Tfcf W§ath0r THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. m XO. 242 Tk it ir it THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1963—32 PAGES rnwrap ^raEs^wraRNyTio^ SMALL BptTLE f- U.S. San. Edward M. pro. vide the actual money for which the authorization bill simply sets ceilings. PROGRAM IN DANGER Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark„ who had the task of steering the bill to passage, said in an interview that the future of the whole program is ih danger unless the Agency for International Development can make it more palatable to Congress next year. ■ The revolt against the program drew support from both parties and was led by Democrats who turned a deaf ear to Kennedy’s pleadings. In an effort to turn the tide a week ago, the President chided “those who find it poli-fically convenient m denounce ~ foreign aid with one breath with the other." But as the tide rolled on. amendinf and sUclng the aid bill, he told his news conference Thursday In evident exasperation that he had "tried to makq |t very clear that I cannot fulfill my responsibilities in the field of foreign policy without this program." Kennedy liad no comment yesterday. Romney Faces Another test Legisfature Must Act on Now Constitution By RICHARD PYLE --LANSme..!*- The„n_ext^h^^ political issue in Michigan is arising even before the last one — Gov. Romney’s tax reform program turns cold in its gravo. Another special legislative session, slated to begin on Dec. 3, will deal with bill* needed to implement the new Constitution which becomes effective the first of next year. It will give the Democratic party, whose leaders hq|fo, they soordd a propaganda victtry whan Romney’s tax reform program was defeated, another chance to shoot at Romney. Democrats — who fought bit- the constitution’s acceptance by the people last April—can be expected to revive all the same old arguments. FOREWARNING An indication of what’s to come was contained in a speech prepared by Democratic State Chairman Zolton Fereney for delivery today to the Allen Park Democratic Club. Assailing Romney for failure to get his own Republican Burty solidly behind fiscal reform, Fereucy said: ”... The present Republican, governor once and for all exposed the real cancer gnawing at the Michigan body politic the backward. Republican-dominated legislature which is totally dedicated to only one ideal —stagnant self-perpetuation. /-A i ★ "And the real tragic-comic Irony ... is that George Romney, the victim, almost single-handedly shackled progress in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Protests Made by Mansfield and Dirksen Warning Is Ignored by President lllia; 12 Companies Taken WASHINGTON (API-Congressional leaders said today that Argentina's seizure of American o i 1 properties is almost certain to result in cutting off U.S. aid to that coun- BALDWIN CONFAB U.S. Sen. Philip recording secretary, met lat^last bight to A. Hart (from left); William Morrissey, 2800 discuss the recent sale-^ tb^Baldwin Rub. Pontiac Lake, Union Lake; Leonard Yocum, ber Division Plant. Sen. Hdirt and the union union local president; Leo George, interna- officials met with Max Adams, manager of tional representative; and Dolphus Farner, the^Pontiac Area ChaimJer of Commerce. Hart Urges Search for Baldwin Buyer / ^le Professor Lends in West Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana and Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois agreed in separate interviews... that, Argen-■BnS’sTctTdrTis a serious blow to the Alliance for Progress. State Department officials did not commei............ U.S. Senator Philip A. Hart last night agreed with local union representatives. that a)l efforts terly and expensively against,^ jhould be made to find a buyer for the Baldwin Rub- ber Division plant. But Hart suggested talk' of an investigation of the plant closing should be put aside as of secondary importance now. "There is no law to prevent the closing of the plant," Hart advised representatives of Unit-^ Rubber Workers Local 125. He added be would give what support he could to getting fuH cooperation from the/ plant’s former owner. Bald-win-Montrose Chemical Co., in obtaining a\ true picture of its financial status. This was in of ment by Max Adams, manager of the Ppntiac Area Chamber of Commerce, that corporate officials would not release the information. ' ' Adams said not even industrial Plant Corp., the New York liquidating firm which purchased Baldwin division’s build- FIR8T ATTACK Ai the first spepch by a Ken- nedy attacking one of the President’s possible 1964 opponents, it appeared to be a preview of Democratic campaign strategy for what the senator said "is going to be a hard fight." As he held up a small bot-He of what he called "Geld-water cologne," Kennedy sold, "R’s. for people who want le aniell eonseirvaave." Making one of his rare speaking appearances . outside his home state, President John F. Kennedy’s Sl-year-old brother predicted even more Democrat. ,iic progress before the cam- With greater optimlim than HMt Democrats have Rieie days, he exuded confidence that Con^esa would pass the " Administration’s civil rights, med-icara an4 tax cut hiUs. In a press confm^nce after- (CditUnued on Paga t, Col, 1) Tiw MviNmi Anny w*mH|| vwr eucmlM. rcMrirMi* iM^Uv OMivM «w’vMk « dinner SPBAKKR-s Moat of the top D-Mass., (center), Among attending Dem- Mlchlgan Oenaocrats attended^ last night’s ocrats were Jjimes M. McNeely, deputy County congTMMional, dinner featuring p County Democrat Chairman, OeR) «nd speech by Sen. Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy, Archie Bailey, dinner dhalrman. ings and machinery last week, had full access to the corporation’s records. LENGTHY REPORT Adams then gave Hart lengthy report on-Baldwin’s acquisition by the corporation composed of Montrose Chemical and a brewing firm, in 1959. / 'The hour-long meeting ended at 11:30 p.m. as Hart wearily ended a day that started in Washington and finished in Pontiac at the annual Democratic congressional dinner. Locah 125, was chief spokesman of several union officials at the meeting. He said he agreed! fully that finding a, buyer tot the plant was of key importance. On the state level. Gov. Romney has pledged the full assistance of the Michigan Department of Economic Expansion to promote sale of the plant and helpwhere possible. COORDINATE EFFORTS In letters to Mayor Robert -A! Landry and Fred V. Haggard, AFL-CIO Oakland County Council president, he said the department would coordinate state and local efforts to prevent losing the plant. The Pontiac plant, at 366 E. South Blvd., and two smaller ones in Cass City, Mich., and Norwalk, 0., are set for olosing by Dec. 1. , Baldwin - Montrose officials say the .manufacturing operations have shown no profits the past three years. Released by Russia at JFK's Prompting LONDON (AP) - An airliner carrying Prof. Frederick C. Barghoorn from Moscow landed at London airpbrt tonight. The Yale professor, an expert on the Soviet Union, was expelled by the Russians earlier in the day after being held in jail op espionage charges. The British European Airways plane flew noifstop from the Soviet capital. The 51-year-old Yale University faculty member had been freed by the Russians only a few hours before. The Russians said they were releasing him because of President Kennedy’s “personal concern.’’ — ^ The President, at a news conference Thursday, declared; “Professor Barghoorn was not on an intelligence mission of any kind." Barghoorn’s arrest brought the sharpest kind of reactions from the United States and the Russians apparently were startled. But the Russians stuck by their claim that Barghoorn was a spy and that they had enough evidence to bring him to trial in U Soviet court. Barghoorn was reported placed aboard the British plane barely four hours after Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko informed the U.S. Embassy’s minister counsellor, Walter Stoes-sel, that he • was being released and expelled because of Kennedy’s concern in the case. The State Department expressed pleasure at Barghoorn’s (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Showers Predicted Tomorrow Sixty-two is the predicted high for,tomorrow, following tonight’s low of.45, ! Showers are! likely toihorrow, along with clpudy skies. Cold tveathw will reti Mbnday. There’s also a blllty of showers or snow flurries. Winds, are southwesterly at 15 to 30 m.p,h. ' The lowest mercury reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. today wa^ 44. At 2 p.m. the thermometer registered a mild 58. ^ ly but there were indications the United States was watching the situation. tvith deep concern. Argentina ignored last night a U. S. warning of possible serious consequences and annulled Its multimilllon-dollar oil contracts with eight American epd four other foreign companies. President Arturo lllia carried through a campaign pledge and issued decrees placing foreign petroleum production and development under the control of the government-run oil agency, Yacimientos Petroliferos |Pi?cal- The decrees authorized the agency fo use force if necessary to take over the operations. it was not immediately known whether the companieis would be fully compensated since the final annulment papers will be drawn up by Argentina’s procurator general. There was no indication when he would deliver his decision. The -U;S. companies, who have estimated thht they invested $397 million for drilling and exploration operations, have already indicated they will take legal action to gain compensation. JU^'T SETTLEMENT Mansfield said aid to Argentina should be “suspended pending a just settlement.” If there is no such setMement, he said A m e r i can assistance should be cut off completely. Dirksen said that the United Slates recognizes the right of any country to expropriate for-eign-held proper^; But he said that there , must be just compensation to the foreign owners. Dirksen said that the Alliance for Progress goal had been to stimulate capital investment of $300 million a year in Latin-American countries. First Call Soltf Pool Table ! jght it” MRS. J.D (5tiac PRESS WANT ADS Phont 3S2-8181 .1 ’ ■L' TWO Ted Blasts Goldwater THE PONTTIAC press, SATURDAY,'^^0VEMBEB la, 1968 (Gtontliuied From Page One) wards, the senator said he did not think the Administration’s stand on civil rights would hurt it at the polls. Kennedy said he didn’t understand the criticism that, his brother was playing politics with the racial issue and antagonizing both sides by trying to appease each. “The civil rights bill is a strong one. It really addresses itself to the outstanding needs of the nation in this area,’’ he said.' ' Kennedy said, also at the press conferencej ihat “it vdll ★ ★- Barry; GOP Race be of the utmost importance that the President carry Michigan.” In his speech, he said, “Our- success in 19S4 will depend to a large extent on how we da here in .......... CRUCIAL AREA Kennedy also singled out Oakland County , as a crucial (Continued From Page One) than 700 Pittsburgh businessmen and their wives. So did Goldwater’s reply. The Arizona senato^.eattL he’d need “some time to really think about t^ie whole-thing.” ■^‘Besides,’’ added Goldwater, who tops public opinion polls on the nomination, “it’s going all right the way it is.” Goldwater had some barbed comment on-^jOV.i-JiIelSon-^ Rockefeller of New York, the , only declared candidate for the GOP nomination. He told a news conference Rockefeller has been wrong about 90 per cent of the time in his representation of Goldwater positions. ms ARE KNOWN “I haven't heard , his- pro-• grams, any of them,” Goldwater saidv “Mm? havel)een tossed around from pillar to post for years.’’ As for Rockefeller’s criticism of Goldwater positions, the senator said “if he would _Jbe—mere^opeelflc^-ln—theke^ hrfront of fiiift. charges, then we could help him understand what I as a Senator have been frying to “I’m dealing with government at a national level, and he’s dealing at a state level. It’s a little hard for governors sometimes to make the jump. It takes a little while.” In Washington today, leaders of Draft Goldwater organizations from about half the states meet in closed session to discuss their movement and plan their campaign to make the senator the nominee. . GOLDWATER ALLY They are due to hear from Sen. John G. Tower, R-Tex., a GolWater ally, and from Peter O’Donnell, the Texas Republican who is chairman of the national Draft Goldwater organization. * ★ * About 70 Goldwater-for-pres-ident leaders are attending. Goldwater, who called the draft movement flattering, has thus far steered clear of open conti^ct with it. Denison Kitchel, manager of Goldwater’s campaign for reelection to the Senate, said the senator is not sending a representative toland Township, has been a delegate to sweral county, state and national party con- He has had an interest in the GOP since he was 20 years old. When Johnson was 24 years old, he served as aii alderman on the flint city council. Now retired, he says he has more, time to devote to his original drive fot better government. Stop, Start Smoking ROME W) Italy’s state tobacco monopoly, already the mhker of a cigarette called “Stop,” has now started production of a cigarette named ‘Start.” Birmingham Area Businessmen Lectured Zoning Beguhfidns BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP--Three young businessmen who claiined they “just didn’t know” they were violating township oipH^KM *T« catehwii up on'bactt tessons, Stables and Mlracle MlIe tors have apeed to start their They appeared before the board with two requests—one for outdroor sales of new and used cars and permission to expand their facility at 2182 Telegraph and the-otiier to operate a lot at 2160 S. Telegraph. „ , * w ★ They wen# faced with a petition bearing 40 signatures and asking that the businesses not be allowed to operate. TEMPTING TO TEENS The petitioners charged that unsightly :. . and a temptation, especially to teen-agers,” '*The Sites are being rented by Ben Lazich, John E. Hardy and James J. O’Brien. They started their operation in May. ' They thought. Hardy said, that Democrat Defends Congress WASHINGTON (AP) - House Democratic leader Carl Albert the permit granted a used car sales formerly located there would suffice for ____ ★ ★ - ★ - '' Bdpervlsor Homer Case iwtad • that they were oRerpting About a quatW-mile outside the area 4eg|l^ted on the original permit and that they had been issued .jmUfication_ hy -Jauildlng-Inspector Harold Sciwl . REMOVE CARS The men agreed to remove the sjx cars on tiie lot at 2160 S. Telegraph, for which a permit had nevpr been issued. In a Thursday meeting with Case aad School they further agreed to build a fonr-foot fence on the reta* of the four lots Involved in the others operation^ They will not build within 20 feet of the rear lot line and will provide a driveway an either sUe for emergency'acceu to the easement. They also said they would contact the State Highway Department for permission to park on the highway right-oj-way. ■# : Sr ■ W Case noted that the shoulder often is crowded with the cars ot persons interested in the classic and antique cars at the Stables. BETTER CfflNDinON —r— “This was informal,” Case said, “but it will put them In much better condition to come back to the zoning board of appeals. ■a ★ ★ The next meeting is scheduled for Dec. 10, at which time the men may be able to discuss their plans for expansion. says the reeprd^of the 88th Con- .^nond White, 64, of 3740 WeUes- cannot be judged now” “anymore than you could say a horse race is won at the first quarter or the half.” ★ ■ ★ „ W That is Albert’s answer to a growing body of criticism of Congress as outmoded, dilatory, cumbersome, unable to cope with the jet-powered problems of .(he space age. , 'W ★ Albert conceded there is no chance of enacting by the end of the year the two top-pridrity administration bills, civil rights and tax revision, although the House passed the tax bill ahd could possibly handle the civil rights bill before the Christmas recesp, END OF TERM But he pointed out that the 88th Congress has another year to go and said the time to judge its place in history •will be at the endP of its full term. He agreed that many problems coming before Congress in these times haVe new dimensions and must be met by new approaches. ■ w ★ ' Jn the field of education he cited bills providing aid to vocational education, higher education, medical and dental education, and to combat mental retardation-all either passed'1^ the House or fn the legislative process with a good chance of passage, ★ ★ ' ★ ■ On “reforming” Congress, Albert said some have advocated doing away with the seniority system In committees. Other criticism has centered on the House Rules Committee, which can and has bottled up legislation and kept Jt from reaching the floorDf the House. WHAT JFK BAW - President Kennedy, aboard the U.S. Observation Island, a missile support ship off Cape Canaveral, Fla., watched the firing of a Polaris missile from a submerged submarine today. The Navy re- ^ AP PiMMfm ported the missile performed perfectly. Hie iiring climaxed a day in which Kennedy Viewed similar demonatrations of military might. ^ Sodp/s Mother Dies at 80 in Detroit Hospital DETROIT (AP)-Mrs. Henry P. Williams, 80, mother of former Gov. G. Mennen WilUAms and an heiress to the Mennen toiletries fortune, died today at a Detroit hospital. * * * The former Elma C. Mennen succumbed to apparent heart failure at 5 a.m. She had entered Jennings Memorial Hot-pitai Oct, 28. * * w The formor six-time Michigan governor who now la assiatant secretary of state tor African affairs was at her bedside. .A ■ a There afato are two other tons, Richard E.. executive of a marine engines manufaetiirlng firm in Detroit, and Henry P. Jr., a rancher at Glenwoed Springs, Colo. . Mn. WlUtams’ husband died in 1941. A. Raymond White Private service for A. Ray- ley will iiie Tuesday with burial to follow in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Friends may call through Monday evening at the Bell Chapel of the WUliam R. Hamilton Co. Mr. White died suddenly yesterday. He was assistant chief engineer for Chrysler Corp. Surviving are his wife, Cath^ erine S.; a son, Alexander, at home; two s 1 s t e r s ; and a brother. JA CHAIRMAN - Ford Motor Company executive Earl G. Ward, 650 Lone Pine, Bloomfield Hills, has been named general chairman of Junior Achieventeni’s 1904 Fund campaign in southeast-ern Michigan. He was co-chairman of JA’s 1059 fund drive. TODAY'S Downtown TURKEY WniNERSI H. Jonti—-53 StratKmor* L. Whltint>.-.55l Pitoaw H. Zatnm—9419 Ckallia H. MeUran—50 aingall C». C, Marfan—-2196 lamat Rd. |. I. MaynarA-lisiVk Ban-Wain Rd. Mra. A. Hydn—lHO Garland I. Baaall—2179 Onlay Dr. M. 1. Itnaa—4291 Layaar Rdt Ratty Allan—SI ARIaan N. 1 Ballay—141 VSi Oakland L. Orliwald—212 Hnwatd Me- Mn. D, Brawn—6510 I SAW!" -obITOOSUIICaii WIN A FREE TURKEY HERE'S HOW.* . enme to downtown ■tom with tko turkey on tho door, for froo tickot —•till liiany Turkoya lolflt 'til Nov. 20tb. V THE POlffTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY^ NOVEMffEir 16> 1903 THREE Cambodia Nejd^^iigel^ Ri^^hina|f By CONRAD FINK TOKYO (AP) - Red China aeama confident of making a -- jngJot. BfiMtrj^Jlon in Southeast Atdli despite costlylTSnBiaijj^ to defend that strategic area from, communism. Tin taritet is Cambodia, a jun^ gle nation next door to Laos, Thailand and South Viet Nam, .. w^e the United Slates has invested heav^ily in( blood and tnoney. ^ ^ Peking broadcasts^ boast that Cambodia’B _ chief of state. Mce Norodom Sihanouk, has —pledged Close iriendship and co- Sihanouk has explained he is grateful for “disinterested” r"*“ nese help at a time' srben called imperialist nations are threatening him, Peking tu^ad-casts say. Almost daily, the xa-dio describes ^friendly and cordial” talks between officials Cambodia, all of Southeast Asia will be more seriously threat- Cambodia’s long, ill-defiQod borders with its three neighbors are almost impossible to close IrrHhftltrators. South Viet Nam claims Viet Cong ^errillas now ing that communism already has triumphed in Viet Nam and the rest of what once was known as French Indochina. FATESEAXED, ‘The fate-''of Viet Nam appears to me to be sealed,” he be also some time later. Tbfe prince appearM^sorri^ that Cambodia. — about six million persons, 88,780 square miles — would be unable to stay afloat in the sea of crisis surrounding it. He complained that Ameri- pplnce Sihanouir has dipiomatie relations adth Boutb ' Viet Nam and Thailand, charging both with border violations and plots against what-he calls h Cambodia’s neutralityr-^ tabUsb a bate of operations in Sihanouk has expressed feel- Stamps Honor Coi. Gknn JJoixShBpord oihI— Split Fbcfred at Afrlfxin Parley 12 SOON to 6 P.N. -All Ih«»JSpwoia-Foi- TODA^^T 10 P.M. - SUNDAY 12 Noon to 6 l*.M. ortd MONDAY 9 A.M. to IQ P.M- Oniyt SHOP NOW and SAVE MORE SIMMS to WIN A FREE TURKEY ... you itill hov* a chonc* fo win a franTuHiav Nov. 26th. Orawingt hnld •vntyday.. No 18 years By ANDREW BOROWIEC ADDIS ABABA. Ethiopia (AP) — The African foreign ministers conference to settle the Moroccan-Algerian frontier dispute reconvened today amid fears lit may develop into a bitter verbal battle between the two Arab neighbors-amf-4heir backers. Morocco took a possible con- ciliatory step today by propps-t a small arbitration jcpm-— not to exceed seven be appointed im-dy its dispute with Algd*!! over a mineral-rich trapt of tMlahara and report to a meeting^the foreign ministers in^ Ft However, there i ! indica- SHOP SUNDAY 12 to 6 Super-warm casual coat of pne-lmed laminated cordurdy petch-pocketedy wMi big , wooden platter buttons tto^B COMFAIlABUVAUn f«.M A lot of smart fashion, a lot of snug warmth, for such a tiny little pricel VYlnterwelght cotton corduroy witjh foam laminated insulation... plus a lining of Malden’s deep aciylio pile, and cozy quilt-lined slpevesl ChoOM either Antelope or moss green. NSM-S WHY • W* Mil for «mIi Milyl * TImM «M M WMlIt chwgMl YOU SAVI * vy# Imm «o «Mli ImmiI u mom *m wo I ’’orau smmkTS 12 noon , it 6 p.m." ^ Plenty of free Parking m MNflAjC-lOO Nenb $nh"t St. IN CUNKSTON-WATIRPOIID M IMxIa Nwy. Jest N. U Wattrfsid HlA tions that the Moroccans were alsd preparing dramatic arguments, accusing the Algerians of massing foreign troops and weapons with intentions of renewing their war. Morocco previously accused the United Arab Republic and Cuba of helping Algeria, ~ The Algerians have not disclosed what action they are planning, but there were indications Ibcy want to turn the meeting of the foreign ministers of the 32-nation Organization of African Unity into a general discussion of African frontier items. Moroccans want to limit the d^ate to their dispute with AIgerie\and not expand the me^g^ incliMe ail the other frontier pr6l)teih£ There Are at least seven \other simmering frontier dispures. ^ “If the committee consists of impartial nations who have not been involved in the dispute in any way, we are ready to accept its recommendations,” member of the Moroccan delegation said. - -- ★“—A—A----------- SomeT delegates took this to mean that the U.A.R. should be excluded from the committee. The conference,-which opened Friday and is expected to conclude Tuesday, could test the prestige of Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie, the principal peacemaker in the Moroccan-Algerian dispute. FAMILY QUARREL The 71-year^ld emperor opened the conference Friday by describing the border dispute as a family quarrel that must be settled within Africa without any V meddling from outside the continent. ★ * * He did not mention any foreign countries, but Algeria has countered the Moroccan charge of Cuba aid by saying that the Moroccans were using U.S. Qenergtl Electric & Sylvania FLASH BULBS lowest jsrice ever! All-~white^ bulter ~frr — popular AG-1 size. Regular $1.44 carton of 12 bulbs. Limit 4 cartons. 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS \Hattlo Storm Window Kit ,,,.» / 0 Full^ 1 ‘ Vr 2 sheets 'of 36 x 72" transparent f ’III HI \.^altic, moulding and noils, DRUG DEPT. DISCOUNTS Gonuine PARKE-DAVIS /MYADEG’VHamins FARKFMIIN W||a|iie 7 DllHIIIa emuNDAVf f ii H. SAflINAW ST. ...Irl. 8kl8 Inch RUBBER SfairTroads^ Regular 29c kach (libbed rubber stair. treads In blg{k__Qt... brown c^rs.-No limit With Free IHtiienter i&.6S pack oi too capsules at discpuni price. 433 OLD SPICE’ Men’s Toiletries Hegutar SI to SI.2S Sellers PRESTO’ or ‘SPARKLE’ Paint Set PfrJWt Chrigtmaa Gift! FQRyOUN SHOPPING CONVENIENGI liie Following Downtown Pontiac Stores Will Be . . |I8 Buy lor Christmas Giving Now • assorted titles In choice of 'Presto' points 'Sporkle' Points. Limit 2. STAINLESS STEEL 24-Pc. Tabfewaro SS.OO Value - JVose Only Stainless steel — the perfect tableware, for everyday use ond company loo. Won't rust or tarnish either. 333 12 NOON to 0 P.M * CONSUMER’S DISCOUNT 118 N. SAGINAW ST. • FEDERAL DEPT. STORES 91 N. SAQINAV' “ GEORGE’S DEI 14N. SAQINAl •S.S.KRESGE lENOXWARE’ Melamine 45-Pes. Dinnerware Set mnialue-AlSIrnea' 'Americono ' Star' pattern, mm Mm mMlIMI Complete serv- I ^ ^ ~\W1 wore at lowest R| WW WA^SHABLE Blankets 66x80” For Twin Bed or Oar Use $2,89 Value - Now 91 N. SAGINAW ST. • GEORGE’S DEPT. STORE 14 N. SAGINAW ST. •MALING SHOES 44 N. SAGINAW ST. SO N. SAGINAW ST. Ah • NEISNERS 42 N. SAGINAW ST. WIN A FREE I TURKEY " Oe> Yeyr Tkl(eti Her* Nft Ptiiwhate NectMoty 94% Rayon with 6% Nylop bland, heavy 2-pound vyeighb blankets with stitched, edges. Choiqe of various colors Limit 2 per' person. Buy for yourself or for gifts. ,, ■ ••• •■ ■' ,.'■ , 'ii,. ' THE PONTfAC PllRSS. SATURDAY, KQVEMBEB 16, lp6ft isiBi ill misuBBs III m... On This Special Advertising Page The coortwctlon* Ibtf «i«i^ed in April wA «imidr:in Octolwr pf iftb* ^ Bantiny hourg arc conduced at th« new bpiik ph Judx ilpyAweek basT«, Wdnday lHrou^ Saturday, from 9:30 to 4:30 P.M, Com- piele banking aervice* are available Inolt--- ----„ .......... automobile loans, home improvement loans, home mortgage loans. Four per cent’ interest is paid on all renilar savinp accounts on * ilances remaining on deposit for a period of " [word A. Rositt Is President of Troy Nationi • ~ • • '• "ihool > "I He is also a ip^uate of the'Inter* iingham.Hnsin is a graduate of the Scl . State University and attended graduate school in banking and ml of Economics, Michi* at the Bank Examination School, Washington, nC. Oliver Motor Sales “Hob” Oliver. Sr„ Prr>iiient of OUveC Motor .Solof, In*., localed *1 210 Orchird Lake Avenue w«. r»c«»llr swerderf the iwenty-flve veer plenue for eelllns Buick*, ~ blfflrm he« Ihe JltllHeilOTrofb«lH)rnwTilae«i new eer dealer in ronllec. Hi* falner, Dwfghl I. Oliver Marted when bufinet* was at In lowaat e^b In 1929 and mlabllahed Oliver Malora In 1932.9inee lhal lime Bob baa teen many car dealert come and so btti hopet lhal Oliver Bulok will S<* •“ t»re*«r. Bob 11 Is Vice T Mr. Oliver faelt dial ihe TJtOO^JWO ear talat plalean ihii yearvill be equated asain in 1964, and he feel* lhal Ihe >ame number of older cart lhal are a menace lo every, one ihould be deilroyed annually. Tbit would nol only make il tafer drivins but would help in ihe tale of good ut^ eart. He alto feelt General Molort Corp. and Ford Molor could afford lo pay fifty dollan apiece for the older cart lhal are not only an aye tore but a menace lo lafety. Ha tald Ihe fifly dollan paid per car could be tax deduclible fur Iha Corporaliont. Scarlett’s Buycle And Hobby Shop HalVs Auction Jack Hall of 705 W. Clarkaton (one mile off USM*24) in Lake Orion has people coming to his Saturday night auction from Flint* Petroit, Southfield, and other Rip’s Barestaurant Rapidly gaining fame as a club of 4ialtnction is Rip’s Bareelaurant located at 998 W. Huron in Pdntiac. John Humphries, Mho manages lh(t weil-known spot, hat spared no pains in giving his ntlany pairOns the best in foods and drinks. : I . ■ hoy cities all over the state. They bring furniture, new and used appliances, miscellaneous items, anything of value* and Jack puts them on the auction block and the item is sold to the highest bidder. This is done on a percentage basis and Jack takes the itchis of value on consign* ment. He will be happy to pick up what* ever you have that you would like sold and can be reached by calling at MY 3-1871 or MY 3-6141. The time of the auction is froth'7:3Q P.M. to 1:00 A'.M. ' and every Suitday from 2:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M., as well as being open every day from 8:00 A.M. to 6 P.M. Another attraction here is the Friday night Rock and Roll Teen Age Dance, refreshments are sold and police protection it offered. It was ip 1905 that John's father, (C. I. “Rip" Humphries, a hoy of twelve came to Pontiac, with his parents and three hrothert. Because he spent ^ most of his nights in his father’s pool room, he tended to drowse in his classes at Baldwin School next day. H|s teacher hung the name “Rip Van ’Winkle” on him a name that stuck throughout his lifelinie. Aside from fniiiqeew yTafro'ulw’e*l, Rip’H and was in'business in Pontiac all his life. Many remember *Tower Beach'* on Sylvan Lake with nostalgic fondness and later on Elisabeth Lake Road. The original building in this location was built in 1941. Everyone in Pontiac knowt that Scarlett*i Bicycle and Hobby 3hop at 20 East Lawrence is the store to come to wheU you aro looking for a gift or hobby that is different, attractive and sensible. Ernest R. Scarlett went into business in 1928 and is still active at the shop at 77. His son Laird J. la the manager. They recently won the Schwinn “Thousand Club” award for outstanding sales achievement. ' . . Scariett’s have one of the mosf amasing and currently popular , gifts tliat the entire family may enjoy for hours on end. Stock oar racing sets. You brill have to see them to appreciate them. Its a game and a sport, for the growing number of road racing fans who want the bisst that model road racing offers. Drop into Scarietls and let them show you the many racing sets they have and if they don’t have what you want they can get it for you. They also service the rieing 4:ars they sell and don’t have to send,them back to the factory for parts. Service is one of the 'vmany reasons for Scarlett’s continued success in buslitesefor-. ihvkpast 35 years. -fW- * Dr. B. T. Breit^ Optometrist \ Dr. B. T. Br.ll. OpiomHrbt loe*t«l at 17 ha. been in practice since 1935 and at this locaiion for the past four years. Dr. Brett features the latest fashions in eyeweaXand is a dis* penser of contact-less lenses^ “the better way tiKsea without Frank A. Anderson Agency Frank Shepard buying four poilcies from two or ihroo diffaront aunts. Wouldn't It ha muck simplar and more convaniani to have all y< 1 your iiisuranco nrcdscomhln^f The Frank A. Anderson Agency located at 1044 Jotlyn Ave., In Pontiac has had SO years of experienoe In programming their clienls insurance need*. Il is iheir firm belief that ihe edveniages of “Planned Prolec-lion", where one agent knows your entire insurance program is by far the beat. Another convenience la that you may pay your insurance in . regular q^uarterly or monthly payments instead of lump sum* coming due at different lime*. Eleven yean ago Frank Shepard started In the real eitate hnsineas in Rochester and has been baying and setting ' T new and used homes, farms, and lake lots ever slnee. Mr. Shepard also deals in property on Maaitonlin Island followed the development and expansion of this section. He has been closely identified with the growth and busi* ness activity ^nd has always extended the buyen and sellen of property the highest t]rpe of service. Mr. Shepard also deals in property on Manitowin Island in Georgian Bay in Canada, which is resort property. He moved into his present and altracliye office October 1st of this year located at 511 North Main in the beautifnl and growing village of Ro«|hester. ContajDt lentes are a modern miracle ... tiny clroIets^|»f,^pIattlo custom ground to your preicriplion which are worn under tho eyelids... so light and praotically undetectable that one rarely knows you are wearing them. Because the modern plastio con-tact lenses can be wOm directly on the layer of tears of the oye, visuai clarity is often Improved, together with a natnraUy wide fieldofview. There are indeed many fields of endsaivor—ftom atriino pilot ' and stewardess to typesetter or printer-^where the freedom of naturel vision with eontoct lenses is more and n Since the prescribing of ehntact lot fessionei responsibility to tho Mtiont, it it wise to have these . lentes provided and applied oy a rcspontible contact lens fitter. Dr. Brett has fitted hundreds of pationu In this area and... a great amonnr of his practice is devoted to this work. His knowledge of where to obtain contact lensea with the props 01^ bow to piwierino thp •^ientific curves and 'proper curves for you, is invaluablo in vanced kind of eye earo available lodior- / ,'T' : THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATUBDA17 yOTI^MBER 16, 1068 FIVE U-S.-Soviets Mark 30 Years WASHINGTON niPD - The United States and the Soviet Union mark 30 years of uneasy diplomatic relations today, but, the occasion offlcialiy will go unnoted here. eooperatloa within the newly The late President Franklin D. Roosevelt recognized the Commnnist government led by Josef Stalin on Nov. M, 1113, and eapressed hope the After Stalin’s death ip 1953. there Was some hope in the West that the state of armed and uneasy suspicion on both sides might be lessened. However, it soon was evident that, in Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, who came to power in 1356, the United States faced a ...................... with tWiSli passing year.** ____Stall»i!s-JojtLeign minister, Maxim M. Litvinov, called the ^ developipent “a creative factor in international affairs wdilch Will be beneficial to mankind." sometimes amiable but sophisticated hnd dangerous adversary. , Recurrent crises over Berlin, where^ the allies ^1 cling^ to a Red-encircled enclave left over from the war; the savage Soviet repression ol the Hungarian rebellion; the Cuban ihissile crisis — these have provided some of' the. high points of terror in the postwar relationship between the two countries. The limited nuclear test ban treaty and the **thaws** after the Geneva summit epn-(erence of 195$, and ^ Camp David meeting betuwen former Presided Dwight D. Eisenhower and Khrushchev — these havw beea the pe»-riods of lower tension which 8parked..8omr-hope7{or-progp ress in blunting the peril of nuclear war. The split between Russia and Red China, which impelled some to believe the Kremlin^ might draw closer to the West, now appears moVe and more to be a factor that may force Khrushchev to even nastier ventures against the United States and its allies in his effort to retain control of the international Communist move^^ ment; , Against this background, American officials noted as a Jiistor-ieal- fact—the -30th.anni- versary of the establishmentnof : relations'. But they found it no occasion for undue celebration-orcomment. 8PECIA18! \ SHOP MONDAY 9:45 A.M. TILL 9 P.M, Sorry,. No Moil or Phono Ordort on ThoaoMondoy Only Spociolt, Charge Theni at Waito'f! -r jnr ^11 *1 jj^ 9 Colors in Imported Wod The cordiality of that occar. •Ion has disaM>eared tp be re-—placed, byi t^tinual tension between 'the two nucleaf giants. -The world nervously studies the ebb and flow of cold war relations between Moscow and WashlMton, wondering if the ) wm drag other nations in- two V ^0 an. atomic holocaust. TENSE HISTORY Except for the era of World War II cooperation — caused by circumstances after Hitler attacked his former ally Stalin and Japan bombed Pearl Harbor — the relationship has been tense at best. At worst, it has been punctuated with crises which threatened unother war of far worst dimensions than 5 RUSOIB WHY... 6 REASONS mi Miller’s can Sava You MondV ’’RagariHass of Salas.” 3 Floors of Fine Now Furniture of Nationally Known Qualify. * At the . moment the relationship is particularly icy, chilled by the arrest of ah American eessor on what President nedy says are trumped-up spy charges. , This critical incident may pass but the global struggle for the allegiance of nations is bound to continue indefinitely. Most Americans believed after World War II that more than $11 billion worth of lend-lease aid to embattled Russia and the major U. S. role in the defeat of Germany and Japan had secured lasting Soviet' friendship. Early disillusionment came • We Own Our Buildng • Low Cist lacathNi • Family Owiwd and Operated • Ho Stockholders to Pay • No Corporation Tax SHETLAND CARDIGANS Roff.-5,99 , Very nice 100% imported wool cardigons with ribbon-faced but-i tonholes. Sizes 36 to 40 in white, [beige, blue, red, grey, cornel, brown, green or block. ' Siiorttwear . . . Third Floor Proportioned WiderWale MISSES Our Service i$ Tofi$ CONVENIENT - EASY TERMS - AMPLE FREE PARKINQ CAREFUL FREE DELIVERY CORDUROY SLACKS Our 27 th Year of Courteous Friendly ' Service at This Ideation. Reg. 3.99 when Stalin flumped an iron grip on Central Europe, In-augurpted a campaign to subvert nations thronp^out the . World, and blasted hopes of . J44 OAKLAND AVE. TJies* jtiarp <»rduroy ore In ' lh« naw wld« wols, hov« a »id« pocket and a Talon nylon ilpper. Block, blue, red dr green In sizes 10 to 20, short, medium and toll. Open Monday and Friday Night 'til 9 Convenient Term»-90 Day* Same^ie Caih Spurtiivear ... Third Floor 100% Cotton Fleece .. MEN’S SWEAT SHIRTS n„. 1.99 $|66 Worm, fleecy sweat shir,ts with reinforced collar and culls. Navy-, white or gun metal, sizes S-M-l-Xl. Men's Wear... Street Floor, Extra Soft! Extra Fluffj Belleair MAKE « DATE ROW -FOR NEXT TEAR- JOIN OUR 1964 CHRISTMAS SAVINGS CLUB ACRILAN BLANKETS \ Rog. 10.99 761 Wi HURON-PONTIAC- 16 E. Lowronco Si-fooMoo J 407 Main SlM*t-R«ch«tt*T 4416 Ohila Hwy-rDfoyian Hni. n 02 W. Maple Rd. - Wallod U. 471 W. Broadway-- Lake Ori|Bw 5799 Odonvilla Rd., Cor, M-1 S-Cla«fcRton NATIONAL LEAGUE HOCKEY GAME Reg. 12.98 *397 A reol gome ol skill r ,; fon for young end ' oldl You manipulate the men up ond down the board remotely, turn them to shoot ohd, KOre. Ponery operated lights. The "real Toys... Fifth Floor Men's Smart iBtAZER STRIPED WOOL : CARDIGANS 100% fine wool or 2-ply Shetland wool lightly brushed for a luxurious fool. Choose ■ taupe/ white or blue/whito combinations in sizes S-M-L-XL. Boy.'8-18 KENTFIELD REVERSIBLE SKI JACKETS n, $1298 • 100% Dacron Polyster fiberfill • Lightweight, washable Here's o worm lightweight, quick drying jacket thanks to Dacron libertill. It hbs a roll-up hood, zip pockets, zip front. Red, olive or royal blue, each reverser to black. Sixes 8 to 16. Boys Wear., .Second Floor Leother-Likf Vinyf.;. Worm BOYS' WINTER CAPS Reg. 2,99 $2 ormj caps v ir .warmers. Tan, red. olive or block, sizes S-M-L. Boys* Wear ... Second Floor Checks! Plaids! Solids! NOVELTY WEAVE WOOLS \ Sunburst. THERMOSTAT CONTROLLED OVEN BROILER g,95 Value IkerrnestMicolly controlled even * ■ toost Inside, wp fries and heati rolli, .ploiMeie. UL opproved 6ifi. n«l*r <. Suiwrsonic_ Plane Now Making Headway The ^ long:delayed, controversial supersonic airliner program now ap-peafsTb~Be getting hff the ground. ^Pushed by the Federal Aviation Authority, which is collaborating in the underwriting of the huge introductory cost pt the venture, the new plane will compete with the French-British plane Concorde expected to enter passenger service early in 1970. ★ ★' ★ ' Airllnes^hro^rinr six was the first airline to purchase the American plane still on the drawing board. Pan American soon iias also ordered a number nf Con- cordes. ............."... The foreign plane got a head start toward supersonic passenger aircraft and will take to the air a year earlier than , the U.S. entry. It is expected to cost $10 million against $15 million for the ^erlcan counterpart. ★____ir '■ ★ Present* specil^ications,' however, give the latter an operational advantage. It will cruise ofj the army of women workers _ in recent years. More rather ~’^tl!ah Tewer-womiM at the upper end df the Incol^ scaliTfife~e*ii j : tering gainful employments - - AtW end of the last century not a single nation had granted women political rights. In 1902, however, the women, of Australia were given the right to vote in national elections. American women did not receive that right until 1920. Today more than 100 nations extend equal or limited rights to women. ★ ★ ■■ ★ ------giving women the vote has not brought thie cleansing influ- ence into pities'" that was jt 1 .xpected. But* has immeasur-^tbly-imprpved the-poUtical,^o^ cial, and economic status of - - women in^ this and. other countries. The ladies, bless ’em, are going great guns in their race to equality. But they still expect you to take off your hat in an elevator. Congressmen Set as JFK sum Voice of the People: ;. Are Improperly Dressed hour — more than twice’the speed of sound -r> while that is the Concorde’s maximum performance. ★ ' ★ ★ A TWA spokesman said that the company chose the domestic plane for three reasons: consideration for American prestige; the favorable effect on the Country’s balance of payments problem: and the necessity of keeping this Nation’s aeronautical engineering skills at a high level. Log Cabin No Longer a Political Asset Deeply Imbedded in the folklore of American politics is the conviction that a politician to have Hii, fectlve empathy with the electorate should be able to point to humble beginnings. • ★ ★ ★ Birth in a log cabin was orice considered a sine, qua non for a would-be sieryant of the pee-pul, and many a historical figure pointed with great pride to having s^en his first light of day through an oiled-paper window. (They couldn’t afford glass.) But alas — times change. Today, with the most likely presidential candidates each burdened with an inherited fortune approximately the sire of a ojux,.— MARLOW self-respecting national debt, getting himself born in a desolate dwelling will take quite a hit of ingenuity. Besides, tio one gets born at home anymore. . ★ ^ There is still a glimmer of hope/ however, for keeping rapport with' the voters in the tiihe-tested area Of lowly nativity. A candidate can with engaging humility \ bear witness to birth in a hospital that wasn’t air conditioned. Verbal Orchids to- Equal Pay for Women Not Realized by Bill The report of the Kennedy Commission on the Status of Women comes four months after the President signed am “equal pay for w 0 m e n” bill, which had been before Congress in one form or another for almost two decades. But the measure has few teeth. The payoff for women will come only when Congress starts extending coverage mf the Federal minimum wage act to which the equal pay law is tied. ★ ★ ★ By 1970, the habor Department predicts, one out of every' three women in the United Statee will' be working outside the home. Rising ineo^me has not affected the prodiMoua growth , of 261 Baldwin; 9lst birthday. I wonder what women will be wearing ten years from now, if anything at all. ^ a nightclub or dance and see these girls dancing m flimsy tights and- pants.^Do they think they ' men? I canlt help but believe men would respect girls more if they dressed like girls4ised4o. Now its pants every time they go out. ^T j i. I wonder if mothers ever notice how their daughters look when they go on dates? It’s time someorte to^ the'bun by the horns so we can~s$e women“di>essed properly again. * FrighU,« HOJOalQ 7; PONTIAC PRESS, SATimPAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1963 SEVEN GEORGE'S SUNDAY 12 to 6 SAVE AS NEVER BEFORE SUNDAY and MONDAY SPECIALS ’100,000 STOCK DISPOSAL SALE / I . It K, ,l„. , ,l r,,, rs. ( h tn,,: . PARK FREE ANYWHERE DOWNTOWN City Urban League in Program Pontiac Area Urban League is expected to take part-in a nationwide program being de? veloped to i^ify and. upgrade Negro employment opportuni* -ties. League fkdd urarker from CM? cago YisUiag/ppnttec to explain the progWr termed it a /'skillg bank” based on h three - staie.iir«iinim^ witt fBWrtve if search and recruitment, on the local level to locate job seekers and' their interests,” a job survey to determine the Negro labor market, and finally, placement he said. t it * Clarence 1$. Barnes, exeai-tive director of the Pontiac Area I League, skid the program will I tie Jn witjii efforts already begun here. i t* 1: i givft HU ing contacted to team their .empioymefit . experiences, Bar-net explained. At the same time, major area bnsinesses will be surveyed to loam their attitudes toward hiring Negroes he Added. McKinnky said program, financed by a |lpQ,dOO grant from'the Rockefeller Brothers pmnL wUl Ter the M time «^ate picture oLNe^ ^ gro employment in the nation. ' He predicted it will encourage Negro workers, and especially students, by showing what occupations offer equal opportunities and where such employers .:are-.--^ DATA ON FILE Statistical data will be centralized in New York for access by Urban League branches, and on local participation N expected to be made shortijr IqdF-the Pontiac Urban League’s board of directors. Firm With Area Tie, Brokerag'e Merge ' KEEPS PRICES DOWN OPEN SUNDAY _^odb^ _& Cq^ jme of tjm largest Wall Street brokerage firms, announced yesterday it •will merge Jan. 1 with J. A. Hogle & Co., securities and brokerage firm headquartered in Salt Lake City. „.Coodbody, which maintains 4i( officies, has a branch at 155 S. Bates, Birmingham. The combined firms idll operate 72 branches. under the Goodbody & Co.'tiame, from too: Sunday Only Specials TIIR PONTIAC PRESS, SATCTDAY, NOVEMBER |6, 1968 ONE COLOR Jlleiisjiilt PHl INWM MMfer c*. IM. 1749 S. Saginaw St. ■niMT IMLY Chair Sale DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Home 'OtttfUtingCa, ref. S.98 GtoidoH. UntORY RECLIMMS ^haii^ $ilA95 SWeiRENHISPEeiiUJ Half Soles i«i Rubber Hoofs fw Wam«i r-^oyt COMPLEti' R»g.$S.$OValm ^IIARAi^ Soles tfifty 11.79 / Whilo You Wolf or Shop Sorvlco , SPeClAt,. »OooNPAY-TUESDAY~WEDNESDAY ONLY m COUPON ; COUPON I _ .... J MIN’S OR UOIII' luirt f I ji MIHrSPANTS . _ I OR FUIN COATS .1 ] :^5lF!:^M»j '* COUPON (WHh fWi eaupoB Man., Tuai., Wad.) ■ ! SHIRTS UUNDERED I a liiavMoallYCulloiAanu S' . Pachutf wflh Dryttemliif . All ■ Or4«raf|1.SOurAAuft. _ _ -.... _ ^ Me • OuhwtFInlih ' _ | laSBr J Expartiy FiHwd Tailor Mad* To Ordar ONE DAY SERVICE Regular Price TOP....... .$79.95 WINDOW.....$10.U0 jvor. TOTAL $9M6 *69 95 ONE^WEEK HAYCe SEAT COVERS InutalMWhllaYiwWalH ti48t INSTANT CREDIT " ^VOOB CONVeMlINT B.P.O0ODRICIf •TORN FE2-0121p 111 H. Pony SUNDAY ONLY TM9AD e Fresh Ground UldR Jb Hamburgor 7IK limit 5 pound$ IllPlb. c DIUnON PLAINS STONE ONLY BMlteMo. BAZLEY & . 4348 Dixie Highway |i- Drayton Plaint ^ HCX)VER SWEEPER Authorized Hoover Service Station FlU: CLEUIM RUNES ft MUCRtVE Hardivara IE 8-9101 74SIW. HURON Sr. v,l^ OPEN DAILY ID to 10 SUNDAY 12 to T Jjj^pP SUNDAY 12 to Mmarfi GLENWOOD PLAZA Paddock and N. Perry at Glenwood SAVE 90* OR I HRS SIZE ROX OF HEW IMPROVED TUB PONTIAC PRRSS« SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1068 ONE COLOR NINE SHOPP«l sriOpM®? "DEER WIDOWS”-PUr IT COZY when hf «*lvmi. W« hav« •vtrythliHI yaw nood tg^^brightan up your horn# for »ha HUDSON'S HARDWARE 47 EAST WALTON .fort off Walton JUST 11 LIFT.. BUY BUCK and DECKER DRm (H«ii! U.llW) Regular $14.95 MW roll OHMSTIUI SUPER Kerh-Tone SMi OF FUSTIC WMI THE Cemplat* Packafi* $||95 for Tub Aiwa.... . 9 Comploto Pacbaj|o for Full Batb Afos; .. FLOOR SHOP HEW KITCHENS fer at littia at It Month JIOD-A-KITGHEM or HPDATE YOUR FRESEHT ORE! Plan Nowfn Hava YeiirKtikhwiRMnodaling Com* pMadfortM Holidaytl Oill Molt’i for a Frit AI-Hmiib Iitlnratt On Any Homo Improvomont! tfO roar* of CoNitowHH, JlwItaUa Swrwfoa To Tito CamMiwKrr SUNDAY-MONDAY ONLY w RETREAD SNOW TIRES WALTON nm.,. (it)VarlallH Wy iMPi Mife tr OlXlf OariM Oonttniotioii. |no. IYMNIflilnniM.(M4l) •ehMW OwMwU U4w end Alnwf •*. tarvUn li wMiiv. .FfwaaMMim _ PIZIA niCno^U Call for Pnmi IttimjriNt TRADE FAIR 0044111 Opan Dally ani Sun. PM MERCHANDISING CORPORATION 1108 W. HURON ST, 3,';’-9lj? i"'. ' ... -f ■ I - ■/ S''-. TEN it f ]|fO THE PONTIAC PRESS SATtTB^Y, NOVEMBER W, 1M8 Yule Visit Improper (gshington Had hfis fick^ hi 'Chews' Modern Teeth _^%J1B1GAIL VAN BUREN . DEAR ABBY^ Yeu said iir' your column that dentistry required years of training and practice. Well, I don’t know any-1^1 thing about I dentistry, but | 1 am a stu-1 dent of Amer-1 ft beyond his tipper. lower jaw protrudes , husbandwprks and how much time he has to spend out of town on '‘business.” The pay-off is this: Hie widow has given him a deadline. Either leave the wife anij marry her—or lose her. And he is going, around like an) idiot trying to hang onto both of them. What should be Abe EdiQy Peat Institate Q: I am Id^years old and Just recently became engaged , to a boy hi the ai^ioe. I will bevA two eff^m col-^ lege during the tbristdias tiol-' iday and nw fiance would like me to come down to ufti^e he is stationed for a few days , K 1790, when blacksmiths dqbled for dentists, there was lurc^cuse for it, but not today. the dentists, and don hand that makes it during that time. He said that I could stay with'an oHieer friend and his wife who have a house near the base. Hiis couple are unknown to me but are good friends of nay fiance. My mother doesn’t think it would be proper for me to go. What do you think ab b o u t this? Mr. and Mrs. Frank V. Regner of Elm Street will be honored at an open house Sunday at the Davisburg home of Mr. and Mrs, Earl 'J. Bwber. from. /O 7 p.m. MarriedjiiJilotJUdniaex.id^ov,-^^^^^ 18, 1913, the coupk now have fourMrs. "JJsSy StJDENT John E. Hardy arid Mrs. Harold E. Hughes of Pontiac, Mrs. Barber, and Mrs. Alvin DeLano of Port Huron, 14 grandchildren and^ children. University of Michigan Students Are Actwe in Cai^ By BARBARA GRIFFIN Many area students have participated in student spng-fests, a musical satire and sym]dH>ny orchestra concerts idiich have dominated activities at the University of Michigan this past week. ' Both the Greeks and the independents have been rehearsing for many weeks for Interquadrangle Sing which was presented Monday„ eve-, ning and Interfratemlty Sing which will be given Friday evening in Hill Auditorium. In both of these events* the women’s and men’s houses team up for the Judging. ‘ THIRD WIN Winner of IQC Sing was Martha Cook Building and Cooley House. This marks the third stra'lght year that Martha Cook has vron the first place trophy. Supporting their house effort were Sylvia Rothschild of Dwight Avenue, Candy Windeler of Hatchery Road and Carol Wargelin of Voorheis Road. TFC Sing will feature nine teams of fraternities and sororities who will be rated by judges from the School of Music. Among the groups singing will be Delta Tau Delta fraternity, supported by Ganuna Phi ^ta sorority. Directing the Gamma Phis will be their song leader Diana Owen of Auburn Road. Mary Ann Affleck of Woodward Avenue will also sing with the. Gamma Phis. back stage committees for this year’s MUSKET show which was given last weekend in Lydia Mendelssohn theater. MUSKET, wb i c h means “Michigan IMon Show—R6-" Eds Too’’ has presented student musicals recently, but chose Sandy Wilson’s well-known satire on the I920’s, “Tlie Boy Friend” for this year’s production. Playing a leading role in •^e Boy Friend” was Betty Vernan of Lake Front Drive. Betty is a senior speech major and ha? had major roles in many other university dramatic pr^uctions. The Richard ^ Matuscheks of Gfeen Lake announce die et^fogement of their daughter Jean to George R. Brandau, son of ^George Brandaus of Warren> , She was graduated ’ • from Bargess Hospital Schopr of Nursing, and her fiance from University of Detroit. lean history, | and it is a fact f that Paul Re-1 vere m a d e | George Washington’s false teeth. And Paul Revere was not a DEAR STUDENT: And if you examine a picture of George Washington, you’ll see DEAR ABBY: I’ve been sitr ting back watching a thrice-married widow wreck the home of two of our best friends, lliis couple has grandchildren ahd was ideally happy. ’Then two years ago this widow came along. She man-_ 1#ges to be everywhere this man is, even following him out of town on his business trips. The wife is a trusting soul who knows from nothing about what’s going on. She is forever telling me how hard her WA’TCHING A MESS DfcAR WATCHING: A friend oK^tb should get the man asideNmd tiy to bring him to his sbijm. (Jmigiqg from your khqwlqdge of what’s going like an eligible I Unless you are sure ( facts, stay oiit of it. might have to learn the I way, A: It will be entirely proper for you to stay with this officer and his wife, but your fiance should ask her to write to you and invite you personally to stay with them. JEAN kitUSCHEK ■ ' , -X ' , ■ ■ White W^l Worsted ^oqi \ Highlights Bddal Gown DEAR ABRY: The bride “WHA who wanted “WHAT KIND OP FOOL AM f?” sung at her Vedding showed what kind of fool she was. And, Abby. ybu showed your ignorance when you suggested “I Love You” Truly.” “Because” is poor. And ^‘I Love You Truly” is -ft: We have.two young children, a boy and a girl, and we are trying to teach them good manners. I always insist ......>y ask permission to e table after they h^ve eating. My Iftu s b a n d thinks lam cariyingNiuanners a little too far by demaiaiing this, and says it is not) I would very know irtiat you hiS^ to say about this. St. Paul’s Methodist Church broth^ Uwrenca Dove Jr* In Rochester was the setting for besthMn. Another broth-today for the mairriaipi irf er, David, . .. tor bride’s coubln, Richard H. Your husband 1 Harriet Pelle Gerald B. Conley. Por the midaftemomi ceremony, the bride, daughter of the Charles C. Maltrotts of Rochester chose a gown of white wool worsted. ★ ★ ★ Seed pearls-edged the scalloped neckline and accented w lace crown atop the short illusioii veil. 'Die bridal bride’s Way (d in thinking that you are carXgade bouquet Included pink A wedding ceremony is pert * love of a church service, and songs are out of plaie. Any qualified organist or soloist can assist fte bride in selecting appropriate wedding the game the Glee Club pre- Floyd Foren, of Lake Ange-sented a joint concert with the lus Drive. Illinois Glee Club. Singing in The Alpha Gamma Deltas ______ . this program was Gary Rel- and their dates aPpeffl:ed..^in,^ -musfe no excuse yea of jirive..GaqF-^^^^i^ costumes for for all the trash that is being is-alsff rhew member of thb their theme party last Friday night. Winning second prize for thehr portrayal of Buddhist monks were Karen Kessler of Desmond Dri^ and her date. rylng manners toolar. Every well brought up child is tau^t not to bmve. tl e table until he (or she) has asked, “Please may I be excused?” and receives permission to do so. t roses and Steph- Friara, a double quartet of glee club members which is in demand for parties around campus. played at weddings these days. ORGANIST Mark Lightfoot of McClin-tock Road was active back-stage as a member Of the stage crew during the five MUSKET performances. He also worked on the productions committee for the show. Working On the administrative end of the show was Barr, bara Harling of Birwood Drive. A member of the Central Committee, she was co-, chairman of ticket sales and' ushers. ' The Cleveland OrchOstra came to Ann Arbor last Thursday evening and played to a capacity audience. Among those students enjoying the conceit was Donna Rofe of West I^uois Road. Carol Wargelin of Vowheis Road has recently pledged Sigma Alpha Iota, a national honorary sorority for women. Carol is a Junior majoring in music education. FAIHER’S WEEKEND This weekend the Delta Gammas will honor their dads at their annual Father’s Weekend. Following the Iowa game they will attend a banquet where the Friars will sing. Enjoying the fun at the DG house Saturday will be Martha Foren and her father. Mariann Englehard of Whittemore Street has been elected philanthropy chairman of Couzens Hall. In cooperation with the Women’s League Community Services committee, the philanthropy chalr- What’s on your mind? For a personal reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, in care of Hie Pontiac Press. Q: We have just received a printed announcement of the opening of a dental office by the son of friends of ours. Will you please tell me if this requires any acknowledgment? 1 Canfield of San her aister’4i matron of'bpnor, appeared in an AJlne di^ of turquoise sheer wool ancKheld a cascade of pink carnbUons. The bridegroom, bop of Mrs. Lawrence Dove of'ftit. late Clemens Street and the William Conley, had men are preparing Ibanksgiv- jng- • ■ * ' i|ng baskets for deserving families in the Ann Arbor area. The men of Evans Scholars Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to ABBY, in care of Hie Pontiac R-ess, for Ab* by’s new booklet, “HOW TO WRITE LETTERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS.” A: No acknowledgement is necessary. It was sent to let you know where his office is located should you virant to go to him. When you see the young dentist you wish him success In his new office. Worker Earns Much Faster \ •1^ are enjoying a new color tele- AuXlliarV MoetS vision set which they won for their homecoming display. ‘The Original Roaring Twenties.” The display, which won the over-all prize annng housing units, included/ 20 monsters, dressed in coptumes of the 1920s. Helping to construct their winning display was Tom McGfath of Niagara Road. for Instructions MUSiaANS Playing in the MUSKET orchestra was sophomore Jean Huttula of Roselawn Street. Jean is also a member of tee University Symphony Orchestra which presented their first concert of the season Thursday evening under the direction of Josef Blatt. ■ __A.--.#........... ' Among the many Michigan students who went to Illinois last webkertd to support the Wolverines as they pulled an upset victory over the Illini were members of the Michigan Men’s Glee Club. After Local Group Has Oil Tour Not Only N.Y. Women Aware The Waterford Jaycee Auxiliary will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday in' CleO’s Handicraft Shop on Saginaw Road for instructions in making holiday decorations. Mrs. Robert Wright of Clayton Road will open her home, for the meeting following the workshop. The EmUy Poat Institute offers readers booklets on a variety of subjects concerning etiquette. If you would like the booklet entitled, “The Bride’s Trousseau,” send 10 cents in coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to tee Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mall but all questions of general in-terost are answered in this column. The average factory worker in the United States today can purchase his family’s monthly food needs with the income from 37 hours of work. A decade ago, it took 51 hours to purchase the same amount of Wherever. iC'»'Wh«i|eveif t However YourTnivel vv# > 5)^ X^LLUS TRAVEL CENTER SB K. nil-»i\ New Chairman Rehearsing extensively to regain tee first place trophy from Delta Upsllon is Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Among the Alpha Phis supporting them will be Linda Underhill of Joy Road and Jiidy Hinkley of Illinois Avenue. Linda has been busy at , the sewing machines all week as she is head of the costumq committee for f5r Alpha Nu the Alpha Phis. ' The team of Alpha Chi Omega and Theta Xi fraternity will carry out the theme of “Annie Get Your Gun” for their performance Friday night. Singing with the Alpha Chls will be Dodle Duckwitz of Sweetbr Uc Road and Phyllis Beneicke of Lakevlew Court Jim Hansford of Cedar Hill iVlve will sing with the Theto Xis. Several Pontiac students had stage roles or worked on Alpha Nu chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa sorority appointed Mrs. Richard McCall as philanthropic chairman, Thursday in the home of Mrs. Ronald Voorheis on Ormond Road. A donation will be made to a Pontiab school in need of supplementary educational material. Last season, the group assisted Joyce Hofman, a Peace Corps representative teaching |n Malaysia. Members of the Waterford-Clarkston Business and Professional Women’s Club toured Oakland university'with Penny Barrett, sophomore student following a dinner meeting Thursday. Harry Bandy, manager of the Tandy Crafts shop at the Pontiac Mall demonstrated the making of honeycomb candles. Mrs. Oliver Dunstan, Mrs. L. V. Kline and Mrs. Bandy assisted with tee Workshop and distributed materials to make candles at home. Guests at the meeting were Mrs. Frank Benning, Mrs. Jerry Thomas, Velma Britton, Maude McCurry and Mrs. Philip LaBarge. Designer Teal Tralna says it isn’t true that women, across the country aren’t as fashion conscious as those in New York. He based his say-so on a pulse taken while jtiiging a show in Oklahoma City, “A fashion conscious wbinan today isn’t a mouse,” he said. “She visualizes herself as a' tender trap — as glamorous Farrri and GarderLCluh Has Gift Making Lesson Mrs. Allan Montelte of St. Mrs. Richard Redding pre-Joseph Road was hostess to sided In the absence of the the Sylvan Manor Branch. 1 president. Mrs. Kenneth Sen-Woman’s National Farm and' lor was appointed new fl^er Checks'Check In' for Jumper Wear Garden Association on Thdrs-day. Mrs. F. E. Lane and Mrs. Leonard Paholak assisted. Itte check and double-check for the little miss who wants fashion in a jumper. One good-looking version is of black, In her program “Unusual Christmas Gift Making” Mrs. William Tiberg displayed some 30 items which included decorated stationery and tree trimmings. show chairman and Mrs. Russell Buffett will handle orders for Candle wax. Residents of the Lakeview Convalescent Home will be visited by Mrs. Merle Smith and Mrs. Buffett this month. Mrs. Albert Hulsmah and Mrs. Mac Miller are planning the Christmas porject for the red checks with straight pleats falling from a blasyidce. rActs About mARMACY ByHOWARD L Dili —«m*ie athih ihimuMiiW—l iwwwdi-iiww rni- i m iJiikli cwt iwSw Mn.fdlwailrfliaaaU,. * laidMiB nuHimoy 21BBsIMb£ ow to Make YOUR HOME SPARKLK New Way professional cleaning methods — will restore the original luster and color to your mgs. ,1—add lire to Mor ruB«, hove ikem olwmea by Now Way. 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DOME IN ssS BROWSE Our TPained Specialists Are Here To Serve You,* 4* See Our lltefric HMt un4 Q| luHt-in 175 $4 PE 2-9261 » AMACINT te OW SigWMOM '■ .. ; 1' CALFSKIN BAGS L nifMlia MR YMI , , inniHii. niHiiiiMB pric* for suppla, ^ ;ift«d handbag! lm« for Chrittmai H •know!tyl*!» dll lu Imfiirlout look. flRRlRJC WR tiwTr •• ily luxurioui look. 9tn block or colon. . . . plurtho car* in ityllng and toilorlng by tho Amoricon maktr ... aiiuros you of im-.mlitakoblo valuoi Chooio woihfast plaldi in lubdutd ^ ombro tdnoi. WARD’S BEST TABU mONINQ TABLE WITH FAD Signaluro Ironing tabio ad-|uit! in* standing or sH;* ting. Corvod logs allow you moro room. Whooli on roar foot for mobility; iwhfol front foot to Idvol tabio. STORE 9:3BAM.1o9dnP.pL HOURS MOHDAYfHRUSAlUr Moll PNOME 682-4040 Tolograpli il ElhaboHi Liko Roai I'':'Ml... ■:ir JM' Cultural Series to \ Begin The cultural a by CongregaUon B’nal Israel aad Temple Beth will Tea-, -----------------tbia year. at 8:30 p.hi, Nov. *<> Coiipre-gatlon B’nai Israel, 143 Oneida. A gradjjate of the JeWfv ‘oglC‘* Theolo'gldal Seminary^ writer on psychiatric and/thw logicid themes, Babbi .Rubinstein was one of 29^iritual leaders uiio paid a v^lt to Birmingham, Ala., to participate in the demonstration led by Or. KKig. : Martin Luther J A iueetion and answer period will ftillQw Ms address.' The SisteiTOod of the synagogue #ill se^e refreshments. Cochairmen at« Israel Goodihan, host rab^i. and Dr. Maurice 'riiome. T|ie public is invited. ; Mexico City Host for 1st , -■---I Meeting ST. LUKE’S 1^: W a yn e~Srookshear leading the study course fo adults at 10 a.tn. each Sunday in St.“Luke’s Methodist Church. This is a special ciass studying the foundations of Christian teaching in the churches. The .course will continue for f 6 u A drama group currently in rehearsal will present a play entitled “The Choir’’ shortly after Christmas’. The play is visible sketch of what a choir tl^inks while the m i n i s t e prwies. the sOr'inon. FIRST METHODIST “Point the Way” wiil be the sermon topic of Rev. Carl G. Adams at First iM e t h o d i s t Church for both the 8:30 'and 11 a.m. services tomorrow. Some circles of Woman’s Society of Christian Service will meet at noon ’Tuesday. Others will get together in the evening. At 7:30 (p.m. the Flint District is inviting all workers with children! to a workshop. Harriet Palmer of Saginaw will be in charge. Prayer Fellowship and Bible study are planned for 7:30 The first meeting of Iho Commission on. World Mlsi^n and Evangelism o^ the World Council of Churches will be held in Mexico City, Dec. 8^20, to sWcfy^ ’‘God’s IMissted ind Our Task.” ' About 200 churchmen fiiom six continents are expected; to Attend. Delegates appointed; by the national Christian councils affiliated with the Commission will confer at Union Theological Seminary and the Sarah Alarcon d 1 s t Girls’ School. -- tur, clinical director of th children’s program at Pontiac State Hospital will speak on Children and Mental Health.’’ Hosts and hostesses include Mr. and Mrs. Victor Brown, the Reginald Whartons, the Ford Everetts and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis. Wednesday evening. The commission, on membership and evangeli.sm will be in session following Bible study. At 6, p.m Friday the Booster Class will meet for a cooperative dinner at the church. The Pioneer youth group will view and discuss the film, film, “Monganga.” The picture features a missionary doctor in Africa. | “Living Without Inner I Tension” will be the theme of Rev. Paul D. Cross’ sermon tomorrow morning. He is assistant pastor of the church. MACEDONIA The music department of Macedonia Baptist Church, 612 Pearsall Will obseiye anniversary services at 3:30 .p.m Sunday. The choir of Secoijd- Baptist Church, Detroit and the choir The Junior Choir will sing Bless Thou Our Gifts” and A Hymn of Thanks.” Carl Leedy will be heard in “The Beatitudes” by Malotte. The Fred Sartells and Mr. and Mrs. Richard J, Pattison will be coffee hour hosts.' JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES Among those baptized Saturday into the ministry of Jehovah’s Witnesses were G 1 o r i a W a 11 s, Elin Smith, Colleen Smith, Joanne Barnowsky and Ail religions include in their doctrine the injunction, “Thou Shalt not Mil.” Standing on this common ground, religious leaders, both national and local, have combined their efforts to press forward safety programs. Because Christmas is essentially a religious holiday, church leaders are conducting a nationwide reiigious emphasis traffic safety campaign. You can -support this campaign through the church of your choice. —National l^fety Council the afternoon with the Rev. Edward M. Lovely, associate professor of University of Detroit, and Dr. James H. Laird.of Central Methodist Church, Detroit. A half hour discussion period will follow their presentation. During the latter part of the afternoon the dialogue topic will be “The Nature of the Christian Church.” Participants wilt be Rev. Donald F. Schroeder, director of family life education Detroit Council of Churches, and the Rev. William J. Sherzer, Sacred Heart SeminaihJ', Detroit. ... ^ p -a-■ Chairman of the day, which has been planned by a steering CQmmittee of >16 Protestant, Catholic and Jewish clergymen, will be the Rev. Thomas F. Hinsberg of< Sacred Heart Seminary, Dietroit. Advisors, observers fr^ other world chnreh bodies, d stMf Bishop Lesslie Newbigin, director of the WCC Division, has observed that the image evoked by the word “missions” is still shaped by the experience of the colonial era. There are more than 200 missionaries of the Aslan churches going from their own countries to work in other parts of Asia and Africa, he pointed out. The Orthodox churches will participate for the first ^e in such discussions, the WCC reports, and the meeting “will not only represent six continents but wiil face six continents” imong them several where Christianity is still a mioority religion. Take Tour of Coni^ent Chairman of the Clergy Friends of Gakland University is the Rev. J. W. Angerman of First Presbyterian Cljprch, Bir- The St. Paul Guild of St. Michael's Catholic Church Will meet at 8 p M. Tuesday in. the church prior to making a tour I of the St. Miichael’s Convent. Meetings to Close Guest at BJoomfiel Rev, Fred C. Renich, execU' tive director of Missionary In» ternship Inc., of Farmington will speak toniorrow on the closing day of the spiritual y f ® meetings being held at Bloomfield. Hills Baptist Church, 3600 Telegraph. their . Services will be ^ 11 a.m. \and 6 p.m. The /murch choir under the direct^ of Rick Hart-soe will sing^ both services. Pastor Har^ W. Gieseke said the public Xinvited.' Leading mission boards send (ccepted candidates to (nary Internship w h e r spend seven months in-ilng in various churches un-the guidance of the local pastor. The movement is gaining nationwide attention for its success in preparing missionaries for foreign service, Pastor Gieseke said. Missidi Group Sponsors Ti^q REV. FRED C. RENICH . i. - ' The Tennessee , Group of Bray Temple C.M.E^. fs spon-mrlng a green leaf tea from i to 5 p.niv on Nov, 24 at the church located at 320 Rockwell.' Mrs. Cornelia Cobb, chairman, said the proceeds will benefit the building fund. Rev. R. H. McEwen is pastor. Vera Tl^ssen, home on leave from (Mia, Bunia, the former Belgi^ Congo, will speak at the Roman’s Assoclalibn meet-_ of Pine Hill Congregational Turch at 8 p. m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Alvin Sass, 1576 Kirkway, Bloomfield Hills. f * ir Under the African Inland Mission Board, Miss Thiessen has spent the last five years in treating leprosy. Besides nurs-iPA she also contributes to the teaching of French and writing. Mrsi Jared Welsh is in charge of the program. “To Comfort All Who Mourn” will be the theme of Rev. Harry Clark’s r sermon at .11 a. m. Sunday. Services are currently being held In the Pine Lake Elementary School, one mile west of Middle Belt on West Long Lake Road. The Pine Hill Choir under the direction of H. Barnard Ernst will sing “The Silent Sea.’^ Mrs. Ernst will take solo imrts. Young people will gm togeth-’ at 4 p. m. tomorrow in the home of Jane Pervogel, 2253 Somerset Road. Julie Cliam-berlaln of Lansing and Pat Rit-tenhaus wjil relate their experiences on their pilgrimage tQ Greece, . CARRY CLOTHING-Joseph Laramie of 5110 Orchard Lake Road, West Bloomfield Township, left, and Steve Tray-nor of ,3087 Brock, Keego Harbor take shirts, shoes, dresses and coats to Our Lady of Refuge Church during the annual Catholic drive for used clothing. ^ To Celebrate Anniversary Congregation Honors New Hope Minister Dr. and Mrs. Bradley will be hosts to the board of social action Tuesday eveni|V. The first anniversary of Rev. and Mrs. G. B. Ballard as pas-of New Hope Baptist Church. 382 Bloomfield, will be celebrated Monday through. NOv. 24 with Rev. L. R. Miner and the congregation of Macedonia Baptist Church guests the first evening. Serviees will start at 7 p.m. Rev. Brief Dyer of Mt. Olive Baptist and Rev. Waiter Rowe Of Antioch Baptist with their congregations will be on hand Tlu^ay evening. ‘The Friendship Baptist and hers with Rev. Alvin Hawkins and Rev. R. H. McEwen will be Wednesday guests. Rev. V. L. Lewis and congregation of St. James Missionary Baptist Church will visit the New Hope Church Thursday evening. Coming from Detroit, Friday, will be Rev. R. W. Wright with a group from the Mt. Zion Baptist Church. The Missionary Society will sponsor a talent show at 3:30 pjn. Sui^ay. Mrs. Walter Barnes is general chairman. Anrioal Thank Offering dt Bloomfield Chapel The Women’eC^isslonary Society of Bloomfield Chapel, 1330 W, Square Uke Road will present the annual thank offering at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, r Rev. Orville Wolff, missionary interim, will present a film on “Missionaries in Bras(l • Land o( Opportunity, I'Oday.” EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 645 S. Telegraph Rd. (Near Orchard Lake Rd.) M Fundamtintal, Independent, Bible Believing BaptUt Church HEAR ORRELL QUAI SUNDAY, NOV 17th Dr. Tom Malotw, hUor WPON 10i13-ia45 A.M. nmm AT All, $H/ICK BUS TKANSPOSTATION CAU « }.S3Ja JOYC6.MALONE, birtetor ef atw’c THE BIBLE HOUR 10 A.M. TWO GREAT SERVICES HAM. 7 A.M. In the 1,200 Seat AuditoYlutn Baptism Every Sunday Nigfif School Attendance Loit Syn. 1515 THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY. NO\fEMgER 16, 1963 THIRTEEN Ath«m by Salathld ot 1st Congrgeational ■Tl>y I Great" win be the topic of V. Malcolm X. Burton’s to Fint /^nn^tional CburdU Sunder momtaig. Tlw Ohai^ Choir win be Heard hl/Wa anthem, ‘‘Consider ^ f Me” by Lyndon choirmaster and. o^ of First Presbi^h^ I. Mrs. Dodge Melkoniaiir SiO{L“^ Lord Be Mercifui' by Bartle».“^—_ To worship rightly is to love each other, each sqiile a hymn, each kindly deed a prayer. -John Greenleaf Whittier. MORNING WORSHIP tIAM First Christian Church DISCIPLES of CHRIST - iMMcRj:. awk, Sailer ass W. Huron Sk BIBLE rebinding CHRISTIAN , LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 United Presbyterian Churches OAKLAND AVENUE Odidond of Oodlllae Ihoedara R. AlWbodL PkMlar Aidi^UmlpnoikYevA Pbador Morning Worjislp.. lOiOO A.M. Sundoy School... 11i20AJA Voulh MeoHngs... St45 PM Evening Worship .. 7i00 PM WodnMoy jPlrci^.. 7i00 PM AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Plrlmoiy Street F.Wm.Mmar,rwer 9i30 AM — Sunday School 11.00 AM-MornIng Worship Youlh Fallovi«hi^lS~PM^ .DRAYTON Drayton Plains, Michigan I School.... 9.45 A.M laming WoWhIp.. 11.00 AM YooA Oreups .... di30 PM Wednesday Rnoyer and Study Hour . . . 7.30 PM Churchmen Promoting Fair Housing In qiecial ncUon, the board of directors of the Berkek^ Area (Calif.) Counell of Churches recently commended ‘those church organizatioas. churches, churchmen, ciUaens. and reaitors who have promoted fair housing.’,: the present state law, the Rumford Fair Homing Uw, said 1ha,.bserd; should be implemented ancT protected , from any attempts to repeal dr id it. Uoderseering that the Coun-cO’s statement was not bind- that all citizens encourage' members of the housing and real estate industry to support the Rumford low. Direct action by churchmen and others, said thC statement, should include confrontation and conversations with the dustry representatives and “the promotion of suitable legialation and buying policies’’ to ensure 'equality of opportunity in for all people deapite differences in race, religion, ancestry or national origin.’’ Dr. Bruce K. Wood is executive director of the Berkeley Area Council of Churches. God hath not promised skies always blue, flowei-strewn pathways all our lives through. God hath not iwomised stin without rain, Joy without sorrow, peace without pain. Blit God hath promised strength for the day, rest for the laborer, light on the way, iP'ace for the trial, help hrom above, unfailing sympathy — undying love. — Author JmoTOr jGkddepests. 7"^ Ghrisfs Churg! of Light/ NON4}ENOMINATte Lolui taka Sc|iool,Walarford Cor. Porey KMo ^ Horpar 9t. Sunday Sch^l 9.45 AM Worship / 11.00 AM. (n call OR 3-7dSQ OR 3-4710 Study DIVINE PLAN OF THE ACES" With ^TIAC BIBLE STUDENTS ECCLESIA u Pontiac YMCA ' Evary Saturday . . . 7 to 9 P.M. ' ALLIANCE ' CHURCH M-S9otN. Com Lake Rd. FIRST UNITED . MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 North East Blvd. FE 4-1811 Pastot, WM. K. BURGESS SUNd/y school ......... 10 A.M. WORSHIP.............. 11 AM. Gommunion EVENING WORSHIP ........ .7 P.M. ’ "Th« Pool of Bathasdo^^__ All Saints Episcopal Church Wllliariis St.'ot W. Pike St. The REV. C. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD The REV. WM. E. LYLE Auoclola The REV. ALEXANDER T. STEWART Vkar 8(00'AM. Holy Communion 9i15 A.M. - Morning Prayer, Holy Baptism and Sermon by the Rector. Chuith School 11, ti A M. ~ Morning Prayer ond Sermon by the Rector. Church School Thuri. Nov. 21-10 A.M. - Holy Commi*.,ion ' CHURCH of the RESURRECTION I. CW.*. e—"■ THE REV. ALEXANDER T, STEWART, Vkor O.aQ g.tn.—Holy Communion ond S4rmon__ II WHbon, wrestling: coach, Pontiac Northern High School, TvUl speak to the senior high youth grbup of Msrimont Baptist Church during the 6:30 pjlLJerylce tonwrrow._____ FOR MISSI0NS-Mrsy4. Q. Hashman, lected for missions by young people of her superintendent of the sedior and youth de- department. The youths will use the money partment of the Sund^ School at First As- to provide Christmas for a family in the sembly of God ChurolC receives money col- OrientJ^ey adopted Tor the holiday. Adopt P/oh Christmas hr Fqrhily The /irst Assembly of God, 218 NTPerfy is expandtag^^^^^^^ mljdlonary program through the lay School. Currently the jation contributes toward the support of 11 missionary ifamtlles in foreign lands. Ryery department of the church is being madeTlware oT the importance and responsibil- Pack Boxes at Oakland for Families Xteacons of the Oakland Avenue United PresbiMaitChurch will pack boxes Of groceries and clothing for needy families of the area at 7 p. m- Tuesday. \ Those meeting for the task are Mr. and Mrs. Clarl Comer, the Walter'Wessers, the Ralph Osbornes, Mr. and Mrs. Her: man Reeder, Mrs. Edna Math-eny, Mrs. Walter Napersky, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Tanner, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Shepherd. The midweek Bible study and prayer hour is at 7 p.m. Wednesday. “Stewardship" will be the subject of Rev. Theodore R. Allebach’s sermon at 10 a. m-Sunday. The Men’/Chorus will sing tomorrow night ndien 70 awards are given to Pilgrim, CloloniSt and Duide Girls. Mrs. Allebach will give a chalk talk. Youth groups will get together at 5:45 p. m. with the Pioneers discussing “If You Were a Parent” and the Builders talking over the subject of i^itnessing. I ain profitably engaged in reading the Bible. Take ail of, this Book upon reason that you can, and the balance upon faith, and you will live and die a better man. — Abraham Lincoln. fll^ST SOCIAL Brethren church 3,16 Baldwin FE 4-7631 Sunday School.. -1 OiOO AM. Sunday Wonhlp J 1,00 A M. Sunday Evening .. 7i30 P.M. W«d. Prayer . . . 7<30 PM. Saturday Service 7130 P.M, Rev. tammy Gueif, Pui tor re 2-0364 ity of thp churches to mission fields: The boys and girls Have aerogram called “Boys’ and Girls’ Crusade" which providers printed literature Jo aid missionaries. I One such project furnished MRS. BOBBY WHITE (PLAN MU3IC-^Mrs. Bobby White, general chairman, and Mrs. Clenruner Page, chairman, plan the- program for the musicale slated for 3:30 p.m. Sunday at Provldenca Missionary Bapttat Church. Participating will be the Morning Doves, Spiritual Singers and the Charmel Chautauqua ^oup Will Be Hoiiored , The congregation of Temple Beth Jacob will honor the Jewish Chautauqua Society at the 8:30 p.m. Sabbath Services Friday. Since 1893 the society has served college campuses in the United States and abroad with free speakers and free books. In about 58 instances the soft aiety provided full-time resident 'M^turers on Jewish religion and culture, all paid for by the Chautauqua Society. Friday’s speaker will be Av Bondarin, associate executive director of the National Federation of Temple Brotherhoods in New York. “I am convinced that highway aafety is a spiritual problem and that we Christians have a definite obligation to drive carefully and safely on the highways. Most people do not aasdeiate careful and safe driving with spiritual living, but there is a definite connection." MARIMONT BAPTIST GHURCH 68 W. Walton '■".. FE 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL..........................10 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP HOUR..........'..IhOOA.M. "THE proclamation OF GOD" PASTOR SOMERS, SPEAKING EVENING SERVICE ..................7,30 P.M. "NEW SHELTER" ^ . Philip W. Someri, Jr., Speaking ________Public C^rdiaHy Invhad ._______ ' ,• :• '■ ' .V ^ ■■ ^ Bill WilBon the Speaker DtiCttfr^ Young People Charles Malik Book Catholics Predominate Forty - one per i*ent Of the population of Philadelphia is Catholic, says a study of the city in Catholic Market nulga-zine. Last year; notes the study, S8 per-cent of alt newborn babies ill the city were bom into Catholic families. . Claudette BexeU wiU be in charge of the Junior high youth group. Alice Cooper will lead in the discussion of the book, “Christ and Crisis” by Charles Malik et the Teens & ’Twenties group meeting. • Young People will sponsor a aingspiration after the evening service at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John dark. Anlbra Lewis', Janet Schtder, Rick Wlnkley, Charles Morgan and Harry Smades will participate In the Innioi-H" Church program tomorrow. The All for Christ dass of the Sunday School will have a party at 7:80 p. m. Monday ini the home of Mr. atkl^ Miller Gavette. I ’The ’ Colonist and Eta Chi group of Pioneer Girls and the battalion group of Christian Service Brigade will meet at the church Friday evening before going to Roy’s Ranch at Walled Lake for a bayride. gospel tracts to cover the entire population of a city in Japan---- ★ » ★ Rev. Samuel • Beckdahl and family, missionaries to Tanganyika, East Africa, have been adopted by the congregation. ’Their birthdays and holidays remembered^wlth gifts. The family will be on the present assignment for five years. Bishop's Company Dramatizes Book Stephen Vincent Benet’s “The Devil and Daniel Webster" will be dramatized by the Bishop’s Co. in dffSn^Kurai eJanb^ qt 8 p.m. Nov. 24. Mrs. Arnold Q. Hashman, wife of the pastor, works with the youth of the church in mission work.^ ’The recent offering for missions will be used to provide Christmas gifts for the Beckdahls. Drivor Usually at fault in Autamabile Accident In far too many situations where death or injury occura in automobile accidents the driver is at fault. His carelessness, neglect Or reckless conduct causes the death or injury. From a legal viewport, juch conduct is q <^ime. From a moral and religious viewpoint, these actions are sinful. ■k ★ ★ Each nf-na has an Obligation, b seek an enlightened and educated conscience. It is tor this reason we urge, with the utmost seriousness, that every driver reflect upon the moral obligations he aaqumes. —Catholic Bishops of United States The production presents the situation qf Daniel Webster, American statesman and lawyer, who attends the wedding of Mary and Jabez Stone and finds himself defending Jabez against the Devil. BIRMINGHAM ^ , UNITARIAN CHURtH • Ml Woedword Avf: at Ion* l>lm Id. MaomfWd H>H> Ml 7-2300 Church School_o^ N»f4«fy lp_30 oj BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST church 3600 Telegraph Rood Jut, north of Long Lok* Road 10 A.M. Sunday School Closing Day of SPIRITUAL LIFE MEETINGS U AM ond 6 PM ' Rov. Frad C. Renich 5 P.M. Youth Groups Harold W. Gisiaks, Pastor Tel.! 647-3463 According to the story when times were hard Jabez had become discouraged andt in a fit -o£-ten)per,^-aai(i-Jia--woald- sell his soul to the Devil. Mr. Scratch, the Devil, appeared and wheq Jabez made a deal with' him, he immediately began to prosper. Ten years later on Jabez’ wedding day Mr. Scratch came to collect. The English theater was born before the altar of the church. Asking the audience to share in the creation of the play iq part of the technique of the company which uses no props. Founded by Phyllis B. Bo-kar in 1952, the Bishop’s Co. is named in honor of Bishop Gerald H. Kennedy of the Methodist Church. The company is interracial and interfaith. ’There is no Admission charge. NORTI^ EAST COMMUNITY CHURCH—^ EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN 620 Mt. ,CI*m#n» ot FoothM^iton* 11 A M. Sermon: "Flr$t Things for Chriitioni" Wednesday, 7 P.M. Choir Rehearsal , 8 P.M. Bible Study and Prayer ,1. 6. SCHEIFEIE, Postoiy FE 8-1744 The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET Sunday School 9:45 A.M.-Young People's Legion 6 P.M. Morning Worship 11 AJVl.-Evangelistic Meeting 7:00 P.M. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 P.M. LIEUT ond MRS GARY^CRQWELL CoW Muilc-Sliislna-JVw 10 ifc« r«nl Praochfiif God Meets, Wl»h US -yofi. Too, Are Invited FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN , 46 NoHH Roselayvn 10 A.M. SUNDAY SCHCX3D WESltY OaVAULT, SUPT, WORSHIP HOUR 11 A.M and 7 P.M R«v. L. W. Blockvytll, Poitor ________________re a-2412____________________ PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST 1180 hf. PERRY ST. , FE 2-6269 Listen to the "Herold of Truth" Each Sunday—CKLW, Chon. 9-11 A M. BIBLE STUDY 8:45 A M, and 11:05 AM. Clotses tor all ages MORNING WORSHIP i T.r.9j45'A.M. ^ "The Bridegitooms' Porting Words'' ' Sundoy Evening . > 6iOQ P.M; "The Church" BOYD C. GLOVER Evangelist ”€HRISTIANT’SYCHIC-SCIENCE CHURCH 12WorrenSt. Speaker 7:30 P.M. Silver Teo, Wednesdoy 7i30 P.M. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECTlorlUNDAY. MORTALS and IMMORTALS Sunday Services and Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Wednesday Evening Services 8 P.M. Teadrng"Room ‘ 14 VV.' Huron’Sr Open Dully M A.M. to 5 RM.* Friday to 9 P.M. First Church of Christ Scientist Lawrence ond Williams tSlreeis PONTIAC 9:45 A.M. ..SUNDAY. ' SPEAKS^ |t6y<)u| CKLW 800 KC FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 3411 Airport Rood Independent and Fundamental 10:00 A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Worship Service 7:30 Choir Presents "Let No Mon Tok* Your Crown" Special! ond Scenery ’ SILENT CLASS 10 A.M. Rev. Al Kosten, poster ' ■ PONTIAC UNITY CHURCH, .8-N*-Genesee^€orner W. Huron) 335-2773 H A.M.-SUNDAY SCHOOL WEDNESDAY 11 A.M.-MORNING WORSHIP 8:00 P.M. EVERETT A. DELL, Minister; "The Study Of Prayer" COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave..— FE 5-9960 Sunday School9:45 A M. Morning Worship . ... 11:00 A.M. Training Union .A ...... 6:00 P.M. EtfflningiWQCsbip--——P.M. Midweek Service (Wed.). 7:45 P.M. AKlIioted with Iho Southern Batitijt Convention CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 347 N. Saginaw Merrit H. Boker, Min,. Bible School 9,45 A.M. Morning WoriHip 11 A.M. "The Pre-eminence ot Jesus Christ" Evongellitlc Service 7 P.M. Youth Service 6 P.M. "Some Folse Notions about God" Wed. Bible Study 7>30 P.M. f friendly Church Clow To The Heorl ot Ihtnlloc FIRST ASSEMbI^ of GOD 210 N. PERRY STREET PRESENTS A GOD GIVEN MESSAGE FOR THESE LAST DAYS . . . WITH THE "Gospel Ambassadors^' HEAR! COME! The outstanding testimony ahd anointed preaching^ of these servants of God. II Robert Bolen |s an American Baptist and Gilbert ? Rodriguez a Preibyteriam hav«h both received the ^ Pentecostal/Baptlsm of "Act 2:4. This experience | Is for every Christian belleVb?. Act INNING SUN.,NOV. 17 - 11:00 A.M. m THROUGH-SUN. NOV. 24. services NIGHTLY EXCEPT MONDAY 'Dbn't Miss One of These Services" SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. BE IN OUR GREAT SUNDAY S HOOL RALLY Paitor Arnold Q. Hoshmon A. If''' FOURTEEN th:^ pqntiao prf.s« Saturday, NOVEMBEfR le, loeg Recognition Service for Rev. R. H. Rosche A service of recognition, fw Rev. Raymond H. Rosche as minister of visitation will be held'^in cmnection with both w 0 r 8 h i p services of Orchard Lake Community Church, .Presbyterian tQpiorrow. -, . ' i The Rev Mr. Rosche who came to Orchard Lake after 21 years as pastor of the Presby-terian Church of the Covenant in New York City, wili' participate in the wbrship services. Rev. Edward D. Anchard, pastor, will preach. WjHiam Dogget, chairman of the session recognition commit- Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Geisler will be in the reception line with the pastors and their wives. tMrs.'lJlarerice^rown ancT'k&s. SMINGFiaO MISSIONARY BAmST CHURCH IRS W. m* St.' •SUNDAYSCMOa............9.45 A.M. MORNING SOVICE........ ...11.00 A.M. IVENINO SaviCE.......... 7.30 PM. BlllE STUDY W«f.Ev(. RwtJ»uMtA>i>«A poMOf ' Williams Lake _ Church^L-the Nazarene 2840 Airport Road Pout Colemdii Miniuer 10 A.M.-SUNDAY SCHOOL It AM-WORSHIP HOUR 7 P.M.-WORSHIP HOUR The Church of Christ in Faith and Practice invites you to attend services eoch: Sunday Morning 10:30 A.M. Sunday Evening 7:00 P.M. Wednesday Evening 7.00 P.M. 87 Lafayette St. 1 Block from Sears I Pit. FE 5-1993 FE-8-2071 to Jhe congregation. Also ing part in the special service will be Rev. Robert H. Yolton, field administrator for National Missions of United Presbyterian in the De^it and Lake Fbiron Presbyteries. Council to Hear Views From Exchange Students ■ summer in Germany, Jane and . Dick In Sweden, Carol in Eng-1 , Clifford Bentley is chairinan ► of the GWCC exchange student, program. He has his sights on expanded support by various groups to enable m«pe youpg^ sters to participate. Richard. Reese will be in charge of r^ceshments. The Senior High Fellowship will meet at 8 p.m. Sunday and Pastor Auchard will teach an Inquir3l0 PM. Nursery at oil Services lorge Parking Lot. draft of proposed home rule enabling legislation for Michigan’s 83 counties was prepared for the Wayne Caunty Board of Supervisors yesterday. The board ‘ expected tract onItNov; 36. - Stefan Moreh of Sweden, both Kettering students, and Waterford Township High students ►Per Ahlstrom from Sweden and Uruguay’s Christina Villar. Local students «4io will relate last summer’s travel experiences are Kettering’s Jane Dikeman, GInny Fry Jack Davis anf Carol Howerth and Pamela Mtorgaa, DI o k Miller and Pat French of WTHS. For Exceptional Children 4f apprwedi- itr wiH"b^ to the legislature. Home rule would extend more authority to counties. Gouneif Provides Christian Training A FRIENDLY WIICOMH AWAITS YOU AT THE GOOD SHEPHERD assembly of god rOM 8«(t lok* M. Woli*tbnlT6»i»hlp Sunday School........ ■ • 10 A.M. Morning Worihip...... 11 AM. Evt. Evongtl Set. ....7.30 PM. J> education of exceptional persons. Mrs. M a y n h r d Johnson of Bethany Baptist Church with the assistance of Rev. Chalmer Mas-tin, Christian education.director at Bethany, organized the first group. It is a class for retarded children held each Sunday from 10:30 a-m. to noon at Central Methodist Church, 3883 Highland Road. ‘ Mrs. Jqhnson, the counseling teacher, is aided by Mrs. Jack Newman of All Saints Episcopal Church, Mrs. James Van Cleave of First Methodist Church and Mrs. John Miller of Central Methodist. The present enrollment is five. The youngsters are studying the life and teachings of Jesiis with particular e m -phasiS on their applicability to the lives of these children. Sunday Night—7:30 ' - HEAR THE - CALVARYMEN Quartet of Flint with Chuck Cassin, .. .Mc."Hyromitno" hiacd ovet»WMUifM.4>ighilv aUhe . Evangelical Missionary Church 2800 Watkins Lake Rd., ot Bukk St., neor The Market # A Froa gift Song Book to ovar/owt pr*i*f4 oi 7.30 # Sunday Schoot tO AM. Praodwvg at 11 A M. e Rodio-80 — CKiyV Sunday at 7 30, AJA. A M. Boughny, Pol oj)M ♦ SUNDAY SCHOOL ♦ MORNING SERVICE ♦ RADIO BROADCAST Station CKIW ♦ YOUTH FELLOWSHIP ♦ EVENING SERVICE ♦ MID-WEEK PRAYER SERVICE •Wtdntidoy ♦ RADIO BROADCAST SaturdoytStation WBEG 9i45 Oiin. I0i45 a.m. litOO o.m. 5i45 p.nia LOO p.m. 4 L30 p,n. 6iIS p.m. OAKLAND I SAGINAW RcPa Robert SheltonoPnitor llM« M M N Ulb sliiM ua - Mcbigw'i FIRST Biirtlit cl^ The I hour and a half goes far too 'quickly t& incorporate all the music, activities, lessons and devotional material planned. We spend a great deal of time just getting acquainted,” said Wrs. Johnson. * ‘Each child deserves and wants the kind of education pror .vided by a Christian Church School class. This one is interdenominational. The teachings we want to irtiare with these children are basic to all Christian religion,” she added. We know from hiStbry what happens when men and civilizations stray from the path of God. Their Immediate endeavors may be successful, but eventually they are doomed to decay. Communism contains within itself the seeds of its own destruction. — J. Edgar Hoover. DRAYTON PLAINS BAPTIST CHAPEL . 3800.W. Waboii BM. David Grayson School SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 AM morning WORSHIP 11 A.M. Call FE 5-3958 REV. BILL DINOFF CHURCH Of"jESUS CHRIST o( lotof Doy Solnii, 19 from Sf. ' U A.M. Sttv.ic« . (Idw Jarotd Oullood 7 P.M. Strvlc* Cld«r Allrnl Sirtling • 4 a?W Mrs. Johnson went on to say “the exceptional chlM can find the fulfillment, the self expression^ the joy In living the way of Jesus Christ. We hope to provide the channel.” OUier classes for exception^ children will be made available through the council of churches when needed. Anyone knowing of a child that might like to attend the class may contact Mrs., John- FIFTH STEP-Shlrley Perkins of 425 Brooks, left, and Millie Edward of 770 First cook a spaghetti dinner for the Junior Girls’ Auxiliary of Columbia Avenue Baptist Church. They are working on their fifth step award of the Intermediate Girls’ Auxiliary. Girls Cook, Study TTie Intermediate Girls’ Auxiliary of the Women’s Missionary Society at Columbia Avenue Baptist Church entertained the Junior Girls’ Auxiliary, at a spaghetti dinner this week. Preparing, and serving the food were Shirley Perkins and s Edward who are earning There are aix steps to the auxiliary awards. The girls in cooking the dinner earned part of the fifth step or Queen Scepter. They will have to coI5 P.M. ng Strvlco - 7:00 P.M. J. t. DeNEFF. Patter REV. J. E. DeNBfF,>ifor Bible centered lermoni which will help to solve persolnal proUemt. FIRST. METHODIST, CHURCH 501 MT CLEMENS STREET Pastor: C W. Koener SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. Brtng^ The VyholqFqmily. II a.m. “Worship 7 p.m. “Worship Dal« EvantoH, Pn»lor i|:| ChurchSorvicos...8.00A.M. J:?,- Sunday Scitool..9.15 A M. i:|: Church Survicoi.... 10:30 A,M. Sf. Trinity | Auburn otJenle (EoiiStd*) KO^tUCfau»,Pa$tw |ig *r?JUehariC. drueIrMeyer.PmFor ufChurch Service.... 9iQ0AM.J: ^•iSutiday School9.00 AM g:iChurch Service...lliOOAM..:» ,;:iSueday School.... I li(|p AM.:.^ ^1 -The iMiheron Hour" over. sUnNy vale chapel 5311 Pontiac Lake Rd. S.S. 9,45. Worship II A.M. YP Meet 6 P.M. Setk/lc'e 7 P.M. Wed. Evening 7 P.M. OR. HENRY BRANDT, PH.D. H'nor (Ml IntornoUonaily known Chriitiqn PiychgloglU Nov. 34-77 APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 458 CENTRAL .'I Saturday Young People.... 7.30 P.M. Sunday School and Worship ..10.00 A M. ' Sunday Evening Services...... 7:30 P.M, 1 Tuesday and ThursdayiServIces.7.30 P.M, . ; j Church Phone ...... FE 5-8361 - Pastor's Phone ........... 852-2382 CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP MALTA TEMPIE - 2024 PONTIAC ROAD Nov. 17—Rev, Elsie Beesley Nov. 24— Rev, Agnes Hawkins Nov, 28-A Silver Tea CHURCH of CHRIST siohuohUst.pcs-iiss Roosevetl Welfs, Cvongellit Sundoy Bible Study for oll agM, 9.43 o.m., Sunday Worship Periods I I a.m. and 7 p,m. Tueidoy Weekly Bible Study 8 p.m. I. — Centra I Methodist i| 3i882 Highland Rd. Rev.^Wm. H. Brady, Asioi MORNING WORSHIP 9.15 and i0;45 A.M. "Messianic Hope" Dr. Bonk, Preaching MILTON H. BANK |:§ Ppstor Si I, -- Rev. RIthar Jl, Clemons, Asio. Min. S.oo4(«*WfON MSOk III church school 9i15 and 10:45 A,M. I FIRST METHODIST CARL G. ADAMS, Minister JOHN A. HALL,'Mln.of Vlsllallon South Saginaw at Judion i:| morning worship B.30 and 11 A M, i|i "POINT THE WAY" . Rev, Cgrl O, Adomi, Preoching 9.45 A.M.~ CHURCH SCHOOL iiiiii M.Y. FELLOWSHIP 6i15 P.M. I. Prayer & Bible Fellowship mmm-. ST. PAUL METHODIST 143 e, Squere Lake Rd. FE 8-8233 - FE 2-27S2 Morning Worship 10:00 A.M. and 1 hi 5 A.M. 'Chujtfh School .10:00 A.M. • , Intermediate and Senior Youth Groups, 6:00 P.M. •M covert I METHODIST CHURCH i 2773 PONTIAC LAKE RD. ^ Rw. W. E. C4iul«r, PMler, $ Church Service . . /.. 9:30 A.M. f. Church School..10.45 AM. ST. LUKE'S i METHODIST CHURCH 2012 PONTIAC RO. ? ELMWOOD METHODIST g GRANT ST. AT AUBURN AVI. ttk O. Wihrll, Peitor :'Church School.....t0AM.'| ; Morning Worihip.11.13 A.M.| ALDERSGATE § Sunday School.......... to A M. Worihip......8,43 - IMSAM. I Evening 7 PM-tVoyer Wed. 7 PM. MBtMODISr CHURtH . 1534 BALDWIN AVE. . Horoce Murry> Pouior X ii"v> i.s ' .M.'' 'i-'r',!: ■;,'*■■ ... ;; ■'■:;> Vi.................. \- THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBKli 16, 1903 IPEII TONIGHT DTT^HTH TNEMEHDOIt FAMms NHffDFTs AT ‘ ^ ; TWOUHamOHSv -4, , . PERRYATIIIOirTCAUIMPIIIIiM»IMIU M mmMliHISJinL 10. SHNUYS TIL 7 ' ' . ,i i"'. Li'1 L - .; THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAYr XQVEMBER 16, : PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. '' SKVIJNTEEN . ivktfround for LIVl 0-. V'*'','\ 33 I'l. FROM nnS — Ooce, live reindeer apd other anlmale that marched .down Woodward in the annual Thanksgiving, Day parade lived in this old barn. The farmer owner, the New-d live adlmals ao that comb iamily, Used fi city youngsters could see the r^ thing. Then; for years until the Coppins tow over, the bant stood empty and neglected ^ the back of the Newcomb estate • minder of happier days. I 30RXMAW-UViNO«6OM=-There’s plenty of space fer easy, graceful living in this 30-by 24-foot room on the main floor., Massive furniture for solid comfort is mixed with soft and vivid colors. A' lovely oil painting of the Coppins* 13-year-old son Torrey, looks down over a coral-seated, built-in unit that runs/ nearly the length of the room. From Lonely Old Barn By REBA HEINTZELMAN Pontiac Press Home Editor Every once in a while you run across someone who has taken an old. run-down building that.jiofeo(ty.eJse.wants, and made it into a wonderful thing of beauty. This is the story of Oakland County’s oWn internationally acclaimed artist, John Coppln, and his wife SMni, who could foresee a completely functional as well as beautfiul home in an old barn on Echo Road, Bloomfield It took Just a year to tear out the interior and install new windows and doors before the barn was livable. In order to have two mammoth fireplaces, (one in the upstairs studio and another in the living room), Coppin had the lower floor. —torn up-and40me 15-inches ol concrete poured in for a new flpOT;- But (hat’s not the most exciting story. You get into the big building by rapping on the. door wHh an old knocker, identical with one used at 10 Downing Street. Inside, there’s an overwhelming sound of stereo music ' flooding like giant waves through all the rooms.'^Bach and Beethoven set the theme for the entire (kippin living..... The sunken living room is big, colors are blended — some muted, others brilliantly alive. Lovely oil paintings of Sidni and their 13-year-old son, Torrey, are placed artistically at proud focal points in the lower level. Warm-toned woods inwaHs and lumiture match "the informal atmos|riiere. * In the huge upstairs studio, wails are sprinkled with oversized still-life oil paintings, portraits of world-famous personages jsnd macabre sketches created from sheer imagination. • by Udwanl a. NabW TO THIS — Today, the Old b$rn is a teal studio-home as » i>emian*^. thing of beauty, built into the side of a hill on windows replaced the hay loft Echo Road. Because it was structurally sound, part, and a plate glass picture' the Coppins could foresee this ivy-strewn er's the former main door J»jycnce,. Big door in the upper window now cov- GREAT GRANDFATHER’S CLOCK V This old clock xvas ^ shipped over from England when CoppiVs great-grandfather came to America. It’s had very little rapair and quietly ticks off the minutes and booms out the hours. The big clock is right at home on the landing leading to th^ ppstairs studio. STUDIO’S ON TOP — The spacious, L-shaped studio upstairs holds every type of \oil pamtlng, fronrcolorful still life to macabre xlesert scenes. Portraits of famous men and women peer down from artistically arranged-vantage points as the genial Coppin goes: about creating new oil paintings. |/| ARTIST REUXES-TMs Is il rare pose'for traveler George Pierrot In back of Copgtoi internationally known artUt. Llohn Cpppln. was recently wmi’eaed At the Detroit Scarab Hundreds o^ worldwide” b^le^tles have sat Club, of whl|(ih ^pln was one of the first tot the genial geptleman in that well-wornorganiiera. I V, ^ cbafaf In tlwviiitstiidtb.’Hit portrait of world ' ' CHARMINQ PORTRAYAL Hm quiet charm of Sidni 6oppln was captured by her husband in this almost life-sized painting created four years ago. A feeling of informal vlai^th floods the room, creating a "ao-glad-you're-iwre”^atmosphere, informal Charm There hgvrbeen many informal conversations around this sturdy trestle table as fine foods were passed. Brilliant btaes, oranges, yellows and brbwns dominate the big sUll-llfe picture on tl Fall, in all Its glory, could nut be p< more vividly than in this fialnting. .■ ..... ^ •i ■'1 I ■ ■■"Hi 'wT. THlb'PONTlAC PRE3S. SATURDAY^ NOVBMBisR 18, 1968 The increase in the number of I seals in the Baltic Sea is worry-tog fistMoinen who estimate that seals eat SO,000 tons of fish a jrear there. tually deserves special mention. WheiLl!lUx.Aeyelppedt there are no less than 18 closets with IB feet of shelves and 52 feet of handing space. " How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home Fun study plim Information on this architect-designed House of the Week is Included in a JOnwjt baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s Mtlmte. You can order also, tor II, a b^et called YOUft HOMB-How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in it are sroaU rem^tions of It of the most popular House of the Week issues.'Send oiders to House Plans. The Pontiac Press, P-0. Box 9, Pontiac, r" *-'— The sunken living room has a , foot 3-jnch ceiung heipi, a grand fireplace, and connects through sliding glass doors to the rear patio. 28-FOOT EXPANSE An attractive balcony rail separates it frt»n the corner room, and both roonw combined provide an expanse of more than 28 feet overhxddng toe mrte^ race. / The family kitchen is nicely I Enci5iid“bli9 t ! Plus Coapoa ^ HW-HS a I ■A , . .. I ' j SncloBed Is H for YOUR HOME booklet - □ | of the side play terrace and only a few steps from both 98 EAST IROQUOIS 4 BEDROOM COlONIAl-2 Boths^ ,d#n fliUWuUaat ■ In'Baiatnant."”Eamily comfort with formal dining room ond 20x11 •d roar porch. Baoullful condition. Raducod prica for quick i Only $1,750 down or you may trade your present'amotlar home equli) down poyment. Huron Street to Ottawa; I Bldck left to East Iroquois. Trade The Batejhmn Way i#; I f l\ nealtii BUILDERS MODEL NOW AVAILABLE FOR l/WMEDIATE OCCUPANCY LOCATED AT 2108 SHAWNEE UNE JAYNO NEIOHTS This beautiful 2500 square foot hofne on Schoolhouse Lake Is complete with lahdscapihg, storms and screens, baseboard < radiant heat and many more quality features. Reduced to $35,900 with minimum $5,000 down or your house in trade. OPEN SATURDAY and SUNDAY 1 tc 1 Silver Lake Constniction Co. 673-9631 the same openings that' permitted toe moistuiw to /leave also afforded pasaage-ways for heat, causing toel blil/s to ntount and making houses muf^h harder to keep comfort- OPENSUNDAT2 toTS P.M. 2915 SHAWNEE LANE - Drive out Dixie to Silver Lake Rood, turn right to Walton, left to Shawnee to O'NEIL'S OPEN SIGN. RAY O’NEIL, REALTOR, 262 S. Telegraph FE S-710S QUESTION: The paint on some paito of the outside of our house hai started to blister. We had a paint Job done ji little over a year ago. We kec^ everything" m good condition. The home is insulated, weatii-er-sh’ipped, etc. Can you tell us what is causing this blistering? ANSWER: Exterior paint blistering usually results from excessive moisture within the house which can not escape except through the. walls. It gi)es through toe walls, condensing into water as it hits the cooler inside surface of the siding aiid then pushing through toe outer paint coating. It rarely happened years ago when houses were not of such tight construction. Ihe moisture then copld escape easily wiUiDut forcing its way Washer and dryer, and handy mud room dioset, also are nearby, and a sheltered service porch adjoins the side entry behind the garage. ■k k k The exterior features _ charming oovered portico with gracdul arches. STONE WAUx I A low stone wall across toe garage s^kls the garagis door from the street view. through the walls, however, t Another modern-day factor, in this entire picture is toe moisture-exuding appliance, of vtolch there are many. Exhaust fans, especially in the kitchen and bathroom and wherever the. clothes dryer is located, often solve the problem. More severe conditions call for other measures, among them toe installation of breather tubes just above the foundation. With its diamond^ned viu-dopi and cupola atop the garage wing, the house offers a facade which wlU be popular tor years to come. FLOOR PLANS — Th^-dttic expansion would add an additional 675 square feet to toe basic area of 1,299 square feet which doesn’t include the portico, garage and utility room. The house has a full basement of 1,299 square feet. 3-Bedroom House Grows Along With the Family From coast to coast, young couples spend Sunday afternoons search of a medium-priced six-rooip home with three bedrooms, an attractive exterior and an up-tOtoite room arrange- thV Week; it was selected specifically to solve this twofold problon. The house is a quietly elegant threobedroom model of Two main obstacles stand in ; their way: | 1. The homes in many developments simply don’t offer the liveability, that middle-income families feel their hard-earned matey should bring. 2. Thev are lucky enoURh to find this dream house, and Uses of a Divider Many and Varied In most homes, it’s .pest to let the entrance hall connec^ VlsuMit wltinK Tlvihg room so that each can borrow space from the other. Yet, some separation is needed to preserve toe entrance hall’s individuality. Attractive wooden acreens, simple and open in pattern, could do the trick, or use of a head-height storage divider. Such, a divider could also be design^ to act as a guest closet if one ig not already built into the entrance hall. Otherwise, it can be a shallow freestanding unit designed as an entertainment wail, or for general storage. LESDOlIBHTYandBOBEVJEll ■AMU AIROWN nuMsma a nuona urvioe dett. ' H«v* n«av f^od 0 MW company and wiH be oarvicing ell fomar lamai A Brawn Cuotonioro. You Arm CofdUMlxInvtied to Contact V§ With AU Your Plumbing Sk Heating Hifficytltie^ BOB 9VJEN lt» OroaUaia, Panliaa .......... PLUMBIN6 a HEATim Safot-Slonieo-Repair Duly ^F64^10 HS STATISTICS A l^tory home of three bedrooms and 1% baths with upstairs expansion for two additional bedrooms and full bath. Basic area is 1,299 square feet; expansion attic is W5-square -feet (f u H height ceilings); garage and utility room add 366 square feet; front portico 123 square feet; full cellar of 1,299 square feet. Over-ail dimensiona 53 feet 2 inches wide biy 91 feet deep. Recommended plot: 79 by 100 foot. compasses a h a s i c area M ^ only 1,299 square feet It’s the product of architect Samuel Paul and is design H-3 in the weekly serlea Its Neatest attraction is an expansion attic, made postible by a spacious rear dormer, which will add two more enormous bedrooms, a full bath and an abundance of dReet and storage space, PIECEMEAL Best of alL ttio space can be developed piecemeal as the need arises, and much of the work can be done by a handy husband because' the basic space is already built and paid for. Meanwhile t h e' still-young family can esjoy toe imaglaa-tlve ajad Sensible dewnatainr layout with its sunken Uving Though it appears consMera biy larger, the home actually haa modest overall dimensions -01^ 52-fwt 2-inches wide by 51-feet deep. Architect Paul suggests a 79-foot by 109-foot plot to take full advantage of Its limped design. amended regulations in a let--ter to all Approved mortga-gees. “A few instances have come to our .attention,” Brownsfeln wrote, “vtolch indicated that there is some possibility of avoidance of toe executive order by sale of new^ constructor liotiBihg is existing dw^Ungs or by the sale of land and a subsequent contract with toq purchaser for toe construction of» move in; there’s a strong possibility that a family po^atioi explosion would soon for^ them to flee to a larger but less desirable house, with a flifendal loss that in many cases w be crli^iling. DUAL SOLUTION Moat couples in this category slmply’s can’t afford the gamble ^ and there’s no need if they choose today's House of foyer and beanutd sellings in the living and dining rooms. The upstairs expansion will Tips Make Small Area Look Large and efficient kitchen with plenty ef conntertiqt space. Also a breakfast room with a glamorous bow window, nicely located lavatory, mud room, main-level laundry, attached garage, and sudi other touches as a ^cathedral celling in toe add 975 square feet of living area whan it is completed. DRAMATIC BALCONY “This is not “emergency’’ space, but offers full eight-foot-high flat ceilings, a bath with double vanity, a dressing akove in one of the rooms, and a dramatic balcony overlooking toe hanging spape. The lower toree bedromns closets, ahd ail are wititia a few stops of the main bato. Closet space in this house ac- mutmum'kfh SOUTH OF SQUAKS LAKE ROAD ............. The problem of making a small room seem larger is one which has twffled many a housewife. Hovv-ever this is easily solved. < Simply follow the methods used by professional decorators who ^ offer toese tips: 1. Use large mirrors on the walls et the small room to give a feeling Of space and roominess. ' 2. Paint or paper the walls iq white, or a light ibade. Brightening a smgll room enlarges it. 3. Bring a feeling of outdoors Inside with large-appearance windows. Turn two side-by-side regular windows into one jKgejtMlteCS FlndQjii., , 4. Use a simple light colored pattern on toe floor which is composed of infinitely imali chips embedded late each tile. A liglit color gives the effect of a 5. Use small scale ftu^-niture. Avoid the ove^ accessorized look. . 6. Make sure the curtains’’ are the same color toe walla. This will tend to extend ^ wsjll length, ai far as toe eye is concerned. FHA Tighkns Up on Integration Order FHA has tightened regulations on enforcement of the executive order against racidl dlscHmina-tion in sale of federally aided housing. FHA Commissioner P.N. The letter said that the Leaky Faucet Means Trouble Characteristic of water is its bility to dissolve other suh-stanedi. r .f.rpt Ut BIVBRLY ISUND CAM lAKi nr— ■■no*i*iK!5. lorwmiw(M.OH WILL DUIUIMTE "wxa"v Lak* Orion fownihip iYE.^0N U >-91t4oril T-2669 Buit^ (Lieenred BuUden Since J 9.U) ^ T602S.Tale9raph Coll FE3-0023 \ Pody-BiH 6arago Co. BUIlDEdS OF FINE OARAGES 1123Auttoro,WatOrforC YOU OM FIT HORE..; BirVOUOMWrBIIYIEnER Lot wt ceMiM Awl aihL shaur innf our AMMlAle, and NO SUB-GONTIIAOTINap DIM. cmcoT wrm thi cuildcn for QAIIAQI AND OIMCNT WORK OR 3-5619 W HvCMNNlGfl RMNNHa R'lhGiMMlSLM W INnvInW W iNMflM # WtliiktrgM H«him Cm •• . PurUcatMl M your 1^1 komi hf Wtlabufw pWKpfNw Fi VHn \ MMMPIWMMHrH PONTIAC Rockcote PAINT STORfe ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS 2 Savth Can 332*4641 When Finiihin0lA^C/ Insulate It Adequotely |f finishing the attic to add living 4»fift.ia on, your dchit--yourself schedule this year, don’t waste time and money creating a room that’s going to be too hot for comfort in sum* mer and unbearabiy coid in winter. Invest a little' extra time and money to insulate it adequateiy now and you’ll reap dividends, in comfort and fuel savings far into the future. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMgER 16, 1963 NISTETEEN Better Walnut Wood Sooghtin Program Seed nut coiiectioti in the walnut industry’s continuing program to assure an adequate supply of quality walnut timber reached a record ll.MO bushels in 1963, according to Do^ld H. Gott, secretary-manager of the IF YMIWUT TO SAVE I 2B% 0H TIUT IDim0I REU miSAD ... American Walnut Manufacturers’Association. This was an increase of 23S bnshels or approximately 1S3, IN seed nuts over the pre-vions peak, recorded lait year, be said. Figures are compiled from records submitted by the U states presently cooperating in the industty’s^plantlng programr now in Its 34th year. In addition' to its j>rogram of encouraging annual fall seed- ..............^ nual spring distribution df the nuts and seedlings to growers, the industry continues to sponsor controlled growing experiments aimed at maintaining and increasing the quality of walnut Hm^r. FARM PURCHASES . The association is negotiating for the purchase of several sub-stantial central states farms for conservatidtf’purposesron which is contemplated the planting of a minimum of 250,000 walnut seedlings per farm. Plantings will be under sn-pervislon of a trained forester who will protect against weeds and overgrowth as well as grazing and other hazards, and do the necessary pruning required. In this manner^ direct control can be exercised over all growth conditions and periodic checks made on survival results. _ Under_the catagory “little things >hat annoy a lot’’, is thq t>anging sound, of “water hammer" in a piping system. Fortunately, it can be remedied. . . The cause and e f f e e t of water hammer, sa^i the TInmhIhg • Keaflng • Cooling Information Bureau, can be campared to a car driven into a brick wall. Because the wall does not absorb any of the impact, a dettrqctive crash is To growers interested in further information, the booklet “Growing Walnut for ^fi|’’ is available in a edition, without charge in limited quantities, from the American J^atout Mah-iafaciureii^ As 666 N. Lake Shore Drive, Chicago 11, lU. Hang Large Clay Pot for Lively Party Finalp Water Knock Can Be Fixed Chedc the Problem Before Pipes' Suffer The most ustial, but not the best, way of preventing water hammer is. the installation of air chambers at all p o i n t s where-the faucets or valves are connected to pipes. An air chamber is a vertical length of pipe ivith a natural air pocket that cjishions^the force ofThe^waterr PLUMBING SUFFERS Eventually, however, the air in the piping chamber is sorbed by the .water..mid you hear the constant sound of water hammer while your plumbing suffers. The entire plumbing system must then be drained to recharge the air chambers. . - A far better protection is the installation of special shock absorber devices by For. a lively “South - of - the border’’ finale to a children’s Christmas party, suspend , targe clay firt full Of hard cah-dy from the ceiling in hanging basket fashion. First youngster to break the pot showers guests with take-home gifts of candy. tef pa SHOW YOU ' HOW TO BEAT RISING < BUILDING COSTS Ir' See THe':sxciTiN6 ‘ ‘‘ MODEf 54 Horn* StyUi »o CIioom From Clad In m budget for mMW£rr>Ohw/ HAMPSHIRE $8490.00 ..wdimtod an Yrar Ut. you OAVK THOUSANOO A’ SWIFT HOMES art prn-plannnd-SavBs ' costly building llmo ■ ^ A Mass buying savings am passed on to you if Swift Homos ars prs-englneorisd, you noad , no arqhitact, no coatly on-thaHob Cutting .V ★ Our craws will orect ybqr home lor you or) ^' A Do-It-Yourself end save even more V ‘ w f ZCXPWrfFW'OVER S0.000 PAMIIIES HAVE TAKEN a^NTACE op THESE OPPORTUNITIES, THE SAME OPPORTUNITIES ARE OMERtO tpu At Wl FINANCI FINISHING MAFFRIAIS: FOUNOAFION, HEAFINC. PLUMBING, ELECIRICAL. M0NTHL~ WAll BOARD, INTERIOR DOORS TRIM pAYMBNT SWIFT HOMES • Of f»dNTIAC INC * r'Mw m awi sin"s« mm .m» mm-m M| NoaN Send Ms Year PRII 1963 Cssisg | 2110 $. LAPIIR ROAD, LAKI ORION MW |sp ap awi^Mi ap Use Different Lighting When Selecting Paint TRADB YOUR HOME 3 Beefroom Brick, . 80 Ft. Lokefrertt dhly HMN Larger than a pipe chamber, it absorbs water shock with a rubber - type tube that expands , inside a rigid sheU containing a pliable insulation material. Because it does not depend on an air pocket to cushion the water, it never tieeds any kind of recharging to continue its vital work of protecting the plumbing system from damage and your ears from needless noise. ' ' Full Mirrors Now Are On Folding Doors Any woman faced . with the problem of checking her appearance in a smaU glass appreciates the convenience of full-length mirrors. Now such mirrors have become part of another problem - solver, the folding closet door. Folding wood doors with factory - assembled mirrors and hardware are now available to do-it-yourselfers for as little as $67 for a 4-door, 4-foot-wide, 6 foot 8-inch Angbng the mirror doors fslightly gives a “dressing room” view, front , and back, head-to-toe. ' Fully opened, doors stack tightly to either side to allow easy selection from any t>art of the closet: close quickly, quietly ' and effortlessly. SEEMLARGE In addition to their practical p u r p 0 s e in dt’essmaking a over-all good grooming, mirror doors make small rooms seem large, large rooms larger. Available to woods and styles to match any period, decor or color scheme, mirror doors may also be had in a full selection of fine finishes or in ready-to-paint hardboard. When you select paint colors, be sure to look at color chips under the same ty^ of lighting that will exist in the room ypu?re redecorating. Identical colors appear to be different when viewed Under daylight. Incandescent or fluorescent light. There are mbre than 70 known i Live in Beautiful Waterland “Clarkston Gardeiis” KING SIZE BARGAINS RANCH CLARKST 1-75 >1 . WALDOM k ^ . 1 t Drive out today—me — The “WESTERNER” ★ YOU wljl loll 1(1 ,|ov» ol «rt» *IbI>«. wfhon m w* K* ! rM^" '14,390 •• >18,190 'Including All OpHonalt F.H.A. and CONVENTIONAL LOANS and Daily i 12to7PJd. * Phone 625-2882 The “RANCHERO” jA Till* Contomporary Ranch Homa yvlth Its attached 2-cor garage plus a ^ large fomlly rooln* and 3 beoutlFuF bedrooms with king sized closets',' ■Full Isasemenfs, of course—centered on a lot — 107 In width. A truly fontostic borgolnl Only $14,390 plus optlonals*. Red lace brick on all Four .sides with o low hlD rooF. plus white Shingles-mokes your dreams come true. The BLUE STM . . is your assurance «f o quolily Gos feoturlngi ■ SYMBOL Gas Heat, and Gas Built - in Cooking _________________________ equipment. GO MOO^AN > QO GAG ^LOW DOWN PAYMENTS-WE TRADE FEA TURES T««»-Cnr Faee Brick Nutoiio Kllchaa reis for living c^^Phn-i., wiShJj" *•>'*»*' convenience! Commanily Water , l^irge Closati With Vull Basemania Folding Doom Blrc|i Doom tiarriaga Ughla dak Flooring «» Garage Gas ilaal »’««•• Glaaa Mirror AuioismiIc Claaallned Birch KFIcfacn llolwaler Healer Gablnela lluUl-ln Oven and Formica Tope Kange' Snaeli Bar Bathroom Vanity Alutnlnnm Door Wall In Family R«(e«ll in the Gablaa BUILT and SOLD by lARlSTOCRATL , BUILDING COMPANY ^ 'll /fWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1668 'Can’t Expect Miracles tin ^ MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-^tte Alliance for Progrera “ bwefiling the United States’ La-| tln neighbors; but overnight I facies must not be expected. I^g^panelef experts t(dd members -- ■ utThe Associated Press Manag- ing Editors Association. ,/’7Pedro Beltran, pubjisher of U #msa in Lima, Peru, said, *Tfba can’t changb peorde and opontries overnight.’* lie told editors from across Uie nation that it was not until after World War I that England had universal sufferage. “Latin America can’t do overnight what it took the English nuiny generations to accom-pUsh.’’ AFTER ELECTION ’The discussion of Latin-Amer-lean affairs followed the elec-( of Sam Ragan, executive >r of the Raleigh, (ff.C.\ 8 fb Observer and Times as (Hresldent of the APME. Gewge Beebe, managing editor of the Miami Herald, was cboeen vice-Resident. William B. Dickinson, Philadelphia Bulletin, was named secretary, and Howard Clavinger, Spokane (Wash.) Chronicle, treasurer. Press Association, said, “I think the alliwice is a great program. It is the greatest answer to fight infiltrations of commonism thjig has been. We must accelerate all the things we are doing under the alliance.’’ INCONSISTENT POLICY A charge-that U.S. State Department polUgr has been Intdn-sistent m ^nuitlng recognition to the military coup in Viet Nam while denying it to the Domim-. can Republic was voiced by German Ornes, publisher of E! Caribe, in Santo Domingo. “We are ruled by a civilian triumverate,’* Ornes said. “Six political parties formed a coalition and were given government control 48 hours after the coup. But we have gone nearly two months without recognition.” .■■ Ornes efeimed, “The hard policy of the Uhited States means We are bound to have either a military dictatorship or a civil war. given with a military dictatorship, we will still likely have a civil war. And if we do, communism will comet out on top. By withholding recognition, the United States is Setting this up.” Beltran, former Peruvian prime minister, caid Latin America’s political problems are greatly different from that „ of the United .States and often are not understood 1^ Ameri- Romulo O’Fafrill, publisher of NovedadeS in Mexico City, and president of the Inter-American Community Theaters TUMBIJtRS FTiOAT 1I0PE--G^ Romney today received the first plastic tumb-biers being usad in a nationwide fund raising effort to benefit the S^, Hope. Gov. Romney proclaimed Wednesday as Project Hope Day to honor die hospital-teaching ship whidi visits underdeveloped nations. Holding the seal is Alvin Bentley, Hope state chairman, while Jack Gould of Detooit, a Hope director, < presents a tumbler to Romney. Doctor-Technician 'Phyllis, Baby Advises Kildare By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD — When the mother of Dr, Phyllis Wright learned her daughter was to be technical adviser for “Dr. Kildare,” she asked in dismay: WINTER BEGINS DECEMBER 2 Day or Eyening Division Programs ACCOUNTING CLERICAL SECRETARIAL OFFICE MACHINES BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION naneWaylor SHORTHAND CHARM COURSE for Seorefaries Free, permanent placement service to graduates Registration open as of this week. For information or a cataiogt Telephone: 333-7028 PONTIAC BUSINESS iNSTumi: Christmas BUY WITH aREt Know corrtet lixe. Try or, If polilbit, to chock fit. ' DEAL WITH RRIAILE MERdUHTSt Ctiock roliabiltty. read UIELS to DETERMINES Wearing quality Cloaninf or woshlng fmtrodlons. READ PAPERS -YOU ARE ASKED TO SIONi Hovo 1 KEEP A COPY. DETERMINE COMPANY'S POLICY BEPORE YOU PURCHASE AS TO RETURNS ANB ALWAYS on A RECEIPT. A$K THAT GUARANTEES RE PUT IN WRITING. RE COURTEOUS WHEN YOU MUST ASK FOR A REFUND OR AN EXCHANOE- THIS IS A lUSY, TIRING SEASON FOR THOSE WHO SmVI YOU IN THE lUSINESS PUCB. REMEMBER THAT CARELESS RETURNS ADO TO TNI COST OF BUSINESS AND INCREASE THE COST OF MERCHANDISE TO TOIL REPORT MISREPRESENTATION TO THE MERCHANT PROMPTLY! Ohro Mm or Offor-tRRHy to odiott. RETURN MERCHANDISE PROMPTLY! THE MERCHANTS USUALLY ORANT YOU ONE FULL WEEK FOLLOWING THE HOLIDAYS. RECOMMENDED STORE HOURS FOR THE CHRISTMAS SEASON FOR DOWNTOWN PONTIAC: 9:30 UL to 9:00 P.M., Novombor 21 to Docombor 24, 1903. tThonlrtgivIng Evo oxcoptod). .. Bu8ine§8 Ethics Board , Pontiac Arei , Chamber of Commerce '/ “What will they call you on the set — ‘Phyllis, baby’?” The doctor reported this to the movie workers and now i mtarly everyone calls her “Phyllis, baby.”... ' ‘Except the THOMAS more repent members of the J she said. “’They are more reticenTjiin3~’ca1^^ me, ‘doctor, baby.’ ” More Arrested in N. Carolina Negro Demonstrators Added to Jail Total WHJJAMSTON, N.C. (AP)-Police arrested G^defr^FTlnlwr field secretary for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and 20 other Negroes demonstrating against racial segregation Friday night after protest leaders- had spent most of the day trying to recruit marchers. It was the second consecutive day of demonstrations. Police JaUed M, including 19 Northern white ministers and seminary students Thursday after they had staged a silent ttiree-block mardi from a Negro church near the Martin County court-housei. Frinks also was charged with organizing and leading the dem-onstratlQn. The Edenton Negro said be did not join In Thurs-dfty s merclr beebuse he fitced a six-month jail sentence if arrested He Is under suspended sentence on a bad check charge. Officers set Frinks’ bond at ‘(tor biggest problem is finding dramatic diseases,” said Dr. Wright. “The Ideql disease is something that is not disfiguring, not below the waist — for sensitivlify“ feisons—^ and something that allows the patient to be lucid to the end. Leukemia fits perfectly, but we have used it too often;” Mrs. WrlghtrWflfe of »i?refes-sor of pediatrics and mother of two children, consults with writers via phone at night. “They call, me and want to know If a certain disease would work in a certain situation,” i^e said. "I straighten them out and they go back to work.” Her job takes constant vigilance — “if I don’t keep an eye on things, they’ll get an X-ray upside down or do something ebe that would make us all look silly.” She also has had to resist writers’ attempts,to shove Dr. Kildare into the operating room. That was all right when be was an intern and could swing through various departments at Blair General. But as a resident this season he, can’t be as 31,000. The integration Inder * ■ remain ,tokl newsmen he would in jail. Frinks said he decided to join Friday’s march “If I had to go by myself.” Five of the Northern clergy-■ Frlfiy men were transferred night from the Martin County Jail to neighboring Beaufort County Jail in Washington, N.C., because of crowded cell condl- Once they were jailed, fom* of the dergymen began a hunger-strike protesting segregated jail faciUUes. Sheriff Raymond Raiwls agreed .to diuegre-gate the jail and the ministers called off’their fast after two meals were refused. EAGLE Sat. - hton.: “The Birds,” Rod ’TaykK', color ' “U Frightened Girls,” Kathy Dunn. Tue. - Thu.: “The Thrill ol R AU,” Doris Day, JRmos 0■^ ner, color; "Flower Drum Song,” Nancy Kwan. dolor. Starts Fri.: “Tarzan’s Throe Challenges,” Job It Mahoney; “Showdown,’! Audle Murphy. FORUM Sat. • Thu,: Ingmar Berg- man’s “Wlntw Light.” I ‘The, ConjugM Starts Fri.: Bed.” NHURON , Sat. - Fri.: ”V.l.P.e,"/Elisabeth , Taylor, Richard , Burton, The attractive pediatrician spends her mornings- teaching medical students, then goes to MGM In the afternoons to ad-vjse oh medical matters for the Kildare show. She keeps an eye procedures by Richard Chamberlain, Raymond Massey and the other television medics, and also helps on scripts. Mrs. Wright said she takes a lot of ribbing and some complaints from her fellow doctors. “Doctors hear about the show through their patients,” she said. “But I think most of them are like my husband. After spending the day in and around medicine, he has no desire to see more of it on television.' Higbie Co. Earnings Higbie Manufacturing Co., 300 E. Fourth, Rochester, has announced net earnings of lUUIK on sales of 32,408J»2 during the three months ended Oct. 31. Per common riiare earning of cents on 385,999 shares out- Campflr# Cattily Sala Watch for your nalghborhood CAMPFIRE dIRL ^ Help tha oii'i* BY BUYINO CANDY Courtesy COAAMERCE DRIVE-IN Dr. King in Danyille Rallies Marchers DANVILLE, Va. (AP)-Weak-,tod by flu but grimly deter-niinqr.:i)r=~Martta Luther King Jr. lias vowed thafrjBeessarj. this Soutjislde Virginia city"wai “have blggei* demonstration^' than any we’fe ever held before.” King, uriw came Friday to rally Negroes in this textile and tobacco hub of 47,000 for a renewed desegregation drive, was to address a student rally this afternoon. The ailing leader of the Southern Christian Leadership (inference shrugged off a verbal attack Friday night by Carl K. Allen, a member of the American Nazi party from Arlington, Va. Allen, 32, deputy commander of the party headed by George Lincoln Rockwell, came to Dan-vUle’s High Street Baptist Onirch and made an impromptu speech from the floor in which he questioned the Negro fflintotor’^l toOtlves nilta of his campaign. Allen spoke for IS minutes while King and other civil rights leaders stood quietly on the platform. ANenwasPlntorniptod sev- eral times by persbns in the crowd of about 375 but each Qme the Rev. L. W. Chase chairman of the Danville unit of fOngi orgaidMtIon, urged the gathering lir bo Jo jhe speaker could finish. When Allen finally Mt down and King started to speak he was greeted with an ovation. He said he was “glad you let him (AHen)-say what ha had ‘ King looked peaked and ratlv-er sick. He sMd he had had a temperature of 101 degrees and a doctor told him he shouldn’t come. But “I came here to let you know that we in the SCLC are with you all the way.” Regarding, the racial struggle In Danville, he said, "There will be a new day, a day not of the white man or of the black man but a day ^of man as man. ;“I am here in DanvlUe because the city of Danville and its oflteials have W pied Negroes basic human anxl constitutional rights. I want it knovm there will be no tranquility and peace here until the No: , gro has all Ws rights." TOP VALUE (M Gouras SECESSMY) SUNDAY NOV 17 AT KROGER IN PONTIAC, DRAYTON PLAINS AND UNION LAKE ONLY! OPEN SUNDAY to HM. to 8 P.M. for your shopping oonvonJonof ^ . Tllifi PONTfAC rilESS; SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1963 ^ TWENTY-ONE ri Show Kn^s; It's OK ____AN-CmiA,4t8lym court in this central Itaitan city on the Adriatic Sea has ruled that a short skirt is not su(< flalent evidence that a wdman' is trying to entice someone. A private complaint was filed against ^e« young women allkgii^ that aejr itklrts were so short that t&eir r knees were exposed when they sat on a pmt bench. charged. Uni violated a section of the n penal code forbidding an t of enticO’ , Yesterday, the acqulttedl the three grounds of i ....... The women were identified i court only bf initials. members Monday night are expected to act on a police de-pai^ent proposal calling for adoption of the Uniform Traf^ fic Code. iT^S WORTH A TRIP TO DETROIT METRO G0LDWmMATE9Et HOW THE mm WON Traffic Code Waterford Township Board Now f^resently, ,the township is gey^ed by its own traffic ordi^e patterned after state^w. By DICK WEST , WASHINGTON (UPl) -about this business of a head waiter accompu>ying members of the U.S. delegation to the NATO parliamentarians meet-^ing in Paris: ‘ I don’t understand why that IH>lice\wtend that the Uniform Traffic Code is broader in scope th^^ mdsUng^-dinance. They claim ttiat-uniformity pf tranlc regulations Is advantageous. \ IN COMMUNITIES \ The Uniform Traffic fcode is now in effect in more tha^lSO state townships, villages clUeS; In other bu8ine88^ the board consider recalling 1943 This will eliminate all out-stamllng obligations and eaibliL Oaklami County to issue new bonds.' The county recenily was designated agent for the township's water system. ' ____________ Headwaiter in Kettle of FiSh Why Stew Over Congress? much controversy. After all, there 4sHiething iiovel altout it. Some waiters go off on long trips every time you give them your order. Frequently, the temperature of the'food they bring back ■ ■( me to believe they have to'lceland nest Petinaud, in the party, Rep. Wayne Hays, D-Ohio, who headed the delegation, killed t w o birds with one stone, ,e Chances are they will turn up t- on the n\ena next week. Under glass. EXPOSED SKILLS What Fmean is. the trip^ex-V Petinaud to the culinary^ (HV..IS of France, and it exposed members' of the delegation *“ the parltomrataiyjilfifl^^ r- WEST I to the NATO Ing. Parises you know, Is the fountainhea^ of fine cuisine. And- headwaiters are. nothing if not parliamentarians. By including theNyaiter, Er “ ^ Z. , ACiumiy, good^JilBfc- -foed-is^Hi TODAY:1:00-4s45-&30'‘m •ox oxnei oriNi 10 am. oaily • ii nooN 'Iunoav NieHTIi Sm. Mr* !■». o* lilt S.M. • Saf. ft Sat. at {4i« P.M. '^OrtK. ft Man. U.IO. Ala. ii.fl ' I. at S:0t r.M. • Oral It liftt StM- « iMk. 1 TICKITI , NOW AT BOX-OFFICE OR BYMAIL1 • MUSIC HAU THfATSf Ml-M '■t I 0 n —r —^*“^ • Mw5$ n •t Brush • ., ’ - Wo I-3T8I •••ftaiMHM fcTHBAMA] MUSIC HALL NOTHING YOU HAVE EVER WITNESSED BEFORE HAS PREPARED YOU FOR SUCH SHEER STABBING CUfinKI '“-Wais-.*' ADULTS Ritaft i Sun. SOo Sat.'til 8 980 HAVANA (AP) - A foreign ministry official said yesterday that two Canadians accused, of trying to smuggle explosives into Cuba Will be tried in publiq, and foreign conrespondents will be allowed ^ report the pfo-ceeding. This would be the first public trial of its kind since dto mass trials of supporters of former dictator Fulgencio Batista in 19N. The official said the trial-of Ronald Patrick Lippert, .32, of Kitchener, Ont., and William David Milne, 31, of Montreal No Negroes Will Select t?oseQoeejn- recHNic&Lorr .ROSmOR-JESSICATANDY SUZANNE KESHETtE »a'.,:TIPPI’HEDRFI< GOOD OLD DAYS MATINEE 13 INTetlNATIONAL BBAUTIBS mAPPEDs^N THE CANDY WfB COlUMfllA PICTURES \ f / " Frightened GIR.LS! t i ■iiiifciiiiiiiuiMiiiifniHis of Two Canadians Cuba Plans Public Trial probably would start Tuesday or Wednesday. However, Canadian Foreign Secretary Paul Martin said in Ottawa yesterday he had been advised that the trial was ^et for Nov. 23. HAp BEEN canceled The Cuban official said tihat a news conference scheduled for the Canadians today had been canceled ‘idue to the"^ nearness of thd trial” ^ two were arrested Oct. 30 on their arrival at Havana Airport in their small, private airplane. — oeeused^ Canadlans^ofHbeinll Old Forge, Pa., and becamer a PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -Selection of the Tournament of Roses queen won’t be made by an integrated committee, officials say. Reacting to a reqeust by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Tournament President Hilles Bedell said yesterday: ‘The tournament is a private organization and final selodUon of fhe queen is made the responsibility of the regular committee established for that purpose, as it alwaya- has been.” The NAACP had asked that an integrated panel of students from Pasadena City Colldgr choose the queen. The Pasadena chapter said that the all-white judging panel has never selected S Negro girl as queen ofprihcess. 'Danger Spot' South Africa LONDON (AP) - A Labor member of Parliament told the House of Commons Friday that white-ruled, segregated South Africa is in danger of “a Spanish-type dvil war that might' a prelude to«world war.” He demanded that the United Nations Intervene. “I do not ttiink it'Is possible to exaggerate the situation there,” Labor-ite Fenhir Brockway declared during debate on African Uf- i^ UiST DAY k MlltrumirllkimmPiamOp'nmMU WAIT DISNEY, AMMIESIt DQORS QPEN: 12:45 PAS. NEW JEii^^s t;ieatre family of five lor an entire week. Five hummingbirds. Alter cardul ”«onsideration, there is only one point on which I would be critical of the Paris trip. They should have taken the head cl)ef along, too. MTvsoftr ft luiwsy DooaxasiiM4ef.il.' > CHILDRSN ISO MHILTI1M MWIS(»i(X)MPAI(Y______ J86K SHIRlCir LEMMON .MmUUNE BILLY WILDER’S wm TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* ..... ...... j .40.4:20 FEATURE: 7^00-9:20 Urns, both stand to gain something fro% ttie'experience. Which is more than can be said for most congressiongi junkets. I frequently have lunch in the House restaurant, and I can say this about it — the food may not be much to brag about, but -the service leaves a lot to be desired. Actually, the quality of the pOod^s^Mittle coneerirte me. Man does not live by bread, alone. Not as long as Metrecal is available. FOR SCENERY I go to the restaurant mainly for the sceneryi I sit at a table overlooking a waiter who overlooks me. But in suggesting that the , service is sometimes less than impeccable, I should in all iairness add that the meals ara cheap. And so is the elien-tele; You might think from the size of the appropriation bills they pass the members of Congress are lavish ti()pers. Well, I hate to disillusion anyone but candor prompts me to report that certain law-givers are known to the waiters as “the Ipst of tjhe big misers.” As for the press table, the tips that we newsmen leave our waiter every day would fe«l a Pimburgh Archbishop AHack Customs officer! said they gr ena<^ and explosives cohceal^^ 'i^^^ fruit cans the Canadians'* liifere carry-ing. Prime Minister Fidel Castro NEW YORK (AP)-Archbish-op Benjamin of the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Diocese of Plltoburgh and WMt Virginia, died of a heart attach Friday. Archbishop Benjainin, 76, was the first American-born priest of any Orthodox jurisdiction elevated to toe rank of bishop. He was born in Basil B.qsalyga in tHOUGHTFm., ENGROSSING# SHOCKING PliM.«-PIERCING, STARK ANP unsettling! THIS IS A HLM TO SEE AND ponder!” -Bosley Crowlher, New York Times 'ONE OF THE MOST MOVING FILMS I HAVE EVER SEEN. Its total effect is shattering!” -Philip T Hartung, Commonweol "I ASSURE YOU IT IS A BEAUTIFUL MOVIE!” -Brendan Gill, The New Yorker' INGMAR BERGMAN'S BEROMAM AT ms BESTV SUNDAY SHOW TIMES-3;00-S;08-1i1P-MlS ALSO SELECTED SHORT-»- 6UI3EPINM’ " AMPLE FREE CLTY PARKINGI NOW YOU CAN SEE IT AT POPULAR PRICES Columbia Pictures presents THE SAM SPIE6EL'DAVID LEAN Proctuction of IMBENCE OFAB4BIA V . . .Vi. r Vi At me DAIMC . AR.TMI IP KFKlNf-iry ,—ALEC GUINNESS ANTHONYOUINN-JACK.WWKINS JOSE FERRER ANTHONYQUAYie 'a^,WNSj^TW «.OMAR SHARIF.-Air ■ PETER OTOOLE --lAVAlENCf ■ TOtSSil(Oil■ SAMSTOOa■ SSoKAN • TZcHNicaqH--SUFtA aanavuorTt- ^ TWKyTY-TWO I KOKTH ♦ AQ65 «« ♦ KQ 4AKJ1065 WMT BAST SJX A 10983 ♦ QJ87S* ¥104 ♦ AJ4 ♦ 97683 «83 A74 SOUTH (D) AK74‘ ..------ ------ ♦108 2 ♦ Q83 North and •South vulnerable SMth West North Boat iA 1¥ lA “ 2A Paaa S¥ 3N.T. Paaa 4^ 4 A I%aa e * 6M.T^ Paaa Pass Opening lead—♦ A By OSWAU) JACQBY Slam bidding isn't always difi ficult. If the' game had beeh rubbeb bridge North would simply check for aces by means of Blackwood and go to six cl4ilMi^ 4f- ” JACOBY found an ace'off «the hand. In duplicate there was a further problem. North would —------------- like to get to six no-trump if possible, in order to scord the few extra points that mean little in a rubber game, but may mean the difference between a-top andtan average score in a tournament. IB the Texas Reglonals at San Antonio: my son, Jim, opened the South hand with one elnb. He had a rock bot-|om minimum, but an open-^^ tnigbid^ih our system, West overcalled with one heari and it was up to Jim’s partner, Russ61l Smith of Dal-■ IS, to take over. . He bid only one spade to start; Then, after Jim raised him to two, Russell bid three hearts. This cue bid in the opponent’s xuit was a game force. Jim signed Off at three no-trump and nOw Russell bid four diamonds. Jim Went to four spades. He had no interest in anything except the nearest exit, but now Russell lowered the boom and bid six clubs. This series of bids made it easy for Jim to see what Russell had in mind. He did not appear to be toying for seven so he had to be angling for six no-trump. Jim obliged and they were pleasantly rewarded because the ho^trump slam was an absolute lay down. nJUliliigtgIgg . The bidding haaJ?J6fiB^ „ , South West North Best Frank Webber, chairman pro tern of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, will bn a workshop paneUst on "County Home Rule =-- What -Doe*-It Mean?’’ when the National Municipal League opens its 6#th conference tarDetooit Monday* TheVonference at the Stat-ler Hhtol is expected to'draw several hundred business, civic and labor leaden, state and city officials, public adminis* Divorce Unit Plans Meeting A "meeting of "Divorce Decree Enforcers, Inc,,’’ is planned for 8 p.m. Nay* 22 at the Veteran’s Memorial Building in Detroit, ^ , Anyone interested has been invited to attend for a discussion of measures, which the group intends to present to the State Legislature dealing, with divorce laws and decrees. A Wayne County group, it is noted authorJWes on government from ak parts of the country. " Gov'emor Romney and Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh wiljL open the three^lay conforence with welcoming addresses* A highlight of the conference wiH be the Midrigan Conttotn-tional Convention'Dinner recogr nixing the 144 convention delegates on Tuesday* You, South, hold: • ♦A3 ¥AICJ5 AS ♦AQJ887 What do you bid? A—Bid one club. You aren't ■Irons enough to open with two* tobay’8 question You open one club and your parhier responds one dlanwnd. What do you do noW? ’This port in Braxll Is now the world’s leading coffee export source. ^ it Astrological Forecast * r.................... ’’•’t. j for homo li five, rine ti 'our chorm SPECIFIC. Don'. ------ ■ ■ I Improvements prove construe- - --------visitors, ofeheng- _________ ________ r WRITING, sharing interests._____ LIBRA (Sep,. 23 to Oct. 22); Travel Indicated. Stress on COMMUNICATIONS. Check with euthorltetive sources. Find put the WHY, WHEfm.and-tmw. MUm. Highlight mature approach. Respect EXPERIENCE. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 2t): Impress associates with original Ideas. Break from tradition. Be leader '—*—• -• •-> lower. Permit Instinctive ;__ ... . Ity to come forth. RESPECT YOUR- fo be told. Go "on your own." I fMent of your own ludgment. HIGH. Ypu are able to overcom Goto Itt CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jei Reed ARIES message. Be res SURPRISES. Good,lime to visl confined to home or hospital. Be thetic. Practice Golden Rule. You gain respect, appreciation. AOUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. nermost desires cen now be ......... Friends due to show appreciation (or past lavors. Gain through fraval or writ' ttn.ward Indicated. Highlight CREATIVE ACTIVITY. PISCES (Peb, 20 lo ,March 20)', Watch pecktibook. Avoid extravagance. Don't tall lor "sob story." Be practical; make financial resolutions. Be repdy to change 14 l.„. dlctiri,^ IP SUNDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY . you era capable of going lo the top but 18’npTd*Wc*e^" w TENDENCIES; Cycle hi TAURUS (April 20 to May 20); Be oW. Don't tall all you know. This piles especially where fir------ ' • tntar picture. If expert p, "lip/" keep It to yourseltl GEMINI (May 21 to CANCER (June 22 to July 21); may feel "out of your element." It lo vou t« make the best of situation. Ex, MnyUi ask questions. Be espaelelly ^skferate td CANCER-born persons, -an help you today I y 22 to Aug. 2t); I. OtherwiA embarrass- ■,y'"55.~(Au9!"22 to Sept. 22); Member eleppoille eex may require advice. Be Opnmiitlc. Ilreu "oood" aMa. AunM wMilUnd on iomiMr tion. niM for vliitta I ,bl handling correspondanca. . Alao, 2»nr Wi^ ,SPOi^ WORD Is i„,. others ere apt to misunderstand, ’fTKcTsEf!"'**' -JORPIO (Oct. 22 to Nov. 21); Whet K•enVt?e^.'",S;dmU•^ to Pk. .21), cbuld crew delays. Ba merchant. ,CAItolCQRN (0 , . . Don't take any, BPMiM. Clteck detalla your-mere IN PERSON. Highlight ^^uskies Dominate 4fh Game in Series PNH Ends Grid FrusMoirAgiistTonliarO^ Early Blocked Punt Sets Up First TD Pontiac Northcim ended four years of frustration Pontiac Central at W^ner Stadium before an estimated 5,500 fans, larjgest of the'series. The win was the first against three setbacks for the Huskies in their annual series with Central, and the victory upped their season record to 6-3, equalling a high team mark i^et by the 1961 Northern eleven, A touchdown At the 2 :46*^ mark of ^e opening |itan-za gave the Huskies aU the points needed and th e y added six points Ih the, second and fourth periods. A blocked pupt on t h e fourth play of the game ^jffitnpltherfirat Northern score. The Chiefs took the opening kickoff and Northern forced the sophomore-studded Central lineup into a punt situation at the 2S>yard line. Central’s Wcker Jan Ande^ Officials ftallnd interference on _ the play, giving Northern a first down at Central’s 14-yard line, but the attack died at the seven-yard line when halfback Don Weyer was stopped on a fourth and two situation. center but Northern’s Tom Nichols raeeiHn frdin his defensive end position to block the punt. The ball bounced toward Central’s goal line and Nichols and tackle Lany Dean- smothered FOUR mvs Northttn picked up the touchdown four plays later, when sen-l(nr quarterback Jim Kimmel filtered through a hole over left guard from one yard out. Dean Souden added his first of three PATsfora7-0Hu8klelead. kinunel masterminded the i|econd scoring drive at the start of the second quarter after the Huskies had halted a budding Central drive on the PNH 87-yard line. The Huskiea iu«d 12 plays and most of the swond stanza in covering the 78 yards which ended with fullback Steve Daniels bursting over from the one-yard line. Sr a ★ The big play in the series a 80-yard pass frbm Kimmel, his first of the evening, to Souden which moved the ball to Central’s 38-yard stripe. first half when Kimmel. tossed a 21-yard pass to Sond-en who was racing into the left corner of the end zode, but defensive halfback Ken Seay bumped the big end Just before the ban a^vod to pre- (Cqnt. on Page 25, Col. 2) • Kimmel applied the Clincher with only 1:15 remaining in the game when he rifled a shot to Jim DeFlorlo on a 96-yard pass-and-runplay. Ihe Huskies were on their own five-yard marker when Kimmel turned the ball loose. Deinorlo snared the toss near his own 80, broke away from a Central defender at the 50 and raced in for the six pointer. ★ Sr ' , The Chiefs, who, dosed the sea-son with a 04-1 record, had numerous scoring opportunities but they couldn’t come up with that‘big play,’their trademark in winning the first three games of the series. After Northern had boning into a 74 lead, the C h i e I s ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ic ★ ★ Lions^ Will Find ★ ★ NFL Plans Test With Theater TV Rams Better Many Changes ★ ★ ★ DETROIT (AP)-The NaUon- al Football League will experiment with theater televising of its games next season, Commissioner Pete Rozelle said Friday. But he said this won’t affect the NFL home television programs. I seriously doubt that the NFL will ever abandon free win J. Anderson of the Lions, presumably over Ford’s offer to buy the Lions for |6 million. Rozelle indicated he thought well of Fowl’s offer. He said that at ohe Qhii' the NFL approved group omiership of a club but that now one owner or The NFL boss, a visitor in Detroit on his way to Chicago for Sunday’s Chicago Bears-Green Bay Packers battle for tiie NPTL’s Western divlsid|tL le raft CluV. spoke at the Adcraft ( including the suspensions of tackle Alex Karras of the De- AIRBORNE MANEUVER - PNH passer Jim Kimmel (13) leaps into the air to toss short pass to end Dean Souden who is being pursued by Pontiac Central’s Dave Edwards (76). The Kimmel-to-8ouden combination proved very effective for the . of the Packers and overtures from the American Football est is felt preferable. The Lions are owned by 144 stockholders and operated by a board oif directors. The bo^ approval of Ford’s offer by the stockholders. i REVIEW CASES Rozelle repeated he would review the Kturas IShd Hornung cases in January. The two stars were suspended indefinitely on charges of gambling on games. a panel of sports writers and sportscasters. Ode question was post-season game between the NFL and AFX, champions. Rozelle was cool to it. Rozelle said he recalled a contact from coach Sid Gillman of the San Diego AFL club. ”1 remi gram from Sid Gillman,” Rozelle said, “in which he said Pope John was a great man. He recognized the other league.' Well, I answered him, ‘True, but it took 2,000 years.’ ” Argentine King Belts Thornton Since .Opener Detroit Now Tiding to Salvage Seaton A lot of things have changed for the Detroit Lions since they )st saw the Los Angeles Rams. ' The first meeting of the two clubs, who wUl play Sunday at Tiger Stadium, was in the op«m-b^game^the __ ,.the season when the Ltoiu recorded a 23-3 triumph. The Lions at that time were d r e a m l n g of the National FootbaH Leagnem, but now they’re jUst trying to salvage a few moments of respectability from a dismal season. The Lions were rocked by Green Bay, 31-10, and by Chicago, 37-21, in the next two games after the win over Los Angeles. Injuries started to pile up and IKe fnistrating 17-14 rad 25-21 losses to Dallas and Baltimore killed their final hopes of being a contender in the NFL race. Ihrir own » to North^’s 17 with sophomore quarterback Jerry M&r^y at the helin. Murphy found • lot of *’*ot® on the left side of the Northern line in the drive and sent fullback Jim Crump and halfback James Mitchell around end for Northern halted Crump Inches short of a first down to halt the drlvestthe87. A 24yard pm front Murphy to end Frank u>llias late in the first half iut the <^tofs in s^-ing position at Northern’s 26, but ■ spilled for a seven- An^rsoo booted the bril into the end sone two plays later. Tbs Huskies almost made it l/wUk seeemis Ipft M the , ^.#..1:1........* i**‘hil6ilK.Ma‘ J NtfW TdRK ‘(AP) - After whipping Wayne Thornton bruising 10-rounder Friday night Argentine Gregorio Peralta probably will have to beat the Californian again to get a title fight with light heavyweight champion Willie Pastrano. The handsome, 28-year-old heavyweight king of Argentina chopped and poked his way to a split verdict over the light heavyweight contender from Fresno in a television thriller at Madison Square Garden. Peralta was an 11-5 favorite as he ran his unbeaten streak to 44, including two draws. The darkhaired gaucho has lost only one fight, a knockout to Peruvian Mauro Mina in his first pro start. Since then it’s come up, iT ★ dr ★ CHARGE AHEAD — Pontiac Northern quarterback Jim Kimmel (13) prepares to hand off to toe Huskies captain Dqn Weyer on this play at Wlsner Stadium last night. Play went for short yardage when middle of Pontiac Central line -■ up to stop toe power thrust. Note “C” painted by PNH players on their helmets, perhaps meaning Charge Central. At any rate, the Huskies crowned toe Chiefs with a 21-0 defeat. Coqc/i Calls It, Then Hopes Long TD Play Put Icing on Triumph By JBRE CRAIG “Jimmy, mi the next play you go back in on toe Transcontinental.” Thu* st«rW the^I^ play In toe city high i football series between rwr tlac Northern and Pontiac Central. The speaker was first year PNH coach Bob Ding- «... .Mil WliK back Jim moved baek five ywds to toe Nortoera flvefard- aad toen seat DeFlorio to with toe play. “It’s a touchdown one way or the other,” the coach commented before toe play started. As soon is quarterback Jiih Kimmel began roUing out to toe right, toe excited Dingman yellod: ‘W us, for us.” At toe same moment Kimmel whirled and hurled a*0ong dangerous crosafield pass to the wide open De-Florio on the Adeline; and he outdistanced two rather chagrined PCH defenders to ton distant goal Itaw. The play put icing on toe victory dake being saihr’-^ by toe HuOkles. Thw loot some of toe spark tney bubbled with earlier In the game, but tod spectacular, quick strike brought life baek into toe happy grinip along the sidelines ... and a big smile to Dingman’’s face. For Central ttb play was toe climax to a season of experience and tack of Bbe, toe Chiefs failed to win a game tor toe first time to IfseaSmiB. Although falling , to score for the first time against PNH in toe four totra-city battles, vtoo Chiefs wagSd' a game battle. Their tackling on defense was the best since they tied Bay aty Handy a monto ago in what provN to be the only bright spot this season. Ug PCH blockers M smear qaar-lerbaek Jerry Murphy for key louses. One of the biggest reactions fnnn tin stands during toe halftime performances by the PCH aiid PNH bands was for the latter’s routine showing a scales tiding the balance of atb-letic power to favor of Northehi. Game statistics gave further proof of that fact. In previous city series grid contests, the Chiefs had gained toee times as many yaedsiusbingii . Last night PNH led in this department, 155-115. The Chiefs had only passed five times for 52 yards pre- viously, but bit six of 14 fod 78 last night - only to see the Huskies gain 161 on six of nine. the^ame was a credit to both teams for Ujc calibre of play. The two sides hit hard, but clepnly. Not one dnsportsmanlike con duct penalty was called, nor were there any warnings for rough play. WeU>laaaed and executed pep rallies at each school to toe create a spirited but peaceful attitude among the fans. The PCH student body heard a talk by Northern’s , Steve Daniels and the Huskies’ pep rally was addressed by Central’s Linda Fdught. Both urged fair play at the game and the beneficial results of their talks weye evident at the contest. w it' ★ The victory for the Huskies gave Dingman a 6-3 mark for his first Season at PNH and eariiied him a ride on the shoulders of the team following the game. Foe Central’s Paul De^o^ ba there Was only the lonely walk to another losing BIGGER JOLT Last wetk’s tost' tofh* chances of getting a third place finish and a .500 record oqt of this season since they still must face Green Bay, Chicago and Cleveland. But toe Rams are one club tiiat Detroit should be able to handle despite its many troubles and toe Lions are a solid 10-potet favorite. Los Angeles is in a last place tie with San Francisco with a 2-7 mark, although the Rams did put up a stiff battle against Chicago last week before losing. A crowd of 40,000 is expected for the contest and that’s not much more than Just the season ticket holders. With a big clique of Argentines in the slim crowd of about 2,000 cheering him on, Peralta broke up a tight battle, fought mostly at close range, by sweeping the fifth, sixth, and, seventh rounds. Hfe was cut ovet' the left-eye tti the eighth round and Thornton won that big to narrow the margin. Judge Artie Aidala six rounds fo four, and Judges Tony Rossi, 64-1, voted for Peralta. Referee Art Mercante had Thornton in front 5-4-1. The AP card had Peralta ahead 64-1. A poll of boxing writers showed an 114 vote for Peralta with one even. DEFENSE GOOD The Ram defense has been tough and their front line of Dave Jones, Merlin Olsen, Ro-sey Grier and Lamar Lundy led the way last week as the club allowed Chicago out of its own torritoy only three times. ’The game showed that the Rams have made a remarkable improvement since suffering a 62-14 licking at the hands of the Bears on the west coast. Prep All-Sfafe Lineups Start Next Week hopes that Wt year the young PCH squqd «H1 prbf-(Cont. on Page 85, Col. 1) dIeTROIT UP) — Collegiate professional football stars of the future are almost certain to be among toe boys named on this year’s-Associated Press all-state high school football teams. • The 23rd annual AP all-state teems will start appearing in The Pontiac Press Tuesday, Nov. 19, with the announcement of the Class D team. On the following days. Class C, B and A teams,will be announced on these pages. Former all-staters who went on to make their mark in collegiate and pro circles Include Dick Rlfenburg, Dorn TomasI, Sonny Orandelius, Leo Sugar, Don' Dahoney, Tom Tracy, Tonj Branoff, Gaiy Uwe, Terry Barr, Jim Ninowski and Dean Lo^. / has finally given the quarterback Job to Roman Gabriel, Job but still has a long way to go. Helsman trophy winner Terry Baker, who started for the Rama against Detroit but still needs time to adjust to pro ball, is the No. 2 quarterback. The Lions actually got through the loss to Baltimore last week without suffering a major injury \^hich Was somewhat of a victory Ih itself. ,/ But toe club is still i middle linebacker Joe Schmidt, defensive halfback Ytale Lary dnd guard Dan La Rose besides the three players, who are lost for the season, Pat Studstlll, Carl Brettschneider and Gary Lowe. Buitar Dobi It, Again VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AH -Buster O’Brien, the greatest S in Virginia High School 11................. ■ ' football history, closed out hli career Friday night with 85 / completiohs in 53 attenmts lo|f 538 yards and seven touchdowna as Priheess Anne defeated win-less Warwick 684. , , The tWooH honor student fin- ^ mre io watch for title Ished this season irith M ecorliqf, year’s teams op these pages aerials ■ n d fan his toree-ye» next week. I career total tq 61. .M TWENTYFOUB tHE PONTIAC PRESS. SATUEDAY, NOVEMBER imj • • V Chicago and Green Bay Battle Over League Lead Titans Sj^rHe in HometOTir tilt PAis-Bears 2nd Clash Set for Windy City Browns, Giants tiod In East; Cordinals 1. Gomie off Pace By the Asaociaied Press The tangle In the National Football League’s Western Conference is due for an unraveling Sunday, but there’s all sorts'of snarls possible In" the Eastern wrangle. Chicago and Green Bay, knotted for the top spot in the West with Sri records, collide on the Bears’ h<»ne grounds Wfth the winner a solid favorite to make it to the title game . The whuer goes one pme out in front and the loter has only four weeks to catch up. They don’t play cAeh other again, liearlng a idayoff. Hie Bears knodced off the two-time league champion Packers IM on opening day, but the mi(^ty Packers have been untouchable since, winning eight in a row. ALL HANDS ON DECK » Bart Starr, No. 1 quarterback of the Green Bay Packers gestures to show his right hand has healed from the fracture wiiich sidelined him for three games. He talks to understudy J- although Kirkland himself doesn’t remember too much about his last delivery. I was just Ithihking give it ■ release), 'enouilh room (bn the he said, “and then 1 was afraid Igaveit toomuch.” . His performance helped the 300 team to sweep eight points to the league play. ' Samardzija need every pin they can get to the semifinals today. Both have assured themselvel of a slice of tee prlia fund already since cash awards go to the top 48 nien. However, both The bowlers carry their pins throtttfiout the tournament but in the finals an additional SO pins is added for each win in the match play. Thus Moore and ‘Best Round' Nabs lead in Gulf Golf OSt^Bur^* II SM* ♦«"» 0^ "liirkt 11 pMt frwn Qvmh (Clsrti Srivn 1 run (Oarrttt p*w trOm St firmly set on ^t t^ award of 87,500. Dmnir'ChtpitJ'SiTTow'll T.'.'. ..'. '^ Last Chances at Six Sites OCEAN SPRINGS, Miss. (AP)—“The best round Of golf I have ever played” has Shirley Engelhom out front with a three-stroke lead today in the 815,600 Mary Mills Gulf Coast Invitational. Shirley toured the difficult 6,224-yard, 3548-71 QuU HUls Country Club course Friday BowlerOma with a two^lnde^par 8445-69,'" OOWimumu for her opening round. Kathy Whitworth was to second with a one^)ver-par 72. She scrambled over the front nine, drowning a bird in four bogles for 38. On the back nine she settled down with two birdies and seven pars. ' Sybil Griffin was to teird place with 37-38—73. The Infant of the tour, 12yoar-old Judy Torluetoke of St Louis, had a 34-40-74, going four over par mi tee last three holes. Begtontog at 11 a.m. tomorrow, six qualifying sites for tee seventh ^ annual Press Bowlerama win have teckr fi-itol day of competition la the As many as six squads may be ran at each site, pwvUIng there are enough bowlers to Error GIvm Ttgoro Win DUNEDIN, Fla. (A capitalized on an error by Cincinnati shortstop Lynn Boehmer in tee sixth toning Friday, made two runs and defeated Cincinnati 4-3 to Florida winter instructional league baseball. Homer Lee of Cincinnati lloi»e^ ed to the fourth. ts atJ i ? Hhnii) Oriiory. DoOwn (T) No ai^ qualifying start after 8 % tee end el the last eqaad tonMrrow, tee first poMen ef^ the qualifiers for tee Dae. 1st finals at m Bowl wiO he known. Six more sites will conclude ttwir quaHiying next The bonses tomorrow im Cooley Lnnes one for tteat proved to-be the winning touchdown. Southern Cal’s first and final touchdowns oame on- rocoverud fumbldk. The first was Trojan recovery on the enemy IS. In four plays the Trojans scored on a seven-yard pass from Craig Fertig to Hal Bedsole. Hie flnal touchdown for USC #as setuiq) when Dan Eqtalto fumbled a -fbnes punt and the Trojans took ov«r on the Ore^ State 26. Hie Queen-Butke conibtoation was sensatl^. The two got together for two passes of 12 and 22 yadls for touchdowns ndiich came to less than two minutes and put tee Beavers to front 14-7. size of Davisburg, is to the center of this extraordinarily good White tall county. .. .A',. * - Dear tmelteeado th »r sigas wme in evldi^ around the Isabella GoUnfy vllliqto> buDyester-daya optoer tolM to i^uee enough ^’outside” hunters — those fipom smiteem Mldhigan- Yarik Takes Jump Honors Stoinkrouss Is First m Toronto Mooting :'; rj ? tS *4, ironwMd If, AmWoM t KIngtford 75, Orway 52 Ukt LhMtan «, OntoMoan » MarawMta 55, Munlilno 4t AlMiTlIlqut 55. lth»t«Ano 51 K&*LW'a2oblle 44 — TORONTO (AP) - We8tTle^ many took over the lead to the totemational team Jumping competition at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair Friday night, but the final contestant of the night Stole the show. ’BUI Steinkrauss, United States mi the list to a Junqion to break an eight-way tie tor first place to the individual honors, emb-pleted the course to 41 seconds, without any faults and wen the Earlier in tee Jumpoff, Alwto Schoeckemottele marked with farma, fwamps, lakes, hardwood and p e p p 1 e Baler, the Htana’ fullback, gained 54 yirda to 18 carries to run his season’s totid to 766 yards, making him the top rush-r in the Country. It was a frustrating niglit for Xavier, which not only akW its line crossed for the firat time in 5 quarters, but also suf-fwiails flMt setback to five games. The Musketeers entered the game with thrM straight shutouts under teeir bett. The vlctofy was the second for Detroit in nine games this season, and only the third in John Idzlk’s two-year reign as head coach. The Htans iHayed a tie with Dayton earlier this year. OUTGAINED Xavier outgained the Titans on the ground, 253 yards to 174, but the stubborn Htans came up with a big defensive play whenever the Musketeers threatened. season opened'appeared to be in good shape indicating suf- All-StarGame Stays in LA LOS ANGELES (AP) - The AU-Star Pro Bowl game, which matches outstanding idayera of the two divlsIOQs in the National Football League in a poatfea-son struggle, is set for anoUier 10 years in Los Ahge^. A new coqtract, announced today, was signed by CommiA-sioner Pete Rozelle of the NFL and the sponsoring publishers of the Los Angeles metropolitan ficientfood. No special permits were issued for antlerless deer around Weidman. The area aectlons a few mil0B east and north are open to special permit gunning. One ^^8 reason adiy downstators do not hunt the area is because it “isn’t far enough north” one man put it. ★ ★ .★ A deer hunter cah drive south of Weidman for 15 minutes and find himself in zone 3. where shotguns no centerflre rifles — must be used. A good many people don’t consider k teihselves “up north” until they are above Clare. This area resembles many sections found farther “up north.” It has good grouse hunting, trout streams and, deer. The majority of bucks taken to this stretch of land are fork horns on up. This isn’t true to many sectenur to the Norteem Lower Peninsula where splkehoms are the rule, and the four to six-pointer ah exception.' Note — There’s one less six-point^ on Meyer’s place. In its 12year history, the Pro Bowl has averaged 50,386 to at-tendance. The new pact goes into effect with the Jan. 18,1984 »W»H ly NSW YORK-Otm inW, A^ aMtin*, oUtpQkiM Wayiw Tnornton, ROMS, AnwMI, 1V4, llalv. lywekx ^ Om Wanwr. IW, RMIa-"^l6ourn«, Awirtn»...aHii«r '41. 135, Italy. ovip«intt4 otcar 13155, MmIM, If IT GOT AWAY - Unlveraity of Detroit end live back Jim Korb (33) Just toahafed to Dick Alge let this pass for a poaiible touch- get tot finger tips qt| it. Hw Htana won t firon him aa Xavfor’a defon- ixmiaceiiitog gama ^ iiigbt, 84. down get away f UD Bells Xavier in DETROIT (A - AU the University to Detroit needt for a successful footbaU season is to The Htans, to their best defensive effort of the season Friday night, upset Xavier 84 before 12415 homecoming fans. Fred Beier capped a 77-yard V-D tetve with a i yard tehehdown .phnge midr iray to tee lecead qm^ for In tee first quarter, Xavier got as far as tee Deiralt 87 before ' Dennis Assenmidier intercepted a Joe Wyzkoskl passonteelt. The Musketeers marched from their own 10 to the Detroit six-yard line late* to the eecond * ' 1 penal- quarter. A delay of game p ty put them back to the 11, and Detroit guard Dave VltaUl then intercepted a pase on tee goal Une after tt botniced off the shoulder of the intended recelv- Xevier ceme on with a rush at tee start of the second half as Mike Junker brought the opening kickoff, back from bis own end zone to the Musketeer 43, Walt Mainer ripped off 38 yards up the middle and Wyz-koski tried the middle again, fumbled, and Ed Oreeves recovered for the Htani. “ Two more Xavier drivee were halted when fourth down gum wore incomplete. Detroit penetrated Xavier territory only two other times to tee game -r- getting to the 48 lost betore its touchdown drive, and teen to the 18 in tee fourth quarter. Assenmacher, who was caUed W to «to fitosrMTfottOIt’s plays early to tee gama as Beier was used as a deaqr, galnod 86 yards In 17 attempts to lead the Htans. “Xavier’s Watt Mainer picked up 127 yards in 11 attempts to pace all rushers. The Htans close out their season at Toledo next Saturday tKamp ofi AAark OK for TiH« D«f«rti4 MANILA (AP)-rFlash Elordo of the PhUipplnes weiighsd to at 180 pounds 1^ challenger Love AUotoy of Ghana at 188 for their i2round tlUe fight tonight. Elorde world Junior llght-welftet chanqiion who bad dl^ cul^ maktog the 189 pound limit for hie previous title defenses, easily Made it thie time. He mu 189 on the nose on his fint trip to the soalee. Ad^, 28, the No. 1 eontend-«r fights out of London, also fottgh^ inside the iimtt on his first tiy. The odds rumitoaa at 74 to favor of tee H-year-old champion, iirhb is scheduled to meet Carlqe Ortiz of the United States next monte or to Jamiiry, The fight, be held to Manila, will be for Ortb’i'crown. a' TTO yONTIAC PBESS SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 19, 1963 TWENTY-FIVii PASS OR RUN — .PonUac Central quarterbadc Jerry Murphy (ie) Ji in petition to hand the ball off to either the trailing halfback Jim Mltxdwll (35) or keep the ball for a paaa attempt. The blocking atancea of Ed Collina (81) and George Jackami (60) would indicate Murphy kq>t the ball thia time for a paaa attempt. Leading the bloddng charge on the rij^t aide are Carl Williams (66) and Jim Crun^ (33). VOCAL SUPPORT — All eyes weren’t always on the grid action at last night’s PCR-PNH game. Pontiac Central’s enthused leaders kept the la^ge turnout of (^lef fins shouting encouragement to its hard working team on the field. The Cenval fans and cheer leaders were not so enthused when the game ended, though, with Northern ahead, 21-0. The trium^em^ the Huskies 100 points in the All Sports^ Trophy competraon between the two city rivals. Whitey Dazed by Yankm Offer NEW YORK Whitey Ford was in a kind of dam when the New Y«-k Yankees asked him if he'd like to sign both as a pitcher and a pitching coach. **rd Just coma into house after speakhig at a dinner in New Hampshire for 5»000,” he said. He gulped and added hastily: “Five dionsand people, that Is.” He “slept on it’’ and then agreed to his dual role. The fact that an estimated $55,000 salary went with it helped considerably to make up his mind. Ralph Hbuk, whose Jump to rsral manager payed the way Yogi Berra to become man-, ager, still rode the bench at the announcement. He was a bit apologetic. “We didn’t mean to compete with that other fellow Wing a press conference today,” he said, referring tb the fact that President Kennedy was speecbmaking a ffw Weeks,-Yo(d atood around,' shilling from one leg to another and nodding gnomish agreement to Houk’s itatemente as the iron major explained a number of. items. WORKS WELL One was that Ford had always Scoring Pass Ices Victory (Coht. from Page 23, Col. «) it from this, season’s hard For the first time, a restraining line was marked 18 inches outside the sideline on the Northern side of the field. Hw players wire ^.jdl supposed m stand be. hind it, leaving room for tiie coaches and officials to move between the 30-yard-Unes. The line was pracUcally gone by the start of the second half and never very iCloMly observed. Both Clift Ashley of PNH and John Knox, of the Oilefs ware carried from the field on stretchers in the fourth quarter, Ashley’s leg injury did not keep him from watching the remain, dir of the game. KnoK went to the hospital With a knee Injuryi but was rHeased later, . . w ‘ ★ Seniors finishing their grid careers at Northern were Daniels, DeFlorlo, Don Weyer, Klmmel, Les Smith,, day Ollletti, John Kraus, Ashley, Bob Bates, Antle Osta, Roger Coleman, Paul Mirien, Dave Gruber, mm Nichols, Jim Bland and Dean Soudan. Those plmrlng their last footbaU for PCH were Me^ cure Washington, Esjaye Whiters, WUUe Hairls, Jim NQtciieU, Dnve Houts, George Jackson, Dick Sha* fer, Dick Northcross, Tom Rotunde, pk* Cloolw, Dennis Wright, Ed Rogers. John Smith, Diok Rouse And Tor the concession stiad fans, a total of . 806 hot dogs were dispensed to cold waiting hahds. wewked with younger plcthers this way all hands would feel free to give or ask advice and that Whitey “has been thinking of stirring in baseball as a coach when his pitching, days are byef7^ Whitey agri^, asserting that he looked forward to a “couple more years of action.” it h t Houk went on to say that Roger Maris wasn’t on the trading block; Rocky Colavlto of Detroit woudn’t do well in Yankee Stadium because his power is to left center which is the deepest spot in Yankee Stadium; pitching was the Yankees’ strong suit; the Yanks were trying to develop and not trade for future talent; and that the big drive was to produce a catcher for the future as well as power^iit-ting outfielders. “Now that you are a coach are you still opposed to the spltbail?” U^itey was asked. Ford, often accused of tossing the saliva pitch, winkled his nose in amusement. ★ w ★ “How come you didn’t adc me during the series?” he demanded. It was recalled that once, when Jinuny Dykes accused Whitey of expectorating on the horiehide, Whitey replied: “I don't eomplaia when we play golf and he carries m extra club.”/ | Huskie II Wins First in Series (Cont. from Page 23, Ck>l. 2) Northern kept^ the Chiefs bottled up during the third period, but two Huskie fumbles in the final frame kept the outcome of the game in doubt. W e.y wjf... Jarred loose from t^ ban early in the closing period and Central recov- the Huskie tf. Murphy moved the club to the IS-yard line, hitting end Dave Iklwards and Seay wi(h tosses of 21 and five ydrds. ★ ; ★ ★ Central missed the TD when a Murphy pass bounced off the fingertips of Edwards who had moved behind Northern’s defenders Into the right comer of the end hone. The Chiefs’ final opportunity came with two minutes remaining when DeFlorio was separate ed from the bail at Northern’s 39-yard line. Central moved to the Huskie 10, but Northern killed the threat by slamming Mitchell to the ground on fourth down. Kimmel turned loose his aen< lal bomb two plays later. The 95-yard scoring pitch to DeFlo^ b was the longest scoring play in the series history. Northern’s experience war evident throughout .the game, . . .. m a I line kept thr SHOWS PGUE Murplqr was pressed bto the gukrterback role early In the feason when Bflh WiMhis w** knocked out of action, and the young signal caller showed a lot of poise against the Huskie ruB^. He eempieted six'll U' passes for 78 yards, throwing, aaeet ef tta line en the ma. Interest in R(Kky Lags on Market Fails to Lure Top Prospects Houk Sayi Yankees Don't Need Colovito; Moris Not Available DETROIT (UPI) - The Ma-Jo^ League teams aren’t exactly beating the Tiger Stadium door down at the prospect of Rocky (>olavito being on the trading block. Although (blavito Is up on the block for the highest taker, the other teams — publicly, at least haven’t shown too much interest. WWW At a press conference in New York Friday, new Yankee general Ral|di Ibuk said the Yanks aren^t interested In the temperamental'llger leftfielder. “I don't think he weald do os much good. Colavlto’s power Is to left center and that's the deepest spot in Yankee when asked tf the Yanks were trying to land him. R Just happens that Colavito, the Bronx naUyo who — as the cUche goes - “grew up in tl» shadows of Yaiwee Stadium,” does some of hte best hitting in New York. But the Yanks sUU don’t want him. SQUELCH RCipORTS Houk also squelched reports that Roger Marls is on the trading block. “You don’t come by players of his type oveiy day, he’i still one of the best you can name,” Houk said. w ★ k' / For some strange reason, Maris had been mentioned in trade talk with the Tigers. .But Tiger manager (Jharlle Dressen, who doesn’t like Maris’ attitude, ton’t Interested hi getdng Maris* Dressen, who arrived on the baseball scene not too long after Abner Doubleday tossed out the first bases, has lived through many of baseball’s most remembered moments and also doesn’t like toe idea of Maris getting one more homer than Balte Ruth. The inter-league trading ■eaaon will start this Thars-day and mas torongh Dec. 15. General manager Jim Campbell has been dickering with several National League teams in an attempt to swbg a deal and tha Tigers may taka advantage of the qpeolal trading season. The Tigers are also trying land s second baseman and have been talking about trqding Colavlto to Kansaa City for Jerry Dumpe. . . .■■i j I k WISTHN OlVIllON IJ -j. ••eimon •T'cliiicM^I M, OlWfON S»M tt •t M AuMitwia. I.D. « Hat* Sk Arkaniaa Itata la ----ita fa, Vanhantfla A*" " r’* SMt Valet to Bntey Wrestling Ring in Tag Match A fellow who has played a villainous role from his safe position outside the wrestling ring in the past few weeks may get a taste of his own medicine when he moves onto the mat Saturday night. '' '★ ★ The villain ia ‘The Valet’, a gaily-attired young man who shines the shoes of The Great Mephisto. Valet normally takes a position at ringside to watch Mephisto in action, and on many occasions, he has aided his master by tripping die. opponent. To give the Other wrestlers a chance to get even. Valet wiB enter the ring Saturday night along .with Mephisto in a tag-team match with Louie Kltoe and Gino Britto providing the oppositjyn. The bout is one of four on the Saturday card which- is slated to get underway at 8:30 p.m. at the National Quard Armory on Water Street. Other matekm bawe The Sto- LONG REACH ~ Wilt Chamberlain is sure of one thing. The seven foot-one inch center of the San Francisco Warriors knows that Detroit’s Ray Scott has very little if no chance of getting the ball which he prepares to pass off in their game in San Francisco last night. The Pistons won, 101-98. Pistons Rally lo Beal Warriors, 101-98 8AN FRANCISCO W - The Detroit Pistons scored 21 points while holding San Francisco to six Friday night as they made up a 15-polnt deficit in the last period and beat the Warrors 101-98. Trailing 8348 after three quarters. It took the Pistoiw Just seven minutes to tie the score at 8949 on Don Ohl’s 10-foot Jump shot. Ohl led the comeback with eight pointe In t^ final period.,_ It was the Pistons’ fourth National Basketball Association victory in 10 starts. The Warriors now are 0-7. Wilt Chamberlain and AI At- tlees led San Francisco’s attack with 22 points each, but the Warriors coUected only 16 points in the final period while Detroit tossed in 33. Ohl, with 15, and Bob Ferry, with 10, were high for the Pistons. CELTS 6th The Boston Celtics, aiming foi' a sixth straight NBA championship scored their llth victory in 12 starts by walloping the New York Knicks 138-110. The Celtics are playing at a .U7 pace far better then their .710 play two years ago when they won 10 and lost Third Jn Mexico Open Gajda 3 Shots oil lead MEXICO CITY (AP)-Laqky Al Balding of Toronto, sniffing oxygen because of Mexico Clty% nirified mile-and-a-haH altitude, swept into a two-stroke lead Friday at the half-way mark of the Mexico Open G<^ Tournament. i w W' ' BaMIng, Canada’s new champion, showed how he got that way with a thrOemnd^-par 00, breaking out of a tie for the top with Mexico’s Juan Nert «nd tal^. a two-stroke lead at 86, eidht under par for 72 holes. 'it * .Sr-: Nert nicked up his second ^Ogle of the tourney, but was otjfy enr uiider at 71 over the 7,ik^yara, par 72 La Hacienda Bob Gajda of Forest Lake ime in witit a 09 and was one stroke back of Nert and three back of Balding atf 139. I atfH Ehiie Vosslar u Oklahoma City and Doftg Banders of OJai, Calif., were tied for fourth at 10. Others still in tite running Included Bitiy MoxweU at 142, three Mexican players, Ramon Crus, Jose Gonxalez and Antonio Cerda, all at 148, and PhU Rodgers, Jim Ferree and Richard Crawford, bunched at 144. J0$$ OoniRiM ................ vSmmv 8*sE!E!!!!!!'.E........] Chick av*ii ............ Tomnw PonMC* 1 Jack BUI* Jr. ......../...... kwl Vwilrul ........... H*cfor Alvtrti ..............I Sat the Naw 'B4 Dependahliii . Dadfia and .Oaif Core and Trucks nl 20. Setting a record for moat victories in a season. Philadelphia, like Detroit, also had to make up a IS-point deficit to beat the Los Angeles Lakers 99-97 in Friday night’s other NBA game. But the 76ers had longer to do it. They started their comeback midway through the third period, when they were trailing 67-62. .DSTBOir IAN PBANCIICd OPT OP Moreland 3 M 4 Hlghl'ar ill nowtii a a-3 r niii i 2-2 irVuill TUal* W20I2 N MlM ................. 24 It 2S M-ltl Ian PranclK* ........2t !• 27 IS- H Panonal touts - Dalroll, Mor--- ' Scoll 2, Imhoil 3. Igan, Mllaa Parry 3> Howall 2. ilavarman Pranel -------------------- Pranelie*,, ChambarWtr........... 3, Thurmond 4, Ssors i, Aliandanco 2,2M Masdiary odoart, Atll Pontiac*B Closest DRAG STRIP INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY PARK ir ir Ir STILL OPEN SUNDAY LAST DAY ■k -k * < 26 Mill kD. 6 Miles Inst of Orotlet Stria IktanM 1.000 Poof orts (7) Wide World of Sports (In Progress) (9) Popeye and Pals l:3t (2) Highway Patrol <4)Surli»ided-------- 47)-P^AJrXe.w:____WJjl ter Olympics 7:N (2) Death Valley Days (7) Dickens — Fenster (9) Follow the Sun . 7:39 (2) Jackie Gleason (4) Lieutenant (7) Hootenanny 8:99 (9) Sports-Ted Lindsay 8:39 (2) Defenders (4) (Color) Joey Bishop (7) Lawrence Welk (9) Hockey: Toronto vs. ■ New Yoric 9:99 (4) Movie: (Color) “Untamed.” (1935) Tyrone Power, Susan Hayward, Richard Egan, Rita Moreno , . 9:39 (2) Phil Silvers (7) Jerry Lewis 19:99 (2) Gunsmoke 19:15 (9) JuUette 19:45 (9) Sports 11:99 (2) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:15 (4) News, Weather Sports 11:29 (9) Passport to Pfofit M ,(2) Movies: 1. “Mo-gambo.” (1953) Clark Gable, Ava Gardner, Grace Kelley* 2. “The Whip Hand.” (1951) Elliott Reid 11:39(7) Movies: 1. “Miss Sadie Thompson.” (1954) Rita Hayworth, Jose Fe^ rer. 2. “The UntaiAed Breed.” (1948) Sonny IWts i (9) Movies: 1. “Cast a I Dark Shadow.” (1955) ' Dirk Bogarde. 2. “Racket Busters.” (1938) Hunt-phrey Bogart 11:59 (4) “How Green Was M)l Valley.” (1941) Walter Pidgeon, Maureen O’Hara, Roddy McDowell SUNDAY M0KNINQ '1:19 (7) Genius ‘ 7:15 (4) News 7:39 (4) Country Living (7) Rural Newsreel 7:45 (2) Let’s Find Out (7) Insight 8:19 (9) Warm-Up 8:15 (4) (Color) Davey and Goliath (9) .Sacred Heart 8:39 (2) Mass for Shut-Ins -----(4)“Etemal Light ____caia World (9) Temple Baptis Church 9:99 (2) Gilead BapUst Church (4) Church at the Crossroads (7) Magic Ranch . (9M)rai Roberts 9:lj5 (2) To Dwell Together 9:39 (2) Let’s See (4) (Color) Bozo the CSovra ’ (7) Air Power (9) Christopher Program 9:45 (2) Off to Adventure 19:99 (2) This Is the Ufa (7) Riverboat (9) CathedraXof JCo- 19:39 (2) Christophs Program 19:45 (2) With This Ring 11:99 (2) Deputy Dawg (4) House Detective (7) (Color) World Advsi-ture Series (9) Herald of Truth 11:38 (2) It is Written (7) Champion If r> I jr I* • 19:49 (56) French Lesson lkeJgdi}Ltace-Que$tt0mF^ United Press International UEUTENANT, 7:30 p.m* (4) Lady of-ficers prove embarrassing for Marines, who hope they’ll “wash out.” HOOTENANNY, 7:30 p.m. (7) New Christy Ministrels, Leon Bibb join Jack Linkletter at Fordham. • DEFENDERS, 8:30 p.m. (2) New time slot. Policeman wounds bystander while shooting at fleeing mugger, repol-ts that partner fired shot. ' SUNDAY V INSIGHT, 8:00 a.m*X7)-Two men, ^ .Coi^iinist.. (Ed Begley) and one Christian (Brian Keith), fight for control of U.S. la-Itor union during ’30s. FACE THE NATION, 1:30 p.m. (2) GOP hopeful N^n Rockefeller Js interviewed. ISSUES AND ANSWERS, 1:30 p.m. (7) Fonner President Eisenhower is questioned. TWENTIETH CENTURY, 6:0() p.m. (2) Austrian’s children’s villages, in which fanU-ly atmdsphere is provided for orphans and abandon^ youngsters, is explored. SHOW OF THE WEEK, l6:1o p.m. (4) “Miss America; Behind the Scenes” follows Miss Tdkas of 1963 as she prepares her bid for the Miss America-erown^——. 7—^ MONDAY TODAY, maJ0.4i).H^ with Secretary of the Interior Steward h, UdaU, James Steivart. (9) Movie: “Dimples.” ^1936) Shirley Temple SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:90(2) Detroit Speaks (4) U. of M. Presents 12:39 (2) Decisions (4) Modem Music Makers (7) Discovery ’63 12:45 (2) Report From Washington ' (4) Fran Harris , 1:90 (2) Camera Three (4) Captain Gallant (7) Direction ’64 (9) Movie: “Lisbon.’ (1956) Ray Mi Hand, Claude Rains 1:39 (2) Face the NaUon Wl^Highlihts (7) Issues and Answers 2:90 (2) International Zone (4) Top Star Bowling (7) Starlit Stairway 2:30 (2) Traveirama (7) Movie: “Explosion.” ; (1956) Lyle Bettger 2:45 (2) Sunday Show 3:90 (4) News Encore traveLogue r r 3 r” fT B- 1 A BT nr ir \r iA PT IB IB A 2T zr Hjkr 2T W M 32 U 3T U ♦T »w. ■T" 32. u BE ta ACROSS 1 Asiatic country OSea--------- 11 Lecturer 13 Looks fixedly 14 Cloak 15 Least ferocious 16 Mariner’s direction 17 Coat part 19 Female saint (ab.) 20 Soared 22 IncUne 25 Observe 26 Exute 30 Encourage 31 Ribbed 32 Otherwise 33 Miss Tanguay am sakM 34^1nes 35TVirf 38 Oriental coins 39 Violent wind 42 Policeman (slang) Flower part 46 Lleutenahti (ab.) 49 Beast 61 Medicinal waigi 83 Choose 54 Scanty 55 English stream 56 Expunge DOWN .1 AJaskan 2ifc 3 Window 2 A_ 3 Window part 4 Pewter coin of Thailand 6 Lounges 6 Not flash 7 idb of Noah (Bib.) 8 Mineral rocks 9 Pause 10 Italian city 12 Harvests 13 Cubic meter IgvPastry 20 Bear witness 21 Hate 22 French community 23 Capable 24 Arboreal home 27 Stir , 28 Persia 29 Hardy Heroine 35 SmaU fish 36 Make a choice 37 Transactions 40 Excess of lunar over solar month 41 Slant '42 Toss 43 Heavy,bIow ' 44 Heap 46 Italian cbln 47 Hurl 50 Mates 48 Dirk 52 Mariner Answer to Prevtous Puzrie 3:15 (2) Changing Times 3:30 (2) Movie: “A Letter to Three Wives." (1949) Jeanne Crain, Unda Darnell, Ann Sotiiern (7) Pro.. FootbaU: York vs. Denver ' "(9) MoTter “Bombardier.” (1948) Pat O’Brien, . Randolph Scott' 4:90 (4) Sunday 5:00 (4) (Color) WUd Kingdom 5:30 (2) Sea Hunt (4) (Ck>lor) College Bowl (9) Bugs Bunny SUNDAY EVENING 6:00 (2) Twentieth Century (4) (Color) Meet the 'Press » (9) Popeye and Pals (56) Musicals 6:15 (7) All-Pro Scoreboard 6:30 (2) Leave It to Beaver (4) Probe (7) Mr. Lucky (56) Science .Reporter 7:00 (2) Lassie (4) Bill Dana (7) Biography (9) Mr. Magoo (56) Destruction of the Indian 7:30 (2) My Favorite Martian (4) (Color) Walt Disney’s World (7) Jaimie McPheeters (9) Movie: “Wagon- master.” (1950) Joanne Dm (56) On Hearing Music 8:00 (2) Ed Sullivan (56)) Playwright at Work 8:30 (4) Grind! J (7) Arrest and Trial (56) What in the World 9:00 (2) Judy Garland (4) (Color) Bonanza (9) (Special) Show from Two Cities. (56) Producer’s Choice 9:30 (9) Flashback 10:00 (2) Candid Camera (4) Show of the Week (7) Laughs for Sale (9) Let’s Face It 10:30 (2) What’s My Line (7) News Report . „ (Oj iJuestiOB-Mark- ' 11:99 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Sports, Weather 11:29 (9) Passport to Profit 11:25 (2) Movie: “The Big Lift.” (1950) Montgomery Clift, Paul Douglas. iL39 (4) 'filler. (7>Movle: “The Long Haul.” (1957) Victor Ma. ture. 11:25 (9) Movie: “The Wicked Lady.” (1945) Margaret Lockwood. 1:15 (2) With This Ring I MONDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:26 (2) On the Farm JTroni 6:25 (2) News 6:39 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Funews 7:99 j2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:95 (2) Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show 8:39 (7) Movie: “Johnny Allegro.” (1949) George Raft, Nina Foch. (56) Great Books 8:59 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:99 (2) Movie: “LovevLet-ters.” (Part 1) (1945) Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotton. (4) Living (9) Kiddy Korner Kartoons . 9:19 (56) Understamling Numbers 9:39 (9) Jack'^La Lanne 9:35 (56) Careers 19:99 (4) Say When (9) National Schools Telecast (56) Spanish Lesson 15 (7) News (58) Our Scientific World 25 (4) jNews (7) Girl Talk ^ (9) Chez Helene U:99.(2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Price Is Right (9) Romper Room 11:19 (56) Let’s Read 11:85 (56) Science Reporter 11:39 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Missing Links (7) Seven Keys 11:55 (56) Spanish for Teachers hlONDAY AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7)Jl^o Ford __________ (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News Urn (2) Guiding Light 12:59 (59) Understanding Numbers 12:51 (4) News l!99 (2) Star Performance .(4)_Ci«Mrsa^ Piece: 17) G^aTHoq^tal (9) Movie: “Dangerous^! They Live.” (1941) John . Garfield. 1:16 (56) French Lesson 1:36 (2) As the World Turns (4) Make Room (or Daddy (7) Bachelor Father (58) World Iflstoiry 2:99 (2) POssword (4) (Color) People Will Talk (7) Rebel (56) Adventures in' (4) (Color) Truth or consequences (7) Father Knows Best (9) People in Cimflict 12:35 (56) Spanish Lesson (56) Friendly Ofanl 5:39 (56) What’s New 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends 5:55 (2) Weather ~ Mb Micrt wort* • t«y« of hoof of Ik* nlllns. 6*m(«*M..% 'Deep Purple'Up to No. What young people think are the top records l»f the week as compiled by the. Gilbert Youth Research Institute. 1 Deep Purple Tempo and Stevens 2 Washj|||t(m*i|^uare Villa^b StdIhpOrs 3 Bossa Woim Baby Elvis Presley 4 I’m Loaving It All Up To You Dale and Grace 5 Sugar Shack Jimmy Gilmer and Fireballs 6 She’s A Fool 7 It’s Alright 8 I Can’t Stay Mai At You 9 Fools Rush In ” 10 Mean Woman Blues 11 Busted! 12 (Down At) Papa Joe’s 13 Your Other Love 14 Be My Baby 15 Donna the Prinma Donna 16 New Mexican Rose 17 Misty 18 Hey Little Girl 19 l^alking the Dog 20 Everybory Leslie, Gwe Impressions Skeeter Davis Rick Nelson Roy Qrbison Ray Charles Dixiebelles Connie Francis Ronettes. Dion DiMuci Four Seasons Lloyd Price Major Lance Rufus Thomas Tommy Roe County Man in 60P Group Jack I. Slater Jr., executive director of the Oakland County Republican party, is a member 0* a new GOP executive directors asmciatiah formed Thursday in Flint Eight Republican executive establish^ the grpup fOr the interchange of information and ideas and promotion of the par^ in Miebigiui. The group was named the Re^ publican Executive Directors Association of Michigan. A former Oakland County GOP staff member, Robert ,L. Slaughter, now executive director of the Glenesee County GOP, was elected temporary secretary of the new group. Charles Laser Jr. of Saginaw County was named temporary chairman, Paid staff members of the party’s state central committee ol be invited'to join. 4 meeting of the group is set for Dec. 11 in Saginaw. The executive directors are full-time, paid, professional political organizers. 2:25 (I) News 2:39 (2) Hennesey (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:35 (56) Careers 2:55 (7) News 3:90 (2) ToTellthelVuth (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day (56) Spanish Lesson 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30(2) Edge of Night " (4) (Color) You Don’t ■ Say! ■ (7) Who Do You Trukt (9) Friendly Giant \ 3:45 (9) Misterogers \ 4:00 (2) l^ret Storm \ (4) Match Game \ (7) Trailmaster \ (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: “Parole, Inc.” (1948) Michael O’Shea. (4) Mickey Mouse (3ub (0) Hercules 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) (Special) Detroit Aglow. . (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (7) Movie; “Rocket to the Moon.” (1954) Sonny Tufts Rosamond Williams SONOTONE 291.^.11 76 2-1225 OervtoataiNlOapBllosler ....... - 1oT5d8 ttoMdbrtlk*t*w*rii«,h**liM*l ■ •Ir Mtiily from 6**r <• «*Ulnn 5 i|i|tkrovahymirh«m*. g 8” Gail today for a Waa l I " oak! Tka furnace: EXCLUSIVE LIFfTIME GUARANTEE I omuR IIEIHmOO. NigMand I Ast 9f I ■V Hi I “Weekend Radio Programs— wjmyao) wxYin a70) cKiwtaoo) wwjtoso) wcawci i ao) wk>n(i aeo) wjaknwpf w R, NOWI I Princo Bocorolla __________Lowrtnr- -' WJBK, Rotert E. L — - :nrt*ry of Slat* lie for Atodama S’SHiF Nawhouaa ww^Nawt. NawfMiiaa' lil^wJR, UoM V*. Rama WWJ, Nawf. NawiMMM Si(*-WCAR, Ntwf, Logan WWJ, Newt, Dal. Symphony CKLW, Nawi, Staton limjjj^^Nawt, Komar am’S iiMjITftiTO CKLW, Joa Van ii**-w3tt, wood WPON, Nawt, ‘— wiVi WWJ, IN ...... , Si**-w)'nu Wood CKLW, Davlaa liW-WJR, M*ale Hall wiyw. Ntwi, Dali Tkw :;.,V 1, Nawa, RoBart ta* New Opening Day for 1-75 Section Dec. 16 is tile new date for the opening of 18.7 miles of 1-75 freeway from Walton Boulevard at Pontiac’s northeast corner to lOH Mile Road in Madison Heights, HmlleS of interstate highway to be opened during the next month in Miebigun by the State Highwuy Department. The new freeways will push ttw state’s freeway mileage past the 1,100-mite mark, aoew^ to State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackle. The I-7S section from Pontiac to Madison Heights previously had been expected to be open to traffic by tiie end of November. flibsoB llprighf FrBBzar Bay Now First Payment Due Maroh latlfoeaired ILIOTRIO aaSW.Hiiiwn FE 4-2525 NOW samcE /^biYOUB rmtiEcnmi! All MfMnbtero of TESA — Ooklond County Hovo Boon Exomlnod And Approvid for Lleonting By TESA of Mleliigo|ri. You are pratested iMcauso: To _P«tanwlnO Hit Compntwi^ And l^lmlMi • Eoch Mambar-lt ftoqulrad To Porferm Mi Sarv-IcM By Tha TISA Cod* of EHikt. Tho Hlghost Ethical Stondoids In The Strvlca Industry- KSUREofthtKSTIVSERnCE ditt i TE8A of fl«kl#nd Ooiinly r*w yw AAmdio SoHtieoJMs. AnEjmoK GMi^ployees 100,000 6.T.U. DELCO GAS FURNACE »169" JlJlDfLCOilfAI 125,000 B.T.U. Delco 68s Funiace *199" CSRIES nt vgoRHiis SB, FE 2-2919 MUMiunanint •miTMIHNn TirtnpoytiAC press. Saturday. November le. loea TWENTY-SEV^lSis^ Grcintf Go to U. of M. ANN ARBOR (»-A. total of |3W,(iN in gifts and grants to the University of Midiigan was scioiowlsdged by the board of regents yesterday. One grant was $100,000 from The Ford Foundation to support Increased attendance at summer engineering conferences from other achools. ■ The Oakland Count y^Road' tkftnttiisslon Ms^^ been awards a $88,000 grant for a new garage building and remodeiing of an existing garage. oppiciAL NOTica'or iAi.e ministration under the Accelerated Public Works program. The money will be used to help , finance construction of a garage aT the rosid commis-‘4^ headquarterff near Lake Orion. In addition, the existing attached garage will be remodeled. IN MtMl DMtfflIwr 1, wlTItiilur# MiV 1. 1M4 •im will inwrMt at - -.......... Knk*«r W’i bt payabla at a tp ba^^lgnatad IgNal purthaa*''..,?* O'* aMWriiiKff*® ua or of tha radaral qovarnmant. Da-Sminatigna and form at notai to ba at "pit ttia iwrpr- wnp'JtS^J i'*oaiy*ot°H»'%'agufar"aarv^^ noticai of >>'?.SLr»VAlon Of tba IX duo and payable Daeam- „.v ». e^lar'i eliMk I.. ( of tha par value of tho iwn upon an incorporated b""' company and payable to^ the treasurer must accomMny at a iiuarantae of good faitn :»'n1th\*«'i.l« and pay fo** ff'P notaa* ChacKs of ui fht purchaatr' >rnav approving ina lagafity of th srat'j.s'isiUtt-’ss Ichoolt Board ot Education. The right Is plemiy marHId Secretary, Intermedlote Schoc mIScWl^nanw CO^^^ Road Commission Gets Garage Grant The grant nm approvei|l by the Commnni^ Facilities A4- 3Vork will begin within 120 OPPIC1AL NOTICt Op sals M0l,000.00-Clty ot PontlK, County of OaKlan-* - Scenery CtHmes 1st WASHINGTON (UPI) - No high-rise apartment project is going to mar the scenic-splendors of Mrs. JacqueUne Kennedy’s girlhood home if the Interior Department can help it. Acting under what it termed *‘ciear instructions” from President Kennedy, the de- above note'i will be received 1^ the undariignad at the City Hall, U South Parka Straet, Pontiac, Michigan, until S;00 o'cloM, p.m., Saitarn Standard Tima, on tha Uth ddy of Novambar, 1»43, at which lima end place they will ba ,end read. ir ba dated November 1, rt'on Saptamber I, IfM, ....— .Jitarait at a rata or ratal axcMdIng four par cant (4%) par 'Sotn principal and Intarait to at a bank or trust compiny ................llnil pur- Ing agint „ ______ ______ .... .titutai of ot Michigan ' ' " publicly 0 The not im will _____________________________ Oovirnitmi, ' Said'Tssuai Ntalt conilit one note of 1401,000.00; Provided, hOw-— - - -- mrchaiar may deilgnate In taiiar amounti. Ac-t» dm* o4- dailw«„«t, .....ba paid by tha purchaiar • of delivery. purpoia^of awarding the notai S'! _________ 1, 1043 to their maturity deducting thatdirom any premium. 1 notai will ba awarded to tha bldi whole bid on tha above compujat producai tha lowait Intarait coit lb i City. No proposal tor. the purchaia last than all oMha noljw or at a price Ml improvmant July V, toil. -' carllflad or cashier' ;lpatlon ( < due ani of 3% of tha par valm notai, drawn upon an Incorporate «r trum company and payable t order of tho Traaiurar of the C y ot good t;___________- . r to ba forfaited as llqu If luch bid ba accepted ai notai. Checks ot i afdi ifiitl'ba eondltlonad upM the imU pOFi Kmm, NlTfM opinion of MII'W'Cwll'll'a i. WALTER HALL Service and burial for Walter Hall, 65, of 290 N. Paddock, will he Monday in Wartburg, Tenn. Mr. Hall died Thursday following a four-month illness. Surviving are his wife, Georgie; eight daughters, Mrs. William Rose, Mrs. Iris Clifton, Mrs. Charles Brown, duanita Hall, all of Dayton, Ohio; JUel, Barbara and Rebea, all of Lexington, Ky., and Dorothy of Kingston; and three sons, Robert of New York State, Clayton of Lancing, Tenn., and Billy of -stone, attornaya of Orti approving tha legality of .... coif ot which iniir by 1 , ■ftaeilvo November An Ordinance to amand the - Zona Map at Ordinance W-at ™Tha Bulldina Zona ^^'"anr Tha CIfy Of Pontiac ordpini: •ciilitlon haralnattar eat forth In (^.*L . .. .n abovo area to Commarcia Sac." 0.11 Slgni! in all ' ■ ,\t w b!nding'*il ir, nil agent or occupant wit ramal’of*‘ViJch*|pro|Nrty^ i*^ia?a ?::«ro,Wv.r^ !l8Ki 'rt'*»ty IS* tnS viiNga yi ^Jard Laka ihalj ba .. a.f'T,aa“.Arf S£ ----• ihall not bo pormlltad. .'■S'St,.' to raaO Tni mitowiT---^ ~ Arllcla IV-Sacllon 4.03 (2) Acciitofv u$^s ^customaniv in-cldwt to prlvRte ^dwelling*. Includina not more than ond gsi’BQt 'dc ddcn Pr»! *b"uii; 1.03 W of Arllcla V I 'A 103 (41-Zyna, eaiiory uiaa cuilomarlW i ny of tno abova parmIMad Ui B for aach family occup ^•"coi;?Mv« v..^y Mlldlng and am I ^Saai Baaflng ftld, VH grchard^L • Zoning •mondod ,3, AccBOry un. . cu^^j|^ It , provided not more irclal vahlela la ona com-tharaln. ' TENURE DRIVE - Tlie Midilgaij Education Association petition eariipaign enters its final week in a drive for 300,000 signature in support of changes in the state tenure act. From left, Mrk;-Lilllan Reeves, 98 Poplar, signed the petitions of Mrs. Ralph Ellsworth and Mrs. Llllla Walters of the Pontiac Education Association, local chapter of the MEA. U.S, District Court at Alexandria, Va., yesterday to block construction of the controversial $17-mUlion complex on the 46-acre “Merryi estate near. McLean, Va, The department filed an unusual ‘‘declaration of taking” of the so-called ‘‘scenic easement” of Merrywood, giving Interior the right to Merrywood’s scenery but not to the property it-self. _ '• Deaths in Pontiac Area in an automobile accident in Detroit. He is survived by his wife, Beatrice. MRS. AUGUST JORGENSEN AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. August' (Johanna M.) Jorgensen, 91, of 2566 Walton will be 1 p.m. Monday at the William R. Potere Funeral Home. Burial will be' Acacia Park Cemetery, Bifmihgfiatn. Mrs. Jorgensen died Friday after a short Illness. STEVEN J. ADAMS TROY—Rosdfy will be recited for Steven J. Adams, 5t, of 5721 Wright at 10 a.m. Monday at the Price Funeral Home, with burial to' foUow in Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Adams died Thursday. He was employed as an electrician in Plant No. 2, GMC Truck and Coach Division. He was a member of Local 594, UAW-CIIO. Surviving are his wife, Janet; two daughters, Diane at home and Mrs. Joseph Boyd of N. Carolina; his mother, Mrs. JOSEPH J. KUS AVON TOWNSHIP - Requiem Mass for Joseph J Kils, 70, of 1575 E. Hamlin will be sung 10 a.tp. Tuesday at St. Andrew Catholic Church Rochester. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery. ^ Mr. Klis died Friday alter a long Illness. He is survived by his wife, Frances; tWo daughters, Mrs. Wanda Blazie of Frankfort, Ky., Mrs. Mary Gawinek of Phillip Pisakik of Detroit; three sisters, six broti brothers, and two grandchildren. HORACE R. CORNELL ORTONVILLE - Service for Horace R. Cornell, 58, of 3670 Seynibur Lake Will be at 2:80 p.m. Monday in the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home with burial in the Seymour Lake Cemetery. Mr. Cornell, a driver for Checker Cab,Co., Detroit, died •Wnnwlay frominjurlesTeeeived News in Brief AUce’ Note,, it, flw ojKrator of the Hlght parking lot, 204 N. Saginaw, reported to police yesterday that a $70 portable television was stolen fj-om the attendant’s building. ’ seph of Rochester and Michael of Lorn Linda, Calif.; and 17 grandchildren. A Rosary will be said 8:30 p.m. Monday at the William R. Potere Funeral Home. JOHN B. SCHURMAN aARKSTON-John B. Schur-_ »an, 62, of 7616 Eston, died today following a three-month illness. His body is at the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home. In announcing the depart-nient’s move, T. Sutton Jett, director of the Capitol Park Sys-Tein, ^Ited Ar1y ;ommlHwn i art,’ ) thli dlitrict. 11 lokt OffMt K • ddlo of pm . ........ Vlllogo Chartor 00 ' coflim. of th ■---- --------Xb|3*U« ' VlUAOa, OP MRS. LUCIUI m I Lodge' Calendar Pontbrn Chapter No. 228 O.E Jnjpapers officially began. Composite School of Instruction with dm Areme Chapter Monday, Nov. 18,7:45 p.m. at Roose-, velt Temple, 22 State St. Edith M, Coons. - 7 / -adv. Areme Cluiv$ir No. 503, OE8. Officer Fif^actlce Sunday, Nov. 17, at 4 p.m^ Spaclal Meetlnd Monday,' NoV. 18, at 7:45 p.m. Toledo Newsmen Go Out on Strike TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)-Plckets of American Newspaper Gullcj Local 43 were posted in front of the Toledo Blade and Toledo Times buildings today as a strike against the dally news- S^locFsaid arthe meeling of the Military Armistice Commission that Communist machine guns suddenly tired on a U. N. Command observer team made up of two Americans and six South Koreans. They were pinned down in shallow water on the north bank of the icy Pukhan River, 60 miles northeast of Seoul, for more than three hours until darkness Tell. Seedlock told Chang: NO PROVOCATION ‘"rhe attack was made without provocation and in spite of the fact that the personnel were properly identified, they were unarmed, and your side had received prior notification of their presence in an authorized area in accordance with the truce agreements.” tap Pickets ReJ Orchestra They carried jilgns saying ‘Soviets, go honp,” and “Death to the communists.” In addition, four pallbearers carrying a coffin^also marched outside with the demonstrators. COFFIN SIGN On the coffin, they had a sign saying‘‘Ca^Uve-nations.” Thf pallbearers had purchased five tickets for the performance but were denied ad-rniltanEe aW refuntfed't money. C. Byron Gilbert director p. E. PURSLEY FUNERAL HOME 151 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 4-1211 -.J—... Two Men Robbed by Pontiac Gangs Gangs robbed two men early this morning after their cars were halted on city streets., Herman Dunn, 29, of 754 Cameron, told Pontiac police that three men jumped into his car at Orchard Lake and Bagley and forced him at knifepoint to drive to Maple where it dead ends. Spec. 5 Harold Aldrich, 26, of .Montrose, Colo., was shot In the thigh in the attack but managed to escape with the U. N, team. There they were met by three other men who took his wallet containing $55. The robbery occurred at 3 a.m. CMnpofili School of Instruction, tp be held Jointly with Pontiac diapt^ No. 228, at 22 State St. The local’s executive board .voted unanimously Friday night to strike in the midst of negotiations on a new contract. Marvin Ogletree, president of the local, said the publishers insisted on taking away the Guild shop provided in the old contract, whlph expired Oct. 21. About IS union members appeared in front of the plants on the strike deadline of 5 a.m. Uh day and set up picket lines. DstroH^ Un«mploym«nt Daclines in Octaber DETROIT (AP) - Unemployment in D e t r 011 dieclined by 6,000 during October, the Labor Department said yesterday. It said 50,000 persons were unemployed during October, representing 3.6 per cent of the city's Work force. Nonfarrti employment in Detroit climbed to^ 1,342,600, an increase of 6,100 ibver September, and Fifteen minutes earlier, five men jumped Vernon W. JonSs, 21, of 3071 Greenwood, stole |4. ESCAPED He escaped.and hailed a cab which took him to the police station. When police investigated, they found that a $140 portable, radio had beeft stolen frotti Jones^car^ Man Crushed by Car MARQUETTE - Durward Seppanen, 18, of Marquette wt crushed to deaih last night by car which toppled off a garage Hoist as he was working on it. SLIDE RULE ANSWERS Th« on of llvlni h«o never come under slide rule monipuleUon yel there ere men who allempl lo hut everything we do in ■ column of figures, they use an Index to figure the law of prohablllly liut fail miserahly when striving for an answer to the Bohrtion of jealOUsy’'ind divoire. Jealousy is as old as life. Priniales howled, grunted,' Ihumiied iheir chests under every ,, , , condition except jealousy; that eal|ed for phyaieol' puilisbmenl. Tho solulioo-of-thaO-prok- ■ leni is beyond a slide rule lo answer, however, a solution is in the simple rules of behavior taught at the knee of a mother as she instills the rudiments of clviliied conduct in the pliable mind of her child. From where I bU I need no sliae rule; The figuree 1 like best ere thoie clothed in cheery greelings, with smilea that tell they are happy to see mo. They are the figures I understand and which make my world spin around and around. The only index I need is reciprocal friendship and the answer is obvious and always the same; To Receive, Give. Simple, isn’t ItV 26B North Perry Sfreel Phone FE 2-8278 VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME Rwmwmbwr Your. Loved One* With a A4ARKER OR MONUAAENT MARKEHS $4500. MONUMENTS *160 nilTIMi aRANITE 8 pRBUE Co, Qmo. E. Slonak«r & Sona Our 32nd Year 268 Oakland Am FEHm._ Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME •*Thoughtfiil Service** r 'f/v TVVENTVKIGHT Death Notices the PDyTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 16, 1063 3 Help WaiitM| Mglt get out of debt On A CORNELL, NOVEMBER ' n«ral services will MT Monde ..November at 2:3B .p.m. at tl C. F., Sherman Funeral Horn Ortonville with Rev. A. A. Ca ■ MHchel oNIclatInQ. Interment HALL, NOVEMBER IS. 1*63, WALTER, 790 N. Paddock St., age 65; beloved husband of Georgia Howard Ellis Hall, dear father of Mrs. William Rose, Mr*. Iris Clifton, MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 6-0156 - I Pontlac^s Oldest and largest _buag*t_as*lstmce^mp|ny__ GET" out OF DEBT with payments as low a* tt0;0O BUDGET SERVICE 18 W Huron___________FE , »0*0l BUS BOY I vacations. ./Apply I TED'S B'OYS-16 YEARS" FOR R'ESTAO- full lime, out ot sch^l. b6ys wanted For morning Detroit Free ( routes. Good profits. Call FE Human, Luke S ________________and Glen Sexton. Mr. Hall has been taken from Y-Voerhees-Siple Funeral ' . , 1 Funeral H hiter'mc ' ------- pan County, feonessee. _____________ ..PBDVEMI AND INVESTMENT CL. ________Pcstflag^m------- Pay Off Your Bills — without a loan — EXCELLENT. •'OPPOR.TUMtTY FOR I g^ trade. 334-0033. .V EXPERrENCEb B"ROiLE"R‘ MAN 1 TIZZY . Preferably middM-aged, curate telephone messaocs. S. Telegrapli or cell FE 2-»27( , WANTEO-CONSTRUenON SOPIR- WANTED MASONRY CREWS. Call 334.1533 from 1:30 to 5 p.m. — 33*41158 •• ---------- WANTED YOONG~M_EN OVER 18, Club Rochester, WHEETTmAN FOR* car RECONDI; SmSS. _________________ OPENING a permanent sales employaeu d William R. Phlll proiner of Lee H., Floyt Merton L. Phillips. A service under the auspic Rposevelt Lodge No. 511 held Sundav, November I Donelson-Johns Fu- e Donelson-Johns F neral Home. Interment ir COATS FUNERAL MON DRAYTON PLAtNS -------------- r. EXPERIENCED TOOL RODM^X/IAl chinist with . lob shop experience. Acorn Tool- and Die, 3*6 South ~ Street, Rochester. __ j____u i EXPERIENCED SHIPPING"SlERK, " 1, afternoon shift. Oakland I Mfg,. 32451 Dequlndre. ! laundry, cleaning. EX Pi , AT7T 12 ____^ _ I for opportunity in growing company. Competitive — —" —^ benefit*. Write J . JO, HELP -POUO PATIENT, e In Child or ccupl* welcome. 1 4-1*72. . BEING SCHURMAN, NOVEMBER 16, JOHN B., 7615 Eston, Clarks age 52; beloved Tsusband of No— Schurman,- dear son 9I Orpha D. E. Pursley FUl^EBAL HOME inOflild Car Service FE 4-1211 OONas5'N-JOHNS exc«Ment fringe, ts, hourly wage. Apply In a 2m Dixie Hwye LLOYDS -----------must HAV€ lwmi««i»4wl*M_ isffiiarSBb.. sly furnished, always warm, Isabeth Lak*. OT we»'T-r*. Elwood. 682-2410 efficiency unit, 84*. UN^ION LJrtML OT-3B02T---------- •nice 3 trance, no chill.........., . . „ „ AportiMirtt-URfarNi^ OloiirAdult*, ’"nS uTsa^;rnSre;'33»5352:Fi 4-185*. 2 ROOMS, WEST T SIDE. 5-»608 t ADULT. BtOROOMS, WALTON-BALDWIN ■te. No drinkers. . Retarences, 175 |H>E 5- utilities furnished, ,„n. 875 mo. 644-3676. ____4-ROOM aVa^mentsTISi Prospect St. 33AB0»V i-TttoMTTSivAii-SSW^ entrance, couple, references. 115 Stout, near General Hospital 2BlDli^TBRRA^ " Pontiac A/lal .L.'xs-A* J-B65ROOM HOUSiTlNQUlRi At 233>^'Dtx|^Hwy'^;^7. Aru^di’ ■ *«'■ * pfoSop^-ai-P 0 0 T„ living . «5< madam, basament. OR t;»p. a^oRiMM. ^snced vaUS. gas own TOOLS. TINSON, NOVEMBER 15, IS FHEBE A. (HENDERSON), 7 Greeley, Utica, Michigan, pge 24; beloved wife of Joseph R., Tinson, dear daughter of Charles E. ““** "HUNTOON FUSNACE MAN ■ ■ I Experienced in service pnd Ir —: latlons, steady year-'round * r. Transportation FUNERAL HOME I HeatingTc«)l&g'*0^ uakian^ Ppnllac_for Jj0_^ar|.^i^-^ - . Bvnard Snider, Mrs. ver dhd Mrs. Wm. Casey, arrangements are pend-e Voorhees-Siple .Funeral sp'arks-griffTn FUNERAL HOME . Thoughttu;_Servi«" FE 2-5841 VOORHEES-SIPLE funeral home Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads for fast action Establi^ Owr_40 YMr; Cemetery Lots _ 4-A 4 SPACES,. OAKLAND HILLS, MA- NOTICE T ADVERTISERS AO( RECEIVED r*- * ... STATION ATTENDANT, perlenced In mihor repair and ups. Full time employment, port Mobile, 5»*5 Hrghland. GENERAL MECHANIC Dealership experience. Blue Cross, vacation pay, 6*3-6266. INEXPERIENdEb ARE YOU Aggressive — personable — energetic. Willing to prove your ability to recruit people and build a sales slaft. Looking lor a district manager position with excellent salary, overwrite and expenses. Permanent w«h groat opportunity to ad- i«I?*to 'ttlon'^ *lth 4lFyeai^ld Smpan^a^ubsidlary of ^Bristol-Myers, write Mr. Metil ’ 2-BEDHOOM LOWlirADi$rfsrW- “Fatber would you please check the bathroom s seems I’ve k»t 40 pound$!” ' curlty deposit. FE 2-1718. 2 ROOM BACHELOR APARTMENT ................ ■ " -ii^BATrwrR-rwA^^ enirance: East Side. Handy to Eastern JunWr High. $3* month. Owner. Call OR 4-0306. . rTtboiiiTliNb bath, COUPLE, ■—— to babysit. Can be as part payment, n heat. Deposit. Ft 0-»™-‘ "R00MO"ATHrT36 PUTNAMTHo-quire M2 PUtnem Ave.* ' _ - , *575. ’,1: 4Mp Wmtetl Fe*ii88l# T WAITRESS WANTED. APPLY i. Cass Lake Rd., 3*0 CUSTOM MADE DRAPES, ALTBR- 2-ROOM ^ EFF^OENCY Cooley' L * W, Wilson.'FE beautician; experienced hair styling. Imperial Beauty lon^ JMjiu^rn Ave. _____ ABY'sITTBr; foTlVE IN. Liofff ■ 0-0201-. WANTEb""iXPER I ENCEb. maids, 2 waliresses, mi 'bM»^ riAR dressmaking, TAILORING. Al- ------ t.— CB 4JMS 2 Rob/yis and“bath 63 NORTON ______ I ROOMS, near DbWN'fOWN. nib^s; -BAfrH. 7T^ slov*, relrlgarator.JieaL F^2-7OT 4"lpOMiS ANDBiftH IN DRAYTON “'sins. Stove, relrtgeralor, hn* w«. ...■ lurnished. OR 3-*t^3 o i’^raiiislfNDB^^ AND refrigerator, ,heet.‘hot wafer fur- '4-ROOM HOOsE ~ . UL ^5266 . 4"bEDROOST~HOUSE at 1620 BeechmonI, Keego HOrtwr, «v*H- cS?i r2.is&! References required. PRboMt"b5S"|fA;^^ per month. |FE •*3iW. '' (1 BibRObM OAi flltAT, garage. 8U5 Lake Or., Pontiac. Call FE 8-4550. rRWr.*Mf^o''Ji'h"jd!ln*^.^: 'OR EXPERIENCED ...NOPERATOR_ ., n business for yourself. _ lore year-a'round earnings BABY SITTER, ' week. 338 *7*1. BABYSifTER 5 DAYS. 8 5. Or^h^ i 1 LOVELY HOME FOR ELDERLY . people. LOW rafts. OR 3-6264. _ . FIRST FLOOR ROOM FOR BLMR- ira. iujj uF.vr’v’’ _,__ ibM’S ^ .FURNAbt i 5""R66MS”'ANb'BATiOL^ 3 BEbROOMS, CORNER OF fLI- 17""^ KENILWORTH, 3-BiB55oM'. OT BR* : —J33, STANLEY Face brifk, 3-badroom homo. Iwsih mftfiL, aluminum *torm», Kifcnen , WANteb-POARDING HOW "FOR aluminum itormi, IOT9 Rv«oi raw ,rw*w. -icTnerator. copplwaft rro PtO^APARTA^^^ .“4^ KtCsISOeBB' I ANYONE WHO WITNESSED ACCI-' den ai Auburn and Sanford on I Friday, Oct, 18 where ' killed, please contact dwN OR BE ABLE TO FINANCE 1*58 DIESEL 195* GAS OR LATER '^TDiirk’ BABYSITflC'LfGHT HOUSEKEEP- . FE I I is correct. The Pres* i TRUCK WRITE NOW JO: . , BOX 1*7 DBPC 25 AERO MAYFLOWER TRANSIT CO. INDIANAPOU^, INDIANA__ JaNITROL work. EXPERliNCED WANTED 2 WAITRESSES , cook. Apply In person, r-Telegraph Town and Count BABYSITTER AND LIGHT HOUSE-keeper, own Irons, day vnirk. 87*-635f, Tr- BABYSiTTER T , full i the charges (or that portion of the first Insertion ol " advertisement which has b The deadline lor cancellation of transient Want Ads Is * a the day of publication after (Ions ore mode be sura to get your "KILL number." No adjustments will be given without rinsing time for adverflso-contalnlhg fvpo slies • han regular “ * DAINI Y MAID SUPPLIES: 73* - _ Menominee./E 5-7805. _ _ | erences. 879-0552. ANYONE SEEING ACCIDE’nT MON-I MAN TO LEARN AVIATION. ------------- , ~ corner ol Cass Lake Rd., and! Highland Rd. Elllabeth Lake Rd. Please coll FEImaN FOR DRY c"lE"A n1 5-0*32. I route. Apply Main Cleaners, ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDINGI Elizabeth Lake Rd. ____ 3 PtwhP,, FE I MEN -WHY BE SUBjicf 'fO LAY- an’swe. clilM ?.e%. °^onVn“l BAR WAITRESS, PART T LIVE iN. ROOM I wagzs. 624-1352 r after 8;30 p.m. VOMAN^F^R GENERA^ WORK IN nsima? week^s. i i«. OR 3-162*. choice of e proved. F Wmw. S23-SM patient in prhraM home. Jj le entrance, utilities lurnished. __________6 S. Sanford St.________ I 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRAMCl', iJHbfifijPPER, GARAGE, NfeAR 2I-30^E 8'-1763. -BEAuneiANs, .Mlji- - I expitleoee. -Kendatw; ™ ROOMS,. EVERYTHiNO 2*5 Whim ^2 inro? :lock noon the day pra-lus to publication. CASH WANT AD RATES /734. Conflden-j I ON an"d" after"this [Date, no-! sponsible to by any oth M. Snyder, tiac, AOichlgan. lost and Found FOUND any debts contractedi than myself.- Henry 0 E. Tennyson, Pon- clerks, etc. who'decided that they would have permanent |dbs, with a future and no layoffs, Car lul. For personal Interview our factory representative, p FE 5-6115. MIDDLE-AGED MAN I d Pointer OR 3'2108. LOST-BLACK 7.................... 1, vicinity of Oxford. Reward: I service. Inquireg^Flrasfoi white' IM w. Itbron; PBnt|ac,. .....^, i" Need4125 Up Weekly? female! - - - --------- for 2 more marHad unoer « for route sales. Pon-area. Complete training given ----------during (raining An additional charge of 51 nit wm b* made for uta oi gntlae Ties* Box number*. Yho Fontldb Prms FROM S A M. TO 5 P.M. Card of Thanks If found. No questions' sary. Also 2 part-time openings I $3 hoursly: OR 3-8565. i.iNEAt " DRESSED AAlbbLE-AGEb -'wtTwvr*' r*i h*s?nrAifr ^ )d HnlburYf dark day. Room 8, 84 fl 3und; small male,' 336-4650. £*1*^01*’°'^' opening" for man with'some Sly J&^ay4' THE FAMILY OF MRS. ZENELLA - Jadkson wishes to thank the many friends and neighbors, Rev. L. |R. Miner and Mr. Frank Carruthers I tor the kindness and expression ot j Signed, Mr. and Mrs. Georg* | Howel and Family. _ | THE FAMILV of ELMER C. Mc-| Gehee wishes to express thanks to everyone who assisted during -BOXREPLIES-At 10 a. m. today there were replies at The Press office in the following boxes: to Install water softeners an pllances. Must be 25 years, ----- to give references. Call Crump Electric for an appointment, FE _4-3573.____________ OUR”b"USINE"SS INCREASib. 2, 12, 25. 34, 62, 65, 76, j 85, 98, 102, 107, 112. all American Want good ' work. Must h— ---------- ----- — references. Apply In person. Andy Csikl Garage, 772 Baldwin. PART-TIME DELIVERY BOY AND ' k, 18 or over. Perry Ph----- Baldwin. ______________ ’•^Help Wanted Male. r kindness. Mrs. f WE Sincerely wish to thank all those who gave ol their kindness and sVmpethy, gifts, food and floral llbute* at the time of bereavement. ol pur dear mother, 2 REAL ESTATE SALESMEN. Experienced preferred, but will train. Plenty ol leads and floor lime. Member of M.L.S. Many deals made possible by guaranteed contract sales. We build, we trade. Call J82-I820. Ask.jlor Ted McCul- *ARR0 REALTY 5143 Cass-Elizabelh Road To’ MEN-NEEDED AT ONCE experience nece: ...] Pontiac lacim electrical manulacti train those men selected "ol1^; PROCTOR & GAMBLE DISTRIBUTING CO. telllgent retail grocer Irajplng vided. opporluni slanlial bonus a EXPERIENCED TELEPHONE SOLI-cltors, salary and commission. Call FE 8 66^1, between 10 6nd 5 p.m. EXPEmENCEb BABY SrTTER"s"fi Rochester area over ju, must hav own transportation. OL 1-8471, V-l EXPERiENCEO BEAUTY 'OPER'/k- tlclpata In snaring, ais-aolllty, and on the lob. Makes previous experience untiecessery. details lo 28 W. Adams, 3. i LOVING MEMORY OF^ FRANK POLICECAbETS CITY OF PONTIAC SALARY *3,581*4,318 'AUTO PARIS tLERK, F mechanical ability L time! lZ\rne^ " AW5^6dY BUf^R, 9ALL OR 3-2075 ARC WELDERS ........ Capable ol passing Navy weld lest G & W Engineering Inc,, 2900 Indlanwqod Rd., Lake Orion BROWN AND SHARPE Screw Machine Operator Must be eble to set up machlnei Utile and Dalvid Machint Co,, 17* . Announcements DISPLAY VoRTER I, Apply Ellas PORTER ................. . APPLY IN PERSON, *:30 lo *;30. ROBERT HALL CLOTHES |460 Dixie Hwy. Clarkslon ftEAL Estate salesman WiDEMAN realty, FE 4-45: lEAL EStATE salesman ■ prlfiTced full tlmf siiiFism No Matter What the Need, a Press Want Ad Is Alwayi Avoilpble to Help You Fulfill It-and Fasti Montgomery Warci PONTIAC MALL Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED S5 Rh Positive *7 and 810 Rh Neglltv* DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE ol leads and floor time. SMITH WIDEMAN REALTY, FE 4-4526. REAL ESTATE SALESMEN Need two lull-time solas pec |«rFE'’5gS7^ ' REAL ESTATE SALESMAN MIchlgatl Business Sa BEAUTY OPERATOR Full time. Larde shop at Walled Lake. Call MArkel 4-2*35 eves., MA/-463I, days. feJOkkEBPER FOR BOOKKEEP- Ing firm, age 32-40, -----'--- helpful ■ ■ ■ ----- I but not necessary. Call “1*5^!' days 8 a.m. 5 p.m. FE 4-2461. *>*(*’!"*.. BOYS AND GIRLS NEEDED ^ once ,10 handle Chrlstrha* wreath orders. Call FE 4-49M. 1 ESTABLISHED WATKINS ROUTE, MOVING ^ SERVjCE.^ ^RlFUL"^ MiSviNG." X"Crw les. UL 2-3*»», 62B351*. Bob's ^an ^rvice AAOVING and STORAGE REASONABLE RATES PacMbi^l* Years Exponent. ROBERT^ TOMPKINS___OR 4-IS12 Miiliii| .A l^erirttaf 23 iody, 3»4*H ____ Tl. Sat. throji 3 ROO"MS, "SiNGLg^ MaI decorated. koQNUiiiaft wdAjPL. CLEAN, PARTLY FURNISHED UP- private entrinca , tIac .: speed 45 wpm. Apply L, I. Personnel, City Hall, 35 EXPERIENCEO --- -Jdem ■ Designs, rage- FE 2-3*53. AIR STYI ISTS. 1 PAINTING AND PAPER H Private entrance. FE 4-4425. 3" R(X^," ATTRACTiVE^ "B tor's apartment. Everything furnished. Private bath, entrance, no drinking. OR 3-4374. ■ 3 kOOMS, BATH, AbULtS f _ 47 jAugu.sta'_____ ifROOlS AND SATH; TDEAL I^R couple. FE a-1525. Call after 6 p m. ■ UTIL- ELDERLY LAbv' TO BOARD’ fk LOVELY NEW'ykOOM AND SCTR _WherxJuy«JL and Seller ’ storage, adults, re(.,J)R 3- __ _ NEW LAi^i-FRONT, '»6"MINUTES WIxom plant, .2 m,. S. off 1*6 —" “-itlac Trail. Carpels, drapes, 26*65 Milford Rd. Apt. 34, ■— d )-7218 ir KEnwood )■ perhHp Fre« S. 6*2-0620. 5-RI "very nW kooiXs — X Liberty St. FE 4-46*6, IVATE EiT- NICE APARTMENT RENT, ^|PRTva COOK Experienced, lor family of Bloomfield Village. Atten _ _ through dinner. Complete charge A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR,' estate departmept, Expetleic* Pre:' AND PAPERHANQING. tarred but wUI train It necessary. roofing, FE S-2402. ^_____ Plenty of floor time and prospects, p a | n T I N C. PAPERING. WALL Call J. A. Taylor, OR ,44)3*6. ; washing. Tupper. OR 3-7*61. _ . _ __ - *25 deposit. 8*4j30» 50 N* «Am»»*w..-AT-fRACTIVE"n9ACHELOR "APART-ment at Lake Oakland. Call OR 3-16*6. ____ __ _ Ta"C iTE U4>R'S-HOUSEfkAILEi: Modern. *5* per month. FE 2-7548. OkCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERY DITAI' ---- FB • OPEN DAILY 12 to « Furnished model of apartments In tta Fountalnl^av. Fouotalr-*--4*5- Casr.'XaRi R3., aparl available lor immediate occu Meet . Pontiac Press Want Ads Just Dial FE 2-'8l81 MAN ^NO VV right person. Ml 7-0644.___ _ CLERk-TYPISt FOR MAIL ROQM, addressograph and mimeograph r n premises. Must b mediately. Real's Orlv*-ln, OR references end phone number Reply Pontiac Press, Box 1*7.______ WANTED, RELIABLE CoUPLE" JP rant our 8-room homo, loatonabit to take cere ot 3 aporWnentt. )B GIRLS, FULL AND PAR1 ne, day and night shift, hospital ----"^n with pay. Apply I Bros. Big Boy, Teft- DENTAL ASSISTANT Experience not necessary, must education and**sxperlenca. Pontiac ‘ Press Box ID*. DIpenGaELE woman for BABY EVELYN EDWARDS "VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE" telephone FE 4-0584 } East h slttln* eno iigni, nouse wurx, a days, own transportation. FE 8M544 I. F 5-2143 a I. Own transporta- FEMALE PLACEMENT PRESTON WALKER SMITH 280 W. MAPLE, SUITE 321 Birmingham, Mlchloan 646-3663, Midwest Empldyment nines. Write ACCOUN1 I off;. I quarter* with TV. Ml 4-7262. EXPiRlfeNCED CdOk, WAITRlS- --------I, 0^ j.,„, GIRL TO BABYSIT, LIVE IN OR out, 7 e.m.-4 p.m. 6*2-41*5.__ general "Live TnT "must Likl plain cooking, ref., 444- _____JNTI „. , ..... Detroit >1. FACTORY TRAINING AVAILABU ----..-...^^niC. I.T.V, OetfoM. UN J5M. C eT(. GENERAL HO"USEki'EPE( perlenced with children, Ilgni laundry, assist cooking, neat appearance. own car, 2 days oil, .good salary, age 25-45. 626-5*4*. ousEkEeper and care* of 2 children, 5 days week, while mother works. While Lake arqa. 887-515*. HOUSekEEPER ■ ffok HftMRtY —,,js.''''ld9*l’ l^tlon!'^ Fe"^^m" HOUsl'kiEPER,"4Vj DAYS,’'*'A.M./ tallon. 830. 826-24V*. HOUSEiglEPER Matur* woman to live In to 3 months. 3 In lamlly. child. Ml 4-7764. “ HOUSEWIVES learn to operate Dozer*, graders, cranes, efc. Key, S*_W. 4 Ml., Defrojt. OJI^1-7OT. IM'TRAINING * Learn IBM, Keypunch or machine operation and wiring. 4 weak course* available. Approved by Michigan Skate Board of Education. Free placement assistance. Free parking^ tineocing arranged. SYSTEMS institute 62 E. Nine Mile, Heiei Perk ------- -547-8303 SEMI-DTeSEL, TRUCK . training sctiool. writa TRUCK, 14*33 Llvernols, Detroit. UN A66B6. WerOtanted Male 11 painting. Warning. PAikriNG 3 AND PAPER HANGING feleviiieiidladia SenriM 24 RADIO*ANO TELEVISION .REPAIR V^JC^OgNE WHILE Trained Service Man, Reasonable prices. Free Tube Tasting. ning service cells. : EM 3-Tm. A»» » CALIFORNIA DRIVE AWAY WIN Share expenses and pravhte late model aUtomoblle (Or yoUr trip ssest. Must be at least 25 years or older with references. Apply at MBM Motor Selat, 2527 ................ "" ' “** . PONTIAC FENCE CO. T5*32 Dixie jHwy. OR 3-65*6 ROOF REPAIRS, WORK OUARAN-■ d. *18 and up. UL 2-18*0. Sheet Mftal Werir BAKED ON ENAMEL EAVES- OFFICE WORKER WANTS RIDE ir^ , EL66k l*VikiS, llnlshlng. Phon* FB Teievilieii, Rttdie and M-n Service REBUILT ANI Scales Agency, FE ^ J* - l(.SS ANNUALLY Hay and Sb^ ^ ID GUARANTEED TV'S '< Oxford, 628-1611. INSURANCE Fire end wind storm Insuranc 2* per cent savin**. Other li REFERENCES. FE 44)777 HeoHng Service^ AAA STORM DOORS, WINDOWS, ens or will make: lyw i, He^tM 27 BASHAW'S- MARKET. COMPLETE-deer processing. Freeier meats qvellable- 6B2-183I. 5446 “ Ceotoy ■ Lake Rd. u._____ DEERS SKINNED COT kND FTCE-' zer wrapped, Ui also taxidermy, 1453 Merry Rd. OR_/-2*l2.____ HAVE YOUR DEER PROCESSED •KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. 0»n«retor*‘-Rrtoletor*-Start#rs Batteries $5.95 Exchang4 3377 W. Huron 36*. Ai “ FE 5-0155 FE FB 3-7172 Tree General free Service size lob. FEMM4 FE 5-S023. "M6kYira!rfSft*S^ ■..........335.3150 2-CAR GARAGE, t**f incl. OH Door*, Concrete Floors Additions, House Raising PAUL GRAVES CDNTRACTINO Free Bsflmate* ____9?.JL!5!' MBRION BLUE SOD, PICK UP OR dellvared. 2601 Crooks- UL 2 " '* Lavlidry Service TftuLKINO - itAR"lFinL" aaa/arpentEr, w6Rl"'iNsioi or out, small or largo job*. FE 2-24*2. 1 ENTrV...kitchens, AOOI- y service. FE./3M Permanant position Comm. Send postal card staling age, address, experience to: Mr. Howard Dubar-—" STANDARD MANIFOLD Co. modeling. FE 5-6010; OR 38*10. MARRIED MAN DiSTSiriTiADV lob. FE 8-1077. ______^ PAiNtlNG, MORNINGS AN^D S^- 333 West Lake Street, CHIcapo, Illinois, 60604. _ „ . KITCHEN HELR Nlghl shift. Fringe banellts. Ellas Bros. Big Boy, Telegraph and Huron. Apply In parson, 2 lo 5 p.m. MIODLl-AGEb HOUSEKEiPER to llva In^Weekand* oIf.JFE M— mSthIr'S helper to live' Id help expectm mplhor i children. Must have rcltran ^tolyya^^J ^er^iNanted Feoiaie _ day and afternoon shitli benefits. Call 8 OL )-*3lt. RELIABLE L ‘iDto'Jinr 2 WOMEN WANT * Waoted diildivMi ta Beard 21 ALUMINUM STORMS-SIDINO Awning* - Porch - patio - roofing. C. WEfoON CO. FE 4-fW7 Woielwl Hewwli^^ mToRjTp^^ ^NtTUEB GUINN CONSTRUCTION Homo improvements, porches, e< ports, addition*. AM Types ol i ment work, patios, driveways, a sWawelks. Terms. FE 5*l«j__ WE DO WASHING AND IRON-Ing. Flat work by the pound, other Item* by the piece. Wash, dry and told - 1M pound. 2 day -----1. OR 3-0481, 44*4 DIxl* Hl^yi- pOHT fRUCKJNG^p’ HAuLiNQ LT6f}r"SNBnw^v-TOn^ 89'JIL"® JHy: way, Droytort Plains. NEIORICK BTUILDING SeRVltC -Home, ------------ 4..s.t«-*. BMM8*.— Trucks to Rent VTTon f I'M*"- «*•<•* t- Garage, Cablnels, ; TERMS. FE 4-6*0*. CablnelN Additions. ^ AND EQUIPMENT Dunjp Truck* - S*ml-Trall*ri Pontiac Farm and -----, puisr c«bto*ts, rmB. iMg I TALBOTT LUMBER ■ Glass Ihstol^ iSiuSST*..!!!?,. l*§OakM~~ Industrial Tractor Co. ' 4-0461 ” *' USED OFFICE FURNITURE. FILES CEMENT CONTRACTOR LICENSED . ^^sioewalk buMder-termi. FE ‘ Meifii^ g|id^ ^Starage COAST WIDE VAN LINES ■ -.MTH MOVINQ ________?E Bodk^ewlnV. I R fC K L A y’E R S, VENkMll"!;-. Sleady work/ear round. OR 3-3462. rb BUSINESS increase,'2 'lanced mechanic* with own ' "tor Rambler dealtrship.' 86 rate. Steady ■—'■ land. Avt. ~rUbber1:hemist5 AND engineer DUE I OR registered nurse r nursing and genaral luper-. Jlon In a modern cOnvaleKOnt home in Pontiac. Experience desirable but not essenllel, g--- starting salary and working , Reply Pontiac Pres* Box Apply 5 raTi Desiegners Checkers Lay-Qut Men 58 Hour Week ■ RESUME OF BACKOROUND; EO-UCATION, EXPERIENCE ANO SALARY IN CONFIDENCE TO PONTIAC PRESS- BOX 4. it AT ibN AT T i NO A NT S' Atlb Chanits. Apply 3430 “ Blvd. ... ^ _ ■ SERVICE manager EXPERIENCED For fast growing new car dealer- „ ship in this area,.... , spartan dodge ill S. Sagln|iw FE 8 4541 SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, ---------- time, Walled Lake SALES PERSONNEL WANTEO’fb work In lawelry daparir--— ly wd’ n [her NEEDS WOMaKH^ I housekeeping. " . Atondoy to Ft 4 p.nl. Own I OR 34175*. vyAiTRESS, EkPiATtNcrb, fSk TWO MEN . with menagemenl potontlnl to sal lor on* ot the world's |—--• WAITRE itoody . , 8, 4*4 *565. Oakland In wA'iTliBisE*. T)AY ' a¥d 'jtTOHf pay.'AoX In parson Big Boy; T*lt*rdph a 33*4473 . ' ' ! iRONINO* WANTEb ' - i .9R MOM , ^ FAST RENTAL SERVICE . Crenn m’ refaronca* checMK. Call AdanH llaaity. FB. *-40*3. NEW BABY? VACAtlONt CAP- wlll 'car* tor your chUdroiiJn itoMr . home. EM 3-351*, Ml 44*34$. ONiTSAY IRONrNiOSRVICf. RBF-arOnca*. Mrs. McCowon, FE M471. TUTORINO ELEMENTARY iU^^ lacts. Saturdays. FB 84SI*. iiliOT tbl«B Ibsartiw 13 1 PRIVATE ROOlWS !aNO SHARE tww^iMlh lady. ChHd welcome. HIil"bASsTSlB“ffiTfATITH -,Leke*. 2 broltiert will share home with 1 or I portent. *SM7*o, fve-■ jriiK'iamr smt $ " imiiB SviUdKiiy ''''US A-1 BRICK, BLOCK, CEMENT 08OTHBR AND SON WILL SHARE mm 2 gfrls or coupW. PE S4**4 or MS0S14 attar S:3S p.m. wiLLlisAs-luKAs PLiXinSktt. ULS-I3S*. Barioeei Sewke Ijl ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN FENS repaired by factory TM|lnad men. ?^I7*W*'L"'^iSoca SI***** C AND R CERAMrC TTli'lNSTOiU' Mltont. ftoors. Wills, and shower stalls. FB (-16*3. ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-^RE pairing and rewindine: 21* R. PRto. Phone FB 43NI. FREinisTTMATBS ON ALL WlA-- bia will flnenoe. R. E. Miewv Electric Co. FB S4«I1. WwtoilMillwIt IB ' RiSt'eJSSe ^ ' ! '‘"**CLAREHCt* RIDGEWAY 1 m W. welton FE S-TtSI AAKE FRONT BUYER lUVE BUYER FOR NEWER l^Ft BRICK lake!. FRONT HOME. MUST HAVE GOOD •EACH AND lake SUITABLE FOR SKMNO. WILL FAY UF TO S£*0S./call MRS JOHNSTON. FE SQMO representing CLARK^EAL ESTATE. . . OresMiaiihm * TaHwfiif ll Nood. W. immediate UMS/S^eeMre^^ -,**^-5*' RBMOOEUINO; TAILORING AND fur work. Edna We^r, FB S-lSll ____Js ttudh). f Ceovalescent Homes stonYcroft nursing h o m FB 2 FE 5'8688 a'f CewMMtliil PAM'LY. marital and retiree ; tounselllng S3M401. [TH8--------- • iterations ALL. TYPES, Kt dreOtos. le*th*r,co*ta. OR 3-71*3. UiillNlW vWlffVCfvrB Wollpdper Stcomer Floor saiKtors, poMshtrs, hand d Lake Av« FE sili*. 9 Slit Hmmi CUSTOM HOMES Qutllty built - PrkMi. rlgli OmI dtrict with BulkMr. Cdrrigan Cons't Tlffe POyi^IAC PllKSS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 1», By Diek Turner Silt ______Ji TW15NTY-NINR r HT0ROiN6^^ISTAT■S,~l^^il'(^RMM '' brick ranch, m battit, bvlIMna, LEASE 0PT(0Nr~: ., "* ******y~y^'^ ' OXFORD, « rSOMS, NBWLY 08C-- prlvllagai, U,V«0 — tl.lM $250 DidWN-FHA ^ Looking tor a 3 badrc full baiamontr Chock ...., . room city homo for a roal buy. ^atod In a good, oldor nolgh-borhood, tho down paymont ihould toll thli ono quick. Call tonight Xo --------------------------- REALTOR PARTRIDGE r''li the Bird to See" " ■ HURON, Ft 4-3»t I3$vy sCitpiNCI VdOMT'NlfcliLY' FUR-nlihod, prtyata bath and ontrahco. Noar town. » Norton._____ _ $400 DOWN 3-Bedroom, Neory New SPOTLITB BMILOINO CO. 43 3>rko. I LAKE ORION “BY OWNEf^ „Z:'^ >lTORr MiOROdM OLdtR , HOMf, Large double clos- | 2425 DUCK LAKE ROAD ... OPEN SUNDAY Prico cut, 4 bodroomt, bascmont, Oiy wido lot. Oarago. 3)3,300. Low termi. Ovorlookt whito Lorb. C. SCHUETT FE 8-0458 OPEN SUNDAY 1 to-4 185D Barr Rd. , acra horio tarm, with 4-boclroiyn ranch home, foalurot poholod living room with ftrapiacc, ' turo windowi, panoramic Dtnlpg Oil, cuitom kitchon, bWtakfaif bar, - tamlty room, 7 , Warren Stout, Realtor 1450J4. OpdykoBd.,., Ph. FE 5-3143 Qpon Evas, nito pu»w,_ ‘ JACK LOVELAND 3100 Can Lako Rd. ■ 333.1335 TRADE 49 Sale Houmb t TAYLOR CLARKSTON AREA - 3350 tr - you In. 3-badroom ranchor, handy IP ichoola Largo lot. Payir--lass than rant. Only 33.700. MANY ON PAVED ROADS LADD'ClNC. 15 Lapoor Rd. (Parry M-34) E 3-3331 or OR 3-133) attar 7i30 WATERFORD AREA - ii lor chlldtan. S om rancner, brick and fr—. , O baths. Extra law lot. Daad- ic) pavart street. Peyments 1..... an rent. Only 3)0,300. / $1,000 ■ WE HAVE AN EKCELLENT SE-' lection Of nearly-new homes In ’ ; all areas with small down pay-4-..moots and low monthly payments. Ti tamlty Iwme with ____ ^.-Ivlleges. The' price 33,300 Mfers gas heat, t00xi40( ' need lot, 4 bedrooms, excellent lar^ family. Not a. naw ri^AfLY'R'EAL ESTATE . EM 3-7114 XMK ^ spacious b I'/S baths, I. jrn*;iurc'-o‘.‘i?: OUTSTANDING RANCHI EXCLUSIVE TWIN LAI 'ITS, SEPARATE DINING ROOM WlTtf BUILT-IN CORNER CUPBOARDS, D B N, CALIFORNIA ROOM, BNCLOSEO OLASSED-|-PORCH, PULL BASEMENT WIT large, storage -■ HEAT, WELL IN$yi LY CARPETED UPSTAIRS Aiuu DOWN, DRAPES, ^CAR OARAGE WITH LOTEOF STORAGE AREA IN REAR. V/t SHADED LOTS WITH FRUIT TREES, COMPLETELY FENCED REAR YARD. 75 Olanworth, off M-34 MY 3-1733 attar 6 o.m. MOOiRN al&lFrushour Struble tomorrow," IVIi baths. Bullt-m room with tlraplace. Full dining - room. Situated In lovely Fox Bay. Truly a lovely nelghbor- .. ______ Cl5sE TO Busi- ness district, schools, collages, enurehes, super markets and bus. Owner, tjlL. 3-1713. - MUSl SEir. LOTUf LAKE ARIa *■—T, Inlarlor 44 newly remodeled, “rtelen tells me Mrs. Higgins suffers from timidity . whatever that is!’! curb, iJIjillir and community^ me road, can be purchased tor ; $22,300. DR $18,300 on ydur )al.-| This, is an area of. prestige' homes, ' wonderful resale are* .j ?n'"£kll*I Sw ’S^e‘hSI 1 Elliebelh family room,*'tirepilaee, wonder- -----—.— ful modern kitchen, bath and half, bdsemanf, attached garage, solid drive, and all the appointments demanded by today s most dIsCrimlnalirtg buyer. We are proud of this beautiful brick ranch home, and Invite comparison. Twin Lakes just, past Pontiac Lake oft M-33. Follow WEST SUB. ■ '.brick ran^ hon district, full bi compare wim others. Open SI DAY, I to S. Oul Elltabeth L Road past Williams Lake 3 turn righr on Perry Blvd. to ......5, Coll for appointment. MCDDEL John K. Irwin 313 w. Huron St. - Since 1925 f E S-9446 or Eve. FE ,24503 598 Lennox ^ $4(» DOWN — Ne»r Northern High. ■ Excellent modem bungalow wim breezeway and jynxar as heat. Full basamant, siding. Raal quick p< ASY FHA m—*-'" ~‘ SaurJ A monthly pay- NICB rooms with BOARD. beautiful home ^rFvuIpI. *Excallant food, pd 3-7333. _ IldbWlv LAOY to board . IN REAGAN]#! REAL E 2551 N. 0( ■homa, cooking. 34 Eoplar 8t. -■•rMgfi -TGATt^iyAVAlLABg ffiKi¥ir-iton. Good 3-bedroom home. OH . furnaea. North of Walton. • r C. HAYDEN, Realtor W04 10751 Hlghijind Rd. 0 PAYMENT FIRST MONTH usal 'locstad In all parts, a ntlac area with or without base SAUNDERS & WYATT REALTY 74 AUBURN i FE 3-7C SYLVAN lake PRIVILEIJES, Id perch. 3)1,300. 633-153). Kitiae- Laki ika Road, a:off Craicant i-targarTwmir « f family room, brick 6 at 67V Kinney near lan I to 4.dally.and NORTH PONTIAC $69 Down NEW 3 bedroom HOME $55 Month lot a home that has averymlng, ; 2 full baths, oak floors, plastered walls, 2 llraDlaces, bol't-ln refrigerator In ma mammoth kitchen" full basemenL with racrea- * n cab- INDIAN VILLAGE. Ideal west side I ipt, \iuii bile- loeaiiBft: walk 16 Tel-Huron or'Poh- i garOge. COM- < tiac Mall. 5 cheerful rooms and I LEkOY TO bath with space lor additional bedrooms. Wall to wall carpeting I In- llv. rm, dnd dining rm‘. New j • modern kitchen. Full basement, ' I; gas heat, alum, exterior f---------- . No closing C. SCHUETT — ------aped to - 373 Month Costs, vacant now FE 8-0458 . '"Ekbluding taxeii and Iniuranca. Everyone qualifies: .Widows, voreaes, even parsons wim credit problem.'' AUBURN-CROOKS AREA. OFFICE ■RBt- ______ ____ __________J. Ava, office, 4 .R06Ms7 PROMiifiNT a6n.n.l?i^‘!i'’''yr.“‘lt'“.; $9,390. MOOEi. - AVAILABLE; rai 3 bedrooms bn your lot, full__ mem, oak floors, gas heal, birch 342 77*^0 ^NEY down. ' YOUNG-BILT HOMES . _ fo model. JOR 3-1191. _ _ N0RTH OF PONTIAC " I ACRE OF LAND Union Loi^e Privileges Cute modern lot, year-around. Immaculate ' 3 bedroqms. fuM Hathi «wpated Itvtng room, large pan-•lan family room, basamant,^ gaa attached garage. 73x140' -'^'orhaaid, ^Ri -HAROLD R.'FRANKS SealtV*' 3583 Union Lake Road EM 3-3203 _ ___ _ 3;”*' WALLEd" lXKB, 3' - BEDROOM ' large family room, living , dining room. 315,250. Approx. CALL ANYTIME DAILY, SAT. AND. I Hnwn ra FM 4-4703. W ailMnav Full basamant with gas haa' 33,375 on FHA or, Gt terms. .. ALHTgnmtM sided bungalow - "4»RlllnE: lIpUCED 1 314,500. c^r oarage. Sm t14,900i Mtg. U H. BROWN, Realtor 03 Elizabeth Lake Road I. FE 4-3564 or FE 2-4610 .GAYLORD living I r'i:”oma^e?J.lrr;nt'« ern to mlnuta 10x11 kitchen, aluminum storms and awning, IV?-ear garage and lake prlv, on Cass Lake, 33,500. TY, ‘-IvflYliBE-'vacant^ IG.^^W V CUiTOM BUILT homes. , pon-tEl^Enter, ampLe paRk- ing, 300 aquare Met. Air condl- - RbCHiSTER -A 1 S*60 ^^’namth. RolM H i,.Raajtor, PE 3-7343. 3400 SQUARE FEET OR ilick RANCH, 4-BEDRdOM7"m bathi, carpeted, gaa haat, '- faW ». ^nd aci a-331i). rsor'si?^ conversion u -,Pa*uff irage afid a rBOO with $ UOtONETDOWN OAKLAND LAKE TRADE OR SELL. 310,700. Landscaped 'A-acra lot, modern 1-floor CASF LAKl-FR0tn7;^%E6^^^ IS to cash. 634-3333. at Holly. 3tSO-33$0 p iAST^F aTjIUrn HEiGHt'5 3-bedroom with basement, lars~ ' * f^lL^33,335, farms. UL MIH. GHACIfSuS COlSnIAL HOME, TIn- G. FLATTLEY, BLDR. 1363-6331 _______Evas, r ' ' furnace, tlraplace, large si with dining space, tiled ba tarad walls. CLARK REAL ESTATE HAYDEN 3. Bedroom Tri Level . $9,995 $1,000 DOWN $300 Down TRADE West Suburban paled, nice bright kitchen h ing space. Full basairieni SM$!'^Fu^^^6^^y^Tl)! "V“ ! $1,500 down. Bpl. 375 monm '■*?^d?S,'^^,^u&^’'RW.*?^/r'2n^''vEST SIDE between Huron SMoW^iXe. on*SVk^ Good home tor young or. retired couple. Full prjee 36,350. LESS I TWENTY ACRES - Building sites only 3300 per acre. OUr models are ready for you to look 'over. They rangisf from 2 bedrooms, bricks at 310,500-to 3 bedrooms -or 313,200, 4 beefrboms On this one. We have a fine city home With 3 bedrooms, big kitchen, carpeting, ceramic bath, full basement, fenced yard and iv>-car garage. FH^ appraised at 3I2,3|XI. _____ 32,000 DOWN on I Immaculate 3bedroom brick. - — carpeting, bull Only V - and- gara5e-em3,2IIO, 4 be at 313,330. Spring Is not f Better start looking. Call FE nr MV 2-2821. AUBURN HEIGHTS Cfpe Cod ' with 3 bedrooms and tawing Water/ and furnaM In 2-bar a toV the hobbylsf^early an d built-in vanity. Plas- leges with this neat 2-bedroom -ench. Selling on lot 38x105 In lice neighborhood. Covered patio vlth a privacy fence, also play lousa and storage building. 33,350, arms or will taf - " -....... IS down payment. PHONE 682-2211 5143 CajttEllzabeth Road MULTIPLE LISTTnG SERVICE_ William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 670 W. HURON OPEN 3 TO ‘ corner lot. Fruit trees a Lawrence W. Gaylord CRAWFORD ROOM, ___________,.(e fr ■ 103' frontage, 2. fl SEE THIS beautiful 2 li^ory, lull basamant, siding,' with Income' apartment, professionally lands'baped. 33S,000 — $7,000 down, balanbe oh land contract, See II today. 'SMITH" Cldfkston stalely Early American Home In tna center of the village. 3 bed- 3 acres SUBURBAN, high and dry Open Sun. 1 to 5 FE 3-7888 I'VCAR GARAGE horta' barni, on -40 acrob. 'wood Lake, IW miles 1-10. Baautiful yard '' ,y corner I ■ ilvOOO < ss,.'isr;,w?»'iT ___w kitchen, formal dln- 4, spacious living and tbm-dan, two bedrooms. V/t ly phone and. school. ■r loasa also. 333,500. Lvi.1,1, Real Estala, CB 3-3547, iMiTne. noiiy pnonv «nH.»wnuwi. »»i33 SiARMiNf JpNiB ________ PE 6-3350 Nothing Down 4710 SUNOALB. 3-bedroom, brkk, large living mom, modern kitchen, tTle both. Larfi lot. BlacktMt street Lewi Lewi 51/4 per cent (ntesast. RBjit MjlCBllBHI basemai Good lo "^^m^aerRONT" , location. Only 310,400. Closing ™. ONLY to move In. ASK FDR . RON O'NEIL. FE 3-7)03. Pli^rSWNERrSFF WILlIAMS JlfflB Houibi 2 tlreplaces, fl im, aftachad g ■3 CLEAN ■ HOMES, O'RILEY Straet. 1 l>«froom town, 3 and rage, excellent conditions. Tei Al Pauly, Realtor 4316 Dixie, Reer _ —--------- ■ Eves. PE 3-7444 •THEY'RE 'LCX)KING FOR YOUR, '“WANT AD IN'THE ■ Pontiac Press Include Carpetlna 1st time oflered „ now fnoving out of state. Hare Is one you will love. Shown by appointment, ask tor Mr. KInzIer. TIMES REALTY 3513 Elizabeth Lake Rd. ML» 333-6343, BvOS. 33S4B63.... DfiNflSON PARl Lovely rambling brick Large carpatad ------ Ing all, firapiai drapes througho n5LD”FARO^0USE SIh 30 lots, 34,000 total pi halt -acra. (Wast Commi IILlV6p realty 673- iiiwwi. 3 — ________________ath. Modem kitchen, family room, oaroM, tot'' ..............-1 tot. Priced OPEN- gaharous slitd lo»- Pf'e*®. fivaiyi Ba sura and aaa this bi lore you buy I Dorothy Snyder Lavender ■M 3-334*Pb”'1-I^''^*«v^^ " Gl RENT'BEaYER 350 DOWN- AND 310- PER MONTH. 37,000 FULL PRICE. Close ‘ Oakland. 3-room modem '"’s'v'^jruW OENTLEMAN farmer or dai ar. 41.41 acres. Can build 6 li or 60 with halt-acrt lots. Inc baaullful ranch home, walk-ln- mint, tlraplace, circ a drive. Driveway axtandinq fo house 10 back from road Owner has Phone 332-8181 porch with canopy, dining room, “®r«EAhsTATr Ask for Mr. Clark PE 3-7330 Rasidant Pl 4-48)3 r^bU^RAOB DEALS IEW3- AND 4-BBDR^OM HOMES 307 W. Yato at StanlaY "0" Down-$59.65 Mo. SUNDAY'2 TO 5 - 3M7 tOAENA DA. . JThrii new colonials on Loreno-Dr. In Wotklns Hills off Wotkins Lake Rd. SYLVAN MANOR KAMPSEN Quick Poiwsslon. Paybd street 'YOUR CrTi|*|TOoD HERE' ***^Ml8ffAEL*s'RSALT'Y srgk iim QpfinONBAY Now is the time to trode. W# will pay you the top dollcir for your Ijome in trodel OPEN > GRACIOUS LIVING Can be yours In Ihli lovely It he^ 2510 EMPIRE d In excellent con- gas heet, Mneed yerd, pewd itmet, Qentol WhIHleld schoel diit. Onty 3IJC81OO doent plus eloa- THINKING OF SELLING? Call Prad Reaevoer, KAMPS , M.L.S.' r 8^0|K" U)71W. HURON ST. M.L.S. After 8 C#lfR 3*5544 LAKB'PRONT.-IO'WIDE ; iS»:_______ an MS3, north at Harvey Lai Rd„ s-bedroom brick, 3.vaarn)l -tf lloors, natural llraplac Wped-ttoir.; natural .1^'?^*!' ON KINSWAY DRIVE. I'SwT*LOW?*)iR/cir 0NLY”311-700. IT'S TODAY'S BARGAIN. :.‘»r”""yE 8-0458 SEMINOLE HILLS Brick. 4 badroemk, 1W ball Choica toeillon In "The K Architect dasignad and cu ao-toot site. Early Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 71 WSat Huron Street PB S-StSI levenlnga FE 4-437S) Val-U-Way WEST SIDE y ITATiLY a-BEDROOM .... -------lOM ceipmei heme. 3 bethi, large Cerpam living reem and dtnlng reewMedern kltohen. full beaemenpwilh euto- IMdc RANCHO SCHOOL djatrlct. ____ emt, welLfc-well |tM then rant! 01 50/50 Oakland. Haa nica ahiminum j'ewt R. J, (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4:3531 FAMILY ROOM 2-bedroom home on the North Side. ' I city conveniences. It's vacant id you can have Immediate pos- GLES enthusiast, raising horses d^S. only $10,500 terms. living room with fireplace, family room, dining room and kitchen, In the wing is a 5-room apart- tage overlooking Parke.......Lake. Ground completely landscaped with an underground sprinkling system. OPEN wiLl trade 2 ACRES WILL ^R LOT J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor EM 3-6604 10751 HIQhland Rd. (M53) -FrushoUr huqe picture wini lake front. Carpet, lion room, electrl CRAWFORD AGENCY RoUa H.'Smith, RBoltor FE TTOao’^'* 3-«3J Rochester Struble ^ New Ranch Home w 3‘^roi , I'A bath 110 W. University ( brick \A ... 3-Car brick atiacned garage,' modem -kitchen of frultwood. Lovely . -ed setting. Clarkston area. Priced tor quick sole. $16,400. Approximately $1,500 down, plus closldg costs. Immediate possession. Builder on property 13 noon to S p.m. rses, garage. , Realtor xt to Taxi) 651-0143 'BUD' xBA^GAIN ' $100 DOWN MOVES YOU I- EAST BLVD. - 3 BEDROOM BUNGALOW NEWLY DECO-■JATEO - AUTOMATIC HEAT - EXTRA LARGE LO/ — I GILES A-l BUYS GILES REALTY CO. FE 5-6174 231 Baldwin Ave JLTfpLE Li^J^oTfeRYlCE _ MONTHLY PAYMENTS.' MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD BEDROOMS, 3 LOTS, north side, gas haat, full basement, oak floors, walls, very nice condl- flo*n. $8,25 OAKLAND HEIGHTS 3-bedropm brick ranch. Newly decorated. Excellent neighborhood. In this delightful 3-bedroom brick ranch home with attached 3-car garage, clote-ln suburban ' I carpeting and drapes, 3 NEW HOMES Full Basements $00 DOWN WATKINS LAKE AREA Owner moved out of state. Must sell. 3-bedroom home, full bi ment, 2-car garage — plus an come bungalow on rear of Large tOOxISO-foot lot Iwith tqji Ing oaks — It will cost you v lllTle to live here. Sacrifice $11,300. Terms. Only $750 Down ' on this five-room brick terrace with run basement, gas heat and hot water; Includes separate closeS tront' porchf**D*Shmaster? Clean and neat throughout, Im- STOUTS Best Buys Today NOTHING DOWN - BEAUT.. 2 BEDROOM COLONIAL HOME - NEWLY DECORATED INSIDE , AND OUT - FULL BASEMENT ' _ AUTOMATIC HEAT - LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS. WRIGHT, 302 Oakland . _ 2-0141-2 Evas, attar 7, OR3-203S IR3-044SI MULTI room, wall-to-wall ____ - heat, nicely land- apad. Only $$0,000 full price. GILES REALTY CO. ' 5-6175 222 B6ldwln Avt. tIple liTting Service Bloamfield Twp. Only one block from Hlekory Grove' School, custom 3-bedroom brick, carpeted llvlhij^ r- WATERFORD HIGH "Bud" Nicholie, Realtor OPEN 10-8 DAILY SPOTLIGHT BLDOU CO. FE 4-MOS ■ ksk about our trade-in plan Fianeer Highlands Riduetd 2 bedroom oncx ----, garage, pav '- lake lor quick tala, with fuu bate-ad tiraal, clota SWrsVKllTIVlvVn 1,500 with 10 per cent $58.85 a MdntH Plus .laxet and. Insuran^i Sfraat. Not a new hqma, but you get' twice the house tor hell the price. Jutt .mtg. costs FHA-,VA Names wt have a compli fine hemat avail I dt theta Come In or cei' ler oeiaiit. WARDEN lached garage. Large 350x250-foot tot. Lake prlvIlageB. Save money here — 9nly $2,300 town to existing mortgage. SN It today I WATERFORD REALTY 20*1 Dixit Hwy. ---------OR J-l™ FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M., FE 2-3370 glac«4 2 full bathse k uMt In oven and rbnyo, uasc Larg^ 2-car attached garaoB patio* paved drive. Only $27*30 'Seminote Hills : CLARK , 3-car gai floor home, g FHa terms. DDNELSDN SCHOOL DISTRICTS, vacant. Datlrable frame bunga-■ floors, plastered ‘ street. Only S10,*50. FHA terms. TRADE OR sell. Williams Lake seetton. 1-ltoor 3-bedroom bunga- tow, „new wqll to-w-............ new furnace. Seilei jto. Will trade ter , ,.'*15,000. Pull price “uify'**?', Many More Selecjtions-^ Drive Out and See Our Photo-Listings! $150 , DOWN $79 Mo. Excluding Taxes -... NEW. 3-BEDRQOM FACE BRICK HOMES FHA Approved Off MS4 lust Dearth of Uka. Orion, behind Alban's Ceuntn* Cousin. ' - MODEL OPEN 628-1565 fcARLISLB BUILpiNO CO- "nfFANKUN-SOUTH BLVD. AREA CITY OF PONTIAC WHY RtNT? $47*50 DOWN NO OfHEk COSTS Stesr CLTR*5’R*i"rL\. , .%'E^‘-V4rMV?S‘5-5146 .......... ESTATE TO BUY, SELL .AND VrAI Evenings, Call PE 5-414' ■ " Mulllpla LIttIny OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 5 SPACIOUS FAMILY LIVING Happiness will be yours In this fine custom-built ranch tramei. "-am Its ollreetiva roman brick tertor to hi worm gtowlito apiece, W oners comferf and curlly to Us femlly. Won-irtul suburban tocetlon on Lady of the Lakes Church krhnnii. Deluxo kitchtn, all ue, .a~lAmllx.,.zniim... las haat, Thermo- w li or tor Ctmbroek Lone, Weterlord, . NORTH C 8UR LAOY OP THE LAKI PP US-10. REALTOR PARTRIDGE NIGHOLIE Ideated on eulo. heat, condltldned ;",/5‘’“prr LAKE PRIVILEGES 3-bedroom ranch h( tile bath, racanth and dacoratad. 0354 and payments Itiii NORTH end ng area, in perfect condition, ling costi move you in. CLARKSTON AREA 3-bedroom brick, and frame, eer-port, large lot, auto, street. It's vacant. NORTH SUBURBAN ‘ ■ droom ranch, auto vanity typa bath. Sat., Sun. call Mr. Cattail F NICHOLIE HARGER C ANNETT 2-Family-i$700 Down Both apartments on one ' — Each hat 3 rooms, price 37,000. ) Acres-Close In ...a%.r7?"’.i 6 Lirgt MforKtf *30p'ta« 6-Family Terrace Good rental a., to Fisher Body _____ Separata batamantt and lurnacat. All apartments have 3 bidrooms and *rem (amlly home, spacious c living room, formal dlnln; . IV; baths, . basement, ni furnace, screened summel 3-car garage, paved driv. $350 Down Smell closing co'st on* this ■ bedroom home li . UtlHty ............ gas turnace, extra lot Included, fenced back yard. 1750 d ‘b.ra“n“< $57 per monitv Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE 5-0165 Oi>en Eves. Till 0 p.m. Sunday 1 to 4 p.m. MULTmLE Listing SERVICE_ WATERFOSb"AREA ~ , BRiCK 3- tarred — priced right et 01MSO, ) to expreitv TTJIO'down.^ CLARKSTON AREA -on 5 acres — on clots to ekprettwsy l UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE J 0665 Dixie, Clarkston 623-3615 Eves. 63S0241 HIITER 160-FODT LAKB-FRbNT . glassed-in porches. Tile i _... __I SUNDAY, 3-4 1 Pegej. WILL TRADE S ' 28 E. Huron St.' S3S,000 WEST SUBURBAN - kalh, large living pated. Large lot wi lieges, 17,000,. terms: NEAR CLARKSTOI6 II teda^y- FE 8-0466 111,500, It O'NEIL model Another twin vanities. Plastered tl ment painted and f"— Lakes. Turp left tc OPEN 3 to 6 758 Sunnybeach Drive e your host. OR 3-6033. Open Sun. • 4 to 7 2915 Shcfwnee Lane ....... _ brick Entered through the Salrly American light aV.'L Ha*'con^ru'cTto'n:''seale'd''oraas''colon yer a—" “ ----------hw » bS? e Road to Walton A family r bookcases ar and ready for left Iq Shaw TRADING IS TERRIFIC LAKE FRONT :X lamlly. Your kiddies enloy swimmihg In the ........- lovely ranch home has three bed-jpoms. Jipjaths. t li^af-altacbed^ garage, aluminum siding and lots of living area. Call to see II. You get a belter buy on lake Iron! SIMPLE ARITHMETIC Wf'll work oul terms., 00 It. .jntage 'on blacktop straal — baautllul landscaping — 4 large bedrooms with private „bath-*tei» .Tc&tte'wiM-i;^^^^^ rHoorTou %hTv.M on this deal II you call Today. CLARKSTON AREA a lot of good nving ai to this 3-badrodm’ranch overlooking naw ooll course. Mom will “-OMS./ LOTUS LAKE PRIVILEGES Beaulllul 3-bedroom bl-ltvel In Lotus Lake Subdivision. Upper level completely carpeted. 2-cer attached garage. Lovely land--scapatL-ye«L/- l^ar toval-ijiad andpiilriled. FulTpr ca 3 0,e00. BRAND NEW LISTING NEAF St. MIKE'S ' rape, full basamenl. An outstanding buy at 30,500, with low town payments —i don't delay to call :tts to 'Mur lakes* i'4-car M, Cerpeied living room ling ell. On a Ikrga lot. ' I cetit down to an eili aran. Pull price 313.000. ■ RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 262 S. TELEGRAPH SUNDAY 1 to >4 Saturday Evening After 6 Call EM 3'0531 • M,L.S, FE 37103 —rV" TflE PONTIAC PIIKSS. SATURDAY. NOVEMimR 16. 1908 Wmtod Contrach^ M-A Land Contracts MoMy t« __ly wm L«nn«o_ BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $1,000 -Drl^%tain»-UlS« Lafce-Blrmlnohim III $25 to $1,000 "'sTATtMcrcr 5M Pontiac State Bank Bktg.. FE 4-1574 FINANCE 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER ROMEO 214 E. SL CLAIR LOANS USi TO $1,000 Srtiith Wideman GETS RESULTS GUARANTEED HOME TRADE-IN PLAN , ________ ... _____r Long . n Bloomfield Hills. Builders home, Includes iSOxIJO ft. and, sailboat, swimming raft, long pump on lake, fountain and Loft-Acraage 2 ACRES, CLARKSTON AKBA, 200 ■ It road frontage, $2,385, 10 per It down. FE «-t50a or UN 4 SliO. east WALTON Near Dixie Hwy. 77Vjx300 eommerV clal corner, good location, sectlonX developing, terms. PONTIAC REALTY 737 Baldwin_ FB 5-1275 GR6VELAND~JREA — OLOlER SUNDAY 2-5 I. 96 .£. Iroquois 5. 6065 Wilson Drive Wonderful location clout 8-bedrm. den, recreation . slie 2^a_r^ ®-’’‘^eal•> “‘I’l ,si: on and s ,>v-. ■ ne. ' Price reduced ay. Just SirSff. down trade your present e in payment. W. Huroi , ever^hlng t . Completely t ust $202 per acr 6334 Balmoral BUILDER'S CLOSE-OUT; b«autl-, carpoted and ------ ■ ^Iqh scenic settlnq on t*--- Treplace ■ and*”p'anet e rter''*^e,:rySu“"Uw loVe every Inch of II, Priced to ioilf8!°^D)xle*"Hwy'’W ‘wJlerCd Hill Terrace, left 1 block to Balmoral. 1370 Dundee WATERFORD HIGH Wonderful west suburb,... .... .• new hrick homes with winding blacktop streets; lust like living ■ ■ vn, only belter. 3 be^rms. ranch bUllt In 1958, base- S?cely* carpeted "and Xnchor )nfy^tl?M e 6. 2994 St. Jude BRA|ND NEW;^ h*e r“"ln' Jayno ffelgiffa? Just "c o m*pI e I e d *and --*7 to move In. Ranch stone lor, big beautiful ground Igmlly rm. With parguet ) and full wall Georgian marble tireplace. It will tv,.vpur favorite room. Farm-type kitchen with all the bullt-lns and a breathtaking master bathroom. Full basement and attached 2-car ?00 "8own'*plus p)sts”w?i? ?l^t to vyallon, *LeTrto Shawneel left 1 block to St. Jude. t" ACRES - PEAT TYPE SOIL, tilled. Irrigated, Oxford area. Fine for truck garden, soil farm, etc. Plenty pt wdter UNIVERSAL realtors 334-3551____________ 468-3387 A LOVELY LARGE CORNER LQ-p PONTIAC TWP. FE 2-3071 AFT, CORNER- LOT. 45x128"aT S. SH ley and Judson, all Imorovemt Including _____ ...^^...^FE 2-7243. SALE“' --5 LOTS IN WAtlii'-■ -wo. By owner. 12,000 with _ Or- 81.500 cash. 693-6296,_____ HOWLSnD AViNUE, StXISO'ALL 7, 2720 Berry COLBERRY PARK; venlent location. . Art and blacktop straats. Brick ranch, 3 bedrms., 2 .full oath^ basement, built-in range and oven, disposal and 2-car garage. Lots ot extra lealuras; even cedar lined closet. Just 2 yrs. old and Immediate possession. You can trade. Only $2300 down plus costas. ACREAGE Fot Investment or Building BEAUTIFUL ACRES, complete tended and Ideal fdr horses or be cattle. On'y 8202 per acre. 16 ACRES WITH I- n of Ciarkston. i ■4" 8475 Cooley Lake Rd. UNION. LAKfe AREA; extra nice 3-bedrm. brl^k rancher with basement.' Unusual amount of bulll-inA cabinets Including large china cabinet. ■ Large grpund level (am-llv rrVi., attached garage with blacktop drive. Suburban living at Unlon'^ Lake VIMIage. 8. 2276 Lancaster BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS, bedrm. brick ranch with 2-c ^eat*’and**JPSrnip»” landTc'a|Sd C. PANGUS, Realtor OpTONVILLE L'’o™“l5S''’mich. MONEY- 5JS2Sv?rd",?'''ld“l'Skrlt to Rutherford, left to Lai right to properly. ir.’n1 C. PANGUS, Realtor , ORTONVILLE' \ ! MI|I St._________NA 7-2815 Ity with 4 bedrooms ^ t - " outbuildings and 614' of road age, $10,500, - $1,000 down. 185 ACRES NORTHWEST OF p6n- ----— Early American home — -----house -- currently used tenant pays $200 — It stay on It want _____ _____ante ■ setting on v Improved road. $59,500. Shown appointment only. HOLLY AREA — 127 ern 3-bedroom homt lakes — 2 perns - suitable for horses o pavement -- currently used tor nursery - $29,000, - Substantial UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 8665 01x1$, Ciarkston 625-2615 ' Eves. 625-1241 rented), horse barns, o Beautiful yard and ga kitchen, lormal dIpIng clous living and famlty two bedrooms. ur' n ACRES new Chrysler Hljihw erege. Approximately 280 ,e frontage. $35,000. T- 90 ACRES . LAKE NEVA AREA 96 FT. LAGOON, FRONTAGE - $4,7M7il,750 DOWN HOUSEHOLb GOODS $-7011 OL t-9791 --'-8 PL 2-3510 "Friendly Service" LOANS TO $1,000. UsuaMy |>n first visit. Quick, frlem ^ -ly, hetptul^^ 2--9026 I the ttumber to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 2 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. - • ....... 9;30 td 1 LOANS . TO $1,000. To consolidate bills Into on* n ly payment. Quick service, .... courteous experienced counsellors. ____ ... jr phone FE 5-1121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. . Perry St. FE 5-812 9 to 5 Dally. Sat. * “ ’ CASH TO $1,000 QUICK, FRIENDLY SERVICE NO RED TAPE mSURED PAYMEHT PLAN AVAILABLE Baxter & Livingstone ' Finance Co. Hac Slat* Bank ( 1 FE 4-1538-9 LOANS TO $1,00. COMMUNITY LOAN C 30 E. LAWRENCE MONEY TO LOAN MICHIGAN CUT your payments Ofie-HALF by quick cash home lo$n up jo $3,500 from Voss and Buckner, jO W. Huron SL, Room 209. Phbn$ FE 4-4729. Business Soles, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 73_Telegraph FE 4-1582 There Once Was a Man with a Route About Which His Wife Did Pout Ht Didn't Hesitate S'aw Portridge Real Estate In \Their Store They Have \Beer to Take Out! \ For YOUR Store Call FE 4-3581 HOME OWNERS CASH, UNLIMITED ExcItfSive ______ . ____currant bills. Consolidate Into one low monthly payment. And extra cash It you Swaps TAVERN 1969. In town of 1500 near Ing. One other tavern In 'own, Scsts 110. All new equipment. Complete stalnleks steel kitchen, but does not serve food. Very high gross for, tavern. Price $30,000 with $10,000'dOwn. State Wide-Lake Orion 1175 LAPER RD, OA 8-1600 -.... AFTER 5 OR 3-7000 .............. ioD SOM licenses, brick building, .. 3-b*drsom living quarters, ■y good condition, fully equipped, lead at only $19,m piM stKk. ____only $19,500 1 LEW HILEMAN, Realtor-Exchangor tOjt W, HURON ^ FE 4-1579 PRTci"*RlbuCED ON THIS 21x72' BROWNING, GUNS We buy, sell ' skates, swaepen grave Hdw. 742 Bambs Har- cleaner, FE B-2774. HOUSE’ FOR SALE OR TRADE. Ttly finished. Full pr after $ p.m., 332-49 RACING OO-KART, parts and aqulpme., movie camera, It Sok HMSthoid Goods 3 ROOMS OF brand-new p^- 5aL''‘S^lr{^2,s'!1Lrt^ w5*. ^F_e^»__--- 2 BARGAIN HOUSES Grand Opening Specials^ 4«w itor* at Baldwin and Walto 'lEc/twcIn ^$77 open ARGE ' 2 nice ............. . BARGAIN SPECIAL. - - - $159 2-PIECE ' FRBIGE "TlVtlig large sue maple BCfNK beds, used" R E F R I G B " *J.P, Paarri AppU^iiJEW sEbnocfRrrioRVERrTiA-sonablr. 33$-$t**t: WEStlNGHOUSE ™ .. trir ttewa, $^, $74-t4^v WATER SOFTENER,' LIKJ CLEAN 0» S*$i*eo. I»rwir^ ^rs«ln« Easy terms. Buy, Salt, Tri ■» Baldwin at Waitgn FE -1 N. Cass at LafayeW* FE ^a$42 7-PIECE ' living room SALE, h»nd hew 7-"'"-* raom 2 stap a-PlECE-SOLID OAK pik suite, $$8. OR 3-178L 9x12 LiSrSOLUM RUGS” USED BARGAIN STORE (Raglater lor Fm Turkov 5-pl*c*'Mapl* dlnatta sat .. II iue^aladTlc'retrlgerdtor -• 8**^?*^* Easy Terms FE 4-186$ BARGAIN CENTER isad staraos and TV. ' exchange warranty. . --------------fO-TV LIMIT TIME ONLY-FREE WItn F. GPODPIOH 8TORB_^ For SoirMbcoiroMOVS aS I "out" of’thewav but p'pIlS’nces* ol S?l''kli^.'NEV?. AND IBOUT ANYTHING YOU and look around, 2 acrts of Irt parking. Phone FE 5-9241. ' l-A ALUMINUM SIDING AND STORMS Sat solid VINYL siding In at 4498 Orion “ ' “ north of $18 Pieai*.........iv;- . JOE VALLELY CO. FE 5-9W E. of Auburn h M59. UL 2-3300. AUTOMATIC WASHERS ...... $49.95 TV’S o - $19.95 and u- SWEET'S RAblO S. APPLIANCE '** ----- “ 334-5477 2-WHEEL UTILITY TRAILER, 334-7981 TWO 2S816ALLON OIL TANKS WITH Y bed', tv, CHAISi LbUNOEir, BUYING CARPET? BENOilOilTOMATIC IRONER.' BLOND bedroom' _______......._ UNK beds' (BRAND' Few) son's Purnlnira, 210 E. Plk$. chartreuse"6aystrom formi- _______ ___ - matching chairs, S5a FE 4-845L_____________ iHAMBERS GAS RANGE, A-1 CbN-dlthm. $82-2563. CHIB double~SVen hot. < Lochlnvar* 3Sgal. bit Ai ____________ LINEOy MODERN print 15 ft. X 98, In, Traversa. Good condition. LI 9-3511 ‘ ^CHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE ^7471 BENCH DRILL PRB^> ^O'^ALLON ELECTR 1C DRYER, (iObb'ciONDF tion. FE 4-5212. RANGE, full size, KEN- ■ . ,..... $35. Desk, ■ .months. n^(^ shape, J reasonable. 33S-69S7. ____ KELVINA'YOR "RBFRKJilRAfSyR, -Good condiflon. 9'. $20. Ml 4-M77. FE-uin^wS^r-RW axe, condiflon, $35, 693-3064. NO ci^ LARGE S r, antique tlj bed lagAj^l^blrd cage, , LIQUIDATING . „ 170' corner lot. Lots, of parking. Call B. C. Hllt$r, Raattor. FE 4-3l$90 or FE 2-0179. s - Package ucfuo'R store ' Pontiac area, math street, parking lot, $276,000 last year. Flnaii equlp-menl Partners roust sail. Pay only sto<.: doim. Call_RyaiL 86W525. P'EfOSKEY, "MICHIGAF-FOR RE-couol*. Yaar-rouniL 3-unllTur-rt and all modern molal. 2-bad-apartmant, 2-car garage, to^xpanslo«i_a7J-5l42;__^' -A8.W "RCWf BEEil' FRA'N-available In Michigan. Fran-and . equipment. Priced tor sale. PE 2-8616 after Sak Ckthing BOY'S SPORT C MOVING,,orew 1 colonial furnllura. M^day. ns E. jROsf ifu'^AutbiwAf rf holes, design ....s aha does menis of 8S.93 I, monograms, i warVIhlng. 11 p each or will i 3RWEGIAN FUR SUNOCO En. .muBsst. We speclallza In carpet cl aasenabi*. FE 2-7937. Small-Town Livjng smair°*lov?n? ' Bolter *'lnveshgalo Inis real nice 2-bedrm. bungalow locat^ on paved slfH I" n«»rt new?Vi lurn. ?er'm8**afid no morig, co LOOK TODAY. Price now only $6950. BIG Bl Lakefront eally Deluxe-all 1 rZ d lendscapipg It A showing .Commerce Lake -EGES .........— ____ -ohCani at|d Llncoln- Id Tot 1 It $1150 No Money Down JUST GOOD CREDIT^wlll mov Into this coiy 2-^.rm. bw I In Ellz. Lake Eital8S^_Q" heat, walk-out basernenf oncT sfo'so, UILOING'LOTS, $4,000 wonderful Ellz. —jv - — lust one block. Only $8950, and don't welt. Immediate possession. Aorth ’Suburban NEAT AND CLEAN) cozy 2-1 Ri’f'S'Sr.s rr?g.'’YoT’up°l"*'$3l5o." MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE APPROXIMATELY 2 ACRES GOOD BUILDING SITE „ $3,000. $100 DOWN ' V Floyd Kent Inc!, Reoltor 2200 Dixie Hwy at Telegraph ___ F E M123 or F E H9l4____ Soiii Buiineis Property 57 CLARKSTON AREA HI-WOOD SUB. large WOODED LOTS ..... -ENT bOWh In' the Country and large 300 and blacktop r« and Just $11,30 isemeql iced loV' with $1150 do er will trade $2,495 UP, 10 PER CENT DOWN WATKINS LAKE privileges, LARGE CORNER LOT, $3,000 CROSBY lAKE^OINT' SUB. . LARGE SELECTION BUILDING LOTS ....- " PER CENT DOWN g quattors and C L BUILD TO SI UNIVERSAL REALTORS 334-3551............ 448-: Business Property LOCATED AT TELEGRAPH a Walton Blvd. Small house, lot I in' wllh 20' allay at iha r< STATIONS OFFER UNLIMITED EARNINGS FINANCfAL SECURITY INDEPENDENCE laoi1F~blub coat, sizF nice 21-inch zenith tv. |IED Chrome sat. Baby crib and —‘ tresi. Mlic,_lurn. OR 3-9444^ 5>n<~fwjN‘ Bib's, SEltA BOX springs and mattrasias, 2 odd To the man who la sales min hat managerial ability and meat the moderate financial .. quiraments. Several locations avall- Lady'i rad winter Fur (acket, slZa 14.......____________ si£f“ - (.GAI, vnevR' axcellant condt otter. OH 3-0787,____________ PHlIifo '' REFRiOEHATd!i. f1 2-3935. Hau ?6rtable^automatic zig-zag singer, no atlachmahta _naadad. $34,50. Curia Appllanfe OR 4-1101. Rebuilt Applionces Sale HoUMhaM Geoik 6^ wrtngar’'w?shars ........................... |$4 ------------Automallc waihars ...................... RairijaraN)Mir*r#'nawrt^' ’ .. 21" (Toniolt TV's, new pix tu 2 TABLE LAMPS, 2 EASY CHAIRS, Safe lawd Cdntracte 20% DISCOUNT Discount $570. Your cost ^£AN6US*-Mi1iql " >^°'^"'‘-'-"nA.7 2,I5 •FA/ wivF ROIi.U*A'WAT l$BI#a gas and alaciric itova, $10 elaciric dryer, $39| ralrlg-lort, $19 UP) 2-plac* llvlrig VI tulle, $29) coal and wood ulaling haater, $34.50) alaciric ler, tSh 4-placa Duncan Phyla t. Hi CibbOS 45 KIRBY VACUUM Usad- In good condMliii lallPE 5-9243 Smith Wideman Indapandenc* Twp. $3,395 NO E. PIk* iipflc:!..■BiFH6dvr'*«uffi; '$50. Mtiai bad inallrait, dr*tij.r, $7,84. CO rrtrL_____ ...... ... » . --------- „ R'BT'FfGERAfSff. fflfion CQNDr- Hon, $40. 42 Park PT*c*.____i _ GOOb BIO CORNER. C Cop RANCHER "40" LOT 412 weir HURON .. OPEN EVES. _FE 44526 247vfilOHWATFRONfA6E' in DIxl* Hwy.,. .with approx. 7 iCH<4 at land, with two buildings, 18.450 wri ,Fe 5-885/ ' Seasoned iM 1859 tot $4,400, praaant b «* only $4,440 at $75 par man! m be handled tor $3,654 caal). Warren Stout, Realtor I matirait, drtttar, ____alaciric range, $75. 7ryr^^m Chrim ijjichan lamp! $4. Floor Tainp, $1.50. ^ an rackar.M, library tabi* $1, *:pTicrnFi'64«oT«''lALT'''2‘ brand new doubl* drassari book-cat* bad) chast of drawers) box f?.Slty*"?.m"’prTf.rX'ni $aALY''HjbpAWF'r''BiD, Vi^Y mallraitae apd i L Really CLOSE TO PINE KNOB SI wonderful butinatt lot 21 Saihabaw at axprattwsy Land Contracts! iwju5 "FAY DIRT" - OTTAWA HILLSI 1 (Iberglas Insulalibn 2 ft. overhang end (i CALL FOR details .Trade The BATEMA^Way batemM . , 377 S. Telegroph | Rdajtor FE 8-7161 Not- tor $4,000 or $3;000 W)t only $3,000 cash Call el onc4l . W, H. BASS realtor FE 3-7210 BUILbER “Spaclallzlng In T-.............. Wanted!! Templeton commercial BUILDING/ ---------- ,ou daal. Warraq I, Realtor. IMO N. Opdyk* Rd, , FE 5-$l$5 ^ Lots in fh* tity of Rontiae SPOTLITE BLDO. c6. , PE 40985 Today's Be^t Buys Are Found in THE PONTIAC PRESS WANT Ab PAGES ..... . xPy i'-v StLL 6rfFA6¥mVtAb'WRflJ§’. ar-waihar, or Whit* tawing nja-china, both In good condition, tor 4^ bodroom lultfcjWl-oaji._ mod»r Mokoa button tiolot,..bilnd eount ln”|!*”Moi5i5i bi^VlSi wr mo. or $44 coin btlanca. Uni-vori*' Compony, PE Special WMtXvr.2ri».:i!s 'Sr'c'SKi! miS'idni g&Tt««mrv.«^ FURNITURE CO. Phone 332-8181 KIRBY VACUMIiT TNCHnOC- ,. $45. FE 4-7139. LINOLEUM TRUCK,_ 3 FLOOR’ dollloi, 8 record cabinets, 5 re-frlgaralori, 1 got stove, 1 Clary cash register, 1 cabinet table. FE 4-5214. Tarrnifc ■i",- cint 1^3 Orchard UMwam, ■■■■ ••- MUlCiiTTuMATROL OUN rsSSS:?:!-: “T)NLY$75 ■ Everhot Hooter Gas Fired ^WeMT'-' Gloss Lined FOR further^information WRITE PONTIAC PROM BOX 2t (SSnamental iron porch anB A% CABlfiETs7*l874 (^yk*. FB ' Fea-1455- , )Tl~F'URNACE, $5,000 BTU, $». Call 473-2872. “PL?SC0RD CASH AND CARRY ^'“rNTrAl^L"$??06D • WL' fABLe, LlkE Nl ____UL 2-4545 aftarj.?, PLUMBING ----------- 'BARGAINS T'RidL _______ ...let, 118.95) M-gallJn healer, 149.95) 3-pl*e* .bath_ salt, $59.95. Laundry tray, trim, 519.95. shower slalla with trim, $32.95. '2;bowi link, $2.95t Lavs., $2.95) ■ " ....... .P!i?!..?!fL^4 .MS?, c rr,,.w£LY CO, ’ — r MONEY DOWN ■ OL 1-6423 mHWriTu GAS FORcSra furnace, completely Installed /fo 499 OmaA _____________ TUFIDE BRTeF CASE GUAR-..itaad for 5 years, $9.95. GENERAL' MINTING AND OFFiCE PRINTlI SUPPLY, 17 W. -RlMTSbrSN" XufbMATit) sump pump) electric trolley holsl, ■joiMk.|MF^734frdttorT-p:Titr"^"^^^ 50 FEET USED FENCING, SINOlE maple bedatoad. FE 2-4133. mepta an Ciudad. I la SInka, 19.50. Faucets, $9.50 KITCHEN INTERIORS . 33$-U13 3127 W. Huron St.____ BEEF aRO pork -- HALF,AND quarters) O^yko Mkt. FB 5-7941. EAUfTEOmPMENT: 2 CHAIRS, Brown's Cabinet Shop Custom cabinets, v4nlfyi tormh tops. 2503 Dixie Hwy. 47»7554. , ..'5)0872;.-......- ------- COMPLETE.8T06k OF PIPE aHd .....— -laitle, copper and cast 154 W. . Oroov* .............. M Birch 4X8 . DRAYTON PLYWOOD OR 3-89I2 24n Dixie Hwy. OR 3-» 'eiMt'NrTi,L6i:'i;..ffARTT-ys-i destroyed, all material In exchange ir removal. JO 4-7127.. .......icABmEE'-,....... stock orcuHonr Call us first. Day PONTfic KU??M SPECjAtTIES ' D &TTABrNirSH5F r boiler built custom cabinets. SLPd%'i'r!'$i'(T'87,*2:hr ’'r Baby Pood, 24 fi. Cut-Up Friers. 14c 0 Lb. Dog Food, 12 tor S9c 1^- qusiij|ty, Call fa7-1577. oisi'i 'erL0MliN(i'!^u1^* a; ~ -. Novels) locks) V4-ton chain foil) sssissi'a', ■.......“iW ir planters) ') 2^gal. ti "ilwlFFipF ..™_ COPINO-^FLUt COMPLETE STOCK OF FITTII 4" DRAIN TILE-)-l0c EJ ‘ ' BLAYLOCK COAL A $1 81 Orchard ‘ ' lER INOS FOR CHRISTMAS? BOY'S FIGURE, SIZE 7, S3) SIZE 9, $4) G>ni-'e SIZE 12, IS) LADIES' FIGURE, SIZE 7, S5) CHILD'S ROCKER SEAT, S3) ■SWING SET, 118) TABLE FOR TRAIN LAYOUT OR UTILITY USE; LARGE DOG HOUSE. MY 3-1724 AFTER 4 P.M. TALBOTT LUMBER (31141 h dows. TV, OIL BURNI PE 4459S 125,008 BTU. AAH Sates or A4A J-2537._______________________ VANitY AND HAND BAllN^Wf - compiato, S59.95. B tetiots -------------------------------------- Tice doskt, Cttom, fllil, Orittlng tables, typawritars, adding ifia-chlnas, check wrltari, mlmaaoraph maehfna. Forbes PHnting A ONIm Sui^y,^ ^ Olxta Hwy., OR 3-9747 . JOOWS, Odul Slngla, 3414x40". IcraatH. 424-3329. Chriitmos Traai l$,000 WELL SHAPED BEAUTIFUL, ly colored scotch pInas. Rail bar- :8J|^no'u^n«d.l^r2'‘^ "" PLANtATibR -ITAOWN S d 016 H PTnB BO(70HS, 2APOUND (iCiN- pear. Call Farmington 474-7494, Hand TpbIi-^^^^ - WANTED; CLETRAC FOR PARTS .. OR 4-1493 Camarai'■ SenHct 76 Sacrillco. Slop. Cost f|90. PE 5-8277. OR^Mib'vl'iwTlixS likOTM with 2 Ions (F4.5-7W" llkx In No. t Acme shutter] (Gaerzf 4.3-1" In ihunar) (C Parle ihuitadJ, C“* f*'"* TiENT A NEW GRINNELL PIANO _ Music lessons Included Choose yowr stylo end f|nlsli All poymonti apply It yuu buy $2.00: '; , Per wiBK ' ' Grinnell's .Jasriug**-, "4ia almBst new player piaRO ifi beautiful walnut llnlah. Bancli oiW 25 now roll*. Save 1^. - ir Music Co. FE 4-0566 ANfi6iiI squaAM HiHifklXiTill Oran^ tondftlon reW" A Trumptt, Cornat, Trambonsy Fluta, , Clarin«t, Violin ’ or Snort Drum Kit $5.oa ... A MONTH Hm* for «• lohq m you wiih^ Grinneli's s88T.jrMr* V THE PONTIAC PRr^SS, SATURDAY, NOVKMBEIi 1^, 1963 thirty-one '"NiW AlHlwtronic' Organs wim b«neh, mwil« ind Ittto m6rris music I. THuri ' FE 2-0567 (I) Uairt Baby Orand, Baldwin, mahogany fin' - 5SX“'Xi.J ^mAffmNOui^'SISoD* a Try WIEGAND MUSIC adyiiyban^ahoRd. WfTWANrisrFADiC”* USED amall m'aola piano. USED amall grand piano. , haaamoWO- Chord organ, wa. _ _j|5TEll( OROAM- wMh largo taill( apoakor, $a,M0, now ai,»5. E»T*y organ, gi»5. LOWRBY organ, II,»S, now toys. UOWRfY' organ, bvHMn Ualla ipoakor, aaM liM. JANSEN Plano wllh built-in Lowray organ, II,4W, now MM. Gallagher Music Co. I Eaii H Opon Monday fhru Friday 'til 0 FE 4-0566 > late model consoub chord organ; IM.M, tarmi. Curta Ap-pllanca, OR .... MWO RENfAUI U PER M^tt Full allowanca if purchased lator. Gallagher Music Co. II eait Huron y Monday thru Friday 'fll I - oww ifWiMiit ' n NEW PORTABLE TYPEWRITER, mw. ^|aHTiod^la|’away. Curts Sportliig Goods jgraj|h Rd. and Bdng, Ava. FE 3o:»^ I no moat complete---------- for all your eporlsr_..... thoriied dealer for Lvms nell-Weaver and Browning scopes. We also are authorlMd dealer for alU-RROWNINO, WINCHESTER, REMINGTON, ITHACA, WEATH-BRBY Guns on display at all SCOPE MOUNTING and GUNSMITHING' JO-Yd. and lOO-Yd. Range and Trap thootlng COLT PISTOLS : FREB-Oun ease With the Hoy'Orfliii-IFeeiil CORN, 3,000 BUSRELS. K03 Cliff Dreyer Gun and Sports Center 15310 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-a;7i BIO sSIIctTon. tilil....SHbT guna and rifles. Free case with purchase. Bert's Loan Office, FB 4-5U1. 15 N. Saginaw. . ETeBr to ’BlSkiNffiDT"^ ,• claansd and wrapped. Also lockers OAVEY'S MARKET ISOS N. Main, RochOster, OL Sjlll ' "^ONS'^IuY, SBi-LTTRAOB SKIERS We have a complete line of skli boots, clothing and accessories. A at sale tlnfa Prl«*v CHATEAU DES SPORTES • Dixie at Telegraph ...... M I-J4I4 afiarJ 6ii?Man famah. aae for lalaTaat Mill; bTSd?) iren,' eeii ur tridS. iers, gentla wllh chJWran. ul iTOIB’s, i6 wBBits 6LB/ ^^jalarafl, mala and famala. iox"''t’lRili4Bt ; wlVi^i'. yar a^yw!'o*R^^ Auction Sales wa_Jjtf-SaU-yrada,. atall 7 Days rwnsignments weleoma 5089 Dixie Hwy, QR ymf AUCI lON&WBDNiSOAYi "i PTSl Wll|.0-Way Cbuhtry Mart, 013 W. Long Lake Rd. Ml r-tfae. H^f^CttON- SAtoS^ Ringer type'washe'r7'eiKtrir'a^ &Vsh^“a5& aV(^le“ll*^^ room safr tots'^o^^ arto used Items. Consignments ac-cepfad dally, Duane Upton and Bob Dobson,'jWctloneers. Call MY "#EtTAL SUNDAY 2 P“M. Hall's Auction s.... .„ .. ____ ton. Rd., Lake Orion. 3 nice con plete bedroom suites. Dining rooi table, and chairs. Day bad. Na kitchen set, new apiece living m set. Lots of new and used Item Plants-Treei-Shrubi STS BEAUTIFUL NURSERY GROWN ----------- W ea. You dig. 13 mil lie north sprayed. It than 10, S3, north of Pontiac, V, T blACIC ’ANO WHlTr”WK^ „ grjiarbecuing; OL 1-0413. BOOT A"ND ' SADDLE shop" NOi Sopon. Week days 10;30 to 5, Fr 0 9. Sundays 1 to 5. Opening si Rope Hallers, 99c. 39901 ___ western Hwy^ EL 3-3140. _ BLA£F ANGUS BUI L, 3W years 0 0335 Halstead Rd., Walled Lake, HARNfeSS 4-TEAM --'RE.GISTEIIB quarter-horse gelding - coining 3- ' Rd. RIDING STABLE, 13050 NEAL Oavisburg, 034-4901, call lor details. Riding Instructions avall-Groups welcome. HORSES BOARDED stalls. 100 acres to riga. LEGHORN HENS FOR SAl-iT^50c each. 0150 Cranberry Lake Clarkston. 035-3538. ________ FRfM^ ORADl t¥Rk~E"VS,. - whlte meat, I Thanksgiving. OA ^aolo.*”**' i scientific forge amount of 'tressed for 5 and Toms t WIRE BALED WHEAT AND mately 9-9733. _______ APptl'S I- GOLDBN |AW5~RF5 ...........................^*53.1 Not----- Delicious p.m. da.„ -............. Orchards, 1 mils east of Milford , on E. Commerce H ' ..I FRESH FARM PRODUCE, SEE Bob & Bill's Produce Co. 740S Highland Rd... 073-5031 . West of Atrgeri'Rd.1 ^armllqHlpmant . >7 Davis Machinery Co., orio NA 7-3393. Your John ---- fj^ftruNeri NA 7-3475 BVENTNOS SlED, UTIlI" ........ \UL 3-1133.- ___, ATtriilw-WAY#L |TWIIjr« rcTTrolv^,*iM.mia, S3W aIAIVABAm LTOTTWIiSHT TRAVEL TRAILERS a lew. Guaraptaed ft al*Warnar frailer Salas, 'Met ... Huron (plan to loin ana of Wally Byam'a okcitlng caravatts). fclH0WlJ5i ' New Holly Travel trailer ;k Camperi, eiao Ster Ci Trailer. ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES dS77 Olkle Hwy. MA 5-1400 quality, all aall-conlalned. Com ?r2’t^"a'S'V7ef’-Oo!5aSmliS koo s. Rochaitar Rd. UL sale - kALi "Rantal Unlfs^ Right' ompem, Wdivirina In nabago Pickup Cempara. T'rdllblaser Travel Trallari. - - HOWLAND /(QVK UP TP WESTERN PRES- MIWamMl Cars-Truckv 101 TRAVEL TRAILERS light weight, ________ FWat Wing Tawat Bravo sail contained t ELLSWORTH AUTO , .and trailer SALIS 5577 Olale Hwy. MA S-14SB Wan ________’ JsU Mobile Homes vnicn.Cen Be Bought for as " $ies Down. Torms to Suit, 1953 CHEVROLET PICKUP TRUCK. Good fir.......... ...•— EXPERT MOBILE'HOME REPAIR service, free estimates. Also parts and accessories. Bob Hutchinson, Hwy,, Drayton Plolns. OR 3^ OXFORMRAILER ....-.....-■SALES-''’”’”’"' living any- ,, ____ . .j latest In n, 58' - 13' wide Vega-(. For those who —' 1, 0 compitio rooms. Thost JEEP, test, ^WHEEL p_R|y£, NEW ■ Parkhurst Trailer Sales FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 TO 60 feet. Featuring .New »h*.'lfw»iinO?ro loosljd^he Country Cousin. MY 3-4611. ,SHDRTS MOBIL^ HOMBi and bottle gas. sted Glean Trailers 3172 W. Huron OL,; HOOslffcAiLlR.^NOT l4' widt, about 41' long, - --....— '—ly to HASKINS chbvrolet-oldsmob I le US-10 at M-15 Clorkston_ ““ 4-BARREL CARBURETOR manifold for 1957 to 1953 Ford. 683-0473. flrBi-AutoifruclP ALL SIZES, 50C TO 85, SOME mounted, cheaper In Iota, --Parte, 1130 Mt. Claman Auto SirBSceT' CRANKSHAFT DRINDING IN THE au'Bsn.'SSf-SiW 3-3563. Motorcyclai v Attention BoatersI DON'T WAIT-DON'T HESITATE UP TO 30% pISCOUNTI ! YOUR glUTFIT NOW, MERCURY-SCOTT WBST BEND Boat-Motor Storage CRUISB-OUT BOAT 8AUES 63 E. Walton * to 4,. FE H4M ‘ CLrArtHE'DEGl^^ Everything Must Go! Up to 25% Discount I Et««. ' Inside-Outside Storage Harrington Boat Works Fall Cleranc# Sale) ^la,^muat go, Ineludm^tjijM m^la, Turta ■ crall lot Win take tredci. Winter Inside Storage teasonabje ratee. Contact MIC «308 SALES, ( "Invest in ThE PEsti PINTER'S BOATLAND '64 OWENS AT TIRRIPIC SAVINGS , Lake and Sea Marino - PI 4-9IW Saginaw at 8. Blvd. PB 4-95W flRR'l?iC~DTseojN^^ Marina, .Keego Harbbr.. 583-3660, lIVuNted Cwi-Vruciie HRM Mansfield AUTO SALES , 1501 Baldwin Ave. 335-5900 LLOYDS BUYING work. $3l»; MY 3 6113. 3"CHBVY Vi-TON 1 International V, ........ . CONclkY'5«8?^Afr^fs(J6u 3335 Dixie Highway .. ____ CORVAIR, 95, PANEL, radio, sidovlow mirrors, Jlka new. 3,100 actual mllai, has »ll new car warranty. $1,4(10. OR A1()64. >55 OOdOE TRACTOR, nEw EN. gine, 2-iposd axis. $575. Cats Lake Marina, Car- ■>“ or 634-W14. I FORD ECON^LIN ’JEEP HASKINS Better Used Trucks GMC HASKWS Used Cars 1951 CORVAIR Portol, Ilka new, bei "'ul fawn balge finlah. ' HAkiNS chevrolet-oldsmobile US-10 at M-M , , Clarkston 104 AETNA CASUALTY r <. coverage. $11 QUARTERLY BRUMMETT AGENCY Noxt to Pontiac State Banl^ AUTO INSURANCE FOR SAFE: DRIVERS $23,50 QUARTERLY COVERS ALL THIS $1G20.000 liability, $5,000 .prcperfy nnVaiir sisf'VtJi. S Iran“ aRdeTrson a%ncy|^ n Cars 105 AUSTIN HEALEY GRAY, NEW —iL 33^»m,_»acrlllce. __ 1953 AUSf iN-HEALY' SPR ITeT black, 5,600 actual mllet. OR Forilia Core I960 FIAT, 1100, SERIES 195S IWtta ..... 1958 Maiico .... ......... 1958 zodiac .. ..... -- ------------------------------------------------------ brakes. Excellent condition. FE 4 3963. » ________ ■ 1962 CHEvrOlMt SUPER SPORT 1963 BUICK SPECIAL ______________ 2300 miles, automatic Irena- .....an, radio, hooter, power atoer- Ing, whitewalls. 646-6390. I960 BUICk power. A bargam hUhtwY drawn" $1345 TWO-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN .DODGE '311 S. Saginaw ^^^_FE 8 j J962 rCORVAIR MONZA . COUPE, red with matching Interior, 4 on the -tloofi radior heatOfr lVH- price BOB BORST , 1954. JEY black muA sell. $150; 635-209S. ' 1955 (SudTlLAC" ELDORAPO- CON-vertible. All power equipped. $395. FE 4-5330. ' : 1954 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, Marvel Motors 351 OAKLAND, AVE. CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE 1962 power accessories; less the the cost of e new car. > , $495 Dn. GA5AC 35.MONTHS WILSO'N PONTIAC-CADILLAC -CAOMACS-Air-Conditioned '61 - '62, _______ Sedan De- ... Sharp 1-owner cars that completely re-cbnditloned. Onp o'$j!69S.“°'’ WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC N. Wobdward Ml 4-1930 JBIrmIngham, Mlchlgaji "1950 'CHEVROLET _,FE 8‘430e _ _ 1953 CHEVROLET," $65 MY 3-2003 _ _ Ifsr'i-DOOR"CHEVROLET, RADkJ, mllaago, _ . -1 motor, best offer 2-4139.________________________ VERY (IlEAN 1955 CHEVY . station wagon, cheap. UL 3-3371. 1956 V8 CHEVY station' WACiON. 1956 (:h1VR$LET STATION V on, VO, stick shift. »375. FE 3-4 CHEVROLET, fdltlon. M • ■■ ■ R 3-2953. 930 CHEVY 4-DOOR, AUTOMATIC. Power brakes end steering, good shape. OR 3-1520. _ ■ 1958 GHEVROLEr 2-door, red and white, automatic, radio ’ and hooter. Special price $445 TWO-YEAR G.W SPARTAN WDG£ 311 S. Saginaw . '%WiFteBK55BE 1953 MO MIDGET. ORIGIN/LirBwN-- Excellent condition. After 6 p.m. .... 4-3757, _ „ . foMliPBLrfliADIO, HtfAfiR, VERY "itEOPrBTrdT^SALES' , 4$ OAKLAND__________pj 3-3351 WHITEWALL YlR«, ABSOLUTE- ....* ------ DOWN. Payments ). Sae Mr: Parks - 4-7500. 1958~CHEVY IMPALA. 348~ TR'j-power. Stick. Runs good._585-1779 1958"CHEVROLETr2-DOOR SEDAN With 8 cylinder and automatic transmission, radio and hoatai: and H id real honey. Monthly payments only $15.83, and "" money down, full price 4>nly I King Auto 5ole$ , ,3375 W. Huron SI.Hl. FE 8-4008' ' ToirCHivYim^ALA, T4T I, PE 44)103, OLIVER RENAULT u looking tor a car [u up to 40 rniloa pi lAULT DAUPHINS lAULT R8 $150 down on abovo low low paymon OLIVER .......-.... WUR ----OR 3-0410.^_____ fyjo' imii>AlA"tONv6AfikLCTiiIw top. UL 2-3435. ______ 1959 cHEvror \ Automatic, radio and heater, extra aharp and ready. Original owner really took care of thl* ona. Only $795 TWO-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN RENAULT Sport Roadster conyargiblo. Lbrgo motor and aide curlana. Spaclaf 1(1745 SPARTAN • DODGE 1 8. I•plll•w Pi I-4S41 . «MlT---------- ,,^_.jd.q]:ge Iti S. Saginaw . PE .. 19l9 0HiVROLiT"v"8, AUTOMATIC trantmTaslon, radio, heater. Real nice car. No money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "'Pontiac's Discount j-ol" 193 S. Saginaw_ _____^FE ( 19*9 C'HivY' 3-oooR radio" htaui, .atick 475-4709. _ I?Sr7ffltvY,“TEb aWd ObLD -"tal-fluka, 409 4-spaad, ■“-* . PE FOI04. ' .I9S9 ■'CHIvY, 5, StiCIKr a-doSr 503-0991, 1961 Vary aharp white as $445 1940 CHEVROLiT iftAfl^^wIT-Eon. V-0, 9-passangar, radio, hoator, automatic, balls, alec, rear wlrv SHa^^ffooo" M^waot®^' bilOl'TO E i7>TR MfiWIX™J94i Bpoti coupe, tmtad giaii, auto., - radla. nnt a itpt, sacon-" ---. PE 3-7545. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC iMDODGn "i", three' sharp cars to from. All are In top co Priced from $645 .... 4-1930 Birmingham, Michigan ToirveLKswAGiNrciBANn^ condition. 490 Scotl Lake Rd. PE TWO-YEAR O.W. WARRANTY I!* VOLKSWAlSiN, NEW OVtR- . SPARTAN DODGE lult engine I 1-3040 pt... - I...... vw "suNROOP. ExcIllent iwAMM,"r-e««i(nn POUtlAC GRAND PRIX LUCKY / "Pontlec'a Dlicount Lot;' ' I S. leginew „!*■ a Words cenhot toll how clean tl .$2595 VaOXMALL ;VICT0R7l>lL5Xf“4-door BOdan.’ vmyi trim, vaiy clean, 'no fuat. aoonomical, M fo <30, MPG. PJr4l S3S0 takaa. Ryan. Privi'- ‘..... WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC dCarv 106 ITew gad UEid Cart 106 FALCON 4-OOOR, 442 MONTEREY CONVI and Is: In new condition $1,895. Sdburban Okie, 54$ S. ward Avp., Efrminghem. M' r9H Ol^ SUPER IS, 4 ‘-irdtoK power brakes, «7I. UL r— $995 TWO-YEAR O.W. WARRANTY .SPARTAN DODGE 942 CHEVY UnpolO hardtop, fV4l, Powert— — showrooni rttw inaroon finish. HASKINST CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE US-10 at M-IS Clarkston _____ MA 5-5071 Birmingham TraiSe "nroufrFORCrOSALER.SInce 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD At THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 1941" FALCON 3 - D05r, RADfo; HEATER, AUTO. TRANSMISSION WHIJEWALL tjrjes. absolute* Lt No MONEY DOWN. Payments ol $9.65 per week. M Mr. Park at Hdrpld Turner Ford. b'lrmlngtiam '' _____J9 1963 CHEVY IMPALA 3 -hardtop, 409, ' 340 h.p., st HASKINS HASKINS GHEVHOLET-OLDSMOB4LE ^ Clarkston MA. 5-5071 US-IO' aT-W-IS 1963 MONiA“SPYDER‘ CONVERTI- > 9T,795 Van Camp Chevrolet Milford _______ _ MU_ .6J035 IMT'CHEVROLEI iMPALfG'SUPER sport. All power, radio and f***' $2,595. OL 1-0167, Rochester, 4-Speed 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA Hardtop, 2-door, with radio, heeler, whitewalls-and a 337 engine, very low mileage, end IS extra sharp throughout! Solid blue finish, $3,595. Crissman Chevrolet ^OR C fR AN^pSlfl^ld’N, call Sava Auto, FE 5-3278. Birmingham Trade 1955 T-BIRD RED FINISH, MATCH-■Interior^ sharp,_one_owner, low 1961 "CROWN IMPERIAL" 4-DOOR herdtdp that will please the buyer that demands the very best. The sparkling chrome accentuates the custom styling of this Glaciv Blue beauty. The luxurious tollorod sliver gray Interior has sf*-'"' swing out front seats for convtnlence. Equipped wllh , about everything Including 4-way* power,- tinted glass and excallant whilawall liras. You get a ...... ona-yaar guarantee with o full price of ortiy $3,395. ...» -. Woodvvard Ive. glrjmlngham_____ _ __MI 6-4538 --i63 FORb" FAIRLANE, $1,850~OR best offer. Clean In and out. 335- |Y«Tnfbfro"‘f>AipANE" 2 ^ Woodward______^ Ml 50 DODGE COUPE, 'iso.* ...................... 7-3214 _________PotARA 1963 mSBSh hardtop, while with red Inf-oil extras. Save $1500. 3^-7491. _ DODGE,' 1958," 2-bOOR' HARDTOP, automatic 'transmission, pr— steering and brakes, radio, hoi good mechanical condition. No _on$500. LI 1-1415. DODGE, rm'jt-DOOR, autom,'dle, 6, wind new battery, clean. 19-C. 338-8616. _ _ TmT" DODGE "SENECA StATION wagon, $850: 1963 DODGE V-8 2-DOOR, STICK, RADIO AND heater; small payments with cnl " $65 down. TWO-YEAR G.W. WARRANT^ SPARTAN DODGE 'bpoin't look .— —-■ 1954 Ford, $85. 852-5514. 7"1lxc!iiLENt cOnOi- auro runs good.______________ 19^5 FORD VICfORiA, V8, %7~S. IN-qulre at 718 E. Tennyion: ___FORD STATION WAGON. I Cass Lake Marine, 683-0651 _626;3014^__ I9SS FORD, V-t,~ "stTck, visy 31OO8I. Conway Dealei lif fO'rd" faIrlane, $m" Ra-dio, heater, tinted glass. Fordo-, metic, V-8_ OL 1-6598. f»"FOM 3iDOOIL E AUI66«AT.L^ clean. JliA M876: ^ _ IST^YBIRD, good COfrOITION, , RADIO, IRES, A POWN. 1958 FORD CLUB COUPI heater, auto, TRAh WHITEWALL TIRE LY NO MONEY p( of 819.65 per , mo. / at Harold Tumor Fc.. . i9rT*51FTAMA"N"lToirA^ malic, radio, hoator, 40,000 9ml $635.'Call Ml 4-3195 Surtday. 9| TWT&ITD $695 TWO-YEAR O.W. GARRANTY ~ SPARTAN DODGE 11 5.. Soolrmw ___FE 8'4541 »59'?ORD, 1 bWNl'R, LOW "mTl¥-ago, reasonable, FE 5-2931. P50 FORD STATION WAGON, RA"-010, HEATER, AUTO. TRANS-^ MISSION, . POWER STEERING, per week. Sea Mr. Parks at Harold Turnoi Ford, Ml 4-7500. " I963S THRU 195ns'" Youiia!rv;'ir«^si,c.it YOUR FRANCHISED DEALER RAMBLER JEEP CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH AND ■. VALIANT- BILL SPENCE "Auto Ranch" _______________ -V4547' •B1RD7“l9dO, 2-DOOR HARDTOP. ' ----- Interior. l!€61 Ford (is 4-Dopr "heiler! engine, Fordom i( sharp. 51395. BEATTIE OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. Formerly RBR Motors NEW-USED CARS ‘ SERVICE PARTS 724 O lO FE 5- "^OHN MCAULU=*FE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. 1962 FORD Falrlanq -2-door, one-owner, lov mileage trade-in. Has a moto that lets you forget the p^lce c •flat.’" tlke'-Ti»w;”'Only""--- , T1495.. TWO-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY ■ SPARTAN DODGE STICK, 2 DOOR, .ROR BORST- f959 OLDS 88 $9.?5 TWO-YEAR •• O.W. . __ __ VVikRRAlilTY SPARTAN DODGE 1 S. Sagibrtw . FE B-454t 9 _-DLDS . S'TAI.IQN .. WAGON. rack, whitewalls, beautiful. Suburban Olds, 565 S. Wt Ave., Birmingham. ‘ r 4-DOOR HARDTOP 1958 OLDSMOBILr SPARTAN DODGE kes, whlte-on. $1,975. Suburban Olds, 56S $. Woodwqrd, . ____ .. CONVERTIBLE, hite With a red Interior, full pow-•, Birmingham " -------- $2,395. Olds, 565 S. Woodward Blrnilngham. Ml 4-4485._ _ m'S OLDS STAR-FiRE CO'UPE", cortyan with saddle Interior, lust 4-4485. OLDS JETFIRE COUPE, RED with a white top, bucket seats, consul shift, with power steering, 18,808 actual miles, new spare. $2,495. Suburban Olds, 565 $. Woodward Ave., Blrn5jnglTam,_/^l 4^^5, I OLDS OYNAMic 'es' COUPE', red w Now aad UsmI Con 106 SPECIAD:_ iWfEMraT fransmlttlfl... a real nMa ut $1195 Pontiac- Retail "Store 65 Mt, Clemens $t,......... ....... FE 3-7954 1»6"i""TEMPEST 4-DOOR STICK -Showroom,, condltloir. No money '"'“lucky AUTO SALES - mlislon; FE 4-5212. PONTIAC 1963 B0NN|VILLE""£0N-vertibta, hydramallc, .power steer; ing and brakaa, bluS, white top, 16,000 miles, like new, EM 3-3601. 1963 Pontiac Oatalina, white red Interior, low mileage. $ »963 TEMPEif LE MANS, a7i, ■ - FEB-t939._ 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVER-tlble, full powar, 332-7888. ' 1963 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE, EX- tras. Must sell 731-2903.______ l"963 PONtlAC STATION WAGO'N, k 9,700 miles, I owner, power brak^es Jacriflce. FE 2-0237_ $2,795. Suburban Olds, S65 S. Wkwd- I ward Ave., Blrmjngham^ Ml 4-4485, r954 PLYMOUtH "CONVERTIBLE, engine, fair body, r oie, re 4-5409._____________ 'I94t VStlANf, 4-OOOR, S T l < - ■etrtth' ■ radio; - heoterr-solid red, ( HOMER ■MIGHT Motors Ihc. , 1963 TEMPEST LE MANS WITH VALIANT, H wagon, V-1(k raoia, powe ~,700 miles, I Jt!______________________ 3956 PLYMOUTH 3 DOOR GREEN finish, full price $145. " Marvel Motors f . 251 OAKLAND AVE, et-Ponllac-Buick Oxford, Mich. _ OA $-2528 1963 tempest LEm'ANS ' COjJPE, automatic, 3,500 . itil. Exc. condition. 482-3235 alter 6 p.m. week ■ - all day Sunday. ■ ,____ V8 engine, stick si and vinyl trim. $2,095. JOHNMcAULIFFE FORD 630 Oaldand _ FE 5-^01 \96i FALCON SPORTS' Til. $1,945. Ml 6-0761. ^_ IRD CONVERTIBLE; 1963, 12,000 -------------^ FORD' 630 Oakland Ave. 1962 JE¥P iSTATION WAGONf w condition. PH 3: 427 1963'/J, 4-SPEED, FAST BACK FORD ..... ... ^11 inieriof, ____ illos OA e-I43i._ 1953GMERCURY," O'O'O O" TIKES', 5^317j'll**'' *“■ MERCURY MONTEREY 1962 4-Door Hardtop with matchlnij Interlo "$l95 OAKLAND " _ FE 2-2351 41 PLYMOOYh stAtlON WAG-on, V a auto, trknsmisslon, power steering, radio, heater. OR_3-8569. i48 PONTIAC, <3000 "cO’ND'ITTON, See at I49_0age, £E 2-4593. _ 1955 pontiac'DataIinaF power brakes, power steering. Excellent running condition. $195. OR 3-9714, 19"54 PONTIAC; c(SbD TRaNSPOR- T9'5/ Jtl((0. 482-3428._____ • p6"NTrAC,”NTCE, $l9r >hqn, 125 Or-—■ —' * 1957 "pONTIAC;''"HARDtOP," VERV ■ an. Em 3-8881. Conway dealer. ■pofil^^iAC'S-fARCHJIf 4-OOOR , 1958 " PONttAC. r*'i3fiia 4) Lincoln, II Dick's Sales AUTO. LEASING FE 4- Sl-IARP, 2-DOOR HARDTOI itic transmission, r^ rater end whitevyall 1958 PONTIAC has hydram dIo and h tires, spark,..., --- — ......... finish. Full authorized. Ilqulde-finn nrice $377.85, weekly pay-.80. ESTATE STOrAGB 1963 Tempest Convertible -with heater, radio,.heater, washers and a standard transmission, white-walls tool $2295. BEATTIE - ^1 OR 3-1291 CLEAlC rffFPONTAC'a PASyCNGBR VVAG' I on. All COMPANY, ... _. ________ at Auburn, FE 3-7161. 1958' PONTIAC CONVERtiBLE ~ Good condirion, $650. FE 5-2726. 1958 PONTIAC B'ONNEvILLE. 'ALL power, vary clean. $750. FE 4-8579. i95e" PONTFac' SUPE RC'Hi Ef",' ■ A-1 power, 682-3229. _ __ 1959 Pontiac hardtOp_^ f-®®'**'!. P®*®'" . Priced l( ''*$945 WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE very clean. 393 W. Iroquois^ 1959 PONtlAC BONNEvTllE CON-■ - vner new-car trade. vertibte, ■' money oown. LUCKY AUTO SALES 'Pontiac's Discount . ... -. Safinaw FE 4-2214 l'940 PONTIAC VENTURA 2-DOOR hardtop, clean. Autoipatlc, powt steering-and brakes. MY 2-5191. I960 PONTIAC STRAIGHT STICK, ________ ..., .... mileage. Owner. OL 1-6540. ___ 1958 " RAMBLER, RAOrO AND heater, 145 W. Beverly. 195»'"RAMBLER' 4-DOOR,' SUPER., 1959 RAMBLER in wagon. The aconbmy car goes "forever" on a gallon 6-cytlndeh automatic. Loaded * $79!j TWO-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY, SPARTAN DODGE LUcicY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" 193 S. Saginaw _ .....am'blIr MBLfR '2-jrONE ^ ®‘'hi,ater ,r ' sleerlnc iner, $1,025 WILSON PONHAC-CADILLAC < Woodward Ml 4*1930 _____Birmingham, Michigan 1957 MERCURY HAROtoy' kUTO^ RA-WHITEWALL ANSMIS"'''" ___________ .. ,. ONEY t Payments of $4.65 per week ... Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. '4-75o2i*____ '1961 mercury Hardtop Monterey, of the line. Tree--Pontiac family Only $59 down ___ small monthly payments. TWO-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE III S. Saginaw FI 8-4B41. ■isr-^LDf 3.6o"6'S""h1('rW0p: Sr*3 322?.'*'°" °***'^-***^ FOR : NtfI ■ c leSn FmodK pi-?T0RSON CHEVROLET 0 S. Woodward Ava. Birmingham '-3735 Boy Your Rambler or Olds / FROM Houghten & Son • Main, Rochastar OL 1-9761 BIRMINGHAM TRADES Tvery used cor offered for retail to the public is a bonafide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp car. 1«year parts and labor warranty. 1963 iUICK Lesabre Dame. ■liTvtea’-pffif... IS! S itlSsS SSr..:::: |S 13 BUICK Hardtop . .53 BUICK 4-OOOR Sedan ... $3195 1962 ELECTRA Hardtop $349$ 1963 BUICK Hardtop ' > . $3395 1959 FORD ,4-Door,' Nice . finish with matching Interior. Pull power, radio and aytofnallc transmission. Priced this week at only $1395 TWO-YEAR O.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE I'BEAUflfUL SELECTION OF 28 NEW 1963 RAMBLERS special purchase from AmerJ- can Motors, received several ullvd cars, also have a few demi Up to. 41,888 savings Including 1964 American hardtop. " These --- ail carry a new car warranty of 2 years, 34,008 miles. Get our best deal, top trade In, Immediate da-livery, excelTant llhanolng and tln-tst Service. No fair otter ralusad. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND AVE. LOOK But See Pat "Deal" Patterson for an Imperial Chrysler: Plymouth Valiant .FISHER. 'BUICK eirtnikohaiY '"Top <$uality" kUsed Carls conditioning, pew brakes, orlglqal o, 4-7733 bet. 7,9 p.m.. 1963 RAMBLfeR CUSS'l'C."'i'TANb'-radio, l-owner, low mlleagle, exc. condition. Will sacrifice. Call Ml •4.538»"*flr.see at 932 Tlmberlake Dr., Bloomllel^llls. FOR that BEAifTl'FUL USED CAR . See SHELTON Pontiac-Buick Rochester, Mich. OL 1-8133 COME TO PATTERSON CHEVJ1,0LET For a-reaL good deaf" 1888 S. Woodward Ave. Ramblers-Ramblers Under the -Flashing SATELLITE The Beautllul '64 Hardtops New '63't Below Cost Used Cars at Wholesale ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Cdmmarce, Union Leke EM 3-41,55 OLIVER BUICK SHOP SUNDAY BUY ON MONDAY OLIVER BUICK ’“■’fmfir, A'.-TJ 37-Inch Sleds Tap*flred for Speed Mon. Only 2^^ Easy-ate«riiiR spring steel, irooved runners; hardwood top. 46-Inch Sleds........ .4.57 Toyr«»n.PtnyStB.mt} .Set consistS^ of 4 regular slotted blades (pocket size, W\ 3/16”, Vi”) and 4 Phillipsrhead blades (#0, #1, #2, #3). All liaVe unbreakable plastic handles. »6.4*> Value IVIONDAY ONLY! Har/ltvartf Depl., Main Ha»f! Khr.Drver..............[..$149 twis Dryer..........$/69 - AppUmtee De/ft’, -Alnln-Beisenten*-—— MONDAY ONLY SaVel Luggage-Style All-Channel TV Save $.31.^9! Reg. $179.99 UPDRATORY JlS APPROVED ‘148 2 Types of InsalatiDii on Sale Moiidiiy Roll Typo Fibcrgla* Insiilalion, paper **'*• ^•’•'*'* NO MONEY DOWN easy to install. 3.in. thick roll 083" ,9..# Eharge It 'vrap, i: .-------------- covert 70 square feet. Save $1.56 Mondayl, 86..H9 Foil Kiicloscd Fiborgbis Rolli..... 4.83" 82.19 Pouring Fibcrgla* Insulnlion . . *. • s » • 1.65“ *^l,VKi;.yitrU JiuMinit Maleriah, Drrry DiitHt. - - New bonded picture tube cut* re* flection*, clean*, without removing gluR*. 19>in. overall diRgonal, 172* s<(. in. viewing area. 5*inch oval speaker. See it Monday . . . *hop until 9 p.m.‘% K«di« * TFlIcfit., JHnIii Floor IVIONDAY ONLY! Allstate Silent Cushion Tubeless Whitewall Sale 1599' 17 Cu. Ft. Coldspot Freezers Store 598 Lbs. 7.50<14 S.OOvh 8,50x14 7.60x15 Regularly *t' $249<95 Porcelained Interior PIu* Old Tire Off Your Car s.p|u* Tax Silent Cushion L1FC11ME CU^ANTEE based on tread 19988 Save! Women’s Vinyl Starline Luggage Sale 4-pc. Hollywood Beds Serofoam Mattresses Regularly 88.981 14*lA.^Train Case' 588^ " Charge NO MONEY DOWN on Sear* Lasy Payment Plan Deep tread ha* wide (ace ,; y. tlioilsands of biting edges for ■top and go power. P>95 a^itive in tread improve* traction and tire run* cooler, loi^r mile*. Save Monday! Auto Acctj4orl0$, Perry St. llaiement Cold control, magnetic ga»kct to keep cold in. Two sliding baskets, fa*t-freeae section, counler>balanccd lid. Li|ht and lock. Buy at Sear* thrifty price and gave |50! AppUanee Dept,, Mntn Batmment Auto Aecettoriee, Perry St. llaiement A TTW Sat^^on guaranteeii or your moiigr back” ^SKA Kp Charge It 110.98 Week-End Cash , 24-In. Pullman.. 9.66* or 16” Models (!a*e 7.8^* 26*ln. Pullman . 10.66* , One-piece frame molded Inlo slroiig 3-ply wood box . . -vinyl covered. Bra*«*pltted !iafdware. Open itiuclc. / I.Hgga«r Depl.. MoIm f loor TLIJS F.E.T. 4288 Regularly at 859.95 Monday Only Special NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Includes buoyant uretlmne foam mgttre**, matching i box spring, white plastic covered sweetheart heads ' hoard, sturdy leg-hracket aeL Twin »iat< Oet yhtif Hullywdod bed this Monday and save $17.07 at i Furnhura Bept.-Somn Steond Fleer Downtown Pontiac Phone FE S^4l7]l Ti '■■•“Iff f-jj ,.e ' .Z.:\ '1 r' f 1.' ■\ ONE COLOR 181 Th9W4dfh9F I U.I. WHtlwr Pane. . t OUNMiy. Warmer (Mtlli on Poflo^4)' THE PONTIAC PRESS THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMiJEll Ki ]{k;;i-I^32 PAGES VOL. 121 XO. 242 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Contracts Canceled Ponlioc Prtii Pl^lo SMALL BOTTLE - U.S. S®"' Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy, D-Mass., addressed a record crowd at the Oakland County Democratic Congressional Dinner last night. Kennedy held up a-small bottle of what he called “Goldwater cologne,’’ which he said was for people who “want to smell ■ conservative.” Goldwater Is Bios fed by Teddy Kennedy By JIM DYGERT One of the Kennedy brothers last night opened , -the door for a peek inside the Oemocratic arsenal for ^ House. 1964 and let out a few blasts at the current front runner for. the Republican presidential nomination, Sen;"Bariy Goldwater. • : ‘ U.S. Sen. Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy, D-Mass., told some 800 party faithful in Pontiac that a Gold‘ Barry Says Race 1$ Going All Right • PIT’TSBURGH (AP) - Sen. Barry GoldWatbr thinks “things are going all right” in the, presidential race he hasn’t formally entered. While Goldwater gave that assessment of the 1964 Republican picture, leaders of the drive to put him at the top pf the GOP ticket gathered in Washington to sise up their operations. “Why rush? Why be in a , hurry? Things are going all rights,”" Goldwater said last night when newsmen asked him when he will announce whether he Is a candidate for the nom-inatiort^ Later, he aninyered questions at a Harvard. Business School Association dinner. WHY DELAY? , “Why delay your announcement, we’re all for you;” was the first one. It won applause from/more (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Aid Cuts Cloud Program's Fate WASHINGTON (APy — The Senat^’« $827,250,-000 cut in President Kennedy’s foreign aid bill flashed a warning to the administration that the whole overseas assistance program,^ Romney FaeesI Another Test Legislature Must Act on New Constitution unless sharply curtailed and revised, may be on its way out. The amerfdmenfrriddled $3,- 702.365.000 authorization meas- ure-more sharply reduced than any since the foreign aid program started after World War II—cleared the Senate Friday by a 63-17 vote. , " But (he temper in Congress —- and presumably around the , country, judging from what senators say about their mail — is such that further cuts seem certain next week. Senate and House conferees meet then to adjust differences-between the Senate bill and the 63.502.075.000 measure previous-. water proposal would be the surest Step “toward military dictatorship” and the best way “to trigger a war.” other Goldwater proposals would “take us back to 1916, move our ideas from 1916 up to 1935,” and end equality at _______ the union-management bargain-' year, ing table, Kennedy said as he took the offensive against his brother’s critics. The President, on the other hand, he said, will go before the people for reelection on his record of progress in four pollticdlly sizzling areas — economic recovery, economy and efficiency in government, peace, and successes against . communism. A record crowd, including almost all top Michigan Democrats, came to the Oakland County Democratic Congressional Dinner at the Elks Temple to hear a rousing political oration spiced with the Kennedy personality and Boston accent.. And that's what they got; And further reductions pear likely when Congress acts on the foreign aid appropriations measure which will provide the actual monfey for which the authorization bill simply sets ceilings, PROGRAM IN DANGER Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., who had the task of steering the bill to passage, said in an interview that the future of the whole program is in danger unless the Agency for International Development can make it more palatable to Congress next | BALDWIN CONP'AB — U.S. Sen. Philip recording secretary, met late last night to A. Hart (from left); William MorrL^sey, ‘2800 discuss-the recent sale of the Baldwin Rub- #*ontiac Lake, Union Lake; Leonard Yocum, ber Division Plant. Sen. Hart and the union union local presidentT beo F,gorge, ipterna- officials met with Max Adams, manager of tlohar representative; and Dolphus F'arner, the Pontiac A^^a Chamber of Commerce. The revolt against the .program drew support from both parties and was led by Democrats who turned a deaf ear to Kennedy’s pleadings. In an effort to (urn the tide a week ago, (he President chided “(hose who find it politically convenient to denounce foreign aid with one breath and the Communist menace With the other.” By RICHARD PYLE LANSING (ffl — The next big i political issue in Michigan isi arising even before the last one j Goy. Homney’s tax reform; •prdgram ^ turriis cold in its! grave. ^ ' | . Another special legislative I session, slated to begin on ! Dee. 3, will deal with bills | needed to imjilement the new Constitution which becomes { effective the first of next year. | It will ^ve the Democratic | pautyf'vwhose leaders hope they' scored ' a propaganda victory when Romney’s tax reform pro-1 gram was defeated, another chance to shooUt Romney. , U.S. Senator Phjjip A. Hart last night agreed ! Democrats — who fought bit- with local union representatives that all efforts | terly and expensively against should be made to find a buyer for the Baldwin Rub-! the constitution’s acceptance by I jjivigion plant ' i the people last April—can be ex-1 ... , 44,11* pected to revive all the same suggested talk* old arguments. : of an investigation of the FOREWARNING ' piant closing should be An indication of what’.s to put aside as of secondary U.S. Warning Is Ignored by President lllia Possible Cutoffs in Ai(d,' lnvestnie'nt*CyBtjK by Officials in D. C. BUENOS AIRES,' , Ar-’ gentina (AP)— Argentina j ignored last niglit a tl.S. warning of possible ser-j ious consequences and annulled its multitnillion-dol-lar oil contracts with eight American and four other foreigh corrfpanies. President Arturo lUia carried through a campaign pledge and 1 issued decrees placing foreign petroleum production and de-1 velopment under the control of the government-run oil agency, ' Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscal- • Hort Urges Search for Baldwin Buyer Russia Frees Yale Professor The decrees authorized the agency to use force if necessary to take over the opera-. Uons. It was not immediately known [whether the companies would I be fully compensated since the President's Concern i “"al annulment papers will be » I drawn up by Argentina s pbocu- Couses Red Release lator general. There was no in- -......- dication when he would deliver his decision. ing/i' and machinery last week, had fiill access to the eorpora-Iion’s records. Squeals of delight came from women in the audience as Kennedy, In * boyish, bushy haircut and navy-blue suit, strode-the speaker’s table. ‘Isn’t be,.a 4oll?” was one remark. FIRST ATTACK A‘s the first speech bv e Kennedy attacking one of the President’s possible 1964 opponents, it appeared to be a preview of Democratic campaign strategy tor what the senator said “is going to be a hardHIght.” As he held up a small bottle of what he called “Gold-watci; cologne,” Kennedy said, “It’s for ..people who ', want (0 smell conservative.” Making one of his rare speaking appearances outside His hbme'state, President John F. Kennedy’s Si-year-old brother predicted even more Democratic progress,, before the campaign. ' With greater optimism than most Democrats have these days, he exuded confidence that Congress would pass ministration’s civil rights, medicare and tax cut bills, In a prMS conference aflcr-(Continued on Page 2, Cqi. 1) TM S«iv»ltos Army srimtiy n» your dlicantM, raulrabM lurnitur*. I prj^t trues ^IcS^ip (--- But as the fide rolled bn, amending and slicing the aid bill, he told his news conference Thursday in evident exaspe!*a-tion that he had “tried to make it very clear that 1 cannot fulfill my responsibilities ih the field of foreign policy without this program.” A Kennedy had no comment yesterday. come was coJitajned in a speech importance now. prepared by Democratic State [ .-There is no law to prevent Chairman Zolton Ferency f 0 r j the dosing of the plant.” Hart delivery today to the Allen Park advi.sed representatives of Unit- Democratic Club. Assailing Romney for failure to gel his own Republican party solidly behind fiscal reform, Ferency said: ”, . . The present Republican governor once and for all exposed thd real cancer gnawing at the Michigkn body, politic — the backward, Repubiican-dofn-inated legislature Which is totally dedicated to only one ideal —stagnant selLperpetuation. ★ * .. * “And the real tragic-comic irony . , is that Gborge Rom- ney, the victim, almost single-handedly shackled progres.s in (Continued on Page 2, Col, 6) ed Rubber Workers. l.ocal 125. He added' he would give what support, he eou|d to getting tull cooperation from the plant's former owner, Bald-win-Montfose Chemical Co., in obtaining a true picture of its financial status. This was in reply to a statement by Max Adams, manager of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, that corporate officials would not relea.se the information. A * ■ *' Adams said not even Industrial Plant Corp.. the New Yorlf liquidating firm which purchased Baldwin division’s build- LENG'I'HY REPORT Adams th(«i gave Harit a lengthy report on Baldwin’s acquisition by the corporation composed of Montro.se Chemical and a brewing firm, in 19,59. The hour-long meeting ended at ill:.30 p.m. as Hart' wearily ended a day that started in Washington and finished in Pontiac at the annual Democratic congressional din- Leopard Yocum, president of Local 125, was chief spokesman , , of several union officials at the | * contwn^ meeting. He said he agreed fully that finding a buyer for the plant was of key importancer MOSCOW i(P) - The Russians expelled Prof. Frederick C. Bar-ghoorn of Yale today, saying they were acting because of the “per:^nal concern” of, President Kennedy. Barghoorn was placed aboard a British airliner that look off for London. But the Russians stuck by their claim that Barghoorn was a spy and that they had enough evidence to bring him to trial in a Soviet court, Barghoorn was reported placed aboard the British plane barely four hours after f^'orelgn Minister Andrei A. Gromyko informed the U S. Embassy’s minister co^ipsellor, Walter Stoes-sel, that he was being released and expelled because of Ken-the case. ,On the slate level. Gov, Romney has pleaded the fdll assistance of the Michigan Department of Economic Expansion to promote sale of the plant and hell) where possible. COORDINATE EFFORTS j In loiters to Mayor R,obeil..4\. ! L:uulry and Fred V. Haggard, I AFL-CIO Oakland County Coun-I’cil president, he said the department would coordinate state and local efforts to preveht losing the plant. it * it The Pontiac plant, at .366 E. South Blvd,, anij two smaller ones in Cass City, Mich., and Norwalk, 0,, arc set for closing by Dec. 1. , Baldwin - Montro.se officials say the manufacturing operations have shown no profits the past three years. The State Department expressed pleasure at Barghoorn's release but said no plans have yet been made for sending a U.S. cultural mission to Mow- POSTPONES DEPARTURE The departure of the mission to hegotiate a new cultural exchange program wilji the Soviet Union was postponcKl earlier this week because of Barghixmi’s ar rest on spy charges. The shy, retiring professor, a Soviet affairs specialist at Yale, was arrested sornetlmr’»nnu"‘‘d all development, around the end of tlctober and charged with espionage. American officials were not informed of the arrest until last Tuesday. U.S, reaction was immediate and violent. President Kennedy ordered postponement of negotiations with the Russians for a (Continued on Page 2, Col, 3) Warm, Then Cold Is Predicted DINNER SPEAKER ~ Most of the top Mdhigan Dcniocrat; attcnd«kt last night’s county Jbbngrcseional dinner • featuring a speech 6^ Sen. Edward M. (^Tcd) Kennedy, center). Among attending Deni-■■ “ *• -ly. del ■' ’(left) ocrats were James M. McNeely, deputy | County Democrat Chairman, (le'.........^ H Archie Bailey, dinner chairman. -I ■ ' , Sixty-two is the predicted high for tomorrow, following tonight’s low of 45. Mostly cloudy skies are expected tjDiinorrow. Colder weather will return on Monday along With a possibility of showers or show flqrrles. Winds are'southwesterly al 15 to 30 m.p.h.i * « The lowest mercury reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a. m. today was 44, At 1 p. m., the thermometer regi.stered a mild 58. \ V,'-----------------^ ^ \th* Army urgtnMy nttdi yoi(r d)K«rded, r»p«)r«bl* lurnllur*. Por prompt Irucit pick-up lorvlci c«)l PE The U.S. companies, who have estimated that they invested $397 million for drilling and exploration operaU)pns,.have already, indicated they will take legal action to gain compei)sa-tion. ' KENNEDY SUPPtlRT President Kennedy has maintained that the United Stales could' not block the long-threatened. annulment but that the United, Stales would press for full tompen.sation for l(ie Amer- ' ican firms. Wushingloii also has indicated to Argentma that the annulment could result fin a reduction or cutoff of U.S. aid and private investments. U.S. Undersecretary of Stale W. Averill Harriman stre.s.sed the U.S. stand to lllia only last week during a stopover in Buenos Aires before attending a conference of Latin-Ameri(!”an nations in Sao Paulo. Brazil. A Stale Department .spokesman .said Friday night in Washington there was no immediate U S. comment on the Argentine action, CONTRACT ANNUl.LEl) Economy Minister Eugenio Blanco announced the decrees explutation- and-’-amice tracts -*)igned by the oil Wfn-pani4 since May 1. 1958, yvhen former'^ President Arturo Fron-dizi was in power. First Call Solti Pool Tuhifl "We had evei' so many calls, fogi) our Want Ad . - . maybe 50. The ,ftrst person to call bdiight It.” ' MRS. J.D. "V-FOdr POOL TAbtE,’ IrYiAil." PONTIAC PKKSH WANT AOS me unique In many whys . . . they arouse interest. - theV produce psospeets - they woeg just • they me low In cott. A perfect gombfnatlon. Phone 332-Ht8l ask for an Ad-VIsur rnrnimmimm mm4im I' THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAy, NOVEMBER 16, 1968 Blasts Goldwater (Continued Frota Page One) wara deadline. Either leave the wife and marry her — or lose her. And he is going around^ like an i^ot trying to hang ontp both of them. What should be done? He said that I could stay with an officer friend and his wife wno have a house near the base. This couple are unknown to me but are, good Nfriendsof my fiance. ' mother doesn’t think it 5 proper for me to go. What do you think abbout this? , . WATCHING A MESS DXAR WATCHING: A friend of both should get the man ^asi^and try to bring him to his/^nses. (Judging from your xnowledge of what’s going onXyou sound like an eligible medikor ). Unless you are sure (rf your facts, stay out of it. This^n might have to learn the ’ ^ way. University of Michigan Students Are Active in Campus Life By BARBARA GRIFFIN Many area students have participated in student song-fests, ,a musical satire and sVmpliony orchestra concerts which have dominated activities at Ihe University of Michigan this past week. Both the Greeks and the independents have been rehearsing for many weeks for Interquadrangle Sing which was'presented Monday evening and Interfraternity Sing which wiU be given Friday evening in Hill Auditorium. In both of these events, the women’s and men’s houses team up for the Judging. THIRD WIN Winner of I(JC Sing was Martha Cook Building and Cooley House. 'IBis marks the third straight year that Martha Ckx)k has won the Hrst place trophy. Supporting their house effort were Sylvia Rothschild Of Dwigbt Avenue, Candy Windeler of Hatchery Road and Carol Wargelln of Voorheis Road. IFC Sing will feature nine teams of fraternities and sororities who will be rated by judges from the Schobl of Music. Among the groups singing will be Delta Tau Delta fraternity, supjported by Gamma Phi Beta* sorority. Directing the Ganuna Phis will be their song leader Diana Owen of Auburn Road. MOry Ann Affleck of Woodward Avenue will also Al»g with the Gamma Phis. Rehearsing extensively to regain the first place trophy from Delta Upsllon is Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Among the Alpha Phis supporting them will be Linda Underhill of Joy Road and Judy Hlnkley of Illinois Avenue. Linda has been busy at the sewing machines all week as she la head of the costume committee for the Alpha Phis. The team of Alpha Chi Omega and Theta Xi fraternity will carry out the theme of “Annie Get Your Gun" for their performance Friday night. Singing with the Alpha Chis will be Dodie Duckwltz of S w e e t b r 1 a r Road and Phyllis Beneicke of Lakeyiew Court. Jim Hansford of Cedar back stage connmittees for this year’s MUSKET show which was given last weekend, in Lydia Mendelssohn theater. MUSKET, which means “Michigan Union Show—Ko-Eds Too" has presented student musicals recently, but • chose Sandy WUpon’s. well-known satire on the 1920’s, “The Boy Friend” for ^ this year’s production. ' Playing a leading role in “The Boy Friend" was Betty Vernan of Lake Front Drive. Betty is a senior speech * major and has had major ryies in many other university dramatic productions. •k it ★ Mark Lightfoot of McClin-tock poad was active backstage as a member of the stage crew during the five MUSKET performances. He also worked on the productions committee for the show. Working on the administrative end of th^ show vas Barbara Harlinii of Blrwood Drive. A member of the Central Committee, she was co-chairman of tifcket sales and ushers. MUSICIANS Playing in the MUSKET orchestra was sophomore Jean Huttula of Roselawn Street. Jean is also a member, of the University Symphony Orchestra which presented their first concert of the season Thiirsday evening under the direction of Josef Blatt. ■k k * Among the many Michigan students who went to Illinois last weekend to support the Wolverines as they pulled an upset victory over the Illlnl were members of the Michigan Men’s Glee Club. After the game,the Glee Club presentee joint concert with the Illinois Glee Club. Singing in this program was Gary Rel- yea of Rosedale Drive. Gary is also I a new member of the Friars, a double quartet of glee club members which Is in demand foy'parties around campus. . Floyd Foren, of Lake Angelas Mve. The Alpha Gamma Deltas and their date appeared in international costumes for their theme party last Friday night. Winning second prize for their portrayal of Buddhist monks were Karen Kessler of Desmond Drive and her date. DEAR ABBY: The bride who wanted “WHAT KIND OF FOOL AM I?" sung at her wedding showed what kind of fool she was. And, Abby, you show^ your ignorance when you suggested . “Because” .or “I Love You” Truly.” “Because” is poor. And “I LoVe You Truly” is worse. A wedding ceremony , is part of a church service, and love songs are out of place. Any qualified brg’anist or soloist can assist tee bride in selecting appropriate wedding music, and there is no excuse for all the trash that is being play^ at weddings these days. ORGANIST Q: We have two young children, a boy and a girl, and we are trying to teach them good manners. I always insist that they ask permission to \leave the table after they have finished eating. k^h u s b a n d thinks I am carryihg^ manners a little too far by d^mandihg this, and sayS'it is not at all necessary. I would very much like to know what you have to say about this. A: Your husband is wrong in thinking that you are carrying manners too f^r. Every well brought up child is taught .not to leave the table until he (or she) has asked, “Please may I be excused?” and receives permission to do so, The Cleveland Orchestra came to Ann Arbor last Thursday evening and played to a capacity audience. Among those students enjoying the concert was Donna Rofe of West Iroquois Road. Carol Wargelln of Voorheis Road has recently pledged Sigma Alpha Iota, a national honorary sotority for women. Carlol is a junior majoring in music ( ‘ FATHER’S WEEKEND This weekend the/ Delta , Gammas wilt honor Ihiir dads at their annual Father's Weekend. Following the Iowa £[ame they will attend a banquet where the Friars will sing. Enjoying the fun at the DG house Saturday will be Martha Foren and her father. Mariana Englehard of. Whittemore Street has been elected philanthropy chairman of Couzens Hall. In cooperation with the Women’s League Community Services committee, the philanthropy chairmen are prepat^ing l^anksgiv-ing baskets for deserving families in the Ann Arbor area. The men of Evans Scholars are enjoying a new color television set which they won for their homecoming dispiay, “The Original Roaring Twenties.” The display, which won , the over-all prize among hous-ihg units, included 20 monsters dressed in costumes of tee 1920s. Helping-to construct their winning display was Topi McGrath of.Niagara Road. What’s on your mind? For a personal reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. Q: We have just received a printed announcement of the opening of a dental office by the son of friends of ours. Will you please tell me if thisj«-quires any acknowledgment? Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to ABBY, in care ef-The Pontiac Press, for Ab-by’s new booklet, “HOW TO WRITE LETTERS FOR ALL OCtASIONS.” A: No acknowledgement is necessary. It was sent to let you know where his office is located should you want to go to him. When you see the young dentist you wish him 5 in his new office. Auxiliary Meets for Instructions Local Group Has OU Tour Not Only N.Y. Women Aware The Waterford Jaycee Auxiliary will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Cleo’,s Handicraft Shop on Saginaw Road for instructions in making holiday decoratiohs. Mrs. Robert Wright of Clayton Road will open her home for the meeting following the workshop. The Emily Post Institute offers readers booklets on at va-: riety of subjects concerning etiquette. If you would like the booklet entitled, “The Bride’s Trousseau,” send 10 cents in coin and a stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail but all questions oA general interest are answered^ in this column. New Chairman for Alpha Nu Alpha Nu chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa sorority appointed Mrs. Richard McCall as philanthropic c h a i r m a n, Thursday in the honie of Mrs. Ronald Voorheis on Ormond Road. A donation will be made to a Pontiac school in need Members of the Waterford-x Clarkston Business and Professional Women’s Club toured Oakland University with Penny Barrett, sophomore student following a dinner meeting 'Thursday. Handy Bandy, manager of the Tandy Crafts shop at the Pontiac Mall demonstrated the making of honeycomb candles. Mrs. Oliver Dunstan, Mm. L. V. Kline and Mrs. Bindy assisted with the workshop. and distributed materials to make candles at home. Guests at the meeting were Mrs. Frank Banning, >Mrs. Jerry Thomas, Velma Britton, Maude'McCurry and Mrs. Philip LaBarge. Designer Teal Traina says it isn’t true that women across the country aren’t as fashion conscious as those in New York. He based his say-so on a pulse taken while staging a show in Oklahoma City. “A fashion conscious woman today isn’t a mouse,” he said., “Sh^ visualizes herself as a tender trap — as glamorous as possible.” Farm and Garden Club Has Gift Making Lesson Checks'Check In' for Jumper Wear Mrs. Allan Monteith of St. Joseph Road was hostess to the Sylvan Manta* Branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association on Thursday. Mrs. F. E. Lane and Mrs. Leonard Paholak assisted. It’s check and double-check for the little miss who wants fashion in a jumper. One good-looking version is of black, white and red checks with straight pleats falling from a bias yoke. In her program “Unusual Christmas Gift Making” Mrs. William Tiberg displayed some 30 items which included decorated stationery and tree trimiiiings. , Mrs, Richard Redding presided in the absence of the president. Mrsr Kenneth Senior was appointed new flower show chairman and Mrs. Russell Buffett will handle orders for candle wax. Residents of the Lakeview Convalescent Home will be visited by Mrs. Merle Smite and Mrs. Buffett this month. Mrs. Albert Hulsman and Mrs. Mac Miller are planning tee Christmas porject for the home. . Hill Drive will sing wljh the / Theta Xis. of supplementary educational material. Last season, the Several Pontiac students had stage roles or worked on group assisted Joyce Hofman, a Pdace Corps representative teaching In Malaysia. pAcrt Aioiir fhaiimacy br HOWARD L DEU FAMILY HEALTH FORUM Fi4-tite H' ow to Make YOUR HOME SPARKUS New Way professional cleaning methods — will restore the original luster and poldr to yonr rugs. Get Heady ’ for the Holiday Season! Th« deep deanins will alio a |ha aril and dirt that MEW WAY-SSfflfuK esu aap-add Ufa to your Vtt|i, hava lham elaanad by Naw Way. Call FE 2-7132 CARPET CO. 42 Wiener Street,Tontino' HT OPEN-SUNDAY 2 to 5 P.M. 4716 Dow Ritdge Dr.-Coss Lake Front Cuilpm built brick rtnci)* lot ‘ cont«|n|iw mlny tr«M. Living room M.lxlM wim largo pletura window ai^flroplaca, kitciwn with many buMMn$ In addition to Sx> braak-ifatt naok,maMad-tn family room 14xl5, 3 bad room, and 1 earamic Ilia batba wltWdan 10.4x11 uwabla tor toi(rlh bad room. Oil hoai, 3an Slgnl Dow RMga Driva to 47i\t. , ANNETT I NO, REALTORS 28 E. Huiion Pontiac . FEderaj j8-0466 * Opan £vaningra and Suttduy 1-4 > ' -rnr- i, :■/ JEAN MAWSCHEK White Wool Worsted Highlights Bridal Gown St." Paul’s Methodist Church in Rochester was the setting today for the marriage of Harriet Belle Maitrott to Gerald B. Conley. For the midafternoon ceremony, the bride, daughter of tee Charles C. Maitrotts of Rochester chol, will apaak to Bie senior high youth group f Mr. and Mrs. Gavette. Adopt Missionary Plan Christmas for Family Chrisfs Church of Ll^ht NON-OeiOMINATIONAl Lotui Lolc» School, Wotorford Cor. Biicy Kino and Harper St. Sunday School 9.45 A-M. Worship 11:00 A.M. Information call OR 3-7650 or OR 3-4710 ____________ Study, , "THE DIVINE PLAN OF THE ACES” With PONTIAC BIBLE STUDENTS ECCLESIA a the Pontiac YMCA Every Saturday ... 7 to 9 P.M The First Assembly of God, 210 N. Perry is expanding its missionary program through the Supday School. Currently the congregation contributes toward the support of 11 missioAary families in foreign lands. ity of the churches .to mission fields. The boys and girls have a program called “Boys’ and Girls’ Crusade” which provides printed ^literature to aid missionaries. : pne such project furnished Every department of the church is betog made aware of the importance and responsibil- Pack Boxes at Oakland for Families Deacons of the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church will pack boxes of groceries and clothing for needy families of the area at 7 p. m. Tuesday. MISSIONARY ALLIANCE CHURCH Sunday School 9:45 A.M. . AYF 7 P.M. Worship 11 A.M. "The Baptism of The Spirit" "The Whitness of The Spirit" Rev. G. J. Berscho, Pojior ’Those meeting for the task are^Mr. qnd Mrs. Carl Comer, the Walter Wessers, the Ralph Osbornes, Mr. and Mrs. Her-Reeder, Mrs. Edna Math-eny, Mrs. Walter Napersky, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Tanner, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Shepherd. FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 149North East Blyd. FE 4-18)1' Pastor, WM. K. BURGESS SUNDAY SCHOOL ...........10 A.M. WORSHIP . .............. Communion EVENING WORSHIP______,., . "The Pool of Bethesda" 11 A.M. . .7 P.M. All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike St. 8:00 A.M. — Holy Communion 9:15 A.M. — Morning Prayer, Holy Baptisrp and Sermon by the Rector. Church School 11:15 A.M. -n Morning Prayer and Sermon . " by the Rector. Church School \ Thurs. Nov. 21 W A.M. — Holy CommiMion CHURCH of the RESURRECTION wlllWeet in Clorkten Elementory School, 4595, W^dron Rd. * TI)E REV.JALI^ANDER T. STEWART, Vlcor 9^30 g.m.— Holy Communion and Sermon The midweek Bible study and prayer hour is at 7 p.m. Wednesday. “Stewardship” will be the subject of Rev. Theodore R. Allebach’s sermon at 10 a. m. Sunday. The Men’s Chorus will sing tomorrow night when 70 awards are given to Pilgrim, Colonist and Guide Girls. Mrs. Allebach will give a chalk talk. ^ Youth groups will get.together at 5:45 p. m. with the Pioneers discussing “If You Were a Parent” and the Builders talking over the subject of witnessing. I am profitably engaged in reading the Bible. Take ail of this Book upon reason that you can, and the balance upon faith, and you will live and die a be ter men. — Abraham Lincoln. , FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin 'fE 4-7631 Sunday School., 1 (3i00 A.M. Sunday VYorshlp 11.00 A.M. Sunday Evening .. 7i30 P.M. VVed. Prayer . . , 7.30 P!M. Saturday Service 7i30 P.M. Riv. Tommy Guest, Pastor FE 2-03B4 JMR8. BOBBY WHITE PLAN MUSIC-Mrs. Bobby White, general chairman, and Mrs. Gemmer Page, chairman, plan the program for the musicaie slated for 3:30 p.m. Sunday at Providence Missionary Baptist Church-Participating will be the Morning Doves, Spiritual Singers and .the Charmettetr Chautauqua Group Will Be Honored The congregation of Temple Beth Jacob will honor the Jewish Chautauqua Society at the 8:30 p.m. Sabbath services Friday. Since 1893 the society has gospel tracts to cover the entire population of a city in Japan. Rev. Samuel Beckdahl pnd family, missionaries to. Tanganyika, East Africa, have been adopted by the congregation. Their birthdays and holidays are remembered with gifts. The family will be on the present assignment for five years. Mrs. Arnold Q, Hashman, wife of the pastor, works with the youth of the-^hurch in mission work! The recent offering* for missions will be used to provide- Christmas gifts for the Beckdahls. Driver Usually at Fault in Automobile Accident In far too many situations where death or injury occurs in automobile accidents the driver is at fault. His carelessness, neglect or reckless chnduct causes the death or Injury. From a legal viewport, such conduct is a crime. From a moral and religious viewlpolnt, these actions are sinful. Each of us has an obligation, ti seek an enlightened and educated conscience. It is for-this reason we urge, with the utmost seriousness, that every driver reflect upon the moral obligations te assumes. —Catholic Bishops of United States The Colonist and Eta Chi group of Pioneer Girls and the battalion group of Christian Service Brigade wilt meet at the church Friday evening before going to Roy’s Ranch te Walled Lake for a hayride. Bishop's Company Dramatizes Book Stephen Vlnceht Benet’s “The Devil and Daniel Webster” wjU be dramatized by the Bishop’s Co. in Christ Chwch Cranbrook p m. Sunday. The production presents the situation of Daniel Webster, American statesman and lawyer, who attends the wedding of Ifiary and Jabez Stone and finds himself defending Jabez against the Devil. According to the story when times were hard Jabez had become discouraged and, in a fit of temper, said he would sell his soul to the Devil. Mf.' Scratch, the Devil, appeared aind when Jabez made atfly began to prosper. Ten years later on Jabez’ wedding day Mr. Scratch came to collect. The English theater was born before the altar of the church. Asking the audience to share in the creation of the play is part of the technique of the company which uses no props. Founded by Phyllis B. Bo-kar in 1952, the Bishop’s Co. is nnmed in honor of Bishop Gerald H. Kennedy of the Methodist CJhurch. The Company is interracial and Interfaith. There is no admission charge. n6rTH EAst COMMUNITY CHURCH : LVtaNQELICALtJNJTEP BR|THREN 620 Mt. Cl«meni ot Feotherjton# II A.M. Sarmon: ’"First Things for Christians'' - Wednosdoy, 7 P.M. Choir Rehearsal 8 P.M. Bible Study and Prayer L. S. SCHEIFELE, Postor FE 8-1744 ■ served college campuses in the United states and abroad with free speakers and free books. In about 50 instances the society provided full-time resident lecturers on Jewish religion and culture, all paid for by the Chautauqua Society. Friday’s speaker will be Av Bondarin, associate executive director of the Natioiuil Federation of Temple Brotherhoods in New York. ' ”1 am convinced that highway safety is a spiritual problem and that we Christians •have a definite obligation to drive carefully aiid safely on the highways. Most people do not associate careful and safe driving with spiritual living, but there is a definite omnection.” MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68 W. Walton FE 2-7239 SUN,DAY SCHOOL .................10 A.M. MORNING Worship hour..........i1:00a.m. "THE PROCLAMATION OF GOO" ‘ PASTOR SOMERS, SPEAKING EVENING SERVICE.................. "NEW SHELTER" Philip W. S6m«rs, Jr, Speaking Public Cordially Invited .7:30 P;M. The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET Sunday School 9i4S A.M.-Yoon^ Peopla^i legion 6 PM. Morning Worship' 11 A.M.- Evangelistic Meeting 7i00 PM. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 P.M, LIEUT and MRS GARY B CROWELL Coed.Muile-SInglng-Trur to the ITonl Prgaehlag God Meets Wtth US-You, Too, Are Invited FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN 46 North Roselawn 10 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOO WESUY D.VAULT, SUPT. WORSHIP HOUR It A.M. amf 7 P.M. Ko^. L. W. BlockwelL Ptiitor. fE 2-3813 , PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST 1 ISO N. PERRY ST. PE 2.0249 . n to the "tterold of Troth." Eoch Sundoy-^-CKLWb^Kaf' 9—11 AM. “ • BIBLE STUDY 8:45 A.M. and H:05 A.M. dosses for oil ages MORNING WORSHIP!... .9:45 A M, ‘‘The Bridegrooms' Porting Wbrdt" Sunday^ Evening 6:00, P.M. I "TheXhufch" BOYD C. GLOVER Bible Claims for Everyone Wed Night 7.30 P.M fvongelisl l^piES’ SIBIE CLASS Thu^ 10 AM. BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 36Q0 Telegraph Road r Just north of Long lake RocnI 10 A.M. Sundoy School Closing Do/of SPIRITUAL LIFE MEETINGS .11 AM-and 6 P.M. Speaker: Rev. Fred C. Renich 5 P.M. Youth Groups: Tbl.i 647-3463 CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 12WarranSt. Speaker 7:3b P.M. Horace John Drake Silver Tea, Wednesday 7i30 P.M. (:i4RlSTTAf SCIENCE SUBJECT for SUNDAY M0RTAUMd\ IMMORTALS Suhddy Servicas ond Sunda/School M:00A.M. Wednesday. Evening Services 8 P.M. “Reading Room 14 W. Huron St. Open Dally 11 A.M. lo 5 P.M. Fridoy to 9 P.M. First Church of Christ Scientist Lowrence and Williams Streets PONTIAC *- 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY i RADIO STATION CKLW 800 KC FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 3411 Airport Rood Independent and fundamental 10:0OA.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Worship Service 7:3d Choir Presents SILEND CLASS 10 A.M. Rev. Al Kaslen, pastor ^ UNITY CHURCH 1 N; Genesee (Cbrner W. Huron) 335-2773 11 AM.-SUNDAY SCHOOL WEDNESDAY H A.M.-MORNING WORSHIP 8.00 P.M. ' EVEREH A. DELL, Minister "The Study Of Prayer" COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave. — FE 5-9960 Sunday School...... • 9.45 A.M. Morning Worship ..... 11:00 A.M. Training Union ........ 6:00 P-M. Evening Worship......7:00 P.M. Midweek Service (Wed.). 7.45 P.M. Morion Sherrill, Mlnliter of VlRltatlon i Carroll Hubbi, Muilc Director Alllllaied wllh ihk Soulhero Bnpilit Convention CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 347 N. SUglnow Merrit t). Baker, Min. Bible School 9.45 A.M. Morning Worihip 11 A.M. "The Pre-eminence of Jesus Christ" Evangelistic Service 7 P.M. , ’ Youth Serylce6 P.M. "Some False Notions about God" Wed. Bible Study 7.30 PM. f friendly Church Cloie to The Heort of fonlloc FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD 210 N. PERRY STREET PRESENTS A GOD GIVEN MESSAGE FOR THESE LAST DAYS ... WITH 'THE "Gospel Ambassadors'^ COME! HEAR! The outstandinQ testimony and anointed preaching of these^’servonts of God. GILBERT RODRIGUEZ SOLOIST ChrlMlon teconding ' Robert Bolen is on American Baptel dnd Gilbert I Rodriguez o Presbyterian; have both received the Pentecostal Baptism of "Act 2:4. This experlenGO~:;|: is for every Christian beltever. Act 2:17. BEGINNING SUN. NOV. 17 - 11:00 A.M. , THROUGH SUN. NOV. 2^. SERVICES NIGHTLY EXCEPT A "DotetiNjliss One of Tihetwi Services" / SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. ' BE IN OUR GREAT SUNDAY S HOOL RA'llY ■if I IV ii ’ jriiK rayTiAC piikss. Saturday. yovEMHER Show Knees; It's OK ANCONA. Italy (AP) - A :ourt in this central Italian city m the Adriatic Sea . has ruled hat a short skirt is nof suf-.’icient evldi^ that a wona^ a trying to Wice someone, N A private complaint was filed I g a i n 11 three young women alle||png that their skirts were so short that their knees were e xj o s e d when they sat on a park beach. The complaint ' cbarg^\tike exposure of knees violatedNi section of the Italian penal code forbidding any act of entice- Traffic Code Being Eyed Nfate Veaterday* the A^na court memh^a Monday n^ht 1 pected K act o" a^lice de- acquitM the three women on idsV grounds^ insufficient evfajehce. The whm^were identified in court only by initials ^ ~ . — pertinent calling for ^option of the Uniform Trp^ fic Code. IT'S WORTH A TRIP TO DETROIT reBSEHT THE Mm .TECtMCGUIIf*..# TODAY:1:00-4i45.8:30» M. •ox OSMCI OPINS 10 A.M. OAlt.'yv* 12 NOON SUNDAY 4:4i P.a NIOHTS: $m. Mni .Sat. at 1:30 P.M. • SaK S Im. i Orck. t Man. S2.S0. laic. $i:t| |j Wt4. 4t 3:00 P.M. • Orel. S Mon. S'3.71, laic. $1.21 kTiPIKBw*. W#B» ®T-a.WII r»Mc • V MOH> «0aaBc BOIC< tat. S SM. at 1:0$ P.M • Orel. S Man. $2.0^lalc. $i:tO TiCKITf NOW AT OR BYMAILI •I Brush • • MUSIC hall Yheatke - lU M«4lwa Ara.,.Dalra» M, Mltk. yn-u , • • MaaMbt. • Wa. n*'—*• n-Tf • jmtMh ’ , • ...„. • ... • * «o, . _ Wo l-STOO ••• a tlM» tmlaM •tomMA »/r.M IIIIUIJII g^mnimn NOTHING YOU HAVE EVER WITNESSED BEFORE HAS PREPARED YOU FOR SUCH SHEER STABBING SHOCK! "technic6H6r‘ . .—RODTAYLOR'JESSICAJANDir SUZANNE PLESHETTE .aWTIPPI’HEDRENI GOOD OLD DAYS MATINEE Tu**day 10i45 A.M. »o 1:00 P.M. ■ ‘ ■ I 30e With Thl» C 13 INTEKNATIONAL BEAUTIES TRAPPEthXM THg CANDY WEB Head waiter in Ketjtfie of Fisl^ Why Stew Over Congress? Jha ■■ pwn\prgffie governed by Its ordinance patterned a ^le By'PICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - Now about this business of a head Waiter accompanying members of the U-.S. dfetegatlon, to the [ATO parli ■ I dVi Police contend that the Uniform Traffic Code -is broader in scope than the existing ordinance. They also claim that unif^mity of traffic regulations is advantageous. ISO COMMUNITIES The Unifohp Traffic Code is now in effect ih^more than 150 state townships, yillages arid cities. \ In other business, the |ioard dill consider recalling watei; bonds. \ This Will elimina'te all outstanding obligations and enable Oakland County to issue new Binds, . The county recehtly was designated agent for the township’s water system. jhould cause s moch controverr sy.^A Mer all. there 1s nothing iovel abbut it. Somo .waiters i WEST go off on long trips every time you,give them your order. Frequently, the temperature, of the food They bring hack leads me to believe they haye been to Iceland. In my opinion, taking the head waiter of the House dining room to the NATO riieeting was iike good think-ingMParis, as you know, is the fouutuiphead of fine cuisine. And headwaiters are nothing if not parliamentarians. By including the waitbis^Er rieut Petinaud, in the party, Rep. Wayne Hays, D-Ohio, who headed the delegation, killed two .birds with one stone. Chances rire they, will turn up onji.e^,mem,aexLjKeek^ giass.^ EXPOSED SKILLS -TWiarTTnean posed Petinaud to the culinary skills of France, and it exposed members of the delegation to the parliamentary talents of Petinaud. Thus, both stand to gain something fr o rii the experience. Which is mote than can be said for most congressional , Junkets. I frequently have lunch in the House restaurant, and I can say this about It — the food may not be much to brag about, but the-service leaves a lot to be desir^. ActuMJy, the quality of the food is ^ittle concern to me. Man does not live by bread alone. Jlot as Ipng as Metrecal is available. Of Two Canadians HAVANA (AP) - A foreign ministry official said yesterday that two Canadians accused of trying to smuggle explosives in- to’ Cuba will be tried in publio, l|8 will and foreign correspondents be allowed to report the proceeding. This would be the first public trull of its kind since the mass trials of supporters of former dictator Fulgencio Batista in W59. . The official said the trial of Ronald Patrick LIppeft, 32, of Kitchener, Ont., and William David Milne, 31, of Montreal No Negroes Will Select Rose Queen probably would start 'msday or Wednesday. , However, Canadian l^t®l8n Secretary Paul Martin said in Ottawa yesterday he had been advised that the trial was set for Nov. 23. HAD BEEN CANCELED The Cuban official said that a news conference scheduled for the Canadians today had been canceled “due to the nearness of the trial.” The two were arrested Oct. 30 on their arrival at Havana Airport in their small, private airplane. Customs officers said they jound hand grenades and other Explosives concealed in fruit cans the Canadians were carry-irtg. \ PASADENA. Calif. (AP) -Selection of the tournament of Roses queen won’t be made by an integrated committee, officials say. ' Reacting to a reqeust by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Tournament President Hilles Bedell said yesterday; “The tournament is a private organization and final selection of the queen is made the responsibility of the regular committee established for that purpose, as it always has been.” The NAACP had asked that an integrated panel of students from Pasadena City College choose the queen. The Pasadena chapter said that the ail-Whlte judging panel has neVer selected a Negro girl as queen or princess. 'Danger Spot' South Africa LONDON (AP) - A Labor membes of Parliament told the House of Commons Friday that White-ruled, segregated South Africa is in danger of “a Spanish-type civil War that might be a prelude to world war.”' He demanded that the United Nations intervene.; “I do not think it is possible to exagge^ ate the situation there,” Labor-ite Fenner Brockway declared during debate on African af- * LAST DAY * BullOenmMmwnenHitifrnMiAuf DOORS OPEN; 12:45 P.AA NEW HILLS THEATRE .1. V \ family oMive for an entire week. Five hummingbirds. After careful consideration, there is only one point on which would be critical>qf the Paris > They should haye taken the head chef along, t0o^\ FOR SCENERY I go to the restaurant„^n for-the scenery. I si^t a Ubl6' overlooking a lyafter^ho otw-ihoks me. ’ \ in suggesting that the serviebTs sometimes less than impeccaMy, I should in a 11 fairness add that the meals are, cheap. And, so is the clientele. You might think flom the size Of the appropriation. D^ls they pass the members of \ are lavish tippers, Well, I to disillusion anyone biit cai prompts me to report that cer^ tain law-givers are known to the waiters as “the last of the big misiers.” ■ As for the^ess table, the tips that we newsSwn leave o u r waiter every daV would Pittsburgh ArchEushop Dies of Heart Attack MMLEIEm OMILDRia th AMLTt MIRI^HCOHPANY s ^ iieK fRURlCY LEMHON NmUUNE BIUYWIIDEKS] D(^ TECHNICOLOR’ PANAVISIpN*^ .......... r'46-4:20 ' ”BRILLlAIITtY^NEaaa\ THOUGHTFUlv ENGROSSING/ SHOCKING FiiHlaaaPIEiltiNG/ STARK AWP Ull^TTLIIH»i THIS IS A FILM To SEE ANP PONPEIt *^ -r^qiley Crowther, New York Times "ONE OF THE MOST MOVfNG FILMS I HAVE EVER SEEN> xfts^tbtal effect is shattering! -Phijip T Hartung, Commonweal "I ASSURE YOU IT IS A BEAUTIFUL MOVIE! ” ■^Brendon Gill, The New Yorker INGMAR-XERGMAN’S Prime Miriiater Fidel Castro accused the Crinadians of being agents of the U.'S^. Central Intelligence Agency. \ NEW YORK (AP)-Archbis op Benjamin of the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh and West Virginia, died of a heart attack Friday. Archbishop Benjamin, 76, was the first American-born priest of any Orthodox jurisdiction elevated to the rank of bishop. He was born in Basil ^asalyga in Old Forge, Pa., and becahie a bishop in 1933 and an archbishop I in 1950. BLRGMA1\ ATIIINBEST! SUNDAY SHOW TIMES-3:00-5:05-1:10-9:15 - ALSO SELECTED SHORf^- AMPLE FREE CITY PARKINCr NOW YOU CAN SEE IT AT POPULAR PRICES Columbia Pictures presents * » ■ . : THE SAM SPIE6EL -DAVID LEAN Production of ^ ALEC eUlNNESS ■ ANTHONY OUINN ■ JACK HAWKINS JOSE FERRER ANTHONY OUAYLE CLAUDE RAINS ARTHUR KENNEDY mOMAR SHARIF « 'ALI* • PETER O'TOOLE .. 'LAWBENCE* • RioBERT BOLT ■ BaRTsPIEGEL • ^VID lUn • lECHlICoWR'’- SUPER* fWNAVISlOlV 70* i,H i ,1 i\ _ :: I.- - ■ ■T . :\ Pontiac Press Sports, Saturday, November 16,1963 Huskies Dorr^dfe 4fh Game in Series PNH Ends Grid Frustration Against Pontiac Central, 21-0 ly Blocked Punt Set- Up First TD •k ★ .#★ .★ . k ['it Pontiac Noiroern ended four years of frustration Friday evening with a well-earned 21-0 triumph over Pontiac Central at 'msner Stadium before an estimat-edU5,500 |ans, largesKpf the series. The win was the first against three setbacks for the Huskies in their annttpl series with Central, and the victory upped their^ea^n record to 6-3, equalling a high team mark set by the^ 1961 Northern eleven. \ A touchdown at the 2:46^ mark of the opening stanza gave the Huskies all the PQints needed and the added six points in the second and fourth periods. A blocked punt on t h ^ fourth play of the game Set up the first Northern score. \ The Chiefs took the opening kickoff and Northern forced the sophomore-studded Central lihc-up into a punt situation at the 28-yard line. , ' Central’s kicker Jan Anderson fielded a bad snap from center but Northern’s Tom ' Nichols raced in from his defensive end position to block the punt. The ball bounced toward Central’s goal line and Nichols and’ tackle Larry Dean smothered the pigskin at the 12-yard mark- first haif when K i m m e i tossed p 29-yard pass to Soud-en who was racing into the ieft corner of the end zone, but defensive halfback Ken Seay bumped the big end just before the bail arrived to prevent the score. Officials called interference on the play, giving Northern a first down at Central’s 14*yard line, but the attack di^ at the seven-yard line when halfback Don Weyer was stopped on a fourth and two situation. (Cont. on Page 25, Col. 7) rnt MnalMi t mmi FOUR PLAYS Northern picked up the touch- down four plays later when senior quarterback Jim Kimmel filtered through a hole over left guard from one yard out. Dean Souden added his first of three PATs for a 7-0 Huskie lead. 2 FIrtf ____ IK TotaMIrjf JM Y«rd« Bain.. ........ 181 Yards galnad passing "46 Total net Yards gained 9 Passes attemptetT 6 Passes completed 1 Passes Intercepted by . 17 Punts and' average yards 2 Fumbles , 2 Fumbles lost -30 Penalties and yds. penall SCORINO PLAYS el I plunge (Souden lions Will Find Rams Bettert ManyCH^nges; Since Opener- k kf k NFL Plans Test With Theater TV DEtROIT (AP)-The NaUon- tallzed 4-30 kick) AIRBORNE MANEUVER - PNH passer Jim Kimmbl (13) leaps into the air to toss short pass to end Dean Souden who is being pursued by Pontiac Central’s Dave Edwards (76). The Kimmel-to-Souden combinatioh proved very effective for the Huskies four times keeping drives moving. No. 28 for PCH is defender Esjaye Whlters. al Football League will experiment with theater televising of games next season, CQipmis-sioner Pete Rozelle said Friday. But he said this won’t affect the NFL home television programs. “I seriously doubt that the NFL will ever abandon, free home television,” Rozelle said. The NFL boss, a visitor in Detroit on his way to Chicago for Sunday’s Chicago Bears-Green Bay Packers battle for the NFL’s Western division lead, spoke at the Adcraft Club. He ranged, over many topick including the suspensions of tackle Alex Karras of the Oe-tooit Lions and Paul Hornung of the Packers and overtures from the American Football League for competition with the NFL. win J. Anderson of the Lions, presumably over Ford’s offer to buy the Lions W |6 mlllicn. Rozelle also met privately with president William Clay Ford and general manager Eld: Rozelle indicated he thought well of Ford’s offer. He said that at one time the NFL approved group ownership of a club but that now one owner or an owner with controlling interest is felt preferable. The Lions are owned by 144 stockholders and operated by a board of directors. ' a paael of sports writers ud ’Die board has recommended approval of Ford’s offer by the stockholders. REVIEW CASES Rozelle repeated he would review the Karras and Homung cases in January. The two stars were suspended indefinitely on charges of gambling on games. The commissioner appeared at an Adcraft Club luncheon and answered questions from NEW YORK (AP) - After whi{q)lng 'Wayne Thornton in a ENDS — Andsrson, CoIIIm,. Edwardi, Houts.. Johnson. TACKLES — Petarson, Jenkins, Wright, Coates, Northcross. GUARDS — Rotundq, K. Jacksolt ■ickson, Roblnsdn. CENTERS — G ■ quarterback"-' MurpSy! Lavalals, Seay, Washington, irris, Knox,. Crump, Mitchell, ‘ Kimmel masterminded the second sc^oring drive at the start ol the second quarter after the Huskies had halted a budding Central drive on the PNH 37-yard line. The Huskies used 12 plays and most of the second stanza in Covering the 73 yards which ended with fuDback Steve Daniels bursting over from the one-yard line. Thp big play in the series was a 30-yard pass from Kimmel, his first of the evening, to Souden which moved the ball to Central’s 33-yard stripe. Kimmel applied the clincher With only 1:15 remaining in the game when he rifled a shot to Jim DeFlorio on a 95-yard pass-and-run play. The Huskies were on their own five-yard m a f k e r when Kimmel turned the ball loose. DeFlorio snared the toss near his own 30, broke away from Central defender at the 50 and raced in for the six pointer, . The Chiefs, who closed the sea- son with a 0-8-1 record, had nu-mefous scoring opportunities but they couldn’t come up with that ‘big play,’ their trademark in winning the first three games . of the series. After Northern had bounced into a 7-6 lead, the C h f e f s stormed back and moved from . their own 33 to Northern’s 37 with sophomore quarterback Jerry Murphy at the helm. Murphy found a lot of room on the left side of the Northern line in the drive and sent full-. buck Jim Crump and halhiack James Mitchell-around end for . sizable gains. Northern baited Crump short of a first down to halt the drive at the 37. A 28-yard pass from. Murphy to end Franl^Coliias late in the first half rat the Chiefs In scoring positira at Northern’s 25, but Murphy was spilled for a seven-jarti loss pn second down and' .yara loss pn secona aown ana / Anderson boot^ the ball into^ the end aone two plajls later. l\ ' The Huskiek almori made.lt 21-6 with seconds teft In the (Cont. on Page 25[ Col. 2) I'iv.i. L . . . >,■. Is, R. Rayner, TACKLES - Straus*-Dean, Marine, Coleman. GUARDS •■‘■tr, A. Rayner, Zuck, Osta, Waites, Chapa. CENTERS - ■ — Cheek. QUA"--— QUARTERBACKS - Dare, Kimmel. BACKS --‘ "erry, Weyer, Smith, Gillette, Kelly, Bes- "i^ioivfbuAL'sTATw'T^^^ PASS RECRIVINO . Ydt. TD PONTIAC CENTRAL RUSHING AH. Ydi. Avo. I ......... 15 69 4.6 bruising 10-rounder Friday night Argentine Gregorio PerlRa PASSING AIL Comg.Y^s. Inl. PASi RECEIVING* No. Yds. TD Totals CHARGE AHEAD — Pontiac Northern quarterback Jim Kimmel (13) prepares to hand off to the Huskies captain Don Weyer on this play at y/ianer Stadiilm last night. Play went for short yardage when middle of Pontiac Central line ganged up to stop the power thrust. Note “C" painted by PNH players “ ■ At any on their helmets, perhaps meaning Charge Central, j rate, the Huskies crovmed the Chiefs with a 21-0 defeat. Coach Calls If, Then Hopes Long TD Play Put Icing on Triumph By JERE CRAIG “Jimmy, on the next play you go back in on the Transcontinental.’’ Thus startiKl tlie longest play In the city high school football series between Pon-tipc Northern and Pontiac Central. The speaker was first year PNH coach Bob Ding-man ,aiid “Jimmy” was second string offensive halfback Jim DeFlorio. When the ball was moved back five yards to the Northern ftve-yard-line for iltogal procedure, DIngman hesitated briefly n sent DeFlorio In »y- / and t win the play. “it’s a touchdown one way or the other,” the coach j commented before the play started. As soon as arterback Jim Kimmel ‘TQllihg out to the right, the excited Dingman yelled: “for us, for us.’’ At the same moment Kimmel whirled and hurled a long dangerous crossfield pass to the wide open De-Florlo osr the sideline; and he outdistanced (Wo rather chagrined PCH defenders to the distant goal line. The play'put icing on the victory cake being sampled by the Huskies. They had lost some of the spark they bubbled with earlier in the gt;mp, but the spectacular, quick strike brought life back into the happy group along toe sidelines . . . and a big 'smile to Dingman’s face. Flbr Central the play was the ciimax to a sea-' son Of frustration an{d gloom. Plagued with inexperience and lack of slie,^ toe (^i^fs failed to win a game for toe first time in 25 seasons. Although failing to score for the first time against PNH in the four intra-city battles, the Chiefs waged a gatoe battle. ’Their tackling on defense was the best since they tied Bay City Handy a month ago in what proved to be toe only bright spot this season^ But toe big Northern defensive wall repeatedly broke through the PCH Mockers to smear quarterback Jerry Murphy for ^ key looses. One of the biggest reactions from the stands during the halftime performances by the PCrf and PNH bands was for the latter’s' routine showing n scales-tipping the balance of athletic power in favor of' Northern. . ji Game s B fur- ther pi:oof of that fact. In previous city series grid contests, the Chiefs had gained three times as many yard; rushing as had North- Last night PNH led in this department, 155-115. iThe Chiefs had only passed five times for 52 yards previously, but hit six of 14 for*^ 73 last night — only to see toe Huskies gain 181 on Ux of nine. helped create 1 spirited . The PCH student body heard a talk by Northern’s Steve Daniels and toe Huskies’ pep rally was addressed by Central’s Linda Fought. Both urged fair play at the game and the beneficial resulta of toeii* talks were evident al the CREDIT Tite game was a credit to both teams for the calibre of play. The two sides hit hard, but cleanly. Not one unsportsmanlike con duct penalty was called, nor were / there any warnings for r|tagh ri*y- V^ell planne Peralta was an 11-5 favorite as he ran his unbeaten streak to 44, including two draws. Hie dark-hafred gaucho has lost only dne fight, a knockout to Peruvian Mauro Mina in his first p(6' start. Since then it’s come up rpses. i BIGGER JOLT Last week’s 24-21 loss to tha Colts even jolted the Uon dhances of getting a third fUacg; finish pnd a .560 record out of .this season sinco toey still must fair Green Chicago atid Cleveland. With a big clique of Argentines llm crowd of about 2,000 in the slim Cheering him on, Peralta broke up a tight battle, fought mostly at. close range, by sweeping the flfth, sixth, and seventh rounds. He was cut over the left eye in the eighth round and Thornton that big to narrow the margin. ' Judge Artie Aidala six rounds to four, and judges Tony lUHjfsi, 541:1, voted for Peralta. Referee Art Mercante had Hiomton in front 54-1. The AP card had Peralta ahead 6-S-l. A poll of boxing writers showed an 114 vote for Peralta with one even. Prep Allstate Lineups Start N^xf Week DETROIT un Collegiate and professional football stars of the future are almost ceftain to be among the boys named on this yoaf's, Associated Press ail-state ‘ligh school football teams. The 23rd annual AP all-state teams will start appearing in The Pontiac Pross TueMay, Nov. 19,"With the announcement of theClaSiDtoam. , On the following days, the Cless C, B end A teams will be announced on these pages. Former all-ataters who went n to make their mark in col-leglato and pro circles include Dick Rltenburg, Dom Tbmasi, Sonny Grandeilua, Leo Sugar, Don Dahoney, Tom TTacy, Tony Branoff, Gary Lowe, Terry Barr, Jim Ninowski and >Dean ■ i»k. / Be sure to watch for tms year’s teams on these pages A lot of things have c for the Detroit Lions since t , last saw toe Los Angeles Rams. The first meeting of the two cfobs, who will play Sunday at Tiger Stadium, was in the opening game of the season when the Lions recorded a 28-3 triumph.. The Lions at that time were' d r e a m I h f of the Nattonaf Feotball If e a g q e title, but now they’re just trying to salvage a few moments of respee-tability from a dismal season. The Lions were rocked by Green Bay, 8M0, and by Chicago, 37-21, in the next two games after the win over Lod Injuries started to pile up and the frustrating 17-14 and 25-2i losses to Dallas and Baltimorq killed their final hopes of beintf a contender in the NFL race. ' “But the Rams are one chib that Detroit ihoohi be able to haliidle despite Its many troubles and toe Lions are a solid lO^point favorite. Los Angries is in a last pla^ tie with San Francisco with 6 2-7 mark, although the Rams did put up a stiff battle agains| Chicago last week before losing, W. A crowd of 40,000 Is expected for the contest and that’s not much more than just the season ticket holders. DEFENSE,GOOD ^ The Ram defense has been tough and their front line Of / Dave Jones, Merlin Olsen, Ro-sey Grier and Lamar Lundy led the way last week as the club allowed Chicago out of Its ovttk territory only three tlmw. The game showed that the Ramd have made a remarkable improvement since suffering a 52-14 licking at the hands pf the Bears on the west coast. has finally given the qnartor-back Job to Roman Gabriel, Jeb but still has a long way to -go. Heispiah trophy winner Terry Baker, who started for the Rams against Detroit but still needs time to adjust to pro baO^ Is the No. 2 quarterback. The Lhms actually got through the loss to Baltimore last week without suffering a major injury which was somewhat of a vip, tory in Itself. But toe club is i___________^ mld(de linebacker Joe Schmidt, defensive halfback Yale Lary d ipiard Dan La Rose besides I toree players who are lolt the t for the season. Pat StudsUto Carl Brettschfielder and G a r y Lowa. BuitBr Doof It, Agp^ VIRGINIA BEACH,'Va, (Al*j —Buster Q’Brien, the gr in Virginia High i --------- School football history, doted out career Friday night with 85 C(Hnpletlons in 52 attenmts for 588 yards and seven touchdowni as Princess Awm detoated K#. less Warwick 584. J- Thi 5toot-L honor student flip ished this toaiton with 28 scorliig aerials and ran his three-year Ncaraer total to ft.