THE PONTIAC 'PRESS VOL. lu — NO. j ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 >PAGES Home Edition Vitamin A Curbs Lung Cancer in Animal Tests TOKYO MV— Big doses of vitamin A can halt or prevent development of lung cancer in animals, a scientist reported today. He has found a way of inducing lung cancer — the same kind that humans get—in hamsters. But when he also feeds them vitamin A, ------------------- very few come down with MANILA (AP) - The U.S. commander in Viet Nana told the Manila today the' i 1966 Congress to Have Impact All Americans to Feel Effects of Legislation WASHINGTON (AP) - The 1966 session of the “Great Society’’ Congress Will have profound impact on all Americans — their hopes and fears, their pocketbooks, their way of life. A stepped-up war on poverty, billions more for the Viet Nam i war, sums to stake education at home, a boost in the minimum wage, auto safety, consumer protection, new remedies for ailing cities and public transportation, Steps to clean up the air and waters, to beautify highways — these are just a few of the problems Congress tackled. In Franklin D. Roosevelt’s day, the cliche was that the New. Deal affected people from cradle to grave. The Johnsonian Congress has expanded that, at least at one end. The second session of the 89th Congress, which adjourned Saturday, specifically authorized Sargent Sbriver, director of the war on poverty, to provide birth control devices upon request of a local community, and the [ women involved. j I On the other end, Congress cut the excise tox on hearses from 10 to 7 per cent — but don’t count on a cheaper funeral as a result. ‘TYPICAL’ FAMILY To explore the effect of the programs enacted or extended this year, lei’s take a “typical” family living in Beauville, a mythical Midwest city (pop. 15,-000). Some of the things the 1966 ' session did for, or to, this family: Dad — His take-home pay dropped by $2.40 a week on May 1, because the income tax withholding Went up from $20.80 to $23.20. w ★ - ★ However, if he has $15,000 in the bank or savings and loan, it Will now be fully in-' sured, as compared with the previous $10,000 limit. If he’s (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) In Today's Press Manila Confab Talks open as folksy mood prevails —r PAGE B*7. Florida Slayings No clues to killer of two - PAGE D-18. Modal-City , Plan Urban chief cites world potential — PAGE C-4. Area News .........A-4 Astrology .........C-8 Bridge ........... C-8 Crossword Puzzle D-9 Comics ,t.........!C4 Editorials ....... A4 Markets .......... D-2 Obituaries ........B-8 Sports ........ Theaters .:...... C-i TV-Radio Programs D-9 Wilson, Earl .., .D-» Women’s Pnges B-l—B-4 Bums toe leaders of nations fighting Communists in Viet Nam. " s last speak- lead-forcesare in bat- said troop mo- are the finest they understand and appreciate their role as both fighters’ The session in Which Westmoreland and. the President spoke wps closed to the public, but their remarks were given to newsmen later byJU.S. spokesmen. White House press secre- taryfiiHD: Moyers-gaveAhe........ account of Johnson’s remarks. Johnson summed up what he portrayed as the four main principles which had stood out in the talks of those leaders who spoke before him. He listed them as: • The determination of all that aggression must fail, , • Commitment to the job of pacification, • Our commitment to and our awareness of regional cooperation among Asian countries, and • Hie hope for reconcilation and a peaceful settlement. ----"‘W * ' ' It was then that he said unity and determination of the seven allies in Viet Nam should prove , to be “new fuel for the cause of peace” either through negotiations or a halt by the Communist aggression. Before Johnson spoke, Westmoreland was asked by one of the conferees if he would need lung tumors. His findings, he stressed, are by no means an invitation for cigarette smokers or people liv-- ing in air-polluted areas to start . gulping down vitamin A, or lots of carrots which are rich in the vitamin. Too much vitamin A can be harmful to humans.. Dr. Umberto Saffiotti, Italian born pathologist now at the Chicago Medical School, described his research at ppen-ing scientific sessions of toe Ninth International Cancer Congress. He amplified them in an interview. He turned up evidence that dust particles in the, air, or in cigarette smoke, can be the “carriers” to take cancer-causing chemicals into the lungs. * * ★ Using hamsters, he prepared inert dust particles to which were attached crystals of a potent cancer-caused benzpyrene. Benzpyrene is found to smoke or exhausts from industrial plants, automobiles, Coal furnaces, and also in cigarette smoke. He injected this material down the windpipes of hamsters, rather than let them breathe it in over a period of months or years. He could fol-■ low what happened because the benzpyrene fluoresces. The dust particles mostly became lodged In the walk of bronchioles and alveoli, or air sacs. Soon the benzpyrene dissolved and spread, through toe lungs. The chemical attacked the bronchial tissue^ from the inside, in a sneak backdoor'approach, avoiding the surface mucqsa or cilia that could have a sweeping-away action. Nor-mal cells began changing to PHnnornw folly----------_JL_---- Hamsters given dust only, without benzpyrene, did not get tumors. Looking for a way to prevent the cancers, Dr. Saffiotti gave some hamsters — already treated with combined dust — two 5,-000-unit feedings of vitamin A. Only one developed a tumor, compared with 30 per cent of a group of dusted mice not getting me vitamin. FIRST WORKING SESSION — This is a general view of the first working session of the seven-nation summit meeting to Manila’s Malacanang Palace. President Johnson is at the right with Secre- tary of State Dean Rusk at his side. Other representatives around table (from left) are from Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, the Philippines, South Viet Nam and Thailand. 'End Measles' Drive Called Big Success There was much wailing (yesterday as 35,000 Oakland County youngsters got toe needle in a tricounty "End Measles” campaign.____ Thirty-eight clinics operated in Oaklaiid County from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. to inoculate children over 1 year of age who had never had natural measles (seven-day roeasels) or a previous measles vaccination. Some of the centers were still open at 5 p.m. handling the overflow. “The doctors and nurses in Pontiac did a terrific job. The drive exceeded all of our expectations” said Dr. Bernard Berman, director of the Oak- land County Health Department and chairman of the program. Die campaign was organized by End Measles Detroit Inc., a nonprofit corporation chartered by the State of Michigan to promote and augment a mass inoculation funded by the state. ★ ★ ★ Yesterday’s campaign immunized more than 175,000 youngsters in the tricounty area including Oakland, Wayne and Macomb counties. The total response was so overwhelming that more vaccine was rushed in from Lansing. With the aid of REACT and RACES, amateur mobile radio operator groups, who handled the communications between Oakland County inoculation sites, vaccine was rushed from one center to another to meet specific demands. Measles, once thought to be a disease which gave one only red spots, is now known to cause serious complications including pneumonia, bronchitis, a n d varying degrees of brain damage. ★ ★ ★, The stogie-shot vaccine will give the recipient a simulated case of measles and provide full protection to those later exposed to virus Rubeola, more commonly called red or hard measles. CYCLICAL BASIS Dr. Berman pointed out that measles outbreaks occur on a cyclical basis and that the winter of 1966-67 has been viewed as a high-incidence period. ★ ★ Legislation was signed recently by Gov. Romney adding com-, mon measles to ther inoculation j for all children entering school after Jan. 1, 1967. ★ ★ ★ No follow-up to yesterday’s program is planned but measles vaccine can be obtained through private physicians or at health department clinics. —o.lifar “Bid you ever have a day when you can’t seem , ‘o anything wrong-staffed nearly 200 —;—: j"111 ■ y ■ ELECT L. HAKVIY LODOI. STATS Uther requirements woukF prohibit handlebars “that are more than 15 inches above the uppermost portion!, of the seat when depressed by the weight of the’ operator,” require a listing of the gross brake horse-. power of tiie vehicle on the title and registration certificates, and call for a horn pp, each cycle. Ke/ley Asks Age Minimum for Cyclists ' LANSING (AP) — Youngsters under 16 should not be allowed to drive motorcycles on Michigan highways, ' Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley said today. m a list of legislative proposals, Kelley also called for licensing a motorcyclist the same way an automobile driver is licensed and for courses in driver education that include motorcycle instruction. They were among 12 proposed changes in the law recommended by Kelley as the result of a study of the mounting death and accident toll involving cyclists on Michigan roads. In a letter to “several hundred interested individuals, agencies and organizations,” Kelley said he will,propose legr islation that would require licensing, road tests, driver education courses, dual brakes, mufflers “in good working order and in constant operation to prevent excessive or unusual noise and annoying smoke."Bid u* , * * ■* .- „■ Kelley conducted, a series of ■ hearings across the state with law enforcement officials, interested citizens and cyclists Jthemselves before- drafting the list of recommendations. NEAR TO THE RIGHT Another proposed law would change the present requirement that dycles ride as near to the right as possible “to provide that such person shall ride as near the center of the lane of traffic as is practicable. , n “According to the motorcycle drivers,”. Kelley said, “this would help prevent ac- more troops in Viet Nam. He replied that he would. But a top military informant explained later this need is due, at leas! in part,' to plans to put increasing emphasis on clearing* and holding areas of South Viet Nam for pacification and reconstruction. A stepup in what President Johnson calls this “other war” , to improve the living conditions of the South Vietnamese people and develop loyalty to the Saigon government is said to be a major concern of the seven allied governments meeting in Manila. Allied forces in South Viet Nain now total slightly more than one million men under arms, according to officials in Saigon, while the Communist armed strength is estimated at 284,000 men. The allied force includes 705,-000 South Vietnamese, 331,000 i Americans, 45,000 South Koreans, 4,500 Australians, 2,000 Filipinos, 150 New Zealanders and 150 from Thailand. Westmoreland said the ratio of men killed in battle is becoming more favorable to the allies, the number of enemy soldiers surrendering in battle has to- -creased, the,number of enemy casualties left on the battle field rather than carried off is rising, and the stream of refugees choosing government security over Viet Cong domination continues to grow. U.S. Asking Confab: Aid POWSwap MANILA (AP) - The United States is asking the Manila summit conference to make a bid for some agreement to swap prisoners with Communist North Viet Nam, it was learned today. The United States wants to include such a bid to the meeting’s ...filial statement, .to be signed at theTOidup tomorrowr Officials to Washington believe North Viet Nam is holding more than 100 Americans. North Viet Nam has spurned all attempts to talk about the American pilots it holds, even through a third party. The International Red Cross has tried without success to get Hanoi to allow Red Cross representatives to see the Americans held prisoner in tfteNorth. Although a hard liner toward negotiations with North Viet Nam, Premier Nguyen Cao Ky of South Viet Nam has shown a sympathetic attitude toward possible exchanges to free American fliers from Red captivity. The Saigon government has custody of most North Vietnamese captured to the ground fighting. CAPTIVE SAILORS The only North Vietnamese the Unjted States is known to hold are 19 sailors picked up in -international waters after their PT boats were sunk to action. Hanoi has paraded captured U.S. pilots through the streets of the capital to whip up public anger at American air raids. North Viet Nam has threatened a number at times to try them as war criminals 'U hut has not gone through with its threat. Agreement by the North Vietnamese to negotiate on the question of war prisoners could be a wedge for Wider talks on {he Viet Nam war itself. It might also open the way to freedom for other Americans captured by the Viet Cong to South Viet Nam. Fair and Warmer Is 2-Day Forecast The Pontiac area will be treated to a welcome serving of Indian summer as the weathcr-man predicts fair and warmer for tomorrow and Wednesday. Tonight’s low will range from 32 to 37 with tomorrow’s high in the60s. Prior to 8 a.m. tow downtown Pontiac, the low thermometer reading registered 38. By t p.wL sunshine warmed the merairy to 60. A—2 THE PONTIAC I’KKSfc MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 Sovtef Union, Reel Chinese Exchange Blasts MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Union accused Red China today of practicing “an absurd bar- S;s-style communism,” and ing described the Soviet ership as ‘‘a gang of rene-gftdes.” An article in the Soviet Communist party paper Pravda attacked Chinese —Communist Chairman Mao Tse-tung’s “cultural revolution.”' ■ ■' v.. It asserted real communism nas nothing to do with the type of activities undertaken in Chi-na’s purge, which jt described as: “The destruction of monuments' of ancient civilization, the destruction of masterpieces of world culture, the manhandling of workers and progressive intellectuals, the defamation of Communist party organizations, the implantation of the Mao Tse-tung personality cult.” The trouble, Pravda said, was that 1 “petty bourgeois revolutionaries” had distorted the sit- I'll Fight to the End —O'Brien LANSING (AP)— State, Sen. Bernard F. O’Brien Jr. promises to fight his conviction on a charge of engaging in obscene conduct “just as far as I have to go.” ★ ★ ★ -The 31-year-old Detroit Democrat was convicted Saturday of “being a disorderly person by nation in China because of pressure created by a massive peasant population. The Chinese attack against tte Soviet Union was contained in an article in the Peking People’s Daily which criticized the ‘IJ.S.S.R. for expelling Chinese students^ Moscow ordered the ouster of the Chinese students Oct. 7, claiming it was in retaliation for the expulsion of Soviet students from China in September. “Hie expulsion of the Chinese students is a new high in the Soviet anti-China»fide and a present to please U S. imperialism,” the People’s Daily article said. The article was broadcast by Peking’s New China News Agency. \ “The score will rhave to be settled one day,” said the article. “They will be made to pay for their unprincipled evil-•doing.” Chinese Red Guards demon- strated Sunday night outside the Soviet Embassy in Peking, the Soviet news agency Tass reported. The Red Guards — the muscle behind the cultural revolution — -pasted a huge slogan across the street from the embassy saying: “We strongly protest against the expulsion by Soviet revisionist authorities of Chinese students who were studying in the Soviet Union,” Tass said. Birmingham Area News , . . •• ■ - ■ ' •■’(- - ’ Traffic Diverter Will Face Commission BIRMINGHAM — The City Commission tonight wifi be asked to consider a traffic diverter island on the west side of Adams at Mohegan. The administration has recommended against such a diverter, according to Assistant City Manager Johi Saefke. 3 Nations' Chiefs Urge Bomb Halt, Troop Pullout NEW DELHI, India (AP)^ The government chiefs of India Yugoslavia and the United Arab Republic called today for an immediate halt to the American bombing of North Viet Nam and the withdrawal of. all foreign forces from Viet Nam. In their closing communique, the leaders of the three non-aligned countries also said participation of the Communist Viet uiouiuci iv uoiauu uy A • . .. in obscene conduct in|Con8 ® •Wp*" talks was a public place.” ★ ★ Lansing Township Justice George J. Hotter gave O’Brien the maximum sentence, 90 days in jail and a $100 fine, but suspended 80 of the 90 days. O’Brien was released on $000 bond pending his appeal to Ingham County Circuit Court. The jury reached its verdict after more than seven hours of deliberations, which began Friday. ‘NOT A FAIR TRIAL* O’Brien said he was surprised at the verdict and claimed the trial bad not been fair. He was certain his conviction would be overturned on appeal, he said. The prosecution contended O’Brien accosted Marion Lu-kens, 22, a Michigan State University coed from Santa Ana., Gefif^vn file MSU campuslday 27 and asked her to agree to be photographed during sexual intercourse with movie stars. * ★ * JD’Brien produced six alibi witnesses who said they saw or telephoned him at the Stale Capitol Building, about four miles frSm the campus, at the time Miss Lukens alleged he was with her. Four girls besides Miss Lukens testified O’Brien had also accosted them and tiwee said he made similar proposals, ‘INSURANCE LOBBY* O’Brien, chairman of the Senate Insurance Committee, maintained during and after the trial that false charges against him had been engineered by “the insurance lobby.” , O’Brien’s wife, Mary Louise, burst Into tears momentarily as jury foreman Betty Jane Riley announced the verdict. O’Brien showed little emotion. ★ ★ * The O’Brien’s have four children and are expecting a fifth. essential for the talks to be suc- The communique was issued by Indian Prime Minister In- Senior Citizen Units to Fete Rep. Farn ’ Congressman Billie S. Fa: num will be honored at a luncheon tomorrow by senior citizen organizations in his district. dira Gandhi and Presidents Tito and Gama] Abden Nasser ~ after four days of talks. They said they are convinced the implementation of the 1954 Geneva agreements and thd withdrawal of all foreign forces would lead to peace. ri Crew Flees Fiery Ship; 7 Missing MORGAN CITY, La. (AP) Flames raged out of control through an oil 'and gasoline-loaded tanker 60 miles southwest of here today, forcing the crew to abandon ship. The Coast Guard said seven of the 40 Newsmen asked Nasser if the1 crewmen are missing, communique’s request for the! The Gulf Stag, a 572-foot ves-withdrawalof all foreign forces sel, was settling and believed meant the withdrawal of North "Staking at midmorning. Vietnamese forces from the south and non-Vietnamese Communist forces from North Viet Nam. deny Forces in south ‘The North Vietnamese say they do not have any forces in the south. It is not clear to us if they do,” Nasser replied. Tito, asked about reports that President Johnson had sent a note to New Delhi in connection with the opening of the Manila conference, said: “This meeting has nothing fit common with the Manila conference." Tfie 19th District representative will be presented [award “for his leading role in the fight for Medicare, in-creasesls Social Security benefits and the Older Americans Act.” The sponsoring committee said Farnum “has always recognized the dire needs of older citizens end has voted for the important legislation to meet those needs.” The luncheon will be held In the CAI Building, 5640 Williams Lake, Waterford Township. ★ Sr- it Members of the sponsoring committee include Mrs. Eva Ross McCarthy, member of the Oakland County Senior Citizens [Advisory Council; Marie Aid-'rich, secretary of the Pioneer Golden Age Club of Farming-ton; and George Cherry, program coordinator for senior citizens activities, OCCEO. ★ * ★ Others are Kenneth D. Conley, director of senior citizens ac-tivities In Nbrthvill'e; and Charles Kokotek, Pontiac area secretary for the National Council of Senior Citizens. Store Boycott Spread Is Seen Area Woman Tells of Food Price Cdmpajgn A Keego Harbor woman who is spearheading a local drive to lower food prices said today that she expects the campaign to spread throughout Oakland County. “I’ve already received a number of letters from women wanting to know more about what we’re doing,” said Mrs. Joseph Szeremet, 758 Otter. On Saturday, Mrs. Szeremet led a Score of pickets protesting high food prices at a new A&p supermarket in Keego Harbor. "We’U resume next weekend at the store, and possibly oth-rs,” she said. Mrs. Szeremet, whose group is known as “Housewives for Lower Food Prices,” said she beOeyed that the picketing of the store was effective. The boycott 'was one of several that has sprung up across the country since the movement Another tanker, file Atlantic Prestige, picked up thq Gulf Stag’s captain and many of the crewmen. The Gulf Stag’s master, whose name was not available, said he believed all his crewmen had abandoned ship. He said seven crewmen are missing. Coast Guard Helicopter ~ took three badly-burned crewmen to a Morgan City hospital. A doctor at the hospital said the trio suffered second-degree burns. The hospital identified the injured crewmen as Paul Berry, Wilton Guthrie and Jesse Jef-j frier. Their home towns were not available. Coast Guard planes, helicopters and cutters converged on the scene after the Gulf Stag sent out an SOS, reporting a fire blazing fiercely in its engine room and pump room. Rescue ships were (weed to keep their distance by the dan-of an explosion. The Gulf Stag reportedly carried 163,000 barrels of gasoline and intermediates. Smoke and flames poured from the stricken vessel, The fire reportedly was feeding off bunker oil. Fire-fighting attempts were abandoned by 8:30 a.m. The Coast Guard declared the area around the burning ship a Lull in War ContinuesJn S. Viet Nam If tee commission decides a diverter is needed, he said, the administration suggests a A date for a public hearing will have to be set if the. commission decides on a permanent island. Hie traffic diverter island wotild consist of reconstruction of the Adams pavement at Mohegan to form a lane for southbound Adams traffic to turn west at Mohegan; a lane for eastbound Mohegan traffic to turn south at Adams; and triangular-shaped traffic diverter island located between the two tarn lanes and the Adams pavement. THROUGH TRAFFIC Such an island would prevent east-west through traffic, left turns from northbound Adams to Mohegan and left tarns from eastbound Mohegan to northbound Adams. SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Small-stale fighting flared Monday in scattered sections of South Viet Nam, but the war for the most part continued in a lull. Thunderstorms of the northeast monsoon again cut m .... heavily into U.S. air blows ne engineering department (against North Viet Nam. P,ans ta*e a s“r,vey of resi-.... . . ' . dents in the Oakland area, AUhoughi a general upsurge m, Woodward to Hunter, to Communist mili ary ^y fdetemilne if a refief sewer is and terrorism failed to develop to coincide with the opening of the Manila summit conference, a civilian bus hit a Viet Cong mine 22 miles north of Hue, killing 15 Vietnamese and injuring BACK IN COURT — Samuel H. Sheppard walks toward the Cuyahoga County Criminal Court Building this morning for the first day of his murder trial. Sheppard was convicted 12 years ago hr the slaying of his first wife,. Marilyn, but was releated on bond in 1964 on a U.S. District Court ruling later upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. He is being tried again, this time for second-degree murder. Lawyer Hints That Dr. Sam May Not Take the Stand CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -Samuel H. Sheppard’s lawyer hinted today that the former osteopath may [not take the witness stand at his murder retrial, or even offer any evidence. Sheppard, 42, is being retried by a U.S. Supreme Court mandate after serving nine years in prison for the 1954 slaying of his wife, Marilyn. restricted zone and warned aircraft not to fly ldWer than 2, feet in-4he vicinity because of the danger of an explosion. 75 Die, 55 Injured in Belgian Blast MALINES, Belgium (UPI) -A huge explosion ripped through a munitions factory and dam-aged several nearby homes today. Officials said 15 persons were killed and at least 55 injured. Rescum plunged into the smoking debris and pulled out Sheppard came to the second-floor courtroom shortly before 9 a.m. looking relaxed. The defense had sought in vain, to have his new trial transferred out of Cleveland. However, Talty directed that the case proceed to the extent of determining whether an impartial jury can be selected here. it a it A panel of 15 women and nine needed before paving Oakland. A slight increase in load will be placed on the sewer system when Oakland is widened and the department wants residents to report any flooding of their basement caused by an over-. loaded city sewer. The Viet Cong made mortar (tacks on four South Vietnam-1 ese outposts in the central highlands Sunday and two on American positions in the northern iroviitces today. In one shelling, the Reds fired 30 to 40 mortar rounds against the command postof the U.S. 7th Marine Regiment about two I miles south of the demilitarized zone. RETURN FIRE The Leathernecks replied with counter-mortar fire, and a 7th Fleet destroyer fired 100 rounds of five-inch shells. Marine casualties were reported light; results of the counterfire were not (announced, A unit of the U.S. 173rd Airborne Brigade received 15 rounds of Communist mortar fire eight miles northwest ef Da Nang airfield. A U.S. spokesman said file paratroopers had light casualties. U.S. troops reported killing! ^ poUn(js arg on their way out, 100 Communist soldiers in small and ^ ajr Space jn the top of 1966 Congress to Have Impact (Continued From Page One) thinking of buying a new car in 1968, he' can expect it to be more “crashworthy.” • Meantime, the manufacturers’ excise tax bn new autos has gone up from 6 to 7 per cent) and the tax on phone calls from 3 to 10 per cent. As for recreation, if dad is a sports fan, he can look .forward to seeing more pro football games. Mom —* Hie supermarket labyrinth will be a little easier to figure oat, though dot right away. Labels will be easier to read, giant half-quarts and jum- unit clashes in scattered areas ... _______ - » - . j Sunday and today. One compa- -When—the first prospective marwas-sumineneriof exami-CT^^ y ^ 1st infantry Divi- juror was summoned at the opening of the trial today, defense attorney F. tee Bailey asked: “If the defendant did hot testify would you feel that was any indication that he had something to hide?” REPLIES IN NEGATIVE When the prospective juror Alan Severs, replied in the neg-ative, Bailey asked:-----~t “If at the end of the state’s case, the defense says nothing and presents nothing would this indicate to you that he had something to hide?” ___ The Weather I to lower prices ^started in Den-many of the injured and five j verj Colo., more than a week {bodies. Another 10 bodies were ago. I believed still in the wreckage. nation. Sheppard half rose ai bowed in their direction when Talty introduced him along with the opposing lawyers. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny tonight and tomorrow. Warmer tomorrow. Lows tonight 32 to 37. Westerly winds 8 to 18 miles today and 4 to 12 tonight, Wednesday’s outlook: Fair and warmer. Precipitation probabilities tonight and tomorrow near zero. Tttfay The prospects heard a reading <4 the second-degree murder indictment which charges that cm July 4,1954, Sheppard, then a practicing osteopath, “unlawfully, purposely and maliciously killedMarilyn Sheppard.'' ‘NO PREMEDITATION* The indictment does not include the element of premeditation as it did in the first trial, when Sheppard could have been sentenced to % electric chair. “No,” replied Severs, 38, a| The defendant was convicted bachelor who works for a firm by the original jury of second-manufacturing truck equip-'degree murder and under the ment. (Supreme Court ruling any fur- ther first-degree prosecution Severs -was temporarily seated as a juror by Common Pleas Judge Francis J. Talty, despite Bailey’s objection that the panel member had been subjected to “general exposure” to the case through news media. was outlawed. By chance, Severs, the first prospect to be examined, once worked for the late Thomas Reese, who was the father of Marilyn Sheppard. sion killed 17 Viet Cong in sampans in four separate firefights Sunday night. The fighting took place seven milefe north of Saigon. - i A U.S. spokesman said American casualties were light in all the actions. 51 MISSIONS UlS. airmen flew only 51 bombing missions over North Viet Nam Sunday, one of their smallest days this year, spokesman said the raids were limited by the monsoon rains, which also reduced the allied tactical air strikes in South Viet Nam. Pilots reported 28 cargo barges and junks destroyed or damaged in the North and two bridges knocked out in the Dien Wen Phu area near the Laotian frontier. U.S. B52 bpmbers struck just before midnight at suspected Communist troop concentrations and supply areas 18 miles southwest of Hue,. the package seems likely to diminish, M Mom can hope for a better education for Nancy, and for the grandchildren, if any, in view of $6i billion in aid to. elementary. and secondary schools and $3.9 billion for colleges; if she goes touring she will be able to see more pqrks; if the family takes a cruise, it will be better able to Ovoid a fire-trap ship. Operators of foreignliners must advertise whether they meet safety standards. ★ ★ ★ If mom and dad are interested in a painless way to finance presidential campaigns, they can check a box (Hi their joint income tax return and $2 will go into a kitty for the purpose. Grieving Welsh Parents Disturb Inquest ADPbPiv nr.l._ flu__i__>_<_* >» ■ ,, . .... . H ABERFAN, Wales (AP) —I mothers and fathers by saying: Shouting “They killed our chil*'“I know your grief is such that NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain and showers are in sight, says the Weather Bureau, for the north Pacific and south Atlantic coasts tonight. Hie rest of the nation will be clear to parity cloudy. A REAL ‘PAPER DOLL’—Paper spots glued on clear vinyl over a pair of red bikini panties quality this dress worn by model Peggy Moffitt as a paper dress. She's talking with designer fiudy Gernreich, who escorted Miss Moffitt to a paper dress ball in Hartford, Conn., last night. More than 150 paper gowns were worn to the affair, and reportedly most of them held up to the test of fragging, etc. (See story, pageC-9). ; dren!” bereaved parents brought uproar today to quest for young victims of the coal slag slide that buried Aber-fan’s village school. A man whose wife and twb sons were killed in Friday’s ‘black glacier” told the coroner to record a verdict of “buried alive by the National Coa] Board." ★ ★ ★ The board, which runs Britain’s state-owned mines, has been accused of neglect in allowing file gilnt slag heap to grow to the point where it col-psed. , To date,, 143 bodies have been recovered, all but 17 of them children. 60 PARENTS PRESENT Sixty parents were present at| the inquest for the first 34 victims identified. In the uproar, women called out: “They killed our children.” \. Coroner Benjamin Hamilton tried to calm the distraught you may not realize what you are saying." it He reminded the parents “an inquiry will be held at a later date when you will be able to voice your grievances.” One father, his face twisted in sorrow, replied: “We had an inquiry on Friday night when we stood and saw our children murdered."IH least 17 children were still missing, It was believed they werei ? swept away by the avalanche of mud and rock. STILL INSIDE Police said, 35 persons were $ believed still inside the crushed j| houses. Some of these were children, too. ★ ★ * Prayers for the dead and bereaved were said Sunday churches throughout Britain. In Rome, Pope Paul VI asked pilgrims in St. Peter’s Square to pray for Aberfan and said: “It is a disaster which fills one’s heart with tenderness and grief.” scended on the village school Friday from ^ the man-made mountain of coal mine refuse. ★ “ ★. ★ -■ ■ ■ - » Hundreds of miners and volunteers struggled on through the night, shoveling away millions of tons of waste from the school and 16 nearby houses. The school was cleared, but at SOON AS POSSIBLE Under British law, inquests on Ml violent deaths are held as soon as possible after the event. Officials estimated tHat more than 50 others were still under the waste and Mime that de- -In Aberfan, one little girl ar-rivet for Sunday school but there were no other children for toe class. All were dead. Hie village’s Baptist minister, the Rev. Kenneth Haye, conducted his morning service a few hours after finding the crashed body of Ms 10-year-old son. in the mass of blackened rabble. Parts of the Bible have been translated.into 1,151 languages, according to (he Encyclopaedia Britannica. Deputy Aid I to Polecat[ in Distress I An pakland County | sheriff’s deputy declined | tq play “William Tell” I yesterday, but succeeded in (saving the life of a suffocating skunk. Deputy Gerald Reeves was called to a Pontiac Township residence about 10 a.m. where a skunk had reportedly gotten his head stuck inside a baby-food bottle. Hairy Huey of 3265 Pontiac asked Reeves if Reeves couldn’t shoot the bottle off the trapped animal’s head without killing the «famk- Reeves decided against taking a chance, Instead, he used a long pole to gently shatter the glass. ♦ * ★ . The skunk, nearly unconscious, lay still for ft few minutes, then got up and ran off, Reeves said. T THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 Mbi Syria Blamed irv Mine Raids Rqmney's Optimism Growing UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — Israel blamed Syria today for two more mine-laying raids into her territory and said they proved the need for preventive action by toe U.N. Security Council. "r-rr-, r Israeli Ambassador Michael S. Comay wrote a letter on the incidents to Lord Caradon of Britain, the current president oi the council who was planning another council meeting Tues< day on Israeli charges against Syria made Oct. 12. Comay’s letter said an army vehicle in northeastern Israel teas damaged Sunday by a mine laid opposite toe Syrian military Position rtf Tel Azaziyat and only three yards from another land-mine explosion reported last Tuesday. He said there had been four ‘mine-laying outrages at this same spot in less jtoan sever weeks” at distances of 600 to 900 yards from toe Syrian position BORDER PATROLS _ The Beirut, Lebanon, papa* A1 Moharrer reported today that Israeli and Jordanian border patrols are cooperating to capture Arab guerrillas responsible for raids into Israel. There was no confirmation of the report. Three guerrillas were killed recently by Jordanian soldiers, and 15 others were arrested, the paper said, quoting a “reliable source.” By the Associated Press Gov. George Romney said today “As we near toe final stages of this campaign, I am more and more optimistic about the final results.” Romney, running against Democrat Zolton Ferency for election as governor, today be-; gan what hte aides called toe “stretch drive” of his campaign. After riding with commuters n a train from Bloomfield Hills to Detroit and speaking to Girl Scout convention in Detroit, the governor planned to spend the afternoon in his Lansing office. Ferency, who has concentrated his campaign among union members and other usually Democratic audiences, scheduled a 12-hour series of campaign visits to city workers and Detroit residents today. TLEAR CHOICE’ The Detroit Free Press today supported Romney for election to a third term as governor, describing him as “the clear choice” over Ferency. The newspaper said Ferency is “the most articulate of all toe mafor candidates” and is’ toe wittiest. But it said he has ‘‘three strikes against him and, in this ball game, that’s out.” The “strikes,” the Free Press 'Said, are that Ferency has " unable to generate any debate over issues, “simply because there aren’t any genuine issues in toe gubernatorial campaign,’’ he has a temperament which “leads him into hasty decisions,” and Romney “has indeed been an excellent governor, one of the best.” OPEN, SCHEDULE Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., aiming for votes from both normally Republican and Democratic sources, planned to Paper Will fold DETROIT (AP) — Only one locally published Negro newspaper will be left in Detroit, as toe result of purchase of the Detroit Courier by Sengstacke Publications of Pittsburgh. Seng-stacke, publisher of the Michigan Chronicle, toe other Detroit Negro paper, said Saturday toe Courier either would be discontinued or run as an edition of the chain’s national publication. SI N US Sufferers Hare'. good mw» lor youl Exdudvo now “hard eon’ SWA-i CLEAR Oocongwhmt tablots ad inttanHy and continuously to drain and dtar «fl naral-dnm cavi«.u On* “hard eon’ tablat givn up to 8 ham ralltf from pain and pmaura of angntion. Process Eyed CLEVELAND (UPI) - U.S. and Canadian steel producers are taking close looks at a British process which eliminates the need for steelmaking furnaces, Steel magazine reported today. Molten metal from a blast furnace is directly converted into finished steel in toe process. The spray steelmaking process is said to offer truly continuous processing, resulting in higher production rates and lower handling costs; substantially lower capital costs through elimination of huge furnace facilities; reduction in heat losses because it is a one-step process, and longer refractory life. The process, developed by toe British Iron and Steel Research Assn., has been tested since May at a pilot plant at Millom —Hematite Ore and Iron Cq., Millom, Cumberland, England. , Steel said Millom has been processing metal at a rate of about 24 tons an hour. It planned to have a capacity of 3,000 tons a week by toe end of 1968, and 9,000 tons in the 1970s. A continuous casting plant is to be built next to the blast furnace building and the two processes will be integrated.' | ftII This Week at Simms! IwemiMio^D ' When Your Doctor Advises Yoti To Get A Hearing Aid... ui’t fail to investigate adioear! Great strideain oto-rgery have made it possible for ouaande gLjtorloQi to hear ain. But wtuK about thooe who ffer from aensori-neural loaa true deafness) and Cannot be ilped by medical or surgical Mtment? Fortunately, many of em eon be helped by a hearing y if you suffer from nerve deaf-iaa, don’t fail to investigata idioear hearing aids. Aa your cal Radioear Counsellor, we >ve a full Una of quality atrthe-r, eyeglass and conventional itnimente. For more than 40 ars Radioear hearing aida have on designed to make people «ur better! And the latest tech- nee have made poasibk 5 for many of those with nerve fnees. For more information ut naaioear, pounu « or fill in the handy coupon RADIOEARV — 1105 Pontiie State task Bldg. 7 S. Saginaw Pontiac, PI 9-072R, w Yes! Send me more information about Radioear's quality heaflnc aids. You con buy SYNA-CLEAR at your favorito dive a nead far a prescription. Satisfaction faarantaad by a Try H today. INTRODUCTORY OFFER WORTH $1.50 SIMMS - 98 N. Saginaw - Drug Dept. visit plant workers in Pontiac and Rochester today besides speaking tonight at a dinner in his honor in Rontiac. Former Gov. G. Mennen Williams left his schedule opkn today after campaigning part of the weekend with Stewart L. Udell, secretary of toe interior. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Si. Aimouricing The Fact That lf YOU Bay A CAMERA, RADIO or RECORDER How, the fiuaranfee Starts Jan. 1st, 1967 at SIMMS... Buy your Christmcr gift now and the guarantee won't start 'til Jan. 1st, 1967 and you also have gift exchange privilege 'til Jan. 4, 1967. All specials for today, Tuesday and Wednesday. CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS Friends and Neighbors, You Can Shop Late SllMS 10.. TUES. & WEDS. STORE HOURS: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Simms Bro$'-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Boycotts going on all around the country over the increasing higher prices you're reading about it every day—food boycotts are spreading all over and retailers ara being fqpced to bring prices down because people are tired of paying higher and higher prices on everyday necessities.______' 7-„'.' "■ ■ SIMMS Again Takes thq Lead in Holding' Prices Down-Why? Because we sincerely feel that the public deserves to gain any savings we make. And we make our savings because,w# own our building —no high rent to pay, we don't have fancy fixtures and interior which add to the upkeep costs, we don't nave swivel chair executives —ours work on the floor, and our buying power makes us selective, we won't take a price increase by passing it on to you ... we battle our suppliers to sell us quantities.at the lowest price in order to maintain our low selling price to the public. Try us every day and see w.hat we mean when we say ‘Simm? Buys For Less, Simms Sells For Less'. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Complete WATCH OVERHAUL With PARTS and LABOR at this price... your watch will be ’disassembled, cleaned and oiled, — adjusted and timed electron!- , _ colly, genuine factory parts used and you get full year guarantee on labor. Parts Include stems, crown, mainspring or balance staff at this price "Badly rusted watches, automatics, chronos and broken crystals at small extra cost.----- OVERHAUL AND WATCH CLEANING Only . . . 5.95 NNorth ............. ‘ .............. tsfinsw SIMMS.,{5f» Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Another SIMMS FREE Public Service For Families With Men And Women In The Armed Forces -Today Through Thursday, YOU Can Tape Record A *Living Letter* To Your Men And Women In The Service At Simms ABSOLUTELY FREE Today 'til 9 p.m., Tuesday and Wednesday 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Thursday 9 ami. to 8:30 p.m., you and your family can come to SIMMS-and Tape Record a 'Living Letter' for Christmas to ybur seryicemeri. SIMMS and the AWiA Tape Recorder company ore providing a free, roll of tape and the use of famous 'AIWA* recorders to enable you to send a voice recording anywhere to your serviceman (all you do. is mall the tape.) Just come -into Simms Camera Dept, and tell us you want to send a recording to your serviceman. And you'll be instructed how to do so in complete privacy here at Simms. (Helpful hint! prepare some notes on what you wish to say). The tape is approximately 10 minutes of time, so plan 16 allocate the necessary time for each member of your family. Imagine the thrill vour serviceman will aetwhen he hears the family talking to him on tape—incidentally he'll more than likely have access to a tape recorder no matter where he's stationed. So come in this Week and make a 'Living Letter' to your serviceman. Minors must be accompanied by an adult, Please, 1 per family. XT SIMMS..?* Colorful floral quilted bedspread* or bright solid colors. All American mode but very slight irregulars, won't effect weor* ing quality. . —Basement Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac A.?—4 THIS PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 Novi Board Awards 3 School Contracts NOVI—Three contracts total-jfor an addition and alterations lng $479,645 were awarded last'to the high school building. week by the board of education Holly School Contract OK'd Board and AFSCME Reach an Agreement HOLLY — Final terms of an agreement between the board of education and Local 92 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes were agreed, to following a nine-hour bargaining session Friday. * * ★ ' Members of the union, which ' represents custodians, bus drivers and cafeteria workers, will meet this week to ratify the new contract, according to union President Donald Lucas. Schools Supt Russell D. Haddon said that the board will ratify the contract after the union has done so. The main items of contention in the contract were union security and longevity. Negotiations brought about what Haddon Iterated a “modified” and Lucas termed a “weak” union security clause. Lucas said the union did not get a longevity clause. ★ ★ * After seven months of negotiations, a mediator from the National Labor Relations Board was called in Friday to break the impasse on the noncash items. The general construction contract went to D. M. Kitchen Co. for a base bid of $308,500 plus an alternate of $3,200. The mechanical contract was a warded to Brady Plumbing and Heating Co, for flit,-WO pins an alternate of $4,MS. Gillis Electric Inc. received the electrical contract in the amount of $43,445 plus an alternate of $1,500. Two other alternates accepted by die board were a folding partition in the gymnasium for $16,-) and a football field and track for $62,150. THREE TABLED Three other alternates were tabled far further stedy. They were a precast canopy for $11,* 700, bleachers for $11,400 and a fence for $9,100. Built-in equipment bids were also accepted lor the science room at $17,496, the drafting room for $3,267 and music room for $5,514. The work is to get under way in about two weeks, according to Schools Supt. Thomas Dale, with completion expected in August 1967. Completion of the addition will allow the district to conduct a K-12 program. The present K-10 program will expand to include the 11th grade next year and 12th grade the following year. Eleventh and 12th graders presently attend Northville schools. Hie building now houses 400 students. When the addition is completed, 750 students can be accommodated. Traffic Toll Is 15 -_.f..'___. .;v4vf: U- for the Weekend Old Lake Orion Depot Cut In Two For ,'Moving Will Become Barn i Depot on New Track LAKE ORION — An Orion Township farmer has wtfat he thinks will be a good sturdy ham to house machinery and feed for livestock. Earl McCollum, 465 Crediton, Orion Township, is die new owner of the Lake Orion train Depot. For file sum of $1 plus movhig costs, which he says will probably amount to $1,006, he’s purchased the old New York Central {NYC) depot, which sat just off M24 near Flint Street. About a year and a half ago, village officials asked the NYC to remove the building because it was an eyesore. The depot had not been used since the company discontinued its Detroit-Bay City passenger run mare than two years ago. BUILT EARLY IN CENTURY NYC public relations people say the depot originally was built by the Michigan Central Railroad which early in this century was taken over by the NYC. McCollum says signatures on the wall near the old freight scales date back to 1900. In order to make the move, the old building had to be cut in’ two pieces. ★ ★ ★' f McCullum says he’ll nail them back together again and you’ll never be able to tell the difference. By the Associated Press A rash of traffic accidents late* Saturday and early Sunday brought the Michigan weekend traffic death toll to 15. • ‘f ; * . ■ The victims were: Mrs. Dianna Florian, 23, of Detroit when the' car in which she was a passenger ran off. ? road Sunday and rolled over three miles northwest of Ousted. Jeffrey L. Peapples, 8, of Northville when he was struck by wear Sunday on a road near Northville. it" * * James B. Reynolds, 45, of Dearborn after he apparently fell asleep and his car veered off a road and hit a tree Sunday in Melvindale. COLLISION John Christy, 55, of Stanton in a two-car collision Saturday night on M66 near Stanton in Montcalm County. Randall R. Klumpp, 40, of Mount Pleasant, when his auto struck the rear end of a car Saturday night on M20 seven miles west of Mount Pleasant. Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Stuart, 50, of Detroit in a two-car col-lsion on Metropolitan Beach Parkway in Macomb County’s Clinton Township Saturday. Florence H. Voss, 40, and Thomas W. Jenkins, 24, both of Grand Rapids, when the autos U.S. Sewer Grant OK Awaited A strike vote had been passed by the union last week. Commerce Board Okays IV Setup COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - The Township Board has cleared the way for a new television station, WXON, to be built at Decker and 14 Mile. A. E. Johnson, 4861 Shoreline, Waterford Township, owner of the station, said he must whit for approval from the Federal Aeronautics Ad-lhinufiaUbn~to|niruinfire^ 850-foot tower. He said the UHF station, Channel 62, will carry a general type of programming aimed at a younger audience group. A AlUssrsJ D~~*~Jwork m a federal appfica- /VUITOra rOSTOmon for a proposed $4.4-miIlion I sewer system has been complet- Joins the Staff ed a”dallctt>’oWcial'1 c“ qt,Sf. Paul's ROCHESTER — Rev. Howard F. Short of Milford has been appointed associate minister at St. Paul’s Methodist Church effective Nov. 1. His appointment was announced this week by Rev. Wit 11am Rickard, district superintendent of Port Huron District of the Methodist Church. A graduate of Michigan State University and Boston Ideological School, Rev. Siort was ordained to 1957 and has served churches in Genesee as well as Milford. Previous to his ordination the new pastor served several years personnel manager for large insurance firm. Rev. Short will join a staff presently composed of Rev. J. Douglas Parker and Rev. A. P. Rickard, minister emeritus. He, his wife and two children will live at 417 Paricdale. do is sit and wait City Manager Royce Downey was in Chicago last week completing necessary paper work with the Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Administration. He said everything is submitted so that HUD can now proceed to obtain a $1,117,000 federal grant to cover a portion of Walled Lake’s cost of a joint sewer system with file village of Novi. The two communities are considering a joint sewage treats ment plant, a trunk line sewej-and an internal sanitary sewer system. Of the total project cost of $4.4 million, Walled Lake’s Baked Ham Dinner Set LAKE ORION - The Reorganized Church of Latter Day Saints will sponsor a family-style baked ham dinner from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday at the church. Proceeds will go to the building fund. Lions Will Host Halloween Party The Auburn Heights Lions Chib will host its 19th annual Halloween party next Monday for the area. A parade starting at 7:30 will be judged for best costumes, party will follow at Auburn Heights Elementary School. A community dance will begin at the American Legion Hall once activities at the school have concluded. WALLED LAKE — Paper share will be $3,447,000, according to Downey. PRIORITY LIST He said he hopes to get final word on the application within a month. He said the city is on the priority list because the State Water Resources Commission has cited it for water pollu- If the federal grant approved, the remainder tion. Both communities have been given until June 1, 1969 to correct their pollution problems. Downey said, “If we work real fast,” the proposed system can be completed by 1968. A Demonstration cities bill passed by Congress last Thurs-will help considerably, according to Downey. Re said pari of the federal funds should come from this bill. Walled Lake’s share will be financed through a metered water’system. Downey said 80 per cent of the water bill will go for sewer service. He said it would entail an increase in the water bill. WATER BILL “In other words,” he said, the total water bill is $10, $8 of for sewer serv- this would { ice.” He said the total of the water and sewer service would probably average out to about $9-50 per month for, a one-family residential home. If the federal grant is turned down, Downey said, he doesn’t know how the city would pay for the project. . ★ ★ ★ We’ll be forced to do it any-y,” he said, “but we just don’t have the funds to pay for it without assistance." Sodium chloride is better known as table salt. in which they were riding collided Saturday night at a U.S. 131 intersection near Howard City in Montcalm County. Colleen B. Renton, 37, of Howell, in a head-on collision Saturday on M59 near Howell. 1 Francis P. Farley, 75,; of Garden, when he was struck: by a car while walking on a Delta County road Saturday near Garden. Arden J. Birk, 17, of Lake Orion, when he was hit by an auto Saturday while walking on a road near Lake Orion. Leon J. Orr, 60, of River Rouge, in a two-car crash Saturday at a U.S. 24 intersection in Wayne COhnty. Joseph Manzoline, 23, of (desalting when his car ran off a Saginaw County road Saturday add rolled over. Joseph Carmody, 65, of near Middleville who suffered fatal injuries Saturday in the collision of two cars at an inter-IsedfoiLnear Wayland. Mrs. Lora Johnson, 86, of Grand Blanc, when she was struck by a car Friday night while crossing M21 near Davison. MISS JANET LESSITER Orion Twp. Girl Is County Entry in Queen Contest ORION TOWNSHIP — Miss Janet Lessiter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Lessiter, 501 Baldwin, has been chosen Oakland County’s entry for Michigan Farm Bureau queen. She will compete Nev. 8, 9 and 10 for the title. A graduate of Lake Orion i Community High School, she is presently, a junior in the Honors College at Michigan State University, majoring in elementary education. Janet has been active in the ast Orion 4-H Club and was 4-H county queen in 1964. This past summer she worked as camp counsellor at Camp Oakland and in the Michigan State Fair Junior Department. She serves on the teen board i of Farm Journal magazine- JCs Will Host Candidates Auburn Heights Area Jaycees will host a “M e e t thr Candidates” evening at 7:20 p.m. Thursday at Avondale Junior High School. COehairmen for the event are Patrick A. Elwell and Sam R. Sheehy. The program calls for candidates to state their qualifications, the selection of questions on township government from a question^box, and a direct audience-candidate question period. Sheehy stressed the importance of the eVent. “The Jaycees have just completed an extensive survey of the community. We are aware of the concerns of the people. Now we are giving the residents an opportunity to. take their, concerns to the officials — before electiorf! “For too long,” he continued, “officials in most townships have been elected on the basis of service popularity, or the quality and quantity of their campaign literature, or on the basis of service club or fratern-I lodge memberships. “Due to the extreme growth of Pontiac Township, the rest-dents should be concerned with the election of qualified, sincere, and dedicated individuals,” Sheehy said. Which Savings Plan for Yon? Rep. Slingerlend Named to Probe LAKE ORION - Rep. Robert Slingerlend, D-Lake Orion, Msb^~nam»nsiIKliinr other House members to a House-Senate study committee looking into commitment procedures in Michigan mental hospitals. The resolution setting up the joint committed noted that pro-cedures for admitting patients for mental health care were “archaic and detrimental to patients.” PTA Fair Scheduled Auburn Heights Elementary School will host its annual PTA Fair from 5 to 9 pjn. Friday at the school. Refreshments win be sold. Ground Is Broken for Industrial Park FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP -Ground was broken recently on the first two sections of the Farmingtop Freeway Industrial Park near lO Mile, 1-96 and Halstead. Thirty-eight Industrial sites, ranging from one to 10 acres, will be developed in the two sections by Thompson-Brown Co. of Farmington. The 166-acre site marks the initial nse of a 760-acre parcel zoned for nse as an industrial park, according to Township * r Cnrtis Hall Thompson - Brown Executive Vice President William W.Bow-man said that the initial development will include, in addition to the 38 industrial sites, an center facilities to proride services to the industrial community. It will contain Detroit water and sewers, heavy duty paved concrete roads, Consumers Power Go. gas and Detroit Edison electric power. Bowman pointed out that while the ground-breaking ceremonies mark the start of the formal service center, a number of firms have already completed plants or are In the .process of actual construction. They include Diamond Au-tomatkm, Futurmill, Inc., Moore Industries, Automatic Valve, Posa-Cut, Inc., Boench, Inc. and Omni Spectra. In addition, several firms have purchased property and have scheduled construction to bona* • clinic, hanking institu- begin late this year or early tion, restaurant and additional I next year. They are Multi-El- mac, H.M.L. Industries, Solar Industries, Whitlock, Inc., Eaton, Yale and Towne, Gancia-Cote, Howell-Penncraft and Johnson Die and Engineering. Bowman said that negotiations with other industrial firms are now going on. He added that Gordon B. Hall and Sons have indicated plans to build plants on five sites. ■ p Bowman has served as chairman since 1961 of an Industrial park working committee appointed by Hall in 1959. “In a metropolitan area such as southeastern Michigan, the hope of a community such as Farmington Township is to increase its tax base,” said Bowman, “and the current growth and development of our industrial park cannot help but play a major role in achieving tills goal.” •10,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 594% when held for a period of 12 months.' •5,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 5% when helcF for a- period of 9 months. ♦2,500 * SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 494% when held for is period of 6 months. PASSBOOK SAVINGS Hie rate if 4Vi% Is compounded and paid quarteriy; which gives an annual yield .of 4.318, a high rate of return .paid on regular insured passbook UT- AH Accounts Receive accidental LIFE INSURANCE PROTECTION up to $10,000 at no additional cost! 761 ,W. HURON STREET Downtown Pontiao - Clarkston - Drayton Plaint Rochester - Waited Lake - Lako Orion — Milford y THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 - 8 r ...., A?-* Just th* prettiest collection of prints wo could find for nighties, p|», children's sloop* things. Colors are lovelyl Think how many things you can make for so littlo at this special prico. A bio assortment, but hurry for first choice. 35/36*' wide. „ 3 yis. *1 looking. Eaiy-care—hand wash in lukewarm water-line diy— gently 'brush pile. Max. shrink. 2%. Iren lightly on the back with steam iron. 35 in. wide. 3.99 yd. Hurry ini You'll have to sea tho beauty..of,those fabrics to know what a fabulous buy this is. All top quality, woven to Ponnoy*s demanding specifications. Beautiful colors, big assortment. And the/ro Sanforised, mercerized, machine, washable. 77V Unheard of at a prico like ♦hill Dacron polyostor/cot-ton or Fortrel polyester/ Avril rayon blonds. Crispy, firm, tailored to perfection; holds pleats permanently. Machine washable with touch-up only* Crease-resistant, too. Wears well. A rich harvest of fall colors. 44/45* wide. Special assortment! Sowing notions! Fill in your sewing basket with all the notions you’re shy of. Sea how 4 cards for you save now! Youll find buttons, sewing gauges, needles, bobbins, £b g tracing wheels, tape measures, seam ripper and more. Great values. STORE HOURS; 9:30 AM. to 9 P.M. ft mneuf ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY m PENNEY DAYS COME ONCE A YEAR *1 don't seo how they do it.* Our buyers have amazed evtn us—with the year's most fantastic values! dome seel Fashion fabric Clear-out! PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE CHARGE ITI Quick-Can Daily cleaner xwiri,a,n. VACUUM cleaner to store, easy to handle, cleam stairs easily. Quick-change disposable bag. Nose hugs the I floor at any angle. * 3-position brush for Ml" • 4-yl.c* toot BARNES ft HARGRAVES HARDWARE 742 W. Huron St. PARK FREE EE 5-9101 Across from the Post'Officp For Spqce, Rockets , , Ejection Idea Patented By Science Service WASHINGTON A system for tossing film packs and other small containers from space satellites and rising rockets | was patented by the tLS. 'Patent Office. The invention is an improved assembly for opening the stabilizing flaps that help cushion toe film capsule’s free-fall through flic earth’s atmosphere. The capsule is automatically ejected at • pro* determined time and altitude. The system, granted patent 3,262,365, has been nsed an Saturn I and Adas flights, and is scheduled for nse on the powerful Saturn V rocket flights----- Details of the ejection system for many of the secret satellites launched-by the Air Force, such as the Vela Hotel, Samds and Midas series, are not available. However, it is likely Out the patented system is used to eject film capsules from these satellites also. CAPSULES DISSOLVE If not picked up within a predetermined length of lime, capsules Jrom the Air Force satellites; with their film, dissolve in the ocean waters in which they fall. Alfred P. Warren of Hnnts-vflle, Ala., and Billy D. Lawson of Madison, Ala., assigned rights to their patent Dpi the government through toe N.a t i o n a 1 Aeronautics and Spice Administration. The patent covers not only a way of storing the capsule before ejection, but also a device for sehding it earthward |with stabilizing and decelerating flaps that open and lock automatically. The flaps are so arranged that they cannot collapse. add a "devil-may-care" flair with DOBBS Chelsea there's a touch of the best British arid a lot of dash in these two new all-wool casual hats for fall, (above) Hopsacks in black, grey, and olive, (below) Muted pla/ds and checks in many color combinations. Both treated with Zepel®, DuPont's new fabric fluoridizer, for stain and rain resistance. 8.95 tha Detroit Lions Linebacker Boot is a must for gome watchers If you're watching outdoors, that is. It's a great indoor boot made especially for HHS. Wonderfully warm with a snug fleece lining; the soles are waterproof. Smart zipper-front model In black leather. Sizes 7 to 12 .... 12.95 THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron §treet Pontiac, Michigan 48056 ; • MONpAY, OCTOBER M, 1966 ( Bowui H. PnaBOMU, It jam W. Fimtuu Executive Vice Preeldeot Pruldent end Publisher . Asto McCOUY Richais m. rmsnui Tressurer sad Plnanci Officer It Seems to Me: Johnson Politically Inactive as Election Day Approaches Lyndon B. Johnson has no intention of throwing himself into the current political campaign. Several weeks ago assurances from the White House suggested he would become an assertive figure this fall. ★ ★ ★ As November 8th approaches, he has shown no inclination to stump for hardly anyone, and his current program sees him visiting Manila, Australia and other distant points in the fleeting weeks ahead. ★ ★ ★ The grandstand quarterbacks are assigning a variety of "reasons for abstaining. Some say he simply intends to place the burden on the candidates them- | selves. Others, including both Republicans and Democrats, suspect that he is slowly reconciled to a sizeable loss in the House and Senate and feels he would weaken his personal standing if he went all out to help his party — and then suffered a sharp repudiation at the polls. ,★ [it ' ★ Off year elections usually result in gains for the party that’s “out.” Currently, the soothsayers are predicting that a minimum of 25 Democrats will be swept from office and a few exuberant and enthusiastic GOP leaders predict as high as 65. I don’t know anyone less qualified to guess than your struggling scrivener; therefore, I freely forecast a turnover in the House and Senate that runs around 35. (Major Hoople, please copy.) ★ ★ ★ In the Congressional primaries across the Nation, eleven office holders were discarded even before they faced the finals — three in the Senate and eight in the House. ★ - ★ .. ★ Both political parties will watch eagerly to see how those unpredictable, silent and enigmatic voters act at the polls. , Look magazine suggests there were 3 million voters who stayed away in 1964 as they looked with high disfavor on both Johnson and Goldwater and refused point blank to vote at all. T ★ ★ ★ Both sides concede the unspoken vote is harder to predict this fall than ever before. Unquestionably, the recent civil, rights “backlash” will play a definite part, but the extremists and the irrational radicals are calming down through political necessity and actual alarm. This will be an interesting “off year.” Nightmare . . • Statistics show that at the peak of World War II, this nation was spending $300 million a day, the bulk of which went into the war effort. ★ ★ ★ Today, our spending totals $280 million a day. How can top ranking Government executives go to sleep at night in the light of this appalling revelation? They must have cast iron constitutions or be wrapped in a cloak of absolute indifference. ★ ★ ★ Of course, they don't have to disgorge the money, personally. You—tlnd you—do that. Russian Hypocrisy . . Periodically, word “gets out” that the Russians are “softening” in their hostile attitude toward the United States._________________^ It seems they aren’t as anxious to “bury us” as they were in the past. Phooey! What a farce! r * ★ ★ ★ One Leonid I. Brezhnev, the head red, just finished a confer- j ence with some of his henchmen which resulted in new pledges to increase the aid in North Viet Nam. Further, the conference developed the sobering fact that Soviet exports to the same spot leaped upward the minute our bombers shook some of the foundations in North Viet Nam a few months ago. ★ ★ ★ Friendly? Those international pirates? Even their propaganda smells. And in Conclusion . . . Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Overheard: “If these modern movies get ‘more-so,’ they’ll have to equip the theaters with seat belts.”...........Well, the Rus- sians are certainly “progressing.” They are now considering holding all-out bull fights.........Re- member—you can’t vote if you aren’t registered. November 8th is ballot day......... Overheard: “I wish my 1967 car had 1947 parking spaces.”...... Montreal comes up with a new one: a b a n k solely for the feminine contingent. Only the manager will be a male. ★ ★ ★ Trusted won international competitions , turn out to be males. Russia’s two greatest stars, the Press sisters, dropped out permanently when female observers were stationed in dressing rooms to watch..........Insider’s News- letter says GM has an answer to Ford’s electric car in a “chemical conversion of liquid fuel into electricity.” ★ ★ ★ Detroit’s own Hank Greenberg says Feller was the greatest pitcher of them all until Koufax came along and he now rates them equals. .......... Overheard: “If parking spaces are so hard to find, how is it a million drivers find one before I can.”........... Remember: it’s nice to be important; but it’s more important to be nice. . . . . .......Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—Al Watrous retiring from golf with one of the cleanest, finest names in the golfing world; the J’s —Cluttering up the countryside with political signs. Harold A. Fitzgerald 'Knock It Off! After All, , • , We're Supposed To Be Happily Married!' David Lawrence Says: Campaign Finances Bill a Mess WASHINGTON — Congress, in its hurry to adjourn, passed a law which is a hodgepodge that will never accomplish the main purpose of the i e g islation — to.stop bribery of elected officials through cam- ! paign contributions. „ The President has yet LAWRENCE to sign die bill and would be well advised to give it what is called a “pocket veto.” This would require Congress next time to make a careful study of the use of campaign fundi and write a truly effective law. 1 If thg^pew law were to cut ourall private contributions and prevent any organization or individual from buying seats in Congress for candidates committed to vote for legislation sought by vested interests or special groups, such a statute might well receive wide support But the bill just passed doesn’t do away with private contributions. It merely supplements them. Nor is there any system set up to finance congressional campaigns. The money derived from the voluntary in- “ conie-tax contributions would-be supplied to the two majot* political parties on an equal basis to be used for presidential candidates only. ★ ★ , ★ No restriction has been imposed on the use of funds which are collected ostensibly for candidates for state, county or city offices but which play a big part in lining up votes for candidates running for the presidency or for Congress. f MISUSE OF FUNDS No provisions in the new law deal withmiiuse of the funds. Nor it there any way that a Democrat or a Republican can indicate lion his income-tax return thht he wants his dollar used entirely for the party of his own choice. Actually, he finds himself in the position of contributing half of the iRoney to the party that he will be voting against. i I There is, moreover, no reason why the citizen shouldn’t be allowed to give more out of his taxes to a political party in whose principles he be-' lleVes. If it is a proper use of tax- Verbal Orchids Mrs. Mary Jane Richmond of 2449 Auburn Road; 87th birthday. Mrs. Charles A. Hayward of Lake Orion; 84th birthday. J. L. Gardner of Commerce; 81st birthday. Mrs. Mary E. Stephens of Union Lake, 88th birthday. Mrs. Maggie Ueberroth of2100 Woodward; 89th birthday. P William G. Thompson of Alma, formerly of Pontiac; 85th birthday. payers’ money to finance cam-paigns, then out of the $130 billion appropriated during the last session of. Congress, the Treasury can be authorized to set aside $60 million for campaign use. COULD BE INCREASED If necessary, the sum could be increased so as to elimi-nate some of the bribery going on now through the use of large contributions collected, directly or indirectly, from the members of associations or groups set up for the purpose of raising large sums for political campaigns. Cerialnly there is need for reform on the whole subject of campaign contributions. Some members of Congress . have said they didn’t like the law submitted to them last week because it had not been given thorough study in committees, but they also declare that, after all, “It’s a foot in the door.” Unhapipily, however, It opens wider the door of political corruption in the American system of financing campaign expenses. (Copyright, 1966, Publishers Newspaper Syndicate) Bob Considine Says: Supreme Court Wronged Sheppard Trial Newsmen NEW YORK - God save the Supreme Court, every last hardened artery on it! But it was wronger than - a three-dollar bill with Warden Harding’s picture on it when, it accused the press of making a sorry shambles of the first trial of Dr. Sam Sheppard. - * The presiding judge of the new murder trial has made it clear he agrees with Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark’s astonishingly inaccurate majority opinion to the effect that the first trial was marred by* “disruptive influences in CONSIDINE the courtroom” and “constant commotion within the bar” and by “hounding most of the participants in the trial, especially Sheppard.” There was sufficient legal ground to warrant giving Dr. Sam another chance to pin die murder on a “bushy - haired Intruder.” But by legal osmosis or eerie evolution a prime “cause” of tee high court’s action has been this completely fabricated accusation against reporters who covered the two-month long trial of a dozen yean ago. There was a related and equally unfair castigation of Judge Edward Blytbin, the bleak Scot Who presided over the first trial. Actually, he ran his court quite stem-' iy. “What we feel is a moral obligation to speak in defense of a dead judge and in behalf of trial reporters everywhere,” reads a communication to the Supreme Court signed by nine out-of-town reporters who covered the Cleveland trial. CONDUCT “This letter is about courtroom conduct only;' we have no other issue to raise. We do not believe the (Supreme) Court was deliberately misled. “We do believe that In the 12 yean tee Sheppard case shuttled among the courts, this one phase (the press’s conduct) ballooned out of proportion" to the facts. “We were in the courtroom. So was the chief defense counsel, the late William J. Corrigan, whose affidavit in support of motion for & hew trial, made in 1954 when the trial was still fresh in his mind, never mentioned noise . . Judge Blythin’s court- room was run with a decorum comparable with the best we have semi... “We are speaking purely as members of the out-of-town press at the trial, whose reports were lor readen who in no regard could be connected with the case. . . At the time of the trial, we never believed that the American press as a whole would be condemned 12 years later for local stories about revelations made by police, defense and prosecuting attorneys, and the coroner in one city in the Middle West...” Vo tee of the People: • ‘Remove Identity Shield of Juvenile Criminals’ The raid by young hoods oiv the Bingham Farms home is incredible. The public should refuse to tolerate this kind Of behavior. " One way to sharply reduce juvenile crime (tyt’s drop that namby-pamby word “delinquency”) would be to wte" public the names, addresses and parents’ names of all juvenile offenders. Paltry fines have no effect, but publicity and loss of face at the country club just might do so. ^ JANIE C. COLLINS BLOOMFIELD HILLS Will Witches and Goblins Share Their Loot ? Halloween is just around the corner and we would once again " appeal to parents and children to share some of their abundance of Halloween candy with children less fortunate than themselves. Candy may be sent or taken to Children’s Village, 12IS N. Telegraph Road. Yon may be sure it is greatly appreciated. i ' MR. AND MRS. L. H. LANDAU OAK PARK Spurns National Council of Churches Stand The General Board of the National Council of Churches adopted a resolution calling for tee admission of Communist China to the United Nations and the granting of United States diplomatic recognition to the Peiping regime. ★ ★ ★ What does this stand for appeasement do to file morale , of our young Americans against whom Commimlst China’s weapons are being hurled? ★ ★ ★ What does the National Council of Churches say to Red China’s primary condition for joining the United Nations — the expulsion of the Republic of China? Have they ever denounced the cruel aggressions, assassinations, and slaughters committed by Communist China? Do they speak for the protestant churches of Pontiac? Which local churches support this Council with money? I want to be sure that none of my money goes directly or indirectly to this National Council 6f Churches. GEORGE A. LUENBERGER 9 ORIOLE ROAD Wants Changes in Road Commission Setup Oakland County needs a change in our Road Commission And a way of replacing commissioners by election if they perform unsatisfactorily. They are now appointed by the Supervisors and the office has become a featherbed for past supervisors, The people should directly elect one commissioner, preferably Mi engineers let him appoint the assistants he needs and hour him responsible. > ★ ★ ★ Bataan Drive is only a short graveled road. It has been scraped once since spring and the weeds have never been cut. With Square Lake closed all summer Bataan has taken many times as much traffic as ordinarily, so that tee gravel we paid to have spread is now pushed to one side where It Is a foot hi^ier than tee road and the road is full of bumps and holes. We need this gravel on tee roadbed. Repeated calls get no satisfaction. V ■' —— L. L. OBEKLtN 1534 BATAAN DRIVE Question and Answer Has tee airplane Oakland County purchased helped on crime or traffic study and is it being used now? CURIOUS TAXPAYER REPLY Sheriff Irons tells us the plane, which ioas donated for County use, proved too expensive to operate for the amount of benefit it afforded, and has been turned back to the donor. \ The Better Half *71 have to bring your blue knit suit this aftemoon-a co of the girls at the plant were trying it on this morning one of them sprung the zipper.” Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Junk Removal... The Grand Rapids Press Another major step toward neighborhood renewal in the city’s blighted areas is the action by the City Commission clearing tee way for adoption of an amendment to the city code to provide for clearing “junkers” and other disabled motor vehicles from residential areas. The “junkers” have been a long-time accumulation, making unsightly back yards and front yards of many local housing accommodations and generally creating neighborhood eyesores. In countless cases, the “junkers” have been inherited by renters and tenants, nnable by themselves to finance tee removal job and heretofore nnable to get tee city an-thorities to do anything about tee problem.: The city’s action I in taking one more needed step to re- move neighborhood nuisances is a practical demonstration to the low-income residents of long neglected areas that Grand Rapids, as represented by it? city government, does care about conditions under which its people live. ★ ★ ★ Edward C. McCobb, chairman of the Ordinance Committee, describes the city’s action as a “worthwhile forward move.” It is indeed a significant advance in the campaign against substandard housing a campaign that must move ever forward. Demonstrations The (Portland) Oregonian A tew noisy youngsters disrupted church services in Brighton, England, the other day by shouting, "Hypocrite! ” at Prime Minister Harold Wilson as he sought to read part of the service to a congregation including Labor Party leaders. ★ ’* The demonstration, which broke np tee services, was aimed at Mr. Wilson’s support, albeit lnke-warm, for U.S. policies In Viet Nam. The same stupid episodes occur on this side of the Atlantic. For every convert won by such displays, hundreds are repelled and affronted. One cannot escape the implication in Wilson’s comment that some so involved really do not intend to serve the “cause of peace.” TEE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 High Qualify Work Student Prerequisite By DR. LESLIE J. NASON Dear Du Nason: Our 9th grade daughter has an I,Q, will above average. The school she attends expects high grades, s i n c e m o |i of its graduates even-11 tually enter coh HHm lege. However, our daughter is fHHHHL satisfied with gflH less than a C j (pwi® average. She completes HHRi all of tier as-DR. NASON signments, but they are not very well dime. »At this rate, she will not be eligible for college when she completes high school. Meteor, Earth Samples Alike By Science Service WASHINGTON -Samples from the earth itself and from meteorites — this planet’s only known visitors from space — both show the same) percentages of basic chemicals in earth’s deep interior. ' Remarkably good agreement about the earth’s composition has been found from these two completely different sources by Dr. Brian Mason "of the U. S. National Museum, part of the i Institution. Meteorites are believed to contain the compounds from which earth and the other planets close ttf' the sun were formed. Since none of the materials below earth’s crust can yet be examined directly, scientists rely on meteorites for clues as to what lies deep below this top layer, a thin skin only some M miles deep. Dr. Mason has used chondritic meteorites to calculate the chemical composition of earth’s interior and of this planet as a whole. He then compared these, estimates with those made by Drs. David Green and A. E. Ringwood of the Australian National University, Canberra, on the basis oif the chemicals in two common earth rocks. Dr. Mason found that although these two estimates were made from completely different basic data, they were sufficiently in agreement to show “the chemical composition of the inaccessible parts of our planet below the crust.” - How can we arouse her interest in her studies? ’ D. D., Pasadena, Calif. Answer.:. ' - Merely passing her1, courses is apparently the success fur which your daughter aims. Either she does not realize that, upon high school graduation, she will want to continue on to college with her friends or she does not feel capable of better work. I suggest that you talk the matter over with her school counselor. If possible, get Mm to set up a program wader which each id your daughter's teachers would demand a higher quality of work. The counselor may need tc discuss study and test-taking techniques with your daughter to help her meet these new demands. Ih this way, he should get to the root of the matter and1 show, her that she must start now if she hopes to get (into college and succeed. Dear Dr. Nason: Our son graduated from hii school In June of last year wi a low C rating. He was accepted at a technical school but, perhaps because of his poor high school preparation, he found toe work very difficult and withdrew. He is now registered in an evening class, but would like to get a college education. How can he build up a background to be accepted and succeed in a regular four-yew college? C. C., Sarasota, Fla. Answer: To be accepted, your son must present evidence to the college admissions officer that an improvement In his scholarship has taken place. Onee in college, he will not succeed unless he has learned to be a better student. In many evening schools counselors are available. I suggest that he ask both his teacher and counselor the best way to study the course that he is nov taking. When they realize that he is sincerely interested-In becoming a better student, they will give him help. ihdOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 51W. HURON Buy From Appliance Specialists—Then You’ll Be Sure! nt swims m wniANCES Olid TELEVISIONS If you BUY mm SAVE NOW! ENJOY NOW! PAY LATER! SAVE! All Sew! All Channel! All Bargains! 1967 FRIGID AIRE “JET SET” 50 Pet. in Favor DETROIT Utl - Fifty per cent of Detroit’s voters favor a Nov. 8 proposal to boost -property taxes by five mills -tot five years to aid Detroit Public Schools, a poll showed Sunday. Thirty per cent of the voters were listed as uncertain, 15 per cent in opposition and 5 per cent who didn’t intend to vote. KXXXXXXXXXXXX3CKX)®q It A 'fivBnd.Mti'faone," sa I For old-fashioned quality and v honest value... make friends with GENERAL w ELECTRIC * 12” All-Channel TV $89»« Including Delivery, Service and Warranty! NO MONEY DOWN! |5 MONTYLY Weighs only 12 pounds. . . But, it’s terrific .performer! 82-channel reception, newest taqdem touch tuning, 72 square inch viewable area, FM speaker, carrying handle, etc. Handcrafted Royal Television ZENITH 23” Inlaid Carved Cabinet *208“ NO MONEY DOWN! $11 Monthly ,.. Including Delivery, Sarvioe .and Warranty Don’t confuse this with ordinary TV! This is fabulous Zemlh“Royalty” TV— Famous “Royalty" features: Full UHP and VHF reception. Bigger 6Vi by 2Vi inch speaker. Tone control. 3 stage IF amplifier. Lighted tuning dial. Peak picture control. ' OAKLAND COUNTY’S LARGEST SELECTION COLOR TV YOUR CHOICE-ZENITH MG 21”—NEW ’67 COLOR W Only $379 weekly Only >3T 0 per week Delivered, Serviced, Warranted Easy Credit - 90 Says Cash Here’s world-famous Zenith performance, world-renowned — Zenith quality Color TV at a down-to-earth price. Ho* 6-inch Twin-Cone Sjtetker — IsHF/VHF Reception -Illuminated Spotlight "DM - Slid MOTOROLA 23" Rectangular COLOR CONSOLE _ 079 per Pay- week DELIVERED WARRANTED SERVICE 90 days cash - easy credit Beautifully styled 23” rectangular all channel new 1967 console complete with all the new features. Compact cabinet all hand wired chassis, automatic degausser, lock-in tuning and much more. Come see, Come soon. RCA VICTOR 25” All-Channel Deluxe Console Only 4* J per week Delivered, Servic ed Warranty 90 Daye Cash, Immediate Delivery For matchless performances and greater dependability see the new 1967 RCA modeln now being shown in our huge display. Sharper steadier picture with extra brightness and ‘many more features, too. Come lee, come buy. EUREKA with 5-Pc. Set of Cleaning Attachments Charcoal Perfected ■ Whisky M M $4.96 $3.14 I* vi at. «. Iw-A © MKT OltrilURV. CO.. lOOISVtUE. KY. $2799 Pay $1.25 Weekly and floor nozzle, scab tightly, undipt quickly. Protective Vinyl bumper furniture guard. All attach, ments Included. All steel construction. Sanitized Dust Bag NEW JET ACTION AUTOMATIC WASHER NEW GIANT JET 14-LB. DELUXE DRYER TWIN VALUE—TWIN SAVINGS Roy Now! Buy Now! Only $J®® Only *133*® Delivered, Installed, Serviced NO MONEY DOWN £ Pay Just $8.95 Monthly or 90 Days Same as Cash The all new jet action 1967 -2-cycle automatic washer is ready for da* . ’livery. Come see giant all porcelain tub; detergent dispenser; all water temperatures for all items. Soak cycles and so much more. Come see! Delivered, Serviced, Warranted Pay Just $44 Monthly or 90 Days Same as Cash The all new 1967 jet action dryer is ready for delivery. Come see. ... Electric giant, all porcelain drum. Big lint trap, 2 cycles for all types of clothing. Safety door shutoff when open. Come see! Gas model $163.00. NO MONEY DOWN-DELIVERED-INSTALLED HOOVER DELUXE SPIN DRYER STAINLESS TUB Delivered, Serviced, Warranted 159 ,95 PAY 6.75 MONTHLY Designed to wash, rinse and spin-dry a complete load in as little as 8 minutes—rinse one load while starting to wash another— stainless steel . tub—heavy duty double pump—has caster* for easy moving. Come see! , FRIOIDA1RE 30" Deluxe Electric Range *189°° Delivered, Serviced, Warranted No Money Down! Bay $2.25 Weekly Come see the new 1967 big, shiny 30” deluxe special—complete with automatic oven. Preset oven to go on and later turn off. Has oven light—back panel illumi-nated lamp and much more. Come see! Come buy! 1 ____ ADMIRAL 2-DOOR FREEZER and Refrigerator White or Coppertone Finish! Freezer with 2 ice cube trays and door shelf. Has 27-qt. porcelain crisper, two tip-proof, slide out shelves. Also egg storage and two bottle-deep shelves in door. NO MONEY DOWN *198“ Pay as low as $7.19 Monthly THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP PONTIAC ~ 51W. HURON - FE 4-1555 Free Parking-We’ll Stamp YourTicket Open Mon* & FrL Till 9:00 . A—• ggK v v THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 24, 1969 Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Sdys: Some Cortisone Cures Must Continue Q — MU cortisone, if started earty in the course of an inflammatory disease, cure it or will the disease come back on d i scontinuing . the drug? BRANDSrTADTf 1 animations such as bursitis and sprains but when taken for.......... bursitis and other diseases of this type it must be taken continuously or the symptoms will return. The disadvantages of such prolonged treatment include the development of "moon face,” peptic ulcers and softening of the bones. 1 Q — My wife has taken cortisone for over a year. She is! hungry all thetimeand has gained 45 pounds. Would cortisone cause this? Q — My internist says I have low blood sugar. He put me on a high-caloric diet with food! every two boors but I still have] occasional blackouts. Is there! anything else 1 should do? ♦ ♦ ★ A — The treatment of low blood sugar depends in part on whether the condltioB is due to an inborn error of metabolism, acquired by over-indulgence in sugars and starches or erased; by alcohol or cerfam drugs, j Attacks may be triggered by ] rad) emotions as worry, grief or fear. In most victims the con- j ditkm can't be cored but can] be controlled with skillful treat-mem. Yrar high caloric diet should not permit sugar, pie, cake, starchy vegetables, foods of the macaroni family, dates, raisins, coffee, tea or alcohol. The most difficult requirement in such a diet is to omit wheat products. Foods allowed include meat, fish, fowl, eggs, milk, margarine or butter, cheese, nuts, decaffeinized coffee, very weak tea, sugar-free soft drinks, vegetables and fruits not on the A — A short prescribed list and soybean course of one of products, the cortisonelike | d r u g,s w i 11 A recent study indicates that greatly hasten injections of glucagon Into the [the cure of,hip muscles stimulate a release 'some acute in-[into the blood tf the sugar stored in the liver. This you could be, taught to do for your- Q — My doctor says I have blood sediment. My count is 6< and it should be around 10. What could cause this and what can be done about it? ★ ★ | A — Your doctor determined your sedimentation rate which normally is legs than IS (or less than eight, depending on the technique used). In some persons the cause of an increased rate cannot be determined. More often than not, however, it indicates rheumatic fever or rheumatic heart dis-is a valuable guide to the effectiveness of the treatment used. State Drowning SAUGATUCK (AP) - David Quint, 23, of Grand Rapids apparently drowned Saturday when he and a companion were tossed train a sailboat in Lake Michigan. State Policesaid the boati capsized. Vera Yetman, 23, of Grand Rapids told officers be swam to shore. Quint’s body has not been recovered. OMN DAILY 10 - 10; SUN. 12 - 7 THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY Pre-Christmas SHOE G1EARANCI MEN’S, BOYS’ 1 YOUTHS’ FOUR- I BUCKLE BOUTS * APPLIANCE . COMPANY ‘Junior Editors Quiz on* SPACE □ signals nm 2 ounxstHo* 5—it?B(LUC>M fl MILES OR. MORE “We must face up, whatever1' our particular views may be, to the fact that the war in Viet Nam is not only a disaster for the Vietnamese people, but also a constant threat to world peace. Peaceful solutions must UNITED NATION*,, N.Y. (AP) — In a U.N. Day message < marking die organization’s 21pt I anniversary Secretary General < U Thant today summoned I statesmen to abandon power i leal experts say infest 1 out of every 8 persons examined. Entire families may be victims sndnot know it. , To vet rid of Pin-Worms, they must be IdUed in the brie intestine where they live and multiply. That’s exactly whet, Jayne’s P-W tablets do... and here s how they do its First—a scientific coating carries the tablets into the dtowels before they dissolve. Then — Jayne’s mod-ora, medically-approved ingredient goes right to work—kills Pin-Worms quickly and easily. Don’t take chances with dangerous, highly contagious Pin-Worms which infect entire families. Get genuine Jayne’s P-W Vermifuge . . , ■mall, easy-to-take tablets... special sizes for children and adults. COUPE DE VILLE CALAIS HARDTOP SEDAN THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 A—9 Voting Record fo Stay Intact After 70 Years JACKSON (AP) - Horiace O. Moffitt, applying for an absentee ballot, told election officials he hasn't mised an election in 70 yean. He will be 94 Nov. 0, the day after this year’s general election- > g: For titfee quarters of a tury, Moffitt says be has voted straight Republican and doesn’t intend to switch now. v “We have always had better times under Republicans,” he said. . He thinks Teddy Roosevelt and Dwight Eisenhower were outstanding presidents, but added: “They’ve all been good men I guess-even the Democrats.” Moffitt’s main concern these days is high prices, >he said. He retired from farming 22 years ago, but said be still eats well and takes short walks. The Prince Albert coat was named for Queen Victoria’s husband. YOUR CHILD MAY HAVE PIN-WORMS 10UT OF 3 DOES I Fidgeting, nose-picking, atormenting rectal itch are often telltale signs of | Thant Urges Statesmen fo Abandon Power Politics be found to this and to other persistent conflicts.” MARKS RATIFICATION The anniversary marks the ratification of t|ie U N. charter by the original SI member countries in 1945. The membership today stands at 121. - In the traditional observance at U.N. headquarters the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra directed by William Sternberg will present a concert in the General Assembly Hall. Mirella Freni, Italian soprano, is the soloisL QUESTION: What is space? ★ ★ ifr ANSWER: Space is said to begin at a point, about miles up, where Earth’s- atmosphere is so thin it has. no effect on objects passing through it. Then comes cislunar, translunar and interplanetary space — lonely regions through which die moon and the planets travel. Such space ends about 51 billion miles away,> where the sun ceases to exert any gravitational pull — the outer edge of oar solar system. Beyond this, outer or interstellar space extends through infinity. Science penetrates these outer regions with the radio telescope, which is able, by gathering radio waves, to give us information about galaxies add mysterious heavenly objects Which exist at the outer limits of our known universe. Wfe' show three specially important contributions science has made to our understanding of the closer zones of space (bottom picture). Rockets (1) can lift off Earth’s surface, releasing (2) satellites or capsules, often with men inside, and (3) probes which can penetrate to some of the other planets, sending back signals which can be translated into photographs. FOR YOU TO DO: Paste this article in your science scrapbook. GOOD HEWS! WWW •★★★★★★★ 'tt*****l*4 For those who have been experiencing difficulty in obtaining automobile insurance or who-have been recently cancelled.. . whatever the reiison. Granted this type of insurance may call for • higher rate than usual -,. But, if yon really Waiit help and we can have your- cooperation wo will try our best to process a limited number of applications; Our 50 years — three generations — in the •insurance business in this area qualifies’iis for dedicated, personalized service to our clients. 1044 Jeslyn 334-3535 Pontiac, Mich. 4S055 ft IMi mm 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET 'Downtown Pontiac Store Onlyl I CANADIAN BACON SPARERIBS Sound System Could Find Fish Over Mile Away By Science Service WASHINGTON - Underwater sound detection systems capable of locating a single codfish more than a mile away could result from research at Birmingham University in England. W w. , w ' Laboratory experiments there show that the technique, called nonlinear acoustics,” c o u 1 d give a completely new look to undersea communications and research, as well as to exploration and exploitation of the ocean’s untapped riches. Sound waves are now widely used to transmit signals under water, but usable band widths are narrow. Another drawback is that highly directional sound beams are produced easily. To get a directional beam using relatively low frequencies, which are necessary to obtain ranges greater than a few thousand feet in water, large and expensive equipment is required. w w w ■ What is needed for good communications is a pencil-like beam of low frequencies with a wide availabie.band width. About 75 per cent of all new non-farm houses are purchased through mortgage arrangements. The question this year is: which Cadillac? Nowhere else in the luxury car field can you discover as wide a range of excitement as you will with Cadillac’s twelve 1967 models. Whether you prefer the luxury of a Fleetwood Brougham,.. the distinction of the Coupe . deVille...orthe daring elegance of the totally new Fleetwood Eldorado... your choice will reward you with the comfort, performance, safety and convenience only Cadillac could achieve. Asyou can see in the models illustrated, 1967 Cadillacs have a nqw forward-sweeping front and a new flowing side contour. Interiors are more luxurious than ever. And Cadillac in 1967 provides a smoother V-8 engine... improved variable ratio power steering... a new General Motors-developed energy absorbing steering column.. * and a new padded instrument panel And now, for 1967, Cadillac introduces the dramatic Fleetwood Eldorado —world’s finest personal car. Eldorado is tha first car in die world to .combine the traction of front wheel drive With the precision of variable ratio power steering and the balance of automatic level control. All in all the twelve finest Cadillacs ever created! Visit your authorized dealer. Let him help you select your favorite model! MMrCsrDMrtn mu Standard of the World * SEE AND DRIVE THE EXCITING 1967 CADILLACS NQW ON DISPLAY AT YOUR AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER’S. JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. 1980 WIDE TRACK DRIVE, WEST • PONTIAC, MICHIGAN WtC HOME OF fWEST BRAND NAMES 108 N, SMINAW-FE 8-7114 let this magnificent Astro Sonic Stereo bring "Concert HalT realism right into your living rootn. Magnavox advanced acoustical system projects sound from both the cabinet rides and front to extend thrilling stereo separation to the very width of your room. You'll enjoy 40 watts of undistorted music power • Glorious stereo FM-AM radio • Powerful AM radio • Two high efficiency 12" woofers • Two 1000 cycle treble horns • Exclusive Micro-malic Record Player with Diamond Stylus guaranteed 10 years. Warranty* Solid Stole Components 5 years —'..other parts and service I year. all NEW Magnavox . ASTRO-SONIC STEREO RADIO-PHONO surpasses all previous achievements in the reception of sound! *425 No Money Down Up to 3 Yrs. to Ray The "Roekoway" Is 72 inches tong. Storage for 170 OPEN THURS., FBI. AND MON. NIGHTS TIL 9-PARK FREE IN WKC’S PRIVATE LOT AT REAR OF STORE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 Sure traction in hub-deep snow, smooth and quiet an dry pavement! Safe Ends Wed* Oct. 26-9 PM. GRIPop*">«g y^**"*^ / 0fOUR j l at lims — ANY SIZE STEEL WHEELS Plymouth Only If 1 f f* Riverside portable lift-out car radio Operates, on car battery jeee Ae and antenna or use as a por- mJ Qgg table at beach, picnics. Key lock guards against theft. With batteries, 2 keys. REG. 49.99 |, Deep biting angle elected tread 6) continuous design for greater pulling power. 2, "Skid-resistors" in tread for extra fraction; resists side-skids on snow or ice. 3# Lowest level of tire noise on dry pavement... even in high-speed driving. 4, Full 4-ply nylon-cord body resists damage from impacts, flex-fatigue and moisture. 5, RIV-SYN compound added for greater mileage and better driving performance 6, Lifetime quality guarantee. 33-month road hazard guarantee. Save on bulk oil three days only! REG. 28e QUART • Riverside Heavy Duty oil for ears, trucks • Equals or exceeds every oil in its grade • Gives you maximum' and save! It's your best oil buy...the protection you need at a really low price! Surpasses car maker's MS Sequence tests. SAE 10W, 20-20W, 30. HEAVTD^ Complete oil change in one Container. No need to change seasonally. API dais. MS, DO. SAE 10W-3QA WARDS RIVERSIDE* . . your assurance of top-quality tire products at the lowest possible prices. NO MONEY DOWN AT WARDS Buy this great Riverside18’ tire now Only at Wordsl Mufflers-save off flameless heater • Compactl Only 2% lbs., 8x11 in. • Safe! No flames or fumes • Economical120 hrs. beat only 10c Spun-mailed seam for safety Carry your comfort with you! You can with this lightweight Riverside aluminum flameless heater, it uses unleaded gas and is completely safe —won't even burn paper and is nonexplosive. It evenheats In tub-zero weatherl Buy now at this low price! now at Wards Super Saver pricpsl 70% of all muffler failures are In winter, so you could be driving with deadly, bad muffles. Don’t 195543 FoM 1049-54 Chevrolet; 1949-53 Ford. Tubeless Sizts Black- walls Each Plus Fed. Excise Tax Each Tire Tubalasa Sizes Black- walls Each Plus Fad. Exclsa Tax Each Tire 5.90/6.00-13 $15* lii 7.75/7.50-14 7.75/6.70-15 521* 2.20 121 6.40/6.50-13 W7 1.83 8.25/8.00-14 6.15/7.10-15 523* 2.36 235 7.00-13 6.95/5.50-14 $18* 130 1.92 835/8.50-14 8.45/7.60-15 525* . 15} 2.55 5.60/5.90/ 6.00-15 $18* 1.91 8.85/9.00-14 8.85/9.15-15 8.00/8.20-15 527* 2.84 2.97 237 7.35/7.00-14 6.40/6.50-15 7.35-15 519* 2.11 2.05 2.05 •Whitewellt S3 Mon Per Tin ■yr Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. • 6824940 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN* MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 B—l Calendar TUESDAY Pontiac Women’s Christian Temperance Union, 1 p.m., Ray Fleming home on Cottage Street. Mrs. Ernest Aider of the Salvation Army will speak. Woman's Wcrid Series, 10 ajrL, The Pontiac Mall. James F. Taube of Michigan BeH Telephone Company will speak on “A History of MBchigan in Paintings” by Robert Thom. Ladies’ Day pat, noon, YWCA Luncheon with program on “Antique Doll Making.” Orchard Lake Flower and Garden C3d>, 12:30 p.m. Oliver Risk Jr. home on Deerfield Drive, West Bloomfield Township, fibs. Charles Pollock will present . program, on fall plantings. Menscola Guild e of Lonrdes, 8 p.m., Pontiac Country Club. Annual card party to benefit Lourdes horsing Home. Open to the public. Pontiac League of Women Voters, 8 p.m., All Saints’ Episcopal Church. John Dowsett, Oakland County Court Services Director, will speak. Members may bring guests. Holds Space for Driver to Park By EXJZABET1II«P0ST Dear Mrs. Post: While taking . a trip, my husband considered himself extremely lucky to spot a vacant parking place near the inn. He started to drive into it and a young woman came up to Mm and said that she was saving fiw space for her boyfriend's car. (She was on foot and there was no sign of a car.) , ★ A ,dr I was very annoyed when my husband acquiesced and drove bn. The other couple & the car agreed with me that he should have ignored her and taken the space. We were unable to find another (me in the area and this put all of us in a bad mood. What should he have done?— FrancesK. : dr -A i Dear Mr*. K.:’ H it were just for a moment or two while a driver may be turning around w dropping off another passenger, his companion might quite correctly try to hold a parking space for hint jfc_*. \» Otherwise, I think '’you’re right; spaces in public parking lots should not be reserved. English Actress Has a Setting Mrs. Ben Mills Resigns as Committee Head At a brunch Sunday in the lakeside dining hall at Oxford’s Camp Oakland facilities, Carl 0. Barton, president of the camp announced that Mrs. Ben D. Mills, chairman of the Women’s Committee for the past eight years has resigned. * * * A framed letter of thanks was presented to her on behalf of the entire board of directors of which she now has become a vice president. * ★ ★ . The Women’s Committee has been credited with providing the special toddies that has made the camp a real home for under privileged children. , Barton also gave thanks to Mrs. Mills for the leadership qualities she showed in planning five outstanding benefits in Detroit for the camp’s buildings and equipment funds. ADDITION Announcement was also made of the addition to the dormitory housing boys in the work education program. The addition will accommodate nine more 18 to 19 - year - olds who have dropped out of school. More plans include extending the summer camp session two weeks to permit 128 more children to attend. . * ★ 1 A new arts and crafts center is also planned, made possible by the Bargman Foundation. It will be named fpr toe late Theodore and Mina Bargman. By JANET ODELL Jenny Laird Ferpakl brought her clothes, some books, a few pictures and half a dozen Wedgwood cups and saucers to make a home fo toe United States. The London-born wife of John Fernald, director of toe new Meadow Brook Theatre, at Oakland University is settling a house and adjusting to a new life in a new country. Her husband has been here since July, working on toe thousands of details that go into a new production. Mrs. Femald, who Is an actress, had a stage commitment at the Edinburgh Festival until September. ★ * * Leaving behind her a'-home -and daughter, she flew to join her husband in a project she finds as exciting as he roes. Daughter Karto who’s 21 is touring in England with the play, “Barefoot in the Park.” That she will come here for Christmas is her parents’ hope. The couple has been buying furniture here and there, some antique, some more modern. They have gone to several auctions. SOLD TO THAT LADY “But I couldn’t understand a word the auctioneer was saying.” she complained. Her relief was comic when we told her that almost nobody can understand his singsong speech. • —r—*-----★----Jk----- Translating American money into English pounds is not difficult for this new resident alien. “I never know whether I’m getting a bargain or paying too much. And your prices vary so from store to store." i * fc ★ There/are- times when a writer goes out on an interview, meets his subject, asks toe necessary questions nnd leaves. ^ Then there are times when the interviewer and the subject find common areas of interest and talk on and on, forgetting the clock. That is what happened last week in the Squirrel Road home of the Femalds. We started with coffee in toe study and hours later wound up with tea at toe kitchen table. This English couple has tak- ' en happily to instant tea. But Hobn Fernald insists on a tea boxy to keep the pot warm; theirs Is a gaudy red and blue gtyipedone. |p!| | ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Fernald says in her lilting English accent that she fcddresthe deep freeze in her “frig.*!' But toe push-button electrie stove has her a tot baffled. She hasn’t figured out all tbs buttons yet The Mel that local utility companies give free bulbs and repair appliances simply amazed her. At first, toe didn’t believe it FULL HOUSE Some members of toe theater staff and a few actors will be living ip the delightful rambling farmhouse with toe Fer-nalds. The upstairs anchpart of the first floor are being remodeled into efficiency apartments. John Fernald is a restless man who does not adjust well to working in a rut, says his wife. He likes to plunge into difficult new ventures and she backs him up. She shares his enthusiasm and his ideas aboitt what toe perfect repertory theater should be — one without stars. “To be creative is the greatest thing; it is really the only thing that matters, isn’t it?” ; ★ ★ ★ “ Mrs. Fernald hopes to act in some of the plays to be given at OU, but not for a while. Her major concern now is to keep a peaceful environment for her husband and to keep the other actors happy. “Actors are really children at heart; keep them happy and you can do anything with them, even pay them less.” This is an actress speaking, remember. 65 Per Cerit on Friday UF Women Near Goal Mrs. Ben D. Mills opBloomfield Hills and Diane Large, a resident dt Camp Oakland's Girl Ranch, discuss the former’s resignation as cmm/ian of the Women’s Committee for Camp Oakland, ms.3Mills mill remain on the board of directors and contmM to work on pro* grams of the camp for iinderrprivilegkd; children. UF volunteers working on toe residential campaign are close to the finish of their 10-day drive and preparing for the women’s victory luncheon on Thursday, at toe Elks Temple. Results of Friday’s report date place the women at 65 per cent of their $36,000 quota with a raised amount of $23,025. ★ lib Over the weekend and during the next few days, the women are rushing to complete their calls, tallying the results and reporting foeir totals to chairman in anticipation of meeting their quotas. REPORTSDUE Mrs. James H. Cowen, women’s campaign chairman, reminds workers that the final re-However, additional monies port is due tomorrow, will be recorded up to the time of the victory luncheon to allow chairman to qualify for an Indian Oscar award given to chairman meeting their quotas. The women’s division, which began its drive, Oct. Ilf, is considered toe pace setter of campaign units, traditionally finishes first, and celebrates this achievement early. .* * ★ Lake Orion leads women’s units with 17 per cent of the goal. Mrs. Gifoert Adams is chairman of toe Lake Orion drive. Waterford women at 68 per cent are in second place. Mrs. Paul Atkins, Waterford chairman reported. ★ * if Independence Township has roadbed toe 65 per cent marie Benefit 1$ Set for Wednesday The theater benefit sponsored by toe Woman’s Auxiliary to Society will take place Wednes-~~3ay avenging. Tickets for the musical, “Walking Happy” at toe Fisher theatre, may be obtained from Mrs. Ralph Wigent, Mohawk Road, or Mrs. Vernon C. Abbott, Hlnois Avenue. Proceeds go into toe group’s fund for nursing scholarships. ..“Anyone who acts is really showing off, isn’t he? I remember when I was just a little girl. I had on a pink costume and was prancing ground the room, doing' nothing at all,, but showing off. “But it is when you decide to make that showing off a profession and spend the time learning and accept the disciplines, that you become a real actor.**' ★ . * ★ This small him woman with the coiled reddish-brown hair and hazel eyes feels deeply about life. Dedicated to producing illusions on toe stage, toe is realistic and concerned about society’s problems. As working mothers, we traded feelings of guilt we had experienced. Mrs." Fernald told of the time when she was set to go on stage for toe first act of a play her husband was directing and word came that their daughter had been injured by a truck. “Nothing must be allowed to stop a performance,” she said firmly. Three acts later, the worried parents could rush to the hospital where Karen was being treated for a concussion. The Femalds have been in the United States several times/ but this is their first visit to the middle west “I feel so good here, so healtity. London is really an awful city for anyone with allergies. But toe air here Is so dear.” WANTS SNOW “Do you* have tots of snow here? I love snow and am looking forward to it here in the country. We like to ski and hope to find some time for that. We went to Norway last year/* We , assured her that there would ^obatoy be snow and that Michigan abounds m ski resorts, pome which make snow when Nature is stingy with it. *, . ★ The Fernalds are impressed with toe way civic leaders take over voluntary jobs for sudi things as toe Meadow Brook Theatre. And tiie work of toe woman volunteer impresses her. jfc . * .★ “Women don’t do that kind of volunteer work in England. Oh, they sit on committees, but they don’t make a career of it. I think it’s healthy.” ★ ★ ★ In summing up her reaction to the move she and her husband have made, she said, “I think it’s providential that we came here at this time.” fc * *• We’re inclined to agree with her. But we think she’s going4o become Americanized quicker than she realizes. She can’t find anyone to help with the housework. Sorority Has Pledge Party Mrs. Clyle Haskill opened her home on Woodbine drive for the recent pledge party tor Zeta Eta chapter, Beta Sigma Phi sorority. Mrs. Dennis Lowes was cohostess. ★ ★ ★ ' Highlights of the recent state convention in Traverse City were given by Mrs. Jack Barker and Mrs. Joseph Ga-lardi. * A ★ Mrs. Norman Richards and Mrs. Robert Diebfll were guests. according to Mrs. Robert C. Jones, chairman. Mrs. Sol Newhouse, Pontiac chairman reported her unit at 55 per cent. Lake Angelus women are closing the gap at 63 per cent raised. Mrs. Ray Hayes, chairs the Lake Angelus division. ★ ★ . ★ , Thursday’s luncheon, to which all workers are Invited, will be sponsored by the Fisher Body Plant, General Motors truck and Coach and Pontiac Motor Divisions. William Belaney, promotion director, GMTC Employes Federal Credit Union will act as master of ceremonies. Music will be provided by toe Executives through toe courtesy of toe Pontiac Federation of Musicians, local No. 784. Mrs. Charles F. Collison, Lenox bguer while Mrs. Robert Neigebaner of Street (left) wears two hats during the Spence Street (right) does her stint as United Fund campaign. When she isn’t Pontiac Area IV chairman. The little girl out collecting in her area, she baby sits is the star attraction in her family with with two-month-old Roberta Ann Neige- four older brothers. m lml■ MICA White and Gold 39* Vinyl Asbestos Tllirxs” Many Colors MICA Cigaretta and Alcohol Proof 29*« UN0LE6M RUGS iw wt Vinyl Rubber TILE 9”x9" s -V/ ISC Plastic Wall TILE ACROSS From The MALL 2255 ELIZMETO LM RD. FRONT DOOR PUKING FE 4-5216 / k Jk B—2 THE PONTIAC PftKSjS.MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 Parties Will Precede Metamora Hunt Ball By SIGNE KARLSTROM - Prior to the Metamora Hunt Ball on Nov. S, Mrs. Charles K. Backus will entertain for New Fan hairstyles Permanent Waves . . .from $10 Speeixi Hair Catling by 0«car Blomquial Shampoo, Cut and Stylnd .C $5 Open Eveningt by Appointment . Appointment. not nhnqn rcmm 21 NORTH SAGINAW-DOWNTOWN PONTIAC WINTER CRUISE HEADQUARTERS Agents For All Cruise Ships Anywhere In The World PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE Pontine Mall Shopping Center 108 Mall Office Building V Phone 682-4600 * W A Warrant Officer Swint will later be assigned to helkop-. ter flight training for eventual duty in Viet Nam. He attended Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Eastern Michigan University. jt*it '• ' A;. A IBs bride attended the University of Oklahoma and Oakland University. Molli Jane Anderson, daughter of the Robert E. Andersons of Bloomfield HMs,mdy£. Warrant Officer Gregory Lee Swint, son of Mr. and Mrs. , John A. Swint of Fox Hills Drive were wid Saturday MinFoitMoUexr m Post Chapel, |§ Mineral Wells, Texas. MRS. GREGORY LEE SWINT Home Life Education Is Needed A legislative committee in California, aft e r exhaustive studies of family-related problems, has come up with an interesting proposal to add two deHart toer err marriage license and five d o 11 a r s to every divorce fee — with ail money thus collected to be spent for family life education in schools and colleges. A ■ A —A ■—•* This indicates that family education is failing to teach youngsters the importance of home discipline — including good housekeeping, standards and practices. The divorce rate might recede appreciably if today’s parents would pass on knowledge about the importance and responsibility of home cleanliness—which their children so sadly lack. to WON and WORT for the HOLIDAYS EVERYTHING FOR FAMILY LIVING CONVENIENCE Beautiful Modern Two-Piece Suite IMF. ROOM yon ford that new living room in time for the holidays! For one low price, own this luxurious/7 80” sofa. / Polly's Pointers Use Silver Cream DEAR POLLY-Sitver cream makes an excellent cleaner for enameled refrigerators and stoves which have .yellowed. This gets them white without dulling or scratching. When knitting sweaters leave long ends at the start of each garment piece when casting on and nse these ends to. sew the seams when the garment is completed. There are then many less yarn ends to “ran in”[ when finishing. I disagree with the Pointer about cutting out sewing patterns with, the pinking shears. I This is all right for simple garments but anything which re-1, quires precise joining such as set-in sleeves, collars and sol on are easier to get perfect with straight cut pieces; F usually pink the seams right after they are joined and before pressing them open. — MARY ANNE DEAR POLLY — Has anyone discovered a successful way to mend robber gloves? Often a ,tiny slit rains a glove and this is both expensive and frustrating. I have tried many things but none were successful. - CAROL ____________________ DEAR POLLY - I keep a wooden mixing spoon handy at my sink to use for pushing the odd shaped pieces that do not foil through thp opening in the rubber gaskets at the top of my garbage disposal. This unfinished wood does not get slippery with use and the round curve of the bowl does not damage tin rubber. It also saves possible injury to the fingers. —MILDRED DEAR GIRLS — Betty, my rigfat hand helper, also thinks a rubber spatula or scraper is as good or, she thinks, even better for this. If yon don’t" have one of these, fry the other. - POLLY Anyone submitting a Polly’s Problem, a solution to a problem or a favorite homemaking idea will receive a dollar if Polly uses the item in Polly’s Point- The William H. Free-lands of Crooks Rood, Avon Township} announce the engagement of their daughter, Janis Grace, to. Gregory Stephens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Stephens of Gravel Ridge Road, Avon Township. She attended Oakland Community College and her fiance is currently enrolled at Northwood Institute. ^CHRISTMAS SPECIAL > BABY PORTRAIT SALE Tuts, thru Thun. 11A.M. to I Ml. Fri. ; II AM. to liM P.M. Sat, It A.M. ta l:S$ P.M. Lunch Hour P.M. Get a Beautiful 8"xl0" (BLACK and WHiTE) Picture of Your Child Only 93c Bring all Hre children under 12 - 1 8x10, only 98c oach child tokon singly or 1 8x10 group only $1 por child. Selected frem finished pictures, NOT PROOFS I Finished 8x1 Ot in black and white, pita 5x7s ond i block and white and Itving coler believably taw privet. W.T. GRANT CO. 8030 Cooley Lake, Union Lake tgE PQNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, I960 B—8 MRS. R. W* ROSE Lace Accents Ensemble for Mrs. kose i yenise lace accented a gown and cape-train of ivory peau /satin for Leigh Ann Wagner who became Mrs. Robert William Rose, Saturday, in St. I* a u i’s Methodist Church, Rochester. .Hr * ★ Imported ivory illusion fashioned her veil. She carried “ yellow tea roses, chrysanthemums and white pompons. The newlyweds’ parents are the Otto Wagners, East Gunn Road, Oakland Township, and Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Rose, Livernois Road, Avon Township. Linda Smith was honor; maid at the double-ring rite followed by a church reception. /" ■ Hr ★ ★, Bridesmaids were Margaret son. Doris Rose was flower girl. With Charles Meagher, his cousin’s best man, were the ushers, Roger 0. Wagner and John Rose. f /The couple will reside in Madison Heights. Anne Dault Is Married an Friday Mr. and Mrs. Francis B. Dault of Eastview Drive, Independence Township, announce the marriage tlieir daughter Anne to James E. 1 Famttm, Friday, in the First llMWHHi Chyrch of the Brethren. RBMBWMBM|| Ae bridegroom is the son M the Kenneth Farnums of I Holbrook Street For die evening ceremony, Irar ■* , TQCAT the bride chose a street-length dress of avocado sheer wool pMMiiBaMMPB and a veiled headpiece. She"MI— carried white and yellow roses. Attending the couple who left for a northern wedding-trip were Karen Bray and Terry Stbcher. Store's Cleanliness Attracts A trade magazine, Progressive Grocer, has released findings from research on why' shoppers shop where. Second only to file first factor of a large selection, came cleanliness.— which rated ahead of courteous service* low price, quality of perishables. It seems logical that women who rate cleanliness so high where they shop, should also apply this principle at home. No husband enjoys a home that does not measure up to the best cleanliness standards —no matter how courteous the service or how fresh and good the food. CUSTOM Vitalising Permanent *1 050 Reg. 115.00 for Tinted and Bleached Ifol NOW SENSATIONAL SPECIALS Deluxe . Cold Wavy •10 Beauty Takes Many Different Faces In Eyes of the Beholder By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Your advice usually pretty good, but this Mg|g|£time I think you flopped. No, Abby, a pregnant woman is NOT beautiful. Unless you> want to call a woman whose face is puffed up, and whose an-ABBY kies are swollen to twice their normal zies, and who appears to be concealing a 55-pound watermelon under her1 dress, “beautiful!’-- SEES MYSELF ★ ★ ;h* DEAR ABBY: In 1914 a little 12-year-old ' boy named Harry watched his mother as she stood at the kitchen stove stirring a pot of oatmeal. Harrv suddenly noticed an unusual radiance in Shannon Rodger* for Jerry Silverman his mother’s face. Never before had she lboked so beautiful! When he remarked on it; she only smiled. A few months later the mother gave birth to a baby boy. Hairy did not know at the time of his remark that his mother was expecting a child, but he couldn’t fail to notice the exceptional radiance that fairly beamed from her face. | I was that boy, Abby. And no one wHl ever convince me that pregnant woman. does have a special heavehly beauty about her. Isaw it. H.I.S. (DALLAS) DEAR ABBY: I usually agree with you, but when you made the statement that there was “beauty” in a pregnant woman, that’s where you lost me. Anything that is not normal is not beautiful. And the shape that a woman gets into (or out of) while she is with child is anything but normal. Granted, it is only temporary, but it’s normal all the same. I have been married for 12 years, have nice children with a tenth on the way, and I have been in that blimp-like condition enough to know how unlovely I look. OUT OF SHAPE DEAR OUT: If you have been pregnant 10 times in 12 years, then T would say that pregnancy is the normal condition for you. DEAR ABBY; I am glad you said yon thought a pregnant woman is in a sepe “beauti- NA-2150 HALF SIZES ful.” I agree with you. And it is because they are playing such a big part in the miracle of God’s creation that they are. Over in France during World War I, I noticed Frenchmen of all ages tipping their hats to pregnant women as they passed them on the streets. I inquired about this, and was tokl it was a custom to show respect. Hi thought tills was a lovely gesture and have often dered why we don’t do it here? DEAR W, L. S.: Maybe it’s’ just as well. What with the new fashionable “tent” dre gentleman couldn’t be sure{ which ladies qualify for such “respect.” CONFIDENTIAL TO “HAVING OUR PROBLEMS THE FIRST YEAR:” Marriage is a job requiring the constant effort of both parties. If it isn’t worked at every day, it slips a little. It is my opinion that there never was a marriage that failed that could not have sue-' I, nor a marriage that endured that could not at some time have gone on the rocks. ★ ★ ★ . How has the world been treating you? Unload your' problems Dear Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal unpublished reply, enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. A bright orange cotton pillowcase is the basic ingredient for this, mtdh> costume. Cut necjdine and armholes With pinking shears. Pull corners of case through Hafe cur ta in rings to adjust fit. Vie scraps for witch’s face; yarn for hair. Designed by Lady Pepperetl. For rocket-propelled trick or treaters, a striped cotton pillowcase forms the basic costume. Loops of wire in the hem-and top give it a rounded shape. Rocket "nose” is cut from, cardboard. Now for Only *15°° 11N. Saginaw St. No Appointment Needed! Beaoty Salon Phone FE 5-9257 Pillowcases Become Halloween Costumes i FREE Area-Wide ! DELIVERY SERVICE [ casing at the bottom of the j other. Shoulder straps can be j made from bias Tape. Add a j cone-shaped hat cut from card-1 What do you do when your own little goblins demand quick transformation into a witch or fairy princess ... a space man or a demon? Here’s a quick trick from the ®08™- £ National Cotton Council: use a bright-colored cotton pillow- Make the costumes from old ■ case for a basic costume. Snip pillowcases you have on hand ■ out armholes and a neckline J. , . then replenish your supply," with pinking shears. Then pro-with some of the new fashion-|R ceed to decorate as the, chil-|oriented cotton percales. ■ dren’s imagination dictates. Little or no sewing is required. PHARMACY, INC. 880 WOODWARD-Medioal Building - -- FE 2-8383 FE 4-9915 to ...isCRfistm To make a witch’s costume,] for example, form a neckline by cutting a 12-inch slit in the center top of the pillowcase. | Mark the pillowcase five inches down from the top on I each side. Then use shears to cut an eight:inch opening down! from each mark for armhols. j 1 Pull the top corners of the pillowcase through cafe curtain rings to fit at the shoulders. j Use curtain rings that are tnree-1 fourths of ah inch in diameter, to assure a snug fit. To decorate the costume, cut out facial features of a witch from fabric scraps and glue in place. Outline features with' a laundry marker. YARN HAIR j Make the witch’s, hair by j cutting a skein of cotton yarn!__ into 30-inch lengths and ar-|—. ranging it across the top of R1 the pillowcase* Stitch . across, ■ catching each strand of yam, ■ and then trim as desired. A bunny-face costume can be R made inthesamemaimer. For R-longer ears, start armhole cut- ■ Outs nine inches down from the J top. Form rabbit whiskers from 5 pipe cleaners. The perfect A-line simple dress, created by Shannon Rodgers for Jerry Siilverman, has beautiful custom dress-maker detail. Note the narrow bias trim that circles the neck, arms and hem, with a small button to set it off. The princess shape is darted to follow the feminine lines of the figure. The sleeves have gussets and the tipper is set in the center back seam. Absolutely ideal for any choice of fabric such as jersey, tweed, shantung, raw silk, cottons and wool. Christmas cards from the Michigan Cancer Foundation are a rich red with a choice of the message shown above or simply “Season’s Greetings.” A donation of $3.75 is suggested for each, box of 25 Cards. Imprinting of a name or names will be done for an additional $2 per order, r€* gardless of quantity. Send orders, including 50 cents for mailing to North Oakland Unit, 64 West Lawrence, Pontiac 48053. • A more vital YOU- with ZOTOS* Vitalizer cold wavol Your whole personality become* more vital-vibrant-when your coiffure reflect* the conditioning and hidden rapport only a quality cold wave can give. 1000 Zotos Vitalixer Reg. 15,(X NEISNER’S ; Beauty Salon 42 N. Saginaw, 2nd Floor FE 8-1343 budget wave li HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS ALL THESE PHOTOGRAPHS Hy ' 32 PHOTOS ON Another variation is the “astro-spook”—a rocket-shaped costume tor the space-minded. Use a striped pillowcase to form the body of the rocket. Give it a rounded shape by inserting loops of wire into the top and bottom of the pillowcase. Use the pillowcase hem for one loop, and make a one-inch 1-8x10 PRINT 6-5x7 MOUNTED 24 WALLET SIZE 1-SCHOOL PRINT No Setting Charge CLOSED WEDNESDAY Men., Tim*., Thur*., 12-8:30 1 Fri. and Sat. 9-5 If ENDALE’S lm Studio 45 West Huron St. FE 5-3260 FE 5-0322 •From Nap* of Nock to W_ Size 16% requires 3% yards oft 39” fabric tor dress. Misses size 12 requires 2 % yards of 45” fabric for Dress. To order, state size and correct pattern number. (NA-2026 Misses or NA-2150 Half Sizes); send $1.25 for each pattern ordered.. Pattern Books No. 28, No. 29 and No. 30 are available for 50c each plus 10c postage for each book. Duchess of Windsor Pattern Book with 60 designs is available for $1.00. 'DON’T MISS save Annual «»% FALL Smrvimg Oakland County Ovor 3S Yean WILLIAM WRIGHT fWnflMW Mehen < ^270 Orchard Lake Furniture Mehen Omd Vpheltteren _jjga*»«r. FE4-0558 ""T* *8 SOFTEE MOCS ltd 6® • Mew Rounded Toot • Handsewn Vamps • Foam-knit Lined a Fashion Styling a Sparkling Color Choice Soft and supple ... a fashion choice in four earthy colors. Your pick of Vintage Rod, Loam Black, Jug Brown, Country Groan. Sizes 5 to 10 B, 6Va to 10 AA. Hurry for the rock bottom price during thia special sale. Shoe Salen-AAesanine 48 N. Saginaw THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1066 MRS L. T. MOEHLMAN May Clog Op If only a spattering of water comes out of the shower head, it is time to take it off and clean the interior, for. sediment and mineral deposits will clog it up. They can be removed easily with a sharp pointed tool. A U. $. national census taken evfery 10 years. Miss Watts Takes Vows on Saturday; Marjorie Carol Watts and Larry Troy Moehlman were wed Saturday in St. Mail’s-in-the-Hills Episcopal Church, Lake Orion, and later greeted guests in the church undercroft. 1 v - * ★ ar)-* " Attending the candlelight rite were their parents Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Watts, Joslyn Road, Orion Township, and die Robert F. Moehlmans, Lake Orion. LACE GOWN With her floor-length gown of white Chantilly lace over, taffeta, the bride wore a bouffant illusion veil. Her spray bouquet held white carnations and a white orchid. With honor maid, Victoria L. Ryckman, were brides-maids Linda L. Bracken, Trudy Wiseman and Lori Nixon, flower girl. Steve Watts qar-ried the rings. Robert E. Moehlman was his brother’s best man. Ushers were Howard Paulson and Kenneth Pearce. The couple left for a northern wedding-trip. Holiday decorations to be sold at the annual bazaar Saturday in the Farmers’ Market were displayed by the Dirt Gardeners Club this past weekend at The Pontiac Mall. Mrs. Chester Dlugoszewski of Momihgside Drive holds a table tree decorated* by Mrs. Eleray Thomas of Thomas Dane. It is backed withfelt to hold Christmas cards. Hairdo How-To: 7 Three Brush Wardrobe C. R. HASKILL STUDIO Has Photographed Over 2,000 Weddings* MayWeJdafce Your Pictures? Twenty-8x10-inch fitll color tilth album s’1451 Price Includes: • • Picture for Press • • Just Married Sign a • Wedding" Guest Book S a Miniature Marrisfe Cer>' * ^ Rficate > .T.-v- — a Rice to Throw J Mrs. Lynn R. Thorpe '£ 1 Mt. Clemens St.. _____ FE 4-0553 j RANDALL’S 88 Wayne St. .(Rapture drama with a NEW HIGH CURVE HAIR FASHION —It is strikingly modern and classically romantic* reports Ora Randall, recently returned from the New York Show. Expert hair I shaping underlines this coiffnre. Beauty Shoppe FE 2-1424 By DOROTHEA ZACK HANLE Editor, HairDo Magazine The prettiest hairdo you’ve ever seen has enjoyed superior “brushmanship.” That lovely, controlled, super-smooth coif depends for its appeal oh luster, sheen and; texture — the result of absolute cleanliness and dihgent brushing. WHICH BRUSH? What kind of b r u s h should you own and use? Or should you have more than one? Whep you choose yours, consider these factors: Is your hair wiry, wild, coarse? You need a tough-bristled brush tHat grips the hair and gives your scalp a thorough workout. Baby-fine, wispy hair? A gentler-bristled brush for you — but with long and short natural bristles to stroke as well as stimulate. Hair that lies flat and limp most of the time? Liven it up with a synthetic-bristle brush to improve its health and condition. • ★ ★ .★ Ideally, the minimum ward-_ robe of brushes should be three — one for before-shampoo brushing (the grime-getter), one for nightly conditioning and a little one for styling and touching up (dice to carry in your handbag). Very few people really know how to brush hair properly. Begin by brushing hair firmly back from face. Brush next up and away from the neck, never down. Throw head forward as you bend from the Get a New Viewpoint about CONTACT LENSES Wearing contact lenses is a secret only you and your doctor need know' Ask about the many advantages of contact lenses. It is possible that you mqy qnjoy a new freedom from gldSsek. A becoming, natural appearance bnd the other advantages that minutely-sized contact lenses can give. If ypu think you would like to wear contact r lenses, your inquiries are invitedX 109 N. SAGINAW ST. f. STEINMAN, O.D. Dolly 9:30 A M. to 5:30 P.M. Friday 9:30 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. ?£tudio4 FE 2-2895 DIVIDED PAYMENTS AVAILABLE Brush briskly from the nape of the neck to the very ends of the hair. Keep the stroke steady hp don’t tear at the hair. Give a slight twist to the wrist as you brush., nils makes a brush stroke with a rolling motion that' grips the hair, gently tugs the scalp to stimulate circulation. The upward, outward movement raises the hair, enabling bristles to massage and cleanse die scalp. Be sure to. complete every stroke to the very aids of the hair. How many times? Two hundred? That’s “brushmanship” if you’re doing it right with the right brush for your hair. One hundred? That’s grandmother’s rule. The more, the bet ter — but we’d say you’d have a pretty heatlhy scalp with a mere 50 good, professional strokes. GUIDE TO BRUSHOUT You’ll begin a brushout, of course, with hair that’s bone-dry. Your equipment, spanking clean and thorouthly dry, top: a firm-bristled hairbrush; a comb or slim teasing brush; a rattail comb. And you’ve a can of hair spray handy, too, properly selected for your kind of hair. Now, follow the pictures and directions for a professional-looking brushout: Remove clips and rollers, picks and papers — gently, please, without tugging or tearing. If hair’s been dryer-dried, replace each curl in roller form, let it cool that way. Start right at the hairline and brush straight back— in long, vigorous strokes, blending all the curl lines together. If your hair tends to- dryness, dab a Mt of cream hairdressing on the palm of one hand, rub hands together, then run them through your hair this way: slide fingers back from the hairline, up from the nape, close to' the scalp. Brush again, now blending the curl lines still more, and being sure to carry your brush strokes the full length of each strand. ★ * * Now, with your brush, begin to guide your hair into the lines defined by your setting. Details are not important now; work for over-all direction, moving the hair in large sections, concentrating on top and sides. Stop and check your progress now; use a hand mirror, and examine your coif from all sides. What td look for: those areas that seem to be resisting your coaxing into line, those that will need some special attention. ★ ★ ★ Now for the final molding and smoothing. Let fingers help, too, ..in drawing, out a slim cheek curl, draping a wave, curving a flip. All done, just as you like it? Spray — an even misting all a r o u n d, holding the can upright and as far away as label directs. ★ ★ ★ Before the spray is quite dry, use the flexibility it gives you to adjust those last little touches: lift very, very lightfy with rattail comb to pouf where fullness is needed — at the turn of the bangs or the rise of the crown; use fingers to fan out a flip or guiche, if needed. All Rubber 395 NEW 7-FOOT VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Rubber Exchan gable With | Your Old Re-Use- W obi* Hot* Endt Regular 7.50 Come In or t ree Delivery PARTS and SERVICE OR ALL CLEANERS Disposal Bags-Hosas-Brushes-Celtf-Attachments-Etc. '"Rebuilt by Curt's Appliances Using Our Own Parts" Complete With Attachments Free Heme Demonstration - OR 4-1101 Within 21 MBs Radius CURTS APPLIANCES Factory Authoring While Daalar 6484 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD Club Slates Market Sale Members 01 the Dirt Gardeners Club have been mak- Kseful and decorative ar-for a four-hour bazaar which wifi open Saturday at 8:00 a.m. in the Farmers’ Market. Fungi have been treated to be us^d as wall plaques and for turkey table centerpieces. Other novelties are comhusk dolls, gourds, nuts and fruits arranged on a tree-slab. Proceeds from the sale which also features wild fruit jellies, aprons, baked goods and linens will further the club’s civic projects which include assisting with the landscaping of the Waterford Township Library. Mrs. R. W. Hermes is ways and means chairman. ALL PEIMAJffiNTS *3« NONE HIGHER 1 —Slew Lustre Shampoo 2— Flattering Haircut 3— Lanolin Neutralizing 4— Smart Style Setting HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. 78 N- Saginaw Over Basdey Mkt. 338-7660 Bloomfield Wrack Nile Only 'RE HOUR the most m SHIRT SERVICE REMMMUIB ALTERATION SERVICE Dry Cleaning Special. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, October 24-25-26th LONG or SHORT COATS Waist Length Jackets 69c 98* Bloomfield Miracle Milo Only Dial 332-1822 FREE PARKING Directly Acres* the Street I • 4 Complete Floors of Home Furnishings Elevator Service to All Floors • Provincial • Colonial • Traditional O Modern All by America's Leading Manufacturers END of MONTH The Big Event You’ve Waited For! SAVE 1/2 Up Hurry for Best Selection! FREE DELIVERY Quantities are limited, and many are one of a kind and will* be told on a first-come basis. Sorry, no moll or phone orders on sol* Items! DON'T 1 I XicV 1 YOU'LL I MISS | rpp 1 ITI £ 5CC I 111 | SAVINGS p Greatest! galore | FURNrrURElTHR°uI?H0UTi Sale I The I of the STORE Year! & - --- - * Save On f| Sofas Chair* Dining and Bedrooms Mattresses Lamps | Occasional Tables ACCESSORIES \ Everything Tor the Home ■ NO MONEY DOWN 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH Convenient Credit Terms Arranged_ 'w m THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONPAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 B—3 COME ON IN MID JMN THE PARTY! 4 MORE DAYS TO BO! GOODYEAR SERVICE STORES rnmmm Convenient, Ultra-Modern Automotive and Appliance Headquarters BRAND OPENING 1370 WIDE TRACK DRIVE W., PONTIAC NO SHORTAGE OF COLOR TV HERE! JUST COME ON IN - MAKE YOUR CHOICE GENERAL ELECTRIC HIGH SPEED DRYER No Special Wiring Neeefr cary—operate* on stand-ard 120 or 240-vott dp s15995 Just Say “CHARGE IT’ Instant Credit • Yob Bay Hare • You Pay Han o.Yoa’n Serviced Han FREE ROSE CORSAGE for the Ladies I Gifts for the Men, Too! ~Ju$t Comehrxmd— Register -You May Win! Budget Priced GENERAL ELECTRIC s189 95 CONVENIENT TERMS Leaf rake gyring steel Hut 77* all. handle / [r Basketball Set <3» Extra wide lor fait raking. 22 tine* of spring ateel. Rust to* sistant baked-on enamel finish. Overall length 60". 24-pc. setting "Barbados*'pattern of fall* blown American Beauty rose. Polished finish. Hot* forged knlvsa. (Imported) Bath Scale eS£SL *p$ Boy one el Nits pries. Additional scales $2.eg. Has large, vinyl-covered tipless plat* forsa. Baiy-to-read dlaL FREE *2,500 GRAND DRAWING ! NO PURCHASE NECESSARY 1st Prize ... GE Color Television 2. GE Portable TV 6. Bicycle 3. Pair of Winter Tires 7.6E Steam Iron 4. Pair cl Winter Tires 8. Electric Carving Knife 5. Pair of Winter Tires 9.30-Cup Percolator . Hundreds of Other Prizes! Stop in and Register Todayl— FIHMVBKI! (.00/6.50 x 13 black tubitois plus S3.UFid.Ex.Tn and two racgppabl* tins NEW SUM-GRIP SHOW TIREG • Don’t get stuck in the gnow—-buv now while prices are loir and stocks fall • Built deep to bits deep -190 tractor-type cleats designed to get you through even in hubcap-deep snow • Built with 3-T nylon cord fdr extra body strength and extra safety • Has Tufsya rubber/the extra mileage rubber FILTER-FLO* WASHER _____leavy Fabric Loads a New V-14 Spiral Active-, tor*—3-zone washing notion Size Tubslsisf BlaekwaR Pair Price* WhltewaR Pair Price* Fad. Ex. Tex 2 Tires 6.00/6.50x13 2 for $28 2 for $33 $3.12 |H 7.35/7.75 X14 (7.00/7.60 X14) 2for$35 2 for $40 $4.40 ■ 8.25X14(6.00X14) 1 2 for $38 2 for $43 $4.72 WrM 8.55x14(8.50x14) 2for$43 2 for $48 $5.14 l&l 7.75X15(6.70X15) 2 for $35 2 for $40 $4.42 Wm 8.45x15(7.60x16) 2 for $43 2 for $48 $5.10 — 8.85/8.00x15(8.00/8.20x15) 2 for $49 2 for $54 $5.50 Ir’ M-Piu* tax and 2 old tire* HSw-size listed also replaces size shewn In parenthesis NO MONEY DOWN • j $L25 WEEKLY • ' FREE MOUNTING "No Limit" Guarantee h. Unlttd Sl»t« and Canari in original traad dapth nmalnlni and 0< Winterizing Brake fecial CetNnnr at this low price Official sice and waight Eagle basketball with,black seama. */a"xl8"ateel goal and inflating needle. Protect your car from winter'eravagee, Trained. expert operators will apply Sure-Sealing Compounds to save your car’s appearance. Aak about our complete rust-proofing offer! • , ___________ PLENTY OF FREE PARKING REFRESHMENTS FOR ALL! COFFEE § DONUTS PEPSI FOR THE KIDS Children Must Be Accompanied by Parents Just Come In and Browse Around USE OUR EASY PAY PLAN) NO MONEY DOWN! TAKE MONTHS TO PAY ON ALL MERCHANDISE AND AUTOMOTIVE SERVICES ! GO I fcjyg X .Vli B—-6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 ROYTEX CULTIVATES CORDUROY AND COMES UP WITH THREE HANDSOME PEDIGREES Signs Point to Doubling of Viet GIs EDITOR’S NOTE - UPI foreign news analyst PhU Newsom has just returned from two months in South Viet Nam — his fourth visit there since mid-imj. 1 By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst A turn is coming in the long and frustrating war in Viet Nam which coaid nearly double U.S. forces there and, at least /for a time, lead to a substantial increase hi American casualties. » • a With no sign that the Communists are ready to ne* gotiate, the change will be a part of a new U.S. effort to end the war as quickly as possible. It will reflect a g r a d n a 1 shift in tactics under way lor several months and a new role for the armed forces of South Viet Nam. It will not be announced. This does not' mean that the military phase of the three-way war in South Viet Nam is not doing well. It is doing better than expected. But the pacification phase is lagging and, in coming months, will get special attention. ON CONCLUSIONS After a fourth visit to South Viet Nam since the United States began stepping up Us efforts there, these are among the conclusions reached by this correspondent: • UA forces, now at around 125.000 in South Viet Nam, probably will go up to around 600.000 barring the unexpected, namely, negotiations. • U.S. forces will take over the striking role as South Vietnamese troops begin playing a bigger role in padfica-tion. In the last year and a half, U.S. forces have taken over more and more as primary strike forces. Vietnamese success fa providing at least partial security to Vietnamese voters in flu Sept 11 elections will giro the idea added emphasis. It is the old idea of the one-two punch. o US. and South Vietnamese forces have been killing their1 Viet Cong enemy at a rate of about 6-to-l over their own losses. They believe that, in coming months, they can kill the VC and the North Vietnamese at a rate faster than the Communist can infiltrate. Nonetheless, pacification, that is, the returnees from Viet Cong control, in flu last year is figured onlp ci the rate of about two per cent and is not a howling success. • Economic gains, the third phase of the war, are described by American experts on the: ground as “not inconsequential."! It is a negative phrase which means that gains have been made but the program continues to be plagued by Vietnamese carnqrtion and by inefficiencies. BEEF LOINS Tender Juicy SIRLOIN Jfc jfcx t-bone nnr PORTERHOUSE H Ifl ¥ STEAKS VU Special 33 lbs. Includes Steaks, ROASTS,BACON,Eto. Our Finest '. jFpr & Only 22 95 Extra Tender BEEF HINDS RQc for Your || ^|b 45 c lb.- I* M«NmiI Chart* tanka . Nam, laeta and SbmmmI ^taaaaia - Ca> aaSWrawst/f c DEER PROCESSING LOCKER SPACE AVAILABLE S APPROXIMATELY V 20 IbS. Rib Stoaks 30 IbS. Roast Beef Cut ,15 IbS. Hamburger 1R ihe Bar-B-Oue ID IbS. Beef Ribs Mlot Cut 201b*. T-Bone Steak •Hill Pounds $ aw U.S. * JUU Total 49 Comm.J Ilf III i80 Hig 0 ATERF0RD MEAT PACKERS 4980 Highland Rd. (MSB) Waterford, Mieh. 674-1440 XFORD LOCKER MEAT 41N. Washington, Oxford, Mieh imwmminiiji/ OA 8-2884 , JRJSP^J^jjJIJTjjjMeTTOuroJkjr^ Wide wale corduroy . . . soft, supple, deeply.-piled . . . and beautifully tailored dv Roytex. (above left). The Saki kimona robe, a wrap style in the three-quarter length. Red or blue, $13. (above right). The TV coat, a wrap style with satin shawl collar and sash, red and blue with black piping, $19. (below) The Wales, a full length wrap robe ggM in red and blue 1 with black' pip-ing $15 All in OurPontiK Mall Store Opm Ivory Ivening sizes S,M,L,XL. iOAN.Tewip.pl. Rd. Our Birminiham Store Open Mob., Tues. and Wad. to 5:SO 100 Piorc* St. Miil and Phana Ordatra 082-2200. Add 4% Mich. Salat Ta* Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, Oct. 25,26, 27 Eatmere Res 0n>e4r, Wsfu in our new building... 929 West Huron V2block west of Telegraph Louise Ledbetter and Mary Negoshian, your hostesses, will be there to greet you. I FEATURES OF THE-DAY. /.PLUS OUR REGULAR MENU I Feature of the Day TUESDAY Roast Turkey With tatty dressing, potatoes, vegetable, salad, bread and buttar, ice croam and cranberry sauce. 89e Breakfast Feature Poached Eggs on Toast Coffee 53' Open 5 A.M. to 8 P.M. Feature of the Day WEDNESDAY Baked Ham and Yarns With vegetable, salad, bread and buttar and ica cream. *1.19 Breakfast Feature French Toast with Syrup and Buttar Coffee 49' Feature of the Day THURSDAY Swiss Steak With potatoes, vegetable, salad, oread and butter and ica cream. $1.13 Breakfast Feature Egg Omelet Toast, Coffee 5t' Baily and Sunday - Friday 5 A.M. to 9 P.M. r4s-j Congratulations on Your Grand Opening and Continued Success from: Maple Loaf Dairy Exclusively Farm Maid laity Products and lea Craam City Sign Co, Haon and Plastio Signs Dssigning-Building-Maintananeo lTMd-1 Paul Humphrey Restaurant Ssrvics OK 8-9241 Service Plumbing and , Heating 429 Orchard Lika Ava., Pontiac L. G. Fidler Wholesale Food Distributors 2005 Pontiao Rd., Pentiao Avon Electric and Refrigeration 1428 W. South B t, Rochester Culligan Water Conditioning * Sales I Service 926 Orchard Laka Ava., Pontiao Quality House Bakeries 121 W. Huron - Nick Pappas “The House of Goodies” Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Pontiao ‘’Things go hotter with Coke” Oakland Vending 809 H. Perry, Pontiao Pontiao Fruit House Frozen Foods, Fresh Fruits and Prodonn (WholesaitOnly) 260 Norton Ave., Pontiao Mainline Insurance Agcy. 188 S. Bates, Birmingham Tam Clapp Hoffman’s Oakland Pckg. j Quality Moan 121H. Parry, Pontiao - Banner Linen Service 366 N. Cass, Pontiao B-sT TTTR PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1666 TWO YANKEE STORES IN THE PONTIAC AREA * MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER * CORNER OF PERRY AND MONTCALM STREETS VaVET BOUND WMTERHEIHIT IIMKETS Reversible two-tono solid color. 72 X 90 sis*. Fits twin and double beds. Machine washable. \ Compare it 7.18 ROBERT I TEMPI Preferred In Lawyers' Official Pelf fir CIRCUIT JUDGE OAKLAND COUNTY ^ : NMUEDFOM FUNNEL RACKED TERRY MATS TABLECLOTHS EACH tut* Never clip, 100% Cannon ootton terry tops. Non-skid, machine washable, poly-foam backs. ’ * Heavy vinyl, wipe clean table covers, with cotton flannel backing. Protects and tneulatss your table top. Aaaorted patterns and colors. DEMONSTRATION - Astronaut James formed on the space flight of Gemini 12. A. ,Lovell (right) usea a motel of a Gemini Lovell is command pilot and astronaut Ed- spacecraft and an Agena to demonstrate one win E. Aldrin Jr. the pilot for the Gemini 12 of the flying maneuvers that will be per- effort, slated to staH on Nov. 9. Little Speech-Making at Manila Talks Open on a Folksy MANILA (AP) chiefs at the Viet Nani confer-ence approached their task with determination today, but the opening session was almost folksy. President Johnson shaking hands all around and complimenting his host, President Ferdinand E. Marcos, on the fancy embroidered shirt that is Philippine national | Mrs. Marcos moved graciously among the women asking if they were too hot, were their seats comfortable, could they hear all right. Summit | nists would be, too, if ha could only get them to Manila. Marcos gave the floor to Ky and the lights were dimmed. Ky had some colored slides prepared to illustrate his resume of the Vietnamese military situation. By agreement, speech-making was at a minimum. Thailand’s soft-spoken Premier Thanom Kittikachorn declared the meeting open. Towering, gray-haired Prime Minister Keith Holyoake, ______ to no one’s surprise, nominated MV OMEII ()rTEN Marine ae permanent chair 11 VmMI Vf i sn HAVE BLADDER IRRITATION Marcos hobbled the names of ri^Son, »<>» S6uth Viet Nam’s chief of state Nguyen Van Thieu and Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. They but hardlv anyone else noticed.] u«u*iir bring, rut, niutnt comfort br . j J i curbing , irritotlnf germ. In itronl, OCM ■*•'*'* ‘ ■ ■■----------------relief. Oct letter fut. Several thousand Filipinos watched the leaders arrive at the yellow stucco congressional buildings. They applauded happily but not exuberantly, there wasn’t a demonstrator in sight. The temperature was 92.4 degrees and going up by the minute. \ The formal opening was completed in less than an It was all much less colorfulj and noisy than «&e street-side enthusiasm Sunday, when all the chiefs of state got a motorcade trip from the airport* At the stately Malacanang Palace, Where the closed-door ________ were held, Johnson’s bubble-top limousine was parked in a comer of the grounds and a stream of palace employes went to look at it. hour. Marcos disregarded most AGENTS RELAX of his prepared text weighty ideas to emphasise that he considered his guests his American Secret Service gents seemed almost relaxed. One noticed that a Philippine brother and felt the pOmmu- traffic cop lacked a few rounds in his amnumition belt. Up went the trunk of the bubble top and the policemen got seven rounds from the Secret Service armory. “i’ll never fire those, you can be sire of that/* said the patrol- Storm Ships Leave Haven HOlJGffl'ON (AP) — The ore carrier Chicago Trader led a group Of M Great Lakes ships through the Portage Ship Canal onto western Lake Superior Sunday after a weekend storm abat-/ed. The ships had moved into the security of Portage Lake, between ChasseU and Torch Lake, early Saturday and remained at anchor for 36 hours. The storm lashed the Keweenaw Peninsula with rain and snow behind 60-miie-an-hpUF winds. * * ★ The largest of the ships was the Herbert Jackson and the - smallest was a group of Army Corps of Engineers togs. The conference itself was held in the small council of state chamber. The room measures 24 by % feet and is dominated by a spe-j dally built horseshoe table of beautiful, Philippine hardwood and an ornate chandelier. AT ONE END President Johnson sat at one end of the horseshoe. To his right were Premia1 Kittika-chom, the Vietnamese leaders, President Marcos in the center of the table, South Korea’s Chung Hee Park, Prime Minister Harold Holt of Australia and his look-alike friend, Prime Minister Keith Holyoake of NeW Zealand. IK MW TO JUDGE mm CELEBRATION QUALITY CARPET s iuwjhtsliriJigc 18.95 22.95 SQ. YD. PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT • No Down Payment • 90 Days Sam* a* Cash • Up to 36 Months to Pay This is an unusual statement to make about carpet - but it’s the. truth. When customers/ like yourself, see Knights Bridge, feel its luxurious deep carpet pile made with Acrilan® acrylic fiber, admire its rich texture and glowing colors — they’re ready to buy! Knights Bridge has that remarkable combination of looks, quality and practical pricing. And it’s made by Roxbury, the carpet manufacturer - who gives you * 11 exciting Colors * special easy-care maintenance * long-lasting wearability plus 11$ years experience making quality carpet. It’s love at first sight And the love is lasting. HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 108 N. SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 live with it, love it, & take your time paying for it! BUY, SELL, TRADE USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS SEAMLESS, mB FOAM BUCK MATTRESS PHD & COVER MmAIm woihokU, MU* fsrliid, llttW (klrt, Knrt f fit >»>• “ ‘ I TWIJt (EG. 2.99 FULL SIZE. 2.44 22 X 28M size. Choose from Fruit of th« Loom softly shredded foam flakes or 50% foam - 50% feathers. REG. 2.49 TOSS PILLOWS 66*°» Solid color textured ribbon effect decorator fabrics, filled with shredded foam. pi B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 2^ 1088 Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Victor j. DeClerck De Service for Victor J. Clerck, 73, of IS N. will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at St, Vincent de Paul Church with burial at Mount Hope Cemetery. A Eosary will be said at 8 tonight at the Donelsbn-Johns Funeral Home. Mr. De Clerck, a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division, died Saturday follow-ing a short illness. He was a member of St. Vincent de Paul Church. > Surviving are his wife, Mary G.; a son, Charles J. of Clarks-ton; a daughter, Mrs. Phillip DeConick of Orchard Lake; two brothers, Alfons of Auburn Heights and Alberig in Belgium; two sisters; and eight grandchildren. Andy M. Hagen Service for Andy M. Hagen, 71, of 401 N. Paddock will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Coker Funeral Home, Harrison, with burial in Maple Grove Cemetery. A prayer service will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Voarhees-Siple Chapel Mr. Hagen died yesterday following a long illness. He was a retired employe of Fisher Body plant Surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Lila Clark of Pontiac, Mrs. Ruth Keller of Clawson and Mrs. Lula S. Payne of Saginaw, and a brother. Mrs. Erwin M. Metzdorf Service for Mrs. Erwin M. (Mae S.) Metzdorf, 62, of 165 N. Johnson will be 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Sparks-Griffln Funeral Home, with burial in Oakland Hills Cemetery. A teacher, she died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Patricia Gibb of Denver, Colo.; a son, Thomas Metzdorf of Pontiac; a sister, Martha Ahner of Pontiac; a brother; and five grandchildren. Mrs. Charles McNeil Service far Mrs. Charles (Vena) McNeil, 68, of 117 Summit will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Hun toon Funeral Home with burial hi Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. McNeil died Saturday. She was employed at the Hotel Roosevelt., Surviving are a son, William of Pontiac; agister, and three grandchildren. Mathew L. Pfeiffer Service for Mathew L. Pflef-fer, 56, of 601 Peacock will be 9:30 a.m. • tomorrow at St, Michael’s Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery: The Rosary will be said at 7:30 tohight at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mr. Pfeiffer died Saturday following a long illness. He was employed as a tool and die maker at Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Goldie; two daughters, Mrs. Kenneth mother, ^Mrs. Frank Fenton of| Surviving besides her husband] Pontiac; and a sister, Paula at]are a daughter, Mrs. Dan Guth-home. i Tie of Uticg; two sons, Glen R. / jtjf Los Angeles and Ray H. of MfS. G. A. Danielson Sacramento, Calif.; and eight SHELBY-TOWNSHIP - ServJgrandchiWren- ice for Mrs. G. A. (Olive) Danielson, 66, of 6681 Dorf will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be in Acacia Park Cemetery, Birmingham. A orial service will be 7:30 tonight by Order of the Eastern Star Chapter No. 165. Mrs. Danielson died Saturday after a long illness. She was member of Order of the Easton Star No. 165 and the Village Extension Club. Bus Rides Included in 'Y' Program An after-school bus program offering swimming and gym classes has been organized at the YMCA, 131 Mount Clemens, for fourth, fifth and sixth grad-from eight elementary schools. Pontiac elementary schools participating in this program are Lebaron, Bagley, McCarroll, Whitfield, Webster, Irving and Emerson. Cherokee Hills Elementary in Waterford Township Is also participating. “Y” buses pick up 318 boys at 3 p.m. on an assigned day each week during the 10-session program. ,-i - ★ ★ ★ After two 45-minute instruc-tional and recreational gym and swim classes the bus returns the youngsters to their school yard by 6 pm. OPENINGS EXIST There are still openings in this program at LeBaron, Whitfield, McCarroll, Emerson and Bagley. Hie program fee is |4 for nonmembers and 88 for members. Children will be considered ‘Y” members during the 10-week session ending Dec. 16. Members may participate in other programs, providing their own transportation. Contact the YMCA for further information and registration. Mrs. Albert Fischer ATTICA — Service for, Mrs. Albert (Lillian) Fischer, 69, of 36 Springer lime will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday from the Muir Brothers Funeral-Home, Imlay City. Burial will be in Attica Cemetery. Mrs. Fischer died suddenly yesterday. Surviving are her husband and brother, Elgin Lucas of Attica. Kenneth Hale ORION TOWNSHIP - Service Tor Kenneth Hale, 54, of 3695 Waldon will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery; Pontiac. ...........7“ ~| Mr. H a le, employed at the Oakland County laundry, died suddenly Surviving are three brothers, Harry and Charles of Pontiac and Leonard of Davison, and a: sister, Mrs. Clayton SneUing of weekend in Sarnia, Ont. Lake Orion. Joseph of Clarkston and Mrs. un*®y Gun, $850 in Cash Stolen From Home Loss of a 38-caliber revolver and $850 in cash was reported to Pontiac police yesterday following a break-in at a city home. Elmer Yarbrough, 42, of Crystal L a k e told police His house was ransacked while he was absent from the home Sat- Paul Cassidy of Tucson, Ariz.; two brothers, Peter and Rudolph, both of Pontiac; three sisters; and five grandchildren. Newton Reed Service for Newton Reed, 57, of 577 Fildew will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at Friendship Missionary Baptist Church with burial at Mt. Olive Cemetery, New Orleans. His body is at the Frank J. Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr. Reed, an employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division, died Friday following a short illness. He was a member of Friendship Missionary Baptist Church. Surviving are his wife, Lam-urrell; three brothers; and four sisters. Mr*. Peter Travers Service for Mrs. Peter (Mildred) Travers, 59, of 522% Highland will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at St. John Methodist Church with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery by Frank J. Carruthers Funeral Home. Mrs. Travers, a member of St. John Methodist Church, died Friday following a long illness. Surviving are her husband; a son, Isaiah Lidell of Pontiac; and a sister. Arden J. Blrk ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Arden J. Birk, 17, of. 2605 Semloh will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Hie Youth died Saturday as a result of a traffic accident. He was a student at Lake Orion Community High School. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ervin J| Birk; a grand- Police said entry to the house had been gained by prying off a kitchen storm window. Crash Injures Area Youth A Highland Township youth is in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital with injuries suffered early yesterday when his car stemmed into a tree. Wayne C. Granger, 18, of Baker was alone in his car, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies, when the vehicle skidded out of control on Milford Road south of Highland in Highland Township. The accident occurred about a.m., deputies said. U.N. Week Observance Is Planned * ROCHESTER — Church bells rang yesterday to herald the start of United Nations Week in tiie Rochester area. The observance will move into tiie schools Monday with sped-tel films and literature for the elementary group provided by Mrs. Robert W. Gaines, 2567 Stoodleigh. Richard McGowan, 327 William, former president of the area chapter, will head up activities in the secondary RETURN OF NATIVES - Discussing the 16th annual Pontiac Educators Conference with Assistant Schools Supt. William J. Lacy (center) are two reading experts who also are former Pontiac residents. Kaye Stickle, now working on ho* doctorate at Michigan State University, and keynoter Dr. Harold Herber of Syracuse University were among the resource persons who conferred with Pontiac educators this" A bullet wound suffered when die was accidentally shot by her husband has hospitalized a Pontiac woman. ★ . . it n This is a message be calling < here. There area at the Donelson-J( Home. In our resident!) crowding —/a is easy to reach, and easy to park. 2 City Youths Face Charges in Area Break-In Two Pontiac youth* were arrested by Waterford Township and city police yesterday morn-ling shortly after a burglary at] the Elizabeth. Lake Pharmacy,! 3801 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Townqjiip. . . 1 r Sr . * __ ; Scheduled to be arraigned on breaking and entering charges' today are Berlin W. Batey, 18,1 of 488 N. Saginaw and Douglas L. Runyon, 19, of 796 Crittendon. ★ ★ * The suspects allegedly took 12 bottles of Whisky, valued at $93, from the store. I Three youths, who saw the su-i spects flee from the Store, informed the owner after obtaining the license number of the getaway car. , FEDERAL ^4-4511 (Pa/Jdnq On Our (Pruuuei ■ COoneLon-^olim 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC ENDURING MEMORIAL We are specialist* in fully guaranteed monument* sculptured from Select Barre Granite. Monuments ... .From $195 Markers ......From $35 INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry ‘ 335-6931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Memorials for Over 72 Year* SINGER CLEARANCE SALE OPEN STOCK - -0 SAVE:1>0 The only machine that does all 3 kinds of sewing! Touch &Sew & Zig-Zag SEWING MACHINES by SINGER SAVE! SAVE! Vacuum Cleaners, Floor Polishers, Stereo-Phono Equipment SINGER Learning to Play the Organ is More Fun with the HAMMOND JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PA|D - We Pick Up FE 2-0200; ■ PONTIAC SCRAPM Hammond Self-Contained Console . This superb console hot *U now theatrically voiced pre-sets to give you the professional touch! Mow rhythm and percussion voices, 27 control tabs plus Hommond drawbars, to odd variety to ovary mote. Two 61-note manuals. 25 pbdals. From $2,120. Modal shown, $2,465. \ e Easy to Play! e Easy to Own! Our Mobile Fleet will bring a Hommond to your homo tor tree trial! - Pontiac Mall and Downtown Pontiac Hammond Spinet with 8 Lessons! *895 ThU dramatically now Hommond organ automatically creates far you the sounds of Hawaiian guitar, banjo, morimba, mandolin and harpsichord! Has now i Organs from $595. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 2d, 1966 B—9 By Nixon, RFK, Douglas Backlash Is Discussed WASHINGTON {KP)/^\ Former Vice President M. Nixon says “the Democratic party now natiopdUy has become the party of the back-i lash.” But Sen. Paul H. Douglas, a Democrat, says Republicans are trying to stir a back-t him in the Illinois tate race. >n. Robert F. Kehnedy, D-'N.Y. warned white politicians against exploiting white back-lash. one Republican candidate wbojbago for whom Nixon cam- Nixon spoke in New York Sunday on a television interview program. Douglas Was on another program from Chicago and Kennedy was campaigning is riding the backlash. He said if Democrats win hi the South, it win be “a'pyrrhic victory, because they will, then, for some time, for the next generation, be the party of racism in the South.” Nixon acknowledged in the interview that some Republican candidates in the South are not integrationists but explained, they “are not racial demagogues. They are not trying to capitalize on the race issue.” ASKED ABOUT REPUBLICAN Asked about open housing foe John Hoellen, a Republican congressional candidate in Chi- in Berkeley, Calif,, for Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown. Also in New York, Sen. Gale McGee, l>Wyo., was accusing extremists of spending $12 ntil-lion in congressional races spread “hate and bigotry." COLLECT $1.2 MILLION And a report Sunday night from the National Committee for an Effective Congress, whieh calls itself nonpartisan, said “r i g h t w i n g extremists have been able to collect over $1.2 million” for the congressional cgtopaigh. Nixon said Democrats had become the party of backlash by refusing to disavow segregationist gubernatorial nominees Lester G, Maddox of Georgia and Jim Johnson of Arkansas, Gov. George C- Wallace of Alabama and open housing foe George Mahoney, Candidate for governor of Maryland. paigned, the former vice president said: “I talked to him, I discussed the issue.' I made the same , statement in my speech for him that 1 make in every one about equality of opportunity. He subscribed to it. I don’t consider him to be a backlash candidate.” Douglas said that in me Chicago area, “In 'many of the wards where it is thought thaw is a white backlash, the Republican precinct captains are spreading the word that I and the Democratic party are fore-, tog the Negro upon them.” New Discovery Now Makes It") Possible to Shrink And Heal Hemorrhoids Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain In Minutes */ Nixon declared, ”1 don’t know N«w York, N. Y. (Special) t A world-famous institute has discovered a new substance Which has the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids without surgery. The sufferer first notices almost unbelievable relief in minute» from itching, burning and pain. Then this substance speeds up healing of the injured tissues all while it quickly reduces painful ■welling. Teste conducted under a doctor’s observations proved this so-even in cases of 10 to 20 years’ standing. The secret is the new healing substance both ointment or ruppoeitory forto called Preparation H*. In addition to actaally shrinking piles-Ptepsration H lubricates and makes bowel movements leu painful. It helpi to prevent infection (a principal cause of hemorrhoids). Only Preparation H contains this magic new subetance which quickly helps heal injured cells back to normal and stimulates regrowth of healthy tissue again. Just ask for Preparation H Ointment or Preparation H Suppositories (easier to tut away from homa). Available at (Bio-Dyne*) - now offered in I all drug counters. Dinner is the perfect time to talk about re-electing Thomas M. Kavanagh and Otis M. Smith to the Michigan Supreme Court. ft marl to bn that yen hid to rup around in circles trying to collect damages if you were harmed by some product you bought. People in the chain of manufacturing and distributing had big legal loopholes to hide in. * Men like Thomas M. Kavanagh and Otis M. Smith hava helped plug those loopholes with decisions tlpit protect the consumer — you— whenever you buy something in Michigan. That means things like food, tools, machines and vehicles, have to be safe for the use they’re made for. And if they aren’t, it’s now possible for you to find the-right party to sue if you're injured. This Is one of many landmark decisions the nationally < recognized Michigan Supreme Court has made to protect you and your rights. Now, it's up to you to keep Michigan's Supremo Court moving ahead. To do this, you have to vote for two present Supreme Court Justices, whose continued membership is vital to Michigan’s continued progress. Justin Thomas M. Kavanagh Justin Otis M. Smith Re-elect Justice Thomas M. Kavanagh Justice Otis MICHIGAN M. Smith COURT Vole Mw separate non-partisan judicial ballot in Bio November t •taction. (It’s tha blue section on the voting machine.) The store that cares...about you! Early Bird Values! Prices Effective Through Tuesday, Oct. 25th 'SUPER-RIGHT"—CUT FROM MATURE CORN-FED BEEF STEAK SALE ROUND STEAK SIRLOIN lb T-BONE 851.951.991 T PORTERHOUSE $1 GOVERNMENT INSPECTED "SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS RUMP OR Fresh Fryers | Rotisserie Rousts • • • • CUT-UP FRYIRS 1 WHOLI FRYIRS 29- 25- LB. 89 Fryer Breast ATTACHSD ^ 49* "SUMR-tltHT” SHORT SHAHS me Smoked Picnics..... 11 49 CAF'H JOHN'S 4* AAC Fish Sticks.......... 2^ 99* "SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS BRISKET Corned Beef 69? 159 ALLGOOD BRAND Sliced Bacon 2-LB. I 3 5 j 1-LB. PKG. ■ I PKG. "SUPIR-RIGHT** VAC Fancy Sliced Bacon 7“ WESTERN RED DELICIOUS—SIZE 111 APPLES 10”59* I' MICHIGAN JONATHAN Ot S m M Snow Apples_______Vx S Is9 HOTHOUSE tomatoes........... , ,, u 39 SUNNYBROOK GRADE "A" large Eggs *"49 3 I00 CANS | AGP OUR FINEST QUALITY i^T. V A| Tomato Juice . . . . photo) on a short plunge in the fourth quarter Sunday at Kezar Stadium. Alert Brace Maher (21) of the visiting Detroit Uons snatches the ball from Willard’s grasp (bottom) but the officials have already blown the play dead. The 49ers retained possession mid scored on the next play for a ^1-10 lead. ...i f ii«-v ■ (Davis kicked) ngn (Yepremlan kicked) "tSCSSJT* pass **. , lWmf% - (Davis kick) Attendance 24.743. r C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONJPAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 Spartans Stay Atop Big Ten in 41-20 Romp Undefeated State 11 Hat Clear Sailing for Title Quest By FLETCHER SPEARS EAST LANSING- Pity poor “Duffy” Daugherty, coach of Michigan State’s Spartans. For the next three weeks, “Duffy” faces the monumental task of convincing the Spartans that the likes of Northwestern, Iowa and Indiana pose a threat to their drive toward a second straight Big Ten Conference championship, That has to be the major problem Duff’ll have to cope with after the Spartans Saturday brushed aside their chief threat to a second title in hammering Purdue’s Boilermak-ert, 4m, before 78,014 fins, the largest crowd to watch an MSU-Purdue game The trlumph raised the Spar-tans conference mark to 4-0, and it leaves only Iowa, Indiana and Northwestern in their path, and it would take something just * short of an act of Congress for that threesome to derail the! MSU steamroller. Purdue slipped to a M mark but still is a prime contender for the Rose Bowl trip since SPARTAN SCORES—Michigan State halfback Dwight Lee (34) slants off rgiht tackle for two yards and MSU’s first touchdown in a 41-20 victory over Purdue Saturday at East Lansing. Clearing the path for Lee dre David Techlin (68), Jerry West (77), Toni Conti (67) and Gene Washington (84). No. 87 is Purdue's George Olion. UCLA Topples California Notre Dame Swamps Sooners By the Associated Press “I thought sure we were play-e ing the Green Bay Packers," the powerful State squad can’t sald Ha*rry Hettsmannsperger. return after representing the I “Who in hell scheduled Big Ten last January at Pasa-jfhem?” joked Jim MacKenzie. dena. Hettsmannsperger plays line- WWW I backer for Oklahoma, MacKen- But while the Spartans will be playing tlliose conference tilts, they’ll be thinking of their final game of the season which brings the No. 1 ranked Irish of Notre Dame to East Lansing Nov. 19. RANKED SECOND MSU, ranked No. 2, was impressive in routing Purdue, but no doubt will remain second since the Irish were equally impressive in blanking Oklahoma, 38-0. ___•______A___.W .. Wr In stopping the Boilermakers and quarterback Bob Griese, the Spartans confirmed what many observers had suspected — that Purdue is not one of the better defensive teams around. EARLY COMMAND The Spartans took command Miss Spuzich, Rule Take Golf ing Crown CARLSBAD, Calif. (AP) —[Sunday. They overtook Jim Fer-Says Sandra Spuzich, feminine ree and Judy Torluemke by a early, and after a field goal at- 9*etime-tempt by Griese fell short, drovel Nick Ed A E A A Michigan quarterback Dick Vidmer hit on 15 of 19 passes for 212 yards and three touchdowns. His first to Clancy covered 24 yards. Clancy went high for the ball, tipped it from his left to his right hand while sidestepping a Minnesota defender, then ran about 20 yards and dived into toe end zone. On the first touchdown I saw a guy coming at me from the outside,” Clancy said. ■fT’d been caught so many times I said to myself: 'Oh, oh, here we go again. ” ★ .*... *..: Actually, 1 it was the third touchdown for Michigan, following those by Detwiler and Sy-Cnrl Ward then. Michigan’s Rick Sygar (18) breaks clear of a tackle en route to a 57-yard punt return for a Michigan touchdown Saturday against Minnesota- Bill Hardy is the teammate1 at- tempting to block for Sygar while the Gophers trailing behind are Charles Killian (55), Dennis Cornell (37), Ron Klick (79), Bill Laakso (61) and John Wintermute. WASHINGTON (AP) - Quarterback Sonny Jurgenson hit flanker Bobby Mitchell for two touchdowns in less than three minutes of the fourth quarter and diminutive Charley -Gogo-lack kicked four field goals Sunday as the fired up Washington Redskins upset the previously undefeated St. Louis^Cardinals 26-20 in a National Football League game. Jurgensen’s first touchdown . ass to Mitchell was for 15 yards and came on the first play of the fourth quarter after Palisades, and Donna Gilliam, Whittier, won with a 304. Other top money winners in the professional tournament: Gene Littler-Mickey Wright, 280, $2,250 each; Tommy Jacobs-Sandra Haynie, 281, $1,950 each; Randy Glover-Gloria Ehret, 282, $1,700 each; Mike Souchak-Kathy Whitworth, 283, $1,500 each; Phil Rodgers-Clifford Ann Creed, 283, $1,500 each; Don Cherry - Donna Capohi, 285, $1,350 each; Bruce Crampton-Margie Masters, 287, $1,250 each; Julius Boros-Judy Kimball, 289, $1,150 each. New Carburetor for Tahoe Miss five-yard pass from Vidmer, Clancy again on a 56-yard pass from Vidmer, Detwiler on a one-yard run and Ernie Sharpe on a four-yard rush. Sygar converted each time. I Dave Fisher led all runners with 68 yards on 20 carries. Detwiler ran 16 times for 60 yards. The Wolverines outgained Minnesota 234 yards to 34 rushing and 222 to 72 in the air. Minn. Mich. MICH—Ward 5 pal from Vidmer (Sy- from Raynt (Kan- "fcsUApta. i run (Kan nay kMk); PUR—Grlate 6 run (Grlaaa kick) MSU-Apia Id run (Kannay kick) PUR—Hunt Jyun (kick »a»ad) MSU-^v**:! „M i HH! DERBY LEADER — Arthur G. Sabourin, 350 Newport, winner of the 1963 Pontiac Press Pheasant Derby, is leading this year’s contest. He entered the 41 Vi-inch pheasant at 7:30 this morning. It was shot Saturday -in Pontiac Township. \ ' MICH—Sharp* — Tahoe Miss, the 1966 nationally,,,,,,,,*60*11 champion unlimited hydroplane j*1'1*1**" racer, is testing new carburetor adjustments before it tries for the world speed record for propeller-driven craft. nr Jv Y/.VWw Harry Volpi, raritrg tejpn * •'* V ICTUiy manager, sent Sunday to Oakland for a new carburetor to be used with the crafts turbine-driven supercharger. The new carburetor has been tested only at low speeds. Former Czechoslovakian pilot Mira Slovak, who drove Tahoe Miss to the national championship, has not yet taken the craft through a speed test. The craft three tries before’Oct. 31. hydroplane making, a worjd record attempt, delayed until Wednesday its next speed run. Driver Bill Brow of Seattle returned home fori personal business, but was jpe, back at Lake Tahoe for the Wednesday run. Browns Steal Passes Skins’War Parly Springs Ambush on Cards, 26-20 Surprise Pass Helps Eagles Down Giants NEW YORK (AP) "ml King Hill’s surprise pass to Tom Woodeshick on a fourth down fake punt play triggered a 24-point Philadelphia surge in the second period Sunday in a 31-3 National Football League victory, over the New York Giants. ,lr A A 'Die Eagles, trailing 3-0 when Hill hit Woodeshick for 27 yards, scored on the next play, a 30-yard pass from Norm Snead to Pete Retzlaff. Sam Baker’s 15-yard field goal, Earl Gros’ two-yard TD„ run and an 18-yard pass from Snead to Timmy Brown counted for 24 points in 10 minutes, 35 seconds. John Reger had intercepted Charley Johnson pass. A little rhbre than two minutes later, Jurgensen threw a 44-yard touchdown pass to Mitchell on the first play after St. Louis was forced to punt. A * A The Cardihals, however, bounced right back with Johnson going over from the two-yard line. The drive, which started on the Washington 31, was aided by a 50-yard run by halfback Johnny Roland. A it A Up until -the fourth quarter, the Redskins were able to keep close to St. Louis only because of the field goals by Gogolak, the soccer-style kicker. FOUR FOR SIX Gogolak kicked three-pointers from to»39, 9,34 and 19. Heal* tempted field goals from the 53 and 44 but was short. AAA The Cardinals scored their first touchdown with 4:51 remaining in the first period when Johnson hit end Sonny Randle on a one-yard pass play after he had moved toe team 57 yards in nine plays. Roy Shivers gave St. Louis good field position when he returned a Brig Owen’s1 kickoff 39 yards to toe Cardinals’ 43. AAA The Cardinals also scored on field goals by Jim Bakken of 37 and 17 yards. The victory is the fourth in seven games for Washington. St. Louis is now 5-1-1. Cardinals Redskins Rushing yardage ...... . Passing yardage Passes Intercepted by . Fumbles lost ........... Yards penalized Philadelphia .... ...... **—• York 1 -FG Goooalk » EafMt etanfs 200 76 9*14 15-33 114 152 fig yVraaoY .: .VI.: Passes Intercepted by .... Fumbles jost Yards penalized St. Louis .. - 1M 13*24 2045 . 3-37 3-43 7 32 .7 3 3 7-20 . 4*35 4-39 .. 2 1 58 76 Washington . Wash-FG Gogolak 3* StL—Randle 1 pass Iron 3 6 3 14-26 ) Johnson (Bak- 0 24 0 7—31 3 0 0 0-3 ken kick) Wash—f G Gogolak 9 Cowboys Lose Before 84,721 in Cleveland CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland throttled the Dallas passing attack with four interceptions — turning two into third-quarter touchdowns by Leroy Kelly and Paul Warfield - as the Browns beat th^previously unbeaten Cowboys 30-21 in a National Football League game Sunday before a record home crowd of 84,721. Ross Fichtner picked off three Don Meredith passes and one set up a two-yard touchdown run by Kelly. Mike Howell’s theft resulted in a 21-yard touchdown pass from Frank Ryan to Warfield. Lou Groza added three field goals after six straight misses this season. Meredith, who had three passes intercepted lpst Sunday against St. Louis, was hurried by a strong Browns’ rush in the second half. It kept him from going with the deep pass to Bob Hayes. . 11 The Cowboys, with a 4-1-1 record, took a brief 7-3 lead in the first quarter when Meredith rolled out for a three-yard touchdown run after a fake field goal attempt set it up. , OUT OF REACH Don Perkins added a touchdown on a one-yard plunge in the fourth quarter, but the game was no longer in doubt. Trouble-Free MEXICO. CITY (AP) - John Surtees of England, driving a smooth and trouble-free race in his Cooper-Masserati, von the Grand Prix of Mexico Sunday in toe record time of two hours, six minutes and 35.34 seconds. It was toe first Grand Prix victory of toe year for1 Surtees, who was injured in a crack-up in Canada several years ago. It also gained him second place to Jack Brabham of Australia -in the final standings for the world driving championship for formula one cars. He averaged 95.69 miles per hour for toe 201-mile around the twisty Magdalena Mixhauac course. SECOND PLACE — Randy lid, 14, of 255 Hadley, Brandon Township, held the lead in The Press Pheasant Derby for less than an hour this morning. He checked in at 6:30 with this 40-inch ringneck taken Sunday pear his home. NBA Standings St. Louis 133. Cincinnati 1 Sunday's Results Now York ltd, Chicago .105 Detroit tit, San Francisco 11 Today's Gamas NHL Standings v Nattanal Laagu* * W I T Ft*, on o, Chlcagd..... Ill Datrolt ............. 0 3 0 I Saturday's Results Montreal 3, Boston 1 Now York 4, Toronto 4, >1* Chicago 7, Detroit 4 Sunday's Rasattl Now York. 1. Toronto 0 Mon tree I 1, Boston 2 Chicago 4, Datrolt 1 Today's Gamas No games scheduled. Bobcats Romp to Easy Win Waterford’s Bobcats rolled to a 35-12 victory Saturday over toe Hornets to capture toe Waterford Midget Football championship. » Fullback Gordon Sheldon scored tfarte touchdowns to shark the attack. THE PONTIAC TRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 24,1966 C-'-S Rams Victors WOU Gains Title Share in GridLoop St. Michael Whips Holy Cross; St. Fred Tops Anchor Boy Waterford Our Lady of Lakes, St. Michael and St. Frederick each vas a Macomb Catholic League football winner Sunday with the Lakers and Mikemea both having special reasons to celebrate. ★ ♦ ★ -Waterford OIL clinc he d a share of its second straight title by pounding Detroit St. Rose, 394, with Don Guibord showing the way. < St. Michael’s homecoming observance included its 27-14 last-period win over Marine City Holy Cross. The Mikemen virtually clinching second place. St. Fred’s Rams retained their hopes for third place in the race by tripping Anchor Bay Catholic, 194, to move within a half game of Holy Cross entering their meeting next Sunday afternoon. Waterford’s Lakers can clinch their second unbeaten Macomb season by defeating weak Richmond St. Augustine Sunday afternoon. Guibord yesterday rushed for 232 yards in eight tries and tallied the first two touchdowns on, 69 and 60 yard sweeps behind! Jerry Methner’s trap blocking. I OTHERS He also added a 15-yard score later. Vic Tersigni and Roy Lilly both ran for 25-yard touchdowns. Tom Sirbaugh hit Brian Haskins on a 37-yard pass for the final score. ,4 I w r llg/? ’*^ KICKERS DUEL - Frank Smally <7) of Schoolcraft College and Oakland University’s Bill Stanton battle for the ball during them game at OU Saturday. Smally,won this Pontiac Prtn Pboto by Ed Vandorworp duel and Schoolcraft won the game, 2-0 Coming up to give Stanton an assist is German Tovar. OLSM Upsets St. Rita; Sorrows Keeps Rolling Orchard Lake St. Mfcry upset St. Rita, 25-0, Sunday afternoon as Dim Kowalski tossed three touchdown passes in the Northwest Catholic League encounter. it it it. Title-bound Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows crushed Detroit Nativity, 40-0, in a non-Femdale St. James dumped Highland Park St. Benedict, 406; and Royal Oak St. Mary spilled St. Francis de Sales, 32-12. Royal Oak Shrine blanked Holy Redeemer, 27-0, in • Double AA tilt. on 13 St. mark at 3-3. He hit Greg Fior (17 yards), Stan Wozniak (10 yards) and Fior again (34 yards) before handing off to Dan Ku-basiak for a 28-yard scoring run. CUff LaFond ran for touchdowns of 39, 48 and 37 yards in gaining 212 yards on nine carries for unbeaten Farming-ton OLS. Shrine had a one-two punch in Dave Yeager and Mickey Brzezinski. Yeager tallied the six-pointers and Brzezinski the PAT as Shrine took a 13-0 half toe lead. Yeager ran 22 and six yards for the scores. ★ * ★ Brzezinski then scored touch- Kowalski connected passes for 228 yards - , —.....—, Mary’s Eaglets evened their;downs on a four-yard run and a 75-yard pass interception^ Jim Siudara added a conversion. FOOTBALL STATISTICS OLSM St. Rita! Downs Rushing ..... J 6 Downs Passing ....... t 3 Downs Penalties 1 n Yards Rushing-Passing . W. Bloomfield Takes League - Harrier Title 125-211 87 93 Passes Intercepted Fumbles—No. Ypsilanti, Flint Triumph The Lakers so dominated the game that the last two quarters were trimmed to eight miputes. St. Mike built a 14-0 lead on two plunges by Greg Glynn behind left tackle BUI L French’s blocking then saw Holy Cross rally for two third-period touchdowns to tie the game. But Glynn again went, over behind French from three yards out with about seven minutes to play, and freshman Tim Boyer skirted left end for a 35-yard score with four minutes to go for the Mikemen. ★ ★ Quarterback Bill Florence of the Crusaders took a crossfield aerial from halfback Bill Groff for the first Holy Cross score, then passed to John Dietlin for the second touchdown, in addition to kicking the two key PATS. RAMS WIN Mike Cafey of t Special to the Press DAYTON, O. Pontiac’s Arrows virtually sewed up their fourth championship in five years in the Midwest Football League with a 23-14 victory over Davton Saturday night. Quarterback Bill Harrington, guiding the ball club after regular Tommy Myers was recalled by the Detroit Lions, directed the ball club to three touchdowns and a field goal to keep the Arrows unbeaten at 7-0-1. Tony Odneal, a 6-2, 218-offensive end, moved to halfback for the game' and responded with a 20-yard touchdown run. Halfback Chuck Wiseman and fullback Willie Jones pushed across the other Anew scores. touchdown, then sped 20 yards for score that boosted the lead to 13-6. ★ ★ ★ i Joe Murphy added a clinching touchdown in the second half. STATISTICS St. Rom V First Downs Rushing ....... 2 First Downi Passing ....... 1 First Downs Pwwltin .... S Yards Rushing-Passing .. 17-5 J PasMS .................. 1—11 PatMS Intartaptad by .... 1 d Average , Fumbles—No. Lost ....... 0-0 Penalties and Yards ..... M5 SCORINO FLAYS W-Guibord, 48 sweep (St! Louis W—Tersigni, 2J run (Mettmsr kid W—Lilly, 25 run (kick fslltd) W—Guibord, 15 run (kick fsiM) W—Haskins, 37 pass from Sir (kick f*IM) SCORE BY QUARTEBS , . *t. r ...» i 4 t 14 12 t 114-47 SCORE BY QUARTERS MC Holy Cress . . .:...8 8 14 *-14 St. Michael ............7* ~ "MU SCORINO FLAYS SM—Glynn, 1 plunge (Oliver SM—Glynn, 1 pit HC—Florence, 1» pass run from Groff (Florence kick) HC—Oiotlln, 5 pass from Florence (Florence kick) SM—Glynn, 3 run (run stopped) SM—Boyer, 35 sweep (Boyer run) First Downs Rushing ... First Downs Passing .... First Downs Penalties . Passes Punts .. 212-51 131-7* SCORING FLAYS ST. FRED-Gullluan 1 sneak (Carey run) Mlke-John A BAY—JSrry Grubey G lot pass failed) ST. FRED-MIka Carey 20 run On® Bull Too Many NIMES, France (AP) — Spanish bullfighter Gregorio Tjiinnria- nephew of the great Martial Lalanda, was gored seriously by his second bull here Sunday. Arrows Turn Back Dayton, 23-14 West Bloomfield rolled up 51 points Saturday on its home course to capture the Wayne-Pakland League cross-country championship. ★ ★ *• Defending champion Bloomfield Hills finished third, with “ points, a point back of runner-up Milford. Bruce Evans of Bloomfield Hijls covered the two-mile course at Marshbank Park in 10:32. Dave Maun___of___West Bloomfield ran second and Holly’s Larry Reese placed third. 2-20 3-20 Kowalski OLSM—Wozniak 10 pass from Kowslskl run lollod) OLSM—Fior 34 pass from Kowalski (Kubaslak run) OLSM—Kubaaiak 28 run (run failed) SCORE BY QUARTERS M*nr ..................• 4 415-15 The Arrows went in front 6-0 early on Odneal’s run, and Day-ton cut it to 6-2 when a pitchout from Harrington was covered by Pontiac in its own endzone. Day-ton went ahead moments later, 8-6, on a short scoring run by Chuck Malloy, but Ed McQueen 215-pound defensive end and kicker, boomed a 40-yard field ' to put the Arrows back in front for good, 9-8. McQueen later suffered a head injury and was taken to the hospital in Dayton. Team officials said tiie injury was not serious, In other games, Ypsilanti kept its faint title hopes alive by knocking off River Rouge, 26-7, and Flint scored three touchdowns in the fourth quarter to hand Lansing’s All Stars a 39-25 setback. Ypsilanti, running its record to 6-2 can take the title only by winning its final two games and if Pontiac drops its final outings to Lansing and River Rouge. Mace Segal passed for three touchdowns in sparking the Flint victory. The Blue Devils moved in front with five minutes left in the game. J1 m Long scottd twice for the winners. Sam Eyde scored twice and passed to Dave Johnson for two other touchdowns for Lansing. Birmingham Brother Rice was no match for an inspired Harper Woods Notre Dame eleven Sunday in their showdown for the Central Division Soup Bowl berth of the Detroit Catholic League. COLLEGE EMI Army 28. Pittsburgh 0 *----— “ u-'f Cross 6 4 Mary 0 Harvard If, Dartmouth 14 .Corntll 16. Yale 14 “ "ennsylvanla 11. ..umbia 34 i 22, Buffalo 21 Boston U. 7 v uianova is, wait Chester t Temple 35, Connecticut 25 Navy 21 Rutgen Boston Georgia 27, Kantudcy .. ”—-■— *• South Carolina 17 ’Stat# «Ttom * AUDurn 7, Text* Christian 4 Florida Stata 10, Mississippi Stats t Richmond 23, Davidson 17 ih State 41, Purdue 20 ■UMPPM-a Stanford 6, Illinois S Notre Dam# 38, Oklahoma 0 Oklahoma Stata 18. Kansas 7 Nebraska 2V Colorado 1* Iowa Stata 10, Mlaaouri 10, tla Cincinnati 20, Kant** state 14 Kent Stata 3S> Bowling Gruan 12 fl Dayton 10, Nooharn Michigan 0 Ball Mata 17, Butler 14 Wayne, Mlctl. 27, Wtslefti Reserve 24 Central State, Ohio 20. Kentucky MM Southwest Taxaa 1* Arkansas State 33, Abilene Christian : Texas Ail 28, McMurry 0 Arlington State 20, Trinity, Tox., 7 Howard Payna 3, Stephen F. Austin 0 Texas Lutheran 10, Angelo State 14 Tarleton State 31, Arkansas Tech 7 Sul Rosa 14, East Taxaa Stata 14, tie HIGH SCHOOLS Warren Lincoln, If, St. Clr. Shrs. Lake Ihora 1® ftl®1 Taylor Center Royal Oak Shrine 27, Dot. Holy Re. HpTwds. Notre Darn* S3, Blrm. Irother Rica 12 Mt. Clem. St. Louis 47, Utica St. Lawr- Grand Haven 14, Musk. Hots. • Oat. Catholic 25. Cathedral 14 Dot. U at D High 33, Saleslan 4 Dot. St. Catherine 20, Canter Lina 1 -lament 13 1. St. Mary 24, Dot. St. Phil Fern. St. Jamas 4t, High. Pk. : Benedict t Royal Oak St. Mary 32, Det. St; Frs ds de salM 12 Orch. Lke. St. Mary 25, Dat. St. Rl*« Part. it. Michael 25. Mar. Cltv I '"fugatioond liregon CoUags Arkansas 41, Wfchffir^*-^ * tS“ &v?Bay' ssrwrff&f Utah 24. Arizona If Texas Western 35, CROSSCOUNTRY MEET 1. West Bloomfield 51, 2. Milford 85; It; 4. Holly Mi 5. Brighton 157; 7. Clar 1. Bruce Evans, Bloomfield Hills :32J; 2. Dsvs Maun, West Bloomfield; | Larry Reest, Holly; 4. Joe Waling, Milford; 5. Rick Oldeugh, Holly; 4. Neil Stalker, Clarkston; 7. Bryan Kent, Clair-encavllle; I. Bill Schrader, West Blor~ N Rick Parry, Milford; 10. S Graham, Bloomfield HMw 44. Tony B Brighton; It Bob Blackburn, VI Bloomfield; 13. Mika Kllmowicx, VI Bloomfield; 14. Mika Sutton, Milford; Ron Ranger, Holly. Brother Rice Easy for Notre Dame brother Rice earned a brief 6-6 tie on Dan Parks’ short plunge before Notre Dame pulled away to a 16-6 halftime ' that ballooned into a 53-12 final score. Mike Vito tallied twice for the winners. Bill Rose added the Warriors’ second score in the closing half. A crowd estimated at 7,000 watched the contest. FOOTBALL STATISTICS FOLS. I First Downs Rushing ....... a First Downs Passing . ,______ l First Downs Penalties ... 2 Yards Rushing-Passing ...314-120 38-101 ............ 3-n 4-i6 'cepted by Punts and Average .... 2-sT Fumbles—No.____ Penalties and Yards '.... ! SCORINO PLAYS from McGrath FOLS—Audetle 77 __ (McGrath run) FOLS—C. LaFond 37 run (Hlckty FOLS-C. LaFond 48 run (Hlckty 1*OLS=A1tan 27 pas* from McGrath •un failed) FOLS-C. LaFond 38 run (run failed) FOLS—Hickey 5 run (Hartwlg run) SCORE BY QUARTERS Farmington Our Lady ......J nf 7-4 • • f Detroit Nativity Win Habit for Andretti SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)— Mario Andretti manages to keep the winning habit even when he trouble forced Andretti to finish 10th Sunday in [the Golden State 100 race at the California State Fairgrounds. But the 30 points he collected were enough to'hel|> him clinch his second straight U.S. Auto Club big car driving championship. Dick Atkins of Hayward, Calif., won the race, overtaking Andretti on the 96th Lao when the Nazareth, Pa., to the pits. champ v Rita : NFL Standings Chicago .............. 3 3 0 .588 77 Detroit .............. 2 S 5 .286 104 1 'Mnnasota ....... 1 4 1 J08 122 1 Sunday's Rasults ’ Philadelphia 31, New York 3 Grean Bay 56, Atlanta 3 Cleveland 30, Dallas 21 San Francisco 27, Detroit 26 I Chicago 17, Loa — Cleveland Baltimore . Green Bay at Philadelphia ____urgti at Dallas Next Monday's Gams Sen Francisco- at Minnesota-Chicago at St. Louis, night AFL Standings Kansas Cltv ■■■... 5 j Sfarter Ailing COLUMBIA (AP) — South Carolina's football forces suffered a severe blow in their loss to. Tennessee Saturday when quarterback Mike Fair suffered a knee injury that may bench him for the season. DOUBLE DUTY MEDICATION FOR PAIN OF HEMORRHOIDS tmnquo the hospital-type medication Because trinquo it both , anesthetic and antf-septic It sarvat at a double-duty madtea-! tion for hemorrhoids I. and related discomforts. Trthquo't high, peln-killins potency come* from Its hospital-type formula of 12V, I lenzocalne. It' actually : relieves pain In sec-[ ends and sustains relief | for houri. Trinquo'1 I antiseptic properties I help fight infection and 1 —d up the healing Ml. I available tn aerosol another fine product of (mmn) laboratories ^NimjLUNOIS One thing all nations can agree upon: ‘Dulles in 87 Ian, ...... 81t*B 0t8.MWETIB W (01111 HU CIMM11 MUM Whitt* IMNETUt WC. MT80IT. MICH. MAftOtf. BUHOED CANADIAN WHISKY. GRAND OPENING SERVICE SPECIALS AT TOUR BRAHDIEW GOODYEAR STORE Protect your car from winter’s ravages. Trained, expert operators will apply Sure-Sealing Compounds to pave your car's appearance. Ask about our complete rust* proofing offer! ■s _ MinorTune-up Special _ We put you engine in shape 4^77 lor winter driving ahead. T # e c*. ua wtut m plus parts Reset timing and points, adjust carburetor and choke, dean fuel bowl and air filter, check starter—volt regu* lator—spark plugs-cyL compression-generator out*1 put—battery-ignition wires. 8 cyls. add $2.00, Winterizing Brake Special Get itnowr at this low price We adjust all four wbeelf, add brake fluid. Inspect drums, repack front bear* togs, check seals, springs. We Repair and/or Install • Muffled • Tailpipes • Batteries • Fan Belts • Brake Bands • Spark Flags • Lights • Front End Farit r FREE! BATTERY CHECK QUICK I'OWEK TEST —NO OBLIGATION GOOD-YEAR SERVICE STORE 1370 WIDE TRACK WEST FE 5-6123 0p«n Mon.-Fri., 8:30 to S, Sat. Til 2:31 £-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 Western Michigan 11 By the Associated Press Western Michigan continues to show that it’s a team to watch in Mid-American Conference football—and the Broncos can thank Dave Hudson for its fifth victory in six games. Yank Post World Golf Victory MEXICO CITY (AP) - Shelley Hamlin, 17-year-old Calif., schoolgirl, is just one of a bevy of whiz kids who are going to make their presence felt in international golf in the next few years. They tear into a ball as if they want to smash the cover off it They are bold and cocky. They are completely devoid of nerves. * *' *, Shelley was the fast-finishing spearhead that carried the United States to the world women’s amateur golf team championr ship here over the week-end. After starting with a jittery 80, she settled down to shoot 75-72-72 and mark herself as the most exciting player in the field of 57 from 19 nations the' last days. The United States, with strong assists from both Mrs.. Theodore Boddie of Shreveport, La., and Mrs. Davis Welts of Mt. Vernon, Wash, won the event by nine strokes with a score of 580. LITTLE TIGER Canada, led by Mrs. Marlene Streit,* the Little Tiger, was second at 589, followed by defending champion France, 597; Belgium, 611; Britain-Ireland, 612, and Mexico, New Zealand, South Africa and Italy, tied at 613. ★ ★ * Mrs. Streit, past winner of both the U.S. and British women’s titles, won individual honors with 219, beating out Mrs. Boddie by three strokes, but she Cinishe^. second in her head-to-head duel with Miss Hamlin in the final round Sunday over the Mexico City Country Club course. Shelley shot a 72, Mrs. Streit a 74. ★ ★ * “She’s marvelous,’’ acknowledged the Canadian star. “She hasn’t played enough to be scared yet. She hits a long ball, has a great temperament and fine all-around game. I predict wonderful tilings for her.” Winnipeg in Playoffs WINNIPEG (AP) - The Winnipeg Blue Bombers clinched a playoff berth in the Western Division of ttie Canadian Football League by defeating the British Columbia Lions, 16-7, Sunday. Western nipped Toledo 14-13 in an MAC game as Hudson blocked a passing attempt for a two-point conversion with ® seconds to play. * .* « In other, weekend games, Wayne State, defeated Western Reserve 27-24, Albion blanked Kalamazoo 236, Afina .took Hope 126, Olivet demolished Adrian 436, Northern Illinois nipped Hillsdale 14^7, Central Michigan beat Illinois State 296, Michigan Tech upended Mankato State 27-7 Eastern Michigan dumped Ferris State 216, Lincoln, Mo., edged Northwood 15-12 and Dayton shutout Northern Michigan 106. Hudson’s, heroics, much disputed by Toledo, upped Western’s MAC mark to 21 before a record conference crowd of 20, 500 at, Kalamazoo. Western scored on a 17-yard pass from Cary Crain to Jim Boreland and Tim Majerle’s one-yard dive. Quarterback A. J. Vaughn threw three touchdown passes and sewed another TD himself as Wayne State won its first game of the season after three losses. MIAA PLAY In MIAA action, . Dick Van-derline tossed two TD passes and Craig Cossey returned a kickoff 97 yards in Albion’s victory over Kalamazoo. Tom Ja-kovac scored on runs of 27 and 10 yards as Alma dumped Hope. Ray Cooper scored for Hope. Halfback Mike Wescott scored three touchdowns for Olivet it recorded its third straight shutout in. blanking Adrian. Mike Griesman passed for 119 yards and sewed both touchdowns in Northerga Illinois’ victory at Hillsdale. Fullback Mel Patterson, who picked up 114 yards in 20 carries, got the Dales’ lone tally. ★ * ★ Central Michigan opened its IIAC schedule with a homecoming victory over Illinois State. Bob Rosso had two TDs for the Chippewas. Michigan Tech’s victory over Mankato State kept the Indians from sharing the North-ern Intercollegiate Conference lead. Fred Hall scored twice&r Tech in the first period to break the game open.; Eastern Michigan was held to a scoreless tie in the first half by Ferris State but quarterback Rick Krumm broke the game open fw tiie Hurons with two touchdowns in the third period. Ron Shirley scored for Ferris, taking a 22-yard pass from Walt Haskins. ★ * ★ A two-point conversion by Willie Lbwis enabled Lincoln to nip Northwood at Midland. Hugh Davidson and Bill Simmons scored for the losers. Dayton twice held Northern Michigan at the goal line in defeating the Huskies at Dayton. Bob Thomas booted a 25-yard field goal and Jerry Biebuyck sewed on a one-yard burst for the only scoring. GOOD TIMING — Oakland Raiders fullback Hewritt Dixon (35) scores with only two seconds left in the game to give the Raiders a 24-21 victory over the New York Jets in New York yesterday. Dixon takes the handoff (top left) from quarterback Tom Flores (IS) and cuts left into the endzone for the score. KC Romps, 56-10 Ex-Bad Cranbrook and Country Day of Birmingham continued their offensive explosions with high-scoring triumphs Saturday out of the state. Cranbrook journeyed to Western Reserve in Ohio to record a 40-2 Inter-State Prep League conquest that leaves the Cranes alone atop the grid standings. Country Day won Its fifth straight by pounding Maumee Valley Country Day hi Ohio, 316 as Bob Davenport ran for three touchdowns and a two-point conversion. Craig Tailberg and Craig Tuohy each pasted two six-pointers for Cranbrook who won its fourth straight. Tailberg scampered 40 and 70 yards on sweeps in the first half. Ted Lowrie ran 15yards. Tuohy then went 25 and W yards in the third quarter. He also ran three two-paint conversions and Tailberg made two more. Cranbrook will entertain perennial nemesis University School in its 2:3( p.m. homecoming game Saturday with tiie league title at stake. Country Day (5-lMcored lb first touchdown by driving 65 yards with the opening kickoff. Davenport went over from the four. He added a sevten-yard touchdown in the second quarter and a 10-yarder in the third. By the Associated Press Bad boy Bert Coan has been nothing but good news for the Kansas City Chiefs and Coach Hank Strain this season. Coan is the one-time problem child halfback who has been nothing but trouble for opposing linemen around the American Football League. ★ ★ ★ He rushed for three touchdowns and caught a Pete Beath-ard pass for. a fourth as ~~ City battered Denver 56-10 and jumped into first place in the AFL’s Western Division. The Chiefs’ victory lifted them one half gume in front of San Diego, which lost at Boston 35-17. The Patriots’ victory moved Boston within one half game of New York in the East as the Jets were beaten by Oakland 24-21 in the final minute. Miami won its second straight, beating Houston 20-13. Coan rushed for touchdowns of 35, 18 and 19 yards before grabbing Beathard’s 19-yard pass for his fourth TD of the day. Hie 26-year-old running back gained 111 yards along the ground and moved into fourth place among the AFL’s rushers. CLOUD OF DUST His performance keyed a ground-it-out Kansas City rushing game that produced 380 yards — tiie second best one game rushing output in AFL history. It was Coan’s second 100-yard day of the season. He gained 101 in the opener against Buffalo. “He’s had his heartaches and disappointments,” said Stram. “It’s just great to see him pulling himself out of the jungle.” Coan’s controversial background includes a celebrated transfer from TCU to Kansas and a recruiting squabble that ended with Kansas stripped of its Big Eight title. ★ ★ ★ Eventually he quit college and signed with San Diego. After being dealt to .Kansas City, Two Get Booted Colt Star Kicks al Deferiders Tactics Title Pidure Blurry After Mexico Bout BALTIMORE (AP) - Flanker Jimmy Ort of tiie Baltimore Colts says he is tired of being the target of “cheap shots” by defensive back Earsell Macka-bee of the Minnesota Vikings. Orr’s patience wore thin So day and both players were banished from the National Foot-ball League game after a brief fight which threatened, to erupt into a wild melee. ★...★ ★ Midway through the second quarter, Mackbee was penalized for interfering with Orr on a long pass. That gave Baltimore a first down on the Minnesota nine, and led to a Lou Michaels' field goal, which figured prominently In Baltimore’s 20-17 victory. Two plays after the interference call, quarterback John Unitas threw an incomplete pass intended for split end Raymond Berry in the left comer of the end zone. Suddenly, Orr and Mackbee began fighting on the far right side of the field. “He’s the only gpy in the league who takes cheap shots me,” Orr said after the gait You expect to get hit when you’ve got the ball but not when you’re .on tiie other side of the field and not even involved. Mackbee’s done it the last three games. “He threw a forearm at my face,” Orr said. “I watching Raymond across the field but I was keeping an eye out for the defensive back managed to block it. “Maybe Mackbee was still irritated from the pass Inter-ference call — it was a borderline call — but that’s no reason to go outside the legal limits of the game.” After Mocking Mackbee, Orr grabbed his face mask and pulled tiie defensive back down. Then he kicked Mackbee, About that time, tackle Jim Parker of Baltimore, MB pounder, looked across the field and saw “somebody standing over Jimmy with his foot in Jimmy’s beltline.” Parker raced into the middle of the squabble, shoving and jumping up and down. He was finally restrained by several Vikings and the officials. “I see things like tills .every week,” Parker said, “And everybody says to keep your poise. But this time I couldn’t control myself.” When calm first was restored, the officials said Parker had been ejected. Then they . re-themselves ar Orr and Mackbee from the contest. ■. ik ★ ★ “I told the officials I was just trying to keep my ground,! Parker said. “Then Sandusky (Alex Sandusky, Colt guard) came over and told them what a nice guy I was. 'The officials said ‘let’s have no more Up out of you, number 77,’ and they let me stay in the game.” MEXICO CITY (AP) - Sugar Ramos may be the world’s lightweight champion in Mexico, but Carlos Ortiz of New York still is the 135-pound title-holder as far as the World Boxing Association is concerned. Hiat’s what Robert Evans, president of the WBA, said in Louisville, Ky., Sunday night in the wake of the controversial decision here Saturday night by which Ramos was declared the champion when Ortiz refused to re-enter the ring after the fight had been stopped in the fifth. Referee Billy Conn, the former world light-heavyweight champ from Pittsburgh, Pa., had stopped the fight with Ramos bleeding profusely from a qut over his left eye. He declared Ortiz the winner and still champion by a technical knockout. Ortiz went to his dressing room and refused to return when Ramon Velasquez, secretary of the World Council, ruled that the fitfit should continue since Ramos was able to go on. After a 10-minute time limit Velasquez declared Ramos the world DEMONSTRATION Conn’s decision started 8 wild demonstration, which took on the proportions of « riot before Velasquez’s ruling giving the title to Ramos, a Cuban who now lives in Mexico City. There were echoes of the decision in New York Sunday night. More than 2,500 Puerto Ricans, who regard Ortiz as an idol, vented their anger by demonstrating against a Mexican troupe before a Bronx theater. Evans said that “if in Conn’s opinion the cut was enough to the fight, as president of the WBA, I accept that decision.” Conn said he stopped the fight because “Ramos was in danger of suffering permanent injury to his left eye.” Conn agreed with Bill Daly, manager of Ortiz, that “tiie Mexican people are not to blame for what happened at ringside.” Agitators, who exist everywhere, are the ones to be held responsible,” Daly said at a Sunday press conference. Daly was in a more calm mood than Saturday night when, bleeding from a wound on his head caused by a thrown 20-centavo piece, he termed the milling ringsiders “savages” and “animals.” Daly and Fancho Rosales, manager of Ramos, agreed that a return bout might be feasible open. Four Yanks Win in Net Tournament BUENOS AIRES (AP) - Arthur Ashe, Allen Fox, Dennis Ralston and Charlie Pasarell, members of the U.S. Davis Cup team, won their first-round matches Sunday in the Argentine International Lawn Tennis Championships, Ashe, of Richmond, Va., beat Modesto Vazquez, Argentina, 6-1, 6-3, 6-1, Fox, of Los Angeles, downed Jorge Martinez, Buenos Aires, 64, 66, 64, Ralston, of Bakersfield, Calif., whipped Roberto Aubone, Argentina, 7-S, 6-4, 64, and Pasarell, of Puerto Rico, eliminated Julian Gonza-bal, Buenos Aires, 6-2,26,64,6-4. - '} ' . ' In the women’s singles, Nancy Richey of Dallas beat Ana Maria Arias, Buenos Aires, 66, 66 and Rosemarie Casals, San Francisco, defeated Argentina’s Ana Maria Cavadini 6-4, 6-4. Single Wins Game CARACAS (AP) - John Bat*i man of Houston broke a 4-4 tie with a two-run single in' the ninth inning Sunday to give La Guaira a 6-4 victory over Valin April, but the site was leftjencla In the Venezuelan Winter Baseball League. Pistons Top Warriors by 119-110 Count SEATTLE, Wash. (AP)-After dropping three of their first four games, the Detroit Pistons bounced back Sunday night to down the San Francisco Warriors 119-110 in a National Basketball Association game. The two teams are tied for third in Western Division standings, each at 24. Dave DeBsucchere paced the Pistons attack, scoring 30 points and grabbing his share of the rebounds against 6-11 Nate Thurmond and 66 Fred Hetxel of the Warriors. ★ * Eddie Miles, former Seattle University star, scored 15 points for tiie Pistons, hitting on his first five attempts. He was brought back Into the game when the Warriors threatened to overtake the Pistons in the final minutes. DRTRglT^ Deto'c'a 11 44 30______I Scott I 3-3 1» Th'rm'nd Str'd'r S S4 IS Attfoo t Miles 5 U 11 Naurn'n 3 7-9 V'ar'lt i s 7 Hetzel 2 2-3 Bing I H t Mullins 1« M Reed < M 11 King 1 Vaughn 3 0-0 t Lee 1 M Herding 2 1-1 t Tetels «IMS 1W..floats 40 30-41 1 _ SAN FRANCISCO 5 5SS3.V 4«* Total fouls - Detroit i 3,014. » 3S » *7-111 San Frandscb Coan stormed out of camp in 1963. He returned but in three years he had gained just 293 yards. This season he has been a new man. ‘The holes were there,” said Coan. “If I hadn’t done like I did it would have been poor playing on my part.” Larry Garron was the hero for the Patriots, scoring times, two of the touchdowns on 53-yard bombs from Babe Paril-li. Jim Nance, the league’s leading rusher, gained 108 yards in 25 carries and Parilli picked the Chargers’ defense apart for 250 yards through the air. It San Diego’s third straight winless game on its swing through the East. TWO SECONDS Hewritt Dixon plunged into the endzone with two seconds to play as Oakland caught the Jets. The TD came on a fourth down play after New York’s line bad yielded only one yard in three Shots. The winning TD was set up by a 42-yard Tom Flores-Art Powell pass that came on a broken play. “It was a short pass, first Idown pattern,” Powell plained. “But I broke it and Tom saw me.’ . ★ Powell beat Dainard Paulson to the pass and brought the ball to New York’s 24 with 1% minutes left. Dixon caught a 22-yarder setting up the Jets’ goal fine stand that eventually surrendered the last two yards. Three different quarterbacks guided Miami to its second straight victory. George Wilson Novi Downs Lancers, 13-6 Second Half Rally Earns Decision Jr. and Rick Norton each put points on the scoreboard for the Dolphins against Houston before being injured. Dick Wood took over and marched Miami into position for two Gene Mingo field goals that wrapped it up. Cookie Gilchrist, making his debut for Miami, carried 10 times for 32 yards and caught a 13-yard TD pass from Norton. CLEARANCE Camping Trailers low as $195.00 Cranes, Jackets Victors Chuck Booth ran 20 yards with g pass interception. Sfove Tar-czy scored two conversions. VETERANS NEW 6.1. BILL . vftp WO 2-5 J STREET ■ PHONE | CITY .. WEEKEND FIOHTS MEXICO* CtrftSS*?-Rtmo*. 13444, Argentina, 15. Elorde retained lunlor lightweight title. BUENOS AIRES-OSCar (Rlngo) Bov- THERE'S MORE ACTION AT JACKSON! • Daily Double NIGHT RACING IO Races Nightly Rain or Shine JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAY I.D. CARD FOR 1AREYTON SMOKERS CLIP AND FILL OUT PASTE IN YOUR OWN PHOTO “UsTareyton smokers jjj would rather 1 fight than switch!” I Join the Unswitchables. Get the filter cigarette with the taste worth fighting for. Tareyton has a white outer tip ... and an inner section of charcoal. Together, they actually improve the flavor of Tareyton’s fine tobaccos.1 Emmanuel Christian, delighted its homecoming crowd at Wisner Stadium Saturday in taking a 66 halftime lead with the Lancers’ first touchdown of the season, but Novi rallied for a 136 win. i Emmanuel’s L e n Loveless I scooted seven yards In the sec-j 1 quarter for the team’s first six-pointer in a winless cam-palgn. But after the halftime festivities, Novi’s sophomore-freshman squad rallied for a third-period lead as John Van-Wagner plunged over from the one and Gary Boyer rta the convention. Mike Farah clinched the Wildcats’ first victory in their var-history by going over from the two-yard-Une in the last session. Novi is playing a mixed vtf> sity-reserve schedule this fall. FOOTBALL STATISTICS Navi Imin. Pint Downs Rushing {INSURANCE SE RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL! DON NICHOLIE 53Vi West Huron FE 2-9194 FE 4-0581 Nothing else quite measures up to Walker's DeLuxe Bourbon ... Downs Passing First Downs Panaltiaa Yards-----1 “ 1 Penalties and Yards ......... SCORING FLAYS SMM—Lovaiata, 7 run (run tall NOVI—VanWaglar, I plunga NOVI—Marsh, * run (run A SCORE «Y QUARTERS R*t ....................• • » t-U f TjgE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 C—a At Viet Field Dispensary ■ i " i " . sp ■ a x. '£ V Comedienne Nurses SAIGON, South Viet Nam I (AP) — Comedienne Martha Raye, a front-line trouper for 24 years, changed her routine last week. She donned fatigues and worked for two days in an Army field dispensary, cleansing wounds, changing bandages and comforting GIs wounded in a Mekong Delta battle. The twangy-voiced brunette, who has gone from outpost to tiny outpost througuwt. Viet Nam to entertain American servicemen, sang, danced and ribbed the men of two Army aviation helicopter companies stationed in the Mekong Delta town of Soc Trang. The next morning, the chopper pilots and their crews delivered Vietnamese soldiers to the paddy fields and marshlands of the delta to charge the entrenched Viet Cong. As the first helicopters settled into the landing zones, they were met by intense fire. The landing zones were in the stronghold of a Viet Crag battalion. Additional troops were brought in, and in the battle that followed four American helicopters were shot down and 20 were damaged. American casualties began arriving by a m. at the small Soc Trang dispensary. 27 War Dead Announced WASHINGTON (#> — The Defense Department has an-1 nounced that 27 men were killed in action in connection with the Viet Nam War. The list included 17 soldiers. Killed in action: CALIFORNIA—Pfc. Oarrtl Anahtlm. FLORIDA—staff Sgt. Rodger E. Tar- Waycrou; Pfc. Marvin Dowdell, Cordala. ILLINOIS—Spec. 5 Darius E. Brown, Salem. IOWA—Spec. S Dennis W. Waterman, Portsmouth. MICHIGAN—1st U. Jamas ■. ___ nar, Katemezaoi spec. 4 Gerald j. Collins, Essaxvlllo. NEW JERSEY — Sat Lt. Emory G. Mikula, Jarsay City. NEW YORK—Pfc. Jamaa S. Pittman, Schenectady. OHIO—Spec. 4 Chariot t barton. SOUTH CAROLINA—1st Welloni, Florence. TENNESSEE—Spec. 4 Shrtim, Chattanooga; Pfc. Miss Raye* a former nurse, arrived about the same time, dressed in Army fatigues and volunteering for duty, “She worked all dayuntil 9 that night — doing everything she could,” one corpsmansahf One of the first things she did was donate a pint of blood to a sadly wounded sergeant. Then it was hour after hour of scnib-hing and preparing the wounded for surgery, helping the surgeons, changing bandages, and cheering up men awaiting evacuation to field hospitals in Vung Tau or Saigon. Raye’s show did not go on that night. The next morning she was back at the hospital in her stained fatigues, helping the one doctor and eight corpsmen pare for the patients. ‘SHE DID A LOT* Shortly before noon, when the 1 wort eased, Miss Raye flew JO miles north to Vinh Long and performed that right fa* another unit of . Army chopper crews who fly Vietnamese troops into battle. -c* 'She did a lot for the morale of the men who’d been shot up, and she did a lot for ours, too,’* said a corpsman at the dispensary." MARTHA RAYE CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP)—A. One of his first actions after said free speech, free press and'fair trial are “compatible cra-man who has known Judge) being assigned the Sheppard) an accused person's right to a I stitutional guarantees.” Francis J. Talty for years de-l^ffttf was to refuse to be|-ja| Scribes him as “h*e, outgoing! .....; .Ai...■. — a good companion for conver- NO CONFERENCES sation, sharp and witty.” And; he ruled out question-an- New acquaintances of Judge swer conferences with newsmen Talty, 46, a bachelor, may douM I in a group. Notebook at hand, description. Especially if he listened to individual com- they want to talk about Samuel Sheppard’s new trial; which is being conducted by Talty. Beneath a distinctive crown of gray hair that wreathes his brow in a way suggestive of a Roman senator, Talty’s eyes twiride less frequently these days. He is reserved, serious, plaints and problems involving news coverage of tie trial. ♦ ★ ■ ★ Although he acknowledges there is “widespread and extensive public interest” in the 12-year-old Sheppard case, Talty said he hopes to conduct the new trial as routinely as pOssi-stern — a man of few andjble. guarded words and not . much In a . journal entry setting time for those. ' strict rules for newsman, Talty. ARTIFICIAL UMBS Certified by Thy American Board of Certification We Manufacture All TYPES OF UMBS FITTED BY PRESCRIPTION • Over 30 Years Experience G Latest Techniques as Taught by Northwestern U niversity • Training Facilities Available AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC SERVICE 1066 W. Huron Ph. 334-2529 c—* THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, -OCTOBER 24, I960 Urban ChiefCifes World^dfentia Cities | PITTSBURGH, Pa. (AP) —jtlen cities program has world-led Nations seminar on urban I will be made available not only Robert C. Weaver, secretary of wide potential, even in such a problems, Weaver said to American cities but to cities housing and urban development,! war-tom city as Saigon. „ knowledge gained from the around the world, said today the new demonstra-| In a talk prepared for a Unit-] demonstration cities program] «,‘I can think of no better place Repeat of a Sellout! New "Wolverine" 4-Drum Set Snare Drum Kit All the most wanted accessories are INCLUDED > in this deluxe set! You get Acymbals, cowbell, tone block,, bass muffler, snare stand, cymbal stands, brushes and sticks as shown, with snare drum, bas drum, 9"x13" and 16"xl6" tom toms. Choice of sparkling finishes. This chrome doubletension snare drum, 5’/2"x14" with flat- brushes, drum sticks, 6" practice pad, vin^l carrying bag, beginner's self-instruction book I where a total approach of this kind could apply than in Saint,** the secretary said. “This is a city where not only the usual urbanization process going bit where tbs pressures of war have added thousands of refugees to an already overburdened city.” WORLD pROBUSM Weaver told planning, housing and public works officials from 26 nations that the urban crisis is a world problem and solutions common to U S. slums and blighted neighborhoods could well be applied in foreign cities. A projection by the United Nations showed a 25 per cent population increase in Viet Nam’s urbah areas of 20,000 or more between 1960 and 1970 and even this projection now is considered modest because of the expanded war, Weaver said. ★ ★ ★ He noted that President John^ son pointed early this month to the necessity of a major rehabilitation in Viet Nam. Urban programs in most countries now are directed only at a single problem, Weaver said. ” WHICH LADY ISA Hobday HcaMt Club Why, of coune, it’s the lady on the right. Have the figure you have alwaya desired. Lose pounds and inches, regardless of your age, pins feel better, and have more energy the easy Holiday Health Club way. Call or eome by today for your free consultation. Stop putting it off. Call for your appointment today. 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"OVER 250AflUkltodStmMM Coaat to Cotut and World Widm** Pk.»W62l I-Facilities hr Mai* Facilities for Women DOWNTOWN TEL-HURON • DRAYTON ROCHESTER BLOOMFIELD PONTIAC I PONTIAC CENTER PLAINS PLAZA MIRACLE MILE MALL I shop without cash—"CHARGE IT" AT KRBSGE'S — pay only once a month! .1 UeHb Nny St 9M-062S (Comer Hke sad liny) { § THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 C—7 GIs Prefer Homemade Gifts WASHINGTON (WD - From Da Nang to Darmstadt, the gifts U. S. servicemen abroad want most from their families and friends this Christinas are those with a homey touch. The* desire for homemade things was No. 1 on the gift parade in "a survey ma^e by American Bed Cross field directors stationed with U. S. troops in the United States add at far-flung outposts in South Viet Natn, West Germany AwiHi W ^ Climate ~ )inclu^® Newfoundland rad the _ washcloths, metal mirrors, recorded messages, family photographs, school periodicals and home town newspapers,” ★ ♦ ★ Santa Claus is going to have to pay his own way to Viet Nam this Christmas, but still the flood of gifts for U. S. ser men there is expected to reach record proportions. There will be no free airlift as Azores. Bed Cross officials said today their survey showed die average GI prefers homemade things because they are Awe personal and meaningful than luxury items, which often can be bought for much less money at military post ex- Family gifts should vary ac- cording to where a man yfa- tioned, the Red Cross said. Perishables such as soft candy, cookies or cakes are not very Doctors Alerted to Dystrop practical for men in distant tropical areas like Southeast Asia. “In stateside military bases, however, Mom’s homemade goodies, often arrive safely if properly packed and bring joy to a son's heart,” the fied Cross said. POPULAR PRESENTS “Other popular family Christmas gifts — some again depend- HARRIMAN, N.Y. (AP) The nation's physicians were urged today to, he abat for a prime “masqueradpr” df tragically crippling muscular dystro* phy — lest they miss or delay attacking a treatable disease. The “mimic” disease -<- treatable Jby-ijrugLIbe cortisone family— is a muscle-weakening malady called “polymyositis.”! v-vvd'' A;-' :* And it can often be confused by the unwary with muscular dystrophy, far which there are no drugs or other effective treatments, said Dr. Carl M. will have to be sent regular mail surface or air — at standard stal rates. FR1GIDAIRE BIG 13 CUBIC FT. DELUXE 2-DOOR BRAND NEW 1966 MODELS AUTOMATIC DEFROST WITH SEPARATE- 100-LB. TOP FREEZER BRtter Hurry for This "Best Buy” FRIGIDAIRE washer1! HUAM! l/M/reo TtM£ Off£Af Pearson, professor of medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles school of medicine. Muscular dystrophy affects at least 200,000 persons in the United States alone and polymyositis strikes nearly half as many offers, he said. ADDRESSED CONFAB He told about it in addressing an unusual international conference on “Exploratory Concepts in Muscular Dystrophy and Related Disorders,” and he amplified in an interview. The conference, sponsored by cases treated with corticosteroids — that is, cortisone and its derivative drugs.” the Muscular Dystrophy Associations of America, is being held at Arden House, a moun tain-top mansion given to Columbia University by now Ambassador W. Averill Harri-man as a site for conferences on “coifiplex national problems” in VaSlyieiM scientists are aJ^yt" tending. Pearson said this is the prospect with the “masquerading” disease if diagnosed early: “You can expect some improvement and in a few cases nearly full recovery of strength (of muscles) in about 70 per cent of; They Put It Away PRAGUE (AP) - Czechoslovaks had the biggest beer con- the Czechoslovak news agency C.T.K. reported: On an average, the Czechs drank 130.4 liters per person, but in West Bohemia (where the Pilsen brewery is located) the beer consumption was age 191.4 liters. SHOE REPAIR SPECIAL -BRIM THIS COUPON WITH Y0U-While-You-Wait Service Top Lifts Women's Dowels, Spike and High Heel* 89? Coupon Good Tuesday,.Wednesday, Thursday DOWNTOWN SHOE REPAIR DEPT. KRESBE’S CUSTOM DELUXE MODEL! WITH 2 SPEEDS AND AUTOMATIC SOAK CYCLE! . 5 YEAR WARRANTY AT HO EXTRA CHMfiE! 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KROGER PLAIN,.SUGAR OR COMBINATION FRESH BAKED M f DOHUTS____,...w C A TOP VALUE 3U STAMPS C A TOP VALUE 3V STAMPS EA TOP VALUE 3U STAMPS TC TOP VALUE #3 STAMPS BA TOP VALUE 3U STAMPS 2 WITH THIS COUPOH OH g H S2 PURCHASE OR MORE ■ ■ « HALLOWEEN CANDY * 9 | VcM thru Wed., Oct. 26f *66. m I of Kroger Hat. A East. Mleh. f •> ■nmaaseppmammamaM WITH THIS COUPOH OH ANY SCHICK PRODUCT ■ f- ■ M • ■ ’■ ■ WITH THIS COUPON ON AMY PACKAGE ROYAL VIKING DANISH PASTRY Z Z WITH THIS COUPON ON Z Z WITH THIS COUPON ON B S ANY 4 LOAVES j J ON ANY 2 PKGS ■ ■ MEL-O-SOFT BREAD ■ ■ IMPORTED ■ « OR KROGER BUNS ■■ HOLLAND BULBS ■ Valid At* Wed., C 9 Valid thru Wed,, Oct. 26, 1966 - i\ Valid thru Wed., Oct. 26, 1966 ■ Valid thru Wed., Oct. 26, 1966 -pj ■ Valid thru Wed., OcK 26, 1966 emM 1 >•t Kroger otf. A Eaet. Mich. H |\d Kreger Det. A East. Midi, fj lot Kroger Det. A Ee,t.Mlch. fl Bot Kroger Det. I E art. Mich. IB !■»■■■!■■■■■■■---13 Istoa»«■■■■■■•■ •■■■Mi mmmhillseitoHfi|arOMtoM Ramse •• as •■*••• totoSBMHR;. t. o-$ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 Jacoby on Bridge NOKTEt jti ♦ J52 ' i«M1« ' I H4I ♦ J» WEST EAST 43 AQ109 TKQ53 V 10 9 6 ♦ 1098 2 OAKS ♦ 85 32 ♦10764 SOUTH (D) ♦ AK8 7 6 4 ♦ 82 ♦ Q J ♦ AKQ Both vulnerable EM North East South 1* Pan 2 ♦ Pan 4 4 Pan Pan Pan Opening lead—# 10 By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY In arguments.,between bridge partners we have noticed that on many occasions the man who • loudest in criticism of his ! partner is blind to his own errors. East cashed the ace and king | of diamonds and | shifted to the four of clubs. South won with the ace and played ace-king and a small trump/ East was on lead with the queen of trumps. Meanwhile West who had played ups JACOBY the deuce on his partner’s club lead had managed to continue showing did) weakness by playing the three and five in order. East played Us five of diamonds. South raffed and proceeded to ran off his last three trumps .and the good clubs. The last club lead squeezed West. He had discarded down to king-queen of hearts and nine of diamonds while dummy was holding the ace-jack of hearts and seven of diamonds behind him so that no matter what card he discarded dummy would make the last two tricks. ist really lit into his partner for not opening the king of hearts. He pointed out in several thousand words that if West had just opened a heart there would have been no way for South to develop that squeeze. East was correct about that, but he was entirely wrong in blaming his partner for the unfortunate result of the hand. He would make the same lead West did but would not have played the defense as East lid. Mien East was in with the queen of spades he should have led a heart, not the five of diamonds. It was up to him to see that he was not going to defeat, die four-spade contract unless] his partner would show up with die king and queen of hearts and then only if he broke up die squeeze by means Of a heart lead. V*Cf)RDJ&MNk* Q—You, South, are* dealer and hold: ♦KQJ9765 WA32 #2 *7 S What is your opening bid? A—-We recommend three spades. You might try one spade or even pass. There is no standard procedure with this type hand. TODAY’S QUESTION You bid three spades. West bids four , hearts. Your partner bids four spades and East five hearts. What do you do how? Answer. Tomorrow Founder Dies FARMINGTON UP) - Funeral service will be held today in Southfield for Mrs. ZoraF.Alt-man, a founder and member of the Mount Clemens Symphony Orchestra. Mrs. Altman, 49, of Farmington, died Sunday in a Detroit hospital. Dutch Princess, to Bear 1st Child THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Crown Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands is expecting her first child in' April, the Dutch government announced today. ar * * Beatrix wds married March 10 to Claus Van Amsberg, a West German. A spokesman for the government information service said the 28-year-old heiress to the throne was in excellent health. Debate Victors DETROIT m-A Wayne State University debate team Sunday won the Motor City Invitational Debate Tourney at the University of Detroit. Runnersup in the competition among 60 teams from 33 colleges were, in order, Albion, Michigan State and Northwestern University. The teams debated whether the Uni-ted States should substantially reduce its foreign policy commitments. THE WILLETS WOMEN ALWAYS WAS TOO FOND OF TALKIN'TO U5TEN- I'LL ----- CALL SAM AM'GET "THE SCOOP.! ALREADY..,.. . . .. THE BERRYS SAM?YOL' DADOY-W-LAN, SPEAKlN'L. I , IMRHIKI ________________________ THE MI55U5 MAS BEEN KIAGSIKJ'ME WHAWTY SAY? WELL,HE... IU BE DOG-ABOUT CGOAIWMJP V SEE MOfJ.SHES i a - r’qptFI KNOW.1..,I DO BE- LIEVE HE HAP A ONE-WAV CONNECTION 1... By Carl Grubert Astrological Fojrecast 'JL ... -A-.M.. By SYDNRY OMAR* "Th» who mm contrail Ms ftstiny . . . Astrology points tlM mm" ARIES (Msr. 21-Apr. 19); .If you have Doaloclsd recent responsibility ... you srt delayed. Otherwise dey Is marked by progress. But realise Importance of health. Don't be- tempted Into MmgMM TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): picture. ■mony is of uimosT Impor-aroust needless controversy. (June SKliriy 22): Favor- aspect highlights long-range VIRGO (Aug. 2S-Sept. 22): Obtain hint from LEO message. One you ediitlre I* going through "preesure period." Kno* this and bo lenient. Don't try to torn1 Issues. Take tune to bo kind, gracious. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): New approach to dealing with associates Is necessary. Be Independent without being arrogant. Strass originality without being eccentric. Highlight willingness to *'~ ....I....lk*Shere* Innermost thoughts. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Ooc. 21): Fine *r taking action toward if'"—*- —' Chief Justice Urges Federal Age Limit DETROIT (AP) — The chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court says mandatory retirement in all three branches of federal government would benefit tiie nation. Justice Earl Warren told' news conference in Detroit Saturday that he advocates compulsory retirement in the legislative, executive and judicial branches but did not suggest an age limit He did say that 60 is too young for persons to be required to leave government service. Warren was in Detroit to help dedicate Wayne State University’s |2.5-million law school building. He received an honorary doctor of laws degree from the university. Plans Affecting Grand Canyon Under Review HOUGHTON (AP) -Interior Secretary Stewart Udall says federal officials are taking an-other took at proposals to build dams that would flood the Grand Canyon. Udall said his department “may crane up with a new proposal Much would not disturb tiie canyon.” Udall, at Houghton this weekend, was replying to a question of why the natural beauty of file Graid Canyon must be disturbed by damming the waters of the Colorado River. Conservationists have opposed building two proposed dams. They would generate electric power and furnish water (or irrigation. Udall did not indicate what the new proposal might be or whether the Interior Department is considering giving up plans for tiie dims. I THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 C-* On Several Fronts Backlash Rearing Ugly Head By WHITNEY M. YOUNG, Jr. Executive Director NetttlNd Urbea League The phenomenon of backlash —white resistance to the Negro’s cause of equality — once again has seared its ugly head. Its effect can be seen In • num-• ber of recent j events^ .... the I falr housing bill I was killed I the Senat I Then, emigres-Isional leaders I launched an at-Itack on U. & (C b mmissioner of. Education Harold Howe’s efforts to bring about desegregation of th schools, claiming he was moving too fast-despite the bet that 90 per cent of Negro children attend segregated schools 12 years after the Supreme Court’ historic decision outlawing segregated schools. Other signs that backlash is becoming more of a problem include the many primary election victories by segregationists, as wel) as the current appeals to racist ele-raeats in many of the election districts around the country. Part of the reason for this ii that Negroes are no longer demanding merely, to be served at a lunch counter, but are seeking more basic freedoms like open housing and integrated quality education — freedoms which touch all white Americans more directly. ★ * * This quest for real equality by Negroes has laid bare the strain of racism which exists in the nation. SUMMER RIOTING Much of the blame for backlash is laid at the door of the riots which have taken place in Negro ghettos in recent summers. People became frightened of the violence which erupted, and they became scared by extremist statements they heard or read. These people should realize that the overwhelming majority of Negro citizens do not believe in violence or extremism. I am afraid many of the so-called “bacHasIiere” know this, bat use incidents of violence or extremism as an excuse to parade long-hidden prejudices out in the open. There has been a serious fait ure on the part of white leadership. It has failed to live up to the principles of equal rights and has been too hasty in reacting to isolated incidents with threats and warnings. ■ ★ ★ it Responsible leadership in the Negro Community, while getting less publicity in its rejection of \riots and extremism, has tried to “cool off” dangerous, situa-tions and bring an end to violent outbubts. For this, white leadership has been profuse in its commendations and thanks. MORE THAN PRAISE But responsible leaders need more than praise: ., What Negro leaders want and need am concrete victories which they can present to their constituents. They need Jobs for the unemployed of tiie ghetto; they need low-and - middle income housing projects; they need a crackdown mi stum conditions; they need better schools; they need better municipal services including a police force which protects^atfler than bulllei. These are what responsible leaders need, not letters of commendation. ★ : * i Praise from the white establishment can only harm these Now at 7 and 9:05 p.m. leaders if it is not accompanied by measures to improve the lot of the Negro. The man in the ghetto wants action — now. He can’t eat promises; be needs a job now. VAGUE PROMISES And he can’t stomach vague promises about open housing when his kids are bitten by rats in the shuns. Responsible leadership fa a s tried to convince officials of this urgency and all they get for ' It iue commendations which oga only bring them los» of confidence and influence in the ghetto. Unless officials stop writing nice letters, start listening to responsible leaders and give them concrete victories, the mood of the ghetto will become even more ominous,* and violence and destruction will become even more prevalent. Ga/s Have Ball in Paper Gown HAB3YDRD, Com. f AP) Mrs. Leo Rose dyed hers, Possibly the most easily dis- was a dream ball for Husbands —tiie kind where women who usually wear 81,900 gowns chose paper sacks instead. The occasion was a paper dross ball tossed Saturday night fo| enrich the coffers of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum here. It was more than that It was a nationally important test determine whether nonwoven paper wrapped around a pretty package doing the frug, the pawuige UU1US uro uug, swim, or themonkeycouldlqng tucked, ticked and glued plastic posable of the so-called discs until her dress was a«exy°ble gowns there was a tiered marvel. Still, she kept her ruffled one made from bath-gloves on all night because the room tissue, dye refused to wash off her hands. Other1’women splashed on glitter, stapled on flowers, or spray painted op art designs: Some husbands caught up in the spirit of tiie evening wore paper vests, ties, and cummerbunds' Other men wielded scissors, ' threatening to whittle away at the ephemeral female State Hunter Dies GRAND HAVEN (A?) Lawrence Reek, M, nt Muskegon died Sunday of an apparent heart attack while hunting in a wooded area 10 miles South of this Ottawa County community, sheriff’s men reported. The Negro wants nothing very extraordinary. He wants what other Americans have and enjoy —he wants to be a part of a prosperous nation with equal rights and benefits. He is lesLby responsible leaders who have been trying to bring the Negro into the mainstream of American life. But without meaningful Indications by society that it is prepared to open its doors to the Negro, irresponsible elements on both sides will take over. This is a national crisis, and it has beconfo a crisis of leadership as well. AP Wlrtphoto BARON TAKES A IDEE - Baron James Nathaniel de Rothschild 70-year-old member of one of tee worlrfs richest families, and Ms wife, the former Yvette Honorine Choquet, sit in the office of the mayor of a Paris district after their weekend marriage. The new 27-year-old baroness worked as a theater usher until last month. Soviet Artist oft Blacklist endure. If so, wives could dress more cheaply. ; ‘J Some 150 women showed up in, paper dresses they created! themselves or which were espe- j dally painted for them by well-known fabric designers and popl artists. ‘BARELY THERE’ Model Peggy Moffitt showed] up more than any Other woman. She wore a clear vinyl top with nothing to stop the view but paper dots there and there, and! teeny, weeny red bikini panties, j Her barely there costume was' designed by her boss, Rudi Gernreich, the Californian who reated the topless bathing suit. The packaged paper sack-like nightgown that most women received to work with cost less than $10 However, most women refused to settle for this much, simplicity. &amJL Ofc 0(b Waterford C.A.l. Building Sunday, Nov. 6, 196 Buddy Sanders Local Recording Artists $1 Arlvnnrerl —Donation - Roy Drusky and His Band 'Nashvillt Sound $2 at the Door Tom Turkey Leads Chase WILLOW SPRINGS^ Mo. (AP)—Bob White had no more than sounded his turkey call when a big tom headed toward him over tee hill about 100 feet away, coming lickety split.* dr ★ ★ White said the bird’s onrush caught him unprepared. The wild gobbler thundered by so fast and so close the hunter’s turkey call went one way and his gun |he other. * “I was five minutes finding my turkey can in the brush,” White said. ‘That doggone tom must’ve heard some hen, .and he was going to beat all the other birds there.” The Chinese were the first to produce objects made of cast iron, according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. MOSCOW (AP) - Nikita Khrushchev stood before painting by Soviet artist Robert Falk in 1962 and ..declared, “I would say that is Just a mess.” Falk’s Daintings are back on exhibit m Moscow for the first time since then, perhaps eating a slight loosening of controls on Soviet art. ir it ' it An exhibit of about 100 paintings and drawings by the late artist opened Saturday in four rooms erf the Moscow Center of the Union of Artists. It is being well attended, especially by young people. The exhibit is the second officially sponsored display in recent months of works by previously blacklisted Soviet painters. Paintings by Alexander Tyshler, 67, were exhibited at the Pushkin Museum here in March. SURPRISE VISIT Khrushchev paid a surprise visit to an exhibit in December 1962. His outbursts against tiie modern art he mI flo*h hrama plotad. CempUta with Plaitic Hallowatn hood. POLY TRUK OR TREAT ' • V- win. pumpkh. pin c TWO YANKEE STORES IN RES IN THE PONTIAC AREA * MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER * CORNER OF PERRY AND MONTCALM STREETS ,* / /- THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24,1966 Don’t Miss These Outstanding Food Town-People9* Exciting BargainBuys, 8 EXCITING WEEKSOF GOLD BELL VALUES GALORE-BUY NOW AND SAVE! GOLD BELL am iyurieyi up sia-op USDA ROUND Bat SCTat mm sb» a U.S. CHOICE U.S.CHOICE PIONEER PURE GRANULATED U.S. CHOICE BONELESS CHUCK ROAST SUGAR 5^39 COFFEE SUGAR > Sold to Duhn i MICHIGAN U.S. GRADE A STOCKTON MEADOWDALE MEL-O-CRUST SUGAR OR PLAIN PRESTONE I FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of 1 Pound or Mora CUBED STEAK | FREE GOLD BELL I Stamps With'Purchase of 3 Pound* or Moro HAMBURGER (FREE BOLD BELL Stamps With Purch.it HALLOWraTcAHOY BEEF ROAST VALUABLE COUPON y fi ! DOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS il PEOPLE'S | FOOD MARKETS \wm mm ■ KSESS ■QE51 Mi Mil Snltokm Rmi Fin*Xa*h>bu Comor Moybf OPEN SUNMfft n E.2M AUBURN I KSL PIKE ST. I 7M AUBURN ST. 1 III ORCHARD LAKE fUL ■ ■ 1 I * hays aw*. 1 ■ aosco SUNDAYS | OfEN SUNDAY | OPEN SUNDAY 1 OWN SUNDAY U.S. CHOICE BONELESS HEEL O’ ROUND 89$ U.S. CHOICE BONELESS rump ROAST 99$ U.S. CHOICE CHUCK STEAK 59$ U.S. CHOICE GROUND BEEF ROUND STERN 79$ m D—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 Family Income Up, Too Food Costs High, but... By JOHN CUNNITF AP Business Newt Analyst |4 Americans sped less than 20 I per cent of their disposable in- The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots'. Quotations are furnished by the I new YORK (AP) — Selective Detroit Bureau of Markets as of | strength among blue chips Thursday. „ widened gradually and gave the stock market a fairly good gain early this afternoon. Trading was moderate. Market Enjoys a Good Gain Produce Apples. Crab, bu.......... Apples. Delicious, bu. Apples, Delicious, Red. b Apples, Greening ,Su...... Apples. Jonathon, bu. Beets, topped, bu Broccoli, db... bu Cabbage, Curly, t Cabbage. Red. bu Cabbage) Sprouts, I Cabbage, Standarc Egg Plant, Vi bu. Horseradish, pk. bsk. not be another one In the rarely broken string of “Blue Mondays.” * A spurt in machine tool orders reported for September and some good reports of corporate m Some key teues advanced acheerful .. 4iO oKaiii 0 nAinta Kni nonoral ° r . ... about 2 points but the general "* pattern among high quality is-o sues was irregularly higher at ? best. ★ ★ ★ The market was a little higher on “balance at the start. As the session wore on and prices held their ground, there was increasing confidence that this would background for Wall Street. HIGHER GROUND ' Generally higher were autos, steels, oils, rails, chemicals, electrical equipments, drugs and electronics. Aerospace defense issues declined. Airlines and nonferrous metals were mixed. The Associated Press average of 00 stocks at noon was up A at 285.1 with industrials up 1.6, rails up .2 and utilities up ,8. * * Sr ' The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 4.73 at 792.03. Prices advanced in moderate trading on the American Stock Exchange. Up 2 points or better were Syntex, Conductron and BAker Industries. Ahead more than a point were Solitron Devices, Signal Oil “A” and Paddington “A.” Polic* Ask Public, FBI lor Assistance age of her money on food] today than in almost any per-. 1lod in American YPSILANTJ (AP) -'The FBI history. ..id the public were asked todayl “0 od pnceai to help in the investigation Of are high. GOW the death of a 17-year-old Ypsi- —.......... lanti youth whose concrete-weighted body was found in a creek near Port " Washtenaw County Sherif f , , „_rr _ . .. come on food today. A century NEW YORK — The housewife ^ nwre ttian half our ■ probably will find it hard to be-jwages feeding ourselves. In the | lieve, but she is spending a for Soviet Union they still do. smaller percent- wasnienawOTyDnbi.i. ukjn m consideration,"^ ~ D<^las. ^^.“^^JflthTmoney that evaporates in!PERCENT; the iteam of inflation. The New York Stock Exchange eminent statis-j tics prove But the net in-1 come of families is higher than 'ever, too, age is even smaller. Some supermarkets make ton Hun a penny on every dollar rung up at the checkout counter. Food retailers, in fact, have been howling about costs as long as die housewives hive, Although some chains are very profitable, others are on very spongy financial footing. Who, then, is at fault for hlgfa pfiees? evidence' that Arland R. Withrow was kidnaped; and held for some time before he was strangled and his body dumped in the creek 14 miles west of Port Huron. We feel sure that this boy was held by his killers’ for at least two days and possibly three before the murder,” said Harvey. “We are trying to find] the place where he was kept.” Harvey asked that a ny one knowing 6f the youth’s activities! prior to his disappearance con- These are percentages the food stores like to quote, of course, because most of ethem feel mat, rather than having treated the housewife unfairly,I die housewife is demanding tool Until the housewife decided much of them. she wasn’t going to play the 1 Profits on retail operations game anymore, the complaints are compared to die turn- sounded like a chorus of Farm-over, which is very high. A er in the Dell. It went lflte this: store might have to sell about The husband blames the wife, “ M —|d| ‘ the wife blames the grocer, the grocer blames the distributor, the distributor blames the farm-«?T the fanner blames the government and on and on. ORDERLY This was orderly complaining. If nothing was accomplished, the complaints at least spun in a neat circle, Ring Around the Rosy, the old schoolyard game. In the child’s game, if someone pulled your anil too hard you could wince and puH even’ harder on the kid next to you. T OWDON f API — A noliticalAs Vhyed by adultS’if y0U LONDON (AP) -A political bla(ned { high prices you storm descended on Prntte Mm- . . . .. ^ teter Harold WUaon today the escape of double agente,se’ ^ ^ ^ . George Blake, sprung Saturday _. . night from a London jail where TMs dMn’t ““ke prices lovver. he-was serving the longest sen- K was ineffective. But it let-off-tence in modern English histo- steam. The housewife stopped playing, however. Fed up, she stuped out of line and smacked the grocer with her pocketbook. And, as we know, the grocer is Soviet Spy's Escape Stirs British Outcry Scotland Yard kept special watch on eight Communist ships at the London clocks hiid on Communist embassies and incensed. Everywhere, food prices are. challenged. No longer does order prevail. The first travelogue, “Three Worlds of Peru,” in the Kiwanis Travel and Adventure Series |Years as tbe most dangerous spy of the postwar years, he was kept without special securi- Communist-front institutions. But detectives speculated that Blake, 44, had been spirited out of Britain within hours of his PROPER SPOT? escape from Wormwood Scrubs! whether or not the housewife Prison; _______ jhasappiied her pressure in the Conservative legi s 1 a t o rs proper spot is debatable. What served notice they will seek j can no longer be debated is | to censure the government 1 for failing to keep Blake under closer wraps. Sentenced in 1961 to 421 will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at Pontiac Northern High School auditorium. European - born Eric Pavel will narrate as he shows his own pictures of Peru. Hie pictorial tour will include a visit to Lima, the capital, with its old churches a«d Its gaucho dancing groups. Than there will be a trip up the northern Andes to the world’s highest passenger sta-tion and to Cerro de Pasco, a ing by the wail for him. mining center; next to Machoi Pichu, the mysterious lost city I of the Incas; and finally a' canoe trip down the Amazon. ty in a jail from which eight escapes already had been made this’ year. Blake broke the bars of a window on a second-story landing, apparently with some tool which has not been traced, dropped into an exercise yard and climbed a rope ladder over the 20-foot prison wall. ONLY 2 REAL CLUES Police believe a car was wait- The plotters left only two real clues. Pavel, who m a r r i e d his French-born wife in Sou t h America, speaks seven languages. Board's Study of School Needs Will Continue certain effectiveness in her campaign for lower prices. Grocers have submitted In some areas. Supermarket competition often was not so mtich in the area of prices as in promotion, trading stamps and services. The housewives’ campaign has returned competition to the price area. * . ■_______, 4. A big question now is how ilong'will prices remain lowered. Another is how far the pressure will spread. The grocer, despite a small return, apparently can lower some prices by becoming more efficient, eliminating promotions, cutting services. What happens, however, when he can cut no more? Or if he finds price cuts unprofitable? ' Will he demand that the food processor drop his prices too? Will the processor demand a lower price on the packages he uses? Will farm to market transportation costs be challenged? Will farm prices, themselves, feel the effect? Will the cost of farm labor be blamed? One wp s a pot of geraniums in \ the road outside the prison. De- h tectives believe it was either a u marker for the getaway car or t was carried by Blake’s accom-1 plices to suggeat they were via- s itiikg Hammersmith Hospital c across the road. The other clue was 20 steel knitting needles, size 13, which a were used to reinforce the rungs e of the rope ladder. .Blake’s unprecedented sen- e tence was for nine years of ii spying tor the Soviet Union > .while he was employed by the that It’s called inflation and the The Pontiac Board of Educa-; British Foreign Office. TYOUSewife knows it. tion will continue its consider-: We probably never will be able to analyze exactly the areas that react to thehousewife's motion a soul-searching by everyone connected with prices, including President Johnson. All we can say for certain it jjjjgl m,iutk>n of current school facility! ^ needs at its meeting tomorrow Tr % ** 1 < I'? * * * Successruhtnvestim* The session will be held atj|>; f'lH 7:30 p.m. tomorrow Schools Supt. Dr. Dana F. Whit-mer will attend a regional school superintendents’ conference Wednesday, the normal meeting night. * Also expected to be discussed at the meeting is a final contract with the school district’s cafeteria employes. News in Brief The theft of tools valued at $250 from Herman Ioppolo Trucking & Supply Co., 1435 E. Avon, Avon Township, was reported yesterday to Oakland County sheriffs deputies. Banquet Hall for rent. Immediate opening. FE 4-7677. —Adv. 1 This is the big one — rummage sale. Christ Church Cranbrook. Thurs., Oct. 27, 9 a.m. - 2 p.m. Lone Pine at Cranbrook. Bloomfield Hills. —Adv. Lodge Calendar Pontiac Shrine Number 22 Order of the White Shrine of Jerusalem, School of Instruction, 6:45, ceremonial 8 p.m. Wed., Oct. 26. 22 State St. Refreshments. Florence Schingeck, WHP. f i By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “My husband shifted our savings into bonds; he says we’ll earn more that way. I don’t understand.” F. B. A) Investors prefer putting money to work with minimum ride and maximum earning power. Bonds, representing capital borrowed by corporations or, government units, generally provide maximum safety, They earn interest at fixed rates. Borrowers respect their obligations, since defaulted interest usually means bankruptcy. Stocks are shares of ownership expected to return dividends that tend to move with earnings. Prime income stocks normally yield four-six per cent.; Borrowing money to conduct business is common procedure. When demand for money is low, interest rates are moderate; when demand for money becomes high, rates move up, as they have recently by Federal . Reserve Bank action. Bond- to bring yields back to current money rates. Your husband took advantage of falling bond prices to secure maximum income on his capital. On rising bond prices, his portfolio should also produce capital gains. He may then decide to move back into stocks showing attractive yields from their depressed levels. I call him a shrewd-investor. ________i—— (Copyright, 1966) B usiness Totes Harold S. McFarland, director of personnel services, General Motors Carp., Detroit, was recently elected the National Safety Council’s vice president for industry. McFarland, who lives at 323 Lakewood, Bloomfield pila, will serve as a lisiaon between titpe council’s board of directors and its industrial conference. : Mark A. Ottati baa been appointed national account man- holders do not receive a match- ager to handle the General Mo-jng interest hike, but bond, tors, Ford, and American Mo- PRICES fall to match yields to money rates. If bonds yield more than stocks, investors will sen stocks and buy bonds to increase income. When demand again declines and interest rates drpp, bond prices wiU tors accounts for Burroughs Corp. Ottati of 6824 Tamerlane, West Bloomfield Township, is also a part-time teacher of computer systems design at Wayne Sate University. i $k TOE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 D—• CAPTURED — A wounded prisoner, left , behind by the enemy, is kept under dose guard by » soldier of the U.S. 1st Cavalry Division during Operation Irving. Frequently the highly mobile unit has to fight for the same ground repeatedly because there is no effective political follow-up to 1st Cavalry military Political Follow-Up Lacking After 1st Calvary Victories 1 Cutters Help Grounded Ship MACKINAW CITY (UPI) -Two Coast Guard cutters/ today resumed efforts to refloat the motorship George A. Sloan, which wait aground on a reef near the Straits of Mackinac during high winds yesterday. Coast Guardsmen on the cutter Mackinac threw lines aboard the Sloan yesterday in an attempt to pull h^r off the reef, but a spokesman said they were only able to move the vessel a few feet. The Coast Guard vessel Naugatuck sailed here from the Cleveland Coast Guard station last night to aid the Mackinac. Gale winds between 35 and 40 knots whipped up four- and five-foot waves which hampered Coast Guard efforts yesterday. * ★ ★ Authorities said the 16,000-ton ore-filled vessel and its crew of 32 were in no immediate danger.-......... HIGH WINDS BONQ SON, South Viet Nam (AP) - By military i the job the U.S. 1st Cavalry Di-1 (i vision, Airmobile, has done in Viet Nam must be ruled a success. The diviiskm has run five operations and reports a (>ody count of more than 6,500 North Vietnamese regulars and Viet Cong guerrillas. Yet the division’s repeated victories raise questions. There has not been enough of the follow-through that would fall naturally to forces of the Saigon government — Vietnamese troops. Brig. Gen. William A. is the division’s assistant commander, in charge of operations. When he is asked if there isn’t something wrong when the division has had to fight in the same area five times, he says: “Each time we’ve been in here, we’ve done the enemy con- siderable damage. Qur main effort must still be to oppose the (enemy) main force.” HOLDING ACTION But he indicates the job of holding and securing should be given to less mobile units of the allied forces. Once we have enough combined freeworld strength stay in the area, it will be good,” he says. The division presses a civic action program, giving villagers medical aid and other ance, “But when we are needed someplace else, that’s where go,” Beeker says. , ★ A ★ This pinpoints one of the problems of this war, which is often described as actually two wars — one military and one political, the latter an effort to safeguard people and to encourage them to be loyal to Saigon. Most of this month the 1st Ca- 1,000 Protest Against U.St in Philippines MANILA (AP) — About l,00t students — instead of the 5,030 hoped for by organisers — demonstrated today in front of the U.S. Embassy against the Viet Nam policies of President Johnson. The President, residing about four blocks: away at the Manila Hotel for the seven-nation summit conference, saw none'of the demonstration. It began about 6 p.m., with a few hundred students and grew to about 1,000 after an hour. ★ * * The demonstration was orderly and consisted mainly of speeches and slogans except for one brief incident when some cameramen were shoved around by students. About 100 policemen and troops stood in front of the iron fence guarding the embassy compound but made no effort to interfere with the demonstra-tiqp. ....:.;-----“ Death Notices SHERMAN, OCTOBER . 22, 1946,' ■ EARL C„ 1711 Oklahoma Street, flint; formerly of Oakland Coun-,ty; 67; beloved husband of Thelma Sherman; dear father of Mrs. Evelyn Hadden, Mrs. Arlene Hadden, Mrs. Erlene Boyce ehd Mrs. Judy Walker; dear brother of Mrs. Pearl Sherman. Frank The Coast Guard said the skipper of the Sloan anchored when winds up to 50 knots raked the area. He pulled anchor when the winds started to diminish, spokesmen said, and the ship drifted sideways onto the shoal. CARRY BANNERS students carried banners sayingN" Johnson, murderer’ arid “Jonhson, go home” and arrived at the demonstration chanting an old , familiar slogan:' “Hey, hey, LBJ, how many kids did you kill today.” Grand Rapids Man Kills Self Hunting GRAND HAVEN (UPI) Qetus Peterson, 31, Grand Rapids, died Saturday after he accidentally shot himself while hunting pheasants near here. A companion told police they were hunting near the Grand River and Peterson decided to. row out to a small island in the River. The gun accidentally discharged as Peterson was climbing out of the boat. The blast struck him in the chest. Police said the hammer of the shotgun apparently caught on the seat of the boat. Towns Separate MIAMI (AP)—The world may be getting smalleiybuttoe official 1966 Florida road map lists greater distances between Miami and 38 other cities in the state than did the 1965 map. A S t a t e Road Department spokesman attributed the greater distances, ranging from one to Six miles, to construction of “better highways — but npt necessarily in a straight line between cities." a petition concern-aka Junior Noble, , sr. and Dorothy I minor (Child, filed In this Court valry has been engaged in Operation Irving, with its helicopter-borne forces swooping in and scouring section after section of the coastal delta and -foothills near Bong Son, 290 miles northeast of Saigon. The surprise of this operation that prisoners outnumber enemy dead. Totals announced few days ago were 632 killed, 650 captured, 2,986 detained for questioning. LIGHT CASUALTIES Over-all American casualties have been light; The U.S. troopers have been ranging almost at will through 700 square miles in Operation Irving. Since the first clashes, the major task has been to discover and pounce on fleeing bands of guerrillas 6r North Vietnamese. The ‘number of prisoners and American spokesmen adi they are not all enemy riflemen but include political cadres indicates that the 18th North Vietnamese Regiment of the 610th Division has been shattered. The 1st Cavalry has brushed against elements of the 2nd Viet Cong Regiment of the 610th and is pressing the pursuit white still seeking another regiment. * ».★ ★ Coordination of the attack with the Vietnamese 22nd Division, blocking to the southwes and the Korean Tiger Division south along the Phu Cat Mountains, has been a major key. As the cavalrymen drove in from the north and west, the fleeing enemy soldiers were i caught in a ring with the sea to their backs. “Seldom has an operation turned out as close to the plan,” says Becker. The count of enemy losses in Operation Thayer during September totaled 231 killed and 74 captured. HOPSCOTCH TACTICS The division's hopscotch tactics of moving across country to strike at enemy concentrations took it into western Pleiku Province near the Cambodian border during August, on Operation Paul Revere II. That accounted for 814 enemy killed ‘ 106 injured while suffering 77 killed and 265 wounded. The division was desig scout out sizable enemy units and then swiftly bring in sufficient force to dock, attack and them. * military officials, uncertain of the division’s future role, say the division’s tactic of spotting, striking and then moving out lets the Viet Cong move right back in and start rebuilding when the Americans leave. Becker does not see the division changing its course right now. NEUTRALIZED We don’t believe the enemj has broken up his large units,' he says, “and we believe it is basic that his major units be mtralized.” If the enemy should drop back to its “phase two” campaign of using terrorist squads rather than military units, “we can adjust — our squads can beat his squads. * * ★ a.m. at 611 Walton Blvd., Pontlar “We feel we have damaged V the Viet Cong tostrocturel^ ^ ^ ^ here, Becker added. i birmingham-bloomfield bank Becker, a native of Kagfcn-1 oetowr a i«* The term “shunpBung,” used to denote the avoidance of superhighways' with toll charges, had its origin during colonial times in New England. Farmersof that day were incensed by what they consider e d high toll charges for the use of roads and formed a “Shunpike Association” to find alternate routes around the toll gates. Petition having barn flh alleging that aald child a provisions of Chapter 71! 1 Laws of 1941 as ai present whereabouts aid minor child Is unknown ai _...J has vlolatod a law of the Sti that said child should bt piscod | i lurlsdiction of this Court, n the name of the poo pi* of Hi Michigan, you are hereby „jf the hearing on said petition hold at the Court House, Oakland County Service Contor, in the City of Pontiac '' County, on the 3rd day of Novem-D. 1966, at 1:30 o'clock In the _______mi, and you are hereby commanded to appear personally at said hearing. being Impractical ill be served by publication a- weak previous to said hearing The Pontiac Press a newspaper prli nd circulated In said County. Witness, the Honorable Norman Barnard, Judge of said Court, In City of Pontiac In said Counly, this 22nd M September A.D. 1966- (Seal) NORMAN A. BARNARD, copy) Judge Of Probate ELIZABETH A. BALLARD, Deputy Probate Register, Juvenile Dlvlaion October 24, /1946 U.S. TREASURY DEPARTMENT-INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION SALE Pursuant to authority contained In Sae-ion 6331 of the internal Revenue CrJ" the property described below hae b ——1 'sr nonpayment of delinquent -venue taxes due from Potor B. ______ S. Barkor, 699 Glenhurst Drive, Birmingham, Michigan, rill be sold in accordance islons of Section 6335 of IPIMRi avenue Code, and the regulations fhere-ndtr, at public auction. Dale of sale November 4, 1966. Time of sale 1:60 P.M. Place of sale Harold Turner Inc owers, Birmingham, Michigan. Description of property—1264 P Grand Prlx #094P 10441.---- Property may be inspected at Bowers, Birmingham, Michigan. Payment terms: 1X1 Full' 1“ _ — ----------— - • •yabla Title e to "Internal Revenue Si ct Director of Internal Revenue A. M. STOEPLCR Revenue Officer (Signature) HENRY A. WILLIAMSON, JR. Deleter 21, 1966. ______to tor Information concerning sale Federal Building, Parry A Huron **-k-=“ ‘■'Thtgan. Phono 339-7101. October 34, 1966 NOTICE OP PRIVATE SALE We Design * We Manufacture • We Install • We Guarantee County, Texas, is one of toe few -----------„ „ men who arrived In Viet Nam'signod mot ton days with the dhriskm in SeptanberiwH t» Mid at • privat* 1965 and is still ter?. Most sol-I dim go borne after a year in' a * I Viet Nam. Death Notices BIRK, OCTOBER 22, 1966, ARDEN, 2605 Semloh, Lake Orion; age 17; beloved son of Mr. and AArs. Erwin J. Blrk, beloved grandson of Mrs. Frank Fenton; dear brother of Paula Blrk. Funeral service ... . October 25, 1 i me Sparks-Grlffln vlved by nine grandchildren. Funeral Mrvice win be held Wednesday, October 4 at 2 p.m. at Rlgrtm Holiness Church, 6721 Latter Road, Pitot, with Rev. John, (if* officiating. Intorment to Crestwood Cemetery: Mr. Sherman wilt lie to state at the C.'F. Sherman Funeral Heme. 135 South —I Ortonvlllo, Michigan. Lldell; dear sister of Mrs. Minnie Cato. Funeral service will bt held Wednesday, October 26, at 1 p.m. at St. John Methodist Church wim Rev. William T. Teague officiating. Interment to Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Travers will, lie to state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after Tuesday at visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to DeCLERCK, OCTOBER 22. 1966. VICTOR J., 15 N. Rose lawn; agt 73; beloved husband of Mary G. DeClerck; dear fattier of Chartoi J. DeClerck and Mrs. Phillip De-Conlck; dear brother of Mrs. . Recitetloft'-o# me i Donelson-Johns Fyneret Home. Funeral servlet will bo held Tuss-C8hur£l* torment to Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. DeClerck will lio In st*<* at the funeral home. (Suggestec too hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 HAGEN, OCTOBER 23, 1966, ANDY M, 401 North Paddock Street; age 71; dear brother of Stanley Hagan, Mrs. Lila Clark, Mrs. Lula S. .Payne, and AArs. Ruth Keller. Prayer service will be held Tueiday, October 25, et I p.m. et Voorheee-Stple. Funeral Home with Rev. Galen E. Hershey officiating. Following the prayer service Mr. Hagen will bo taken from toe Voornees-Siple Funeral Homo to the Coker Funeral Home, Harrison, Michigan where service will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. Interment In Maple Grove Cemetery, Harrison, Michigan. Rale, October 22. ltAs, KENNETH, 3695 Waldon Road, Lake Orion; age 54; dear brother of Leonard, Harry, end Chairtoe Hale and Mrs. Clayton (Daideo) Smiling. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, October 25, at l :3Q p.m. Harris, oc+dB.ek 7ai, m Court, Ip; age 76; ____ ________ William C. Gilman, and Hariand. D. Harris; ■ also survived by 12 gran arid 10 grest-grandcnildi.... neral service will be held 1 dey, October 25, at 2 p.m. it First Presbyterian Church of ____Cemetery, Tray- Mrs. •Herrto- wltt Jtojn state at Iht Manley-Balley Funeral- Home, Birmingham. The family suggests that memorial contributions may bo tnaito to the Modem Living Dopartmgit of the Birmingham Women's Club Scholarship Fund, tor Retarded Children. P. O. Box 2a,ainmnQhtm. it Cemetery. Mrs. Erwin M. Metidorf; dear m of Patricia Jean Gibb, and Th Irwin Metzdorf; dear slsto Martha Ajmer and William Nl . Funeral servlet w tery. Ml SparicsGrfjfto Funeral Heme. —— to Oakland Hills Cams-. Metidorf wilt lie In ha funeral heme. (Sue- 7 to » p.m.) ______________ NELSON, OCTOBER ~n. 1966, DOUGLAS It. Sr., 16B4I Warwick Street; eg* 67; dear fattier of Douglas H. Nelson Jr.; also tor* vlved by two sisters and three brothers. Funeral service will be Tuesday, October 25, at 2 at the McCabe Funeral 11570 Grand Rhfgt, Pete’ chlpan. Interment In Rote- ftome, *11... rash PFEIFFER, OCTOBER 22, 1966, MATHEW L„ Ml Peacock Avenue; age M; beloved husband of Goldie Ptolftor; deer father of Mrs. Kenneth (Evthm) Joseph, and Mrs. Paul (Ethfo QNMdyjdnr brother ofMrs. Aim Yenko, AArs. Berber* P*tar,n**ndMrRudotohrV Pleltteri will be at 7:30 p.m. eftha Vwr- the funeral home. (Suggested visiting^ hours 3 to t and / to REED, OSTdeSR 21. lfo, NlW-TON, 577 Flldew Street; age 57; beloved husband of LaMurrell Williams; dear brother ol Mrs. Hollowtan Chandler, Mrs, 0111* White, Mrs. lifttr Haynes, Mrs. Louise Catom,' Thomas, (MM, and Lenox Reed. Pugaral service will bo held Tuesday, Qcwtor 25, at I WMI Friendship RMMWwry Baptist CMm with Rev. Aim Hawkins officiating. Mir, Read will aOh JsriTlM _ Fri* c*p- ruthers Funeral Hiima .until Tuto- .. ------- ---------------------1 Louisi- ana for service and burial more Thursday, October V. Interment In Mount Olivet Cemetery, New Ortoans, Louisiana. valter] October 22, ittf. BLANCHE E., 63 West Washington Street, Clarkiton; age 15; dear mother of Ronald A, Walter; also survived by tlx grandchildren. Memorial service wiu be conducted by the Eastern Star tonight at 6 p.m. at the Lewis E-Wtot Funeral Home, Clarkston. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, October 25, at 2 p.m, at tho funeral home with Rev. Lewis' C. Sutton officiating. Mrs. HUSBAND ALLEN AND DAUGHTER Mfs. William Brown wish to ox-^ their sincere appreciation ’ lends and relatlvr- y ....... Aydry StrleUch morlal contributions. Iff MEMORY OF OUR BELOVED Ort!" S4^C1953: * P*S Alter the worse has happened. There It nothing left to fear. The sun continues-shining. With undlminlshed shear. And winds continue blowing, And akles continue-fair, At Iwdria continue betrlrg, Forever In our Marts, Morn and Announcements . 4 CHURCHES CLUBS—ORGANIZATIONS it Simms BimT Drugs.______ ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID INC. offtca, 711 Rlker Building, branch of Detroit's well GET OUT OF DEBT - AVOID GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT AND HARASSMENT. We have helped and saved thou- wlth one low payment you can afford. No limit as to amount owed and number of creditors. For those that realize, "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT." —slntmont arranged anytime ne appointment ari T NO CHARGE. . BOX REPLIES 2, 4, 5, 10, 12, 24, 35, 45, 48, 49, 50, 52, 56, 60, J (1, 62, 65, 66, 67, 70, 80, 91 103, 105 Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS 6 DONELSON-JOHNS Huntoon SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Service" FE 0-9201 Voorhees-Siple lei E. Milton, n 537 S. Jostle. Nethan- CHRISTEL NORDBECK BEAUTI- GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. __________FE 8-0456_______ DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES 2021 E. Hammond FE 5-7108 HOUSE HUNTING? — CALL YOUR O'Nell Realty Company repre- r*too. You'll *0° ______ ...ts. You'll professional advise. Roy O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lake Rd. OR 4-2222 "HOUSE OF WIGS" HAS MOVED TO THE ARCADE AT MIRACLE MILE. FE f 4M6 ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, OCT. 22, I will not ho responsible tor any debts contracted by any other than myself. Roger L Goltry, 2080 Rlchwood, Pontiac, Michigan. ONE &OLLAR INVESTED IN THE New Carmelite monastery will yield an Immediate return In grateful prayer*. Ptoaso address: Car-elite Monastery, Box 3M, Iron SLEIGH RIDES ARE UNMATCHED FOR WINTER TIME EXCITEMENT. UPLAND HILLS FARM Lest and Found LOST: PART RETRIEVER, RED-dtoh Mack with White hairs down Victolty of Maybe Rd. OH LOST IN THE ROUND LAKE-MAN-don Lake area. Black and white Bird Dog. t year old. Has long hair, round Star under rlaht eve. RawafrfrS6S-4777. LSfi MALE MIXEb ’ BLOND codiar, vicinity Pollock Rd., Grarid Blanc. Reward. 153-2313 evenings. Pontiac Press Want Ads Pay Off Fast .OST: FEMALE FOX TeArIER, black-white-tan, real "heavy, answer* to name of Penny. FE 2-6090. 53 S. Roealawn. Reward. mwmf/tmrns :? THE 1964 . CIVIL RfdMTS LAW PROHIBITS, WITH ii CEUTA IN EXCEPTIONS, If; K-:DISCRIMINATION BE-X; KvCAUSE OP SEX. SINCE X; SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE ;X »CONSIDERED MORE AT- -X ;X TRACTIVE TO PERSONS •<: m OF ONE SEX THAN THE X- s-xother, advertise-:-:-Mi NTS ARB placed f.: I:-:- UNDER THE . MALE OR << << Pf MALE COLUMNS FOR -X •X CONVENIENCE OP READ-X-•X ERS. SUCH LISTINOS ARB ® '& MOT JNTRNOBn TO EX- ;I;: :■:• CLUDE PERSONS OF -X ff EITHER SEX. :x mmm I EXPERIENCED USED CAR POR-ter, year-sround, steady work..Top wages. Apply 630 Oakland. John McAullffe Ford. Seo Tom Norton, Used Car Dept. 6 WELL DRESSED MEN TO DE-tlver advertising material. 015 par evening. Car necesaary. 363-9539. 5 MEN For factory branch that has it experienced «xtra bene-II Inquiries ADJUSTERS NEAT YOUNG MAN fcdklng' fbr a reel csreer with growing firm. $4800. Call Jean Moores 334-2471 s Snelling and Snell- ASSISTANT MECHANIC. AUTOAAAT-ic Pinsetters. Immediate openings. Apply in person. Airway Lanes. 4125 Highland Rd. irassivt. call collect, i gressivi 536-0271 AGGRESSIVE YOUNG MAN TO SELL BALDWIN PIANOS AND ORGANS. SOME KEYBOARD EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. DRAW: ING ACCOUNT PLUS COMMISSION, EXCELLENT F R I N G E BENEFITS. SMILEY BROS. MU-. SIC CO. J19 NO. SAGINAW. FE ASSISTANT MANAGER TRAINEE — no experience necessary, will train. Apply in person, Burger Chet Drlve-m, “-------------- ADVANCEMENT UNLIMITED Position now open tor an aggree-slve young man who desires t~ excellent career with a good eh Hwll ■. Includes liberal frlnt snpllcant must be 2,, graduate and wanting SRE YOU LOOKING FOR A P fesslonal career In salei. Over l a month end commission to si work. Good working conditions. Minimum age 16 years old. Full or part time. Apply 2 to 5 p.m., MAPLE HOUSE RESTAURANT SOMERSET PLAZA COOLIDGE AT MAPLE, TROY, MICH. AUTO SALESMAN NEEDED _____2-5. Mr. Wyman. CABINETMAKER SOME FINISH------------ Beauty Rita CaM- SSJT idg WeuH4 M«h I ELECTRONICS TRAINEES ^-•^baSStM International Personnel ENGINEER, SOra fexpERIENCE to plant layout and design is helpful, 19000, call Don McLean, 334-2471, Spelling m Evenings Part-Time, 3 men needed immediately part-time evening work. Must neat, mature, married and hi Opening for several sales. • people both mala and female1 who art Interested to making money. Bonus plan and many advantages In on* • of the fastest growing offices. Both existing ana new homes. Cell FE 1-7161 ilk tor Jack Ralph. BATEMAN realty CHEF'S TRAINEE. EXCELLENT 'opportunity tor young man Interested In ristaurant cooking. Soma experience preferred, we will train you for this high paying profession. Apply ‘ Bloomfield Canopy. Orchard Laka Rd. at W. Maplt. 626-1517. LABOR. HAVE of block laying MNL- Bulldart profict. 621-1433.____________ COOK-SHORT ORDER EXPERIENCED ONLY Ktd working conditions, extent wages, paid Ufa Insurance, tallzatlon. Apply to parson, :gg Restaurant, 5395 fetor" — DESK CLERK, ALSO PORTER. AP- DELIVERY AND STOCK. MUST BE 11. FuU time. Able to work days. Apply In parson. Perry Pharmacy m B. BlvdjWMHB^^M DESIGN ENGINEER, YOU CAN BE original and creative on this lob, hurry I 11400, Call Don McLaan, 334-2471, Snalllng and Snalllng. DRAFTSMEN TRAINEES Age 11-20, High School or College drafting. 1400. Mrs. Allan. ' International Personnel yard Birmingham 6424263 ,________ ' DRAFTSMAN ©ROWING COMPANY, DAYS -MANY FRINGE BENEFITS -STEADY EMPLOYMENT AND OVERTIME: ,n Equal Opportunity Employer EXPERIENCED MACHINE OPERA-tort, lathe, mining, D-D. end I.D-, grinding dey or afternoon’ shifts, steady work, overtime and fringe benefits. Brtoav Mto. Ce« 1165 seoa Rd., between Crescent Lake and Pontiac Lake Rds., oft west ■Ml. , ' ' EXPERIENCED HARDWARE AND manager. Send resume and sal-ary needs to Pontiac Press Box DAYS OR NIGHTS MILL AND ENGINE LATHE OPERATORS Mill Operator AEROSPACE "WORK McGREGOR MFG. CQRP, ' 2735 W. Maple Rd. Troy--,, -r■■■ J- , Ml 4-3543 ' EXPERIENCED Automobile Salesman Would you Ilk* to* sell the top three lines of automo-- biles? We otter BUICK-CHEVROLET - PONTIAC at our showroom. Fringe benefits. Apply to person only to Homer Htoht Inc. On M24 In Oxford, Michigan. _ EXPERIENCED DISHWASHER — 10:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. No Sundays. Apply 14SW N. Saginaw. L OR PART TIME DELIVERY i. Apply Peabody's Morktt. 154 bbta-’-rd., Birmingham. Ml *- Hunter Blvd., GENERAL Maintenance FOR AIRCRAFT AND MISSILE PRECISION PARTS. EXPERI-ENCED IN LAY-OUT AND PRECISION MEASURING. INSPECTOR-TRAINEE GROWING COMPANY, D i • MANY FRINGE BENIF STEADY EMPLOYMENT An equal opportunity employer DISHWASHER ALSO BUS BOY the night a > Good wai t et Big Bo ___ph I, Huron. ENGINEER, ONE WHO LIKES A real challenge to industry, era you man? 3HM. Call Don McLean, GAS STATION ATTENDANTS, F or part time, days or efterrx.__ local references, Sunoco Motion, Telegraph and Maplo Rd. GAS STATION ATTENDANT. Experienced, mechanically inclined. Local references. Full or part tlm*. Gulf, Telegraph *nd Maple. GUARDS Full and part time, Immediate city and suburban |ob openings. Ml. Clemens, Utica and Birmingham Included. Bonded Guard Services. 441 East Grand Boulevard, Detroit. LO 3-4152. 1IM p.m. GUARDS PONTIAC. FULL HARDWARE AND LUMBER SALES-man for permanent part-time em-Ptoyment, 335-7100. GLASS MAN EXPERIENCED GENERAL CLEAN UP AND MAIN-tenance man tor Used Car Dept. Must have drivers license. Ask for Bixl at Jerome Ford, Roches-ters Ford Doctor. OL 1-9711. HARDWARE CLERK HOLD IT. Want high pay, guaranteed year around work, profit sharing, retirement plan, group insurance? 60 year old firm has immediate openings for good roofing and siding mechanics: Call 332-5231 todayl HANDY MAN, CLEAN HALLS, ETC. Immediate Assign- ments ---- _t rear entrance 1 I. Saginaw. 6:3t a.m.-io a.m. KELLY LABOR IMMEDIATE celtont opportunity fori vancement. One of the arei """ ng r Cell N JUNIOR ENGINEER, THE FIRST step in a successful career, get in on this. S7500. Cell Don McLean, 334-2471, Snalllng ai " * ”" KITCHEN HELPER FOR DAYS, apply in parson to th* Rotunda Country inn, 3230 Pina Laka Rd. Orchard Lake._____________ — f truck, S days, M, at toast II yairs old, frlng* benefits, 15 MU* end Coolldge are*. 549-7579, LABORERS. PERMANENT positions. Available Immadlately. Day shift. Apply employment office International Pip* Ceramic Co. 70001 Powell Rd.. Romeo. LARGE VOLUME STANDARD OIL Service Center —Birmingham has openings tor full or part tlm* driveway salesmen, gas attendant LATHE OR MILL OPERATOR -Small plant, days, overtime, paid hospital and Ufa Ins., frtog* bane-fits, good working condltUML 4515 Oetomere, Royal Oak, S4M119. LAZENBY brand new building toll or part tlm* sales help — experienced or will train. If you wish toi mak* sales a career or augment present Incam* — we have a piece tof you. Mutt be conscientious — willing to toem— fascinating profession by calling 6744301 - ask for Mr. CMdWW. ROY LAZENBY, REALTOR 4626 W. WALTON — (Ml 44391 0 block E. of Dixie Hwy.) ____ctlon and credit background. 1 Local firm, 35000, call JOanlMorl, . 334-2471, Smiling and Snalllng. ■V' IP D—4 ’ 7 7 * ‘ m : TOft Pontiac press, monpay, October m, iwg Maintenance Man Steady Work in Downtown Office Building Excellent Fringe Benefits. Apply Community National Bank 30 N. Saginaw Pontiac Management Trainee Some restaurant background . I qulred. Excellent opportunity. Company beneflts-hospltallzatlon, paid vacation and pension program. Applyin person to Mr. Michaels. Elias Bros. Big Boy. Telegraph * ptoyment. Apply any Big D. st< 335-1707. MALE. FULL Tl MECHANICS ____ .. EE D E D 1MMEDI for auto clinic. Full experience preferred. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac. 335-0302. Managerial Career Opportunity on their own Initiative. One the finest training programs the consumer finance industry. V train men for management In months. Excellent ..benefits. Including a Ing salary, wholly profit sharing, ma|or surance program, 2 \ I tlon within the first year, salary Increase each 6 months, during training and again when promoted to management. Immediate openings In the Pontiac Area. Aetna has expanded from 3 to I offices In the Metro area. Aggressive, ‘~ telllgent men are needed to i tlnue this expansion. Locally nationally. For Interviews contact FINAL INSPECTOR M. C. MF6. CO. Ill Indlanwood Rd. Lake MY 2-2711 MALE PRODUCTION HELP WANT-ed. Good pay and all fringa benefits. Exc. future for right people. Apply See Ray Boats. 125 N. La-— r Rd. Oxford. MAN FOR OFFICE WORK. SEND MANAGER FOR AUTO WASH; graduate. Send complete resume with pay Information to Pr-"— .. Prase Box a.__________________ NIGHT AUDITOR. FULL TIME. EX-mtImci helpful but not mcm M 6*7300. Marking AtTENbANT. retired man. Ml 3, Blvd. E., Corvette Store. mi PIZZA COOK TO WORK NIGHTS. . TIM# ., o per hr., car necessary. Must |B , Contact Mr. .Bryan PORTER-TYPE WORK, l-OAY PROCESS . ENGINEERS to gross and expansion. ____ attractive openings for exi rienced process engineers, t tooling and production routing tng your .. _____Interested In Improv- Ing yourself. calt or write Mr." it Flanary or Mr. A. Axline. Lansing Div. White Motor, 1331 S. Washington Ave. Lansing, Mich. 455- An Equal Opportunity Employer W—ladMale SHOP TRAIN) SERVICE STATION DEALERS . Rochester 1 Area. Ftnanoat a nee available. Contact LSrry Tre-peck, OR 2-I23S. STOCK BOY WANTED FULL TIME BOBS RESTAURANT, KEEGO. 11.75 hour. 63240S7 before i 335- e over 2t with local r SHORT ORDER COOK, NIGHT PART TIME t ’troubie Reels Drive-In. OR 3-7173. TURRET LATHE OPERATORS Hand and automatic VARIOUS MACHINE -.OPERATORS PONTIAC BUSHING & DETAIL CO. ed for Immediate employment: 1—TURRET LATHE OP%RA ne experience necessary. Oppor-Ity to grow with a rapidly , tx-iding company. Apply: 5320 HIGHLAND RD. , OR CALL 674-2288 See or ask for Mr. Beggs Public Relations Trainee 21 up, excellant starting salary, Mrs. Allan. International Personnel 1880 is. Woodward Birmingham 642-8268___________________ TRUCK DRIVERS r 3 years experl- R ET REAL ESTATE SALESMEN & ANCHOR MOTOR FREIGHT INC. BOOKKEEPING. VERSATILE GIRL who likes to work with i--------M 8325. Coil JO Martin, 334-2471, Ing and Snalllng._________________ COOK WANTED, NIGHTS. AFFLY in person, Cooley Lanes, 7175 Cool-ev Lk. Rd., union Late. cafeteria waitresses DINING ROOM WAITRESSES Meals and uniforms furnished, paid vacations and Insurance. Apply 2 to 4 pm. Greenfield's Restaurant, 725 8. Hunter; Birmingham. ^Eel- IMP .. .. .its. Paid vacation. Apply Sherman Prascrlp-tlons. MaplerLahser Rds. Birming-ham. 847-4700. CHAIR-SIDE ASSISTANT. EXPERI-enced preferred, but.not necessary. Willing to let " “ ||g| — transportation. Box 73. e Pontiac Press CHICKS, HERE'S MAMA HEN, aM|H|M|M|-d typo I1 v Case, i to P.O. Box 57, Warren, 482 for application. : DRIVER WANTED. _____ bonus plan. Valuet Realty, FE 4-3531. Ask for Bob Davis. RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATE — An exceptional career opportunity as claim representative for a leading insurance company. No iMM|H ence required. You cam at ... learn through our excellent training program. The man we want must be mature in ludgment, ambitious and personable. Co. cor supplied for business and personal use. To this mon we offer on Interesting and rewarding career with the eventual goal of an Important managerial position. Wei For further Information conta Gundaker, 231 S. Woodward. mlngham. 547-5700. Two Openings JANITORIAL Staff 9 ,____________FE 4-2547.______________ SALES. BACHELORS DEGREE IN pharmacy or chemical background. Like wild! $7500.-Call Bob Cain, 334-2471 Snelllng and Snolllng. fits. These are permanent post tlons for those who quality. Pleost send short letter covering back ground, age and phone number to Press Box No. 82 SALESMEN Need 2 capable men to follow i buying opportunities In the Pont! area In the real astoto line. ANCHOR-POWELL, CORP. lal L-I-S-T-KN-G or LI 7-78 SURFACE GRINDER FOR >*6-— live dye detail work. 5teat" top rates. Excellent workir got good pickin') 334-2471, Snell ing___________ CLERK TYPIST, IF YOU ENJ9Y working with people, this Is you. 8255. Call Jo Martin, 2471. smelling and Snelllng. COOK WANTED TO WORK FROM ^—■ nay plus rmatlon, 2-3410. ineflts. For further Inforr III Mr, Elwell, et UL 2-3410. COUNTER. GIRL, FULL OK KAKI time, experience not necessary. Rosman Cleaners, 551 S. Adams, Birmingham. COUNTER WOMAN FOR DRY SMSS Tas YVSSSt CLERK WANTED FOR ACCOUNT-Ing deaf, should possess good arithmetic skills, full rang* of company benefits. Mr. Lantz, Kay Baum Inc. MI 4-0311. , ■ ■ COUNTER AND MARKER cleaners, must be over 18. # Fox Pry Cleaners, 71» W u,“~ Part-time openings now CALL MANPOWER 1331 Wide Track W. NEED MONEY? / LIKE PEOPLE? ^,nnvoek;tryno collkt-KIMBERLEE JEWELS YOUNG WOMEN tb-M If you have tied previous expt % • SECRETARY RECEPTIONIST WAITRESS CAR HOP OR BAR MAID 1112.50 par weak. Call our paraon-net^offlca^fo Ctetrjlt, collect. WO Hb^WeeimI VfrT OFFICE CLERICAL Girl to do clerical work hi pur-— - - modem Cleaner REGISTER NOW, PART baby sitting, own transp., guaranteed wage, no tee, college student* accepted, Oakland Nursing Service. Ml 7-3422. Restaurant Dining Roam I Supervisor BLOOD DONORl URGENTLY NEEDED Positive 87.50 .... Neg. With positive fodors A. B. i AB nog. 3 Nag, - DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE n Pontiac FE 4*747 1342 Wide Track Dr., Crndlt JUMton 164 lEBT^AJD, INC., 7J« RIKl* BLDG. Pwawn * TpBtrbf IT ALTERATIONS and leather coats. FE 5-7534. \ . PRES3MAKIHG. ' ALTBRAtlOHB, perylsor experience necessary. 544-7754 between 7 end 5 to pointment. TED'S BLOOMFIELD HILLS REGISTERED LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES Needed. 2 staffs. New addition modern nursing home. Starting sa •rif« are very anractlye eiH differential are paid. For Nursing Home; Pontiac. Competitive Salary. SALES, FUTURE WITH GUESS urfm? II, -m.l— _________ L. COUNTER. AND MARKING. FULL CURB GIRLS No experience necessary, w — Full time. Day or evenlr SECRETARY, INTELLIGENT AND neat to work In expanding division In large Co. S32S. Coll Jo Martin, 3342471, Snelllng and Snell- i Bros. Big Boy, 20 S. ' SALES, ATTENTION storting'salary. Phone Mr. f GOLDEN 'OPPORTUNITY, tile furnished end a ---------- _oy wonder, 1500. Cel 334-1171 Snelllng and Sni Join the Leader in the Medium Priced Field of the Auto Industry APPLY NOW FOR: Production Work (No Expariances Necessary) ALSO: . QUALIFIED JOURNEYMEN FOR TOOL & DIE WORK OR MAINTENANCE JOBS IN PLANT ENGINEERING DEPARTMENTS All of the GM employe benefit programs will accrue as you enjoy top earnings with a winning team. MAKE APPLICATION AT OUR EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Pontiac Motor Division GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION Pontiac, Michigan GENERAL MOTORS IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Production Workers (No Experience Necessary) - ALSO -1 _ Qualified Journey man. Electricians^ Millwrights Tool Makers ' Pipe Fitters All °t the GM employe' benefit programs will accrue as you enjoy top earnings with1 a winning team. MAKE APPLICATION AT OUR EMPLOYMENT OFFICE 8:00 A.M. to 4 P.M. Monday thru Friday FISHER BODY 900 BALDWIN AVE. FISHER BODY If AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER TIMES Seles poeple needed for one of fastest growing offices in the ounty area. Experience not ne sary. We will train. Call the I ker for personal interview TIMES REALTY, 5870 DIXIE ,—> —- S744W5. CURB GIRL, DAYS, WEEKENDS. I Super Chief. FE 2-6851. DENTAL ASSISTANT RECEPTION-Ist. Experienced, dependable woman. No children. Good hours. Writ* qualifications: Age, telephone bar, desired salary to P( WANTED, car portar fly Motor_______________.. Clarkston, Mich. Coll 673-1271. TOOL DESIGNERS DETAILEKS FOR SPECIAL MACHINES AND PRESS WELDERS. SI - H O U R WEEK. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS. RITE-WAY T DESIGN SERVICE -3833 Elizabeth Lake Rd. _________338-0383 DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK Full or part time. Ruse's Country Drug*, — DRY CLEANING SHIPPING 1 isant working Keepers Inc. Birmingham. WANTED: 2 FURNACE SERVICE man. Must be able to do gas and oil. Also 2 for Installation. Highest pay for right men. FE 407SS M 573-5724, or 573-5576. is experience. Commission r. Pontiac Press Box No. 7; WASH ROOM HELPERS, FULL OR part time. Pontiac Laundry, 540 S. telegraph. Warehouse Clerk II or over. Driver's license Full time. , Day work. Apply 16 Ivy St. Cor. Joslyn A Perr-Phone 338-0425. Pontiac DESK CLERKS Over 25 applicants must hav minimum of 2 yrs working. . parlance, able to rotate shifts, work weekends and holidays. $322.-85 per mo. Shift differential for evening end night duty. Apply In person. Personnel Dept. Pontiac General Hospital. New line of gifts and toltetrla_______I give you an unusual earning opportunity during the coming Holiday reason. Coll — tlon. Ml 5-5454.' EXPERIENCED OFFICE GIRL FOR permanent position. Must b perlenced typslt of general Pontiac P Experienced Waitresses FULL OR PART TIME HELP wanted, for laniforlal service, must g^ii^^Ttion.47' "*-■ SALESWOMAN Some experience, full time. Apply Younglend's Children'* Shop, 2161 S. Telegraph. Miracle Mile Shopping Center. SECRETARY NEEDED FOR AD-mlnlstratlve office of large nursing home. Must have good shorthand ond typing skills, and be able to meet the public. Cell be-tween 10 e:m.-4 p.m. 338-7152, Ext. 7 Seminole Hills Nursing Home. ________SHJRT GIRL _______ Musr be experienced and able tc do top quality work. Permanent lob, top wages, paid vacation and holidays. Reply Pontiac Pres* Box SHIRT PREISER. EXPERIENCE not necessary Good hours, good Apply Flash Cleaners. ~“ ■ JWDL-F* COOK. NIGHT shift. Apply in person. Airway Lanes, 4025 Highland Rd, (M-57). START EARNING IMMEDIATELY with one of the nation'i ------ Party plans. Work own hoi No _____BEELINE FASHIONS 532-1513. 582-1878. . 475-8245 THIS IS THE PLACE, DOLL, Verted office skills, Get that horn llngllng, $255; Vlv Cato, 3344471, Snelllng end Snelllng. 12 person ....JPMPHP9I tinned oHIce buMdlng. Send of experience and personal to Janz TYPIST-SECRETARY 12-person office, modern all_M tloned office building. Send resume of experlenc* and personal data to Janz A Knight. CPAs, noo N Wy ward, Blrmlnohar Real Estate Salesmen Experienced jnan^or woman, f J. C, Hayden, Realtor EM 3-5504 10735 Highland Rd. (M57) SHOltT ORDER COOK - APPLY Harvey' 3-5740. _________ Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A Executive Salesman FOR FLINT ANB VICINITY If you ore a strong personal salesman with sound successful experlenc* In telling legal, accounting or financial Information service*, business machines, Insurance, or other Mats or services to top executives or professional men, we may hava a carear spot Planned dynamic expansion, in one of Its three sales divisions of • leading and still growing 31 year old AAA-1 company, unique In its field offer* e rare opportunity to the right men. we ere seeking e men who Is o self-dorter with positive motivation end who has the ability to manege hie time with one ob|ect In mind—to make money for himself end his ftmlly. Ho ceiling on earnings. Celllna on business leaders and professional man, uMwAAjMMkknpMnblB TRESS, DAYS, II «pply In person at - v« Restaurant. Corner Walton WAITRESSES run time, port time ond weaken Excellent benefits, paid meals, t pltalizatlon, pension plan and p vacation. Apply In person Elias Bros. Big Boy Telegraph et Huron Dixie Hwy. at Silver Lake Rd. WAITRESS pert time for even , J LIKE TO ADVANCE managing cook? Days, i, good soleiy. Must bo q&fwa liE- GIRL FOR DOCTORS OFFICE, typing essential, preferably over 35. Reply with particulars, Pontiac Press Box “" " tor softeners. A mechanically Inclined a YOUNG MAN, WITH CHAUFFEUR license, familiar with Pontiac and Detroit Metropolitan area, to dtl small delivery truck. Contact N Burton, FE 3-7147. Between I 4 TO APPRENTICE I YOUNG MAN FOR OFFICE WORK. Typing ability helpful but not required. Must have at least high school education. Reply In own handwriting giving oge, exp. teml- HILLDALE VETERINARY HOSPI-t*l. Bookkeeper-receptionist ond or Exporiaaced trimmer. EL 6-7350 12-5 p.m. HOUSEHOLD HELP WANTED. . weak. Long Leke-Franklln . Experienced. Ararere|5||terem lad. MAyfalr 5-5454. Moore, YOUNG MEN Immediate openings for shipping, receiving end secondary depts., with special fringe benefits end bonus. Please call Clawson JU 8-1341 and ask for Monzles for appointment. , YQUNG MAN FOR MASON HELP-er, must bo able to do heavy outside work, must hav* cor. OR 3-3442 otter 6 P.M. _____ Help Wanted Female 7 2 MATURE LADIES TO DELIVER and taka orders for Fuller merchandise. Driver's license required. Piper R FE 8-67 to work afternoons, 5 .. ....dnlght, axe. pay. Plad Restaurant 4370 Highland Rd. ACCOUNT CLERK, PERSONABLE gal with bright outlook for busy now office. $300. Call Jo-Martin, 334-2471, Snelllng and Snelllng, ASSISTANT FOE PHYSICIAN'S OF-fice. Typewritten reply to Include personal .data and references. Pen-"tc Prgu Box S2. ,N EXCELLENT NEW RESTAUR-ant befog opened. We will train women, for Kitchen < work. Good working condition*. Minimum oge 16 year* old. Full or port time. Apply 2 to S p-m. MAPLE HOUSE RESTAURANT, SOMERSET PLAZA COOLIOOB AT MAPLE, TROY, MICH. ADMITTING OFFICER Applicants mutt be able end willing to rotate' shifts, work weekends end holidays, Type 45 wpih, $2.23 per hour plus shift differential. Apply In parson, Personnel Department, Pontiac General Hos-Seminole at “* •*r-— ** BAR MAIDS FOR COCKTA 1- WAITRESS WANTED. NO EXPERI-ence necessary. Apply In person. After 6. Huron Bowl Lounge. 2525 Elizabeth Lake Road. WAITRESS, NO EXPERIENCE necessary, afternoons and midnight shut* now available. Good I TYPE, TAKE SHORTHAND? re Is your first step up, II now, Vlv Cow, 3342471, id Snelllng. >, Training to Inetruct ^nlcoploco Hours to'wtt.*Applyn2I Maple house restaurant WAITRESSES WANTED. FULL 6R part time. Apply Tn pr--- — Bowl. 100 5. Can Lk. Rd. to 26 to a Must bo i school grn INSURANCE OFFICE Immediate opening tot mature bookkeeper. Must have i ' M -------- receivables WAITRESS FOR DINING ROOM, Vf ahltt, 10 to 5 p.m. Raals •Ive In. OR 3-7173. WAITRESS WANTED. 6 A.M.-2 P.M. r o.m.4 p.m. No Sundays. Apply to person. Sunbeam Coffee Shop. Opposite St. Joseph Hospital. WAITRESS FOR SMALL RESTAU-ront In Pontlec 5 a.m. to 2 p.m. 6742714. Want adventure, rqmanc#, “ "“- hove typing ond shoHhand, Co,I Vlv 2*224 for ah Interview. KITCHEN HELP SHORT ORDER COOK night shifts. Apply i esiaurant. Telegraph i WAITRESSES-TABLE AND COUN- *------ - -full or pert lime No Holidays. Will train. $400 PER MONTH Call 6742231, 4 te 7 p.m. — ‘* - -n. to 12 nr" LADY FOR TYPING AND E l office nd family « 55 Pomh LPlJ'S FOR 311 AND 11-7 SHIFTS-EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS, SALARY $20. TO START. 737-0211. MANICURIST WANTE&. JOHN OF ----Ingham Beauty Salon, call fm ntrnent, 5444534. MOTEL DESK CLERK, DAYS, full or pert time. Ml 41S4S. MAID FOR MOTEL WORK. PARt Inexperienced IMRMI ..... to work with excellent tip potential. H 91 * *" 5 p.m. Cere, 3342471, S WOMAN FOR HOUSeCLEANING —' help to core for 3 babies, In, I days. Ml 7-2550. WOMAN FOR KITCHEN WORK, p.m. te 11:10 p.m„ ne o ipteipi necessary. FE 47182, 22 WOMAN f6r Wo4k IN laUnory i. Telegraph, Pontiac WOMAff FOR GENERAL OFFICE. Must be able to typo. Stota age, marital status and experience. Pontiac Pres* Box 24._________ y6ung woman * TO ASSIST MANAGED In local branch\pf coast to coadl chain orgenlzatloli. Ago 142*. Bxp*ri*nc* not necessary, ----- ba abl* to epnverea Intel IF ^and tetl»»lod>lth 1100 per Muiit be ebia to itarf work Im-—-■■—■ -—id advancement to — we train you opnMntmont in*137 excellent career job* with opportunltle* to edvanoe to supervisory and administrative responsibilities. I5JI13 to start plus ell Michigan civil service fringe benefits. Apply in person for Interview end special examination at the Welfare Building, 1200 N. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac, Mich, at 1:30 p.m., Oct. 27. An equal opportunity em-ptoyer. i____________________ DISHWASHER, DAYS, APPLY IN to The Rotunda Country » Pine Lake Rd. Orchard MOTOR ROUTE DRIVER, MILE-ege and commission, Rochester .Avon Township area. 65M675, IS to t pr- MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS immediate opening for ASPC registered medical technologists. Storting salary depending on qualification and experience. Minimum, $537 per month, exc. fringe benefits end tuition grants available. Apply Personnel Department, Pontiac General Hospital, Seminole ' W. Huron St„ Pontlec. WtofciitaMlMe^ fn,^i%;AiLK,woi COMPETiktY IHij^tical nurse fir canvele leant, aim sitters for patient. 512-HIT. ' 1 ■ - ; IRONING DONE IN MY HOME. You deliver. FE M50. On Km- MltleJ —-----an V9IRIVI RVVlVRwV VlOOl ZV ISEHOLDS - CASH EOR EUENItwew. BalMl $ertrlet«$^i|>Be« IB elm teach a ;». 673-5721. Boom for i kady, $ Menring andl Trgckhig AA MOVING Careful, tow rate .. 2-3777 or 628-3511. Pd iithbp E nd Decorati ng M Wanted Children fo Board 28 We'll euctlen It or buy It. B & b Auction . ■ - .OR 3-2717 Deny BUmlgaim ^0 WIU. BOY YOUR HAIR 12" © tonaer. Ml 7-13M or Ml 41252. OffPER, BRASS RADIATORS, BA-, terle*, redletors, batteries, starter*. generetors, C. Plxeon, OR- OFFICE FILES, t>SSI 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES WRIGHT Ml Oakland Ava.____FE 2*141 ■OR 2*757. IS, DESKS. > equipment. APARTMENT OR HOUSE FOR —1—iot teachers. Call collact Ison 8834770. after 6 p.m. Share living Quarters ~33 BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING AND STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES____________________________ Robert tompkins em 3-7820 Wanted Real Estate Painting and Decorating 23 YOUNG WOMAN WANTS TO «s.... — anytime during wk. Sun. after 4:30 PAINTING, WALL 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE ..... CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8155 Urgently need for Immediate Sale! Fentiac Dally rill t MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Any Condition Any Price " cash... immediate Closing Bnb Davis Br"'" J. C. Hayden Realtor We heed fittings, equltlae I 10735 Highland Rd. (M571 HAVE PURCHASER FOR 40 TO 100 acre farm with nice 3 .room homo In Rochester i Cell. Mr*. Nichols, George I Reel Estate, FE 3-78*3. LOTS—WANTED if jeMawW'- REAlW.5___________ NEED IMMEDIATELY 3 BEDROOM text** for femiiy with 7 chfidran-will rant, leaso, or buy land centred. $500 cash available. Not over 000 me. FE 3-7250. ______ or Other, for wicKACftON call now. hagstrom realtor, OR 44250 OR EVENINGS 632-0485. SOMEBODY WANTS YOUR HOME NOW td we have |u*t whet It take* to find that somebody. (!) advertising that attrads attention, (2) salesmanship that enables us te sell and close the deal, (3) knowledge of mortgage toons that wifi help the buyer finance, (4) billboard advemsIiM. WANT YOUR HOME SOLD? Call „ YORK E BUY WE TRADE l 40353 - OR 4-0353 4713 Dixie Hwy„ Drayton Plains WE WILL GET YOU CASH FOR your equity In your house or property. Call us for more Infor- A. Johnson & Son, Realtors 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-2533 ALUMINUM —VtNVIr— excellent. 3150 par _______ I I day comprehensive salary to by the company include hospital and surgical Insuranc*, life Insurance up 1b 8404)00 and a sound pension plan. . For personal Interview phone Mr. William F. McLean Monday, Oct. 24th between 6 p.m. - 9 p.m. Tuesday, October 25th between 8:30 a.m. -12 noon 313 CE 2-5131 (Flint). BRICKWORK, NEW AND REPAIR. Specialize In dtemteMta anytime. PAPER-SCHOOL SUPPLIES Reliable men needed to service ex Istlng school accounts and expand our activities In Michigan. Sales experience with echools helpful, nr' necessary. Straight comm, wit drew provided. W* publish a 33 page complete school catalog -furniture, supplies, teaching eld PYRAMID PAPER COMPANY 3530 W. FIFTH AVENUE CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 50424 SACRAMENTO 2-2208 Opportunity men In this area. Management potential In current expansion program. Qualified lead* fumlshdd. tlon with weakly draw against commission. Exc. monthly accrual potential. Write: Alllid Institute, Pontlec Press Box 3. TIME& alespeople needed for one of latest growing offices In the n ounfy ore*. Experience net ne— -ary. We will train. Call the broker for personal Interview at TIMES REALTY, MS DIXIE HWY. Midi, ©43385. WANTED AT ONCE — RAWLEIGH Dealer In W. Cant. Oakland Co. or Diet., |n Pontiac or Bloomfield Hills. Ovtr -333 household necessities. Can earn $3.30 an hour and up. Write Rtwtelgh, Dept. MCJ-570-51, Freeport, III. 51032. Instructlons-Schools TO OPEN tarred t PONTIAC UPON . The Margaret finishing and Modeling rite PO Box 1041, Flint 233-7711. Enroll for pre- Esiote Sales will, iter7 beginning Tuesday Nov. 1st. at Hacket Realty offices. 7750 Cootoy Lk. Rd. at 7:30 P.M. *harp. No charge and _ no obligation. EM 3-7700. ■rffi HACKETT, OR. — Will afftr training In Roil Estate Salts work. Arrjng* fo attend by calling EM Work Wanted Mai* 3-D's CONSTRUCTION PARKING LOTS DRIVEWAYS IS PH ALT DISCOUNT. HURRY Hurry! I Winter price. Free estl-metes. FE 5-7457. Brick fc Block Service OCK B naerlng, after Sp FIREPLACES—BRICK AND STONE. Written guarantee. EM 3*177. CONTRACTING ENGINEERS INC. 333-7170. EXCAVATING, GRADING, EARTH MOVING, TREE REMOVAL. Boilding Modernization 2-CAR GARAGES, 200(20', 8875. WE ere local builder* and build any size. Cement^wwrk. Free^estlmetes. GENERAL EXCAVATING -trucking, dozing, back hoe, drag line. Cliff Howard Excavating Co. 673-2732. 2-CAR GARAGE, 3877 LIGHT EXCAVATING, PERCOLA- ♦I«n tnete nnW Inctall KMntir tvc. Also AISG4' windows, ) „.JDllWW-S“FjRD“r'N.. 402 Rlker, FE S-S116 Eves. FE 45884 All Types of Remodeling Kitchen cupboards, additions, alt rooms, recreation rooms, oarage aluminum siding, roofing. Fra* « No down payment. G & M Construction Co. ANY TYPE OF REMODELING Large or Mnafi lobe. Local work. Fair prices. . V years experlenc*. All work guaranteed In writing. GIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION-JERRY na m Bmpu ec uni BMC, Co. Bonded -IMP.tomes.and Modemlze-3347743. A dltlons, etc. Earl Kline, Bldr. OR 3-1736 Days. Or 3-3132 Ev~~ GEORGE- HOME IMPROVEMENTS, 2105 Union Lake Rd. EM JMD77. LET GEORGE DO IT. LICENSED BUILDER WANft to do your addition. Call now r. free ostlmete. Andorion-Gllfo.. Rlker Blda. FE Mil* MASTElt CRAFTSMAN, I DO BEAU- OUR Blbs HAVI PRO' to be lower. Peel direct wM ANDERSON-GILFORD, ■■ PE Mil*, Eve*. 3343184 •1 CARPENTER. INSIDE JOBS. 0R41Q74r cdMENT CONTRACTOR - FRED •Fr^Cament and block work. FE CARPENTER WORK WANTED. Cement and Block Work Oulu FE 47577 MASONARY REPAIRS OF_________ kinds — 3343207 after 5 pan. PATIOS, DRIVES, GARAGE ------ft. FE 42875, day*. Ceramic. Tiling CONDRA’S PLUMBING-HEATING --sewer end water lints. Medarnlz-Ing. FE 1-0543. - ______ r 67^-6866 * Electrical Sarvicas Residential Commercial In Excavating 7451 or FE 2-1325. Floor Tiling , VINYL, ASPHALT, IN- CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING, noltum, formica, til*. 741 N. Per FE 2-4078. ___________ Janitorial Servicae JANITOR SERVICE l-AXMERION BLUE SOD, PICKUP \ -----* III nr A9A.9G00. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, eeSfizineK *"--------- m CARSON’S FURNITURE SHOP W# rtllnlsh end restore oil ty(.„ ol fornlture. Specialize In antiques. Estimates cheerfully given at rea-tfnabla rates. 1175 Portar Rd. Ne. I Milford, Mich. 187-5757. CEMENT WORK WAMfd6.~SET-sonaMo. MA 44173. T . » CLEAfflHO JOBS WANTEb: BASE Raa80n4rta^atei*5e!l-CMl! h*Ull"g‘ '2KI J»yvBRY: PAlHtlUo' A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON FE _ Plastering Service PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES D. MeyertT’ 353*575. R2G7I. Rent«I^El|HneBt BROWNIES HARDWARE _ FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS 52 Joslyn Open Sun. FE 45133 1. Price. FE 41024, ROOFING AND REPAIR Iflles 582-4790 Hot asphalt SPECIALIZE IN HOT TAR ROOF-Ing. L. J, Price. FE 2-1035. TraeTrimmlBgServIce B&L TREE TRIAAMING, REMOVAL. Free estimate. Ft 45557, 6743510. DAVE'S TREE SERVICE Removal, ' trimming, cabling, cavity filling, welling, lend clearing^ landscaping ana design. *32- Lakes Tree Co., Trimming Slump ond Tree Removals Fireplace Wood — Plantings 573-2133_________ 535-3380 TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL. Tracking sale. Reduced rate* Jo 1st 200 customers. Call 432-2374 for ap-polntment. Light hauling service. HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME ' LIGHT MOVING, TRASH HAULED , ------“ 1 AND HEAVY " TRUCKING, soiah, fill dirt, grading end grev-- end front-end loedlng. FE 8-0603. TRUtk HAUUllG, LAWN. GARAOE, Trucks to Rent Vb-Ton Pickups lW-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS ANDEQUIPMBNT Duma Truck* — Semi-Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. ItS S. WOODWARD FE 435(1 PO 41452 Open Dally Including Sunday Woi C THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1906 D—5 • Wanted Real Estate We Need Listings Buyers Galore l A. TAYLOR AGENCY R«»l Estate-Insurance—Building 7m Htahtond Rd. 1.55 month. 6734927, APARTMENTS FOR RENT 1 Bedroom Apartment Carpeting, drapes, stove, refrigerator, tile bath, air conditioned, 1 soft water, new, call at FE 8-7169. 1 Bedroom Apartment P trap lace, air JMRtaH „ drapes, carpeting new, call Tom :k Ralph Easement, twin beds, 2 men, no drinkers. FE a-4434 after 6 PAL or Sat. CLARKSTON—2 BEDROOMS. CAR peted and draped, stove and — frlgerator, adults only. 625-3511. LEASING APARTMENTS - TO BE deluxe apartment*. Ni Community > College, I agar, 26*3 F E 3-6S07. $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 1-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT . LARGE DINING AREA . WILL ACCEPT ALt. APPttCA TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB-L EMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN OAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 390 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY 'I For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 FHA Repossessions VAL-U-WAY REALTY Oakland Ave. FE 4-3531 FHA Approved Management Broker LAKEVIEW ESTATES LAKE ANGELUS Immediate Occupancy 4 new hornet that ore the finest homes in the. area. We invite you to' wr oofo. A#ipigH SPECIAL . t Completely redecorated 3 bedroom I brlckfront bungalow. Gas heat. Large kitchen aiid dining area. Speclow^utllltj^room^Prlred afj l Val-U-Way ORCHARD LAKE AVE. 1 ¥ -* | . Comer lot '46x110 ft., zoned C-l, 34s Oakland , FE 4-3531 ^r#tc!»mm?t^le“'l,undro' Pontiac's FHA appointed j SEMINOLE HILLS Attractive brick and frame 3 bedroom, TVS bath home- Living room with fireplace, separate dining room, large den or library, modern kitchen with bullt-lnL * rooms up. Full basemsnt. 2 nicely landscaped lots, 2 car garage. Owner IeaV—mm ----------- STOUTS Best Buys Today has over 1,700 sq. ft.-of living area| plus a 2V*-car garage. Femlly KBQITOrS room with fireplace, m baths, full office Dpet school, water and sewer at Site. I 152,500, terms. 1 WILL TRADE GROWING PAINS?— 28 E. Huron St. X? Office Dptn Evenings A Sundays 1-4 Lake with, separate dining room,. uiNTOnil • DuISm 338-0466 j caroeted llvlnflj room, l*rge utility; HAbb IKOM, KBOjtpr like this luxury brick rancher with Its gallery at features such as: 3 baths, gergaous family room, full basement with thinly at recreation area, 4 relaxing badroamt, 9 large ctosets; IW car attached garage, large 90x175' site on paved street. EXCELLENT POE THE EXECUTIVE GOING UP OR ONE THATS ALREADY THERE. BSSj-900. Defies reproduction cost. Prestige lake area. Can trade V0“ HA°GSTR0M, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE _ •*••••• n OR 40351 6*3-0635 4900 W. Huron Made Ready Painters have printed — plumb-bers have plumbed, everything sparkles and gleams, reedy for your Occupancy now. Nothing to :dou but sit m easy chair and count the wild ducks resting c land contract with *1500 down. FynBa*emen~t7~G*s t gSrage. Can FHA or Gl 15 10 answer, FE *4960 "BUZZ" Frushour 1 flas 1 / WATERFORD REALTY Dixie Hwy. 610x1273 « i ■ |8.SB f v « 7 ^ Multiple Listing Service O /V TUU A |\T ' RHODES n sided HOME AND BUSINESS POTENTIAL -ar aa-1 is yours, plus the acreage you have n Only! wanted. Ideal for horses. Now used WATERFORD TWP. Choice location — 3 bedroom, eutc gas heat, 135x640 lot. Only M750 o land contract. Beauty RiteT 3J ..Homes./ . 673-1717 j TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE . Opdyke 33^01 WEAVER ■ At Rochester NO. 16 i BRICK RANCHER HERRINGTON HILLS: 3 bedroom In wonderful condition throughout. Full basement with nicely finished recreation room and well-landscaped yard. Only one block to schools. ; Priced at 114,950 and assume present - Struble 4 Minis TUI I W4UK*4P lh petto doors. Gi , Utility room, cl? lor, .excellent ■ beac mu/laka 110.500 now; It's EXTRA SHARP. NO. S ml FAMILY HOME _ . I NO DOWN PAYMENT for qualifying ranch# family veteran on this 5 be#iimnm hnma I kitchen' bullt-lns, close to school, bu attached garage, shopping. Full pries ....____ .... jments Tike rent. Just closing Gl TERMS/ On this 1 floor 2, bedroom home I with family sized kitchen, OM Tnn CV/fl. Wet, 3 caf attached garage. Tne I KH.C¥*y lot Is 100x316' — The price' $10,-950. $500 mortgage costs to quell-1 I LARGE FAMILY— See this 3 bedroom brick -he solid built with ook floors, i *14,500 v fled veteran. brick i beautiful country setting. |i ford# CALL TODAY I MODELS OPEN LAKE OAKLAND SHORES; Colonial, Trl-ievel or Rancher loaded with extras and custom features. Beautifully furnished and Deluxe quality eji the way. Duplication-priced on your lot as low as 119,250. Several new homes with Immediate posses-rion In this subdivision, most of: _______ BEDROOMS. SOME W option to buy. Ask about oui down payment plan. Pick up at Art Daniels Realty.7200 E Mile. 364-1080 or KE 7-7230. HOUSE - 830004500 t Intere; 3 BEDROOM RANCH. FULLBASE-MENT. ATTACHED GARAGE. FHA TERMS OR TRADE. D. HAMPSHIRE OR 3-3473_roe. Frushour A Strubte 3 BEDROOM HOUSE, FULL BASE-'hJ HANDYMANS S P E C 1 A L. ELIZA-beth Lake Privilege*. No refused. 3995 Oak Knoll R< -----------39S-H74. T VntTH&” 10 633-1565 YORK eytoifPli Pontiac, North. 004500 GOWN, MY 3-15*5. P E C I A L. ELI2 LIVE TODAY - WITH HACKETT Realty — Buyers writing. Cask to mOOO — call today, EM 3-7700. MODELS OPEN - 0 DOWN, NO points. Art Daniels Realty, 536-0333 —7-7500. HAROLD R. FRANKS, -----LAKE PRIVILEC in Pleasant 4REPP 3 bedrooms. .Lama living room. Separate dining/ room. Oversized 2 car garage. Could be used ar workshop. $12,000782400 down: $10 per month. Land contract. Everett Cummings, Realtor MtHJNION LAKE ROAD IGE, ROUGHED-IN H O U S E Ith frontage on channel of Ponte Lake. Sacrifice price. Edmund . Sanch, 1116 Lee Street, Milan, .Dan Mattingly tie WalfOn, right to Lako Oakland Shores, left to Models. 1- YOU CAN TRADE tafore^wlnfer "ref's ’in.^Re^y BATEMAN for Immadleto occupancy and FE 0-7)61 Oil 14510 priced from *35400. I REALTOR—M.L.S. 1377 S. Telogreph 730 S. Rochester Rd. Call 'til 7 p.m. Daily FE 5-9497 or FE 2-2444 EQUITY TRADE cent to 6 per cent current Interest rates. Cali and have one of our 1 experienced salesmen IRWIN * WEBSTER SCHOOL AREA 2 Three bedrooms, two-story. Eight comfortable rooms. Full basement. Gas heat. Two-car garage. This home Is In good condition. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Val-U-Way $500 Down ove you Into this nicely HHPRPteVtaM . bedroom homo near Bald-,m|MRVRNPI. back porch. I Win A Walton. Tiled bath. Gas Walking distance to schools and ' ^^^^g|g|^|||u|||||^ i money. 6743239 $1,000 DOWN a rent beater at lust *80 Month. .160x270' 2 bedroom home. F8r appoint shopping. Appointment J brick ranch n School District, ind lovely heat ■arpetad living IWEWP.-, ly spacious kTtehen, IV* ceramic tile baths, and two-car attached garage. Basement. Well. Insulated, thermepane windows and electrically purified. This fine home was designed for peace and pleasure, and is situated on a large 1110 Price *28,500. Lend contract. In! OTTAWA HILLS 674-3239. Two-story, seven rooms snd b- IEW 3-BEDROOM HOME — 1V*i baths, large kitchen, full walk-out I basement, 2-car garage, large lot. WuwtBrrHBliftar^ 3-3308 -T 363-7111 HIITER ^ (BETH LAKE ESTATES -I. new/ 6 rooms and bath. Pull * >ment with recreation room. PREVIEW SHOWING BEAUTIFUL NEW CORAL RIDGE APARTMENTS 4-H REAL ESTATE CANAL FRONTAGE - ISC' Oakland Lake — lovely 16 n ranch style home, full baseit with paneled recreation room, ! place and bar, fireplace In living room, beautiful carpatlng. ? or garage over an ACRE tor privacy. Price $23,950. .Term* Arranged, WILL TRADE. NORTH/SIDE — 6 rooms end bsth.l „ i Aluminum storms and screens. SUL, 15844 Dixie Highway OR 42396 too, Tsrms. FE 40941 OR 3-0455 OR 3-3391 HURON GARDENS - New 3 bed- -----------UK SB room. Full basement. Aluminum skiing. Close to schools^) 5J5IL i NEAR FISHER BODY Very nice 3 bedroom homo, kite on, living room and utility rooi 113,750 wlth SUSO down. BREWER REAL ESTATE WIlllam B. Mitchell, Seles Mgr. 734 Rlker Bldg. FE 451 CUSTOM RANCHER. Fo ice of $15,900, you wr dream home t ELIZABETI basement ’with i aluminum siding, 11* cS Fenced/lot $16,5iw terms. Brown O'NEL SMALL FARM NEAR HOLLY th full set of buildings on l( res. Present owner may consldei small home In the city fgr trede OAKLAND HEIGHTS . —joms, n* baths. Ideal for 1 growing family. A1 short walk TURN WEST FROM MAII AND DRIVE 3 BLOCKS TO WILCOX. . MONTHLY RENTAL; 1- AND 2-BEDEOOM • completely carpeted CUSTOM DRAPES HOTPOINT AIR-CONDITIONING HOTPOINT REFRIGERATOR HOTPOINT OVEN RANGE. GARBAGE D1SPOSAL EATING AREA IN KITCHEN CARPETED HALLWAY LAUNDRY AND STORAGE SPACE HEAT INCLUDED SWIMMING POOL____ PLENTY OP PARKING • MASTER TV ANTENNA 6 PER CENT Land contract terms on fortable 2-bedroom hoi Welkin* Lake. On 2 I with many fruit trees a garden space. Full b flits e 3 bedroom ranchers. * .arj?r tu,ao c garoen apace, run aer- heet, attached garage. Within walking distance to new eksmentary school. Lek* privileges. Shown by, appointment. _ / R0LFE H. SMITH, Realtor/ WE BUILD basements. ---- ------ I . your lot. To see the model — B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 34179, after 8 p.m. FE 2-3573. OPEN SUN. 2-5. IEI^fe wfae A-A-A BETTER BUY / REPOSSESSED J FHA AND VA HOMES S50 down and monthly paWnants i low as *60. Call u* tor iocitlons. ANCHOR-POWELl C0RP. Dial L-I-S-T-I-NG or LI 74000 AT ROCHESTER Traftlc-freo living 3 bedroom brick room In paneled NEED MORE ROOM? tharp 3 bedroom ranch home situated on • large 1 aero lot. full walkout basemsnt, 21* car attached garage, don't mist this one. For easy bank terms am11 •arty possession, call today. YORK »n have __ml tws -—..(■NIIPtaRI. ji 3 roomy bedrooms with big, big ets“*-country stylo kltchon with cl of beautiful cabinets and tile floor, dining area with huge window wall, mtln bath with ceramic tlla A colored fixtures, extra half bath, full basement and 2 car attached garage. Painted and deCortied to suit. Kaiser aluminum siding. All thermoper ^ur Hmm*. e»ot* p I yard, sewer, end water wl Les Brown, Realtor ^ ,,,'sw wlm qulc* 509 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. v (Across from the Mall) FE 2-40)0 or FE 43564 den. Large 14'x34' living room. I Nice carpeting and drapes. Fire-place — built-in bookcase. Base-1 ment plus utility room. Fenced! yard with outdoor barbecue, 2-car garage. Extras Include bullt-ln van-j Ity, outdoor lamp post, new roof -and siding. 3 rooms wired fori AM-FM. Excellent neighborhood. | Terms available. For appointment! call 6743239 116,900. Call for appointment. John K. Irwin A SONS, REALTORS "'lit Huron — Sine# ■ w Selling Call FE 54446 breezeway with rwu , tor ouacnea garage. Excellent value at $19,750. Mty consider small home In trede. No. “ U THE ROLLING HILLS OF ROCHESTER . offers a horns wltti bullt-on cot convenience. Thle 1 bag CLARK- i TRADE OR SELL. HOME AJN- 1---COME. frroom modem^S-bed- I room, living auarterr I closed porch, bullt-ln .— — range, modem kitchen, large rooms, very good condition. 2-four room apartments up I room and privet* bath*, merdal lot, paved reed, garage, In fair condition Easement. 125,000. Woulc slder your present home or | as all or part down paym brick home, land CONTRACT 4room. n.ll landscaped plus sunroom, 3-bedrooms. —- ures living room with reto dining room, full basement fining room, carpeting with new gasi furnace, 1-car ga-, very modem kitchen rage. Needs outside, trim .paint-and rafrlgarator, 3 full ed and some decorating basement with rec. City property on bu* IrndP^WIP j - — — - - u — —ts properly SOLD. Asking 'BUD" md stores. 110,750. Payments low ban rant. Professional Business •00 r garage ana a is a tJTlT room. In front that was formsrly used as a Beauty shop. Ideal tor lawyer. doctor, barber, smell business: mooo. *3,400 down, Cute and Cozy , proposed Osteopathic College. Spacious living room. Conveniently arranged kitchen. Fenced yard. Storage shed. Plenty of trees. Full price Is only *5500. *1,200 down. 070 per month. List With Us-We Sell a Home Every 24 Hours R. J, (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345^Q«kiand^ ^ rc?00i!iT BGRRIBr VER V* ACRE - loads of, breeze catching shade trees. On this beautiful let 130 x 240. That hi completely anchor fenced. This I* Ml HUMPHRIES FE 24336 3-story 3-bedroom homo W. Huron and 2-ear garage, iment, storms price; 015,900, Shepard's Jieol Estate HOUSES! HOUSES! ALL NEW 3 BEDROOM RANCHES TRI-LEVELS 4 BEDROOM RANCHES COLONIALS SUBURBAN LIVING 100 FOOT LOTS VILlA HOMES, INC. ED BARN VILLAGE NO. 1 AT MILFORD $125 CORAL RIDGE APARTMENTS Redl Value Realty Rent Houses, Furnlslied 39 3 BEDROOMS NEAR PONTIj - Motor. >150 per m- »*-oal BEDROOM, C ---A furniture. { BRICK RANCH—1 ACRE , fine $/ bedroom ranch In Orion Townihlp on an acre tot. Hr paneled family room with flri place, full basement, gas hea bum-ins In kflchtn, attached car garage. Ideal family horn Ip a rural setting. Fairly price, -at 033,900 with farms. SEE IT TODAY. Warden Realty IMMEDIATE POSSESSION clean 2 bedroom ranch hoi... with full basement, oanwr^sklng formation on this horns rush yot call to: YORK WE BUY WE TRAD "1 44363 _ OR 4031 4713 Dial* Hwy., Drayton Plains OPEN MODEL SAT. I, SUN. 34 TUES. WED. AND THURS. 34 CLOSED MONDAY AND FRIDAY Anytime by appointment WEST WIND MANOR 1340 S- WILLIAMS LK. RD. NEAR UNION LAKE VILLAGE BRICK WITH ALUM. FAMILY ROOM 3 BEDROOMS IV* BATHS 2-CAR ATTACHED GARAGE $17,400 SEE PLANS FOR OTHER MODELS STARTING AT S12.900 WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOT OR OURS J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 10735 Highland Rd. M59 QUALITY HOMES Hon. 0150 .................. r*OOM JWNTODN LAxE ........... 2-May 0, 6743755. ■■I Hbbsw, ItaffwMid 40 I BEDROOM!,, GAS HEAT; FULL haarinant. Ret., Popoalt. FE 443M. S BibkOOM, BASEMENT, $m A®. Will allow tor Cleaning and dac-oratlng. Sac. Pep, FE 54276. 5 ROOMS - W OF DUPLEX. *aBults only, west Of Man. S ROOM AND bath, UTILITIES, adults only, no drinkers, may be saan anytime until t P-m. 213 CHURCH & PARSONAGE Ample Parking — W. Sidt 335-6222___ 1 . CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM IN | ■rtoatohotna. FE 3-7B0S..____ ----clean sleeping rooms WE build on your lot YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BBTTSR-OILT ; Russell Young 334-M30 —1 w. Huron Dan Mattingly DRAYTOlk puins New 4 bedroom ranch home * :. 635-2136. „„ __..7leman. Comp late price 117,300. Call 'til 7 p.m. Daily FE S^497 or FE 2-2444 Immediate Possession NORTH END | 6 room ranch located on 2 largo shaded lots on quiet tt. Full beie-| \ ,» mu ment with targe^ recreation -room/-------o and bar. Oak ' floors, plastered OR 34821 wails. 2 bedrooms, fireplace In IN-room. 2 car attached garage. 02900 down 4 Bedroom Quad-Level $31,950 Including lot. Distinctive Homes By ROSS LAKELAND ESTATES FE 5-8183 Two-bedroom bungalow located i peting, large kitchen and dining combination, full basement with tiled ritaai and painted walls, 2 car ga-■P fenced back yard, what more could you isk tor, ,-k- i attached garage. Gas bath, lust redecorated e and eut. It's vr-“* bT'K wlth^tMy'torms'and^s MOVE IN TOMORROW 2V* ACRES rga farm house, 4 bedrooms, base-nt,-----“—* 1— '— i. Priced at $10,950 dining' room, full basement. t SPARKLING GEM — In Highland Estates locates this 3 bedroom brick ranch home with full basement that has been completely redone Inside and out. Financing Is no problem here. *17,500 on i, .i e. , ______________SWISHING WILL NOT SELL, IT-*- either Gl or FHA term*. Gleam- North Stde ■ Quick Action Will. Call U* For] |ng oak floors throughout. Family Convsnlently located North Side.1 A Price On Your Home. No styled kltchon. Tiled, bath. Very Vttedroom home, close to bus and; obligation. We A1- - — ----- ■** Hgteta CLARK REAL ESTATE ................... garage —! priced at 88,950 — Only S1.500 Uaf - shown by t ---------- ,,42 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7008 or FE 04270 multiple Listing Service NICHOLIE-HUDSON ASSOCIATES, Inc. 49 Mt. Clemens SI. FE 5-1201 AFTER 6 P.M., FE 5-0 Two-story brick four-bedroom home In Seminole Hills. Beautifully landscaped lot, two-car garage,. Largo screened porch at rear. Slate vestibule entrance. Large living room with fireplace. Family size dining room, modem kitchen, powder room on first floor. Four full-size bedrooms and ceramic tlla ||l| on second floor. Rec. room fireplace. Shower and lav. In Here is o .. . i bedroom aluminum Sided *-lk# r ' i 100x150 foot M KINZLER LAKE SPECIAL ARRO CASH I FOR EQUITY - LAND CONTRACT ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES. COTV 2-bedroom bumjatow^ ca^rilng OUTDOORS — FALL FASHION —' 2 acres plus with this brick and aluminum ranch home with basement and breeztway attaching tha 2 car garaga. Idea location near 1-75 entrance at Clarkston. Luxurious carpeting throughout. 13x21 v* living room with natural fireplace. 11 x 16 kitchen and gas-heat. E HAVE THE KEYI as. Call Mr. Castoll PE2-727 NICHOLIE It HARGER CO. KcATINGTON Beautiful lake-front end leke-privl-lots available. Plan to live ■- toga k this b HOWARD tTKEATINGCO., SPOTLESS 3-BEDROOM HOME -Hardwood floors, plastered, “*"• Wall-to-wall carpeting, gas tllsd floor in basement. TIMES MODELS YOUR CHOICE i RANCH-COLONIAL-TRI-LEVEL $16,150. PLUS LOT rive out M-S9 (Huron St.) to Airport Road, turn right, IV* miles) to Models. 1 OPEN DAILY 24 Open Sun. 24' RAY O'NEIL REALTOR 3520 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 9 to 9 — 12222 MLS EM 34531 tor quick sale. BRICK RANCH I gai’yard iight' *17,500/Terms. This Is the most attractive home.i “ 6 nice rooms and finished recrea- NOTHING DOWN BUT CLOSING I lion room. Paved street, sewer i COSTS TO Gl — 2 bedroom bun-1 and Water. *500 down plu* costs, gai0w on canal Info Cass Lake. on FHA or closing costs only to Total price, *7,900. , her Gl veteran. , DRAYTON PLAINS Ted McCullough Sr. Realtor LAKE DIBteRP drapes, fenced yard, basement family room paneled, paved drive to two-car garage, also paved street. Close to schools and shopping, a real MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTY TRADE YOUR HOUSE, Land co tract or Vacant property on th -NEW, West suburban 3 bedroom brk kitchen wi?* formica bullt-lns. Family room JOHN KINZLER Realtor 5219 Dixie Hwy. 6742235 Acres* from Packer's Store Mutflpls Listing Ssrvlcs gri o closing costs, ( Multiple Listing Service ROCHESTER - ATTRAC bedroom brick rancher. 2 rage. Large V $17,900. Nix “■ 2-5375, UL KENT BRICK TWO FAMILY INCOME - H2S zjraw basement, automatic heat and ho water. A real buy at bt.500, terms. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor ■ 2200 Dixie Hwt. ef Telegraph FE 24123 tir FE 3-1*4 LAKE AREA DUPLEX Ideal tor large family or Ineomi Only 111,950, on land contract Trades accepted. WATERFORD SCHOOLS On Pontiac I*. RtL 3 bodropr ranch on oyer an acre land. IMOC C SCHOETT dixi.FhUT Of w Open 9-9 (5l**14221; SMALL FARMr eke the whole family happy wl the purchase Of this clean bedroom homo With a toll bat ment, plut 10 acres where f children can roam and play. ( yes, you can have horses, to keep the children happy, excellent land contract terms ava" able thru: YORK Re buy we trade OR 40363 OR 44343 — Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains LARGE WOODED LAKE .FRONT Lot — sandy beach, beautiful view or lako - Ideal for year around home. Located on Lake Shannon. Priced at *6,000. Carrlgan Quality — Homes, Inc. at CE 341*5 or MA|full basmt., gas heat, attached 2 9-5773. ______________1 car garage. *29,500. . SEnJL,L?unrRrTSMniN NiTTREND*^ VACANt 3 BEDROOMS, IV* bath*, Plens-ottered By NU-TmN P^ l^l4uHH»Mmt, ga4-heet< 2 car garage I omlcal Prefebrlcated Home* "blacstop drlvri Very nice eon-WWV idltlon. Just *15,200 on FHA or Lend PINTERS MARINE I Contract. KAMPSEN j "IT'S TRADING TIME" "l DRAYTON WOODS SCHRAM QUICK POSSESSION Two bedroom homo In High area, wall to we ing throughout, garage, gage costs, no credit report, lust *1,850 down and start packing, toll price $10,500. MIXED AREA rrivllsges afforded you /when you purchase this immaculate three-bedroom ranch. Full basement, recreation room finished oft to a "toe" with bar and running watar. Features Ilka paved drive, large petto. 24'x2if garage, fairly new walMo-Woll carpeting, plastered wells, oak flooring, now water softener, refrigerator. jpdyke Rd. 1-75 At Oakland University Exit. TOsa-s TAYLOR 42'x30' on foundation. x x -1—1 ^ x STARTER HOME rooms, rough wiring i nace In — Lake privileges on i Straits Laka. 42'x30' on foundation. I Law down payment. ,. BARGAIN COMMERCIAL — W corner tot located on Orchard Laka Ava. S-room bungalow — Basement — Terms avaBablis, Cash In 48 hours for your Equity WRIGHT REALTY CO. B Oakland Ava. FC 24141 After 7 p.m. Call SSATMt TUCKER RlALtY CO. FHA RESALE Super sharp 3 bedroom home with full basement. Gloaming hanhwor" floor*. Plenty of etoMto. .Snacto living room. Gas -toft., Tlh bath. Fenced yard. LhEatpd tha Northern High area. 15 down. ITS per month Includ taxes and Insuranct. Calf Val-U-Way 345 Oakland FE 44531 Pontiac's FHA appointed property management broker HEW IMME Centre FE 2-0262 t. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9 GILES rooms, over t,500 {g-"& ^ pasans&'sJS ft, <-- your,l|n«pe^^.mpriced,'ri'**9.9W R0CHESTER AREA with forms or we will tr | present home In TRADE. CLARKSTON SCHOOLS PRICE REDUCED tor a » Country living wlfli city once* end easy access to be yours In this lovsly th room brick ranch. Two _— ramie baths, plus an extra stall shower, 12x12 screened porch, two car attached garage. Prtr-to 123,980 with terms 1 TRADE your old houso li ♦ will ' BALDWIN AND 1-75 - 1 1 Ml I of lend and 4 room house. 2 bod- [xaiid " host, aluminum storms, „mir nid n. m ft U..II MU VHr Th* outside features yard, toll concrete d garage, yard ell tom fhe new carpet, thr This three b located on )*• wi b™. loaded with shade trees, 3 car garage', IV*1 baths, msks* this a buy for the discerning family. Immediate possession, fend con- List With SCHRAM And Call the Van 1111 JQSLYN FE S4471 REALTOR ■HU 4 you did. A QUALITY Homo built by o quality crafts* man. Located In Lakt Oakland Shores area. Featuring four bad-rooms, colonial styling, brick and alumnilm siding, gas heat, full basement, bunt-ln even end range, 22'x2T attached garage, family room on first floor with fireplace, and sliding glass door to patio area, Home Is brand i new and If spoken for soon — possibly pick ■ry/anly 127,- 65-ACRE FARM ■R...IRN LOWER PENINSULA AREA WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH OP TIMES Times Realty 5898 DIXIE HIGHWAY (South of Waterford HUD OR 48396 REALTOR OPOtl 94 Pally GAYLORD Mixed Area eatodrIn*th^.WclnllY N^'perry and E. Blvd., Pontiac Northern School district. Includes full tx ment, gas heat, tottced In r yard. Only $i3m FHA ar farms. Call OR 44306. J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY Real Estate—Insurance—Building j 732 Highland Rd. (MSt) OR 48306 Evenings call EM 39937 NORTH ENI plastered v It. kitchen, pine fl rage, only 8L508 LAKE FRONT - 2 family unit 4 rooms snd both each. Private entrance, gas heat, city watar, blacktop street leading to take. Fun price 810408 with STB pdr month. Terms. ... M___th apartments to refit, II to wall carpeting, fireplace, ^•.r,onT'«b,TRh4S°E i>r present home In. tractor and farm tools. Land i ___ — ly seeded to alfalfa and tlm ’‘browns* PROPERTY.0?RICE CUT TO IIS™-1 LAKE FRONT WITH SCBNIC.VIBW patio. 500, DUE TO ILLNESS. and good beach. Two bedroom, finished n .DETROITER MOBILE HOME 41'xlO' with «‘x32' addition, altualed on 2 LAKE PRIVILEGE. LOTS, 180*x137‘. Mobile horn*. Is completely furnished. 3 bedrooms, large1 located ON SQUA living room and dining room. Full more Is plenty et a bath. Automatic washer; Oil heat, --------- electric hot water heater. CALL FOR DETAILS. > Suit, Emery Butler, * Bradley, Elaine ipsen, Hilda Slaw- SMITH & WIDEMAN 2-2831. OPEN SUNDAY 124 LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD IW. Farit Street Trml Traifon THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 jM|A»te Accessories D-T Ml i«vk, i«v4,21 vi- sage SPECIAL Mallard Canvasbock Hardtop I slMMr (ONE ONLY), loaded with equlpmant, brand "**' $1095 .... .WINTER HOURS . . . . . Mon. * Tua. 9 ant to I p.m. Wad. thru Frt. ♦ a.m. to 4 p.m. lat. P a.m. to S and doted Sun. TOMSTAIHLER „„ AUTDAMOMOBILE SALES 1721 W. HWtond lM. M36, pg viaaa PICNUPOTVEES.jAdl ft*. Wt" cabcovers, $1,295 and up. ^ TAR CAMPER MEG. CO-mo Auburn Id. U2-sxh . : Jffil1 CAM1 - 1— from 0190 Large selection to choose from LLOYD iRIDGES TRAVELAND 1010 w. Maple, Walled Labe $24-1572 pickup oMPiA; l6aOs 6f~ex- tra». S« Henry Clay. Pontiac. Large age5M0n_toct100M.fr >C<^Wal«fff5V|^nti.>r,-Pl , CHROME I AI RCRAFT FOR SALE. PIPER PJL =*-- _______I ,.Fe msw or wt 43M9 altari. . tNr--------------------------- day service J 103'CARNIVAL By Dick Turner I $1495 Oakland ,:®l ahta tor tala 0MB. S44-7«* w \A*A*%P* UREPOSSESSION «M HONDA MOTORCYCLE with candy .apple rad flniah, JJ>W* .down, toll aL#* ss jfm. D HONDA SCRAMBLER, r payments. 1000 actual King due to Illness. 415- honda wws^mmrm 5:2S p. SU2UKI-WWA™lcAnSl?BIKES Berts House of Champions (Formerly Custom Color) 230 W. Montcalm FE APSIS HERE NOW 1967 HONDAS ' All models and colors Special announcement prices Easy Terms—Buy now and save. Mftad Ufa 424-1572 PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILEERS A CAMPERS TRAVELOUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (•"-iFS*"emers) $$$ Save $$ Pickup compart, convartlblo, 15-10' trailers. More than 20 units to chooso ti Discounts on . all units. 10" and 30" pickup covers. Roost and Drawtlte Hltchas HOWLAND SALES AND RENT/ 3243 Dixie Hwy. OR 3 Open 0 ~ ~ ... SPECIAL CLEARANCE 175CC. OSSA'S BRAND NEW "1000 HOT ONES" FROM SPAIN 1500 DELIVERED PRICE Wonted Cm • Tra£~lil CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH —I ,710 Qooitowa Ava. Ft MHO ENCLOSED UTILITY TRAILER. EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOft'THAT EXTRA Sharp Car torn to. &%***' Averill MONEY Paid For Sharp Cars GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Sales I Baldwin PE I-0S2S PAYMENTS TOO HIGH? to buy or will adjust your 0 -tents to less expansive car. DON'S USED CARS 477 S. Lapeer Rd. Lake Orion MY SEMI SPORTCRAFT PICKUP SLEEPERS '0S< SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-2S0CC. RUPP. Minlblkes at low as S130.05. Taka MW to W. Highland. Right on 073-7143 TRAVEL WITH THESE QUALITY LINES— Luxury In a BOLES AERO, 20-35' FROLIC, lofa-REE LINE, 11-10' YUKON DELTA. 17-24' "THE RED BARN" Jacobson Trailer Sales 5000 Williams Laka Rd. OR 3-5001 WOLVERINE TRUCK - CAMPERS a Rd. to Demode Rd.! tllow signs to OAW-, S AT TIPSICO LAKE ! STOP HERE LAST la pay more tor Sharp, lets mo 1 fira. Corvettes needed. M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location 1150 Oakland at Viaduct GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cats FE 5-9485 Heavy Duty One-Ton Pickups 4 mod. VO and VI. hstvy du springs, Eras. 1960-1964 GMCt and FORDS $695 up FE 5-4101 John McAuliffe ford Auto-Marine Insurance II AUTO INSURANCE TERMS AVAILABLE . CALL TODAY Anderson & Associates FE 4-3535 ^ 1004 JOSLYN I Uead Cars 194 1702 CORVAIR 700 2 DOOR COUPE. ' *—tor, and. ready to go. iw car trade. S4C7 Full ‘'SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 1104 South Woodwtrd Birmingham II today, tor lust S) —payments, rf 330-4520 Sphrton. ■ffTKVi'asra tor you and your femtty. Fan_ Chev with Powergride, WW. Radio, pMl carefully /drtvgn — Hr cannot be total from special price ,0100. Kei Mew EEd lleed . Caw 1944 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE Only 400 miles. Exc. Condition. Many Luxury extras. Buy at 03,900 MIKE .SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 106,New mi 8m*Ow ^FOROV-^OggO^MOFOR. STeSS 1003 CHEVROLET SUPER Sport/convertible, blue finish with matching buckets. Powerglide VI, power steering, full price, $1,397. Bring this ad and oat a free Honda. /SPARTAN DODGE INC. 155 x Oakland Ave. FE 1-4521. 4903 CHEVROLET BEL AIR. steering, braktt, b_. _ tan finish, with matching interio Only — $1095 ^ Oakland CHRYSLER-PlYMfrUTH 14 Oakland Ave. FE 4911 McComb CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL I OL 1-1551 1011 N. Main ROCHESTER f6rD, 2-DOOR, 0, 1135. cyl. Auto, transmission. DeSOTO 1940. j . hapdtop '*M Oakland A IMF John McAulHik Ford 1960 Ford 9 Passenger Wagon Country Squire with VI, automatic power steering, brakes, what i gorgeous carl Booing 1s believing Only — $695 , "It only taka* a minute to Get a 'BETTER DEAL' at" John McAuliffe Ford "Tone this down,Perkins! What do you, think you’re writing—TV commercials?* CANCELLED AUTO? YOUNG DRIVERS Budget Payment Plan racks. Lowry Camper Soles, 1325 S. Hospital Road, ---- SUZUKI DEMOS a USED CYCLES Beats-Accessaries 97 14' FIBERGLASS BOAT, 45 HORSE- power, electric Evlnrude --- Trailer and accaaae ' ditlon, >995. 303-7049. ir THOMPSON HELP! Foreiga Can We need 300 thprp Cadillacs, tiecs, Olds and Guides tor a state market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1100 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-5900 TOP t FOR CLEAN CARS OR 1959 MGA Roadster. Nice .......$o 1*04 MGB Roadster Sharp ....$14 1945 FORD Cortina excellent . .$8 BERGEN MOTORS Cortina, Angola, MG, Austln-Heeli IT "BEST" Foreign Cor Service! FE SWfte 1000 W. Maple, Walled Like 424-13 YOUR APACHE DEALER EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 0507 Dtxle^Hw^., Clarkston IT INBOARD UTILITY 0934191 after 4:30 p.r 50 PER CENT OFF ON ALL MA-I I rlne Point, 30 per ce Owens Marine Supply. | Lake Ave. FE 2-0020. _________. ■ ALUMINUM GUARANTEED BOATS. 855 0a*l,nd ‘ $50.00; also flat bottoms, v 1 11 noes, prams. All at wholesale -3000 Dixie Hwy. Open I ti tophi- OR 3-1544. "Top Dollar"' that's what wa pay for 1960 thru 1965 Immaculate Carsl' Stop In—Sot Mr. Gilmer .Spartan Dodge! Priced to sell. Only - $595 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 00 S. Woodward 047-; New —d Used Care 106 New and Used Cert 106 BEEN BANKRUPT? NEED A CAR with os low os $5 down? Try King Flan Financing. Call Mr. 1 Stark. 3344000. Repossession j I960 CHEVY Impala 2 door hard- Lease ‘ / 1903 BUICK Convertible, full /factory equipped, sliver blue, matching interior, low mileage/ extra clean. On Approved Credit. $41.66 monthly. Ask for Mr. Archer. King Financing available to all, regardless of past credit problems. KING red and Mack Interior, extra clean.1 Assume payments. Ask for Mr. Archer. King Financing -available problems, KING ! AUTO SALES AMerlce's Largest Used Car Dealer M59 at Elizabeth lake Rd. FE 84088 Call Collect ~ 1941 CORVETTE. REASONABLE After 4 P.M., 3443280 » AUTO SALES America's Largest Used Car Dealer M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. Ft 84088 / Call Collect Lease 1961 CHEVY 9 passenger wagon, VI, automatic, silver blut with matching Interior, extra sharp. On approved credit. $32.54 per month.! Ask for Mr. Archer. King Flnanc- 1963 BUICK 4 DOOR, HARDTOP. 81297 full prlct. ’ / LUCKY AUTO j / 1940 W. Wide Track »FE /4-1O04 . or F E 47054 1964 SKYLARK, 81,500. 334-2926 OR i W. Hopkins, Pbntlac. i Ing available to all regardless of ! test credit problems. 1963 CHEVROLET 4-door Sedan i cylinder engine, automatic tram nlssion, radio and hooter. $1095 PONTIAC ' RETAIL STORE 65. Mt. Clemens St. (AT WIDE TRACK) FE 3-7954 1963 CHEVY BI SC AVNE 2 DOOR, )GE R Oil < kessler:s GM DODGE « AND TRUCKS lies ond Service 41400 (Owner's Initials) Gala McAmally's Auto Salas WANTED: SHARP LATE MODEL CARS FOR OUT OF STATE SHIP-MENT. INTERESTED IN ALL • MAKES AND MODELS FROM 1902 TO 1J67. Stop or Call Today i960 dodge full factory equip-' 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 .i£*f--r'l Amta from Pontiac State Bank proved Credit. $4149 nXmfhly. Ask1'160 FORD, EXCELLENT CON- for Mr. Archer, * Kina financing fltlon, OR 3-Q359. ______________________ toe'l regardtas* of past mi ford STARLINER HARDTOP. — ' I. SS95. Lease DGE full fact.., MM ie finish, matching Interior Vww A KING AUTO SALES cylinder, aujgv Radio and heater. America’s Laroest Used Car Dealer rood condition; 674-2534. i .Tcrl A rl:_ L i i r,7 3 CHEVY‘BEL AIR, 2-DOOR - M59 ot Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 84088 1903 CORVAIR CLUB COUPE HNGH AUTOMATIC TRANS-RADIO --------------- OCTOBER Transportation Specials BUY HERE-PAY HERE No Application Refused strata. Hurry best offer. 0 evenings. 1942 FALCON STATION WAGON, HAS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, ROOF LUGGAGE RACK, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE SOM, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, a 1966 VW, SUN ROOF, 1| 88 SALE DAYS Are In full swing at Hutchi._________ King size values ore In welting1 for you. You fat more home In, a Detroiter mobile home, 12 wldes, 3 bedrooms as IHtle as $58.12 per month. A wide selection of rtiffoiwit sizes and floor plans. Also i (election of pre-owned 0 Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homes 4201 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plolm OR 3-1202 BOAT-MOTOR-BUYS - I FREE WINTER STORAGE ON .PURCHASES NOW! CARVERS-SKIFFS, MF6., STARCRAFT I BOATS, SAILBOATS, JOHNSON MO-I TORS, WEERES PONTOONS. is PINTER'S 1370 Opdyke 94 FE 4 (1-75 st Oakland University Ex.., BOAT STORAGE Sell Out —1966 Models PONTIAC'S ONLY j MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER CruisG-Out, Inc. ‘TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S WANTED GOOD USED ( CARS—CASH Qpdyke Hardware I JGwk Cir«-TnKks 101-A 2 AND 3 JUNK CARS-TRUCKS. . Free tow anytime. FE 2-2600. ALWAYS BUYING JUNIC CARS —1------— *— FE 5-9940. VW / CENTER Autqbahh l 1964 Buick Skylark 2 door Hardtop, with V8, automatic, bln interior, white finish, Only— $1795 BEATTIE I960 RIVIERA, AIR CONDITIONED, A-l CONDITION, 12x04' MARCfet+E Mobile Hbme, 16x10' living room. 2 bedrooms, built In AT COLONIAL . Immodlott Oceupeney In Our now Modern Parks RICHARDSON-HILLCREST ACT IVE—HAMPTON—HOMETTE 25 OodykS Rd. _ 332-1057 (Comer of M-59 ot Opdyke) HH Hwy. 074-2010 FAST CRUISER 22 ft. Cruls-Along with 135 H.F. Greymarlne, ideal for couple or small family, complete sleeping, eating A toilet facilities. Many extras Including -----* - - —■*- trailer. Fast — radiators, batteries, generator: starters. Don't fun — cell us: HAH Auto Salas. OR>5200. JEEP MOTOR COMPLETE7 McClough chain ae» (ye mile South of Waterford) INDOOR BOAT STORAGE WATERFORD SALES (Across Pontiac Airport) 0333 w. Highland INSIDE WINTER BOAT *TORAGk. Make reservations now. Kir's Boats A Motor*. Laka Orion. MY MICHIGAN TURBOCRAFT SALES, INC. 27 Dixit Hwy. - Pontl In 5 different_■ FORESTPARK PARKWOOD HOLLYPARK All at reduced prices. 16 to 40 ft. long, I to 20 ft. wide Wo have parking spaces. Open 9 to 9 — 7 days a weak MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. 331-0772 1 block north of Telegraph MUST SELL 15' PENYON A trailer. 35 h«. Go~t < Ing or skiing. Skis, Included. S27S or to offer 0 p.m. otter. 074- IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 4 Star P extra charge. Also sat too famous light wttfrt WtanObogo Traitor. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 94, CLOSED SUNDAYS, 1 mile south of Laka Orion on M24 MY 2-0721 . • K HOUSE TRAII n, $425. 0734059. Porkhurst Mobil! Homo Solos and Court____________ 50- by lOO* now Ukevlow lots h ____ Lui. --I- m* IH.lt, Mi OWENS I960 LEFT-OVER BARGAINS 30' Flagship, H-top, twin 225 h.o. 29' Flagship, H-top, loaded, 225 h.p. 20' Sea Skiff, reduction gear, 225 h.p. 24' Sea Skiff Wildcat, 115 h.p. 19" X-L19 fiberglass boat, 225 h.p. 1907 MODELS ON-DISPLAY LAKE & SEA MARINE SOUTH BLVD. at Saginaw, FE 44517 OPEN SUNDAYS STORAGE '00 boats and motors. PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. Dixie Hwy. at Loan Uka -ayton Plains OR 44411 Opsn Piety 9 AJW. to 0 P.V Phone In your reservation today I HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS pSnttoE Mobile Park. FB 59902. ^$99 5. Telegraph Niw and Used Tracb 103 New and Used Tracks 103 DODGE TRUCK HEADQUARTERS Serving Soutoeestorn ^khtWj" wHhJhe best bu n im7 Dodge Truck, S1I95 total price. All taxes USED SPECIALS -d F-350 1-Toif stake. V4, 4-spead, 11,000 qtl TMty. ‘ ..... 1994 Chevy Vb-Ton Pickup. V4. stick, Ilka nt 1942 FORD F-100 to-Ton 1901 PODGE Mt Ton Plckiip 1904 CHEVROLET Panel Von 12 Ford F490, 4-sp**d, 2-spaad a ROCHESTER- DODGE, INC. 0514100 ROCHESTtR 1904/VW . ..___I fineheing charges. 334-3902 for/natlon. ____________ See All the New 1967s JUMPH-MGs-SUNBEAMS /AUSTIN HEALEYS—FIATS— AUTHORIZED DEALER Grimaldi Imported Cars ^^rindow” With power" brakes^ pow-staerlng, power windows, power 1904 STATION WAGON VAR I- __ have to sell for last. .. I BEAUTIFUL And only SIM. Keego Pontiac Salas. 0(2-3400. 50 years BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You- Buy Here Pay Here Where? STAR AUTO SALES CALL 336-9661' 962 Oakland Avenue AGE CO. 109 S. East f Hon. This Is a prestige car vo been looking for. Bonl nclng and too price it right. $2695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH KING AUTO SALES America's Largest Used Car Dealer M59 of Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 8-4088 Cell Collect 1901 CHEVY 2-DOOR. STICK, 6-CYL. engine, perfect condition, glooming white new-car trade, $395. 2nd Car Headquarters MARVEL MOTORS 251 Oakland (North erf Baldwin) _________- FE 94079 I DOOR. CLEAN. Mission, _______ HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE S7M, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments only $7.42, CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks ot HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 47500. Autobahn MOTORS, INC. ]!' AUTHORIZED VW DEALER : | Vj mile north of Miracle Mile 1705 S. Telegraph FE 0-4531 1904 CORVAIR MONZA CONVER-, tibia, 0, excellent. 3354372. ' ' ”1964 Chevy I Bel-Air 2 door with V8, automatic, blua finis1 Only- $1195 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930' On Dixit In Waterford at toe double stoplight Ofl 3-1291 ;|1959 RAMBLER auto .. '1959 DeSoto 2 door .... ,1900CORVAIR auto ... 1900 IMP ALA Convert .. 1960 PONTIAC hardtop . 3 CHEVY 2 dqor . S097 S8.99! NO DOWN PAYMENT I SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT FE 8-4071 papitol Auto IMF John McAuliffe Ford 1962 Falcon Futura $399 ’SOMETHING NEW" S MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 4-2735 — Ml 47009 1905 DODGE CORONET 440 nine-passenger wagon, mahogany finish with kid-proof all vinyl trim. Torqueflite, VI power steering. Chrysler'! new warranty for your protection. Full price, $1497. SPARTAN DODGE INC., 155 Oakland Ava. FE $-452$. 1944 CHEVY 2 DOOR, axe. condition, low milM 073-1391. Stronahon. CHEVY 1944 IMPALA, 4DOOR SE-dan, auto., power steering, radio, dark blua, vary clean. ,$1005. 051-0230. _________ | 1904 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4 DOOA, 0 cylinder and standard transmission, radio, hooter, (1195 JEROME FORD Rochester* Ford Dealer. OL' 1471). LUCKY AUTO Cash Low, Want to Go? If, you hove a |ob and (50 < — * — —1 you^ ln^ 1940 W. Wide Trade • 4)000 or FE 3-7>54| 13 VOLKSWAGEN PICKUP. DOU-! l NEED A CAR? have (240 range LWe handle and a nclng, Call Mr, Da FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM JEROME 1 J | John McAuliffe. Ford MOTOR SALES 1910 Wide Track Dr Ft 47021 1962 Chev/ ' 1945 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE with air conditioning, fully equipped, full price $4395. STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road Bel Air Sedan.' Standard transmlulon, radio, and, fresh air heater, showroom condition, full price of Only/- 1966 Cadillac $666 j Convertible, maize finish, black, leather Interior, Mack cordovan full power, air conditioning. Only— (0 Down—$6.97 weekly "It only takas f minute to $ave ASK FOR NORM OANIELSON Get a 'BETTER DEAL' at" John McAuliffe Ford ' WILSON Repossession I Cadillac 1942 CHEVY impala 2 door hard-| top, V$, automatic, radio, heater, bucket Mats, console, candy ap-| pie rad, rap and white Interior, showroom condition, assume bal- i Ml 4-1930 ance. Ask [tor Mr. Archer. King Financing available to all regard- 1944 CADILLAC CALAIS COUPE, El Dorado flremlst green, air, alec, windows, 4-way seat, tilt-wheel. 7,M0 ml., S4,m 4249116. KING 1945 CHEVY' SS, VERY GOOD, 9500i —mfau-'les. Beet offer. 002-5205. 90S CHEVY WE'RE LOOKING FORl-an extra-smart aft season buyer,. Ilka you. This lovtly ermine white impale convertible It lust what you've been looking tor, power 1965 CHEVY 2-door with 6-cyl. standard transmission, hoetor, rodto,^- , 1963 CHEVY Bel-Air Wagon with V(. automatic, heater, Only — $1295 1957 RAMBLER 4-door VI, automatic, power steering, brakes, hMtor, radio, whitewalls. Only — $245 Crissman Chevrolet (On South Hill) loctiestor____________OL 1-7000 1965 BISCAYNE, 1-OWNER Downey 1966 CORO Executive's car, fi miiooge. - T ; $3495 Downey V Oldsmobile, Inc. . '1084 Oakland 338-0331,338-0332 1954 FORD, $00 OR BEST OFFER '02 FORD WAGON *01 -POMTIA£ 4000R '41 CORVAIR 2-OOOR '40 OLDS WAGON '59 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE ELLSWORTH AUTO SALES , Repossession iftjl962 FORD O uihlla with r. Archer. King Financing avall-lo to all regard leu of past credit KING ! AUtO SALES America's Largest Used Car Dealer M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 84088 Call Collect 1966 Cadillac Coupe OeVllle, turquoise with I black leather tap, full power all conditioning, .9,000 mitot. Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Cadillac Ml 4-1930 FE 84088 Coll Collect____ 1902 CHEVY BEL AfR 2 DOOA. CREDIT NO Repossession PROBLEM 1942 FORD Falrtane 2 dear, Vt, automatic, radio, heater, Mua with matching Interior. Looks and runs EVEN IF YOU HAVE BEEN BANKRUPT, HAVE CREDIT PROBLEMS, lOj^NEVER HAD CREDIT IN THE far Mr. ‘Archer. King financing available to all regardiaaa of put No Money Down I960 FORD, Wagon PR»W GONG 1940 Chevy, Moor ./!/ / /St? 1954 BUICK, Wagon *397 AUTO SALES I960 CHEVY, 4-door (197 1941 DODGE, 2-door $397 M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. 1959 PONTIAC. Wagon (197 1955 FORD, 2-door $77 1959 FORD, 2-door $99 1942 FALCON, 2-door $497 FE 84088 Call Collect FORD 1943 2 DOOR CUSTOM V8, 1960 CHRYSLER, 4-door *597 NORTHWOOD with gas saving standard transmission, almost new whitewalls, radio, heater, and Is a one owner car of course. Full price , $795. AUTO SALES Can be handled with no money down. Keego Pontiac 4043400. 50 2023 Dixie Highway FE 49239 years of servlet. defogger. Attar 4:30 fp A1 Hanoute Inc. Chevrolet-Buick Laka Orton MY 2-2411 m and bank Rates. Credit No "SOMETHING NEW" 'I MIKE SAVOIE' CHEVROLET it east of Oakland 1905 CHEVROLET Vk TON PIOCUP. Ftoatslda Box. heavy duly springs and clutch. Back Bumper and (till under warranty. *1395 with 09$ Down at Bonk Rates. Credit No Problem. "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET I Finance at 1% Per Month PICKUP SPECIALS 1904 PORO PICKUP with v$, standard transmission, $' . IMS CHEVY thrifty thc-cylinder with standard trsnsmlulon, tone box, extra meal SPARTAN DODGE IS Oakland Ava. FE 4452$ We Hove 8 Wagons i choose from, 190419021 — ords, 2 Chevys, 1 Plymouth, — 2nd Cor Headquarter: MARVEL MOTORS 251 Oakland (North of Baldwin) 1900 CADILLAC, 2-DOOR HARDTOP, PM radio, 4000 mlin, spotless, $3(95. 335-0333._________ 957 BUICK. AUTOMATIC, GOOD amts-rsa not inand too price of thh ad to to toll you. Full "price too. Keego Pontiac sale* 6743400. *** - o* ggrvleo. 1966 Cadillac Coupe, DeVtlle, blue with bled (aether lop. full power, air condl Honing many other extras. Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON - WILSON Cadillac Ml 4-1930 1904 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE, ■BlMIri vr, fully 047-5028. .. SIW * 1959 Ramblers/each I______ mi Small vaudiaui ........... srn -----Cadillacs, 1 19S7 .... 195 up -----Chevy, 2 and 4 doors $45 each 19*4 small Rambler ............$495 1---I---195$ Olds .......$ 41 Wh and 1904 Penllac. ' Other models — a tow trucks. ECONOMY CARS 2315 PIXIE HWY. .luicK lIsmA'e ’ 4-oook | ft “ [I prfa a ’SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET Now Is the Time to Save On a New Model Trade-In Matthews-Hargreaves 631 OAKLAND AVE. *FE 44547 757 CHEVY. WAGON. $125, 5-404$ or PE 44915. CHEVY FLOOR SHIFT, FULL _________ tatllc ttrrtsh; full price $543.37. $J down, payments of I7.2S weakly. ■state storage CO. 109 s. East Blvd. FE 47101. Frida of Ownership Is Standard Equipment 0 trade-ins. Every one Is well cared tor and pi Easy To Own. 1966 OLDS 98 4-door hordtop ... .$2999 1966 OLDS 88 4-door hardtop (Air).. .$2777 1966 OLDS 2-door Sport Coupe .........$2666 1965 OLDS Starfire ....... .....$2555 1964 QLDS Starfire ......... ..$1999 1964 PONTIAC Tempest....... ... .$1444 1963 OLDS 88 Convertible .......$1333 1963 OLDS Cutlass Convertible .... ........$1222 Ask for Leon (Goose) Robertson, Bob .Mathews or Vern Sheffield, Sales Manager HOUGHTEN Olds OL 1-9761* Rochester Kters, Cruisemetic, power ■ing and brakes. Premium , midnight blua. Immacu-50,000 warranty.. Full i SI 245. $45 down. 1900 Plymouth nine passenger station wagon. I cylinders, automatic, power steering and brakes. Very good condition. Two yean warranty. Full price 1965 Chevrolet Impela Harbor blua, V-t out . poster steering and brakei, tint- 5 English Ford. GT e ket seats, four speed. I m condition. Full price D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER Mr 1868 INwr twi tm )$t>jM«w md IM Cm TmT*>«Po4^^ 11 1-3347. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE._ BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 IMF John McAuiiffo Ford 1964 Ford • Galaxie Convertible with • sun gold finish, black t automatic transmission, p o w steering and power brakes, I price Only— $1095. "It only takas a minute to Cat a 'BETTER DEAL* at" John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ava. . FE 5-4101 1044 THUNDERBIRD WITH AIR _ conditioning, full power, 1 owner, let black finish with tur-quolse leather Interior. Full price STATE WIDE AUtO OUTLET 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 4-3747__ 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 t door hardtop, vt. automatic, powei steering, black vinyl Interior swing away snaring wheel, yellow finish. Only— $1495 BEATTIE . J FALCON 4 DOOR, AUTOMATIC, radio, heater, *1295 at JEROME FORD Rochester* Ford GALAXIE. 2 DOOR I, Auto. Power steer’ star. $3195. 343-4404. ______._______j. Price from it JEROME FORD Rochest-rd Dealer. OL 1-9711, 1940 MEkCURY, RUNS LIKE A —n, $45. Save Auto. FE 5-337* Lease 442.54 per month. KING, AUTO SALES America's Largest Used Car Dealer M59 ot Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 84088 XL 4 DOOR , HARD- 1964 Mercury Comet series 4 door with 4 eyl. standard tram mission, yellow finish, Only— $1095 BEATTIE isnm BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1966 OLDS ,98 Luxury Sedan Full Power including 6 way power seat and factory air......SAVE 1965 MERCURY Parklane 4-door hardtop. All power and factory air ............... $2095 1963 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille, full power, including 6-way seat. Factory air conditioning.$2195 1966 BUICK Electro 4-door hardtop. Full power and factory air —.................... SAVE 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville Convertible. All power, red finish, white top ............ .... .$2395 1965 OLDS "98" hardtop, full power, factory air conditioning, sharp throughout! ......$2695 1966 OLDS Cutlass Convertible. Burgundy with black top. Transferable New Car Warranty.$2595 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham. 647-5111 New md Used Cars 106 Ngw Md lied Can M 1144 TEMFEST CUSTOM STATION ■ssx.msat'^ Autobahn MOTORS. INC. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER. V> mile north of Miracle Mile 174S S. Telegraph FE 1-4531 IMS PONTIAC VENTURA. 15,000 £ZL,m&»Utv rtHI1,lJ ** THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy—Pontiac—Birmingham Aras 1050 Maple, across tooth Bari Airport Mew aad Used Cm 1061 Ml CATAUNA wagon. Mil power, many Wires. $2,aoo. 1390 Joslyn. temfestconVertible. vinyl roof. VI wHh power steering and Henry Fonda narrates this report on U. S. medical teams in action on the battlefields of Viet Nam. AHfww Ss PmtouB Piml* NEW DELHI IBP# - Shankar Prasad, the “human cannonball” of the Geminj Circus, was blown to bits during a recent performance in lhe northern India city Of Lucknow. Reports of the incident said the 25^year-old performer was killed when a charge inside the I 7:01 (2) Bowery Boys (4) Today 7:38 (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:01 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Romper Room 8:30 (7) Movie: “That Uncertain Feeling” (1941) Merle Oberon, Melvyn Douglas. 8:45 (56) English Five 9:08 (2) Merv (biffin (4) Living (9) Bonnie Prudden Show idtlA(56)Let^Read —— 9:38 (9) People in Conflict (56) American History 9:55 (4) News (56) Let’s Talk Spanish 10:00 (4) Eye Guess (9) Canadian Schools (50) Yoga for Health 10:19 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Ontario Schools (50) Love That Bob 10:35 (56) Children’s Hour 10:50 (56) Let’s Talk Spanish 11:61 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Pat Boone (7) Supermarket Sweep (9) Butternut Square (50)Dickory Doc 11:65 (56) Let’s Read 11:38 (2) Dick Van Dyke (4) Hollywood Squares (?) Dating Game (9) Friendly Giant 11:45 (9) Chez Helene AFTERNOON WANTED Restaurant and/or Bar Management Honntt, BondabU, non-drinking, very high type, wonderful personality, good background. Extremely experienced in Ovary phase of feed business. Knew advertising. Public relations, end how to profitably build a business. $3.00 per hour minimum plus percentage, plus bonus for (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Johnny Ginger 4:11 (2) Stmt Storm g| (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Dark Shadows (9) Fun House 4:30 (2) Make Douglas (7) Where the Action Is 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (56) Americans at Work 5:06 (4) George Pierrot (7) News, Weather, Sports (SO) Soupy Sales .. (56) Pathfinder______ 5:36 (9) Cheyenne (50) Superman (56) What’s New 5:45 (7) Network News 5:50 (4) Political Talk 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall |i 2 3 4 5 r- r 8 io ii HA1 11 14 r 16 tiz pr 9 26 r 24 27 28 29 30 31 sr r to K BT r ■ EL 42 43 44 48 46 47 *9 81 jj^ 5T bb 56 57 56 59 24 Cannon Blast Kills Performer Circus cannon exploded prematurely before Prasad had left the barrel. Two circus hands -wore also hurt by die blast. The FBI reported a 6 per cent increase in crime January through March of this year over a corresponding period for 1965. H0MEIMPR0VEMENT IS OUR BUSINESS Why Not Deal Direct? Personal and Direct Supervision on Your Jobl No Salesman’* Commission—No Middleman Profit! TfliMjlHI FAMILY ROOMS $1,295 e KITCHENS e BATHROOMS eALUM. SIDING NO MONEY DOWN—FHA and BANK RATES NO PAYMENTS TIL MAKCH 1987 Member Pontiac Chamber of Commarce (.all Anytnne >. . FE 8-9251 FREE ESTIMATES U M OB WWMDWi (No Oblieatiois) 32® H* PONTIAC House Break-In DETROIT (At») - Assistant Wayne County prosecuting attorney Luvenia Dockett told police Sunday that thieves broke into her house and stole two portable television sets, liquor, two mink wraps and a radio. Write for appointment: Give name, business address, telephone Send to: P.0. Box 21B Orchard Lake, Michigan Can Us For FAST BUILDING SERVICE Winter Is On Its Way! NO MONEY DOWN FREE ESTIMATES 4% mi 8% m m am la Pittime Sines 2982 \5Yimou co ] 032 West Huron Street JBDDBBDO KJ (UCAt NIQHTS a SUNDAYS PHONE! 4>4391 682-8848 MA 4-1811 . - * 014 0019 EM 4.440B Bum Crashing f* Quickly Given Bum's Rush Mock Election Delayed Due io Past'Forecasts' (2) News, Weather, Sports (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Take 36 12:36 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Swingin’ Country (7) Father Knows Best (9) Communicate (50) Movie 12:35 (56) Let’s Talk Spanish 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:56 (56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:88 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “Flesh and Fantasy” (1943) Edward G. Robinson, Charles Boyer. 1:16 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (2) News (4) Doctor’s House Call (56) Arts and Crafts 1:39 (2) As the,World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News (56) American History 2:11 (2) Password l (4) Days of Our Lives > (7) Newlywed Game 2:28 (56) Book Parade 2:88 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Ua (50) Peter Gunn 2:45 (56) Let’s Talk Spanish 2:55 (7) News 3C * -* 3:81 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:11 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses NORTH VERNON, Ind. (AP) • A mock election by.North Vernon High School pupils has been postponed because local politicians feared the results would influence adults.---- Both Democrats and Republicans have objected to the mock balloting which has been held prior to the general election since 1956, school officials said. | [ in past years, the youngsters] By EARL WILSON : predicted upset victories by j NEW YORK — An unkempt panhandler, with a dgaret hang- “electing’’ Sens. Vance Hartke, ins from his line weaved past doormen and ushers during the I and Birch Bayh and former | tiwvery dressy opening of “The ApplejGov Matthew Welsh, all Demo-j Tree” at the Shubert the other night, . . and fiffl An ------------- |H sprawled out in a seat belonging to one of the World’s Best Dressed Women, Mrs. William S. Paley, wife of the CBS board chairman, or one of her guests. When he dropped his lifted cigaret on the carpet, people in the exclusive down-front section began wigwagging. A couple of husky dinner-jacketed theater operatives carried him bodily to the sidewalk, almost bumping into the Paleys, returning to their seats, and to Jolly Joe Levine, who is Mrs. Rosalie Levine’s favorite film producer. I chased out and asked a ticket taker, “Who was that?” “Some bum,” shrugged the ticket taker, “Probably a relative of mine.” crats. All were considered upsets. Hie youngsters this year won’t vote until Nov. 8, the same day as the general elec-tion. .~--------------- WILSON One of the astronauts is reported planning to marry an Eastern Airlines stewardess. (But who isn’t marrying an airlines stewardess these days?)... Irving Berlin’s birthday greeting to Groucho Marx is going around the world: ‘‘The world would not be in such a snarl/if Marx’s name had been Groucho instead of Karl.” I figured out watching lovely Barbara Harris and Alan AMa lathe delightful musical, “The Apple Tree,” that in one qiiirlrjheng#* scene they must have had to use doubles. They denied it - but asked me not to print ttl Figure it out yourself when you ace it — as you must. Perfect Employes Given Barbecue Free Racing Time (See Coupon Below) 2 New 8-Lane Trucks LIKE SPEED? 150-Ft. Track with 50s Banked Turn 110-Ft. Flat Track to Test Driver Skill Drayton Model Speedway 4470 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains OR 3-9372 NORFOLK, Va. UP) - New Hours: 12:68 to 16:36 Bail; COUPON Drayton Model Speedway j 20 Min. FREE! Good Mon., Tues., Wed., | Oct. 24,25,26 Only. Lindt 1 per east than 400 employes of the chassis department of the Norfolk Ford plant got a free barbecue lunch as their reward for building 1,170 cars and trucks without making a single mistake. Plant manager M. T. Runyon! had promised to buy lunch for the first department that went a whole day without an error. The winners worked a tidal of 18,000 error-free hours. “You have set a milestone in the automobile business,” Runyon tokl the men. “I know of no other automobile plant that THL£l?£!?£r. to TV-tape hia Oct. 30 show with S, Did. J* Dyto, '*><" SIS ference . . . French film star Anouk Aimee was barred from £hi ■ y,, ith „ Monsignore - she wore slacks. . .Walter Matthau told Para-swp «8tm withes, mount he won’t do the “Odd Couple” film unless Jack Lemmon; , . _ his “Fortune Cookie” co-star, js in it, too. L/l/IDpS / Of ZOO, James Roosevelt left a UN meeting to phone the Joey Gold agency for “Man of LaMancha” tickets for his boss, Ambassador Jane Are FoUnd Goldberg ... Maurice Chevalier, introducing the much younger A; Charles Aznavour at the Empire Room, said, “I’d be proud to • pLAna D~niL be his father. I’d be even happier to be his non!”... The Doug| M rnone BOOTH McClures finally reached a property setUement. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: This season’s crop of dull TV shows just proves that people would rather look at anything than each other. —Ray Fine. WISH I’D SAID THAT: - The trouble with today’s housewife (claims Vinnie Haggerty) is she’s so busy pushing buttons shehas no time to sew any on. ——- REMEMBERED QUOTE: “When you’re average, you’re i close to the bottom as you are to the top.” EARL’S PEARLS: — “Inexcusable errors” are made hy employes. What the boss commits are “justifiable mistakes.” A Russian woman recently reached her 129th birthday — and if she’s like other women, it’ll be years before she admits she’s 130.... That’s earl, brother. Radio Programs- WJM760)WXrZ0270) CKLW(900) WWJ(W0) WCAM1180) WPOWttO) WJlKQ 500) WHFHM(94.7) “ *:**—WJR. News, Sport* WWJ. Newt. Sport* WXYZ, Nswtcont CKLW, Ntwt, Music WJBK, Music. Sport* tiSS-WJW. But. itrorrwttr t:«-WJR, LowtllThomt* 7:10—WWJ. Newi, PhOD* Opinion WCAR, N*WS, Ron Rom WHpT. Dlnnpr Cenctri 7:t»—WXYZ, JMy RSTBSlCl*. Musk, N*w* f% 7ilS—WJR. Economic Club liBB-WHFI,- British Jtzi CKLW, Music WWJ, Ntwt, Sportslln# WJR, Mmin. Music *rSS-WHFI, Jsck Fuller f:SS-WJR, lliSS-WJR* tic IliBB-WWA Music, Sports, Mu- gU NBNNH,„_ Sportsll TUESDAY MORNING WJBK, News, Books, Edl-. Vgrlet, Music WXYZ, Msrc Awry Ntwt, wjr, Nswt, Musk ten WPON. Nswt, Bob Lswrtnc* 7:SS—WJBK, Vtn Patrick SiSS—WJR, Ntwt, SunnysM* •iSS-WJR, Musk Hall t:SS—WJR, Ntwt, Htrrlt WCAR. .News, Stndtrt whfi, Undt Jty CKLW, Jot Van WWJ, Nswt, Ntlghter IS.SS—WJR, NtWt, Good - Mutlc . WXYZ, Srstkfait club WJSK, Nswt, Musk WFON, Ntwt, Bsn Jobnton it iSS-WJR, Ntwt, Amur TUESDAY AFTERNOON IStSB—WJR, Ntwt. Psrm WWJ, Rtvltwi Ntwt; M*r- WCAR.^Ntwt, Dtv* Lock- WHFI, Ntwt, Encort WJBK,-Ntwt, Shirley Eder ltBB-WWJ, Newt, Call Ken- NEW YORK (AP) — Tarzan and Jane, 18-month-old chlm-inzees who were abducted ear-Saturday from Brooklyn’s Prospect Park zoo, were found iday — in a telephone booth. An anonymous tip to police sent them to Myrtle and Franklin Avenues. They opened the] door of the booth and there were the chimps, huddled in a cardboard carton. ★ ★ ★ Both zoo customers and officials mtysed the 2%-foot-tall chimps so much that yesterday the keepers started a Tarzan ami Jane ransom fund to be turned over to anyone producing them — no questions asked. MY BUSINESS: Working Solutions To Your Living Problems! Let’s Talk REMODELING Eliminate In-Gntween Costs and Confusion... I Personally Will Call OnYoul REMODELING raSSSSBT ★ KITCHENS . ★TMS * ATTICS ★JDDITIONS ★mil ★ SIDING 2 Are Charged DETROlXP — Police Sunday charged /Thomas Johnson and Glenn Muhem, both 22 and both of Detyoit, with murder occurring during the commission of a felqpy. They are charged in con-tion with the attempted rob y of a store Saturday night suburban Lincoln Parte. One! robber, William Turner, 24, of Wyandotte, was shot end killed tor a watchman in the robbery attempt. FREE ESTIMATES 27 Years Local Success and Laysirt Strvic* *FS*rsdBBl Supsrvition Of III Mails pFLscal Contrtclor FHA AND BANK TERMS UP TO 21YURS AN OPPORTUNITY TO BID FOR YOUR WORK WILL PLEASE US BOTH C0NSTRU0TION COMPANY 739 North Perry PONTIAC FE 3-7833 D—10 TIIE rONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1 No Clues to Killer of Educator, Daughter TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -The killer of a Florida Department of Education official and his 12-year-old daughter in their fashionable home left no clues, and Sheriff William Joyce said today no motive had been found. Killed Saturday night were Robert W. Sms, 42, director of data processing, and his daughter, lay Lynn. Each had been bound, gagged and shot once in the head. The daughter had seven stab wounds in me chest and abdomen. fr i* ‘ * Sims’ wife, Helen, was bound, gagged and shot twice in the head and once in toe leg. She was in “very critical” condition at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital. All three were blindfolded and tour hands tied behind their- backs before being shot witoi what was believed to be a 38-caliber pistol. 'At this point we can find no motive,” Sheriff Joyce said, "There was no sign of disorder in the house and the money and valuables were intact,” DISCOVERED BY DAUGHTER Another daughter, Norma Jeannette, 17, discovered toe two bodies and her wounded mother when she returned home from a football game about 11:15 p.m. Saturday. The ranch-style house, in toe $25,000 class, is at 641 Murid Court, a short, circular street in the Parkside subdivision, six blocks from a high school. Sims was lying on the bed in the master bedroom and his wife and child on the floor. They CONFRONTATION - Villagers In a remote section of South Viet Nam, 90 miles north of Saigon near the Cambodian border, inspect a column of armored personnel carriers and tanks of the U. S. 1st Division’s 4th Cavalry during a pause in a recent patrol. had been gagged and bound with ties and soda. * . » ♦ . Sims was dressed in slacks, a sport shirt, socks and shoes. His wife wore pink slacks and a blouse. A neighbor reported that toe heard high-pitched screams about 10:45 pin. but thought they came from children. Other residents of toe area *said they heard nothing. a Another daughter, Judith, 16, returned home from a baby sitting job after toe bodies had been found. Nonna called mi ambulance and it was driven by Russell Bevis, an undertaker, Pickets Cha rge Rental Bias ANN ARBOR (AP) - More than 30 pickets, mostly University of Michigan students, marched at the home of an Ann Arbor couple Sunday. The demonstrators charged that Mr. and Mrs. Martin Wagner attempted to evict two coeds from a house in which they are part owners because Negroes visited the coeds. I AAA Police stood by after white, youths in a passing car hurled ggs at the pickets. The Wagners are co-owners with a daughter, Joan Wagner, of a house occupied by Carol Sue Oakes, 25, of Mount Vernon, Ohio, and Sharon Johnstone, 24, of Binghampton, N.Y. Both women lire graduate, atudents in social work at U. of M. CHARGES FILED Miss Oakes and Miss Johnstone earlier this month filed charges of racial discrimination against Mr. and Mrs. Wagner with the Ann Arbor Human Relations Commission. ★ A A The coeds accused Mr. and Mrs. Wagner bf ordering them to leave the rental property be-e of pressure from neighbors who objected to the visits by Negroes, said David Cowley,1 commission director. and bis son, Rocky. They called' i police, who were on toe scene within minutes, HOME OF COLLEGE? Tallahassee is a city of 48,000 in North Florida, about 18 miles from toe Georgia Bne. In addition to being the seat of toe state government, it is the home of Florida State University and Florida A. & M. University: A * A ''7 The Parkside area of university professors and higher-in comb state officials was shocked. The street where toe Sims family lived was closed to traffic after hundreds of sightseers converged uponit. The dty assigned a policeman to patrol toe street on foot and residents kept their house lights on throughout the night. i: 'A .-A Sims, a native of Meridian, Miss., was a graduate of Mis-Southem and received his doctor’s degree from FSU in 1961. He had taught in high schools at Seminary, Mss., and Cairo, Ga., and was principal of the high school at Meigs, Ga., for two years before moving to Florida. A A A Sims went to work for the education department in 1956 on a part-tone basis and joined toe department full-time in 1958. Mrs. Sims is a native of Middleton, Tetin. Fire at Airport Hits Building JACKSON (UPI) - Fire of undetermined orign Saturday night damaged the Jackson Flight Service’s building at Reynolds Municipal Airport. The Flight Service, operated by the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA), transmits weather and other flight conditions to aircraft in the area. A A A A FAA spokesman said no aircraft were in danger .when the communications were knocked out by the fire in the basement of the two-story bidding. There was no immediate dollar esti-mate of toe damage. YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR COMFORT.. .THOMAS FORNTTURE’S ‘RELAXATIOH CENTER’! choose your Stratolounger, Stratorester or Stratorocker now for immediate delivery! After o busy day, when you're tired and tense, what could be more inviting than sinking idown into the blissful comfort of one of these Strotoloungers, Stratoresters^or Stratorockers? Comfort is just one of the benefits. Thomas Furniture features^ beautiful array of colonial, traditional and modern styles covered in your choice of decorator fabrics or leather-like Vinelle. Visit Thomas Furniture today and start enjoying o year 'round vacation of luxury! X Variable speed vibrator included in feature chair -optional on ony other Stratolounger for just.. *11” Man-Sizes Sfrato-lounger with adjustable head pillow. Black Vinelle or olive tweed...........$159.95 Colonial Stratorocker with maple trim. Covered in Olive Green tapestry-. $169.95 DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY • OR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY. THURSDAY. FRIDAY *Ttl 9 - a . The Weather UJ. Weathtr Bureau Fore Wr, Warmer (Details Page 2) VOL. 124 — NO. 222 __ MAKE OVER PAGES PONTIAC PRESS ★ ★ ★ ★ if POftTlAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 —44 PAGES LBJ Says Asian Unity Fuels Peace Vitamin A Curbs Lung Cancer in Animal Tests 1966 Congress to Have Impact All Americans to Feel Effects of Legislation TOKYO UP1)— Big doses of vitamin A can halt or prevent development of lung cancer in animals, a scientist reported today, ■ 1 He has found a way of inducing lung cancer — the same kind that humans get—in hamsters. But when he also feeds them vitamin A, ■*--------- very few come down with lung tumors. His findings, he stressed, are by no means an invitation for cigarette smokers or people living in air-polluted areas to start gulping down vitamin A, or'lots of carrots which are rich in the vitamin. Too much vitamin A can be harmful to humans. Dr. Umberto Saffiotti, Italian born pathologist now at the Chicago Medical School, described his research at opening scientific sessions of the Ninth International Cancer Congress. He amplified them in an interview. He turned up evidence that ' dust particles in the air, or in cigarette smoke, .can be, the “carriers” to take cancer-causing chemicals into the lungs. * * * Using hamsters, he prepared inert dust particles to which were attached crystals of a potent caBcer-caused benzpyrene. Benzpyrene is found in smoke or exhausts from industrial plants, automobiles, coal fur. napes, and also jn cigarette smoke. ' He injected this material down the windpipes of hamsters, rather than let them breathe it in over a period of months or years. He could follow what happened because the be^pyrene fluoresces. The dust particles mostly became lodged in the walls of bronchioles and alveoli, or air sacs. Soon the benzpyrene dissolved and spread through the lungs. The chemical attacked the bronchial tissues from the inside, in a sneak backdoor approach, avoiding the surface mucosa or cilia that could have a sweeping-away action. Normal cells began changing to cancerous cells. Hamsters given dust only, without benzpyrene, did not get tumors. Looking for a way to prevent the cancers, Dr. Saffiotti gave some hamsters — already treated with combined dust — two 5,-000-unit feedings of vitamin A. Only one developed a tumor, compared with 30 per cent of a group of dusted mice not getting the vitamin. WASHINGTON CAP) — The 1966 session of the “Great Socie-ty” Congress will have profound * impact on all Americans — their hopes and fears, their pocketbooks, their way of life. A stepped-up war on poverty, billions more for the Viet Nam war, sums to stake education at home, a boost in the' minimum wage, auto safety, consumer protection, new remedies for ailing cities and public transportation, steps to clean up the air and waters, to beautify highways —these are just a few of the problems Congress tackled. In Franklin D. Roosevelt’s day, the cliche was that the New Deal affected people from cradle to grave. The Johnsonian Congress has expanded that, at least at one end. The second session of the 89th Congress specifically authorized Sargent Shriver, director of the war on poverty, to provide birth control devices upon request of a local community, and the women involved. ★ ★ * . On the other end, Congress cut the excise tax on hearses from 10 to 7 per cent — but don’t count on a cheaper funeral-as a result. . m ‘TYPICAL’ FAMILY To explore the effect of the programs enacted or extended this year, let’s take a “typical” family living in Beauville, a mythical Midwest city (pop. 15,- -000). Seme of the things the 1966 session did for, or to, this family: Dad — His take-home pay dropped by $2.40 a week on May 1, because the income tax withholding went up from 620.80 to $23.20. * it it However, if he has $15,000 in, the bank or savings and loan, it will now be fully insured, as compared with the previous $10,000 limit. If he’s (Cohtinued on Page 2, Col. 8) ) In Today's | Press jf Manila Confab § Talks open as folksy | 4 mood prevails — PAGE I I B-7. | Florida Slayings 1 | No clues to killer til 1 | two — PAGE D-10. i Model-City Plan 1 I Urban chief cites world i I potential — PAGE C-6. 1 % Area News .........:A-4 § S8 Astrology ......... Cl I Bridge .............C-8 8 ) Crossword Puzzle ...D-9 Comics ..............C8 Editorials .........A-6 Markets ............ D4 Obituaries ........ B-8 Sports ..........C-1-C4 . Theaters ..... . c-9 | TV-Radio Programs . D-9 Wilson, Earl ......., D-9 Women’s Pages B-l—B-4 laps* MANILA (AP) - The UJ5. commander in Viet Nam told the Manila summit conference today the war is “far from over” and he will need more troops in the days ahead, but President Johnson said a display of unity by the allies here should provide new fuel for the cause of peace. ★ ★ ★ “Let foe bullies Of the world know that when they do attadk their neighbors, the friends of their neighbors will be there to resist,” the President said in this first day of meetings among the leaders of nations fighting Communists in Viet Nam. Johnson was the last speaker of the day. His remarks came after Gen. William C. Westmoreland ,the UJS. commander, reported to the leaders that allied forces are increasingly effective in battling foe Communists. Westmoreland said troop morale was high. ' “Thp troops are foe finest ever fielded; they understand foe conflict and appreciate their complex role as both fighters and builders.” The session in which Westmoreland and the President spoke was dosed to foe public, but their remarks were given to newsmen later by U.S. spokesmen. White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers gave the account of Johnson’s remarks. Johnson summed up what he portrayed as foe four main principles which had stood out in foe talks of those leaders who spoke before him. He listed them as: • The determination of all that aeuression must fail • Commitment to the job of pacification, • Our commitment to and our awareness of regional cooperation among Asian countries, and • The hope for,.reconciliation and a peaceful settlement. * * It was then that he said unity and determination of the seven allies in Viet Nam should prove to be “pew fuel for foe cause of peace” j either through negotiations or a halt by the Communist aggression. Before Johnson spoke, Westmoreland was asked by one of Maiacanang Palace, president Johnson is at the right with Secre- the Philippines, South Viet Nam and Thailand.'- K 'End Measles' Drive Called Big Success There was much wailing yesterday as 35,000 Oakland County youngsters got foe needle in a tricounty “End Measles” campaign. Thirty-eight clinics operated in Oakland County from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. to inoculate children over one year of age who had never had natural measles (seven day measles) or a previous measles vaccination. Some of foe centers were still open at 5 p.m. handling the overflow. “The doctors and nurses in Pontiac did a terrific job. The drive exceeded all of our expectations” said Dr. Bernard Berman, director of foe Oak- land County Health Department and chairman of foe program. The campaign was organized by End Measles Detroit Inc., a non profit corporation chartered by foe State of Michigan to promote and augment a mass inoculation funded by foe state. ★ ★ ★ Yesterday’s campaign immunized more than 175,000 youngsters in the tricounty area ih-cluding Oakland, Wayne and Macomb counties. The total response was so overwhelming that more vaccine was rushed in from Lansing. With foe aid of REACT and RACES, amateur mobile radio operator groups, who handled foe communications between Oakland County inoculation sites, Vaccine was rushed from one center to another to meet specific demands. Measles, once thought a humorous disease which only gave one red spots, is now known to cause serious complications including pneumonia, bronchitis, and varying degrees of brain damage. ★ ★ ★ The single-shot vaccine will give the recipient a light case of measles and provide full protection to those later exposed to virus Rubeola, more commonly called red Or hard measles. CYCLICAL BASIS Dr. Berman has poipted out that measles outbreaks occur on a cyclical basis and that foe winter of 1966-67 had been viewed as a high-incidence period. ★ ★ ★ Legislation was signed recently by Gov. Romney adding common measles to the inoculation list. for all children school after Jan. 1, 1967. ★ ★ ♦ No follow-up to yesterday’s program is planned but measles vaccine can be obtained through private physicians or at health department clinics. MEASLES CAMPAIGN — Little John C. Val-lance Jr., 2, of 3660 Alfcfo, Avon Township, js comforted by his mother as. nurse Mrs. Avis Green ygives him A measles shot, ( The “End ' . ‘ * ■ s , Measles” campaign was held yesterday in Oakland, Wayne and Macomb counties. Hundreds of volunteer doctors and nurses staffed nearly 200 clinics In foe trlcounty area. ’‘Did you ever have a day when you can’t seem to do anything wrong?” ELECT L. HARVEY LODGE. ST ATI Senate, Nov. Mil. —Adv. Soviet Spy's Escape Stirs British Outcry LONDON (AP) — A political storm descended on Prime Minister Harold Wilson today over foe escape of double agent George make, sprung Saturday night from a London jail where he was serving foe longest sentence in modern English history. Scotland Yard kept special watch on eight Communist ships at the London docks and on Communist embassies and Communist-front institutions. But detectives speculated that Blake, 44, had been spirited out of Britain within hours Of his escape from Wormwood Scrubs Prison. Conservative legislators served notice they will seek to ■ censure the government for failing to keep Blake under closer wraps. Sentenced in 1961 to 42 years as the most dangerous spy of foe postwar years, he was kept without special security in a jail from which eight escapes already had been made this year. Blake broke the bars of a window on a second-story landing, apparently with some tool which has not been traced, dropped into an exercise yard and-climbed a rope ladder over the 20-foot prison wall. ONLY 2 REAL CLUES Police believe a car was waiting by the wall for him. . The plotters left only two ^ real dues. One was a pot of geraniums in foe road outside the prison. Detectives believe it was either a marker for the getaway car or . was carried by Blake’s accomplices to suggest they were visiting Hammersmith Hospital across foe road. The other clue was 20 steel knitting needles, size 13, which were used to reinforce the rungs of foe rope ladder. Blake’s unprecedented sentence was for nine years of spying for the Soviet Union while he was employed by foe British Foreign Office. more troops in Viet Nam. He replied that he would. But a top military informant , explained later this need is due, at least irt part, to plans to put increasing emphasis on dearing and ( holding areas of South Viet Nam for pacification and reconstruction. , A stepup in what President Johnson calls this “other war” to improve foe living conditions of the South Vietnamese people and develop loyalty to foe Saigon government is said to be a major concern of the seven allied governments meeting in Manila. Allied forces in South Viet Nam now total slightly more than one million men under arms, according to officials in Saigon, while the. Communist armed strength is eratynated at 284,000 mefi. ^ ; .-df The allied force includes 705,-000 South Vietnamese, 331,000 Americans, 45,000 Soufo Koreans, 4,500 Australians, 2,000 Filipinos, 150 New Zealanders and 150 from Thailand. Westmoreland said the ratio of men killed in battle is becoming more favorable to foe allies, the number of enemy soldiers surrendering in battle has increased, foe number of enemy casualties left on the battle field rather tnan carried off is rising, and foe stream of refugees choosing government security over Viet Cong domination continues to grow. U.S. Asking Confab: Aid POW Swap MANILA (AP) — The United States is asking the Manila summit conference to make a bid for some agreement to swap prisoners with Communist North Viet Nam, it was learned today. The United States wants to include such a bid in foe meeting’s final statement, to be signed at foe windup tomorrow. Officials in Washington believe North Viet Nam is holding more than 100 Americans. North Viet Nam has spurned all attempts to talk about foe American pilots it holds, even through a third party. The International Red Cross has tried without success to get Hanoi to allow Red Cross representatives to see foe Americans held prisoner in the North. Although a hard liner toward negotiations with North Viet Nam, Premier Nguyen Cao Ky of Soufo Viet Nam has shown a sympathetic attitude toward possible exchanges to free American fliers from Red captivity. The Saigon government has custody of most North Vietnamese captured in foe ground fighting. CAPTIVE SAILORS The only North Vietnamese the United States is known to hold are 19 sailors picked up in international waters after their PT boats were sunk in action. Hanoi has paraded captured U.S. pilots through the streets of the capital to whip up public anger at American air raids. North Viet Nam has threatened a number of times to try them as war criminals but has not gone through with its threat. Agreement by the North Vietnamese to negotiate on the question of war prisoners could be a wedge for wider talks on the Viet Nam war itself. It might also open the way to freedom for other Americans captured by the Viet , Cong in South Viet Nam. Fair and Warmer Is 2-Day Forecast The Pontiac area will be heated to a welcome serving of Indian summer as the weatherman predicts fair and warmer for tomorrow and Wednesday. Tonight's low will range from 32 to 37 with tomorrow’s high in foe 60s. Prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac, the low thermometer reading registered 38. By I p.m., sunshine warmed foe mercury to 59. ' 'ilW r-2______________LJL M U3A0 ]WW TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 •UBS* , '’vr, -* , • Vs if' • > . ' ra Soviet Union, Red Chinese Exchange Blasts MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Union accused Red China today of practicing “an absurd bar-racks-style communism,” and Peking described the Soviet leadership as “a gang of rene- An article in die Soviet Corn-munist party paper Pravda attacked Chinese Communist Chairman Mao Tse-tung’s “cultural revolution." It asserted real communism has nothing to do with the type of activities undertaken in China’s'purge, which it described as: “The destruction of monuments; of ancient civilization, the destruction of masterpieces of world culture, the manhandling of workers and progressive intellectuals, the defama- tion of Communist party oreani-Tantation of the rations, the 4 Mao Tse-tung personality cult.” Hie trouble, Pravda said, was that “petty bourgeois revolutionaries” had distorted the sit- uation in China because of pressure created by a massive peasant population. The Chinese attack against tiie Soviet Union was contained in an article in the Peking People’s Daily which criticized the U.S.S.R. for expelling Chinese students. Moscow ordered the ouster of the Chinese students 'Oct. 7, claiming it was in retaliation for the expulsion of Soviet students from China in September. “The expulsion of the Chinese students is a new high in the Soviet anti-China tide and a please U.S. imperial- present to pie ism,” the People’s Daily article said: The article was broadcast by, Peking’s New China News Agency. “The score will have to be settled one Wr said the article. “They will be made , to pay . for their unprincipled evil-doing.*’ Chinese Red Guards demon- strated Sunday night outside the Soviet Embassy in Peking, .the Soviet news agency Tass reported. The Red Guards — the muscle behind the cultural revolution -pasted a huge slogan across the street from the embassy saying: “We strongly , protest against the expulsion'by Soviet revisionist authorities of Chinese students who-were studying in the Soviet Union," Tass said. j&irmingham Area News Traffic Diverter Island Will Face Commission BIRMINGHAM — The < Commission tonight will to consider a traffic diverter island on the west of Adams at Mohegan. The administration has ommended against such a _ verter, according to Assistant City Manager John Saefke. If the commission decides . a diverter is needed, he said, the administration suggests a temporary island. A date for a public hearing will have to be set if the corn-ton decides on a permanent island. I'll Fight to the End —O'Brien LANSING (AP) - State Sen. Bernard F. O’Brien Jr. promises to tight his conviction on charge of engaging in obscene conduct “just as far as I have to The 31-year-old Detroit Democrat was convicted Saturday of “being a disorderly person by engaging in obscdhe conduct in a public place.” Lansing Township Justice George J. Hutter gave O’Brien the maximum sentence, 90 <’ in jail and a $100 fine, but suspended 80 of the 90 days. O’Brien was released on $500 bond pending his appeal to Ingham County Circuit Court. NEW DELHI, India (AP) £= fhe government chiefs of India, Yugoslavia and the United Arab Republic called today for an immediate halt to the American bombing of North Viet Nam and the withdrawal of all foreign forces from Viet Nam. In their closing communique, the leaders of the three non-aligned countries also said participation of the Communist Viet Cong in any peace talks was essential for the talks to be sue cessful. The communique was issued by Indian Prime Minister In- The jury reached its verdict after more than seven hours of deliberations, which began Friday. ‘NOT A FAIR TRIAL’ O’Brien said to was surprised at the verdict and claimed the trial had not been fair. He was certain his conviction would to overturned on appeal, he said. The prosecution contended O’Brien accosted Marion Lu-kens, 22, a Michigan State University coed from Santa Ana., Calif., mi tiie MSU campus May 27 and asked her to agree to be photographed during sexual in-tercourse with movie stars. O’Brien produced six alibi Witnesses who said they saw or telephoned him at the State Capitol Building, about four miles from the campus, at the time Miss Lukens alleged to was with her. Four girls besides Miss Lukens testified O’Brien had also accosted them and three said he made similar proposals. ‘INSURANCE LOBBY* O’Brien, chairman of the Senate Insurance Committee, maintained during and after the trial that false charges against him had been engineered by “the insurance lobby:’’ O’Brien’s wife, Mary Louise, burst into tears momentarily as jury foreman Betty Jane Riley announced the verdict. O’Brien showed little emotion. The O’Brien’s have four children and are expecting a fifth. 3 Nations' Chiefs Urge BombHalUioopPullout dira Gandhi and Presidents Tito and Gamal Afoden Nasser after four days of talks. They said they are convinced the implementation of the 1954 Geneva agreements and the withdrawal of all foreign forces would lead to peace. Newsmen asked Nasser if the communique’s request for the Withdrawal of all foreign forces meant ihe withdrawal of North Vietnamese forces from the south and non-Vietnamese Communist forces from North Viet Nam. Senior Citizen Units to Fete Rep. Farn DENY FORCES IN SOUTH “The North Vietnamese say they do not have any forces in the south. It is not clear to us if they do,” Nasser replied. Tito, asked about reports that President Johnson had sent a note to New Delhi in connection with the opening of the Manila conference, said: * * This meeting has nothing in common with the Manila conference. * * Congressman Billie S. Farnum will be honored at luncheon tomorrow by senior citizen organizations in his district. The 19th District representative will be presented an award ‘Tor his leading -role in the fight for Medicare, increases in Social Security benefits and the Older Americans Act.” The sponsoring committee said Farnum “has always, recognized the dire needs of older citizens and has voted for the important legislation to meet those needs.” The luncheon will be held in the CAI Building, 5640 Williams Lake, Waterford Township. Members of the sponsoring committee include Mrs. Eva McCarthy^ member of the Oakland County Senior Citizens Advisory Council; Marie Aid-rich, secretary of the Pioneer Golden Age Club of Farming-ton; and George Cherry, procoordinator for senior citizens activities, OCCEO. Others are Kenneth D. Conley, director of senior citizens activities in Northville; and Charles Kokotek, Pontiac area secretary for the National Council of Senior Citizens. A Keego Harbor woman who i spearheading a local drive to lower food prices said today that she expects the campaign to spread throughout Oakland County. “I’ve already received a number of letters from women wanting to know more about what we’re doing,” said Mrs. Joseph Szeremet, 758 Otter. On Saturday, Mrs. Szeremet led n score of pickets protesting high food pices at a new A&P supermarket in Keego Harbor. The Weather Full UJS. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly sunny tonight and tomorrow. Warmer tomorrow. Lows tonight 32 to 37. Westerly winds 8 to 18 miles today and 4 to 12 tonight. Wednesday’s outlook: Fair and warmer. Precipitation probabilities tonight and tomorrow near zero. I Tuesday at 4:51 • Downtown Ttmperoturts Weekend in Pontiac r, Windy. y'u Temperature Chart 55 31 Duluth 53 29 Port Worth 75 51 58 37 Jacksonvlllt “ ■ 40 35 Kansas City __ 57 33 Los Angeles 89 One Year Age It Highest temperature .. Lowest temperature .... Mean temperature Weather—Scattered sui Marquette Muskegon w *o miiwouKee ,. Pension 50 33 New Orlia 38 I Traverse C. 51 30 Ntw York . 33 I Albuquerque 64 40 Phoenix . .35.5 Atlanta 65 60 Pittsburgh Beach 85 57 33 56 S. Lake 46 S. Francisco 78 60 34 $. Sts. Marla | M 37 Washington NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain and showers are in sight, says the Weather Bureau, for the north Pacific and south AUtttic.coasts tonight. The reat of the nation will be clear j togtai^ cloudy. # ^ Store Boycott Spread Is Seen Area Woman Tells of Food Price Campaign ’Well resume next weekend at the store, and i»ossibly others,” she said. j. Szeremet, -whose group is known as “Housewives for Lower Food Prices, ” said she believed that the picketing of the store was effective. The boycott was one of several that has sprung up .across the country since the movement to lower prices started in Denver,. Colo., more than a week ago. Crew Flees Fiery Ship; 7 Missing MORGAN CITY, La. (AP) Flames raged out of control through an oil and gasoline-loaded tanker 60 miles southwest of here today, forcing the crew to abandon ship. The Coast Guard said seven of the 40 crewmen are missing. The Gulf Stag, a 572-foot vessel, was settling and believed sinking at midmoming. Another tanker, the Atlantic Prestige, picked up the Gulf Stag’s capitan and mainy of the crewmen. The Gulf Stag’s master, whose name was not available, said he believed all his crewmen had abandoned ship. He said seVen crewmen are missing. HOSPITALIZED A Coast Guard Helicopter took three badly-burned crewmen to a Morgan City hospital. A doctor at the hospital said the trio suffered second-degree bums. The hospital identified the injured crewmen as Paul Berry, Wilton Guthrie and Jesse Jef-frier. Their home towns were not available. Coast Guard planes, helicopters and cutters converged on the scene after the Gulf Stag sent out an SOS, reporting a fire blazing fiercely in its engine room and pump room. Rescue ships were forced to keep their distance by the danger of an explosion; The Gulf Stag reportedly carried 163,000 barrels of gasoline and intermediates. SMOKE, FLAMES Smoke and flames poured from the stricken vessel. The fire reportedly was feeding off bunker 1 oil. Fire-fighting attempts were abandoned by 8:30 a.m. The Coast Guard declared the area around the burning ship a restricted zone and warned aircraft not to fly lower than 2,000 feet in the vicinity because of the danger of an explosion. The Gulf Oil Co., owns the ship. The Gulf Stag had left Port Arthur, Tex., Sunday for Tampa, Fla. CLEVELAND (UPI) - Looking jaunty in a gray suit and puffing an extraloflg stem pipe, Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard arrived 10 minutes early today for his second trial in the courthouse where he was convicted of murdering his pregnant wife 12 years ago. New York is the nation’s busiest air traffic complex. On an average day 2,600 planes land or take off from its main airports — Kennedy International, La Guardia and nearby Newark. Another 1,500 fly daily out of Teterhoro and Floyd Bennett airfields, both close to the city. A REAL ‘PAPER DOLL’-Paper spots glued on clear vinyl over a pair of red bikini panties qualify this dress worn by model Peggy Moffitt as a paper dress. She’s talking with designer Rudy Gernreich', who escorted Miss Moffitt to a paper dress ball in Hartford, Conn., last night. More than 150 paper gowns were worn to the affair, and reportedly rapJt of them holt) up to the test of frugging, etc. (See story, page C-9). ~ ’Du SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) | - Small-scale fighting flared Monday in scattered sections of South Viet Nam, but the war for the most part continued in a lull. Thunderstorms of the northeast monsoon again cut heavily into U.S. air blows against North Viet Nam. Although a general upsurge in Communist military activity and terrorism failed to develop to coincide with the opening of the Manila summit conference, civilian bus hit a Viet Cong mine 22 miles, north of Hue, killing 15 Vietnamese and injuring 20. BACK IN COURT — Samuel H. Sheppard walks toward the Cuyahoga County Criminal Court Building this morning for the first day of his murder trial. Sheppard was convicted 12 years ago in the slaying of his first wife, Marilyn, but was released on bond in 1964 on a U.S. District Court ruling later upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. He is being tried again, this time for second-degree murder. Jaunty ’Dr. Sam' Arrives Early for Second Ohio Trial The Viet Cong made mortar attacks on four South Vietnam-outposts in the central highlands Sunday and two on American positions in the northern provinces today. In one shelling, the Reds fired 30 to 40 mortar rbunds against the command post Of the U.S. 7th Marine Regiment about two miles south of the demilitarized Dr. Sam” walked with bouncy strides across the street with a member of his defense counse) team, Russell A. Sherman, 31, of Elyria, Ohio, preceded by newsreel and television photographers. The second act of the most sensational trial of this generation had been scheduled to get under way at 8 a.m. EST, but Common Pleas Judge Francis J. Talty scheduled a half-hour conference with attorneys to discuss preliminary motions and tactics. in. the first-degree murder trial of John L. Vanatta, in a courtroom just around the comer from the Sheppard courtroom. Hie Vanatta courtroom present ed an interesting contrast with Sheppard’s. Judge Talty had reserved 14 front-row seats for 12 news media representatives in the Sheppard courtroom, but said that any others must stand in line with the audience to get in. Sheppard stood in a second-, floor corridor of the Criminal Courts Building, chatting with Sherman, chief defense counsel F. Lee Bailey and Paul Holmes, former newspaperman now associated with the defense. Sheppard was nonchalant, smiling at times. MURDER TRIAL The conference in the judge’s chambers was delayed because Prosecutor John T. Corrigan M to testify as a rebuttal witness Talty prohibited cameras in the building and banned interviews with persons connected with the trial. He said no reporter could leave or enter except during recesses. In (he Vanatta courtroom, Judge John L. Angelotta had allowed a small table to be set up for newsmen inside, the bar rail about four feet from the defendant. Reporters were permitted to come and go freely. The judge has aUowed photographers to make pictures in the hall outside. NO LINE Contrary to the scene 12 years ago, there was no line of spectators outside Courtroom No. 2, just across the -hall from the trial room where “the state pf Ohio Vs. Sam H. Sheppard” started on OcL 18, 1954. Lull in War Continues in S, Viet Nam would consist of reconstruction of the Adams pavement at Mohegan to form a lane for southbound Adams traffic to turn west at Mohegan; a lane for eastbound Mohegan traffic to tum south at Adams; and triangular-shaped traffic diverter island located between the two turn lanes and the Adams pavement. THROUGH TRAFFIC Such an island-would prevent east-west through traffic, left turns from northbound Adams to Mohegan and left turns from eastbound Mohegan to northbound Adams. The engineering department plans to, take a survey of residents in the Oakland area, from Woodward to Hunter, to determine if a relief sewer is needed before paving Oakland. A slight increase in load will be placed on the sewer system when Oakland is widened and the department wants residents to report any flooding of their basement caused by an overloaded city sewer. RETURN FIRE The Leathernecks replied with counter-mortar fire, and a 7th Fleet destroyer fired 100 rounds of five-inch shells. Marine alties were reported light; results of the counterfire were not announced. A unit of the UJ5. 173rd Airborne Brigade received 15 rounds of Communist mortar fire eight miles northwest of Da Nang airfield. A U.S. spokesman said the paratroopers had light casualties. U.S. troops reported killing 100 Communist soldiers in small unit clashes in scattered areas Sunday and today. One company of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division killed 17 Viet Cong in sampans in four separate firefights Sunday night. The fighting took place seven miles north of Saigon. A U.S. spokesman said American casualties were light in all the actions. 51 MISSIONS U.S. airmen flew only 51 bombing missions over North Viet Nam Sunday, one of their smallest days this year. A spokesman said the raids were limited by the monsoon rains, which also reduced the allied tactical air strikes in South Viet Nam. * * * Pilots reported 28 cargo barges and junks destroyed or damaged in the North and two bridges knocked out in the Dien Bien Phu area near the Laqjian frontier. U.S. B52 bombers struck just before midnight at s Communist troop concentrations and supply areas 18 miles south-iwest of Hue. Grieving Welsh Parents Disturb Inquest ABERFAN, Wales (AP) Shouting “They killed our children!” * bereaved brought uproar today to^Sn inquest for young victims of the coal slag slide that buried Aber-fan’s village school. A man whose wife and two sons were killed in Friday’s “black glacier” told the coroner to record a verdict of “buried alive by the National Coal Board." mothers and fathers by toying: T know your grief is such that you may not realize what you are saying.’’ ■■ The board, which runs 1 ain’s state-owned mines, has been accused of neglect in allowing the giant slag heap to grow to the point where it collapsed. To date, 143 bodies have been recovered, all but 17 of them children. M PARENTS PRESENT Sixty parents were present at the inquest for the first 34 victims identified. In Othe uproar, women called out: ‘They killed our children." \ '• Coroner Benjamin Hamilton tried to calm tiie distraught He reminded the parents “an inquiry will be held at a later date when you will to able to voice your grievances.” One father, his face twisted in sorrow, replied': “We had an inquiry on Friday night when we stood and saw our children murdered.” least 17 children 'were still missing. It was believed they were swept away by the avalanche of mud and rock. STILL INSIDE | Police said 35 persons were believed still inside the crushed houses. Some of these were children, too. SOON AS POSSIBLE er British law, inquests on all iolent deaths are held as soon as possible after the event. Officials estimated that more than 50 others were still under the waste and slime that descended on the village school FYiday from the man-made mountain of coal mine refuse! Hundreds of miners and vol- unteers struggled on through vay tiie the night, shOveUng away millions of tons of waste from (to school and 16 nearby houses. Ttosdiool wasjeleared, but at Prayers for the dead and bereaved were said Sunday in churches throughout Britain. In Rome, Pope Paul VI asked pilgrims in St. Peter’s Square to pray for Aberfan and said: “it disaster which fills ' heart with tenderness and grief.’* The traffic diverter 1966 Congress to Have Impact (Continued From Page One) thinking of buying a new car in 1968, he can expect it to be more ‘crashworthy.” Meantime, the manufacturers’s excise tax on new autos has gone up from 6 to 7 per ( cent, and the tax cm phone calls from 3 to 10 per cent. As for creation, if dad *s a sports fan, he can look forward to seeing more pro football games. Mom — The supermarket labyrinth will to a little easier to figure out, though not right away. Labels will be easier to read, giant half-quarts and jumbo pounds are oil their way out, and the air space in the top of the package seems likely to diminish. ★ ★ ★ Mom can hope for a totter education for Nancy, and for the grandchildren, if any, in view of $6.2 billion in aid to elementary and secondary schools and $3.9 billion for colleges; if she goes touring she will be able to see more parks; if the family takes a cruise, it will to better able to avoid a fire-trap ship. Operators of foreign, liners must advertise whether they meet safety standards. If mom and dad are ii in a painless way to finance presidential campaigns, they can check a box on their joint income tax return and $2 will go into "a kitty for the purpose. Parts of the Bible have been translated into 1,151 languages, according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Deputy Aid to Polecat in Distress An Oakland County 1 sheriff’s deputy declined I to play “William TeU’ yesterday, but succeeded in saving the life of a suffocating skunk. Deputy Gerald Reeves was called to a Pontiac Township residence about 10 a.m. where a skunk had reportedly gotten his head stock inside a baby-food bottle. In Aberfan, one little girl arrived for Sunday school but there were no other children for the class. All were dead. .The village’s Baptist minister, the Rev. Kenneth Haye, conducted his morning service a few hours after finding the crushed body of his 10-year-old sqn in the man of blackened rubble. | v- Harry Huey of 3265 Pontiac asked Reeves if Reeves couldn’t shoot tiie bottle off the trapped animal’s he a d without killing tiie skunk. Reeves decided against taking a chance. Instead, lie used a long pole to gently shatter the glass. The skunk, nearly conscious, lay still for a I few minutes, then got up and ran off, Reeves raid, j M :v ,:S as swi m im THE T^ONTIMTEBESS 18 West Huron Street ■ "*“ Pontiac, Michigan 48056 MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 Hnaoit a. riiKMALB y" **®2f*«* H. finomu. ii ■ 1 Chairman ol the Board 1 President an* Publisher- John W. Pitsokbaui John A. Ru.tr A»io McCoiw Executive Vice President < Secretary »nd Advertising Circulation Manager and Editor Director Habit j. Rsro Richa«» M. Pmonutn O. Maishau. Jouax Mantling Editor - Treasurer and Finance local Axavrertlslng Manajer '' Officer - < It Seems to Me: . ' Johnson Politically Inactive as Election Day Approaches Lyndon B. Johnson has no intention of throwing himself into the current political campaign. Several weeks ago assurances from the White House suggested he would become an assertive figure this fall. ★ ★ ★ As November 8th approaches, ho has shown no inclination to stump for hardly anyone, and his current program sees him visiting Manila, Australia and other distant points in the fleeting weeks ahead. ★ ★ ★ The grandstand quarterbacks are assigning a variety of reasons for abstaining. Some say he simply intends to place the burden on the candidates themselves. Others, including both Republicans and Democrats, suspect that he is slowly reconciled to a sizeable loss in the House and Senate and feels he would weaken his personal standing if he went all out to help his party — and then suffered a sharp repudiation at the polls. ★ ★ ★ Off year elections usually result in gains for the party that’s “out.” Currently, the soothsayers are predicting that a minimum of 25 Democrats will be swept from office and a few exuberant and enthusiastic OOP leaders predict as high as 65. I don’t know anyone less qualified to guess than your struggling scrivener; therefore, I freely forecast a turnover in the House and Senate that rphs around 35. ' (Major Hoople, please copy). ★ ★ ★ In the Congressional primaries across the Nation, eleven office holders were discarded even before they faced the finals — three in the Senate and eight in the House. ★ ★ • ^ Both political parties will watch eagerly to see how those unpredictable, silent, and enigmatic voters act at. the polls. Look magazine sug-ggests there were 2 million voters who stayed away in 1964 as they1 looked with high disfavor on both Johnson and Goldwater and refused point blank to vote at all. ★ ★ ★ Both sides concede the unspoken vote is harder to predict this fall than ever before. Unquestionably, the recent civil rights “backlash” will play a definite part, but the extremists and the irrational radicals are calming down through political necessity and actual alarm. This will be an interesting “off year.” - Nightmare . . . Statistics show that at the peak of yforld War II, this nation was spending $300 million a day, the bulk of which went into the war effort. ★ ★ ★ Today, our spending totals $280 million a day. How can top ranking Government executives go to sleep at night in the light of this appalling revelation? They must have cast iron constitutions or be wrapped in a cloak of absolute indifference. ★ ★ , Of course, they don’t; have to disgorge the money,, personally. You—and you—do that. Russian Hypocrisy . . . Periodically, word “gets out” that the Russians are “softening” in their hostile attitude toward the United States. It seems they aren’t as anxious to “bury us”' as they were in the past. Phooey! What a farce! ★ ★ ★ One Leonid L Brezhnev, the head red, just finished a conference with some of his henchmen which resulted in new pledges to increase the aid in North Viet Nam. Further, the conference developed the sobering: fact that Soviet exports to the same spot leaped upward the minute our bombers shook some of the foundations in North Viet Nam a few months ago. ★ ★ ★ Friendly? Those international pirates? Even their propaganda smells. And in Conclusion .. „ Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Overheard: “If these modern movies get “more-so,” they’ll have to equip the theaters with seat belts.”............Well, the Rus- sians are certainly “progressing.” They are now considering holding all-out bull fights............Re- member—you can’t vote if you aren’t registered. November 8th is ballot day..............Overheard: “I wish my.1967 car had 1947 parking spaces.” ........... Montreal comes up with a hew one: abank solely for. the feminine contingent. Only the manager will be a male. ★ ★ ★ Trusted scouts tell me Diane Downing deserves mention as one of the area’s attractive young ladies.. . *. .... It’s surprising how many “female” athletes wlto’ve won international competitions turn out to be males. Russia’s two greatest stars, the Press sisters, dropped out permanently when female observers were stationed in dressing: rooms to watch..........Insider’s News- letter says GM has an answer to Ford’s electric car in a “chemical conversion of liquid fuel into electricity.” ★ ★ ★ Detroit’s own Hank Greenberg says Feller was the greatest pitcher of them all until Kotjtax came along and he now rates fcliem equals. ............Overheard: “If park- ign spaces are so hard to find, how is it a million drivers find one & fore Leah.”.....Remember: it’s nice to be important; but it’s more important to be nice......... ......Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—Al Watrous retiring from golf with one of the cleanest, finest names in the golfing world; the J’s —cluttering up the countryside with political signs. \ —Harold A. Fitzgerald it - . . «* I./, • " I, 1 DIANE 'Knock It Off! After All, We're Supposed To Be Happily Married!' David Lawrence Says: Campaign Finances Bill a Mess WASHINGTON - Congress, in its hurry to adjourn, passed a law which is a hodgepodge never accomplish the main purpose of the legislation — to stop bribery of elected officials through campaign contributions. The President has yet LAWRENCE to sign the bill and would be weU advised to giveit what is called a “pocket veto.” This would require Congress next time to make a careful study of the use of campaign funds and write a truly effective law. If tiie new law were to cut out all private contributions and prevent any organization or individual from baying seats in Congress ior candidates, committed to vote for legislation sought by vested interests or special groups, such a stat-' ate might well receive wide support. But the bill just passed doesn’t do away with private contributions. It merely supplements them. Nor is there any system set up to finance congressional campaigns. The money derived from the voluntary income-tax contributions would be supplied to the two major political parties on an equal basis to be used for presidential candidates'only. ★ ★ ★ No restriction has been imposed cm the use of funds which are collected ostensibly for candidates for state, county or city offices but which play a big part in lining up votes for candidates running for the presidency of for Congress. MISUSE OF FUNDS No provisions in the new law deal with misuse of the funds. Nor is there any way that a Democrat or a Republican can indicate on his income-tax return that he wants bis dollar used entirely for the party of his own choice. Actually,., he finds himself in the position of contributing half of the moaey to the party that he will be voting against. There is, moreover, no reason why the citizen shouldn’t be allowed to give more out of his taxes to a political party in whose principles be believes. If it is a proper use of tax- Verbal Orchids Mrs. Mary Jane Richmond of 2449 Auburn Road; 87th birthday. Mrs. Charles A. Hayward of Lake Orton; 84th birthday. J. L. Gardner of Commerce; 81st birthday. Mrs. Mary E. Stephens of Union Lake, 88th birthday. Mrs. Maggie Ueberrotii of 2100 Woodward; 89th birthday. William G. Thompson of Alma, formerly of Pontiac; 85th birthday. payers’ money to finance campaigns, then out of the $180 billion appropriated during the last session of Congress, the Treasury can be authorized to set aside 860 million for campaign use. COULD BE INCREASED If necessary, the sum could be increased so as to eliminate some of the bribery going on now through the use of large contributions collected, directly or indirectly, from the members of associations or groups set ujf for the purpose of raising large sums for political campaigns. v Certainly there is need for reform on the whole subject of campaign contributions. Some members of Congress have said they didn’t like the law submitted to them last week because it had not been given thorough study in committees, but they also declare that, after all, “It’s a foot in the door.” Unhappily, however, it opens wider the door of political corruption in the American system of financing campaign expenses. (Copyright, 1886, Publishers Newspaper Syndicate) Bob Considine Says: Supreme Court Wronged Sheppard Trial Newsmen NEW YORK - God save the Supreme Court, every last hardened artery on it! But it was wronger than a three-dollar bill with Warren Harding’s picture on it when it accused tiie press of making a sorry shambles of the first trial of Dr. Sam Sheppard. The presiding judge of the new murder trial has made it clear he agrees with Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark’s astonishingly inaccurate majority opinion to the effect that the first trial was marred by “disruptive influences in CONSIDINE the courtroom” and “constant commotion within the bar” and by “hounding most of the participants in the trial, especially Sheppard.” There was sufficient legal ground to warrant giving Dr. Sam another chance to pin the murder on a “bushy-haired intruder.” But by legal osmosis or eerie evolution a prime “cause” of the high court’s action has been this completely fabricated accusation against reporters who covered the two-month long trial of a dozen years ago. There was a related and equally unfair castigation of Judge Edward Blythin, the bleak Scot who presided over the first trial. Actually, he ran his court quite sternly- Jjj * “What we feel is a moral obligation to speak in defense of a dead judge and in bdhalf of trial reporters everywhere,” reads a communication to the Supreme Court signed by nine out-of-town reporters who covered the Cleveland trial. (CONDUCT “This letter is about courtroom conduct only; we have no other issue to raise. We do not believe the (Supreme) Court was deliberately misled. “We do believe that in the 12 years the Sheppard case shuttled among the courts, tills one phase (the press’s conduct) ballooned out of proportion to the facts. “We were in the courtroom. So was tiie chief defense counsel, the late William J. Corrigan, whose affidavit in support of motion for a new trial, made in 1954 when the trial was still fresh In his mind, never mentioned noise . . . Judge Blythin’s courtroom was run with a decorum comparable with the best we have seen... “We are speaking purely as members of the out-of-town press at the trial, whose reports were for readers who in no regard could be connected with the case. . . At the time of the trial, we never believed that the American press as a whole would be condemned 12 years later for local stories about revelations made by police, defense and prosecuting attorneys, and the coroner in one city in the Middle West.. Reviewing Junk Removal... The Grand Rapids Press Another major step toward neighborhood renewal in the city’s blighted areas is the action by the City Commission clearing the way for adoption of an amendment to the city code to provide for clearing “junkers” and other disabled motor vehicles from residential areas. The “junkers” have been a long-time accumulation, making unsightly back yards and front yards of many local homing accommodations and generally creating neighborhood eyesores. In countless cases, the “Junkers” have been inherited by renters and tenants, unable by themselves to finance the removal job and heretofore unable to get the city authorities to do anything about the problem. The city’s action in taking one more needed step to re- Voice of the People: ‘Remove Identity Shield of Juvenile C’ The raid by young hoods on the Bingham Farms home is incredible. The public should refuse to tolerate this kind of behavior. One way to sharply reduce juvenile crime (let’s drop that namby-pamby word “delinquency”) would be to make public the names, addresses and parents’ names of all juvenile offenders. Paltry fines have no effect, but publicity and loss of face at the country club just might do so. JANIE C. COLLINS BLOOMFIELD HILLS Will Witches and Goblins Share Their Loot ? , Halloween is just around the corner and we would once again appeal to parents and children to share some of their abundance of Halloween candy with children less fortunate than themselves. Candy may be sent or taken to Children’s Village, 1200 N. Telegraph Road. You may be sure it is greatly appreciated. MR. AND MRS. L. H. LANDAU OAK PARK Spurns National Council of Churches Stand The General Board of the National Council of Churches adopted a resolution calling for the admission of Communist China to the United Nations and the granting of United States diplomatic recognition to the Peiping regime. ★ ★ ★ What does this stand for appeasement do to the morale of our young Americans against whom Communist China’s weapons are being buried? ★ ★ ★ What does the National Council of Churches say to Red China’s primary condition for joining the United Nations — the expulsion of the Republic of China? Have they ever denounced the cruel aggressions, assassinations, and slaughters committed by Communist China? Do they speak for the protestant churches of Pontiac? Which local churches support this Council with money? I want to be sure that none of my money goes directly or indirectly to this National Council of Churches. GEORGE A. LUENBERGER 9 ORIOLE ROAD Wants Changes in Road Commission Setup Oakland County needs a change in our Road Commission and a way of replacing commissioners by election if they perform unsatisfactorily. They are now appointed by the Supervisors and the office has become a featherbed for past supervisors. The people should directly elect one commissioner, preferably an engineer, let him appoint the assistants he needs and hold him responsible. ★ ★ ★ Bataan Drive is only a short graveled road. It has been scraped once since spring and the weeds have never been cut. With Square Lake closed all summer Bataan has taken many times as much traffic as ordinarily, so that the gravel we paid to have spread is now pushed to one side where it Is a loot higher than the road and the road Is full oi bumps and holes. We need this gravel on the roadbed. Repeated calls get no satisfaction. L. L. OBERLIN 1584 BATAAN DRIVE Question and Answer Has the airplane Oakland County purchased helped on crime or traffic study and is it being used now? CURIOUS TAXPAYER REPLY Sheriff Irons tells us the plane, which was donated for County use, proved too expensive to operate for the amount of benefit it afforded, and has been fumed back to the donor. The Better Half “HI have to bring your blue knit suit this afternoon—a couple of the girls at the plant were trying it on this morning and one of them sprung the zipper.” Other Editorial Pages move neighborhood nuisances is a practical demonstration to the low-income residents of long neglected areas that Grand Rapids,' as represented by its city government, does care about conditions under which its people live, * ★ ★ Edward C. McCobb, chairman of the Ordinance Committee, describes the city’s action as a “worthwhile forward move.” It is indeed a significant advance in the campaign against substandard housing a campaign that must move ever forward. Demonstrations The (Portland) Oregonian A few noisy youngsters disrupted church services in Brighton, England, the other day by shouting, “Hypocrite!” at Prime Minister Harold Wilson as he sought to read part of tiie service to a congregation including Labor Party leaders. ★ ★ ★ The demonstration, which broke np the services, was aimed at Mr. Wilson’s support, albeit luke-warm, for U.S. policies in Viet Nam. /★ ★ ★ The same stupid episodes occur on this side of the Atlantic. For every convert won by such displays, hundreds are repelled and affronted. One cannot escape the implication in Wilson’s comment that some so involved really do not intend to serve the “cause of peace.” jwj EM THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 MRSL. T. MOEHLMAN May Clog Up If only a spattering of water comes out of the shower head, it is time to take it off and clean the interior, for sediment and mineral deposits will dog it up. They can be removed easily with a sharp pointed tool. , * ■ ■ A U. S. national census is taken every 10 years. Miss WattS Takes Vows on Saturday Marjorie Carol Watts and Larry Troy Moehlman were Saturday in St. Mary’s-in-the-HiUs Episcopal Church, Lake Orion, and later greeted guests in the church undercroft. * * ★ Attending the candlelight rite were their parents Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Watts, Joslyn Road, Orion Township, and the Robert F. Moehlmans, Lake Orion. LACE GOWN With her floor-length gown of white Chantilly lace over || taffeta, the bride wore a bouffant illusion veil. Her spray bouquet held white carnations and a white orchid. With honor maid, Victoria L. Ryckman, were bridesmaids Linda L. Bracken, Trudy Wiseman and Lori Nixon, flower girl. Steve Watts carried the rings. Robert E. Moehlman was his brother’s best man. Ushers were Howard Paulson and Kenneth Pearce. * * ★ The couple left for a northern wedding-trip. State College Of Beauty 47 N. Saginaw St. Pontiac 335-9249 Club Slates Market Sale Members of the Dirt Gardeners Club have been making useful and decorative articles for a four-hour bazaar which will open Saturday at 8:00 a.m. in the Fanners’ Markiet. Fungi have been treated to be used as wall plaques and for turkey table centerpieces. Other novelties are cornhusk dolls, gourds, nuts and fruits arranged on a Wslab. Proceeds from the sale which also features wild fruit jellies, aprons, baked goods and linens will further the club’s civic projects which include assisting with the landscaping of the Waterford Towpghip Library. Mrs. R. W. Hermes is ways and means chairman. ALL PERMANENTS .<1* NONE HIGHER 1— New Lustre Shampoo 2— Nattering Haircut 3— Lanolin Neutralizing 4— Smart Style Setting HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY . Open Mornings at 8 A.M. , 78 N. Saginaw Over Bazley Mkt. 338-7660 Holiday decorations tq be sold at the annual bazaar Saturday in the Farmers’ Market were displayed by the Dirt Gardeners Club this past weekend at The Pontiac Mall. Mrs. Chester Dlugoszewski of Momingside Drive holds a table tree decorated by Mrs. Eleray Thomas of Thomas Lane. It is backed with felt to hold Christmas cards. Hairdo How-To: 7 HEME and DRY CLEAN FE 54)725 C. R. HASKILL STUDIO Has Photographed Over 2,000 Weddings. May We Make Your Pictures? *145 Twenty-Four 8x10-inch full color with album Price Includes: • Picture for Pres* • Just Married Sign • Wedding Guest Book • Miniature Marriage Certificate • Rice to Throw > Mrs, Lynn R. Thorpe I lMt. Clemens St. Capture drama with a NEW HIGH CURVE HAIR FASHION It is strikingly modem and classically romantic, reports Ora Randall, recently returned from die New York Show. Expert hair shaping underlines this coiffure. RANDALL’S Beauty Shoppe 88 Wayne St. FE 2-1424 Three Brush Wardrobe By DOROTHEA ZACK HANLE Editor, Hair Do Magazine The prettiest hairdo you’ve ever seen has enjoyed superior “brushmanship.” That lovely, controlled, super-smooth coif depends for its appeal on luster, sheen and texture — the result of absolute cleanliness and diligent brushing. WHICH BRUSH? What kind of b r u s h should you own and use? Or should you have more than one? When you choose yours, consider these factors: Is your hair wiry, wild, coarse? You need a tough-bristled brush that grips the hair and gives your scalp a thorough workout. Baby-fine, wispy hair? A gentler-bristled brush for you — but with long and short natural bristles to stroke as well as stimulate. Hair that lie* flat and limp most off the time? Liven it up with a synthetic-bristle brush to improve its health and condition. Ideally, the minimum wardrobe of brushes should be three — one for before-shampoo brushing (the grime-getter), one for nightly conditioning' and a little (me for styling and touching up (nice to carry in your handbag). Very few people really know how to brush hair prbperly. Begin by brushing hair firmly back from face. Brush next up and away from the neck, n^ver down. Throw head forward as you bend from the waist. Get a New Viewpoint about CONTACT LENSES Wearing contact lenses is a secret only you and your doctor need know Ask about the many advantages of contact lenses. It is possible that you may enjoy a new freedom from glasses. A becoming, natural appearance and the other advantages that minutelysized contact lenses can give. If you think you would like to wear contact lanses, your inquiries are invited. 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E. STEINMAN, O.D. Dally 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Friday 9130 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. FE 2-2895 - DIVIDED PAYMENTS AVAILABLE Brush briskly from the nape of the neck to the very ends of the hair. Keep the stroke steady ;-w;don’t tear at the hair. Give a slight twist to the wrist as you brush. This makes a brush stroke with a rolling motion that grips the hair, gently tugs the scalp to stimulate Circulation. The upward, outward movement raises the hair, enabling bristles to massage and cleanse the scalp. Be sure to complete every stroke to the very ends of the hair. How many times? Two hundred? That’s “brushmanship” if you’re doing it right with the right brush for your hair- One hundred? That’s grandmother’s rule. The more, the bet t e r —- but we’d say you’d have a pretty heatlhy scalp with a mere 50 good, professional strokes. GUIDE TO BRUSHOUT You’ll bjegin a brushout, of Course, with hair that’s bone-dry. Your equipment, spanking clean and thorouthly dry, too: a firm-bristled hairbrush; a comb or slim teasing brush; a rattail comb. And you’ve a can of hair spray handy, too, properly selected for your kind of hair. Now, follow the pictures and directions for a professionallooking brushout: Remove clips and rollers, picks and papers — gently, please, without tugging or tearing. If hair’s been dryer-dried, replace each curl in roller form, let it cool that way. Start right at the hairline and brush straight back — in long, vigorous strokes, blending all the curl lines together. If your hair tends to dryness, dab 9 bit of cream hairdressing on the palm of one hand, rub hands together, then run them through your hair this way: slide fingers back from the hairline, up from the nape, close to the scalp. Brush again, now blending the curl lines still more, and being sure to carry your brush strokes the full length of each strand. * * ★ Now, with your brush, begin to guide your hair into the lines defined by your setting. Details are not important now; work for over-all direction, moving the hair in large sections, concentrating on top and sides. Stop and check your progress now; use a hand mirror, and examine your coif from all sides. What to look for: those areas that seem to be resisting your coaxing into line, those that will need some special attention. - < * * ★ Now for the final molding and smoothing. Let fingers help, too, in drawing out a slim cheek curl, draping a wave, curving a Hip. All done, just as you like it? Spray -4 an even misting all a r o u n d, holding the can upright and as far away as label directs. ★ ★ ★ Before the spray is quite dry, use the flexibility it gives you to adjust those last little touches: lift very, very lightly with rattail comb to pouf where fullness is needed — at the turp of the bangs or the rise of the crown; use fingers to fan out a flip or guiche, if needed. HEW 7-FMT VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Rubber Exchangable With s 39s Your Old Re-U*e-' able Hole .Ends Regular 7.50 Come In or Free Delivery PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS Disposal Bags-Hoies-Brushos-Bolts-Attachmonts-Etc. "Rebuilt by Curt's Appliances Using Our Own Parts" Complete With Attachments Fra* Home Demonstration-OR 4-1101 V Within 25 Mile Radius CURT’S APPLIANCES “h Factory Attlhorlmd Whll, u~itr ___6484 WILLIAMS lAKE ROAD Bloomfield Miracle Mile Only SHIRT SERVICE ■BSPiS AND ALTERATION SERVICE _ Diy Gleaning Special _ Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, October 24-25-26th LONG or SHORT COATS Waist Length Jackets 69c 98* Bloomfield Miraole Mile Only Dial 332-1822 FREE PARKING Diroctly Across tho Street! 4 Complete Floors of Home Furnishings Elevator Service to All Floors e Provincial e Colonial O Traditional O Modern All by America's Leading Manufacturers END of MONTH none. The Big Event YovCve Waited For! ?.V2 mlBML Hurry for Best Selection! FREE DELIVERY Quantities ore limited, and many ai one of a kind and will be sold on first-come basis. Sorry, no mail < phone orders on sale Hemsl DON'T MISS IT! Our GREATEST IRNITURI Sale of the Year! | Save On | 1 NO : 1 YOU'LL | Sofas • | SEE \ Chairs 1 MONEY l | SAVINGS | j: Dining and Bedrooms | DOWN l | GALORE | :p Mattresses jj Lamps * 90 DAYS i 4 THROUGHOUT 1 Occasional £ SAME AS o 1 The Tables i V CASH • | STORE j | ACCESSORIES \ 5 Convenient 1 Everything! i for the Home ■! Credit Terms 1 Arranged o OPEN MON.. THUR.. FRIDAY ’Til 9 P.M. 8$ MORI REASONABLE PRICES AM M AARf lit IM fJUtlR UAlUAJUULUAUUli U 88-MJL Phone FE 2-4231 "to* Mntl he untinfieH- *#* Ur »Wm piipyippf THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 B—T YANKEE ROBSRTl. TEMHIN Preferred in Lawyers’ Official Poll for CIRCUIT JUDGE OAKLAND COUNTY Reversible two-tone split! color, 72 X 90 size. Fits twin and double beds. Machine washable. Compare at 7.98 SEAMLESS, FITTED FOAM BACK MATTRESS PAD & COYER REG. 2.99 F0U.SIZE~2.44 PRINTED FOAM FUNNEL BACKED TERRY MATS TABLECLOTHS i44 66 . I.2S ■ TWW __________ _______ Never slip. 100% Cannon cotton terry tops. Non-skid, machine washable, poly-foam backs. Ilf Ml SSTcSSff-e'SR.tMTiSSa TWO YANKEE STORES IN THE PONTIAC AREA * MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER * CORNER OF PERRY AND iVIGNTCALM STREETS DEMONSTRATION — Astronaut James A. Lovell (right) uses a model of a Gemini spacecraft and an Agena to demonstrate one of the Dying maneuvers that will be per- formed on Hie space flight of Gemini 12. Lovell is command pilot and astronaut Eld-win E. Aldrin Jr. the pilot for the Gemini 12 effort, slated to start cm Nov. 9. Little Speech-Making at Manila Talks Open on a Folksy Note MANILA (AP) - Summit chiefs at the Viet Nam conference approached their task with determination today, but the opening session was almost folksy.' President Johnson was shaking hands all around and complimenting his host, President Ferdinand E. Marcos, on the fancy embroidered shirt that is Philippine national dress. Mrs. Marcos moved graciously among the women asking if they were too hot, were their seats comfortable, could they hear all right. ★ ★ ★ Several thousand Filipinos watched the leaders arrive at the yellow stucco congressional buildings. They applauded happily but not exuberantly, there wasn’t a demonstrator in sight. The temperature was 92.4 degrees and going up by the minute. The formal opening session was completed in less than an hour. Marcos disregarded most of his prepared text With its weighty ideas to emphasize that he considered his guests his brothers and felt the Commu- Storm Dies; Ships Leave Haven HOUGHTON (AP) - The we carrier Chicago Trader led a group of 14 Great Lakes ships through the Portage Ship Canal onto western Lake Superior Sunday after a weekend storm abated. The ships had moved into the security of Portage Lake, between Chassell and Torch Lake, early Saturday and remained at anchor for 36 hours. The storm lashed the Keweenaw Peninsula with rain and snow behind 60-mile-an-hour winds. ★ ★ * The largest of the ships was the Herbert Jackson ami Hie smallest was a group of Army Corps of Engineers tugs. nists would be, too, if he could only get them to Manila. By agreement, speech-making was at a minimum. Thailand’s soft-spoken Premier Thanom Kittikachorn declared the meeting open. Towering, gray-haired Prime Minister Keith Holyoake, to no one’s surprise, nominated Marcos as permanent chairman. Marcos hobbled the names of South Viet Nam’s chief of state Nguyen Van Thieu and Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. They smiled but hardly anyone else noticed. ★ ★ ★ It was all much less colorful and noisy than the street-side enthusiasm Sunday, when all Hie chiefs of state got a motorcade trip from the airport. At the stately Malacanang Palace, where Hie closed-door sessions were held, Johnson’ bubble-top limousine was parked in a comer of the grounds and stream of palace employes went to look at it. AGENTS RELAX American Secret Service agents seemed almost relaxed, (tee noticed that a Philippine traffic cop lacked a few rounds ammunition bdt. Up went the trunk of the bubble top and the policemen got seven rounds froth the Secret Service armory. “I’ll never fire those, you cab be sure of that,” said the patrolman. The conference itself was held in Hie small council of state chamber. The room measures 24 Iby 38 fpet and is dominated by a specially built horseshoe table of beautiful, Philippine hardwood and an ornate chandelier. AT ONE END * President Johnson sat at one end of the' horseshoe. To his right were Premier Kittika-chom, the Vietnamese leaders, President Marcos in the center of the table, South Korea’ Chung Hee Park, Prime Minister Harold Holt of Australia and liis look-alike friend, Prime Minister Keith Holyoake of New Zealand. Marcos gave the floor to Ky j and the lights were dimmed. Ky had some colored slides prepared to illustrate his re-i sume of the Vietnamese military situation. THE MAN TO JUDGE WOMEN OFTEN HAVE BLADDER IRRITATION Aftarll, common Kidney or Bind! nny make yon tenee and n_ frequent, burning or Itching both day and night. Secondarily, you may loee eleep and auffer from. Headnchee, Backaches and feel old, tired, depressed. Ini such irritation, CY8TEX usually brings fast, relaxing comfort by curbing irritating germ* in strong, add This carpet 10.95 22.95 WKC PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT • No Down Payment • 90 Days Samo as Cash • Up to 36 Months to Pay s In unusual statement to make about — but it’s the. truth. When customers, like yourself, see Knights Bridge, feel its luxurious deep carpet pile made with AcriUn$ acrylic fiber, admire its rich texture and glowing colors — they’re feady to buy! Knights Bridge has that remarkable combination of looks, quality and practical pricing. And it’a made by Roxbury, the carpet manufacturer who gives you • 11 exciting colon * special easy-care maintenance • long-lasting wearability plus 115 yean experience making quality carpet. It’s love at first sight. And the love is lH^H mMmrn$SS0, HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 109 N. SA0INAW—FE 3-7114 live with it love it & take your time paying for it! BUY, SELL, TRADE USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS ■IUKMDNR flfflNNIlK! I KING SIZE BED PILLOWS KSSOITEIFIAH TOSS PILLOWS VELVET BOUND WINIEMfElHl HAMITS 22 X 28" size. Choose from Fruit of the Loom aoftly shredded foam flakes or 50% foam - 50% feathers. Solid color textured ribbon effect decorator fabrics, filled with shredded foam. -Mirnw mmm HIGH QUALITY CARPET roxbury’s Specially Priced SO. YD. B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 LBJ Likely to Sign Most of Last Bills • WASHINGTON (AP) -President Johnson is expected to sign into toiv virtually all toe legislation passed in toe rush to adjournment by Congress. Much of it is for his “Great Society" program — and some is greater than he asked. * ★ * Some key programs could be signed by f Johnson even before he returns to the United States Nov. 2 from h>s Pacific-Asian tour. The lengthy second session of the 89th Congress ended late Saturday afternoon after two years of record spending and government involvement in new fields. RACE HOME Most of the lawmakers who had stock it out to the end in Washington raced back home for two final weeks of campaigning before the Nov. 8 election which will choose an entire new House and 35 senators. The final outpouring of legislation included a $6.1-billion el- ementary and secondary school aid bin for the next two years that is • . whopping $1.7 billion above what Johnson asked. ★ * * The President’s demonstration cities program — designed to show what an all-fronts attack on poverty can do *- won late approval at $1.26 billion, less than half what he asked. Lawmakers voted each major political party a potential ISO-million kitty for toe 1968 presidential election campaign. The program would permit taxpayers to divert $1 from their income tax to the campaign. STILL CLACKING The adding machines are still clacking away trying to figure out how much Congress went over or under Johnson’s recommendations in specific areas. ★ ★ * The two-year appropriation total of $263 billion stands as a record, with this year’s $144 billion a close second to toe one-record of $147 billion set in * 1942, the first full year of World WarIL After the Medicare and voting rights blockbusters of 1965, second session of the 89th Congress seemed a step slower. And there was greater preoccupation with talking about toe war in Viet Nam. * * * But 1966 did bring creation of 12th Cabinet department, transportation; a two-year plan to raise the minimum wage to $1.60 and broaden its coverage by 8 million workers; new safety standards for automobiles; a $3.7-billion attack on pollution, and requirements for so-called fair labeling of consumer goods. LABOR SHUT OUT Labor, perhaps toe key bloc in Johnson’s and the Democrats’ victories in 1964, oddly was shut out on two other major demands: Repeal of state right-to-work laws and broadened and *d unemployment compensation. And Negroes, who went overwhelming Democratic in 1964, saw their string of civil rights bill successes snapped when a controversial open housing pro: vision led to shelving of this year’s rights bill. 7w »• • ,♦ The 89th Congress had better than 2-to-l Democratic majorities. But some of the President’s program squeaked, by narrowly, especially in the Home. Loss of 20 liberal Democratic seats in the November election could eliminate that narrow working majority if many Republicans join with Southern Democrats to fight certain programs, as they often have done. One controversial Johnson favorite, the antipoverty program, won authorization for (MwrHwnMt) TEETHING PAIN Milliaiu of mothort rdjr on Baby OM-1EL liquid. Put oo—pnin'i ton,. Recommended by many pediatricians. Easy to Utt. Brings prolonged re- CUNNINGHAM'S DRUG STORES another year at $1.75 billion only about half What toe antipoverty agency wanted. Even before adjournment, toe word was out that when toe 90th Congress convenes Jan. 10, first major order of bush* will be increasing Social Security benefits. WORLD WIDE'S MAIN WAREHOUSE IN SOUTHEASTERN MICHIGAN IS DANGEROUSLY OVERSTOCKED . HUNDREDS OF HOME FURNISHING ITEMS HAVE BEEN SHIPPED INTO ALL WORLD WIDE STORES FOR A GIGANTIC IN-THE-STORE WAREHOUSE SALE CWMSi COLONIAL MODERN, OR C0WIBMMRY. EACH COMPLETE I ROOM GROUPING WORTH MUCH MURE I ANY ROOM ALL THREE ROOMS ONLY *147 *4091 SET THE PACE IN ANY ROOM GROUP WITH THESE ACCESSORIES RETAIL NOW COLONIAL PLATFORM £ Altai! 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I *65.00 ©-trouser Stonehaven Worsted Suits..., *56 *75.00 ©-trouser Dunrobin Weave Suits......... *64 *80.00 ©-trouser Premium Quality Sharkskins.. $68 *85.00 ©-trouser 2-ply Premium Worsteds.........*73 *50.00 Harridge Row Natural Shoulder Suits......*42 *55.00 Harridge Row Blue-Chip Worsted Suits..... *46 *50.00 Rochester-tailored Topcoats.;....... *44 *60.00 Rochester-tailored Ziplined Coats ......... *54 *37.50 Royal York Sport Coats and Blazers.......*29 *15.00 PropOrtioned-fit Wool Flannel Slacks....... *12® Suiti with vests—add *6.50 All alterations without charg* Use our New more Convenient Optional Charge Account Bends AMERICA'S LARGEST CLOTHIER PdntidfTMoH Shopping Center T ' .. -' ' . THE PONTIAC PEESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 On Several Fronts Backlash Rearing Ugly Head By WR3TNEY M, YOUNG, Jr. Executive Director National Urban League The phenomenon of backlash —white resistance tor the Negro’s cause of equality — once again has reared its ugly head. Its effect can be seen in a num-gber of I events. First, the 1 fair housing bill I was killed in gthe Senate. I Then, congres-| sional leaders I launched an at-itack on U. S. ________l C o mmissioner YOUNG of Education Harold Howe’s efforts to bring about desegregation of the schools, claiming he was moving too fast-despite the fact that 90 per cent oil Negro children attend segregated schools 12 years after the Supreme Court’ historic decision outlawing segregated schools. Other signs that backlash is becoming more of a problem include die many primary election victories by segregationists, as well as the current appeals to racist elements in many of the election districts around the country. Part of die reason for this is that Negroes are no longer demanding merely to be served at a lunch counter, but are sewing more basic freedoms like open housing and integrated quality education — freedoms which touch all white Americans more directly. ★ ' ★ ★ This quest for real equity by Negroes has laid bare the strain of racism which exists in the nation. f SUMMER RIOTING Much of the blame for backlash is laid at the door of die riots which have taken place in Negro ghettos in recent mers. People became frightened of die violence/which erupted, and they became scared t>y extremist statements they heard or read. These people should realize, that the overwhelming majority of Negro citizens do not believe in violence or extremism. I am afraid many of the so-called “backlashers” know this, but use incidents of violence or extremism as an excuse to parade long-hidden prejudices out to the open. There has been a serious failure on the part of white leadership. It has failed to five up to the principles of equal rights and has been too hasty in reacting to isolated incidents threats and warnings. * ★ * Responsible leadership in the Negro community, while getting less publicity in its rejection of riots and extremism, has tried to “cool off’’ dangerous situations and bring an end to violent . outbursts. For this, white leadership has been profuse in its commendations and thanks. MORE THAN PRAISE But responsible leaders need more than praise. What Negro leaders want and need are concrete victories which they can present to their constituents. They need jobs for the unemployed of the ghetto; they need low-and - middle income housing projects; they need a crackdown Mi slum conditions; they need better schools; they need better municipal services to- These are what responsible leaders need, not letters of commendation. leaders if it is not accompanied by measures to improve the lot of the Negro. THe man in the ghetto wants action — non. He can’t eat promises; he needs a job now. VAGUE PROMISES And be can’t stomach vague promises about open housing when his kids are bitten by rats in the stums. Responsible leadership hat tried to convince officials of this urgency and all they get for it are commendations which can only bring them loss of confidence and influence in the ghetto. Unless officials stop writing nice letters, start listening to responsible leaders and givei than concrete victories, the mood of the ghetto will become! even more ominous, and violence and destruction will be-] come even more prevalent. * * * . The Negro wants nothing very] extraordinary. He wants ..... other Americans have and enjoy wants to be a part of a prosperous nation with equal rights and benefits. , He is led by responsible leaders who have been trying to bring the Negro into the stream of American fife, put without meaningful > indications by society that it is prepared to open its doors to the Negro, irresponsible elements on both sides will take over. This is a national crisis, and it has become a crisis of leadership as well. Gals Have Ball in Paper Go HARTFORD, Com. (AP) — Itf Mrs. Leo Rose dyed hers,, Possibly the most easily dis-vas a dream ball for'husbutdsl tucked, tacked and glued plastic posable of the so-called disposa-—the kind- where women who discs until her dress was a sexy ble gowns -there was a tiered usually wear $1,009 gowns marvel, Still, she kept her ruffled one made from bath- HVERJAfiES~ chose paper sacks instead. The occasion was a papa dress ball tossed Saturday night to enrich the coffers of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum hoe. It was more than that. It was a nationally important test to determine whether non woven paper wrapped around a pretty package doing the frug, the swim, or the monkey cou’J Tom Turkey Leads Chase WILLOW SPRINGS, Mo. (AP)—Bob White had no than sounded his turkey call when a big tom headed toward him over the hill about 100 I away, coming lickety split. ★ ★ ★ White said the bird’s onrush caught him unprepared. The wild gobbler thundered by so fast and so close the hunter’i turkey call went one way am his gun the other. ' **■'':* j * * ■ I was five minutes finding my turkey call to the brush,’ White said. “That doggone tom must’ve heard some hen, he was going to beat all the other birds there.” I Hie Chinese were the first to produce objects made of iron, according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. AW Wlrephoto BARON TAKES A WIFE —- Baron James Nathaniel de Rothschild 70-year-old member of one of the world’s richest families, and his wife, the former Yvette Honorine Choquet, sit in the office of the mayor of a Paris district after their weekend marriage. The new 27-year-old baroness worked as a theater usher until last month. gloves on all night because the room tissue, dye refused to wash off her hands. Other women splashed on glitter, stapled on flowers, or spray painted op art designs. Some husbands caught up in the spirit of the evening wore paper vests, ties, and cummerbunds. Other men wielded scissors, threatening to whittle away at the ephemeral female fashions. endure. If so, wives could dress more cheaply. Some 150 women showed up in paper dresses they created themselves or which were especially painted for them by well-known fabric designers and pop artists. ‘BARELY THERE’ Model Peggy Moffitt showed i(p more than any other woman. She wore a clear vinyl top with nothing to stop the view but paper dots there and there, and teeny, weeny red bikin) panties. Her barely there costume was designed by her boss, B Gernreich, the Californian Soviet Artist off Blacklist simplicity. MOSCOW (AP) - Nikita Khrushchev stood before a painting by Soviet artist Robert Falk in 1962 and declared, “I rould say that is just a mess.” Falk’s paintings are back on exhibit in Moscow for the first time since then, perhaps indi-| a slight loosening of controls on Soviet art. +r ★ An exhibit of about 100 painb-lgs and drawings by the late artist opened Saturday in four rooms of tiie Moscow Center of the Union of ArtiBts. It is being well attended, especially by young people. A nude by Falk at that exhibit outraged Soviet cultural over-The works of several oth-j er artists in the exhibit were also denounced. ★ ★ ★ Falk died in 1958 at the age of 68. He had been subjected to severe criticism in his homeland before the Communists took power to 1917 and was expelled from a Moscow college in 1909 for "leftism”—showing a marked devotion to Cezanne and others of the French im-school. The exhibit is the second officially sponsored display in recent monttia of works by previously blacklisted Soviet painters, Paintings by Alexander Tyshler, 67, were exhibited at the Pushkin Museum here hi March. surprise: visit Khrushcbev paid a surprise visit to an exhibit in December 1962. His outbursts against the modem art. he saw there sent shock waves through Soviet cultural circles for the next two years. ' You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! State Hunter Dies GRAND HAVEN (AP) Lawrence Reek, 54, of Muskegon died Sunday of an apparent heart attack while hunting in wooded area 10 miles South \ this Ottawa County community, sheriff’s men reported. &jwL Ofo Sfuxii Waterford C.A.I. Building Sunday, Nov. 6, 1966 TUESDAY LADIES’ DAT Pontiic’s Popular THEATER WHklaiu Cat. It MkHu Iwftri OmHumw It Mh •» Itjua. EAGLE Now thru Thurs. M'S THATHAYBOY \ THOUBlf-SH00TER who always shoots the. . workst j dean Martin T.,,. as MATT HEU mIHI: /',/ If wv Silencers MONDAY-2nd HIT “LOST COMMAND” TUESDAY-2nd HIT! n i iLictwe in-car Miamian 1 MIRACLE MILE wi'-mAC BLUE SKY n so. telegraph at sq. lake rd. 1 MILE W. WOODWARD CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE 1 2 CLflUPL'DfODIDTI ! — m emniiewnv7ri'.T^— 1 BLOCK N. TELEGRAPH RD. CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE TAKE 175 TO MT. CLEMENS RD. 0PDYKE SO. AT WAIT0N BLVDi CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE : s.tuiw IIaDDaDiuI: raKEEGO TiiiiiiimiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiilkiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuiAiddUtDMUMiiMJjJJiiifffiiifiiiiO YOUR NEWS QUIZ PANT I- NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 President and Mrs. Johnson were given a tradiitianal welcome by the Maori people as part of the First Family's visit to ..... last week. a-Cambodla b^-New Zealand c-Argentina 2 The United Nations last week approved the admission of Botswana and Lesotho. This brought the total UpT membership to ..... nations. a-86 >12i c-156 3 Congress last week raced to adjourn. We know that our lawmakers will meet again in 1967 because..... a-the Constitution orders annual meetings b-Congressmen voted to do so c-a 1947 law establishes yearly meetings 4 At President Johnson's request, a Federal Court ordered 6,000 striking General Electric defense workers back to their Jobs for 80 days. The government is given this power by the ....• Act. a-Full Employment b-Smlth-Warner c-Taft-Hartley 6 Space scientists last week told of plans to place two mqnkeys in orbit for six months to a year. This experiment will help them learn more shout the possible effects at .«..< a-great speeds b-high altitudes c-weightlessness The Pontiac Press Monday, October 24,196<» Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for* each correct answer. Halloween is almost here FART II - WORDS IN THf NEWS „ Take 4 points for each word that you can match,with its oorrect meaning. 1, ,v. .boycott 2.. ...1.bor strike 3.. ...criticise 4.. ...dlsperse 5.. ...bloc a-stopping work b-find fault c-refuse to bey . or use . d-go in different direc-' tions e-group of nations PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. l„...Tengku Abdul Rah- a-President, South ■man . Korea b-Prlme Minister, Thailand c-Prime Minister, Malaysia d-Georgia Democratic candidate for Governor , , e-Ohio GOP candidate lor Representative • VEC, Inc., Madsen, Wisconsin Nationalist Chink's President will he 79 October 31 a symbol for United Nations Children's Fund Denver housewives protested supennarket -prices Communist Chinese Deader Mao Tse-tung earthquakes left many homeless here students thought of this way to honor our GFs President Johnson visits here this week Eastern European leaders metlnMoscow 10..... a new Cablhet Department was approved 2...Robert Tift, Jr. 3.....Lester Maddox 4..... Chung Hee Park 5.. ..Thanom Kittika-cbonx VoLXVt,No7 FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION Would increased cooperation with the Soviet ' Union at this time benefit our nation^ Thil Quiz i» part of the Educational ftegram which TMa Newspaper furnishes to School* in this are, to Stimulate Interest in N*tion*| and World Affeir* aa m eid to Davaloplng Good Citizenship. . — how ~dq you RATE ? (Seen Etch Side of Quiz Separately) |» „ poMt. 91 to 100 points - TOP SCORE! Site 70 point*-Fair. 81 to 90 points - Excellent. <0 or Uh dUr ? I ' aatreio* Save Thi* Practice Examination! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Exams. ANSWERS 1*01 *9-6 !V-8 !H*L Sp-9 *9*8 13*9 -9*1 .(KitH =ZllUl 10IVUS q-q !«■$ lp-g f»-g fn-i mimtd o-g>t Iq-fc Is ■ *>l IN JttN a-s !o-9 iH Nrf H JLHW “f f EslI Ill'll HILLS BROS COFFEE ‘ HULLS BROS. 10-oz. jar INSTANT All COFFEE |2b|J FRANCO AMERICAN I 1n SPAGHETTI | With Thi* Coupon and $10Pinchaio or Mora Not Including lour, Winn or Tobacco! | GOOD ONLY OCT. U THRU OCT. SO, 1966 | PEOPLE’S FOOD MARKETS fjk , FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS w ■ MICHIGAN ILS. GRADE A INDIANRiVER W FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase ' of 1 fal. Cider or 2PkfS.«f loo Croam Cones THE .PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, I960 USDA ROUND Ifirr ijv™ up. FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS & Exciting Bargain Buys! 8 EXCITING WEEKS OF GOLD-fta* ANO SAVE! PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS I ■ owMswawr M MpeiUbVOma It iffA1 f All Iff All Wf All WfAli Iff A OfmfAUMttj*. 4DAYSAWE0C GOLD i | bell 8S • I0Ng|:'fiiiWl WN69 .M$S£i fflrowpt ^pa^?| jan-gay} farruspl ;-cipTmMp RE—■ .^ --------- ^ . fl PUtA.,. EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! PktA... GOLD BELL STAMPS PtuA...FRIENDLY SERVICE! Ha Hll WE EESEEVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OIIARTmES . .. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS OR MINORS. SIRLOIN STEAK — 89$ yaiMH i&liiiM c - k W M lb. RID 01 MU U.S. CHOICE BONELESS CHUCK ROAST 89$ U.S. CHOICE BONELESS HEELO’ ROUND 89$ U.S. CHOICE BONELESS RUMP ROAST 99$ U.S. CHOICE CHUCK STEAK 59* U.S. CHOICE GROUND BEEF ROUND STEAK 79$ U.S. CHOICE jjj^ljjfajl IjBgH ■ >^JJw iwntw FOOD PEOPLE’S VALUABLE COUPON MICHIGAN SUGAR 39° Limit MEADOWDALE STOCKTON PURPLE inniAAi PLUMS APRICOTS I-pound, 12-oz. can 1-pound, 12-oz. can 19$ 19$ 12-19$ ill COCA SR SEgMfl ^ ^ 4 * s MEL-O-CRUST SUGAR OR PLAIN DONUTS PRESTONE mS •/lit FREEZE «Umlt2 and coupon 1 GALLON 1 CAN I SALE DAYS MONDAY, . TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY DM. 24,21,26, IMS GIANT PACKAGE 3-lb., 2-oz. Real Prime PRUNE JUICE quart (FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase j of 1 Pbund or More CUBED STEAK of any BEEF ROAST of ‘j Pounds or More HAMBURGER raugwhiOra WadMiOu,. Oatubct M.IHO Coupon W»Ai..4ni, 0—Ur H 1H* snvd mo im D—t THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1966 MARKETS Trading Moderate TM following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as Thursday. Produce mom Applies, Cortland, bu... Apples, Crab, bit. ..... Apples, Delicious, I ., bu. 3.00 Cabbage, Curly, Cabbage, Red, Cabbage Sprou ................. Cabbage, Standard, bu................2.50 Carroll, di. bch. ....... Carrots, Callo Pk., 2 dz. Carrots, topped, bu...................... Cauliflower, dz. .........„..........3.50 Celery, Pascal, dz. sites. ............140 Onions, green, dz. bch.............. Onions, Dry, 50-lb. bag ........... Onions, Pickling, lb.................. .20 Parsley, Curly, dz. bch. ........... “ Poppers, Pimento, pk. Peppers. Rod Swoot, bu. Potatoes, 50 lbs......... Potatoes. 20 lbs. ....... Squash, Delicious, bu. Tomatoes, bskt. (. Topped i, dz. beti.. AHiodStr 1.32 AiilaCtwi .75 Alcoa 140 AmAIrlln 1.50 Am Bosch .60 AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 AmCyan 1.25 AmirSa i# CoUord, greens, bu. jplwicti, ............... ..... “^LeWuCl AND GREENS Celery, Cabbage, dz. ............. J*. »**. .............. Lettuce, head, dz. ....... Lettuce, Leaf, bu......... Lettuce, Romaine, bu. Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)—Prices paid per po for NO. 1 live poultry: Heavy type t 10-21; roasters heavy type 25-25%; broll- DETROIT BOOS DETROIT, (AP)—Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (IhCMing U.5.): Whites Grade A (umbo 4M1; extra torse 46-41%; large offWl mediums 37-M; smells 30-31, Browns Grade A CHICAGO (AP) -fc Chicago Mera______ Exchange: Butter steady; wholesale buying grin unchanged; 73 score AA 66%; 72 A'Wit N C HI 19 C 43%; 70 ■ MW; It C 45. Eggs Irregular; wholesale buying prices 1' lower to to higher; 20 per cent or better Grde A Whites 43%; mixed 43; mediums 35to; standards 41; chocks 35to. Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (API—(USOA1—Hogs 4,500; mostly 1-2 200-225 lbs 21.75-22.00; mixed 1-3 170-240 lb 2145-31.75; 230-240 lbs 21.00-21.50; mixed 1-3 350-400 lb sows 17.25-17.75. Cottle 4,000; calves none; Prime 1,150-1400 tb slaughter steers 26.g0-24.25,- NO choice and prime 1,075-1,400 lbs 25.50 choice 700-1,350 lbs 24.75-25.50; high ?rime 700-1,050 M> slaughter 24.50-25. 0 lbs 23.25-24.50. Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points art eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are representative inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 am.. Inter-dealer markets Engineering . a Utilities Clot Citizens Diamond Crystal . Kelly Services ............i Mohawk Rubber Co............I Dotrox Chemical ............1 Satran Printing ............1 Prank's Nursery ............ North Central Airlines Units Wyandofle Chemical .........2 MUTUAL FUNDI Market Average Up Slightly American Telephone and U.S. Steel. DOWN FRACTIONALLY Down fractionally were Kenne cott, Anaconda, New York Central, Pennsylvania Railroad, International Harvester and Liggett & Myers. _______H ______________I Among small gainers were gained more than a point. Also! phesa peake ^ OMo» Pan Amer- NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market was uneven in moderate trading today. The average was up slightly. Firmness in oils, electric equipments, airlines, building materials and drugs appeared in a generally mixed list. * ★ ik- Standard Oil (New Jersey) up about a point were American Tobacco, Metro-Goldwayn-May-er, Xerox and Control Data. Little or no chance was shown by General Motota, Du Pont, published report that Allied Products is making an offer to buy control of the company. Schlumberger was down 2% at 40 on an opening block of 210,000 shares. On Friday the Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose .2 to 284.3. Prices were mostly higher on the American Stock Exchange. Fractional gains were made by ican World Airways, United Air Lihes, Johns - Manville, Merck, Westinghouse Electric, Caterpil- Syntex, Oa^Elretrc+Netics, Gen-lar, Chrysler ahd Ford. leral Plywood, Giannini Controls Dayco spurted I points on aland Molybdenum. Down slightly The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)—Following f selected stock transactions 01 ’ork Stock fxchtnga with not as: I Fort Dair .51 Ptoiot Sul I ' FruenCp 1.70 Nati Ip, Ik Low Last Cbg. I !3to 13to 13% + GanMIlls 1.50 OonMot 3.05a OanPrec 1.20 GPubSvc ,47a G PubUt 1.50 GTal El 1.21 Gan Tire .It Ga Pacific lb GerberPd .70 Getty OH lOe Gillette 1.20 Glen AU .70 Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 1.35 Gracaco i.3t Granites 1.40 GranlWT 1.10 GtAliP 1.20a 61 West Flnl Gt Nor Ry 3 GtWSug 1.60a GmyiM# “ GulfMO 2.20a AmNGos 1.1 A Op«Cj.25 11 Otto ft to Otto - 1 Tob 1.00 111 34% 2 2 23% 22% 22% ., . fa U0 HewPack 40 Arms Ck Ut A hland Oil 1 —JDO 1.40 Atchison 1.60 23 42 41'A 42 +1 70 27% 27% 27to + j 4 49% 49% 41% ... 21 2lto 27% 20 ... 2 61 to SOW 61 to -1- I 37% 40% + % 32to 32% + to 17% 17% — to .......... » Hook Ch 1.30 7 34to 34to I...... House Fin 1 46 24% 24% 24% -hi to Houst LP 1 I 40% 47% fi Howmat .10 7 37% 37% 37to HuntFds .50b 4 17 11% 11% Hupp Cp .101 21 4% 4%V %to 32% 32% OobCokW 1.25 Balt 6E 1.52 Baauntt ,75 Beckman JO BeechAr .ttb 13 12% 13% 13% — 7 4tto «% 42% + i «* 10 «% . 46 27% 27 27% .. + % + % Imp Cp Am , IngtrRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InsurNbAm 2 IntorlkSt TJ0 IntBusM 4.40 HrtNUnar l3 ml Nick 2J0a irlsf My 1 IristolMy 17 33% 33% 33% + 1 14 30% 35% 30% - < 1 42% 42% 42% ... * 75% 77% 77% - 1 11 27% 27% 17% — Cal FbiaRl Calif Pack 1 CalumH 1.20 CampRL .45* Camp Soup 1 CdnPac 2.55a Canteen .10 CaroPLt 1.21 ChIPnau 1.00 Chi Rl Pac ChrlsCft I.Mf Chrysler 2 CIT Fin 140 CltiasSvc 1.60 CtovEIIII 1.65 CocoCoto 1.70 CBS 1.20b CollInRad 40 Cota Pal .70 COIFICt 1.217 Col Got 1.34 ComICre 1 ComSolv 1 Con’ld'l. .150 ConEloclnd 1 ConNGas 3.20 CentPow i.TO Containr 1-30 137 34% 33% 33% + 1 60 25% 24% 25 — ' 43 45% 47 47 + > 2 40 37% 40 4-< 21 11% 00% 11% + i 15 53% 53% 53% + 1 12 43% 42% 43% -h 1 37 27% 27% 27% — 1 It 34% 34% 34% — < 3 31% 31% 31% - Affiliated Fund .. .... Chemical Fund ........ Commonwealth Stock . Keystone Income K-l . Keystone Growth K-2 . Mata. Investors Growth Most, investors Trust . Putnam Growth ....... ------- n Electronics .. ‘Nominal Quotations HI 2,40o >1 Data P .40b 40 40% 47% 45% + L 1.50 12 37 36% 36% -t- iper 1 17 27% 27% 27% + fi ,50 4 28% 21 21% f .. .60 10 13% 13% 13% + % Teen's Slaying Puzzles Police Boy Found Strangled in Port Huron Area AP Bflllfless News Aqalyat W cent of fhelt disposable in- NFW YORK Thw ^ A ««gtury NEW YORK ~ spent more than half our probably wifl find it ban) to be-|wages feeding ourselves. In the Ueve, but she; is spending a far Soviet Union they still do. smaUer percent- PORT HURON (AP) week ago a 17-year-old Ypsilan-ti boy mysteriously disappeared from his home in the middle of the night. Sunday, the father of Arland R. Withrow identified his son’s body as the one found weighted by a cinder block in a creek, with rope bunts around the neck, near Port Huron' Why tiie youth was strangled and who killed him and threw his body into a creek 14 miles west of Port Huron were questions being probed today by police and sheriff’s agencies tiie two counties. Alford R. Withrow, father of tiie young Ford plant worker in Ypsilanti, and Detective Cpl. Chester Wilson of the Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Department drove to Port Huron and identified the body Sunday. DISCOVERED BY HUNTERS When young Withrow’s body was discovered by four hunters last Thursday, it was lying in 18 inches of water, weighted down by a concrete block tied to the right ankle. Rope dangled around the head and upper part of the nude body. The face bore Family Too Food Costs High, b By JOHN CUNNlFF Americans sped less than 20 age i even smaller. Same su- age of hhr] money on food today than is almost any per-j iod in American! history. Food prices! are high. GosM eminent statis-] tics prove it But the net in-' come of families is higher than ever, too, even taking into consideration the money that evaporates in the steam of Inflation. CUNNlFF There are' percentages the [food stores like to quote, of ‘course, because most of titan feel that, rather than having treated the housewife unfairly, the housewife is demanding too much of them. Profits on retail operations are small compared to the turnover, which fs very high. A store might hiave to sell about $25 worth of merchandise to make a 50- or 60-ceht profit. PERCENTAGE SMALLER permtrltats mal||^fe8f1han p penny on every dollar Yung up at tti checkout counter, Fotod retailers, in fact, have been hewing about costs hs long as thd housewives have. Although some .chains are yeiy profitable, otb^s are on very •ponfr financial footing, who, then, is at fault for high prices? 70 35% 35 35 ID Co 1.02 U0 SouthPoc 1 South Ry 2.00 Sportan Ind Sparry Rand Square O .60 SMBrand 1.30 ltd Kotls .13a ROII Col 250 itoniMi t itOIINJ 2.... StdOllOh 2.40 SI Packaging StanWar 1.50 ftai^Ch ISO StorlOriM .10 arum An autopsy report said Withrow died last Thursday from strangulation, four days after he suddenly was missed from his home. The last time a member of his family spoke with him was the 5% 1% — % night of Opt. 16. im **“ Withrow had come home at 11:30 p.m. from a date with his girlfriend, Mrs. Withrow told authorities. MOVE CAR Mrs. Withrow said she was in bed but that she called out to Arland and asked him to move his car from behind her’s because she planned to go out in the morning. He went outside, she said. Next tiling she heard was an auto roar away from in front of the house at high speed, she told sheriff’s men. When Arland failed to return, Mrs. Withrow said she checked outside, found that he had moved his car and couldn’t find him. 11 32% EMk 31% + % 1 17to 16% 16% - U 127 1% «% 17 35% 35% 35% + to 110 41 40% 41 ... 7 37% 39% 37% rr % 9 33 33 33 — to 1 55to 5Sto 55to + to 32 27% 27% 27% + to 6 30to 36% m —T— ■ 16 61% 60to 61% +lto 31 20% 20% 20% 60 73% 73 73% . .. 7 19% 11% 17 + % 36 70% 77% 77% + to 26 IjOto 101% 101 to -1% ■ 7 13to 13% 13% ^ 70 4 . - ' ‘mm We . 1 n% iito mo .. 4 21% 20% 21% 120 33% 33 33% +1% —u— 7 12to 12% 12% 58 51% 51 flto I M 26 24% 24 24% -F % 11 56% 54 54% + % M 37 36% 37 1 54 54 T 54 61 47% 46% 471% Mogntvax .00 “-rotnn 2.20 ir MW 1.30 irou»r .25® ...jrtftiMir I MoyOttr 1.60 McDonn .40 McKeis 1.70 1 15% 15% 15% + 4 31% 30% 30% - -M— 7 31% 31 31% ,. 6 47% 47% 47% 4 r 22% 12% 22% .. US Smelt le Steel 2 ___j Whelan UnlvOPd 1.40 WarnPic .50 WarnLamb WashWal I. Westn AlrL WnBanc 1.1' WUnTel 1.4 MlnerCh 1.20 6 72% 22% 72% + V 64 47% 47% 47% + '/ 5 15% 15% 15to + V 16 40% 39% 40 .... 17 31% 31% 31% + V 3 34% 34 34% + 4 10 23% 23% 23% . .. 1 21% 21% 21% — 1 17 101% 102% 103 + 1 iO 21% 21% 21% + V —N— 20 65% 64% 65% -1 7 45% 45% 45% + 4 15 57% 57% 59% — 1 Worthing 1. 3 29% 29% x—Y—Z— 14 162 160% 161% +1% n 25% 27% a ■ Zenith Rkd 1 66 49% 49% G% ... Copyrighted by The Associated Preu 1966 Sale> figure* are unofficial. n«m« -th.rwlse noted, rotes Of foregoing tablo are ai - Rails Ulll. Stocks I 149.3 162.6 301.0 DaycoCp -50b DeitoPAI Deere 1.60a DenRGW 1.10 DetEdlt 1.40 DlamAlk UO Disney ,40b Dist Stag 1 OomeMn .80a Doug Alrc lb 123 35% Dow Chem 2 ii *0% ”-----1.20a 7 10% 7 58% 58 55% +1% 21 30% 30V, 30% ■+ 12 27% 28% 27% + | 45% 46% 46% + T 27% 27% 27% + ‘ — 37% 37% .1 Nat Fuel 1.60 Nat Genl .20 NatGyps 2b N Lead 2.250 —‘Steel 2.50 Ml Tea .50 Nevada P .14 -"ewbery .68* EngEI 1.28 ..Y Cant 3.12 NlagMP l.it .1 16% : 30 33% : I 33% -f Oresslnd EE uPont 3.75e 7*2.62-106 Dyu U 1.50 172.424-0.07 DynamCp 4< . 133.15—0.60 275.55-0.30. Friday's 1st DIVIOENDI DECLARED Aca% Markets Conlury Elec Smmt invest United Foods woyno Knttt mi <11 28% 25% 28% 7 10% 10% 10% E— .450 177 60 50% 58% — % 1.60 62 117% 116 117% + R 1.25 10 24% 24 24% + I W 33% 32% 31% + 5 1.72 IS 32% 31% 2|% + I 1, l» mk 17% 2% -■ lit 21 57% 57% 57% + Occident .70b iihylcmt 00 EvansPd .60b Evershp .50p 22 25% 24% 24% 2 m ftto » —F— 76 115% 112% 112% -^% i 11% 11% 11% % ii 6 20 20 20, ? u tt% 11% t 28% 27% : 23 70 77% 77%,- 25 M/t 43 44% -f 2 44% 44% 44% + 10 45 MR I H%-% 44 30% 27% 30% + 22 27% 26% 27% + 12 32 51% 52 26 34% 33% 34% -t -JO) 15% 13 15% - - 11 66% 65% M% - % 14 It 10 II + “ —P— I 32% 31% 31% + 13 26% 26% 26% - PacT&T 1.20 I 39% 37% 37% - 5 24% 24% 24% — 1 14 24% 26% 26% + 9 2 22 21% 22 + 1 43 46% 46% 46% + 1 —w— 47 14% 14% 14% + 1 6 36% 36% 36% + < I 4 0% 22% 22< 74.3 774 77.7 Mi 714 70.11 1st Travelogue Will Be Shown KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) —A leftist opposition to President Johnson’s visit to Malaysia Sunday gained momentum today, with a warning to the U.S. chief of state not to set! foot here. ★ * ★ The warning was contained in an open letter to the “American consul general in Malaya” from 22 left-wing trade unions in Singapore. Copies were issued ') newspapers there. ' Police sources here said security officials were watching for a possible joint demonstration against Johnson by Singapore and Kuala Lumpur leftist, who have maintained links despite the separation of Singapore from Malaysia last year. ★ ★ ★ Malaysian police raided two branches of the left-wing opposition Labor party Sunday and seized banners and handbills denouncing Johnson as a “war criminal” and “murderer.*' Board's Study of School Needs Will Continue The Pontiac Board of Education will continue its consideration of current school facility needs at its meeting tomorrow night. ★ * ★ The session will be held al 7:30 p.m. tomorrow becausd Schools Supt. Dr. Dana F. Whit-mer will attend a regional school superintendents’ ference Wednesday, the normal meeting night. , * ★ * Also expected to be discussed at the meeting is a final con-tract with the School district’ cafeteria employes. Until the housewife dedded she wasn’t going to play the game anymore, the complaints sounded like a chorus of Farmer in the Dell. It went like this: The husband blames the wife, the wife blames tiie grocer, tiie grocer blames the distributor, the distributor blames tiie farm-. . , ■ er, the farmer blames the gov- In food retailing the percent- ernmenttatid on and on. " ORDERLY , This was orderly complaining. If nothing was accomplished, tiie complaints at least spun in a neat circle, Ring Around the Rosy, -the old schoolyard game. In the child’s game; if someone pulled your arm too hard you could wince ahd pull even harder on the kid next to you. As played by adults, if you were blamed for high prices you could, in turn, blame somebody else. LBJ Warned Not to Visit Malaysia Anti-Viet Nam war demonstrators turned out on Singapore streets and had to be dispersed by police. The open letter from the Singapore unions refrered to “our beloved country, Malaya” —the heartland of Malaysia—and said 'It is advisable to inform your president not to step his legs (sic) on the ground” here. * ★ * Labor party sources said they expect arrests this week of some of the party’s extremist elements as . a. precaution against demonstrations during Johnson’s 21-hour visit. Under Malaysia’s tough emergency security laws, person? can be detained without specific' charges filed against them. * ★ ★ One Labor party source said “there may be some trouble” during the Johnson visit, possibly outside the capital to avoid clashes with police here. This didn’t make prices lower. It was ineffective. But ii let off steam. The housewife stopped playing, however. Fed up, she stepped out of line and smacked the grocer with her pocketbook. And, as we know, tiie grocer is incensed. Everywhere, now, food prices are challenged. No longer does order prevail. PROPER SPOT? Whether or not the housewife has applied her pressure in the proper spot is debatable. What can no longer bo debated is a certain effectiveness in her campaign for lower prices. Grocers have submitted to some reas. Supermarket competition often was not so much to the area of prices as to promotion, trading stamps and services. The housewives’ campaign has returned competition to the price area. ★ ★ • > A big question np# to bow long will prices remain towered. Another is how far the pressure will spread. The grocer, despite a small return, apparently can lower some prices by becoming more effteient, eliminating, promotions, cutting aervices. What happens, however, when he can cut no more? Or if he finds price cuts unprofitable? Will he demand that the food processor drop his prices too? Will the processor demand a lower price on the packages be uses? Witt farm : to market transportation costs be challenged? Witt farm priceb, themselves, feel the effect? Witt the cost of farm labor be blamed? ★ ★ * We probably never will be able to analyze exactly the areas that react to thehousewife’s motion a soul-searching , by everyone connected .with prices, including President Johnson. AH we can say for certain is that it’s called inflation and the housewife knows it. H * a?-a- - # § Soccessfuhlnvesfmmt jBK» nil met** News in Brief The theft of tools valued at (250 from Herman Ioppolo Trucking & Supply Co., 1435 E. Avon, Avon Township, was reported yesterday to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. Banquet Hall for rent. Immediate opening. FE 4-7677. —Adv. This is the big one — rum* mage sale. Christ Church Cranbrook/ Thurs., Oct. 27, 8 a.m. v 2 p.m. Lone Fine at Cranbrook. Bloomfield Hitts. —Adv. Lodge Calendar Pontiac Shrine Number 22 Order of the White Shrine of Jerusalem, School of Instruction, • 6:45, ceremonial 8 p.m. Wed., Oct. 26. 22 State St. Refreshments. Florence Schingeck, WHP. ^ to bring yields back to current money rates. , 1 Your husband took advantage of fatting bond prices to secure maximum income on his capital. On rising bond prices, his portfolio should also produce capital gains. He may then decide to move back into stocks showing attractive yields from their depressed levels. I call Mm a shrewd investor. \ * ' * * ,A ,>i Q) “Hie present bond market is weaker than ^expected. Your view» will be appreciated.” T. Br * ; > A) In the interval after ydur question was formulated there were noticeably firmer prices and some new issues were marketed slightly under peak yields. Contributing influences w e r e peace feelerrthat bed been set motion, phis increasing evidence Of lower corporate earnings. Both developments could ease demands for capital and depress money rates. Yet we can’t dodge the fhot fitat to the fourth quarter seasonal de- By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “My husband shifted our savings into bonds; he says we’ll earn more that way. I don’t understand.” F. B. A) Investors prefer putting money to work with rntoirnum risk and maximum earning power. Bonds, representing capital borrowed by corporations or government units, generally provide maximum safety. Tbey earn interest at fixed rates. Borrowers respect their obligations, since defaulted interest usually means bankruptcy. Stocks are shares of ownership expected to return dividends that tend to With earnuijffe - Prime, Income stocks normanyyield fern-six per cent, V Borrowing money to conduct business is common procedure; When demand for money is low, interest rates are'- moderate; when demand for money becomes high, rates move up, as they have recently by Federal Reserve Bank action. Bondholders do hot receive a matching interest hike, but bond ^ PRICES fall to match yields to mands credit increase. Fur-money rates. If bonds yClildlthermore, Federal authorities more than stocks, investors will consider the economy still oversell -stocks and buy bonds to heated. Tight money is likely to increase income. When dehkd continue. Conceivably,, b o n d a again declines and interest rates .could even weaken again, drop, bend pric^f will advance! (CopyMpht, 1886) ; ^ '/