The Wlather J!.*. mmm awns ijiwmi htt Flwhi, Cold (MMb Mhnt| VOL. 128 NO. ! THE BONTIAC PRESS oneupr Edition ★ * * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 19H.5 -44 PAGES Cutback Hits 149 More Bases .... .. Hospital Reply Expected to Bronson Report Today Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital officials were expected today to reply to findings issued Friday by Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson in the ether-injected deaths late last month of three patients. Hospital Administrator Harry H. Whitlow scheduled a meeting for noon today of the hospital’s board of directors. Object of the meeting was to review the three-page report issued by Bronson following a week-and-—----------------*----a-half investigation, which Mon Dies; 4 Flee Fire in Dwelling A 33-year-old Ponttac mar died early yesterday In a fire which gutted the upstairs of a two-story frame house at 262 State. began Nov. 22 after the three surgery patients died from accidental injections of ether. Bronson concluded that no criminal charges were warranted in the tragedy. But, the prosecutor charged there is abundant evidence of inexcusable laxity and deplorable negligence in the use and control of anesthetic procedures as well as in other related hospital procedures." Bronson said his report did Dead is Luther Falin, whose | not direct attention to any one body was found lying in a hall-individual because it would be way after ho apparently lost his | “unfair." He said there was ,way in trying to escape the. “cumulative responsibility." A supplemental report, is-by Bronson’s office, HARRY H. WHITLOW blaze. A brother of the victim, El- mer Falin, 28, made his way outside after being roused by a downstairs occupant of the multiple dwelling. Three other persons also escaped. Fire Marshall Charles Metz said the victim apparently fell asleep on a couch while smoking, starting the blaze. UNDER CONTROL Three engines and a ladder unit responded to the alarm just before 3 a.m. The flames were brought under control to less than an hour. Metz estimated damage to the building at about $U>00 and placed loss of contexts at $500. Interest Mike Plunges Mart Opening Hour Trade Highest Since 1933 WASHINGTON (AP) - Overriding the President’s economic policy, the Federal Reserve Board increased interest rates -to their highest level in 35 years today and the stock market reacted by plunging. A total .of 3.94 million shares changed hands during the first hour the New York Stock Exchange was .open, toe largest total for an opening hour since the exchange began listing hourly transaction figures in U33. Some blue chip stocks fell S or more potato. At the end ef the first half hour, the Dew (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) In Today's . Press Af C Says U. S. could destroy North Viet virtually overnight-PAGE B-l. Wilson I Rebuffs Afrloans: “Won’t star! Rhodesian war." - PAGE A-7. Yule Storks Two apodal feature! start today - PAGES A-l, Ci Area News ........A-4 Astrology ....... B-6 Bridge ......... B4 Crossword Puxzie .. D-ll Comics .............M Editorials ...... A-l Markets ...........r. C4 Obituaries .......M Spirts .......D-1—JV4 Theaters ....... TV-Radio Programs D-ll WOtsm, Earl.......D-ll Women’s Pai stated, however, that Dr. Stanley E. Abrams, 42, of 7127 Brookridge, West Bloomfield Township, was seen draining ether Into a bottle, later discovered to have contained a small amount of Surital, another anesthetic. LEFT ROOM “It is apparent that Dr. Abrams left operating room No. 1 without properly disposing of toe Surital with toe ether content," the report stated. The operating room privileges of Dr. Abrams and Dr. Lloyd Goodwin, 51, of 48 Oxford, Pleasant Ridge, were suspended seen after the investigation opened. Dr. Goodwin, chairman of the anesthesiology department, re-iprtedly injected two of the patients with the fatal anesthe-a. Bronson said that evidence gathered in the investigation 'reflects serious and reprehensible derelictions on the parts of several of the professional staff personnel as well as the hospital administration itself which in its composite effect resulted in these tragic jdeaths.” FAILURE ON RULES The deaths, he said, resulted primarily from fallure to observe usual hospital rules. The prosecutor said that If the results of an autopay performed on toe first victim had been followed up with proper communication with appropri- DR. STANLEY E. ABRAMS DR. LLOYD GOODWIN not have been toe loss of toe two additional lives. Eight-year-old Kimberly Ann Bruneel of 2599 Ivanhoe, West Bloomfield Township, died Thursday, Nov. 1|. Her death was followed the next day by those of William M. Ketchum, 12, of 250 W. Webster, Fern-dale, and Mrs. Gerald Covington, 24, of 234 Boland. In the event of such a tragedy as that which happened at ,the local osteopathic hospital, Bronson said an immediate and complete investigation is the best protection against repetition. Earmuff Weather for Pontiac Today Earmuffs and nose warmers will be the accessories of the day as the weatherman predicts cloudy, arid and windy weather. Skies will partially clear, and 15 to 30 mile winds will diminish to 5 to 15 miles by this evening. Tomorrow will be partly many and slightly warmer. Accompanied by fair skies, the warming trend will continue through Wednesday. The lowest reading in (town- GM Truck Builds 10,987 Units for BestNoyember November deliveries of trucks ahd buses built by GMC Truck and Coach Division totaled 10, 967 units, making last month the best in the Division’s history. Calvin J. Werner, vice president of General Motors and divisional general manager, reported last month’s domestic retail deliveries topped by 38.8 per cent the 7,918 sold by GMC Truck and Coach in November 1964. During the past 11 months, deliveries have increased 11.4 per cent over the comparable period in 1964. De Gaulle Is Forced Into Election Runoff PARIS UP) — President Charles de Gaulle maintained silence tpday after French, voters handed a stinging rebuff to his bid for first-round victory in the presidential election. With a record turnout of 84.9“per cent of the voters, de Gaulle polled only 43.96 per cent of the vote in the first round of the voting yesterday. This forced him into a run-off Dec. 19 with left-winger Francois Mitterrand, the’No. 2 man the six-man- race. Some Gaullist officials had predicted before the election that if d'e Gaulle did not get the massive endorsement he wanted, he would refuse to run in toe second round. Other officials differed. ‘The general is a fighter,” said one supporter, “and he will not abandon the combat now." IN THE BAG A second-round victory was considered in the bag for de Gaulle if he runs. City Woman Dies in Crash Injuries From Friday Mishap Fatal ta Man Oakland Highway Toll in *65 140 A 66-year-old Independence Township man died last night, two days after being struck by a car, and a 45-year-old Pontiac woman was killed yesterday in a three-car accident which hospitalized four other persons. ★ aw, Dead are Paul G. Gaber of 9820 Sashabaw and Mary C. Sanchez of 426 Midway. Gaber died at Poatiac General Hospital from injuries suffered Friday evening when he was hit by a car oa Sash-abaw Road near the intersection of Pino Knob ia Independence Township. Alycetiae A. Townsend, 26, of 3851 Granger, Brandon Township, driver of this c a told Oakland County Sheriff deputies Gaber tuddenl walked across toe darkened road in front of her. She was not-held. 3-CAR COUJSION Mary C. Sanchez died at Pontiac General several hours hfter cars collided at the intersection of Ortonville and Oak Hill in Independence Township. She was a passenger in a car driven by Lloyd J. Barger, 45, of 2876 Walsh, Avon Township. Barger suffered a concussion and was reported In lair condition at Pontiac GencraL Oakland County Sheriff a deputies said Barger’s car collided with one driven by 56-year-old Raymond Low# of 499 Omar and then hit a third vehicle driven by Nathan R. Menold, 61, of Davison. Action to Save $410 Million -McNamara Locations of Affected Facilities Won't Be Told Till Wednesday WASHINGTON M — Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara today ordered 149 more base closed, consolidated or substantially reduced. McNamara told a news conference the actions, calculated to save $410 million a year, “will be completed without decreasing military effectiveness or limiting, our current and future activities in Southeast Asia." Coupled with 763 previous base closings and entdowns ordered since March 1661, the new moves will bring total savings to $1.5 billion n year, McNamara said. The affected bases are located in 39 states, thf District of Columbia and 10 foreign coun- Although his image was bruised by the outcome yesterday, it is not likely tout he __ will change his attitudes and ways. In department after depart-1 McNamara told reporters that AP Mwtafax ment where he had shown strength in other electoral tests, de Gaulle polled less than 50 per cent of the votes. His pride must have suffered additionally from the knowledge that election of the president by direct vote was the result of a constitutional change he had inaugurated. ONCE BEFORE Only once before, In 1848, did French voters have a direct say about who would be elected president. These were the results from nearly 24 million valid ballots in metropolitan France: • Charles de Gaulle 10,504,-007 for 43.96 per cent. • Francois Mitterrand 7r 655,042 for 32.04 per cent. • Jean Lecanuet 3,770,771 for 15.76 per cent. • Jean-Louis Tixier-Viga-nancour 1,269,095 for 5.31 per certf • Pierre Marcilhacy 414,056 for 1.73 per cent, • Marcel Barbu 278,420 for 1.16 per cent. congressmen are being informed how their districts are affected but that formal announcement of the 149 bases in the new list will not be made until Wednesday. The 23 foreign bases, account-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Lowe and his wife, Helen, 53, a passenger, were hospitalized. Lowe is in serious condition with Internal injuries and his wife reported in fair condition. Menold suffered a fractured skull and facial lacerations and la in serious condition. to be recorded were returns from about 446,000 voters in overseas territories. TWO FACTORS The record vote was probably caused by two Important factors: it was the first time in more than a century that Frenchmen took part directly choosing a president. And was the first presidential campaign where the candidates {entered millions of.homes yip television. Mitterrand, 49, got his support from the Communists, the Socialists and some radicals, and his total was not surpris-log. Judges to Test Legality of Act Court Test Started of Law Extending Terms CRASH AFTERMATH — 1Wb is the wreckage:^ the Eastern Airlines propeller- town Pontiac prior to S a.m, > driven Gohsteilation, which crashed in mid- today was 33. By 3 pjn. the me*’ cury had inched to a freezing 32. air with a Trans World Airlines Jetliner, then fell near North Salem, N.Y., Saturday. av rtwMu Four died, a total described as miraculously low. The TWA plane Umped to a safe landing in New York City with 30 feet of a wing torn off. The planes carried a total of 112 persons. (See story page 2.) Wheels were set In motion this morning by Oakland County Circuit Court Judges James S. Thorburn and Philip Pratt to test the legality of recent legislation extending terms of circuit Judges. In a joint statement, Thorburn and Pratt announced that a suit, entitled James S. Thor-bum gnd Philip Pratt versus the secretary of state, the Oakland County clerk-register and the Oakland County Election Commission, has been filed. The two are seeking a “declaratory judgment” from toe Miehigaa Supreme Court. Their case must start in toe Oakland County Circuit before the high court can consider it Pratt said the suit applies only to Oakland County and the effect the new law has on its circuit court. However, a Supreme Court ruling In favor of the judges could affect other circuit courts in the state. * ★ * The case was assigned to Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem who excused himself as an interested ,party. Ziem tentatively scheduled a hearing for next Monday in which the state and county officers being sued must show cause why toe new Jaw should not be declared unconstitutional. Pratt said another judge must be assigned to hear the case. Pratt and Thorburn originally were scheduled to seek reelection next year, whea toe county's four remaining circuit Judges are scheduled to run and when two new judge* will be elected. However, the State Legislature in October passed a law extending Pratt and Thorburh’s terms until 1979—thus staggering the terms of office. { “We were appointed under a specific act," Pratt said. “We ran for a term of office set by that act. Can the legislature, after toe election, extend that term?’’ Pratt and Thorburn were appointed to office in lata. 1963 by Gov. Romney. Several judges in Wayne County also had toms extended by the new la#. READY RENDEZVOUS - A crane raises the Gemini 6 spacecraft into position yesterday atop a Titan II rocket at Cape Kennedy. Astronauts Walter Schirra and Thomas Stafford am scheduled to be sent aloft into space from Cape Kennedy a week from today for a rendezvous with Gemini 7 with astronauts Frank Borman and James Lovell aboard. Astronaut Performs 1st Space 'Striptease' MANNED SPACE CENTER, Houston, Tex. UP>— The first space “striptease” by a U.S. astronaut was performed successfully today and James A* Ldvell Jr. rode comfortably through space in his “long john” underwear. • “Jim’s all out of his suit and comfortable,” command pilot Frank Borman reported to the Carnarvon, Australia, tracking " station during the 29th orbit of the 14-day Gemini 7 endurance mission. The.experiment, treated humorously by the astronauts in their conversation with ground stations, was important because it was a step-toward the time when spacemen on long flight! #U1 be able to perform their duties in a shirt-sleeve environment rather than in the cumbersome space suits. Aa the Gonial 7 spacecraft sped smoothly along in toe third day of Its two-week marathon, preparations moved ahead at a rapid rate for the attempt by two manned craft to carry out the world’s first rendezvous in space. Paul Haney the voice of mission control at Houston, reported pad crews were running 14 to 16 hours ahead of schedule in the race to launch astronauts Walter M. Schirra Jr., and Thomas P. Stafford in the Gemini 6 spaceship from Cape Kennedy, Fla. The launch is scheduled for Dec. 13, in the ninth day of the scheduled Gemini 7 endurance mission, but flight director Christopher C. Kraft Jr. was “looking into that eight-day possibility. Truck Rams Crowd; 115 Die LOME, Togo (UP!) ' A speeding trailer truck plowed -into a snake-dancing procession of villagers north of here yesterday, killing more than 100 persons including an American Peace Corps wonter, police said today. Police put the toil from the accident at Soutouboua Village, 180 miles' from Lome, at 115 dead and mote than 100 serious-iymjured. In Washington, toe P« a c e Corps confirmed it had received a telephone report from Togo indicating that more than lit persons died and another 100 were injured. It said James George Driscoll, 20, a Peace Corpsman from Buffalo, N.Y., was killed in the accident. Four other Peace Corpsmen were injured, none of them seriously. Police said the accident occurred as more than 1,000 men, women and children sang and danced to the beat of tom-toms to celebrate an annual tribal feast. 'His and Her' Yule Gifts Are Plentiful and Varied By JEANNE NELSON Christmas and romance, long a twosome, seem to go especially hand in hand this year. The wide variety „of “his . and her’’ gifts seems plentiful in local stored. One store offers matching sweaters of orion and mohair in a pale yellow slipover and cardigan style for both men and women. Both are attractively trimmed with brown accents. They cost about $12 each. Something definitely new this Christmas for toe enamored set is identical fragrances. These come in after-shave lotion and cologne for toe men. Perfume, splash and cologne are available for the ladies. * * * The price range on these is 64.50 to $15. SKI TOGS Look-alike ski togs are becoming more and more prevalent in the area. They include pants, jackets, jump suits, sweaters and . all types of act They make expedaily fun gifts for going-steady teens and engaged couples. Identification bracelets that match proclaim romantic notions about couple*. The brace- lets can be engraved on the back with endearing messages.' Prices on these run about 65. One practical suggestion with romantic overtones is matching luggage seta. The color range includes blue, tweed, fawn and silver dusk. Prices (depending on size) range from $27 to 855 per piece. ★ * * 'His and her” raincoats aren’t especially new but are just as popular as ever. Light beige is still toe leader i color, but coming up'fast is navy blue and black. For a really good quality, pin to spend about $33 to $40 each on these. ^nTdayHSl A A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER ft, 1085 Complexifies Snarl • Osteopath College By L. GARY THORNE - The tantaliztogly complex question of the future of medicine in Michigan has become entagled in the quest for state assistance for Pontiac’s proposed osteopathic college. Probing the merits of the college, state legislators have decided they need an answer to amalgamation — the merging of medical doctors and doctors of osteopathy into a single profession. The general need for mere medical education facilities pear te be in jleabt. In hearings earlier this week before the house State Affairs Committee, osteopaths offered a variety of statistics to support their arguments for the college. The House committee is pondering a Senate-passed bill establish a 10-inan authority to govern the projected school. CONSIDERATION Later consideration is expected of state aid to operate the college. Osteopaths plan to build the school .with private funds matched on a 2-1 basis by the federal government. The bead of the Michigan Osteopathic Hospital Association testified that the college was n e « d e d to bolster the staffs of each of the 32 osteopath: hospitals in Michigan. He said osteopathic hospitals In Rescue Efforts Plane’s Pilot Gave Life NORTH SALEM, N.Y. (AP), trying to help passengers from —Eastern Airlines pilot Charles J. White apparently sacrificed his life wliile helping to evacuate passengers after crash-landing., his propeller-driven plane following a collision Saturday with a Trans World Airlines jet. Three other persons lost their lives and 50 were Injured. The two planes carried 112 persons. 8nrvivors and investigators alike praised the flying skill of White and of the TWA pilot, Capt, Thomas H. Carroll, who guided hli craft — minus a 30-foot section of wing — to a safe landing at Kennedy International Airport. Federal investigators arc probing the eause of the crash. #' Or * The bod$ of Capt. White, 42, a World War II bomber pilot, was found yesterday midway down the smashed and charred cabin of his fouq-engine Constellation. Standing' beside the wreckage, Oscar Bakke, regional director of the Federal Aviation Agency, said: "All I can say is it is fantastic that people walked away. The pilot must have done a wonderful job." The pianos collided about two miles above northeastern Westchester County, flying it a combined speed of perhaps 1,111 miles an hour. White was piloting his ship on a shuttle run from Boston to Newark, NJ. The TWA jet was en route nonstop to New York from. San Francisco. the flaming wreckage. COULDN’T CONTROL CRAFT After the collision, Lewis said, White "found he could no longer control his aircraft through normal systems’’ and made the emergency landing. Lewis added: "That he was able to bring his aircraft into tiie small field under twilight visibility conditions Is little short of miraculous. “After the impact, Capt. White went aft to insure the safe evacuation of his and this performance of duty apparently cost him his life." ★ * . * George Rhoads, 38, of Cranford, N.J., a passenger aboard the Eastern plane, said: “He flew us right into that hill. He pancaked it right into the hill. He was fighting it -all the way down." JUST SINGED Rhoads suffered only singed eyebrows and lashes. * * a With the tail section of the plane gone, another Eastern official said, White “could sise only engine power” and made a ‘very accurate approach’' the field by manipulating the throttle. Fred Trenner of Danbury, Conn., was flying his small private plane nnd saw the crash. senior vice president and general manager, issued a statement in New York last night praising the “superb airmanship" of White. Lewis said White apparently died while Trailing the Eastern plane down, Trenner said, he saw “a terrific burst of flame. It didn’t Arthur D. Lewis, Eastern’s ePP«ar ■» if anyone could get mIm _a____a _____Mil aliua " out alive.’’ h Ambulances responded from hospitals in Mount Kisco and Carmel, N. Y., and Danbury, Conn. in the Mate have grown from 2,000 beds in 1900 to 4,200 currently. The total payroll of D.O. hospitals is 827 million per year. The hospitals purchase another $20 million worth of supplies. PATIENT DAYS It was estimated that 160,000 patients would stay a total of 1H million patient days in osteopathic hospitals this year. Osteopathy, It was contended, has too long waited for others to provide medical education. The implication, naturaly was that the college was the only answer to meet osteopathic hospital needs. Osteopaths testified the college would go ahead without state aid, although it was admitted the project would take longer and be more difficult, T,h e college, which already has a 164-acre site at Auburn and Opdyke, is slated to open in 1970. CONVICTIONS In hearings this week and during other legislative considerations earlier this year, the college’s opponents, have attempted to convince the legislature that: # ★ * • Osteopathy is no longer ‘separate and distinct/ ing D. O.’s practice much in the same manner as M. D.’s. A merger of the two doctor professions is the only answer. • Existing medical education facilities should be expanded. The Michigan State Medical Society (MSMS) has formed the main opposition to the proposed osteopathic school, entering the discussions when the osteopaths sought state financial support. MSMS spokesmen claim unity of the two professions is the only course. The M.D.’s cite their groundwork to accomplish this over the past four years. ★ * A Meantime, theM.D. contention is based on the belief that the past differences between the D. O. and M. D. no longer exist or are disappearing. HE AUNG METHOD Osteopaths counter that their •e 1 i ftg method is different. They firmly state that the 72-year-old practice of osteopathy Will continue. Somewhat, confused by the conflicting testimony, the 13-member House committee is slated to journey to California for answers. California is the only state hat has merged M. D.’s and O.’s. Michigan legislat- Fill U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy, windy and cool today with a few brief snow flurries. High 32 to 49. Partial clearing with diminishing winds tonight. Partly sunny and slightly warmer tomorrow. High 37 to 45. Northwest winds II to M miles today, diminishing tonight to I to 15 miles becoming variable tomorrow. Wednesday outlook: fair and slightly t Wind Velocity ISOS n Sun sets today at 5:St p.m. Sun rises Tuesday at 7:4i e.i Moon aats Tuesday at t: Weekend to Pentlac (aa recorded downtown) Sat. Sun. _ it temperature ............14 40 Lowest temperature ...........IS is Weettter—Chilly, Windy...... CAST BALLOTS - Presidential candidate Francois Mitterrand and his wife, Danielle, cast their ballots yesterday in the French presidential election at Chateau- AO PMtafax Chinon in the center of France. Mitterrand, 49, had joint Socialist end Communist backing in the election. LBJ Given Report on Blackout JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP) - President Johnson was told today the. massive Northeast power blackout didn’t have to happen — yet could happen again. Experts urged new precautions and perhaps new legislation. Johnson got a 95-page printed report on preliminary findings by the Federal Power Commis- CONROE, Tex- (DPI) - A power failure, the third major 'blackout" in the nation in less- than a month, shnt off electric power in at least six Southeast Texas counties today. A spokesman for Gulf States Utility Co. said the failure occurred somewhere near Beaumont, Tex; sion In a Johnson-ordered investigation of the Nov. 9 power failure that affected 30 million people in the United States and Canada. To discuss the report, the President summoned retiring FPC Chairman Joseph C. Swidler to the LBJ Ranch here. According to the report, the chain reaction that plunged 80,-000 square miles into darkness could have been avoided had employes at Canada’s Sir Adam Beck hydroelectric plant on the Niagara River reset an electric relay to handle power loads that had increased significantly since the device was last set in 1963. Allegations of man-failure merger. ★ ★ * The trip, which is to come prior to the January session of the legislature, along with a poll of Michigan’s physicians, is to help answer the far-reaching unity question. tors have received conflicting.were not limited, however, to “lews on the success of the the Beck plant. The repoft also said: • Employes of the Consolidated Edison Co. perhaps could have prevented the blackout from enveloping alt of New York City had they acted quickly to shut down parts of their system at the first warning of trouble. • The complete collapse of the interconnected power system in the Northeast might have heen avoided had employes of many individual utility firms taken similar action. • The chief operating engineer of Consolidated Edison told the FPC.that, with benefit of hindsight, power might have been restored in New York City twice or even four times faster. The blackout there lasted from 8 to 13 hours, depending on the section of the city. Four Captured Looting Store NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow flurries are forecast tonight from the lower Lakes region, into New England, and occasional rain' is expected from the Pa&fic Coast to the northern intermountain region. It will be cooler east of the Mtoslarippi Valley ascent for the Gulf (hast and wanner weMItor is expected in me northem and central Plains. Police captured four youths early yesterday morning in the act of looting a Pontiac area department store. Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies, Waterford Township and state police arrested 19-year-old Robert W. Valentine of 67 Forts >7 Fort worth 77 45 est and two 16-year-old compan-» to kSSTow ts »ions at the W. T. Grant Store, 4». 25 MtomlT,U* 74 Sr30 C00ley k ® -- - Milwaukee 44 irTOWnsMp, « A third ll-year-old, who fled ! the scene, was apprehended j nearby in a field. „! Valentine was to be arraigned 30 today. He was held for investigation of breaking and entering. ★ Sr W The four youths reportedly ad-Imitted to sheriff’s deputies the burglary of a second store, Un-lion Lake Market, 7275 Cooley Lake, West Bloomfield Township, the same night. BIG LOOT When caught near the front door of the department store, | the youths had seven bags of merchandise, a portable television and a basket of goods, po-j lice said. . * * * The market, according to police, reported $104 stolen and an undetermined amount of beer, wine, packaged meat and cigarettes. The store was ransacked. * . * > Police said a front door window was smashed to gain entry to the department store. Interest Hike Plunges Mart (Continued From Page One) Jones industrial average was down 14.M to 931.12. Boosting of the interest rates brought immediate disapproval from the President The board announced its decision last night saying higher Ui. Infantrymen Hold Olf Waves of Attacking Reds SAIGON, South Viet Nam attack on a U.S. enlisted men's —Caught in a murderous ma-billet Saturday. Eight persons chine-gun crossfire, U.S. infantrymen stood off wave after wave of attacks by a communist regiment with help from the sky by U.S. Air Force and Navy jets. The battle 40 miles northwest of Saigon raged yesterday near the bloodied rubber plantation where U.S. and South Vietnamese troops have been hunting the Communists for days following the near destruction of the Vietnamese army 7th Regiment Nov. 27. Sporadic firing continued today. The Communists repeatedly probed another U.S. battalion in the area during the night. Reports from the scene said U.S. casualties were heavy, although spokesmen in Saigon described them as moderate. Estimates of Communist dead ranged up to more than 200, although only 40 to 50 bodies were left behind by the Communists. The battle involved the U.S. 1st Infantry Division in Its heaviest fighting since the Big Red One arrived in Viet Nam. The Viet Cong warned pf killed, American. including one Along the coast 260 miles northeast of Saigon, a U.S. Marfaie amphibious force swept across a Communist stronghold after storming ashore yesterday and killing 14 Viet Cong. DESTROYER FIRE Eleven others were reported killed by fire from 7th Fleet destroyers and attack planes. The Viet Cong were reported to have lost as many as 299 dead in a battle iSatnrday between South Vietnamese forces and the Communists for control of a three-hamlet complex near Quang Ngai City, 329 miles northeast of SaigOta. In the battle south of the abandoned Michelin plantation, the Communists opened with a blaze of 50-caliber machine-gun fire from both sides as companies of the 1st Division battalion changed positions during a sweep of a road/ * * * At one point the Communists hurled themselves on elements of the battalion in human waves, punishing new blows” against forcing some of tbs infantryman Saigon, similar to the terrorist rates will help prevent inflation The action, he said, will re To Put Clamps on 149 Bases (Continued From Page One) ing for $93 million in savings, will not be disclosed until after ns with the countries involved. McNamara said there was no political significance in the foreign base closings which he said will not affect any U. S. troop dispositions. As required by law, McNamara said, the Defense Department will file reports with the Senate and House Armed Service committees on Jan. 10 on bases which are being eliminated and at which more than 250 persons are employed or tioned. ANOTHER 31 DAYS No base dosings, will take place for at least another 30 days beyond that. McNamara said in response to questions that in such base closings he Is required only to notify, tiie appropriate committees and to give them 39 dhys 'notice, but may go ahead after that. ■ The latest base actions will eliminate more than 53,000 military -and civilian jobs, most of them military. *" Or ★ McNamara-contended there is a very real manpower saving in tiie elimination of the military jobs, even though the men are shifted to other poets. WILL REDUCE and aid in overcoming the persistent U.B. balance of payments deficit. It ordered: — An increase in the discount rate from 4 to 4.* per cent, its highest level since 1990. This is tbe interest the 12 regional Federal Reserve banks charge oa loans made to member commercial basks. Any upward movement generally spreads throughout the enflre credit structure — applying to consumers who buy houses, cars and other goods op the installment plan. duce by a like number the military servicemen due to be added to the armed forces under a buildup to nearly three million by next September. « He said he did not have a breakdown of the military and Chilian personnel involved in the 53,IN positions. The civilians affected will be guaranteed an Opportunity to shift to another government job. * a * If necessary, they will be retrained at government expense and their moving costs paid for them. to abandon their wounded. Birmingham Area News Ergasterion Club to Give mi v i, \Jj 4 • ; Dramti This Weekend BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Ktogs-wood and Cratlbrook schools' Ergasterion Club will present Lillian Heilman’s drama “Tbd Little Foxes" Friday and Saturday. * H * The productions are scheduled for 8:30 p.m. in the Cranbrook School auditorium. Tickets are available at the door. The play concerns the moral deterioration of a southern family that hopes to profit at the expense of its home town. Portraying one of the leading roles is Bernt Sanden of 1334 Sandringham, Bloomfield Town-ship. ★ * * Other area students in the cast are Serena Simons, 3722 S. Darlington, Bloomfield Township, and Jeffrey Ganz, 25151 Coolidge, Oak Park. NATIVE OF SINGAPORE Lee-Eng Chua of Singapore, who is living with the Irving J. Minettes, 675 Poppletpn, Birmingham, also has a part In the play. Randall Darwall, 1207 South-field, Birmingham, designed the set. Action will be viewed through the haze of scrim curtains on a stage projected out into the audience. x A * . A Randall, a senior, has designed stage sets for Will-O-Way and tyanbrook Summer Theatre productions. PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS /Assisting with production of the play are Horrid A. Fitzgerald II, 4820 Echo Road; Stewart Lachihan, 3499 Sutton; and Kenneth MeLean, 516 Wadding-ton, all of Bloomfield Township * * * Others are Michael Fortune, 26985 Charles, Franklin, and Stafford, 811 Westchester, Birmingham. ★ ★ ★ The Ergasterion Club takes its U. S.-County Pacts Ruled Permissible LANSING (AP) - A county road commission may corttract . .____________. . with the federal government for Hie Americans regrouped and flood Mntrol_ or i_h battled their way back-to pick up their bleeding buddies. “God,.they were firing from everywhere," said a survivor of the first barrage. “The 59-caliber was the worst. But they were la trees, in holes, everywhere." The fighting raged so close both sides tossed hand-grenades at each other. The Viet Cong carefully sprung their trap, planting grenades in trees beforehand. flood control, drainage or beach erosion control, Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley ruled today. ★ ★ * The opinion overturned a 1957 ruling by then Atty. Gen. Thomas Kavanagh, now chief justice of the Michigan Supreme Court. 2 Auto Crashes Take Five Lives; State Toll Is 25 By The Associated Press Five persons were killed la two separate smashups la Macomb Conaty's Sterling Township yesterday bringing Michigan’s weekend traffic death toll to 25. Nine of the other victims wore pedestrians. State Police said icy roads in many parts of the atate contributed to the weekend toll. The Associated Press tabulation began at 6 p.m. Friday smd ended at midnigbt tost night name from a Greek word meaning “little, workshop." New director of the club’s performance is Herbert J. Motley. Hdrmon Quits Union Election Floyd B. Harmon, niled Ineligible by the federal government from continuing aa secretary - treasurer of Teamster Local 614 in Pontiac, has withdrawn from the local’s election, which begins this weekend. New ballots are being printed. * * * Harmon's right to run again had been challenged by a rival candidate as a violation of the Landrum-Griffin Act. A ft * In 1963, a jury convicted Her-, mon of embezzling $2,080 in union funds, and of falsifying union records to h 1 d e the embezzlement. He repaid the money but was fined 11,500 and placed pn two years’ probation. Harmon has made three appeals against the convictions. On Friday, he was informed by the government that he had exhausted his appeals, and that the Landrum-Griffin Act was being invoked against him. Title 2 of Landrum-Griffin makes it a federal crime to make a false/entry in inion records. Title 6 mattes embezzlement one of the felonies for which a union official can be barred from holding office for five years. : 4t it # Harmon decided to nm this tfine in order to establish behind-the-scenes control of tho local according to Alvy Bush, one. of his rivals for secretary-treasurer. HARMON-CONTROLLED? reasoned that If Harmon won and was then forced out-of office by the government the choice of his successor would be up to the local’s executive board which he claims is controlled by Harmon. Joe Bato, president of the local denied the executive board was to on any such plot: “There are seven people on the board. Hannon has one vote. And we've never discussed whom we would support if ha ’t continue.” Greatest Watch Value in America—LOOK 17-Jewel ‘Vantage Men’s & Ladies’ Watches A watch that look* and.perform! * like watches costing $50 or moro and doubly guaranteed by Simms and maker. 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Jane, a graduate student In college preparing for elementary school teaching, had no conception of the realj meaning of fraction. She! knew the word. |_____________ She said that D(t nason in any problem she always multiplied by the numerator or divided by the denominator to get the answer. Her method of approach to all word problems was some formi of guessing. Jane had gotten by through all of her grade school, high | school and four years of Col- ! lege , without anyone discovering that she did not really ' understand fractions. It is not that Jane could not understand. Fifteen minutes of careful explanation was all that was required. She was forc«l to think about what fractions actually are and not rush off Into some pattern of thought that might by chance get answer. / ★ ★ ★ / The new mathematics in vogue in elementary schools is j putting the spotlight on the hap- DetroitHosts States' Aides 19 Attorntys General i in 2-Day Conference DETROIT (AP) — Attorneys! general from 19 states entered on a two-day conference today discussing topics from the war oh crime to the international situation. .William G. Clark, attorney general of Illinois leads a discussion on the war against crime and Atty. Gen. William' B. Saxbe of Ohio speaks on the, relationship between the attorney general and the state legislature. + ★ ★ David P. Buckson, attorney' general of Delaware, Tuesday | will head a panel discussion of • federal-state tax problems and! Iowa Atty. Gen. Lawrence F.1 Scalise will lead a discussion on the Free Press and Fairl Trial. Tile Honorable Paul Martin, Canadian secretary of state for external affairs and president of the NATO council, will speak I Tuesday night. IN ATTENDANCE Attending will be attorneys! general from Delaware, Indi-j ana, Idaho, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Rhode Island, Missouri, New Jersey, South Dakota, Kansas, Ohio and Pennsylvania. ★ * * Hie conference is -a combined meeting of the Midwestern Regional Conference of Attorneys General and the executive committee of the National Association of Attorneys General. hazard manner in which too many students have guessed their way through basic maths* matics. MUST KNOW MATH Prospective elementary school teachers must necessarily take a course In modern mathematics and understand it well enough to explain it to the children. Knowing this, many of them struggle for complete understanding of mathematics for the first time in their careers., 5 surprising number of these young men and women voluntarily are taking a coarse in remedial arithmetic « ^reparation for the course in modOrn mathematics. Tooinany pupils give up the struggleX for understanding as they work their way through the grades with mediocre suc- Pat is such a pupil. In the eighth grade, asked to list some personal pronouns, he included several verbs and adjectives, It developed that he had no clear idea what a pronoun really is. Neither did he know hoof to find out by looking in his English book. For some reason, Pat had never discovered the usefulness of the index! NEEDED HELP Once he found it was possible i understand things exactly and find them through the Index, his progress in his English class was so rapid as to be called amazing. All he needed was a little direction in solving his specific problems of learn-ing. Such failures could be avoided by the proper early start. The evidence seems to Indicate that a child who is expected by the school to learn, does so while the child of whom little is expected produces little. (You can get Prof. Nason’s book, “How to Get Into College,” by sending $1 to College Book in care of The Pontiac Press.) NOTICE OF TAXES CITY OF PONTIAC The 1965 County taxm in Ihe City of Pontiac will bo duo and payablo at tho offico of tho Pontiac City Trooturor, Docambar 10,1965 throwsh February 14,1966, without foot. On February 15,1966, a collection loo of 4% will fee added to all County taxes paid through February 28,1966. On March 1,1.966, all unpaid County and 1965 City, School and Community Callage taxes will be returned to the Oakland ' County Treasurer's office and must be paid there with additional fees. Payments made by mail must be postmarked not later than February 14,1966 to avoid penalties. Walter A. Giddingt, City Treasurer 450 Wide Track Drive Pontiac, Miehigan Ruptured Men Get $4.95 Gift /’ for Trying This Kansas City, Mo.—Here is an improved means of holding rupture that has benefited thousands of ruptured men and women to the last year. Inconspicuous, without leg straps, elastic belts, body encircling springs or harsh pads, it has caused many to say, "I don’t see how it holds so easy.i I would not have believed, had I not tried it” So comfortable — so easy to wear — it could show you the way to Joyous freedom from your rupture trouble. You can’t lose by trying. It is sent to you on 90 days trial. You receive a separate 04.05 truss as a gift just for trying the invention. Write for descriptive circular. It’s free, Just address Physicians Appliance Company. 4009 Koch Bldg., $15 W. 15th St , Kansas City, Mo. 04114. But do It today before you lose the adifress. y" ;'.. I Voice of the People: u THE PQNTIAC PRESS • Welfares Street. Pontiac, Michigan I® * ™ P MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1965 HAROLD A. PITZOERALD President »nd Publisher John W. Pmiauu John A. IUWT Becretenr and Advertising Dll O. Marshall JMMM Local Advertising Manager It Seems to Me_ GM Corporation President Sees Bright Business Trend This entire area was stimulated and heartened anew by the appearance and remarks here Thursday of James M. Roche, President of General Motors Corporation. ★ ★ ★ His talk was heard by an attentive audience of 700 business men who jam-packed the Elks and the vital message was spread throughout the area by The Pontiac Press. Mr. Roche scored a personal triumph in ^is appearance and laudatory comments were heard on all sides *• at the conclusion of the luncheon. ★ ★ ★ He was given a rousing and spontaneous reception when he was presented and was later rewarded by even greater applause at the conclusion of his forecasts for business in general and in our own area in particular. Everyone can rejoice at having our economy resting in the capable and perceptive hands of great administrators like James M. Roche. ★ ★ ★ The biggest corporation ip the world is lucky to have a top man possessing a definite flair for public speaking and the ability to “get his message across" to an audience that remains attentive and thoughtful. And quite simultaneously with this happy event, Calvin Werner lands another fine contract for the GMC | Track and Coaelt While 5‘Long John" DeLorean Is ^budding Pontiacs and Tempests almost as fast as an eager and expectant public demands them. How can we better say: “Merry Christmas?” We Sympathize.... Periodically, a “news” weekly takes a blast at' the newspapers. Newsweek is the current “champion” of the divine right of self-expression. ★ ★ ★ i Newspapers leave the weekly “news” magazines alone. Daily publications throw no bricks and hurl no rocks in their pathways. , We really sympathize with the enormous problems confronting a publication that only comes out every seven days and which struggles to present current happenings. We imagine it must be a rather discouraging tank aa / & Newsweek Seems to he increas-/ ingly aware. ★ - ★ ★ But why pick on us? Since we issue daily, we propose to print the facts simply—as they happen. #e don’t have to falter under a weekly hodgepodge of past-due miscellany. Newsweek, you go your way. We’ll go ours. And pax voblscum, chums. Just a ‘Pushover’.... Certainly the United States ranks as the all-time, international pushover. No one grovels like we do. And the world yells: “go home." ★ ★ ★ -A year ago we announced that we would cancel our annual pledge of $60 million unless the United Nations enforced Its charter and made _ j those in arrears “pay up.” Russia giggled openly and the other free loaders guffawed in unison. Did they pay? They did not. '-Jr ★ Jr Did we cancel our $60 million as we "Threatened?” We capitulated— meekly. And now James Roosevelt has the barefaced gall tosuggestwe advance ah additional $5 million for technical assistance in certain countries. And you know who would pay the bill. You—and you—and you. Forecast: Education... Neil McElroy, chairman of Procter and Gamble, believes the American economy should lay definite plans to double its current annual Investment in education between now and 1970. This comes from another one of the hardheaded bosses of one of the nation’s biggest industries. ★ ★ ★ Mr. McElroy says U. S. business will need that many more highly trained men and women. He declares all businesses — large and small — will require administrators and executives with a sounder, rounder and more comprehensive background. ★ ★ ★ This forecast emanates from a man of wide experience and a comprehensive knowledge of world affairs. And in Conclusion.... Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Fish dealers are aghast at the suggestion Catholics may not have to adhere to the traditional Friday diet. It could be serious for many who’ve specialized............ Pat Collins, Hollywood, and onetime Detroit girl, Is currently considered the greatest hypnotist In the world. She’s only thirty...... . . . . Overheard: “Everybody loves a lover, especially drive-in theater owners.” “Green Acres” and “H o g a n’s Heroes” have made the biggest hit of the new TV shows. ■Jr ★. ★ Trusted 1 scouts advise f me Candace 1 Ronk rates as | o n e o f the J prettiest girls 1 in the area. . I U; S. 1 r e s t a u rants 1 were jammed [ T h an k s - ■ giving but you CANDACE may. be amazed to learn the biggest “eat but” day of the year is — Mother’s Day girl can refuse a kiss and still not lose it.” on the rear of a pleasure boat: “Sin or Swim.” ... recently, Chicago traffic was backed up four miles at O’Hare airport. Many,, many missed flights. . ★ Jr Jr Alex Karras has the recipe for stopping Jimmy. Brown of Cleveland: a pistol and an ax. ..... . .........The “no-deposit” bottles may be on the way out. They’ve littered so much property, authorities are considering a right smart tax ..............The paratrooper looked out the airplane window anxiously. “Pm* nervous,” he confided to a seat mate. “This Is only , my second straight landing.” ..... ......... Queen Elizabeth’s salary and perquisites amount to $1.3 mil-* lion a year. Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s — the white jurors who convicted those Klansmen; the J’s — the first jury that didn’t. —Harold A. Fitzgerald v t \\\ « , ^ David Lawrence Says: Viet War Sure to Be Intensified ‘Let’s Support Our Men in Fight for ’ I am a United7 States soldier stationed iit Germany. I’m just one of many thousands who are proud of being American. I plan on making the Army my career. I chose it myself. I feel I owe my country whatever I can give, even if it’s my life, and I’m not the only American serviceman that feels this way. It really disturbs us to read about some of the stuff that is going on in our own country—protesters and persons who burn themselves to death. Why should people like that be allowed to exercise the rights of an American — those same rights our fathers an give it a distinctive off-therfloqr look. Come in see this com- fort and style beauty . it's an outstanding value at 3-flECE BEDROOM SUITE •6-Drawer Double Dresser •Tilt Frame Mirror •Bookcase Bed •Matching Chest A mellow blending of warm walnut finish with decorativo bud accent finish on top drawers. Sculptured logs and complementary brats hardware. Quality hand-nibbed top,- double center-guided drawers, guaranteed not fo stick. "Plasticized" finish will not mar, scratch and is stain resistant. 8-PIECE MAPLE BUNK BED SET WITH 2 SEALY INNERSPRM6 MATTRESSES On Sale For First Time. 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Great Haul, Old Bean SUTH M1MMS, England (UPI) — Police were looking today for the thieves who stole a truck con t aining IS tons of baked beans. ' Wants Plain Words, on Squealing Tirei NOBLESVILLE, Ind. (AP) ^ When Is a squealing tire not a squealing tire? When it grates, according to Hamilton Circuit Court Judge Edward F. New. . The judge recently voided a city ordinance which provides fine for a driver squealing the tires of a car' unnecessarily within city limits. He said an ordinance must be “plainly1 worded," The Noblesville ordinance refers to tire squealing as "grating/11 he said. Service Set for Shriner DETROIT (AP) — Funeral services for Charles E. Merrill, 68, attorney who was, to bm. been elected - to the Shrine’s Imperial Potentate in July, will be held Wednesday in Detroit., Merrill died of a heart Attack! Saturday while riding a city bus. PONTIAC* Reckcot# PUNT STOIC ROCftCOTI PAINTS WALLPAPERS t South Csss . 132-4641 Free Conversations DETROIT (AP)-Thg 9th annual “Hi-Mom” program, sponsored by the Communications Workers of America hi cooperation with United Service Organizations, will allow 35 Detroit area families free telephone conversations with sons or daughters overseas during the Christmas holidays. Australians -HopMad PERTH, Australia UR — Citizens of this west Australian capital got bopping -mad when they learned that kangaroo meat is going into sausages without their Imowledge. Health authorities disclosed that 8 of 18 butcher shops inspected were found to have kangaroo meat in sausages displayed for sale. This is not illegal as long as the animals are killed under supervised conditions and the product is labeled kangaroo-meat sausages. But inspectors say kangaroos are too often killed In the dusty bush under a blazing sun, flung into an open truck and carried around for a day or two before being processed. Say* Some Inmates Want Walls Around RUTLAND, Vt. (AP) -Lt Gov. John J. Daley says walls around a prison “give a sense of security to some inmates.” In' supporting Gov. Phillip H. Hoff’s proposal for additional medium security prison space,] Daley said some prisoners transferred to the state prison farm get "itchy feet” and ask to be put back behind walls again. All Items Gift Boxed Free Spruce up your favorite boys for the holiday. Our bright, new gift selection has all the smart apparel every boy needs. He will look great and you’ll feel likewise. A. , Dress Shirts of the new Perms-Press fabrics for easy care and easy wear. SisesStoU 3.50 Sisss 13to 1414 4.00 B. Permanent Press Dress Slinks of Dacron and cotton blend in the important Ivy model. < * Sisss 61612, Regular and alfa 5.00 Sisss 26 to33 6.00 C. Sport Coats Classic tweeds, brawny plaids, or traditional bluer*—we have them all for “your** young nun. Sisss 8 to 20 15.00 to 25.00 D. 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MICH Hi AN MONDAY, pECEMBER 6, 1965 ^ • B—1 BANDAGES INSTEAD OF BULLETS -Pfc. Robert Fass of Long bland, N.Y., dresses sores on the arm of a four-year-old Vietnamese boy at a dispensary set up for civilians at Vo Dat, 60 miles northeast of Saigon. Hie medical treatment of civilians Is part of an over-all psychological war-fare program to win the allegiance of the South Vietnamese and counteract the propaganda programs of the Viet Cong. Pfc. Fass is part of a medical team of the 173rd Airborne Brigade which had moved into the previously Cong-controlled village In late November. Gl Missing; Urged Drive to Aid Viets NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -A month ago, Army Capt. Ronald F. Rod, father of five children, appealed for 10,000 bars of soap and clothing for a Vietnamese village where he was stationed. A letter from Capt. Rod, whose, home is at Kenner, a New Orleans suburb, was printed jn the Clarion-Herald, the weekly newspaper of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of New Orleans. .The request launched a campaign, to collect soap and clothing which spread to other clies in the South, including B^ton Rouge and Humboldt, linn. r I A large shipment of donated goods is scheduled to be sent from flew Orleans Tuesday for the villagers in the Due Pho area. MISSING IN ACTION Capt. Rod may not be there to see that it is distributed. The Pentagon reported Sunday that the 31-year-old career soldier was missing in action. Father Elmo Romagosa, executive editor of (he Clarion-Herald, recalled that Rod wrote that his greatest problem in dealing with some 10,000 villagers, including refugees from the Viet Cong, was sanitation. “His role wax as a civil administrator,1’’ said Father Romagosa. “He wrote that children kept breaking out in boils because they had no soap to wash themselves and clothing to wear." . Within two weeks after Rod’s request was printed in the Nov. 4 issue of the Catholic newspaper, 4,500 pounds of clothing and 2,000 bars of soap had been col-j lected by New Orleans children.1 LOS ANGELES (UPI)-The McCone Commission’s post-mortem on last summer’s Negro riot in Watts, the worst in America this century, was being released today with a forewarning not to expect a miracle.’* John A. McCone, former head of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) was appointed by Gov. Edmund M. Brown to preside over the eight-member blue-ribbon commission, which Included two Negroes. Brown ordered the commission to investigate the cause of the riot sad suggest ways of preventiag a recurrence. The five-day August riot in the Findings of LA Riot Study Will Be Released Today Russian Moon Shot on Course MOSCOW (UPI) - The Ru* si an spaceship Lima 8 raced toward the moon today for an intended soft landing shortly after midnight Moscow time (4:60 p.m. 1ST). It is the fourth Soviet attempt to place a package of instru-ipents on the lunar surface and pave tile, way for a manned flight to the moon. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, announced the anticipated landing time last night aad said Lana 8 would hit tile moon la the area of the Sea of Storms. Tass gave few details, but it appeared that Luna I wa equipped with cameras and other instruments designed to survey the lunar landscape, determine its characteristics and record the temperature. A successful soft tow Store Shot Up; Parrot Killed WARREN (AP)—Vandals Invaded a discount store Sunday, shooting up television sets with stolen rifles and killing a talking parrot valued at $149. Police estimated damage at I $10,000 to $15,000, but a spokesman for Arlan’s Department Store said it was closer to $20,-000. An 18-year-old boy is being held for questioning, police said. The vandals left a monkey, taken from the pet department, tied outside in freezing temper-hires. Police said the burglars broke into a gun display, took rifles and ammunition, and began shooting up the television and appliance departments. The store spokesman said he qould not immediately determine what had been taken. predominantly Negro Watts District of south Los Angeles left 37 dead, more than 900 injured, some 4,200 persons arrested and nearly $50 million in financial ' isses. The MeCone Commission heard 443 witnesses, visited the 46-square-mile riot area and in 16 weeks had ready for distribution a 101-page book with color and black and white photographs of the riot along with a map of the area. COST OF ANALYSIS Somewhat akin' to the Warren Commission’s report on the assassination of former President John F. Kennedy, the McCone Commission’s analysis was reported to have eost $860,900. v. Last weekend, McCone cautioned the public “not to expect a miracle" from the report. “You can’t wave a wand or make recommendations that will relieve a disadvantaged area overnight,’’ said the 63-year-old McCone. WWW ‘The best we can do is to present recommendations for relieving the situation causing the greatest amount of frustration and anger." CITED CIRCUMSTANCES Various authorities have cited circumstances and conditions that they believed figured prominently in the rioting, which began Aug. 11. These included: Unusually high humidity and temperatures. • Poor housing facilities in the Watts District. • Negro frustrations over poverty and the lack of jobs. ‘ Asserted police brutality, not necessarily physical in nature. Can Destroy N. Viet Overnight' would give the Russians a lead in the race to get a man the moon. RIGHT MANEUVER Russian scientists communicated with Luna 8 twice yesterday. Telemetry information was received. Trajectory measurements were made to that a correction maneuver made Saturday night was keeping the rocket on target. “The correcting engine facilities were working the correcting period in conformity with the calculated regime," Tass said. Luna 6, launched May 9, missed the moon because its correction equipment failed t# function properly. Luna 7 and Luna 5 both landed too fast and crashed, destroying their precious cargo of instruments. The Sea of Storms is the same spot where Luna 7 crash-landed Oct. 8. The scheduled landing of Luna 8 will fall just before the opening session tomorrow of the Supreme Soviet, the Russian palia-ment. Coed Call to Duty NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) - A Rutgers University Coed received a letter from her local draft board Saturday, asking which branch of the service she would prefer. Erica Gaetano, 20, of Belleville, NJ., said she’d gladly serve in the military “if I were a man." Being a woman, she said, she’d prefor to finish her education and become a teacher. Rutgers blamed the error on a computer, which, it said, processed information on its male students for the selective service system. WIVES OF SPACEMEN - The wives of America's two current spacemen, Mrs. Frank Borman (left) mid Mrs. James A. Lovell, are shown together at Mrs. Lovell’s home in Timber Cove, Tex., yesterday. Mrs. Borman, who had just returned from Cape Kennedy, gave Mrs. Lovell a firsthand report on the successful launch of Gemini 7. Trial Tuesday for 3 Whites Accused in Minister's Death SELMA, Ala. (AP) - Three white men go on trial Tuesday on charges of .murdering the Rev. James J. Reeb, a Boston minister who came south to join the civil rights movement. The trial is the third in Alabama in recent days involving civil rights or racial slayings. The other two, both before white Jhries, ended in convictions. ★ w, ;% This time the defendants are Odel Hoggle, 30, an auto mechanic; his brother, William Stanley Hoggle, 36, a salesman; and Elmer Cook, 41, manager of a novelty company. All are Sel- Indonesia Red Leader Alive' Jakarta Reports Say He's Held by Army SINGAPORE (AP) - D. N. Aidit, the Indonesian Communist party chief, is alive and in the hands of, anti-Comm leaders of the Indonesian army, diplomatic travelers from Jakarta reported today. These informants said Aidit, who had been reported killed last month, was seen being taken under guard recently from a military aircraft at the Jakarta •irport. ★ * * Intelligence sources in Singapore described the reports as ’very likely." The intelligence men The trio is accused of attacking the Rev. Mr. Reeb as he walked away from a Negro cafe in Selma the night of March 9 after an attempt by civil rights workers to stage a march to Montgomery failed. BEATEN SEVERELY The minister was severely clubbed, lapsed into a coma from which he never regained consciousness and died two days later in University Hospital in Birmingham. *v * His death was the second of the racially connected killings since the Southern Christian Leadership Conference under the direction of Dr.. Martin Luther King Jr. initiated an intensive campaign for voting rights for Negroes. Jimmy Lee Jackson, 26, of Marion was fatally shot during a demonstration Feb. 18 shortly after the campaign began. * * ★ Three members of the Ku Klux Klan were convicted in federal court in Montgomery, Ala., and sentenced to 10 years in prison on charges of violating the rights of a Detroit civil d have nows. “And you can be sure that be tells would incriminate only Subandrio but Sukarno as well in the whole Oct. 1 coup ‘The spired coup failed. ' w ★ intelligence sources discounted Indonesian and Japa-paper reports that Aidit killed in central Jaya Nov. 32 trying to escape from a prison in Solo, central Java. • * * sources said of Aidit’s death circulatel hv the rights worker, Viola Gregg Liuzzo, and other Americans.. Mrs. Liuzzo was one of thousands of demonstrators who participated in a four-day march from Selma to Montgomery in March after the Rev. Mr. Reeb’s death.. The Detroit housewife was shot as she drove demonstrators back to Se after the march. STATION ATTENDANT A white service station attendant, Hubert Damon Strange, 25, was convicted in the death of a Negro foundry worker, Willie Brewster. Detroit Group Hears AF Chief DETROIT (AP) — Gen. John P. McConnell, Air Farce chief of staff, said today the United States has the military capability of destroying North Viet Nam and forcing its surrender “virtually overnight.” But American policy id to keep the Viet Nam war at the lowest possible level of intensity for humanitarian and political reasons, he said. hi an address prepared far the Detroit Economic Club, McConnell said the strikes by South Vietnamese and American aircraft against targets in North Viet Nam have a dual purpose. “First," he said, “they are designed to assist our aerial interdiction effort in impeding the flow of supplies and reinforcements to the Viet Cong from the North because that is where the supplies are coming from. ONLY HOPE “Second, our only hope of opping these supplies is to discourage the North Vietnamese from supporting the Viet Cong by making such support too costly to them. This strategy, which is best described as ‘strategic persuasion," gives the President a highly flexible tool in inducing North Viet Nam eventually to accept his offer of unconditional discussions. “It is true that we could achieve this objective, virtually overnight, by destroying North Viet Nam and forcing its surrender. We certainly have the military capability to do so. ‘But President Johnson has emphasized that it is our national policy to keep this conflict at the lowest possible level of intensity, for humanitarian as well as for political reasons. “As both our* commander-in-chief and head of our government, he has the final decision on the exact level end scope of our bombing effort In North Viet Nam, and that decisions must . ke guided hot oi^fcjhinilitarw Strange was sentenced to 10 conflderations and recoAnenda-years in prison on the second-tions but by many other and degree murder conviction. possibly more compelling fac-Itors." Brewster, who had not been involved* in the civil rights struggle, was shot to death as he drove home from work in the wake of a series of miUtantly anti-integration rallies in Anniston. ★ ★ ★ President Johnson, commenting on the Klansmen’s* conviction, said, “the whole nation can take heart.” The general also told the Detroit audience: —Some B52 bombers of the kind which are making massive strikes from a Guam base against the Viet Cong in South Viet Nam are being changed to increase tbeir load of convention bombs by more than half. —The “major burden” of the battle against the Viet Cong has shifted to air power. TILE Your KITCHEN We'll Even Loan You th« Tools .. The Finest Instal- lation By Our Ex- pert Mechanics! SOLID VINYL TILE IQ, 13”xtl” 1 rl. feelers- ■ W-1 VINYL RUBBER TILE VINYL ASBESTOS TILE Tf« lit QuoDtyl ■ ' Ugh* Cabral ■ »”*t” Genuine Sandran Vinyl FLOOR COVERING yard Genuine CERAMIC TILE MICA rut tie . WALL | Ciganftv 1x12 LINOLEUM RUGS MOSAIC TILE Vary Spaeial! B~a THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6,. 1063 fan, public sale of a tMJ Pontiac Tam-patt GTO 2-Door Hardtop, bearing aarlal numbar in 37S P 3SMM, win ba held, for ca»h at auction, ItHpaittlon thereof may ba made at Vpara Shall • Service, 3M Main Street, Rooheater, Oakland County, Michigan, the place at etoraga. National Sank of Detroit 339 Main St., fcocheater, Mich. |y a. Assistant Cashier , V £r 7,; . -- it Acres Building Company, Corporation, to Guardian Fully automatic, complotoly Htormostatic, outperform! too atari coating much more. Select-tronic color control guarantooa golden brown toast every time. Famous Proctor 1 -yoar over the counter replacement guarantee. MODEL 20214 Michigan In aucl vldsd, notice Is oast, West Bloomfield Twp., Oakland County,, Michigan, according to the plat thereof as recorded In liber 77, pagg 37 of Plats, Oakland County Record!. Dated: Ann Arbor, Michigan, SCHICK MARY PROCTOR DELUXE 2-SLICE TDASTER1 && /a. - STATE OP M Beta Court lor A root buy in a handrome style, with color dial for "any shade Mast, black bakelite trim with attractive chroma finish. Santiago, cwk m - Five planeloads of Chilean soldiers were reported en route to a disputed border area today while Chile and Argentina completed plans to hold high-level ministers’ talks to ease the border tension. Chile’s largest paper, El Mer-curio, said the troops were flown to Puerto Moiitt, about 750.miles south of Santiago, and would continue further south, to World; News Woundup Chilean Soldiers Fly to Disputed Argentine Border the remote border area when weather permits. RIO DP JANEIRO, Brazil UR — Francisco Negrao de Lima became the new governor of Guanabara State Sunday despite a military request far bis arrest for alleged. Communist connections. The. inauguration went off as scheduled after Brazil’s military tribunal postponed action on the request, made last week by a colonel investigating the Illegal Communist party, dr * Sr, Informed sources said the court deferred to President Hu-berto Castello Branco’s promise that all dinners of the Oet. S gubernatorial elections would be installed. Negrao de Lima said in his inaugural speech he would fight against communism. JAKARTA, /Indonesia UR -President Sukarno challenged the Indonesian Parliament today to relieve him if it is dissatisfied with the way he Is running the country. There was no indication that the 600-member assembly would take up the challenge. It elected Sukarno president for life in 1966; + : 1r •• •;*; " The president once more de- that bis fuD poiAtrs, which the army curtailed in the Fake of the attempted coup op OCt. 1, be returned to him. The Identification Ml a significant numb ef of unexpected, medically important abponnd-ities in hospital patients thropgb testa of their blood was reported recently. Mormon President Raps Financing PROVO, Utah (AP) - President David 0/ McKay of the Church of jcsip Christ of Lat-ter-day Saints has crushed any hopes to return the swim, twist, frug or money to Brigham Young University, jfe. , ^ In a letter printed in the student newspaper, Daily Universe, the itysaNJM leader of the world’s Si million Mormons wdnt on record opposed to fad BAMBOO PREFERRED - Steel may be the material' for heavy-duty construction hi the West, but in the Orient the ancient bamboo is still preferred even for many modeni tasks. This .new building rising in Hong Kong is festooned with scaffolding built completely of bamboo, instead of the maze of steel pipes usual hi the West Experience his shown that bamboo scaffolding, constructed without nails or metal support, is actually stronger and more stable than similar steel structures. , j* ‘ Off-Track Betting Said Damaging British Economy LONDON (AP) - Legalized off-track betting In Britain jui annual $2.S-bi!Uon business, has failed to keep gambling within reasonable bounds and is seriously hurting the economy, a member of a New York survey team said todey. » STATS OS MICHIGAN — ■ ' bat* Court far *h# County at Oakland, i Juvanla .Division , Henry D. frley said the port found that the poorest ftrit- cws* lshers gambled the most. This milior cwid: hurts Die economy because it diverts money from normal consumer, goods purchases by the working class, he said. Paley mpde a similar study two years ago for New York State Assembly Speaker Joseph F. Car lino. This year’s report was prepared with-Samuel Roman, representing New York’s eight harness race track*. They sought information in connection with a proposal to set up state-run, off-track betting shops in New York. Nam* Of' the Paopls « of Michigan, You oro Korol Mg (ring on said pollt— — ggMI Court Heusa, Oakland County Service Canter, .In tho City of Pontiac sold County, on ttio lltK day ol MtfH i;D. IMS, at 1:30 o'clock U „t, and you oro hereby co i appear personally at SI .. _____ Impractical to mako parsonal sorvlco hereof, this summons and -Ota* i g ba strvtd by publication of IMP week previous to sold hoa ,The Pontiac Proas, a newspaper r nd circulated In said County. Witness, tho Honorable Norman • CHy g , ___..._______jty, tms if “ at December, A.D. IMS. (S*al) NORMAN R. BARNARD Irua copy) Judo* of Probate DELPHA A. 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High impact plaatic, largo any height. No need for hairnet ear pads, dose* to compact, portable siia 29.95 deliiie styling- RIVERA HAIRDRYER SCHICK PETITE I HAIRDRYER UNIVERSAL BETTII1A HAIRDRYER IR THE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER AND CORNER OF PERRY AND MONTCALM M THE PONTIAC,PKiSSS, MUMUAV, DKCKMBEK 6, 1963 I drat tortoises on the arid' y. P. Supervisors Wcmtj”*8 Adopted Saturday by Upper] {Galapagos Islands store waterl t ’ Peninsula county supervisors. [from the scant rainfall in neck Big Mac Tolls Lifted Alex Goldade, supervisor ofi |sacs. Shipwrecked mariners • , , Ichippewa County, said the reshave been saved from death by, ESCANABA (AP) —A resolu- 0lutlon will be submitted to the! __„ ^ _ __|____ the unusual water sup- tion calling for elimination of state convention of supervisorsjiarm worker was suffocated dislodged, officers said, burying tolls aw the Mackinac Bridge in January. jSunday when he was buried Gonyea. Worker Suffocated funder some five tons of corn. Police said Donald J. Gonyea, Under 5 Tons of Corn [33, climbed into a v-shaped _ trailer to free some corn width MONROE (AP) — A Newport jud become stuck. The corn By TOM TIEDE LAI KHE, Viet Nam (NEA)-The day after combat. Full bellies, clean clothes, night's rest. The men *( A Company, t Infantry, rose early, those who slept at all, and complained anew how hot it was, how the cook had watered the coffee again, how their faces horned from cold razor blades/ W body “Bull," someone snorted, “an Mg fights are the same.’’ “WeU, anyway,” said a third, “we gave ’em bell.” it a ★ “And they us,” answered the sergeant. “You said it” Eight or nine “Eight, or nine guys got it in; fids company alone.” “One jay had Ms arm Mowed on right next to me.” “He live?” “No. I tried to help him, butj it wasn’t any use. I tied something around the stump, but he Mod to death light there in my ■lap.".- ■!,»& n • “Joes." “What couki you do for Mm? Nothing^ I felt akk." 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(90 day*'same as cash) or Budget Term* ALWAYS THE WORST “They sty the first big fight’s always the worst,” a guy mumbled. The fear was now. But memory never be. imme a some-” growled rgeant. thought quit smok-a man re- ‘STARTED AGAIN’ “Whatta ya want one for, then?” “I started again during the fight,” the sergeant sighed. ' was lying there shooting and wishing I had a smoke. Then * said ‘Fer crying out loud, what have I got to lose?’ So I lit up.” it it it , “It’s bad for your health, Sarge.” MEN LAUGHED “So? I hope I live long enough fb die of cancer.” The men laughed. Every- * body Stored at his hands. A guy with a fragment wound Was tracing the outline of the pole with a finger. A lieutenant cleaned his weapon. A medic cut his fingernails. ' it it ★ * “I never figured we’d get hit so hard this soon,” a man said. ONE MONTH “Yeah. Lord, only one month we been here," another answered. “The worst was when we got cut off.” “You said it." “I felt like Custer’s Last Stand all over again.” ■k it it “You said it.” “You know what really was funny?” a nonconi asked. CAN OPENER “Right in the middle of the whole thing, when the slugs were popping all ova-, a guy turned to me and asked for a P-38.” “A can opener?” “So help me, he did. Said he was hungry.” A jeep drove up a nearby road and the men swore at the gust. it * * , A young boy' labored a pencil over a piece of wrinkled stationery. Another nibbed the tips of his fingers, lightly over the prickly 'sprouts of his fleshly trimmed crew cut. $1000? THAT "4 Bit Beneficial “So, we done good our “Nobody chickened.” “Yeah? So nobody ran. Where “Please, just one cookie?” Just call up or come in. Get the cash you want fast to do your shopping, to pay your bills, to enjoy the holidays. You pick the terms... you pick the payments... at Beneficial, Where you get that BIG O.K. for cash! Call up and seel BENEFICIAL FINANCE SYSTEM • 1600 OFFICES COAST-TO-COAST Loans up to $1000 on Signature, Furniture or Car PONTIAC —(2 office*) Beneficial Finance Co. of Detroit • ION. Saginaw (Near Strand Theatre) ........332-9249 Beneficial Finance Co. of Waterford • 477 Elizabeth Lake Rd.................. 334-4513 OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT — PHONE FOR HOURS Not long ago, Mrs. Barbara Saylor, Michigan Bell telephone operator in Flint, heard the hesitant voice of a small boy asking her if it was all right if he ate a cookie. , “But it’s so near dinner,” was her reply. “Mommy’s not here to make dinner, and I'm hungry.” “Where is your mommy?” Barbara inquired. “She called ... the car broke ... she’ll be late. I sure would like a cookie.’’ Barbara hesitated a moment. “Please, just one cookie?” pleaded the boy. “Instead,” suggested Barbara, “why don't you spread yourself a nice slice of bread and butter? I’m sure Mommy will give you a cookie after dinner. Will you be a good boy and do that for me?” “Okay,” replied the youngster, disappointed but reassured that—somewhere—a, nice woman was at hand to offer a bit of motherly advice until his own mother'arrived home. Nothing unusual about this little incident. Just another example of how telephone people arc naturally friendly and thoughtful. You see, with Michigan Bell, friendly service is a way of life. Michigan Bell Part of the Nationwide Bill System ; . ■■ \ \ - ., FOR HOME ENTERTAINMENT AT ITS FINEST Choose a Magnificent '66 MognaVQ B-+ f HE PONTIAC *&BSS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1965 Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: SurgeryOnly Answer fo Gallstone Woes Servicemen fo Get Georgia State Flags ATLANTA, Ge. (AP) — Oov. gency fund to buy Georgia flag! for servicemen in Viet Nam., • Secretary of State Ben W. Aiming at Con Men LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Lddwn the stwalled fly-by-night business “adept * W • ★ Would a gallbladder X ray show whether you have ulcer? the duodenum, which lies Just beyond the stomach. Q—What is acute cholelithiasis? Is it curable? What medication should be taken for it? ♦ .★ h A — Cholelithiasis refers to stones in the gallbladder. I presume the “sente” refers to Die gallstone colic that Occurs when n stone passes throagh the bUe duct into, the, intestfoe. The only cun is surgical removal * A—X rays made after you have taken the opaque dye that concentrates in the gallbladder will reveal stones if any are present. Ia addition to this, X rays may show that your gallbladder does not. empty after a fatty meal (one type of gallbladder disease or malfunction). Other types of gallbladder dis-iaae must be found by other methods. The only drugs any value would be pain killers to tide you over the worst of the attack. Q — What diet do you recommend for gallbladder dls-ise? A — Most persons with gallbladder disease are overweight and should reduce. The most important consideration, both for the gallbladder disease and the weight problem, Is the avoidance of fats — no chocolate, nuts, pie crust, avocados or whole milk. In almost everyone with this disease the gallbladder must eventually come out, after which a return to a liberal diet is possible. ■k h it There are many advantages o not delaying this operation. Says Heart Murmur No Reason to Curtail a Child's Exercise Science Service PHILADELPHIA -‘Do no, A gallbladder X ray will not condemn your elementary reveal ulcers in the stomach or school child to the sidelines be- Tender - Juicy - Boneless SIRLOIN fiQO JDw'ss after exercise, Dr. Hyman said. Those who have a low recovery rate are usually poor candidates for any athletic program. EIGHT TYPES Eight types of cardiovascular disabilities have been found among school and college students. Cardiac murmurs are said to occur in about N per cent of all youngsters, but have no clinical significance in many cases. , The w a 11-conditloned athlete with a cardiac condition may-be1 better able to tolerate oxygen cause he has a heart murmur. Most children can exercise In spite of this common cardiac condition, provided the murmur is not caused by a* heart-valve weakness, the National Conference on the Medical Aspects of Sports here was told- "It should be said at the very beginning,” explained Dr. Albert S. Hyman of New York, “that every athlete has cardiac problems.” An imbalance of oxygen ls'^t than a person who has a produced in the system by vig-1n<> rma 1 heart but is to poor, orous exercise, whether or not Physical condition, said Dr. Hy-the person has a normal heart.!man, who is associate clinical Any athlete experiences labored kTOte$°' of medictoMmeritus, hSrthtog, palpitation and Ne" York f^cal College. 01 1 Dr. Hyman is founder and hon-physiologic oxygen debt. I J™£a J Atnerican - v * * * I College of Cardiology. - j A simple test is based on the) ★ * ★ percentage of recovery of | This optimistic outlook was in normal breathing and heartbeat contrast to another report, show-I-- trmrrnni-ri • ‘ tag that one of every nine boys Mor« ComfortWaaring wiU have either a concussion ^■| TrrTij a jammed neck or a pinched rALdt I tt I VI nerve during a football season Her* u * pi«M*nt «r»jr toolroom* at University of California at loot# put* discomfort. PASTEETH. . mi improTtd powder, ipruiUad on I Los Angeles, upper end lower plate* bold! them I firmer so that they feel more comfortable. No rummy, gooey, peaty I teste or feeling. If* alkaline (non-acid) . Does not sour. Cheoka “plate odor breath". Oet PASTEETH today , at drug oountere everywhere. High Fidelity! For the thousands of Cadillac buyers who faithfully trade their cars for the latest models, there is an equally faithful following that eagerly awaits the pleasurable economy of a used Cadillac. Read the reasons why. :________________I Choice of Storoo or HI-FI! firestone w 12-inch, Long Playing Cluithnu WMmt ♦3.98 to *4.98 VALUE NOW ONLY... *100 H featuring r JULIE T ANDREWS 1SSS ACADEMY AWARD WINNER and STAR of "MARY POPPINS" and THE "SOUND OF MUSIC" SINQS... VIC DAMONE SINGS..."It Cam* Upon A Midnight Cl**r“ and "Hev# Yourself A Merry Little Chrietmee" DOROTHY KIRSTEN SING8...ri Wonder A* I Wender" end “Joy ton* World'' JAMES MCCRACKEN Refrigerator Car Fire Causes $12,000 Loss | LANSING (AP)—A refrigerated railroad car caught fire Sun-, day, causing some 112,000 damage to a Cargo of 1,000 cases of 'lemons. Fire officials said if the Public Health Department condemns the balance of the shipment damages could exceed i $20,000. A defective refrigeration unit caused the blaze, fire-'men said. There were no injuries. Cadillac owners are moving up to the 1966 model in record numbers. And understandably so. They find that its distinguished new styling, its exceptional performance, its remarkable luxury, Ita many new options including exclusive new variable ratio power steering, end its unmatched quality a're difficult indeed to resist And so will you, once you have taken the wheel for yourself. But if you are not quite reedy for a new Cadillac, follow the practice of the thousands who choose a late model, previously^owned Cadillac. They get advanced featuree and lasting value that most new ca^/of other makes do not yet provide. Whether you buy your Cadillac new or used, see your authorized Cadillac dealer. Hia wonderful selection of Cadillacs is waiting for you now. SEE AND DklVE THE MAGNIFICENT 1966 CADILLAC N6W ON DISPLAY AT YOUR AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. 1980 WIDE TRACK DRIVE, WEST • PONTIAC, MICHIGAN CHRISTMAS , $7% PIANO SPECIAL iSliglS Priced *t ehewn at Pbaetee* Store,; cempetitivel, priced *t Fire,ton* Dealer, end at all service station, diiplo/in* the Fimtons >i< 148 N. SAGINAW Gpm Mon., Thor*., Fri. 9 to 9 146 WEST HURON Open Men. end Fri. 'HI 9 P. M. The Grjnnell-Made "HOLLY" SPINET' built for a lifetime of musical happiness I For your home this ChristmM . . . e gift that will pay dividends for years in fun and relaxation. This beautiful "HoiI/* Spinet, crafted in Grinnill's own factory, has a full 88-note keyboard, rich tone and responsive action. Lustrous walnut to fit any decor. Order now for immediate or Christmas delivery. ‘569 BENCH INCLUDED No down payment GRINNELL'S, Horn*.of STEINWAY, KNABE, STECK and Othar Fin* Plato Nam#* Use Your CHARGE, 4-PAY PLAN (90 Day* Same as Cash) or CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY Pontiac Mali 682-0422. Downtown, 27 S. Saginaw St. Ft 3-7161 , tHE^ranmAc press, Monday, December e, ipea U.S. Rights Unit/ Katzenbach at Odds WASHINGTON (UPI) - Atty.i Katzenback replied sharply, ,tained in a report on early im- Gen. Nicholas DeB. Katzenbach breeding the Commission’s al- piementation of the four-month- ___________________ _____________ and the U.S. Civil Rights Com-) legation as “aeitber literally oW Votin8 Rights Act, was the change would lead to farther mission are af odds over correct nor comisant of the sharPest yet and the first to open conflict between the De- fiiatlwn fttmatiwi .. hrifltf A mnlt; frAm ITttfwAtlkfl/ih -a.—1 J iL. n.______1. mentifrf the historic Vo fin g*®*” Rights Act. • % H In a repo# mads public during the weekend, “ . agency which advises mid Informs the Pfosldent had Congress, suggested that Katzenbach and the Jlistlae Department are moving tyjp slowly under the Act. “”“L * Wi,UMn L- Taylor- was also misswn had criticlled the Jus- gecn as an answer to attacks on bring a reply from Katzenbach. ANSWERS ATTACKS w • .. ________... . . The reply, a 3,000-word letter It was the second time In (essito the Commission’s staff direc- e Johnson administra- .ere into the South. Katzenbach feared the ex- replied that he has ordered, and will continue .to order, examiners into any county where they are warranted. ttee Department Three weeks the department by civil right ago-it accused the department- * of ’‘reluctance” to protect civil rights workers from violence. Bid the latest criticism, con- "HOLIDAY BILLS?’’ MNot me! I shop with cash...cash from Associates. Saves time and trouble.. .and means I nan start the new year with a clean slate. Yea, sir, I can get the money I need for any worthwhile purpose. Associates will even arrange extra cash sol can take advantage of the January ■aha. Holiday bills? Not me! See Associates! That’s the answer!'* A financing Ham tor grwry *—4 ASSOCIATES CONSUMER FINANCE CO. Opsa St 4 Saturdays hafwt Christmas IN PONTIAC 684 Oakland Avanue........ ..FE 2-0214 689 Nprth Telegraph Road....682-2000 Pontiac Mall Shopping Cantor IN DPAY70N PLAINS / 4476 Dixie Highway..........OR 6-1207 Arraignment President Hubert H. (umphrey has said the plan should end “confusion and duplication” in the civil rights field. Although the Presdient is not likely to take sides publicly, jthere is little doubt he approves Due in Brutal M°’'edby “ The Commission’s chief complaint against Katzenbach was hat he has failed to s e n d enough federal voting examin- State Killings LANSING (AP) - Authorities planned an arraignment today for Donald Basinger, 32, held in connection with Saturday’s bludgeon slaying of his wife and two children. Officers said Basinger was held on an open charge of murder after the discovery of the bodies of Mr. Joann Basinger, 25, and her children, Dennis, and Charmaine, 7. .v * * Ingham County Coroner Jack Holmes Aid the three died of repeated blows, apparently from a ballpeen hammer. Two other children, who reportedly were outside -playing, were uninjured. The family dog also was beaten to death. .. ★. w * According to Det. Fred kins officers were called to the Basinger home by neighbors to investigate a disturbance. Dennis was dead at the scene and Mrs. Basinger and Charmaine dieA at a hospital. Wilkins said Basinger was treated at the hospital -for self-inflicted head wounds, apparently from Die same hammer. Bunnies Second Choice With Pussycat Fans NEW YORK, (UPI),-The Bunnies at New York’s Playboy [Club played second Addle to pussycats last night. Some 350 members and friends of the Save a Cat League Inc., took over two rooms at the club for fund-raising dinner. The federal government owns 769,900,000 acres of land in the 50 states, or more than one out of every three acres. THE ‘RED’ SPECIAL — A soviet-made hydrofoil speeds along in test run on the Elbe river near Hamburg, West Germany. The craft can carry 120 passengers and has a top speed of about 40 miles an hour. It will .operate between Cuxhaven and Heligoland. "The "War of Jenkins’ Ear’ was the popular name given to ,a war between Spain and Great Britain in 1739. It Was occasioned partly by the tortures undergone by Robert Jenkins, ship captain, at the hands of the Spaniards. -1 FREYTER ALWAYS GIVES YOU HIS FAMOUS GUARANTEED WORRY FREE SERVICE! la GOES! ALL FLOOR SAMPLES! DEMONSTRATORS! ‘All BRAND NEW 1965-1966 MERCHANDISE FRETTER’S PRE-CHRISTMAS ■Only a fsw ihert week* left 'HI ChrlstmasM If you'r* planning m baying m appliance, TV, Color TV ■ or store# for this Christmss, I suggest you come in Hi'- —| **-* —’■ »■-------—* J H----------- ■and tho selection is stHI complete, lot more then Hist ■$199 but hurry in fhsy won't last through Hit seesoi ■prieo and ssrvks you got 5 lbs. of coffes absolutely free.' auggost you como in this wttk, Hist way you'll bo guaranteed delivery HM * '-------iMi that you con sHII buy your elactrlc knifa for on! season. And renumber If I d “ A ‘ | ■ 10-Inch Mint Got Santa with U«ht, Timor, Clack, Ovon light. SoOmcoU to $1MOO. ■ Faaiily-iiit RtMsarator with | tcrttii tht tea Frttitr, VtsataMt _ 6rltetr,IM«ai la Star...SUMS. I tta ua—aw aa ai tlaat auSata. Dahna Walnat Staraa, with 4 > ChMior with AM-FM I St, naaars Manet I I US Siwaela. SltUS. Admiral 21” PORT. TV • AH SI Chennai Tuner O Maw Channel Selector O Built-In Monopola AnUnwa O Poltrtaed Lina Cord, Pmtter's low Sale PHoo w *159* Admiral CONSOLt STEREO 0 Brand New Mid-St*ta Man* ■ 0 AM-FM Sadie 199* S Admir : Portable TV ■ ■ • Big Screen ■ • 14,000 Volt Chassis 5 e New Stool Bond Tubs *99* RCA VICTOR 23” 1REVIH0N COLOR TV PONTIAC WAREHOUSE TEKORAFH RD. H Mill S. ORCHARD LAW RD. 1 Mils North of Miracle MUe Open Doily 10-9-Open Sunday 1106 — FE 3-7051 M9N0NIY DOWN-UP It 30 M8NTM It PAY (Ship him a sltnmtrrhututui for (Ebristmas LOOK! These amazing SANSABElT SLACKS are actually patented to slim his waist and fit better than any slacks he’s ever worn. You are looking at a small miracle for big waists. It’s called the SANSABELT1* slack, and Jaymar imported it from France. The secret is in the patented inside construction. (See it up there?) It banishes belts, buckles . . . and bulges. Like magic. No matter how he stoops, squirms, bends, sits or twists—the wide all-way stretch band adjusts perfectly to every movement Come in today. See the huge Osmun’s collection of SANSABELT slacks (one of the biggest in the state!). A great gift for any man. Even if he has notummyatall. ‘Licensed by Y. UCottier and A. G. Trentesaux of Franc*. Patent No. 2,757,381. CHARGE IT! Or give him a convenient Osmun’s Gift Certificate. SANSABELT SLACKS by JAYMAR... from $18.95 a part oI Christmas since SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN A YOUNQ MEN ■ Downtown Pontiac ITel-Huron Center In Pontiac ■ Tech-Plaza Center in Warren FREE PARKING at ALL STORES * OPEN EVERY NIGHT til 9 KDNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER fl, I960 Jacoby on Bridge tyJAGOBYftSON A letter from Wyoming, reeds in pert, “How can average players learn how to work a play? He note* that dummy's last heart is a threat against West. The only other threat is dummy’s third club. It isn’t much of a threat but if it turns out worked some without actually knowing that he had done so. Sooth is rather unhappy with the king of hearts opening leadjbnt there is nothing he r suit. Blast plays the nine and West continues with the ace and Jack. East raffs dummy’s queen and returns the queen of din-■ends. Some players would just give up. Others would play it out in; hope of a miracle. The expert recognizes a possible squeeze1 situation. fa?that West started with five or The answer Is more dubs, it is going to be a that anyone can sure trick. In any event, there work a squeeze is no harm in hoping, play and that! chances are that our Wyoming reader may have NORTH (D) 4JI9I VQtlt *14 4 AK2 BAST A 3 4 104 S ¥AKJ10 ¥92 ♦ 97 5 ♦QJ1QIS2 4 Q 10 7 4 3 4 J* SOUTH 4 AKQM ¥ 7 5 S ♦ AS 4 S 6 8 East and West vulnerable , West North East South 1 4 Paw 1 4 Pass 2 4 Paw 4 4 Paw . Paw Paw > Opening lead—¥ K South wins the diamond la dummy and runs trump tricks. West discards two chibs and South begins to hope. Maybe West did start with five clubs. South cashes Us ace of diamonds and leads a fourth trump. West throws aw*y a low diamond and now South leads his last tramp. k ! wai By this time West has run) today’s question out of discards. He can’t chuck I »“tend ot Jumpiiw to four ... ; . _. ,. hearts, your partner rebids the ten of hearts. This would (three diamonds over your two establish dummy1* eight. So | hearts. What do you do now? West throws another club. Sooth! Answer Tomorrow Mfff w Astrological Forecast By SYONOV OMARS • pisces (F«b. it . Mar. 20): Attand to MCurlty naadi. Build on solid baaa. Ap-pilat to bud nasi, root astate, spaclal or wne-rane* projects. Don't ba deceived Discuss centroveraM TAURUS (Apr. IS - mar «/• track of possessions. Excellent far dal purchases, including luxury IL™ antiques. Fine far hobby Interests. Road _be In contact with experts. INCOME j OPPORTUNITY OUt. GEMINI (MW It - Juno 30): Cycle moves up. Public discussion bonotltsj Nir cause. Moans accept invitations1 .j, personal appearances. Don't tool alt must bt perfect, instead, octant corny. CANCER (Juno It • July 21): Proasuro Indicated duo to added reaponalbUlty, opportunity. Don't bo dapresaad H yea art —rfc overtime. Superiors ab-, are favorably Impressed. There la nothing to fearl LEO (July 23 • Aug. 21): Don't permit conduct to bo Influenced by "ahoddv*' Individual. Maintain dignity. Stand Stress knowledge rattier than gHtti superficiality. Deal with vounoar oe VIRGO (Aug. 21 carter questions * ...J originality. TAKE A CHANCE ON YOUR OWN ABILITIES. Invaat In your own talents. LIBRA (Sept. 23 -Oct. 22): Emphasis on PLANNING FOR FUTURE. Now "“h i otherwise, padtated. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb. IS): Favorable lunar aspect spotlights romance, creative endeavors. Day when you tefl especially "alive.'' There Is communication. accomplishment. Friend provides incentive. Sewer System Meeting Set INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — A public information meeting, concerning the proposed Clinton-Oakland Sewage Disposal System, will be held Dec. 14 at the Township Hall, Clerk Howard Altman has announced. Township and Oakland County Department of Public Works officials will explain the system, according to Altman. Tentative plans call for Independence Township to pay approximately^ per cent of the coot of the lle^pilUon project, if it is accepted. ^ Wixom Firm Gets 1-6% Highway Job The Walter Teebe CO. of Wixom, with a proposal of $3,253,666, was low bidder for construction of 1.96 miles of 1-696 divided highway in Southfield, the State Highway Department a n-nounced. Six bridges are included in the proposed project, which extends from Franklin Road to Lahser. This bid was one of severalj low bids far road projects throughout the state totaling over $16 million. Like money in the bank .. . this sole of dress shirts Thd fabrics are excellent — fine pima broadcloth, lustrous and silky smooth . . oxfords,, beautifully woven —- and they're both wash 'n' wear. The stitching is exceptionally fine and the buttons are pure ocean pearl. In fact, we know if we could show you these shirts we wouldn't have to say a word . . . the extraordinary, value would speak for itself. Drop in and stock up for everyone on your gift list. Pima cotton broadcloth with regular collar, convertible cuffs, in white, sizes 14-17Vi, 32-36; pima broadcloth with tab collar, convertible cuffs, in white, sizes 14-17, 32-36; bxford with button-down collar, barrel cuffs in white sizes 32-36, in blue or maize, sizes 1414-17, 32-35. Oxford with tab collar, barrel cuffs in white, sizes 14-17, 32-35. 1UUL and PHONE ORDERS—412*2200 Add 4% Mich. Salt* Tw BIRMINGHAM 0PM SAT. TO StSO PJL THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER C, 19Q3 -■■■■-—— 25th Anniversary Pontiac Pro** Photo* Past presidents of the Cotillion Dance Club were on hand to help celebrate the group’s 25th anniversary Saturday evening at Kingsley Inn. Front the left are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Glenn, Clarendon Street, and the Donald Jacobses, Watkins Lake. Is She Too 7 Old Silver Is on Display for Program Mrs. James Youngblood gave a program on Sheffield silver at the Christmas party for the Heritage Society In her Bloomfield Hills home. She displayed several pieces of silver from the late 1700s and told of the methods of silver-plating used in England from 1750 to 1838. Wassail was served preceding the program in the Victorian room of the Youngblood home which is furnished in the Williamsburg period. After an exchange of antique gifts, the traditional English plum pudding was served. Mrs. Robert Boyce and Mrs. John Napley assisted with the coffee. Carol Sing for Patients by Group Group II qf the Oakland County Alumnae Chapter qf Delta Zeta sorority will meet at 7:20 p.m., Thursday, at the Alexander Convalescent Home in Royal Oak. After presenting a gift-wrapped package of cookies to each patient at the home, the group will begin the annual Christmas caroling. Members will bring gifts for a children’s hospital to the Royal Oak home of Mrs. Charles Fleckenstein Jr. after the caroling. The evening will closp with a program on “Holiday Decorations” and the service of dessert and coffee by the cohostess Mrs. Edward Martin of Southfield. \ YWCA's Yule Begins Tonight The “Hanging of the Greens,” i traditional ceremony in all YWCA’s around the world, will be held in Pontiac’s new “Y" for the first time this evening. Y-Teens, Day Campers and friends will be on hand at 7 p.m. to help decorate the building and trim "the tree. Carol singing and the recounting of the Christmas story by Mrs. Donald McMillen will take place. Refreshments will follow. f Calendar I MONDAY AW chapter, PEO Sis- I terhood, 8 p.m., home of 1 Mrs. Norman Allen of I Newberry Street. Mrs. | William Kalwitz is co- § hostess. Exchange of ideas I on Christmas gifts and I 1 decorations. TUESDAY I ■ Pontiac Osteopathic Hos- | | pital Guild, 2-4 p.m., home I I of Mrs. Ward Ross of I North Berkshire Road.' I Holiday membership tea. I Past Noble Grands of 1 Welcome Rebekab lodge I No. 248, 8 p.m., home of I Mrs, Ferman Huston of I Montcalm Street Ex-| change of Christmas gifts. Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Campbell of Watkins Lake take a rest from dancing to pose for The Pontiac Press photographer. They’re Cotillion Cltib members. Holidays Entertaining Begins for Hills Folk BySIGNEKARLSTROM' Mr. and Mrs. Norman Strouse of New York City returned to our community this weekend. With Mr. and Mrs. William D. Laurie Jr. of Grosse Pointe and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thomas they entertained 250 guests for a holiday brunch, Saturday at the Bloomfield Hills Country Club. It was one of those parties for which the Strouses are noted. Their guests had a happy time recalling past events when Mr. and Mrs. Strouse resided in'Birmingham and also catching up on the latest news. FOR CHRISTMAS At Christmas time, Mr. and Mrs. Strouse, together with her mother, Mrs. L. B. Auger , will visit the Strouses’ youngest daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. William Edwards of Cincinnati. * * ★ Mrs. Strouse anticipates a wonderful time playing Santa Claus to her six grandchildren. Another large party at Bloomfield Hills Country Club Saturday was the dinner Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick Colombo gave for some 150 friends. ★ ■ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Guy D. Hitt recently returned home after one month of traveling in Florida and Jamaica. NEW HOME The John Cann'ons have moved into their new home on Woodale Court, Bloomfield Hills. With their children, Jill and John junior, they spent the Thanksgiving holidays with Mrs. Cannon’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Lang of Rathmore Road. Joining the family was Mr. Lang’s elderly aunt, Mrs. E. E. Domm who arrived by plane from Chicago. ★ ★ ★ The project, “Knight Before Christmas” planned by the , Women’s Council of Holy Name Church in Birmingham will be supported by Mesdames Harry L. Winston Jr., Judge W. B. Bearden, Leon E. Briggs, Donald E. Scriven and many others. Sorority Has Dinner Party Twenty members of Zeta chapter, Alpha Delta Kappa sorority, gathered recently for a holiday dinner-meeting in Fortino’s Steak House. for the evening were Mrs. Walter Bennett, Mrs. Marjorie Cotterman and Mrs. Francis Schell. • ★ * a Christmas plans include gifts for a number of children in fpster homes, alsp a gift of money to the ADK scholarship student in this area. June vows are planned by Diane Lynn Darby of Swartz Creek, daughter of ■' the Carl Darbys of Ridge Road, and David Allen Corns, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Corns of Kalamazoo. She is an alumna of Michigan State University . where her fiance is a senior. DIANE LYNN DARBY She Wishes to Add Their Son By The Emily Post Institute Q. When signing birthday or anniversary cards to our friends, I always include the name of our 19-month-old son along with my husband’s and mine. My husband thinks it is foolish to include our child’s name on the card as he could not possibly be aware of the birthday or anniversary. I’m sure this is not a very important matter but I would, nevertheless, like to have your opinion on this. ★ ★ ★ A: I’m inclined to agree with your husband, but as you say, it is not an important matter and if you wish to include your small son’s name on these greeting cards, there is certainly no reason why you may not do so. CANT GO TO THE PARTY Q: I received an invitation to a friend’s birthday party, I will be unable to go as I have another engagement for that evening. The invitation did not mention anything about a reply. Must Iy nevertheless, write a note to' my friend telling her that I will not be able to go to her party? A: As no reply was asked for, strictly speaking, none is necessary. However, it would be polite and thoughtful to write a note or telephone your friend to say bow sorry you are that you will not be able to go to her party and give her your best wishes for a happy birthday. TOAST TO HER HUSBAND Q: The other evening I was at a dinner given in honor of my husband. A toast was imposed and he and everyone stood to drink it. I stood along with the others and drank the toast. However, .1 felt somewhat uncomfortable because I really didn’t know whether I, as his wife, should have done so. Will you please advise me? A: If toe toast had been proposed to you as well as to your husband, you should have remained seated; but as you were not included in the toast you were quite right in rising and drinking with the others. The Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “Formal Wedding Procedure" includes details on the wedding procession, the receiving line and other helpful information.'. * v To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. Gives Wrong Impression By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Just what is the difference between “flirting" and being friendly with a man? I have been accused of flirting when I have only meant to be “nice” I am single and people tellflH| me I’m the type they feel j vU. mm like they’ve • known all toeh-ff^Z^H lives only a few minutes after meeting m e. IH Men DO ask ABBY me out as soon as they meet me, but I have trouble with them after that. They try to take liberties with me and I’m not that kind of girl. ★ ★ a" How can I be friendly enough to capture a man’s interest, witobut giving him the idea that anything goes? JUST FRIENDLY DEAR FRIENDLY: “Flirting” constitutes encouragement above and beyond the platonic plateau-. The girl who is constantly being misunderstood is a little TOO friendly. Don’t be a tease. The man who mistakes the dating call for the mating call needs his hearing tested. Start by saying “NO” very clearly. * * ★ DEAR ABBY: Our daughter was selected to be one of a few for a big honor in her school. She had a lot of competition Son Is Born Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Rik-er (Patricia Piper) of Raven Road announce the birth of a son, Thomas Aaron, on Dec. 1. Grandparents are Dr. and Mrs. Aaron Riker of Orchard Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Brooks of Akron, Ohio. but, Abby, she won it fairly and squarely. We later heard through the grapevine that the reason our daughter won was because we were friendly with some of the people who had a big say in picking the winner. I swear on a stack of Bibles that we never once mentioned our daughter or anything about that “honor” to these people. This sure does take the joy out of it for us. How can we let folks know that she won with no help from anybody? HURT DEAR HURT: Don’t waste your time or energy. Your friends don’t need to be assured and your enemies wouldn’t believe the truth anyway. Credit it to the sour grapevine and forget it. ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: Please be a pal and discourage people from sending out those boring five-page Christmas newsletters that seem to have replaced the lovely traditional Christmas card. I realize that some people don’t have time to write letters to their friends all year and their annual Christmas letter helps bring folks up to date on what has happened to all the members of the family since last Christmas. However, if Cousin Ned was appointed to the Supreme Court, they will read it in the papers. And who cares if Susie placed third in the frog jumping contest, and Grandpa Joe had all his uppers extracted? (Yicb!) Yours, for the old-fashioned “MERRY CHRISTMAS" cards. LAKELANDER DEAR LAKE LANDER: Speak for yourself. I’ve seen some annual Christmas newsletters that were interesting, amusing and tastefully done. And those five-page duds make wonderful kindling. ★ ★ * DEAR ABBY: I was delighted with the way you answered that young woman - who wanted to know what was wrong with discussing people. You said, “Intelligent people talk about ideas, —not people." How true. And what a joy it is to be around them. ★ * ★ One of the loveliest qualities found in all truly great ladies is their reluctance to talk about absent parties in a manner which is uncomplimentary to ' them. This kind of behavior reflects good breeding and inspires trust and affection. It is something we all “know" but should be reminded of from time to time. Thank you for reminding us. CIVILIZED ★ ★ ★ Problems? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Gregorys Travel North for Ski Honeymoon Honeymooning at a northern -ski resort are the junior William J. Gregorys (Sandra Kay Francis) who spoke vows Sat- Sandra Kay Francis, daughter of Mr. and‘Mrs. Max A. Francis of Polvadera Drive and William J. Gregory Jr., son of the seniof Gregorys of Novi were married / Saturday in the Walled Lake. Methodist Church. MRS. WILLIAM J. GREGORY JR. urday in the Walled L4tke Methodist Church. / Reception for 2£0 guests ip the Commerce Masonic Temple followed toe evening rite performed by Rev. Ellis Hart and Rev. John Mulder. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Max A. Francis of Polvadera Drive, Commerce Township, and the senior Gregorys of Novi are the newlyweds’ parents. CRYSTAL TIARA A tulle veil with crystal tiara complemented the bride’s sheath gown and chapel train of White brocade. Cascading white roses rested on her Job’s Daughters’ Bible. Sharlyn and Susan Francis attended their sister as maid of honor and junior maid. Linda-Rasinen was bridesmaid and Robert Francis carried the rings. With best man, Gail Collins, were Dale Gregory and James Nicolow who ushered. * ★ * The couple will reside in Royal Oak. She is a senior at the Harper Hospital School of Nursing and he attends Wayne State University. His fraternity is Phi Kappa Pi. THS yONTIACPEESS, MONDAY,, DECEMBER 8, 1963 Traditional Tunes Sung by Magi In each Belgian Village, three man chosen for their standing virtue, are appointed Jto walk through the streets at Christmas dtesftqd as the Magi. Attired in colorful raiment, they sing two songs at the door of aadh house. ★ * ,> * One describes the journey of the Three Kings, the other Is a Flemish version of “0 Tan-nenbaum.” Their singing is always rewarded by an invitation to tea and pancakes. Button Earrings When putting pretty buttons on a dress that you are making, use two extra ones to cement to earring backs for matching accessories. Brock- Hampton Vows in Afternoon Ceremony A four o’clock ceremony and reoeptkm Saturday in the First Social Brethren Church, marked the vows of BUIie Jean Hampton and Elmer Brock Jr. of Pingree Street: Their parents are t(|a Thomas Brights of Putnam Street and the senior Mr. and Mrs. Brock of Kettle bland, Ky. The bride’s floor-length gown of white taffeta was styled with bodice and overskirt of Chantilly lace. Her veil of silk illusion fell from a jeweled tiara and ivy accented her bouquet Of white Sweetheart roses. ★ ' w. ■ #■' Amy Hampton and Diane Bright attended their sister at "Sir SEWING CENTER (VALUABLE COUPONS—-p mmmmmrnmmmm| I VACUUM CLEANER I NOSE . T length cloth ! | and nibber. No plastic. ! Clean, check motor oil, I clean machine adjust I tensions, check timing. I \ , Check electrical. I I Sewing Machine j TUNE-UP * All Work Guarantawd 4SI ELIZABETH LAKE RD., NEAR TELEGRAPH ACROSS FROM PONTIAC MALL 333-9289 the rite performed by Rev. Loy Barger. On the esquire side w e r a* William Daniels, best man, and the bride’s brothers, Robert Hampton and Cbsrlas Bright, as ushers. Quiet Time in New York In sharp contrast, in Hie bustling, crowded metropolis of ftow York, at Amstar* Yard, a Quadrangle of renovated 18th Century brown-stones and gardens, friends of the 48th Street Association gather on Has Monday evening before Christmas 4o light a stately spruce In the center of the Yard. At .that same moment, Christmas' lightr and candles are tamed on in the* windows of the surrounding bouses. Then, carrying lantdhu and lighted torches, and dressed in colorful caps and mufflers, Hie carollers walk through the heighboring streets singing the beloved Christmas carols to the enjoyment of their friends, and neighbors, returning later to the Yard for a Wassail bowl and fruit cake. ITs a Pair Twin daughters were bom Dec. 1 to Mr. and Mrs. Morrison L. LaPratt (Marilyn Miller) of Walled Lake. The -girls have been named Michele Ann and Marcia Sue. Grandparents are the Raymond La Pratts of Keego Harbor and the Vincent Millers of Warren. Evening Glitter by NELLY dw GRAB The scene is set for elegance in these dramatic dinner length separates. Metqllic overblouse in gold on black or on white. Sizes 32 to 36. 17.95 Formal Length block evening skirt. Sizes 8 to 16. 17.95 111 im Fairfield Tops Go With Everything SLEEVELESS SHELL Stretch nylon in 6 holiday array of glittering colors. Black, cranberry, olive, navy, gold, beige. 3.98 Mock turtleneck in machine washable 'chem-strond nylon. Block, white or cranberry. Sizes 36 to 5.98 PERSONAL or SECURITY CHARGE The Glenn M. Lock-harts of Eastwood Street, Avon Township, announce the engage merit of their daughter Brenda Irenq, to James Grigg Pote, eon of Mr. and Mrs. Craig M. Pote, also of Eastwood Street. Sing on Mountain To mark the midnight when Christmas Eve becomes Christmas Day, in the Austrian village of Kitzbuhl, villagers and skiers, carrying long, lighted tapers, slowly climb up a snow - covered mountain. There they gather in the churchyard of a mountainside church to sing Christmas carols into a still and starry night as Mozart’s music sounds on twin trumpets from the two church towers on high. Kappa Delts to Celebrate at Parties Both afternoon and evening groups of Kappa Delta toror-ity, South Oakland Alumnae, will hold Christmas parties on Dec. li The afternoon group will have luncheon at 12:88 p.m. in the home of Mrs. William P. Shaver of Birmingham. Assisting Hie hostess wilt be Mrs. Walter Dennis, Mrs. William R. Niesen and Mrs. Myron R. Zbudowskl. ■ Members win sample Christmas cookies and me-change recipes. A box will also be donated to the Oakland County society for Crippled Children and Adults. EVENING GROUP The. evening . group will meet in the Birmingham home of Mrs. Paul Pentecost. Cohostesses will be Mrs. Ray--mond Graziani and Abigail Sweeney. * * ★ Members will bring can goods to fill baskets for the needy. There will also be a Christmas tree ornament exchange. Terry Is Tops Terry cloth is a perfect bathroom accessory. Pretty poncho robes are comfortable and water absorbent to wear while shampooing the hair or giving yourself a pedicure on stepping out of the tub. , 4443 Dixiw Hwy. Drayton — 673-7464 YOU’LL BE READY WITH ZOTOS Vitalizer cold wave!. Maybe you won’t be butted under the mittletoe (then, •Itain, you might)... but you DO want to look your very belt, particularly in thit festive season. Zotoa Vitalizer at-turet you of a beautiful coiffure—dayt in, nights out. ZOTOS TOTALIZER with tty led cut *li’ set $995 FASHION VALUE . — Starhrite or Flair Cold Wave Bfl ZL S Mon., Tues., Wed. Only NEISNER’S ter 42 N. Saginaw, 2nd Floor FE 8-1343 MON. and FBI. 9:30 to 9:Q0 all tfyrous!) t&e Ijo u*t Wfc A gift for the home is pleating to all! We've scoured the ‘SjaQCj^ globe to being you the new, the exciting, the usual and all-time favorites. Come shop for Christmas treasures now! L Provincial Flower or bittersweet ironstone. New charm for your table by Castleton. Many decorative pieces. 45 pieces, 49.95. Service for 8. N. Fostoria “Argus” glassware, east in the original old moulds. In colon or clear with goblets, sherbets and other related pieces. Goblets from 3.50. Sec Our Many Noritako Chins Patterns Noritake “Fairmont" has a traditional pattern of rose gprlands and platinum bands. Open stock. 5-piece place sBttingt 5.95. , BLOOMFIELD HILLS 4080 TELEGRAPH RD. At Long Lake Rd. - 644-7570 Open-Every Evening TUI 9, Till ChriataMS PONTIAC 24 WEST HURON ST. In Downtown Pontiac FE 4-1234 Monday and Friday 'til 9 P.M. WIQQS At our Bloomfield Store ear new addition Is taking shape, aeon you will see a larger and morn exciting Wigga. Come browee now. B—10 THE PbNTlAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 0, 1965 Cairo is et Mara -El the pUro- Moot Mm* tor? BREAKFAST ami LUNC Always Rood Coffee BIKER FOUNTAIN l mfcorgtdg. - Lahhy J Lake Angelus members ' have a vast variety of I Branch, Woman’s National items, including door knockers 82 N. Saginaw St. Set Greens Market for This Friday The annual Greens Market, by the McLeod Sale FE 3-7087 Carpet Farm and Garden Association, in cooperation with the Holiday Farms, Lake Angelus and Sylvan Lake branches, is slated for Friday. Hours will be from 10 a.m. to p.m. in the Waterford CA1 Building. Specializing in greens, the Waterford Branch will have swags, roping, trees and a varsity of fresh greens. Members also will be selling Della Robbia wreaths and Christmas arrangements for borne and hospital KITS The Holiday Farms women are featuring do-it-yourself kits which include kissing balls, door swags, log candle holders and jspaghnum tree forms. ♦ ★ * I A delectable display of holiday breads will be used for counters operated by Sylvan .Lake branch members, specializing in baked goods. Mike Your Holiday Appointments Now ... at the . . . BEAUTV SALON RANDALL'S SHOPPE M Wayne St - FE M4I4 A NEW! ATdndLOSE TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to take and moia effective than the powdered and liquid food supplement, and costs less including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY> Lie. Physician, M.D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON’T DIE l —JUST EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 decorated hangers, hand-knit articles, mobiles, tree ornaments, candles and Christmas cards. Their food items will include baked goods, stuffed dates and VARIETY Waterford’s bazaar table will offer Jewelry, Madonna walj hangings, felt birds and personalized ornaments for foe tree, ks, homemade candy and specialty foods. A smorgasbord luncheon is planned from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sr . ★ ' ♦ Cochairmen of the event are Mrs. E. L. Windeler and Mrs. William A. Shunck, Waterford branch. Mrs. James C. Raison chairman for the Holiday Farms branch; Mrs. Charles Mortenson, Lake Angelus; and Mrs. Sam Warwick, Sylvan Lake. WATERFORD BRANCH Mrs. J. P. Carritte of Royal Oak talked to members of the Waterford branch recently. Curiosity about geraniums began a pursuit which has become an integral part of Mrs. Carritte’s life. The speaker related that some >00 varieites of flowering plants, 460 trees and nearly 400 grasses are now known to have existed at foe time the Bible was being written. Many are listed in its pages. ★ * ★ Most of the herbs we are familiar with were known centuries ago, according to Mrs. Carritte, as were lentils, garlic, onions (07 varieties), watermelon, cantaloupe and cucumbers. The grains barley, com and wheat also were common then, and the list of fruits included apple, apricot and pomegranate. The grape and olive were meas-lure of a man’s wealth. Mrs. Carritte also told of re-j cent, experiences in Morocco where whe went for the wedding of herdaughter to a French scientist. WWW i The meeting was at the Walton i Boulevard home of Mrs. Lloyd jThornton. Assisting the hostess | were Mrs. A. W. Emery and Mrs. Arthur Arnold. Colorful and glittering Madonna wall hangings also trill he available at Friday’s Greens Market in Waterford’s CA1 Building. Mrs. Arthur C. Arnold of Williams Lake considers purchasing one for the holidays at her home while helping to gather articles for the 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. event. Festive door swags and table decorations trill be among the vast array of items available for Friday’s annual Greens Market, presented by the Waterford Branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Assodar tion. The event is in cooperation with Holiday Farms, Lake Angelus and Sylvan Lake branches. Admiring some of their wares are members (from left) Mrs. Ray Hgyes, Lake Angelus; Mrs, George Tozer, Sylvan Lake; and Mrs. Alfred Nicholls, Edgeorge Drive. Carols Began As a Device to Teach The win'd carol, meaning “to dance and sing in a ring,” was said to have been popularized by St. Francis of Assissi. Wanting to bring the Christmas message vividly to the villagers of Assissi, who could not read, he arranged a manger scene using, real people an animals. When the villagers came to see it, he led them in Joyous song, or carolling, for which he composed a series of nativity hymns expressing faith, tenderness and a happy enjoyment of Christmas. At first part of religious liturgical drama, carol singing dates back well before 1521, when the first-known collection of Christmas carols was published. Tbday, car oilers walk through the streets in many countries, and on Christmas Eve in many homes, families gather around the tree and lift their hearts in Joyous song. TTuTv'e BACK PROBLEMS SUPPORT for WOMEN Model 493 {Gel relief from poeturel (train and many back conairioti* with a high I degree of comfort Three (eti of ad-' jutfment (trap* permit “form-fit'* ttm trol to (uit individual need*. Elastic insets allow free movement for the Wearer. "Cuahioned for Comfort,” this fine*Freeman garment feature* downy toft Dacron-Pint* Cotton. Ea*y to waiih.ahd dry. Cuahioned stay*. By PRESCRIPTION ONLY! AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC SERVICE, INC. 10M W. Horen, Pontiac DUO. 334-2529 Don’t Be Sexy, She Says NEW YC want to help\j ahead, you’d \| sexy, smart. If youi you could ulcer. That is the wold from Mrs. J. Robert Fluor of Pasadena, Calif., wife of a business executive and beauteous mother of two sons, aged 18 \ She’s so attractive you think she did not take\her own advice. Her husband of 21 ydars is president of the National-$sso-ciation of Manufacturers. He also is president of Fluor Co. Ltd. of Los Angeles, a Arm with 6,000 employes that does a IHNHnlllion to 1200-million a year business building oil, chemical, and petrochemical plants around the world. PARTNERS “We have the perfect husband-wife relationship,” said Fluor. “I get the work, and she gets foe ulcer.”' Less than three months after he was elected last year to a one-year term as president of foe NAM, Mrs. Fluor came down with an ulcer. “I take things quite seriously,” she said. “But that ulcer —'it wasn’t all NAM. It was part Fluor.” WWW' She is .quite serious about her role as a corporate wife. “You should be a good listener and a good conversationalist,” she said in an interview. “That’s one of the biggest things for a good wife.” CORPORATE IMAGE “Any criticism of foe boss’s wife would be transferred to his company,” she said. “I like to be able to be myself, but I must dress and act in keeping with my husband’s position and not overdo.” WWW - As for her husband’s business, Mrs. Fluor said she knew little about it. “He’s a firm believer in leaving business at the office,” she said. “When'someone asks me why the stock went up or down, I don’t know and I ask. But he always says he doesn’t know, either. UNSOUGHT ADVICE “I give him an opinion on personnel problems, whether he asks or not.” When your husband gets involved in something, said Mrs. Fluor, you Just set aside part of your time, however long it Is. “You try to stick to your normal routine, but don’t do the extras. Yon don’t play golf,” she sighed. “You postpone decorating the house.” You do start trying to add a personal touch to the business, whatever it is. * * * For Mrs. Fluor, that has meant things like going over the menus and decorations for quarterly NAM meetings for persons and the annual meeting in New York this week for 1,500. “I like a personal feeling,” she said. New Laces . Have Stretch Entirely new versions of traditional cotton laces result from applying a new chemical treatment — called “slack mercerization”—to lightweight flat laces, as well as to Cluny and heavy Venice types. * * * This process, which causes the fibers to swell and crimp, gives the fabric stretchabiiity and a rich 3-dimensional effect. Ibis type of no-elastic-yarn stretch lace; destined .for dresses and lingerie, has the same washability factor for which cotton is noted. In fact, sudsing and rinsing help to tighten up and restore any “sprung” spots paused by normal wear. Granny's Trick Rub the scorched part of linen with a cut onion, then soak in cold water to remove the scorch. How to be an executive wife . . . Mrs. J. Robert Fluor, Pasadena, Calif., wife.of the president of the National Association of Manufacturers, suggests a woman not be tdo sexy, too beautiful or too smart if she wants to help her husband get ahead. Mrs. Fluor, mother of two sons, 18 and 20, and married 21 years, to so serious about her role as an executive’s wife, she has developed an ulcer. 7 1,1 ~ ~—S ^ ^ there’s still time .. • ■■■ fofave your furniture 8®^ REUPHOLSTERED ft before Christmas! I LB. WASHERS 20« 12 LB. WASHERS 25* 20 LB. WASHERS 3S< ECON-O-WASH Dtr CLSANINO CINTCR Mlracl* MH* Iwt.l* NW MM Our .killed craftsmen can make your furniture look just like newt At money-saving prices, fool Phone toddy, WILLIAM WRIGHT Furniture Maker t and UphmUterert 270 Orchard Lake FE 4-0558 Settle* Oakland Cooaly Over S4 Year* EASY BUDGET TERMS OR 90 DAYS CASH Sensational Specials Rue/wft a wave of Avici “Poipee” 11 N. Saginaw St. Think of it! The Luxury Qf Onr $25.00 Salon Custom Wave Sale-Priced Now For Only $15®® No Appointment Needed! Beauty Salon Phone FE 5-9257 START CHRISTMAS WITH THE SOUND OF BEAUTIFUL MUSIC! LOWREY OMAN Yet, music has a dramatic new sound this year. Lowrey* Automatic Orchestra Control. You can hear ft onfy on the Lowrey Organ. A'O'C makes the beginner aound like a professional. With only one finger. See, hear and try the amazing new A-O-Cat your Lowrey Organ dealer’s today! ~ |’ ft-wa X95 No Money Down . . No Payments ’ail February *66 Free Leeeona Free Delivery You Will Enjoy Shopping at Royal oak 4224 X. Woodward l MMiU. *•1 *tU Site p.m. PhoBf MMIU THBPONTIACPR3SS, MONDAY, DECEMBER fl, 1965 "t.; Men's Nite 7:30 to 10:30 Giveb Advice To First-TimeFather By MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: N hi 1% cause I have to learn if K’l the Wroeg way,” fear of oar inferior competence can make w so anxious that we aDfew teutons In the grownups around them. So the first rule of baby care is our own emotional quiet- got some new things to .learn, too. He's got to learn that all the bigger experience and knowledge of baby care possessed Towel Aprons Use pretty floral turkish aprons. Select the size towel that will make two aprons by cutting it across the middle. Attach a band and string of a contrasting percale or broadcloth as the sides are and the bottoms lemmed. Such aprons are tighly absorbent, easy to Tbnite is the Harlan E. Becks of'Highland, recently of Pontic, announce the engagement of their daughter. MargaretAnn to Jerry Lynn Caiyiey, son pf'the George Car-neysof Stirling Avenue. A June wedding is being planned. Pllf Won't Dry Milkln Mom LONDON, England — If nursing mothers start taking the birth control pill five to eight weeks after giving birth, it will, have no effect on the mother’s ability to breast-feed her baby. *' • ★ * This is what the'British Medical Journal told its readers to answer to a query it received on whether “the pill” taken while nursing suppresses l&cta* tion or shortens the period over which a woman can breastfeed her baby. The answer is no, “toe pill” does neither when taken as prescribed. Soda Cleans It If the Job of washing glass bottles, jugs or jars that have held buttermilk is a lot of trouble, put one teaspoon of baking soda to each container and fill up with water. Let set a little while and see how easily the bottle comes clean. want her with me right I don’t know bow to te husband fids u he wj hurt, too . .. ANSWER: Ask your obstetrician to tell him. He knows that helpers whose feehags get easily hart are net the kind far first-time mothers to have around them. Veer Jfcasbaad, a first-time lather, aaeds know this. If we’re a first-time our emotional comfort is the prime essential because tin baby’s depends on ours. So we can’t have helpers around us whose sensitive feelings we have to soothe to addition to soothing our own naturally uncertain feelings as we go about learning to give the baby his bath, dress him, superintend his feedings and do all the other new chores which at first seem so overwhelming. We need all our soothing energies for ourselves and the baby. k ★ ★ Our relatives are not always suitable helpers at this time. Unless we feel free to be honest with them, old tensions between us can develop a strained but secret competition about whose concern for the baby is the better concern, into disagreements over the right way to hold him to his bath, over what his crying indicates. Unless we feel free to say, 'I have to do it my way be- Jt’s a new child-guarding door locking system. The roar .doors lock automatically at 8 miles per hour, in case you forget. Enjoy 4-door convenience, 2-door safety. An exclusive Mercury option that proves you move ahead with All Men Are Cordiallyjnvited To Attend Modeling - Refreshments Bring A Friend 'f in the Lincoln Continental tradition 1250 OAKLAND AVE. LLOYD MOTORS LINCOLN — MERCURY — COMET 333-7863 OPED YOUR 1966 CHRISTMAS CLUB NOW Handbags *9 »$55 Lovely shapes under the tree in a marvelous assortment of handbags she is sure to adore. It’s so easy to put on a gay party for teenagers during the holiday season, and a "snowman” cut out of snowy latex foam rubber provides a lively theme. All that is needed is W thick latex foam rubber cut in two larger and smaller connected circles to foam the head and body. The "hat” is cut from ted blotting paper with "eyes,” "mouth” and "bow tiq” cut from black paper and pasted on to the rubber. The entire "snowman” is attached to the wall with double faced masking tape which leaves no mark when it is removed. A place mat of the same latex foam rubbet encircled with holly leaves, holds the punch bowl. ALL PERMANENTS NONE HIGHER 1— New Lustre Shampoo 2— Flattering Haircut 3— Lanolin Neutralizing 4— -Smart Style Setting HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Opee Mornings at IAJL 71 N. Saginaw Over Beaky Mkl Bank with the bank on the "GROW” m OMAIN OFFICE, Saginaw ot lowranc* OAUBURN HEIGHTS •BALDWIN at YALE UpmUpM #DRAYT0N PLA'NS •OPDY’tt-WALTON (N«xt to Blue Sky Thnotr. OM59 Ploza f Ur I IL tO VtAST HIGHLAND (M5.9 and Duck lok* ltd.) •Miroct* Mila-Talagraph Rd. W f970 W. LONG LAKE HO. • Mimlw Fmdarul DtpmtUIninrmmc* Cary. They look . real . . . ^ s positively unreal! A Send your child a FREE letter from Santa Claus! How? Pfck one up at any of our offices. Simply address it.. . stamp it; ... and drop it in our special mailbox, It will be mailed from Santa Claus, Indiana. DON'T DELAY-DO IT TODAY! And Get This Beautiful China SANTA CLAUS BANK ssr 99* Make It An Added Gift To Teach Them Thrift i| Send Your UTTER Fran SANTA What a lovely way to be strandedl Have a wardrobe of theml Here, just a few from our Collection of graduated or uniform strands, beautifully rhinestone-clasped, each in tts own luxurious jewel box. Single grand, $5; double, $7.5Uhtriple, $10; earrings $3 and $4. Gainsborough | D|p*m SIMULATED PEARLS BY XlULnll* {Uvm's I Comedian Gets Ohio College's Award CMMdiu Joe E. Brm koi beet awarded the Pov-erello Medal, fa highest Bonacademfe awttd si fra Co!-lege of Stenbeavfiie (Ohio). and record royalties. B-lf THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, IMS Britain's Radio Pirates May Come Ashore Legally LONDON UP) -radio pirates may weigh anchor soon, haul down the JoOy Roger and pound oat their pop music on land with die government’s approval Postmaster-General Wedgwood Benn during the weekend threatened legislation against the untaxed, unlicensed stations broadcasting ships anchored outside British territorial waters. ★ ★ ★ “There is no future for pirate radio stations,” Benn said. He is believed, however, to favor local commercial broadcasting in Britain. The Labor government, hopeful of boosting its tiny House of Commons majority by reducing the yoting age to 18, cannot afford to alienate millions of teenagers by driving the pirates off the air. COMMERCIAL BAN Britain’s only legal radio I the state’s British Broadcasting Carp. Commercial radio is illegal There are four main pirate stations — Radio Caroline, Radio London, Radio City and Radio 390 — and several smaller ones. Some operate from aban- army forts and rocky islands. They hope that if commercial broadcasting is legalised, they will have a head start The BBC is reported to have little objection to the pirates coming ashore. The BBC feels it would not compete directly with them since the amount of time Ford Hails GOP's Role in Congress WASHINGTON (UPI)-House Republican leader G e r a Jd R. Ford of Midi, believes GOP congressmen can take pride7 in the part they played during/thc first session of the 89th Congress. ★ ★ * jT Ford said yesterday that Republican lawmakers “tried to make the Congress what it should be —a deliberative body, independent of, and coequal with, the executive, judging legislation by 'the pole standard of the national inttnsL’’ k * * He madk Ms statement on “Comment,** the GOP National Committee’s weekly radio program. W |. Communist bloc countries are spending more than $4 billion a year for Western-made goods. it devotes to records is restricted by agreements with the musicians’ union. BOOST OUTLAY On land, the pirates’ operating costs would fall from around 842,000 a month to an estimated 811,200 and Philip Birch, head of Radio London, says ad- CANADIAN A BLEND. SO lltOOF. IMPORTED BY MiMASTO IMPORT COMPANY, DETROIT, MKMOAK. A $6.50 Canadian for only $4.80? What’s the gimmick? Big tax savings on every bottle! Instead of bottling McMaster’s in Canada, where most Canadian Whiskys are bottled, we import it direct and bottle it here. By doing it this way, we save handsomely on taxes and other charges. You would expect to pay $6.50 for this smooth, mellow Canadian Whisky. McMaster’s is distilled, aged in the barrel, and blended in Canada. You can't Buy a finer Canadian Whisky than McMaster’s. Why pay more than $4.80 a fifth (tax included). (P.S. McMaster’s also comes in a big H gallon or handy pint. Just $11.95 and $3.06.) A $7.00 Scotch for only $4.97? Sure. McMaster’s gives you the same big tax savings on its mellow, imported-in-the-barrel Scotch, too. OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 5 This dramatic contemporary ranch is now available for immediate possession. There are three oversize bedrooms, two full baths and a family room. Many extra value features such a* thermopane windows, kitchen built-ins, charcoal grill, electric garage door openers, and privileges to a beach on Sylvan Lake. Drive to 1030 James K Boulevard Sunday between 1 and 5 and sea this fine home. MAX BROOCK INC. 4139 ORCHARD LAKE RD. MA 6-4000 AT PONTIAC TRAIL OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 444-4890 .A ? THE TQKTI AC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 6. 19M FINAL WEEK OF ROBOT THE GREAT ARMOUR'S Thursday, » Wj Friday, Q\ * Sat. only! Armour's Star | | | B 1 Jt’i a Pleasure tb Shop and at at PEOPLE’S FOOD MKT. [ 888 Orchard Lake tvs. Naar Telegraph Road ROASTING CHICKENS WHOLt fo°o town VALUABLE ond PSOPLi'S COUPON DOUBLE .SAM* "me or Ciflorott.,) Ved'tttfic.8,1965 Coupon Bor Cuitoml, |N INSTANT BIRDS EVE - FRESH FROZEN ROMAN CLEANSER llHDunce pkg..•. • • ■ ■ ★ #• *★ ★ ★ ★ ★ BIRDS EYE- FRESH FROZEN FISH STICKS ■jljc 8-ounce pkg.. ARMOURS STAR / SLICED BACON ARMOURS ROLL SAUSAGE BANQUET WHOLE CHICKEN 3^pound, 4^ca. Hi!? CAN FACIAL Tli||^;ii||i|Ki APPIAN WAY <■'*“? &' k. ***? ^ /<& j HI77A i. ^ ,;vH. : **' - r I ZZA..ij^oz.pko.... .................... MEADOWDALE FRESH APPLESAUCE... round fSf *• I ; ♦ ;? ;x<< *j CONTADINA TOMATOES** KRAFT'S ORANGE JUICE**, Mu CAMPS TUNA«ev, CARNATION 1 ' \ ' EVAPORATED ^ILK.. MYSTERY, BTC.—Ambler, To Catct toy; Ball, Uptoid Witch; Pftocls, I Kicks; Hubbard, Picture of Mlllla; Quo — - ytti PpSitT i Dairy, at PletToorsky, l Collection. Queens Full; Welsh, The Tenth Point. TtajUAPUY Adame, ~ - Charles Pranclt Adams Calllati Untermeyer, PrK... _______ OiNRRAL SUBJECTS—Blacker, Tha Book of Books; Back, FIddtef OB’*# Root; Dulles B Crane, Deter' Strategists In Transition; hmerson, unwritten Literature m Hawaii; Hate, Drawing Laaaona* From ttw Groat Masters; Hodgdman, Tha Trumpet Sounds; Hurll-----1- Venice; Jarrell, ThaLMt World; World Wide’s Christmas Inventories Are At An All Time High! With Less Than Three Weeks of Christmas Selling Left, We Must.. Move This Merchandise. Selection Is Great-Prices Are Rock-bottom ROOM DELUXE fUU ^MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE nh"i ONE MORE REASON WRY WORLD WIDE IS MICHIUN'S LARGEST FURNITURE CHAIN PLATFORM ROCKER STUNNING 2-PC. MODERN LIVING ROOM 9x12 Linoleum Rugs Assorted colors and A Eft N IN 100% NYLON pattarns. Wo bouaht those bv tha bought these by tha carload and ara galling thorn at our MOt... With such outstanding faaturai at, ravarsibl* foam cushions, tuftad back styling, hardwood construction. World Wide dalivars both sofa and chair for tha unballavabiy lew pries of just.. V- { M** V *.s* NO MONEY DOWN 4-PIECE MODERN BEDROOM •»N«rri •NClUOfoi -Piece Solid Maple BUNK BED OUTFIT •gad kld-pnet asf A ■■ Eludes 2 beds, 2 V Iff ■Hiesset, a ortho- WlmU die beeids, ladder ^^g id guofd mil. Sturdy U|1 auls constrvction. HOME FURNISHINGS ONLY WORLD WIDE’S GIGANTIC 17 STORE BUYING POWER MAKES AN AMAZING OFFER LIKE iTHIS POSSIBLE YOU GET THIS COMPLETE HOUSEFUL FOR ONLY NO MONEY DOWN-EASY TERMS PMflM ua Dime INI TELEGRAPH Eveiy World Wide Store Is a Westinghouse Appliance Center Waltz your way thru wash-day with a Wait-inghousa Washer and Dryer from Michigan's largest Westinghouse dealer..World Wida. NEW STORE AT QLENWOOD PLAZA Week LOOK FOR THE WORLD WIDE MESSAGE ON MICHIGAN'S LEADING TELEVISION STATIONS THE EONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1965 between a monkey and a wild. cat. Is this true? ★ it ' it .ANSWER: It is true that Siamese cats seem different from other cMp, but this is not because they are related to monkeys ana wild cats. Monkeys and apes—such as the gibbon we show in our picture—belong to a different order of ahimals than do the cats. * Exactly when Siamese cats appeared is unknown, although it is thought that they were a variation or “mutation” of the ordinary eat. v They were highly regarded by the nobility of Siam, now Thailand, and were spoken of as royal cats. In 1884, the British General hi Bangkok was given a cat which had lived in the Royal Palace, and he took it to England. Siamese appeared in thf United States in 1885 and became popular almost at once. These cats seem to need more human companionship than others. They fret if left alone. They seem to want to talk to their human blends. They meow more than other cats, in a louder, more persistent way. As one Siamese owner expressed It 'They Oink they are people.” With their china-blue eyes, their light cream-colored bodies and striking dark “points," they art among the most beautiful of animals. ★ ★ " ★ f FOR YOU TO DO: Siamese cats are said to resemble the cat statuettes of the ancient Egyptians. Look up Egyptian art and see if you can find a cat statue; compare it with a picture of a Siamese. Do you find a certain “royal look” about both. Chess Expert Here Sunday Billed as a chess and checker wizard, Newell Banks of Detroit will visit Pontiac Sunday, appearing at the Hayes Jones Recreation Center. Banks, who will appear between 2 and 5 p.m., will give some interesting highlights of the history of chess and checker games. He also will meet the challenge of players from the beginner to the experienced. ■ ★ # ■ 'it Sponsored by the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Club, the event will allow players, fUra*.*l.MT--«T WT. IMS. Corned Beef. DEL MONTE YELLOW CLING 1 -LB. Sliced 13-OZ. or Halves CAN NET. WT. 2-OZ. CTN. SAVE 10c JANE PARKER, Ns* Wt. 11-Os. jw Choeojate Brownies 59* JANS PARKER— 1-LB. LOAF Cracked Wheat Bread 21* ANN PAGE QUALITY SOUPS Mushroim ro^-ox. 6 CANS 89* Tomato-Rice SM«. 6 «« 73* Tomato Soup . . $£10* CHAMPION Saltines •. ™ 22 America's Favorite—Jane Parker FRUIT CAKi SULTANA, FINS QUALITT aw. Salad Dressing . . & 35 STAR Klfr, ML MONTI ur BREAST O'CHECKFN Tuna Light Chunk, Net Wt. S'A-Os. 4i CANS 99* VELVET BRAND Elbow Macaroni 23* Peanut Butter . . " 69* Libby's Spaghetti ^ 39 WISCONSIN MILD — Cheddar Cheese . . u 59* A&P'S VERY OWN dexola Oil 55‘ 6-oz! ALL PUOWI __ AAe Sunnyfield Flour.......^ 39 AGP GRADE "AM Grape Juice 3 $ 89* V9 WHITE HOUSE INSTANT Dry Milk fiK. . . • ™ JUST SAKE AND .SRVE eWOW. Golden Rise Cookies39 OVER % FRUITS AND NUTS 2-LB. SIZE 169 DARK | MICHIGAN RED DELICIOUS APPLES 6 FOR CEREALS OR DISSERTS Bananas ..... • RAVI AT AAP 1-QT. AAf Hawaiian Punch... 3 'fift 98 Ad* BRAND, FLORIDA Fresh Orang ANN BABE QJALl i .' Blended Syi ie Juice "^69* up .. v& 49* 1 Come See ... You'll Save | ^ at AGP! THE GREAT ATLANTIC A FACUIC tlA COMPANY, Solve Gift Problems Tastfully With AW GIFT CERTIFICATES »m—T« Due. Tth *AfwuPer Markets aviPKA s DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT SINCE IBS* 1 C~~4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. DECEMBER A, 1085 Santa and the Zabbazara 6ns CHAPTER ONE IYLUCRECE BEAU This is the story of the Zabbazara bus, how it came to fo*> to Santaland, and how Santa happened to ride in it, and how it came to Zabbazara which is a land where the sun always shines and no grown-ups are allowed. Hie Zabbazara bus was not always the Zabbazara bus. It used to be the Main Street bus. Mr. Diefenderfer was the driver. He had such a long name no one ever bothered to say it. Not even Mr. Diefenderfer. Everyone called him. Mr. D, and that’s what he called himself. ♦ * * He was a little fellow with ^^ big ears and long feet and crossed eyes. * S3 TIMES For as long as anyone could remember he had been the driv- 1 er of the Main Street bus, wfatchl g*** D’s bi£ never went anywhere at all-ex- «“Jed up around the hat it cept up and down Main Street!10**1 ** * flying saucer with 33 times a day. fcWf* that had just happened . to land on Mr. D’s head by mis-As soon as the sun rose each morning Mr. D got on his bus Mr. D Drove The Main Street Bus and pnt on his special driving glasses. He put mi the glasses the very first thing because withbut them he saw two of everything, and seeing even one Main Street was almost more than he could bear As soon as he put on his glasses he took off his shoes. SO BIG!! His feet were so big'he could never get shoes that fit, and his feet always hurt. He tucked his shoes under the seat. Then he pnt on his driver’s hat. It was an official cap and very smart. At least on anyone else it would have looked smart. HO didn’t look like much of a driver. But then the bus he drove didn’t look like much of a bus either. By pagan law he claimed i Mother (mm bride I on her wedding night! IChiun Heston - ..... I 1i«Y CALLED HIM | “FAST EDDIE"... Iji Award-Winning Drama ii § PAUL NEWMAN jjj iji JACKIE GLEASON f *THE HUSTLER’ jl IfWIHflAC- 1 ANN-MARGRET He's Really Got Trouble With Ponies ELIZABETH, Pa. (UPI) -Louis Demoss today pondered the problem of what to do with the seven ponies he found in his yard. Demoss’ son, Louis Jr., 12, turned cowboy when he spotted a pony running loose in this Pittsburgh suburb, brought it home and stabled it in the family garage. His sisters, Debbie, II and Dorrie, t, not to be outdone, went ont and rounded up six other ponies. Only one of them would fit in the garage, and the elder Demoss was forced to call neighbors to see if they could put up some of the ponies. Demoss said he had no idea where the ponies had come from. He added. “I’d sure like to find their owners.’’ Council Approves Schema on World It looked like a beaten np old picnic basket on wheels. People said it was a hundred years old at least, and how it held together no one knew. * - Jt ★ ; Yet Mr. D loved the bus. It wad Main Street he just couldn’t stand any more. And the people who rode the Main Street bus. They were very rude to Mr. D. JOKED ABOUT EARS 'Pull in your ears,’’ they said to* him. “They’re shutting out the view.” They looked at his big shoes tacked under the seat and said, “Dd yon have permission to carry BOATS on this has?” Mr. D was tired of it all. He kept wondering, “What li?s beyond Main Street?” One day, right in the middle of the Christmas rush, Mr. D decided he had had enough. GOT A SIGNBOARD He got a signboard And he painted on it in big red letters ZABBAZARA. ★ * , ★ He took down the sign on the side of the bus that said “Main Street” and he put up the new sign saying “ZABBAZARA.” * aw. Then he 'got on the bus and drove straight through the town, never stopping once for all the people waiting for the Main Street bus. (TOMORROW) Tht crocodile U-M Chief Hits Use of D as a Reprisal Sight Gets Dim, but Not Spirit Bernard Walters’ vision is growing dimmer — but not his spirit. The 42-year-old former physical education director of the Pontiac YMGA, who lives at 525 Lakeside, face! total blindness in three or four years. It holds to terror for him. He lost his right eye in an accident when he was 13. The vision in his left eye was always poor. Despite his handicap, he earned a master’s degree in physical education at the University of Iowa, took third place in Big Ten swimming competition in 1946, and became a teacher in the Bloomfield Hills school system. In 196j, he suffered a retinal detachment in his left eye. Eleven operations followed, but his .vision has grown progressively worse: TROUBLE PREDICTED This trouble did not come unexpectedly. A doctor had predicted it in 1957. ' Mrs. Walters started college that year to prepare for the day when her husband would no longer be able to earn a living for their family. She is now teaching at Booth Elementary School in Bloomfield Hills and completing work on her master’s degree in education at the University of Michigan. The couple has two children, Stacy, 16) and Holly Dianne, 13. Walters can’t see printed words any more. He even has trouble maneuvering round his house. But the husky six-footer still leads an active life. With the help of a friend, he completing construction of a garage at his home: He also helps his wife with' the housework. WIN TRIP The story of the Walter’s triumph over adversity came to light when the couple won ah all-expense-paid weekend at Detrbit’s new Hotel fcnchar-train in a drawing sponsored by the Pontiac Mall Association. The weekend just ended. They enjoyed it immensely. Walter^ says he especially enjoyed ihe view from their room on the 14th floor of the hotel. was able to make out both the skyline and the'river." Another highlight was a performance of “Kismet," to which they were chauffeured by limousine Saturday night. “I thought the score and dialogue were beautiful," he said. SPIRIT UNDIMMED-Beraard R. Walters, 525 Lakeside, is losing his eyesight. But the former director of the Pontiac YMCA physi- cal education program is still active. He is seen here working on his garage, which he and a friend are building. By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Sometime you wonder about actors. Take a fellow like Robert Goulet. The robust Canadian can {Hill down a few hundred thousand a year merely by exercising his singing voice ini nightclubs,, concerts and television. So why would he chuck I it for the pre- THOMAS cariousness of a spy television series. ★ ★ it/ “For two reasons ” he explained during a brief stopover here. “One is that a series will give me a chance to stay in one place for six months, something “ haven’t been able tddo for the past three years. ’The other reason is that a VATICAN CITY (AP) - The Vatican Ecumenical Council gave a decisive vote of approval today to its schema on modern world problems. It condemns nuclear warfare and urges, further study of birth control methods. ★ .- * ★ The vote in St. Peter’s Basilica completed the work of the three-year-old council. The schema and three others win be proclaimed at a public session in St. Peter’s Basilica Tuesday and the council wiU come to a ceremonial end Wednesday. ANN ARBOR (AP) -President Harlan Hatcher and a second University of Michigan official say Selective Service should not be used for “an instrument in punishing dissent” or as “reprisal for political activity:” The Michigan Daily, student newspaper, so quoted Dr. Hatcher and Dr. Richard Cutler, vice president for student affairs, in Wixom PTA to Hear Walled Lake Librarian WIXOM—Laurel Adler, head librarian for the Walled Lake School System, will discuss children’s books tomorrow night of the Wixom Elementary School PTA. I A short business meeting at if p.m. in the school gymnasium will precede Miss Adler’s talk. Saturday about the Draft Act. it * ★ The Daily said Hatcher and Cutler commented on reclassification of draft status for four students who had taken part in a recent sit-in «t the Ann Arbor draft board office in protesting U.S. policy In Viet Nam. Selective Service administrators have said the reclassification of the students from student-deferments to 1A status was the result of their interference with the law, not because of their political beliefs. Their 1A status makes them immediately available to the draft. Conservatives Start Ballot Bid JACKSON (AP) - Michigan’s American party has begun its effort to get on the 1966 state election ballot. The new political group, which advocates recapture of Cuba and the Chinese mainland from the Communists,, formally set about getting 25,000 petition signatures at a weekend meeting here to qualify for the ballot. About 120 persons, headed by party. Chairman Victor Watkins of Allen, adopted a platform and heard a denunciation of the Republican and Democratic parties by Californian Karl Prussion, anti-Communist lecturer. Prussion said there is a “dangerous trend” of the Republicans and Democrats to “become appendages of communism." * * * | Harold Snyder of Watervliet, Hatcher said persons should'program chairman for the be drafted only from “clear meeting, identified himself as necessity." Cutler said Selec- member of the John Birch So-tive Service “is treading on ciety. He said he was attending dangerous ground" if it uses the session as an “American the act as a “tool of reprisal citizen,’’ not as a society rep-for political activity.” Iresentatative. at 7tO0 and 10:40 "MISTER MOSES* at 8.50 Netisc’t POPULAR THEATER »Mk Rqrti CmHmmin It ml (• It ►«. laatayti •mHmnm II m. MU pm, HHW NOW! TUESDAY LAMES’ PAT Also dHpMREitorwp aum* PRESLEY Jut Adams-JocemIm \ PMutnuotr* oi Luxe Count AS ■ NICK ADAMS”! YDUNG DILUNGER Goulet Views the Switch to TV television series might convince movie producers that I can act. They may be in doubt after my first two pictures.” LITTLE PROMISE His films were “Honeymoon Hotel" and “I’d Rather Be Rich.” To put it kindly, they did not fulfill the promise he displayed as Lancelot with Richard Burton and Julie Andrews in ‘Camelot” on Broadway. ★ * ★ Goulet has canceled a flock of munificent singing dates begin production in Munich next week on “Blue Light," which will debut on ABC Jan. 12. He reported that his take per week will be $5,000, out of which he must pay his manager and company expenses. Thus he’U' end up with just about what he could earn in one night in Las Vegas. ★ ★ ★ “To afford the show, I had to build up a backlog of resources,” Goulet remarked. That’s why I just did a toi college concerts. ★ ★ . ★ ’If the show should survive for a few years, I’ll be the winner in the long run.” SELDOM SUCCEED Its chances? “Blue Light” will start with one or two strikes against it. For one thing, series that debut in midseason seldom succeed. For another, spies are profuse on television this year. .. ★ * » The story line of “Blue Light" - that’s Goulet’s code name — has him pAtraying an Allied agent in Nazi Germany during the last World War. The first half dozen shows will be filmed in actual locales of Munich, Berchtesgaden and other Hitler haunts. Then the company returns to Hollywood for more shooting. World’s oldest domesticated bird is the Japanese, or Cotur-nix, quail. Good for Book Crook BIRMINGHAM, England (UPI) - Officials at the University of Birmingham were op in arms today over an unsigned article In the university paper. K described bow to steal books from the university book shop. 1 “The KNACK I and hew to got it” and “Girl With Breen Eyes” V ■ /£Z2 KEEGO imiiw-wiNMS jfm» YOUR HEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 UN Ambassador Goldberg calls it a sign of strength that our nation allows disagreement with government policies in Viet Nam. Name at least one right given in the Constitution that protects our freedom to disagree. 2 One purpose of the Gemini flights is to test the effect of. “weightlessness" on the amount of calcium in the body. The main reason calcium Is Important In the body Is that it. a-helps night.vision b-aids digestion c-gives bones strength 3 The Army overthrew the government of Dahomey and Installed a new one. Dahomey Is one of the more advanced countries In .... a-Asia b-West Africa. o-the-Middle East 4 The Consumer Price Index'roBe to a record high in October, the government announced last week. The CPI Is one measurement of. a-business profit* b-the cost.of living c-wage Increases ‘ 5 Fighting, flared In the Mekong Delta In South Viet Nam. In a delta area, we would expect to find. a-hlgh mountains b-desert c-streams and level land PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1...regiment a-make Into one . 2.....reiterate b-a military unit 3.. ...unity causeless 4.. ... aftermath d-repeat 5....futile e-result, consequence PART 111 - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1....,Henry H. Fowler t-Geminl astronaut 2...Alvin Dark 8...Kenneth Kaunda * 4...James Lovell 5.....Joseph Mobutu Vol. XV; No. 13* b-President, Zambia c-Treasury Secretary d-new Congolese President e-new manager, Kansas City Athletics . ® VEC, Inc., Madison, Wls. The Pontiac Press December 6, 1965 |p TUwtfctAfUlM Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. * — 1. * France, third - Space power 9 *_„• ^ urged permanent UN peace force B 3. O . nuclear-powered ship NATIONAL joins Vfet struggle LIBERATION “orbited" world via W c Viet Nam - 5.. ... “Someday," grand champion Angus •r-# ^...... H Cuba begins to cut Its big crop D T..... troops guard harvest \ / against Viet Cong theft y / ....... • ,1 y seasonal sales rise 1 ** 5ft' toward record ENTERPRISE 9.. ... V political arm of Viet I Cong J 10... Latin self-help program HOW DO YOU RATE? (Soon Each Side of Owls Separately) 91 la 100 paint* - TOP SCORE! SI to 90 point. - Excellent. .Bit Bpaint*- Goad. 61 te 30 point* - Fair. d0«rUMbr???-HW Tht* Quit I* part of the Educational Program which Thll Nawtpapar fumiihat to School, in this area to Stimulate Interoat In National and World Affair* a* sn aid te Developing Goad Cltlzamhlp. Save Thl* Practice Examination! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Exams. ANSWERS i*oi in fr-i ij-i uh *h-i **» ‘t-t *e»t !d*i >imo ioinas M N* I9-I Itol till iUVd »*9 l*-9 !•*! Ip-I lfr| i|| UN 0-9 fq-ty !q-C *>l f0|B ‘uojfnw ‘sssjd ‘ipteds jo utopeliH H JLUVd THB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DKCEMBKH 6, 1965 Cr* EAST LANSING (APMOch-jlege enrollment this, year. He,movement in the history of high-i*an State University is 41th caSM this the "most massive er education." largest in the nation in full-tiroe enrollment, the University of Michigan is 14th and Wayne State University is 19th, a survey'showed today. hi grand total figures, MSU is ninth,. U-M 14th and Wayne State 19th, Dr. Gardland G. Parker,' dean of admissions at the University of Cincinnati, reported in the educational journal '’school and Society.” . Dr. Parker reported a 10 per cent increase nationally hi col- Dawson Hopes To Regain Health Legendary Viet Searcher III, on Farm LEGENDARY. VIET -42 E. COSTA MESA, Calif. (AP) Donald Dawson, weakened by malaria during months spent searching for his brother in Viet Nam, is trying farm life in Oregon to give his body a chance to catch up with a will still strong. Hie 28-year-old seaman’s only reservation: "I’ve neves worked on'the beach — the land — before.” He took time out from packing to sit and talk with a newsman before taking his wife and four children to Astoria, Ore., a trip be planned to complete day. He weighs 20 pounds less than he did when he left tills country more than a year ago to tackle a mission that was to become one of the legends of the jungle war. . Don’s search for Daniel Daw-• son, 27-year-old U S. Army lieutenant who disappeared while flying his spotter plane over the jungles Nov. (, 1964, led him for five months through South Viet Nam and finally to a Viet Cong prison camp. There, after four months, he eventually was told his brother was dead and promised a guide to the grave when the war was over. He also was given his freedom. “I’m going back, but H might not be before another 1$ years,1' he said. “They’re not going to get the Viet Cong out of there so damned easily.” Before he returns, he has to recover his strength. “I’m up to eating one meal a day now,” he said. “If I eat much more I, can’t keep it down.” For the first 40 dhys he was home his fare consisted of baby foods and liquids. ■ He hopes all will be different i the farm — 90 acres he is charged with caring for 15 miles from Astoria. “We can live off the land,” he said. “I know can open up the season on deer and elk, and we’ll live on that." He has no job and no immediate chance, he fears, of getting one on the seas. If he suffered a malaria attack while captaining a ship he probably would be put ashore and never given another ship, he said. ’But it’s been a month since I’ve had an attack,” he said, "and the doctors say now I may not have another one.” Hie sea has been Dawson’s life. * - I knew he was a wanderer when I married him,” said his wife, Jeanne. She hopes to keep him home until he gets well, but realizes he’ll probably go to sea again. “This will be the first Christmas we’ll have had together since we’ve been married,” she said. smm LIGHTWEIGHT ntmimzfflim 12” Portable TV The JETLITE . Modal N1250 An exciting now standard in COfflDlct Derional nort»hl» rV? sMh MMf • and jmLm # Only *129’' 3 Stale Colleges Rank High in Enrollment Michigan in Program to Train Oil Salesmen WASHINGTON (AP) - Michigan will be among 13 states taking part in a ll.7 million program to train 4,160 service station salesmen, the Labor Department said Saturday. The program will be developed by Shields & Co., a Palatine, III, oil job consulting firm. Total national enrollment was reported at 4,686,057 at 1,005 colleges and universities. Of these, 3,292,530 were full-time students. ENROLLMENT UP Dr. Parker listed MSU with a full-time enrollment of 33,734 and grand total of 41,712, pom-pared with 28,587 and 36,102 ' year. U-M’s full-time figure was 28,416, up from 24,642, and its grand total was 347153, up from 32,415.' Wayne State’s full-time figure was 17,415, up from 14,075, and its grand total was 29,125, up' from 25,200. To Weigh Training of Handicapped DETROIT (AP) - A Senate The State University of New education subcommittee will York was listed as largest, with hold a hearing starting Dec. 14 107,707 full-time students, «ndfor evaluating the education op-""I"*""'*' •’*»•«• MlchV ™ V-™- [gan s handicapped children. Nine Big Ten universities gen. Sander M. Levin, D-Berk-were among the 25 largest, (ley, chairman, said Sunday. Last year, MSU was listed as Hie two-day hearing will be ninth largest in full-time enroll {held in the Veterans Memorial ment and Uth in grand total; {Building. Levin says that by the U-M as 12th fulltime and Uth state’s own calculations, as grand total, and Wayne State many as 50 per cent of the as 27th full-time and 18th Grand, mentally, retarded children untotal. |der age 21 are not in school. I Label-Reg. or Drip Grind Ulls Bros 1 Out with Ceepse Mew White or Assorted Bathroom Tissue Northern Limit Oao /tor Sell . Peck with Ceepse Mow Welch's Rich ’rape Jelly UmH One with Ceepse Mow Meadowdale Fresh Frozen from Florida meaaowdaie fresh frozen from Florida am * Orange JuicelQ UmH One with Ceepse Mow 9 Whit# at Awirtll Tiiaue 1 1 Welch's Jtich jj 58 , Moodowdala trail* Frosen 1 3 NORTHERN ] GRAPE JELLY j 3 ORANGE JUKE H 4-roll 5b gw m Sava Sc | 9 ■ o.Tl With Thla 1 ■ r«ch OkmT coupon 3 9 1 loi Ol Jbe Cava Ida V ■ t 7 111 With Thla i B N. Can Nl^y Coupon - 1 3 Limit ana four rail pack with Nila 1 19 coupon aftor tlw purchaao of %IM i u or mora. Coupon oxplroa Wednesday, 1 [ Limit ana with thia coupon attar tha | 1 purchaao of U.H or moro. Coupon 1 ! oxplroa Wednesday, Dacambor a, | |i ■ Limit ono with this coupon attar the 1 0 purchase of M-t* or moro. Caupan , ■ ■ axri raa Wedhaaday, Paaamlar A 1 1 IMS. Limit ana aaupon par cuatomar. 1 9 INS, LlmM ana coupon pit euatamar. ] C—8 THE PONTIAC PREfcS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1905 Mart Prices Take Battering The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by I them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the new york UP) - Stock I selling stampede. Higher pricedlled to the emotional selling.’ Detroit Bureau of Markets as of!market ^ battered to issues slid 7-or 8 points. one Wall Street official said. history’s biggest first-hour sell-| T*16 selling was triggered by The Associated Press average Produce ling wave today as Wall Street "ew* *****.|*e9erveJ°f 60 8tock8 at n00B was M 45 Ireacted to news of Ughtening W ** raisea at 348.8 with industrials off 1.0, credit rate to 4% per .cent from 4 per rains 0ff 3 5 an(j utilities off 1.7. - I ... .. cent, but street observers L iaiK,rn0°n\ PrlCe1fthe big slide-in stock prices was Frdiay. FRUITS Apples. Delicious. Golden, b Apples, De'icious. Red, bu. Apples. Jonathan. bu. Apples. Macintosh, early, b Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples, cider, 4gal. case : VEGETABLES * "(recouped a sizable portion of :: i»| their, worst losses but the averages were still down sharply as : the ticker tape* ran 13 minutes :: jljpte. l'soj Key stocks slipped from about 1:21 to 3 points on a broad front as l&big Mocks changed hands in a ’over-reaction” to such news,' compared with past performances. CITE OPPOSITION ‘It was the spectacle of Presi- the money authorities more than the rate increase itself that The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was off 10.36 .at 935.74. Corporate and UJ3. Treasury bonds 'slid sharply as their interest yields were pushed up to DODGE ‘CHARGER’—A new Dodge called the Charger will make its debut in the me; dium-size specialty car field on Jan. 1. Its prototype was Charger II, an experimental , car which was displayed in nine major auto dent Johnson being opposed by match interest increases result- ing from the discount rate boost. Budget Casualty 1, Butternut, bu. . Cabbage, t Cbllard. bu Kale, bu. Mustard, b . 1.50 SfF li Poultry and Eggs DSTROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—Prices paid I tor No. 1 live poultry: heavy 20-22; light type hem 0-7; roast type 23-25; broilers and fryeri _ .... whites 11-20; Turkeys heavy type young toms UVb-24. DETROIT BOOS DETROIT (API—Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (including U.S.): Hie New York Stock Exchange OlOS Net Sales Nat i.) High Low CION a 30 21 20% 21 15 TO'/j 78 70% — NOON STOCKS SI.25 NEW YORK (API-Following 1.25 lot selected stock transactions on Exchange with noo —A— Salas (lids.) Nigh Law Last CHa. ,1 IS it 40% 41 — ft I 23 V* 23% — *4 FoodFalr .00 FMC Cp l.» .... ., FordMOt 2.40 273 55% 54% 55% - Fore Kir .JO tt 10 to 10 - ------ - s- Tl 45% 44V* 44% - 10* 32% 31% 32% - 1.00 I 14VS ' 1 if wholesale ______________ Jgpr *4; 00 B *3%; 89 C *tVk) ... * canine,* Alum Ltd .00 Atop 1.40 Amerada 2.00 AmAIrlln 1.25 mm ut AmBdcsl 1.60 ■“ Can 2 AmiYpw 1.32 A Enka l.ioa FPow 1 I 42V* —1% 47% — % i 01%—IV* i 31%—2% i 26% 66 - % ; 2% F reeat S 140 FrwehCp l.so G*Accep° 1.20 Gen cig 1.20 GonDynom 1 Gen Elec 2.60 oSn-jMi 2.2o GoiiMlra 1.40 GenMot 5.250 GenPrec 1.20 GPubSvc ,5Vg GPubUt 1.40 SVet jlr.i.u ~nn Tire JB .jFacHIc tb pwag .oo GettyOII .10g two Id .50a VI? 1 U* i l.< 1J0 Polaroid .20 ProcttG 1.S5 PublkTnd .36# Pullman 2.40 21 21V* 28 IP -- 526 58% 56% 58%-2% 101 114% 112% 114% — “■ 15 87% 87% 87% - -2% Goodyr 1.1 - % Gracia l.«» - % GrenllCS 1.40 GIAAP 1.20a 25 34% 36% 36% —1% 100 45% *5% 45% —1% 177 26% 26% 26% - V 20 S7% 57% 57*6 — V 13 38* 37% 30%-V 31 33% 32% S* —1 41 Jr 30% B - 0 n Thb H Ii% — vl 74 53% 52 . 53% — 1% 40 43% 42% 43% - % 42 53% 53% 53% - % 32 23% SP,Sfk---*t 70 33% 33%-8%,— V 0 50% 58% .18% - 0 (20 11% 11%-*1%'—I RAC Corp RCA .40* RalstonPur 1 Rayon ler 1.41 Raytheon .40 Rood log Co - • hCh .20 C 41%. I *4; AMet Cl 1.00 -62p wylng prices 1 AmNGas 1.70 r boiler grade a Optic I .Mb Eggs firm; i to 2 higher; 70 rw —- - ■x-r-a: " icat- -a--A whites 44%; mixed. 44%; mediums »; a Photo ,20p standards 31; dirties unquoted; checks 13. A Smolt 2.60a chica*o poultry CHICAGO (APHIUSDA) - I try: wholesale buying prices uu^., roasters 23VV84; special iad Whltp Rock fryers uv*-ii%. % Grumn A .88 124 * Livestock OBTROIT LIVESTOCK _ DETROIT (API—(USOA)-^sttlt Moors folrly —M j '"* Hollers strong to 25 mostly 25 Igher ♦OO-l 18% 10% — % 4 31% 30% 30% — 1 10 47% 47% 47% .. UN 25% 24% 25% —II 33 32*4 31% 32% —1 no oo ran oo -v 11 11% 11% 11% - I I_______ 6 65% 64% 44% — % Armour 1.60 85 40% 30% 40% —1 ArmsCk l.ioa xll 57 56W S7 + V. I“arl“ 75 S5% 48 fP| | AnwhCp1,10 Anacon 3.75g AnkenCh 03p Assd DO 120 Atchison 1.60 Cowa *etlv* |AMCLIne 3a I 54% ! i 54% - ms seutfc {»;9f is, •sur Sffiyryl 5 chotca 700-000 lb. hdlfft^.lMLOO * good .to low cholca 2l-23.7S. ytttlty COWt * uPAcenntr and cufttr 11.14. * - mV & irang®™ i J^^»?n»2tVl tO| 3 ^0-MO & S MOO, 3 4 } OooS 24-31; standard 1»-?6. . , Sheep 1200. Not enough to mok* market. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (APMU*DA)-Ho*t butchers 50 1-2 J**;™ s?aS lb, m»42.Hl boors 19.50-21.00. »c8!8^535S.S«; SjraSreflMP 29 32% 32% 32% - 4 i4% 13% r 74 73% 72 1 14 j* 2% . 24.2$- „____-JPIPIISI.lfijp r hellers 25.56-26.00; choice 000-.a 24 50-25.50; Mixed good tod and commorciol CMN 13.0O14WI utility and commorciol to®'1IG-OO-IV-OO. Sheep 1,000; slaughter lambs steady; several small Ms choice and prims. H*100| R> wooled slaughter Bendlx 2.40 Benguet .05g Beth Stl 1.50 Bigelows 1.40 Booing 2a Itrdon 1.11 BorgWer 2.20 ‘’■IS8iyS,r,.^ Brunswick BucyEr 2.40s 41 42% 42 42 — % 21 31% 38 38% - % 14 42 41% 41%-1% 4 87% 87% 87% ' 80 30 28% 39% -1% 245 39% 38% 39% —V 113 47% 44% 67%»—1 107 35% 34% 15(S-% 17 37% ft 87% - % 347 131% 119 111% —2% 73 40% 40V- 40% - % 37 47% 47% 47% — % 19 43% 42% 42% -1% 13 95% 94% 95 -2% 154 1% 0% 0% — % 18 58 44% 47 —1% 44 19 16% 19 17 |4% 24% 24% 27 »% 21 21* „ 19 42% 42% 42% — % 291 45 43% 45 -2% Golf MO 2W Gulf OH 2 Gull SUt .1 Halllburt 1.80 HamPap 1.40 HaclaMns lb Hare Pdr lg Mam i.20 wfeck .20 N Electron lid Inn .40 HySug 1.M mestk i.60 noywt i.io ok Ch U0 us* P 1.00 ideal Cam 1 IllCenlnd 2.40 IngorRtnd 2 inland Sfl 2 Jr^.6? IntBusMch 6 ■*‘H*rv 1.50 Minor 1.20 Mkk 2 00* Inti Packers Cal Plhenl Cal Pack .90 CampRL .45* __Cemp Sp % .50; CdnPac 1.50a "'CoroP Lt 1.14 > 21% 1 KernCLd 2.40 KerrMc 1.30 (nmbCMrk 2 Koppers 2.40 . Korvette l Kresge 1.40 Kroger 1“ American Slocks NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (APR- Following Is list ot selected stodc transactions on tl American Slock Ixchong* with noi Pflt“i Sad* R- (hds.) HW Law Last Chi. Aerolet 50a 28 M% H% 22% -» 321 JUT* 2 3-1* 4J&-1-H ArkLaGas 1.3* 11 Asantwa Assd Oil&G AtlasK Cp wt Barnes Eng Brat Tree M mm wit .3io Brown Co .40 Campb Chib ‘Can So Pot ' Cdn Javelin Cinerama fawi* Ctrywide Rl .31 Craol* F 2.44a Data Coni Equity Cp .051 Fargo oils Felmt Oil .ISfl Gen Dovel Gen Pfywd Giant Yel 60i ChRIPac .1 ChrlsCrft .< Chrysler 2 CIT Fin 1 CitiesSvc 1 C lev El l II 1 S 15-14 15-1* 15-14 I! i?% ,ss aw in ih * 19 Mb jib 27 14% 16% 16% - I 41 3% 3% 3% — • 122J3-16 2% 213-16 . 7 0% 4% 0% - I 1% t% 1% i 32% - 1 cbs t jfc Vm Col bos 1.26 Comic1'* fto Comw* Ed 2° Comsat Conldls 1.80 GanSIlcInd 1 CnNGas 2.30 GansPow l.oo lonfalnr 1.20 Jont.Atr .60 Coni Can 14( 4 43 63 43 —1% I 13 49% 40% 48% —V 12 71 71% 7* —I 32 417% 17. ItaH 1N %% 22 V 102 49% 49V. 44 00% 79% 00 17 35 v 34% 34% i 14 47% 47% 47% 50 37VV 34% 37% 119 21% li* 31% 50 45% 45 45 -3% x9 42% 42% 42% 1. 15% U% 15% 9 75% 75% ,n\% 45 4K1% 40*4 40% ,, I 4 41 43 S -I i 3 29 .MH S% — % x7t 22% 20% 22%-% 503 51 49% 51 -1% 54 31% 31% 31% —' I 59 40% 40% 40% —1 5 41% 41% 41% — I 1* 80% 79% 00 — 49 37% 27% 27% - % > 210 49% 47% 41%'—2 irSleg .60 iForcam 1 lehman l.»2g LOFGIs 2.00a LlbbMcN .551 LlggettAM 5 kKi LivingsO .431 .ockhdAjrcJ loneSCem I .oneSGa 1.12 Long 1st Lt 1 Lorillard ISO LTV J» LuckyStr 1.4* .ukens 111 41 »% 33 33% - 14 B%. 20% i% -18 <52% 51% 52% -65 38% 38% 38% -103 41% 41% 41% -f 22 33% 32% 32% -22 -71% 71% 71% + 12 SS 54% 54%- Cant i 2.40 AS 41% 41% - I McCrory wt MM'JMr Molybden Day FL 1 Deere 1.40 OoRs Air ‘ Treasury Position' WASHINGTON (API - The ce - slttoin of Iho Treasury comparer corroipondlng dale e year ago. D*A l. mi dk: 1 i Wm^"stt*«^l34.ht*r"S3.725.661,399 ; (*,_Tom«u9t, VmMmM 1SJS4.1S9i49.il Lodge Calendar ; Witerfort Auxiliary Mo. 2887, >FOB, regular meeting has been ,changed to Tue«., Dec, ,7, at 8 .ji.to Doris Strickland, secretary. Disney ,40b DomeMn ,00a DougAIr ,40b. DowCh l.80b Draper 1.20* Dross Ind 1 DuksPower 1 duPont 4d Duq LI 1.50 DynamCp .40 ___,%rOh EostGF l.ftf r Kodak l.iOo ietonMf 2.20 idgeGG .200 IIBondS 1.55 tIPotsNOT JmerEI 1.20 EmerRad .40 Tnd JSa : JrleLeck RR Ethyl Cp .50 EvansPd 40d Eversharp 1 Fodd Corp 1 FodDStr 1.40 Fed Mog l.SO Formrpns i;; FsIChrl t?7f 11 m M 37% % U% .fMk 14% 1 32% 32% 32% 3 S’* K S'* +i% 241 72% 70% 72% —Hi IS n* 72% 3% - % 3 42% 42% JM — “ 21 233% 230% 232% - 20 32% 31% >. — ioo n% ii li* — —B— 532 10% 05 J7% -2*9 1 165 195 MS -1 ’fs'g^T’St-iS ff:” 54 20% 20 29% + 7 59% 59% V* —.... "S «% rC:,it 41 1% 7% J% — % . I* 34% 15% 14% - % Slip AIM —F— . 200 139* 134% 139 -5* 443 H% If* 30% r- % f H im w. 21 17% 17% B* -21 71% 71% n%r* 9 27% 36% 24% ' ‘ » 24% 34 M M 57% 56% _ 13 34% 2* —-H— » 44% - 1 I 51% - < i it + i_ I 40 —1% 53 -1% 1 34% —1% 30 41% 47% 4M/4 — ' ,17 70% 70 70 -1' 13 14% 54 —V 15 42% 42% «% - % 29 77% 74% 77 ... 8 35% 35% 35% — ITECktB .80b 42 40 i 10% 10% .. . 24% 29 i 65% -r i 52% — 1 i 36% -1< i 73% 74% -2% 22 48 44% 47 Tampa Eh .52 TennGas 1.16 . Texaco 2.40* ToxlTm i.05 Taxaolnitm 1 TexPLd .35g Textron 1.80 .25« w m on Tt 4tv Tlrn RE 1.00* 12 47 mpmp —3* 37% 37%- % —L . 200 23% 21% 22%—1* 23 15% 15% 15% ... St j 5% s% -12 33 32% 32% — % « 53% 53% 53% -1 17 13% 13% 13% — % M 71% 70% 71% + % 88 5% 5 5 - % 145 iiomMUriMm^to i 9 37% 37% 37% —1 27 J1% 31% 31% — * —M— c Maralhn 2.20 - Mid i.a quer ,25g MertinMar 1 MayDSIr 1.50 McCall JOB Me Don A JOB McKess 1.70 . .1 42% 42% 42% 10 54% 54% 54% i it a a 7 52% 52% »% — % 295 77% 76 77% -V" 45 54 M% 53% -3 17 31% 21% 31% + 34.15% 15% 15%-t 252 M 21% B - 31 57 55% 54% -1 •is m% 24% a* — . a 6i% -si *i% —i 1| 42% 42% 42% -1... 44 42% 41% 41%—IV* 11 53% 53% 53% *• MinnMM 1.10 45 I Monton 1.40b 32% : 47% I 9% i 47% 4 i 32% —1% MorrtllCo lb Nat Airnn .10 44 151% 150 151% -3% 5 25% 25% H —N— 159 17% *5% 17% —2* w 53% iLMHhMi id 3.2Jg iteol 2.50 ■I TO* JO NJ Zinc la imSRt 1.30a ieiMf I * NA AviO 2.80 NOrNGas 2.20 ^orPag 2J0* TIN .... M Norwch 1.26* 50 47% 44% *7% 23 53% 53% 42% 11 li% 18% 18%=% «r ss ssic 94 75% 74% 75 —2% 31 25% 25% 25% 97 41% 9 41 i s *0 a 17 M M* 34%-% tB£«- 7 39% 39* 39% — 5 51% 51 il*- OxfdPep 1.20 27 46% - POcGEI 1.20 ::: PkTLT 1.2* ' Pin A« .40 Panh EP 1.40 PMMMICl 2 ParkoDav la Nwfiu I PennDhde 40 Penney Un i PePwLI 1.40 : £% S%.... i 19% 19% — % -1 41 -1*' IB 45% 46% - 13 29% 29% 29% -1% 12 34% 31 tt* ■ 24 inh! 11% iwiee 17 47*i2% e* - % ,lk u uk lx ____ u. PO RR 1.M X214 I Ponnzoll 1.40 M PepsiCo 140 7. i PflzorC 1.20* ■ ■ k-I "&» j i 72 72% —I* I 70% 70% - % tl 24 13% Ijl 13% M4 til 108% 111 —e 15 71% 71% 71% — a 8% 1% BV* — .. 71 57 . 54% 55% -2% —K— 4 22 21% a .30 53 40% 39% 40% — % 0b 1* 44 45% 45% “ .75 143 #* 39% 40 i ■ b 2 104 43% 42% 43 — % 1.20 34 25% 25% 2M — I SO 26 75 74% 74% — ■ 126 37% «4% 37% —1% •' “ k a% 22% SouNGas 1. SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 221. - H Sperry Rand 975 11% 0 19% .. ■ ....... 3 54 »V* 54 - 66 60% 59% 40% —1 42 54% U 54% - 4 75% 75% 79% —1 41 93% M 93% —1 21 17% 14% 14% —1W V 39% 38% 39% — %. 14 30% 30% 30% — N 33 43% 42% 42% —1 27 58% 50 50% — CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) Three federal judges have under advisement the caae of five drug manufacturers accused of price-fixing. Oral arguments in the 8th U.S. Circuit 'Court of Appeals were beard Saturday. ★ * • ★ The compaSifos denied the charge, but Frederick H. Mayer, an attorney for the Federal Trade Commission/ told the court prices to druggists “have remained absolutely rigid tor years and years” even -though production costs have gone down. In rebuttal testimony, Walter . Mansfield, attorney for American Cyanamid Co., staid the prices stayed at the same level because of the companies’ experience that if one firm cut the price, all the others tol-!dety may stage lowed suit and no one got ai0f their own in competitive advantage. I the next few hfo CONSPIRACY I weeks as a new was a selfish decision if federal budget you will, because they saw np gain, but certainly was not made from . a conspiracy," Mansfield said. The FTC, in a dispute dating back to 1858, issued on Dec. 17, 1963, an order forbidding the. companies to continue fixing mopes- of the prices of tetracyline andjother *ax cut. other antibiotic dugs. • (But if the military spending The companies are Charlesi-Mses much faster, some of the Pfizer & Co. Inc., Chicago; Great Society programs may American Cyanamid C o./have to be set back in their tim-Wayne, N. J.; Bristol-Myers Co.png; and Bristol Laboratories, New York; Squibb Division of jOlinj These new programs have Mathieson Chemical Corp., Newjbeen estimated to call for more York, and Upjohn Co., Kalama- than $30 billion over the next zoo MMi 1 five years. How much more the One of the judges * hear- war will cost is shrouded in con- ftonjndo 2.40 BM Kollsman StOII Cal 2.50 StOIIInd 1.70 St Pockaging Stan War 1.50 StauffCh 1.40 StirlDriig .80 '23 77% 75% 74% —1 T 40% 40% 40% -1 I 73% »% 73%—IV. 1 23 23% Mf —1% I 78 77% 77% -1% ’ 47% 47% 47% — N ! 78% 77% 77% —I > 47% 44% 44% —1 I 10% 10% 10% big the arguments was Anthbny Celebrezze of Cleveland, former secretary of health,’ educa-and welfare. The other judges were Clifford O’Sullivan of Port Huron, Mich., and Harry Phillips of Nashville, Itan. 1 41% - -1% 32 48% 47% 77 .37% 34% 34% —2% 54 45% 45 45% —V 25 22 21% 21% - 3 62% 62’/a 62% — 77 30% 30% 30% — 21% 21% 21% - Transam ,00b '■’anbltrn ICont 1.13a vont C .60b , Carbide 2 -A Elec L12 UnOIICal 1.20 fk iJb Tank 2- ___,lrL 1.50* UnllAlrc (] UG*»Cp 1.70 Unit MM 1.20 USBorax 80a USGypun 3a “• Indst .lta Lines 2b ■Sa. Ui Smalt US Stool 2K Unit Whelan UnMatch .50 UntvQPd 1.20 7 53 52% 52% 123 32% 31% 32% —u— 26 27% 27% 27% 22 49% 49 49% IS 43 42% 42* -rl% 5 40 M M 135 108 104* 100 177 11% 77* 01% —1% 22 44% 43% 44 171 10% 17% 10% I S’ to ;':to ' 1—a.i— 9 44% 44* 46 -il% 40 70% 49% .79*4 —l 20S 39% 37% 39% — % 227 40* 47% 41 - H 5 4% 4% 4% + ’ 232 20% 20% 20% — 1 41 jfc 51% MW —V 21^*8% 47* UVt -1 18 25% 24% 25% + 1 ■)3i 25% 24% 25% —1 19% 19% 1»% - % a- —— 4-, —2% ____ ■ .a-* —W-X-Y-Z— ■H Co 7 8% s% .0% + WamPIct .50 27 15% 15% *15% - : f.» 91 35% 35% 35% - WUnTol 1. WestgEI 1. whiHcp; WhlteM 1., Wilson CO . PWPPto. PPM WlltnDIx 1,32 13 25% 35% 35% — oolworth 1 13 28% 20 28% - Xerox Cp .70 23* 194* 190 194% —1 YngstSht 1.90 37 37% 37% 37% — _ Zenith 140 137 114 112 Wlli—W ------—. ^ tiw Associated Prtss 1945 rate ptu* stock dMdand. c—Liquidating dividend. d-Oeclered or POMJn 1965 plus (tack dividend, e—Paid Mot year. 1 “Tyobl* In slock during 1965,----f i value on ox-dlvldond or 1 dale, g—Declared or paid h—Declared or Mid oiler or s*4n up. k—Oocoprod o r—Declared or e dlvktand. I—Fold stack dlvl- I_________vfi, In errwrL jt—two Isouo. p—Fold /Idond omitted, deferred or W dlMdand mooting. i*M In1 _ 19*4 plus stack ___________ _ Tkienf 1 Istrlbutlon dot*, z—iotas In lull, dd—Col tad. x—Ex dividend, v—Ex Dividend and solos In full, xdta Ex iiaH|M non. xr—lx rlgtats. m» WWimt PI TMt*. ww—Wlta wgiYBlRs. wd—When die trlbuted. wl—When Issued, nd—Next day delivery. vl—In bankruptcy or recelverlhl, .. being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Adt, or aocurmos assumed bv such com-pantos. w FoZolpn Issue sqblect to In-forest equalization l‘ BOND AV . Fpn. L.* Noon Mon. M.l 100.0 B7.I 914 Frqv. Day NJ 100.2 SfS 91.4 Week Ago 10.5 100.5 |7J i 914 Mmlh MP 80.0 tot .4 47.8 fU Year Ago M4 lOl.l Ml 91.S 93.4 mo High 117 102 5 K# 9U 1945 • Low Ml 100.2 07.0 fO 1944 High 02.9 103 5 98 6 92.2 1944 Low N.S 100.4 17.2 9*> Get Drug Casa 5 Firms Art Charged With Price-Fixing shows last year. Standard engine on the 117-inch wheelbase model is a 318-cubic-inch Dodge V8. The Charger is 203.6 inches long, 75.3 inches wide and 53 inches high. Tax Cut Hopes Dim By SAM DAWSON ' AP Business News Analyot NEW YORK fAP.) - The Viet Nam conflict and the Great So-private war 'today in its December letter I that the impact is yet to be felt since, in addition to appropriations, it ‘‘authorized huge amounts as part of new felfare legislation” which will call for appropriations in future years. ★ * ★ Since the President has promised to ward off inflation wherever it threatens, many private economists now feel that this year the shaping of the new federal budget will be done with much more of an eye to cost cutting than a year ago, when1 DAWSON | Defense Department spending was declining instead of rising as today. The outcome of such frugality, if, it develops, could affect many government activities, old and new. ' The more the Viet Nam war costs rise, the tighter thd squeeze on sums available for the Great Society programs. The bank economists think both the President and the Congress will be more inclined to give fiscal restraint top priority. Budget drafting in the next few weeks should give a clue. GM Tells Role in Auto Safety siderable mystery and' Uncertainty. Together, the war and the new social programs already have increaskl the'federal deficit this year well above the estimate of last January. -SPENDING PLANS The hew budget Which President Johnson will submit to Congress next month will outline spending plans for the fiscal year starting next July 1. The rest of this month, the President and heads of government departments will be trying tc choose between various spend-!| General Motors has just re- .Proposals, ^object: totry leased a new booklet describing * kef JJ* expenditures wito-j in a liveable range of probabie| Delayed Action Seen Interest Rate Effect Viewed NEW YORK (AP) - The man in the street is not likely to suffer financially, at least for a while, due to' the sharp rise in interest rates announced Spn-day night by the Federal* Reserve Board. Banking officials said the average consumer was hot likely to pay more to finance his car dr to borrow cash for Christmas. Nor was he likely to get much more interest on his savings accounts. the corporation’s contributions to automotive safety over the years. The booklet, “Desijpi for Safety,” emphasizes the point that tiie basic structure of the car itself is the most important requirement in automotive safety. GM’s more than one million sharholders win receive. the 40-page illustrated booklet, as will educational, political and other groups across the coan- *y- The booklet traces the improvement made in each major automotive component,' and relates this constant improvement to safety. The development of improved testing techniques also is discussed as a contribution to the manufacturing of safer cars- As a Jesuit of these hew techniques, according to the booklet, new designs now can be tested in the laboratory before being put on experimental cars, These tests subject the cars to far inore punishment in a few days than they get in the entire lifetime of the car. .tax collections — a range that doesn’t threaten, a dangerously large deficit. This year, the Congress appropriated a record $119 billion; $13 billion more than last year. But the First National City Bank of New York points out School Bond Buyer Is Told FARMINGTON—School building bonds totaling $2.5 million will be sold by the Farmington Board of Education to Halsey, Stuart and Co., .file., of Detroit. The firm’s bid, the lowest of four, offered an average interest rate of 3.6783 per cent. The bonds are the last of a series of $5 million approved by district property owners in November, 1963. Wig Store Is Opened in Waterford Twp. The Drayton Wig Distributors Co. has opened at 4666 Walton, Waterford Township. The owners, Mr. and Mrs. E. D, Countemanche, have been in the hair business for over 20 years. Quake Hits Tokyo Area TOKYO (AP) - A minor earthquake jogged Tokyo and vicinity Monday night. The Meteorological Agency located the epicenter about 56 miles southeast of Tokyo on the Boeo peninsula. BOW-JONIS NOON AVERAGE! 9*pf '■ . 0 Indus* .........A..... 935.74—10.34 E * 'tl .............. 229 *4— S .................MM4— ck* ...............2J0.9S— . — jnd grad* rolls . o Public uttmta* ...... 0 Industrials ......... Civic Information Night at St. Michael's School The St. Michael’s Division' of the Tri-County Senior Government Seminar will hold a Civic Information Night at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the school auditorium, 100 Lewis, Pontiac. Congressman Billie S. Far-num (D-Waterford Township), City Manager Joseph A. Warren, Pontiac City Engineer Joseph Neipling and Municipal Court Judge Maurice Finnegan will explain the functions of their respective offices. STOCK JNMMIS Compiled by TIM AoooclOtaQ Frau . "H#y : ■Si Year Ago . 513.1 1N.t 1 04.4 110.7 140.9 N4.7 Monday's IN DtVtOBNPS^ MCtjkRIjO RBGUUU Q 12-30 B-9S t Successful % * Investing * J * s * By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “My wife and I are in our late 40s. I am a Civil Service employe, earning $9,400 a year. We have one g r o w n - n p, self-supporting daughter. Our money—$25,000 —is all in savings, no stocks or bonds. I will retire la 10 years and would like to invest t som? of our savings to have a better retirement income. What do you suggest?” A. E. A) In your position, I believe you should invest $15,000 of your savings in solid, conservative blue chip stocks Which have not moved ahead much in a market that has favored glamor issues. I would buy stocks with a strong growth factor which should advance in price in the next decade as they have done in the past. For you, I suggest Corn Products and Consolidated Foods— two of our great food processing companies. I also like Procter It Gamble,.which requires no description, and Texaco, oui greatest oil merchandiser. Q) “I wonder why you have never mentioned Western Pacific R.R. stock for income. At tte present price tiie yield is five per cent. Do you care to comment?” W. H. A) One reason that I have never written up this railroad is because yours is the first inquiry about the stock I have received in recent years. Western Pacific is a bridge line, which means that it forms a link between certain carriers from the East and other lines on the West Coast. The road ip Relatively small but strategically important. I believe earnings will reach about $3.50 a share this year, which indicates ample coverage for the $2 annual dividend. The appear to be , a good buy for income and I recommend them as such. (Copyright, 1965) However, it was thought that the' cost of home mortgages might inch up a bit. Observers believe that, for a time at least, savings rates for individuals at commercial banks, mutual savings banks, and savings and loan> associations will not change mqch. SEE REDUCTION A spokesman for the National League of Insured Savings Associations said the Federal Reserve’s action might cause a considerable reduction in the amount of money available for bousing, for which savings and loan associations are the largest supplier of funds. * ★ ★ Mutual savings bankers, and saving and loan officials said that, unless there was a fairly general increase in commercial bank rates on consumer savings accounts, they would probably be slow to increase their rates. Gresham Cleaners Being Modernized Work is now under way to modernize equipment and add approximately 5,500 square feet of space to Gresham Cleaners, 605 Oakland. ★ * * Completion date for the project will be about March 1. The facade of the bfiilding will also be pioderni^ed with new aluminum windows. Borman Board Votoi 20-Cent Dividend The board of directors of Borman Food Stores, Inc., has voted the regular 20-cent quarterly d lv 1 d e n d payable Jan. 10 to stockholders at close of business Dec. 17. Borman Food Stores, Inc., includes Arnold Drugs, Inc., Savon Supermarkets, and Yankee Department Stores. Stocks ot Local Intorost Figure* otter decimal point* or* eighth* OVER THR COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from tho NASD or* representative Inter-dealer prices of approx I-—It o.m. Inter-dealer marfcota ------ throughout the day. Frtcao do not include retail markup, markdown or commission. . 17 j 14.7 -------- Crystal .. Kelly Girl -MRwwfc RuMor Co. FtOtataf Finance ... tamp Printing .... Scripts Vemor's Ginger Al* MUTUAL FUNDS AHMatod Fund ......... f.1 Commonwealth stock .... it.: Koystono . income K-l t*< Keystone Growth K-7 Investors Trust Putnam Growth ...... Television Electronics .. Woilngtan Fund ........ Windsor Fund ,......... .10.77 . 1748 i iU ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 0, 1 m C-U Thailand Likely Spot for Next Red Chinese Move in SE Asia By WILLIA ML. RYAN AP Special Correspondent Exactly a year ago, Red China aet in motion machinery for a new “people's war" in Southeast Asia, in the style of Viet Nam. Today, anticommunist leaders scent danger, seeing in Peking’s activities a new stage in a nibbling process by which the Chinese may nope eventually to dominate the whole Southeast Asia mainland, w To these leaders, the peril seems more acute in view of Red China’s quarrel with Moscow and its setbacks elsewhere: Frustration in the India subcontinent, failure of policy in Africa and the fiasco of the Peking-oriented Communist/party of Indonesia. Apart from Viet Nam, Chinese communism has had little luck in the non-CoOubunist Orient. Before the calamity which befell Indonesia’s Reds following an abortive Oct. 1 coup, there were signs they were trying to reactivate the Hukbalahap Communist insurgency in the Philip- the U.S. imperialists and their lackeys,” using “every possible means of struggle." The means-incl against Thailand.” While no real guerrilla warfare has started, he said, Communists were ’seriously active now” in Thailand’s impoverished northeast,' forming small groups to carry out a first phase of the plan. Whether it is named for the Red Chinese premier, these evidently is a plan which was in motion early last Decend Peking then announced the formation of a “Thailand Independence Movement” In January, it announced organization of a ’Patriotic Front for Thailand.” ♦ ★ This is the Viet Nam pattern: guerrilla forces badked by i front.’The Viet Cong’s “National Liberation Front” was set up in December i960, Just in advance of the all-out Viet Cong effort which eventually escalated the war there to its stage. Soon after the organizations were set up in Peking, a European diplomat returning from It already has haen tooperation in tha northeast 'dust bowl of -Thailand/nomb fja third of the nation’s 30 million people. 1,toct InflWrition from -th# SIMILAR TACTICS The tactics, are strikingly similar to those used by the Viet Cong when'Hhair Mg effort in yM Nam began in llM: a sination of viHqge •chiefs persona collaborating with tha government. Bangkok officials daim foe Communists killed SO such persons this year. Thailand has no frontier with China, jit has an >66-mUo Hreported to have infiltrated into der With Laos. Tim northeast Thou.nrf .nH Nam. In the south near Malaysia, 700 terrorists, mostly Chinese remnants of the Malaya insurgency of a decade ago, are In addition, there are 10,000 or more North Vietnamese in the northeast; there since foe end of foe French war 1n Indochina and openly loyal to North Viet Thailand and reorganized. The Thais for the most part _____A ... . have/atraditional dislike and distrust toward thfassa. There area would be no problem. ^ cWe to five million over-sea* Chinese in Thailand, all subject to pressures from Red China’s ageots. NOT POPULAR Oo&munism is not popular in Thailand. A Communist party was formed in 1946, mostly of Chinese, and outlawed in 1952. Its hard-core leadership now may be only 500 with about 10,-000 sympathizers. Up to now, foe government has appeared'to have them in hand. But foe situation could change. Experience of the postwar years has shown it takes only small forces to sustain a guerrilla war. ★ * * Armed Communists roam mountain areas of the northeast on terror missions. Earlier this year, the U.S. State Department said Red terrorism and recruitment were being stepped up coincident with heavily Increased propaganda from “The Voice of Free Thailand,” a radio evidently located in North Viet Nam. At foe same time, Hong Kong reports told of big Chinese purchases of Thai currency there. * * * A U.S. special farces group from Okinawa has worked with Thai special forces, training them for antiguerrilla war. The United States, with an already heavy military commitment in Thailand, is financing construction of a new airfield which could be part of a massive military complex to counter Red expansion. * ★ ★ Peking’s threats have become more menacing to recent months in view of foe unoffodal-ly acknowledged role Thailand plays in the Viet Nam war, permitting use of Thai bases for air missions against Red strongholds in Viet Nam and Laos. pines, but that movement, which chin* quoted Marshal Chen Yl, collapsed 10 years ago apparent- the ' ' ly has disintegrated into squabbling bands of ideologically inclined bandits. NATURAL TARGET Thus Thailand, a pro-j can bastion in the Far East, is a natural target. In Bangkok last week, the Thai deputy defense minister, Air Chief Marshal Da wee Chullasap, said “We have reliable information that /thete.is a Chou En-lale plan Councilman Unable to Earn 2 Salaries BOSTON (AP) SI City t Councilman Paul P. Callahan of Malden cannot collect his 03,500 [ council salary because of his $7,-600-a-year job as assistant school principal. The State Supreme Court recently upheld a District Court decision based on a state law barring a councilman from drawing more than one municipal salary. the deputy premier, as saying ”We may have a guerrilla war going in Thailand before the year is out.” EXILES PROMINENT Thai revolutionaries and politicians in exile in Peking man the fronts. The Thailand Independence Movement delegate in Peking is a man named Mon Non Nanakon. The Patriotic Front leader is Phayom Chula-m. Some reports say the plotters hope to use Pridl Phanamyong, 65, wartime Thai regent and 1946 premier, as a figurehead. Apparently foe has been in Peking since 1951. His name was connected in 1957 with a Peking-sponsored “Thai free state," and his appeals have been broadcast to Thailand to overthrow governments. w w. ★ Nanakon, in a Peking broadcast to his countrymen in March, said the situation in Thailand was critical, and begged them to Join with Communists in a struggle against -nor lii effect! BUY NOWI..NO CASH ’TIL MAY ’M NO PAYMINTS ’TIL MAY ’ll | rnmmm YOU CAN WIN REAL MONEY PLAYING MONDAY & TUESDAY SPECIAL! "Your products ore only as good as the company behind then 24-SIZE CRISP HEAD LETTUCE 50 TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH. COUPON WIENERS “SET. 2 i«’l" FROZEN All BEEF SHAPED FAMILY STEAKS 10 PATTIES M COUNTRY CLUB POINT CUT CORNED BEEF. . . *69* COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS. ... i. 59‘ CHUCK STEAK 59 CENTER CUT RIB I PORKI CHOPS BEEF RIB ROAST 4TH A STH RIBS . f LB.. 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PK0S. 25’ tAVI S' ON TWO * V.M (I Kmg.r thru Saturday, Ok. 11, I I IMS. limit im cwpM ft family. 3 . 4m right t. Rmk WITH THIS COUPON AND ■ = _ $5 PURCHASE OR MORE I I----------------H I Swat. CTT-.P «ms, I KROGO SHORTENIRt | Knew fa dmnm ■ % ncos. FRYER PARYSot | 1 ■■ can 44* save jo- ■ 1 1 R0MTIN6 OHCKIRS , ii» ■ IMS. limit —« amfa —' famSv. ■ TuMdov DM.mbar 7 TMS ■ * RUASIIHR I**;- I v«NHwSaturday. r34) Slonny Gasman 434) Rill Aim 435) Joe Dunlap 435; CBrtBahrick 435; Sarnia Simla 435) Jerry Brooks «4i AI Piets Stan OrrtswkskT 433/ Odie ........ HP Jsrry McKay 434) Cast E. Fredrickson T*S Wblar 433) James |Mtwi Ruffner 434) Charles RjiBdrdabn _ till Johnson 433) Jose Tovar 432) Rudy Yapo 423) John McCreary lari Kltson 420). EsM HmTO nmm 4if) lea f idwr.4)7) Herbert i____ 517) Dan McOonaid 5Mt Richard Store Pontiac Northern put strong finish and won the fourth annual Vehicle City Swimming Relays in Flint Central’s pool Saturday ‘ with a total of 69 points. The Huskies moved ahead in the 200 breaststroke relay to outpoint Flint Northwestern which finished second with 58 points. ★ ★ ★ In the Royal Oak Relays, Birmingham Seaholm won its fourth straight championship with 62 points as host Kimball finished second with 54. At Flint, PNH won tee 460 individual medley relay with Frank Yedlin, Bob Bragan, Steve Yedlin and Cart Hiller finishing in 4:20.0. In the breaststroke relay, the team of Don McGeen, Richard Kuhn, Frank Yedlin and Carl Hiller finished in 2:01.6. The Huskies finished second (Continued on Page D-2, Oil. 8) VIHICLE CITY RILAYS ... .Hadley relay - 1. Flint Central (Mika Coleman, Randy Hanaan, Ran ' Flpar, Chip Roeder), 2.' Southweitarn, _ Herlhera, 3. Pontiac Northern, Oil Sayan 51 run_(L Chl—FG LaCjare 13 Chi—FG LaCIOrc 31 And ao far as the Minnesota Vikings are concerned, the miracle already happened Sunday nteoi the packers defeated the Vikings 14-19 with a dying quail Dm Chandler field goal and two disputed calls in tee final 69 seconds that disallowed Viking touchdown pitehea. *T caught the bate I didn’t trap it,” insisted flanker Jim Phillips, tee target ei a 16-yvd Fran Tarkenton pass in SAYERS SAILS ON — Rookie Gayle Sayers of the Chicago Bears cuts up the middle after passing the line of scrimmage en route to a big gate against the Colts in Baltimore yesterday. Coming In to hate at left fa fullback Ronnie Bull (29), while Colt linebacker Ted Davte (35) looks & helplessly from right. Sayert scored in the first quarter on i 61-yard dash to lead the Bean to a 124 triumph over the Colts. ' . ' T Floras 513) Glynn h ■••tty All) . Nick Contor 511) William Ash < Larry Pfaftar 511) I. M. Bata 513) Inman 510) Hamar Fultz 503) Ji Wozniak 409) E. FI to 401) Ban Gam 407; Manual darcio 407; Lou Koarl 404; Marvin Wabar 404; Ron Smith 4», Rotor) Morlarlty 405; Floyd Pom 405; ^•kl Coto 404; Ivan JohSon 404> Gar Zghallk 4M) Truman McDonald mi lob Martin 403) Rotort McLIntock 401 j Craycratt 401. W_____..... (Frink VM&fr'^Sart Stava Yadiln, Cart Hlllar), 3. ItMMP ■-n, 3. Flint Northarn, A Rvaratt, s. Canal, 4. HorthiuaaNm. T—4:204. DNIng—1. Lansing Rvaratt (Jim Han-derson, Chris WMMora), 1 Southwarter-3. Flint Northarn, 4. Pontiac Nerthom, --------- - -vgjnt cantral, pfe-lM. ■ ralay—I. Northwastai (Lorry Hoklan), Mika Torrany, Lori Kimball, Doug Warwick!), 1 Pontli Northarn, 3. Flint Central, 4. Rvaratt, *. Pontiac Northern, 4. Film Nortnem, s. Film Southwestern, 4. Flint Central. T—3:35.9. (Record). ROYAL OAK TEAM TOTALS Seaholm 41, KimbaH 54, Battle Creak 40, Gratae Polnte 43, Ann After S, Dearborn and FHnoraW 30, Fordaon 20, Oraval, Hazel Park and Thurston 14 Ferndale 10, South)iaM 4, Rlvarvlaw 2, Dondaro 0, Madison 0. RILAY BVRNTJ ... freestyle—Grosso Polnto, Seaholm, Kimball—Tima: ItfM (meet record). 300 braoststreko ralay—Seaholm, Bottto Crook, DoorborttortlMr IrtnT 300 bockstrako relay — Grasse Polnto, Seaholm, KUnball-TImo: 1:52.3. 30# butterfly ralay—Ann Arbor, Klm-ball, Gravao—Tbno: 1:45.3. r 500 croacondo relay—Kimball, Seaholm, Fordaon—Tlmo: 4:17.1. Crook, Fom* ___ Bob Gormang 435) Ban Andar- ___ 435) Ended Stevens 435) Jssat Hart 435) Sam Woodman 435) James Waters 435) Many Ivans 432; David Mason 430: _Atox McKinney 430) Gary Bllllngton 429; Bob Green 439) Gerald Sonnenbarg mi John Snead 439) Jamas Llnsenman 435: toWd^Myett 43il frlaa 423; Randy (MV 419) Guy Coleman 419; Robert Tartar 411) Tom Stlllwall 411) Bob Toad P. h. Then 412) Mario DMenlo til) Oram SI. Amour 410) Bill Stillwell 410; Monraa Moore mi W. A. Dalmtr 409, Edwin Rood mi Stan Lyons mi Rkharx. Voro 404: Robert McLaimhlen 40S: Mil •rry Presson 70S: Joe Mysrs 401 It Pointer 400; Bill Kirkland tfPHM I 472: Merv Weber 547; Mart Chano- PNH Mafmen 3rd in Owosso Meet Pontiac Northern’s wrestling squad picked up a couple of titles Saturday in finishing third in a field of six in the Owosso Invitational Wrestling Tournament. Owosso picked up 64 points to lead the tourney field,’ followed by Lansing Eastern (78), PNH (70), Okemos (65), Jack-son (45) and Saginaw Arthur Hills (12). PNH’s Mike Hester won the 95-pound title and Troy Dell captured the heavyweight crown. In the AAU tournament at Flint Saturday, Royal Oak Kimball’s Bob Regan (112) and Jim Gallery (180) picked up individual titles. 95 — Mika Haatar (Pontiac Northarn); Reeves (Owosso); fspinaza (Lansing lastarn). 103 — Hoddy (Owosso)) Gerzs (Lansing Eastern)! Tam Kali (Pontiac North- lit - Martin (Okemos)) GrrtaH (Lansing Eastam)) Jonas (Owaasa). 120 — Atom (Owosso)) Logo* (Jackin); Phillips (Pontiac Northarn). 127 - Nlamlac (Owosso); Mlkets (Oka-no); Hollingsworth (Lansing Rastarn). -Tsamr-y (Lansjnp Restart)^ P. 5-1 Conquest of Maple Leafs 4th Straight Gordie Howe Tallies Twice in 18 Seconds to Decide Outcome DETROIT (AP) - It didn’t take much — luck, marksmanship and a surprising performance at defense—to move the the Detroit Red Wings back into contention in the National Hockey League. Gordie Howe scored twice within an 18-second span of the third period Sunday to highlight the Red Wings’ fourth straight 'victory, a 5-1 verdict over Toronto. * * * Detroit downed the Maple Leafs 5-3 in Toronto Saturday night and has scored 25 goats in its winning streak. The surge has moved the Red Wings into third place. Stan Mikita scored his second three-goal hat trick in as many nights to lead Chicago past New York 6-2, and Montreal and Boston played a 4-4 tie in other games Sunday. The results moved Chicago into sole possession of first place. HITTING NET 'We’re just having a little more luck around the net,” Manager-Coach Sid Abel said itt explaining the Red Wings’ winning streak. “At the start of the season we couldn’t find the net. Now we’re getting the good bounces and shooting better,” he continued. Abel added a note of caution, however, saying he didn’t know how long his . team could keep things going with the defense in its present situation. * * # It was goalie Roger Croxier and not tee defense which kept the Mapel Leafs at bay Sunday. Croxier turned aside 33 Toronto shots, 16 of them in the second period, in his best performance of tee season. Eddie Shack got the lone Toronto goal late in the first period to tie things at 1-1. “Even though our defense isn’t as good as I’d like it to be, I can’t help but be amazed at the play of young Bert Mar-Abel said. LONG TRIAL Marshall, 22, was called up for a trial from the Red Wings’ farm team at Memphis and has played in 10 games. He has three assists qnd has spent but' two minutes in the penalty box. ’Right now, he’s the biggest surprise oh the team,” Abel said. “When I called him up to have a look at him, I 'never thought he’d be around as long as this. “He has a lot of poise for a player who is oily in his third season as a pro and covers up well when he does make a mistake — which dbesn’t happen often,” be added. Norm Ullman scored on a power play in the first period and Alex Qelvecchio put the Red Wings ahead to stay early in the second period. FINAL TALLY Ab McDonald added the Red Wings final marker in the third period. Bobby Hull, Doug Mohns and Phil Esposito scored Chicago’s other goals as the Black Hawks won (heir sixth game in their last seven starts and extended the Rangers’ winless string to six. Hr * * Arnie Brown and Lou Angot-ti tallied for the Rangers. Ron Stewart’s goal at 7:56 of the third period gave Boston the tie with Montreal after the Canadian had taken the lead with three goals in a two-minute apatt. * Johnny Bucyk scared in the first period and ex-Red Wing Bob Dillabough tallied twice in > the' second period for Boston. The goals were the first in the NHL for Dillabough. ■ ^ Try Sail f NHL Standings WLTPfeOFOA . Oatratt .... 7 I 4 II 44 J4 . Toronto • • • • • • • 7193 17 &#«/ , Montreal 4. Naw York 3 Chicago )£ Baton 1 DotrolT5, Toronto 3 fSst«• • . D—9 IE PO ,:F THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1PM Several ragged, annual metches are on tap tomorrow night as prep basketbaB resumes around the area, although the only league contests are in the Catholic League. Highlighting that list arW un- UET XJS HELP YOU PLAN YOUR VISIT TO THE ROSE BOWL Stay in the fabulous Disnoylond Area, and sm all tha wonders of sunny Southern California easier. Mora than 100 modern hotels snd motels... sll near Disneyland KNOTTS BERRY FARM MOVIEUND WAX MUSEUM and only fast fraewsy minutes from tha Rosa Bowl. For FREE information... and opecial Rom Parade, and Bowl Gama packagea, write; ** Wlr*' ANAHEIM AREA VISITOR A CONVENTION BUREAU ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA ISO W. KATELLA AVE., DEFT. R beaten St. Frederick at Waterford Our Lady of Lakes and Ro^al Oak St. Mary at undefeated Orchard Lake St. Mary. Pontine St. Michael will {day Detroit St. Rose at Kennedy Junior High School; Ferndale St. Jamas will visit Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows; and St. Augustine will tackle New Baltimore St. Maty in other parochial contests. ,y ■' * h ‘ * ★ Oxford will v i a i t Avondale, Milford will go to Waterford Kettering, Capac will travel to I inlay City, Berkley will be host to Birmingham Groves and Holly will entertain Fenton in nonleague starts. One important Saginaw Valley Conference clash will be plnyed at Saginaw where Arthur Hill it host to Bay City Central. Pontiac Northern and Pontiac Central’s basketballers are idle tomorrow, but the two will battle in swimming for the lead In the annual All Sprots Trophy! competition. Each has *100 points after their football and Cross country encounters, and will seek SO in the Northern portion of their home-and-home tank series. MATMEN Hie Huskies wrestling team will action, also, meeting Warren Fitzgerald on the PNH mat. • ,1 ♦ , I* i Other grappling activity trill have Groves it Cranbrook, Madison at Seaholm, Redford Union at Fanqington, Hazel Park at Berkley, Dondero at, Oak Park, Southfield at Ro Kimball, Ypsi-lanti at Walled Lake and North Farmington Rolls; Seaholm Wins 2nd Farmington’s Falcons came from behind Saturday night to hand city rival North Farming-ton its second setback in a row, 68-55. The winners were down 27-23 at halftime, but moved in front in the third quarter, 42-39, and GOODYEAR SERVICE SPECIAL SAVE YOUR CAR FROM RUST! HERE'S WHAT WE DO ... 1. Inside doors and tradk area 2. Floor pans — Headlight shields 3. Underside of rocker panels 4. Fender wheel wells 5. Gravel splash pans 6. Gas fank 7. Pressure applied far complete penatratii even through original undercooling A$k about our complete ruttproofing tervlee. and tafely applied la any car, nru or old, by trained open tori. Protect your ssr sgsinst costly—unsightly corrosion 6ET OUR RU8TPR00FIN6 SPECIAL ROW I GOODYEAR This week...WINTER TUNE-UP SPECIAL YOUR CAR'S PERFORMANCE CHANGES WITH THE SEASONS ... SO BRING YOUR CAR WHERE THE EXPERTS ARE .. . FOR THIS ... Mroter • Halo* • Fwlltwi • feitMAMoi^^Morftfe odwjoJtWo sIm • Mr fAtr a AotaoiMto Ctofeo • Salt try EASY TERMS—PAY^S YOU RIDE Get Ready Wilder No* 49 7NT EW ALIGNMENT I PLUS PASTS A TAK UR CAR TO THE EXPERT A«SRferomiiMitN*a SLIGHTLY USED, EXPERTLY RECONDTDONEDI 75%OR MORE OF ORIGINAL TREAD DEPTH allowance par month ba*od an tailing prica will ba made by tha toHar toward th purchata of any now Goodyear lira. GOOD/YEAR SERVICE STORE OPEN GAILY 0(30 TO 6. FRI. TIL 7:30, SAT. TIL 2:30 outplayed the Raiders in the final frame. la other games Satarday, Birmingham Seaholm downed Crnnbrook, 64-54 for its second win in a raw; Mount Clemens topped Warren, 6549, South-Held trimmed Royni Oak Dondero, /77-5f, Detroit Country Day outlasted Grosse Pointe University School, .85-79, and Clareneeville. dumped Crest-wood, 11-47. The victory Farmington evened the squad’s tecord at 1-1. The Falcons dropped a 66-59 decision to Bentley Friday evening. Sparking the Falcons .attack were Mike Wilson and Greg' Dorow. ★ ★" ★ Wilson tossed in 26 points and Dorow collected 25. Both came through with 16 field goals apiece. Pacing North Farmington, [which dropped its second in a row. were Rick Lorenz (IS) and Rich Schultz (12). Seaholm’s Maple's, who I trimmed, Port Huron Central Friday night, evened their season record at 2-2 with the victory over Cranbrook. Chris Hawkins poured In 19 points and Fred Neil added 16 to spark Clareneeville to vie* tory. FARMINGTON MS) N. FAR'TON (IS) FO FT TF • FO FT TF Wilson II M X Schultz 2 1-11 12 Dorow II H S Carta Tho'pson 1 10 S Schu'cho Amos 11-17 Bowie* Moor* 0 3-5 S Lorenz Hobicht I H ) Ol'show Ruld'ugh 3 2-4 1 Total* 34 M-Jl 4* - Totals It 17-1* M scons SY OUARTSRS — .... 14 * If M—41 .... IS IS 11 14-U CRANBROOK (54) FO FT TF 1 Cum'lngs 5 0-1 10 Farmington at Livonia Clarence; ville. hfIlford and Kettering started their caga seasons with a victory dnriag what could bo a rough portion of their hoop campaigns. Each will be seeking to develop valuable momentum ■T a victory. Milford is still looking for its first win in the brief series with the Captains, having lost three times. * * *. Fred wants to keep the Macomb Catholic League lead in Us meeting with Waterford OLL. The Rams have two quick league wins already. St. Michael is 1-6 as are the Lakers (though losing two nonleague encounters). Groves has been the surprise team with three fast impressive wins to date. Berkley is making its first start. The Bears’ play will be watched with interest by other Southeastern Michigan Association members since Kimball and Seaholm already have lost to the Groves’ quintet. Pontiac Northern’s basketball squad will see action Wednesday night against Highland Park at Detroit’s C6bo Hall court. The game is the preliminary to the )rafessk>nal Detroit Pistons-San Francisco Warriors’ contest. ★ ★ ★ The PNH main office has $1 tickets for the double-header. I BA HOLM (I HP . . . .... iw 4 Cook i. 1 1-1 f Mahtaf* I 1-4 t Wife vf o-l 0 Fortif 1 w 10 Tspeu* 3 5-5 fl HMHl 0 1-1 1 Total* M *41 44 . TMal* M 14-30 54 SCORE BY OUARTHBS Sports Calendar Hill Mount FlMiant at Midland RO St- Mory at Orchard Lak* St. Mary Ftnton at Holly St. Frederick ot Wotorford OLL Oxford ot Avondolo Milford at Kottering Birmingham Grove* ot Berkley Capac at Imloy City Lincoln' ot Clowton Detroit St. Rita at St. Francis do Solos Detroit St. Rom ot It. Mlchaal Bait Detroit ot Lakevlew Ferndale St, JamH ot Farmington OLS Oak Fork at Hazsl Fork t Clemens et Port Huron No St. Aususthw at NS St. Mory South Lyon at Pinckney MBfottUng Birmingham OntMO It Cranbrook Msdlton .at Birmingham Saohotm , Fitzgerald at Fontloc Northern Radford Union at Farmington Hazel Fork ot Berktty Fontlsc Northern v*. High! Cobo Hall. 4 p.m. Romulu* at Cranbrook Wrestling Fontloc Central at Kettering Swimmlna Fontloc Northern ot UP AND OVER - Detroit Lions fullback Amos Marsh (31) leaps over the San Francisco line in the first quarter yesterday on the West Coast but wound up with only one yard AF Fhototax gained as the 49er linemen closed the gap. Stopping Marsh are defensive back Jim John-son (37) and tackle Charlie Sieminskt (66). Backfield Switch Aids Buffalo Bills By The Associated Press Wray Carlton’s wife is in for a tough week. He’s had another good game. It was so good, as a matter of fact, that the Buffalo funding back undoubtedly will cut off the daily newspaper, pull down the window shades and become recluse in the Carlton household. ★ ★ ★ Carlton, normally a halfback, ran from the fullback position — and all over the defensive positions — as the Eastern Division champion Bills experimented with a new backfield en route to 29-18 American Football League victory over Houston. Carlton took over for Billy Joe at fullback, while Bobby Smith ran from the halfback position, and ramled for 148 yards in 11 carries including an 86-yard touchdown run. He was so effective there’s no doubt his name will be in the newspapers — the last thing he wants. HIT BY INJURIES 'Everytime I get toy name tn the paper, something happens to toe — a bad game or an injury,’^gaid Carlton recently. And WIDE TRACK a* LAWRENCE FE 5-6123 stop guessing mmm 0° ••• g&ir SEVEN STAR ameriea9s liqhtest igi whiskey .* * SCOTCH LIGHTNESS CANADIAN QUALITY A Nitiooth American Blend at • money saving prlee SEVEN .^STAR, I****** $1085 Include* g% Michiftn Safe Tn it’s hard to blame Carlton, whose career has been marked by injuries, for feeling that way. A standout it Duke, Carlton came to the Bills in the 1966 season — and Coach Lou Saban can always claim he made an extremely good deal for the 236-pound North Carolinian. Saban, who was coaching at Boston to 1966, traded Carlton to Buffalo for tackle A1 Grow — who disappeared before the season began. However, a year and a half later, Saban wound up coaching at Buffalo and in 1962 Carlton was one of his top rushers with 530 yards. While, the Bills were trying to Practice Games Set for Waterford Recreation Fives Three p r a c 11 c e games are listed topight for recreation teams in Waterford Township. All will be played at CTary Junior High School. Lyons and Heaton will scrim-age Joe’s Bar at 7 p.m.; Cal Bell’s squad meets Zilka Heating at 8 and Buckner Finance and Pontiac Lake Inn will take the floor at 10 o’clock. Program director Bill Woods said the deadline for entering teams in the league is Monday, Ded. 13 at 7 p.m. Persons interested in entering a team may call Woods at 674-6056. The league will open season play after the first of the year. Pontiac Cycle Team Gains 2 Top Spots The Pontiac Competition Team captured two first place trophies Sunday at the Brighton Motorcycle Snow Scrambles. Ted M a r t in in the featherweight class and Chuck Fordyce In tile heavyweight event were the local winners. Bob Hawk of PCC was second to Martin. Fourth place awards went to Norm Rappuhn (lightweight) and Jerry Harwell (heavyweight). The event Is the last one Of the season until ice racing begins next month. j MSU Matmen Win Air Force Invitational AIR FORCfl ACADEMY, Colo., IB — Michigan State wrestlers combined an afternoon victory over Air Force and a Saturday night conquest of Colorado State College to win the Air Force Academy's invitational wrestling meet In the first match the Michigan visitors handled Air Force, 36-13, then just got by Colorado State College 16-14 in the finals. Air Force finished third and 'Colorado Mines fourth. get aligned for the championship game, the San Diego Chargers were trying to get in it and moved within one victory of the Western crown by crushing the New York Jets 38-7 Saturday. Oakland remained to the race with a 29-18 victory over Denver. Bill* Odor* Flrtt down* It If Ruthlng yardage 204 *4 Posing yardsgo 12 til Yard* pontllztd (Gogolek k . But—FG Gogolak 12 Hau-FO Bland* 41 But—Fp qodolak 47 Seaholm Victorious in Kimball Event (Continued froin Page P-1) in the butterfly relay and the Crescendo relay. Northern gets its dual season started Tuesday night against crosstown rival Pontiac Central which scored aft impressive triumph last week against Flint Central. Final total team points in the Flint relay behind PNH and Northeastern were Lansing Everett 55, Flint Southwestern 51, Flint Northern 48, Flint Central 43. At Royal Oak, the Maples took the 200 breaststroke relay as their lone first place but it was the perennial Seaholm depth which made the difference. Grosse Pointe, winner of three events finished third behind Kimball. p FREE MOUNTING ; ■ *fe*«*go-VRdt—afc SMS M*» I ■ OPEN DAILY 8*9-5AT. 8-6 I UNITED TIRE SERVICE INI Baldwin Ave. ’RION Go To G For Your GTO and SAVE at.. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES SI M-24, Lake Orion 693-8266 ! BUNDED WHISKEY, K PROOF, 10% STRAIGHT WHISKEY-SOX GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. G00DERHAM 6 WORTS LTD, PEORIA, ILL kt Lost! a tow coat, automatic answering system. ELECTROPHONE THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1965 Ex-Arthur Hilt Star Helps Wolverines Dill Scores 21 asCagersWin Michigan's Quint* r Awaits Ball State D—8 «0 So 1 |'S| IN WWP ; M i i .no i7t im Hr. 'Ira! ® Er- 11114 Mleti. State to .000 0 l doo ANN ARBOrTaP) - Michigan’s continued success in basketball this season will hinge on how well Craig Dill performs as the replacement for Bill Buntin. If last Saturday’s perform-anee against Bowling Green is any indication, coach Dave Strack will have nothing to worry about. . 4 .4 4 Dflj scored 16 of his 21 points In the first half, pulled down ’ nine rebounds and made a number of standout defensive -plays as the Wolverines thumped the inexperienced Falcons, 108-70. Michigan plays host to Ball State tonight, then plays Wichita Wednesday and against San Francisco at Chicago Stadium Saturday. “Dill is not as strong as Bun-tin but he can run like the devil and he’s a good shooter,'’ Strack said. • EX-LUMBERJACK The former Saginaw Arthur Hill AQ-Stater missed but five shots in 13 tries from the floor. Bowling Green, with three sophomores in the starting lineup, kept things close for a short while. But a three-point effort by Dill put the Wolverines ahead to stay and they put the game out of reach with a 13-point spurt late in the first half. ★ * ■ ★ Strack said his game plap was to dominate the defense and set the early pace. The Falcons scored but 12 field goals in the first half, six of them after Strack took out the first team in the final four minutes. Cazzie Russell and John Clawson shared scoring honors for Michigan with 22 points each, j {- ... *. \ * .;•* John Platkowskl topped all scorers with 24. Sam Mims of Highland Park, one of two Mich* igan men in the Falcons’ lineup, added 12. Horse Owner, Breeder Dies of Heart Attack GEORGETOWN, Ky. W> -Thomas Piatt, 88, a prominent Payette County thoroughbred breeder and first president of the Thoroughbred Club of America, died Wednesday of a heart attack. Piatt was a director of the Keeneland Association and honorary vice president of t h e Thoroughbred Club of America at the time of his death. QUALITY FARTS and MUINIINT SERVICE FARM OR INDUSTRIAL Ft 4-0555 fontuc tractor a equip, co. HU t. T»Ufr.N M. HUM UCLA Coach Criticizes Officiating . MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) —Asi Reached at his home in Los of • the nation’s bowl-bound 'emesaee Coach Doug DiekeyjAngeies, Prothro said he “aUU]teams to complete the regular expressed surprise, UCLA’s feels the same way” concerning season. Tennessee, now 7-1-2, Tommy Prothro today stuck tOjUCLA’s 37-34 loss to Tennessee, faces Tulsa in the Bluebonnet his claim that the Volunteers-1 was Bowl in Houston Dec. 18, while Bruins football clash here Sat-| He referred to his statement UCLA, 7-2-1, must battle top-urday was “the worst-officiated after the game that said: “It ranked Michigan State in the game I have ever seen.’’ was the worst-officiated game I Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day.j ' jhave ever seen. The pro all- The Volunteers came from collkm « H*» "■ «* K*lnd three Ume, to pin the - *v **» tmmmu prtm jUiwe uway. win m a game described by THfc? L ***** meanwhile- defended Tom Siler, veteran sports editor! Alabama Conference offi- 0f the Knoxville News-Sentinel,I Piorwa •• .mo 2 oi.ooo it? la elating and said he felt Pro-jas the “most spectacular victo-tf ;8 f S i.SSo 1 l** remarks w*re, made un- ry in all of the grand history of A A AAA 1 A1 AAA AT 7i AAP thn cfrAce nf neintf tViA in. m_* _ *• •• HELPING HAND - Playing a big part in Pontiac Northern’s swimming triumph in the Vehicle City Relays at Flint Saturday were the Yedlin brothers, Steve (left) and Frank. They took part in the winning individual medley relay. Kentucky SbiH US I Si’S « S?er *• Gaorgia oo .oto i i .Jto in 16?itersectional tilt in the' final! EE Si :SS i i’ JSS £ m I minute of play. OPENING CLOSED - Bobby Smith of the Buffalo Bills runs into trouble as he tries the line against Houston yesterday in an AFL game. Bobby Maples of the Oilers has Smith around the waist while Gary Cutsinger'appears to have n firm hold on his face mask. I. State 0 0 .IN 0 t .« ATLANTIC COAST Maryland Clemion So. Carolina N.C. Stata Virginia N. C'llna W. Forest Iowa 5 Ends Evansville Streak We Specialize in BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEONS Don’t Miss our CHRISTMAS and New Year’s Eve WMENFSM NILLG.C. 6633 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2609 Spartans, Titans Lose Saturday Cage Games By The Associated Press I Dales outlasted Davenport Mc-Westem Michigan, getting Gehee wound up with 35 points, scoring punch from Reggie Hank Sterken of Davenport had Lacefield, spoiled John Bening- 37. ton’s debut as Michigan State coach, and Detroit blew a 12-j point halftime lead in bowing to Purdue in highlights of Saturday’s full slate of college bas-ketbaU.. Western defeated MSU 15-82 and Purdue trimmed Detroit 83-75. In other games Bradley whipped Northern Michigan 90-! 78, Xavier of Ohio dumped Aquinas 115-83, Case Tech bounced Wayne State 79-57, Indiana Tech outlasted Detroit Tech 98-79, Northwood beat Ohio Northern 97-84, and Olivet defeated Kalamazoo 84-73. AI90, Hope trimmed Concordia 91-84, Hillsdale outlasted Davenport 197-10S in overtime, Central Michigan dumped Illinois State 78-81, Wabash trounced Albion 91-76, Eastern Michigan edged Western Reserve 77-78 and Adrian clobbered Alma 98-73, ICED GAME Lacefield dumped in 26 points in lifting Western past MSU. The Spartans, who trailed 51-40 at the half, came back to within a point of the Broncos, but Lacefield iced the game with a field goal in the final two minutes of play. Bill Curtis and Matt Aitch led MSU with 20 points Mch. Purdue chopped away at Detroit’s lead until the Boilermakers finally took the lead on a| jump shot by seven-foot George Grams. Dave Schellhase led ! Purdue with 35 points. Lou Hy-1 att had 22 for the Titans. i i Joe Allen, a 6-foot-7 center | from Chicago Carver, Cazzie Russell’s prep alma mater, I dumped in 28 points in Bradley’s win Over Northern. Gene Sum-[mers had 26 for the losers. Boyd Hosapple’s 29 points gave Case Tech a Presidents’ i Athletic Conference victory over Wayne State. I Jerry Pettway and Tom Rath-burn accounted for 58 points in jNorthwood’s triumph over Ohio Northern. Rathbum had 34, apd Pettway 22. {PACED VICTORY ! Gordon Loft netted 24 points in Olivet’s victory over Kalamazoo. Jim Peters had 23 for the Hornets. Clare Van Wieren notched 25 points as Hope trimmed Concordia. Marshall McGehee forced an overtime with a three-point play and theq notched 11 of Hilb-I dale’s 13 overtime points as the H “1 have always felt that the Southeastern Conference’s off!-I dating is handled in a tremen-| i o i.ooo t # 1.000 ’& u7 dou*,y fine manner,’’he said. “I ’ 0»ooo t I .500 to 1311 was surprised at Coach Pro-| 00 -m 3 oiooo tog 131 thro’s comments because we ®y The Associated Press knocking off Evansville on Its1 The Hawkeyes, who opened ot .ooo o j .oS 1” m;always have good, sound offi-j Iowa’s hurrying Hawkeyes, home court Saturday night. last Thursday with a 111-50 Vi m \ \ 5w to iR cteting. They make mistakes, who beat mighty UCLA at its The victory also evened a romp over Pepperdine, take on ATHtsTic conmrrncb j}. eye.ry?nf else, but I certam- own Bame tggt w|nter have S€ore for H1®*,Hawkinyes’ who another mighty jnite tonight feel m they are honest‘ stepped out this season by run- were one„of E!T'Uf’8 e,ght whil« of the Top Ten ’ o So | o°iooo 220 I*? WINNING DRIVE nine over ca^Fhaskelbdl’s major co,lege v,ctims ,ast year teams (ft the country go after 118Mill 2W «*-«? “from the Vote’ 65-yard drive While two of its mg ieni.,. . .. os-noint cmc*ia“18 ooul,lc,u 11 which culminated in a touch-neighbors were wilting in the ^.reb0Und Mrformance hv ^ nois- runnef'uP to Evansville L&J2Z l0Wa entertains Southern fill- SOUTHERN CONFERENCE Richmond t0 Davidson if Ths Citadel 0 0 I. Caroline $0 WmAMary * * W L Pet. PH. OP . i 01.000 174 130 I 2 01.000 100 157 I 1 1 .500 1M 135 I 1 1 .500 166 ISO down with only 39 seconds left UCLA pressure cooker I .000 1 1 .500 145 150 MISSOURI VALLBV Cincinnati Louisville Drake 22-rebound performance by .. _ r p . - last season’s NCAA College Di- and gave Tennessee the victory. I weekend, Iowa downed Evans-!h ' frpfi°rge ^ es s °PP®<1 vision tourney. ‘ Second-ranked | “Tbey (the Vols) threw a la- ville 89-73, snapping the NCAA e Michigan hosts Ball State, No. 3 teral once and the officials College Division kings’ 35-game HIT-AND-RUN Duke visits South Carolina and winning streak. Miller, who came to Iowa aft-1 New Mexico State is at No. 9 'er a successful tenure at WicM-!®rahtol Fischer Empire Vll $475 $175 $215 560 $295 .Vlll$575 POOL TOWN 22711. Telegraph SlMmfaU Mifocla Mil* (Arcoda) ©PEN EVERY MIGHT ’TIL CHRISTMAS The New XST was proven better 144,000-mile test by a leading inde] lint in every single test: 20% Better Traction on Snow, lee The XSIV when new, had 20% better live, tion en seft snow, hard snow and wet ice. After 8,000 tew mile., the XST proved to be better in traction en all the rarfaeet. 19% Better Braking on lee The New XST came et a slop 18% sooner on wet ice than Sean beat previom mow tire. After 8,000 test mile*, the XST wa» even better—stopping 19%'sooner. 5% Batter Mileage After 8,000 test miles, the New XST had worn down 5% less. Projected over the life of the XST this could mean extra months of wear plus more tread for traction and braking. Better Handling and Qnietnesa The New XST rode better and handled better, concluded the automotive experts, it was outstanding at sustained high speed* and ground curbs. It was quieter/^ *Xtra features which make the XST safer, more Comfortable Speed- The XST waa ^ctnally made for sustained high speeds Traction- Sean best by test on treacherous ice and snow ALLSTATE Passenger Tire Guarantee | TMIMCwmM treadwear GUARANTEE I AgaiaM AR Failam t. pun■ Img Ifcfcr « ■vary ALLSTATE Mr. is -tlw aaofcwrfwsalk. 4nlf S -----Sgjg g f.g. B.ML If Nmi saw. **« Jj tmi tmrli w «MMa iM> pwiaA, ream it. Z th. lif. of tlw la nclma., w* will roplw. ■ ' fcshsuRm* Tubeless Blackwalls 6.50x13 ........ .15.95* 7.35/7.00x14 . . *17.95* 7.75/7.50x14 . . .18.95* 8.25/8.00x14 . . .20.95* 8.55/8.50x14 . . .22.95* WHITEWALLS, MS More Per Tire WHEELS for Snow Tires, 4.95 Sear* Tire Dept., Perry St. Bate meet 33-Month Guarantee Against Wear-Out 6.00x13 Tubeless Blackwall *12 ♦ Plus Fed. Tax ' No Trade-in Required NO MONEY DOWN... Use Sears Convenient Payment Plan 'Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Downtown Pontiac E’honc FE 5 D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1965 BASKETBALL SCOKES Michigan ' L Bowling Orton 70 PurthwM."6«ireff» Bradley to, Nertharn Michigan 71 Waettm Michigan B, Michigan state It Xavier (Ohio) IIS, Aquinaa 13 Case Tech 7t, Wayne Stale 17 Indiana Tech »«, Detroit Tech 7 North wood 07, Ohio Northern 14 Olivet .14. Kaiamaaee 7} Hoot ti, Cencendle 14 , ■ HilMaie i«7, Davenport 103 (ovortlmo) . Control Michigan to, imnoit ' ' ' wabaah 01, Albion 70 NBA Standings Boston Philadelphia San Francisco St. Louis KT* Detroit 130, Baltimore 110 Philadelphia at New York, postponed Sunday's Results Cincinnati 10S. Boston oo v York ot Philadelphia. 'hiladelphia at Charles- AFL Standings rn Division W IT PCI. PIS ^Buffalo New York . Houston San Diego Oakland Kansas City . t 3 1 .771 270 107 til .434 240 201 1 4 2 .400 252 214 Oakland 24, Denver 13 Buffalo If, Houston ti Only games scheduled New York* Oakland* ° Santiago afHouston Kansas City at Buffalo Port Wayne 4, Port N Today's Os. No games scheduled Tuesday's Bi No gomes scheduled. ■astern Michigan 77, Western Re Adrian If .Alma 73 OTHBt COLLEOBS St. Joseph's, Pe. 100, Feirfiekj 74. Providence 40, vitianova so Princeton 70, Army 40 SI. John's, N.Y. 44, aeorgotosm, D.C. Boston Col logo 147, I Cornell 114, Co loots Cenlslus 17, Murrey Penn 72. Nevy 55 Harvard 74, Holy Cross 47 Syracuse lit, Buffalo 40 Penn state II, Oettyshurg 43 Duke S3. Clemaon 44 Virginia T Richmond Louisville II, Central MISslurl 72 Minnesota SO, Iowa Stale 40 Tulsa 70. Kansas Stale 43 St. Louis 77, Southern California 72 Cincinnati 44,HRIIiMHVi^^ Dayton 72, Eastern Kentucky 40 Oklahoma S3, Indiana tt Northwestern 42, Ohio U. 40 Kent State 70, Pittsburgh 47 Wichita 103, New Mexico State 47 Chicago Loyola 120, NE Missouri 70 Toledo IDS, Oshkosh State 44 UCLA 07, Illinois 70 Stanford tl, San Francisco 71, overtime Brigham Young ill, Houston a 13, Washington 41 la 35, St. Mary's, Ce ton State 10, Montar s, Calif, a .________..ontana State 44 a 44, Hayward 4S — Texes Tech 70 ...* Mexico 74, Baylor 44 Southern Methodist S3, Georgia Tech 73 Arkansas 7Si Missouri « Texas 00, Lowell 44, Ionia 52 Adrian Catholic a, Onsted 44 Cement City 01, Adrian Madison 42 Trenton 00, Monroe 40 Dearborn Fordson 55, Plymouth Farmington 40, North Farmington 55 MelvMale 47, Dearborn River side 43 Mount Clemens 45, Warren 30 Southfield 77, Royal Oak Dor_.. Bloomfield Hills Country Day 05, Grosso Point U. School 70 Birmingham Seaholm .ilrnorTOl.____ Toledo Cardinal Strlteh Detroit tt. Cyril 5 Chicago Team Paces Bowlers Browns, Giants,Cowboys Post NFL Victories CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) —'ago. came into his own Sunday I Smday’s 21-19 victory over the The Cleveland Browns came with a three-touchdown effort) Philadelphia Eagles, from behind in the fourth quar-'again8t 0,6 Pitt*burgh SteelersJ Jethro Pugh la jiis name. He’* Hamm's Finishes 1st ter, with Frank Ryan throwing in QualifyingRound • touch..*. p« MX Jim ' * Brown cracking four yards for another, to defeat the Washington Redskins 24*16 Sunday in a National Football League game. Broom’s touchdown was his 29th this Season tying the NFL record set last year by Lenny Moore of the Baltimore Colts. HIGHLAND, Ind. (AP) -Hamm’s of Chicago withstood a late rush by Edmond's of Detroit Sunday night and topped qualifying for the National Men’s Team Match Game Bowling Championship. ■it it At Edmond’s fought from 21st place after two rounds to second which it kept for the third and final Younds. Hamm’s finished with 12,204 for 12 games, while Edmond’s hit 11,965. The top six finishers among the 36 qualifying teams compete Monday and Tuesday in round robin match play, based on total pins and bonus points. The first prize is 62,000 in the tourney sponsored by the Bowling Proprietors' Association of America. ★ ★ ★ Behind Hamm’s and Edmond’s were Shaw’s of Cleveland, 11,744; Heileman’s of Minneapolis, 11,721; Strob’s of Detroit, 11,580, and Calumet of Hammond, Ind., 11,578. Don McCune, who fired the high individual series with 740 in the third round, paced Hamm’s. scores. Linebacker Vince Costello picked off a pass by Sonny Jurgensen, setting up Ryan's 14-yard TD toss to "1Pson I .it s, „ J‘egl I had 33 and 32, respectively, as I ste Hockey Association victory 1^ palcons SqUared their loop without a loss Saturday to, -! dumping Minnesota 4-2. In another league nTnTrrrrrrrrrTrrrrTTTrrrr^^ 563 Wilt Huron I mark at 1-1. match North Dakota upended Michigan istate 5-3. Waterloo, Ont., nipped Michigan 2-1 in a nonleague match. the Giants’ 25-10 victory over the fumbling steelers. PHILADELPHIA (AP) - It was in the early hours, of a morning inNovember, 1964, when the Dallas Cowboys were called upon for their 19th select tion in the National Football League draft. it it * If you’ve ever been to an NFL. draft ybu .know at that point they’re selecting tor laughs.! Dallas picked a 19th choice who is having the last laugh after * ★ ★ RWilkins Browns Waait—Taylor 2 r Clev—Collins 7 p ......... . pan from Ryan (Oroca kick) Wash—Rlcbtar 4 pass from. Jui (Jencks kick) Waah-FG Jencks ». Clev—FG Groza 42 Clav—Hutchison 14 pass from Clav—Brawn 4 run (Groza kick) iu^7,7tr Passing yardage NY—Shofner 33 pan from (Tlmberlake kick) Fltt—FO CIark 25 Pttt—Ballman 1 run (Clark kick) NY—Pradartckaon 13 run (Tknbarlaka] NY—Frederickson 3 run (Tlmbarlaka kk) NY—Frederickson If pass from Morrall Tlmbarlaka kick) ■ I NY—Jonas tl pan from Wood (Tlmbar-ike kick) Attendance 42.735. Cawbayt li In other games, Grand Rapids School of Bible and Music trimmed arch-rival Grace Bbile, 101-84, and Michigan Christian Junior College won a one-point _ ■ , . 4 5 . . . . decision over Grand Rapids Bap-*^ Gary Milroy’s hat tnck helped) tist at Avondale High School. : lnterCMtM) *. I T the Huskies past Minnesota. Thei The Warriors from Rochester) punts • Gophers now are 1-3 in WCHA'are now 2-1 in loop play. CwSUm • antion i . + * * . 'Oallaa . ........ 7 7 7 6-21 a oluuii. www Philadelphia ....... 7 4 4 5-11, • *** Davidson “d Terry Cas-| Midwestern led Great Lakes, fugf"*"* 43 p,“ ,rom 0ro*(MIW' INSURANCE a ey split four goals between themi74-84, at halftime. Thompson led ' AGENCY • as North Dakota whipped MSU.|the rebounders with 16. The Fal- * Phil—fo Baker 33 __ • «in ■ Waterloo’s Norm Allen scored cons hit 50 per cent of their - “ •■111 I J the winning goal id the victory I field goal attempts while mak- ^#Baastat>f a«if>sss>«tf tt«»«»BtsfSB»iP nv*r the Wolverine now 2-2. ling 63 field goals. Mr. UNWERSE BRUCE RANDALL TUESDAY, DEC. 7 5 to 9 P.M. Mr. Universe, Bruce Randall will be demonstrating the proper handling of barbells and other body building equipment. Mr. U niverse,will answer any and all questions you may have in your oWn body building program. There will be free autographed pictures of Mr. Universe for everyone. Mr. Universe will also talk with the ladies on excercise and diets. Don't miss this chance to meet and talk with Mr. Universe in person, it could change your whole life. Pontiac Mall I ward (Vllleneuva kick) PhH—FG Baker 27 Dali—Clark 21 pau from Meredith (Villanueva kick) Phttfr-PG Bakar if J---- -£3)4 CHEVROLET W0RKP0WER WITH TORQ-FLOW DIESEL FOR CITY HAULING! Chevy Torq-Flow diesel engines are earning extra money for truck operators id all types of city hauling. If you put on a lot of miles er run up a lot of idling time, they’ll save you plenty! And give you the most in engine reliability. There are three of them, all V6s, from 130 to 170 horsepower, built right and sized right to cut costs on city hauls. It will pay you to look at Chevrolet Torq-Flow diesels for 1966. j NO. 1 WAY TO WORK Talk to your Chovrolot doalor about any type of truck. lATTflEHS- HARGBEAVES, IRC. 631 OAKLAND AVE. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FE 5-4161 rs>? THE PONTIAjC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1965 D-fl * Cohsult u$ with CONFIDENCE We are specialist* in fully fcuaranteed monuments | iculptured from Select Barra Granite BARREl £UI1if Monuments Memorials for Over 72 Years ■ SfoJWJMENTS ■. ./. . , from $198 MARKERS . from $ 35 INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry 335-6931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Area Man Held in Crash Death Driver Killed, 2 Hurt 1 in Car-Train Crash ’ REBECCA M. DAVIS Stephen and two sisters, Kath-Gr a vesicle service for Rebec-pa M. Davis, infant daughter fi» or. 3>.„u *>% * Donald 3i. Johns PAW PAW (tTPI) - Carl Lap-! ham, 51, of Clarkston has charged wtih negligent homicide in connectian with a collision of jhis semitrailer and a pickup Itruck, resulting in the death by Idrowing of John Kroeg, 64, of rutsd Lawrence. ' *' ’;:s 4... J / A Kroeg died Saturday when his pickup was catapulted into Bush Creek after being struck by Lap-ham’s from the rear on 1-94 | near Lawrence. An autopsy revealed Kroeg’s death was casued by drowning. Lapham posted 6500 bond after demanding examination in a weekend arraignment before Justice of Peace David Smith at Paw Paw. Every Detail Is Important We do everything carefully qt the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. We would not hove it any other way. The little things of the funeral service are always important apd mdan much to you. Sill MS (Phone FEDERAL 4-45ii ; Padcin Laxkinq » Oar xwwort w III Qoruhofr Jok pm* ift ns jpfc 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Pontiac Man Is Arrested in Shooting A 34-year-old Pontiac man was arrested for investigation of at* tempted homicide Saturday after. another man .was shot in an apparent argument over a one-dollar debt. Held at the Oakland County Jail is Roy Jones of 503 Franklin Road. Pontiac police said Jones wounded Andrew Burkett, 32, of 349 Ferry in the head and neck with two blasts from a 12-gauge shotgun. Jones said he -fired when , Burkett pointed a shotgun at him, according to police. * * */• | Patrolmen found a loaded 'shotgun near Burkett’s car. of Mr. and Mrs. Terrance L. Davis, 51 Lorraine, frill be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston, by the Coats Funeral Home. Ibe 1 Vi-month-old infant died Saturday. Surviving besides her parents are grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Leo Davis of Waterford Township, Mrs. Maud Nicholsen of Union Lake and Donald Beck of Florida and a great-grandfather, Elmer Davis of Pontiac. BABY ROBERT J. ELDREDGE Service for Baby Robert J. Eldredge, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Richard Eldredge of 3462 Fort, Waterford Township, was to be 1 p.m. today at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. The baby was dead at birth Saturday. Surviving besides the parents are a brother, Dare Richard at home. of 5T9 Commerce will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. .Burial will be in Commerce Cemetery. A military service will be conducted by Oxbow VFW Post 4156. Mr. Frank died Saturday after a long illness. He was an employe of the Plymouth Tank & Assembly Co. Surviving is one sister. MRS. ALEC T. JACKSON BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Alec T. (Mar- leen and Sharon, all at home. MARY C. SANCHEZ Mary C. Sanchez, 45, of Midway died yesterday of injuries suffered in a traffic accident. Her body is at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. - MRS. ELIZABETH VERNON Mrs. Elizabeth Vernon, 83, of 346 Central died Saturday. Her body is at the Hun toon Funeral Home. Surviving are two_, •Jorie) Jackson, 54,’ of 5775 HARRY M. BALDWIN jFranklin will be 1 p.m. Wednes-PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Serv-(day at the First Free Methodist ice for Harry M. Baldwin, 80, Church, Pontiac. Burial will be, of 2400 Snellbrook will be 1 p.m. 'in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, j tomorrow at Donelson - Johns Pontiac. Mrs. Jackson died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Wilbur of Ortonville; a brother, G. Roderick Moran of Pontiac; and two grandchildren. FRANK J. MORAVEC _____i CLARKSTON — Service forj Pontiac; five grandchildren; Frank J- Moravec,. 72, of 5024 and 10 great-grandchildren. Sashabaw will be l p.m. tomor-. Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Square Lake Cemetery, Orion Township. Mr. Baldwin died Saturday after a long illness. He was a retired carpenter. Surviving are a son, Reon K. of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Wilma Brooks of Pinellas Park, Fla.; a brother, Maurice E. of will be 7 this evening at the Coats Funeral Home. Burial will be tomorrow in Pioneer Cemetery at Roscommon. The girl was killed Friday evening when she was struck by a car. She was a student at Pierce Junior High School and a member of Waterford Community Church. Surviving besides her parents are a brother, Larrie at home, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kline of Pontiac and Mr. Mrs. Burton Williams of I Roscommon. Wednesday at Muir Brothers Fu-lPontiac Motor Division and a neral Home, Lapeer. Burial will member of the Central Meth- be in Metamora Cemetery. .Mr. Blow died yesterday after a long illness. He was a retired fanner. Surviving are his wife, Laura; two daughters, Mrs. Robert Blair of Metamora and Mrs. William Gies of Warren; a son, Jakie of Metamora; a brother, George of Lapeer; four grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. ■Ml gives you a JET ACTION WASHER! YEAR PROTECTION PLAN AT NO EXTRA CHARGE! Automatic Soak Cycla plus Jat Action features galore! t Jtt-Awav Lint Removal • — no Hnt traps! • Jet Spin cuts drying time. Leaves clothes extra light and dryl * And clothes come out st loose and easy even apron strings seldom snaril NEW LOW PRICE *198 J *5 YEAR PROTECTION PLAN I Strongest Frlgldalre Washer Protection Plan ever. One-year Wap ranty for. repair of any defect without charge, plus four-year Protection Plan for furnishing replacement for any defective part In the trensmleebn. drive motor, or tone capacity meter pumpf Exclusive frigidaire Custom Imperial Super-Surge DISHWASHER Super-Surge Washing Actjon reaches into every comer of dishwasher. Eliminates hand rinsing. Special Pots A Pans Cycle. Amazingly quiet operation—4 sound-deadening features. • Holds 16 table settings (NEMA). Pay As Little As 121 N. SAGINAW OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL CHRISTMAS FE 6-6189 odist Church and Oakland County Barracks 49 VFW. Surviving is a brother. CARL M. O’MALLEY AVON TOWNSHIP - Carl M. O’Malley, 62, of 3839 Auburn died today after a long illness. His body is at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Mr. O’Malley was a retired , __ employe of GMC Truck & CHARLES W. CORBETT CoaCh Division. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP Surviving are his wife, Lo-— Service for Charles W. Cot- rena; two sons, Robert of Flint bett, 64, of 6095 Crajnlane will and Floyd of Brown City; a sis-m ! „„ ■ be 2 p.m. tofnprcow-at t h e ter; and five grandchildren. (Carma T Kern, 62 of 2404 jSharpe^Goyette Funeral Home, ! 5.? w WatCrf0rd TowiBhi.p’I Clarkstoh. Burial will be in MARTIN A. PAULSON It White Chapel Memorial Ceme-J TROY — Service for Martin tery, Troy. .A. Paulson, 74, of 4882 Roches- Mr. Corbett died Friday af- ter will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at , ter a short illness. He was a1 Price Funeral Home. Burial will Mrs. Kern died Saturday after section hand for the Illinois Cen-lbe in Union Corners Cemetery, a long illness. She was past trai Railroad. Mr. Paulson died Saturday af- matron of the Joseph C. Birdi Surviving art his wife, Mary; ter a long illness. He was a Chapter, 294, OES, Clarkston, {WQ Ronald of Clarkston'retired self-employed painter 8nd amember Meth- an(j Robert of Pontiac; a daugh-|and decorator, odist Church. Iter, Mrs. James Biggs of Ponti- Surviving are his wife, Sarah; Surviving are a son, Richard ac. one brother; one sister; andla daughter, Mrs. Martina Bon-L. of Lake Orion; a daughter,]eight grandchildren. die of Farmington; a son, Mar- Mrs. Charles Nash of Waterford ________________tin Of Hot Springs, Fla,; a sis- MRS. LEONARD O. KERN Service for Mrs. Leonard O. J will be 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Coats Funeral Home, with burial in Lakeview Cemetery, Ciarks- ter; a brother; 14 grandchil- Township; two sisters, Mrs.! JEFFREY W, DYER Ralph Hall of Pontiac and Mrs. OXFORD TOWNSHIP — Serv- dren; and nine great-grandchil-j Donald Reynolds of Traverse ice for Jeffrey W. Dyer, 1-year-1 dren. City; three brothers; and six'old son of Mr. and Mrs. William | ____________„'y.....________________ grandchildren. H. Dyer of 2310 N. Baldwin, will MRS- WILLIAM PFEISTER be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the! AVON TOWNSHIP - Serv-Bossardet Funeral Home with [ice for Mrs. William Pfeister,! burial at Mount Pleasant Ceme-|86, of 2854 Norton Lawn was toj tery in Qajiiwood. (be. 1 p.m. today at Pixley Me- The boy died yesterday after i morial Chapel, Rochester. Buri-j a long illness. jal will be in White Chapel Me- CHRISTOPHER T. KRAUSE Mass of the Angels for Christopher T. Krause, 4-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jos e,p h G. Krause of 2991 Edgefield, Waterford Township, will be 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Benedict Church. Burial will be in Mount Hope Cemetery by the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. The boy died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving besides his parents are two brothers, Joseph and his parents, he is survived by grandparents Mr. and Mrs; Harry Crocker of Pontiac and Mrs. Estella Claycomb of Oxford. ANDREW FRANK COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Andrew Frank, 52, 3rd of Weiekend 61 Arrested in Liquor Raid Ideal Facilities and'Locationl PROFESSIONAL CENTER This modern building, conveniently located for to and from travel (with plenty of convenient paved parking areal— is now-available for immediate occupancy. Professional and Business Men should see these quarters today. 1800 square feet of area for addition —we will build to lease specifications. 2 miles West of Telegraph on M-59. — Across the street from Methodist Church. IMMEDIATELY A VAILABLE WEINBERGER HOMES 3901 Highland Road, Pontiac—-Phone 332-9121 Vice squad officers and patrolmen from the Pontiac Police .Department raided an alleged illegal liquor operation ear ly yesterday, arresting 61 persons. Charged with operating an illegal drinking establishment was A. J. Simpson, 32, of 256 S. Johnson. ■ Phyllis E. Willett, 17 of 491 Wyoming was charged with aiding and abetting, and Al- Sea Disaster Claims 90th Victim Sunday i MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Ann Martin Jackson, 21, of Rochester, N.Y., is the 90th victim of 'the Yarmouth Castle cruise ship disaster. ! Miss Jackson, who died Sunday, had been undergoing treatment in the intensive burn center at Jackson Memorial Hospital. morial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Pfeister died Thursday, after a short illness. MRS. ORAL FISH ROCK WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP-Service for Mrs. Oral Fish Rock, 69, of 9725 Crosby Lake will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Hun-toon Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Rock died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Thelma Speke of Detroit; a brother; and a sister, Mrs; Ota Richards of Clarkston. MRS. LEE D. SWAIN BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs. Lee D. (Hazel) Swain, 65, of 241 Bloomfield will be 3:15 p.m. tomorrow at Don-elson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Swain died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are a son, Donald G. of Walled Lake; two brothers, Louis ' Giilis of Clarkston and Glen Gtilis of Pontiac; two sisters, Mrs. Clara McDonald of Garden City and Mrs. Shirley Wedge of Farmington; and four phonse R. McDowell, 37, of 255 W. Wilson, with illegally selling liquor. The rest were charged with loitering. It was the third weekend raid. Thirty-one persons arrested early Saturday were arranged in Municipal Court, two charges of operating "an illegal liquor operation and 29 on loitering. PLEAD GUILTY Fifteen pleaded guilty and paid fines of $15. Trial was set for Thursday for Sarah Calvin, 49, of 201 OTTO E. WOLFF Hughes, and Mary S. Gibson, ORION TOWNSHIP - Service 25, of 241 W. Wilson, who pleaded |for otto E. Wolff, 78, of 3916! innocent to operating an illegal Gregory will be 1 p.m. tomor-establishment. row atthe voorhees-Siple Fu- Fourteen otherS who pleaded: nerai Home, with burial at innocen ^loiteringchargeswilljPerry Mount Park cemetery. Ko m Mr wolff died Saturday after a long illness. MISS OLGA M. ZANDER SYLVAN LAKE - Service for iMiss Olga M. Zander, 77, of lof 2250 Garland will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the- Donel- aiso be tried Thursday. Obliging Troopers Prove Drunk Wrong GRAND HAVEN (UPI) I Obliging SjjBte Police took Amos^n-Johns Funeral Home, Pon-Donation to Village Jones, 22, of Holland to a local j**®' Burial wil1 be in Ottawa Some 6200 from the sale 0f hospital early yesterday when he Miss^n^’died^yesterday coffee and soft drinks has been stomped into the station andafter a ^gf illness. She was a contributed to the Oakland Coun-j demanded a blood alcohol test'member of the Golden Age ty Otildren’s Village by em- to prove to his wife and ife ployes of the Buick Motor Divi- laws that he wasn’t drunk, sion Service Parts Warehouse, Jones flunked the test and , 15260 Williams Lake, Waterford j was jailed on drunk and dis-✓ I Township. [orderly-charges.' j Group; the YWCA and the Sylvan Lake Garden Club. Surviving are a sister and a brother, Henry E. of Sylvan Lake. Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads con FAST ACTION AM RECEIVED EY $ PM WILL IB PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING MY. Pontiac F The Pontiac Press FROM S A.M. TO S P.M. Death Notices A. SHARON KUNE I ■ row at the Coats Funeral Home. Service for A. Sharon Kline, ROBERT J. BLOW Burial will be in White Chapel 13-year-old daughter of Mr. and METAMORA — Service for Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Frank A. Kline of 5525 Robert J. Blow, 77, of 4043 Mr. Moravec died Saturday. Cleary, Waterford Township, P1 easant will be 1:30 p.m.!He was a retired foreman of • 3 to S p.m. i Funeral MrvtCB I _.eslde military s______ ! auspices of Oxbow V TuoiGoy. Pspomstr * Waterford Township; loved ton of Joseph G. ana vomerine A. Krause; door brother of Kathleen, Sharon, Joseph, ond Stephen Krause. A Mass of the Angels Will be teid Thursday, December f, et it a.m. gt st. Benedict Catholic Church. Informant In Mount Hope Cemetery. Christopher will lie In state at the Don-eison-Johns Funeral Homo alter J p.m. Tuetdoy, December J. (Suggested ^visiting hours 3 to S p.m. MORAVEC, DECEMBER 4, IMS, FRANK J., SOU Sashabaw Road. Clarkston; age FI; beloved husband .of Hosier Moravec; dear brother of William Moravec; dear brother-in-law of Mrs. Joseph Mor-avec. Funeral service will be held Plains. _______ _.. Bank officiating. Interment in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Troy. Mr. Moravec will lie in MSMfortT the funeral home. (lug- 3 to 5 p.m. O'MALLEY, DECEMBER «, foil, CARL M., 3839 Auburn Road, Avbfl Township; ago 63; beloved husband of Mrs. Lorena O'Malley ; dear father of Floyd and Robert O'Malley; depr brother of Mr*. Burger; also survived by Funeral ar- ROCK, DiCIMBER J, 1965. MRS. ORAL FMW, 9725 Crosby Late Road, ClMtuiton; age 69; beloved Thelma Speke; Oti Richards IT at Mr I Fish. be held Tuesday, December 7, n,m. at the Huntoon Funeral —I bt Ottawa Pent Rock will lle in Death Notices ... Louis Mi Olen Is; also survived by tour arend-umdren. Funeral ear vice will bo held Tuoaday.OoeombeyF. et *;» p.m. at the DenettoNMjMMF*weM6 Home. Interment b< Parry Mount Park Cam alary. Mrs. Biwbi will lla In it ala at tho funeral homo. (Suggested vleltlng t— rsngsmtnta a. _ ,______. Huritoon Funeral Hama. WOLFF, DECEMBER 4, 1965. OTTO E . 3916 Gregory Road. Orton Twp.i age 78; beloved husband of Esther Wolff; door father of Mrs. Roger (Marsha) Duddles; deer brother of Mrs. Mary Reese, Mrs. Mirths Markl, William and Robert Wolff. Funoral service will be held Tuesday, December 7, at 1 p.m. el Ihe Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Mires Stine officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Perk Cemetery. Mr. Wolff will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to S Orion Township, Mr. Baldwin whl e Donelson-Johns (Suggastad visit- 17 to 9 CAMPBELL, DECEMBER X 1965, JAMES E., 3652 Walton Blvd„ Waterford Township; ago 73; door father of John W. end James Campbell, Mrs. Kenneth (Ellen) Clark, Mrs. Thomas (Jean) Johnson and Mrs. Rsx (Edna) Parker; also survlvtd by 24 grandchildren and 27 groat-grondchlldron. Recitation of tho Rosary will bo Monday, Decembtr 6, at (:30 p.m. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, December 7, at 10 a.m. et St. Michael's Church. Interment In Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mr. Camp- toon Funeral Home.________ DAVIS, DECEMBER 4, 1965. BABY REBECCA MARIE, Si Lorraine Court; beloved Infant daughter of Terrance L. end Dorothy Davis; beloved granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Davis, Mrs. Maud Nicholsen, and Donald Beck; beloved great-grmddauijhter of E I m tr held Tuesday, December 7, at II a.m. in the Catholic section of Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Arrangements were by the Coats Funeral Heme, Drayton Plains. ELDREOGE, DECEMBER 4, 1965, BABY ROBERT JOHN, 3462 Fort, Waterford Township; beloved Infant eon of H. Richard and Patricia Eldredge; dear Infant brother of Dora Richard Eldredge. Funeral 1 service was held today at T p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Hama. ' Interment In WMte Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Elton Black Funoral Home, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lakt, Fodder off 1- stato at. the Elton Block Funoral Max (fardto) King and Mrs. Atox (Shirley) Marrlsi dear sister of Mrs. Clara Sherwood and William Ayers; also survived by 12 cjrand-children. Recitation of the Rosary will be held today et t:45 p.m. et the Huntoon Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, December 7, at 11:30 a.m. at SI. Mldiaal's Catholic Church. Interment In Mount Hwt Cemetery. JACKSON, DECEMBER 4, 1965, MARJORIE E., 5775 Franklin Road, Bloomfield Township; ege 54; beloved wife of Aloe T. Jock-son; dear mother of Wilbur (Bill) Jackson; dear sister of G. Roderick Moran; also survived by two grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, December X . at 1 p.m. at the First Free Math#-dlst Church; Interment In Ferry ML Park Cemetery. Mrs. JMMM will lie In state et the Sperks-Griffln Funeral Home after J p.m.. today. (Suggastad visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. end 7 to 9 p.m.) - Mm; dear ■ rngiiar Ihertes (Ardto) Nash pnd Mrs. Ralph (lie) Hall, Mrs. Donald —.(Ethel) Reynolds, ROy, Glen, end Floyd Taylor; also survived ay eix grandchildren. Funeral service ■ will he held Tuesday, December 7, at 4 p.m. el the Coals Funeral Home, Drayton Plains, with P*v Ronald Thompson officiating. CerTttttry, will lie in and Mrs. Burton williams; sister of Larrie Kline. Fu-service will be held today p.m. at the Coats Funoral , Drayton Plains. Interment —ir Cemetery,-------- o' Mri. Elinor E. Bartholomew and Henry E. Zander. Funeral December I at*l hel<1 Wednes<,*V> elSon-Johns Funeral ‘ Home, in" ferment In Ottawa Park Cemetery. Miss Zander will lie in state at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home •Iter 7 p.m. this evening. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to S p.m. (j LOVING (MEMORY OF RICKY Grsmpa Harris. Born July 1, 19S4, to hot forget hi ove her too de< her memory tc For grief otten dwells Where It seldom Is see From the children. Announcements 150 CASH FOR CHURCHES, CLUBS, or#5?liS!lon* 30 bot,lc* R U S S E L L COX, FORMERLY OF Kaverly Mercury of Rochester ........ ---------- ‘ “ 1 Certar- BOX REPLIES j j At 10 a.m. today there | jwere replies at The! ! Press Office in the fol-J {lowing boxes: 2, 6, 13, 18, 24, 36, 45, | j 61, 52, 55, 57, 66, 62, 63, | { 48, 98, 102. ] ZP " Funeral Directors COATS FUNEBAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS D. -E. Pursley ’’ FUNERAL HOME FE 4-1211 ElTONBLAtK ' UNION LAKE _________ Huntoon PUNEAAL HOME - fentlac tor 50 years 7t Ommtf Aua. F»2-ww donilsonjohni Funoral Home Deslanod for Funerals" SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOMEv "Thoughtful Service" FE HBI Voorhees-Siple S400- OR 3-3281. . DETECTIVE BUREAU CMnmarcial. Private. Civil Investigations confldsntlal STATE L1CONSED—BONDED B Riker Bldg. FI 1414 SlBt OR WOMAN NEEDING adviser, phone FE &T34. ?enHdmtieL 2-5122 ' DAIlifv "Mjtib' lUFPLili 739 Menominee FE 5-7805 ~ oIt out of debt oR V PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM .YOU CAN M>PORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE *L*ldH RIDES-p&k tHURCHEi UPLAND HILLS FARM WIGS, 839.95 TO 8300. FE FttuTFl *' - - -» p.m.. Set. and p.m. House of Wigs. T LARGE ENGLISH POINTER, Cat! MY 3-3403. spots, vicinity of Four Towns School Cootoy Lake Rd. Reward. 682-4371. ___________________ , LOlt: YlAR-OLO FEMALE WEL msrener. David Plauti. OR 3-582L LOlfTTovfe M b ^ A 18, LAtGE yellow tiger cat, male, MM In lelt eye. vicinity of Franklin Blvd. end Oneida, FK 4-3614. 12-we^ks-old Female beagle, lost in Willlama Lake area. She an-swers to "Delay." Reward. OR LOST: LADIES' GOLD" WUUWX welch, at Miracle Mile on Set, Re-ward. 635-0216. ‘ —r THE 1*64 CIVIL RIGHTS -a S LAW PROHIBITS, W I T H a; V C S R TAIN EXCEPTIONS. A; v DISCRIMINATION BO- a- V CAUSE OP sa)t SINCE » a; SOME OCCUPATIONS ARC -X . X CONSIDERED «M)RR AT- % »TRACTIVE TO PERSONS % ;a OF ONI sax THAN TNI X: OTHER, ADVERT I SI-:: AMENTS ARE PLACED ;X X UNOBR THE MALE OR -X »FEMALE COLUMNS POR fe vi CONVENIENCE OF UA»> X-S BRS. SUCH LISTINGS ARB :•:• ■:•: NOT INTINOED TO IX- v: X:CLUOB PERSONS OF ;X EITHER SOX. 4 YOUNG MEN C*l factory Branch to expending, ady, year around work. Magi wilts. 474-2233. 10-12 Tuesday” $480 PER MONTH D—« THfc PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1005 ACCOUNTANT FOR COST NMI offtca work ' ins Mint. Ammo.__ . tofcfigsr» ad6"slooo a yfeAk toyOur present Income. Car necessary. Far Inforvlewcetl 42H44S. AFTER 6 P.M. $200 PER MONTH AMBITIOUS MEN WANTED, steady year around work. Top WMOO offered. Start work Immedl-•my. Apply I ».m. at 54 S. Can Lake dead. APPLIANCE SALESMAN ■PPlIWKtl prater rec APPLIANCE SALESMEN iMohJtaatotf Malt DRIVERS Full or part-time TRUCK FURNISHED, 8 YEARS OR OVER WITH OOOO DRIVING RiCORP TO DELIVER SALT TO gOR CUSTOMERS. APPLY IN PERSON - COOLEY SOFT WATER - 214 W. WALTON. DISHWASHERS Apply Biff'*, 525 S. Hunter, Blr- HUSKV SOY TO WORK ON SCRAP -------- 2540BI00^,'!d'* DISTRIBUTOR TRAINEE Man to train to taka over wt •ate dlitrlbutorship tor large known company. Salary plu* com. mltoloni while In training. Future of SUMS par year and up. 332-308 I tolB a.m. or 4 to I EXPERIENCED STATION I . Scott a I Frank*on, Rochester State 2-4206. it manopor. Th ir opportunity ti .oo Mr. Hutton, Bonk Bldg, or MILL OPERATOR ENGINE LATHE OPERATOR EXPERIMENTAL SHEET METAL wiencod In fabrication. EXPERIENCED flAL ISTATE Ti ATTRACTIVE POSITION •go limit. Hast appearance, good character, tfeedy work—no layoff Could use part-time through Christ mas help. Call personnel manogei AUTO MECHANIC, CHEVROLET and Olds deoler, lube mon, fringe benefits, Haskins Chevrolet, Inc., Call Paul Newman. SPARTAN DODGE 155 Oakland FE salesmen, licensed ti_. _ . used homes, members MLS. ( FE 5-9471 tor Schram. McGregor MANUFACTURING 2715 w. Maple Rd. EXPERIENCED USED CAR -SALES-mon tor fronchlsod Chevy, Pontlec, Bulck dealership. Apply In person Jacobsen's Flowers, BUS BOYS TED'S PONTIAC MALL caK WASHlftt, DIVERS, OR IV-•r*. Full- and part-time. I4» w. Huron. CARPENTERS, ROUOHERS. UNION. See Harold on apartment otto, Square Lake Road and Woodward, across from St. Joseph Hospital, or ctH 474*877, or MA 4-IOiH.__ CARETAKER FOR 30-UNIT APART-«naM to. Pontiac, piaoao state sge, marital statue, previous experience end salary requirements. All — P^s ^confidential Pontiac Pi CHRISTMAS MONEY Mon to work 4:30 to 10:30 u. nings, some Saturdays. Up to 5125 a week. Must bo over 21, am-goyod days. Apply 7:30 p.m., 4840 Doqulndro, near it mho. CLiRK, DRUG OR RETAIL FULL TIME WORK I .871 Hamlin Rd. G,DIVERS .......:* end claanln enclosed shopping centei good starting pay, time and v? ovi 40 hrs., retirees will be cer sldered, reply Pontiac Press Be FULL-TIME AND PART-TIME FIRST-CLASS BROILER MEN) FRY COOKS, GRILL MEN, BARTENDERS, ASSISTANT MANAGERS, DINING ROOM HOST, BUS BOYS, KITCHEN UTILITY MEN. APPLY IN PERSON. 8 A.M. TO 7 P.M. MACHUS RED FOX, S.W. COR. MAPLE AND TELE> GRAPH, BIRMINGHAM. growing Elastics manufac- hirer has opening tor: Plastic Fabricators Excellent fringe benefits. Cell Personnel office. Ml 2-128. oas statioA Help, equal op- portunlty employer, full time, afternoon shift, tee pay, good hours, Rest Sunoco Service, —1—3 id Square Lake Rd. Machine Shop TOOL LATHE HAND TURRET LATHE HAND FLOOR INSPECTORS OVERTIME, FRINGES, DAYS M. C. Mfg. Co. Hi Indlanweod Rd. Lake Orton An equal opportunity employer CARPENTERS, ROUGH OAS STATION EXPERIENCED SER-vice manager. Tune-up end wrecker men. $120-9150 per week. Also trainees, 85 e week. Bern while you learn. Shall Service, Meet- gi Lahser, Birmingham. , must rblfltWASHlERS, FULL SAN WITH 14 YEARS EXPSRI remodeling. 473-1352___________ houses, 673-1717. Milk Routt Salesman Wholesale and retell, must be _ yrs. or older, married preferred. PE 4-2547. ________ SEN TO WORKJNI SERVICE and wrecker experience. 51.40 hour" ly to start. Shall Station, Long Lake end Woodward, Bloomfield Hills. AAN TO WORK ON POUL+RY form. Own transportotton or may live In. Write Pontiac Press Box 22. so oral " Wallop i Interested In learning the following machining _ MILLING MACHINES SURFACE GRINDERS This 1s steady employment with good wages and fringe benefits. VALCOMATIC PRODUCTS Ahtmimm Bldg. Hons KAISEt, ALCOA ALUMINUM il6- Architectural Drawing Basement Waterproofing Block Laying 2-CAR GARAGES. 20x20', 557: build any size. Cement wo-- -Free estimate. Pedy-Bulft Garage Ce- OR 3-5415. 2-CAR OARAGE, 5099 ADDITIONS Alee Akim. wtndowA daors, suing. GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Eetlmetes OR 4-1511 CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WORK ________ OLIOMI _________ A-l Interior and exterior attic, basement, recreation room, kitchen and bathrooms my specialty. Slot Bceneed. Rees. 452-044S. CARFdNTRY, NEW AND REPAIR Free estimates. 22599T. I N 11H, KITCHENS. Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. FE 4-7477 Eyas. Ft 5018 JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. Sending end finishing. 8 years experience. 332-4971. LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE Old floors mads like new — '!»PWNnc«- 427-3773 Collect. R. 0. FW Ting HAD FLOOR TILE. SPECIAL ON REPAIR. MOREY'S- ___ ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR General Maintenance — 1025 Oakland Aye. Moving gad Steragg SMITH moving CO. fjaialiag and PeioraNoy" A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANOINO’ uauuau p| 44344 I INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR S3*d.‘ Reasonable ratos. *42- AAA PAINTING AND DECOitATINO Interior and exterior, free mates. UL 2-3557.____________ INTERLAKES PAINTING AND DEC orating. Al work. OR 4-381. Painting and wall washing. roofing, home repair. All work -----a—. ------% ceil us. D. . Ceraaik Titf og NEW AND REMOOELI NO WORK, Excavating SEWERS, WATER LINES. SEPTIC DRAYTON FENCE CO. PONTIAC FENCE CO. A-l PLAINER ING, EXPERT PATCH Repair Paris and Rapiacamonts 8 Oakland Ava.___________ 38ad ‘■10 BOY DRIVE PAPER STEAMERS RUO CLEANER - POWER SAWS 33 Joslyn Open Sun. FE OdlMj WALLPAPER STEAMER floor sandars, polishers, haul iendeij, furnace vacuum cleaners.! .. _ Oakland Fuel * Feint 8 Orchard Lk. Ava. FE 3418 Haig Waafod Mal> MASTER BAKER Muef have produtton Excellent opportunity. 8,58 per war “*"> * Reply Pontlec P AI Noip Wootod NowIb manicurist wanted, w per • ^uaKantaa. Philips. 333428. NEEDED AT ONCE 21-33 .to Jill vacancies had partonco required I varsity _________ eluding paid vocation, paid sick leave. For an Interview confect Personnel Dept., Oakland slty, Rochester, Mich. Fh ____NIGHTS ORFMM 7 beautician, Salary, per c OIL BURNER OR STOKER SERV Ice men, year round emptoyrgato no layoff. AH fringe benefits highest wages, apply In pe 9151 Monica, Detroit or coll BEAUTY OPERATOR Full or port time, UL 3-3815. CAR HOSTESS, ABOVE AVERAGE —.......i benefits. Fled OPENING NOW AVAILABLE TO loin eggrosslva established real aetata office. Member Pontiac Multiple Lilting Service. Inquire Warren Stout, Realtor, 148 N. Opdyke Rd. PONTIAC-TROY AREA ARE YOU 25-45? Have you done any selling? Would you like to have a route business of your own? We furnish truck, CLERICAL, NEAT APPEARANCE, CLOSING SECRETARY FOR lIaO-Ing Birmingham real estate office. Excellent salary end profit shoring. Must have real estate or mortgage company experience. Ml 6-5000, Ext. 8. _____________ PORTER OR BUSBOY Full-time nights. Apply at Big I Restaurant, 20 $. Telegraph, Dixie Hwy. end Sliver Lake Rd. O'NEIL NEEDS SALESMAN. GO Where the Action Isl Ray O'Neil Realtor PART-TIME er 21 to work 2 lome Saturdays. L PARTS COUNTER MAN. FORD experience preferred. Top Starting salary end many fringe benefits. a. 430 Oakland, Pontlec. PRODUCTION MACHINE OPERA-tors, experienced, steady work with fringe benefits end overtime. Hawk Tool end Clarkston, Michigan. Rough Carpenters work directly for builder, y« around^ journeymen carpeters oi RETIRED FOR LAUNDRY AT- ...r. Wonders. RiTlREO MAN WANT part-time jenltorial wo nave own car. Reply 1 Press Box 43, giving i SALES WELDING INDUSTRY peat ales to Industrial accounts Our products have t^en AEY SITTER, 3 DAYS, CALL ■ Own transportation ■ > BARMAID-GRILL GIRL 4 NIGHTS e week, no Sundays er holidays. Good salary, steady work. Call Oman tout. Good opportunity ... right girl. Also waitress tor nights, experienced, ever 21. Can tor — polntmont, 425-852. CASHIER (shift. Apply at tig1 t, 20 5, Telegraph, TWO BEAUTY, 57^1 CLEANING LADY WANTED FE 5-348, XEANINO WOMAN, FRIDAYS, own transportation, ref., lit. 447- CLERK-TYPIST FOR EMERGENCY room in email hospital. Phon H Oanti, 451481 otter 3 p.m. NURSES' AIDS, PART TIME OR relief. Rochester area, 447-145S, f 451-4377. • Payroll Manager We need a motura woman who has had suporvisory experience in payroll or ralatod bookkeeping work. Apply to ptrsonnol deportment or send comploto resume to personnel manager ati' Montgomery Ward 48 N. TELEGRAPH RO. PONTIAC MALL_ EXCELLENT FAINTING. MORN- 5!dfc£tARV. BUSY LAW OFFIC In FontlK-Btoemfleld area, tog exp. desired, but net neceeaar.. accurate typing and shorthand, 333- Intemalionol Personnel Service, Inc. IE A BARBER. TO EARN MORE Ggb»MJin7*17, Ttot Fdr metoln write, phene er vied — fesslonel Barber School, 558 Joe. Cempeeu, Hemtremck, Michigan. Work Wanted Male Work Wanted Female IS ■MEPMI____I recep- llght typing, book-deble, teachable. Re- WOMAN DESIRES IRONING. Buildioi Servicee SappBei l3 HAVE BUYERS FOR ANY KINO i ygp-^ ^ — Foul J I HAVE fgjriie-jg 1 CASH BUYER FOB' * .jge, with- :jr“W Roy O'Neil Realtor 358 Pontlec Late Rd. OR 4-2232 or FE 3~441f „TS,ZU"'"V' DUCK CASH FOR YOUR HOME OR EOUITY 3151 W^HURgN^FB.J-TIM VACANT LOTS AND HOUSES Wanted In Pontlec and Waterford. Immediate dosing. REAL VALUE REALTY. 489575, Mr. Davti. W. H. BASS WANTED LAKE 7 n Mocodoy Lake. OR 3-778Q. Gresham Cleaners; 405 Oakland, WAITRESS, DAYS, NO SUNDAYS or holidays, 85 per week. Apply | Pete's Lunch. tfS Orchard Ldkt, I WAITRESS WANTED, FULL-TIME | II-. work. Apply In person only, Franks n. Restaurant, Keego Harbor. .-WAITRfeSS, FULL-TIME EVENING,, work. Recce's, 5171 Dll '- 1 Dreylen Plains. Dressmaking A Tailoriag 17 ORESSMAKIHG 'AllORiNG AND WE NEED LISTINGS TOM REAGAN, REALTOR N. Opdyke ____38 We Need Listings Beat Basiaese Progeny 474 1148 SQUARE FEET, Vk OR ALL. Light manulictonng er warehouse, New construwBtoliMr Orchard Lk. Rd. end Telegraph. 6*1 K1L After 4 ejn. FEMaW.___________ 1-001 Retirement Home. ' 1 bedrooms, plastered wane, Weal jar retlremeig, totie prlmMes — iSO'xlSO' tot. Only SIENrertth tonne. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE Nr?r.eSrar - DRAYTON, 2-BEDROOM HOME Nice shaded let, lOS’xllS'. 1 ^jeke^MtootodS^bs FLATTLEY REAtTY 2 OUTSTANDING BUYS 22 CARLTON COURT Desirable downtown .property, S-•pt. Income, S18 monthly, zoned commercial. Fries reduced to $12,-•8. Terms. 47 HILLSIDE BREWER REAL ESTATE WM. B. MITCHELL, Seles Mgr. E. Huron FE 4-5111 Evas. Mf. Gregory, FE 2-5215 3-BEDROOM RANCH ) wages, ply In p I 'WAITRESS WANTED, AFFLY IN ' person, Wilkins Restaurant, 418 ’ Orchard Lake Rd., MA 44314. 1 Opdyke and [WAITRESS - BAR AND GRILL, ----- t to 3 e-m.. 4 days a._______________________ to^sundays or holidays. Moving aod Trucking WAITRESS, oyik DENTAL ASSISTANT^ PREFER EX perlence with public In set pacify, exceptional career oi.____ nlty, write age, marital status, experience end qualifications Pontlec Press Box 42. iXCELLENT COi opportunity tor management h company. Call colled Detroit \ day. 4 to 5 p to 12 noon. Dining Room Waitresses Including good earnings, double that of boring, i .flee lobe. Day and n available. Insurance ben vacations. Apply In perse •TED'S iWOODWARD AT SQUARE L fastgrowing r. c. wgT'— 1-8035 on , Tues. 9 SALESMAN EARN BIG $$$ SALESMAN WANTED, ORGANS, FI-•no* and musical Instruments. Full ur pert time. Jock Hagan Muelc Center. 332-0500. SALESMEN NEEDED PONTIAC AREA to 555,000 annually, w you with 48 tredlr furnish the Investthu. vehicle, end operating expenses. This Is en excellent career opportunity that provides voluntary r EXPERIENCED COOK-NIGHTS-steady employment. Apply In pet son—Town and Country Ian—172 S. Telegraph. V FULL TIME BABY SITTER. 5 DAYS — ------| 11:8 a.m. to 5:8 have own transport* $7,500 pS lization s Ttent program. $4,500 pi guarantee. Our everege me ^TO APPLY blank below end r GIL IDE 245 5 Mile Road stroll, Michigan 3480. __________________ CLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY, Iniuranco and'own. 4734297. NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS, INSURED and guaranteed. Cell Tom. 602-4563. ROOFING AND REPAIR, REROOFS and leeks, gutter work, all work rrurni.”F^,nr.n jrrgt Trlmmlng Sgrvice Lakes Tree Co., Trimming Plantings —*•* GENERAL TRUCKING AND EXCA-vetrng, top sell, fill dlrfT senf B Revel, back hoe work, semi ell us, OA Hut!' '* WU**‘ HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAMe _7°ur price. Any time, FE S-58S. LIGHT MOVlNO, ‘ TRASH-HAULED L|OHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, till dirt, ,„v ** ~~d front-end load no, FE Track Rgw«gI Trucks to Rent IVVTon _____ TRACTORS _ AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - Semi-Trailer Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. _ 18 S. WOODWARD Ft AMI" . FE 4-1441 Including * — Education Completed varsity of recognized standing with specialization In public health, bacteriology, chemistry or related sub-lects. Should be reglatorod In Mich., as a sanitarian. Apply Personnel Soles Representative Outetondtog opportunity with 101-yeer-old national manufacturer tor strong mature" self-starter. Sales experience absolutely necessary — Protected territory within Michigan. Wholesale selling. Draw vs. commission. For locel Interview Vraotand. 3IS-X8- ~~ SEVERALMEN evenln Cell t willing to 21 FOR DRUG AND TOBACCO CLERKS, '-"■flme, excellent salary, 21 years older. Sherman Prescriptions, pie and Lahser Rds., Blrming- DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK. Full or pert time. Russ's Country Drugs, 485 Elizabeth Lake Rd. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, DAI ■ shift, 11-3. Jack's Drlve-ln, 22 W Montcalm, Pontlec._____ ne,^ jiood pel Ggnvalgscgnt-Nft’siag 21 3~ NICELY FURNISHED ROOM FOR T elderly Person. Good food, reason-able. 3334371. I STONE VCR',FI NURSING HOMES — 451-407? ------ .........- I ON LAKE !, custom-built. 87,58. See - lintment Uhly. 473081. n'4-BEDliOOM RANCH TYFE, SYL-- van Manor subdivision. 3474 Laley. * . 414,350. 48-4443. WAITRESS FOR NIGHT SHIFT WAITRESSES Dining-Room and Curb Full er part-time. Paid vacations. Hospitiiizatton. Lunch hour end toad allowance. Apply In person. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph A Huron of WAITRESSES tl years or elder. Apply El S7S S. Hunter, Birmingham f WANTED: KITCHEN HEL?, MUST *— healthy and ambitious. Apply r* Telegraph, 'ANTED: RECEPTIONIST AND full charge bookeeper, 1 girl office. Give experience, reference end age. Write to Pontlec ~— Bex 102.______________ i Fox Dry Cleaners, 715 I OPENINGS AVAILABLE IN CAR pool — Pontlec end doer'-------- Detroit. Warklng hrs. 1-4:30 8)1 or 473-4057.__________ WOMAN FOR KITCHEN. APPLY Big Bey Drive In, 24M Dixie ■ Hwy.. between 2-5 pm______________ WOMAN FOR BABY SITTING, 7:8 a.m. to I p.m., S days e week. Own transportation, references. 424-9025 after 4 P.m. i Wonted M. or F. ~T t FART TIME COUNTER work in cleaners. Apply t Cleaners, 1457 N. Main FULL-TIME AND PART-TIME WAITRESSES WITH LIQUOR EXPERIENCE, CASHIERS, HOSTESSES, COOKS, PANTRY WOMEN, OFFICE GIRLS. KITCHEN UTILITY WOMEN. APPLY IN PERSON. 8 A.M. TO 7 P. M. MACHUS RED. FOX, S.W. COR. MAPLE AW TELEGRAPH, BIRMINGHAM. GENERAL OFFICE, TYPING AND filing, high actwol grar | | FE 4-821, tor Interview. OIRL FOR GENERAL OFFICE work with some knowledge of shorthand. This lob Is a permanent lob with a long established firm In the Pontlec arse. Feld vacation end other benefits: 'Please outline experience In reply to Pontlec Press Box 13.___________________ GRILL AND COUNTER WAITRESS- BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Positive Lie. CARETAKER COUPLE For country estate near Ri Mich, garden, swimming Private aparPment^parMTnru wife In winter Cell OL 3-3731 _ DEPENDABLE PERSON NEEDED tor steady travel among consum-ers In N. Oakland Ce. or district In Pontlec er Btoornttoid Hills. Permanent opportunity with large manufacturer. Only reliable mn son considered. See or write Gei Rose, 445 Fourth, Pontlec, or w Rewlelgh, Dept. MC L 490-244. DIETARY AND HOUSEKEEPING full time, over 1L Pontlec Osteo pathlc Hospital, Personnel Office MAINTENANCE MAN — FART " t, available living quartet nlses If desired. Would bd AA MOVING Careful, enclosed vans, fr*4835l? BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING ANO STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES ROBERT TOMFKlNI EM S-1 kIn'S'kari— Move 1 to 7 Items on Tompkins, SIMM Painting & Dgcgrating 23 IF YOU'Ri GOING TO CALIFOR-— deliver e lets model car tier M Motors, 287 Dixie Hwy., OR WaatadIChiMrta f Board II I C E N S B D BOARDING HOME, dev or weak. 48-1421. T Waatad Household Goads 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AF-Mancto. 1 place er houseful. Fear- — j. FE 4-781._____________ GOOD KITCHEN SINK AND CUP- y moke. 613-6329. !AR OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU eke so little tor yeur fur-'*— r appliances end what have - Wyman Furniture. COFFER, 35c; EftASS RAOIATOf 8t batteries, ItSrtr Dlxsi OR 3-5547. , vision zu-ai *nh^.customers, S2-S3 per hour, Railroad. OR 3-58S.................... .. HOUSEKEEPER FOR FATHER AND GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD An Equal Opportunity Employei MIOOLEAGCD COUPLE TO EX-change services tor smell med-.. . «Tn, completely furnished home, Need 2 ledles, 'plus wages, women to‘ do tight .......... housework, man ‘ and experience Mutt furnish “* session. Cell 3-8424 or FE i__________________■ 'ERMAHENT POSITION AVAIL-able tor gwieral office work. Mato or female. Phone collection experience helpful. Salary. Apply 5 to It a.m., 857 Elisabeth Lake Rd., FE metal fabricating tools tools*- tw^lTryoutill,ind,° follow IH0UI6KfePER' 3..?A.vi' 8gV»»» ■»* production. This, lobl ** OR MOTHER'S 'equire relocation to Ohio in HOUSEWIVES R OVER. EARN $100-5200 -....... .. -ir homo. Arrange your, own hours. For Information i write Pontlec Prose Box 51.' BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS . WASHIN Wall washing, carpets, ma- chine cleaned. FE 4-1077. WINDOWS. WALLS ODD JOB SERV apprexlmetoly t tors ixceltont aovsneemem tunltles. Salary open. Send HIGBIE MFG. CO. \ I ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN _______ and ,rln,a benefits tor the gal Wa TRAINEE - GRILL MAN. 1B2S, who wants a permanent position ----- -■* - wKKjn.j In j pleasant office: Cell FE 2-9224 Sic "in j'enTi 'Wn tooklng l *°f in lh**rvl*W.____________j person to manage this cen DU“-1 IRONINGS DONIL ¥>V SNOW AP-| you have exjjerl-------- ■ Spiegel Growing With Pontiac Manager Opening DESKS, ton, i FILES, OFFICE TOP PRICE* - COPPER. SftASl Waatad ta Kaat 31 2-BEDROOM HOME OR APART- APARTMENT UNFURNISHED, OR LADY WISHES ONE ROOM, FIRST floor. Vicinity ot Auburn , Heights - Rochester. 731-2753. MOTHER AND 3 CHILDREN NEED BLOCK FROM GENERAL HOSPI-tel, 1 or 2 todies only, no drinkers, FE 2-4447, FE 2-9755._________________ SINGLE GIRLS, OVER Vacancies comino up soon, i- ' " ' --------1> fur- FrlaU ftssionel women kitchen provl leges available. Phone Mr. Weav er, FE 3-708._________________________ Anartmcnts, Unfurnished 38 2-B K D R 0 0 M LIVING ROOM, kitchen end bath, north of Ponttoc, adults, S4S, FE MBS. OR I $83 TO $111 MONTH GE equipped kitchens, sliding glen doers leading to redwood-screened petto. S2S5 moves you Ini Btoornttoid Townhouse Apartments 181 Woodward, 332-5555 1 COUPLE FOR 3-ROOM APART-ment in good building centrally to-. ceted. Wife to assume duties as caretaker, husband may be employed elsewhere. Free apartment and email monthly salary. Please reply Mating ages end experience, Pentlec Pros* Box 30. idw l- ANO 2-BEDROOM GAR den-type apertmanta. Completely alr-candttlened, GE appliances sound conditioned, carports avail no pets,' 1 bedroom, 1135. 2 bedrooms, ttlS. 500 Scott Take Rd Root Moulds, Furnished 39 -B E D R 0 O kitchen end 4-3584 eftor i Rent Houses, Unfurnished .40 -BEDROOM, LIVING ROOM, kitchen end both, Lake Orton, $75 — F E 4-854 after ‘ 2-BEDROOM HOME ON 20 WOOD-ad acres, Waterford Twp., carpeted living room, drapes, appliances, fireplace, 3-car garage, OR 3-7547, neighbor. veniences 40 FEET ON WILLIAMS LAKE Excellent beech, concrete breakwater, 3-bedroom home, In' good condition. Slt.fOO, term*. Sharp 2-bedroom Dreylen Plaint arte, ceramic tile bath. Insulated windows, carpeting, drapes, full basement, tvy • cer garage, specious lot. 117,78, S800 down. AL PAULY I 3-782 255 HARRISON ST. 4-room modem, carpet, drapes, clothes dryer, new furnace and garage, $4,500 full price. PAUL JONES, Realty B'W, Huron___—_____F £6-038 378 DOWN, 2-BEDROOM ON WEST-brook. Ml 4-148 otter I p.m. $9990 Rancher en your let. Lovely 3 Bedrooms, full basement, eek floors, FULLY INSULATED, Del-Mar fin-Ithed cabinets. No money down. YOUNG-BILT HOMES BEAUTIFUL village SKTING 4-bedroom older heme (Cep* Cod), trees, BIRMINGHAM Four hug* bedroo rage. Spacious i tor S75.38. XXii HOUSES) 3 AND a^aiie <>r twit i_______ ___ Inquire 2335 Dixie Hwy. BOULEVARD HEIGHTS Applications now BasM accepted Contact Resident Manager 544 E, Blvd. at Valencia WEIR, MANUEL, bedrooms J SNYDER & RANKE 555 S. Woodward, Birmingham *43300 PHONES 544-2323 ILOOMFIELD hills. VAC a H t, brick, 4 king-size bedrooms, family room, full basement, 2-car attached garage, on SO-xISP let. Built-In 8 42 N G ROOMS, GENTLE- BEAUTIFUL ROOM FOR PROFES- CLAWSON. 5-BEDROOM OLDER shopping, will trade for tmaller ™vi* 5r sell en lend contract witn $2,500 down dr mortgage. (514,380) 424-7221 or 547-4444. wist of Rochester Rd., 4 blocks south LARGE SLEEPING ROOM WITH twin bade and TV for 2 gentlemen, near Pontiac factory end schools. Phone FE 2-4731, 441 Jootyn Ave. MAID SERVICE, COFFEE, CAR-peted, TV, totophena, • —-Sagamore Motel, 709 1 MEN ONLY toiina*, kite' FE 4-178. SLEEPING ROOM, NICE COMFORTABLE ROOM ON Lake Oakland, 112.50. OR 3-7539. ROOMS, AFTER 7 >.M. ROOM AND OR BOARD. 135V? OAK- lend Aug. PE »ldS4.________• SLEEPING ROOM FOR 1 GENTLi-— ■ FE 56079.__________ Rooms With Boora 20 S. », Clarkston 62S-2S2S. illlng and FE THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN need* mil* Interviewers 21 or ever to work on * travel survey. Car required, wages plus travel ex-peneoa. Cell 333-4355 before S p.m. ’ employment ton PlelM. i A N T V 6 EXPERIENCED .. technician with color set-op experience full or part time. ’Hampton Electric. 18 W. Huron. FE 4-2S2S. WORK TOMORROW Warehouse, landscaping, shop, i WATER CONDITIONER ■ leading sand handy ir“ M- RENT OR OWN IT FC“ - fetoj 33.8 FEE MONTH - i / a.m. National Water Conditioning Service MANPOWER - 138 Wide Track W. ■ !■ YOUNG MAN FOR METALS WARE- LADY NEEDED TO STAY WITH wit* while husband works days, live-ln or out. 5424 Drayton Rd. OR 4-1432, call eftor S p-m. LAOY FOR WAITING OM 555. M. ‘ MMi Dixie Hwy.-OR_______ OFFICE FOft RENT IN i parochial school, i NORTH POINT REALTY ? AJ** Clsrkstor RENTING $59 Mo. Excluding taxes end Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITJf APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA will, accept ALL applications FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. TH CREDIT FROG-RETIREES Ala REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5*3676 626*9575 . NEAR CRESCENT LAKE — 3 bed-“i, forge kitchen end slum, siding, 2-car Barege, r“ ^ i [ THfl PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1005 HAttXD ft. FRANKS, Rtolty SURBURBAN HOME -------sttroctlve, large M I ,ma Evtratt Cummings, Rtoltor an union lake-roao bm um___________ rb-wwI HAYDEN 3 BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL Will Bulk! Ml Your La* or Ouri Pricer alert at 111,250' Office open 9 to ft* p.m. J. C. HAYDEN, Rtoltor IMMEDIATE POSSESSION PHA 3-bedroom ranch In beeutlf Romeo, monthly payment* only H BREWER REAL ESTATE WM. B. MITCHELL, Salat Mgr. »4 E. Huron n S-S1 Ivo*. Mr. OraBarV, Ft l-git Frank Shtpord, Rtoltor rooms, living rc locetlan, SIMM with wtatantiai down payment. . INVESTMENT S-raem frame haute, with walking distance to Hi Saginaw. Needs — makes it ideal car garage, fwi price s Terms available. INVESTMENT t-tamlly apt. building, watt location, close la town n It an Ideal rental Invettmant, pr vacant. Nett *3,0*0 par Sislock & Ktnt, Inc. ISM Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 330-929! McCullough realty 11,200 dawn and assume existing mortgage. Monthly ——**-*- ** a month, indudb yard, only 0 years old. , WATERFORD TOWNSHIP The best for less goes with h 2-bedroom bungalow. All brick i tarter, spacious living room, w beautiful wall - to - wall carpettr Share kitchen with ample eatl... space and cupboards. Inclosed rear porch, could be 3rd bad room, plus a large family room and Itt-car jarage. Excellent area, only 112,- ' ted McCullough jr. • BROKER ♦24-2022 It no answer FE HIM Mixed Neighborhood No down payment MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS 15 WEStSwN REALTY _ . 5*5 Bloomfield Near Luther PE S-2242 afternoons. LI 24*27 Ives. - PIRET IN VALUE_______ NEW ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT Beautiful klng-sliad 7-room, m baths, 2-car garaga, .t"------ scaped. Perfect beach, down payment. Elwood Realty 4*24*35 it Clerkston way. I b. easy clean tils ... —..it, pevp* *•■■•*» 120x125' life, I TOR,"490* W. HURON,”OR evenings OR 2-*22*. _________ thgrg Is a Santa Claus BUT IT ISN'T YOUR LANDLORD So, buy a home of your own and be satislflad and happy. Let us •how you IMs modestly priced 3-bedroom aluminum sided ranch, hill basement, gas bultt-lns In family kitchen, 25'xl*5' lot near Dray-tan. Only 514,2*0. HAGSTROM REALTOR 4200 W. HURON OR 4-0351 EVENINGS OR 3-4222 Sylvan Shorn Sub IMS Woodbine. bHck veneer, is&jsywmr* TRADE . J/W&mxate cash HOUSES. FARMS, ACRID CONTRACTS, EQUI WRIGHT REALTY 332 Oakland A VO. ♦Mi Eva*. after 7;3» pr s-uh D—T WATERFORD Spacious 3-story 4-bedroom Kama, carpeted Hying, dlnbia add 1 bedroom, jiw oeths^. gm^hoet.^^i- Torms. J. J. JOLL REALTY Pi 2-24W 412-0102 Ml i-5523 WEST SIDE Erick 3-bod room bungalow, custom-built by Cummins to 1*33. Pent led mont. Draperies, cerpets and rang# Included, prtctd at exactly 114,90* — Shawn only by appointment — WEAVER r garage, 10,950. Quick potsat- MILTON WEAVER INC., RE* In the Village of Rochosto University ♦ money; hat large with •Iroplact, dining n kitchen, IVj-cer gerege i furnished. Priced eT only . CALL FOR APPOINT- GIROUX TAYLOR TRADES place to rent? V Lake Front Ntar 1-75 Ideal homo lor IN family man. There are 4 bedroom*, largo living room, lVi baths, full basement, with wslk-oul door, nicely landscaped, located Ih Springfield Township. Full Price only $12,500. Terms to suit. GEORGE IRWIN- SUBURBAN LIVING ranch typo wit Siting, full basi Ity, near shopping cantor. Gas lx aluminum storms and sc rat Prlcad at $14,900 with Immsdl possession. NtCMl aluminum storms, lll-tO-WOH carpeting, ____t and roar porch, In txcellent condition, 09.-0200 down. FHA terms. CENTRAL location 2-bedroom brick, largo living room, dining ol with picture windows, nice kitchen, ceramic tiled ba‘h, carpeted throughout, lVb-ssr go- contract, 505 per month. NORTH END—$0 DOWN TO GIs We have ana 2-bedroom and ono 3-bedroom real nice homes In the north tnd of Pontiac, good location, Nth homes hove large roams, full aluminum sfdlng and many extras! all you ns*d Is good credit. O'NEIL TRADE SILVER LAKE PRIVILEGES Over 1400 loot all an ono llooi which will to Include 4 twin bods. If you wont o piano for I __________ling llvbtf room to show it off Ml. — I - showers. Fully tHed, partitioned basement. Family room, 2-car garage. A lot of extras will be Included at 122,900, I ------|— —- —----------- incinerator. Why not trddo in your • kids, tt JUST WHAT YOU WANTED! 3-bad room brick, 2-car garage, full basement, fenced roe Neat and dean, wall land sc sped yard, good Wait sMo er blacktop (tract and sidewalks. Priced *f 511,250. 19% do; closing costs. Why wait? Will Trade tor smsllsr .horns n i storms, screens and new doors. Inside new walls, hardwood floors, colored both fixtures, now Formica counter tops. Bsssmsnt, gas hast, sotting an an sera lot. well landscaped. Only 1200 down far a O L tn.soo with terms er will trade. VAN NORMAN LAKE AREA This nice 3-bedroom home to ♦ years young, nlea Itvtng mam, 10x12 kltchan. Pull bsssmsnt with gas Net and walking distance to ---------------- tt.411 gown plus dating costs ar wm PLEASANT OLDER HOME y 19,250, assy farms, no Btwn payment for a MODELS Opon Daily 2 to 6 For Sail or mil Duplicate WESTRIDGE of WATERFORD I INVITATION IS EXTENDEO TO ALL OP YOU to Inmtd our ir furnished Model Hemet, SKtLOompMWy dWersrrt end including Spsnl* style. We'll dupllcete, from >12,900 on your lot or you tour models ce« be purchased lust ad INy — sceped snd with immediate occupancy. Trade your present heme. Dixie Highway to Csmbrook Lon, right near Our Lady Of Lakes, RAY O'NEIL REALTOR 3520 Pontiac Lokt Rd. OR 4-2222 MLS Opon 9 to 9 FE 4-8576 GAYLORD 4AVC A LOOK dt this nice jttm bedroom ranch, LIN now, |ult m side vHlage at Often. Oes. pi coats. Call MY 2-9121 or PE i-9091 IEARLY NEW throe bedroom, gas hoot, extra largo garage with workshop. Ill,250. Small dawn payment. Call MY 22*21 or FE 1-9403. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD MY 2-2*21 or FE *- LAZENBY $500 DOWN CLARKSTON AREA caHent i newly carpeted. Also neighborhood. Prlcad (15,150 ROY LAZENBY, Rtoltor CLARK Coder Island Lake privileges. Leva- KINZLER 4-BEDROOM HOME In Done Ison School arse, new whit aluminum exterior. 19' living roan.. family kitchen, ) bedrooms and bath doom, 2 bedrooms up 0 ir IT). High. Hght basement. 114.1 10 par cent dawn plus casts. VACANT, $300 DOWN No other coats. In Clarktlsn School JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5219 Dixie Hwy. 024-2235 Multiple Listing Service -* Across from Peckers Beauty Crest OPEN 2 to 6 Daily 2 to 8 Sundoy Visit IN all-new "Huntoon Shores Bub." 3 model homes to C froth, a delightful ranch with Ity room, a spacious tri-level .. . 2-Story colonial; several elevations available In each. Your choice, SIMM plus tot, to Induda stw 5>m, ' tots, and an outdoor h ovary house, plus hip of p lake front I Road between MSS a wiinams Lake Road. Ray O'Ntil Realtor 3520 Pontiac Like Reed OR 4-2222 Bloomfield S e h e e I s. 3 bedrooms [ family room, fireplace, all built- j Ins. IVt baths, basement, garage, sewer, water end gas. 133,900. | WE NEJO LISTINGS. WE ... EQUITIES—HAVE BUYERS FOR LAND CONTRACTS OR W11 * TAKE Yeur Home In Trade. CLARK ftKAL ESTATE 3101 W. HURON ST. FE 3-2«lt OR 3-1925 or FE 5-5154 Multtete Listing Service DORRIS ntco, IW-cor gar crate drive and < with very nice b barbecue. SIMM. id eslltags. 9 h new gas fi Val-U-Way Government Representative ir gerege end • dawn. Now this Investment will rsturn to y over 64,500 o year. All kltcN recently modornliod, separate < trances, odequoto parking, stea MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICB MILLER hit., gas I re. *24,351 4-IEDROOM ERICK. Colonial styls “— TNrm* windows, TVs t, dining room and i iKd*p ~ session. WEST SIDE FAMILY. I rooms, 1W baths, could to Income property. 1-unlt or rooming house. 1-car ga-■ • on easy terms. NORTH SIDE 5-room lovely homo, "•stored walls, hardwood floors, I basmt., get host. Corner lot it much mors. Just N*,9(( on easy IN IT INCOME NORTH SIDE. 90* full price. 2 largo rooms, Ivsto entrance. New gas furnace. Aaron Baughey Realtor PE 243(2 *2* W. HURON OPEN GILES 5500 DOWN — 5-room bungalow, oak floors, plastered walls, oil Michigan basement. Mixed I berNod, pried *4,7*0. ELIZABETH-CASS - 24'x3*' I homo, carpeted end tils I BOS heat. 110-car garage, i LAKE ORION - Ranch built In brkk-fscs front, basement, 12' bratoowsy, 2-car sttschsd gs- GILES REALTY CO. FB 5-4175 221 Baldwin A vs. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE West Bloomfield Woter Front lust off tN M| ft. Cass Lake froi ement, hard-, city water i, completely I. S9.500. MIXED AREA - i completely i-JHRI Features easy to dean — NM Only Is S45 pi h with only List Here-All Cash for Your Homel R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 34S Oakland Ave. Opon 9-7 Aflor hours FE 4-*2*( or 334-4*17 ARRO CASH FOR EQUITY-LAND CONTRACT WE BUILD — WE TRADE HIQH ON A HILL In on executive sotting, Nsutltvl Orton Ter i Sub. There are still a taw k available. Also white brick Ndroom colonial, t full bath, NH baths, family ream wl... fireplace, 4" wali submersible pump. Call ofr details. UMT By Kata Osann "Boy, this country sure has piled up a lot of history in a few hundred years!’’ Sale Hoaees II BUD' tec had breezeway and 1-car garage; features 2 fireplaces, 1 picture windows, lots of closet and storage specs. 2 baths, spick snd span kitchen and dining aloe, electric hot water gas host, lovely shade trees, paved drive. At S21,500, to sure — "BUD" Nicholie, Realtor 49 Mt. Clemems St. FE 5-1201 AFTER 6^ P.M. FE 4-B773 Sale Heesee 49 RHODES ... ... iith TV combination, extra speakers, extra I nice kitchen with plenty of cupboard space. Parked at Keego tor your convenience. 14,500. LAKE ORION. Nlco 9-room income property, excellent location, 3-room! apartmont up rants tor *75 a month, nlco 6-room apartment JOHNSON NORTHERN HIGH DISTRICT room, l-story in excellent coi lion, enclosed front and b porch. Ml basement, gas l nace and recreation room, w to-wali carpeting, stove and frlgorotor, 2-car garage with CLARKSTON AREA, lOO’xSSO' LOTS, —- —• dawn,- *30 month. Near Bloch Broo. OR 3-1295. HIGHLAND - MILFORD AREA, minutes Pontiac, 2W acres. 330 by 33* 11395, 540 down, 140 month. Bloch Bret. FE 4-4509 or OR 3-1295. JAYNO HEIGWY3 AFTER 5 CALL CHRIS HORNBECK 332-6692 A. John$on & Son, Realtors 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-2533 Waterford WEST SUBURBAN a 3-bedroom homo lit - ■ Full bos*1- i garage,] Crescent Lake are; mont, 2-car otta< largo 2IW living Lhts—Acreage CANAL LOTS Choice building sltds - 4 Connected with Sylvan Lok*. JACK LOVELAND 2111 Com Lok* Rd. ' 452-1255 ' OF PONTIAC - MBNOMI-» Read, tsncsd lot, JO'xis#', ot-a Hills, PE 5-2105. Busin*** OjpforfnMee J9 NEIGHBORHOOD GROCERY WITH hear snd, win* Hcmbb, good Income, building avoltoMo hr sole. City and Country Realty, 3354511. SERVICE STATION EOCTfitif, with tew Inventory. Call 333-9332 trOllp7-- SOUTH END BAR A roaL going Sodth End bar can to bought right. Doing SI business ear wear. Tata! price 139,000 ; WARDEN REALTY ■ Huron. Pontiac 323-2152 TOP BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY — Pur* oil modern 3-bay sarvlep station In Union Lake tor loos*. Potential earning* ot 1750 minimum per month. 4 weeks paid doctor training. CoH Jock Anderson. 4S2-3344 y 4*2-1*41.____ - Tub* Processing Plant — Pontiac - note over 11*0,000 MICHIGAN Business Soles, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 1523 S, Telegraph _FE 4-15*3 carpeting, I S ;* WATERFORD HILL MANOR WHY NOT? I* ACRES, N M ACRES 0 il dining area, 1 id family room 1 , lull basement,________ 1 JSSl* ACRES, rolling LT trT.! •*. * ."'ll*, nor x**0', 15,250, t blacktop root Sal* Land Contracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Mntly wonted. See us bi ACTION On your tend contract, largo o small, call Mr. Hlltor, FE 24179 Broker, 3293 Elizabeth L----- LAND CONTRACT, U.17S.' buy ! Full tasbmont Mountain Rd. Ideal location. Only 5454*0. Terms. LAKE ORION. Commercial garage, Istroots. 545,000. Terms. INDIAN WOOD SHORES NO. 3. An ideal homeslte tor your family. Coll today tor details. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE 1-2304 251 W. Walton FB Si-4212 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE SCHRAMKAMPSEN Now Doing Custom Building on Available Building Sites I Your Plans or Ours 3-Btdroom Brick East side location. Ilk* now •tructlon. hot carpeted I room and dining "til,'' Ml mont, gas hast, hot water, port with pavtd drive. At fenced yard, paved stroct sidewalks, city water and M Full price 513,000 with 540* plus mortgage costs. List With Schram and Call the Van REALTOR r— MLS 1111 JOSLYN AVE. FE I MW matter bedroom, hoot, aluminum storms si — 2-car garagt, large I CARE FOR COMPACTS? t. Youngstown kltchan. Lori___ oom, double sliding door ctooet. oil basement. Awnings. Aluminum terms snd screens. Cyclone fenced lieges ONLY (9.95*. TERMS. SMITH & WIDEMAN Frushour Struble DRAYTON WOODS 5-BEDROOM COLONIAL style home an a large tot. Lldgorock fireplace facing living roam dining room artas. 1 baths, I Ins, family room. Ml total and 2-csr sttschsd garage, shitted tot ter th* perfect ting. Maks an appointment — tevaty — M > tor enty Stt9*>. We could JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE REALTORS MU Ml HIGHLAND RO. (W. HURON) pi M*ti____________n tmk IRWIN Call for mars details. Pries tl*,45o! Terms. * SCH00LH0USE LAKE FRONT Shawnee Lana Is Hit location of this *-room rancher. Thro* tad-rooms, lovely living' room with - fireplace, kitchen with built-ins, 2 ceramic til* baths, utility and fWear sgrogt. Shown by appalnt- msnt only. John K. Irwin AND fONS REALTORS |U W. Huron -Stearins Phono -P* 5444* month. Furniture Included. 519, 550. terms. CLARKSTON AREA - Spacious to available In beautiful O r * * 1 Acres overlooking Deer Lake, private Mach tor subdivision ideal spot to build yeur arm house. Call ter details. Ted McCullough Sr„ Rtoltor PHONE 682-2211 S143 Coss-Elizebeth Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN DAILY 9 TO * Buzz Bateman SAYS TRADE 7SB With rcosonoM* te ._____ ____________tots dt extra features. W«B tewpll carpeting, built-in bar In r*c. room, outside patio. 2-car garage and nicely landscaped. This I* one you mutt ass. Owner transferred out of state end priced tar quick oate at SIMM with excot tent terms. You can trad* yeur present smaller home acuity. NO. 09 NO DOWN PAYMENT TO VETERAN that auelHtet. Almoi or lust minutes tram team; at ctosteg c ’t watt, a MODEL HOMES BEAUTIFULL* furnished te Lake Oakland Shores. Rancher, trl-level and Colonial priced Nam 0040* "*“ tat. Ohms models at tow as Open d - 24'p.r SAT. and SUN. > of these model t INSTRUCTION aASS 2-WEEK COURSE In real estate ... sajosman. Class tow terming. Coll 322 S. Telegraph Rd. 731 S. Rochester Rd. ANNETT Ntar Webster School Brick seml-bungotow on wd landscaped cornoV lot. 2 bee floor with stairway to torg* unfinished 2nd floor with water and electric roughed In. Largo living room with natural flroplac* and wall - to-wall carpeting. 2-car garage. 12,50* down on land contract. Wcriltd Lake Area 3-tadrattn brick ranch priced tetow reproduction .«-0Its. Owner has left city and willing to sacrifice. Largo car-petod living room .with fireplace wall, modern kitchen with dishwasher and Bui- PA gas boat and centra conditioning. • 2-car alt; garage and fenced rear B2,I«0 down, plus FHA gag* cos^s. Wist Side Colonial BooutlM homo built In Has living room with a tlv* bay window and flroplac*, dining room, room, ’ .modal kitchen . Includes carpeting and •S. Basement, gas “—‘ ■ brick garage, t Sylvan Lake Privileges FE 8-0466 ur Neighbor Trotted. Why Don't You?, DECEMBER WILLIAMS LAKE Towering a • k lovely 3-bedroor tZrJKWnirJ bedroom home property that wi income. Owner; Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A mm v-75 Vndj 1 to so rkston. S1.9N. Terms. LAND CONTRACTS 11b ACRES — scenic Hadley Hills Urgently needed So* us bofor* d slightly w home, attached WARREN STOUT, Rtoltor 145* N. Opdyka Rd. FE S414S ______Open Eyes, 'til » p.m. WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor OR 2-1 454* Dixie Hwy, Von Walt BI KENT Bstobllshod In lfl* mont, gas furnace, finished ____ room, colored both fixtures, fenced yard. Only S1,«5*B-T*rm«. ’EST SIDE — 3-bedroom, with l*4l lot for gardon spec*, basomor* and gas host. 57,950. Terms. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 2-0123 or FE 2-1984 log burning flroplac* s and attached two-cor gorog* i oors thro; 1. PRICE REDUCED IS This th* home you or* looking YES It 1s. Some ol th* feotun this fin* homo ore: living room flrtpteco, formal dining room, 1 bedrooms, full bosomont, attached garage, lovely wooded tot, elf and more for B1S.950 with 11,400 * cozy canal front homo is to Macoday and Lot ioI for th* newlyweds o 1 payments. Coll te WHY WAIT7 You don't on*. Kampson Realty w Brown ESTABLISHED SINCE 1939 d two-car garag*. Full dining , finished family roorr — , completely carpeted lentlon here. Very attractive auction coris. About * year* i 9-9. Multiple listing servlet. L. H. BROWN, Reoltor 509 Ellzototh Lake Road Fh. FE 4-35*4 or FE 2-4*1* Income Preperty 50 I DOWN "PARTRIDGE IS THE BIRD TO SEE" WATKINS LAKE FRONT and of th* s< safety of y; i. Largo living Investment at 522,500 UTICA AREA If you're looking tor a I Th* hem* It Immaculate, manihlp th* best. Alt bodrooms, Ml tatomoti.. ----------- ------ Thermo window*, through- STKter7 ... fireplace, carpels and drop** Included in th* 529,9** price. PARTIDGE REAL ESTATE m W. Huron PE 4-35*1 STOUTS Best Buys Today Doll House- peted living _______________ beth. sharp kitchen, utility, P*s hoot, IVb-car garage, ■"—^ tar, Anchor tenetd 5114*0 with terms. North Side Cottage redl cut log cobin ot Perry —— .Oriwivttte, fully fur- y 54,750 with term*. Handy Man Spacial Near Fisher Body plant, 3-b*d-room home needs a nJNte Fix- paved street. Only 52.95# cash. Warreg Stout, Realtor I SO N. Opdyk* Rd. Fh. FI Ml*5 Opto a vet. Till I p.m. T Multiple Ltettng Service TIMES Went * cut* comtey homo I th* cool winter oheodt M y do. coll right away to see tt 3-bedroom rancher on largo i with lake privileges on e go fishing and swimming lok*. i and lot th* other Ml ml. Hoar General Hospital trt Is always a waiting ..jrkston, In * very -slrable neighborhood. Don't miss out an this, only BT9.SI*. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU • "JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES" Times Realty S*9« DIXIE HIGHWAY (South ol Waterford HIH) OR 44394_________opon 94 dolly NICHOLIE HERRINGTON HILLS t decorated and In largo tot. i heat. «» 3 STORES rented, good location Ir . Only 52.500 down and *20* month on balance. Excellent •rick each, i gas furnaces ____ Close to downtown I area, about *10,000 ---- mortgage. BATEMAN OXFORD-ORION A choice commercial cornu, tween thee* 2 growing communities. SIC frontag eon M24 adjacent te GTRR. Ideal ter shopphr conter, auto dealer or many oHm uses. Call ter totalis. 2.5 A. INDUSTRIAL SITE IN' frontage on MS9 near Wot* ford Twp. Hill, *20,000. R0LFE H. SMITH, Rtoltor 244 S. Telegraph Ft 3-2*4* EVES. FE 1-23(2 tONED LIGHT MANUFACtti Approximately 10 acres not.. .... Commerce Drivo-ln Theater. Tho last parcel w* have toft. Priced m TEMPLETON, Rtoltor 2339 Orchord Lok* Rd. 4*2-*9fl(f Lake Property HOME SITES. (O' x 100', SI BtoCh overlooking beautiful _______ tors Lok* privileges. 2 sandy beaches, docking. 51000, lit -— LAKE FRONT HOMES frontage. Direction*: Clari Orton Rd. to Eston Rd., 5 t north la S*93 Mohawk Drlv*. 412-21** SYLVAN 425 1584 -------- 3344222 RtEBrt Property 52 PONTIAC IS MINUTES, PRIVATE toko, no motors altewod. 50* — 150' tot. 1*95, sio down, *10 mi Ctearod or wooded tots.. I Ero*. OR 3-1295 or FE 4-4509. Loti-Ajcreoye h ACRES - Wooded, good ret •Ions, 1 miles north of 1-75 U.S. 1*. 513,950. 1* Mr cant d I ACRES — Clerkston school i Vk ACRE TO te Clerkston ■ to tl,*50, 10 Mr WATKINSXAKE — Largo oN-ta 60 ACRES ocatod In iconic ore* ird, land It high. r Ox- _ panoramic I countryside. Ideal setting tor secluded country • State, 134,000 — Terms. -C. A. WEBSTER, Rtoltor MV 3-2WI________________0At«-2*tl EAST SIDE Throe bedroom brick home, fuH basement, gas heat, hardwood Hears, tlte bath, recently dbcorated. Closing costs down and payments 100x155 LOT IN HIGH WOOD SUB-dl vision, off Maybe* Rd., OR 342*0. AUBURN HEIGHTS 9tX1R LO+ Oft ' ft. excellent tocaltwi 13,- h payments k It 5250 will IW Eves. CeH Mr? Cestell, FE 3-21 S3* W. Huron St. • to I-7S to lakes I___ eal for sub- Annett lnc. Realtors J. Huron St. FE M. Open Evenings end Sunday* 14 COUNTRY ESTATES Large building sites on wlndlnt paved streets, among a rolling hillside. Excellent view ter miles Low at >3t* down. LADD'S UBS LMdor Rd. :< FB 542(1 or OR 2-1211 after TUB Open Dally 1*4 Sunday 12- lod treat. *24,500. 17,500 down. C. PANGUS, Realtor M15 Ortonvl Coll Collect NA.7-2015 Salt Business Property_____57 2 BRICK STORES, CORNER Shlrloy and Auburn. 50x00 plus parking lot 40x00. Now vacant, 2 store ovollobl* for tease. BREWER REAL ESTATE WM. B. MITCHELL, Solet^Mjr.^ Evd*. Mr. Gregory, FE 2-5219 in' TbWjfSPNO LAKE, WATER-ford Rd. Ally, 4734701._____, - discounts. Call 412-1(20. ir Ted McCullough Sr. ARROkEALTY _______Cats-Ellzaoeth Lake Road NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL tflMt 2&rl G*rrel* iM 3-2511. SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS wanted. Sot our deal before you •ell- CAPITOL SAVINGS S LOAN AWN„ 75 W, Huron. FE >-7127. 3,774' cement block building,-- tor light manufacturing, dry woter and sowar, paved street, village of Rochester. Priced to soil at only 127,500 with terms. M-59 FRONTAGE Comer parcel With 421' fro on M59 noor Croocont Lok* Coast-To-Coast TRADES Tom Bateman FE 8-7161 Realtor Exchangor INVRStMfcNT 50x40 tUILDINO. Business Opportunities 59. 20% RETURN ON $30,000 CASH INVESTED 40 3-ROOM AND BATH APTS. NEAR E. JEFFERSON MR. ROBBINS, DETROIT, (42-3444 NU-TONE RADIO WITH INTERCOM. APPROX ACRES, % OAKLAND MAT ELY 4W MILE FROM UNIVERSITY, CORNER OP SQUIRREL AND SHIMMONS RD. USED AS A DAY CAMP! BUILDINGS, EQUIPMENT AND SWIMMING POOL. POSSIBLE MULTIPLE SITE. OWNERS. LI I-S0S3. ATTENTION NEW PRODUCT i unusual opportunity Coast-To-Coast TRADES Tom Bateman FE 8-7161 Realtor Exchangor to, S3S4927. Call h PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE' NOW READ THIS A poldon opportunity to OddJISr continue 22 west cleaning dry nan, 611,000 down. *** ^ DON'T BE A PIKER Own one of the finest and busiest liquor carry-out party stores te Oakland County. Doing a quarter million in business and gmrir 510,000 down plus Thventery Is ye solid Investment ter • .terrific to “ now is the time Right now you cati make the b at your in* on th* live Host I PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE B W. Huron PE SU0I SEND FOR FREE CATALOG Don't r land contract*. discount! EMpIre QUICK CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS Clark Reel Estate FE 3-7000, Rot. FE 4-4013, Mr. Clerk. NEED CASH FOR "BACK TO-SCHOOL" EXPENSES AND BILL CONSOLIDATIONS BORROW UP TO $1,000 16 month* to My credit lit* Insurance available BUCKNER LOANS !. LAWRENCE LOANS *2S te 11400 Insured Payment Pten BAXTER t LtVlNQtTONI Finance Ce. 401 Pontiac State Bank Build FE 4-1538-9 LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick, friendly, hateful. . FE 2-9026 Is tha number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 3(3 Pontiac State Bank BMb. * “ " ' “ - ‘ 9:30 tel. LOANS TO $1,000 courteous sxportencsd counselors. 945 B U I C K WILDCAT <2 - DOOR hardtop, power and rool sharp. Will consider any type of prapprty In trade. Vacant preferred. Ft WILL SWAP FOR LATE MODEL -Mr dr what have you: • 45' Now toon housttralter. Fully equipped nd furnished. Air csndltteAdd. 1-1 condition. Cell FE *4922. Sal* Clothing OYS' CLOTHING AND SKATES -•izo 4 through 14, oom* tor twins. *29-4523.________________________________ MEN'S CLOTHING SIZE 4*42, HIGH —‘‘‘viii ShoeJoott end hunting out- csltent condition, 4444131. Sols HowohoM Ireodh AS LOOM, AND EURNITURE risr\si 1 MbRE llMI BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-R00M GUI FITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Wtokly $378 (BeUet) $3.00 Wnkly $478 (Best) $4.00 V.':ekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS *loc* (brand now) Bytes ram: -piece living teem suite, tws step tables, matching coffee tab!*, two decorator lamps, alt ter 111*. Only «i JO weekly. NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS m. boekeet* tod and PEARSON'S FURNITURE lit E. Pike PE 4-2W1 Between Paddock er- ELECTRIC RANGES. 1 KJ N-more wringer, 1 set double tttor-glas laundry tub*. *24-214*. 3-PIECE BEDROOM, *19) ELEC-trtc and gas staves, (IS to re- H| i the Pontiac press, monpay, December $,iw Helpful Hints for Christmas Gift Shoppers $«lt WiwrtiM QaaBl *1 1 Big “B*ot$ 'Em All" Anniversary Special 58 Pieces BRAND NEW FURNITURB ‘ $297.00 NO MONEY DOWN S2.7S A WEEK Beautiful walnut double dreutr. mirror, bookato bod ond largo roomy ehoat.Serle box spring ond ---------mSm —. t largo MHO lamps, In — .rotor colors, orb 2 throw pillows, Formica too dinette Table ”“*■ leaves and 4 matching chairs. 11 rug,-and 32-plecs sot of d STORKUNE CRIB, CHIFFEROBB. , Wl__JRATOR, KWTW' USCD REFRIGERATOR UMtwSr» Radio A AppUanca Inc. 422 W. Huron TM-stn WA1HM m. GAS STOVE, «S- M- A NEW CONN PIANO OR COnn Organ I BETTERLY MUSIC Ml 6-GOO: FOR HER CAR GIVE SPECIAL CHRISTMAS GIFTS temoto control mirror . S11.0. “PONTIAC RETAIL STORE MAKE I ___ CHRISTMAS W A JOYFUL IS WITH A id Cor fr PONTIAC RETAIL STORE S Mt. Clemons St._____FE 3-7954 r SEND HER BACK TO COLLEGE with an economical, low cast, used "Bug" tram Autobahn Motors, Inc. authorised VW dealer. 174S S. Tele-graph. FE 8-4S31. _______________ 1964 RIVIERA MODEL _ OLIVER BUICK | no Orchard Lake_____FE 3-9165 A NEW SOHMER PIANO OR Conn Organ BETTERLY MUSIC_______Ml 4*002 BEATTIE MAKE IT A JOYFUL CHRISTMAS WITH A Now or Used Car tram PONTIAC RETAIL STORE S Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-79S PICK CAR—PICK THE PRICE -Give Him a car tor work— PATTERSON I BACK TO COLLEGE lea lor, 1765 S. Tote- ______________11. ___________ > THIS CHRISTMAS SURPRISE HIM I----a TOP QUALITY car from MARVEL MOTORS F 1S1 Oakland Avo. FE 8-4079 A CAR FOR MOTHER'S USE See KING AUTO. SALES 3275 W. Huron St. FE 1-4001 A SECOND CAR WOULD MAKE HER VERY HAPPY THIS YEAR Wf HAVE A WIDE SELECTION JlunwM Mtt OUTLET 3400 Elisabeth Lk. Rd. FE 0-7137 BEATTIE BEAUTY? ECONOMY? PRICE? Give her a car to use from Russ Johnson Pontiec-Rambler I On MS4 In Orion MY HRI BUSY SHOPPING? ; FLUORESCENT FIXTURES - TER-rifle tor growing plants Indoors, man-ad 011.05 value, S6.0S. Michigan Fluorescent, 303 Orcherd Lake FE 44442. FOR HER CAR GIVE LITTER BASKET FOR CAR MAk# IT A JOYFUL CHRISTMAS WITH A New Or Used Cer From PONTIAC RETAIL STORE a Mt. Clemons St. FE 3-7054 PICK CAR—PICK THE PRICE —Give Mom A Cer to use— PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth-Vallant 001 n. Mein Rochester OL 14S5I "THE GREATEST GIFT" IS A BIBLE Christian Literature Sales \ 55 Oakland Ave. FE 49591 TREAT MOM TO OUR deliciously different Sunday Breakfast Buffet Served from a learning silver TED'S r Woodward at Square Lk. FE 4-6630 TRADE UP FOR CHRISTMAS Treat Mom to Her Own Car We have M top grade used cars to choose from with money sav- “""lIoVD MOTORS HE GIFTS FDR 1066 BUICK SPECIAL MODEL Car For Only S340 OLIVER BUICK 16 Orchard Lake FE 14165 FOR MIS CAR OIVQ SPECIAL CHRISTMAS GIFTS Outtlda mirror .......... 15.10 floor vanity mirror ........ $1.65 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FOR mnffef GIFTS FOR A GIVE WARD'S GIFT CERTIFICATE "THE GREATEST GIFT" IS A BIBLE . - Christian Literature Sales Oakland Ave. FE 44591 SMALL WANT ADS BIG DEAL FOR Y0UI 12" MOTOROLA Portable TV 190.95 WALTON TV FE 2-2257 OPEN 94 515 E. Walton, earner of Jotlyn LOW? ai-- present ef $2,695. Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth ____724 Oakland Ave., 332-9150 SACRIFICE PRICE I SCOTT RENTAL SERVICE 106 W. Walton FE $-4141 A USED CAR MAKES AN EXCELLENT,CHRISTMAS GIFT STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 1400 Elliaboth Lk. Rd. FE S-7137 N CAMP CHEVY A NEW OR USED CAR FROM BEATTIE Seebura organs Storey A Clark organa DeRAE MUSIC i Dixie Hwy._______________674-1700 Brand n AT GALLAGHER'S n $300 Shop ut before you buy. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC IS B. HURON FE 44544 Royal Oak Store 4224 Woodward Between 13 and 14 MIN OPEN sVnDAYFROm'i TO 5 p!m. FBEE PARKING BE SANTA TO YOUR FAMILY . ._________i tor Christ- giving. Come and browse ■ round. JACOBSON TRAILER SALES. 5490 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5901 Hours 9 to 4. BEAUTY? ECONOMY? PRICE? Glue Them a Used Car (ram Russ Johnson Pontlac-Rambler On M24 In Orton MY 3-4264 COUPON SPECIAL WATKINS PRODUCTS hat that "special" gift for that "special" someone, worth 10 per cent on any 06 purchase at 163 Oakland Ave.. Pontiac. Call 332-3053 tor free de- llvery service._________ CAR KLEENEX DISPENSER For Only $5.25 OLIVER BUICK 210 Orchard Lake______FE 14145 Christmas Shoppors MONAHAN'S BEEF BUFFET Open Men.-Sun. 11 e.m. to S p.m. DAILY LAKE FRONTS . ---es on Unton - Cooley-Lower Strolls — priced from $10,500 to 030,000, — For heetlnig • fishing- J year-round lake and country living at Its best - MOVE IN FOR CHRISTMAS. DETROITER—PONTIAC CHIEF es,‘ ell Detroiter products meat or exceed the rigid Blue Book standards for heating, plumbing and electrical systems. You never B| 4. You always onlay the uL In safety, comfort end resale value. Iso a large selection of used I and 10 wipes at bargain prices. 10 per cent down. pen dally until 0. Set. end Sun. BOB HUTCHINSON SALES 1301 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-120! _________Drayton Plains DON'T GAMBLE WITH* ’ YOU LIFE Rear Window OeFogger $23.00 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE IS Mt. Clemens SI, FE 3-7954 During tht Busy Christmas Rush EAT AT THE “BIG BOY" Telegraph A Huron Dixie Hwy. A Silver Lake Rd. FOR THAT CHRISTMAS PIANO OR as Hammon, Steinway, Knebe, Sleek, GrlnneH, etc. GRINNELL'S (DownWWn) 27 S. Saginaw FUN FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY A HONDA Motorbike Easy terms. Christmas delivei FAMILY SAFETY FIRST WITH CompletB Highway Emtrgtncy Kit PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FREE-BEAUTIFUL Scotch Pine Christmas Tree With purchase el BIG or more. Ice skates, hockey sticks, skis, sleds, toboggans, guns, barbells, football, baseball, archery, fishing, hunting goods. Fox Snowmo-. biles, NlmrM Camp Traitors. Marina and sporting goods. Poo-Use's only Mercury MerCrutser dealer. CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 E. Walton Pally 9 to 6 FR MSM GIVE AN A-1 USED OAR THIS YEAR FOR CHRISTMAS TEL-HURON AUTO 5 W. Huron St. FE S49T3 - Get That S«cond»Car MANSFIELD TuTO SALES Many sharp cars to choose from 1104 Baldwin FE S-5900 Seeburg Selects Rhythm organ at $1,260. Ludwig, Beverly, Appollo, complete drum sets at $189 50. Complete line of Guitars. Mlnchelto'Music LOOKING FOR A NEW HOME? Why v i Til________ ______ selection of all types ell locations. A courttw. —— staff Is on hand at all times to assist you no matter, whet your real estate problems or desires are. lee us today and start getting reedy to move. TIMES REAL ESTATE 5S90 Dixie Hwy._________OR 44396 GIVE WARD'S GIFT CERTIFICATE' tor Christmas this year MONTGOMERY WARD The Mall Open 9:30 e.m. to 9:30 P.m dally GIFT IDEAS FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY!) Compact 1966 folding 3hp EVINRUDE with carrying case. See the AMF SKI DADDLER SUZUKI CYCLEs” WC-250CCX6 Hut*-tor. RUPP Mini-bikes from S12f. .. Specials — |—Bi —I— —1 traitors. ‘ big Right ns. to Dem< follow signs to -MR AT T1FSICO LAKE. HOLIDAY SPECIAL! Custom kitchens, basements end recreation rooms. Free planning service. FHA terms. FE 44460. MAKE EVERY DAY A HOLIDAY ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 6577 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-1400 MAKE IT A JOYFUL Christmas with a New or Used Cer From PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 45 Ml. Clemens St. FE 3-795/ NEW CONN ORGANS See the "SHOW-CHORD" (your Qulie In teacher), Large selection end immediate deliver BETTERLY MUSIC • Ml 64002 NOW'S THE TIME TO BUYI And Ivan W. Shram Is the men to try. He and his salts staff have a complete end varied selection of all types of homes In all kinds of locations. So don't welt, see SCHRAM and cell the van. IVAN W. SCHRAM, Realtor till Joslyn Ave.____FE 54471 POOL TABLES—BELAIRE . LI 4-0900 - 353-6520 PUT AN ECONOMICAL USED "Beetle" under the Christmas tret this year! Autobahn Motors. Inc., authorized VW dealer, 1745 S. Tele- BOB BORST 1iNCOLN MERCURYw 520 S. Woodward Birmingham MI 6-4538 SUZUKI ALL MODELS IN STOCK TUK0 SALES, INC. 127 E. AUBURN, ROCHESTER __________UL 2-5363______ STEREOS—TV'S—RADIOS Johnson Radio & TV I E. Walton_________FE 0-4549 SAFETY AND PROTECTION CO WITH AN Automobile Safety Kit Included ere the following: Emergency Tire Repair Kit $11.50 SHOP AT HOME, AVOID THE RUSH FREE ALL COLOR CATALOGUE TANDY CRAFTS PonttoC Mill 4034710 SMITH MOVING, COAST WIDE VAN LINES has several pianos which will make excellent gifts thte Christmas, 371 E. Pike, t SANTA RECOMMENDS A HUNTER DODGE FOR THAT SPECIAL CHRISTMAS GIFT , QET A CHRISTMAS DEAL TELL Ut SANTA SENT YOU HUNTER DODGE 499 j, Hunter Blvd. Ml 749SS, "THE GREATEST GIFT" IS A BIBLE Christian Literature Sates SS Oakland FE 44591 TAKE THE FAMILY OUT TO Christmas dlnne- In a "new" used “rfr0m SHELTON P0NTIAC-BUICK 155 S. Rochester Rd. 651-9911 WANT A CAR FOR CHRISTMAS? We can put you into the car of your choice. Your credit to no problem as we handle ail the financing. Stop In today and drive one eway. CAPITOL AUTO SALES 312 W. MONTCALM FE 0-4071 e Track Drive) WILKINS BAR AND RESTAURANt Dinner out tor the whole family. ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY ,T 4105 Orchard Lake Ave. WRAP Y6UR RIBBON Around a sports car. Make Ms or her Christmas • snorting affair. A Large So tact ton r* “— -- ■ •—1 GRIMALDI IMPORTED CAR CO. 090 Oakland Ave. FE I YOU CAN'T BEAT CHRISTMAS IN YOUR OWN HOME modsefiy" i basement, gas built-lns, family kitchen. 75x165' let near Drayton. $14,990. HAGSTR0M -REALTOR- MULTIPLE'LISTING SERVICE AMPt 6-FOOT FLUORESCENT lights. Ideal tor workbenches, shops, $19.95 velut $10.90. Coll at factory showroom. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orcherd Lake. a Gar for dad to use Sec KINO AUTO. SALES '5 W. Huron St. FE 0-4000 BEATTIE BEAUTY? ECONOMY? PRICE? Give him a used cor from Russ Johnson Ponttac-Romblor On M14 In Orion________MY 34306 CUSHMAN ELECTRIC GOLF CAR Ktep him younger longer Easy terms. Christmes delivery. GOLF CAR DIST., INC. 371 S. Saginaw_________FE 44585 FINE CHRISTMAS GIFTS ARE USED CARS FROM: STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 3400 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. FE 0-7137 FOR HIM TO FIX UP HIS CAR Touch-up pencils, color to match. Any cer $1.00 Trailer hitch for oil Pontlacs From $0.95 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemons St. FE S-79S4 For His B«st Christmas EVINRUOE 3-horse foldup motor. SKEBTBR Snowmobile. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evlnrude Dealer" 1099 S. Telegraph Ed. 3334033 MAKE DAD HA^PY MAKE IT A JOYFUL CHRISTMAS WITH A New or Used Cor from PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemons St.____FE 3-7954 NEW MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS. PRICEO AT ONLY S124.9S. KING BROS. FE 44734 FE 4-1663 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyko PICK THE CAR—PICK PRICE FOR DAO FOR CHRISTMAS PATTERSON Chrystor-Flymouth-Vollant 1001 N. Main. Rochester OL 14550 PROTECT YOUR CAR WITH DOOR EDGE GUARDS' 2-doors 15.10 4-doors I7-2S PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemons SL FE 3-7956 CASH AND CARRY 4x1 mahogany v-grooved ... S3.9S 4x7 mahogany v-grooved^ ^... $2.49 &. 'tll sVdock DRAYTON PLYWOOD 4112 W. Walton___________OR 34911 EXCITING NEW THOMAS ORGAN prices starting at $479. Also Incomparable Wurlltzer T o t a t-Tono organs $795 up. Wurlltnr and Thornes pianos. Trade-In specials during tht holiday season. Open dally 9:10-9:30. Sun. 124 JACK HAGAN MUSIC CENTER 469 Eliza bath Laka Road FE 14900____________________332450 LIGHTING FIXTURES FOR THE HOME Exotic styles Imported tram all over the world. Traditional, Provincial end Early American You pay loss at MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT, 393 Orchard Lake. FE 44^62. . RECREATION ROOM BAR, CUS-tom-made by experienced carpenter at your home, mahogany paneled In front, formica top, r wide. I' long. 46" high. Christmas special $58.50. 338-2198. THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs Clothing, Furniture, Appliance! "GIVE CROCKER'S" and you'll know you govt tht vary, vary bon. Oodles and oodles of stocking stuff CROCKER CANDIES LAMPS FOR THE CAR Courtesy 2irtr.T ................ST PONTIAC RETAIL STORE f 65 Mt. Clemons St.___Ft S-79S4 OTHER STOVES, l— And rugs ... Wo toko trade-ins Fra* Delivery IITTLI JOB'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6142 1-75 Set. ' SUZUKI Kawosaki—Whit* Big Bad Bultaco VAN TECK Rupp Mini Bikes GO-CARTS 36" ELECTRIC RANGE Hr Sola Mli»W««gLJg «OF USIL PING PONG VaBLB, '•YiAH-ui-O. $35. Schwinn Bike, $11- Rocking Stir. SIS. 43548" PLUMBING BARGAINS FR R ■ frigorator i fc Electric stov* STfc Harris*'pftsw*, WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE , At Our II W. Pike Stare Only _ tonal chairs rBWMNM living room i ■ size get (to-. ........ £t 85:5 Your Credit to Goad at Wymsnl? ASY TERMS Ft Mil 8S5T Shi threaded? saveUPplumbino CO? 141 iiwinlll. FI 4»1}U. RlSTAliRANT OWNERS DO YOU - - 6-burner, ♦speed, coffee all stainless stoat, rest -FE 4-2997. j E CLOCKS FOR SALE, ___mantis. FE 6-2029. BRASS SLEIGH BELLS, CUTVEd ss^fcsjssrjs 5*-.. '•« man TV FE 2-2257 Open 94 515 E. Walton, comer of Joslyn 33" ZENITH LOWBOY TV, 1963 >IOr fllWt , both In oxc. condition. 39.95 TO $300. FE 8-6214, Drastic reduction on all ALL NEW 23" COLORED TV'! mediate delivery. Also used m»w» and white and colored TV's, Da by Radio TV, FE 44102, 345 Lehigh k OX-40 TRANSMITTER) NC4S RE-colver and "Q" multiplier. S100. FE 24884._______- _________ “ MOTOROLA 21-INCH TV, B6.W SET, I walnut finish. Early American deni sign. Beautiful condlt1-- CHRISTMAS LIGHT SPECIALS Luggage and utility „ S6.95 Park and Braka S4.I0 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 63 Mt. Clamant St.___FE 3-7954 < covering, t KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Salat and Service dord__________OA 1-141 SUZUKI Kawasaki-White Big Bad Bultaco VAN TECK H Rupp Mini Bikes G0-CART$ BEDROOM SET, tllOi DINING wm tot, $100; living room tel, 5; end tables, SIS; lamps, $30; nette sat, $35; rugs, $10 up; pia-j, $50; dresser, $25; Chet's- SIS. I. C, Llpperd, FE S-?931. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large end smell size (round, drop-toet, recta nguler) tables In i S end 7 pc. sets. U4-9I and up.. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 8 E. Pike______________FE 4-7W1 , BUFFET, AFT. TABLE, S2S. MON'S SONY tape deck, 2 10" pioneer 2-way speakers, 338-4859. V 23" RCA FLOOR MODEL, GOOD condition, $45. 682-1098. USED STEREO RECORD FLAYER—635 JOHNSON TV FE I-4S69 45 1. wiiitolt N«|- for Sal* Miscellaneous 67 W-TON t-A ALUMINUM AND VINYL SID-Ing, storm windows, ownings, gutters. For i quality guaranteed lob-call the Old RallabTa Pioneer — no money down—FHA. FE 54545 - Joe Valtoly — OL 1-6623 ROYAL WATER SOFTfeNar-a RUMMAGE WEEK DAYS StTl Sat., Sun. aM day. 13 rieronce. Sectional, refrigerator, Maytag washer, toyw muroe UMtornw. w*-temlty end mlsc. clothing, etc. SPRED-iA+IN FAINTS. WARWICK Supply. 3671 Orchard Lake. Ilf- 2820. _______________ ~ STEEL BUILDINGS, S'X7' UTILI- ■ house ........ Jl» » » utility house ......... nl99J ' screen house- ...... $239JO TALBOTT LUMBER ______ Heetlng, OR 34631 WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT discount prices. .Forbes Prlntlng end Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie CHOICE SCOTCH PINE BEAUTIES. 5' to 7'. Wholesale. MA S-1SB1, MA S-IOOt. AAH Sr‘— CHRISTMAS TREES, CUT YOUR own. Pine, spruce,' $244. 17S N7 Hospital Rd. 682-4969._______ CHRISTMAS TREES, YOU CUT. OA S-3S46. Cf1' -------- CHRISTMAS TREES HUNDREDS OF BEAUTIFUL TREES - TAKE YOUR PICK Fancy apple gift packs. Orchards, 1 mile east of S to 6 deity- ________________ PICK YOUR TREE ON THE.STUMP —Bring the whole famlt Sl!fc an3 12 miles north of Pontiac, V6 mile north-of 1-75 intersection. Codar -Lane Christmas Tree Farm, 1970 Dixie Hwy. MA S-1912.___________________ SCOTCH PINE CHRISTMAS TREES wholesale on Hwy. M14 In Oxford area.' Ph. Metamora 670-2523. Ed SPRUCE CHRISTMAS TREES ! high, for churches, shopping ct tors ond schools, alto small Scotch Pino. EM 3-lltl. Christmas Gifty 60 HORSEPOWER, JOHNSON ELEC-trie start outboard motor, less than 25 hours, *•*> value, tsoo. 2710 E. WaJton. 74-PIECE AMERICAN FLYER SET, Ul! ninn.nnnn ut CIO MLl«t ' JIM'S OUTLET NOW HAS A GARDEN CENTER Grave Blankets, S4.95 to 810.95 Wreaths and Visas GIFT ITEMS Religious - toys - books • gas ranges • pictures ond frames. CHRISTMAS TREES, S3 UP. 2301 Dixie Hwy. FE 4430S PINTER'S MARINE 1370 Opdyko 94 FE 44914 (1-71 at Oakland University Exit) es we handle all the financing. Stop In today end drive one ewey. CAPITOL AUTO SALES 312 W. MONTCALM_______________FE 0-4 DON'T HUNT Got your needed ports from the complete selection it Pontiac Ratal I Store. Anything you naod Is In stock. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemons St. FE 3-70S4 kief your Gar neat WITH FLOOR MATS Front .............. .. 57.05 Root .................. 17 JO PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St, . FE JJ9S4 KEEP MOVING THIS WINTER Complete Selection of Parts tor alt Chevrotets, priced to save you money fair Christmas. Alt guersntesd. MATTHEWS HARGREAVES GIVE HER A CAR OF HER "OWN" 100 per cent financing. Many to choose from TIC Corp., Mr. Sno, Ml 6-5500 December Specials j Hoover upright, 2-speed $ . GE Dishwasher, deluxe, new S1S8.00 Humidifiers by Coolerator, or Sunbeam, automatic, new 554.95 12" GE portable TV, new, oil channels, handle $ 88.00 portable stereo ~” . ds, with stand, si Gibson freezer, 305 lbs. Sl'l VIOLINS; BANJO; PORTABLE I sewing machine, never used. Lee's - Violin Repair, 9 to 2 p.m. 6744524. 3-PIECE PINK BATHROOM SET.I, i Has bullt-ln hand basin, S49.9& 1 Thomspon, 7005 M59 "~~A 6-ROOM HOUSE, MUST BE TORN down and moved, bast offer takes. Sundays end evenings only. 1416 Oiklpy —| | ELECTRIC TRAIN AND ROAD race set. OR 34147 anytime. LECTRIC GUITAR, CAN in ilayed with or without ampllflor, 1110, fancy. FE 5-6564.________________ Calling tlte - w BAG Tito, FE 4- 1959 CHEVY; 2 GUNS; COMPLETE Scuba diving aqulpmant; 1 Bear bow. Priced reas. 6744630. GIVE HER A GIFT OF ELEGANCE THIS CHRISTMAS Tht luxury of a new or used Cadillac from JEROME ELECTRIC STOVE, SEWING MA-' 'oe, portable dishwasher. All Ilka r. Mlsc. furniture. MA 64799. FRENCH BEDROOM SET, 3 BEAU-"*vl sofas, breakfront, wrought iron »t-top table, 4 chairs; knao-to fig - Tt offer. 343-17S4. MOTHER'S HELPER For • whale of a surprise Christmas morning, why not _ that 2nd car now? Always a largo selection on display I , FISCHER BUICK 544 3. Woodward__447- GE STOVE AND REFRIGERATOR, walnut dresser, Danish sectional, other Items, reasonable. MA 5-0450. ADDING MACHINES, TYPEWRIT-art, now and used, adding machine, now electric, 10 keys, $79.50, Royal portable typewriter, now, 169.50, chock protector, 825.00, Cash register, $75.00, wo rant —* -------- Ice, open Sunday, 124 H mas, Beverly's 77SI Aut Utica, 77’ GOOD WORKING REFRIGERATOR 825. Gas stove, 835. Washer. 825. '• * water heater, S2S. FE 5-2766. RICHMAN BROTHERS SEWING CENTER FOR THE WORLD FAMOUS NECCHI SEWING MACHINE It HOLDS 'TIL CHRISTMAS OPEN HTIL 9 'TIL CHRISTMAS. 465 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 5-9283 KIRBY VACUUMS __9 - Used - Repossessed — Save 10 to 20 por cont. Call 0424 between 47 p.m. KIRBY OF ROCHESTER KENMORE LARGE WRINGER, S40, KING SIZE DEE^ fry COOKER, 335-7942, , cost $50, sell $25, H A M I L toO,N AUTO-ler, $45, clothes dryer UNIQUE! Buy her the most useful and appreciated Christmas gift ever; a top quality used CADILLAC from- WILSON OF BIRMINGHAM (ASK FOR MR. WALLACE) MI 4-1930 r* MAHOGANY DROP LEAF TABLE, with 3 leaves, tea cart, lounge chairs, largo white table lamp, Frlgldolre washer, high chair. Iron- __but mW UL MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASHER, excellent condition, 90 day war-ranty on parts. >** ' mahogany pi ehrtonMs a Hand Tools—Machinary 68 APPLES—CIDER CHRISTMAS TREES A score of varieties. Finest quality. Fancy gift packs. Bargains In utility gradas. $1.50 bu. up. Lbts of beautiful trees, priced tow Cameras • Service. A BOLEX W WITH TURRET. S. I6MM Devry, $50. 16MM md protector, $50. 0320 High-id Rd. (MS9). ____________. d Orchards, 2205 E. Commerc MoskalGoods 71 'REED. 5-SWITCH ITALIAN AC-3634077. ALUMINUM FRAME WINDOWS, 2 used 9 section windows, f'xTO" >56 each. FE 4-39»l. ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 L 0 WI N SPINET PIANO, <« , JSrs old. 335-0870. BUNDY CLARINET, EVCELLEI4T condition. With com. 015. Opdyko Hardware FE 8-4484 prints of" okl paintings. HMNH framing. Also gives history of. tot Close Out Sale I Conn Organs greatly reduced BASEMENT SALE: CHEST, BEb, dining table ond chairs, old tru ' washing machine, knick-knacks s. Wadu ' ' ' * 4:30 p.m. on. 1*4 I. Tilda oft Voorhels. __________ BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL AND RtmtonSt Brothers paint. Super Ktm-Tono and SSSSS7S Rustoleum. NECCHI HEIOHTS SUPPLY rtri nvr Tin Tin .2615 Lapeer Rd. FE 6-S431 DELUXE ZIG-ZAG ' to InflaMion ' ■ Two 100-pound cylinders and oqul mont. $12. Great Plains Gao Ci FE 54072.___________________ ENRICO ROSELLI ACCORDIAN — —a, axe., 330-7942,after 5:30. EXPERT PIANO MOVING PIAMOf WANTED Bob's Van Service EM 3-7030 GUITAR (KAY) LIKC NEW. ZASE, picks and Instruction books. $50.00. 9471 Bonnie Briar, Pontloc Lake, after 3:30 p.m. balance. Universal C NEW NELCO DELUXE ZIG ZAG I cabinet. $250 Invested, sectl-.. $150. 103 Oakland. REFRIGERATOR, GOOD CONDI-lion. 2454 Voorheli CLEARANCE OF USED OFPtCh 1 machines. • Fr ' Office Supplies, REFRIGERATOR, SEIGLER O _ healer, freezer, 30" etoctrk range, -‘-i. washer. UL 24702. COLUMBIA STEREO, 4 SPEAKERS. 45 spindle, S albums. Now —| tlon. S7S. 2 470x15 4-ply snow _ on Chevy wheels, M5. Sot of 15-inch chroma wheel discs, 53-00. 3-16)0. A PERFECT GIFT Both Unique and Attractive Model Chevrolet Transistor Radio works on tv transistor battery $15.95 MATTHEWS HARGREAVES 1 Oakland J FE S CHRISTMAS SPECIAL! maracas and DeRAE MUSIC REFRIGERATOR, LARGE FREEZ-er, S2S. Stove, 120. Other appliances. Appliance parts. Michigan Appliance Co., 3217 Dixie Hwy. 4734011. ROUND OAK DINING TABLE (NOT padostal typo), Oil; 2 Bentwood choirs, 01 each) 10-vol. sol of Thackeray. SS; antique dishes; old booksr plank-bottom chairs; JTIf-fany typo lamp, 130; Bay Scout and Cub Scout uniforms, 14 each; Mlsc.; boys ond girls clothing. 602-2176, 5145 Dumhom oft Cm-Elizabeth. SINGER, 1964 Zig-zag equipped for buttonholes, hams and oH your fine eowkr year guarantee. New paymati IS monthly „or $45.41 cosh. credit manamr, Richman ■______ 465 Elizabeth Lake Rd„ FE 54203. EXTRA HOLIDAY FUN TED'S SINOER PORTABLE, StOJl. tlG-OR*g4-1?oiIPP*J CURT'S APPLIANCE $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists •fi *—e lhjlno-----7 * -4— I Orchard Lekt Avo. FE 4-6546 KIDDIE CORVETTE By Chevrolet ’ .jerfcllng Red finish, steering wheel rxVr ruglnchMed. All tarUto?' 1 WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 1? I. HIIBOM FE a^tei Dixie Ing and Hwy. C 1 3-9767. We el 11. Hudson's Hardware, 41 E. Wsl-\ ton. DAVIO-BRADLEY GARDEN TRAC-tor, almost now, Wisconsin motor. Including plow, cultivator, mowing ton*Ploins, OR 39767. DRAFTING TABLES, 4500 DIXIE Hwy. Forbes Printing A Office Supplies. Ws '— “■— 3-9767. sizes. Garage front remodeling Frio ostlmotoa. Berry Deor Satoo Co., Ml Colo Street, Bir-natoghom. FE 2-0201 or Ml 4-1035. CHILDREN'S ELECTRIC ^MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd PonflM, n Tol-Huron FE 34567 LOWREY ORGAN HOLIDAY MOO-el, Irultwood, like now. SNO. FR 34615 aftorS. LOWREY ORGANS With built-in transistor. You owo It to yourself to set and hoar this fabulous Instrument before ytu buy. Prices begin at $495. Ms money down till Fob. 1946. Open 6 days, 9 e.m. to 9 p.m. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC III E. HURON______ FE 44S60 MARTIN ALTO SAX WITH CASE, excellent condition. OA 1-3066. MARTIN PRERES WOOD CLARl'- Y ■ R PIANO AND ROLLS -—tod, any Condttpn. FE 64108. PIANOS, PIANOS. PIANOS, 140 AND Clarinet, S3S; old violin, SIS; Ven Llnet. 371 E. Pike.____ SACRIFICE, ALMOST NEW BALD-WIN SPINET ORGAN. BOTH PERCUSSION AND LESLIE SPEAKERS, MODEL 54, SAME MODEL NOW SHOWING. 363-6377. Gutbransen toll size organ, 81,795. ALSO SAVINGS ON FLOOR MODELS AND OTHER TRADE-INS Jock Hogan Music Centar „ .469 Elizabeth Lake Road Eg 94900______________ 3324500 UPRIGHT PIANO, JUST BEAUTI- THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 1W D—9 ____n USED ORGANS CHOOSE FROM HAMMOND, LOWRRY, WURLITZ-■S, iltvlRKMI, BTC. Priced from $250 GRINNELL'S (Downtown) 27 S. SAGINAW wh WILt~i« SPIK IVIftV Bay M anf ft! Son, tor your musical AUCTIONEERS: BRRRY All la/ikl FB 4-074S or FE S-71 ■VERY FRIDAY . . 7:M P, EVERY SATURDAY . .. 7:9 P EVERY SUNDAY J:00 P. Sporting Goodt-AII Typo, Door Prim Every Auction gift Mtoctton*. Pontiac Parcuatton Cantor Mr. Elltabath Lk. Rd. and Johnson 332-4)g or 335-1130_______________ prices bafora you buy. HALL'S AUCTION SALES Mf^m'uW3L, BEAUTY EQUIPMENT COMPLETE Stera IwlfErt__________7$ DRILL STAND AND ACCESSORIES, Scotsman lea Dakar, roc — MR rail, MS-77EL HORSES, . Boat offer. FE S-2041. Ai STUD REGiistBRED QUARTER hors# italllon, Fredac. con at Joa issM II, anvato treaty. OoMan jjd Corral. EM >4111. ISOS ";r”- SporHm Goods GOLDEN H CORRAL UNDER NEW management. Box (MISW rent, Indoor arena, lighted lor night rld-Ina. Late of riding room. Exeat' * MS1I. 1000 Hlllar Rd. GOOD SELECTION WELL .EROKR C POOL rw, >t;s. TABLE, SLATE prowninQ Superposed ti and . M^geuge. ^modified I * GOOD Uk#D SHOTOUNS AND RL GUNS, GUNS. GUNS - WE BUY, •oil or trade. Try bafora you buy I 50 and 100 yd. range Weatherby, Browning, Winchester, Remington, Savage, rifles and shotguns (now and used). Over and undart, siw.50. Saa the now Colt AR IS. 273 caliber. Wo specialize In • mounting,, (tap toe-u-under). Lyman Bauach and Lamb. Bushneii low to 011.14. Gun repair, Sportsman XL IS chain sew, $141 the Tots Goto that goes everywhere! Also the Polaris snow alar (t models, the Mustang and Colt) IS and )4Vh« h.p Cliff Dray-er's Sport Cantor, into N. Ho Rd., Hglly. ME 4477). Open iKIS AND BOOTS, NEVER USED. aa,m---»—»— ou noosBiroiion m JONES, Raolty Uk W. Hawn ~ FE 44 Livestock 88 SHETLAND PONIES, REGISTERED QUARTER HORSES *—MB saddle harass, wall Golden H Corral. EM hoy-GralB-feGB _____17 THE LARGEST "REAL" F t service store in Michigan. Dears and New Idas parts galore. Homellto chain saws, KnDco Heaters, Colt hydraulic drive riding tractors, tractor eyelet, and It— toys. Gold Boll Gift Stomps merchandise In stock. - Davit l chinary Co., Ortnovllto. NA 74 Head Implements to fit Farmai Super H, lift-all system. Post hot digger, 2 bottom plow, etc. Alt front and loader for same. N, 7-3420. YEAR-END CLEARANCE SALE Wonted Con-Tracks .HA, NEW FUR-priced immediate occupancy in OUR NEW ULTRA MODERN PARK All 1044 Modi la on Display In Every Price Romp At Winter Discounts ACTIVE-TRAVELO-VAC (Vy MHO South of Waterford) OPEN T PAYS DETROITER—PONTIAC CHlt Largo Mlad Ion at uotd • erxt wldos at bargain price. IB per cent down. Open daMj until I, Sat. and a discount tpocial _»w doom payment FREE ^UvJ??Y-PR'lir’SET-UP WE GUARAMTBS A PARKING SPACE. fk55y*SmSc, champion PARK WOOD AND PARK ESTATES Low overhead - save real money MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. 338 0772 Mdtow| Tpigarogh NowandUsgdCors CORVAIR CORSAIR. Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER -HI too S. Woodward EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid ___FOR THAT EXTRA $horo Car "Chtck the Net, than Hftthabsst" at Averill AUTO SALES PE 24070 1M0 PIxlO PE 4400* [510* LD Ul $3ttl _______>2041______ HELP! E Wo need SOS sharp Cadillacs, Pom tlacs. Old* and Bulcks tor out-of. atato market. Tag dollar pr'* MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Av*. FE MSB__________FE >4021 334-7032._____________ lt4S CORVETTE COUFE, POWER, loaded. FB 0-24S0. 1965 CHEVROLET New ooJ Iliad Can lit 17SS T-BIRD^OWNBR. 1757 FORD CONVBRTIBlO, POWEB steering, auto. MW Bead oandWton. 426-4544 motor? dick OQS.~07B4B41." HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 404 I. WOODWARD AVI. .. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-7500 145 CHEVELLE SUPER SPORT, 250 auto, all powtr, revlrb, Call PI 2-5163. 17*1 CHkViLiR NEW YOkkik 1959 FORD *— >-■«■ s-cyllndor engine. ______________m las tow. redtotwd hooter, only OS-W dawn and tiM a FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM .... FORD CONVERTIBLE, SS77 NORTHWOOP AUtO Sato* FE B4237 ITSO fBuNOBRBIRD, FULL POW-ar air conditioned, 05 dawn. LUCKY AUTO SALES, PE 4-1000 or FE 3-7S54. 1740 FORD 2-DOOR. NO MONEY of only. $147. LIFPE FORD, 430 MORE MONEY PAID FOR SHARF CARS chains, $477, WITH ELECTRIC STARTER, WHILE THEY LASTI KING BROS. Pontiac Rd. at Opdyjfc| ^ Rent Trniltr Spncn Swid-OfEEl-PIrt 76 CHOICE TOP SOIL AND BLACK dirt. 7 yard*. >15.0*1. FE 44810. GOOD DRIVfeWAY GRAVEL. 5 10*3" CABOVER, SLEEPS A COM- . _ R CAMPER MFQ. CO. MB Auburn Rd.___________SB-3334 1743 17-FOOT CEN+uQy, SELF-CON-talned. 642-5730. SAND, GRAVEL, FILL OIRT, TOP soil, block dirt. BulMoting, excavating. OR >5050. Wood-Coal-Coko-FvM Ptt»—Hunting DafS A REAL BUY now low HOBO pickup camper, furnace, gas refrigerator, stove and oven. Marino stool, so If-contained. Many other features. 01,350 including tax. ALSO wo have 10W HOBO Tor 0475. Ml you do It your own cabinet "they ARE QUALITY GUILT HOBO MFO. SALES Rear 3345 Auburn Rd. S AKC MINIATURE POODLES, 4 weeks old, will hold till Christmas. 473-0214. DACHSHUND PUPS, TERMS, stud dost. JAHEIMS FE 8-253$. ADOG IS tHfc ONLY fRUE LOVE money Can buy. AKC poodle pup. In time for Christmas. 474-0215 573-3743. AKC WIRE f6X TERRIER, m5L6, 14 months. Call FE 3-0757 before TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1732. Guaranteed tor See thorn and get -lion at Werner Tral W. Huron (gton to Wally Byam's exciting caravans). ’ AKC' BLOliO COCKERS AKC BEAGLES, 3 MONTHS, FE- males. $30. QR3-5007.____. AKC MALg ST. BERNARD 1-YEAR- : REGISTERED COLLIE PlJP- Ml TINY TOY POODLES, Sit ver AKC toy poodle stud service, . black. OR 3-2181 Mt— AKC POODLE PUPPIES, LARGE AKC REGISTERED 1 * spies, S wks. old .. I ; 2-7744 dr FE 4-5243. AKC CHIHUAHUA . Service. IMATODP' UPPIES, S i‘S. 332-7131 AKC, PUPS AND _/ APPOINTMENT __ H boulevard, Rochester. Cleon, comiortabli. * bathing, grooming, b ed facilities. tTo 3 4740. 551 >000. HER PURE-purabted Brit-pirents excellent hunt-bgid until Christmas, Roy Otwgy, MA 41455. ,___________ FREE PUPS, brod Basset, tony, both ■ LOVES CHILDREN. FB 2-5381 AF- POODLES. lug PIXIE HWY. OR MIXED GERMAN SHEPHERD PUP-plas. FE 5-7054. _ --------tUMt FOR BASSENJI PART TOY MANCHESTER mat* pup. S30; small tomato IVY years S5. Radbona coon h >, roaaonohk r, AAA 4-1484 tie. by appointment POODLE BREEDERS FO* SALi. puppies. S3S and S5B. FE 547S7._ HG'STERE^MIH^UA AHU Tor Few te^terpwiB^ChRwm Iwa and _TW Ft- •—*- **^ sarvlca. FE 3-1477. AESE K <25-2111 SIAMESE jCITTEI MIINATURE. BChnauzeOT Tondmit, TINY TOY -G^iife K POODLES. males, SUP, OR 3-7075. 1745 HONDA 140, 1400 MILES. 473- 1047 attar 4.______________________ >45 HONDA, 150 CC. EXCELLENT condition, taka over ba'------*“ 1965 CLEARANCE Centui^-Garway—Sags staa in and choose yours-Century Demo, IWPttawdi 7B . 1745 Honda 350 Scrambler . --- Honda Super Sport Ducatl 250 Scrambler . battery and water system. Rataii $5,145.24, now 13,775. 34' Century, dinette model, self-contained with * ' * * ------- 17* Oar- These era all new traitors i are not ^ able to accept tr* TOM STACHLER A FIRST IN THIS AREA NOW ON DISPLAY ALJO 23-ft. tandam axle fully self-contained BRAND NEW M0N0MATIC sanitation system Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Philo Hwy.______ MA 5-1400 BOOTH CAMPER Aluminum covers and campers ... any pickup. 4247 laPortst. Water, ford. ORH“‘ CLOSE-OUT SALE 1965 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. 51 East Walton, dally 7-4, FE B-4482 CAMPERS TRAILERS Wolvarlna Alio used traitors and camoar*. Pickup covert. Wa tali ----------- Reese and Draw-tlto hifr HOWLAND SALES at I RENTALS OR >145 Oxford Trailer Soles 744 MODELS. IS to 40 «t< 1-10-lS-SO wide—and 2 story. Mariettas, Slew-arts, Belvedere and th* tomou* lightweight Thermo-panel Winnebago travel unit*. Also good used units W* guarantee trailer space. We have no gimmicks. Just IS yean of good merchandising an 1400 satisfied customers. Open 74, closed Sunday Mila south of Lake Orton on Ml __________MY24721 Parkhurst Trollor £alas 4 MOBILE..UVINg lS I toddy si .rated he Oxford ot Country O GALE MCANNALLY’S NATIONWIDE AUTO BALES , 1304 Boldwin FE 84525 PREMIUM PRICES PAID FOR LOW-MILBAOE USED CARS. VAN'S AUTO SALES 4548 DIXIE HWY. OR >1358 New—d ibed Timto lMl New end Used Csrs way between Orton and MSA- next to *“*“ isln. MY 2-4411. Junk Cart-Tracks 101-A 1100X20 TIRES IN GOOD CONDI-- 334-2555 otter 3 p.m. Jit AND' SNOW Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 N D A SCRAMBLER 305 town, mutt tall by Wad. r payments, 8*74142 attei UW CYCLE YAMAHA Two locattons to aarv*. ¥•£. ] Auburn, Utica and 7415 Hlflhl Road, Pontiac. 1755 FORD MQTOR, 207 CU. 1.... 4-barrel carburetor comp lata, MY 3-1140.__________ M0 CHEVY FOR PARTS, BODY TUK0 SALES, INC. S27 AUBURN — ROCHESTER -• 2-5343 1745 MUSTANG 4-CYLINDER' I tor and syncro-three speed tri mission. 1100 actual miles. C ---- “ **'" ‘—tween lira , Charlie': SALEI SALEI SALEI » USED MOTORCYCLES CHEVY • ^ORD • COMlT - FALCON * “1- factorY. rebuilt mutora. 077 install. Terms. Other makat hilr it TT... ' M l 4-SPEED TRANSMISSI r linkage and ahltti ball h Y MORE TO CHOOSE FROM _________________ r HortBa,.frl. umph, Ducatl. Norton and ESA. Used Motorcycles ___da. Moped* Cushman, Siuvm CUSTOM COLO* FE 44! Bicycles___________________*4 a", 34", 14". MB UP. COY*' Girl*'. Hold *111 Christmas, Bogh-AcCGtBGrttE 9/ r CENTURY GOAT AND TRAILER, needs mechanic, reasonable, 334- 7757 after 3:30 pjn.________ ir kUtlAbOUT BOAT, 75 WRS^-Rke*ne . 493-4480 or 333- C0ME TO THE BARGAIN BARN campers to choose from. Service, supplies and storage. Hours ON' wbmwiycnm fHEfr* JACOBSON TRAILER SALES A RENTALS BOAT STORAGE- KARS BbATS Motors Lake Orion, MY HOB- CubhLbr turbocraft jet spin tin boat*. Correct Craft Inboard speed bo Shall Lake and Silver Lino i board and Inboard*. Interceptor Marin* angina*. Eaton and Volvo drive. Evlnrude outboard motors. Complete boat and molar rap Boat hauling and storage. FREE Gift Certificate travel traitor < Streomlines-Kenttkills Franklins—Fans—Craw and, Monitors f-uak y* Over— Sarvlca altar the Sato— Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 1S»0 Molly Rd., Molly ME 4-47 i XL— ------------' Sundays— holiday rambler. Itxr clean, Ilka MW, sett-austeinad. sleeps 4, panwanant bad, BBral extras, mad* 2 trips private party, heart condition, OR >772L____^_ PIONEER CAMPER SALES 8-GEOROOM marleyte. excellent AKC ragtitomL deposit t _ graashBcsr TOY WWTB MALE POODLE, > 33x8 ANDERSON, mpnrnt otd. FE t-SWS.. 1 condition. 743 LaSatl*. TOY POOOLfe, AKt. MALI, »ay Ngjyv WlOON HOUSETRAILEl;. . 4^Wh.p___1 • MitJ t6YM6BLC. hLV|R. t Y* EM. 3-5344. Call FB >7772. ' d fumlthad, air MICHIGAN TURBO CRAFT OAKLAND MARINE SALES ay-Pant 573-2442 i. Economy Cars. 2335 Dixie. MUR tWBRH U3CU 1AK3 GLENN'S lamraa"-""1" ______K CARS - TRUCKI ow anytime. FE 2-2444. ALWAYS BUYING '■*”1—FREE TC « fit 4 cyl. Tempest. Fi _ CHRYSLER WINDSOR 2-DOOR hardtop, double power, custom In-terlors, >875. MA 4-5809. 1962 CHRYSLER "300" 4-door, hardtop, car 1$ Immaculate, power. You lust can't bast MUST SELL 1941 T-BIRD REPOSSESSION, NO S NEEDED, NO PAYMENTS 'TIL FEB. CALL MR-BURKE AT 338-4528. SPARTAN. 1740 FALCON STATION WA06n. 1 door, bargain. NIc*. 8275. 333-7542. H. Riggins, dealer. Oh, nothing much, Lucille — Just rearranging some fur-; niture and Henry’s plans to go bowling this evening!’’ 1745 FORD Vb TON automatic, custom ei paid Show Truck, JIROME FORD, *' Dealer, OL 1-7711. PICKUP. VS 1742 SUICK ^ isTmta^' Hi 1V„ ____.JPCHEVY REPOS- — SESSION, VS AUTOMATIC, POWER, NO S NEEDED ANO NO PAYMENTS TIL' FEB. CALL MR. BURKE, AT 33S-452S SPARTAN. AIR V-S VERY FE 8-4484 SALES, FE 4-1004 or FE 3-7S54. GMC FACTORY BRANCH New and Used Truck* Fa MBS CONVERTIBLE. 1745 BUICK SKY-lark, fir* anglh* rad. bucket ie"‘ powar brake*, power steering, ai 1966 FORD F-100 Pickup 240 Cl 4-cytlnder angina, ell flit washers, froth air heater and l. frosters, 5-7.71x15 4-ply liras. Fad-: oral tax and 2-year warranty. $1795 1 Ask for Truck Dept. FI 5-4101 John McAuiiffa Ford ‘ FE 5-4101 CADILLAC 1754 4-DOOR. power. U------------- 2-1311. Aafa-Mori|te Insurancg 104 AUTO INSURANCE TERMS AVAILABLE- >TOF IN TODAY- Andtrson & Associates FE 4-3535 1044 Joslyn CHEVY-FORO-PLYMOUTN Credit prob"- -------- Tic Cere-1 Foreign Core BURKE AT 338-4528. SPARTAN. 1963 CHEVY II 2-Door 4-cyiindor angina, standard tri mission, radio, hoator and wh walls. Real Economy. $1095 H* BUICK WILDCAT, 4-DOOR, ALL UA.„1U. ruauv power,. 85 down LUCKY AUTO HASKINS CHEVY FB 4-10S4------- ■*•■*“■* ■ -" 1963 CHRYSLER "300" 2-door hardtop, all factory power, exceptionally clean, mechanically A-l, another weakly special, prf $1695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 14 >. Woodward Ml 7- &404 11743 CORVAIR COUPE, S479 i, 2230 Pontiac Rd. a^Kltxlyke. ■ 1943 STING RAY COUPE, 4-SPEED, j. 250 horsepower, rad- 82,400. OR «5 BUICK CONVERTIBLE SPE-dal, actual mll?t_572, taka over payments. PE 0-S427. 1 Oakland Ava. 1963 CHEVROLET Super Sport convertible, let b with black vinyl matching Into VI automatic, bucket seat* console, excellent condition, a V*"^ $1595 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 714 ». Woodward Ml 7-3314 CADILLAC, 1740 4-DOOR SEDAN Devllle hardtop, beige: air condl-Honing, -----**• »<-• 1743 CHEVY IMPALA 2-DOOR hordtop, VI auto., power steering, radio, whttowalla, 17,000 mil**, oxc. 1700 CADILLAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP, 1740 CADILLAC DoVILLB WITH itr, promlui Ith $75 dowi E FORD, 410 LLOYD'S SALE 17S7 VAUXHALL STATION WAOON, real clean, 8145. Sava Auto. FE S-3278.__________________________ W0 VAUXHALL. GOOD RUNNING condition, >200. OR 3-7301. 1740 VOLKSWAGEN. S377 I tits Ford and Mercury. SITS tor transmission and link. 8300 for complete ast-upl 335-0874 attar 4. PARTS FOR RENAULTS Aotor—Transmission—Complete ..Iso tor Slmca and mast Imports. GRIMALOI IMPORTS, >70 Oakland Ngw and Used Tracks 103 1748 DODGE PICKUP, A LITTLE rust, runs joed, |BA Ud tires. >125. 573-5571. 152 FORD PICKUP. FOR SALE or trado tor car from 174* 1753 Ford or Chevy. FE >5147. , A-l SHAPE, 3RD F 400 12* PLATFORM , V-l, 2-speed transmission, -at, excellent ... — Alto 175* Dodge platform Wit. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO* 1104 S. Woodward Av*. “* 1743 TRIUMPH, LEAViNO TOWN— Must *411. 482-4241 aftor 4 p.m. 1744 OPEL. tAkl OVER PAY- &s." ITU VW, LIKE NEW, MANY Extras, 3700 mil**, MA 5-1U3. 1745 KARMANM OHIA, RED. TAKE axel, 825x20 10-ply hydraulic tllFbad with hydraulic winch, new paint. *2,500. King Bros., PE *0734.____________________ i** GMC t - TON PLATFORM with lift gala, 4-speed tranamle-alon, dual rear wheat*, 8405. Aim 1955 Dodge 1-ton with same equipment. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO- 1104 S. Woodward Avo., mlngham, Ml 4-2735._____________ $1595 Crissman Chevrolet (On Top of South Hill) ROCHESTER OL 2-9721 SIMCA 1940 4-DOOR, CLEAN, RA-dio and heater, 14,500 actual miles. UL 2-3120. SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS 1743 CHEVY Vb-TON STEPSIDE real hie*. $1,075, PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO* 1104 S. Woodward Avo., Slrmineham, Ml 4-273S. ITU DODGE- W TON PICKUP, Oakland Chrysier-Plymouth 734 Oakland Av* 332-71SI PONTIAC'S NEW AND ONLY JEEP DEALER 2S NEW JEEPS IN STOCK Camptata Part* And Sarvlc* Superior Rambler mission, radio, heater, like new! JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Ooetar, OL------ sat* canoes Motors OWE n^TmaX I N^SUPPL Y 4 Orchard Lake_____FE Ml Iraida Boat Storage MOTOR REPAIR Wide track Auto Croft 10 W. WW* Truck PE 5-1311 ON DISPLAV OWENS CRUISERS Chris-Craft Speedboats Motor i Marine Sales PE *MO B. Blvd. *t S*gHN 1964 CHEVY El-Camino pickup, VI angina, automatic fra... mission, hoator, radio, whltowallt, color of rod) Only — $1845 Crissman Chevrolet (On Tog of South HIM) IQCHESTER ■ OL >7721 $1495 Homer Hight MOTORS, INC. PONTIAC-GUICK-CHEVROLCT OA S-252S____Oxford. Mlchtga 1745 PORO RANCHERO PICKUP, OUR NSW INSIOE SHOWROOM IS NOW COMPLETE - All '44 II art now In Stock - LONE STAR. MFO and GLASSTRON GOATS. art looking tar WINTER PRICES J Stop In new - w* have g fait ‘45 Mercury*. 3.0 rag. NOW. ONLY 8M0.7S. Stag Clllt Ortycr Marine Ohr. 1S210 Holly Rd. Holly, cM ME «d*7t 1966 GMC Vb-top PICKUP h tha r bak, hoator, datroatar*. fliter, Washer*, aim baits, ana Continues 1963 CADILLAC coup*. Midnight b Ing Intarlor. 1964 CORVETTE Convertible with 4-speed transmit-lion, radio and heater, whitewall tire*, almost now condition. Only SI47 or old car down and wookInpayment* of Slf-72. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM “T * “ $2545 1961rStMCA ■ door sedan with many extras, stick ahift transmission, economical transportation, full pries $277, only $3.00 down and $3.r par w*0k. W* handle and arrang all financing, call Mr. Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM 1965 VW 2-Door or* other^Ilintel.. KEEG0 PONTIAC 0ALES A SERVICE 682-3400 LLOYD'S SALE Continues 1964 CADILLAC ill power, alr-conditloned Mu* with matching Into $3695 Lloyd MOTORS 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 lOfl MIG — _A LITTLE CHARMER WITH A 4-SPEED, RA-DIO, HEATER AND REAL WIRE WHEELS, PULL PICE, S1.S77. S55 OAKLAND Aim. (V4 MILE N. OF CASS AVE.) FE S-453S. 6MIW-#0>»-Pi-VM6uTli. ClKPiT problems? . - Will francs. TIC WE HAVE Han at SO used VW* Sjw,SZ.,b 1757 CHEVY. RUNS FINE. REA-sonablt. M3 OaKland. 1757 CHEVROLET, iTlck SHIFT -Radio and hoator, full prke only 1140. MARVEL WRAP YOUR RIBBON Around a sport* car. Make hit or her Christmas • ■artlng affair. A Large Selection at Haw or Used, New er4 Ubo4 Con 106 NEED A CAR? son bankrupt In racaivorthlp, had a repossession or just credit pnobtams bi Ranaralt give you Immediato - Credit no pruolam, wi — Call Mr. Dan at FE 8-4171 Approval by phone. FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just oast ot Oakland , I75S BUICK 4-0OOR SEDAN, 33JM0 1757 BUldK INVICTA. 37,000 AC-tual miles, all power, vdittawallt, 4-deor, 8354, 3*34004. SPARTAN ONLY IPEdlAL^ 1037 BUICK CONVERTIBLE IN SOFT ERMINE WHITE Wf™ * RED INTERIOR, POWSI COURSE AND ROAD READ' . YOU. PULL. MICa. BS77. S55 OAKLAND AVE. (14 MILE N. OP CASS AVE.) FE S-452S. 1741 BUICK 4-DOOR HARDTOP, Ctlttomla car, SS down. LUCKY AUTO, FE 4-1004 or FE >7854. TRADE, NEED NOT BE PAID FOR. CALL MR. BURKE AT 131. SPARTAN. 1742 BUICK ELB6tAa 225, HARD-top, like now, » down. LUCKY AUTO, FE 4-1005 or FE-3-7B54. Ill N. Main It. ’ ms BUICK CONVERTIBLE WITH AUTOMATIC TRAN* MISSION. RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NOj MONEY DOWN. Assume1' weekly payment* of S7JS — -CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7300. Lloyd MOTORS 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 M4 CADILLAC CONVBRTIBLI air cond. if.ooo mil**. Ilka nm 424-4514 or FE 3-7S45. 144 CHEVY II 2-DOOR. AUTO-malic, IS down. LUCKY AUTO FE 4-1004 or FE 3.7154- 1744 IMPALA HARDTOP, 4-DOOR, power steering and brakes, extras, rati sharp and clean, 01,700. FE 44154. WILL ACCEPT GUNS, BOAJS, MOTORS Sunshine from a beanery Echo from a steamboat whistle Exhaust fume* from an outboard motor or, almost anything movable AS PART DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY NEW OR USED CARI BILL SPENCE 6673 Dixie Highway ChrysIgr-Piymouth-vaiiant Rembler-Jeep CLARKSTON _____MA 5-2635 ...... . ___ POWER, —_ THE BUILT-INS T-BIRD LUXURY HAS. FULL PRICE, $1,577. S55 OAKLAND AVE. (to MILE N. OP CASS AVE.) FE 8-4528.________ 1762 THUNDERBIRD LANDAU hardtop, radio and haater, powar tleertog^ brakos^wlndowt, 1-own- Oakland Chrwer-Plymouth — 332-7150 1743 FORD 6ALAXIE 500 ' PA4T- FORD lta 4-DOOR, AUTOMATIC, , good condition, private, $1.->r beat ottor. 447-4484. 1964 CHRYSLER 2-door Hardtop with automatic, powar itoerltn and brakes. Only $2250 HASKINS CHEVY CROWN IMPERIAL, 4-DOOR nin powar, air conditioning, don't mil* at *3175. Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Ave____________332-9150 I CHEVY SUPER SPORT, tt power, 4-speed, axe. cm n, >1700. 6S2-404S. 1744 (tHgVHOLET I M P A LA >TA-2M h!^*ngln*P0^'l-tir#ck, tilt wheal, traitor hitch. 81,750. EM >4313. _____________ 1964 CHEVY Impola Sport Coup*. - ^ steering and breiwy. < $1795 HASKINS CHEVY MA 5-3404 1744 CHEVY SPORT COUPE, CLEAtl — No reasonable offer refused. 4734157._______________ 1744 CORVETTE CONVdltTlBLE, 1964 IMPERIAL ;rewn coupe, air candlttonc.,__ id with all th* extras you would vent. This car also hat 5 h—' taw premium tires, lust Ilk* ■ top quality value. $3295 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 714 S. Woodward Ml 7-3114 1745 IMPERIAL L^BARON 4-D60R, beautiful midnight blue, vinyl top, lull powar, air conditioning, llJNg actual mltos, plenty at warranty toft, *44.75 par montn. Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth >34 Oakland Ave._______3324150 1964 FORD Econolint station but, 7-paatangar xtel, radio and hoator, whlta-ill liras, only 147 or o" — speed transmlsaton, real tha r p, *3,075. PATTERSON CHEVROLET 1104 S. Woody ' ' “ — ------------ 4-2735. Matthews-Hargreaves Chevyland Oakland_________FE 44547 1965 CHEVROLET Impala 2-door hardtop, VI, automatic powar steering, radio, heater, whlto W*"*' $2495 Crissman Chevrolet (On Ten ot South HIM) O L 2-7721 fa CHEVY MALIBU SPORTS coupe, loaded, 11775 with G7* — JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, Oakland Avo. FE 5-4101. 1964 CHRYSLER Newport 4-door, power steering i brakes, good tires, mechanic! $1795 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH SEDAN WITH SLANT SIX, AUTOMATIC AND PULL PACTORY EQUIPMENT. PULL PRICE, 8377. *55 OAKLAND AVO. (to MILE N. OF CASS AVE.) FE S-4528. i, IWV LANCER 4-DOOR V gon, auto., clean, good Brakes. Exc mileage. Set M 1741 D66GE LANCER, A second car, full price 1575. Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 74 Oakland Av*._______3324158 NO * NEEDED ANO IN) katMENTS *TIL FEB. CALL A BURKE AT 338-4528. SPARTAN. SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS FORD CUSTOM WITH WTO-MATIC AND PULL PACTORY EQUIPMENT. TUXEDO BLACK WITK.AMD INTERIOR. FULL PRICE, 81,377. S55 OAKLAND AVE. (to MILE N. OP CASS AVE.) FE BIRMINGHAM 17U FORD RANCH WAOON, HAS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN —Assume weekly payment* ot IS.II. CALL CRlDIT MOR. Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURNER FORO, M| 4-7100. MISSION, RADIO ANO HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of SS.72. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mf. Parks at HAROLD TURNER . FORD, Ml 4-7SOO. 144 FORD V4, 4-DOOR, AlJT6-mafic, axealtont condition, private owner. 330-3757. HA FORD XL 500, 2-DOOR HARP; top, lust like now, SS down, LUCKY AUTO. FE 4-1 >»4 or PE 3-7854. HAROLD TURNER I 4-7501 1744 FORO GALAX IE 500 FAST-back, VI, automatic powor^ staar-Ing. brakes, factory warranhL SV 495, JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 14711. 1744 FORO FAIRLANE, VE AUTO-matic, M down. LUCKY 'SUTO SALES. FE 4-1006 or FE 3-7054. BLUB, 17a MUSTANG, 2-PLUi-l Faetbeck, SB-4774 af»- « u vary clean. >1,775. 4S2-W Pratty Ponies 1965 Mustangs 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM \ CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS > 2 PLUC 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $79 Down HAROLD TURNER 351 Osktond Av*. 1957 CHEVY Man with S-eyllndar angina, malic tranamiatlon, radio —— hoator, full Price 8277, only 13.00 down and S3JN par weak. Wa handle and arrange all financing, call Mr. Dan at: FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just east at Oakland 1757 CHEVROLET STATION WAC on, SS down. LUCKY AUTO SALES FE 4-1004 or FE >7854. 1757 CHEVY STATION WAGON, $125. >75 - cMtvROLET, 1*58. GOOD IgaIn* AUTO. SMI W. Hurt* CHRVEOLET, AUTOMATIC., war steering and brahaS. A nice-nnlng car for tt)* family, „. lea, 8275. MARVEL___________251 osktond 1959 CHEVROLET FOUR TO CHOOSE FROM, 2 —d 4 doors, aytomattes cks. as low tt 1177, only $1.00 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM tt oast of Osktond 1740 CHEVY 2-DOOR. EXCELLENT condition, 47,100 mltot, no Beat ottor. 343-5577. ■_________ 1740 CHEVY 2 DOOR. REAL NICE, I 1740 CHEVY IMPALA, 2 • L__________ hardtop. 4, auto., mator newly overhautod, radio, heater, FB 1740 CO MMM* shape, . I R MONZA, WHITE m# CHiW va, stick, bronze beauty, no rust, *177 Ml price, *4237. j 1740 CORVAIR, 2-DOOR, 4-SPSED.i • ihtpa, 8350, will trad* tor ITMor lfMOtovy. Iiwa. REPOS! ■ 1755 or 1754 Chevy. FE J DUiMIdw-lraWfVV'/ money down, paymonts ot V4. bk-l_______ 1741 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, . ■ speed,- tool Infection. A real buy. S1JM. PATTERSON CHEVROLET BE, INS S. Woodward mlngham. Ml 4-2735. INDECISIVE? i PLAY THE BIG WINNER! GO CADILLAC ALMOST LIKE NEW 1965 CADILLAC (T /HOC SEDAN Ml/J ONLY 11,000 miles . PRICED TO SELL AT SMALL CAR 'PRICES FROM wnmw - OF BIRMINGHAM (ASK FOR LLOYD WALLACE 1350 NORTH WOODWARD PHONE Ml 4-1930 D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER V1Q65 Hut mi Deed Cm 10 f Qf'o _sasaiaPM| ^lll^rRDtr.Fn^il°--,>'— t5 down. LUCKY AUTO. FI 4-1004 or FI 3-7*54. mi ****** Wake, v*'p awM-saras _____ JEROME FORD - Rochester FORD Dealer, OL t-571t. MUST DISPOSE OF 14*4 MUSTANfc gs SUm*. call owner, MA 4-1541 1M3 MERCURY 2-DOOR HARDTOf*, IMS FORD COUNTRY SEDAN IMS’* MUSTANG FASTBACK, engine, automatic, J.300 mil**, 100. 334-1424. 1M3 COMET DELUXE 4-DOOR, R LINCOLN CONTINENTAL W64, conditioned. approx. . 11,800 l mlle». Sell or trade lor good oowtraet. Mr. Drawer, 452-2*73 »<7 MERCURY,''CLEAN, ORIGINAL lady. PE 5d4l5. OLIVER BUICK Double Checked —Used Cars- w mlleagel .. SI,MS mi WILDCAT h Stowing New lad Deed Cm 1M me MERCURY MOAN, POOP JuJrprtoT'oo'ly 'iM7m,JoJlNdTIS& AULIFFE FORD, W Oakland Am. AUTO SALES. F| 4-ISM IMS MERCURY 4-DOOR WITH POWER (RAKES AND POWER STEERING -AUTOMATIC TRANS-MISSION, RADIO AND HEATER. WMITiWALL TIRES. RESOLUTELY NO MONEY OWN. Atiume r psymant* d 57.42. CREDIT MOR;__Mr. ‘iStJS 1R«3 RED AND WHITE MERCURY. *** “*-■-—*“* —an power, mrm New mmI Used Cm MU COMET WAGON, I CYL. EN-« #ln«, automatic, heater. Law MIs-age. Extra sharpl JEROME FORD, Rgr FORD Dealer, OL 1-471), 1963 MERCURY Autobahn Specials IMS Pontiac OTO c ometlc trantmlulon, whitewall* — Comat with | minion, | SI,W5 engine . pwer steering Chevrolet 4 a, custom trim, doy- i FORD Galaxle J-door hardtop. 196-210 Orchord Lake FE 2-9165 Chevrolet 4-door. 1M0 Chevrolet convertible. Horizon bhw. fthfeh, automatic tranr—1"1— 4-cyllnder angina tiro* aim -— excellenf transportation Autobahn Motors, Inc. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC 444 S. WOODWARD AVI. eiRMINOHAM_Ml 4-7100 tranimMon, axe. condltloi mT, MA 4-10SS._______________ 14*4 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE, LLOYD'S SALE Continues 1965, MERCURY "Braettway" 4-door. I - cylinders outometlc, double power, radio $2295 Lloyd MOTORS 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 RIARMADUKE By Anderson and Learning OLDS, DEPENDABLE. 115*. I»5> OLDS, tt HARDTOF, lift AuLL price. No cath needed. Oixlyk* " tors, 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opd 1965 MUSTANGS '5 to Choose From HARDTOP - CONVERTIBLES Automatic transmission As Low as $59 Down As Low os $59 Mo. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. _ 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. EIRMINOHAM Ml 4-7300 price 177. TEL-A-HUR0N AUTO SALES IB S. Totoooroh_______Ft M44I “The more you put qn, the better be koke!” «5i RAMBLER 2-D06r, RA&IO —I hooter, automatic, good trans-etlon, no money down, 53* New end Used Cm 106 brakes, power stoarlng, only 11.00 down and 11.00 par week. Wo handle and arrange all flnandnc FE 84071 Capitol Auto IM1 PONTIAC STATION WAOON ------------ ngg ng.ua. Northwood Auto Solei FE Htt 1MB OLDS CONVERTIBLE, POV& or only HIM with «M down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, 410 Oakland Avo. FE 5-4101, New and Used Cm 106 1M1 TEMPEST, 2-OOOR AND . door, 1 to choooo from, 15 down. LUCKY AUTO SALES, FE 4-1004 " FE >■17454. TAKE OVER PAYMENTS 6n 1 1962 OLDS HOLIDAY WITH FULL power, air conditioning, W5 down. Finance balance of 11445. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, 410 Oakland THE "HQT ONES" — Have Just Arrived — Now on Display in Our Showroom 7 LITRE 2-Dr.. Hardtop with the 425 V-8 engine, 345 h.p. with 4 on the floor, radio, visibility group, nylon whitewalls. Bucket seats, power disc brakes. The All New Fairlane "500" GTA 2-door hardtop, with the 390, 4-barrel V-8 engine, 335 h.p.; radio, visibility group, power steering, whitewalls, bucket seats. New Fords, "His and Hers," Crusamatic and/or 4-speed con-tule. BEATTIE FORD "Your Ford Dealer Since 1930" On Dixie Hwy., Waterford OR 3-1291 LLOYD'S SALE Continues 1962 OLDS "98' 4-door, I, automatic, power Ing and brakes, radio, h whitewalls. .$1495 Lloyd MOTORS 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1963 OLDS F-85 Convertible, all white M bucket seats, runs Ilka a price to stir quickly, only— $1295 BIRMINGHAM CHR YSLER-FLYMOUTH 414 S. Woodward_____Ml 7-1214 SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner Birmingham Trades AT LOWEST PRICES 411 $■ Woodward_______•414-5111 1964 OLDS Vista crulsor, f-passenger, only 14, 000 actual miles, power brakes and itoorlng, V0 outometlc, spies*. a roar clean wagon, look this on* and you'll buy. $2095 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-FLYMOUTH 14 >. Woodward — M l blACK *6n BLACK, PONTIAC SAFARI ___________ „tt full price No cash noodad. Opdyke Motors, 2230 Pontiac Rd. *1 Opdykt. FE 1-4237.__________ 1442 PONTIAC 6AYaLINA, 2-DOOR, I, outo. Call OVOO. OA 0-3347. 1442 PONTIAC STARCHIEP WITH power, 045 down, fInane* balance of 01445- JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD, 43o Oakland Avo. FE 5 — itoorlng an---------- miles, 5450. 673-0439. sharp,’ $V,550.~ol LY WITH NO 0 NEEDED, CALL MR. BURKE AT 130-4520 SPAR- 1941 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, ALI r Need Cm ^’in^brakp!*wlmXi prET j^l f9^>Lui i >Sntiac--- 1943 CATALINA^ VjNTURA 7-DOOR-old. UL M979. mmm prtea. *2,495 plus HOB down STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET MOB Elizabeth Lake Road FE 8-7137 1443 RAMBLER 2-DOQR, $544 FULL Motors, "^“pontl^Rd. aT*^ dyke. PR MB7. \ '6460SE FROM 50 SELECT USED CARS Mostly Now Car Trad** New Md Deed Cm 106 truck. EM MOlt CON Cflor Brail n. ti.ito. Call aw ttiSLuT ROSE RAMBLER "VMSM000 SELLING BELOW COST 12 New 1965 Romblers Example; Now Rambler I door, hoe tor, whitewalls, washer, toot bolt*, 2-v*ar. 24.000 mil* now car warranty, 1st *1444. Superior Rambler 5» Oakland AVE._FE >4421 Other folks make money from Pontiac Press WANT ADS If you haven't ... try one. Hundreds of others do . . . daily! FISCHER BUICK 1965 LeSABRE Convertible/Air ... $2788 1964 SKYURK Hardtop —$1888 1963 SKYLARK Convartibla ..: 1965 WILDCAT Coupa, 9,000 Milas... ... $2988 1962 PONTIAC Convartibla ....$1088 1965 F-85 Vista Wagon ....$2688 1963 ELECTRA 4-Door Sadan ....$1888 1964 LeSABRE 4-Door Hardtop ....$1688 1960 LeSABRE 2-Door Hardtop ....$ 688 1965 SPECIAL 4-Door Sadan ....$1988 1964 ELECTRA Convartibla ....$2288 1963 PONTIAC Catalina Coupa .'...$1688 FISCHER BUICK 554 S. WOODWARD USE* PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. BUY, SELL, TRADE. Those Cor* To Be told Bofor* 1444 Superior Rambler 550 Oakland Avo. O, heater. *11 red. *745. ROSE RAMBLER I PONTIAC LEMANS S P O R SPARTAN DODOE 1443 TEMPEST CUSTOM —,..■ COUPE IN ANTIQUE SILVER WITH BLACK PADDED TOP -BLACK BUCKETS, AND A FULL PRICE OF ONLY *1,147]. 155 OAKLAND AVE. (Vk MILE N. OF CA55 AVE.) FE 4-4524. 1443 PONTIAC. STICK, FE 1-4122 1441 CATALINA SPORT COUPE, I bl* power, excellent condition, 5-1405. >43 CATALINA HARDTOP, 2-C/uuk, good condition. 51,500. OR 34314. J PONTIAC HARDTOP, 2 PLUS , bright rod, whit* Infantr^m ramatic, doubt* power, tx sots, etc. Ml 4-4295. GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC 1961 BUICK 2-Door Hardtop • 1959 RAMBLER Wagon 1959 PONTIAC Wagon 1961 CHEVY Wagon 1961 CHEVY 4-Door 1961 FORD Wagon . $49 Down Haupt Pontiac COST SALE EXAMPLE. 1964 Rambler sss ZpJZF"' 1963 Olds jiSLmSr- **1 1963 Tempest 1963 Renault ‘St**** H Was Sale Price $1595 $1295 Automatic radio, all-vinyl Interior. $1395 $1195 $ 895 $1145 $ 895 $ 695 WE HAVE A WIDE SELECTION OF ONE OWNER MINT CONDITIONED NEW CAR TRADES WE HAVE DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES ON OUR ENTIRE STOCK. You May Select Any Car From 1961 thru 1965 2-DOORS—4-DOORS—WAGONS—HARDT0PS—CONVERTIBLES IMMEDIATE DELIVERY-CREDIT NO PROBLEM-ALL CARS GUARANTEED! RUSS DOWNEY'S VILLAGE RAMBLER SALES 666 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 1957 PLYMOUTH 1959 Chevrolet, 2-dr. hardtop 1959 Plymouth 9-pata. FREE HIGHWAY EMERGENCY KIT* TODAY'S Ins BUICK LoSABRB 4-Door Sedan. Power steering CDCflAt and brakes, Dynatlow, radio, hooter, whilowolls. $2395 SEVEN 1445 COMPANY CARS. Yas, Polka, savin Catalina 2-Door Hardtop* with moat of tho luxury options. AH company cor* have lactory warranty ... 52445 1443 PONTIAC CATALINA adoor sedan. Power itoorlng and brake*, hydramatlc, radio, hoator, whlte- 1444 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-Door Sodon. Power steering and brokos, Hydramatlc, radio, hoator, white-wolls. Beautiful whit* finish 51145 1441 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF Door Sodon. Power all brakes, Hydramotlc, rat _. end whitewalls. Bluo with wmrt Np 51445 IMS BUICK ELECTRA .._ PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Coupe. Power steering and pow-— brakes, Hydramatlc, radio. FORD OALAXli whitewalls. 11,*01 1442 P O N T I A C BONNEVILLE Coup*. Power sloering and powor brokos, Hydramatlc, radio, heater, whilowolls. Rod with block loothor Interior . ........ 51545 1442 SPECIAL DELUXE 4-Dior. Factory air conditioning, V-6, powor stoerlng and brokot, Dyne- 1943 PONTAC 9-Pouenger Wagon with rock on top. Powor itoorlng and brokos, Hydrometlc, radio, local businessman *1*95 I 1963 PLYMOUTH 4-cy Under, automatic, 2-door, I clean, priced to Mil only— ! $995 I BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-FLYMOUTH 414 5. Woodward Ml 7-1214 |144l VALIANT 2 - OOOR SEDAN with radio, this on* Is almost Ilk* now, full price 51,045. JEROME. FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-4711. 1444 SPORT FURYS, 2 TO CHOOSE | from, t rod, 1 white, sharp cars, 510* down, 5*1 per month. I Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Ay*_______332-9150 1964 PLYMOUTH Fun i — 4-door, automatic. This t~ spotless, good tiros, worth mors than this price, $1495 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH *14 5. Woodward Ml 74214 14*5 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-Door Sodon. Booutitui maroon finish with matching Interior, l-owncr and still almost iikg new *1595 IMS PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Coup*. Powor flooring and pow-“ brokos, Hydramotlc. radio, Ih ^ight h Brougham I for *5,200, 1445 PONTIAC BONNEVILLB CONVERTIBLE. Factory sir conditioning, all power and loaded consol*. Powor stoerlpg, powor THIS AO ANO THE PURCHASE Op A SHELTON USED CAR Completely Paved Used Car Lot — New Car Warranty (Ask for Details) PONTIAC-BUICK ■ ______ 651-9911 > ISS ROCHESTER ROAD ‘ Yr w ROCHESTER 1965 PLYMOUTH Fury, double powor, radio, hoator, auto. SLIM. 1965 PLYMOUTH Salvador*, VS outometlc. 51J55. 1963 PLYMOUTH Puryaa£door hardtop, double powor, 1963 CHEVY tup truck. 51,145. 1963 CHEVY Wagon, S1.2H. VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFORD MU 4-1*15 1959 PONTIAC. WHITE, 2-DOOR down, weekly payments S10.M. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 4*4 5. WOODWARD AVE. URMINOHAM_Ml 4-750* ........... OTO, PULL POWER, sliver gray with black vinyl too. Boat offer over *1*00. 4244127. aOYD'S SALE Continues 1964 PONTIAC Catalina. Automatic. Powor itoorlng •nd brokos, radio, hoator, whit*-1 $1895 Lloyd MOTORS 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 door hardtom doubt** powor, A?1 condition. 4(2-1724. SHARP 1944 CATAlInA CONVERTI- « TEMPEST STATION WAGON, 1944 TEMPEST CUSTOM SPORTS SELECT USED CARS SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS 1*5* PONTIAC HARDTOP INDAZ-ZLIN6 SILVER WITH-AOTOBAT-IC, POWER, MB PULL FAC TORY EQUIPMENT. FULL PR.CB ...._______ 5397. 855 OAKLAND AVE. OA, 1441 FORD hardtop Galoxlo MILE NORTH OP CASS AVE.‘ FE 5-4524. 144* PONTIAC STATION WAGON, I *550. OR 3-4361. lM* WNtlAd VINtuRA WITH bowfltut grey. ■-— - brakes, power steering, an a; tional buy. Sav* today! BILL SMITH USED CARS 2 M. Parry M.__________PE 4 DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD - BIG LOT 55 CARS TO CHOOSE PROM 1964 CUTLASS Auto. VI, 2-door, powor stoorln rod, wMW top, tl ,145. 1963 GRAND PRIX iron**, block Interior, 4 spaa doubt* moot, tinted gtana, t steering wheel, SIJ4S. 1964 FORD Galaxle M festbock, otandai transmission, Vt, dam btuo, vin upholstery, (lJ95 1964 CHEVELLE Super Sport, Mar hardtop. 2 vt. 4-sooed, maroon, Mack bit rlor, *1,445. 677 S. LAPEER RD. Lake Orion MY 2-2041 814M . 81445 1454 OLDS PIS 2-door 1*41 TEMPEST wagon, * 1451 BONNEVILLE Vista 1451 RAMBLER 4-door, blua t 445 1452 PONTIAC EOnMyttla . *1445 PONTIAC Catalina .II495 1952 PONTIAC Catalina .. 11245 RAMBLER Classic ..SUM] 14*2 CATALINA 4-door .51541 INI PONTIAC convorDM* .... 51245 14*4 RAMBLER Classic .51445 14*4 TEMPEST convertible $1545 1454 PONTIAC Vonlur* 51*45 TEMPEST Wagon, 4-cyl. 51445 14*1 JEEP pickup JIM 21*45 INI CORVETTE cgnvortMo 52445 1411 CORVAIR Monza epupt FORD Galaxle. 2-door 51245 RUSS JOHNSON QUALITY ALONE JUSTMES THE PRICE OF OUR USED CARS 1963 Chevy Biseqyne 4-Door station Wagon, frcylln-dor, standard hoe— $1395 1962 Rambler 2-Door Good transportation. You'd have to ao* this on* to appreciate Its tow price of $495 1962 Buick LeSobre, $1395 1963 Pontiac Catalina 3-Door Hardtop. Radio, hoator. $1695 1964 Buick LoSABRE $1895 1962 Chevy Impalo 4-Door Hardtop. V4, solid Mack $1295 1964 Pontiac CATAllNk 4-Door Sedan. Radio, hoator, automatic, pow* - brake*. • staorlng a $1895 1964 Chevy Convertible Impale. I-cylinder, radio, heattr $1995 1964 Pontiac Bonneville ConvertIMe. 1 h $2245. 1964 Buick Electro $2595 1962 Pontiac 2-Door $1195 1964 Buick WILDCAT $2295 PONTIAC—BUICK—CHEVROLET OXFORD, MICHIGAN on M24 OA 8-2528 Jt. % 1 THE PONTIAC PRKSS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1963 D—11 -“Television Programs— Program* furnished fay stations Hated in this column are subject to cliang* without notice rs'-wjigjy, 4^wW»lj F-WxYi-Tv, ♦-di4^*^'-Wicth-iv),s»-wTv» MONDAY EVENING l:«M3) (4) Ntwi, Weather, . Sports . (7) Moyle: “Face of a Fu-fltlve’’ (In Progreas) (9) Dennis the Menace (SO) Soupy Sales (41) Legacy f :2S (7) Sports fill (»(4) Network News (7) Neva (•) Marshal Dillon (50) Superman (56) Conversations 4:41 (7) Network News 7:11 (2) Dobie Gillis (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) (Color) Stories From Beyond (I) Movie: “The Hunchback of Notre Dame'1 (1939) Charles Laughton, Sr Cedric Hardwicke, Maureen O’Hara , .(SO) Ibis Week in Sports (51) (Special) Building the Bomb 7:» (2) Tb Tell the Truth (4) (Color) HuQabaloo (7) 11 O'clock High (50) College Basketball: U. > of D. vs. Indiana 1:00 (2) I’ve Goto Secret (4) (Cblor) John Forsythe (54J Great Books 1:30 (2) (Color) LfUcille BaU (4) (Color) Dr. Kildare (7) Legend of Jesse James (SO) To be Announced •:00 (2) (Coot) Andy Griffith (4) (Cofor) Andy Williams (7) Shenandoah <9) Show of the Week 0:30 (2) (Color) Hazel (7) Peyton Place (SO) College Basketball: U. of M. vs. Ball State 10:00 (2) Steve Lawrence (4) (Color) Run for Your Life (7) Ben Casey (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee 10:30 (9) The Sixties 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:25 (7) Movie: “The Female Animal” (1957) Hedy Lamarr, Jane Powell 11:39 (2) Movie: “The Bad and the Beautiful” (1952) Kirk Douglas, Lana Tumor, Walter Pldgeon, Dick Powell, Elaine Stewart (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (9) The Saint (SO) Merv Griffin 12:41 (9) Film Feature 1:90 (4) Beat the Champ 1:15 (7) News 1:99 (2) (4) News, Weather (7) After Hours TUESDAY MORNING 4:15 j(2) On the Farm Seen# 4:19 (2) News 4:25 (2) Sunrise Semester 4:39 (4) Classroom 4:55(2) NeWT 7:40 (4) (Cbfcr) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:05 (2) Network News 7:30(2) Happytand 9:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 9:90(7) (Color) Movie: “Oh, You Beautiful Doll” (1949) June Haver, Mark Stevens J:4S (54) English V n|:5| (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-' •* Round 9:40 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living (9) Romper Room V 9:10 (54) Come, Let’s Read 9:90 (2) Dick Van Dyke (54) American History 9:55 (4) News (54) Spanish Lesson 14:00 (9) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) fractured Phrases (9) Canadian Schools 19:14 (54) Oqr Scientific World 19:25 44) News 19:34 (2) McCoys TV Feature First Atomic Bomb By Ualted Press Iateraathmal CONVERSATIONS, 4:30 p.m. (80) Interview with Socialist party leader Norman Thomas. BUILDING THE BOMB, 7:00 p.m. (54) Newsreel dips, rare films chronicle development of first atomic HULLABALOO, 7:30 p.m. (4) Frankie Avalon welcomes Nancy Sinatra, the Ronettes, the Yardbirds, and the Hollies. , ANDY GRIFFITH, 9:00 p.m. (9) Aunt Bee takes part-time Job- io printing shop where, unbeknown to her, counterfeit money'Is being made. STEVE LAWRENCE, 10:00 pm. (2) Guests Include Buddy Hackett, Jack Jones and Nancy Ames. (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Friendly Giant 10:35 (56) French Lesson 19:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:50 (54) Spanish Lesson 11:40 (2) Divorce Court (4) (Color) Morning Star (7) Young Set (9) Butternut Square 11:90 (9) Across Canada (54) What’s New 11:39 (4) (Color) Paradise Bay 11:19.(9) News . AFTERNOON 12:09 (2) Love qf Life (4) (Color) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Razzle Dazzle (50) Dickory Doc 12:25 <2) News 12:90 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Post Office (7) Father Knows Best (9) Take 30 12:35 (55) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (54) Come, Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:49 (2) Scene 2 (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “The House of Intrigue” (I960) Curt Jurgens, Diwn Addams (50) Movies: 1. “Sofia” (1940) Gene Raymond. 2. “The Bold and the Brave” (1956) Mickey Rooney, Wendelltforey U10 (54) Children’s Hour 1:25 (4) News (54) Arts and Crafts 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal 1:95 (4) News (50) American History 2:00 (2) Password . . (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Nurses 2:20 (54) Safety Circle 2:25 (54) Book Parade 2:90 (2) House Party ‘ (4) Doctors " (7) A Time for Us 2:50 (54) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:25 (2) News 3:90 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say . (7) Young Marrieds (9) Swingin’ Time 4:40 (S) Secret Storm (4) (Color) Bozo (7) Never Too Young (90) Topper 4:94 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Ii Firm Charged With Violating Fair Labor Act TROY - The U.S. Department of Labor has filed suit in U.S. District Court, Detroit, against the Knight Construction Co., 1931 Austin, charging the firm with violating the Fair Labor Standards Act The complaint alleges that the corporation failed to pay many employes the required overtime pay since Sept. 1,1963. The Labor Department estimated that about $20,400 la back wages are due 117 employes because of the alleged failure to comply with the law. A judgment is being sought to permanently enjoin and restrain the firm from future violations. Legal aation followed an ln< utigation. or the*company fby the Detroit Efcrhffioe 0f the Labor department’s Wage-Hour and Public Contracts Division, 14641 E. Warren, Detroit. ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING (9) Fun House * (50) Love Ibat Bob 4:56 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) (Color) Movie: '1 Love Melvin” (1953) Donald O’Connor, Debbie Reynolds (50) Lloyd Thaxton (56) Driver Education 5:30 (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall lis# to tawtses Punk ' 2S Aiiayer's cup i wanusanMN ---- DOWN 1 !?'**(. , wwwj MU 1WU1 27Green — ****** UDicnN 84 Muter 28Piece of plat* ZUkImi 15F»t SSExtnmi ■rmor * River (SpJ 18 In vertical line SS Vina vafiUbla 29 Throw np bank 4 Not any (mut) 37 Yoont •forth 8 Desired 22 Indian iboriflM barracudi (pi) 82 Footed via# (nitty of Haiti 39 Surrounded by S3 Mutual concord •Remain 24 Excess of aolar 43 Melody 84 Brussels---- suspended over lunar yoar 48 Feline IS Leave out 7 Jap statesman 25 Mr. Coty 47 Musical syllable •u—«-*- «* '““/a ikkntff' 89 Primate » Varnish nngr 86 Cat’a aound 2 3 4 6 r- H L 15 rr 12 13 nr l 13 ;;; r U 19 26 ' 33 15 30 91 D - n ST ST" 38 fc 11 BT r RT 51 b2 L3 6 Michigan Briefs Killing Suspect Is Due in Court TORONTO (AP)-Najeb Ka-dri, 21, of Detroit, wanted in connection with a Detroit slaying, was due in court here today for a hearing on an appli-cation for extradition. He was arrested in Calgary Friday night. * * ' * Kadrl faces charges in the death of Julie Pasanen, 14, of Highland Park, Mich., whose nude body was found Nov. 1 at the Detroit home of Kadri’s estranged wife, Eileen. The girl had been baby sitting for Mrs. Kadri’s. 13-month-old who was found unharmed near Miss Pasanen’s body. h it h Calgary police said officers acting on information from Toronto police arrested Kadrl in a rooming house. He had arrived in Calgary a few days before and was seeking employment. Kind Words, Gifts Warm a Family's Day By Esther Van Wagoner Tufty WASHINGTON - Former Michigan GOP Sen. Charles E. Potter is an honorary member of the Population Crisis Committee “to promote government support for population and family pluming programs.” Gen. Wiliam H. Draper Jr. has just been named chairman to replace former New York Republican Sen. Kenneth Keating, who was elected recently to the New York State Court of Appeals. Sen. Philip Hart, D-Mleh., is unhappy that after four years his truth-in-packaging bill has not been enacted. Nor has hfb bill to establish an office of consumers. But the word from the White House is that both of these bills, along with Illinois Democratic Sen. Douglas’ truth-ftt-tedding bill, are to be on the President’s “must” list in the next Cqhgress. Manufacturing employes in Michigan totaled 960,000 when last year. The Young Americans for Freedom announces that some 40 colleges and universities will hold campus “debate-ins” on the Viet Nam war tomorrow. The University of Michigan is one of the 40. the census bureau’s 1048 census of manufacturers was taken. The figure- la up from 880,000 recorded in 1058 when the last previous c e n i u i of manufacturers was taken. Potato Crop Expected to Be Largest Recorded LANSING (AP) - Fall production of potatoes in Michigan is expected to be the highest since records began in 1049, the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service says. It predicts fall production of O-mlilion hundredweight, cpm-pared With 6.7 million last year. Total production for 1965 was forecast at 9.0 million hundredweight o- np 24 per cent from — Radio Programs— WILSON BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - A paratrooper bound for Viet Nam and his mother, headed for surgery, shared today the memory of a warm family gathering ‘ hospital room. * ★ * The paratrooper, Tom Dough-er, 20, was off for Viet Nam today, while his sister, Marge, observed her 18th birthday, and their mother, Margaret Dough-er of Tonawanda, was scheduled for major surgery. ★ * * The family, including Frederick Dougher, the father and husband, swapped gifts and brightened Mrs. Dougher’s hospital room Sunday night. For Toni, who will spend Christmas somewhere in Viet Nam, there were Christmas gifts. GETS PRESENTS Marge, with her brother leaving and her mother* in the hospital, received birthday presents. Mrs. Dougher received Christmas and get-well gifts. ■ * . ★ f-The father sat on a hospital bed and beamed. His son, who trained at Ft. Bragg, N.C., will depart from Travis Air Force Base, CaUf., fen* duty wi(h the 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Division in Viet Nam. “I’m a little nervous, but Tm anxious to go,” he said. “My son wasn’t drafted — he enlisted. That should explain the way he feels,” the father said. And his mother added: “Come bacl^safe, that’s all 1 care about:” Neither Crash, Qualce Still Voice of Joyful 'Gypsy" By EARL WILSON San Juan, Puerto Rico—There she was up on the stage playing the squeezebox and singing . . . Gypsy Markoff . .. “Ths Indestructible Gypsy,” Gen. Douglas A. MacArthur called her once when he found her in a hospital in Japan, having survived an earthquake. ^ Gypsy Markoff here at Jose Delema’s fashion safsri at the Hotel Americana . . . well, now, anyway, that was something different for Gypsy. I felt suddenly sorry for these beautiful, brittle young people sitting around me here at the fashion show ... sorry that they were too young to havo known Gypsy’s golden yean. Sitting here at Jose’s show is guttering Christina Paolozzi and her Pomeranian pup and her husband. Maggie McNeills is "commentating” the beautiful fashions and Vera Swift, the millionaire-marrier, is busying herself with some vodka. And it is tres gay and chic , . . and not one has heard about Gypsy Markoff. It was Feb. 22,1943, that Gypsy Markoff and Jane Frohman were pulled out df the Tagus River in Portugal... crippled . . . after a plane crash that killed 33.. ★ ★ f The singer Yvette she credits with saving her life. Yvette kept calling to her as she was flailing around in the river. “Hold on, hold on, somebody’U com?. ... but don’t come near me, you’ll pull me down.” Now it’s 22 years later, and Gypsy, still with an injured wrist—“But I make it work,” she says—has just organized one more combo and is ready to entertain. I was seeing and hearing her on the new combo’s first date. Gypsy, a study In courage, had gone to Africa — or started for Africa — to entertain the troops, in 1843. Unable to nse her hands for a long time after the disaster, she had gone to Japan to sing, ajnd that’s when Gen. MacArthur found her after the earthquake. THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN N.Y------------ Merle Oberon and her husband, Bruno Pagliai, moved from one Acapulco mansion to a larger one, giving them three Mexico homes' (in Mexico Cjty, Cuernavaca, and Acapulco) . . . Teddy Stauffer, of the Perla night club in Acapulco, is celebrating his Mth year with the “canyon divers," and none was ever hurt (except in a battle with a girl friend). Geraldine Chaplin arrives Dec. 7 for “Dr. Zhivago” publicity ... Frank Sinatra Jr. quit the set of the “Adam” film here— virus . . . Tony Curtis’ new movie got its seventh title change; it’s now “My Last Duchess” (at the moment, anyway) . . . Jack E. Leonard said at Danny’s Hideaway he’ll fly to London fpr one day, to do a TV’er. EARL’S PEARLS: “A book about Fred Allen—‘Funny Men Don’t Laugh’—makes me miss radio. Another thing that makes roe miss radio, is television.”—Arthur Solomon. Max Asnas of the Stage Deli told Del Marino he once hated waiter so much he fired him: “But first I gave him a raise— so he would be losing a better job” . . . That’s earl, brother. (TM Holl Syndicate, I at.) 80 COLOR SETS in STOCK and Ready for (punsdiato Delivery -Convenient Terms Arranged- Here I» WHY You Should BUY Your COLOR TV from OREL TV FREE SERVICE Which InehidM All Parts, Laker and Sarvica Call free delivery PLUS FREE SET-UP On tYLVANU and MOTOROLA TVs -We Also Take Trade-Ins -OPEN DAILY!to 9 Large Selection of Guaranteed Used Televisions . . . .*19“ 3 B *101 Wall-to-Wall 100% Nylon Broadloom No Money Down-Easy Terms SPEEDY INSTALLATION FREE SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE MR PET KINS 4391 Highland Rd. Mar • an* WatktnH CaM I a*, ta I p.*. OtN Call Collect 549-8378 > t THE PONTIAC PJEUfcSS. MONDAY, DECEMBER fi, im . ,. What can be mors relaxing after a long day, when the children are tucked in, and the day’s pace has stoned, than a quiet evening at home?... TArtrfnmg to your favorite music, watching TV... This is the time when you most appreciate the value of good entertainment... Choose from our vast selection of complete home theatres. Y* Color TV or Mack/white TV... all with stereo high-fidelity, AM/FM, and FM-stereo radio. All with UHF/VHF. Many with solid state amplifiers and tuners. Furniture styles and finishes. to match any decor... Here are a few of the many sets we have for you to choose from famous brand names, highest quality, easy terms and, of course, Highland’s nnchulU traditionally tow prices... Come in, look over our selections and see if you don’t agree. . H. PHILCO 25” COLOR TV COMBINATION * v CtasUW hamaaolaftliaatm. Solid rtata 25* color TV, HW> hMI,AM-W0 radio. >-«poakor sound systom. Ksctongular color tub*. Danish madam mastorcraft til cohlaat datif a vN door. Ooaulna walnut. COME IN-GET OUR SPECIAL LOW PRICES amd Highland Civet You FREE a 6Vrft. Aluminum ChrUtmuu Tree With Every Combination. PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH RD. CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE RDl OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. OPEN SUNDAY II A.M. to 6 P.M. PHONE 682-2330 I iuN The Weather Snow Flurries, Cold THE PONTIAC VOL. 128 NO. 259 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ - PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1985 —44 PAGES JOQLQR lOe Johnson Discontent Over Reserve Board Interest Rate Boost WASHINGTON UP) — The Federal Reserve Board increased interest rates todajf to their highest level In 35 years, overriding Johnson administration economic policy and drawing immediate presidential disapproval.. The board announced its decision last night, say ing higher rates will help prevent inflation and aid in overcoming the persists ent U. S. balance of payments deficit. It ordered: t An increase in the discount rate from .4 to 4.5 per cent, its highest level since 1930. This is the interest the 12 regional Federal Reserve banks charge on loans made to member commercial banks. Any upward movement generally spreads throug^iout the entire credit structure — applying to consumers who buy houses, cars and other goods on the installment plan. An increase in the maximum interest banks may pay specified time deposits of more than 30 days from 4.5 to 55 per cent, its. highest level ever. ATTRACT MONEY This might tend to attract money from other areas — the stock market, savings and loan associations, for example — into tbebanks. The board left unchanged the 4 per cent interest ceiling on regular savings accounts. The administration is powerless to alter the actions. Although board members are appointed by the President, they compose an independent agency, subordinate to no one. City Woman Dies in Crash Injuries From Friday Mishap Fatal to Man A 65-year-old Independence Township man died last night, two days after being struck by a car; and a 45-year-old Pontiac woman was killed yesterday in a three-car accident which hospitalized four other persons. Dead are Paul G. Gaber of 9820 Sashabaw and Mary C. Sanchez of 426 Midway. Gaber died at Pontiac General Hospital from injuries suffered Friday evening when he was hit by a car on Sashabaw Road near the intersec-tion of Pine Knob in Independence Township. Townsend, 26, of 3851 Grang- In Johnson City, Tex., President Johnson said: “I regret, as do most Americana, any action ’ w UMt nunno, may that raises the cost particularly for homes, schools, hospitals and factories.’' FIRST REACTION The first reaction in banking circles generally was favorable, although some expressed surprise over the time savings deposit interest raise. In New York, Robert V. Roo-sa, partner in Brown Brothers, Harriman & Co. and former undersecretary of the Treasury for monetary affairs under Presidents John .F. Kennedy and Johnson, said: “They were right to do it, the time ik right.’ Earmuff Weather Faces Pontiac Residents Today Oakland county Sheriffs deputies said Barger’s car collided with one driven by 58-year-old Raymond Lowe of 499 Omar and then hit a third vehicle drivMK^ Nathan R. Menold, 61, 4 lbs. Whites 11-20. DiTRPIT EGGS . DETROIT 90 B 44) (9 C 4216. -?«* .SSSJL45 TlVhiSS-7 To jtr - Grade A Whites 4|W| .. I________e buying prices WtdtdMM| roasters 2316-25) special fad Whits Rock fryers 1116-1*16. * Livestock CMtl. 3JOO)* five k^s prlme choice 1,000-1.300 lbs 24.00:27.25) load choice erouml WO Ib sleudhtar hi 25.75) cltolcs 000-1,000 lbs 243+25.50. American Stocks NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (API — Following list of selected stock transactions o American Stock Kxchange with (MLt) High Low Last Cbi. Aeroiet 50a 2 3416 3416 3416 - AmPelrotA .30g 2 746 746 "746 + ArkLaGas 1.34 1( «*«*/*¥ t. Assd OH4.G Atlas Cp wt Barnes Eng Brai Trac .40 Cdn Javelin 2V6 2 1-14 2 +3-14 Ctryw Rlty .30d 24 *16 266 2*6 + BSyr IT 1512 13M* BO 1+H +* A#? Si*016 !$*• jh| Giant Yel ,40a .♦ 1264 1266 186 ■■■ Goldfield 6 144 144 J64 + fit Bas Pet 22 2V6 2 2 — Gull St Ld g f 7. f.v .41 *4 2*46 8 2046 iwotyuoen 4 «je 8 471* + New Pk Mng 51 5% 544 544 • Pancst Pet « ]}* U* ng* RIC GrOUU 41 2V6 2V6 2V6 + Scurry Rain 4 14 1546 1546 .. Sbd W Air M WJ M46 1M6 .. Signal Oil A 1 10 »4 20% 2046 + l?St3 Cp'jOg 2$ 11446 W* wg + Technlcol .75 13 1046 1146 1(66 — Un Control .20 Ml * 446 5 •». Copyrighted by The Associated Prate 1*45 Stocks of Local Interest Figures attar decimal points art eighths OVRR THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations front (ha NASO erg re,.-sentattve Inter dealer prices at appiuM-mately 11 e.m. Inter-deeler markets change throughout, the day. Frlces do - t Include retaH markup, markdown or AMT Corp. Associated Truck .......... Braun Engineering . Citizens Utmtlai Class A ... Mon rot Auto Equlpmsnt .... Diamond Crystal ........... Kelly GW ............. .... Mohawk Rubber Co........... Detrex Chemical ........... Pioneer Finance ........... Sefran Printing ......... Scripts"................... Venter's Ginger Alt ....... Wehr Corp. ................ Wyandotte Chemical ........ MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated Pond .......... Chemical Fund .........17J| Commonwealth stock .........10.35 Keystone InmM3+ ...........10.05 Keystone Growth K4 ........ 4.54 Mass, investors QrwNi ......11.75 Mass. Investors Trust .....10.07 Putnam Orgwnt .lid* Television Electronics.'^....9J2 Wellington Fund ............14.71 Windsor Fund .................IMS BONO AVERAGES Compiled 6j The Assecleled^res^ Rails lad. UHL Fg*. L.Y change ........................... m Frl. (M 100.3 W.l *14 *1.7 >. n» (0.3 1003 W.l *14 *1.. (03 1(0.7 W4 *14 *2.1 •IS 101.4 a® -US fl|, ft* lw.l 85 ft!HE! 003 100.3 17.0 WJ 91.) I Friday's 1st Ohrtdbads DlS?l&. stFew t rled Record (Ms ill O 12-14 12-21 Mart Dips on Discount News Standard Oil (New Jersey) lost % at 78% on 3,700 shares. U. S. Steel opened on 7,000 shares, off % at 48. ONE-POINT LOSER Eastman Kodak was a one-point loser, opening at 106 on 1,000 shares. Sears, Roebuck lost % at 63 on 3,000 shares. -A * ★ ■ Many key stocks were slow in opening. Latrobe Steel, newly admitted to trading on the New York Stock Exchange, op 17%, a rise of % from its last bid price in the over-the-counter market. a * * On Friday the Associated Press average of 00 stocks rose .6 to 353.3. STOCK AVSRAOSS c(malted by TIM AwurUted Pmi m i» is *r I nd. Ran* UHI. Steel Frl............512.2 1104 14*4 Day ..........5113 1*04 14*4 Ago ...........4114 1M.I 172.4 _______j Ago ........520.1 1054 Yaar Ago ........4434 173.* MM High .........521.1 NM MM LM ............451.4 1493 1424 is! IS The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK ( of selected Hoc York Stock ,Sx transactions on thsftew Abbott Lab V ACF Ind 140 Ad Mllllt 40a Admiral Air Rad 230 Tturt war ■ ml V 431* 42V6 42V6 —1V6 (5 Teck& 'iwb JgfinMan 2.20 jSiLegan 0.0 JdMO L 130 Alcoa U| ■ A Botch 30g Am Brk 2.00 AmBdctt 140 97 M 12 2766 9 1046 100 194* 47 W —IV* ■ 82-66 2416 24V6 — 1* 44 Ml - 4* 244* £m —Ml 4446 4M| — 46 424* ml—MB 5546 5546 —11* 4116 WBfefB 3746 3766 — 1I1A 1046 ... 1946 1*46 — 46 Mi/MW (MHo i .7o Optic lJgb-Photo .20b Oman 2.60* m Sid 1 rn TAT 2.20 n Tab 1.70 MHfM 1.40a i SOW .. Lahman 1.92g LOFGII 2.00a LlbbMcN .551 wSy Loews Thaat LonaSCam 1 LonaSGa 1.12 « 23 32 : 70 00 I 10 111* 1 4 45V6 i x8 5644 j . Ml* Ml* Ml* - MacyRH 1.40 MbilS i.05a MagmaC 2.80 Mar Mid 135. MartlnMar 1 Mtr 1.50 WmMT. Auto Cant JO Avco Cora 1 Avhet .50b Avon Prod 1 Borden 1.11 BargWar 230 Brlggi Sir lo BristMy 1.20a Brunswick BucyEr 2.40a I I0W 1016 1016 -1 5 3744 374* 3744 — 20 4046 401* 4016 — 20 47*6 47*6 47(6 — ) 4(14 43 43 —1 7 95V6 95 *5 -2 . 95 0*6 044 044 - 46 7 58 5744 574* NCadtR 1.20b “^-iry 2.40 .... _lit 1.40 Nat Oanl 30 NatGyps 2b NLaad 3.25g Nat Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .00 NEngit 130 NJ Zinc la 33 37 3444 36*6 — IW Chet Oh 4 ChRIPac .25p ChrlsCrft .Mt -Chrysler 2 CJT Fin 130 CitiesSvc 130 * ClevEIIII 1.44 CacaCoia 1.70 Cote Pal .90 . CoInnRad 30 CBS 1.20b Col Gai 130 Col PlCt .999 Comw Ed 2 I 3146 3)66 . ... i 401* 401* —11* ■ 41W 4IV6 — H Comsal Con Ed —..Jdls 130 CanElecInd 1 CnNGas 2.30 ConsPow 1.00 Contalnr 1.20 COM Can 2.40 COM Ins 2.(0 ggif Mot .40 I 3216 3216 - W i 71’* 711* — 46 MW SOW - " t 35 35 - . t 4116 4166 - H 1.50 DaycoCp .40b Oay PL 134 Deere UOe DenRF..... 17 21V6 231* 23V6-14 644 466 dW . 43 *1* (I* *1* - —D— 21 24 24 26 - J MW MW J”" Dow Ch i4w DukePower 1 duPont 6d Duq LI 134 ll o° \X ,3 4544 4544 - 44 13 233 231 a: a S'/, Mi* : —E— 35 10546 1MW II 17 MS' 2546 1 > sow aow 34 SW 20 3 5946 S9<* 5916 -25'* - Vi 35'* -14* FfdOStr 130 HnsOm i FUtrol Cp 2 Fla Pew 1.20 FW PL 132 FttedFelr .90 Fraept S i*.«0 FruetlCp 1.50 ■PHB i 2*W — '* fa —i > 5466 —146 i ifi* —r 54 3216 3144 32 GerberPd .90 GaityOII ,l(g Gillette 1.20a M 4*6 ,a 5* mt i¥ Is 20 4346 34 gw 26 2346 9 3366 I *044 130 1W6 3446 26W - 4546 454* -II* '« 374* — Vt K saw—mi M TRSei SwSwz! 8*6 aw — 64 33V6 3346 ... 5144 504* — W 2 Ml* 45*6 45W 41*4 41W - *6 2146 SW — W —H— Homn$ 1 \ &: »=* 35 W_ —I , ■ 29*6 M*b » 40W 406* —. 6* Sv6 mt —J ! 14 4(1* 1 7066 . It 44 a* >• — 8 am 1Mb Mb- 1 i 451* 451* 6514 ... 11 846 86* Bl* —1 IS MW 4SW MW — W 12 F 74V6 76W — V* 4 dW 3566 35W - 4b Salat thda.) High Low Ctoei •a WV6 10W W6 S3 2914 20*6 20*6 42 40 44 . 44 sikssss W UW 42 41 —K— 13 3316 3316 3316 ... 6 51W 51 51 -+W I 4316 *316 6316 —1<* . . s.) High Low Clota Chg WualaiBh iv 37 mtlmt .Mb — 4b YngstSht 1.00 II 27*6 1746 8W — W Sales figure* art unofficial. Unless ettigrwHa nglad, rates of MPte ar -Special rTXtTi*f* Plus slock dividend, a—P... .—. MR I—Payable In stock dynn^ 1945, aatbnated i S3'* S3'* -1 14 M 24 14 1*44 l4W 14 316* 316* 1 —M— 34 4264 42'6 < 10 J4W S4'A I 53*6 5314 l I 3246 3216 : 1 3746 846 1 5 816 2216 1 4 25*6 25*6 2 —N— It 2516 S 2 21 74W 741* 7 5 M M I 27 3016 30 3 I 866 5316 41 SOW 55*6 55*6 -116 7 3464 34W 3464 -66 1 45W 45W 4164 — 1* 7 30V4 3*16 3916 - 46 1 S1V6 5166 51W— T* School Bond Buyer Is Told FARMINGTON—School building bonds totaling $2.5 million will be sold by the Farmington Board of Education to Halsey, Stuart and Co., Inc., of Detroit. Hie firm's bid, the lowest of four, offered an average interest rate of 3.6783 per cent. The bonds are the last series of 85 million approved by district 'property owners In November, 1963. Occident? .60 ghteldti 1.04 Otis Elev 2 OxfdPap 1.20 PacGEI 1.20 Pac Ltg 1.30 PacTAT 1.20 ----1.40 _. j8lefT • Paab Coal 1 PannDIxIa 30 PaPwLt 1.40 Pa RR 1.60a PfltarC 1.20a PhalpD 3.40a FRiji tl i3) n I PhllMor 330 Phill Pet 2.20 PIMeyidw f P IIP lata 2.60 Pit SM . ErodAO 1J5 Publklnd .361 Pullman t.40 9 MW 5566 5566 —11* 13 3416 34W 341* — W 14 2IV6 20 28 -” 0 2544 8W 256* - 5 »W MV6 »!6- 8 626* 4266 4264 - 4 30*6 81* 3164 - 3 114* 11M 116* .. 9 36 35*6 35*6 - Xl33 40W S9W 5966 - 14 7264 72'* 7214 - 21 7016 7016 7016 — ) 1.20 63 52 24 57 54*6 57 - 3 44*6 4416 44'6 - 1 55'* —2' Raytheon 3* 1*4 jgw J0V6 3*66 - Reading Co II WW WW 1916-16 RaichCh .20a (I 1466 14W 14W - 30 40V6 4016 40'* - 10 4564 4566 4566 - if 43*6 431* 431* - 19 25W 81* 81* - 8 75 74W 7416 - 11 8'* 22*6 22*6 - 24 42'* 42 42 — RichfOII 130 RoyCCola .40 RoyOut 1.05g StJosLd 230 10 51W 10*6 4066 - leap 1.40b San D Imptr Schenley la Schering 130 (Chick Scott Paper 1 Saab A L 1.00 1SS 7W 7 7 -W A M 3564 3(64 -IW 31 Mt SW SW-1 Socony 2.10a SoPRSuo lp SouCalE lis MOM Cal 230 Sioiiind 1.70 StdOilOhio 2 51 Packaging StauttCh 1.40 StarlDrug 30 Studabaker Sun Oil 1b ffilnbr. I.# _ Swift Co 2 12 SiW 3966 10W- W 3 30W SOW 3064 -14 431* 4264 42*6 -12 mi 771* 77'A .. 7 nw 81* 7314 -33 77W 7716 77V6-V 476* 471* 47W- : Sw= iff: Mjtm 85 --tire 130 £ % ___rax JOa USOypsm 3a US Linas 2b ‘l|PtpM 1.40 i\ swrsi hi —T— 13 816 2 31 2316 2 S fib 2 28 71'* 7 8. 1PW 3 W l —u— 40 40 00 A -2 14 fTW 2766 2766 — I 70 8 T“- ““ “ 0 0*6 8 7*64 i 10 44W j i 8w \ 134 8 ; 18 4016 f VaEIPw 1.8 —I Walworth Ca WamPIct 30 Wamtam JG WnSanc 1.10 . wUnTrt 1.40 WMlgEI 1.40 Wayarhr 1.8 , Whirl Cp 1.8 loysw IT SOW 141 SSW 1 19W 24 lfW tt 4 12 35V* m MW -IW UpOM 1.40 1966 1916 -4M 4564 - ■Z— M M* 15V* 1JW-42 42 - ft; 39'6 3916 — 156* 1566 - L c—Liquidating r paid In 1*41 Paid leaf yaar. id or paid at i. k—DKlari a yaar, dividend action taken at ll -Declared or paid tldand. 1—Paid la estimated cash value distribution data, z—Salas In full. MS Callad. x-Ex dand and sals ' tlon. xr—Ex CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) -Three federal judges have under advisement the case of five drug manufacturers accused of price-fixing. Oral arguments in the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals were heard Saturday. * * * The companies denied the charge, but Frederick H. Mayer, an attorney for the Federal Trade Commission, told the court prices to druggists “have remained absolutely rigid for years and years” even though production costs have gone 'own. In rebuttal testimony, Walter R. Mansfield, attorney for American Cyanamid Co., said the prices stayed at the same level because of the companies’ experience that if one firm cut the price, all the others followed suit and no one got a competitive advantage. NO CONSPIRACY “It was a selfish dtcision If you will, because they saw no gain, but certainly was not from a conspiracy,’ Mansfield said. The FTC, in a dispute dating hack to 1958, issued on Dec. 17, 1963, an order forbidding the companies to continue fixing the prices of tetracyline and other antibiotic drugs. Civic information Night at St. Michael's School The St. Michael’s Division of the Tri-County Senior Government Seminar will hold a Civic Information Night at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the school auditorium, 100 Lewis, Pontiac. Congressman Billie S. Far-num (D-Waterford Township), City Manager Joseph A. Warren, Pontiac City Engineer Joseph Netpling and Municipal Court Judge Maurice Finnegan will explain the functions of their respective offices. Treasury Position corretpondlnq 1, 1945 T A744M4.772.M t .„ Deposit* Fiscal Yaar July I— _______ 47,732,494,845.55 44.041,007,229.05 Withdrawals FteCOl Yttr— _______ 50,054357,234.74 8,725341399.70 (xl—T08uT DoM— ’ 322.051.890.493.73 319,298,470,021.24 Geld Assets— 13309,027,428.12 W — M.12 . 15388,159,349.10 181,IM.977.41 debt net OOW-JONSS NOON AVERAGES ITOCKS 8 Indust .............. .945.(2+1.8 8 Rails ............... 243.23—0.20 » Util* .............. 153.24+030 U Mock* ............... 334.08+0.8 87.09—038 YOUTHFUL SCENTS-Teens wiH ^predate a vial o^4he new-type light scents in their storing — such as this ‘*Gti! de London” by Yardley. Get Drug Case 5 Firms Are Charged With Price-Fixing DODGE ‘CHARGER’-A new Dodge called the Charger will make its debut in the medium-size specialty car field on Jan. 1. Its prototype was Charger n, an experimental car which was displayed in nine major auto shows last year. Standard engine on the 117-. inch wheelbase model is a 318-cubic-inch Dodge V8. The Charger is 203.6 inches long, 75.3 inches wide and 53 inchqp high. Budget Casualty Tax Cut Hopes Dim By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst itoday in its December letter that the impact is yet to be felt ..since, in addition to appropria-NEW YORK (AP)- The Viet L^’ u "authorized ’ The companies'are Charles fixer & Co. Inc., Chicago: American Cyanamid C o. Wayne, N. J.; Bristol-Myers Co. and Bristol Laboratories, New York; Squibb Division of Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp., New York, and Upjohn Co., Kalamazoo, Mich. One of the judges hearing the arguments was Anthony J. Celebrezze of Cleveland, former secretary of health, education and welfare. The other judges were Clifford O’Sullivan of Port Huron, Mich., and Harry Phillips of Nashville, Tenn. Nam conflict and the Great Society may stage a private war of their own in |j the next few weeks as a new federal budget is hammered out. Costs or both, have been rising. The firstl casualty appears to bej hopes , of an- DAWSON other tax cut. UAWBUIN But if the military spending rises much faster, some of the Great Society programs may have to be set bade in their timing. Firms Asked to Cut Dollar Flow Abroad WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Johnson administration is stepping up its drive to eliminate the dollar drain by asking U. S. business to cut back its foreign expenditures by upwards of $2 billion. ’ Half of the cutbacks, about $1 billion, is supposed to come from reduced outflows of dollars for direct investment in new factories and machinery abroad. The administration proposed a formula to enable each company to set Its own dollar 11 m 11 an foreign investment These new programs have been estimated to call for more than $30 billkm over the next five years. How much more the war will cost Is shrouded in considerable mystery and uncertainty. Together, the war and the new social programs already have increased the federal deficit this year well above the estimate of last January. SPENDING PLANS Hie new budget which President Johnson will submit Congress next month will outline spending plans for the fiscal year starting next July 1. The rest of this month, the President and heads of government departments will be trying to choose between various spending proposals. The object: to try to keep total expenditures within a liveable range of probable tax collections — a range doesn’t threaten a dangerously large deficit. This year, the Congress appropriated a record $119 billion, $13 billion more, than last yew. But the First National City Bank of New York points out In addition, other groups — bankers, tourists, the government itself — are bring urged to keep up the fight against the dollar deficit in the ation’ balance of payments. ★ it it But officials made it clear that further improvement next year is going to have to come mainly from the efforts of businessmen. STABLE ACCOUNTS “To assure that the dollar will remain as good as . gold, we have to show the world that we can bring our accounts Into sustainable b a 1 a n c e, and keep them in balance,” said President Johnson in a letter to a special cabinet committee on the balance of payments. *' * f : Johnson said that while the tighter curbs on business would mean “some pain and sacrifice .. the stakes are great. What is at issue is whether we can meet our critical responsibilities abroad, and maintain the expanding propserity of the past four years at home.” Wig Store Is Opaned in Waterford Twp. The Drayton Wig Distributors Co. has opened at 4866 Walton, Waterford Township. The owners, Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Countemanche, have been in the hair business for over 20 years.. huge amounts as part of new felfare legislation” which will call for appropriations in future years. it it + • Since the President has promised to ward off inflation wherever it threatens, many private economists now feel that this year the shaping of the new federal budget will be done with much more of an eye to cost Budget drafting iii the next cutting than a year ago, when'few weeks should give a clue. GM Tells Role in Auto Safety General Motors has just released a new booklet describing the corporation’s contributions to automotive safety over the years. The booklet, “Design for Safety,” emphasizes the point that the basic structure of the car itself is the most important requirement in automotive safety. GM’s more than one million sharholderg will receive the 48-page illustrated booklet, as will educational, political and other groups across the country. The booklet traces the improvement made In each major automotive component, and relates this constant improvement to safety. The development of improved testing techniques also is discussed as a contribution to the manufacturing of safer Lodge Calendar Waterford Auxiliary No. 2887, FOE, regular meeting has been changed to Tues., Dec. 7, at 8 p.m. Doris Strickland, secretary. —adv. Defense Department spending was declining instead of rising as today. The outcome of such frugality, if it develops, could affect many government , activities, old and new. The more the Viet Nam war costs rise, the tighter the squeeze on sums available for the Great Society programs. The bank economists think both the President and the Congress will be more inclined to give fiscal restraint top priority. Delayed Action Seen Interest Rate Effect Viewed NEW YORK (AP) - The man in the street is not likely to suffer financially, at least for a while, due to the sharp rise in 1 Investing * By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “My wife and I are in our late 49s. I am a Civil Service employe, earning $9,400 a year. We have one grown-up, self-supporting daughter. Our money—$25,000 —Is all in savings, no stocks or bonds. I will retire in 10 years aqd would Uke to invest some of our savings to have a better retirement income. What do you suggest?” A. E. A) In your position, I believe you should invest $15,000 of your rings in solid, conservative blue chip stocks which have not moved iihead much in a market that has favored glamor issues. would buy stocks with a strong growth factor which should advance in price in the next decade as they have done in the ist. For you, I suggest Corn Products and Consolidated Foods— two of our great food processing companies. I also like Procter & Gamble, which requires no description, and Texaco, our greatest oil merchandiser. - Q) “I wonder why you have never mentioned Western Pacific R.R. stock for income. At the present price the yiekl is five per cent. Do you care to comment?” W. H. A) One reason that I have never written up this railroad is because yours is the first inquiry about the stock 1 have received in recent years. Western Pacific is a bridge line, which means that it . forms a link between certain carriers from the East and other lines on the West Coast. The road is relatively small but strategically important. I believe earnings will reach about $3.50 a share this year, which indicates ample coverage for the $2 annual divideml. The interest rates announced Sunday night by the Federal Re serve Board. Banking officials said the' average consumer was not likely to pay more to finance bis car or to borrow cash for Christmas. Nor was he likely to get much more interest on his savings accounts. ^ C ’ ' '★ it e. •* However, it was thought that the cost of home mortgages might inch up a bit. ' : Observers believe that; for a time at least, savings Vries for individuals at. commercial banks, mutual savings banks, and savings and loan associations will not change much. SEE REDUCTION A spokesman for the National League of Insured Savings Associations said the Federal Reserve’s action might cause a considerable reduction in the amount of money available for housing, for which savings and loan associations are the largest supplier of funds. A 'A, A Mutual savings bankers and saving and loan officials said that, unless there was a fairly leneral increase in commercial sank rates on consumer pavings accounts, they Would probably be slow to ilfcrelise their rates. As a result of these new techniques, according to the booklet, new designs now can be tested ih the laboratory before being ^7^ £Tg^d biiy put on experimental cars. ' rr— . . » These tests subject the cars to far more punishment in a few days than they get in the entire lifetime of the car. for- Income and I recommend them as such. Roger Spear’s 4S-page Guide to Successful Investing is available to all readers of this column. For your copy, clip this notice and send $1.11 with your name aid address to Roger E. Spear, la care of The Pontiac Press, Bex U18, Grand Central Station, N.Y.C., N.Y.U817. (Copyright, 1885) Gresham Cleaners Being Modernized Work is now under way to modernize equipment and add approximately 5,500 square felt of space to Gresham Gleaners, 605 Oakland. A A A. > Completion date for the project will be about March 1. f The facade of the building will also, be modernized with new aluminum windows. Borman Board Votes 20-Cent Dividend The board of directors of Berman Food Stores, Inc., has voted the regular 23cent quarterly dividend payable Jan. 10 to stockholders at close of business Dec. 17. . A .. A , A |; Borman Food Stores, Inc., includes Arnold Drugs, Inc., Savon Supermarkets, and Yankee Department Stores. Quake Hits Tokyo Area TOKYO (AP) - A minor earthquake jogged Tokyo and vicinity Monday night. The Meteorological Agency located the epicenter about 50 miles southeast of Tokyo on the Bceo peninsula. ".' *. '7?' I® THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1965 Consult us with CONFIDENCE We we specialists in fully guaranteed monuments sculptured from Select Granite ( Memorials for Over 72 Years : MONUMENTS....... . . . from 8195 MARKERS...............from $ 35 INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry 335-6931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Area Man Held in Crash Death Driver Killed, 2 Hurt in Car-Train Crash Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas REBECCA M. DAVIS Stephen and two listers, Kath-Graveside service for Rebecca M, Davis, infant daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. Terrance L. ‘Donald 3£. Johns I PAW PAW (UPI) - Carl Lap-ham, 51, of Clarkston has been icharged wtih negligent homicide in connection with a collision of |his semitrailer and a pickup [truck, resulting in the death by ^drowning of John Koreg, 64, of rural Lawrence. * * * 1 pickup was catapulted into Creek after being struck by Lap-ham’s from the rear on 1-94 Inear Lawrence. An autopsy revealed K r o e g ’ s death was [casued by drowning. Lapham posted $500 bond after demanding examination in a weekend arraignment before Justice of Peace David Smith atPawfaw. Every Detail Is Important We do everything carefully, at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. We would not have it any other way. The little things of the funeral service . are a I ways important and mean much to you. (Phone FEDERAL 4*4511 Pmkinq Jj_ On Our (Premise's =|ii|||= WPowhofr Joh ns 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC fjap Pontiac Man fill Is Arrested in Shooting A 34-year-old Pontiac man was arrested for investigation of attempted homicide Saturday after another man was shot in an apparent argument over a one-dollar debt. Held at the Oakland County Jail is Roy Jones of 503 Franklin Road. Pontiac police said Jones wounded Andrew Burkett, 32, of 349 Ferry in the head and neck with two blasts from a 12-gauge shotgun. Jones said he fired when Burkett pointed a shotgun at him, according to police. ★ ★ * Patrolmen found a loac shotgun near Burkett’s car. Ml 5 YEA A1 JET ACTION WASHER! gives you a YEAR PROTECTION PLAN AT NO EXTRA CHARGE! Automatic Soak Cycle plus Jet Action features galore! • Jet Away Lint Removal —no lint trapsl a JatSpin cuts drying time. Leavee clothee extra light and dryl a And clothes coma out •o loose and easy even apron strings seldom snarll /‘new low $ PRICE \*198 Exclusive FRI6IDAIRE Custom Imperifl Super-Surge DISHWASHER MATCHING DRYER $133 For Only *5 YEAR PROTECTION PLAN I Strongest Frlgidsire Washer Protection Plen ever. One-year Warranty for repair of any defect without charge, plus four-year Protection Plan for furnishing replacement for any defective part In the transmission, drive motor, or term capacity water ptwipf > Super-Surge Washing Action reaches into every corner of dishwasher. > Eliminates hand rinsing. > Special Pots & Pans Cycle. v Amazingly quiet operation—4 sound-deadening features. Pay As Little As 121 N. SAGINAW OPEN EVERY NIQHT TIL CHRISTMAS FE 5-6189 Davis, 51 Lorraine, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston, by the Coats Funeral Home. The ltt-month-old infant died Saturday. Surviving besides her parents are grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Leo Davis of Waterford Township, Mrs. Maud Nicholsen of Union Lake and Donald Beck of Florida and a great-grandfather, Elmer Davis of Pontiac. BABY ROBERT J. ELDREDGE Service for Baby Robert J. Eldredge, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Richard Eldredge of 3462 Fort, Waterford Township, was to be 1 p.m. today at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. The baby was dead at birth Saturday. Surviving besides the parents are a brother, Dare Richard at home. A. SHARON KLINE Service for A. Sharon Kline, 13-year-oid daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Kline of 5525 Cleary, Waterford Township, will be 7 this evening at the Coats Funeral Home. Burial will be tomorrow in Pioneer Cemetery at Roscommon. The girl w'as killed Friday evening when she was struck by a car. She was a student at Fierce Junior High School and member of Waterford Community Church. Surviving besides her parents are a brother, Larrie at home, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Arthuih Kline of Pontiac and Mr. and Mrs. Burton Williams of Roscommon. leen and Sharon, all at borne. MARY C. SANCHEZ Mary C. Sanchez, 45, of 426 Midway died yesterday of injuries suffered in a traffic accident. Her body is at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. MRS. ELIZABETH VERNON Mrs. Elizabeth Vernon, 83, of 346 Central died Saturday. Her body is at the Hun toon Funeral Home. Surviving are two sisters. HARRY M. BALDWIN PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Service for Harry M. Baldwin, 80, of 2400 Snellbrook will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson - Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Square Lake Cemetery, Orion Township. Mr. Baldwin died Saturday after a long illness. He was a retired carpenter. Surviving are a son, Reon K. of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Wilma Brooks of Pinellas Park, Fla.; a brother, Maurice E. of Pontiac; five grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren. ROBERT J. BLOW METAMORA — Service for Robert J. Blow, 77, of 4043 Pleasant will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Lapeer.-Burial will be in Metamora Cemetery. Mr. Blow died yesterday after a long illness. He was a retired farmer. Surviving are his wife, Laura; two d a u g h t e r s, Mrs. Robert Blair of Metamora and Mrs. William Gies of Warren; a son, Jakie of Metamora; a brother, George of Lapeer; four grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. MRS. LEONARD O. KERN Service for Mrs. Leonard O. (Carma T.) Kern, 62, of 2404 Pauline, Waterford Township, will be 4 p.m. tomorrow at the white chapel Memorial Ceme- of 519 Commerce will be 11 a m. tomorrow at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Burial will be in Commerce Cemetery. A military service will be conducted by Oxbow VFW Post 4156. Mr. Frank died Saturday after a long illness. He was an employe of the Plymouth Tank & Assembly Co. Surviving is one sister. MRS. ALEC T. JACKSON BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Alec T. (Marjorie) Jackson, 54, of 5775 Franklin will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the First Free Methodist Church, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Jackson died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Wilbur of Ortonviile; a brother, G. Roderick Moral of Pontiac; and two grandchildren. FRANK J. MORAVEC CLARKSTON - Service for Frank J. Moravec, 72, of 5024 Sashabaw will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Coats Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Moravec died Saturday. He was a-retired foreman of Pontiac Motor Division and a member of the Central Methodist Church and Oakland County Barracks 49 VFW. Surviving is a brother. CARL M. O’MALLEY AVON TOWNSHIP - Carl O’Malley, 62, of 3839 Auburn died today after a long illness. His body is at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Mr. O’Malley was a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division. Surviving are his wife, Lo-rena; two sons, Robert of Flint and Floyd of Brown City ; i ' five grandchildren. Coats Funeral Home, with burial in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Mrs. Kern died Saturday after a long illness. She was past matron of the Joseph C. Bird Chapter, 294, OES, Clarkston, and a. member of Trinity Methodist Church. Surviving are a son, Richard . of Lake Orion; a daughter, Mrs. Charles Nash of Waterford Township; two sisters, Mrs. Ralph Hall of Pontiac and Mrs. Donald Reynolds of Traverse City; three brothers; and six grandchildren. CHRISTOPHER T. KRAUSE Mass of the Angels for Christopher T. Krause, 4-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Krause of 2991 Edgefield, Waterford Township, will be 10 Thursday at St. Benedict Church Burial will be in Mount Hope Cemetery by. the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. « The boy died yesterday after a long illness. : Surviving besides his parents are two brothers, Joseph an ‘ CHARLES W. CORBETT INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - Service for Charles W. Corbett, 64, of 6095 Cramlane will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the'ter; Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home,, pauison Clarkston. Burial will be in MARTIN A. PAULSON TROY — Service for Martin . Paulson, 74, of 4882 Roches- tery, Troy. Corbett died Friday after a short illness. He was a section hand for the. Illinois Central Railroad. Surviving are his wife, Mary; two sons, Ronald of Clarkston and Robert of Pontiac; a daugh-er, Mrs. James Biggs of Pontiac; one brother; one sister; and light grandchildren. JEFFREY W. DYER OXFORD TOWNSHIP - Service for Jeffrey W. Dyer, 1-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Dyer of 2310 N. Baldwin, will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Bossardet Funeral Home with burial at Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Oakwood. The boy died yesterday after a long illness. Besides his parents, he is survived by grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Harry Crocker of Pontiac and Mrs. Estella Claycomb of Oxford. ANDREW FRANK COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Andrew Frank, 52, 3rd of Weekend 61 Arrested in Liquor Raid Ideal Facilities and Location! PROFESSIONAL CENTER Thte modern building, conveniently located for to and from travel (with plenty of convenient paved narking area)— » now available for immediate occupancy. Professional and Bwtiheaa Men should ace these quarters today. -1800 square feet of area for addition • —are will build to lease specifications. 2 miles West of Telegraph on M-59r — Across the etreet from Methodist Church. • M? IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE WEINBERGER HOMES 3901 Highland Road, Pontiac—Phone 332-9121 Vice squad officers and trolmen from the Pontiac lice Department raided an alleged illegal liquor operation early yesterday, arresting 61 persons. Charged with operating an U-legal drinking establishment was A. J. Simpson, 32, of 256 S. ilohnson. Phyllis E; Willett, 17 of 411 Wyoming was charged with aiding and abetting, and Al- Sea Disaster Claims 90th Victim Sunday MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Ann Martin Jackson, 21, of Rochester, N.Y., is the 90th victim of the Yarmouth Castle cruise ship Miss Jackson, who died Sunday, had been undergoing treatment in the intensive bum center at Jaekson Memorial Hospital. Donation to Village Some $200 from the sale of coffee and 9oft drinks has been contributed to the Oakland County Children’s Village by employes of the Buick Motor Division Service Parts Warehouse, 5260 Williams Lake, Waterford Township. ■' phonse R. McDowell, 37, of 255 W. Wilson, with illegally selling liquor. The rest' were charged with loitering. It was the third weekend raid. Thirty-one persons arrested early Saturday were arrainged in Municapal Court, yeo charge of operating an illegal Uquor operation and 29 on loitering. PLEAD GUILTY Fifteen pleaded guilty and paid fines of $15. Trial was- set for Thursday for Sarah Calvin, 49, of Huges, and Mary S. Gibson, 25, of 241 W. Wilson, who pleade innocent to operating an illegal establishment. Fourteen others who pleaded innocent to loitering charges will also be tried Thursday . Obliging Troopers Prove Drunk Wrong GRAND HAVEN (DPI) -Obliging State Police took Amos Jones, 22, of Holland to a local hospital early yesterday when he stomped into the 'station and demanded a blood alcohol test to prove to his wife and Inlaws that he wasn’t drunk. Jones flunked the test and was jailed on drunk and disorderly charges. ter will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be in Union Comers Cemetery. Mr. Paulson died Saturday after a long illness. He was a I retired self * employed painter and decorator. Surviving are his wife, Sarah; daughter, Mrs. Martina Bon-die of Farmington; a son, Martin of Hot Springs, Fla.; a sister; a brother; 14 grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren. MRS, WILLIAM PFEISTER AVON TOWNSHIP — Service for "Mrs. William Pfeister, of 2854 Norton Lawn was to be 1 p.m. today at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be in White Chapel Me-1 morial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Pfeister died Thursday after a short illness. MRS. ORAL FISH ROCK WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP-Service«Jor Mrs. Oral Fish Rock, 69, of 9725 Crosby Lake will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Hun-toon Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Rock died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Thelma Speke of Detroit; a brother; and a sister, Mrs. Ota Richards of Clarkston. MRS. LEE D. SWAIN BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Lee D. (Hazel) Swain, 65, of 241 Bloomfield will be 3>:15 p.m. tomorrow at Don-elson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Swain died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are a son, Donald G. of Walled Lake; two brothers, Louis Gillis of Clarkston and Glen Gillis of Pontiac; two sisters, Mrs. Clara McDonald of Garden City and Mrs. Shirley Wedge of Farmington; and four grandchildren. OTTO E. WOLFF ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Otto E. Wolff, 78, of 3916 Gregory will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, with burial at Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Wolff died Saturday after a long illness. 'MISS OLGA M. ZANDER, SYLVAN LAKE - Service for Miss Olga M. Zander, 77, of of 2250 Garland will he 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Hone, Pontiac. Burial will be in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Miss Zander died yesterday after a brief illness. She was member of the Golden Age Group; the YWCA and the Sylvan Lake Garden (Hub. Surviving are a sister and a brother, Henry E. of Sylvan Lake. Tba deadline lor cancellation of troniltt Wont Ado ts_» e-m. me day of publleeHon aflar Death Notices BALDWIN, DECEMBER day, December 7 at , ....... „. ...o Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment In Square Lake Cemetery, Orion Township, Oakland County. Mr. Baldwin will lla In stata at me DonelMn-Johne Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 Rjn. and 7 to t CAMPBELL, DECEMBER X IMS, JAMES E., 2653 Walton Blvd.. Waterford Township; age 72; daar also survived By 24 granoennoron and 27 great-grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be Monday, December 6, at 8:30 p.m. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, December 7, at 10 a.m. at St. Michael's Church. Interment In Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mr. Campbell will lie in state at the Hun-toon Funeral Home.________________ DAVIS, DECEMBER 4, IMS, BABY REBECCA MARIE, St LorraiM Court; beloved infant daughter of Terrance L. and Dorothy Davis; beloved granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lao Davis, Mrs. Maud Nicholsen, and Donald Back; beloved great-granddaughter of Elmar Davis. Grlveslde service will be held Tuesday, December 7, at 11 a.m. in the Catholic section of Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Arrangements were by me Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. ELDREDGE, DECEMBER 4, 1065, BABY ROBERT JOHN,. 3462 Fort, Waterford Township; beloved Infant son of H. Richard and Patricia Eldredge; dear Infant brother of Dare Richard Eldradge. Funeral service was held today at ) p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Intarmant- In WMte Chapel Cemetery, Troy._______________ Gillis; also survived by Mur grandchildren'. Funeral earvka will be haw Tuesday, Decamber 7, at 3: IS p.m. at the Dnnalisw Jehw Funeral Home. Interment In Forty Mount Perk Cemetery. Mrs. Swob* «Mll lie In state at the funeral Itame. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 Caster «______ rangements a Huntpon Funei WOLFF, I Tuesday, December 7, u , HR at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Hama with Rev. Miras Stine officiating. Interment in Parry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Wolff wM lit In state at the funeral home. I visiting hours .|* to S Sylvan Lake; age 77; «_____________ of Mrs. Elinor E. Bartholomew and Henry E. Zander. Funeral service will be haM Wednesday, December I at 1 p.m. at the Den-eison-Jchns Funeral Hama, informant In Ottawa Park Cemelsry. Miss Zander will lie In state at ♦he Donelson-Johns Funeral Home attar 7 p.m. this evening.' (Suggested visiting hours 3 la I p.m. I LOVING MEMORY OF RICKY I *---I Gramma and m July 1, 1M4, Grampa Hi died Dec. 6 IN LOVING MEMORY OF HATTIE Lubahn, who passed away Dec. X IMS. We do not forgot her. We love her too dearly. For her memory to fade From our lives Ilka a dream. Our lips need not speak Whan our hearts mourn slncoraly, For grief often dwells Where It seldom Is seen. From the children.____________ _______,H FOR CHURCHES, CLUBS, organizations for sailing 50 bottles or Watkins vanilla ana 50 cans of Watkins pepper. Call 332-1053 | Tablets. Only Iros. Drugs. RUSSELL COX, FORMERLY OF Kavarly Mercury of Rochester now on the sales staff ol Csrter-Rymill, Inc. of Chevrolet-0 Ids Deal-or. Romeo. FL 2-3563._____________ BOX REPLIES At 19 a.m. today there j were replies at The! Press Office in the fo)-| lowing boxes: 2, 6, IS, 18, 24, 30, 41, ! 51, 52,15, 57, 68, 82, 83, 68, 98, 102. COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS i mere* Townships agt 52; survived by one sister and three nephews. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, December 7 at 11 a.m. at the Ellon Black Funeral u[J|^,e'L^^3 D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME FE 4-1111 with Rev. Dorr W. Fockler officiating. Intarmant In Commerce Cametery, Commerce Township. ■ Graveside military service under the auspices of Oxbow VFW Post No. 41M. Mr. Frank will lie In state at the Elton Black Funeral UNION*LAKE * FUNERAL MOM^ Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 50 years HEAVENS, DECEMBER 4. 1965, EDNA R., 1432 Jefferson, Detroit; age 61; beloved wife of Charles Heavens; daar mother of Mrs. Max (Bardie) King and Mrs. Alex (Shirley) Morris; dear sister of Mrs. Clara Sherwood and William JACKSON, DECEMBER 4, 1 MARJORIE E„ 5775 Fran Road, Bloomfield Township; Jackson; dear sister of G. Roderick Moran; also survived by two grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, December 8. at 1 p.m. at the First Free Methodist Church. Interment In Perry Mt. Park Cametery. Mrs. Jackson will lit In state et the Sparke-Grlffin Funeral Home attar 3 p.m. today. (Suggested visiting hours 3 Mrs. Ralph (lla; (Ethel) Reynold Floyd Taylor; Hall, M , Roy, Gian, and jlso survived by grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, December 7, at 4 p.m. at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains, with Rev. Ronald Thompson officiating. Interment In Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Mrs. Kern will lie in stele at the funeral heme, (Sun-gested visiting tvours 3 to 5 | Fund. i to 'Pie* Cancer KLINE, DECEMBER X 1965, A. SHARON, 5525 Cleary, Watartord Township; age 12; beloved daugh-. ter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Kline; beloved granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kline, and Mr. and Mrs. Burton Williams; daar sister of Larrie ■ KUna. Funeral service will ba held today at 7 p.m. at tna Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. Interment in Pioneer Cemetery, Roscommon,-Tuesday, December 7, at 12 noon. KRAUSE, DECEMBER 1 1965, CHRISTOPHER T„ 2991 EdgofloM. Waterford Township; age 4; beloved son of Joseph 6. and Catherine A. Krause; dear brother of Kathleen, Sharon, Josspn, and Stephen ' Krause. A Mass of the Angels will be said Thursday, Do- 1 Catholic Church. Mount Hope Cemeter her will lie In stato ai m-Johns Funeral Ho Hester Moravec; dear Tuesday, December 7, at 1 p.m. at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains, with Dr. Milton H. Bank officiating, intarmant In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, Mr. Moravec will lie in stato at the hmerai home. (Suggested visiting hours 2 to 5 p.m. O'MALLEY, DECEMBER 6. 1965, CARL M., 3839 Auburn Road, Avon Township; agt 82; beloysd husband of Mrs. Lorens O'Malley; dear father of Floyd and Robert O'MeNovi wmmmb' — . , Lloyd Bui fhle gran_____ - rangements _ ___________ later by the-Harold R. Davis Funeral Homo, Auburn Heights. ROCK, DECEMBER 5, 1965, MRS. ORAL JPtfiX ftU Crosby Lake Road, Clarkston; age 69; beloved . mother of Mrs. Tntkne Spake; daar sister of Mrs. Ota Richard* and Buryi Fish. Funeral service "Designed for Funerals" SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Servlet'' FE 6-9286 Voorhees-Siple Cemetery Lets Commercial. Private. Civil Investigations conUdantlol STATE LICENSED-BONDED 622 Rfktr Bldg- EE MI6 ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 1-5112 before S p.m., or ----- swer, call FE M734. C GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN APFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME JHl MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FES-0616 RANDY WEST HAIR STYLIST NOW at ratal, v SLEipif RIDES FOR CHURCHES, clubs, scouts and family groups. Groups of 20 to 500 call for rssar- UPLAND HILLS FARM 628 )6)1 WIGS. 8)8.95 TO 8380. FE 64216, FE 5-295X ‘4 p.rtv * P-m., Sot. and Sun., 8 a.m. hr pjn. House at Wigs. Urt pM hrarf_______________S LOST LARGE ENGLISH POINTER, with dark liver colored spots, east of Lake Orton Tuas- LOST: FEMALE BRITTANY, LOST: YEAR-OLD FEMALE WEI-maranar. David Plautz. OR 3-5828. LOtT N 6 V fc M ■ £ A lfc LARGE yellow tiger eat, mala, blind in Wt eye, vklnlfy of Franklin Blvd. and Oneida, FE 4-3616. 12-WEEKS-OLD FEMALE BEAGLE, lost In Williams Lake area. She answers lo "Daisy.*' Reward. OR l6|Y: LADIES' GOLD W1UWA watch, at Mlmcto «»• « “ »•-vard. I1M3M. 3: THE 1884 CIVIL RIGHTS « law prohibits, with-:-: S CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS, X; V DISCRIMINATION BE-X; •X CAUSE OP Jn. SINCE « 3: SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE X X CONSIDERED MORE AT- -X X TRACTIVE TO PERSON* X; •X OP ONE SEX THAN THE X; -(- OTHER, ADVNRTISB- X-3: 88 ENT S ARB PLACED 8 X- UNDER THE MALE OR 3: X FEMALE COLUMNS. Wig :3 CONVENIENCE OP READ-& 3: IRS. SUCH LUTINGS 1M X-3: NOT INTENDED TO EX- *■ : CLUDE 'PERSONS r* fi :■ EITHER SIX. 4 YOUNG MEN Local factory branch I* axes.-.— $480 PER MONTH ACCOUNTANT -TAX BXPSST. McGrtw, CPA. 4M Walnut, Each. ... What csn be man relaxing after a long day, when the children are tucked in, and the day’s pace has domed, than a quiet evening at home?... Listening to your favorite music, watching IV... This is the time when you most appreciate the value of good entertainment... Choose from our vast selection of complete home theatres... 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