Tfm W0ath§r ( Moifliy SuBiiy THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 123 NO. 225 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 -76 PAGES 0N.TB5*1SiiJi"“iSTK'N?T.0NAL PARENTS OF CHILD—Nineteen-year-old James Pusey (left) and his wife, Susan, 18s duck behind their coats as they leave the Pontiac iwUce station for the juvenile divi- sion of Probate Court. The couple, whose 2-month-old infant daughter was abandoned Monday, was to appear today with the child at a preliminary hearing on child neglect. Abandoned Baby's Parents Show Up at Police Station Hie parents of an abandoned ^m(»th•(dd baby walked into lha Pontiac police statkm “Tljay’va b«« living out of a ' lenlflv’a Presii .... .h... h.... •> terday afternoon, minutes fore authorities were to leave the station on a tip the father was employed at CMC Trwdt and Coach DivisHm. ★ ★ ♦ The two were identified aa James PUsey, 19, and his wife, Susan, II. Their bifaiit daughter. Dawn Marie, was found Monday afternoon in the chapel at Pon-tiae General Hospital. Policewoman Mrs. George Caronis said she received two calls on the abandoned child, one from an Army recruiting officer nlw connected the father terday’s Press. ★ Sgt. Harold Munroe was telling of Pusey’s attempt to enlist in the Am^ alien the (Mple appeared at the station, aocore^ ing to Mrs. Caronis. PUSEY REJECTED Sgt. Munroe said Pusey rejected for enlistment b^use of his dependents. The other tip came from the CathMk Welfare Agency, which identified Pusey as the “man from Indiana” who attempted to place his infant daughter with the agency. The Indian Summer to Creep Back Under Sunny Sky It looks like Indian summer is here again. ♦ * * The weatherman promises mostly sunny skies with little temperature change, highs 52 to 58 through Friday. Tonight will be fair a^ cool, the low dipping to 32 to II. Today’s westerly winds at 10. to 18 miles per hour wiil shift to northwest late today and diminish tonight. ★ ★ ★ Thirty-seven was the low recording prior to 8 a.m.. The mercury had skipped up to 55 by 2 p.m. In Toda/s Press City Affairs Plan recommended for uUlities PAGE B-8. Pragnancy Drugs FDA orders warnings on labels -r PAGE A-10. Collaga Blood Donations show support for U. S. Viet policy --PAGE B-19. Ares News D-11 Astrology D-IJ Bridge .........D-ll Crossword Puzsle . B-ll Comics D-ll Editorials •• A4 Food Section D-l, D4, D4 MarkeU D-12 ......E4 . E-1-E4 .....E-14 TV«adie Programs E-U WOsoa, Earl E-ll WomcB’s Pages B-1-B4 Sign Welfare Merger Bill car since they came here,” said Mrs. Caronis. ■k 'The father was given a job %ea days ago at Gaps^ Motors Truck A Coach Dlvl-, 8km but oirty went to work one of the days.” INTENDED TO QUIT-Pusey intended to quit the job because he “didn’t like the work,” according to the policewoman. The couple was described by Mrs. Caronis as “heavily in debt.” A petition of neglect was to be filed on behalf of the child in the juvenile division of Probate Court this morning prior to a preliminary hearing. A final hearing before Probate Judge Norman R. Barnard would determine what provision would be made for the infant’s care. A mandatory welfare merger bill whi(^ shifts $6-1 million in relief costs next year from county governments to the State Dq>artment of Social Welfare was signed into law today. U. Gov. William Milliken, acting for Gov. Romney who is tourinig Asia, signed the meas-ire. The hoi exclndei only Oakland and Wayne counties from merger of county and stat^ operated welfare agencies. The door was left open, however, for the two counties with over 600,(KN) population to enter the merger by a Dec. 31 deadline. George H. Williams, director of the Oakland County Department of Social Welfare, pre-|dicted last week that his department would merge with the state welfare agency, in Oakland County. Oakland County would receive an estimated additional $430,000 in stote funds next year If it couple is originally from Fort Wayne, lad. Mrs. Caronis said the child would be taken from Pontiac General this morning and placed at the Oakland County Children’s Center. She indicated it was doubtful that'charges of contributing to the neglect of an infant would be filed against either parent. Missile Plant Blast Fatal to^2. Injures 3 BRIGHAM CITY, Utah (AP) -Rocket propellant at a Minute-man missile manufacturing plant in northern Utah blew up this morning, killing two workmen and critically burning three others. ★ ★ ★ Thiokol, which operates the Air Force Plant 78 to make the first stage of the Minuteman missile, said the fire partially demolished part of the propellant preparation building where mixing operation was in No Survivors London Air Crash Kills 36 GM Sets Records for a Manufacturer DETROIT (UPI) — General Motors Corp. reported the highest sales and profits in manufacturing history yesterday for both the third quarter and the year’s first nine months. The giant auto maker said its profits for the first nine months totaled $1,539,000,000, or $5.36 per share, up 13 per cent from $1,360,000,000, or $4.75 per share, in the same period last year, the previous record. Sales in the nine-month period totaled $14,539,000,000, up 14 per cent from the year-ago level of $13,159,000,000, abo a previous record. No manufacturer has ever piled up so much ia dollar sales or profits. The same was true for the third quarter when GM made $264 million, or 91 cents per share on sales of $3,743,000,000, up from 1964 third quarter earnings of $222 million, or 77 cents a share, on sales of $3,291,r' 000. ROSY REPORT GM’s rosy report followed by 24 hours a record-breaking per-formanca by Ford Motor Co., second largest auto maker, which also set all-time company marks in sales and proGts for the quarter and the nine months. An auto makers have report brisk sales of 1966 models which were introduced last month. THIRD QUARTER In the third quarter, GM said it manufactured 1,245^98 cars and trucks in the United States, Canada and overseas, up from 1,134,173 last year. In the U. S., the firm said it made 949,286 cars and trucks in the period, which reflects the start of 1066 models, compared with 813,472 a year ago. Chrysler Corp., tiiird of the “big diree” is expected to announce its results tMnorrow. American Motors Corp., which ranks fourth in the industry, has not yet announced its results. Plane Pilot, Crew Thwart Hijacking Try KEY WEST, Fla (Jf) High above the Florida Keys Capt. K. I. Carlile faced a decision aboard National Airlines Flight 209 from Miami to Key West. ★ ★ ★ He could obey the desperate commands of an armed Cuban exile and fly the plane to Havana, or he could gamble and attempt to overpower him. Carlile decided to gamble, and with the help of his crew disarmed the would-be hijacker yesterday. The exile, Luis Medina Perez, 20, who said be wanted to see his family in Cuba, was (Continued on Page 3, Col. 1) DOs Confirm Merger Stand Again Reject Plan for Joining With MDs Responding to recent merger proposals. Michigan osteopaths have reaffirmed their stand against amalgamation with the 'MD” profession. Proposals for a merger of the DO and MD professions arose during recent legislation hearings on a bid by osteopaths for state (grating funds for the projected Mk^an Cdlege of Osteopathic Medicine. The projected osteopathic school if to be located on a site ar AAburw and to the city. The legislature declined to act at the fall session on the request for state funds, but promised early consideration during the winter term. k k * Meantime, an Interim legislative study has been ordered of t h e amalgamation proposal made by the Michigan S t a t Medical Society. k k k Osteopaths, however, have issued a unanimous “no” on the question. REAFFHIM RESOLUTION This week the House of Delegates of the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons voted 116-0 to reaffirm the group’s 1959 “Michigan Resolution.” This resolution called fhr a separate and distinct school of medicine in Michigan. The resolution stated that schools of osteopathic medicine are complete and are m a ‘ schools of medicine “which have served the public for m(»‘e than 60 years.” Further, “the public is b e s 1 served by the free choice of physicians without interference r 0 m professional organizations,” said the resolution. ★ ★ ★ In addition, the osteopathic medical school “shall maintain its status as a separate and complete school of medicine, cooperating with all agencies and groups that sincerely prmnote the same objective when that cooperation is on an equal basis, granting full recognition to the the autonomy and confributkm of the osteopathic school of medicine. If it remains independent, it will still receive an added $230,000. Oakland County officials had opposed substitute S^te Bill 216 mainly because of the loss of control over welfare matters by the county. ____________ Spectacolor Ad Featured Today’s Pontiac Press contains the first advertisements in the high quality color pix known as Spectacolor. Such ads are in the epedal ■ectkm entitled “Accent on Elegance” featuring The Pontiac MaU and MontgooMy Ward. y ^ Scared? ...a Little! See Pg. A-2 CONG STAMPS, PINS-Stanley Nadel, University of Michigan senior and chairman of the Committee to Aid the Vietnamese, displays Viet Cong postage stamps and lapel pins being sold by students on the Ann Arbor campus to raise money for the National Liberation Front in Viet Nam. Money and medical supplies are forwarded by the student group through an agency in Algiers. Cong Raid 2 U.S. Bases DA NANG, South Viet Nam (DPD —Viet Cong guerrillas launched simultaneous attacks against two U.S. Marine bases at midnight and left one littered with burning helicopters. Official spokesmen said the attacks were launched precisely at midnight against the Marine air installations at Da Nang and at Chu Lai. Da Nang is the biggest American military complex in South Viet Nam. Chn Lai is 68 miles to the south and like Da Nang is also on the South China Sea coast. Marine officers said there were about 50 helicopters based at the nearby Da Nang, East-Marble Mountain air complex, across the river from this city, where a white glare gave evidence of burning aircraft metal. The spokesman said a “number” of " helicopters were destroyed but gave no immediate figure. TRACER BUU£TS Explosions and tracer bullets were visible from downtown Da Nang and military officials said attack had been made on the Da Nang east air complex, just east of the city about 370 miles north of Saigon. k k k Almost 200 miles to the south, “Flying Horsemen” of the 1st U.S. Cavalry division were sweeping the jungles for Communist troops who tried to overrun the Plei Me outpost for eight days. The cavalrymen were dropped by helicopter into the U.S. special forces camp in the central hif^lands yesterday. Unable to Land in Shifting Fog Airliner Explodes in Flames; All Aboard Said to Be English LONDON (2P» — A British domestic airliner exploded in flames on its third attempt to land in shifting fog at London Airport early today, killing all 36 persons aboard. We could see a sheet of flame which seemed to stretch the length of the runway,” said one airport employe. “We could see people among the flames but they were obviously dead.” The plane, a four-engine Vanguard turboprop designed to carry 139 passengers, was landing at 1:23 a.in. after a flight from Edinburgh, Scotland. Operated, by British European Airways, it carried 30 passengers, one a child, and a crew of 6. k k k The airline said it was believed all aboard were British. Four hours after the crash all the bodies had been recovered. WORKHORSE It was the first fatal crash for a passenger-carrying Vanguard, which since 1961 has been BEA’s workhorse on domestic routes. The deaths also were London Airport’s first passenger fatalities in almost 15 years. A BEA twin-engine Viking from Paris crashed and kill^ 28 persons Oct. 31, 1950. That crash also occurred in fog. Airport officials said visibility on the runway at the time of the crash today was 500 yards. The airline said the pilot had made two previous attempts to land, and just before the crash was heard to turn on fiill power, apparently trying to get airborne again. Ex-Press Newsboy No Newsboy at All Sometimes a newsl^ isn’t a boy at all. In fact, one of the finest Pontiac Press carriers in recent years was a woman—a mother of four. Her name is Mrs. Earl Long and her purpose in delivering papers was to help finance the last phase of her college education^ to become a teacher. She completed her degree work last August at Wayne State University and now is an ex-“newsboy” teaching third graders in Waterford Township’s Donelson Sdiool. Why would a woman of 33 with four youngsters and three years of college accreditation invade the male realm of newspaper distribution? Mrs. Long explained her 1960 decision quite simply. ★ ★ * Three of her youngsters were then in school. She wanted job that would both enable her to get out of the house and take a two-year-old son with her to avoid baby sitter fees. ACCEPTS ROUTE She accepted the challenge to deliver a route in the Bloomfield Township area by car and continued the assignment five years until last August. “I enjoyed. Ike work immensely,” Mrs. Long said yesterday as she sat hi her class-ro«m at Doneboa, reminiscing about her aewspaper care^. “I made a lot of friends too.” Mrs. Long not only derived self-satisfaction from her ten- ure as a newspaper carrier but her conscientious work edmed the respect of those she served. One of her customers, Basil B. Kimball, 6845 Lahser, said that ((Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Clear Electric Firm in Iron lung Death NASHVILLE, 'Tenn. (UPI) -A metropolitan medical examiner ruled yesterday that an 11-year-old polio victim died of double pneumonia and not because electricity had been shut off to his iron lung. Dr. W. J. Ck)re said Francis Audie Barrett had a “well-established” case of pneumonia in his right lung and a lesser case In his left. Core said the irni lung which the child’s mother pumped by hand was of “no value” in her futile attempts to keep the boy alive. FORMER “NEWSBOY”-From her third grade classroom at Donelson School, teacher Mrs. Earl (Laurel) Long recalls her five years as a Pontiac Press carrio* that helped finance her education, whidi led to a teaefaing certificate. THE POMiHC I KfcSS. WKDNESDAy. OCTOBER 27, 1985 Newsboy Not a Boy at Ail (Continued FYom Page One) come high water, sleet, snow or! rain, he never missed an edition j ... and delivery was always ^ on time. The new teacher actually i began her college edocation M ^ years ago at Albion. After three years there, she tran.sferred to Wayne but had withdraw after one semestorl due to the pending arrival of her first child. * * * ‘'The thought of completing! my degree work was ever present." Mrs. Long said. i REENTERED WSU She reentered WSU two years] ago as a part time student and then carried a full schedule thei last two quarters. The novice teacher “loves working with youngsters” but this could be expected with her extensive background in cub s c 0 u t, gfa-l s c 0 u t and church youth activities. Home for Mrs. Long and her Insurance agent husband is 25504 W. 14 Mile, Bloomfield Township. The children are Robert, 18; Ann, 15; Gregory, 13; and Jeffrey (who used to take his afternoon naps in the back seat of his mother’s car), now seven and in school. 2 Men Rob ^ Birmingham Area News Credit Office HALLOWEEN HARVEST - A table grimaces for Saturday night’s revelry caught the children’s imagination. First, second and third graders from Waterford Village School, as they stood enchanted before the painted pumpkins displayed in the booth of W. L. Holland. Avon Township, at the Oakland County Market. It was the youngsters’ first trip to the market. Two men wearing masks over the lower part of their faces robbed a Waterford Township loan ofHce of $1,400 at gunpoint yesterday. The robbery at Pioneer Credit Co., 3513 Elizabeth Lake, curred at 12:15 p.m. when the only persons in the building were cashier Mrs. Gerald Smith land a wonian customer. Mrs. Smith told police that the men entered the building simultaneously from different doors and then donned masks. One of them rushed to the counter and ordered her to hang up the telephone she was using, I Mrs. Smith said, and the other man stood in the doorway. ♦ w * j The man at the counter, who I displayed a blue steel revolver, I demanded the cash box, accord-ing to the cashier. PUT ON GLOVE She said he put on a rubber glove and sorted cash from checks, discarding the checks on the counter. Halloween Celebrations Slated Plane Pilot, Crew Foil Hijacking Try (Continued From Page One) wounded and taken prisoner in Costumes on parade, masquerade record hops and a gaggle of prizes in the Mystery Treat contest are part of the Halloween celebration scheduled for Pontiac and Waterford T o w n-ship Friday and Saturday. Students at Kennedy and Washington junior high schools are holding record bops Friday Prizes will go to students who are at home when calls are made to elementary students at 9 p.m., junior high students at 10:30 p.m. and high school students at 11 p.m. Approximately 240 youngsters, clad in spooky costumes, will step a “circular” route from the sclwol down Lanco, Seebaldt, Seeden and Sashabaw. The bandits then ordered the two women to the rear of the building, bound their iiands with tape and told them to stay there. A customer, who came in after the bandits fled, removed tape from the two women. Upon return, they will play First prize in the elementary L^mes and be served refresh-group IS a bicycle, and m the ... .. . ^ , r,™, STPTA th. m B,y f Pigs ir.asl«,.!"W!’ SjJiPARlTES SLATED tumlT^o^U^ 'Washington party. three winners determined in the From 7 to 8:15 p.m. Friday ^ . I . k I drawing. parties will be held at the Com- Apnll4.1«^. I Most elementary schools are munity AcUvities Inc. building Perez pleaded guilty yester-, planning room parties for late . _ day to attempted piracy of an ain^ane — a federal offense which could carry the death penalty and was held in default of 825,000 bo^. 32 ABOARdI The prop-jet Electra, with a crew of 5 and 27 passengers including Medina, was 20 minutes out of Miami when the control tower at Miami's Intematii^i Airport got its first word ofihe drama. “Have a man on airplane with gnn holding it on stewardess.” radioed the copilot, D. S. McDaniel, 29. “He wants to go to Havana. Captain is talking to him on phone now. This is copilot. I'm flying airplane. Will keep yw informed.” Capt. Carlile, <48. filled in the details after the plane landed at Key West. "Take this plane to Havana because I want to be with my family, " he quoted the stocky, dark-haired passenger as saying- drawing. IN WATERFORD I Parties, parades, bonfires, ^ggett, Pontiac Lake, 'trick or treating and dancing are B"*-* R*''«'‘SKie elementary Sponsored by the Recreation Department, Jaycees, Lions, Rotary and Optimist clubs, the parties will feature movies. Modified Space Rendezvous Try Set for Gemini 7 afternoon Friday. Community groups have or-| ganiz^ttree parties at Pontiac in Waterford Township Friday schools Friday mght.^ ] and Saturday. The Herrington HUls Hom^j Saturday^night from" 6 to 7 has owners Association is spons^gdesignated as the time for early evening township children to go trick or costume parade for elementary students at Herrington School] * from 6 to 8:30 and a record hop Drayton Plains Elementary from 8:45 to 10:30 for junior high I School will help kick off the and high school age students. township celebration with a COSTUME PARADE ' _ Wever Elementary School will| be the site for a costume parade and contest sponsored by the Wever-Owen-Alcott Hawthorne Ckimmunity Qub, with prizes donated by the Parent Teacher fires for children in grades 1 through 8. Saturday night, residents of Lake Oakland Subdivision will hold a party, featuring danc'mg, I music and refreshments. MANNED SPACE CENTER, Houston, Tex. (AP) — The next U.S. manned Gemini flight will include a modified space ren-Idezvous. called station keeping, it was learned today. Station keeping is similar to airplanes flying in formation.! Air Force Lt. Col. Frank Bor-1 man and Navy Cmdr. James A. I Lovell Jr., the Gemini 7 astronauts, will try to keep within 100 to 300 feet of their Titan 2 sec-| ond-stage booster for two and one-half orbits. ' ★ ★ ♦ ' I The United States attempted! rendezvous exercises or the last' three Gemini failed. Two-Nighf Halloween Slated BIltMINQHAM - The apeU that changes friendly youngsters into ghouls, goblins and ghosts will be effective for two nights this year in Birminghapi. ★ ★ ♦ Saturday is the night chosen for official Halloween observance, but many of the young people here also will be trick-w-treating for UNICEF Sunday. The city’s 29tb aanuai Hal-htween parade wiil begin at 7:45 p.m. Saturday. Young costumed characters wili gather at 7:15 p.m. in the municipai parking lot at Merrill and Pierce. ♦ ★ ★ Some 300 prizes are to be awarded in the costume contest conducted then. MEET AT SCHOOLS Children will gather and march according to their schools. All Birmingham District schools will be represented in the parade, except Groves' High School, Berkshire Junior High School and Franklin, Valley Woods, Meadow Lake and Walnut Lake elementary schools which voted not to participate. The marching bands of Grovw and Seaholm high schools will provide music for the parade. ★ W A When the marchers reach the parking lot at Willets and Woodward, thqy wUl be served hot dogs, doughnuts and cider. MOVIE PUNNED Following the refreshment period, a movie will be shown at Baldivin Elementary School for children in the fourth grade and ibove. Dances will be held at Derby and Barnum junior high schools and at Seaholm High School. Tickets for these events now are available at the schools. dents for contributions between 2 and H p. m. Those participating can be identified by the black and orange containers bearing the UNICEF symbol. WWW The program is being coordinated by Rev. William Sutterlin of the First Baptist Ohurch of Birmingham. Any group wishing an area assignment can contact the First Presbyterian Church of Birmingham. BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Charles F. Adams, executive vice president of MacManus, John and Adams, Inc., has been named chairman of a special Governor’s Commission on Mass Transportation. ★ ★ ★ Acting Gov. William Milliken yesterday announced formation of the cimunUtee under Adams. 6139 Dakota, Bloomfield Township. After the massive Saturday night celebration, members of local church youth groups and Girl Scouts have set aside time advertising agency execu-Sunday to trick or treat for the , composed United Nations’Internatronalk Children’s Emergency Fund. Lpjversity experts and repre-IN AREA CALLS sentatives of the major means They will call on area resi-lof transportation._______________ SIMMS Discount Annex 144 N. Saginaw St. Downtown Pontiac-Next to Sears |Let’s-Get-Acquainted Specialj Glftwores Bananzo heave it to Simms to bring you folks such a tremendous value—fomous electrical appliances ot such a low price. Stock up now for Chrisfmos oifts or your own personal use and remember, you con use our free layoway at no extra caJTSale-ifood whdu quantities remain. Items not necessarily os shown. Associations from the four schools. The Mystery Treat contest-cosponsored by the Pontiac Parks Sc Recreation Department, the Pontiac Board of Education and the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce — will be held Saturday night. 2 Brothers Reuriited After 23 Years By L. GARY THORNE On a Pontiac street comer, two men are working. One turns to his companion and says, “I’m your brother!” “But, I don't have a brother.’ “Oh yes yon do ... ” This near-comic conversation almost occurred recently at Williams and Pike between two city employes, George H. McClellan and James L. R. Prosser. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly sunny with little temperature change today and Thursday. Fair and cool tonight. Highs today and Thursday SI to 56. Lows tonight 32 to 38. West winds shifting to northwest II to U miles today diminishing tonight. Friday- outlook: Continued excellent faU weather. er Mrs. Annia Dailey, 21 Lexington. McClellan said the elderly Mrs. Dailey wanted to see her grandchildren. SAME CORNER Circumstances that put the two brothers on the same street comer began nearly two decades ago during World War II. The boys’ mother separated from her first husband after George was bom. She later remarried and James was bora. The mother bad a total of four children. ‘l When the mother died, the grandmother, Mrs. Dailey, took by Mrs. Dailey, said that efforts to locate his brother were at first unsuccessful. A recheck of the county files, however, turned up the elder Prosser. “I couldn’t believe my eyes,’ said McClellan of the first meeting with his younger brother. “It was hard to believe.” I Velocity • m.p.h. LowMt lomoeroture Weother; Portly cloudy ! McClellan, 38. a city water department employe, and Prosser, 25, employed by the Department ’ of Public Works, work^ on opposite sides of the street recently on a city project. j UNAWARE lin George and a sister. Then 72 A few days later, they discov-ly « a r s old, Mrs. Dailey was jered they were brothers. Pros-I^^ced by the state to give up Iser was unaware he even had a •Barnes and a then six-year-old i brother. sister. I Separated in childhood when I , j , u i. i Prosser was a 2-year-oW, the ' I brothers were reimited after a *«. ^ “ax Prosser. 5361 I 23-year lapse through the rec- iStickney, Clarkston. The latter I did not know there was another brother. ^ords of the adoption depart-lent of the Oakland County - n For, worth 7t 47j Court. |KIND OF SHOCKING j _____________] S 2 S Mcciellan initiated the record' 7. T" 5 lmSukT u n JwimiolMSi S « check to locate his younger!®*]’ -Barnes saM. It was kind « Marqwoftc N J* MiiwoukM 51 37;brothcr. He was prompted to do®^ shocking when I met him.” ,Mu»ke«on 5^ ^ ^ ort^t « JJ j,y j,jj j2-year-old grandmotb-l Meantime, McClellan, raised Despite their blood relationship, both brothers agreed that meeting each other was “like meeting a stranger.” CTTY WORKERS McClellan, 767 St. Clair, has worked for the city for IS years, while Prosser, 3305 Shimmons, Pontiac Township, joined the city about six months ago. McClellan is married with eight children, while Prosser has two chiMrea. Still the family circle is not comidete. The search is continuing for a sister, Bernita Majew-ski, who also was adopted as a NATIONAL WEATHER—Fair weather is expected to ooatinue over the entire nation tonight except in the Pacific Northwest where intermittent light rain and showers are ex-pectad. Tonperatures below seasonal aver^es will continue over most of the eastern half of the nation while above-average temperatures will prevail in southern California and Nevada. REUNION — Reunited after 23 years, James R. Prosser (left) and George McClellan compare memories while looking at a scrapbook with their grandmother, Annia Dailey, 92, who prompted the McClellan suspects that the missing sister might live in the Pontiac area. She would be 28 yean old and have a birthday coming up Feb. 6. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 A—3 Dominican Showdown Looms on Firing Top Military Leaders SANTO D(»!INGO, Dominican Republic (fl - Members of the Dominican Republic’s shaky provisional government appeared today to be nearing a showdown over whether to fire the top leaders of the armed forces. The danger of more large-scale violence was believed ruled out by the presence of the 10,000 -man Inter - American Peace Force patrolling the capital. But there was a possibility that the long and coHly reha- bilitation program for the coontry might be dealt a serious setback if President Hector Garcin-Godoy was forced ont by the crisis. ^ Then the Organization of American States would be faced with the task of creating a new provisional regime. The prevailing view in influential circles was that the major portion of Garcia-Godoy’s Cabinet, sympathetic to the rebel cause, would resign if the president did not immediately fire the armed fo’ces secretary. Commodore Francisco J. Rivera Caminero, and the chiefs of staff of the army, navy and air force. * w ♦ The president was reported unwilling to take this decisive step because the U.S. government and the OAS had made clear that they considered such action undesirable at this time. Garcia-Godoy reportedly does not wish to alienate the only source of badly needed economic support for ^e country, which is on the brink of bankruptcy. Rebel sympathizers charge that the military chiefs ordered indiscriminate bombing of Santo Domingo’s civilian population in the early days of the April revolt. The military leaders deny this and fear their ouster would pave the way for extreme leftists to take over the armed forces. This fear has chilled relations between the president and the military, which considers that Garcia-Godoy picked a Cabinet that is oriented too much toward the rebels. The crisis brought the three- Polaris-Firing Sub Joins Navy N-Fleet NEW LONDON. Conn. (AP)-The Polaris-firing submarine Benjamin Franklin has joined the Navy’s nuclear-powered fleet. The 425-foot missile-launching submarine is the 30th of 41 pro-granuned by the Navy. man OAS committee back to Santo Domingo late last week. The three members — Ambassadors Ellsworth Bunker of the United States, Umar Pen-na Marinho of Brazil, and Ramon de Clairmont Duenas of El Salvador — have met repeatedly with the president and his Cabinet in an attempt to work out a solution. ★ * * It is known that the OAS committee, which forged the peacemaking formula between the rebels and the military, is not happy with Garcia-Godoy’s failure to caco' out critical features of the formula, particularly the disarming of civilians. * * -k Critics of the president say he relied too much on the word of rebel leaders that their sector of Santo Domingo had been disarmed. The outbreak of violence in the past 12 days proved that a substantial number of weapons remain in the hands of civilian sympathizers of the rebel movement. SIMMS Open Thurs. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. - Fri. & Sat. 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. L- " ’ Storts Tmnorrow Morning ot 9 a.iiiniere at THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY \ 3 BIG SALE DAYS SIMMS End-of-Month Cleoronce A Store-Wide Odd Lot, Short Lot Clean-Out Naturally thes* ar« mostly limited quantity items — to you better hurry to Simmt (or the items you want. All prices tub|ect to stock on hand. And we reserve the right to limit quantities. ^ « Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac A—*4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 19M !j1r 1 MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS — Three pairs of look-alike mother-daughter combinations are shown during a pause in the schedule of the Miss Teen-Age America contest in Dallas. In the foreground are (left) Mrs. Vera Marchette and Dayle Marchette, Miss Ae pimmix Greenville, S.C., and Jackie. Mcllvain, Miss Memphis, and her mother, Mrs. Thelma Mcllvain. In the back are Mrs. E. D. Taylor and Tia Lou Taylor, Miss Fort Worth. A new queen will be crowned Friday. Ultimatum to Rhodesia Not Necessary License Plates to Have Unique Color Scheme LANSING (UPI) - The 1966 Michigan license plates will have dark blue letters on a beige background, a color scheme designed to make them unique among states. Secretary of State James Hare said the new colors have no special significance. “They just mean we’re not competitive with any other state,’’ Hare said. The 1966 plates will also not require tabs after one year’s The state abandoned the use of tabs on license plates following several years of protests from motorists who complained the plates rusted aijd presented a bad image tq the majof auto producing state. Tabs were used on license plates every third year starting in 1959. Milliken, Subbing for Romney, Signs Four Measure Into Low LANSING (AP)—Acting Gov. I under the Workmen’s Compen* William Milliken Tuesday sation Act shall be no less than signed four bills into law, includ-specified minimum weeMy ing two clarifying amendments'amounts which rise gradually to the Workmen’s Compensation by 1967 to two-thirds of average Act. I weekly wages for a period of The new law, effective im- 5Q0 weeks, mediately, provides that part- Also signed was a measure time domestic servants are ex-| permitting the State Employ-eluded fr6m the compensation merit Security Commission to program if employed by a pri-i disclose otheryvise confidential vate employer less .than 35 information to the Treasury Dehours a week for 13 of the pre- partment for escheat purposes ceding 52 weeks. Agriculturar pnd to colleges and universities workers similarly are excluded for research purposes of a pub-on the same bads. I lie service nature. Another nneasure si^ed prtor General Thurgood Marshall appeared on an hour-long television program answering questions by students in London, Paris, Belgrade and Mexico City via the Early Bird communications satellite. MEXICAN STUDENT Eisenhower was replying to a Mexican student who had asked why the Johnson administration was “putting into effect the very same platform that the people of the United States repudiated.” The three U.S. officials occasionally got into heated exchanges with the students, particularly over U.S. policy in Viet Nam and American intervention in the Dominican jof closing: Eisenhower said student dem- Methodical Milton — Some-onstration against U.S. involve-! body stole a paper clip over-ment was the work ol“» fewinight from Milton 15 years ago rabble-rousers trying to get pub-1 and he is determined never to licity and trying to get theirilet it happen again. He puts ev-faces on the television screen.”' lerything that is on top his desk * ♦ * I inside his desk, checks each Goldberg and Marshall em-{ drawer carefully to see that it is phatically denied another Mexi-.iocked, then locks his file cabi-can student’s assertion that U.S.lnel, padlocks his typewriter and prosperity depended on waging!hides the cushion of his swivel war in Viet Nam and elsewhere.'chair in his locker. Atheist Freed by Court BALTIMORE, Md. OJPD-Mad-i alyn Murray O’Hair, the atheist whose suit led to the Supreme] Court’s historic school prayer i decision, was a free woman to-[ day because a Baltimore grand] jury that had indicted her professed a belief in God. | Criminal Court Judge Shirley Jon^s disniiSsed a nine-court indictment/ against Mrs. O’Hair I yesterday. 'The judge’s dismis-j sal was based on the ruling of another court which held that] Maryland’s law requiring jurors j to affirm a belief ir> God was unconstitutional. Mrs. O’Hair, married to expatriate Richard O’Hair Oct. 18, has been fighting extradition from Texas. Her attorney said the ruling makes her “a free woman.” She was charged with assaulting Police Sgt. Charles Kelley, disorderly conduct and obstructing justice. In Austin, Tex., her lawyer,! Bill Mitchell said he has noj plans for the present, “but will I wait and see if the state of] Maryland will not drop its extradition request.” ! PRAYERS BANNED Mrs. O’Hair was the plaintiff in a 1963 suit which resulted ini a Supreme Court ruling banning I compulsory prayers in public] schools. Since winning that! case, she claims she has been] abused by private citizens and’ potice. The assault charge resulted from an altercation she had | with Kelley and other policemen sent to arrest her daugh- ' ter-in-iaw, Susan Abramovitz, ' for violation of a court order. Mrs. Abramovitz, a minor, I had been forbidden to see the Murrays, who were professed I atheists. I A scuffle followed, and Mrs. Murray; her son, William; and her mother were ordered to] court to answer the charges. Instead the family left for| Hawaii. The woman then went to Valle j de Bravo, Mexico, where she met O’Hair, part-time rancher and artist. Mexican authorities later deported her because of discrepancies in her tourist papers. She went to San Antonio, Tex., where she was arrested and ordered extradited to Maryland to face the assault charges. Mrs. O’Hair won her first battle in the case when District Court Judge Tom Reavley or^ dered the state of Texas to explain why it held her for extradition. She contended it was an act of religious persecution. Yesterday’s petition was filed through American Civil Liberties Union. Mitchell said the move was based on an Oct. 12 ruling by the appeilate court in a murder case involving a Buddhist convicted of shooting his wife. 'The conviction was thrown out I because the defendant was de; j nied equal protection under the' law because Maryland required I jurors to affirm belief in God. Mitchell said Mrs. O’Hair, an ' avowed atheist, was denied her right to be tried by persons of her same views. Blind Man Robbed DETROIT (AP) - Ronald Utting, 23, who is blind, rakes leaves and does other odd jobs to add to his t50 a month state pension. Two men came up be-ihind him this week, pinioned his I arms, and stole the 75 cents he had received for a raking job. PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER side. Thomas is almost completely blind and was helpless when the fire started. A passing salesman saved the boy but was unable to reach the girl. Closing Time Is Office Ritual By HAL BOYLE , NEW YORK (AP) -Quitting time is as much a daily ritual in the American business office as coming to work If you check __________ I the lowing herd BOYLE ]in your own white collar zoo, I you might note the following 'familiar characters at the hour Fun Loving Freddy — As soon shapely legs and indulging in as Milton is gone, the office boy, gay banter. Her big hope: One who has keys to everything,,«>em will wwken and take .. .. ... . f. her to dinner and a movie, opens MUton s desk, puts a well-| yght-fingered Leo - The chewed apple core in the top office wolf has everything tidied drawer, then relocks it. Milton]up at 5:15. Then he stations will worry for a month how the himself near the door, hoping he apple got there. can get in one more pinch as the Hangover Harry — He has girls from the stenographic pool spent the day hiding out in the pass by. washroom. At 5:29, still a bit Wheelhorse Wilbur — 'The foggy, he wheels in and calls quitting hour of 5:30 is only an out, “Anybody ready for lunch? interruption. He wipes his myo-I found a great place — the pic eyes and begins to stack up house buys every third mar- the work he intends to take tini.” home with him. He no longer Suburbanite Sam — In the uses a briefcase. He fills a suit; summer this prisoner of the out- case with it. er spaces sneaks out at 5 p.m.| * * ★ so he can spend-more time. Sycophantic Sid —By 5:35 whacking away at his crabgrass every other clock watcher has before dusk. In winter he starts fled. Sid puts his feet on the wrapping up in heavy clothing desk and waits 10 minutes to be at 5 p.m. so he can make the sure he is alone in the outer of-long voyage home without freez-fice then walks to the door of ing. ;the boss office. Wiping his brow Madcap Molly — The office in a show of weariness, he says Geopatra never gets much done cheerily, “Well, chief, I guess after 4 o’clock. From then on it’s up to us to close up the store she tours the place, sitting on again. Do you mind if I knock the desk of one junior executive off now? Two of my kids are after another, swinging her sick.” '-pant suit days at HHS you’ll find most luxurious 2-trouser suits in our Eagie colioction When famous Eagle tailors a two-trouser suit, you know the results will be superb. The fobrics are fine worsteds and lustrous sharkskins in rich deeptone patterns and muted stripings. They're impeccably tailored in smart 2-button models with plain front trousers ond 3-button models with pleated trousers. Drop in and see for yourself. They're priced at $125 and $135. OUR FONTIAC MAU STORi OFIN EVIRY EVININ8 TO V PJi I RRURINOHAM STORE OPEN THURS. AND FRL.TO f;.SAT. TO 5:30 Open Mon., Thun, Fri and Sot. Nites Til 9 2-Piece "CLAN CREST" Plaid Suit by KAREN KANE "CLAN CREST" plaid in o 2-piece suit Matched plaid, notched ond trimmed Petal collor. Self buttons, and sheath skirt. Completely woshoble. 50% Orion, 50% Rayon. Choose from blue/grey or Berry red/grey. Sizes 12-20, l4!6-22Vi. 3-Pc. Bonded Orion and Wool Suit. 3-Piece bonded Orion and wool suit has controsting shell. Button trim on jacket and shell. Slim sheath skirt. Choose from grey or black in sizes 10 to 18. Just Say "Charge It" on Woite's *9.99 *14.99 New TRIC-0-LASTIC®Lace by PRETTILY PAMPERS THE FULLER FIGURE Such firm support, so completely comfortable —so fashionably pretty, too! "Lycra” Spandex around the cups, at the midriff, the sides and bock —everywhere you want it —stretches to breathe with you all day long. Loce-over dents find it necessary to walk on only two or three feet of one lane out of four lanes, but if sidewalks were put in people would use them. We do agree that students should not be touching trucks and endangering their own and others’ lives. ,JOYCE BRANSON LEA BRUNSON WATERFORD TOWNSHIP David Lawrence Says: ^Students Could Volunteer Their Servicea’ 89th a ‘Do-Nothing’ Congress WASHINGTON - The 89th Congress may go down in history as the most glaring example of a “do-nothing” Con- gress. It point, of CO to many pieces of legislation of a “do-something” variety in the field of human welfare. even 8 eral and local governments. Action has long been overdue. • Congress, although it investigated the Ku Klux Klan, did nothing about investigating the activities on the campuses of many colleges and universities where Communist subversion has appeared in incipient stages. • Congress did nothing about a code of ethics that should govern all federal employes. While the Bobby Baker case was widely publicized, the lessons that were learned from it were neglected. Committees to devriop codes of ethics are helpful, but Congress was confronted by a concrete example of misfeasance and failed to enact remedial legislation. (CmyrigM, 1M5,......... The college students adding their signatures to the circulating petitions favoring U.S. policy in Viet Nam should emph^e their patriotism more strongly by adding the following poet^pt before mailing the petitions to our President: “We are willmg to postpone our education and are ready to volunteer our services to the war to Viet Nam.” The women studente could be trained as nurses aides to a very short time 'Xo as to hasten their departure for Viet Nam. MRS. EVA M. WRIGHT WATERFORD 'TOWNSHIP ‘We Need to Maintain a Two-Party Syatem’ these laws, it isl conceded by some of the LAWRENCE leaders, will have to undergo substantial changes and amendments at the next session in order to make them feasible or workable. Bob Considine Says: Aerospace Achievements Are Modern Phenomenon All citizens sincerely concerned with the downfall ot the two-party system of government in the United States and the problems of the present Democratic administration would do well to look with hope to the House minority leader from our own State of Michigan. Gerald Ford shows the most promise for his party, the State and the Nation that the Republican Party has so far been able to produce. America needs to maintain a strong two-party system of government to maintain a strong America. FORD FANS ‘Lake Orion Has Purchased New Radar Unit’ lie “dOHiotlitog record can be sauuned np as follows: • Congress did nothing to stop the irresponsible spending of trillions of dollars of taxpayers’ money each year, as the purchasing power of the dollar is steadily weakening. • Congress did nothing to halt the reckless misuse of power in tbe industrial field, as nationally organized labor unions annually inflict heavy losses on the country. • Congress failed to stop the use of the strike weapon as a means of demoralizing an industry, forcing higher prices and causing the shutdown of factories and plants because of artificially imposed costs by labor organizations. LOS ANGELES - This is the “Detnrit” of the aerospace industry. Billions of dollars have fun-neled into it, and the general area has produced aircraft that blanket the airspace of the world, missiles that keep the peace, satellites that find startling answers toplanetary CONSIDINE and solar questions that baffled man since his creation. • Congress did nothing to INotect the rights of companies to the free-enterprise system to carry out management func- It permitted instead the use of boycotts and picket lines to paralyze many a business which did not conform to union demands, even though these were not directly related to wages or employe benefits, but were concerned primarily with the way a company should be permitted to use machinery. • Congress did nothing to curtail the abuses that are going on abroad to the foreign-aid program at U.S. expense. • Congress did nothing about “trading with the enemy.” Although Congress has the power to make war to Viet Nam, it dk| iwt insist that all countries aiding the Comimmists in Southeast Asia should not be given tbe benefits of world trade. And all of this has come to pass to the memory of millions still alive and kicking. James A. Farley touched on that particular phenomenon to a speech.this year before tbe International Benjamin Franklin Society in New York. Big Jim said: “No man in Benjamin Franklin’s time — and no man now — can foresee the vast new sources of energy and'-insights tvhicb will come to us. Sometimes, it is closer than we think. “At a state celebration a few years ago, the oldest person present, a lady nearing 100 years of age, was brought to the microphone to speak of her early days. SaENCE INSTRUCTOR “She said that she and her husband had taught in a log cabin school, built by a religious (M-der. Her husband was an instructor in science. merely a prelude to great new inventions that lay beyond. In fact, he said to the bishop, he foresaw the day when man would fly. “The bishop sternly warned him that if he continued to this view the mission church might have to reexamine his teacher’s contract. “ ‘You are approaching blasphemy,’ the old lady remembered the bishop saying. “Then she added, ‘There would be nothing exceptional about this story except that the bishop’s name was Wright, and his own two sons invented the airplane my husband predicted.’ ” I would like to warn all travelers going through Lake Orion on M24 to beware! The City Fathers have purchased a new radar unit which is getting a bigger play than a baby with a new rattle, by the local gendarmes. With all the problems w# have* had, now we’re inviting the reputation of being a “speed trap.” BOB SWEM LAKE ORION Waterford Township Streets Need Attention It is about time that the duly-elected officials of Waterford Township did something about the situation of many of our streets and roads. This is mainly due to the work done by tha contractors in Installing tbe mains for our water system. Crescent Road, Plumstead and Rivard are heavily traveled but nearly impassable. We understood the construction company installing the water system was bonded against leaving such dim-age. Many of the streets which we have paid to have oiled for many years are in worse condition than they were thirty yeart FRANK A. LANE WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Reviewing Other Editorial Pages No Hurry The Kiuxmis Magazine A man fell out of a 10-ttory window. He. hit with a thud, a crowd gathered, and a witness rushed over, and said to him, ‘•What happened?” "/ dunno,”, said the man, standing and dusting himself off. "f fust got here myself.” Peace Alliance The Israel Digest • Congress did nothing to prevent injustices against public-school tysfems which are punished because they do not obey arbitrarily phrased edicts of the federal government. Indeed, Congress failed to supply the legislative standards to justify the penalties now being imposed. • Congress did nothing to help the states to meet some of their rising problems by giving them refunds of their own taxes.'These funds could better be spent by the states whose inhabitants are* furnishing the money out of their tooomM. • Congress straighten out to tax systems nothing to “Every three years the bishop totpectoh the school, she related, and on their first encounter with him be asked tbe young,bniband what he thought abont the rabject he was attemptiiig to teach. “The husband said science was tbe greatest tool ever given to man by God and that through it man would build a wonderful new society. “The bishop cautioned the young teacher. He said that man already had tbe steam engine and the telegraph and, indeed, there were even a few tfle-phnnes. “The bishop suggested that God had given enough, perhaps as much as was to store for man, and it behooved the young scientist to teach gratitude for gifto already receivad. “Whereupon, the old lady conthutod, her you^ hasband aassrered bravely that la his opiaion th#sC| times were In a speech of welcome to President Francois Tombalbaye of Chad, who has been paying his second visit to Israel, Prime Minister Levi Eshkol called on the developing nations to take the initiative to concluding alliances of peace instead of military treaties. temity will obligate the signatories to respect the sovereignty and independence of other countries, to refrain from intervention to their internal affairs to any manner whatsoever, and to use no other means than nego-tiaUon to solve international disputes. “Israel, on her part, will support an toitiative in this direction, which is to keeping with the spirit of the prindpies of the United Nations and the Charter of Addis Ababa, with all the strength and influence at her disposal.” Tha wd-iare department ~pr avid ad care for children. Mothers who were disabled, or naable to work, were exensed from tta One of Those Things. The HutsonviUe (III.) Herald It is not unreasonable for those on welfare to help themselves and their conununitias, or to be asked to do so. Many of the women, including tboso who had never worked btfore, found that it was not aa dif-f i c u 11 as they had imagined. They received more money than the welfare gives them. Many of the tomato workers may hava been encouraged to seek permanent employment. This would drop them from welfare aid and from being a burden on tha community. “It is enstomary to the world of today,” Mr. Eshkol said at a hmcheoB, “for countries to contract mfllUry alUances fsr ' preservattoa af their tade- vonsaence u sometnmg :nat ^ a • makes a kid teU his mother be- ^UeSS Again . .. fore his sister does. The Easley Progress ® wMShieUt Uooa example wiper.- »/ have jut smashed Surely it would be a godd thing to alter this sttaatloB. Let os take the taMatlve -we. the developiag cenatries-aad cuatract aUlaaces af peace for the same cad. Na place could be more fltttof and salt-able than Jerusalem, the CHy of Peace, at the tenm from which a can should go forth The Danom CommerciairNews ^ saw the accident are watching We think it was e good idea me. They think I am writing when the director of public wel- dotm my name and tare to Muncie, Ind., sent out They are wrong.” orders to 150 unemployed moth- ers on welfare to report to work or be dropped from the community-supported program. Tbe r east I far the order I dae to the bumper crop of tomatoes aroaid “Treaties of peace and fra- that aaeded procasslBg. The welfare mothen worked to the tomato eaaamiet. They were paid 1148 aa hear far a Bve. day week wilh houn from I In OMIana,*0«nSML*Uh? vwen. • Atacemb LipMr jnS Vjwi Htwtmt a Michlgw ej «•««■ rnt* w .rmNK, MbNa*. THE PONTIAC PRKSSj, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27. 1965 A—7 1974 Is Jarget for Huge Plane CLEVELAND, Ohb} (II - A ' four-way race for mayor may be decided along ethnic and radii ical lines in this strongly Democratic city of 875,000. Incumbent Ralph S. Locher, the favorite, has the Democratic party support against two inde-WASHINGTON (UPI) — The'pendent Eiemocrats — one a Ne-| United States will put a super- Dasigning Started on 2,000.M.P.H. Craft Cleveland's 4-Way Race hr Mayor May Be Decided Along Race Lines He is the second Negro to run for mayor. In 1055, Alexander H. Martin, also an independent Democrat, poiled 10,930 votes,! By overriding protests againstjeration Czech with a record ofjcent of City Hall jobs to seniorl Lausche's policy was to Ig- .1_____________-1 w lu. buildincr thrM> sphnnU in m.. riti7i>ns ____ 8p finished sonic airliner Into the skies no later than 1974, Federal Aviation Administrator William F. McKee said yesterday. Washington that the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) has a target date of 1974 for certification of a 2,000-mile-an-hour supersonic trahsport (SST). Certification means that the plane will have finished all tests and prononneed safe for regular passenger flighte. “But,” the new FAA chief added, “I hope we can do better. ♦ e * The competing British-French “Concorde” SST project, a slower and somewhat smaller transport, is expected to be ready for passenger service by 1970 or 1971. ANSWERS CRITICS McKee indirectly answered criticism that the Concorde’s designers already are cutting metal while the U. S. planners still are cutting paper. Referring to President Johnson’s order last Jnly for 18 months of fnrther research on an American SST, McKee said, “This presrat phase means Favor Inviting Soviets to Afro-Asia Summit . , ^ ^ ^ i ALGIERS IB — Algerian of- *"‘*,^*" Independent Re- fjdab said today an overwhelm-publican who fo popular amongVg majority of African-Asian the city s elderly. (countries favors inviting the So- „ , * * * Iviet Union to the African-Asian Carl B. Stokes, 38, first Negro summit conference dub to open ^mocrat ever elected to the Nov. 5. Red China, the country most violently opposed to Soviet par- Anothcr candidacy carrying'of him with these predominantly! racial overtones into the Nov. 2 “. S Democratic ethnic groups. |PAPER SUPPORT electfon is that of Ralph A. Me- - WELL UKED | Two Ohio House of Representatives, McKee toM the Aero Oub of P**" Negro vote, an estimated 128,000 of the city’s 337,803 registered voters. Stokes, a lawyer running with A 1 ” foreign or^minantly white schools.lWP endorsement. A thirtl-gen-death, and his pledge of 5 per friend. the support of Americans for ters’meeting due to open toAor- _l__________________1------^------------------------------------1--------------------L—=---------1---------- Democratic Action, has stressed row. | that his election would not mean -------------— ' a Negro take-over of City Hall.' Sailors deserted 500 ships In He has used his considerable the San Francisco Bay during speaking ability to woo votes in July In 1850 to Join the Cali-white wards. fomia Gold Rush. “It means hardware — three engines from each manufacturer. It means certain sections of the proposed wings and sections of the fuselage.” ♦ ♦ * McKee said he has been visiting manufacturers involved in the SST competition — Boeing and Lockheed for the airframe and General Electric and Ecatt & Whitney for the engines. KEEN BATTLE “The work is under way and going well,” he said. “The iriaoufac^ers are in high blower and the omipetition is Ic'eBi.'”' The FAA boss also predicted America’s SST would be a mogey-maker for airlines op-eratiBgit. “The odds look better every day that it will operate at a seat-mile cost equal to that of the present jets,” McKee said. * ♦ * McKee said the SST program would benefit taxpayers by bringing about economic growth “that otherwise would not oc- He said the project would create about 50,000 nbw jobs and “will be plain good business for. all parties concerned.” I per cent of the total, andschools In mainly jactivitity in nationality groups, cil'z*"®-I fourth in . opprontly brtle™, the S"*" nore opposing candidates, cam- ithan at sites where enrollment would have more integratfon,'P««^y .... . .him nfith fhosA nrAnAminon the'^“‘" T J, , only a and sUy urt'*^®*u ^ T |ln view of the voters while in “ ,‘ially he d have to work for re-! ticipation, has announced it will boycott both the summit and Allister, 36, ah Independent Democrat. He was president of the Cleveland Board of Education when a dispute over a de facto school segregation reached a high pitch in 1984. ♦ Sr ★ McAllister, a tall and handsome lawyer given to ' speech, was accused by civil rights groups of blocking their .attempts to bus Negro clilldren Locher, seeking a third, two-| lyJ-. t.ii. ProoBr newspaper advertise- year term, is endorsed by both' “ P The Republican is Cuyahoga I ments brought Perk $14,000 of Cleveland newspapers — The Attire for Courtroom County Auditor Ralph J. Perk.{campaign funds to help finance election after his close victory. Like Locher, he is popular the busiest campaign among the over County Recorder Mark Mc-| PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)— among the city’s many national-four. I Elroy in the Democratic pri-| Lumberjack shirts, sweaters ity groups. But Perk, 51, also is' His appeal to the elderly is mary. and open collars have their well liked by elderly citizens based on his successful fight for * ★ ★ 'place, but not in Superior Court and by most of the city’s 33,000 reduced city transit fares forj Locher, 50, has adopted a.presided over by Judge Joseph registered Republicans. (persons over 65, his campaign campaign tactic favored by a R. Weisberger. ★ * • ★ I to defer real estate taxek for former Cleveland mayor andl He has warned lawyers that Perk, the only Republican in retired persons and permit pay-Ohio Governor — U. S. Sen.{defendants appearing before county office, is not running with ment from their estate after Frank J. Lausche, his dose, him should wear jackets, shirts land ties. LAST FOUR DAYS Now through Sah, Oct. 25 8x10" PORTRAIT of your child—special price 88‘ Plut S0« handlini *>4 Let our professional photographers capture the youthful glow and bright-eyed faces of your youngsters, NOW! Just 88c for a large beautiful 8x10" portrait. Your choice of several poses! Group photos slightly higher. Nt €ppoinlmfnt necessary 9HOTO HOURS; 10 A.M. »• 7 PM. M»n4«y Hirautli Seturday DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers REI PARKING furnished by the folloumg merchants DOWMm AKK-SHOl 4IN.IeBlMWlt. MWirrioLonn 8Hop 1ION.iealnawlt. mimsHOR UN.Ie|lnewSt. MUAfaUII>8MU«OIIIOF •irtitaMiL 91 N.leglnawlt. PRION. PAULI JIWILIRS aeW.Himnft. PONTUOmUIpJIWIUIYOO. 29N.S«9lnawft. TRIPONrUOPRIII 48W.HurenSt. OLOONANDRUO 00. 72N.SoolnawSt. IHAW*8JIWILIR8 24 N. Saginaw St. WARD'S HOMIOUTFimNO 00. 17*19 KSubiaw St. F»F11 c: ES DOVl/IM CONVERTIBLE SOFA-SLEEPERS SALE . Yoiir choice Handsome sofas by day—foam beds by night SPECIAL! New triple purpose contoured sofa . . . lounger-recliner Sit on it! Sleep on it! Relax by flicking the mechanism and locking it in any tilt position you desire. Filled with solid urethane foam, your choice of decorator cover. Free headrest included! Big value! Danish round-the-corner group Two 6' sofas with walnut finish arms, big comfortable bolsters—oil filled with shape retaining urethane foam. Plus 0 smart and handy walnut finish mar-proof top table. ^ OPIN IVRRY NIGHT TO f Manday itirbugli Saturday OOWNTOWH STOM ONLY 91 N. Sog mow Si. A--4 THE PONTIAC PllKSS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1963 West Berlin Still Tense, Lonely Despite Glitter of Prosperity , BERLIN (AP)—Beneath its^phere of tension," says Dr. glitter of prosperity. West Ber-jB^ohJ Moldenhauer, a chief tin is a city of tension and,Wchiatrist at Karl-Bonhoeffer loneliness. Each day eing enclosed create an atmos- Mental Hospital. ♦ ★ * • Last year there were 881 known suicides, or 40 for every 100,000 inhabitants. It was only 110 less than Denmark, which has more than twice the population. Ellen Balaszeskul, a psychiatric social worker, says "one of the most frequent reasons is loneliness of one kind or another." But she finds no single an- CORRECTION! Pried Listed in Corter Tire Ad Monday, October 25 SHOULD HAVE READ: from each The Pontiac Press swer to why the suicide rate Isiof all'Western forces from Ber-high. ilin. SUICIDE RATE ACUTE THREAT ‘The suicide rate in Berlin! "In the state of acute threat was high even before World to life," Moldenhauer said, Charters Plane to Get Stockholm Apartment STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)-In this crowded capital you have to wait for nine years in the municipal rent-a-flat queue. So' Alfred Friman, 28, and his wife, Ingrid, 26, asked a special airplane charter company to send up one of its small aircraft carrying the message: "Alfred Friman needs a flat—call 38 42 05." It cost 1,000 Swedish crowns—$200. They received a dozen calls from private apartment house owners. War I," she said. More than half of West Berlin’s people are 45 or older, and about a quarter of the are 50-60. The attempted suicides predominantly involve persons in the 20-30 age group. WWW Dr. Moldenhauer said most of the persons sent to the mental hospital after trying suicide are in an alcoholic amF depressed state. The younger ones usually are treated in regular city hospitals. The rate is especially high, he said, around holidays. The rate drops when the city faces a direct threat, such as when Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev demanded in 1958 the withdrawal ‘‘most people react properly.’ The Berlin Telephone Soul-Care Service was set Up nine jyears ago. Telephones i nuumed around the clock to lend a sympathetic ear to troubled people. The service receives IS telephone calls a day and conducts face-to-face inter-' views with five persons. White Porpoise Dies After 3 Days on Show MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-Florida Snowball, the SPECIAL FOR WOMEN from ptrlodlc phrils*] dUtrm wtUi thta (•ntl* honwopdtlilo praparatloa. A«k jour dnicdit for RUMPHRSTS •‘U”. poise to swim in captive water, has died after only three days on exhibition. ,| The six-foot male porpoise; was found dead this week in the tank that its predecessor, Caro-' lina Snowball, used to occupy' before she died last spring. An autop^ indicated Florida Snow-| ball died of natural causes. I Now Many Woar FALSE TEETH With Morn Comfort FASram, a plOMant alkaline (noD-aold) powder, bold* toim teeth I more Snnly.To eat andvtalk In more eomfort. |u«t eprlnkle a little FAS- I TEETH on your platee. No gummy, gooey, party taete or leeUng. Obeeke "plate odor" (denture breath). Get ------------------ 1,0 H'iili iW Bl(i ONII MILLION DOLLAR BIRTHDAY SALE jrilK PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 48. 19C» A—» Sir Winston's | London Home Will Be Sold LONDON (AP) - Sir Winston Churchill’s famous London home, 28 Hyde Park Gate, will be sold at auction here Thursday and the buyer could be an American, said an official of the auctions — Knight, Frank & Ruticy. The house — really two houses, because it includes No. 27 Hyde Park Gate next door — is expected to bring between $224,000 to 280,000. ★ * * The auctioneers have imposed no condition of sale concerning the use of the house or who buys it. but a move is under way to have it declared a historic building. It then could not be moved or substantially altered without official approval. BOUGHT HOUSE Sir Winston died in a ground-floor room in the house on Jan. 24. Sir Winston moved into the house during World War II and bought No. 27 for his staff. The adjoining houses are in i I quiet dead-end street in fash-., „ _ , lionable Kensington, just south N. Y. Thruway Travel Lf Hyde Park. ,, ^.1 I -7 n /- «* T’e house is heated by a sys- Up Nearly 7 Per Cent concealed Electric radia-ALBANY N Y (AP)—The includes a big wine WASHINGTON (AP) - Both 1965, the total was 2,497,000, Vork Thruwav Authoritv® the birth rate and the number of down from 2,687,000 iin the „ u of wines, whisky and Wont Flag 24 Hours I at Minuteman Site { WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate has passed and sent to the White House a bill to permit the U.S. flag to be flown 24 hours each day on the green in Lexington, Mass.' - the site of the first confrontation of the Minutemen with the British in the Revolutionary War. * * ♦ Heretofore,, Congress has authorized nigbttihie display of the flag In only five locations — the Capitol, the White House. Ft. McHenry, Betsy Ross’ home and the Marine Jwo Jima Memorial. Murder Is Charged | to Jackson Convict I JACKSON (UPD-Roger John- ■ son was charged with murder J ''esterday in the fatal stabbling | of a fellow inmate at the South- ■ ern Michigan State Prison here. ■ F^ank Clark. 35. was stabbed g S nday as he pas.sed through a ■ lunch line at the institution. ■ A hearing for Johnson was set ! foi* Nov. 1. I Scientists and geologists have measured snow and ice which' is 16,000 feet thick at Antarctica. JUNK CARS : WANTED I USED AUTO PARTS : FOR SALE 1 FE 2-0200 I %■■■■■■■■■■■! PONTIAC SCRAP C:HILDREN OUTGROWN the wagon? SEUrrr~witsTa LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AiD EASY TO USE JUST PHONE 332-8181. ON AUCTION BLOCK - Sir Winston Churchill’s famous London home, 28 Hyde Park Gate, will be sold at auction tomorrow. The house is really two houses, including No. 27 Hyde Park Gate adjoining, which was purchased to quarter Sir Winston’s staff. Several Americans have expressed interest in the purchase. U.S. Birth Rate Dips in August babies bom in this country con- similar 1964 span, tinned to drop through August,npn iNir the Public Health Service re-,*^^ DECLINE says that by Sept. 30, the number of miles traveled by motor-C-, lists on the superhighway was ported yesterday. decline In the birth rate nearly 7 per cent ahead of the It estimated 335,000 babies in 1957. I2.34 billion miles reco. borr. during August, compared) A spokesman for the National same time last year, with 350,000 a year earlier. Hie Center for Health Statistics ex- Income through the first nine August birth rate was 20.3 per pressed the opinion that birth months of 1965 totaled nearly 1.000 population, compared vrith control pills are having only a $61 million, an increase of more 21.6 in August 1964. (very small effect, if any, in the than 8 per cent over the same Tbc birth rate for the 12.period in 1964. months ended in August was even lower, at 20 per 1,000 population, .compared with 21.3 the preening year. There were an estimated 3,- 864.000 babies bom during the year ended Aug. 31, down from 4.062.000 in the preceding year.j During the first eight months of; 'Conscience' Money ...., . ,,................ ALBANY, N Y. (AP)-The 12.34 billion miles recorded at the State Tax Department says it has received $748 in conscience fund payments in recent weeks. Such payments trickle into the treasury from persons trying to settle, anonymously unpaid tax obligations. was jop-P»w '■r Economy Changes Benefit Elderly' Deadline Is Near kf Apply for Test for Scholarships LANSING (AP) - Michigan high school seniors and graduates have until next Monday to apply for 1966-67 state college s^larships, the State Department of Public Instruction said today. An estimated 5,000 scholarships will be awarded, said Alexander Kloster, acting su-! perintendent of public instruc-' tion. Applicants must register by Nov. 1 to takp the competitive examinations Nov. 20, he said. The examinations will be given at 143 test centers across the state, at a charge of $1.50 each, he said. Application forms can be, obtained at any of the 787 high schools in the state, or freun the Michigan Higher. Education Assistance Authority in Lansing. i WASHINGTON (UPI) - Automation and changes in the economy may be more of a blessing than a curse for older workers, a Harvard economist said yesterday. Prof. Johfl T. Dunlop, chairman of Harvard University’s Economics Department, said older persons probably have only one major disadvantage in applying for new job opportunities — less formal education than younger persons. Dunlop made the statement in a paper present^ at a two-day conference on manpower policy for oMer workers sponsored by the National Council on Aging. Job requirements for physical effort and strength have decreased, Dunlop said. Government figures show that laborers’ jobs fell hvm 14.7 per cent of the male labor force in 1900 to 7.8 per cent in 1960, he noted. ★ ♦ ★ Maintenance, clerical, technical and professional jobs are becoming more significant, he said, adding that older workers are able to perform better and for longer periods in such occupations than in factory jobs. GROWING SECTORS Dunlop described rapidly growing sectors of the economy — state and local government, services, trade arid finance — as probably more favorable for older workers than mining, construction and manufacturing, in which employment is dropping. Finally, Dunlop said, the expected shifts in location of industries to warmer climates in Florida, California, Texas and the sonthwest is a favorable indicator for older job seekers. But, he added, employers’ demands for high school graduates may hamper workers who grew up when a grammar school education was more typical as a job requirement. ★ ★ w Dunlop suggested that private and public employers provide more part-time jobs for older workers. SHORTER PERIODS Two persons may be able to share a single job, he said, if each takes responsibility for half of the working time. In occupations such as teaching, he said, a shorter work year might be arranged. The Harvard faculty member also urged extending jobless benefits for long-service employes. “Far too much of our unemployment compensation dollar goes to the seasonally unemployed and employes with marginal attachments to the lator force, compared to long-service employes who lose their job as a consequence of plant shutdown, long-term decline in business or technological displacement,’’ he said. ♦ ★ ★ “A year of benefits might well be provided, for instance, for those employes with over 15 years of employment.” Have you noticed that the Smooth Canadian gets to the best parties? More guests prefer V.O. than any other brand of imported whisky. It does what no other one can—defines smooth once and for all. Light? Of course. Seagram’s\ ^ Canadian>^) enneui ALWAYS RRST QUALITY^ end-of-month clean-up! Starts Tomorrow at 9:30 A.M! 150 Pair Women’s Nylon Hosiery 30 |C Pr. All first quality full fashioned hose. Discontinued styles and colors. 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A-40 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WtePNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 Word Power fo Success—15 Test Tells Your Command of Grammar (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is I the ISth in a 30-part > series j entitled '“The Word Power tp I Success.” The’series is de- two minutes a day for about eight days you can overcome That is a promise. Test it for signed to help bring improve- yourself by keeping the score meid injpelling, grammar lyoo make at the end of this col--_j , 1 ^ ^ compared with your 'score in the final test. By The Reading Laboratory, Inc. Written for NEA Speciai Sei^'ices I AQUIZ i Reconstruct the sentences be-' low which are grammatically wrong. Compare your answers with those given at the bottom of the column, giving youseif five points for each correct answer. FLORAL TRIBUTE—Princess Grace of Monaco holds a flower presented to her by Jacqueline Palazzi (left) and Alain Prot (right), members of a Monacan folklore group. at the end of a Paris press conference yesterday. The occasion was the-100th anniversary of the founding of Monte Carlo. FDA Tags Pregnancy Drugs I Nomenclature excessive I In rules not expressive Is hardly impressive I And more like oppressive. I The aim of this article is to j ^ ^ give you some Idea of your com- about a Broadway mand of English grammar. Arti- j cles 16 to 23 will cover the most j^egardless, pay the rent common grammatical errors ® f j and show the my elementary 3; common sense beMnd the rules^ „ ' A^cle 24 will be a review of ^^ave a dime, a 1 the grammar ru es, and arti- 5 cle 25 will be a final test •" n^ank our speaker. | grammar. g In other words, for less than no further. 7. College football squads! 20. j^e Insults everyone; he should have less players and even Insults his narther. more quality. J. You can’t make those charges against all conserva- tut* good n • fives. " ^!di.S^^hISl * * * 9. Everyone is entitled their own opinion. 10. He hardly never visits his si, motiMr n— ” — mother now. | tmL . 11. Your remarks are nasty'j^ nJiVuT i*!* riw'tnr o»WtS and infer that I am a liar. !)»»*,•' T«. dt dc 12. He can’t even read his (w « v own handwriting. llt^r rioti ntm oOwn. it. Things < 13. UVs keep this deal strict-W between the five of us. sum tvsn ms vm motiw. f‘14. Take either otf the three (MnxTi t* mm kit mm.i . 5. On bMalf of Iho I. Your romarlu oro books, but leave one for me. I Willy Mays is a most Qriye Awo/ Troubles unique athlete.. | . . ^ . 16. Lay down for a minute and' PARIS (UPI) — Andre Caire, rest 156, was arrested on charges of 17. Do like your mother tells setting fire to 10 automobiles, you. I He told officers, “When I’m de- 18. Some cities have less riots pressed, I set fire to cars. I than others. |have the impression that my 19. ’Things are no different now troubles float off with the than when you were young. Ismoke.” WASHINGTON (UPI) - Man- the drugs have not been proven “should not be used during preg-ufacturers were under orders to- effective against vomiting. Inancy without the advice of a day to warn pregnant women lab^L physician.’’ that three nonprescr^Uon drugs] The new warning label wiU be! But during hearings last m £ pregnant women June by fi»e House Intergov- ade might possibly injure un-^^ become! emmental Relations subcom- mittee, Rep. L. H. Fountain, D-N. €., the chairman, pushed for stronger wording. At one point in the hearings. bom infants. Evidence that the drugs caused deformities in animals was first discovered by the government in 1963. An FDA advisory group, Includfaig Dr. Frances 0. Kelsey, who inspired the thalkiomide warning, recommended that nonprescription sales be halted. A special advisory committee was formed by the FDA in , pregnant. After three vears of studies; ^ , ____ and congressional hearings, the! Jo^ph Sadusk, FDA Food and Drug Administration' ®*CONTINCNTAL DISTIUINS CORA.. PHILA. OUR ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME Values to *25^* mwoHiv All TaxM lael. 3 un$ MLY! Mill HEATED PANTS SALE! SfiOO W per pair We have never had a pants sale like this before. We're adjusting our entire pleated pants inventary-. . . the biggest of its kind in Oakland County, 1,000 pairs! Every color, every size, every kind of fobric you can think of. Belt-loop or self-belt styles . . . slacks and suit trousers alike. You'll find rich worsteds, flannels, twists, Bedford cords in every shading. If you're a pleat man . . . this is your chance to clean up. But BIGI But get down to Osmun's today —RIGHT NOW— while the choosing is best. (Things will not be slack during this pants sale.) USE YOUR OSMUN'S CHARGE or open one in three minutesi a part of Pontiac since 19S1 CUFF ALTERATIONS ONLY (Charged at our cost) OSMUN’S STORES FOR MEN & YOUNG MEN TEL-HURON Shopping Center»Open Every Night 'til 9:00 P.M. FREE PARKING THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 A—11 Detroit'Schools Start Program for Trial Teachers DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit Public Schools Tuesday started a program to attract persons who have had no teaching experience but who would like to become teachers. ' ★ It A gmup of 21 college graduates -r 10 men and 11 women without teaching certificates —started an orientation program Tuesday. ♦ ★ ★ Starting next Monday, the 21 will start teaching in prhnary classrooms. If after three months, they decide they want to continue in the field, they will take education courses in a special program at Wayne State Univenity for a full certificate. Atomic power may be used in the future to blast artificial harbors, dig new interocean canals, and aid in the extraction of mineral and other national re- Less Talk of Red Battle Home Front Seems to Preoccupy Fidel HAVANA W- While he sUll mixture of gypsum and mud, talks of the revolutionary strug- are „nder investigation. ““ ^ cement, Fidel C a cause other countries have large s^ed to be pr^upled irttt irements and we wo3d pr^l^s of housing, roads and^ave to pay for it in dollars,' 'Castro has said. Cuba has to build 1,200,000^ ★ * * dwellings by 1#75, the prime minister has said. I, “y* ■k k w - increase m agricultural produc- , tion will mean nothing if .fruits, A big obstacle Is lack of ce- vegetables and other products more pensive and serious in demeanor than in the past. Physically, Castro appears healthy and putting on weight. Resounding Welcome at Their New Home MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - Mr. and Mrs. John Ellis Lof-I . j „ „ 1^" were moving into their new To'buiW that n?any houses, “r"«(,W farm r(Ss!|‘“'"® Montgomery Castro says, more than two mil- estimated that 500 or was wrecked by lion tons of cement would be gpo pippi.^ roarihnilding equip, an explosion, needed each year, “and we available don’t have it and cMMt jj,g repair and construc- Ition of such roads. DOWN FOR 7HE THIRD TIME A proposal to. emancipate all I eight Northern states in 1825. It slaves at federal expense was was rejected by the Southern approved by the legislatures (rfl States. .produce that much until 1970. jsEEKING ALTERNATIVES Cuban-scientists and lexperts are seeking ways to', build without using so much;construction planned, but Castro concrete. Methods hf building has often complained that more walls and ceilings with other schoolrooms are necessary, materials—such as clay and a| Castro often appears to be No figures have been made public on the amount of school The blast Tuesday night was attributed by firemen to an accumulation of gas in the attic.: The explosion collapsed ceilings, toppled a part of the house’s brick veneer wall, and blew out windows and doors. | The Loftins escaped with minor injuries. | SMITH’S TILE OUTLET Ff 4 4266 736 w Huron s» SNTlJfFIBtUARY1966*^ 40"* Anniversary Pick the headboard of your choice AT NO EXTRA COST when you bny this SEALY sleep set SUPER SPECIAL! KITCHEN or BAR STOOL X ■< c London-Univortal ttaam and dry iron with handy fabric guido to-provont burnt. Evon-ttoaming tolo plat*. Dry-iront boautifullv. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 Ted Hopeful Over Viet Nam But He Says Struggle to Be Long, Enduring Russian Moves Against China May Being Viet Talks SAIGON ^ - Sen. Edward M, Kennedy told a'news conference today that he and three other U.S. lawmakers are ‘ hopeful" about the situation in Viet Nam but "it certainly appears that the struggle will be long and enduring." ' The Massachusetts Democrat Sen. Joseph Tydings, D-Md. Rep. John T u n n e y, D-Calif., and Rep. John Culver, D-Iowa, concluded a five-day visit to’ South Viet Nam and left for Laos. “The Vietnamese people could not have a firmer ally than the United States," Kennedy said. He reported that U. S. troops with whom he spoke expressed concern over the student protests at home against U. S. involvement in South Viet Nam. But he said the soldiers have “extraordinarily high morale." the National Front for Libo-a-tion of south Viet Nam-NFLSV —the' Viet Cong’s political front. It came at a time when an international Communist meeting was in session in Prague, and it is unlikely that it could reflect anything but an official view. The Prague version of the Viet Cong representative’s remarks to a group of students differed to a degree from report carried by Helsinki newspapers. ’The difference was one of shading—perhaps indicating wishful thinking. COOL RELATIONS According to the H e I s i n k i papers, he said “relations between China and the Viet Cong The broadcast concerned a [are not very warm, even now.” statement in Finland last week In this version he repeated by the Moscow representative of |Communist demands that the By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspaiident Moscow may be getting up steam behind a drive to isolate Red China’s warlike policies and create conditions in which Viet Nam peace talks could be held. A clue to thinking in the Moscow bloc — at a time when Kremlin patience with Peking seems near the breaking point —came in a broadcast from Czechoslovakia. It contained one of the most outspoken condemnations of China’s Viet Nam policy from a Communist source and carried a hint of division in the Viet Cong leadership over peace talk demands. Americans withdraw completely from South Viet Nam and end raids on the north as preconditions for talks. Then, when asked if U. S. withdrawal was a fixed precondition, he replied: It does not iftatter 'if ihey are there or not, as long as they accept our final conditions.’ the United States must recognize the NFLSV as a partner in END PRECONDITION This seemed to lift the pre- ’The Prague radio version went this way: “Nguyen Van Dong, NFLSV representative in Moscow, said that gelations betweien the Viet Cong and People’s China now are considerably strained. Tlie Viet Cong, in his words, has no definitive claims under which the United States would have to withdraw its units from South Viet Nam before it would be possible to start peace talks. ’The Viet Cong only insists that in the Prague broadcast, which uled for Nov. 5 and China’s condition of U. S. advance withdrawal and limit the Viet Cong demands to a. seat at a conference table, rather than recognition as South Viet Nam’s only legal representative, as Hanpi and Peking have insisted. The way Prague quotes the NFLSV representative, there is a hint of division in the Viet Cong ranks and probably in Hanoi, which fathered the liberation front. It also adds substance to a growing impression that Peking is becoming more and more isolated in the Communist world. ’This seemed to be reflected said that if “the entire NFLSV leadership” endorsed the statement made in Helsinki, "it will meanlor Chinese policy the last step in the isolation in which it fin^ itself at every step because of its unrealistic warseeking of the past few weeks.” The "past few weeks” could include China’s interference in tile India-Pakistan war ov.fer l^shmir. It could include Vice Premier Chen Yi’s dare to the Kremlin leaders to join ^‘the U.S. imperialists and 1 reactionaries” in an attack on China. It could include the paim ful Chinese setback when Red-backed coup collapsed in Indonesia. It could include the rejection of China’s demand for another postponement of the threat to boycott it because the Soviets will be invited. (XH4FUSION SPREADS Moscow and Washington each have a tiger by the tail in Viet Nam—Moscow because the war has spread confusion in world Conununist ranks and threatens to involve the U.S.S.R.; Washington because the Communist attitude up to now has left open no honorable avenue to peace. But the Viet Cong takes increasingly more punishment all the time, and Communist North Viet Nam obviously is hurting. Chinese attitude that the struggle must be waged till the victorious end, whatever the price.” Referring to these factors, the Prague broadcast said: “The Vietnamese people, meaning the Viet Cong, would not be able to Asian-African conference sched- agree indefinitely with the Probationary Licenwi for New Drivers Eyed LANSING (AP) - Secretly of State James Hare says Michigan should study whether to issue probationary driver licenses to first - time drivers. He pointed Tuesday to a new law in New York which establishes a six-month probationary period for all new drivers. If a probationer is convicted of ohe major or two minor traffic violations, his license is canceled and he cannot reapply for 60 days. Earlier today, the visitors met with a group of South Vietnam-j ese students, and one student' suggested that Vietnamese stu-l dent groups be sent to the! United States to explain the U. S. effort in South Viet Nam.' UNDERSTANDING The young Vietnamese said he thought the demonstrations showed that American students do not understand the war. Tunney welcomed the suggestion. Kennedy expressed confidence in the South Vietnamese government’s efforts to meet the needs of its people. He and his group came to Viet Nam to survey the refugee problem. Yank Tells of Killing 2 in Saigon SAIGON (UPI)-U.S. aid mission official Robert Kimball told today how he killed his boss and | an attractive Vietnamese woman while ‘‘out of my mind” with jealousy last July 23. He said he tried to kill himself, too, but found he had used all his bullets on the victims. Kimball, separated from his wife and son who live in Salt Lake City, Utah, went on trial in Saigon’s Palace of Justice I on murder charges. He is the first American to be t r i e d by a Vietnamese court.! U.S. authorities waived his diplomatic immunity. The victims were Jack Ryan, 44. a onetime FBI man who was chief of the public safety division of the U.S. Operations Mission (USOMi. and Mrs. Nguyen 'Thi Hai. 27. a secretary in the mission who was estranged from her Vietnamese Air Force pilot husband. INFURIATED Kimball. 37, said he was in love with the Vietnamese woman and became infuriated when he found her outside Ryan’s bungalow shortly after taking her home from a date. “It happened instantaneously," be testified. “I do not know bow many shots I fired. I lost control of myself. "After seeing what I had done, I put the pistol to my forehead and pulled the trigger, but the pistol was empty. I was out of my mind . " Kimball was the first witness called by the three black-robed judges, who sat in a semicircle on a raised platform. Kimball could receive from five years to life in prison if convicted. Vietnamese justice min-isir" sources said it was unlikely he would be sentenced to DONT BUY ANY NEW or USED CAR UNTIL YOU SEE ME! WALLY SNEBBON Bfittie Motor Solof IN6 OixM Highway tR f-tni 1965 STOCK REDUCTION We must make room for "66" merchandrse now being purchased in all the major markets by World Wide buyers. NO MONEY DOWN - EASY CREDIT TERMS OPEN NITELY TIL 9 P.M. TWO PIECE FRENCH PROVINCIAL LIVING ROOM 100% Luxurious 82" Franch Provincial sofa with matching chairs beautiful matlisse MMSfi lOOl* frieze covering in a wide selection of InAILIooC colors. 169 This Is Only A Partial Selection Of The Many Styles Available at World Wide TWO HECE EARLY /WERICM LIVIII6 ROOH 100% NYLON Warm colonial living back styled 88" sofa and matching choir in your choice of tweeds ond frieze covers. siwieoiiiiwitraidWiuiEigns 4 PIECE MODERH BEDROOM Walnut finished double dresser, with center guided drawers, double plated mirror. Bookcase head -board and roomy chest. 8-Pc Set AAeple ^ Nsh easily CONPLETE SELECTION OF NfESTIMlNOUSE APPUMCES AT ALL WORLD WIDE STORES! NO NONEY DOWN. NOSY CONVENIENT TERNS AVAILABLE Westinghouse space king 2T.2 square feet of shelf space. King size door storage, handy freezer, and versatile shelving. WORLD WIDE IS MICHIGAN’S LARGEST WESTINGHOUSE DEALER 15 STORES THROUGHOUT MICHIGAH MIRACLE MILE CORNER OF SHOPPING CENTER DIXIE HWY 221 5 TELEGRAPH RD AND TELEGRAPH RD OPEN NITELY 'TIL 9 USE ALL THE CREDIT YOU NEED V, Oc i 27, lyoJ REGULAR $85.00 ALL-WOOL MARTINELLI ^ PANTS SUITS WITH PERMANENT CREASEI What better time to stock up on your winter suit wardrobe. than right now ... at the very beginning of the season? And what better value can you find than our famous Martinelli all-wool, 2-pants suits? (The extra pair doubles the wear!) We’ve just unpacked some great ones: 1- and 2-button models in luxurious all-wool worsteds, sharkskins, hopsacks, etc. The latest shades of classic blue, dark burgundy, black-brown, black-green, in center and side-vent models. Another touch — permanently creased pants that hold their press. See them now! Priced far below their in-season price: ... a full size range up to size 50! a part ol Pontiac sinco 1331 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN 4 VOUN8 MEN FREE PARKING at ALL STORES ■ Downtown Pontiac Op#n Fri. $ Mon. 'tH 9 ■ Tel'Huron Center in Pontiac Optn Every Night 'W 9 ■ Tech Plaza Center in Warren Opert Every Night 'tii 9 :e^ in 7 aJu THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1965 C Junior Editor* Quiz i SPEEDY ANIMALS To Fight Subway Crimo NEW YORK (AP) Tht Transit Autttority says it wants Mayor Robert F. Wagner to increase the transit pdice by 580 QUESTION: What are the fastest animals? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Many studies have been made of the speed of animals by driving alongside them in cars or from planes. It is difficult to get an exact speed figure in this way, so one must allow for possible error. But experts agree that die pronghorn antelope (A) is the fastest native land animal in America, having been clocked at over fiO mOes an hour (compared widi 4045 miles per hoar for the fastest racehorses). (B) is the duck hawk going 175 m.p.h. It is when hawks and falcons dive dowp on their prey that they attain such terrific speed. There is little doubt that the family of swifts are the fastest birds. TTiere is disagreement about their top speeds — some say the claim of great speed is exaggerated, others insist that the Swifts of Europe and Asia have been clocked at 200 m.p.h. which would make them the lastest living creatures. Experts agree that the prise for the world’s, fastest land aninul goes to the cheetah of Africa and Asia (D). It is a cat, hot has the long legs and deep chest of dogs, making speeds ap to 70 m.p.h. They are often trained to hunt. The fastest fishes are (E) the sailfish and (F) the dangerous barracuda, which Sometimes attacks human beings. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Next time you are in a car or bus, watch for some flying birds and see if you can judge their speed. You may be traveling 40 or 50 miles an hour. Are the birds flying faster or slower? Sculpture Presented as Kennedy Memorial I (AP) A bronzejHealth as a memorial to Prest by Eric Cat. «('‘'".S"'wSr‘’'or --- Sweden has been presented to heaves, it symbolize man’s de-the Harvard School of Public I pendence on plant life for food. to 2,800. Danid T. Scannel aayi dm ao-ttiorlty wants to install $15 lion in dectrooic equipment in the subway systdm to cmnbat (S-ime. College Head to Retire BOSTON (AP) - Dr. Harald C. 0« says he president of Boston University on July 1, 19$7, in 1 compliance Calif. with the customary univerdtyi Alcoholik Policy reitrement oge of 65. He be-| ___________ ., caipe president in 1961. Enriler, Afrfcn he hml been pmrtor «rf the First Mdhodlst church in Pasedenn, ptoyeo treated for lare to be granted full qknboiinn by the [Cleave lurry beneflti, making the cipltal tha first dty in the repuUle to rec-ognln aloobol as a diaaaso. The reoognltkie«>Oo«ed a campaign ■ the city health officer. Dr. 1890 FM(ivrf4 MimIa 1965 by the EARtSCOURT CITADEL BAND Toronto, Canada THE BAND OF THE SALVATION ARMY-PONTIAC CITADEL PONTIAC NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 1051 Arlene Saturday, Oct. 30,1965 7:30 P.M. BASS SECTION TICKETS ON SALE at Citadel Corps, 29 W. Lawrence or at door of High School Admission $]50 BIG, MAN-SIZED GENUINE TOP GRAIN LEATHER CHAIRS ... REG. ’249.95 SCIAL. SELUIMG vour chairs designed to give you extra years of deep seated, luxurious comfort Large, luxury lounge chairs quality crafted and covered in soft, supple genuine top grain leather. Here is comfort, style and quality fit for a king, and, at king-sized savings tool Three handsome styles In red, brown or block leather. Take your pick, save, then settle bock and relaxi CONVENIENT CREDIT DECORATOR SERVICES AVAILABLE C. Sfraighf arm, attached pillow bock. Exposed wood legs. Brown leofher. PONTIAC S. SAGINAW• FE3-7901 OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY 'TIL 9 DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY • OR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY. FRIDAY 'TIL 9 r THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN Gave 34,000 Hours in Year Hospital Thanks Its Volunteers Dr. Donald Martin, medical superintendent of Pontiac State Hospital, chats toith volunteers Tuesday during the annual tea honoring them. At the left is Mrs. Robert Hewlett, Orchard Lake, who works in recreational therapy. Mrs. William Burmeister, Cedar Island Lake, (right) is on the geriatrics board and serves ivith the coffee cart. He Won't Marry Her Add the Score and Run By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am 22 and recently met a fine young man of 2S. We hit it off perfectly. I’ve never known a young man who had so many of qualities I mire. He t o 1 < me he “loved” me, and I him I love( him, too. Ihen he he didn’t we should _______________ ABBY as he couldn’t propose marriage. The reason; His parents were very much prejudiced against people of my religious faith, and he would never marry a girl his parents didn’t approve of. ★ ★ ★ He said he realized that a “real” man would probably marry the girl of his choice and disregard his parents’ wishes. But material things were his weakness, and if he were to marry me he’d have to change his standard of living, and give up all hope of eventually falling heir to the family business. Should I continue going with him, hoping he will change his mind? Or hope he can get his parents to change theirs? I love him, Ahby, and can’t give him up just like that. DISQUALIFIED DEAR DISQUALIFIED: If he can’t propose marriage, what does he propose? Run fast, in the other direction, unless you are content just to go with him until he meets a girl of whom his parents will approve. ★ * ★ DEAR ABBY: My husband, who is a professor at one of the local colleges, is very well-liked by his students. Consequently during the school year we receive many wedding invitations, and we usually accept them all. We are on a very tight budget and must watch our expenditures closely. Is it necessary for us to give the couple a wading gift if we attend their wedding? Many of our friends who are also teachers (even the single ones) are wondering about this, too. We know the students invite my husband because they want him, and the gift is unimportant. TIGHT BUDGET DEAR TIGHT: If you want to Christian Club Women to See Holiday Ideas A luncheon and Christmas decoration program will be given for members of the West Side Christian Women’s CTub at 12:30 pjn. next Wednesday in the Birmingham Community House. h if it Mrs. E. C. Smith, artist and musician, will speak. -★ ★ ★ Musical entertainment will be provided by the Chapel Trio, Mrs. Roy Gonzales, Mrs. Gerald Presley and Mrs. Karl Knaps. Mrs. Thomas Tryhall will accompany. if if it The afternoon speaker will be Mrs. Badon Brown and an installation of officers will be held. Mrs. Fred Hartkopf of Birmingham is taking reservations. attend the wedding, go, and take a gift. It isn’t necessary to strain your budget. Browse around in an antique shop, or a book store. You can find some small appropriate item for a dollar or slightly more. ★ ★ ★ A second^iand book, or paperback edition of one of the classics, selected with the couple’s special interest in mind, could be more meaningful than a more pretentious gift. it it it For Abby’s booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding,” send 50 cents to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Women’s Editor Pontiac State Hospital said thank you Tuesday to Its volunteers at the annual tea set up to honor the more than 1000 individuals who give service. Dr. Donald Martin, medical superintendent, said that 116 organizations are participating in a volunteer program that gave 34,000 hours to the hospital in the past year. it it it More and more, he added, volunteers are being included in the treatment team. Their presence in the hospital has a special meaning for the patients; it shows them they are not forgotten by the world outside. MAIN SPEAKER Principal speaker was Dr. Lowell Eklund, dean of the department of continuing education at Oakland University and director of Mott Center. ★ ★ ★ Our way of life would wither without volunteers, Eklund said. Volunteers have always been in the vanguard of every step forward; they have helped to advance civilization. “Always it has been the individual first with his own commitment and dedication. When the needs are revealed, social agencies then assist.” it -k it He echoed Dr. Martin’s statement about the importance of volunteers to the well-being of the patients, then elaborated on it. # Volunteer work is important in three ways. ★ ★ ★ • There’s the actual work itself which contributes a service otherwise impossible. • Internal communication with hospital personnel means that the public has its finger on the pulse of a government sponsored institution. • Volunteers are an external public relations resource. Not only do they help interpret the hospital programtothe oom-munity, but they also bring in more conununity support and help. * k k Volunteer work is “obedience to the unenforceable” and Imposes an obligation on -oneself, it is the right to be responsible. Admitting that service to others is a form of enlightened self-interest. Eklund also stated that it is a challenge for the individual to grow. He concluded with Rostand’s quotation, “The purpose of life is not to be happy. It is,to be useful.” Dr. Lowell Eklund of Oakland University was the principal speaker at the annual volunteer tea. Dr. Wanda Schlicht, a psychiatrist at Pontiac State Hospital presided during the refreshment hour. Dr. Schlkht’s hiLsband is a coworker with Dr. Eklund. Personal News of Interest Mr. and Mrs. Bradley D. Scott, North Genesee Avenue, have returned from Washington, D. C., where Mrs. Scott, state president of the Daughters of Colonial Wars of Michigan, at-tended the National Council Meeting. She also attended the 75th anniversary celebration of the Daughters of the American Revolution. k k k Mr. and Mrs. Allan McLintock of East Kennett Road have returned from visiting relatives in Philadelphia, Pa. Mrs. Philip Long of Santa Barbara, Caiif., formerlv of Pontiac, is in this area visiting many friends. Miss Cox to Wed Mr. and Mrs. Gerald L. Cox of Walbridge Street, Avon Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Anna Pearl to Gregory James Aird, son of James Aird of Dearborn and the late Mrs. Aird. He attends Wayne State University. Late November vows are planned. Pledges Get Pins at Tea Initiation Mrs. John Orosey opened her Kratage Street home recently for the annual pledge tea and pin ceremonies of Beta Chi chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority.' * *, ★ Honored were Mrs. Louis Schaar, Mrs. Forest Fisher and Mrs. Peter Neill. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Robert Bolt and Mrs. Dorsey Underwood. ★ ★ ★ Presiding over the ceremonies were Mrs. James Vincent and her assistant, Mrs. Carl Rose. A history of the organization was given by Mrs. Jean Saf-ford. ★ * ★ Deiegates attending the City Council meeting at Rotunda Inn recently included Mrs. Lacey Schiefler, Mrs. Jerry Strang and Mrs. James Stone. k k k. Mrs. Carl Rose announced that the Christmas dinner will be held at the Kay Falls restaurant on Dec. 6. M/ss Willis Honored at Recent Party Sandra Sue Willis of Ogemaw Road, bride-elect of Gregory E. Leach, was feted at a shower Monday evening. ★ ★ ★ The affair was in the Oakway Drive home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Leach, parents of the prospective bridegroom. Hostesses were Mrs. James Lovelace, Mrs. Lucille ’ITirower and Mrs. William R. Brown. ★ ★ ★ Miss Willis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Willis, Peoria, III, also was honored recently at a shower by friends In Peoria. k k k The couple plans Nov. 20 vows in the First Church of God. Littles on Honeymoon at Laguna Beach, Calif. ! At Laguna Beach, Calif, for a honeymoon are U, S. Naval Airman 2. C. James Wallace Little of Birmingham and his bride, the former Nancy Kay Nelson. k k k * St. Marie’s Lutheran Church, Chula Vista, Calif, was the setting for the candlelight vows be- MRS. J. W. LITTLE fore Rev. Lauren L. Egdahl, followed by a reception. Parents of the couple are the Jack 0. Nelsons of Chula Vista and the Sheldm G. Littles of Birmingham. Re-embroidered Alencon lace accented the bride’s gown and train of white peau de sole worn with lace headpiece and silk il-lusimi veil. Her bouquet was vriilte Fuji chrysanthemums. Mrs. Robert Lavin was honor m a t r o n along with bridesmaids Gail Nelson and Sue Little of Hayward. Calif. Terri Nelson, and Mary Beth Little of Birmingham, were Junkn* attendants. Stephen Tomac, USNAF, was best man and ushirs were (diaries Lamb, Jerald Wolfe and Hugh W. Judd. The bride attended em State ^liege, 1 Southwest- ----Hotmtof MONTH jidntianKi---- END SALE Hand rubbed oil Walnut set includes Sealy 79.50 Mattress and Box Springs, Extra Long Double Dresser, Mirror, Panel Bed. 188<"> Includes Sealy 79.50 Mattress and Box Spring Whit* Provinoial with Trimmed Gold Accents and Formica Tops • Commode.............59.00 • Bochelor Chest..... 59.00 • Vanity..............89.00 • Double Dresser and Mirror.......169.00 e Triple Dresser and Mirror.. .. 149.00 • Chest........ • Hutch....... e Niqht Stand . • Panel Bed . . . Less an Additional 10% , c Ti. . _ Canopy bed with Gold Accents ite ^Itege, San Diego, and her busMnd will enter Michigan State University in January. Hli parents attended the wedding along with the Robert W. I^inners of Santa Barbara, formerly of Bloomfield Hills. Houdeof lldinioimi 1662 S. TELEGRAPH RD. • PONTIAC Daily 9 to 5:30 —Evenings —Mon., Thurs., Fri. 'til 9 Terms Available Near Orchard Lake Rd. Phone 334-4593 WEDNESDAY, OCXOBKH 27, 1965 Vdcram’ Administratian hoa-i Bitdi treated 7S0,m paUentil laat jrear, an increaae of 2S.000 LADIES' SPORTSWEAR GROUP SWEATERS Reg.Sn - S16 Sixes 36 - 40 OPEN SUNDAYS 10:38-2:30 DAILY 9:30-8:30 CM 3-3912 Esther Middlewood (left) of the Michigan Department of Mental Health came from Lansing Tuesday to speak to a meeting of the Water- ford Parent Education Associates at the CAl Building. Mrs. Angus Miller, Whitfield Court is a program adviser for the group. SPECIAL BUDGET $^50 WAVE ^ Callies’ U6 N. Perry 8t. PE 1-0381 Just a Pinch One easy way to rewhiten yellowed clothes: Add a pinch of cream of tartar to the wash Cut Scuff Mark To remove black scyff marks from a tile floor, make a paste of baking soda and water. Rub it into the marks and let it dry. Vacuum, then wet mop. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Dear Eunice: Why, oh why do we still pay a good price for buttons ^t Is a Small Town Best for Retirement? ByMARYFEELEY Management Even if Retirement is some years (rff, you’ve probably done some thinking on the sub-ject. Most of usf are concerned] with two angles! when we try toj do any serious: planning —I where and how. Some people! build their retirement years around a cer-l tain spot on the map, either because they’ve always wanted to go there, <»■ because it’s a familiar and beloved place. Others weigh the advantages of one locale over another strictly from an economic standpoint. I think this letter from a reader in Roseberg, Oregon, raises some interesting questions: WWW Dear Miss Feeley; I do not recall that you have ever said anything to give the impression that living in the country or small town is cheaper for^die retiree — or anyone else — bat many people think it is. After years of experience with both city and small-town living, my first advice wonld be for the older person to choose a city or a town at least large enough to have a little competition At first itenee, It might seem a small community is best for the puitoses of retirement, but I do not think this Is necMsarily true. ’I^, first, the matter of groceries. It Is an unusual small town grochry which does not charge more (they have to), and offbr less variety than a city market. Add to the larger grocery bill the coat of transportation to get to the market >- and rl^t there you have added costs. bi fact, transportation Is the thi^ that fooh you in figuring cost d living. When you must consult a doctor — and most older peiqile have to with in- that you must Hrst telephme with long-distance charges, then buy gasoline to get to the (tffice, which in the case of specialists can be many miles away« and often even spend a night or two in a hotel in order to keep the appointment. Of course, I am talking about a very small town. In the' city a telephone call and a bus ride are all the services you usually need. Telephone fates and most utilities are higher also, to say nothing of the exasperation of poorer services, REA statistics to the contrary. I have never lived so cheaply or so satisfactorily as when I chose a 90,000 population city. Miss Miller, Mr. Lankford Speak Vows Candlelight vows and a re-:’»pHon in the Memorial Bap-»'-* Church marked the recent pv ti i-<;e of Connie M~e Mil- come back completely ruined after a garment has been dry-cleaned? Mrs. J. A. W. Dear Mrs. J. A. W.: Almost withoot exception, decorative buttons should be removed before a garment is dry-cleaned. Many of the expensive battens are imported and are made of varions types of plastic which, are soluble in commercial cleaning fluids. Since these buttons are the focal point of your garment, it jnst doesn’t pay to take a chancy Get in the habit of removing them yourself, it only takes a few minutes to sew them back on again—it’s good insurance! ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Leonard Andrus, Horscheads, N. Y„ is awarded this week’s Tailor ’Trix pressing board for these instructions for Irr !o P'lnold I-ee Lankford, making a “deerskin” jacket from the skins the hunters in your 7|,g j^wis S. Millers. South family have acquired. Francis Street and the Cecil This, she says, is a very rewarding project. However it E. Lankfords. North Sanford takes time and patience. i Street, are parents of the new- • Four skins are required for the average man’s jacket, lyweds who are at Niagara Be sure to make a muslin pattern first and fit it perfectly be- Falls for a honeymoon. fore cutting the skins. Machine stitching cannot be removed w w w from the leather without leaving permanent marks. j For the double ring cere- Tbere is no “grain” direction to leather. However, there j mony performed by Rev. Ger-are certain parts of the skin that are much thicker. Try to' aid Rapelje,' the bride ap-avoid using the thicker part of the skin where you will have pe.ared in a gown and train of to join more than one seam; it is almost impossible to machine candlelight satin appliqued stitch. with rose motifs of Alencon ★ ★ ★ lace. You will find extra yokes and seams on most ready-inade ★ ★ * leather garments. Don’t hesitate to add them to your garment, A rose headpiece secured it wiU conserve leather and also add to the attractiveness. j her illusion veU and her bou- • Do not fold the deerskin when cutting; cut each piece of Quet was of white carnations your pattern separately. Do not use pins. ’Trace pattern with and Sweetheart roses. a soft pencil instead. Deerskin stretches very easily, so you] With Mrs. Lawrence Craw-should use a cotton twill tape on all seams to prevent sagging lord, matron of honor, were out of shape. It also is wise to use interfacing in the fronts I the bridesmaids Mrs. Edward and collar of your jacket. | Van Tassel and Nanp’ Fetter. • Use a longer than normal machine stitch and heavy duty thread. Be prepared to break a few sewing machine needles, because this will happen when you are stitching through the heavier parts of the skin. Use paper clips or hair clips to hold the seams together for stitching. Experiment with the stitching on a few scraps before stitching the garment. , • You may press the seairts open by placing brown paper over the esam brfore pressing with a warm iron. It is brat to ' glue the seams lightly to the jacket, using a milky type house-1 hold glue. 'The hem will also be glued in place. • Be sure to clip or trim excess leather close to the. stitch-] ing line on any area that is to be top-stitched. It will relieve' the thickness of the seams. it it it Are you proud of your buttonholes? If not, send for Eunice, Farmer’s free leaflet, "Bound Buttonholes.” Send a large, self-addressed, stamped envelope with your request to Eunice Farmer, in care of. The Pontiac Press. THa hair dresser is Just aronml tha corner, the Hbrai^ easily accessible, and to me all these things make up for the few extra dollars in rent or taxes. After aU, when we retire most of us want to do some of the things that were not possible during the years of work in ^aces perhaps not of our choos- There can be two sides to this question, of course. But It How Guest May Assist at Party By The Emily Post Institute WhUe most of the obligations lie with the hostess at a party, there are many things that a guest can do to make the eve-ing a success. When invited to dinner, you should arrive within 15 minutes of the time for which you were invited. More delay than that indicates that you have not made much effort, and it may* ruin the hostess’s carefully planned' is amazing that so many people take to granted that costs«^ the country are lower than in the dty. I beUeve many people would like to give tills whole subject of where to live stune serious thought. R. B. W., Roseberg, Oregon J}{eumode I •♦SMART GIRL” SEAMLESS Aw «1iMr ayloiM Ned* h*tt sad d«u4o* When dinner is announced, don’t ignore the invitation, sitting back and sipping slowly at your full cocktail glass. I On the other hand, don’t jump up and fly out as if you had been kept waiting to the point of starvation. Watch your hostess and if she seems to be edging toward the door, take one more sip and rise, encouraging your companions to go with you — "Shall we go in to dinner? I think Lucy would like us to.” r;, * She may say, "Dinner is ready, / but don’t hurry. It will stay hot r Anna-Marie' Him tmm Personality Shaping and Styling All Perm*»e«U C«*r»nl*-rd Complete Beauir Sen ire 3860 Elisabeth Lk. Rd. 332.5052 J for a few minutes.” Unless she says. Rutledges Edward Lankford assisted his brother as best man. Ushers were Costa Gianakos and Bernie Tate. “Please bring your drink with you,” don’t. She may be serving wine jor a meal that she does not feel s complemented by a cocktail.] When you are told which is your place, wait until the host-I ess starts to seat herself before you sit down, unless she says, “Please sit down. I must bring in another dish.” Men, as at any meal, should help the women on their right to be seated. When your hostess rises to clear the table, don’t jump up to help unless she has asked you to beforehand. You’ll probably Tour North However, it can only be a help if you wish to offer to pass the After Vows XX^dii" I And most important: remem-The newlywed James C. Rut- jber to talk to the guests on ledges (Tennie Marie Hutchi- «*€'• ^ son) left to a northern honey- enthusiasm into a p^eral moon after their recent vows conversation if the table is] and reception in the Bethany ]«'™«ti-Baptist (hiurch. ’Their parents are the Jack Hutchinsons of Mark Street and Mr. and Mrs. Crazier I. Rutledge of Beverly Island Drive. fr-TT" h.,^RICIS10N WATCH REPAIR ..iFWed • WATCH BANOS *148U|i NUtNirS Wateh Repair 42N. Sntiiwiw U 8.^93 . fd AAuihi, Milnay*r - Swing Into Fall With a New PERMANENT and HAIR STYLE Tinting—Bleaching Catting IMPERIAI-SS? 158 Auburn Ave. Part Free FE 4-Z878 Edfth SlcBien. owa*r CUSTOM MADE SLIP COVERS Av*rao* Choir $31.95 Av*f09* Solo $52.95 ,.C*m*l***i IncIvSlns Eabfic, Ziaowi and Lahar FABRIC FAIR Bobette „ Shop _ . ^ Carry sizes to fit the Mature Half Size figure. •Uniforms Sice* 12Vk to 24L^ • Sweaters Sixes 42 to 48 • Slips Si/.e*.42 to 52 PAULI’S Family Shoe Store 35 N. Saginaw FE 2-3051 • Dresses Site* 12tk to 24Vb • Blouses SisM 42 to 48 • Hose Outtise np to 12 • Bras Sixei up to 52 - E eup • Girdles and (^orselettes hizr* up to 54 A Graduate Contetiere to Fit You 16 N. SAGiSAW, DOWNTOWN LFBEE PARKING FE 2-6921 CHAICE ACCOUNTS MRS. D. L. LANKFORD ] O OMEGA Q Candlelight silk organza over satin fashioned the bride’s bouffant gown and cathedral train worm with sequin tiara and veil of white tulle. CASCADE BOUQUET During the ceremony performed by Dr. Emil Kontz, the bride held cascading white roses, carnations and ivy encircling a white orchid. With Charlene K. Woody, maid of honor, were Mrs. Jack Hutchison, Mrs. Kirby Hutchison, and Mrs. Joseph Hutchison as bridesmaids. Mark T. Rutledge was best man and the bride’s brothers Jack, Kirby and Joseph Hutchison ushered. The couple will reside on Murphy Street. Photographers KENDALE wian.< Tut8., WM„ Tnuft. . 45 W. Huron St. Phone for Appointment, FE 5-3260, FE 5-0322 THIS OFFER ENDS IN 15 DAYS winds itself as you wear it «i the H xatoawtic tlut mlUioM el Die* rely oa for eeenrtU timekeeping. Powered bf grevity, it never neede winding while yen wev k. 1497 queliiy.«entr*l inepeetiene ineure meximiiin dependebility. A$k lor free Omega StyU Brtduir* Redmond’ Jewelry — 81 N. Saginaw Free ParfciHiiRMrd Stan TWO DAILY PiUVIRIIS TO DiTROIT i INTIRMIOIATi POINTS THE PONTIAC PRRSS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 B—8 Child Study Hostess Is Mrs. Taylor Members of Child S.tudy Group m gathered in the Ottawa Drive home of Mrs. William H.' Taylor Jr. Tuesday to hear Mrs. Ferdinand Gaens-hauer.speak on “Music in the Home.” ♦ ♦ ★ To help demonstrate her topic, Mrs. Gaensbauer brought with her an autoharp, ukelele and a guitar. , ★ ★ ★ She stressed the use bf good records In helping children enjoy music and develop riiythm. ★ ★ w Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Rob^ Cl Irwin, Mrs. Richard Corl and Mrs. Leslie Miller. Program chairman was Mrs. Donald Rath. * * * Guests included Mrs. Richard Zinomerman, Mrs. Verne Riemenschneider and , Mrs. Ivan Bauman. ★ ★ ★ A tea for past presidents will be held on Nov. 23 in the Orchard Lake home of Mrs. John E. Hubbard. An autoharp toas of particular interest po Mrs. Robert Irvnn of West Iroquois Road, left, and Mrs. William H. Taylor Jr. of Ottawa Drive at the Tuesday meeting of the Child Study Group III. Mrs. Taylor was hostess when “Music in the Home” was discussed. Area Poet Is Published A collection of poems by Naomi Long Madgett, 1965 Mott Fellow in English at Oakland University, was published this month. ★ ★ ★ Entitled “Star by Star,” the collection gathers together in book form a number of poems previously published in numerous books, magazines and periodicals. ♦ ★ ★ Mrs. Madgett is on leave from the English department of Detroit’s Northwestern High School for the 1965-66 academic year to work at Oakland University. * it it She was awarded the first Mott Fellowship in English at OU for the development of an American literature textbook which will challenge the interest and imagination of eleventh-grade inner-city students of average ability. Polly's Pointers Save With Sheets DEAR POLLY - After purchasing a king-size bed, I could only afford one set of sheets and pillowcases to fit it. In order to have a change, I slit a fitted double sheet down the center, measured the extra materiai needed by slipping these two halves over each side of the' bed. Then 1 cut a flat sheet to size for the center. It was^ stitched in and made a good Gt-‘ ting bottom sheet. I enlarged a sheet by slitting one down the middle and sewing these two pieces at either side of a whole sheet. The blankets were done the same way. Pillowcases can be made from any material, printed or plain. -LINDA DEAR POLLY - When stor-tag glasses, save space by placing six passes in two rows (three one way nnd three the taher), lay a piece ef heaivy cardboard on t^ and store six more glasses on top of the cardboard.-4[ATIE ★ ★ w DEAR POLLY - After our trash cans were emptied it was always such a bother to find the right lids for the right cans. As |S cure, I coded each lid with its correct can by painting a “1” on each, “2” on tlw next pair and so on. Readers who live in apartments, where th?re are many cans, might have to wvk out a different code such as one big dot on one set and two big dots on another. This really cuts down on the rattle and clatter as well as the annoyance of having to try several lids on several cans. -MRS. W. R. C. STAPP S. .. trained shoe folks .. . that's whoooooo . . . For special days or every Stride Rite and our expert staff know what looks best, fits best, and makes shopping-for-shoes fun. In children's sizes thru 3. All styles available at all 3 storesi ^trideRtte SHOE THE SHOE THAT UNDERSTANDS CHILDREN SPECIAL NOTE STAPP’S ROCHESTER MICHIGAN STORE ... 418 N. MAIN STREET... Open FrI. to 9 JUNIOR SHOES 928 W, Huron St. at Telegraph (Open fri, to 9) (Sat. to 8:30) JUVENILE Brn Ereniniit FONT I AC MALL j William Crisp Jr. ★ * I Cohostess was Mrs. Marion Shepard. I i Following a business session,! the program “Developing Moral! .Values Tnrough Discipline’’ was conducted by Mrs. Amos Vaught and Mrs. Russell Jacobsen. MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Open Evenings THE PONTIAC MALL Try Tope Trick Cellophane tape (used sticky side down) often removes crayon marks from carpeting. Toy Company Asks Women About Ideas Women are the best source for ideas for toys and games, an executive of a large toy and game company said today. Myron Menchel. executive vice president of Amsco Industries, Hatboro, Pa., declared that most women, with the experience of raising children, know what kind of plaything a youngster likes. WELCOME POUC Y This is why the company has swung its doors wide open in a welcome to amateur inventors who believe they have conceived a worthy play item. ’The welcome policy has been in effect for several years, but now the doors at 200 Fifth Avenue are open even wider because products from nonprofessional inventors have turned out to be sales bonan- “While men generally appear at our offices with a new idea, it is usually wives who inspired the creation,’’ M r. Menchel stated. ENCOURAGE WOMEN The executive believes there are countless women around the country with ideas for sal-abie toys and games, and they should be encouraged to step forward with their suggestions. ★ ★ * “No one really knows what will come over the threshold.” Mr. Menchel said. It could be a sensational new toy or game, or it could be a dud — but we want to look at everything.” In dealing with non-professionals, the firm quickly establishes confidence in the amateur, reciting its past transactions. k * * “Apparently our reputation for integrity has circulated among non-professional,” Mr. Menchel stated. “We have fre-. quent visitors, offering us their inventions.” Specializing in the Finest Steaks WORLD'S TASTIEST PRIME ROUNDS • Broostad Cliickan • Lobitar Tails • Chor-Broitad Staaki * frash Florida " Snappar and Pickaral a Fatnoui for Excallanco in Saa Foods • Try Our Fornous Round-Up Styla Baaf DINNERS START AT $2.50 .\o l.itiuor — Juel Good Food Colt 796-2245 for Taka Ouf Ordars Coll for Rasarvotions N Drydan Road, Oryden, MichigaR Open Daily II A.M. to I P.M. SAVINGS ARE WORTHWHILE! 3-DAY MONTH-END SALE! Here Are lust A Few of the Generous Reductions! 365.00 Complale sofa in handsome Gold and bittersweet cover, steel lOO^® pagoda legs.................................................... I X Z 164.00 Open bookcase and hutch — nor perfectly 70^® matched......................................................... # Z 214.50 Wall cabinet will hold record player and speakers........................................................ WZ 469.00 Traditional sofa, wing efiair and (club chair by Globe) — for all OOO^® three pieces.................................................... A Z Z 377.00 Quilted sofa in handsome char* cool ond strawberry.............. A Z Z 319.50 2-piece sectional In handsome ^QQSO green fobric..... ............ z Imported Dux reclining chair with adjustable mechonism and adjustable 770^^ footrest — list price 538.00 — sole price O / z 169.50 Bor cabinet with swing top, plastic lined complete with glasses, T QQ50 movingo woods...................... lOT RLJF=lIM ITUFRE S.$AGINAW ST.ATO(CHAND LAKE AVE. 10% DOWN DELIVERS ANY PURCHASE fes-sit* pontiac 282.50 3-piece dresser vanity ond . butternut headboord — complete . . . Contemporary 4-piece grouping, foam filled sofa, low back and high back chair with footstool, regularly 319.00 159.50 Lay-Z-Boy recliner rocker, colonial wing frame, a floor sample... 465.95 West Michigan bedroom. A stunning design in contemporory Walnut. A pne-only saving opportunity on sole at .......................... OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS! 14900 24950 9950 29900 Laka Fresh. Tender Plain - i« Richardson's or White Lake Fresh, Tender Plain DONUTS doz. 4Sc Top 'em with Richardson!s Own "Pumpkin Pie" ICfi CREAM 4Sc Blighty Juicy JONATHON RICHARDSON’S FARM DAIRY STORES APPLES 6 lbs. SSc ^ Cherry Apple Drink 33c Firm juicy apples and Luscious rip* cherries combine to bring you a thirst-quenching drink that's great Cold or Hot! Diehl's Famous The Tongy traditional Foil treat is at its best in Diehl's Apple Cider. Serve it often —it's so good to your taste .. and good tor your tummy too! Prices effective thru Oct. 31st, 1965 OPEN Daily & Sun. 8a.m.-10p.m. How long since you've dined at Richardson's Restaurant? Do it Tonight! 7drin !Dairy Stores 4342 DIXIE HIGHWAY DRAYTON PLAINS 1350HIQNUND RD. M43 PLAZA •H- 3414 W. HURON •tEliubathLakeRd. 5131M-1S CURKSTON 24M ORCHARD U.RI. lYLVANURK THE PONTIAC S. VVEDNESDA V, OC rOBER 27/ B—5 Boston Man Guilty in Gang Slaying BOSTON — George P. Me- He was accused of killing Laughlin, 37. was under sen- Ham J. Sheridan. 20. j»f fence U^ay to die in the el^ric ^ christening' part/1 h el chair after he was convic^ of of March 15.1964, / I murder in what police called the ^ / first of M gangland slayings in the last 19 months. 4^ effect of ^ettiii^ rival canffs' A Suffolk Superior Court jury Jne'^ ound the short, plump Me- ^ T ^ , ~ month has>ken place in Great-' FBI’s 10 most wanted men - ^ guUty of shooting a bank clerk who never had a police record SHOT 7 TIMES and who police say may have Ju^t last Wednesday, Mc-been mistaken for someone else. I^ghlin’s brother, Edward J.' McLaughlin paled percep-/"“"‘^hy) McLaughlin, was shot tibly and took the hand of d seven times and died as he girlfriend last night as >e boarded a bus. jury foreman read the velfdict | Punchy had lost part of his of guilty in the first/egree. jaw and a hand in two other His sentence was sta]4d pend- shooting attempts on his life ing appeal. / I earlier this year. Another brother, Bernard, 41,! Iwa.4 killed in a water-front am-Ibush in 1961. I * 4, * i I About 50 pdlice officers were stationed in and about the court-Ihouse last night as officials' feared a last-minute gangland [attempt might be made on George's life. ONE CONVICTION The state has obtained only one conviction in the other 23 killings. Robert E. Cook, 35, Boston, was sentenced to life imprisonment in the slaying last November of William Treannie, 23, Boston, whose body, hacked in several pieces, was found in a suitcase in a parking lot. Deputy Police Commission- er Herbert F. Mulloney said I he had traced the trouble to “rivalry between gangs from Boston and Somerville, loan | sharks and lailgaters who^rob ' from open trucks." One victim was Joseph R.| Francione, 35, of Revere, who at the time he was shot last Jan. 26, was under surveillance in the Plymouth, Mass., mail truck robbery. Some 31 5 million was taken in the robbery in August 1962. McLaughlin swore during his trial that he was innocent. “The shot that killed Sheridan was meant for me," he said. STRONG CASE Asst. Dist. Atty. John A. Pino told the jury the government had a strong case because a “young mgn named Herbert Josselyn had the courage to come in here and point the accusing finger at George McLaughlin." I Josselyn, 22, an ex-Marine, testified that be witnessed the shooting in a doorway of a boosing project where the christening party was held. The jury also convicted three friends of McLaughlin of being accessories after the fact in harboring McLaughlin. ★ * ★ Sentences against James S. O’Toole, 34. Maureen Della-mano, .33, and Frances Bithony, 21, all of Dorchester, were deferred until Monday. SHIP BLAZE — Firemen fight a blaze in the 496-foot Marine Devil after three massive explosions ripped the forward portion of the vessel at a Mobile. Ala., ship repair yard yesterday. Fifteen persons were injured, three critically. Coastal Rocks Key to Puzzle' Stevenson Birthplace Site of U. N. Tribute marked with a comi/morative plaque in observance of United Nations Week. / The Stevenspn family was LOS ANGELES (AP) — The represented ^ the ceremonies I birthplace of the late Adlai E.. Tuesday by/4he late ambassa-Stevenson, U.S. ambassador to dor’s sister, Elizabeth Steven-jthe United Nations, has been'son Ive/ By Science Service |— - - .........— WASHINGTON - The dates ^ of ancient rocks along the coasts. / / of South America and eastern ' Africa may solve the mystery Li.. 1 VALUES Best PRICES percontinent that then split up and drifted apart. If the ages of the rocks match, the theory of a former large, continent will be strengthen^. Dr. John Refolds of the University of California said. If the ages do not match, the snpercontinent theory will probably have to be discarded. Scientists have long argued over the possibility that a lafge land mass near the mi^le of what is now the Atlantic Ocean later broke and drifted apart to form today’s continents of North America, South America, Africa and Europe. * ♦ w Supporters of the continental drift theory, who call the supercontinent Gondwanaland, are now using latest scientific ad-; vances to match belts of rocks in the continents. , RESEARCH GRANT A grant for this research has been made by the National Science Foundation to the Univer-| sity of California and its partner, a new institution called the Geochronology Laboratory of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil. h h * Handprintad Pur* Scientists supporting the conti-nental drift theory have long Wall Murols based their arguments on similarities in certain continental shapes, particularly those of South America and Africa, which seem to fit together like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Gunninghamk DRUG STORES 7^he4c/i/ption^Speatal^c6t6- Bteomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center-S. Telegraph Tel-Muren Center, IS. Telegraph - Pontiac Mall Shopping Center, N. Telegraph Birmingham, Maple at Woodward-Rochester, 1451 N. Main WIN! {5OJ100 || mfMous PRIZES jnh^ extra special weekly KlmS grand prize CONTEST! All Channal Wattingheut* Pertobl* T*1*vitien S*! given away fr*a *ach and avary w*ak. Jut! fill out ih* stub on your Jumbo Jock Lucky Numbor Coupon ond d*pe»it in any Cunninghoin'i Drug Star*. *Cont*tt undar luporvUien of E.F. Me Donald Co. lUT rORTMM-, ► NooemMMi* THIRD WEEK’S EXTRA-SKCIAI GRAND PRIZE WINNERI MRS. E. CANTERBURY nsa DONALDSON DEANBORN, MICHIGAN SAVE JUMBO JACK C0UP0NS...Y0U CAN BE A WINNER ANYTIME! URGE ASSORTMOn ILLOWE ’ EN COSTUMES SMALL - MEDIUM - LARGE Nearly all of the approximately six million square miles of Antarctica, the world’s fifth largest continent, is covered with ice and snow. PATLALLY HOUSE OF COLOR 3139 WEST HURON FE 8-0427 DISTRIBUTOR OF O'BRIEN PAINTS B€^IFUL, BEAUTIFUL TOPCOATS IN A WIDE VARIETY OF sfVLES AND FABRICS IMPECCABLY HAND-TAILORED. YOU'LL APPRECIATE THE WONDERFUL FIT AND COMFORT OF THESE COATS. PRICES FROM 69^° Harmon ii CLOTHIERS - TAILORS - UNIFORMS TUXEDO RENTALS 908 W. HURON AT TELEGRAPH. PONTIAC CHAINLINK 14" X 24" COCOA DOORMAT STURDY, LONG LASTING OUR ^ m A LOW 1 AQ PRICE * iSTEP STOOL STRONG, WILL NOT TIP .OUR ^ Kow I QQ PRICE BLANKET ASSORTED PATTERNS OUR LOW PRICE i 2.98 VOS HAIR SPRAY " 1.671 TONI HOME PERMANENT 1.171 DRISTAN INHALOR 69t| MICRIN ORAL ANTISEPTIC 1. 66<| BANKERS CHOICE CIGARS Z 233^ Bubble Gum flavor mate 69* Slm lin Caramels- 49* POP-EYE POPS ■“ 59* OH HENRY KISSES 29* Qinch DIIIIDKIII^th 0 PLASTIC rUmrillnHAHDLE 39*, PORTAIU IRONING TABLE' AND TRAVEL IRON Ineludat Mod & eavar, folding lagt, vanlilalad toy. iron with corU. OUR LOW PRICE SALE DAYS THRU SUNDAY puTTHnnun iWCAuTWJOL. CANDY &CJISTUMES4 FROM. Gunninjgliam’siT"o"«"r: B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27. 1965, No Action Taken on Recommendation No actioii wtt taken laat Riiht on a precedent • setting staff recommendation to govern the installation of certain utilities for multiple housing projects in the city, City Commissioners merely received a recommendation from City Manager Joseph A. Warren referred it for study at the commission's next formal meeting. Hm question of who pays confrented City Hall afto* Developer Charles L. Langg pro- sanitary sewers for his projected housing project across city officials on the question ofithn costs would be spread over the utilities at-large under terms of According to Warren’s recom- mendation, Langs, and no doubt! the case of Langi, the future developers, would pro-1 «torm drain ouflet wouW ^ _________- vide for the water lines and th« proposed Hainlto drate, from St. Joseph Mercy HospI- sanitary sewers, and also pay-1 aaat'the housing tal. ing the normal connection project property. Langs, who plans 238 town- | Wamn said that Ungs had house apartment units on a va- CITY PROVIDES agreed to the proposed policy, cant 80-acre tract off of Wood- MeanUme, the city wUl pro-lApproval by the commissron ward, has been negotiating with vide the storm sewers. Construe-;®™**® "**®** f** I**™™ <**■ jvelopers would follow the same . , . ^ ^ ipolicy. The matter will be con- * * * WWW sidered at the next meeting. City Considers Appeal AnIipoverlYOfiice Space Questionable I In other business last night, 'the commission received a report on the fire-damaged house The total water pumped for jthe quarter ending Sept. 30 wil one billion, 396 million gallons, up 11 per cent from the sanac period last yehr. a ★ a If pumping continues as ex- Area Doctors Join Council Scout Units to Aid Drive for Goodwill To H.lp Plan Attack on Three Diseases in the Pontiac area will conduct a “Good Turn” operation . for Goodwill Industries on the Three Oakland County phy- weekends. jpected, the dty should pump ddans, including Health D^art-, ^ vohfoteered ment Dlr^r Dr. Bernard D. household dlacaids to Berman, have ^ named to a ^ handicapped men governor’s advisorv council map an all-out attack on heart, *“ disease, cancer and stroke. This Saturday, emp^ tap i, i, * I will be distrlbnted to aeiglibor- Gov. George Ronuiey said the hood homes from II a.m. until 31-member council will recom- noon. , , ____ ______methods for Implementa-I QUjens are asked stably to A bid of $25,000 was received: commission approved a revised uon and utUlxatlon of recently jjj, y,e bags with repairable for the 0 V e r p a 8 s, the second lease for the restaurant at Pon- enacted federal legislation which pj^thing old shoes, toys, etc., owned by the city back of Pon-lsuch walkway proposed for the Municipal Airport, the'provides fw prevention, diagno- ^ porches tiac General Hospital. idty. Bids have now been re-, g . gg j, g^th t h e Waterfo(d sis and treatment of the three following Saturday morning. ^ iwell over five billion gallons this ^year, up 14 per cent over 1164 tion of a pedestrian overpass jand passing the five-bOlkm-gal-over East Wide Track south Ion mark fw the flrst time in of Whittemore was re- [the city’s history, ceived and referred to the city OTHER BUSINESS engineer for study. | In still other business, the, ' TEAR DOWN i ceived for the construcUon of Township School District. Caty Commissioners were ^ The original lease, approved City Commissioners support the war on pov-1 City administrators told antipoverty officials formed that the hospital’s board Previously, the Guardian firm ^ was to be revised erty, but it still remains questionable whether | that the library building was not available. iof trustees have voted to tearH*e lowest of two biMers gfter the school district’s attar-the city has office space to contribute to the ariip* down the house hit bv the fire tta overpass for Wrat Huron ,.evliwed It. antipoverty effort. nut AVAILABL,IS _ . »1 Wph»lpp .^tehnol That eon- The request for office space was appealed directly to the commission last night by James M. McNeely. executive director of the Oakland County Office of Economic Oppoitndty, and Carl F. Ingraham, chairman of the OEO commission. A meeting was scheduled for 4:11 p.m. Friday to fi^er investigate possibilities for local office space. and also an adiacent house Webster School. That con-Commissioners repeated the “not avaUable” jj -g pjj _ tract was awarded for $17,400. j A contract for $3,433 was answer and supported the jcontentlon with a , * , u, HIGH LOADS awarded last night to Stanley Wta from 0,.^ pmki»t th. PortUc , l« .Kh. ............ Flgor^y « Pont l.c for com Creative Art Center. The commission promised the for the iwojected art center. Commissioner T. Warren Fowler totric exception to telegrams lent to each of the city r^e-. „ , , . j. c j c sentatives by the presidents of seven local Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. indicated that j^g^jg unjong both the commission and the city staff were ready to cooperate and that the City Commission support^ the initial organiution of the antipoverty j^mittee. Leading off the discussion. City Manager Joseph A. Warren last ni^t detailed st^-level conferences on the office space request. POSSEBUTIES EXPLORED Essentially, Warren said he felt all possibilities had been explored as “fully as pos-1 Nov. 6. The other two local doctors ★ ★ ★ appointed to the council are i Scouts will collect the bags be-Forest D. Dodrill, 22$ Wood- ginning at 10 a.m. on that day berry, Bloomfield Hills, and |and load the discards on Good-Lather R. Leader, 3M Cran- will trucks, brook, Bloomfield Township. | The drive is sponsored by the ............................ “Unless Michigan plans care- CU*>t^V«Uey the saw the commission approve An arch-type overpass is pro- gtruction of a sanitary sewer in fully,” said Romney, “many dif- Boy Scouts ot America._ a contract for construction of posed for the Wide Track loca- g portion of Bloomfield street, iferent agencies may formulate (AOv«rtiMMMi) a reUef storm sewer on por- tion to provide for the transit of The city attorney was directed conflicting plans, set up techni- tions of State, Norton and abnormally high loads, such as „p the necessary con- cal committees, and receive sei> Dl%\#jni\sn i 119 West Huron, from Norton to in house moving. tract. arate funds to carry out identi- ' West Wide Track. , in other business last night, i ★ ★ ★ cal programs.” _____________________ _ The contract was awarded to «>e commission received an 'ITie commission approved «- ♦ * SM Su!S^,£ffl»rSSS‘- Mole ConstrucUon Co. of Detroit “inlnlwl report on the city’s nal payment of $16,565 to A & A The $340 milhon, ^ee-ycar jjud w lor J71.230, .hicb»»me««,. "to 1^?"? .‘>*“”•1!'' Morning COugh At tht Unt tItB d whwnag, AUfleult Tta telem-ams delivered after midniaht MO abm^’-tta en«nS™ Sti’ report detailed local water istreet and-parking lot resurfac- lishment of a system of 30 re--fi ,fu_ S’III!:*. engineers esu g^g^ ^^g^g, The entire contract gional centers throughout the urged the city to provide the old library build- mate, ing for the antipoverty center. i * o ★ UNION LEADERS ' A public hearing on necessity However, union leaders present at last night’s was set for Nov. 9 on sidewalks meeting agreed that the commission could not l°r the southside of Kennett, go back on its promise to the art group. Sarasota to Stanley. ’The side-Ingraham disavowed any connection with for the past ffve years. U.S., including one in Michigan. i ^bmAoo «t’(u sible.” and that the' city did not have 5,000 i the telegrams, but did p^t that the dls-square feet deemed necessary for an anti- patch time for the messages was 5:6$ p.m. COST ESTIMATES poverty community action center. i ^ho claimed the commission had A request for a 300-foot water McNeely said two such centers are pro- i been accused of being biased suggested that mafo on Balboa near East Boul-posed for the county: one in Pontiac and communication with him be carried out during evard to provide water for a the other in Royal Oak Township. Die for- regular business hours or in the early evening, proposed hot dog stand and car mer is to be open by Dec. 1. -k ir it I wash was referred to the water In a letter to the ewnmission, Ingraham McNeely said office space is needed in Pon- * * *' suggested the use of (the city's old library tiac because the city is one of the target areas building at Williams and La^nce. The in the poverty war. The OEO can not rent The lone bid of Guardian building is now vacant. space, according to McNeely. I Engineering Co. for constme- walks are proposed to service the ^cott School near there. SPARTAN nUIO KilTERS f/uimMJiKiiiSBmimm%imai SNOW TIRE PRICESMRSH SAVE UP TO 38Yo PER TIRE Off BIO. tICMAHOt HH ,^When hobgoblin! art hobnobbing in your neighbor* hood, make their eyes light up! Give 'em a candy bar from Kresge's great selection. 40 Miniature Roxes of Candy.... 77< 30 Rolls, Fruit Drops, 1.50 value.. 79« 40 Ct. eIox Bonanza Rolls.......... 79< 80 Candy Money Rolls in poly bag. 89< 50 Roxm; Camfy Cigarettes........69v 10-Oz. Bag Jr. Mars Bars.........39« 40 Ct. Box Jr. Curtiss Bars......77< Peanut Batter Kisses, 1-lb. Bag... 33< 160 Ct. Bubble Gum, in poly tag. 79< 40 Ct. Box Licorice Ggurettes -.. 89< USE OUR FREE LAYAWAY PLAN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC TiL-HURON j CENTfR I ROCHiSTIR PLAZA HOP WITHOUT CASH - "CHhROi IT" AT KRESGE’S PARTAN s SAVE ON MTIONAUY FAMOUS PRESTONE ^ . )®vjk NON-OimOINT ANTIFREEZE 5°^“79t IRANO N|W VCHTAOe eniAATOH itarM. IM Ita (t) B' OAS UNI ANTtPRIlZI lAniRY CHAROiR w THIRMOSTAT WITH OASXIT 113 IM% Hm4. ■ UmM ye (t) ■ . IlKTRie CAR^ DitROtTIR OUN 1^2“ Shop IpwtM 6:10 A.M. lo 10 P.M. Dally ... SoiMsy 12 Noon to 10 P.M. CeiMr ei Dixie Rifkiray k Telegiapli leadk-ni P0N1UC V THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27. 1965 B-7 Young GOP Will Conduct -Birch Inquiry WASHINGTON (AP) - The Washington Young Republicansj are going to conduct an inquiry into the John Birch Society in an attempt to find out if Birch membership is compatible with being a R^bllcan. ★ ♦ ★ Members have agreed in a sometimes stormy session to hold four open hearings to discuss the history and background of the Birch Society; the nature of the affiliation — if one exists — between the society and the Republican party; and whether to take any action regarding Birch members who belong to the Young Republicans. I * ★ ★ I Roland Barnes, president of the District of Columbia group, indicated that spokesmen from the Birch Society, along with opponents, would be invited to testify. “We’ll listen to anybody who wants to come,” he said. Campaign Publicity Telling UF Story Is Vital Endeavor The 700th anniversary of the birth of the Italian poet Dante is being observed this year. He was born Dante Alighieri sometime during May. Campaign publicity, much in electrical department. results out the Pontiac area are ob- Advertising pron>otion in The evidence during the current Pbn- 1“ immediate repair or remov- tained through the combined ef- Pontiac Press is handled by the tiac Area United Fund Urlve,' |f°rts of the display chairman. Press’ advertising department, plays a vital rote in the success I Similarly three 10-by 12-foot Advertisingj A record high of 1,000 inches of of the drive. displays placed in retail stores, valuable sponsored advertising was soli- Behind the scenes efforts that oK'ce buildings' and campaign advertising staff mniTP it possible are accomp-meetings are also conceived, lished by a group of people with constructed and maintained by the backing of innumerable Pontiac Motor, businesses which help finance Weight and size of the UF disand donate facilities. plays require two men to handle For example, the Wt. bright jand transport the sign by truck red torch and feather signs |b> various sites scheduled by hanging from street poles, re- Pontiac Mayor William H. Tay-mind citizens of the drive. 'lor Jr., display chairman. They are cut from masonite, PROGRESS BOARD painted in dayglo paint, and PonUac Motor is also respon-I mounted on brackets to fit vary- sible for the progress board lo-,ing poles in Pontiac, Indepen-cated at Wide Track and Au-dence, and Oxford shopping bum. Campaign progress is decenters. picted by caricatures of chair- Each year the signs are made men in a General Motors and stored in the charts and dis- Truck and Coach Division bus, play department of Pontiac Mo-Fisher Body coach and Pontiac itor Division. The painting pr>'cars riding down the charted cess alone requires* four days to road to victory goals. I complete. | Motorists checking the daily I WIND DAMAGE progress of the campaign may Mrs. Chester J. Arnold, 340 Rivera; Lawrence Huebner, 15, I Wind damage, which previous- not be aware that two extra son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Huebner, 45 Theda; and Ted ly took a heavy toll has been sets of faces stand ready to Johnston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert L. Johnston, 291 corrected by drilling numerous replace those that become Unsing, all of Waterford Township. i.jnch holes in the torch and weather damaged. EAGLE RECIPIENTS - These three Boy Scouts of Waterford Township Troop 57, sponsored by the Stringham Elementary School PTA, were awarded Eagle badges yesterday. They are (from left) Daniel Arnold, 15, son of Mr. and . feathers. The flaming gas torch ignited Says Area Opfomefrisf 'Good Vision Key to Highway Safety' I A frequent check is made on kickoff day in front of City , throughout the campaign to Hail, bums brightly for 21 days . spot broken brackets or or until the goal has been I loosened eye bolts which might reached. It is maintained by cause personal or property ' Consumers Power Co. A call to the city I The 25 UF biilboards through- PmiIIk Prns Ph«t* UF PUBLICITY—Colorful charts, posters and pictures are used annually to tell the story for the Pontiac Area United Fund campaign. Joseph J. Cox, 47 Mohawk, charts and display supervisor at Pontiac Motor Division, holds the “heads” of the division chairmen for the 1965 compaign. last year and Is again under the direction of Arthur Sanford, UF advertising chairman. Advertising is subscribed by local merchants, firms and organizations. The Pontiac Press editorial staff gives wide coverage to the campaign as do local weeklies, industrial publications, and radio station WPON. ★ * ★ Brochures and other materials distributed are given an assist in copy and layout by Mac-Manus, John & Adams. SPONSORSHIPS Meal ‘tponsorships and training for the numerous meetings and campaign functions which constitute a vital pole in the campaign machinery are assist ed by an arrangements commiw tec headed by Solon Phinney. Volunteer speakers help by giving talks and film showings to employe groups on behalf of the drive. William Belaney is chairman of the campaign speakers bureau. Over-all responsibility for planning, coordinating and staffing the publicity promotional efforts for the 1965 campaign is credited to Robert C. Emerick, public relations director, Pontiac Motor Division. Advanced highway and auto-'Dr. Connolly says, mobile technology have de-' Among them he lists the fol-creased the modern driver’s lowing: awareness of hazards and put a » ^ • An oncoming car 140 feet coordination of driving skill in processing visual events. Responsibility for improve- , neat of vehicles from a stand- ’ point of better vision lies with automotive desi^ers and engineers and with visuai con- Phantom Prices Broomstick Down! li premium on vision as a traffic Btomlielit TowiBhip optome- Hr Daifl t rnnnnil., ^ P®" VjsIOn — | BHIUIUIB. Karen, in a paper presented to Visual instruments, vehicle the American Association of Au- “ “ ^ | lighting and signaling. Dr. Con- tomotive Medicine, points to the I • Motion perception is poor- noUy says should provide a Modern superhighway as a “vis- periphery of vision driver with necessary informa- ual desert” in need of “reference side, but can be tion about driving conditions' cues” to guide the speed and greatly improved when thore I with which he must cope. | directkm of motorists. ‘ ‘ ' KRESGE*S 1 i! ■ i t 1 ;■ w Dr. Ceanolly is visual con-sultaat to the styling staff af General Motors Corp. are stationary reference ob- I A third possibility is the mark-jects in the field of view — ing and landscaping of the high-such as trees, buildings and way. | parked cars. I Pavement markings and sta- a Ability to pick out move- {tionary objects near the road He notes that smoother high- ment at either side of the are also backed by Dr. Connolly ways, in^roved suspension sys- forward line of sight is cut in | as effective aids to driving, terns and tightened car design' half when the driver has a de-1 The paper was presented at have taken away a driver’s fecL manding visual task directly jtbe association’s recent annual ing of vibration and centrifugal in front of him, such as a fast-1 meeting at the Mayo Clinic in force and awareness of road andi moving expressway. I Rochester, Minn, traffic noim. j improving the safety factor! 7 .... . . . , from a visual standpoint. Dr. Happiness to Prisoner: Vb^, he concludes .s nian’s conm,iiy suggests, cJn li at-! ^ tained through attention to both Kin on Parole Board oiRtion in directing the speed msi vehicle i of his vehicle, allowing for other J SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (UPI) cars and responding to the high-° VI*” !!!!'** * “J®" Ca'^>’> « San QuenUn in-' way, signs, guide lines and ad- .J"**® “e r^ to kwk ftwmember of the pria-i Jacent objects. J* m^ningfij evrate in a traf-^., r^ewsfaper staff, wrote in In guiding the job of “road ''**‘^ ^ *****"• ihis column recently: transport engineering,” human Good visual acuity, with or “Happiness is discovering vision capabilities have a num- without correction, is a must, they’ve just appointed your ber of significant limitations. Dr. Connolly notes. Also vital is brother to the parole board.” Just a few sites left in Beautiful CLARKSTON GARDENS liKctiaB km hitiic Dizia Thij. (US-IO) to M-I5, turn right 1 mile to Waldon Rd., ri^t 1 mile to models or I>75, dim Clarluton. Left ■t Waldon Rd. off Main St ®*An Urban Conmmnitjr** WALDON ROAD AT ALMOND LANE ACT NOW BEFORE ITS TOO LATE! 1,850 8Q. FT. of Living Area MINIMUM DOWN Payment $890 We Trade Homes — Will Build on Your Property! ButUJ^SMby AraSTOCRAT BUILDING CO. DtuigMd /br LMng Features! ★ Speeions Family Room With Fireplaee* if Largo Kitehen and DinbtxE Area •it 1 and Ml Baths ir 818. Bog..........33< in 160 Ct. Bubble Gum, in poly bog............79^ 40 Ct. Box^icorica Cigarettes..............89^ A New Halloween Party Props! ^ ^ "Witch" Luncheon Napkins, Pkg. of 20........ . 35^ "Witch" 9-oz. Hot Cups, Pkg. of 8;.........35< ^ Halloween Cardboard Cut-Outs.............5M9^ jn Poriy Hats, AAany Ooy Stylos..........10«-29« X Halloween Musical Blowout favors..........10^ ^ I Trick W Tiwt Bogs with Handles ....._je jt W I SHOP WITHOUT CASH -"CHARCEIV AT KRESGE’S THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBEg 27. 1965 Curiosity Marks Iron Curtain Studorits ‘Senl ne aBytkiig to ichance meetings and scheduledischotd for the social life,” he ' • Rassiaa student “mixers.” ‘ said. By MARY KAY FLYNN , V.* MOSCOW (NBA), - Curios- , ^ ^ . ^ ity is a curious Uum in Com- ■fter Carl Brandan of ./ 't, munist countries - esoeciaUy PleasantvIUe, N. Y.,gave him 1 These travelers have returned At a televised enidoor dance amoi% students. I ■ *•* Visitors may arrive with the Knots of youths gather around preconceived notion that the western - manufactured auto-Communist-oriented youth, shel- mobiles Inping more for con- CONVERSATION IN BUDAPEST-Su-zanne Smith (left) and Cindy Salladay of Spokane. Wash., are surrounded by frilly Hungarian teen-agers at an indoor dance in Budapest. Visitors come away from Iron Curtain countries convinced that young people want to know what’s going on in the outside world. Foreign News Commentary New India Has Emerged in Past Year tered and propagandized, must have limited or no interest in a foreign way of life. But visitors often vleave con-vinced that these students, bred in self-containment, have deep desire to know what is “out there.” The epitome of the “outside” is likely to be the United States, a world power which has attained such economic audacity that its women can throw away nylons just because they have runs in them. * ★ ★ Foreign students find tha most counterparts they meet in Communist countries express the wish to study or travel in the West. Theirs primarily is an intellectual curiosity. RAVENOUS APPETITE versation with the occupants than for a close-up look at the upholstery and design of the car. * w w Charles Callender of D e a r-bom, Mich., was impressed with the “complete friendliness” of the people who talked with him for more than tw;o hours in a parking lot when he stopped to attend a celebration in a Russian village. PARTING NOTE A local student gave him a set of picture cards and a parting note: “Thank you for your visiting. It was very charming to talk to you. Come some -other time. Good luck.” Among the youngsters who traveled recently behind the Iron Curtain was a pilot group People-td-People Students to their campuses with a new appreciation of international friendship. VERY IMPRE8SEP Seven students were so impressed by a Russian intern met at a hostel near Loiingrad that they plan to pool their resources within the next few months in order to bring him to the United States to complete his medical Mike Kepler, m of the Mven, commented in agers swarmed aroond a Peo-ple-to-People delegatioB of 15 hi^ school students from Spo- “Yes," the girl from Spokene •The boy Is sorry.” T am, too.” GREAT INTEREST Coeds in Warsaw displayed a great interest in Americans and ___________ jone in particular, Doi^ Lamb of Photos and addresses were ex-'|hat street peddl^ sold Richard changed between dances. It was the first time most of the Hungarians had met Americans and when they could not ask questions through interpreters or limited English they re- “We tried to be good Usten- ers, remmbering always to LANGUAGE BARRIER Suzanne Smith did not find language a barrier. “He danced steps I’ve danced at home,” she , said excitedly. “After several “The students we noet during dances I said I was tired by our camping tour were open-'a^pi„g „„ brow and pointing to minded and rec^tive to enplan- gjy chair.’' Visitors from the United Ambassadors from the United States report that Soviet stu-j States, dents display a ravenous appe-| They wanted to understand By PHIL NEWSOM !to free the economy of govern- five birth control device which, tite for the paperbai!;k bwks and be understood through visits UPI Foreign News Analyst iment controls 1 is expected to reduce the birth they carrv in their luggage, to homes and classrooms, NEW DELHI. India - Be- The war with Pakistan is es-''f^ tween the neo-Indian architec-India ! ture of the new U.S. Embassy . , FERTILIZER PLANTS -V- - about 1150 nullion in foreign , . „ .. , ********1 currency and twice that much' A^culturally, fertiliz^ I more in rupees. It is not. how- Plants are on the increase and I ever, regarded as a fatal set-« land distobuUon program is I back. l®®‘"8 pressed. ations of our society." ★ ★ ★ Convincing the Russian student that the American student feels a conunitment to the lot of society was somewhat difficult, according to John Dobelek of-Detroit. I The students, who found they had many interests in common, including the Beatles and U.S. television shows, re-hictontly parted at the 11 p.m. closing. , Interpreting for a friend, a The Russian seems to think Hungarian youth was overheard that American students have saying, “He asks if you are go-no esthetic goal and only go to ing.” Chamberlain’s photo along with those of national heroes. While a guest in a Palish family’s home, Doug saw two postcard - sixe photos tt the star propped besWo the television set. After a month In Yugoslavia, Diana Drisko of Kansas City, Mo., was so accustomed to questions that he got so she coufd' antfeipate the subject range. ★ ★ ★ Students in particular were eager to communicate. ★ w ♦ At a party following a student performance of folk dances and songs, one of the violinists told Diana: “1 cannot speak much to you in English so I play the violin for you.” Construction of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City began in 1858. The e d 1 fi c e was I completed in 1879. m aging scaffolding. It has _________ that way since, NEWSOM just three years ago this month, Red Chinese troops crashed across India’s Himalayan frontier and destroyed Jawaharlal Nehru’s hopes of peaceful coexistence. The Red Chinese attack revealed the woeful state of In-dian defenses and farced India upon a whole new coarse of action. In the midst of H, Nehru died. Most of the problems which Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri inherited from Nehru remain, but Western observers say that the last six months to a year have been marked by the emergence of a new India. * * w In the minds of Indians, at least, it also proved that India’s army is the equal of Pakistan’s which had been touted as one of the best in Asia. BULK OF FORCES \ India fought the war mth the bulk of its forces still lined up against Red China and was on the offensive when the ceasefire came. The war bolstered ludain unity and from a new burst To achieve economic independence, it is believed that the present annual growth rate of 5 per cent must be increased to to 8 per cent To do this, agriculture must be increased and the population rate decreased. ’This year something like 100,-000 field workers will be circulating through Indian villages educating women in the use of the “loop,” a cheap and effec- Hiose are two items on the credit side of the ledger. On the other side is the stif-.ling hand of the ruling Congress 'party, whose aging leaders d)ow no signs of stepping aside or of developing younger men. j TODAY THRU SATURDAY! Meanwhile there remains the unsettled dispute with Pakistan and the equally unsettled border dispute with the Chinese ministries now are studying possible effect on the national economy should the country elect to go it alone without foreign aid. From a practical standpoint, no one seriously believes that, any such thing will occur. But predictions are being made that within a target date of 10 to 15 years, India might become self-supporting. I * * * Economically, Western observers see India with three main problems — agriculture, population control and the need Vandals Pose Threat to Schoors Retreat BENTON HARBOR (APi -Lake Michigan College administrators are trying to figure out ways to combat vandals who have caused an estimated $5,000 damage this year to the school’s retreat in Van Buren County. , * * * The unused retreat, consisting of a hunting lodge in an 80-acre wooded tract, was donated to the school several years ago. , PERSONALIZE YOUR GIFTS IN GOLD STAMPING • Napkins • Convention Guest Tags • Gift Ribbon Gold Embossed Ntmes on • Bibles • Books • Lesther Goods CHRISTIAN UTERATURE SALES ^ .SSJkifckiid Ayc. FE 4-f5Sl BAG OF SCHRAFFTS GOLDIE CURS HEALTH and BEAUTY 13-OUNa AQUA NET HAIR SPRAY l.2« UN NOXZEMA SHAVE BOMB IM M«t tr Tati DERMA FRESH tf( niiE PRELL COHCEHTRATE . SHAMPOO 20-0L MHU LISTERIHE MOUTHWASH AHTISEPTIC PUSH BUnON LILT HOME PERMAHEHT FREE Ik TEX TOOTNIRUSN WITH EXTRA URGE CREST TOOTHPASTE •16 SAvmesi COHTAC .CAPSULES SHOP SPARTAN fc30 AJN. TO 10 P.M.DA.LY... SUNDAY 12 NOON T010 P.M. Oonwr uf DIxb Highway and Tubgrairii Rud - IN PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAV, OCTOBER 27. lDfi.5 |'65 Appropriations Bring $100-Billion Budget Near of Rotation for Mercury V WASHINGTON (AP) — Theiyear. Much of the money voted!Budget Bureau completes its lion in 1942. the first year ofilag roughly two to four years'ments for fiscal 1965 cleared to be included in a suM>leniental $119.3 blllioh in. appropriations'in 1965 will not be spent this'review of actions of the 1965 World War II. It is $13.2 billion behind appropriations totals. 'earlier in the year. i**'** January, most of it for voted by the 1965 Congress rein-year. [Congress. | more than Congress^ voted last The all-Ume record for spend- * * * , the Viet Nam war. I forces the view of fiscal experU ♦ ★ * | Congressional experts believe * Fiscal 1966 will be just barely By Science Service 'that the day of Uie $10C4)illioh- JtAnson held his the spending estimate for fiscal!BILLION ing, $98.3 billion, was reached in past the halfway mark wh^n WASHINGTON - The olanet “‘**'*”* submitted appropria-1945, the last year of World War Congress reconvenes, and large .the sun’s system. n>tates on iU whether 'the ceiliitg wlll'’be Charles L. Schultze. the budg- $2 4-billion cu^ ,«'e record appropr.at.ons year. ' ThoL Watson Jr ani a grot axis every S8.6 earth days, not pierced in the current spenomg gj director, already has conced- Part of the money voted this FISCAL 1966 the $8 days reported in most or in the one that »tarts!« ‘=“’’""‘,ed the budget for next year. fis-|year will be 1 ............. textbooks. nextJuiyl. The 58.6-day figure has now 'Operation Femail' Set to Boost Troop Morale 'Thomas Watson Jr. and a group , . !)f friends have launched what he *,year, fiscal 1966 In'i T*! ^ *^"1 tti‘s fiMal Qf ijjg j gpj sen. Leverett Saltonstall of oalls ‘Operation Femail” at DDimPu.'f* 6bove $100 bii-year, but a substantial poftt®" ,uj, Massachusetts, senior Republi-'Northern Illinois University. REVIEW OF ACTIONS |lion. [will not go out of the Treasury P P Ibe Senate Appropria-' He said the prograqt is de- i pinned down by both op- appropriations total is no| So far the administration hasi The $119.3 billion in ap-!un“l later years. I*!*’® b'"*on for ttscal i966nig„g committee, has estimated signed to encourage coeds to tlcal and radar observations. 8“^e to what the actual not revised this figure, although propriations voted this year wasj ★ ★ ★ and later years. The remaining that $7 billion to $10 billion in write U.S. servicemen in Viet Agreement between the optically be in a specifidit probably will do so when the'exceeded only by the $147.1 bil-| Experts say spending totals $4.5 billion constituted allot-'extra defense money will have'Nam in support of the war. obsmwed rotation period and the ' recently discovered radar-determined rate is reported in London' in the British scientific journal Nature. Even witiKwt optical or radar observations, however, two scientists in Massachusetts have calculated from mathematical theory that the most likely period of Mercury’s rotation is 58.6 days. Dr. Giuseppe Colombo of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, Mass., and Dr. Irving Shapiro of Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Lincoln Laboratory did the theoretical calculations based on forces and tidal effects in the solid planet. Dr. Colombo noted that the 58.6-day figure reported from a reanalysis of previous optical observations was nearly two-thirds of the 88Hlay period Mercury takes to revolve once around the sun. With Dr. Shapiro, he found that Mercury is the first observed object in the solar system diat is “locked in’’ with respect to its position to the in a manner differing from the way the moon is locked to earth. OPTICAL OBSERVA’nONS | In the past, from optical observations, the planet’s orbital period and the rotational period were thought to be the same, botif 88 earth days long. This would have meant that Mercury’s position with respect to the sun did not vary — broiled on the solar side, frozen on the other. The moon is linked with the earth In this way. However, recent radar observations showed that the true rotational period of the planet b about $9 days, thus shaking the old theory that Mercury constantly bad only one side turned sunward. Although the planet is not in, the same attitude to the sun at all times, it is neverth locked in, in a sense. This is because Mercury’s rotational period never varies — it makes a neat and complete “about face’’ on every orbit. On one close approach as it ssrlngs around the sun every 88 days. Mercury “faces” the sun. On the next solar approach, the planet presents its “back side” to the solar blast. It accomplishes this feat because it rotates about its axis in exactly two-thirds of the time required to orbit the sun once. HencO a year on the planet lasts precisely Mercury days. Painter Falls From Big Mac ST. IGNACE (AP)-A painter^ on the Straits of Mackinac Bridge fell 115 feet into the' straits Tuesday but was saved from serious injury by a fellow workman who slid down a rope and held him until both were rescued. Emery McKelvie of Sault Ste. Marie remained conscious after his fall and was able to grasp a life jacket. A co-worker, Millard Jewel of Indian River, slid down a ropO and grabbed McKelvie. Other painters worked the rope along the span to an adjacent pier where both were transferred to a boat and later hospitalized. McKelvie was reported in satisfactory condition,' and Jewel was examined and released. Inttrnational Fund Availqbl* to Morocco* WASfflNGTON (AP) - A, i stand-by arrangement for the government of Morocco authorizing drawings up to the equlva- I lent of $45 million during the next 18 months has been announced ^ the International I Monetary I'Wl. fl The arrangement will providei f styport for the continuing efforts of Moroccan authorities to^ restora and maintain internal J and external financial stability, \ the fund said. I SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A.M. TO 10 P.M. DAILY... SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 10 P.M. Gomr if Dixit Highway aid Ttitgraph Road - iN PONTIAO FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES ACRES OF FREE PARKING B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 'MSUHxNo Cong Recruits' New York Statements Surprise Unit Head Thousands of Collegians Give Blood to Show Support of U.S. Viet Role EAST LANSING - (AP) Statements that the May 2nd Movement is training people in Michigan to fight on the side of the Viet Cong surprised the leader of the Michigan State University chapter Tuesday. The organization—a student group whose main purpose is to protest U.S. involvement in Viet Nam and to interest others in protesting—has staged one dnnonstration this fall, is making tentative plans for another and has given some undefined thought to donating blood for the North Vietnamese. ★ ★ ★ But Brian Kelleher. local leader, registered ^rprise when asked about the statements, reportedly made in New York. “I’m going to have to call our New York headquarters to find out what this is all about and who said it,’’ he said. GARBLED UP “The only explanation I can think of is that someone said Michigan SUte University is training people to fight in Viet Nam and it somehow got garbled up,” he added. The MSU School of Police Administration helped South Viet Nam reorganize its National Police Force and advised tile Vietnamese from 1955 to 1961, said Arthur Brandstatter, director of the school. ★ * * “And Ngo Dien Diem (former South Viet Nam president, assassinated in a coup) was a graduate assistant at MSU,” said Kelldia*. “Radio Hanoi called MSU S| school for spies last week,” he added. POUnCAL STUDENT Kelleher, of New York City, is a senior in political science at Michigan State. The idea of sending Americans to North Viet Nam to has been raised before, he said—but rejected as impractical. ★ ★ ★ “The only possibility is that of sending doctors and technicians to aid the No-tb—but that idea is still in the stage of dinner table conversation,” Kelleher said. NEW YORK (f> - Thousands of college students are giving blood to the armed forces with Pentagon approval as a gesture of support for U.S. policy in Viet Nam. The junior dass at Washington State University collected 750 pints in three days. Hundreds more were turned away for health reasons. A “bleed-in” is being organized by the Denver Center of Colorado University. ‘We wanted to show that not the movement, who called the| The Defense Department said all college students rush aroundjUnited Stptes ^ “aggressor”|Tuesday it has asked the Amo-i- saying ‘no’ to everything," saidijUj*®* **** ***** Cress to collect the ....... the go-ahead from the Inter-., . j .. . ^ , Red Cross to send the *>*o«* donaUons A d^ense supplies. He did not elaborate .blood Is not needed in Viet Nam, sophomore Bill Van Pelt of Denver, drive organizer. CONG SUPPUES Pentagon approvaf came as it was revealed that the May 2nd Movement prepared to raise funds to send medical'supplies to the Communist Viet Cong. Steve Cherkoss of Berkeley, Calif., a West Chast leader of on “the go-ahead.” where 2,000 volunteer donors have signed up. We’ve had several inquiries already from groups on other campuses who want to provide lu wilfb^'^used fw Students at more than a dozen States. American universities and colleges across the nation are involved in blood drives. The drives came into being after the anti-Viet Nam demonstrations. Iquirements within the United 2,000 He said the first collections will be made early next month at the University of Illinois, berger, 22, of Alton, 111.,^ president of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity at Illinois, sponsors of the drive. The SAE chapter at Millikin University in Decatur, 111., is community-wide drive for blood donations. ★ , ’w * In Berkeley, Otei^koss said that sending medical supplies to the Conomunlst Viet Cong would be a “concrete political act against U.S. imperialism.” NEW MOVEMENTS He said the drive to aid this country’s enemy would begin at Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif. “Depending on the suc- cess of the program at Stanford,” Cherkoss said, movement chapters at San Francisco State College, Sacramento State College and the University of California will start similar fund drives. ★ ★ Sr The movement takes its name from a demonstration on May 2, 19M, which- it clainw was the first against U.S. intervention in Viet Nam. SPARTAN Four Arrested on Charges of Selling Dope NILES (AP) - Four Niles area men were arrested Tuesday by federal narcotics agents and State Police in a crackdown on an alleged interstate marijuana operation. The arrests followed six to eight weeks of surveillance during which undercover agents purchased quanities of marijuana, said Ross Ellis, Detroit district supervisor for the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, w ★ * Seized on charges of selling the contraband were Leroy Smith, 54, of Niles; James Henderson, 42, of Sodus; Charles Dilworth, 44. of Berrien Center, and Charles D. Haliburton, 50. of Eau Claire. All were taken to Vicksburg for arraignment before U.S. (>)mmissioner Lloyd R. Fayling. DETROIT, CHICAGO Investigators said sales were made to buyers from Detroit and Chicago. The State Police Rackets Squad under Sgt. Walter Sokol cooperated with the federal Dilworth and Haliburtwi were arrested at Haliburton’s home.i Smith and Henderson were seiz-! ed at their homes. Eighty per cent of the American people have never traveled in w atrplanr. according to'a travel firm survey. FAMIL/ DEPARTMENT STORES ACRES OF FREE PARKING THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27. 1965 B—11 New Dixie Protests Are Being Planned ATLANTA, Ga. m~h aeriM doora in AUanU set the stage for possible new racial demonstrations in the South and what could be a solution to the school desegregation problem in Georgia’s Taliaferro County. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. cut riwrt a European tour to return to Atlanta Tuesday because, he said, he was “outraged at the acquittal of Collie Leroy Wilkins in Hayneville, Ala.” ★ ★ ♦ The Negro integration leader reported a similar reaction in Europe to the jury’s verdict last Friday in fhd case of the 22-year-oid Ku Klux Klansman charged with the slaying of Viola Uuzxo, a Detroit civil rights worker. •it aippears urgent that the civil rights movement must voice all its influence in insisting on the proper administration of justice,” King said, ‘i think it necessary to dramatize'^ what has happened at a very high level and Hayneville occupies a symbolic position.” MADE PLANS Then be met with his aides in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference to plan the demonstrations. In Paris Sunday, Kbig called for a march "by the thousands bn the courthouses of the South to obtain justice.” SCLC members have been active recently in demonstrations protesting school segregation at Crawfordville, Ga., the Taliaferro County seat. Attorneys Howard Moore Jr. and Donald L. Holloweil met for two hours with U S. Circuit I Court Judge Griffin B. Bell in Atlanta. They said a state plan to bus Taliaferro County Negro pupils to other counties with white pupils would not be satisfactory. Clues Hunted in Air Crash Near Jackson JACKSON (UPI)-The search for pieces of a six-passenger' private jet plane continued bi Leoni Town^ip today as offl-cials made plans to attempt to| reconstruct the aircraft to deto*-mine what caused it to crash. ’The plane, built by Lear Jet Corp. of Wichita, Kan., plunged to destruction last Thursday | night, carrying two test pilots to. tbeir deaths while it was on a routine postmaintenance test flight. Bill L. Abram, principal op-eratioaal inspecibr of the Federal Aviation Agency, said it woidd take six months or a year before the cause of the mishap can be determined. He and the FAA will investigate whether the plane fell short of standards for safety procedures, design of the aircraft and pilot proficiency. ★ w * Abram said when all the ob-| talnable facts are collected they, win be forwarded to the Civil Aeronautics Board which will attempt to determine the cause of the crash. NO STATEMENT A spokesman for Lear said the company would have no further statements to make about the crash until the official investigation is made pub-' lie. The attorneys said the Ne-1 white school would not solve groes would prefer to have Dt.In e g r o problems. He recom-Claude Purcell, stote s c h o o 1 transferring certain superintendent, reopen a white i„ ... u , ■ i» school in Crawfordville on . Negrojwpils to Khools in War-desegregated basis. The school,«"• . closed when ail white pupils' Washington, the Wiikes transferred to other counties .County seatJS dvil righto workers marched through al-RULINGS WAIT deserted streets for a Bell took the objections linder courthouse rally. The two-mile advisement and indicated a rul- march was heavily guarded by ing would be handed down in st^ poliee. Augusta, along with a three-judge federal court’s review of Purcell’s plan. The school superintendent said reopening of Crawfordville’s DeGaulle Decision Due Nov. 4 The only incident occurred ^ when a white man drove his, truck toward the line of marchers and braked it to a sudden halt. He did not hit anyone.! AN ORIGINAL? - This is the bust of a young woman I that was purchased for $225 by | the Metropolitan Museum of i Art in New York Friday. j PARISiUPD-President Charles de Gaulle will reveal Nov. 4-the Feast Day of St. Charles—whether or not he will seek reelection to another seven-year term qn Dec. 5, it was announced today. The date of his nationwide radio and television speech was disclosed by information minister Alain Peyrefitte after today’s regular cabinet meeting. It was still anybody’s guess what de Gaulle’s decision would be, although French sources said virtually ail members of the government believed be would announce he has decided to run again, despite the fact be will be 75 on Nov. 22. French sources said that, until last spring, de Gaulle’s cabinet was completely divided on his second-term plans. But they said that, in recent weeks, it has been generally assumed he will run again. * ♦ ★ Hie sources said that, in the first three months of this year, he appeared to favor a second term himself. But he apparently had second thoughts between April and June. Then in July, it was said, he seemed to have changed his mind again and to have decided it is his duty to run again. However, aides who see de Gaulle frequently, warned that a bombshell decision not to run cannot be ruled out. ’They recalled that on a number of occasions in the past— among them when he suddenly quit politics in 1945—he has completely surprised his aides and advisers. There have been reports that de Gaulle might announce he plans to stay in office only a year or so if he is reelected. Informed i?'rench sources said this is most unlikely. They said he might announce, however, that he plans to do so as long as his mental and physical powers hold out. Yugoslavia is increasing investments in agriculture In an effort to spur higher yields. ! Since World War II the country [has been forced to import food-I stuffs. stop fcrubbing with oid-fathion«d cloansertl use 71m iwodwn liquid tolirt TAN today ,„.THR0 , [SATURPAvi B—w THE PONTIAC PEgSS, l^^NESDAY, OCTOBER 27> 1965 What’8 l]ooking? top names low prices at ’s Bndffet Store. Shop with confidence from our value ’ minded selec^ fions of electrical appliances. YouHl find tried-and-true brand names at ^everyday low prices^ that will help stretch your shopping dollar. So get the satisfaction you expect, everytime ... shop for appliances at Hudson* s Budget Store in the Pontiac Mall. Presto toaster 14" Big family size 4-slice automatic toaster with 'dark or li^ht’ color selector with a wide range of settings. Vdleo broiler 2494 Large 10i/2xl6x8-inch family size electric broiler. Prepare tasty treats indoor and out. Detachable tray handles. Oster blender Osterizer, the original pquef-ier-blender. 3-s peed controls for proper blending. 4-cup glass container; molded handle. Oster earn opener M3" Easy-to-opcrate electric can opener with a special knife-scissor sharpener. Wipes clean with a damp cloth. Sunbeam egg cooker M4" Automatic cooker makes hard-boiled and poached eggs. Keep it on the uble -to save you steps to the stove. Presto trging pan Jumbo square inch electric frying pan, with no-stick, noscour DuPont Teflon* cooking surface. Time-all timer MO" Protect your home by automatically turning on and off room lamps at times you desire. Grrat during trips. Toastmaster grill 30" Automatic svaffle and sandwich grill combination. Easy to clean and opmte. Sturdy. Temperature inmcator light. Sunbeam drger M7" Hair dryer completely removable from zip case; portable. Colorful dntw string, beauty cap. 110 volts, A.C Toastmaster heater 12" 'Instant heat' automatic heater. Tip-over safety switch, thermo-..itat, air blower and aafe beat resistant abinet. WestlniMkouse iron 13" 'Steam *N Sprinkle’ iron uses plain up water. Choice of steam and fabric ^ ily poruble, lightwei^ Sunbeam mixer M3“ For easy-blending. Concenien-ce; 3-st^. Beater ejector button. Li^tweigbt. 120 voltff; ....100 warn. f. i\ f: \j.. 'S" Mlxnmster mixer 39" Sunbeam's dependable, heavy-duty model with 12-spi^ for your blending convenience. 2 iirmfir IV. 21" Portable auotmatic roasting and baking oven. Sp^l that* mosutic control gives jnet- Mm’s Buflget Skre in tho MaU EASY TO BEACH • ..EASY TO PARK.. .EASY TO SHOPOpen tlU 9s§§ PJH, Mdndng thru Sntnrl^g • • • EUsnbeth hake Bond and Telegraph THK POX llAC HtKSS WKDXESDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1965 U.S. to Help Streamline Local, State Law Agencies WASHINGTON (AP) - At precinct headquarters, a policeman checks an instrument panel to see if the doors of all merchants in the area are locked fM* the night. On the street, a patrolman takes careful aim at. a fleeing suspect, fires his weapon and brings him down, asleep and unharmed — with a tranquilizer dart. * # ★ In a classroom, a seasoned police chief studiously takes notes in a course in public relations, personnel management and cost accounting. If this doesn’t sound like any police department you’ve ever heard of, wait a while — it may figure in police work of the future. The federal government is pitching in to try to streamline law enforcement at state and local leveta as part of the Johnson administration’s “war on crime.” CRIME IN STREETS After long years of staying out of “crime in the streets,’’ the federal government is going to spend 17,249,000 in hopes of modernizing police department, court and correctional practices. “Of course, we’re not going to do it all in the three-year life of the Law Enforcement Assistance Act,” said Courtney A. Evans, a former FBI official who has been given the job of putting the new law to work and earmarking the federal money for local projects. “We’re Just hoping the little bit of money we can invest will result in substantial benefits to many persons beyond the immediate field of law enforcement,” Evans, 51, said in an interview. “Perhaps we can set up some models in law enforcement for others to copy and Water Restrictions End MADRID, Spain (AP) - An end to water restrictions in effect in the Spanish capital since last May 15 has been announced. Officials said recent heavy rains led to the restoration of normal 24hour service. A long dry period and increased domestic and industrial consumption caused the shortage. record and disseminate what’s been learned so that it becomes the literature of law enforcement.” Evans expects the first demonstration grants will be distributed in January and will range between |M,000 and $150,000. NEW LAW Much of the impetus for application of the new law will come from suggestions of the National and District of Columbia crime commissions, Evans said. Meanwhile his office plans to recruit a panel of scientists to study the application of modern science to law enforcement. " “I think we have to generate additional, radically new appli-catinur of scientific methods to law enforcement,” he said. “Police still go on patrols in 1965 as they did in 1700, and patrols are prinurily used to prevent and detect crime. * ♦ w _ .“Why can’t we develop a ^ whole new field of scientific research devoted to law enforcement Just as we did when we decided to- explore outer space?” Evans cited continuous electronic surveillance of a neighborhood at night as a sample of what the scientist might do for the policeman. EX-FBI AIDE The former assistant director of the FBI, who retired last year to begin his own law practice, envisions schools where police executives will be ex- posed to the best modern business methods. “We’re not going to take these experienced men and put them through a law enforcement course," he said. “But they should know the best niethods of running a big organization, principles of budgeting and personnel management and cost accounting. And they could learn something about public relations and how to-^give their product the best possible image.’’ * * it Evans feels the program, to be successful, must depend on the suggestions and initiative of local, county and state authorities. Will Evans’ former chief, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, cooperate? “I have no doubt the FBI will be involved,” Evans said. “I can’t imagine it expanding its National Academy from 200 to 1,200 police officers without wanting to use it to test new procedures. The FBI always has played a prominent role in this field, and I’m sure it will continue to do so.” Salt Water Converter WASHINGTON (AP) - A 'Tuxedo, N.Y., firm — Linde division of Union Carbide Corp. — has been awarded a $170,568 contract to design construct and test a new high thermal efficiency evaporator for use in saline water conversion. Your food dollars worth more rMer (and so are you!) At Kroger you-and your dollar-rate more; lower prices through volume buying, wider selection. Plus the extra savings, the special “thank you” of Top Value Stamps. (for gip you can enjoy and keep on enjoying, long after the groceries are gone! OTOe VALUtlNTBMmSIt. INC. I«N Your dollar's'worth more when you shop at the store that gives Top Value Stamps! B—U THE POiniAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 KWICK KRISP THICK OK THIN SLICED ACON TIGER TOWN BRAND BOILED HAM 69 HYGRADE'S BALL PARK wieners. .69* GLENDALE BRAND SLICED BOLOGNA .. .49* WITH THIS COUPON & $5 PURCHASE-SAVE 15*-SPECIAL LABEL : GIANT ICHEER VolM at Krogar thrv Soturday, Oclabar 30, 10BS. Limit on* caupon ft family. SAVE 10*-KROGER OR BORDEN'S CREAMED NEEDS NO REFRIGERATION-NON-OAIRY COFFEE-MATE.............. .....II-OZ. WT. JAI 69*1 R)l YOUR WITCHES « GOBUNS TOT POPS.......................,0^2 WT •AC 29* r OW UBEl-SMOOTH SPREADINC PARKAY MARGARINE .. I 29* Sandy doll DRESSED IN PLAY-SUIT AND SHOES REG. T.OO VALUE ONLY 0 NO COUPON NECESSARYI COUPONS GOOD FOR 2 WEEKS! ■ TH« COUPON^ ANY Mjy* ■ SANDT EMSEMBIEI SAIWr ENSEMUri 69* I 99* «MvrA«ir, Nmt. VaUat Krafar rtmSataiAay, I ! VaA( at Kfapa* ttmilatvrAair, Nav. A.* VaU at Krafar tlwv SatviAay, Na¥. A, “ IlfArjiM ana aavfaa par lainily.l IfAS Umil ana caupaa pu familr. I I i TWO 1-lB. PKGS. I MViUiR'S I TMW SPASNini I WH.IJK FRESH FRUIT GOODI WELCH'S GRAPE JELLY ... lo-oz wt jar 27* BIRDS EYE-WITH BUTTER SAUCE-FROZEN FORDHOOK UMA BEANS.................lo-oz wt fko 39* BIRDS EYE TENDER CUT FROZEN BROCCOU SPEARS...........looz wr nco 39* FROZEN CRINKLE CUT BIRDS EYE POTATOES.............. ma hco 27* FOR QUICK, EASY FAMILY-PLEASING MEALS COOKS UP TENDER AND TASTY EVERYTtME VITAMIN ENRICHED-WlOE OR EXTRA-WIDE DELMONICO EGG NOODLES 29* COTTAGE CHEESE-<4.-39* SAVE 4»-AU PURPOSE CRISCO SHORTENING 3.c.a79‘ SAVE 5*-KANDU LIQUID GALLON BLEACH.....39* BORDEN'S RICH WHIPPING CREAM r 39* KROGER BRAND SWEET POTATOES-^"17* FROZEN BEEF, CHICKEN, TURKEY, HAM OR SALISBURY STEAK MORTON DINNERS vf39* PERMANENT TYPE PRESTONE anti-freezes:l^1*^ MORTON FROZEN PEACH CHERRY. MINCE, OR MORTON APPLE OR PUMPKIN PIE WITH TOMATO SAUCE CAMPBELL'S PORK AND BEANS 0 13-OZ. WT. PK6. AN f VALUE TOP VALUE . a AB i" TOP VALUE H M TOP VALUE 25 STAMPSD25 STAMPS U25 STAMPSHSO stamps WITH THIS COUPON ON TWO «-OZ. WT. PEGS. KROGER GELATINS I S-FL. OZ. CAN ” ENERCINE • LIOHTfR FLUID § mrwbh wksnimbd ■ VaU rtmt SatvMay, AfL I VaU Hwv UtwUmr, AB Z VaU rtmt UtwMay, wSmmmm■■ J 4-Pl. OZ. BOTUI com POLISN REMOVER Y r' THE PONTIAC PKLSS. WEDNESOAV. OCTOBi’.Ut 27. 19H5 H-IA HERE ARE A FEW OF THE RECENT "MAKE MONEY" WINNERS! Mit. C. O. Vilbrt, 1SI19 Hanno, M«lvindal« J«Mph J»nM, 1956 PingrM, Detroit E«y Emt, 57 Sher* Cmt, Grots* Point* Shorot Hoxol McCoy, 22315 Holttood, Pormington Gooif# Kotegian, 1912 Whit*, Lincoln Pork iomord Wimbug, 20231 Canuow, Dotreit Horbort Knon, 03 Phlox Stroot, Whitmor* Lok* Ethol Spront, 2195 East Grond Rivor, Howoll Mn. lorbora Hykol, 607 Horton, Northvillo F. J. Murroy, Moyflewor Hotol, Plymouth Holon Hunt, 24306 Stophonson, Hoz4l Pork Mrs. Vincont Hockott, 3430 Thro* Milo Rood, Dotroit Anno Kornmor, 12600 Frankfort, Dotroit Ittolla Oornoy, 20477 Stoopol, Dotroit Mrs. Joonio Nowak, 1808 Elin, Wyandotto Hilda Hill, 19499 Hoydon, Dotroit more days TO SAVE ON THE freezer salIi CUT AND WRAPPED FREE! U S. CHOICE TENDEEAY BEEF ROUND AVERAGE mm ^ WEIGHT IE C to Its. ^ U S. CHOICE TENDERAY beef arm CHUCK BONELESS ROAST 79* 89* 99* average WEIGHT ao TO 100 LBS. RUMP ROAST TASTY fCKRICH SO T.V. STAMPS WITH COUPON-FROZEN All CHOPPED SMOKERS.................Hi: 79* FAMILY STEAKS .10 U S. CHOICE TENDERAY beef rib ROAST ■avirage^^ gr 1 WEIGHT W 30 FRESH SHOULDER CUT „AU BEEF HAMBURGER 10“ 3** ^gg^UAWTITUt An^. RiTAii VEAL ROAST...... S9* DEI MONTE FRUIT COCKTAIL IPEACHE 4^^83j4^ YOUNG, TENDER GREEN DEt MONTE PEAS .5 %99 DEI MONTE CUT _ _ GREEN BEANS....5%99‘ ZESTY N' TANGY DEL MONTE CATSUP 5“m' 89‘ CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL DEL MONTE CORN 41169* 89* 4^89* VELVEETA...........2.%. 79* COUNTRY STYLE OR BUTTERMILK PILLSBURY BISCUITS l-OZ. WT. TUBE 10‘ WITH THIS COI_______ $S PURCHASE OR MORE BORDEN'S SNIRBIT OR . COUNTRY ClUt Kl CRIAM | HRST W OAUON 59* . SECOND W OALUN4 29’ I GAUON II- SAVE 30- | Volid of Krogor thru Ocfobor ■ ‘ 1. 1965. limil ono couMAft p^r family. J DEL MONTE TOMjnroiS 4 BIRDS EVE VACUUM SEALED IN BUTTER SAUCE-FROZIN MIXED VEGETABLES................um>z wt pro. 33' DEL MONTE BEANS CUT WAX FLAIN OR PIMENTO CHEESE SPREAD THREE»4-ROll PACKS WALDORF TOILET TISSUE B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, IMS OPfN 10.10 DAILY MILLION DOLLAR DISCOUNT SAL$! 100% Acetate Lining WOMEN'S BONDED SLACKS Compare at *2,97 I CHECK THESE SAVINGS ON I SLIPPERS FOR THE FAMILY 4 Stytei Wgrml}tiiiied ^ - Mtn*a ManhmallowO ▼{117I uppers with nutehing Tinyl padded eoles. In nusenline deereolor; sizes to lOl ^ IFMsais*# moeeuin bootees with MarshnuHowO vinyl ■ppens, vinyl padded soles. Bone, bine, black; to 10. ChiUrtm*$ HnckelbeiTy Hound boot slippers in Marsh* mallowO vinyL Maple color; sizes 7>11, 12-3. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD c—« i During $2.4-Million Expansion THg PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 Hudson 's Is Going at Sometimes when a store expands, it is necessary to shut down existing facilities for at least a short period of time. However, this is not the case in the proposed $2.4-miIlion i. L. Hudson Co. expansion program at Pontiac Mall. Hodsoa's Budget Store is open and operating at full capacity, emphasixes Manager Robert Greening, even though 1«,IN square feet of floor space has been chopped off to make room for the huge addition. Even when the budget store is relocated into a new base-lthought the budget sUm wps ment ^ probably in the winter dosed, of 196M7 - the building willL^ILL SELLING remain open to shoppers. * * ★ “There’s nothing temporary “It’s still convenient to shop or makeshift about our opera-here,’v asserted Greening who tion now,” he said, explaining expressed some concern ove r that all of the same merchan-reports that some per sons dise is being sold even though the store is somewhat smaller in size. In fact, it has only been reduced from an M,M to a 74,-OM-square-foot area. Construction plans pall for expansion of the present one-story building into a full-line depart- ment store with two floors and,; a basement. The addition, which also will: Mise Six fashion sho^, anil consist of 200,000 square feet of floor space. BANK EXPANSION The Community National Bank will also expand its present branch at the Mall. Upon compietion of construction, the Mall will be the third tergest shopping center in Oie Detroit metropolitan nren and the largest inclosed shopping center in Michignn with more than one million square feet. The first floor will offer ap:;: broad variety of women’s, and children’s fashions and ac-cessorles, sporting goods, a drug| and sundry department, books; ^ "ficcent Oh /leceht INTERIOR VIEW — Large plants and a water fountain, as sketched by the architect. Charles N. Agree. Inc., of Detroit, beautify a hallway of the projected J. L. Hudson-Pontiac Mall expansion program. Completion of the g2.4-million addition is earmarked for the spring of 1967. _________ The value of Florida’s c u t flowers is about $19 million a year. The gladiolus is the commercial leader. i meats. ♦ ★ ★ The second floor will provide home needs including furniture, home furnishings, housewares and related merchandise and a toy department and service area. PONTIAC ROOM The “Pontiac Room,” a new :i: Hudson restaurant, also will be located on the second flow, ac- I cording to a company spokes- :i: The basement will house a modem beauty salon in addition to budget store offices and serv- A ice facilities. A new entrance on Elizabeth Lake Road will lead into an air-conditioned mall from where g customers can enter Hudson’s or | the fashion shops. Hudson’s present entrances S will continue in use. NEW ENTRANCE - This is the architect’s drawing of the proposed new main entrance to the Pontiac Mall. Located on Elizabeth Lake Road, the entrance will lead into 6 New Shops CNBBroncfi in Mall Plans' tjie new J. L. Hudson Co. addition, currently under construction, and several planned fashion shops. Hudson’s present entrances also will be in use, company officials note. 4 Wilf Be Women's Teller Space Ready-to-Wear The 160,000 Community National Bank expansion pronv at Pontiac Mall will double me . , , , „ . capacity of the tellers’ service Winkelman s Brothers Appar- ^ office space, according to a el. Inc., and five other shops company spokesman, will be built as part of the Pon-^ ^pon completion—earmarked tiac Mall-J. L. Hudson Co. $2.4- January or February—there million expansion program 12 tellers’ cages instead Mall officials indicated that of the present six. four of the shops, including sub^equenUy, from five to Winkelman’s will be women s additional persons will ready-to-wear stores. ^ employed. Also scheduled to con- ^ present, the branch bank structed are a fabric shop and, p^p|„y jg persons — eight per tentatively, a shoe store. * The Winkelman’s store will The expansion will increase augment the company's present floor space at the bank from store, two blocks from the Mall. 31.000 to 32.Q00 square feet. * * * ^ TERRIFIC VOLUME Details will be announced at a _ man. semor vice president. bank’s Mall branch especially Winkelman’s is planning to add > mtolmum Tta to* a 11;30 to M to present 46 «»res ^ Monday Ib. eepeneion 1. aimed PH-‘ manly at regional shopping cen- ^ ^ ters throughout Michigan and -----------——----------- A° spokesman disclosed that Lewk of Imagination long-range plans for the Mall , ^ call for a Northland-type area. to Communists including t h e a t e r s bowling Jakarta (APi - Not much *** * imagination went into a flag the automobile dealerships. communists prepared to fly if the Oct. 1 coup succeeded. The Blankets to Viet Nam official news agency Antara said the flag found by mobs ran-WASHING’TON (APi — The sacking a party hea^uarters in Agency for International Devel-| North Sumatra had simply a opment says it is sending thou-ihammer and sickle imposed on s^s of blankets to refugees in the Indonesian national red and South Viet Nam. [white banner. i The elegance of hfemtiie European tradition ......yours toeiyofjintiw > heart of Detroit -f ' ... during a wonderful “Week-end of Elegance” at the luxurious new Hotel Pontchartrain Win a w««k-«nd of •Ugoncu, for a morriad coupla, at tha Hotal Pontchartrain in Dotroit, tickatt to tho Fiihar Thootro and a high-fashion hair styling by Donnall Hair Stylists. Tha waak-ond will include Friday night dinner, 3 mools on Saturday and Sunday breakfast. REGISTER AT THE PONTCHARTRAIN EXHIBIT INSIDE THE MALL This Week at The Mall (Thurs., Fri., Sat.) See .... ^ • If750,000.00 diamond collection • 6 Bernard Buffet original lithographs • A Marc Chagell original oil painting • Collection of Currier & Ives originols • AMA medical exhibit.. t beginning Oct. 29 • Concert organ music on the red carpet at the fountain • Coffee will be served during prefes- fionai modeling at Bloomfield Fothien Friday 2 'til 5. . • the 196(6 Buicic Riviera • The 1966 Pontioc Grand Prix • The 1966 Cadillac • The 1966 Lincoln Continental • The 1966 Chrysler Imperial • The 1966 Super Sport Chris Craft Plus mony other exciting exhibitsi Pontiac Mall Shopping Center ■■ 1. TaK 1 U iaUiV Jji^>aA 1, ol G>it Equals Entire Budget for Fiscal "32 'Great Society Could Affect Millions fSDITOR’S NOTE: Among far ■ reaching prograwu op-proved by Me firet teuton of the MM Congreu teat Me ad-mMetroMm’s ambitmt ontt-pooertg pro^t. Thu third of five ertklet exammet the tub-fed, and delvet into hooting programt and beautification at well./ By RAYMOND J. CROWLEY WASHINGTON (AP)-Pover. ty-stricken women with a knack for making fruitcake, but customers; the worker whose assembly line world has collapsed because of automation; the girl too embarrassed to to school because her Moes are worn out; the fatherless child for whom breakfast is thing other people eat. The motorist irked by billboards between him and autumn’s ^loKlOTs; Me soul who finds enjoyment in music, painting, ballet, theater; the man-in-a-hurry wondering how to get frtun place to place in megalopolis; the nature-lover bemoaning the reported slaughter of wildlife by pesticides. In retraining adult workers, pitfalls must be watched for. RecenUy, in New York City, M last fiscal year to |1.S bUUoD this year. However, the project operated only seven months laid year, so the nKMitb-ly spending rate stays about the same. The miltitudinous projects of the Office of Economic Opportunity include: it ★ Community action programs —these, ranging from education in the three R’s to job training to clean-up-the-block campaigns, are sort of revolutionary, in that by law poor people must sit on the policy-making committees. Tho-e haiis been much pulling and hauling with established powtfs-that-be. B u t Shriver aides say that in Qarksdale, Miss., a Negro civil rights wmk-er sits on a committee with a White Citisens Council man. (XHJLEGE-AGE FOLKS VISTA - This is short for Voluideers In Service To Am It is a "domestic Peace Corps," composed mostly of I coUegisage folks, with a sprink-1 ling of retired elderly. Its I workers teach the children of I migrant laborers, introduce I modem cookery and dressmak- F ing to Indian women on reserva- p tions, show a town how to get ^ ^ federal funds for a hospital, help retrain the jobless of Annniarhia'e hilU . air conditkmers. But the water-short dty clamped restrictloas on air conditioning, and the expected jobs ^id not materialise. SORE SPOT For one of the nation's sorest economic sore spots — Appalachia, stretchMg from no^em Pennsylvania to Alabama — Congress authorised a $1.1-billion five-year program. The impoverished mountain folk, and coal miners passed by in automations progress, will get a chance to help build an $840-million highway netwmit. The aim is to op«i up hills and valleys for industry and recreation. Slum squalor and rural blight All these people and millions more could be affected, in greater or lesser degree, by what President Johnson calls the "Gr^t S^iety" measu^ Apiwilachia’s hills. .- piss^ at the first session of the corps—The trick here is -89M Congress. to train youths for jobs that ac- ' " tually exist. Emphasis is on : such trades as welding—there’s ® a crying shortage of welders; '' mechanics who can do simple auto repairs; hotel jobs; small [ boat repairs and cookery. At t Camp Kilmer, N.J., a veteran * Navy cook is readying boys to '' be chefs at hotels and motels. It was a session in which a|^ pro^tkms for all purposes hit a peacetime high of about (118 billion; in which one siqiplemai-tal appro|Miatian of $4 7 Ullion, to help finance M “Great Society” programs and other activities, equaled the oitire cost of government in the fiscal year 1932. ‘LEAP FORWARD’ While critics cried “Peder- Nei^borhood Youth Corps -The aim is to prevent school " and accused thejdrxqwuts by providing part-time Johnson adminudratkm of a; jobs. In some towns, youngsters ntammoth boondoggle. Congress| work in libraries; at Passaic, took what the President's back-|N.J.. they help clean a polluted ers called “a great leap for- river; on Cape Cod, Mass., they ward” in social welfare. Peder- build jetties against beach ero-italay is the name of the river atlsion. Wage: the legal minimum the Johnson Texas ranch. iof $1.25 an hour. “This hel|»," Almost doubled was the mon- said an antipoverty official, ey for Sargent Shriver's anti- “because huw can a kid go to poverty campaign—from ISOOlschool if he has no shoes." HE’S ALL BALLED UP -Little ^^month-old Doug Curtis of Mount Holly, N. J., actually is up to his chin in popcorn as he samples a huge popcorn ball made by his father. The father explained that he was making popcorn balls and “it sorta got away from me.” At any rate, son Doug had a ball. |7.5-biUion housing autboriu-Uon bill, featured by a propoaed new departure lii the form of rMt suMdies. However, the start of these new subsidies was delayed at least until next year when the House bucked at supplying funds. This was a setback for the Johnson administration. OTHER FEATURES The housing program has many other features, such as grants up to $1,500 to home owners with incomes of $3,000 or less, to repair their rundown properties; provision for 240,000 units of public housing, 100,000 of which mi^t be obtained by buying or renting existing homes. This could be a boon to the central core of cities, whore big old houses are oftoi a wasting asset. The problems of the cities much on the mind of Congress. It created an 11th Cabinet depa^ent, the Department of Housing and Urban Develop-For the mimient, “ amounts to little more than a dianging of nameplates doors, a regrouping of existing functions. * ♦ * But for the future, it undoubtedly spells greatly increased attention to the problems of cities, in which 70 per cent of Americans now live. Transportation, for example. Experts say that a motorist, bucking New York traffic, is lucky if he travels across the city at an average of nine miles an hour. $00-MILUON STUDY What happens when megalopolis, a vast city, stretches from Norfolk, Va., to Portland. Maine? Seeking an answer. Congress set up a $90-million study and demonstration program. Emphasis at first will be on high-sp^ rail transport between Washington and Boston, perhaps eventually whisking passengers at 150 miles an hour. For the highway traveler who does not fancy billboards. Congress passed Lady Bird Johnson’s beautiful highways bill, but the billboard lobby was ac- It requires states to Initiate billboard and junk yard controls along the interstate and pri-, mary systems by Jan. 1, lOM. If. they don't, they lose 10 per cent of their federal highway aid funds. Owners of signs which must go, or auto graveyards which must be screened or removed, will be compensated mostly by federal funds. The measure calls for removal of all signs on the primary system, except in desi^ated “commercial or in-j , and on the premises of businesses doing { the advertising. I AUDIENCE OF CELEBRITIES If, against the billboard lobby, nature lovers did not score an unqualifled breakthrough, it was otherwise with those who have argued that the federal government should do more to' support the ifts. I Before a star-studded audience of HoUyqpxxl performers, artists, po^ and other humanists, President Johnson $2l-million-a-year, three-year bill to set up a national foundation for the arts and humanities. Johnson announced plans to create a national repertory theatre to bring ancient and modem classics to the people; support national opera and ballet companies, and subsidize artists to work in schools and universities. i And tor the nature lover. Congress authorized a study of the! effect of pesticides on fish andj wildlife. Thus the nation may know whether it really faces the menace pictured by the late biologist Rachel Carson, in her’ book “The Silent Spring.” | ACCENT ON ELEGANCE WEDDHIG CAKES I Mod* to : Your Orator I ond * PERFECTION: YOUU KNOW WHtN YOU TRY OUR BAKED GOODS HAWAIIAN COFFEE CAKE Ring Choke ef Teppingsi Cherry, Blue||»erry er Pineapple 69: M&mfBekeShoffe Romo Is Proforonce ROME (AP) - Most American tourists prefer Rome, Flo-i rence, Venice and Naples, in! that order, on their visits to Italy. The national tourist agency determined that through polls taken by its New York and San Francisco offices. ACCENT ON ELEGANCE I* ■ Sam & Walter Delicious Sausage WaVa been in the bueinass long enough to make the besti BOILED HAAA Our Own Hickory Smoked SLICED BACON 59** CARRY.OUTI Call 6IB2-9811 m SAM’$” KITCHEN FOR l-R-R OHIMm-R-R-R RIM NOTURDWIOHM PONTIAC MALL-Dpmi Nitow ’til 9 P.N. BIRMINGHAM-Opm Then., Fri. 'lU 9 P.M. Almost any evening now, and on into the Holiday Season, yon*U make the scene in a glowing BROCADE DRESS in rich jewel tones. *55 We’ve a choice collection of untrimmed COATS masterfully tailored in dressy or casual styles. *59 to *39 Designed for a dramatic entrance into winter . . . COATS luxuriously touched with mink or beaver fur. *125 to *279 Decorative Little WHIMSIES Mere wisps of veiling capture the imagination ... give the suggestion of a hat while they protect your coif. 4» us 12’» KNITS with a difference for every season. Here, our nubby wool accented with braid in blue or red with white. INFORMAL MODELING FRIDAY 2 to 5 P.M. Fashions for now and into the holiday season. REFRESHMENTS PbssMae Stove Only THE 'lONTIAC PKESS. \VE1)NKS1)A\ . OC TOHEH J7. I9H.5 C—d Rose.. .Your Jewelry Fashion Center Ladtoa Diamond Dorn* Ring—An array of diamond brilliance enhances a most unusual dome ring set in 14 Karat gold.....49.95 b. 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Longines IHin's-44 dia-jnonds, solid 18 Karat gold, strap With 18 Karat gold bucklo. 495.00 LONGINES PONTIAC MALL Teleg^raph at Elizabeth Lake Road OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. BUDGET TERMS | 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH | 18 MONTHS TO PAY PRE-21? Charge at Rose Jewelers! If you’re between the ages of I? and 21, you can open your own credit account. 4 WAYS TO BUY: Cash, layaway, 90 day account (no interest or carrying charge), extended term account (no money down, 18 months to pay). THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTQBER 27. 1965 Myth: Society Will Be Older Population Analysis Debunks Pet Theory By Science Service CHICAGO — The widely nef-cepted belief thnt man’s capacity to survive to a ripe old age U. creating an oversized older population appears to be mythical. ★ ★ ♦ In an analysis of the U. S. population at the American Public Health Association meeting here, it was revealed f tality rates in themselves really have little effect on the population. Major changes are in growth and age and resnil mainly from the birth rate. The relative importance of mortality and fertility was reported Iv Albert I. Hermalin of Princeton University, who made a study wider a partial grant from the National Institute of Moital Health. ★ ♦ ★ Mr. Hermalin surveyed the effect of fewer deaths from 1900 to 1960. Using these statistics, he estimated the future effect of long life-spans on the U. S. population. NO GREAT CHANGE He concluded that a decline in death rate from I960 figum will not change the population to any great extent, either in size or age. In the first half of the 20th centnfy, the greatest advances in staving off death benefited the young — especially young women capable of having children. The effect of declining mortality was to increase the pop' ulatHHK considerably and also make ir younger. One life saved actually meant three or four. * * ★ Now advances are expected to occur primarily in the over-50 segment of the population. Their increased longevity will have very slight effect on population growth, reports Mr. Hermalin. FOR INSTANCE For intsance, if not a single woman should die between 1965 and 2000 and if there were a low birth rate — about 2,600 babies per 1,000 women — the female population would increase only by 5 million or three per cent, over what would be the case should current trends continue. Women now have something like 3,500 children per thousand. * ♦ * Mr. Hermalin estimates that there probably wiU be a smaller prt^K^on of people over 65 in the year 2000 than there an By ALTON BLAKESLEE AP Science Writer NEW YORK - Driving your car, you almost have a terrible Stretcher-Bearers Carry Wounded To Aid Station Rescue Helicopters Mean Blood, Agony at Aid Areas And almost instantly, your 'jheart speeds up. Your heart, of course, couldn’t see” the threat. Neither could the glands Inside you that spurted out adrenalin to make your heart start thumping. Then how does such an astonishingly quick reaction edme about? CHAIN OF EVENTS and debris and hurled it against the aid men who had turned tail to the force of the wind. 'The cargo doors flew open and small rivers of Mood spilled on the ground to introduce the passengers. A man with a gaping hole in “It’s quiet,” said Capt. Buck i his face staggered out Harper, M.D. ‘“niats a badied. Four others had to be car-sign.” By TOM TIEDE Newspaper Enterprise Assn. BIEN HOA, Viet Nam (NEA) -’The men of the aid station sat, backs to tent poles and feet like 20 minutpg.-to-four. *^y slept, they scratched, they carved holes in the dirt with their heels. It was midday and the heat of it had cooked the breeze the countryside. (t air that did stir was putrid farmland manure left to sizzl^ the sun. The cots were occupied by camp patiwts mostly; foot, a headat^e, an upset stomach. IN ONE CORN! But in one c oVn era Vietnamese m 01 h e V wept and smoothed the hair o^er 4-year-old son. \ He and a pal died. The boy was leftNs hamburger on the inside of b legs. “How bad is the boy, cap^ tain?” somebody asked. “He’ll live," was the reply. ‘Only he’ll never father a family.” ’COPTER CLATTER “You, hey, you,” cried the copter pilot. “Get us some water buckets.” “Water? Wha . ..” INCH OF BLOOD “We got an inch of blood on the floor of this thi^. Swab it out. All hell’s breaking loose in the hills. We gotta get right back.” Hell was also breaking loose in the aid tent. “God help me.” mumbled i man on a stretcher. ★ * * Blood was everywhere. Men slipped on it. A jeep driver became ill. THREAD OF RED The man shot in the face sat mt over, a steady unbroken of red dripping from his Now and then he spat out a chunk of flesh, m a n ’ s leg jerked ibly. leant had no cot, so One s The clatter of a helicopter in-r**® painstak- terriipted ... counts the puncture holes .. I in his mutilatt ' “Cap’n,” the radio maa said, “rescue copier’s coming I ..won’t soniebody get me *"•” some water? ’ a private plead- “What’s aboard? ’ ,ed. Litter cases. ” j GOTTA WAIT’ “Damn. I knew it was too! -you gotta wait, quiet." was told. “You know ydu gotta * * * iwait. Eyes^^uinted up. The bird had appeared from nowhere, as' was its habit, and began to land. *®“' ” ‘ ‘ " ‘ * I wound, regardless of degree. GIANT BLADES ' ig invariably less than some- Its giant blades picked up dirt body rise’s. Aid men act not with courtesy or favor but with speed and proficiency. They must only remain impersonal, professional. ★ ♦ * A shot of morphine, a wet rag, a hunk of gauze ... HAVEN’T ”nME “Our job is to see they don’t die,” says Dr. Buck Harper, |l73rd Airborne Brigade. “We haven’t the time, the men nor the facilities to do much else. Sometintes we can’t even st the pain. “In as few minutes as pos-siMe, I’ve got to sort them oat, decide the more serious, patch them up temporarily and then get them back to a larger hospital. “Sometimes yqM can’t get them all back at once. So I have to choose. And I have to choose right.” ★ ★ ★ The bleeding began to subsidy and the dull, quiet hurt set in. GROAN, PRAYER The private groaned and prayed, nie sergeant quit counting his holes. “My feet,’ a man whispered. “I can’t feel my feet." “They’re there, boy,” he was told. “Believe me, they’re there.” » ★ * ★ In the corner, the native woman still comforted her son. FALL ASLEEP Two victims'had fallen asleep. The man with the hole in his fac stared down, impassively, into the pool of his own making. For a while it was q u i e t again. Then— “Cap'n,” said the radio man, “Another rescue copter’s cornin’ in.” \^is is how it is in an aid tent at the edge of war. New Concepts Attaclied to Body's Hormone Role adrenals, the sex glands, the pituitary, and other glpnds. Each hormone affects only one or a few body organs or tissues. CARRY MESSAGE Now, from research at Van-' derbilt University, It appears! that hormones carry theirj messages” only part way. Upon reaching their target organs, they turn over the job of' delivering the message to a kind of errand boy inside cells of the' organ. And this errand boy is cyclic amp. Thia chmical can mimic or ”rhe answo- is fantastic. For do the job of at least some hor- at least eight separate events take place, in chain sequence, in perhaps three seconds or less. The story is another exampie of the remarkable workings of the human body, plus new insights as to how vital hormones, such as ,adrenalin, really do their jobs. It’s also an exampie of basic medical research digging ever deeper toward knowledge that niight lead to new means of safeguarding human health. ★ w ★ As for those eight steps; 1. Your eyes spot danger, and register images in your brain, so you slam on brakes, steer away, or just luckily escape collision. NERVE SIGNALS " Your brain flashes nerve signals to your adrenal glands; sitting atop your kidneys, as well as to your heart and various other organs. 3. ”rhe nerve impulses stimulate the adrenals to release some adrenalin—about 1,000 times as much as when you’re just resting—and stimulate nerve endings in the heart to some nonadrenalin. Adrenalin and nonadrenalin are the hormones that mobilize energy to fight or run away. mones, the researchers find. ’These new studies of hormone action were described to (he American Chemical Society recently by a team of Vanderbilt researchers, including Dr. Earl W. Sutherland, who first discovered amp; and Drs. R. H Butcher and G. Alan Robison. Cyclic amp seems to mediate or control the action of a variety of hormones, they said. COURSE OF ACTION This, they believe, is what m 4. 'The hormones reach the muscle cells of your heart. 5. But they don’t act within these cells, and this is one new finding. Instead, they activate an enzyme, or chemical governor, which appears to be located in the cell mentbrane or wall. BRINGS RELEASE 6. 'This activated enzyme then brings about the release inside the cell of a special < nicknamed cyclic amp. Cyclic amp then activates or more enzymes inside heart muscle cells. | 8. And this enzyme — or en-j-i-xi zymes — actually does the job; of making your heart speed up! -Si; and work harder — all because,:!;::;; of what your eyes saw an in-' slant ago. Hormones are chemical mes-|:i;:;i; sengers playing powerful roles in maintaining health and nor-|:;!::;! : mal body functions. Different Ihormones are produced by the A hormone, when it reaches its target organ, first activates a complex enzyme system, known as adenyl cyclase. This interaction increases the amount of cyclic amp inside the cells. The amp then “tells” special enzymes within the cells to get busy and follow the instructions of the hormone. At any one time, numerous hormones may be circulating in the blood, reaching all organs. Then why don’t all organs and cells react to every hormone, willy-nilly? ”1110 answer, the researchers think, is that the adenyl cyclase molecule has a slightly different shape in the heart, the liver, the uterus, or other organs, so that it will respond only to the hormone it is supposed to accept. Ae eMMAK WALL-TO-WALL COP-ETRY - These young state troopers present a study in uniformity at commencement exer* rises at the State PoUce Academy in New York. They were among 93 who graduated in recent ceremonies. Water Under Arabia By Science Service ROME - Still relatively fresh and cool, 40,000-year-old rainwater has been found beneath the boiling desert of Saudi, Arabia. These vast reservoirs of precious water, in saturated layers some 1,500 feet beneath the surface, can be tapped to meet the country’s needs for many years, water experts of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations report here. An investigation of this water resource has began with a million dollar agreement between the Saadi Arabian government and FAO, which will tor Arabia’s rich fields of petroleum and natural gas will be used to locate the water rese^ voirs, by the Saudi Arabian gov- training to develop the water resources lying nnder 7M,MI square miles of the country. New geophysical instruments, superior driiling equipment and methods developed in searching These reservoirs have been slowly accumulating as rainfall has seeped downward over thousands of years. Experts estimate that some of the water has been there for at least 40,000 years. Tests show that, thanks to the normal filtering and purification phenomena, the water is of good quality, although there are some areas where the water is salty. * w w The deserts of Saudi Arabia ary dry and dusty, with leas than an inch of rainfall a year, compared to 20 to 40 inchm on an average for Europe. Saudi Arabia, is about as large as Europe. It is one of the few large countries in the world which has no real rivers or permanent water courses. m shoppers convmience! Enjoy The Thrill Of Hearing Again Our specially trained personnel/using modern testing equipment, will accurately .analyze your hearing and recommend the best course of action to correct your hearing loss. Don't miss, for another day, the joy of music, the voices of family and friends and the old familiar sounds that are only a memory. ^ou Owe IrTo Ymrse^t Phon* 612.1113 Tedoy M’l liiiig hm ... nor popular Scot’s Room ■eeentod by a noiqnc, w*nw decor to eoniMrOinit tlie good food Mways aefvad at Ted’s. CufM dNrt Cafetwii ...-AaOraui an atmfspherc and apaaians- Sih« wdM ... *Aa Orange IVaa" keymMOs an aungiphere-fresh, eolorfal -for yonr pleasant Taifly, Tempting^ Delicious Food! GARJIE.^ lOlRT ... FAMILIES LOVE TED’S Dinner at the new Ted*s if a **real family treat** Mother and the Children will love it Dad will find the moderate prices a true value in dining enjoyment Ample coffee, compliments of Ted’s—we’re sure you*ll be pleated! Pote Mall Hearinr Center Thoi. B. Appleton^ Cenified Hearing Aid Audiologist 9:30A.M.^o8:al|P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 27. 1965 C-7 Delinquents Also a Viet Problem SAIGON, South Vie t Nami (AP) — As in many Western countries, Viet Nam is beset byl a surging wave of juvenile de-| linquency and the problem is what to do about it. 1 Col. Pham Van Lieu, directori general of national police, said in a speech that police arrested; 1,413 hoodlums and rowdies last year, and almost that number— 1,225 — in only the first six months of 1965. ★ w ★ 1^ Lieu compared Viet Nam’s de- linqueats with the English Teddy Boys and tjie French Blousons Noirs. Young hoodlums in Saigon are called cowboys. Many have individualistic haircuts, (rften thick with pomade. They display a sullen air and usually go about in small gangs. CRIME LIST Purse snatching is one of their most frequent minor offenses. They often assault police. Their crimes range from brawling, general disorderliness and theft to stabbing, shooting, murder and rape. Saigon’s crowded streets and bars, with many dark side streets and alleys, offer a wide scope of operation. Police have announced the breakup of a free love cibb among students. A Saigon paper said the club’s activities were designed to promote “wild parties and free association.’’ ★ ♦ ★ Lieu named the war as one (rf the main causes Iw Viet Nam’s growing juvenile problem. He also listed a lack of education, roken homes and inadequate arental supervision, depraved iterature, and sexy movies. : also said the Communists e scheming to exploit unrest •r cities. For Underprivileged Child A 'Head Start' Is Not Enough By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed.D.j the line, and the problem was Emergency programs are not' appropriately attacked simul-the sole answer to the problems jtaneously at several age levels, of ^ucaUonally disadvantaged'^ ^as necessary to do some-I thing immediately without tak- children. It is true that a six-week pro-1 jpg {„,. jong-range plan-gram aimed at giving these children readiness for entry into kindergarten does give schools. Parents, aided by advice from teachers and counselors, can be a major factor in developing the background necessary for their children's school success. BCURES s were those often Institute in Tennessee Alters Official Name |ning. I BEING REVISED These programs are now being revised and corrected in the light of the first successes and! OAK RIDGE, Tenn. (AP) — failures. jT^e Oak Ridge Institute of Nu- ' . . . .... .. • clear Studies will officially belt IS hoped that, as there is ^ ^ . more time available for plan-|‘^°"’e Oak Ridge Associated ______ining, provisiops will be made I Universities on Jan. 1. iTe“a s caimrt BRANDSTADT for continuity In the supporti ♦ ♦ * , . quickly be brought up to the f®’’ individual children. | The name change was decided HOMEMADE SPACECRAFT-When poUce in HaUfax, Mass., responded to a call to investigate a spaceship, this is what they found—a strange craft built by earthling William A. Ellis Jr. for the enjoyment and location of his I AW PlwWax three children. The 60-foot “spacecraft” is built on a truck chassis. Passengers inside hear the roar of an engine, see stars and a distant earth simulated on the windows. IpvpI of the children'who live! "f^i® should not be consideredi upon to indicate the broader in n»re fortunate circum-|«>>e'y responsibiUty of thelprogram to be pursued. stances. Aden: Independecne Now (EDITOR’S NOTE: In the face of continuing terrorism, Britain last month suspended the constitution of the coUmy of Aden, perched on the south-' em tip of the Arabian Peninsula and considered the most important British base between the Mediterranean and the Far East. A UPI reporter in the following dispatch describes the strategic city and the troubles encountered there.) By DAVID DUGAS ADEN (UPI) - A local joke is that the first men on the moon will find it uninhabitable — “because it will be just like Aden.” The colony also has been described as located in an “unfor-_________________ tunately extinct volcano,” but|E^"p|i'a;, mone7, arrm and ca-of juvenile it is the location that makes it|jres of Yemenis trained and e: compul- vital to the British. voca-| Through the long summers, a south Arabian federation on grounds it would give power to the tribal rulers of the protectorate and perpetuate Britain’s nore techni-iAden steams in 105^egree tem- Pressure against the British has increased ever since September, 1962 when the dormant monarchy in neighboring Yemen fell in an army Republican coup. It proved a major victory for Britain’s arch enemy in the Middle East, Egypt’s President Carnal Abdel Nasser, who was invited to send troops to support the new regime. I In fact, home environment continues to exert a powerful in-Ifluence on a child’s attitude to-Iward school. The use of good English, as well as the activities carried on by both children and adults in some homes, give some children a distinct advantage over the less fortunate ones. then, but the death toll stands * * ★ at 38 and nearly 250 others have Thus, the gap in school suc- been wounded, including many cess between the advantaged women and children. CUT DOWN OFFICIAL Late this summer, cut down a senior Arab official and two top British officials, the chief of police and legislative speaker. Aden’s chief minister, Abdul Qawee Mackawee, Nasser had long had the support of key Aden politicians, yet the British remained, as strong as ever. To speed their departure, he organized the socalled National Liberation Front in southern Yemen. Backed with delinquei •ory pri tional - , - , cal schools, a Mn on obscenejperature and intense humidity, literature and filriu. He urged In the winter there is virtually church and social Vganizations no rain but the air cools down to aid in fighting the ^blem. Ito the 80s. Almost no one has I running hot water because in ., Aden the cold is hot enough. ^ fW entertainmeat, BMtc tfc I f^ beaatifni sandy beaches they draw crowds the ^year around despite the coa-1 menace of sharks. The TORONTO (AP) — Seven! yeia^^d television station now women’s colleges in the United allov^^residents to watch films States are seeking applications | of rec^ rioting and less ex-from Canadians, a spokesman, citing African serials, for the colleges says. The Old ^k Hotel now ha^ a . o -.u ^ I. .“ new rooftop sMper club with a i^i^ions at Smith College in ^-condlUoned view of the spectacular harbor. U.S. Colleges Canadian Womei Northampton, Mass., said that in addition to her own college, other colleges interested in Canadian applicants are in Bryn Mawr, Pa.; Barnard, N.Y.; Holyoke, Mass.; Wellesley, Mass.; Radcliffe, Cambridge, Mass.; and Vassar, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. sent into Aden, it has become the most powerful and feared element in Aden politics. BACKED NLF It has been blamed for, and claimed credit for, most of the terrorism. The Adeni pditical leaders meanwhile have backed the NLF, either out of fear or because they see it as a useful ally in winning British withdrawal. sgspending the constitution and imposing strict security measures, the BriUsh have now declared open warfare against the NLF. If they can crush it, they argue, the Aden politicians can return to their earlier, more moderate, position and plans for the federa- An Italian combo’s fi^uent renditions of the twist only remind one how far this oasis^ from London or New York. Cancer Center Expands BUFFALO. N.Y. (AP) - Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller has approved funds to begin design of a $2.6-million education and communications building at Roswell Park Memorial Institute, the state’s cancer-research center. JET PROPELLED - Robert F. Courier of Yoimgs-town, N.Y., soars above a crowd on the Washlifgtoh, Monument grounds, powered by an experimental rocket belt. His leap to a height of about 80 feet was part of the U.8. Patent Office’s recent 175th anniversary celebration. Aden in fact is perched on southern tip of the Arabian peninsula, 100 miles east of the entrance to the Red Sea. Only its strategic location explains why Queen Victoria sent a gunboat to claim it for Britain in 1839. UVE ON TRADING In those days, a mere handful of Bedouin Arabs managed to live here on trading. Today, Aden colony has a fxipulation of nearly 250,000, including 12,000 British forces, 8,000 European civilians who are mostly British [service families, 30,000 Indians and Pakistanis, and 20,000 Somalis. The Arab population is made up of about 100,000 Adenis and other South Arabian Arabs and 80,000 Yemenis. Surrounding the colony are a score of British-protected snitanates and sheikdoms with some 750,800 tribesmen scattered over an area larger than the United Kingdom. I The relatively sophisticated, highly unionized, Arabs of Aden colony enjoy a surprisingly good life for this harsh port of the ' world. But the trouble is that I Aden, in an era of rampant lArab nationalism and anticolo-jniallsm, finds Itself the worst of pariahs — a British colony and British military base, w w ★ The British have promised Aden independence by 1968 but want to keep the base, their most important between the MeAterranean and the Far East. FEDERATING PLAN Hoping to make this possible, they set out six years ago on plan of federating the colony with the surrounding protectorate states, whose rulers rely the British to maintain their power. Most Adeni peliticiaos want Yemenis, the federation makes ly in December 1963 when a sense. Aden colony itself has nojbomb^t Aden airport killed an natural resources except its har- Indian woman and Aden’s dep-bor and some salt. It has no uty high commissioner. Attacks irmy. 'have been intermittent since protectorate states, on the hand, have an army and They oppose the whole idea of sassination attempt since the terrorist campaign began nearly two years ago. It shows, at a glance, how difficult it has become for the British to remain here. But anyone can see that by driving, as I did some days ago, from Aden airport to a hotel. ' BRITISH SOLDIERS Along the hot, dusty main streets, lined wtih shops and cookie-cutter apartment bouses, British soldiers walk with their rifles and sten guns. The weap-|ons are not slung casually over their shoulders but held firmly and grimly in their hands so that you pass them the barrel points briefly, impersonally, at you. Along the incongruously modern divided highway, which might have been imported from Los Angeles, there are road blocks where more British soldiers peer into cars and trucks. A European, American or Indian is instantly waved sometimes with an embarrassed smile or remark (“srary”). But a carload of Arabs may be'By day, the streets are as bus-searched down to their bones’tling as the 95-degree tempera-and axifes for a hidden wesson ture permits but are nearly de-or bomb. I sorted at night. Over lunch at the house of a British service families friend we hear a dull boom in crowded into the apartment the distance. It can be another houses along Maala Straight, or just blast- and disadvantaged continues to widen. ihe disadvantaged child needs special consideration all through his early school years. My own experience in work- (u«(ltocoodenmU»terrorl5m.!j» “Ill'S; Itat was when Britain suspend, f ed the Aden conslitution, lejista- '* ?J tire councii and council ol min. I gams competence and pictures A week later, Oct. 2. the !’™“lf as being capable of d(^ ATUC called a 24-hour general strike which turned into an orgy ,, ... ... • of rioting and destruction, the' Until this se f-image is gam^^ worst in the wlony’s history. i J Fires were started in a Presby-h'®. own hai^s and needs terian church and Jewish syna- soPPort m his efforts, gogue and at two newspaper of- DIFFERENT SITUATION fices. I A different situation exists Cars were burned and over- with students with average or turned. When tear gas was used superior ability who are doing against the mobs, they broke | poor schoolwork due primarily water pipes to wash the sting to lack of learning techniques, from their eyes, incidentally flooding the streets. In their wake, the riots have left the colony quiet but afraid. To most foreigners, and many terrorist attack ing at a nearby quarry. Conversation turns automatically to the most recent incidents and precautions a resident has to take — little everyday things like locking doors and windows to keep from being murdered. The terror began dramatical- main street of the central town, have their street entrances chained and locked'at midnight. That is Aden. New Prof at Harvard CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) -Former U.S. Solicitor General Archibald Cox has been named new Harvard Law School professorship honoring the late Samuel Williston. Williston A few minutes or, at most, a few hours during which they come to understand more Efficient approaches to the courses they are taking often makes a good student out of a mediocre one. Furthermore, the gain is more likely to be permanent. These students continue to improve on their own. The disadvantaged child lacks' the background to successfully new learning techniques.' It takes time to build up the needed background. Consequently, permanent gains from new educational pro^ams for the disadvantaged will depend to large extent on follow-up assistance programs. I am not criticizing the emer- taught at the school from 1890 to gency programs. Help was needled by these children all along newlV irrigated farmlands that now fm much of the colony. It may Eyen have oil; at least that is th^laim of Amerioans now looking t^r it in the outlying deserts. Aden colony’s gives everything of unreality matcl political situation. GREATER YEMEN The NLF, for example, to abrorb Aden and south bia into a greater Yemen, move that would overwhelm the ^ Adenis and their politicians with six million poor and lesser developed Yemenis. The anU-British Aden Trade Union Congress (ATUC), led by Abdullah Asnag, demands withdrawal of the British base although Its largest union, the 8,000 - member forces union employed on the base, would be thrown out of work by the move. Other Adenis would feel the British withdrawal in their pocketbooks, too. Besides the $100 million British now spends! annually on maintenance gf the| base, another 835 million is spent in Aden salaries and goods. TEMPORARY VICTORY Weeks after suspending the constitution, indications are that the British are winning at least a temporary victory over the terrorists and politicians. A 48-hour petroleum strike passed peacefully and with little effect. A schoolboy demonstration was nipped in the bud. A bombs have gone off but witmut causing serious damage or injpf;^. But on a wall at the office of the British High Commiuion hangs a map of Aden wtih marks for each bomb cxplo- rf Treat Yourself to a Week of Elegance k At One of the Following Enchanting Islandsr^ NASSAU • JAMAICA PUERTO RICO • YIRCm ISLANDS EASILY REACHED BY |media are oils, w|^ colors and iginals cost several hundred dol- drawings. T lars today and^e are valued at more than $1,000. u . • . w V ★ He is a skilled lithographer A century aeo thev sold for P®*"*®^* * gigantic as little^TsixwnS L «rely f t-for more than $3. 10 to 12 hours a day. Buffet has $100,000 ‘GEM’ - Valued at more than $100,000, this gem-studded necklace is on display at the Pontiac Mall as part of its “Accent on Elegance” celebration today through Saturday. The necklace is included in a $750,000 exhibit shown through the courtesy of Rose Jewelers. celebration today through Saturday ar^ a jewelry collection, Currier and Ives original prints and six Bernard Buffet or- . The exhibit will be transport- ,„i uiout«-Ro» JewelCTS ^>"8^ s ^,ed by courier and will be under first Supplies and the NaUonu^e Mu-,pi^erton guard at aU times. BUSINESSMEN FIRST tual Insurance Co. of Columbus, * ♦ ★ Currier and Ives were buM- Ohio. ®>-® the ex-| b'b'ts. Currier and Ives were comnnon- „u_' fnr tt^n^lovar The $750,000 jewelry display, place in American homes IW cSe^ffN?UoJjidSicS featuring diamonds, sapphires j years ago. according to officials NaUonwide officials, and emeralds, is from a world- of Nationwide Mutual Insurance I Because their pictures were famious New York collection, Co. of Columbus, Ohio —owner made to sell, there was an ah-said Mall officials. of the large collection. j “nee of pretense in them. , Some pieces contain as many PRINTS RARE | They are valued today not as 100 carats of diamonds inj However they point out that “**7 because they are rare, but » r q u i s e, pear, baguette, today these prints are rare and because of their simple scenes on..o..»1 . . ng4 dose that we don’t read anybody out'between the GOf and the John in the elections, and this con- “It might be difficult to do. A ................, the John probably as many Demo- Mend of the party’s 1964 presi- of the party." (girch Society. Icerns me,” he said. jlot of them are elected.” “r S!‘»v«w o™x«k i ~ t.., gop ^ r Thomas Davis of Stamford,; llraTrec-" 1«™* “'ey will have to make a said, “Our best guesstimate is ai®“j^ jj., * * * |decision between the Birch »> J ^ j ber of the Orange County, Calif., little over 50 per cent are Re-L... *ug_’ ’ vy* j j-_.. In Washington state, the GOPiciety and the Republican par- ~onirTa»’»hr«npiP^ Central Committee before pubUcans; I would say about are It b a sS Central Committee repudiatedty,” Johnson said. *“**‘y- |he moved to South Dakota, has percent.” 'number.” members before the par-j Florida GOP Chairman T o m NEBRASKA COUNT announced he will run against ♦ * * I Two Republican governors —® congressional leaders spoke Fairfield Brown said the Birch Nebraska GOP Chairman Republican Sen. Karl Mundt in ---- ----- Homni hv •^“Vis said the society is william H Averv of Kansas and voice in his party is a very mi-Walter Witthoff said he knows the 1966 primary. Cousteau, vastly increases the tolo ot laKeover atiempis strongest in southern California. Mark 0 Hatfield of Oreson — Washington C h air man C. nor one.“They get more atten-of 8 or 10 Birch members on his In North Dakota, Martin area of the world accessible to ri^ght wing torces^ But even there, the state Repub- offered different advice on deal- Montgomery Johnson said Birch tion than their numbers warrant Central Committee. Vaaler seeks the GOP nomina- oceanputs have returned to the'f°" California after Resurface of the Mediterranean a^ ter living three weeks in an dersea Itation planted 325 feet infiltrate their party. The feat, planned and super- ★ ★ - vised by Capt. Jacques-Yves In a few states, party leaders| ^ strongest in southern California.'Mark 0 Hatfield of ol^on”— Washington Chairman C. ----------- - .But even there, the state Repub-offered different advice on deal-.................................................................................. human exploitation, said Dr. the ettorB were tnwartea. chairman played down so- ino with the societv forces tried unsuccessfully to because they are so vocal,” he “We know they are here,” he tion for the House seat now held Melville Bell Grosvenor, presi-j GOP Chairman J o h n^^.^jy i“ win control of the GOP organi-*said. said, “but there has been no by Democratic Rep. Holland dent of the National GeographiciMcMurray said the society in .‘j know of no John Birch zation in Kitsap County, Wash.' ♦ ★ * effort to take over. Redlin. Society. The society >bas sup-his state has oo more intluence^j^jy “There’s no place in the poli-Then the state committee Brown said right-wing forces ★ * * i--------------------------------- ported Capt. Cousteau's proj-,in the party than a gnat on ^jof the California Republican par-'cymaking facet of the Republi-passed a resolution, at the be-bid for power in the women’s “Until they commit some act Venezuela is the world’s lead-eels since 1952. I jackass. ,, qj. Qaylord Parkin-jean party for the Johii Birch best of Gov. Dan Evans, on branch of the Florida party, that warrants action, there are ing oil exporter and third larg- The French undersea expert- I OFFICIAL STATUS son. “There are no plans to Society,” Avery said. “But I qualifications for party leader-|“The tactics and activities of no grounds for attempts to re-est producer, ranking behind the ment, known as Conshelf III, I do not know of one John'oust any Republican from the always held the position ship. Johnson said it drew a line the Birchites were very evident move them,” Witthoff added, i United States and Soviet Union, is a u*emendons leap down- iBirch Society member who is an party in California.” j ’ ward from the previous depths 'official of the Republican par-wquu ggcuETLY Some other state GOP leaders of 33, 36 and 90 feet at which ty,” McMurray said. Capt. Cousteau had sUtioned I His colleagues in other states ., . . divers in prefabricated steel '^id there may be ^iety mem- cie^ member^retly at work ™ within their organizations, but Recently the U S. Navy has I * insisted the number is small, had men living 205 feet below InMichigan.GOPViceChair- men in erview^ GOP chair-^^^ « McLaughlin said men. John Birch ^lety figures y, - - - ,and Republican offirehoWers in j The French teammates, un- « states to size up Je impact of, ^^3 der the immediate supervision fh® congressional de^nunciation. ^ \ ' of engineer Andre Laban, were mu , o « . » “I don’t know why they picked given daily tasks to perform ^S«i. Thniston R Morton of outside their underwater home. Rcafacky opned the attack by|ggjy ..^g ^now they’re there.” declaring that Birchers should ..m. j______,u„;. _______u EmaENTHANDUNG v trm. th, GOP. "TaS the surface in its Sealab II project off La Jolla, Calif. They efficiently handled a Everett M. production oil well head at 370,Gerald R. Ford, the GOP con-;,”/*^, feet. ’The oceanauts made short gressional leaders, lined up withl........v excursions to a depth of 430 Morton on Sept. 30. ‘trying to gain strength from they’re active there.” Oil experts watched on television screens as the oceanauts manned the five-ton production well bead which was rigged with compressed air to simulate the 3,666-poandB-per-sqnare-inch pressnre of an actual oil well. ’They are not now a part ofi TROUBLE TALK the Republican party. ’They nev-| Society leaders in Maryland er have been and they never j and Delaware talked of trouble will be,” Dirksen said of socie- for the Republicans because of ty followers. the congressional denunciation. If Republicans “don’t want support from us kooks and extremists,” said a s 0 c i e t y director, Tom Anderson of Baltimore, “ a lot of us are going to STRONGER HOLD Morton said in a speech, “Birchers of the left have a far stronger hold on the Democrats Capt. Cousteau said the new than any extremists ever have, ^ working depth of divers, made had or could have had in ourj. „ ® ** possible by sophisticated sea party.” j ♦ habiUtkms and respiratory de- The consensus view of Repub-| y, , d:„u X Vto U»n 4»bl« te Uen ch.1™™, j ^qffsliore temtory that can be * • * * .. Del., said Republicans may lose n conservative con- not change much tributors in campaigns to come. “There's going to be efficiently exploited. Previously, offshore oil strikes itself, because there is little 150 or iflore feet down have overt Birch influence to be beenca^hp^usethenormalchanged. But it maj help dtving teduuqu^ - with divers Republ|cans convince mjddle-of- 3^3^,^ ^ after the-rtmd voters that the con-Barry each period of work - cannot servative society is not mfluenc- Qoldwater’s nhilosoohy ” maintain economic oofput at ing party policies. p f j those depths. “I don't think there will be HME FOR PARTY The six French oceanauts any particular impact on the Goldwater has now suggested breathed a mixture of helium party." said the West Virginia that Birchers could help the and oxygen at 11 atmospheres of chairman. John Shott. “T h e GOP by resigning from the so-pressure. Nitrogen had to be re- denunciation was more for the ciety and devoting their time to moved to prevent toxic effects edification of the public than the party, under high pressure. the party.” Arizona's GOP chairman. ACCENT ON ELEGANCE Get that Paris Fall-opener! Flings' bow front sling with open sides inelegant black peau (--------- de sole. fdmtew ^ X SHOES W K RESGE’S BUCARONI SHELL $299 Women's Jewel or Moc Turtle Neck TOPS Nubbily knit nylon with important textured surface interest. Bright pink, bright blue, bright yellow, bright lime, white or navy. 34-40. Wool-angora-nylon Fur Blend Shells, 34-40 Moc Turtle Neck Orion Acrylic Shells ^3.99 ^3.99 Plaids, Solids, Tweeds! 8-18 BONDED WOOL JUMPERS A delightful range of styles and colors, including plaids, ricli solids, herringbone tweeds . . . and new heather tone^. Sizes 499 NOTHING BLOUSE WoiticnS' (avonte wash and wear hlnij-.r-. now with long sleeves lor loll and winter. ^ I >,V White, pristels, prints. 32-38. \ » / / SATEEN BLOUSE styles — all with long sleevet A Classic for Women! 90% Wool-10% Mohair CARDIGAN SWEATERS Luxuriously soft sweaters with ribbed crew neck, cuffs and bottom. Links and links-shoulders. White, block, red, royal, blue, light pinlc, light blue, medium grey, heather betge.aqua. 34-40. Extra large sizes, 42-44. 588 Charge ItAt KRESGE'S THK VUi\ > i Ai I Kh^S. a>A ^ . OC rUrtKK 27. 196.5 c~;-ia ■ ? PONTIAC MALL STORE c^cc6nt on fi^egance... The Fisher "Futura" Stereo Radio.-Phono-groph has two 3-woy speaker systems (6 speakers in all), 75 watt stereo amplifier with solid state circuitry. Italian Provincial 62" cabinet, in distressed cherry, $845 The Fisher "Philharmonic" Radio-Phonograph is remarkably compact (46" long) yet its stereophonic sound is magnificent. Stereo FM-AM radio, 4-speed automatic turntable, 6 speakers. Fruitwood, $429 The Fisher "Ambassador" Stereo Radio-Phonograph in a Mediterranean console cabinet that is an artistic masterpiece. 8 speakers, 75-watt stereo amplifier for superb tone. Butternut and oak, $995 916 incompo/iaMe 1966 FISHER Few purchases you can make will give so much pleasure, for so long a period of years, as a fine stereophonic radio-phonograph. Tomorrow at Grinnell's we raise the curtain on the new '66 Fishers . . . marvels of electronic engin- eering that reproduce the original with total realism, whether from records, radio or tape . . . and marvels of furniture design that enrich the finest homes. See ail the models at Grinnell's, from $399. C^U THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, im Engineers' Viet Job: Make Jungle Home ROAD GIVES YOU BENDS—Japanese drivers who make the grade on the switchback nightmare 80 miles north of Tokyo turn every direction on the campass on this new highway which goes only one way—up. The newly opened road at Nikko National Park winds for about five miles upward from the top left. Another road takes them down. Crime in Sweden's Capital Literally Is Underground AN KHE, South Viet Nam I* tress deep in Viet Cong terri- paring it. Helicopters dropped - Sgt. Jimmy L. Nipper and tory. sandbags unUl a helicopter Pfc. Taldion R. Devlin are im- ★ ★ ★ could land and let out troops, portent men in the 1st Cavalry, Tj,gy „an “Water Point,” a The company cleared brush 1^ Division’s massive encampment outpost on a swift stream until they had a spot on near here m the central Viet- 5^^,^ distance from the main which to land a small bulldozer, namese highlands. effective This dozer tumbled big trees Devlin, 25, and Nipper, 32, apparatus they can turn out 900 moved granite boulders un-help the diyisipn exist at its for- ga„ong „f pure water an hour. Ul a semblance of level ground Without this precious water, was established. Then a big bull-1 the 19,000 men of the 1st Air Ca- was Ufted in. valry would either die of thirst ★ ★ ★ in the dehydrating heat, or sick- Bravo Company interrupted ' en from drinking impure water. I work to beat off an< occasional I MANY imw i I MANY JOBS j jijg company will build a DevUn and Nipper are mem- rodd to the site. It will start bers of the 8th Engineer Battel- from the top and end at the I ion. Among its numerous other bottom 3 Man-Made Valve Substitutes Possible i The batteUon commander, Lt. . ‘H »unds a little Uke build- BIG CORN BIN IN SKY-Farmer Ray Dubbert scratches Col. Robert Malley, says: “It a hoi^ from the roof down his head in wonder as he watches a helicopter carry a 2,200-will be our Rock of Gibraltar ™ a®aal way,” said pound corn storwe bin on a 10-niiIe journey from a site near Bv Science Service , in the middle of Viet Nam.” |Cerjan, but it’s easier to work th »— *-----n------»u w__t^— m ATLAl^C CITY N J —! company of the 8th was down than up and we have the RhoiiinaH,. hoar* natipnic arp 1,008-man advance par- choppers to take our equip- RheumaUc heart patients are jy arrived Aug. 25 in Viet ment up there.” i getting a new lease on Ufe ^ directed the clearing - die men here are ca- through re^ilacement of t h r e e by hand — of thick jungle on the ^’'diers formerly stationed heart valves. chosen campsite. Benning, Ga. Nipper, Mal- I Dr. Albert Starr, head of sur-, ★ ★ ★ ®"d Cerjan all list Colum-| gery at the University of Ore-| -rup ugnj piparinff with hm«h ’ dieir homes J)evlin Portland, told tSe Ameri-'h I Beggars went abouttwinging, “A soul cake, a soul cake, have Wrcy on all Christian souls for a soul cake.” Prayers were , pledged in return for gifts. iGOT INTO ACT ! As time passed, the pledge of prayers was dropped. “Soulers” gave way to children eager for By Science Service aiff, chief of the Forest Serv-'apples, nuts, or other goodies. WASHINGTON - Forceful ice, U.S. Department of Agricul-| But households were still roused management wooded areas ture. For three centuries, U.S.''*™ Exhibit Islls History industries is essen- forests have been among the. the progress he had made in plained by Col. Malley. replacing the tricuspid valve., ..^e couldn’t disturb the turf STOCKHOLM (AP) - Crimelto draft extra men for patrol This valve often has to be re- bulldozers and earth mov-' in this capital city of Sweden isjduties at the worst affected ste- placed after subsUtutive mitral grs too much. We’ve got 450 hel-going underground quite liter-also operate icopters in this outfit and they, ally- on the trains connecting the city I create enough dust, even with In fact, beneath the surface suburbs. | Of 23 patients who had sur- jgood turf. Also we can’t have a tee‘!^mbUM‘fr l^^auS'^bi! “ is^ impos^ble for| gical replareme^ of ^ thrre imorass of mud when it’s rain-bite in the Pontiac Mali's “Ac-have or can economically ere- Uon opportunities^ IJ! “yipobce to predict when and; valves, only two died. Dr. jmg. cenj „„ Elegance” celebration ate, a raw material base for the subway trams alone. ,^,ere a crime will take place,, Starr reported. CHASE SNAKES \is a Heakhmobile-a 50-foot-long developing forest industries to PROGRESS Ibe modern city-center sta- the judo-trained station staff! -a 67-year-old woman who Together with the banvanwhich tells the history of greatly boost their economies, Much progress has been made ^ oiw:ure io«- If you haven’t an apple, a pear will do. One for Peter, two for Paul, And three for the Man Who made us all. tial to close the widening gap major building blocks of our so-, X Cl * kil J* • ; between the “have,” or de-ciety. Today one out of every j 01 Mdl6 iMBCllCinB veloped countries, and the three acres in the U.S. is forest “have-not,” or newly developing land that gives the public such countries. benefits as timber, water, wild- |„ Ireland forerunners of One of the outstanding exhi- Many developing countries, life, livestock forage and recrea- j-jek or treat laid it riaht on the line. People went about b^KSlng gifts in honor of one 11 wa r AA.I -.1. .1 “A 67-year-old woman who Together with the banyan,which tells the history of greatly boost their economies, -..-v.. .,,,0 character nrobablv lined will be faced with trying to'^as such a desperate case that teak and mahogany trees the Michigan medicine. Ithe North American Forestry In the last few years to retain maintain law and order untfilwe advised against surgery.” I tangled liana vines and lesser. Conceived as a means of giv-; Commission meeting here was the ^uty ^ beiwflte of the naTHSTein enstonw regular pohee officers arrive on Dr. Starr said, "insisted that'brush, the troopers chopped up “8 continuity to the Michigan'told by Dr. Nils A. Osara, dl-forests, Mr. Cliff said. Research cn»uim». the scene. |she needed to live to take care l8-fa)t pythons cobras ^poi-‘State Medical Society’s 1965^ rector of the forestry and for- is under way to develop biologi-j Householders were reminded NONINVOLVEMENT of her 80-year-old sister. We sonous kraits ' which the men!®®"*®"™®! observance, it relates'est products division of the Food cal or improved chemical con- that Muck 011a was responsible And they are not likelv to ®*>® “ going caU‘‘bamboo’vipers.” One man outstanding inUestones in Michi-'and Agriculture Organization of Potato dwtroy forest-blighting for prosi^rlty. which would dis- . . " as bita ta, nodicaln«lldn.. ^ ^ Uatel NaUona. danger to «her ^ ’ support from local onlookers, for: _. . . , ,, tention saved his life. | ,1,- « LiLiJ Canda, Mexico and the Unit- -----------------------------------------—__ Add to these the velvet, lace the average Stockholmer prefers'.,^® “ a pump, and all On a recent move of battalion; ®"® ®f the exhibit! ^ members of the and pastel plumage of the male to steer a course of noninvolve-|“f. ^ “ ® Commission, which is one of “beat” set, with their shoulder-,ment which, depending on theiri Hons on the Stockholm nnder-ground railway network, with' their late-night shops and hot dog and soft drink antomats, have become favorite hangouts for young thugs, teen-age prostitutes and persistent one will break down. [leading the way was blown up instrument collection of^ regional forestry groups length ciiris, Spanish heels and pr^ficienc'yTwiineroM '^y a mine. But the ®ngf®®®”'S®organized by FAO to facilitate chunky jewelry, and you have for the 75 women who have so Asked by Science Service if,had Padded the truck’s floor|g®®" aw teachCT at me international cooperation and a crime cocktail which is leav- far enrolled for the unarmed ing the Stockholm police and {combat course, subway authorities with a monu-j u. to* -1 Ism—which runs up to millions 'nie bi^r obve in the ^ktail, ^ ^„uars every year-to rob-is that these yimg hoodl^j are a product of Swrfen s ^u- ^ ent society and welfare state,; jy^riy women where economic prosperity has I elevated just about everybody Many women having to travel to middle class status. jhy the late night trains, arm DANGEROUS SITUATION | themsdv« with tags of pepper _ . , ,ito ward off attackers. Hie crune rate has mcreased, * ★ * so alarmingly that, according to ^ an official of the subway com- ^ pany, the tendency is toward a {subway’s newly appointed man-“daneerous situation.” i^gj^g director. Helge Berglund, Another exhibit relates the' he expected that an entire arti-iwidi sandbags so that the driver ®^ Michigan s medical ficial heart would ever be prac-l®s®aped with no injury at all s®"®®*-tical. Dr. Starr said we should I andtta passenger had only su-i not "pooh-«pooh” the idea. Dr. Starr estimates that M,-OM persons are wearing either one or two or all three valves today. The Lowell Edwards Laboratory of Santa Anf, Calif., has produced 24,0N of the vdves. “dangerous situation. So Berkms has it become, that in addition to regular two-man police patrols and armed officers of Stockholm’s Night Security Service, employes of the subway are being recom- rapid exchange of information { on forest resources. For the j . . , u- . 1 I first time, the United States is ' i perficial cute. ®.^ Michigan s early years | ^ sessions. Previous w w ♦ as a pioneer in medical tauca-, A particularly difficult task bon which began in 1866 at Ann jjgjjpu 1961 and in He estimated that 800 to 1,000 valves a month are implanted in' for the battalion was clearing Arbor, the top of nearby Hon Cong Mountain and the establishment of a heliport and “antenna, farm” as the heart of a communications network. ' Hon Cong, commanding the Connecticut 'Cuf —Vermont Is Cuter ! Ottawa in 1163. The “have-not” countries can greatly benefit from counsel. capital and assistance in learning bow to develop their forests HAR'TFORD, Conn. (UPl) — and to combat such destructive en^* ArT'iuie 'vaU^lT valua^ A tanking advertisement in the forces as insects, fires and humans"ai rcwTof“^7 pie^ ble as an artillery observation ^ew Englander magazine read careless depletion of trees, Dr. for the valve alone. position. ”... No bank knows Connecti-Osara said. ^ WWW I ^ cut better,” * * * '■ “We do not plaim that the UUMPANY’S JOB ' jhe ad featured a picture of The forestlands of the United who is onlv too'Twa^ orthe valves are perfect,” Dr. Starrl^Capt. Paul J. Cerjan’s Bravo a rural scene photographed in States are a cornCTstone of our dangers of allowing Stockholm’s,*®^ “Sometimes a temporary had the job of pre-Vermont. subway savages to go un-{*P®®®*’. ®®®“''S ®v®n if the. Great Society, said Edward P. checked. V FINANCIAL LOSS operation is successful, but we are continually trying to perfect the parts.” mended to take special train- L ^ Starr’s first tricuspid, ■no eonrses i^^indn and tectmg passengers, there IS also|valve -operation was in Febru-unarmed combat * 'f*'® financial loss to be taken ;ary 1963, and this patient is still {into account if they decide to alive. The first mitral valve re-.Meanwhile the S10 c k h 01 m make use of other forms of placement in the world was P’olice Department is planningtransportetion. done by him. Did you know that • . ^ ^/J 9. stand behind every piece of merchandise they sell O 01 Lead out in silky suodo pumps and matching bag to take the trick ovary timal HIgh-haal CUT UP ancirclas a high vamp; mid-haal BU88FUL has lizard-grain and lustra laathar trim. Choosa Farn Oraan. Cattail or Black auada uppars ... for smart fashion stratagyl -■ w aa 14” :MF=»OS* TODAY.. .TOMOWtOVU.. .TCRWFIC Where Fashion Is a Looking Not a Price Also at Pontchartrain Hotel of Course! This picture could have been taken at donnelFs newest hair studio at the new Hotel Pontchartrain in Downtown Detroit Donnell anticipates opening in mid November. The decor will be in French Provincial in harmony with the French and International theme of the Hotel Pontchartrain. Color scheme will be gold, eggshell and black. The drying room and reception room will be carpeted. The winner of The Pontiac Mall “Week End'at the Pontchartrain” will also win a complimentary hair style at donnelPa at The Mall. Does She or Doesn’t She? These wip can be obtained at Couifrures by donnell at the Mall. Glamourous women the world-over are changing their personalities and appearances with, fashion-styled wip from fashion tress. Think of it! If you are swimming or golfing in the afternoon, there’s no worry about your hairdo for that big evening date. Just slip on your Fashion 'Tress Wig and be the woman you want to be-effortlessly! Because more and more “women on the go” have become increasingly knowledgeable about wigs. Fashion Tress Wip have gained unprecedented popularity. Par and away the finest in quality, they are far and away “first-in-sales.” Here’s why: Fashion Tress Wip are made of lovely European human hair and are available in the widest choice of colors and styles. They stay beautifully dressed for weeks and can easily be cleaned, redressed and styled. Light (lew than 4 ounces) cool and comfortable, a Fashion Tresa Wig slips on in a second, combs euily and can be worn with complete care-free confidence. European wip flSO and up. Oriental wip also available from 160. Come into onr lalon and see onr selection. Couif-fnres by donnell at The Pontiac Mail Most any oil co. credit card or mgjor department atore credit eard aeknow- THE VONTlAl I'llESS. AVEDNESDAV. ()C r()BKK 27. l»(i.5 C- la Jh geidlt tiHieli 0^ Minli subtle flattery just for you Tha triplax twist of noturol mink in paitat ranch JM Embo* Tourmolina* ... to circio your thould-art, and land on anchonting bit of glamor. Saa all this luxury for a comparativaly small prica. At Wards, of coursa........... . $99 tfi nf impmrt^Hfurt Glamorous, Festive after-five party dresses are waiting for you Rich rayon valvat with squarad nack; ball skirt, "glittar" pin at waist. Tha parfact way to wolcoma that vary spacial ovaning. Rad, royal. 7-15,.^................19.99 Now you can enjoy the flattery of this magnificent mink stole You'va only to saa and touch this magnificant split mink stola to raaliza what an unusual buy this is. Natural ranch or postal mink, ax-partly workad for a stola of timalass baauty. Doubla fur collar............. 299. > »r urodurU lahrlm 5 POR MAGICAL NIGHTS Breath-taking" dresses put you in a festive mood 'M- SEE AFTER-FIVE ELEGANCE FOR JUNIORS AND MISSES Shown... just a sampling from this beautiful collection: (5 A rich rayon velvet bodice, circled at the waist with a velvet-leaf band, and with a bell-shaped rayon brocade skirt. Raspberry; moss green. 7-13. 24.99 @ Holiday dazzler... this long-sleeved, cowl-necked sheath of glittering rayon and miracle-knit Herculon ' olefin. Yours in brilliant winter white. 7-15. .19.99 IVansilional 86 inch three cushien sefa 1 HEW, WMM, HCmiS S0F> HUT WILL aHUCE YOUl UVMt fVlONTGOMERY WARD Beautifully quilted of famous Scotchgard fabric, in warm gold or green. You get a sturdy self-covered platform with a full coil spring base construction to add extra comfort to the years of gracious living ahead waiting for you. Also pictured is the cane accent chair with a nubby textured cover, choice of colors . .109*' Cocktail, step, commode and drum tables, priced from . . . .49" $ 22999 NO MONEY OOWN Remington 30-06 caliber 5 shot-clip fed rifle This b«auty will be your hunting partner for life! Extra strong, fast and easy loading with dependable rotary multiple breech bolt. All wool cop...........1.N Woolfich Pants......... . 19.M t..........t2.N Insulotod Boots........28.BS »I49K NO MONEY DOWN Fully equipped 7-foot slate top pool table-accessories Professional styling adds to the years of family fun. The playing field is a big 7 feet with thick slate top. Concealed and padded ball returns and scoie counters. Complete with 2Vk" billiard bolls, 4 pool PONTIAC AAALL Telegraph Road G>rner Elizabeth Lake Rd. Telephone 682-4940 *425 NO MONEY DOWN Store HOURS OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. Until 9:90 P.M. J PONTIAC AAALL Telegraph Road Corner Elizabeth Lake Rd. Telephone 682-4940 STORE HOURS OPEN MONOAY'THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. Until 9:09 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1963 TWO COLORS D—1 FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS i PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS IimMMM•nfeMMUUH.I 1 | inuinn | «lnut»i. | ni«»i««ui. I OWN iUNOAYS E OWN MNDAW | OWM iUNPAYl M aosto Don’t Mm These Outstanding Food Tcnvfi-People’s Exciting Bargain Buys! 8 EXCITING WEEKS OF GOLD BELL VALUES GALORE-BUY NOW AND SAVE! 1 ton lu mis WEB lOlhEnM s; STAMPS 1 FREE 14-OZ. Bonu OF Hlmrs Tomato CATSUPI Coupon Ooo4 ot Alt Poopio's and Food Town Moricots ' BONELESS ROLLED RUMP ROAST BOROESS ROUEl HEEL or ROUND «FRESH 6MVID HJWURGER 89t 79i 490 f Amiour's i pommii \L ARMOURS GROUND BEEF ■fAX ROUND 7uC STEAK |yl FRESH FROZEN Smolik CAKES ASSORTED VARIETIES nWV EACH ONLY W W ' FRESH FROZEN a a ■ TOP FROST nfiA perchVUv Pound Pkg. Hw INSTANT NESCAFE CRISP POTATO CHIPS Pound Bag 39< KRAFT'S VELVEETA CHEESE SPREAD 2 Pound ^ ^ C Pkg. 79' CAKE MIXES • CARROTS • CABBAGE • SQUASH Your Choice XOLURA NYLONS BLUE RIBBON FACUL TISSUES kvo ped stems in half of I butter, until onions are golden. iMix sauteed onions and mudi-rooms with salt, crumbs, cheese, walnuts and steak sauce. this mixture, ahd place in shaving dish. Add water, am| dot with remaining butter. Bake in oven (400 degreeb) for 10-25 minutes until nicdy Bean Dip 2% cups cooked lima beans 2 tablespoons steak sauce % cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon chopped scallion I Mash beans well with fork. 'Add remaining ingredients and Sbdf mushroom cape ^ith blend to a paste consistency. Refrigerate, covered ujitil ready to se^e. Serve on crackers. Natty Cheese Balls 1 package (0-oz.) cream Vi cup steak sauce % cup chipped nuts (pecans, walnuts or almonds) Soften cream cheese and mix weU with steak sauce. Shape into little balls. Place toothpicks in each, and roll in chopped nuts, turning toothpick until cheese ball is completely Hearty Casserole Saves the Day When you are in a hurry, tills pantryshelf special may fit in. Chli Beans Wito Rice S cans (1 pound each) blit cue beans 1 teaspoon chili powder (or more to taste) 1 cup rice, cooked 1 cup grated cheddar cheese In a large skillet, mix t beans and chili powder; ht slowly, stirring often. S^ ever the rice and sprinkle^/with| the cheese. Makes ings. Pickling Gives Shrimp Lively Tast4 iHNnEasiBi I sprinkle n 8 4 lar^ se Pickled shrimb qiec^ featurp ,fer your neyt bridge IbnchM^ bu(M supper, cocktail paldy, or after-the-game snack/ This gouhaet treat is both de-EkNisjm aittractivc on your| table. Wtiat’s more, you it at Ibaat a day in advance — wheii you aren’t busy rushing arpund doing other things just hbfore your guests arrive. Pidiled Shrimp 2V4 pounds fresh or frozen shrimp V4 cup celery V4 cup mixed pickling spices 3V4 teaspoons salt 1 cup celery slkes ^ cup chopped onion VI cup diced green pepper IV4 cups salad oil % cup vinegar IVI teaspoons salt 7 or • bay leaves , 2% tablespoons capers and juice ^ ^ 6 or 7 drops Tabasco sauce 3 hard-cooked eggs, diced (jover shrimp with boiling wa? ter; add celery tops, pidtllng spices, and 3H teaspoons salt, (iovor and simmer 5 minutes. Cwnblnc celery slices, chopped onion, diced 0en pepper, salad oil, vinegar, li% teaspoons salt, bay leaves, capers, and Tabasco sauce. Pour this dressing over ahrlmp; at least 24 hours. Drain shrimp reserving dressing; remove biy leaves. Toss shrimp with diced hard-< cooked eggs. Serve on lettuce with the dressing or mayonnaise, ff de- Draln. Cool with cold water.jsired, garnish with hard-cooked Peel shell from shrimp, and de- egg slices. Yield: About 4 serv-vein under cold water. ings. KIN^OF ROASTS! ''Supe^Ri9ht" Mohirt. Com-Fod Boof BEEF RIB ROAST "SUPER RIGHr MATURE, CORI FED BEEF CHUCK RO lb. TV IDEAL FOR BRAISING — "SUPER-RIGHT' Beef Short Ribs • • •» 45^ 189 "SUfER.RIGHr BONELESS No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No • • • EVERYDAY LOW PRICES Mixn viOiTAaLes ^ ^ _ Veg-AII..............2 37* SALAD OaESSINC urrwr A M Shedd's Ezy ... . F25* SALAD DSiSSINU MSTwr dto Shedd's Italian . . vf 34* DtL MONTi-; LlfiHT CHUNK STYU - Tuna Fish Kr . . 4“« 99* HAia DKfSSING uarWT Grooms Clean . .. 83 SAVi AT ADP Ponds Cold Cream 1** OCIAN SPRAY — U>W CAL. COCKTAIL . ^ Cranberry Juice . . '^ 49* CRANaEaer-OKANCt urr ^ * Ocean Spray Relish 35* WcNod Floor Care . . ’in' 79* ONE STEP ARAASTRONe ^ ^ Floor Care..............93* Johnson's Pledge 1” CUTEX —6c Off LASEL wrrw* Polish Remover . . V.” 37* Pillsbury Flour . . . •» 55* UVE AT ADP—NcT WT. 12-01. ^ ^ _ HormersSpom . .2u"^89* GlodoMist __________________’^149* SUNSHINE - . Hydrox Cookies . . 49* PILLSOURY —MILK CHOCOLATI ^ M Frosting Mix . . . .’^ 35* musauRT — ck««my fudge ^ ^ Frosting Mix . . . .'lit'35* Wylers Soups . . . v;!?. 10* AU PURPOSE - A Robin Hood Floor ’^ 49* SUNN7BR00K 6RADE “A” URGE EGGS 2 DdZ. SUNNTFIfto _ WBCAKE FLOUR }* 27* ^ROCISS CHliSl SPREAD Ch^-O-Bit 2X6» 3.ts..49*| I ANN PA6« ^ . Elbow Moei CHOCOUTt eOVIMD ICC CRU*. Chccpio Bcipb 12 s 49* ....49* HOT HOUSE tomatoes - 59* SAVE AT Afrp jm mm loM Tomatoes 4 5w lb 39 Coffe^ ETrSii 3 DELUXE EVIRBADY 1 LB JL ----- Nestle Cbcoa... P9 Bananas , , ,, 2 25* \ m #|d|c Fresh Golden Carrots -- 2 a 19* I®??'® ^ f " Nut Meats oTtssivix., ’ria 99* Fruit Punch . ^ * wvwn. QCUN SPRAY COCKTAIL Cranberries * Cranberry Juice MARVft SPRAY \ JM 23*'iff 4^ Window Cleaner 39* 2c OPP UIIL~M0 SHUTS 4Vi"x4Ji^ Northern Tissue GIANT SIZE Oxydol Joy liquid Detergent 3LB. 10Z. PKG. 79 8U K QUART fUSTlC Hoerty end Vlfereot OUR VP A ^ »W" TEA J 1-LB. LOOSi; THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27. 196.5 D--8 Taffy Rum Mousse Is Light, but Distinctly Flavorful By CECILY BROWNSTONE i ta t»ved i AP Food Editor oar famUy, Mends or i When . recipe is tried in our ^ ^ . test kitchen for possible use inl When we tested the r e c i p e this column, the result is comi mented on by the people who work with us — our regular tasters. Emergency Kit a meal at which that follows, a full-bodied Taffy! Rum Mousse, we made • And •* changeabout. presented the * ‘ rrfof^riv\?b?**S;|tS»H)uld you tiy this spirited sister. I Her menu included a first .mAiiwaa /kf Mritk «uks#A ^ __ course of spaghetti with white Make your own fire extin-^ But as often as we can, we Kosher to keep in your kitchen! thick sirloin steak, a cooked like to have what has come tojUse an empty salt box with a vegetable casserole; a tossed be known at our house as pour spout and fln with baking salad. soda. Cover the outside of the; Then came the Taffy Run us their opinion of a dish. jf ,^h attractive Mousse. We’re happy to re- This means that Hie dish Ipaper. I port t^ the honest-to-good- |Should you try thi . ^HGujed floui flour Garlic powder and ground- Second Appearance until mixture is slightly thick- I with saran and continue chilling ened and consistency resem- until serving time, bles that of unbeaten egg Unmold and serve “as is,” or white. Whip cream until it garnish with whipped cream and doubles in volume and holds | chopped nuts. Makes 10 servJ soft peaks; fold it into the ings. ' gelatin mixture, (if at the end -f- sweet, we hope you have simi-|minutes. Remove from heat; lar success. add sugar and stir until dis- ( Taffy Rum Mousse Stir jn molasses and , . rum, then milk. 1 cup cold water .... Chill, stirring occasionally, 2 envelopes ilnflavored gelatin' _ ^ cup sugar | Vi cup old-fashioned 1 V« cup light rum Vi cup milk ''\ Use that leftover meat loaf for c u m i n may be added to sea-! ^ cups heavy cream an hors d oeuvre. Cut it into, gently beat until they are salad, cook celery ribs in * IntA A medium sAureDsn noiir n j w *1 u u hi«>ndAfi \ chicken stock, drdin &nd insrin* soned flour (flour, salt and pep-ly,"^,; spSKl- ’ i •. ate in French dressing: chill per) and used as a coating for.atin over the water. Plaa over,'****' ** ‘*“™*! and serve on salad greens with a chicken or fish. Serve with rice low heat and stir constantly un-,U>e broiling. Tastes good with until firm - about 3 or 4 hours; garnish of pimiento and anchovy and chutney. 'til gelatin dissolves — about 3 tomato juice. 'tightly cover the top of the mold fillets. of the folding process there are blobs of cream not worked use a rotary beater Different Salad As a change from a tossed "Supw-Right" Quality Govtrnmant Inspected FRESH FRYERS immsABT WHOLE FRYERS Cut-Up. Split or Quartered FRYERS 2» k JWllSE J "SUPER-RIGHT" SKINLESS All-Meat Franks "Super-Right" Quality ^ 2 to 3 Pound Sizes SPARE RIBS Just Quality Merchandise at Low Prices! 2-LB. PKG. 1 95*1 l-LB. PKG. 49* "SUPER-RIGHT" HOT OR MILD Pork Senisage... ... «u 45* CAP'N JOHN'S Breoded Shrimp 2 it. r’ PEELED AHD DEVEINED Shrimp medium size ., ..3 .a. 3” H*iw Tomato Kofehup I Tomrte Ke»chup2 *3 49* I "w SOLID ,ACK-H-W..T-0.. Whitt Albacore Tuna Rs" save ioc-^ane EAEKEE 1 amh ^agi wm Egg Noodles. 29* PKG. OF 12 ^CH'GAN swkt P*der SlUh FOR A&P CANHED FRUIT SALE! Whole Apricots Fruit Cocktail Cling Peaches Purple Plums Apple Sauce UNPEELED 1-LB. 13-OZ. CAN 1-LB. 1-OZ. CAN 1-LB. 13-OZ. CAN 1-LB. 13-OZ. CAN 1-LB. 9-OZ. JAR 99 Halloween Candy OLD NICK — 5c SIZE Candy Bars 24..~.69‘ WORTHMORI Ha »BS. Mil vtS. 29 WORTMMORR M IN RKO m A* NSntlOlltS..n'w-oz. 09 lABY aUTH OR BOTTERFiN^ER CANDY BARS 40VnVk"«‘69‘ ,E TURKiV OR CMieitiN—RROXIN banquet Dinners......... TURKIV OR CHICKIN-RROIIN jm nIT WT. | Banquet Pies........D p'^V ■IROfIVB-RROXaN FORONOOK 0% mr WT. Lima Beans J VI&V ■liMIVI—MOZIN VAC. ilAL 4% NIT WT. Broccoli Spoors .4 liaMIVI-.-afOZIN VAC. rial n Kiixod Vcoofoblts... Vim. PARKAY-4N CTRa. , ^AC ........... AT 39* 99* |00 1“ 27* ■TOKItV Sheilie Beans------- CRIAM STVLI S uoiv Corn .... MINI LIVII ALL TUNA Celt f^ood.......... LWHT, CHUNK STYU Stor-Aist Tuna ... ROIL WRARRI»-NIT WT. H-OX. 4% Kod./aO: r St________j NIT WT. . CANS ^ I Towels........ THI GREAT ATLANTIC I. PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC. |y|arl(ets ^ AMERICA'S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT SINCE 1859 PRICES OPICTIVI THROUGH MTUROAY, OCX. lOtb EVERYDAY LOW PRICES SAVE 10c — Jane Parker 8" Pineapple Pie - 39‘ ZANI PARKIR IRISH CRISP pidWC Potato Chips .. ;^o"x 59 SAVI 11c JANS PARKS! piCAN punsi m ew# •«rC«ke.......tit 49* CRACKID WHIAT eWmw Bread «ni parkh 21 JANE PARKER—Amfrica't Fevorita FRUIT CAKES l-LR. SIZE . S-LB.SIZE DARK RATTER I LIGHT BATTER 89* 3*^ Tuna Fish . . .4”"’9 Tomato Juice . . 3'i;°Hi89* Glo-Coat ..... 7^ Johnson's Wear Johnson's Pledge si 73* Pineapple Juice . 34* Dole Pineapple . /’£;°n^ 35* Mozoln Corn Oil / . 63* Tuna Fish . . / . . 5|? 35* Pilisbury Flour . . . 2**’ CHOPPED HORSE/ -...T - NET WT. 15-OZ. ^ _ _ Orleans Dog Food 2‘^’'’45* ROLL OF 500 4Vi"»4'/z'' z-PLY SHEETS ^ _ Aurora Tissue . . . %“25* Did you know tiiat “soft”biiead isn’t necessarily fresh bread? That's w^JaneParker bread is dated daily ...IT'S YOUR GUARANTEE OF FRESHNESS. JANE PARKER ENRICHED ^WHITE BREAD ib«^2^!S989BS8SSSSBR9BSHHHI -hfA-r- Coff#« Cream Wt. Jar Johnson's Floor Wox Glo-(oat ^ Furniture Wbx loknson's Pledgew't Sn Food Club «ela«n 3 25' Red or Yellow (ra?berryJaBte4ia«89‘ Ked or yellow Hawaiian Punch 3'^»-39* Bondware Cold Drink Paper (ups 'SSf 99* Bondware White 9" Paper Plates Dog Food Ken-L-Rafion 6 cans < Hygrode 100-tt. Pkg. 79' Mb gy Eosy to Apply Aero Wai T Vegetoble Vi-Gal. $^17 HabilanISoiip 2cJ^33' Container 1-lb. lundieonNeaf wtca„39' Ihedd's Sofflower Margarine Contedine Celifornie Tomatoes Mb. 2^. Rieh Hobitant Pea Soup ^ Chiffon Margarine ■wJock Frost 2-or. Can 25' I lb Ctn. ' Strawbeny Drink’’’ca;” 59' 6"S,-*^00 6Fop ^rost Seafood Sale! Fish Sticks 3ST Perch Fillets Mb. * 39‘ Sove 10c Pet Ritz Pumpkin Pies Meadowdale Potatoes-Aunt Jemima Waffles Popsicles or Fudgesicles Breaded Shrimp -$199 Sove 20t P&D Shrimp >kfs. Mf. wX39‘ 49‘ 12 Rich Coffee Flovor INSTANT MAXWELL HOUSE Sj6» 14-oz. Wt. Jar ^ Whitens Clothes Post Acting . For Automatics Speciol Label Removes Stubborn Stain* Speciol Lob*l Mild ACriVf "ALL" EXTRA FLUFFY AU DISHWASHER AU UQUID WISK LUX LIQUID LUX FLAKES 74' i^75' t£,.69' ^ &t 60' 12V2-OZ. or« Wt, Pkg. 00 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27. 196.5 D—5 ‘•"STAMPS BEU Finer gifts come faster when save Gold Bell Gift Stamps. Fill •.. Tor Christmas U.S. Choice STEAKS Center Slices Sportsmon __ Sliced Bologna Hygrod# W. Virginia Sliced Bacon BonolMt Pan Roady Ocean Perch Fillets ^Ib. 12-oz. Wt. Pkg. 59* 'rt99‘ U.S. Chaict Bttf Chuck Steaks CoHirtty KitchcR PotatQ Salads - 39- steaks Center Slices Completely Dreseed Fresh Lake Smelts Fresh Breakfast Links Agar Boneless Canned Hams Nb. Reody 3-lb. $^99 to Eat Can' X Rich - Reg. or Drip Grinds CHASE & SANBORN Umil Oat wHk Ctvpoa ta Oppetite Poft Regular or Lo-Cal MVUIW 12-01. 20', FI. (an SAVE ON 6 UmH Six with Caajaaa ta OppuHt Peft S{.aUovxen Candy dieadquarters Hershey Candy Bars mtSO* ’AT79‘ K.bw.c«m ’Sr2?‘ s/aSh. EE WITH THIS COUPON be.r, w Halloween Apple Harvest Michigan U.5. No. 1 Extra Fancy All Hand Picked McIntosh 6^ 79‘ ^tT79' 79- FREE Halloween Mask with purchase of 3 lbs. or more Applet while supplies last Red Jonathan Apples Red Delicious Apples Caramel AffyTapples ' Apple Cider Michi I a« Sweet-1 Large Pumpkins Bunny Pop Popco rn wt Breakfost Magnolio Prunes U.S. No. I Michigan Monty Rolls Ic candy aer Buttorfingors Pi3 cups flour teaspoon baking powder ^ teaspoon baking powder IVt tea^Mons salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teas])oon cloves ^3 cup nut meats, broken ^ cup raisins or dates, finely chopped V« teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon ^ teaspoon nutmeg Vt cup shortening m cups brown sugar 2 eggs ^4 cup coconut Combine cereal crumbs, pumpkin, molasses, vanilla and milk. Let stand 15 minutes. Sift dry ingredients together. Beat shortening with one cup brown sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in one egg. Add cereal mixture and blend well. Stir in dry ingredients. Spread batter in greased Itz-Sx2pan. I Beat remaining egg until thick and lemon colored. Gradually ibeat in remaining brown sugar; continue to beat until mixture is thick. Stir in coconut and spread over batter in pan. Bake 30-35 minutes at 350 de-| grees. Cool 30 minutes in pan] on rack. Cut to serve. Midces about 12 bars. | Then try some pumpkin ice cream. It'll have extra nutritional value because there’s vitamin A in pumpkin. Pumpkin Ice Cream 1 cup brown sugar 1 tablespoon flour V* teaspoon salt 1 teaspom cinnamon thick. Cembiue pumpkhr and egg yolks; slowly add hot mixture, beating constantly. Cook about three mhiutes over low evaporated A Cobbler Is Tasty romaine 1 jar (6 ounces) marinated artichoke hearts, undrained 12 pitted vriMle r^ olives Olive oil and wine vinegar Seasoned salt and pepper WWW Remove sUn and bones from chicken and cut into %-inch squares; toss with romaine, undrained artichoke hearts and olives. Add (dl, vinegar, sea-' with lids. Fill thiWquarters full with bluebmy, apple or peach pie filling, and top with a pastry crust cut and freshly-baked for the occasion. A tiny cobbler like this will be a welcome sight come lunchtime. AAarmaladtt Layer Almond Crisps Hold Cream ^•ntifui Fowl ^ani Lots of Gom iivors Dessert will truly be some-,4 inches apart, on greased, li^t- ttoTN^UnTi thing to savor when it’s “Al- ly floured baking sheet. mood Crisp Ice Cream Cakes.” only 4 or 5 crisps at a time Toasted silvered almond ssupply in 375 degree (moderately hot) delightful crispness in theseloven 5 to 6 minutes. overcooked, they should be des^ “sandwiches" which are,' , brown outside, sUghtly pink in- definitely not to be eaten out-of- rteet befow lifting with spatu- side. I* to waxed paper-covered i Simplest way to prepare racks. (If orispi harden be- them: halve livers, saute in hot fore they can be removed ! butter in skillet over low heat from sheet reheat in oven a |with chopped onions and mush-few seconds to soften.) jrooma about S minutes, turning ..•I - Serve ovef toast points; Slice Ice cream into 8 equal .. . , ’ parts. Sandwich 1 slice ice cream between 2 crisps for each serving. Drizzle with chocolate, ^ . synqi if desired. Makes 8 scrv- Cold Wator Bath Almond Crisp Ice Cream Cakes H cup toasted slivered almonds V4 cup sifted all-purpose flour Vk teaspoon salt H cup sugar % cup butter or margarine 2 tablespoons light cream I quart firm vanilla ice cream [ng«*' Combine all ingredients except f head lettuce is to be used , . Ever thought of this? Spread ice cream in saucepan^ (3ook Have sour cream out of the pnmediately, ^leaves dan be soned salt and pepper to taste, orange marmalade, be generous until mixture begins to bubble; refrigerator and at room tern- separate by cu^g out Makes 4 servings. (There should now, over an unbaked pie shell, remove from heat and stir briskr perature before you add it to a stalk, then to^g cold water be almost 2 cups chicken from Fill shell with cherry pie filling ly a few seconds. sauce or gravy to help prevent into the opening for a minute the large breast.) and bake as usual. It's good! | Ih-op by teaspoonfuls, about curdling. two. ...gugfir! NATURE'S PERFECT SWEETENER 'X1iere*s nothing artificial about the pure good-noM of augar. Only soft drinks made with sugar provide quick energy, food v^lue and flavor artificial sweeteners cSh never match. So stick with the winners .. . Big Chief and Pioneer. Remember, there's no substitute for nature’s perfect sweetener ... Sugar. MICHIGAN MADE PURE SUGAR HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. BfTAIl IHVIV044 *4 OAMtiiNe BACK QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOUSALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. wi risuivi thi niOKT t< W{ RfSUIVI 7HI HfGKT TO ItfAIT QUANTITIU THE PONTIAC PRESS. WKDNESDAV. OCTUbKli 27. 196.5 D-7 'Men Over 26 Have Little to Fear From Draft at This Time' WASHINGTON (AP) - The deputy director of the Selective Service said today that men over 26 have little to fear from the draft at this time — the bumper crop of postwar babies is filling the bill to a great ex tent. “Under present circumstances, I don’t anticipate that we’ll be getting into men over 26,’’ Col. Daniel 0. Omer said in an interview, “Right now about 150,000 to 160,000 youths a month are coming into their 19th birthday, and this ypar about 2 mil- lion men will reach the age of 18.” Under present law, youths under 19 cannot be drafted. But Omer estimated that about 30 |wr cent, or 600,000. of the 2 million 18-year-olds will be eligible for induction next year. About 40 per cent will be excused because of school, he said. As for the 19-year-oIds, Omer said that a large number of them will enlist. high, enlistments are up,” he said. “Right now enlistments are good.” Selective Service officials revealed Tuesday that the ban against drafting childless men who were married before midnight Aug. 26 had been lifted, enabling local draft boards to meet the recently increased manpower quotas. ENLISTMENTS UP “Always when draft calls are President Johnson’s announcement tt the Aug. 26 cutoff date, made that afternoon, precipitated a rush to the altar by linany young couples hoping to beat the draft. Two weeks ago, the Defense Department requested a draft quota of 45,224 men for December, the largest quota sihce the Korean war. MARRIED MEN ' By early next year, Omer predicted, nearly all states will be drafting married men under 26 in order to fill their quotas. An Associated Press survey indicated Tuesday that St least 12 states plan to start drafting married men without children in December. 'The states are New Mexico, Alabama, Washington, Illinois, New Hampshire, Montana, Minnesota, Maryland, Idaho, Connecticut, New Jersey and Wisconsin. Nine other states — California, Nevada, Oklahoma, Maine, Texas, Arkansas, Kansas, Nebraska and Massachusetts — indicated that by January they may begin taking such men. Omer said he considered the decision to draft those married men a further assurance that men over 26 are not immediately in line for the draft. MANPOWER POOL The colonel, who is also general counsel of Selective Service, explained that there is a manpower pool of 500,000 men who were married on or before Aug. 26 and who must be inducted before men over 26. The order of selection for induction now is; 1. Registrants who have disregarded their draft notices or draft regulations. 2. Volunteers. 3. lA single men and men married since Aug. 26 who are between 19 and 26. 4. Men who married befqre Aug. 26 and who maintain a bona fide family relationship in their homes. 5. Men over 26. 6. Men between 18V4 and 19. Ninety per cent of the Ice mass of the world is in Antarctica. The average ice sheet there is estimated at 7,500 feet above sea level. 10 New .1966 DODGi TO Yes... 10 New Dodge Deluxe Coronets will BE GIVEN AWAY TO lUCKY BIG D' SHOPPERS 1 CAR EACH WEEK FOR 10 MORE BIG NEW CAR WINNERS! NOTHING TO BUY! NOTHING TO WRITE! t P-a THE rONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1965 Views Vary at Migrant Worker Hearing LANSING (AP) - Proposed rules governing the licensing and regulation of migrant labor camps were argued from contrasting points of view at a hearing held Tuesday by the State Health Department. “Growers objected some of the regulations were too strict while representatives of migrant labor said they were not strict enough,” reported John Vogt, director of the department’s engineering division. regulation of migrant labor camps by the department. The regulations still have to be gone over by an advisory committee to the department, approved by the Legislative Service Bureau, checked by the attorney general’s offiqe for legality and finally be adopted by the department. BETTER CONDITIONS The recent Legislature approved a new law requiring there needs to be a general improvement in facilities for migrant labor,” Vogt said of, the meeting attended by some 80 persons, mostly growers. “Our goal is to be realistic and reasonable. A reasonable period of time will be allowed for improvement of present facilities housing migrant labor.” ★ ★ ★ The hearing mostly was concerned with technical details of the requirements for housing, such as the number of square feet allowed for each worker, the size of windows and the number of fire exits. HER SPECIALTY-Marga-ret Bartlett, 17-year-old Marshalltown, Iowa contestant in the Miss Teen-Age America contest, in Dallas, shows highly decorated egg shells she’ll use as her presentation in the talent program. U.N. Kashmir Talks Strained UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., (UPI) — The Security Council worked today to end bloodshed on the India-Pakistan frontier and to narrow down a Soviet-American split over how the fighting should be stoppki. The council convened this morning in a strained atmosphere resulting from a Russian attempt, supported by France, to limit the powers of Secretary-General Thant in directing and manning the 194-man U.N. observer team in India and Pak-tan. Britain joined the United States in backing Thant’s efforts to preserve the shaky cease-fire in the Kashmir conflict. They said he should have fall authority to dispose the observers, in opposition to the Soviet view that be has already exceeded the council’s The Americans and British regarded this as an “internal’ matter that would not destroy the so-far unanimous effort to get an effective cease-fire on the Kashmir front. They did not regard it as a new breach in Soviet-American relations but merely as a renewal of an old quarrel over the role of the secretary general. it * * The council faced another •omplication. India, which walked out Monday evening when Pakistani Foreign Minister Zulfikar All Bhutto attacked! Tdinn policy in Kashmir, said! it would continue to boycott the council meetings during this phase of debate. I INTERNAL MATTERS ' India is willing to talk about. the cease-fire and wlthdra^l of troops but unwilling to diacu^ Kashmir internal matters. ★ ★ ★ American sources said the council will try to agree on another resolution that would emphasize the need to have both sides withdraw their forces to positions held prior to last Aug. The number of television stations in tlie United States reached 570 last year as six very high frequency stations went on the air. DON'T TAKE OUR WORD FOR IT! PROVE IT TO YOURSELF! ^ 5348535323534853235353 THE PONTIAC PRK^S. WEPxNKSDAY, UC IUHKR 27, 1965 D-» Rumors Denied 'Defense Chief Will Stay' Old Capone Crony Will Be Deported Rickover Asks War on Technology Threats to Man WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara has relayed a denial he hasn’t talked with President Johnson about resigning. ★ ★ ★ The statement came after a! -syndicated news column repwt-j President.^ ed Tuesday that the Defense Department chief had told the President he planned to return to private life by the end of the year. Assistant Secretary of fense .^rthur Sylvester ferred with McNamara. merely a tool. Unless it viewed "as a means to human ends," he said, “It may become a Frankenstein mobster distroy-i®Ti‘y would be nMomw eeneral Sir Elwin ®**'***'’month. | •***“* the crown ^ might ^ gjjaminer, said attorney general. Sir Elmn ★ * * ""tt that ..jjg„ry V,”jRzadea had a severe heart con The crisis revolves around *P'’**" Africa. anyone ^),o did not have dition of which his family ap Jqnes, from London to advise jhim on the legal aspects of the proposed treaty. The British prime minister was reported planning to meet today with two leading opponents ol Smith’s policy, African nationalist leader Jo- Smith's threat to declare tode-pendtnee rather thair surrender government control to the Negro majority in this central African colony. The British say the Negroes___________ must be guaranteed political cutties.” ' The British leader delivered!stomach for the fight aheadiparently was unaware. to Smith a personal letter from should leave. | —------------------ . Queen Elizabeth II to which she ------------------------ ' Ties purchased by men to the said she earnestly hoped theirj Portugal’s wine production to United States are mostly (7S talks would \‘succ^ In findingi 1964 was more than 1.4 billion per cent) of dark hues; 17 per a solution to the current diffi-! quarts, an increase of five per cent are medium to tone, only I cent over the preceding year. 4 per cent on the light side. i!^Af/ARK FRANKS . 69' (•'S'i^ASPACK X- 89- jE&OlOGNA. . . 49' . 69' I SAUSAGE 79 *1’hutT ...... ! I haddock flllfTs I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY^. OCTOBER 27, 1Q63 D-ll, Vote Is Tuesday on Annexation By PAT McCARTY City living would be cheaper, Farmington city officials advise residents of the Farming-ton Township area being considered for annexation. ★ ★ '>* “They’re promising something to the people which they cannot deliver,” Township Supervisor Curtis H. Hall said. The discrepencies are mainly in the comparative costs of supplying water and sewer services to the 5M-acre area. Voting on the annexation will be conducted Tuesday. The change would require the approval a majority of voters in both the. city and the area invojved. , a * The triangular parcel which is the subject of the vote is Farmington Area Survey Being Held Farmington area residents are about to record opinions on thier community and its future. A community attitude survey' is being conducted by the Farm-; ington Jaycees in an attempt to discover what the Farmington area public would like to see accomplished. | The survey covers all phases of community services in both Farmington City and Township. A questionnaire was to bei published today in the area's two weekly newspapers. ★ ★ ♦ Composed of some 80. . ques-tions, the survey is aimed at establishing an order of preference for community improvements. ★ ★ ★ The complete questionnaire is to be returned to the Jaycees within a wedt. They expect to have results of the survey available within 30 days. bounded by Grand River, Gill, Freedom and Halstead. A group of over 500 city and township residents petitioned for the election last summer. Except for Woodcroft Subdivision, much of the parcel is undeveloped. The City Council has offered what it labels “firm prices” for extension of Farmington sewer and water lines to the area. •k ic k For a 100-foot lot, the charge for a lateral sewer line would be $550, with a $35 tap-in fee added to it. LATERAL LINE A lateral line for water would cost $450 plus a $140 tap-in and meter charge, according to city officials. The combined figure for supplying these services through the city systems then would be $1,175. In comparison. City Manager John Dinan listed charges for township services totaling $2,938, attributing them to estimates made by township officials. w ♦ ★ According to Dinan, township sewer charges would be $1,250 for a lateral sewer, $175 for an arm which would have to be extended up Gill Road, $150 for the Tarabusi Industrial Arm and $350 for a tap-in fee. SEPARATE CHARGES He claimed that the cost of supplying Detroit water through the township would consist of an $800 lateral line charge, $138 for tap-in and meter and a $75 capital charge. Dinan computed the net savings at $1,763. “He’s doing something our engineers wouldn’t do,” Hail said. “Those are not official estimates. We don’t claim them.” The supervisor said they were off-the-cuff figures which definitely were high. ♦ ★ ★ “They’re not authentic. They’re not even realistic,” he said. NO ESTIMATE While the township has no Pact OK'd by Holly Teachers HOLLY—An agreement which will give them $200 raises and duty-free lunch hours was ratified by Holly teachers yesterday afternoon. The pay boost and fringe benefit were approved by “a substantial majority” of the teachers at a Hoily Education Association (HEA) meeting, according to an HEA spokesman. He said about 75 per cent of the district’s 102 teachers attended the session. Approved by the board of education Monday night, the agreement is the result of less than two weeks of negotiations between board members and the HEA salary cMnmlttee. The teachers’ group had asked that contract negotiations be reopened after it was granted sole bargaining rights by the board. It had submitted a five-part proposal headed by a $300 across - the - board salary increase. Along with duty-free lunch hours, the HEA had sought a health and accident insurance plan, terminal pay for retirees and the placing of all teachers back on the salary schedule. The package approved by both units is expected to cost the board $^,000. The additional pay for the teachers will be spread across the remaining months in the school year. Broken Boiler Gives Holly Pupils Day Off HOLLY - A bole in tbe boiler at Holly Elementary School gave at least a one-day holiday to the some 700 youngsters enrolled there. School officials canceled classes in the cold building today and expected to learn this afternoon whether the boiler could be repairetT. Arm estimate on sewer service, it has determined that the cost of supplying water to the area would be about $607 per home, according to the supervisor. Hall laid that whether the area Is annexed to the city or not, it still will be a part of the sewer district estab-Usbed for the Farmington Interceptor. Residents of the area legally are bound to pay a $150 capital charge for the Tarabusi Arm and $350 for the interceptor. k k k “This is binding,” he said. “You can’t move and escape your debts.” TOTAL UNITS Hall noted that financing for the interceptor was based on the total number of units in the township. While there now are about 83 homes in the area under consideration, it has a potential for 1,050 to 1,100 units. The Township Board entered the sewer agreement in 1959. k k k Hall said the responsibility of property owners is explicit in the contract. COURT ACTION The supervisor mentioned the possibility of court action should the annexation be approved. “Fnrralagton Township has approximately $1 million at stake,” he said. “Certainly we would have to pursue H to the end to protect our people’s interest.” Dinan also compared city and township taxes. k k k The city rate is $11.50 per $1,000 of assessed valuation and the township rate is $8.73 per $1,000 of state equalized valuation. CONSTANT TAX ’ “But the city tax has remained constant for the last five years and is four per cent lower than in 1960,” he said. “The 10 w n s h i p tax has increased 370 per cent since 1960, when it was 2.37 mills.” Although the average property owner in the area would pay $32.30 a year more in city taxes than ha now does to the township, a savings would be effected by a $25 cut in water charges and others in expenses not enUiled ' in city service, Dinan said. He listed expenses of township residents which would be dropped through annexation as $30 a year for garbage pickup, $15 for oiling streets and $15 for snowplowing. * ♦ ♦ In an appeal to the city residents who will vote on the question, Dinan noted the “great economic potential” of the area. FUTURE BUILDING “We project that this area will produce upwards of $18 mUlion in assessed valuation upon its ultimate development w i t h i n the next five to 10 years,” he said. ★ ★ ★ “The city is in a position to sffvlce this area with very little Increase in operational costs because of its prdximity to the center of the community.” May Nof Need Vote' by Teachers in Troy! TROY — It may not be neces-'and report his findings to the sary for the school district’s board at the next meeting, teachers to hold a special vote ★ ★ ★ to determine who will repre- In other action last night the sent them in salary negotiations board awarded a contract for with the board of education. $69,042 to Lind Asphalt and Pav- To Hear Plan on Land Usage Affects Rochester and Avon, Pontiac Twps. rcntlac PrM> rhal* WHITE ELEPHANTS?—Auburn Heights kindergartners Steve Reader, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Reader, 2168 Hempstead, and Jyl Bowen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Bowen, 2542 Liverpool, both of Pontiac Township, find it hard to believe that they are holding "white ele-phantA” The tie rack and letter holder are among items to be sold at the Auburn Heights PTA Fair from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. Friday at the school. In Clarksfon The board last night reconsidered the Troy Education Association (TEA) request for sole bargaining rights and decided to withdraw its petition for an election now pending before the State Labor Mediation Board. Two weeks ago the board denied the TEA’S request for exclusive representation, claiming it did not have adequate proof of authorization. The board wanted to see signature cards or photocopies as! proof that the teachers author-1 ized the TEA to represent them. An attorney for the Michigan Education Association advised that the signature cards were signed with the understanding that they would be held confidential. ing Co. of Troy for construction of a track at the high school and eight tennis courts at the junior and senior high school. Jaycees Plan Halloween Party CLARKSTON—The Clarkston tary students, but emphasized Jaycees will sponsor a Halloween party and costume judging contest from 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday at the high school football field. A spokesman observed that the costume Judging contest is primarily geared for elemen- ; AREA NEWS Jaycee Cider Sale Slated in Rochester ROCHESTERf - The Rochester Jaycees Will hold their eighth annual cidpf- sale tomorrow, Fri-UNFAIR PRACTICE day and Saturday at various lo- He said it might constitute un- cation^ througho^ut the Village, fair labor practices if a school / . . lofficial looked at the cards. ^ 1 ^'chir wil be pressed at * • Ydtes Cider Mill by members In an attempt to solve the Uf (|^p organization just before problem last night, board ; gg|g that all are welcome. i members said they would ac- , ' k k k Cider and donuts will be > third party affidavit as ^ sales goal of 600 gallons has served. i authorization trom ^een set, according to Ron Ludy, The Independence Township teachers. jyos Ludlow, head of the sales fire whistle will sound at 7, in- They appointed Rev. C. Wit force, dicating the start of trick or liam Pearson of the Lutheran Committee chairman and cotreating, which will last one Church of the Master to check.ordinator is William Schroeder, hour. ithe cards against school recordsi243 W. Tienken. ROCHESTER - A master plan foj; future land use will be presented to residents of the village and of Avon and Pontiac townships at a meeting at 8 tomorrow night in the Rochester I Municipal Building. I Plans 'pif expansion of the residential, commercial and industrial areas and the economic ^pects related to the growth of the area will be discussed by Robert A. Shadduck of Vilican-( Leman and Associates, planning consultant firm which prepared the plan. A question-and-answer period, moderated by Mrs. Donald Hil-dum of 424 Ciunder, will follow. A panel composed of representatives of the Village Council, township boards and the Avon-' Rochester-Pontiac Township Regional Planning Commission will be present to furnish additional information. The meeting is sponsored by the League of Women Voters of Rochester. Smorgasbord Slated CLARKSTON - The Women’s Society for Christian Service of the First Methodist Church will serve a Harvest Smorgasbord from 5 to 8 p.m. Friday at the 'Education Building, comer of Church and Buffalo streets. Firm Goes to Court Vote on Mobile Hoine Site Challenged ROSE TOWNSHIP - A referendum election that has prevented the development of a mobile home park has been challenged In a suit filed yester- tion. that the election was In conflict with the 1963 state constitution since only property owners were permitted to vote on the qdes* day in Oakland County Circuit Court. The action was started by Mohave Plantations, Inc., and one of the shareholders, Ivan S. Bloch, against the Rose Township Bqard. The suit asks the court to set aside the Sept. 28 election and order a new referendum election in which all qnalifled electors in tbe township be allowed to vote. Township officials have been ordered to appear Monday at 9 a. m. before Judge Arthur E. Moore to show qause why tbe election should not be voided. k- k k Hm firm contends in its suit , > 1 it V..- Ml f$$ ON PEirnoN The referendum election was petitioned for by 209 residents after the township board approved the rezoning of 40 acres from industrial to a ilnobilt home site classification. The loning reverted back to ers voted 193 to 127 agalait tiw use of the property as a mobfle home site. The property is at the end of Cogshall, just south of the Holly VUlage limit. ★ * ★ The suit also requedts that the township board be ordered to accept a plat of the property. On Sept. 23, the board rejected Uie plat, according to the suit, because the “land is not considered suitable for platting purposes because there is no legal access road” and because the referendum vote was spending. nesoh claims that the first reason given by the board is not valid because tbe township has nothing to do with roads. It states that the Oakland County Road Commission, whidh does have jurisdiction, had already approved the layout of the roads in the subdivision, known as Holly Shores No. 2. k k k The property in question is adjacent to the township’s first m^le home park established by tbe same firm, Bloch Brothers Mobile Homes, which is associated with Mohave. It's No Trick To Save AND YOU COULDNT Dl TMATID BBTTIR AT FOOD FAIR I ‘M Thit wMk at Feed Fair, Jwky frM dikkan is a m thas# fresh whole fryers are treat that all your little r 8 s • ghosts and goblins art sort i h^r^g 'i^ alhi^ror^r,!^ to approve. Especially if you k chicken and you'll love the ^ favorite recipe end f extra savings. Stock up on Food Fair's specially salactcd chicken at Food Fair this Grade A Whole Fryers. 1 sveek. ) JUICY AND DELICIOUS ^ TENDER, WHOLE Givde A Fryers BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER 1 D—11 THE PONTTAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965. MARKETS Into Record High Ground Stock Market Widens Gains NEW YORK (AP) — Thei SlMls were inspired by U.S.I U.S. Steel and Jones & Laugh- The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by then in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of stock market widened its gains|steel’s report of a jump in prof- Friday. Produce Appifs, DelickHJi. GoM Apples, Dt'kious, Red. Apples. Jonathan, bu. Apples, Macintosh, ear Apples, Northern Spr. h Cabbaofc Curly Cabbage, red. Cabbage Sprout early this afternoon and pushed further into record high ground under the leadership of steels and other heavy industrials. *3 50 Trading was very active _ iM the street seemed to have re-j 51 covered confidence following J “ yesterday’s reversal of the Mon-IJ5 day profit-taking. its. RECORD SALES Record sales and earnings by General Motors spurred the entire automotive group. Chemicals, rails, building materials, utilities, electronics, office equipments and aero- The Associated Press average:space issues joined in the ad-of 60 stocks at noon was up to a Ivance. substantial gain of 2.4 at 355 01 The Dow Jones industrial av- McNamara to Run Again? Car Records Offset ^ Dip in Steel Output By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst lin were up more than a point each while Bethlehem and Republic Steel gained fractions. GM touched another new high but it was content with a fractional gain. Chrysler and Ford climbed nearly a point each. 1547,000 American-made' carsisumers who feared- a steel were sold, compared with 374,- strike. This was averted by a NRW YORK M.w ^ 1964.'new labor contract settlement /.or j The industry counts on selling early in September. Consumers .......... enough more to push October’s have lots of steel on hand and Says He'll Tell Plans ^ total above 800,000. At mid-aren’t pressing the mills for ------------------|™»U.,,lrd..l«.,^«lll.«Wn»"b. 64 per cent more a day than a * * * year earlier. I But what is worrying the mills But comparisons can be tricky, is that the drop in new orders, This year the new models! although that too was expec^, were displayed later. October is is "J®*’®,.. seeing the first chance the buy- thought likely and ** ler had to get a 1966 model; »‘5® I year ago the 1965 models had! ^ hig bui^ in steel produc-been around for some time. • bon earlier m the year means Also, last year General Motors that output to date is well ahead was struck and many dealers of last year. The question is how were short of GM cars. much longer will steel users ba coy about placmg new orders, Around First of Year‘be plunge of steel production •to the lowest WASfflNGTON (AP) - Sen.ilevel in nearly Patrick McNamara said today two years, he sees no reason why he| ’These cross-shouldn’t run next year for a currents in the I third U.S. Senate term. He saidlecwiomy are Prices were generally higher,he expects to announce his in-important not in heavy trading on the Ameri-jtentions about the first of the only for what can Stock Exchange. year. they reveal of Corporate bonds were mostly' Although not tipping his hand,| the present unchanged. U.S. ’Treasury bonds he did say in an interview: >Wate'of industry j 51 with industrials up 3.5, rails upjerage at noon was up 6.14 toiwere unchangedjin light trad-' “I think I could win no perhaps more, for what they i* STRAIGHT WEEKS jjjg operating welj 1/1—I 10 loco ic lini, matter whom the Republicans might do to the consumer and' * " ..... j « 1.0 and utilities up 1.3. ling. The New York Stock Exchange 30»i - In the case of steel, the drop below capacity, customers nominate.” business psychology. in production for eight straight needn’t worry much about ship-f That remark came when it^ * ★ a , weeks, with signs that the de-ment delays, was inentioned that Republican steel long has had the reputa- dine is continuing, also must be: a ★ ★ i Gov. George Romney might try tion of being a basic industry.'put into perspecUve. The mills] will Vie lift which record nevil for the Senate in 1966 instead of When mill production booms, now are producing at less than'ear sales is giving business psyi seeking a third term as gover- the public thinks all must be two-thirds of capacity, at tha'choli^y lead to a fairly quick nor. well with the rest of the econo- lowest level since December revival of steel mill activity f ,tw LMt chj! Romney has given every indi- my. 1963. jsteelmen say they aren’t wor| u !«■/» ilS + of being interested in the Auto sales long have been re-j ★ ★ ★ jrjej about the order slowdowij JM MH Mil, GOP presidential nomination in garded as the chief clue to how' Rut most of this drop had so far. But all hands will b^ 3j. ^8^ T* + jJ;1968. He is now making a trip the public feels about the been expected. It resulted from watching to see how long thf ” abroad and he has been making present state of siffairs and the big buildup in stocks by con- boom in new car sales lasts. speeches in various parts of this about future prospects. New car-----------——---------—-------—— ----------------------------* I, country. sales are a test both of how 5 NO REFUSAL much money the public has to „ i v5, „ „ ., spend and of its willingness to KtVerS Dill OfQnGu 21 McNamara, while not saying gLnd it ^’in- definitely that he would JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP) I—President Johnson talked. 35-/- 36 -1- .... 3SM 3811 -f IW ll'/l IW4 3116 -I- ~ ° sueiiu 11 ISS + H definitely that he would ^ xo fxpi AIN ^ would not seek another Senate TO EXPLAIN I 66V. 4SM 46'/7 -i-i^ term, did say, “I see no reason' So now steel production is ii 36^' 3»! 36^ + u not to run again.” falling and auto sales are rising.] 139 SS ^ 35vi’ +ivJl McNamara. 71, is chairman of Economists are quick to come the Senate Public Works .com-up with explanations of both' mittee. He is preparing to go factors ami of their apparent^ back to Michigan soon and, ex-.contradiction. ncoiucm cept for unforseen ci''cum-! Th^ ^s are selling fasteH ^^,5 „ . stances, intends to remain in the this October than last may ™>t secretary of State Dean Rusk, ?3 ’tIJSrestate until shortly before the ^ as gamor^s as ^ ^BJ Ranch, after 3f, the 89th C»n-glance^That^^^^ ^.^illion 11 39'» 38H 3I'1- + VI gress convenes Jan. 10. tion is failing and new orders . u u:,, » I H Also interested in McNam- cof^mg in slower than expected ^ 1 Democrat G. may^not be as calamitous as «t discussed ’1 m! mS im - 2 Williams, an assistant sounds. ^0^,^ affairs generally, but *! SI? 5TS SI‘ secretary of state, who served ^ . 44 70'/, 6816 69vl-HM 12 years as governor of Mich-I In the first 20 days of October, M 5k ir T ^'igan. I'----------------------------- !« Ji. t If There is talk that Williams is' Rusk Visits LBJ Ranch Senate but his reported position vis that he will not do sc' next 2 year if McNamara tries for an-IIJ other term. # Successftfii i ■ ■ Police Vote Slated on Representative; A collective bargaining representative election has been gave no specifics. Signing of the rivers and harbors bill was announced early in the day. There was no word on whether the President affixed his signature last night or today. I , , • Also announced was the sign- lnV&^inCt 0 I mg of another measure author-C m C payment of $22 million for > S ^ 180,000 claims filed by Okina- day of suspense: has Johnson signed it? White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers announced ’Tuesday morning Johnson had indeed signed the bill and would ignore one provision that, in Johnson’s view, eroded presidential powers in violation of the Constitution. MADE MISTAKE After reporters in Washington learned the measure hadn’t even reached Johnson’s desk, Moyers said he had made a mistake. He said the bill was being flown here aboard an Air Force courier plane and would be signed Tuesday night. By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “I am 21-years-oid and have been working since graduation from high school. I have been putting my savings into a bank and U. S. savings bonds. Since I have no finan- scheduled for Nov. 5 for mem- . , , . ber, o( the Ponttac Police De- ' J“™ partment, it was reported last 2 night. invested a portion of my money in the stock market. Onlv one oreanization has ne- 1^.. 1 ■ . n■! K ^ »r«n> inflation. I bought Atchi- titioned to represent policemen. City Manager Joseph A. War- Topeka & Santa Fe; I wans for personal and property damage resulting from American military occupation of the Ryukyu Islands between 1945 and 1952. ★ * A The peace treaty with Japan waived these claims, but, by voting to honor them, the White House said Congress again gave expression to American concern for the well-being of the people of Okinawa. Rusk flew to the LBJ Ranch, +1H hearing Monday before the + 2 Michigan State Labor Mediation X JJ Board. ren reported the results of a J hearing Monday before the p^Id Gi^nT Mlr^ke?^ .day night after addreffling OU Will Host Aid Seminar Legislative programs to aid municipaBties and private enterprises in getting federal assistance will be discussed dur>-ing a Congressional Conference on Community Growth Nov. 16 at Oakland University. Cosponsors of the program ark U.S. Representatives William S. Broomfield, R-18th District, and Billie S. Famum, D-19th Dis- B- P- 'southern Meth^ist University and the University’s Divi- _____ AI The stocks you bought are audience in Dallas. Spokesmen Continuing Education. The Pontiac Police Officers not growth stocks - which you said no emergency was involved Association (PPOA) has peti- should have - but are sound in his meeting with Johnson - ^ M ^ " tioned the-mediation board for a and are rather good income that Rusk just happened to be in N commis- representative election. Ballot-producers, except Food Giant the neighborhood and was asked Sh t H ing will be at the police depart- which pays no cash dividends, t® drop by. | _ _ '''»*bi gt«n, j; + ment 6:30 to 8:30 a.m. and 2:30 I believe that to offset infla-| to 5 p.iT Business Notes 50 33 VH 27 +VA “■ t It, Donald B. Delzell, of 7409^. X It Auburn, Bloomfield Township, + '/4 has been named -I- K p r e s i d <5 n t +■■’/- in charge of -'2 b u 8 i n e s .s + for Bank of the - 12 Commonwealth. Delzell joined the bank last DELZELL by Th, A.KKiMed gn assistant cashier. S6l«> figures ere rwhe ____ .. foregoing teble tion, you should hold only! As for the omnibus rivers and' Brownstein will open the con-I shares which have grown con-harbors bill, authorizing 142 ference at 2:30 p.m. with an ad-sistently in earnings, dividends water projects, this question'dress reviewing the role of pri-and price over a period of was left dangling after nearly a'vate enterprise in FHA proyears, and seem likely to con- ----------grams. tinue this trend. | | Following dinner at 6 p.m., Why not start all over again, 6i ■ D ■ | Kcrmit G. Bailer, assistant ad-since you don’t need income? I 111 Bri8l for Community Pro- suggest you switch your present' igrams, U.S. Housing and Hona holdings into Texaco; Generali Th» theft oUJaa froin ■ Washington, Foods; Texas UtilitiM 4|i^|drawer in the oX of the Pon ® ^ “’® *®®“"’®^ *P®®>'- Honeywell. Over a period, I bfr|tiac Motor Court Hotel at 510 lieve you will be very much jeiapaph is being investigated pleased that you did. To order your copy of Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful Investing, clip this notice and send $1.06 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, care of The Pontiac „ sross reve- Press, Box 1118, Grand Cen- si^ciai Z nues were $358,717,419 for the tral Station, N, Y. C., N, Y, idimf’tfM' 12 months ending Sept. 30,1965. | jou;, b-Annu.i camings of the company ‘ (Copyright. 1965) ' xiquidating for the 12 montlis through Sept. ________________ w ^ w 30 1905^ were $57,054,073, or _ , ^ icarti Vaiui 98 per Share on the 28,818,700 Stocks Of Local Inferost outstanding at the end ffr .r. .mm*- •’J-w w* of the period. I - ovan tm coyuTitjTocKs •rrMri. n—New isuM. p--Pfii> by Pontiac police. Rummage, Bake Sale: 69 So. Astor, first street east of East Blvd., between Pike and Auburn. Wed. and Thurs., Oct. 27 and 28. 6. —adv. MOM’S Rummage: Tlinrsday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. „ ________fik« « tort I David F. Blake, 1614 Ledbury,................. ’^!div35l5.'*t-Pii8*to ‘T{g Bloomfield Township, recently . I*rtim6t^c.rt.,v6i«.on.x-divwW«,.K-attended a life underwriting! ^1... x-SxdtoKtond. y-ex 0.v.'®«“®""®® ^ S2T’ !!S.rx'“ril,to" x^wlMliu^’iSr Go. in Zion, 111. TTie rmJSN'iyf'tmtoi^cto.. a w-wHfi wtrrenf.. xS-wMn (Si- conference covered life under- «onro» Aide EguipmMt Wi_wfw« i,««d Ad_N.xf 8.y writing, health and employe pro- Krttoofn Ml to SS'rapf?; insurance. : I Ur* “ W Act, Of MCurHtoi •Mumed by «fch com- ------------------- Plonoor PInonco ............... M M'A MU 4. to E?""" *"-Por»lgn Ihuo to to- Sofron Prtnting ...... 380 “ “to + to oouoltortlon tor —— 4 39'/. 39'6 39'/* II 65 64'/j 64Vj - to *’ ” A INtTIAL STOCK AVIOAOIS Ttxtron Inc new .35 Comgitod ky Tut AiwcHlgd PfOM IXTRA 18 II IS 68 Vanodlum CoAm .58 . 131 13-1S 1?™ lnf«r-(toolor mirkafs rrtili markup, morkdown Lula Harper Circle Rummage: Trinity Baptist Church, at 619 Fildew, Oct. 29-30, in the basement. —adv. Rummage Sale: Friday, October 29, 9 a.m. tiU 12 noon. CAI Bldg., Waterford. Sponsored by Omega Mu Sigma Sorority. tter’i Farm Market - 322$ 180 18.3 W. Huron St. Haiid picked Mac-VA 38.4 Intosh, 89c pk.; also large se-fjj ;J lection of Jonathan, Snows, De- BOTH SESSIONS Seminars dealing wUh appropriate subjects will be held during both the afternoon and evening sessions. Reservations can be made by contacting the Mott Center, Oakland University. City Police Probe Theft of Boat, Motor, Trailer Pontiac police are investigating the thhft early yesterday of a boat, motor and trailer valued at just under $1,500. Alan Uvergne, 23, of 240 W. Princeton told officers the trailer, boat and motor were taken from the driveway in front ^ 54'/. 54'/. Noon Wtd!^ 83'/. 1311 Il'A + to Prev. Opy 37to 37'/j 37to 1 '6 Ye»r Ago 521. 5t'» 53'/* fl11|l965 High 9Sto 94to 94to - '/. 1965 Low 68 99'* 68 -fto|l«64 Htgli 46'/1 45'/. 44'/1 flit'1964 Low Vonodlum CpAm +T$ +7!o .... ______ 531 7 II3A 173J 355.8 (x) - T II3J 171.5 153A opprdwpl. 183.3 171.3 310.7 174.5 173J 344.4 „.. ________ 118.3 1*4.1 339.4 Dorr Oliver 113.1 >78.3 353.6 MpdUM PortCem r Reducllon I 119* 167.3 406* 150.7 Rummage Sale —’Thurs., Oct. 5 fim I I : , .M 28,8 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri., Oct. 29,^itod« : i:::.';: :;::: 9 a.m.-l p.m. Redeemer Luth-« .......... eran Church, 1800 W. Mapk Rd., uSSS grtS "i'lto Birmingham. -«dv. JJ .. 963.684-6.14 .. 338*34-1*8 . 88.55 . 83.864-8.03 : .. 83.M-O.0l 1 THB PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 D^13 Jacoby on Bridge By JACOBY & SON Oswald Jacoby starts off today’s discussion. He says, "Here is a hand that illustrates the extra chance that a good player gives hand was played Sooth bid up to a six heart coatract oaly to iose the hand by poor play." Jim: “We really should be happy about the whole thing. After all, we held the East-West Jim: "You mean the extra' chance thdt a| losing player* does not give hin^lf, don’t you?" Oswald: "Right. When this NORTH tf AAIS42 W J»l ♦ 54 «K6S wnr EAST 4K1079S A J9 V764 ♦ QJfTdl AAKIOS * 3 A J 10 • 3 SOUTH (D) AQ V AKQ1083 A 2 ♦ AQ874 East and West vulnerable South Weat North East 1 tf Pass 1A Pass 3 A Pass 4 W Pass A N.T. Pass 5 A Pa.ss 8 W Pass Pass Pau Openina lead—A Q Oswald: “How about giving our readers a chance to see the winning play before you describe it to them." Jim: "AU right. Now that diey have iooked the hand over I will start by giving the actual (day. South ruffed the second diamond, led out three rounds of hearts in order to poll East’s trumps and went after the dobs. When East showed up with four clubs he had to go down one." Oswald: "Now for the correct play!" Jim: "South should lead onlyi two rounds of trumps and then! start on the club suit. East would have to follow to four clubs and South would haye been able to ruff out his club loser. * ★ ir Oswald: “Yhis play risked nothing. True, if East held a singleton club he would have ruffed and set the hand, but if East held a singleton club South would have been unable to make his contract on any line of play." 2A 4 A Pa« You, South, hold: A43S AAJ8S4 ASI A8I4 What do you do? A — Paas. Tonr nartaor .hM hoard your pooMro roopoaso and allow no latoroot la roiac to a alaaa TtWAfS QUESTION Instead of bidding four spades your partner bids four diamonds over your throg spado ------What do you do? To Urge New laws on Child Custody LANSING (AP) — A House committee planned today to recommend new child custody legislation. Committee Chairman Rep. Robert Waldron, R - Crosse Pointe, said the recommenda-would "strike a balance between the best interests of the child an TO STAY UP ? r\ ^IGHT) DONALD DUCK GRANDMA MA.VBE I OU6HTAVVEAR ____________By Charles Kuha WHETHER TO ITICH OR ENIVME/ aal- D-14 THE POXTIAC PREgS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1965 U.S. Has Some Asian Support for Viet Policy KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysial (AP) — Ibe storm over American military involvement in' South Viet Nam isn’t Mowingi just one way in Southeast Asia. Along with gusts of criticism]' against the United States, there | is a current of “Yankee, stay” sentiment. * * * Viet Nam. Wellsprings of support for Malaysian observer cau- Laos, whose governments and people feel their future is dose-komorrow.” |ly linked with the fate of South The most strident opposiUon L.. . ..T 4a TT.Q inv.MvpmAnt has mma to U.S. involvement has come from Indonesia and Cambodia, which have bonds with Communist China and North Viet Nam. Indonesian President Sukarno has condemned what he calls American “intervention and aggression” in South Viet Nam. It remains to be seen whether the recent crisis in Jakarta, with the solidifying of army power there, will mute Indonesia’s anti-U.S. outcry. Need Cash *tll Payday? Associates* Payday Loan Plan means cash for youl Get $50 for 14 days for only 580 put Thailand close to the china firing line. The feeling In Bangkok is that if Viet Nam falls, Laos will fall too, and Thailand also. Thanat Khoman believes that, faced with American military power, the Communists Deginning to feel that they cannot get what they want. There no other way to stop aggres- We have a variety of other loan plana to handle most nxmey needs. HieTe are over 600 Assodatea oflScee in the United States and Canada. Visit or call the one near you.. A Flnmitelng Plmn for Kootf tfoo4 ASSOCIATES CONSUMER FINANCE CO. IN PONTIAC 125>127 N. Saginaw Street..FE 2-0214 3t9 North Telegraph Rood...682-2000 Pontiac Mali Shopping Center IN DSAYTON PLAINS 4476 Dixie Highway.........OR 3-1207 Little change, if any, can be expected in the attitude of Cambodia. Its chief of state, Prince Norodom Sihanouk, sees China as the eventual victor. Sihanouk is both scornful angry toward the United States and what he calls the “pretended government” in Saigon. He broke relations with Washington last May after accusing U.S. Vietnamese forces of intruding into Cambodian territory — where the Viet Cong are said to take refuge. LESS WARM Singapore, Southeast Asia’s newest independent state, has taken a somewhat less than warm line toward the American effort in Viet Nam. Its premier, Lee Kuan Yew, is pessimistic about U.S. ability to sweep bapk the Communist tide. He cl/dins Americans know nothing about Southeast Asia — “^t’s why they are in a mess.”/ But in the P^ppines, Thailand and Mal^sia, •official and popular opinion is running in favor of,America’s presence in South,/Viet Nam and its air itrik^s against the Red North. y’The Thais, in fact, think the Americans could have moved in a bit earlier. Thailand’s Communist-hating Foreign Minister Tlianat Kho-nuin advocates “careful use of armed force” to prevent a Communist take-over in Viet Nam The influential Straits Times, wfaid does not hesitate to twit the United SURea^ other matters, has praise President Johnson's Viet Nam decisions. In neutralist Burma, which shares a frontier with Conunu-nist China, there has been criticism of U.S. policy — and also of North Viet Nam’s refusal to negotiate a peaceful settlement, tiers. When the big dragon, Chi- Although Thai military leaders say they need all flieir armed strength to meet threats developing along their own borders, Thailand has pitched in with some active help for the American-Viet Nam effort, including use of airfields. The Thai air force has trained some 30 South Vietnamese pilots, and promises more of the same. Thai medical and development project teams are operating in South Viet Nam. Similar aid is being supplied by the Philippines whose foreign secretary, Mauro Mendez, is known to feel that no action taken by the United States in Viet Nam could be too strong. Neither President Diosdado Mac^ pagal nor his chief oppoi Ferdinand Marcos, has ^ Viet Nam an issue in tl|alr campaigns for Nov. 9 pi'^dential elections. A relia^ private poll recently showed^nat 76 per cent of the Filipjnte cheer for the American^ in Viet Nam, only a ^w of the remaining 24 per^t actually in opposition. ^OCAL SUPPORTER Malaysia’s Prime Minister Abdul Rahman is a vocal supporter of America’s policy. Although elements in his government would like to see Ma-take a more neutral stand — in keeping with the country’s efforts to win Afro-Asian friendship — Rahman] and equipment to South Vfet The Laotian minister of public works, Ngon Sananikone, sees it in tends of dragons. ‘For'thousands of years we have had the big dragon and the little dragon, with their big, b^' appetites, sitting on our fpoh- Burmese condenuation of “power bloc” competition in Viet Nam cuts two ways. ★ * * / Laos has not let its official neutralist line get in the way of support for the United States. The government of Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma has become increasingly aware of the role played by North Vi Nam and Communist Chin^ stirring up Laotian civil Mrif It’s acknowledged thad'^eri-can pressure on the J4orth Vietnamese has slackened the Red war effort in Laos. The Amwican-equipped Laotian ah: iorce raids the Ho Chi Minh^ail, the jungle corridor iiV Southern Laos used by the No....... na, was too drowsy to ^ble at Laos, the little drpgon, Viet Nam, was eatiqg away. If America were pdt in Southeast Asia, it wouUhe a feast day for hm," he^ays. r Tree Selling /Bloomfield, n.j. (ap) - 'own Qerk H. Joseph North says all Christmas tree vendors, including chwitable organizations, will be required to buy transient mm;hant licenses costing $100 this holiday season. In the past the licensing fee has been waived. The average age of World War I veterans' is 72 while World War II veterans average 46 years of age. the United States has nol alternative but to fight. ; “It is clear that the Communists were the aggressors. It is wrong to speak of American interventicMi,” he says. Rahman notes that Malaysia, while saddled with its own defense problems involving hostile Indonesia, is throwing open mil- wentu;S^in“all'.;r&;u“th- east A«a ®®e personnel for trammg in jungle warfare. He recently 1X)NG BORDER welcomed Vietnamese Premier A long border with Laos has'Marshal Nguyen Cao Ky. Monster Sale On Cloroii: OF Mng Size to prove Glorox bleach gets out dirt detergents and weak bleaches leave In. Kids bring home that grubby dirt Halloween or no Halloween. And no detergent or weak bleach can get it out Clorox has the only kind of cleaning power that will. And we’re putting a frightfully low price on Clorox to prove just that Better take a couple of bottles. After all, kids scare up that dirt every day. ■ I* THE rONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 fe-1 Part II—Sportotorial fey Kearns Unimaginative Offense Keeps Lions on Defense By BRUNO L. KEARNS It’s easy to criticize, especially yirhen the criticism is directed at failure. But as someone once said, you don’t knock success and you don’t dare kick a guy or team when it’s up. ’The best time to kick him, and we don’t mean physically, is when he’s down. After 11 years of staff writing of the Detroit Lions, we like to think that when we are posed with the question, “What’s wrong with the 1965 Lions?’’ it’s a matter of expressing opinion and not all criticism. After six 1965 games, three winning and three losing, the problem as we see it can be put into outline form. Poor Mental Attitude A. Confidence Lacking 1. Failure at Quarterback a. Poor play calling b. Poor passing 2. Unimaginative Offense a. Stereotyped play series b. Conservative decisions - B. Harmony Lacking y Defense vs. Offense a. No balance of units b. Opposites in leadership II. Revival of Morale 1. Essential changes 2. Optimistic Outlook Winning isn’t all talent and I the admission of this is often made by coaches, players and fans when the statement is| made, “On any given Sunday in this league, one team can beat the other.” MENTAL ATTITUDE Because it isn’t all talent, it must be mental attitude, and this is where the Lions are failing with each passing’week. Even after winning the first three games, which psychologically should put a team into a stronger positive frame of mind, the Lions were doubtful about their own success. They knew they had won without a winning offense and it was a matter of time for the offense either to start winning or the team to start losing. Now, the confidence which was always weak in their field general Milt Plum, is down to its lowest ebb. Herein lies the success or failure of the Lions, or any football team, and here- Pietrosante Joins Plum on Lions' Bench Gilmer Names Amos Marsh at Fullback Izo Gets Starting Nod as Quarterback; Team Eyes Arrows' Sweetan Detroit Lions’ coach Harry Gibner didn’t stop shaking up the team’s offensive' backfield when he announced yesterday that George Izo will start the next game at quarterback instead of Milt Plum. Gilmer also sent fullback Nick Pietrosante to the bench and Inserted Amos Marsh in the lineup for Sunday’s contest at Los Angeles. Detroit is last in the National Football League in scoring and has lost three straight games, including a 38-10 debacle to Chicago last Sunday, after winning three in a row to start the season. . “While I definitely am not singling out Milt for onr lack of punch, it is no secret he is not having a good season thus far,” Gilmer said. “I have decided to give Plum a little rest and at the same time find out what Izo can do as a starter.’’ Izo, 27, is a Notre Dame graduate who has played for the St. Louis Cardinals and Washington Redskins, but never as a starter. His career record shows 63 pass completions in 153 attempts. LITTLE WORK The Lions acquired him early this season and have played him less than a half. He has thrown 19 times, completed 7 and had 3 interceptions inc 1 uding one which the Bears returned 89 yards for a touchdown last Sun-’ pm***** Don Heffner describes the way ^jx OTHERS GUIDING REDS-‘‘Big- he is going to manage the Cin-^ disclosinu Heffner’ •'toi all-league honors last season in the Bi-County League, s win tow with Fi^ s ^he senior is second in the area prep school scoring race - mtbninotwcMoms. them sixth straight this year. ______________________________ Utica moving, again. The Chieftains equalled last Parker/Olivp, Kubek Ailing NBA Standings ■y Tht AiMCtaM PrMi I WISTUtN DIVISION But the curly-haired coach,' perhaps goaded by the publicity and jibes, began to mold the Engineers i n t o a respectable unit and they narrowly missed a victory last year, settling for s«, Frtnc?.!? a 20-20 tie with Nichols College. s,“ loSJ» When RPI was barely edged by Hamilton 14-12 earlier this season, the fans began to sense that the nation’s longest win- ........ ' rimrisart less streak was about to end. I BaseballVAdiing Hospital Bound By ’The Associated Press Their long season finally completed, baseball players are beginning to filter into hospitals across the country, having vari-oiu aches and pains cared for. ’The famed Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., Is the busiest! 01 h( a, who batted .321 and ran his second strai^t batting Town, wm undergo surgery Friday for traumatic periostitis of the middle flti^er (m his right LOOSE GRIP The injury. rhlVh caused RIVERSIDE, Calif. (UPI) -Richie Ginther, winner of the recent Mexico City Grand Prix, today was named teammate of World Driving Champion Jimmy Clark of Smtland in the 200 mile Riverside Grand Prlx for sports cars this weekend. The Granada Hills, Calif., driver will handle a Lotus 40 Ford for Colin Chapman of Britain and team with Clark in the $49,660 event over the Riverside International Raceway. A third new Lotus 40 will be driven by A. J. Foyt of Houston, Tex., four-time U. S. National Champion. Foyt’s car wHl be his personally owned speedster. Another Indianapolis 500 driver who became a late entry was 'Jim Hurtubise, tonawanda, after missing pitches. Involves ^ Y., who will drive an Arciero an overgrowth of bone caused special, by repeated injury to the| Imuckle. The surgery, expected to keep Oliva hospitalized for four days, will return the knuckle to normal size. Kubek suffered through the bert, who missed the season Injured N. Y. Ranger Gets OK to Join Club NEW YORK (UPD-Rod Gil- '”*.*!*» *>*\worrt season in his career last'opener for the New York Rang-ready cneexed m. 2ig The veteran ers because of muscle spasms I Wes Parker, first baseman ■ ■ r'l'fl 'infielder was troubled by a sore at the base of his spine, was to the World Champion Los An- NlcklOUS btlll l®ft shoulder through much of rejoin the team tonight at Mon-jgejes Dodgers, joined American campaign and will undergo treal. iLeague batting champion Tony ,, i _ I ^ examinations at the Qinlc. * * * Oliva of the Minn^ta T^ns. UOl OT Leader «,, . Plttsbnreh’s ; »« sl^ated Wednesday for the ^ s^ty Tony KubA the’ j PltUijugh . ' ^ New York Yankees at the CbmcI palM BEACH GARDENS, m!! S ................... Tuesday. |Fla. Ufi - Jack Nicklaus has onunr BF6 TRAILMAKER SILVERTOWN SNOW TIRES ■ Get more traction in snow because Trailmaker Silvertowns have the deepest-biting edges of all major brands! ■ New improved nylon cord. Stargell, who drove in 107 runs and batted .272 i^th 27 h o m e' ^ runs, entered Pittsburg’s Pres-' J2, OPEN nings and is more than $27,000 ahead of his nearest rival in total earnings, the Professional Golfers Association reported _ , Monday byterian-University Hospital for ^ Ibe top'ten in official, unoffi- ^ ®" J cial and total winnings: *>« ®P*™^ ®" ★ Nid.i«„. ,,31452.1,1.W4. ^ ^ "main i> the ^ . — hospital for a week. i y ______ ______wt,i«, MMw', i Richardson, a left-hander whp ^ — saM he expected the tests to U7'.«7: &21! compiled a ^2 record with a 3.8lvj^ • ALL TNE TIME "{jit take fOTr days and he plans to earned run average in 35 ap- ^ • LiABUCS WANTED ^ Parker said he injured his shoulder in a home plate collision at (^ncinimti early in the'3^ season. .................. NO MONEY DOWN! snwoB BEODUB IDES UKTEDTUnOlIT AS Bitckwall plui ■HI and tire from car RFC LONG MILER330 TIRES ■ Easy-Steer shoulders for easier turning. Sports-car tread for safer stops. ■ tough nylon cord and Super-Syn rubber fight wear at high speedsi . OTHER SIZES I MaekvaH TuImIms I 7.00/6.50x13 I 7.00 or 7.35x14 I 7.50 or 7.75x14 I 8.00 or 8.25x14 $18.25 $20.25 $20.75 $23.45 WhNma* S3.00 nwt pet t« EXTRA WHEELS FORi SMOWTIRES^^^ i/2Pricel 60% eff wheal manulacturar't (Hf-■attad retail prea with the purel ol two B.F.Goodrich snow tire*. WINTER CAR NT sNu *100 A3-waybonus buy for wintordriYort ■ ANiMl caa al IMiiif FWd-|pnf la wrtaNlN. m WairMor cap and ■ aiiMt lar iM Narta a Aaitad can af MnMM Da-lcar--aHlli IH la iMaa*. in \ NORTH PERRY \B.E Goodrich FE 2-0121 Hie tough breed of tires for the hard-driving man! Hawaii. Parker wUl imdergo a series j Passed the $150,W in^w^ of allergy tests and have X rays taken ef bit dHmider. Tbe rangy first baseman also plans a routine physical check- NeTY^k Met relief pitcher ^azu® Yawgisawa gave Gordon Richardson were set to P®nnlssion to return to ac- ondergo knee operations. 1 _ $ B0WUN6 $ 3'-»U .Arnold Palmer, PLANNI TO BUY A mr ‘n'77* ^ Mo'IS; P®aran®es fw ‘he Mets last sea-1 jU-L STAR LANE$ v r »5,m son, will undergo surgery Thurs-j pTHiN- P«”T PI 1-1622 W day for the removal of cartilage 'v from his left knee. : •a Wmtnet Ymit In wHh ixel ign Car Inawranee I Good driv 1 knew that tho Ext comploto otiction, ptu$ auch Mombor ( INslon Pretoction ai Sorvico, ol rs tho boot valuo in rqanlzatlen Insuroa j'a bread, fair, and benefits ss Fellow :oast-to-Coast Claims I insurance. J many good Michigan .“and better meets your modern driving needs than tho Exchange at tho Auto Club. Join Today and .,. LEAD THE WAY WITH TRIPLE-A. AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF MIOHIOAN FE 5-415f 76 Williomt Sf. H. E. Hutmonn, Mgr. T WATER REPELLENT Rain or thine, every all weather coof detervei the ultimate protection of Greihom Profettional Drycleaning gnd guoronteed woter repellent procetting. fobrics loti longer, look belter anywhere, anytime... call todoy for convenient pickup and delivery tervico. /Pi Th» LUtlm Thingt Thai CatuU at GrathamI THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER No. 1 Spartans Picked to Stop Northwestern TUISOAY'S PIOHTi NEW VOKK - Ctorg* F«Mr, 1U. N«w York, itoppod Tomimy TIbta, IM, , 154, Ookland, Calif. By HAROLD CLAASSEN | isociated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK (AP) - It is getting to be the time for the traditional college football game. That means, they are traditionally tough to pick. Last week there were 16 wrong selections in the 56 games listed. That’s an average of .714. The season’s totals are 229-86 for .727. Michigan State over Northwestern — Lightning does strike twice in the same spot but will it strike four times? s^Three times previously under Coach' Duffy Daugherty the Spartans have been tagged the nation’s best only to be upset in the next game. This week they again are| No. 1—but the lesson has been learned. Arkansas over Texas A4M — The schedule maker has been kind to Arkansas since its terrific triumph over Texas. ^ BEST OFFENSE Nebraska over Missouri — The Huskers have the nation’s best total and rushing offenses and lead in team scoring. They also have a dual carburetor in quarterbacks Bob Churchich and Fred Duda. Against this, Missouri offers Charlie Brown. Notr« Dam^over Na\7 — The Middies have no answer for Notre Dame’s Larry Conjar and Nick Rassu. Louisiana State and Alabama Many great gifts come in small over Mississippi and Mississippi packages, says an old axiom. At State — A college football dou- Syracuse you pronounce small bleheader played on a neutral like Little, Floyd Little, field at Jackson, Miss., with Georgia Tech over Duke — Alabama and Mississippi SUte Scotty Glacken, Duke quarterplaying the daylight half. back, hurt and likely will not Purdue over Illinois — Bob piay again this year. Griese does Purdue’s passing -------------------------------- and kicking. .. .. Florida over Auburn - Steve R°okie Goalie Starting Spurrier, the Florida quarter- BOSTON (UPl) - Rookie FREE MOUNTING 22 back, has the pro scouts droll- cheevers was to ‘”8- replace veteran Boston Bruins Texas over Southern Method- goalie Eddie Johnston tonight ist — Who can remember when against the Toronto Maple Texas lost three Southwest Con- Leafs. [ ference games in a row? This would be Cheevers’ first; * * * start in the National Hockey Syracuse over Pittsburgh —League. 1“ A.forl # ■ ■i.chon«.-Wl.lt.«all. 51.11 Mot I nos TAX ■ OPEN DAILY 8-9-SAT. 8-6 ■ OPEN DAILY 10 TO 10 . . . SUNDAY 12 TO 7 . . . PLENTY OF FREE PARKING SPACE TWIN PROSPECTS - The Van Arsdale twins — Dick (left) and Tom—won’t prove as confusing for their opponents this season since they are on opposite tepms for the first time. Dick is a guard prospect with New York while Tom is seeing a lot of early Na- tional Basketball Association action with the Pistons. Both have shown aggressive instincts against more seasoned backcourt foes and should aid their respective teams. Tom had 11 points in last night’s Piston loss to Baltimore. Big Pass Plays Decide Clash Orchard Lanes Hits Twice at AAcDonald's Ailing Pistons Tumble; Lakers Nip New York By The Associated Press | Don Kojis’ 15 pmnts topped The Detroit Pistons, rocked,the Pistons, who missed 13 of by early injuries to three key their first free 14 throws and players and then rattled by thei wound up 20-for-40 from the foul deadly shooting of ex-teammate Un^-Don Ohl, have slipped into the National Basketball Association’s Western Division cellar. Ohl, traded from Detroit to Los Angeles went on a nine-point tear in the 1 a a 12% minutes after New Y«t had built Two second-half “bombs’ paced Orchard Lanes (5-2) to a 194) win over McDonald’s Drive- In (3-4) and a on^ame lead ________,_______ ________________ in the city recreation Men’s Baltimore after the 1965M sea- * with four minutes Touch Football League L a s t gon^ sparked the visiting Bullets West’s basket with night. to a 117-98 romp over the crip- ^ ^ ganje 101- Dan G r e 1 g connected with pjed pistons Tuesday night vrith *>y Elgin passes to Earl McKee and Davelg 27-point barrage. Baylor put the Lakers in front Simmons, each 40-yard scoringi ★ * * f®*" 8®od- ' piays. to decide the battle. Greigj , k . , „ „ „ . West topped the scorers with, and McKee teamed on a 10-yard-'^" ** ® *■ 8 ® m e "^ck Barnett, traded T l» . 74 talfti™ «lg.. iram Lo, U. behind and edged the New York McDonald’s lAich lost^ a [Knickerbockers 104-102 in Los , ..... The victory was the Lakers’ 14th straight over the Knicks at home. chance to tie Motor Mart (4-3) for second place, also had a 40-yard scoring pass when Mike Marcum threw to B o b Weinberger. Hie same two teams will play tomorrow night at Jaycee Park and The Offenders (2-5) will meet Motor Mart Bandits. the Knicks, was high for the losers with 28. BALTItMHIi DITROIT OPT e 0 ■ lewell 5 7-f )» CaMfWlI 4 3-5 11 ilowi 5 »-4 13 MV* - - - - _ _ . J*ll«ny 7 7-10 M Sfra'd'r The P i s 10 n s nussed R o d,ow 'J « '' Thom, out with an ankle aU-lHtSft'w'r 7 3-3 u ment, and got little help frompM^'n^dt ! o player-coach Dave Debusschere ......... and big Ray Scott, both nursing injuries, as they dropped into iwtjh The final night next week will the Western basement with a tS*i fcX-KIrim^w! find the Bandits colliding head-1-3 mark. Atnn- director. He threw 11 touchdown Hotel. From Miami, Gay ners and passers, but a defe^lP^sfVV*^ 'Planned to stop at New York sive player - safety Bill East-l and and Chicago on business before jman of Georgia Tech — was;^'' named today as The Associated r children. !arriving here. Press back of the week, i “I didn’t think one jilayer could ever do so many things |one game.” Tech defensive I coach Jim Carlen said of 1 man’s performance in the Yellow Jackets’ 37-16 victory over Navy Saturday, i What the 5-foot-lO, 163-pound Eastman did was return a punt 86 yards for a touchdown, recover a fumble, intercept two passes and deflect three others, make nine tackles and contribute four key blocks on punt returns. Ultra-Modern Dome Set for Shea Stadium OVERHAULING ^GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS 1 LOW PRICES 1 EASY TERMS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS OUR SPECIALTY MOTOR £X€HA:\GE 405 S. Saginaw St. PE 3-7432 NEW YORK UP Are you ready. Texas? Plans have been made to ish off Shea Stadium with a $9 million glass dome that will top Houston’s Astrodome because will be: 1. Glare-proof. 2. Bigger. The announcement of the plans for turning Shea Stadium into an all-weather stadium, made today by city sports commissioner Ben F i n n e y, also called for an arena to have 114,000 additional seats. Shea |has 55.000 permanent seats. "All I said was: ^ Show me a filter that delivers the taste and I’ll eat my hat.” ^vernight PLORSHEI3M eliangcs Ihe shoe shade of the Xation WEATHERED MOSS Exclusive. Floreheim Weathered Moas—rich, deep color to bring out the best in your new olive-toned clothing. And beneath that elegant shading you’ll find incomparable Floreheim quality in every detail. SHOE STORE Open Monday and Friday Until 9 Sarving WMi Quality Foetwaar Sinca 1919 If You Think Pontiac Is Trying to Get by on Looks Alone This Yjear, You Haven't Driven One Yet! PONTIAC 1966 BROUGHAM 4-DOOR HARDTOP Luxuf^ous Broughams with plush interiors! Come in Today . . . You'll Be Glad You Didl Deal Now . . . Higher Trade-in Allowance Because We Need Used Cars! THERE MUST BE A REASON: Others Talk Deals, But The Pontiao Retail Store Makes Them The PudiM Rchit fitBre 65 Mt. Clemens St. Downtown Pontiao FE 3-7951 1," THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAV^ OCTOBER 27. E—5 the Out(fm 7tail with DON VOGEL Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Press Squirrel Shooters Doing Well Pheasant Hunters Need Dog Hopeful pheasant hunters whoi don’t use dogs had better turn! to squirrels or jumping brush piles for rabbits. This is one pheasant season where a good dog is worth his weight in gold. Ringnecks are scarce and those that are around are running a country mile before flushing. ★ ★ ★ It takes a smart canine to flush or pin these crafty birds within shotgun range. Except for the wet opener when numerous roostqrs were walked up, gunners with dogs have been having the only success. Early in the morning— preferably at dawn —and the last hour of daylight are the best times. Pheasants are moving off or going to roosting areas at these times. Open fields are the best producers. Daring the day cornfields are best and so are heavy swales. Rain the first three days of the season in Southeastern Michigan cut hunter activity and the overall success was well I down from last year, according to the Conservation Department | report. Sunday showed 54 pheasants taken by 165 hunters. I A spot check of western and good success in that area the inorthem Oakland County last first four days of the season. 'O’Dea’s rooster was downed in [Lyon Township. All entries must he brought The average in M a c o m b > department of I ^ . , ... The Press for measuring Mon- County 18 one rmgneck per eight hunters and one in seven for thej 7 g, m. and 2 p. m. | six townships open to hunting gquirrel hunters had veryi “ 'h Sunday. Leaves are off the trees mak-' ing it easier to see the bushytails and numerous hunters were out reported down in all areas with a lot of good pheasant cover not being hunted. The Pontiac Press Pheasant Contest started slowly, but picked up momentum Monday because of increased weekend hunting pressure. The top three ringnecks were taken Saturday. last weekend. The majority were downed in the northwest section. Officers made several arrests for a variety of Killed pheasant from « car, loaded gun in car, hen pheasant, too many squirrels in bag, song bird, no license, quail, identification of pheasant destroyed, no back tag and uncased gun in car. Sore-Legged Horse Sparks U.S. Team NEW YORK (AP) — Even hor.se show.s." observed the 39-with a gimpy-legged e q u i n e year-old book publishing execu-scrub who came off the bench live. “He has had a bad leg for at the last minute in the line-up, | several years. If he were in top the United States appears ready physical condition all the time, to make a runaway of the Inter-|there's no telling what he could national Championship at the do." National Horse ,§how The 82nd edition of the venerable fixture opened Tpesday in Madison .Souare Garden and in the two international classes. with scope-sighted .22 rifles, check of squirrels taken showed two fox for every grey. LIGHT PRESSURE Pressure on grouse in Southern Michigan has been light. , .. . j Results were poor Sunday in Leading contender for the ^ Vassar and Tuscola game savin^^ IS Michael <^lo-|3reas and fair in Rose Town- sino, 381 Clayton, who downed a ship. 39V«-inch ringneck in Brandon, ^ being Township. Itaken. Tied for second are Michael O’Dea, 7195 Wedworth, Union Lake, and Robert Pickett, 3545 Meadowleigh, who entered 38Y«-inch roosters. Second place jcarries a $25 bond. Flight ducks are beginning to arrive at the St. Clair Flats, but gunning pressure is light as the waterfowlers are still concentratinif on pheasants. And ringneck hunting around I Pickett shot his bird near the Flats and Harsen’s Island is I North Branch and reported very rated good. ------------------------------- The department reports 50 geese taken in Oakland County Gaining Access lo Farms Becoming More Difficult By DON VOGEL "Ask the farmer first,” is a slogan that has been pushed by-sportsmen’s clubs and conservation department officials before and during tlhi pheasant season for a number of years.' More and more nimrods are following this advice, but more and more landowners are saying, “No.” “I drove past mile after mile of excellent pheasant coyer on farms in Rose, Springfield, Holly and White Lake Townships Sunday,” said Howard Greene, the Conservation Department’s district game supervisor for southeastern Michigan, “without seeing a hunter.” ★ ★ ★ Greene reported that the state-owned lands were being "pounded very hard by hunters.” “I can’t understand it,” he said. “We like to have the hunters using state land, but let’s face It-most of the gaine is rais^ on private lands and that’s where the best hunting is normally found. If the hunters can’t get permission at one or two places they should keep trying. “Sooner or later they’re going to find a farm where they can hunt and they should get good shooting.” Most hunters, however, don’t have the time, patience and necessary diplomacy to gain access to choice hunting grounds. They want to hunt; not spend half of Saturday or Sunday run-ing from farm to farm. , They ask, and If the owner refuses they move on. Time s-a-wastin’,” is their theme. A couple of rebuffs and these hunters head for state land. fW) ’TIME FOR BANTERING ’The mid-week after work hunter has only an hour or two at best. He goes straight to a pre-determined site. There’s no time to banter with landowners. Of course, some hunters have made friends with farmers over the years *411x1 are always welcome. But even some of these are finding former spots now closed to hunting. A few have the ability to tolk their way into Just about anything. Ihe average hunter, however, isn’t to blessed. Why the increasing reluctance on the part of the farmer to allow hunters on their lands? “We just decided not to let anyone hunt here this year, that’s all,” is the jtock answer. The most apparent cause appears to be the few who fall to ask permission and trespass or become belligerent when they are refused access. Stories of landowners being threatened and even shot by irate hunters haven’t helped. Carelessness is another reason. Farmers get tired of making repairs because of malicious shooting that deliberately destroys property, and fences or gates being broken down. ★ ★ ★ These things have happened In the past, but occurrences are becoming more numerous, for some reason, with each season. Only a few are guilty, but the majority of careful and thoughtful hunters are being penalized. The only persons who can prosecute trespass violators and those who destroy property are the owners. And they have found It much eakler to close their lands to hunting by tacking up plenty of signs and refusing permission to anyone who asks. Many people fear retribntion if they sign a complaint. Eliminating the problem by barring hunters also eases this fear. The solution isn’t a simple one. Even when arrests are made and convictions handed down, the violators usually gets a fine, which he pays, and goes back to hunting. THE HORTW TRESPASS LAW Violation of the Horton trespass law should carry with it suspension of all hunting and fishing privileges in Michigan for a period of five years. Malicious destruction of proporty with firearms should carry the same penalty in addition to the usual fines and restitution. Second offense careless use of firearms, other than wounding, should have the same suspension of privileges. If complaints are signed each year, particularly for trespassing, word would soon get around and this prob-' lem would pretty much erase itself. The same holds true for other violaUons. | A reminder in the 1965 small game laws says. “To hunt! on another man’s land Is a privil^. Abuse of that privilege has but one result—loss of a place to hunt.” I CONTEST LEADER - Michael Colosimo, .381 Clayburn, hold.s the top ringneck entered in The Pontiac Press Pheasant Contest. He Fire One wears a special shoe that is built up, so that he can walk evenly. He is owned now by Mr. and Skiing Increase Seen for State the U.S. Equestrian team took Mrs. Patrick Butler of St. Paul, six of the first eight spots. iMinn.. and is on loan to the * ★ ; U.S.E.T. Miss Kusner rode him Fire One was the late replace- Europe on a trip last summer ment. Untouchable, one of lhe|^|’‘^ ^ trophy in Dublin with aces of the team, and the mount Kathy Kusner rode to second! place in the Women's World Championships last month,, in England, was badly shaken in ai fall at the Pennsylvania National Show in Harrisburg last Sat-' urday. The horse was not injured, but U.S. Coach Bert De Ne-methy decided to keep him on the sidelines for the week so he could rest up. Enter Fire One. Miss Kusner pushed him to >nd place Monday night in the^mericana Trophy competi-| tion^hind Sinjon, piloted byj peerless^Bill Steinkraus. She had two clean\punds on Fire One,j and lost onl^on time, 28.6 seconds to 30.2 LANSING (API - Michigan skiers will spend $28 million pursuing their sp«rt during 1963-66 the Michigan Tourist Council predicted 'Tuesday. It would help bring the state’s biggest-ever winter vacation season, the council said. Some 87 winter sports centers, two less thart last season, will serve an estimated 250,000 skiers this yeal^ The other half of winter recreation economy comes from hunting, ice-fishing, skating, tobogganing and remaining winter sports. The council estimated skiers spent $25 million in Michigan last season. Winter sight-seeing and cami-also will draw tourists out- 'The Conservation Department'as our possible face in the'to sport and to commercial fish-has postponed its plans for plant-jhole’.” / ling interests.” ing striped- bass in the lower I Tanner goes on t(Vsay; | Key question in the depart- Great Lakes next spring in or- “Our money, e^ipment, and ment’s plans is whether the der to concentrate on the intro- personnel are thoroughly com-j Coho, in the fresh waters of duction of Coho salmon in north- mitted to the Cojio program and the Great Lakes, will produce lern streams. ‘ -■— - .............. TIED FOR SECOND — This 38%-inch rooster was taken near North Branch Saturday by Robert Pickett, 3535 Meadowleigh, and is tied for second place. A $50 savings bond will be awarded for the longest bird entered and a $25 savings bond for the second place ringneck. I Since the Conservation Com-' mission in September signaled the go-ahead to planting stripers, department fisheries men have learned more about the Coho which indicates that this species may provide a bigger breakthrough in improving Great Lakes fishing than they earlier thought. we don’t want tof^ater down] eggs that can be fertilized for | this effort by /shifting some of hatching, naturally or artifi- j our attention/at this time to a! daily. Go To For Your GTO and SAVE at... RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES Conservation Crews Seek Seasonal Workers The Department of Conservation is sounding its call to men who are interested in finding seasonal work as park rangers and forest fire lookouts starting next spring. ’Hie chance to take examinations for both types of job openings are being offered to eligible candidates S^o apply through the Civil Service Commission in Lansing by Nov. 15. Applicants who meet minimum qualifications will be selected for work if they score passing grades in written tests to be held Dec. 18. Park ranger candidates must be at least 18 years old by June 30, 1966. ’They also must be' high school graduates or anticipate earning their diplomas by next June. ’Those who pass Civil Service exams will he assigned to state parks throughout Michi- »econd s^ecise, namely the striper. ^ ^ ECONOMIC VALUE I the first runs of fast-maturing Also, s^s Tanner, it is possi-jyoung male Coho, called jacks, ble that the introduction of the are expected to take place inj striped tbass could undercut the Great Lakes streams. The reai;^^ succes^ of Coho plantings. |answer won’t come, however, V I i “In making a choice between until the fall of 1967 .when the Hh nFFRC|f|y * * * these two fish, you have to go first spawning runs are antici- ™ UCtnOlklll Coho experts from the West.lwith the Coho because of its tre-'pated. 4 who ought to know, told us re-jmendoud economic value, both' After that, the department f 89 M-24, Lakt Orion 693-6266 should know whether to stick •' with the Coho or bring the p striped bass into the picture. : ^ I Several other factors enter | [into the department’s decision gan some time within the March-to-November period. Most of the vacancies in the forest fire lookout positions are located in northern Michigan, with a few men also needed in the southern part of the state. Persons hoping to join this seasonal work force must be able to serve from April to November. With one exception, applicants for these jobs must not be under 18 or over 45 as of next June 30. The maximum age limit does not apply to those who take the fire lookout exam tkmal basis. cently that we may have been underestimating the potential of / this fish for making the grade in a big economic way in thej Great Lakes,” explains department fish chief Howard A. Tan-' reports U,e sfe.espi,™ rOrtarute ?a rcompferS ' in recent years come up witn pign y<,ur days so that you will new techniques and information be fishing in good territory or ® ' for raising, feeding and planting bunting in good cover during - Solunar Tables The schedule of S 01 an a "P Ortirvic fee hsainu, ^mong them IS Uic matter of ^ Handtoni* App«aranc« • Longar Waoring | I 4t Wik TAXIDERMY mi South Toloirohk Cohosalmon which have virtual- jbese times, if you wish to find ly revolutionized efforts for pro- best sport that each day has ducing and increasing the sur- , vival of these fish. luouci. ^ ^ ^ ^ . “This means that we should have a much better chance of successfully introdneing Coho | in the Great Lakes than we i realized only a few short , weeks ago,” points out Tan- 10:45 1:55 10:10 J:M Paces Golf Qualifiers “We aren’t pooh-poohing the striper in any way and we SAN JOSE. Calif. Iffi — Ron haven’t given up on this fish. We Lettelier, former California promo-1 simply think that in attempting Open champion now playing out 'to make Great Lakes fishing of Manhasset, N.Y., shot a four-The starting bi-weekly salary'better, we should lead with our under-par 68 Monday to lead for park rangers and fire look- strongest suit. And that, in our qualifiers for the $46,000 San outs is $178.40. Ibook, is the Coho. If this doesn’t'Jose-Almaden Open Golf Tour- Further details about these work, we can look to the striperinament starting Thursday. i positions can be obtained from the Civil Service Commission or Conservation Department in Lansing. ■ * • • An Engineering'tHumph! ■ A HIGH MOIIUTY MUITI-TEMAIN 1 The BEST in TAXIDERMY I At A REASONABLE PRICEl I You eon pay a littU Uii and get amateur I woric, but »why riik a worth-while trophy? I Our 17 years' experience Mtoret you the b j poiiible job. V ThratH*, 1 Iraliat ‘895! ■ JIOOER Ridaa vary imoethly. Climbt 45 dagraa hilli with aota. Untinkobla ■ ena-piaca (ibargloi body, high lletolieii tubalaii tirai blawn to a raquirad I ■ praitwra of I P.S.I. with 1 daap braoth ... no gougai or pump raquirad. I ■ OAKUND JIGGER SALES k SERVICE ■ Call HvfHintfi Aflrr 6 for/titpolHlmml blU-27H7 Stop by Anytime nnd yi»it Our Trophy Rooms BILL HUFFMAN TAXIDERMY In Your Yellow Pagea I 3563 AAARK RD., PONTIAC •■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a' •■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ TIRE TALK If your are reading your snow re-Ireatl ads carefully these days, you'll notice a confusing array of prices, designs and claims. Trying Jo pick the best value here is even harder Ilian selecting the most succulent melon from a fruit stand. We make lots of mistakes picking melons, but when it comes lo retreads, we are not fooled. Here are you lo use in measuring value in snow ' some yardsticks for retreads: 1. Appearance — Is it finished earefiilly, the casing fresh-looking, sound, and free from weather-checking or cracking? 2. Tread Depth — is it 14/32” deep? Many are 8/32” 1I/.32” shallow designs that won’t give lasting traction. 3. Tread Design — Lugs should be heavy, well-siped (blade cut for traction) and the contour fairly flat for more contact. 4. Rubber Quality — Service and performance depend on top quality tread rubber — it is here that the good retreader offers the best and the cheapie, the worst. 5. (guarantee — Ask and see how well the retreader stands behind his product. Some are worthless ^iand some are as long as two years. ■an't help murh picking melons, quality snow retread instead of a And finally, while we we ran help you pick i lemon. Try us. Carter Tire Co.^ 370 S. Saginaw St., Ponliae, FE 5-61S6 £—^ THE roX . lAC I HESS. AVKUNEi-DAV, OCTOl^ER 27,19U5 THE PUN ; 1AMi S. VVESIA V, 0C:T0BEK 21, 19G5 E—7 Supervisors' Proceedings THE WHEREAS (Cmtiwied from Prevkmi Page) ^ to lor tta/W«ltt of Ito toWori of uMtondt. ^ tu IS. Thit contract I ‘ Vjnoj It of ttio ptrtloo This tend Ts“ ----------- -i- .. That tho County of Qaklaod --------- ! 'wa.iod to atlabllih a county wMr tf a oarlMW tonto ,„pp|y ,y(ttm In and tor taid Pwadar-**--** horn Eitatoi lubdlvlolon In the Townihip I, of ttia proposed tower. In the recorded pump station location In a I- aaaawant li lomawfiat vaaua and Inda- and an aoMmant tor an ac terminate, and uid tItaTTha Chairman i body of the munklpalliYf by the board of day and htar nm abovo written, public Wtoto of Oakland C^»y, and COUMTY OP OAKLAND SY tbi of wporylwm of.OoWand ^ ** * torn *bo" «"»*i*«*o « LtlSXi?., ^f^oTIS ISbX prte Isy"^lJS'V.aSd niW abovo wriHan. and Elahty^lvo Thewahd ^ taSlltlea, to the board of public works. It shall nata fifty (SO) years from the d this contract. This contract may b cutod In tevaral counterparts. Tto provislont of this contract tf in roll conformity wtth the Constihrtlon ^ and Statutes of the Stale ^ Sin to and atpaelally Act Ho. US a# the Mlc“ ** gan Public Acta of lay, at untndti. the putpoae of dofraytoo the coot of I Milford Sewage Oltposal System. Bonds of this tarlea maturing prior ... . — ^ oublect to ttret*l??!Ii*r*^Sigf *^“a%s *a“7lj|'*{nr°'jlu*x °*'“**^ ** Super-, - Chairman, Ladlet and Oentlemen; ..HEREAS the original plant for the Oakland County Court House contemplat-sxpanslor -* “•-* nttf^to ;* *5; wings ’'(the Admlnlstrat 7!? arecled In ItfJ, and WHEREAS the groi apartments planned iturc East Court y _ ______ _______ —........-........... ...............ALLERTON, JR. a'hera^ aut^liM H>*ob, Critdale, Hagstrom, Hall, Hamlin. , CARL F. INGRAHAM d directed’to' e'xec'ula sue# a d^ m Heacock, Horton, Houghten, Hudson. The resolution was unanimously adopter --------- IT' WtrLauWessfi??: m-rMioJ''tJ'o.‘“aS?rte^''A;rl. , 4, relative to the Incoriwratlon ol tt posed City of Medgar Evers, be take ---- Knowles, Lahti, _________ _________ , Levinson, LInley, Macdonald. Males, i Mainland, Mastin, McAvoy, McKinley, p Meniles, Mercer, Mitchell, Nelson, O'Don- | - ----------- -- Osgood, Petnales, Pe- . - _______« --------- •-------- - -versa numarlcal ordar, at r e County prior to maturity r more Interest payment da .fttr October 1, IWI. Bonds redemption shall be eadeenK. . par value thereof and accrued Intsraat to I plus a premium on each bond computad a, ' at a porcantage of the face amount burse the county tor all natoni tharaof In accordance with the fol lowing neering end admlnlatratlto co Khedule; after actually bicurrad by ttn I 3 per cant If called to be redeemed on Departmont of Public Works li i or after October 1, W73 but prior tr " ■ ____)burg, ( Potter, Pow................ lult, Seeterlln, SImson, _____________ Solberg, Tapp, TIley, TInsman, ^ ot this I Walker, Webber, g r after October I, ; October 1, I9t4 1 per cent If called to bi I RE: ROYAt OAK CORPORATION - Cl EVERS -e Oakland County NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED: ADOPTED. ----- ..... gpchert, p , Clark- w. smitn, ooiberg, Duwn, Turner, Valentine, V..... ----- Wilcox, Woods, Yockey. (73) (Soodspeed, Grisdale, Hagstrom, Hall, unn. tn) Hamlin, Heacock, Horton, Houghten, Hud- ErnS?5r'-*MSS''"S:^!^'FEil^^^^ ^“vllS^s®*'"*'^ •*' *“'*^-jEa7t C^ou" Jylng^'o^'l^o‘.’k^ll^d' Coun" M:i"ll«,Vr«^^^^ by O-Donoghua supported by of Auditor, tw au- Rhlnevault SMttrlin SImson Slavcns. * Ait i a ^ •* Madgar Grounds Committeasr to employ tna firm W srn?m'Solero Tapp* TInnnan sufficient .malorlty having voted Evers In the Townpilp of Royal Oak, and of O'Dell, Hewlert and Luckenbach. for- Tlir^T. val.ntl4; vXwal^^^^^^ WHEREAS a dispute arose oetween ™r architect, ol ttw Co^^^^^^ Wilcox Woods Yockav (73) DBLCW HAMLIN proponents and opponents of said mcor- P*®*' prepare preliminary plans and Chairman poratlon as to wither such oetifloni specifications in accordance with the By-were proper, and submission to this Board. :REAS a prior to ADOr AYES: Rtharde Chamberlain, Warner, i mwiasw .as OeConIclb Warfon, Forbes, Whltmer prior to NAYS: None imed on WHEREAS the establishment of a r to Oc- syflem will protect I ^ Duhito huIMt S.WI -I ,K. N RE: OLDE FRANKLIN -------------- DIVISIONS - EXCHANGE OF DEEDS mvocanon oiven TO PERMIT PLATTING OF WELL giilirmiJld Township SITE Noll £f„.„ OAKLAND COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS MEETING AUGUST 10, IMS - ----- - |,y DolOS H by Homer Case, the Circuit Court tor the County ol Ook-lond by the Township ol Royal Oak lor a declaratory rights opinion as to tho propriety ol the petition, and WHEREAS the proponents tor Incorporation hove requested that ho lurth*r m-corporation procaedings bo had ami fur- I Grounds EDWARD CHEYZ JOSEPH FORBES ' Notlcwof redemption shall bo given the holders of bonds called for redon Slot imi M *l"t by publlcotlon of such notice i itOM Oo **’•" ’’’‘'■'Y. ' 25,Woo ’ “ ‘ ~s403,3oo.oo Liiif. "Lr°i*!:S l'?S£ „ interest after iption, provided lunot the paying agent t County, Mkhlgen, ? PVfw*"* to said ACT no. las oi me F Michigan Public Acts of 1057, as omend- . »“PP'Y con- e distribution 0 serve Powderhorn Es-1. West Bloomfield Town-untv, os requested In the y the Township Board PRESENT: Allerhm, Alwerd, Bechert, pi.mtST.r In view of slid >HER>r^the Fermlrmton ^Oe^nere. c^reV|■s. i“ec,i« Corporation of 1624 Guardian Building, mule, Dohany, Duncan, Durbin, Edward, null'and void ® ?y*’S"o?klaTl,V".''^to, ’Snrto'u'iyd'^ SaTel^’lfag^. Sfin'Il 2t*v":!?iT',h.'“tCT*'th’? rptiy“o?'w'itt? rn®'’k%7n::i;‘:‘^;prt"'K”,:iX'i:' LiStT ^i'r^nr'i'd’TTi n”' !JrPhl^.?ioi!‘rs '^“*™ .meSded to'm Part of the N WV, ol SeCTlon 1 TIN, Avoy, McKinlay, Melcherl,' MeniiosI Mer- Rde'”ciN°''to to''known‘os'* Farmington Townsnip, Oakland car. Miller, Mills, Mitchell, Nel«>n, ™ .... Februory tl. lOsar Towna Remer, R Cdunty. Michigan, being ot*^he" 5?ly' line of* Side Frah I tha that the County f, nard ol Public Works Is hereby directed 1 to submit fo this Board, for y ms end specifications and , I, 15 ( ^ 191.6) Board approval, estimates _ ____ , said system )t Lot 37 Ir $466,112.50 _ (344% for 12 Ato.) ................. --.J 11 117 50 . OS to both principal ” lerett, is payable from monies to Total Esfimatod Cost 14)5 000 00 tlf.. ^“'"'•7 ®* Oakland by oitimefe tho period ot usefulness of this loclllty to bo forty («) ?<»" Skirt X l'imV bi?w«“the CoJStl'Sf Hubboll, Roth t, Clark, Inc. *™i ”'<* tillage wherrty tto By: M. 0. WARING, P. E. “if /lltoge agrees »o._^P*Y *® .«« “W —- - —- VILLAGE OF MILFORD ,, g?;S,'l..”’lys'i“ei: t ^iilu.7'’l“nS.I»s* P“«THER .............. ToX'nlhlp d‘’west BIrtmfIdd’ construction, op-I financing of said system ispect to tto furnishing of a Smith, >m the ry, TIley, Tinsmon, Frank- \/oll, Walker, Webber, 0 feel; Yockey (79) ---- thence aBSEI" . thence S 21*13 graham, • 13 0 feel along Ouorur-'-•'"••'ng to the - - e East City 0 radius of 770.0 J]®'JL*’Y Forbes the resolution be a' had*'on the Discussion followed. >n. A sufficient melority Ihe 'Boundo- therefor, the resolution wo O' MISC. 4470 BtJUNDARIES OF CITIES B) AND VILLAGES COMMITTEE THOMAS C. TILEY, Chairn TO RETIRE PROPOSED $415,000 SEWAGE tIeXtmENT BOND* M « Total 344% ing September 1, 19)6, In the semo mo "Powderhorn Estates (West Bloom-its as tto annual maturities ot tho field Townshlo) Water Supply System" of mis issue and wml-ennual^ to end that the district to be served thereby ‘ ' ■“ ‘ - the "Powderhorn Es- S 63* V 1.24.0 feet; I n performed in Durbin, Edward, Fouts, Frid, Frye, Good- ......- - - ..-.ifier as required speed, Grisdale. Hagstrom, Hall, Hamlin, 6 Constitution and Statutes of the Heacock. Horton, Houghten, Hudson, if Michigan, and that the tofel In- Huhn, Hursfall, Johnston, Kennrty, Kep-—'d county, Including mis hart. Knowles, I ehti, Laiirle, Lessller, _____ .. _________ does not exceed any Levinson, LInley, Macdonald, Maler, constitutional or stotulory llmitotlon. Mainland, Mastin. McAvoy. McKinlay, IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the County ot Oakland, Michlatn. by Its Board erf ."'l"' ____________ ______ like to Include well site as Outlet "D ' Olde Franklin Towne chord bea I thence N 2 e S $7 24-I0" _____ ____, the Slid exti f the W'ly line of Olde Ft , N 0*09'10" E 230.0 feet I d^innli ■ 1, Oekland”counfy Record) • with his . here^ller tet forth, iklln The Clerk presented the i* the meeting togeth— to the mailing s Liber 4717, notice and efiidavit notice I'" *•■ To ^me Mem^ 1 meeting fiU'ii"’JI S' PHILIP 0. MASTIN, JR. JOHN LESSITER CLAUDE R. TAPP Moved by They supported by Lessller le resolution be odoptrt. A sufficient meiorlly hev . RE: STATUS REPORT ON COUNTY WASTE DISPOSL FACILITY AND DATA PROCESSING CENTER 0 the Oakland County Board of Supor- <- central angle o -chord bears S 69*09'0S" thence 10.05 teat ulong tto ve deflecting to the l»tl, soli radius of 60.0 feet, ^ ^ ....__________________ ’ ............* ......... ‘ ............g’jrd ot Auditors ht . _ _ _ oral projects In the County. Service Center necessitated by the continuous growth of the County. '■ " tys and Means Committee has In these prolects and wishes to the Board of Supervisors us ot two ot tho prolects. Board’ol Super- t® oekiand county Board ol Supor- .'tl* , C'"'*'’ Waste Disposal _________™ s?'S.s",5L,'ifSj! i« a 7vaUablt'a^w^ used k) suto'Y Boanfol *Super* Townshhf end oVy'of Fermhigton’ fave *"The f’ecllhv”w“ contain 600 square feet ’wiif*to^LstolwS SloM ^ “me tol*ow*lng Trtuesi ®* '♦«»' »» emended, to detach the torrU complete with flue gas wesn-rs. City of Dotroll water will be evsilable piece stated in me to towing rrtuesi described below from the Township Consumers Power Company will to Ir to mis area, and wnicn nos been iiieu wnn me, 'icwii. .,,„k „ ... <<>iiinn > m.in «•. w . WHEREAS me Farmington Geneml "A regular mrttln^ of 1 ANNEXATION FROM FARM- ®' INGTON TOWNSHIP TO FARMING-TON CITY Ol Oakland County Boorc cBy stalling 4 ______________ Michigan, Nc. 3, held on Tuesday, ,v. ~ K-- _______ - ttt* 'W5> ®t ®i30 A.A Township of Farmington regulations cov- House Auddor ering picnnrt unit -------------* proertur..........*• I lom < ? tto^Court ' Tt which a Telegraph NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED: •"■eedy been awerdrt on the pur- t- That the petition containing the fol- »"® serrate contracts w rnsaclViig ■■'such 'business es lowing descritod properly, to-wit: SSfiding * ”’’ **'" *’ Michigan, ----- rt by the county d System, which uId con-rtti In lull In the said resold of Supervlogrs; and ' WHEREAS construction plans iTid spec- , , Ificjtlons for tto MIHord Sewage Oliposel (SE*l-> I System ei prepared by Hubbell. Rom A c„ rogisterrt professional otol- Oort)to, EdWerd, Routs, FrId, Fryo, Good- Jf.. tpood, OrladeM, Hagstrom, Hall, Hemlln 5” ®tj. a»*lmeto of _ U»nm4f. ktovtow. Stouahton. Hivtoiin, J|g^uln«*-*^ **^*^^* ** ““** ^^^lOd pf POy tO fhO County .... porole seal____________ ______ .... __ _______ :oupons to ABSENT: ------- -------- ........ signalures mute, Ewai said Chairman and County Clerk, ell chert, Mllle ol me first day of August, A.D. 1965. Travis. (13) COUNTY OF OAKLAND, MICHIGAN Seeterlln. SImson, Slavens, ... -..... Solberg, Tapp, Tllev, TInsmen, Turner, Valentine. Voll, Walker, Webber, r- ytilcox. Woods, Yockey. (731 acceptable time. ...... ....lip of Farmington, Siwi NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED Dl by the Ooklend County Board of Supervisors, that the well site be quit claimed by a metes and bounds description to This MehrnoT'fSr’o"dHS'*7'me“samrp^ lf“super“vlsors. T'he''prevlous'’mrttTng Ihence southerly alono”tt Chalrr '-^9* 9*^'''“^' AM ol ”lto''tond contained’within the ‘h® following: com unu nmiiMu u. ...« Juto Beginning at the Intersection ol Grand '• Oakland (Tounty Board River Ave. and GIN Road and proceeding SM.OOO, « work on tto prelect is expected to The Date Processing Center Is being itructed In the basement ol the Court se In the area formerly used es e assembly room. At this time, partition n Road tc Kiiowloo, ’’lihli: LMtrto,’ Li^iltor, -KJln- J2l,‘*V!2„vrt'to'Ti son, Llnloy, MecdoiMid, Molar, Mainland SjJrtcs Kd to SX. ^ AKestln, MpAvoy, McKinley, Mamies, Mer prepared by said hereon County and of Milford, 0 MISC. NO. 4461 recommended bv the Board of Public IN RE: EVERGREEN GLEN SUBDIVISION - EXCHANGE OF DE*:DS TO CLARIFY OWNERSHIP OF GROUND WATER RETENTION RESERVOIR SITE I — vinn resolution was offered by ______________It ot me County ot Oakland to accomplish this exchange. ■Rehard ir- -■ “■ d the adoption ol ft Register of D ly 21, 1965 Oakland, Michigan, ' ___er "—* ----------- lawful ■; Mr. Chairman, Ladles and Gentlemen: • Work* a certain pi PROOF OF MAILING STATE OF MICHIGAN, Slate Sei COUNTY OF OAKLAND i; Aiierion, mworu, Bacherl, John D. Murphy, being fi r, Carey, Case, Charterls, Clark- sworn, deposes and says ohen, Dewen, Doheny, Duncan, County Clerk end Regis Durbin, Edward, .Goodspeed, mlln, I, Huhn, Hursfall, Johnston, , deposes K Clerk a . —________nd County Hall, of Supervisors f Register of Id Clerk of ............ „.,.vn 29,"tolng aTso’the Dole processing equipment I centerline of Halstead Road; ttonce te*®7 to be ossenr' I northerly along the centerline of Halstead when the other preliminary Rood to the centerline of Grind River . ........ Ave.; thence easterly along the c»nlerilne Center wMI furnish dole processing il ol sold Grand River Avenue to Ito point »®r,'' *® County deportments. Increase ol beginning."; efficiency end eld In, providing better IrsI duly be approved as to term end sufficiency ol*'*®'' service. It Is also contemplated to Is the and in compliance ------------------------ th.i i~-.i ..mi. .■ ----------- --- -- Deeds of Public A..........~ t 279 of mi *"al local units II themselves c car, Netaoh, Oldentiurg, osgood, peineies, PeferiMi, Potter, Powers, Rtherd, Re- ®* mer, Rhinevault, Seeterlln, SImson, Slav- WHEREAS pursuant to t„ ens, Spltorg, Tapp, TIley, TInsmen, Tur- of sold contract of fAai 1 nor, Volonfito, Volt, Welker, Webber, Wit amounts of the lovtrol ani cox, Woods, Yockoy. (691 to bo paid by me NATi: None, iwi . •• ."w x™ ABSENT: Brlcknef, Casey, Ctoyi, De- f^bi - mute, Ewart, Fortes, Hursfall, Ingraham WHEREAS undor sold contract of May Nlokhorf, Minor, Mills, MItctoll, O'Dono- J- 1*65, tho vIMoge Is to pay annually imue, H. Srnim, W. SmWh, Ttrry, Trovis. the amount ot tach tnnuel Instollment 1965, me (FACSIMILE) I Instell- ------------------ loge art County Clerk naturltles (FACSI t said Section 15 a._ . . E 60.00 ft to the point of beg’nnlng; ;m»nce N 0*I6'30". E 95 ft; thence N _ $0*37'40" E 111 ft: thence S 0*16'30" W |95 ft; thence S M"57'40" W 11) ft to the ------ ..... ............... », _ Th® estimated pro|^ ... _____ _ . .. detaching the territory described from tto Pfjee's'PO Center KSihe7t,""i(nSil«?''LahlV,"'Laurli7^^L^^^^^ S?*s“petol»V8‘ol Coun^ Melntort"**Mas\ln'*'“McA‘^^^ envelw properly’"rtaled, “sufficiently day of November, A.D. 1965, to"t 'uxrrer Mitchell Nelson, O'(3on- stamped, end plainly addressed to such tors In the district affected. SJSTue bl^torb, Pe-mJmtor at his lest known address and _Mr. Chairman, on beholl of the to?.on pX~ Powe^Rehard, Remer, depositing the same in the United Slates-rtes CommIMee, I move the ado Rhl^i^-uU. Se,l7llm Slavens, mail at Pontiac, Michigan on July 21, the foregoing ---------- w s7llh, Soitorg, Tapp, TIley, Tinsmon, 1965. | BOl witoox'WMds’'YPckey"’(ra*''‘*'^' ^’jOHN D. MURPHY, __________ . **ijaYk-"’Nnne (01 ' Oakland County Clerk, I Chairmen ' ABSENT: Brickner, Casey, Cheyl, Ofr Register ol Deeds ---- —. .r-—. I.,.r>h.m. M®I-Subscribed end sworn to — — onnexlno vided for Iron Inpton a" ®«»lno el I me 2nd Y()ur We« — .. --------------.-v--— . - - .im-. report on other pending prolects es Im-I plementatlon end work progresses. . Mr. Chairman, on behert ot the Ways ■ Means Committee, I ------------“—* J(5UNOARIES OF CITIES AND VILLAGES COMMITTEE -----C. Tiioy, forcing report bo roctivrt an- WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE DAVID LEVINSON, Travl's. (13) MISC. NO. 4464 • Municipal Finance Com- RE: MILFORD SEWAGE DISPOSAL SYSTEM SiiMniHrt by Mr Rehard BOND RESOLUTION nnuolly In^rest and paying mission of the Stele of Michigan shall J.’®' citor . -------d other bond handling costs have first Issued Its order grentlng per- •• toferminrt pursuant to said contract; ^sslon to so do, as provided In Act No. . W4FREAS WHEREAS tto County Is desirous " sulny bonds to ontlclpotton pf “ Works has 91.t H«v ol Julv iW ------ CLAUDE R. TAPP Signed: JULIA MADDOCK, Notary B®" '■ public, Oakland County, Michigan '™ ..vino My commission expires October 7*fcJ®** il. Clerk read letter ot toijtik* ft®*" Edwin. ™to*or, the resolution was adopted ring Com-|N'(S^4f le County Bi r. county f dtopesing of aa Milford Sewago jh dlitrict net In therefore be it RESOLVED BY THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF per- OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN, 0) fol- _ ““rThot Ito bonds of said County of '® Ptovisibns’of mis resolution. Nn Oakland, oggregotlng the principal sum 9. All resolutions and ports of op. of Four Hundred end Elghly-FIve Thou- tions, Insofar os ------------ ---- ----. •'yiiari ($4)5,000) to limed ter tto conflict herewith, of defraying tto cost of acoulrlng u. chairman «'*il?~t,*d2?rto‘’l^“' tetwjnrresojutlon. IIO^OE* TROY SANITARY SEWAGE Dlt, Tto*Chalrman mau» nw .vnuw.„ii '■'"■• in.,: Mr PHw.rH eSIeMEn'tVtO ^#'TATE®PLAT TY**LA?yl'"i*j"oto S. Slavens (7®P'»c-jJg^f'^iON OF RI.3HTS AND, CT',n'f„v7stON''°'’ '"?oTL[?ATllr- Frank F. Webber ' SrmED%®ER®vTcEs“^''®"* Thfr following resolution was offered (replacing Edward C. Bloey To ^ Oakland County Board of Super- ’'.wuBR'EArEva Haus, a single woman, (rl®S:ing*wlMiem A. Ewerf) _ ” “'^WHERSir'durinr Wct and qrantod to Rte Oakland County SALARIES - John B. Osgood (replac- *B® Uni °®?®9--!»'rV*>'!frrtn’rHrt in Liber '1p"^?«Om7,TTEE TO STUDY ^r» o, s 32, Oakland County ACQUISITION OF PONTIAC MUNICIPAL HUGH G. ALLERTON. JR. JOHN L. CAREY C. HUGH DOHANY HARRY W. HORTON THOMAS H. O'DONOGHUfc JAMES E. SEETERLIN FRANK J. VOLL. SR. FRED L. YOCKEY by Levinson supported by Do-roport bo received and placrt iny^ m# report bo received A sufficient malorlly having vo erator, the motion carried. Mrs. MItctoll requestrt mot )2.00 Corey (replacing J States Government to rt lacrlflces being made by n e armed services by exten rights and privileges to I B, Recommended t survivors of those w t Board of Public : PONTIAC TOWNSHIP WATER Mercer (Chelrman), ! Frye, Edwin J. Johnston, Leo •,'city of Tro;^ "ytore were no oblecflons. The j, leges previously accorded those serving similar conditions; - f THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED (. mat this Board of Supervisors recommends It to be me policy of me Govern-,.J"iitt’e7 from Prlscllto Hll-I;:;'®"' ^ ' Chairmany County Government r/OfJJ* •* rolwwiy •---of' me oikland County-'l7'*^JB®7^ nm.n Voters, menktog the u®®®™*!’? tto -evised Ex- per cent (5 per Heacock, Houghten, Hudson, .... .. ,, poyobto on April 1, fall, Johnston, Kennedy, Kephart, LohtI, ,b,, ,ha ............. Illy mareaftar on tto Laurlo, Lessller, Levinson, LInley, Mac- gnard ba and mev .... , ... . ^,10, weier. Mainland, Mastin, Me- to avecuta a oiiit ci»im nnea ot 'ne Avoy, McKinlay, Monilos, Mercer, Milch- nrlglnal m*t*s and bounds dasrCbad . ell. Nelson, O'Donoghue, Oldenburg, 0»- nronerlv to be exrh.noed for a deed to gort, Pemsies, Potorion, Potter, Powers, that oarcel now de*lnnated as Let 313 , Rehard, Renner, Rhinevault, Seeterlln "f "veroraan r-.i,n SHMivi.ion N;v 3. lo- , S'msnn. Slavens. W. Smith, Sn'hert, cetrt In the City of Southfield, Oakland , Tapp, TIley, TInsmen, Turner, Valentine, C»i-lv Mlrhigan. Voll, Walker, Webber, Wilcox, adooiloo ot me , Yockey. (70) 292 t. 293, Oakland County goerd tor me resolution prJmlums,’^' ... ... booklet "Know Your Oakland County ' ent twenty five (25'1 feet soyornment." (Placed on hie.) . j . 1. Gtovernment Insurance following described lend: „v ..... grant DONDERO n. ■■. .... .. - «’ Bie N'V % To tto Oakland County Section 25. T2N, RUE, City of Troy, yijors V^iSs) otherwise known »s parcel y«. i adiM am 572 on the City Of Jrny T*x r"Ms. '. The motion was st Knowles, Melchert, Miller, ^ H™Smim, Terry, ------Miscellaneous Resolution ^ Allerton, Alwerd, Bachert, , Hall. Unrtnn. In. g^her, ■ Carev. Case, Charterls, Clerk-son, Cohen, Dewen. Dohany, Duncan, >. Durbin, Edward, Fouts, Frid, F-ye „ Goodspeed, Grisdale, Hagstrom, Hell J Hamlin, Heacock, Horton, Houghten, Hud 2 ton, Huhn, Hursfall, Johnston, Kennedy Kophort, Knowles, ' ------- -------- orabYe discharge, length of service. 3. Education and training privileges previously ------..................... minor Chile s meturlng on or oftor October ....I..* .. 0 County . . - —d directed to txKirtt-------------... ----- t on behalf of tto said county end to in RE; POWDERHORN ESTATES X the oeol of sold county theroto. and (WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP) ----------------coupon) to to el-l WATER SUPPLY SYSTEM . ------ -------------by causing to to submitted by Mr. Rehard .n affixed mertto Iholr focilmlle elgnetures) Mr Chairman. Ladlet end (ientlemen: ,-u..a., .»wx... p,,.,........... rest payment dates, ond that upon the execution of. teW b^ o«ef the following resolution which IftiBonds cellod on® ettachto coupon), mo oomo iholl to „„ Approved by me Board of Public " Snlham. Taoo. Tllev. TInsman . mi, uiaii M raficrmrit at the delivered to me Treasurer of said county u,.rki at their meetinu of Juno 21, 19)5: rTSwTmoroof ond occruod Intorest ^ WHEREAS mo County pf Oeklond by ... O oramlum on oach bond computrt ®®“7®/ “J® ™^,.*"® ---------------------- " -* --------------- .............,_____ .Jslsin, O'Con .. . Oldenburg, Osgood, Patnales, Pe terson, Potter, Powers, Reherd. Remer ... .. -----11^ SImson, Slavens Tapp, TIley, TInsman filcox,' Woods. Yockey.'(73) NAYS- None. (0) ABSENT; Brickner, • Catoy, Cheyi, De lute, Ewart, Fnrbes, Inoraham, Vet tort. Miller, Mills. H. Smim, Terry cres) s and mrough the He was born In Royal Oak, tto son " d: of George A. Dondero and Adele Roegner if the East 60 acres Dondero, both of whom survive. Educated r 1/, aiui me W«t In (bo schools of Royal Oak, his attended i.,ni^?7 *■ FapiIIv benefits such farw-nira '"B allotments to depend-benefits paid directly lo of Public Works has approved and adopt-nui not ®®' *1® Bas submlttod to mis Board ot I, oui I Supervisors tor Its approvisl, a revised es-In World ®* “** ®* ’Be Pontiac Township ui Peym®nf of,W®'f SW mill jBnAiirjkttAn from $1r342)000 to $1«570e000 prt- lout «PP"c*»'®n pared by Hubbell, Roth a, Clark, Inc., raoe esoeclatly' registered profettlonel engineer) and rt turtles of >"®®® hoceise™ by hlgtor'thon enllcl-ve nOver tom cov-'P®**® construction bids, ond To extend least WHEREAS tto Board of Public Works > those servlno. oar- Bes also approved end submitted to mis ded or Inlurei, and Board of Swervltprt ter Its jpprevel, • anyone killed while revised schedule of payments to be made fo those discharged gV *B® J®W"»BIP »nd Coumy pursuant to wt receiving an hon- «i®^c®"*f«» betwem tto County o' Oak-t without regard to I*"® •'«* *Bo Township of Pont'ac relitlvo Ito me acquisition ond financing ot told privileges as >y>*®t7i' ®hd IQ survIvlOQ WHEREAS tt>6 Township B Township has a''»r<>"“< »»• t that revised E e said ri /ED that in bie sent AcNamare t station, sholliti It If called to to redeemed ei *iwto tVk I, 1973 It H celled ti . . ■p7eniVu’m”on 'erth’bond computed resolution of Its Board of Sugorvlx I percentage ot tho toco amount there- ' ®»'»B"»B®0 ® Deportmontof Public In iceordonco with the following *Be purchoto price ttorotor. ,bo rtmlnistretlon of tho powai rtulo- *• ^Bat the said bonds are to to iiturt tarred upon the county by Act N.. ..., irovts iiji ■ -------- ■ the provislont of Act No. 1)5 Michigan Public Acts of 1957, ■> amend- ®®| wBIch Oeparfmenf Is administered MISC. NO. 4462 entlclpatloit ot the tormenti py e Board of Public Works under me Rnc-mmended by me Board oh -Public .SV? I® *B® County from the gonorol control of told Board of Super- Works m"*®? o» “IB®*;® “"®®f “I® eontriKf pi visors, ond IN RE: SOUTHFIELD ROUGE ARM - May 1, 1945, whirt toytnents ere In the WHEREAS It I) necessary to provide EXCHANGE OF EASEMENTS TO prindpel omounf of fto bond) with Inter- , Aiotor supply tytlom consisting of a CLARIFY ROUTE OF PROPOSED P.7''‘2!f 4.A*45I2: “N®* ®» dUtrlbutten moms In end to,SEWER vniJm' ,!r^MmLr!i H »®''7® Pow®®fBorh Estetes Subdivision In The loMwIng resolution was oflerd by ?P®, 91*®'.* .»* *B*..y_”l«B® °t.“'l*®t®.!« tto Township of Wost Bloomfield, Oek- Mr^ Rehnrd. ®!?®®®1 ** ***? ®* ,i*l® P*Y"’®Bf» (And County, AAkhlgon, ond “r. Chairman, Ladles ond Gentlemen: I* hereby yyHEREAS tto Township Board ot the WHEREAS the Carmelite Sisters ot the Act No. gjjumfleld u..rt m • Ulrhlnm roe. ’. The e'sement, tor eccess poses lo the sewage lift sfe-consist of the S 20 leef ol the W 55 also Ito East 20 feet of the W 55 ' tto N 15 feel of the S 35 feet ah-ve described parcel. offlc t. Also an easement, for a sewage tice Dumping «lrtion, consisting of the " — feet of me S 75 feet “ ' d to Congressmen Broomf m by the County Clerk. Mr. Chairman, on behalf ans Affairs Committee, option ot the foregoing rose VETERANS AFFAI COMMITTEE ROBERT F. PATNALES JOHN D. MCKINLAY ovrt by Edward supporte" ' resolution bo adopted, sufficient meiorlly having by the Township Supervisor -___ .... Township Clerk; THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED BV THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN, as fol- revised schedule ( ^ - the tame are hr mat the County Cl StLhii**i"*?to? £rt 'SSTtaS. full film end credit of m# County mVtenmviM Of ittef.Oclttof 1, 1916 but prior to Oe- u, ooklond to llio ptymont of tho bond), ,”17 ^ *bb)r t, 1917 ______. „ both prlnclpol ond Intortet, whon duo. I.**-.* m wL.t or X oStotor"^ M iSWtS^ *• Thot oil monln paid to the County .SSTotklSrt cSSto'Mtehl«7 tof NoKco of rodorngtlofi^ehoil to ghton *j"*[*f*^^*7 9!*!^ «*7. i»J, of 1:00 o'clock P.M., Eaitom to fto h^) •»„*B* b®"* !• bo ro- m *-^919*® Stonderd TImo. {rstW(i:)'X7p?^ ftood to ntonXi, rt liMrt rtM In a Intoratt m too bond! hariln oumorli jrffS^«iSs‘''sa!ris i!Ka'.5i.s a*ny:,jK 9i.’a«'ii3s« iS5i-,jiK “'siAss.-a. ^ « poo, Iholl be subitertlelly In me tollr n May 19 ....... .. ______ . Michigan — poratlon of 4)00 Cadleux, Detroit, Mlchl- Kn, granted on oasomont to the Oakland unty Dtportment of Public Work) to to uiod tor the construction, operation, ------------ ------- replacement of ?r"?ud« D±rT rt“te';rt rse of training for his ultimato eleva-| I to the Bench by serving as court ■k for the late Judge George B. Hert-(. After e year of ludicial Indcct'lne-I, tto young lawyer opened hit own -- In Royal Oak lor tto gen?rnl prec-I law, shortly thereotter becoming , - - attorney tor Hazel Pork, the E 25 feet tpa cataclysm which befell the world laid above de- the 1940s swept Judge Dondero Into tto •CT-bed percel. 7j''**p''i^^Jrtin^'^lm'“to^^^ ‘whereas Prncllcol Home Bulldog untted“rtato“Navy Inc., a Michigan Corporation, of 21790 (ittment, to guollfled for e commission „„ CoolWge Highway, Oxk Pgrk, Michigan, py virtue of a cram course at Harvard Is the land contract purchaser of me said university, end wei then posted to com- --------- ... bet duty In me, Pacific Ocean as • co^ MISC. 4449 ______ ____ end Practical inunicafloni officer on the stetl ®* jBe g„. Levinson ,_____, .. Builders, Inc., ere In tto process Admiral commending, »P«'®'b!I *.‘“g- |,j pg. (jakLAND COUNTY COURT obligation . , . ’ stontlal part ot his tour of duty un w HOUSE - EAST COURT WING - shore of the revised cost of teM cruiser Monfpeller. Ho was dlsctorged EMPLOYMENT OF ARCHITECT - supply system required fo serve O ------ Navy In 1944, hevltrt Bald e AUTHORIZATION OF PRELIMINARY University In laid Township and C -----------------* »pow»» *®- PLANS me seM revised exhlWti to said c< "Eva Haul provided fund) ere on hand wim the pey-Ihg agtrt to redeem the seme, ^t mefurli*| prior to the year 197) shsll not to tublsef to rodomptlon prior to maturity. All bond) shall have proper coupon) ettoched Ihoroto evidencing laterest ' to Itoir respectlva detat of mo* " UNITED STATES OF AMERICA STATE OF MICHIGAN COUNTY OF OAKLAND WertW’.’OtiConldL’Werren, Forbi), Wtiitirse3lrt“^‘'Tl’N,''R10E, CItv - ............. m®*' - fitid, oiakland County, MIchIgsn, Pert ABSENT: None of tW % beginning rt Intenectlon of The toUowIng reeolutlon wet offered bv eentorllne Shlaweuae Roed wim West Whltmer end eeeandad by Warren. 'lection line: Jhenee N oras' E 420J7 ft; WHEREAS me Township of West fBence V»*«' B 440.04 ft; thence N 0*05' Bloomfield presently owns and It operet- f W J*l,.5f'l£®*J?'®P®.i“*B’*'’u 5S*iSf Ing a water supply system In the WesTJIvw N^4S*50' E 220 ft; ttonce N «*M Bloomfield Hills Subdivision, which lys- * *J:*B®«® .N„ 61*35' E 125 fl; lom hoi sufficient excett weter supply *B®"» •'» E J37 «; ^>“2® N » 45 cepKlty to serve .Do ^ f | .uV. ft; thence S 0*15' W 1375.03 ft; thence d 1244.76 whereas Eva I .tome Builders, Inc., ore m < of platting me said properties division to , be ----------- " Subdivision," onu WHEREAS the Troy Sanitary Sewage DIspotal System trunk sewers toye --------- conotructid across mese propertlas, WHEREAS Ito pump station, hot ----- ,— >ncatk>n site In --------- . «.«« DOCTims , (Be. 0110111 of HUS w“---------- UDaivision, ana . . . |b( WHEREAS mo ettomanf deocrlptlws «, f such approval, end t hereby Is approved, and that the Chairmen end Secretary of tto said Board ol Public Works be art they ere hereby 'authorized and directed to approve sold I exhibits and to attach the seme to tho Isold contract tor ond on hehalf ot tto .County of Oakland ttoroby incroosing the The young lawyer ttion returned to .hi privrto practice In Royal 0 ' ,Jy b------------------------ PONTIAC TOWNSHIP WATER SUPPLY SYSTEM ESTIMATE OF COST In Eaaements "A" and "B" can to mod.l- Run goH Club, the Royal Oak Lodgelsactlon III (led to conform wim lot lines proposed In of the Elk), Pontlic Rotary Club and-Section IV ....................... ’ Torch Lake Y»—* —-------------'■'■■•* KNOW A(,L MEN BY THESE PRES- *NTS, met me County rt (------ an, hereby kcknowlodgot ■n Etiates Subdivision, ond Jh bank and/or trust company which quellftot es e ptylng agent ^ 1.,, which jg'rfa.'ff&ri saar ja ggj r«i,“ p 'sls fled Mptylto 6B6rt. per ennuttt, peyebic April lT 19)6 and --- • - ■ - Board of Ihorteffer tamlannurtly on tto flril diys ^ ^ ^ |g ogjg yoor. Bern me County • centerline described as VSbltTlterks^iir AC? ®f • PO'n* ®" *Bt NW'ly I Putok Arts os ®* »"l®'®*P»rcel; thence N 32*5I'56'' 'i. art w'..tahiiwi E 5663 It to • point of beginning; thence l*-r» f® 77 30'47" E I9.J3 It to me point of «n*"?to’®#«r22Swi™.ii*’!i!l!~.**®,!Ll®'Nllng; sold point of ending being S 0* >*" E 41.17 ft from tto NW come (iiQin pursuant to Mid Act ind to lto$ of ttii odUcent tax oarcal* ^^^taSlSS^ tf !SS Wi!V5S;rLVED n7L Oakland County Rocortf^TS tion, maintenancfr ___ mant of tte sanitary Mwors by ttn Oakland County Dopartment of Public ^0^ '“'“now therefore BE IT RESOLVB6 mldeerTn'o b^ the Oekiand County Board of Super- laymen. 1. That the original easements sanitary sewer, Eesements "A" - . be quit claimed to Eve Haus end PrectI- .......... cal Home Builders, Inc., In exchange and Meryi-H tor new casements which will more pro- end chlldrim, . . ^_______ cliely conform wim the sold proposed (toorge A. Dondero, by .... __________ -'-* "Id thot Ito Chairman and Clark art ond hit sister, Mrs. Marlon ______________ Board b® end ere hereby author- Judge Dondero milnlaincd on obMIng h dirtefod to ekecute suck deeds Interest In the history ol his co”—' ol Ito County of Oakland to ond his nation, actively sharing -----,—J thl) exchange. terest wim his fithar trid (rlei _ _ 3. That the ' orlglnil easement. Ease- mrough membership In me Royal Oak ment "C", tor the ecceu rood end pump Hlttorkrt Society end (to Civil War station to quit claimed to Eve Haus end Roundtable. -Practical Home BulMers, Inc. In ex-i Cut oil from this life at the very, |Sectk>n l\ rriure. Judge' hereby estimate the period ot uiafulneu to to forty itUBBELL, ROTH end CLARK, INC. By; M. D. WARING (Continued on following page) E-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1903 Supervisors' Proceedings gQp Political Parties in Brazilian Action (CMtiMKd fr*m Previwu Page) PONTtAC TOWNSHIP WAT6H SUPPLY SYSTtM SCHfOULE OF INSTALLMENT PAYMENTS RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -Balked by Congress, the Brazilian government today abolished all political parties and gave military courts sweeping new powers. New institutional acts superseding portions of the constitution for nearly two years gives President Humberto Gastello Branco power to declare a state of siege and to rule by decree for up to 180 days and ^ant military courts jurisdiction over cases heretofore limited to the Supreme Court. threw leftist Joao Goulart as president. HAS POWER The president is empowered to close Congress during thej state of siege and purge public offlcials elected or appointed at| all levels— federal, state and municipal. Despite the abolition of politi-j cal parties and their member-1 ship registries, the present Con-| gress remains open. I1.3j7.00 •Prepayment by EXHIBIT "C" The (boptlon of the foregoing lesolut by M^T^fry*’.'' On roll cell the resolution was aOop* by the following vote: AYES: Allerton, Alward, Bache .. Beecher. Brickner, Carey, Case, Casey,!. Charteris, Cheyi, Coheiv__ Demute, n--'. Fouti, 'prT ' fl’roi , Knowles, Lahti, t of construction II h revised estimate ol *1,570,000, wl Clark, Inc., registered protessional engineers, and has been approved by the Board of Public Wip-kt * " In a brief address over natlon-;wide television before the new Gastello Branco came out of read bv an aide, Castei- the army leadership in - April Branco said the step was nec-1964 to take over the govern- because “we need tran- quility for the nation s economic development.” the Township B ard of tha Townsh s desired that of >.»»' *1.470,000 be financi the issuance of County bonds, and WHEREAS as amended ,^„the a St, Joseph Hospital Hosts Clinic Day IN RE: PONTIAC TOWNSHIP WATER SUPPLY SYSTEM „ Tf» resolution- was offered by ,,,470,000 ,. ----- To The Oakland County Board of Super- “fHERTFORE'*BE" IT “eS^L^D BY Gastello Branco said the revolutionary regime in power since Goullart’s overthrow faces danger from supporters of the deposed president who “threaten and dare revolution action.” i “Revolution is alive,” Gastello A “blood" symposium was toi®''®''^® said, “and does not re-be held for area physicians to-|^®®t-” | prolided'’* ”wh '"'annuel day at the 10th annual GliniCjOTHER MEASURES oJwl'Sj^TSj^tal Th.e other measures in the annually thereafter on the unpaid bair ” ' -g W W c^n%"has“woyed'’'}hu i'J»iu^ The one-day program was to pj. j Garrott Allen of Stanford’s University’s Department of Surgery; Dr. Eugene Lahey of the University of Utah’s Department of Pediatrics: Dr. Jack A. Pritchard of the University of Texas’ Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology: and Dr. Garl V. Moore of Washington University’s Department of Medicine. •?L-. . THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF r. ChalrnMn,l^idlM and GentlOTen: ;OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN, that I offer fhe Wkn^ng rej^utloo p,r,graph$ 1, 4 and « of *ha Bond Rfio- Drks 8t tnCir fTW^in0 on July 26a if65, to rwad as follows’ MENOMENTS TO BOND RESOLUTION * t^ tanS rt mW C r r»C'^p<^’«iyf4 pa-H - S5. •uthorlzed the issuance of tt.242a000 water SBc^y System; shu Oakland County Water Supply Bo^ ,, "Oakland County Water Supply » » w rtlac .Toi^kOip Systei^ to be drted (Pontlac Township Sytfen.)'; shall j • , . j "iJ' T^.hi?^w.tor c,™iu ** '*»'«’ •* of June 1, i»«; shall be Dr. Frederick M. Adams. the Ponfloc Township Water *uMy numbered consecutively In the direct -j , i- j- i “ n estimated to costJ1,34}.M0, order of their maturities *-om 1 upwards; president of the medical Staff, to"be‘'*ma4 ^ i"ooo*ealh!“aT'spIjdfie?bJ‘'^^^^ preside at the symposium * original purchaser; ^haii bear on hematology, the clinical sci-' new institutional act include expansion of the Supreme Gourt ; to Ifi members from the present 11 and indirect election of the next president by Gongress. The document said the president would decide the date for the next presidential election, which must be held no later! than Oct. 3, 1966. The announcement of the institutional act followed _ .. of political tension climaxed marathon congressional sions Tuesday night debating the government-backed /fonsti-tutional changes. County D^fors to Attenp Heart Diseas^ Confab A dozen^akland Gounty physicians iml be a m 0 n g the 25 d 0 c t ^ s participating in the Michimn Gonference on Gardio-Tar Disease Nov. 6 at Mer-!bllege, Detroit. [ponsored by the Michigan [eart Association, the confer-We is designed to summarize progress in heart research and to bridge whatever gap between It and practical medical treatment. The Oakland Gounty doctors slated to participate are Edward L. Quinn. Manes S. Hecht, John Galdwell. Yoshikazu Morita, Two of four Pontiac men charged with the armed robbery of a Waterford Township drugstore were freed yesterday on a ruling of insufficient evidence. Waterford Township Justice Kenneth H. Hempstead dismissed charges against Gharles L. Hall, 35, of 192 Dellwood and James Faulkner, 18, of 277 Howard McNeill at preliminary examination. Two other men charged in connection with the case — Janies W. Harden, II, of 381 E. Wilson and James M. Johnson, II, of 17 Prall—were to go hefore Hempstead this afternoon. Gharges against the four men stemmed from the 1493 robbery Oct. 7 of the Thrifty Walgreen Agency Drugstore at 6 S. Telegraph, Waterford Township. ★ ★ ♦ Bond for each of the men i set at $25,000. Harden and Johnson are still! Merit System Clears Hurdle More Stud/ on Plan for County Workers A proposed civil service, or merit system program, for Oakland County employes cleared an initial hurdle yesterday. ★ ★ ★ The ways and means committee of the County Board of Supervisors expressed general agreement In the concept of a merit system but deferred a formal recommendation pending further study. Committee members will meet again next Tuesday on the merit system proposal prepared by the Comity Board of Auditors and county personnel director John Witherup. If a recommendation comes at this time, it will be presented to the full board of supervisors Nov. 9. * ★ ★ The proposal to establish a merit system ordinance probably would be ordered on the ballot of the November 1966 general election if accepted by the full board. MATCHING FUNDS Availibility of federal matching funds to governmental units Iwith merit systems was the ba-isis of the ways and means epm-I'mittee last summer asking for a study by the board of auditors. ARTHUR G. BUTTON ! Federal aid is already OXFORD-Service for Arthur available for operaUon of civil G. Button, 90, of 6 PonUac will defense department's in such be 2 p.m. Friday at Bossardet municipalities and expansion Funeral Home. Burial will be in of matching funds is expected Church with burial in Oak'Hill Ri^elawn Cemetery. i“ ‘be ‘“‘“'e. Witherup said. Cemetery by the William F. Da- Mr. Button died today after a A merit system would extend vis Funeral Home. long illness. He was a retired present county practices of com- Mr. Fluellen, a former em- employe of Pontiac Motor Divi- petitive examinations and pro-ploye of Pontiac Motor Division, sion. vide appeal rights for employes, died Saturday after a three- Surviving are his wife, Nellie; according to Witherup. week illness. two daughters, Mrs. Pauline ★ ★ ★ Surviving are four children, Knickerbocker of Mount Morris Generally, it would offer D. T. with the U.S. Armed and Mrs. Evelyn Colby of Com-greater job protection for county Forces, Betty, Willie and Edna|stock Park; five grandchildren; employes. R., all of Pontiac; two brothers,'and 11 great-grandchildren. | Included in the proposal was Evridge of Pontiac and Chester! , establishment of a merit system of Tyler, Tex.; a sister; and a MRS. WILLARD McGREGOR board of seven members to ad foster brother. GROVELAND TOWNSHIP - minister the program and MRR nnv n wRivviri i Service for Mi3. Willard (Net- to hear appeals. MRS. ROY D. FRIZZELL McGregor, 90, of 4271 Ellis. -------------- Service and burial for Mrs. win be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Roy D. (Monico) Frizzell, 71, of Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, 5781 Savoy, Waterford Township Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, wiU be from the Gibbons Fu-aarkston. Burial will be in neral Home, Harrisburg, Dl. Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. | pr b^y will be taken there^ McGregor died yester-i by the Huntoon Funeral Home. ^3 3 , ghe was' afte^abStLS The transfer of a liqnor 11- w^Tsh^m^e iS^homJ- are a Jiughter, Es-|s3 4^3^ to the Matador Lounge, E. Pike, was approved by a 5-2 vote by the City Ckmutiis-sion last night. WILL FLUELLEN Service for former Pontiac resident Will Fluellen, 49, of C Chicago, III. will be 1 p.m. to- b morrow in New Bethel Baptist F Commissioners OK License Transfer Herbert Robb and James B. in custody at the Oakland Coun-Blodgett. tyJail. Others are Joseph Schaeffer,| 'rt John Keyes, Richard J. Bing, ^ \/ jchiyo Chiba, Thomas Cruce and ^ Y PTirQ >♦« I George Ritter. Z. I ^ I C7UI Fire Destroys Barns Is Term in Charge Murder i in Lot Slaying LAWRENCE J. PARR PONTIAC TOWNSHIP -j Commissioners James H. Service for Uwre^ J. Parr, ^ta„haii and Wesley J. Wood 70 COO Cl/Bniim tuiH kAllflfVt 1, of 693 Slocum will be 11 a.m. 3 3j„^t the transfer, tomorrow at H^e-Peterron ,3^^ opposed it be- Funeral Home, ^arborn, fol- ^.3^3^ j^ere would be too many lowed by ^avMide wrvice «t taverns located in one area. 3 p.m. at St. Louis Cemetery, St. Louis. I I———— DETROIT (AP) — A murder Mr. Parr died Monday after charge now confronts a high a short illness. He was an em-school youth in the fatal parking pioye of Chrysler Corp. in ^nrlnnflolrl Tuin lot shooting of’Abdul C. Accra. Surviving are his wife, Helen; In jpriflyTIclU IWp.l l\niTG L/OOTri’ Can-ol Roland, 17, two sons Norman and Clare; ,one of six children in a broken two daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth i A*. ti ' jfamily, was accused formally}Dildine and Mrs. Emogene Bil-, , ^ Dctrolt man was sentenced [Tuesday of the death of theladcaux; two brothers; five^ 3! ship bSs. causing an ttimat*l“> 2-15 years in the state ^ ■ *......... * |for the fatal stabbing of a fel-|»*‘y student from Lebanon. ied$30,000 damage, ^e bams, own UUV uajlld|$e. vne lavai otaui/aite vi o ixsa-: if if if bams, owned by Theo- low worker in West Bloomfield amuel of 7141 Hall worp Townshio. ' ^oung Rola^, charged with in the first degree. .......Iprovlilonj iKtimilt'pilad L*wi ---------------- dore Samuel of 7141 Hall, were Township. - ^ of hay and grain. However, Convicted of manslaughter by rijdiction of mil Court. his Cattle escaped the blaze. a jury Sept. 30, Joseph E- ntpr«i f« rh 1, * * * !Slr.»tl.er, a. o( 1KS4 W. D*.l. •f'tiw^owi’HoSie! oSkliMld'cowSy s«l^ Firemen from the Springfield son, was sentenced by Circuit vk» Center, in thit City of p^ec In Township, Independence Town- Judge William J. Beer. r^ "S^5^r:^;'?c23;“!n"?^S:;ship and HoHy departments MlchliH.;i.PPe.r per«K,.ny et Mig'^Tl'rT' -------ai •• beif^ ?*^*^'* Asst. Chicf Marian Hillman of grandchildren. Investors Service Center ' held without bond for examination. Nov. 5. Mishap Hurts Local Youth Strawther was found guilty of the Jnlv 14 slaying of Quit- the Springfield department said, Twelfth*Defroit the bams were beyond saving’ [when firemen arrived. They; The pair had been tearing .................... worked to keep the fire from down a home that had burned ^ '?i"*odoi»r, a'o. “'"Ispreading to adjacent sheds and^on Locklin Road when they be- (scoi) NORAMtf R. BARNARD 'thc Samuel home, Hillman Said, gpn arguing over money, ac- Iru. copy) --------------- cording lo sheriff’s deputies. Xi: oTSiTtS; Cubans Head for U. S. 'strawther accused Williams of quarters" by a TesidCTts’ group ocfotef 27, IM5 Stealing his wallet. of the general Wayne State An 18-year-oM Pontiac youth Prosecutor Samuel Olsen, issuing the warrant, called . “really a shame” that in in- hospitalized after a Bloomfield stances of this sort the parents Township traffic accident yes-; also could not be made de-,terday was reported in good fendants. condition this morning. | pni ipi? PirifiiTTm ' Malcolm S. McDonald of 99 POLICE PICKETED Ip3,^^^ One repercussion of the case facial cuts at St. Joseph Mercy I was the picketing of police head- Hospital. , uMii . UL J . - . ' . Bloomfield Township police HAVANA m - Thirty refugee Williams was stabbed twice area, a mixed residential sec- said McDonald’s car was struck iw,boats arrived yesterday at with a 1.3-inch butcher knife. tion. when he made a left turn at 'Mkmg'4'!' mUk Camarioca and more than 20 Strawther was charged with The West Central Organize- Telegraph and Hickory Grove mg JiVi*4^g,r®^’?ii7'3i. Cubans headed irst degree murder but the jury tion, meeUng with Police Com- i„ front of a vehicle driven by ** X *be newspaper,returned the verdict on the missioner Ray Girardin, de-Donald C. Freeman 29 of De- ogkiiS o!^?,'Mkhijinl Granma reported today. I lesser offen.se. manded more Negroes on the troit. ’ < police force. • LISTED SECURITIES • UNLISTED SECURITIES • MUTUAL FUNDS • TAX EXEMPT BONDS • CORPORATE BONDS • SYSTEMATIC INVESTMENT PLANS • PORTFOLIO REVIEW AND ANALYSIS Comg in todoy or phon* Watling, Lerchen & Co. mernkf N«w Y«4> Ueck Wrvinf , 2 North Saginaw Pontioc, Michigan Phone FE 2-9274 NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Nolle* Is hertby given by bit undtr-ttanM ttiat on 2t OCUbtr, ItAS, .1 10 o'clock A.M. *1 22S00 Woodwerd, Fem-Oekland County, MktilgM, p—- dress, OMcIwtd County, Mtebigw, t For OCC Construction Bond Issuance Is OK'd D.ted: October 13, IMS. I intemr meturing 's scries o< bonds. -• vote ol 3/»h, ----------------- le Oeklend County jOHN D MURPHY ‘"il felth erd Clerk ______ Oakland Community College H. Vau Bnakirk, director of ^*“^^7 vvSl^Srt^F^N; yesterday was authorized to Is- campus development for the B sue^ mimoh to tl^ college. ----Michigan Municipal F1 n a^ t e nCE OF PUBLIC SALE I hereby given by the under. LXimmiSSlon. The area includes a housing project tenanted at low rates by Wayne State students. Accra, shot in a nearby parking lot Sunday night, lived in the project vdth his American wife, Helen, 27, and their three-year-old daughter Lila. Commissioners Honor DELOS HAMLIN e urincipel ot end w...„ 1s series ot bonds. Meeting celled le order by Cheirmen ds o4 this scries meluring prier to D»iot Hemltn I, INI ere not sublect to redemption j Invocetlon given by Homer Case, . Bonds melurlng on'Bloomlleld Township Supervisor be cuWt| Roll celled. ..jr-ly In In- PRESENT: Allerton, Alwerd, Bichert, it the option of Beecher, Brickner, Corey, Cost, Cher-^ more MerpsI Icris, Cheyt, Clerkson, Cohen, Oamule, lies on end oNpr Miy 1, IWA'Oewen, Detiem, ------------------ - - velue thereof prid accrued Fputs, Frid, Fr •if’ Construction^ is expected to be- ________^_____________________ WWW ''t”"«‘'ately with comple-! Lofa Airport Manager RocilJster‘^ku.S cLm? M*kl^ TK*. i... «iii finwn - .u ' “00 of the scvcn buildings io tlw ® ss;«r,i ‘7 2*M7W2«*2*t, I proposed campus to Farmington Ro^7r,®^'iki^‘"6.?n%?**Mw^^^^^^ Bod part of the second the piece ot itorapt. ohase. sale of bonds Is scheduled Id 277itMl for Nov. IS, according to Lloyd The contract for the project was awarded to the J. A. Utley Co. of Royal Oak whose base bid of 15,416,000 was the lowest of four proposals. the City Commission last night honoring Homer Hoskins, manager of Pontiac Municipal Airport, who died Monday. Hoskins had managed the airport for 24 years. NEW! REDUCE AT and LOSE ^ UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to taka arrd moia effectiva than th# powdarad and liquid food supplement, and costs lass including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M.D No Gastiitis or irragularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET —-JUSf EAT! As tltousandJ have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP ir OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 f OfflcH I* Otkletid e*d W*vm Cewitiei ~ oe* Ir mr*el$ MB* THE PONTIAC PKKSti VVED.XKMJAV. OL1 Olii^.U ‘*1, iy(i.5 6 H«ln Wonted Mole 4'Help Wonted Mole___ STOCK CLERKS FULL TIME AGE 17-30 SAVON FOODS trt ottering; baby' SITTER, GENERAL, LIVE In, om rootn, TV, I ctiMd^»^?«. BABY SITTER TO 'LIVE IN. S3A 28)0. Coll Otter 3 p.m "sitter to live in, light TED'S WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE VO ond o^*ore lake minogemenf poiltion beauty OPERATOR 6»”sdufH ol ond ore between , Auburn HelghU eort • " CASHIER ______i 3i5-»2»3: WOOL PRESSER |coffee shop and lenced, full time, good poy. woltress wonted, doys ------ MS Ooklond. i Coll or opply otter 0 p.m. •TIME COL- COMPANION FOR ElBeRLY COU- .. nl. « H.w. K..,. ....... porlotion. Vicinity Crescent Coll FE 4-744« otter 5 p.r COMPANION AND Cdo'k, Wotertord Drive COOK WANTED FOR ' 6 Help Wanted Female T^Help Wanted FanHila 7 'I'^TiR-1 PART-TIME SALEl LADY WANTED BABY sitter'FOR I PRESCHOOL, ond route f"" J .'BlWren light! pitolizotioft ono iito miuron housekeeping. Vic. Montcolm ond: celleni ymrking conditions, O^loM 5 doys. FE 00412 _ I immediotely. Coll ---------------------- BABY sitter” WANTED,' MdRE' lor home then woges, 2 pre- RECEPTIONIST FOR OOCTORS „ wMic olflce, oge between 2S ond 40. II, Wi.. Must type. Phone 02S-S»2). _ quoliti- receptionist - WALLED LAKE oreo — experience preferred m bookkeeping and d>ctatioo4 Pleasing personality reejoired. Age preference 25-35. Reply to Pontiac Press RELIABLE BABY SITTERe NIGHT work, off Richardson Rd.e betwaen Walled ^d_K_e^. J43.MI5- RELIABLE SITTER IN MY HOME, Secretarial Openings Oakland University BEAUTICIAN splendid working CONDI TIONS, 40 HR WEEK. SALARY ce'fpFTAR’Y'FdR l” PLUS COMMISSION, HOSPITAL I- h, J, 2ATION, PAID VACATIONS * * BONUS PLAN. BERNARD HAIR STYLIST person, Rotundo Country li BOOKKEEPER - EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER COOK, EXPERI-Ihrnuah iri>i balence, epply ini enced, lest Ireck, breekfesi and - ' ■ .......* '—‘1. Good pay lor right girl, _ in person. Western Drive In, CASHrER TYPIST, ' 5 DAY"wEEK,' ____________ ---- ■ Saturdays, experienced. SHIRT WASHER AND SHIRT PACK iwi a iziz ager lor laundry dept. Douglas ---- ------ _ Cleaners, $34 S. Woodward, Bir COME BACK STANDARD "drir'CAR'"CAR'E'CEN To Ollice Work As A ter has opening lor cashier, age MANPOWER 'WHITE GLOVE GIRL' 3S SS. excellent working, conditions Key Punch Operators ' and hours. Call Birmingham, Ml •......- 2-0700 !* WAITRE^S.^NO NIGHTS OR SUN- WAIT RE S S ,'»> L Y ' A T^BA Oman ' s Restaurant, «W S. Blvd., E. No Sat,, Sun. or Holiday work. WAITRESS' FOR SMALL RESTAU Spare ■ 21. Strike t CLEANING WOMAN FULL TIME, . day work. Apply evenings. 5171 p.m. ___________________ , ins ^-“Ixle Highway.______ _____ WAITRESS ” WITH SOME GRi DIxIa i^LEANING WOMAN, FULL-TIME,! work experience. No Sundays •-I dav V,n,v a~.i„ avenings. SI7I holidays. Phone FE 3-*55*. Ml Lunch. » E. Pika Street.____ COCKTAIL WAITRESSES NEEDED. WAITRESS FOR NIGHT SHIFT ' Orchard Lanes. 44S Opdyke. ................ --- - ilngham atfer 5 : t^jM. WAITRESS,' } L TIME, EVENING WAITRESSES )ok,'to LIVE* Dining Raom and Curb In the Vicinity pun part-time. Paid vacations . tim'e Hospililizatlon... food allowance. Apply In parson. _ ___________ _ _ ............ BIG BOY RESTAURANT ITmploymENT,'“good "salary ' .Telegraph J, Huron or BENEFITS. Apply in person only, Dixie_ Hwy. 4 Jllver J^ake Jld^ Frank's Restaurant, Keego Harbor. WAITRESSES WANTED, IWI C'ASS COu'NTER WAITRESS, NIGHfll - '*B.^Cjwr-|kolj^___________________ Apply in person, Burger Chel|WAITRESS OVER 21, PART-TIME, ..........f. I days, no holiday or Sundays. Call ----------- ^ 4-9271. Call OR 3^19. Counter Sales _____ Marking-Inspection I ciuB, 4ios1>rchard appearing. Pleasant person-Ur, . Steady work. - - ------'*9 MS Oakland. WAITRESS, NIGHT WORK, NO exp, necessary, apply 71 Baldwin. — WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED, GOOD CURB GIRL, DAY SHIFT, 1 I DiVle.'" DEPENDABLE WOMAN FOR BABY wf-fD n'viriro~PFN«HSMn^ DRUG CLERK. G60D“"PA'y:'GOOD WHte"pon*fac pfess*Box^ t!ic“®' I WOMAN FOR KITCHEN. APPLY --- “-'va In, 2490 Dixie ^S p.m. '•I WOMAN FOR I GENERAL between 10 a.i OFFICE Pontiac Laundry and Dry Clean- ______] er*. 540 S. Telegraph. WOMAN - FOR DISH WASHING EXPERIENCED GIRL V ------fpr general hr- ____ys. Private ro 545. Ml 0-0357. EXPERIENCED ATTENDANT PRE-I and vacations. Reply ferred lor auto, laundromat, con-i Press Box 7._________ tact Bill, 31 C.|fnwoad Shopping WOMAN OVER 21 FOR__________ and marking, apply Fox Dry Claan- ers. 719 W. Huron.____________ WOMAN - OVER 30 FOR ALL Phases of general g«lca work, typing raqyirtd. Writa Post Office Box 232, Pontiac, HELP WANTED ________ Ave.. Rochester Aerosal Sorp. M7 aindpay-experienci^"'**'^'^ w"OMAN FOR HOUSEKEEPING babysitting, 4'/i days, OR FOOD AND BAR WAITRESSES, EX-.WOM ""’lenced, interviewing from 2-5, and "-_---JFrl.^2*_Ei.™_9 S'-____ FULL-TIME SECRETARY FOR IN-I ***'' office. Call r '“*• ' wage, weekends a ■" '32^420. _____ E'4-3531.'345'OakTand Ave. WOMAN FOR MOTEL CLEANING, ’able to general HOUSEKEEPER AND' .'iff"' ®*" ... 4S9 c«79 »• T-yeardId. 5-day week, live I 'ransp. 332-52M._____ _ les. MX- ii, Waterford area. Call WOMAN EXPERIENCED IN GEN- MAKcRSr LATHE' Mon. 673*5734. wOaOna »a«ad \pply Holly ----------- III Resatta ^ GENERAL OFFICE WITH TYPING lo Pontiac raduate, 4129 Highland R TRAIN, CHIEF _________________Idwin. HOUSEKEEPER, 2 ADULTS. TELE-graph-Maple. 5 days, ISO. Plus 4 — - Sat. S55. MAytair 4-3547 alter I, marital status and exparlenct YOUNG LADY PERMANENT NON-routine position, office work, mealing mblic. AAusI type. Work ax--perlenct gets oratarence. SKlay week, good salary, regular i n-creases, vacation with pay. F"r appointment phone FE 2-9249 ' 4G LADY -- cashier, 5 dev., ■> Wetting, Lerchen. FE r9274. YOUNG LADY WANTED WITH Experience on cash register and general ottice Apply 2940 Cooley Lake STAY NIGHTS, ---------------------vMv ..VK, .V.. wdges. 424-0747. Young Men—move up \'housekeeper for couple with one ol Michigan's feslesK *1*'’ 14-year-old daughter. Do some growing end largest retell chains, \cooklng. 5 days. Set. and Sun. oil. No experience necessary. Married \iye in preferred. Own quarters men 20-35 years old with 2 or more w'Rh TV. MA 4-2442.____ Clism ."d**dVrmK !r'^ H9^EEPER, LIVE IN. TUES. ell Important. " " "* *- 8 1 8 1 , age 42; beloved! { wile cf willlcm A. Saunders, Sy.; mother ol Dorothy J., Robert end WIIHem A. Saunders Jr.; survived by one sister and grandchildren. Eastern Star Funeral Home until Friday morn- ‘ Ing, at which time she wHI be taken to the church tor tunerel service. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. end 7 to 9 p.m.) SPENCER, bCTOBEk 24, f945, CLARA BELL, 3300 Elizabeth Lake Road,,Wotertord; age 43; beloved wile of Franklin J. Spencer; dear mother df Franklin G. Spencer end Robert Carlson; dear sister ot Mrs. Mabel Emrick, Mrs. Emms Green, end WIIHem Lelan. Also ' survived by 10 grandchildren and I one greel-grendcnlld. Funeral service will lie hew FrWey, October 29, el 1:30 p.m. el the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, interment Pontiac Press Want Ads Bring Advertisers and Prospects Together Hundreds of People Use Them Every Day to Do Just That . Profitably! YOU CAN, TOO! Just Dail - 332-8181 education colllns ---------------- - - - Coleman,! poches Din "n" CnnJ Ctn.n. I Olstrict Soles Mpr., World wid- Big D Food Stores ! Home Furnishings, Inc., 2135 DIxl 2375 Orchard Ley_Rd., Sylvan LMe Hwy„ Pontiac. ___________ PUNCH PRESS I Help Wonted Femole 7 OPERATORS ! IMMEDIATE OPENINGS ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARIES Thomos Die & Stamping Inc. Lrc-I^rnify coTieS'. WALTON BLVD. I whose skills include M Ing, shorthand at W Wl...... Continuing Education, Admissions, Help Wanted M. or F. ACCOUNTANTS TO PREPARE 1 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED Positive S4 Neg. $7.00, $10.00 — $12. DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE In Pontiac FE 4-9947 1343 Wide Track Dr — -Mon. Career ! Opportunity NCR WILL TRAIN MEN WITtl THE FOLLOWING QUALIFICATIONS: 1. Age 22 to 3i -3. Presently employed, but looking tor a poeltlon that offers belter opportunity er " ' 3. Degree ... _ ______ but exparlenca In direct er retell selae will be stongly considered. TO BE REPRESENTATIVES IN THE PONTIAC AND M.. CLEMENS AREA FOR THE SALE AND INSTALLATION OF CASH 5y's?e'mV“ accounting SUCCESSFUL APPLICANTS I WILL RECEIVE -1. Thorough sales end technical training. ”!. Salary and liberal bonus based! ability er- .. ! Phone tor appt. OR Ray O'Neil Rultor 1520 Pontiac Ld. Rd. OR 4-2222 EVENING AND SATURDAY INTER-I VIEWS MAY BE ARRANGED. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT OR S E N d! RESUME TO: I Furniture Salesman Wa have a career opportunity for on ex-pariancad. furn i t u r • salesman who is used to making top commissions in a fiigh volume store, excellent employe benefits. Apply at the personnel deportment doily between 9:30 o.m. and 9:00 p.m. Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL Real Estate Partner Dker .-verleSce. Help* to Commisslon.'w Oekieiid Ave.'Pon- menage Ponllec - Clerkston area tlec, FE 2-0191.______________ office for an estobllshed company. ALBERTS SUBURBAN HAIR FASH-S52; •Hempoo girl, license, 474-' .JJ!-*"*** ^'i' Walton, Drayton; REPRESENTATIVES NEEDED NOW FOR PONTIAC AREA with national corpor^lon. ATTENTION RN'S b.i"fS7'benSII?*S?«: .. . jrlng,Tevr cerT for wrsoSel ASSISTANT MANAGER, Interview cell S42-4444.____I pwsqns end cesi I ils Veer Shop .» u. uawna, .. Pontiac Laundry. 540 Miracle Mile Shopping Center S. Telegraph. Retired man for cleanup 4 hours dally, ^transp. 331-344$! 5-9 p.m. ROOFER, EXPERIENCgoT PLEASANT, DEPENDABLE MATURED LADY OR 4 I women for motherless home, 5, '“ • *- " - school egM children. Father assists [ 1. _™.i— .oc *.,1 charge of everything. 4734)243 el Michigan Employment Security Commission Ollice, 343 OeklancL see Mrs. Hewkjns.___________: AUNT FANNY'S ' ln*pe7son.’2244' I Oak, ■' _ . KIMBER- LEE JEWELS. No investment: — delivering or collecting. Call my company Is now hiring the trepsendous Christmas b i. ,;FE 2-2224 bet. 9-4 SERVICE STATION, PART TIMI or nn evenings end weekends, no experl- 5-.ATflNgipi.3US^ ^ ers, end Career Women, e to $50 per 15 to 30 tx 17 I STUDENTS . ROweri at 333-3053 4 Coventry. No ... ery. MA 5-1541 e TABULATING EQUIPMENT OPERATOR Immediate opening tor txparienced operator on 402 or 407. 519. S4S. SS7, 003. 015. Ability to perform control panel wiring an 402 or many women earning ssv ni| 407. Opportunity to grow In ox-ptr week working a lew| pending ooverntnantol data pro-I 0 doy showing Avon prod- costing unit. Silory opon, depend . FE 4-4504 or write R. 0. Ing an guelltkatlana. Apply', per- 91, Drayton PHInt._eonnat division Oakland . Ccttdy NEW MOTHER OF TWIN BABIE$| C^eurttiouee, 1201 N. TelegrOdB, needs Women tor baby simng andi .. w. •"« «■ __________________12 Mile Rd. NEED CHRISTMAS MONEY? 'WOMAN TO ASSIST WITH GEN-| time to earn you Christmas money by showing fi mout line of cosmetics end gt K—10 THE PONTIAC PRKijUS. WEDNESDAY. OfeTOBISR 27, 1960 IIUrF. yt WANT® MOTOR ROUTE DRIVERS fiifnin Sf>te>_____________IS HwwtlnW 19 Wmttdl R—I i»ty» SA^Rtirt Bwl—u Frafwly 474 Sate H»wf ELECT*K MOTOR SERVICE-RC- HEAR OUR PRICE REPORE YOU --»-MoA"R r»*rlndin*. IK E. PRa Mki *• Unit Mr ywr furnlhir* n ^E aSM). or tMXIwtcM and whit lM«t you. ■-------------------------- Wo’ll auction It or buy It. nfRiTRiBirlmi A TaiteriM 17’ B & B Auction oixio or i-im DRESSAAAKING, 18-A 4tjS«te Hmku 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS. ACREAGE PAR 'r«„*-, 1 CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP- uocTor-Lowyer ERTIES. AND LAND CONTRACTS R,o|^or-lnsorer ATTRACTIVE EAST SIDE LOCA-tlon for hardararo or drM — planty of parfcli^. Call PE AGENTS A & H THIS RUN ONCE ONLY A-1 SOD, PEAT MOSS, TOP SOIL, I fill dirt, crushed limestone, gravel, bulldozing. Tall-Timbers “------ KSi S. T(-------- Wanted MisceHaiweas 30 CASH FOR PIANOS, FURNITURE, musical Instruments, tools, etc. FE telegregh Rd. 30J-MM, If 4-4M4.____________________________ , -------MA frOSTt.__________■ CASH PAID FOR YOUR USBB’ TREE CUTTING AND TRIMMING, furniture and appliances. FE a iM6. la m-VM or I Days Only, ask lor Mr. Grant, i e------------------------------------Wyman Furniture._____________________; 90 DESKS. FILES, OFFICE FURNI A* hira. Dnrtablo oitd Office typewrit. I Ing machines, dral :. Forbes, OR M747. BRASS, LEAD, Urgently nea Warren Stout, Realtor -/j 450 N. Opdyka Rd. FE SKI6S Pontiac Dally til i MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE • Lanndry Service i Daiiy tii i :Saie Hmkba 49 I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE | , ” _____________Zl ^ , I-BEDROOM, NEWLY DECOAaT- SrSal' <^AC!TJ ed. gas heat, SS20e tormsT — - UriOii Stanley, Pontiac. OR HOP. " 2-BEDROOM HOME Nice shaded lot, tOO’xUS', In garage, lake prlvllagaa, go beoCh. It,550 with 10 par c CANAL FRONT lant «r canarM at Syl^_______ Pull baaamant, naw gaa funiaca, now roof and guttara. Larga dkl-IfM room and living room, f'—-will aacrRIca lor larga dowr. mant. lasOO on land contract. SKLSW for cash. Sinock & Kent, Inc. isoa Pontiac Stata Bank BMo. 3se.y»4_________________23lmi WEBSTER SCHOOL AREA 3-bodroom ranch, raclalmad brick,' racraathm room and studio In HIITER 1 KINZLER *",WEST SUB - a 3-PAMILY INCOME. , carp^ la kth^i CLARK5TON-7 ROOMS substantial oldar IW atwy h— overlooking the famad MIN P All romoAiod Mko new axcof large bedroom up. Sat Ih^p mant, new kitchen, naw_bath_ lix- if proven WANTED LAUNDRYS, SPIC AND tables, *" Span Laundry, « days a wsek, tisose_______ from 7 a.m.-4 p.m. 44M Dixit COPPER JSc, Hwy., Drayton Plains. OR 3-0411. -'1=" CenvaleKent-NHrsing TOP PRICES, COPPER BRASS ;|'’Nteii^g ani^raciuBg____________M WANTED y through Friday. Yhe stereo and mTisTc~divi- aion of Reeders Digest Sales end Servlcti Inc. has a career oppor-^ •>»>lty for the right men! Currenf! qualified leads fumishedj 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES WRIGHT _____________________FE I-yi4l Cash Buyers Waiting j We can sell your home. I Elwood Realty _________4ga-i4IO DO YOU WANT TO SELL? We need listings on homes, also apartments and lots. A. JOHNSON & SON REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-7533_________ KIND FLATTLEY REALTY immerce____________3^ J ACRES—3 BEDROOMS Good-size living room, dining ro large kitchen with lots of caMn YOU I Initiative I drive ■ , HAVE BUYERS FOR 4 TRUCKING AND MOVING, Upright, grand, spinet and console of property for qulc» »«n>, me, Reas. 40J-6787. pianos. If you have a piano to Paul Jones Realty — FE 4-055C. »*" cell: .HAVE BUYERS WAITING IN LINE y, GRINNELL'S | -I FE 3-7168 AA MOVING y 620-3518. t a whistle, m-car garage. Sma ut-bullding for workshop or chid ns. In Orion Township. SI6,yS wr H. BASS FHA REPOSSESSION If you are Interastod Ni gattlng ona of the bast buys of our^mas, call about the repossessions with ' 3 par cent down and 30 years to repay. Pontiac, Oxford, Lake Orion, Waterford and Holly. NORTH POINT REALTY SM4 S. AAaIn ' Clarkston AAA 5-3341____________MA 5-t5tt HOUSE ON HU er. '^iF75yr^_____________ HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL 3-badroom, uiearly modem ho large glassed-in porch. Baaanweni,l fanced back yard, and m-car garage. FHA terms. TED AdeCULLOUGH, JR. | ghiand Read (M5*) OR A03D8 -tt I TTTAr ------- jVal-U-way| pFORnF ‘iMno'*r'!OT,''dhIhla”i!!’K^^ Representative! vJl’i—L'^-l—' PERRY PARK IRW^IN .t':'7t5r;'s'’;;;d^.c’sss?;:lLAKE priv.-huntoon lk. .’sSodiiL^asS^'''''..... “ ... vanity. Spacious wardrobe closels.l Basement, large recreation room,, aluminum awnings, 2ontlac homat In thU araa. A good lakei Raawnably priced, tront at 133.300. Good financing available. * „ , i WorehousB Site Everett Cummings, Realtor Handy, accaisibie ... apace lor rKreatlon EM 3-3300______________________3*3^11 •* P®'W*Ty Scar garage, paved ilreat.,home SITES, SO- K 100', SUNNY Square L*aRd ■----- ' leach overlookina baaulltui Wai-1 CLARKSTON AREA - Spacioua loti beachea*'%clUno, S?So, 110 dowm' AlUiett lOC. ReoltOrS available In beajtltul GrtrnI tIO month. Owner. MY },0ta0. 21 E. ' ----- Acrat overlookino Derr >RK REAL ESTATE BUY, SELL A TRADE ■ Lilting Service KENT DRAYTON - Ideal lor handy man. Rapair soma lira damage and save. MMdroam home. Bath. 20r(t. ,1..,—---picture window. Sh^'^ I Sl^ down. jM| fy SbIb MIbcbIIbbbbbb ; *7 Hf.l5 PLUMBINO BARGAINS. p'rBE ---- SBgJlon IsaiaV Lawidry tra^i i-A^ threaded: s'ave’plUMBING < I Ml Baldwin. FE 4-151L ' REGULATION HOSPITAL BED, EX-cellent maltreia. EM 3 2543. 'REMINGTON SUPIr, 73 CHAIN GARDEN TRACTOR house. Call tor details. PHONE 682-2211 Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor 3143 Cass-Ellzabeth Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN DAILY y to 9 ANNETT .AKE LIVIN minutes, II down, S20 LIVING, PONTIAC 10 tO li ■ lOO-xW lots, S1.W5, 120 ' - Blacktop, i, "swlnv'Blocir Bros. jiR'sTwS. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE A real steal, 9» records. Sat. only 334 N. Sag- - ... --..I. FE 3-7408, 7 .. , to 12 noon, ask for Dorothy. STTOVES, 30", 350 -e, 325. FE 4-0393 < TRAILER AND SET f 327.500 with terms. WARREN STOUT, Realtor I '"‘‘h you, Rogers, but I want you to know .... ............................... _ 450 N. opdyke Rd. Ph. FE 5-3145 you re Still in the over-all picture! ige refrigerator. 8 cubic ft ''»57 pontiac wagon, best of-, .....a, -----r^^TTT-a iT~srV~----- ■---------------------------------------------------—working condition 335 OR i ®*>>V bed and dog house. 334- 338 1801._ - QPT-TRflK/ , _______________ i _________________,WEBCOir AUTOMATIC 4 ■ SPEFd 11 1/T.lVi. IBusiBEIl ODOgrtunitiBB 59 SaU Clalhina AA GE electric stove, excel- AA barbie, tammy or skip- ' record player, with am radio. Good |0uamcH wppsiriHnmes . . _. . : . lent condition. 340. 482-4329. [ Pe; complete wardrobes, R 647L condition. iSO. FE 8,8421. ^ 'WEDDING "'announcements AT 11,000 Sq. Ft. Block and brick building 000 square feet ot lam gas heat, auto, hi trie refrigerator, ^t pump. Wall to ^",7“55r’J3?-- Resort Property List With Schram and Call the Van nil JOSLYN AVE. FE 5-9471 j Business Opportunities 59 A COMPLETE MARINE AND CAMP-i Ing business, the largest business ot Its kind In the Thumb area.' can be purchased'. Lots-Acreage 1 restrictions. FE 2- 1-1-4-10 ACRES. - OA 8-2013. XI. 13,900 full I fireplace In 3 bedrooms .. . room In basi Aluminum tld-1 sylth bar In ce and waterf oven end t. 1 nice bed-i drepes Inclix kitchen, goed locetlon. 31,900 price. ST. MIKE’S AREA, kig, new gat fum heeler. Full besemt.... . _ peitlUe 3rd. 39M AARON BAUGHEY, Realtor I FE 2-0262 I 371 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9 7 BIG LOTS Close-In Waterford Twp. location on paved road. Wafer ave"-'-'- range. carpeting and drepes Included. Walkout basement,; 12x12 workshop In basement. Alu- t, 50 ACRES WITH 'grocery - SDM WITH 2-BED-' room home attached plus fireplace. I ,1 Good gross, Rochester, Romeo! ;,j area, 1-781.3114 or 452 0104. ! Sole Land Contracts 60 " 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us beli you deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-3 _____Open Eves. 'Ill 3 p.m._ BARGAIN BOX 465 S. Woodward, Birmingham Ml 4-4528 ® 3 DAYS ONLY j I SPECIAL WHITE TAG SALE 1 THURSDAY, OCT. 28, 10 A.M—5' . P.M. THROUGH SAT. OCT. 10. 9 12 . NOON •’ E ELECTRIC STOVE," EXCEL-, AA BARBIE, TAMMY lent condition. 340. 432-4W. _ P^ complete wardrol GOOD AUTOMATIC'^WASHER. '|35,! —- ----- --------- Clothes dryer 330. FE 2-4267. I GOOD"WORKING REFRIGERATOR ANCHOR FENCES Highway, OR >9W7 ----- 325. Gas stove, 335^ Washer, S25 [ NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 Hand ToOls—MaChinOry 68 5-2744.1 basement SALE r"24130 TWIN Valley. Farmington Rd., near 10 1 Patio lounge, TV, outboard, HOME FREEZER Full Family Size Holds 341 lbs. All .fast freeze shelves Bonus storage door rTsotor.-itahles, benches, bi ing, etc. Thurs., FrI. BATHROOM FIXTURES, FPETTER S WAREHOUSE All While Tag Items will be one-half 1650 S^ Telegraph_^ 5 ot price marked on tag._ ,XENMORE TWO-BURNER FUEL . LADIES, TEEN-AGE AND CHIL- .......... .... — g buBinets p g. FE 2-5146. .... "quarlers. Can'be "purchased ° on term basis to qualified buyer. Mf Shown by appointment only. EARL SUGDEN REALTOR 547 CEDAR STREET LAPEER, MICHIGAN | 1 TO 50 Sale Heusohoje Ooodi 65 Wonted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A ’ ... ____ ..rge tank, . . large gas dryer, S75. FE 5^M7I._ KELVINATOR refrigerator, 2-|JM5 L y Duty h. 465 Di»ie«Hwy. Clarkston 625-2521 ‘ BODY-HARRISON EQUIPMENT CO. IS MOVING TO PONTIAC New Location: 151 S. Cass lake Road 338-4008 ) the exclusive OAKLAND LAKE FRONT STOUTS I -SI Best Buys Tociay 60 ACRES Located In scenic area ford, land Is high. "vTaw*' PHONE 464-3241 ---- —------.1 land CONTRACTS LyOaSt- 1 O-Uoas 11 urgently wanted. See us befo .TRADES '■ Tom Bateman FE 8-7161 Realtor _ Exchangor FANTASTICr 'Ta.,«n ® nooionolo oooai 6S p|*ce Hvlna room suite, Reasoi. . .7 ~ -----------—.....I ,(,1, Qp 3,5370_ after 4 p.m. I Lake Road. i. Electric Frigidaire stove. 36". all - --------------- " I KIRBY VACUUMS | ... - Used - Repossessed - J. AunuKA cnime and Bell ClocK,' ^8ve lb to 20 per cent. Cal' mantel. 320.00. 1424 between 4-7 p.m. (II all three Items are purchased KIRBY OF ROCHESTER kTs'-iuV' *" “5,001 MAYTAG WASHE"R WITH PUMP, —_______________________________I good condition, 850. 673-5790. ’ .SUEC-,MOVING TO DENVER: MUST SELL trie and oas sIovm. iu t. tso gg washer, dryer, deluxe refrlger-— —Ileo electric range. Bottle Gas Installation _____________ Tibh lOO-DOuno cylinders and equip- INFRA-JJi? co.,i iS from 300 B( (excellent) 359, llvir , 314, 1 OR 3- CASH J39, odd beds, chests. Everything at b is. Little Joe's Bargain i. Baldwin at Walton. FE 2 IS All In perfect __________ ________ 9,1 antique oak table. 492-6001. “!:i NATURAL FINISH CHIrFEROBE, 4'x6', I ir Ted McCullough Sr. NEW AND.................. gan Appliance Company. 673-8011. PFAFF AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG SEWING MACHINE DELUXE '----------table - 1962 model 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE ' 3-ROOM OU in 15 pr ..., ______ $278 (Good) $2,50 Weekly ;^rrtoV-8 moI,thVor-i56- —fJ-ake Road J378 (Better) $3 00 Weekiv l>«l»hc». 5-year guarantee, U NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL t Y' sal Co. FE 44)905: ------------- ----------■ $478 (Best) $4.00 V..ekly.PHHIcawTMissliM 4500 0)xl afso buy. _ COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE AND JOHNSON and LIBERTY AREA Six-room, IVy-slory bungalow, o car garage, basement, like n< gas furnace. Glassed - In Ire porch 82,241.24 d ----- ACREAGE I g building. Finest ' EMpire J-4^^.' _ SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS NEW wanted. Get our deal before you 7-plece I- sell. CAPITOL SAVINGS 8. LOAN 2-plece 0 ASSN.^75 W. Huron. FE 8-7127. tablet " decor e Money to Loon LWNG ROOM BARGAINS living room suite, ?wo°itep , matching coffee table, two' itor lamps, all lor. 3109. Only »t irKiud- Full p I. NOTHING DOWN Eost Suburban Naat Mdroom •d sn leaclaus ...... tier W. irxir living cleanest I’d-itory, 5-room 2-bed-room home you've ever Inspected , Clase to shopping In North Perry! section. Gas heal. 20x22 enclosed porch, dining room, basement. You . can't afford to rant, with a deal Underwood Real Estate 8445 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston ________Call 425-2415_____ tolW-car garage. Canvenlent ti 3-Family • «*•' CANAL LOTS , Choice building sites ~ 80x147. ' Connected with Sylvan Lake. |» Fi«« JACK LOVELAND >"» Cass Lake Rd. ____________432-1255 _______ CLARKSTON in ™ve J- 5 ACRB PARCELS, REA- Jll DTlC# SONABLE. 474-1740. 315,500. Wi'll take y MODELS I Open Doily 1 to 9 P.M. , ! WESTRIDGE OF WATERFOI^D j r AN INVITATION IS EXTENDED TO ALL OF YOU to In COUNTRY ESTATES ! Large building sites on winding paved streets. Among a rolling hlllsida. Excallent views tor miles. Low as 3300 down. LADD'S 3305 Lapeer Road FE 5-9291 or OR 2-1231 after 7:30 ‘— .......- * Sunday 12-4 ir fau?lur-iFOR SALE 2 LOTS II ACTION! MAN ALIVE! WATERFORD TWP. BAR Big 3130,000 gross. AAain Hwy. coi 19c HAMBURGER $142,000 GROSS SALES 40^ jl ver^^ rewarding a . CITY GAS lour tWKWs can be ourc^^^^^ PONTIAC 20 MINUTES, PRIVATE sed end with Immediate occupan-i Trade your present home. Dixie groV OR ilKMS^r^FF ixm .hwey to Cembrook Lane, right «er our Ledy ot Lekes, left to JHE COUNTRY ' ------------- ray O'NEIL Realtor (BUCKNERi I 3 Room Outfits $274 SINGER DIAL-A-STITCH income. FInenclel assistance and many other company assistance! programs available. For further Information call Bob Hall Ml 6-53111 or evenings 452-3001. -----------e Twp. onsists of gently rou-Hf with Blue Spruce, virgin pinae and vai bprdarlng property, faaturae Ineluda: open banistarad etairway, pegged hardwood floor-. Ing ihrevgliout, 2 full baths, 3 bad-rooms, 2 flraplbcas, 2-car garage and oak bam with 2 horse stalls md lack room. S15,000 on, land con- ' i CLARKSTON DREAM HOME. Nat-, tied among a grove of malasfic hardwoods wa are offafing you this! 5-4404 greens ttoul 4 years old, Hadley 032 hQnuu A O' “ •’ 1 iL y\ f-\ V acres, wooded and hilly and ap- Ic Xi LX XXVXi proximately 3 mllas from U. S. 10 , , and 1-75, 17,900, 11,400 down. Now Doing Custom Building On AvaiTable class "C" liquor bar I Building and land Included. North west of Cadillac Mich., 310,500. Cash, Full price. , PAUL JONES, Realty ' ■' "— FE 4^5M LOA.NS TO $1,000 To consolidate bills Into one monthly payment. Quick service with courteous experienced counselors. Credit life Insurance available - HOME°&'’Tljfo LOAN CO. N. Perry St. FE S-SI21 LITTLE_____ BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-4042 First traffic light south of 1-75 Acres of Free Parking 5-year guarantee. Must t_____________ 352.79 cash or 35.00 monthly. Call Credit Manager, RIchman Bros. Sewing Canter, 335-9233._____________ SPECIAL .JO A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists of: 12-piece living room suite with 2 step GET YOUR GAGS AND JOKES I, 1 P , 7-pl»ce t , chest, fi COILT-OP Building Sites! Your Plans or Ours DRIVE-THRU <1-„I CAR WASH Choice location now avallabla In thie area. on hard- contact; J. L. Palace - 92 Bald-hwest oil win Ave. PONTIAC - FE 3-9027 wgtjijfj food PROCESSING n'xw w basement, 2-car brick home, ranenar over 70* long witn ipaciout 2S?nir5^«^to'?*!riv*r'm'*:a AIso Bl-level 04'»5?) •^rTl'r's, }iS;'r"" t;,?r *^h?,'T«r' Ins, flraplace, 1 full ceramic bath, •***' ™“''' > 'OTB* bedrooms,___________* a____ rjaraga. 5 ACRES, ri hall, "full j 13,900, S400 2 acres, si s north ot Clarkston, MICHIGAN Ssi ted, 5 »P7lne »® m«*£h with 2 vanity 47*!k»4 ask"SrMr Mafun, Unltte ii'J 'i'"'bSkcS5j''’’i Home Furnishings, 5050 Dixie Hwy.| ' 2-T^RENCH^ProvTNCIAL—S"TepI ’ W^AW tables, 1 cocktail fable. Sable fin-' WTWAN ........ ■ ........... ■' FURNITURE CO. ______________________________17 E. HURON FE 4-4901 3 PIECE BEDROOM OUTFIT, S75; Studio couc ,, S49; uccus nal chdu, SINGER PORTABLE, 319.50. ZIG-I 325; 2 end tables with formica tops, zag equipped. I BEDROOM HOME ON ACRE 380; 2 piece gold sectional, 3150; OR 4-1101 CURT'S APPLIANCE ....... ' "■ *.... radio, phono combln- STOVE, BEDS. SWEEPER, DRESS- L 0 A H "S - ^ , 325 to 31,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Build FE 4-1538-9 _______ Swaps ( I r. ' r,. . condition, I /acanl. Will taka small home, ation, RCA TV, S50 .1...... ... ,. ..... ---------------------- ^11 Bd., Keegp Herbor. PIECE DINING ROOM SET IN .... .n trade. , CONE'S RENTAL ! ... „ . , I . '»5' DODGE PICKUP, SELL OR 7“ , "" Business Sales, Inc. 'moe lor ??? ol equal value. FE silvered .. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER ____glass front _______ . 1573 S. Telegraph FE 5-1582 1956 CADILLAC, SELL OR SWAP, ot mod aa"dy ^ teoch. Thro# - bedroom brick roneher foofurlno a 2T -room wHh lodgerock -Ire allding glMe door opens to a an .fho lake sida. Tw arlat, hot watar haat, aflactiad btehAbfl6HAL J4 ..........................1. TItad Brewer Reol Estate M. B. MITCHRLL, Salat Mgr. i. Huron FE ^511 UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY Watt Caatl Corporatlan 1 cantly rtorganiztd that c withstand rigid financial t amlnatlon Is oftaring on a r tranchiM foe basis axclusl dlstHbutorsblpi. Thii lx product In d used by^such ..... _ zatlons at Soars Roebuck ai Co., Hblldiy inn Motels ana various branchts of the armed forces. Product 100 par dent guerentead; Investment from 1400 to $14,000. In-voetment guorenteod with 10O par cant markup. Manufacturer has provtn mathpd of distribution advertising and merchandising. A tadory ropra-santattve will assist you in setting up your buslnass. For complata details and descriptive lltarature write National Cham - Plaitlci Carp., 1SS0 vyiLL I K n 1/ c x-r«nnii- , rww ■ ■ -- larger Income. Pontiac Prew >0* . sell, FhlfilbAlRi AUT(3-He waster or swap for freezer. 1 . _ 5-5017,____________ WILL TRAOfe PORTABLt TV, TWO ■ old tor pick-up truck. EM WILL ACCEPT I GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS i Sunshine from e Beanery Echo from a staamboaT whistli WOODEN PUMPS, OLD PLOW, ME-rhanical bank, spinning wheels. Y-:not Antiques, 10345 Oakhlll, Holly. ... ^ . 4 fnl. east ol Dixie. MB 7-5198. felegrote FE 3-7051 LARGE SPINNING WHE£l, 15423 ALUMINUM COIL SPRINGS FOR' ‘ ^ ' “ ■■■ ‘ doublo bed; Frlgldilre Ironer; Mag. navox consola TV with AM-FM ra-dip, record player. MA 4-5742. NT SIZE STOVE'S, apanmanr and regular size rafrlg- , erator, lofa beds, waster, space ' haatars, TVs, chests of drawers, many more savings at Stones Used Bargain Store, 103 N. Coat -* Wide Track. MODEL T'S 1927 Roadstar-restorad, original 1924 modal coupe, I92S pick-up, 1913 VANWELT___________bR 3-1355 ____ .. FE 2-2257 Open 9-9 iu5l5 E. Walton" corner ef Jeslyn T COLOR TV, EXCELLENT CON-■ I $100. FE 2-4247. tronihly 01 EV™ OR 1-7291 AS PART DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY NEW OR USED CAR! BILL SPENCE 6673 Dixie Hwy-t Chrystor-Plymoulh-Vallint Ramblor-Utopi CLARKSTON 'mj PHiLco TV - 1 Year guar-- - T— .ntea on picture tuba. - i—- • --------------- ***'"^ JOHNSON TV FE 1-4549 Center. 335-9383. 45 e, wALTON NEAR BALDWIN AUTOAAAfl^""WASHER; SIS, GAS a'SIMIRAL BLACK AND WHlfE"TV dryer, 005, very ^ condition, with record player, mealc. Reas. complata, $49:50 and up. Poarsan'iiC Furniture, 3IQ E. Pika._____ ' ». FE 54024. over szsa. pb z-irez oner e p ^ «cA VittbRV^'CbNSbLl 1 good condition, walnut finish. Si 111 U^l. CASH AND CARRY 8 Mahogany V-Grooved 7 Mahogany V-Grooved Open MON. and PRI. Eves. 'Ill 8 O'clock DRAYTON PLYWOOD PAINT BAKING OVEN vorioDir speed conveyor. Cost 31,-500. yours 3350. mI 4-3544, Ml 4-3655,^___________________ LARGE PRODUCTION MACHINES, lerators, 23" chain;accordion, GUITAR, PIANO, OR-*' FE 8-4M2! --------I Buy Nbw-Save-Sove!! 'SS sTaz I I”*"® walnut, 3399 up. Ji ---------—______________rived: 1964 Lowrey organ CLEARANCE OF USED OFFICE; up. Used Plano 350. 3495 rnllure machines. Forbes, V. OR 3-9747. w.| GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. ________________FE 4-0544 Out SqI© Conn Organs greatly reduced -- . - _________sdn'illz'ed Chrlsr **'*' "® ®«®7 mas cards. Forbes Greeting Card Shop - 4500 Dixie Hwy., Dray- MORRIS MUSIC Plains, OR 3-9767.________ 34 j. T^ele^raph Rd Across from Tel-Huron FE 2-0547 COMPLETE DRUM S^T, BLACK ■ $250. OR 3------- DON'T MERELY BRIGHTEN YOU! carpets . . . Blue LuJIr# them Eliminate rapid resolling. Ren CONN ORGANS and PIANOS Supplies. OR 3-9747. ELECTRIC WATER HEATER, BER- ENCYCLOPEDIAS, 1945. COST $141$ must sacrifice, S35. 543-3515. FLINt AND WALLING DEEP NOW $1495 Used Wurlltzar Spinet, « For the Finest in Top-Quality Merchandise Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC AAALL NOW 1595 STORE HOURS 9:30 a m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday 'III 9, never on Sun. LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. (across from B'ham. Thaatar) Guitars starting nps ar 129.95. 4130 Dixie Hwy. .________________474-1700 Bolce Builders Supply EXPERT PIANO TUNING, A-l RE-■“Ir service, plan ' - — King. FE S-OlOO. ^ERT PIANC___________ PIANOS WANTED I B"'’’ I II R. Kin ' EX Factory relecfs ---- ..rage front remote. FrM wj^tos. Berry Door j-1035. Sales Co., 2300 Cole Slr« GRAND PIANO Dixie Hwy. OR Bill's Outpost, 0245 HAGGERTY HAS IT! 2"x4"x8' selected economy fir,-only 39c each, cash and carry. HAGGERTY LUMBER )55 Haggerty Hwy. MA 4-4551 HEALftTMAE'HINES, STEAM CAB-Inet, vibrating table, scales, tor- chests, Maytag washer,' 2iilece 1125. Player piano, needs small repair, $95. Old piano stool, S15. Coast Wide Van Una; S71 E. Pika DeRAE MUSIC nplete line of Story & Clark ms with Hawaiian attachments ting at SB95. Seeburg organs ) • selector rhythm attachments —. ling. at $595. 4130 Dixie Hwy.____________474-1700 south ot Pontiac Drlv. ... going on at corner of A Hatchery Rds. from 11 LAVATORIES, 1 values. Michigan Fluorescent, 3 MOVING, 40" ELECTRIC STOVE, chest ot drawers, chairs, rotlsserle, large electric tan, clothing, misc. 335-5457. lEW AND USED GAS AND OIL tufnaces. 23 years exp. Immediate Installation. Verv reasonable. A S H Sales, MA 5-1501 or MA MOOI. OIL BURNERS7"T0AL HEATERS. Taylors, 402 Ml. Clemens St. OIL COUNTER FLOW FURNACE, IS. 343-4421. PIANOS USED UPRIGHTS FROM $49 USED GRANDS FROM $199 GRINNELL PIANOS USED AT MEADOW BROOK SCHOOL OF MUSIC SUMMER PROGRAM. DRASTIC. ALLY REDUCED. GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN 27 S. Saginaw SELDOvTJSED TRApE-INi ONE OF THE BEST BASEBOARD; deals In town. Hot water base-’ board, heal with enclosura POOL TABLES Poker Table-PIng Pong Tables POOL TOWN 33^2244! MIRACLE MILE ARCADE FE 28900 A. Thomp-jMODELS AND OTHER TRAC Jack Hagan Music Center PLYWOOD ,'x7' Mahogany paneling S 2. 4'x8' Mahogany paneling S 3. •"x12' root boards WP $99.50 x8' Plasterboard ... S I- ,'xO' Masonite pegboard . SI. 235-lb. shingles; sq. In lift S 4. “sthtub enclosure S 19. glass sliding H doors S139. 0"x4'S" Mahogany doors • ’ I"x4'l" Mahogany doors plate glass sliding door, ’/k" plate glass sliding d '■— Comb, pre-hung door es ServIca PulanackI OR i _ DeRae Studios of Music . Enroll nov 1495 Spftiwj Gtodi 2!}9'x1I' NEW TENT _ - - - , mant. 492-1401.__________ ni c* woTIpringfieldi 10-30 wia- O chaster; 30-40 Kr^ wlthMOBai ... deliver EM 3-4171 M Rwnlngton FWi.f Open 4 days a wtak I o-wl to I g.m. io-30 iAVAcr S-BOWSR KOW .............. sHdlng window 114:95 5'0"x4'0" Alum. alMIng window 123.95 8'0"x4'0" Alum, sliding window $39.9$ idl. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 •om, ARROm. lUPRLICS —JfiStL£S5C2iI!l^LlJS55-_ limmiNi ia«aum AutoMAT Ic, mmHotI canRMM. M Call Ut WB» af*» 7 pan. ^ ------------------- • MtAW tAliitL' tA*- «y;UBy^- ■A As Ml>. H. PM. 4M1 F«r.| ’'22ll222. TBAh uTSk imf-gi SxPORID IMMUNITY ^ ^ i^O^, 15 H s4l-! JlirtSoToxfl^Mlms*' ■ "**• T*HL-------------- SATURDAY, OCTOBER Guns—Guns—Guns i Ona a« Bit matt oampMt Una gum In Oakland Cauntyl wa carry tha camtlata llna of BROWNINO-WEATHERBY REMIIMfTON WIMCHESTER-COLT PISTOLS —Try tnam batora yau buy— WE DO ALL OUR OWN Scorn Mount Inn — Gun Smlttilng RIFLE RANOT-TRAP FIELD SATURDAY, F» FARMALU MOUNTED ON MANY OTHERS L KING BROS. ■■ FE «734 FE 4-1«SI --------- " —"iM- FARM HouaahoM, Guns and H CLIFF DREYER'S Gun and Sport Canter HaMv Rd, Holly ME - -Opan Pally and Suwdaya- ____ -SELL-TRADE Burr-Stiall, S7S S. TalOBrapn LIKE NEW WINCHESTER (MODEL No. )2 trap gun, Monte C ' eteck, vr BrooA^ ventilated THE largest "REAL' aervice store' In MkMgan. jonn eSr % tKtiaA Rw'rigid iiuc'BM' ttand- ________________________ *>5!^ Supplies chlnery Co. ortonvillo. NA y-S2W. I vnu M|oy the ultimate Mi PERKINS SALE SERVICE YOUR OLD CHAIN SAW IS WORTH safety, comfort and resale value. I AUCTIONEERS S50 and UP on any Steel chaM _ Swarti Creek US-taOO saw. Come In and see us. Evans Open dally until *, Sat. and Sun. I ------------------------------Equipment Sales A Sarvka, *507,until i. BOB HUTCHINSON SALES, Dixie Highway, Clarkstan. *25-1711.14301 Dixie n— Pre-Inventory Sole Agricultural - Industrial Equipmam . — ItM Massey - Ferguson 15 tractor. AUCTION OF OLD LAHRING' Homastaad, Friday, Oct. 2t, 10 a.m. Frederick and Maybelle Luring, owners, at 13153 Fagan RB., comer ol Lahring .................. FARM EQUIPMENT: Iver M row crop, de__ plow, Oliver 2x14, Raydex: ing plow; snow blade: cr“ bean puller; cultipacker • 1054 Ferguson 30 tractor with Massey-Ferguson 15 tractor loader 10*5 205 diesel trKtor with 1 12 Ford tractors. J Oliver 77 Diesel tractor. I Oliver 550 0----------*- mTO-O International ( completely circulatins _______ ______ . ------- I' model, *345. 1-used in' model —■ “'e are dealers tor DelRay, ----------- -------- „------ front desk; spinning wheel, i Incomplete; OC-** Dine; pine com-j loader .............old mirrors; 110 r-aia'tractor with kv deecon s bench; cherry table, oval iiq case tractor with lor ves; Victrola; pIna huftar.' drop leaf; 2 | chairs: bed and dri rer ticks; pictures ai._ ______ walnut bedstead; pair rope beds, twin slie, maple, refInIshed; ma-_i. ----------- youth chair; Sand-Gravel—Dirt SrtraSoJi’ •" free ^"E^ltETl-F Pontioc Form and | I HoTLY"prRtcHrMP?0*N |«; pine youm cnair; *• WOODWARD PARK WOOD AND PARK ESTATES X wamui sme Chairs, trunks, Jenny FE 44>4*1 , FE 4-1442 Low overhead - save real money Pia":?k1e.ych^s Sith*bint I ....^ ' MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Jr^llhest'WIM*?’ T'—l T«.iu« RR O*' stripe; chest w hardware; stereo viewer slides: shaving stand, sllvt milk glass Insert: mantle sewing machine. Domestic; Staffordshire plaHer, large; 1 Marl plate; 2 wall plates: Malolica plat, ter, large; Satsuma plate and vase: Bennington pie plate and pitcher; biscuit lar; covered cheese; footed china dish signed Adams; I i; Royal Bayreuth , signed; chamber 1 lar. Royal “ handle; 20- TRAILER. SELF-CONTAINED. I *1.2(10. 4744H34.__________________! with*'or]gl- 1735 GMC BUS-CAMPER, SLEEPS poles with *, best offer. Phone OR 44)271. nd made; 10*4 FRANKLIN TRAILER. USED twice. «W.*375. 1M4 13' TROTWOOD, EQUIPPED units. We guarantee tracer apace.' We have no gimmicks. Just 15 years of good merchandising and 2,400 satisfied customers. oyal triton 1»4S *-fooT CAMPER, CABOVER a T c______ AA wash bowls; ig« PORD Pickup, automatic, de- Rent Trailer Sp«Ca 90 ther of Pearl my, cab, all for »1A95. JEROM - wlde-and 2 story. Marlattes, Stew-| arts. Belvedere and the famous « . . lightweight ThermoiMnel Wlnneba- BoOtS—AcceSSOriat - ----- "s. Also good used ------- FREE WINTER STORAGE MY im}____________I f^om"* now**unflli***sp'rM cSi* _jE TRAILER, GOOD' prices on 'f' --- — condition, 31x(. 1(7-5051 or *87-5114. i and demo' ---------------------------- pair rating. B finishing. We ti PINTER'S Now Riidl U»>< Cy» 10* 1962 Chevy II 4-Door, 6-Pos$efig#r station Wagon, with radio, heater, and Is only— $1095 ■ BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWV. IN WATERFMD "Your FORD DEALER Since ttSO" "Homo of Sorvko offer the Solo" OR 3-1291 WITH —............- TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO AWNEY DOWN, Assume weekly poy-monts of S*.*2. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Pork* af HAROLD TURNER FORD, YOUR OLD CAR DOWN id*Cradlt ric^prgblam. SEE CECIL BYRD PATTERSON CHEVROLET 1104 S. Woodward ____ , Birmingham____[_____Mt 4-7t>* 'Let's Trade Sale" Ims chevrolbtimpala jooor 1M2 CADILLAC 4-wlndow DaVllla '!!hltewalM ■tvM hirritoD. that Is fruly th«i 3?^" WWWWWltr Wi"S__ _ ..... CORVAIR !»**, ^DOOR, RAblO, .. condition. I.„...— CORVETTE, 4-SPEEO, *2,4S5. Must tell. 473-45HS offer 5. CHEVY BEL AIR V4. V^RY Ip Spartan Dodge',^ m (ira'^ar 4Tm....... ...... >r MT mm____________________________, ie« CAM W'~«ir ca’uiMr PiNANr TRAILER, GOOD' ”“_FAN n , BIG SAVmG, FINANC- condition, 31xS. S87-5051 or 8*7-5114.1 ■, engine, eufometic trensmls- **"*• FF 4-1475.----------- ., custom trim. Ford factory 1745 OPEL STATION WAGON, _.. *7»5. JEROME FORD, Roch-| sharp, onepwner, 114100 miles, --------------- ester-FORD Dealer. OL 1-»711. I still on warranty, II,2»5. 1742 CADILLAC. 4-DOOR SEDAN, «'• ruBKiv 'Dirviip MCUU Tipck OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH all power, 0*7-5470 eves, or week- re- 1742 CHEVY PICKUP. NEW TIR«^ 724 Oakland Ave.____________332^15(1 ends. w«>r, nrwi^ o. rvari luxe Cab. all tor »IA»5. JEROM ,-------------------------------------- him Si; Rochester FORD Dealer, new SPACES WITH NATURAL GAS „ tern and colored glass, Pjckl^ces-] OL l-*71l.____________________ Pontiac Mobile Home Park. 1370 Opdyka AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT ------------------------:------------------ (1-75 at Oakland ter, green cut ( TRAVEL TRAILERS ComiiMrcial Trailers 90-A "hard to find, but easy to Woed-CeaKeke-Fvel 2 CUTE HAPPY, LtVELY KIT-I tens, free to good home. FE 2-7434 1 jrnlval bowl; Carnival ,^0 „ Werner frailer Sales. 307* DSR COACH OFFICE AND WARE- d creerners; cmI ollyy. Huron (plan to loin one of house. SIOO. 4244)204. mT*slag‘Siode-S“c7r Welly Byem't exciting corevensl. -------------------- oitctir^ one green a^l AMERICA'S LARGEST | Aute Accesserlef 91 j -^'SELLING CAMPING TRAILERS NIMROD NOW ON DISPLAY |Tlra$-A»to-Tre€t 92 Trgef^r tali, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY kettle, cast Iron; cast Iron, fireplace I a * . L .. X . I 1959 SIMCA . Autosann Motors, InC. la-Ooor sedan with radio and hester.' AUTHORIZED VW DEALER , I stick shift transmission, only *3.00 ,, W mils north of Mirada Mile I down and *3.00 per week. We * 1745 S. Telegraph ________FE i-45311 handle ei^ arrange ell financing, 1743 CHEVY W TON FLEETSTDE pickup, custom cab, radio, heater, ---.------. mirfoyj, gggo condi- ------ Tool *1 *As ■ ■ FE 8-4071 Qvai wiiii mriKKVT/ aivury* vnvM^'i HWMf CfWitt mirrers. «MW>d COndi* .-x. • • Bm'STiHE' Capitol Auto Idt and®WloSr*ilgns^ToAvySIjS^S FORD ECONOLINE SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE, phone good a------------- MAIn »-217». 1721 W. CRUISE OUT, INC. E. Walton Blvd. FE S-4402 _______Open Dally 7-4 I AUTUMN SPECIALS ATTENTION T R U tread 900x20 true dltlon, set of , 1370 Wide Track 5^123.________ ' Metorcycles ..JNI-TOY FRENCH POODLi^, ...• mala. Its. FE 4-2744 attar 7:45 pjw.___________ AKC REGISTERED B R pups, 4 mot. OA *-141v. AKC MINI-TOYS, *75, APRICOT. ____________42S0172.___________ AKC COLLIE PUPS, SHOTS AND wormad, OR 4-S4B4.____________ AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, STUD Aprkst poodle*, • r 1 pair, or *40 each. *:------ AkC DACHSHUND PUPPlESjSTUO dogs. ESTELHEIMS, FE 24X7. ALL PET SHOP. SS WILLIAMS. FE 44433. Hemstefs ai—----- STk:............. skillet with vnpug... __ door stops, banks; toy fire engine; dinner bell; register; stove parts;' cast pancake griddle; wattle Iron; sad Irons; old license plates to 1710: broad axe; old tin skimmers; All '45 HOLLYS, CORVAIRS, painted tin trays; pewter mug; tel- BARTHS AND AVALIERS mut' tor maaturet: brats ladle with long Also tome good used onei Iron handle; pair brass candle hokfl ..Incense burner; apple iwrer,! ELLSWORTH AUTO oecovs TRAILER SALES 1945 honda 50, excellent con- 5Ick>I carder: *577 Dixie Hwy.__________MA S-1400 dltlon, low mileage. MA *-50*4. tcre^rs: hand made ladder; pine ~-.— boxes; Vk bu. measures; pine carpenters chest; egg box; butler bowl end ladle; eld granite; picket Inside Boat Storage MOTOR REPAIR BOAT REFINISHING-REPAIR Ask tor EARL or DALE Wide Track Auto Craft MO W. Wide Track FE S-13H ! FORD PICKUP I icellent shm with imper $1200 03-7571. 11,150, UL 2-2915 1 )T FE 24>350. sacrifice, days OL 1 Repossession *SPMar WII rast. piywi ESTATE ISTORAGE t Blvd.___W VAIR MONZA CO i Interior. Original v ns, radio, whitewall* FE 0-«149 after 5 p. FE 4-5507 transportation |'»«„.cad,ll« ^ SPECIALS with air conditioning. Phono 474*i I 391t after i:30 p.m. < '59 Austin Healey 3000 Black I, White 19*1 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE - '“ ---------------- -“■I 13,000 ml. 19*4 Jeep, 10,000 ml. I FE 44)494, after t.___________ . Chrysler call after horse cutter; double harness: even- CAMPERS ent; grain cradle; whiff letrees; I Winnebago brush 4wok; house blindt; old Phoenix books; Civil War traveling boxes; i Wolverine BOOTH CAMPER umlnum covert and camps . . y pkkup. 4347 LeForest, Water-■d. OR ^5S2- ' Wanted Cnrs-Trecks TRAILERS stand; day co« JecoMani step laoie, i-renci vinclel; coffee table, lea the plant stand; shadow box; be fancy work: chicken fryer; i range, Reese and Draw-tHa hitchas. haater; wring- HOWLAND SALES and RENTALS wash tubs; 1245 DIxia Hwy. OR 3-1454 wyt: typewrif-l_Open 9 a.m. ‘til 9 p.m._ seless; dinette! CHEVY CAMPER. ALL EQUIPPED ■ ---- OL 1-5031. FACTORY CLOSE OUT excellent condition, OR 1-5490. K & W CYCLE YAMAHA Two locetlons to serve you. i Auburn, Utica end 7411 HighI Read, Pontiac._ NOTICE: 1965 CATALINA MODELS I 'RCMIUM PRICES FOR LOW FORD ECONOLINE. feXCEL-l lent condition. Has windows all around. 11 295 wHh *99 down. HUNTER DODGE, Birmingham. Ml 7-09‘5. 1945 44-TON CHEVROLET, HEAVY EASY B Yaltow -Grean PREMIUM . .w.. MILEAGE AUTOS. I__________________________ VAN'S AUTO SALES take over DIXIE HWY. OR 3-1155 ‘ Grimaldi Imported Car Co. CADILLACS Large Selection Always ' On Display WILSON Pontioc-Codillac 1 Block South of 14 Mile pa/lhentt. OR 4-1044. 'California Buyers RAUTIFuL GERMAN SHEPHEttb PUPS. *25. Call UL M4B2. lEAUTIFUL w6ST HIGHLANb Whitt Mrritr, malt, 4 ytart MY M9B1. BLUE TICK PUPS, AECISTERED Coon. Bobcat and Baar. LI 9-7S43. BRITTANY SPANIEU EXCELLENTl ' hunter, 3Vk yr*. oM. *40 '«> "• n *4)32*._________________ CANINE COUNTRY CLUB ENGLISH POINTER, FEMALE 1 EVERGREENS -■5. Reetoneble. 4*2-0420. | spreaders. 10 ti ——------------------—- - -J I We specietize i POODLES NURSERY CLEARANCE; EVER-greent, shade trees end shrubs. Dig your own. McNeils Nursery, 4474 Dixie Hwy. at Mcybee Rd. RIVER bInO POODLES ■■ Phone 425-5^.---------- 5010 DIXIE HIGHWAY . an WATERFORD-OR H920 i UVeSIOCE BJ TgRAIN fed VtVeR.' ALSO 1 NoTwETANffrNO^;PU^-. ' ‘ " ■ outdoor lighted i neMe. 1144 W. « Manutecturing ai Rear of 3345 Aubi CENTURY-TRAVELMASTER SAGE-GARWAT . SOMETHING NEW Robin Hood I It's quality, eye-appeal and TOM STACHLER AUTO and MOBILE SALES 3092 W. Huron 5t. FE 2 492* FRANKIIN Truck Campers NEW! 1966 HONDAS i NEW! 305 CC SCRAMBLER NEW! TRAIL BIKES $295 SPECIAL!! CLOSE-OUT ON ALL 1965 TRIUMPHS LOW DOWN PAYMENTS EASY TERMS SUSUKI NOW ON DISPLAY TUKO SALES, INC. '7 E. Auburn Rochester UL ^ SUZUKI Kowasaki-White Big Bad Bultaco Van Teck-Dart Lil' Indian Mini Bikes CUSTOM COLOR I. MONTCALM FE 4-9513 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Poid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Cor "Check the rest, then get the best" at Averill Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER HELP! We need 300 them Cadltlecs tiacs. out and Bulckt for state market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD ; AUTO SALES | n04 Baldwin Avt. I rg 5-5900____FE *W25 Attention Hunters 1966 GMC backup lights. $1845 —Prices Art Bom Here— -And Raised Elttwhara- Volkswagen Center PontiK N convertible. Frost » KEEGO PONTIAC SALES t SERVICE tin- 682-3400 *•** I954 CHEVROLET WljH POMTI« *19'*!!; I „ *' er extr*tT"Ceir FE 4X49. S1J9S InterlS' radio. ’754 CHEVY WAGON, 4, STICkT — — Cell 4*M217. 1757 CHEVY, *75. 1943 CORVETTE STINGRAY WITH the 327 engine, Atpead, «itra cleani *2,495. JEROME FORD -Rochester FORD Dealer, QL IWI. 1943 CORVAIR "TOT' 3«OOR, A 1964 IMPALA SUPER SPORTS Hardtop, 327 VI, auto., XuBIc | er, solid maroon. 11,995. VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFORD MU 4-1025 cHfVY iMPAU ! SPECIAL Chevies, 1957-1941, *145 up 195* Plymouth ewgon, 9-Mttonger, new motor tirea, carburetor, *145. 4 Bulckt, 1954-1957, very reetonebk 4 Cedlllect, 19531957, very reetoneble Autobahn I Motors/Unc. AUTHOR IZED VW DEALER *95 - CHEVROLET. I95(, g60D bI^AIN'aUTO. 13*1 W. Toor GMC - 1745 S. Telegraph R New and Used Cart Holly Travel Coach 'rupp mini-bikes / 1521* Holly Rd., Holly ME 447711 —Open Dally end Sunday*— PUPPIES, SA4ALL MIXED BREED, I he* Been told". Trutn -*5 *7*- ff Rochetter Rd. Tuei.>S«t., 1049 og____ FOR RENT: 7 Wolverine ig-ft campers ei GMC pickupi. 1100 week an “sCOTT 'r'eIJtAL SERVICE N W, Walton________FE 1-414 HUNTING SEASON IS HERE STOP AND SEE PLAYMATE TRAVEL TRAILERS JOHNSON'S •A 517 E. Wilton el Jeslyn FE 4-5*53____Of CE *M1. 423 E ITTLE champ TRAVEL TRAILER, Demode Road, left signs to DAWSON'S ---- ... TIP5JCO LAKE. Phene MAin 9-2179. ^^let „ 20", 24", 25" 3 English 3-t ______ Seott-Auetteriet T'WR uaeu LAMa GLENN'S „9nwe»f Huron St. ■t 4-7371 _____FE 4-1791 BUYING SHARP CARS BUD MANSFIELD USED CARS 1501 Baldwin. 2 btockt N. of Walton ________FE ^2e4^__- rop S FOR CLEAN CARi OR trucks. Economy Cert. 2"* “' ' SPECIALS I 1955 FORD T-lOO tandem 3.S0ggallon irliw. In A-l candittoni ready set up tor road oiling. A-l Is ready for work S1.595. 1959 GMC 450 platform, 900-20 la toy stud, at’tarvhi. Terrific black pigment. 451-4747.______________________ Y6y poodle AND TORKSHI^ ly AT MIDDLETON'S ORCHARDS - -- Apptot. You pide or wa pick. Squash. Halloween pumpkins. Open, etter 4, Monday through Friday. AH dav Sal. and Sun. 1510 P -" ' ! Orion. MY 2-11 'stud'•arvlei'* pTijlfrio. ' ~fe",U793. ! "hore Rd., Lake Orion. MY 2-1941. | POODllIs: 2 MONTHS-OLD, » CfNTSj alas. 4914375. Oxford OA t-3544.' j tamalei. 4934375. Aectita Seles^ AUCTIONEERS: BERRY Cortland, Spy, Stealt Red. Grin NOW ON DISPLAY FROLIC - YUKON DELTA-BEE LINE-TROTW(X3D SCAMPER low It the time to reserve < raller lor the hunting season or i .11 trailer SALES* RENTALS ----------------le Rd. f^RY FRIDAY EVERY SATURDAY Wa Buy-Sall-Trada, Retail 7 days danslgnmants Weleama MB AUCTION 50*9 Dixie Hwy.___________OR 3-2717 Soturday, Oct. 30, 6 p.m. Toys, new and used tumitura, mlt-callanaM Hams too numerous r Sunday, Oct. 31, 3 p.m. Crocarlat ol all —' *■ Was, hundreds < Itamt to ehoota I Wa will have 2 t_______. from new until Chrltlnwt. HoN's Auction Sales 3« W. Clarktton Rd. Lake Orion MY *1171 ______________ MY 24141 The Fred LaMng Ho^eed ' Car. Fagan and Lahring Rdt. Holl] PtRK.S?‘&E^?ERV.CE AUCTIONEERS Hiina *3*4411, Swartr Creak HAU/S AU( i'S AUaiON SALES 711 W. Claitalen Rd„ Lake Orton MV S-II71 ar MY S414I jSSha'ir^'^rE APPLES AND CIDER, MAHAN OR "I E. Walton, I block ' > Sundy ulet. DODD'S ORCHARDS, Ion Rd. SPECIAL WEEN. Fresh cider, kw fie licout epples, SI .92 bu. Other duf^lon ..................... -........ to eny lake In Oakland County. , Ask ter Kan Johnson, *93-42**. ' 31' CABIN CRUISER, NEW MO-• ■ 1000, 335-5135. BI6I BIG! SAVINGS! UP TO 30% OFF ON 1965 MODELS NOW IN STOCK! PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Aharlna and Sporting (ioodt CRUISE OUT, INC. U E. Walton Dally 9 * FE 0-4402 BOAT storage. KARS BOATS 1. Lake Orton, MY 3-1*00. CLOSE-OUT SALE OF 1965s LONE STARS-GLASSrONS and MFG BOATS —that are on display- TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR SHARP CARS! Gala McAnnally't NATIONWIDE AUTO SALES « Baldwin_________^ WE NEED CARS! TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS Motthews-Horgreaves *31 OAKLAND AVENUE ________FE 4-4S47_____ Jank Cars-Tracb 101-A 19*1 FORD F-100 pkkup wtth body, molar evarhaulad. tbraughoutl 1495. 1942 FORD FtOO pickup, motoi haulad, new tira*, S99S. Ask for Truck Oapt. FE 5---------- AtrtB'ManiiB iNMraiice 104'- IMF John McAulllfa Ford 1961 Buick" Convertible 05“ With full power, only ! iwn, our full asking price- $1195 1959 CHEVYS rHREE TO CHOOSE FROM, radio and haafar, automatics and stick shuts, at tow at *297, S4.00 down and S4.M par weak. Wa handle and arrange ell financing. Call “"fFb-aoti Capitol Auto 312 W. MDNTCALM Ju«9 m«9 af Oakland I OWNER. 1964 Chevy Bel Air 2-Door With blue finish, radto, haatar, Powarglkto. Only — $1695 BEATTIE Interior, VI angina, rXle, haoN whitewalls, Ilka new, S1495. I 2-4775._______________________ 1944 CHEVY SUPER SPOfcf, ’ blue. FE 5-2*51. trantmittion, pesvar brakes and power staerlng, a real nka car. Full price S1,m. " BIRMINGHAM Chrysler—Plymoolh CHEVROLET, AUTOMATIC FE S-9973 RATES. ■"*4yS:SS” 1959 CHEVROLET, STATION V nvw. rt o-xi JOHN McAULIFFE FORD IMF VY CONVERTIBLE - K CARS - TRUCKS AUTD INSURANCE FDR ANYONE ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS-FREE TOWS TOP SIS-C^L FE 54142 SAM ALLEN G SONS, INC. AUTO INSURANCE TERMS AVAILABLE STOP IN TODAY iu>4 PmrH iA«l Anderson & Associates P«^ 101 FE 4-?53S 1044 Joslyn m PONTIAC ENGINE, TRI-CABB, “"Otri Irantmittton with floor I. 2S3 Chavy angina, standard RED DELICIOUS APPLES, I SquIrrtI Rd. STARKS QUALITY SPRAYED AP TTf Eb: ccWplete Ffcbkft tor 19*0 Cadillac or rapalrabto hood and part*. *24-2575. Nmr Mf IlMf TrKb 103 TRUCK CAMPER lO-toot truck cam(^ with .haatar. CLOSEOUT Doaii Canoe* moi OWEN^S*XuSlN?*UPPLY 39* Orchard Lake FE 2SC21 - SEMI TRAILERS, . .IM each If taken at OWK Cab ^ TOM STACHLER —auto Si MOBILE SALE* 87 3091 W. Huron St.___FJ J-^ WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS 1155 UNIT BACKHOE PHONE 412- BOD Y-HARRISON EQUIPMENT CO. IS MOVING TO PONTIAC NawLocafton: 151 S. Cass Lake Road tala*ooplng, bumpy*, laddai CORRECT CRATT Fibergiat Inboard spaadt »r\ai from S2,095. Saa and thasa quality boats at OAKLAND MARINE II S. Saginaw FE * PalG 'HI *, Sun, 'til I pin. C^ WMa Van Lina, CHEVY M-TOH PICK-UP, uick anginM ----- ‘---------- HI «744742.~ 1959 RENAULT - •• *124*71. 1960 MG dio and haatar, I. ZERO down • I954-19*!, celling.--------- Fords, Chavyt PASSENGER, ‘ I, A-1 tha GMCt. I HAROLD TURNER S751. M*tl9S. Repossession 19*2 BUICK Hardtop. Must llqu IMF John McAulKft Ford 1963 Buick traramlsHon. 444-11**, GONE U.S. NAVY, TAKE OVER naymante-19*! Chevy * " -4. Saginaw. FE 5-4134. arSly lUitawafto, S7M. OR '349M. 19*1 CHEVY IMPALA HARDTOP, ?4M* , 19*1 CHEVY BEL AIR 2-DOOR, cylinder, auto., motor evarhaula new lira*, *495. *73-1391. Stran han. \ I9M CHEVV 2-DOOR *XJCk) 4, “225" Electro Hardtop with full power, plu* factory a conditioning, premium tires ar $2395 Lucky Auto 1941 W. WIX Track FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7154 1964 Chevy Biscayne 2-Door With • iptrktrnp whHt Hnlth* r»-dk>r hddtiP, only — $1595 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD "Your Ford Malar tinea llljP' Home of Sarvka attar Hit sale" OR 3-1291 1944 CHEVY SUPER SPORT. LOW innatgt, axetitont condition. *n- In.'^'^SH'rM'FM rlSE' 1MrTo-»VATR-HjyR6tOOA6!fi St,951. Phina FE 5-mi. INI CORVAIR SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSM’S-SION, RADIO AND HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, A^sum^l^lV^W-CREDIT MGR.*m”’ Paikt'ai ! DON'T TAKE CHANCES WE PROUDLY INTROOUCt P6R VVb DOIl't! toxurkMt! SJSU,'*** Inside-STORAGE-Outside ■ Ishing and ropain ir Tuno-Upt d body, S251. 425- eOLES AERO. A travel traitor. Aircran oontiri tton. BOLES AERO tor ptepto w S4N Wllliamt Lake Rd. I Be n»&Y ter Early Sprtng HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS ltS99 s. Tttogrtph Rd. A 1919 OA4C la* VAN, GOOD CON-dlflen, 554 Franklin Rd. 1959 CMC ►icKUPnrrwriuti. FE 2-4359.__________________ 1941 CMC Vh-TON PANEL, BLUE i'l 4-2735: . .... JnlV W >A_________________ CHEVROLET CO. 1IM t. Wood-^ Blrmiii^ain, ------------------ 1961 RENAULT door sedan wtth misston, rxie _ _ prka 1397, no money weakly payment* at handla and arrange all Call Mr. Dan at; FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just east af Oakland _______________________ m whllawalls, A raal ctoan car. *1495. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1IM S. Woodw ^ - 1942 CHEVY BISCAYNE *. LIKE new, new tirai, original rwntr 474-11*4._______________ Having Trouble Finding Your Size? WE HAVE IT Large ones, small ones, medium-sized ones. Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET ITI 100 Top quality, 0iw-own«r, • new cor trodM to chooso from 65 Mt. Clomoni at WMl Trxk FE 3-7954 THE PONTIAC PEESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2Z, 1965 E—13 itewMd uwdm 1965 CORVAIR Corso Ntw Mi Us*^ Cm 1»« FMD FAIRLANI 1-OOOR H. £ ‘nmClhoN'lSHIVRO^^ Co. 1)04 S. WeedwoNI Av*.. Ilr —I—I.— “■ 4-0735. Repossession Juit ralUMd tor public Mio, 1140 T-BIRD, full powtr. No n ntodod, poymtnti of |wt 17.07 wookly. Will bring cor to your homo. Call Mr. Cash of 330^. Spar- - 'iSfeaf^iio'^aw sa^ Bill SMITH USED CARS 462 N. Ptrry St. . FE 44241 r down, waakly pay- HAROLD TURNER FORD. INC. \ 444 $. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM 1965 Chevy Biscayne 4-Door '4<^l. **J*f*j^ 4-pasttnger, groan '"12195 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER SInca 1730" "Hama of Sarvict aftar tha Sola" OR 3-1291 Repossession 1757 Imparlal, full powtr, luxur car. Just ralaascd for public salt No t$ ntoded. Full balanct, t27f .... ~M-457I. Spartan. CHRYSLER Nawport*4^hior with radio and laatar, automatic transmission, sowar brakes and power staor. ng. Full prica 11,775. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler—Plymouth NORTHWOOD AUTO OUTLET Fancy Fliers USED T-BIRDS '61 thru '65 LANC^AUS HARDTOPS CONVCRTIB|.E$ Soma have air conditioning All hava power As Low as $99 Down Payment of $79 Months Credit no problem HAROLD TURNER New jUiyl Cif» imTfo^ 6Nm* m4 Um4 Cm Mew aid Uni Cm T06 iS OTO, TAKE OVER PAYMENTS l^ulra at IttI Waukegan, Auburn i,ow! MC J3 Having Trouble Finding Your Size? WE HAVE IT Mew and UsEd Cart 106 t74a RAMBLER, PERFECT CONDI-! tion, 1323. 0. X. HubMa. SSSaotl. NO MONEY OOWN-WE FINANCE CREDIT HUNTER'S SPECIAL Save a Buck with this original 1-owner 1743 Rambler Clastic Station wagon. Automatic, 4-qrllndar. Special Hunter's Sale - til75, ROSE RAMBLER 4145 COMMERCE ROAD _ UNION LAKE _ RAMBLER, 1743, 2-ObOR, ’XOtB-—ic, radio, heater, excellent con-n, retiree owned, driven. U3- _________ TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEAT-ER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly pey-mentt of $7.72. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Porks of HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7S00. 1742 FORD WAGON, a-OOOR DE I FAIRLANE, 4 STICK, WITH :cettorlet, nico. 1450. FE 4-03S7. Capitol Auto 1743*.TEfRPEST, 4-DOOR, ACYL, nydromatic transmission, powei steering, tinted glass, morrokide trim, excellent cond. 4940. OR 1744 PONTIAC CATALINA, S-bOORi 1744 FORD CUSTOM SCO ADOOR. rodio, heater, extra sharp. Only 41,475. JEROME FORD. RKhOtlor. FORD Pooler. OL 1-7711. _ ! 744 THUNOERBIRD. FULL POW-.. .... . 473-1444. 1963 FALCON station wagon with real lov aga, fully cquippad witti HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM . Repossession Juat released for public lale. 1741 PONTIAC Bonnovlllc hardtop, i power. No 4$ needed. Cell Mr. C--t,334-4S24. Spartan. 1741 PONTIAC, ADOOR STRAIGHT stick. $777 full price, $5 ' CREDIT NO PROBLEM, W NANCE BANK RATES. 1964 Pontiac Catalina Hardtop 2.door with radio, heetor, white-wells. Only— $1995 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" "Home of Service after the Sale" OR 3-1291 OLIVER BUICK Double CheckecT Used Cars J3 BONNEVILLE 2-d(>or herdloi dio end heeler, automatic^renVI brakes, whltewells!*Whlte with bli ■ mission, whitewall PATTERSON ROCHESTER Chrysler—Plymouth Imperiol-Voliant toot N. Moth_OL 1-B5SB fer!or,**nNPiv ce'r” wirranty to 40,460 milts. Fun pries 43,475. BIRMINGHAM 714 S W«3w**'d~ 7 3214 i74rCHRYSLM“W'~TW^ hardtop, radio and htaler, power ataering and brakes, one owner. Full pries 42,175. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Ooklond Ave. 332-7150 oondltlonlne. Full price t7,m. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler — Flymouth 14 i. Woiidwrd________Ml 7-3214 man||s oil financing. Call Mi "*'fE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM 1742 DODGE DART ADOOR, Automatic, radio, hoator. 4 brand now tiros,clotn, 4175. JEROME Fd*p^Reeheitor FORD 1743 DODGE DART Ot, BUCKET SMfs, oxtro Rica. 41I7S, 177 down. HUNTER DODGE, Birmingham. Ml 7-07S3.______________________ II Dodga I 17 Ford an KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Salat and Sarvict "Let's Trode Sale" Glowing powder blue, 1744 I TIAC CONVERTIBLE with a ir and a dlllerence ol— $1697 C«ll 339-4528 NOW OPEN 85S Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Shovyroom) d arrange all financing, Ci *Ve 84071 Capitol Auto Autobahn Specials a 1745 WILDCAT J I, brakes, whilawe 1744 PONTIAC Catalina 2 lop, power steering, I dIo. heater, whitawellt. r hardtop Oyn.irr 1744 BUICK Wlldcel - Pretty Ponies 1965 Mustangs 7 USBb MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2'$ FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $79 Down HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM____Ml 4-7500 I4S FORD GALAXIE 500. CON-vertlbU. 370 V-l. 4-sptetf. A-1. FE 0-1171. ' DYNAMIC — --------- _____ ..Iver blue flnlth. Automatic, power steering, brakes. $1,495. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. I 1104 S. Woodward Ave., BIrming-l hem. Ml 4-2735._____ I 1744 aDOOR HARDTOP OLDS, $2,-275, weekdays after 5:30. 334-1447. 0LD3M0BILE 1745 44 Adoor with radio and heat-ar, powar steorlng, power brakes, autometic, nice tu-tone interior, 42,375 lull price BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth PLYMQUT FE 4- NORTHWOOD AUTO OUTLET 1965 FORD Mintry aqulr automatic Today's Special I Plymouth, V-| tngina, aulom Irtntmlstlon, radio ind two whltowoM tirot, only 477 BUY HERE-PAY HERE -MM CREDIT NO PROBLEM transmission, radio, 2023 Olxlo Hwy.________ FE A7'a37 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml A7500 fTrsY BOB BORST LINCOLN-MBRCURY 0 S. woodward BIrmI MI 6-4538 I FORI lOtlc, 2-1 ;0, *dd J w* »hen »he‘”“‘»„'"»^ Ihe dlHMly ef .eeld nie for the divorce, but (dlherelaughter ntlatiou-that she would file at El Dorado, where she has been staying recently with her parents. Mr, and Mrs. Hurley Axum. ' The couple eloped and wed ;Dec. 21 in a quiet ceremony witnessed only by a Pine Bluff, Ark., minister and his daughter. I Mrs. Buckley said she wanted a simple wedding because she was tired of fanfare. BOTHJiTUDENTS ----- She and Buckley met as students at the University of Arkansas. Mrs. Buckley said she did not want ’ to disclose now t h e grounds for her divorce, or whether she would seek custody of the couple’s child. She said she didn’t know where Buckley was and asked if she thought he would contest the action, said: “I have no i idea.” It would be Pope Paul’s fourth trip outside Italy. His first was to the Holy Land in January 1964. The second was to the International Eucharistic Congress in Bombay, India, in December ot last year, and the third was earlier this month, on Oct. 4, to the United Nations in J York. that's what keeps me young,’ tie said. “There’s nothing in life ■ like better than doing a show.” 4 TV SPEQALS More movies? He’d be delighted. Television? He’s doing , four specials this season, including the Macy’s Parade at Thanksgiving and Pasadena’s ( Tournament of Roses on New t Year’s Day. Everett Freeman, coproducer of “Glass Botfom Boat” is talking to him about a Vatican sources had said pre-series viously the Pontiff hopes to Last year he played “Never make another, longer trip to the Too Late” on Broadway, andjcnited States but that it prob-that sharpened his appetite for nbh' will be some time before the theater. He is considering ajsuch a voyage can be made. U I EASED COMMENTS called The Girl in the Freudian, „ « 1. .. n—i Slip ” He would play a psychi-' atrist, of all things. Unit^ Nabons has , tempered some of the objections I to a trip to a Communist nation j When all is said and done, that had been raised by some' Godfrey’s great love is radio. I Vatican prelates. “Why, there’s more money in' ★ ♦ * radio nowadays than there wasl jhey felt it would be a in the old days,” he said, facto recognition of the Com-"Think how the population haslmunist regime — at least in the grown. Think how many more public eye — and could be mis-radios there are today — tran- interpreted by the world in sistors, car radios, etc.” general. I Singled out for special attention were post offices at Brooklyn, and Long Island ' City, N. Y.; Philadelphia, Pa.; Newark, N. J.; Boston; Worcester, Mass.; and San Francisco, and Los Angeles, Calif. The report said GAO investi- ’Godfrey has been on Tff(flo fnr“ Rhol3eIsland Farms 3S years. 31 of them with CBS. He has done his show from every conceivable location, lately producer’s office at MGM. Decline in Number ^ PROVIDENCE, R.I, (AP)-: ....the best salesman on radio "The number of farms in Rhode and of radio, and is likely to Island declined by 280 between I remain on the air as long as 1959 and 1964 but the total value; there is a Godfrey s" farm produnts sold rose u_______IJ_____ by $200,000. The soap and detergent indus- * * * try has announced that thev A U.S. Oimmerce DeparV have ceased production of prod- ment census counted 1,115 ucts that create foam on farms during the la.st census, streams and rivers. 1 compared to 1,395 in 1959, Miracle MTle B 2103 SO TELEGRAPH AT SQ.LRKE ROAD-1 MILE WEST WOODWARD AME fAs ckisiy ff spy Ifiln as you couM losk to seer ^ -M.r. TIMES, Fried Ghickea TafeM SMVka omirt Wauh fmr omr Specialt — Carry Outt At Bloqmington, the parents-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Buck-ley, expressed surprise when asked about the matter. They said they had heard nothing about it. Mrs. Buckley said she planned to continue her work iwith the Miss America pageant, I which includes personal appearances at various events. I * * * 1 She was the first Arkansan to win the title. SLUG BITE-TESTED -Jill Salisbury, a dancer in a Las Vegas hotel review, bite-tests a new silver-dollar substitute circulated by some of the resort casinos. The clubs had the coins minted fo make up for the silver dollar shortage. Club owners don’t mind if collectors grab them, because they cost just 25 cents to WED. & THURSm NOV. 34 A 4 TIMES ONLY! ★ MATINEE A EVENING AN ENTERTAINMENT EVENT OF IMOR IMPORTANCE! / the great U SCALA opera COMPANr (N AN ACTUAL PERFORMANCE OF PUCCINI’S IMMORTAL Thtaftr YOU SAIL AWAY AND LIVE ALL THE EXCITEMENT YOUR MIND EVER IMAGINED YOU'LL SEE Th« Gr«*li lilandt - TurVcy-Copri-NapIct-taccalww-fgypt-SavilU-Pertufol-Artnfit-Monoco. You'll foo o comol figM, • climb to tho top of tho PyroitiMlf, tho Grand Prix Auto llaco in Monto Corlo, o bull fi^ ond many, many moro thriNing fVEHIHQS •2" IN THE FINEST HK3H FIDELITY SOUND EVER RECORDED ON FILM ............. „ _ TCCMNITOLOR* . . . For .Student ainl (iroii|t Parly |)iM-oiiiitn, (ioiilact I liealre Man; —ConvgnientAAoil Order Couponm. •••>•» I Enclosed $...................Chock or Money Order for I for tjte.................performance L' .. Address , ^/eCHNICOLOF iCHARMA TIIK roM l.vi —TelevisTon Programs— plegrami fumiihtd by stationi llstad in this columji an subi«ct to change without netico Ctwnwln 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKlW.TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTV5 I i;i..ss. —I—; \vi',n\:;sr>AV. (k loiiKil 27, i965 E-ia WEDNESDAY EVENING •tN (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “Amaiing Transparent Man” (In< • progress) I (9) Dennis the Menace (50) Movie: “Whispering! Smith vs. Scotland Yard" (1952) Richard Carlson,! Greta Gynt. (56) Mythology •tN (7) News (9) Marshal Dillon (56) International Magazine. 7:N (2) (Ck>lor) Stingray (4) Juvenile Court (7) Shivaree (9) Movie: “Blood on the Sun” (1945) Janies Cagney, Sylvia Sidney. 7!N (50) Sports Desk 7;N (2) Lost in Space • (4) (Color) Virginian I (7) (Color) Ozzie and Harriet (50) Colorful World (56) American Memoir 9:N (7) Patty Duke (50) Speedway Inter-national (56) Great Books l:N (2) (Color) Beverly Hill-bilUes (7) (Color) Gidget (50) Pro Basketball (66) (Conversations 9:N (2) (Color) Green Acres (4) ((Color) Bob Hope (7) (Color) Big Valley (9) Musical Showcase 9:N (2) Dick Van Dyke (9) Festival 19:M (2) (Color) Danny Kay (4) Amos Burke 19:N (9) Festival (50) Merv Griffin 11:N (2) Movie: “Mr. Steve” (1957) Jeanne Moreau (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (7) Nightlife (9) Man of the World 12:45 (9) Film Feature 1:N (4) Beat the Champ 1:15 (7) After Hours THURSDAY MORNING 6»15 (2) On the Farm Scene tint (2) News •IN (2) Sunrise Semester 9;N (4) (Classroom (7) Funews •i5S (2) News 7:N (4) (Color) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7t0S (2) Network News 7:N (2) Happyla^ S:N (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Wally, Lippy, Touche 8:M (7) Movie: “ITI Be Seeing You” (1944) Ginger Rogers, Joseph (Cotten 6:41 (56) English V 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry Go-Round 9:N (2) AadyGrifflth (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:19 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:N (2) Dick Vany Dyke (56) American History 9:55 '(4) News (56) Spanish Lesson 19:N (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Fractured Phrases . (9) Canadian Schools 19T16 (56) Our Scientific World 19r25 (4) News ‘ (7) Political Talk 19-N (2) Mc(Coys M) (Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Friendly Giant 1I:U (56) French Lesson 18:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:M (56) Spanish Lesson 11 :N (2) Divorce Court (4) (Color) Morning Star (7) Young Set (9) Butternut Square 11 :M (9) Across Canada (56) What’s New 11 :N (4) (Color) Paradise Bay 11:H (9) News (56) Arithmetic for Teachers AFTERNOON 12:N (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Razzle Dazzle (50) Dickory Doc 12:85 (2) News 12«N (2) Search for Tomorrow “ (4) (Color) Post Office (7) Father Knows Best (9) Take 30 ItrU (M) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light TV Features Girl From NEPHEW By United Press International PATTY DUKE, 8:00 p. m. (7) In “The Girl From NEPHEW,” Patty suspects that girlfriend of agent who is visiting this Lanes is really a counterspy. PRO BASKETBALL, 8:3 Baltimore. p. m. (50) Pistons vs. BOB HOPE, 9:00 p. m. (4) Prim and unfeeling Englishman (Jack Hawkins) asks lonely waitress (Shelley Winters) to pose as his wife so they can qualify for domestic position open only to married couple. FESTIVAL, 10:30 p. m. (9) One-act drama by Thornton Wilder entitled “(Childhood,” about three youngsters on imaginary bus trip. CBS Defends Death Story Details of Rasputin's Killing Said Accurate NEW YORK (UPI) - The (Columha Broadcasting System ((CBS) was trying to prove today that the 81.5-millioh damage 'suit of Felix Youssoupoff, the prince, is nothing i "lint-picking by a mui The 79-year-old prince, nephew marriage to Czar Nicholas II, planned and carried out the 1916 assassination of the "Mad Monk” Rasputin. He charged that CBS invaded his privacy in a television film, “If I Should Die," about the assassination. The film was shown in (Chicago and New York in 1963. 12:N (56) Come, Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1;#0 (2) Scene 2 (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “I was a Communist for the FBI” (1951) Frank Love joy, Dorothy Hart (50) Movie: “Whispering Smith vs. Scotland Yard” (1952) 1:10 (56) Conquest 1:25 (4) News (56) Geography 1:M (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News (56) American History 2:M (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth 2:M (56) Safety Circle 2:25 (56) Mathematics for You 2:N (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us (50) Love That Bob 2:N (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News 3:N (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:M (56) Memo to Teachers 3:25 (2) News 3:N (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Captain Detroit 4:89 (2) Secret Storm (4) ((Color) Bozo (7) Never Too Young (50) Lloyd Thaxton 4:36 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:69 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) ((Color) Movie: “Her- Ship Aground, 2 in Crew Hurt ANCHORAGE, Alaska MI Two injured crewmen were taken ofT a Greek freighter aground and being battered by a fierce storm in the Aleutian Islands Tuesday night. ★ ♦ ♦ The Alaska (Command said two helicopters and an amphibian reached the Ekaterini G. and removed the injured men despite heavy rain and high winds. Gusts up to 70 miles an hour were reported. ♦ ♦ ★ One man reportedly had broken neck. The other suffered undetermined injuries. They were taken to the Adak Naval Statim hospital. The 11,000-ton freighter lost a propeller several days ago about 500 miles south of Adak and was oeing towed by a U.S. Navy tug to Adak. She went aground when the tow was lost in heavy seas. ★ ♦ ♦ The Alaskan Command said some of the 40-man crew had gone ashore and started fires on Great Sitkin Island where the vessel lies on rocks. cules Against the Mongols” (1962) Jose Greci (50) Little Rascals (56) Invitation to Art 5:30 ( 50) Superman (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall Yesterday, Youssoupoff completed his case against the network, and CBS immediately asked Supreme (Court Judge Wilfred Waltemade to d i r e c t the jury to find in its favor. The judge reserved decision. Youths Riot in Phoenix; 2 Are Hurt AT THE RACES I r r 8 r f" nr TT 12 13 14 IB V IT TT h 21 W 2T 27 23 W U 38 38 ♦r 42 43 r 43 XT 43 4T 81 63 8i 84 68 83 V 25 Dripping wet 26Celt 27 Row 28 Metrical foot 29 Kaolin, for example 31 — race 34 Pain 35 Whiskered 37 Ice dealers 38 College official 40 Foam 41 Reverberate 42 Place and — 43 Bulrush 45Wash (poet.) 46 Solar disk 47 Intense desires (slang) 50 Pheasant brood (var.) « Answer to Previous Puzzle ACROSS 1 Pari-mutuel — 5 ‘‘All horse players — broke” 8‘Track adviser (slang) 12 Set of three 13 Tavern 14 Capable 15 Race with equalized odds 17 Scottish island 18 Octaves (Ital.) 19 Like a line Yousbupoff contends the (CBS _21 Air (comb, form) PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)-About 200 shouting, rockthrOwing Negro and S p a n i 8 h-American youths riot^ near downtown Phoenix late Tuesday night. Police restored control two hours later. A dozen auto windshields and several store windows were smashed. Two persons, including a policeman, were hit by rocks that shattered windshields of moving cars. Both of those hit are white, but police said there were no apparent racial overtones to the rioting. The rock throwing started outside at a dance at a Negro neighborhood park southeast of downtown Phoenix. An officer said two Negro youths were fighting when police arrived, then without apparent explanation, others started throwing rocks at passing cars. ★ * w One of two 17-year-old youths who were fighting was detained by police. ‘The other was released to his parents. POLICE CARS A half-dozen police cars were damaged by flying rocks. “It was like a war. They were bombarding the restan-rant with rocks. We jast hid In the dark at the back. They kept throwing and throwing,” said a waitress in a restaurant. Teen-agers harassed firemen putting out two trash fires which had been set. Police cars blocked off the area which is occupied mainly by Spanish-American and Negro families. POUCEMAN HIT Policeman J. D. Nelson was injured slightly when a rock crashed through the windshield of his cruiser and struck him over the right eye. A motorist, Bobbie Joe Vaughn, 39, was on the head by a rock sailing through his windshield. ‘We just don’t have the kind of city where this can get out of ' said Mayor Milt Graham who went to the scene. “And, If it did, it wouldn’t be for long.” Police C3iief Paul Blubaum lid: “The mayor’s the boss, agree with anything he said.” fim insinuated that the prince used his beautiful young wife, Princess Irina Ramonoff, to lure the lecherous Rasputin to his palace the night of the murder, Dec. 16,1916. LAWYER’S CLAIM ‘This has put the prince in the role of panderer of his wife,” said Herbert R. Zelenko, Yous-soupoffs lawyer. Carleton G. EMridge Jr., the attorney for the network, contended Yonssonpoff failed to prove his case. “The picture properly showed that Rasputin was lured to thei Youssoupoff palace by use of Princess Irina as a ruse or trick,” Eldridge said. ★ ★ * Princess Irina, now a gray 70, was hundreds of miles from the palace in St. Petersburg (now Leningrad) when Prince Felix and three other noblemen poisoned, shot and beat the Siberian peasant mystic to death. WROTE BOOK But in one of two books which Youssoupoff wrote about the assassination, he said, “I thought Rasputin would more readily accept my invitation if he was unaware of this (the princess’ absence).” Eldridge read the| passage in court. He said the film had the same atmosphere as the books, “Rasputin,” and “Lost Splendor.” 22 Craft 23 Superior qua.'ity (slang) 26 Of positive spiritual knowledge 30 Mixture 31 French city 32 Adjective suffix 33 Past 34 Tavern drinks 35 Chancel section 36 For local application 38 Kentucky — 39 Greek letter 40 Ocean 41 High regard 44 Pyramid winning bets 48 Pal 49 Flood 51 Cavity 52 Shakespearean knave 53 Equitable 54 Masculine name 55 Driving command 56 Lairs DOWN 1 Roman emperor 2 Minced oath 3 Force 4 Sodium carbonate (2 words) 5 Crapshooter 6 Feminine appellation 7 Boards an aircraft 8 Poisons 9 Wind instrument 10 Forearm bone 11 Rend 16 American lithographer 20 Metal 23 Small talk 24 Lake (Sp.) TV Surveillance Planned on River SAULT STE. MARIE (AP) -The U.S. Ckiast Guard station here plans to test a televiston surveillance system for the St. Mary’s River, a Coast Guard spokesman said Tuesday. Initially, four television cameras will be used for the test which the spokesman said is expected to be run Friday. Monitor screens will be set up at Coast Guard headquarters. If successful, a series of television cameras might be used to scan the river area near the Soo. he added. "now UHF ANTENNA InstolUd $29.95 SWEET'S SueED KtTRA SPACE? ■■ WILSON New Note Hit: Opera Star Sings His Own 'Crazes' By EARL WILSON NEW YORK *— It isn’t often that a man writing his autobiography admits he was stupid. Opera Star Robert Merrill confesses in “Once More From^ the Beginning” that his getting fired from the Met in 1950, and marrying, and busting up from, Roberta Peterk, were part of his colossal stupidity (at the time). r “Rudolf Bing fired me from the Met be-| cause I was so efazY^to get into the movies,’ 'that I stupidly didn’t reiacl my movie contract,”! he says. \ I “The picture started ttt the same time I was due to go on a Met tour. Bing said I would never sing' at the Met again. I haunt- ! _______ ed him, 1 went to parties he went to, to beg him to come back. He kept fluffing me off, and he was right. Finally, he saida’I’ll see you.’ “I married Roberta. She was a kid; that’s her ex^se. I was an idiot: that’s mine. It lasted 3 months. Well, that’s longer than Ethel Merman’s lasted! ‘“Then I married Marion Machno (it’s going to be 12 years). I settled down and did my best work. * “I ran into Roberta recently on the West Side Highway.! Here comes this lovely girl in- a slick car getting in my way.' I yell at her. ‘HEY, where do you thing you’re going?’ She scowls then says, ‘Bob!’ I say ‘Roberta!’ I say ‘You go first.’! We wave at each other, she goes back to her husband” (Bert! Fields, the hotel man) “and I go back to my wonderful ^arion.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... The guy chug-chugging around Rockefeller Center and, By Science Service the Plaza in a 1914 Model T was Jerry Van Dyke of NBC’s “My, LOS ANGELES — Latest idea Mother, the Car,” who wasn’t even born in 1914 . . . Let’s just! for diluting automobile smog: remember — in our opinions of the Vivian Beaumont ‘Theater half - mile - wide “green belts” opening and “Dantbn’s Death” as a selection — that all such along both sides of our freeways projects get slaughtered iff tKe press, but eventually do real where no one, even a private 8®®^- . „ home owner, is allowed to burn! Dana, introducing the Tiajuana Brass at Basin St., ex-i anything. iplained his TV show (on whichr he played a bellhop) wasn’t] People near freeways are!®®®®®*®*- G®*’'*"®'' checks into ...jv breathing air that has been Regency Nov. 9-one day after her friend, bullfighter diluted with less than 1,000 parts I®®”**"*®'"' ®**®®‘'® of fresh air to one part of auto| 8 WEEDONS S ■■ 1032 West Huron FE 4-2597 «ha“st ’’ says Prof Altert F ' REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Every time I fill a political of-Bush of the Universitv of Cali- ^'®*> ^ malcontents and one ingrate.”-Louis XIV. BUSn Ot me university Ot Uail- pwAnuB. un,..* «hlc i« > nr. Britain’s Most Noble Order of the Garter, baaed on a legend, survives still. It is based on the Arthurian legend. — Radio Programs— WJtfTie) WXWn arO) CKIW(800) WWJ(950) WCARU I aO) WPONH 4A0) WJHMI SOO) WH W-fM(94.n «t«-ciaw, N«wi Wja. Ntwt, SporM KVWJ, Nmm WXYZ. N«w« WJSK, N«w«, 0«0. T*IM WCAS, Ntmt. Jm SaurcMt WTON. Nawt, Sped! WHPl, Nawt, Mutk py C«v SS6X,^SSt wxei, CiirlPin Thw rits-wxvz. Lw aim. mmic WWJ, PhoM OpMlen llto-WJR, NPWI. MmK iiW-WWJ, Polltle»l Program Wja, Nawa, Muilc Nawt, Nlghl tcana laitP-WXYZ, Madcap MurpKy WJR, Nawi, KalaMetcopa lliia- WCAR, Nawi, Iporit wwj. Nawi ainal ii!ig-WCAR, Madkai Jeuroai IliU WCAR. Bovr.......... lltIP-WWJ, - ^ CKIW, “ 4ilS-CKLW, lya opanar iiia-wjR, MMK Hall Iiia-CKuw, »• ‘ ^ Oaviat WXYZ, Marc Avary, MmIc WWJ, Nawt, Mutk CKLW, AutfiB Oraof WPON, Nawt, Ban JatM WCAR, Nawt, Tom KoWl WHPI, Ntwt In DapHi WXYZ, Ntwt, Mutk WJSK, Nawt, edtr 11i1»-WJR. Pocut WWJ. ling lilB-WJR, Ntwt, LInkN CKLW, Ntwt, Dava IN WHFI, Encort 'Green Belt' Proposed to Dilute Smog ★ ★ COLOR TV 0 J| 4 AQFL • 1 Y*ar Frpp Sarvicp I wiB®® Oo Parti and Labor I • Fro* Dativpry and Sat-Up 360 tcfuarp inch picturd. tpek-in tuning, channal aplpction. -0BEL TV & APPLIANCE SALES & SERVICE 3480 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE fornia at Los Angeles. For a sound eir environment, we believe that the pro-PQrtion should be at least 2,000 tol.” To get the right mixture around an eight-lane freeway at least one-half mile of open area on each side would be needed, in which all burning' processes, even from private i homes, are excluded,” says' Prof. Bush, who heads the en-| vironmental laboratory of the; UCLA engineering department. W W W I The open spaces, converted to | parks, could make for healthier air balance in tv ways. ! I The unpolluted fresh air of the parks could dilute and diminish the smog buildup above the freeways, and the green vegetation would actually remove pollutants and restore oxygen to the atmosphere. EARL’S PEARLS: What this country really needs is a credit card that fits into a vending machine. Bob Orben saw “The Agony and the Ecstasy,” which shows that it took four years to get the Sistine Chapel ceiling painted. “I guess,” sighs Bob, “they had the same landlord I have.” . . . That’s earl, brother. (Tlw Hall SyndkaM, Inc.) IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE CALL FE 8-8173 Open Daily and Sun. Couldn't Get Rolling Pait the First Bump ROANOKE, Va. (AP) - Ev-erything appeared normal a« Samuel Ginger got intc his car ’Tuesday, started it and pressed down on the gas pedal. Then imethecraih. During the night a thief had stoian a front wh^ and tire and the car propped up on a jack. CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen SOCfl COMPLETE I-Ft. Kitchen SQQf COMPLETE iCuS INCLUDES: Upper c Lower Cabinets. Coun CALL DAY OR NIGHT ★ ADDITIONS ★ FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING RFC. ROOMS ROOFING—SIDING WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION COME TO I WITH FREE ______ AND PUNS—NO CHARGt 15 W. 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White Acoustical Tile Paint..............gal. 2.99 Scientifically-Built 720-Coil Sears-O-Pedic Mattresses Your body is gently cushioned by a quilt top yet you get the extra firm support yon want Coil-on-coil design eliminates sagging. Rayon - damask cover. Matching Box Spring .... 59.88 EtQ88 each SAVE UP TO *20 on Mattresses and Box Springs 6-In. Foam Latex Mattresses Covered in Quilted Satin 4988 SAVE •!!! 4-Pc. Luxury-Quilt Innerspring Hollywood Beds Choice of Maple or White Vinyl Headboards *88 Sears exclusive dimple-top foam latex supports you evenly from edge to edge — will not sag even where weight is heaviest. Acetate bridal satin cover. Matching Box Spring...........49.88 Furniture Department, Second Floor Regular $99.95 Each Bed NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Everything you need for comfort! Firm 216-coil mattress with a soothing quilt top... matching box spring on metal bed frame . . . and your choice of decorator headboards. Colonial style is all solid maple. 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Overnighter or Cosmetic Case Charge It 21-inch-Weekender.... 8.88 24-inch Pullman . 10.88 26-inch Pullman . . . 11.88 29-ihch Pullman .... 13.88 Starline Hat Box .... 8.88 Traditional shaping, fine quality make this an excellent value. Vinyl covering, fabric backed, over 3-ply wood frames, brass plated hardware and side pockets. Your choice of blue, white, tan, red. Zig-Zag Portable Base Machine •68 With Built-In Sewing Light era^ng of Iht nirfaet ii guaranlaed to proirlda a water-proof cooliitg for dtrea yean from data of ula or wa will rafnnd lha eoH of the Guaranteed for 3 Years! No need to wet down ***' walls, nothing to mix. Apply even over uncured concrete. Protects ai beantiriei. Save $1.97! Charge It .NO MONEY DOWN, Iti Payment Feb. 1st, 1966 Luggage Dept., Main Floor Just set the dial to: sew on buttons, straight stitch, overcast raw edges, blind hem, zigzag. In 5 Colon, White Parchment Yellow Mint Green Frqsly Pink Capri Blue Sunshine Yellow\ Pontiac Store Only! ''Satisfadion Guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Downtown Poll liar Phono FK .I- 11 c I Th0 WtifhT W4. WMlkir Um» Mr* Moidy Sonny THE PONTIAC VOL. 123 NO. 225 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 —76 PAGSES^ 36 Die qs Plane Crashes in London! GM Records Best Ever for a Manufacturer Sales, Profit Marks Set for 3rd Quarter and First 9 Months DETROIT loyM at GMC Truck and Coachwision. yes-inutes be-to leave Janies Pusey, 19, and his wife, Susan, 18. Their infant daughter, Dawn Marie, was found Monday afternoon b the chapel at Pontiac General Hospital. Policewoman Mrs. George Caronis said she received two Icalls on the abandoned child, |one from an Army recruiting of-Thq/ two were identified as ficer who comected the father Indian Summer to Creep Back Under Sunny Sky It looks like Indian summer is here again. The weatherman promises mostly sunny skies with little tenqierature change, highs 52 to 58 through Friday. Tonight will be fair and cool, the low dippbg to 32 to Today’s westerly winds i to 18 miles per hour will to northwest late today and diminish tonight. . ★ ★ ★ TMrty-oeven was the low re;; cording prtor to 8 a.m. Hie mercury had skipped up to 56 1p.m. Responding to recent merger proposals, Michigan osteopaths have reaffirmed their stand against amalgamation with the “MD” profession. Proposals for a merger of the DO and MD professions arose during recent legislation bearings on a bid by osteopaths for state operatbg funds for the projected Michigan College^ of Osteopathic Medicine. The legisbture decUned to act at the fall session on the request for state funds, but promised early consideration during the wbter term. Meantime, an bterim legislative study has been ordered of t h e amalgamation proposal made by the Michigan State Medical Society. w ★ ♦ Osteopaths, however, have issued a unanimous "no” on t^ In Toda/s Press City Affairs Plan recommended for UtiliUes ^ PAGE B4. Pregnancy Drugs FDA orders warnings on labels - PAGE A-19. College Blood Dooations show support for U.S. Viet policy -~PAOE B-M. .....D-11 .....D-IS .....D-U ale . . .E-U .....D-18 .....A-8 FtodSecUoo D-2, D-3.D4 Markets ........D-12 OUtaaries .........E4 Sports.........E-1-B4 TWiders .........E-14 TV-Radb Progruns E-ll WBsob, Eari......E-U WaoMa's Pages B-1-B4 DOs Confirm Merger Stand REAFFIRM RESOLUTION The House of Delegates of the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons voted 118-0 to reafflitn the group’s 1960 "Michigan Resolution.” This resebthm called for a separate and distinct school of medicbe b Michigan. The resolution stated that sphools of osteopathic medicbe ^ complete and are m a j o r sduMls of medicine "which have served the public for more than 60 years.” Further, “the public is bes served by the free choice of physicians without bterference from professional organiza-iions,” said the resMution. In addition, the medical school its status as a separate piste school of medi ‘ erating with all groups that sine the same obje^be when that srati lo become a teacher. Clear Electric Firm in Iron hing Death NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -A metropolitan medical examiner ruled yesterday that an 11-year-old polio victim died of double pneumonia and not because electricity had been shut off to his iron lung. ★ * * Dr. W. J. Core said Francis Audie Barrett had a “well-established” case of pneumonia in tgs right lung and a lesser case in his left. it it it Core said the iron lung which the child’s mother pumped by hand was of “no value” in her futile attempts to keep the boy alive. Is It a^rd, Plane or Martian? See Pg.A-2 .'J She completed her degre work last August at Wayne State University and now is an ex-“newsboy” teaching third graders in Waterford Township’s Donelson School. Why would a woman of 33 with four youngsters and three years of coUege accreditation invade the male realm of newspaper distribution? Mrs. Long explained her 1960 decision quite simply. it * * Three of her youngsters were then in school. She wanted job that would both enable her to get out of the house and take a two-year-old son with her to avoid baby sitter fees. ACCEPTS ROUTE She accepted the challenge to deliver a route in the Bloomfield Township area by car and con-, tinned the assignment five years until last August. “I enjoyed the work im-menseljV’ Mrs. Long said yesterday as she sat in her classroom at Donelson, reminiscing about her newspaper career. “I made a lot of friends too.’ it it *■ Mrs. Long not only derived self-satisfaction from her tenure as a newspaper carrier but her conscientious work earned the respect of those she served. ALWAYS ON 'HME One of her. customers, Basil B. Kimball, 6845 Lahser, said that come hi^ water, sleet, show or rain, he .never missed an edition (Continued on Page 2. Col. 5) shifting fpg at London Airport early today, killing all 36 persons aboard. “We could see' a sheet of flame which seemed to stretch the length of the runway,” said, one airport employe. “We could see people among the flames but they were obviously dead.” The plane, a four-engine Vanguard turboprop designed to carry 139 passengers, was landing at 1:23 a.m. after a flight from Edinburgh, Scotland. Operated by British European Airways, it carried 30 passengers, one a child, and a crew of 6. The airline said it was believed all aboard were British. Four hours after the crash all the bodies had been recovered. WORKHORSE It was the first fatal crash for a passenger-carrying Vanguard, which since 1961 has been BEA’s workhorse on domestic routes. The deaths also were London Airport’s first passenger fatalities in almost 15 years. A REA twin-engine Viking from Paris crashed and killed 28 persons Oct. 31,1950. That crash also occurred in fog. Airport officials said visibility on the runway at the time of the crash today was 500 yards. As fire engines and ambulances raced out, it closed into less than 100 yards and sometimes to zero as fog patches rolled over the No. 1 runway. The airline said the pilot had made two previous attempts to land, and just before the crash was heard to turn on full power, apparently trying to get airborne again. ORANGE FLAME John Dabbs, working at an airport service station, said he heard the impact and saw a huge orange flame light the sky. “Then I saw the plane coming along the runway from the east, breaking up and exploding as it went,” he said. “Seats and bodies were scattered aU over the runway. Then the wings broke off. “Finally the nose ended up in some buildings at the end of the rbnway.” Specfacoldr Ad Featured Today’s Pontiac Press co^ tains the first advertisements in^ the high quality color process known as Spectacolor. Such ads are in the special section entitled “Accent on Elegance” featuring ’Die Pontiac Mall and*^ Montgomery Ward. from Stoves to Sporting Goods TAPPAM bottle" GAS STOVE, “Our Press Want Ads cleared out both items in no time. Hiere were several disappointed people though. We could have sold several of" eadi,” said Mrs. R. C. Just an Idea What Can Do (or Ym Try one ... see for yourself, just dial 332-8181 ffl3W«3A03)IVW Anne-lord,E Plansto Marry Will We<^ New York Stock b4ker Dec. 28 t THE PQI^TIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27ri965 NEW YORK (AP)-Mfs. Anne McDonnell Ford, former wife of Henry Ford II. Tuesday nounced the engagement of their daughter. Anne, 12, Giancarlo Urielli. Miss Ford, younger daughter of the Fords, made her debut in IMl at a lavish party in the Grosse Pointe, Mich., home of her father. ■k * i UzieiU, a New York stock broker, is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Giorgio Uzielli and is divorced from the former Anne-Marie Descholdt. Uiielli’s mother is a member of the Rothschild family. Miss Ford and her older sister, Charlotte, 24, last year were among those named as the world’s best dressed women. EDSEL’S GRANDDAUGHTER Miss Ford is a granddaughter of the late Edsel B. Ford, only son of the original Henry Ford, founder of the Ford Motor Co. Mrs. Ed^el Fortl still lives. Family sources in Detroit said Anne and Uzielli will be married in New York Dec. 28. It wUl be Miss Ford’s ‘ ~ two we dating for nx Miss Ford, a a graduate of Sacred Heart She also attended Junior College in New Anne and Charlotte, along with their brother, Edsel, have made their home with their mother in New York since, their parents’ divorce in 1964. iOl Cong Killed'; Yanks Mop Up After Viet Fight (Continued Frwn Page One) Vietnamese regular soldier. Hie area had been beaviiy bombed by U.S. piaaes during the si^e. Atop onb hill the advancing Americans found one of the (Communists’ main observation posts. The enemy had pulled out so fast they left behind anunu-nition, equipment and clothing. HALLOWEEN HARVEST-lt’s a table full of jack-o-lanterns wearing grins and grimaces for Saturday night’s revelry. First, second and third graders from Waterford Village School stand enchanted before the painted pumpkins displayed in the booth of W. L. Holland, Avon Township, at the Oakland County Market. It was the youngsters’ first trip to the market. OU Will Host Aid Seminar Legislative programs to aid municipalities and private enterprises in getting federal assistance will be discussed during a Congressional Conference 1 Conununity Growth Nov. M I Oakland University. k * * Cosponsors of the program are U.S. Representatives William S. Broomfield, R-18th District, and Billie S. Famum, D-19th District, and the University’s Division of (Continuing Education. Keyaote speaker will be Philip N. BrowMtei^ sioner of the F( Administration, D.C. Housing Washington, Browns^in will open the conference at 2:30 p.m. with an address reviewing the role of private enterprise in FHA programs. Costumes on parade, masquerade record hops and a gaggle of prizes in the Mystery Treat contest are part of the Halloween cdebration scheduled for Pontiac and Waterford T o w n-ship Friday and Saturday. tudents at Kennedy and Washington junior high schools are holding record hops Friday night, with prizes being awarded for the best costumes at the Washington party. Most elementary schools are planning room pities for late aftehioon Friday. (Community groups have organized three parUes at Pontiac schools Friday night. ★ * ★ The Herrington, Hills Home-Owners Association is qxmsoring eariy evening cartoons and a costume parade for elepientary students at Herrington School from 6 to 8:30 and a record hop Following dinner at 6 p.m., Kermit G. Bailer, assistant administrator for (Community Programs, U.S. Housing and Home Finance Agency, Washington, Id. C. will be the featured speak-U.S. officials in Washington er. had been baffled by the renewal of the Communist attack aftee®^.*®^*®'^* the arrival of the 1,300-man re^ Seminar dealing with appro-lief force. One (rfficial specula^|P'’*^[® subjwts will be held dur-ed that the Reds were trying to afternoon and eve- “pull a psychological Dien Bien sessions. Phu” — a victory which (Com-i ★ ★ ★ munist propaganda could likeu Reservations can be made by to the disastrous French defeat contacting the Mott Center, Oak-in 1954. land University. The Weather Full UJS. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND ViaNITV - Mostly sunny with little temperature change today and Thursday. Fair and cool tonight. Highi today and Thursday M to 58. Lows tonight 32 to 38. West winds shifting to northwest If to 18 miles today diminishing tonight. Friday outlook: Continued excellent fall weather. T*« REUNION - Reunited after 21 years, James R. Prosser (left) and Cfoorge McCtel- scapbook trtth their grandmother, Mrs. A Jan compare men^ries while looking at a Dailey. 92, who prompted the aeerch. THE PQNTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 27. I9(>3 DoiTiinican Showdown Looms on Firing Top SANTO-pOMINGO, Dominican Republic un — Members of the D(»binican Republic’s shaky provisional government appeared today to be nearing a showdown over whether to fire the top leaders o( the armed forces. The danger of more large-scale violence was believed ruled out by the presence of the 10,000 -man Inter - American Peace Force patrolling the capi- Bnt there was a i that the lofBg aaid costly reha- for the comtry might be dealt a serious setback ifvPresident Hector GarciaCtodoy was forced out by the crisis. „ Then the Organizati^ American States would be i with the task of creating a new provisional regime. The pcevailing view in influential circles was that the major portion of Garcia-Godoy’s Cabi-het, sympathetic to the rebel cause, would resign if the president did not immediately fire the armed forces secretary. ’ CoAunodore Francisco J. Rivera Caminero, and the chiefs of staff of the army, navy and \ air force. 'll The president was reported iwilling to take this decisive ^ep because the U.S. government and the OAS had made clear that they considered such action undesirable at this time. Garcia-G<^oy reportedly does not wish 'to alienate the only source of badly needed economic support for the country, which is on the brink of bankruptcy. Rebel sympathi^rs charge that the military chiefs ordered indiscriminate bombing of Santo Domingo’s civilian population in the early days of the April revolt. The military leaders deny this and fear their ouster would pave the way for extreme leftists to tjke over the armed forces. This fear has chilled relations between the president and the military, which considers that Garcia-Godoy picked a Cabinet that is oriented too much toward the rebels. The crisis brought the three-" .Polaris-firing Sub Joins Navy N-FI«et man OAS'^ommittee back to ^ ^nto DomiAgo late last week. The NEW LONDON. Conn. (AP)-Poldris-firing submarine Benjamin Franklin has joined the Navy’s nuclear-powered fleet. The 425-foot missile-launching submarine is the 30th of 41 pro-granuned by the Navy. three members — Ambassadors Ellsworth Bunker of the United States', Umar Pen-na Marinho of Brazil,,and Ramon de Clairmqnt Dueilas of El Salvador — have met repeatedly with the president and his Cabinet in an attempt to work out a solution. It is known that the OAS committee. which forged the peacemaking formula between the rebels and the military, is not happy with Garcia-Godoy's failure to carry out critical features of the fprmula, particularly the disarming of civilians. ★ AW Critics of the flrasident say he relied too much w the word of rebel leaders that; their sector of Santo Domingo Had been disarmed. The outbreak of violence in the past 12 days proved that a substantial number of weapons remain in the hands of civilian sympathizers of the rebel movement. Stirts Tomorrow Moroino of 9 o.m. Jlore ot SIMMS 13 BIG SALE DAYS filHIIO Enil aI HIaiiIIi riAfiwuilAA A Store-Wide Odd Lot, Short Lot Clean-9lA-. VIIHHIV Ellll"lll”lilUIIIII UlvUIUllliv limit quantities. THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY m^m am THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27. 1965 MvshrpQfns, Beans-and Cheese Become \ Preparing appettaers that Vpiqua Ika Interest of year guests by tMr esdting kwks and taste, la the formula for launching a party successfully. Here are suggestions for cans dipis that should be conversation pieces at your next party. Ilk 1 tablespoon minced onion 3% tablespoons butter teaspoon salt 1 cup soft bread crumbs y« cup grated Parmesan 3 tablespoons chopped walnuts 1 tablespoon steak sauce Clean mushro<»ns, remove stems and chop. Saute onions and chopped stems in half of butter, until onions are golden. Mix sauteed onions and mushrooms with salt, crumbs, cheese, walnuts and steak sauce. this mixture, and place in shallow baking (|ish. Add water, and dot with remaining butter. Bake in hot oven (400 degrees) for 20-25 minutes until nicely Stuff mushroom caps with Refrigerate, cove^ until ready to serv4 S( Bean Dip> 2V4 cups cooked lima beans 2 tablespoons steak sauce H cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon chopped scallion Mash beans well with fork. Add remaining ingredients and 1 pai Serve on crackers. Cheese Balls (boz.) cream blend to a paste consistency, covered^ Mi cup steak sauce . V, cup clipped nuts (pecaps, walnuts pr alnoonds) Soften cream cheese and mix well with steak sauce. Shape little balls. Place toothpicks in each, and roll in chopped nuts, turning toothpick untU cheese ball is completely Saves the Day When you are in a hurry, this pantryshelf special may fit in. Chili Beam With Rice 2 cans (1 pound eadi) barbecue beans 1 U^sj^ chili powder ( ml^ to taste) r cub rice, cooked 1 cup grated Cheddar cheese In a large skillet, mix the beans and chili powder; heat slowly, stirring often. Serve over the rice and sprinkle with the cheese. Makes 4 large servings. Pickled shrimp Is a psrtect special feature for your next bridge luncheon, buffet supper, cockuil party, or after-the-game snack. This gourmet treat is both delicious and attractive on your table. What’s more, you prepare It at least a day in advance — when you aren’t busy rushing around doing other things Just before your guests arrive. Pickled Shrimp 2H pounds fresh or frozen shrinnp % cup celery V* cup mixed pickling spices 3V4 teaspoonssalt Picklinig Gives Shrimp Liv0ty Taste vein under cold water. Combine eelery slices, chqqted onion, diced green pepper, salad oU, vinegar, Ite tea. spoons salt, bay leaves, capers, and TabasM sauce. fW this drssslng over ihrimp; chill at least 24 hours. 1 cup celery slices H cup chop^ onhm tk cup diced green peppw IV4 cups salad oil 44 cup vinegar teaspoons salt 7 or 8 bay leaves 2% tablespoons capers and juice 6 or 7 drops Tabasco saUce 3 hard-cooked eggs, diced Cover shrimp with boiling water; add celery tops, pickling spices, and 3te teaspoons salt. Cover and simmer 5 minutes. Drain. Cool with cted water. Peel shell from shrimp, and de- Drain shrimp nserving lay leaves. dreMing; remove bay Toss shrimp with diced hard- Ssrve on lettuce with Um ^ dressing 'Or mayonnalae. If desired, garnish with hard-cooked ' egg slices. Yield: About 6 servings. f* BP unmiitSAsr KING OF ROASTS! "Super-Rlgiit" Mohiro, Corn-Fed Beef BEEF RIB ROAST 4th emd Sth Ribs 79 lb First Ribs OCc r QO< '^UPER-RIGHT' MATURE, CORN-FED BEEF CHUCK ROAST lb. 79^ IDEAL FOR BRAISING — "SUPER-RIGHT" ^ Beef Shod Ribs.. .r 4y "SUPER-RIGHr BONELESS ^ Delmonico Steaks. • ■ No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits •.. EVERYDAY LOW PRICES MIXIO VietTASLES V^-Alf. . . . . 2 iiJi 37* Shedd s Eiy .... v% 25 uui>nis»w Shedd s Italian 34 DEL MONTI — LI6HT CHUNK STYLE . Tuna Fish . . 4“«99‘ unnoswe MIT WTO'S. Groom & uean . . . Vu” oi Ponds Cold Cream T’ OCEAN SPRAY — LOW CAL. C(3CKTAIL . ^ Cronherry Juice . . >^ 49* CRANSERRT-ORANGE wt A Bi > Ocean Spray Relish 35 ARMSTRONG , „ Wooid Floor Care . . 79 One step Armstrong Floor Care .... . 93* PURNUURE polish Johnson's Pledge & 1'’ Pdish Remover . . ‘.“ 37 AU PURPOSE pi Pillshury Flour . . . 55 SAVE AT ASrP —NET WT. 12-OZ. ^ HormersSpam . .2»"$89 Glade Mist.............49^ Hydrox Cookies . . 49 FrastlngMIx . . . . 'l£^35 mu.u.T-<^T»irMi NnwT.ne< Frosting Mix . . . Wylers Soups . . . 'iS 10 IP VS 49* SUNNTBROOK 6RA0E “A” large eggs fROCJSS CHtBI Ched-O-Bit CHOCOUTE COVERED ICE CREAM Cheerio Bars 12r49< --...T.ri.bv ^ ■ ■ md%C I B —-4 PLAVORS PAWC4KE FLOW 27* I I stoeoronl 3 >«« \ I Slwbt. . . ..............49* HOI HOUSI tomatoes 4 4 1-U. CANS 39 1-U. CANS fvary Jboy Low Price I Bananas I4mI for Aftor School Soockc Fresh Golden Carrots a ^ 17 HAWAiiAlf A Nut Ments •i’sss'w’jasr............................ 99* ffidt Bunch • TO ^ MB I ABBI AHA cuerre 2 2 25* 19* SAVE AT AfirF Iona Tomatoes EIGHT O'CLOCK Coffee DILUXI EVIRIADY y.u. Nestle Coepo •.. AOP GRADE "A" ^ ^ j.y. Tomato Juice 14-CANS 59‘ 59* |99 69* 99* OCUN SPRAY OCEAN SPRAY COCKTAIL Cranberries "08“ stuInu ABP Cranberry Jsiice •iff- 49^^ 31 > OFF LABIU-4S0 SHEETS WiAVt” Northern tissue *n*%a MARVEL SPRAY 4% WhHfewClMiMr GIANT SIZE Oxydol % 79* Joy Liquid Detergent 80* Heoify end VlgeteUB OUR OWN ■■ THE ^ONTIAC PRESS. WEDNKSDAY,.OCTOBER 27. \m The foUowing are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold’ by them in whdesaie package lots. Quotations an furnished by the Detroit BureSu of Markets as of Friday. Produce Applm, AAacIntoih, Mrly, bu. . Applu, Norltwrn Spy, bu. ...... ApplM, CkMr, 4««(. cu« ...... Orupn, Conc^, pk. biM. Pupn, boK, bu............. Steels Strong in Market Rally NEW YORK (AP) -were strong as the stock market mounted a vigorous rally early today. U.S. Steel advanced about m following its report of higher darnings and paced others in its group. Jones & Laughlin made similar gain. Bide chips were in gear withi The market was moving above more speculaUve is&es once record closing highs made Tues-again. Fairchiid Camera re- * * * Opening blocks included: S SLSdated FoSs, off % at r!S.Sil W « shares; Universal Match, unchanged at 19 on 12,-000; err Financial, unchanged other new high as it rose V* to 113 on an opening block of 14,600 shares in the wake of its report of record sales and earnings. Ford and Chrysler also gained fractions. 25,000|^k UP TWO POINTS Generpl Motors touched an- Up 2 each were Boeing, Pola- at 31 on 29,300. rdid and IBM. Xerox rose 3. I Tuesday, the Associated Press Ahead a point or so were duj Average of 60 stocks rose 2.1 to Pont, Union Carbide, Eastman^ 352.1, a new high. Kodak, United Aircraft, West-j Prices were generally higher inghouse Electric, Zenith and on the American Stock Ex-Control Data. i change. The New York Stock Exchange McNamara to Run Agairi? Says He'll Tell Plans Around First of Year WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Patrick McNamara said today sees no reason why he shouldn’t run next year foi* third U.S. Senate teriri. He said he expects to announce tentions about the first of the year. Although not tipping his hand, he did say in an interview. I think I could win no matter whom the Republicans nominate.” That remark came when was mentioned that Republican Car Records Offset Dip in Steel Output \ By SAM DAWSON \ AP'BuSlness News Analyst NEW YORK (AP) - N« car sales are setting a reedrd this month, and by doing so are helping to offset the plunge of steel production to the lowest Iftvel in nearly two years. These crosscurrents in the economy are important n o t only for what I they reveal of the present DAWSON state of industry and trade but perhaps more for what they might do to the consumer and business psychology. Steel, long has had the reputa- Gov. George Romney might tryltion of being a basic industry, for the Senate in 1966 instead of seeking a third term as gover- )r. Romney has given every indication of being interested in the GOP presidential nominatioii 1968. He is now making a trip abroad and he has been making speeches in various parts of this country. NO REFUSAL When mill production booms, the public thinks all musK be well with the rest of the ecorai^ my. Auto sales long have been regarded as the chief clue to how the public feels about the present stale of affairs and about future prospects. New car sales are a test both of how much money the public has to , 'spend and of its willingness to MpNarpara, while not saying'^p^nf} definitely that he would or 547,000 American-made cars sold, compared with 374,-000 in the like period of 1964. The industry counts on Selling enough more to push October's total above 800,000. At midmonth, the dealers were selling 64 per cent more a day than a year earlier. But comparisons can be tricky. This year the new models were displayed later. October is seeing the first chance the buyer had to get a 1966 model; a year ago the 1965 models had been around for some time. Also, last year General Motors was struck and many dealers were stiort of CM cars. 8 STRAIGHT WEEKS In the case of steel, the drop in production for. eight straight weeks, with signs that the decline is continuing, also must be put into perspective. The mills now arc producing at less than two-thirds of capacity, at the lowest level since December would not sek another Senate term, did say, ‘‘I see no reason not to run again.” McNamara, 71, is chairman of the Senate Public Works committee. He is preparing to go back to Michigan soon, and, except for unforseen circumstances, intends to remain in the state until shortly before the second session of the 89th Con-ress convenes Jan. 10. / Also interested in McNamara’s decision is Democrat/G. Mennen Williams, an assmant secretary of state, who smed 12 years as governor of/Mich-igan. / There is talk that Wmiams is interested in running for the Senate but his repor^ position is that he will not/do so next ’ year if McNamar^ tries for another term. / As to what tre voters will be interested in/next year, McNamara said “war and peac6| will be the/overriding issue over anything else.” QUICK TO, EXPLAIN So now steel production is falling and auto sales are rising. Economists are quick to come up with explanations of both factors and of their apparent contradiction. Tliat cars are selling faster Ms October than last may not as glamorous as it seems at first glance. That steel production is falling and new orders coming in slower than expected of thi#^ drop had Bcted. It resulted from p in stocks by con- ,\ sumers who feared a steel strike. This was averted\ by a new labor contract settlement early in September. (k)nsi^rs have lots of steel on hand and aren't pressing the mills for shipments. ★ '-W ★ But what is worrying the mills -is that the drop in new orders, although that too was expected. more severe than first thought likely and is lasting longer than the mills had hoped. T^e big burst in steel production earlier, in the year means that output to date is well ahead of last year. The question is how much longer will steel users be coy about placing new orders. With the mills operating well below capacity, customers needn’t worry much about shipment delays. Will the lift which record new; car sales is giving business psy-; chology lead to a fairly quick-revival of steel mill activity?! Steelmen say they aren’t worried about the order slowdown so far. But all hands will be watching to see how long the boom in new car sales lasts. Rusk visits IBJ Ranch JOHNSON CITY. Tex. (AP) -A visit .to President Johnson’s ranch by Secretary of State Dean Rusk shared center stage at the Texas White House today with the $2-million rivers and harbors bill. Rusk flew to the LBJ Ranch, sounds. In the first 20 days of October, may^not be as calamitous as it jg jjiiles west of here, late Tuesday night after addressing Southern Methodist University audience in Dallas. Spokesmen said no emergency was involved in his meeting with Johnson — that Rusk just happened to be in the neighborhood and was asked to drop by. Pplice Vole Slated on Representative A collective bargaining representative election has been schedulell for Nov. 5 for members of the Pontiac Police Department, it was reported last night. Only one organization has petitioned to represent policemen. City Manager Joseph A. Warren reported the results of a hearing Monday before the Michigan State Labor Mediation Board. The Pontiac Police Offers Association (PPOA) has feti-tioned the mediation board for a representative election. Balloting will be at the policie department 6:30 to 8:30 a.m. and 2:30 to 5 p.m. iw eivieiNot a^.Siisys.’at .■Ad IMft AIM 1MO 11-IP SB*.iv. as JSte-'. Ts KJ !R. » . Business Notes Donald B. Delzell, of 7409 St. Auburn, Bloomfield Township, has been named president in charge of business for Bank of the Commonwealth. Delzell joined the bank last ______________ November as DEL2XLL an assistant cashier. Detroit Edison’s gross revenues were 6358,717,419 for the 12 months ending Sept. 30,. 19654 Net earnings of the company U 2 14 0 f®'' the 12 months through Sept. ' *■* si,30, 1965, were $57,054,073, or - - * ® 11.98 per share on the 28,818,700 shares outstanding at the end of the period. David F. Blake, 1614 Ledbury, Bloomfield Township, recently .........attended a life underwriting loiS 1J;« I conference pf New York Life "•4 io”.Insurance Co. in Zion, HI. The conference covered life writing, health and employe priK tection insurance. n.t *4.i;it i>uMic # Succ0s$tuL% ' Investing * * » $ % By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “I am 21-years-old and have been working since graduation from high school. I have been putting my savings into a bank and U. S. savings bonds. Since I have no finan-cialN responsibilities, I have now invested a portion of my money in the stock market, hoping to protect my savings from inflation. I hought Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe; American Crystal Sugar; Kaiser Cement & Gypsum and Food Giant Markets.” B. P. (A) The stocks you bought are not growth stocks — which you should have — but are sound and are rather good income producers, except Food Giant which pays no cash dividends. believe that to offset inflation, you should hold only shares which have grown consistently in earnings, dividends and price over a period of years, and seem likely to continue this trend. Why not start all over again, since you don’t need income? I suggest you switch your present holdings into Texaco; General Foods; Texas Utilities Honeywell. Over a period, lieve you will be very much pleased that you did. w * ★ (Q) “If you owned a large block of Beneficial Corp., would you hold or switch to other securities? We are a middle-aged couple, well-fixed financially and in no need of high-dividend income.” P. R. (A) The predominant asset of Beneficial Corp. is shares of Beneficial Finance. As a result. Beneficial Corp. moves more or less in line with the market action of this investment. If my only personal holding was Beneficial Ctorp., I’d gradually switch some shares into other good stocks in order to achieve di-vOTsification. However, if this issue made up only part of iny portfolio. I’d hold it because I think Beneficial Finance has good prospects and Beneficial C^irp. should fully participate in any future gains made. To order your copy of Roger Spear’s 48-me Guide to Successful Investiag, clip this notice and send $1.99 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1619, Grand Central Station, N. Y. C., N. Y. 19917. ^ (Copyright, 1965) As for the omnibus rivers and harbors bill, authorizing 142 water projects, this question was left dangling after nearly a day of suspense: has Johnson signed “it? White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers announced Tuesday morning Johnson had indeed signed the bill and would ignore one provision that,-/in Johnson’s view, eroded presidential powers in violation of the Constitution. MADE MISTAKE After reporters in Washington learned the measure hadn’t even reached Johnson’s desk, Moyers said he had made a mistake. He said the Bill was being flown here aboard an Air Force courier plane and would be signed Tuesday night. Come midnight, however, the White House press office still couldn’t say whether Johnson had actually signed the bill, w w ★ In announcing prematurely that Johnson had signed the bill, Moyers released a presidential statement that argued the lasure infringed on presiden-powers because it provided tha\ water resource dev^op-ijects with price tags of less thlm $10 million could get appropri^ons only by action of the Senat^nd House Public Works committees. v Moyers expired the premature announcement by saying he had got word from, the ranch about the signing ^ another measure and, by inistake, checked off the rivers and harbors bill as having been sip ★ ★ w Johnson spent a quiet Tue^ day at the ranch: walking a^ mile, sunning himself by his swimming pool — without venturing into the water — and driving with Mrs. Johnson around the countryside, “v. News in Brief The theft of $200 from a desk drawer in the office of the Pontiac Motor Court Hotel at 510 S. Telegraph is being investigated by Pontiac police. Rummage, Bake Sale: 69 So. Astor, first street east of East Bfvd., between Pike and Auburn. Wed. and Thurs., Oct. 27 and 28. -6. —adv. MOM’S Rummage: Thursday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin! —adv. Lola Harper Circle Rummage: Trinity Baptist Church, at 619 Flldew, Oct. 29-30, in the base-lent. —adv. Rummage Sale: Friday, Octo^ ber 29, 9 a.m. till 12 noon. CAI Bldg., Waterford. Sponsored by Omega Mu Sigma Sorority. -^adv. Ritter’s Farm Market— 3229 W. Huron St. Hand picked Macintosh, 89c pk.; alM large selection of Jonathan, Snows, Delicious, Northern Spys and sweet cider. Halloween pumpkins, winter squash, bittersweet, Indian corn and gourds. New crop raw peanuts and paper shell pecans. Open 7 days. FE 8-3911. Rummage Sale—Thurs., OcL 28, 8 a.m,-5 p.m., Fri., Oct. 29, 9 a.m.-l p.m. Redeemer Lutheran Church, 1800 W. Maple Rd., Birminghkip, —adv. French to Eye Boycott End After Election PARIS I# — President CJharles de Gaulle’s government will lay aside the Common Market's appeal for France to end its boycott of tfii^ organization until after the presidential election, French sources say. The situation could change, they added, only in the unlikely event that de Gaulle decides not to run again. The first round of voting is set for Dec. 5, with ■■ le second round Dec. 19. The appeal to France to get the six-nation trade bloc back in full operation came yesterday from the other five mem- / bers after a two-day special/ meeting in Brussels. / They offered to hold a s^ial meeting without the racket’s executive commission ^ch de Gaulle dislikes becau^ he feels it is working to .trim the sovereignties oRhg members of the ecohomic community. * * De Gaulle pulled his spokesman out of the market July I disagreement over farm subsidies and the role of the executive conunission. “In inviting France to an extraordinary meeting,” said Luxembourg Premier Pierre Wem-T, the five market members have manifested their good will in wanting to hear what changes she wants in the application of the treaty rules.” Treasury Position «iSS . 'M42.1M.311.W t S,ni,1M.Mi 74 "''‘“'•*s:‘45;j»5isi:ir-3».nsi.7,4«.4. **?Su*.5«.7II.41 1I.4«Z.^3».M - InckMiM (M Ml ;t to »l*fu»Ofy Ihnlt. STOCK AVanAUU •UM h« TiM Am * i:... Ath aSb. . $r i MV* .. su, HAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 2T, 1965 JncKidlnp" miT dtilBMtlon*^ iC'lwft .............. , Hunftll, Inori JoIfnMon, Kiniwdy, Mp»i»r?, Kni L«M1, Lauflt, Leultar, LeVInion, ' MaMpMM, M*ler. Malntand, ......ly, Melchcrt, K---------- ________ Ndton. O'Donoghue, , Osgood, Pomoles. Potorion, - —■ Homer, Rh'“ Slovens, Of Ingrm and *tnm aiiarallon and ^ftiaervMan al County can-itlsn at itM torasi^.^lutM. andJM MWC. MSf IM to ttw M^nwal of iMt Baard tl'tt •ad across lands ownad of.structlon. In iidditlon. Hie gnglnaai; andia.^Wled capy et mM rasolutlont^aq^ »r . fcoar ________ Itw Uaaor, sublaet to ap- his ataft hava leorliad In tioaa. Ilalaon with tha Saal of Itia County ^ (MM, IN. BE; *OUTH ^KLANp COyNTY, yyuBllnurdia Vlllaas at ^ iM. out proval ol tha County ot Oakland through with ttw Cantral Maintananca blviaion, ha torwa^ to Sanator Uvta and Bap. HEALTH CMTEB^MUMNCE OB ^ItuX^* onto naaM to ^ no. to asslon 1M. COMMITTEE ciJiS^Eawd at f Tha>a^.*?!5“-'!? 5 *55 M^aM &|ohI mmTm atSTiSat ^XcE C FOUtIT viEJs^^ of tha prolacti SUWOT mo ni^^ana^moia looa caning lor onginoor chairman 'Mr. Chairman, Ladlaa and Oanflaman; NOW THEBEFOBE BE IT BESOLVED S alt?M aftocM fflf,r»r™«,!^n‘WC irss. ssviJii ", IS,", s™s nsr Ass^ffH ^ «"sajurw XirSS • r: cIs-sS-Sat as "S-Si si5 ^ Barato board shall notify tha municipality, by j ■ ''luther^eacock, 'iSi cu’stJr®''*'- th.W^iS,?f^°5Sw“r5.JL"J*&Vf.^^ > ' \ ' To the Oakland County Board of Super- DUANE HURSFALL EDWARD A. MAIER VINCENT J. McAVOY . . LOUIS F. OLDENBURG ;iby Heacock supported by Tiley, 1 Walker, We (7t) yBBSENT; FdM Ml bar. Wilcox, Woods, Brictoner, Casey, I buiktinge ai the sSe*Tesms'iblHto o' Cwnto ot' OakTand, be adequate io grahai^ n that said buildings and Indemnify the County of Oakland, Its da- p|,cod on nw. all- be removed by the parfmmts, fleers, and employ a sufficient majority having voted termination of this loasa. against liability of every name or nature therefor, the motion carried, d structures which .have arising by or thr^h the acts or omls- 1 removed upon toe termination slorts ot Lessee, Its off cars, a^t^ or misc. 444S Lease shall become tha aole employees. Copies rt said mIIcM of In- By Mr. Clarkson ol the Lessor. J? !* J."**®* IN RE: AMENDMENT TO BY-LAWS - — —roes to comply with all Auditors tor the CojmlV Oakland. ROLE XII, SECTIONS I AND 5 ______ - . ordinances covering the *■ A. Any and a I structures eroctad i» To the Oakland County Board ot Super- on described premises. the lease^ shallautomaticalto mverl yijors S »■ Lessee shall at all limes carry such to and become the sole prpp*-^ -S insurance and In such amounts as will. In Lessor upon termination of this M the opimpn ol toe Board of Auditors (without charge to the Lessor ^ ot Oakland County, Michigan, be ade- rMson other than as spac|tied hi, quata to Indemnify toe County of Oak- ot>ove), uMh hi> aftMavlt as to IS'xt, Its departments, officers and em- B. In the evmt of “"ool'*™". ™ fhe'By-Laws' '..MIJe.'T^S’ ^’.ic*? '^Bilijy ot^evjry name^r thU Lto^jk by^ff^L^^^^ ha. gcuV^s*’Vnii^^^^ and affidavit are as follows: '’omissions* iff Lessee, ns officers, buildings on the promises or having the NOTICE OF REGULAR MEETING o“ employees, Splai ol said pall- same removed at the end ot one year ,4 “^*5 illimba^ TlSr^- To the Members iff the ^rd ot Sgjr- o,,, ^ insurance to be filed with the frOT Mncellatlon, at the cost ot Lessee. w?fh vl«f. visors Iff toe County of Oakland, State Board of Auditors ot tha County of Oak- 10. The Lessee agrees to pay tor »™>man» wim ran ot Michigan ! land. utilities furnlshad to the Lessee by T7 itl'^Sa'l aairw appears In the notice of n hereafter set torth. The Clerk presented the notice 1 .. -----M. ... affioavlt notice is HEREBY GIVEN tl s that the details ci a Board by s“M. ESte'iS MiMiml!!''ri!22rtJL2!'15 • contract to ba dated as of May I, "Wt “Y and of tha achaduA of aay-^-1° j?P*Tt'?«"' 2 IMS, bqtwsan the County of Oakland and [jents of the principal of and Intorasron iiMH?"'2l”SS.*5tfl?te.3 lUJ?'®*»' •• 2;Ut“C r*?iha*nSfhg’'ct«!:W“5-'.'31 t&alth .Canter, SovthneW, MIchl- ......................fSSicI thiretoT qrTK^ariSi!l?rt iSS^ tal payments, fees and charges to be paid by Mid munklaallty. Bald municipality entered hereby covenanto and agraes, not lass _ ISM by than thirlv (XII davs orlor to tha dua lUNTY OF OAti-^ •I Jn9 "COUn- f“'**\'»**' 'V UIWI Mia t part, and tha Li *“!L J!?®'•“'??*'f***'*- , being a village B** fiereto. The obligation harain ex- rs Z wtoram "! cre^color, saV nitteSJl^i: N"); Sirto rt toe liMt -----------------.-v. « ~ ^ W - j Chairman, Ladles and Gantlamen: Pursuant to written Notice given .. - —"-irs of this Board on June II, .................. — ......... By-Laws Committee has conrrcusler, may be excast-to-^ gpysrnmant, and WHEREAS the proposal to establish a .Jatlonal Cemetery at Fort Cutler hat been endorsed by the Oakland County part; I WITNESSETH: I WHEREAS It It of tha complete toe project, whafher ItaiM^ at one than one time. It It principal of tha bonds represents tha ot the prolect. If the municipality tl pay the project cost, c- —■ — thereof, of f&ndt thaji I to the existing t ba acquliad-------- municipality 143 has b "A regular meeting ol Supervisors ot toe County ot State of Michigan. Is here^ j^ne1U“’at“?!?Sr’'A.M.* :I?t", to" thi Court House Auditorium, 13(» North Telfr graph Road, Fonllac, Michigan, tor the purpose of transacting such business asi may come betore the Board at that time. wuld^ro- boirrd'to govern'devetopinent ot tk" ----- ------------- tional cemetery system, and lEFORE YOUR BY-LAWS WHEREAS It Is understood that a RECOMMENDS that the elery already exists al Fort Custer couio be converted to a National 1 '2 AYES: '*- Beecher. I Chair or otherwlsa to appfy against the Itlons and imprevaments cost of the projadt, prior to the Issuance sewage treatment plant ot bonds, then the obligation of toe mu-cenatructed to serve the nicipallty shall be adjusted accordingly, means of tha System It the municipality shall tall to make ledi and any of such payments when dua, tha county, under too pro- •"»«"» B^foof shall ba subjaef to a I, PiMIc A^ of Mlchie Penalty of onaJialf of one per cent (W of . »Kla«■■■*• "-tir, HERBERT RA-’ i ac- 0* tha foregoing rtsoluMon. BY-LAWS COMMITTEE S. JAMES CLARKSON. Chairman HOWARD H. BEECHER JOHN D. McKINLAY ROBERT J. TURNER Moved by Clarkton supportad by Committee. _____ ______ ________ _____ _ __ ,_________ ______Ing the month oti COMMITTEE Leese^ March, the Oekland County Sanatorium I VERNON B. EDWARD, 'witness WHEREOF, the Chair- ^ ®" i(«pph'co Clark ot the Board of Sopor- «< '"'“'"8*,.‘"d the -^OJ^EPH - Hid County ot Oakland In "••d' •"*> of additions or alterations; ^^'^ll^AY request to confer and a .... , lum a... .. .... Board of County Hi 1 ot Supervisors; „ present to toe t yearly statistical jb-HNCc'A'illY"™"''"'^ »yWr%n THOkWS H. O'DONOGHUE FRED L. YOCKEY y, .------ Allarton, Al»«~i a.vKu4 £!?S7.' Baectar, Caray, CsM, C Clarkson, Cohen, Oomut., hany, Duncan, Durbin, E P/'d- Fty*. Goodioai* i_____ Strom, Hall, Hamlin, Haacock, Horton, *i_ „„„ ™ ___ THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED S^Jitoom*,"' JMifston', ^Koivwdy*'*!?**^^ **’* calondor' yoor w I. P..VH -------- Oakland hv «, K^MItohaW^^^ '»«• J* £S'r'd’;f"«2'tto Oktonburg. Oagood, ^ Vp?,l'“ Irl* - Sewage DtspoHl DIs- ■ OMIwd and th municipality ot amount thereof, _ ___ _____ _ "P* correctod within ton (10) days attar ;”7-, "P* such notification, tha county Iraasurar or «v'hih»'county official charged wlth dis-borsamant to such municipality ot funds rgtarance made a part harp derived from the atata Mias tax levy MISC. 44M P’i.f.eo... -K. I „ “Pdar toe provltloils ot Act 107, Public By Mr. Osgood . WHEREAS Hid act authorizes a county Acts ot Michigan, 1*33, as amendad, and IN RE: CO^ENDING OAKLAND *!5*®*. disposal systems as raturnabla to such municipality pursuant COUNTY LEAGUES OF WOMEN VOT- defined in Ml FRANK F. WEBBER of Oakland, under tha provlstona of Acf submit to the board «, wwori ^ Osgood auppertod by Caw 185, Public Acts of Michigan, 1*57 as Oakland County a rasolutteni .U. _ .-u.,.., amendad, which li to dIspoH of nnlfary tor fha issuance of addfflonal I sewage originating In the area utolch has an amwnt nacasHry to provkta been designated by the County Board ot compIcW the prelect In which i Supervisors as tha MILFORD SEWAGE duties and obllgattona of tha b( [Dvmr. Wilcox DISPOSAL DISTRICT (htrelnafter soma- the municipality as •vnrMinn I IN RE: MEMORIAL FOR CLAUDE W. times rafarred to as tha "District"). forth in this contract ' OWEN 2. Tha sewage dIspoHl tyslem referred to such additional lss( M adopted, nwlorlty To tha Oakland County Board of Super- ti • RE: LEASE baseball, inl. To toe Oekland County Board ol Su Mr oiirman. Ladles ■•’8 Gentlem^ to so do ana cnargv lo lvuw; .t;’ ' 3. Right ot ingreu and agreu to site ■’*'<’2, over county-owned lend; named 4. Lean shall not be assigned I the Corporation ( , .BBrovro; __________t**® Corporation. id grounds to be ^7 Commission Expires: similar t^ ... /- ____Public, Oekland C< charge ' ' ' ■* Herbert Radunz ho being by me ii that they arc respectively _ may be cancelled by Lessee P,’’”'®"! •"! Secretary ot the Board _______________________ cancrtlitlw ^ *^'*i Improvements to be rtetenrilned IIHU I eeoue Ltssof Shell pay Lessee for seme; Indemnification of the County „ iobillty whatsoever arising '- m epproveo by'^’^o^r’’.'^ ^P wS, ' ^tfsrtory aV to form and contonts. |, J^^uctor„ to^^evejl N^.ary Pitollc, Oakland hard, Ramer, Rhinavault, Seelerlin, Slav- Moved by Levinson suivv. ens, H. Smith, W. Smith, Solberg, Tepp, toe resolution be adopted. Terry, Tiley, TInsmen, Turnei*, Valentina A sufficient malorlty I Walker, Webber, Wilcox, Woods, Yockey. therefor, the resolution wis i ____e has bean dasig- ai , ____ ....___ity Board of Supervisors times fully recognizei i MILFORD SEWAGE DISPOSAL the payments lo be (r is Board, pt WHEREAS the Southtield Besebell Inc., a non-pro corporation, has advised and in Ounadin, Florida. f agraad t by toa mun „ .... _____________________________________ .... ______________________bylft___________ former member of SYSTEM and shell consist of enlarge- pallty. In the manrter ipocHM in ura- ----- ■ “ — nenis, additions and Improvements of toe graph 7 ot this contract, shall ba bated reatment facilities substantially at IndF W»n the cost ol toe project. In lieu of iaa resio- cattd on Exhibit "A" attached hereto. Issuance of such additional bonds, ------- ------------------------Township 3. The county end the munlclpillty »"7 "•'“r "Wtltod may be Mread (^ lerd, Edward, Horton, Huhn, MISC. 4454 In Oakland County. , hereby approve toe estimate of cost ot "IS.®?!!!’*'’ *™* mumlelpallly to pro- ■ .......- Row- By Mr. Levinson He was a mambar of this (isard, hav- the System consisting of the Items set v™JJ# nacesHry tundt to complato the ..... ......... IN RE: SOUTH OAKLAND COUNTY Ing lorvad ct GfPvaland Township Su-torth In Exhibit "A" attached hereto, ■ hk, u u k tufficl*ht melofity having voted HEALTH CENTER - APPROVAL OF parvltor In 1*30, and sarvad on toa Coon- and tha esilmala of 50 years and up- "J? therefor, the resolution was adopted. **** ®®^* wards es the period ol^ usa'ulness tlwept Jf /-,.ju .k _.u_ ... u harebyptodge Its full falthjsnd PROGRAM, DESIGNATION OF AGENT t) ........ ............ FOR /MATCHING FUNDS, AUTH<7RI- Girls Clubs CommIttM. ....... ... ....... ........... Justlca g ZATION FOR DESIGN DRAWINGS WHEREAS tl Chairman, Ladles an .. ^ Auditors and bar of Ihi to Director have pre- Claude ________________________________ted a delallad Building thoH wh liitfitld, Oakland Program and preliminary protect coA t« to. filed a petition estimates ot *750,000.00 Jpr_ttw conrtruc- Grovtland Township and Krvad Said Mwaga dIspoHl fa hip Truttoa tor alx yHrs. after-----"-------‘— pmMant of the Brandon School act." JsJit^lSff!"^ 4. Attar tion of to execution of tl— —........ ne couniy and the municipality, t 5 shall taka tha following ataps; (a) Obtain final canatruction pla specifications tor the prolect pi 3 by the Engineers. WHEREAS the hW Lease, which Is etteched hereto at part ol toil resolullofi, pr— e authority Grounds end F 4 Erection, maintenance and operation-------------------------------- ot any buildings, etc. to ba the responsl-[ica^ attached hereto be allocated blllty ot Lessee, as well as removal from Oakland County Employees ff to becomej ii ! City OrdF.bi nioK ^ renwvlno same at end resolution__________ St cost to Lessee'^ ' * sufficient malorlty having voted •ssee to pay tor all utilities by therefor, toe resolution was adopted. *e^on?**™'infenence and opera- ,, ' buitolng, sole responsibility of ^p^RT OF BUILIF 'P;;„rR*^aS* issor has right of access lo main- .,'"05 AND GROUNDS COMMITTEE .rs hav? d lilies, roads, etc,, provided Lessor Counto Orel 'rHEREFOR^«*7r*^ESOLVEO '-•P'®* PPP Gentlemen: THEREFpRE BE .ITJESOLVED accordance With Section 4 of Rule ,„kJ*k—,. k. .1,—fui to P"p WHEREAS toe Drain Committee has ______ ________________ _______considered the m(...................................................... ... for Its um; lpproved*"^i?*to torm and**• txwn. n. n benefited properties. I'aif, arid 'cwi'ifruct to# project. “I*** * lw'^Hubb5l!'’R(rtfi ®B 'oark!' Itk', *Y»*^ '» ..w\Illfu.T"j£!S'!!L..Jlf!f'L-ir!!!l*P.'." raglalerad profeMlonal angina reviewed and approved by s ba and are hereby ap- Superviws^ firappnwa^ Also”at™saS *"® *"* municToefitv. fha rtsponsIbMItv • r. Murphy, Chairman « W'S^TtoV® SS Jptppr I Ra "iAtL'Z' 1tS‘'MU^'$l!iJSi SId'^^^lSln^d*Iln5*X^^^^^l^tHs ""’frSl? tX'*’to“tli!Tb5* jR.’s;Mns;^'Sct^^,5M':rTn*s.^K'I^ m«Steto;il™aSr St to? 'individual *|*1p"„'" ffP®„^'«®" 7®®®"- jparty ov^and umra toaraet. unless <« ^ 0^11''«i''lii.SI?rortaf?y:S ’ special agreemant betvuem tot board r*®lLJ'®L ®®7ff’" ™ «l*ch»hBe Into aald ...y ■ *"* mimicloeiltv. Tha rtsponsibllltv ?Ya|®7Y_iff a^ ®!®^"®!!. ** !?• I County of Mrving toa In I. m. 4)11 I voted of Oakland. State of Michigan, to-wit: a. Thar part of tha Northeast 'A, section 24, Town 3 North, Range * East, Water- ___________ ed Into ford Township, Oekland County, MicM- Agmeies e-m‘f*l2li*l in# of S Commence Likewlsi North, ato^ to to. ' W rage; '4 Section C| peretion, herelnetter referral ---- n epr- ,je West a dtp . - . Norto »• 64t'counfv Service Cenfer. l?..?®i*YT.'Y *""® *"* County iw. JAMES CLARKSON WILLIAM OUNCAN HERBERT SMITH WILLIAM SMITH LEONARD TERRY LEE B. VALENTINE loved by Potter supported by Reherd resolution be adored. ...... malorlty • 'CX ShTtS' ^SmTshill ^"b?"M)ltoS5 »il®et lKffn the'todlYldiir Uteri if 'to JW'S.'WK'!: "SSS ‘pTJS: SSr,JSS STSi, 'K iSaii'S, feS Si ES B s" iLsuryS-AS •usta *!?!.otoar ttwn toott daaignaied in para andJlie^mf^ *ln^*!ll?ifi3! to tolS ^ s!!3-r"Tha"Mm'y'ciIf" «'Zd S"*SilllCSS ba imaMry to ^ toa f paid, nSi"(s" ylart, commencing' September Cor-^r^^ol lX.OO I line pt County Center Drive nsld fence of II3.X feef, toence due EeW e central meinlefience end grounds 1.M) distance of 137.74 feet, toence doe South under the Auditors, we believe to ...k.. . of 1U.H feet to the point ef to be es^lally complimented be proud^ II Incinerator at . MISC. years. By " • having w IS odoptSd. ivkxis dasl(m.lkini of uwni. h.inn h.r.h^r maT me Hma da opprovgu py mis Boaro unwr imn rescinded.®^ ' of Supervisors. A form of bond rtsoluflon gruPffT •W"®®*-, „ I 3. That the Board of Auditors ba au- •“*"®r'*'!S. iMuaitcu of UUMO te • mit iff to?’ thorized lo proceed with design drawings "“"*7 *»nds was aijo approved at aald county "t®.. and specifications, allowing tor poulbtlL t tor future expansion. In accordance the By-Lews of this Beard. l"*!J"® ^7® o' AWI'ors be and g" hereby authorized to earmark the "" irn of S4*S,000.00 thg estimated amount ®" I the County's share ’df toe total prolect J “ " ................."o?» evelleble In toe County Building Fund. Mr. Chairman, on bteaif of the Wa: RE: acknowledgment TO tl TATE SENATOR SANDER LEVIN STATE REPRESENTATIVE JD SNYOiER> g*toruugh'slf' tolh bieloalverOakiand ii •rdmabMIvitian of ^ 1. The LesteE Mid prenffsOt for toe purpota Ing a .cYadit union businete *« lltpY Oakland County ■■— ..... ally agn... ---------------- ___ _____ ^ e toall be for a parted of ordered grounds Range M Eaat, Souttiflaid Township' Oak- forty (40) years, commencing with the terms of planning land Caunty, Mkhtaan, as recorded In date of this LetM upon tha payment of are e credit to ol. ________ ________ Ltoer *4, Page I of Fief a, Oakland County 11.00 In consWeretion thereof. forcei. To be eepecitlly noted Is Racorda. and J It •« agreed that the prellmmerT wot* around 'toe Court House end Audi- :"L-k"U','-'.:.-TT.-.' Lots m toito^ ISB, both Inclusive, plans and sketches for any buHdingv toriun), the Children's Village end toe ** !*!* '®®"®Y!"'®--®J*®i?j?®.-Ii.-"- ctoViS;,; 'cihi J» torwtei SStTtalh hsetuslve, ot Wood- structures or future eddltions or altera- Seuthcest portion of toe Service Cantor. m ih.y*.ffn3?^i?^!?t tends Park SubdIwIaJon ef Ihe West 'n tions of buildings, shall be aobmitted The buUdlng division df Central Mefto *" •?-;•?!??? tY?7, puncen, of toe Soutoeest mi^ VIHaga of Mllferd In ra^ to toa Batcher; Carey, Cate, Cherfirle,Thayi; Offrothn and rtnandng tf ri..k„ ,-uu. O^t. Oewan, 60- “JSuV??Ii®Sl jrWn, Edward, Foots, k .'"® ton, OurWn, 'rv«j. GoodiBMj ____ ••■v*M, %ll, HamiSJ/"haoegcHa norron, v"*- < R«pr«. Houghton. Hgdtoa Hufm. HurtftIL In- Svtifma hffl tealMl ffW>te«tMl iaObaantaiaa MtlmOto III HurtftIL In-idy# Ki^ri, miter. Levin- preperetf if M» ell .buiktings I other ^ c^nty-i Lteite, "ae r mttiriaew bitebefi dark lea' cwilw,'Providte, however',' r LrTTC^^uJT«LW^ iiat-^^^--------------------- I ern concepts calling . .-------s and schooling of pers a similar aiing units providing training Oakland County; - •el trav- NOW THERE FOI r mei^n^ utof ttffs Board ( ...--------------Jrwo m mn nmiwivs, lwutiv, LSSSirar, Levin- ' mnsiwrwi StgP.0M tak savtng to tha pbopla at son, Lkilty, ASacdonald, /Water, Mainland, Inc., rtgli -lakland County; Mastin, AAcAvoy, AAcKInley, AAelchart, "®er»- all of whi HOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED AAaoiles, AAercer, Mitchell, Nelson, O'Don- ®7 toe Board of F... — . ... X . Supervisors of the oghue, Oldanburg, Oagood, Fetnalts, Pe- WHEREAS tha Oakland Caunty Board dead haroby acknowl- tenon. Potter, Itosmn. Reherd, Renter, o' PuMIc Werfct an A^ ISi W4J, did_____ ®'3K^.v. «fi-N. .« bteter -tar; iSSHorZS^fr! hte s: s^®Y‘sirtor*^’^^ »gr-* 49orm 90 ceft^ence In Ceunty. ,(7»i ------ ^ —• *-----^ ^ i?uX..-trs rrMja.rw^nnaTng'is^^'a ^KStS StS'i I ofi S. Ltsaor grot a hitei dagrae W oompritnea bi Ceunty . _ u jte lft many and varied raapan- Mr. Cnmmwn, *• hw> ss-kJs: S!S«Sfti*r ___ ____. - - _____ ___, - jertf five wHtiln fKiwn OS) 4eyt efler beif>0 ak^ fiartein lorfha end wfll fist euN^ 1999 htrefty •dinoerf' terMo, Potter* ^ewera. Rehard* Remer* of PuMte Wodu on May 10^ INS* dM notified to do to by ttie boerd end within ^ ®wp^oHK®Y‘sisrtor^ 2i''r'ite\i!u*Tb:j."’p;^ ............"-'."ghSisusajg jrr-aS aragHra:v^ X7^5te?ih152^^ (Continued on following pa^e) r > euffi^ '7*|P7<'7 •**!?* tff ■ ' tharator, lha raaolutlon wat adopM. • Bpofd at Ps^'n Id Caiilract taB- to i j iOittHIMl THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCfOBER 27, 196^ Can Count on Us ... 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