The Weather U.S. WNtlur BurMu Fortcatr • Rain or Snow Tonight (DiUlIt on P«h* 2)' THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 122 NO. 253 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. flllDAY, NOVEMBEE 27, 19(54—44 PAGES Troops Hunting Congo Rebels LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (jP)—Snipers’ bullets still whistled through Stanleyville today as government troops pushed across the Congo River after the main rebel force. “Stanleyville is under control, but all resistance has^^not been eliminated,” said an American Embassy spokesman. “The city is virtually deserted. The Congolese have fled to the biish. But snipers are still active and you can easily get a hullet through your head.” Since the U.S.-Belgian airborne operation began Tuesday, at least 59 foreigners including three Americans have been slain by the Peking-backed rebels. The paratroopers rescued about l.eOO ’white hostages in Stanleyvilie and Paulis' Ball to Leave for Talks With Europe Chiefs WASHING'TON (AP) - Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor started today an intensive reappraisal of U. S. strategy in the anti-Communist war in Viet Nam. The study riiay lead to a decision by President Johnson to broaden the war. In Paulis, which was seize‘d yesterday by Belgian paratroop-. ers, about 100 whites awaited evacuation on U.S. ClSOs. At least 170 foreigners were brought here from Paulis yesterday. SCOUT AREA Belgian paratroops were scouring an 18-mile radius around Paulis for other foreigners. The U.S. spokesman said the evacuation of refugees from Stanleyville has been completed. The American planes brought a total of 1,070 refugees from Stanleyville and Paulis. Congolese and other aircraft have airlifted hundreds of others from the rebel zone. Key Topics Expected to Be NATO N-Fleet and British Economy Taylor met with Rusk early this morning, beginning a schedule of talks to be climaxed by White House ses- sions with President Johnson and other decision makers next week. The ambassador also met with Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara for a half hour at the Pentagon. The admii^tration appeared to be moving reluctantly toward a cautious expansion of the conflict beyond South Viet Nam in the hope of improving prospect for a peaceful settlement. Johnson and other top ad- ministration officials are reported to have divided feelings about Viet Nam strategy between sticking to confining the war almost entirely to South Viet Nam, and makine some strikes to the north. / Taylor, who returned to Washington yesterday, is known to believe, that the time for n.ew» decisions is at hand. promptly ur^rtaking air strikes either ajgdinst Communist supr ply lines from North Viet Nam to ^th Viet Nam through the ^ighboring kingdom of Laos, or aga'inst Communist concentration points for men and sup-' plies in the north. IN DOUBT Furthermore he sees some advantages in authorizing and Taylor recently declared that the outcome of the conflict is now "very much in doubt.” But he said he thought attacks on targets in Red-held territory would probably make the Chinese and, North Vietnamese Communist leadership realize that the conquest it seeks in the south will become too expensive l)ecause of impending damage in the north. The ambassador is reported to believe that such attacks might thus compel the Hanoi regime to reconsider its policies and enter into negotiations on terms more favorable to South Viet (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) ' The embassy said five Americans remained in rebel-controlled areas. They are Miss A. Chansler, who is believed to be about 18 miles from Paulis in the village of Egbita; W. Mc-Chesney, last reported in Wamba, and Mrs. F. J. Cunningham and her two children in Titule. All are connected with the Heart of Africa Mission of Fort Washington, Pa. STILL MISSING Other reports said several hundred whites of other nationalities were still missing in the northern Congo, and the Belgian paratroopers were planning other rescue missions before leaving the country this .weekend. Reliable reports said the paratroopers might drop at Bunia, on the eastern frontier, or Watsa, to the northeast, to save whites there from massacre at the hands of the rebels. WASHINGTON — Undersecretary of State George W. Ball flies to Paris tonight for talks there and in London with European leaders and U.S. officials on economic and military problems confronting the Atlantic allies. Key topics for Ball’s conferences are expected to be the financial policies of British Prime Minister Harold Wilson and the U.S. plan for a multilateral nuclear force, jointly owned and manned by the various NATO countries. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Candidates Gel Deadline lo File Expense Statement A dozen candidates in the Nov. 3 election who have failed to file campaign expense statements with the county clerk were today given until Monday to do so. Under state election laws, the deadline to file was Nov. 23. Of the more than 50 national, state and county candidates required lo file written reports in Oakland County, all but 12 have done so, according to Election Clerk Mable Child. Avon A4an on Board of College She said she would ronlael those who have not filed today and if the statements arc not received by Monday their names would be turned over lo authorities (or prosecution. Failure lo submit a detailed account is a violation of state election laws and is punishable by a tine of up to $1,000 and or two years in prison. A week's grace pericnl will liavc ended on Monday. T h e statement of disbur.sements and . receipts actually was due last Smart resigned Monday, 20 days following the h'oai^tlie college election. '....' A statement ^st be filed even if no funds gre spent in a campaign. Candidates file their state- The undersecretary’s trip comes in the wake of a severe British financial crisis revolving about Wilson’s attempts to bolster the pound sterling and improve his nation’s international payments standing. And it comes less than one week after Wilson sharply criticized the proposed joint nuclear weapons force in a speech to the House of Commons on Monday. Despite Wilson’s stand, and the continuing opposition to the ML^' project by French President Charles de Gaulle, the United States and West Germany — its two chief backers — agreed yesterday that the NATO nuclear fleet can be established. JOINT COMMUNIQUE In a joint communique following talks. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and West German Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder expressed hope that agreement on the multilateral force “will te reached soon and that as many member nations of the alliapce as possible would participate.” Hard Line Pays for Viet Chief Protests in Saigon For! to Materialize SAIGON, South Viet Nam (/?^-Premier Tran Van Huong’s declaration of martial law and his obvious intention to crush antigovernment riots with bullets if necessary appeared today to have won the scrappy leader a first-round victory over his militant opponents. SAIGON DEMONSTRATION - Youthful demonstrators pick up rocks to hurl at Viet Nam riot police (background) during antigovernment demonstration in Saigon this week. Predicted mass demonslra-tions failed to materialize yesterday and today. , The powerful Buddhist leadership apparently was shying away from a showdown in the streets, at least for the pres- Troops were under orders not (o use force or charge. Saigon was relatively quiet today with martial law in force'. To Boost PresidenfipJ Guard The National Buddhist Insti-bite was closed by barbed wire strung up by the Buddhists. X,., Signs proclaimed there would be I rOD6 10 M0FS no demonstrations today WASHINGTON (AP) - The Secret Service will expand its machinery for presidential protection significantly in the next few months, adding 75 agents, clerks and technical personnel as the first step. Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon said “the basic emphasis will be on more effective advance and preventive work for the service in connec- tion with presidential travel, as well as the use of more sophisticated equipment.” The Secret Service is under the Treasury Department. In announcing the plans today, Dillon said the hiring of 75 additional persons would cost approximately $850,000. Tfie Secret Service maintains secrecy as to its exact number of agents, but the present total is believed to be about 400. Is Postponed A 41-year-old Avon Town.ship man, David W, Hackett, has been appointed to the Oakland County Community College Board of Trustees. A runner-up in the trustee race, Hackett ofi i:i80 liuby was I ap'jfointed after Walled Lake School Slip! C 1 i f f I Rusk and Schroeder were reported to feel that Wilson’s speech may have been delivered partially to placate the left wing of his I.abor party and partly to establish a bargaining position when he comes here Dec. 7-8 for-talks with U.S. officials including President Johnson. Says Tot Chatted on 'Hot Line' board. By virtue ofi ills election to tile state legis- HACKETT lalure Nov. 3, Smart is required But a new blow lo the MLF plan came from Brussels where parliamentary sources reported today that Belgium had decided to lake no part in the nuclear PORTAGE LA PFtAlRIE, Man. i/Pi — Canadian Prime Mini.ster Lester B. Pearson says he once found one of his grandchildren talking on the “hot line” telephone at liis Ottawa home. The telephone, to be used only in extreme emergency, is a direct link with Washington and North American Air Defense Command Headquarters in Colorado Springs, Colo. Addressing a IJheral parly rally at Portage La Prairie, Man., last night, Pearson said the 4-ycar-old child found the telephone in a cupboard. “1 grabbed the telephone and explained (on the telephone) that war had not begun,” Pearson related. ‘‘That won't happen again,” added Pearson, who has nine grandchildren. SOME INCREASE There already has been some increase in the Secret Service since the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in November of last year. Dillon’s statement said the program of further expansion has the approval of the President’s Committee on the Warren Report. Shortly after the investigating commission headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren issued its report on the assassination. President John.son appointed the committee of Cabinet officers to study presidential protection. The Warren (Jotnmission.crili-cized both the Secret Service and the FBI with particular emphasis on the failure to spot Lee Harvey Oswald as a threat to the president before Kennedy's fateful trip to Dallas. Dillon said the full program lo strengthen the Secret Service will lake up to 20 montlis. Armed police broke up a news conference given by Nguyen Yuan Chu, former chairman of tlu' National High Council. He Parts Failure Halts amumntTd the merging .)f Itl political parties and student Shot Until Tomorrow gi'oups into a national revolutionary committee pledged to de-strov Huong’s 4hrce-week-old CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) government. — Spacecraft communication problems today forced post- . - “ , , . , ponement of an attempt to A barbed wire was launch Mariner 4 to Mars to removed from yound the pa -take pictures and probe scienlif- rhicf of state Phan K ic secrets 9’oops were on the ‘ ‘ * * * lilert to crush any renewal of The National Aeronautics and 9'n demonstrations which were Space Administration described staged daily from Sunday the trouble as an apparent tern- through Wednesday, porary drop in signal strength Huong proclaimed martial the spac(‘crafl receiving system. A statement .said it ap-jicared to he as.socialed with ground support equipment rather than with the payload. The liiiiiiching was rescheduled tomorrow in a periml between 9:22 a.m. and 12:32 p.m. (EST). law Wednesday night. continued to be the Support of the military. It is still smarting over the collapse of military rule in August, when tough .action was not taken agqinst rioting mobs until too late. ments in the county where they resign any other public office reside and not where they for office, said Mrs. Child. In addition to each candidate, tile law requires that every treasurer of a |)Olltical committee must file a report of elee-tioii expense.s. In Today's Press Steel Contract Dissatisfaction with current pact jeopardizes Donald’s job PAtJE 15. Medal of Honor |■’lrH( of Viet war may be awarded soon 1 PAGE 5. Yale Prof Less retleeiiyiiow nlioiit Soviet spy eliai'ge nr rest PA(;E 24. Area News 26 Asli'ology 36 Biiilge 36 ^ Ciiiiiles 36 Kdltiirliils 6 ' High Hehiml 23 ' Markets Ohitiinries M ' ,S|Kirls (30-34 'llieoters ' 28 29 Wilson, Earl 13 J Women's Pages IH 21 by Jan. 1. He has .submitted hLs resignation as .scIxkiI super-inletKjenl effective in .lanuary. Hackett will serve Smart’s term on the eollege board, ' whieh expires in June, 1965. A member of the Avondale Hoard of Education, the Michigan Bell Telephone technician is expec ted to resign his school lioard post at the next regular iiK'eting, He Is a graduate of Hie Uni versity of Detroit and has talum Imsmess jidmimslralion eourses at Oakland Universily. MarrU'd, he and iiis wife liave seven ehildri'ii. Ha''l(etl, who ran for Ihe col lege lioard In HHi;) and IIIIH. finished elghtli each Hme, Six were elected. Ponder Cause of Ship Collision NEW YORK (/!’) - • Botli .shijis had radar. Tlie fog was dense. Both captains said they were on tlie bridge. Yet Ihe Israeli luxury liner and ttie Norwegian tanker collided, and 19 of the tanker’s crew are dead or miss- and llic tanker mg. An air-sea rescue operation Eventually, 24 ol the tanker's alMiard was quickly put in motion. 43-memher crew were snatelied Clad variously in nightdress from Ihe .seas., from swamped BLUE WIIH COLD or ballroom atfire, many of Itie lifelioats and f)om the barely Some ol the nu'ii saved horn cruise liner's lilti passengers floating forward .section of the Ihe .sea were (iiily p.srlially (•Iml. raced to decks lo watcli llirougli vessel. Among them werv a They were oil-smeared, blue the mist. stewardess — the lone vYoman (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) The launch crew hud only a 3- IRRESPONSIBLE PEOPLE Imiir 13-minute favorable period ^ broadcast said tiro ending at 12:41 p.m. in which lo Communist Viet Cong had fire the Atlas-Agena rocket lo p|;,y,.,j ,.,)io in the riots and achieve the desired trajectory. n,ey were fomented by Wlien the trouble could not be "(groups of irresponsible people corrected in time, the shot was yv|,„ h;,vc cither innocently or called off for the day. deliberately fallen in with Com- 'I’he rocket is to propel Mari- immist plans and incited the (>r 4 acro.ss 32(i million miles of nmst unoccupied and innocent .s|iace for a brief encounter witli sectors of the ixipulation.” the red planet next .Ilily 14. If successful, the unmaimed •raft will skim within 8,600 miles of Mars and radio to earth the first close-up information Huong said 86 members of the security forces and nearly all pitlicemen were Injured ill Wednesday’s melee, lie did not specify casualties How did il haiipen'.' The two nallonstIsrael and Norwiiy, re- See Story, Page 3 Wound Kills Troy Hunter A 28-year-old Troy man died last night of a gunshot wound suffered Nov. 10 while deer hunting on opening day. The vieliin was Daniel Ko-zlckl of 11120 Wiittles, who suc-ciiinlied at Mercy Hospital, Bay City, lie had lieeii sliol while hunting In Midland ((oUiity. HIn IsHly In at Price Kiiiieral Home, Troy. poricdly will he the ones to in-ve.stigale and. if necessirt'y, negotiate Ihe damages. The IJ. S. Coast Guard said today that Is the iisiial procedure III eollisloiiH in Inler-iiatioiiul waters, Tlie damaged liner was safely limk in iiorl, its ThanksgivinK holiday crni.se lo the Caribbean over only liours after it began. The collision oeccurred i» miles off the New Jersey Coast shortly after 2 a.m. yesterday in dense fog. STERN SINKS The Hlerti qiiarli'r of the lank er sank In the |)all of darkness and fog. Water |M)ured into the liner's how eompartmciils, whieh were sealed off- ■ver obtained from the planet, among the rioters but there Many astronomers believe that believed to be at least 30 a basic form of life such as veg- 'll' elation exists lliere. Communist terrorists conlm- * A * ued at work in Saigon today. Mariner 4 will not he able lo detect life. Its main purpose is to collect data that engineer: need for designing life-seeking spacecraft that Ihe United Stales hopes lo land on Mars iik. 1969. Below Freezing Forecast; Snow Flurries Saturday Nippy temiM'ralures will ac-copipaiiy Christmas shoppers FOUNDERING AT SEA freighter Stoll Dagall under water yesterday, the Coast of New Je SEA 1 has (is ’, but (is ley. TNe Tlie Norwegian stern seelioii still ariniit off freighter was split In two by the Israpli liner Shalom earlier in Hie day. Nineteen of the freighter's crew were killed or are missing. HOI'E FOR SUCCESS I’rojeel selenllsls liope that Mariner 4 will sueeecd wlien Mariner 3 failed an idenlleal )37'aiid''ti asslgnmeiil Nov. 5. 25 to 32 Is forecast. Mariner 3 fizzled wlien its („n„wed by a liigh tomorrow of glass shroud eollup.seil wlllilii .|d <17 five niliiules after launeliing, ’ i| ||'1,,, eloudy and windv (0-The shroud wa.s iinalilo lo drop ,,| g„ow by late off and Imprisoned tlie s|)aee- flurries are due erafl, preventing it from I uii- folding its jMiwer-gntherlng solar , , , ,1. panels and from aelileviiig suf- Siimluy’s outlimk for the fleieiit speed for the Mars trip, ‘"-eii Is partly eloudy and eold-Marliier 3 noW Is in lifele.ss orbit about the sun. A leetlicliHUerhig 26 was re- A ningiiesluin-sli'engl lie lied corded dowiilowii curly this slileld was devlswl for Marl- iiiornlng. By 2 p.m. UWS mcr-iier 4. < eury had moved up to 37. TWO THjET PQjj^TlAC PRESS. FRJDAY, NOVEMBER 27. 1964 WASfflNGTON yPI - M a j 0 r charges in Federal Aid to,Eld-ucation and »ibsidies for th« poor through an unusual income tax formula ^ reported to be underrfionsideratipn by the Johnson administration. The Washington Post said this week the two s w e e p i n g proposals were part of the still-secret seties' of reports rfaeing written by 14 task forces organized bv President Johnson. '★ ★ ★ The President plans to use the§e studies as a basis for his legislative program to be presented to the new Congress. Proposals to improve educa^^ Survivini of Quinfuplefs Figm for Life /PARIS (41—Physicians watch-over the four surviving Sambor quintuplets reported today that two of them are having trouble breathing. - ■ * * 1 A ministry of health bulletin said: “For the four children the battle for life continues. Its outcome remains unforeseeable. The principal handicap continues to be the respiratory troubles characteristic of extreme immaturity.” The five children were born to Mrs. Raymond Sambor, 27-ypar-old wife of a mailman, on Monday. Jean-Luc, the last born, died Tuesday night. “Catherine: several res- piratory pauses but with spon-taheous restarts. Start of tube feeding without difficulty. * * * “Thierry: Situation un- changed. Start of tube feeding without difficulty. BREATHING CRISES “Monique: Frequent breathing crises necessitating resuscitation. “Dominique: Several breathing crises necessitating resuscitation.” Development Group Will Hold Meeting Stockholders of the Greater Pontiac Industrial Development Corporation will meet Monday at 4 p.m., it was announced today by President Bruce Annett. The meeting will be held in the auditorium of Consumers Power Co., 28 W. Lawrence. tioh include a major program of providing f^eral scholarships and guaranteed loans to students attending college and altering the Nationai Defense Education Act to allow grants for construction and teachej salaries, the newspaper The Post also report that consideration is a suggestion that and land grant/fblleges be encouraged to ^ in solving city problems ^ they have helped farmers/with agricultural ex-tensioB^rograms. (other proposal would i n -‘ease federal aid to elementary and secondary schools. Federal funds would be provided to improve college libraries, especially in small schools, also has been suggested. IMPROVE QUAUTY To improve the quality of some colleges, especially Negro institutions in the South, the education task force has considered offering federal funds to allow faculty exchange p r o -grams. The Post said that another task force has come up with a “revolutionary” plan to subsidize those persons earning less than $3,000 a year though the income tax system. =^e plan would allow a person with sufficiently low income to skip paying taxes and also receive a cash subsidy from the federal government. The Post said the subsidy would be a percentage, equal to the applicable tax rate, of the deficiency between a p e r-son’s actual income and the total of his exemptions and deductions. SYMPATHY FROM ROYAE COUPLE -Adrian Desmittere, a hostage rescued from Congolese rebels at Stanleyville, is comforted by Belgian King Baudouin (right) yesterday in Brussels. Desmittpre’s daughter, 8 months, is held by Queen Famiola. Desmittere’s wife was ^lain by the rebels. Rebel Force Hunted in Congo Police Grads to Be Honored Nearly 150 basic police training school graduates from Oakland, Wayne and Macomb counties will be honored Dec. 17 with a graduation luncheon at Devon Gables. This will be the ninth graduation class of the school, sport-sored in the Detroit area by the Southeastern Michigan Association of Chiefs of Police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. ★ * * Featured speaker at the event will be Bernard C. Brown, special agent in charge of the FBI office in Detroit. His topic will be “Your Future in Law Enforcement.” Toastmaster for the affair will be Ralph W. Moxley, Birmingham chief of police. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy and colder today. Highs 30 to 38. Cloudy and windy tonight with rain or snow by iatc tonight, changing to snow flurries tomorrow and turning colder tomorrow afternoon or night. Low tonight 2.'> to 32. Highs tomorrow 30 to 37. Winds northeast to cast at five to IS miles an hour, becoming southeasterly at 10 to 18 miles an hour this afternoon, increasing to 15 to 25 miles an hour tonight, and shifting to northerly tomorrow. Sunday’s outlook is partly cloudy and colder. Ont Y«r A«o In Pontiac 4S 2^ Lot Anqnlet MU|K«oon 4.1 24 AAllwnuknn TrlivrjM^C 40 24 N^^Yotk""’ 5Ilmir(k 12 fMnri'>u"al> Ooklofi M 4/ Salt I akn L :hlcaaii 42 J5 s Ptamlvo if it a NATIONAL WEATHER Showers are due lonighl .over parts of Pacific Coasl, with snow due over norlliern Plateau and parts of Plains, snow showers In up|Mu Misslsslpiii Val-1^ and snow mixed witli ruin in l,akes men and northern MitUne. It'll be cooler in nortli and central Atlantic Const atlrtcf, Plains and Plateau and warmer in Lakes area. Ohio and Tennessee valleys and parts of Mississippi Valley. (Continued From Page One), Violent protests against the Western powers continued in Communist and African capitals. In Cairo, hundreds of African students burned the U.S. Information Agency’s John F. Kennedy Memorial Library and See Stories, Page 17 a Marine barracks in the U.S. Embassy compound. No one was hurt. The U.S. and Belgian embassies were stoned in Nairobi, Kenya, and the U.S., British and Belgian embassies were attacked in Prague. MAY ATTACK There was speculation that the rebels would take the offensive again when the Belgian paratroopers were withdrawn this weekend. Premier Moise Tshombe’s white mercenaries and supporting Congolese army troops did not appear to have sufficient strength to consolidate the rapid gains they have made across a vast area of the northern Congo. South of Stanleyville, rebels recaptured the tin mining town of Punia, taken last week by the government troops on their march toward Stanleyville. Despite the reports that the Belgian paratroopers might make more drops. Premier Theo Lefevre of Belgium said Brussels that Belgian resc operations in the Congo will end today. RUN RISK The Belgian premier told re porters that unless the operations were brought to an end We would run the risk of getting involved in the Congo’s civil war.” Belgian Ambassador Hip-polyte Cools (old the Soviet government in Moscow, however, that the Belgian paratroopers probably would be withdrawn from the (.'ongo within 48 hours. Cools went to the Foreign Ministry as Soviet criticism of the paratroop landing continued. There still ha.s been no direct mention in the controlled .Soviet press of white hostages killed by Congolese rebels. Cools and the British and U .S. diplomatic repre.sentatives in M0.SC0W were called to the Foreign Office Wedne.stlay ^0 hear denunciations of the paratroop landing in Stanleyville. They were told it constitute $'20-mlllion liner Shalom, pride of the Israeli merchant fleet and Its seven-montlis-old flagship, and the t2,723-ton M .rwegian tanker Stolt Dagali The (l2«-fnrkling white ship were 1,076 poraons. They Includeil crew memlmrs and a host of entertainers. No one suffered an Injury of any consequence, It was reported. The (anker, whose home port is Oslo, was Inbound (nr Newark, N. J. on a voyage (rnin I’hlladelphiu. Her tanks were 80 per cent filled with ■ cargo of vegetable oil. As ihe two plow«Ml through I he foggy murk on what was to be a collision course, neither apparently had any impending sense of dangei' even though both were equipped with radar. Hieir captains later declined to comment on circumstances preceding the collision. I Collections ■ Saturday Garbage and rubbish collections, delayed because of the Thanksgiving liollday, will Ire caught up by sonte Saturday eolleo-tlons, Clyde Christian, su|M«rintendent of department of pulkllc works, announced kaJay. Christian said the regular Thursday pickups . were being made today, I along with some normal I Friday colloctions. ! DPW employes will work tomorrow to catch up on remaining Friday collectluns. (Continued From Page One) Nam than are now con^l4ered possible. ' ^ Another benefit Taylor is believed to see in strikes to the north is that they might have a heartening effect upon military and anti-Communist elements in the south. Government instability has been for months one of the most serious problems in South Viet Nam. Though Taylor praised the “courage and determination” of the new civilian premier, Tran Van Huong, authorities here say the situation will get increasingly desperate unless the new regime can demonstrate it can command and enlist support from such politically powerful groups as students and Buddhists. Against these benefits of a possible escalation, or step-up of the war, the President and his advisers must weigh the possibility that such moves mav provoke responses from North Viet Nam’s regular military forces and even from those of Communist China. The Soviet Union injected its own warning into the Vietnamese situatio’n yesterday but failed to stir up any concern or even very much interest in government quarters here. NOT INDIFFERENT A statement by the Soviet news agency Tass declared that persons who “harbor adventurous plans” for Southeast Asia “shouid understand that the Soviet Union cannot remain indifferent to the fate of a fraternal .Socialist country and is ready to render the necessary assistance.” Upon his arrival at Andrews Air Force Base Tavlor denied reports which had preceded him here from Saigon that he would present a plan to President Johnson for extending military operations (o (he north and would resign unless Johnson accepts the plan. “.So fjir as I’m concerned I’ve eiillsled in ttiis war for Hie duration,’’ Taylor said, implying that whether he slays on is not his decision but the Pre,sldenl’s. .lolmson and Taylor are ex-Fiecled to meet Sumlay or Monday after the President returns from his extended visit to his Texn.'i rnneh. Advance word was that John-m would play an active role in the (ilaciissions prece , ......................... Cry Baby Magic I Lincoln Lop Building 4 k Doll Bottle I ^ Sets nCc $1.00 1 «f.m. on IV ™ 1I|, Ihi.-I liolll* limif llm linhy cryffl ' "■ mllli llrolly, Sol# miMoKl.:, TECO TOY TEIEPHOBE......68vU HALSOM ‘ABC’ BLOCKS .. .. 68« ASSOIREB GAMES Tudor Eleolrio FOOTBALL GAME 4” Iffll—“ THE PONTIAC PRESSj FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1964 THREE Sea Tragedy... and Band Played On NEW YOR^ (AP; - A rending crash split the tanker. Aad-var Olsen, ,wbcf had been asleep in. his bunk, suddenly found himself swimming for life in the cold Atlantic. A Jolting shudder shook the liner Shalom. ll knocked passengers to the dance floor. men and the clanging of the ship’s emergency bell. INTO EIFEBOAT He leaped into a lifeboat with nine other men and was lowered into the sea. The lifeboat filled with water.' helicopters lifted tpem to safety, but one of the nine died. to New York City. A 40-foot gash in her bow made .navigation difficult. Roger Elkarief, a Shalom deck steward, said: “All passengers and crew were alerted and they began to show' up on the decks, but there was no panic at all. N.Y. “But we'were very frightened. We thought we'd have to get into a «lifeboat and at that time of night, you can imag- She said the ^ band started playing and “some of the guests got up in their nightclothes and started dancing.” Murray Kaufman, 56, of Palisades, N.J., said that •when the baod started JJlaying . again, “the bar opened up and served "tree drinks after the first round.” “I heard' a grinding sound, said Samuel Gerson of Wynne-field. Pa. “I thought we might have hit a big whale or .something. I never thought it would be another ship.” On the, Shalom, some passengers .slept, !5ome went back to their dancing and some stood on deck. The .ship, after lowering lifeboats, left the crash scene off the New Jersey Coast to return BARS OPENED “The bars were opened and music began to play and many people danced until 4 o’clock in the morning (nearly two hours after the collision.) “We tried not to be scared,” said jean Meth of Great Neck, uramsED Electric Shavers ConuDar* Simm* pricat and than buy with confidanca. All Other Stores Romance You With Low Prices ONLY At Christmas'Time —SIMMS Woos You With LOWER PRICES All Year Long - and HERE'S MORE PROOF! Simmi camara pricas-ara low all year long and »till low at Chri»tma»^ti/na. So coma to Simms 'cau«a now'i tha tima to buy, now'i tha tima to save. $1.00 hold* your lalaction In froa layaway. "I was sleeping,” said Shelley Mangel of Philadelphia, heard the Jolt. ! jumped up and looked out the porthole. I saw the .sinking ship. Water was all over it. It looked like a submarine, I looked but 1 rouldn’t .see anyone around, either in the ship nr in the water. Then, 1 went bar k In bed.” KODAK COLOR HLM PROCESSING; |39 ..i::i KODAK KODACHROME II | " r:'*" S 35mm Slide Film * 620-120-127 Size I KODACOLOR Film 2.0-Kxp. 2 ^ KNOCKED TO FLOOR “1 was dancing with my wife, Barbara,'.' said .Stephen Tannen-baum, a New York City pharmacist. “We were knocked to the floor. We got up and man told us not to worry.” He said Shalom pa.ssengers in party dress nr nightclothes be-gan thronging In the outside decks. They were not aware that in the dark waters of the Atlantic Ocean, more than a .score of Norwegian seamen were battling for their lives.' Their ship, the Stolt Dagali, had been sliced in two by the prow, of the Shalom in early morning darkness and den.se fog Thursday. SIMMSifI FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 19H4 Roundup of World News Brazil Troops Hunf Suspects in 'Red-Backed Plot' RIO DE JANEIRO (^) Federal soldiers searched today through the interior city of Goi-ania for more than 100 persons accused of involvement in a Communist-backed plot against the Brazilian government. - ' * i ♦' / A::my Col. Carlos Meira Mat-tos yesterday led thejroops into Goiania, capital of GoiaS State, and deposed Gov. Maruro Borges. The War Ministry said he was the center of a “subversive focal point.’’ Mattos was named' temporary administrator. The federal congress has 66 days in which to ratify the action or Borges will be restored to office. Borges was carried from the palace on the shoulders of supporters and disappeared after urging the people to “stay calm and await the decision of congress.” The governor had obtained a writ of habeas corpus from the Supreme Court prohibiting his arrest. JAKARTA, Indonesia Uf) — Communist Chinese Foreign Minister Chen Yi arrived in Jakarta today on an unannounced visit for talks with Indonesian leaders. Chen Yi’s arrival became known only two hours before his plane landed. In a brief airport statement. he said he came on of friendship.” He recalled that President Su- 0. S. to Seek law to Curb Pep Pills WASHINGTON (AP) - The administration plans to ask for legislation making the possession of pep pills illegal. The pills are becoming a big money item in organized crime because of lack of federal control, says George P. Larrick, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. Arrests for possession of the pills can only be made now if the federal agents can prove the pills moved across state boundaries. Larrick said big-time racketeers are being attracted to the pep pill trade by the lure of large profits. The pills can be bought for $1 a thousand and peddled for 5 to 10 cents a pill, he said. Fumble-Fingered Felon SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) —A man robbed a liquor store of $195 this week, but in his flight he dropped his weapon— a toy pistol, his tassled cap, his sweater — and the loot. kamo had been to Peking twice recently an(J he had not been able to see him. TO ENLIST’ AID There was speculation that Sukarno would try to enlist Red China’s aid in barring Malaysia from the Asian-African conference in Algiers next spring. A Foreign Ministry . spokesman said Chen Yi would remain a few days. HONG KONG.(J>) - The Year of the Dragon is ending, and the rush to marry is on in this British colony. “It you want to get married at a marriage registry before the Chinese New Year, give notice now. * ,. * * “Heavy bookings are already being made for marriages next month.” The Year of the Dragon ends Feb. 2, to be succeeded by the Year of the Snake. Chinese couples prefer to marry at the end of a lunar year because it is regarded as an omen of good fortune. 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HOOKS WAIIL'IiMl/MNINr extent of Cuba’s possession'of such arms. “Cuba is a geographic", physical and^ political reality that we should not overlook,.’ said Argentinian delegate Sil- vano Santander at a meeting of Latin American nations. “Were Soviet (missiles) really retired from Cuba in 1962?” Santander asked, adding that Prime Minister Fidel Castro said only a'few days ago that 1 clear powers wquld respect a “the nudear arms rtow will be I non-nuclear zone and what af-handled by Cuban hands.” feet creation of such a zone * * ★ would have on the obligations ’ He said there also« were ques-. of Latin American countries in tions of whether the world’s nu- i regard to hemisphere defense. OVER 30 M.P.H. IN SNOW! • !«• Fishing •.Hunting • Scenic Off-Read Adventure McKIBBEN HDWE. UNION LAKE HEY KIDS! SANTA ARRIVED AT WAITE'S TOYLAND TODAY AT liiOO'- FIFTH FLOOR SHOP TILL 9 EVERY RIGHT TILL CHRISTMAS! 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SIkILI FLOOR Measured fREE in your homel Custom TABLE PADS Order Now lor Christmas MEASURED tREL: IN YOUR HOME BY FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE Just call IE /1251I to your home and t, wlile (hohe of uivmlm gtalii.s uml leullmt elln ive our repre-.enlallvo come tllul Idkn llin pollPins of your Ltui lulletlion Iniludes d lots Itu ludiny (loroils, wootb Uiblepuds , lourlhllour "■'A- THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY,/NOVEMBER 27, 1964 FIVE N.Y. Hero May Be firsf fo Win Medal of Honor in Vief War WASHINGTON (AP)' -- the government may soon award : the first hledal of Honor of the war iw South Viet Nam. ’ Secretary of the Army Stephen Ailes reportedly has approved'a recommendation that the nation’s highest decoration for valor be conferresd on Capt. Hugh C. Donlon, a SpeciM , Forces officer from Saugerties, N.Y.' ★ ★ ★ Final action on the recommendation would come from the White House. The MedaT of Honor has not been -awarded since the Korean conflict which ended in 1953. NIGHT ATTACK Donlon, 30,’ won the recom- . mendation from Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the top U.S. commander m South Viet Nam, as a result of Donlon’s conduct in a Communist guerrilla night attack on his camp last July 6. Although wounded, Donlon stayed in the fight and refused first aid. An official account said he stopped for treatment only when he was warned; he might die from lack of blood. ★ ★ ★ - Meanwhile, , reinforcements had arrived after two U.S. Special Forces soldiers were slain and seven of ten other American advisers had been wounded. Known Communist losses in the night assault on the c^p at Nam Dong totaled 55 dehd. OTHER DECORATIONS The. Army, Air Force, Navy and Marines have handed out thousands of lower-ranking dec- orations in South V*ef Nam oyer the past three years. ★ * ' ★ A report on**the total as of dct. 1 showed that among these have been three Distinguished Service Crosses, a Navy Cross and six Air Force Crosses, 46 .Silver Stars, 1,396 Bronze Stars, and 1,-#1 Purple Hearts which are given for wounds, ★ ★ A The most freely distributed U.S. decoration in South Viet Nam is the Air Medal — a total of 24,305 given out as of Oct. 1. These figures include clusters in lieu of repeat Ajr Medals. Donlon recently returned from South Viet Nam to Fort Bragg, N.C., the Army’s Special Warfare Center. ENLISTED IN ’53 He began his military career as an Air Force enlistelman in December 1953, served a hitch as an Army enlisted man and was commissioned in the Army in June 1959. , . His nearest relative is his mother, Marion H. Donlon of Saugerties. 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Waite's Third Floor of Fashion Waite's Have A Charge Account For Your Every Need Just Say "Charge It" Leather Handbags Reg. 7.99 toJ0,99 . ^5®® and '^6'*'* Special Purchase 401 NYLONS 3 Ladies' Lined Leather Stretch Gloves Reg. 4.00 and 5.00 $999 $044 and O Misses 100% Nylon Half Slips Regular 3.00 $2 00 Men's Assorted Sport Shirts R(m|. 4.00 $097 (inci 6.00 Z 100% nylon tricot in fancy and tailored slylcs. full cut, perfect fit. Lace and satin trims. Choose from white, blue, pink, maize, mint, lilac, black or red. Sizes S M I: :z 88^ /■ ! 1 Girls' Cotton Blouses $244 $344 liilnnl'i' Coulttioy Crawler Sets lA 2„*3 USE YOUR CREDIT ll'.s I (isy (111(1 Convoniont cit Waite's /vlen's Hosiery SALE 3 3i2 THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Htffon Street FRIDAY; NOVEl^ER 27, 1964 Pontiac, Michigan JOHN A. Rn.IT Secretary and Advertlalng Director O. Marshau. Joisan Local Advertising Manager . A Christmas for All: Saltation Army Goal No symbol is more truly representative of the Christmas spirit of fellowship and" solicitude for the needy than the kettle stand of the Salvation Army, tended by a cheery lad or lassie tinkling bell in hand. Beginning today and through Chirst-mas Eve, a dedicated corps of Army workers will activate 10 such stands to see that none face Christmas destitute or forgotten. ★ ★ ★ Last year, this unobtrusive organization that has brought salvation and inspiration to millions, gave Christmas remembrance and aid to 5,000 members of 500 families for whom the Day would otherwise have been desolate. Of the $13,000 spent by the Army on this Christian activity, $10,000 was raised by direct contribution to its Christmas fund and collections at the kettle stands. ★ ★ ★ This year promises to be a record-breaker in most phases of human endeavor. Let’s make it one in support of the Salvation Army’s Yule-tide mission. Nations, Like People, See Their Money Go Things are in a bit of flux on the international economic front. Mapy basically strong nations are battling that old fiscal bugaboo; balance of payment deficits. Which simply means that they create monetary liability with other nations greater than those nations do with them. The result is that they are or become debtor nations, with their gold reserves subject to demand to balance discrepancies. ★ ★ ★ Both the United States and Britain are in that category. Both countries have taken steps to remedy their unfavorable positions. The United States habitually exports more goods than it imports— which is of course a favorable factor. Where our dollars leave the country Is in the one-way flow of our vast programs for foreign aid and costly military .installations abroad and in the excess of spending by American tourists over that by those from abroad visiting America. To close or narrow the outgo-income gap, the U.S. has stepped up its export expansion drive in order to sell more U.S.-made goods abroad. As more manufacturers become export-minded, more Jobs are created. It is estimated that more than 3 million American Jobs depend on exports. ★ ★ ★ Uncle Sum has also Impot/ed nii ln(ereNt-e(|uuli/.atinn tax on pur-rhascH of foreign securitieH by AmericnnH, designed to slow the outflow of private invoatment capital. But since trade adjustments can rarely be unilateral, Britain recently lmiK)sed a 15 |per cent surcharge on Imports and plans a tax r<*bnto for Bfltlsh exporters. The effect of the two measures will make It more difficult to sell Ainerlcan gxH)ds In Britain and easier for British manufacturers to market their products in America. Another expedient adopted by John Bull lo keep his funds within the Kingdom’s borders and sup|M)it the slipping value of the pound sterling was the hiking by the Bank of Kngland of the rediscount rate from five to seven per cent—thd highest level in modem times. ★ ★ To partially counteract this. Uncle Sam’s Federal Reserve System boosted its rate from 3'/2 to 4 per cent. The over-all picture is further clouded by internal Jockeying among the six European Common Market nations over a complex pattern of tariff issues. It is to attempt an international reciprocal solution of sorts that the “Kenndy Round” of tariff negotia-tiohs was held earlier in the month in Geneva as a prelude to a later meeting in the same city of all members of the European Free Trade Association. Verbal Orchids to- Arthur II, Scutt of 1300 Winthrop; »4tli birthday. Mra. W. II. Campbell of 30 Bdlcvuo; 04Ui birthday. Willluin (;nlvv. miif MrR. F.rnrtil 0. Nnndrrii of f{o<-bcNtcr; ll.tid wedding nnniverNnry. Mr. uiiil Mm. ntflurii H. MrCormaek of 10 (hayinirn; 55fh weddinx nnidvernary. Voice of the People: “A 16-year-old London schoolgirl, who has 8,820 pictures of the Beatles, says.she plays Beatle records while doing her homework as this helps her to concentrate.” — News item. Concentrate with what? . . . But Gn The Other Hand Reviewing Other Editorial Pages In the “good old days” parents had baby-sitlers of their own for all their children except the first orte. /s Death Pen^y on the Way Out? By BARRY SCHWEID WASHINGTON (fP) - The Babylonians drowned murderers; the Israelites stoned Sabbath breakers; the Assyrians impaled the guilty; the Romans had an extra special way of dealin'l with citizens who murdered close relatives. They sewed the victim up in a sack with a dog, a cock, a viper and an ape. Then the sack was cast Into the sea or river. Last year in the United States, 21 men were put to death by legal authorities In entirely legal ways. ' Six were gassed, 13 were electrocuted and two more were hanged. The youngest was an 18-year-old Ne^o in Georgia; the oldest a 55-year-old white man in Arizona. ★ ★ ★ The crimes they committed are recognized universally as heinous: murder, rape and kidnaping. But, in this century — and there are notable exceptions — that’s the way more and more Americans, like people all over the world, are viewing the death penalty. SMALLEST NUMBER The 21 executed by civil authorities in the United States last year were, according to Federal Bureau of Prison records, the 8malle.st number executed in any year in the nation’s history. From 1930, the earliest for which detailed statistics are available, until 1949, at least 100 were so dispatched each year. Equally to the point is that capital punishment is as good tis dead in many states where It remains on the books. Only 12 states rficordcd executions In 1963. Seven states haven’t conducted an execution in a decode. At the moment, 42 states, the District of Coltimbia and the federal government impose capital punishment. It is illegal in six states — Michigan, Wisconsin, Maine, Minnesota, Alaska and Hawaii - and, for all practical purpo.ses, in Ithwle Island and North Dakota. ★ ★ ★ Perhaps the mo.st prominent voice raised against abolition of the death poiu.Ity is that of J. Edgar Hoover, since li|24 director of the FBI. HOOVER SPEAKS In June 1960, writing In the FBI law enforcement bulletin, tlie nation's mo.st famous erlme fighter said: "It l.s my opinion that when no shadow of a doubt remains relative to the guilt of a defendant, the piil)-lic interest demands capital puni.shmcnt be invoked where Ihe law so provides.” ★ ★ ★ And, he went on, “Hie profe,s.Nional law enforcement officer Is convineed from experience that Ihe hardened criminal has been and is deterred from killing based on Hie proHjiect of the death penalty.” Still, the pendulum Is swinging the other way. Election Frauds Chicago Tribune Vote buying, illegal “assistance” to voters, and repeated voting by the same persons marked this election in Chicago wards where the Democrats ’ have little or no opposition. The boldness of the illegal activities and. the numerous complaints received by The Tribune indicated that the Daley machine was operating with its usual high efficiency. * * * A group of University of Illinois students armed with credentials as watchers got a lesson in political science, as it is practiced in the 27th ward. Rod Mitchell of Peoria, a graduate student, reported that he saw one man vote four times. The man voted three times in the 26th precinct polling place, and later walked , across the street to vote in the 27th precinct, Mitchell said. Protests were Ignored by election judges. Sue Gordon of Urbana said .she saw precinct captains handing money to voters. A woman who had just voted asked Miss Gordon: “Where is the lady wlio is supposed to pay me my $5 for voting like she promised?” ★ ★ ★ Gloria Luptak of Chicago, a senior majoring in political science, and Robert Park, of Rock Island, reported that they watched a man who appeared to be handing money to voters. When he saw that he was being observed he crossed the street. A woman approached the students and asked them where the payoff man was. “This hag been the most brazen and disgusting experience of my life,” said Jonlec Nelson of Highland Park. “The judges refuse to recognize our credentials, there is money being passed to voters, and there are voters coming back time after time.” Similar examples of fraud were olisepved by Tribune reporters. Ttiroughtout the 29th ward, Democratic workers in front of polling places passed out orange card.s bearing lhc| following notice: “To the judges of election. I am unfamiliar with Hie opergtiori of the voting machine and I would like to be stiown how to pull the Democratic levers A and D and t(V vote •slraighl Democratic on the representative orange ballot.” voters assistance, although there is no provision in the law to render such assistance unless a voter is illiterate or disabled and has so indicated on his registration card. City Famous Motor News — Automobile Club of Michigan The name Lida Rogers does not mean much to most Michiganians, But what she did for tourists will live long after her. it it it It was recalled by her recent death. A high school biology teacher in Holland, Mich., Miss Rogers gave a talk 35 years ago to a women’s literary club. In it she suggested an annual celebration to commemorate a flower. Since 85 per cent of the city’s population was Dutch, she suggested it be the tulip. Two years later the city purchased 100,000 tulip bulbs, staging the first Tulip Festival in May, 1929, lasting nine days. The Festival has- brought world fame to Holland and millions of tourists to Michigan. We’ll bet there are a hundred simple, workable ideas for each community in Michigan which could produce sinular results. Want to make your town world-famous? Here’s how. / Capital L/etter: Kennedys Show Wisdom in Preferring the Senate The ■ards apparently were pled as authority to'give By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON: Bobby and Teddy Kennedy demonstrated their awareness of changing times w h e 1 they chose to | run for sena- \ torial rather] than gubernatorial office. Just as the governor’s man-sion of a big-vote state used to be considered the logical RUTH proving ground MONTGOMERY for the presidency, so the U.S. Senate has now become t h e launching pad for the White House. With the growth of big government and our increasing preoccupation with foreign affairs, the political spotlight has shifted to Washington; and while governors struggle with nagging sectional problems, senators grub the national headlines. From reconstruction days through the Roosevelt era only one senator, Warren G. Hording, made it to the White House. By contrast, every U.S. president since the Roosevelt era has earned his political laurels in the Senate forum, except f o r war hero Dwight D. Ei.senhower. •k k ' k In Hie lust 100 years the White House has been occupied f o r more than half the time by eight Presidents—Andrew Jphn- The BulK r llulf son, Hayes, Cleveland, McKinley, Wilson, Coolidge and the two Roosevelts — all of whom had gained executive experience by serving as state governors. VAST WORLD World War II awakened Americans to the vast world beyond our shores, and the Cold War dramatized it. Perhaps because a senator deals far more with international problems than a governor, the trend is now to shop the upper chamber (or party standard-bearers. Although Senator Harry Truman became president by way of the vice presidency, on the death of FDR, his unsuccessful GOP rival In 1948 was a govcj-nor, Thomas E. Dewey. Four years later, when t h e GOP snagged the five-.star general whom Democrats had also wistfully courted, the D o n k e y party ran a governor against him Adlai E. Stevenson. Ad-lai lost again in ’56. ★ ★ * In 1960 both parties nominated standard-beat-ers who had c u t their political eyeteeth in Con-gre.ss: John F, Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon. SENATE PRODUCTS Significantly, the t w o vice presidential nominees were also senatorial prmiuets: Lyndon Baines Johnson and I Henry Cabot Lodge. I.,ast August Johnson chose (or his running mute another senator, Hubert II. Humphrey. To oppose Johnson, Hie Republicans also picked a senator, Barry Goldwater, who dlpp«*d into the other house of Congress for his running male, William E, Miller. All of this adds up to sod news for governors, hut suggests that Hie Kennedys made jKilltl-cally astute decisions. Officers of Area Express Appreciation for Support The members of Pontiac Lodge No. 132 of the Fraternal Order of Police express their appreciation to the Pontiac Press for the editorial in support of police functions. With the emphasis that has been placed recently on “police brutality,” it is gratifying to know that we enforcement officers in the Pontiac area have the backing of the local news media. GERALD L.J:oLb, SECRETARY PONTIAC LODGE NO. 132 FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE Agrees a Handicraft Market Is Needed I agree that a market is needed in this area for people living on a small pension or Social Security. I recently met a widow who has no way to sell her handmade items. ★ ★ ★ r cannot be of any help but write this letter in ho^ that the right kind of people may come forth and be able to help. CAMILLE J. POULIOT ^ 253 N. WINDING DRIVE ‘The Chicken Has Become U.S. Emblem’ The heraldic insignia of the United States used to be an eagle. It has now become the chicken. I believe this is due in large measure to little men in big government. ^ uu a Our citizens are help captive and threatened with death by mobs of savages. Our flag is torn down and insulted in all parts of the world, and all our lame-brained leaders can do is send more of the American taxpayers’ cash to help the Communists. Do we have traitors in high places? Do our government officials represent and work for the United Nations or the United States? EXTREMIST Offers Suggestion for Poverty Program All you hear is how much money will have to be spent on the^ poverty program and the training it takes. All the training and the tax money together cannot cope with automation. If we are really interested in the common man, why not go to six h(wrs per day and work four shifts in place of three. When automation cuts from 70 men to less than 30 on one job and turns out more production, what good will the training do in the so-called poverty. Give people a chance to work. GEORGE SMITH 2511 LANDSDOWNE Questions Site for Osteopathic College Why is Mayor William Taylor pushing for contributions for the Osteopathic College to be located at Auburn and Opdyke Roads? Why not encoimage and promote downtown Pontiac rather than start an entirely new area that the college would automatically bring? » MRS. W. K. MARTIN OXFORD V (Editor’s Note; There isn’t enough wide open land in dovm-town Pontiac to handle a proposition as enormous as this is expected to be within the next 15 or 20 years. Also, the doctors who are spending many, many million dollars want it at Opdyke and Auburn). Reader Gives Three Cheers for Widow Hurrah to the widow! Too bad there aren’t more like you. MRS. BETTY DELLING 690 BALBOA Says Commission Is Dictating to People I believe some good, well-educated person should explain to the present City Commission (including the City Manager) the meaning of “taxation with representation.” According to my belief we are not in a city of dictatorship as it seems now. ★ ★ ★ When the new commission took over, William Taylor read a speech stating he as Mayor and the Commissioners elected by the people of Pontiac were going to do as the people of Pontiac wanted. Now they are dictating to the people of Pontiac and not asking the people if they want this income tax. it it if Remember, we are still living in a free democratic country and still believe in a demwratic form of government. A TAXPAYER ‘Area Needs Private Police Protection’ Many residents of Bloomfield Orchards are wondering how far the thieves and robbers will be allowed to go before our civic association will help us bring in private police protection. More people live here now and all could share cost. Why not a car kept in thi|! subdivision all the time? it it it £ Due to an alleged lack of law enforcement in our area we are getting hit hard. Many are even afraid to put Christmas decorations out this year. it it it Some whisper of a lawdlutn clernciil in a certain section of our .subdivision. If true, let’s clean it up and then fight for stop signs. A MEMBER OF BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS CIVIC ASSOCIATION Two Give Opinion on Unbiased Teaching 1 am concerned with the use of Hi^> classroom as a front to Indoctrinate the minds of young adults. Our teachers are not paid to leach their own view ■ ■ ■ "..... - student.s to form their own eonelusioriU ★ A A I know of one case in Waterford Township whore, in the classroom, the student stands on one side of the fence and the teacher the other. If these sliidenls do not have a trtkld of their own if they have not yet begun to think for Hiem.selves, at the etui of the semester Htey will liold Hie same ideals as the teacher. ‘Td never consider divorce, but I'm thinking of suing y for mental anguish anyway.” Whether these ideals are rigid or wrong, Hie process by which these concepts arc iiuloclrlmded Is wrong. The teacher is using unfair advantage of his position to promote his own ideals. The school board should demand an (mkI to this ANOTHER WORRIED TAXPAYER OF WATERFORD'l-OWNSHIP Teaching is one of tlie most honorable professions. A biased eacher loses the dignity ll.al Ids profession calls for when he leaches Itls own inlerprelatioii of ideas, political or otherwise, A FORMER TEACHER Has Kind Words for Hospital Personnel All the personnel at I’ontiac General Hospital should be given .siro'ale * *'* i•'"'>Kl'tful and e«n- A A A I believe our community should he [iroiid Hint we have a hoa-pllal as fine as I’ontlac (Jencral, MRS. CAIU, WRIGlh’ B340 I.YNSUE LANE (I ■ s,. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TRIDAy, NOVEMBER 27, 1^64 iEVEN; -A Junior Editors Quiz AtxMtT INSECTS QUESTION: What good are fruit flies? ANSWER: We think of fruit flies as nasty little pests which buzz around fruit and spoil it for us. It’s trtie fruit flies do a great deal of damage to fruit, laying their eggs ifl nuts, fruits and berries (1, 2). These eggs into little white maggots (3) and flien into brown pupae (4), from which adult flies emerge. But not all fhiit flies damage sound fhdt, some preferring rotting or fermenting cherries, apples and so on, which are worthless to us. In one special way, 'the fruit fly performs a, great service to mankind. They multiply with extj-eme rapidity, so rapidly that a fruit fly is completely grown in about 10 days —this representing about 20 years in a human lifetime. TTie life cycle of the fruit fly is so short that a scientist can check on a great many generations in a year, making it possible'to learn important things about breeding and heredity. In oiu- picture, a scientist is pointing out to two of his young friends a fruit fly strikingly different from the rest— it has short, stubby wings (above). By studying such variations, scientists keep learning things about the mysterious workings of nature. FOR YOU TO DO: Keep studying nature and looking for interesting, unusual things in the animal or plant world. Some day you might make an important discovery. Empty Rowboat Ends Search for Boy in Virginia PORTSMOUTH, Va. (UPI) -j The discovery of a small empty rowboat bobbing in the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay yesterday brought an end to a search for a 10-year-old boy missing since Wednesday. The Coast Guard halted the hunt for Jerry Hale after the boat was found drifting about two miles from Cape Henry.' Mayor Willie Brandt Wins Party Election KARLSRUHE, Germany (fl -Mayor Willy Brandt of West Berlin has been overwhelmingly reelected national chairman of the opposition Social Democratic Party. ■> The reelectiop yesterday a 11 Karlsruhe strengthened j Brandt’s leadership for next j fall’s general election campaign | against chancellor Ludwig Er-! hard and his Christian Demo- S crats. Brandt won a two-year! term as national chairman with I 314 of the 324 votes cast. 1 The boy’s foster parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Rose, reported the child missing Wednesday afternoon. They said he had been in a rowboat he had found on the beach last week. FAT OVERWEIGHT Volunteers joined the C o a s t Guard in ships, planes and helicopters in the massive hunt that began Wednesday evening and resumed after dawn Thanksgiving Day. TRADE-IN yoUr SKATES WE WILL ALLOW YOU UP TO ON FIGURE, HOCKEY AND ROLLER SKATES llvar IkaUi" "■runiwl«(|" 'X.C.I Men's, women's, boys', girls' skates. Any style, any condition! Now is the time to trade. OPKN IVERY NiaMT TO 9tl0 Optn Sumlo)r Noon 10 t F £3 lE^Fl S_'S KEEPS PRIC3ES 13 <3 WIM HEY KIDS! SEE SANTA AT ^EDERAL'S STORE! FREE CANDY TO ALL! _ --------------------------------7,t':qr----------------------- — 'iiu I Room-size 9x12' tweed rugs, ™, 19.99 . . . Ota $6 savings! 1.29 runners, rugs to match 88c.. 24x36" rugs, 24x72" runners. Sale priced. What a sale! What qualityl Luxurious rayon viscose pile defies footprints ... is easy to clean and long wearing! Bound on 4 sides to lie flat. Polyfoam backed for added spring to your step. Exditing tweeds. 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Salt ond pepper shakers. Handy help motes 4 beautifully decorated trays on brass finish logs. One set on casters (or easy lervlngil Save at Federal'i She'll love the heavy gauge polished aluminum, tight lit-ting covers, easy waterless cooking. Food raloini flavor. Makes perfect coffee every time and then keeps it hot till served. Signal light. Handy front spigot. ©f. • R0I idav * • ipv. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 P.M. OPEN SUNDAYS NOON TO 6 DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS (l/iiRl ChiUimas) • EIGHT ■ !»• ^ ' ‘‘I . . V ’ - ■ ' ^ ■R/c/t Memories Help Keep You Young By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - Memories in the heart can do morei to cheer you in yoiir old age than money in the bank. You’ve your fair share of living if you] can remember when— Your biggest goal in life was . to ride dowij a hill on a bicycle with your feet on the handlebars. Bob Hope was a rising young song and dance man on the two-a«day vaudeville circuit. CH.D STOCKING Mothers cured children of thumbsucking in their sleep by tieing an old stocking oyer then-band at bedtime. In many neighborhoods you could see dogfights in the street several times a day. ★ ★ During prohibition, if a man BOYLE walked unsteadily, it was suspected he had the “jake leg” from drinking a bad batch of Jamaica ginger. - Children seemed to learn more in schoo}, and didn’t have to spend ^ all evening doing homework. About as many people believed in prenolo^ as believe in astrology today. SMOKING GRANDMOTHERS More grandmothers puffed on corncob pipes than smoked cigarettes. Autumn’s greatest delight for a boy was to go walnut hUnling in the woods. Later, when you removed the rotting rinds, the, stain remained on your fingers for weeks. ★ ★ ★ During World War I, the flu epidemic caused Uncle Sam more casualties than did the kaiser. Everybody bought things at retail. Nobody seemed to bOve a friend who could get it for him wholesale. It was a family crisis if a girl with long hair went to the bar- Iwrshop and got It bobbed. Mother wept, and father stormed. The fellow who knocked on yoiur front door and tried to seU you a magazine subscription was working his own way through college not his son’s. ★ ^ ^ You smugly felt you had done your bit for the Lord if you dropped a quarter in the collection plate on Sunday: some gave only a dime. Many a fat man spilled more calories on his necktie at lunch than the modern doctors now allow him to have all day. HIRED GIRL Well-to-do families in smml towns usually kept a hired ^1. If you called her a maid or tried to get her to wear a uniform, she’d quit. Before the rise of suburban cookouts, the only people who generally cooked their food outdoors were cowboys and hoboes. A wise child hung up his mother’s stocking on Christmas Eve because it would hold more pjresents than his own. The most' quoted fellow in a village was the village idiot. Everybody would rather have him around than send him to a state asylum, where they’d miss the benefit of his daft wisdom. ★ ★ ★ A Spendthrift was a py who bought a suit with only one pair of pants. . ■Ihose were the days! Remember? (Advirtisemenl) Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH No^ummy. gixiey pasty taste ot feeling. Get PA8TKETH today at drug counters everywhere. fileed m ih«wn sit rireitonfi Sleren temptllllvelv priced «| rirailons Dealers and at dll service ilalloni dliplaylng Hie FIrtslone sign. FIRESTONE HCH.IIIM . leCSIMIMN 333-7917 H 4-9970 / OPEfS MOISDAY IHHV FKIDAY 'TIL 9—SATIKDAY TIL 6 MOID AND AS5f/HWf , jjJTH CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT THAT REAUY.WQRK$I^ “ .......'■ ■ ROAD GRADER EASY! SAFE! FUN! Make over 50solid piasuc construciion toys: Cement Mixers revolve, Electro-Magnetic* Cranes pick up pnd release; Truck mounted Dipper 'and Clam Shovels that raise, lower, open and close. 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Build an unlimited variety of modern structures like Skyscrapers, Airports, Shopping Centers, Motels, etc. Strong, colorful plastic parts just snao together—no tools! At odvarffMcf on TVf Set 21 (137 |k:s.), $2.17; Set 22 (2.31 pcS.), $.3.57 KENNER’S FREEWAY U.S.A. Brlds«i & Turnpike Building Sets Exciting building fun build all kinds of realistic sx* pressways, clovsildafs, inlarchangvs, 4 Imimi highways! Itiiitd all lyims of bridges Bus|H>nNion, rAntil'ever, arched, doubla deck! Many! Unbreakable polyellivlcne girders and high-str0fig '----T AW liiiir l» romloiMlMif III X Urdin.i Kotkri. W.iiiMo lo.k,' ^ooitHouMkMpIr^ \ (< invodl) j i, , Uiint lo irmr' ll x iuiiiliul.ililr W.iiil (i> m lliir' 7/i«- Mnuutailuin- of Hr, liiu. Rm Kdlwiii^ llo'ik'as and llntiiii'iig Chant Our Servive in Topn CONVENIENT—EASY TERMS —CAREFUL FREE DELIVERY AMPLE FREE PARKING Jwit Around Corner on Clark Street 'I 144 OAKLAND AVE. Opuit Motido)' and I'tidar NtghI 'III 9 Conv«ni*nf Ttrmt — SO Dayt Soma an Cath 21 STYLES TO SELECT FROM! HEATHER ISLE COLLECTION OF RICHLY TAILORED HERRINGBONES y of all wool iportcoal* . I. Cliooia diltinclivi 29 ?5 QUALITY TAILORED DRESS SLACKS Pannay'i fin* qudlity (abrici that qiv* you ••rvica and w that bland with your ipbrf coaft. Chooia li and 70y« Orion Acrylic 2 tnparad modalt. PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURSi V.30 A.M. lo 9 P.M. \ V TEN . THE i^OMlAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1964 LBJ to Prevail, State Congr(Bssman Makes Assessment WASHINGTON (AP) - 11 is the opinion of Rep. James Harvey. R-Mich., that President Johnson will get just about what he jvants from the new Congress which convenes Jan. 4 The congressman expressed belief today that Congress will take a sober look at the legislative requests sent to the Capitol by Johnson, but in the end the President will get about what he desires. Besides Johnson's smashing victory over Sen. Barry Gold-water. Democrats increased their majorities m both houses of Congress, particularly in the House. Harvey, who won a third two-year term in the Nov. 3 election, said that never since 1936 have the Republicans in Congress been at such a, low count. “The Democrats must accept the full responsibility for all, Itgislation," he said. “Our Republican role will be constructive." Harvey said he will support Johnson’s requests when he believes the President is right and will oppose him when he believes Johnson is wrong. As an illustration, he said, he supports the administration move to increase the bank interest rate by 'z per cent following a move by Great Britain to increase the bank rate there from 5 to 7 per cent. Harvey said he will seek membership on the House Ways and Means Committee. He noted Rep. Victor Knox, R-Mich., a committee member, was defeated for reelection. Lower Rote Expected for '64 '63 Fd//oi/f Sufposseef Any Prior CHOW AT THE WALL — Pfc. Danny Wiens of Augusta, Kan., carries his Thanksgiving dinner to the dining area at Checkpoint Charlie in West Berlin, Wiens' meal included turkey and other traditional food served to U. S. military personnel around the world. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. W • Radio active fallout in‘1963 I f r 0 m nuclear explosions ex-c e e d e d that of any previous year, the U.N. Scientific Committee on Atomic Radiation said today. The committee’s 1964 report said long-lived fallout^ in 1962 was three times that of 1960-61. With the ending of atmospheric and underwater testing in December 1963, descending fallout for 1964 was expected to drop to two-thirds of that in 1963, the report said. Short - lived fission products decayed to negligible levels during 1963, so no further dose will come from the stratosphere af-)ter 1964, the report added. * ★ ★ A seientific source close to the committee said the committee had reached no conclusions concerning underground testing. He said there was no pub-llished evidence of water contamination from underground tests. As for venting — the leaking of radiation into the air- gases formed by underground explosions could cai^ comparatively heavy amounts of contamination, the source said. He said concentrations o f Say Ford to Remarry Soon MILAN, Italy (AP)—The magazine Oggi in Milan, Italy, reported today that New York friends of Henry Ford II and Maria Christina Austin say they will be married before Christmas. The head of the Ford Motor Co. and the Venice-born divorcee, seen-together frequently during the past year, reportedly will be married in a civil ceremony and travel in Europe on a brief honeymoon, Oggi said. The article, by Benedetto Mosca, said: “Three persons very close to Ford gave this to us! Maria Christina herself confirmed it, although not explicitly ... in New York, where she lives after leaving Milan for good.” Ford and the former Anne McDonnell were divorced last February. > iodine 131 found in the state of Utah apparently came frpni tests carried out, in Nevada, where the United States has triggered a series of underground detonations. The source said the committee never specifies which tpsts are used as a basis for its observations. NOT POSSIBLE The committee said it was not yet possible to" assess how nuclear radiation already disseminated by testing, would affect the spread of cancerous malignancies among humans, if at all. It said information so far available on this was unreliable. The report was compiled before the recent first atomic test by Red China. The committee source said, however, that the Chinese test was too small to determine how what pattern any futurh Chinese testing would take in terms of radiation and which world areas would most likely be affected. In terms of employment, the forest - priiducts industry now ranks third in the Tennessee Valley — after textiles and Chemicals. PONTIACI^LL OPTICAL CENTER OLuii I 8Jb PM 682-1113 TEEN-AGERS LEARN TO DRIVE • Daily and Evtning Instri^loni • Licensad by Staff el Michigan SAFEWAY DRIVING SCHOOL FE 2-22M WO GRANDA—PONTIAC 2 Refugees Wander, but Escape From East BRUNSWICK. Germany (AP) - Two East German refugees lost their way among the barbed wire barriers along the Iron Curtain border and by mistake doubled back into Communist territory, Western border police reported today. The refugees, a 41-year-old high school teacher and a 27-year-old farm worker, finally managed to gel across the border — unseen by East German guards — after wandering around the barriers in the dark last night. The population of Great Brit-I ain is largely urban, with 80 to j 90 per cent residing in cities I and towns. , | LAKE BRAEMAR ESTATES 600 HOMESITES on Davisburii; Road ME 7-1101 PAINT and WALLPAPER FOY-JOHNSTON Miracle Mile Shopping Center | Once you’ve heard this revolutionary new IVIcigi ASTRO-SONIC^ STEREO HIGH FIDELITY you’ll know why tube sets are obsolete •USES NO TUBES—Astro-Sonic is the space-age development that surpasses all previous achievements in the re-creation of sound! Its solid state circuitry not only eliminates component-damaging chassis heat... it is ten times more efficient than conventional tube seta! • StereoFM, MonauralFM plus selective AM Radio • Solid state Stereo Amplifier produces 15-Watts undistorted music power • Six highly efficient speakers include two IZ" Bass Woofers • Fabulous Micromatic Player lets your records last a lifetime—Diamond stylus Is guaranteed -10 years • So dependable-the solid state components are guaranteed 5 years I Im (>intflm|iornry Aitro Sonic tmidfll t sifill In Wulniil (InUh OJi^ $29850 SUCH VAST TONAL DIMENSION ... IT CAN WHISPER OR THUNDER THE FULL BEAUTY OF MUSIC you munt hnar It to ballave it! Thn advoncoH acoiintical syatam Bxtendu thrllllna starao sopnration to Ilia vary width o( your room. Gliding lop panals rIvo moat convanlant access to record player and all controls—without disturbing your top-of set accessorlas. All these features ... at less cost than most ordinary tuba sets today. **whert> tmalitv funtlfurf h itrlrtul riffht** CLAYTON’S 2m OK(!IIA^I> I.AKK ROAD PHONE TI.1-7052 IliHirii: MiHtiln.v aii. The Red Carpet Is Out Now is; the lime lo brijjhien your lioriio for the liplidayf. ,\t .Spencers you will find a large selection of carpet that .‘•alidies >our carpel needs. Remember at Spencci new home buyers can pick out that new c,n|jel. imu, and a mall depo,>.it will hold inilil V'U ready *ALONGr WITH 743 Other Colors l-iir»(* Ncicrtion of lliill llaianccs al Keduipd IViics Heavy I’liisli Heavy Scrolled ACRILM* NYLON • i'liinpkin fj/ wl ^ # IVItirtiiii a IliMOIllillUIMl Piillcrii ^ X V fJ Ih’gulur Utnulur / 2.<>5 \J ^ n.At I ni-.>S. FRIDAY. NOVKMBEl( 27. 1964 EI.RVEX ORCHARD FURNITURE IS STAGING AN OLD FASHIONED you’ll l/y/C with EARLY AMERICAN “mAde-to>your • NO SPRAYING -no calcium residue to ifritalc nose and throat —no "white dust" to disturb housekeeping' ► CLOG FREE solenoid valve- -I- eanabie monel filter prevents Hogging . COSTS ..LITTLE to operatc-less ^ than night lighL bulb . REVERSIBLE installation - on anv forced warm air furnace, * either left or right side A BIG 4 VALUE. iriun ‘57.95 HURRY! While Stock Remains! COATS • PANTS • Dacron Insulated • Full Zipper Front UNDERWEAR $799 Complete $uit INSULATED JACKETS (Poplin Jackets too) K. t INSULATED SKI JACKETS........$13.88 $1 HOLDS TILL CHRISTMAS Shetland FLOOR POLISHER $2295 /ft« / 9.9.-, '34 88 12" Field BOOTS $499 POR TNI PIMPUCI Pres*to*logs case of 6 $|59 Complete Selection of Bright New CHAMPION and FLEXIBLE FLYER ^ SLEDS OENERAL HUMIDIFIER PIATES $149 $997 THE PONTIAC PRESSj FRIBAY, MQV^EIVIBER^ Divorces f*' from Mark F. Potnam . from iraiM M. Elllof R. Rlchfar^ Polly > Curtis Pansy......... Mary E. from Jerald B. AAarvIn violet C. from John H. Thorpe Gayle A. from BugnM R. Brimer Stephen N. from Unda N. BKk Gretchen from fkfchard Bowman Diane C. from Allan E. Pyne Greta from Olden Jackson Bird from Betty N. AAcCaflsIer« Barbara C. from Maynard C. Holmes Katherine R. frord Jos^ E. Ray Jack F. from. Donna J. Looman Geraldino from Stanley W. Teddy Haiel R. from Brian M. Geyer Margaret from Wilbur A. Wood Eleanor L. from Robert A. Sticker . Netta R. from Ray Cook Judy A. from William A. Redden Mary L. from Thomas R. NadolskI Jessie from Robert Watson Doris E. frbm Philip C. Stephens Norma J. from Thomas J. AAalray ’Imofhy J. from Lynne D, Wheeler MarMrat J. from Dale Harvey Owen Judith L. from Alan I. Parmet „Lucllle from Roland Baker Peggy A. from Cleon Miracle Rita J. from Peter M. Soelch Jaclyn M. from Kemp J. ^sewall Wesley W. from Mary Waite Doris AA. from Donald D. Hunt Margaret S. from Gordon L. Martin Louis from Margaret Walters Joan M. from Gordon R, Reitz Marlean A, from Nolen B, Cross Barbara J, from Roderick M. SabatinI Mary L. from Thomas W. Martin Jr. Rosalie J. from Jose J. Torres Mary A. from Donald E. Maher Lloyd Woliace ORDER NOW FOR EARLY DELIVERY ON ’65 GADDYS JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC FE 3-7021 20% DISCOUNT Clearance Sale Select-O-Verse Pcrsonglized CHRISTMAS CARDS r«rumiliail WhlM Wall ^ 24 Hr. Service on Personalized ROBBER STAMPS Got Your Name, Address and Zip Code, too—on a Rubimr Stomp ABLE Rubber Stamp & Printing asia Woedwird r.i blocks South tl U Mile Rd. Royal Oak Doily 9 to 9 Sun., Nov. 29, 1 to 6 In Idaho, noteiy for its^ hunting,- bears weighufg founds have been shot. The 27,‘1964 rHIHTI^EX mal elk population is 20 000 ;an, wolf, lynx, moose, antelope cougar and deer abound. ' A new, superconducting alloy las been m^^de at California Institute of Technolipgy by an ul- tra-falst cooling technique that opens the way toward develop-' ,ing other such alloys." TYPICAL FAMILY — A native of Nepal, Photofax Tulsi Narayan, 50, sits in front of his fruit’ tion in the Himalayas. He is happy, relaxed stand with some of his children. Narayan and more or less unaware/of world events represents a typical member of the tiny na- that make things tense elsewhere. It's a Relaxed Country No Need for Psychiatrists in Nepal KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) — j halt ^nd a chat with the first If Nepal had any psychiatrists i Passerby who happened along, they’d go broke. j STREET SCENE Here in Katmandu, with the world and most of its tensions far off on the other side of the surrounding Himalayas, no one seems to have a worry serious Women buzzed at each other from balconies overlooking the street. Children, ragged and filthy but happily unaware of it, scampered about. Merchants enough to warrant paying to > dozed over their displays, have it solved. Dilbahadur Gurung, 22, an up- * * * and-coming tobacco merchant, Katmandu’s “man in the on a good day grpsses the equiv-street” — normally found sleep- j alent of $3, nets considerably ily squatting on the sunny side less. But it’s enough. — is remarkably free of tension. ‘ “How about your custom-A newsman just in from the ers?’’ he was asked. “Aren’t tense “outside” had difficulty j they afraid of smoking because i WORRY KILLER finding anyone giving any of the official warnings about For anything that does get a are neighbors, the sturdy 10,000 don’t get too fired up about marching off to defend the borders. At an improved rifle range in a rice paddy outside Kataman-du a nervous recruit cut loose with a Bren gun and sprayed the countryside, almost shooting a few holes in a Buddhist temple where a dozen monks were chatting prayers. The army officer in charge thought it was hilarious. He laughed and laughed. thought to problems that have much of the world concerned. FRUIT PEDDLER Take Tulsi Narayan, who for most of his 50 years has squatted on the same comer of Jud-dha Road selling fruit. Yawning, he consented to an interview through an interpreter. I “How’s business, Tulsi?” I “All right. Some days I sell something. Some days I don’t.” “Worried about war?” NOT WORRIED “I wouldn’t have to go. Only ^ soldiers fight.” I “Aren’t you worried about the athmic bomb?” j What’s the atomic bomb? cancer?’ “What’s cancer?” he asked. PROBLEMS EXIST jThis isn’t to say there aren’t ’ any problems in Nepal. There are. This is a rugged, cold ; mountain country and it’s pretty tough sometimes to scrape q living. It’s just that few worry about | bit worrisome, there are two antidotes. i One is rakshi, a powerful beer brewed from fermented rice. A couple of slug of rakshi and any | pToblem is guaranteed to jump the Himalayas. The, other antidote is “bholi” ■ literally meaning tomorrow. Bholi, bholi” — impatiently makes today a snap “■ . ,even if tomorrow may be a bit Rice prices went up a while fluttered back and that made everybody pretty mad for a time. But now there's little more than an eloquent shrug of the shoulders when the subject is raised. The government, personal arm of King Mahendra. doesn’t take things too seriously either. ENJOY DINNER at i Tfanvey’xJ ‘ COLONIAL HOUSE OR 3-0940 “How about the wav the So-' HOURS viets demoted Premier Khru- Office hours are supposed to shchev?” begin at 10 a m. but 10:45 or 11 * * * a m. is more realistic. Then “Who’s he?” I there is lunch and a little snooze And so it went, all the way in the afternoon before every-down Juddha Road. ' body takes off at 4 p.m. so he Ambling cows took the right- won’t be locked in the building of-way and the mainstream of when it clo.ses at 5 p.m. traffic — a few ancient cars, | Nepal has an army of only 10,-► I rickshaws and bicycles — | 000 men. And since the world’s ! [ I swerved to the side or stopped, | two most populous nations, I * I Any place seemed to do for a I Communist China and India, ■r- lti:i OKK i»in r ill III SUM,I, I I.OIIU III I'lixiriiik. Willi ilx M 0 ilrliiiliirully Ill'll THEY I’l l UP THE I’KEE, THEY IVIONTIINA ON THE EEO^JIt COVMIINC miw III In im nliiiw you iiiii mil, nloiio-liki' i'lil|in ... mil In ilnr|i, Ir lfii.liii'n . . . Miiiillnii will iiihIki your roi W^’ll iirniiiKi' l^lll^y Tn iiiB for ll, loo. ENOU<;il MOIMTNA TO COVEH A 9’xl2’ AREA EOIl AH I,rm,E AS #119 INSTAEIJH) KXI’KHT IN.S’I'AI.I.ATHUN.S . . . I IU':K DKI.IVKIUKS gi® FLOOR COVERING U 3286 Dixit HWY. • OR3-I209 II ilo “iEJiere llenuly tntj Itutlf/nl Meol" HOW TO BUILD A FISH HOUSE' for Hobby and Commercial Ice Fishing For Fishing Fun in the Winter, keep snug in your own UPSON FISH HOUSE fREE: Ea>y-To-Follow building and aMambly Inttruc-tioni. Practical and inaxpanilv* ta build with tturdy, lighlwaighi, windproof and warm UPSON all-waathar $1085 I oompitf* All Matwrialt Including Hardwar* for 4'x6' Shanty Masonite TIDY BOARD Animal Shapod Peg Board. Par-fact for room dacorotor. Pickup ramindor, and clothas rock. Thraa shades of color. Complete with necessary fixtures for easy mounting. PRE-FINISHED MAHOGANY PANELINGS Uniform in Color 4’x7’ .... 3«.n 4’x8’ . . . . 3?» W# hove In stock pre-finished hardwood moldings, to complement your panelings. BURKE Lumber 4495 Dixi« Hwy. -OR 3-1211 HOURS- OPIN WIIROAVI MOMBAY Mm PRIMY • A.M. tt liM EM. tATUNPAYStwinf Ul. t* 4 M. FOURTEEX rijiy. PONTIAC; ^ress, friday> nqvei^iber 27, i904 t X-’ . s Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MRS. JAMES GEROW Service fot Mrs. James (Au, drey D.) Gerow, 46, of’319 N. Saginaw will be at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Gerow died yesterday after ” an illness of several weeks. She was a member of Christian Temple., Surviving are her husband; her mother, Mrs. George Peth-ers of Pontiac; four brothers, Kenneth qf Pontiac, George of Clarkston and Henry and Thomas, 4)Oth in Florida. !0 surviving are seven sisters, Mrs. Lila Robinson of Pontiac, Mrs. Margaret Jacopec of Rochester, Mrs. Rilie Powell of Monticello, Ind., Mrs. Ann Thompson of Grayling, Mrs. Charlotte Bergy of Gaylord, Mrs. Edith Sides of Vanderbilt and Mrs. Florence Theiss ol Goodison. ISAAC MYERS JRl Service for Isagc Myers Jr., 67, of 233 Oakland will be at 1:30 p.m. Monday in- the Hun-toon Funeral Home .with burial in White Chapel Meniorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Myers, a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died erday after a long illness. He was a member of Knights of Pythias, Masonic Lodge No. 21; a^ Knights Templar. Surviving are his wife, Alma; a son, Lloyd V. of Springfield Township; a daughter, Mrs. Bonita M. Fox of Pontiac; four grandchildren; a sister; and a brother. ROBERT N. STEWART Service for Robert N. Stewart, 56, of 5755 Corunna, Waterford Township, will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow in the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston. Burial will follow in the Lakeview Cemetery. Mr. Stewart, a member of the Methodist Church in Clarkston, died Wednesday after a long illness. He was a real estate salesman and a member of Pioneer Lodge No. 79, F&AM, Sag-ignaw, Detroit Moslem a li d Knights Templar, Detroit. Surviving are his w i f e, Frances; two sisters; and two PATRICK D. CAMPBELL TROY — Service for Patrick b. Campbell, day-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Campbell, Montclair, will be 9:30 a.m. at St. Andrews Catholic Church, Rochester. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. The baby died Wednesday. His body will be at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester, until time of service. Surviving besides his parents are seven brothers, Joseph, Edward, Paul, John, Steve, Kenneth and Karl, and a sister, Mary, all at home, and his grandparents, Mrs. Helen Campbell of Oxbow Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Dave Susalla of Troy. NORMA J. FITZSIMMONS NEW HUDSON - Requim Mass for Norma J. Fitzsimmons 17 - year - old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fitzsimmons, 29925 Milford, will be 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Milford. Burial will follow in St. Mary’s Cemetery there. A student at South Lyon High School, Norma died Wednesday after a long illness. The Rosary will be recited at 7 tonight at the Phillips Funeral Home, South Lyon. Surviving besides her parents are five sisters, Doris, Ro.se-mary, Mary Jane, Judy and Unetta, and a brother, David, all at home. ELMER D. FORI) LAKE ORION - Service for Elmer D. Ford, 73, of 117 E. Church will he 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the First Baptist Church. Burial will follow In East Lawn Cemetery. Mr. Ford died yeiiterday after a lengthy illness. His body is at Allen’s Funeral Home. A retired maintenance e m -ployc of the Village of Lake Orion, Mr. Ford was a gardener for the William E. Scripps estate for 16 years. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Henry A. Snover of Lake Orion; a brother; and two grandchildren. JERRY JOHNSON BIRMINGHAM Service for former resident Jerry Johnson, Bl, of Roscommon will be 1 p, m. tomorrow at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. A retired paint contractor and decorator, Mr. Johnson died Tue.sday. Surviving are his Wife, Edna; three daughters, Mrs. Harold Tolies of Royal Oak, Mrs. Fred Cooper of Berkley and, Mrs; Kenneth Meunier of Bloomfield Hills;- a son, James of Monroe; three sisters; a brother; 11 grandchildren; and four greatgrandchildren. i LOISL.dONES WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP Service for Lois L. Jones, 53, of 9652 Round Lake will be II a.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will follow in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Pontiac. Owner and operator of Jones Dari-Creme, Waterford Township, Mr. Jones died yesterday after a short illness. He was a member of First Methodist Church; Hill Gazette American Legion Post No. 143, Auburn Heights; and Pontiac Coin Club. Surviving are his wife, Olive; a daughter, Mrs. Douglas Cue of Waterford Township; his step?-father and mother, Mr, and Mrs. A. N. Boyd of Rochester; a sister, Mrs. Homer Johnson of Rochester; and five grandchildren. FRANK MACIER TROY - Frank Macier, 75, of 1750 Hartshorn died early today after a long illness. His body is at Price Funeral Home. MRS. W. CLIFFTON RANDALL BIRMINGHAM -Service for Mr's. W. Cliffton (Ethel Taylor) Randall,, 77, of 770 Shirley will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Anderson Funeral Home, Windsor, Ont. Burial will follow in Rose Hill Cemetery, Essex County, Ont. Mrs. Randall died Wednesday after a short illness. She was a member of Presbyterian Church, Order of the Eastern Star, and the Home Demonstration Club, all in Leesburg, Fla. Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Mrs. William K. Fischer of Woodbury, Conn, and a grandchild. DAVID E. TUCKER AVON TOWNSHIP - David E. Tucker, 70, of 3052 Greenwood died yesterday after an illness of five weeks. He was a farmer. His body is at D. E. Pursley Funeral Home, Pontiac. Surviving are his wife, Dicie a son, Doyn of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Willie Berry of Orion Township; and two broth-i ers, Vernie of Pontiac and Rubin of Arkansas. BERT A. VICKENGS PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for Bert A. Vickengs, 77, of 4105 Giddings will b(^ 1 p. pi. tomorrow at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will follow in East Lawn Cemetery, Lake Orion. A former inspector at General Motors Truck and Coach Division, Pontiac, Mr. Vickengs died yesterday after a long illness: before retiring in 1945, he had worked at the plant since it was established in 1928. Surviving are his wife, Katherine M , and two sisters. Found Slain ‘ GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -Walter Sidor, 48, a handicapped World War II veteran, \yas found dead .late Thursday in his southwest side home, apparently the victim of a robbery-sldying, police sjaid. , Detective Inspector Walter Gilbert said ah autopsy indicated that Sidor, a bachelor, had been struck a fatal blow to the The man’s wallet was missing, Gilbert said. ■' The victim apparently had been dead several days before the body was discovered by his ,naother and other relatives on a Thanksgiving Day visit, investigators said. SERVICE DISABILITY Gilbert said neighbors claimed that Sidor had been receiving a government pension as compensation for “some type of seizures’’ suffered as a result of Armed Forces service. Sidor had operated a small general repair shop across the street from his residence, said Gilbert. He added that investigators had no immediate leads to the assailaht. Local Man Hurt in Fight Earl Hairston, 32, of 494 Nebraska is in fair condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital with a knife wound suffered in a fight yesterday afternoon. ★ ★ ★ Police are holding John Henry Shaw, 23, of 550 Arthur for investigation of felonious assault. The fight occurred at 2:15 p.m. on the porch at 227 Rockwell, according to police. Hope Coin Shortage Has Its Bright Side NEW YORK (AP)-The kettles on the comers this Christ-iflas season piay see the bright side of„the coin shortage; Thd Salvation Army and the Volunteers of America are optimistic that the public will drop paper money instead of change in the kettles. ★ ★ ★ Elsewhere the coin shortage is a cloud without a silver lining. “We anticipate we will have more dollar-and-up contributions in the kettles this year,’’ said Ralph E. Chamberlain, director of fund raising in the New York area for the Salvation Army, which traditionally uses corner kettles to solicit funds for,4ts work. SANTA GARB The Volunteers of America provide street-corner contribution points manned by men in Santa Claus garb. Waterfonl LUMBER CO. INC. -CASH 'IS' cAuny specials- TO 3 P.M. Pre-finished M MAHOCANY PANELING GRADE A 4x7 Sh«»tt *3 The plane, flight 114 bound for McCarran field here from Phoenix, Ariz., cra.shed on a mountain top Jess than 10 miles from here in a blinding snow storm a week ago Sunday night. All 29 persons aboard were killed. Dr. Roland Roepe, head of the CAB human factors team from Washington which investigated the crash, charged Wednesday that Chief Deputy Coroner Jeff Corni.sh hampered the investigation by refusing to yield jurisdiction over the bodies of the victims and insisting that local pathologists do the auto|)sies. Townsend Named toU.S. Committee Lynn A. Townsend, of 5991 Orchard Bend, Bloomfield Township, Chrysler Corp. president, was named today to the Treasury Department’s U. S. Industrial Payroll Savings Committee to serve as chairman for the Metropolitan Detroit area. The appointment was made by Douglas Dillon, secretary of the treasury. ★ A ★ The committee, originally organized in 1963, comprises 32 of the nation’s outstanding business and industrial leaders. It is charged with directing a national effort to stimulate sales of U. S. Savings Bonds through the Payroll Savings Plan. “We have been concerned about the coin shortage,’’ said Gen, J. F. McMahon of the Volunteers. 1 But, he added, his organization is hopeful any lack of coins may be more than offset by currency contributions. In the past, said McMahon, banks would groan when they spotted the Volunteers arriving with bags of coin. APPROACHING US “This year they’ve been approaching us to get the coins,” said McMahon. For merchants the coin shortage could mean loss of sales. ®‘To head off that possibility retailers. and banks have been trying all kinds of methods to attract coins from the public. Scores of banks are offering paper dollars for l&s^than 100 cents in change. The Christmas kettle groups are eying the bank offers with anticipation since they are sure to collect a great deal of change during the season, despite the shortage. “I’ve.been thinking of sending Volunteers into banks with a dollar in change at a time,’’ said McMahon in jest. Dealh Takes Major in Salvation Army Mrs. Major Emest''(Mary) Al- , der of 532 Orchard Lake died this morning after a brief illness. She’was 80. Her body is at the. Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. ■ With her husband, the late Major Alder, she was assigned te serve the local Salvation Army Citadel from 1926 to 1929. She was born in England. Mrs. Major Alder, a member of the Salvation Army of Pontiac, leaves two sen MonAny, ff'etinetniay uiirf Friiluy HvfiiinKti 'til 9 2363 Orchard Leke Road (Sylvan Center) Phone 6S2-0I99 LOANS 1,000 to ^5,000 Cash whm nvvdod I | without oliIlKiitInii, nnil tiilh with Mr. I Merle Vomn or Mr. Iliii'kiier, wlio liiive I In ronitiir (IiiiIiik (he |>iik( in yejirii. All | horrowers will leNlllv li> leeelvliia tiilr, hoiienl, nml eonrleoiMi Ireiilnieiil. (Po not I Inhe n ehiiiice (leiilliiK with xlniiiKerN or I llv l>.V nlRhl lenilern ) | When you ern lo nIkii oiiIII the liiiiii In eloMMl. No I eliurne lor lunpeelhm, n|i|irrilNiil or xnrvey. | No ehnrKe lor nhnlrnel, tllle aeiireh or lltle , InHiirniiee. I I'onlrnel, lo |w.v lexes, In mnke home re-imlre or Improveiiieiiln, or lor any ellter gmut inirpose. Hen iia hNlny. SPECIAL r«* Periling on county lot corner N. Sag- Pree Parking whanever you apply for an law and W. Huron Sta. each lima you bring approved loan or ranawal. > our oHIco a full monthly paymanl. Orlng ui yOur parking lickal lo bo alampad. VO^!S ami lllIiKIMirit FK 4-4720 200 NATIONAL HIIILDINO' /,/ THE PONTIA^ PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2^, 1964 FIFTEEN Churchill's Son Feels 'Jolly' About Lost Job. LONDON (UPlV - Randolph ChurdiSil, son of Sir Winston Churchill and a political writer, said he was pleased ^^esterday when informed'his-political column was to be dropped from the magazine Spectator. “This is the first time in my life I have been sacked,” said Churchill,” and I' fihd it rather jolly.” V The CARUSO • Modal MM2650H Elegant Italian Provincial styling Cherry Fruitwood veneers and solids. $67500 Handsome Louvered doors. ALL NEW ADJUSTABLE LOUVERED SOUND DIRECTORS* FINEST SOUND REPRODUCTION EVER , ACHIEVED IN HOME , ,oa «uo.n 1964 SEVENTEEN Rescued Consul Ready, Willing to Return to Congo WASHINGTON (AP) - U^S. Consul Michael Hoyt, for three months a prisoner of Congolese rebels at Stanleyville, says he “very definitely” would be willing to return to the Congo. Belgian paratroop operation that plucked hundreds of whites from the midst of rebels who were preparing to execute them. Hoyt and four other members of the U.S. Consulate staff in Stanleyville were rescued earlier this week as part of a U.S.- ii e five arrived in Washington Thursday after a flight by military transport. They were greeted by Wayne Fredericks, deputy assistant secretary of state, sand a small cnftvd of well-wishers. Hoyt said the Congo insurgents first put him under hou'^ arrest at the U.S. Consulate but later confined him in a prison with po bed and poor sanitation. PREPARED EXECUTION When word'came to the rebels that land forces of the,central Congolese government were approaching $tanleyville, Hoyt said, they prepared to execute the whites they were holding as hoslages. “Certainly we had many doubts that we would get home alive,” he said, adding that the swiftness of the joint rescue operation saved him and most of the other hostages. Others of the hostages, including at least two- Americans, were killed as the rebels herded^ the hostages jnto Stanleyville’s Lumumba Square and started firing at them. Hoyt and'his four aides — Vice Consul David K. Grinwis of Maplewood, N. J.; communications officer Donald Parkes; and)communications clerks Er- nest Hule and James E. Stauffer — landed first at New York’s Kennedy Airport before proceeding to Washinjgton. WIFE GREETING Hoyt. was greeted in New York by his wife, Joy, of TUc-’^n, Ariz., who rushed up to him and embraced him. “I feel fine,’*’ he said. “It is wonderful to be back. Pnl glad to be reunited with my wife on this Thanksgiving Day.” He said his most anxious moment was “when they started firing at us.” Upon his arrival here, Hoyt was asked if he would accept assignment to the Congo again. “Oh yes — I very definitely would go back,” he said. He expressed confidence that the central Congolese government can restore order in the country although “that will be a long and difficult task.” After reporting to the State Department today, Hoyt plans several weeks of rest with his family. Lost in Congo FORT WASHINGTON, Pa. (UPI) — Five Americans listed as missing in the rebel territory of the Congo were identified as missionaries 'connected with the “Heart of Africa Mission” to the Congo, an endeavor sponsored by the worldwide evangelization crusade here. Officials ojf the crusade, an interdenominational mission organization, said they Imd not , heard from the five or A r o m | their missionaries of other nationalities since July 30. The Americans were identified as Mrs. F. J. Gunning- | ham, a former resident of the | state ef Washington, her two children; WUliam McHesney j of Phoenix, Ariz.; and Agnes Chansler, 63, a veteran mis- ' sionary worker in the Congo Troops Hprit Rebel Snipers Tension SUIT Grips Bloody Stanleyville By ROBIN MANNOCK STANLEYVILLE, the Congo (AP) —Stanleyville is a city of desolation, of bloodstains and unbiiried corpses rotting in the tropic sun. Until Belgian paratroopers ended rebel rule Tuesday, Stanleyville was the capital of the Peking-backed “Congolese People’s Republic.” The city had 300.000 inhabitants, including more than 1,000 whites. BACK FROM DANGER—Men, women and children, rescued by Belgian paratroopers from rebels in Stanleyville, the Congo, arrive safely in Leopoldville earlier this week. In the background are military personnel guarding the area. Most of the refugees were saved shortly before they were to be executed by Congo rebel forces. from California. Officials said Mrs. Gunning-ham married her husband, F. John, of Bristol, England, in the Congo while they both were working in. missions there. Her husband was with her but he was not listed with the missing Americans because of his British nationality. The Cunninghams were sta--tinned at Malingwia, a mission outpost in a densely populated area about 250 miles north of •the mission headquarters at Ibahgi. A missionary from Scotland also was stationed at the Malingwia mission with them. Miss Chansler, who has been a missionary in the Congo for about 35 years, was doing general missionary work at the mission station at Egbita, which is 45 miles north of the Ibamgi headquarters. Martyred Missionary Inspires Devotion “And at that time there teas great persecution agginst the church . ; , therefore they went everywhere ■ preaching' the word.” —Acts of the Apostles 8. says the martyrdom in the Congo “undoubtedly will strengthen the purpose of our young people in missionary training.” “Our people are prepared to die,” he said. dents, Judson Clements, 28, Lafayette, Ga., said, “If you have received the call of God, nothing will keep you from the place where you’re need- At least 38 of the whites are now believed to have been slaughtered by the rebels in a last minute bloodbath before the paratroopers seized the city’s center. Two were Americans — Dr. Paul Carson of Rolling Hills, Calif., a Protestant medical missionary who had been condemned to death by the rebels as a spy, and Phyllis Rine of Cincinnati, Ohio, a Protestant mission worker. 300 REBELS About 300 rebels or rebel sup- porters are believed to have died in Stanleyville. It is still not healthy to move around. Rebel snipers are holed up in the top floors of buildings. Except for heavily armed military trucks, the streets are empty. Shop windows are Shattered or scarred by bullet holes. Shop doors are open but there is no one behind the counters. Automobiles are abandoned in the middle of streets. Many have flat tires, others hfave open hoods. ’They have been stripped for spare parts. ' GUNS RATTLE The rattle of automatic rifles and machine guns is a constant reminder of the rebel presence. Premier Moise Tshombe’s white mercenaries and Belgian paratroopers are trying to flush out the snipers. Across the 1,000-yard-wide Congo River, the rebels are still masters of a section of Stanleyville. Mercenary pilots in converted T6 training planes ed.” CHICAGO (UPIl-The church has always thrived in the midst of persecution, and that's why Dr. Paul Carlson may be an even greater missionary in death than he wais'in life. 'The Rev. Harold Cook of Moody Bible Institute, a nondenorai-qational facility which has turned out 4,200 missionary-trained students in 78 years. Family of 58 NeetJed VFW Hall for Dinner SALT LAKE CITY, Utah Thanksgiving was .something of a problem for Mrs. Stephen C. Marchant. The family turnout of 58 was so large she had to use the VP’W Hall. Attending the family dinner Tl|ur.sday were her 7 daughters, 8 sons and their 43 children. Latest Dream of Navy Is Flying Sub In 1956, five missionaries { died in Ecuador at the hands I of the Aucas Indian tribe. In | the months that followed dozens of persons» committed their lives to missions. < Clements and his wife, Susan, a nurse from Little Falls, N.Y., plan to be in the Congo in the latter part of 1966. They said the martyrdom of the missionaries was the motivation. ' The Rev. Mr. Cook, chairman of the department of mjssioas at M(x)dy, said 17 Moody graduates have met violent death while spreading the Gospel. NO DETERRENT “Our students know of these,” he said. T never have heard of any being deterred. The students know there is danger where they are going.” One of the institute’s stu- Robert Gordon, 27, of Elgin, III., and his wife, Edyth, from South Bend, Ind., hope to be in the Congo in a matter of weeks. INSPIRING ACT “I feel that hundreds of boys and girls will be inspired by the things that have happened in the Congo,” Gordon said. “My wife and I are very anxious to get there.” WASHINGTON liP) - A submarine that can fly is the Navy's newest dream. “I want to go back and I will go back as soon as there is a government that will let me,” said Mrs. Virginia Mi-chon, Canonsburg, Pa., who has tieen head nurse at the institute clinic since August. At that time she was taken out of the country. Foot Health DO YOU SUFFER WITH: Corns? Calluses? Bunions? Tired, Aching or Burning Feet? Athlete's Foot? Got Guoranteed Robot Quickly or Your Money Back With BUN EX FAIRLANE DRUGS Ry«n. Cor. 11 Milo Rd., Worroo SHiRMAN PRESCRIPTIONS Rbchetlor Rd.. Cor. H Milo Royil 0*k Ibrin Liibort-------- . — . Lothrup Vllltg*, Michigan It has awarded a $36,(X)0 contract for design studies to see if such a combination is feasible. Brother Tells of Letter What the Navy would like to have — in the event of a war with the Soviet Union — is a smallish submarine that could fly to such large inland bodies of water as the Black Sen and Caspian Sea and Uicn plop back into the water to prey on Soviet ships. It would be almost impossible to gel a conventional submarine into such seas during a war. From Dead Missionary NORTH LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) — An American mis.sion-ary killed by Congo rebels, Jo-.seph Waller Tucker, 49, wrote his brother Aug. 15 that tlie situation was quiet and asked him to pray. Clarence M. Tucker, the brother, said yesterday the medical missionary left for the Congo 26 years ago and returned only on furloughs. "That was his live’s calling,” he said. "They forced me to leave in the middle of a smallpox epidemic,” Mrs. Michon said. “The example of Dr. Carlson will inspire all of us.” “We are not afraid,” Gordon ;e, our lives are not 0 "But ye shall receive power after that the Ifoly Ghost is come iiixm you: And ye .shall he witnesses unto me I both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth.” —.Jesus Christ Us development would be “both complex and laborious” says a Navy aircraft engineer, Eugene II. Handler, in an article dealing with the flying sub in the magazine “U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings” SEMI-AUTOlWTIC WATER SOFTENER Itaiuller nilled for a careful examination before such an Idea Is shelved. /Ivoid lInrd-Riisly Water! * W-YEAR WARRANTY * Special Sale While They Last! • 1964 Rsfrigeralor, Top and Roliom Freezer • 1964 Ranges, Gas, and Elaetric • 1964 TVs, Uonsolos, Portables • 1964 Stereos, Consoles TERMS AVAILARLE ampkn^ ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 W. Huron St. FE 4 2525 Op«n 8 A. M. to 9 P. M., Except Soturdoy Now Specially PricodI You can hove the con-venience of Soft Water ONLY A FEW CENTS PER DAY Have a whiter waeh eofter clothns, lovelier complexion and even save up to 50% on soap. WHY RENT A WATER SOFTENER? as little ! 125 per it NO MONEY DOWN it Come In Today or Phone FE 4-3573 Compare and seeiiidQr... MOTOROLA MM76S is the new generetion of Color TV New rectangular tube Motorola's exciting Color/65 picture ie rectangular, full, big, with the natural shape similar to color movies. Ordinary round tube color TV has a picture which is smaller and rounded off. THIS THIS '”1 New slim cabinets Motorola's new rectangular tube ie about 5.2 inches shorter than the round color tube, consoquontly slim, trim Color/66 sots (It Inches closer to the wall than aver bulure possible with large screen color sets blopd beautifully with other room turnithlngs. Color indicator light When fine tuning Is properly adjusted, this Motorole-dealgned electronic device automatically lights to toll you when a color signal or program Is being telecast. Hand-wired Power Transformer Chassis Precision oralted with modern hand and dip soldering for circuit t;qnnecllons ol high rellalrillty. Full year guarantee Manufacturer's guarantee covers tree exchange or repair of any tube or part proven defective In ttormal use Arranged through ue, labor extra. WALTON RADIO-TV 516 E. Wallen Bhd. Open 9 Ie 9 FE 2-226T I. Michael Hoare, 46, com- mander of the South African mercenaries, dropped one rebel across the river with a rifle shot from his hotel window. 'Congolese Rebels Kill Missionary From Italy VERONA, Italy (UPI) - AI 57-year-old Italian missionary! priest was killed by Congolese rebels in Paulis, it was confirmed today. The superior general of the Comboniani Mission in Verona received word by telegram that the Rev. Remo Armani was killed by the rebels in the Congo. There is plenty of evidence of Chinese Communist influence. I slept Tuesday night in the hotel room of a senior officer of the nonexistent rebel air force. He had a large set of Mao Tze-tung’s works. PRO-CHINESE •Articles in the rebel newspaper, “'The Party,” show a strong pro-Chinese influence. Back numbers of thp biweekly newsletter give evidence of the rebels’ glee at the ouster of Nikita Khrushchev. BLUE SHIELD ANSWERS YOUR QUESTIONS Blue Shield cannot be cancelled for reasons of age or health ? I’m getting on in years and I’m wondering how much longer I can keep my Blue Shield coverage? Regardless of your age or condition of health, your Blue Shield coverage is yours for as long as you want it. When I leave my place of employment where I have my group enrollment, can take my Blue Shield coverage with me? Yes, you can. You will aulomat)cally be offered a group conversion contract. If you take a new job with a firm that also has group enrollment with Blue Shield you may continue your Blue Shield group coverage there. 7 Who determines the fees set in the Blue Shield rate schedule? The fees are set by doctors and o‘her qualified people who have a knowledge of medical skills. Can I go to any doctor and receive Blue Shield benefits? Yes. You can go to any physician anywhere in the world, and Blue Shield will pay the Blue Shield fee for all services within the contract. Does Blue Shield offer a deductible plan for people who feel they don’t need comprehensive coverage? Yes. The deductible plan is available at a reduced rate, too. Call your nearest Blue Cross-Blue Shield office tor more intormal)on. Do you have a question about your Blue Shield coverage? Just write Dept. 54, Michigan Medical Service. 441 E. Jefferson, Detroit, Michigan 48226. michioan BLUE CROSS ' BLUE SHIELD Nowl Join Bluo Croi«-Blu» ShUlrf without bolonulng to ■ i(tou|) )( you aro undar 65. Oat your apirllrallon from your dor lor, hospital or naaiaat Blua Cro«» Blua ShlaldoMIca. EIGHTEEN THE PQNTIACTRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1964 Employ^eff $850,000 Bequest Sparks Gossip ABBY While her daughter Jane, 5, ‘practices’ modeling, Mrs. Charles J. Myers visualizes the “Portraits in Fashions for the Holiday” luncheon and fashion show to be held Tuesday at the Edgewood Country Club by the Mothers’ Club of Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church. Mrs. Myers, of Portland Court, West Bloomfield Township, is general chairman of the event. National BPW Group Offering Fellowships WASHINGTON, D.C. - Implementing the theme of “full partnership,” Mrs. Dorothy Ford, president of the Business and Professional Women’s Foundation, j announces that applications are being accepted for the l%5-66 graduate fellowships from the ,Lpna Lake Forrest Fellowship P’und. Men as well as women are urged to apply. ★ ★ ★ Individual fellowships range from $500 to $2,000 for one year. The research grants will be awarded to a person or persons whose proposed research at the Ph.D.heil'el will be related to interests of business and professional women and designed to contribute to the knowledge of the role of women in economic, political and-or social life. The number and amounts of the grants to be made this year will be determined by Unfriendly fl^r Guest to Lock Door By The Kniily Post Institute Q: Is it considered rude for a guest to lock the door of one’s r(K)m at night when staying in .someone's house? A: Locking the door to one’s room when slaying in someone's hoii.se is not actually wrong, hill il diK's indicate llial llu' guest does not have complete confidence in all the Olliers In the house, and therefore Is not a very friendly tiling to do. My daughter has been • going steady for almost a J year, She is not engaged and won't be until he finished college. My daughter wants me to meet his parents and sug-ge.stiHl that I invite them h(*re to dinner some Sunday. 1 don't think it Is my place to do this as they might gel tlie impression tliat I am trying to riiah things. I Uiink Uiat if his parents are interested in meeting us, tiiev should make the first ovenurcs. I would appreciate your opinion on thi.s A llnlesH his inollier has told your dnuglitvr llial she would like to meet you, I •grtHi lliak, as tlie girl's nioIlK'r, you alKiuld not make tlie first overtures. ' the board of trustees of the foundation based on ah evaluation of the proposed research. TO PROMOTE RESEARCH The fund was established in 1923 during the term of office of Lena Lake Forrest, second president of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs, “for the purpose of promoting research in problems important to business and professional women and to encourage graduate study in fields of work where there is need to increase the activities of wom- Applicants must be citizens of the United States. They either must be doctoral candidates whose proposals for research have been accepted and approved by academic authorities in an accredited graduate institution or they must be able, to demonstrate that the proposed research will be conducted under recognized doctoral level standards for scholarship. ★ ★ * Application forms and further information mav be obtained from the Business and Professional Women’s P’oun-dation, 2012 Mas.sachusetts Avenue, N W., Wa.shington, I). C. Applications rnu.st be siilirnitted liy March 1. Ittti!). Awards will be announced by July 15. 19IW. See Fashions for Holiday Celebrating “Portraits in Fashions for the Holiday” will be p r e-sented by the Mother’s Club of Our Lady of Rdfuge Catholic Church at 12 noon Tuesday at the Edgewood Country Club. ★ ★ ★ General chairman of the luncheon and fashion show is Mrs. Charles J. Myers. Fashions are being provided by the Jacqueline Shop at the Bloomfi,eld Shopping Plaza. ★ ★ ★ The club’s last meeting of the year was held Tuesday to complete the plans for the show. Other chairmen helping with preparations are: Mrs. James Haas, Mrs. Harold Boutin, Mrs. Leonard Rose and Mrs. Raymond Schpttler. Reservations may be made by contacting any one of the chairmen. Calendar SATURDAY !St. Frederick’s Parent Club; 9 p.m.; Knights of Columbus Hall on South Saginaw Street; scholar-i ship fund (lance; open to * public. MONDAY Beta Sigma Phi City Council; I! p.m.; Sharon Street home of Mrs. Russell Perkins; Marcidlu Kit-son, cohostess. TUESDAY Italian - Aiuericaii (Juh. Ladles’ Auxiliary; l):30 p ni ; Pine Knob R(!Sorl; S tilth annual Chri.stmas din-; ner; liostessc.s, Mrs. Ralph Spadafore and Mrs. James W Johnson. Past noble grand’s club of W e I c 0 111 e Rebekiili Lodge No. 246; 8 pm.; . Lexington Place home of I Mrs William Fyfe; Christmas gift exchangiv By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My sister’s employer died recently and he left her $850,000, thereby dis> gracing whole family. |,' She went to 1 work for him when she was 22 and was his loyal employe for years. She was well paid, but her work always came first and, although she was the prettiest girl in town, she never married. She was a good Christian woman, Abby, and there never was a breath of scandal about her. When her employer di^ and it was learneii that he had left half his estate to his wife and the other half to my sister, you can imagine what the gossips had to say! My sister had Social Security and a retirement policy, so she didn’t need the fortune he left her at the expense' of her reputation. How can we clear her of the suspicion that was cast on her good name? NO CITY, PLEASE ★ ★ ★ DEAR NO CITY: Confidentially, I think YOU are contributing suspicion where none is warranted. A bequest of $850,000 reflects nothing but favor on a “good Christian woman” about , whom there never was a breath of scandal. DEAR ABBY: My husband never misses your column, so you would be doing me a great favor if you printed what you think of a husband who asks other women to select his wife’s Christmas gift for him. After 15 years of selecting my gifts personally, he turned to other women to make his selection for him. I’d be satisfied with a single hankie as long as I knew he chose it for me himself. SENECA FALLS DEAR SENECA: I hope you won’t feel shdrt-changed if old and a little on the chubby side. Everything I touch, I either drop, break, or spill. I bump into doors and ped-ple and other thiugs. My mother thinks it is because my bangs are always in my eyes and I can’t see. My father says my coordination is off. What is the matter with me? CLUMSY ★ ★ DEAR CLUMSY: Marfy » - girls (and boys, too) your y()ur husband presents you ^ age have the same problem with a- ^rsonall^selected sin- and for the same combination gle hankie this Cluistmas because I am printing your letter along with your wish. Merry Christmas! DEAR ABBY: I am 15 years MRS. RUSSELL SNAVELY READ Pink, Dubonnet Theme The Thomas F, ScI-hosts of Grey Road. Pontiac Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Karen to Wditain V, Ma.nvell. son of the Lester A Maxwells of Cedar Shores' DrwJ. White Lake Towiwlnp. A June wedding is planned. Dinner Meeting Mis. It'(*nc E, .Snyder oiKTied her homo on Mander-ford Road on Tuesday for the annual dinner meeting of Omega Mu Sigma sorority. (‘oliostoSsos were Mrs. Carl Coster mid Mrs. II I c li a r d llian.slnei Clolliing |)Uirlia.sed liy Hie sorority lor a needy a r e a family was gift wrap|Mland and Mrs, James Jolurson. AiiiKiuncemenl of plairs for the chapter’s annual Christmas dinner at K-Falls Dec. LI Was made by Mrs. Imvsc. A candlelight cenunony at tills dinner jwill be the oc caslon for pledges to receive their phnlge pins Mrs. Fred Vollrath served the ri'fresliments at Tue.sday’s informal initiation. ' The bride carried white camellias, Stephanotis and ivy arragned in a cascade. Mary Affleck, Bloomfield Hills was honor attendant. A W » Bridesmaids included Mrs. Ralph L. Polk Jr., Bloomfield Hills; Linda Brandt, Birmingham; Lynn Gruebner, Nee-nah, Wis.; Sandra Corricre, Easton, Pa., and Bonnie Barnes, Washington, D.C. Sara Patter.son of Darien, Conn, was flower girl. Franklin B. Read H of Flint was his brother's bkst man. S t e p h e n Read, Ralph L. Polk Jr., Allan Masters, Mer-' rick. Long Island, N.Y.: Jeff Waller, Pennsauken, N J. and .lack Petrykowski of 01 instead I'alls, Ohio, comprised the usher list. * * A After a brief honeymoon in Cliicago, the couple will live ill Birmiiigliam. To Celebrate 68th Year Alplia Omicron PI alumnae of the North Suburban chapter will join the other four Detroit area chapters in celebrating the G8th anniversary of the sorority Wednesday. The sorority was founded at Barnard College of Columbia University Jan 2, 1897. Greenfields at- Nortliland will be the site of the 7 p in. Founder's Day dinner. Hostess for tids year's annual affair Is the Detroit Norlhea.*d .Sulairban club. of reasons. Practice poise. Try to move more gracefully and be aware of what you are doing every moment. It will soon become part of your natural behavior. Try it. It really works. DEAR ABBY: The letter signed “PLAYING SAFE” hit home with us. We, too, had safety belts installed in our cars. Front and back! When some of our friends ignored them, saying they were “too much trouble,” we would reply: “While you are in our car, WE are responsible for YOUR safety, so either buckle up or walk!” Real friends do not resent it. “SAFETY FIRST” Troubled? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. AAA, For Abby’s booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding,” send 50 cents to Abby, in care” of The Pontiac Press. Families Are UniteeJ for Holiday Dinner guests of the Samuel Tobys of Canterbury Drive on Thanksgiving were her parents, the Nathan Standlers of Detroit, also Mrs. Toby’s aunts, Mrs. David Awerbuck of Windsor and Mrs. Helcum Goldenberg of Detroit. Mr. Toby’s nieces and nephews, the Morris Bletsteins and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jacobs came with their families, along with Philip Jacobs. Joining the Charles and Bernard Tobys and their families was their brother Melvin who attends Ferris State College. This Thanksgiving marked the 30th family dinner with Mrs. Harry Wendt of Palmer Street in the role of hostess. The Robert Bryans and son David came from Sylvan Lake also the Herbert Glenn^ and Mrs. Joseph Haviland of Pontiac, along with the Kenneth Sheffers and son Karl of Airport Road. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Essex and daughters Jean and Donna of Detroit were present, also the James Essexes of Cleveland. MRS. FRANK E. HOAG JR. 300 Guests at Wedding A reception in Orchard Lake Country Club followed the marriage of Dorothy Ann Ellis to Lt. Frank E. Hoag Jr., Wednesday at Kirk - in - the -Hills. Dr. Harold C. DeWindt officiated at the double-ring candlelight ceremony before some 300 guests. Imported white silk peau de sole fashioned a gown for the daughter of Mr; and Mrs, Norman J.Ellis of Lahser Road. Pearl-frosted Alencon lace accented her Empire bodice and formed a court cap for her illusion veil. Honor attendants were Mrs. James N. Ellis of Birmingham and Rebbeca Crim of Sidney, Ohio. Janet Hoag of Freeland; Barbara Beoucher, Dayton, Ohio; and Eleanore Holt, St. Joseph, were bridesmaids. John Dose of St. Joseph was best man for the bridegroom, son of the senior Hoags of Freeland, Mich. John Barnard and Albert Women Plan Smorgasbord and Bazaar A smorgasbord turkey and ham dinner will be a feature of the annual bazaar Wednesday at Grace Lutheran Church on South Genesee Street. Sponsored by the Ladies Guild, the bazaar will have Christmas gifts, novelties, baked goods and homemade candy for sale. Coffee and cake will be served during the afternoon under the supervision of Mrs. Emma Young and Mrs. Agnes Stamman. In charge of the 5:,30 to 8 p.m. dinner is Mrs. Elsie Martin, assisted by Mrs. Edward Demuth and Mrs. Harold Potter. Mrs. Fred Zittel is general chairman. Other workers include Mrs. Arthur Kaphengst, Mrs. John Ridgeway and Mrs. Emery Mitchell. The affair is open to the public. Glover, Grosse He; Gary Knight, Royal Oak; George Webb, Oak Park; James and Robert Ellis seated the guests. A corsage from her bouquet of phalaenopsis orchids and camellia foliage graced the bride’s ensemble for the Chicago honeymoon. Lt. Hoag, an alumnus of Michigan State University, will be stationed with the U S A. Signal Corps in Europe. His bride will join him there after her graduation from MSU in March. Club to Hear Christmas Music Fete Robert Bates, pianist, and Carolyn Grimes, soprano, will present a program of Christmas music Wedne.sday at the general membership meeting of the Village Woman’s Club. Mr. Bates, organist and (Choirmaster at Christ C!hurch (!ranbrook, is a graduate of Harvard University. Before coming to Bloomfjeld Hills he taught in New York and Connecticut and held church positions in New York and Detroit. Miss Grimes, soloist at First Presbyterian Church in Birmingham, has made many concert, oratorio and opera performances in the Detroit area. A .soloist with the Kenneth Jewell Chorale, she recently sang the leading role in the Wayne State University production of “Don Giovanni.” TEA TO FOLLOW Following the 1:30 p.m. musical program, a Christma.s tea will be served in the club dining room. Hostesses will be Mrs. Lc-Roy Kiefer, Mrs. Arnold Pape, Mrs. Robert F. Watt, Mrs! Stephen J. Tompkins and Mrs. Donald Hir.schman. Rtvservations are being handled by Mrs. James Hastings, Mrs. Ben Stone and Mrs. Albert C. Childs. The Ladies Guild of Grace Luth eran Church /ta.s turned out many interesting handrnade Christmas gifts aw\ novelties for their annual harnesj dinner and bazaar on Wednesday. Mrs. Edward Demuth, State Street (left) and Mrs. Emery Mitchell, lialdwin Avenue, Pontiac Township, display items. The 2 to H p.m. affair is open to the public. THE PONTIAC PRESS/FRIDAYilyOVEMBER 27. 1964 NINETEEN Preserve j_eayes With Poraffin Preserve Qplorful fall leaves by dipping them in paraffin; which,gives a waxy iook, or in glycerine, which gives a soft, translucent effect, ^ .\ Leaves also can be pifr seired with a drying agent such as borax or silicel gel. For Emergencies Soiled spots on pastel gloves may be touched up in an emergency with a piece of pastel Colored chalk. PANEL A NOOK .H Pop ha* paneling In hi* don, why can’t Mem hfvo bar cowing room panolod— Sheet Price BIBCH ...... .{7.95 SHEET $18.95 SHEET $12.95 SHEET WALNUT ... $13.95 SHEET .$13,951 TEAK PECAN CHERRY ALL SHEETS 4x8xllAt»WlN„ ballLlo . 1,; A 'M: action r«fcpKiortaf ov "iTll a’r*>' Or<»a-Sonic SrllNI/r OHOAN ' 'I'wo niiiiDiaU 'VI'iHdc (‘im Jc ^ ^ will. 'J VIl,1, l.oHi d. A vuricly «1 1" *1015 AnnivciPHiy l'"< « #■ JIatbtom Mtttlcl 16l« Tl.„ n.OKl .•oi.iplclc oim«» 1 I .. lilt* lioiiu*' rriilui**** - .laiuhira <>Lkcy^ tone leinotlm in**'- ^2SS5 HAEDff IN Avromnic CONTKMPORAHV spiM/r PIANO ’ amiMiinit '■..vij iliffrrence 1 (mic in well worlll the xmull illffercni'c in |irinc. (.nmittire ItMlilwin'n 'i<'iill Blow" key «r> . Uoti which iMovcp it lo Itc ihc l'inc:‘l of «mnll iniinoh. ]V|«nv .Hh -aVMllMhlc. 0(if S|M‘eiwl AiiiiivcruHry I’rit* BAimiN 970 French IVtnirtcial SPINET PIANO ' . '‘.V t ■ ■ The nliiinale ih email PianoK in lone, eraftii* inaiiHltifi aifcl. dettign,.. BaitlWin built qiualiiy.. ihroufiboiu aiid aii-iheniie lUylinit in beau- ,, ■ tlfiil •■Ch«rr!ywn«d''’ti|A; ■ finikh.; ' .i,,;. ■ • Other Model.'from *7isf"!,l ,urwBStP> . - —-. ■ ■ ■_i.. . ''w w*.., I rftiaw Sirrel _ , Pbunk.FB d-8222 riThEIS OJSI'OMER pAIK^C RKAR OK ST’OtlF' IMMariiV Acroaoiik . .scandiinavIan’ ' NiniNET PIAINO ;%mie tiiinold fnti^rhnd Itiw,Jdn-' litlicil lt«rk>*|y|«'MM MrihUm , flivltlAi .., ykhlriit. httitMt. lolic ’ •> lititl (ttitilliy. 'BiMiuifffil oil MNin ’ I , . V’)t' ' ' ....., "t Nitw for No Oiilsidr Einonving Hvtinired Wt‘ ( '.iiri’V Our Own l*ii|M‘r i i:kms io si in Remove Smudges To remove fingerprint smudges from light switch Jylates and woodwork, sponge area with a solution of three tablespoons of sal soda concentrated' and a pinch «f detergent in 1. quart of warm water. Rinse with fresh water. Let Furniture Be Brilliant Give your furniture a brilliant look for the holidays. Even precious antiques can be given a high gloss safely and easily with this.method. Liquid furniture wax can be applied ^to the most delicate finish with a soft pad made of dinner napkins. When one portion of the absorbent pad is soiled, fold it over to expose the clean side. Buff with a clean napkin. You’ll have ,no unpleasant smelling flammable rags lying about to start a potential lire. You loss that worry away with the napkin. Enroll NOW! Enrollments Token Doily at Your Convenience PONJTIAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 16'/2 E. Huron Phone FE 4-1854 Study the latest techniques and hair fashions. , Coll Miss Wilson for further information ENJOY DINNER at COLONIAL HOUSE OR 3-0940 WIQQS-HOLIDM mmu! SNOW WHITE REGENCY Find FniKlisli IliniiiirwaiT Ity Johnson lindlnns 1 new shipnwnl of ihis popnlor panorn has jnsl arrived fnnn Enp;lan(l! liii-lifKi: Niiimii: fiiii n Includes 8 eadi ol dmni scilods, fruits, cups and s and vnr|(>lnble rlisli. l.ieod and I -- plus mediui 'W 'I'liiH eli-giint Hwirl-hlitipe |mIIciii h\ .lolms.m Krollin.n . . . sciil|iliirc< I ill pure Miow-while <‘iirlliwai'<‘ . . . ssill i-nl laiK'c any lahic M’lling lie il In i.lilional, colonial, or ronlci..,.oi ary! The las I lime SVC ofTcnl ihin fit le inipoilc .I Fnglisli .liiiiicrsvarc it svan a ... no giving, loo, ill thin very special pi in ilo i-liop early. Riiy lor ; r! Open slock pieces iilsi yoiirscIC ail I iivailaltle. III for gift Oval ROASILR Regular $19.V5 $1698 SPf;)CIAL SALE :d l.imoir, lidlik COOK WARE M • Parking for 500 ® accommodations • nmousine Service to ^ airport every half-hour. o for your phone Ml 4-1400 • . . , JO 4-5144 « gracious living! •> . . . in Bloomfield Hills I in » m » ilUJLXXX: NEW questions concerning the etiquette of sending cards, the following series of questions and answers is printed. The authority on»€hristmas card etiquette is Mps. Jeanette Lee, art director and a member of the board of directors of Hallmark Cards, Kansas Cit.v, Mo. Question: Does a person have to send a Christmas card to everyone who sends one to them? Mrs. Lee: No. I consider Christmax cards a voluntary expression of friendship or love, not something that needs a reply. Question: Is it good manners In have the family name imprinted on the card? Mrs. Lee: Imprinting i,s both proper and practical. It becomes more widely used every year. Question: Should a husband include his wife’s name on cards to his business associates? Mrs. Lee: Generally not. Busines.s and social mailing lisfs are best, kept apart: Only the husband’s name should be im^ printed on business cards. Question: - How should Christrads cards be addressed if the sender knows only the wife or only the husband? Mrs. Lee: j It’s good form to address a card to a husband and wife even if you know only one of them. Question: Are photographic cards, including pictures of the children, considered in good taste? Mrs. Lee: Family photographs should be sent only to loved ones and very close friends. Question: Is it correct to send Christmas cards in unsealed envelopes? * Mrs. I,ee: It is socially correct, but a poor investment. First class postage makes sun? your carefully selected cards and personal mes.sages will be quickly' delivered and will be forwarded or returned to you,, if un- FALL PERMANENT TIME . . . Make Your Appointmcni Now. KAf\DAU;.S ,SIIOPI»E nvnp St. Ank I'k Almiil riirklnK I I'. ! NeMrly 125 ycnrs ayo this quainl card was designed ns the world's first known Christmas greeting. Sir Henry Cole, first director of the Victoria and Albert Museum and. art shop owner in London, sold over a thousand hand colored copies three years later in 1846. Puritans in England frowned on such frivolity, but the small panels on each side showing charitable acts helped offset this criticism. One Problem Never Solved GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) — One protocol problem that never has been solved, a c -cording .lehan de Noue, Chief of Protocol for the United Nations, is what to do with the husband of a lady diplomat. Wliile an ambassador's wife shares liis rank, a lady am-ha.ssador’s husband is just an ordinary citizen. To Avoicf Tangles Wa.sli hells, aprons, hand kiMchicfs or any items with long tics liy putting them In gi'tlicr in a nicsli hag in the same laundry load who like the charming femlnlnllii of ihit beautiful dlamoiul - but who want tomelhing ciiHerenl than the conventional telling. Mere, llie grace lhal IdmlKlet the marqulit‘CUl it enhanced by rlngt that tweep and curve - lhal dramatize lit firnilernett and gllller. The Store H'here (Jhiulily ('.ouul$ FPED nJ^Ou/j CO. l‘ouliur'n indent Jewelry Store Sets Contain: 12—Dinner IMiitcs 12—Sniad Platen 12—Dread and Kiitler 12—-Soup 12—Hiiucern 15—,-(!upN I—Chop Plate I—-Each (’reamer and Kugnr 1— (irnvy Howl and Ladle 2— Venrelahle Mmvla Olten Stork $62 Value 29 95 delivered, without additional postage^ Unsealed cards will not be forwarded if your friends have moved and will not be returned to you unless you guarantee return postage. Question: If the fpll return address is printed or written on the envelope, does this suggest a return card? • Mrs. Lee: No. It Is quite proper to use your full return address on either the front or back of the envelope. Not only does the Post Office Department encourage this, but your friends will appreciate this opportunity to record the information in thejr address books. Qnestton: it ail right to send Christmas cards to families who haVe: suffered a recent death? Mrs. Lee: Certainly.,The comfort of hearing from friends will be especially appreciated during a period of mourning. Special care should be tdken in selecting the card for this situation. Question: When a married couple send a card, whose name should be written or printed first? Mrs. Lee: The person writing the card should put his or her name last. If a man signs the card, he should write: Mary and Bill Miller. The complete name should be written since there are so many Mai^s and Bills,-so many Junes and Bobs. ► Question: What is the proper form for family signatures? Mrs. Lee: On a Christmas card from the entire family, the father’s name should come first, followed by mother’s, and then the children iti order of their ages, regardless,of sex. Grown daughters’ names may be included; grown sons’ should not be. The -expression “and family’’ is not recommended since it tells nothing of the children. Question: Is it all right to write on beautifully imprinted cards? Mrs. Lee: Every year more and more people are takiri| time to give their cards the special thoughtfulness of a personal note. This extra touch pays dividends and often brings you the same kind 6L personalized card in return. Bell & Howell Zoom Moifie Camera • Automatic Exposure • Autoload • Reflex $^2|i50 ASK ABOUT SRiE FILM and PROCESSING! MIRACLE MILE CAMERA SHOP BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER FE 4-5992 By 1875, Christmas cards were being produced regularly in the United. States. Louis Prang, noted craftsman lithographer of Rnxbnry, Mass., designed, these typical cards of the elegant 80's. llis first cards were flowery and had little to do with the Christmas scene: these were, more in the Yuletide spirit. Sometimes lithographed in 17-20 different colors, the more elaborate cards were trimmed with colorful silk, fringe. (Yimplele Cusl.im Drapery Service MITZELFELD’S OK.I’AKT.MENT STORK M2 Mnin .St Hivhpstpr OL 1-SI71 KINNEY'S SHOES PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE Playtime Tent Set up a card table and throw a blanket over its Lop. Your small youngster will play in his improvi.sed tent for a long lime without tiring of it. Pul it away and do not try it for a few weeks, then do it again and he will enjoy himself again. Scour Substitute If you hesitate to use scour lug powder on the bollom of good pots and pai>s for fear of seralehing Ihem, use sal stxia eoneentraled dry. 11 contains no grit or sediment that might mar the surface. STAFF'S . . on gift lisis llivso are . Some people hang onto their grudges like a child does to a stick of candy. They can never forget or forgive others for a tactless remark, a bad mood, or something they considered to be a slight. They actually coddle their resentments, keeping them safe, snugly wrapped in their eon eern. Snell persons imagine that they are paying the offender hack with this attitude. Just the opposite is true! When we think of someone with dislike or hatred, when we aet ungraciously or treat someone rudely, we are the ones who are damaged. Negative emotions and attitudes drain away vitality. They actually can poi.son us and make us sick. What a boring way to^ spend energy! If we are going to waste it, there are many more pleasant ways to do so. * * * . Yet many folks live in a elironic ditlier of resentment. They are so busy “fighting for their Hghls” that they do nol have timejo enjoy 'lie. SMALL miUTANTS Tlien there are other nnpleas ant ways lii whielt we e.an spend Ions of |)ep, The.se are the small Irrilanis, Ihe Ihiiigs that “gel our goal" Maybe It is a squeaking do(tr, a neiglilior's radio or dog, or an annoying m.innerism of someone you know, Perhiips it is n hanging d(Hir, elothcK thrnwn on the floor, dresser drawews left open, lights left nn uselessly. nr any number of odds and ends which make up living. I do not believe that most people realize how truly tiring such irritants can be. Fretting to ourselves requires energy which could be used so happily in other ways. It changes the glandular setup of the body and lakes the sparkle from personality. * * * II .seems to me that we should make every effort to remedy ir-rihaling silualions, and many of Ihem CAN he corrected. After that it is so important that we learn to adapt to conditions which cannot be changed. Don't hold onto your grudges or they will gel a strangle hold on you! If you would like to have my leaflet, “Individual Happiness'' send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for It to Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. Girls'-Misses-Moms SNO BOOTS Ttie nevv in comlort, the tolorlul lor winler, the greo'eit in lashioni Choose Vinyl, All Leather, or Rubber , . . they ore lully lleece-Imed weather delymg and a deligh Priced according to size Ironi -■ We have the ESKIiOOS loo! STAFF'S -3 Stores- 28 E. Lawrence St., Downtown Pontiac 928 W. Huron SI. at Telegraph 418 N. Main St., ROCHESTER OutmoiJecJ Items A(d(J to Decor Search around c o u n I r y homes for outmoded items that may be made Into something prelly for llic home. Clean an old fashioned Iron corn sheller thoroughly and apply black enamel to the out side. Mount on the walls of your front |M)reh, Let (he part where grandpa fed the corn inlo to he slielli'd, hohl an arrangement of artificial flowers and you will have a real conversation piece. < 2K Wrisl Huron Slrprl FE 2-72r>7 DIXIF roi IFKY Dixie Hwy. OR .T-lHfM 3 V / - l*t'ol«Mi Your MohI PrerioiiH FiTiA(: omcAL n:iNTi:i{ DOWINTOWIN IHtPdTIAC nvif DOCK ms oi orroMciHY TO SERVE YOU! DR. ARNOLD DR. HAROLD I. MILES BUSSEY Optometrint Optometrist 25 Ymarg Cotnhlnmd Ofgommtit Piacilem In Downtown Ponllnr: ritn of Opliiiiintry IVni'tlen I Ur. Mllen ttinl Or. lliinRp,v PONTIAC (imCill, CCNtcll lli:i M. I'ttKIMH DuwMi.iwn INiMliuc . .A.... tllE POXTIAG PRESS, Pij|lIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, : TWIi!ifTY-O^^TT ■ Fringe Benefits, Two New Eye Make-Up Products By MIRIAM NEAL Eye-emphasis has becoine the password to the fashion world. By highlighting the more expressive part of the face, beauty experts hope to enhance the appearance of all women. , New Voducts are being introduced at this time to make the application of eye and make-up easier and the results prettier. Party Angle-International e|WiEMiyliKlitlM»ftP.I. 2-Day Sale! Winter Coats regufof to ^85 ^44 .o ^69 Imported and domestic tweeds, or solids. Regular and petite sizes. All Items Gift i Wrapped Free | Double Knit Cardigan Sweaters Magnificent double knit wool in your clioice of black, burgundy, moss or blue. *20 Handsome Outer Coats Herringbone or birdseye wool tweed pile lined with a pile shawl collar. Grey only. 79 95 Velvet Chanel Suits Hv^ulitr !o STtO uml » With Sliort Skirt 29 90 34 90 Alvin's Boot Fashions S:nOn .SlKlciolly Priml Regulnr to 10.95 Icishionablf} herjls and safe stepping ibbed rubber soles feel as good os they looki Block fur collor on glove leather or block glove Ipalhcr upfters with trirtt lit inside zippers. $y9o HURON ot 1111 GRAPH cake formula. The cakes work on the same principle as wa-tercoiors, with application via dampened sponge or brush. The products are an eye shadow and liner in a new Looking for a new party angle? Try running a United Nations party — a costume masquerade with an international flavor. Just paste small paper flags (available at most stationery stores) on your invitations and tell the guests to wear traditional costumes of that country. You can bold a contest at the party to see who identifies the most c o s-tumes. They make possible a greater precision of eye design than other formulas and dry to an even finish that last indefinitely . without streaking or smearing. They eliminate any need of setting eye make-up with powder. FOR SKIN For the rest of the face, the manufacturer of a dry skin conditioner is introducing a new dry skin soap. When cold weather and hot. dry interiors dry complexions, the manufacturer recommends the use of the soap which it claims creams Hhe skin with mild effective cleaning while protecting against dry skin. A Holiday Hint Holiday mirror and window cleaning is a breeze when you* use an aerosol window cleaner and a' roll of paper towels. A Tvte Bag for a Doll ^ The latest in tote bags for the growing girl features a pocket to carry the doll of one of those doll - and - wardrobe combinations. The bag comes in alphabet print design, is laminated, and has a plastic lining. An umbrella matches. City BPWs Hedt Librarian Uoris Haynes, Pontiac Cfen-tfal High School librarian, spoke before the Pontiac Business §nd Professional Women’s Ulub, Tuesday in Devon Gables. 'Foil' Scorching Not only are the towels lint free, you toss them out with the trash. There are no buckets to clean or rags to wash afterward. Any heavily-starched small item that has a tendency to | scorch should be ironed be- : tween two thicknesses of alu- ! minum foil. i There will be no scorching | nor any deposit of burned starch on, the sole of your I iron. Highlighting her talk titled “Changing Cultures in the World" was a display of books concerning several influential men in Africa today. Hostesses for t h e dinner meeting were Mrs. Glenn Rivard, Mrs. George Pudduck, Mrs. Ralph Spadafore and , Mrs. John Dow. Fasten a piece of cloth to a yardstick with a thumb tack, to clean hard-to-get-at spaces. - 120 ROOMS Mary Ann Leatherberry was a guest. C.4RRIAGE TRADE YARN SHOP Open 9:30 to 5:3d Daily 24 South Main 625 2400 C’larkston Hove A Happier Holiday V/ith A New Kitchen Fr^J/ickes! PD]D r k% Prefinished ETLIN6 Kitchen Cabinets' Solid c HERE'S A GREAT HOLIDAY SPECIAL! . .. Styled for beauty and efficiency LOOK AT THESE FEATURES: i Birch Doors, adjustable hardwood shelves, nylon center drawer guides, magnetic door catches, completely finished interiors-and hardwood bocks and sides. Kitchen cabinets included for one LOW price: • 24 X 84“ Oven Cabinet • 24" x 30“ Wqll Cabinet • 36" X 30“ Wall Cabinet • 24" x 30“ Corner Wall Cabinet t 36“ Range Base Cabinet • 39“ Corner Base Cabinet WIiCKES offers a complete line of built-in ovens, ranges, vent hoods, sinks and dishwashers ... at LOW “Cash and Carry" prices! All these Cabinets for ONLY 175 • 36“ Sink Base Cabinet • 36“ X 18“ Oven Cook-Top Wall Cabinet A WICKES Holiday Special! S-A(/IJIG SAW KIT f. A HERE'S WHAT YOU GETi 1. FREE eorrylno cose. r ’3F NOW ONLY. YOU SAVE $17.60 HANDVI PORTABLE! MULTI-PURPOSE / STAPLE GUN KIT HERE'S WHAT YOU GET: ■ T 50 SlaplK Gun • 2000 '.V' SfoplM • 1000 \ i" Stapio* • Slip On ShnU* Fo REGULAR PRICE ..,.$17.50 $JQ95 NOW ONLY ONE WEEK ONLY' Waldorf Post Formed Waldorf Post Formed COONTERTOPPING (High Pressure Laminated Plastic) check these easy care FtATURES: 1- One smooth flowing surface. Heat, stain and abrasive resistant. wa^pi'" 4. Two-year written guarantee. m..al regular tgfic PRICE holiday PRICEI fOM mv. 30 rliro dVc i you SAVE 66i PIR LIN. FT. YOU SAVt $6.55^ Give a ' WICKES GIFT CERTIFICATE for ChristmasI « ON HIGHWAY M-53 —I’/i MILES S. OF WICKES ROMEO PHONE HOURS LUMBIR & BUimiHG SUPPLY CENTER Lumber— Building Suppliei Plumbing— Heating Electrical 752-3501 Mondoy 752-3504 w.'r'"o^.otV, i twenty-two THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1964 Educator Says Teaching of Reading Is Improved Cleveland, Ohio (AP) -“The way we teach children to read in this country still is pretty bad, but it’s getting better,” a reading expert said today. . ■ * * ★ ; Dr..Ruth Strickland, research professor of education at Indiana University, took a long, hard look at reading instruction during a recent tour of the Unit-^ States and Europe. “Some of the hew, ideas we see are pretty fair out,” she said in an interview during the annual convention of the National Council of Teachers of English. “On the other hand, we’re getting some solid new information, too.” Among the things she has seen which encourage he^ are a linguistic approach to reading being tried in Philadelphia, arid a language approach that started in San Diego and has spread to nearby areas. LETTER? FIRST In the linguistic approach, Professor Strickland said, children are first taught to recognize the letters of the alphabet. Then,, they are taught the most common pattern of English, spelling, the consonant - vowel- SKANIAHOUSE YULE DECORATIONS As you know, from'Scandinavia come many of our loveliest and most beautiful Christrnas decorations. We are very pleased to offer our handcrafted, straw ornaments and charming wooden ■ figures. Many traditional items date back hundreds of years. You will delight in them. We also have a beautiful collection of hand blown Crystal creations — glass vases, bowls and dishes. These will make much-cherished presents. Until Christmas, we are open Fridays and Saturdays until 9:00 P. M. SKANIAHOUSE 4079 West Maple Road, near Telegraph Ml 7-1666 consrinant. Examples would be pin, cut and hat. . pe cMldren are taught to sound out'the words, not the individual letters, Next they Pilot From Detroit 1$ Cut in Crash WARRfiN, Pa (AP) - Police said a small plane skimmed the one-story plastics plant building of the Sylvania Corp. in Warren Thursday night, hit I some power lines and crashed : 25-feet from an occupied home. A ★ A Police said the pilot, Dewey Morris of Detroit; Mich., was treated for cuts of the forehead and cheek at Warren General Hospital and released. They said he was en route to Erie, Pa., from Williamsport, Pa., when his plane ran out of fuel. He was the only occupant, police said. The crash occurred on Warren’s east side, an industrial and residential district. Dies in Cai^ Accident XENIA, Ohio (AP)-Bernard Strempeck, 34-year-old former University, of Michigan instructor and a native of Detroit, was killed Wednesday night in a traffic accident near Xenia, police said. Strempeck was teaching English at the Dayton campus of Miami (Ohio) University. learn consonant substitution — changing pin to tin, cut to rut, and hat to bat. ■ A „ A A Further lessons^how how ttie final letter ‘e’ changes the sound of the iniUal vowel —as in cut and cute, hat and hate, pin and pine. In the language approach, emphasis is on teaching the children to read and write sto ries that they make’up themselves ill their own words — not the artificial words found in so many beginning readers. A SORE POINT « Those readers are a sore point with Proifessor Strickland. “They may be getting just a little bit better, but some brand new thinking should be done on them,” she said, “Children don’t say, ‘Oh, oh, oh. Look, look, look! Children don’t live such namby-pamby lives. Little boys don’t play house.” Professor Strickland said she would like to see a combination of the linguistics approach, the language approach, and ptr haps stories from the Dr. Suess books. NEW SYSTEM , “I think we could take the best of each of these and build a fine new system of teaching reading,” she said. “One thing is certain, we can and should speed up the teaching of reading.” Wife Cooks Inmate's Turkey SOMMERVILLE, Mass. (41 - Reginald F. Carpenter Jr., 25, a maintenance man who surrendered to police and admitted a $2,476 bank robbery, had one thing to be thankful for—the Thanksgiving dinner he ate in jail was prepared by his wife. , Carpenter told police he robbed the Somerset Savings Bank Wednesday because bills were piling up and his car was about to be repossessed. ★ ★ ★ But, he said, when he told his wife, Theresa, 23, that night, she' uyged him to telephone a friend who is a Boston detective. Carpenter did and the officer notified local police. After he was jailed Carpenter asked if he could go home for Thanksgiving dinner. The answer was no, but police brought him his home-cooked turkey dinner and let his wife visit him. Carpenter faces arraignment today in District Court. 3-BEDROOM FULL BASEMENT w PER MONTH PAYS EVERYTHING A COMMUNITY YOU'LL LOVE . . Laguna Vista subdivision has the cool breezes of Wolverine Lake yet the convenience of city living. Plenty of room for the kids to play, and father and mother to relax in! You must see this Todayl Inritulinfi lulervH., Prlnciiutl,, Taxes and Insurance ONI Y 20 MINUTFS FROM PONTIAC MOTORS All Americana Homes Feature: Tulie OttTietd lolte MouiJ It Troll Right on Ponlicu Tmil Decker Rood. Right to South Cor merce. Right to Glengory then l« to Models OPEN 1 P.M -8 P.M Cloaad Thurtddys $110 MOVES YOU IN WITH OUR “WORK EQUITY PLAN” hiirra tiiKi l/oriK’s diorah building Co. 628 Los Arboles PHONE: 6244200 • Full basements • Maintenance free aluminum siding e Built-in bedroom closejs w/convenient storage above, e Beautiful Mapletone kitchen cabihets e Gat heat e 40 gollon gas hot .water heater e Tiled tub and shower area e Formica window sills • Full insulalioK e Exclusive thermal break windows.\ e Ppved streets • Community Water e 70' X 140' six# lot. Savings for f riday and Saturday; Men’i 2-Pant Suits All of Our Famous Makes regular 79.95 *64 Men^s Topcoats By Kevin Stuart regular to 59.95 $49 BoysVCorduroy Parkas $1299 Girls’ Winter Coats Girls’ Coat Sets Dresses Regular to 35.95 regular to 8.98 t|j$$J24’> $399 Girl’s Flannel Gowns or Pajamas regular $3.00 $199 ■ Uf Ladies’ Shetland Sweaters Cardigans or Pullovers regular 5.98 $399 Ladies’ Quilted Nylon Robes regular 9.98 $6” Ladies’ 900 Winter Coats regular T ^ 55.00 W Ladies’ Mink Trim Ladies’ Coats Coats regular to 125.00 Zip-Lined Chesterfield. regular 2 9.95 1M9 $1999 SHOES Casual Demi-Boot In black leather, brown fe-:; suede with leather trim or rust suede with leath-er trim. Sizes 4 to 1 0 AAA to B width! Ladies’ Leather Snow Boots y44 _ 044 Children's Insulated Boots Choose from Red, While ^ - or Brown. Size* 6 to 4. Children'* and 5 to 10 lodiet. j II Use A Convenient Lion Charge Plan ^ i; THE PONTIAC PRESS l^ONTIAC, MICIIIGAN. TWENTY-THREE 'Flower Drum Song' Set for March Faculty Will Star in Ploy at Ketfering By PENNY YOUNG Faculty members at Waterford Kettering High School will have their first opportunity to display the “ham” in them next March when the Oriental magic of “Flower Drum Song” lights up the stage. Tryouts have been held and the cast, composed primarily of faculty members, has been selected. Leads have been taken by Gerald Wallace, No. 1 son of Wang Chi Yang; Carol Kratt, Mei Li, the sweet little bride bought for Wang Ta; Mrs. Susan LeDuc, Linda Low, the No. 1 son’s No. 1 choice; and Ste-phf^i Hubbel as Sammy Fong. Continuing the cast list are Mrs. Janet Hunt as Helen Chao; Donald Gurk as Wang San, Robert Seeburger as Wang Chi Yang; Patty Loo- man as Madam Liang; Allen Elliott as Dr. Li, Mer Li’s father; and Duward Chaffee as a not-so-funny night club comedian. “Tom Jones” and May for “Inherit the Wind.” Stagemasters are sponsoring a theater trip, to Detroit to see “My Fair Lady” Dec. 12. To Aid Needy on Christinas Families Are Chosen for Each Homeroom Also cast are Roger Johnson, Mrs. Mary McGinley, Lynn Ror-her, Mrs. Lela Long and a large cast of chorus members. Fruitcakes are being sold by the band. Money obtained from the sale will be u.sed to buy a portable band shell. TRYOUTS SET Tryouts for “Tom Jones,” the Academy Award winning movie which has been reproduced in jplay form, and “Inherit the Wind,” the famous story of the Scopes monkey trial, Will be held Monday at 7 p.m. in room 302. Ski team members are beginning to shake in their boots as the snow is expected soon and racing season approaches! The team has organized, and new this year are team swealoi s in WKHS green. 6 RETURNING Returning racers are David Chambers, Steven Zempke, Thomas Ojay, Andres Blain, Richard Sies, and John Peterson. Others are Stephanie McKenna, Jamie Schutt, Pamela Hicks, Patricia Meyers, Donna Gould and Jeanne Trevethan. By JEAN PERRY Waterford Township High School students will be contributing to the annual Christmas drive, sponsored by the student council, beginning Monday. Wednesday student council representatives chose a needy family from Waterford Township for each homeroom .to represent. Canned foods and toys will be donated to this program from the students of WTHS. Money will also be collected from the homerooms to buy such items as fresh bread, milk, butter and fruit. Tentative production dates for the two plays are April for New racers will be announced after tryouts are held. Group Making Advent Gifts St. Michaers Club Is Preparing Wreaths Pontiac Pro«$ Photo THANKSGIVING DONATIONS - Over 50 baskets were donated to needy families in the area this Thanksgiving by Pontiac Northern High School students. Betty Rodgers of 2455 Williams has trouble picking up the overflow falling from the basket carried by Rick Fritz of 401 First. This is the fifth consecutive year for the volunteer effort by Northern students. Election Is Wednesday By HERVEY LAVOIE ' With the opening of the Advent season just two days away, the Sodality of St. Michael High School is preparing a special gift for each homeroom. The Sodality, a religious club aimed at self-sanctification, is making Advent wreaths. The wreaths, symbolic of the approaching joy of Christmas, are a circular arrangement of evergreen boughs, ribbons and candles. 10 Vie for Senior Class Offices af PNH By ALICE TURNER The top 10 candidates for Pontiac Northern High School’s election for senior class officers have been chosen. They include Rick Fritz, Carol Hose, Scott Kerns, Kay Hud-.son, Robert Hayes and Michael Woodruff. Others are Shirley Kath, Wayne Anabcl, Giles Kandt and Robert Church. by the senior class. Top four are determined and voted on again with the candidate with the majority of the votes being named as president. Second largest number of voles will make the candidate vice presi- Deborah Collison and Shirley Momero. These candles, four in number, represent the four Sundays of Advent. Each successive one is burned during its respective week. WREATHS FOR ADVENT - Members of the Sodality at St. Michael High School are making Advent wreaths for homerooms. Working on the project are Judith Ghastin (left) of ,3618 Baybrook and Judith Saxton of 177 W. Ann Arbor. The wreaths are symbolic of the approaching Christmas season. Dec. 24 will be the day of delivery on which the representatives from each homeroom will take their food and toys to their appointed families. Student council has purchased new furniture and carpeting for the new lobby. They hope to have this contemporary furniture by Christmas. Thomas Sweetman of Pontiac is the interior decorator for the WTHS lobby. MAGAZINE DRIVE Money for this project was earned by student council through a magazine drive held last spring and a hewtenanny also held last year. The council will sponsor a Christmas party for the 20 children from the Children’s Village Dec. 18. The ages of children arc 5 to 10. Refreshments will be served and presents distributed. The first comedy of the year “Pillow Talk”, was succe.ssful both nights according to director Anne Hobart. dent and s These candidates were nominated by a committee of 17 seniors, one from each senior homeroom. The two-ballot system will be used. The 10 students arc voted on Future Nurses Sew Slippers af Troy High . By ANITA CAIMION 'I’he future nur.ses club of Troy High School will (urn the next two meetings into .sewing bees, making slippers out of washcloths for the Baptist Children’s Home. 'Hie girls are planning to a d 0 p t a 16 - year - old girl for Christmas. Her expenses will he paid from donations received from club members. Also planned by the group was ii (rip (0 Grace Hospital Sehmil of Nursing Tuesday. Many future nurses are taking Red Cross first aid classes to prepare for their future vwa-tlons. Chrlstel Iliilippl/.ig won the “Know Your America” essay contcHt sponsored by (he Business anq Professional Women's club of 'Troy. Runners u|) were Julie Gwxl-win and Biirbura Vostlner, Science students were excused from their second hour classes (o attend a talk on atoinic energy. The Troy High School library has received 41)0 new books, most of which arc reference iMxtks and pertain to art, music, English and social studh's Helen .Smith, the sclusil II-bn 11 III innoiii i I that t h o class of IIHII) presented books in memory of George KeBr., a Troy graduate. The final election will be Wedne.sday. Students of Pontiac honored thejate .John Fitzgerald Kennedy at Northern Sunday at the first “Salute to Youth” program. RECEIVE CERTIFICATES Among those Northern students receiving certificates at this program were A1 Raynor, Robert Carr, Nancy llolmquist, Mary lluemiller, Giles Kandt, George Wren, Sheri Mason,. Gary Eldridge, Kari Nestrick, David Orvis and Andrew Kives. Purpose of this program is to recognize the youths of Pontiac ' for their contributions to the . community. Awards of various types were given in 14 catc-I gories ranging from scholarship to handicrafts. Tryouts will begin .soon for Northern’s next production, whii'h will be the musical 'Carousel.” The musical will be under the direction of Judith Hansen and John Tou.sely. Pontiac Northern .students voted for the “ugliest athlete” this past week. Pennies, nickels, j dimes and quarters acted as | ballots and were dropped into jars which were carried around by the athletes. Others were Robert Dugan, Ronald Fritzs, lloluirt Hayes, Elizabeth Johnson, Don Wyer, Kenneth Collins, .Sue Cook, IJndu Felice, Judith l.uwson. St. Michael’s was well represented Sunday at the Salute to Youth program. Receiving honors were Lawrence Bieri and .Janis Greek in art; Frances Franzel, Scot Gagel and Carol Moreno in creative writing; and Evelyn Daughtery, James Stickle, Hervey Lavoir and Carol Haddad in leadership. Other honor students were Patricia English and Sarah Raymond in music; Atwood Lynn in drama; Lorraine Ilylla in traffic safety; and Neil Paquette in photography. Area Schools in News W. BLOOMFIELD WINS Ti ri E John Cojocar won the title. This election whs a project of the Varsity Club. The $100.16 total was presented to the American F'ield Service Club to help reach the $100 goal to send , two Northern students overseas I next summer, 1 DAR Award Presented at Walled Lake By SU.SAN LaFEHK' West Bloomfield High School has a new foreign exchange student, Wolfgang Nein frimi Cu-haven, Germany. Wolfgang is visiting through the “Youth for Understanding” program and is residing with Steven Klopp jtmd family. I sponsored by the vocal depart-! ment soon and will feature the I Western Michigan University •hoir. I BLOOMFIELD HILLS AVONDALE Vote Delayed St. Fred's Frosh Elect Officers By JANIS QUARLES The freshmen at St. Frederick High School have elected I heir officers for the year, p'roshmeti elections w now available to all students wishing to apply. Freshman .scholarships at the University of Michigan, Michigan .State, and Oakland University arc now being offered. l-ater this year, a scholarship will be offered by the Junior Chamber of Commerce. Tlie (Jub of Walled Lake will of(cr a nursing .scholarship and (he J(;an Ott Memorial .Scholarship will lie offered again this year. A small .scholarship fund will also be presented by the faculty of WTII.S and a small scholarship from the .senior cla.s.s money will be awarded by the stiff. Thanksgiving Program By ANN LONGO The .Sodality at Our laidy of the Lakes Higli .Schixil sponsored a f(X)d drive Wednesday. During the ()ffcrtory of the Mass Wednesday ni|ornlng students moved to tlie front of Hic church and placed tlieir offerings ol canmxl foixls in baskets on Hie altar. George Lee and Louanna Hunt were chosen the two most valuable students to the sophomore class and were presented Iro phles by the Optimist Clul). Central Features Assembly ' By KAY CO.SMA Tlie musical department of Pontiac Cen-Ir.'d High Scliool wishes the studei.it liody and facully mnnlicrs a happy Tlianksgiving liy having an a.sscmbly Wedne.sday. Main ('Vent was tliu accappcla clioir singing "Magic Moments,” “Cry Out and .Sliout,” “Exodus,” and “No Man Is an I Island” s in Ann Arbor for LAKE ORION To complete (he progrmn, the senior hoys ensemble sang the popnlnr folk song “If I Had a Hammer" with soloists Roger riitiiuin, Nathon Jones iiiid James Webb. By PATRICIA WARD The vocal department and the band of Laku Orion High .Scliisil presented a Thanksgiving program to the student IkkI.v Wed nesday, 'I’lie I.OH.S clieerlcadcrs will hold their a n n u a I Christmas (lance Dec. 10. A N|)('clal asm'inlily will lie Tile senior girl.s ensemble also .sang “One l.iltle Candle” witli Evelyn Alderson us .soloist. The program was conducted and directed by A. Michael Dempsey. GIRL .SWIMMER.^ Ten girl.s from Hie girls swimming team, the Dolplilns, were cbo.sen to participate in the University of Micliigan “Micliifish” clinic recently. Five girls swam in a skulling and stroking group while the other five In a stunts grou|). Botti groujis lii'ard a lecluri' on poolside < tecliniques f 0 r synclironized swimming I teams. Tliosi' girls wlio went were Marja j Bruin, Ann Marie Mjazur, Cam MclKiwell, | Marsha l.uther, Peggy O'Neil, Chris | Blakney, Judy Slade, Connie Vanderllnd, | Sharon Kincaid and Molly Sellmnn. . } Till' German Club,.under Hie advisorship of Antiai i.lngei, el(»cled new officers. Ttiey Include Sarah Deem, president; Rolmrta Wine, vice president; and I'enny Webster, secrelary-trenaurer. Members of the club Nallion .Jones lias been seli'cted president || of lli(< nude cliia’us and Rogi'i' Putnam elected president of Hie senior tioys en- ’ .semlile BoHi groups are under the direction of A. Micliaei Dtmipsey. TWKNTY-FOUtl THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 19641 Yale Prof Less Reticent Now About Soviet Spy Charge Incident NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) Prof. Frederick C. Barghoorn of Yale grinned shyly, then laughed wh^n he said he’s on the Soviet Union’s mailing list. Pravda, .Izvestia" and other Soviet newspapers haven’ stopped coming to Barghoorn in 'the year since he yas impris-;pned on a charge of spying and then expelled from fte Soviet Union. Barghoorn has spent most of the past year assembling his latest book, living the life of a scholar as far removed as he can get from the public spot-. light. But he is less reticent now about telling of his arrest in front of Moscow’s Metropole Hotel, the incident that hurled Barghoorn into international prominence a year ago. TOWARD LOBBY “I had come from a visit to the American Embassy,” he recalled. “I was in the ambassador's auto. The ambassador was out of town and his chauffeur drove me to the hotel. ‘T was about two-thirds of the way to the hotel door. I was walking toward the lobby to meet a friend of mine (an acquaintance from a Western embassy). Gun-Toting Driver Wounds Man, Boy PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Police say a motorist shot and wounded a man who yelled at him and also an eight-year-old boy playing nearby. Police are still searching for the motorist. Detectives said that John Whitney, 38, yelled at a motorist Thursday who nearly ran him down. The detectives said the motorist stopped, cursed at Whitney, and then opened fire, hitting Whitney three times. * * if A fourth shot hit Ronald Thomas, playing about 40 feet away. Whitney was hospitalized in serious condition. The boy was treated and released. Gamble, Get Clipped SITTINGBOURNE, England (UPI) —A barber here applied for permission to install a slot machine in his shop to keep waiting customers engaged. :The gift : *for the top* •names on * •j^ourgift I •list... • ^BULOVA! Each Bulovd h rnrid« with ^ prldn, »o you can loke ® # pride in giving it, pride # in owning it. ^ ^ Our Watch [xperti will # H help you find the perfect ^ 0 Bolovd — for yourielf or (or a gift. Wo finvo a wide • ® »e|ert|on priced ' fiom • # $24.75, ^ • JIWILRY CO ‘‘A young man came up to me and asked,.“Are you an American citizen?” and thrust a piece of paper at me. That was all. He didn’t ask my name. "Three other men gtj^bbed me. “I made quite a commotion and tried to break away. Nobody outside the hotel paid the slightest attention.” HUSTLED AWAY Barghoorn, who had entered the country as a tourist, was hustled away in a car. That was at about 7:30 p.n Oct. 31, 1963, the night befpi Barghoorn was scheduled to leave the Soviet Uniop for War-sav(5 It Was almost two weeks later, on Noy. 12, that Tass, the 'Soviet news agency, announced that Barghoorn had been arrested “the other day” on a charge of spying. *■ ★ , ★ . The news shocked the Yale University community and Barg-hoorn’s colleagues. Protests were raised about the arrest of the scholar who had made several previous trips to the Sovifet Union and who had served at the American Embasi^ in Moscow front 19« to 194?T ★ President John F. Kennedy expressed his personal concern. CITED CONCERN On Nov. 16, the'Soviet government announced it was washing its hands of the matter, cited Kennedy’s concern and expelled Barghoorn. Bachelor Barghoorn, 53, still lives in an efficiehcy Apartment next door to that of his 81-year-old mother, Elizabeth Barghoorn. ' I back to Would he like to { 1he Soviet Union? ★ ★ ★ “Not for a few years,” is all Barghoorn Will say. WORKING ON BOOK Barghoorn currently has the title of “Ford rotating research professor of public affairs” at Yale — a status that keeps hhn free of classes and enables him to work on his book, tentatively titled “Politics in Russia.”/ ★ ★ ★ . “I’m afraid it will have to undergo some revisions,” he says with typical understatement. “Itls an occupational hazard in this field. ★ ★ ★ ^T: was hoping Khrushchev would stay in power until I finished the bbok.‘ I didn’t anticipate the way he would leave/’ Vinyl AsbestosTile ^ Plastic Wall Tile....... ^ 3700 Sashabaw Rd. Droyton Plains (2 Blocks North of Walton) 674-0421 Open Mon. thru Tliun. 8 to 6 ' SPARTAN SHOP 9:30 A.M. 'TIL 10 P.M. FIRffr QUAlJTy-WJW COST mummi TEmspimii i ^ ^ ©yPONIAli! SATURDAY ONLY-12 BIG SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A.M.TO 10 P.M.DAILY...SUNDAY 12 noon to 7 P-M. 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Ideof (or molit-ure barrier, drop Clothi, etc. A bargain. 3’xlOO’ROLL 44s TWKXTY-SIX THE PONTIAjrPRESS, FRIDAY, XOVEMBER 27, 1964 LAKE ORION - Village residents can rest assured that the possibility of Lake Orion becoming a city will not die from inattention. A meeting of the Lake Orion Womeri’s League for Better Government concentrated that issue this week. Focal point of the open dis- cussion was the repent of a Citizens Advisory Committee made j^blic last year. Although the report recont-mended cityhood for Lake Orion bfcau^ of several advantages to be gained, the report was tabled by the Village Council and no action taken since. Only about 25 of the 75 who Revives Ofyhood Issue attended the meetfng members of the \eame,J)^e remainder being in|&§sitM citizens. REVIVAL OF « Some of these residents were indirectly/wsponsible for t h e revival/0 applicants in the 4 11 |irogram by the county award's commit berships initially, the country club eventually will be restricted to residents of the Village Green apartments qs their number increases. Construction of the Williamsburg style apartment buildings will be programmed over several years to allow for reasonable occupancy, according to Thomas Duke. The development al.so is to contain a 7'^-acrc man-made lake with covered bridges crossing It at two points. Plans call for tlie 16-unit sliopping center to be designed like an old-fashioned village green and built around a band shell in a small park. today. Mr. and Mrs. John Teare headed the drive for funds supporting agency services in the township including Brandon Community Projects. Commenting on the drive Jointly, the Teares said, “We are very pleased that our local citizens have supported the drive to such a successful conclusion. “Without this support we would not be able to provide many of the services now available to our community.” Other major agencies serving Brandon are: American Red Cross, Boy Scouts of America, Clinton Valley Council, Northern Oakland County Girl Scouts, Big Brothers, Oakland Child Guidance and Michigan Cancer Foundation. Also the Catholic Social Services, Michigan Children’s d Society, Family Service of OalL-land County, Salvation Army and St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital Clinic. ASSISIING CHAIRMEN Chairmen assisting with the residential campaign were Mrs. l.eary Wood, Area I: Mrs. George Sutton, Area II; Mrs. (.’haries Carmean, Area HI; and Mrs. Clark Miller, Area IV. The school campaign was headed by Robert Harvey, high school faculty member. Dr. and Mrs. George .laruga and Richard Wafts headed commercial division calls. * * ★ Student (Council members at Bi|-andon (^ommunily High School also assisted the drive by s|Min.soring an annual dance which netted $82.60 toward the campaign. NO FIRM POSITION Although the league has not yet taken a firm position on the kind of governmerrt it wants to their money will be outlined at Monday’s 8 p.m. session in the South Lyon Elementary School gymnasium. On hand for the meeting will They, board of education Some $14,500 of the total would be used at New Hudson School to change the heating plant and rewire the older portion of the building. The rest of the bond issue would be earmarked for contingencies. The’ school board plans to Seek Salary Hike for Holly Teachers HOLLY — The salary committee of the Holly Teachers Club has presented to the board of education a proposal to step up pay increases for the 1965-66 school year. The committee has recommended that the system’s salary schedule, which has been adjusted upward annually for the last five years, be increased on an index basis. The index computation endorsed by the Michigan Education Association provides that each step on the salary scale be determined as a percentage of the base pay rather than a flat rate. Starting salary for the holder of a bachelor’s degree with no experience would be $5,000 on the proposed scale, while it now is $4,900. Working through the 10 steps on Itie scale, the teacher with a bachelor’s degree-would earn a lop salary of $7,200, or 144 per cent of his ba.se pay. $6,900 MAXIMUM Maximum pay in this cate- trie. Tliey were judged on llieir dpi) m'hievemenlH nnd records lliniugliout their entire career n.s 4 H memlxTH and also after a dfllnlleil Interview by llie com iilRlee. Tlie two leaders also were picked to go wiUi the < emiler this inoiilh lireniisp ol ill health. j Feigley, of Feigley M o t o r | .Sales, Is a captain In the Mll-i ford Volunteer Fire Ih'parlmenl; and is a tneiiilier of Ihe Amei lean Legion. I He was a Milford resldeiit were from lO.'IO to I9f|9 Ihen livid In •ounfy |(’olorado for IlirOe yearn lieforc I reluming hero in 1962. MAKING HECORA'IIONS Tliiee mem tier,s ol the Oxliird Junior Women's ( liib com iiiillee planning tomomiw night's annual ('harlly Hall In lie lield at I’Ino Kiioli near Clarksloa put Hie final loudies on a paper topiary Iree. Tliey are (from left) Mrs. •Slewml Langley, dance dialrniaii; Mrs. JoHi'iili I’lilpps; mid Mrs JaiiieS Sclmilile Dancing lo llie music of Bull vSdineldcr mid the (Yestiiieii will lie from 10 p.in. lo 2 a.m. 'Tickets will be available at tile door. gory now is $6,900, with teachers receiving annual raises of $200. Recommendation for the beginning salary of a teacher with a master’s degree is $5,-.‘iOO, comparcii to the present $5,200. The top figure would be $7,950, or 150 per cent of the base pay, while it now is $7,750. In his presentation to the board, committee chairman Kichard Jacobson al.so outlined teacher requests for a health insurance program partially paid by the board and establishment of a terminal pay policy for tlio.se who retire. Schools Supt. George Carver noted that adoption of the proposed scale would mean a raise for each of the district’.s 107 teachers. , STUDY SESSIONS 'Phe board plans to hold a number of study sessions to consider the proposal, the total cost of which has not yet been determined. New Zoning for Bank OK'd FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP -Kimberly Subdivision residents have decided that they don’t mind having u bank for n neighbor, and the Towii.slilp Board has concurred, Three lots on Ihe iiorlliwest corner of 11 Mile and Middle Bell were rezoiied Wedne.sday night from residentiiil to office to permil con.slrliclion of a Na-I lional Bank of Dclroll lirmicli offCT, The •mhdiviNlon iiNKiielatlnn met TiieNiluy night mid took nn iiiformutionul vote, whieh gave Mipport lo the re/oning reqiieNt by ii 152-41 iniirgln. Altliougli not liinding on the board, tnisleeH had requeHted N definite Indication of liow residents felt. By n voice vole, residents sup* ported Early American design for tlie branch office, another issue In whicli Iheruliud seemed to lie a division of opinion. * A * Bank olficlals Wednesday as I sored Itie Township Board that I I the design of the building would be Early American. VUlf Ih* N*w Horn, of Pixloy Memorial Chapoi members and school adnunis-1 abandon the annex now being by seven elementary ne^s of the distnct and the ,1^33^5 if the proposition is ap-method proposed for answering 1 proved them. j ^ ★ A ★ BUILDIN6 PLANS | n,e„,bers have agreed Central in the building plans that a new high school should about six years and the pre.sent one converted to a junior high school. DEBT RETIREMENT Cost of the new bond issue would be added to a levy which this year will include 1 mill for debt retirement. That portion of the taxes was is construction of a $430,000 dition to the high school. '' The 10-room wing would feature a science unit which would allow the present chemistry-physics a^ea to be converted into an art room. The school’s gymnasium, home economics room, shop, library and cafeteria also would reduced for the December a.s-be remodeled. sessment because re.serve funds * * * were applied lo the district's Proposed construction of a debt, according lo tfchools Supt. music room, expansion of art Frank Bartlett, facilities and improvement 6f The levy also contains 16,75 the home economics room at | mills designated for opcration.s, Sayre Elementary School would I 8.5 mills of which were voted cost about .$60,000. extra. Let us show YOU the EASY, FUNWAY of | S handling SNOW this Winter! TRY OUT BOLEN'S POWERFUN EQUIPMENT! SNOW REMOVAL your frvv a two Bayberry candles I that will fill your home | with the warm glow yuletide scent of the holiday season! 2 FREE with purchase of a BOLEN'S SNOW CASTER, this smart-looking SURCQAT with quilted lining. WATER and WEATHERPROOF! NEW WINTES kSPORT BOX^BNS ARTIC SNOW CASTER Compart the leuturcfl • Two Imlciipmldil cliildieg lor rotor ond drivo wliPoU • 2 forwArd, 2 revnr»o Apcndi • .SirAlglit-APlIon doAiiiii i>r I Short Hlovk West servative of the studios, blinked in disbelief. Studio workers are not allowed to purchase even beer in the dining room. “I am sorree,” Del^ said airily as he sipped the golden bub- bles, “but I cannot'drink Coca-Cola with my meals,” The independent Frenchman is the latest of international film stars to come to Hollywood, and he is one of the most willing of emigrants. Many of them | travel here to collect large sal-! aries and the prestige of appear-1 ing in American films, then! hasten back to their tax shelters ’ in the old country. HAPPY TO STAY “How long will I stay?” said i 5elon. “As long as they want | j me here. Wherever I work.'I am I To Map Pla ns O n I happy to stay. I can adjust to ' ^ jany surroundings. And I must Canal Treaty Action j say life in America is very easy I to adjust to.» T>AXTA»»A orm,, ______ ww I “Living in Southern Califor-: PANAMA CITY (UPI) — The jg yej.y pleasant — if you anti-American students’ federa- gj-g g movie star and can afford . tion (FEP) scheduled a mass L jjouse in Beverly Hills. But | meeting here tonight — the j got everyone is a movie star.” third in four days — to “map j Delon is now finishing his first ^ture . plans regarding U.S.- Hollywood film, “Once a Thief,’” Panamaman treaty negotia- j jg ^vhich he costars with Ann-Margret. He has found the Student Parley Set in Panama tions.” Such meetings frequently lead to violence. A policeman and passerby were injured Wednesday night when police broke up a student “march on the capitol” after a mass meeting in Santa Ana Square. Three students were arrested on charges of disorderly conduct. Political observers said the FEP apparently has failed in efforts»,to enlist union support for its campaign against officials who they argue are not harsh enough in their dealings with the United States. There were some union leaders present at a student-organized meeting Tuesday night in the Panama University auditorium, but done attended the meeting Wednesday. Unionists are expected also to boycott to-Ight’s meeting. * * * The current outbreak of anti-American activity here began when Jorge Illueca resigned last week as special ambassador for negotiations with the United States, charging that Foreign Minister Fernando Ele-ta was hesitant about canceling the 60-year-old Panama Canal treaty. Eleta charged in a radio broadcast Wednesday night that Illueca had violated the la^y forbidding disclosure of confidential information. It was not certain whether the foreign minister would press the charge. GIVES A HOOT — Little Hoot, the pet owl, seems a bit ruffled as dog Brownie bids for the attention of Johnny Parrish. The 10-month-old owl can’t fly yet, likes to play and is a finicky eater. Johnny, Little Hoot and Brownie are,members of the J. W. Parrish household of Lynchburg, Va. filming technique no different from that in Europe. “We are all one big family,” he observed. “The only differences are in the amount of money that can be spent and the skill of the technicians.” The sad - eyed, exceedingly | handsome actor has fluttered' many a heart, notably those of costars Romy Schneider and Jane Fonda. There was consternation among feminine members of the jet set when he married Natalie Barthelmy earlier this year. He now appears to be a devoted husband and father — a son was born six weeks ago. BORN IN U.S. “He was born here,” Delon pointed out. “Just think — he could be president of the United Stated He is a citizen.” And Delon himself? “No, I cannot be president,” he replied. But does he plan to become a citizen? “Oh, I cannot tell now,” he remarked. “Supposing I become a citizen and then I find no work here. How would I be received when I go home to France?” Owner Is Still Tryin' to Keep Unquiet Lion Caroline Is 7 Today NEW YORK <41 -- Caroline Kennedy is 7 years old today — two days after her brother, John turned 4. They live with their mother, Mrs. John F. Kennedy, in a .New Y(,rk City apartment. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, STEAK HOUSE LIQUOR and DELICIOUS FOOD SATURDAY QUARTERBACK CIAJB BUFFET LUNCH TIL 5 — $1.50 *‘All You Can Eat’* Taking Reservations for Christmas Parlies! WIDE TRACK DRIVE iit W. HURON, 17:i« WILLOW GROVE, Pa. (AP) — Howard Sautter made ituposi-tive today: He’s going to fight'to keep his lion in his own back yard. Sautter, a garage owner, originally said he would bow to last month’s order of the Abington Township commissioners and get rid of Leo, his pet. Neighbors had complained of the roaring and said the animal frightened them. The commissidners cited Leo as a nuisance. Sautter said then he would find a new home for the lion. Many offers reportedly came in. This week Sautter decided against it. He took Leo to the University of Pennsylvania Veterinary Hosoital in nearby Philadelphia where surgery was perforneed purportedly to quiet the roar. LOUD AS EVER After coming out of the anesthesia Leo opened his mouth— and roared. About as loud as ever. Sautter felt the sound — he calls it Leo’s mating roar — would diminish in time, and Dr. Daniel B. Bleicher, a veterinarian who treats Leo, said the operation si’.ould make him more docile. “But he’ll still be a lion,” add'd Bleicher “I had him for two years, and he P:’lice Department has n» had one complaint,” Sautter said. “Everyone around here knew I had him all that time. Tliey will have to prove he is a •lui.sance.” NOT BUDGING The township commissioners aren’t budging. “I still feel Willow Grove is no )!aee for a big lion," said John ’ Gibs-n, ei airm.an of the Pub Safety Committee. “Pm sure Leo is just as clean as Sautter says, and he may not roar, but people are still afraid of the lion being in the neighborhood.” Leo isn’t really a ferocious beast of the jungle- As a cub he developed rickets, which stunted his growth and makes him more crippled than catlike. He is' kept chained and rides around in Sautter’s truck when his master goes out on business calls. William D. Clarke Jr., another commissioner, said he feels the township should give Sauter a time limit — say 10 days — to gte rid of Leo. This decision may be made next Monday. “I wouldn’t want it living next to my home,” Clarke said. ^ZZaKEEGO eilinim iiMHEiraEnE FATE IS THE HUNTER... IBM lAKOHiiiifinnH Here comes Bipper, the ‘ flipWJI Prisoners End 18-Hour Revol More Mail' Privileges Gained by C^onvicts PETROS, Tenn. (AP) — Except for a slight revision in the policy of handling prisoners’ mail, nothing has changed much at the Brushy Mountain State Prison as a result of an 18-hour sit-down rebellion by 134 coalmining inmates. Harry Avery, state corrections commissioner, a*fter conferring for nearly two hours with the rebels 'Thanksgiving Day, returned to Nashville. Officials said everything is “back to normal” at the prison and that no disciplinary action will be taken against those who revolted. The rebels were scheduled to return to the mines today, along with three mine foremen they held hostage during the Wednesday protest demonstration. Commissioner Avery and Warden John Winsett agreed to permit the prisoners to mail four letters per week instead of only three as in the past. And Winsett said the number of pages of outgoing letters would be increased fron) two to three. A major complaint of the rebels enter^ around mail privileges. ! The only weapons the rebels, had inside their dark mine shaft j were dynamite caps and dy-1 namite. The hostages were un-' harmed. ^ Pontiac’i POPULAR THEATER — — — — — —i tlssk Oayi: Continuoat II t.m. to 12 p.m. SAT. 10:45 A M. fa 1:00 P.M. ’ Cotinuau. 12 ..m. 1.12 p.m. | 13 glDDIE SHOW I EAGLE I KIDS 13c L With This Coupon heteconesB^, thefeadess^ ...he's back with some brand 'new fun, thrills, as he^ tackles a band of desperate pirates! ^Merro-Gold^n-MajUrp-Bsenrs An Ivan Tors produerfon TllE PONTIAC FRKSS. FRIDAY,"NbVEMlIER 27, 19«4 TWEN 1 VUNl^E 1| in Male Die in Early Holiday Hours A LOAD Frigidaire Jet Action KEEGO QUICK CLEAN CENTER 2945 Orchord Loke Rd. 'JBy The Associated Press At least 11 persons died in Michigan traffic accidents during thC; first 42 hours of the Thanksgiving holiday weekend —including three young people killed in a one-car crash in Livingston County. ★ .* * ■ The Associated Press holiday traffic death count began at 6 p.m. Wednesday and continues through midnight Sunday. »• ★ : * ■ The victiihs include: 'Marcia Sweet and Connie Ylanch, both identified by Liv-' ingston County sheriff’s officers as approximately 16 years old from , Stockbridge, and John Murray 23, of Munith, were killed Thursday when the car in I which they were riding ran off M106 east of Stockbridge and struck a tree. DEARBORN DEATH Lawrence^ J. Lindner, 20, of Dearborn, was killed Thursday when the car in which he was riding collided with another auto at a Dearborn Heights intersection. George Nowak, 41, of Gage-tpwn, was injured fatally Thursday night when his car went off a Tuscola County rural road and slammed into" a tree. ■ ★ * ★ Ruby E. Kotli, 44, of Standish, was killed Thursday when her car was struck broadside by another at a rural intersection near Linwood. Police said she SUNDAY SPECIAL! Dinner Served 12 .Voon (o II P.M. RIB EYE STEAK DIKNER 5150 ItandBun.r ■ PARTIES - BANQUETS C fol 1_ fol I Private Dining Room 1— I Seating Up To TO Person^ CALL FOR INFORMATION 1650 North Perry at Pontiac Road NOW APPEARING The Sensational CORD-AIRES Tuesday Thru Sunday 9 P. M. to 2 A. M. Announcing New Feature DEUGIOES HOT SANDWICHES Including Corned Beef and Other Ta.sty Sandwiche.s Hef and /thckct 119.") Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains FRI. and SATo NIGHTS 9:00 P.M. to 2:00 A.M. NO COVER CHARGE ISow Appearinfi; For Your Dancing and Linteninff Pleasure! ED and THE BREWERY BOYS STARTING DEC. 4th REX MAYWORM & HIS QUINTET SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER Family Style Fried Chicken 3:00 To SI 39 Children 9:00 P.M. I Under 10 96° HELDOVERSmWEK! An age of rampant lusts, abandon, runatvay passions. An age brought bristling to life by two of the most exciting stars of our tunc! UINWKIIO nilMlIfll MAKIIMIIftil DWIIAin hHMMlrf . .PCTER -*.KrWAIU) , JEAN I * GLliNVILLE ANIIAi:rS!UN()UILU ..ANAyi«!oN; TH.IINK.OK »H' His KiiHj HURON SAT. I SUN. at l!00-9|46 017B fliOB CHILDREN 60c Fatalities. I on Upturn i in Nation By the Associated Press The pace of the nation’s traffic deaths spurted sharply on Thanksgiving, casting a somber note on holiday festivities in many families. A rash of multiple-death accidents since the count started at 6 p.m. local time Wednesday was a major factor in boosting the toll to 193 today. The highway fatalities were far above the daily average of 126 in the first nine months of this year. This year’s Thanksgiving toll I also was far more than reported i in the corresponding period a i year ago. The final count, for the j 102-hour weekend in 1963 was 543. a record high for a four-day Thanksgiving holiday period : since the count was started in 1958. i j Wet weather, snow in the Pa-j cific Northwest and Midwest I and rain in the East, created hazardous driving conditions in many areas. Highway travel, although not regarded as heavy as on other major national holidays, appeared above normal in most of the nation. LATEST REPORT The latest of the multiple-death accidents were reported in Kansas and Iowa, A car rammed under a parked truck on the Kansas Turnpike near Wellington, Kan., Thursday night, killing Joan Judd, 24, of Blackwell, Okla., and three of her young children. Two cars loadt*d with teenagers from Fort Dodge, Iowa, returning from a wedding reception crashed in separate accidents. Three boys were killed in one accident and in the second mishap one boy was killed. The worst accident during the holiday thus far reported was near Olanta, S.C., where seven members of one family and the driver of a second car were killed in a head-on collision. No estimate of traffic deaths for the Thanksgiving weekend was made by the National Safety Council. It said there is little extra long-distance travel for the holiday. SURVEY TOTAL An Associated Press .survey during a nonholiday weekend of 102 hours from Nov. 11 to Nov. 1|) showed 4IMJ traffic deaths. Tile record low traffic death toll for a Thanksgiving holiday period was 442 in 1960. Nehru Sister Seated irt Parliament Today NEW DELHI (/ll - Mrs. Vi-jayalakshmi I’iuidil, sister of the late Prime Minister Nelii'u, took her seat in Parliament today. She was elected recently in Phulpur to llic seal left vacant l)y her brother’s deatli Mrs, I’andil, 61, was a member of I’arliament for two years 19.52 ,54, liefore heeoming Indian high commissioner in f.ondon .She resigned as governor of Maharashtra Slate In October to rim for Parliament, drove past a stop, sign into the path of the other vehicle. Theodore Keskey, 30, of Islh peming was crushed to death TTiursday when he was thrown from tils car and it ran over him near Ishpeming, state police said. Officers said KeSkey had lost control of the aut<4. which ran into a ditch on • a county road, FAILED ON CURVE Robert Hawley, 47, of Grand Rapids, lost hiS life when his car failed to make a curve at high speed and hit ai tree off M21 near Iona, state police said. Lloyd J. Laughlin, 21, of Grand Rapids, and Derrick A. Wirth, 36, of Wyoming, were killed when their car hit a tree in Wyoming. ★ ★ ★ Charles Miles Jr., 40, of Portage, died when his auto ran off a Barry County road and struck a tree, DINE OUT TONIGHT & KKATCRKS: ./^ -SANDWICHES -STEAKS-SALADS 39 Varletios of Pancakes WOODWARD AVE. and 14Vie Mile HIHMIMdIAM Ml I 2727 Plans Buddhist Retreat VIENTIANE, Laos on - Gen. Kong Le, leader of the Neutralist Laotian Army, will spend next week in Buddhist'retreat. The 33^year-old general, a de- vout Buddhist, shaved hi^ head and changed his uniform for robes three days ago after spending a night meditating in a cave, it was reported today | Cohim^^bani^^ in Vientiane. ' i signed a hew commercial France. Albania Siqn V n)ent aimed at stepped-up .trade ■ next year„ Commercial Accord PARIS (UPIK- France and The, a^eement followed a recent decision by France and Albania to raise the status of their diplomatic missions to embassy rank.- ■ ' WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR, CHRISTMAS? You can still eat at Pino Knob Ski ResortI Clnrknlon, Midiiynn. CnII 625 2MI Waldtctt Hotel PIKE AND PERKY IIOMU: OIT I'llK EAMOIIS WAI.HKON IIUKKICT CA'I'EltIM) TO: I'inhI iit Un (llimin Htylc) • ilANUIIIOTS lliitlcl or Moiiii FMwvloe • IVIIillOTINUN .1 TliiiOi Itnll.v • lUcOloriTONH (^ccktui! Hout (SiM'clnl Low Prhos) .Momla.v tlini Hiitiirilii.v 1 I’.IVf. (o 0 P.M. AIXOi ANOTIII6IL HOUR IIAH IIEKN AI)I>KI>— Mon. Ilirii TliiirN. I) lo 10 i‘.M.—HAMV; I.OW I’RICKM DANI’ING NIGHTLY HurriT WOOKONItl II.M Are you looking at pennies... and missing out on the dollars you can save with an electric dryer? Perhaps an electric dryer does cost a couple of pennies more per load to operate than a gas dryer. But with an electric dryer you come out dollars ahead in the long run. Here’s why: Model for model, an electric dryer costs from .$20 to $40 less than a gas dryer. And you save more if you buy now because this low price includes installation. YtTu’ll also save in the long run because an electric dryer costs you nothing for electrical parts (repair or replacement) or labor. Edison will c6ine to your home, make repairs and leave without letiving you a bill. Based on manufacturers' repair policy premtuins, this no-charge Edison service can save you uplto $200 in TO years’„^tiine. It doesn’t matter where you buy your electric dryer; the Edison no-charge service still applies. Add it up and you’ll see that electric dryers actually cost less to own. EDISON THIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 19R4 Player Bidding Opens Tomorrow AFL Officials Brand 'Sneak Draft' Report Erroneous NEW YORK (AP) - The American Football League has branded'as erroneous a newspaper report that the 5-year-old league held a “snealc drift” two weeks ago to get a jump on the senior National League in the brewing battle for the top college football players in the country. The story, which appeared in Friday’s New ’V’orK Daily News — one day before the rival leagues conduct their separate drafts at different sites in New York — was immediately denied by league and club officials. * * * Milt Woodard, the AFL’s assistant commissioner, flatly stated the story was “erro- neous” while pointing out that “our constitution and by-laws don’t allow this. We have set a date for the draft and if we sign anybody before that we would have to void this type of agreement. The story is, not true.” The Daily News story, written by Norm Miller, said “there are strong indications that the American Football League clubs already have held another sneak draft in an effort to beat the NFL to tjhe best available college players.” PLAYERS LISTED Accompanying the story was a club-by-club list of names that included such top-flight talent as Illinois linebacker Dick But-kus, halfback Gayle Sayers of Kansas, receiver* Larry Elkins of Baylor and California quarterback Craig Morton. Miller’s story said the premature draft was “believed to have been conducted by phone nearly two weeks ago. At least one leading collegian already has been signed by an AFL team.” The AFL held a premature draft three years ago, in viola- tion of their agreement with the colleges to hold off until the final full Saturday of the collegiate schedule. Commissioner Jde Foss, who was not aware of the move instituted by club owners, ordered it voided. ★ ★ .★ There were vigorous denials that any such situation exists this time, with a couple of accu- stations tossed at the NFL at the same time. “We have held no secret draft,” said General Manager Jack Steadman of the Chiefs. “This sounds like another move by the NFL to stir up problems for us. We have been bdsy contacting about 300 college kids. If we knew who we were drafting. Crippled Bears Nip Hurting Lions Chicago Posts II-U Victory on Late FG Leclerc's Boot Ends Scoring; John Gordy Suffers Concussion By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press DETROIT-Two crippled football teams, the Chicago Bears and the Detroit Lions, played a game of steal and giveaway in the traditional Thanksgiving Day contest before 52,231 at Tiger Stadium yesterday. For the Bears it was just like faking the Turkey drumstick from a caged Lion as they went back to Chicago with a 27-24 victory. They did it primarily by stealing the ball from fullback Nick Pietrosante early in the fourth'^ quarter and then stealing one of Milt Plum’s passes late in the period to set up the winning field goal, a 17-yarder by Roger Lederc with 1:14 left in the game. After all this “thievery” coach Papa Halas then showed his mercy in true holiday spirit by letting the clock run out in the final seconds with the Bears on the Lions’ one-yard line, within easy range of another seven points. It was the 30th anniversary of the first Thanksgiving Day game during which the Bears were the first holiday foe in 1934. Eor the Lions, however, the defeat may have hurt their chances for a possible playoff Bowl trip to Miami in January as their record dropped to 5-5-2. (lORDY HURT In the defeat, anotiu'r first line performer, John Gordy, suffered a concussion and was placed under ob.servation. The Lions had a touchdown at their dispo.sal midway in the first quarter, but Terry Harr dropped an 18-yard throw from Plum in the end zone and thus they had to settle for three points on Wayne Walker’s 25-yard field goal. With Rudy Bukich hitting on 11 of his first 12 passes and finishing with 22 of 29 for the afternoon, the Hears sconsi 21 points in tlie .second quarter. It was 7-3 with Hob Jencks’ conver.sion after Hukich hit Jon Arnett with a one yard touch down pass. A moment Inter, Bobby Joe Green punted off the side of his foot. The bull hit on the 3t), iMtunced back to the Bears’ 17 and he was credited with only .ONK-yard punt. A 13-i' yard pass from Plain to Barr made it 10-7 with Walker’s point. A five yard Tl) pass to Joe Marconi ami a 18 yarder to (Conlimicd no Page 34, Cot. 4) Navy Unit Favored in Quarterback Tilt PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Navy is a one touchdown favorite to defeat an Army team still living a nightmare in the 65th service football game Saturday also billed as the third war of the “S” men — senior quarterbacks Roger Staubach and Rol-lie Stichweh. ★ ★ ★ Shorn of bowl possibilities, national ranking or even a club with a winning record, the contest more than ever is the beginning and end of the season for th participants. Although the President will not be in the crowd of 100,000 at John F. Kennedy Stadium, Luci Baines Johnson will represent the first family. A healthy Staubach is the chief reason the momentum-riding Middies are the choice to achieve an unprecedented sixth straight victory and even the colorful serifes Army currently leads 30-29-5. Two years ago Jolly Roger ran and passed for four touchdowns against the exasperated Soldiers. The- Cadets can’t shake the memory of 1963 when the final gun found them two yards short of what would have been the season’s biggest upset. Navy won 21-15 behind fullback Pat Donnelly’s three touchdowns but observers came away singing the praises of Stichweh. Never in the series dating from 1890 have individuals been more important to their teams than these scrambling field gen- IN BEARS’ TRAP - Chicago Bears’ defensemen John Johnson (76), Roger LeClqrc (83) and Dave Whitsell (23) close the door on Detroit fullback Nick Pietrosante (33) as he tries for yardage through the center of the line. Bears won, 27-24, knocking Lions to third place in NFL standings. erals who are fast friends off the field. Each suffered a leg injury at the outset of the campaign and Staubach couldn’t even make the trip for one contest while he was severely limited in several others. Both are 100 per cent physically now. “’They’ll certainly concentrate on Stichweh as every other team has this year,*’ says Army Coach Paul Dietzel. “And we certainly intend to zero in on Staubach. 10 MINUTES “Stichweh has taken the most severe pounding all season yet he has outgained every player on the field in eight of the nine games, ,playing only 10 minutes against Boston College. . “Staubach is back in tip-top condition, and he’s a great one. I believe he will be in better shape Tor this game than he was last year and that scares me.” Staubach, from Cincinnati, has completed 107 of 183 passes for 1,021 yards. He also has Houdini-like qualities as a runner when his underpinnings are sound. Stichweh, from Williston Park, N.Y., is a good passer and great runner who has accounted for 1,354 yards in all offensive departments this fall, a school record. Both have occasionally operated out of shotgun formations to capitalize on their talents. Army stands 3-6, only the second time in the last 24 years it has faced its arch-rival with less than a winning record. Navy is 3-5-1 but is 2-0-1 against common foes all of whom beat the Cadets. Stichweh was recently quoted as saying Army is going to “finish” last year’s game, a remark plastered in the Navy dressing room. The Middies fully expect to benefit from extra incentive from that close'call, too. LION CORNERED — Detroit Lions’ receiver Pat Stud-still, unaware of anything but the ball, failed to hang onto the ball when Chicago’s Dave Whitsell slipped behind him to break up the pass. Play pame in the second quarter at Tiger Stadium. ’ we would have contacted about 20.” , „ SAME DAY The AFL and NFL drafts , have been scheduled for the same day for the first time since the two began to compete for talent and started a apiralf-ing dollar war that |s expected to reach still another peak this year. . The AFL, which signed only three of its first eight selections last year while the NFL grabbed 12 of its 14 No. 1 picks, moves to the conference table this time armed with millions from its new television contract. Both drafts will be conducted by telephone and telegraph with representatives of the clubs checking their home offices around the country before making their selections. Each league plans 20 rounds, with the AFL starting at 8 a.m., EST, and the NFL an hour later. The New York Giants will get the first pick in the NFL and the Houston Oilers the first two in tlje AFL — their own and Denver’s via a trade. The teams will select in the reverse order of their standings with, ties resolved by coin flips. The order of selection (ties to be decided on coin flips): ' NFL - 1, New York. 2, .San Francisco. 3, Chicago nr Pittsburgh. 5, Dallas. 6, Philadelphia or Washington. 8, Los Angeles or Minnesota. 10, Green Bay. 11, Detroit. 12, St. Louis. 13, Cleveland. 14, Baltimore. AFL — 1, Houston. 2, Denver. ^ 3, Oakland. 4, New York. 5, Kansas City. 6, San Diego or Boston. 8, Buffalo. LION* BIARt ruthing Nuinl)»r of lumi 76er Defense Nips Warriors but Not Wilt By the Assbeinled Press The Ptiiliidelphia 76ers may haye come up with a new de-fen.se against Wilt Chamberlain - they pretend he isn’t there. Wilt poured in 63 points high for (he National Basketball As.sociation sea.son - agoin.st Philadelphia Thursday night but (he 76ers capKalized on the frigid .shooting of his .San Francis CO teammates and whipped the Warriors 128-117 It was the 7(lers’ third siraighi victory and the Warriors’ sixth con.seciitive setback. In vThur.sday’s only other game, the Hob Pettit-less St. Louis Hawks overcame a 24-mimite cold spell and bull-dozed the Boston Celtics 110-98 with a 40 (lolnt final period. Chamberlain hit on 27 of .58 field goal attempts and nine of 20 free throws, pulled down 32 rebounds and contributed lliree assists in a brilliant, full-route effort. NO I'ltOBI.EMS Philadelphia’s Hal Greer, 26 [H»ints, Lucious Jack.son, 24, and Larry Costello, 23, had no such problems as the 70ers mdscored the Warriors 24-6 during a first-|M'rl(Kl stretch and were never headed. City Pro Cagers Colled First Vidory MUSKEGON The initial I success comes hard in most endeavors and there was nothing easy about the Pontiac Nation-1 als’ first North American Basketball League victory Thurs-1 day. I At least, their 109-103 triumph' over the winless Muskegon Panthers did give the Nationals something to be thankful for and raised hopes for a strong showing .Saturday night in tlu'ir first home game. The Chicago Brown Bombers will invade the Ponliac Northern gymnasium at 8:15 p in. tomorrow as tlie Pontiac quintet’s fourth opiMinent in the young NABL sea.son. Former Purdue All-American Willie Merrlwenther broke a 9.3-93 deadhM'k with a field goal and the Nationnls pulled away in the finai four minutes at Muskegon. The contest was bruising; liiit the wiiiiierR adopted to the style of play after a slow start and finally wore down their hosts. Big (6-7, 220 puqnds) Ed Burton of (he Panthers used his hulk to giMKl advantage in help ing Muskegon to thret; 11 point leads in the third quarter. His 33 (SiintH and 22 rebounds topped all performers. But he was llrnll^d to six points when tlu> visitors charged back in tlie i the total while the lo.sers’ bench latter stages of the third periixi I could muster only five marker.s. and tliroiigh the final .session. DOUBLE FIGURE.S .Six Nationals were in double figures; and the reserve Pontiac players contributed 17 points to HOME DEBUT - Manny .Jack.son, former University of Illinois star, will he with (he Ponliac Nationals tomorrow night when they open (heir home season against the Chicago Bombers at PNII in a North American Basketball League game. Merriweathcr regained his shooting eye after a one-game tailspin to lead the winners with 24 points. He hit 11 of 20 from the floor. Henry Hughes added 23 on 9 of 17. The NABL’s leading re-hoiinder, Charlie North, had 19 retrieves and 17 p Sterling Auto Parts teams 'con-!: tinue to run one-two. ; ’ I Proprietor Sam P e r n a . ; showed the Saturday Night Mixed League at West Side , Lanes that he hasn't lost his ! touch hy rapping the pins for a 685 last week. Ins & Outers Mixed action al I; .300 Bowl featured a '204-214— J 6‘2.3 by .loe Foster, fresh from " his triumphant visit to Caracas. Venez Mary Keller hit 2,33-.542 and Nancy Jarrell ,50,3. Ray J* Brancheau posted a 225. I POSITION n Position night in the Monday night Collier Lanes House League saw Medaugh’s Department .Store retain its two-point I, lead and Town & Country moved " into second place. ^ Ken Willhile led all .scorers n with 246 628. Turkeys were !’ won by Jim Addiss, Dick Miller - and Clarence Borsl. Shirli'y Pointer continued her . fine bowling in the Airway ' Lanes Ladies Major (Jassic with ' a 277-217 615 efiort last week for the Huron Bowl team. Evelyn Wozniak of S'hmidl's Pie Crust hit 241. The Airway Kings & Queens recorded a 224 for Walt Perry and 218 for Harold Stanquisl. The Bocci Fdur. team has regained the lead. ' Bucks and Does bowling at Howe’s Lanes Monday was paced by John McCallum (212); Dale McLean (21Q) and Fran McCallum (200-553). 2 KO Artists in Title Scrap BOGOTA, Colombia lAP) -Eder Jofre of Brazil makes the .seventh defense of his world bantamweight boxing championship tonight against young Bernardo Caraballo of Colombia in a match of undefeated knoek-oul artists. 'I'he 28->'ear-old Jofre, winner o[ his last 15 fights by knockouts, is favored over the 21-year-old. third-ranking eonlend- They will meet over 15-rounds in the 35,000-seat El Campin .Stadium in this 8,600-foot high Colombian capital. Jofre’s record is 45 victories and three draws in 48 fights. He has 35 knockouts to his credit. Caraballo has a 42-0-1 record, including 20 knockouts. 1 aX free The Brazilian has been guaranteed ,$.50,0()0 taxfree for taking on the idol of Colombia in his home country. Caraballo will collect $12,000. Barney Boss, the former lightweight and welterweight champion from New York, will be the referee. Calif, star has 158.26 points while Pete Tountas of Chicago; is a distant second with 143.14 points. Soutar moved into third with 142.47 points, although he; won only one game, the 299 against Smith. The tournament is scored on the Petersen, point system which awards a point for each game won plus additional points for every 50 pins knocked down. For the 28 games bowled, St, John has won 24 and lost only four while knocking down 6,726 pins for a gaudy 240 average. St, John won 13 games and lost only three Thursday, two to Bob Chase of Kansas.City. Kan,, and the other to Jack Biondolillo of Houston, Tex. He has had onlv two games .under 200 and won both of them. Petite .Iiidy Audlsey Cook of Kensas Citv, Mo . the vouncesi nri'i smellesf entr“ in the field.' won he- final three games of the j ni'ght from Edie Jo Russo of Miami, Fla., to lake the lead in the women’.s division. j LESS THAN 100 Mrs. Cook. 20. who is just | over five feet and weighs 98! pounds, rolled a 629 series i against Miss Russo to finish the i da-' with 98.20 Petersen points. i With the 16 women finalists | finished with seven matches and 21 games of the scheduled 16 matches and 48 games. Mfs. Cook has slightlv more than a ; point lead over’Bobbie Shaler of Chicago, who rolled 613 in her final match, but lost two games to Betty KuCzynski of Chicago. Miss Shaler has 97.14 points while third place Jean Havlish | of ,St. Paul. Minn,, has 96.08. The defending and four-time champion, Marion Ladewig of Grand Rapids, Mich., ranked fourth with 95.35, HUNTIN6F0RA FAMILY CAR? STOP LOOKING AND COME TO... UAfilflUf! 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MoUnal. $•! *795 nnd Hardwar*. | f 4'x8’ Panels only $1.69 ea. ZONOLITE GLASS FIBRE Blanket Type Aluminum Foil Insulation HA8GERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. 2056 HAGGERTY HWY. Walled Lake MA4 4S6I --- It 1-4140 1 A.M.-4 P.M.SAT. 4-5 TlllRTY-FOtR THE PONTIAC PRE^. FRIDAY, Nol^^MBER 27, Vikings Ace on All’^Sfdte Pontiac Pr#$j P ROGER RUMINSKI Walled Lake All-Statcr Tackle Roger Rumfnski of Walled Lake is the biggest lineman on the Associated Press’ All-State Clas? A high school f(X)tball team announced today,. * * ★ In gaining a first team^befth, the 26n-pound .senior impre.ssed all observers with his defensive ability and lateral movement. So effective was his tackling — an average of 14 a game—tbal opposing teams left the middle of the Walled Lake line aloQC. Craig Irwin, Royal Oak R^m-ball guard, i? a member of the first team. * Neal Peterson. Pontiac Central’s All-Saginaw Valley tackle, earned a place on th» All-State Class A •^irst Team SCHOOl PCS. HGT. WiiMert L Second Team Honorable Mention WOT. CLASS (second eleven along with guard Jim McFarland of Milford. For the second straight year,! the dream team of players from the state's largest . school is headed by Flint Central quarterback Tiny baster. Other members of ■ the back-field on the all-.senior team are ] Arnie Williams of Battle Creek Central, Graig Teff of Ea.sl Lansing and George Hoey of Flint Central. Laster threw 26 touchdown' passes in two years at Flint Central, having thrown at least one in 13 of 17 games played He also scored three times himself. 9.5 AVERAGE Williams, who played safety j on defense., gained 1,159 yards in 122 carries for a 9.5 yard average. He scored 15 touch-1 downs. Williams is a ,s t a t e sprint champion. j Tefft accounted for more than j half of his team's total offense I as the Trojans moved through an undefeated season and were named the state's top Class A He gained 1,226 yards rushing and another 28 passing, ye . gained at lea.st 100 yards in i BEAR BEAT.S BARR Bennie McRae (26) came up every game except one. scored j from t-he rear in fhe fourth quarter yesl'erday to take Ihis nine touchdowns and passed for! pass away from Detroit's Terry Barr (41). McRae picked another. He averaged 7.3 yards off the toss at the Lions’ 47-yard line and returned it to the 35. a carry. ; Hoey, the leading scorer in the Saginaw Bailey Conference | for the past two years, tallied 11 touchdowns this year. By the Associated Press Alabama and Texas didn’t wait for their Orange Bowl meeting to spring a surprise. They unveiled a crucial play — the same one -r in closing out their regular football season schedules with victories .Thursday, Alabama trimming Adburn 21-14 and Texas whipping Texas A&M 26-7. ^ . Following Alabama’s lOthj victory without a defeat, the Crimson Tide formally accepted an Orange Bowl bid everyone knew i they already had received. Texas, 9-1, had accepted an, invitation nearly two weeks ago. In using the surprise play, second-ranked Alabama had help from Auburn’.s Mike Alford while Texas, No. 5 in the nation, received aid from Tom Murrah of Texas A&M. Both centers, ) Alford and Murrah, started the whole thing. I On foufth down and punt situations, Alford and Murrah snapped the ball back over the punters’ heads. In Alabama’s case, it resulted in the first touchdown of the game. For Texas, the errant play brought a tic-breaking safety that opened the way for a 19-point second half. .SQUIRTED AWAY Auburn's Jim Kilgore was .set to punt in the first quarter when the ball .sailed over his head. He chased it back into the end zone and fell on it, but the ball [ squirted away and Steve Bow-i Coach Paul Bryant of .Ala-i man dropped on it for a touch- bama challenges Notre Dame’s J . t I right to the No. 1 spot. In the third quarter of the tra- .... iiitional Texas battle A&AM’s Phil Scpggin was back to punt ^ when the snapback got by him.. • ENJOY He recovered the ball but ” couldn’t get out of the end zone. There was only a handful of | • 0t other Thanksgiving Day games. | ' Tulsa defeated Wichita 21-7, Virginia. Tech swamped Virginia Military 3.5-13, William and I Mary walloped Richmond 33-13 and an East All-Star team de- _ feated the West 19-12 in the Gem t ft'tt« » < < n ' Bowl at Erie, Pa. DINNER COLONIAL HOUSE OR 3-0940 Bears Edge Lions on Late Field Goal StubI, RO Kimball; Tom AAltchell, Farm TACKLES-Bob Mihav, Waterford; D obinson, Berkley; Rick Snyder, Seaho yroe Steeh. Mt? Clemens. C6NTERS-F Bills Down Chargers on 4th-Period Surge By the Associated Press The Boston Palrmts, trailing Buffalo's Bills by I'z games in the American Football League's Eastern Division race, go inlo Sunday's game at Houston with the, growing .suspicion that these Bills are for real. Buffalo, seemingly beaten with less than seven minutes to play in Thursday’s game at San Diego, rallied for 13 points producing an important 27-24 victory. The Bills were down 24-14 when they started their comeback — moments after lo.sing the ball on downs on the San Diego one. Linebacker Mike Stratton, who played a vital role in the Hills’'rally, biirsl inlo the .San Diego end zone and spilled quarlerhack .lohn HadI on the firsi play afler the Chargers had halted Hullalo's march. The safely made il '2416. Charle\ Warner Ilian reliirnecl Hadl’s free kick 4(1 yards to Hie San Diego 18 and five plays later B ii f f a I o, quarlri back Darylc l.amonica went in the (michdown htingmg the Bills wiHiin (wo poinis. Hullalo’s altempled Iwo-poinl conversion f^led but the Bills gol a .second chance when the Chargers were peiuilized for holding This time, l.amonica went in for tlie two-poinler, l,\ ing Hie .score. .Stratton then picked off a Hrtdl pass the Bills' fiflh m 1 Icrception of the day on the Buffalo 44, Four carries by Cookie Gilchrisi helped move the hall inlo field goal range and rookie kicker Pete Gogolak, who later said he was "shaking like a leaf on the .sidelines,” trotted in with eight seconds to play and booleci the 33-yard field goal that won il for the Bills. SECOND CHANCE Until Stratton's safety turned Hie tide, Lance Alworth’s pass catching had kept the Chargers in command. The flashy flanker caught four passes for 185 yards and two louctidowns. The TDs came on a 6.'l-yard pass from HadI and a ,53-yarder ori Hie halfback option with Keith l.in-coln doing the throwing. ftilchrist, Hie AFI,’s leading rusher who was placed on waivers liy the Bills last week and Hieli removed from the list, paced Buffalo’s offense, picking up 87 yards in 21 carries, SuiKiay’s AFL scliediilr has Boston at Hoiislon, Kan.sas City at New York and Oakland a( Denver. THURSDAY'S F tluyofthi T'4; 90 B 61'., W C 60; Eggs About steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 70 per cent or better Grade A whiles 31; mixed 31; mediums standards 28; dirties unquoted; CHICAGO POULTRY AmOptic 1 10 Her bod\ was idciiliticzl by a pink, black al'id blue taUiMi on her letl lol-eariii, a design of llowcrs, tlic word.s "mum and dad” and tlie name ilelcii" Detectives were convinced that her murder was linked with that of five other prostitutes whose nude bixlies have been found since last November. Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK , (MKAGO (AP) (USDAj Hugs , rw7() U js!" 530 J50 iL i.-SO- I ! 5S, 370 300 Ibl 13.55 l< 00, 13 350 400 lb' , w? 15.00 15 75 . 400 500 Ib4 11.50 15.55; ; ( «l'll« «,500; calvfs 35, 5l4ughlfr it«r» ; II Oil 1 Sm?thK t/ SouCalE 1 SouthnCo 1 SouNalG 2 25.00-25.75; fh Ry 2 WARD CASE GIRLS One of the five, Helen Bar-; thelemy, 22, knew several girls named in the Ward case. ' In bunting the killer or killers, , detectives have questioned cv-; ery one of London's 8,000 known ; prostitutes about their clients " and protectors. Thousands of the clients and protectors have been questioned also. I InfbusMch Stocks of Local Interest | - SI H.ick.iqinc) SD-tlOfuu /() E COUNTER STOCKS Detectives say they are letl willi two theories — eitlier a maniac is among tlie drivers who prowl W'esl London picking U|) girls, or a vice gang has chosen murder as its means of discipline. The econriniy al.so is a hit .skiltisli over the chance of trouble ill llie steel indu.siry when labor negotiations o|)en early next year. The worry is lest a generous wage h(M)st miglil set off anotlier wage-price spiral spelling inflation and the further loss of purchasing power by the dollar. Bankers have contended that higher interest rates were needed to cool down any speculative fever- that prospects of such a spiral might cause. A KE.SI’ON.SE The Federal Reserve liolds that raising interest rates on short-term borrowing this week is merely a res|Mm.se to the Bank of England s hiking its rale to 7 per cent from .I l>er cent lo protect the pound sterling in world money markets. The United .Stales rai.sed its rale lo 4 per ceiil from J'j lo keep dollars from fleeing the coiiiilry. By ROGER E. Sl'EAR Q. “We are a happily married couple with $4,000 in the savings bank to be used soon as a down payment on a home. Should we take this money out and invest it in slocks? Do you have any suggestions for an inveslinenl to bring us a nice prolil quickly? " R-R. My advice is lo leave your nioiiev ill I he liaiik. To invest ill slocks with a Imic limit is always risky procedure. No one can’ pick .slocks that arc certain to reap a nice prolil in a .sliort time Slum aiiy-,.iic who otters to do that lor Money in stocks is "u.sually made by careful selection and growth over a period of time — or by buying overlooked issues witli the riglit liming -- and it is not as easy as it sometimes seems. Q. ‘ I would like to invest for my grandsons (they will be Bar Mi/.valied soon) about $1,000 each. I have had recommended Life Insurance Investors and General Tel. & Elee. I would appreciate your opinion and any alternative suggestions." I..S. Life lii.siiraiice Investors is a well-m;maged mutual fund specializing in the type of shares Its title i II (I i c a I c s. T li c r e lias been excellent growth here which should continue. (As an alternative suggestion, you might consider buying directly a life insurance slock itself. If so, 1 recommend Commonwealth Life Insurance of Kentucky, selling around 40, whicli — in ad-, (litiun to its insurance operations 'is itself a .sort of mutual fund because of its large investment portfolio. This stock is a major liuldiiig of l.ifc Insurance Investors. I \ General Telephone seems fine for-ymir piiriMise in every, way, and I l■c(•olllmend its purchase. Roger Spear’s new 48-page Inveslinenl Guide is now uvuilabic to all readers of this eoliiinii. Clip this notice and send $1.00 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear in care of this newspaper, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York City, N.Y. 10017. (Copyright 19611 Safety Chief Appointed at Fisher Body he Soybeans Decline in Profit Taking Wriv^rlnp SI’Df WvAndoM** Cl'AmicAl MUTUAL FUNDS ' ‘T lllonin 1.87 ' I IvInqsO 7(5 > CHICAGO (API - General profit taking at (he opening de-' pressed prices for so.vheans fn-' lure while wheat and rye ; showed improved strength. Corn and oats dipped fractions. Tlie American ccidral hanking .system exprc.sscd confidence it can continue (he policy of rccenl years: keeping rales on sliort-(eiin money high witlimil any boost in the rales on the longterm borrowing by husiiiess for expansion and by consumers for such things as new homes, autos and appliance.s. The iKilicy has worked because there was a continually growing supply of investment money for such long-term finan- News in Brief iv.se, 142 Cadillac. ap|)oiiil(,'d chief of protcclion and salcly at tin; I’ll lit iac Fisher It 0 d y I’laid, according III A I gf r Two rifles with aUadiid scop<-s were rcpoi'Icd slidcn yes-terday from (he car of .Ici'omc l.azar of Detroit wliilc parked at the Villa Inn, 60 Parkview, Lake Orion Estimated value ot the rni.ssing items is $'240. .Iiisepb Wells, 197 Washington, reported to police loday Hic theft of a 200 pound (leer that was til'd to his ear in front of the house. LOVSE I USGypMD J USPlywO 1 ' Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) Th« Hon of the TrrAsury compArrd w BAlAm • C, About an hour after the opcn-(ing soybeans were P'l cents a bushel lower lo '« higher, Janu-ary $2.91-'i: wheal to ',4 high-'» er, December $1.91; corn 'h to ' ' '-z cent lower, Di'ccmlicr $L22'-z; oats '« lo 'i lower, Decemlx'r I '• till' 1 ceiils and rye was iin-,, clianged lo '« higher, Itocemher $I.2:I'h, Soles Show Increase ot Consumers The Liiml-of Lakes Majiirelles aiiiiiial riimmai'.e sale, LUt W Pike, Nov, 211, .Sal , !ladv Lovse joiiu'd Fisher Body in I9:i2 as ail hourly rate employe in the paint departmeiil. Following .service as a foreman, alely engiiiecr and pla lit pa- drolm; promoted to Short Quake Strikes Southern Alaska Area 1 6,573,2:i5.7n V? 1 42,570,470,10674 WllhdrAWAH FIscfll Y 107.5 » 3 mgh 8?.? 105 4 0? 5 51 I A. 11. Ay mo lid, Cuii.sumers Power Co. hoard chairman, aii-nounml lhal in llic 12 inonlli.s ended Del, :il, 1964, kilowall-hour sales of electricity iii-crea.sed seven per cent and volume sales of natural ga.s five per cent us eompari'd with the 12 months ended Oct 21, ItHkl. ANCIIORACE, Alaska i/Tl A short, liul sharp eailli(|uake hit this soiilliern Alaskti tirea ahmit !): Ill p m. ( Alaska Slaml-ard Time I Iasi ni|',lil. :i2 nieiil comes atter mori' than Nt^ngPI ' *6 n thf* Unt lymenlft noi t idiontlflrd df%lg I Crf'oU* P 7 60rt K dlvKlrmi, t '63, n Druper* 1.80 23 53 5I'» I fi v'J 2W SO 10% 9% ng«T I 9% 9% V 4% 4'4 Mlywil 5 4% 4'* lYfil 60fl 22 15 ri,, s !u ' 4 I ynni, nh m (ufiiuloHvt’ (i iiiniHiRl, K dividend px dividpful ur fx dlslf ihuHuft MyronMIij oIl'|1M,'"\ 50 Mnckf/ Air 5 6 5"i KAodilJulin ,4( V I4W 14V, I TVUch sug.ir ( 4Vi 4W AAolyUdon 10 3Hli 30v, 5 Nowl’K/Wng ,131 3517 47i t'/i Pmicil Pi'T 15 !"• IVl f;|Jrr|Wo””;ioj ’S ^ ' tiumiOiiA' n 11 10'/, [low : Sii»rry P wl 111 4'7« Iftltnliol 50 8/ 17^4 1/ (Iross oporaliiu; roveiiue ruse five per ceid, amounting to $;tlUt,.l7l).0(MI in llu' mo.sl r(‘eent 12-moiilli period. In enlarging uml hii|iroving Us electric ami giiw HysteniH uml general fucllllles lo meet the needs of Michigan’s ex-liundlng e<-onoiny. Consumers Invested $6H,h;I5,(MI0 during the period from Nov. I, IIMJ3 through Ocl. 31, IINM, siild Aymoiid. The eompany s Ncrvlce ari'u eiicoinpas.se,H 66 of the till eoun lies of Michigan’s Lower Peninsula. No d.amii);e was |■eporlc(l, lull the leiiihlor jolli'd dishes and kiili'kkiiacks and hi'oui’hl a mo nieiilary chill to llmiisamls who experienced I li e devaslaling Alaska earthquake of March '27. The '(|iiake was reported "qiille severe, l)iil sliorl only one joir at tlie army’.s nearby Fort Richardson. service at the Fisher B n d y plant, lie was appointed chicl III plant p r o lection iiiid .safety Rail Tragedy in Japan Kills 2 and Hurts 47 Sues Doctor in Foilufe of Hand Transplant GUAYAQUIL. Ecuador (/li A Navy pcily officer has filed siill iigiilnsi a physician who im successfully (i anspliinlcd a dead man's hand onto his wi lsL Eaniinga per share on the average number of cpmmon .shares oiilstandliig wei5i $2.39. This comp)|ii es will) $2 21 in Ihe l'2Dionlh perlml ended Ocl. 31, 1963. Julio Lima Vera charged In Ihc suit yesterday lhal Dr. Ro- ,SAPPORO, .lapai women passengers were killed aii(Kl7 other persons in|iirc(l lf>-iilglit when a six coach riah-liour commuter (rain (ravellrtg through fog smashed Into a gak-hagi' truck tmd derailed, A second six - coach train crashed Into Ihc Iriick minutes lalci, apparently before a warh-liig could he sounded, and also ilcriillcd. All the casuallies were on Ihc firs! (rain, which WSa Iravciing on Ihc main nort^-south line of .lapan's northern island (7t Hokkaido, hcrlo Gilbert "mhllrarily inn lilalcd’’ him wllhoiil permission while he was In a dniggenl stale, Lianr asked $111,318) in dninagcs More than 30 million pcisoiln In Ihc U.S. |)lay .some kiml of musical InstiiiinciiL J HTRTY-STX ^ Apply for Assistance THE FOXTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 19fi4 Bm C^SET .________________________ Don't Blame Education for Own Inaction R. MOREL, , WE'VE GONE AS FAR A? WE CAN IN EXAMINING YOUR UNCLE, ANP we CAN talk now. ^ By DR. LESUE J. N.\SON Dear Dr. Nason: I am an 18-year-old girl. I finished sei-ond in my high school class and would like to go-to college to study nursing- but neither 1 nor my parents can afford it. I now am working. Why do they keep encouraging kids to finish school when kids who-went no further than, the sixth or seventh grades afe working on the same job that lam? B.S.P., Massapequa Park, Long Island, N.V, things that are yoiff own fault. Yoin;' le.tter, parts-of which I quote here, is not of tliej quality onq would expect from a student second in her class. Success is not guaranteed by a high school diploma; It is up to you to prepare yourself to hold a job where your education will be an advarftage. It is up to you to apply for scholarships or other finarteial help in getting the nursing' training \'ou desire. Dear Dr. Na.son: I am a senior in high school and am in You are blartiing education foi' the mid.st of picking a college for ,the fall of 1965. My school: is small and there are no deans to whom 1 can turn for advice. 1 want to become a politician on both the state and national level. My dad and brother disagree on; what I should do. My brother., a senior at the university. suggested that I go to.Har-„ vard and take law. Dad suggests ; 1 get a degree in business administration jvith graduate work in economics. I would , like your* advice on what degree I should strive for; also the top three colleges in the nation which offer this degree. H.,I.E., Cincinnati, Ohio Jacoby on Bridge body and college through participation in the silent body and service‘'club organizations. Dear. Dr. Nason; I will soon ' be out of the Armed Forces. j In one of your articles you stressed'., that the individualj should place most of his emphasis while attending school on getting a running start and succeeding in evening school. What I would like to know is, does this hold true for a day school also? Would it be better for an individual to attend an evening school refresher 'course before entering a dav school? P.G.M., Richmond, Va. If you are a good student and By OSWAl.D .lACOBY The bidding in the box is that used by the Australian team getting to six clubs in the World Bridge Olympiad. 1 don’t know V h a t system they wergusing except th^ I ; assume that a I ^1 one no-trump response to a club opening 1 shows a very P big hand. If Bob Ham-JACOBY „f th,. United States had opened a heart, the slam would have been set in less time than it takes a kangaroo to jump, but Bob opened the jack oT'diamonds and South'was in business. He entered dummy with a spade and discarded his two hearts on (he king and queen of diamonds. ' Then all he had to do to make made a really brilliant false-card play that caused South., fo ) had opened the jack of mds. He dropped the ten e king and the nine on ueen. This set up^dum-eight spot, but .Rob had to the conclusion that had his exact hand for idding and that he would no need for i rd on the eight of The falsecard convinced South j lat Bob was out of diamonds. I ence, it was up to South to ang down dummy’s ace o( libs. He did that and the slam 1(1 bounced out of the pocket. Q—The bidding has been; East South West North t 4 Dble Pass 2 ♦ Pass 2 4 Pass 3 4 Pass ? You. South, hold: 42 VAQIOS 4AK76 4KQJ4 What do you do now? A—Bid five diamonds. It you feel really oonserratlve or are Just soared, bid four diamonds only. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding two diamonds over the double, your partner bids three diamonds. What do you do now? t often! en'JV You vour little HlDEAWA-y.^NUFFy.^ MOOPLE /HAMcOR 16 ADE(3(JATE FOR THE BKASH,UNFEEL1N6T'/PE6 LIKE the 60AKDER6,6l1T 1T’4 NO PROPER PLACE FOR A SCHOLAR.'' EVERY 60 OFTEN) ' I Need peace and quiET TO COLLECTM'Y THOUOKTC, AND plan any research^ ...........' T Xsfro/og/ra^ Hv Frnie Hu.shmillcr I SEE YOU ALSO ATE TOO MUCH TURKEY YESTERDAY By Charlen Kuhn Mki mi iney THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY; NOVE^fBER 27, 1964 THIRTY-SEVEN ^ARin FONEI.... 10 Harbpr. PH. aum COATS funeral home ORAyroM PLAINS OR >Tna ‘ D. Pursley ~ FB 4-1211 _____ HUNTGON 79 OoMand Ay. FE MH9 SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME Hul Sorvico" FE MM VOORHEES-SiPLE FUNERAL HOME 2-l37t EttabllUlild OvM 40lYwrt ACCEPT? AS DOWN PAYMENT Cemetery Lott wltt< femllv Ini. nlan. OR 3-3473, Dale F 4-PIECE COMBO t WOMAN needing adviseo pliene FE E i-mt. ^tldwilial. LICENSED PRIVATE DETECTIVES r information leader reiurn. Call Hadley, r Holly, ME 7-2547. 12 MEN HIRING PART TIME ' ning'v idy full-time 10:30. Guar-of profits. ATTENTION, MEN! i^a }»eek, Irlnge ^ne- AUTO MECHANIC This Is your chance to mi plenty of money. We hav< large backlog of work. J AUTO reconditioning AUTOMATIC SET - UP MEN, SET UP JH Inch and 3V, Inch, ,RA-6s. Top rate fof qualified man. Insurance, vacations, holidays. Steady work, overtime. LI 2-4425 lor ap- polntmenl. ______________ BibY MAN Needed; Must be ek- _____ PleiSy of work. Guaran- taei A R ^ Press Box Nu. 99, womAn over 25 t6 cARI EOR ■ housawork. Live elderly ledy end h In. 873-8594. WAITRESSES, EXPERIENCED OR Will train, apply In person to Howard Johnson, 3450 Dixie.__ HeIpJWonted MONEY ORDER AND DRUG ^erj(, apply Joslyn Ave^ Be- PART TIME SCHOOL BUS DRIV- ester School Garage.' ?80 S. Llver-nols. OL 4-0311. TELEPHONE SOLICITATION Guaranteed salary plus commls- slon. 338-9497, ___________ WANTED - 4 GUARDS WITH OWN uniforms and CWP permits, 8100 ........... ......'* qualified; Sales Hdp^j^-Fmale 8-A EXPERIENCED OUTSIDE SALES-man, sail office supplies. Office furniture and printing. Weekly draw against commission. A fine opportunity --- IF YOUR LIFE'S AMBITION i: SELL; If you are now a s man; A sole owner of a bus! ! lo JAMES Mgr. Equitat-», Birmingham e 28-40 and, worker; It • financial '^^'Wmakl Lite, 931 Michigan. YOUNG MAN High schooi graduate to s tail on ouiT salesflocr® On 1 training program. We are organization. Vacation, gro An equal oppor'unity rmployer Employment Agencies EVELYN EDWARDS PUBLIC RELATIONS ........ .. 8 22 to 38, no typing. lOB HUNTING TRY International PERSONNEL SERVICE Ing qualified applicants in all fielc of dmployrr.enf. Starting aalaric for these positions range froi $3,000 to $20,000. If you are Inte nearest IPS office. BIRMINGHAM. 490 E. MAPLE __Ml^ AMM Opportunity MICHIGAN PERSONNEL SERVICES CORP. 770 S. Adams Rd. Birmingham __647-4660 _ Instructions-Schoois I9 ATTENTION CLASSES START NOV 30 AUTO MECHANICS Automotic Transmissions wolvie'rine SGTOOL stale BM^d’o*Vduca'lion 39 Years, Same Location 1400 W. Fort, Detroit WD 3 0692 A Better Income by Learning IBM Machines LEARN IBM KEY PUNCH, MA-CHINE OPERATION AND WIR-COMPUTER PROGRAM-------------------------- MONEY [ GENERAL INSTITUTE 22925 Woodward Ferndal* CALL COLLECT 543-9737 FE 4-4509 finish' MIGM'SCHOOL AT HOAAE, Diploma awarded. Write or phon# for FREF booklet. Nation# School of Home Study, 27743 Mound Road, Dept. Warren, Mlditgan. IBM TRAINIFI5^ Learn IBM, Keypunch, machlrm operation tnd wiring, MOI computer prmrammlng. Mich. Staid Board of Education approved. Free Completa financing ^ No money SYSTEMS INSTITUTE FE 4-4300_^^ _ 547 0303 Work WaiitBd Male 11 Al CARPENTER NEEDS WORK CARPENTER WORK, R0U6H AND 3445.' y*"^' DRUMMER 6eSiR6S T6 join LIGHT HAUl ING 334 3048 TRUCK, LIGHT HAULING , BABY-SITTING, BY THE DAY, IN my home. 332-4235, dEANING AND WAir WASHING. 82 4453 or 12 5534 EXPERIENCED LAD Y WANTS ^uiec^eanlng by hour. References. ritONINOS WANtiiD, DRAYTON WOMAN DESiRES bAY WORK, FE 8 9524 Building Service-Supplies 13 USED 919 Joliyn, corner 44ndl«on. IRiinilt nun DINO PRODUCTS CO. ANo'sTRUctuRAL Vt^^HI. CINDER ANp CONCRETE BLOCK Butinett Servleg 15 El RCTRIC MOTOR SBRVICE RB-palrlng and rawlndlng. Ill ■. PIkiy Phona PB 93981. Dreiimaking 6 follornig lH DRESSMAKINO, TAIIORINO ANn eltereMoni, nAri. BodeM. PU 4 9051 iiwiWS and ■ Al.TIRAfibKis ^ tInrMlim area, »-m\ Convaleicent-Nurilng ' 21 MODERN LICalNSBD NURSING home, Otlarlng lha beat of care R B f I RE^ HdWI Slone"'mil *'*' RncHeSlai^ . Al ***• Moving and t^ckln|| 22 AA MOVING Careful, enctoBdNJ van^ Inturad. I and Truckint 22 Bob s Von Servica MOVING AND STORAGE REASONABLE RATES Completa Iniur,- ROBERT TOMPKINS A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING > THOMPSON ___________FE 98344 A LADY INTERIOR OEdORATOR, Papering. FE 8-0343. ERNIE'S SERVICE -PAINTfNG decorating and remodeling. 482-4132 PAINTING And CAULKING interior, exterior. PAINTING AND PAPERING. YOU •e next, Orvel Gldcun PAINTING PAPERING, WALL WASHING, MINOR REPAIRS, -REASONABLE PRICES. FE 5-2402 QUALITY WORK ASSURED, PAINT-28?2 "*M2418'l '**'* ****’*"®' Television-Rodio Service 24 in$urat.ce 26 HOMEOWNERS, $18.55 ANNUALLY. Scales Agency, FE 2-5011, FE J-7425._____________________ . Quality Automobile Risk Insurance BRUMMETT AGENCY Deer Processing Hove Your Deer Processed at Opdyke Mkt.,JE 5-7^1 WE WILL FULLY DRESS’ AND process your deer at a reasonaole price. Can FE 2-U37.__________ Wanted Chiidren to Board 28 RELIABLE LICENSED HOME FOR 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL 0 FUR- Needed __Mor^cash- Little Joe's. FE 2-6842. AUCTION SALE EVERY SATUR-day at Blue Bird Auction. We'll buy furniture, tools and appliances. OR 3-68^or_MEIrose_M193.__ CASH i=OR FURNITURE AND A>'-Pearson's.Ve"4-788L 1°F«ful. CASH FOR YOUR FURNITURE or let us sell It for you on consignment. Hall's Auction Sales, MY 3-1871, MY 3-4141.____________ Wanted Miscellaneous 30 Need Christmas Cash? OFFICE DESKS, FILES, FURNI-ture, typewriters, adding machine, folding machine — Forbes — OR Wanted to Rent 32 18' TO 20' TRAVEL TRAILER FOR 2 months. Prefer Air Stream. Call after 5 p.m. O^R 3 9666. COLL EG E DEAN WITH 5’ EL-unfurnished mingham or Berkley area. Will Reply Pontiac Press BoiMOS. SEMI RETIRED COUPLE, WANTS Wanted Real Estate 1 TO,50 WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-9165 MULTIPL °LI^T?NG SERVICE CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS -HOMES WRIGHT 38J; Oakland Ava. FE 2-9141 COUPLE rNTERESTED” IN ' PUR-chaslng - 2- or 3-b*droom on FHA or Gl equity. Call Detroit DON WHITE, INC. 2891 Dixie Hwy. Phone 474-0494 HAViS buyers FOR any KiMD al properly lor quick sale, call; Paul_,^ono8 Realty - FE 4-8550, HOMES FARMS^-ACREAGr CLARENCE C RIDGEWAY REALTOR 228 W. WALTON 338-4086 _ MULTIPLE LIFTING SERVICE Listings Needed Customers vvaltlng, West SIda of Hackotf Realty EM 3-6703 NOTICE! Clarkston Real Istate 58,54 5, Main MA 5-5821 QUICK CASH For homes In good locations. No discount to exchange your home W.H.BASS RiAl ToK'"' " b ’'^7210 BUIl DER VACANT 16TS wanted dlale"""do«lriH* '’t^Erc'*'VA'i.'ue _REALTY. 424-9575, Mr. Dlivis, Apartments, Furnished 37 2 RO()M8, PRIVAlH" (NtRAflCI, Raeburn Streal, FB 5 0494. 3 r6oMS, BAYh, UTILITII9 Ruft-nlihed, laorklng or retired couple. Weal Side. VB 3 7214. 3"ft'66tas POR ftiOihiV CbUpLB nr bechalor. PB 5 1434 between room;...... only, 75 Clerl. i ROOMS AND^ftAtM.^tMAU if'^deTOlir'lmiulIl 'et's/T*'* ilPFRR, RBA MEN nBar IRoOm nuf* •onelile, PR APARTMFNf Flahen, also tH,rTexeia nnmimw.ii available. FE 2 2009. . doMBlRA'floN tfitcHKNlTtr, ewnroR WHATEVER YOU WANT TO DO, USE A PRESS WANT AD TO DO IT I Agortn^^ 31 'I-BEDROOM, I HEAT FURNISHED, 1125. Jeanie Bea Apartments. 48^ IRoois nlihiid, 5?'CLEAN' uflLITllES FUR- —...d, 309 N. Saginaw.__ , 4-BEbROOM, 3 CHILDREN WEL-compyCall before 4, OR 3-0549. f6uR rooms; UPPER, GARAGE, r furnished. 4S4-1011 t NEWLY DECORATED 5 ROOMS and bath, upper, heat and hot water furnished. 339g413 after 4. ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS' MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL Adults Only fe 94918 READY* FOR " IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY FEATURING: 200' sand beach Carpeting Included 23' living rooi|is 15' bedrooms Excellent location No children, no pets 1- bedroom, 8125 per month 2- bedroom, $150 per month Village of Waterford. Rent Houses, furnished 39 HONEYMOONERS, secluded small ________. ... nished lodge near Alpine Valley Ski Slide, from Dec. through May. Jeep available. $175 per month. Dial 1-887-5433 except Thursday. WALLED LAKE ^ 2 BEDROOMS, neat, clean, $100. 588-4700.__ Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 2 BEDROOMS, IN PONTIAC 842 Cedar, 625-4267. 3-B6bROOMr WATERFORD TOWN-ship, 1150 Bangor. 879'6640. 3-BEDROOM, NO BASEMENT AT 3442 Chalice, Judah Lake Estates, 4 miles north of Walton Blvd. out Joslyn road. $85 per month. ,1 year lease. Security deposit. Must have good credit rating. Call 624-4200 between I p.m. and 8 p.m. 3 BEDROOMS, Large family room, 8-car garage, available Dec. I. Lotus Lake. TR 92912. 5 ROOMS, G’AS HEAt, COUPLE', adults only. FE 8-1843.________ BOULEVARO HEIGHTS -9.RBrtrnom Unit-r Month t Mane,,, t Valencia Contact Resident Manager HbUSE7“RENT~i9rSOUTH JOHN-SMAlCThOM E^O I AC TRAIL 5“”1To6mS, f=ULL BASEMENT, on Rent Rooms 42 1 ROOM AND BATH, PRIVATE. Inquire 273 Baldwin Ave. ^Caii 338-4054._ _ _____ ATTRACTIVE” ROOM’WITH PRl'vT-lege$,jpature woman. FE 2^470. BUSINESS MAN, SHOWER, WEIY side, FE 2-3517. CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM, krtCH- en privileges. FE 4-1039. _____ ROOM AND OR BOARD 135'/3 Oakland Ave. FE 4-1654. S’LEEPINO” ROOM FOR GENTH-man, downtown. Pontiac, 692-0762. SLEEPING ROOM FOR MIDDLE^ fn,®FETIl906^'^*''*** *"*^*"^*' Rooms With Boord 43 FOR SINGLE MEN, PRIVATE EN-trance. 682-0843 after 5 p.m. LOVELY HOME. PRIVILEGES, good food, gentjemen. FE 5-7959. NO DRINKERSr>ACkED"LUNCH MODERN ^TORE BUILDING IN neighborhood shopping area. Ideal for drug store or cleaning plant, plenty parking. For appointment Rent Office Space 47 1,100 TO 2,900 SQUARE FEET available on Wide Track Drive near Cass Avenue at Huron. Phona Leslla R. Tripp, Realtor. FE 5-1141 Rent Suiinetf Praperty 47-A 20x100' BUILDING, WIRED FOR 2-BEDROOM, FURNISHED. 8500 I. Sanders, Rep. fTACHEb” 3 BEbROOMS. ‘........... rage, rnany gxtras, $19,500, 482-3321. 3-BEbRbbM'BRicirRA'NCH, MASY extras, IV, b" ~ ---- 118,950. A eai Wadsworth Dr. I-E 4 44IZ. 4 bedrooms, carpet ' ANb drapes, wasi side of Pontiac. Close lo schools, churches, shopping. FE 7-ROOM FARM HOMi NEAR OW^ Convenlont terms. TOM REAGAN rated, forced air heal. 8500 dov ‘“pAUL JONES. Realty 1500 DOWN • Highland ^ree. blllhas. BM 3 7700. BUYERS WAITING — lor homOi In Commerce, Walled Lake, Union lake area. Call ut for Information and tree eillmalet. BM 3-4703. NOW IS A GOOD TIMi TO 8BLL -We have many buyers willing. r.t"i.ruSir5'e.TMi« WANT ADS ARE FAMOUS FOR "ACTION" Just Dial FE 2-8181 THIRTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 1964 S«lt Hmmi 49 10 CLARENCE STREET A good buy at $6,350 with $1,000 dMim. 3 badrooim, modern oil • hoot, Icar garage. Quick posses-See or call WM. B. MITCH- WILLIS A/f. BREWER REAL ESTATE $4 E. Huron FE 4.5181 Eves. 6034I161_______ $750 tX)WN. 3-BEOROOM, BASE-ment, garage, screened porch. Ty- $9,990 WE TRADE YOUNG-BILT HOMES really WEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG, 53V> W. HURON ment, gas furnace, garage, paved street. $6,750. Terms. PONTIAC REALTY CO. FE 5.8275 7373 Baldwin 3n. Stone fireplace, finished I basement, electric heat, garage. Barn for horse. 10 west ot Pontiac.- Will sell y terms. Harold T. Cough- AT ROCHESTER Custom built brick rancher In the hills north ot Rochester features; family room, fireplace, built-ins, utility, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. On scenic are lot. Rochester Schools. ’“■’‘“frank SHEPARr"‘"'°"' 651-0588 ' OWNER^ EAST ■pF ROCHES- Township, OR 3-7440. heat, Waterford up — 3-bedroom h pairs. Inquire ' ' Economy Usee BY OWNfeR: SILVER LAKE AREA, 3-bedroom ranch, family room, large 2, winding road, circular black I L®ke pr WEIR, MANUEL, JNYDER & RANKE 398 S. Woodward, BIm Model at 61 Court N. of Mt. Clemens Call 334-6683 2 BATHROOMS, LEVEL. READY eep Iiorses. See this B. C. HIITER, Real-Mlzabeth Lake Road. Acoustic Ceilings SUSPENDED ACOUSTICAL CEIL-Ings — residential, commercial. Caples Construction Co., FE 5-4468 V ALUMINUM SIDING, STORMS, kaiser ALCOA ALUMINUM SIDING, AWNINGS, GUTTERS, STORM WINDOWS-DOORS, PATIOS, ROOFING. SUPERIOR FE Architectural Drawing NEW HOUSE AND^REMOBELING Basement Waterproofing JOHNSTONE WALL REPAIR Batteries KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. Generators—Regulators—Starters Batteries $5.95 Exchange FE S-I9I4 368 Auburi Block Laying BLOCK LAYING AND C E M E N _work. FE 4-8521. _ Building Modernization 2 CAR GARAGE, 8899 ALL TYPES OF CONSTRUCtfON Pease Builders, FE 6-8845 RoUSE raising and'MOVING - R. McCellum, FE 5-6543. ■need unusual remodeling? Call OL 1 8255 Carpentry carpentry, new, repair and _tormlca.J35y981^_____ I nTe RI OR FINISH, KI TCHERs, CEMENt wORK “ ' ' PATIOS 338 8328 Cement Work Llcensed^cemenlcornraclor. ““C EME NT WOR K^ R EABLE.” FLbbRs''AND DRIVEWAYS, w6RK lhat cannot ba Deal, city and stala litansod notl Cornmlns. FE 8 0245. Chimney Cleaning chimney and FIREPLACE Roa^ roles. 335 2348, Custom Cabinets CUSTOM CAIIINBTS, BATHROOM and vanlllesj Fformlra^^^opi and Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS A( L TYPES. KNIT Eovostroughing Engine Repair MOTOR EXCHANGE CO. ENGINE REBUILDING AND T“"' EXPERT TUNE UPS Excavating DREDGING, TRENCHING, BULL dozing, grading, loading, hauling. Free estimates 363-6811 _______H. Excavating Cp.___ PONTIAC FENCE CO. Fireplace Wood )AN 8, LARRY'S FIREPLACE wood. FE 2-8449 or 673-8536. Floor Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR., FLOOR SAND- experience. 332 6975. Heating Service OIL AND GAS SERVICE MOREY'S ___ 682-1810 Floor Tiling IN ST /ji L L A T10 N R^E E^ ^|ST IM AT E S Home Imprevemont _ FE 5-9122 K. feistammbl" EngineBring Co. Rooling, sheet metal, Sanllallon OA 8-3155. 92 S, Washington, Ox WIE DM AN CONST R UCT ION, COM-plete Bervice Free estimetet. FE 5-7946, dey or nlpht._________ Home Moving HOUSES FOR SALE TO BE MOVED lot. D'hondl Wracking Company, Landicoping rad^260l Crooks, SODDING, 'slEOiNo,' rItAINIr walls, pallos, basement celling. FB 8-2702.________________________ TALBOTT LUMBER Gl««i ^nttnMed jn 1025 Oiikinml Ave, FE 4 4M Moving and Storage COAST WIDE VAN LINES SMITH MOVING FF 4 48, Offico Cloaning Painting and Decorating Ll INTERIOR AND BXTBRIOR AAA PAlttflNO aND ftSCoRAt-Ing, 26 yean exp. Reas. Free ei' tlmclei. Ph. UL i 1398. Interior pxtbrior dbcoraT WIEGANU'S FE 2-4924 A I tUNlNO AlfD RfPAIRItjQ Plostering Service PLASTERING, patching! FREE esIlmMes. 4M-300^ plastering and DRY walling E. A. Davis 674-1820 plastering, nIw and REPAIR Radiator Service DIXIE RADIATOR ^SERVICE, 5908 Rental Equipment BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS DRILLS - POWER SAWS 9H Joslyn______ FE 4-610 Wallpaper St'eamer BIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXI _Sllver Lake-Telegraph at Hun BOB'S'REStAURANT, 1018 JOSLYN NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS. INSURED an^guaranteed. Call Tom 682-6563. ROOFs; NEW, "REPArR General Maintenance 682-64 Televiiion, Radio and Hi-Fi Service REBUILT AND GUARANTEED TV $19.95 up. Ob«l TV «nd Radio. 3^ Elizabeth Lake _ FE 4-4S Tree Trimming Service A.E. DALBY TREE SERVICE plantmV'Fi 5™00s)'FE 5 3025. th(B TRIMMING AND RBV Trucking HAULING and RUBBISH. NAMB your price. Any time. FE 8-0095 LIGHT AND HBaVY TRUCKING Truck Kentul Trucks to Rent Vi Toh plcKupft l‘/y Ton Slake TRUCKS TRACTORS ^ AND RQUIPMFNI ^ Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD Pi 4^0481 Pi 4 144! Open Dally Includiny Sunday Uphelitering MBIBR $ OLSON UPMOI STERINt BE 5 2192 Biae EtIlmatea BK 8185 Well Cleonert BUJOMBieiD WALL URANBRS SYLVAN MANOR !- 3- 4-BEDRO0M HOMES. SYLVAN SYLVAN MANOR Hlached carport, gas heat, I, lot, school bus at door. Ov SEE JHIS FRESHLY DECORATED BaldwIn-Columbla area. $250 moves you In. Payments cheaper than your present rent, at under $63, including taxes and Insurance. "Smiley", 332-8326, 162 W. Cornell. OPEN DAILY 9 to 8, including TIZZY By Kate Osann Sale “Tell me the truth, young man. Are you in the employ of some aspirin company?’* Sole Houses 49 FIRST IN value RENTING DNLY $10 Deposif WITH APPLICATION DIVORCEES, To Buy or Sell Coll Dan Edmonds 325 Pontiac Trail MA 44811 HAYDEN NEW HOMES 3 BEDROOMS TRI-LEVELS RANCHES P/j-Car Garage 83' Lot Inciudec ■nlly Room Gas Heat FROM $10,-500 10 PER CENT DOWN " WILL BUILD ON YOUR L'OT OR OURS Open Mon. thru Sat. 9-5 J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor EM 1 6604 10751 Hlghlani Mixed Neighborhood WESTOWN REALTY 478 Irwin off East Blvd. "UPrnoons. U 2-4677 E SHOW HOUSE BUILDER'S MODEL "For Sale' Occupy Jonuory 15th Bi-Level — Carpeted ThrougTout - Full landscaped $700 Moves You In Only $122 Per Month Dpen I to 6. closed Thursday South CommVee, 7 miles to Glen-oary turn right to models. D'LDRAH Americana Homes 624-4200 MILLER 1 eye life. $11,200 '■wWl. WE TRADE YOUNG BILT HOMES Rl AUY MEANS BETTER BILT LOOK! Ranch $12,375 Bi-Level $12,875 Only$125 Down LARGE LOIS, LAKE PRIVB OCCUPY JANUARY Coming About Jon. 15th New l'/2 Both Bi level Buy Before Prices Intronse South Commarce, 2 mllai lb Olan-oary him right to Americtinq Homes 624 4200 NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY O'NEIL The Top Trader 2 NEW BEAUTY RITE MODELS Open 3 to 7 Mon. Thru Fri. Open 1 to 5 Sot. and Sun. 6808 Bluegross You are Invited to Inspect our lovely Beauty Rite Ranch with a walk-out basement and all the deluxe features found only In finer homes. If you like Colonials, we can show you styling at Its oesi In this 4-bedroom BEAUTY RITE. Featuring a spacious family room with fireplace, seperdte dining room, morble window sills, 2V,-car at- 3156 Lake Angelus Drive Lake Angelus Golf View Estates course. Modern bulll-ln 'kitchen, large family room, walk out basement plus Btfached 2Vli-car garage. Road. RiglIl'*'lo Wallon"Blvd.,''"el* to Uke Angelus Drive, right to RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 1520 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 9 to 9 )R 4-0427 MLS EM 3-2475 New^ Mo(deIs Open Doily 1-7 P.M. PRINCESS Brick and aluminum tri-level th features 3 bedrooms, I'/i bait family room and large 2-car g rage. VIRGINIAN This exceptional colonial features large country kitchen with bullt-Ins, paneled family room, 3 bedrooms, IVa baths, full basement and large 2-car garage. These homes also Include late size lots, blacktop i and sliding door walls Located In the new Maceday Woods Subdivision with paved streets and city water. to Williams Lake SPOTLITE Walk to Work feels Ilka home the mtniites you Iter this very cf— ''—-- KENT Established in 1916 “DRAYTON AREA^-pedroom raiKh. Northern High Area ..jms,» tgl floors, like Room for the kids to ip. 3 bed-hardvyood Smiley .Realty FE 2-8326 Open Doily 9 q.m. to 9 p.m. TIMES WATERFRONT TRADE On beautiful Beverly Isle to Otter and Sylvan Lakes. Roomy Immaculate and only 518,300. NEW ARRIVAL And with lake privileges to Ca; Lake. Newer 2-bedroom (40'x24' gas heat, oak floors. Now vacan $10,600, $350 down plus costs. TIMES REALTY 5219 Dixie Hwy. MLS 674-0396 n right 1 DON WHITE/INC. OPEN D Moderately arpeling, Cy-, paved street. Lake Braemar 2 homes, ready lor Immediate oc-cupency, noth have: Fireplaces, lemlly rooms, teclory llnished cab-Inein, 2 cer alleched garages. MANY, MANY OTHER FEA- These homes are priced to a FOR INFORMATION CALL; 629-5773 Carrlgan Quality Homes IRWIN NORTH SUBURBAN Hi*r« I Is illualed on a nice corner lot lull lor enoi^h out to be j^ed lor shopping, etc. ^ 7 piece end bulli ln bookcase In living rwin. Thli^ home h**^' ^ Plenty of parking space. Can hive lecltlc hoi water heeler, l i larage. SIlualed on 2 lots, lewi rater, gas end paved street, m lui and shopping center. jem^ room,^ 2 car ^gariqje, Wx^22« home lor a large laiiiMy. locelei neei^^lecfoiUs, peve.l ilreeli, ^Mon Mill TIPI if I.IBTINQ SI WATERFORD AREA Spacious 3-bedroom ranch home featuring carpeted living room and hall, gas heat, enclosed patio, at-lached 2-car garage and large ' * 95x250. Full price only $13, Terms to suit. WHITE LAKE AREA Lovely 4-bedroom tri-level ho Includes family room, carpe throughout, tVi baths with an i ... Pontiac ________ ed walls, carpeted h fireplace, kitchen JAMES A. TAYLOR, Realtor FAMILY FITS THiS PICTURE ached ^'*7age. Plus many exlrr I separate entrai y, only $2,100 dov it today. peted living room a basement, nicely li ATE Bryson, I _0 Dixie t BLOOMFIELD HILLS Your fnnilly d«R«rvfts the en|( ment of life, the prestlfle of * dreki, end the fine school* Bloomfield Hill*. Thl* iMoutlful I top colonlel will fulfill every dre/ Goroeous kitchen with dellahl breekfe*! nook end full dlnl fecllltlei. Mwfer bedroom w private bath, and two large rooms with bath. Has two-ca rage and circle drive. Extra RFAI TOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO Sl^" 0.50 W, Huron TF 4 ;i58 lAYNO HEIGHTS OFFICB 2909 SHAWNEE LANE CLOSED THANKSGIVING ' WvV tn*''o,"1er'y7c7 lur Ihenki to all who visit here ^Slncer|iiy^. ^ luro,*'’*'”'* *” CAPITAL SAVINGS $25,900, easy terms. KNOCK IT DOWN rwt«. ,i; WE TRADE AND TRADE Silver Lake Const. Co. 673 9531 GILES ■d living room and^ i_________ sement, gatage. lome timb >al for country living, Oi NORTH OF WALTON sharp 3 room ranch, (let in the city. bath. Basement, gas*heal. Li landscaped lot. Bedutllul greens. Screened patio. GILES REALTY-, CO. FE 5-6175 221 Baldwin Av« MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Smith (Sc "Wideman REALTORS FE 4-452i 12 W. HURON ST. OPEN 9 TO O'NeL IFF JOSLYN — 5-room bunga(ovi full basement, new gas furnace 1'/3-car garage. Priced at $7,50 to settle an estate. BEAUTIFUL LAKE FRONTAGE I the Village of Lake Angelus. Ove 1 acre, nicely landscaped wit many tall stately oaks. Reinforced Val-U-Way 192 W. CORNELL $400 TO MOVE IN BARGAIN-BARGAIN ESTATE PROPERTY In, $6S per month Including taxes. Gl WANTED MIXED AREA well kept'5-room**home with bat-men^ and garage, corner lot, 2 able clean family home at. the money saving price ot $6,000 total. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland RHODES SUBURBAN - Beautiful home /*ood n**’*'^*^2i it. Oil heat. 3-car tjarpge. Large ly lawn with 10 acres of rolling . Blacktop street. $30,000. $6,-GOOD 5-ROOM RANCH HOME — roomT'^ Full^baier lV2.car garr-- 'AT^R*^FORtT' 6-room home. Excellent Rotation. 3^^ bedrooms,^ V/j dmoner%!’ce* ‘kllctwtn.*$l3.m M50 ACRES — Ideal fpr horse*. Has room home. Moderlfi kitchen. 100x200 f car garage. Bree/eway. $9,500, ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE e-2306 258 W. Walton FE 5-6712 MULTIPLE LISTING SEIfVtjCE Silvan Lake . Nice II larpeted, lamlly , TalS condition. Plus $75 month Inco from leased building In rear. M be sold to settle estate. $15,000. basement. Gas Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 24)123 After 6 p.m. Call FE 2-7342 WEBSTER and WASHINGTON SCHOOL AREA Neat 7-room home. Excellent construction. Newly decorated. Large family kitchen, formica top covers. Living room with natural tl.. place. 3 spacious bedrooms. Tiled basement with extra lavatory. Also gascinator and gas range, •—*— softener, gas steam heat. Vacant'^v^ right in CITY-NORTH Attractive ranch type home. 2 bedrooms, large living-room, full " with shower, new gas furr--- rear yard fenced. PRICED FOR QUICK SALE - CALL FOR DE- ---- ---- ------- ----- the nicest beach In Oakland County. Nice 6-bedroom, 3 baths. 2-story house In very good condition. Living room Is 24x16 with fleldstone fireplace. Formal dining room and olher teafures. with terms or -ade. Let's Look Today. LARKS I ON - Do you like to from your kitchen window? Do you enjoy feeding the birds? Call us ^ about this ^spacious bedroom when this lovely home was built. .11 features two baths, a fire- end range, double pane windows throughout. A 2'/3-car garage and a large lot with trees galore. Only SZi.OOn and wa-ll tradn T . Dandy basement, rough Ing for extra stool; gas . Full price $15,900. $3,800 N ACRE AND A HALF In the South Boulevard, Adams Road section of Avon Township. Offered tor last sale at $20,500 Is this low, rambling brick ranch with 2-car garage, plus another 2-car garage way out back tor storage of term Implements. Huge - I connected; plenty ot 1*2 o^*iv*rJ’^® Custom built, WEST SUBURBAN — 2-bedroom $. Aluminum storms and Attached two-car garage, landscaped lot. Cyclone RAY O'NEIL, Realtor SCHRAM Cozy Bungalow Handyman SpeJal "■-story, 3-bedroom on 2 lots h 2-car garage. Needs some rk but the price Is low. WE HAVE SEVERAL TWO- AND THREE- BEDROOM HOMES AVAILABLE WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENTS. DOWN PAYMENTS START AT APPROXIMATELY IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 942 JOSLYN, COR. MANSFIELD MULTIPLE LISTING SERV.ICE Frushour Struble Huron Gardens Convenient to everything. . Dandy ,2-bedroom with oak Jlooi;*' ,p'»-fefed walls, gas heat, 21' living room, carpeting throughout. $8,961). •WHt trade. Winter Price . ■ On this dandy S-room lake front’> home. Located on Williams Laka good beach, tasament and Elizabeth Lake 8 rooms, 1'/2-story w rooms, spacious living JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE REALTORS ,1 FE 8-4025______ „ FE CLARK NEAR AIRPORT RD. - You'll love this comfortable clean home that doesn't need a thing done to it. Cheerful kitchen — g^ counter space — living room is carpeted — separate dining room or den. Fapiily room and attached garage — Vacant — Lot 75'x240' — WEST SUBURBAN - 6-year-old 3- mediate possession. Can taka ovtr land contract If you desire. UNION LAKE AREA — 7-room trilevel home with 3 bedrooms, 1'/7 baths, lovely family room pa- CLARK REAL ESTATE , 101 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7888 3 BUY, TO SELL, TO TRADE Multiple Listing Service . STOUTS Best Buys Today 5 Acres Modern 3-bedroom rancher, 1,300 square feet ot living area plus 13'xl4 all-purpose room, 2'/2H'S,“' kt! Burmeister's „wr-‘ : TSsfjSnfS one of America's „_ staning oPlmWIEGAND MUSIC CO, 469 Elizobtlh s:a;.. s5ir=a:s%H.r“" ..,ir£s-”“- Iri'H TO GO RIGHT WHEN YOU USE PRESS WANT ADSI UNITED AUCTIONEERS <:ATllRnAY”A PM 81-A \sr-,,s“.ri.'s?.,ro'; r^ORTY THE PONTIAC. PRESS, FRIDAY, NOYHMBER 27, 1964 Faim Prodwe ’ M FRE^H FILTERED CIDER. Farm Eqiripmeiit J. USED WHEEL HORSE TRAC-fors starting trom $250. Used chr’-saw. Evans Equipment. ^1711. 1965 MODELS. MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS, PRICED AT ONLY $124.95. PARTS AND SERVICE KING BROS. ' FE 44734 FE 4-1642 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke SEE US FIRST AND SAVE. JOHN SEE OUR LINE i USED FRAZER ROTOTILLERS, PARTS AND SERVICE. L. W. Avia 1570 Opdyke FE . !, Comanche, Driftwood, Tour-a-Home and Bee .Line. Truck campers and used trailers. Storage. JACOBSON TRAILER SALES AND RENTAL, 5690 Williams I Drayton Plains, OR 3-5981. tion at Warner Trailer _______ Waliy Byam's exciting caravans). ARE YOU FLORIDA BOUND? AVAlE 'cRlESr HOLLYS, TAWAS 14way plan, no Interest BiRMINGHAM SAVE New '64 models. 14 and 19 ft, Winnebago's, Large discount. Plck-up X j F. E. HOWLAND 3255 Dixie OR 3-1456 TRAVEiTTRAILERS AND TRUCK campers. Pontiac Auto Brokers, Perni at Walton. FE ^lOOk_ WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS Heusetrailers A BETTER PRICE FOR trailer. PR 1-88M or VA 1-882 TravetOf Vagabonds Richai iltzcraftr Diplomat. New B 'tM 9, Sun, 12 to 6. Corner of Op dyke (M24) and Auburn _(M59), IXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAIR service, free estimates. Also r ‘ and accessories. Bob Hutchir Mobile Home Sales, Inc., Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains, OR 3.1202._____ " OETROltER ALMA PONTIAC CHIEF 10'-12''20'-WIDES A size and price for evei Stop out today and let us or used mobile home. No^ Delivered and set up. Many r ANOTHER FIRST 10 ~ Closed Sund Oxford Trailer Sales onor Rent Trailer Space Truck Tiro Specials 10 iff iji'g’, mud end 14/.32 '’KrZ’cJde. $45.76 FREE MOUNtING Budoal^terms^.vell.bl. Ttiuick TlR^$. 106x26. VUUxV * ^ 4 4)99, Ifto Sarvica " 9 crankshaft orindino in th car. AAqlor rabulkflng and valv ^Indli^j^^^Wrt^ Machine, Shop, ] Mbt9rcyclet YAMAHAS All New 1965 Models K 8. W CYCLE Auburn Utica 731-6290 Bicycles Boats - Accessories 396 Orchard Lake r, $500. FE > engiria 4-S702. BOATS AT A GREAT OISCOUNT-Glastron, Lone Stars, MFG boats, some very good used rigs fro“ $150. Mercury Motors 3.9 to 100 h. STILL THE BEST DEALS AT CLIFF DREYER'S Gun and Sport Center 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 —Open Dally and Sunday- FREE LAY-A-WAY Starcraft — Sea-Ray — Thompso Johnson Motors and Boats STORAGE-REPAIRS PINTER'S-FE 4-0924 Opdyke. _ Tues^Thu_rs. 1 (1-75 at t. Clemens Rd. Exil "HARD TO FIND BUT EASY TO deal with." RInker, Steury, Cherokee boats, Kapot pontoons, Evln-rude motors. Pamco tr-"— DAWSON'S SALES e MAIn 9-2179. Inside Boot Storage $8 PER MONTH AND UP OR BY SEASON Hubbard Parking Service Inside-Outside Storage Boat Repairs—Refinishing HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS SPECIAL OFFER! FREE 75 wall ship-to-shore radio Depth sounder. Limited Supply With Purchase Ot New Ovvens Cruiser On Display—Trade Now WALT AAAZUREK LAKE & SEA AAARINA ‘ ■ FE 4-9587 Airplanes 60 de^rei ALWAYS BUYING AND PAYING MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS ASK FOR BERNIE AT- BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. - • ---- Ml 7-3214 California Buyers ’“m &’m motor"sales' 2597 Dixie H\«V OR 4-0308 Did You know? VILLAGE RAMBLER MANSFIELD AUTO SALES We're buying eharp, lata model »ri .. . NOWI 1)04 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-590G SPECIAL PRICE PAID FOR 195VI943 CARS VAN'S AUTO SALES GLENN'S OP I FOR CLEAN CARS OR trucks. Econcomy Cars, 2335 Djxle. ..WANTED: 1959 1943 CARS Ellsworth AUTO SALES WE N^D CARSI TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS Mafthews-Hargreaves 631 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 4^47 Junk Cors-trucks^^lbl^ OR 10 J U N K CARS - TRUCKS tree low anytime. FE 2-2664. AND 10 JUNK CARS TRUCKS WANTED. Frae low. OR 3 2938. Al WAVs BUYING MJUNK^CAjyL^FR|E SAM ALLEN ai SONS, INC. JUNK CARS HAUL eb AWAY 67T8503 Used Auto-Truck Portf 102 7 PONTIAC FRONT END COA V CHfcVRrilBt BNGINI:, 283 vheol, MY 3 4707. >4 FORD 427 ENGINE WlT tenders, 4-epaod, Hurst linkaf ind slicks. Also 1981 I’ontlac ei line. PE 5.8528. RD 292 OR CHIVY FACTORY ebullt motors, $100. AIm) 312 352, M or 301 327-409. You or wa In-ilall. terms. S37 III7. New and Used Trucki 103 III***' «!W*Ve Ford '> foN wrBckIR, od shape, MA 4 3263. 53 FORD Vj t6N PicKUP, $125 FE 8-0*96 FORD V,-T0N pickup TRUCK, MARVEL il Oakinnrt Ave, FB 8 4079 'iMi 0M( SIRAlGMf AiB, S SElfO er'le, I'll’Tlilll!' ' *' PRESS WANT ADlS HAVE TH^ LAST WORD-RESULTS! New" and Used Track* 103 JEROME-FERGUSON, 1962-JEEP with 4-wheel drive, red most Ilka newl HASKINS Chevy-Olds On US 10 af M15 Clarkston . ___AAA 5-2604 1962 JEEP PICKUP CAB 9,000 miles, snow blade, $1745. Opdyke Hardware, 1960 Opdyke. FE 1963 FORD F-lOO Vi-TON PICKUP V-8 automatic, big heater, only 8,000 miles, solid red finish, almost like new conditloni Savel JEROME-FERGUSON Inc., Roches-ter FORD Dealer. OL 1-9711 & FORD F-100 Vi TON PICKUP, ~ "ox, 6-cytlnder, stick, radio, Savel JEROME-FERGU-nc., Rochester FORD “ ‘ 1-9711.___________ HASKINS G.M.C. Factory Branch ■ New and Used Trucks FE 5-9485 _____675 Oeklant ROCHESTER 1965 GMC >-ton PIckuf >t box, her iTsto*' Houghten 8, Son AAaln Sf. SPECIALIZED , UNITS 1956 Dod^e Ton I, C600, Tilt Cab, 14' van, igine, 2-speed transmission. Ires, A-1 throughout. $1,495. 62 GMC U-ton pickup, \ 4-speed transmission, I body. $1,350. 63 Ford, F-700 wrecker. ' 2-speed axle, 5-speed D choose from, pickups. McAULIFFE $12 QUARTERLY BRUMMETT AGENCY MIRACLE mile FE 4-0581 AUTO INSURANCE FOR ANYONI Bruce G. Kendall Inc. 338-7151 Canceled and Refused PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE Stop In Today! 1044 Joslyn Ave. Frank A. Anderson Agency FE 4-3535 _ PonllBC Foreign Cars 105 1956 VW. GOOD CONDITION. 674-1774 i958d^AOUAR,^REAL^^ NICE. $99.1, M5 25OT OWNER, 1795, 160 RENAULT, GOOD CONDITION. Call after 4. .. ?61 FIAT, A ^'^Gallogfy, and Baldwin/’ Laka Angojus. 761 RENAULT "OAUPHINE 4-DOOR, a real bargain, full prica only $295, no money down, $.1.60 weekly I MARVEL SI Oakland Ave. FB 8-4079 SUfJ rOof, RADIO. 772 Baldwin. 334 1963 FiAT^"TT66" ALMOsr^^ new $995. SUPERIOR RAMBLER so Oakland Ave. FE 3-9421 >63 VW bfcLUyti '^bbOR' STA-hon wego^wlth euntrof,^ Ilka new. OUS-ROYCl, SILVER WBAlfM body" Alio m^Wrelin'T needi work. Cell EL 6 8298 eves. Are You Looking for ECONOMY? Our English Forrf line cars ar Com pa re I rltajn star I UesI LLOYDS Llncoln-Mercury-Comet - engliih Ford ^ IZW Oakland Ave. FE 3 7863 Aufomaflt. tran»mli»loi Renault "AUTHONI7BD DBALIR" OLIVER BUICK and JEEP CORNBR OP PIKf AND CASI MARMADpKE By Anderson & Leeming Ncjw and Used Car* 106 CLEAN 1961 CHEVY, 4-DdOR, ---------- jyjj UL 2-2781. ....................ja! Opdyke. FE 8^686. 1962 CHEVY II, WHITE, 9-P/\S^ senger, 6-cyltMer, automatic transmission. Wife's car. Exc. condition. $1,250., Ml 7-1722._________________ “How did you know Marmaduke did it?” New and Used Cars 106 1960 Buick Buy this 1960 Lteabre with plete confidence and save _______ $$ at the same time. Equipped with automatic, power steering, brakes, and finished In spotless powder blue. Just $9.88 weekly with no $$ down, call Mr. Darrell, Credit Co-ordInator. 338-4528. NOW OPEN Additianal Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) (V, mile north ot Cass Ave.) Spartan Dodge i960 BUICK HARDTOP, POWER BUICK SPECIAL, )62 BUICK LeSABR^, 4-DOOR. White, new premium tires. Excellent condition. Garage-kept. Power brakes, steering, radio, h ■“ All Cars Carry Our Famous Gold Crest or Silver Crest Warranty! $1845 $2095 1962 Mercury Hardtop 2-door with power steering, aut malic, radio. $1395 1962 Chrysler Wagon $1895 1961 Pontiac Sedan doub^e^^wer only- 1960 Chrysler Hardtop power 1959 Chevy Sedqn Almost like new throughout. Only $795 1961 Ford Convertible $1095 1959('0lds ”98'' 4 door hardtop, power, real sharpl $895 1963 Codillac DeVille Sedan with low mileage. Only - $3695 Big Stock 1964s at Less Than Dealer's Cost I 1964 Mercury Demos as Low as $2395 1964 Chryslers as Low as $2595 1964 Fords as Low os $1895 1964 Continental IS Low as $1,000 Discount 1964 Ponfiocs as Low as $2295_ 1964 Comets as Low as $1695 All Cars Carry New Car Warranty Up to 24,000 Milos I LLOYD'S LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland Ave. Now Location FB 3 7863 , >663 BUiCK INVfCYA coWViRTI dl'irVieeVerV'wlillewniMs. *Iuxm'V «l only $l,8»5. rAITERSON CiIev RoLbT CO., NOW AT OUR NEW lot, 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4 2735. itiriuiCK eleCTra convert!- “e, full povKor, low mllenge, pride petty Cell MA 6 6456. ll bURADO CONVfiRTini (i, lre"'wl*eel«.’"nm« gmKl "*375. Diet LITTLE COST, BIG RESULTS WITH PRESS WANT ADS I New and Used Cars 106 1957 CADILLAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP, NO RUST, very good mei ‘ t''"$895 • BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 8 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE. 1961 CADILLAC WHITE COUPE, nice, 1st 52,075 takes, OL 2-2431._ CADILLAC 1964 COUPE, ALL CHEVY 2-DOOR HARDTOP MARVEL 1957 Chevy 283 Engine—4-on-the-Floor Capitol Auto Salej 312 W. Montcalm FE 8-402J 1962 Chevrolets 6-cylinde BIscayne 2-do Powergllde Powerglide $1 6-cyllnder, Impale Sport Coupe. Satin Sliver i Ish with Aqua Interior. Pow glide, power steering, pov Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1104 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-273 BIRMINGHAM brakes, whitewalls .....$1 Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1104 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM 1963 IMPALA SUPER SPORT, 327 "c Inch. Automatic. Power steer-end brakes. Radio, many ox-...ufc blaclk Intarlor. Ofte>. 651-3096 BIRMINGHAM _____ ______ TRANSMISSION, POWER STEERING. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments ot 520.82 per month. CALL CREDIT MARVEL ______E 8-4079 TOLET 2.DObR",'radio, WHITEWALL TIRES. MARVEL ^CYLINDER, AUTO ' $444' I960 Chevrolet PATTERSON CHRYSLER-PI DODGE-D ROCHESTPR Pallorson Chevrolet Co. 104 S. '60 cMMVy Wagon, od6b'c6^ dillon.PE OAKLAND $1195 734 Oekland 335-9436 I96L GORVEffE. ilARDtOP, 3 speed, Honduras maroon. FE 4 3731 $777 1962 Chovrolof PATTERSON CliftYSTBR PI YMOUTH VALIANT DObGB-DOU(3a TRUCKS 1001 N. Main SI. HOCMHSTeR OL 34551 1959 Corvatte convertible. Power-glide, radio, heater, whitewalls. Red and white exterior, red In- BIRMINGHAM 1963 CHEVY SPORTS COtJPE, 425 IS. OR 4-0785 1963 CORVAIR "CONVERTIBLE' Yh a, white top. A , ver. ;ar that is sure to please $1595 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 912 S. V 7-3214 easy on gas. $1,095. OL 1-114 1963 CHEVROLETS Impala convertible. Asure aqua trim, black fop, V-8, powergllde, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only ..............$1,995 Patterson Chevrolet Co. 04 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM 4964 CHEVROLETS ala Sport sedan. Daytona b mpala Sport sedan. mileage. Best o BUY YOUR NEXT OLDS OR RAMBLER FROM HOUGHTEN & SON ROCHESTER OL 1-9761 '64 CHEVELLE. HARDTOP,' 220 hp„ 4-sper*' FE 5-2363. I, heater, $2,100, metallic brakes, heavy duty suspension, seat belts and more. Ivy green and tan Intarlor. $2,375. OR 3-4414. Forbes^_ HAVE You RECENTLY been denied the privilege of buying a car because of previous credit problems or bankruptcy? If so, and you have a steady job and as little as a $5.00 bill to put down, then I can get you a car and get your credit reestablished. Call Mr. Cook at FE 8-4088. King Auto Sales. _ $88ST I960 Chrysler Convertible fl engine, power equipment, and only a few miles. We will finance this balance for $35.24 pbr month. PATTERSON Mro *Hl (he, C«i 1M 1962 CHECKER WAGON. 1-OWNER, trade-in on' new 1965 Checker Marathon. Checker Sales end Serv-ice. 3916 AubOrn. 852-4666, $666 1961 Chrysler Almost like new 4-door, only 31,000 miles. We will tinance this balance for $26.81 per month. PATTERSON Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You! 100 Cars to Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LLOYDS____ COME AND GET 'UM VILLAGE RAMBLER Has lust received a Brand New Shipment of 1964 'Ambassadors FULLY LOADED: RADIO, POWER STEERING, POWER BRAKES, TURN INDICATORS, OIL FILTER, DOUBLE ACTION BRAKES VISIBILITY GROUP, LIGHT GROUP, INDIVIDUAL RECLINING SEATS, WHITE-WALL TIRES, FULL WHEEC COVERS. $1,977.77 $99 down, 36 months on balance ■Village RAMBL.ER 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 New and Died Can ‘106 New and Used Can 106 1954 FORD $49 COOPERS-4278 DIXIE-DRAYTON 1954 FORD. 410 CUBIC INCHES Rolled and. pleated interior. OR .1957 FORD, REBUILT ENGINEJ^ i, stick, $175. OL 1-3948. $999 PATTERSON ROCHESTER 100) N. Main SI 1959 DODGE CONVERTIBLE, CUS tom Royal Lancer, blue top, pow er brakes, redio, heefer, full pric only $395, no money down, $4.1 weekly 1 MARVEL If a newer used car is in your' immediate future, and reasonable priced dependability is a must . . . Then look no further. .. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE is the place to shop. They have only “First Class” “Goodwill'' used cars that are priced honestly. You don't have to settle for second best. A phone call to FE 3-7954 or a short drive to 65 Mt. Clemens St., downtown Pontiac, talk with any of the friendly salesmen. They'll solve your used car problems to your absolute satisfi^tion. 1964 Dodge Enjoy driving Dodge's finest, a a fraction of It's original cost Fully equipped with automalk power steering, brakes, and bucke Additional Locatioi. 855 Oakland Ave. Spartan Dodge Capitol Auto OBIes For fine used cir buys 312 W. Montcalm FE 84071 , AUTOMATIC, 2-• )ck finish, r " I only $295. MARVEL 251 Oakland Ave._FE 8-4079 1959 FORD GALAXIE 2-DOOR, V-8 engine, automatic transmission, radio-and heater, extra clean, $695. JEROME - FERGUSON, Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1.9711 1959 FORD 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC, radio, heater, full price $595. 1501 BALDWIN Autobahn Motors, Ino. AUTHORIZED V _______________ DEALER V2 mile north of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegragh . FE 6-45 -Can Finance-. I960 Valiant 4-Door stick, green tinishi $440 Can Finance ‘ V/ 1963 Valiant 4-Door Automatic, radio, heatftr, $890 Can Finance. I960 Dodge 2-Dogr Sedan, like new conditloni $460 Can Finance 1963 Dodge Polara 4-door automatic, 2-way power $1260 Gan Finance NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. ^ (Outdoor Showremm) ^ ^ Spartan Dcdge I960 FORD 4-DOOR, RADIO, HEATER, ECONOMY ENGINE, WHITE-WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take over payments ot $20.82 per ,mo. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks, af Harold Turner, Ford. Ml 4-7500. FISCHER'S MONTH-END SALE 1963 Riviera with 3-way power. Only , . $3088 1963 Wildcat 2 0oor Hardtop. Double pownr, 4-spe«d 12388 1964 Wildcat 4-Door Sedan with douole power, demo. Only one—So Hurry $2988 1944 LeSabre 4-Door Hardtop. Double power . $2488 1943 Electra "225" 2-Door hard-too. Full power and factory air $2886 1962 Ooel Hardtop. Come on out and see this one $ 768 1964 Electra "225" Coupa with full power. One owner $3388 1944 Special 2-Door Sedan. Conrv pany demo, must sell $2188 1964 Buick Special 6-Pa$senger Waqon ^wdh^, double 1944 Olds "88" Convertible. Double power. 10,000 miles $2686 1962 EI«lra^4 Dow^Hardtop ^^h 1961 Bujek Soec'a^l 4 Door FISCHER BUICK 515 S. Woodward Ml 4-9100 LUCKY'S NEW POLICY WE FINANCE Nc Money Down PAY NOTHING 'TIL '65! Pay as Little as $1.00 per Week '59 Chevy Station Wagon ..$296 '59 Buick 4-Door Hardtop .$397 '59 Ford 2-Door $247 '60 Ford Station Wagonj.$497 '61 Tempest 4-Door $597 2 Lots With Over 100 Fine Cars Lucky Auto Sales 254 S. SAGINAW FE 37853 193 S. SAGINAW FE 4-1006 PONTIAC - BUICK - CHEVROLET 1963 PONTIAC 2-Door $1895 $3195 $1895 1964 CHEVY Super Sport $3195 1964 CORVAIR Monza 3 TRANSMISSION. Only toiHiiii»ffi''w"& istL*****'"'*$3195 1963 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door 42195 1963 FORD^^Converliblo $1895 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville $2495 1962 TEMPEST Convertible **^ dPlOQP Idlwrlno'lin'd like* new Throughout 1 ' ^ D 1963 CHEVY 4-Dopr Pl/1 P Wim^redlo, $ikI 6cyilndw kPiUTO 1959 RAMBLER 4 Door Sedan $295 1964 TEMPEST 2-Door rt^innr 1964 CHEVY '/2-Ton Camper (hOlOt: lOlne, radio and heoler. Only - $1995 ^ ‘ 1 ZO HOMER MIGHT ' OXFORD, MICHIGAN OA 8-2528 CHEVROLET THE PONTIAC PRP:sS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBE^ 27,11964 FORTY-ONE^ BEATTIE'S I New I 1959 FORD'ft 2-CbOR, STANDARD ! shift, very nice Inside and out. FE 3-7542, H. Riggins, Dealer. 1962;Corvair Monza $1295 19(^2 Ford Fairlane 2-Door wittii 5-cvllnder engine, radk heater. Only— $1095 1962 Folcon 2-Door r and whitewalls. Only— $995 1959 Vauxholl 4-Door s one has radio, heater and wl $395 K O M P A C K K O R N ,E R 1962 Ford Fairlane "500" 4-Door with engine, automatic. $1395 1963 Ford Fairlane $1795 1960 Falcon 4-Door Radio and healer. Yours tor only— 1961 FALCON 2-DOOR. RADIO, HEATER, WHITEVIfALU TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take over payments of $27.74 per mo. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Park* at Harold Turner Ford. "Ml 4-7500. 961 FALCON. '64 ENGINE. $375. Can see car at 3869 Orion Rd., Lake Orion. New and Used Cars ’ I FALCON 2-DOOR, 6, STICK, r FORD Dealer, OL 1961 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN STAr lion wagon. Bright red finish, with matching Interior. V-S engine, Cruls-o-matic, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, white-Extra nice. Only $595 1960 Rambler 2-Door heater. Only— $395 'Tour FORD DEALER Since 1930" Home of SERVICE After the Sale i On Dixie Hwy. (Waterford) OR 3-1291 SELECT USED CARS AT LOWEST PRICES EVER During , VILLAGE RAMBLER'S ‘ Great Expansion Sale Now 1964 Rambler ... $1595 Classic 4-Door Sedan 1962 Oldsmobile $1595 Convertible — Power 1963 Rambler . .. $1195 Classic 4-Door Sedan 1962 Plymouth . $1395 Convertible — Full Power 1,963 Rambler . $1595 Classic 4-Door Wagon 1959 Ford ... $ 795 Hardtop — Power 1962 Rambler . $ 995 Classic 4-Door Sedan 1959 Pontiac . $ 795 Bonneville — Power 1961 Rambler . . $ 995 Classic 4-Door Wagon 1960 Rambler . $ 595 Ambassador — Power THESE SHARP ONE-OWNER Birmingham Trades Can Be Bought for as Little as $5 Down and Financed os Long os 36 Months! 666 S. WOODWARD - BIRMINGHAM 6-3900 JO 6-1418 I Coi:t 106 NOW e, 33M164. }962 FALCON A-DOOR^ ^^YUNDER automatic, d e t u x e throughout! Company owned, only' $995 ROME-FERGUSON, tnc., R ter FORD Dealei'", OL 1-9711. 1962 FORD 2-DOOR, RADIO,. HEATER, AUTO. TRANSMISSION; WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN.Payments of $36.75 per mo. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks at Harold T- Where You Can .Buy With No Money Down ING. POWE BRAKES. ONLY H2.00 96,2 Oakland FE 4-9969 1963 FORD Fairlane 4-Door whnewa.l^es.^e^x^ra Sharp. ^ McAULIFFE NO MONEY DOWN -CREDIT NO PROBLEM- WE DO OUR OWN FINANCING Listed below are a few of the many fine cars to choose from that we have in stock. 1957 Mercury Wagon. Icyllnder, automatic. Mechanic's Speclall Weekly Payments $1.12 $67 1956 Pontiac Weekly Payments $1.12 - $67 1958 Pontiac 4-Door Hardtop. Original tlnlsh. Power sleerlng and brakes. Weekly Poyments $1.80 $97 1956 Mercury Weekly Payments $1.80 $97 1956 Olds 2 Door Hardlop. Original flnUh, powBr »ff«rlng and brnkas. Weekly Poyments $2.80 $197 1957 Ford Weekly Payments $2.80 $197 1958 Edsel 2 Door Hardtop Full power, $ cylinder anolna, aiilumelh,, Weekly Payments $2.80 $197 1958 Buick Convertible Weekly Payments $2i^B0 $197 1959 Chevrolet 6cvHnder, slick, orlplnel blue finish. Mileage maker. Weekly Poyments $3.80 $297 1958 Olds Weekly Payments $3.80 $297 1960 Valiant Weekly Poyments $3,80 $297 1960 Ford Weekly Payments $5.80 $497 109 S. East Rlvd. at Auburn 109 S. East Blvd. at Auburn 963 FALCON FUTURA 4-DOOR, 101 engine, automatic, radio, heater, low mileage end clean. $1,295. JEROME - FERGUSON Inc. Rochester ROME-FERGUSON, Inc., -Roche: ter FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711, 1963 FORD GALAXIE, 4-DOOR, AL power, exc. condition, take pve payments of $81.74. 731-0815, Utica. 1963 T-BIRD 2-Door Hor«dop With an Acapulco blue finish, pov or steering, brakes and window Beautiful car for only — $2769 Call "Big" Ed Bretzlaff at . JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 0" Oakland Ave._FE 5*41 ( 63 FORD GALAXIE 4-DpOR;' ( a FORD 2DOOR. GALAXIE, V8 lutomatic, radio, power steering. >nd brakes, whitewalls! Factory official car- $T,695. JEROME-FER-3USON, me. Rochester FORD Economy Used Cor Mart ___2335 Dixle^Hwy.____ i64”FALCON SPRINT 2 - DOOR mission^ radio, buckets. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc., Rochester FORD Dealer. OL I-97I1. 1964 FORD Wagon, 9-passenger country sedan. "CLAWSON" Value House 1964 FORD " Fairlane 500 SPORT COUPE with rac $2191 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 5-4101 Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You! Call Mr. Darrell FE 8-4528 - ANYTIME -SPARTA^ DODGE IN^C. 1964 GALAXIE 500-Xl, TDOOR ' 'top, bergundy, black Interior, h 390 engine, 4,eoe.ed ti New and Used Cark 106 1965 MUSTANG 260 V-8. $2,450. Excellent condition. $250. FE 4-4225 BOBBORST 520 S. Woodward Birmingham - MI 6-4538 1963 MERCURY Monterey Custom 4-Door t, automatic and 1$ ready at only - , $1999 McAULIFFE I OLDS" sVar'fire co'nverti- tion. Phone Metamora excellent condi- HAUPT PONTIAC , radio, heater, whilewal me has 6-cylinder, standard nissron. Very nice Ihrough- 13 PONTIAC CATALINA " OLDMOBILE DYNAMIC 10 E^Wallon, Pontiac. KESSLER'S DODGE - CARS AND trucks Sales and Service ;ford _ OA JOj winterTargains 7 Olds and 1955 Olds . $95 ’lymouth and Dodges '55-'58 U ’ontiacs, '55 to '62 ,,, $4 0 Chevy, needs repair _______ 100 PER CENT ECONOMY CARS^ 2335 DIXIE 1964 OlOS7 TAKE OVER PAY DON'T MISS OUR PRE-GRAND OPENING SALE MI 4-750Q TURNER ' FORD 1964 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 1961 SIMCA 4-Door Sedan. This condIMonfd. full powftr, /*lurplnum 1962 PONTIAC HARDTOP. Power radio, heater, whitewalls. 23,000 1961 MERCURY MONTEREY Convertible. Power steering and heater and whitewalls. 23,000 actual miles , . , $995 '63 Ford Country Sedan $1695 1961 BUICK FLECTRA "225". 1962 BUICK 2 Door Hardtop. Power steerlnn end brekes, Dynallow, ectuni miles $2095 1961 FORD GALAXIE 2 Door 1963 ECONOLINE VAN. Mas 14,000 1 000,001 usei. Doors opan both '63 Olds F-85 Coupe $1575 1964 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2- flnlsh 12395 1964 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE whilewftlls. New cer fectory wer-rentv $2995 1962 CHEVY BELAIR 4 D(K>r Se 1964 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 1964 FORD FAIRLANE "500" 4-Door. Vfl, Ford-O-Matic, radio, miles with new car warranty $2095 1963 LORD GAIAXIE Sedan with rordOMaftc, Vfl, power i»eerlng ' 62 Chevy 2-Door, Automatic $895 1963 PONTIAC CAI ALINA Con- (960 PONIIAC BONNEVILLE Door Hardtop. Fflclciry alr-com ditioned. Power steering and brakei, Hydrnmatlc, ^dlo, heater and whitewalls $1495 1964 PONTIAC nONNBVtlLE Many Other Cors to Choose From walh. This one is almost like new $1395 1962 PONTIAC nONNEVILl E and whitewalls, Beautiful blue llnish end matching trim $2995 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA Hard- Ml 4-7500 trim, New rnr wrtiVanly I2HV5 1961 BUICK m F( IRA "225" Con vmllbln. All imwer, Dynatlow, TURNER msMmj FCRD PONTIAC-BUICK 464 S. Woodward OL I-8I35 855 rocheste:r rd. Birmingham '62 VW Kormonn-Ghia $1388 '63 Falcon Hardtop $1441 '62 Renault Douphine $595 '64 Ford Fostback $2042 '63 Ford Convertible $1795 '60 Falcon Deluxe 4-Door $445 '61 Corvoir Coupe $888 FORTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1964 TIA New qnd Used C|ar$^ 106 4-DOOI^ BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth »12 S. Woodward M ' 1962 Plymouth PATTERSON CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTHVALIANT DODGE-DODGE TRUCKS 1001 N. Main St. •3214 ' ROCHESTER. OL 1-8558 RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-RAMBLER IS THE PLACE TO BUY 1965 PONTIAC'S 1961 PONTIAC CATALINA oor Sedan with automatic, power steering and brakes. Real sharpi y mileage! One owner, new lar trade!-inl ^ __________$1295_____________^____________ 1962 RAMBLER 4-DOOR CLASSIC with aconomy 6-cylinder engine, stick shift. Special to yi _____________^ $995__________________ 1963 RAMBLER AMERICAN warrantyl Heater,, radio, or __________$1125 ' standard transmission! $585 1964 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE VISTA or Hardtop powered with a 389 cu. Inch trophy V-8 rated a ,, automatic transmissioo, power steering and brakes, radio, i r extras, and has a beautiful nocturne blue finish with a rokide combined with lustrous cloth. _____________________$3025________________________ / . 1963 TEMPEST 4-DOOR This one has automatic, power steering and bralres, n blue finish with blue Interior. This one Is extra sharp 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA Sports Coupe with power steering and brakes, radio, ly-owned beauty I Dnly - _________________________$2295 , 1963 REN|IULT R-8 $1195 . ON M-24 IN LAKE ORION \ MY 3-6266 1961 CHEVROLET Impala 2-door 1962 BUICK Special 2-door, r THE HOME OF Goodwill and Top Value USED CARS WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 14 BUICK Skylark, v ,5 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-DOOR, OLIVER BUICK THERE IS REALlY ONLY ONE Tel-A4luron Auto Sales FE 8-9661 CONVERTIBLE. Credit or Budget Problems? We Can Finoice You! 100 Cars to Select f^rom! Gall Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 other extras, clean, S895. OR 3-1391 or OR 4-1312, Dealer. 1961 PONTIAC 4-SPEED, ALUMt-jtum^hjeels. FE 2J552 after ^ _ “ '“lEROME^^^ OLDS and CADILLAC New Car Savings—Today CALL FE 3-7021 1961 PONTIAC , 4 - DOOR, STICK, '55 to '5t 1 Ponflacs, 1957 to 1962 models and tr 60 S. Telegraph—Opposite Tel-Huron Centei 100 CARS , MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEK! FINANCE COMPANY REPOSSESSIONS NEW CAR TRADES, TRADE-INS, ETC. 2-Doors-4-Doors-Hardtops-Sedans-Wagons-Stock Cars-6's- V-8's~Sticks-Aufos. Walk In.... lUST SIGN YOUR NAME — Drive Out! ABSOLUTELY FINANCING - NO PROBLEM ALL APPLICAtlONS ACCEPTED We Handle and Arrange All Financing 36 MOS. TO PAY! L ALL CARS ARE IN TOP SHAPE READY TO GOI '59 Pontiac H.,d.op $495 '58 Pontiac $195 '59 Ford $195' '60 Plymouth $395 '61 falcon . ., $595 '61 Ford $695 '60 Comif . $595 '60 Chevy . . $595 '60 Mercury n or Wagon $595 '60 Dodge Sedan or Wagon $595 '61 Rambler $595 '61 Corvair $695 THERE IS REALLY 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 Directly Across From Tel Moron Shopping Center 2 Blocks S. of W. Huron (M 59) and Used Cars 106 New and Used Can 106 New and Used Cars 106 Ghristmas $ CASH $ on any NEW 1965 PATTERSbN CHRYSLER-F DODGE-D 1001 ROCHESTER 1960 LARK, DELUXE INTERIOR, Positraction rear end. Overdrive, $275. 627-4475.______________________ 1963 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Sport Coupe, white, power windows, seats and brakes, 14,000 actual miles, bticket seats, very good rubber, spare never removed. $2,-300. FE 4-7943 or FE 2-7448. 1964 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, FULL power, 10,000 miles, $2,990. 626-9t16. radio, heater, whitewalls. DON'S USED CARS '7 S. Lapeer Rd., Orion MY ; TEMPEST COUPE 1964. BEAUTI-ful metallic bronze with sparkling white cordovafi top. Standard transmission, showroom condition. $95 down, bank rates. Full price of We're vrheeling and dealing the all-new 1965 Ramblers. See them new! Used cars are being sold at wholesale to make room for the new car trades. i ROSE RAMBLER | 8145 Commerce, Union Lake I Autobahn Motors, Inc, AUTHORIZED VW DEALER 9 LARK WAGON, 1960 STUDEBAKER 2-DOOR STA-tion wagon. Automatic transmission, excellent tires, new spare. Sparkling ruby red. Full price 8495. No money down, choose your>own payments. Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEAtER V2 mile north of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You! 100 v;ars to Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 ______L'. OYDS__ > RAMBLER AMERICAN ECON- ; my transportation, $295 full price! SUPERIOR RAMBLER 1961 STUDEBAKER Lark 4-Do6r tic transmission, r ter. Only - $499 McAULIFFE SUBURBAN OLDS BIRMINGHAM TRADES NEW BARGAINS 100% WRITTEN Guarantee Every car listed carries this gudrontee. T 0 k e the guesswork out of buying. Used cars! Credit No Problemi ALL CARS FULLY EQUIPPED 1963 STARFIRE Convertible $2,495 2-Door Hardtop 1964 PONTIAC ler. Factory Air Dynamic Coupe 4-Ooor Hardtop SEE STUB STUBBLEFIELD, BOB MARTIN 565 S. Woodv/ard Ave. BIRMINGHAvM MI 4-4485 Has just received 100 automobiles that must be sold im-' mediately to the public only. As of November 20, 1964 these automobiles will be sold regardless of cost. 1959 Ford Fairlane Weekly Payments $1.48 1958 Pont. Starchief 4 Door, power steerlncj ^ and brakes, automatic, Weekly Payments $1.48 1959 Chevy Bel Air Weekly Payments $3.48 1961 Valiant Weekly Payments $5.48 1959 Buick Weekly Payments $3.48 1960 Plymouth Weekly Payments $3.48 1959 Pontiac Sedan Weekly Payments $3.48 1958 Volvo Weekly Payments $3.48 $197 $197 $397 •■$597 •$397 $397 $397 $397 WE FINANCE ALL . OUR CARS NO MONEY DOWN We Finance When Others Cannot If you've been bankrupt, in receivership, or had credit problems, we can handle and finance a deal for you and deliver in 10 minutes. 1958 Oldsmobile 4-Ooor, radio, heater, power steering, power brakes, whitewalls. Clean, na rust. Weekly Poyments $2.48 1959 Dodge 4-Door, automatic, radio and heater. A beautiful Weekly Payments $1.00 1958 Chevy Delray 2 Door, radio, healer, autometlc. Weekly Payments $1.48 1957 Buick Weekly Payments $1.48 1959 Oldsmobile "8". 2-Door Hirdtoo. Full poWer, radio, heater. Weekly Payments $6.48 1960 Ford Converllble, .wlomallc, radio, healer, power Meering and brakes. Weekly Payments $5.48 1957 Chevy Weekly Payments $1.48 1959 Lincoln Weekly Payments $8.48 $297 $197 $197 $197 $697 $597 $197 $897 BANKER'S OUTLET FE 4-5967 LIQUIDATOR OF AUTOMOBILES FE 8-7137 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road THE POKTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBEE 27, 1964 FORTY-THREE —Television Programs— Proeratnf furmshed by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice. il 2.-WJBlg-TV Channel 4-WWJ-TV Chonnel 7-WXYZ-TV Chonnel 9~CKIW-TV Chonnei 56-WTV5 FRroAY EVENING 6:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7)’Movie: “Dragonfly Squadron” (In Progress) (9) Peter Potamus (56) Big Picture 6:30 (7) (C!oior) News, Sports (9) Bat Masterson (56) Challenge 6:45 (7) News 7:00 (2) Dobie Gillis . Dobie takes up boxing to impress hi; girlfrieno (4) At the Zoo (7) Ensi^O’Toole Shore sailors warned about ship’s crew (9) Movie: “Possessed” (1947) Joan Crawford, Van Heflin (56) As Fairs Go 7:30 (2) Rawhide Man brings in outlaw shot in the back (4) International Showtime Hungarian ice revue (7) (Color) Jonny Quest (56) Focus on the U.N. 8:00 (7) Farmer’s Daughter (56) New Orleans Jazz 8:30 (2) Entertainers Guests: Carol Burnett, Carol and Bill Mc-Cutcheon, Bob Newhart, Caterina Valente (4) (Color) Bob Hope Detective suspicious as ex-convict spends time in church (7) Addams Family (See TV Features) (56) For Doctors Only ■ 9:00 Valentine’s Day Val decides to propose marriage (9) Time of Your Life Guests; Villagers Three, Sheri-Lee Hall, Michele Finney 9:30 (2) Gomer Pyle Gomer assigned to take colonel’s daughter to dance (4) Jack Benny Rochester takes first vacation in 20 years (7) 12 O’clock High Furlough proves not restful (9) Telescope (56) American Symphony 10:00 (2) Reporter (4) (Color) Steve Laurence Special (See lY Features) 10:30 (7) Manhunt (9) Mr. Fix-It 10:45 (9) Provincial Affairs 11:00 (2) (4) (9) News, Weather, Sports TV Features NFL Drafts Players Ex-Con Held in Bus Killing DETROIT (AP)-Police today I held a 32-year-old ex-convi(St I they identified as James E. i White of Detroit for inyestiga-I tion in the fatal shooting of a : city bus driver. A warrant' charging White i j with murder was to be sought I today, said Homicide Bureau I Inspector Hiram Phipps. ADDAMS^FAMILY, 8:30 p.m. (7) Visitors from un- I u* ^ u c friendly nation are jolted in quest for average, uncultured I White has denied the shooting family when they meet Addamses. ^ Lucian A. Fryling, 40-year- _____ p ! old Department of Street Rail- _______ aai ways driver, police said. STEVE LAWRENCE SPECIAL, 10:00 p.m. (4) Appear- Fryling was fatally wounded ing mth Steve in one-hour sp^ial are Allan aer^n Nij^ kjov 18 in an apparent robbery I sey RusseU, Juliet Prowse, Jill St. John and the Bitter End | attempt by a gunman who ^ Singers. - , t,Qarded his empty bus. After being shot, Fryling drove the bus two blocks where the vehicle ran over a curb.;and SATURDAY PRO FOOTBALL, 12:30 p.m. (9) Grey Cup champion- ^ : ship game pits British Columbia Lions against Hamilton ^ | stopped. Tiger Cdts. & t ' SAVE. $ f Hoyo Your FURNACE CLEANED NOW UET OUR SPECIAL PRICE MICHIGUI HEATING 88 Niwbarry Fi 2-2254 COLLEGE FOOTBALL, 1:15 p.m. (4) Annual Army Navy clash at Philadelphia’s John F. Kennedy Stadium ^ NFL COUNTDOWN, 4:00 p.m.’ (2) Scheduled: profile ^ of Redskin flanker Bobby Mitchell, review of league s best f rookies, and live' reports on NFL college-player draft in ^ progress in New York City. i 11:20 (7) Les Crane 11:30 (2) Movies: 1. “They Live by Night” (1948) Cathy O’Donnell, Farley Granger. 2. “Dangerous Profession” (1949) George Raft, Pat O’Brien (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (9) Movie: “Love in the Afternoon” (1957) Audrey Hepburn, Gary Cooper, Maurice Chevalier 1:00 (4) Lawman (7) Movie: “Son of Frankenstein” (1939) Basil Rathbone, BoriS Karloff, Bela Lugosi SATURDAY MORNING 6:10 (2) .News 6:15 (2) Farm Scene 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:45 (7) Americans at Work 6:55 (7) News 7:00 (2) Mister Mayor (4) Country Living (7) Images of America 7:30 (4) ( Color ) Bozo the Clown (7) Junior Sports Club 8:00 (2) Happyland (7) Crusade for Christ 8:30 (7) House of Fashion 9:00 (2) Tennessee Tuxedo (4) (Color) Hector Heath-cote (7) Buffalo Bill Jr. 10:00 (2) Quick Draw McGraw (4) (Color) Underdog (7) Shenanigans (9) Pinocchio 10:30 (2) Mighty Mou.se (4) F’ireball XL-5 (7) Annie Oakley (9) Supercar 11:00 (2) Linus the Lionhearted (4) Dennis the Menace (7) Casper the Ghost (9) Bugs Bunny 11:30 (2) Jetsons (Repeal) (4) Fury (7) Beany and Cecil (9) Hercules ^ WINTER PRICES ... Remodel now FE 4-2597 CALL DAY OR NIGHT Wtr H4urf M4 Iun4»yil PONTIAC, 6«2.064e WAHID LAKIi AAA 4 1091 C.WEED0N 1032 W®»t Huron Street FE 4-2597 • Bedrooms »Attics » Dormers [ »Kitchens | • Rec. Rooms Additions • Porches • Storm Windows • Alum. Siding | • Family Rooms iVo Pnrntrnt 'III Sitrhifi | CO/WPANY J„IViill.icSlm. 19.11 gieviii:i:eiiLi:i.i.iniM AIttr Hauri in4 tun4ijril }>ONTIACi 682-0449 WAUIDIAKI(MA4-I0»1 UNION LAKIi IM 3-2319 WATIRfORD 673-2142 ' ALL AWNING FE 3 7809 Dey or Night 919 Orchard loho Avo. ALUMINUM SIDING • AWNINGS t Storm WIndowi A Doori • PATIOS ENCLOSED • DOOR WALLS Showroom Op.n 8 A. M. to 5 P. M.. Lotor on RoqUo.t All Insurance Work AFTERNOON . 12:00 (2) Sky King (4) (Color) Exploring Focus on development of Los Angeles (7) Bugs Bunny (9) Canadian Football Preview 12:30 (2) Sergeant Preston (4) House Detective (7) (Color) Hoppity Hooper (9) .(Special) Grey Cup (See TV Features) 1:00 (2) Lone Ranger (4) Army-Navy game preview (7) Allakazam •1:15 (4) (Color) Army-Navy Game (See TV Features) 1:30 (2) Seekers (7) American Bandstand Guests: actor Jimmy Boyd, British singers Chad Stuart, Jeremy Clyde and Bobby Freeman 2:00 (2) Detroit Speaks ■2:30(2) Decisions (7) Wrestling 2:45 (2) Washington Report 3:00 (2) Sea Hunt 3:30 (2) Ripcord (7) Movie; “20 Million Miles to Earth” (1957) William Hopper, Frank Puglia. 4:00 (2) NFL Countdown (See Tv F'eatures) (9) Teen Town 4:15 Milky’s Party Time 5:00 (2) Mpvie: “Back to Bataan” (1945) John Wayne, Anthony Quinn. (7) Wide World of Sports All-Ireland hurling championship : international figure-skating exhibition. (9) Planet Patrol Dart sets up heat transmitter on planet Mercury 5:30 (4) (Color) George Pierrot Film visit to Congo (9) Rocky and Friend.s AFTER REWARD An 18-year-old tipster implicated White in the slaying in order to collect a $5,000 reward offered by Division 26 of the Amalgamated 'Transit Union, AFLrClO, to which Fryling belonged, said Homicide Det. Sgt. Edward Rohn. Police said they arrested the suspect at his^ apartment. A pistol found in his car was shown by ballistics tests to have been the weapon used to kill Fryling, Phipps said. Officers said the suspect had a record of three convictions, including burglary, receiving stolen property and violation of probation. Answer to Previous Puzzle ACROSS 1 Mark---, silver miner 6 Famous “Silver State”« 12 Come 13 Eluded 14 Lea ” 15 Classes of plants 16 Initiative (slang) 17 Fortification 19 •-Snead 20 Angry' 21 Mud brick 25 Marriage 30 Home of Pluto (Greek) 31 Wind instrument 32 Mine entrance 33 To a lower place (poet.) 34 Rich mine 38 Stringed instrument 39 Passageway 41 Call of distress 44 Smile of scorn 45 King of Jhdah (Bib.) 48 Marjoram 50 Steep^roofed 52 Blue stone”, 53 In time (music) 54 Black Sea port 55 Smallest DOWN 1 Juniper, for instance 2 Enfold 3 Help 4 Elephant tusks 5 More recent ; 6 Nullify 7 Made level / 8 Mover’s tciick 9 Summer drinks 10 Neck types (comb, form) 11 Furniture style 12 Electrical unit (ab.) 18 Bird 21 King of Israel 22 Part of column base 23 Norse god 24 Greek letter 26 Comstock — 27 Greek coin 28 Monk’s hood 29 Card game 33 Needle-shaped 35 Helmet nosepieces 36 Flower 37 Ibsen character 40 Lawful 41 Song for one 42 Mouthward 43 Dimension 45 Charitable gifts 46 Month (ab.) 47 Fuss I* 49 Mr. Edwards, actor 51 Miss'Lillie, singer 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 U 15 l6 17 8 19 26 21. 22 23 24 26 27 28 23 3o ■■ 31 32 F 34 35 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 bU si 62 63 S4 55 27 r Student Is All iVef LIVEBI^L. Eiiglmd (AP) — Henry Osahon, 27, a student from Nigeria, wrote in the Liverpool University ,newspaper last week that the university had “the largest collection of ugly, shabbily dressed and ill behaved girls in Britain.” ★ * ★ Thursday six of the coeds grabbed HChry as he walked-through the campus, pulled off his pahts, dragged him to a pond and threw^ him in. Henry admitted he deserved it. Wilson Plofis Visits ,. , to European Capitals LONDON m - Prime Minis-, ter Harold Wilson plans to visit . several major capitals of allied iEurqpe early next year in an effort to rally understanding and support the international policies of Britain’s Labor party government. ★ * * Informants, who reported his plans in London last night” said no definite arrangements have yet been made. William T. Taylor, lawyer, banker and manufactdring executive, was chosen 1^ recipient of the Alexander Hamilton Medal awarded annually by the Association of the Alumni of Columbia College. ★ ★ Grand Prix SLOT RACES 78 N. PADDOCK ST. Friday, 8:00 P.M. Mother and 3 Children Die in Kansas Wreck WELLINGTON, Kan. (1\P) -A young Oklahoma mother and three of her children were killed Thursday night when their car rammed unde^ a parked truck on the Kansds Turnpike about six miles south of Wellington. The Turnpike Patrol identified the victims as Joan Judd, 24, of Blackwell, Okla., and her 18-month-old daughter, 'I'erna Jo, and her son.s, Glen Dale,and Vern Raymond, 7. Confab at U. of M. ANN ARBOR (AP) - A research coi\fi‘rence to stimulate effective communication between .social scientists and college residence hall officers will be held at tlic University of' Mlehigan Saturday and Sunday. It is sponsored by the U S. Office of Education WlUSON Comic in Hospital to Rest After Risk Taken to Jest By EARL WILSON Veteran comedian Bert Wheeler’s reported recovering In Lenox Hill Hospital from a case of disobeying doctor’s orders in Washington last week. He disobeyed orders when Carol Chan-ning was Fall Gal for the Circus Saints & Sinners, and performed 20 minutes with Jimmy Dillon, though warned not to. The doctor then put him in the hospital for a rest. The waiters at the Plaza Persian Room gave a different kind of party to Robert Goulet celebrating the birth of his and Carol Lawrence’s son. "They chose a waiter to present Bob with a cake bearing the son’s name, Christopher Joseph. Then the waiter read this sentiment; ‘^Long life, lots of happiness, and we hope you should never be a waiter.” ★ ★ ★ Frank Sinatra’s big black-tie concert opening at the Las Vegas Sands this week, with Count Basie, has the droves of Sinatra fans battling loudly for choice tables and rooms. Jilly, his pal, made a remarkable reservation. Front table two shows, every night, for all 3 weeks. Garry Moore was In Turkey (Istanbul) lor Thanksgiving . . . Norman Rosemount, the personal manager, bought an $8,000 Italian-made Ghia limousine, one of eight In the world, the other owners being the Rockefellers and like that. He had to buy a chauffeur with it. ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . A top stage comedienne is very ill . . . Ethel Merman, looking thin and chic with her longer hair-do, is around again with her old escort Chester Babcock (that’s Jimmy Van lleuscn’s real name) . . . 'The excitement about Ross Hunter’s “$75,000,000 deal” at Universal reminded Bob Goldstein how he and his late brother Leonard Goldstein hired Hunter when he was Martin Fuss, a Cleveland school teacher, it\ Hollywood, for $150 a week. "And if I hadn’t been so generous,” Goldstein says, “I iould have got him for $100 a week.” Buddy Ilackett flew from his “I Had a Ball” .show in Detroit, and Richard Tucker from Chicago, for the services at Monti-:cllo for Arthur Winnrick, much-loved opcrjitor of the Hotel Concord . . Joseph E. Levine tixik over the entire 4 Scason.s Pool Dining Room for a press luncheon for Carroll Baker, returning from Europe to start “Harlow.” TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: One of Broadway theaters now serving drinks at intermission may drop the idea -- the bartender got mixed notice.s. WISH I’D SAID THAT: You can always' jiick out l|ie host [i jiarly he's tlie one who knows where to find his coat. KEMEMHICHED QUOTE; “Man is a large, irrational creature who is always looking for home atmosphere and hotel .service around the home.”-Jacob M. Braude. j Radio Programs- WJB(760) VyXYZd 270) CKlW(BOO) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPON(1460) WJBK(1300) WHFI-7M(y4.7) lilJ-CKLW, FuUon Lev liM-WWJ, BuitneM wjw, New., Mii.li WSYZ, nd Moroeo WJDK. Jack the Uellh WCAR, Boyd Careiirter WWJ, Phone Opinion ' liil! W.lE!^ Waller Cronkllo lATUSDAY MOHNINO tilO-WJR, Music H I8H6-CKLW, News, Jo* V» WWJ. Nows WPON, News, Ron KnluM IATURBAY aptrhNoon WXYZ. Sebastlon, Music, Nightmarish Experience for Actress CALCUTTA, India (AP)-“It was all those guns that got me,” said Shirley MacLaine. “I felt that if we accidentally tripped on a stone they mjght go off.” The Hollywood star told here Thursday of her experience with border guards as she tried to smuggle an Indian citizen out of troubled Bhutan. She said she was “tearing mad.” The Himalayan kingdom is reported to be in a stale of unrest after the defection and flight last weekend of its deputy army cliief of staff. Brig. Ugyen Tangbi, and"oilier officials and their families. The film star .said slic went to Bhutan on Nov. 1(1 as a guest of Lhendup Dorji, Bhutan’s acting prime minister wlio reportedly is now in London. She said a message from a Bhutanese official warned her last Sunday tlial “real trouble is brewing.” DECIDED I'D LEAVE Miss MacLaine said she and a party of six decided to leave at once for India. They tried to take with them K. S. Bhalla, an Indian working as Lhendup Dor-jl’s private secretary. But the border guards wouldn’t let Bhalia through, even when Miss MacLaine triwl to emphasize Ihiil she wa.s Dor-ji’.s guest. “Lhendup DorjI’s orders no longer hold good in Bhutan,” she was lold, ; ,j Miss MucLainc .said lluit she made an unsiiccesslul attempt to gel Bhalla oul, disguised as (lie cliauffeur of lier luggage Jeep. .She al.so died to scare the guards by popping off the flash or her camera, liiil lo no avail. NKiinMAHISII After a uightmarisli experience doininuted hy the .sight of the guards’ rifles and fixed bayonets, Mi.ss MaeLaino managed to eoiitact the Bhutan palace. King JIgmo Wiingehuk’i private seeix>'inry gave a Mafa conduct out of Gillian for the wtresa and her parly, Ipeluding Bhalla. After a twoday trip from the mountains, through Faktatan, they reached Caleutta. BI<; SAVIIN(;S! — 1964 Modal. Mu.» Go • HANQEI • WAIHinS g mFHlOillATOWt D SWEET’S •mi*Noi TESA of OAKLAND COUNTY MEMBERS OFFER / • LICENSED TV SERVICE competent, professional service. • SATISFACTION GUARANTEED / TESA members must service your electronic equipment according • SENIOR CITIZENS DtSCOUNF Senior citiiens are eligible tor lOr# discowt on all parts used fo service their equipment. FOR BETTER TV i RADIO SERVICE CUL ONE OF TKESE TESA MEMBERS; Grogan'S Radio-TV Hod's Raiio-TV 5965 LIvarnols, " 5)5 E. Walton, Pontia< ATTENTION ^ lake | HOME OWNERS THE PRICES ARE RIGHT m PAYMEISTS FOR 6 MONTHS • NO MONEY DOWN • CALL FE 4-4138 24-Hour Service FOUNDATION WALLS ADDITIONS ALUMINUM SIDING ______________________ ROOFING (r PORCHES | Woodfield Construction AUTOMATIC HUMIOlPldt? Naluie puls invigorating moisture into the air. Artificial healing dries it out. Because this moisture is essential for so many reasons, it must be replaced. Here's how: With an Aprilairo 1 lumidilier. Here's why: It adds moisture just as Nature does—as a vapor. No mists, no droplets, no white dust. Controlled by an accurate humidistal. Big capacity. No liming or mainlc-nance problems. Choose your new humidifier wisely—choose the best— Aprilaire. KAST 463 South Soginow AAodali For All Typ«« Of Haafinfl COOLING & HEATING CO. FE 5-9259 KITCHENS REMODELED ATTIC ROOMS BATHROOMS FOUNDATIONS WALLS I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE ANO PLAWS-WO CHARGE CALL FE 4-4138 Opon Daily and Sun. CALL DAY OR NIGHT ★ ADDITIONS^ ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING-AIDING STONE FORCHES WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION WINTER PRICE NOW IN EFFECT TO APRIL 1966 ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING FORTY-FOUR THE POyTIAC PRRSS^ FRIDAY, XOVEMBER ^7, 1964 TWO CDtORT One of/ every si* businesses [ way with the automotive indils-in (jhe nation, is allied in some I try. ^ Cattle Graze on Chief's Grave OPEN SUNDAY 10-6 P.M. Daily 8 - 8 P.M. Call FE 5-9452 >ntioc I Downriver I 5*9452 I AV. 5-3595 | SMEO SALE Saturday - Monday bays $10095 1259.95 oNi.Y XVV ffllatfealan Attpliattrr 6 North Main CI/ARKSTON MA 5-2700 PBYOR, Mont. - A parcel of land given by the statesman chief of the Crow Indians as symbol of friendship between the red man and his uninvited neighbors has produced its share of friction. * * * The conflict is between the Crow Tribal Council and the Montana State Parks Department, in charge of management since 1961 and the latest of three trustees! The Crows charge mismanagement of the small southeastern Montana - park; the state, in its latest' statement, said the Crows can have it back if they want to assume responsibility; the Crows say this isn’t exactly what they have in mind. Such a standoff would have been unlike the benefactor of both tribe and state, the late Chief Plenty Coups. BURIED IN PARK Plenty Coups and his wife were buried in the cottonwood Johnsons Had Quiet Holiday JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP) — President Johnson, nearing the end of an e;ctended holiday stay at his ranch home, had no announced appointments today. Johnson and wife Lady Bird spent Thanksgiving in seclusion, far as newsmen were able to determine. Malcolm Kilduff, acting White House press secretary, furnished little information about the First Family’s holiday activities. Kilduff said the President worked during the morning and kept in touch with the Congo situation. SPENT AFTERNOON ‘‘The President spent the af-ernoon quietly with Mrs. Johnson,” he added. At some point during the evening, it was understood, the Johnsons were joined by their two daughters. Lynda, 20, and Luci Baines, 17, for the traditional turkey dinner. ★ ★ A The daughters flew to Texas from Washington Thursday and, with friends, attended the Tex-as-Texas A&M .‘'ootball game in Austin before flying to the ranch. Lynda was a student at Texas until she transferred earlier this year to George Washington University in Washing- Pfeiffer and only Pfeiffer gives you its Draft Beer in Bottles l^folffor - On Tup mid lliidor (Jin (iup J(,'h nxnotly tlm Nitiim JSxti'H Sinoo(.h .... Morn P’litvorfiil .... t,hn L’li 11-,Th.h(/0 Boor grove he planted as a youth. It now is Plenty Coups §fate Park. Part of the complaint is that, through state neglect, cows wander through the park and across the graves. ★ ★ ★ Crow anger also is stirred by state prohibition of their ancient arrow game, because of public-safet)^. Indians compete in teams, one man throwing to see who can come closest to it. In reply to claims the game keeps tourists out, Donald Deernese, Tribal Council secretary, comments: ‘‘If tourists ran, it would be to get cameras and take pictures.” LEFT monument Plenty Coups, who died in 1932, at age 83, made the gift as ‘‘a monument to the friendship I have always felt for the white people. I desire that this park may commemorate that attitude and be a reminder to Indians and white people alike that the two races should live and work together harmoniously.” Plenty Coups is quoted on his explanation for helping rather than fighting the white man. Crows reportedly served as Army scouts and in other ways. Our decision was reached,” ! in .West he said, ‘‘not because we loved the white man who was already crowding other tribes into our country, or because we hated the Sioux, Cheyennes and Arap-ahees who were pushing us, but^ because we plainly saw that this course was the only one which might save our beautiful country for us. When I think back my heart sings because we acted as we did. It was the only way open to us.” ★ ★ ★ Plenty Coups was the last Crow chief. The tribe voted against choosing another, saying: ‘‘No living man can fill Plenty Coups’ place; therefore it is fitting that none chosen.” Errant Shell Brings Jail Term for Officer MUNSTER, Germany (UPI)-A military court here convicted the commander of a West German Army antitank demonstration last April in which 10 military observers were killed. Maj. Erich Remer, was sentenced to seven months in jail for negligent homicide in the demonstration during which a mortar shell scored a direct hit on a truckload of observers. Found Dead in Car BALDWIN (AP) - Richard Leroy Cowles, 20, of Baldwin, was found dead of asphyxiationiSheriff's meii said .Coles ap-Thursday in his car which was parently drove onto the ice and mired in ice on Wolf Lake with;his car became stuck W6dnes-it^ engine running, take County | day night.' 1005 69^(9^ /&o/ Return 8 s,. STl^RKO CX)NS()I/L: with FM/AM-STEREO FM RADIO E/VKER SOI NI3 SYSTEM // The ROMBERG • Model MM2670W Long. low. slim Modern styling with handsome louvered doors. Genuine oil fini veneers and solids. Record storage space. $80000 8 SPEAKER SOUND SYSTEM Eight Zenith Quality High Fidelity Speakers with Crossover Networks -two exponential horns, four 3Vi” tweeters. Mvo 12" woofers. 240 WATTS PEAK MUSIC POWER-(120 watts EIA power output) with Zenith Solid-State 240W Amplifier. Completely Transistorized ! Zenith Custom 2G "Stereo Professional" Record Changer • Micro-Touch* 2G Tone Arm • Pushbutton Studio Control Panel • See Your Nearest Zenith Dealer NOW see your Ford Dealer first You can be sure your son will gel a ear he can Iriist from a man you bolh can Irust. Ford Dealers sell more used cars to more people than anybody! Your Ford Dealer has a history of durability in your community. That's why he’s the man to trust when you want a used car. Right now he has a large selection of premium used cars, traded in on the hot-selling '65 Fords. Lots of low-priced late models, including our top-quality A-1 Used Cars. These "cream puffs" are inspected, road-tested, and reconditioned when necessary. And remember: your Ford Dealer wants you to come back some day-and trade that used car on a brand-new Ford, That's why he’s out to jalease. Happy customers come back! JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, INC. 630 Oakland Avenue Pontiac, Michigan The Weather ui. WMtiwr Bunau Farecasr Rain or Snow Tonigbt (Dttails an Paga 1) 1 THE PONTIAC '• ‘'ll' [S VOL. 122 NO. 253 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1964 —44 PAGES TroopsHunting Jo/^s Begin teday ~ n L I 2ndU.S.Iry ——;—-——— L ongo KgugIs gf ^grs Probe ■» 4- - LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo tfl-^nipers’ bullets still whistled through Stanleyville today as government troops pushed across the Congo River afteii^ttie^main rebel force. “Stanleyville is undeFlcQntroi, but all resistance has not been eliminated,” said an American Embassy spokesman. “The city is virtually deserted. The Congolese have fled to the bush. But snipers are still active and you can easily get a bullet through your head.” Space Trip to Take Over Seven Months, Send Thotos Back Since the U.S.-Belgian airborne operation began Tuesday, at least 59 foreigners including three Americans have been slain -by the Peking-backed rebels. The paratroopers rescued about 1,600 white hostages in Stanleyville and Paulis. In Paulis, which was seized yesterday by Belgian paratroopers, about 100 whites awaited evacuation on U.S. C130s. At least 170 foreigners were brought here'from Paulis yesterday. SCOUT AREA Belgian paratroops were scouring an 18-mile radius around Paulis for other foreigners. The U.S. spokesman said the evacuation of refugees '"^irom Stanleyville has been completed. The American planes brought a total of 1,070 refugees from Stanleyville and Paulis. Congolese and other aircraft have airlifted hundreds of others from the rebel zone. CAPE KENNEDY — Technical problems with the spacecraft today forced- postpone-. ment of an attemp|: to launch Mariner 4 to Mars on a picture-taking mission. No new launching date was setv The embassy said five Americans remained in rebel-controlled areas. They are Miss A.. Chansler, who is believed to be about 18 miles from Paulis in the village of Rgbita; W. Mc-Chesney, last reported in Wamba, and Mrs. F. J. Cunningham and her two children in Titule. All are connected with the Heart of Africa Mission of Fort Washington, Pa. STILL MISSING Other reports said several hundred whites of other nationpli; ties were still missing in the northern Congo, and the Belgian paratroopers were planning other rescue missions before leaving the country this weekend. Reliable reports said the paratroopers might drop at Bunia, on the eastern frontier, or Watsa, to the northeast, to save whites there from massacre at the hands of the rebels. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) (Candidates Gel Deadline lo File Expense Statement GAPE-KENNEDY m — Trouble with the shroud on the Mariner 4 spacecraft temporarily delayed the United States’ second attem^^t to explore Mars. The U. S. plans to launch the Mariner on a 7%-month journey to Mars to take pictures and probe scientific mysteries. An Atlas-Agena rocket was originally scheduled for launching between 9:28 a.m. and 12:41 p.m. to propel the intricate payload across 326 million miles of space for a brief encounter with the red planet next July 15. If successful, the unmanned craft will skin^' within 8,600 miles of Mars and radio to earth the .first close-up information ever obtained from the planet. Many astronomers believe that a basic form of life such as vegetation exists there. Returning Envoy Sees Advaqtages in Air Strikes Against North SAIGON DEMONSTRATION - Youthful demonstrators pick up rocks to hurl at -Viet Nam not police (background) Troops were under orders not to use force or charge. Saigon during antigovernment demonstration in Saigon this week. was relatively quiet today with martial law in force. N-Fleet, Economics Main Topics Hard Line Pays Ball Heads for Europe Talks forVietChief - WASHINGTON (/P) — The Johnson administration appears to be moving reluctantly toward a decision to undertake a cautious expansion of the anti - Communist war in Viet Nam in the hope of brightening the currently dim prospects for a peaceful settleraerU.w.^BBc Talks beginning here today among'Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor, Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Defense Secretary Robert , S. McNamara, and other officials are likely to lead to basic policy decisions by President Johnson next week. A dozen candidates in the Novi. 3 election who have failed to file campaign expense statements with the county clerk were today given until Monday to do so. Under state election Mariner 4 will not be able to detect life. Its maiii' purpose is to collect data that engineers need for designing life-seeking spacecraft that the United States hopes to land on Mars in 1969. HOPE FOR SUCCESS .. Project scientists hope that WASHINGTON (AP) - Undersecretary of State George W. Ball flies to Paris tonight for taiks there and in London with European leaders and U.S. officials on economic and military problems confronting the Atlantic allies. The undersecretary’s trip comes in the wake of a severe British financial crisis revolving about Wilson’s attempts to bolster the pound sterling and improve his nation’s international payments standing. laws, the deadline to file was Nov. 23. Of the more than 50 national, state and county candidates required to file written reports in Oakland County, all but 12 have done so, according to Election Clerk Mablc Child. She said she would contact those who have not filed today and if the statements are not received by Monday their names wouid be turned over to authorities for prosecution. F'ailure to .submit a detailed account is a violation of state election laws and is puni.shlfble by a fine of up to $1,000 and or two years in prison. A week’s grace period will have ended on Monday, t h e statement of disbursements and receipts actually was due last Mondpy, 20 days following the electii)!). A statement must be filed even if no funds are spent in a campaign. Candidates file tlu’ir statements in the county where they reside and not where they ran for office, said Mrs. Child. In addition to each candidate, the law rcfiuires that every treasurer of a political committee must file a report of election exiienscH. Eye Chang§ in Domestic Aid Plans In Today's Press Steel Contract DlH,snti.sfactlon with cui WASHINGTON UP) - Major changes in Federal Aid to Education and subsidies for th* poor through an unusual income tax formula are reported to be under consideration by the Johnson administration. The Washington Post said this week the two sweeping proposals were part of the still-secret series of reports being written by 14 task forces organized by President Johnson. The President plans to use these studies as a basis for his legislative program to b(|; presented to the new Congress. Proposals (o Improve education include a major program of providing federal scholarships and guaranteed loans to students attending college and altering the Notional Defense Edm-ation Act to allow grants for construction and teacher salaries, the newspaper said. 'I1i(? Post also reported that consideration is being given to a suggestion that state colleges and land grant colleges be encouraged to aid In solving city (iroblems ns they have helped farrner.s with agricultural extension programs. Mariner 4 wtil succeed where Mariner 3 failed an identical assignment Nov. 5: Mariuer 8 fizzled whin its glass shroiid collapsed within five minutes after launching, the shroud was unable to drop off and imprisoned the spacecraft, preventing it from unfolding its power-gathering solar panels and from achieving sufficient speed for the Mars trip. Mariner 3 now is. in lifeless orbit about the sun. A magnesium-strengt h e n e d shielld was devised for Mariner 4. Key topics for Ball’s conferences are expected to be the financial policies of British Prime Minister Harold Wilson and the U.S. plan for a multilateral nuclear force, jdntly owned and manned by the various NATO countries. And it comes less than one week after Wilson sharply criticized the proposed joint nuclear weapons force in a speech to the House of Commons on Monday. Despite Wilson’s stand, and the continuing opposition to the Says Tot Chatted on 'Hot Line' MLF project by French President Charles de Gaulle, the United States and West Germany — its two chief backers — agreed yesterday that the NATO nuclear fleet can be established. JOINT COMMUNIQUE In a joint communique following talks. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and West German Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder expressed hope that agreement on the multilateral force “will be reached soon and that as many member nations of the alliance as possible would participate.” Protests in Saigon Fail to Materialize SAIGON, South Viet Nam (iPI-Premier Tran Van Huong’s declaration of martial law and his. obmus intention to crush antigovernment riots with bullets if necessary appeared today to have won the scrappy leader a first-round victory over his militant opponents. Johnson and other top administration officials are reported to have divided feelings about Viet Nam strategy between sticking to confining the war almost entirely to South Veit Nam, and making some strikes to the north. Taylor, who returned to Washington yesterday, is known to believe that the time for new decisions is at hand. COMPLEX MISSION The two launchings were scheduled because of the complexity of the mission and because Mars is in position for a launching from earth only one month out of each 25. Mars won't be within shooting range again until December 1966. PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man. MPI — Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson says he once found one of his grandchildren talking on the “hot line” telephone, at his Ottawa home. The telephone, to be used only in extreme emergency, is a direct link with Washington and North American Air Defense Command Headquarters in Colorado Springs, Colo. Addressing a Liberal party rally at Portage La Prairie, Man., last night, Pearson said the 4-year-oId child found the telephone in a cupboard. “I grabbed the telephone and explained (on the telephone) that war had not begun,” Pearson related. Rusk and Schroeder were reported to feel that Wilson’s speech may have been delivered partially to placate the left wing of his Labor party and partly to establish a bargaining position when he comes here Dec. 7-8 for talks with U.S. officials including President Johnson, Predicted mass demonstrations failed to materialize yesterday and today. The powerful Buddhist leadership apparently was shying away from a showdown in the streets, at least for the present. The National Buddhist Insti-Uite was clo.sed by barbed wire strung up by the Buddhi.sts. Signs proclaimed there woqld be no demonstrations today. “That won’t happen again,” added Pearson, who has nine grandchildren. But a new blow to the MLF plan came from Brussels where parliamentary sources reported today that Belgium had decided to take no part in the nuclear force. ' \ Ponder Cause of Ship Collision NEW YORK UI1 ■— litoth ships Air air-sen rescue operation Eventually, 24 of the tanker’s aboard - and the tankers cap-bad radar. The fog was dense, was quickly put In motion. 43-member crew were .snatched Both captains said they were on variously in nightdrc.ss from Hie seas, from swamped BLUE WITH (-OLD the bridge. Yet the Israeli lux- ballroom attire, many of the lifeboats and from the barely Some of tlie men saved from ury liner and ‘h® Nn^weg an Oner’s 616 pa.s8engers floating forward section of the Hie sea were on y partial y clad, tanker collided, and 19 of lit, raced to decks to watch through vessel. Among them were a They were oil-smeared, blue tankers crew are dead or miss- mist. stewardess ~ the lone woman (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) lag. Armed police broke up a news conference given by Nguyen Yuan,Chu, former chairman of tlie National High Council, lie announced the merging of 18 political parties and student groups into a national revolutionary coiranittee pledged to destroy Huong’s three-week-old government. ON ALERT A maze of barbed wire was removed from around the palace of chief of state. Phan Khac Sun, Hut troops were on the alert to crush any renewal of the demonstrations wlilch were staged daily from Sunday through Wednesday. Furthermore he sees some advantages in authorizing and promptly undertaking air strikes either against Communist supply lines from North Viet Nam to South Viet Nam through the neighboring kingdom of Laos, or against Communist concentration points for men and su|)-plies in the north. IN DOUBT Taylor recently declared that the outcome of the conflict is now “very much in doubt ” But he said he thought attacks on targets in Red-held territory would probably make the Chinese and North Vietnamese Communist leadership realize that the conquest it seeks in the south will become too expensive because of impending damage in,the north. The ambassador is reported to believe that such attacks might tiius compel the Hanoi regime to reconsider Us policies and enter into negotiations on terms more favorable to South Viet Nam than are now considered p^issible. Another benefit Taylor is bc-lievisl to see in strikes to the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) How did it happen’? The two nations, Israel and Norway, re- rent pact jeopardizes Me-' Donald's Job PA(iE 15. Medal of Honor First of Viet war may ' be awarded soon PAGE Yale Prof I I.ONS reticent now about | Soviet spy charge arrest | PAGE 24. I Aren News. Aslrnlojliy Bridge Comics Editorials High School Markets ...... Obltiinrtes Bporfs Tlienters Wilson, ICnrl s Page 43 18-tl Another propo.sal would Increase federal aid to elementary and,secondary schools. Federal funds would be provided to Improve 1-ollege libraries, cspeelal-ly In small schools, also has l)cen snggesle.i. IMPROVE QUAIJTV To improve the quality of some colleges, especially Negro Institutions in the South, th(« ('ducat Ion task force has con-shhned offering federal fndds to allow faeulty exehange programs. The Post said that aiielher task force has come up with a “revolutionary ” plan to subsidize those persons earning less than $3,0tl0 a year Ihough the Ineome tax system, 'Hie plan woidd nllow n |»or-Bon with sufficiently low Income |to skip paying taxes and also receive a cash subsidy from the federal government. See Story, Page 3 |M)rtounty Circuit Court Tueoday. Carter and Catoman ftca conspiracy charges arising from a grand jury Indictment. They are accused of conspiracy to obtain money under (uIm pretonaas In the purchase of proporty for a Flint water pipeline project.' AAA A total of 121 persons have been listed as state witnesses In the trial slated to get under way before St. Clair Circuit Judge F,n would play an active role In the discussions preceding any policy decisions. There were strong Indications that McNamara remains the President’s chief adviser on Viet Nam. This view stemmed from the dlsdosuro that the State Department’s two top men Rusk and UndenuHsretary OiuTrge W. Ball — will be out of Washington during at least part of the discussions On Viet Nam.' ‘Birmingham Area News Skiing Season Preview Will Be Pf/ered at Show BIRMINGHAM' - Information needed to enjoy Michigan’s coming ski season will be available at the Community Itouse Wednesday. The center at Bates and Townsend has set that date for its second annual ski show. The program will begin at 7:30 p.m. Many-aspects of skiing will be explored from various angles. Two ^-color ski films, One by Stein Erikson and the other by Warren Miller, will be featnred. Austrian ski instructor Herb Thayer will be on hand to present tips and techniques to beginners and advanced skiers alike. There also will be a fashion show of appropriate styles for the slopes as well as for afterski activities. Representatives from area ski lodges will provide ^descriptions of nearby facilities. ‘ Display booths will offer additional Information. Tickets for the event now are on sale attiie Community House, the Sportsman, the, YMCA and the Varsity Shop. " BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Cran-brook School now is offering scholarships up to $1,500 for the 1965-66 academic year. Applicants must be eligible for die ninth, 10th or 11th grade by SejRCmber 1965. They must have above-average academic records, good school citizenship, leadership qualities and a proven financial need. While there are no fixed number qr size of grants, at present more than 12 pw cent of the students at the college preparatory boarding and day school for boys receive financial assistance. Inquiries about the scholarship program should be addressed to Howard Wert, director of scholarships at the school. Applications must be received by March 1,1965. SAVE MORE ON SIMMS 2nd FLOOR SHOP TONITE AND SATURDAY ELECTRIC GIFTS Are Lasting GIFTS • Zip Code too; Order at Able Printing/won't you} *, , 1 ABU RUBBER STAMP A -■ -- - Gives In'the 89 years since Louis Prang designed the first American Christmas card, the custom of exchanging Yule-tide greetings has become wid^pread. Because there a r e. often Thawing Salt (100 lbs.) $1.90 Water Softener Pellets $125 Free BeUmry - Orders Over $5 SCOTTS Lawn Care Products"^ 25% Off Buy Now for Next Spring! REGAL FEED and LAWN SUPPLY CO. Pontiac Store — 2690 W^Asyard — FE 2-0491 Clarkston Store — 6676 Dixie Hwy. — MA 5-2745 Drayton Store — 4266 Dixie Hwy. — OR 3-2441 j,nn M! a 102 Luxury Guest Rooms a » Banquet Room Meeting Room Ballroom • Cocktail Lounges lEW lOTEL I • Coffee Shop — 24-Hour Service • Sauna Baths • Heated Swimming Pool a • Beauty Salon • Barber Shop • Travel Service • Parking for 500 a • Limousine Service to airport every half-hour. a Phone Ml 4-1400 JO 4-5144 accommodations for your gracious living! . . . in Bloomfield Hilh \ lAJuuuA«j»Aux«.i.9j>.ujjLja,AAa«a am u aaaar£ FALL PERMANENT TIME . . . Make Your Appointment Now. RANDALL’S SHOPPE 88 Wa.vnc Kl. Ank Dii About Free Parking FK 2-1124 wlio like the charming femininity of lhl« beaiillful diamond • but who want lomeihliig different than the convtnliolial aelllng. Mere, lltegrnce that Idenilflea llte mnrifuh*-cul li enhanced by rlngi that iweep and curve - that drnniaihe Ilf flenilernetf and glitter. The .Store iFhere (Juolily Counts FPED N^aultTo. Pontiac s Oldest Jewelry Store Oinntl Trunk Knllronrt Wnli ti for Morb 'I'lmu Ml Yoni)il 28 West Huron Street FR 2-7257 qt^tions ctmcertiing Uie etiquette of sending cards, the foUewiiiR series of questions and answers is printed. The authority on C3iristmas catd etiquette is Mrs. Jeanette Bee, art director and a mmnber of the board of directors of Hallmark Cards, Kansas City, Mo. . - Does a person have to send a Christmas card to everyone who sends one to them? Mrs. Lee: No. I conrider Christmas cards a voluntary Expression of friendsl^ or love, not sopiething that needs a reply. Question: Is it good manners to have the family name imprinted on the card? Mrs. Lee: Imprinting is both proper and practical.' It becomes more widely used every year. Question: Should a husband include his wife’s name on cards to his business associates? Mrs. Lee: Generally nofji Business and social mailing lists are best kept apart. Only the husband’s nqme should be inflated on business cards. . How ^should Christinas cards be addressed if ' the sender knows only the wife or only the husband? * Mn.LM: It’s’ good form to address a card to a husband and wife even if you know only one of them. Qnestkm: Are. photographic cards, including pictures of the children, considered in -good taste? Mrs. Lee: Family photographs should be sent only to loved ones and very dose friends. Question: . Is it correct to send Christmas cards in unsealed envelopes? Mrs. Lee: It is socially correct, but a poor investment. First class postage makes sure your carefully selected cards and-personal messages will be quickly delivered and will be forwarded or returned to you, if un- delivered, without additional postage. ' . Unsealed cards will not be forward^ if your friends have moved ahd will not be returned to yoju unless you'guar-anteeretum postage. Question: If toe futfTetum address is jprintSl or written on the envelope*, does this a return card? Mrs. Lee: No. It is quite proper^ to use yoiir 'full return a^ess on either the front m* l»ck of toe envelope.) Not only does the Port Office Departmoit encouriage this, but your friends will appreciate this oppertunity to record toe information in their address books. Questions Is it atoright to send Christmas cards to families who have suffered a recent death? Mrs. Lee; Certainly, The comfort 61 hearing from friends will t|e especially appreciated during a period of mourning. Special care should be takennn'selecting the card for this situation. Question:' - When a married couple send a card, whose name should be written dr printed first? Mrs. Lee: ; .The person writing the card should put his or her narhe last. If a man signs the card, he should write; Mary and Bill Miller. The complete name should be written since there are so many Marys and Bills, so many Junes and Bobs. Qaestion: What is toe-proper form for family signatures? ‘Mrs. Lee: On a Christmas card from toe entire family, the father’s name shoujd come first, followed by mother’s,' and then the children in order their ages, regardless'of sex. -' Grown daughters’ names may be included; grown sons’ should not be. The expression “and family” is not recommended since it tells nothing of the children. Question; Is it all right to write on I beautifully imprinted cards ? [ Mrs. Lee: - I Every year more and more I people are .taking time to I give their cards the special 1 thoughtfulness of' a personal. ! note. This extra toUdh pay.s ' dividends and often hfings ^ you the same kind of personalized card in return. Bell & Howell Zoom Movie Cdmera Nearly liS years ago this quaint card was designed & the world's first known Christmas greeting. Sir Henry Cole, first director of the Victoria and Albert Museum and art shop owner in London, sold over a thousand hand colored copies three years later in 1846. Puritans in England frowned on such frivolity, but the small • Automatic Exposure • Autoload • Reflex $9450 ASK ABOUT FREE FILM and PROdESSING! MIRACLE MILE CAMERA SI40P BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MUE \v SHOPPING CENTER panels on each side showing charitable acts ^set ti helped offset this criticism. --------y By 1875, Christmas cards were being produced regularly irftti.e United States. Louis Prang, noted craftsman lithographer of Roxbury, Mass., designed these typical cards of the elegant 80’s. His-first cards were flowery and had little to do with the Christmas .scene; these were more in the Yuletide .spirit. Sometimes lithographed, in 17-20 different colors, the more elaborate cards were trim,med. with colorful silk fringe.. Complele (!ii,s(.iin Drapery .Service Mitel EEl.D’S iu;i*\ktmi;m' sKun-; 01. 1-SI7I ) K^NNEY'S SHOES PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE One Problem Never Solved GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) — One protocol problem that never has been solved, a c -cording Jehan de None, Chief of Protocol for the U n i t e d Nations, is what to do with the husband of a lady dipio- While an ambassador’s wife shares his rank, a lady ambassador’s husband is just an ordinary citizen. To Avoid Tangles Wash belts, aprons, handkerchiefs or any items with long ties by putting them together in a mesh bag in the same laundry load. Playtime Tent"' Set up a card table and throw a blanket over its top. Your small young.ster will play in his improvised tent for a long time without tiring of it. Put it away and do not try it for a few. weeks, then do It again and he will enjoy himself again. Scour Substitute If you hesitate to use scouring powder on toe bottom of good pots and pans for fear of scratching them, use sal soda concentrated dry. It contains no grit or sediment that might mar the surface. Choiee of 3 Patterns • Colonial • Blue Willow Homestead • Good Morning R3-Piece S(^I« Servici; for 12 Sets Contain: 12-—Dinner Platen 12—Halad PInlea 12—Urwid and Uniter 12--Hou|t 12—Haurera IR—Pupa J-»-Ch«p Plate 1—Eacti Creamer and Sugar 1—4Jravy Howl and lTIC4t mm 9-niiui Downlown INinliNe-A«rw«tmiNiMamMr NphI In FfN**#!** IMWIUNli AV am AIMt i IIMBt HMI ' I ................ Who is beer made for anyway? ^tween a man’s first and second childhood th^re is a period known as grownuphood, when some men like to act their age and drink beer type beer. ^land tasting things are perf^ly wonderful for anyone who likes bland tasting things. And we’re not linocking them. Aftei^ all, we love babies and you can’t give a baby anything to eat or drink that isn’t bland. But our brewmaster is u^der the impression that beer is brewed for grownups. He also believes grownups should haVe a choice when they buy beer. He doesn’t believe all beer should taste the same. So Drewrys is brewed to give you a choice. It’s not bland beer. Our brewmaster uses expensive Fuggle hops to give Drewrys more of the be^ taste, beer smell and beer feel that professional beer drinkers look for in a glass of beer. He figures that anyone, whether he’s 21 or 81, who plunks down his good money for beer deserves to get the kind of beer he wants. And if he wants a beer with more beer taste, more boor smell and more beer feel, he should get it. That’s the only kind of beer that Drewiys makes. If there are some professional beer drinkers around, Drewrys is in the bars find stores for them to enjoy. After all, they’re paying for this kind of beer. Why shouldn’t they get exactly the kind of beer that they’re paying for? THE rOXTIA^ PRESS. FlUDAV; NOVEMBER 27, 1964 r MARKETS. The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown prcKluce bv growers and sold by them jn^holesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the ' Detroit Bureau of Markets as of ...Wednesday. Produce ■ Apples. McIntosh, I Apples, N. Spy, bu........ Pears, Bose, bu. VEGETABLES Beets, looped, bu............ Cabbage, curly, bu. ........ Cabbage, red, bu............. Cabbage, Std. Carrots, Cello Carrots, topped Cilery, Pascal, Celery, Pascal, Celery, Root, ' Onions, djy, 50-lb. bag ■ Parsley Root ........... Parsnips, bu........... Parsnips, celio "Trodihg h Slack Stock Mart Moves Uneyehly Reopen Files oirDr. Ward ■Sixth Woman Found Dead in West London will high-„ ^ er interest rates Interest Rate Hike.., Will It Helfi or Hurt? By SAJA DAWSON ^ AP Business Newit Analyst NEW S'ORK-Along with Itie dug. The big .supply kept bor- seem to be deterred in their borrowing eharges moderately low. rowing by higher costs, Bank-LONOEK MARKET regard higher rates as i •turkey leftovers Arhericah "con- The questton'tod.ay is whether I sumers, businessmen and bank-; the furttjer increase in short-' ers today are faced with other bit of unfinished business: NEW YORK (AP)—The stock jthart a point as it Jaced a- new r Up fractionally were du Pont, market moved unevenly in I lawsuit; ' ! Chrysler, a^nd U. S.,Steel, slack trading early today. i MirOFR Stock exchanges .were closed Changes of most key stbckp _ . " , Thursday for the Thanksgiving j w^re fractional. Tobaccos, electrical equip- ; j Q[yjnoN * , * ments, aerospace issues a nd g,, ^ad stretched-this to a four- i yard reopened its tiles on the so far offered. American Teiephone declined I implements were steady to day ^gekend. . - | Stephen Ward case today in. ,-ange from very '/4 to 66V4 on .an opening block mgner. , opening blocks included: j ggarch for'clues in the- death i,,, i j.,, of 10,000 shares and sold slight-, Oils, utilities and mail order-1 General Motors, off ^/2 at 96^/4; g prostitute, the sixth in ! u . t, ly lower ii^later trades. The retails were a, little lower. ^ ion 5,600 shares; and^Pennsyl-1 west London within a year, ^ Ri'-'-*t Federal Communications Com-^ Top steelmakers moved irreg^ vania Railroad, up % at 41% on | The latest victim was t^ mission has announced rate ularly to the upside. Motors, 2,000. . . - i tooed’ Margaret McGowan. 23; cuts for long distance telephone rails, chemicals, drugs and ' Wednesday the Associated ; Her naked ijody was found half calls expected to total about building materials were mixed, i Press average, of 60 stocks; ixn ied on a parking lot ^ I- term rales may "iiffect .the rates more a preventative tha» a cufe. • ■ ;! Advocates of easy moneyitivill buy none of this. They say dnly Losses of about a point were dipped 1.3 to 329.1. Prices were mixed on the American StocK Exchange. WARD CASE G1RI.S One of the five, Helen Bar- up girl' ^y'li iiiiirdc Tiplinc, j them? . Scotland TIte , an.swers Bankers argue alorfg with the businessman the small Fed that' there are plenty of f™=^t'n.out when in- available funds to hold the line rates go up.._Euen speh on the rates lor mortgages ^ n,oderaJe h<>o.l as this week s in.stallmeni loans. Reserve/dis- Ohe uncertainty, however; is r«unt ..rate is seen bs speihng. economic expansion. How fast it ihe-yng-hved bp.si- comes and how pigh'it goes will atleci the demand for long-term, m 96 . swank Kensington High Street expansion, the warning ol ^ ■ Wednesday. Police said •'asy-inoney advocates. tiimncing. Bank ecdnomLsts say_ tlial moderately higher interest harges and a bit tighter credit speculative boom The stock market also faltefed this week in the belief that higher fates made future inflation n^ded ‘To ' nip Tnv ^nd economic growth ' " uncertain and thus could clip some dollar value frohn business profits in coming months. But, -she . was a woman of many viTHiki.-' names. Economic expansion is a cold rr'^^UR MRiKI;,. * * W sounding phrase that can be But they admit that when the slock market has been As Frances Brown she gave translated in terms of jobs, in- sucii a fever strikes, neither ; wrong almo.st as many times as ev idence for the defense in the comes, .s.ales, profits, taxes, busine.s.smen n o r consumers it's been right, trial last year that convicted building — or in terms of liie osteopath Stephen Ward of run- |)ossihilily of inflation and even ning a vice rihg. llie future likelihood of making ^ ‘ Ward was tried in the wake of, a quick buck, . the scandal which torced his Many bankers had been plug- ji friend .John F'rofurno to resign gjug p,,- higher interest rates ^ as war minister after adniKting and tighter money before the* % he lied to cover up his affair British forced American hands ^ ^ V* jt ** ^ S H Successful ^Investing ^ ^ S h % J* - ^ ' with call girl Christine Keeler, ryp^king theirs drastically. The TOOK POISON ' hankers cited fears of a rim- Ward took poison before he was inflation, sefltenced. Miss Met^owart -- STKL'GGUNG EXPANSION otherwise known as ''■^1,1 the business expansion, now almost four years old, is slruggling just now with a setback from* auto strikes. So higher interest rates at By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “We qre a happily married couple with M.IMMI in the savings hank (u he used suuii as a down payment on a home. Should we lake, this money Brown, Susan Edwards, Frances, Quinn and Anne-.Sutherland — took flowers to him as he lay dying in hospital. She testified, at Ward’s trial , ■ , that she visited his apartment his time wou dn t ^ welcomed .twice with another prostitute for ‘^y «dv«<'ates ol a quick bedroom four.somes. "''"‘‘.''y >e.sumplion ol ir ir ir ( limb to iTiuch higher ground. Her body was idenliiied by a; * ^ pink., black and blue tattoo on j >he economy al.so is a bit her left forearm, a de.sign of skiUi.sh over the chaAce of, Iron- _ Howers. the words “mum and hie iii the steel industry when; pp,,H( .j,, g short lime. Shun any dad" and the name “Helen" labor negolialions open early oir.i-s lo do that for Detectives were convinced next year. The worry is lest a .y^g that her murder was linked with generous wage boost miglil .set Money in slocks is usually that of five other -{irostitules olf another wage-price spiral' |„ade by careful selection and whose nude bodies liave lieen spelling inllaliop and the further, gj-owth over a period of time found since last ,N'o\ ember. loss.ol purchasing power by tlie „|. py Buying overlooked issues dollar. with" I Bankers have contended lliat seems. lias been excellent growth liere wliicR should continue. (As an alternative "suggestion, you iniglil consider buying directly a life insurance stock itself. If I, 1 recommend Commonwealth out and invest it in, stocks? Do Life Insurance of Kentucky, .sell-you have any suggestions for , lug around 40, which — in ad- dilioti lo its insurance operations -- is itself a sort of mutual fund because of its large inve.st- investment to bring us a lice profit quickly? ” R.K. My advice is to leave Vum i ■overy and' resumption of Ihc ,noney in the bank. To invest ill slocks Willi a time limit i always risky procedure. No one can pick stocks that certain to reap , , , • , > liigher interest rates were need- thelemy, 22 knew several girls, speculative named in the Ward case. . • , . r ... u In hunting the killer or killers, ^ detectives have questioned ev-CI V one of l,ondon's 8,000 known' A 'RE.SPONSE prostilutys about their clients 'pi,^ Fed0*il * Reserve liolds and protectors. Tliousands of digi raising inieresi rales on tile clienls and proleclois have (jiirrowiiig Ibis, week licen quesHoner^ also^ |,,j merely a response lo the Bank of hiiigland's liikiiig ils with the right timing — and it s easy as it someiimes 7 per cent froiO 1 Dcicclives sa,\ lliev are left I willi two llieorics - - eillier maniac i.s among the drivers ^ who prowl West I,o,idon picking; pi'olecl the pound slciiing c gang lia.s I'llO s of dis- rate lo 1 per keep dollars roiinlrv. Q. “I would like lo invest for my graiid.sons (they ivill he Bar Mi/.vahed soon) about $1,000 eaeh. I have had rec-oiiimemled Life l,iisuraiice In-ve.slors ami General Tel. &' Elec. I would appreciate your opinion and any alleriiative sugge.slions." I.S. in I Life Insurance Inveslor well-managed mutual fund spe-ils [ ciali/iiig in the type of shares from 3'i lo I ils title I n d I c a I c s. T li e r c ticcing I he major holding of Life Insurance Invesiors. i Genei al Teleptione seems fine for your purpose in every way, and I recommend itS'purchase. Roger Spear’s new 48-page Investment Guide is ni> w available to ail readers of Hiis column. Clip this notice aOd send $1.(KI with your name and address to Roger E. Spear in care of this newspaper, Box 1618, Grand Central Stn-tion. New -York City, N.Y. 10017. (Copyright 19641 III lo Safety Chief Appointed at H Fisher Body soe- / Seven State Offices; Robbed in Month Raft Survivors Return Home 'I'he American cciilral banking system exprcsscii coiilidencc il oiiliimc Ihc policy of recent years: keeping rales on sliort-Icrm money liigli willioiil any lioosl in Ihc rales on llie long term liori'owing by busnicss for I.ANSING (Al’i S c V c n i oxpaiision and by consuiiicr.s lor ; NATCIH’I’Ot’IIE.S, l.a, iAI*» Dciniii area branclics of Ihc i .such lliiiigs as new homes, autos j The .survivors ol a rt agic out Secretary of Stale’s office have I and appliances. ! Ing on Hie Red River liml been hiirglari/ed In the past ( The |)olicy has worked he- 'I'hanksgiving dinner al a hospi nionlli, Sccrelary of Stale cause there was a conliimally I |al here and llien hoarded a bus growing .supply of Inveslmeiil to ride liack lo Dallas, Tex money for sucfi loiig-li'i in fiuaii The bodies; of I wo liovs wlio Hare said loda\'. But, for llic most pari il's liar(ll\ worlli llic cflorl imv .. added 'I’lic largest liaiil \^as $4.50 al llic Van Dyke Inaiich, Nov, 9 'I’liicvcs got only $2,25 at an-ollicr lirani'li and $92 50 al an oilier. Short Quake Strikes Southern Alaska Area ANCHORAGE; Alaska 'il’i A sliori. lull sharp earlh(|iiake liil this soul hern Alaska arya ri'u alaiiil !i 10 pm (Alaska Slaiid-I aril 'I’ime i Iasi nigh( No iliimiigc was rc|ior(cd, hill \ llic Icmliloi jollcd dishes a mil : kMlckluiiieks and lu'oiigtil y mo-I' III I mcidary cliill to lliousaiids who I II e (Icviisinliiig Sales Show Increase at Consumers drowned wlieii a riilt I allci smasliing iiiio a piling licre VVednesda were |■|■(■ovcred Tlnirsda\ a|isi/ed III lilgi Albert Lov.se, 142 Cadillac, lias been ap|s)inled chief of plant protection and safety at llic R 0 n I i a c Fisher Body Riant, accord- j ing to A I g c r V. Conner, plant director of industrial re-lalions. l,ov.rmile ' below Hie Grand Keore Hridge. A. II Ay III 0 II (I, Coii.siiinei N Rower Co, hoard elialrinan, an nminced lhal In Hie 12 monllisi ended Del. 31. 1964. kllowall liour s ales of eleelrieily In erea.sed .seven per eeni and vol | SURVIVORS lime sales of imliiral gas live The oHier surviving Imys, per eeiil as eompared with Hie ranging In age Irom 12 lo 16, 12 months ended Del .11, 1963 | were Ifolicil Carlncy, Daniiv * * * I SIclicr, SIcven .Sell/,, itoy l.alim Gross operating revemic rose and i.ee Wright ’I’hc coimsclors B 0 d y plant. He was ap|Miinled chief of plant pro COIN led Ion and safety In 19,57.1 th((iuike ol March 27,1 live per cent, aiinaiiiUiig ’I hc 'i|iiakc was reported “qiilli sci'crc, hut sliorl only one j loll’’ al Hic arinv’s iicmliv Fori I Itloh/ird-ion. UIVinSNIlt lig< I ANBD P« tin, *1 P«/ Sill rM (••rim .k\. $;ilUI.!r/0,INHI In Ihc most l'2 inoiiHi period In eulnrglng unit linproving Km elrelric nml gUH HYnleiiiM iinil geiiernl liicllKIrN In meet Ihc neeiin of Mlchlgnii'it iNnv. I, HHI3 IbroiijTh Oe(. 31, 1914, muIiI Ayinniiil. The coui|)«nv’.M'sei vice men eiicoiiipHsses 06 of Hie 08 cmiie lies of Miclilgan’s Lower Reiilii-siila. Rail Tragedy in Japcln Kills 2 and Hurts 47 ’ Knriilngn |ier s h u i e on Hie n V e r M g e niimher ol I'oliiiiioo .'ilinreii lailMlmnlliig were $2 ;*9 ’l ilts compHi es Willi |2 ’/I In Hie .l’7. ihonHi period ended Ocl 31, 1983, Icrald ililile of (;ikco,j III 'I’ex , and Ken F.dgar of Tvlci, Tex SARROKO, ,lapaiM4'i l(wo womt'ii wore klUprl . I • n • f “it** other persons iii)oredlfo- News in Driel i^«‘" '• 4h- I Imiir commuter Iruili IrnveDnK ^ Two rllleM wKh Mllm bed into fi #i- ' .scopes were reported .sloleii ves i '"'K'’ " '"'k "»«' 'b’l’nIU'd, i lertliiy Iroin the ciir (JI .lei iiiiie I ^ kIx - epacli liiin U>,ar of Dell oil while pfli'kml ‘’nwhed lido Hie truck inln^fg Ml Hie Villa Ion. iMl Rnikvlnw, «l'|>nietilly before M vv*ii. Luke Orion EsHmaled vnliie ol big could he soilmM, niid iliO Hie missing Hems is $240 | dei «IM, All Hie cmsumUIps wiTP ! on the flrsl train, which wag .Inseph Wells, 197 Waslihiglnn, j ((-HveliiiK on the main no#-■•-polled to, police today Hie u„„ „orllnrn Hiell ol-a 'ilKI-poond deer that was lied Id Ids cm lo front of the Imiise Till’ I.Niol id l.itkes MnloreHea aioioal nimmiige sale, 128 W Rike, Nov. 28, Sal , 8 8, i adv. islaiHl of Hokkaido. More Ilian 30 nilllhm |i«iN^g In the 11 S. play wima klwf /lrf nnmIcMl liiMtninient. c