The Weather . UjS.'WMtlMf BuTuu Forl Cloudy, Colder In Afternoon (Dtftut m Past 2) THE PONTIAC Thanksgiving Day Edition yOL. 122 NO. 252 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, ;VOVEMBER 26, 1964 —126 PAGES 2nd Paratroop Drop Saves Congo Whites LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (i?) — Belgian para-iroopers landed at daybreak today at Paulis, last major rebel stronghold in the northern Congo, and swiftly began rescuing some 300 white hostages, including seven Americafis. Intensive ground fire hit four of the seven U.S. Air Force Cl30 transport planes in the operation but ' all were reported to have 2 Ships Crash in Heavy Fog off N. J. Coasf No Early Indication of Death Toll; Report 33 Crewmen in Sea Known by FBI Agency Is Collecting Evidence to Prosecute WASHINGTON (UPl) - The FBI knows who killed the three young civil rights workers at Philadelphia, Miss,, last sum- landed safely. One paratrooper was killed and five injured. A U.S. Embassy spokesman here said the Belgians had “secured” the town -in about two hours. Rebel sniper fire was continuing, however. The Belgians shepherded the first group of whites aboard a transport plane for evacuation to Leopoldville. The flight included 34 men, 1 woman and 19 children. The embassy spokesman said NEW YORK (^) — The Israeli luxury liner Shalom and a Norwegian tanker collided in heavy fog off the coast of New Jersey today, slicing the tanker in two and opening the liner’s bow. There were no immediate reports of deaths, but 33 crewmen from the sinking stern section of the tanker were reported to be in the water. ..... as'’weir’arwho’wa7respon- 267 paratroopers were flown to ■sible for the fatal bombirig' of Paulis, 244 miles north of Stan-a Birmingham church in IsJtlil. leyville. * * * American and Belgian mili- An FBI spokesman admitted 'ary officers kept the other,350 ^ Belgian paratroopers at Stan- officially for the first time yes- , terday that the agency knew the ^ P identity of the slayers of An- SECOND RESCUE drew Goodman, 20, and Michael Today's dramatic rescue op-Schwerner, 24, both of New tration was the second and ap-York City, and James Chaney, parently final operation by the 21, a Meridian, Miss., Negro. Belgian and American forces in FOR MEAT, FOR BREAD-u FOR PLACE TO REST THE WEARY HEAD- the Congo. In Washington, high U. S. FOR OUR GREAT NATION, FREEDOM-BORN- IN EACH ONE'S WAY, THANKSGIVING MORN. He said that “intensive investigation is continuing to de-veiop the case for prosecution as quickly as possible.” The bodies of the three men were found in a deep grave near an earthen dam in the vicinity of Philadelphia, Miss., about two naonths after they disap- Tuesday, the paratroopers were ^ared last June 21. All three had been shot. Leopoldville and quickly * * freed about 1,510 white hostages The investigation into the at Stanleyville, the rebel capi-Sept. 15, 1963, church bombing tal. showed that a small group of Ku T'he paratroopers made a few The Shalom, with 600 pleasure cruise passengers aboard, radioed that she did not require immediate assistance. ALso reported to be in no im-' mediate danger were the 10 crewmen aboard the bow of the severed tanker, the Stolt Dagali out of Oslo. Despite the fog, a Coast Guard helicopter removed a woman patient from the Shalom, pride of the Zim Israel Lines. She was flown to the Lakehurst, N.J., Naval Air Station. officials said the next move would be to get the paratroop units out of the troubled central African country as quickly as possible. In the first re.scue mission INTERNAL BLEEDING She was said to be suffering from extensive internal bleeding, not explained in early messages from th^ liner which carries doctors. 8 Persons Die in Dixie Crash Nation Gives Thanks OLANTA, S. C. (UPl) -Eight piTjons, including a family of six from Long Island, N.Y., were killed early today in a two-car collision on U.S. 301. By the Associated Press A nation grateful for the blessings of peace and prosperity celebrated Thanksgiving Day twiay with prayers, parades, family reunions, and turkey dinners. Only one of the victims wa.s Identified immediately. He was Dcmelrio Julio Cruz, 20, of Orlando. Fla . driving alone in one of the vehicles. Kdton Floyd, of Floyd’s F’U-ncral Home here, said the other victims were three adults and four children, all riding in a station wagon. It was a nation that could hardly forget the somber mood of last Thank.sgi'lring, which came within a week of the as-sa.ssination of President John F. Kennesiy. President Johnson said in a message to the armed forces, issued in JohnUon City, Tex.: blowing snow in the Midwest disrupted transportation on the holiday eve. Many flights to John F. Kennedy Airport were diverted to other cities Wednesday night. The rains slowed bus and automobile traffic in the New York metropolitan area. in Today's Press I Defense Cuts ; Storm is brewing in ; (ongress PAGE A-2. Thanksgiving Text of Pr l.'imatlon “Today all Americans thank (he blessing^ of the l,ord for the bounty of their land. In homes at pea(‘c, in hV.se.s of worship that are untouched by rancor or anger, families are gathered In gratitude for all that God has given them and for*the blessings that He has rained upon our nation,” Churches held si)ccial services and in some communities Protestants and Catholics joined in a common' observance of Thanksgiving, a practice begun last year in the new spirit of cliurch unity. CELEBRATIONS The dajy was celebrated in Plymouth. Mass., which most Americans think of as the site of the first Thanksgiving, and in ’Virginia, which claims that Berkeley Hundred, near Jamestown, Va., held the original Thanksgiving. The Virginians say the Thanksgiving celebration there in 1619 was the first, has been held annually and was religious in nature, in contrast to what they call the revelry that the Pilgrims indulged in two years later at Plymouth. In his proclamation earlier this month. President .Johnson paid tribute to bolh. as did President Kenntsiy in his last proclamation. Saigon Fears More Rioting Klux Klansmen were believed responsible for the tragedy, the FBI spokesman said. Four Negro children were killed in the church blast. ‘PREMATURE ARRESTS’ But, he said, “This investigation was prejudiced by premature arrests made by the Alabama Highway Patrol and, consequently, it has not yet been possible to obtain evidence (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) As resdue vessels groped toward the scene, 28 miles southeast of the Ambrose Lightship marking the approach to New York Harbor, the Shalom lowered lifeboats onto calm but obscured seas to search for the tanker crewmen in the water. Snow Flurries and Cold Winds Head for Pontiac Turkeys may be happier on the table than outside today with Viet Council Meets After Youth Is Killed confessions that would assure high winds, cold temperatures, r . ,< flurries foreca.st. The high expected is .38 to 46. successful prosecution. The FBf statement was a reply to charges by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and other Negro leaders that the FBI was not providing adequate protection for Negroes in the South. ... I .Saturday’s outlook is King, winner of the 1964 Nobel , Peace Prize, liad cited the lack Ambulances sped to the Point Plea.sant Beach, N.J., pier to take the rescued men to a hospital The collision occurred 17 miles northeast of Bamegata Light shortly after 2 a.m., just three hours after the Shalom left a Manhattan pier for a cruise in the West Indies. Tha 24,500-ton liner made her maiden call on New York last spring. SAIGON, South Viel Nam (AP) — The National Security Coundil met in emergency .session today to consider mea.surcs against fresh waves of antiimv-ernment rioting that re.sulted in "f^8»-eVirin‘7he"™ Tonight will I* partly cloudy with a low of 12 to 20 predicted. Tomorrow also will be partly cloudy and cold. A high of 22 to 30 is expected. loudy The 12,723-ton tanker, carrying solvents and fats, was en route from Philadelphia to New York. Parades signaled today the approach of the next big holiday, Christmas, Tliey were being held In New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Albuquerque, N.M.; Charlotte, N.C., and Detroit, apiong other cities. TURKEY DINNERS Cities, churches, charity groups and individuals providc'd turkey dinners for the poor and homeless in many areas. He noted that many .servicemen would not l)e with their families. “But all of us here at liomc romembor you with gratitude," he said. 2 P. M. Tomorrow Military Resort i Expense of llawallun /e-.sorl crlllcized PAGE A-S. KENNEDY FAMILY Mr.s. .John F. Kennedy and luu' cliildren, Caroline, who will tie 7 Friday, and John, who was 4 yesterday, spent the day] witii her brother Ifi-law, Sen,-eleet Robert F, Kennedy In Oleij Cove, N.Y. Across the niUloii families gathered for the holiday. Heavy ra(n in (he East and To Dedicate Wide Track It was the first meeting of the council since street demonstrations began Sunday, threatening to topple ‘the fledgling civilian government. Authorities feared the killing of a 15-year-old luiy, first known victim of the rioting, would toueh off new and wider demonstrations. More than 100 have been injured. As the youth’s body was put on display in Buddhist headquarters, a Western observer commented, “They have their martyr; now all hell could break loose.” \n aiiuota in uic i iinaux^iii/iiia ., . t a tt a tr and Birmingham killings in a southwesterly at five to 15 rniles telegram to FBI Director J. Ed- hour They were to shif to gar Hoover ^he northwest at 15 to 25 miles hour this afterniMin. King said tho.se and other in- The thermometer recorded a cidents showtxi inadequate FBI l«w of 37 before 7 a m. today, protection for Negroes In the At 10 a m. the mercury .stood at 38 in downtown Pontiac. The Shalom turned back for New York, but her damage and the fog were expected to add more than an hour to the return trip. Shortly after 5 a.m.,.the Coast Guard reported both sections of the tanker still afloat but said the stern was almost submerged. 'I'his report did not include the fate of the 33 seamen in the water. 2 Teens Feared Drowned os Raft Roms Into Bridge wide DedieiiUon ceremonies for i’onllnc’s loop road Trnck Drive • - arc scheduled for 2*p.m. tomorrow. Sl[ate and city officials will gnther on the south corner of Wide Trnck and Wosl Huron for the formal eercmonlos. A IMtS I'ontlac will b« driven through a ribbon stretched across the multilatte road In a change from the (radUlonal Astrology Bridge I Fire Kills 5 In Family ICdltorlnls .S|H>rls Hieaters II2-H-6 IMS rV-Radlo Programs 11-17 Women’s I'ages G-S-O-U IXINDON W1 — Five members hf u .family burned to death early Iwiny When trapped by flames In their apartment nlswe a hla/lng laiindroniul. They were David Steller, u builder; bid wife, Joan; and lhair three young sons, Mark, P«ul and L««. Siieaknra (o^ (ho program trill be Howard Hill, managing dtreclor of the Slate Highway Department, Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., former Mayor Philip E. Rowaton, Willis Brewer, of the Pontiac office of the Secretary of State, and Max Adams, manager of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, master of ceremonies. Buddliist lenders nuit at ilie national pagcxlu and a spokesman said a demonstration probably would bo staged Monday. BIIOAD POWERS Under tlie nation's provisional consUlutlon the council Ims broad |m>wci-s, including author-lly to replace Premier Tran Vao Hong. It Is headed by the chief of state, Phan Khoa Sou, and includes Huong as well as former Premier Nguyen Klianli who Is now military commander. NATCHITOCHES, La. (It - tjlearch units combed the Red River today for two teen-aged boys, missing after tlie liomemade raft on which they and nine others were on smashed Into a bridge piling and eupsizod. "Wo heard one of them cry out,” said Randy Ulmer, one of the survivors. “He said, Tm liurtlng.' We couldn’t find him.” Missing and presumed drowned In (he swirling Red River were Danny Tedford, IB, and Joe Warren, 13, both of Dallas, Tex. Tedford and Warren were In a group of nine boys from a camp for underprivileged youths ' by Uie Dallas Salesmanship Club at .S()me .30 city and state offtcols, along with business and civic lenders, are slated to attend the dedlcatlcm. The Ihmtiac Nortliern lllgli S<;h(H)l band will provide music for tlie ceremony, beginning at 1 p.m. West Huron will be (BIOmKI at Williams about I p.m, to clear traffic for the dedication, Premier Huong Imposed martial law Wedneiriuy night after rioting described as possibly the year's worst. Even after the law went into effect a crowd of youths claslied with imiIIco and a grenade blast Injured seven (iqllcemen. sponsored , Hawkins, a Dallas suburb. ★ ★ ★ Two counselors, Gerald Bible of Cisco, Tex., atui Ken Edgar of Tyler, Tex,, were with the Ixiys, who planned to float down the Red River to Its conJUncUon with the Mississippi and on to New Orleans. raft- planks la.shed to empty oil drums — ran out of ga.s as they were trying to beach the craft for the night. “We wore trying to get across the river 10 moke camp for (he night and I thought we had l( made. All of a sudden we were coming up to a logjam piled up'at the piling. “I told everyborly, "Hang on, we’re going to lilt,’ ” Edgar continued. ★ ★ ★ “In n spill second we turned over. Several boys were pinned under the raft,” -'»' WARM UP , , As the survivors warmed up, Randy Ulmer pointed (0 Danny Luton and said: “That .boy NO GAR Edgar |iaid the outboard motor on the 35-[ T was h on to a log an|il ho holpad -Tip A^2 THE rONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26> 1964 Santa Due the Area 'Tomorrow 1C just had Thanksgiving'Dinner, this may hot come as %) much of a shock. It'*)? Christmas time again!! l^nta Claus is coming to the area and to the shopping center malls, and he’s coming tomom)w. : About 10:30 am. tomorrow, Santa will come' to the Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center by helicopter, landing at the south end of the parking lot. He’U proceed to his igloo in the arcade. There will be gifts for the children.' * * ★ He comes to the Pontiac Mall Shopping Center, at noon tomorrow. This time he goes back to his famous sleigh to reach his' shiny igloo where he will greet the children and listen to thefr requests. BOTH PLACES He’ll be in both places during the season with time out for lunches and snacks. ' ★ ★ Santa’s arrival and hours for the' Tel-Huron and downtown stores have not yet been revealed. Birmingham Ared News Seek Delay on Request for Recreational Millage BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-1 on the ballot “until such time The Bloomfield Hills Board of as a definitive study may be Education is going to be asked of the recreational needs by the Township Board to. hold „ „ off on a proposed recreational ‘ millage request. PROBLEMS j • * * - ★' I It was noted there are juris-! Township trustees will urge dictional problems among oth- j the sclidol board to postpone ers to be iron oul;. ^ When Better TOYS and GAMES Are Being Sold for Lose-You Know They’re From SIMMS While most of the school district lies within the township, it also covers most of the city of Bloomfield Hills and areas in Troy and West Bloomfield Township. Pontiac, Birmingham and Avondale school districts also extend into the township. " BABY (APE) SITTER-Baby orangutans, each 2 months old yesterday, peek over the shoulders of Mrs. Marvin Voorhees, who is caring for them in Fountain, Colo. Mrs. Voorhees’ husband is supervisor of the ape house at Cheyenne Mountain Zoo near Colorado Springs. The babies’ mothers lost interest in them. They wear diapers, suck their thumbs-and take baby food from a bottle. Three Bandits Rdb Cleaners 'Three masked bandits, one of them armed with a pistol, robbed Flash, Cleaners, 339 W. Huron, last night, escaping with abqut $225. "^e trio entered the firm just before 8 p. m. and ordered the three employes, to* go to the rear of thq building and lie down on the bathroom floor. The holdup victims told Pontiac police that two of the robbers wore nylon stockings over their heads. The third had his face covered with a jacket hood. Troops in Panama Halt Demonstration Report Reserves to Be Abolished Defense Cuts Stir Storm in Congress seeking a one-third-null operating levy for recreation until aft-' er a joint study of existing facilities is completed. The Bloomfield Hills Recreation Commission, which operates under the jurisdiction of the school board, has asked that the mijlage request be placed on the next district ballot. . .. „ „ The Blqomfield Township The board of education now ^3 IS preparing a mil age propose ^ ^3^ tion for teachers sala^ im ^ high-accident West creases exp^t^ to be taken to Maple-Telegraph intersection. ^ the polls in February. 1 * * ♦ ★ • * w ! Board members have indicat- , Trustees have asked the Caked they have some reservations and Coun y Road Commission about putting both propositions w‘den Maple on either side on the same ballot. They also Tele^aph to permit the ad- have questioned the advisability, of left-turn lanes for east of asking for more recreational and westbound traffic, funds before a survey is made. WIDER STREET SPECIAL MEETING : They want Maple widen^ Save $4.89 On ^HASBROS' Famous 'Hurdy Gurdy’ Musical Toy $7.88 Seller-Now As shown — ploys popular melodies IZK IV/2XI y/4 -tncn size. 68< PANAMA (AP)-National guwdsmen used tear gas and rifle shots yesterday to break up another antigovernment demonstration by rock-throwing students. No injuries were reported, however. The demonstration followed a meeting of the left-wing Panama Students Federation, which has accused President Marco A. Robles of going soft in negotiations over the Panama Canal. Thirteen persons were injured in a similar demonstration last Monday. The demonstrations were in defiance of a government ban. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Johnson administration appears to b^ heading into a storm in (^gress over the course Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara is taking to cut defense spending. Even the mere report that McNamara is considering abolishing the reserve components of the Army and Air Force provoked quick reaction on Capitol Hill. - ★ ★ * Reserve Rear Adm. Edgar H. Reeder, head of the Reserve Officers Association, charged in a stafement Wednesday that the Pentagon is secretly working on a plan “leading to the destruction of the Reserve elements of the Army and the Air Force. He attributed this information to “apparently well-based' ports. This seemed to stem in part from secret testimony by McNamara earlier in the year that he could “save a lot of money’’ by reducing the National Guard and telescoping the Reserves but that political considerations entered into the matter. PROTESTS READY Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., said that if any attempt i§ made to cut down the guard and abolish the Reserves it will be greeted in Congress with ‘’vigorous protests.” ★ * ★ “It would be unthinkable to abolish the Reserves,” Thurmond said. “It would be a devastating blowAo the security of our cpuntry. In the last war citizen soldiers made up the over- whelming majority of our fighting forces.” A member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Thurmond is an army reserve major general. Chairman Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., of the Senate Armed Services Committee, told a news conference Wednesday that McNamara is going to be questioned about his course in ordering the closing of 95 military installations when he appears before the committee early next year. NO HEADWAY Russell said he had told McNamara he opposes the sched- uled phasing out of Hunter Air Force Base at Savannah, Ga. He said he hadn’t made much headway with his complaint. Russell, a recent guest at President Johnson’s Texas ranch, said that while he did not campaign a dent “I’m going to support him on as many of his proposals as I The matter is to receive further consideration at a special school board meeting Dec. 3, The township board has from Gilbert Lake Road to Inkster Road. Following appeals from the township board, the State Highway Department recently tablished a recreation com- nounced plans to improve Tele-mittee of its own to investi- graph, its portion of the inter-gate township-wide needs. I/Section, next spring. Members of both recreation ★ ★ ★ groups have decided a joint The $17,500 state project calls study should be undertaken to | widening of northbound J iiicu wimc lie uiu iivk L ^ ' ....® —------------ actively for the Presi- determine both existing and |a„gg eliminatipn of left- ^ • - needed facilities. *---------------------*'— But the Bloomfield Hills Recreation Commission in the Russell said he thinks Johnson | meantime wants additional “has got the votes to put! funds for “long-term planning.” through Congress pretty much; seek PROPOSITION what he wants to.” But he did not speculate on the difficulties turn crossovers north of the corner. the administration may encounter in getting approva|l ^of a pared-down defense budget. The Wee^her Taylor Flies to U.S. to View Viet Tactics Prisoners Will Have Thanksgiving Dinner The prisoners at the Oakland Connty Jail will have their own Thanksgiving dinner today direct from the county Jail kitchens. Chairman Merrill 0. Bates, in seeking the proposition, said he saw no need to wait until the survey is finished. He expressed the opinion that the present program can justify *‘*®’*- I 'The menu includes chick- The township board disagrees.! en, dressing, mashed potatoes, ★ 'gravy, vegetable, cranberry Its resolution Requests that the sauce, hot biscuits and butter, district delay putting the issue mince pie and coffee. ^Electric Hockey Game iStrombecker Road Race Set $29.95 Seller-Now By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER AP Special Correspondent WASHINGTON - Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor returns today to Washington for strategy talks on the war in South Viet Nam. From them may come decisions by President Johnson on expanding the war. Taylor, a fornier Army chief of staff, is expected to recommend that the President consider the military advantages that might stem from ordering air strikes to halt the flow of supplies to the Viet Cong guerrillas. He has spoken recently about (he possibility of bombing supply routes from Communist ing areas In the north would remind North Viet Nam “that it cannot get off unscathed, that indeed they stand to lose far more than they have any likelihood of winning.” There have been unconfirmed reports that Taylor felt .so strongly about the need for broader action beyond the boundaries of South Viet Nam that he was prepared to resign if President John.son did not approve his recommendation. Stopping at Honolulu on his way home, Taylor was asked about reports that he might resign his post, RUMORS DENIED "Ab.solutely nothing to it,” he Full U.S. Weather Bureau lU'port PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sunny and mi|d this morning, becoming cloudy, windy and much colder this afternoon snow flurries during the late afternoon and evening. High 38 to 4B. Partly cloudy, windy and cold tonight and tomorrow. Utw tonight 12 to 20. High tomorrow 22 to 30. South-tvest winds five to 15 miles this morning, becoming northwest . IS to 25 miles this afternoon. Saturday’s outlook is cloudy and cold with light snow. Second Drop Saves Whites North Viet Nam, which run said, “I, cannot imagine where i through areas of neighboring the rumor ever came from.” Laos that are under Communist ----------------- j control. He has spoken also of possible action against selected ^ I areas in North Viet Nam itself. ' 'Faylor, ambass/idor to Saigon since July, will be in Washington five or six days, officials said, and plans to spend today, 'Thank.sgiving, with his family. conferences will begin Friday with Secretary of State r. v Dean Ru.sk and other high offi-, ut any I area hv 8.50 Katanga gendarmes drastic action by the Dnited and 210 white meraenaries who States. They sfiid (hat on the | spearhi'ad/'d the ground drive one hand negotiation with the against Christophe Gbenve’s Communists for a settlement of Communist-supported rebels, the war was out of the question On the other, they saw no possl bllity of committing American ground forces to the fight or of massive atfaeks by sea'and air on North Viet Nitm. ' 1/32 scale, cars have interchangeoble chassis. Ove ; feel of track, speed controls with speedometers built-in, ^ I etc. Thrills, chills and spills. ETCH-A-SKETCH 20” SWEATER DOLLS COMBAT INVADER SET aaai cisi.c $B 88 ^ Always the First to Sell-Out Boys’ and Birls’ Sleds 34-Inch Sleds 38-Inch Sleds ...... ...3.97' 45-Inch Sleds ....4.89; y SO-Inch Sleds . .. 6.79 58-Inch Sleds .. itewring »oO. • BOYS' HOCKEY-Sizes 13 to 5 GIRLS' WHITE-Sizes 12 to 6 BOYS' BLACK-Sizes 12 to 6 Arco (irst quality leather shoes on chrome steel blades. Hockey skates are in Iwo tono colors. All have pnddml tongues If any new inca.sures ijrc adopted — and the general ex-ptmlatlon'among informed officials is lliat some steps will be taken they will likely be de signed to limit or cut off tjie iti-ftitration of supplies to the Viet Cong from North Viet Nam, and make the war more expensive for the Communist side so that eventually I he Red lender Faced with mounting ehargen by Communist nations of armed Intervention, the United Stales and Belgium wanted to make It elear Uie paratroopers hud been used only to save the lives of the hostagcN. In Washington, the U.S. kate Department sold that the Paulis move, like that at Stanleyville, was deemed necessary strictly for humanitarian reasons. "The re.scuc mission williin Stanleyville has now be/m com-|)leted and (he |>i(rntnK>p force MEN'S & LADIES' SIZES NATIONAL WEATIWR Itain showerti arc expected lo-MtiU ovii .jiortions of the Pacific Northwest while siww Is mety fffih the norlhern and c('n(ral Rookies eastward Into ^ northern plains and Upper Lakos region. Snow will also Attend from the Ohto Valley Into the New England.states. Colder teihpenituree will doininate the, u piior end mid-Miaalatrippl Valley eastward inlb the North AttnnUe ktali^s. t ' t * ( ly be iwrauaded to negotiate, withdrawn ‘ to the Stanleyville a setUemont acceptal/le to South 'lei Nafii and the United Stales. TnyloF said in a Life magazine Interview released last weekend that strikes against the Infilt-alkm lines and the train- ulriH/rl area. 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Irregulars Compare to $1 5.98 Seilers — 'Aldron' Speed Control Transistor Tape Recorder |||9o Portable 4 transistors, with mike, batteries, tope, etc. ..... Compare to $3.95 Sellers — Beautiful Pastels In Ladies’ Nitegowns Smart waltz-length gowns with lace trim. All sizes for ladies . . |87 Regular $6.95 Value — Battery Operated, Handy Shoe Shine Outfit Shock-proof battery powered shiner, vyith 6 accessories . . . ... 4>ii SIMMS CLOSED Today For Thanksgiving Day-Buf OPEN TOMORROW 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M. Hurry In ISimmi lor ttm Fridny and Saturday 'Gold Tag' »al« avant. ., and ai usual at fortha •f 30 yridrt wa'ra cuHing pricat whan tha tovingt ora naadad mott — at Chrittmot lima'. . . hurry, wa ratarva tha right to lim|t quontitiat and oil pricat tubjact to stock on hand. Genuine 'West Bend' Large Size Aluminum 'teflon’ Electric Fry Pan |qDI No-stick cooking, no-scour cleaning. With cover. Regular $3,37 Value — Perfect For The Holidays IF Dll Cookie Making Set 159 Genuine 'Miiro' ChriWius rookie cutter ond He(ornlor set Mj Compare Anywhere Powered by General Electric 'DuWel’ 7” Power Saws GE M^l^r < II)-, Ilunm-)I| posily. Rondy to use 2399 Compare to $29.95 Values ~ Genuine 'Stetson' 69-Pc. China Dinnerware Modern style dinnerware set in service for 8. Check it F With Geared Chuck, Develops 2250 RPMs - Famous Electric Drill Powpr(t)l */a HU h drill - ihf* fp( t nuin's qift Regular $6.95 Value — Sturdy Steel Construction Folding Step Stool l7'/z ' I'dl, Ii'ive scjirly lirnds. eiirnuel Imisli 299 Complete With Stand - ALL ALUMINUM Construction 6’/2-Ft. Christmas Tree Gleoming oluminum, permonent, lifetime tree lor only 497 Gift For The Sportsmen-Trevelers. The Family. $6.95 Vacuum Bottle Outing Kit 'Alnddin' kit with quart bottle, sandwich box and carrying case .. Regular $6.95 Value ~ Genuine 'Beattie Jet' CIGARETTES 1 jjgrl|f Are CIGAR and PIPE LilgllHelO Bmiltir'', let lighleis with 'llin Home you (oii nmi' lor only 595 Gift for the Cigar Smokers — Smooth,.Mild IDMDM 'Tampa Cub’ Cigars-50 for 199 liRsh ( ic)ciis, nlwoyj Ihe fieifer.t gill lor .smokeis. Buy '2 boxes.... ■ Eaty R«od Luminous Dial—'Regular $4.95 Seller Pocket Watches f'ortious ^PoclcPl pocket wolches 10% Fed. Inx . . . 449 Choice of 3 Types - Washable Blends In Large 72x90-inch Blankets jRoyon and Nylons, Rayon and Acrylic or Rayon/cotton/nylon .... Regular $2.95 Value - Comfortable 'Corduroy' Men’s House-slippers (. hoice ol pluiJ oi solids. Rubber soles, sizes 7’/v to 10 . .. } The Perfect Gift,For The Man Fitted Style Toiletry Cases I Iplds lo^lbbrushos, hnirbrushes, razors, bIc., 107o led. fax . $2.98 Quality - Lustrous 'Avisco' Lace Trim Ladies’ Full Slips Shadowprool puttels, lute trim. While only. Sizes 32 to 40 . Regular $1.00 Value - Fan|iou8 'Evening In Paris' Ladies’ Duo Gift Set Clioico of cologne und toilet water or cologne slick. Regular $2.29 Value - Perfect For Any Man Gillette Razor Set Sul hus od|u',lul,.le tu/or und ull.*r shuve lulion ;- Regular $8.95 Value - A Warm and Welcome Gift Electric Heating Pads Kilul. ,') Yr. gunrunleo Regular $1 .25 Seller - Gift Presentation Set Jergens Lotion i|K)lli(*( (II y milk glass toninii i $3.00 M K I Bf I Regular $1.00 Seller - Perfect for Any Lady '' MMFMPM dk Bourjois Cologne Portraits f OP Introductory presentation of three line colognes . SIMAS..m„ Pleat#-No Phone Orders ||0 || CT We CathYeurl AI These Uwer Prices ‘ MO He OAllllIRll Ola PAY CHECK FREE 1 ^HE PONTIAC PRESS TUrRSDAV. NOVEMBER 2n.,1964 Zany Gifts j Add Joy to Celebration I Gag gifts, good for f a m i 1 y lau^ter, have their place un- ■ der the Christmas tree just as! much as luxury items. ' Teen daughter nei er gels around to hanging up h e r | clothes? Give her a set of plastic hangers, with an appropiate verse attached. •• j Father complains he can’t remember names? Give him a | paperback on 20 ways to a bet- | ter memory. | Young daughter, still bites her | nails? There’s a nasty-tasting | nail polisher that will curb her ! appetite. There's no end to the fun i ty'pe of present that can be un- ■ earthed by rummaging around; ten - cent stores, second - hand i shops, even junk yards. And -it all adds to the merriment. i feViCeas I Here are a few ideas: I For the student who struggles with math, an engineer s slide rule. For the accident - prone car driver, ^ piece of damaged chrominm. For the corporation executive a tall siik hat, second-hand. ‘ j For the jewelry - cmjscfous • miss, a collection ofcfiormous j cheap rings with gld^ settings. I For the s e^fo u s artist,, a I child’s coloring books and cray-1 ons. For the mighty hunter, a beer \can launcher, so he can target Shrot at will. ^r the adolescent film fan, a collMtion of photographs from t^lft-cent store, framed or otherw^e. For the tii^ businessman, a single vitamin Wting in a cot-tonlined box. RED DOG/fS LINEBACKER’ — A police dog patrols along a 1^ bf barbed wire and fence, a portion of the Berlin Wall notrt^to an East Berlin.cemetery. The East German po-lico^tf^ the dogs to frighten off would-be refugees. The ceme-t^ will be visited by many Germans on Sunday, a traditional day of mourning. You know best the^centrici-lily. ' them into laughter with X zany ties of your dwn family. Turn them in present. Literally Gets Carried,Away GRAHAM, N.C. (JP - Pros-cuting witness Robert Harvey, testifying in a larceny case, was carried away with later proceedings, then was carried away himself. Harvey heartily approved testimony of another witness. He applauded. Superior Court .Judge James L. Latham of Burlington turned to the bailiff. Deputy Sheriff Lonnie Craven, with two directives. “Sheriff, bring that man up here. Sheriff, put that man in jail." The citation; contempt of court. Harven completed one of the shorter jail terms on record — one hour.' A major crime is committed every 15 seconds in the U. ,S. SHOP TILL 9 EVERY NITE Formerly 10 99 to 39.99 All These Fine First Quality Slipcovers Feature: • Extra Strength Safety stitching. • Stain Resistant • Ovorlocked seams, reinforced sfresr. points • Water Repellent • Guaranteed woshoble • Washable • Many fabrics are self wdtrrl • No-Iron ■' • Bouillon fringe or ruffled skirts. ' • Irxtured • Fabrics include textured .solids, boucles, friezes • Green • Grey • Brown • Rose • Furquoise Special Assortment STUDIO and DAVENC COVERS g99 Red Values to M.99 SHOP TILL 9 EVERY RIGHT TILL CHRISTMAS! F^qnd MadeJiriported from Italy TrlsTMohair SWEATERS THESE WEAVES: • Torrmino • Coble Stitch • Popcorn weave • Washable ■ - STYLES: • Cordigans • Slipovers COLORS: • Red • Blue • Green , • Agua • Beige • Mnize • White • Gold • Black' G.rlC Weor.. . . Se.and FInof ladies J00% Ny-lon . SLIPS Req. 4,00 Req. 6 00 $297 $397 ‘ ^ ^loce Him .ond bodice. 100% nylon V ^ I ir.col or Sotin trjcol. Perfect lit. FuH f \ ' hloclj, or beige. Sues 3i to 40. Chorge Y: \\ Girls'i Holiday DRESSES - Reg, 3,99 Reg. 4,99 Reg 6 99 $299 $354 $^54 • Sizes 3 to bx ond 7 to 14 • Wnshnble Velvets. Wools, Dou . and dotlon • Shirtwoist, A line, Slep-mi • Oioose lion: Red, r„een, While • Pink ond Men's STORM COATS Regular 35.00 j *28 88 Worm (ur like pile col lor. Ye length storm root. Spot and slam resistant Block only 111 sizes 3fi to 44, Charge Yoiiis KENTFIELD Ivy or Continental Style Proportioned Polished cottons $349 49 ir perfect fit. Just the thing Assorted Styles Men's SWEATER SA|.E USE YOUR CREDIT Reg. 10,95 to 17,95 THESE STYLfS; • Cardigans • Slipovers I • Button Fronts • Zipper fjronts IFSl I ARRK S: 100% Grlons • 100% Wools Wool Blends ....-.......... ' - -1 ^ THB^PONTJAC PRESS. THtTRvSQAY^. NOVEMBER 26, l* i 'B* a ladies’ Wirier t Mes’ Miik Trim Coats I Coats Rcjsulnr to $55.00 Regular to $125.00 ■2 S 2 fO/\ :\j4 Men’j pedwin. Demi-Boots Choose from Illack or Hrown. Sues 6Vi to 12, C, I), K widths. 11199 Also nvailahle in black for hoys. Sixes .Wa to 6, C, I), K tfidlhs. low fipecisMi; Ptlfatl Ladies’ Leather Snow Boots 'I lie perfect way to endure I lie nasty winter weather, in lleeee lined snow hoots. Sixes 4 to 10. •// \ "-T< THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 - IC1 L' I SHOP TILL 9 EVERY NIGHT VuilW’a I TILL CHRISTMAS! HtYKIDS . SWA ARRIVES AT VifJ8llSTOWORROW 11:00 A.M. Waite's,Will. Not Knowingly, Be Undersold ' ^ ^ .V / »c. Exciting Lionel Military Elec. Die-ca;t locomotive smokes,'whistles, has iight-up headlight. Deluxe 60-wotf tronsformef powers our exciting fully equipped military troin over large figure 8 over-and-under trock, with trestid. Cannoncarrying car operates at touch of a finger. Target range cor explodes when hit, re-assemblps easily. . Toylond . . . Fifth Floor Train Set $2995 DOLL COACH ' Clegont in bfu* ond wl.ilB. . $998 ERECTOR SET ;n,:ra;.l7:j:i.$io88 ports, new girders. I Z. FORT CHEYENNE on. otlmk Fort Cbeyenn* TABLE and CHAIRS "Allied 401" TYPEWRITER AvIhentiC tcOyisoord. Portoblo cil mhI ruler. Uwt4l ' I I SMOKEY the HORSE $1 <98 Springs positioned for sofety. I \»/ 'l5'»bolls. outo- lt~ white cue ball, 2 rubber'fipped WESTERN LOCO yellow light, cow-catcher NEPTUNE TUG BOAT oyqh sea, fted hght; ^ a a a >0Mery Ofieralfd,' mystery ^44 >#on. ^ TOYLAND ... FIFTH FLOOR "Barbie" The Teenage Fashion Model Waite's Will Not Knowingly Be Undersold $209 so Borney's Aulo foctory .. 8.88 soHoBiillon Motor Spider 2.29 CO Hamilton Helmet............ ].49 to Hamilton Mbsquiir Ir. Kelly Auto W. Barbie Costumes .. 1 56 Barbie Costumes.. 1 87 Barbie Costumes. . 2.66 3.,33 3.33 6.44 Bnmeo Okinawo Gun........... 4.79 Ben,CO 2-woy Wrist Rod,,0.... 3.29 Mouse Tropo, Crazy Gome... 3.64 Molteis Barbie i Ken Gitl.Sel 8.98 , Mot,.11 Animal Yacker...... 10.89 Mattel CtioHy Baby Doll..... 8.44 Mattel Chany Calliy Doll.... 9.44 Toylond . .. Fifth Floor Playtex Padded Bra reg.»3<«' now niUSBS lEHIIMIl CLOSEOUT SALE! Wm/ (mmmM iwiiNiiiri Also includes Publisher’s Famous 10-Year Free Library Research Service-Plus, 10-Year Book-of-the-Year 50% Savings Plan! Full and complete 1964 unabridged edition of the highly-rated ILLUSTRATED WORLD ENCYCLOPEDIA. Because the publisher Is closing out a limited number of sets we ar^ able to bring theni to you at this .special low price. You get FREE^the publisher’s famous Library Research Service for the next 10 years. Pius a 10-year Book-of-the-Year 50% Savings Certificate Hurry for yours. niew soft cups stay soft/ machine washable/ made without rubber / Now you get exciting sovings of $1.00 on the sensational new Playtex Soft-fine Padded Bra. The cups ore soft and stay soft through countless machine washings. The secret? The cups ore mode without rubber f Wash It.again and again... cups stay soft-never crumble, harden or lose their shape. So right now buy a Playtex Soft-line Padded Bra and save $1.00. Hurry, offer expires soon. White. A, B cops 32-36. Reg. $3.95, now only $2.95 Your FARBERWARE Appliance Center! Open Every Night Til 9 P.M. Til Christmas Forberwore Smokeless ^ Broiler and Rotisserie $3988 . • Exclusive "cool-zoned" broiling to eliminate smoko and spatter. • Stainless steel bady,- aluminum drip tray. • 1 4 Ad|u.'.lable rotisserie settings. • ta.sy to clean, trouble-free motor. • Use your Waite's Charge Account. Forberwore Elec. Con Opener ond Knife Shorpener $1499 Forberwore 12" Electric FRYPAN *26“ „ St holds lid away • Open heavy or aluminum • Sharpens knives perfectly. • Removable heat control .with high dome covet. • Fries ond bakes. • Easy to clean stcilnless steel f Ideal for all cooking needs. Forberwore 8-cup COFFEE MAKER $]788 Phono tE 4 2511 Only ifnltileii itnel Farberwnr* tsiim|Kt hot water Iftilerttly ol the exact inm|)erolure (or peirlec) brewingl Really oulonwllc. 4-cup collee moW.......15.68 12-cup cpHm moktr... 20.88 . ,______________________» . . THE PONTIAC PRESS a West Ruroa street Bowam H. Fh£9*mi» EMCutlve VIA* PT" ■ EUMnesi Maoiger’ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Pontiac, Michigan JcaiM A. Kiunr Bcerctm »nd AdvartUlnt Director O. Mamhahi. JomXm Advertising Let’s ‘Keep’ Thanksgiving fEDlfOR'S NOTE-r In keeping with our policy of running guest editorials from time to time, our Thanfagiving Day 'message has been written hy Rev. Harold W. Gteseke, Pg^star, Bloomfield Hills Baptist Church.) Holidays are like money. They are easy to spend and hard to keep. Most of us are “spending” this day eating turkey with our family and friends. We are in the best tradition for the first Thanksgiving on our shores was a day of joyous feasting. . But every thoughtful; American knows that Thanksgiving is more than good food and family fun. To truly “keep” this day we must lift our hearts In praise to God, the Giver of avery good and perfect gift. Like our Pilgrim P’athers 343 years ago, we must add to our REV. GIESEKE festivity a humble prayer of thanks. ★ ★ ★ Gratitude, we soon discover, is not an easy art. Counting our blessings takes time and effort. It makes us think. Here is one good reason for this annual November holiday. But how can we ‘‘keep” this uniquely American day of thanks? We can remember Our heritage. Our nation was founded by hardy men- of faith. Consider these Pilgrims. After sixty-three days aboard the. Mayflower they reached the “stern and rock-bound coast” to faqe a terrible winter. The story is that they were reduced to mere grains of corn for rations and that once only seven well colonists remained to nurse the sick- More than half their number slept in the snow-covered graveyard. ★ ★ ★ But the new year brought a harvest, the Indians were friendly, and a day of thanksgiving was called. They were free men in a free land. Cod was for them. Who could be against them? America, this is “the rock whence ye are hewn.” Never forget it! ★ ★ ★ Wr ran acknowledge the goodness and power of God. In spite of near di.sastcr, the Pilgrims did. Can we dn 1C.S.S with our land so prosperous and at jieace? With King David we inu.st say to God “All this abundance t hat we have provided comes from Thy hand and is all Thy own” (I Chronicles 29:lfi). Added to our national blessings Is the security of a personal faith. ★ ★ ★ iMir a Christian this means the Joy of sins forgiven by the costly sacrifice rtf .fesus Christ on the cross — the abundant life now and ftwever — hope In a cause that will ultimately triumph. For we believe oiir Lord is the coming King, “lie must reign until lie hath put all enemies under His feet” (I Corinthians I.'i;2.'>). This Is the re-ligioiis faith that founded and preserved our Nation. If we lose it we are doomed to the fate of Nineveh and Tyre. ★ ★ ★ Wo can appreciate our friends. How seldom we thank those who mean the most to us. This would be a good day to begin Dr. William L. BriPOKa, professor and poet nt Boston University, says that one day he remembered the ^ elementary school teacher who had first planted in his heart a love for verse. He wrote her a simple not« of thanks. 'I'lic reply he had was u cli^lC. ★ A' My dear Willi#: 1 mnnot t«l| you how much ymir note meant to me. 1 am In my. flghiles, living mjone In a small room, cooking my own • meals, lonely, and like Ihp last leaf of autumn, lingering behind. You will be interested to know that I taught school for fifty years and yours>is the first note of appreciation I ever received. It came on a blue-cold morning and it cheered me as nothing has in many years. So let us “keep” Thanksgiving. Grateful for our heritage, thankful to God, kind to those who help us, and always breathing George Herbert’s prayer: “Thou that hast given so much to me,, Give one thing more—a grateful heart.” Monet still talks, but in these days of inflation it takes a sizeable wad of it to say something important Verbal Orchids to - Mr. and Mm. .Inhn E. Llnnliury of 111 E. Iroquoln; .’idth wedding Hnnlvemmy. Charlw 8«a(r of 220 N .InhnMirt; Wlh hlrthduy. Mm. (Uephea ,1. nmtmtn Nr. of KisSiimmll, «Mh hirfhday. Mr. and Mrr. liny hnwiidR of Uiilun Lake; if7th wiHldlgg RimlvorHiiry. For All Our Blessings We Give Thinks 'David Lawrence Says: To size up a man fairly well, add his mother’s appraisal of him to that of his mothe^in-law, and divide by two. Hoover Talk on FBI Significant Obscurity Due for Humphrey? By HARRY KELLY WASHINGTON (IPI - One of the capital's favorite guessing games is whether Hubert H. Humphrey’s incandescent spirit will be obscured by .Lyndon B. Johnson's long shadow. Johnson himself knows the hazards. Like Humphrey, he was one of the most celebrated personages on Capitol Hill, yet all but vanished as John F. Kennedy’s vice president. “Whatever happened to Lyndon Johnson?” was the joke going the rounds then. From the beginning, vice presidents had a lost feeling. 'The first, John Adams, felt he held “the most insignificant office that ever the invention of man contrived nr his imagination conceived.” John Nance Garner, summing up his job in 1934. likened the vice presidency to a spare tire: as long as everything rolls smoothly, little attention is paid to it. ■A ★ ★ But even then a trend had begun to give the vice president more responsibilities and duties. ENLARGE THE FfELI) Herbert Hoover once .said he was the first chief executive to enlarge the field of the vice president by having Charles Curtis attend Cabinet sessions “.so he would know what was going on in the executive arm of the government, and would be belter prepared to take over the presidency if needed." Franklin 0. Roosevelt delegated important ndminlitralivc duties to Henry Wnlliiee In World War II. Harry S. Truman made Alben W. Barkley a member of the National Seeurity Council, where he purtielpated in policy making. Dwight D. Eisenhower had Richard M. Nixon represent him on various public occasions both at home and abroad, as well ns having him join discussions of the Cab. (/let and Niitional Security Council. Kennedy enlarged the job a hit more, assigning Johnson to the ehnlr/nanshlp of Ihe National Aeronautics and Space Council, NOW IT’S HUMIMIREY’S TURN Now it is Hubert Horatio Humphrey's turn, and Johnson apparently has no intention of shunting him off Into a corner. He has already proposed that the government eslahlish an official residence for the vice president. Rut from present indicntinns nnd reports, the President has enough work ‘ lined lip for Humphrey that he will have little leisure lime nt home. In addillon to Ihe other vice |)resiclenflnl assignmenis, .lohnson is said In w a n t Humphrey to keep an eye on sncli depari-nients ns labor, agriculture and liealthi edii-ealion and welfare, and to act as a lightning rod lor lileas In government. He may also moke use of the Minnesotan’s bright Image abroad by giving him overseas missions. ★ ★ ★ If all this holds true. It doesn't Seem likely anyone will be asking, “whatever happened to Humphrey.” WASHINGTON ~ An award has just been given in Chicago by Loyola University’s School of Medicine to J. Edgar Hoover, direc!tor of the Fedeifal Bureau of investigation. It is known as t h e “Sword of Loyola” and is being given n for the firsl| time. It is namedi for St. Ignatius I.AWRENCE Loyola, who, hs Hoover phrased it, “turned aside from narrow self-interest to dedicate hiis life and his sword to God.” Hoover’s address in accepting the award is significant because he declared, in effect, that the FBI must not be misused or its power abused for political or other selfish purposes. He said: “We must never forget that government cannot favor one group or one special interest over its duty to protect the rights of all citizens. * ★ * “We must constantly guard government against the pressure -groups which would crush the rights of others under heel in order to achieve their own ends. GREAT MISFORTUNE “It is a great misfortune that the zealots or pressure groups always think with their emotions, seldom with reason. "They have no compunction in carping, lying and exaggerating with the fiercest passion. They cry liberty when they really mean license! Various Negro organizations have demanded that the FBI make more arrests in civil rights cases because, they claim, local police may not make them. ★ * * Roy Wilkins, executive director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and one of the ablest of the Negro leaders, said last Sunday that, while he does not call . for the resignation of Hoover, as some of the Negro leaders have done, he does disagree with the contention of the FBI director that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. had not stuck to the truth in his charges against the FBI. Wjlkins added: “The truth of the matter is that 99 per cent of the Negro citizens of this country believe that the attention they received from the FBI in the Southern struggle has been, say, less than satisfactory. They agree with Dr. King . . . CAN’T PRODUCE "They feel, of course, that the FBI's iraditional method of operation, that is. cooperation with loral police agencies, cannot produce results in the and that unless the FBI depWts from this formula, they will working in cooperation, that is\ the FBI, working in cooperation^ with some of the very forces that have oppressed Negroes. “They don’t believe in their local police force, by and large, and therefore unless the FBI discards this formula and acts a little independently to -protect the rights which the citizens believe should be protected under the Constitution, irrespective of the local police forces, then they won’t gel any satisfaction.” The controversy over enforcement of the civil rights act is in its Infancy. ir ie it But already there are signs a the enforcement problem is ming a real issue, and that the partisans of the civil rights law are not going to be satisfied with a reliance on state or city police but are going to insist that the federal government increase police measures in this field. Voice of the People: -----^^ ■ Mod^ Literature Is Not Only Source of Obscemty There is more smut, obscenity, lust, etc. in the Holy Bible, Book of Leviticus, chapters 18-21, than in any modem books today. I’ll venture to say there is not a boy or girl from five years to 18 years that doesn’t ' know about the birds and the bees. Let’s stop picking on the publishers, book stores, drugstores and magazine stands. I^t people read their own choice and we all can enjoy a social blessedness and a future happiness. Live and let live. ERNIE SPENCER 47 GLENWOOD ‘Americans Let Others Think for Them’ Gold water is a conservative in every sense of the word. He is also an honest politician. .★ A '* We have allowed the Federal' government to do our thinking for us for so long that when the challenge to Improve onr government came, we were unable to meet it. We were uninformed. People went to the polls confused because much of the press had released only what it wanted them to believe. ★ ★ ★ . The'key to keeping our country a democracy is educaUon and information. The conservatives realized this and work^ t<> remedy this lack of facts which was too big a task with the liberal papers, commentators, and TV stations against them. . it * * How is it that this controlling of public opinion can occur? ’fhis i,agoodpointto™llo.er, UNION LAKE ^ Fellow TV watchers: We have shown our desire to remain secure rather than free. it * * Liberals have chosen both presidential candidates since Roosevelt. They polished off Goldwatcr and never raised a sweat. Even though they are disarming our national defenses, refuse to defend our sacred honor, bankrupt our country, and tax us dry, we still vote for them. ^ We let news reporters dominate our thinking, teachers brainwash bur children, and seU our vote for a handout. America will fall like an overripe fruit. ANOTHER BIRD BRAIN fells Importance of United States Flag OiXflag is very important. It means that we have life, libertv and pea^ in mind. Without our flag we have no joy in Ufc, no freedom became of war, and no freedom of speech. \ * * * \ In both ^orld war.s our men fought and died so that we cokld have everythin. Lct'.s .still remember that they are fighting ant^ will" keep on fighting as long a.s they have to. We all know that God is and will be with us forever. ^ DONNA COX 66 , WILLI AMS Wants Oppokunity to Thank Champion Recently the studenw and faculty of Pontiac Central were given the opportunity to thank Hayes Jones for his contribution to our City and for giving hi^gold medal to us. Could the citizens be given an opportunity to thank Hayes Jones for his magnificent example and 8portsmanship?\Wc feel deep pride in his accomplishment and would welcome some way to thank him. ROBERT E. BUNCE 460 N. SAGINAW Capital Letter: LBJ Works With Cabinet as if It Were Own Team Smiles Wonder if the little kids, upon returning to k e h n n I, meant it when they said “Go • Choose From BUILT-INS-WHITE or COLOR » TOP LOADING PORTABLES » FRONT LOADING PORTABLES NO HAND RINSING REQUIRED COMPARE and You'll Buy a KITCHENAID 2 YEARS TO PAY! THERE’S A KITCHENAID • FOR EVERY KITCHEN • EVERY BUOOET Layaway Now For Chrlitmai 90 Days Santa At Cathi M 121 N. SAGINAW FI 9-6189 *’V0$$r AppUutU'« OPtN tViWY NIGt^T Til 9 t» M i THE PONTIAC PRESS, TIfURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26. 1964 acEEF>s t>Ftad V DO W'ISI HEY, KIDS! VISIT SANTA AT FEDERAL'S ... HE HAS FREE CANDY FOR YOU! Sole! Regi^r $2 to $10 Austrioi^urora crystal t*’.4 97 Earrings, 1.67; Necklaces, 1 strand, 1.97; 2 strand, 2.97; 3 strand, 3.97; 4 strand, 4.97; pins and bracelets, 2.47. Clear crystal plus some colors. SALE Sheaths 'n shifts. Jumpers'll kiiits in gala holiday looks, reg. 5.99 to 6.99 4 97 2 FOR 9.00 Here's your chance to have a new holiday wardrobe at sensational savings!- Styles for daytime 'n datetime in every imaginable fabric . . . cotton knits, rayon crepes, soft wools, rayons with a 'linen look' . . . just'to mention a few. Assorted prints and solid colors. . . novelty combinations. Petite 5-13, junior 7-14, misses' 10-20 and half sizes 14V2-24’/2 in the big selection. Hurry, don't miss this spectacular dress sale! Genuine leather gloves, fully-lined — every length '2 »5 Special! Reg. 1.19 nylons with that French touch 55 1.45 Shortie to 8-button lengths. Stretch fourchettes for perfect fit. Rayon lined: (A) shortie, black, brown, $2. (B) 6-button; black, brown, $3. (C) 8-button; black, $5. Natural rabbit fur lined; (p) shortie; black, brown, $^. (E) 4-buttonr iblack, brown, beige, $4. Imaginel You save a whopping 2.12 on a box of 3 pairs! Fabulous fashion nylons for gift giving. Seamless sheer mesh weave that wears longer ... for leg-flattering, flawless I fit, first qualify I In sizes 9 to 11. 4.99 to 5.99 handbags in shapely, spacious styles 3.49 Simulated calf or grain leathers in a multitude of smart shapes to take you around the clock in stylel Colors to match your every holiday entemblel Finely crafted, fully lined plus zipper sections. Black plus tones of brown in this exciting group. ,^.'ij7h©Ic • ^ ^ j^giY f i OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 P.M 1^. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS Af It THE PONTIAC HllESS,, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Oswald’s Mother Rambled in Testimony WASHINGTON (AP) - On the first of her tl^ days of testinnwy to tiie Warren Com-missd(Hi, Marguerite Oswald prodaimed: *T am liable to name some very important people.” iSie never did, as she defended her son, Lee Harvey Oswald. She rambled on in long, unbroken passages. Over and,over she would say: ‘‘I have many stories, gentlemen, I am sure you do not have" or “I am the only one who has this information" or “I have offered over and over to give any information I have.” But, when pressed for facts by chief counsel J. Lee Rankin, she could only say: ‘‘if I knew who shot President Kennedy, I would be only too happy ‘b tell you.” the papers she said would exonerate her son were old family pictures, letters from Oswald and school records. RAMBLING TESTIMONY Through her gambling testir mony gbnt tbe fragments of a mother who felt abandoned, a woman cast in the shadows of the glare of great tragedy, a woman who did not share in the sympathetic generosity of the thousands who sent money to the bereaved. At the time of the assassination, Mrs. Oswald had been estranged front Oswald and his wife, Marina, for a year, didn’t even JoiiOw they had had a second child But she droppdjd* everything to rush to her daughter-in-law’s ‘’side after Oswald was arrested. ’ When Marina found a “ photograph of Oswald, holding a rifle and burned it, his" mother flushed the remains down a toilet. Two days later, the day of Oswald’s funeral, they fought. Mahina was trying to choose between two dresses for the funeral and became annoyed at June, her 2-year-old daughter, finally striking her on the I with a comb. “Marina, don’t do that,” said Mrs. Oswald. A Secret Service agent assigned to the family told Mrs. Oswald: “You let her alone.” DON’T TELL ME “I said ‘Don’t tell me what to say to my daughter-in-law when she was hitting my grandbaby on the head with a comb.’ ” Then they left for the graveyard. Shortly after this, the rapture was complete — as it remains. Mrs. Oswald told the commission she then began to suspect Marina was involved in a conspiracy with two of the Secret Service agents and “another high official” in the assassination. Rankin pressed for details. I have no proof because naturally if I did, I don’t think we McNamara Getting Both Praise, Scorn WASHINGTON (AP) - Is Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara “the bravest man in America” or is he “cruel and heartless?” You can take your pick of opinions from telegrams he has received since announcing plaps to, close 95 military bases last week. TTie telegrams were from businessmen, labor leaders, politicians, clergymen and others. There were 60 of them — surprisingly few considering the furor raised when McNamara’s, decision was made known. Of these, 35 were favorable and 25 critical. Some of the critical telegrams asked postponement reconsideration. NOT AVAILABLE McNamara received letters too, but a count and breakdown of these were not available at the Pennon. A Sail Francisco woman addressed her wire to “Mac the Knife” and told the secretary: ‘“rhank God you didn’t cut down Hunter’s Point Shipyard entirely. We love you in San Francis- STICK TO IT A Dartmouth College professor advised McNamara that both .New Hampshire senators would protest the closing of the Portsmouth Naval shipyard “Let them prote.sl,” advised the professor. “Stand by your guns." McNamara got similar advice and support from a man in China Lake, Calif., who told him to “ignore political objections. Stand pat.” Other samples: “Hooray for savings. Down with wasteful duplications. Down with the Brooklyn Navy Yard.” — an Albany, N.Y., man. “I go with you. Get the dead-wood off our backsj” — a Bishop. Calif., man “Hooray for this Now let’s have a similar cut jn federal employes for additional saving of some no million a year” - -an A.shland, Ky., man OPPO.SITE SIDE On the opposite side were tlm.se telegrams Two Samoan Teachers Missing on Canoe Trip PAGO PAGO, Samoa (AP) An Arizona man and wife who teach school in Samoa were m I a a i n g Uiday on a lO-mtIo ocean trip from NIM to 1‘ago in an outrigger canoe. Dennis L. Hoff, 28, and his 22-year-oid wife, Patricia, look advantage of a school holiday to make the trip from their village residence In Nun. A new airport (erminal and an educational television center were be- In^i^TSlS by oAwiI Oraki In By stripping our country’s defenses at home and abroad you are inviUng Communist attack in selling out the American people.” — a Muskegon, Mich., woman. “That tbis-should be done by an administration committed to bringing about an end to poverty Is incredible.” — a New York labor official. “Members of this parish protest the closing of military installations. Save money by stopping giveaway programs overseas. We want to remain free and strong.” — a Port Jervis, N.Y., pastor. would be here,” Mrs. Oswald spid. “But I feel there is a lot of speculation'about everything.” As she was leaving the hosiM-tal emergency room after viewing her son’s bodjr, Mbs. Oswald said she told policemen: “I think some day you will hang your Jieads in shame. I happen to know, and know some facts, that maybe this id' the unsung hero of this episode. And I, as his mother, intend to provide this it I can.” The Warren Commission was her chance. The nearest approach to conceding Oswald’s part “ the assassination was that he was ^ agent of the U,S. government. Rankin again asked for ^ proof. . Because, said Mrs. Oswald, he began reading Communist literature right after he had talked with a recruiting officer about joining the Marines. This showed the government had bigger things in mind for him. Because hie was allowed to leave the Soviet Union with his wife ^ easUy. Because when he got to Fort Worth on his return he walked in front of Marina to protect her. ★ / Because after he returned from the Marines he told her to turn off what three years before had been hi$ favMte television show, “I Led Three Lives for the FBI," because he said it was just propaganda. e 109 E m Women's 'SQUAW' HudiPkifipi^* Genuine brushed pigskin fleece lined boots Made of soft genuine brushed pigskin, the air conditioned leather that breathes. Resists soil, stains, melted snow, rain, water splashes! Steel shank support. Men's loden. 7-12. Women's Silverpine. 5 to 10. 12 95 CHARGE IT Give Hush Puppie n your Christmas gift list OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL 9:30 OPEN SUNDAYS NOON TO 6 d'otH Christmas) •W.rta.gf. Eslidaf • • HEY, KIDS! VISIT SANTA AT FEDERAL'S, HE HAS FREE CANDY-FQR EVERYONE! nioOMuiful nil well ALL OF OUR SKI SHOPS NOW OPEN.A I SPECIAL PURCHASE! •t GRISWOLD Natural mipk and blue fo^rimmed Famous wool fabric high fashion coats $ $ SKIERS' SPECIAL Griswold ogain offers the finest ski :•:• package anywhere^ We .invite your comparison. :•:■ The Ski Lominoted with a gleaming block finish, metal edges, heel and tip ■:•: protector. Perfect ski for the novice. Regular 23.00. V: The Boot Complete double boot by Kastingor. Smooth, firm leather oflers the best I;:-in support and fit. 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Fashion coats in uniquely woven wools. Newest^ slim-line tailoring for a fabulous luxury look. Misses' sizes. FOWTIAC Tel-Hiseen Canter FI S-2363 OfUn MtiMly '(il t 269 HomlltMs Re Ml A-397A 0»en Nietillv Til 1 33 FREE ALTERATIONS Imaginel Worumbo, Foritmann, Somersville famous mill woolens go into the making of these warm winter coats! Natty tweeds, vel-yety plush textures. Thermo-Ray<^ insulated lining or wool inter-l^ied. Sizes 8 to 18 in group. SAVE 'Go-go' suburbans toko you warmly thru winter 17 88 FREE ALTERATIONS Swank wools, cbtton corduroys, ‘ vioyl suedes. Short to % lengths. Many Orion® acrylic lined . -Orion acrylic pile lined hoods . . . scarf treatments. Fall colors in the casual look. Sizes 8 to 18. “>il *N OI^EN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 P.M, OPEN SUNDAYS NOON T0\^6 (VmU Chtistm») 1- J I HK PONTIAC I PRESS, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 26, 1964 A—13_ Now Teen Aids Handicapped - ----j— ■" I T—^“ • Door Slammed Deafness LANSING giP) - Rubyanne Doll cdi^’i; ejren hear« a IPhone ti|^, But ^ day a car door slanfU)^ ^ suddenly she was bearim;, the conveirsa-tion of iwo youngs^Wlth her. . Now the P^r blonde 19-year-old hij^sdibol senior finds her new h^aoki poirera a large help in her frdfiuent work of caring for especially handicap-youngsters. "I can hear the kids cry when they’re In mother rboui,” she said. The slmuniag car door opened up htnew world of sound to Rubyanne which was “a lot different thaH thought it would be.” after MUMPS “1 never thought it was that clear^ the said. Rul^aiine aD but lost her hearing completely after the mumps and a series of ear infections wdien she was about 5 years old. After an ear operation at age 6, doctors held out lio hope for her recovery. But two weeks ago, Rubyanne climbOd in to the car of neigh-* bor Janies S. Heiden, waiting to go to a Veterans Day parade. bettcr and better “I remember telling Jim that each time he shut the car door 1 coiild hear' better,” she said. ‘ I could al^ hear Bobby and Janie (Heiden’s children) talk-. ing. It seemed gSod to hear them for their voices were much clearer than when I used to wear a bearing aid.” SincO then, she said, her hear- j ing seems to have improved i more. She talks excitedly about! it. I ■k * * ‘ I can enjoy my stereo now,” ^ .said Ru^anne, who enjoys both popular and classical records, especially if they have singing parts. “With my hearing aid before, I couldn’t understand the words very' ctoarty. I thought they were: ’saying one tWng, and reallj^,®tti^ were saying something else,** she said. LIP READER RubyamM is rated an excel-; lent lip reader, and in class she j had no trouble understanding: her teachers. ‘‘But when students talked; with the teacher, 1 couldn’t keep up with the moves back and forth,” she said. 1 A new experience for her now | Is being able to hear the youngsters she works with. Rubyanne has been active as a volunteer worker with Ingh- Ask Kelley to Rule on Studded Tires LANSING (AP)-Secretary of ite James Hare has asked ly. Gen. Frank Kelley to rule the legality of a new stud-ig device to increase tire iction in winter driving. Hare said, however, he thinks ch tires arc illegal in Michi-n. ‘We have had reports that any tlrC("ldeaicrs in Michigan B selling studded tires,” Hare Id. “But Michigan law ap-ars quite specific in the atter, and on the ba.si.s of »lr chewing up our roads. By may have to be outlawed.” ham Cmjnty chapter of the Muscjd^‘‘^ Dys^ophy AsMcia-i,"And plans to enter nurses training next f<^. OPENS DOORS. attractive teeii - ager was on her way to ride on the Muscular Dystrophy float in the slamming created pressures that dislodged the scar idsaues. And, they say/ if she have more hearhig, pre^ms, the new diagnosi| ind^ates meOiods-foT correctinrg if surgically. . J ■ Gordon Thomas, audiologist at . . Everett High School, says Veterans Day par^ when the Rubyanne has improv^ from a slamming door opened the door | “severe loss” to a “mild loss’ on her hearing. DocUh's first diagnosed Ruby-ume’s hearing loss as “narye deafiiess,*’ but ndw belidve it was caused by scar tissu^ from her childhood idfections keq^ her eardrum ifrom * moving properly. ' They believe the car door —which means she has a slight difficulty hearing. Doctors say^ though, that her hearing is "ad- Said one; “It was quite dramatic thing to see a girl who was raised as deaf-come in be able to hear.” LIONIZED - TV’s Linus the Lionhearted, in a 55-foot tall balloon version, is the star of the annual Macy Thanksgiving Day parade in New York today. , Quiz to Cover Renewal Area Residents of Pontiac’s urban redewal area will participate in a “neighborhood interest”, survey Saturday. ★ ★ ★ ’The s u r V e y, conducted by Michigan State University, is part of a study program to determine what persons living in a renewal area are most concerned with. Residents w i ii be asked questions about their iieighbor-bood and its future development. Ten workers will survey an estimated 400-500 families in an area bounded by Auburn, Os-mun, Paddock and Wide Track, w *■ * An office will be set up in one of the new homes constructed by Dubbs Construction Co., in the area of O’Riley Court. CALLATOFTICE K residents know they will not be at home when the interviewer is slated to call, they are urged to go to the office at Perkins and Willard between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Grand Haven Adviser GRAND HAVEN (AP)- City Council has approved hiring Muskegon consultant William Krause to work with a committee in developing a year-around recreation area centering on Grand Haven’s Snow Bowl. The area also includes a site for a future armory. Rare Blood Volunteered MUSKEGON (UP» - Eighteen donors have volunteered rare B-negatiye type blood for 6-year-old Kristy Fowler who will undergo heart surgery Tuesday at Blodgett Memorial Hospital hi Grand Rapids. ★ ★ ★ The child is the daughter of Harold Fowler, business agent for the Machinist’s Union at I Brunswick Corp. here and Mrs. Fowler. The Red Cross had issued a plea for 14 pints of the B-, negative type blood. Glass capsuels are being used to drill oil wells. Between 20 and 40 pear-shaped capsules can be lowered 20,000 feet down into an oil well shaft and exploded. Sentence Escapee for Mofals Offense FLINT (AP) - Lteo B. Cole, 24, one of five prisoners who escaped from tiie Genesee County Jail last Wednesday, wm sentenced in Genesee County Circuit Court today to 10-15 years in prison for .a morals offense. Cole, convicted earlier by a'' , jury, was awmting sentencing when the esca]^ occurred. All five men since have been recaptured. Cole was arrested by" Mount Morris police. ★ ★ “ He was_^ the second of the five to receive a long prison sentence since being re-captured. Arthur L. Nation, 28, was Sentenced to 20 to 30 years Friday for h(s part in a Flint area holdup last winter. UEGOlTltn lEISES lEAUYSAFE? Throe yenrn of dlUBcnt re-nemch hnve pnxluced u nc Chcmh-ally null', accoi’dliiB lo Kln«ly Optical ('ompany, 13 N. Saginaw St., PoiiUac. '' The nafoty fenturei of the new lens Iwv® been wmfli’ined by n leading mldwestern medical «<;liool and a natloriiiliy rellac You Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs No More at Sears YOUR CHOKE-Allstate Regular or Snow Treads Sears Cuts Prices on Guardsman Nylons and All-Season Snow Tires ! 6.50x13 Tubeless Blackwall Guardsman or Snow Tread! each plus Fed. Tax NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED 7.50x14 Tubeless Blackwall Guardsman or Snow Tread! Our Ijowest PrixHiS Ever for Nylon Winter 'fires Searg Companiattjf 7'rattion Tire fpuaranteed 15 Montlui >■'- • > - I 6.'70xl.5 Tube-Type ItlnekwalU 9** riua Ta* ... No Trade-In Regulrfd Strong nylon winter llrfi glvea good Irectlon In Irr aiixl linow . . . anal priced •<> lx>w . . • xirive in SEARS I Ittu iihns II INtiiliar IMkmhM ‘ 11. ITHE PONTIAC PRI^.SS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, I9fi4 Compact Craftsman Portable Sprayers Regularly at J27.95I Sealefi ball-bearinga Oaftsman 16-pc« *A-inch Drive Socket Set Regularly ^99 at *9 99! ^ Charge It Charge It Completely portable to go where you go! Does everything from painting a house to inflating a tire- Sprays any paint, varnish, lacquer, enamel. Save $8.07 tomorrow at Sears! •74.95 Portable Sprayer with Cart....^.......'>9.88 Tanh'IVP" Sprayers..............114.88 anil 164.88 Paint Dupartmant, .Sears Main Ha$tnnent ALLSTATE All-Weather Motor Oil Sale Our best SAE lOW, 20W, 30 oil. Exceeds Re«- 39c SAE, API and car makers sequence tests, qin. O for sU Improved adilitive content. Save! Charge It ^ MooaacnaJ Manoann BBflnHO flflaaaaoODlOOO iVine socket kizes from 3/16 to Vz-tneh. Set also has reversible ratchet, flex handle, cross bar, .3 and 6-inch extension bars, slide bar. Chrome nickel-plated. Buy now for (diristmus! saaBQoanci aoimaii Craflaman 36-|»e. ^,%-in. Dr. Socket Sets Vit’in. dr. sockets hot forged for greater /f strength. Ten 12-pt. sockets (Vit-in. dr.) afiwl^x* 'ef 7/16 to 1-in. Seven 12-pt. sockets (•'Mt-in. Itea. Ssnsrsia IVIeraTol.t dr.) % to -34-in. or more. A u loin a lie sht-Bn lion (Jaragi^ Door Ojieners ^ Sears (ias Space-Saver ViirnaeeH (!herk Srnra low price! |{Mens, ligliis, closes and locks garage on the darkest night; rain, shine. .Siandard Intlallalion, As l-ow As . . ..............$24 nallding Mal0rlrth, Pmrry .*ilreel Uat^mrnl NO MONEY DOWN on Seam Easy Payment Plan Compact installation . . . even In a closet. With stainless steel ribbon inseU tp assure a uniform, clean blue flame-Af'A approved. Shop tomorrow and Saturday 'til 9 p.in.! *tn«lalk> You are also reasonably .secure from the perils of sunstroke; also, from smoke pois- oning caused by Inhaling the fumes from backyard barbie pits. , ■ It is easier to shave in the mornings, as — according.to many barbers — your be^d doesn’t grow as fqst now aS it does in summer. A You don’t have to fret so much about being caught in a riot. Most people don’t enjoy rioting when the temperature drops below freezing. BUY ,SHOVEL If you were thoughtful enough to buy your wife a new snow shovel for her birthday, she’ll proudly get rid of the drifts In ttie driveway herself /— so all the neighbor wives will be sure to see your fine gift and envy her. About now the children ^art giving le^s trouble, figuring vfr-tue will get its reward on Dec. .25.' ■■ You don’t have to listen to the golfing nuts brag about their scores, as they have put away their clubs for the dimation. It is safe to pick up the.morning newspaper Without wondering if you’ll have to read about some ambitious housewife’s plans for swimming the English Channel both ways whije knittipg'a sweater. NO BOMB DROPPED No one has dropped a hydrogen bomb in anger or by error. Gen. Charles de Gaulle hasn’t kicked up a diplomatic ruckus in days. Nothing to be grateful for this Thanksgiving? Why, man, think it over. When you get right down to it, you’re riddled with Beirut's Mice 'HarcT to Kill BEIRUT «V-Killing a rat in Beirut is easily arranged but a mouse is another matter. If you are plagued by rats, you submit a written request to the Beirut Municipality offices and in due cwirse a rat extermination squad will come around, to handle the case.' But a mouse ~ and a cockroach — requires the personal authority of the director general of the Ministry of Health. Only he can issue the fatal order, since regulations say he most keep the moose-killing powder under his personal control at all times. The rat squad, which uses a different powder, has its own supply. . If a mouse is killed accidentally along with the rats, the m-cident is labelled “a fortuitous accident’’ on the official records. riSSmslw^m^ sreciALS! BN. Sapnaw layway How For Chntteias tmeiAUY niBco' J-M. LUOUfit IIT .. Hut, Tts, C tele hiiM. TA«r«‘a exfrt vp/u* In ZnnHh QutHty FREE • Delivury and $«t-Up • I'Yuar Parti And Pieturu Tuba Warronty f 90-Day Service Warranty OPEN FRIDAY 8 'til 9 P.M. TV. RADIO SERVICE 770 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. Michigoti TESA 1157 FE 5-6112 It enneuf ALWAYS RRST QUALITY ^ GIVE THE QUALITY SOUND OF MUSIC CHOOSE A PENNCREST STEREO FOR CHRISTMAS NO MONEY DOWN ON PENNEY'S TIME PAYMENT PLAN The ''Spartacus" ... our handsome Danish Modern style with genuine walnut veneer! PENNCREST STEREO CONSOLE WITH FM/AM, FM STEREO RADIO OQQ95 M M No Money D 29995 Down! $12 a Month New Penncre.5t “Audio 777’’ changer with lightweight tone arm and low-mass cartridge . . . cuts record and needle wear in half! Retractable diamond needle, 45 RPM adapter. 6 speakers (two 100“ woofers, two 5” midrange, two 31/2” tweeters). 50-watt pu.sh-pull amplifier. Flywheel radio tuning, FM stereo indicator light. Tape input/outpiil and extension speaker/ headphone jacks. The “Homeslpadei”, Early American console in genuine maple veneer. IVnncrest “Audio 777’’ low-mass changer, retractable diamond needle. 6 speakers, ,50-walt pusli-piill amplifier. Flywheel radio tuning, FM stereo indicator light. PENNCREST ALL-TRANS(STOR CAPSTAN-DRIVE TAPE RECORDER 59’5 No Money Down! $5 a Month Use it anywhere! Tlattery-operated recorder has JVg” speaker. Dual track record/ play ... up to 24 minutes on reel of 1.5 tape. Remote control microphone, earphone, tape, reels, batteries inch PENNCREST DELUXE "DROP-DOWN' TRANSISTORIZED STEREO PHONO 9995 No Monoy Down! S.SO a Month 20-watt all-trausistor chassis. 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First, It's e Towncraft which msani longsr w«ar with o fraihsr look, sacand. It's tht lusurlout fit ond laal of Fortral poly-«it«r. Favorll* Klngdor collar, convartibl* cuffs. PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOUftS: 9;3fl|A.M. to 9 P.M. MON. thru SAT. '\i- ■ THK lH>i\ T1 AC FHKSS. 6, 1964 Tomorrow & Friday Onlyj d^Dresser, Chest, Spindle Bed authentically styled lines, rich Salem brown finish and hand-rubbed tops — these signs of quality. All this plus durable hardwood under-construction and dustproof interiors. Attractive spindle bed. SPECIAL-WHILE THEY LAST! Chrome Chairs r^oo Reg. $10 dinette chairs, 22 only................... ^ * Kitchen and Dinette Sets Regular S.'JO.OS Dinette Set, 5-Pieee.44.88 Drop-Leaf Table, Regularly $29.9i5.24.88* $24.95 Drop-Leaf Table, *Takc-With . . . 17.88* Odd-Lot Furniture Pieces Reg. $3.99 Toy-Cateher, now only..2.99 Reg. $9.88 Baby Swing, Just 11 at.7.88 High-Chair, Regularly at $16.99..12.88 SPECIAL-WHILE THEY LAST! 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REMEMBER ROSE THIS CHRISTMAS FOR GRACIOUS GIFT GIVING r) B—■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Papal yisit Stirs India Protests BOMBAY, India (UPI) - The impending visit of Pope P aul VI to the S8tb intecnational Eu^ diSriatic Gmgren has sparked prot^ by militant Hindu or* ganlzatioiis and stirred bitter memories of the Portuguese rule ovw Goa. ' ' ' ■ -k ★ In the longest journey ever undertaken by a reigning pope, and the first into Asia, the pontiff will travel to Bombay to attend the congress between Dec. 2-5. The conp’ess opens Saturday and ends the day after the Pope’s departure. Government officials, expressing regret at protests by some religious organizations, have noted that holdihg t h e^ congress in India was en-dors«l by the late Prime Minister Jatraharlal Nehru. It will be the first time the congfess has been ^held in a' predominantly non - Christian nation. , ' » This country of 465 million persms has about 8 mOIlon Christians, 365 million Hindus, 45/ million Moslems, and more than 7 miUkin SikhiT SOUTH D®IA Most of the Christians Uye in south India, \«here the apostle St. Thomas is said to have established Christianity shortly after Uie crucifixion of Christ. The historic visit the P<4>e will symbolize the new interest of the Roman Catholic Chn^h in Asia. The pontiff’s description of himself as a “missionary pope” has been noted critical^ by IBn-du and Mosleip organizations here. — , In a recent edition, a. Delhi weekly .“Organizer” headliito read, “Eucharistic Congress Will Be Smugglers’ Paradise,” and signs in New Dettii streets have praised Prime Jfinister Lai Bahadur Shastri for not attending the congress. Shastri had promised pre-viousy to attend a meeting of the rultog Congress party in! Calcutta which will take place l at the Same time as the Eu*| charistic Congress. ★ ★ ★ Tha pontiff is not expect^ to visit Goa; but his presmtce has recailed 4po years of overlordship over that small enclave in India by the Roman Catholic nation of Portugal. You Can Count on Us...Quality Costs No More at Sears ■>-•/'A-rI. y-.. .. A f1 Low -'DEIi: SAVE *70 ON AVERAGE 40 Sq. Yds. INSTALLED Continuous Filament Nylon Pile Carpet 799 § Sq.Yd. Regular $9.74 Carpet, Cushion and Installation Sears exclusive pattern in a high-low loop texture lends distinction to your home. Fine continuous filament nylon pile is extremely durable, easy to spot clean. Won’t shed or pill. 5 decorator colors. 12 and 15-ft. widths. With rubberized cushion. Room Siie Regular . Sale Sfvinga 9xl2-ft. 116.88 95-83 21.00 12xl5-ft. 194.80 159.80 35.00 15x21-ft. 340.90 279.65 61.25 SAVE *70 ON AVERAGE 40 Sq. Yds. INSTALLED Acrylic and Modacrylic Pile Patterned Carpet Regular $11.74 Carpet, Cushion ancl Installation Random sheared pile of superior Acrilan® acrylic and modacrylic in a handsome scroll pattern. Luxuriously dense; stays beautiful longer. In .Jade green. Shell beige, honey beige, reseda green or gold. 12 and 15-ft. widths. With rnbberiged cushion. Room Sige Regular Sale Savinga 9xl2-ft. 140.88 : 119.88 21.00 12x15-ft. 234.80 . 199.80 35.00 ].'ix21-ft. 410.90 349.65 61.25 SAVE *150 ON AVERAGE 40Sq. Yds. INSTALLED Sale-PricedI Sears Wool Wilton Carpeting 11??. Regular $15^74 Carpet, Cushion and Installation Knitted oonstrnetion give* euporior tuft bind, high, resistance to crushing. “Good” wool wilton in a practical aolld pattern. Parchment beige. Fern green. Spice beige. Bright bronze, Pecan, Colonial blue and martini. 12 and 15-ft. With rubberized riiRbion. Ho«»m Hiae Regular iSnln Savinga 9xl2.fl. imuui , 14.1.88 45.00 I2xl54t. 314.H0 239.80 75.00 15x214t. 5.'')0.90 419.65 131.25 Fre« Shop-nt-Home Biirvloe W«*ll brini MmplM to your home, ■in dwNdiiliii advice. Call FEdSrzl S4in todarl Fxport Inalatlalion “SsllRfaotion (Jiisrsniccd or Your Money nick” on all n»»r eoverlnoi initslled through Sean. We Cut to Any Slae All Saan earpalinf la avainhia In bill rlilb and Is enalonl'aiMd to jmur ezael Shop Tomorrow and Sal. ’Ill 9 P.M. NO MONEY MOWN Ask your anieaman how y4iii may lake yesra to |Niy on .Seara lVloderi|iziiig (Credit Plan Flrtof Coimrlrtfi, Stw0iui f'hor \ II I'oilli.l < M H II . ^<>^l ( ;iii! ('oiiiif on I . No Mor<^ ;»l So; Merry Ckrietmas Wki Portable Lightweight Vacuum Complete with set of 7'attachments NO MONEY DOWN, First Payment Feb. 1st Vacuum rugs with the thoroughiiesg you expect Attachments let you do everything from dusting; to cleaning upholstery. Tools travel wiu yon. Stands on end for stair cleaning, storage. 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Exp trt heavy duly motor tuma meat ilowlv for EVEN s«lf4>aitin|. NO .SPATTER, NO SMOKE-Jiist the laulett maati youTl ever sarvat SI'A HS V A ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 / USW Lexers to Map Talks PITTSpURGH, IM — Leaders of the United Steelworkers will meet in Pittsburgh next Wednesday and Thursday to lay the groundwork for the opening of fomal contract negotiaUcms with 6ie basic steel industry. David J. McDonald, steelworks president, called yesterday* a meeting of the 33-member executive board on Wednesday to be followed by a session of the 17D-man wage policy committee. The wage, policy committee meeting will continue Dec. 3 The wage policy committee has th^ final, say on union loon-tract matters, and Is expected to set a date for the start of national negotiations. This can be anytime after Jan.'l Gerhfion Is Arrested With U. S. Currency FR^KFURT, Germany (av-Detectives have arrested a Carman who stole $250,000 in worn-out U.S. currency" bemg tetumed to the United States for destruction, police said. Police reported they took an airlines employe into custody Tuesday after he made off with a sack containing the money from a shipment of several million dollars in old bills being returned to the United States. They declined to name the arrested man. Whole World Is a Toyland for Globe-Trotting Buyer SpeciaMi Ernest Theuer is a man with a single-minded purpose. As soon as the Christmas holidays are over, he’U once agai^ start roaming the world in search of toys whim«cd, ingenious, and extraordinary. Some he’ll find high up in a Swiss mountain hamlet, readied by a lo^ train ride and then a car ride through the mountains, r In St. Croix die working membera of a 1S,IN popnla-tion produce music boxes, cameras and phonographs in a fine, modern factory. In upper Bavaria where toy making is still a home indus- try, he’ll see women with huge baskets of Christmas free ornaments on a rack around, their backs, walkfaig to town to deliver their work to expoH -ook. lection centers. \ In Nagoya, japan, where Jap-, anese families paint miniature tea sets in their homes, for the world market, nieuer will sit with them around their, charcoal stove aihl si^est new designs for Christmas 1965. WORLD IS TDyLAjND the whole world is toyland I for the F.A.O. Schwartz buyer, I who unearths the ultimate in In England, he discovered the widow of a colon^Hn the’ sign^ a bear dressed .as a pe^er, carrying in his ba^ ket tiny bracelets, sendng 5 Clean-Cut Beatniks Placeld on Probation WEYMOUTH, England, (UPI) —Five beatniks were placed on probation bere^after lowing up in court-clean-shaven and with haircuts. The five, who had been ch^ged with loitering, were described by the woman judge as '“decent and employable.” kits, buttons and ribbons, all of which were carnally wired to the basket. . First she makies the bear of plush, outfits Mm with a leather cape and rubber boats, and then proceeds with the painstaking task of filling his basket. The same toy maker ,a is,6 ^lecializes in fanuliar situations such as a general store, but peopled by bears or mice as storekeepers; . Another English toymaker uses felt ducks for her parade of whimsical characters. There are brides and grooms, skaters, and street singers. In his 2- to 4 - month forays around the world, -Thener has a global view of toy possibilities. I n d i a^ he says, contribntes very„ little, except for chess sets and a Bombay collection of horns. Italy specializes in dolls, par<^ ticularly those with interchangeable heads. Sweden excels in woodep toys, as does Holland, and fur teddy bears. Trolls, which used to be made in Denmark, have pulled a puckish gesture, and are now-made in Florida. life, since the Spanirii appe^ to be not as caiwble ctafte-ihen. But one contributioi^ m interesting castle awtyafd mounted on a wooden board. . The Japanese, who take ibe toy business very seriously, excel in mechanical toys, and their future toymakers. study the craft in special schobls. Cuban Aide in Peking SPANISH MAKERS In Spain, the toy industry, he ! says, has only lately come to TOKYO!(AP) - Deputy Minister of Foreip Trade Raul Maldonado of Cuba has arrived in Peking as head of the Cuban government trade delegation, the New China News agency said. Say Merry Chr^mag SAVE *90.95! Lady Kenmore Automatic ^^sher NO MONEY DOWN No Payments Until February 1, 1965 on Sears Easy Payment Plan 199 Sears does not establish artificial “list” prices lo allow so-called “discount” or “trade-in” prices. Sears original prices are low prices. 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See 259«8 Gas 1.59.8« NO MONEY DOWN, First Payment Feb. 1st Automatic see-Ievel oven cooks, then holds food table-ready for hours. Has burner-with-a-brain; sliding cook top and cook top cover, oyen peek light. Save $40.07 at Sears! Kenmore Eleelrie Classic, Tomorrow . . . $199* Aitftllniirtf Dfiil,, Main llniemmit t4 (hi. Ft. Coldspot Refrigerator-Freezers 20777 le|iilarl^ <1 Silvertone Stereo with Walnut Veneer Cabinet Regularly priced at $229.99 ^”1 C) FM-Hlerco, FM/AM riidio! | \ f NO MONEY DOWN, First Payment Feb. let. NO MONEY DOWN, First Payment Felt. 1st Without Lessons Play This Chord Organ Rcgulaily III $119.99! 0088 Fainoiis Nilvertone <|iiiiliiy NO MONEY DOWN, First Puymcnl Feb. 1st Big Value! Silvertone Realistic Color TV (!heck Sears low price! 2-knob color eoiilrols ‘348 __________ . ly- 1 loreeiuin enamel interior, 25.2-t|t. t^risimr, fiiisli-iioor liiiiging, lift-out freeser basket. 11 (;ii. Ft. 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Stores Begin Early on Yule Preparations While New York shoppers take a look at bathing suifs in an air-conditioned store, or select straw bags to take away on a summer holiday, the store’s personnel is making plans for the Christmas rush. ★ ★ ★ They KNOW how many shopping days are left. An inexorable and highly detailed sch^nle is circulated telling the staff to do what looks like the nndoahle: move booths, add counters, and bring in Christmas merchandise without a ripple passing through the current selling stream. The directive says things like this; “Remove CAMPUS WAY merchandise and prepare area for APRONS.” ★ ★ ★ “Vacate present INFANTS TOY area and prepare for GRANDMOTHER BOUTIQUE.” WRAP DESK “Set up RED ROSE WRAP DESK in 3rd floor transfer room. Same as last year.” “Install two bed-jacket cases In corridor for NEGLIGEES DEPT.” As early as June, the display department will have decided what kinds of decorations to hang inside the store, buyers will be looking ahead to the July fashion shows to learn trends for holiday stocking up, and artists will be reviewing merchandise with the buyers as the Christmas catalogue starts its long route from store to customer. ■k -k -k By September special Christmas card booths will be activated primarily because shoppers who wish cards with imprinted name? must make a decision early. EARLY FALL The mass movements within the store, planned to focus attention on Christmas merchandise, and downbeat slow sellers at holiday time, stiirts up in the early fall. Maintenance men as well as buyers are continually busy too making safety checks on the functioning of package conveyors, elevators, doors, lights, and dumbwaiters. In late October extra personnel is interviewed and hired for the Christmas rush, and usually given a brief training period for efficient performance. ■k k k ■ Santa moves in shortly after Thanksgiving to take up his familiar post, which means Christmas is practically around the comer. Notre Dame Counting on 4 Hearsemen SOUTH BEND, Ind. (JV-If the I University of Notre Dame football team still had its famed ] Four Horseman” backfield, : could count on the avid support of the “Four Hearseman.” ★ ★ ★ Four students have chipped in $25 each and bought a used vehicle to transport themselves and fellow students (at so much per head, of course) to out-of-town football games and other events. The vehicle is a 1949 Cadillac hearse, complete with purple felt lining and purple curtains on the windows. The boys have added such touchess as a big “Fighting Irish” across the back, golden shamrocks on the sides, and t coat of arms for the “Four Phantoms” on the front doors. k k k “My mother was a little leary, because I guess she’s superstitious,” one boy admitted. REAL BARGAIN “But where else could you get a car for $100 that only has 14,000 miles on it and carries eight passengers in the back. Besides, it still has the original felt!” * "4 A.s fof any possible psychological scars the constant presence of a hearse might give the football players, the boys p CHANEL N°5 SPRAY COLOGNE 70 W. LAWKENGE HT. FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE 4895 Dixie Hitjfiway maiEiamm/i THE It)NTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 B^7 Small Nations Gry Imperialism' U.S. Rapped on U.N. Payments Stand • WITED NATIONS, New Y6rk —I^e African 4iploiiiat was in-dighant. “President Johnson is as much a colonialist as Sen. Goldwatlr,’\he exclaimed. The little slender man in tight pants and short jacket with padded shoulders was comment-ini; on the United States decision to; suspend financial contributions to the United Illations until! the Russians paid their debt of,some $53 million. “The Americans behave like peevish children,” the diplomat said. “They are undermining the United Nations because they cannot have things their way.” The diplomat’s harsh remarks were, of course, anything but diplomatic. Yet they expressed the view of so-Called neutral and “unaligned” nations on the latest American-Russian dispute. ★ ★ , ♦ They seldom blame Moscow for failing to pay United Nations peace-making assessments. This, despite the ruling of an international court that Russia must pay her debt or lose her vote in the General Assembly under article 19 of U.N. Charter. , ‘IMPERIAUST’ But they see an “imperialist conspiracy” in President Johnson’s decision to bring the issue to a head and save the United Nations from bankruptcy. No doubt that by suspending contributions the United States is also hitting at the pocketbobks of the “uih aligned” countries of Afrfea and Asia who benefit m\>st from U.N. technical and other aid programs. But it has been this bloc of nations that has consistently, thwarted American efforts to pressure the defaulting Russians to meet their obligations. Presideirt Johnson is uiiderstood td have anticipated the ava-Iphche of criticism. He is determined to see it through anyway. RUSK WARNING Last January, Secretary of State Rusk warned that the United States drill not tolerate much longer a situation whereby a “two-thirds mmority of the General Assembly’” consists of Until now the sniair nations nations who contribute only 5 took lightly American threats to i per cent of the United Nations’ withhold financial support from assessed budget. the United Nations. A typical example was tlie conference of the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) that was held recently in Paris. DEFEATED The United States delegates were unceremoniously defeated in their attempt to take away voting rights from member-nations which failed to pay their dues to UNESCO. Then, ironically enough, an alliance of Reds and African-Asian neutralists passed a record UNESCO budget of $49 million. They took this action—against the objection of American and Western delegates—obviously in the belief that the United States will foot the bill anyway. Where else coiild they possibly hope to get the money" However, this time the unaligned nations seem to have counted without the paymaster. The neutralists and Reds discounted Rusk’s threat as usual campaign oratory during presidential elections. Now they are indignant because President Johnson means to bring the issue to a vote in the General Assembly. The reason behind the President’s decision is the growing belief of American experts on communism ^that the Russians now need the United Nations an insfrument in their conflict with their Red Chinese adversaries. , ■ * ★ * That is why Moscow is currently appeatog to the United natioife far an agr^ment to ban the use of military force in set? tiing territorifil quarrels. The Staie Department no longer believes Russia’s tereat to quit the United Nations if the General Assembly’s vote goes against them. BEHIND SCENES United States delegate Adlai Stevenson continues to work behind the scenes for a compromise that would permit Russia to pay her debt without loss of face. But Soviet diplom,its are p r e s s u r i n g the undeveloped countries to .back Moscow against Washington. Thus, for the first time the small nations will be given an opportunity to prove whether they are really neutral or merely unaligned on the sidje of the (^mmunists. D4ver Failed to Hear Siren ’for Good Rieason KANSA? CITY, Mo„ (UPI) -Patrolman Carl Buck used his siren to try to halt 81-year-oId Eugene H. Emmert after the latter ran a red light. It didn’t work. I Buck* pulled his patrol car in front of the truck and asked for an explanation. Emmert said: “You’ll have to speak louder, son, the battery on my hearing aid went out a few miles back:” Detroit Man, Woman Found Dead in Car DETROIT' (AP)—A man and woman were found dead early today in a car parked on Detroit’s near west side. Police said Mt3. Doris Pyer, 24, |id a men identified thrw# papirs as Frank Bates, 21, of Ecorse, were aiq>arent victims of carbon monoxide poiscming. The car was parked beside Mrs. Dyer’s residence, police smd. THE SALVATION ARMY f . CHRISTMAS CLEARING HOUSE Groups Giving Christmas Gratuities Please Clear All Applications Through Clearing House Office To Avoid Duplication, Nov. 27 - Dec. 18 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. CLEARING HOUSE PHONE: 332-3443 29 W. Lawrence Lower Level Clearing House Committee Saigon Riots Are Blended With Laughter, Tragedy SAIGON, Viet Nam, (UPI)-A Saigon riot is a bloody bandage, a police car being smashed by tiny fists, rocks arching through the hot noonday air and the noise of laughing, jeering youngsters. It’s a Mardi Gras of violence perfumed with the stench of tear gas, a fun affair where people get hurt — sometimes killed — and governments crumble. It’s a scenario so incredulous Hollywood would never dare produce it. Death and violence one moment, laughter and happiness the next. It’s a Chinese shopkeeper cautiously selling Ice drinks through his grated doors to boUi police and rioters from his no-mans-land spot. It’s the neutral spectators lining the rooftops pointing and gesturing as the battle moves back and forth in the kfreet below, ’ w * ♦ , It’s the hysterical shouts of a iK)lice sergeant on a bull horn, the lofted tear gas bomb Dial lands at the feet of a white pajamaed HcluM)lglrl and the stampeding of hundreds of teenagers shoving, |)ushing and ,seratnl)ling to escape the biting fumes. it’s a hurnige of hrleks and roekR that come sSiHng of a narrow alley nt bewildered green uniformed police. It's the ImmiiciilBtely nltlr«»d mmidsrln walking serenely thn)Ugli Ihe mob, his erect |M)sliire j)rotect«l by a black umbrella. It’s the Jeep ambulances In tiielr broken, field runnliig to PICK up the Injured and the long lines of troops resting on be! mots and chatting with yiMiiigslers wlio later |mmmel them Willi rocks. N’l’ANIW AWDIi: It's n shaven monk staiMlIng ((iiletly aside. Ills head moving from side to side like a tennis fan following the street fighting that flows back and forth along the street irt front of his pagoda. <’ It’s an invitation from German-born Karl Ross to come inside his house and sip a cold beer while the fighting rages outside and the sputtering tear gas bomb fumigates the house mixing tears with beer. It’s the blue-scarfed paratroopers fresh from fighting the Viet Cong now brandishing bay-onelted rifles at the mobs of naked-legged and jeering rock-throwers. It’s children of primary gradcfT being led In clenched fist cheering by a swarthy adult far too old to be cla.ssed a student, and It’s the police standing five feet away who absorb bis Insults but make no move to arrest him. CHARRED TANK It's a charred lank, a car with a smashed windshield bearing (lie clasped liandslinkc seal of friendship from America and tlie rock-filled deserted streets left behind as Uic battle moves on. It’s the gay laughter of a slngs Into a maniacal bliMKi-seekIng mob Intent only to kick, to lilt or to malm aOd kill oilier human iMdngs. It’s bliSMl, It’s sweat, and It's toiirs, all on a hot aftormarn in Halgoii. PONTIACs 200 nJiIH Saginaw St. CURKSTON-WATERFORDt on Dixia Hwy. Just North of Watarford Hill “Opan Sundays 12 Noon ’til B P.M.” THl^i PONTIAC PHMsS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26,1964 Christmas Displays /nc//cofe Long Preparation Whwi New YoA’s Fifth Avenue department stores linyeil Uieir bedecked tHndows this Christmas be they exotic, sophisticated, or nostaiigic —the (Unlays will bp the results of months of advance preparation in design, research, c(»istruction --and often innovation. What is being set up behind the drawn curtains in store windows is also top secret until the December Day the gloiy is revealed, for each store jealous- ly guards its Christmas plans. ^ A floiU' below die sidewalk where CSiristmas shoiqiers wOl later swarm is die domain of Paul Vogler, window display .^director of Lord and Taylor’s. Here he and his staff of 14 Have been hard at work on-Christmas windows since spring.. “Sometimes I have an idea for the next Christmas just when we’re finishing this dwist-mas’ windows. “IPs hard to tell where.h come from. You can get them just waUdng down the.^strwt, or anywhere.’’ After sketches have been’ made, specific orders go {o die specialized' manufacturers who- design complex mechanical displays. When they are completed, the staff goes to work on pains-^king detail such as stapling soutache braid on pieces of cardbdaid, sculpturing mannequins, figuring out ways to give, the illusion of thin rays of light (gold elastic cord); Vogler; who thoroughly dislikes last-minute complications, and finds there are few, recalls two embarrassing technical duds. ' “One year we had the Sleeping Beauty and the Prih^ce scene,’’ he recalls. The Prince was supposed to bend down and Sleeping Beauty. “But something went wrong, and his head hmded smaA in her stomach." It toidk 17 hidden motors for just that one piiece of action, and something had slipped. “Usually, by working all night before the window’s opening, we’re reddy and going ^ooth-ly. “But an hour before curtain time one Christmas, I was in the window under a mountain ktill making mechanics flowers bloom in the snow.’’ Painstaking efforts are taken by Vogler mid his Stafif to track down just' the material they Dead. “One year,” says Vogler, “I was looking for wood that would, be ideal for our candy windows, a gothic steeple kind of thing. I found jn^ wbat I wanted, some horrible goMen oak in a Wrecking yard in Yonkers, »N.y./ and we paints it pink and white;” « The candy was hard to come by, too. “I wanted those old-fashioned lollypops with flowers in the center, and finally f(|und -them in a shop in New Jersey, in all sizes.” Backgrounds are prepared two weeks before they’re to go in the windows, the staff working-6h an elevator - type win-1 dow 'settipg under the street while the current window is in place at street level. ■ j Whatever the theme, Vogler feels it must be something to whiqh passersby will relate, something they know and love. Lab Work Real^ool UIWERSITY PARK", Pa. ( AP) — one of'the “coolest” jobs-oh the campus iS that of Leslie F. Shultz. He supervises the mechanical operations of the Low Temperature Laboratory’s “cold plant” where liquid hydrogen, helium,, and nitrogen are produced. The Laboratory produced about 31,-000 to 33,000 liters of liquid nitroeen per week, plus about SOO .litet-s of helium and 1,800 liters of hydrogen per month. come as you are i THE POX'rJAC I’KKSS. 1 HPRSDAV. X()\'KMBKR 2^ 19(U B—9 Christmas Season Is a Hectic Time for a Small-Town Minister and His Family % Christmas is a hectic season In anyone’s book, but for the wife of a small-Wn minister, it reaches staggering p r o p o r^ tions; With Mrs. Carl Fearing Schultz of Cape Cod, Mass., the holiday begins with the 'Thanksgiving left-overs, and ends with the church’s New Year’s Eve candlelight service. Right after Thanksgiving, the choir, in which Mrs. Schultz sings soprano, begins rehearsing Christmas music at weekly sessions. During the first we^k in December the annual two . day holiday, bazaar is held, and Mrs. Schultz, as president of the “afternoon” ladies organization,. will be ^ery much involved. , ' There’ll be booths to decorate and stock, and Mrs. Schultz will donate aprons, sweaters, and knickknacks she has made herself for the booths. There’ll be a luncheon and buffet supper to supervise. President pf the “evening” ladies organization is Mrs. Schultz’ daughter, Mrs. .Robert Thomas, who will no doubt seek her mother’s advice — as everyone does — on quantities of food to order and kinds of decorations to have for the group’s festive functions. At Christmas, Mrs. Thomas’ three lively children will traditionally be given at least one"^ sweater and a pair of mittens knit by their grandmother. Over the 35 years that Dr. and Mrs. Schultz have been at the Federated ChOFch, it ha* j become castcmary for M r s. Schultz to create remembrances for tbe elderly and lonely Ir'the parish, and this yea^iino exception. She is already wondering If Mrs. Smith would like some jellies. The W h i t e Gift service on family night is held the secbnd Sunday before Christmas, Children bring toys or clothes wrapped in white paper, and marked according to^sex and age;’ the parents bring box suppers. When the guests have departed after supper and a Christmas movie, the Schultzes package the gifts and send them to a city mission in Boston, v The following Sunday, the young people of the Pilgrim Fellowship go carol i n g through the neighborhood, and stop in at the parish house where Mrs. Schhltz’ has h o t chocolate and cookies awaiting them. By this time the more than 4,000 Christmas cards which the minister and his wife design are in the mail. It remains to sort all the cards coming in' to bv 1-button and high 2-button models plus trodittonoi 2- and 3-buttdn styles. Plain-front or pleated trousers. An outstanding range,of weaves and new Fall colorings to make you look your best. And what a buy! . . . Were to $65.00. Again this year . . . outstanding values in America's nationally-known clothing and accessories for men .,. from Osmun's. A rare opportunity; a perfect time to think of those Christmas gifts. FREE ALTERATIONS • USE YOUR OSMUN'S CHARGE • FREE PARKING FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY! All-wool worsted SUITS $41900 2 Days Only! 2 GROUPS of 2-Trouser SUITS ^SPORT COATS Choose (rom the top of the season’s best seller list . . ^n«luflmR C,imel ind N.ivy Bl.ii.r $35 end $39.95. \00 2 DAY$ ONLY TOPCOATS by Ronald Baicombe selected Rroup of all-wool top-ils in solid shades and soft plaids. Splll-raglan shoulder style. Were *o $75. $4Q00 2 OAY$ ONLY ......... Pilc-Linad ZIP COATS. Dacron-colton shnll $ repels moisture. Worm Orion pile liner zips out. Solids and plaids, topcoat length. White DRESS SHIRTS. Lustrous broodcloth in t\wo collar styles. Spread or Snap-tab. .Sizes 14-32 3 loi to 17'/2-35. 90 Fine All-Wool Worsted SLACKS. Most with permonent crease built- in. Blacks, greys, olive, brown $fo^ SKI JACKETS. Reversible. 100% Nylon quilted with folding hood. Block, navy ond green. Hip-length styles. Regular $15.95. Bettor SWEATERS. Selected from our own stock of qual ity sweaters. Coat Style, Pullovers, V neck and crew necks. Reg. to $16.95. RAN-ION SHIRTS. Roglan Hall Sleeve ... six hondsomo loll shades. Regular $6.95. ”’$990 I DAYS ONLY $490 a iHtrt of VootUu' sinro I 9,'f / SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN AND BOYS Use One of Osmun's Individualized Charge Plans FI^EE PARKING at All Stores: DOWNTOWN o„ .n M. and Mon 'ill 9 P M. TEL-HURON FI 4-4$4l , —10 ‘ THE PONTIACTReSS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 to Oppose U S. Ttireal' By JOHN CANtUE^L HONG KONG - (AP) - Peking appears to fear the United States in supporting the anti-guienrilla war in South Viet Nam will attack Communist North Viet Nam and”^ fighting will spread to Red China. i And so Peking is using the possible IIjS. threat to build up its home-front militia forces. Peking reintroduced a drive to build up its militia several weeks ago. The drive had been introduced twice before when.Communist China feared attack from Formosa. Peking originall.v claimed a target of 200 million men and women for its ma.ss militia forc- es. This claim, originally made in 19Sa. has been sharply reduced since and there is no present estimate of Peking’s militia strength. The latest buildup was announced at a meeting in Peking last week. Party leader, Mao Tze-tuhg, President Liu Shao-chi. Premier Chou En-lai and other tpp Chinese communist officials attended the meeting. PUSHING AROUND Mao told the meeting that the Unite*! States and other “imperialists” were pushing Communist China around. They are doing this In such a way that we must deal with them seriously,” Mao said. “We require in addition to mighty regular armed forces, a tremendous number of militia divisfons. “Then, when the'imperialists Invade China, they will find difficulty in moving a single step.” ★ A A Western observers here believe Mao’s reference to “imperialists” invading Communist China indicates Peking's con- cern^-ihat an attack on North Viet Nam could spread to Red China. REDS COWINCED They believe Peking is convinced that the United' States, will carry the war from-Sopth-Viet Nam into the north. This uneasiness was apparent even before the U.S. ambassador to South Viet Nam, Maxwell D. Taylor said Sunday that U.S. air raids on Communist bases and supply lines in North Viet Nam. and Laos coiild contribute to victory over the Red guerrillas in South Viet Nam. Peking has said that the United .States is scheming to carry the war to the north ‘‘so it can get itself out of il.s impasse in the ‘.special war’ in the south.” * ★ A ■ It has claimed that the carrying of’ the war to the north ‘‘would add to the tension in Indochina and Southeast Asia, and threatens peace and security in this part of the world.” Observers here point out that one ‘of the main resolutions taken at the miliiia meeting in Peking was to strengthen and build up militia forces in coastal and border areas. The areas mentioned in particular were the border with North Viet Nam and the coastal area facing Formosa. The meeting also recommended thgt regular armed forces in these areas be strengthened. Professor VVill Head Civil Liberties Group GRAND RAPIDS (APi -Donald Hall, professor of physics at Cwand Valley State College, has been named temporary chairman of an interim committee to organize a west Michigan chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. He heads a 16-member body which meets Sunday to nominate officers for the chapter. Jobless Rate in U.P. Drops Below 5 Pet. DETROIT (AP) - The Michigan Employment Security Commission reports Upper Peninsula unemploymeht dipped below the 5 per cent level in October for theJirsLiime gince 1956. ' ' The MESC ,said “a .seasonal contraction of the labor force” cut unemployment to 4,400, (4.9 per cent) in October. This was down 900 from Sefitember and ,200 from Octqbto 1963. “Heavy labor force withdrawals of students returning to school and other temporary workers leaving the market accounted for most: of the downward trend in unemployment and offset the impact of employment reduction s,’* 1t^e MESC said. The report noted a simultaneous drop in wage and salaried employment from 70,200 to^ M,-500 during October was largely because of a strike involving 1,400 workers at White Pine Mining Co. OFFSET LOSSES “Offsetting mo,s(t of the job losses resulting from seasonal reductions, were increases of 1,200 in state and local government payrolls,” the ^gency said. “Auxiliary positions required by the reopening of schools boosted total government employment to 16,400.” Biochemistry Grant Is Given to WMU KALAMAZOO (AP) A three-year, $64,885 grant for research in biochemistry from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare has been awarded to the Western Michigan University Chemistry Department, the school announced Tuesday, At the same time, a $3,000 gift—second in a series of three — was presented by the Jewel Tea Foundation to the WMU Department of Distributive Education for new food distribution curriculum quarters. Sales Pkture Good Despite Strikes /• Thanksgiving Bright for Auto Dealers By CHARLES C. CAIN AP Business News Writer » DETpiT (AP) - Auto sales reports' from pll sections of the country gave the nation’s auto dealers good reason Jo celebrate Thanksgiving Day; ' * ★ ★ The dealers, plagued since mid - September by a series of strikes and parts shortages in the auto industry; were cheered by the fact that labor peace has been attained in Detroit’s auto fadtories and that full production scion will be reach^. * * * Ward’s Automotive Reports said strong mid-November sales have put the auto industry in good position to hit the 600,000 sales mark for the month.,, third highest of arty November, despite effects of the recent General Motors and Ford strikes. A. E. Tracy, automotive sales manager of American Motors, said Wednesday of the auto strikes and their possible effects on sales: A * A . “As you know, automotive production has stuttered a bit in recent weeks as a result of strikes and work stoppages. However, this is a temporary situation and we can expect production to regain a normal pace in the near future. , NOT LOST FOREVER “This in no way affects our industry’s opportunity to mark up a record sales year. I don’t -subscribe to tlie theory that a sale lost because of shortages is a sale lost forever. The prospect- is still there. You may have to work a little harder to sell him, but if he was ready to buy in September, he is still a live prpspeef for November and December. “The predictions of an eight-million - car - sales year in the U.S.; —including imports— the first in the history of the U.S. auto industry are entirely realistic. If anything, the economic irifluehces that produced the phenomenal sales momenttim of the past two years are stronger and more pronounced.” market projection Ward’s said in its market projection that the eight million sales milestone could be reached, but that the margin would be very close. It pointed out that January - October car sales, plus projections of No-vefhber and December sales, total 7.55 million U.S. iiiade cars. A A A It added that if import sales for the calendar year hit 475,000 —as seems likely — the^otal sales volume for the year would be 8,025,000. The present calendar year mark of 7,408,000 total sales' was set in 1955, but that rec6rd seems doomed. General Motors production lines and its flow of cars to dealers reportedly are pretty much back tp normal following the month - long CM national strike and a series of local CM plant strikes, BACK TO NORMAL Settlement of' Ford 1 o c a 1 strikes came more recently, but that firm reported too that it is getting back to normal. “Despite strikes and parts shortages, we have managed to U.S. Building Set for Grand Rapids grand rapids (AP)-A new $6.2 million federal courthouse and office building of 146,000 square feet has been approved for construction in the downtown urban renewal area here. Word came Tuesday from the office of Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, D-Mich. AAA The new structure, according to announcement last April, will house 10 federal agencies in addition to providing 40,100 square feet of courtroom space and 5,000 square feet for the offices of the district attorney and federal marshal. Litfer Bags Are Too 'Fine' BURLINGTON, Iowa (f)—Litter bags are literally for litter, Burlington Police have announced to motorists. They aft not, the police department explained, the place to deposit parking lines. Litter Bags, decorated in holiday colors, have been placed on the parking meters as part of the city’s Christmas decorations. Police said some moforisis have been putting fine money in ticket envelnpe.s, then depositing the fines in the lifter bags, instead of taking (hem to one of the courtesy boxes provided for them. Treat your fines as litter, the police department said, and you may wind up paying later. provide our dealers with-ample supplies of most vehicle lines and as a result have broken a car sales record that has stood since 1924,’’ said tee A. lacoc-ca. Ford vice president and Ford division general manager. A . A A lacqcca reported Ford Division set*its sixth straight 10-day sales record in mid - November and said its year to date sales are running ahead of the prewar high es|ablished in the heyday of the Model T 40 years ago. . Other car makers were equally enthusiastic in their sales reports. AAA P. N. Buckminster, general manager of the Chrysler - Plymouth division, .said its Nov. 11-20 .sales ran .37 per cent ahead of the .same period last year. Frank V. Bridge, general sales manager of Pontiac division of General Motors, said “Although there still is a shortage of Pontiacs and Tempests in many sections of the. country, our sales pace is picking up right where it left off after our record - breaking new model announcement. Our mid-November sales were the second best in Pontiac history and when o dealers are well stocked again, Pontiac will resume its record pace.” • Pontiac Youth Faces Negligent Homicide Charge An 18-year-old Pontiac youth is free on $200 bond facing arraignment in Circuit Court November 30 at 1'.30 p.m. on a charge of negligent homicide, Norman G. Henry, 555 Arthur, was bound over to Circuit Court yesterday following examination in Municipal Court. The negiigent homicide charge stems from an auto accidcht Nov. 13 in which Judith Rollins, *21, of 380 Cejntral was killed. Police say the Henry vehicle failed to yield the right-of-way at the corner or Sanford and Prospect and collided with the car in which Miss Rollins , was riding. YOU WILL LIKE OUg BUSINESS METHODS IMPERIAL-CHRYSLER-rPLYMOUTH -VALIANT SALES BJRMINGHAM SERVICE • CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH NOTICE Basiness Will NOT Be Transacted by the Following Banks SATURDAY, Deceniher 2llh and SATURDAY, -Jaaury 2.1965 Community National Bank Pontiac State Bank Oxfoid Saving! Bank Clarkston State Bank THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26^ 1^64^ pl„ /:<_s enter o] " 15 STORES OFFERING YOU Fre^h new seasonable merchandise at all times, a wide selection to satisfy all your needs and trained salespersons to give you the most in service. • WALK LESS • SHOP EASIER • SAVE MORE MOST STORES OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 P.M. Camera Mart Wrigley’s Children’s Shop Jayson lewelers One How Valet Shoe Box Bill Pistrusha & Sons R.B. Shop Sanders Candy Griswold Sporting Goods Kresge’s Osmun’s Winkelnian's Cunninghams Murray Sisters Bea. TEL-HURON STORE SeamleM nyloni for every girl on your list. Every size, length and color you need. From ^35 .^I'OLIDAY Friday and Saliirday reversible hooded parkas $g9T Save on Finishing Touches Cards, Tags, Seals liig economy sire package of 200 seals, tags, and cards or a pack of 60 strung tags anti cards. S3 Nylon prints reversing to solid color quilts; sizes S-M-L. stretch pants $097 Rayon/nylon vertical stretch pants W'itli stirrups. Colors; 10-18. ~ •rri iiiin/Nhi rri^nmni/^ r*cMTrn TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph at Huron Street FRIDAY 6 SATURDAY ONLY! Reversible Ski Jackets AvailabI* at both itoret TEL-HURON DOWNTOWN Op.n Ev.ry Nit. Til 9 Op»n Mon. and f rl. Til FE 4-4541 FE 4-4551 FRtE PARKING AT ALL STORES mis PAPIR OR rotL RIC.97( 73* 5?S" of brightly printed holiday-wrap pn]ier, earh roll 26/’’xHS" or 180^^ of 26x 2 30 ' embossed and plain foil. Save! iki»»»K)aMtnaiK»«iR««aiW5naiwia«TniKtiiK>ii$iniMiR«ia«swm RIBBON REEL PAK u PRE-CHRISTAAAS MARK'S BELL & HOWELL ^ Auto Load Zoom Camera Heg. $149.9.-; 195 109- Raflex-Built-in FilUr* Fully Automatic BELL & HOWELL Automatic Thread R> g. $99.9.; Save $20.00 79 50 No Money Down! FI .6 Z-O-O-AA Lens Forward — Still and Reverse REVERE STEREO 4-Track Tape Recorder Sol,I for $2:t9.9.-; |95 159' PROJECTION TABLE With 3-Way Power Panel DELUXE MODEL Friday and Saturday Only! 14 "Stick-to-irscir ribbons on large .s|>ool. Solid colors and tinsel stripes. 2(K)V5/8 and! 7/16" wide. iKMJMlWRlMMiMIMtMRMlMRli I ^|f; $10’® o ^emm /r at msav $1.00 Holds Any Item In Layaway 'Til Christmas BE SMART ... SEND YOUR ORDERS TO The CAMERA MART "TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER" 55 S. TELEGRAPH, Pontiac, AAich. • FE 4-9567 ISMUN’S STORES EON MEN and BOYS Open Every Night 'til 9 ^ ^ use Your jBCurlly Oliarie $t ^GIFT-STARRED ^ Light and lithe leather... fluffy-warm lining 'l^aiuA&mu -SORORITY" .Comfy* Slippers i 20° Off On All Small GE Appliances J 1 • HAND MIXERS • IRONS A B • PERCOLATORS • MANY OTHERS S «wli OPEN EVERY UP TO 36 WE DO OUR FAMOUS NAME NIGHT 'TIL 9 MONTHS TO PAY OWN SERVICE! APPLIANCES SECURITY CHARGE ACCOUNT SERVICE Tel-Huron Shopping Center FE 4-0259 •Utakhnd Omniy‘0 Largmiit Shorn Sloro" TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER 332-0666 B—12 THE PO^^flAC’ I’HKSS. THI RSDAV, XOVEl^IBKR 1904 Wassail Bowl Si Is Used A Favorite Among Christmas Traditions FARM HAND - Beatrice Stefanie Maberry, 21, looks as though she is a typical Bavarian peasant, but she is staying in Holzkirche"n, West Germany, under the International Farm Youth Exchange program. To Meet on Future of the Grand River LANSING (AP)--Officials of cities; villages and counties through which the Grand River flows were invited today to a Dec. 3 meeting to decide the future of the river. The meeting was called by Lansing Mayor Willard Bower-man, who said: “I hope that this meeting might be the first step to setting up a council or organization of governmental units to coordinate action to make the Grand River a scenic and recreational asset to the people of Michigan.”" In Merrie Old England, the Wassail Bowl with its mixture of spiced ale, was an indispensable part of the Christmas feast. The one used at court was a masterpiece of silver-gilt, while Ihe^owl in the cottage was only tnad^f wood. But the drinking pledgeVas the same.“Wassail,” the Angl\- Saxon equivalent of ‘ Your H^lth,” was given -with reverence — to the Bdbe of Bethlehem, as well as to, the King, to, neighbors and" to the season. ^ , Then benedictions were culled down upon the fruit trees, the flock and next year’s crop. And always the occasion was observed with song and merriment. Old customs change; old ways are replaced by the new. Still the Wassail Bowl remains among the cherished Christmas traditions. There’s something Warm and inviting about the look of a fra-grant holiday bowl, nestling among green boughs and hollw It shouid rest on its own special table, which has been covered with a floor-length cloth. Salvofion Army Spreads Yule Happiness 'or several hundred galvation ^my officers across the coun-Christmas is a day not for personal celebrations but for giving cheer to the inhabitants of Skid Row,, to drug addicts and drifters, and to the homeless and the’lonely. fhe staggering prospect of serving dinner to hundreds of thousands of these peopfe is taken in its stride by organization meinbers. In some small towns, the artny officer and his wife may invite transients to share a liieal in their own home. In other cases, the organiza- tion supplies meal tickets to local restaurants- to those who have ho place to go, and n 19.96 Formica top cocktail table...............24.95 2 commodes with drawer................49.90 2 tall walnut decorator lamps............19.90 2 daoorator pillows ......................5.96 ^35” Total prico if purchased sepaptely All 11 Pieces^. . . *329"" d*llv»ry I. includadl Salltlaction guaranla*dl 3 ways to BUY! CASH 90 DAYS (same as cash) or up to 36 months to pay ONLY '20 DOWN HI ixiKT rimis OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9 P.M. Furniture BLOOAAFIELD AAIRACLE AAILE SHOPPING CENTER So. Telegrdph of Square Lake Rd. “ FE 8-4091 arrituH hy HKLlCOPTI^'.li —• Friday^ 2 7 ni I (h-tOA \ / 9 TOMORROW Quantaties are limited, and nhany are one of a kind and will be sold on a first come basis. Sorry, no mail or phone (MANY ITEMS NOT LISTED-ALSO SALE PRICED) rM MR. & MRS. CHAIRS & Ol lOMAN 2 only. Colonial, or Gold print Reg, COLONIAL ROCKER 4 only. Wood wing design. Foom rubber cushion, pillow bock, green print or gold tweed, your choice. Reg. 99. .\Or WINGBACK SOFAS 2 only. Colonial, loom nsbber cushions, sell decked and arm covers, duroble tweeds in brown or Turquoise, Reg. 199. NOV COLONIAL WOODWING SOFAS 2 only, foom cushions in lovely I, 3 pc. group in red * keg. 149.NOW // . 57. 144. beige "I r\ fN mw I O O. 99. 166. 144. 219. 99. 188. 197. KROEHLER (3) pc. SECTIONALS 2 only foom cushions, durable nylon covers in lovely brown Reg. 299. NOW KROEHLER (3) pc. SECTIONAL I only, deluxe, foom rubber cushions and loom bock. Nylon cover, green. Reg. 299. NOW KROEhLER LIVING ROOM SUITE 3 only (2) pc. Sola and matching choi with foom cushions and nylon Reg. 279 NOW (2) pc. LIVING ROOM SUITE 3 only, by Kroehler. Sofa and molch-ing chair in brown or beige. 188. 199. Brown, green, grey. I / / - ------y I / / . masm PROVINCIAL (4) pc. BEDROOM I only, French provincial luife with double dresser, mirror, chest and panel bed in lovely cherry. __ Reg.219.NOW 179. i,^189. DUXBURY SIDE CHAIRS 4 only, lovely colonial group of chairs in beautiful cherry. Reg. 34.95 NOW 5 pc. DINING GROUP yincial wifi s chairs. Reg.199.NOp' • No//iiAoney ^wn Months To Pay .to9.P.( FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27th fS on these items.. only, In Provincial with ovol ext. *| / X Table and 4 side chairs. | -----------------I 12 ONLY 14.99 WALL MIRRORS by Bassett 1.8 X 26“ Size, Plata Glaii 6.99 Reg. 199. NOW 144. DELUXE (3) pc, SECTIONAL 1 only, Kroehler, loom rubber cush.^^ ions with nylon cover in beige. ./'ll Reg. 329. NOW W W • BROYHILL Sw’|Ve( ROCKERS 3 only, foom rubber cushions, self decked and arm covers. Lovely Gold ■ 20 Only LIONEL ELECTRIC TRAINS Engine and 5 Cars incl. transformer Reg. $22.95 ...........HALF PRICE BREAKFRONT CHINA 1 only, full 48" china in loyely cherry. Provincial style. Reg. 149. NOW PROVINCIAL BUFFETS 2 only, in beautiful cherry wifh full 48“ width. • Reg. 119.95 NOW 129. 89. PORTABLE TV & STAND 1 A A ,|44_ COLONIAL WOODWING SOFA 1 only with foom cushions in beautiful gold print cover. Reg. 149. NOW KROEHLER COLONIAL SOFAS 2 only, wingbock with foam cushions in textured cover. Gold .or Avocodo. Reg. 199. NOW NYLON COLONIAL SOFAS 2 only, wingbock design with foam PROVINCIAL (3-Pc.) SECTIONAL 1 only, beoutiful fruilwood trim in Rosebelge cover. Reg. 349. NOW COLONIAL SOFAS 3 only, loom cushions, tweed covers in gold, green or lovely brown. Reg. 149. NOW FRENCH PROVINCIAL SOFAS 2 only, foom robber cushions, fruitwood Itim, moltelosse covers, beige or noturol. Reg. 229. NOW COLONIAL QUILTED SOFA I only, foam rubber cushions, self-decked, loosi print quilled cover Reg. 249. NOW Reg. 89.95 NOW BROYHILL MODERN SOFA 1 only, foom rubber cushi decked and Reg. KROEHLER LIVING ROOM SUITE 2 only. Deluxe 2 p<>w)iviih tan, you can liorrow enough to pay all your bills ih full pluH enough extra to lake care of your holi-tb., 1-oz. Box ! OXYDOL I Detergent ; 79‘ 1 Pertoital Size 1 Regular Size 1 Bath Size 1 Regular | 13-oz. Box 13-oz. Box 1 -lb., 2-oz. Box 1 1 -pt., 6-oz, Bottle 1 1 IVORY ; CAMAY ; ZEST ; lAVA ; IVORY IVORY DREFT ; IVORY 1 SOAP • SOAP 1 SOAP 1 SOAP ■ FLAKES SHOW Detergent 1 LIQUID A M i.20‘J2.:27‘i J5'. ..35A. 35! i 58' _ i 3“lb., box 1 1 -lb., 7-oz. Box I 1 -lb., 1 Ohoz. Box 1 3-lb., 2>oz. Box 1 1 -lb., 4-oz. Box 14-oz. Can 15-oz. Bottle 11 -pt., 1 -oz. Bottle i CHEER 1 PREMIUM !LOW suds;LOW suds; CASCADE COMET MR. CLEAR ; DOWRY 1 Detergent ■ DUZ 1'SALVO ■ DASH • For Dishes CLEAHSER LIQUID > RIHSE ; T3' i 59° i 41' i 79' i 49' 15' 39« i 39' Horn sold to doolors or minors. Worosonothe riglit to limit q'lantitios. ' B—16 THEf PPNTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, liTOVEMBER 26, 1964 Work Has Started on 1965 Yule For several hundred highly specialised job-holders Christmas 1964 is ah%a4o meet the challenges of ;t^ay and of the future. For these are the things that Set us apmt as a nation — that made our nati<» great — that will keep our nation great. So as our forefathers in Virginia, in New England, and throughout this land have done for more than three and one half centuries, let us appoint a special day on which ail of us, in keeping with the dictates of our own conscience, will give thanks to the Lord for His man-I ifold blessings. * *' ★ And on that day, let us rededicate ourselves to meeting the challenges of the present with the fortitude and faith with which our forefathers met‘the challenges of the past. * ★ ★ Now, therefore, I, Lyndon B. Johnson, President of the United States of i^merica, in consonance with the joint resolution of the Congress approved December 26, 1941, 35 Stat. 862 (5 U.S.C. 87B), designating tlm fourth Thursday of 'NqvMnber in each year as Thanksgiving Day, do hereby proclaim Thursday, Nov. 26, 1964, as a day of national thanksgiving. LET US GA’THER On that day, let us gather in our homes and in our places of worship and in other suitable places to give thanks tp God for His graciousness and His generosity to us — to pledge to Him our everlasting devotion — to beseech. His divine guidance and the wisdom and atriength to recognize and f o U o w that guidance — and to pray to Him that the forces of evil, violence, indifference, intolerance, and inhumanity may soon vanish from the face of flie earth and that peace, reason, und^tand* ing, and goodwill may r^gn supreme throughout the, world. ■ ■ n " * ★ In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States of America to be affixed. .. (Signed) Lyndon B. Johnson. JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID-We Pick Up FE 2-0200 Packaged as Gifts Bank Sells Holiday Cash HAGERSTOWN DPl-The Hagerstown Trust Company is selling what bank officials consider ; the perfect gift — money The bank sells money birds, money corsages, money by the Inch, money by the pound, money in chests, money in buckets, bowties of money, money trees and other money-inspired items. They sold 7,008 parcels of it last year; this year they hope to sell even more, although they claim to make little profit on it. William E. King Jr., bank vice president, said charges added to the face value of the mondy sold barely cover the cost of handling and packaging. •k ■k -k Among the items are instant money — packaged in a can and guaranteed non-caloric. The can warns that continued use of the contents may be habit-forming. COLD CASH Cold cash <- mounted in an Ice cube which is sealed in a plastic box. Bit-O-Money — cash packaged as a candy bar. And a Money Magic Magician’s Kit with directions for performing six magic tricks ; with money. j k k k Packaging is done by bank employes. King said. The bank Starts stockpiling new fcoins and bills in mid-summer, when the wrapping begins. FOR OTHER DAYS The bank also stocks money gifts for graduations, anniversaries, birthdays. Mother’s Day and Father’s Day, although the Christmas season is the only time it advertises money. King said he is working on about 30 new ideas for selling money — including $1 million money bags, to be set aside until the buyer makes his first million. Boy Wears Right Ear on Left Arm f SAGINAW (AP) - Twelve-year-old Lloyd Hoeppner is wearing his right ear on his left arpi until such time as it can be put back in place on his head. Riding a tractor behind father, Emil, at their home in nearby Merrill la^t Friday, young Hoeppner some way ^ot a sleeve caught in the tractor’s power takeoff shaft. The revolving shaft jerked the boy off. It skinned part of his arm and severed his right ear. Deciding the ear could not be grafted back immediately into its original position, surgeons at Saginaw’s St. Luke Hospital grafted the ear to his arm, to sustain it until such time it can be removed and returned to his head. NOT UNCOMMON Except to confirm the graft and to say such indirect ones are not common, the hospital declined information, even to identifying the surgeon, Newsmen also were unable to learn immediately why prompt re-grafting to the head was Impossible. PILE-LINED MELTON COAT COLLARED IN DYED FRENCH RABBIT 19.95 A terrific coat... nU price you didn’t think possiblel Inlilack or brown melton With deep clyed-to-matob French rabbit collar ... full pUish-pile lining and oozy quilt-lined sloovesi Si^cs 10-18. 1 E 1 T 1 1 I I T-POCKET CAR COAT, COLLARED, CUFFED & LINED IN DEEP PILE REG. 7.97 & 8.97 FULL-FASHIDNED ACRYLIC CARDIGANS A wonderfully warm little braid-edged „ epat with smart new T-pockets,.. and ' a thick plush-pile lining that spills out to form a giant shawl collar and deep turnback cuffs. Loden, black, sizes 10-18. Beautiful bulky awcater.s... expensively full-fashioned throughout.., oasy-caro acrylic, even to the self-covered buUonsl In newest collared and collarloss styles ... white only... sizes 34 to 40. MONEY GIFTS A llagrrsUiwn, Md„ bank officer, William King Ji . |)lnH a money corsage (»rtn»ank clerk Diane Harlles, The corsages, made up of money In any denomlna-llon, are among dozens of gimmicks used by King to |M)pular-Ize money iiovelUos aif Christmas gifU. USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY PLAN...NO EXTRA CHARGE PONTIAC: 200 North Saginaw St.~CLARKST0N-WATIBF0RD on Dixit Mwy. Juit North of Wtttrford Hill ->‘*0pan Sundayi 12 Noon 'til 6 P.M." THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. yOVEMBEB 26. 1964 GOODYEAR : IS CELEBRATING OF PONTIAC'S NEW "WIDE TRACK DRIVE" We've been shut off from the "outside world" for nearly six months ... the street is open now and we're celebrating! EveiTthing in the store priced to go at bargain prices. Mode! close-outs, one of a kind, special purchases, crate marred, scratched and dented . . . All fully guaranteed-Real bargains. FRIDAY & SATURDAr-HOVEMBER 27 S 28-OPEN FRIDAY *711 9 PJN. - SAT. ’TIL 6 P.M. GENERALS BIG SAVINGS ON ELECTRIC STEREOS and AmiANCES 11” PERSONAL PORTABLE $gg05 Pay $|25 Only Iwankly 16” PORTABLE Close-out / special Pay $|50 Only I was eoiumrsimt \ GREAT SONGS OF CHRISTMAS e 33V6 R.P.M. lotif - ^ playing record I n e 19 great Christmas \ i selections by Amcrica’i . i leading artists > * I ( • Esclumve with Goodyear ) dealers & stores ; ^ e Limited edition—bay OMtf W yours Bowl vam m REE STAND I weekly irs emTFOR mn Biymt SAVE ON ALL THESE SPECIALS! HOME TRIAL GE COLOR TELEVISION NO MONEY DOWN Up to '3 Years to Pay! NO PAYMENTS TIL NEXT YEAR SAVE! ON THESE NORGE APPLIANCE BARGAINS Buy The Pair BIG FAMILY STYLE and MATCHING GAS DRYER BOTH FOR ONLY Pay only $275 weakly NORGE WHITE Choice copreR • Balanctt Haat Ov«n • Deluxe Hl-Lo Burners • Automatic Ignition Pay Only $1.60 Weekly BIG 14.9 CU. FT. NORGE FREEZER HOLDS 523 NUNDS “INSTANT CREDIT” WITH ANY NATIONAL CHARGE-PLATE OR CREDIT CARD NOW AT THE ON THE “WIDE TRACK” AT UWRENCE ' ______Open Friday 'til 9 P.M.-Saturday 'til 6 P.M. On«t •nlii TIm Mill to «!• »IM* whMt llnwiM «• w§*i Jf < . numarto* btfin. Iwrta Mtlvw loMtiaw (Mdty) it It O'Otook Noon and wIlI vtoH wHh ihi^Hdrwi Nil I P.M. tonta’o tohodnlo UnNI OHrtatawo WHI |o. u _HMTA$YUUn rrtlf';:, WHIM/... .■ -. Pontiac Mali Shoppingr(^®|x|^raph at Elilabeth THE PONTIAC FRESvS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER‘26, 1964 Advice to Contractor Hush-Hush NASA Parley on Yule Gifts 9y ALVIN W. WEBB iR. HOUSTON, Tex. (UPI) - The business of being “as pure as Caesar^s wife” is the newest top-secret program the U.S. Space agency is running as a sideline while reaching for the moon. . *■ . * ★ It is known unofficially as “Prbject C. of I.” The idea, presumably, was bom 1,900 years ago when Plutarch quoted Julius Caesar as saying, when asked why he parted with his wife: “I wished my wife to be not so much as suspected.” It was reix>rn last month when U S. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara noted, with literary license, that “we must be as pure as Caesar’s wife” in dealings in the multimillion-dol-lar defense industry. ★ ★ ★ Not to be outdone, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (N A S A) Manned Spacecraft Center near Houston decided to let industry know that it, too', believed in ethics. It called t^e first known conference of Project C. of I.” IN AND OUT This explained the presence of some 140 government and industry representatives, slipping in and out of closed doors in painfully obvious secrecy, in the whitish, elephantine buildings of the Manned Spacecraft Center last Thursday between 1:30 p.m. and 2:10 p.m. The meeting was so secret that even its title was secret. Delegates, for the most part, were relieved of the usual name tags add, in the best “hush-hush” tradition, wore garish blue-and-orange labels bearing the code phrase “C. of I.” and the words “expires Nov. 19, 1964.” Space center chiefs refused comment and referred newsmen to the public affairs office, which refused comment and referred them to no one. ★ ★ One reporter did lay hands on one of the curious “C. of I.” labels when a helpful guard passed him without question at the main gate. STOPPED SHORT He was, however, stopped short of the promised land behind closed doors by horrified attendants. Finally, after numerous guesses that included ‘‘concealment of Information,” it was learned — from the usual “informed sources” that prevail at the center in lieu of any consistently believable Information office — that “C. of I.” stood for “conflict of interest.” * Caesar’s wife, if still pure, was at least bared. ★ ★ ★ “Conflict of interest,” If you are a government employe, will have an Importaht bearing on your forthcoming holiday .season. LAID DOWN RULES “Project C. of I.,” it seems, laid down the rules that determine whether the gifts you receive at Chrsitmas are gifts or bribes. The space agency has very definite thoughts on the subject. They were expressed in “Part 1, Management Manual, General Management Instructions, Chapter 9, Number S-7-3, Subject: 0 i f t s and Grat-iuitles,” dated Jan. 21,1963; “This instruction establishes NASA policy regarding the acceptance of gifts in the course of official employment, and provides guidance for the handling of certain objectionable types of gifts." The diteclivc says that space agency employes cannot accept gifts “which might reasonable l)c Interpreted by others as being of such a nature that it could affo<-t h i s impartiality. . ." WHO PAID BILL Since the dIrscUve has been In effect for nearn' two years. It was unclear whv tiio space agency chose to call last week's “Project C. of I," session — nor, for that matter, who paid the freight for the delegates. No one in the space agency would saj whether the conference was ftnencially supported by the better than $5 billion that NASA Is getting each year from taxpayers, or by Industry representatives who wfluid deduct the cost as “business expenses” on next year’s income lax returns. A congressional r e p r e s e n-tative, contact in Washington about the lack of information, contacted space agency officials and report^ that “they goofed. The contractors were brought down (to Houston) to talk about policies on gratuities. “They (NASA^ officials in Houston) will tell you that, and that they goofed,” the Washington man said. .* -k * Not a bit of it. Two hours later,, a space agency official called newsmen to report that the meeting; hel(L28^hdurs earlier, “was held to discuss contractor relationships with t h e Manned Spacecraft Center.” And no one could, or would, say whether NASA was for or against the purity of Caesar’s' You Can Afford To Be In Style at these wonderful SAVINGS THRIFT DEPT, permanent wave specials jSplon Formula No. 9 Salon Formula No, 11 »^9S* »g95 HAIR SHAPING SHAMPOO AND SET *For these savings ask for the Thrilt-Dept.. Prices Slightly Higher On Friday and Saturday Open Late Tuesday and Thursday Evenings Please ask about our Styling Salon Prices Open 9-9, Sat. 9-6 donnell’s 682-0420 Pontiac Mali Shopping.Center BLUNT CUT QuallCraft dm, th. most feminine things with the silky new softness of black suede uppers, dramatically faille-trimmed. Choose a winter-full of exciting shoe looks from our heavitifiil new suede colleclion. QualiCrnft gives you fashion and fine quality that are exceptional to find at such a little price." OIT THE •HOEf WITH THI 6SO LOOK AT PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TOMORROW THRU MONDAY BOND SUITS reduced from ^52.50 & *59.50 $ 44 All the top styles. All from our regular stock. Authentically styled natural-shoulder Ivytowns. New lustrous Iridescents. New subtle plaids and checks. New colors-spiritea bright to distinctive darks. All in luxuriously fine worsteds. A magnificent group telected from our regular stock. BOND COATS reduced from *54.50 to *59.50 $. All alterations without okargs HOLIDAY BONUSI ChaFgib It now. Pay nothing until Fabruary ... t/ifn taka 0 nH^nths \ 44 Famous Heritage Saxony Toncoat.s, Double-duty Tweed Zlpllned Coats. Handsome St. Cloud Melton Overcoat.s, Eveiy coat Rochester tailored. There’s nothing finer. Every cout direct from our regular stock. A big bountiful selection at the very start of the .sca.son. THE PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER ■If - 7'r 'i 1 THUi PONTIAC PRKSS. THURSDAY. NOVKMBKR 26. 1964 ! I- /' FRIDAY ANP SATURDAY ONLY AT OUR' PONTIAC MALL :STORE HUGHES HATCHER SUFFRIN’S BIG THANKSGIVING SPECIALS SPECIAL! ^ IMPORTED FABRIC WHITEON-WHITE DRESS SHIRTS 4.99 Luxury at a big savings! An imported while-on-white, beautifully tailored with single needle stilching. Regular and tab collars with French cuffs. One of the best values of the year! SPECIAL! DACR0N«/C0TT0N ,^IP-LINED PLAID RAINCOATS AT 26.99 Year-'round ,coats in handsome muted plaids with zip-out linings of rich Orion® acrylic pile. Split rag-lan model with stand up convertible collar, slash pockets. Grey, olive, or brown mutfid plaids.Regulars,shorts, and longs. SPECIAL! This tackle twill jacket is just the answer for cold weather. Styled in a full zipper model with a SOUK knit collai. knit culls, watmriiiilt lining and two slash pm.kets, Chaicoal oi taupe. Sues 36 4b. SPECIALS ON MEN'S FURNISHINGS HaNOSOMf raiAMaS in lint! lollmi |ii(Ma(lntli. II com* 10 two \lylos. . . coni ni middy, lomany colni'i j All RAYON ROBI llial'a wanliaht*, soil lik* lin« llaMii*l Willt milchmii sculls. In lilun, sidy oi rod, smy.........11.99 ROXIR SHORTS will) lull cul snal lor •xlt* crmilmt, Th»y «i* »v«ll»hl« In whili, solids mid paltoins al a vory »pwi«l ................................. ..............' NI CKWIAR ...»Iimnlitoiud •sMiilmoiil ol all Alik minis. SPECIAL! FULL FASHIONED LONG SLEEVE BAN LON SHIRTS 5.49 The luxury fabric that’s famous for fit and easy care, full fashioned in a 3-butlon pullover with rib knit waist and fashion collar. Green, camel, pewter, burgundy, blue. S,M,L,XL. SPECIAL! 10.99 We can’t mention the maker’s name, but you'll find these well nailed hats in the iiartnw brim cenler-(lease or the wider hum pim h liont style, withhaod feltededges, III tjie newest shades. SPECIAL! rainoiis for wear and a leader in style, these handsome shoes are AvailahlR in either a wing lip or mot; loe model. Bnlh tnhiackni (talk hiowil smoolli lealliei. Si/es / 12. AND THERE'S NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS PURE WORSTED 2-PANT SUITS, TOPCOATS AND VERCOATS AT 90 49 Here’s a top notch value! Kingswood and Montclair worsted 2-trouser suits in a large selection of patterns and colors. They're specially purchased for this event, tailored to our own exacting specifications, in excellent wearing pure wool fabrics, in 2-and 3-button models with plain or pleated trousers. Featured too, is a superb col* lection of topcoats, zipcoats, and overcoats in such handsome fabrics as all-wool velours, cheviots, saxonies and tweeds. Included, also, are rugged country coals, alpaca lined, with moulon collars. It's a selection that features every tasteful style and color in a complete size range-at wonderful savings. 2-PANT SUITS OF IMPORTED SILK AND WOOL SHARKSKIN; IMPORTED VELOUR OVERCOATS Two extraordinary values I Suits in imported silk and wool sharkskin, willi a beautiful iridescent luster. It wears well, drapes perfectly. (You could normally expect lo pay more than just 09.90 tor such a suit with just one pair of pants.) Handsome 2-and 3-buUoii models with choice of pleated or plain front trousers. Rich shades of silver or Cambridge grey, brown, etc. A complete size range in all proportions. The oiitercoats are lustrous full bodied impoi led velour in handsome dioss and split raglan models. Solids and elegant muled plaids, heaiilihdly lined. An excepfioiial group ol fine coals and a most A AQQ exceptional price. In all sizes. wM SEE NEXT 2 PAGES OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN EVERY EVENING TO 9 P.M. • ' y THk PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NPVEMBER ^6, 1964 fRIDAY-ANB SATURDAY ONLY AT OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE SPECIAL! CHARTER CLUB ALL-WOOL WORSTED SPORTCOATS 26.99 New all-wool worsted sport coats in a traditional natural shoulder model. Three-button, with flap pockets, center vent, in herringbones, plaids, checks;, large selection of sizes and colors. No charge for alterations. SPECUl! PERMANENTLY CREASED WORSTED IVY SLACKS 10.99 Trim plain-front belt loop model in worsted flannel. Styled with a permanent crease. Shades of Cambridge, chargrey, olive, black, brown. Sizes 28-44 for regulars and longs. No charge for alterations. SPECIAL! TRADITIONAL DRESS SHIRTS IN STRIPES (SOLIDS 3.99 long sleeve dress shirts in snap-tap or ivy button-down collar models. Choose from stripes, whites or solids. All colois and sizes. SPECIAL! CORDUROY TOUCHDOWN COATS, ORION PILE LINING 19.75 The casual touchdown coat styled in wide wale corduroy, with two slash pockets, bulky knit collar, quill sleeve lining. Oilon* acrylic pile lining, Olive, bronze or antelope. Sizes 36-46. I , , OBPiM-J.y' : raRY Nieiir^ti ' '"I \ Tlli|[i4 I SPECIAL! SPORT teTS IN TRADITIONAL IVY BUTTO»(-Dm AT 3.99^ Trim tapered body, long sleeve sport shirts in a traditional button-down collar model with box pleat and banger loop. In solids, checks, stripes and plaids. Sizes S,M,L. SPECIAL! CORDUROY SLACKS IN TRIM PLEATLESS STYLE AT 4.79 A wonderful value on these washable midwale corduroy slacks. In an ivy pleatless model with belt loops. Precuffed bottoms. I oden or antelope in 29-38 waist sizes. SPECIALS ON MEN'S FUNNISHINGS IMPORTED ENGLISH WOOL HOSE in « x T tlli; ininlotctd hHl (nri In*. Rrnwn, navy; mid. guy, diaiiriy, ind blicir. SIm 10 1/2 lo 13.........................1.29 SLIM lOXER SHORTS, wisliibit, lull cut snil Ini txlia comlort. Contour taperod. In whllai, chacka, and aasorlad plaldt SIZ«30lo3e......................................1.39 TAPERED TEE-SHIRTS of all combad coUon with ttln-loicfd collar of Ddcron*/cotton. Action ildt vonts.,.. .1.39 MADRAS lELlt (or llio claaalc look. Aaioilad pallmna nl lutbantlc madtai wllh loafhar itiap and brasi bui kl*. Sim S,M,l..............................................1-99 SPECIAL! CHARTER CLUB ESTED SUITS N ALLWL SHARKSKIN AT 49 90 THE fabric, THE look, THE price! That's what you’ll find here, in this sale group of fine all-wool sharkskins from our natural shoulder Charter Club Shop. Styled to our own exacting specifications in a trim 3-button model, with slim plain-front trousers—and a matching vest. The fabric is smooth, long-wearing, luxurious sharkskin in solid and iridescent shadings of olive, brown, blue, medium grey, clay, and charcoal. Sizes 35-46; regulars, shorts, longs, extra longs. AND THERE'S NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS! OUR PONTIAC MALL STOftE IS OPEN EVERY EVENING TO 9 P.M. ■'.V T^ltC poNllAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NpVEMBElj 26, 196^ ■iV ■ ■.M Nj3V C- « FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY AT OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE SPECIAL VESTED SUITS OF OlHjOir-WOOLIN CLASSIC IVY STYU *39 A great value on long wearing, well tailored suits, blended of Orion* acrylic and wool. Traditional 3-button Ivy style with plain front, belt-loop trousers, and a reversible vest Choose from sharkskins in brown heather or brown olive; herringbones in Cambridge grey, black olive, ripe olive. Sizes 3542 regular, 36-42 long. CORDUROY TOUCHDOWH COAT, WITH WARM ORLON* PILE LINING Classic coat in M Irngth has knR collar, slash pockaTa and tri-tona Orion* plla lininn. Lodan or Anla- lopa. Boy's tizaa 10-20 16.99 8ludpnU36 42 .. ...19.75 IMlIlErYEtMaTWIJtl tmEOnSFAMOUiMAKU ShIrK hv a lamoul makir (ThaV'ra pri lIckaM wllh lha lartioui labal) In plilds, iliipas and chocks ot wilhabli coUon. Assdrlad Kylas. Boys' sltas8-20... .2.49 VERSATILE ALL-WEATHER COATS ZIP-LINED IN ORLON* PILE All waathar CEsats with sturdy, watar rapallant shall and a zip-out pila lininc- Plaids and solids'black, Oliva. 6-12...........13.99 ...............17.99 3642 .................19.99 NQCKMEYCR TWISTER SUCKS IN WASHAIU Coiduroy atachf In iwlstor or Ivy ilyla. Bosom sloth pocksts, Juniors 6,1,10,12; blh„ novi Uut, ch" J.99 “""■"•‘•SA4.99 SKI STYLE PARKA JACKETS. WARM ORLDN* PILE UNINQ Nyhm shall parks In a lon(sr lanjsth With warm Orion* plla llnins. Zip-off hood, bulky knit collar, knit cuffs. Trl-lona shall. Blus, Black. Olivs. 6-14 14.99 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -1! }{ I I I I I I Mlavoh and coat slyls swaatora In aoUds and tincy mtlsrns. Soft knit n% Orion*, n% mohair. A|l famous labsis. A wr 4.99 A mOST. EXCITING SAVING ON LUXURIOUS MINK-TRIMMED 7/8 LENGTH SUEDE COATS Elegant suede coats lavished with wedding ring mink collars. Popular % length with side slits. Antelope/ Autumn Haze*, SilverAourmaline'*, Brown/Lute-tia*. 6-18 f CQ •EMBA trademark 4»W»I LUXURIOUS FUR-TRIMMID COATS Iv hmoos makart AM wools with olHintiiliik csRsit. l-ll......>iv9 FUR-TRIMMED COATS at amUanl sivinis, iR In Nns smis with mink counts. 1-11.............. .....$89 UNTRIMMED COATS-Ilnn sX wsd mallons, Iwiids snd plslds IninrlalyolsmsrtslylitSzasHI...............$59 FAMOUS MAKER IMPORTED THREE-PIECE DOUBLE WOOL KNITS FROM BELGIUM Wool knit ribbed jacket and skirt, w/coordinated blouse; elegant imports from Belgium.. Other ensembles also included in grey, red, royal, black, T'o-'‘ $49 UNTRIMMED COATS In flna loni wssrini wcols, soma plla- snd zlp.|lMd.Sizisl-U..................... ....$39 TIP-LINED RAINCOATS, Cbasfirflsld snd Bslmscsin styl«: lip-out pill limnit Pifili 6-tl. MISSIS t-lt. Bom, Black. ..14.99 WOOL DRESSES; cript dnssai, Diersn-Avrll drissas In many smart ityin snd colors. 1-11.............11-99 FAMOUS.MAKER THREE-PIECE ENSEMBLES IN LUXURIOUS KNITS. SUEDES AND LEATHERS If you like luxury (and who doesn't) see our new outstanding selection of three-piece ensembles. Fashioned in knit/suede and leather. Sizes 8-18. 44.99 TWO- AND THREE-PIECE ENSEMBLES, iwcitar tilt, IwNd/ luidi Jirklni. Sins l-1|...........34.99 and 39.99 LEATHER CAR COAT with zIp-out Orion plls llnini. In black, bolls, Uffy. SInil-tl.......................34.99 CAR COATS In suadi doth with llninii ot ■ndlurplltcoati.$lisiMI.......... oarduroy ..14.99 IMPORTED MOHAIR AND WOOL CARDIGflNS.^ AND STRETCH PANTS BY A FAMOUS MAKER Bulky cardigans in a blend of wool, mohair and nylon; in bubble pattern of frosted yarn. Blue, pink, beige and pastel tweeds, 36-42, 9.99 Stretch pants with sill rups, many colors. 8-16, 7.99 HANDBAGS ol |inulni ull with Imported trimis In sttortod ttylii snd colon.................................15.99 PAJAMAS In btUthed nylon and acotito. In pink or blue. Sim 14-40. Sptcisl St.................................4-99 ILEEPWIAR, bruihsd nykm iiwtsta |owi»; J-placs fdU«j lumpir isti. Pink « bluo. Both spodsUy P«lMd '•.5.99 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OpEN EVERY EVENING TO 9 P.M. 'XllE PONTJAC PRESS. THUKSDAY. NOVEMBER 26. 1964 AGRICULTURAL MISS -Connie Lou Hendricks is Miss Agriculture of 1964, chosen for the title at Pennsylvania State University. She is from Butler, Pa. Millions Spent on Hunt for Oil Worldwide Spending for Exploration Grows By JESSE BOUGE UPI Financial Editor NEW YORK (UPI) - For the past few years, news reports from all over the world have shown an intensification in the search for oil, to the point where the layman may wonder whether it is all really necessary. „ ★ ★ '★ Oil companies in the non-Com-munist world are estimated to spend a billion dollars a year 1 in ‘ oil exploration ventures; what is spent behind the Iron Curtain is difficult to estimate, although the Soviet action in extending huge oil pipelines toward the rich Western European energy market indicates eastern pr^ucers aren’t missing any bets. For some companies, the search is an Immediate and pressing necessity if they ^sh to stay alive and boni-petivive and attract investor money. Business Week magazine in its current issue notes that more and more money is going overseas for exploration and development: it has pinched the land-locked domestic companies which have low .supplies of crude oil in proportion to their refining and marketing needs. This, in turn, has reflected itself in stock prices. While the internationally-r e p r C s e n ted companies have done well in the market this year on the whole, those with no overseas enterprises have sagged or. stood .still. RELENTLESS BUNT But these are immediate causes for the relentless hunt for oil and gas. M. J. Rathbone, writing in a fortficoming issue of "Tlie Lamp,” company magazine, examines the longer -range netsls. Tlie oil industry has proved reserves about equal to antici- j pate oil and gas consumption in the free world for the next i 20 years, he noted, and huge known deposits for tar sands and oil shales which will pnxliice. * ★ A World energy demand is growing, he continued. 'Hh' industry has & million barrels a day of spare pnaiucing capac- j ily, about equal to the growth ! in oil demand expected in three j or four years; and in 20 years tlie demand will dont)le. Barber Clips 4 Generations TULSA, Okla (Al’) Barber Millard (' Hamby,'50, has cut iiair for four generations of ttie Gresham family. Hie ru'west member is 3 - year - old David Wayne Gresham, who accompanies liiH father, Ollle (iresiiam a Tulsa attorney, to the bar her iiiop IlmTiby also cuts tlm tiair of David Wayne's grandfather. Of lie M Greshmam Sr . and was the barber for his great-grand father, the late William W Gresham. Ilainby as,vs that lie also has a number of j,hrce general ion faitiillea wiio come to ids simp, but this is Ih^ only four-gmeta (ir|H family. j her alnee he was 17 years old. i Ready Now! Outstanding Christmas Buys! imp mis ppmt osmi m.97t A generous 10-rolI supply of brigbc'Cbr!^ ^IFT glamorous foil Have just the right design for each gift! Shimmering foil wrapping printed with poinsettias and other holiday motifs. Each, roll is 26" wide, 30" long. Save! . 52S" of brightly printed holiday-wrap paperjheach roll 26"x88" of 180" of 26* }0" embossed and plain foil. Save! StarBows,12for67^ StarBowsJ8for94^ 10-Ribbon S|Mol'5/>''idOO',63^ 18 Ft.,Wide Rod Satin Ribbon.bf^ Self-Stick Ribbon 6 Spools Curling Ribbon,600^ 67^ 2 ms OHLS! Reg. 88C RIBBON REEL PAR 14 "Stick-to-itself” ribbons on large sikx)I. Solid colors and tinsel stripes. 200', 5/8 and! 7/16" wide. Proportioned-fit "Agilon” wear longer, resist runs. ln| 3 shiulcs. Petite 8-9 average 9-10; tall Complete, assortment of 8 scries, including Nancy Drew, Bobbscy Twins, Hardy Boy|, Cherry Ames, and Tom Swift. Conventional or religious.'25 i of 1 design in box. Koda-R chrome, gold embossed, wi colors on heavy stock. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC I TiL-HURON CINTER I DRAYTON PUINS I ROCHESTER PLAZA DOWNTOWN BIRMINOHAM S. TELEORAPH AT MAPLE RLOOMPIELD MIRACLE MILE PONTIAC MALL SHOP WITHOUT CASH - "CHARC£ tT" AT KRESGE’S - PAY ONLY ONCE A MONTH T ■t THE PONTIAC HJl)ESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 -Even in Slum Quaker Project Chief Makes Life Merry / Their; 1 i v i n g quarters are crowded and they have fev# of this worid’s goods, but children in the vicinity of the East Harlem Projects hmise find Christ-' mas a thrilling time. Any ordinary day itiay suddenly turn into a party day, and the children never know when Roy and Jean Hanson, the director of the Quaker project and his wife, may knock on theif door and invite them to a pdrty. During the year, when college students volunteer to work in the area for a weekend, a warm relationship develops between the children of Little Puerto Rico and the students. Then in the fall, letters come from the college campuses ask-1 ing the Hansons if tiie students I may entertain at the projects i house. ★ ★ ★ Usually the hosts request a specific age group, and the Hansons decide on the guest list. TO ENTERTAIN Perhaps it’s a college friend wanting to entertain 20 in the six- to eight-year-old bracket. The word is given, and o the appointed afternoon, the chiidren troop in, to find < hand materials for making Christmas tree decorations. .Sometimes there’s a story c music, and always a generous i supply of party food, and per- ‘ haps a favor to take home. Sometimes a group of college Istudents will bring stockings stuffed with little toys to the party. TEEN-AGERS And the neighborhood teenagers, not to be outdone, have their own holiday celebration one evening before Christmas. Great pains are taken in decorating the room. Balloons bang from the ceil- | ing, with little notes tucked ! inside. At the appointed signal, the balloons are burst, and the guest must obey the direction given on the note, no matter jiow silly he may feel. ★ ★ ★ And as if all this activity were not enough for the Hansons, Christmas Day finds them hosting a neighborhood Christmas dinner for 15 or 20 guests. COOPERATIVE AFFAIR It’s a cooperative affair, with staff members and the guests each contributing one item to the feast. The guests are young people of the area who have no family ties, and who otherwise might feel friendless at Christmas. Teacher Is in Chorus Line Nightly NEW YORK (AP) - Dede Thomas doesn’t sqe what’s so unusual about beihg a schoolteacher by day and a Broadway chorus girl by night. The red-haired Dayton, Ohio la.ss, 2(i, who appears in ‘‘What Makes Sammy Run?" spends two or three days a week doing substitute leaching at Manhat tail's Junior High Si'luKil 79. ★ * “1 don’t think this is really extraordinary if you look at the i number of hours In the day,” she says. ■Tm at the theater only ttnee and a half hours In the evening and I get home alwut 11:4.5. It's not as if I worked in a cockli|iiI lounge until four in the morning ' I u.siially get up at (5:45 a m. and ^ that leaves a full day ahead" IJNENTHUSIA.STIC She says that her husband, Jimmy Campbell, wasn’t very enthusiastic about tlie idea. ‘‘But," she explains, *‘I sidd io him, ‘Jim, I have all this time - what am I going to do with U‘" and he agreed." Tlielr schoiiules almost coincide. lie plays In the or<‘hestra of the Broadway hit,*‘‘Hello, Doliy," In the evening and at hovla rehearsals and acting classes during the day. Approximately 100 research proji'i-ts In tills country and nhroad are supported liy funds of the Muscular Dystrophy As HiK-latlonfl of America, which has 380 chapters tlirougliout ttie US. I ZT- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, I9Ci U7hi) not Have exciting storm boots? Dressy mid hssi ovsr-your-foot boots make you look like an international adventuress. Fur collars and fleece linings keep you cozy, Sizes 5 to 10. N and M widths. Use Your Alhertt Charge Account ^Former Secretary^ of Army Leaves Texas Hospifa! SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -Gordon Gray, secretary of the Army under President Hdrry Truman, was released from a hospital after a month’s treatment for a heart seizure disclosed only yesterday . Gray, 55, now a member *of President Lyndon Johnson Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board was a d m i 11 e d to Santa Rosa Medical Center Oct. 29 after becoming ill en route to a meeting ' here. i j He left the hospital and was | expected to return to Washington this afternoon. ' j Gray, former president of'the I University of North Carolina, ‘ was special assistant under Tru- j man and in 1955 served in sev-1 eral capacities under D w i g h t i D. Eisenhower, including special ^ assistant for National Security Affairs. Give Thanks... Join with ut in giving thanks for all the wonderful things which are a part of our*American way of life. We give thanks for the thousands of neighbors whom it is a privilege to serve in a vasl number of ways. After Thanksgiving Sale! Snappy, Velvet Collared WARM WOOL CHESTERFIELD Cuba to Be 'Libra' I With Holiday Booze | MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -, Havana | radio reports that pre-Christ- j mas production of wine and liquor will amount to 12;2 million bottles. There are about seven | million Cubans. ! The broadcast, monitored in Miami, said 9.2 million bottles of Cuban wine and liquor will be available for the holidays and this will be augmented with 3 million bottles of Algerian and Albanian wine. Reg. to $3S Smart young fashion at terrific savings. Choose yours in plaid, herriijgbonc, tweed or checks. Wool interlined. Plaid in loden or blue, tweed and checks in black, brown, grey with white. Sizes S-lSw GIGANTIC SWEATER SALE! Rush To Albert’s For These Christmas Gift Specials I Exquisite Holiday Fashion! RONDED WOOL lERSEY SHEATH 88 Reg. 14.99 Wool jersey, bonded for shape insurance; a rich feeling. Elegantly styled with blouson top; slim bowed skirt. Christmas coral or turquoise. Sizes 7-1S. QUILTED TRICOT PJ.'s. 5 For lAUinging or nleepingt Mandarin alyled quilled ai Plate Irit ol P J.'.^ with la>t>trlpiiig C'<’;iiU‘r 'i" I'ONI'IAC MALL .SHOPPING CKNIEIt SHOES FOR THE FAMILY Mn*iiiMMMUMaiwM>wwuuMMM*lMBWI*lwnMWIMailtWMWIMnMll*MlMl*ldi THE 1?0NTIAC PRESS. TMURSt)AY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964^ /wVoNTGOME RY WARD FOR lyiMILY FUN THIS CHRISTMAS NEW STONE HOURS MON. SAT. 9:30 TO 9:30 SUNDAYS 12-6 till Xmas 'FT. POOL TABLE wMi Slale-Tex finished bed! SAVE *20 Regularly M89 • New slate-lnpregnated bed with Wards exclusive Slate-Tex* finish • Handsome walnut polyester veneer finish—burn and stain-resistant • One-piece molded pockets e 100% green wool billiard cloth • Built-in bed and levelers • 2Va in. championship Belgian balls, 2 cues, triangle, bridge NO MONEY DOWN "CMARai IT” AT WARDSI 7-FTe POOL TABLE *20 OFF SPECIAL PURCHASE TABU AND ACCESSORIES AT A SUPER-LOW PRICE *59 NO MONIY DOWN Get a fully-equipped table at this low, low prlcel Table features: %-in. particle board bed; odiustable bed, leg levelers; green billiard cloth; 2V$4n. molded balls; two 48-in. cues; 2 pieces of chalk; triangle, bridge and full instructions. Save more than ever now! 7-FT. POOL TABLE *60 OFF NEW, NON-WARP TOP ON WARDS EINESTI NO MONEY DOWN Wards heavy duty tables are built to regulation specifications, give lively pro-action. Features 100% wool billiard cloth, 2 V4' Belgian balls, 2 imported cues, accessories. Rail resists stains, bums. 8-ff. table.......... $395 llllliiiiiiiiliililiisiiiiiiiiiiliil: VALUE-PRICED FOLD, ROLL AWAY SPACI-SAVINO TABll->TINNIS TABLI One person can fold or openi Weather-(eiU,fant Swedish hardboqrd 3/16" top. Non-glare green finish with white striping. 1-pc. aluminum legs. 5x9' sISte. 27« Reg. 32.91 45 BEAM! 24 OR 26'' HAWTHORNE SPARKED WITH CHROME 99 reg. 49.88 IN CARTON NO MONEY DOWN I A beauty—built to last for yearsi Rugged frame with twin headlight bullr Into streamlined tank. Rich Chromed rims, fenders, chainguard, handlebars. Safety coaster brake; comfortable 2-tone saddle. Boy's, bold red; girl's, blue. With whitewall tires, white grips, pedalu. HEW TWIST-GRIP Here's all-out adventure I TwIst-grIp shifting—-race-style, caliper brake. Nonslip, diamond-tread pedals, whifewalls--and morel For boys, girls. 3S88 STORE 9:30 LM. to 9:00 P.M. HOURS: MONDAY thru SATURDAY Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at E|i2abeth Lake Road NEW STORE HOURS MON.-SAT. 9:30 to 9:30 - SUN. 12-6 TIL CHRISTMAS PONT/UC PRESS. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 1964 THE MOST IMPORTANT SUIT FABRIC IN YOUR FALL WARDROBE SHARKSKIN SUPERBLY TAILORED WOOL 'N SILK IN RICH MUTED IRIDESCENT COLORS •60 CHECK THESE WARRANTED’* FEATURES • Silicons^ finish r«p«l« rain and itaintl • Sanitizttd® • trtotod linings r«p«l garmsi • Sta-Rit« tm wqistband for parfact fitl STORE 9:30 AM. to 9:00 PM HOURS: MOHDAY thru SATURDAY Tho ona suit that's absolutaly basic to any wali-roundad wardroba . . . hand-somaly tailorad by Brant... attractivaly pricad by WardsI Sharkskin ... famous for rich lustrous looks . . axeaptional long waar. It's tha suit you want . . . and naad. Gat it now - shop at Wardtl up the holiday season in white WARDS CAROL BRENTS STAR YOU IN THE WINTER SOCIAL SCENE For disco dancing, romancing, or just looking entrancing .. . see what the quiet dazzle of white does for you. At its most exciting now in a newsy coilection at Wards. Coma see. . ® Lacy white wool in a 2*piece suit-dress with the simple elegance that’s smart anywhere. Bonded to acetate jersey for shape surety. Bound in rayon satin. 10-18.. 14.98 d| The Chelsea Look sailor shift-spwitty new fafhioivrave in white wool flannel. Navy rayon satin tie. Optional belt. 5-13 ..... 10.98 "CHARGE IT" ON WARD! CONVENIENT CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN ... CAR COATS with brisk young flair TAKE WINTRY BLASTS IN CAREFREE STYLE a meltons, corduroys, tacklo twills a flattering fur chin-chin collars a hooded, belted, b6y-type stylos All the snappy styling, and heart-warming In-tarlcMS, to make them unusual values even f6r Wards I 100% Ireprocoisod wools, rayon and cotton tackle twills, shapeiholding cotton cor-' duroyi lamlhated to foam, smooth cotton luodii. Acafota quilts or plushy acrylic pile linings; some with cuddly collars of tip-dyed bleached lamb. All high-rldfng faihloni; 8-16, r«r sradvtli Idbclfil (d ihow cavnlr/ •! orlfln «l Importtil *vn, P^tioG Mall raORE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road TliK I'OM J A' 1 I r THLRSDAV, NOVEMBE MBER 26, 1964 SHOP IND SAVE ON AU YOUR CHRISTMAS NEEDS FROM WARDS! WENDY WARD OUR CHARM SCHOOL DOLL CHAHOES HAIR-STYLE IN SECONDS WITH WIOS! NEW STORE HOURS MON.-SAT. , 9:30 to 9t30 - SUNS. 12-6 TIL CHRISTMAS M ONTGOiVlERY 3 77 dell with 3 WIGS REG. 4.99 Demure, ladylike and ours alone! 11 -in. vinyl doll is dressed for dreaming in shorty gown.' Wigs in 3 teen hair styles (bubble-cut, pony-toil, side-part flip) to complement whatever outfit she wears! CO-ORDINATED OUTFITS WITH ACCESSORIES! Co-ed schooltime jumper, turtle-neck sweater 1.27 Lace and velvet formal for parties, dates... 1.66 Lingerie set with slippers, nylons, half-slip.... 77C power road race NEW LOW PRICE! 32 PIECES, TRI-OVAL"TRACK! One of the most exciting and spell-binding action games ever devised—and it sold last year in many stores for nearly twice Wards new low price! A power pack supplies the “go", rheostats control the speeds. Two Indianapolis-type racing cars flash over a tricky 2-lane course with 3 oval turns. Wheels spin, cars skid around curves—you see all the thrills of real auto racing. Easy to set up track and fence on table or floor; engrossing for hours! 6 88 Reg. 7.88 **Charge It” V-RROOM!’ TRUCK DUMPER WITH REAL MOTOR ROARl Battery power runs this big truck, lifts and lowers the dump bed. Child controls realistic V-RROOM sound from idle to rev-up to roar! Hi-impact plastic; 20" long. eM*N«i,iM. 8 44 Reg. 8.99 ■ATHRIEI EXTRA V-RROOMr RACER SPECTACULAR NEW ROARING CARI Roar starts as wheels turn, gets louder as speed in-creases. Spin or steer it with ^ guide-whip, cord; let it run alone on friction. 14" long; red or yellow plastic. NEW CRAZY CLOCK IDEAL’S WACkY WAKE-UP GAMEl VAC-U-FORM SET MOW elASm. MAKi OWN TOYS! Two to six players vie for chance to assemble this oddball affair. Then a snap of the key sets off a chain of crazy-wild happenings,wak-ent man who jumps from bed I \ 3«« ' Great new hobby! Make flying planes, floating boats, cars, jewelry from 50 metal molds. Or make own molds of soap, clay. Includes paint, brushes. Completely safe. 8 88 Reg. 9.99 29*l V-RROOM” BIKE MATTIl’f aO-IH. MDIWALK MODIl Battery-run V-Rroom "engine” attaches to frame-makes bike look and roar like a motor bike. Coasljss «rake, semi-pneumatic tires; removable training wheels. "« t9A4 STOrI 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. HOURS: MONOAY thru SATURDAY 7 WEAPONS IN 1 *«JONNNY SEVEN” ONI MAN ARMYI H's a rtfle, Tommy gun, oufor ^ ^ motic pistol; fires piqy gre- nade, anfl-fank rocket, armor-piercing shell, anti- bunker mfiille. 36 inches long, requires no battery. "**• '**“ NEW ROTO-TRAY WARDS MODEL 333 SLIDE PROJECTOR One load shows up to 100 slides! Remote control advances them automatically up to 10' away, reverses or sharpens focus. With "Easy-Edit" tray plus Roto-Tray. 7988 Pontiac Mall 35mm AUTOMATIC SURE-SHOT ELECTRIC EYE CAMERA Aim, focus, shoot! No exposure guess-work, no failures due to poor light (shutter locks itself). Bright-line viewfinder frame is alsdi a rangefinder. Fast f/2.8 lent. Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road PHONE 682-4940 5988 with UNlliar V c—u THE rONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26r 1964 JOIN THE THOUSANDS SWITCHING TO WARDS M NO PAYMENTS IILI FEB. 1965 ONTGOWIERY WARD on Signature 1S-lb< capacity washer! NO payMeiIts TILL FEB. 1965 e Washes 2 lbs, or 15 lbs. really clean! Even takes 10 full-size bed sheets! e 6 cycles, 2 speeds! A custom cycle for all washables, denims to dainties e Soak cycle loosens and removes dirt from heavily-soiled fabrics e Extract cycle provides wash ’n wear cool-down and flush-away rinse e 5 wash-rinse temperatures—correct heats for best all-fabric care . e Recirculating lint filter—no hidden lint traps to clog plumbing e Water level control saves gallons of water—saves on detergent, too! 4-WAY ELECTRIC DRYER-HUGE 15-POUMD CAPAUTY •139 No paymonte until February 1965! e Dries with heat or air, with or without tumbling e Handles a 2-lb. handful to a 15-lb. tiamperful e Fabric selector—‘just-rigKt heat for all fabrics e Safety door stops action and heat when opened e Installed free on Detroit Edison 220 line 15-pound gas dryer........................$159 526-LB. STORAGE! 15 CU. FT. SI6NATUM FREEUR • Removable food basket e Thin-wall construction e Certified zero* storage • Vinyl gasket cold Seal • Ea$y-to-clean enamel ► Adjustable cold control WARDS DISHWASHER SAVES YOU WORK AFTER EVERY MEAL Ch.it or Upright e Portable, fully automatic e Washes, dries thoroughly e 10 place-setting capacity e Cleanses all your utensils e No costly installation e Oncasters;$tandard115V *129 GIVE A RADIO AS A GIFT THIS CHRISTMAS NEW AIRLINE RADIO LONG, LOW, AND TRANSISTORIZIDI NEW CLOCK RADIO POWERFUL-FULLY TRANSISTORIZIDI I I’* FINE FM/AM RADIO Uses home current, but has no tubes — plays instantlyl All-tramistor chassis allows for this dramatic new styling and excellent pertormonce. 4 inches high I Buy now! 24** NO MONir DOWN l-ong, low design made possible by an dll-transistor chassis—no tubes, plays instantlyl Rich, full sound and fine reception. Clock with automatic doze alarm. 29 99 I pi sure with both FM and AM! Clear AM, drift-free FM reception. 6 tubes with two built-in antennas. White cabinet, blue sides and top. 29 99 WAKE-UP RADIO! ALL-TRAMiMTOR WITH 2 5PIAKIR5 99 Style and iouhd of tomorrow due to all-t(lan$istor chassis. Compact, no tubes, uses home current. Accurate time-piece. Rqgfo speakers rotate to aniy direction! 34^ STORE HOURS: 0:30 to 9:30 MON-SAT. SUN. 12-9 TILL XMAS Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. I' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 CPL0R1_, WKCv. 108 NORTH SAGINAW of gift treasures... 16 BARGAIN-PACKED PAGES ... JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING Th«ra's excitement and surprises galore for early Christmas shoppers. Every deportmerd is brimful and sparkling with the finest gift selections — quality and brand names thlat you expect from us — your reliable store. You'll fine! the most wanted gifts for everyone on your list right , here. Enjoy one-stop shopping and save time, ^ money and effort. Hundreds of items to choose from — hundreds of items not even advertised — come in, check them'all! PERSON TO PERSON CREDIT... • NO DOWfN PAYMENT • NO PAYMENTS TIL NEXT YEAR • 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH • UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY GRUEN DIAMOND WATCH SALE! EVERY WATCH IS FUUY GUARANTEED EACH WITH FAMOUS IT^EWEL GRUEN FRECISION MOVEMENT at iJtese Diamond Watch Values . Values like these ore rare In fine diamond watches! Only a special purchase enables us to bring you these Superb creations ... each fashioned with the ex<|uisite grace of fine jewelry . . . plus the quality craftsmanship of thjs 90-year-old manufacturer of Precision Watches. Luxuriously gift packaged, truly each watch Is a poisesslpp of pride! All with newest fashion bracelets. ^ Your Choice UFEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY 'HI 0 P.M. MRK FREE in WKC's Privato Uit at Rear of Our Store 108 NORTH SAGINAW AjtJUST A SMAU DEPOSIT WILL HOLD YOUR PURCHASE 'til CHRISTMAS D-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 WKC 108 NORTH SAGINAW Convi'iiM'iit Jiitr calrmUr v\u(
  • u<«l nImiim'. ..,,..$35.95 Squnrc Jrnia vs.iUli uilli m mp- gcA rxiHiimiiin i>riKfl<’l. ..$39.93 U.ul.T $<4) AirProoF jtrronJ hand. rx|).ni.i.m $-19.95 S«p< rl.ly o\.d watch with c>|Mmi|>liirc cryxlnl. ..$59.95 Unlc|iu'ly dc»l|(nc-J goU-flllcMl Wlilcli ccilll *ui-dfl Iliiip. $39.95 Uiidri J75 All I’diid iiiiliMtiulicr gold fillrj wnirli. .S»ci p loc'ond linnd. $9J Cold (i|l.-d liiHcc'Irl walch, *»- n^TIVE SHADOW BOXES Wide selection of styles with mirrored bock. Some with sculptured corner ornaments, shelves and different wood finishes. MODERN 4-DRAWER Four roomy cfrawers, with double-depth file drawer. Large writing surface 34 inches wide 'and I 8 inches deep. Choice of wolnut, limed oak and maple. Matching chair included. $. No Itonoy Down 18 Piece Glass Tumblerware Set Limited Time Only, with the purchase of this SEALY SMOOTH-TOP MAHRESS HOOVER CANHISTER VACUUM CLEANER Scientifically firm! No buttons with resilient colls, layers of fluffy cotton. Prebuilt borders, strong handles, air-vents. Durable $38 Powerfy.1 I’/a h.p. motor. Mot6r, fillers and dustbag ... all in shell less than 7" deep! HANDSOME* CONVENIENT MATCHING BOX SPRING SAME PRICE 34 50 Front rolls up - Glass Tray Sliiles Out I Finished In walnut with brass trim. Including bross ferrules on smartly tapered legs. Sliding door cabinet Is Ideal for beverages, bar supplies, books or record storage. Makes a perfect serving piece. 31" wide, 17" deep, 33" high. Buy now, and got this Tunblewnro serviin lor 6 I kl El THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 D—11 MAKE IT A COLORFUL CHRISTMAS! WITH RCA VICTOR COLOR TV DEUVERY, INSTALLATION, 90 OAYS HOME SERVICE AND 1-YEAR PARTS WARRANTY Included This boautiful new console TV features glare proof RCA High Fidelity Color Tube which receives Color and black-and-white pictures that are extra bright and vividly real o.i bo;th VHF and UHF Channels. Power-boosted 25,000 volt Color Chassis, Static-free "Golden Throat" sound adds listening realism to your Color TV^ viewing pleasure. H68 RCA VICTOR COLOR TV Prices Start at *399.95 RCA VICTOR UHF-VHF 82-CHANNEL 19-INCH PORTABLE TV & STAND All Channel VKF (2 to 13) and UHF (14 to 83) tuning. Top-front speaker for excellent sound dispersion. Top-front controls for easy operation. SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS IN LAYAWAY UNTIL CHRISTMAS SUNP INOUDEDI SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PRICED *148, As Little As 50c Weekly PANASONIC ELECTRIC or TRANSISTOR RADIO Comes complete with built-in AC adaptor. Has 7 transistors, 1 diode ferrite antenna, vertical dial. PANASONIC FM-AM RADIO PrAcision built FM-AM radio with Automatic Frequency Control for no-drift reception, built-in antenna, extra powerful 4" speaker and slide rule dial. 2995 SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PRICED 24’* pnomaa, PORTABLE STEREO Complete with 2 detachable speakers. Enjoy true stereo performance anywhere with this complete stereo. Has automatic changer and turn over Stereo cartridge. *58 D—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1&64 WKC 108 NORTH SAGINAW Phone fEdctol 3-?m WONDERFUL GIFT IDEAS ENJOY AAAGIC MOMENTS WITH A SONY! SONY MICRO-TV COMPl ETE OUTFIT! Amoz.ingIy compact TV, weighs only 8 lbs. yet gives wonderful picture clarity. Operates “indoors on AC, Outdoors on rechargeable power pack. With UHF converter! Case and battery optional. SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PRICE $15995 A SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS YOUR PURCHASE IN LAYAWAY UNTIL, CHRISTMAS ALL NEW WOLLENSAK HI-FI TAPE RECORDER This fine monaural recorder is easy to operate, has 4 and 2-track mono record playback, horizontal or vertical operation. With mike, blank tape and take-up reel. SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PRICE »129 SPECIAL PURCHASE ... IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS ‘‘Carmencita” GUITAR Professional standard size guitar, OKcel-lent value for students. Complete wifit cord, cover, pick and book. I SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PRICE *25 PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT • NO DOWN PAYMENT • NO PAYMENTS 'TfUNEXT YEAR • UP TO 86 MONTHS TO PAY • 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH NEW GIFT IDEA! DROP LEAF HOSTESS CART Easy-rolling brass cart doubles as a dining table for Iwol Sell-locking rigid drop (eaves provide extra large serving area for all informal entertaining. Richly grained 'Samoan teak' walnut fops. 31" long. SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PRICE $1995 Our Gift Sugfrosliowf . . . JFalhie-Talhivs, Transistor Radios^ RiuocuUtrs, €amera.s TRUCKLOA F1965 MAYTAGS JUST ARRIVED FOR ECIAL CHRISTMAS VALUES BUY NOW AND VE! YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD AG OMATIC WASHER THE PONTIAC PRE$S, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 D—13 MAYTAG ELECTRIC DRYER • High speed, low heot, no hot spots. O Lots you dry even delicate lingerie o EKicient lint filter • Big-family load capacity <0 Zinc-coated cabinet guards against rust e Safety door stops oction when opened o New Safety Restaif Switch CHRISTAAAS SPECIAL *128 PERSON TO PERSON CREDIT • NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY • 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH PHILC019” PORTABLE TV Contplete with Portable Stand FULLY EOUIPPED FOR ALL 82-CHANNEL UHF-VHF RECEPTION New Low Sale Price GIANT PHILCO 2-DOOR AUTOMATIC REFRISRATOR 0 12.2 cu. ft. 2-Door only 30" wide. Stores 92 lbs. of frozen foods in zero zone freezer. O Full-width Porcelain Crisper stores % bushel of vegetables, o Dairy Bar Storage Door o Enclosed Butter Keeper O Door Shelves for half gallon milk containers and tall bottles. • "Book Shelf" storage in frooier door O Deluxe bright metal shelving O Advanced Thin-Wall design e AAognetiC Gasket door seals; quiet, positive Superb styling ... New Tapered Continental shape with finished bach. Two-tone gray, disappearing handle. Telescoping pivotenna; transistorized UHF tuner; 6"x2(' spe&ker, front sound; builtX. / in power cord holder. Matching roll-away cart. $ 198 ★ FREE lAAMEDIATE DELIVERY ★ FREE FACTORY WARRANTY ★ FREE SERVICE ★ SATISFACTION GUARANTEED SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS IN LAYAWAY 'TIL CHRISTMAS D-14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ^^^OVEMRER 20, 1964 RWi? £ 108 NORTH SAGINAW We Guarantee What We Sell JUST IN TIME for CHRISTMAS NEW! DIFFERENT! ADVANCED! Last Word in F^eifection WORLD'S FIRST JET ACTION WASHER FRIGIDAIRE Jet-smooth washing — even apron strings seldom snarl. Wash & Wears come out with practically no wrinkles — less ironing! Jet-fast spin —710 RPAA—leoves wash extra light, extra dry. Save drying time and electricity. This Is the sign of a new way to wash... patented Deep Action Agitalorl Model WDA-65 4 colors or while • Patented Deep Action Agitator creates jet currents to help remove heaviest soil — yet gentle on clothes. • Advanced Jet-Away Rinse — scoots lint, scum right out of the tub. No need of a lint filter. • Soaks automatically, washes automatically. • Dispenses bleach, detergent, even dye — under water. • 4 Water temperature combinations for just-right washing. • Jet-simple mechanism — no gears, no pulleys, no belts to cause potential service problems! TERRIFIC VALUE ^98 THRIFTY FRIGIDAIRE FLOWING HEAT DRYER • Gentle at a breeze. Exclusive Flowing Heat dries fluffy soft. e Low-priced yet gives you Frigidaire quality and dependability. e Handiest lint catcher known — on the door. • Your choice of 4 gorgeous colors or gleaming white. • Porcelain Enameled drum — snag-free. Smooth Porcaloin Enamel drum won't snog delicate*, redsti ruit, too. Trade In that elotheilinel Ju*t diol and it's dryl CHRISTMAS SPECIAL ms Frigidaire Flowing Heat fluff- Handiest lint cotcher known . dries os gently as a breeze. — It's right on the door. FRIGIDAIRE 2-DOOR FAMILY SIZE REFRIGERATDR We took advantage of a special oiler by Frigidaire. That's why wo can offer you a buy like this. Hurry! • • 10d4b. separate zero zone freezer with fast ice cube freezing, e Automatic defrosting in refrigerator section. e Twin vegetable Hydralors, roomy Storage door. $238 with trade FRIGIDAIRE 30-INCH ELECTRIC RANGE Model RS 30 64. e Cook for a crowd in this big, 33-inch wide oven and bake beautifully, too, with even heafi e Exclusive Radiontube surface unit* give you uniform cooking heat. • New, recessed one-piece flowing fop. e Removable full-width storage drawer for pots, pons. e Compact 30" width, save* space in your kitchen. $163 TJl'R rONTIAC PRKSS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 D—15 SPEED QUEEN... A PRACTICAL GIFT TO ENJOY EASIER WASHDAYS!. A SPEED QUEEN AVTOMATIC WASHER »178 • Fully Automatic Oporation • Big 124b. Copaci^ Tub • Hot, Warm, Cold Wator Soloction • Automotic Lit.t and Sodimont Removal • Transmission Guaranteed 5 Years SPEED QUEEN ELECTRIC DRYER <138 o All-Fabric Time Cycle o All-Fabric Heat Control, Hi, Lo, Air Only o Convenient In-a-Door Lint Screen o Free Service, Free Warranty SMALL DEPOSIT Wia HOLD YOUR WASHER IH LAYAWAY IMnL CHRISTMAS We Operate Our Own Service Dept. Staffed with Factory Trained Specialists SPEED QUEEH DELUXE WRINGER WASHER • Double Wall Tub to keep water hot • Massiver Wringer with Safety Control • Welded Steel Chassis, with full length legs • Tangle-proof Agitator • Sediment Zone • 5-Year Transmission Guarantee! Our Low Chrmlmas Price PARK FREE IN OUR PRIVATE LOT REAR OF OUR STORE WXC £ 108 NORTH SAGINAW D—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 11 YEAR ROUND FUN Fh The family 108 NORTH SAGINAW Cish Cncloted Ln N«w Account — ftnncl •mploymont and trada rfifQrenco <- Chuck Steak 39^ 39$ PETERS SLICED ® i(B^i ifioil! !([{0T|: ifiol’ |fi^! ifio> ;([i^ m ^GPl :C«\ 'ft?l GPU GP!I: ;GP5! 0^ tW'i FRESH-GROUND _ [HAMBURGER f*® t'iF] iSi MMUli Golden Yellow BOLOGNA 29^ ■ ^ POUND......piPllr ^ Mi i^i leiS! iGPSi m. 1IP31 isg m imi!! iMi Wk m m. m lEiai Tip Top S Hart's m Van Camps ASMRA6US I PEACHES I tun A Sliced or Halves ^ ■ Wl sd 300 Can lot Large iVi can I or Halves ^ io( § 19^ I jUIF B Jm Con V'\\v i t mrm wm mm. mm- mm mm l^i We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities - Dfone Sold to Dealers or Minors i?Si iP^ EP^ ES E5S1 i!■' S BANQUET FRESH FROZEN | § CHEF'S DELIGHT ^ miHBUii miiipiii rm. m POUND WITH COUPON (Limit 2 Pounds) PIES Chicken, Turkey or Beef EN i g CHEF'S DELIGHT |9( |i affiE »iEu 39t ■ ■■each^fe 2P0UNDPKG. ^nm-, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Cranberry Dishes Star in Brunch Menu will be the long a mdu “Up ahd at ’em” word for ttte day, ^en you spread the news you’re serving an extra lE^ial brunch. And what makes it" so special? Dishes featuring those little Me t^Suncy red cranberries . . . that’s vrtiat! For these favorite berries, Sausage Laws Need Overhaul EAST LANSING - Michigan people eat more sausage, ground beef and other ii:omminuted, or ground, meat fx-oducts per capita than the people of any other state. And this may well be due to the fact that Michigan has the strictest comminute meat law in the nation, J. L. Littlefield, chief of the foods and standards division of the Michigan Department of Agriculture, told a conference of nieat processors at Michigan State University recently. V But this does not mean that the law does not need amendment. In fact, he said, it needs a major overhaul. The law should be revised to allow processors to utilize the iatest research and technology; to require product identity — informative listing of ingredients on the package, and to limit the use of tinted , packaging designed to create a false impression of quality, he indicated. Up-toKlate laws, a larger state inspection force, more in-plant inspection, and better cooperation of the courts are needed, he said, to assure continued success of the comminuted meat business in the state.' Today’s consumer, Littlefield contends, is not basing her meat choice on price, alone, but rather is “searching )for high quality, reasonable priced to fit her budget, attractively packaged, and labeled so as' to be informative.” long a popular parf of the turkey feast, have graduated into a whole new role of their own. Now you’ll find them, in one guise or another, served at your table- the year ’round. ★ *' * ' Brunch? Piping hot pancakes with tart-sweet cranberry syrup . a light, fluffy omelet wife a ruby-red cranberry nut filling .. cranberry pumpkin muffins . . or, just a simple luscious cranberry bread with sweet butter. The cranberries’ tangy flavor and cheery color will make your brunch indeed . . “a special.” So, while fresh cranberries are in seascm, through the rest of the year ’64, use them as an ingredient in your pet recipes. Freeze them for future use, or preserve them in jams,, jellies and relishes for next year’s brunches. Did you ever mix cranberry juice with a citrus juice for a breakfast starter? Or soak prunes overnight in cranberry juice. Get “up and at ’em” yourself M’am, you don’t know; what you’re missing! Cranberry Omelet 2 cups fresh cranberries 1 cup sugar Vi cup water V4 cup slivered blanched almonds 1 apple, peeled, cored and chopped 6 eggs, separated % cup light cream 1 teaspoon salt Vs teaspoon pepper Vi cup butter or margarine Combine cranberries, sugar and water in saucepan. Bring to a boil and Cook until cranberries begin to pop. Remove from heat and stir in almonds and apples. Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Beat egg yolks, cream, salt, and pepper together. Beat egg whites until stiff hut not dry. Fold in egg yolks lightly but Lunch Salad a Bit Sweet For those who like sweet salads, try shrimp-banana ring for a main course lunbh salad. Dissolve 1 (6 ounce) package of lemon flavored gelatin in IVi cups of mayonnaise. Chill until syrupy. Fold in cup of chopped celery, 2 (i'/i ounce) cans of jumbo shrimp, drained, and 3 all-yellow bananas, sliced. Pour into a 6-cup ring mold. Chill til firm. Makes 6 servings. Shrimp in Pie a Bit Unusual „ Shrimp Pie is just what its name implies. It is a pie and it is filled with shrimp in a delicately lemon-flavored sauce. Coupled with celery and onions, it has a delightfully crunchy texture that makes it perfect for main dish serving at luncheons, dinners, or late evening suppers. ■ Plan to serve it with a tossed green salad and hot muffins, and your menu’s all set. Shrimp Pie % cup diced celery 2 m^lum onions, diced 2 tablespoona butter 11b. cooked and cleaned shrimp (fresh or frozen-if Canned is used, 2-5 9Z. cans) % cup cooked rice 2 eggs Va cup bottled lemon juice 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1 teaspooA salt Dash pepper Unbaked 9” pie shell 1 green pepper, sliced Saute celery and onions in butter until soft and lightly I browned. Lightly toss with shrimp. In separate bowl, beat two eggs with bottled lemon juice. Add cornstarch and stir { untif smooth. Add salt and pepper. Spoon shrimp mixture into pie sheil, spreading eveniy. Pour egg mixture over I shrimp. Garnish with thin slices of green pepper. I Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes* or until mixture is set. 5-6 servings. Mashed Potafoes | Frost Turkey Loaf A young member of the fam- cept mashed potatoes. Pour ily" when a favorite way with mixture into a welLgreased 9x-the leftovers appeared on the 5x3-inch loaf pan. Set pan Into Ubie ^ said? "Even ,rt,en a.^n p( hot water and bake rr • ^ wayf oJ'S? a. iar as young tine. Let toat coot la pan to people are , Unmold loaf on a serving plat- ?ILJa7eJS asS ter. With a spatula gently frost excitin^ Almost a g entire loaf with hot seasoned S atafgetllnl' the meat I of l»l '«■ ««> <»P ) Cot into slices and serve hot with Let Almonds Add Touch and pouuws served together in “^Xa^S. ^iefi:'tl aerv a slice. ‘ Finally, the flavor is adveh-furesome but not too much so. Just enough to make the dish outstanding and a lesson in better taste. Reason for that is the addition of the remarkable biend of herbs and spiced that is Angostura aromatic bitters. It has many different spices in one bottie, aii and each of which contribute rare flavor quality to the finished dish. Frosted Turkey Loaf 4 cups stale soft bread crumbs 6 tablespoons melted butter or margarine Almonds glamorize everyday foods. Stir roasted diced almonds and chopped parsley into ground" beef; season with onion salt, pepper and basil or oregpno. Shape into patties and boil or pan-fry. - ' Sprinkle toasted . slivered al-I monds over hot cooked peas and 2V4 cups milk or chicken broth Brussels sprouts. 1V4 tablespoons Angostura - | lightly with lemon juice aromatic bitters i 3 tablespoons minced onion , Oven-roa.sted whole blanched 1 teaspoon poultry seasoning | snacks. For each cup almonds, use 1 teaspoon butter or salad I oil. Roa?t in shallow pan in. 300-degree oven 20 to 25 minutes. CRANBERRIES FOR BRUNCH — Believe me, try one of these fresh cranberry brunch ideas next time you’re looking for a new breakfast dish. Gon’t beat them. if Idea Is New Try It Once Many good cooks still like to use this old-time method. Boiled Chicken 1 roasting chicken (a b o u t 4 pounds ready-to-cook weight) 1 quart water 1 rib celery and 1 pared carrot 1 small onion Vi teaspoon salt Bring the washed chicken and the remaining ingredients to* a boil; boll gently until tender — about 45 minutes. Remove ehicken, crave and serve hot or cool. (Strain broth; refrigerate; remove fat from top and use broth as desired.) thoroughly. Heat butter in a 10-inch skiliet until it begins to stop bubbling. Add egg mixture and cook over medium heat untii underside is lightly browned, (about 5 minutes). Place in slow oven (325 degrees) and bake 12 to 15 minutes, or until surface feels dry. Makes 4-6 serVings. Serve omelet in skillet topped with Cranberry Relish, or serve omelet cut into wedges and pass the Cranberry Relish. Cranberry Date Bread 1 egg, beaten % cup orange juice 1 package (14 ounces) date muffin mix IVii cups fresh cranberries, coarsely chopped Vt cup coarsely chopped nuts 1 teaspoon grated orange rind Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Add egg and orange juice to date muffin mix; beat until well blended. Fold in cranberries, nuts and orange rind. Pour mixture into greased and floured 8x4x3-inch loaf pan. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC furnished by the following mej^hants 4t N. Saginaw Sf. MiMiTri OLOTMII SNOP IfO N. Saginaw Si. ■Nim INOP f UMklfffiMiwtl. fu.UMNM’1 MUINI INOP Tri.HuNwil«. OIMUN’I MliPI WUN SI N. Saginaw SI. FNIO N. PAULI JIWILINI 31 W Huran |l. PONTIAO INOOAII JIWILRV 00. ai N. laglnww II. TNI PONTIAO PRIII 48 W. Huran tl. OLOONAN DNUO 00. 77 N. Saginaw Si. INAW'I JIWILINI 34 N. laginaw |il. WANB'I HOMI OUTPmiNO 0 iMOf. laginaw |l. Bake for about 50 minutes, or until top springs back when touched lightly. Remove from oven and cool for 10 minutes. Remove from pan and cool thoroughly on a rack. Makes 1 loaf. Cranberry Pumpkin Muffins 2Va cups sifted all-purpose flour 1 tablespoon baking powder 1 teaspoon salt % cup sugar V4 teaspoon allspice % cup oil 2 eggs % cup canned pumpkin IVi cups fresh cranberries, coarsely chopped Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Sift flour, baking powder, salt, sugar, ahd allspice together. Beat oil, eggs, and pumpkin together until blended. Add all at once to tbe sifted ingredient^; stir until mixture is just blended. Fold in cranberries. Spoon mixture into greased muffin pans. Bake in a hot oven for 20 to 25 minutes, or until muffins are lightly browned. Let stand for 5 minutes. Remove from pan and serve warm or cool. Makes 12 muffins. Figs Unusual in a Salad A “quickie” that could be used as a luncheon salad as well as part of a bUffet supper. Stuffed Pears V^ cup chopped dried figs ’/4 cup chopped nuts 1 cup cottage cheese 10 canned pear halves Lettuce Mayonnaise Combine figs and nuts with cottage cheese. Put canned pears together in pairs with cheese-fig mixture. Serve each stuffed pear on bed of lettuce with a dab of mayonnaise. Makes 5 servings. '/2 cup minced celery >/!• cup chopped pimiento 4 eggs, slightly beaten 3 cups minced cooked turkey 1 teaspoon salt 4 cups seasoned mashed potatoes Mix all ingredients well ex- stirring frequently. Remove and toss with garlic salt and a little cayenne. FROSTED TURKEY LOAF - The frosting on the turkey loaf is mashed potatoes; the delightful flavor inside is from aromatic bitters. 13 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: fcnrirm 78 North Saginaw DOWNTOWN PONTIAC SHOPi BEHER MEATS Sinre J/Ml Opan Friday Evaningt 'til 9 P.M. 4348 Dixie Highway DRAYTON PLAINS Opan Thurtday thru Saturday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Opan Sundays 9 4.M. to 6 P.M. I AtBazley^s ■ ! SAVE MORE S j At Our Low Prices J * SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF > [holiday poultry j BAZLEY Better Trim STEAKS . • ROUND • SIRLOIN /• SWISS •CLUB T-BONES 69" • PORTERHOUSE 79° HAMBURGER PAHIES Tender Juicy Mil A HAMBURGER PATTIES Chuck Steak 4K r Bulk SausiiilSin Blade Cut a a ■ CHUCK QQ( ROAST ViIh. Lean Beef Short Ribs 291 Fmh, Lean BOILING BEEF Lean, Terider PORK eoc ROAST 09a. Fresh, Leeit Laan BLADE-CUT A l ARAA PORK CHOPS 3 s *1"" Leon CENTER-CUT 55! CHOPS I I via I 02171871 THE POXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2fi. 1964 Cookies Fijll of Crunchy Goodies (Cookies are so welcome In lunch boxes, after school, for eveninfi snacks and desserts. They are nourishing and welcome at all times. Lunches that go off to .school and work are better with a few flavorful, satisfying cookies to .sweeten the day. And they are even better with a few extra cookies included to share with a friend. Peanut Brittle Chocolate Chip Cookies are delightfully crisp, so they really “go with milk,” Their old-fashioned butterscotch flavor combines with sweet miniature marshmallows, crunchy salted peanuts and semisweet chocolate chips to make a whole taste treat. These tempting cookies are made with a mix — chocolate chip buttersri)tch brownie mix. ,AU you add are the mix. All you add are the marshmallows and nuts. Plea.sc the lunchbox carriers In your family some day .soon with Peanut Brittle Chocolate Chip Cookies. Here is the recipe. Chip Cookies Peanut Brittle Chocolate Heat oven to 37,•> degrees. Prepare Chocolate .Chip Butterscotch Mix as directed on package except - omit water and add Vi cup miniature marshmallows and % cup salted peanuts to mixture. Blend well. Shape into balls, IV4”; roll in confectioners’ .sugar. Place 2” apart on ungreased baking sheet. Bake 10 to 12 minutes. Remove immediately frmn pan. MakeJW/4 to 3 doz. cookies. Turn Leftover Spuds Into Dumplings When you are cooking potatoes, make .some extra to use in this old-fashioned dish. Potato Dumplings I cup cold mashed potatoes 3 eggs, well beaten 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup sifted flour teaspoon baking powder , 3 slices bread, cubed 2 tablespoons butter or margarine Mix together the potatoes, eggs and salt. Sift together the flour and baking powder and add; beat well. In a heavy .skillet, toast the bread slowly in the hot butter until brown and crisp; stir into mixture. Drop mixture, in 8 portions. Into 6 cups boiling water mixed with 1 teaspoon salt. Cover. Boil over moderate heat for 18 minutes without lifting cover; drain. Cool; refrigerate. At .serving time, slice and brown in bnt butter. Sandwich Tips Given in Film hr Club Units The announcmenet by P e p ■ perldge Farm of a recently completed movie on sandwich mak ing will be welcomed by the many women's clubs who are alert for new and interesting meeting material, “New Ideas in Sandwich Making" presents a variety of unique and unusual tips on the art of the .sandwich - and the results may a.stonish many who believe they have "seen every thing there is” on sandwich preparation. Shot in color on 16mm film, the movie runs for 36 minutes. A soundtrack explains the. demonstrations of Chef Aldo Ora-/.lotin, of the Culinary Institute of America. Filming was (|onc on I h c premises of Pepperidge Farm, the well known bakery started In lfl.17 by Margaret Rudkin In the k 11 c h c n of her Fairfield, (;onnecticut, home. Prints of the film are available free of charge from Pc|)-peridge Farm. The company re-quests that a letter op club stationery be written to; General Promotion Department, Pep-pcrldge Farm, Norwalk, Conn. Included in the letter should be nitornate datos when the film Is desired and the number of members in the club. Crram of Boon Soup Heat canned green beans with anned condpiwad cream of po-ato soup. TJib bean liquid and vater (o dilute the aoup Serve tipliig Iwt with a big sp*t)NTlAC t*HESS. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 26, Pleasure Repeated Turkey Plays Relutn Engagemeni By JANET ODELL „ Pontiaic Press Food Editor What’s sadder looking than a turkey after Thanksgiving dinner? Nevertheless, there’s plenty of good eating left in the carcass. Of course you removed all the .stuffing* from the bird and refrigerated it immediatelf. Of course you put the turkey in the refrigerator too.' This is a MUST. If you plan to use whatever meat is left bn the birrf w‘ ‘ ‘ a day or two, refrigerator storage is fine. If you want to spread its use out over a longer period of time, freeze it. Packs of white and-or dark meat can be handy to have. Use the bones for soup. We’re going to have turkey sandwiches at our house for couple of days now. But that’s such an obvious solution to leftovers. After the extensive preparations you’ve made for your holiday dinner, you’re probably in no mood to spend a lot of time in the kitchen the rest of this weekend. American process dieese 1 cup diled cooked turkey ■ 1 envelope mushroom sauce mix ’ , . ' » Va cup milk Va teaspoon ground nutmeg % teaspoon salt Black pepper to taste 1 tomato, slicfed, for garnish,, optional Combine water, butter, chicken stock base in a saucepan; bring to a boil. Add rice; cover and let stand 5 minutes! Beat one of the eggs slightly; blend into rice. Turn all into a 9-inch pie pan. Press into a firm layer on bottom and sides to form a rice crtist. Dice the sliced cheese; sprinkle half in bottom of crust. Add half the turkey. Repeat layers. Empty contents of mushroom sauce mix into a,small saucepan. Add the milk and nutmeg. Bring to a boil. Beat remaining 2 eggs. Add the hot sauce to _5, gradually. Add salt and. black pepper to taste. Pour oveh turkey and cheese. i; recipe pastry, using 2 cups flour, of 2 pastry sticks Roll pie dough to %th inch thickness and cut into 2 inch circles. Combine turkey, cre^ntj cheese and ripe olives. Season turkey mixture with ^alt and pepper, if necessary. Place % teaspoon turkey mixture in center of each, pastry circle. Fold dough over fiUing and criinp pastry edges to form a seal. Place tum-on3np TILE \ Closed Thanks- giving Day 9x12 I Lino Rug 395 mic/TC COUNTER TOPPINQ For Floor or Wall 1 xl Cryital FinUh, 20 Colon to Chooio From ^ VINYL ASBESTOS TILE Nafeo, Crad« A, Froeh Large Eggs rao69d 59*» 100% PLASTIC ACRYLIC UTEX CEILING TILE 50% Reg. 2o..........I0 Rag. 4c..........2e Rag. 60..........So Rag. 8c.......... 4o WOOD PANELS Prafinlahad, A-l Orado 4x7............3.95 4x8-------... 4.69 Fairmonl'’s, Craamad or Old Fashioned gNH Cottage Cheese " 19 Top Tasfa, Smoofh-Spraading Coldan Quartars Margarine.. <^12' • • Frasb, Swoot A Full of Jvico, Rich la Vitamin CI GENUINE ORIENTAL a MOSAIC TILES 4 Vox 4 Vo 59* Sq. Ft. NDO it YOURSELF! / We will tall you how and loan all ^ tooii mmJr PONTIAO*! UROIIT TILE OINTIR Our Own Inntelletion Work Done by Experts Oa«N Man., M. 'Ill ViOO f. M. Tuti., Wud.. Sat, 'til 4100 f. M. If You Don’] Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 1076 W Huron Sf Florida Oranges 5 ^ 49‘ Fresh, Mild, Crispy Cr Crunchy Green Onions . 2BinXsl9‘' Fresh Cr Crisp, in Cello Bags R^d Radishes . 2 19‘ Light Meat, for Salads or Sandwiches Del Monte Tuna . . . Deal Pack, Brisk Flavor, Convenient Tenderleaf Tea Bags |. Finest Quality, Freshest Flavor Chiffon Margarine , . Refreshing Orange Drink in an Instant Tang Breakfast Drink , Clean Your Floors the Fasy Way with Bruce Floor Cleaner . . Self-polishing, Saves Time & Elfort Bruce Wax................... Toilet Bowl Cleaner Sno Bol Cleaner . . . 6V2-OZ. 00* Can ZY ^•<^8 00* of 100 yy cil!' 49* 49* Quart . Size 98* Quart Q O* Size 07 Gerber Baby Food I0‘S2’99‘ All $trala«4 PLUS HOLDEN RED STAMPS I \lv;i THE PO^UA Spiced pears Foil for Beef Be colorfully creative! Serve’ tangy hot Spiced Pears with savory corned beef. Garnish with crisp green parsley and you’ve creat^ a real eye open- With their versatile flavor. Spiced Bartlett Pears may be used to accompany other meats and poultry equally as well. A can of Bartlett pears oh the shelf paeans you not only have the makings, for this tempting heat accompaniment, but for my number of delicicnis salads, refreshing desserts and* quick-energy snaqks. ★ * * This week plan to serve Spiced Pears with corned beef. And if (You’ve prepared enough for a second mek, try corned beef salad served in the centers of he Spiced Pear halves. Hot Spiced Pears With Corned Beef 1 can (1 lb.) Bartlett,pear halves < % cup sugar % cup white*wine vinegar 1 teaspoon whole cloves Vi teaspoon whole allspice 2 sticks cinnamon 3 to 4 lbs. corned beef 1 bay leaf 1 small onion, sliced Drain pear halves. Combine pear syrup with sugar, vinegar, cloves, allspice and cinnamon. Bring to boil and simmer 10 minutes. Pour over pear h a 1 v e s. Chill several hours or overnight. In the meantime, place corned beef in kettle and cover with water. Add bay leaf and onion. Cover and simmer 3 to 3>A hours or until fork'tender. One half^ hours before serving, remove corned beef to baking dish. Ar^ range drained pear halves in baking dish with corned beef. Pour % cup spiced pear syrup oVer corned beef and pear halves. Heat 30 minutes at 350 degrees, basting occasionally with additional spiced pear syrup. Serve hot pear halves with sliced corned beef, garnishing with parsley. Lettuce Fruit Slaw Cut western Iceberg lettuce crosswise into 1-inch slices, then into chunks. Place in large bowl with orange sections, banana slices and halved and seeded red grapes. Toss lightly with bottled cole slaw dressing and a little celery sPed. SPICED PEARS — Canned Bartlett pear halves are the basis for this unusual meat accompaniment. Simply marinate them overnight or several hours in their own syrup with the addition of sugar, vinegar and whole spices- While the pears are picking up a subtle spicy flavor, the corned beef can be simmering to tender goodness. Just before serving, heat the Spiced Pears with the corned beef, basting botti with Sjrfcy pear syrup. From Wine Firm Book on Game Is Free An attractive 20-page booklet titl^ “Success with Game in Camp or Kitchen” is the newest in the series of Ixwklets on cooking and entertafning with wine to be offered by T h e Taylw Wine Company, Ham-mondsport, N.Y. The famous Finger Lakes Region of New York State — great hunting and fishing country as well as one of the major u^producing iaureas in the country — provides the inspiration for this informative collection of recipes advice on the dressing, transporting and stor-1 ing^ of i^me, and tips on safe | huntin|. Recipes were tested and the text prepared by Lucille Shear-wood, well known editor and food consultant, and the text has been charmingly illustrated by Clara McCanna. The foliowlng is typical of the booklet’s recipes, designed to allay the bewUderinent of the cook who is prondly presented with a gift of venison steaks and doesn’t know what to do with them. Broiled Venison With Port Wine Sauce Cut vension steaks about W inch thick. Dip in shallow dish of QWve oil; season well with salt and coarsely ground black pepper. Broil 2 to 3 minutes on each side over the hottest possible fire. Meat should be rare. Sen/e at once on large, heated platter. (Meat will toughen if held in warming oven.) Port Wine Sauce 1 tablespoon butter or margarine V4 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons Port wine 1 tablespoon currant jelly Combine all ingredients in saucepan; stir well until jelly is melted ami ingredients are well blended. Pour hot over venison. Makes sauce for two. Copies of “Success with Game or Kitchen” are available free of charge from Dept. SG, the Taylor Wine Company, Ham-mondsport. New York. Streaks Almondine (hoarsely chop blanched whole almonds. Saute in butter until light golden brown. Remove from heat; stir in bottled steak sauce and a little dry red wine or lemon juice. Spoon over broiled steaks or chops. Once A Year FACTORY APPROVED NORGE LAUNDRY SALE! NORQE Electric $|9Q95 BRYER 'i4r NOROI Wrlnear SAQOO WASNER «Np NORQE 2 Door AUTO. DEFROSt $914^" REFRIQERATOR 90 Days Same SWEiT'S discount prices As Cash RADIO and APPLIANCE, Inc. always 42!S( W. Huron 3343677 Optn Ev^ry NI|h«;tU «^ntpiirittmai Florida Zlppor Skin — Coldan Color Tangeloes 5 ^ S9 Prleai sffiellve ffcre lafwrdey, Wo». H« HlH. | FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS 45 I, miaEAPH AT HURON TIl^riURON CiNTIR 514 N. FIRRY AT FADDOCK §91 AURURN AVI. AT SANFORD 50 $. 9AOIN4W AT AURURN ^ "H-. \ ^ E—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NQVEMBEI Christmas Seal Credited to 3 Christmas Verses Hove Long History tions, so popular ^oday on Christmas catds, were not reproduced on cards until the 20th century, however. The familiar Christmas Seal that appears on letters and packages during the holiday season can be’credited jointly to three different people: an American doctor, a Danish postal worker and an American Red Cross worker, Thl first person, the American doctor, was Edward Livingston Tnidean. Dr. Trudeau contracted tuberculosis shortly after graduating from medical school. Both his brother and his daughter also had TB, so Dr. Ti^deau decided to conduct re search on the disease. this led to his establishment of^n tuberculosis hospital at Sar-' anac Lake, N.Y. ‘A Merry Christmas and a Happy New* Year to You” the almost universal greeting of the season— dates back at least a century and appeared in print in 1843 on the very first Christmas card. . The famous missive, known ) antiquarians a^ the Cole-Horsley — and a number of other memorabilia of the spirit of Christmases past, repose in the Hallmark Historical Collection in Kansas City, Mo., largest private collection of its kind in the world. The Cole-Horsley is named And subsequently, when the National Tnl^rculosis Association was founded in 1904, Dr. Trudeau Vas the first president. - In the same year. Encyclopedia International reports, a Danish postal worker, Einar Hol-boell, came up with the thought that Christmas was a time-when people should be reminded of their duty to help the sick and needy children who were suffering from TB. / He proposed to the King of Denmark that penny' seals be sold, for affixing to Christmas packages and letters. The king agreed to the idea, and this led to,the world’s first Christmas Seal in 1904. Also at about this same time, a small TB hospital which had been built in Delaware by a group of doctors, was in trouble for lack of funds. A cousin of one of the hospital’s doctors. Red Cross worker Miss Emil^ Bissell, came up with a solution. She had read a magazine article which described the development of the Christmas Seat in Denmark. And she decided a similar seal should be adopted in the United States. Miss Bissell, designed the seal and by 1907, the first American Christmas Seal went on sale in Wilmington, Delaware. for Sir Henry Cole and John | Much of our knowledge ®f1 Calcott Horsley. the early days of greeting csurds' Sir Henry, director qf the Vic-1 is derived from the efforts of toria and Albert Museum, com- i an eccentric 19th century Eng-missioned Horsley, a noted Lon-1 Hshman who devoted 60 years don artist, to design what wasl?f '’js life to amassing ip his , “ ’ London home more than a half to be later recognized as the Christmas cards," Valen- fhe Victorian Era rival in beau-1 and J. Alden Weir, all-long for. ty and elegance the best cards of our own age of advanced first Christmas card. The card is divided into a trio of colored panels. The center larger than the other two, portrays a family at Christmas dinner. The side panels illustrate the Christian virtues of feeding the hungry and clothing the needy. tines, and other greetings. It was Prince AHtert,. Victoria’s consort, who intro-;' duced the Christmas tree to England from his native Ger-, many in the same . era in which the Christmas greeting card custom developed. The Christmas greetings of Amerkan-dessigned Christmas cards slipped from favor for a|-............. - decade at the turn of the cem i still associated with kissing and Mistlefoe Symbolism The festive symbolism of mistletoe goes back to ancient cults common to the Celts, according to Encyclopedia Americana. Mistletoe once was associated, univ^sally with fertility, and Is technical skill. I The Currier and Ives illustra-, tury; Mahy of the most famous artists on both sides pf, the Atlantic were employed to design them — and the symbols , of Christmas, «>many still popular to the present day — the robin, holly, mistletoe, Santa, and carolers, first became popular on cards that appeared toward the close of the century. ftagfeOFUSmePIM CHRISTMAS SPECIALS ^ typewriter STAND FIRST CARDS The first American Christmas cards were published in £ostpn L by a man named Louis Prang.-' They cost a penny and were modest in size and design by | ^ modern standards. Prang, who would later be known as “the father of the American Christmas card,” was a German refugee who had established a successful business in Boston selling vis-' Ring cards, business advertisements and annhuncements both here and in England. In England, the name of Kate S Greenaway, whose paintings of children became world-famed, I was closely associated with Christmas cards, as were those , of Walter Crane and Robert Dudley,* both well-knowp artists of the era. ★ Is ★ In America, Prang commis-, sioned work from such artists as Elihu Vedder, Douglas Volk with each Tab Set Typewriter byt • UNDERWOOD •ROYAL • SMITH CORONA - YOSS REMINGTON UPRIGHT L.C. SMITH TYPEWRITER VICTOR HAND ADDER ^ $^095 • 90 l)«y (.u»r. P/il :-r *2r ^79 MIDWEST OPEN Friday 'til 9 p.m. Sat. ’til 6 p.m. CLOSED / THANKSGIVINQ DAY! 7 YULE SYMBOLS - Upper left is a late 19th century American Christmas card, portraying Santa Claus as “St. Christmasse.” Upper right, this card departs completely from the Christmas theme to imprint two of Long- fellow’s most popular poems. Lower left, Santa Claus is surrounded by various symbols of the Yule season in this early American card. Lower right, two semihumorous cards printed in America in the 19th centi^y. 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New Viela "Qoldcn Throat" eoiind. ) THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TELEVISION lAAMEDIATE DELIVERY-LIBERAL, • Automatic "Wak*-to-Mu9lc" • Easy to s«t, quiet, dependablo eloctric clock • Rich "Goldan Throat" tons • Isullt-ln loop antanna • Acourat*, dlr«ct-driv« tuning • Four tuboa plus tub* r«ctlfl«r '16" a Dapandabi* Saourlty Saalad Circuitry LOW BUDGET TERMS ELECTRONICS INC. DIoomfield Miracle Mile SHOPPING CENTER FE Bmi U. Se Gov’t. Inspected Gfain Fed Steer STEAKS T-Bones Porterhouse A Real Tender TASTY TREAT Gut from Tender Grain-Fed Steer sth-eth-Tth Rib. STANDING Rib Roost Cottage Style PORK STEAK SPECIAL-ONE WEEK ONLY Out from Grain-Fed Steer BONELESS “butcher hoy''' STEAKS 79' Center Cut ROUND Swiss Cut STEAKS 595 None Higher Greenfield’s Fully Cooked BONELESS HAMS BONELESS Rolled & Tied PORK ROAST 491 imsil atjsr riwmicE delicious tasty RED GRAPES Largo-crisp PASCAL CELERY CEIgl^ oNi<: irM' K htsi.Y! FULL SIDES Ju$t of DEEIi! I ^r.hargithr OEI«r CUT-WRAPPED g DiUVERID FRIil NO eipOSIT-NO CARRYING CHARGE! m PARITFREE IN REAR HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. HlTfllL DIVISION of OAKLAND PACKINO QUALITY MFATS AND PHOOUCL AT WHOLfSALF PmCl'S 526 N. PERRY ST, Wl lil'SI livf TMI HI un 111 I iMir QIIANTITII S [irmei'nirMEi/fK FE 2-1100 /, \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Rationing General Since 1962 food Shortage Is Number One Problem in Cuba (EDlTQR’SJtOTE-^TMsis the fourth article hi d jive-part series toritteri by a United Press Mematumal correspondent after an assignment' m Cuba.) ' By JOHN VIRTUE HAVANA (UPI) - A shortage of food is the number one problem'^ facing the average Ci^ ban today. "^ 7 Food rationing has been ren-eral since 1962. About thinly staple food which can be^ught without a ration book is bread, Even sugar is rationed The amount and/rariety of food available ms been diminishing. New^ items have been put on tbit ration list and the allotted imounts of others have beep rranced. ' Hie in^dients for such typical Cuban dishes as Arroz Con Polio ^hicken and rice) and Lechon Asado (roast pig) are ratkmed. The average Cuban is gming enough to eat, but his met is monotonous, unbalanced /and too dependent on starches. / ■ ★ ★ ★ Following are some typical allotments per person; Meat —12 ounces per week. Rice — six pounds per month (the per capita consumption used to be 110 pounds per year compared to six pounds in the United States). Milk- have growing children. Meat has been selling illegally for $5-7 a pound and chicken for $3.5Qapound. Cubans love beer, but it too is in short supply, the reason variously being a'shortage of caps, bottles or malt. It is usually available with meals, but bars can only serve it for several hpurs in thp early evening, if they have any. Because of faulty refrigeration due to a lack of U.S. spare parts, it is Fnot unconunon to drink a warm beer poured over ice. There are only two types of soft drinks available, but they are usually not sold in the same area. One is a pleasant lemon-lime drink and flie other is orangeade sold in Coca Cola bottles. An incongruous sound in the plush residential areas of Havana is the crackling of a chicken. Thousands of Cubans keep chickens, turkeys, rabbits and even pigs in their front yards in order to help alleviate the food shortage. The shortage of food is a bit bewildering for Cubans because their soil is rich and the growing season is year-long. But there are a variety of reasons for it. First of all, some foodstuffs are shipped abroad for foreign _ credit. Sug^r has been rationed black market, especiaUy if they since Hurricane Flora severely Lard — o;«-half pound p^r month. per person (when there ar^any). - Butt^ — four ounces per montl/when there is any. !fee — IVt ounces per week. ■'l-for those up to 7 years ■ over 65. lEUPS COMMON Lineups in front of food stores are common because the food that is rationed is not necessarily available. When scarce items such as eggs are put on the ; counter they are quickly snapped up. While the food situation in the home has been gradually worsening, it has been improving in the restaurants. Hie government has made more food available to the restaurants, must of which are state - run, because the Cuban with a few extra pesos will periodicaiy eat there to suiqilement his diet. But the . price is high. Even in an average restaurant, a shrimp. cocktail will cost $2, a steak $5 and boiled eggs $1.20. Bread and butter are extra. A meal for two*in a top-flight restaurant can cost $30. Cubans will also supplement what can be bought with a ration book by dealing in the damaged the'crops last year and raised>the possibility that Cuba wou,ld have difficulty meeting its foreign conunit-ments. Chjjban fruits which are now rarely seen in the „ stores are said to be canned and exported. Secondly, many skilled agricultural workers have fled into ei^e, leaving a manpow- “volunteer’' groups help with the harvest, but they do not always have the premier skills for maximum results. Thirdly, passive'^ resistance and occasional acts of sabotage on the part of some workers cut the yield. Fourthly, the small famer farms under F*^170 acres are still privately owned — does not like er shortage. Students and selling his produce to the state marketing body at a fixed price. Some of his produce is sold illegally to private citizens Fiftiily, there is a lack of fertilizer. * Finally — and most import-ntly!— have been the failures of the government’s agricultural policy. Attempts to diversify the crops have not been sub-cessful, especially in the case ql sugar. The government decided early in the revolution to lessen its dependence on sugar, but found it had to go back heavily into growing the crop because it was one of the few products on which it could depend for foreign currency. Detroit May Stage 72 World's Fair DETROIT (AF) /-A committee appointed by IMroit .Mayor Jerome Cavanagh has given cautious endorsement to a plan to hold a World’s Fair in the Motor City in 1972, '' The committee, in a 362-page report, said, “Given the proper public and private support, it would be feasible to hold a •world’s fair in the city...’ It added such a fair would be desirable only if permanent im-to the city would result from the large amount of money both the city and stBta . would have to put into the project. Maintains Cemetery, but Not for Workers WATERFORD, N.Y. (AP) — The Gentral Electric Co. maintains a cemetery on its plant site in this village near Troy, ■k if -k ■rhe plot is not for GE workers, however. It was there when the company acquired the site, and most of the dead lived in the Revolutionary War period. There'are about 40 stone mark- double TOP VAIUI STAMPS FRIDAY I SATURDAY ---- voKd «t AMOUNT POOLE HARDWARE ELECTRIC Bloomfield Miracle Mile COHM w SFriday& Saturday Specials mmmm Morton frozen Beef, Chicken, Turkey, Ham or Salisbu^ Steak Dinners KROGER ALL WHITE GRADE 'A' LARGE E-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Story of Little Black Lamb in Christ Chilid^s Manger - The night was still. All the sheep were lying on the hillside, occasionally looking to.the sky where the twink-\ ling stars could be seen'clearly. All that is, except- or\p young lamb. His name .was Dodo. And he was a black lamb. The shepherds considered Dodo was their most troublesome charge. ★ ★ ♦ Several times a day, one of them had to hook his staff around Dodo’s neck and yank ,, h«B b^ck with the herd. DIDN’T MEAN IT Dodo didn’t mean to be difficult. It was just that he always wanted to see what was over the next hill, and he’d forget lambs weren’t supposed to stray. f)odo had problems too. Getting along wdth the other sheep was very trying at times. ★ ★ ★ Because he was black and, his curiosity got him into so much troublOi the others tended to look down their noses at him. And if one started, they all followed. . DREW AWAY When this happened. Dodo would sigh and draw away. Sometimes he’d decide to go exploring. And that’s how it came to be Inventor Has Wheelchair Able to Climb Up Stairs (EDITOR’S NOTE - The newspaper story said that out of space age research—some day might come a marvelous tfiobile chair to give persons unable to walk a hope of independence from family and friend. A fascinated reader was Rod Zamotin, a man with a wheelchair that actually climbs the stairs.) MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- “I’ve got a newspaper clipping here,’’ a telephone caller told the Associated Press. “It says the space scientists hope to develop a wheelchair that climbs stairs. “I thought you might be interested in. knowing that I’ve already built one and my son-in-law rode it up the steps of the courthouse the other day.” ■k -k it The caller was Rod Zamotin, 45, an employe of the jet engine division of Eastern Air Lines, part-time Inventor and architect. Working at home, In two years of spare time effort, the “hobby” inventor has produced a wheelchair that does climb .stairs, and could open a whole new world to the handicapped. CLIMBED STAIRS With Donald Whitney, Zamo-tin’.s son-in-law, riding the chair, it easily mounted the concrete steps of the courthouse, j, Zamotin, soft-spoken. New York-born son of a Russian portrait artist, has invented only lilt Ip things in the past — such as,a salt shaker which keeps the salt dry. Two years ago, he read an appeal to Inventors from the Department of Commerce to work on a wheelchair that wouid climb stairs, lie went to work on it. With his mcKlel completed, he applied for a jlhtent. He said ho has l)cen advis«Hl that it will be granted "because of the novelty M my invention.” NOT MARKETED Beyond that Zamotin, no marketing expert, didn’t know how to go about getting Ids brainchild to those who need«Hl it. He wrote to a manufacturer of ho.s-pital supplies “and they said it Was a wonderful thing, but it would Involve a lot of tooling up to pnaluce It and they wantwl to know flow big a market there was for it.” Zamotin lias now been put In touch with experts in the handicapped field and has set up a series of demonstratiuns prove die need. "My chate,” ho said, "can mean tha ta paraplegic, now ti lairden to his family and friends, can enjoy lnde|)end-ence. "The two or three step.s down from his front porch — or even a curb o|jered an insurmountable barrier to him. He coiddn't really g«» anywhere wlllioiit lielp. (JET AROUND "With my chair, lie can go down the porch ateps, cross the street, go to the shopping center, up the steps of the library, or just down to the beach to watch the tide come in. “He can sleep upstairs in his home if he wants to, without someone to carry him up. Or he could work on the upper floors of a building, something no paraplegic can do now, without someone to carry him up.” ★ ★ ★ Zamotin’s wheelchair looks much the same as a standard kind, with two big wheels up front and a small one behind. On the flat, the driver operates it like any other, by turning the big wheels. At the foot of a flight of stairs, the driver turns a small device which retracts the rear wheel and lowers a frame with a non-skid belt made of a special rubber composition developed by Zamotin and built by the U.S. Rubber Co. GOES BACKWARD The belt, molding itself to the stair edges, takes the driver upstairs backward as he turns the two large wheels by hand just as in traveling on the flat Zamotin says it can’t slip or skid on the stairs. While the model is hand-operated, Zamotin says it could easily be electrified. The model is much heavier than production chairs would be, but a 72-year-old man testing it out ran it upstairs handily. The so-called tin cans for packing contain 98 per cent steel. LUNAR I’OGO STK’K -'I’his is ail artist's concept of Hie !■ 0 c k e t-powered llinar transportation device that would give an astronaut a range of 12 miles on the miMin. The device was designed by North America’s Space Division at Downey, f'alif, and Is nicknamed "jKigo stick” lie-cause It moves over terrain In relatively sliort hops. that Dodo Went wandering on this peaceful night. . First, he gamboled, to the top of the hill, being careful not to rouse the sheperds. When hd"” reached it and looked out across the land, he was;, surprised at how sharply he could see everything. There was a brilliant star shining — the brightest Dodo had ever seen. And it lit up the whole area below, almost as if it were daytime. Then Dodo headed down the hill into the brightly lit area. He saw a little village, crowded with people, and wondered vyhy they were there. underneath STAR He came to a place which seemed to be »ght underneath the bright star. And when he looked around be saw a stable. There were two people, and several animals —a cow, a donkey and others. They were pll looking down at something lying in a manger. Dodo couldn’t see what it was, but he moved closer to find out. Suddenly he saw—they were all gazing down at a little baby. And Dodo looked too. He felt so happy. He wanted to dance and run and play. Maybe, he thought, I should run back apd tell the other sheep about this so they can come and be happy too. But then. Dodo decided not to. They probably wouldn’t believe him. MORE POWERFUL* It w 0 u 1 d take something more p o w e r f u 1 to convince them, thought Dodo. Maybe they’d afl come—later. A * And so Dodo quietly moved as clo.se to the manger as he in his life lay down and just could get and, for the first time watched, Feminine Touch in the Post Office MORRISTOWN, N.J. (AP) -Kit Murray had no intention of knocking down precedents when she appUed for a job sorting mail during, the Christmas rush. She was merely interested in a vacation job with'pay. But she found she was the first college girl ever to be hired by the local post office, and one of few in the whole postal service at holiday time. “Was she good!” enthuses Postmaster Robert Tracy. “The postal inspector came by and watched her throwing mail faster than you could imagine. When he complimented her, she said, ‘I’d do better if I had my glasses on.’” Show him you care with a GIFT he can wear from Richmans Style-Wise, Value-Wise Christmas Buy Boys’SUIT 21 95 Fine all wool worsted suit for the boy or teen who demands style. Both 3-button ivy and 2-button continental styles.Solid black and olive.Sizes 12-20. Heg.-Slim-Husky. Other prep suit styles available from 19.95. Versatile Gift Boys’ All Wool Sport Coats, Blazers 16 95 more l olorfulTeen Man sport coats.Or, liundsorne all wool solid color blazers in new fall colors. Sizes 12 to 20. Boys' Orion-Worsted Slacks StyiiiiR boys like slim-look continental ivy. 70% Orion* acrylic,30% wool worsted for wear, washahlc care. Solids and heather tone iridescents. Sizes 10 to 20. 6.95 A Gift of Warmth Boys’ Pile-Lined Suburban Coat 17 95 Excellently tailoreil all wool suburban coat is baiidsome for dresH, durabln and warm for hcIi(K)1. Warm’/ You l)ot, It features a liniiiB of Orion* acrylic pile, witli Orion pile collar.(Mioone from solid niul plaid pnllenis, sizes 10 to 20. Richman BROTHERS Charge it now... no payment till January '65 Show him you care with a GIFT he can wear from ^ Richmans Suits of Distinction: SUITS OF IMPORTED ALL WOOL WORSTEDS Excellent 2-ply all wool worsted fabrics specially imported and tailored with remarkable finesse. Look at the smooth trimly-tailored appearance. You’ll like the distinctive look and years of ‘wear these fin# fabrics offer. Choose from deep tone Compound colors. Coat Style Ski Sweater . . . the colorful, warm ski sweater. It’s styled with zipper-coat front, and the latest all over patterns. 40% wool, 40% mohair, and 20%, nylon fabrics in blue, gray and brown combinations. Ring collar. S-M-DXL 12.95 Ribbed Orion Pullover Shirt... for the man who enjoys comfort. Soft, bi bulk 100% Orlonlt acrylic, fully washable. The brilliant colors never fade. Ixmg sleeved models in white, black, blue, frost gray and frost tan. 5.95 3 for n .-iO Knit & Suede Jacket ...» grent look indeed, laminated wool knit is combined with cotton suede. You can see the results . .. ixilton Rtiede front and back, wool sleeves, collar and front zipper panel. Choose from olive ^nd .sandstone. S M L Xi, Corduroylll^r Coat. ing wide wale ixit.ion coat features Tim shawl collar, and a warm wisil plaid lining. Claasic car mat slyling in olive and aiiliimn brown abndes. •Sizes 3(! to 4(1, regular and long. Also all wool suburban coats. 24.95 wind fi'tid rdiiroy car alpaca Richman , BROTHERS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER OPEN DAILY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. Ctmgt it now ...no ptynmit tlllJtnutry '6B dim nil RIiiIhmii InMM 0*. V-> V. FHE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, XOVEM^BER 26. 1964 \ I4S STORES And Services Reody For Holiday Shoppers Now it's easy to get Downtown to Shop! All the roads are open! More parking than eve(r . . lots close to the stores! Come down tomorrow see how Wide Track Drive mak< quick, easy and exciting to shop Downtown again HIGHWAY OPENING CELEBRATION with ribbon cutting, band music an^ official ★ party dedication . . . tomorrow, Friday at 2 P.M. Corner of W. Huron at Wide T^ck. Everyone is invited! / FREE PARKINO ON SAOINAW ITREET DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 2-Hour Limit CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS and Christmas merchandise plus this wonderful snowy weather will make you jolly as Ole Saint hjick. Re-discover the assortrnents, wide price selections, and see too the changes Downtown has for you. WIDE TRACK DEDICATION 2 P.M. FRIDAY ... SPONSORED BY THESE DOWNTOWN MERCHANTS. A-1 Vacuum Cleaner 12 E. Pike Acme Paint 3 North Saginaw Arthurs 48 N. Saginaw '^Comsurners Discount Center 178 N. Saginaw Dickinson's Men’s Wear C. R. Haskill Studios 1 Mt. Clemens St. Pontiac Enggass Jewelers 25 N. Saginew Stapp’s Botterie 28 E. Lawrence 31 N. Saginaw Huttenlocker Agency 306 Riker Bldg. Pontiac Glass Co. 23 W. Lawrence Tasty Bakery 80 N. Saginaw Edwards Outfitting 6 N. Saginaw Joes’ Army Navy Store 19 N. Saginaw Barnett's Men’s Store 150 N. Saginaw family Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bldg. 10 West Huron J&R Auto Stores 115 N. Saginaw The Pontiac Press I Pontiac Rockcote Thrifty Drug Store 148 N. Saginaw B. F. Goodrich 111 North Perry Street Caibi Music Company 119 North Saginaw Federal's Dept. Store North Saginaw at Warren St. Liberty Bar 85 N. Saginaw Pontiac State Bank Saginaw at Lawrence Todd's Shoe Store 20 W. Huron Firestone Stores 146 W. Hurori-140 N. Saginaw May’s Credit Store 18 I 20 N. Saginaw Rogers Sporting Goods 24 E. Lawrence Union Toy Store 142 Wayne Capitol Savings & Loan Assn. 75 West Huron Fortino’s Steak House Wide Track Drive At W. Huron McCandless Carpets 11 N. Perry Sears Roebuck & Co. 154 H. Saginaw Voss and Buckner 200 National Bldg. Cloonan Drug Co. 72 North Saginaw Forum Theatre Neisner Bros. 42 N. Saginiw Shaws Jewelers 24 N. Saginaw Community National Bank 16 Convonient Otficos Conn's Clothes Connolly’s Jewelers 18 W. Noron St. General Printing & Office Supply 17 West Lawrenco Street Grinnell Brothers 27 8. Saginaw S. S. Kresge’s Saginaw at Huron If.» Downtown Pontiao Osmun’s Downtown Pontiac>Tel-Huron Simms Brothers 98 N. Saginaw Western Auto 162 N. SaginijW Waites’ Dept. Store 70 N. Saginaw Pauli Shoes 36 N. Saginaw Spartan Dodge Inc. 211 S. Saginaw Ward’s Home Outfitting Co. 17-19 $. Saginaw WKC Inc. 108 N. Saginaw Austin Norvel Agency 10 W. Lawronoo Goodyear Service Store Wide Track Drivo at Lawrtndt Fred N. Pauli Jewelry 28 W. Huron THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, yOVEMBEll 26> 1964 Refled Cheer Tips for Ingenious Effects in Outdoors Christmas is a season of shar-4 ing. It’s a time to share with family, friends, strangers. Why not let the warm .indoor chfser of your Christmas reflect irv your outdoor decorations? \^h all who pass your home a gay “Season’s Greetings.’’ Here are some tips for creating ingenious and joyful effects: Si^g^gesfs Planning Guide for BuYing Yul^Tree What would Christmas be like without a tree? 4 • Begin with a plan. • Keep the plan simple, accenting and decorating a single feature—a tree, chimney, or door. And, almost as bad, what would Christmas be like Mh the wrong tree? To make sure your tree adds as much as possible to the holiday spirit, here are a^^ few guidelines. Measure the size of the space you’ll put the tree in. The American Christmas Tree Council suggests knowing exactly how high and how wide the area • If you want to be more elaborate, combine several' of these features into an eye-appealing over-all scheme. • Use your imagination to camouflage floodlights. Pine boughs, tiny figures, or snow banked beMnd the lights hide them well. • Snow banked in front of floodlights adds, a special sparkle. • Don’t pverdecorate with, lights strung hapazardly fpm tree to tree, or gate to tre^ ^ • For lop-sided tr^, run the lights from the to pegs in the ground, tep^e-fashion, for a more symmetrical effect. With ing^uity and a little work ypdr home can be a gay mas card proclaiming a 5 of cheer. Eleven women were elected to Israel’s first parliament in 1949. Don’t use guesswork. It’s hard to judge size when faced with hundreds of trees. WHAT TYPE? Decide what type of tree you want. Douglas fir is often preferred as a good, all-around purchase. ^ Red cedar and Virginia pine trees are less expensive, and if you want to splurge, try, blue spruce, white spruce Scotch pine. Study the trep itsej for fir that tapers single tip. Check the x the needles. Brown, drii patches indicate needle^ - 1.; ^ BODY BUILDING and EXEBCISE EQUIPMENT *16'* *26” FREE DELIVERY IN PONTIAC. ON BARBELL SETSI 150 LB.BARBELL SET Including Dumbbull Boro 30 LB. ADJUSTABLE DUMBBELL BARS ... $9.98 50 LB. ADJUSTABLE DUMBBELL BARS ... $13.98 IRON SHOES....................pr. $4.98 HEAD STRAP......................... $3.49 WRIST and FOREARM BUILDER.......... $1.98 15 LB. JR. BARBELL................. $6.98 EXTRA WEIGHTS.... 2Vi lb............. 50c 5 lb....$1.00 10 lb.... $2.00 25 lb.... $5.00 For The ICE FISHERMAN and OUTDOORSMAN I INSULATED UNDERWEAR $C98 [ 2-pc. Suit I Lodi.. 1999 I INSUUTED UNDERWEAR I dL THERMAL UNDERWEAR $1^1 MUSTAD ICE AUGER $700 gU $1198 SHEEPSKIN FLIGHT BOOTS Now $12,95 GOV'T FLIGHT PANTS Now $9,95 Uiod $3,98 NAVY N-1 USED FOUL WEATHER PANTS $3.98up SKIS ... with poles For Boys and Girls with box to# bindings 8V.$6.95 4» $8.95 SKit WITH SAFETY BINDINOS, STEEL EDGES, SKI POLES 4Vl' O' BVl' $11.95 $13.95 $15.95 n’s Ski Boils... slits I to I...$5.98 TOBOOQAN PADS . . . Hoavy Cover For 8’ toboggan........... $3.50 For 8’ toboggan.............$5-08 SNOW SHOES.................$16.50 COLEMAN LANTERNS.........$10 98 up COLEMAN STOVES........ $10.98 up NEAT-PAL ALCOHOL BURNER . . 16.95 up TILLEY KEROSENE HEATER ■.. 29.95 up PLAY TENTS PUP TENTS...... $4.98 DELUXE PUP ITENT $11.98 ' With Floor and Natting SLEEPING BAGS lulotwd, wItK wutvrpiouf $||98 itfom attd fid* lippar V h« SUapIng Sag* TO$42.50 Boys’ FATIGUE PANTS and SHIRTS Sizes 2 to 12.................$2.39 Sizes 14 to 16................$2.69 WOODEN TRAINENIFLES.........$0.98 up DANIEL BOONE CAPS............V$l.19 ARMY PATCHES................29o pkg. BOYS' INSULATED BOOTS, 10 to 4 $3.98 BOYS' INSULATED UNDERWEAR . . $6.96 BOYS' THERMAL UNDERWEAR .... $1.29f INSUUTED OUTERWEAR for WORK or PLAY with MOUTQN HOOD $19.05 Wotti-etptlltnl. ZIpptr or button fly front. 16-tt. O.D. or Navy. DACRON INSULATED Jaokett.............$9.98 Men's Ski Jackets .. $1.96 Ladies’ Ski Jackets $10.98 Army Style TANKER JACKETS Quilt Lined . . B.98 up NAVY SHLE PEA COATS Quilt Lined---$14.90 INSULATED VEITS $4.95 SHEEPSKIN VEST. $1.98 Insulated Coverall 21.50, JOE’S r SURPLUS 19 N. SAGINAW FE 2-0022 Shop Mon., Thur«. and Frl. 'Til 9 dropped off. Check to see if/tbe trfee is fresh by rubbip^ your finger across the bottom of the stump to testjor^sappy moisture. :e your tree properly, it in a pail of cold water, sweetened with a cup of syrup, sugar or molasses. You can also place the tree in a box of wft sand to prevent it from drying out. According to U. S. standard grades, there are four categories for marking trees. 1. U. S. Premium; Fully branched trees, dense and symmetrical. 2.,U. S. No. l (Select): Fairly dense branching, symmterical with three complete faces. 3. U. S. Np. 2 (Standard): Sparsley branched, with long clear stem area between whorls of branches, buy symmetrical. 4. Culls; Trees with major defects. Original St. Nick Lived in Asia Minor The original St. Nicholas lived in Asia Minor during the 4th century, and was the patron saint of maidens, children, merchants and sailors, according to Encyclopedia Americana. Our present-day Santa Claus comes by way of Holland, where he was known as Saht Nikolaas, traveled' on a gray horse, and left presents in children’s shoes on Christmas eve. BE SURE IT’S A .ScJuuxiui IT COSTS YOU NOTHING Established 1928 m KNOW BIKES! SCARLETT’S BICYCLE and HOBBY SHOP OPEN TILL 9 O'CLOCK TILL CHRISTMAS Park Free Behind Store ARTIFICIAL TREES — Some shoppers prefer an artificially colored tree. These table-size trees are placed in a drying room and are then fitted with special stands containing a synthetic sap which keeps them fresh for the holidays. LadiM’ and Men’s ICE SKATES $j95 Boys’ and Girls’ ICE SKATES Girls' Siiei 1 1 to 3 Boys' Sizes 1 1 to 4 S Toboggans.......$8.95 up S Sleds........... 3.88 up 1 Hockey Sticks .... 89c Knit Hats . .......'1.25 Hand Warmers . . . 99c Ankle Supports . . . 1.25. Hockey Shin Guards 4.95 BASKETBALL EQUIP. Backboard Set. .$16.88 Basketballs.... 3.95 Knee Pads... 1.96 pr. Gytn Trunks.....1.00 Gym Shoes...... 3-9B FOOTBALL EQUIPMENT Pants.............$2.95 Helmets.......... 2.95 Shoulder Pads . . , , . 1.95 Jersey with numbers 2.19 ' Footballs.........2.95 Men's and Women's Turtleneok T-Shiiis $2 95 Soft, brushed cotton with reinforced neck. Sizes S, M, and L. Many beautiful colors, fine as gill and lor yoursell. Poker Chip Rock.....$3.SO up Chets Men..............1.95 Dart Board......... 1.95 up Checker Boards...........100 Cribbage Boards..........50c Poker Chips.............1.00 SKI CLOTHING SALE Insulated Parkas............$14.95 RevertIbU Parkas............1Q.B5 Stretch Panti . . Nyleri end Rayon 16.05 ^’Jstretch Pants . . Nylon and Wool 19.95 I 24 E, LAWRENCE MaspaiMMiHMn DOWNTOWN P0HTI4G $T0RE 9NLY esqes freepabkijiq In courlhoust lotdirGCtiy across fha stteetwith$2 purchasGs OPEN SUNDAYS 12 to 6 TIL CHRISTMAS TVTRAYTADLES Reg. 99c THIS ?|7c SALE If ..^ing Size 16Vsx22V3x25V2 CONTOUR CHAIRS 24.95 FaTuc-THIS SALE as 2 <“ ’35“ Vinyl Cuthions, 4 Colors. EARLY AMERICAN 5-PIECE DINEHE SET 59.95 Value THIS $OQ95 SALE DANISH STACK TABLES Reg. 9.99 THIS $088 SALE Q Nest Of 3. COCKTAIL TADLE 7.59 Value THIS $1244 SALE U White & Black With Gold Spatter Design 3-PliCE TABLE GROUP 1 COCKTAIL, 2 END TABLES J 9.95 Faliic-THIS SALE »15“ Mahogany, Walnut, Blond. FIRST QUALITY EUIW TOWELS 2'”*r" MATCHING WASHCLOTH 20c — - FOAM BED PILLOWS 1.79 Value-ms SALE EACH SPECIAL COMFORTERS $5.66 Ta/ue —THIS SALE £ 2’9*“ PATCHWORK QUILTS 5.77 Value-ms SALE £ 2'“’9“ SPECIALS LUXURIOUS BLANKETS THIS SALE 9 for $7®® EACH C 1 »«i2 REGENCY RUG 34.95 Value-m% SALE as 2 <“ *45“ 1 2 Beautiful Colors. MEN’S FLANNEL SHIRTS J.69 Reg. THIS $137 u SALE 3-PIECE LUGGAGE SETS 9.99 Value THIS $088 SALE O Red, Blue, Charcoal i LADIES’ NYLONS 6 9c If Perfect - TH1S SALE £ 3'“*r" ACETATE AND TRICOT LADIES’ PANTIES 1.33 Frifur>-THIS SALE M PAIR $4 00 Sizes 5 to 8, ^ FOR 1 Run Proof. CHILDREN’S CORbUROY 1 OOXER LONGIES 1.47 Fnfrie-THIS SALE Sizes I.IT O X $0 3to6X EACH £ X FLANNEL LINED SHOWER SUSAN THIS QAc SALE 09 Fits On Shower Nozzle, Handy Tray For Soap, etc. PIECED THROW RUGS 2.17 Value-ms SALE £ 2 "”*2“ GAY HOLIDAY PRINTS THIS AAc SALE Hu YD. 14 Designs to Choose From CHOCOLATE COVERED CHEmiES !f, 289‘ 1 O-OZ. BOX LADIES’ VINYL BOOTEES Reg. 1.00 THIS 70c SALE I 0 For Indoor Wear, Size 5 to 10. FLOOR MODEL POOL TADLE 1 /V.9.^ 1rifii«-THIS SALE ss 2 >" ’30“ 42" Long, 26" Wide, 27" High LUXURIOUS BLANKETS 6.99 Value-ms SALE MEN'S WOVEN SPORT SHIRTS $|84 s m l THIS SALE 1 BOYS’ ACRILAN SHIRTS Hen. 1.94 57 Sizes 8 THIS SALE 1 to 4 6 9x12 ROOM SIZE RUG 29.95 Value-ms SALE aa 2 <“ *30“ 1 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORE ONLY | "CHARGUr AT HReSGi'S i'i 1 \ THE PONTJAC PHKSS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 E—n^ 178 NORTH SA6INAW IH nOWNTQWN rONTIAC HOLIDAY FRUITCAKE 3-lb. Size GHRISTMAS GIFT WRAP PAPER 20" wid«, 360" 3 ROLLS tong in 3 roll boxi Astortod Holiday prints. BOYS’ FLAHNEL PANTS with omblom, cuff^. Zippor fly, tab, WOist* lino. Elastic back. SiMS UDIES’FULL SLIPS Lavishly lac# trlmmod. Spoclally priced for gift giving. . FUNNEL LINED TOTS’ OVERALLS orORAWLERS LADIES’ CORDUROY SLACKS A sontational group of colorful corduroy slacks. Sizss 10 to 18. Perfoct Christmas gift for hor. PMmm You get everything you need with! (hh beinitiful, eiisy to operate, streamlined press. Paper, plates, ink, type and twee/ers. Hut that’s only the begiuniug. TlWre's no lafsl Citiaraiileed fMn for yesis. CANNON Washcloths 5* TERRY DISH GLOTRS Hoovy Woight, stripad, full six*. Choics of col> ovod strlpos. Imp. Limit 12. MEN’S LONG-SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS Woven gingham combed cotton, sanforized and mercerized, single needle tailoring. Some button-down collars. Checks, Tartan plaids, solid chambroys, wanted stripes. MER’S GARDIGAR BULKY KNIT SWEATERS 00% acrylic fabric . . . choice of all wanted colors. Sizes S,M,L , Value MER’S GLOVES eAll Vinyl e Stretch Nylon Knits • Driving Nylon Knits with Vinyl Polmt LADIES GLOVES Wool and nylon knit with •mbroi^orod trim. ' GIRL’S MIHERS 1.00 Vulue 5? 1.00 Valus 66° ADJUSTABLE TAB-WAIST has new inside button adjustment. HIQH POCKETS in the front add to the long and lean look ... one high podeet in bock. ^ TAPERED LEGS ... the style young men today prefer for a comfortable fit and important smart-looking slim appearance. CUFFLESS . . . round out the all-over good looks. Washable cottons corduroy in block, taupe and olive. If V. RUSTIC DRAPES I B2”x12’’ Tablpoloth I PILLOW OASES Colorful printed and fully I Chriitmot docoratod. Ro- I Auortod Prints Sold ^ llnod dtopoi, I morkoblo plastic — looks I In Pockogo of %. 5? 1'“%' 19' 1 37' PUIO BUNKET $1.00 LADIES’ and TEERS’ SLIPPERS BIG DISCOUNTS ON TV ADVERTISED TOYS MDUSE .^TEARIEJEARIE^ TRAP GAME . . . tho nullltst, wackiest most hilarious gomo Ir IDEAL’S HARDS DOWR GAME A» Seen On TV Fun for th* •nflro family. Assorted styles and colors. Sizes 4Va to 1 0. BVIIVA Values ^ ' to 1.99 Ladies’ Fold-Over SLIPPERS Genuine Leather Soles. Sizes S, M, L. 4' Sizes t>V» to 12. IT7 14” DELUXE TRIGYGLE Bolloon ‘type all steel trai tires. White ne. Chrome Not exactly |S8 «he drinke and Wett MNd ariil_ tears. Tearle Dearie fNlVfll fittt clou In her sturdy idattia Rai|lMMe which converts to a raclillttt itadre, a crib on legs or baby iMitH, Ihe’s In on adorable dress with motehina diaper, and has a bottle far feesl-Ing. _ ^67 GHILORER’S VAGABDRO ALL PURPOSE BOUTS WHITE ONLY SHOES AND WINTER BOOH FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY E—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NO^hsMBER 26. 1964 Keep Menu Varied Brunch Is ’Fun to Servfe GEORGE'S ENTERTAIN AT BRUNCH—Brunch or breakfast, it’s the best meal of the day. Crisp bacon slices, juicy smoke pork isage links, mildly spiced sausage, served with curried »s, make a fine family meal or party breakfast. New Products Down Goes the Fdt Content EAST LANSING - New low-fat cheeses for weight watchers Will be on the market in the near future, according to a Minnesota dairy pritrfessor. Not only will t h 6 s e new cheeses be low in fat content, but will have different flavors, textures and consistencies than any on the grocery shelves today, said Dr. S. T. Coulter, head items. , Understandably, Christmas is the season for. wrapping manufacturers to be jolly. The total wrapping sales figure of $220 million last year was four times higher than 15 years previously, and Christmas accounted for more than 80 per cent of it. OLDEST SENTIMENT There is really nothing new about the desi.e to make the outside of the gift as attractive Katz, president of the largest of a half dozen maipr^manufac-turers of gift ipdp materials' At the end of World War 11, just discharged from the service, Katz put together $10,000 and two. printing .presses to turn out his, first order of Christmas paper for the 1946*season. FIRST ORDER That first order was for $75. Last year, his company earned $15 million. ’The English wrapped their presents.,in fine silks and woolens. In Europe in the 18th and 19th centuries, famed craftsmen devoted their skills to making ijewel-encrusted gift boxes. TECHNOLOGY Today’s modern technology and mass production—and not least of all., marketing techniques — have revolutionized the wrapping industry and brought elegance within the reach of everyone. Expensive - looking, multicolor papers; exotic embossed foils; fancy silk and rayon ribbons; ready-made, self-stick-ijg bows and thousands of embellishments are available everywhere — including drug stores, supermarkets and even gasoline stations. One of those who helped engineer this revolution is Joseph Today, America leads the world in the manufacture of package wrappings. Partly it’s the availability of wood plup, ink dyes, machinery and skilled labor. But Katz advances another very important smoke- that day after Christmas.” MORE CONSCIOUS Americans are becoming more and more conscious of how packages are wrapped, both those they give and thoiK they receive. Some findings of an industry survey: , • Ninety-nine per cent of all gift wrap materials are purchased by women (though half of all men wrap some of the gifts some of the time.) • Most people prefer to wrap their own gifts (only one in every 14 Christmas shoppers pays for gift wrapping in store). jyttuitzTv 3- WAY COmiNATION • 23"TV • RADIO • STEREO • 82 CHANNEL “Only in America can millions of dollars be poured into a product that will go up in • Women prefer red, green and gold, in that order. Men are partial to foil papers, favoring metallic gold and silver. FREE ANTENNA WHh Every TV SOLD! AMERICA’S LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN HOLIDAY VALUES FOR BOYS & GIRLS DEEP PILE-LINED WIDE WALE CORDUROY TOUCHDOWN COAT 12.99 comparob/o va/w* 16.95 Bugged wide wale cotton corduroy ... Ihied in Malden’s acrylic pile. Wuter-ropellcnt... has a smart bulky knit collar. Full tones', 8-18. NEW-STYLE SUITS IN LEAN IVY AND CONTINENTAL MODELS vr 14.95 comp, value 18.95 vr 17.95 comp, value 22.95 With flic holidays coming up, your bov needs one of these handsome suits! (Jhoice collectiou of 2 or-') button ivy and continental moih-ls ... In smart pallei ns and colors. COMPLITI ALTIBATION* rUU rSELECTIONl ,LS7T014 [.WARM COATS 1.88 The smai)>"•"' styling a voin^ lasbionabh , phis all vvanulbsbenoedsl Hooded CoalH,W« onmlU lined; Noweiit colors' HIRt'S WHY • W« i> YOU $AVI I AT MOMRT HAU • Yau »< CURK8TON‘WATIRFORD on Dixie Mwy. Just North of WateHord Hill PONTIAC: 200 North Saginaw St,-“Open Sundays 12 Noon ’til 6 P.M.” THE 30-DAY STRIKE HAS LEFT OUR STORE OVERSTOCKED. WE MUST REMOVE THIS STOCK RECARDLESS OF OUR LOSS OR COST. TO 00 THIS WITHOUT DELAY, WE’RE OFFERIHC 2-ROOM OUTFITS FOR 1 LOW, LOW PRICE. SALE STARTS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27TH 2-PG. MODERN LIVING ROOM 100% NYLON FRIEZE EXTRA THICK FOAM CUSHIONS Durable long-wearing for beauty and comfort. Your choice of new '65 colon. BUY ONE OF THESE OUTFITS FOR ONLY m AND GET THE OTHER ONE ABSOLUTELY FREE 4-PO. MODERN BEDROOM BEAUTIFUL WALNUT FINISH Includ.i Full-Size Bookcase bed. Double Dresser, Mirror and Roomy Chest. 2-PC. EARLY AMERICAN Coxy Wing-Bock Styling in Prints and Tweeds, all foam cushions. BUY ONE OF THESE OUTFITS FOR ONLY AND OET THE OTHER ONE ABSOLUTELY FREE T-PC. EARLY AMERICAN DINIHQ ROOM Finished Maple Table, 4 Chairs and Hutch Server. 4-PC. MODERN SECTIONAL SMART STYLISH DESIGNED IN I OCf% NYLON IN MANY qOLORS bOy ONE OF THESE AND OET THE OTHER ONE. ABSOLUTELY FREE 4-Pc. BEDROOM SUITE Finished Walnut with Polished Dross Trin| *369 .OPEN NIHLY ’til 9 SUNDAY 12 NOON til 6 wo MOWEV POWWl I «in uemns n ncmu 1 Ponfiao • 4 Flint • 2 Lansing • 1 Saginaw 1 W QRLD IDE *: HOME FURNISHINCS 5050 DIXIE HWY. DHATTOM PLAINS SH0PPIM6 CENTER POLE LAMPS PLATFORM ROCKERS Combination Vinyl and IM Nylon Friata E—U THE PONTIAC PRESSi THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 mtm Klcclric with ‘SEINSI-TEMP’ UINIT \ 9%i,uh,«wid« ** RCA Victor ■. r IE ■ oulr^ BOOTS MOST SMART BUTERS ARE! ARE YOU? CHILDREN’S FAMOUS MAKE THERMO-BOOTS ®2.97 BIG SELECTION LADIES’ SHOWBOOTS *3.97-*8.97 For MEN & BOYS »^1W»WIW(WIIW>WW«T 2 YANKEES IN PONTIAC . . . MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER . . . PERRY AT MONTCALM STREETS F—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TljURSDAY. NOVEMBER 26, lfl'64 Congressional Christmases Spread Across the Nation city, well as }iis faUier and mother, so it’s natural for the family to celebrate the holidays there; The city is also his former home. But one Christmas tiie Zuck* erts took oft for Hot Springs, Va./ and spent tiie holidays iacefully at their oWn cOt- "S'* ‘ ipeacefu tage at the mountain resort. “It seemed quite homey,.” says Mrs. Zuckert. “We dec(^ rated our own tree late in the afternoon the day before Christmas, brought all our presents down, and had a delightful time;” • ^ Two Washington families stay in the capitol for good reasons. ALWAYS HOM^ Congressman Joel t. Broyhill, who lives in Arlinjgton, Va., represents that ^district, so he’s always home for the holidays. A Wisconsin congressman, Vernon Thomson, doesn’t take ;his family home to Richland' Center because his house there is rented. So they have what Mrs. Thomson calls “Christ- mas as we please” in their Washington house. “Even if our home were vacant, it would be difficult to move everyone back to Wisconsin for such a short time. And we have f^o dogs to complicate things,” says the congressman’s wife. * ★ * The family, which Includes two 'daughters who graduated frbm the University of Wisconsin and a high school son, spend a quiet lioliday at their home in McLean,, Va., across the river from the capitol. “We got to the Christmas Eve sendee at the Presl^rian Church, and sleep as late as we like Christmas morning. Our^ ,tufkey dinner is always served at nodh.” Though the Broyhills don’t face traveling problents at Christmas time, there are a few complications in their busy .lives, Jane Anne, who’ll enter De Pauw University in the fall, will have her coming out party at the Holly Ball during the Christmas holidays and all manner of partis preceding it. But Mrs, BroyhiU is experienced in handling such a crowded social calendar. Her "older daitghter Nancy, a senior at George Washington, was present to society at the same function. ★ ■ * “Fortunately, our daughters never have been early risers on Christmas Day, even Jeanne Marie, who is 13. So we have a jate breakfast, and a family dinner whenever it’s ready. ” Retiree Constructs His Own Railroad COEUR D’ALENE, Idaho Uh— A1 Chapman, 70-y|W-old retired "machinist, owns his own railroad—the Idaho Short Line, a 500-foot railroad whidJ ruils wit of the living room window It took Chapman over 10 years of working part time and $2,500 to build the seven scale model cars that make" up the train powered by miniature steam locomotives. The trains, down to the last nut and bolt, are replicas of their 180-ton counter-' parts, scaled three-fourths of an inch to the foot. CAPITAL DELIGHT—One of the highlights of Washington’s Christmas decorations is; the national Christmas tree which is lighted by the President Van official ceremony each year. In the background (left) is the Washington Monument. WASHINGTON (AP)-Christ-mas is very definitely a movable feast for man y congressional families, some of whom may travel hundreds of miles to be back home for the holidays, may spend it in a city where the majority of their children can converge, or may go off to a resort so they can concentrate exclusively on a family Christmas. ★ * ★ “It’s a half and half Christmas with us,” says Mrs. Frank E. Moss, whose husband is a Democratic senator from Utah. “Last year we went home, and had Christmas in our apartment there, since two of our children and our son-in- Tofes Ladder for 105 Blocks WEST ALLIS, Wis. (AP) -When he couldn’t get his extension ladder home any other way, 19 - year - old John Westphal p i c k e d up the two 15-foot sections and carried them 105 blocks to his home. * ★ ★ His 80 - 'pound load got pretty heavy, but he didn’t mind being questioned by the police nearly as much as he did the ribbing from those who wanted to know if he was eloping. law are all students at the University of Utah, and it was more convenient for them if we went west. “We hung a wreath on the door of our Washington home to show we weren’t completely ignoring Christmas here, and then started out.” ★ ★ The Moss family — Marilyn, junior, Edward, a freshman at the university, and son Brian a student in high school in the Washington area—still hangs up Christmas stockings. CRAZY GIFTS “We put the craziest gifts in them,” explains Mrs. Moss, “Things like good luck trolls household items for the that were really designed for women, and all kinds of jokes.’ The Mosses, with scads of relatives on tap in Utah, have two family dinners, one Christmas Eve, and one Christmas Day at which at least 50 people sit down to turkey. Then, says Mrs. Moss, ”sin( e we’re a singing family, we gather round the piano for carols ’ « ★ ★ New York City is likely to be the gathering place for the Eugene M. Zuckert family. NY CHRISTMAS Zuckert, who is secretary of the Air Force, has a mariied son attending law school and a daughter who is working in the [ Junior Editors Quiz on- AUTOS QUESTION; Mow do cars have horsepower with to pull them ' AN.SWER: Don'l lake the upper drawing .seriously our artist was just using his iinagliialion. The main picUu'o shows how it came about that a ear Is said lo )iave a eerlaln “horsepower ’’ The word Is used lo tell liow iiiiieli power an eiigiiie has. One way to measure this was worked out In (he late noo'i by James Watt. Watt wanted some way of measuring how much work an animal or engine might do. He experimented with strong horses to sec how much weight (hey could lift In a certain time. Watt called one pound raised one foot a foot-pOund, and lie found a horse could raise .13,000 foot pounds in one inlmile. He called Uie force exerted to do lids one liorsepower. / A more powerful force, siieh as an engine, may have two or five or many more units of horsepower. In modern cars, pressure on the piston, Is njiultiplled hy the piston's area, by the length of the piston's stroke and llie niimlHir of strokes a minute - this giving fool pounds a mlniile. Divide this hy .1.1,(KNI fiail pounds and you luive the iiidi caleil liorse|K>wei The “K E A Haling " and ' hrnke horse (Htwer" measuremeiil mellKKls are also used, giving differeni results. FOR You TO DO; Kind mil how much horse|Hiwer your family car has. an amiic 1HBB aKnU!HH-H Universal Jewel Case HAIR DRYER Select a heat temperature control. In alligator-type portable case. Large bouffant hood which allows you to use your hands. Hoi manicure dryer too. 911 Lightweight knife with precision balanced handle and perfectly honed blade for the easiest slicing ever. MUSTANG ELECTRIC SLICING KNIFE 988 FAMOUS KROMEX LAZY SUSAN Melamine [Handle 8-pc. KITCHEN TOOL SET 3*^ Four cut glass sections and cgsserole, chrome cover, iusite knob, 14“ chrome troy revolves on ball bearings. Gift boxed. Delicate autumn leaf pattern on coolf heatproof melamine handles. Stainless steel kitchen utensils. Gift boxed, low priced. IN THE MIBACLE HIU SHOPPING CENTER AMP AT PERRY AND MONTACLM * FREE PARKING THE PONTIAC PUESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 F—8 College President Marks Christmas With a Trio of Celebrations SOUTH HADLEY, Mass (iPh-While most families find one Chfistmas A year the most they can manage, President and Mrs. Rjchard Glenn Gettell of Mount Holyoke College join in no fewer. than three holiday celebrations and love every minute of all of them. First comes the Mount Holyoke campus Christmas,^ which begins a week or so before the college’s winter recess. At the head of their “family” of 1600 gfa-ls, President and Mrs. Gettell preside over a flurry of traditional Mount Holyoke observances. There are choir concerts, parties for underprivileges youngsters froim neighboring communities and dormitory parties complete with a faculty-member Santa Claus. Mass, campus, the next phase of the Gettells’ Christinas is soon under way, and nostalgia quickly vanishes in the sportsman’s ^al. . . the president is off to Key West Florida, on his annual deep sea fishing trip. “It’s the only real holiday 1 take all year,” Gettell explains. “And it’s absolutely sacred,” he adds, smiling. At Key Westi Gettell makes straight for the boat of Captain Lefty Reagan, one of the best known skippers in the Florida gam6 fishing fleet. Captain Reagan has been Get-tell’s guide on many fishing expeditions and holds a standing reservation for him this week trophy-lined study back in South Hadley indicates that the coincidence has been a happy one. . At Christmas of 1961, Mount Holyoke’s president brought home the Bimini Big Game Fishing Club trophy for a 77* pound Wahoo. WON BOTH He won both the barracuda and snapper classifications of the tournament , in 1962. and last year he came back with a citation ‘ for spin casting in the mackerel classification. “The toumameiit adds excitement, of course,” Gettell says, “but I would enjoy the ■ fishing with or without fte com^titiQn.” Gettell became interested in deep sea fishing when he u^as chief staff economist for Fortune mi|gazine. “We used to have sales promotion meetings every year in Florida. When the working sessions were over, everyone would go off on some kind of sporting expedition. I wasn’t a golfer, so I went alor^. with Jhe fishermen and became devoted the sport immediately.” inviolable CUSTOM The Christmad fishing holidays have been an inviolable Gettell custom ever since. Mrs. Gettell, an accomplished, swimmer who confesses to being more at home in the water than on if, accompanies her husband to Key West but leaves the fishing to the gentlemen. She has recently become interested in scuba diving and looks forward to the opportunity fo get in^on®'t>ractice diving from the reef off Key West. As much as they enjoy their annual Key West interlude, the Getteljs do not spend Christmas itself in the tropical latitudes. “We are of the candles-in-the-window, gifts-on-Christmas®ye tradition,”. Gettell explains, “so we always fly back "to South Hadley for that.” ; IDEAL setting At Mount Holyoke, the gra-j cious president’s house makes an ideal seeing for an old-fashion^ family Christmas, which is’exactly what the Gettells prefer for Iheir third and final holiday observance. Mrs. Gettell’s mother usually joins them in South' Bad-fey, where the tree, gifts and all the traditional trimmings are asseml^ for the Christmas Eve festivities. “Our family celebration very quiet”’ Gettell says. “Like most families we foliow the same pattern every yeaj, catching up with Chr^mas, cbrds le while that have come \ Key West, then the gifts and our holiday dinner.” . All in all, the Gettells find their .triple Christmas both refreshing and inspiring, and they wouldn’t, consider changing it even slightly:' In fact, the only possible variation in the scene at the* Mount Holyoke president’s house on Christmas Eve 1964 would be a new addition to Gettell’s trophy collection. And on the basis of past performance, that’s a very strong possibility. CAST OFF “The high point for us is the student carolers’ serenade at the president’s house,” Gettell observes. “It’s one of the best times of the year, and of course we’re always a little sorry to see it end.” HOUDAY QUIET But when holiday quiet descends on the South Hadley, With little or no time wasted. Mount Holyoke’s president, Capt. Reagan and crew cast off for seven days of “nothing but fishing.” This particular week turns out to hold more than relaxation, though, since it happens to coincide with the opening of the Miami Herald’s annual Metropolitan Miami fishing tournament. And one ,glimpse of Gettell’s IK Kin VACATIONER LUGGAGE BAN LON CARDIGAN SHIRTS SETTING the stage for a Christmas photographic card^of a three-year-old is no problem if simple props a holiday effect. u.sed for Use Natural Props Sturdily constructed wood frame with heavy vinyl covering. "Triple-‘ ’ bindings and polished Yule Photo Card Ideas Preparing a Christmas photographic card before the festivities begin is not as complicated a problem as it sounds. You don’t need live snow or lighted Christmas tree.s as background effect for the family pic- j ture. Simple props that can be; kept from year to year will do i as well. Candles artifieial wreaths j stockings, a book pf Christmas carols, gaily-wrapped boxes (empty), last year’s greeting ' eards, and a small Merry ] ('hristmas rug arc some sibilitics. Bring out the youngsters, and the wool caps from the moth balls (if you haven’t already), and have two of the children put their heads through the wreath and smile for a elose- Firm Mokes Thousands of Santa Suits If you’re photographing all the children, choose a natural focal |)oin(, such a.s the piano, fire-I)lacc, doorway or stairca.se. Have Hie grouping tie relaxed and informal And if you want to iiicorporal<“ your greidiiig riglil in the picture, llieri' are many easy metliwls. The front doorway is an ideal .setting. All you need do is tape a ready-made .string of Merry Christma.s letters aeros.s the door, with or wilhout a wrealli,^ Or Just use a hand lettered sign. Give the family «•' assiirt-ment of gaily wrapped packages to carry. Show one member ringing the hell, a ii d you’re ready to ellek. A baby and a set of alplialiel hl(K-kH. Heal Hie baby behind .Spell out your greeting with Hie lil(M-ks. sent Hie baby lioliltui Hiem, and .snap yoilr pleture, .SomollmeN, a pU’ture eon he made to exproHH ClirlHtmaH wlHioiil Hie aid of a « 1 ii g 1 e H|ie<'la| prop. Children sJiyUig (heir iirayers Ib a most appealing subjecl, requiring nothing but the ycungiters In their nighties and a iMirtlon of a bed. .hiNt group the ehlldreti as close together ns you eaii. Amitlier slliintlon Involving Hie yoiingatern I'alls for a colorful, artiricial wreath docuralwl with ribbon or nome of hint year'n ornaments. If you’ve ever wondered what the well-dressed Santa Claus will wear, just ask Santa Claus Outfitters of Newark, N ,J. They’ve been making S.'inla llaus suits for mori' Hum :I0 years and they .sell thousands of •ostumes to Santa.s from all ENGLISH TYPE DART BOARD 1 8-inch Engliih ilyl* dart board with 20-poinl foe* and pok«r gam* on r*-vart* sid*. CompUl* with matol dorti. Basketball GOAL & NET OFFICIAL SIZE The eompiiiiy begins making the Niiits ill July each year. MonI of the buying is drtne in November and De-eember, but some enterprising .Santas liny their salts in January - just to he ready (or the next year In plenty of time. The cheapest Santa suit costs $14 and is miidc of white cotton twill or giibardinc with red trim tiling. Al Hie oHkt extreme l.s a vel vet suit wliicli sellH for $inoi In between, lire coHtumeH of plnsli, velours and pile Each still comes e.tjalpp followed by Joseph and thd angels. , The children are by boys and girls. Then "pome the adults and, fi- . i in order to celebrate the com- nially, the servants of the house- the^ voice of the irate pjg^g novena', one family gives hold and the musicians, who-“innkeeper” is heard, threaten- fjrst,Posada and someone play the ihusic which accom- ing them with a beating if they gn^^ng the guests volunteers to panies the litany sung durihg persist On awakening the house- give the next and so one. ; • the procession. ; ^ . , , LEAST PRETENTIOUS * * *■ < Finally, throu^ the efforts of^ . , „.i« the first, the second group », J'’? 4nH^h ’ convinced that Mary is the the least pretentious^ and the Queen of Heaven and that she is to be the Mother of the Sav- Every member of ^e procession, carrying a thin lighted candle, sings the litany and at the end of it the group is divided, one to represent the Holy Pilgrims and the other the innkeeper. COLD AND DARK AT THIS POINT rest grow more elaborate as the -days pass, for everyone tries to outdo the preceding one. The last Posada, on the 24th, is usually given by a group of At this point the door is . „ . _ opened wide inviting them to families who, pooling their re-The former sings asking for; enter in the rhidst of great re- sources, make it the biggest and lodging^ while the latter behind 1 joking and joyful singing. best. ^ UNION TOY SALE Now union memboro in Pontiac can share the benefits enjoyed by union members in Chicago, Detroit, Flint and Lansing. If you are a member of any union, this sale is for you! Embassy Row Is Ready for Christmas WASHINGTON 0P)-A pleasent blend of the traditional American Christmas mingled with long-standing customs of their homelands lies in store for members of the diplomatic commnuity here. Up and down Embassy Rojv, the world’s ambassadors to the nation’s capitol will officiate at parties for their staffs, help decorate Christmas trees, and take part in combined carol and folk singing. / Official duties—and official entertaining — will be laid aside in favor of family gatherings. At the imposing British embassy, Lord and Lady Harlech prepare to welcome home their four children who will come back from England for the holidays. A fifth child lives permanently in Washington. Turkey and plum pudding will be featured at the mid afternoon Christmas Day dinner, and there’ll be a party later on over the holiday weekend for members of the embassy staff who have no family ties in Washington. Christmas Eve is time for exchanging presents in the home of Iceland’s ambassador, Thor Tbors, and for serving the holiday dinner, featuring duck and rice pudding. Not all diplomatic families stay in Washington for the holidays. Frances ambassador, M. Herve Alphand, is able to arrange a Parisian celebration for his family. A HARWOOD SPECTACULAR! HARWOOD DOES IT AGAIN! I HOODID NYLON MACKETS U. of M. M.S.U. I SPECIAL RAYNSTERS $29*9 THE FINEST IN TUXEDO RENTALS-<*AFTER SIX” by WUDOFKER 1 CUSTOM TAILORS TAILOR] TO MfN WHO WANT riNitn . I RANDOLPH Harwood 90S W. HURON AT TELEQRAPH PONTIAC \ FIW300 UNIFORMS FOR POUCf FIRfMtN MAM MFN RIANT GUARDS DRIVIRS • Admission by Union Card or Badge Only This sale is not open to the general public. All merchandise sold at this sale carries a full money-back-guarantee. SPECIALS FOR Fri., Sat., Sun. only e This sale sponsored by United Auto Workers Locals, AFL-CIO. If you,are a member of any union or credit union in the Pontiac area, you may shop at this sale- OPEN DULY, 10 AM. to 9-JO P.M. SUNDAY, 11 AM. to 0 P.M. The most fantastic sound you've ever heard.......... M\ g;-, "g’-f THE PONTIAC PRESS. THUR3DAY. NOVEMBER 26, 1964 SHOP-9:30 A.M. ' E*-5 SPARTAN TIL 10 P M. icf. «?• |7 fM^P'jd/mi %I iiP'i ¥S \l \ §IMIn SPARTAN STORES CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY. TV TOYS AT SPARTAN’S MCK~d0TT0M PRICES! REMCO REMCO BARNEY'S AUTO EAaORY Build your own corj on r»ol molorlied convoyor bolfl |nclud«< pofi* lof 3 "'od«l corjl Chaulil AkIoiI Moford Bodiotl Aulomoll. m-tinbly llntl Boltory npo^nlod JOHNNY-SEVEN ONE-MAN ARMY GUN BLACK BEAUTY SPRING HORSE Sl««k, bouncy, black ponyl B«autlfully meldtd, flowing loll. Trimmod with gold toddU, brld’.» ond hoovtil With pomm«l roil. Aolhnnliccilly looM in cool Woiforn tlyle! Sturdy itool from*! AUtOMATiC BALL RETURN POOLTABII___________ Wondorlul otllon loy lor lh« wholo lomllyl Pool T complolA will. Cu. Slltki, Boll., Rotkl Aulomollc loll Bolurnl En|oy hour* of funi SHOP SPARTAN 9s30 A.M.TO 10 P.M.DAILY...SUNDAY 12 7 I 5 mhl STORES Dixi* iiiid Talagraph PONTIAC LINCOLN PARK Warran ond vannar DITROIT 24411 Michigan Avanua DEARIORN ACRES OF FREE PARKING! Gratiot ond Proalio ROSIVILLI F-6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Creates Gifts Atiistic Woman Has lloir for the Unusual WOOpCLIFF, N.J. UP) - An artistic woman with a flair fw whimsy, and an. instinct for knowing what children inevitably will like is har^ at work dreaming up new ideas for Christmas pleasures. She is Gloria Deppert, who a few years ago built a tree house for her own little gifl, peopled with tiny animals^ and inade from a hollow log. The forest tree house caught on with customers at F.A.O. Schwutz, where Gloria showed her design, and Gloria followed by designing mouse houses — one for the city mouse, one for the country mouse. Both houses contain appropriate .furnishings that fit into a plywood case that can be carried by a child when the mouse goes traveling. . ★ - ★ ★ Then Gloria turned to gam^ making, came up with “Margie Whoopie Game,” and is now working on a board game for little children. TRY OUT IDEAS Her own children, particularly her eight-year-old Dahna, and children of the neighborhood, are part and parcel of the toymaking business. “I don’t close the studio door ^en they come in from school,” says Mrs. Deppert. ”The children like to be on it. And in this way, I can try out my ideas on them, and jsie which appeal. . “Also, they’re helpful because they are so candid.” Mrs. Deppert confesses s h has “many irons in the fire. SOME PAINTING “I do some painting, which can be described as contemporary Impressionism, some sewing, and then these various toy At NY International Center Happy Holiday for Foreigners For 1,500 young foreign Visitors to New York CSty, a small, brovm, wreath hung doorway nestled betw^ two laiige barren window? means it will be a Merry CSuistmas. ■ This is the headquarters of the Midtown International Center, which at holiday time steps up its program of fuii and fellowship. Starting December 20, there’ll be daily open houses, instead of the usual three a week. . There’ll be twice - daily toura to the cityts most compelling sightseeing spots, instead of the once-weekly sch^ule the rest of the year. ★ ★ ★ Sunday evening before Christmas, there will be a gala tree-h-imming party, with the foreign visitors supplying many of the decorations. CAROL SING A carol sing vnll be held, in room decorated with greetings from as many as 105 different countries. Through the Center, many of the students will spend Christmas Day ln>«n American home. Otters, who wish to stay in the city, will be : helped to find inexpensive; lodging, and theater tickets at Because the Center’s recreation room can accommodate only 85 at a time, many inevitably will be disappointed because their space doesn’t permit them to join the holiday celebrants. TREE-TRIMMING PARTY — Tbe wung people at the Midtown International Center in New Yhrk City will join in a tree-trimming party just before Christmas. 'The foreigners will supply many of the decorations. 'Wrong Facts onSexCriines Sociologist Claims Public Misinformed NEW YORK (UPD - From the viewpoint of the science of sociology many Americans are misinformed and needlessly alarmed about “the sex offender.” If they believe “there ard tens of thoiishnds of homicidal sex fiends roaming through the c 0 u n tj* y,” they’re wrong. They’re also wrong if they think rex offenders usually repeat their offenses or that minor offenders go on to more serious offenses. And they’re very wrong when they beBeve “the law gets at the bliital and vicious sex criminal, and the sex crime problem can be solved by pareing more laws.” 'rtis sociological view was jirepared for circulation by the National Association for Mental Health by Gerhard d. Falk who professor of that discipline at the State University College, Buffalo, N. Y. ★ ★ ★ He went back over the crime statistics of many years. Only murders have a smaller crimerepeating rate than sex offenders and “those who do repeat their offense usually are convicted for minor deviations such as exhibitionism and peeping,’ he said. No matter how strenuous her Broadway acting duties may be, 'Taminy tl r limes resolutely and enttusiastically begins her Christmas shopping in August. The husl^rymced star of “The Unsiidcable Molly Brown’’ and “High Spirits” confesses rUrpT afraid I go overboard at C^t-mas. 'Gift-Giving Best' Part of Yule' Tammy’s New York Chnst-mas is a showy affair* she says. ' “Ther0 much festooning in the h^. I nke the-^tree beau-ti^but not too starkly. Just ^t smells good.” Gingerbread cookies are likely to hang from the tree. Before Christmas, she says, she and Mandy read “lots and lots of s 10 r i e s, and always Dickens. ^ “We hang up our stockings Christaas Eve, and Mandy is up at 6 always on Christmas Day. ' “We open a special present first, and somehow have breakfast in between.”, ★ ★ ★ ■ The actress particularly enjoys receiving stuffed a^als, which she collects along ^h pears. /^ybil Burton loves daisies, and I found her pprcelain china with a dai^ pattern.” RECEIVING END On the receiving end of Christmas, Tanuny finds she’s embarrassed to be given presents. “It puts me off a bit,” she says-“I’d rather give.” The young actress, who manages to mix a chuckle, a bit of Cockney and a broad “a’^ all at once in her ispeech, is ambivalent about the location of her holiday activities. “One year is different from another,” she explains. “If I’m free, I take my little girl Mandy to New Hampshire for an old farmhouse Christmas with my parents. There’s usually a great snow. We watch the deer and listen to the owls” If she and Mandy, who is seven, are to stay in their New York home, it simply must snow, announces Tammy. “Snow and nighttime make New York so beautiful.” Actress Roughs Up Design For Holiday Card Dont Allow Santa to Be a Lifferbug Santa, that happy, rotund fellow who’s the big star of the Christmas season now has been cast in a new —and unpleasant — role. He’s turned into a litterbug. It’s not reaUy his fault, but what with 20 percent of the packages he brings going under the tree, there’s bound to be potential litter with all those wrappings, ribbons, and otter decoration. The Keep America Beautiful people are disturbed by Santa’s unsightly image. “He’s likely to of this, an unplanned party was quickly put together last year on Chistmas Eve at the Park-Sheraton Hotel, and there’s likely to be a repeat performance. MUSICAL HOUR The group of 250 foreigners and volunteers made up a band, and an amateur musical hour was held. And once again, the participants joined in carol singing. During the holiday season, the staff of five is aided by 300 American volunteers, many of them coUege students. When the holidays are over, the Center wm continue its year-round program of activities for the 9,000 young people in New York who are students, nurses, interns, business trainees or members of the diplomatic corps. ★ ★ A At the West 56th Street meeting place, they’ll have a chance to take part in group discussions, study English, visit an American family for a weekend, or make up a theater group. They Team Up to Save Lives get a bad name if he doesn' got some help with the litter problem,” says Allen H. Seed, Jr., KAB’s executive vice-president. w W “It's not just that Christmas litter makes an unsightly mess. Dwelling fires, of which litter Is a major cause, during the three of four days spanning Christmas some years have killed 100 or more people. Fire damage tends to be extra heavy In the holiday season." RUI.FJ FOR HEIJPER The rule# for l)ecomlng ■ Santa'i helper In the matter of Utter are easy to follow, according to Seed; I, P a c k uU reaMl|)|e gift wrappings and store 'them in a safe out-of-tte-way place, g. Dispose of all other Christmas wrappings, cartons, ribbons and the like In the trash talner for safe disposal. A a a 3. Taku dosm the Clirlstmas tree when the needlea atart to drop and dlapose of It whore it won’t become Utter or a fire hazard. MENOMINEE (AP)-Approx-Imatdy 40 men In the twin cities of Menominee, Mich., and Marinette, Wls., are devoting much of their spare time to a non-paying, but appreciated project. It is the Emergency Rescue Squad, Inc. The Menominee Herald-Lcader said recently in a page one article regarding the squad; “Thousands of lives, perhaps, have been saved due to the efforts of these unsung heroes, whose only reward l.s sallsfac tlon." * * K- Each mail s|iciids flU esll mated 1,000 hours a year ,working for the squad and giving demonstrations in first aid to civic clubs and school groups. G^ivc ffiUSIC thispitistma^s VISIT GRINNELL'S FOR THE WIDEST SELECTION OF LEADING BRAND NAMES IN THE WORLD OF MUSIC 1 GRINNELL "LYRIC" CONSOLE PIANO One of Today's Finest Piano Values Its famous “lifetime durability” has been proved in the nation’s leading music schools, such as the University of Michigan where Crinnell pianos have been used for half a century! This console piano is one of the fine instruments manufactured in our own factory and reflects superb quality and expert craftsmanship. A lovely gift for your home this Christmas! Crinnell “Lyric” shown. $695, in ebony, including bench. IX/lagnovox 23" STEREO THEATRE Mahoqony. 398^° Wolnut 419 50 • 23” TV • Stereo Phpno • Stereo FM AM Radio Stereo Theatres cost you less than comparable TV and Stereo purchased separately! Has 82 channel UHF-VHF Videomatic tuning, Mkromatic Record Player with 10 years Diamond Stylus guarantee. 12" UHF-VHF TV The last word in Portables! This new 12’ Magnavox UHF-VFIF ' perform brilliantly wherever OQ^L) take it. Amazingly light Gr compact. 7 ^ Has 82 channel tuning. "TV PAL" Guitar & Uk© Yes! You get TWO instruments for just 5.95 complete 6 string guitar and stand,■rrd site uke. BOTH FOR ;95 RECORD RACK Chairside rack, sturdily made of tubular steel in gleamlnp brass finish Holds 100 .ilbums ONLY ''Carmencita" GUITAR Excellent guitar for students and the value is exceptional With cord, cover, ||ick .ind book. 29»5 It's Easy to Buy at Grinnell's—90 Days Same as Cash DOWN I OWN PONTIAC STOREt-27 S. Saginow St.r--FE 3 7168 Budget Terms--Chrlstmos Layoway PONTIAC MALL STORE-Ellxobeth Loka ond Telegraph Rd.—682-0421 i I ' t-: ''. .' -V ' JHE PdWTlAQ PRESS, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 26, 1964 F—7^ In Next Session of, Cong^5^ Signs Favor F^assage of Medicare Bill (EDITOR’S NOTE-FoUdw-ing is the fifth in a series of dispatches on the Outlook for President Johnson’s legislative proposals in the new 89th Congress by a veteran UPI reportpt.) ’ y^By JOSEPH HUTNYAN WASHINGTON (UPI)—There is mountinf evidence today that supporters of health care legis-lad ★ • * * The basic insurance^ program would not cover doctor’s fees, drugs or other medical costs. ^ INCREASE TAX The health insurance plan would be paid for by increasing the present 3% per cent tax on a worker’s earnings to 5t2 per cent. This is the tax that goes to finance Social Security programs. The Worker’s contribution is matched by the employer. ^ The administration estimated that such a Social Security - administered plan would cost about $1.2 billion a year after it begins full operation. TRILEVEL INTERCHANGE - This is the trilevel interchange and the twin spans that carry the east-west freeway over the Grand River in Grand Rapids. 'The $40-mil-lion facility will be opened to traffic Dec. 14. The 12.5-mile freeway, officially known as 1-196, extends from 1-96 east of Grand Rapids to M21, west of suburban Grandville. It is linked with the Furniture City’s $50-mil-lion north-south freeway at this huge interchange near the downtown area. (4ec\ Butte, Mont., ing district in three methods ., la the only min- mining, block-caving and the world vriiere pit—are cariied on ' of mining — vein ously. The great cceib basins ef the earth hold some 300 miUkm cubic miles of salt water. / /Technicians experiment-; ed with several alternatives last | session in a move to broaden i their base of support. One of these could be the final program approved nextjrear. ★ * * . ' i One variation that had some support late in the last session!, proposed a health care plan for | the, aged financed by a separate payroll tax. j SPECIAL FUND j ’This revenue would go into a special fund rather than into the Social Security account. It was designed to appease those who fear the cost et Medicare might, wreck the Social Security system. This group of reluctants, includes chairman Mills of the House Ways and Means Committee. Another possibility is a plan offering each Social Security recipient the choice of an increase in cash benefits or a health in surance program. However, this was introduced last session when Medicare sup- i porters were fighiing a losing i battle, and thus were in a con- j ciliatory mood. It’s unlikely they would settle for this now. , MORE PRESSURE I The new Congress also is expected to see renewed pressure for increasing the benefits of Social Security pensioners who now get a maximum $127 a month. A bill to raise this to $133.46 sailed through the Hirase and Senate this year, but died in a congressional conference committee. ' Cash benefits have not been raised since 1959 and since that time, the cost of living rose about 8 per cent. ♦ ★ ★ Congress is likely to increase cash benefits this year, but not until, the health care question is resolved. Only then, will it know how much cash 1§ available in the ; Social Security system for other purposes. (Next: The farm program.) We/iG/ FM of ChuAtmM )moAi SANTA ARRIVES 10:30 A.M. Friday, November 27 Join the Fun GIFT for Every Child 48 STORES WITH ^1001'^ DEPARTMENTS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE S. TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE RD. ’Where Parking is a Pleasure . . . Not a Problem!^ from McCandless 2- ) COLORFUL Braided Oval Rugs Heavy yarns ia a wide basic color range make ihcse reversible rugs very practical! 9’xl2’ *4200 DuPONT .SOI Nylon Yarn (’arj)clifig from one of Anierica'’8 leading Milln! • Tlie Vmi Installation! .FREE ESTIMATES ON CUSTOM . DRAPERIES! " You chii tlopimd on MoCANDLEMH t« l>r»|>orly llin i|UiiIily bimI weiM'liii iMMoniinl of the carpet you piirchaRcI OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS ^TII.OPM. McCANIlUvSS N, IVt ry SI. v\] i-r.;ii AT BOTH PONTIAC YANKEE STOREO OPEN NIGHTS till 10 P.M. • OPEN SUNDAY till 9 P.M. Delicious 2-lb. FRUIT CAKE A Smart Gift Idea with a Little Price 7-PC. BOUDOIR GIFT SET r € OIJ P O M i g NEWPOBT I By«DETECTO” I BATH SCALES WITH COUPON P«arliz*d luitr* finiih and 22 kt. gold trim. P«rf«gt for bathroom and drotting tabi*. Hand applied flowers. LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON 2 ! f COUPON a«a»«RajiDi.jca! 15-LIGHT OUTDOOR CHRISTMAS LITE SET WITH COUPON Multi color C-VVk globes. Weather-proof string, UL approved, complete with clips and ad-ons. WITH COUPON COUPOM |a« *COUPOM Ladies’ VINYL GLOVES WITH COUPON YANKEE FLYER SLEDS COUPON “COUPON g Brass ’n Black I TELEPHONE TABLES WITH COUPON LIMIT TWO Fleece lined vinyl finger gloves. Sizes S,M,L. g lia taa na na nawa na mrws Rama tsa ttia w.tea ttS LIMIT ONE Hardwood slots and steering bar, safety riveted to all steel frame and pigtailed i S Black steel wire with bright c g trasting brass trim. Sturdily c » IP »RajsiiiwaRaRaRaRa)i».Ra)*».RaRaRa)»jRa)*»!5aRanaRa I %a«aRARa)W»aRamm»aRaRa)wif>£^WRaRaRa)pb^J! COUPON Ktz»jiRi^]RaRs FULL SUPS i ^ a 2 a I a a I a MEN’S ccnoN RCDES With Coupon Turtle neck, double knit, or- \ Ion acrylic Dickies - Whit* i royal ond red. Limit 2. I MRa m Ra Ra Ra M Rama Ra Ra Ra MRa Ra Ra Ra Ra mtJ COUPOIV RaRaRaKMMK!^ Man’s White DRESS Limit One Lac* trim *dg« ortd g built up thouldtri. Whit* ^ only. Siz*i 4 to 14. a 2 M mnRa MRa iia Ra RHRaMLRatMRA Sanfariiad wav*n cottPn g •trip* and all ev*r pot* | | .. f*rnt. Aiiorted colors. n , M Sii«tS,M,L. S I S MHRaRtBRMRawtnMRaRaRaRtl fm] SHIRTS WITH oouintN Ixfro fin* count brood cloth, with m*dium point spread collar. Slz«|>l 4 to 1 7. PERRY AT MOHTCALM • IN THE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER j- ' I, I 1 ^ THE PONTIAC PBESS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26. 1961 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. G—l PI artaking of the Thanksgiving feast of turkey, cranberries and pumpkin pie is by far the most popular of the family activities on this late fall holiday, but watching the annual Thanksgiving day parade is also becoming an American tradition. The parade is a combination of Mardi Gras, homecoming and world premiere with marching bands, high-stepping dancing girls, gaily decorated floats and a Sprinkling of motion picture and sports personalities. This annual spectacle attracts thousands to New York City to watch from behind police barricades and millions more across the country watch it on their television sets. Highlight of this annual event is the appearance of the gigantic helium-filled cartoon character balloons bucking and straining against their tether handlers. The latest addition to this long list of giant balloons made by the Goodyear Rubber Co., is Linus the Lionhearted (left). Each of these seven-story high giants represents more than 1,000 man hours of skilled labor from planning to inflation tests. The parade was originated to usher In the holiday season, but / its primary value is measure in the number of hours it keeps the youngsters out of the kitchen white mother puts the finishing touches on the Thanksgiving dinner. 516 nun f fpa(r«itiok/ng Pepey* fiQveri ever crowds. ....................... Qinnl Onnolil Duih ftwilt l>srw«sn huiltlingi lining ptirmlt roufO. iullwinkh Aloaso lioMs repf effonUoil of y r of InHafhn roifi. frhndly Oino Ofnoaovr nuiifot workman at Akran, Qhla, pifewr. \ , ' i y - , ,1 V, ■ ; ^ TH^ PONTIAC PRRf;S. TH0R$PAY. NOVEkByR l G-^ NEW DROP DOWN MODEL PORTABLE 4-^ED PHOHOGRAPH (.ompd in poMahle lealhfr cane. Play* all 4 »peefl*. (Compact 12” \9Vr’x5i/a”. PORTABLE 4-Transistor TAPE RECORDER CompUt* with ipaad control, 2 track rocording, boilt-in spookor, miko, oar-phonot and battorioi includodl COMPACT POWEI^UL 7 TRANSISTOR RADIO Compact,, powerful. Complete with batteries, eorphones and carrying case. __ 88 POWERFUL AM FM 9 TRANSISTOR RADIO 2 bond AM-FM receives oil stations clearly. With; carrying handle and aerial built in. Standard keyboard. Margin control, ^ Line Spacer. Hideaway paper sup'*^ port. Carrying case included. WESTINGHOUSE Vacuum Cleaner Now Only Powerful action for deep, down cleaning. Rolls easily on casters. Set of all-purpose attachments included. ADMIRAL AUTOMATIC CLOCK RADIO Not exactly ns pictured. AUTOMATIC COMBINATION WAFFLE & GRILL Completely automatic Won t let your waffles burn. Toasts sandwiches, etc^ ^ BEND 30 CUP COFFEE URN Completely, automatic. Shuts off •when coffee is done yet keeps it piping hot. Ideol for parties. Sft88 SUNBEAM AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC ALARM CLOCK LARGE EASY TO READ DIAL Deluxe Electric HAIRDRYER Oui»t, fast, atficiant drying opara* tion. Perfect gift. Hat box carrying CASCO ELECTRIC BLANKET 2-Year Warranty ||88 9-Vott Transistor BAHERIES ||o Limit 6 5-Tube TABLE RADIO 34.95 LIST ELECTRICAL APPLIAMCE RIOT > 6-Qt. Deep Fry Your ChoiCD Cooker > 2>Slice Toaster > Automatic Broiler '15-Cup Automatic Coffee Maker REMINGTON “25” MAN’S SHAVER 17« Jllrtriy Items Similar la IliiisIrOlion 1 m 17-JEWEL eixii- COOKER NHl McGRAW EDISON WATCHES kadiei’ and Men’s LADY SUNBEAM ELECTRIC STEAM and ELECTRIC SHAVER FRYPAN with Cover DRY IROM I 088 5“ 1299 4“ B 88B Choice NORELCO CORDLESS « MEH’S SHAVER II" NORELCO FLIP-TOP ^ SHAVER U" OPEN EVERY DAY 9 to 9 ! SUN. 10 to 3 TRADE FAIR "^corporS^ DISCOUNT CENTER-Phone 332-9137-1108 West Huron I'' TI'HK PO^ ri'AC PRESS, THURSDAY; NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Busy Day for Baker Witness ■ 11 Nations Advance $3 Billion^ WAS^NGTON (iPDon B. Reynolds visited the Senate Ryles Committee’s headquarters on Capitol Hill, accept^ "its subpoena to appear as a witness in a new round of Bobby Baker hearings and pupched a news photographer for trying to take his picture. •And while doing all this yes-. ferday Reynolds hotly” denied that he had sought tj> avoid testifying in the investigation. The hnsky insurance man said he was eager to get on the witness stand to tell his story of an alleged diversion to the ■ 1960 Kennedy - Johnson cam-paip fund of $25,000 appropriated for construction of flie Washington, D. C., stadium.. The hearings are scheduled to start Tuesday. ★ ★ ★ Hugh Alexander, committee counsel, told newsmen “Reynolds normally would be one of the first witnesses because he is the accuser." IS PREPARED Reynolds told reporters he is prepared to substantiate charges he has relayed to the Senate through Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del. These charges link Baker, former secretary to the Senate’s Democratic majority, and Matthew McGoskey, long a party fund raiser, in the alleged payoff deal. -Williams told the Senate last summer he was informed that an extra $35,000 hUd been added to the more than $4 million cost Of the stadium for which Mc-C10 s k e y, a Philadelphia contractor, held the construction contract. Williams said $2^000 of this money wound up in the Kenne-dy-Johnson campaign fund. Later Reynolds punched C. Edward Alley, a United Press International cameraman, for trying to photograph him leaving Williams’ office. Alley told reporters Reynolds subsequently telephoned him and apologized. LONDON (UPI) - BriUsh financial circles today expressed confidence that the pound, would quickly rise in value because of the $3 billion advanced by 11 nations yesterday to support it. The unprecedented financial rescue operation included a $1-billion contribution from the United States. It was undertaken after the pound had dropped to close to its official floor, $2.78. and speculation that devaluation was planned circulated on world money markets. The drop in value was caused by a lack of confidence in the economic policies of the new Labor government and the adverse balance of payments position left by the old Conservative government. Chancellor of the Exchequer James Callaghan planned to make a statement in Parliament today on the crisis. * * -k London newspapers today welcomed the cooperation of the central banks of United States, Austria, Belgium, Canada, France, West Germany, Italy, Japan,, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland in advancing the money. PAPER WARNED But the Financial Times warned: “The debt will have to be repaid.’’ The Times of London said the way to solve the financial crisis was for British industry to sell more abroad. “Much of British management lacks initiative and much of enterprise has to be infused. The rewards must be shared, but first they must be earned.’’ Bankers said the size of the support — it was the largest rescue operation ever taken in defense of a single currency— was expected to daunt even the most powerful speculators. TO HALT OUTFLOW They expected the outflow of gold from Britain to be stopped quickly. The Bank of England had been paying out large amounts from its gold reserves-to support the price of the pound. . Financial circles said the concerted action by the 11, central banks showed they ^cognized that devaluation of the pound would hurt other currencies and destroy thO the careful balance kept for two decades. 'The new reserves wilL give Prime Minister Hiarold Wilson’s labor government time to tackle the balahce of paynients deficit, which was brought about because Britain has been spending more than it earned abroad. The last time the.pound was devalued was in 1949, when it fell from $4.03 to its present $2,80. Deaths in Pontiac Area MRS- THOMAS BURKE . Requiem Mass for Mrs. Thomas (Fern E.) Burke, 72, of 1654 Giddings will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Benedict’s Church. Burial will follow in Mount Hope'Cerrietery. Mrs. Burke died Tuesday. The Rosary will be recited at 8 tonight at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. MRS. DUANE C. BOYLE Service for Mrs. Duane C. (Ruth M.) Boyle, 40, of 751 Melrose will be 1:30 p m. Saturday at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Boyle died Tuesday after an illness of five weeks. HERBERT J. EVERSON Service for former Pontiac resident Herbert J. Everson, 60, of Cleveland, Ohio, will be 2 p.m. Saturday in the Arnold Funeral Home, Canton, Ohio, with burial there. Mr. Everson, a superintendent for Murray Electric Co. in Cleveland, died Tuesday of a stroke. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge and attended the Methodist Church. Surviving are his wife, Ear-lene; a son, Robert J. of Grand Rapids; a daughter, Mrs. William Vanderzee of Pontiac; a granddaughter; and two sisters. CHARLES R. PRICE Service for Charles R. Price, 76, of 88 Washington will be 2 p m. tomorrgw at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Ottawa Park Cemetery. An accountant, Mr. Price died yesterday after a short illness. He was a member of . First Congregational Church. ^ Surviving are his wife, Edythe; three daughters, Mrs. Lloyd Hampttxi of Pontiac, Mrs. Louis Ferris of Sylvanla, Ohio, and Mrs. Wayne Thompson of Royal Oak; and four sons, Walter K. and Donald R., both of Lansing, Charles J. of St. Johns and Arthur B. of Fort Wayne. Also surviving are a sister, Mrs. Linus Pace of Waterford; two brothers, Jasper of Pontiac and Edgar of Cincinnati, Ohio; and 30 grandchildren. MABEL E. FRANCIS OXPORD — Service for Miss Mabel E. Francis, 86, former Oxford resident, will be at 10:30 a m. tomorrow at the Chelsea Methodist Horne Chapel in Chelsea. Burial will be in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, Oakwood. Miss Francis died yesterday after a long illness. She was a member of the Oxford Methodist Church. Surviving a?e three brothers. Porter of Pontiac, Webster of Orchard Lake and Donald of Oxford. The Staffan Funeral Home hV Chelsea is in charge of arrangements. Use Corkscrew to Take Bullet Out of Lung ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Doctors used a corkscrew to remove a toy bullet from the lung of Bruce Gornto, 7, of Adel, Ga. They tried to reach the bullet with force{», but the rounded end was pointed upward and the forcepsf* wouldn’t grip it. ' * * ★ A magnet? That woOldn’t work, eithecr^ The bullet was made of plastic. The corkscrew was attached to the end of a specially devised. instrument. It bore into the bill-let, which then was remov^ without difficulty. Bruce swallowed the bullet while playing in a neighbor’s yard. UAW Is Opposed 4o Shift byjnsurers 'Bomb' Polished Off LATHROP, Calif. (UPD—A package started ticking in the Lathrop post office. Hastily-summoned deputy sheriffs and firemen gingerly opened it and found a battery-operated shoe shining machine. DETROIT (AP)-The United Auto Workers Union opposes the Michigan Blue Cross-Blue Shield .proposed group-type experience rating system* declaring it a “retreat from social responsibilities.’'’ The UAW denounced the proposal Wednesday in a statement saying it r,aises a "clear and present danger’’ of higher rates for persons, least able to pay, * ★ ★ At the same time, the union joined with State Sen. Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, in demanding that State Insurance Commissioner Allen Mayerson give more than one day to a hearing on the proposal. Mayerson has scheduled a hearing for Dec. 15 at Lansing. SHIFT PROPOSED Blue Cross, the prepaid hospital care plan, and Blue Shield, prepaid medical care, proposed to shift from “community rating” to “group experience ranting” in determining rates for about 2‘/^ million subscribers. There are subscribers about 3^ million n the state. The proposed new rating would affect about 700 contracting groups. The Blues say the experience rating system would increase their efficiency and place them in a better competitive position with private insurance companies which use such a sy^em. * * * Rates' would be based on the incidence of use of the plans, by the individual , groups. Under community rating, ail subsprib-ers pay alike. Sen. Dzendzel, saying he would Mayerson he was over the one-day hearing plan in view of the Blues’ wide coverage. News in Brief Six' cartttns of cigarettes and candy anf. two' small vending machines' were' stolen in a break-in at Kubn’s Auto Wash, 149 W. Huron-, the manager, Charles Tallant, 32, of ftoyal Ogk, reported yesterday to Pontiac police. An undetermined amount of change was stolen from a vending machine in a break-in at the ‘ C^&C Gulf Service Station, 515 S. Saginaw, it was reported to Pontiac police yesterday. Entry was gained by smashing a window. The Land-of-Lakes Majorettes annujfl rummage sale, 128 W. Pike, Nov. 28, Sat., 9-5. —adv. Rummage Sale: 674 Pine Tree, ask a legislative review of thq^^^*^® Orion, Fri., Nov. 27. —adv. laws governing the Blues, told New England produced 610,-000 gallons of maple syrup this year, a 37 per cent increase over 1963. THANKSGIVINf; The 26th’ is much more than a tlale on a calendar, turkey on a ]>latter; it is a harvest festival of family love, cheerful voices of friends, self-evident faith in Him who made this festival possible. Bubbling fervor in our heart brings song to our lips, songs of a':sbounteou8. harvest of ____ friendship, food and above all else the J. I.. VOORHEES love of a happy family around us. This is the day when emotion is stronger than might, when spiritual strength swells muscles and heart strings to bring vibrating happiness. This day began as a simple prayer of thanksgiving; it gave .strength then and it will give strength now. .Starvation faced our Pilgrims and God gave them a banquet; starvation of spiritual values spreads over vale and tiale, Thtinksgiving is a M. E. SII’I.E clarion call to a spiritual feast. You are invited. VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME .268 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8378 The Wading, Lcrchert Research Department offers this New Special Report on ’ Champion Home Builders Co. COMMON STOCK Champion Home Builders is one of the largctt producers of mobile homes in America, and one of the fastest growing. With 5(X) dealers located in 49 states and Canada, the company currently operates plahts in 5 states, and plans to expand into other areas. Due to a number of factors. Champion has had one of the highest returns on sales of any company in the industry. Sales and earnings for the first six months of the current year both show substantial gains over a year ago. This new report compares Champion’s outstanding performance record with the rest of (he industry, provides information on capitalization, financial strength, etc., and discusses the company’s future growth prospects. Mail coupon today for your copy. I Watling, Lerchen A Co. sfnd Rfsf! Name Address____ City _______ ch Report on Champion Home Builders Co, WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. Detroit • Ann Arbor • Birmingham • Dearborn • Jackton Laneing • Pontiac • Port lluhm • Warren • New York • ERVINO MICHIGAN INVESTORS SINCE 191 MITHTTIIIG 4470 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS OYER 100 “FOR SALE" Yes ... Everything Must Be sold. We have lost our lease ... So we must CO OUT OF BUSINESS. Every Item MARKED ODWN FOR QUICK SALE. OVER m000.00 OF NAME BRAND FURNITURE . . . WILL BE SACRIFICED... IF WE CAN COVER OUA COST IPS YOURr.. ■ SHOP EARLY ... NO MONEY DOWN, TERMS TO SUIT YOU! Mattresses AND ASS'! BOX SPRINGS-OUT THEY GO - OUR LOSS YOUR GAIN 1 - FROM BEDROOM SUITES 3-4-5-S Drawer Ov«r 50 luitas to choosa frorrl. Ass't finishes and styles. Sea for yourself priced from 9x12 $1 Linoleum fSOFA BEDS NYLON VINYL , I 1 and 2-pc. luitoi ^ Valuas to 79.95 priced from. IMWaittSIIWmicc Several Finishes-start at lw llU U W I Reg. f $6.95 2-Piece Early American LIVING ROOM sums Ass't Colors and Fabrics —Limited Supply — Shop Early MAN SIZE-ASST COLORS-A REG. 49.98 -JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS-Priced at SYYIVEL VINYL or NYLON KING SIZE-ASST COIGRS-OVER 50 TO CHOOU FROM-A REG. 99.98 VALUEI Theta Mutt Be Sold Out at This Low Pri^e- $2788 2-nECE LIVING ROOM SUITES Nylon Covered — Aoi't Colors Save Up to 70% OF TERMS • No Money Down • No Refunds • All Sales Final • Delivery Avallablo MONEY DOWN DON'T MISS IT GREAT SSODOO LIQUIDATION SWIVEL CHAIRS Aoo't Colors LARGE NYLON | EVERY ITEM MUST AND WILL BE SOLD FROM OUR STORE DPEN 12H)D NDDN Yil OlOD P.M. MONDAY thru SATURDAY-CLOSED ALL DAY SUNDAY e-PIECE FltMILr SIZE DWmES *34u Assorted Styles^ and Colors I ASST END STEP LAMP DDUGH RDX 1 UP TO TA% TABLES i f0» SECTIONALS . FAMOUS BRANUS NYLON COVERED ASST COLORS, STYLES-SHOP EARLY-LIMITED SUPPU bassett-johnson Carper - serta - artistic - HARTSHORN CARVER AND MANY OTHERS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION - A SALE WITH A REASON - NOT AN EXCUSE - COME AND SEE! YOU BE THE JUDGE >>> SAVE UP TO 70% i IA<:-DonI,ovrll.M*r. Munin-KK 2 0291 H-n Kri. Em... Mi G—« THE FOII^TIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2Cj, 1964 An heirloom silver tea service used in her family from 1850 to 1900 will grace Mrs. Robert Russell’s first Thanksgiving Day table'today in 'her new home on Tully Drive. Not shown are six individual cranberry sauce dishes, each on its owre tiny service plate, used in Mr. Russell’s family through three generations. Heirlooms Help to Foster Traditions Prim little Pilgrims shed their light over a Thanksgiving centerpiece of fruits and berries arranged by Mrs. Charles Mortensen of the Lake Angelus branch. Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, at the recent “Golden Tirries” flower and exhibit in Oakland University. Pattern for Holidays , By MADELEINE DOEREN Traditions, like, heirlooms, are dusted off along with the memories they bring for gala occasions like Thanksgiving Day and at Christmas time. In the William Dunseith home out in Christian Hills, as an example, a special fruit salad from an old family recipe, is served traditionally on Thanksgiving Day. The Wedgwood fruit bowl and matching platter, also individual octagonal serving dishes in ‘Peony’ pattern are over a hundred years old. Traditional in the Bloom- field Hil^ home of Dr. and jMrs. R. Hamilton White on Thanksgiving morning is the family’s singing of “We Gath- ‘ er Together.” ★ * * Dr. White is accompanist for his wife, son Craig, and daughters Phoebe and Candace, on the concert grand which belonged to his father while concert pianist with the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra. Pictured on this page are a family heirlooms used by area hostesses for holiday enter-f taining. Miss lama C. Hook of Ogemaw Road admits that she loves heirlooms! Flanking a silver-and-glass caster set on her Thanksgiving table today will be heirloom candleholders and shades of Steuben glass. There’ll be a handled silver cake-dish and a covered silver butterdish with built-in ice cube holder. Heirloom Limoges Haviland china in ‘Ransom’ pattern will grace a supper table today in the Sylvan Lake home of the Harry S. Pearces. A platter matching her mother’s Staffordshire tureen in the background is in President James Madison's Personals Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Goad are In Ann Arbor for a family Mtherlng in the home of Henry Carter Adam^i. Joining them there are their spn David and son and daugh ter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Goad and family of Birmingham. Mr. and Mrs. flliQmas Adams of Birmingham will also help celebrate the holiday. ‘ ^ * * * .Four generations arc celc-litatlng Thanksgiving in the '^enonah Drive home of Dr. and Mra. Lynn Allen Jr. ‘Tha Allens and Uielr daugh-tgra will be Joined by Mrs. Mien’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Faulman, and her IFandmoUier, Mrs. Vina Mum-Wue, ill of Augusta Street, i ★ Ten members of the family Blil gather around a table at ^ Orchard Luke County Oub to mark the national holU ¥ Mr. and Mrs. It. A. Arm-Mhoflg of Clierokee Komi will hflet their daui^tar aiHl son-ln* Jiw,» Or. and Mn. Robert toeing «t Vm Lake Shores, hlld (heir ait ohlldren Residents Travel to OtherCities Ihe Walter K Willmans of W«'.st Iroquois Hoad are spending the holiday in Detroit. 'Iherc they are vislling Mrs. Willman's sister and family, the James Burkes. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Montgomery traveled from North-ville to s|K>nd Thanksgiving with her dnughidt and family, the Harry .1. WcMKlmnns of Gateway Drive, Dr, and Mrs. Loren Sheffield of Motorway Drive ore In Port Austin at their cabin for Ihe holiday Family-mem-liers standing the holiday wllli them Include Mr. and Mrs. Jay Warner and daughters, Deborah and Julie, and Mrs. David Hoyt of Windsor. AAA Mr. and Mrs. C I a y t o n L. Dickey and children David and Dale trnvelml from Mid-land hnr the 1'bnnksglvlng holiday. While in Pontiac they are Visiting Mrs. Dickey’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Karl B. Kiitz of l.llmrty Manor. display in the Smithsonian Institute. Also heirlooms are the cut glass flower container, salt dips and small flower butter-pats. Mrs. Pearce is holding a shell painted by her mother in 1871, used as a nut dish. Out-of-Town Travelers Join Area Families Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Lerchen of Bloomfield ^lls will host a family dinner today. Among those at the^ affair will he .sons Gray who will return from Now Hampshire, and Edwartl Jr., traveling from Amherst. ★ ★ ★ The .James R. Jenkins family of Wenonah Drive are spending the Thank.sgiving holiday at the home of her mother, Mrs. Hlenda Anderson of Woodview Street, West Bloomfield Township. Guests from Detroit will also attend the family dinner. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs, Jame.s F. Spence and daughter Leslie came from Chicago to spend the Thanksgiving weekend with Mr. Spence’s sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Jerome Jr. of FiSsl Quarton Hoad. Also there for the occasion are Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Jerome and family. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Bauld and daughter Ann of Bay Village, Ohio, will spend the holiday with his si.ster’8 family, Mr. and Mijs. Iit*e N. Mays of Bloomfield Hills. The Mays’ are hosting a family dinner. Their daughter Suzanne, a junior at Pembroke, will spend her .Thanksgiving jholiday with dasa-males in New York City. I An ornate heirloom turkey platter will contra.st with a Royal Worcester dinner service today in the home- of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Williams of Troy. Centering the two-pedestal English banquet table us a silver coffee urn brought from Scotland in 1910 by Mrs. Williams’ grandmother. The flatware us Dirigold and the place-mats with crochet detail were made in a Spanish convent. The Williams’ <^e recently of Lake Forest, III. Thursday Is Day for Families T)?. and Mrs. Clifford Eke-lund of Ottawa Drive are giie.st.s today, with other mom-ber.H of the family. In the Lake Angelus Shores home of their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Newton Sklllman. Dr. and Mrs. Jon Palmqillat of Minneapolis, Minn., are also celebrating the holiday In tlu' Sklllman home. AAA Nineteen meidbers of the family gathered around the table today In the BkH)mneld Hills homo of Mr. and Mrs F, M. Hathnway. 'rheir daughter, Sue Ann, Is home from Albion College to help greet the giie-ste, Including Mr. and Mrs. I,ee Hathaway and their twins, David and Leann. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hathaway and daughter Kimberly will Join Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Btnnman and their w)ns, Bobby, Billy, Ricky and Danny as guests. Others attending are Mr. and Mra. Wilson Barber and Mrs. C. J. Hathaway of Lake Orton. ' Bring Children Personals Mayor and Mrs, William H. Taylor Jr. of Ottawa are hosts at a family gathering. A new grandson David W. Jplly, just two weeks old, will arrive with parents Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Jolly of Berkley. Other guests are Mrs. Taylor’s parents Mr. and Mrs. Nathan WaiTenter of Poster; Mr. Jolly’s parents the Roy T Jollys of Delaware Drive and Christine and Joan Shorey. Janet Taylor, home from Western Michigan University, and l^urie are a.ssisting their mother with flestivities. ★ A A Mr. and Mrs. John P. Niggeman of Sylvan Lake are in Grand Rapids having dinner with Mr. Nigge-man’s father and sister Frank Niggeman and Mrs. Hoy Martin. AAA I Mr. and Mrs. Otis R. Hriney Jr., Bloomfield Hills with daughter Sandra and son Craig, a student at Purdue University, will be guests of the 0. R. Brineys of Cherokee Road. Another son and his wife the Spencer Brineys will come from Detroit to join the family. AAA • Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Cole of Bloomflnld Hills are celebrating the holiday with their daughter and MMi-in-law^nd their family the A. W, Holcombs of Birmingham. ' ' / Eighteen family are gathered for the holiday In the Bloomfield Hills home of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fitzgerald. Amohg them are Mra. Dexter Craig, Mr. and Mra, Alfred Hubbard and f a m 11 y and David Hubbard. Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Hubbard and family and Jeanette Hubbard complete the Hat of guesti, :t,,A A A Visiting for the holiday weekend are Mr. and Mrs, Leo Flynn of Flint, ataying with their aon and daughter-in-law, the Robert Flynna of Ogemsw Road, ' ■* A A \ With the Jamea Youngbloods of Bloomfield Hllla for the boliday dinner will be hia ipsler and brotheMn-law, Mr. and Mra, Malcolm W. Sparks of Pickering Road, Snd their children Toby, Casey, Jammie and Mitchell. AAA Joining their parents, tlie Robert J. Altons of West Iroquois Itoad for tl her roomata at HUtodale College, and soiijRojbart who attends Ferris Slate College. \ 'r" aV. Shower Curtains Plastic shower curtains, ^toaster and mixing bowl covers are freshened and cleaned quickly by swishing them aroiffld in a solution of three tablespoons of< sal soda concentrated to one gallon of of warm water. ’tmids aniiideva ’tliCbPistoias! Tou can siiend weeks searching for the perfect gift Or you can fin^ it here In minutes.. .-in our large selection of the newest gift-quality watches - from ^ Bulova. Priced as low as $24.75. Visit us soon - white our Bulova selection is complete! JEWELERS V PLOOMFIELD PLAZA BLOOMFldli) MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER THg POXTIAC PRES^, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 26, 1964 ' A G—T" . Holiday Personals Mrs. Percy Hunt is entertaining membera of her family in her home on Cherokee Road for the 'nianksgiving.holiday. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Fitzgerald are entertaining Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fitzgerald and daughter Janet of Bloomfield Hills, Dr. and Mrs. Paul L. Connolly and children, Elizabeth and James of Karen Lane. Other dinner guests are Mrs. Fred Gordon and Mary Kelly. Twenty-six people are gathered in the Old Orchard Drive home of Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Benson Jr. to celebr|ate Thanksgiving. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Dilderback and family arrived from Utica and Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Field came from Saginaw. Others attending are Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Bit-man and family from Ann Arbor, Mrs. M. A. Benson and Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Baumgartner. ★ ★ ★ Four grandchildren, John III, Debby, Barbie and Mimi Santuci are spending the day with Dr. and Mrs. George Harkless of West Walton Boulevard. ' ^ ' They arrived from- Ypsilanti with th^ir parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Santuci II. Four guests from Litchfield are helping Mr. and Mrs. Fred V. Haggard of Terrell Road celebrate Thanksgiving. Here for the holiday are Mr. and Mrs. Francis Kline and their son Don and Mrs. L. L. Miller. Mrs. Joseph Warren, Cherokee Road (center), wije of Pontiac’s new city manager, supervises her two daughters as they get the Thanksgiving table ready. At the left is 13-year-old Janet; right is 16-year-old Barbara. Joining the family today is son Joseph, home from Michigan State University with several of his classmates. Another guest is Douglas C. Wgrren of Detroit.^ Here from Bridgeport, Ohio, to spend the Thanksgiving holiday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Andreoni of Green Lake 1 are the George Melnicks. Mrs. j Rose Kirkpatrick of Detroit I is also a guest. i Spending the day in La Grange, 111. are,Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Critchfield of North Angelus Road. They are guests of their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H.L. Smith, and their six children. Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Prince of Lake Angelus Shores are entertaining a house guest for the holiday. Coming from Flint-is Dr. Dorothea Wyatt, professor of American history at Flint Junior College. ARCADE AREAS MIRACLE MILE PHONE aJI-MII Mr. and Mrs. William W. I Donaldson of Chippewa Road ' will spend Thanksgiving in the i Menominee Road home of j their daughter and son-in-law, ■ Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Scott. ! Greeting them will be two I granddaughters. Shelly Scott j and Angela Balzarini, daugh- | ter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald I C. Balzarini of West Lawrence i Street. ! Mr.. Donaldson’s sister, Mrs. i Rowley of Detroit will i Where Pathion is a Look Sot a price . . . Altvayi Worth a Trip Dotcnlown ANNUAL AFTER THANKSGIVING also join the family gathering. 48 N. Saginaw St. AFTER THANKSGIVING SALE! What X* Wonderful Chance to Save on Arthur's Much Wanted Fashions . . / and So Perfect for Christmas Gifts, Too! FURS Fur Jackets.$299 MINK STOLES *199 *359 COATS RICHLY FURRED COATS SELF TRIMMED Were to 69 98 *58 I Were to 59 98 *38 Weije.to 99 98 ■ *7« j x: Were to 69 98 *48 Were to 1 29.95 ... . *108 1 Were to 79.98 *68 Sa/oii - .Sc on,/ Floor I .Solon Sc on,I Ho, SLITS Were to 49 98 Were to 69 98 Were to /9 98 *38 *48 *68 ■Siiif Solon - Sc„n,l Hooi SUBURBAN COATS Were to 35 98 •23 Were to 45.98 •33 Embotsod Calf SPORT MOCS BUBCET DBESSKS *4 BETTER PRESSES OFF and MORE fodni heel ond nrch cushions, rn hold rujiond Irtshion look. ( onlirrnniol lii|)Rrod loo. Block or Brown, Were lo 1/ 98 Were to 19 98 Were to I S 98 *9 *13 *7 OFF and MORE Were to '/9 98 Were to 89 98 Were *15 *19 *25 Braid-trimmed BOOTS Sp.cr.ri, fQ97 Pricad Braid trimmed ankle-topper with curvy mid-heells. Side zipper lets you .slip easily into black or tawny glove lenlhor uppers. Shoe Solon - Memennint Ihrn.Solon ■■ Sc-on,l Ho, J;: Solon Scon,I H,„ VoMwig Folks Shop 1 ;i;: iji JUAAPERS- i;i; ^ i;: Wurolo 14.98 .■ 1 1 jj: STRETCH PANTS ? "iii ;i: Were to 17.98 ijitn 1 'j'liii 1 1 GIRLS'DRESSES if Were to 8.98 ## ijij GIRLS' COATS Sim* 7 to 1 4 ijij Were to 24 98 8» , ^flll 1 . 19««| ^ SWEATERS 1 si ii; Were lo 12.98 5“* 8«« 1 ijij SNOW SUITS Size* 3 to 6X :;j: Wore to 12.98 10**1 • SKIRTS iij ii; iji Were to 10 98 KB« fl g«i« 1 PRE TEEN CAR COATS - -1 Were to 2.'r98 I'll >;• ionng holht Shop — l.oinri III. 2:e»» 1 iji; iji: iji: s,h„ i Shop - - Main i'lwpr iv r Icel ^ Want to look your best this winter ? 7! want , V a\ your 7^ 1 figure d ^ -]j ,to look V' lovely? ■ 3 ' wont a becoming -hair a style? [F CHARM CENTER AT MONTGOMERY WARD Now's the time to iget rcridy tor winter . . , to look your best, to get ready for Jun. Come learn the] charm secrets of famous models . . . today at the Wendy Ward Charm Center; Just $7.50 Classes Start December 5 HeUlllet flow In • FairMon OnrerilMnnl rONTlAC MAIL A82.4940 G—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY.^OVEMBER, 26, 196> Op«n Nights uht|l Christmos 5i ms 2-Day Sale Velvet Chanel regular *50 and *55, $9Q90 Jmm M with jhort skirt $OJ.90 with long skirt Mink Shawl Cashmere Sweater regular ^90 $7990 The icTeal gift at wonderful savings, 'j. Each sweater is silk chiffon lined. Winter Coats regular I0 ^85 M4.0^69 InijTOiI(’tI (Mid donicslic tweeds, or solids. Regular and petite si^tes All Items Gift Wrapped Free Alvin's Boot Fashions $090 .Sfieanlly Pi it (’d Regular to 10.9d Inshionnble heels and sole stepping ribbed rubber soles feel as good as they lookl Black fur collar on glove leather or block glr^e leather upfTers with triie-fit inside rippers. $790 HURON at lELEGRAPH Personals The Harold S. Jacobsens of Orchard Lake ari having a family get -together today. Gathered around the TTianks-giving table are Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Jacobsen Jr. with children Siisan, Amy and Har> old III; and the Bruce Jacobsens and sons, Bradford and Stephen of Oxford. Coming from San Francisco to be with the family is Beal Jacobsen. * -k -k Mrs. Thomas C. Fitzpatrick of Mary Day Avenue and her daughter Judy, a student at Eastern Michigan University, are attending the family gathering in the Chippewa Drive home of her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Scully. Tom Scully also home from EMU, is joining his parents to welcome Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Treais, Mr. and Mr^ Richard C. Fitzpatrick a^d Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Ly Carthy of Lathrup ■ ■ Pat Scully is hony'f r o m Flint, arriving for ytne event with Mr. and Mrs ./Cecil Hicks of the city. * Thanksgiving holiday dinner for Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Phipps of £)neida Road will be eaten wim their daughter and family^ Ann Arbor, the How-lavenworthsl Mr. ahd Mrs. Albert G. Dwkn of West Hop-kins/Avenue announce the betrothal of their mghter, Jane Lydia to /James E. Abel, son of the Frederick Abels of Grand Rapids. A February wedding is planned. Set Wedding Date Mr. ahd Mrs. Glenn L. Poet of St. Clair Drive, Avon Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Rebecca to Thomas Charlton, son of Mrs. Thomas Charlton of Oliver Street and the late Mr. Charlton. A June wedding date is set, > Open Nights until Christmas /Hum 's Double Knit Cardigan Sweaters ^20 Magnificent double knit wool in your choica of black, burgundy, moss or blue. Hdndsome Outer Coats $7995 Herringbone nr blrdseye wool tweed pile linerl with Cl pile silinwl rollrn, CA'rty only HURON at TEtEGRAPH neV Home I S| Scene ily Gathering . By^NE KARLSTROM ir twenty yeare^. and Mrs. Karl k. Richards ive had their familiesNo^ether for Thankisgiving 'dinner. ’ This year, With Governor an^^rs. Romney vacationing in California and all the Richards’ young people Tn California, Mrs. Romney su^sted that the Richards keep up the tradition and be hdst and hostess in the -Romney home on Rathmor Road to all the young Romney families. Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Robinson with, their three children are coming from Ann Arbor. Scott Romney arrived from Lansing. Mitt attends Cranbrook School so he is nearby, as well as Mr. and Mrs. Loren Keenan and their five children. Also around the dinner table were Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Davis. ’ ' ★ ★ ★, In Merced, Calif, the eldest Richard daughter and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Erekson are having Mrs. Erekson’s sister and brother-in-law, Dr. and Harold Styler and their two sons of Palo Alto and brothers Morgan and Bob who are attending Brigham University. CHILDREN COME At the Henry Whitings’ Thanksgiving dinner table were Mr. and Mrs. Henry Whiting Jr., with their three children; Mr. and Mrs. Macauley Whiting and their five children from Midland; and daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Aten with their four children. This is a tradition of many years. Mr. and Mrs. William T. Gossett had dinner at home with son Thom and his fiance, Mimi Coulter Crebs, and her father Bruce Coulter, Ann Coulter and Mrs. Howard Maloy who is visiting the Gossetts from Canada. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. William L. Kemp is in Atlanta, Ga., with her daughter and son-in-law. Coloriel and Mrs. Stanley E. Reinhart Jr. She is enjoying her four grandchildren, especially the new granddaughter Cameron Kemp Reinhart. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Frederick R. Zimmermann are spending the holidays with their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. Zimmermann in Greenwich, Conn. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wieting and their children, Gretchen and Cary, have joined Mrs. Wieting’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Cary, at their summer home at Higgins Lake where they are spending the holidays. Personals Mr. and Mrs. Oiarles Rogers oCMiaml Road are host-1: ing a faftiily dinner for Uie holiday. Gathered for this traditional meal will ‘be the following families; Mr. and Mrs. Edmund S., Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Refers, Mr. and Mrs. Michael R^ers and Tom Rogers. Out of town relatives who traveled to Miami Road for the affair are Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Hoffman of Lansing and the Albert Renters of Southfield. ★ * ★ Hosts for the annual Sibley family reunion observed on Thanksgiving Day are Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ellis in their new home on Lanergan Drive. Among some 22 dinner gue.sts are Mrs. H. A. Sibley of Matthews Street, the J. Standish Sibleys of Oriole Road and the Forbes Sibleys of Birmingham. k k k Dr. and Mrs. Peter Hooger-hyde of Chippiewa Road are sending the day with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fuller of Orchard Lake. With them will be their daughters, Judy Hoogerhyde, home from Western Michigan University, and Bette Fuller, home from the University of Michigan. .Joining (he group are Mr. and Mrs. EverefI Linden of Farmington and their daughter Kathy, home from WMU. Mr. and Mr.s. W. E. U. Hulh-waite of West Iroquois Road are hosts to their family with Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Nelson and children Erin and David arriving from Saginaw. The David C. Huthwaltes and daughter, Hollis Ann, are here from Birmingham. i/Heumo •FIBEI?LOCI(:‘' SALE! 77‘ 82 N. S. Saginaw St. At SIBLEY'S Miracle Mile Our little-heel Cobble Boot Is all cozy charm... 15.99 Cobbiei' light, ilaak liltl*-h««l*d bool k««pt you f««llng famlnln* -and nica avan whan tha waolhar ItnTI You'll lova lha wa{||Hi of III daap Aaaca lining anfolding your ilocklngad loai ... Ill r«l||furlng non-ikid lola. And ill foihionobla ftollary growi mora dal%hlful with avary ilap, lhanki to Cobblei' fomoui aosal Black nvio-val. MORE THAN 50 STYLES OF WINTER BOOTS NOW IN STOCK FROM Wl CORDIAU.Y INVITi YOUR INSPICTION $399 TO 12495 ^^MicJiigan^n Largest Florsheim Deafer” Uie Your Security Chorga I I Miraeln Mila Shopping Gentar South Talagraph at Squart Laka Road FK R »7M Oiwii Evenings "I'll • mm ^HB PONTIAC PRESS. THITRSDAY,: NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Turn cuffs down and brush out lint before washing. Dance Party Will Aid Charity Fund Children's Holiday Shoes Girls' Black Patent 4'A to 6 The Carolyn Carr chapter of the Leukemia Foundation of Pontiac ’will receive the proceeds of the annual Christmas dance sponsored by Kappa Chi Alpha sorority. The Kaye Davey Quartet will furnish music for the affair from 9 p.m. to 1' a.m. in the Pontiac Country Club Dec. (Biii jCewiA Junior Bootery Mrs. Michael Patterson is Reneral chairman for the dance. Assisting her will be Mrs. James Attard and Mrs. James Lesar. The S t u a r t Whitfields of Cherokee Road and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Euler of Ottawa Drive are spending Thanksgiv-ing^together in Rivena Beach, West Palm Beach, Fla. ij^eumc 9 •FIBEPLOCIf-' 'SALE! 77‘ 1060 W. Huron 334-0125 (Hum, C.ntw, Nairt (o China Oty) Shop Daily 9:30 Till 6 Mon. and Fri. Till 9! 2 pairj $1.50 RUN-LESS SEAMLESS for longer wear. Reinforced toes and heels. 82 N. S. Saginaw St. . Christmas decorations are easy to find, even this early in the season. Mrs. Rickard H. Jones (left) of Briggs Street and Mrs. Michael G. Patterson of Grace K Court pre- pare decorations for the annual Christmas dance of Kappa Chi Alpha sorority. The dance is Dec. 5 in the Pontiac Country Club. Mr. and Mrs. William Shunck of Longworth Drive will entertain her two sisters for the Thanksgiving weekend. Visiting from Ann Arbor are the Misses Nelle and Alberta Mc-Carn. Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Eis of Brookdale Boulevard are entertaining her parents, Mrs. and Mr.s. Thors of Neome Drive. In Ashland, Ohio, for the holiday weekend are the Marvin Redmans of Westlawn Avenue, visiting their daughter and son-in-law, the Morton Sprentall.s. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Chapman of Tilden .Street are entertaining the Sol Ellers, Martin Eller and family and the Melvin Ellers for Thanksgiving dinner. Klary Ann Hampton returned to her Brookside Drive home to help her parents, Mr. and Mr.s. Verne Hampton, celebrate the (holiday. Mary Ann is a fre.shman at Michigan Stale University. Verne C.' Hampton II welcomed his sister and Mrs. Hampton’s mother, Mrs. John Peck, to the family event. Personals Mr. and Mrs. John Irwin -Sr. of Dell Rose Drive are-i entertaining three visitors ! from Evanston, 111. for the i Thanksgiving weekend. i Mr. and Mrs. William Sea- j bright brought their daughter Caitlin for the stay. | The Albert Webers of East Iroquois Road are spending the day with their son and family. Enjoying the company of their grandparents are Robert Weber Jr. and Carol, Gret-chen and Christopher Weber. Thev are the children of the Robert W'ebers of Berkshire Road. Enjoying Thank.sgiving with i ; their daughter and family are I the Edward A. Maiers of j Illinois Avenue Thev are Mr. i and Mrs. Michael J. Ashley i of Shoals Street and children, Mike, Eddie, Sally, Anh and Amy. I Mr. add Mrs. James Colan- , do and son Christian from i Eastern Michigan University i are dividing the Thpksgiving day .between Christian’s two sets of grandparents. | While in Pontiac they will ! spend some time with the Carl j P. Colandos of Mohawk Road ' and Mr. and Mrs. Philip Row- i .ston of Bloomfield Village. | Hosting a family dinner today are Mr. and Mrs Collis Scott of Franklin Boulevard. Among the guests will be Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Dickinson, the William Dickinsons, Mr. and Mrst-William L. Clark and the Osborne A. Campbells of Birmingham. Yes, We Can Give You Immediate Delivery on Chairs and Sofas... at Special Savings! GENUINE leather CHAIR from fh« loctor-io» of Contury. S«l«ct Red, Apple Green or Block top groin leather for the finent gift of all!......... Matching Ottoman (Rad or Apple Giaen) only...$69.50 saleclion of colors! choice of decorator fabrics! collection of styles for all decors! Now, nl n lime when innnulndurers of upholstered (nrnilure ore genernlly Inr behind in deliveries, .MewnrI Glenn hns on excellent .selection o( sohe, nnri choir,s (or every decor.in sloi.k lor imrnedinie delivery! oelect now lor holidtay gills lor the home arjd fomilyl Hi-bock »ofa by Conovtr. Choice of oliv* green and brown check, brown fweed or copper Iweed. AAeaiurei 85" long with 37" back height. ARM CAPS INCLUDED Swivel Rocker by Conover ii ideol for TV viewing, Tufted bock, pleated ikirt. Choice of orange, tweed, red or green print. Lovo teal by Conover with toft attached cuthion back, pleated ikIrt. Width 54"x34" back height. . nf, or blue- choice of green print, $()()(>(> ARM CAPS INClUDtO #151)00 ARM CAPS included Three cuthion tofa with wing - orm ityling. 74" wide by 35". bock height. Choice of char-brown tweed or chocolote tweed. »199" f'iirkiiig (nml i aidr til plttir . - - ARM CAPS INCLUDED 1 680 S. TELEGRAPH RD., PONTIAC 1, Ol.i-l pul ,■>! ml.riiH Lake Rond, I'K OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 ’TIL CHRISTMAS OLIDAY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY our own Italian knit dresses $||88 Imported wool knits in a host o styles and colors. Sizes 10-16. Get several, save! Imported wool shaker gift-knits $097 Full fashioned shaker knit wool caVdijrans, assorted pastel colors; 86-40 luxurious mink trimmed wool coats $, 66 90 Textured wools ’n wool meltons . with natural mink collars. Fashion colors; 8-16 voxy cuddly riiristmas robes $ 9” DeliK’htful styles in a variety of fabrics and tempting colors; sizes 10-18 rielily grained casual liandbags *5 97 Lots of stylos in crushed ^•rain vinyl. Iflack, clu'Stmit or oat. (tlpilcctm Ga/1^ TEL HURON SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph of Huron Roods ii Ii ir:;iitiiii[j|Wiiliiiawiiiiiii^^ ■f THE POKTIAC PRE^S, THURSDAY. n5vEMBBR 26, 1964 Give him mmfoet Evans ^ HAND TLiu^ Slippers See our complete line of Evans Slipper styles for Christmas today! Buy him the finest for Christmas. Closet Tips for Garments Keep your togs whole. .Fix a rip or hole as soon, as it happ^S. • Otherwise, it will make like a leak in a dike, getting worse. Also brush and fasten your clothes before hanging them. Allow space in the'closet to keep garments from crushing. Prevent Sticking Place a piece of wax paper on clotheslines so heavily starched items will not stick. Harken to the Probf&TiS of the Frustrated Cook By PATRICIA McCORMACK United Press International Homefront, U.S.A. — Be grateful this Thanksgivini; if everthing comes off in apple pie order in the kitcheii. It’s been a year now since everthing went wrong in my kitchen. The thought of tackl-i n g another Thanksgiving meal makes me nervous as a driver who gets behind the wheel the first time after an accident. The trouble started with the Wal4tcH ffctel PIKE AND PERRY HOME OF THE FAMOUS WALDRON BUFFET THANKSGIVING BUFFET DINNER Served 12 to 8 P. M. Delicious Turkey GIblet Soup. Taste-Tempting Roast Turkey with sage dressing and cranberry sauce. Our famous bar round of beef au jus. Mouth-watering baked smoked ham with raisin sauce. Mashed and glazed sweet potatoes. Green peas, baked squash, fourteen varieties of crisp salads and relishes. Topped off with choice of pumpkin pie, fresh hot' mince pie, apple pie, holiday cake or plum pudding vrith brandy sauce. All This for Only ' $295 Inc. Dessert BUFFET BREAKFAST Thanksgiving Morning Served from 8 A.M. to 12 Noon DANCING NIGHTLY ? THANKSGIVING ' , i RESEP BUFFET the NOTE-ABLES nqW DINNER ' DANCE TO THE TAKI SERVED ! RHYTHMS OF CHR TODAY RHYTHMS OF | ; MICKEY AND BILL $125 turkey and ended with the pumpkin pie. Hie pie came out a consistency more liquid than solid. NEW STYLE ^ TWs bit of nifty cookery m^ed the first time pump-ki# pie was served , in soup bowls. No one got sick later or' coughing spe& then, so I was grateful. And luckily, I had straws in the house. Guests didn’t have to use soup spoons. The poor turkey started, out as a young Tom. By the time the fowl thing emerged from the kitchen he had aged considerably. If dressed turkeys could trot, this one would have leaped out of the pan halfway through the . roasting and headed straight for the humane society to report me. ★ * * At one time during the afternoon’s trial, in fact, my husband lamented that the bird couldn’t trot. . His exact words: “It would help if this bird could run around the yard a while and work off a few pounds.” »He lAuttered that when we discovered that the turkey, jammed into a roasting pan that was too small, started to drip, all over the oven in a way guaranteed to start a grease Are. ° We turned off the oven, then went to the attic to search for a larger .pan. Fifteen minutes later, we returned with said pan.i The dripping turkey, half-done, was lihed out of ^the smaller pan and placed' in the larger pan. We congratulated, ourselves too soon on a transfer well jdone. After all, we did the bird, slippery as if was, from one pan to another without dropping same on floor.' We started up the oven again. When it got to what we thought was the proper temperature for a half - done Holiday Personals Mr. and Mrs. C. Emery Jr. of Birmingham are providing the holiday table for a family gathering today. Attending are Mr. and Mrs. Edward Emery and their children, Edward Jr., Beth and David, and Mrs. Frances Emery of Detroit. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Jamis L. Howlett and their son Thomas of East Iroquois Road are spending the day in the Birmingham home of Mr. and Mrs. John Jones. ^ Other guests present are Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Jones and their children Karen and Robert of Ann Arbor and Mrs. Harold E. Howlett of Birmingham. THE ROAD IS OPEN! The Perimeter Road, we mean — now known as Wide Track - which will make it a little easier to ^et to our parking lot behind our store! However, due to the inaccessibility of recent months, we have accumulated many fine pieces of quality furniture that should now be sold! We do need room badly for incoming shipments. So, to clear our floors, to moke room, we hove reduced some of our finest pieces for oil rooms — most drqsticolly! MVIN6S ME «S MWH «S 50% These large reductions should clear our floors quickly of floor samples, pieces to be discontinued, oil at worthwhile savings! Here Are Some Typical Values! WAS SALE S*lig Contamporary Sofa, Floor Sample — Slightly Soiled.....................$295.00 $149.50 Contemporary Buffet—Lovely BuHernut Wood*.................... 113 00 99.50 Blue Decorated 3 Piece Vanity — 1 02" wide 237.50 1 49.50 3 Piece Bedroom in Attractive Butternut . . . 338.00 249.50 Contemporary Bedroom in Walnut —3 Pieces 416.00 299.00 Bedroom W/Double Twin Headboard and Commode............... 344.od 248.00 Drexel Party Table —French Accent Group 199.00 99.50 Contemporary Brass Trimmed Bedroom-^3 Pieces.................... 299.00 1 88.00 Bed and Magna Dresser—2 Piece........ 265 00 149.00 Selig Contemporary — Mr. and Mrs. Chair and Ottoman................. 266.00 Selig Lounge Choir and Ottoman-One Only 149.50 99.50 Widdicomb Sofa Designed by Paul McCobb-Charcoal fabric................ 269.00 1 99.00 Save On Early American Pieces Woj Sale Black Decorated Deacons Bench —60" Long $ 99.,S0 $ 69.50 Loungis Chair-Green Tweed Cover........129 ,SO 79.50 Wing Back Sofa — Red and Green Tweed .... 229.50 1 59.50 Colonial Wing Chair—Green Print w/Arm Caps.........................I.. 85 00 49.50 Luxuriously Rubber Filled Sofa —88" Long . . 279.50 199.50 Lounge Choir—Rust and Brown Tweed — W/Arm Caps................ ......... 99 50 69.50 High Bock Wing Chair - Colonial Red Print 90.50,. 49.50 Drexel American Treasury— Six -piece wall unit — 90" Wide............ High Back Lounge Choir—Rust and Green Tweed..................... Here Are More Specially Priced Pieces! Lounge Choir-Handsome Green Fabric . French Provincial Love Seat—White Decorated Frame..................... French Provincial Sofo —Brown Stripped Damask.................... Traditional Sofa —Gold Damask Cover . . Curved Winged Traditional Sofq........ MANY PIECES SUITABLE FOR CHRISTMAS GIVINGI Save On Famous Quality Furniture From Drexel, Thomasvilie, Henredon, Herman Miller and Many Morel WAS SALE 169.00 88.00 149.50 249.50 229.50 295.00 199.50 Solid Maple Round Dinette- Plastic Finish-42" - 5 Pieces........................... 580.00 295.00 Open Friday tveninq.s! 89.50 1 Quulily lnlui iorr> (or . 99.50 69.50 Homos ond Officcsl 150.00 69.50 FUI=IMIXURE MABINAW IT. ATOICHAdo lAKi AVI. . fCB-fl74 rONTIAC Freft Decorating Services] budget TerinsI A family gathering is being held ’ today in the Orchard Lake home of Mr. and Mrs. F. Leslie Huntwork. Mrs. Huntwork’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Bone, are guests, along with Patricia Whitmer and Mr. and Mrs. Rodger Asbury and their children, Gregory and Deanna- Mr. and Mrs. William J. Emerson and their children, Christine, Margaret and John, of West Iroquois Road are in Owosso today, celebrating the Thanksgiving holiday. Mr. Emerson’s mother, Mrs. John A. Emerson, is hostess to the family and to Mrs. Emerson’s mother, Mrs. E. J. Lederle of Royal Oak. Mr. and, Mrs. James W. Hut-tenlocher hosted his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hutten-locher for the day’s festivities. Both families live on Middle Lake Road, Independence Township. bird, we shoyed the place. But the larger pan didn’t^ fit into the apartment - size oven sufficiently well to close the door. So back to the Smaller pan went the turkey. This time we bundled him in aluminum foil ,to contain the grease drippings from the’ parts that extended beyond the pan. For safety’s sake, we rigged up a Rube Goldberg kind of gadget to catch any extra fat. By now, all sense of time was lost. We turned the oven up to high and then to low. About the time it segmdd appropriate to test for doneness, I cleverly remembered one test of same is to move a drumstick back and forth. It it moves freely, the bird’s done. OPPS, IT’S OFF The drumstick moved so freely that it came away from the rest ofsthe bird. I couldn’t figure out how to get it back to its natural position, so I put it aside on a platter. The dog stole it. The turkey was presented on a carving platter and It looked pecuiar wth just one ’ drumstick. “Top bad it isn’t a duck,”' a guest said. “You could call it a lame duck.” Rre-Pressed Patch Press left-over pieces of fabrics neatly, and store them in a large scrap book, using cellophane tape to fasten them to the book. When it’s mending time, you j will have a neat pressed patch I all reafly to use. r Makes an excellent gift ond there's a size ond ityl* for everyone in the family. Quality leather uppers and Canadian flyer blades. /J Bloomfield MirscU Milo Shopping Centor A MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL! TH^ OROAN ^'CAN PLAY • Two 44.Nole Keyboonit. 18.Note IVdel • nulll.lii l.e«ll« Sneaker System • Ollier Models From B49S to 13,,198 a (No Money Down. No Payments 'III Februsry, 196.1 a Order Now for Oirlsli " *‘ 1 the PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY,'NOVE>yBER 26, 1964 G-ll Teens See No Tie Between Grades, Car (^bert Youth Research, Inc I autoitfoblles tend to get poor Teen-agers challenge the grades. charge that students "who own I Of the 1240 boys and girls we ^ "THateHAuCu id/^ SptUatuSt iHl I Classic 11 ' ' Simplicity MFor... Featured in this charming wide -wale corduroy button - down front Jumper. Self-belt lonchored with button at back. Sizes 6 to 16. Colors Red and Rust. 1498 141 WEST MAPLE-BIRMINGHAM questimed about the subfect, 67 per cent thought'the charge was not true. ' What's merer the percentage rose to 80 per cent when we asked the 140 Who own cars wheth^ they themselves got poor grades a« a resnlt of having autos IS their own. Actually, about half of all the students queried had drivers’ licenses, but most of theni did their driving in family cars. Jerry Anstaett, 17, of Lyndon, Kan., explained that “a teen- ager with good commom sense can schedule 'things so the car does not interfere with studies.” offrrs proof A 17-year-old from’ Auburn-dale, Mass., Peter Woodland, offered proof of his contention. Said fae:‘T own a car and if were not for a ‘C’ in English, I would have been on tte honor roll.” Ma^ Schindler, 16, of Louisville, Ky., had her own idea about why some students vi^ho own cars, tend to get poor Holiday Personals Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Eames of Cherokee Road and their children, Judy and Bill, a student at the University of Michigan, are guests today at a family gathering at Pine Lake Country Club. Mrs. W. R. Eames is also hostess to Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Winston of Sandusky, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Thompson and T'rank Thompson. ^ ^ ★ . ★ ★ The Robert R. Eldreds of West Iromiois are enjoying their three grandchildren David, Mary and Christine as well as parents Mtv^and Mrs. Roger R. Eldred of Warren today. Home from St. John Seminary at Plymouth is Robert J. Eldred. Son Richard is still at home with his parertts. ★. ★ ★ Guests of the James Nyes of Sylvan Shores Drive are Mrs. Orville Moll, Woodbine Drive, the-William B. Hartmans and daughter Lynde of Watkins Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sandage and Katherine of Roseberry Drive. grades — even though she thought this was not true of the najority of young car own- ers. She said: “I think .these are generally poor students anyway and would probably find some other diversion if; they didn’t own cars.” NEWNESS WEARS OFF Another young woman, 18-year-old Donna Greene, also of Louisville, said that “after the newness of owning a car wears off, the student goes back to his normal self.” Among those who felt car ownershsip affected studies was Gale Wangerin, 16, of Everett, Wash., who declared: “If a person owns his own car, he tends to spend more time on it than if it were the family, car.” A girl from Island Park, N.Y. -15-year-old Gandy Cannizzaro —made a distinction between boy car owners and girl car owners. She said that boy’s school-work might "be affected “because they seem to spend too much time on autos, while girls use them mainly for transportation.” INTERESTING STA-HSTICS Some interesting statistics turned up on the matter of when driving licenses can be obtained according to states’ laws—and when the teen-agers think licenses should be available. EMERSON PORTABLE NOROE 2 CYCLE STEREO DEER HUNTERS MAYTAO SQ. PHONOQRAPH AUTOMATIC WASHER FM RADIO SPECIAL TUB WASHER Fully Automat- W yM A ic ‘65 Modal tf 14 Lb. With OirWO Lint Filt.r M. 0 v nr'"””” *25 38,Jh^Hom.gi43 $9300 Emorson Oilad Walnut CONSOLE STEREO WHIRLPOOL MOBILE SO Qal. Glass Lined 12 Cu. Wastingtiouse ALL CHANNEL DISHWASHER Qat Hot Water Hooter REFRIQERATOR PORTABLE TV wHtiAM-FM ew g'n Starao Radio J. utO $13300 l^O-Ymir f/iQ OuarantM *178 *9800 While mwe than 78 per cent of those questioned can legally obtain licenses in their- states at 16 or under, only 20’per cent agreed with those age regulations. Seventy per cent fclt that youngsters should noirbe able to get drivers’ licenses until they are 17 and over. Ten per cent expressed no opinion either way. 82 N. S. Saginaw St. Special factory close-out prices, combined with our own terrific markdowns make every one of these lower than ysual appliances prices possible on this 4-day price break sale. We've slashed prices ajain and again to rjeach these all time lows. Carloads of merchandise are arriving, daily, and we must make rdom. Many items are irt original factory cartons, all are brand new to|) brand name merchandise specially reduced for this great sale. P.S. Remember you get 5 lbs. of coffee FREE if I can't beat your best price and service*. town and country warm coats weatherbee* """ABiEnmiEjBjjiojjSSjEP)' VALUE! RCAVIPTOR "VICTROLA"* CONSOLETTE RCA VICTOR S»e^/6' "S'*' PORTABLE TV A-All woodcablnat ^Two6* X 9* speakers, -k 80-20,000 cps Frequency Range. -A Plays ell 4 speeds. Ar Diamond stylus. A Audiophile controls. erage) ★ Top-front ' Throat" sound ★ Dependable RCA Space Ag^ Sealed Circuitry GET FREHERS LOW, LOW PRICE RADIO BARGAIN! 6 TRANSISTOR RADIO BY RCA VICTOR Ar Sparkling 6-translstor "Pow-erllft" performance wjth this deluxe Ppckette -AQlft-packed with earphone, battery end carrying case. PONTIAC WAREHOUSE mtoiuni Ro. Vs mi. so. orohard uki ro. I Mil* North ofMtrmelo H/llo OPIM SUNDAY - Fi S-I9B1 OPEN DAILY 10-9 SUN. 10-T NO MONIY Mtm - UP TO if MONTHS Tp MV FIRNOALE STORE->211 W. I MILE-Ll 1-44SS • Open Men. thru Fri. tiM te ftSf - Set. I te I i with the purohaee of.,. MAJOR APPLIANCE, ■ OONIOLE TELEVISION or CONSOLE STENEO. " '*'txooot With ROA Whirlpool and Kelvinator ■ G—L2 THE FONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVi^MBER 26, 1964 2AtE! 77‘ Thanksgiving Day Is Hospitable Time 2 pairs $1.50 RUN-LESS SEAMLESS Shop Downtown and LUNCH af the RIKER FOUNTAIN Riker Bldg. Lobby Rick Crain has returned from Northwood* Institute in Midland where he is a fr^hmari to help his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart M. Gram of jBinriing-haip, celebrate tne day. «The family will welcome Mrs? Cram’s father, William T. ‘Gunttop, and Mr. Cram’s aunt, Alice *R. Marsh, for the day’s festivities. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mfs. Harry Kimmins are hosts today for a family gathering in their Bloomfield Hills home. Among thosd attending are Dr. and Mrs. Robert H. Kimmins and their daughters Barbara, Jean and Elizabeth, and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Eaton. Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Hackett and their chil-drfen, Christopher and Christine, complete the guest list. The Bloomfield Hills home of Mr. and Mrs. Rob- ert Glenn and children David, Richard, Barbara and Philip js hustling with the sounds of a family holiday. From Arlington Heights, HI. for the event are Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Nelson and their children, Lynn and Susan. Their son Jarhes traveled from Ah bion College for the gathering. Mrs. Howard D. Glenn, Mrs. Victor E. Nelson and Mrs. Hugh Grove and her Sons, Hugh, a student at the University of Michigan, and Robert, are also there. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. G. J. Graham of Bloomfield Hills is hostess to her nephews and their families at a gathering in t6e Bloomfield Hills Hunt Club. Joining her for the celebration are Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Neff and Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Neff Jr. and their families. Pearce Floral 559 Orchard Lake Avenue Exquisite Floral Arrangements enhanced because they are in Haeger Containers. , Yule Tree - , Glance left for colorful, bright delight for every room, office, or your table. Boxwood Christmas Tree with permanent fruits and candles. $1250 $15 Fresh From Our Greenhouses Poinsettias, traditional red, and the excellent new hues of white. Beautiful plants for giving or decorating. $5 $750 $10 $25 Decorative CEDAR ROPE GARLAND Special Value Priced 60 FI, $/,00 Coil O Center of Your Dinner Golden Juni|!$er, Green Pine, White Carnations and bright candles in a perfectly delightfully shapesl and colored Haeger piece. Call , it Fenton Dinnerware, but have (if for you home or sent to someone you especially wont to remember. $15 $1750 $20 PEARCE floral company Two deliveries daily to Detroit, Birmingham, Bloomfield and intermpdiate points. . Open Daily 8 a m. to 5i30 in, , Closed Sunday £59 Orchard Lake Avenue PhqnB PE 2-0127 I A ' ‘ Fireside Warmth In a tall, gracefully »haped Hoeoer conloiner which will be re used again and again Ihli Christmas Pieces combine the brinhl Red ond Creen ol vorigoled Holly with Cedor ond Pine branches $20 ^25 ^30 Floteer orders delivered anywhere in the umrld thru witr siteclul service. The engagement of Ruth Ellen Hinojosa to Domingo Gonzales is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hinojosa of Raeburn Street. Her fiance’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Gillermo^ Gonzales of Weston, Ohio. A Jan. 30 wedding is planned. Cover the food chopper with a clear plastic bag to keep it clean and ready for use. Holiday Personals One son is home„4he other at school as - Mr. and Mrs.^ Williatn B. Bachman Jr. cele-"” brate Thanksgiving today.^ Tom is home from Culver Mlfftary Academy, Ind. wh^e his is a junior. Bill is staying in Boulder, dolo. where he attends the University of Colorado. Joining the family celebration aEe the senior Bachmans and Mrs. Bachman’s aunt, Mrs. William Krueger of Detroit. The Bloomfield Open Hunt Club is the setting for the holiday celebration of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Crissman of Applewood Lane. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Neil Wasser-berger of Canterbury Drive are hosting Thanksgiving dinner party. Among those gathering around the table are Pontiac residents Mr. and Mrs. Qeorge Wasserl»rger, Dr. Leo Wasserberger, and Mr. and Mrs. John Ostrander and children Janet, John and Jimmy. Out of town guests include Dr. and Mrs. H. J. Wyn^ar- den^East Lansing and Dr. and Mrs. Robert Vosburg, former Pontiae resWents now living in Morgantown W. Va. * ★ ★ Mr. arid Mrs. Riilip J. War-gelin of Voorheis Road are spending the holiday in Milr waukee, Wis. with his parenUi, the Soini Tormas. On their way to MilwaukeCi the War-gelins stopped at the University of Michigan to pick up their daughter Carol who is in the school of music. A Thanksgiving Withoul^FoocI New York (UPIf - Thanksgiving Day in Liberia falls on the first Thursday of November. Unlike the American Thanksgiving, it has no tradi-» tional foods. It is a national holiday to give thanks to God for preserving the nation and guiding its founders and pioneers. It's True Men Are Scarce, but Gentlemen Are Rarer By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I wish you would say something in your column about the “extra man” who » thinks that with io many widows and d i V 0 r cees around, he does not need to thank a hostess f 0 r e n tertaining \B3Y him. These extra men, who accept invitations-lefl and right as though they were doing the hostess a favor, make me tired. You never hear from them after they’ve accepted your hospitality, but they keep turning up at all the parties because, confound it, men are scarce! KNOWS SEVERAL DEAR KNOWS: If men are scarce, gentlemen are even scarcer The extra man has no immunity from the social graces just because he’s in demand. He should telephone his hostess the morning after to thank her for having enter-: tained him. (If he's too busy or top tongue-tied to phone, I flowers will say it for him.) And single men who accept ' invitations should play host ! occasionally. DEAR ABBY: I just received the following letter from my niece and would like your opinion of it: “Dear Auntie, I hate to complain, but the next time you send me a Christmas gift, please send it in the box from the store it came from. Evepy time I try to take back one of your presents I am told it didn’t come from there. ★ ★ ' ★ This is very embarrassing. I hope you won’t mind my telling you this, but I would CHILDREN’S SHOP MIRACIJC MII.K .SHOPPING CENTEIt rather be frank than take a chance on getting embarrassed again this year. Love to Uncle and the kids. Sincerely yours, Sandy” Have you ever heard anything to equal this? Sincerely yours, “FLABBERGASTED” DEAR FLABBERGASTED: Yes. This: For Your Wedding QUALITY i and Quantity • 12 Photoa ia 5x7 Album • Free CounieliuK • A Larae “Juat Married” aifcn • A Miniature Marriage Ortifit-ale Budget Terms Available I. Richard Vallard C. K. HASKIfX STUDIO . Clemens Si. FE 4-0553 Welcome Bowl In new design Haeger container arranged for mute color keynote. Noble Fir, Blue Juniper and natural cones with bright berries and complementing color in the container. $10 $1250 $15 ;i THE PONTIAC PRI^SS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1904 G—13> SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Dear Eunice Faraer: I have seen so many of the very round or dorae-ehaped buttons on expensive suits in magazines. Is it possible to make buttonholes large enough for these buttons? . Mrs.W.H: ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. W. H.; You,don’t know how excited I get when you readers become aware of the little details Jn garments that are constantly changing. The dome-shaped buttons are very , new, some of them almost round. When they are very large, they are usually sewed oh the front of your garment vrithout buttonholes. nils is also true of the larger braid and corded buttons. On the inside of facing, sew v^ large snaps as a means of closing the garment. Always cover the snaps with a matching crepe or silk for that “couture touch.’’ KNIT NOTES Mrs. N- A. says: After completing a knitted garment, it is always wise to thread a yam needle with the same yam, run it up loosely and hidden in the seams of the side and sleeves on the reverse side. This way, you will always have the same yarn to use for mending and it will be the shade you need. Dear Eunice: I am having trouble with my skirts poking out at the lowest point of toe zipper. In fact, the whole seaih where the zipper is placed seems to stand away from my body. This is rather unsightly and I don’t know just what I am doing wrong. Mrs. M. S. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. M. S.:‘ I strongly suspect that you are not fitting the skirt as I have suggested. Do not baste the side seams first. Pin side seams WRONG SIDES TOGETHER, with the seams extending out. Pins should be placed vertically on the seam line. This is an easy way to 6t the skirt yourself. After fitting, separate the seams and rub chalk on the pins. The marks will now appear on the inside of the skirt. ★ ★ ★ When stitching the side seams of a skirt, ALWAYS stitch from the hemline UP to the waist. Your skirt will hang much better because you are stitching with the grain. AVOID BULK AT WAIST When lining skirts of heavy fabric and double knits, make the darts in each separately. However^ instead of pressing both sets of darts toward the center front and center back, press the darts on the skirt LINING toward the side seams. When you pin the two layers of skirt fabric together at the waistline, you will have lots less bulk at the waistline seam! Mrs. Bob Christian, Fort Worth, Tex., wins this week’s Tailor Trix pressing board for this fine suggestion. Personals After viewing the Thanksgiving Day Detn^ Lion’s football game, Mr.^ and Mrs. Bruce Annett of Sylvan Shores Drive and their stms Roy dnd Bhice are hosts at a holiday dinner. Mrs. Roy Annett and Mrs. Prank Bach are among the guests. Coming from Dearborn for the event are Mrs. Jean Hayes and her sons John, a student at the University of Michigan, and Frank. Relatives from Canton, Ohio, have joined Mr. and Mrs. Fred V. Davis of Birmingham at the holiday table. They are Mr. and Mrs. Henry Timken. ★ ★ ★ Ann and Nancy Fisher helped to welcome members of their family to the holiday table provided by their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fisher of Cherokee Road. Coming from Midland were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Prosser and their children Steve and Jo Ann. Elmer Fisher of Grosse Pointe also attended. Other guests were Mrs. W. P.’’Ricamore, Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Schram and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Farrell. ★ ★ ★■ Mrs. Fritzi Stoddard of Ottawa Drive is spending the day with her daughter and granddaughters in Birmingham. She is the guest of Mrs. Maxine Nichols. Carol and Ann Nichols are home from Michigan State University for the holiday to visit with their, grandmother. Un-Gum Garment Apply an ice-cube to chewing gum stuck to a garment or upholstery-ior a few minutes. ! The ice will make the gum become brittle so that it can be scraped off. Steam Carpets to Raise Nap Use a hot iron on a damp cloth or a steam iron to raise parts of caorpet crushed down by furniture or ..walking. > Rut be careful not to press down on the iron, brush the spots gently after treating Use the smallest size plea-tic bowl covers to cover the cut ends of bologna or saur sage. Papered-to-Match ji When papering your chil-‘dren’s room, make them a matching toy chest. Cover a large, "but sturdy .ehrdboard box with leftover paper and top with a coat of clear shellac- . / Village Yarn Shop^ 311 W. University Driv* ■ ROCHESTER OL. 1-0371 IMPORTED end DOMESTIC yarni Optn Dally *:30 to S Dear Eunice: ’The “fake furs” are so beautiful, but look like they would be so difficult to work with. Gan you give lUs a few suggestions that might help? Mrs. J. P. Dear Mrs. J. P.: Fake furs are very popular with the more “sportive look” of today. A hat, vest, jacket, or coat (or even a coat or jacket lining) is the most. Fake fur isn’t too difficult to work with if you use a little caution and follow these directions. Don’t choose a pattern with much ease, gathers, or pleats betuiuse of the bulk. (Sleeves should be cut with the body, in other words, ragian sleeves. Collars and cuffs and picket flaps should be lined in a firm, mat(;hing colored fabric. i^eumo^e •FIBEI?LOCI^-'“' SALE! 77‘ 2pdirt$l.50 RUN-LESS SEAMLESS for longer wear. Reinforced toes and heels. 82 N. Saginow St. Open Mon. thru Sdt. ’til 9 R. M., > nr HEADING FOR A HOLIDAY- Featljer-lighl jackeli in wild colon and breathtaking print! . . . color-coordinated itretch ski-pant! (every one carrying the guarantee label). See the whole wonderful group at R B. Sketched: Wildf lower stretch parka in nylon. S. M. L. 35.00. Color-coordinated Gold Medal stretch ski pants, 30.00. Pontiac Tel-Huron. Birmingham. Royal Oak, Ferndale. Rochester North Hill Plaxa mning [r Id eas in Ch iristinas Gifts . . . . sclcclions of Quality and Fashion arc yours at llic Bloomfield Fashion Shop, all gifts will lie beantifnlly wrapped . . . Luxury in Aiigol Sealers with Dyed to imileli Skirts .^hwealcrs . . ■ 11.95 to 17.95 Skirti . . . 14.95 iltiiuiy aofl eiigoliirii «wenleia me Iniiib’a wool Riid fur fibin. Choose n si.uiil niirie V-tie< k over or ii two-ply ennllidin with hIiiiwI rollin'. Eaoli with iiiHivhliig akin in henvciily rolora. 'r\' ■■ ■ WaHimhIi* Irniher-palnwd I jiiiiiiilerloH O rhni Cpiove writl lenffih 8‘hutton length For alKiiiitiiii!, driving mill ell-nronnd wnrmlh mid wriir ■ . . she'll love these hi-hnik Orloii oerylli) gloves. The fit la grenl, Ipok greal^RiHl hnve eHSywAsh (WRcliotllly^' Rliek, brown, beige or red. S.M-L. Ski T og8 are ideal C.tliriNtiiia8 GiflH Jaoks in 1 7.95 to 29.95 Ski PnntR 14.95 to 19.95 (.oniiiiKoii Hiroiig I'nr SKI-HlIinUA . . «ki jRoknia loiiileil willi oiitibior fniib-ion. Pirk nylona or print rnillea, many witli coiicenled hooila. All warmth without weight. G—14 TIIK 1»(1N I lAC VHKSS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Camera and Equipment Specials! Winter Sporting Goods Specials! POLAROID'S COLOR PAK 1l CAMERA KIT Regularly 99.88! 93.17 ^ SA\MYE^3-D PROJEa-A'SHOW Discount Sale Price Gift-o-rama "I 1 QO Discount Price _|_J_*C3c3 INSULATED CO^RALLS 9.97 BUY A COMPLETE WINTER SKI OUTFIT NAME BRAND SKI BOOTS Gift-o-rama Discount Price 27.97 12.97 Get a full color flash pictures in one minute automatically! Outfit includes camera with electric eye, flash unit, and case. A terrific combination family gift! Enjoy 3-1) > viewing ... a large supply of reels are included! :• Also use as a projector. Save more! :• Men'i lightweight coverall* have nylon ihell and lO-oz. Orlon-acrylic insulation. Washable. Complete adult ski set offers multi-laminated skis with strong steel edges, full safety bindings and aluminum poles. Save! Children’s Complete Ski Set .... 11.97 Men, women, children! (irain leather double boot, padded longue, Goodyear wedge sole. HARWOOD ELECTRIC PROJECTOR TABLE KODAK'S CAROUSEL SLIDE PROJEaOR Gift-o-rama Discount Pric 7.87 Regularly 74.871 1 ^ Discount Price UJL*JL § WOMEN’S NEW Figure Skates 7.97 Royal Canadian Figure Skates HOCKEY SKATES! CANADIAN Hockey Skates 7.97 5.99 9.87 Fully equipped and wired table to end that pesky cord problem! -The four eliroine metal legs fold conveniently. Easy two-holt assemhiy. Show beautiful color slides automatically, powerful .'>()() wall bulb itrojecls brilliant pictures. Eqiiipiietl with built-in cord storage! Model No. f.(K). White l(M)% cowhide upper, and plaid liningH. Royal (.anatlian tempered steel blades. Sale! For men! Black cowhide uppers and temperjed steel * blades. (Colorful plaid linings. “('.anadian Beaver" skate* with tempered steel tubular blades! All leather up|ier*'. Men's pro model, all leather skates with tendon guards and (Canadian steel blades. FLEX GLARE-FREE HOME MOVIE LIGHTS y87 g87 C.lcur l.igbt Hlite Light Turn Klex’a l)ial-a4»ollincc knob lo get pttwcrfttl glare-free liglita. Use regular type A film wilh clear lighi, daylight film with hbte light. ) LENTICULAR SCREEN 8.87 ZEBCO “77” ROD ’n REEL EBONITE “300” BOWUNG BALL PUn BRAND BOWUNG BAGS FIN-BORE ICE AUGER Gift-o-rama Discount Pric 4.94 26.88 4.99 19.97 Tlie silver lenticular screen ituproves yotir slitles anil movies. .Sitirdy folditig slatid lets you store .ween easily! Ftill 40x40’’. Young rislierman's set I No. 6 monoflliment lii soliil fiberglass rod. Fr practice plug. “Regency 300” ball is niar-Tieliaed plastic! Red, blue, green, guld. black . . . Other inmiels Ion! Finland's own light-weiglil auger is a big 42” lung. Only .'> lbs. (aits full (iM^” hole. YANKEE DEVELOPING & PRINTING SETS BROWNIC Movie Camera Gift-tor radio sounds like.a iull-siKed table radio! Powered by 3 penlite batteries. CLOCK RADIO BY GENERAL ELECTRIC Brand Name 1 fi fi 7 Discount Price 4 ^ake up to music or alarm aiitoinaticallv w ith 4-tiil)e radio Iroin (»eiieral Electric. >iiooze alarm slumber switch. White or pey. General electric AM/FM table radio SAVE 40%yo50% ON ALL YOUR REMODELING COSTS! We feature a complete selection of paneling, ceiling tile, insulation, doors and lumber. REMEMBER! YOU GAN CHARGE IT AT Kmart! PANELING SPECIALS • Bi^rtrl Name Discount Prici o-liihe \VI/F\t table radio with 1” Dynapower speaker, vernier precision tunmji, aiiloinalie Ireipiencv control. Honey heijie color. >ave! J24.88 PHILIPPINE MAHOGANY K-Man DISaiLMS on ■ \ iUli lilt IMtS~ Take advanta|:(^ ol’ K-inart's everyday diseiutiil'prices on nationally advertised ap|dt-ancc8. Choose IVoni stieli i'anious names as (General Electric, .Sunbeam, Presto, Mary Proctor, ^ou can always depend on K-niart (piality. And you can say “Charge it” too! viy ► First Grqde ’ Satin Smooth ' Ideal for Recreation Room, Attic, Bedroom, Etc. ' Handy 4'x7' Panels $998 MONEY DOWN 4'x8' Panels Also Availablo new proctor-silex steam and DRY IRON SUNBEAM MULTICOOKER FRYPAN ROYAL COTE hy Masonite Corp, ► Nationally Advertised > Rich Looking, Durable Finish ' Your Choice: Walnut, Oak or Cherry 4’x4» Panel 4’x7» PBEFINISNEG SANDALWOOD 4W WALNUT SHADE “DUSK” $388 6.97 Brand Name Discount Price Plenty of Bteuin for easier ironing. ‘Clear view’ heel for ironing in any direelion. Kiisy-to-scefiihric dial. Lightweight. 14.47 VnT liiKury Finished ^MSLANPER” 4'x7» EXOTIC BLONO BEECH Charge It! Brand Name IHsconnt !*rie Large iii*e hiiffel style Siniheum fry[»an hakes, .fries and stews with euntrolled heal. Completely inimersihle. Charge it! Ideal for Dining Room, Breakfast Room and Kilelien 4'x7' and 4'x8' Panels Available at similar savings!____________________ 4^x8^ “FROITWOOD’' BRUCE PANELING, MOISTURE SEALED, ^ FIREPRDDF, A TREMENDDUS VALUE! ^ J NO MONEY DOWN-CHARGE IT! ACCOUSTICAL CEILING TILE 1x2 FURRING STRIPS . 2(mm3S( ■ JHN y Straight Stock ^H^Vlnch '. 12 X 12 i.luMiiiv Ihmgn — iras/mMfi * !3^H I wit FIR $aunre foot i: STRIPS A Straight Stock W W^Kach CORDLESS AUTOAAATIC PRESTO TOOTHBRUSH 10.88 Two free tubes of Colgate toothpaste Riillei'y operated Presto nuloiiiiiliL hHisli eleans your leelli profeHsioiudly. hnishes with nylon bristles inrliided PRESTO CAN OPENER and KNIFE SHARPENER Brand Name Discount Price 12.88 ie tooth' lly. l''oiir Handy appliiiiire twosome. Takes the work out of opening all shape and size eans . . , keeps knives riilling-sharp. it days only. ExmM QaalHy INTERIOR DOORS /VLL POPULAR SIZES Priced from Shop iind (!oinpiirn Johm-Mamrilla FIBERGtASIMSUUTlOH WaAmU lliick aliiniiiiuin 2x4 8-foot FIR straight Stock Ranal of 1,0001 Uiai 4'x8' -1/8 inch HARDBOARD 3^ ^88 Mccln Kll A Sinndnnh Cood for inside or outside framing. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD i tHBi PON'^IAC PRESS. THUfiSDAY, NOVEMBEE S6, 1964^ CHRISTAAAS DECORATIVE DISCOUNTS Aluminum Christmas Trees Easy-To’-Assemble *^Pom~Pom^\Tree With Metal Base Have a decorative CKristmas year after year with‘an ea8y-to.\ 1 uKSS. TliL.HSt)AY, NOVEMBER 26. I9(>4 VALUES GALORE ON CJIRISTMAS TOYS ZA-ZA ZOOM TRUCK! Battery Operated Sound Motor Toy Dixcotint 6.77 Spectacular MOTOR UNIT 2.97 21 Vi” polyethylene clump truc;k comes with battery-operated “Za-Za Zoom” motor for realistic sound. Two separate controls. cxlri \ Make* roar! Plaxtir, 8” X 31/2”. t he 2 ‘-U" balleries. TIC TIC TIME BOMB XKE JAGUAR SPORTSGAR Toy Discount Spectacular 7.97 Great new pame for all ages — It’s unpredictable—No one knows when it will “explode” Charge It! Pla.tic willi pari* tliat move. 21V4“ loop. J2” wheelbase. Spectacular Red polyethylene motor scoot^with shinj silver trim. 2.3” long, 17 Vi” high, 26” AVMITI/lilCYGLES Bendix Coaster Brakes! GALAXIE BIKES Deluxe Features al Low Price! 29.88 (!iistoni twin light, chrome fender and ri;ti, white sidewall tires. 26” Hoy’s/chareoal; Girl's, liir<(uoise. This beauty of a bike is deluxe eqiiipjied with clrroine fenders and rims, ball bearing peclals, chain gnard, kick stand, safely reflector, luggage cariier, and twin lights. Girls’ model in blue, boys’ modclj'ii red. Charge it now at K-inarl! BIG SAVINGS ON ADORABLE DOLLS! ^^STONY’^ THE FIGHTING Gala, WITH EQUIPMENT SHEPHERD SHAG DOG Toy Discount 2.27 spectacular 3.47 He’s over 11” tall, of |m»1v with vinyl head, painted detail, moving joinls. 'rriie-scale field gear, arms incluiled. Soil ir,” looi!-|.itr I>ln4iy ili>a». lull', helps . . . black cars. NEW POS TAMMY DOLL }{ inches of delight! All vinyl with flexible arms, legs, body. IVellily coiffed rooted hair... 2.Z6 Charge it 23" DOLL THAT WALKS Waleh her eve* liplil up when »h« are* ihi* eliiiriiisr. .'t iill-vinvl *lyle« willi pixie or hohhrii hair ... weariiip percale lire**, skirl, plaid jumper 4.58 “TEARIE DEARIE^'- DOLL CKarge it I'or lillle inollier*! iSlie drink*,i i all vilivl. I’lii-lie paekape emiile enli. liiitliiiK'lle. 2.9Z (.harge it FUN AaiVITIES FOR LEISURE HOURS! LARGE CUDDLE BEAR AGGRAVATION K,.1.37 MOUSETRAP 3.96 <:iile II Ciiddlv hiihv hear III velvely-doli loop pile pIiihIi . . . Ileipe, l.iliper or Aprieol. round lioiird I'ir.l. I'lin! nbjecl: lru|i opponent's mouse! MONOPOLY GAME ahallenfging for A H A$(es 2.74 Hpgulnrlr Jtpguln S.74I Timeless game of real estate. Buy, rent and sell “property.” Richest player wins! Hours of iiinusetnent. NEW ELEaRIC CHORD ORGAN! ,7Treble and 6 Chord Keys jg96 TABLE SET! Ineluding 2 Vinyl Chairs 18" X 2i” while lllller lop I* msr resislani; willi iiielsl liihular lep*. Chrunie-rinith llielal liiiek*, lepn on eliiiir*. Children learn to play lovely imisic by readuig numbers, letlcjir* iiislead of notes on this finely made elecirie cliitrd oi> gall by Magnus. Kegtnres on-off swlleh, voUmio oon-Irol. Conipaet plulie cabinet model weighl only 13 lbs. 19Vi” wide, 10” , deep, UVii” high. Great fiin ’ { for kids! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD / V. J -'L r- THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. NQVEHBE^R 26. 1964 Gift-O'Rama Ditcqunt Price! Repeat of a Sell-out! New Jac Style! MEN’S SHIRTS Made in the U.S.A.! For a LimitedTinie Only Continentals, button-downs, perma-stays, ivys, and hi-boys in stripes, solids, embroideries, checks and fancy trims. Chodse from broadcloths, acetate/ray* ons, challis, wovens and iri-descents. Sizes S, M, L, XL. Save! 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GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD . i; ^ I ,^HK PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 mtm Wbtk imi m # # B^SEUING TV SnUTORESTER IN HISTORY... SEALY Hollywood Bed SALE Sealy 4*Pc. Twin Bed Set y%MPLE FREE PARKING EASY CREDIT TERMS Both Stores Open Friday, Saturday and Monday Evening Til 9 P.M. Esconsroivi’Y' fiirnitiir© F03STTIA.C • AOINAW • jr» a-Twox SXJBXJi^BjftLN fu-rniti-ir© draytojt fta»«n DI3CUB HWV. • on. A-ORRl , THE PONTIAC PRESS, THVRSDAY^ NOVEMBER 26, 1964 ★ ★ ★ Huskies Look for Big Year Last November Pontiac Northern coach Dick Hall and Walled Lake mentor Bob Bolton each went out on the proverbial limb and forecast aiid Inter-Lakes League championship for their teams. It did not surprise anyone that PNH went on to claim its almost annual basketball title. The fact that Walled Lake was only a game behind at the season’s end may have raised a few eyebrows. • At any rate, the two coaches are right back where they started in that campaign and this time tiiey each have company. Bob Taylor of Waterford— perhaps remembering the night Inter-Lakes the Huskies scored 104 points against the township quintet-sides with Hall and even takes the Skippers over Walled Lake. Farmington’s Jack Quiggle, admittedly in a building year, agrees with Bolton that this might be the year of the upset. He, also, has Waterford finishing second. (Northern has won or shared the title in four of the five years of I-L competition.) FINE YEAR Hall has high hopes for a fine PNH season. The Huskies front line of Roger Hayward, Dave Sudbury and Larry Frye is the tallest in the school’s history, each one reaching 6-4. ★ ★ ★ The problem could be at guard, though, since only John Bailey has extensive varsity experience. Larry Cushist and Bob Harris will have to provide help. Hayward could key the Huskies to an outstanding season. A fine rcbounder and excellent shooter, he needs only to refine his defensive abilities to rate with the best in the state. Walled Lake finished with six victories in its last seven games In 1983-M, and Bolton expects the Vikings to pick up the momentum quickly. He has Pat Godfrey and Ric^ Hughes returning at guards, Stan Grailt and Matt Planck (both 6-3) back at forwards and football star Roger Ruminski (6-3, 260 pounds) at center. ★ ★ ★ There are six returning mopo-gram bearers at Waterford, led by top scorer Rick Ziem, a ^nior guard. Dick Miller and Lemaux have been regulars for two years. Transfers Bob Adsit (PNH) and Dave Kline (West Bloomfield) could prove very helpful. Taylor enters his second year at the helm determined to erase the memory of last season’s 4-13 record. A game with Pontiac Central tomorrow night will open the Skippers’ campaign. The Farmington * team has John Olander and Roy Leach back from last year’s starting array, but lacks any height. Coach Quiggle intends to have the Falcons run and play a lot of defense to offset the lack of rebounding. FINE TOUCH - Pontiac Northern’s 64 frontliner is considered one of the finest shooters in the county. Kettering Rve Riddled; Romeo, L'Anse in Race Wide-Open | Race Seen in Northwest | A wide-open race is being predicted in the Northwest Suburban basketball League. North Farmington is given a slight edge, mainly because of N( Northwest | the return of Ronald Watson (64) and John McDonald (6-3) Oak Park has five veterans returning, but the Redskins again are predicted to finish last. Grove, Thurston and Franklin are given a chance to win. Emmanuel Has Offensive Void to Overcome Offensively (here In n big void at Emmanuel (3iristian Seliool this basketball season Gone Is Oakland Counly scoring leader Ralph Wingate who hit at a 24 polnt |M*r game clip while (lie I^aneers wore winning but four of 1.*) tries, Bill Yost has siieeeeiled John Malone as coach of the JCnunanuel quintet and he is searching for a rcbounder or tws who ran get the ball linrk to playmakors Tim Mayer and Mike IlkkmoK. Rpti lilllingham, Aubrey Grogan aiMl Harrell Hutto are in the battle for' the forward bsrthi; while John Allen gets first call at Center Coach Joe Duby sums up Kettering’s chances in the Tri-County League basketball race with one word: “Help.” The defending champion Cape tains were riddled by grauda-tion. But the two returnees, Tim McGrath and Jim Nyberg, saw considerable action last season. ★ ★ ★ Romeo and L’Anse Creuse are poised to struggle over the crown should Kettering yield its hold. Oxford and Lapeer are rebuilding. Nyberg begpn last season as a starter for the Captains but later became the No. 6 man in Duby control - ball style. He averaged seven points a game. Metirath worked his way into the lineup late In the season. The 6 - 1 senior averaged only three points but his efforts under the backboards played an important part in the Captains finishing the regular season undefeated. Nyberg, also a senior, is six-feet tall. Mike Shipman, Dave Dodd and Dale Manning, all seniors, are bidding for starting berths with sophomores Ken McLean and Bob Van Bargan and Juniors Joe Racynski and Jay Nash. Romeo has four letterwlnners who top the six-foot mark on hand to try and improve on last season's fourth place finish. THIRD SEASON Tim Quinn, the All-State football center, who led the Bull- dogs in scoring during 1963-64 with 215 points, begins his third sea.son as a regular. He’s 6-2. So is junior Bob Rowley. Both are 200-pounders who use their weight to good advantage while rebounding. John Chapman and Rod Rohloff, both seniors, are 6-1 and 6-0, respective- 'y- Oxford coach Lee Noftz is looking for the underclass members of the team “to supply the spark if we intend to do anything this year.” Roger Miller, who scored 105 points in six games last sea- in before breaking an elbow, returns. S Dave Houck, the other top er returning, is not expected to see action until after Christmas l)cciiuse of a football Injury. Rick l-'ox atKl Chuck Cullen arc returning lettermen who figure in Noftz’ plans. The'’coach is taking a close look at sophomore Rick Miholck and juniors Mike Darling and Mike Lantry. Other hopefuls are Mickey Cummings and Ron Shamblin, both sophomores. Miller is the talle.st at 6-2. Central Five Counts on JV's to Fill Gaps Arthur Hill, Saginaw Pre-Season Choices in SVC Cage Race If all Saginaw Valley League schools each had rally two letter-winners returning, who were reserves last seaSon, Pontiac Central would probably be conceded' the basketball championship. But this isn’t the situation. The Chiefs lost their top eight players at graduation after finishing second to Flint Central and then reaching the semifinals of the state Qass A tournament. Flint Central lost a like number and then had its two returnees transferred to Flint Northern Western in the school district shuffle. Arthur Hill, with six veterans on hand, is rated the preseason choice. Saginaw is being eyed as a challenger with Flint Central and PCH battling for third. Midland, Bay City Central, Flint Northern and Flint Southwestern all return more letter- Although the coaches in Die Wayne-Oakland League do not agree on who will be first at season’s end, tiiey are almost unanimous in naming the has-ketlmll title contenders. ★ ★ * There are three, and two of them were in a season-long fight for the football crown — k^raxl and Holly. Bloomfield Hills, defending cochampirai, joins them in the pre-season cage pri^osis. Of course, the three coaches men than the 1-2 teams of a season ago. How, then, can PCH and Flint Central be regarded above all but the Saginaw schools? LOST ONE Pontiac Central’s junior varsity lost only to Flint Central, by one point, last season. The junior Chiefs finished the campaign with 12 straight wins. Flint Central’s JV’s were just about as tough. PCH coach Fred Zittel is counting on members of the junior varsity to supply this season’s team. Only Carl Arnold and George Cole return as lettermen. Arnold probably will start in the backcourl Friday when the Chiefs open their season at Waterford. Zittel will probably use as many players as possible. Bob Wiggins or Jeff Lane probably will see considerable action at guard. John Hooper (6-3). WilUe Adams (6-2) and Jessie Evans (6-2) are battling for the front line berths along with Cole (6-2) and Ross Lud-wlck (6-1). ★ W A- “Because of a lack of varsity experience, we may get off to a slow start," said Zittel. "We lack height and experience, but we hope to make up for it with quickness and desire.” Thf rorKdl) 4. Flint __ i: 5^^E’S 3 Contenders Seen in Wayne-Oakland of the expected contenders eadi the uncomfortable favorite’s role to the other. Hills has a slight edge in the first place votes bast^ on its over-all height and corps of returning letter wit The Barons have shooting ace Greg (Andy) Anderson back as a 6-1 outside | player, and 6-3 guard Joe Mehger can also put the bkll in the basket. Dave Gottlieb (6-3), Mike Righter (6-3), and Jeff I^Bandt (6-2) are rangy frontliners vdio will have to provide the re-boundit^ for coach Hal Henderson. Henderson predicts a Milford title.o The Redskins have six players back from last year’s 4-11 squad and have the height to equal any team in the circuit. Coach Chuck Schroeder can call on 6-3, 230-pound John Griffin, 6-2 Mike Fremlin, 6-2 Don Hackbart.as exp^ienced fi*rait-liners, (dus in'omising newcomer Greg Soltysiak (6*2%). In toe backcourt are GaiT Newcomb, Bart Mqntante and Jdm Kaspar — toe lattor returning after a twdfear hy-ofi. Schroeder, tooagh, UtosS Holly's chances. Reserve coach Ben Shmtnan has takra over the Rrdiico V8r>« sity. He lades Om eiitdabdtog bac^kboard {H-oto^on but does have solidly built forwards idio will command respect. Tom Faganyand Mark PHialen will lead the Holly attack from the backcourt and could be two of the best in the league. Defending cochUmpion Clarks-trai also has a new coach in Bud McGrath. Last year’s fine 16-3 record was primarily a seniors’ effort and he has a lot of work ahead of him. Promising ^uard Dan Fife was a regular as a freshman last year. He returns with Ron Lipp^, Gary Pearsrai and John Wilberg as letter winners who saw much action. Northville, also, commands respect led by 6-2 center Jerry Imsland, 6-3 Rick Milne and several rangy jayyee graduates. Ihe problem again may be in the backcourt which is uiiat plagued coach Dave Longridge las( campaign. ★ * ★ Standout Dan Greig is gone from West Bloomfield's lineup and coach Art Paddy has a rugged searqh to replace the guard. Rick Hacht, Jay Williams and Tim Moller return up front but no experienced performers are available in the back court. New mentor Jim Korowin at Brighton has promising junior center Bruce Evenson to build with, and Mike Stellwagen, a 60 two-letter winner at forward. The coach promises an aggre.s-sive team bent on improving last year’s 1-16 record. Clarenceville went with young pro,spects last year but does not appear to have enough strength to be a contender this time. RETRIEVE — The Baron.s of Bloomfield Hills are looking to 63 senior Mike Righter for help on the backboards as they bid fqr the Wayne-Oakland League crown. Lettef Winners Scarce at Utica's Practices Only two returnees from a 4-II team is not a bright hoop picture and this is what Utica Coach Carlo Muzi must face in his current practices. ★ ★ ★ One of the letter winners back is Dan Drca who averaged 11 points a game as a sophomore. A 6-2 forward, he should have some help up front from 61 Dave McIntosh, also a monogram wearer Muzi is working 6-4 Bub Hidur in the pivot and another junior at guard, Gary Rodeski. Te*d Huefth is a senior bidding for a backcourt berth. 3 Rate High in O-A I^FIIH** Frtui Fh#t» CHANGE TtMlN - Wollral Uke fcMiltmll reliables Pal Godfrey (22) and Terry l.«hman (30) have put awey their gridiron garb and hav« donittd haakatbaU ahorta in an effort to will N|Mits III the Vikings backcourt., A three-way battle for basketball honors Is shaping up in ^le Oakland A League. ★ * * The three teams wi(h hope for a l(H)|) title are defending hampion I’roy. Lake Orion and Warren Cousino. Avondale, Rwhester and Fitzgerald eiiuld pull a few surprises, and with some help from the reserves, (Clawson and Madison could provide ii few headaches for the favorites. Lake Orion conch George Ellas concedes the loss of Jon ucksay and IBruce Frit* through grudiiiillon will hurt the Dragons. "Rut wo coui(| servo as N|s)ilors In the loaguo If wo 'an get some help from last years' junior varsity." The Dragons will have high-scoring Dave Phillips (6-0) at guard, along with Jim Grecnhill 161). PhlllipN tossed tn 220 points last season. OTHER VETERANS Twi) otlier returnoes with a lot of axparience art cantor Dettnli Brophy (M) and forward mil Hamilton (6-3). Soph- omore Ro^ Kibbe (6-1) could be .some of the help Ellas Is looking for from the JV squud. Avondale has a tall squad build around center Dan Me Coskey (6-.'l). 'Hie other Yellow •Jacket starters stand 6-0. Seniors Lynn lliorpe and Roger Hill will team up at the forward posts, with Tom Reek and John Anderson handling the gunril slots, ThorjM^ dumped In 263 |M)lnts for the Jackets last year, qvor-aging 16.6 a game. ^ Rochester has hot - scoring guard ilruce McDonald on hnnd for another season. The 5-11 playumker posted a scoring average of 21.7 Inst year to rank fourth In OaKInnd Gounty. FORWARDS two otoor votoraiM on too squad nr« forwards Bruce Campbell (6-0) anil Bob Mills (61). Troy has 6-4 center Chris Bencham returning to give the (^)lts some lialance. Beacham scored 135 markers last year. Teaming with Beacham will be Ken Holder (6-0) and Doug Schroeder (611) at forwards and Itud llelher (67) at guard. Cousino, led by 6-7 Greg Fruehe, will floor the tallest unit in the loo|>. Jim Fllzmor-rlco (0-5) and Drew Plshn (6-0) will hold down the forward slots, PIsha led the team In scoring hist year with an average of 15 points a game. A A W Madison has four veterans returning led by forwards Jim Wllfong (62) and Gary Knoche (61). Jeff Plopa (6-6) could keep Fitzgerald In the race with a big point piraluetlon. 1110 Sunior 'enter tallied 140 |K)1uIb In IU0.T in Cnutlno tu 1 Na^iltr LScr 4 Returnees Help Cranes Cranbrouk ran up an Impressive 163 basketball record last campaign and has four letter winners buck to bolster Coach Hugh Davison Is molding tlia Cranaa around captain and oantor Jim Ballay, ,i (Ml two-year veteran. Jon Pavloff at 6-4 Is n sophomore who may prove very valuable. Another veteran Is 6-8, twd^ letter winner Tom Van Horn, II forward. Bnekeoiirt strength sliould crane from .Sid Barth-well and Bu** Mleras, lioth six-foot guardr. The Cranes are expected to stress defense, rebounding and running. I, T THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. ]^OVEMBER 26, 1964 Prep, College Winter Sports Schedules I OLSM 5 Psrodlifll GhoiC^ •N. H«v«n . . ■DRYDEN F M 0 1W;B. city F t-‘CAPAfc ? ^ 12—‘Armada ■i ^ 16-*ALMONT ARAMDA N 25-MarVjyll|# j 22-' D 4—'Almont J 29—' “ ‘l-'MEMPHIS D l»-*ORYDEN F 5-*Orydw . J 8-‘A. Bay F 12-*A. BAY J 9—RICHMOND F 1*-*B. City J 15-*Capac -AVONDAIuE D 4-*R0CHESTER-F 2-*L. Orion D 11-*Troy F S-*Cousino 0 1»-*L, ORION F 12-*MADISON J S-Ox«ord F I6-*Rochester J A-*AAadlson F 19-*Fitzgarald J U—‘FltZBOrald F 23—‘COUSINO J 22-*CLAWSON F 26-*CLAWSON J 29-*TROY BAY CITY CENTRAL N 22—Fenton J 94_»F i D 1-‘Sagl _ .-*P. CENTR'L D n—‘FLINT S'waatern D lg-*F. CENTR'L - J S-MacARTHUR J 29—‘HANDY F 2—‘ARTHUR H. F 5-*Mldland F y-FLINT N'VyESTERN F 12-*F. NORTH'" J 22—‘MIDLAND F 2A-MacArthur BAY CITY HANDY _ . _...T. HILL D 4-‘Mldland D 1)-‘FLINT NORTHERN D 1S-Alpena J a—‘Saginaw J IT-^FLINT N'WESTERN J IJ-’PON.CEN’L , 'FLINT CENTRAL »-‘BC Central 2—‘SAGINAW 5-*FLINT S'WESTERN Southwestern MacAVhu^' 12—‘Pon. Centr 19-»BC C'NTR 2A-‘Flint C'ntr _ l-SALESIAN 0 11—DETROIT CC D l»-DeL8Saila D 1»-DeL8Sa J Higt J IJ-CATHEDRAL D 4-Romulu-D S-BERKLEY D 11—’John Glenn D Ig-'THURSTON J 2«-‘J0HN glen J 30-B. HILLS F 5—‘Thuraton F 12--OAK PARK F 13—Southfield BIRMINGHAM SEAHOLM I 1»-*SOUTHF'LD »_• Berkley 15- ‘FERNDALE -*RO Kimball BLOOMFIELD HILLS O 1-OAK PARK J 23-NORTHVILl E 0 4—BRIGHTON J 29-W. BLM'FLD 0 11-W. Bloomllald J 30-B. Grove* D IB-Mllford . F 5—MILFORD J F-Holly F 9-Clark»fon J 9-clarkston f 11-holly 1 IS-C'LRN'VLE “ ■■ ------ J 22-Brlghton F 19-Clm'vllle D 1—HOWEl O 11--‘Ci-ARKS ‘HOLLY ■N'VILLE BRIGHTON ■ 2*-- u 29—‘ 1 .o—‘HOLLY »—‘N'VILLE £ 9-‘C'vllle F 15—*W. Bloom. F u 11— '■ 3-~*A. BAY D 1^-'ALMONT F 5—‘Alrnont j t'N^lSSkVI .—-AKAHAUM 9—‘DRYDEN , CAPAC D 4-*B. City J'24-l. City , D »-l. CITY J 29-'B. CITY O II-'Dryden F l-'DRYDEN 0 l»-‘A. BAY F $-*A. Bay ??r.wrs J )2-‘N Haven F l9-‘Armada J 15-'ARMADA F 24-‘ALMONT J 22—‘Almont 3 4-MILFORD CLARKSTON -Mlllord CLAWSON 3 1-LAMPHERE j IJ-'I^OY ) 4-*Couslno J 22-'Avondale ) J-LIncoln J 29-*MADISON 3 l|-‘MadlSon r r- riuvr...« 3 l»-‘FITrORLD F .J-.'L; ORION 5_.L Orl^ F I2-;R'CH'STR iT'COu'sINO F 2*- ‘AVONDALE 14 O Park' F 19- Kennedy 2#-Tourney F g-MadiKin U-Or’o'Jes M 3 ‘WESTERN r-VciT)^ F lyr-H.^^B^ACH 15-‘H Beach F 24 PH. North M-PH. NORTH DETROIJ^MKNTRy D^Y^^ F 11-W. Woods m'aUMEF F I»- 6; FOIN ■ V. WOODS F 20-OL Laket . - ------ ^ 24-Tourney nva. > 5 ‘GROOVES )Y F 12 *4. Glenn ,nev F l» ‘FRANKLIN 9L1nN F M *0. PARK nil F 22-R. Union DRYOBN •CAPAr" j 19-‘N? HAVEN ?ATaS:"” F r ‘Ijfiil^ADA , , .. ALMONT .‘AlmonI M U ‘Memphis ‘MBMPHII F 19 ‘IV, City ‘11, CITY F 24. ‘A|. BAV bast DBTROIT r«tl J 22«‘F. HUROF L klMBALl J 19 -‘Ml. Clem» |. WATFRP'O F 2. patndole l-G. I'OINIF " ‘ I oii:G"V()iNti- F .5 ‘ROBFVILLII n II Farmington F 12 *P. Huron J » ‘MT Cl EM. P 14 Kimball J 15 ‘Roseville F J i|. FIRNDALE F 2* 'F. Norlhar ' iMMANUPt B]l J 1^ w '^mSi* IF&a;. p li-i. <;on"{hin F 19 NB Si. Maty F »-Boyi T'ihg „ , ...ley 0 f N. FARM. 1 h,7i,'o . 14-PLYMOUTH J 22-‘Pon. North. nf!?, Roseviu e FA|IM»I 13 4-‘II. MIthaei Biti VVbI? .................... TON OLI J I-‘IT. MICH, ■ *0L MARY ‘OL Lakes ■“ Pretleticjt D B-IMSfVILLE J 22-‘Htahl'd Parle BlJlfegy ^FVOTVIiPT J B-*KIMBALL P ifl'^^baTl J 12-PT. HURON F 19-»SEAH0LM PBRNDALB IT. JAMH N 27_St. BenadM j s-St. The.___ D 4-ST. GR^R'y J B-ST. BENEDICT D n-^aSalla^ J 15-$t. Gragory - 15-ST. CECILIA J 22-DESALLE 0 18-St. Rita J 29-St. Cacilla J 2—ST. A'DR'W F S-ST. RITA FLINT CENTRAL 0 4-FLINT SW‘ F l-MIDLAND* 0 11-flint NW F 5-Fllhf N.‘ O il-BC Cant.* F 9-Ftlnt SW t 22-FLINT N.‘ F 24-BC HANDY- FLINT NORTHERN ■„ I 1-‘MIDLAND J 24—*BC CENT. I 4-YPSILANTI J 29—‘Arthur Hill I I—F. N'west'rn F 2—‘F. S'wesf. I 11—‘Handy F 5—‘F. CENT. 1 1».^SAGINAW F 12—‘8C Central »-*P. Central F 19-*ARTHUR H 1S^*F. S-WEST. F^3-F. N'WEST. 22—‘F. Cant. F 24—Hamtramck FLINT SOUTHWESTERN I—Pontiac N. J 24—‘Saginaw 4-*Flint C. J 29-*PontIac C. 0 1-BAD AXE J 1S-‘0ECK'VI'LE 0 S-PORT HOPE J 22—‘N. Branch D 11-‘MILL'GT0N J 29-‘Milllngton D ll-*l. City F 2-P. AUSTIN 0 28-Caro Tourney F 5-‘l. CITY J S:-N. Huron F 19—‘Deckervllle J 9—P. Austin F 2B-Port Hope J 12—Ubiy F 24-*N. BRANCH 0 S—Oak Park : 5—‘KIMBALL = 5—BRIGHTON 0 1-Almonf -•MILL'GTON D 8-Mlllord 0 15—Clarkston LAKE ORION -•Fitzgerald F 2-‘AV0NDALE _ .. -‘Avondala F S-‘Clawton 0 19-Oxford F Ht^COUSINO J 5—-CLAWSON F 19—‘Roehettef J B—‘Covtino F 20-OXFORD J l$-*R'HESTER F SS-nroy J 21—‘A5ADIS0N F lS-‘Madlson J 19—‘F'GERALD D 1—F. Byachar J il-‘ROMEO 0 4_‘L'Anta J »-‘L'ANSE D S-F, K&SRS. F 5-*K#tterlng ’1-‘KETTER'G F 12-0i|^ ■ -------G F 19 -‘Oxford D 18—FLUSHING D 8-FRASER _____ .= 5—‘OXFORD —WARREN F 9—LAMPHERE -C'OALE F 12—‘Romeo -‘ROMEO F 24-‘KETTER G LIVONIA CLARENCEVILLE *-‘HOLLY J 22-‘Hollv -‘MILFORD I 12-0. HASTON J 29-‘Milford F 19-‘B. HILLS J 14-N. FARM. F 24-‘W. BIm'fld LIVONIA FRANKLIN D 5-WAYNE j 24-Bentley D 1l-‘0. PARK J »-‘0. Park I5-‘THURST0N I 1S-*Roche*ter F l2-*Avondala I ie-*HURON F 9-L. Creuse i-*L. East F I2-‘L. EAST 12-L. CREUSE F 19 ‘C'DAIE 15 ‘C'dal* F 24 *H. Wood* 2i-‘H. WOODS MILFORD 4-‘Clarkston J 2*-‘Brlghfor B-KETTERINO J 29-‘C'VLLE . HILLS F 5-‘B. Hills . BIm'fld F 12-‘W. BLM'FD 'TH'VLLB F l3-*Norlhvllla ‘CLK'Sl ‘BRIGHTON MILLINGTON 0 8 VA55AR J 22 ‘I. CITY - II -‘H. Beach J 24-Vaisar 18-‘DECK'VIL'E J W-‘H. BEACH 22-MAYVILLE F 5-Deckervllle 28-^Tourney F 11-‘N. BRANCH 8-‘N. Branch ., F 23-Raeae 12 RBESB F 2*-‘l. City MOUNT CLBMENS I5-‘P. HURON J 29 ‘E. DETROIT NEW HAVBN I ‘ORYOtN .1 29-*Orydan I C. Valley f 2-‘Almonl I ‘ALMONT F 5 .‘MiMPHII ■ -------- ■ - 1, c,yv I -‘Mamph *B. cily ) I! ADA m I 1t~*D«cktrv( l5-‘l.'ciV*^' J?:Wc NORTH ORANCM ISTON J 24-Petk ‘ J 19-‘DBCK'VILLE P 5—Romeo F 9-ALMONT F l|-.‘MII]l^on II ‘Holly j M ‘Blrn'iiil H. If iiV.'A'ii'i,'' NORTH FARMINGTON I 4-Kelterlng J »-SOUTH'FLO I S-Farmlngton J 29-‘TH'RSTN I ll-‘Thor$fon F S--0. 'Park 1B--0. PARK F 12-‘FR 19-Butler . ... ... ) 22-LOYOLA F 20-ILLINOIS (Sooth) F 22-^at OSU ) 28-LA Tourn; F 27 -Wisconsin J 23-Villanova 5—CHRISTIAN 7-J. CARROLL J 25-Xavie " 1 30-TOLEDO F 3—W. MIchig, F 4-N. DAME 8-LOYOLA D 12-W. ONT. I 14-XAVIER I 19—INDIANA I 22-COLp. ST. F 12-WINDSOR "" "•■-BALD-WALL. D 29-M'TOR C 2S-HILLSDALE le games In capitals Wrestling Schedules O 14-Cranbrook J 21—‘Thurston 0 18—Southfield J 29—*J. GLENN 0 23-SEAHOLM F 4-*0ak Park D 18—‘Southfield F ‘'s—‘sbuTHF'Lb DETROIT COUNTRY DAY D 3-WILLIAMS'N . _ D 8—Clarencevilla J 22—L. EAST D 11-Oakland Co. F 4-CLINTON D l2-0akland Co. F 9-Cranbrook 0 15-Sorrows F 13—DEXTER J 8-W. LAKE F 19-Clinfon J 12-CLAR'VILLE F 26-Regional D lO-N. FARM. D 15-RO DON. D 18-Oakland Cty 19—Tournament 7-E. Detroit 14-ROSEVILLE F n-O'vllle F 14-N. Farm F 20—League NORTHVILLE I 2S-BENTLEY J 19 -Clar'nc I 1 R. Rouge I 29-R. Un I 3 N. F'M'GTON ^ Eaglets Picked toWearCrown Fdvorite Possesses Height, Balance Thp for top honors tn the Northwest Parochial !/eagu« i.s expected to he waged by a couple of St. Mary basketball squads - Royal Oak and Orchard Lake. ROSM walked away with the title last year, posting a 12-0 mark, and the Irish have a''lot Parochials of talent returning from t h a championship unit. 0I.5M, loaded with experience, is the best bet in the loop to remove the crown from the Irish. PONTIAC CENTRAL I 19—P. HURON J 21-*F. Central MtMerald i. PARK . D 8-KETTERING /. LAKE t*WATEI?FX I—Roseville ROYAL OAK DONDERO I—Birm. Groves I D 8-OAK PARK I D 11-12—County D 15—Farmington ■ J 28-FITZGER'LI MAPLE SUPPORT Kitmingham Seaholm started the season Tuesday with a win over Royal Oak Dondero. Sharing in the Maple victory were (left to right) Jim Snider, Tom Snyder, Mike Fremuth and Thomas Starr. Snyder collected 10 points and Snider added eight. , Seaholm Stretches Over Circuit Foes 0 22-RO KIMB'L D 4-Lakevlew D 15-H. Park F 9-H.____ D 18-P. Northern F 12—*MT. CLEM'S J 5—H. PARK F 19—WATERFORD N 27-KIMBALL "J 21-0. POINTB D 4-0. Pointe F 24—FOROSON b 5-SOUTH'FLD. F 1-B#rkley 0 11-MONROE F S-Monro# ROYAL 0 D 27—Dondero 4-E. Detroit -•BERKLEY -*H. Perk -Mt. Clemans -‘FERNDALE -‘E. DETROIT 22—‘Seaholm ^ ROYAL fl 4-‘ST. FRED. y J 15-‘OL ST. M. J l9-‘0r LAKES J 29—‘SI. Michael F 5—‘SI. Agatha ROYAL OAK shrine 17-RED. S. M. J. 14-R'dlord S. M. I-Benedicllne J 22-BENED'CTN M'BRSE F 12-Sarvlte F 14-Calh. L'ge playoffs open SAGINAW ARTHUR HILL ‘FLINT N. I u—-ronnac c. r /—‘BC Central I 18-‘FLINT SW F 5-MacArthur 5-MacARTHUR F 9-Saglnaw 8-‘Fllnl C. F I2-‘M1DLAND FARMINGTON 0 D 3-E. Detroll D 8-F. Rock .HAZEL Park ) 4-P. Central J 29-SEAHOLM ) 11—Seaholm F 2—R. Huron 1 18-KIMBALL . F 5-Klmbell ) 23-P. NORTH'N F 9—Detroit CC S-THURSTON F 12-Southfleld I 8-$0UTHF'LD F t4—BERKLEY. I ll-FItzgeraW F 28-L«agu« KETTERING D I-Southfleld J 19-DETROIT CC 0 3-P. NORTH'N J ftr-Cranbrook D 8-P. Central J 28—UTICA 0 10—L. Creuse F 4—L. ORION .................. “ tl-Waterford 14—Davison 7—Donoero LAKE ORION D lO-WATERF'D I ’n-j D 17-DAVISON J 7-W. LINCOLN J 12-Watertord J 14-SEAHOLM 4-Ketterlng II-UTICA 18-^ltzperald NORTH FARMINGTON D 1-CLRN'VILLE J 28—‘Thurston D 3-Northvllle F 4-‘FRANK'LI " 10—Farmington F 11—R. Union 7—‘J. Glenn l2~Oondero 15—‘Groves SOUTHFIELD l-KETTERING D 3-FITZG'LD 22—‘BERKLEY D 9—Thurston 2—DONDERO 5 14—Waterford F 9—‘Berkley D 18-*SEAH0LM F 12—‘H. PARK F 20-SMA Berkley WALLED LAKE J 28—‘Waterford D 15-FlTZGER'LD F 18—RosevI D 18—Ounty Meet F 20—League J 12-Defrolt CC F 23-R. ROUGE J 14-KETTERING F 24 Regional I—P. CENTRAL F 4—*P. Norl 7-ROSEVILLE F 9-Wayne !-L. ORION F 11-KETR’Nt On paper Birmingham S e a -holm’s basketball squad looks like a winner in the Southeastern Michigan Association. The quintet has a lot of potential, but a cautious Lew Parry says “Only time will tell.’’ •The Maples finished in a tie for first last year with Fern-dale with an 11-3 record. 6-4, forward Tom Snyder the shortest at 6-2. GOOD SCORER The Maples will build their attack around guard Harold Wilber (6-3) who averaged 10 points a game last season. Other veterans on the Se Detroit St. Agatha will also floor an experienced squad. Waterford Our Lady, St. Michael, SI Frederick and Farmington Our Lady of .Sorrows need re-placement.s to fill a few holes left by graduation. OLSM’s Eaglets will have the tallest lineup in the league. EAGLET CENTER John Stolnicki (6-6%) will handle the center post for the Eaglets with John Stepien (6-2) and Don Dzagulones (6-1) at forward. Teaming up at the guard slots will be Conrad Krogulecki (5-0) and Ralph Kibilioskl (5-10). Seaholm will have a height advantage over its league foes this fall. The first six players all seniors — average 6-3. Forward John Toland is the tallest at Southeastern D 15—WARREN Favor Rockets in S. Thumb 1963-64 Standings Veteran Players Back at Almont, Dryden holm roster are Mike Perry, a 6-3 forward and James Snider, a 6 3 guard. Ferndalc, defending champion, lost high-scoring renter Bruce Rodwan, but the Eagles will still have a sharp-shooting quintet on hand. Ken Crooks (6-1), Curtis Mc-Neal (6-1) and Bob Super (6-1) are expected to provide the nucleus of the Eagles’ ’64-65 squad. SAGINAW VALLEY CONFERENCE Lasgu* OvarAII W L W L lint Central 12 0 13 2 Saginaw Atrhur Hill Bay City Handy Bey City Cantral ‘INTIR-LAKES O 22-WAR. WOODS F 27- War. Woods Tanlatlva data. All home games at Madison JMS. ST. MICHAEL N 27-‘SI. Agalha J 8- ‘Sorrows 0 4-‘SORROWS J )5-‘ST. FRED 0 7 -*St. Frad J 22-‘OL SI. Mnry 0 I5~*0L t. MARY J 29-‘RO S. MARY -------- - — ■ • 2-*OL lakes T. AGATh SOUTHFIELD 4- R. UNION J 13-N. k'minglon 5- Ooondero J »—‘Ferndale ll-*F'OALE F S-‘SEAHOLM If—‘Saaholm F 12—‘H. Park _ IS—Tournay F IS—GROVES J 8-‘H. PAftK F 19-‘KI)S4BAU J llV-‘Klmball F 24-‘BBRKLlY F 12-LINCOLN F 19-Sallna F 23-ST'CK'BDO lligarnid AADISQN F II ‘Plligerald F 13 ROMIo WALLBD LAKE 4-PlvmoMlli J 12 wsleifoid n-RosiVllta J 18-H'LAND P. O 11-P. HURON 10-Radford L 9-rSo'f^RO 15 FARM'NO F S -MT. Pontiac Norlharn Wallad Laka Soulhlleld Berkley Farmington wayne-oakland Bloomllald Hills Clarkston Wes)' Bloomllald Northvllla Mlllord Brighton Kellering tr: creuse Romeo Oxford lOUTHBRN THUMB ‘EAITIRH MICHIGAN L*agua G Ferndale II ',1 Birmingham Seaholm 10 4 ■asl Delioll . 10 4 RO KImhall 8 4 Mounl clemeni 8 4 rm, SOUTH eiNTRAU Imlay City ^ ffinj "Wnerl •] I D if *L*oSlON P *1 ‘CI.AW80N :! ;tWo F 19- ‘Avotim HORTHWB8T CATHOLIC ATHOLIC 1} 1 I \l Birmingham Brother Rice ‘Berkley end Soulhlleld dropped from Intcr Lakes In 1944 45 to loin Ferndale, Birmingham Seaholm, Hazel Park and Royal Oak Kimble In now Soulhaaslern Michigan Associnllon. East Datroll. Roia- llac Norlharn, Walled Take, "iSyalerlord and Farmington remain In Intar Lakes EML Coaches Vole East Detroit Best The Eastern Michigan League forecasters agree that East Detroit and Mount Clemens will run one-two, but whether Pori Huron or Roseville will finish third has them guessing. East Wtrolt coach Fred Iree admits he Is liNiking forward to ®!i«aisS(aB'’'4irfWiir3 East. Michigan the seimon. He feels the 8hnm-r(H‘ks have height, speed and exiierlmice. GlemI llradt (6 6) scored 200 ■points Inst year and 00 Fred Bolle had 182. T'liey are Augmented. by 6-5 Junior Ron Binge and 6-8 Doug Hess. Guard Pat MuccI has two years' oxperl- The appearnni'G of 8-4, 205-IHMind Hill Ford In (he Mount Clenieim lineup'Is the prime reason for ,Its high hopM. When the smaller high schools in the state collide in basketball, the teams with good, tall players usually come out on top. New Haven has the height among Southern Thumb quintets, and for this reason the Southern Thumb J Rockets are.being selected, with .some re.scrvntion, td repeat as conference champions. Armada and Brown City arc rated very high with Almont and Dryden being watched as dark-horses. Anchor Bay, Capac and Memphis were hit hard by graduation. Capac, however, Is being-tubbed as th^ spoiler team. Urry Belt (84) Is being counted on to carry New Haven until A-A Richard Crawford gains more experience. Gordon l.«e, l.«mont Harris, Cliff Hunean and Richard Chcnnault are other lettermen. Belt averaged 15 points and Lee III last season. Almonl's 5-11 Ken Schulte, wild averaged 10.4 last season, Is rated one of the finest players In (ho league. Dpve Yennior and Larry MllUklii, both six-footers, are among the lop returnees. The’ starting lineup Is back ot Dryden. TOP HCORER ’rop UKkl-lH scorer Ken Kitch-entnasler will team with Tom Sterner at guhrd. George Cou^ ens is back at center. Dennis Hilllker and Ron Pauls, the leoding reboiinder, wllf be at forwards Tl« FoMic,**ti N*w )l«v Royal Oak Kimball. 9-6 last year, is another squad with a lot of height. BIG GUN The big gun in the Kimball attack is Rich Muenchaii.sen (6-4), who will team with Rob Wlodek (6-3) at the forward posts. Roger Peltz (6-4) Is expedrri to get the nod at center. Boh Miles (5-9) and Chris Navarre (6-0) hold down the guard positions. The biggest loss for the Eaglet was the graduation of guard Frank Rompel, the team’s leatj-ing scorer last season with a 18.2 average. ROSM will build a team around seniors John Dorr (8-2) and Tom Flack (rvtl). Another returnee expected to give the Irish a boost Is Junior renler Ken Wright (6-1). St Mirliarl will build a team arnund Rick Lavoie (6-4), Gary LampliPK’ (6-2) and Mika Racke.s | .5-8 (, Players counted on by ths Shamrocks to fill in the holes are Bill F’rench, a 64 sophomore, juniors .terry Stanton (5-6) and Tom Patch (.5-8) along with sophomore guard Grey Glynn (5-7). TOP SCORER St. Frederick lost its top scor-r through graduation in Lowry Holland, who averaged 17.5 last Southfield has a couple of veterans returning and the Blue Jnys could be tough. Rich Smigielski (6-2) and Ray Schlaff (6-3), both forwards, arc the big weapons in the Blue Jay attack. Hazel Park and Berkley are question marks. ^Berkley ha.s three starters returning — forward Bill Link (6-2), center Jim Leadford (6-2) and guard Doug Reynolds (5-9). John Canine, at 6-1, l.s the tallest player on the Hazel Park squad. Without some reserve help, tlic Parkers could finish last. One thing appears certain In (he pre-sen.son rundown of tha .Soiilli Central League: none of (he coaelies pmliciilarly Im- Blackhawks Lack Poise, but Indicate Potential Cisicli Harvey Fletcher Is lo()klng for poise among (he Ortonvillo Hrandown hoys. “niey're a little too wild, yet," the veteran Blacklmwk mentor commented as he prevlewiad the upcoming season. But he definitely does not expwt A repeat of last yelir’a 1-15 log. Steve llubhs, a forward, and Mel McDowell, a guard, should provide setiring punch as letter winners. Five other returnees are scrapping for the three remaining starting bertha. Another setback for the Ram.s was the loss of senior center Mike Dean, who suffered a broken ankle late in the football sea.son. Dean may he available in late January, Farmington 01will also pot a tall squad on the floor. .Senior t'enter Mike Bars (6-4) heads Hie li.sl of returnees, along witli a pair of guards Brian Hriuicr (5-11) and Myles Kearney (5-11). 2:®F4rX.;nO Favorite's Role Unwonted Tag for Central 5's South Central lay City’s and Harbor Beach’s - want the favorite’s role. Roger Benthem and Dale Goodrich am back at Imlay and that sNoiild mean quite a few points on (he scoreboard. Miirlon Benthem at A-S could jirovlrie much needed rebound- Both Lyle Powers, a veteran campaigner at Imlay City, and newcomer Norm Quinn at Har* bor Reach downgrade ihelr iw- spedive teams despite |h« IJ||^ ratings atfordod thenn teams. ii ' ' I Hi.. THE PONTIAC PRKSS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26. 1964 Swimming Strength at Seaholm, Kimball If anyone wants a sneak-preview of the 1965 Michigain High School swimming championships, the place to be will be the Royal Oak Relays at Kimball high school 'December 5th. Birmingham Seaholm, /state champion of the past two years, and Kimball, the closest contender are expected again to wage a close battle for Michigan honors this year. A TREMENDOUS BUY FOR WINTER 0RIYIN6 BEHER-STRONGER FULL ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE 6.50 X 13 6.70 X 15 T.Ob X 13 7.50 X 14 6.50 X 15 8.00 X 14 TUBE or TUBELESS plus lax and rotroadablo eating WHITEWALLS $1 Extra CUSTOM RETREAD 680 Ml. Clamant St., Cor. East Blvd., Pontiac Opan • A.^. - 6 P.M. Daily - Phona FE 4-0916 0. S. ROYAL TIRES Engineered to keep your tpare in thg trunk Seaholm, with its great depth has lost some out standing names through graduatioji such as Pete Adams, Tom. Coupe, Ken Heft, Dave Zimmer among others but coach Cdrey Van Fleet has more lettermen returning than some schools have on their entire squads. Kimball will be despite the loss of Oakland County MVP Bill Watts, but state champion Doug Webster, a junior who must sit out one semester, Reed McCarthy, Mike Shoenhals, Adrian Van Oss and Larry Burgess give the Knights’plenty of long distance strength. Seaholm and Kimball should battle it out for honors in the new Southeast Michigan Conference. Southfield moves from the North Suburban into the Southeastern League with six letter- Wolverine Swimmers at PNH Pool Monday The University of Michigan swimming team will present their annual “Comedy and Swim Show” at Pontiac Northern’s pool Monday evening, November 30th at 7:30 p.m. Olympic coach of 1964, Gus Stager of the Wolverines, has ,arranged the program which will include diving board comedy and exhibitions, discussions and 19emonstrations in the V a r i 0 u $ swimming events and participation of swimmers in the audience. There is a 75 cent admission fee. men with Hazel Park and Fern-dale as other contenders. In the North Suburban League-which has only Pontiac Northern, Fitzgerald and Madison Heights Irft, Fitzgerald should be the strongest. Northern has 15 lettermen back led, by the Johnson twins, Rick and Dick as captains, along with Gary Forrest. Coach Ed Dauw may not have as good times as last year but appears to have more depth. Birmingham Groves, Thurston and Livonia Franklin are noT/ members of the Northwest Suburban League. SAGINAW VALLEY Of course, Arthur Hill is again the favorite in the Saginaw Valley Conference with Midland and Flint Southwestern regarded as strong teams. Midland has SVC diving champ Jack Duffy back plus good strength in the 400. . Pontiac Central lost Jim Howard swimmer and diver Dale Quinn from a 2-13 season last year, but the Chiefs could improve on their record with captain Ed Chase in the 50 freestyle, Don Miller in 200 ’ free and Tom Howard in the backstroke. Pontiac Prats P TWIN TANKERS - Fpr the second year iri a row, Pontiac Northern’s swimming foes will be seeing double when they meet the Huskies this season. Twin? Ron and Don Chambers (front left to right) and Rick and Dick Johnson (rear left to right) are seniors this year. Swimming Schedules OROVES SWIMMING J JO ANN .ARBOR ■F 12 SEAHOLM F at PNH F 26 FRANKLIN M 5 Leagua M 13 Stala HAZEL PARK SWIMMING F IS^UTICA F 19-.AUSTIN F 23-Fltzgerald I 22-F6RNOALE I 2»—SEAHOLM . : 2—WARREN *—Home meets in KIMBALL SWIMMING D 1—Fltzoerjeld J 29—Gr. Pointe D 5-RO Relays " ' ----------------------- _ . _________ 5-HAZ. PARK O IB—Hazel PacK F 12—Ferndale D 12—GROVES F 13—Plymouth J 5-Dondero F 19-SOOTHF'LD 3 g—FERNDALE ^F 20—Trenton J 15—Southfield <^F 26-Seaholm J le—ANN ARBOR M 6—League J 22—SEAHOLM M 13-State D 4-B. C. CENT. D 8—PNH I D 11-Arth. Hill D 1B-M1DUNO J B-FI. Northern J 1S-B. C. HANDY •—Home meets In c 5—SAGINAW 12-B. C. Handy Royal Oak Dondero has • 15 lettermen as a nucleous tihder coach Pat Wallace and for the first time the Borders Cities League will have a league chanipionship meet. Grosse Pointe will be favored. Utica, former North Suburban member, is now competing in the Macomb League and the Chieftains have 11 lettermen freestyler Steve Ktrksey. From PNH Mat Squad They're Here Waiting For You . The 1965 Chevrolet CARS ON HAND All At The Same Attractive Prices Ihat Have Made Matttiews-Hargreaves Michigan’s Largest Chevrolet Dealer! TOP TMOE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR PRESENT' CAR MATTHEWS IIAIKjRI AVIS 631 Oakland FE 5-4161 Pontiac Northern will open the 1964-65 wrestling season minus a pair of state cfiampions, but the Huskies have enough ta|ent returning to keep the campaign I respectable. ! Missing from the Huskies’ lineup are state champs Dave I Beebe .and Don Weyer. j Northern compiled a 11-2 j record last year under coach Bill Willson which included an I Inter-Lakes League champion-' ship. Willson lost nine lettermen, ' and he is building this year’s team around six veterans. cleus of this year’s squad are Don deBeaudair (120), John Salisbury (145), Bob McGregor (165) and BUI Gothrie (180). ' ‘ ' Returning to the wrestling battles are Sam Dura (95), Dave Oswalt (103), Pat Mcllroy (127), Bruce Tippin (138) and A1 Ray-ner (165). . Waterford’s team will be built around Gerry Gebrowsky, a 180-pou'nder. Pontiac Central has six veterans returrting from a team that finished with a 6-5-1 record. CHIEFS’ TEAM Wearing the Chiefs’ colors will be Clarence Thompson (103), Charles Fowlkes (120), John Catox (138), Dan Rodriguez (145), Nathanial Catr (165) and Neale Peterson (heavyweight). j START THURSDAY The Huskies open the season next Thursday at Kettering. Senior Don Gray, a 127-pounder, heads a list of five returning lettermen at Kettering. Others back to form a nu- “Berkley, Hazel Park and Royal Oak Kimball are expected to field strong teams in the Southeastern Michigan Association. FKEi: WINTER OUTBOARD STORAGE With Spring Tunn-Up 1965 MERCURY OUTBOARD NOW ON DISPLAY ' 50% QUIETER! TRADE NOW! Spring Delivery See Our Display BRUNSWICK POOL TABLE $345 up GHAM BOAT cam A newcoiper to the wrestling j clan in the SEMA is Birming- | ham Seaholm. Among the non - conference teams, Cranbrook should come up with another strong .squad. The Cranes compiled a 9-4-1 mark last year. Heading the list of Crane returnees is Lance Leithauser, a 127-pounder. 1963-64 Scoring „ . _ 0 FG FT TF A Bmm«nu«l 1J 142 77 Ml ; odw«n, Fitrndaln 15 124 U 334 ; nurr, Troy 14 150 Jj 353 ! I 106 32 264 I ' 125 M 319 1 I 101 76 267 1 > 122 67 311 I K«Mfrlng 15 1 I sr Mtry 15 Bullock, W«IIM Lk. 13 |2 69 ! Hppk, K*ll*rlno IS |9 54 i Pplmor, F«rn(lBl« 15 101 26 i Adanukl. Captc 15 116 69 ’ Pprd. Ml. Cl«mtni 16 1.14 71 1 SchuIlP, Almppl 15 III 62 1 I pmaraon, Imlay C. 16 127 60 3 Insaranre Spenallsls Chuck liRtIcr Kick lliillc hon» FK 4-tSSI II. w. iiiinENLOCiieit A(iKIN<;Y, iiu'orpurnlod II. W. Mul«piil IS—SEAHOLM 6-Rcdlord 6—Hazel Park 12-Franklln 15-KIMBALL 22—Open '-Home meets In capital li UTICA SWIMMING I 6—MT. CLEM. I 15-WARREN I 19-pLlncoln F 12-LINCOLN - J 29-COUSINO a meets In capitals AT STANDARD ENGINE rebuIlders 6 Cyl. V-8's $9500 ^$11500 This includes . . . Rings, Rod Bearings, Main Bearing, Grind Valves, Fit Pins, Deglaze Cylinder Walls, Gaskets, Oil and Labor! -ALSO-- FACTORY REBUILT ENGINES 695 AUBURN RD. 338>96T1 338-9672 On Second Mort|(ages and Land Contracts 55,000 CASH a Now WG can loan you at much at $5,000.00 CASH ^ for you to pay off all of thot# old bilit and inttalU J mant occountt. Start with a cloan tlato, have only 0. ONE payment, ONE place to pay, and qn eaty pay- M mont plan to tuit your budget. Your loan fully pro- • tected by life inturance at no extra cott to you. Loons completed within 72 hours. No Closing costs. Family Acceptance Cerp. 311 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron Telephone FE 8-4022 BARNES & HARBRAVE'S GIGANTIC TOYUND UYAWAY SPECIAL! BIG 6 FT. CANADIAN TOBOGGAN WITH PAD 1288 WE BUY, SELL, TRADE • ICE SKATES • SKIIS • TOBOSGANS CHRISTMAS LAYAWAYS NOW1 BARNES A HARGRAVE Hardware 142 W. HURON 6T. pchk mim FI l-tllt I V ■i . THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 26j 1964 H-^5 ' Champ Keeps Bowling lead CHICAGO (AF) - Jim St. John, the 34-y^-old defending chanqiton from Santa Clara, Calif., held a commanding lead today in the ei^th annual $52,-000 World’s Invitational Bowling Tournament. The.lS men finalists have finished (mly three matches and 12 games The Lakers increased their Western Division iMd over the idle St. Louis Hawks to two full games. Ray Scott led the Pistons’ scoring with 23 points, 16 coming in the first half. Rod Thorn followed with 19. The Rangers ran their unbeaten string against Toronto to foiu- games with a 6-3 victory over the Leafs Wednesday n^t. It was the first loss in nine games for goalie Terry Sawchuk and snapped a three-game Leaf winning string. The victory moved the Rangers into third place, and New York made it look easy. The Rangers have won two and tied two against the Leafs. That’s six points of a possible eight and that kind of pace would land them squarely in the playoffs. TWOGOAW Phil Goyette and Donnie Marshall scoried two goals apiece for the Rangers but it was Bob Nevin’s goal with 15 seconds left in the middle period that seemed to beat his ex-mates. Nevin’s score gave New York a two-goal bulge going into the final 20 minutes and then Marshall scored while killing a penalty and Goyette clicked for his second of the night early in the third period wrapping it up. ★ ★ ★ NHL Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE It was ffie second strai^t gam# in which the Ranger^ scorpd while short-handed and Sullivan considers Ithat another good indication of fte hustle his club is showing. ★ ★ ★ Toronto’s goals were scored by George Armstrong, Jim Pap-pin and Allan Stanley. Ann-strong’s tied tine game early in the second period but then Marshall and Earl Ingarfield connected inside of 13 seconds to give the Rangers a lead they never surrendered, Shrine Five Could Shine The Knights at Royal Oak Shrine may not be so long this basketball season. Coach Marty Folty and the .Shirine fans suffered through a 4-11 season last year but there are brighter rays of sunshine this time. Foley has a 6-4 two-year yet-eran center in Rick Chudy whom the coach says could be outstanding. Another two - year performer is 5-11 forward Mick Wentworth. Terry Flanagan and Mike Tamm are returning as t h e regular guards. WIDE TRACK DRIVE GRAND OPENING SALE Tomorrow-Saturday-Monday i FREE MOUNTINe BUDGET TERMS Free Ice Scrapers 1370 S. S4GIIUW FE 5-6138 Pmfiae Montreal at Detroit New York at Bfistoil Toronto at Chicago Friday'* 0*in*> No gamaf scheduled Dondefo Seeks Aid From Big Forwards Three 6-2 forwards may hold the key to Royal Oak Dondero’s basketball fortunes this season. Seniors Jeff Fischer and George Hewitt along with junior Bob Sherwin .will have to provide some rebouiLding help for 6-3 letter winning center John Waters if the Oaks apq to flourish in the tough Border Cities Lea^e. Captain Doug Goulait, Rich HirscK and Waters should prove capable scorers an^ could lead Dondero to an improvement of last year’s 6-10 record. Rich Blake returns at guard. Red Wings Play Canadien Squad in Annual Tilt - DETROIT (UPI) - The Detroit Red Wings will open a three-game home stand tonight when they meet the Montreal Canadi-ens in what has become their annual Thanksgiving night dash. * ★ ★ The Wings are returning hqme after playing seven of their "last eight games on the road. During that span they posted a 2-4-2 record, but still managed to hold onto first place in the National Hockey League. Detroit and Montreal have met the last five Thanksgiving nights and both clubs have injury problems. Montreal’s Henri Richard and Jean Beliveau both are out with groin injuries and Detroit’s Ron Murphy and Eddie Joyal are doubtful starters. Jim Campbell Says Tigers Like Draft DErrsOI’T (UPI) - General niai^r Jim Campbell aftid today the Detroit Tigers favored the free agent ^raft that will be proposed'during next week’s league meetings in ‘We Kke the idea because it will upgrade the caliber of ma-jpr league baseball and bring the paying of bonuses info a reasonable area;” he said.“It also would help cut a club’s scouting staff.” The proposed rule would establish a player pool of high school, college and sandlot players which each team would draft from such as is. used in pro football and basketball. A ffeam would have six months to sign the draftee, otherwise th6 youth would be placed in a special pool for another draft. ERN OIVKIOM . . -WotiLort W. B«lnd 4 12 .250 WatTBRN DIVISION. krtiur*’ .. , 7* :m Baltimor* 125, CinckiMN 116 Bolton 122, Son Francisco 118 PhlBNlelplila 124, Naw York 03 Lo* Angelai 130, DMrolt 117 . Royal Auto Parti Pentiae'B Uri Sava On Good f TIRES Soma On Whool __ Royal Auto Partsl includea—^ • COAAPLETE INSURANCE FULL AAAINTENANCE * CHOICE OF EQUIPMENT Past U-D High Grads of County to Gather Members of the Oakland County U. of D. high school alumni club will attend the annual stag night banquet at the school Friday night, with Andy Farkas as master of ceremmies. , Farkes played football at U. of D. and with the Redskins in the NFL. Bruce Maher of the Lions will also attend the affair. Sports Calendar Ponll»c Central at Waterford at Emmanuel Christian Seaholm at Birmingham Royal Oak Kimball at Royal Oak londaro Brother RIed at Detroit Cathedral Marino City at Anchor Bay Fenton at Bay City Central Imlay City at Brown City Radford St. Mary at Royal Oak Shrine Cofavorites Nominated in Mexican Open Golf MEXICO CITY (AP) - Ken Venturi of San Francisco, the U.S. Open champion, and A1 Baldipg, the defending champion from Toronto, are expected to be the main contenders in the $16,000 Mexican National Open Golf Championship starting today. Tht four-day,'T^hole tournament will be held over the 7,216-yard, par-72 course at the Club de Golf Mexico. Balding set a record of 279 in winning last year. Play Piston Prelims Six high school games and four college lilts comprise an out.standing schedule of special preliminary attractions to Detroit Pistons home games at Cobo arena. HIGH SCHOOL BASKBTBALL Oscortn 95, Rogrrs Clly 40 Yp«ll»ntl llncom 44, Mllon 41 While Ford 83, f rle-M«5on 59 Mnrqu*lt* Blihop Dorag* 43, EitcJinab* 5398 FARM RD. - PONTIAC BORROW *2,200 REPAY *18.57 A MONTH URGES AMOUNTS AT PROPORTIONATE RATES Nome 9wners With or Without Existing Mortgages Coneolidate Your Bills Int Bno Low Monthly Payment. Get additional cash! • HOUttHUlD HfEDS • MEDICAL EXPENSES • DHT CONSOLIDATION • VA04TI0N PUNS ONE LOIN! ONE PAYMENT! ONCE 4 MONTH UOUUOWBNV AMOUNT FOR ANY NEED! FE 4-3737 MICHAEL ALLEN MORTGAGE SERVICE IS W. Lawrence-Pontiac fpieoAO Send Mg More Infermotien. I NAME.......................... JaddrissI...... .............. IciTY .... iPHONf.). .. STATE.. WNATEKR YOU WART IN A CAR ... YOU’LL FIND IT AT OLIVER’S! VALUE • CONVENIENCE • PRESTIGE ■ ECONOMY • PERFORAAANCE • SAFETY DOUBLE-CHECKED '1NEW BUICK" TRADE-INS 1963 Wildcat 2-Dr. H.T. Full Powor ^2495 1963 Spec. Convertible Stick. «eyl. ^1695 1 962 Renault 4-Dr, 4 Spggd ^695 1964 Skylark 2-Dr. H.T. Bbekot Soots ^2695 1963 Mercury Custom 9D,P^, *1995 1 961 Chevy lmpa|a 'S-Dr. Power. ^1295 1961 T«mp«tt 4-Dr. Automatic Trans. ^795 1962 Pontiac Catalina Wagon. Powar ^1895 1 962 Buick Special convertible 1 ^ 1963 Skylark Convertible BucligtSgots ^2195 1963 Renault R-8 *895 1 964 Opel Wagon Bucket Seal* 1964 Electra 225 Full Power ^3495 1962 Fairlane 500 HTV. *1595 1 960 Chevy %-Ton Pickup. ^995 1964 Ford Fairlane 500 HTV4 *1895 1961 Olds 88 H.T. *1595 1961 Chevy Wogon 9-pai8anger ^995 l963LeSabrw War. *2395 1 Monia 2-br, 4SpeMl ^1695 196d Pontioc 4-Dr. H.T. Cordovan ^1095” 210 Orchard Lake Ave. at Williams Oftt*n Thur** TlU 9 0*Clock FE 2-9165 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER i Arthritis Treatment Is Often Incorrect By DR. WILUAM BRA]^ Doctor who diagnoses ’“chroitfc arOiritis’- and pretends to. treat it as a specific di$ease for wliich Uiere is a ^ific remedy or method of treatment is simply stringing the patient “Chronic arthritis” is like the “common cold” in this respect. ?to doctor can give a definition rf the entity that will enable another doctor to recognize a case — for the simple reason ' that there is no entity. In a small minority of in-ktaficeg joint disabiUty of niore than a year’s dnrati^m is inflammation of joint tis- snes, all rij^t, due to one or aAether spedflc Section, sncii as tnbercidosis, brncel-losis; fooorrlMa, sy^Uis hwm a sep^ focns. These inflanunations constitute genuine ar^tis, but oidy an errant charlatan would treat diem indiscriminately with a “wonder drug.” In the great majority of instances (95 per cent) chronic joint disability is jiist plain rheu-matiz. The nature of the rheu-matiz is, “in two words, physical degeneration. Physical degeneration is “a logical change in cells and tis- sues in consequence of which the functioning power is lost suid the living substance become converted into an inert mass” -^(“Steadtoan’s' Medical Dic-tionmy”). One of the consequences of, degeneradon — not a cause, ias the “clinic” racketeers is die deposit of calcium, calcification, that is, b die tissnes when generation, production «■ growth of new cells to take the place of cells which have worn ont, degenerated, died, no longer occurs. Calcification of body tissues is nature’s, way of patching thinjgs. up when new cejlls and tissue are no longer .available — son of a" plaster (rf p^ patch job. Plasttf of pairis Is calciuni sul-fete. “The ordinary mbced diet of Americs^ and Europeans, at least among dwellers in cities and towns, is probably more often deficient in calcium than in any other chemical element.” — (Sherman’s “(Chemistry of Food and Nutrition”). radical notion net approved or accepted. I In Uttle Lesson No. 26, “The jCalcium Shortage,” for which send 35 cents and stamped, s^-addr^ed envelope, I ascribe numerous everyday complaints to calcium deficiency-^ antong them rheumatiz. But please remember I have no cure rheumatiz. * ★ ★ . tf you h a V e no childish illusions about this, it may “be! Worthwhile to Send a stamped, | self-addressed envelope and ask for the pamphlet “CA & Rhfeu-1 matiz,” whether you inclose 35 cents for Little Lesson 26 dr not. This is elementary nutrition, | j although the merchants of med-1 i icine generally ignore it as a i treatment, will be answered by lllam Brady,' i( a stamped, self-./ ed cyelope is sent to Tbe Press, Pontiac, Michigan. - , (Copyright, 1964) | GET EVERYTHING YOU.NEED AT . 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Mike Monroney, DnOkla., has announe«l he push for an overhaul and modernization of congressional procedures; He told a news conference he would introduce a r^lution proposing the study as'soon as Congress-convenes in January. He hopes to get the prestige designation of concurrent resolution No. 1 of the 89th Congress. If Congress passes it, a 10-member special committee would be set up consisting of tiiree Democrats and tWo Republicans each f r o'm the House and Senate, to take mendations for ctoges and other revisions in {htotj. cedures. The senator pointed out that the last siich overhaul, the 1946 LaFoliette-Mohroney Act, took place 18 years ago. ★ ★ ★ ' This revision was called the most cwnplete in history, Mon-roney said, but added that some of the 38 major reforms in that law did not work, and pthers|! sjmply were abandoned by Congress without a real trial. ^’VE GROWN Sinc^ 1946, he said, “Our pop- 4KJ84S WAIOZ ♦ K63 ♦ J4 wan EAST 4T 4Q109S2 W764 W98 4A74 ♦QJSa «K-10865 8 4b Q 9 SOUTH (D) 4A8 VKQJ58 ♦ 1098 «A72 East and West vulnerable Seolh Weat Kortli Eaat 1 ♦ Pass 14 Pass Sir 4ir Pass Pass Fto JACOBY By OSWALD JACOBY The United States picked up 10 International Match Points against Israel when Arthur Robinson made four spades and Israeli South went down. The bidding and opening lead were the same at both tables, but Arthur played a low s]^ from dummy while the other South called for the jack. Arthur won the first trick with the ace of spades and led a low club to dummy’s Jack. East won with the qneen and led back the nine. Arthur took his ace and ruffed his last club with the ten of hearts. He drew trumps with three leads, led the ten of diamonds and let it ride to East’s jack. At this point. East was down to spades and diamonds. He could not afford to lead a spade into dummy’s kin^-jack, so he had to return a diamond. This 8et up dummy’s king of diamonds for Arthur’s, tenth trick. The play after trick one went the same way at the other table ilJ up to the point when East got the lead with the jack of Esmonds. Now East, was able to return the ten of spades to dummy’s king. South returned to his hand by ruffing a spade and led the nine of diamonds. West played low and now South had to make a decision. He decided to let the nine ride, whereupon, East made his queen of diamonds and West his ace. South’s diamond play was mathematically correct so he was unfortunate that the best percentage play lost, but if he had just saved dummy’s jack of spades, he would never have been faceid With the problem of the second diamond lead. ulatioh has grown from 140 million to nearly 190 million, our gross national product from $218 billion to $6:^ billion ^ . . “Our machinery to carry the maramoOi load of eld and new items needs npdating, overhauling, modernizing and revising.’’ * Monroney said the federal government now is a $1007bil-lion-a-year business and tiiat he feels new congressional methods are particularly needed in dealing with the budget and appro-prisdions bill. ★ ★ “We who are the coniptrollers of the world’s biggest business are literally using a high, slant-top desk, an old fashioned revolving stool, a big thick ledger and a quill pen,’’ he remarked. BORROW COMPUTERS ’The senatw said House and Senate appropriations committees should be able to borrow computers from government agencies and use them to eliminate a lot of drudgery now in- volved in pojring over the annual appropriations items. He alsa proposed that certified public accountants be added to oominittee staffs to help make )St effectiveness studies. ’ ★ ★ ♦ Monroney said he decided to try to launch a new study of congressional procedures after watching efforts of other senators falter in the last few years. " Defense Department Announces Pay Hikes WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Defense Department has ^a n -nounced wage increases averaging nine cents an hour or 3 per cent for approximately 11,-000 Army, Navy and Air. Force employes in industrial and maintenance jobs in the Washington area. The wages are tied to the prevailing rates in private industry. Today’s increase was the first since December 1963 for empjoyes. BEN CASET DRIFT MARLO By Dr. I. M. Levitt, Tom Cke and Fhil Evans •V IVDNIY OMARR Pw Pridav H*lp in«y b* rMUirwt from fellow work-•r*. Bo portuoilva. Sprood motioot. BKoron loMO, thouflhti. Soo poopio In poilllon to aW cauio. TAURUS (Apr. 20 (o Mav 20)! /^roo mont. undaratatKlIna ABSOLUTBL^ NecaUARY In connection with h>ve< one. There have been recent problemi tenikmi. irina out In open . . . mek ”g^MINI (Mav 21 to June 201: Qb eonc^' S^’alSol family member. Reallie opirti are but temporary. Pro Tan%R*^(M' to July «)! Av^d . -I TT! nwrouan. OIreM 5iil (July M t::, X oul. VIROOi(Auo. U to Sept. 12): ■ conlrlc tnndtnoni appear to prove Don't be bono^ dwn by tredlllo Brnak new pround. Know that you ha ^ure^ ^ your convictions. Be dlrw '"lCO^PlS'*(6cl. 21 lo Nov, 21); No •Imoly a jonM at humor can (luarentee to •NPwrimMt. FrttndB may rtVMl un* hTO mr coniir'e'Iper' ■ neteiiary conctbiloni. ImportenI ^Wll^lil?’'(Det^ 22 to Jon. Self: ke. .. '^.!.rly““l,l"’t- l&u AQUAftrO* Usn. » lo Teb; It hlph. Upeeli tonrerninp mon«' mveetmenle only tomporary. I to chaflonet. Obetnclot lorve lorce iMoei, Be "nulel wilM" ' By V. T. Hamlin East South West North 14 Dble Pass 2e Pass 24 Pros 2N.T. Pbbb ? You, South, hold: ner By Dick Cavalli By Ernie Bnahmiller By Charles Kuhn By Walt Disney THE PONTIAC PRESS. THT^RSDAY, NOVEMBER 26. 1964 - V Open Bids for Dust and ice Control Several bids for ice and dust control -products were opened y^terday by the Oakland County Road Comtttission. Four bidders asked a price of 1^.60 per ton for 30-ton bulk lots of flake calciunx, chloride, used for melting ice off roads. 'Submitting the low bid were Dow Chemical, Wyandotte Chemical, Haviland Product Co. and Solbay Sales Division of Allied Chemical. The same four companies offered 40-ton bag lots Of calcium chloride at $38.60 per ton. Dow Chemical offered liquid calcium chloride brine, used for dust control, at $44 11 per thousand gallons. The high bid was $.54. 2 MILLION GALLONS About two million gallons of brine and 404 tons of flake chloride were used in the county in the 1963-64 season, according to Audrey Ellixson, road commission purchasing agent. The commission presently has some 150 tons of bulk chloride ot] hand, Ellixson said. PIE-EYED WITH PUMPKIN - There’s enough for everyone as children from St. Vincent’s infant Hospital saniple a huge pumpkin pie at the Sheraton-Chicago Hotel. The king-size pie was baked to call attention to “Pumpkin Pie Pickup Day’’, yesterday. Chicago policemen will pick up pies donated by the public for delivery to orphanages and other institutions to brighten their Thanksgiving Day. CAB Has Ruled for Consolidating Airport Service state Department Orders 31 Area Drivers Ott Road Thirty-one area motorists recently had their drivers licenses either suspended or revoked by the Michigan Department of State. 6938 N. Springridge, and Peter D. Marin, 713 Pierce, both of Birmingham; Jacques P. Bishop, 3295 Coolidge, Avon Township; Charles M. Early, 45285 Grand River, Novi; Jerome M. Groover, 33 E. Burdick, Oxford; Randolph L. Scott, 32125 Nottingwood, Farmington; and Thomas G. Walker, 2501 Blair, White Lake Township. Ordered to sfiow proof of financial responsibility due to shouM he served by dated airports. i 332 Merritt and Charles H. The CAB made these prinicpal Morse, 3274 Luxury, both ot Frank Colbert, 217 Rockwell, rulings in its north central area ’ Township; William F. I Charles E. Green, 611 Pearsall, airline service airport investiga-1 21399 Averhill, and Luciano Ramirez, .30 Nor- Ordered to show proof of financial responsibility after ..convictions of drunken driving were: WASHINGTON (AP) — The < Jerome E. Carter, 3320 Van- Civil Aeronautics Board has ^andt, Charles L. Warner, 7372 rules that several Michigan ^ g and Wisconsin communities: 1011‘i. W. Huron, all of Water- tion, involving points served by | Farmington Township; Clifford ton; Buddy Brock and Mary Ann North Central Airlines: ..... —............ ■ -f ..t;i . McKinney 29'i- Washington, * * * i Oxford; and Paul Roberts, 33615 Ironwood, Mich., and Ash-1 Oakland, Farmington. land, Wis., to be served by a j ................. single airport. Similarly, Green Unsatisfactory driving rcc-Bay to be linked with Clinton- ‘b* following to be ville, Wis., and Oshkosh to be | ordered off the noad: paired with Appleton. 1 Roger A. Bigelow, 800 Oak- A new area airport at Mos-|]apjj. j^rry D. Newmarch, 7062 finee, Wis., to serve the central, pj^^^j^pring, Nathan Partney, 434 ! T„wn.shin Wkscdnsin points of Wausau, [ yiimor, John R. Rooney, 172' Marshfield, Wisconsin Rapids »Oshawa. Ronald E. Sutton, 2.324 and Stevens Point. Brock, of 20832 Tuck, and Willard Vignoe, 20817 Sunnydale, all of Farmington Township; and Minnie C. Burgdolf, 1772 Schei-fle. Walled Lake. Ordered off the road for driving while his license was suspended was Stephen A. Pole-shuk, 2890 Peerless, Waterford j . I Ordered off the road for vio- No change to be made in ref- j ^r'Bosmn ^ aT°of Waterfo7d ‘ restrictions was -...................'®25 Boston, all of Waterford .Sommerfield, erence to Rhinelander, Land ; O Ukes, La Crosse, Wis,. and I township. Winona, Minn., now served as | separate intermediate points. I'cre David S, Fenton, Norton. Ordered off the road for driving while driving with a revoked Push Search for Fugitives in Northwest PAYETTE, Idaho (UPI) Thanksgiving at LBJ Ranch ‘ Johnsons to Gather in Texas JOHNSON CITY, Tex, (AP) - President Johnson and His ftmily will gather at dusk tonight to carve the traditional Thanksgiving turkey .at their ranch home. Daughter# Lynda Bird, 20, and I^JCi Baines, 17, were flying in from Washington for the occasion. The girls hoped to get to an afternoon |ootball game in Austin, 65 miles away, between Lynda’s old school, the University of Texas, and Texas A&M. The President did not plan to attend the game. But he agreed to delay dinner so the girls could enjoy it. Relatives and friends were invited to join the Johnsons for Pilgrim fathers. And he said “for that we give thanks and pray.that we may,continue to deserve His ' ’ CONFERS WITH AIDES Before clearing his desk for the holiday, Johnson conferred at the ranch Wednesday night with Budget Director Kermit Gordon and chairman John Macy of the Civil Service Commission. The topics, on which no final decisions were reached, were federal .finances and personnel. . Earlier in the day, Johnson met vvith Postmaster General John Gronouski and urged studies of possible new increases in second and third class mail rates — on magazines, newspapers, catalogues and circu- roast turkey with dressing and 1And he asked Gronouski to giblet gravy, sweet potatoes, | ° " ®^ ® *' closing several green beans, asparagus, molded I hundred fourth class post ofhees cranberry salad, ambrosia des- “ the smallest type within sert and cake. ^ the next few years. ^ NO PLAN.S « make a study to determine whether to abandon the hine-■year-old policy of leasing post offices from private builders. Still at Lar^ One Man Held In ^robe of Kidnaping Gronouski said he’s sure the government could save money if it built and owned its own large, special purpose post offices. The postal chief also reported he’ll cqnisder neW regulations to require pre-sorting and ZlP-cod-ing of third doss mail. And he said Johnson wants him to consider the wisdoih of asking Congress to require the same of volume users of first class mail. This, he estimated, would save $40 million to $50 million a year. The first family made no advance plans to attend religious services during the day. * ' In proclaiming the holiday earlier this month, Johnson urged Americans to gather in A Au A- u J Au„ .. their homes and places of wor- Authorities pushed their sea ch j into the muddy farmlands of the P ^^^P ^ P^ Idaho-Oregon border country to- * ★ * day for two of seven men who tunneled their way out of Wash- Wednesday night, in a special nirmriT message broadcast via the i al, uc.r iv-i 1 Gronouski indicated Johnson tentatively favors both ideas, although he emphasized final decisions would await the outcome of formal studies. Gronouski, asked about his future in the Cabinet, said he is having a whale of a time and enjoying his work. Me said the .duration of his Cabinet term will depend on Johnson. Rhino Baby Is Lonely but Doing Fine CHICAGf^AP) - Authorities held one man on a kidnaping charge,and sought another today in connection with the slaying of “ an Indiana businessman whose body was fqiind near Escanaba, Mich. ■ Philip ;A. Battaglia', 23, of Chicago ’ 'was accused by the FBI of kidnaping William R. Loomis, 39-ytar-old businessman whose body was found by two dedr hunters in the. Upper Michigan area. A hearing was continued to Friday on the kidnaping charge. M. W. Johnson, head of the Chicago FBI office, said Battaglia named as an accomplice Jerry Lee Rogers, 42, of Chicago. Rogers was charged with kidnaping and is being sought, the FBI said. DETROIT (UPI)-Her mother in heaven, her father behind a wall and her brother in Oklahoma city is no way for a baby girl rhinoceros to start out in life — but Beulah is coming along fine. ington State Prison Sunday. -------------o- ----------- , 1,0 i,oH o„i nf SYNCOM and Relay satellites to; Johnson emphasized to (.ro- They checked out scores of, n^uski that he wants next year’s clues furnished by jittery, dents of this rural border town, maintained roadblocks and searched barns, ditches and haystacks for some trace of the elusive fugitives. The massive manhunt centered on Payette Tuesday night when officers captured without resistance two other men who escaped from the prison in a bold bid for freedom. Johnson called on Americans- to postal deficit to be sfnaller than “thank the blessings of the Lord the current level of $719 million for the bounty of their land” a year. The Cabinet officer said The President said “we are he could give no assurances of prosperous and mighty beyond that now. the farthest imagining" of the' The two men also agreed to Santa to Hitch Train Ride Harold Thomas, 38, a convicted murderer, and Richard E. Loux, 26, were recaptured after the stolen car in which they were riding was forced from the road by officers. They were taken before a U. ,S. commissioner at Caldwell yesterday on federal fugitive charges. He Finds That Night Life Still Goes On in Gotham license was Hommer W. Axford ; k,.p„iap '' 40 Blaine. ^ Two other men riding in the car got away. They were 'believed to be Donald Mesaros, a 24-ycar-old murderer, and Ver-tis James Barrett, a ,35-year-old LAKE CITY (UPI) — A train ride itself Ls a novelty for most youngsters today. But a train ride with Santa Claus atso as a passenger sounds like a double dose of excitement. That’s what’s in store for Wexford County and Missaukee County children. The Lake City-Cadillac Railroad, which started business this year with a 1919 steam engine and a few cars, is going to have a .special run Dec. 19. The ride will be from Lake City to Falmouth and back. ★ ★ ★ Santa Claus will hitch hi.s reindeer and sleigh on a side road and hitchhike a ride on the train to join the kids. .She misses the affectionate nuzzlings she used to receive from her mother Manda who died at the tender age of nine. Manda had been ill since the birth of Beulah on Nov. 1 at the Detroit Zoo. Manda and her mate. Colo, who presently resides behind a wall separating him from his n e w e s t offspring, got along famously. Of the 24 rhinbs born in captivity, two were theirs—Beulah and her 2 - year - old brother Harvey who calls a zoo in Oklahoma City home. The death of Manda, a hand-.some black rhino, cuts the number of rhino families in the United States down to two-at zoos in Cincinnati and Pitts-burgji. These unions have produced one male rhino each. Detroit Zoo Director Frank Mclnnes said he would like to mate Beulah, when she reaches the proper age, with one of the boys from Ohio or Pennsylvania. CHICAGO MEETING Johnson said Battaglia told authorities he and Rogers met with Loomis Oct. 15 in Chicago, ostensibly to arrange a transaction on a foreign make car which Looinis advertised for sale. Battaglia was quoted as saying Rogers drew a gun, tied up Loomis and put him in the trunk of the car. Loomis apparently was held captive overnight. The next day, Battaglia was quoted as saying, the pair drove with Loomis to northern Michigan where Rogers forced to walk from the vehicle at gunpoint and, shortly after, returned alone. Loomis had been shot in the head. Battaglia also was quoted by .lohnson as saying Rogers took Loomis’ wallet, checkbook and credit cards and that they spent the money, forged the victim’s name on personal checks and used the credit cards in a trip to Memphis, FBI agents found the car lii Memphis Nov. 3. Shooed Off the Street BUENOS AIRES (41 - All the women who shine shoes In Buenos Aires found themselve.s without a job yesterday. City officials decided shoe shining in the public streets was not fitting for the women, many of whom are elderly or crippled. Dark Day for Justice By EARL WIL.SON NEW YORK - Some sage .said it long ago when to be funny 1 lighters, you only had to misspell . . . "Things ain't what they used to , LONIWN (UPI) - A power break at the court of criminal appeals here forced judges (magi.strates) to continue .sessions by 'candlelight and ciga- BELIEVED IN AREA Both were believed still in this area although a house-to-house* search here yesterday failed to turn up a trace of them. The other three escapees still were at large, too, and officers throughout the west were searching for them. They never wuz . It’s .still true at this holiday time. It’s popu-1 lar now to deplore everything current, to .say j that the old days and old ways were belter. I There jue .scandals in the .schools, for example, now, concerning young people falling in love. | You would gather from reading j^ome of the | news stories that this is a brand new di.scovery that lhe.se young people have made. | Prisoners Free Hostages, Get Complaint Hearing services summoned n 1 remember when 1 was a teen-age re-por(er covering my high school forj a small Ohio city daily how a city editor who was paying me approximately $1.50 a week for my ................... I) his desk and whispered to me certain scandalous! rumors that he heard about our student body. “How can you believe such stories’.'" 1 demand(*d. I was either a freshman or sophonuire and not much escaped me . . . and I was a bit insulted at his aspersions. new. And to Time lore on. I found that there wasn’t much some, the old days were always superior. Ilierc is great grief expressed repeatedly nowadays over the tragic curtain of darkness that has allegedly fallen over New York’s famous night life. One would think that 8 million .souls slay glued to the telly here every night and never even go out for a bucket of b(“er. UNTRUE, A LIBEI., A SLANDER! „ , , „ „ , ,,, Night life now is gimmicked up .so delightfully that It s a whole new experience. PETROS, Tenn. (AP) (’oal-1 mining prisoners who warned | their hostages "there’s nohody | going out over that dynamite.” | ended a rebellion early today at j Brushy Mountain State Prison. Three mine foremen held cap-live underground for 18 hours by the 134 prisoners w^>re released unharmed. told their hostage,s, "We won’t harm a hair on your head," said one nf the foremen, Thomas I,. Harney, .56. Also held were Itoy Thompson, Rt, and William M. Edmonds, 58. Here’s a restaurant which will wash nine pounds of your laundry for everv Ihn'e drinks you buy. Another restaurant serves' you your drink and hors d’oeuvres on a chug-chugging model railroad train. You may ride to one restaurant In a Lon j tion doubledecker bus, and to another in a horsedrawn stage TIu’ convicts won a hearing on their complaints about mail service and other grievances, a di.scipllnary committee to investigate rules infractions and a proml.se of no punishment for their sildown. "I’m tremendously happy that we were able to end this in a comparatively short lime and without injury or mistreatment to anvone'" said Harry Avery, si,lie corrections commissioner. FORMER RIOT Thomp.son had be(*n in the same mine in July, 1951), and got out Just before convicts rioted and .set the shaft afire before hunger made them surrender after three days. 'I’he three were held where three shafts Join about three-fourths of a mile from the en ELEMENTARY SCHOOL ’They had dynamite down .START HEARING Avery said the griev, ich . . . fre( III one dimly HI East Side spot, there are lelephotves on each table, and you can phone to nnnther table and (IInciinn eoinpniilonslilp . . . an Idea fiorrowed from Germany. And bu.slness! Robert Goulet lured more loot into the Plaza Room on a recent Saturday than hud been rung up tliere in ’28 years. That would liave been 1036 when the .star must have been . , let's see, now . . . Buffalo Bill. (Actually, Volez and Yolanda.) ’ WISH I’D SAID THAT; “Looking at his wailet after the trip, the tourist said. 'Traveling Is flattening’.’’-Joey Adams. remembered QUOTE: The beardos ar(Mind New Vork recall Fred Allen’s des<+iplion of fda friend Monty Wooley: “He hK)ks like he swallow<'d a .11, Bernard and left the tall hanging out.' EARL'S rEARI-S: “What would I do If I Inherited ft,006,-(K)0’.^ Nothing, Starting Immediately!’’ All exiH'rt is Just a guy who can complicate the hell out of Bomelhhig aimple . . . Tliat’a earl, brother. hearings woidd start today at the prison in the Uumberlmul Mountains of Tennessra). The rebellion began soon after the prisoners r(Kle the cable cars Ihree fourlhs of a mile up the mountain Wtalnesday and went anotfier three fourllm of mile Into the pits. ITIaon officials IcanuBo of It six hours lal er, about noon, when no more coal came to the entrance of the shaft. iTclow us," .said llarncv, "and one of then n told UK ‘Ihcrc'.H no- Ixxfy going out over that (lyufimitc ' Ah Avci'i ' and Wanh'ii .lohn 'Hie convicts sent word over the mine telephone Itiat Hiey wanted to talk lo Avery, a post al lnapector,,n newsman and a lawyer. By highway patrol car, Avery hurried here from Nash ville, 186 miles away. Inside^ the mine, l|)e (saivicts Winsell went to the fhaKlIII mine entrance, idmul 170 prl.son guards stood l)y, F(air of the convicts lalkc'd to the officials at the enirance and returned to their companl(>ns, who named four others to go lo the prison for more talks. 1 NEWSMEN WATCH As iiewsmeh watched through a window, Avery and the four prisoners - Lloyd Hyland, James Goins, Jerry Atkins and Richard Tucker signed an agreemeid | Avery agreed that rules gov erning mail woidd not vlidale postal laws, and promisial to discipline any /prison employe who has violated prison regula ll(ms, and ap|Milnt a three-man disciplinary eommlllee. , ■ Jcciiiicei llie American clcinonlnry JU .sdiool reaclie.ii the gre&le.sl number ol our cili/.ens lor llie longe.sl lime, it is rcsponvible lor laying the groundwork lor licallli) intellectual and personality growth, I'denieiilary school gises ihe eliild Ids first glimpse into the worlds of llie .social studies, art, science and literature — and it gives him an awareues.i of the vastues.i of infornialinn ahoiit tliese worlds. Mere the cldhi learns to read and use libraries, lie learns lo nuil trimmer in *1 h e overhead DAHLMAN line s depart-menl. and in 1925, transferred to the company’s eteetrical con struetion department. In this capacity he worked on the building of substations in Rochester, Romeo, Lake Orion and the Bloomfield station in Pontiac. He was assigned to Edison’s Rochester sales office in 1926 and became manager a year later. Dahlman has been active IrT the Boy Scout movement, American Legion, World War 1 Veterans, the Chamber of Commerce and Kiwanis Club. Crash Kills Woman OVID (AP) Majorle A Her gey. 51. of Mount Pleasant was kdlcd Wednesday when the car in which she was riding struck a bridge abutment on M21 near llii.s ,Shiawas(*e County community Tile car crashed aulhorilies said, when il and another pulled out In pass a truck at the same lime. Girl in Port Hope Killed in Car Crash PORT HOPE (AP) - Rachel Leese, 16, of Port Hope was killed late Wednesday when her car, parked nled calls for a trainee program to develop curriculum con-.sultants in local districts. Trainees, probably teachers, would be Instnieted in eurrleu-bmi development by Oakland School!. These individuals could then serve as consultants In their own districts. Total cost of siieh a program wii.s not included in the eonnty hoard’s advance review of tk 196.5 66 budget, hut each Irainee would be paid about $1,250 pe Ncme.ster, boundary nearest Guardian Angels School would have cost about $1,100, after $3,300 was Jeducted as the state’s share of le total $4,400 expense. Opponents of the request said that the $1,100 could be used elsewhere and that the precedent that would be set would result in higher costs later when more parochial students re^ quested similar transportation. BAD ’nME ’They said that this would be a bad time to start busing parochial students. More than 1,300 public school students have just begun walking to school for the first time. This is a result of curtailment of bus transportation by the school board within the I'/^-mile limit set by the state for reimbursement of part of the cost. Prior to its decision on the Guardian Angels School proposal, the board receivecl a similar request' from parents of students at Our Shepherd Lutheran School in Birmingham. The request was tabled for two weeks lo allow gathering of more information, and will be •onsidered separale from the Guardian Angels issue. 5 FAMILIES Eleven children In five families are involved in the re-(juest from Our Shepherd School. 1965-66 hiidgel II alliieali’d mill The lent III Ivi wiitilil re(|iiire i age Ilf about over the euirenl allocalioii of .11. Erolion by WineJs Hurt Stat« Farms EAST LANSING (AP) Wlud.-i whipped away fens b( thousands of dollars lit Michigan farm topsoil and farm crops this year, reports Russell G. Hill, a Michigan Stale University extension speelalLst. k * k Hill said wind erosion lill especially hard in cighl lliumb area eountliis with flai, lake hot lorn soils. Many drainage ditch es were filled and miles of highways were drifleij wllli wind hlowii soil, he said. V and Miss Cleo Llewellyn. ■al service will be held Sal-, November 28 at 1:30 p.m. • woorhees - Siple p--"— h Rev. Geoffrey I >v. Geoffrey Day of-terment in P#rry emetery. (Suooested 3 fo 5 p.m, and 7 ficiating__________ Mount Park Cemetery visifino hours ' BOrkE. NOVEMBtk 2t, 19M, FERN E„ K5Z GIddIngs Road; age 72. Recitation ol the Rosary will be tonight at 8 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Friday, November 27 at 10 a.m. at DAWSON, NOVEMBER 24, 1 FRED 0., I2r Hillcliff, Water Township; age 88; dear falhei Mrs. Lillian Parker, Mrs. a.m. at the Voorhees-Siple F al Home with Rev. Wayn Smith officialing. Intermen Perry Mount Park Cem: (Suggested visiting hours 3 DERTINGER, NOVEMBEl^liT "*''“OND G- 910 riAk I Walled husband _______ father of Rober RAYMOND, ( ^ ^ Danlal. Barbara and Michael Der- be held Friday, Novem Home. Walled vice will be t ber 27 at II a.i Church, Walled Laae. inierm in St. Mary's Cemetery, MIHc HARRISON, NOVEMBER 23, I' PEARlj^ MARION, 4523 Sashab liam Ambs; also survlv grandchildren and foi grandchildren. Retifatio *pr,'."e? , Vincent de Paul MORIN, NOVEMBER 24, 1 GEORGE EARL, 346 Dover, terlord Township; ^e 63; ; and Donald Case. MUf^RAYr NOVETMRER 77. 19 HUGH R.r 921 Sf. Clair Street; 6 61; dear brolher of Mrs, He un"er.?'Son Reading Expert Due in County Monday A British reading expert, John Downing, will visit Oakland County Monday to spread further the gospel of f.T.A. What is I.T.A.? ’The Initials stand for initial teaching alphabet, a new method of tehehlng children to read and write. (JonsisUng of 44 symbols Instead of Ihe traditional 26 let-ler.s, I.T.A. I.s augmented to Include the sound.s of English. * * ft Downing^ head of tlie Reading Research Unit of the University of London Institute of Education, has been instrumental In the spread of the new system. EXPERIMENTAI, BASIS Devi.sed by Sir .lame.s I’ilmaii, giniidson of tlu> Invenlor of sliorthand, the I.T.A. alphahef was first pincliced on an experimental basis in England. If was exporfeil to Ihe Uiilled .SlafeH. I,asl year, schools In Itellile hem, I’a., leporlcd llial clilldren who were started on l.'l’.A. learned apprfiximately twice as mui'h nbmit rending and writing as children In traditionol 26-symbol programs. e Oukl I ai^o .districts are testing the I.T.A. approach. 2-DAY VISIT These include Birmingham, RliMimfleld Hills, Cinrencevllle, l‘’armington, P o ii 11 a c, 'I’roy, Walled Lake and Waterford Town.slilp.' Downing will s|iefi(l (wo days vislling locgl classroom*. On Monday, three apiNvir-seheduled before educators. i iHiiiqly ( .lOIlN DOWNING First grade leadiers who are Introducing I.T.A, will meet with him at 1:15 p.m. In the offices of Oakland .Sebools at Ihe (kinniy Service Genler, Illtl 'I.SII fUAd’K ES I’rior fo (hat tiieclllig, Dowling will report on ciiiieiit Brll-isii prncliccs al a meel ig of cpiTlcnluiji supervisors ami elementary prlnclpnl!i ol l)evon (,«uhles at 10:.30 a.m. The British , visitor will s|ieak at a meeting ol (he Oakland County Reading Cmmcll at 3:45 p.m. at Hlr-inlngham Sea holm High .School. At this last session, Downing will outline the experience teachers have had in using llio new nl()liabel for (eaelilng menially retarded and deaf children, Downing’s visit to Oakland (,'omily Is |iart of a month-long toiintf Ihe U.,S., which will lake In 18 educational gatherings fn^n Rfmloii to San Diego. Death Notices wav, Springfield Township; — 67; belo-.-ed husband ol Gladys, Palmer; dear father of Dolan Palmer,- dear brother ol Mrs. R. a Scloscher. FrSneis and Everatt Palmer; also survived by one granddaughter. Funeral service war be held Friday, Novem-h»r 27 at 2' p.m. at the Sharpe-• tta Funeral Home, ClarksIPn. me graveside service will I under the auspices of the -----^burg Lodge FSAM at tha Lakevlew Cemalerv, Clarkstdn, PRICE. NjOV EMBER 25. W64, CHARLES R„ M WashIngWn ' Straet; age 76; beloved husband of Edythe Price; dear father of Mrs. Wa-— ------- .......... GoveUa F __________ Mrs. Louis rvrris, iYir». Ltovd Hampton, Walter K„ Donald R., .Charws J. and Arthur B. Price; dear brother of Mrs. Linus Pace, J^>er and Ed-, gar Price; aiso survived by 30 grandchildren. Fbiieral service will be held Friday, November 27 at 2 p.m. at the SparksKrrIffIn Funeral Home. Interment In Ottawa Park Cemetery. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. end 7 iEIXMAN, JOHN JO NOVEMBER 23, 1964, I JOSEPH, 2299 Hester Court, Keego Harbor; age 79; beloved husband of Dorothy A. Sellman; dear lather of John g„ and X. Gilbert Sellman and Rodney E. AnnouncBmants gl«s (.50. TY PBrsouaif ANY GIRL OR* WDMAN^'NBtDIN; scennohs, etc. PE f N¥lmlf '7 b ftni. ° 3 SUPPLliS, 739 MAnomlnM. f P 5-/803. Doll MoseirAi oolii rS-iialred and raslorad. By apiralnl-manl only. Fiances Copoarimllh. 682 1813. _ LICENSED PRIVATE DirEcTIVMS Lost and Found 5 I'OUNDi MAI P lost! COON IU1IIND, BRINOi * 4M7j')T\lcilly!'MBS"2547.**'***''’ lOM MAI S niAoL* WITH WHIf* leal, vlrlnlly ol ParkdaMhSlanlay SL, reward. PE 4 2409. lORT: mOND PIMALB COCKER, clilld'i pal. PB I6.M/. Holp Waittod Malo _ A MIRING PART TIME New ticlory branch Is taking applications tor Immediate evening work, must bo 21-45 years ol age and have a steady lull-lime day lob. Hours 6:30 10:30. Oiiar-anlaad salary plus share ol proHls, earn 950 SlOd weakly. Call 6513011 lialwaen 4 and 7 p.m. only, )>■ TCf -;} E0« FUl I time rrSt lam aid wnik, otd al nho«d. Am pY al HI'I'l •- Muhlai, Sir " $20 to $40 extra Pomimisnt Parl-Tims SCHIMMEL, NOVEMBER 5 NICHOLAS J., 120 Pic Walled Lake: age 40; ...... ............. _. .. J grandson, Charles HOuk Jr. Funeral service will be^held Saturday^, N^ Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake with Rev. Carl Graoentlne otllciating. Interment 111 Commet'eo Cemefery. •MANY THANKS TO ALL THE friends, neighbors and realltives. Special thanks to Rev. Malcolm K Burton, and Chaplain Gerald In Memoriam 2 IN LOVING MEMORY OF ANNA and Kelley Spencer, who passed away November 25, 1954 and November 27, 1959. In our hearts your memory lingers. Always lender, lortd and true. iho passeo ; tnber. 27, 195 Id pleksant v Sadly missed by Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Pike and daughter, and Mr, and Mrs. Gordon ^iih. I loving'MEMORY OF LINDA Lee Schram -who passed away In ■ GET OUT OF OEET ON A PLAN" You Con Afford MICHIGAN CREDIT CONSELORS 702 Pontiac Staff Bank Bid. PE i-0456 Pontiac's oldest and largast budgat assistance cortripany._______ LOSE WEIGHT SAFE'l'Y WifH Dex-A-Dlel Tablets. Only 98 cents al Simms Brothers Drugs. il5^()X RF.PLIES j At 10 a.m. today there | were replies (taf *The | I Press Office in the lol- 1 I lowing boxes: | ( 5, 16, 31, 51, 72, 84, ! I 87, 199 I Funeral OirBctors 4 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOMH D. E. Parsley FUNERAL HOME "D«^on«d for Fu^raU'' wmooN ?9 OakUnd Avt.__ FE 3-OIM SPARkS-GRIFFIN ' FUNERAI HOME "Thoughtful Sarvica" FE 2-M4 VOORHEES-SiPLE FUNERAL HOME 2 8378 Established Over 40 Years Cemetery Lott 4-A ACCEPT? AS DOWN PAYMBNT OR 3-.1473, Dale Hampshlra, WHITE CHAPEL, OAKl AND HILLS, I wa^Hly . 6 Help Wanted Male VI... .. LIbtral tamings up to. SID,000 yoarly tor Iho qualifying men, apply In person to 772 Balcl-wln. Repair Canter tor all cars. . ‘ ATTENTION, MEN! Naedad at once, 3 men tor-full time work,'1120 a weak, (rlnga benefits. Calif Mr. Baker. PE S-9243, 4 p,m.-6 p.m. ___________ ■ AUTO MECHANIC . This It your chance to make - plenty of» money. Wa have a large backlog of work. Join < McAuliffe Ford. .1 2-4425 tor sp- BANK OEFICE- POSTTfON OPEN^ Mutt havo minimum of live years divarsitlad ekperlence In banking. Wrifa Mr. Louis J. Lavigne, P.O. Box 8, Farmington, A^chjgan._____ BODY MAN NEEDED. Aflust be ex- perienced L fools. Plenti Pontiac Auto Body Service 245 S. Blvd. E. PE 4-9587 CAR WASHERSr EXPERIENCE not essential, 17 o CABINET A5AKER, EXPERIENCED in layout and essembly, steady work, good pay. OR 3-3881 or OR 3-9860. - ■ " CAB DRIVERS, STEADY AND part time, day or night ahltts. 101 W. Huron.______________ CaS*1vASHER. FULL AI^D PART CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT Interested in establishing own practice to work with established ac-• ■ counting firm. Apply or write. Capital Business Service, 460 W. Huron - Pontiac. cXr 'wash e r17"f ull ,,t I me,'''mTn'- tleld Car Wash, 4025 Telegraph testing laboratory. Concrete | professional references to Pontiac Press Box 52. Earn MofiEY vvhile going’ to college or high school, lor appointment call^625-0931._______ ENGINE LATHE OPERATOR Experienced In finish machining, cosemiernn^cewor^ELDER Good wagas and fringe benefits Including profit sharing. AIRCRAFT AND MISSILE PARTS. OVERTIME McGREGOR *MFG. CORP. C^vrolel, CJarkslon^ MA 5-507L EXPERIENCED WASHER ^ A N Machinists Milling Machine and Lathe experience required. Must be able to do set-ups, read complicated blueprints and do own layout. Apply In Person Monday Thru Friday 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. LTV 'MISSILE PLANT North Gate Van Dyke near 16 Mi. Rd.' U. S. Citizenship Required LTV ling-Temco Vougltl, Inc. Help Wanted Mola - ^ 6 experienced carpenter ...ith tools, own trensportallon, yaer' emBloyment. PE 3-7171. PE 3-7171. FU^L flME ... Interview. OR'4---------- GAS STAftoN SHIFt MANAGER, allernoons, must know fune up and minor repair}, references required, good pay, Sunoco Station Telegraph end Mwle Rd. GOdD'E'XPERIENCED"‘BUM^ MAN or helper, 3260 Elizabeth Lake Good reliable carpet lav-er, experlaced. Raply Pontiac Press Box J06^_________________ graduate male accountant- Send detail resume or call Per-sonnal Director Rochestor Paper Co„ Rochester, Mich.____________ H A R D W A R E CLERK NEEDED full time, steady work, axptrlonca preferred. A. L. Demman Co. 626- JUNIOR COPYWRITER. 23 TO 30. Minimum 2 years non-rttail ax-perlence for top northwast area agency. 3 days, good salary. MIchi- . gan Personnel Services Corp. 770 ---------- "it, Birmliypham 647-46 Orchard Lake Rd. Call 6S2-3100. MECHANIC-LUBRICATION MAN Part-time or tulHIma mechanic, end full Itme lubrication man See Service rp tIac-Cadlllac, Briminghem. MULTILITH OPERATbR jply in ---- -------- Pontiac Gen^ereljdosplt^._ _ NATION,^ CORPORAflON'HAS'AN person Personnel Office. TONAL < imedtSle irJ: If you opportunity PARTS MANAGER GM DOAL IN Pontiac Michigan Araa. All new facilities. Excellent opportunity for aggressive Individual, who con assume complete control of parts department. Including all hiring and training. Liberal salary, In-centlva plan, profit sharing, demonstrator furnished. And all other fringe benefits. Reply Pontiac formation call Mr. Dale, OR 3-0922 PIZM “me n7'“n6“Fx PE RIE NC E rvice Manager, 13 ird, BIrrnIngham. Big Boy Drive In. Dixie Hwy. an^Sllver Lake Rd. after 4^.rn. R E T I.R E b MAN, 65 OR oViW, part tima work eves and wackanda In laundromat. FE 9 3449, 4 0 p.m. SERVICE STATlbN AttENbANf. must be mechanically Inclined, 25 ref., OR 3-9951,’ 5999 Andersonville Rd, _ _ _______________________ . salesman wanted for giJAIL milk delivery,. Pontiac and i^nlly. Good, routes now ,y . eb. .^e _ _ _____Tltln^. SERVICE MANAGER. gVOUAU IN Pontiac araa, all naw tacilltla^., phona In own Kandwrttl > Individual \ )'banatits. Raply t 19 Box 64 SALESMEN WANTED, FULL TIME for ratail furnitura stort. Top tal-ary plus commission. ^Prafar soma- Pontlac'araa.*Cal?33M59a *“ SALESMEN WHO CAN CLOSE Prestige sailing - wanted salesman who warn to earn JU.OOO to unique quality prospects, an n to 4) with direct Ing experience. This Op-otters not only tremen-.v.fwi ^*rnlngs, but elso want. For contI- SHORT ORDER eObK, MUSTRaVe breakfast exparlenca. apply at Big Boy Drive-In, Telegraph and Hur- rOR JOBBING IHOP MUST RE JOURNEYMAN TOP WAGES APPLY IN PERSON RIY TOOL I. ENG. CORP. 2710 W. MAPLE RD. TIME FOR A CHANGE |PLANT SUPERVISORS PERSONNEL MANAGERS HIGH CALIBER MEN ACCUSTOMED TO DEALING WITH PEOPLE lo mo60 RANGH M^USt^BF ABI^F TO START WITM- rOR PBRSONAI AND CONfl-DPNTIAl DISCUSSION OP THIS POSITION. PHONE MR. SMITH AT PE l(H39 FOR INTERVIEW APPOIN1MFI|T. TOOL BORING MILL OPERATOR DVI BIG OB LUCA* p.|roll Broech I, M«chlne Cg. Bmhenler OL 1 9311 IRES 'TRtMMfRg -- iXPiit-enced only — Good ney — Cell Ml 4-7024, UPHOLSTBR'Y ANF pUhNltUIf repair men. Pert or lull lime. Experienced only. Coll 335-8124, • ■ ■■ -lorrli. WANTED: VoUNb t Ing ro6leiiren1 rliein, lunlly In; tight me ellei I p.m, > Wl^l hfBS* WANTFOi gjHdj, I llleple.*7ray ' N Ai MUST •I litel T. VARD MAN WAkTf5 Union I eke. ' j H# Want«d Mol# HLlp^ant#a|F#mol# THE PONTIAC I’RKSS. , 1’HI'RSI MV. NOVEMBER 1^64 H-llH $nack Bar,' County Help, Wanted Female AN ^XPERIENdEO BEAUTY OP-oratBf. Ponell'a FE tnn, applications NOW BEING AC-capfatl top part and full, time help, S. S. I&uga's, «r». Brown Miracle Mila. BAR' MAID. APPLY IN pIrSON, Avon Bar, 3912 Auburn Rd. near Adame. Road. • » BABY SITTING AND HOUSEWORK, live In. Call after 1 p.m., 993-6131, Lake Orion;__ BAR MAID, DAYS. APPLY • applicant muet bf at least USA citlien and hold a Micnigan drivers license. Must be able to pass a typing test, of 60 words per minute. Work consists of taking " !S awllcatlons.^typlng Monday," throu^ Friday. Apply 9 a.m. to noon, room 206, Municipal Bldg., |Sl Martin St.. Birming- COMP'ETENT ___________ housework, husband it drive 890. ARISTOCRA. _.....______ UNION LAKE - LOCKLIN tMH (Prestige area). A'fine home be* gins with a beautiful saltInB. S .acres of beauty. Lawn and tall Xrees. Low brick ranch. 3 bed->boms. 2'/j baths. Family room. ............... heat. Attachad ^ t30,900. teims. . HAROLD R. FRANKS, Really 2S03 UNION LAKE ROAD ' EM 3-3200 363-2111 r WEIR, MANUEL, I SNYDER & RANKE.' SHOW HOUSE ' BUILDER'S MODEL Tor Sale" Occupy January 15th Bi^Level $700 Moves You In Only $122 Per Month - ’ ‘1 I, closed Thursday nerce Rd;, turn left et nerce, 2 miles to.Olan-uai, lull, light to models. 1^ D'LdRAH Americono Homes 624-4200 FIRST IN VAlUB $59 MO. ...excluding taxes and Insutance ' Mixed Area I RENTING Smiley Realty FE 2-8326 Open Daily 9 o.m, to, f p.i«. SilSSs CHAPIN MOm BROKCrIs y '”lKH»^Mri*l O, MICMIOAN^ "" Horn© Owners "Ik: lOWcST RATFS S iil;i Con££%F'""^ ....... FE ’'"'‘X.^tv-Pho:r' ssS-srS Salt NwiMhoM Ooadt 6S THE PQNTIAC IPR^SS, THtJRgDAY^' NOVEMBER 26, 1964 H—18 DINING ROOM < $»; wrinwr-fyp* wmImt, $ r«fr^r*lw, ^doer Kalvinator, m. *’** FE 2-5eP. nilurAM DUVBir4AAU/\>*AuC ...•li DUNCAN PHYFE AAAHOGAHY'F ISH DINING ROOM SET-4IIM * •TCludlhB r DRAYTON SERVICE with table padt, 4 inch matching bu______ ________ pmCE IQ YEARS AGO, Q47qJ ^ALE PRICE, »»9. PICTURES AND ODDMENTS. Tuft- ed klng-slu 7S-lnch headboard RETAIL, PRICE, 7 years ago] t1J5.Q5, SALE PRICE, SMJO; PHONE FOR APPOINTMENT ADDRESS: 290 SOUTH TILDEN (PONTIAC). PHONE: FE 2-2745, 3 BLOCKS WEST OF TELEGRAPH OFF VOORHEIS ROAD BETWEEN WEST HURON AND ORCHARD LAKE ROAD. electric stove, real t gas stove, $10 Oil tank. Ilka FE a-4374._________________ electric STOV^ with LI clock, and storage space. 2-3403 ------- fLECTRIC RANGE, GOOD CONDI-tion Twin bedk, mattress and box springs. Kitchen sink. Call after 2:30, OR 9-7097. bull! vacuum day etterr— Michigan 3282 Dixie 1. Open Sun-d used parts, a. OR 3-8011. CLOTHES DRYER, •40 Bafora 3 p m. 1215 Is Orchard. FREEZERS home specials - DELUXE FREEZERS—WHILE THEY LAST FRIGIDAIRE IMPERIAL Electric stove with French door, 30-lnch oven, complaialy auto. Used I year. Reasonable. FE 2-1477.________________________ FREIGHT DAMAGED REFRIGERATORS WASHER AND DRYERS FIRESTONE STORE 144 W. HURON 333-7917 GE stereo - ONLY $5.00 DOWN Repossessed TV at $1.25 per vreek Like newMiE range—only $5 Down See us now — tor terrific buys GOODYEAR STORE PONTIAC 30 5. GAS RANGE, Chet, 1 INFANT'S 3-PIECE HONEYSUCKLE bedroom outfit. FE 2-0454. KIRBY VACCUM . . . $».50 New portable typewriter .. $33.50 Singer console auto, ilg-zag $59.50 Singer portable ....... ....... Curt's Appliance MAPLE MAYTAG WRITTgER WASHER ________ FE 54)020 ______ MONTGOMERY WARD REFRIGER-r, $25. 482-0309. OIL BURNERS, COAL HEATERS, OPEN DAILY 8 to L For Sola Mi(callaiw«n 67 ^ GAS CEMENT MIXER, enclosed aluminum trailer, sulta-FE Gone's, la aluminum siding, STORMS, awnings. Vinyl siding. Installed materials. Quality low cost. FE 5-9545 VALLELY OL 1-4423 2 SOLID -WARDROBE TRUNKS, Reply Pontiac Press trols. FE 8-8150.____________ ' end TABLEST $5. LIRA cordlon, $180; Conn clarinet, : Odds and ends. 402-4120. LARGE ALUMINUM WINDO' iPRUCE 1 FOOT TO 3 FEET jr dig, $2. Large Scotch Pines 7 ft. to 11 ft., Lapeer. Call Farmington 474- CHRISTMAS TR^ES, BEAUTIFUL bush Scotch and Austrian Pine, wholesale only, 40 cents, $1.00 and $1.25. We deliver. Phone Mt. Clem-ens, Mich. HO 3-1542 or HO 0-4598. 3 ZIG-ZAG SEWING MACHINE Domelco, FE ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN________FE 5-7471 ANTIQUE MIRROR, 1-HORSE MO-nearly new. Set of 5-ton ..... ., ,—• mirror. SCOTCH PINE WHOLESALE, CUT —a ready to load. On Hwy. M24, miles north of Pontiac. 3542 S. peer Rd„ AAetamora. 470-2523.' :ar. 215 W. I BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL AND 'urnace and boilers, automatic heaters, hardware and — supplies. Crock, soil, black and galvanized lutings. Sentry and _______ — —... Super Kem-Tone HEIGHTS SUPPLY 685 Lapeer Rd. FE 4-5431 BEEF AND PORK-iHALF AND ----- ------ MW. FE 5-7941. Bottle Gas Installation Two 100-pound cylinders ai^ equip- ment, $12. Great f BABY CLOTHES, BLAN-es, lamps, sk^ Carload Prefinished PANELS IN STOCK FIRST QUALITY FINISHES $3.65 to i)8.64 4'x7' AND 4'x8' MAHOGANY 4'x7' AND 4'x8' BIRCH MANY OTHERS ON DISPLAY PONTIAC PLYWOOD n* A FE 2-2543 CLEARANCE OF USED dFFICE furniture end machines. Forbes, 4500 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-974' Montcalm Supply, 154 1 HALL'S AUCTION SALES lY 3-1171 -or MY 3-4141 )5 W- Clarkston Rd. PLASTIC WALL TILE B$G TILE OUTLET. 1075 W. Huron PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES 40 Inch sink cabinet, $45. 917 Orchard Lake_________ zig-zagger, Mittonholes, grams, fancy si------- ... nut cabinet. Payments of "95 monthly. Under guaren-I. Domelco, Inc. FE 0-4521 $3.95 monthly, tee. Domelco, _ . FULL PRICE $33.10 REFRIGERATOR AND FREEZER. _______ Cell UL 2-3702._____ SPECIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Conelete of: 3plece living room suite with 2 step- tables, I cocktail table a OK DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple Inexpensive Appilcati Dies builders Supply FE HAGGERTY HAS IT! Table Tennis Tables 5 X 9 It. V," Fir tops ....... $12.95 8 metal folding legs 112.25 Haggerty Lumber/ MA 4-4551 HEAT‘F0R‘''1-3 lESr'WITH G 1-day service A & H. MA S-) JIM'S SALVAGE OUTLET, EVERY- Mon.'fhru_^t.?^93IJill Chr 1 LANDIS SHOE GRINDING “MA- For Sale Mscaikmoam Healing, OR 3-SOU. ’ ANNdliMdiMEHTS j V DBAUlirUkl-T III sha^ Scot^ Pin le In^quantlty.^lO r Pontiac. 420-aiQ, 15,000 SCOTCH PIMES, . . foot. Wholesale. OR 3-22S2, 42S-UI24. -I CHRISTA8AS TREES. SPRUbE. boughs. Open dally. 12 miles north of Pontiac, -trasl filters, complete, $70. 4775 Ponderosa, Commerce, Michigan, *" Commerce Road. built-up display MODELS. Cars, boats, planes, etc. These models were on display at K-Mart. FE 2-4049. FOR SALE: HO TRAIN LAYOUT, iwitebes. 1 cross-over s HO TRAIN LAYOUT, 5x9-FT. TABLE Hand Tools-Mochinery 68 WELDING AND CUTTING KITy new, complete with regulators, gauges, torches, tips, 25-tt. dual hose, Q Oxygen, WQ acetylehe . PENTAX H3-V. ' with F.I.a. lens, w. $105. Call LI AT GALLAGHER'S New Gulbransen Spinet Theatre Organ, "horse-shoe style," only 1 to sell at this low price. No money down, no payments . till "Tallagher's music I E. HURON FE 4 0566 Royal Oak Stora 4224 Woodward Batwaen 13 and 14 Mile OPEN SUNDAY FROM 1 Jt 5 P.M. FREE PARKING________________ February/ 1965. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC HURON FE 4-0566 Royal Oak Store _ 4»4 Wp^ward FREE PARKING •prInS lampi. l-plece din Formica 9x12 rug mattress and ) tiiOta/ I bookcase/ for 1399. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. E. HURON FE 4< OR THE Test buys \W~guT- tars. Curt's Apllance, OR 4-1101. GULBRANSEN ORGAN. 2 KEY-boards. One Octave bass pedals. Chimes, Selt-contalned Leslie condition. After 4 LUMBER HAMMOND SPiNET ORGAN-FE ffANLEY. CHROME DINETTE SET, Formica fable top and 4 chairs, $35. 4734)080._____________________________ yi— .. - REFRIGERATOR Svreel's Radio $. ---- - 422 W Huron 334-54/t WASMeR,^l25, ELECTRIC STOVE. $35 Dryer. $25. Refrigerator with / $49. Gas I 2Mnch TV $23. Refrigerator $2; _y. Harris FE 5-2766.__ us¥d furnYTure'speciXls Kitchen table and 2 chairs 220 gallon oil tank M^aytag *v*'b97, guaranteed Knee-hole desk .............. lIjxaIre oil burner. heater. 220 gallon tanK ano an lltlings. $10 each. 482-0555. MATCHING engagement AND PEARSON'S FURNIT 'XJ: TAKE TRAbe Ih 'family 5 Oixt< WINTER CLEARANCE 1 30" Frigidaire range, 1944 m 1 Frigidaire Iroezor, upright. ' Frigidaire Dishwasher. ALL SPECIALLY PRICED. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3445 Auburn Av*. FE 4 3573 "WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE Al our 18 W. Pike Store Only MEDICINE CAblNETS LARGE 20" 0 r, slightly marred $.1 fS; selection of cabinets with fhout llghls. sliding door-c buys. Michl--------------------------- $399 AVIS CABINETS 1570 Opdvko F E 4 4360 i’ONO TABLE. 28 FOOT IX-...on ladders. Solo Vox. Ft 2 5023 pIpI pitting aNO plumbing. Sinks, windows and electrical supplies (ReclaimedI 4512 Halchery. PRETNVENtORY CLEARANCE carload Sale 150. FB 5 3497 or PE 2 4102^ SLllGli, bells, use rlsfmas Lay away. Y Knol __ I' Hi-Fi, TV S Radiot Antiques/ 10345 il" BLOND RCA. new plrfure tuU. ................— Sllvertena hljjh tl, wood condlllun. $59.95. Used ping Ceiiler. ■■24.|N(;N tAhi.H MoftBL tv, $35; dOMBINAtidN AND ^RlC TOROl A CON80LB IV SET, F ■ ---- '"■■1 21 Inchar " new pILlut (lltlon, RE I All PNICB • yeai $495, lAI F PRK P 999. ADIWESS 290 SOU III TILDEN - BLOCKS WEST OF lELB *»4PH (3FF VOORHEIS ROAD BBTWEElJ WEST HURON ““ ORCHARD LAKE ROAD. 3uARAWElb useb TVrTRoIiA $94.95 up. Financing can b - PAr^RADIOTV PB RtCfiNDITinHiD AND flUABAN leeiWvi. spvPrtAi io cmoosr JOHNSON'S RADIO 8, TV illiBiNodo BMTiAutTiFLlK TUN er. Must go. I yaar oM. OR 3 7445, mm bhonoobafh, 'm. hm radio In Walnut cabmah PB $ 1944. I I RECONDITIONED UPRIGHT Burmeister's 27 S. Saginaw FE 3-7168 REVERBERATOR ilNlt WITH PRE amp. $45. Old amp. $15. DeRrmond guitar pick up $5. OR_4-0034 alle^r_4 SALE OUITArV". . . ACCORblONS rhigan Fluor AUTOMAtlC WATER SOFT- THOMAS ORGANS FOR 1965, one of America's greatest values. Full spinet organ, starting at $495. WIEGAND MUSIC CO., 469 Elizabeth Lake Road. Piano tuning and organ repair. UPRIOMt PIANO, $49;" tELiVj. ■ $35 and up. Coast Wide ^ I, 371 E. Pike St. USEb PIANOS: UPRIGHTS FROM ... " oil PAINTINGS OF ELK. FE 5 4921 ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH PonlI(ic'’Mail. *4aTo422.*' *' WURI ITZER ELECtRIC" PIANO, exc. r.oridllinn, $225. 484-5035. Music Leiiont 71-A Kompoct Kitchens PLYWOOD DISTRIBUTORS of Pontiac Inc. 5 N Cass FB 2(H39 Pool Tables Belaire II 4-0900 PLuftlDING BAfiGAfNf""FRffff"^ ding tollat, $14.95; 3Boallon er 147.95; 3-placa balh — RAPIO OAVToN WATER RUMP, s, usea only 3 iiiuni (awn, $50. 335 5902. iiNsHr' ZIO-TaO SBWlNO MA chine. Dlel'A-Malle. AAodern ceol-■ Used. Taka i.............. Imm. Untvarsal <;o SpReDSAtiN PaiNTI, wARWICk Supply 2478 Oichard Lake. 412-MM ^ -----SPfcTAt" I" Plyscore, 4x8 $915 i" Plyscore. 4x1 fl.49 H" Plyscore, 4x8 94.15 DRAYTON PLYWOOD 4112 West Walton OR $8912 Ns STEf i I. 7001 MW TAUWTl 73 0742. nail's, Pontiac V Grinnell's - ipinets from $ ACCOKDiON, GUIfAR LESSONS. 5/ilfltt Service Puinnor.kl. OR 3 "W6. Sporting Goods 74 NEW APACHE CAMP TRAILERS letToty damonstretors, an tiwu-‘ ai big savings while they ‘ tcTte Fecloty hometown I mlla east of Lapaar AFACHE camp tRAILBRS NBw taclory damonstrators, all mod- rj;,,"UiTXy BANKS ARCHERY' SALSS. Michigan Ava. FE 5 424r BIO SBlectioN, usBd sNoi I OUTFIT, head. Guns hiiY sin rRADB Burr Shall, 375 S. Telegraph NBw Io QAOgE SMbTdUN GUNS^GUNS GUNSI W™rT*H*BH WINCMPSIEH COI T PISTOLS - -Try them belora you bttv we DO Al L OUR OWN Scope Mounllnu Oun Imllhing Ritas RANGB THAR FI8L0 Open io lha Public CLIFF DREYER'S ^ Gun^and »pjjrl wanted. (6ood UsdO lfANDOON _sma^lj)ur«^ Phuna Eve«. OL I-'*" Sand-Oravoi-OIrt NDIcB RICH StACK"WRT, SIX yards tor $10, dyllvered. FB 4 45M, FILL DIRT, PONTIAC VlfWITV. Reasonaitig, oi i *4a!i. ■'''M*aPaifnill'^o6 3*|w’* Ri*N*nAc* lAki BoiL&iRi lOP. niy, ornvi»li fill dirl, OR 3 1^14 W me SANOi oRAVilV Pill “Stars, my foot! He’s watching that French poodle he’s too shy to meet!” Wood-Coal-Coke-Fue! CANNEL coal — THE IDEAL '1761/ fireplace wood, fire-I. OAKLAND FUEL 8t PAINT. 45 Thornes SI GOOD CLEAN S FIREWOOD FOR sale. 673-4932. WHITE BIRCH/ $18; OAK/. $16. DE- Petl-Hunting Dogs 2 WALKER SNOW DOGS, 1 3 years, 1 female, 3V5 ye 8-1475. ______________ AKC COLLIE PUPS, a. 34$7957 after 1i AKC MINIATURE POODLES. PLAT- ___ _STELHEIMS, FE 2-0889. iKC DACHSHUND MALE PUPPIES paper trained. 338-4717. AKC POODLES AT STUD. TROPI-cal fish. Parakeeti, canaries. Pet Supplies. Crane's. UL 2-2200. CUTE PUPPIES, $2 EACH, FE 8-0074, 1009 Northfleld, off Walton and GIddIngs. __________________ DACHSHUND PUPPIES.-AKC RE(j-Istered. OL 1-4525. GERMAN SHEPHERD, GERMAN SHEPHERD I LABRADOR PUP, 10 WEEKS OLD, PARAKEET, BABY A5ALES, f4.95. ___First; Rochester, .461-08051_ PERSONALllZb POODLE CLIPPING. OR 3-89r gift. Non-shed. Non-ellergic. 4505 N. River Rd., Freeland, Rte. 3. 517-SW 2-5343.__________________ POODLE PUPPIES. OR 3-417(Por FE 5-1853. PRETTY WHITE KITTENS, $3 each. 125 Summit. rIoistered""aIrdale" ferrier, PUP, male. 334-4341. _____ RlNO-TA'lLEb " MONKEY,' WELL-trained. Cage Included. Also 2 registered Siamese cats. Call between 693-6550. Richway Poudle Salon All breed professional grooming A complete line of pet supplies 821 OAKLAND (next to Zlebarts) Open dally 6-4 FE 8-0824 REGIStERfeb CHlIHUAHUA ANb hua and T*oy Fox Tiud sarvice. SMALL POODLE PUPS — SILVER, TOY TERRIER, 5 MONTHS" OLD". EVERY FRIDAY EVERY SATURDAY EVERY SUNDAY Goods - A Wrl?i e Buy~Sall-Tr Consign 7:30 P.^ 2:00 P.^ -uirrn* °"bIb"a HALL'S AUCTION SALES 15 W. Clarkston Rd., AUrTloNlER 435-9400 81 ) SCOTCH PINES, SHEARED, of shade ti yraan, tor 4911. Xf,.; I Landstaii Troy. 879 Plantt-TreBi-Shrubs 81-A BIRCH CLUMPS - SHADE TREES vTlIaga.^Oally* Llvootock I HOLSTEIN f n, 6a 8 padd plala, I riFUL ler Iw Complala, T:i00. OL 14454. i IIAUTIFUL BlAeX RiOiSTiBIb quarter Iwrie, aaldlng, tlnlshed cultlng horsi^ ta^dlr lo^ show. STANOt^ Ika. UL 2-3/44, %-eraiii-l. twekt elder tr^ly I Otcherdi. MOl t. Com Rd„ 1 ASIIe d. of MUterd in Burns end Duck Lake Rd. delly. Evans Equipment. 425-1711. NEW 1945 MODELS, McCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS, PRICED AT ........ $124.95. “ARTS AND SERVICE KING BROS. FE 441734 FE 4-1442 Pontiac Rd, at Opdyke SEE _______FIRST AND SAVE. JOHN DEERE. HARTLAND AREA Hard------------:432-7141. SEE OUR LINE OF HOMELITE chain saws. Davis Machinery C Ortonvtile, NA 7-3292. Specialist ' machinery par USED Erazer ROTOTILLERS, PARTS AND SERVICE. L. W. Avis 1570 Opdyke___________FE 4-4380 It brake cont. SI, Wolfe, Comanche, Driftwood, Tour-a-Home and Bee Line. Truck"camp-' used trailers. Storage. JACOBSON TRAILER SALES ANO RENTAL, 5490 Williams Lake Rd. Drayton Plains, OR 3-5981. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed for life. See them and get a demonstration at Warner Trailer Sales, 3098 W. Huron (plan to loin one of Wally Byam's exciting caravans). ARE YOU FLORIDA BOUND? Get your travel trailer now. AVALAIRS, CREES, HOLLYS, TAWAS 14'/i to 28 ft., self-cQiitained Winter storage available ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 6577 Dixie Hwy._______;MA 5-1400 BY OWNER » TON DELUXE TRUCK fw camper/ sleeps 4. FE PHOENIX TRUCK CAMPERS 8-10-10.6/ front and side models Pioneer Camper Sales. FE 7 l^ick-UP CAMPE RJ From $189 up T 8$ R CAMPER MFC. CO. 10 Auburndaie/ Utica 73M240 MONITOR IrOR 1965 New 19' self-contained, sleeps New 22' self-contained, front cur Comes complete with $795, NOW ONLY $495. FRANKLINS 15'-l7i/j'-l8'A'-20>/S'- llsplay - FANS - all on display — Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4-4771 —Open dally and Sundays— __STOP OUT THIS WEEKEND NOVEMBER CLEARANCE Century-T ravelmaster-Sage 18/ 19/ 20r and 23 ft. modeh ALL SELF CONTAINED SOMETHING NEW USED SPECIALS f contained, I rm windows. Sleeps TOM STACHLER AUTO anti MOBILE SALES SMALL TRAVEL TRAILER. $150. 3802 Elliaboth Lake RoadL travel" trailers _AND JRUCK mtiBC Perry al Walton. FE 4 WOLVERINE TRUCK' CaMPBR SALES, FA Housetrailers A BETTER PRICE o Broker CAMPERS telencopln^ COLONIAL MOBiLE HOME SALi'S, Inc. - Travelo, Vagabond, Richardson, Rlticraft, Diplomat. New 1945 (if itbMf GbpAir Iwy., Orayion Plains, OR DETROITBfe Bob Hutchinson 101 DIxIa Mlghway OR 3 1207 pen 9 Io 9 Dally Sat. 94 SUNDAY 195 I ANOTHER FIRST 'tS'kI' wide. Wllh llvlno room ax- Bob Hutchinson uni Dixie-Mlphwav OH 3 1201 Oiaylnn Plains Open 9 to 9 Dally 8ai _____Sunday 19-9__________ MiRL^fn, V*5SS6fJ5, OAfir ner. Skyline, General, 1012 and to wide. 40 floor plans. Oxford Trailer Sales Rorkhurst Trailer Sales finest in mobile livng is fro 40 feet. Faafurlng New AAiion- Jeiik Cewr-ThKks iei»6 10 J U N K. CARS - tRlIcKS Rent Trailer Space VHY RENT: BUY FOR LESS PER month. (Mobile home lots, 40'x120' $2,795, $25 down, $25 per month. Blacktoppad. Gat, beach, fish. Bloc Bros. FE 4^4509. OR S-1295. 1957 PONTIAC FRONT END COM- ■ite. FE 4-9207. ___________ CHEVROLET ENGINE, 203 - standard housing and fly- .... . MY 3-4707. 1944 FORD (|27 ENGINE WITH II and amp gauga $10. Call & slicks. Also 1941 -...„. FE 5-5528. FORD 292 OR CHEVY FACTORY Truck Tire Specials 825x20-10 Ply, highway ... $42.80 825x2(5-12 ply, highway ... $58.28 ■ ,« 825x20-10 ply, snow nylon 900x20-10 1944 JEEP WITH PLOW, condition. $850. FE 5-4145, e 1954 FORD VS-TON PICK 10x22.5-10 ply mud and Ask for special dtal on sets of tour FREE MOUNTING / FIRESTONE CRANKSHAFT GRINDING car. Motor rebuilding * grinding. Zuck Machln Hood. Phone FE 2-2563. Machine Shop, 23 Motorcycles 95 SPECIAL SALE New 1945 NORTON 750 Scrambler . . Only $1,250 del., easy terms. Also TRIUMPH, HONDA, DUCATI ANDERSON SALES 8, SERVICE 230 E. Pike-__________FE 2-8309 SPORTSAAAN 2 HONDA 90 TRAIL YAMAHAS III New 1945 Models K a. W CYCLE 731-0290 Bicycles BOYS 24-INCH SCHWINN, Boots - Accessories FOOT CRISCRAFT ! Sportsman. Bought 2 hours, sen tor $2/800. M MEIrose 7-7327. ' extras. Holly, |5 JOHNSON'S ARE HERE CLOSE-OUT ON '44 MODELS Boats Canoes Trallei OWENS MARINE SUPPLY -5*7S?.'"*' ' BOATS-MOtORS WINTER STORAGE Mercury-Scott-McCullough CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALE A GREAT DISCOUNT-Lone Stars. MFG boats, / good used rigs ' STILL THE BEST DEALS AT CLIFF DREYER'S Gun and Sport Center 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 —Open Dally and Sunday— ENGINES AND DRIVES Inboard-Outboard rt your outboard T REASONABLE COST FREE LAY-A-WAY Starcrall - Sea-Ray - Thompson Johnson Motors and Boats STORAGE'-REPAIRS PINTER'S-Fb 4-0924 1370 Opdyke. Tues.-Thurs. to ' -* “* Clemens, Rd. Exit) BuV r-“*" ■ "HARD TO FIND BUT EASY TO / Steun To'T Hickory Ridge Road. Left anu u. DAWSON'S SALES Inside Boat Storage $8 PER MONTH AND UP OR BY SEASON Hubbard Parking Service _________FE 3-9448_________ Inside-Outside Storage Boat Repairs—Refinishing HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evinrude Dealer" 199 S. Telegraph Rd. 332-80: Depth sounder. Limited Supply Wllh Purchase Of New Owens Cruiser On Display—Trade N WALT MAZUREK^ LAKE 8. SEA MARINA Woodward at S- Blvd- FE 4-9567 SPEC IA L R 'E DUC ED PR IC ES. On 1945 boats and motors tor Chr mss or lor Christmas gilt pur- - Brunswick Pool Tab BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER irlh^ol 14 Mile at Adams Rd. TONY'S (MARINE P"5R JOHNSON MOTORS IE WILL BEAT ANY "DEAL" r"s Boats- Motors. Laka Orion Airplanes 1942 CESSNA S }M8rk'’*^'l2, '*pr f HAWK, 435 TO-Dmnl, 340 degrees, lie owner, $9,.600, Wonted Cnri-Trucki 101 MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS ASK FOR BERNIE AT- BIRMIN6HAM CHRYSLBR-PLYMOUTH, INC. AVERILL'S but get the IwsI" AVERILL'S FE 2-9876 2020 Dixie_FB 4 4 California Buyers '“VT^ motor" SALES Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMCLER Fays more tor ANY make used i Call lor Appraisal ||44 I. Woodward Ml 4 7 MANSFIEID..... AUTO SALES Wa'r# buying tharp. I«la mo cars . , . N()wr 1184 Baldwin Ava. FE 5*5900 SPECIAL PRICE PAID FOR I959I941 CARS VAN'S Auro SALES «40 Dixie Hwy. ____()R 3-13)5 "TQP DSLLAR PAID'' " FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS GLENN'S 9)2 Was! Hiiron SI; ■ a . ' BR J.I, top i fOR'CL f AN C-ARI or Irucki, iconcomy C»rs, 933) l)‘ '■ WANTlBi WrtlU CAHi Ellsworth AUTO SALES^ ^ 6977 DImI# HWVe iPon^^ ALWAYS BUViNG $$JUNK CARS-FREE TOWt$ TOP $$ CALL FE S4142 I ALLEH & SONS, INC, Used Auto-Truck ParK 102 New and Used Trucks ^103 GOOD Pontiac. FE 2-1494. 1948 GMC STRAIGHT AIR, 5-SPEED and 2-speed, with or without tag axle. FE 6-1215._______ Good condition. 343-4713. 1942 FORD F-10Q PICKUP V ve, stick, radio, save on tr JEROME-FERGUSON, Inp: ’'ester FORD Dealer. OL 1- th 4-wheel drive, red finish, sst like new! HASKINS Chevy-Olds 3 CHEVY Vi-TON PICKUP; »r FORD Dealer. OLJL CHEVY 1964, EICAMINO ^PICKUP, safer. Save! JEROME-FERGU- ;4 JEEP n 4-wheei n, MA 5-2604. HASKINS G.M.C. Factory Brunch New and Used Trucks FE 5-9485____________475 Oakland lEEP / OLIVER BUICK and JEEP 210 Orchard Laka JEEP 1963 C-170 Pickup lor snow plow, excellent condition, PATTERSON W. Mr"T280t. _ SPECIALIZED UNITS 1954 Ford, 12' welkin van, du tires, lop carrier, ove and painted. $795. 1959 Ford, C400, Tilt Cab, 1 olna, 8-ply tires,-A-i throughout, $1,395. 20 others to choose from, pickups. McAULIFFE 430 Oakland FE 5 4101 Auto Inturanct 104 AETNA-AUTO-RITE $25,000 liability, $1,250 madir.al $20,008 un-lnidrtd molorlsli $12 QUARTERLY BRUMMETT AGENCY MIRACLB MILB PE 4 05Bi 6 iNSURAN^t >M ANYONg Kabdall 38 7157 AUT6 INSURANCE Safa Drlvars payment PLANS AVAILABLB Stop In Todayl 1044 Joslyn Ave. Forfign Cars 1954 yw 2 000^,^ ?64bS*^' 1958 jaguar;" RIAL NICE, 999). or bail offer, oL 2 2431. 1948 VW 6RIGIHAL eWNIR, mi. 18 RdNAul-f, Gr>ob CbNbiTibN. 'Tali'Bllar4V «2-'8649'. 1941 W, 466D CGNbITIGM," 9)9). Call atlar 4, 33) 1348. 1942 VW, L6W Mil I Adi, 9I.IH. 1947 VW. iUN ROOF, RAnin, XL"M55TTIKk haw 1991 SUPERIOR RAMBLER 1943 "AlilfTN HIaLBV Good c^dltlon.^ 'fj'*‘*4 19)7 «W 'BlLU$fl *3kOb6R ITA- igon with umropt. Ilka new. «6LL| ROVei, 111Vll WlAlTH louring llmousina. with Hoopar ii^^^Alao 1931 Wrallh, .............. New md Uiid Gmv Are You Lookihg for ECONOMY? economically priced, easy tt English Ford line cars are built to high quality. Ford specifications wllh American standard size nuts and boltsi Bast of an English Ford line of cars ara backed by a national wide sales, and service organizatlonl Low Initial cost, low maintains cost, and 30 plus MPG. 24 months or 24,000 miles g least tomorrow at - LLOYDS Llncoln-Mercury-Comet - English Ford-1250 Oakland Ava. FE 3-7863 Automatic transmission! New and Used Cars 106 159 BUICK ELECTRA 4-DOOR, has dynsflow transmission, radio, heater, power brakes, power steering, full price 9497, weekly payments 94.45. Banker's Outlet 3400 EIIABETH Lake Road FE 8-7137 Credit Co-ordinator. 338-4528. Remember - A FREE Turkey all NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) Spartan Dodge HARDTOP, POWER a I E c R . nl G, POWER BRAKES RADIO, HEATER, AUTO. TRANS-AAISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MON- 1942 BUICK LeSABRE, e, new premium tires. Excellent condition. Garage-kept. Power brakes, steering, radio, healer, 37,000 actual miles. $1,495. MA 962" BUICK INVICTA CONVERTI-ble. Raven black finish with red Interior and black top. Automatic, d“o“1ieaVe*r!'^ whitewalls. LuxuJjJe* .1 DATT.cDcnki rHFV. Allewalls. Luxury only $1,895. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., NOW AT OUR NEW lot, 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHA/M. Ml 4-273$_______ 1944 BUICK ELECTRA CONVERTI- 5arty. Call , A $4«6V FISCHFR BUICK ________ Ml 4-9100 Birmingham, Michigan______ ""ELDORAbb CbN\/ERTIBLE, 887-5433 except Thursday. $895 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 5. Woodward ) CADILLAC SEDAN OeVILLE. ull power, A-1, clean. Private wner. Must sell. OL 1-4754 -— CADILLAC 1944 COUPE, A while, all power accessories, steering. OL 1-4428.____________ 1944 CADILLAC, 42 COUPE, C'HEVYT 2-DbbR, V '47"'s.'"Edlth! 336-1547. ' 1957 CHEVY 4-7I30!'___________________ 1957 "CHEVY 2-bbbR HARfttOP MARVEL 251 Oakland Ave. 1957 Chevy 283 Engine-4-on-the-Floor Capitol Auto SoIbj 312 W. Mont(,alm FE 8-4071 CHEVYS, 1957, od. FE 5- 1959, V-) 1 STifcK. 1958 CHEVY BISCAYNE l owner. OR 3-3J41. _ __ 1958 CHEVROLfeT Bfi. ATiS 4-lB@R heater, whitewall*, two>ton« oraen. 4„ 4. ------ Jriop DON'S. 677 S. I 2-2041. 1962 Chevrolets rI Air 9-passenger wagon, aicade green with green trlr •8 engine, Powergirde, powe eering, power brakes, new 6-cyllnder/ Powergllde Aqua, aqua Powerglida trim. 6-cyllnder/ brakes, w Patterson Chevrolet Co. M04 S. Woodward Ava. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM 1959 CHTVY BEL""AIR SIBaKT 1959 ciieVROLfT."CbNVlIJiTTBLl price only 8497, weakly pey ^tate Storage 'Te 3-71 6T '_____ CORVAIRS wheel covert. Ixtr $1199 63 Monza Coupe. Silver blue with blue Interior. Powergih din, heater, whltewalli. Only ll.SfS PatterSoh Chevrolet Co. 14 S. Wmmi BINMINOHAM 959 eillVV ItAtldN WAGbN RADIO. HfAfaR, WHITBWALI IIRR8. AUTO. TRANaMIRSION. POWER ITIBRINO, AB80I OTP I Y NO MONRY DOWN. Paymantl Ml 920M par monlh (All CHPOM IMOR., Mr, Park! al Ha---------- Tutnar j^d. m1 e-iiifc ^ REPOSSESSION 1^59 Chevrolet Hardtop You can aeeuma balance wllh no money down. <:s|l Mr, Johnson, Daaker. MA i960 Chevy 2-Door with a-cyllmter angina, slandei IranemlsikM), haalat. radio, whit walls. Only Iff). Crltsmon Chevrolet m I. Rochseiar Rd. lOCHESTER OL $-97 14, ^HEATlR.'^^WHrrBwSSL' TIMb ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. .ALU VeKBIr/l I anVRa# ftifs at Harold Turner Ford. Ml $444 : 1960 Chevrolet new one for $5.12 par waakt PAT-TERSON ROCHESTER 0 CORVAIR COUPE, STRAIGHT Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 (Access op«n to lots while ttreaf 6r construction) stick, radio, heater whitewall tires. Brookwood 4-door station wagon. Gray exterior and gray Interior. V-8, stick shift ...;.......$895 Patterson Chevrolet Co. 04 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM 1960 CORVEtTE. 2 TOPSr4-SPEED. OR 3-2743 or 674-1810. 60 CHEVY WAGON, GOOD CON-ditlon. FE 5-2503._____________ OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth 1940 Chevy Impala 2-door hardtop. Ilka new, on owner, 38,000 miles, 8-cyllnder a $1195 condition, (2nd c; 1961 Chevy h V-8 angina, economy ( llo, heater, whitewalls, pot Is transmission; Only — $1295 BEATTIE 'Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD -------SERVICE attar the salt" OR 3-1291 CLEAN 1941 CHEVY, 4-DOOR, RAP-■ " ‘ - whltewalla, $975 cash payments. UL 2-2781. 1961 CHEVY IMPALA, FULL POW-er, 91175. Opdyke Hardware, 1940 Opdyke. FE 6-4484. ______ 1941 CHEVY PARKWbOD WAObNi n, $1,200. FE a-9874. $777 1962 Chevrolet finance this balance for $ PATTERSON All Cars Carry Our Famous Gold Crest or Silver Crest Warrontyl 1960 Cadillac 4-Door $1895 $1845 $2095 $1795 $1895 1961 Pontioc 5 4-door with double pow4 $1395 1960 Chrysler Hardtop Power iteerlno/ redio, heeter, en power orekei tool $995 1959 Chevy Sedan most Ilka new throughout. Only $795 1961 Ford Convertible $1095 1959 Olds "98" I door hardtop/ power, reel iherpl ^895 i 1963 Cadillac DeVille laden wllh low mltaagg. Only— $3695 Big Stcx;k 1964s of lest Than , Dealer's CostI 1964 Mercury Demos as Low as $2395 1964 Chr|rilert as Low at $2595 1964 Fords at Low Qt $1895 1964 Continental as low os $1,000 Discount 1964 Pontlaci as Low at $2295 1964 tomete os low a$ $1695 Alt Con Carry New Cor Warronty Up to 24.000 Mileil LLOYD'S lINCOLN'MERCUKY 1250 Oakland Ave. New Location re i-im , - -K’Li Hzdl_ THE PONTIAC PRHSS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Patterson Chevrolet Co. 104 S. Woodward Ave. Ml «73S ______ BIRMINCHAM 1»«2 CHSVY II, WHITE, ^PAS-senoer, O^lnder, automafic transmission. wfte's car. Exc. condition. $l,m Ml 7-17a._________________________ New uBd Used (^106 W42 V-0 IMPALA 4.DOOR, FULL power, Powergllde, radio, heater, whitewalls, extras. 673-9554._ CORVETTES Girvette convertible, Power- e-aod- ’whlte'extisrlori — ... terrier with blbck top. Only $1,7»S. Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1104 S. Woodward Aye. Ml «735 BIRMINGHAM 1943 CHEVY SPORTS COUPE, 4:B 5^7141. 1943 CHEVY IMPALA, STICK, J door, 283 engine, radio and new tires. OR 44)789. ____ Got to Go'Now! ALL PRICES SLASHED TO ROCK BOTTOM DURING VILLAGE RAMBLER'S Gigantic Remodeling Program CHECK THESE TERRIFIC BUYS-NOW! , 1963 Rambler $1595 4-Door Classic Wagon, Auto. I960 Rambler $ 595 Amabassador, Automatic 1962 Rambler . $1195 4"Door Ambassador^ Power 1962 Olds .... $1695 Convertible, Power 1962 Rambler $ 795 4-Door American, Auto. 1963 Rambler $1595 Ambassador, Power 1961 Rambler $ 795 4-Door Classic, Auto. ' 1962 Rambler $ 995 Classic, 4-Door, Auto. 1961 Rambler $ 895 4-Ooor Wagon, Classic 1964 Rambler $1995 Convertible, Automatic 100% MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE! Don't Gamble on a Used Cor— Come In and Get All the Facts! 666 S. WOODWARD-BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 JO 6-1418 New end Use4 Cert 106 1943 CORVAIR "CONVERTIBLE", Y $1595 BIRMINGHAM ChryNer-Plymouth Uws^06 1944 CHEVELLE, HARDTOP, hp.,-4-sPeed- rjwfirt. hM^r. ee.' FE S-2343. 943 CHEVY II, HOUSEWIFE'S CAR, only * 14,800 miles, A-1 condition, easy on gas. $14195. OL 1- p¥lSb4 CORVETTE, 2-DOOR CORVAIR SPYDER. RED I black Interior, everything or ..... jxcellent condition. LI 4-71^ 1944 CHEVY BISCAYNE, 4, POW--r glide, radio, whitewalls. Emiiite 11^ Lagoon Aqua. GM executtee's 1963 CHEVROLETS BIscayne 2-door l^an. Ember red with red trim, 4-cylinder, stick shitt, radio, heater. Only ... $1,49S trim, black top, V-8, power steering, radio, ------- whitewalls. Only ........ $1,995 ) aqua trim, V-8, Powerglid ler steering, power brakes $1,7 Patterson Chevrolet Cor 104 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM 1964 CHEVROLETS impala Sport sedan. Daytona blue with blue Interior. V-8, powerglide, power steering $2395 Impala Sport sedan, Asure i with aqua trim. Powergllde, pc steering, power brakes, power .... dows, 4-season air conditioning and many more tactory Installed options. Only . Bel-AIr 4-door sedan. Daytona ----------- with blue trim. 4-cyllnder, stick shift, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only ......................... $1,995 BIRMINGHAM 1943~I^WLA~“SUPER~SP6Rt,“M7 cubic inch. Automatic. Power steering and brakes. Radio, many extras. Burgundy with black Interior. Low mileage. Best offer. 451-3094 BUY YOUR NEXT OLDS OR RAMBLER FROM HOUGHTEN & SON ROCHESTER 1963 CORVAIR Monza, 4-door, auto, transmission, 110 engine, radio, solid fawn color. van”camp chevy MILFORD ____________ MU_ 4-1025 1943 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4- door. V-8, Powerglide, power steering and brakes, radio, other extras. $1,795. Ml 4-0051. 1944 CHEVELLE SUPER SPORT, 220 Horsepower, 4-speed positrac-tlon, tinted glass, wood “a--*' metallic brakes, heavy duti pension, seat belts and ------------ Ivy green and tan Interior. $2475. 1944 CORVETTE COUPE, 3-SPEED. *“ h.p., AM-FM radio, tinted — - an. 424-4101; __________ 1942 CHECKER WAGON. 1-QWNER, trade-in on new 1945 Checker Marathon. Checker Sales and ice. 3914 Auburn. 852-4444. $888 I960 Chrysler Convertible PATTERSON CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALtANT DODGE-OODGE TRUCKS >091 N. Main St. ROCHESTER_____0^ $666 161 (bri ce new 4-d( ....... will tinani tor $24.81 per month. PATTERSON Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You! 100 Cars to Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 37863 1962 Chrysler hardtop, 2-door Newport, with a power, we can finance this ba ance for $39.44 per month. ■ PATTERSON CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT DODGE-DODGE TRUCKS 1001 N. Main St. ROCHESTER , OL 1 Gobble Up a Bargain on a Matthews - Hargreaves "OK" Used Car Special 11 1959 FORD 4, 2-DOOR, STANDARD 'very nice Inside and out. 3-7542, H. Riggins, Dealer. 1964 1964 1964 I960 OLDS F-85 CHEVELLE CHEVY CHEVY Club Coupe Super Sport Coupe 9-Possenger Wagon 2-Door Biscoyne Hat power steering, automatic with V-8 engina, Powergllde transmission, tdejo, l)****'''^ with 4-cvllnder enolne, standard shift transmission, whitewalls. SEDAN svilh V-8 engine, Power- car warranty, nice powder blue seals, nice let black finish with red Interior. wheel discs and a nice midnight blue llnish. rit.i.u'l‘''“sori3‘’gT,t'tl,llsh.'“''' ""'^$1995 ,$2385 $2295 $895 1960 1962 1959 1964 PONTIAC CHEVY FORD CHEVY II ^ Starchief Sports Sedan Impala Sport Coupe Foirlane 4-Door With 6*cvllnder engine and auto- 2-Door Sedan Has 4-cvllndeir engine and stand- Has Hydramatlc transmission, with V-8 engine, itanderd transmission, radio, heeler, whitewall tires, beaulltui fewn beige llnish. arKt ^6 'iSeauHlul Ivory and blue finish. ard shift, healer 4nd a llnish of white accented by red Interior. """$1195 $1685 $395 $1485 1961 1963 1962 1963 popVY CORVAIR CHEVY FORD v^riEj V 1 Impala Sport Sedan 700 4-Door Sedan Parkwood Wagon Ranch Wagon Has AIR CONDITIONING, 4- With stendord shllt transmission, rodio and heater. The finish Is Ivory with e nice red Interior. ?vo?v and" blue*^end bMUtllul. ** Has overdrive end 4cylinder an qine. radio and healer. The tin- WAY POWER, V8 engine, aulo-malic transml^nlun, radio, hfalar and 50lld rad llnish with red $895 $1995 $U85 '"'”'$2185 1963 1961 1963 1963 CHEVY CHEVY CHEVY CORVAIR BIscayne 2-Door Biscoyne Wagon 2-Door BIscayne Club Coupe tb%''tVn.r^fc*;rd,o.‘'ro%? ||nd ^ a nIca iolld fawn belgo with Powergllde Iransmisilon, V-8 enolne, radio, heeler, power with V-8 engine, Powergllde transmission, radio, healer and a solid lurquolie llnish lliel shines. Has standard shill Iransmliilon, radio, heater and a beautiful solid white finish with lurguolse ""$1495 $1295 $1675 $1295 1964 1964 1964 1962 CORVETTE OPEL CHEVY CHEVY Sport Model Station Wagon Impala Sport Coupe Pqrkwood Wagon jS' Wllh VI engine, Powergllde $3585 $1295 $2380 $1585 OAMANO COUNIV'S VOlUMf CHIVROIEI OIAKR ML 631 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4^547 " FE 5-4161 antf UMd Car* 106 N>w and Uied Cart 106 1940 FORD WAGON, STICK SHIFT RUNS GOOD. PRICED ; RIGHT. SEE IT AT: PEOPLES AUTO SALES 48 OAKLAND FORD ^STi,___ ----- -----iMil!a^n*wi3ff»i'Tii- ROME-FERGUSON, Ine. MclWt-ter FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 855 Rochester Road OL 1-8135 OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth 1944 Chrysler 308 4-door hardtop. 1400 miles, 8-cyt- $2995 4 Oakland 335-9434 44 CHRYSLER, 2-OOOR HAR^D-top. Pay ew balance. FE 2-4t ~ RADIp, HEAT-NGINa> WHITE-ISOLtiTELY NO 1964 Dodge Fully equipped with automatic, power steering, brakes, and bucket seats, with consoie. This Polara the last word in style NOW OPEN Additionol Locatioi, 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) Just 1/4 mile north of Cass Ave.) Spartan Dodge Lucky Auto, 193 ot'254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 (Access open to lots while street under construction) 1940 FALCON 2-DOOR, 4. STICK, radio, heater, deluxe trim. Extra clean, $595. JEROME^FE^GUSON, Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 941 FALCON 2-DOOR. RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO-MONEY DOWN. Take over payments of S27.74 per mo. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. Ml ? ? '? If a newer used tar is in your immediate future, and reasonable priced dependability is a must . . . Then look no further... PONTIAC RETAIL STORE is the place to shop. They have only "First Class" "Goodwill" used cars that are priced honestly. You don't have to settle for second best. A phone call to fT' 3-7954 or a short drive to 65 Mt. Clemen^ St., downtown Pontiac, talk with .any of the friend-. ly salesmen. They'll solve your used car problems to your absolute sotisfaction. Call Mr. Johnson, COOPERS-4278 DIXIE-DRAYTON 1954 FORD. 410 CUBIC INCHES Rolled and pleated Interior. OR 3-4442. i4 FORD STATION WAGON $1,095. JEROME-FERGUSON inc., Rochester Ford Dealer, OL 1-9711. )59 YELLOW T-BIRD, CLASSIC hardtop with authentic wirewheels. Sharp! $1,040 or best offer. 353- ■ FERGUSON, I 1501 BALDWIN -Gan Finance- 1960 Valiant 4-Door stick, green flnlahl $440 Can Finance $890 Can Finance I960 Dodge 2-Door Sedan, like new condition I $460 Can Finance $1260 Can Finance NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave.- (Outdoor Showroom) (Just 1/4 mile north of Cass Ave.) Spartan Dodge 941 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN STA-tlon wagon. Bright red finish, with matching Interior. V-8 engine, Cruls-o.-matlc, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, white-walls. Extra nice. Only $1,195. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1941 FORD 4-DOOR C 0 U N T fV sedan station wagon, V-8, auto., exceptionally clean, low mileage. Priced to sell. UL 2-2228. 1942 FALCON 4-DOORr 4-CYLrNblR i automatic, deluxe throughout! I Company owned, only $995. JE- i ROME-FERGUSON, Inc., Rorh.s-ter FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. ^106 1962 FALOON 2-Door Sedan with a beige finish, heater white-walls, only - $995 - BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since,1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Hdnw'qf Service after the sate" OR 3-1291 1942 FORD ^DOOR, RADIO, HEAT-ER, A U T O. TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TJRES. ABSOLUTE-LY NO MON6Y DOWN.Pa™ents of $34.75 per mo. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks St Harold Turner , Ford, Ml 4-7S00. GOME AND GET 'UM VILLAGE RAMBLER Has lust received a ' Brand New Shipment of ,1964 Ambassadors _____ ___ FILTER, DOUBLE ACTION BRAKES VISIBILITY GROUP, LIGHT GROUP, INDIVIDUAL RE-CLINING SEATS, WHITE-WALL TIRES, FULL WHEEL COVERS. $1,977.77 $99 down, 34 months on balance VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 1963 FORD Foirlane 4-Door Has powerful V-8 engine, radio, heater, automatic transmission, whitewall tires, extra sharp. IC1393 Call Charles Hamilton at JOHN McAULlFFE ■ FORD 30 OaklanJ Ave.___FE 5-4101 FORD FAIRLANE 2-DOOR, Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw i FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 I (Access open to lots while street under construction) 1963 Ford Galqxie 500 4-Door with the famous 390 V-8 engine radio, heater, Crulse-O-Matic, trans wallsronly'^*'^ steering, white $1495 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Home of SERVICE alter the s ' OR 3-1291 1943 FORD GALAXIE 500 FAST back ^door, with V8 automatic, radio, new car tradel $1,895. JE ROME-FERGUSON, Inc., Roches ter FORD Dealer, OL 1 9711. Mbs® 60 S. Telegraph-Opposite Tel-Huron Centei 100 CARS MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEKI FINANCE COMPANY REPOSSESSIONS NEW CAR TRADES, TRADE-INS, ETC. 2-Doors-4-Doors-Hardtops-Sedans-Wagons-Stock Cars-6's- V-8's-Sticks-Aufos. Walk In............. JUST SIGN YOUR NAMF ____Drive Out! 1963 T-BIRD 2-Door Han''t6p With an Acapulco blue flnl$h,_poyf-or steerlnfl, brakes and windows. Beautiful ear for only W'ffl Call "Big" Ed Bretilaft at JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 30 Oakland Avei. FE 5-4101 Hilltop ' Auto Sales, Inc. Where You Can Buy/ With No Mgo6y Down 1944 VW 9-PASSENGER MICROBUS, NEW ,C (TN D I T I 0 N, 115.95 1940 PONTIAC VENTURA 2-DOOR HARDTOP, POWER STEER-(NG. POWE BRAKES. A BEAUTY AT ONLY $12.00 WEEKLY I942 CHEVY IMPALA 2 - DOOR hardtop, power $15.40 WEEKLY. 1942 MERCURY MONTEREY 2 -door HARDTOP, POWER STEERING AND POWER brakes, $13.80 WEEKLY. 962 Oakland FE 4-9969 FALCON FUTURA -4-DOOR, Dealer. OL V 1943 FORD 2-DOOR, GALAXIe, V~8 automatic, radio, power steering, and brakes, whitewalls! Factory otticial car- $1,495. JEROME-FERGUSON, Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer. OL 1-9711. REAL DEALS 1959 Ford Station Wagon ...... $3! 1957 OeSoto . $! 2 1955 and V-a, V-4 Chevy's $35 a. 1940 Mercury ................$59 1942 Pontiac and many others, a good transportation. Sea them at; Economy Used Car Mart 2335 Dixie Hwy. 944 FALCON SPRINT 2 - CXX>R hardtop, VI angina 4-spead transmission, radio, buckets. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc., Rochester FORD Dealer. OL 1-9711.____________ Mafic. Factory guaranteed. Your old car or $100 down. Finance, $2,395. Stark-Hickey Fords "CLAWSON" Value House 14 Milo at Crooks Road Clawson 588-6010 Onrs^JW 1984 GALAXIE *08X1, 2-pC)OR. • ■ rdtop, liergondy, r*V% autofrtatlc, whitewalit, tl' — windshield, $2,590. 48241471. 19^4 FOfeD GALAXIE FAST BACK, with 390 angina, 44i^ tranamls^ Sion, 9,000 aeirtol 1]^, ggf mt tradel Save. SON, Inc., Roehastor FORD DaaL -Of, OL 1-8711. ^ 1945 MUSTANG^ 195 LINCOLN COI white, full P«— ‘ $850.'4285041. 'ExiMllCTt c^l^. 8230. FE 4-4225 SEi OS FIRST BOBBORST MI 6-4538 Suburban Olds Birmingham Trades November Bargains 100% WRITTFN Guarantee Every car listed carries this guarantee. Take the guesswork out of buying used cars! Credit no problem! All Cars Fully Equipped 1963 OLDS F85 COUPE $1,695 1963 OLDS Starflre coupe, full power, tactory air. »$ave 1962 OLDS Super, full power. Factory Air $1,895 . 1963 "88" Dynamic Coupe $2,295 1962 "98" 8door herdtop $1,995 1962 OLDS HARDTOP $1,795 1962 OLDS Convertible, power and let black $1,995 1964 OLDS 2-door hardtop $2,795 1964 OLDS ABSOLUTELY m MtDsmsmm FINANCir^G-NO PROBLFM ALL APPLICATIONS ACCFPTFD We Handle and Arrange All Financing^ 36 MOS. TO PAY! ALL CARS ARE IN TOP SHAPE- READY TO GOI '59 Pontiac $495 '58 Pontiac loo or CoovsTlIbla $195 59 Ford $195 '60 Plymouth $395 '61 Falcon $595 '61 Ford $695 '60 Comet . . , Wounn $595 '60 Che^ . . Wagon $595 '60 Mercury 8eJ‘’l|e«. rijdio, m< $3025 iiua ^nlsli 1963 TEMPEST 4 DOOR iitr'br'i^eX’Girr. * ........... 1961 TEMPEST WAGON WMh ^autom^^j, * ona-ownar, low '****'*''°*"'^ '*' $995____________ 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA sporls CWipa wMh power aieerinq end brake*, radlq, ry oWtHMi beeuiyi tinlv - ____________________ $2295 1963 RENAULT R-8 wmy buy at only— $1195 1961 CORVALR MONZA 4-Door with automallc. bucktte, radio, heater. A ON M-24 IN LAKE ORION MY 3-6266 r iMf 'llMd Cibrt 106 N«w ond UsMi Cars THE PONTlAd PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 \ -rl ^ m3 MERCURY Monterey Custom 4-Door —T power »t»erlng $1999 McAULIFFE neeos repeir ...... $4S • Cadillacs, '54 to '57 ,,. 155 up 5 Bulelts,i'S5 to '58 ... . $45 m rk«’jnIS?^®'’0'*TATIONAN6 LATE MODE! ft iikiri iimoid* cab HAUPT PONTIAC 1853 CHEVY }-daor, radio, heater, __________ this one has <=rom! Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LLOYDSi , clean. $885. PONTIAC STATION WAGON 1840 11 wheels. FE 2-1552 after 5. lohn McAuliffe Ford Is Going Like a House Afire!! -READY TO SERVE YOU- "Big" Ed Bretzlaff, Mgr. Don Rosso-Salesman Glenn Colgan-Salesman Charles Hamilton-Salesman Al Peters-Salesman Dave Sylvester—Salesman Roger White-Salesman '63 Econobus LAST CALL 1965 Mustang Huilter's Special 1964 DEMOS Hardtop cur’lal^J! S*' a'lId^heMer.' This and Brand New Fords This enft hfls radio and haafer. the sportsmlndfd. $2095 $900 Hurry 1 Hurry 1 ""$2495 1964 Ford 1962 Corvair 1961 Stude fairlone 500 2-Door Sedon Lark 4-Door SPORT COUPE boHom^'.nd"tgM*b’lb. Cr dio and healer. Only- '”"$2191 '""$995 $499 1963 Ford 1962 Corvette 1963 T-Bird 2-Door Hardtop Foirlane 4-Door 2-Door Hardtop Wllh en Acepulco blue finish. he%er!*'^eulomallc *lran«mlsilon, whilawsll tires, extra sharp. with two lops, aulomallc trails-misiloni duws, Beaulllul car tor only— $1393 $2999 $2789 1963 VW 1963 Mercury 1962 Falcon Monterey Custom 4-Door 2-Door Sedan Convertible wim radio. *■ This heaulv has power atnering end brekes, ^whllawalls, l*rlm. \iHnmel&,***wh/liwalli amt radio. Only- $1695 $1999 $1122 PONTIAC'S ONLY FORD DEALER New and Used Cars 106 tfansmlssleil. Pi 2;4413. 1842 .PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE- Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FEj-2214 or FE 3-7853 (Access open tg lots while street Ufidtf constructiipn)________ THE HOME OF Goodwill , ond Top Value USED CARS WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1843 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-OOOR. Hydramatic power steering, brakes. Whitewalls. Other extras. 48M7S2. Cart 106 PONTIAC eo^NEVILLE “Mfe, power wlnd-brakee, 14,000 ac- M44 PONTiAC GRAND I^IX.J^ULL _ _________$^ double' pow- aT*radior iietrter)'whitewalls,., dark S'een. DON'S. 477 S. Lapeer Rd., non. MY >2041.______________ 1844 GtO, 4-SPEED, M H.P. 3.80 1844 RED BONNEVILLE 2-OOOR, hardtcp 82,750. UL >3872. ' 1844 PONttAC CATALINA STATION whHe top. «2m». m extreo. OR 3-4f!24. 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville Wagon ler, white finish, radio, automatic transmission. chrome luggeM reek, showroom new threughoufl 3271.___ 2 1840 Fords, V-0 and 4 . 1854 Pcacild and N ' 4 Dodges and — '55 to 'SO . SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave. PE 5-8421 1850 LARK, DELUXE INTERIOR, Christmas . $ .CASH $ No Payments 'Til, 1965 in take your present 'a Isn't paid for In tradi NEW 1965 or a late model used car. t-' —You make only ono payment— PATTERSON CHRYSLER-PLMOUTH-VALIANT DODGE-DOOGE TRUCKS 1001 N. Main St. ROCHESTER__________OL 1-8551 $1995 Homer Hight MOTORS INC. PONTIAC-BUICK-CHEVROLET Oxford, Michigan OA >252S We're wheeling and dealing the all-new 1965 Ramblers. See them now! Used cars are being sold at wholesale to make room for the new car trades. ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commerce, Union Lake ______ EM >4155___________ 1858 RAMBLER AMERICAN ECON- Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Con Finance You! 100 Cars to Select FromL Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LlOYDS 840 STUDEBAKER 2-DOOR STA- tlon wagon. - ----- —*“ cellent tires Autobahn •Motors, Inc: authorized vw dealer Vi mile north of Miracle Mile 1745 S. Telegraph______FE 8-4531 1961 STUDEBAKER . Lark 4-Door - Ih automatic transmission, I and heater. Only— $499 McAuliffe OVER 100 CARS TO BE LIQUIDATED. CHOOSE FROM MANY MANY OTHER CARS SUCH AS THESE EXAMPLES '60 Ford 2-Door Standard Shift Pay Only $9.30 Per Month '58 Lincoln Convertible Full Power Pay Only $28.62 Per Month '60 Corvair ”700" Series Pay Only $20.4 Per Month '59 Chevy Camino Pickup '/z-Ton Pay Only $13.96 Per Month '60 Mercury ...... 2-Door full price Pay Only $18.61 Per Month '59 Mercury 2 Door Hardtop Pay Only $9.30 Per Month Plymouth Belvedere 4-Door V-8, Automatic Pay Only $20 44 Per Month '57 Chevy Bel Air Convertible Poy Only $13.96 Per Month ’ '59 Pontiac Bonneville Pay Only $24,61 Per Month '58 Ford Fairlone 500 2 Door Hordtop Pay Oniy .i-’.30 Per Month '58 Ford 4-Door Station Wagon Pay Only $9.30 Per Month '58 Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop Pay Only $13.96 Per Month '59 F^lyrncuth Convertible Slick Shift, V 8 Pay Only $9.30 Per Month TRADE-INS WILL BE ACCEPTED - PAID FOR OR NOT FE 8-4.088 LOCATED-CORNER OF W. HURON (M-59) and ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD ’ OPEN Monday Through Friday 9-9 - Saturday 9-6 Mansfield Auto Sales FE 5-5900 35 Factory Official Cars to Choose From '44 BUICK RIVIERA, lust Ilka '44 BONNEVILLE, 4-Door Hard- '44 CATALINA, 4-Do PInehgrst green. '44 OLDS "I 2-Door Hardfop, power sterring end brakes. Factory air. Nocturne blue with . Lika n ■44 TEMPEST, 4-Passenger W on, V-8 engine, automatic, po\ steering and brakes. 14 CATALINA SAFARI Wagon. CATALINA, 2-Door wl wer steering and brakes a tomatic transmission. '43 PONTIAC CATALINA, ' Passenger Wagon, has pow« steering and brakes. Also h« 13 BONNEVILLE, 4-Door Hard- '43 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, power steering and brakes, ‘v-8, automatic, and ■43 FORD GALAXIE, 2-Door 1 PONTIAC CATALINA 1 2 CATALINA 2 D< U BONNEVILLE, 2 Di 12 CATALINA, 2 Door ■42 CHEVY IMPALA, 4-Door Hardtop, power steering brakes, automatic, 21,000 n CHEVY IMPALA 2-Door rdluD with power slaerlng t brakes. Whita with red UOEBAKBR, 2-Door I IMPALA, 2Door Hardtop, )wer slaerlng end brakes. I CORVAIR ■■700" Station 1 CHEVY WAGON, V-a auto- '41 CHEVY BISCAYNE Sedan, tevlinder, automatic, 28,000 ■dual miles. Rad. One onwar. ■40 CATALINA, Convarttbla with power ileerlng and brakai. One owner, real sharp. '40 FALCON, 2-Door, automatic, ■40 CATALINA, >Door Hardtop, ■40 CHIVY, 4-Ooor, 4, atick. SPECIAL IMPALA 2Door Hardtop, erino and brakes.' UKI Bank Financing FE 5-5900 Mansfield Auto Sales 1104 Baldwin H—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 Cereal Tycoon Kin, Contributed to Dems BATTLE CREEK (DP»—Mrs. Marjorie ' Post l^y (rf New York City, daughtei" of the late C. W. Pos| of Battle Creek, pi(«eer, c^eal m|muf|»cturer, made a $1,000 political contti-butira to the Calhoun County . Democratic party, it has been repealed. ThO contribution by the Post beiress .was disclosed this week when &e county Democratic committee filed expenses of $3,533.59. Today satellites play an integral part in weather forecasting. NEUII»ER 2«>WEEI! HURON NOW! 7 and 9:35 LUSTY FlLMr^> _ RICHARD BURTON . PETER 01DOLE Certify CarinoR Nevadiyictor CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) Sen. Howard W. Cannon, D-Nev., was certified yesterday as winner by 48 votes hi the Nevada’s Nov. 3 senatorial election, but die wheels are rolling already for a- recount. ★ ★ ★ In official results canvassed by the Nevada Supreme dourt, Camum, 52, receiv^ 67,336 votes to 67,288 for Republican Lt. Gov. Paul Laxalt, 42, of Carson City. Lazalt already had requested a recount, which probably will be conducted Monday and Tuesday. Attw^eys and other representatives Of each candidate will watch as the vote is tallied anew in the state’s 17 county seats. The present Senate count is 66 Democrats and 34 Republicans. Cannon’s victory gives the Democrats a 68-32 margin in the next Senate. ★ ★ ★ The canvass turned up no change from the results compiled by Secretary of State John Koontz last week. Cannon led by more than 6,000 voteip at one time election night; lost the lead to Laxalt next morning, and got it back again. Grand Rapids Lawyers Propose Court Merger GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -Merger of the city’s two municipal courts and two police courts into a single system has been proposed by a committee of the Grand Rapids Bar Association. The reconunenda-tion was^ken under study by the city Mmmission. Attorney William Wilson of Grandville, bar committee chairman, urged the move as a step toward “better economy.” Intercity regulated truckers had revenues of $8.8 billion last year, five per cent over the preceding year. Heston Back in California for I Jfh Century 'War Lord' ByBOBTHiOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer. HpLLYWOOD-Charltdn Heston, who likes it here, is making his first all-California movie since “The Big Country” seven years ago. He would like to spend mbre time in the land of his adoption, but he has this problem. Producers don’t see him as a 20th century man. ★ ★ ★ “All the good modem parts go to Jack Lemmon and Cary Grant,” he laments. “That leaves Heston with pictures like “The Ten Commandments,” “Ben-Hur,” “El Cid” and “The Agony and the Ecstasy.’ Feel like shedding tears fof poor Chuck Heston? Me neithw. Heston admits he has a pretty g^ thing going for turn. If this be type-casting, h6’s making the most of it. ★ ★ ★ Heston’s consolation over Messrs. Lemmon and Grant: “I’ve got more centuries to choose from than they do.” IITTH CENTURY . Right now he’s back in the 11th century, the era of “El Cid.” This time he’s a bit north, playing a Norman warrior in ‘"The War Lord.” The film has been shot on location near Marysville, Calif., and is now working at Univer- sal City, where a feudal tower has been constructed inside ' a stagq and on the back lot. •k \ ' -k k Cost of ‘"nie War Lord”: $5 million. But Heston said iPdif-fers from other epics he has made. “In every massive production there is some kind of climactic spectacle, whether it is a chariot race, an earthquake, a battle or a crucifixion,” he observed. “ ‘The War Lord’ doesn’t have that. There are no surging mobs; the producer, Walter Seltzer, has suggested we advertise that it has ‘a cast of doz- HUMAN RELATIONSHIP “The main point of interest in this film is the human relationships. We are trying to show how people felt and acted in that time — not by today’s standards, but by the- point of reference they knew then. “If you can accomplish that in a movie, then I think you have something that will stimulate audiences.” The 11th century is lucky for Heston. “El Cid” provided more income for him than any other film.” “Ben-Hur” and “The Ten Commandments are two of the three all-time moneymakers, but not for him; he didnt share in the profits. ★ On the other side of the ledger is the unreleased “Major Dundee,” for which he returned his $200,000 salary as justification for his arguments over the script. He has no regrets over his decision. ‘ MEALS PAID “I’m glad it was made on location in Mexico,” he said. “At AP phoiofAx ^ f®*'” NORMAN WARIUOR-Actor Charlton Heston, who has established a near-monopoly on costume epics, rides his charger into a conquered village in a scene from his latest movie, “The War Lord.” In this one, Heston plays the role of Bith North, a Norman warrior, in the movie which tells the story of the 11th Century. TNEMAGICMfChtistiMS RCA VICTOR COLOR TV!! PLEASE REMEMBER REGARDLESS OF WHAT AJSYONE SAYS IT IS NOT RCA YICTOR COLOR UNLESS IT BEARS'THE NAME RCA YICTOR PRAYER'S STILL OFFER THE LARGEST SELECTION OF RCA ViaOR COLOR TV IN THIS AREA RCA Victor Entertainment Center l-SPEAKER STEREO FM-AM and FM STEREO RADIO • 120-WATT* SOLID I STATE AMPLIFIER i( Qlara-proof RCA High FI-dality Color Tube A'AII-chennel VHF (2 to 13) and UHF(14to83) reception ic Powerful New Vleta VHF and UHF Tuners ic Improved 25,000-volt New Vleta Color Chaiala (factory adjuated) -A Automatic Color Purlllar "canoala" Magnetic dietortlone -A Two keyed color controla for eaey tuning ★ Slallo-tree "Oold-en Throat” FM sound BIGGER SELEaiON • BEHER VALUES CHOOSE YOUR NEW COLOR TV FROM OUR LARGE SELECTION OF EARLY AMERICAN PROVINCIAL MODERN FMYE 889 Orehard Uka «va. FE 4-0626 Laborites Seek Closer Ties in U.A.R. Talks LONDON W) - Britain’s Labor government yesterday invited the United Arab Republic to begin a new era of friendlier relations. k k k Foreign Secretary Patrick Gordon Walker met for an hour-long discussion with Ambassador Hafez Ismeal of the U.A.R. “All problems of common Interest between the two countries were discussed,” a British Foreip Office spokes- “The general objective was to promote an improved relationship between the two countries.” k k -tr Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s government has made it a priority task of its foreign policy to seek closer ties with President Gamal Abdul Nasser’s regime eight years after the Suez venture when British, French and Israel troops attacked Egyptian territory. Alvin Is Frognaped by Some Big 'Croak' SAN FRANCISCO (UPD - Stein-hart aquarium officials reports what may be the first case of frognaping. k k -tr Alvin, one of only 24 recorded albino bullfrogs, disappeared from his private pool four days ago. He was described as 8 inches long, three-quarters of a pound, golden in color and penetrating pink eyes. Jersey Districts Invalidated Weighled Voting Not Covered in Decision TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - The New Jersey Supreme Court rule(P yesterday the legislature violates the “one man, one vote” principle and must be reapportioned. The court voted 7-0 to reverse a two-y^ar-old ruling by a Superior Ck)urt judge, who held the New Jersey Legislature tvas properly apportioned. Since that lower court ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court has issued its “one man, one vote” decisions requiring both houses of state legislatures to be apportioned according to population. ★ ★ ★ At the time the court handed down its ruling, the state Senate was holding a meeting to appoint a new lawyer to handle its case. ’The former attorney stepped out of the case because he believed the Senate had adopted an unconstitutional procedure when it installed weighted voting Nov. 16. The decision today did not deal with weighted voting, which the state Senate adopted as its answer to the U.S. Supreme Court decisions. ARGUMENTS SET The court scheduled arguments on weighted voting Dec.l. The court ruled; The legislature is apportioned unconstitutionally. k * * No further elections may be held under the present appor-tionment.‘ The legislative power may not be exercised after the second Tuesday in January 1966 except by legislatures elected no later than November 1965 under a proper apportionment. INTERIM BASIS The legislature may provide by law on an interim basis for election of the legislature in 1965 or earlier. Revision of the state constitution may be submitted to the people by a constitutional convention called by the legislature. The convention must be apportioned according to population. k k k Legislators elected in Novein-ber 1965 may hold office only until the second Tuesday In January 1968 if the legislature starts the constitutional convention process by next April 1 If the legislature does not start the convention process by next April 1 the court will hear arguments on the question of whether amendments may be submitted to the people by some other process. k k * The court kept jurisdiction of the case to hear further arguments or decide questions which may come up later. Seek End Confusion on Litter, Letter Boxes MORECAMBE, England (UPI) —The council here will discuss repainting litter boxes at this seaside resort. The bright red boxes were confused with letter boxes along the five mile promenade here, and many “wish you were here” cards ended up in the rubbish. ^ZSSIKEECO MNFMCn niMNEiiiSieiE FATf ISTHI HUiniR„„. In Matinumioo r.M. TBPAT-tATUBBAr-IUMgAY Woman, 87, Gives Up Her Driver's License GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) -Mrs, Bertha Carlton, who is 87 years old, has given up her driver’s license. Mrs. Carlton wrote Police Supt. William A. Johnson that she sold her car and no longer had any use for the license. REE-E-E-LY BIG SHAKE Home of the World's Greatest 150 Hamburger I The insurance Imsiness began in Hartford in. 17M. Nearly SO home otfices are in this Con-necticut jcity.' rf PLUMSrNG’ [ iJBISCOyNTS 1 THE POlfTlAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1964 PEOPLE AND PLACES« j3-PleceBA1HSETi 1 NEW TOILET | ft 1 r- 16 li IT ■■ *16« ■ Free • Standing > EXTRA SPECIALS! I I Laundry Troy A Trim.. *19.95 | I SioinUtt S*mI Sinin...$32.95 ■ I Bariitubi, lrr««...,.. t.. || 0.00 up I I' Sh9umr S*»ll WHH trim t34.«S ■ I Built-in Woth Botin ..... $2.95 up | I 2 Port Kitchon Sinkt.$2.95 up | ! j All Oinoi Plot tnd Fittlngi I I I I Wt Cut and Thrtad ' | ifiavepLUMBiHB; I 841 BALDWIN ■ I FE 4-1516 or FE 5-2100 ■ I OPINMOH.,$*T.M0P.M., Z ^ wtd. A PH iVit 'Til tiM I Answer to Previous Puzzle USED TV BUYS 10" GE $1495 16" Midwest »19*» 16" Admiral »19»® 1 7" Air King *24»» 17" RCA »29*» 21 "CBS •29*» 21" Motorola »29»® 21" Zenith 93995 21" RCA $3995 21" Silvartone $3995 30-DAY EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE FE 2-225T WALTON TV SIS E. Walton Blvd. CORNER JOSLYN Open 9 to 9 KEEP PORCHES Free of ice and SNOW durable STURDY Aluminum • Screpn & ► Storm DOORS e 36 X 80 e 32 X 80 95i $21= ’-Aluminum-^ WINDOWS •mis IStTALUTIOn Big Value/ POOH CAMOPIES AmpU39" ' projacflon by >1 Q95 ! 54" In width I THISWElk... I W L&Y AWNINC k WINDOW CO. 163 W. Montcalm FE 5-2102 [ USED ¥-V'» TABLE MODELS CONSOLES i A Good Selection $29^'* From 1 Court of St. — 6 Broadway role for Carol Channing 11 Lecturer 13 Gentlewomen 14 Rounded 15 Danish seaport 16 Early English legal term 17 Surety 19Ever (poet.) 20 Make believe 24 Church — 27 Motive 31 Embellish 32 Elevated platform 33 Gem weight 34 Place for an Indian 35 Registered for appointment 37 Practiced 38 Redactors 40 Cameroon Negro 43 Oriental porgy 44 Scottish negative 47 Pet lamb 50 Desires 53 Place in Spain 54 Turns inside out 55 Place in Englani^ 56 Gdt up DOWN 1 Particles 2 Martian (comb, form) 3 Grape refuse 4 French “summer” 5 Drunkard 6 Father 7 Poem 8 Row 9— majesty 10 Belgian stream 12 Carouse 13 Miisplacer 18 Near ' ' 20 Freebooter 21 Raved 22 Squatter 23 Date-stamping gadgets 24 Pouches 25 Land ownership 26 Feminine name 28 Enervates 29 Curved molding 30 Require 36Duplicate (coll.) 37 Speech 39 Symbol for tantalum 40 Deeds 41 Kind of foot covering 42 Place in Norway 44 Ocean depth near Guam island 45 Pewter coins of Thailand 46 Es.senlial being 48 Oriental coin 49 Place in the Netherlands 51 Egg 52 Verse (ab.) Race Loss Was Biting I LONDON (UPI) - An advertisement 10 a British magazine called Sporting Life says: I' “At the last Cheltenham > (hor.se race) meeting, Mr. j Michael Vance Inadvertently I put his front teeth in someone I j else's coat pocket before going j out to ride. I "Would the finder kindly re-I turn them via (race track jj official) Robin Lord as their I owner's tlght-lip|)ed smile Is I beginning to wear rather thin j and his digestion is suffering." .% —Television Programs— ^ Pregrams fumishwet by stations iittad in this column ora subjoct to chongo without notico. ChonnSi 2-WJBK.TV Chonnri 4-WWJ-TV Chonn«l 7-WXY2-TV Choawl 9-CKLW-TV Chonnel 56-WTVS THURSDAY EVE^G 6:0I (2) (4) News,„Weather, Sports’ (7) Pro Football (In Progress) (9) Huckleberry.Hound' (56> Focus on the U.N. 4:36 (2) (4) NaUonal News ' (7) (Color) News, i^rts ^ (9) Bat Maisterson (Re- peat) 6:45 (7) National News 7:00 (2) Leave It to ^B€aver (Repeat) (4) Lawman^Repeat) (.7) .(Colprj^Michigan Outdoors A Ibok at water fb'wl season with close-up of Lake St. Clair (9) Greatest Show (Repeat) 7:30 (2) Munsters Grandpa applies to matri-moniai agency for compatible mate (4) (Special) (Color) Your All-Time Favorite Songs (See TV Features) (7) (Color) Flintstones Fred and. new neighbor are really feuding, but it’s just the opposite with their dogs (56) World Traveler 7:45 (56) At the Fair 8:00 (2) Petry Mason Man from out of past, shows up to claim part of wealth of rich mining operator’s widow (7) Donna Reed Alex and Dave have trouble keeping birthday party for Midge a secret (9) Stagecoach West (Repeat). (56) Science Museum 8:30 (4) Dr. Kildare Conclusion of visit to Rome by Kildare, Gillespie (7) My Three Sons Dinner at Chinese restaurant proves especially delightful, for Steve when he meets proprietress 9:00 (2) Password Rosemary Clooney, Alan King are celebrity guests (7) Bewitched When Darren’s picked to judge beauty contest, Samantha isn’t as upset as her mother. (9) Show on Shows (See TV Features) 9:30 (2) Baileys of Balboa Sam will go to any lengths to keep Jim away from Barbara Wyntoon—even if' it means conspiring with the enemy (4) (Color) Hazel Hazel has trouble controlling her temper at particularly bad moment — when George is entertaining foreign dignitaries (7) Peyton Place Rodney faces the stark truth (9) Serial “The Chord of Steel” (Part 4) 10:00 (2) Defenders (See TV Features) (4) (Color) Suspense Theatre (See TV Features) (7) Jimmy Dean Comedian Norman Crosby, singer Johnny Cash, songstress Molly Bee head guest list (9) Wrestling 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weatlier, Siwrts 11:20 (7) Les Crane 11:30 (2) Movie: “Carbine Williams” (19!)2) James Slew-art, Jean Hagen, Wendell Corey (4) (Ciolor) Johnny Car.son (0) Bingo 12:00 (9) Movie : "Cro.ss-Up” (1957) Larry Parks, Usa Daniely 1:00 (4) Lawman (Repeal) (7) After Hours 1:30 (2) Highway Patrol (Re-pfat) (4) (7) News, Weather FRIDAY MORNING 6:10 (2) On the Farm Front 6:IS (2) News , 6:20 (2) Sunri-9 ScmCsIer 8:30 (4) Classroom (7) F’unews Detroit fdison Donates to Dormitory Fund SAULT STE, MARIE (UPI) -A gift of $7,500 from Detroit Edison to a fund for construction of a new women’s residence hall at the Soo branch of Michr igan Tech has been annuonced by Detroit Edison Board dudrv man Walker L. The gift is the first major' announced contribution to the $200,000 dormitory fund cam-^paign launched last week. About 1,700 persons in tho . United .States die each year qt accidental poisoning. TV Features Songs, Songs, Songs f By United Press International i YOUR ALL-TIME FAVORITE SONGS, 7:30 p m (4) | One-hour special with Dean Martin, At Hirt, Eydie Gorme. ^ SHOW ON SHOWS, 9:00 p.m. (9) Conversation with | film critic Father Marc Gervais on spiritual values in I foreign movies; a look at world of Canadian poet Raymond I Souster. I DEFENDERS, 10:0(1 p.m. (2) Viveca Lindfors portrays,. | notorious has-been actress who gets involved in hit-and- | run accident. I SUSPENSE TOEATOE, 10:00 p.m. (4) When Frehch ^ Resistance leader (Louis Jourdan) gets captured, his fol- | lowers, realizing he must be silenced, put-young assassin / in his cell. - | AutkoriMed' RCA.ZEN1TH COLOR TV SA1£ WE SERVICE WIUT WE SELL! izENmi '«M PORTABIES »fir ll-Channal Tunarl FACTORY AUTHORIZED Op*n Mon. ond Fri. RCA 8. ZENITH SERVICE: Ev*t. to 9 P.M. CONDON’S RADIO & TV 730 West Huron - FE 4-9736 6:50 (2) News 7:00 (2) Happyland (4) Today Author discusses new book;_rep0rt given on children’s hair styles. (7) Johnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie: “Man Who "'agged His Tail” (Spanish, 1959) Peter Ustinov. (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Movie: “M o r n i n g Glory” (1933) Katharine Hepburn, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Adolphe Men-jou. (4) Living (9) Romper Room 10:00 ^4t Make Room for Daddy (7) Girl Talk (2) Canada Schools 10:30 (2) I Love Luev (Repeat) (4) (Color) What’s This Song? (7) Price Is Right (9) Across Canada 10:55 (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (Repeat) (41 Concentration (7) Get the Message (9) Friendly Giant 11:15 (9) Chez Helene 11:30 (2) McCoys (Repeal) (4) (Color) .Jeopardy (7) Missing Links (9) Butternut Square 11:50 (9) News AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (/4) (Color) Sav When (7) Father Knows Rest (Repeat) (9) Bingo l’:?5 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Truth or Consequences (7) Ernie Ford 12:4.5 (2) Guiding Light 1:00 (2) Jack Benny (Repeat) (4) News (7) Movie: "Francis in the Navy” (1955) Jim Backus, Richard Erdman. (9) Movie: “CrimeSchool" (1936) Billy Halop. Bobby Jordan, Huntz Hall. 1:10 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 1:15 (4) Topics for Todav 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal l;!).5 (4) News 2:00 (2) Password (4) Loretta Young (Repeat) 2:20 (7) News 2:30 (2) Playhouse 2 Handsome writer wants to meet a girl that’s differept (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court Z-M (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (('olor) You Don't Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take .30 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game ! (7) Trallmaster (Repeat) (9) Razzl^Dazzle » ' 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: “Triple Trouble” (1950) Bowery Boys. (4) Mickey Mou,se Club (Repeat) (9) Popeye 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot Film trip to the Colorado River area. (7) Movie: “Dragonfly Squadron” (1954) John Hodiak, Barbara Britton. 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) Rocky and Friends (56) What’s New? ^5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:55 (2) Weather (4) Carol DuVall H¥TFilTIAII COTTAGE & LAKE I Al ItmiUW HOME OWNERS i THE PRICES ARE RIGHT m PAYMEISTS FOR 6 MONTHS # NO MONEY DOWN • FOUNDATION WALLS CALL ADDITIONS FE 4-4138 ALUMINUM SIDING 24-Hour Service ROOFING & PORCHES I Woodfield Construdion J Sarvica All-Mata BodioV. TV and Slaimo Hl-VI ■ (JOHNSON TELEVISIOt4 S 5 45 last Walton FE 8-4569 ! ____________________________________________________________ S«■ ■ iTii«■■■■■ ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■! WJRfyOO) WXYI(1 a7|0) CKLW(OOO) WWJ(9aO) WCARG I 30) WP0N(I460> WJBKdSOO) WHFI-FM(94.7) Radio Programs- Id Spoili E. 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