THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition VOL. 122 NO. 270 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1064—42 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL W Romney Reports Big State Gains LBJ Eyes for Fast Transit WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Johnson plans to propose a high-speed transportation program that could lead to Americans rocketing between cities on cushions of air, through tubes or on electronically guided cars within 15 years. High administration sources said aji immediate result could be the fastest East Coast rail" service in Water Work Probe Is Urged Waterford Man Raps Contractor, Inspection history in 1965. These sources said Johnson probably will unveil the three-year research and test program in his state of the union message to Congress next Monday. The long-range program will call for an initial $20 million outlay in the first year, a figure reported to have been approved by Johnson in his forthcoming budget. If Congress approves that amount, $11 million would be spent for research aad development of new ground transportation systems, $8 million for demonstration projects and $2 million for statistical studies. One purpose of the studies will be to determine whether Americans actually want to travel at a speed of 200 miles an hour on the ground, or whether they would fear such fast rail travel. ■ , * * * While the research and development program is designed to solve nagging inter-dty transportation problems between such municipalities as Boston and Washington, administration officials said the results would be used nationwide. LONG RANGE AFFAIR The research aspect w the program is a long-range affair — looking ahead to 1900 The demonstration project could take place next year. Administration sources said talks have been under way (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) A resident's allegation that one of the water main contractors jn Waterford Township was doing an incompetent job resulted last night in the Township Board requesting a full investigation of the contractor’s performance. F. L. Carrey of 2540 Silver-side alleged that Schwab Brothers Co. of Buffalo, N. Y., was not using sufficient sand fill where the main is laid and that cleanup work following main laying is dragging. “You’re paying for a first class job," Carrey, a retired Consumers Power Co. superintendent of new business, EMPTY MONEY TRUCK - A Brink's truck was left abandoned in- the Chicago suburb of Norridge, last night after three masked gunmen captured it when the truck made a pickup at Divine Savior Church. The bandits bound two priests and a guard before driving away with the truck and'looting it. An undetermined amount, collected during the day from stores and churches, was taken. Second Money Truck Looted of $223,000 at Church Stop Mild Temperatures, Rain Are Forecast The calendar says it’s winter, but the weather doesn’t. Mild temperatures and light rain is the prediction through Thursday. With cloudy skies, the mercury will hit a low of 35 to 40. tonight. Partly cloudy weather is forecast tomorrow, along with a high of 43 to 50. Winds today are from the south and southeast at 12 .to 25 miles an hour. They will be diminishing tomorrow. . * w This morning’s low temperature recording was 27. At 2 p.m. the thermometer registered 38 in downtown Pontiac. you’re not getting ft.” Currey cited at least five residences in his neighborhood where access to the driveWdy is cut off because of insufficient impaction where main was laid. After the fill settled, depressions or ruts of a foot to 18 inches were reported by some residents. IMPROPER FILLING He pointed out also that there was indication of improper filling along Dixie. Currey requested the Township Board take formal action to correct the.matter. He said he realized the County DPW was inspecting the job and that the township had no direct control ovpr it. Currey also termed the mspection incompetent Kenneth Squires, superintendent of the township’s water department, said his office has received several complaints on the Schwab operation, particularly on cleanup. These have been referred to DPW inspectors. SAND BEDDING According to Squiers, specifications on fill call for four inches of sand bedding under new water main and one foot of impacted sand over the main. The resolution approved (Continued bn Page 2, Col. 3) CHICAGO (AP) - Brink’s Inc., estimated today that the company lost $223,000 to three robbers whjo overpowered two guards and two Roman Catholic priests in a church rectory. The robbery at Divine Savior Church yesterday was a virtual replay m last week's half-mil-lion-dollar holdup at a church in Paterson, NCJ. A. 8. Genet, president of Brink’s, and Donald Hoag-jand, vice president, said in a joint statement the loss was “only an estimate" and that a more accurate figure will he avaflaMe tomorrow. Hoagland said “a very large portion of the loss was in checks — probably recoverable." He Tax Collections Taken Rob Buffalo City Office BUFFALO, N.Y. tfl W Two gunmen strolled into the city treasurer's office today, slugged the treasurer and escaped with $299,130 in tax-collection money. Only $16,245 was in cash. ★ W '• k A Brink’s truck was to hdve picked up the Buffalo money a half hour after the gunmen, described as white and in their 30s, entered the office of City Treasurer Melvin W. Elliott at about 9:30 a.m., EST. Mrs. Mae D. Wicks, chief teller and a city employe for 28 yehrs, said One walked to her cage, pointed a revolver at her and said: “This is no bull, I want the (money) bag.” ' checks, written to the city treasurer and nonnegotiable, and the cash into a bag. PUSHES ALARM “I just dropped under the counter and pushed the alarm, and I stayed there until the rest of the girls came to my cage.” * k k * Elliott, meanwhile, walked up to the cage, unaware that the holdup was in progress. One mpn, he said, struck him on the left side of the head. ■ “I went to one knee,” Elliott' said. “Then he vaulted the top of. the cage, grabbed the bag with Monday’s receipts and She was putting $282,885 in then jumped back.” would not estimate how much of the loss was in cash. The funds were insured, he said. k ■ k ★ The gunmen invaded the church rectory in suburban Norridge, on Chicago’s northwest edge,, tied up two priests and awaited the arrival of the Brink’s truck, making its rounds of customer collections. GUARD AMBUSHED When the truck arrived, the robbers ambushed a guard, slugged him and tied him up and drove the truck away. The gunmen wore Halloween masks and a ski hood. After they tied up the guard and priests in the rectory, one of theni removed the guard’s jacket, donned it and, averting his face, gained entry to the locked track from the unsuspecting Brink’s driver. •k k * Inside the gunman took over the vehicle and let in an accomplice. They held the driver at gun-point while driving away from the rectory as the third rifen followed in the car. * * * In the Paterson robbery, three gunmen wearing Halloween masks robbed a bank truck while it was picking up the Sunday collection at St. Anthony’s Catholic church. The bandits unloaded a bank track containing $513,000 after binding four priests, a janitor, apd the two bank track guards who entered the rectory to pick up the collection money. Progress Cited in Economic, Fiscal Areas 'Have Lifted Michigan Back to Its Former Place of Prominence' LANSING Ufi — “Our tremendous strides in fiscal soundness, economic growth and the creation of new jobs,” were highlighted by Gov. George Romney yesterday as he issued a 1964 Michigan progress report. “A record number of people are working, unemployment Is the lowest in many years, improvement in personal income tops the nation, investment in plant and business expansions is the greatest in the state’s history, fiscal integrity has been restored,” .the. governor declared. Romney continued: “We have made tremendous strides hi reducing longtime public service deficiences in meeting people’s needs in education, mental and physical health, problems of youth and senior citizens, working standards, welfare programs, and many other areas. “And we have raised Michigan back to its former, place of. prominence among the states,” he added. ir 43 REPEAT OATH — County Clerk-Register of Deeds John D. Murphy (center) and Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson (right), are sworn in by Circuit Judge William J. Beer during ceremonies yesterday in the courthouse auditorium. Both men will assume duties Jan. 1. Murphy is the first Democrat to win his position, and Bronson is the first Democrat to be elected prosecutor in the 1930s. Five new members of Bronson’s staff were also sworn in. Western States Start After-Flood Cleanup SAN FRANCISCO UP)—A mighty force of men and machines shouldered the task today of cleaning up after the West’s Christmas week floods, called by the governor of California “a major American disaster.” A massive airlift hoisted food and emergency repair equipment into • “Ail area for which no act complishment is claimed,” said Romney, “was legislative redistricting, the gerrymander system imposed by the courts in contradiction to the new State Constitution.” EXCERPTS Excerpts from Romney’s itemized report: • Economic growth: Total personal income in the first nine months of 1964 grew 9.2 per cent over the same period in 1983, ranking Michigan behind only the resort states of Florida and Nevada. Economists estimate continuance of this rate would produce a $1.9 billion increase over 1963-$236 a person. * * * In addition, Romney said, “Michigan has seen some $900 million more .in announced business and industrial construction than twe years ago.” STATE EDUCATION x • Education: “Support of our 10 state colleges and universities was increased by $21 million, sharpest! single-year increase {n Michigan’s history, with an additional $31 million provided for (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) stricken northwestern California. Snow and falling temperatures added to (he misery of refugee* from high water, and threatened See Story, Page 23 Gifts Awaiting 1st Baby of'65 again to block helicopter delivery of food bundles to hundreds marooned in the high California timber country for the ninth straight day. Between 499 and 500 persons were isolated in vest-pocket lumbering and mining communities along the Klamath and Salmon rivers Jn extreme northern California. They have been cut off since Dec, 21. Civil defense workers said they undoubtedly, were getting desperate for food. * k k Dozens of helicopters were in Yreka, Calif., near the Oregon border loaded for mercy missions blit unable to take off because of snow and icing conditions. 3-HOUR BREAK ' ■ “We get a three-hour break inr the weather,” said Yreka (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Special gifts froin some 20 Pontiac area business place# Are waiting for the first baby to arrive after midnight Thursday..' Winner of the First Baby .Contest for 1965 will be determined Tuesday from entries submitted to the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. To be eligible to win, the baby must be the earliest barn Friday morning to married - parents who live in Oakland Comity north of 14 Mile Rond. Entry must be made through the family doctor. The family doctor should send • a statement to Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, listing the exact time and date of birth, sex, weight and name of baby together with the names and address of parents., Entries must be delivered by 5 p.m. Monday to the “First Baby Contest” in care of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, Riker Building, 35 W. Huron. 'Where Do We Go From Here' HMl mmm In Today's Press 'White House' Romney hears proposals for state governor's residence—PAGE 49.. Italy President Socialist is chosen after 21st(ballot in parliament -PAGE 23. Aid to Egypt U.S. going thrpugh with plans despite Nasser railing—PAGE 2. Area News ............4 Astrology ......... 27 Bridge ........... tH Coolies .......... 27 Editorials ......... 9 ituaries 35 . 31-32 , Radio Programs . 41 sob, Earl .........41 men’s Pages .17-19 Press ts Offering Book Featuring Top News of ‘64 “The World in 1964”, a pictorial — editorial digest of the past year is being offered to area readers by The Pontiac Press and the Associated. Press, * * * Subtitled “History as We L|ved It,” the 309-page volume is being presented by this-paper and more than 300 other newspapers across the nation. The 9tt-by-12%-inch hard-, back edition contains hundreds of the best news photos of the year la color and black aad white. The book is being produced for delivery by the same AP news experts who turned out “T h e Torch Is Passed” and the; “Warren Report.” Price of the volume is $3. It will be sold by coupon only. (See page 22). Scrap Yard Feud Gets Bitter RUSHING THE SEASON — Sunshine yesterday brought out these women who thought It would be a fine day for a swim. They took a dip in Michigan off Port Sheldon in Grand Haven with the mei’eury reading 24 degrees above zero. The warm water discharge of a nearby plant was supposed to help but show still is visible in the background. From left are Jean King, Jean Karell and Judy Rice Wynn. A long-standing feud between the City Commission, owners pf the Sam Allen & Son, Inc., scrap yard at 22 Congress, and residents in the scrap yard area is growing more bitter as 1964 dwindles into 1965. . ★ ★ ' k “Where do we go from here?” was a question asked today by Mrb. Robert Gilbert of the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home as she told of the efforts she and her neighbors have made toward eliminating the nuisdnee in their area. The controversy began last summer when an auto-body . crushing machine was Installed at the scrap yard. Neighbors for blocks around are disturbed by the smoke and noise when the machine*is in operation. ' k- k k In July Mrs. Gilbert and some 45 property owners in the area petitioned the dty commission to take action to eliminate the nuisance, which the petitioners claim is in violation of several city ordinances. MADE PROTESTS - Varying numbers of the petitioners have appeared at nearly every commission meeting since the machine was installed to protest Its operation. .* ★ ★ Bat it continues to operate —sometimes 24 hours a day, according to Mrs. Gilbert. “We’ye called the police, the fire department, the mayor, the city attorney, the Chamber of Commerce and everyone else we think might be able to do something about it,” said Mrs. Gilbert. “Nothing Has been don*?' k. 4 ’ k k ■ k • The Pursley Funeral Home is about 100 yards from the machine and the huge cranes which feed auto bodies into it. “We can’t sleep when It’e running at eighty’ Mrs. Gil- bert said. “You can hardly carry on a conversation in owr parking lot.” Mrs. Gilbert and several of her neighbors have retained Attorney Paul M. Mandel to help them goad the City Commission into action. k k . k “We can’t stand the expense of taking this/matter into court,” Mrs. Gilbert explained, “and we shouldn’t have to. It's the city’s job to take it there, not ours.” 7 SAID ILLEGAL City Manager Joseph A. Warren has told the commission that the scrap yard operation is illegal according to existing aon-btg ordinances and recommended that it be stopped. ★ * k ; f. The scrap yard owners built a “soundproofing” structure around the crushing .machine but this doth not stop the noise of the cranes dropping the bodies Into piles and toagttng TWO THE PONTIAC PRBSgj TUESDAY. DECEMBER 4). ]M4 m Campaign Violation by Dems Is Reported LANSING OR — The state'll Fair Campaign Practices Com* j mission bin found the Democratic State Central Committee “guilty of an unfair practice” in the 1964 gubernatorial campaign, Gov. George Romney said today. He said the practice was distribution of a pamphlet Which accused him .of opposing equal opportunities in housing. Romney said “hundreds of thtMand” of copies of the pamphlet not only violated f»r campaign practices but Also a bipartisan agreement not to make civil rights a partisan issue. The commission told Detho- Johnson Offer Plan for , fast Transit (Continued From Page One) with representatives of the Pennsylvania Railroad and New Haven Railroad about participation in the demonstration project. One official described the talks as “very enpnnraging." > , IK was understood the demonstration project would include 190-mile-an-hour electrical rail ' service between Washington and Nep York, possibly as far as New Haven, Conn. I ; ★ * * The experiment would cut the traveling time between New York and Washington to less that) three hours, compared to the ;four hours or more it now takas for the 250-mile train trip. TO [MAKE SURVEYS [ Therewould be statistical surveys made to find out if passengers will ride trains if they are fps^ clean, on time and frequent. The administration’s program is an outgrowth of a proposal made in 1163 by Sen. Claiborne Pell, D-RJ., for an eight-state compact to develop high spend rail service between Boston nnd Washington. The Johnson approach is the iQolt concerted attack so far on the transportation problem. Massachusetts Institute of Technology; is working under a $500,000 Commerce Department research contract trying to look ahead to the! most feasible high-speed transportation system for the Eastern region. O&e government official said iQagy people are mistaken in the [belief that this is just a rail program. “It isn't," he said. "Udder study are numerous ground systems, including exotic plans such as air cushion fatadel, guided ground systems apd;tubular transportation.” erstic State Chairman Zolton Ferency of its findings in a'letter dated Dec. 15. ■'it * ★ Romney personally filed a complaint with the commission shortly after the election. content, Timing The commission said it considered' both the content and the timing of the pamphlet in reaching its decision. There is m provision for punishment for violation of the commission’i code of fair campaign practices. Romney, asked if he considered the pamphlet a smear, said, “it was a distortion.” ★ ★ ★ Quotes attributed to the governor were made from a speech he made to an open state meeting of the Michigan Real Estate Association in September. ★ ★ •* Ferency said the central committee had prepared the pamphlet but said he had not seen the Dec. 15 letter from the commission. Airport Report Tops Agenda NEW LAWYERS - Two Oakland County Circuit Court clerks, Charles D. Toby (center), 27, and Robert F. Potere, 28, are congratulated by Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem following their admission to the Michigan State Bpr yesterday. Potere, 695 Red Oak, Avon Town- ship is Judge Ziem’s c has worked for Judge Si years. Dondero was. courthouse c William J. Beer adni ticefii the state. y. Toby, 290 Liberty, nton Dondero for five able to attend the ding Circuit Judge 141 attorneys to prac- A report on Pontiac Municipal Airport by City Manager Joseph A; Warren heads tonight’s agenda for the City Commission. Warren will present a written report on the county’s interest in acquiring the city airport. Periodically, negotiations have been conducted between members of county government and the city as to the city transferring or selling the facility. .Warren is slated to report that Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the County Board of Auditors, visited him last week with a set of questions on the airport. Murphy was delegated by a special county aviation committee to seek the commission’s feeling toward turning the airport over to'ttie county. PRICE FIGURE The questions concern a price figure that the city would place on the facility, an income-expense tally and the commission’s readiness to sell. » In other business the commission is expected to pass on a proposal to extend Edward C. Bloe’s retirement date 90 days. ★ * ★ Bloe, city assessor, is slated to retire Feb. 13 and has already received two extensions as allowed by the General City Employes Retirement Board of Trustees, f The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and warmer today aid tonight with light rain. Highs today 41 to 47. Lows to-night 35 to 49. Partly cloudy with light rain tomorrow with little change in temperatures. Highs 43 to 59. South to south-I westerly winds IS to 25 miles an hour today and tonight, [diminishing tomorrow. Outlook for Thursday) cloudy with • light showers and mild. twnt )emper«ture preceding ! jkt S AJn.: Wind velocity s-lD i Direction—East. Sun atta Tuesday at S:SS p.m. Su» rises Wednaadey at S:M a.n Mtan sets Tuesday at 2:26 p.m. -Maori rites Wednesday at 1:47 a IS Kansas city » «7 17 MhmTCwch 76 70 27 Milwaukee a 30 to New Orleans 46 !7 “*r- U ». Waterford Adopts law for System Waterford Township Board members last night adopted an ordinance pertaining to the operation of file township’s central water system. t Besides providing for management procedures, the ordinance also specifies rates and establishes rules and regulations governing the system. TheTownship’ Board reviewed language of the p r o-posed ordinance at a special meeting three weeks ago. In other business the board opened bids on two cars for the building department and referred them to die clerk and building department s u p e r i n-tendent for study. ★ i ★ - Bill Spence Inc., with a bid of $3,371, was the lower of two bidders. Proposals included trade-in of used building department cars. TEMPORARY PERMIT The board approved a dance permit for New Year’s Eve only for Mitch’s Tavern, 4000 Cass Elizabeth. The action is subject to approval of the township’s fire and police departments and the Liquor Control Commission. In other business the board rescinded a resolution passed last week calling for bids on gasoline for township vehicles. ★ * * An examination of the present gasoline, contract revealed that it continues through 1965 so bids will, not be required until next December. Rail Union Calls Strike Against Southern Line Romney Tells State Progress (ContinuedFrom Page One)1 their capital expenditures, including starts on 29 new facilities. “The first state scholarship program was adopted and is already benefiting 1,399 students. while the student loan program was improved. ‘^Elementary and secondary education was allotted a singleyear hike of $26 million in state school aid, which included revision of the per pupil gross allowance from $224 to $236.50.” • Mental health: “This year’s appropriation was boosted another $4.2 million, includifig $1.5 million more to move into full swing the community . mental health services program and $1.3 .million to further improve the program for care of retarded children. NEW BEDS Funds were provided which will furnish 930 new beds for the retarded aswelUas plan a new facility in west central Michigan." • Social welfare: “Michigan became qualified in 1964 to participate in the federal program of aid to dependent children of the unemployed, resulting in the transfer of needy parents and children 1 of direct relief at higher I Birmingham Area News Commission Meeting Last for City Manager BIRMINGHAM .> After 10 years as the city’s chief administrator, L. R. Gare attended his last City Commission meeting yesterday before retiring Jan. 1. Mayor Charles Renfrew praised Gare, saying, “He has contributed tremendously to the development of the city." Prior to becoming city manager, Gare, 61, served as director of public works and as city engineer for five years. He announced his plans to retire last October. “The city of Birmingham has excellent government and it really has been a pleasure working with officials these last 10 years,” Gare told commissioners last night. COULD SHAKE HANDS’ “There have been differences but afterward you could go up and shake hands with friends. WASHINGTON (AP)/- The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen called a surprise strike today against the 14-state operations of the Southern Railway/System. Union spokesmen claimed several hours after/the strike began at 6 a. m. (EST) that the walkout was 75 per - cent effective and would shut down virtually all Southern/operations by noon. The strike,- in a dispute over the operation of some trains without firemen, caught government officials by surprise. “We just heard about it,” said a spokesman for the National Mediation Board, which handles railroad labor disputes. He declined to speculate whether the government Would intervene. * * * A spokesman for the Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz said he had no plans to step in immediately. WITHOUT NOTICE D. W. Brosnan, president of the railroads, said the strike was called without notice, apparently because “Southern is operating freight and yard engines without firemen on)y when no firemen are available." Brosnan said Southern has notified all its firemen,’that none would be eliminated except by promotion, retirement or dismissal for cause. “The union is apparently striking because Southern is not hiring new hnen as firemen,” Brosnan said. Water Work Probe Is Urged (Continued From Page One) unanimously by the board will cite the fact that several complaints have beeb received and ask that a full investigation be made of the Schwab operation. The resolution will be directed to the DPW and a copy will be sent tp the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. . Though critical of the Schwab He called the shrike illegal but no court action was announced immediately. I WITHOUT FIREMEN J, W. Jennings, vice president of the AFL-CIO union said the railroad started running some engines without firemen last Saturday despite an agreement | to meet Jan. 13 to negotiate the ' issue. . J e n n i n g s said operating trains without firemen violated Southern’s contract with the union. 4, There was no immediate announcement from Southern’s headquarters here whether it would try to continue operations with supervisory employes. ★ w ★ A ticket agent at Chattanooga, Tenn., said all trains would be stopped at the next terminals they reach and passengers would be given bus tickets to continue their journeys. 1,299 FIREMEN “The commission should give consideration to a full-time city attorney because of the large amount of work involved with a growing city," said Renfrew. A request for the closing of Ridgedale Avenue and a petition to rezone property on Ihrdy Street between Frank and Brown for an office complex , 5 . ... . were referred to the plan board . .. . m - , . In other business, the com- for .»uhv average monthly benefit lev- j mission authorized the city’s f ___________________________L_ •“* participation in an engineering “Old age assistance recipients study designed to eliminate i saw their monthly maximum odors caused by an overflow | from the Bloomfield drain. “The people should appreciate those they have governing." Succeeding Gare as city manager will be Robert S. Kenning, present* assistant city manager and a municipal employe since 1950. north of 14 Mile Road to the Nixon Pond. The Birmingham firm of Rub-bell, Roth & Clark will undertake the $1,900 study. * * * Because of the increased work load encountered by the city’s legal counsel, Howleit, Hartman it Beier, Pontiac, the commission approved an additional $1,-750 for the firm. „ < . / ANNUAL FEE The appropriation covers (he months December 1964 through June 1965. / The firm has been receiv- ing an annual fee of $6,599. The administration, on the suggestion of Mayor Renfrew, also will prepare a report on the feasibility of hiring a full-time attorney. convalescent home benefits increased from $90 to $140 and those in their own homes were boosted from $80 to $90. 'Under the Medical Assistance for the Aged Act, we increased allowable Income levels to permit an estimated 22,000 additional needy senior ■ citizens to qualify.” COUNCIL CREATED • Human resources: Romney cited creation of a human resources council ty help “pool The strike involves about 1,200 help for our underprivileged, firemen on Southern and its subsidiaries, union spokesmen said. Southern employs about 16,000 persons , altogether. It serves such cities as Washington, Atlanta, Birmingham, New Orleans, Memphis, St. Louis and Nashville. Recount Verifies Election Win of Area Supervisor Pontiac Township Supervisor Leonard Terry’s 39-vote winning margin in the Nov. 3 election was confirmed today following a recount. n , The recount was conducted^ this morning by the Oaklana County Board of Canvassers on the request of Mont'D. Boa-man, unsuccessful Democratic candidate for the post. 7 ★ * ★ Bodman challenged Terry’s final tally after losing by a vote of-1,350 to 1,389. He asked that only three of the township’s six precincts be recounted. Minor Hurt Is Fatal CANTERBURY, England (UPI) — Construction foreman Albert Arrowsmtth, 47, hit his thumb with a hammer while working and died when complications set in, a hospital spokesman said. “One major target of antipoverty programs are our youth. We have taken several notable steps toward making them more Employable ... and correction of wayward youth, we hive opened 300 more beds at Boys ~ * School and will have more ekrly next year, started an extensive halfway house pro-expanded our youth rehabilitation camps, and added beds'at Girls Training School.” Labor : “A highlight in this i . was passage of the ■needed minimum wage law . . a constructive study of ir antiquated workmen’s com-‘nsation program will soon bear fruition, providing a foundation for improvements next year. “As governor it was necessary for me to play an essential role in resolving two major labor disputes — the Essex Wire Corp. strike at Hillsdale last summer and the Detroit newspaper strike this fall." • State and local government: “The general election included selection of our new Appellate Court, and our revamped State Board of Education under the new constitution ... “We also declared a tempo?, rary moratorium on new taxing privileges of local government pending development of a sound, statewide approach." CITY’S SHARE The city’s share of the cost of the report is estimated at between $700 and $800, with the remainder to be paid by Bloomfield Township and Bloomfield Mils. The problem centers in a ditch extending from the east . side of Cranbrook immediately Western States Start Cleanup (Continued From Page One) Civil Defense chief Bill Sowle, “and you’re going to- see the damndest airlift out of here you’ve ever seen. . “This Is very, very rugged, mountainous country. In some areas We’D have to evacuate and in others well have to drop supplies. “We have a report of 14 children in one house at Oak Bottom 70 miles west of here JAMES A. CORWIN Pontiac Bank Elects Director Milo J. Cross, president of Pontiac State Bank, announced the Klamath. I’m concerned j today that James A. Corwin, of about those people and I’m con- 170 Marblehead, Bloomfield cerned about- the people on Hills, has been elected to the whom we have no reports at I bank’s' board of directors, all. " Corwin, 57, attended Pontiac “A jeep carrying four people | public schools, Albion College with supplies left for Scotts Bar and Babson Institute. . on the Scott River "Sunday „e entered ^ ^ morning at 7 and we haven’tand ^ ta 1939 with his father, who had j operated the business for many years on Cass Ayenoe. I Corwin operated it • after his father’s death -untif 1963, when rtne city’s urban-renewal program. He has been active in civic affairs and is presently a director of/ the Pontiac YMCA, the Pontiac Community Finance Co. and the Pontiac Community Loan,?Co. He is also president of the Oxford Lumber Co. Corwin is maijfed and has a daughter and mb. heard from them." Farrell Roberts Files for 14th District Seat Sen. Farrell E. Roberts yes-! ^ property was taken over by terday filed in Lansing for the; * mtm-------------------- |— special election called to fill th/ 14th Distrjct vacancy caused by the death of Sen.-elect Paul Chandler, R-Livonia#. / Roberts, 42, of West Bloomfield Township gave up his own seat to run unsuccessfully for the Court of Appeals. He is the first Republican to file for Chandler’s seat. if * | contracting and inspection on stt. Mcri* “ 'J\ fre $7.5-million water system; that will interconnect the present 10 separate water systems. Leonard Kapizi, Schwab Brothers vice president and superintendent of the Waterford Township project, said today the job Is being performed according to specifications. Kapizi acknowledged the possibility of isolated cases of Romney Reviews First Years Office law without fekr or favor and put an end to a long history of special interest government in Michigan. I think No. 2 has been the recognition that you can’t really meet the needs of toe people LANSING (AP) — Restoration of confidence in Michigan is toe No. 1 accomplishment of his first administration, Gov. George Romney declared Mon-Currey skid the engineering job | day. ' on the project is excellent; j In a’ 40-minute private inter- „ r_ Hflfl 19 SYSTEMS i v*ew the Associated Press, adequately without recognizing The DPW is actine as auent I Romney summed “P his first I your obligations and commit-The dfw » acting as agent j two year> in office and menta in mMtin„ ^ w forward to the next two,, which begin Friday with his second inauguration. Excerpts from the interview textr Q. What one accomplishment would you list first-in your first term? A. The biggest thing that’s happened is that the confidence in the state has been restored. As a result we gdt to make real ruts on dirt or gravel roads but [ progress again. I think there is' said generally the surfaces! an excellent degree of confi- NAHONAL WEATHER — Rain is likely tonight in Pacific Northwest and showers in mid-Mississippi Valley and lower Lakcf. $now flurries are due in upper Mississippi Valley, snow showers in parts of upper .New England and snow in northern Plateau. It will be colder over northern Plains and • Ptoteau and milder in centra) and southern Pacific coast and greater parts of Mississippi and Ohio valleys. f . jk 1 c % where main has been laid is in j better condition now than before the project began. His flfm will perform a final cleanup in the spring when the job Is completed, Kipizi said. This will’ include seeding and sodding in some areas. ' ■ t dence in the state at this point We should do the* things necessary to retain it. I think perhaps the No. I thing that has brought out a change in attitude is evidence that this is an administration that is determined to apply the have made use . of all the means available to meet our obligations, to put ourselves back on a solid financial basis. We have adopted a program based on solid fundamentals of undertaking to increase personal responsibility and local responsibility and to meet our state responsibility. We have adopted a policy of making our state attractive to those doing business here.. .we have used our strengthened economic and fiscal situation to'be-to overcome deficiencies that have built up in important public service areas over a period of time. I refer to toe fields of education, mental healfii, traffic safety and many of the other fields. . ,Q. When you took office did you think restoration of confidence was your most important task? A. In. looking at the inaugural talk I made two -years ago I said that restoring confidence in this state was the most important thing that could occur. PRIMARY OBJECTIVE Q. What is your -primary objective for toe next two yetfs? A. 4 think to pursue programs that will justify that confidence and retain it and enable us to build on !t....when I say progress I’m speaking broadly and hot just speaking in narrow terms of economic investment. I happen to believe that the more fundamental areas of progress relate to the ipdividual and family life and community years ago. When people think all is well there is a tendency to relax and say “let’s forget It." And yet all is not well. HARDLESSON 4-One of the hard lessons I think I’ve learned from experience is that it is very difficult, in a free society to get fundi-mental action that is peeded except in a crisis situation or where there Is sufficient concern about , some major public need so there is wide public support for a particular course of action. The fact of the matter is we have needed to put ourselves in this sound position hi order to meet educational, mental health and public, safety needs more adequately than we have met them in the past. Q. Does one need stand out life and not just, to the economic' above the rest? aspects of our society. * * ★ Q. Will the treasury surplus A. You take it from a human «g« yw problems as did the standpoint, I think soma of the 1 problems relating to those who deficit? A. It Creates a different situation, in some ways more difficult than the one we faced two are physicially and toentally and educationally disadvantaged represent one of our major problems because it affects • number of fields. . Q. How do you plan to keep pressure of national politics from interfering with your job in Michigan? ? A. By devoting adequate at- ' fiction to my job here.. At the Aiime time, what we'rp doing here in- Michigan is not unrelated to the country. As far as my involvement in the national' situation is concerned. I'm simply one governor among 17 Republican governors who, are in a position to be of some help in strengthening the Republican Party and thus maintain the vigor of our essential two-party system.’* "> * * * Q. Have you given any thought to what you’ll-do in 1966? A. Sure, you chink about things of that type now ahd then, but as far as trying to determine at what point I’ll make any decisions, I haven’t irted to nail it dpWn. I have decided this: I’iniilot going to discuss it with anybody-what I think or what I plan to do. >, THE PONTIAC TKfesS, TUESDAY*, DECEMBER 29, 1964 THREfe U S. Sets Egypt Aid Despite Nasser Railing WASHINGTON (AP) - Only five days after Egypt's President Gamal Abdel Nasser had told America in effect to take its aid and “go to hell," the United States is going through with plans to provide him with $16,-994,000 worth of surplus wheat. Hie Agriculture Department issued an authorization Monday far the purchase Of that amount of wheat under the Fooa-for-Peace program. . A •, A A The department will pay cash for the wheat in the open market, and Egypt will pay for the grain in its' own currency, a part of which will be spent in the United Arab Republic. Although arrangements for the transaction had been made some time ago, the United States still could have stopped the deal after Nasser’s speech of last week. ECONOMIC fRESSURE He accused U.S. Ambassador Lucius Battle of trying to put But Philippine Official Denies, It Report Bomb Probe Quashed MANILA (UPI) - President Diosdado Macapagal was reported today to have quashed an investigation into a bombing attempt on an American primary school here. A presidential spokesman denied the report. * A A -A high explosive mortar shell was lobbed into the yard of a U.S. Air Force primary school at Clark Air Force Base, according to the UJ. Embassy. The shell did not explode. EUer Terns, public prosecutor in Angeles City, adjacent to the U.S. air base, told the Philippine news service he had been ordered by President Diosdado Macapagal to pot off his investigation for an indefinite period. The president's press office, however,- said tiff report was ‘‘absolutely untrue,” . A- A A Press Secretary Virgilio Reyes said Macapagal is not taking am/ direct hand in the investigation of recent incidents at American military .bases in the Philippines because he has already appointed Justice Secretary Salvador Nfdrino to look ' Inro the situation. MOUNTING UNREST / Recent incidents, including the fatal shooting of two Filipino trespassers by .U.S. sentries, have set off mounting agitation here. At a demonstration in Angeles Sunday, some 3,MS Filipinos waved anti - American placards and shouted for the recall of “ugly Americans.” ' Summoned for the hearing scheduled for today were Col. Joseph Friedman, director of in-formation of the U.S. 13th Air Force; Col. W. C. Nutting, Clark Field provost marshall, and Victorio Doria, Filipino guard at the base’s primary school. A A A American officials said Doria was on duty when the shell-hurling incident took place Dec. 17. Doria reported seeing two Filipinos fleeing from the scene after throwing the mortar shell over the base fence into the school yard. There were 750 American children in the school at the time. SERVICE "Great service," that's what Mr. & Mrs. K said when they thanked Thatcher,— Patterson for ^buying new clothes and luggage following their vacation burglqry THATCHER-PKliERSON. INC. "Since 1889 — Tailored Policies,, Total Protection" 711 Community National Bank Building. Pontiac, Michigan fEderal 2-9224 WOodward 1-4656 > economic pressure on Egypt ‘.told a cheering crowd in Port Said: “Anyone who does not like our attitude can drink from the sea. And if the Mediterranean ip not big enough, we will give him the Red Sea to drink, too.*-. ' A ■ ' A ' A •' In Egyptian slang, to “drink from the sea” is the equivalent of to “go to hell” A A A His outburst apparently was triggered by U.S. accusations that he is aiding Congolese rebels and intimations that' future aid deals would be curtailed because of this. -A A A Nasser said in his speech: “We have sent arms to the Congolese rebels, and we will continue to send.arms because the rebels need them. CUT OFF TONGUE “We do not accept any words against us, and we will cut off the tongue of anyone who uses them. We do not new their Washington has been supplying Nasser with about $140 mil-in food yearly under a three-year agreement that expires next June 30. The Nasser government has asked for $35 million worth for the cooling year because of a serious shortage. \ A A A.. Some U S. officials have indicated that the new $35-million request will be shelved. WIDNESDAY—1 to 3 P M REMINGTON SERVICE SIMMS SERVICE - Wednesday of every week- mtMk Electric Shavers -Main Plot - Late Arrivals - Lost Shipments - Slow Moving Sellers - In Fact, ... Everything That SIMMS Doesn't Want Jo Repack Is Reduced for CLEARANCE - So, LOOK for the Famous ‘REDUCED’ Yellotv Signs On AllX Floor* iHEEEBi You'll Foot LI You're Made Of Money With a CHRISTMAS CLUB What a grand "Made-Of-Money" feeling you'll have when that Christmas Club Check arrives next year in time for your Holiday Shopping ... No more being long on gift' ideas and short on cash ... Smart Santas will make their club large enough to care for Year-end expenses too. OPEN YOUR 1965 CHRISTMAS CLUB NOW $ 1.00 Every Other Week Builds - $ 25.00 $ 2.00 Every Other Week Builds - $ 50.00 $ 4.00 Every Other Week Builds - $100.00 $10.00 Every Other Week Builds - $250.00 $20.00 Every Other Week Builds - $500.00 Bank 16 Conveniently Located Offices Downtown Pontiac . . . W. Huron . . N. Perry ; . Keego Harbor. .. Walled Lake "Union Lake . . . Milford . . . Lake Orion . . 1 Waterford . . . Woodward . . . County Canter i,. Romeo . , . Mall. .. Rochester.. . University And Bloomfield Hills Member Federal. Deposit Insurance Corporation ■w SAME ; OLD K SIMMS Yet sir - we never change - tame old store front, tomb old floors and even torn# of tha tame eld'clerks. Best of all are the same eld rock-bottom, low, everyday, discount prices. Tomorrow, Wednesday only, we’re cutting the same old prices even more-so make it a point to come to the same old Simms for the tame old low Prices. WEDNESDAY STORE HOURS: 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. PARK FREE On SAGINAW ST. SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Sal* of Assorted YARD GOODS Per Yard 22* a Better Cotton - Per Yd. .39c LjbRayon • Per Yard .... .49c Choice of assorted yard goods in solids, prints and patterns 6-Foot Rug Runners |97 FOUR THE PONTIAC PRE^S, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 No Primaries Required in 3 Candidates File in Four Villages Ih ft least three of the four villages where candidates far office filed nominating petitions by 4 p.m. deadlines yesterday, no primaries are slated because of lade of intraparty competition for each open post St ★ h<« Incumbents and ^bln inter* ested in naming far office in the March I general elections turned petitions in to the village clerks hi Romeo, Holly, Like Orion and Oxford. V I la each village no more ttan two from any party fifed far a single vacancy thereby eliminating the need for a primary — and in most cases inenmbeats are seeking reeiectioB to present posts. * Romeo, however, is the only village yet undecided about a primary with six haring filed for the three trustee vacancies. A council ruling will be sought. A roundup of those who filed nominating petitions by yesterday's deadline in each village follows: Oxford A total of five persons, Including two incumbents, turned in petitions for three council seats which will become open. The incumbents are Homer Hight, ending a one-year term, and Edmund Unger, winding np a two-year stint. ■ The holder of the third seat, Gerald Olrich, has announced that he would not run for re-election. PLAYHOUSE WORK STARTED - Ground was broken yesterday for the Avon Players' Community Playhouse on Washington Road, northeast of the Rochester village limits. On hand to watch the excavation begin was Players president William H. Keinath. Hie modified A-frame structure, designed by John J. Pottle and Associates, Mount Clemens, is due to be completed for the Players final production of the 1964-65 season in mid-June. General contractor is Ray Pistonetti, who has volunteered hi^. services and has been appointed a trustee of the Avon Playhouse Corp. Farmington Forum Has Both Sides Set Also filing tor nomination were Stanley Schlicht of 29 Easley, Edward J. Bossardet of 48 W. Burdick and Earl Irwin of 10 Part. The two highest vote-getters in the March general election wili receive two-year terms, with the third highest getting the one-year term. • Lake Orion With seven positions to be vacant here, nine candidates submitted nominating petitions. No competition developed . within either the Citixens or Village parties for any spot, however, and a primary is therefore unnecessary. Incumbent Village President William V. Shoup (V) filed, as did Citizens party member Clarence Rossman, both for the presidency. ★ ★ ★ Rossman of 643 Atwater made an unsuccessful bid for the Orion Township supervisor spot in the November election. SAME SLATE Clerk Mary Parkinson and treasurer Geraldine J. Campbell also filed for reelection, both on the Citzens party slate. The assessor position now held by Orion Township Treasurer-elect .Mrs. .Myrle Longpre (C) attracted the interest of one petitioner,. Robert Swem (C) of 459 North Shore. Three two-year trustee positions open are being sought by two incumbents and two other candidates. ★ A ★ Incumbents Stewart Drahner (V) and Michael LaMagna (V) filed for reelection, while former Orion Township Trustee William D. O’Brien (V)' of 15 Bellevue and Richard Goeckel (C) of 272 Lakeriew also submitted petitions. ★ ★ '★ The holder of the third open seat, Robert Hauxwell (C), did not file. * FARMINGTON - A fourth speaker has been named to fill out the teams scheduled to debate censorship here next week. Charles J. Porter, assistant Oakland County prosecutor, will take the affirmative stand in the first Farmington Community Forum Jan. 6. Porter, who has done research in the field of censorship, served as a legal clerk for the Michigan Supreme Court under Chief Justice Thomas M. Kavanagh. The assistant prosecutor joins on the affirmative team Dr. F. Alden Shaw, former headmaster of Detroit Country Day School, te ★ * j Opposing them in the 8 p.m. '^debate will be Thomas E. { Hughes, psychologist and direc--tor of professional services at ; Strike Brawler j Is Convicted in > Guard Shooting 1 HILLSDALE (AP) - Angelo :LoPresto, 37, of Hillsdale, was 'convicted of felonious assault •Monday night in file shooting of 'a plant guard in file Essex Wire Corp. strike here last spring. LoPresto was found guilty by -a Hillsdale Circuit Court jury which deliberated eight hours. ★ * * The jury was given four charges, to consider, including assault with intent to murder. , LoPresto ^nd his brother, jjoc, were charged in the shooting of Lewis Scott of Detroit. VIOLENT STRIKE Scott was brought to Hillsdale fry Essex Wire during the violent strike. * Joe LoPresto will be tried at in later date. He testified at his frrother’s trial that he—and hot Angelo—had fired the shot that wounded Scott in a roadside jbrawl between guards and strike sympathizers May 28. ; Joe LoPresto testified that he fired when be saw Scott advancing toward his son, .Tony LoPresto. during the scuffle. > Circuit Judge Robert W. McIntyre set no immediate data Boys Republic, and Erwin Ell-man, Detroit attorney and chief counsel‘-for the American Civil Liberties Union. Lee Peel, Farmington High School journalism teacher, will be moderator. CHURCH SITE The Farmington Universalist Unitarian Church, 23604 Whrner, will be the scene of the first forum, 'being developed by group of interested persons. . ★ ' ★ * Tickets are available at the Book Coiner, Inc., 33173 Grand River, and the Farmington Savings and Loan Association in the Farmington Shopping Plaza. ‘Avon Players to Do'Picnic' ROCHESTER - The Avon Players have chosen William s’s adult romance, “Picnic,” for production Jan. 22 and 23 at West Junior High School. * * * Mrs. William Whitaker and Ted Knapp will recreate the Kim Novak-William Holden roles of Madge, the beautiful daughter, and Hal, the young wanderer who comes to upset the lives of a family in a small Kansas town. Jo Nqbeker of Waterford Township plays Madge’s mother, Flo Owens. Miss Nebeker recently scored a hit for her portrayal of “Rumpelstiltskin” presented by the Avon Players Children’s Theater group at Thanksgiving time. Mrs. Sulo Palmgren will be the old maid schoolteacher and Duane Utech, her shop- keeper boyfriend. OTHERS IN CAST Others in the cast include Mrs. David Holdecness, Jean Lilly, John Long, Karen Elizabeth Bush, Mrs. Martin Rosalik and Bill Williams. “Picnic” is being directed by Bob Liggett, assisted by Mrs. Edward Howe. Producer is Bob SHERRY SPARKMAN Group in Clarkston Will Install Queen , CLARKSTON - Sherry Sparkman will be installed Saturday as honored queen of Clarkston Bethel No. 25, International Order of Job’s Daughters. Sherry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Sparkman, 4609 Kempf, Waterford Township, will take office during a 7:30 p.m. ceremony at )Clarkston Junior High School. * f • t'other new officers include Jodie Strother, senior princess; Sandra Smalley, junior princess; Cathy Riggs, guide; and Jeanfte Stinkard, marshal. > i. a .< $1 : 'v With three incumbents and three other men, all Re- Courses Set in Landscape Horticulture Three noncredit courses will be offered in the near future to those interested in the field of landscape horticulture. To be given by fin Continuing Education 'Service of .Michigan State University, the courses are' in “Grasses and Turf Maintenance,” “Fundamentals of Salesmanship” and “Principles of Foundation Planting Design.” The evening classes will be held at Highland Park Junior High School, once a week for. six consecutive weeks, beginning Jan. 12. The 2%-hour sessions are slated to start at 8 p.m.- Course fee* will be |25. publicans, filing petitions for the three open trusteeships, the neceisity of a primary election here is not known. Village Clerk Norman Engel said that the/coundl wifi have to decide whether to have a primary. \ / ; Two men have filed petitions for the village presidency now held by Edgar Welach, who has announced that be Will not run for reelection. * * ★ They are Byron E. Nichols of 12548 S. Lane and Tony Galan of 288 S. Main. SEEKING REELECTION Incumbents filing to1 reelection were cleric Engel, treasurer Mrs. Elaine Hosner, and trustees Stanley Holmes, Howard Pallister and Marvin Sie-weke. j Jack McFadden of 221 Croo-well, Merlin J. Kerr of 153 Croswell and Donald R-Mosher of 431 Benjamin have filed for the trustee positions. Ernest Maule of 421 N. Bailey filed for clerk and Mrs. Bonnie Kost of 421 N. Bailey for* one " the two library trustee spots open. * Or it. Incumbent library Trustees Mrs. Elizabeth Spencer and Mrs. Helen Davidson did not file petitions. Neither did incumbent assessor Fred Ebeling. The council trustees serve for two years, library trustees for three. All filers were Republicans. Romeo Holly With only the seven incumbents filing nominating petitions herd, there will be no primary election before the general election March 8. All present officeholders are Union party members. Seeking one-year terms are Village President John F. Oldani, Cleric Betty Oliver, Treasurer Hulda Anderson and Assessor Grant H. Hulet." ★ * * Trustees making bids for new two-year terms are Clarence Lester, Lott Everly and Aaron Ganshaw. GEORGE GOBLE New Officers Inducted by Area Ki ROCHESTER—A new slate of officers for 1965 was inducted last night at the meeting of the Kiwanis Club of Rochester at Bebout’s Restaurant. New president is George H. Goble, 5621 Orion, Oakland Township. He replaces Herbert Stouten-burg who remains an officer of the elub as immediate past president.' A Rochester area resident for 10 years, Goble has been a Kiwanian for six years and has held several key offices during that time. , He is a missiles engineer and holds the position of* manager of reliability and quality assurance at Chrysler Corp. missile division near 16 Mile and Mound Road. Other Kiwanis officers for 1965 include Darrell Bordine, first vice president; Carl Queck, second vice president; Louis Watson, secretary; and Lloyd Christenson, treasurer. Farmington Twp. Raises to Be Decided by Voters FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP— A question concerning the salary increases of three township officials will be put to voters here Febi 15. They will determine whether the raises totaling 19.660 will go Into effect during fiscal 1965-66. The special election wus set following a ruling on the matter by Oakland County Circuit Judge Philip Pratt. The legality of the raises granted on the eve of the Nov. 3 election had been challenged by 11 township residents * ★ h' However, Pratt found that the move was not unconstitutional, that the action was valid and that township trustees acted within the scope of their authority. LEGAL CONFLICT Pratt said there is a conflict in the state statute affecting pay raises but held in his interpretation that a township that had abolished its annual meeting could grant salary increases. If Farmington Township nnal meeting, file increases would have been ruled void, be said. The night before the township’s three full-tfane officials were reelected, they were given raises by the other members of the Township Board. ★ ★ * Supervisor C u r 11 s H. Hall’s salary was jumped from $11,266 to $15,606 a year, Clerk Floyd A. Cairns’ from $8,000 to $11,-500 and Treasurer Elise Avery’s from $8,300 to $11,000. PRESENTED PETITION While flie suit filed against the township was pending hi Circuit Court, some 1,700 electors presented'a petition requesting'a referendum election be held on the matter. . * " *. dr The township Board awaited Pratt’s ruling before setting the date. ■ ■ dr ' * ; Farm of the proposition Ms not yet been determined, according to Hall. Rules on Extra Duties for Road, School Chiefs LANSING (AP) - Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley ruled Monday that the appointive state superintendent of public instruction and the chairman of the Highway Commission or his designee will serve on the State Safety Commission when the presently elective schools superintendent' and highway commissioner leave office. 23,000 VOLTS! The Boston 1-YEAR WARRANTY BUILT-IN ANTENNA POWER TRANSFORMER MAPLE VENEER CABINET LIGHTED CHANNEL SELECTOR CM SPECIAL 16" CHASSIS 5" OVAL HI-FI SPEAKER LOW DOWN PAYMENT! MONTHLY PAYMENTS START ■ . ; MARCH 1965 SYLVANSTEREO& TV SALES Open Monday. Wednesday and Friday Crania ft 'HI 9 2168 Orchard Lake Road (Sylvan Center) Phone 682-019* B BETTER MEATS AIZ LIE V I 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: 78 North Saginaw DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open Friday Even Inge 'til 9 P.M. 4348 Dixia Highway ! DRAYTON PLAINS Open Wednesday1! 9 AM. to 6:30 P.M. , Open Thursday tfcrw Saturday ...Since 1931 o This Ad IN EFFECT BOTH STORES Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday STEAKS Wafer Thin CLUB or SWISS W 59 £ Baxley Famous Tender BETTER TRIM (• ROUND did** SIRLOIN 09* LUB Or SWISS 1juicyR ^ 59Very Best sliced IIAll half Vo S famous nmoRw JUNEDALE Venter £<-7 Lean Pot | BRAND y PORK Sjss, CHUCK Semi-Boneless < CH0PS.Mk\ ROAST--------------- >/55 Vt\ HAMBURGER LP% t Tenderloin Portion Jfk'. PORK ** THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29,1964 Alabama, Mississippi Fall Into Line All States Have Started Integrating National Guard Units American lead consumption i tery production and guoline this year is expected to exceed dttlve applications wHl OS million tons. Storage bat-1 for the increase. WASHINGTON (AP) - The chief of the National Guard said today all SO states with Ala-ama and Mississippi falling into line last have dropped bars against mixing Negroes and whites fat their Guard units. “The National Guard of a 11 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico is now integrated,” Maj. Gen. Winston P. Wilson told the Associated Press. , “All restrictions, whether by law or administrative regulation, barring membership far race, religion or national or-gin have been eliminated in Be modem with | NEW LAVATORY FAUCET J Only One HandleI 6. A. THOMPSON t SONS PlumMM and mating 7m Highland Phan. Oft J-UM the National Guard,” he added. Wilson, chief of the National Guard Bureau, acknowledged that there had been “only token integration in some areas so far.” 'dr jft ★ But Wilson, an Air Guard general from Arkansas, contended that even token integration “represents a milestone in the history of the National Guard.” NOTE PROGRESS President Johnson and his Committee on Equal Opportunity in the Armed Forces said Sunday they were encouraged at “definite and clear signs of progress” in desegregating the Guard. they strongly indicated they State Airman's Body Recovered in Canada STEPHENVILLE, Nfld. (AP) —A body identified as that of an Ishpeming, Mich., airman who was killed with five Others in a plane crash Dec. 19 has been recovered by Royal Canadian Navy underwater divers. The body, identified as that of U.S. Air Force T. Sgt. F. Laine of- Ishpeming, was brought to the surface late Sunday. BLUE SHIELD ANSWERS YOUR QUESTIONS Blue Shield Protects Subscriber Dollars 1 ■ r———--------- • I’ve heard Blue Shield say that it protects I subscriber dollars. What does that mean j and how do you do it? We mean \&e make sure subscriber dollars are not spent carelessly or needlessly to pay for benefits that are not necessary or not covered in the subscriber’s contract. We do this with a team of internal auditors and quality-control specialists, including physicians, who maintain a constant check on claims and payment procedures. ?- I have a small business which employs only a few people. Can we get Blue Shield coverage? Firms with as few as five full-time employees including the owner may qualify for group coverage. And even if you do not have enough , you and your employees to qualify a w . , employees can get Blue Cross-Blue Shield protection as individuals. Write or phone your nearest Blue Cross-Blue Shield office for full particulars. 9————■—--------------------— ■ .If my newborn baby required emergency ' | surgery within hours after his birth, would Blue Shield cover the cost? It certainly would. Children requiring special care are eligible for all Blue Shield benefits from the moment of birth. If he is your first child, be sure to notify Blue Shield of his birth within 30 days. \- Can I buy stock in Blue Shield and how high are the dividends it pays? No, you cannot buy stock in Blue Shield because it is a non-profit organizatiqn. The only dividends it tfays are in the form of the finest medical care protection available at the lowest possible cost In addition, Blue Shield returns to its subscribers, in benefits, more than 93c of every dollar taken in. This is one of the highest benefit returns of any health care protection plan anywhere. 7 Do I need a physical examination before I can join Bllie Shield? NO. You need no physical examination or statement of health—ho matter how old you are or when you join. Do you have a question about your Blue Shield coverage? Just write Dept. 54, Michigan Medical Service, 441 E. Jefferson, Detroit, Michigan 48226. MICHIO AN bli/e cross BLUE SHIELD » were aot satisfied with token integration la some states. Brig. Gen. Francis S. Green-lief, deputy chief of the bureau, said, VWe expect progress to continue.” “I don’t expect to see any tremendous surge in Negro membership in hitherto all-white outfits in the Sodth,” Greenlief said. “It is a matter of steady growth.” - t: 19 STATES Eighteen months ago there were 10 states that had not integrated their Guard organizations. They were Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Caro- lina, South Carolina, Tenn- j earnest when Wilson became essee and Virginia._ Guard Bureau chief in the sum- The drive to persuade these mer of 1963. states to integrate began in I As Greenlief noted, “Ho had Long Kiss Saves His Life LONDON IM — Kathiyn Strowger, 24, gave her husband the longest kiss of their three-year marriage yesterday and saved his life. George Strowger, 26, collapsed with electric shock while adjusting a television set. * “I hardly knew what to do but guested I had to breathe air into his mouth,” said Mrs. Stronger. “His heart had stopped and he wasn’t breathing but after a minute or two he began to-come round.” At a hospital in Wimbjedon a doctor said Strowger was recovering and added: “But. for the kiss he wouidh’t be alive now.” / ‘ no command authority. We tried to lead.” The goventors the key officials in Micetime in their state Guard Organizations h a d to be wapkrfver. Wilson with his slow grin and soft Arkansas drawl set out to bring the Southern state chiefs qnmnd to his way of thinking. - It was a slow job of missionary work, done through personal contact and conversation wherever possible. Wilson was something less than welcome in some of the governors’ offices at first. The last two states to fall in line were Alabama and Mississippi. Wishing You a Happy NEW YEAR We want to thank all our friends for their expression of good cheer at Christmas and the confidence and evidence during the past year by the business they have given us. , "The Lord Mesa thee and keep thee. Tba Lord note Hit face shine upon Ihee, ■and ha gracious unlo (bee. The Lord lift up Hit coealenance upon Iftee. and give Ike* peace."—Nam. 6:24-26 Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE NOW AT OUR NSW LOCATION 185 Elizabeth Lake Road Center Murphy i Sleeks ■. of Pontiac Mel Nowl Join Blu* Cross-Blue jShiold without belonging to a group If you are under 65. Get your application from your doctor, hospital or ndaroat Blue Cross-Blue Shield office. Sorry No Phone Orders, COD's Or Deliveries. End-of-Month Clearance Sole! REDUCED Vi to Vi PRICE-WEDNESDAY ONLY! Each’ item is reduced a minimum of Vi from the price it was in our stock bofore -this clearance ... Charge All Your Purchases! OPEN WEDNESDAY ’TIL 6:30 DRESSES, SPORTSWEAR—Third Floor CHILDREN'S VALUES—Second Floor 40 Misses and .Half Site Street Dresses Were to 12.99 . . . .3.00 40"Mi$ses, ]rs. and Half Sires Street Dresses Were to 17.99 8.00 10 Maternity Dresses 2 and 3-piece styles Were to 11.99 . .7.00 16 All Season Coats Sizes 5 to 10 Were 9.90, Then 4.88 . .2.00 5 Waitress Aprons Were 2.50 ................. ............1.00 10 Blouses Were 4.99, Then 1.88 ................1.00 20 Arnel Crepe Blouses and Dacron Blouses Were to 7.99 . .3.00 2 Long sleeve Jewel Neck Dresses, Black 14-16, Were 25.00' ...............--------................. ,10.00 3 Blazer Jackets Sizes 12-16, Were 17.99..................g.00 6 Famous Make Talsetta Skirts Sizes 8-10 Were to 10.99 2.00 8 Floor Length Formats Sizes 9 to 13, Were to 39.99 . .. 10.00 34 Ban-Lon Slipovers Were 5.99, Then 1.97 .... ...... 1.29 40 Ban-LOn' Slipovers and Cardigans Were to 8.99........ 3.97 3 Half Size Wool Suits l4'4-ld'/2-18Vi, Were 39.99 Then 28.00 .........................:............. 18.00 3 Misses Wool'Suits Ssizes 10-12-14, Were 39.99, Then 28.00 .......................... ......................Ig.oo FASHION ACCESSORIES—Street Floor 9 Nylon Ruffl* Dickies Were 2.00 ........................ 1.00 8 Pique Dickies Were 2.00 ;........................... 1.00 2 Sweaters Were 6.99, Then 4.66.........................2.33 4 Sweaters Were 5.99, Then 3.33 f.«7 4 Wind Bonnets Were 1.59 .................................... 6 Whimsies Were 1.00’.......................................59 4 Evening Bags Dere 5!00 Then 3.33, Then 2.22.............i.34' . 4 Evening Bags Were 3.00, Then 2.00, Then 1.34...........; . .67 I Handbag Was 5.99, Then 3.97 .............................. 9 Handbags Were 3.00. Then 2 00 ,.7 ..1.34 1 Purse Kit Wej 1.00.................... ...................59 2 French Purses Were 8.95 ••..............................4.50 2 Ladies' Wallets Were 7.50...............................3.75 1 French Purse Was 7.50 ..................................3.75 2 Special Tainers Were 3.95 ............ .................1.47 2 Cigarette Case* Were 4.50 .............................2.25 35 Cigarette Lighters Were 3.50 ...........................1.75 1 Man's Festival Watch Was 34.95’ ......................17.47 2 Fur-Lined Leather Gloves Were 5.99 ....................2.99 3 Short Length [Leather Gloves Were 5.99, Then 3.99. . . .2.00 ‘ 'id-Leqgth Leather Gloves Were 7.50 .................3.75 ! Leather Palm Driving Gloves Were 2.00................1.00 I Wool Gloves Were 1,25.............................. 67 ! Leather Palm Dress. Gloves Were 3.50 .............. 1.75 ! White Cotton Gloves Were 3.00 ..................... .1.50 I Nylon White Gloves Were 2.00 ........................1.00 ! WJiite Cotton Gloves .Were 3.50.................... 1.75 > White Cotton Gloves Were 1.25, Then 66c ...............33 > Cotton Gloves Were 3,00 and 4.00, Then„2.00 .....1.00 Assorted Group of Women's House Slippers Were to 6.50 ......... ..................2.88 and 3.8S Assorted Group of Women’s Flats Were, to 8.99 , .. .4.88 Women's Loafers Were 6.99 . .-............... .4.44 CURTAINS, DRAPERIES, ETC.4Fourth Floor >■ Yards Flannel Printi Were 49c /....................32 yd. 5 Yards Gambet Oxfords Prints Were 1.19 ;...........67 yd. 5 Yards Tarpoon Plaids and Solids Were 1.99 ........97 yd. 7 Yards. Widewale Corduroy Were 1.29 . .66 yd. 3 yds. Lightweight Wash and Wear Prints V/ere 59c, .37 yd. 5 Yards Cotton Suede Were 1.99,|». . . ...... ,1.27 yd. 5 Yards Wool Double Knits Were-6.99 ........... 1.97 yd. > Yards Wool and Blends Were 2.99 .................1.47 yd. 1 Yards Wool and Bfend Were 3.99 ........ AY. 1.97 yd. 2 Yards Wool and Blends Were 4.99 2.97 yd. 1 Yards Figaro Solid and Tweeds Were 2.99 .97 yd. 7, Yards Crepe Solid Colors-Were 1.99 ............ .97 yd. 2 Yards Crepe, Solid Colors Were 2.99 ......... 1.97 yd. 1 Yards Abbey Twin Solid Colors Were 2.29 .... 1.17 yd. i Yards Abbey Flanftel Were 2.29................. 1.17 yd. 7 Yards Abbey Double Knits Were 2.29 .. ^..........1.17 yd. ) Yards Yellow Lace Were 98c ................ .47 yd.' l Yards Toast Lace Were 1.49 ...................... 47 yd.° 3 Yards Solid Color Satin Were 1.99 , \ . 1.32/ yd. ) Yards Solid Color Suiting, Were 2.99 ......... .1.47 yd. 1 Yards Solid Colpr Suiting, Were 1.99 ............ ,97 yd. > yards X-Ply Solid Color Fabric Were 1.99_________ .97 yd. I Yards 10-East Acetate Prints Were 1.49 ...........87 yd. <-> 7 Yards Hi-Sign Broadcloth Were 1.49.............. 87 yd. ) Yards Skimmer Cheeks Were 2.39 . .............. .88 yd. . I Yards Solid Color Poplin Were 1.99 ...............97 yd. >• Yards Omibust Check Were 1.4$'V;................. 87 yd. ? Yards Combed Gingham Plaids Were 1.00 /.........27 yd. 3 Fingertip Sets Were 1.99 ...................... .88 1 Tissue Holders Were 3.50 ................ 1.00 « I Jacquard Hand Towels Were 1.29 . .. ..................67 1 Jacquard Bath Towels Were 1.99 ....................1.00 1 Gift Soaps Were 50c and 1.00 .......... .10 3 Rug Sets Were 3.99 ..................................1.88 > Calendar Towels Were 1.00 ........'............. .50 > Roaster Kitchen Aprons Were 1.29 ......... 88 3 Roaster Kitchen Mixer Covers Were 1.79 .t-.18 5 Stercheck Sheets 72x108” Were 3.39 ................1 .l.tf 1 Sfarcheck Sheets 81x108” Were 4.39 .................2.97 1 Starcheck Pillowcases Were 2.29 .'.............1.52 1 Wool Blankets Were 19,99 .......... .................9.88 2 Acrilan Blankets Were 12.99 ;........................4.88 ) Orion Blankets 66x90" Were 2.99 .......3.88 l Orion Blanket* 80x90" Were 10.99..................5.88 5 Piping Rock Spreads Were 10.99, Then 5.92............3.92 3 26-Inch Round Rugs Were 4.99.............2.27 1 Comforters Were to 19,99 • • ...... ............... -5.88 1 Jacquard Bath Towels Were 1.99 .........97 i Jacquard. Hand Towels Were 1.29 . *,«............ .67 3 jacquard Washcloths Were 59c ..........................27 1 Pair 96x90" Panel Print Drapes Were 18.99............8.88 2 Pair 48x84" Print Drapes Were 8.99.................. .4.77 I Full Size Coverlet Was 12.99, Then 3.47 .. ..........2.32 1 Cotton and Avril Bedspreads Were 12.99, Then 6.87. , 4.66 5 Cotton and Avril Curtains 36" Were 3.99..............1.87 4 48x84" Print Draperies Were 6.99, Then 3.97 .........2-62 5 Cotton and Avril Valances Were 1.99, Then 77c..........42 7 Single Widfh x 90" Drapes Were 10.99.................2.88 3 Sofa Pillows Were 2.99 and 3.99 ............ ........1.88 l Hassocks Bench Type Were 15.00 . 7.,.......... .6.00 1 'VelveV Hassock Was 29.99 ............. ............9.00 2 Large Square 'Hassocks Were 20.00 ................. .7.00 Assorted Soiled Curtatns ......... , . .Ml .OFF 7 Girls’ Stretch Slacks Were 3.99 ...................... .2.00 l Girls' Ski Jackets Were 10.99 . ................... .'.6.00 7 Girls' Cotton Panties, White and Colors. Were 67c 3 for $1 1 Girls' ,AII-Wsather Coats. Were 16.99, Then 12.90 . . 9.00 2 Girts’ All-Weather Coats Were 8.99 and 10.99 .... .6.00 3 Girls’. Jumpers Were 8.99 to 1(5.99, Then 6.44 *........4.22 1 i Girls’ Blouses Were 3.99, Then 3.22 .................. 2.00 I Girls’ Cotton Knit Gowns and Pajamas Were '2.75 . -... 1.44 3 Girls' Stretch Tops Were 3.99, Then 2.50 ...... .,1.44 1 GirJs' Sweaters Were 8.99, Then 5.99 ...................3.66 ) Boys' Polished Cotton Pants Were 2.99, Then 1.99 . .1.00 I Boys' Sweat Shirts Ware 1.67, Then 97c...................>50 I Boys’ Underwear, T-Shirts or Briefs Were 3 for 97c 3 for .50 1 Boys’ Knits Shirts Were 2.99. Then 1.67 >'.’.'......97 Boys’ Sport Jackets Were 14.99 ........................ 6.44 > Boys’ Jee-Shirts Were 3,99 . . ... ........ .2.44 1 Boys’ Denim Jeftns Were 2.50 ,.... ............. . . 1.00 5 Boys’ Mittens, Water Repellent Were 1.00. .50 ) Boys’ Hats Were 2.99 ................f...........1.44 2 Girls 3 to 6x Stretch Pants Were 2.99, Then 2.'50 .... 1.97 ) Girls’ Pajamas Bags Were 4.00 ....................... .2.00 I Girls’ Handbags Were 1.00 and 3.50 .................Vi.OFF 5 Comb and Brush Sets W*re' 3.00................. ........1.66 1 Girls Rbbes, Nylon Quilt Were to 13.00 ... ,...... Vt OFF 1 Girls' and Boys' Snow Suits Were to 12.99 . .6.88 and 1.81 2 Girls’ Fleece-Lined Stretch Pants. 3-6x, Were 3-99 .. .2.50 8 Girls' Blouses Sizes 3-6x Were 1,99.......... ..........1.00 1 Honkey Tonk Piano Musical Jewel Box Was’9.00 . . .4.50 2 Musical Jewel Boxes, Simulated Leather Were 4.00 . . 2.00 8 Girls’ Cotton Turtle Neck Shirts Were 2.99 .............1.66 3 Infants’ Pram Suits Were 5.99 ............... .........3.00 MEN'S WEAR—Street Floor 5 Men's Wool Sport Coats Were 19.95 9.97 i Men’s Flannel Slacks Ware 8.99..................... .’.9:97 I Men's Flannel Slacks Wera 15.95 ..................... ...7.97 ) Men's tfnit Shirts Were 4.00 to 8.95................. ,2.00 f Men’s Long Sleeve Sport Shirts Were 3.99, Then 2.66 2.00 Man's Ski Pants Wera 19.95.-....................V.........5.00 Men’s Dress Shirts Were 4.Q0 to 6.95 .................2.00 Pajarr^s Was 12.95, Then.8.63 ...........................5.00 t Men’s Handkerchiefs Were 1.00 and 2.00 .50 •„ ! Men's leather Belts'Were 1.50 to 2.00, Then 99c ..... .50 Men’s Personal Valets' Were 2.50 ...................... 1.25 > Merv’s Support Briefs Were 2.50.........................1.25 I Men’s Support Briefs Were 1.95 ... ..........98 NOTIONS, STATIONERY—Street Floor 5 Pair Ladies’ Briefs Were' 59c ................39 2 Utility Shelf* Were 5.98, Then 2,65 \ ...... .1.67 1 Utility Shelfs Were 3.98, Then. 1 ;78-----------........... 1.19 2 Bedreils Were 2.98. Then 1.32. II » Bedreils Were 4.99, Then- 3.33 .'<. .. .......2.22 I Oloset Rod Was 1.79 . ,. ........................... .88 » Sanitary Briefs Ware 1.69, Thgn 1.13 .... .76 5 Chafe Scants Were 1.35 90 4 Chafe Scents Were 1.50 to 1.75 ..................... 1.00 1 Plastic Hair Rolltr Box .Was. 1.00 .................... 50 2 Mattress Covets Were 1.29 .... .........86 4 Deluxe Suit Bags Were 1.69 ......................... 1.13 ) Stretch Briefs Were 2.50, Then 1.76. .............. 1.18 1 Men’s Terry Robe Wes 7.00 .3.50 2 Dress Forms Were 7.96/.. . .5.31 5 Dress Forms XL Size Were 8.96 ........................ 5.98 9 4-Drawer Metal Chest*»Were 1 2.98, Then 5.67 ..... .3.78 2 12-Piece Shoe Bags Were 3.99 ...............'.........2.66 2 Plastic Hat Boxes Were 3.00 ..........................2.’00 ).Plastic Hat Boxes Were,3.98 ..........................2.66 1 Sachet Was 1.00, Then 44c ............................... 22 2 Oven Cleaner Kits Were 2,29 ........................ 1.53- 1 Bottles of Floor Wax, Were 2.29................ .......73 5 No Moth Closet Hangers Were 1.50 .....................1.00 I Set of 3 Plastic Hat Boxes Were 5.98 .:..... 3.99 I Fountain Pen Was 10.00 ............................ 5.00 I Fountain .Pen Was 5.00 ............................ 2.50 I Fountain Pens Were'8.75 ............................ 4.38, ) Ball Point Pens Were 98c . . . ...................... ,66 > Bail Point Pens Were 29c . . ........................... 19 1 Mechanical Pencil Was • 2.89 .........................1.87 > Owl Lite Candles Were 3.50 ......................... 2.34 2 Desk Pens Were’ 15.00 ..............'........... 10.00 1 Desk Pen Was 435^.................................. J.fcil 2 Norelco Sportsman Battery Operated Razors Were. 12.88 3.82 I Fresh Beauty Was 1.50j Then 44c ...................... ,22 5 Tent Robge’s Were 1.50, Then 1.00 .............. ,66 5 Sheer Geriius Were 1.50, Then 1.00 '................... 66 !) Compacts Were 1.50, Then 66c ....................... '.44 5 Compacts Refills Were 1.00, Then 66c .. ,,T......44 I Liquid Rouge Was 1.25, Then 83c ...................... .44 I Creame Rouge Was 1.25, Then 83c ...-.................. .44 > Lipstick and Nail Polish Sets Were .1.25, Then 83c .... .44 1 Bottles of Nail Polish Were 75c .....'................... 50 ' Bottles of Nail Polish Were 95c ... t... i..............63 > Bottles of Nail Polish Were 1.10 ...... ... t >73 9 Base Coats Were. 95c ............................... >63 2 Lipsticks Were 1.10 . ................................ ;73 ) Lipsticks Were 1.50 ........................... ...1.00 1 Mascaras Were 1.50;' Then 50c ..................... .25 9 Eye Shadows Were 1.25, Then 56c ........................38 2 Eye Shadows Were 1;50, Then 66c........................ .38 I Mascara’ Refill Was 1,00. Then 66c ................... .38 5 Eye Pencils Were 1.50, Then .1.00-...... ............. .50 S Eye Brown Pencils Were 1.25, Then 83c .........50 9 Cream Mascara Were 1.25, Then 83c..................... .50 9 Eye Pencij Refills Were 60c, Then 3Qc ..................15 I. Pencil Refills Ware 50c, Then 25c > • •............ .15 CHILDREN'S VALUES—Second Floor 6 Curity Nite Diapers Were 1.29............................ 44 2 High Chairs Were 10.99 ............................... 4.00 24 Disposable Diapets Were 1.99 .......................... ..1.00 >7 Infants Bonnet* Were 2.99 ..... ........V.'ri.00 13 Infants Set* Were 2>09 ..................................; 1.99 86 Intents Crawleys, Corduroy Were*1.99 .....................1.00 9 Infant Leather Shoes Were 3.00 to 3.50 ... ..............2.00 31 Knit Pajamas Sizes 1 to 4, Were 1.99 .................... .97 ; 11 Infants' Dresses Were 3.99 .............................. 2.00 10 Infants' Orion Sweaters Were 4.00.........................2.00 25 Pairs Children's Boots Were to 4.99.......................I-M , Assorted Group of Children’s House Slippers Were to 5.50............................................ 2-M ; FOUNDATIONS, LINGERIE—Second Floor 3 Maternity Panty Girdles Were 6.95....... • ........3.00 6 Maternity Girdles Were 4.95 and 5.95 •,............2.50 30 Famous Maka Bra's Were 2,99 to 5.99.............. Ml OFF 20 Famous Make Girdles Were 5.99 to 16.50 .........Vi OFF 4 Long Fleece Robes Were 35.00 . ................. 20.00 1’8 Long Fleece Robes Were 23.00 , . •. • • ■ ....15.00 • 9 Velvet Lounge Pajamas Were . 14.95 ..................9.00 9 Velvet Robes Were to 14.95 ....;................. ,9.00 10 %-Length Quilted Robes Were 15.00 ......... .10.00 96. Mines Cotton, Panties, Briefs Style Were 89c ...,. I far 1.00 19 Nylon Slips Were 4.00 ............................ 2.00 23 Nylon Leee Trimmed Slips Ware S.OO .... ........ > .1.00 18 Half Slips Were 3.95 ..........................- • • • M* 32 Imported Cotton Pima Pajamas and Gowns Were 8.99 . .5.00 18 imported Cotton Pi/na Dusters Were 12.99 .........1.8.00 RUGS, TOYS, ETC.—Fifth Floor I 12x15' Foam Back Tweed Rug Was 99.95 ............ .66.00 1 24x36" Cotton Rugs Were 2.98 ................. . .. 1.18 I 26x45" Cotton Rugs Were 5.98....................... 3.81 I 12x12' Foam Back Tweed Rug Was 89.95 . ............ 51.00 > 27x48" DuPont "501" Nylon Rugs Were 9.95 ..........5.44 9x12’ Brown Oval BrJiid Rug Was 29.95 ...........^ 19.88 I Wrought Iron Record/Player Racks Were 4.98 ........ 2.88 ! G.E. Transistor Radios Were 16.88 ..................9.88 Group of 1.99 and 3.99 Records.............. .75% OFF I AM/FM Transistor Radio Was 49.95 ..................24.00 i 5x9' Ping-Pong Tables Were 19.95..................,.12.88 ASSORTED. CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS AND TOYS Mr OFF, HOUSEWARES, LAMPS, ETC.—Lower Level 1 Artificial Grapes Wftte 59c ............ .22! I Hoening Short Vases Were 3.98 .. ........... ,2.33 l Gift Shack Treys Were 2 97 ....... , j . 1.88 I Gift But,ter Dish’ Was 1.97 ............................88 I Gail-A-Lite Susan Was 6.98 .......................... 3.88 > Colored Coasters Were 3.00 ........ ........... 1.88 3 Duo-Temp TumblerS Were 32c ........................ .19 I Set of Glhri Mugs Was 7.98 .1................ ......4.88 1 Animal Salt and Pepper Sate-Were.2.98 ............... 1.88 2 - Animal Planters Were 3^8 ...........................2.33 3 Crystaline Serving Dishes Were- 1.00 .................. .66 3 Bone China Cups and Saucers Were 3.98 ............. 2.33 I Silverplated Fruit Bowl Was . 22.98 ................10,88 1 Silver Sugar, and Creamer Was 6,50 ................. 4.22.- 2 High Covered. Jars Were 13.00 ...................... 1.44 1 Small Candle Holders Were 1.00 ..................... .616 > Flower 8asket Cups Were ’ I'.22 ..................... .66 2 Coffee Carafe and Warmers Were 4.00 * .......2.38 ) Ceramic Wall .^Plaques Were 1.00 . ................ .6,6 2 Maple Floor Lamps Were 35.00 ......................20.00 2 Animal Lamps Were 7.98 ............................ 4.86 2 Ceramic Lamps Bases Were 3.32 1.22 1 Brass Pole Lamp Wls 15.98 ........................... 10.9* 2 Table Lamps with Shades Were 15.22 . 9.B8 I Table Lamp with Shade Was 19.95______.......... .10.38 |l Set of Gold Band Bavarian Dinnerware........... .75% OFF 3 Sets of Service for 12 Earthenware Dinnerware Were 29.95 ......................... 19.88 I Sets of Fancy Juice Glasses Were 7,00 . -........ . .4.88 3 Sets of Service for 8 Plastic Dinnerware Wire 16.88. . 7.88 5 Sets of Stone Dinnerware for 8 Were 29.95 ..........19.88 4 Glassware Sets Were 7.50 ........................... 448 - I Dormeyer Portable Mixer Was 12.88 648 I Mirromatic Fry Pan Was 6.88 J. ,348 3 Mirro 7-Cup Percolators Were 9.99 .. ............ j. 6.66 1 9-Cup Electric Percolators Were 4.99 . 3.22 7 Mirror Lovster Molds Were 47c ,. , .................. .22 >.Mirror Cake Pans Were 69c........wi.............. .32 - 7 Stainless 5-Piece Silverware sets Were 2.49 ....... 148 3 Stainless'5-Piece Teaspoons Wgre 2.00 .............. 1.00 3 Imported Coffee Grinders Were 9.98 . .............. .6.66 2 Wooden Leaf Relish Dishes Were 3.99................... 2.44 3 Wood Cookie Jars Were 4.00 ..............;........... 2.44 3 7-Piece Kitchen Tool Sets Were 7-98................ 5.44 4 Mixing fotwl* Were 4.75.............................. 2.88 2 Beauty ware Step on Garbage Cans Were 9.98 .*........ 6.66 4 Fireplace tool Sets Wefe 7.88 .................... 4.88 4' Service for 8 Plastic Dishes Were 29.95 .............1948, 3 Lotion Dispensers Were 2.00 .............88 2 Folding, Clothes‘Racks Were 6.98 . 348, 3 Back of Door Storage Racki- Were 10.98 ........... 4.88 THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 HAROLD A. FITZOBRALD President snd Publisher . Hcwub h. TllMteJH a t John W. ZmoHUI fj K^iBLw *Sd\ v,“ Fr“*d“t “d Mit,r John A. KlR Secretary and Advertising Director \ "assrii* t _1 : : O*. HUNUU Jordan Local Advertising 1 jWider Music Concept i'ramed by Area School fabakland University takes another lohg stride toward establishing Itself as a leading center for study in til field of performing arts. pRin ambitious credit - standard' summer program for orchestral stu-(ftts and conductors and another fl| vocal students and directors are scheduled to coincide with the Mea^pw Brook Music Festival that won wide acclaim following its inauguration last summer. The project will be guided by Sixten Ehriing, conductor of Detroit Symphony Orchestra and newly appointed professor of music at OU. Joining him in direction of the venture are Robert Shaw, associate director of Cleveland Symphony Orchestra and Albert Tipton, solo flutist for the Detroit orchestra and conductor of his own chamber orchestra. ' ★ ★ ★ Enrollment will be limited to 350 professional musicians, college students, graduate students and high 3&00I students who have completed -their junior year. * ★ ★ • ' The Press warmly congratulates pie administration of Oakland Uni-versity on this latest landmark in the development of the Institution and its widening influence on the cultural tone of the community. UJ5. State Subsidies Called Costly Handouts Assistant Treasury Secretary Stanley Surrey has expressed opposition to the turrently-poputar idea of Federal subsidies to the states for any and all purposes. , . This proposition has been ad- vanced ou .the basis that state and local government costs are advancing rapidly, and that Uncle Sam should help out by making payments direct to the states out of Federal revenues. •:it- ★ ★ Mr. Suutir is the first Administration voice to be raised against this proposal, and we hope he will get backing. There Js.no limit to the money that government can spend, given the chance. The principal restraint on extravagance felt by state and local governments now arises from the fact that their taxpayers and their voters are mainly the same people and must pay for what they get. Once a politician sees the opportunity to spend money from other States on the citizens of his own state, the temptation will be irresistible—especially around election time. t- ★ ★ ★ The sensible approach is for the Federal government to collect no more than it needs, and to allow the states and cities to raise their own money. If Federal taxes go down, the states and local governments will have a better opportunity to tax for their, own needs. Maladies of the Aging a Check to Longevity So much has been said, and written about the great gains that have been made in life expectancy that it may come as somewhat of a shock to learn that fee are not really much better off in this respect than Americans at the turn of the century. True enough, average expected life span in 1900 was about 45 years. It is around 70 today, a gain of 25 years. ★ ★ ★ But this is the expectancy of a newborn child, the result of , the conquest of childbirth and j childhood diseases that once . took a heavy toll of babies and ? mothers and young children. - People who reach age 40 in 1964, However, can expect to live only a few years longer than their 1900 dbunterpkrts — eight years for women, only four years for men- That if, where a 40-year-old male in 1900 cjould look forward to another 28 years of life, his grandson can reasonably Count on 32. { This was the report of a panel of heart specialists to the recent Second National Conference on Cardio-vascular Diseases held, in Washington, D. C- The reason: The chronic diseases, such as heart disease and cancer, which are the chief killers among the middle-aged and elderly, "persist today largely unabated.” ★ ★ ★ It is in this area that medicine is stalemated. Until a breakthrough is achieved, comparable to. that made in the treatment of childhood diseases, the predicted "Golden Age” when the average man will live to 100 or 125 or even longer— with all the social problems that will bring—is one thing we needn’t worry about today. “The Season To Be Jolly Is Over!” David Lawrence Says: Need to Expose Red Subversion "A Soviet educator says he can’t understand why girls are more interested in boys than in art.”—Press report. How can one be classified as an educator who is totally ignorant of biology? Issues at Home Clearer in 1%4 By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - The world was still sticky in 1964 but at home there was steady movement forward and the air was cleared a bit, politically and other-wise, leaving President Johnson to face his first full term at ease on many issues. The economy was booming for a record fourth year in a row. To pep it up even more, Congresis gave it a blood transfusion with the biggest tax cut in history. In the long view the MARLOW achievements in the field of citizens’ rights, civil and political, perhaps will be most memorable. Ia a year in which three civil rights workers were murdered in Mississippi and Negroes rioted in Northern cities, Congress passed the most far-reaching civil rights act of the century. Then, with extraordinary speed, the Supreme Court supported it a couple of weeks ago by upholding the new law’s ban op racial discrimination in places of public ac-commodation, like hotels, or motels, or restaurants. • ★ * ★ . But, even without the civil rights ruling, the court would have made this a memorable year. For half a century, injustice had been piling up in the states where city people were getting less representation in state legislatures than country people. VACUUM OF RESPONSIBILITY Neither Congress nor the legislatures would correct it. The Supreme Court stepped into this vacuum of responsibility and ordered reapportionment so that each man’s vote means as much as any other’s. But it was the presidential election which settled, for years to come, the direction this country will take. Because Democrats and Republicans for decades looked like twins, the presidential races began to resemble personality contests rather than different views of life and government for voters to choose between. ★ ★ * This year the voters got a clear choice * between the Conservative Sen. Barry Gold-water and the much more moderate Johnson. The President won with the greatest plurality in history, 43 million to 27 ipiUion votes. As a result, the two parties’ candidates for a long time are likefy to be liberals' or al. least middle-of-the-roaders. WASHINGTON - One basic problem facing President Johnson is how the United States can thwart. Communist operations in the smaller countries of the world. The main objective -r fight commu-l nism and to en-| able the governments on all IA WHENCE continents to withstand Communist pressures —, can hardly be achieved by those governments alone. Unfortunately, the United Nations is not doing nnything to combat Communist activities which threaten the independence and territorial integrity of many nations in the world today. Adlai Stevenson, American ambassador to the U.N., said the other (tty: * * * “We have seen emerge throughout the world this much more subtle, indirect method of intervention in the affairs of another country by subversion, by penetration of one kind or another, mostly calculated to overthrow, sometimes by the use of force, the other government.” * it h ‘ This emphasizes the failure of the United Nations even to rec-., ognize this new kind of aggression, though its charter spe- , cifically sets forth as one of the purposes of the organisation the taking of collective action for “suppression of acts of aggression.” MAY TAKE STEPS But if the U.N. ignores its obligation, any group of governments which wish, to participate in collective action may take any. financial, economic, or military steps deemed necessary to help preserve the ‘territorial integrity of nations and the inde-* pendence of established govern-. ments. • What is needed, of course, is a means of exposing publicly the nature of the subversion in the different countries where the Communists have gotten a foothold. Where the lives and property of foreigners are threatened, international law gives another .government the right to intervene and to protect its nationals and their These principles have not been made clear to the world in recent months, nor has the whole foreign aid program been portrayed in its true light — as a means of fighting the Cold War in order to enable the smaller governments to retain their independence and to preserve their territorial integrity. * * * To withdraw foreign aid altogether would merely force the weaker governments into the arms of the Communists of Moscow or Peking. *. it h By granting certain help to the governments in Africa and Asia as well as in Latin America, the United States is able to send its own personnel into a country to observe what is going on and to make representations to the government in the hope that effective measures may be employed to drive out the conspirators. (cmrrifM, iN4, Ntw York HoroM Trlbuno Syndicate, Inc.) Voice of the People: Suggests Wag to Regain Prestige of Our Country I strongly urge that this country send some 250 congressmen and high state officials to replace the Americans killed in Viet Nam. ★ ★ ★ By so doing the criminal farce in Viet Nam (as was in Korea) would end quickly and the prestige and respect which this country has lost since the end of World War II would be partially recovered. DISGUSTED AMERICAN ‘More Dancing Is Offered Outside City* Our city commission has done it again—more business is being sent to Waterford. The commission refused a request from a local lounge for a dancing permit. ★ fe fe Minor/ and teenagers have no business in a lounge and those families that do not wish to drink or dance need not enter the lounge. One of the commissioners stated that more dancing was not needed in the city as the Department of Parks and Recreation had a fine dance program set up in our schools. Wonderful! I can picture a group of adults in cocktail attire dancing around a gymnasium. • ★ ★ ★ I can’t understand why our commissioners are bent oh sending business outside the city limits. Almost every bowling alley in Waterford offers dancing while the City of Pontiac seemp to offer only wide streets enabling people to pass through the city more swiftly. , A DISGUSTED BOWLER Says Congratulations for Entertainment It is refreshing to know that somewhere there is a place where adults seeking adult companionship may congregate and enjoy adult entertainment. I congratulate the proprietor of the bowling alley in providing such a place of entertainment. J J. C. ‘Who Wants to Live Under Socialism?’ Socialist Hogan is concerned with amateur criticism of his factually discredited tin god. Hitler built a Socialist order and look what happened. Stalin was a Socialist and his great people's society can’t even grow wheat. The Red Chinese leaders are Socialist and who wants to live under them. D. N. The Better Half Basic Communist Tenet Undergoing an Overhaul By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst A basic tenet of the Marxist-Leninist philosophy is that each member of a Communist state i shall produce according to his ability and receive according to his need. managers and to individual incentives and to deny that it is “creeping capitalism.” ★ * ★ But that is what it is. And it is going beyond the Soviet Union into the satellites. Bulgaria is experimenting with it, *pmd both Poland and Czechoslovakia have been forced to make even greater concessions in an effort to bring economies out of crisis. In Washington: Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. Christie McIntosh of Kfnde, formerly of Pontiac; list birthday, The United States has maintained that it is rendering economic assistance or is providing military' help only when this is requested by the, government df .the country to which such aid is given. ANSWERS CHARGE This answers the charge that America is violating international law by its “intervention.” iSo long as die United States is invited by an established government to participate in the affairs of a country either through advisory missions or the extending qf economic sir . military assistance, the requirements of international law are fulfilled. dergoing a serious overhaul by Communist leaders who sqe their own national growth rates declining as the United States economy, already the world’s largest, becomes one of the world’s fastest-growing. Tire Soviets’ forced departure from accepted theory is one of the reasons for Red . Chinese charges that the Russians are betraying communism. It is interesting that many students of the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London agree with the Red Chinese and see European communism .inevitably moving toward capitalism. It currently is estimated that U.S., production of goods and services jumped $40 billion in the last year, bringing the total for .the year to about $624 billion. '• DOUBLE RUSSIA’S The total is more than twice the comparative figure for the Soviet Union, and the one-year U.S. growth rate is believed to be more than that achieved by the Soviet Union in the last two years combined, and possibly in the last three years. As they ale the United-States economy increase its ’ lead, Soviet leaders are striving desperately to pinpoint their failings. • The more glaring ones have npt been hard .to find. ★ it The Communist party newspaper Pravdia, for example, recently reported 10,000 com-plaints in a single year agaihst poor workmanship in Leningrad industrial plants. TYPICAL JARGON The Communist leadership i employs typical Communist jargon to explain its slow transfer to the profit motive for plant ‘Kooks’ Pose Problem for GOP BIOSSAT BY BRUCE BIOSSAT , WASHINGTON (NEA)-In all tire clamor surrounding the fight over Republican National Chair-man Dean Burch, some influential^ party men are thinking beyond to other problems —such as what to do about the [ “kooks.” This has never been exclusively ’ a concern of party moderates. Many conservative leaders grumbled privately throughout 1964 at the antics and attitudes of right-wing fringe groups and individuals attaching themselves to Sen] Barry Goldwater’s cause. ”t * * ★ One of these leaders—a man closely involved in the Gold-water campaign—believes the party must soon act openly to disavow the fringers. He don-siders it a vital step in the-rehabilitation of the Republican image for the campaigns of 1966 and 1968. Says he: , “I don’t think it should be done head-on. What we should do is seize upon an issue that will permit us to draw a sharp line.” , Party progressives, of course, favor meeting the “kook” problem with a head-on disavowal; The more cautious, approach suggested by the conservatives, who cannot be< identified here, illustrates a peculiar aspect of the GOP’s ideological difficulties. * * * The problem in part is that the term “conservative” has become badly mndt^ei in the last few yean. Respectable, long-established Republicans think the label is theirs. They are more than a little annoyed to find the fringers trying to take it, for their How, then, do you separate “respectable” RepublicanS from those who are not? How do you attack the goofy ones without seeming to strike at the 'regulars? When Goldwater and Burch, defending the latter’s tenure as chairman, say they do not want to see conservatives humiliated, it is not clear which ones they are talking about, tyany conservative leaders want Burch removed. * *• * ’ At the root of this dilemma is'a hard, unpleasant fact: Despite their frequent private grumblings, Goldwater forces and other conservative party regulars allowed the line between themselves and the '“kooks” to he badly blurred from 1963 on. For one thing, the fringers represented an undetermined but conceivably promising number of Goldwater votes. There was no disposition to cast these aside with blunt disavowals such as were suggested by the moderates at San Frqncisco in July. * ★ * There is something else., For all their wild gyrations, the fringe groups, were performing one service whose value might prove considerable. They were striking hard and often, in ) inhibited language, at the i targets—President Johnson and his Democratic party—which the regular conservatives wanted to have battered. From the viewpoint of men striving to elect a candidate to the presidency, the prospect of such added help is virtually irresistible. In the Franklin D. Roosevelt era, Democratic leaders bad the same difficulty disavowing free-swinging leftists who were aiming at the Republicans. - © . * * *' When, as now, talk stirs about shaking off these embarrassing encumbrances, the problem is two-fold; getting rid* of the ‘-kooks" themselves, and stripping the party’s argument of the nonsense that has crept in during the time the irregulars were permitted within party borders. For example, professional politicians simply laugh at the notion, supposedly* first generated by the fringers, that Gold-water’s 27 million votes were somehow a great triumph. But established conservative George Humphrey tried to sell that idea to his friend, Gen. Dwight Eisenhower. (It was no sale.) Sharpening a blurred line is one of the tougher political chores. in un-s very TOT PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1064 SEVMlT Results Sometimes Comic • tj y V‘ 3* -I V-fyJfWU. « • & S \ " - •: • ■ Congo's Independence Filled With Troubles (EDlfOR’S NOTE - Wttft virtually no preparation, the Congo tow catapulted into independence four yean ago. The results have been sometimes comic, often disastrous, An Ap Correspondent describes the nations efforts at survival. Second of three articles.) By SAUL PETT LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (AP) —- Like so much else in the Congo, there is a primitive religious sect in the east which invites both smiles and tears. It is called the Kitawala sect, whose idea of the genesis goes something like this: la the beginning, .God had three sons and a daughter. They were ail colorless until God grew bored with this. So he gave the sons the colors of the rainbow to choose from. The eldest chose to be white and was given a rifle and went to live in Europe. The second son became tan (Arab) and went to live in Zanzibar with a muzzle-loading gun not as good as the rifle. There was nothing left for the third son and he became black and went to live in the Congo armed only with a bow and arrow. This> son tfecame God’s f a- vorite and was given the daughter In marriage and they bed many children, one of whom was called America. America was carried off into slavery by the son in Europe to a distant land Where he invented the auto* mobile, the refrigerator and the transistor radio. JUDGMENT DAY On judgment day, America will return to the Congo and give all the descendants of his parents automobiles, r e f 11 g-erators, radios and all the other good things he invented ... Judgment day still eludes the Congo, which like many places in Africa has been treated cruelly by history. For centuries it was allowed to sleep until the white man came and grew rich here and then, after 80 years, the Congo suddenly became independent and found itself rushing into the 20th century with scarcely enough preparation for the 16th. Thus, a lack lady seeks to protect a facial cut with both an antiseptic bandages and a dirty fetish from a witch doctor. She seeks the best of two possible worlds and finds neither. BLACK MAN WALKS I .Thus, the average black man, poorer now after four years of disillusioning independence, still walks while foe white man rides, still lives in a shack or mud hut while foe white man enjoys a big house. The black man has been known to approach whites and ask for their “intelligence pills’' as the only sure key to the white world. Thus, at a recent meeting of foe National Cabinet, one of the ministers was telling about his trip to New York. He told of a heavy rain one day in "Manhattan, of the cab problem and the traffic. * * * It took him 40'minutes to cover 700 yards. “Really!” said the cabinet member on his left. “Was it the mud?” FIFTH GRADE Hie Belgians gave many Congolese the equivalent of a fifth grade education and they fed and paid them better than most Africans under colonial rule. But unlike the British and the French, foe Belgians gave their rich colony no preparation for independence. When It came suddenly four' years ago, there was npr a single Congolese college/grad- uate, not one doctor or lawyer or engineer or military officer training higher than that of a postal clerk. • ' u foi ♦ Now; there is a handful of graduates in these Holds in a country with a population of U million and a sise ID times the area of Belgium. NOT ENOUGH It is nowhere near enough. And so, four years after independence, the Congo has no sense of being a nation, no central government or army which can function without foreign help. And it is still plagued by foe feuds and dialects of more than 200 tribes with the result that on one 888 - mile/ stretch of railroad, the train crews mast be changed seven times. Crews from all^a tribes would be slaaghterpd. For the average Congolese, four years of^independence have meant almcfn four years of bloody genocide in wars of se-and rebellion, riotous and ineptitude in governing fewer jobs, fewer medical facilities, fewer goods and galloping inflation. The rich copper mines, the $06888® RECREATION ROOMS - ATTICS HII6E WINTER SALE STARTS NOW! DORMERS-EXTENSIONSKITCHENS-CONVERSIONS NO HONEY DOWN-NO PAYMENTS TIL MARCH TAKE UP TO 1 YEARS TO PAT! SAVE UP TO 25 % WINTER PRICES NOW IN EFFECT palm oil, rubber and coffee plantations still are owned by the Belgians and other Euro- the strength of the Army at Hie estimate ferrety rough because local garrisons frequently exist Co paper while pockets the here because' prefits continue to do MOST STORES Most of foe store! and smallj their businesses are still owned by peyrolL G r e e k s, Indiana and Portu-1 */■ .. . .,, goose. And now, along with the bitter ^ „ confused fruits of independence, °* i* !^!/$»e bloody rebellions and aeces- population has fled but thosp/l gjong( chaos and graft of government, a new element has ! appeared in the Congo. It is the cold war. Among black mOn, only the IU A support nw!i Mr0in^gnvern' Tb® United States supports nomicaUv as the only one available with a e * ichance of governing. America w i 7 #enda about ISO million in aid a result that foe government of foe v ■ Congo, by Western standards, is often government by slapstick. Holidays t 9 Year! deaths wen the most for that holiday in nine years, State Police Commissioner Joseph CfoBda said Monday. * The record of SO was act hi 1896 and 98 were kilted in MM. The Red Chinese are evidently here, too. Their guns and PASSION TO ARGUE propaganda have shown up Like many Africans, foe Con- among the rebels. If they in-golese politician has a passion :crease their aid, the United ■ • • • States may be forced !" I crease its involvement And the poor bewildered na- CONST. CO. 739 N. PERRY Call Now for a Free Estimate 24-Hour Phone Service FE 3-7833 Thus, the Parliament argued for four years about a flag and motto. They finally got foe flag designed because President Joseph Kasavubu lost his patience and arbitrarily decided on one. There still is no motto. fit ■ it Graft in the Congo has a quaint simplicity. A customs inspector simply holds up your bag until you bribe him. A city policeman courteously salutes and shakes your hand before he shakes you down lor a real or imagined traffic violation. GOOD MANNERS Their good .manners rarely fail them. At one time, when a European used to complain of looting in his neighborhood, the police politely explained they could not patrol foe area “because it was too insecure.” Uatil a few months age, w h e n the police got a o m e jeeps, foe desk sergeant responded compassionately to the report of a theft and said, “If you’ll send a car down we’ll be glad to investigate.” The police had do vehicles I foea- Last spring, the cabinet of the { province that includes- Stanley- j fville casually v o t a d itself out1 I and drew two years “severance I | pay” about 8126,000 — while! still in office. it it it Before that, they had pocketed , a reported $360,000 intended for j police and teachers who went j unpaid. The cabinet was only I recently fired. NO SALARY Many teachers throughout the Congo went without salary tor I two years until they finally Went I on strike. The central government had sent the money but it I never reached them. Estimates . of that larceny ranged from $40 million to $50 million. - Western diplomats estimate tives in the Kitawala sect may be obliged to rewrite their pathetic history of the world to include the name of a place they never heard of. It is called Viet Nam. Tomarrawi Anoth.r VM Nam? Youth Killed by Train DEARBORN (AP) - Andrew Dowhan, 1$, of Dearborn was injured fatally Monday when struck by a Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad passenger train at a Dearborn crossing. WITH A HOME LOAN from our association, yon can reborrow up to the original amount ofjour loan for future -repairs, remodeling, or diner improvements—without refinancing! And, this practical open end elanso is only one way we help make home financing more convenient for you. Stop in today for full details. Optn Dally t A.M. la 4 PM. — Saturday. I:M A.M. la II Naaa 75 West Huron Established 1890 FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER PARKINS IN REAR OF BUILMNS * Wtiwpt $ * ★ * ► ’Member Federal Home Loan Bank System ATTENTION MEN UNDER AGE 25 Sentryffeports good news (at last) about car insurance for young men—married or single—who qualify. If you’ra under 25, you know what a bif extra premium HOW TO QUALIFY you pay for ear insurance. Now, Sentry Insurance offers y^ man und(r 25 qualify for the Sentry Preferred Young Driver Discount on the basis of a simple a 15% discount for young men who qualify. (This is questionnaire that takes only about 20 minutes. It is not a test of .driving skill or knowledge. It is completely in addition to Sentry's 15% discount for driver educe- confidential. There is no penalty for young men who do not qualify for the extra discount. Come to the tion.) center listed below to find but what this can mean to you! - IIUUITT (single limit) . .........$25,000 Annual Cart: (Pontiac) ■ MEDICAL PAYMENTS .................$ 1,000 •• v«4» u.vntu, not ,rincip«i I UNINSURED MOTORISTS (bodily injury) itWonW wUtr a*. M. * ' Mfh person..........................$10,000 2. Married, age 21 through 24 $ 57.80 ** jl each Accident........................$20,000 3. Undet 25, single, principal operator $107.65 GERALD F. OTZMAN further information >n!acf: GERALD F. OTZMAN 3685 Silver Sands Draytee Plain*, Mich. Phone 673-9437 - . V" .-'•'V ’l dr? ACT NOW! SENTRY. INSURANCE The Hardware Mutuals Organization SENTRY INSURANCE Pontiac Mall Communtiy Room PREFERRED YOUNG * Wednesday, December 30 DRIVEN PROGRAM From 1 thru 8 P.M. in 4 \\ EIGHT. Area Family Providns Millionth Fair Visitor Cobo Hall’s Christmas Carnival reoehrod its oM-milUonth visitor yesterday when a Birmingham family stopped to see the dbplay*. The iwifflllnnih figure was attained with the visit of the Robert Drabik family, 1456 S. Eton, to file carnival which was THE PONTIAC frRESS, TUESDAY1, DECEMBER 20, 1966 started in 1ML The Drabiks were given a placard and gifts for the children, Michael and Kathy. Abraham'Lincoln has been honored internationally, statue appears In public places in many countries, prominent space is devoted to his works in the libraries and a number of nations have honored him by printing his picture on their postage sUftnps. SAVE 1.31 Juv. boys' 2.98 famous maker corduroy slacks 1.67 CHARGE IT Save 44%l Can't mention the name! Those are the slacks that stay upl Keep shirts ini Wear longer! Pinwale cotton corduroy with no-slip elastic back, snap 'n hook tab front, double stitched seams, full zipper. Navy, loden or charcoal. Sizes 3 to 7 in the group. 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Extra size to make your work easier. Buy now! Tony 4M cloths .....v. I for $1 OOWNTOWH AND DRAYTON PLAINS 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 End Sales & Clearances Sportswear Clearance MIX! MATCH! SWEATERS 'N SUCKS DRESS CLEARANCE Slacks, rag. 3.99; Slim, tapered stretch cotton denims. Tailored cotton corduroy and wool pants in fashions latest colors. Bays at 3.99 — smashing at 2.971 Sizes 8 to 18 in this terrific group! Sweaters, reg. 3.99; A marvelous group including every wanted style! Wool slip-ons, cardigans—Orion® acrylic shells—Antrdn® nylon slip-ons. Turtle; jewel necks! Sizes 34 to 40 in the group. Reversible 7.99 ski-parkas Hooded jackets reverse from E97 solid to solid colors or prints* 0 Save 2.02 on each onel Save 1.02! Fancy blouses and basic tailored shirts Round out your wardrobe at fabulous savings! 1, 2, and 3-pc. styles; wools for the office, cotton knits for now 'til spring, rayon crepes, brocades and datetime glamour dresses ... every one reduced! Jr. petite, junior, misses' And half sizes... come early for these! CHARGE IT Our better 5.99 sweaters Long or roll-sleeve, styles in fine cotton or cotton /Dacroh* polyester blends. Solids, prints, plaids! Fashion colors. Sizes 30-38. Just right for skirts, pants and suits! •He#. TM. DuPont Corp. SALE! Wool /mohair! Shetland wool! Orion* acrylic bulky-knit! Cardigans, slip-ons. 36 to 40. 'Reg. TM. Dupont Corp. A complete selection of reg. 5.99 uniforms SLEEP N LOUNGEWEAR Choose from Dacron* polyester/ cottons and /ayon jerseys — Save 1.02 each! Sizes for oil! Reg. TM. DuPont Corp. Soft quilted rayon dusters and paj'a jit 1.11 savings Cozy flannelette printed pajamas, shifts and gowns In- soft, feminine pastel prints and solid colors! Choose one and two pocket styles—with dub-collars, Peter Pan collars. You'll want many. Horryl Sold in lingerie Dept. Wonderfully warm and wearable for the cold winter nights ahead! Elastic waist pj's with piped edges — waltz gowns — shifts. 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Dress and casual styles in this terrific group. Pricet plat US. tax ■ , ' - I M t Complete assortment of pins; ■ ■ necklaces, earrings,. bracelets! ■ ■ 1.00 Jewelry, now........ 50c ■ 1 2.00 jewelry, now ........1.00 * 1 3.00 jewelry, now 1.50 ■ I Price, plus US. lax ■ M. Pi ■ r "’J'JL' CAIA* n * MX r ; TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1&4 _____ HI * p.i Open Thuradoy *111 6 p.m. Closed Friday, Now Yaar'* Day *---* AWfi y-oe a.m.-9:00 p.m. NATIONAL FOOD STORES Bordan’i Creamary-Frush, Rich Cottage Cheese “ 19* HuHed Dairies,Jjreemy'a Rich Q. Unhod Mhi, far Caffaa or Desserts ^ . . A Aj Fresh Half*Half -39‘ Fresh Egg Hog IMtad Dairies, far Caffaa or Doom Fresh HalfsHa Imam's Nippy French Onion 4|||c Dip 'n Chip . . £ 29* For Dips A Dronings, Iordan's 0% mm # Soar Cream . .^■39* Kraft's Famous Philadelphia Cream & Cheese .. 29 29 Top Taste, American er Pimento Cheese % Slices... 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Coupon Ixplrat Saturday, Jan. 1 PRES WITH THIS COUPON 50 EXTRA HiT STAMPS i With PurchiM of i t lb. Jsr AMERICAN DELUXE PEANUT SUTTER Rodaon* Thiz Coupon At Notional Food ] FREE WITH THIS COUPON 25 EXTRA H;i?" STAMPS I With Furchaw at a Quart Jar SO FRESH SALAD DRESSING j Fill WITH THIS COUPON 50 EXTRA MS“r STAMPS With FuixImm of Natco S at. SLACK tf PPER FREE WITH THIS COUPON 25 EXTRA "&T STAMPS j With Furchaw of a n ox. EASY LIFE PINK DETERGENT | Rodoom ThM Coupon At Nattonal Food | W;;/ /# -: THE PONTIAC PRESS TUE8DAY» DECEMBER 20, 1064 ELEVtlf 1 OPEN 10-10 DAILY-SUNDAY 12-7 ON SALE TUESDAY-AND ALL WEEK-WHILE QUANTITIES LAST! CLOSED ALL DAY FRIDAY - NEW YEARS DAY! •■****. PHOTOFINISHING DISCOUNTS K0DAC0L0R PRINTS IN DOUBLE SIZE After Christmas Sale for developing each roll of negaliv STRETCH BUCK AND WHITE PRINTS Doublo Siio plus 16c for developing NEW FASHION TONE SEAMLESS NYLONS DENIM SLACKS K0DACHR0ME PROCESSING 35mm, 20* Exp. Slide* 1.10 1.10 Reg. 36c Pair! 4 Day Only . . . Bring your holiday films to k-mart for “processing and save more! And you can “Charge It” too! Charge It At K-mart Combed Cotton STRETCH BLOUSES Very special savings on better quality stretch denim sports and casual slacks. Choose from button fly front, button tgb front styles. Navy and many colors. After Christmas Discount Price 8-18. 2 97* Charge It for Hurry for After*Christmas savings on fine, first quality sheer, seamless nylons in popular fashion shades. Siges 8Vi to 11. Charge It at Kmart! PLASTIC WARE ASSORTMENT Choose from handy pieces for the home. 3 colors. Fashioned of wash V wear miracle stretch cotton (some stretch oxfords), with convertible or Bermuda collar, roll sleeves. White, colors. 32 to 38. Charge It at Kmart, NEW VINYL COATED 18x36" FLOOR mats Charge It! Shop Without Cn*h Durable, vinyl coated floor mats in handsome new decorator colors. Save at k-muri! 11x72” ... No 16x54” .. . 1.26 36x72”... 1.11 Charge It at Kmart! SPARKLING CLEAR GLASS STEMWARE After Christinas Discount Price S . Choose from sets of 4 in 14Vtas. cocktail glasses, 4 Iaj-oz. champagne, 4-oz. whiskey and 4-os. wine glasses. Charge It! < THRIFTEE NUT MIX 44%^. TRANSISTOR BATTERIES 28c Charge It! 17c! k-Hrand fresh Charge It at Kmart! GUTTERING NEW COSTUME JEWELRY for th* W Price of M 79c to 3.79 Values* Exciting eolleetion of the newest in costume jewelry to accent your wardrobe. Choose pins, bracelets, earrinp, necklaces. Charge it! 1 -Mares. Tss Pumps, Flats and Sport Styles! Vi PRICE SHOE CLEARANCE *2~'3 Clearance of shoes that, tisually sell for as much . as $6. Dress, casual and sport styles in all ma- ' terials, colors, heel heights. All sites, but not every style in every siae and color. MEN'S, BOYS' WEAR CLEARANCE SALE MEN'S TIES . Usually 89c — Newest designs—handsome patterns — Kmart Special. Corduroy SLACKS ‘Continental, ivy “jean” 'in olive, black, antelope., Men's 38-42, lengths, 28- •• BOYS' MUFFLERS Usually 67c wool mufflers, now Me; usually 87c Or-Ion1* mufflers, now 44c. Save Vi! Charge It at Kmart! BOX 400! TISSUES 14 Charge It! ' Reg. 17c! Leading Lady extra soft, extra-strength . cleansing tissue*. BIG 10-RQLL | TISSUE PAN JO 66c li Charge It Reg. 10 for 68c! Soft, facial-type toilet tissue ■■ in 1 Os-oil paks. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD f Buy Now! And Save! Always So Mack FujiTo Eat! QUAKER MAID ICE CREAM 9 Sundae Cups THE" PONTIAC PRE19S. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 Sandwiches Good When French Fried An egg beaten with one-third cup- of milk or Ught cream makes an excellent dipping mixture for French-toasted sandwiches. Cheddar cheese (diced) or tuna fish salad will make good fillings for these sandwich- Roll Long Way When you stuff a flank steak, roll the meat up from the long side. This way when the meat is carved, the fibers can be cut through. YOU TOO CAN HAVE f A TOP QUALITY E303S FURNACE - With tha Wonderful / BCnd 4ilt distributing system Installed by Dependable GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATINC CO. 3401 W. Huron Just West of EliiabttVleike Ad. . FE 8-0484 Cheesecake Gets q New Kind of Crust Cheesecake wall never more glamorous than when baked in a peanut butter crust. Tfee crunchy crust mith plenty of peanut butter flavor makes a delight- Beans, Tuna Great in Salad IGARAGE DOOR • RESIDENTIAL e COMMERCIAL • Operator and Radio Controlled ■Wo Install and Repair Free Estimates 24 Hour Service Vary Roatonabla Prlea* Ask About Our Our Year Cuaranive Sales Ml 1-8811 Service Al*s Overhead OARAGE DOORS iCO W. »ll Bextr lH. • Ranges, Refrigerators • Dishwashers Special Savings On All H Terms Available ampbrfo ELECTRIC COMPANY FE 4-2525 825 WEST HURON STREET 'Recommended as a filling kin9heon/or supper salad, "Tuna Bean Salad" spotlights tender BlueLake green baans. Taaa Bean Salad 1 can (1 lb.) whole or cut Blue Lake green beans 8 tablespoons wine vinegar 2 tablespoons salad oil Salt Pepper Shredded lettuce 1 can (7 oz.) tuna* V4 cup mayonnaise Mi cup chili sauce 2 tablespoons drained pickle relish 1 hard-cooked egg, chopped Drain beans. Combine 1 tablespoon vinegar, salad oil and salt and pepper to taste. Toss with beans. Chill.' | Place a layer of orisp lettuce > hi shallow bowl; top with beans. Flake tuna coarsely over | beans. Mix remaining vinegar with all remaining ingredients; spoon over tuna. Serve at oiice. Makes 4 to 5 servings. Cheese Souffle Must Be Baked for One Hour Cheese souffle, the American way, calls far cream of tartar. , Cheese Souffle % cup each butter and flour Mi teaspoon salt Vfc teaspoon white pepper Cayenne pepper to taste 1 cup milk Mi pound cheddar cheese, grat- i ed medium fine 3 large eggs, separated | Mi teaspoon cream of tartar In a 1-quart saucepan melt the butter over low heat; stir In the flour, salt, pepper and cayenne. Add milk all at once. Cook and stir constantly over moderately low heat until very thick and boiling. Remove from heat; add cheese and stir to melt. Beat eg® yolks until thickened and lemon - colored; gradually but vigorously' stir into cheese sauce. With e'en beater, beat egg whites with cream of tartar until they hold straight stiff peaks. Fold into cheese mixture. Turn into ungreased ltt-quart souffle casserole (about 7tt Inches by 2% Inches). Set dish in a small roasting pan (13 by 8 by 3 indies) with 1 quart hot tap water — water should come up 1 inch. Bake in a moderate (350 degrees) oven 1 hour. Serve at once. Makes 4 servings. ful companion for the smooth cheese filling. It’s the kind of dessert .Mutt give* the grownups a chance at the peqnut butter too! w ★ w , This peanut butter cheesecake belongs to the variety Of baked cheesecakes. The peanut butter and crumb mixture line the pan. Then comes (he filling, a smooth mixture of crqam cheese, lemon, mace, and eggs. After tiie cake comes from the oven it is cooled and sour cream spread over the top. An additional 10 minutes biking sets the topping. This do-ahead dessert Miould be chiltod before serving. y^EANUT BUTTER 4 tablespoons melted butter or margarine 2 packages (8 ounces each) cream cheese % cup granulated sugar 2 teaspoons grated, tenon rind Vi teaspoon ground mace \ tablespoon lemon juice 2 eggs LOANS 1,000 to $5,000 2nd 1st or NOtflGAGt ftMAlA MONTHS 8MpaV^! life credit MJEANC* COST! EXTRA NO Cash when needed! b PontUc daring the put 40 years. AH tiuuwn will testify to reeeivtag fair, basest, and courteous treatment. (Do not take a chance dealing with strangers or fly-by-ntght leaders.) | When yea deal bene, yea receive the full amoaat of your loan la cash at ooce. Ne papers to sign until the loaa is eleaed. Na SPECIAL j sasfi&sttiTsviJS i M ear attics a Mi monthly payment. (Mag aa your parking ticket 14 be damped. f • | VOSS and BUCKNER ! ^ 209 NATIONAL BUILDING FE 44729 JJ Crust Mi cup peanut butter 1M cups graham cracker crumbs. Vi cup chopped peanuts 2 tablespoons brown sugar 1 cup dairy sour cream 1 tablespoon granulated sugar 1 teaspon vanilla ★ *4 ,■■■; Combine peanut butter, cracker crumbs, peanuts, broqm sugar, and melted butter. Line the bottom And sides of a 8 by 11S inch cake pan with removable bottom with the crumb mixture. Beat the cream cheese until it is smooth. Gradually add the to cup granulated sugar. Blend In the lemon rind, mace, and lemon juice. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Poor cheese mixture life crumb-lined pan. Bake in • moderate oven (371 degrees) far 31 minutes. Remove cake from oven. Cool. Combine sour cream, T tablespoon granulate^, i u g a r, and vanilla. Spited cream mixture over top of cake. Return to a hot oven (425 degrees) forld minutes. Chill in refrigerator before serving. Shower Bride-to-Be With Cake Equipment Give that bride-to-be a cake shower. Cake pans in various sizes, wire racks to hold the cakes when they come out of the oven — wooden mixing moons, a cake tester, a flour sifter. These are all inexpensive gifts that a new cook who likes to bake will enjoy having. And have each guest bring her favorite cake recipe! / fe&WahJS -YOU’RE NEVER WITHOUT HEAT! • Furnaces • Bolters • Conversion Burnere (fet 100% guoronfaad MaMe-Kan raw ky a 57 yeoe-ald family linn. Jmt I c Sana. No Payments Nil June afmm~ QgM9M gift*. Doily til 10 pm.. Sun. til 6. BUDMANS UtrtND ON □□□□□ FOR THRIFTY FOODS Seen the decks Will chime out the eld and ring in the now yoar. If you've planned a Now Year's Eve party to celebrate the event, you'll find we have all the party fixings you'll need ... budget priced tool For your New Year's dinner, we've taken e>ecial care to stock up on alt tbe food items you'll need tee, from meats to desfifts. And, every item at Savon is priced for saifagi Have fun with food on the holiday! ■ ’ OPEN NEW TEAR'S EVE 'Til 6 P. M., CLOSED NEW TEAR'StAT SHANK PORTION SUGAR CURED Boneless Hem Smoked Ham ^ IB. ’48*1 Rushed froat Swum) Calif, CRISP ICEBERG HEAD ftiSr-JQ Lettuce True Fum-Fresh. Flavor! FARM MAID GRADE A Large Eggs Ctn. WITH jWN| COUPON GOVERNMENT INSPECTED Plump Young Hen Turkey* 104S. Site, BONELESS, COOKED SWIFT'S Premium Canned Hams GET PLENTY FOR YOUR PARTY! GRADE 1 Peters Skinless Wieners Pkfl. ,36* ,66* ,u>- 39* MAKE YOUR SANDWICHES WITH' YottVe SuiToNiiiCld^l SNACK DELIGHT Potato Chips 28* FOR CEREALS, COFFEE, DESSERTS! • Farm Maid Half A Half QUAKER MAID SHERBET OR Hollywood Rich Ice Cream . WITH COUPON Lady Linda White Bread 2 ioai.,29* 39* 49* 15M-0*. GREAT WITH HOT DQGSl Hunt's Pork and Beans FOR YOUR PARTY COLD PLATE Morrell Snack Lunch Meat 6-OZ. -COCA COLA, 7-OZ. 7-UP OR SOZ. Vernors or Pepsi Cola The Sneezin' Season's -Here! ,WH|TE OR PASTEL TISSUES Kleenex FARM MAID GRADE A ILo large Eggs ^ 28* 155. Pontiac Mall Glen wood Plaza Drayton Plains 42S S. TELEGRAPH 39 S. GUNWOOO 4889 DIXIE MWY. Daly 9-9, Sat. 09, Daly 9-10, Sat. S-10,? Doily 9-9, Sat. S-9, Sunday 9-4 Sunday 9-7 Sunday 9-4 <-> vnh ihb r»upun ind B pun-hue. er Q MminMni km. wine a |4ati ® predaeU. Threuph ______________ C-> Thunu. Iker. 31. Umlli ■ SNACK DELIGHT Potato Chips H-Ox.MQc Limit: Bog AO ! Ban if ISO 24W COUPON area ueti. Tkreafh Than.. Dee. II. LtmHi WHlfr OR PASTEL dl Kleenex Tissues o ■ 2Boxat af f 1. LU.H, ■ Mtht rnanrvad fa Barit quafrtMac. feature 3 mgkm ^ jmL Bai|gw|id|i«s 'r * fir.-: muslin ...1.7il 72x108 or twin bottom fitted 72x108 or twin bottom fitted Type-180 PERCALE of itrong, long-staple combed yarns. Also 81x108 or full bottom fitted sheets. SALE, 2J9 42x38-inch pillow cases.......• • • • • • -SALE, 2 for IJ24 And our White Sale savings don’t stop with sheets! Stock up on towels, blankets, bedspreads, mattresses and mat* tress pads, bathmat sets, dishtowels and so many other linen-closet needs ... at exceptionally low prices! find our own brands, nationally-advertised brands... plenty of fashion in new colors, prints! Sale starts Monday* December 28th. our Mo’ Our ’Hudso’ brand is a hard-to-beat sheet value any day of the week ... but at these low, low White Sale prices* it’s outstanding! The ’Hudso’ label assures you that they’re made to our rigid specifications by a leading maker. Laboratory-tested for long-wfcar strength! Bottom sheets boast easy-on elastidzed comers. White. Type-128 MUSLIN, firmly woven for a smooth touch. ' Also: 81x108 or full bottom fitted sheets. SALE, IJ9 42x36-inch pillow cases. .............SALE, 2 for 94o i ' 1 m • / 1 ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY* DECEMBER 29, 1964 Iff thm Mail brand sheets our own Vanity Houne white perepUe sheets 2.59 durable Vanity House white muslin sheets M.99 Vanity House muslin In. pastel* deep tones 2.47 §prinpmaid*s yay Echo tone Hot sheets 2J79 excitiny *Hem River9 Tulip garden percale 2J9 WHITE SALE! U»« wearinn quality! 72s tOS or twin bottom fitted sheet* io • luxurv-smooth combed cotton percale. Bottom* are fitted wid> eletticized corner* M nay taut, wrinkle-free., 81x108 or lull bottom f.Uai ibeets *•*» 41aUmeb PiUot» cases;..9 for I.SO WHITE SALE! 72x108 or twin bottom fitted ’ ibeet* are our own dependable quality in Krone tvpe-128 mu,I in woven of laa«->MPle vara*! Bottoms boast elaaticized-fitted. easv-or corners. 81x108 nr fad/ bottom titled tboets 9.1# 42xl6-mcb pillow cates..........M lot Me WHITE SALE! Choose dreamy pink, blue, preen., yellow (Oat pastels or tWd hibiscus avocado, told.' blue. Tvpe-I2t muslin: 72xlOS or twio bottom fitted sheets with easv-on elasticized comers. SflrfOB or tall bottom titled sheets 0.07 /42xi6*ncb Pillow 14/It.. . .» toe 1.1* WHITE SALE! Hiah-iathion print in bibianu. blue, avocado, land on oamper-ina-smootb percale. Well-known qunlitv in 72x108 or twin bottom Sited sheet*. Bottoms have Launderlaatk* corners 81*108 or tail bottom lilted tbeetl S.70 42xl8-tacb pillow rasas..,.# far I.M WHITE SALE I Only at Mudaoo’t Bud-eet Store* in Detroit now at savinas! 72x108 or twin bottom fitted sheets in all-over pink, lilac, vattow print percale. Eiasticized-fitted bottom sheets. 81*108 or tall bottom fitted tbetli S.7S 42x18'/,-imeb pillow tain. * tor I.7B Convenient ¥ AMI LV-NIGHT SHOPPING TILL 9*90 P.M. Monday thru Saturday— Plenty et Free Parking at Hudson’# Budget Store-Pontine Mull FOlTRTKKJfr THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY*, DECEMBER 29, 1964 Prepare• Two Elegant Mocha Desserts Coffee first came to Europe from Turkey and Arabia about 1600. Chocolate came to Europe when Spanish conquistadores returned with cacao beans from Mexico. These two favorite flavors,, from opposite ends of the world, were joined together in Paris in the late 1600s. The Marquis de Louvois, war minister to Louis the Fourteenth, is credited with first serving half coffee and half with a touch of whipped cream. It is still possible to order Cafe Louvois in France today. History dees not record how this delightful fusion came to be called mocha, aa ancient t same which conjures up the ' very quintessence of coffee excellence. Mocha’s lively presence, however; is evident in the wide popularity of mocha Beat egg whites until soft 16-inch pie shell. Chill until set i will mound in a spoon. Heap peata form, then beat in cream on top of mocha layer. Chill un- t Prepare as above but omit til set of tartar and remaining to cup chocolate. After egg whites are If desired, top pie wlth a mix-sugar. Fold in. Spoon into baked | added, let stand until mixture | tore1 of to cup brown sugar, 2 Coffee in the cup is, of course, America’s favorite beverage. When you invite friends in for coffee and dessert when you Mplan a dessert-bridga or when you need a special dessert to serve with coffee following dinner^ nothing is more compatible with the steaming cup than a delectable coffee-and-chocolate confection. NEW RECIPES Here are two new, unusual and excellent desserts for your pleasure. Chocolate Cream Puffs, filled with coffee-flavored whipped cream and topped with Coffee Fudge Sauce, would make a memorable and delicious end to any “come for coffee” evening. For a special dinner you couldn’t create a more impressive sweet than Layered Coffee-Mocha Pie. Whichever dessert you choose, keep hi mind that the coffee you serve with it should be your very best — tops hi quality, perfectly brewed, served hot aad fragrant. CHOCOLATE CREAM PUFFS to cup butter or margarine 1 cup boiling water I cup sifted all-purpose flour to cup breakfast cocoa (not instant) 4 eggs Combine butter and water in saucepan. Bring to boil and lower heat. Combine flour and cocoa; add Ml at once, stirring rapidly. Cook and stir until mixture leaves sides of pan and gathers around spoon in smooth, compact mass. Add 1 egg at a time; beat thoroughly after each addition. Continue beating until mixture looks satiny and breaks off when spoon is raised. Drop by spoonfuls on ungreased baking sheet, making 12 mounds spaced apart. Bake at 42S degrees for 30 minutes or until puffed and dry. Cool on iratk. Split each puff crosswise, fill with Coffee Whipped Cream. Chill or freeze. Serve with Coffee Fudge Sauce. Coffee Whipped Cream Combine I cup whipping Cream, 2 teaspoons instant coffee and 2 tablespoons sugar. Chill well. Whip until stiff. Coffee Fudge Sauce 1 cup light brown sugar 1 tablespoon instant coffee powder to cup whipping cream 2 tablespoons light corn syrup 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 teaspoon vanilla Combine all ingredients except vianilla. Bring to a boil, stirring until sugar dissolves. Continue to cook and stir 3 or 4 minutes, or until thickened. Add vanilla. Serve warm. LAYERED COFFEE-MOCHA PIE Mocha Layer: 1 envelope unflavored gelatine to cup cold water to cup sugar, divided • to teaspoon salt 1 cup strong coffee beverage 2 eggs, separated lto squares unsweetened chocolate, melted 1 teaspoon vanilla to cup whipping cream to teaspoon cream of tartar Soften gelatine to odd water. Combine to cup of the sugar, salt and coffee to saucepan. (Coffee may be made with 1 tablespoon instant coffee and 1 cup water.) Stir over low heat intil sugar dissolves. Stir into beaten egg yolks. Return to double boiler and add melted chocolate. Ceak ever lew heat qatil mixture begins to boil. Remove from heat Add vanilla aad stir to softened gelatine. Cool aatil partially set. Beat smooth Whip cream and fold teaspoons instant coffee and to cup chopped pecans. Six whole pecan meats inserted in rim of pie shell before baking are an attractive garnish. BruiMls Sprouts Como Small Size If you haven’t tried the new frosen baby Brussels sprouts-waste no time. Get them today! These are tiny globes of sprouts, with a dedicate flavor, tender as butter. For a rbal treat cook a package of the baby Brussels sprouts as directed, and drain. Then blond to cup of soft hotter with 2 tablespoons of blue cheese. Toss the hot Brussels sprouts with the butter mixture and serve to an admiring audience. This will make 5 servings. Orange Glazt You can make a simple glaze for a coffee cake with confectioners sugar, orange juice and grated orange rind. Hue orange-flavored topping is particularly delicious used over a yeast-risen coffee cake that contains raisins, and nuts. appy New Year Wish FROM THE FRIENDLY FOLKS AT YOUR FOOD FAIR STORE With the holiday season in full «w.njg you're probobly busy plaX, tZ suggestion to heod your New Yea/* 3SSS3&az GARLIC, BLEU, ONION OR HORSERADISH Farm Maid Chip Dips BATHROOM TISSUE VALUE Softer Aurorq Tissue Fluffo Golden Shortening Open. Mew %orsEve "Until 6 "P.M.. Mew ©cyl Spot O' Gold ?S*eosy to ploy. J„, l?i,. °PP,n19 1riP- When it completely punched take it to '"oru’Cr-H. will remove the Spot end your reward will be revile win from $] to $l,ooo. }jo Hunt's Catsup ’ m •cl MEAT Oft CHICKEN Campbell's Soups 2 <£?29# ill SQUIRT, PEPSI, 7-UT w."Sc£» iil «gi 12&A58* Sill g! ji [BEfe rrmp gr rmjjlE a?; rrrrgjS sscssr. caaSi'I 'S?511 fTFEi i coupon 2 | g toicMk, CB<; /O Umlh 3H ® Mftf* iaaib.Sli5r to-Gallon Ctns. Quaker Maid or Other Ice Cream .' ..; •. ).' ■ ....... V' ) THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 Firmer* famous maker suits and outercoats l>y Hart Schaffner & Marx, Eagle, Alpacuna, Hammonton Park, Austin Leeds, Frost & Frost, Barron Anderson reduced to Two groups that feature some of the finest of our nationally advertised .clothing makers ~ at important savingS. 1 -, 2- and .3-button suits in many style variations. Topcoats and overcoats in raglan, split raglan, and box coat models. Many fine fabrics, many of them imported, and all of them beautifully tailored. Many shades and many patterns.' And there's a complete size range that include pprtlies, portly-shorts, pprtly-longs, extra-longs and cadets. All priced at substantial reductions to make every purchase well worthwhile. \ M Hoffman’s famous BAR-H Beof Sale Clubs Ribs Rounds Sirloins BONELESS-ROLLED “King of the Roasts” RIB or I / RUMP I Ik ROAST I STEAKette Gordon’s or Kentucky SPICY PINK r BABY LINK PORK SAUSAGE^ choice, DUCKS Sliced Free! rHYGRADE’S fully-cooked Ready-To-Eat SIXTEEN TflE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29.1»«4 Soup Hits Spot on Cold Day By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor Soup is on the menu at our bouse this week. We’re having eld-fashioned homemade vegetable soup, made with the bones from our Christmas beef roast. Into the kettle with those bones I put onions, carrots and celery. I added a can of tomatoes. All this simmered slowly and the tantalizing fragrance made the family hungry before the soup was done. With youngsters home from school between the holidays, you’ll find soap an easy luncheon dish. You too can have a good vegetable soup, even if you don’t have roast beef bones. -In the Normandy area of France, you’ll find soup made in file following manna*: Normandy Soup Pot 6 large potatoes, pared and quartered 3 medium leeks, cut in 2-inch slices 2 medium carrots, pared and quartered 4 packages (10-ounces each) frozen Brussels sprouts 3 quarts boiling water % cup sliced celery and a few minced leaves Few springs parsley -2 tablespoons butter or - margarine 2 tablespoons salt 1 teaspoon monosodium glutamate 0* teaspoon pepper . Add potatoes, leeks, carrots and Brussels sprouts to boiling water; cover and simmer ft hour. Stir in celery, parsley, butter and seasonings; simmer i hour longer. Makes 10 servings. Another son you can simmer, though mriefly, is an Asparagus Cream Soup. Sour cream imparts a delightful tang to this smooth soup. Asparagus Cream Soup 2 packages (9 ozs.) cut up asparagus 1% cups water * 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon chicken stock base Vi teaspoon monosodium glutamate Dash of pepper \ 3 cups milk 1 cup dairy sour cream * * ♦ In a saucepan place asparagus in water; cover, bring to boil; turn heat to simmer and cook, until very tender. Meanwhile, in another saucepan, melt butter; blend in flour, salt, chicken stock base, monosodium glutamate and pepper. Gradually add milk; cook, stirring constantly, until mixture thickens and loses starchy taste. Using a blender or food mill puree asparagus with cooking liquid; blend in sour cream. Just before serving combine asparagus mixture with white sauce. Heat and serve immediately. Makes 6 to 8 servings. * * * Note: One chicken bouillon cube dissolved in cup hot water may be substituted for chicken stock base. If soup is what you want most of all and time is short, you’re still in luck. There are so many excellent canned and dry soups on the market today that your choice is infinite. Chicken Com Chowder starts out with a can of chicken rice soup. Less than 15 minutes later, you’ll be pouring it into bowls. * , * * It’s so easy to prepare . combine a can of condensed chicken rice soup with a pound can of cream style com. Thin to chowder consistency with half milk and half cream; heat. Season to taste with salt and pepper; serve garnished wifi) chopped parsley. Makes. 3 to 4 servings. Pass This Platter After Card Game This platter will feed a dozen friends—and men will like it as much as dofoe women. Supper Saack Platter lVi pounds snap beans, cooked and marinated in French dressing v \ 1 pound Italian-type thinly sliced salami (casing rempved) , . 12 hand-cooked eggs, halved and stuffed % bunch watercress 2 small bunches radishes 1 can or jar (4 ounces) pi-mien to Make an attractive platter arrangement of all the ingredients with the snap beans in the center and the other foods ringed around them. Makes 12 servings. Malhed Bananas Go Between*Cako Layers For s last-minute cake filling mash ripe bananas with a little leipoky juice and grated orange rind; frost the cake with sweetened whipped cream. ★ ♦ ♦ To gild the Uly, strew with/ slivered toasted blanched almonds. / embarrassed1 WITH YOUR f BATHROOM? lovely-practical ^VANITIES Custom Built-Economically! from $59.95 4 Free Estimate* • Decorator Sendee# No SMigetlea PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES Phenst 1344329 - 111 Orchard Lake Av#., 2M»LetTeL >' - '-i ill !gUrv‘' ®| NOftMANDY SOUP POT * STEWING or PASTING CHICKENS Large Frying or Stewing OYSTERS Here’s the Smirnoff.. .where’s the party? What elee do you need ? Smirnoff is dryer in a Martini, smoother on-the-rocks. Makes delicious Screwdrivers or marvelous Bloody Marys. And nothing Mae blends so perfectly in a party punch. Filtered through 14,000 pounds of'activated charcoal, Smirnoff ia the vodka of vodkas. You owe it to your guest*. It leaves you breathless "Smirnoff; Center Cuts delicious sliced Boiled HAM FRYING CHICKEM farm fresh Fresh Produce Sweet-Juicy Macintosh APPLES 4 & 23e Emperor GRAPES .2^25* Red Ripe TOMATOES 15' New Year's FREEZER Special NO Canying Charge FULL SIDES of BEEF NO Down Payment Always ask for JVODKA mm m noor wnuctfnMmw mpm smmoh us mwmm wnmumumthmcowi If WE WISH To Eiffbnd to Our Customer*1 and Friends Our Beet Wishes for a HAPPY NEW YEAR PARK FREE IN REAR HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. •ITAK DIVISION 9l OAKLAND PACKING QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. wi rkscrvi thi right to liapit quantities FI 2-1100 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 SEVENTEEN Winning Hand in Every Game By JOY MILLER AP Women's Editor It wpa a year to do a woman’s heart good. Never hid she been so appreciated, appointed, awarded and elected. ■ * * dr; A The President boosted so n*0".y women into high office —and kept the talent search going tell steam — that at one point he felt it necessary to reassure men. They would always have a place in government be said, "as long as there are. no women to fill the Jobs.” important professional organizations elected women presidents for the first time. For the first time the name or a woman, Republican Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine, was placed in nomination for president at a major party convention. And although the Census Bureau said that women were mare plentiful than med by 3% million — that for every 100 women there Were 90.4 men — there WS> a silver Single men still outnumbered single women, and it made ^ap Year hunting more of a sporting eveot. Two top pairings of the year: actors Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, who First Lady campaigns for her husband in 1964 election. Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson wtustlestopped to help the President vain election. Here she greets an enthusiastic crowd. * * Ferris Dean's List Names Area Students Forty-five Oakland County residents were among the more than 050 Ferris State College students who were named to the Dean’s list during the past quarter. - From Pontiac are: Robert L. Hoadley, son of the C. R. Gala Event, Marks End of Yuletide The 16th annual Twelfth Night Gala will be held Jan. 0, In Cranbrook House. Mr. and Mrs. Henry S. Booth will be hosts at the event, scheduled from 8 to 11 p.m. He u| executive director and chairman of the board of trustees of the Cranbrook Foundation. ♦ ** Entertainment will as usual be mummery but details in advance are never released. GUESTS Guests will be members of the faculty and staffs of the six Cranbrook institutions, trustees and directors of the institutions, board members of the Cranbrook Music Guild and St. Dunstan’s Guild, choir members of Christ Church Cranbrook and spouses of the same. a . a * Committee members working with Mr. Booth in planning this year’s program are: Donald Willett, Elizabeth Boyne, Mrs. Jack U. Klarr, Walter F. Read, Mrs. H. Leslie Schaefer and Margaret MacKenzie. Hoadleys, Second Avenue; Ross. R. Luzon, son of the Ross Luxons, Third Avenue; Caleb B. Martin, son of Mrs. Pattie Martin, Orchard Lake Avenue; Arthur G. Rendzi-perisj son of Mr.- and Mrs. Chris Rendzi peris of Park-hurst Street, "" Others from Pontiac are' Louis Schneider, son of the Oscar Schneiders, Second Avenue; Ronald P. Toroni, son of the Rev. and Mrs. John Toroni, Otsego Road; Larry E. Wagner, son of the Lloyd Wagners, Woodbine Drive and Shurle A. Warren, daughter of the Vasco Warrens, Harvey Avenue. BIRMINGHAM From Birmingham are Michael J. Bodary, Robert R. Cuddie, N. Richard Elliott, Gail A- Hamilton, and Don B. MacDonald, also Dennis K. and Gary F. Long of Beverly Hills; John E. Erdmann, Castle Drive. David T. Bower, Barry 'J. Johnson and Claudia G. Wallis of Franklin Village are among those, listed. Others are Paul E. Johnson, son of the Ernest Johnsons, Dixie Highway; Jame-sina M. Riddle, daughter of •the James Riddles, Highland; Joseph H. Griggs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Griggs, Avon Circle, Avon Township; Carl W. Wilberg, Sashabaw Road, Independence Township. ALSO NAMED From Walled Lake are Dale E. Caplin mid Daniel M. Godfrey, also Robert G. Nelson, Holly; John G. Hatfield, Lake Orion; Wayne E. Grar ham, Leonard; William C. Jarski, Lakeville Road, Oxford Township. KATHLEEN RUTH YBAGElt Call Friend, Mention Town Trip By Tile Emily Post Institute Q: A woman I know invited me to lunch but did not set a definite day. She merely said that whenever I was in the city to call and she would take me to lunch. ~«U W# ft- ’ I live in the suburbs and' go into the dty (very so often on business or to shop. This woman works and lives in the dty. < * * * I plan to go in some day and would like to know if it would be proper to call her and remind her of her luncb invitation. I’m sure her invitation was sincere but somehow I just don’t feel right about calling and “inviting mydelf to lunch.” What do you advise my doing in this situation? * * * A: You may quite properly call her and say that you are coming into town next Wednesday and that you hope.she will be free to see you. She will then most likely ask you to lunch with her. * * a Q: I received a thank-you note in yesterday's mail for . a wedding present I sent to a young brute. The note was typewritten. A- . A -A Maybe Pm old-fashioned, JiutI thought this is'very bad taste and almost as rude as a printed thank-you card. Are typewritten notes acceptable in the present day? * A<, A A: Long, chatty letters may . quite properly be' typewritten, and indeed are much to be preferred to those written in a hard-to-read handwriting, but a bride’s thank-you notes must be written by hand. * A AA Q: My brother-in-law’s name is Lawrence but everyone calls him Larry. When ad-' dressing a note or card to him, would it be proper to address it to Mr. Larry. Jones .or must it be Mr. Lawrence Jones? * A. * A: When writing to him, the envelope must be addressed to Mr. Lawrence Jones. • a a a Details concerning the remarriage of a widow and divorcee, are described in the Emily Post Institute booklet entitled "Second Marriage.” A A * s To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in ooln and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of The PontiqcPress. A a * • * Hie Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, interest are answered in . this column. had been going steady for some time; Sen. Maurine"Neu-berger and Dr. Philip Solomon, Boston psychiatrist. Along with Leap Year every ,48 months comes the Presidential Election Year. And U.S. women in *84, politicked more and more. a a a . -v From the First Lady to the precinct worker who rang doorbells, thousands of women lived, breathed and talked politics until the last vote was counted in November. SHE SETS PACE Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson set the pace. When she became the nation’s 32nd First Lady she said that her role must “emerge in deeds not words.” a a a She set to work underlining her husband’s program -in travels around the country; she called attention to the ever expanding role of women as citizens by giving White House luncheons for the women “doers.” After the Democratic National Convention nominated her husband, she hit the campaign trail on her own, the first President’s wife to whis-tlestop independently. "a . a • a Politically acjept Lady Bird-Johnson was voted Woman of the Year in the Associated Press Poll, even as last year's top woman newsmaker, Mrs. John F. Kennedy, sought pri-i vacy. JACKIE In NewYork the gallant widow oF'fiie assassinated President lived quietly, with two chief aims: to bring up her children, Caroline and John-John, 7 and 3 in November; and to perpetuate the memory of her husband. a a * She had left Washington and its memories when crowds of curious tourists packed t h e street in front of her Georgetown home day and night. In 1965 the home still loomed is the No. 1 place to be for a majority of women, but President Johnson made it plain he thought their place. was also in government service. a- * a His appointments—and they numbered in the hundreds— included women ambassadors (Margaret Joy . Tibbetts to Norway, Katharine Elkus White to Denmark) Dr. Mary I. Bunting, president of Rad-cliffe, as the first woman member of the Atomic Energy Commission, Mrs. Elizabeth S. May, the first woman director of the Export-Import Bank. Meantime, women weren’t Marilyn May | Igou of Clarkston j became Mrs. I Gerald Allen I Hennig Monday in | Our Lady of | the Lakes[ Church. 1 Their parents j are Mrs. i sluggards in getting laurels for themselves. Outspoken yet ladylik^Hazel Brannon Smith, publisher of four Mississippi weeklies won a Pulitzer Prize for “steadfast adherence to her editorial duty in the face of great pressure and opposi-nKn>.** * * * Over the years she has battled bootleggers, racists and extremists, but she says: “I don’t call myself a crusader at .all. All I’ve tried to do is meet the issues as they arise ... and to report the truth.” WON MEDALS Four women won Medals Of Freedom, the highest civil honor the President can bestow: actress Lynn Fontanne, opera singer Leontyne Price, Dr. Lena Edwards, Who three years ago gave up private practice in New Jersey to devote herself to medical care of migrant workers in the Texas Panhandle, and Dr. Helen B. Taussig, professor emeritus of pediatrics at Johns Hopkins University. WWW Dr. Taussig later in the year was again honored in being named president-elect of the American Heart Association. She will be the first woman to hold the office. A • A A^,,* One of the most glamorous j* and hardest - working — women at the United Nations, Mrs. Marietta Tree has been a delegate since 1961. ■. * ■ *■ w/ In November She became ' the first woman to.serve as permanent U Despite its new social status, this smooth-surface enamel-ware is traditionally easy to wash in hot soap or detergent suds. * Raisins, .Oats Make Cookies Taste Good Ry JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor It your bouse is like ours, it is almost cookieless by now. And with the children home from school all week, you’ll need more cookies for snack time. Mrs. William Robertson suggests a recipe for Raisin Squares. Ibis recipe came from her aunt who lives on Manitoulin Island. The mother of two children and the holder of an outside job, Mrs. Robertson lives to cook. Do try her cookies. RAISIN SQUARES By Mrs. William Robertson Filling: 2 cups seedless raisins . % cup flour ltt cups sugar Mix and cook gently 15 minutes to thicken. Let . stand while you prepare crust. Crust: 1V4 cups sifted flour % teaspoon soda % teaspoon salt ltt cups quick raw oatmeal 1 cup brown sugar % cup butter or margarine Sift flour, soda and salt. Mix oatmeal with sugar and cut in butter or margarine. Blend the two mixtures and press half into an 8x12 greased pan. Pour filling over crust Top with remaining crumbs and press together gently and evenly. Bake 25 minutes at 375 degrees or until top is'A delicate brown. Cut in squares while hot. Serve warm or cool. These freeze well. With three children under five years, the Frank Kurfcow-skis of,East Strathmore Avenue thought they might have a problem with their Christmas tree. Solving it gave them an unusual tree. .For several years now, Mrs. Kurkowski has been collecting fruits and flowers, most-^f them unbreakable. She does Old Standby Yields Soft Laundry Day Vinegar added to your last rinse water will give you brighter, cleaner washables and softer, sweeter-smelling diapers for your baby. Try this test. Take an article of clothing that has been washed, rinsed, and dried. Dunk it back into clear water. Chances are you probably will be able to see the soapy residues dissolving in the wwter. One or two rinses in dear water will not completely rinse detergents or soaps from your laundry. Plain water does a good job but not a complete job. To make sure your clothes get a thorough rinse, put a little wjiite vinegar into your last rinse water. About one cup of white vinegar in your rinse water for an average sized family washing will do the trick, whether you use a tub or a washing machine. Vinegar is about 5 per cent acidity. This is tod mild to harm fabrics but strong enough to dissolve the alka-lines in the soaps and detergents, giving your clothes a better dqse.jCommercial laundries use this same general principle in their rinses. Your baby’s diapers especially can benefit from a vinegar rinse. The vinegar neutralizes the ammonia that is an after product of wet diapers and a common cause of diaper rash. After running your diapers through the complete washing machine cycle, turn the machine on rinse again, filling the machine only half full-of hot Water and adding one cup of vinegar. Put the machine through the rinse and spin cy-- die. Don’t Throw It Away. REBUILD IT i TODAY! s Our expert* will rertorenew comfort, ■ higher quality bit* your present mo*- ■ trait,or boy spring . , . compare ■ bofori you buy! ' 24'5| ONE DAY SERVICE Guaranteed in Writing 7 Years , OXFORD MATTRESS CO. : 1ST North Pony St., Pontiac FE 2-1111 ■ SERVING TOE PONTIAC AREA OVER 41 YEARS | COLOR TV 7-Day FREE TRIAL • TRY BEFORE YOU BUY *• FAMOUS BRAND NAME • ABSOLUTELY NO OBLIGATION If.You Decide To Buy— • NO MONEY DOWN o UP TO 36 M0. TO PAY $1400 SH- UTTLE RICHARDS, Ine. Ml 6-6641 - Clawson have some china, fruit bought at an antique auction, but this goes toward the top of the tree where small hands can’t grab it. VELVET ROPING Winding through the branches is green and gold velvet roping. At the base of the tree there is a hand-carved and hand-painted nativity scene. This was sent to her by her cousin, the Rev. Donald Hri-sler, a Maryknoll missionary in Mexico, formerly of Lake Orion. The Kurkowski children are Marcelyn, 4; John, 3; and Todd, who is just a year old. Wash Blender With Care A blender manufacturer advises against soaking the container in dishwater. Instead, partly fill it with warm water plus a little soap or detergent, put the cover on, and let tee motor run at low speed until food particles are [loosened. Then rinse and dry the container. Turn the motor off, pull the cord from the electric outlet, and wipe off the base and GIVE YOUR CARPET A NEW LEASE OR LIFE Have Your Carpet Cleaned NOW! K 8C. TUS0R CARPET SERVICE 5400 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-8866 Chrome News in Pan World Featured now in the pots-and-pans department is.bake-wear made of chrome. Everyone knows how easy it is to keep chrome clean. Just wash it with hot soap or detergent suds and rinses. Your Good Tost* Deserves the Finest ; Custom Furniture We create our custom pieces to .subtly blend with your home and. preferences . . . for comfortable, smart living. "Hu Furniture MS O_, —------ 5390-5400 DIXIE HWY. Oil 3-1225 OPEN FRIDAY TIL 9 EASY BUDGET TERMS AT LAST... a - INVISIBLE HEARIHG AID foz those that heat but do not nndoistand • This It Hm comi • Flnh colored for maximum comfort ond conc.alment. • No cure, no tubos—no bottom no saparato betteriei. • Mod. to fH your Mr and hoorlng problom. 0 Tha moil comfortable, natural bMrlng Imaginable. • Flti entirely In the Mr AMI not stick out. 1 • Complete volume and anoH csnfrelt. 8 « parfnet far fuU-tlm* sr sccaaisMl uat. 8- d Slips M and bit In sneands. r* Better Hearing Service . 1 10S N.Sdgluew —Pit. PI 2-0292 | I I □ I am interested In ranting |Q I want furtbor information It’s your big buy-time at Albert’s i year-end | a shoe sale! Save now with these great reductions on your favorite famous brands regular to. $14.99 ' Natural Poise regular to $8.99 Sports and Flats Here it isl The sale you’ve been waiting for with real stock-up savings on the season’s smartest dress, casual and sports shoes. You’ll find the newest silhouettes and heel heights in thlp outstanding selection of fashionable materials and colors. Come now, while your size is available. Bob Weddle Manager /. Use Tew Albert» Charge Account TWjtNTy THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 196* Convenience Foods Make Lasagna Good Enough to Serve as a Dessert Casserole Elegante? Yes, indeed! A casserole that is elegant in every sense of the word: rich, tasteful, and correct for any occasion, it’s also one of the more delicious meals you could serve! Any dish that includes beef and needles, of course, is off te a fast start in its campaign for acceptance. Add sesty spaghetti sauce mix crisp bell peppers, and sour cream sauce along with other ingredients, and you’re bound to have a winner. That's Casserole Elegante! Casserole Elegante . 8 pieces lasagna macaroni 1 pound ground beet 1 cup water 1 package spaghetti sauce mix 1 teaspoon diced green bell peppers 1 package sour cream sauce mix Vi cup water 1 package (8 oz.) cream cheese 1 cup (8 oz.) small curd cottage dutose , Cook noodles in boiling salted water, as directed on the package, then drain. Brown ground beef in a fry pan. Add 1 cup water, spaghetti sauce mix, and diced peppers. Mix well, and bring to aboil Add sour cream sauce mix to Vi cup water, and beat until smooth. Blend in cream cheese and cottage cheese. Put half of lasagna In a greased lSxf-inch baking dish. Cover with cheese mixture, Pour meat sauce over the Bake in a 850 degree oven fqr about 20 minutes. Makes 6 to 8 servings. For a pleasant dessert after a main course of Chinese-style food, serve chilled canned pineapple enlivened with slivers of preserved ginger. Shrimp Is Inside Looking for something novel with an Oriental flavor? A distinct improvement over egg rolls are these unusual rolls. Sea-Prise Asparagus Rolls 20 cooked asparagus spears 1 package buttermilk refrigerator rolls V4 pound fresh shrimp, cleaned and cooked , V4 teaspoon soy sauce 1 teaspoon horseradish mustard H cup sour cream l ean condensed mushroom soup V4 stick butter or margarine^ melted Vt ounce sesame seeds Slice or mash shrimp and add Vt teaspoon soy sauce, horseradish mustard and Vi cup sour cream. Set aside. Separate rolls (10) and roll each one paper thin on lightly floured doth. Spread with shrimp mixture and place 2 spears of asparagus at edge of each biscuit, with tips in opposite directions. Roll up and secure with toothpicks. Place on baking sheet withI fold side down.JBrush with melted butter and sprinkle with sesame seeds. Bake in 450 it-gree oven for IS minutes or until golden brown. Serve with mushroom sauce made by adding remaining V4 teaspoon soy sauce and V* cup sour cream to mushroom soup and heating slowly. Add Some Apple Add one cup of freshly peeled and grated apples, tail and tangy, to each four ctfps of a bland, seasonal vegetable, such as mashed squash, sweet potatoes, rutabagas, or parsnips, to impart flavor and flair. Can of Cream Soup Just a Starter To vary that can of cream of potato soup, add whole-kernel corn or mushrooms. If you have leftover cooked corn on the cob, just cut off the kernels and use It the mushrooms are fresh, they may be cooked lightly in. butter or margarine before adding to the soup. Some good cooks like to baste ham, while it’s baking, with sherry or ginger ale. skommimm STORE HOURS Wednesday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Regular Hours Monday, Tuesday and Saturday CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY GOVERNMENT INSPECTED Fresh Fryers • WMt.. <1AC n’m dm jrlb NNI QUALITY—KOZIN Chicken livers u 49* 6KADI "A"—4 TO S SOUND SIZES _ _ Capons . . . .11 59‘ AAR FROZEN Orange Juice 5 — 93* PIZZA with CHEESE GfrW 10-OZ. Brand PKG. ARRIAN WAY—WITH CHKESI Pizzarino........ RK6. OF C 55* 22c OFF All-Purpose Cloanor , Mr. Clean s ,sji nt BTL 37 Now Ammoniated Cleaner, Top Job i-rr. 12-OZ. SIZE 59 Giant Oxydol 3-LB. 1-OZ. PKG. 79* MEDIUM SIZE • ^ ^• Ivory Soap 3 “ 3 f "Super-RigM" -c-t PORK LOWS n. “rJ| 1 "Super-Right" PORK CHOPS Loin Cuts cg< u6CS6 pouND S,ZIS d* ** * Cantor Rib Cut* "SURIR-RICHT" country styli Spare Ribs IB. 1 OUR FINSST QUALITY A&P Apple Sauce 7 1-LI. f OO | CANS I 39* HYGRAD8, ALLJjAEAT 12-OZ. 70C Cocktail Franks 69* RIRD FARM Pork Sausage Ducks "SURIR-R^MT" RLADI CUT k Chock Roast M sr^esStL. at Back Ribs . . • »« "SURIR-RiOHT" LIVER SAUSAGE 9AC I Braunsthweiger “■ ** | Crisp, Fresh Western—24-Size HEAD LETTUCE x* 20c BANANAS... -IT crisp, red ae oeee Radishes .... 3‘«29* MILD FLAVORED gm gmA Green Onions A ,UNCH“ 29 HEIFETZ Polish Dills... SULTANA FAMILY SIZE—IN TOMATO SAUCE . Pork n'Beans.. 3- LB. 4- OZ. CAN 1-LB. CAN.. 10c Your Choict—-Regular or Drip Grind A&P VACUUM PACK COFFEE 2*1“ CRIST MONT—Lima, Orenge.Vineepple or Raipfcarry m ^ Sherbet ..... “49* MARVEL—Vanilla or Chacatata A A Ice Milk . o o. . -™"39* ANN PAGE QUALITY ^ Blended Syrup 29 SUNNYFIILO OtoW Pancake Mix . . 27 I-LS. CAN IT* Crisco ..... .3 ™ 83 Nestle's Cream Bars VARIETIES - . 3 .A°u 19* Lipton Onion Soup ..... VS* 32* Instant Coffee Diced Potatoes ,0J£nd,L0 ... 4 &S*49* Shoestring Potatoes butterfield .. tv*£z TO* • CAN 85* EXCEL VACUUM PACKED, ASSORTED ~M _ Fancy Mixed Nuts “"09* A&P BRAND VACUUM PACKED m Spanish Peanuts ““ 49 A&P BRAND. VACUUM PACKED pg 0^- Virginia Peanuts5 Y Excedrin ¥ 99* Bronto Seltzer » • . . Y 59* Lab Test Aspirin . . . 17* No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits... ANN PAGE CREAM OF Mushroom Soup ANN RACE Tomato Soup ,ocANZ10f CHAMPION Saltines «« 19* LUNCHEON SIZE Kleenex Napkins 50~10‘ *7$ ■ SBILfiPU , r-T / / tttB PONTIAC PRESS, TOBSDAY, PECEMBRR 20, 1964 TWEyTY-Qyj. Today's Cultured Sour Cream, Uniform in Quality, Adds Exciting Taste to Foods All the good things you've heard about dairy sour cream are true,” states Mrs. Josephine Lawyer, Michigan State University Extension Agent. Dairy sour cream can give everyday cooking a gourmet touch. V Today’s cultured sour cream is a tribute to dairy technology. Scientific processing has produced a dependable steady supply of thick cream, uniform in quality, and packaged in the sanitary modern manner. The dairy sour cream you purchase today is cultured fresh cream. It is generally made from coffee cream and contains about 18-30 per cent butterfaL There are about 30 calories per tablespoon. lour cream is pasteurised and homogenised to insure smoothness and uniformity. The testy, taagy flavor and the thick, smooth texture are carefully regulated by adding a special lactic add culture to the cream. Since sour cream is a dairy product it must be refrigerated. It will keep well for one week or longer. To protect its perfect seal, store tbs container upside down. When using dairy sour cream 1n baking, baking soda may be used for all or pari of the leavening in the proportion of one-half teaspoon baking soda to one cup of sour cream. Because one cup of sour cream contains about six tablespoons fat it can be used to replace all or pari of the fat la -- gm cakes, etc. For desserts, it can be .made smoother and fluffier by whip- ping, using chilled beaters and bowl, and beating at high speed for about five minutes. Care must be taken not to overwhip the cream or It will become very thin. BE GENTLE When cooking with sour cream, handle with care. Heat it gently; dfriiot boil, add add It to other ingredients Just before serving. Always fold it into other ingredients carefully as over-stirring may thin'it . Cook soar cream-bollan-daise type mixtures over not cook over direct beat. Experiment with sour cream. Besides using it as a dip for an appetizer, try a generous dollop on your favorite hot or cold soup. Use sour cream as a salad dressing or as an ingredient in molded salads. Add vinegar artd herbs for leafy greens, try fruit Juices and spices for fruit salads. Spread soar cream on browned pork or veal chops or add to gravies and sauces as aa accompaniment to a variety of meats. Vegetables will have more In* teresting flavor when topped with sour cream, and you can add variety by use of seasonings, blue cheese, crumbled bacon, etc. Dessert possibilities With sour cream are only limited by your imagination. Top fruit, pumpkin or mincemeat pies with' sour cream. Or serve sour cream on chocolate cake, gingerbread or canned fruit. If your family desires a slightly sweet flavor, add one-half nip confectioners sugar to one pint of sow creim. Here is a sour cream dressing to enhance the flavor of fruit or molded fruit salads: Combine one teaspoon grated orange rind, two tablespoons each orange juice and lemon Juice, one tablespoon honey, one-half teaspoon dry mustard, one teaspoon salt, and one-fourth tempoon paprika. Feld into one cup dairy sour cream. Chill thoroughly before serving. Makes about one and one- fourth caps. Keeps well, covered, in refrigerator. If you want a quick dip to serve with cheese crackers, blend two cups dairy sour cream, one to two tablespoons grated onion, one tablespoon chopped pimiento, and one-half teaspoon salt. Serve chilled. Add Mashed Egg Hard-cook an extra egg. Mash it fairly fine arid add it to mayonnaise to serve with a cooked vegetable salad. ■Supor-Wahr Quality Skinned Shank Portion Butt Portion t\mwtMl rf’oFQUAury POLLY COOKED 'Super-Right" Skinless 10- to l2.P«Nsn ^ Semi-fioneless Fully Cooked Hams * »• 9 Found Sixes M'XtD LIGHT ANI IK MEAT 2'/, TO 4 LB-SIZES Mayonnaise NEUMANN'S QUART | JAR * ANN PAGE QUALITY ^ Tomato Ketchup 3 -49 A&P Pineapple-Grapefruit A Drink 4-90 A&P Sliced SWISS CHEESE 1-LB. PKG. A&P Large or Smell Curd Cottage Cheese 2* 49' Super-Right Canned Luncheon Meat 3* r 3* 1-LB. s-oz. e • CAN LIBBY'S Beef Stew a&p Light, chunk m Tuna Fish 4‘iff 99 THE GREAT ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC. OMs tftactivu Tim Thurtduy, DM. 81* hi AD letter* Michigan A&P Stem DOW REGULAR SIZI CHARMIN 4< OFF LABEL i Blueberry lie .......... 1 ■LB. S-OZ. MAC «*« s? M-Wrap Dry Trend Toilet Tissue Kleenex Tissues | JANE PARKER DEVIL'S FOOD BATTER German Chocolate Cake * Vi-INCH yec SIZI /2 too-FT. '*%Ac ROLL 47 7 iiva-oz. 99c 4 ««• 99 4 33* .5-”r 29* 1 2 Fly Sheets ™ " i SAVE 10c—JANE PARKER—DANISH TREAT > All-Butter Coffee Cake.. \ i is-oz. CAC . FKO. 37 A & P — OUR FINEST QUALIfY Whipping Cream 255c CANS purco V Maraschino Cherries SULTANA LARGE OR SMALL Stuffed Olives • •.. EARLY CALIFORNIA JUMBO Ripe Olives . * . .3 EGG NOG 39* 79* 79* 59* Jene Porker Fresh, Crisp POTATO CHIPS 59 2 8-OZ. BAGS IN 1-LB. BOX RISDON'S FRENCH ONION CHIP’N1 DIP.. 49* Hearth Rye Breads ;.3L 2^49* JANE PARKER SAVE lie ON TWO PKGS. *w Bake'N'Serve..2 ’39* lust Quality Merchandise at Low Prices! HAPPY MW TO ALL From Y«or Friendly AtP! Peeled end Deveined Froxen SHRIMP 199 Medium Sine 1-LB. S-OZ. BAG 3-Lb. Bag $3.89 YUKON CLUB Club Soda or Palo Dry or Golden 40 * loo |£ E I » YUKON CLUB CANNED Beverages 7 Assorted ( Flavors AtF CRAPEIVUIT JUKE 3 s 89* Delicious, Refreshing Hawaiian Punch 3 9SC NATIONAL BISCUIT SNACK TREATS Bacon Thins, B'/i-Os. Pkg. Swim & Ham Crackers, 10-Ox. Pkg. Triangle Thins, 9Z ox. pkg. Sociables, 9 ox. pkg. YOUR CHOICE PKG. t; / / t- RESERVE YOUR COPY TODAY AT SPECIAL ■3 PRICE Fill Mrt tha coupon and flail it with your chock or money order remittance for'^SI to the addroee indicated on the coupon. The hook will ho mailed in Th« World hi l9«4 The Pontiac Pratt Box 66 Poughkeeptie, N. Y. Encloaod it $....... for .. copies of THE WORLD IN 1964 of f3 each. Please reserve e copy for me: ADDRESS CITY .... STATE....... .....ZIP. Moke chock or money aider payable to The Associated Press. (Books wilt be mailed In Febnhry) A YEAR TO REMEMBER A BOOK TO TREASURE! History As We Lived It 1964 has been an historic year—one of fundamental conflicts and of human drama which struck home to you personally. Keep its memory bright forever with this unique volume — an annual, unlike any other, which brings to life the history of our own time. It's a book to cherish, to rjsfer to, and above all to READ. THE 300-PAGE, HARD BACK VOLUME CONTAINS: ★ Month by month, the stories that struck home to newspaper readers. % Hundreds of black and white news photographs, displayed so you can appreciate them. ★About 24 pages of color photographs. ★Maps, including a double spread world map in color spotting the year's news events. ★A chronology of the year's major events for easy reference. ★An almanac of basic current information on U. S. and* foreign governments, sports, business and economics, births, deaths and marriages. TWENTY-TWO ; ■ ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMB la 29,1064 I ONE Between Holidays Is 'Season of Great Letdown / V COLOR 9 20 2’ 5 27 28 29 ♦ 5 6 7 8 1 12 13 14 * .19 90 ?1 22 4 11 l: 18 1* 25 2 A FASCINATING NEW KIND OF NEWS ANNUAL AVAILABLE -EXCLUSIVELY- THROUGH The Pontiac Press.. . NOW! "My advice, sir-get It’s that time of the year again-moisture can collect in your gas line, freeze, choke off the flow of fuel to the engine and stop you cold. That’s gas line freeze, and there are two ways about it You can be towed in and thawed out. This takes time. This takes money. Or you can use American. Brand Gasolines regularly. They contain the real thing—DE-ICER—to prevent gas line freeze. No extra cost to you. Standard Oil Dealers have said it before and they say it again: "My advice, sir-get DE-ICER!” 5 6 2 13 9 20 6 5 12 1 18 19 2 25 26 2 having to work (or a living. Yes, life is at a halt during the season of the great letdown. But this too will pass. After the first of January, fired up with new resolutions, everyone will be back on the beam. Some of them will even begin to believe In'Santa Claus again. ihtaMrttMlMsiiris 1. I resolve to install seat belts in piy car. 2. I resolve to make sure my seat belt is buckled every time I drive. (Even short distances frorn home.). 3. I resolve to look for seat belts every time I ride in someone else’s car. Published to uVelivet in cooperation with The Ad- /«aV falal, vertisingCounciland the National Safety Council, THE PONTIAC PRESS from Standard By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (At - Every year haa a lost week. HUs is it — “The Season of the great letdown.” It is doubtful that an examination of American history would disclose any grei ventions were| conceived, any great poems written, any inspiring songs created between Christmas and New Yeir’s Day. It is not a week for doing great things; it is a week for hanging on — and hoping for better days. Everyone is gripped by a kind .s of spiritual numbness and physical lethargy that has turned us all into ambulant zombies, drained of all feeling. The season of good will to all has passed, leaving us exhausted from Christmas satieties and excesses and mildly resentful of Santa Claus, whom we tend to blame for our blue and listless mood, Anyone who walks along PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER OjjimMimin the streets now absent-mindedly whistling “Jingle Bells” invites black links. ALL NEED What we all seem to need is a high-powered, dotible-action, after-Christmas pep pill that will rescue us from the dumps and make tis feel ap good as we did Just d week ago. , What happened anyway to that frolic sense of anticipation, that friendly sense of the joy of sharing, that pulse-throbbing thrill in the mere human ecstasy of being alive? they are gone, leaving a barren glumness in their place., , * * * At home the small boy sits listlessly staring at his broken drum. His older sister — on holiday from school — whines drearily, “What’ll 1 do, Mama, there’s no one to play with?” And Mama herself wonders wearily how she’s going to summon the strength to get done all the things that cry for her to do. One by one the browning needles drop from the Christmas tree upon the living room rug. Sensing the decline in family cheer, the dog snarls at the cat, and the cat arches her back and hisses bade. MORE EVIDENT The deterioration In the jolly “Ho, Ho, Ho!” spirit is even more evident outside the home. The postman , totes his load of belated Christmas cards with the self-pitying air of an Atlas carrying unnecessary burdens. In the department stores the clerks, still busy taking back or exchanging presents, are islands of industriousness In the general inertia, but their smiles are forced and they go about their chodres reluctantly. „ ■ ★ l * * * Bus drivers, cabbies and truck drivers bark tiredly at each other, and all bark together at the unwary pedestrian. He’d yap at them, but why bother? Right now he doesn’t have the energy even to jump out of the way. Life at the office is just one big fat yawn. Custom forces the. boss to greet each employe with, “Have a nice Christmas?” OWN TROUBLES Translated, however, his question merely means, “Don’t tell me about it — I’ve got my own troubles.’" ■ The hired hands look dolefully at dll the unfinished chores on their desk, and wonder vpguely who thought up the idea of man Philadttlphla Boasts Bigness in 2 Fields PHILADELPHIA UD — Wills Hospital on Spring Garden Street in downtown Philadelphia has the largest eye bank in the world. Across the street is the Free Library ior the Blind, which has the largest braille library in this country. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 mmm ::Xm THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TWENTY-THREE PRESIDENT CONGRATULATED - Giuseppe Saragat (right) is congratulated by Italian Premier Aldo Moro at Chigi Palace in Rome yesterday after his election as Italy’s first Socialist president. Behind the pair is Ennio Zelioli, Lanzini, vice president of the senate. On 21st Ballot Italy Elects a Socialist ROME (AP) — Giuseppe Saragat, 66; first Socialist president in Italian history, swore faith, to the nation and the constitution today as a 101-gun salute thundered over Rome from the Jani-culum Hill, a The portly former foreign minister took his oath of office standing stiffly erect before combined session of Parliament, which elected him to a seven-year term Monday on the 21st ballot. He succeeds Christian Democrat Antonio Segni, who resigned because of illness. ★ a * The IS bitter days of balloting left Christian Democratic Premier Aldo‘Moro’s center-left government ridden by rivalry and in danger of collapse. Moro’s Christian Democratic party was badly split. Although Saragat is pro-NATO and anti-Communist, the Communists’ 253 votes were the decisive factor. They gave him a total of 646, well beyond the 462 necessary. FOUR PARTIES The four parties in Moro’s coalition — Christian Democrats, Socialists, Republicans and Saragat’s Democratic Socialists —* could have elected him, but about 150 Christian Democrats turned in blank ballots. It was a double defeat for the Christian Democrats, Italy’s largest and dominant party since World War II. They failed to elect Giovanni Leone, their official .candidate, and they 9 Indonesians Caught in Malaysia Territory SINGAPORE, UV-Nine Indo-' nesian infiltrators carrying Sten - guns, hand grenades and high explosives, were captured in the ! western swamps of Singapore Island today. Malaysia Police said they I apparently had slipped ashore ■ from a boat within the last 24 ____ . j hours. It was the third such couldn’t keep Communist votes landing in Singapore the past from being decisive. The result I two months. underlined the shaky position of the divided party. II Popolo, the Christian Democratic organ, warned today of the “grave phenomenon of internal indiscipline, about which the party must take an attentive and severe examination of conscience.” The independent newspaper II Messaggero commented that “Christian democracy must rediscover its unity, lacking which it loses its function as democracy’s stronghold and as the party of the relative majority-” , CENTER-LEFT Saragat is an exponent of center-left government, both by commitment and as a member ■of the Moro Cabinet Political experts speculated that some arrangement may emerge in which the Communists would play a strong role in a center-left regime. President Johnson cabled congratulations to Saragat, but unofficial reaction at the State Department was tinged with reservations. Viets Eye End to U.S. Deadlock US. Loan Offer Riles Malaysia KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) - Criticism of the United States welled up today over the terms of a military loan offer to aid Malaysia In its defense against Indonesia. ' 4 ¥ The government said Tuesday night it has rejected the offer because the United States wanted to charge 5 per cent interest. The loan, to run from five to seven years, was to be used for buying American planes and other military supplies. “We have to reject this kind of assistance,” Deputy Prime Minister Tun Abdul Razak told the House of Representatives. 'We thought our friends would look to us with sympathy in our time of difficulty.'” U.S. officials said 5 per cent interest was normal for shortterm credits for purchase of military equipment. IN DIFFERENT LIGHT* “Any aid to Malaysia must be given in the light of saving democracy and not on the basis of trade,” said Sen. Athi Nahap-pan of the Malayan Indian Congress, a member of the government coalition. Tan Chee Khoon, leader of the small opposition Socialist Front, called on the government to Detroit Pair Released in Death Case make a “complete reappraisal of its attempts to obtain aid from the West so that Malaysia will not become a pawn in the game of politics.” ★ * ★ A spokesman for Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman’s party, the United Malay National Organization, told the Malay Mail: “All along we were doubtful of U.S. aid. At least we know now just how sincere the Americans are toward Malaysia.” * * ★ Razak told the House his government would accept an American offer to train military personnel. Originally the United' States offered to train pilots to fly the jets it was going to sell Malaysia. DEFEND DEMOCRACY “Since we are defending not only ourselves but also democracy in this part of the world, our friends ought to look at us with more sympathy and give us more aid,” Razak declared. Britain has been shouldering the bulk of Malaysia's defense burden and is expected to continue doing so. * * * Indonesian President Sukarno" has vowed to destroy Malaysia, a federation of framer British territories in Southeast Asia. Indonesia sends raiders across the border into Malaysian Borneo, lands small groups of invaders on the Malaysian mainland, and harasses Malaypian fishing boats in the Strait of Malacca. WOUNDED GUERRILLA - Vietnamese rangers drhg a badly wounded Viet Cong guerrilla from a hiding place in a rice paddy at Dai Ngai after the rangers overran the Over Soviet Vote major Red strongpoint in the Mekong Delta recently. Other rangers carry captured weapons. PORT HURON (AP) -. Two Detroit brothers under investigation in the slaying of a farmer during an argument have been released by St. Clair County authorities for lack of evidence. * ★ ★ Two sheriff’s deputies have been assigned to continue the investigation of the shooting which resulted in the death of Ralph Flankard, a Capac area farmer, last Thursday, t * * The brothers, Lawrence Rice, 42, and Elliott, 48, were hunting rabbits at the time of the incident. Authorities quoted them as saying Flankard was shot accidentally at point blank range when he tried to wrest a shotgun from one of them. No charges were Maced against the pair. Ohio Congressman Backs Ford's Bid LORAIN, Ohio (AP) - U.S. Rep. Charles A. Mosher, R-Ohio announced Monday , his support for Congressman Gerald R. Ford Jr. .of Michigan to replace Rep. Charles A. Hal-leek, R-Indiana, as minority leader in the House. * * ★ Mosher is the first of Ohio's 18 Republican congressmen to support Ford, Grand Rapids, Mich., Republican. * * * Halleck has tended to go stale,” Mosher said, adding that “two more years under his leadership would be like treading water, it would be a static period. . Flood Victims Call Motel Home KLAMATH, Calif. (AP) — The far-famed stately redwoods located six miles north of Klamath on scenic coastal Highway 101, attract thousands of tourists in drowsy summertime. Today the motel at the famous redwood grove is an around-the-clock shelter and kitchen fin' hundreds left homeless by raging waters of the Klamath River.. * * * When the river swept the villages of Klamath and Klamath Glen into the Pacific a week ago, “The Trees” motel and restaurant was back in business. But not Commercially. Owner Jack Morris, who liad closed for the winter, isn’t asking for any money, in keeping with the spirit that has provided relief to flood-destitute families in stricken Northern California. CONSTANT EFFORT “Morris, his wife and a cook, Mre' Rose Rode, have been helping and cooking constantly forJbeae people,” reported photographer Pete Palmquist, who was airlifted by Marine helicopter into the isolated resort Palmquist said that meals were being provided daily for 200 persons, 75 of whom were bedding down at the motel. The others were in nearby private homes or vicant buildings. “These are, hardy people, though” Palmquist said by telephone. “The ablebodied men, as soon as they could, west bade to clean up and salvage the remains.” * Outside of the resort, and the sites where their homes once stood, the refugees are marooned. NO COMPLAINTS Their soutiiern exit along Highway 101 "was severed when the 1,000-foot concrete Bear Bridge collapsed into the. Kla- math’s frenzied waters. | cater to*'tbe area’s tourist-ori-Their northern exit ends 20 *nted businesses, miles away at Crescent City, a community of 3,000 also stranded because of wrecked highways. “But I didn’t hear a single complaint from these people,” Palmquist said. The Klamath River refugees mostly work in lumber mills or “Now,” Palmquist reported, “the beadies as far as eye can see are littered with bits of everything. The houses are just broken pieces — splinters. “It’s all come down the river to the -sea, and the sea has tossed it back on the beaches.” U.N. May Avoid Showdown UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. I Dec- 1, to elect the president | improve U.N. finances, crippled (AP) — Hie way was reported and admit Malawi, Malta and i by unpaid assessments, clear today for the U.N. General | Zambia to U.N. membership. I The sources reported that Assembly to clean up year-end The agreement reportedly j Quaison-Sackey got the agree-business without a showdown included a preliminary informal' ment of delegates from Jordan, over the Soviet Union’s vote. poll to resolve a race between | Mali, the Soviet Union, the Unit-Assembly President Alex I Jordan and Mali fiir a council ed States and others to an infer-Quaison-Sackey of Ghanq, was j seat. This would give the as- mal voting plan, expected to fell the assembly ! sembly four unopposed candi- SECRET BALLOTS this morning that he had j dates it could elect by acclama- . ■ J .. _ ‘ worked out an agreement with I tion. Delegations would fi fe through itpv HfWntps Thants office to drop secret Dipfif sources said the AV0ID SHOWDOWN Wtofe into a box stottog their agreement would let the assem- T1*4 would J"4 off a S®^4’ preferences among tjie candi-bly elect four new Security u s- showdown over Article 19 ! dates for the four council seats Council members and adopt a of the U N Charter. The assem- that become vacant at the end stopgap budgetary resolution by ty* af4er finishing the essential of the year - the Netherlands the general consent procedure I business Wednesday would re- to succeed Norway, Uruguay to that was used on «p*"ing day,' cess until around Jan. 11. [ succeed Brazil, Malaysia to suc- —-----—— - ’I Article 19, says any U.N. ceed Czechoslovakia and Jordan member two years behind in j or Mali to succeed Morocco, total assessments shall have no | If either Jordan or Mali had vote in the assembly- The Soviet something near the required Union is more than two years two-thirds majority, the other behind because it will not pay would withdraw. U they were assembly assessments to fi- almost even, they would discuss nance the Congo and Middle- splitting the two-year term. East peace-keeping operations, I * * * (which it contends are illegal. The president then would in-Civil Rights Backers fTbe United Stotes says it should form the assembly that four, "Ot be allowed to vote. ■- countries , were unopposed for * * * , council seats and, if he heard no Diplomatic sources said no [ objection, would declare them progress was made Monday to-! elected, ward settling that dispute. They | - The informal poll also would said Secretary General U Thant enable Indonesia to register op-might appeal to the assembly position informally to Malaysia, for voluntary contributions to I which it is pledged to crush. Negro-Police Relations Aired I Meet With Cavanagh Hold Open House In Restaurant For Stricken Families DETROIT (AP) — Representatives of 10 groups concerned with civil rights met with Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh Monday and demanded an improvement in relations between police and die Negro community. Included in the group’s recommendations were establishment of a civilian review board investigate apd rule on charges of police'brutality and the integration of special four-man police cruisers assigned to control outbreaks of violence. . it * * Also discussed was the possibility of adopting a rule that would prevent police officers from shooting to kill unless someone was in danger of bodily harm. The qommittee cited the case ist week in which an unarmed 15-year-old boy was shot and killed when he refused to stop tin his flight from a ransacked house. . \| NO NECESSITY Cavanagh told newsmen after the meeting he saw no necessity for a review board if the mayor, and the police commissioner perform their duties. In urging integration of the special police cruisers, Rev. James Wadsworth Jr., president of the Detroit branch of the NAACP, said the presence of a Negro in the cars would give the colored community'greater trust in the police department. . * * * Other groups besides the NAACP who met with Cavanagh were the Cotillion Clnb, the American Civil Liberties Union,, the Urban League, the Congress for Racial Equality, the National Lawyers Guild, the' Wolverine Bar Association, the Metropolitan Democratic League of Community Associa-i tlons, the National Student As-! sociation, and the Adult Com-1 raunity Movement for Equality, j Staff Confer $600 Million in Aid Withheld by Yanks SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Lt. Gin. Nguyen Khanh, Viet Nam’s military commander, and his general stpff flew to the seaside resort of Cap St. Jacques today for conferences apparently aimed at ending the deadlock with the United States. The United Statex has been holding back an estimated $600 million offer of expanded aid for Viet Nam since Khanh and his generals ousted thf civilian High National Council on Dec. 20 and arrested a number of political leaders. , The United States has demanded that the council, which was South Viet Nam’s provisional legislature, be reinstated in some form. It alsd wants the political prisoners released. Khanh has hinted that he is ready to do withoutfAmerican aid rather than give in to Washington’s demands. ISSUE COMMUNIQUE Chief of State Phan Khac Suu and Premier Tran Van Huong issued a communique Monday calling on Khanh ami his followers to restore the national council. Suu and Huong were not ousted in the military purge, but they said it had shaken the foundation of their government. Both were named by the High National Council. ★ ★ * The Education Ministry announced today that it would suspend students from classes for a year and bar them from taking examinations if they indulge in political activities at school or incity students to demonstrate. At least four controversial generals were retired or dismissed from the armed forces last week, it was learned today. A dispute over whether they should be thrown out was a key reason for Khanh's purge of the national council. RETIREMENT Khanh had called for mandatory retirement of all officers with 25 years or more service, with the exception of Brig. Gen. Pham Van Dong, military governor of Saigon. Civilian, leaders opposed the proposal and when the High National Council tabled it indefinitely, Khanh ordered the council purged. Maj. Gens. Tran Van Don, Mai Huu Xuan and Le Van Kiin, and Brig. Gen. Do Mau all have been retired, a source close to one of them reported. mwn warns 804 Pontiac, Michigan PERRY Phone 334-9041 Every Sunrise OPEN NEW YEAR'S |Pl;Mii®*i|iTHIS WEEK'S special! I CREAM t STICKS llmmmmmmmm! On the way to work or home from a party, enjoy our specially brewed Dawn Coffee witlt- a -deliciously different Dawn Donut. Everywhere DAY! doz. DflWJS DONUTS TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY DECEMBER 29, 1964 ARMOUR STAR ar SWIFT PRIMIUM Semi-Boneless Hams Amour Star ar Swift Premium Ickriah Atari. Luncheon Maata < u Smoked Hams Smorflis Pack *• 89* Tigar Town Sandwich Sliced . jkB. Glandala Knoekwurst, Kielbasa, Roar Salami ar Boiled Ham £ 97' Liver Sausage s7‘4$; Top Frost ^Pooled l Detained lVi-lb. Peschke Aastd. Verietiee Sliced 1 jm q Vi lk.t*AA PaachM Aaara. Variawai ••• *2'" Luncheon Meals pa piaiM Starkiit L Chunk j: 1 T— £ 1 ~25‘l ? Save up to 4c i ^ Girard Jumbo ‘ip :;3 Ripe | i I 33* 1 s|| Save up to 2c ^ pmtsmir yiWPWMmi&ig |1 Freeh, Crisp ^ Campbell's * I Goylo If Pork 'n 1 1 Saltines || Beans | | ■" 19* P 11* 1 || Save up to-6c 8 1 Save up to 4c m ww^iSMttmag£ I F.S.IW.wC.kh., | I MU'O-Cmtt I || White Oil il Bread Potato Chips 39 Save .up to lt)c coupon after the purchase of f5.ee ar mare. Coupon axplraa Thuraday, Decani-\ one ceuoen Mr customer. White Rock the Perfect Party Mixer PACKER COUPON Etna Processed Spread Choose loaf ^ Save up Loaf to 20c ia with this coupon after the purchase of fSM ar mare. Coupon axplraa Thursday, Decern-. 1*04. Limit ana coupon par customer. pt. 8-ox. Bottle Gab Soda Prictj affective thru Thursday, Dec, 31,1934. We reserve tie right to limit fWMfMes. EVERYDAY LOW LOW PRICES! 100-et. rke Premium Mustard 59* it* 3T5 39* Sf 69 79* T9* IT* Krai* miracle Whip , Aim* Jams Kelish JlSL” Hamburger Jar / Spanish Peanuts Mixed Nats navariaa Rye Chick R OiscuHs tW-as. He- Cheese TwiMees e-ax. Hu- Cherry Pi# Hb.7-ee. J Phe- 45* 25* 39* 79* 10* 2/47* 39* 29 49* IMO GIIVIIVIICKS! THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 TWENTY-FIVE aiUC* 199 toot < A Young, Tender mm ~ Fresh and Plump fryers Country Kitchen Skinless Top Job Cleaner 21-os. Bottle Oar Low Price 58* Twin Creme Iticki 11-01. Pk*. 49* Club Crackers Hokman 14-ei. Pkg. St* Praise Soap Both Sire Bar 30* >almelive Soap Rog. Siio Bar to turf Detergent Special Label Giant Pbj. 57* :abric Softener Pinal Touch 33-oi. Bottla 79* Ajax Liquid with Ammonia ' 21-os. ^Battle 59* Action Blench . 11-as. Bottla 34* Silver Dust Blue , Dotofg oat Largo 33* Hein Tomato Seep Cream Stylo !•%-: Can - 11* NOW Palmolive Soap Bath Sisa Bar 15* 2c zi Heins Baby Poods Strained 4%-es. Jar \lfi* 19c 5c Junior Baby Food Hahn , 7%-os. Jar 14* 1c Zt Butter Land-0-Lokoi 1-lb. _jCtn^ 67* 5c i i Instant Coffee Sanka Ores. Jar f* 10c Danish Margarine Borden* 1-D. Ctn, 34* 10c Flaky Biscuits Bordaut Big 10 Tuba If 4c Pino Ora Fruit • Drink 4d-ai. mmSHmm 14* 4c HI Silvercop Broad 20-os. Loot 27* mm mm 2c Instant Coffee MaiwoN Haute 4-as. Jar m Pina with Cheese '£*,! 49* Pim ^L, ’£• 59* Aunt Jamima Waffles J£ 29* Town Square , Bread Dough 3 39* Top Treat AN Plovon Ice Cream V 59* Pineapplo-Oronga, Pineapple Grapefruit, DOLE -- JUICES 5 «•" 99‘ t -SIX TUg PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 Detroit Area Experiment End Bail Bonds lor Some LANSING (fl — An experiment to eliminate bail bonds for persons accused of crimes but known to have strong community .roots will be tried in the Detroit area within th^ next two months, State Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Kavanagh said yesterday. WWW Investigators would report whether they think the accused has sufficient community ties HANSEN, METTY & HUNT INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. "SERVES YOU FIRST" INSURANCE —ALL FORMS— Phone FE 4-1668 1543 Baldwin Aw. Pontiac, Michigan ■■BURGERS # IN A BAG I FOR A BUCK ACME RESTAURANT tn Auburn Avt. ""^ChoMeftomMe^Son-1000 Beautiful Patterns of WALLPAPERS In Slock ... toady for Immediate Onlivnry. Im29‘.99eu FI 243M Wo Dollvor Complete Bapaic Service Mlmeognph and * Duplicating Machines Machines CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 to justify releasing him on Us own recognizance. The Judge would make the final determination. This would apply to persons accused of crimes other than those < involing sex. narcotics and violence. If the Detroit project is successful, a study Will be made to determine if present law can be changed to make the application uniform in the state. PANEL APPOINTED Kavanagh, a member of the executive board of the National Conference on Bail and Criminal Education of the University of Michigan Law School, announced the appointment of a bail and criminal justice committee to conduct the study. Damon Keith, Detroit attorney, will chair the committee. The Michigan project would be patterned after Manhattan and District of Columbia bail projects. Kavanagh said these two projects indicate large sums of money can be saved the taxpayers by releasing respondents on their own recognizance. STEADILY EMPLOYED “This is especially true,” he said, of those who are steadily employed and who can continue to support their families, earn sufficient money to employ counsel to represent them, and, if placed on probation, continue in their regular employment." w w w In such cases, the number of those failing to appear for trial was less than those released on^hond, he said of past experiment! elsewhere. This is not a program for the indigent defendant, Kavanagh said, but rather to help all who are unfortunately involved in crime. It' is particularly helpful, be said, to the middle income group who have payments on homes, a family and other responsibilities. LARGE FEES “Rather than paying large fees to professional bondsmen, “Kavanagh said, “these individuals would be permitted, in the discretion of the judge, to continue a productive life caring for their families and maintaining their employment.”' Key to making the experimental Detroit project work would be the use of University of Michigan law students as investigators. Kavanagh said the project was encouraged by; Detroit court and police officials. WAREHOUSE APPLIANCES ELECTRIC RANGE D Gas Range :BsHt NORGE REFRIGERATOR Economy Spooial ^ Single door 13 Cu. Ft. Lge. Fr»«z*r with Doer *139“ NORGE FAMILY SIZE WASHER O Full Him lintfilter o Front end service design $1598* Mo. TO PAY OPEN 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. GIANT DISCOUNT FURMTURE FREE PARKING GIANT LOCATED ON THE NEW WIDE TRACK DRIVE W. AS YOU ARE DRIVING SOUTH IN THE OLD LLOYD MOTOR BUILDING. LOOK FOR THE SIGN OF THE GIANT. 1910 WIDE TRACK DRIVE W, FORMERLY .232 S. SAGINAW. | DISCOUNT a-. FURNITURE3324,12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 TWENTY-SEVEN World News Roundup ' 'v n Kuwait Ruler Picks Brother as Premier DAMASCUS, Syria, (AP) % Kuwait’s ruler, Sheikh Abdullah Salem El Sabah, today reappointed his younger brother, Crown Prince Sabah Salem As Sabah, premier and asked him /to form a hew government for the oil-rich little emirate on the Persian Gulf. Sheikh Sabah and his 15-man Cabinet resigned Monday night under parliamentary pressure after only 22 days in office. The crown prince has been Kuwait’s premier since it became a parliamentary monarchy after its independence from Britain in 1982. The outgoing government was stymied by a boycott by 31 deputies of Kuwait’s 50-man National Assembly. They said the Cabinet did not adequately represent parliament. MOSCOW (AP) - Factories which turn out defective goods face heavy fines and their chiefs may go to prison in a new Soviet drive to impose quality. A factory in the Asian republic of Kazakhstan which produced defective fur coats and lugs was fined 10,038 rubles, the newspaper Kazhakstan Pravda reported. Another which made work clothes was fined 5,-814 rubles. NORTH 29 4K764 ¥J2 ♦ K 8 4 J 9 7 6 3 WEST EAST (D) 4J 10862 4 A Q 9 3 WQ885 ¥10 ♦ 4 ♦ 1053 4 Q82 . 4 A K1014 SOUTH 4 None' VAK9743 ♦ AQJ9872 4 None Both vulnerable East South West North 14 Id 14 1N.T. 24 3 4 Dblo. 3N.T. Pass 4 4 Dbls. Pam Pass If Pass Pass Pam Opening lead—4 2. one will pass in that type of competition is almost nil and if anyone is t oblame, it is Lou’s; partner who could well have afforded to bid one no-trump. My sen, James, also ever-called one diamond with the South hand, bat was far luckier than Ms the. Everyone got into that bidding at his table and Jim reached six hearts | after the bidding shown in the box. . . He ruffed the club opening and decided to play as safely as possible in trumps. Therefore,he led a low trump toward dummy at trick two and held his trump losses to one trick. The paper laid some officials of the factories were given prison terms. BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -More than 100, weapons ranging from pistols to machine guns are missing from the Thai Air Force arsenal, police said today. The weapons were believed to belong to the U.S. Army. A U S. military spokesman would say only that it has been a policy for several years to store military aid program equipment in Thai government warehouses. TOKYO (AP) - Communist China charged today that President Johnson’s administration demonstrated during 1984 that it “has adopted a policy of naked intervention by violence in Latin America.” Peking’s New China News Agency said the ouster of Brazilian President Joao Goulart last April was a good example of what happens when “one tries to break away from the U.S. economic grip, attain real independence and safeguard national interests.” a The Communists said the first outbreak against the United States occurred in Panama against U.S. occupation of the Canal Zone. “Like spring thunder, the struggle roared as a dramatic prelude to the year’s national democratic revolutionary storm that swept the hemisphere,’’ the agency said. Pair, Granddaughter Killed in Auto Crash BAY CITY (AP) - A Lake couple and their four-year-old granddaughter were killed Monday nieht when their car collided head-on with another on U.S. 10 west of Bay City. State police identified the victims rfs James Taylor, 51, and his wife, Pearl, S3, and Christine Neff, 4. MERRY'S WORLD JACOBY By OSWALD JACOBY The greatest shock of the 1964 bridge year must have been that frit by Lou Mathe of Los Angeles in the Life Master Pairs at the Toronto Nationals. Lou picked up seven diamonds and six hearts and overcalled East’s opening | club bid w i t h one diamond. The next three players passed and Lou had to play that contract. He made it with five overtricks and strangely enough did not get a bottom score. It seems quite a few pairs I wound up at seven diamonds I and because hearts break bad- j ly there is no way te make I that contract. In fact, several j players went down at six diamonds and one at six hearts, , Incidentally, the one diamond - overcall meets with my full ap- j provai. The chance that every- W|*h iAsfro/ogico/^ forecast I n Q—The bidding has boon: 'est North East Smith , _ A Dbls. Pass 14 I 2 4 Pass Pass ? | You, South, hold: 47141 WA54 Ai> i What do you do now? j A—Bid two diamonds. Yon I planned this when yon bid sne • spade the flnt time. TODAY’S QUESTION West passes. Your partner bids two hearts and East posses. What do you do now? By Jim Berry CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner “You won’t believe U, but THIS ONE doesn’t-EVEN NEED batteries!" BOARDING HOUSE NOBODY Heim V veg. OlHt PUM WILL PO SAW US SUP OUT \ THAC.ANP «lV» A REASON TONIGHT.. BUT WO ] FOR MM SftMNd INDOORS MUST CONVMCB J TILL KOONTTS PICTURE IS 'EM WB DIDN'T!y/ RETURNED. AND WE 6ET THE W \>AiNnNas hidden »m^ W SORRY TO DISTURB *>0«\ OF COURSE! Mg VMA'AM.BUT LEWS SEEN ) LOOKED PEAK-BP I AB.M6 ALLMOHTt DO /WHIN ISAW MM L 'T0U HAW ANY AS PR IN?/ LU6 M HIS CELLO AFTER SUPPERl fll BORROW NIR.KOONU'S |H ^^HERMOMETER^ ;.9StfP BHIHH By Dick Cavalli -a . . U.S.D.A. Choice—Naturally Tender English Beef Roasts 59.:. 35 MKI i 1 BHMMh Top Frost Easy to Slice BONlLESS Turkey Roasts 89: B lbs. to 5 lbs. UJ.D.A. 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Saginaw 1 i TEL-HURON CENTER j AT PADDOCK AT SANFORD 0 . • AT auburn : ■ THIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 Shake-Up Report Has WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-lirig, some in hopeful expecta-dent Johnson had a lot of offfi- tion. rials and their wives sitting on Much excitement was aroused the edge of their chairs today, by word that the President some with a sense of forebod-1 plans a shake-up in his ‘little END-OF- YEAR COUPON SALE! ! TAMPAX ■ J Sanitary Tampons I ! AO’s llmmm 93c WWd '"■USlIliUw'i •BROMO QUININE; i For Cold Reliof i ! '■[* 77™ I 1.19 | Value Coupon | ____________ USTERINE lORAL ANTISEPTIC! I I V** 88c • | Value wW Coupon | m !■ WERNET’S DENTURE ■dr—«—■ 46* ■CENTER I Mi ill 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! Cabinet”; that he will make many new appointments to such posts as undersecretary, assistant secretary and other administrators. Hie President has ordered a “talent hunt.” He wants, so far as possible, to recruit his new administrators from men. and women already in the government. So the question arose: Who will get the ax, and who will be promoted to jobs paying as high as |30,000 a year? HARD TO CRACK It is one of the hardest secrets to crack, because the President is playing his cards so close to his chest. Johnson dipped into govern- McCormack Holds Key to Plan for Changes in House Rules TAXATION WITHOUT ^ WASHINGTON UR - Speaker John W. McCormack may decide today how far the Democratic leadership will go in cooperating with a group of. liberals seeking changes in House , rules and reprisals against two I Southern Democrats. * * * I McCormack was to return to Washington today. Without his support the changes sponsored by a Democratic study group headed by Rep. Johii A. Blatnik of Minnesota would have tough sledding in the party caucus next Saturday. ★ ★ * Blatnik said in an interview his group of more than 100 members intends to push its program. But he woiild make no prediction about the outcome before conferring with McCormack. Persons close to McCormack A SIMPLE, FAST VICTOR UMNO MACHINE TO SOLVE TOW TAX WOOLENS NEW VICTOR ONLY I ADDING MACHINE 123 NirN) Siginiw St P>*FtM83l ment ranks in making two of Ms most recent appointments. Saturday be named William J. Driver to head the Veterans Administration. Monday night he selected Sheldon S. Cohen to be collector of internal revenue. , * * ★ v Driver, who had been deputy VA administrator, succeeds John S. Gleason Jr., Who resigned. Cohen, chief counsel of the IRS, succeeds acting Coni-" missioner Bertrand Harding, who had been serving since Mortimer Caplin resigned last July. Some doubt is expressed as to how sweeping the “little Cabinet” shake-up will be. All such officials submit their resignations, as a matter of formality, when a president is newly inaugurated. The President can give a man the gate by merely ac- represented him as being favorably disposed to one of the major proposals of toe Blatnik group. This would break the ______________________J grip of the Rules Committee on cepting toe resignations. “EffiL*0 2Lday8 TOP MANAGER the time it could block a House _ . . 1LI , vote on bills approved by other ! ,Bu‘ h« * «“• exam- pie, to Charles S, Murphy, undersecretary of agriculture? Murphy was a top manager of committees. POSSIBLE ‘RUNAWAY* To minimize the danger of possible “runaway’" JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED —HIGHEST PRICES PAID-We Pick Up FE 2-0200 Holiday Strike Looms as Hotel Offer Rejected DETROIT (AP) - Possibility of a strike by hotel workers in Detroit at midnight on New Year's Eve loomed today with union rejection of a wage offer. Involved are some 3,000 employes at 10 major hotels. Jr * ★ . The Detroit Hotel Association said the rejected offer was “very fair,” and it is asking for no further negotiating meetings with bargainers for the Detroit Joint Board of the Hotel and Restaurant Employes and Bartenders. The latter represents four AFL-CIO union locals. * * * The offer reportedly would have given maids a 16-cent-an-hour increase over a three-year period. Nontip workers would have received 12 cents an hour and tipped employes 7% cents. A union spokesman contended that Detroit hotel workers are paid less than hotel workers in other major U.S. cities. committees’ bringing undesirable Mils j to the floor, toe speaker would determine what measures would be taken up after a 21-day delay j in toe Rules Committee. McCormack also was represented as having no objection to several other proposals involving ' parliamentary procedure and Democratic party organization in the House, j * However, he reportedly wants to take a longer look at proposals to strip the two Southerners of their party standing and seniority, to change the member-, ship ratio oh toe Ways and Means Committee and to lower the number of signatures needed to make a discharge petition effective. The Democrats marked for a ’purge” if the Blatnik group has its way are Reps. John Bell Williams of Mississippi and Albert W. Watson of South Carolina. Both openly supported Sen. Barry Goldwater’s presidential candidacy. LESS DRASTIC Some Democrats are urging McCormack to support a less drhstic plan by forgiving Williams and Watson but putting toe party caucus on record as determined to get tough on Democrats who bolt party lines in the future. Johnson’s campaign for the presidential nomination in 1900. Or to Undersecretary of Com- A handheld photoelectric do-|Jn Us path deretoOMi by too Air vide that vibrates when It senses j Force may be developed into IB obstacles or changes of terrain I atd to thq blind. ' f \ gg raerce Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr.,sonof LBJ’sldol? . • ■ w * Or to W. Averell Harriman, long-time Democratic stalwart and specialist in foreign affairs? He is an undersecretary of state.. Insiders take into consid-1 eration talk that relations be-; tween him and Johnson are not close. Without firing anybody, the President can put the LBJI brand on much of the govern-! ment when he fills a long list of j existing vacancies. -FEDERAL JUDGESHIPS ! These include about IS federal { judgeships, nearly as many lit-1 tie Cabinet positions and seven j ambassadorships. Among the vacancies are: deputy attorney general, two undersecretaries of the Treasury, assistant secretary of state, undersecretary of the Army, 'two seats on toe Interstate Commerce Commission, one on the Federal Power Commission, one on the Tariff Commission, one on toe Civil Aeronautics Board, administrator of the General Services Administration and executive director of the Civil Rights Commission. END OF YEAR CLEARANCE! ■'a suits SPECIAL FOR NEW YEARS OFF Regular Price *10 SWEATERS Odds and Ends Pilo Lined JACKETS SHIRTS Tuxsde Mentals - Reasonable Rates! CONN’S »C CLOTHES O 71 N. Saginaw ■ PONTIAC SCRAP ■ We reward accident-free drivers. Ifs this simple:—If you’re an adult motorist.. i ll you haven't been involved . in an auto accident irf the past two years .. . Michigan Mutual Liability Will insure your car at a discount on present automobile rate*. More, we do not charge an accident against your record if the loss is under $90.00. Through our “Buyer's Choice Pay Plan," another pioneering venture, you can divide your auto insurance costs into ‘as many as ten monthly payments. SECURE THE FUTURE... INSURE WITH MICHIGAN MUTUAL 1600 NORTH WOODWARD AVENUE BIRMINGHAM PHONE 332-0153 Michigan Mmm^lNSURANCE MUTUAL BUILDING • DETROIT 20 • FOUNOED 1MC Casualty and Fire Insurance ForCar, Home and Bueinesa MCli/l REDUCE ATdndLOSE ^ UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to take and mote, affective than the powdered and liq- uid food supplement, end costs less including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician; M D No Gastritis .or irregularity Diir or Irregu with Medic-Way caps. DON'T —JUST EAT! As thousands havs done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP II OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 Ofticvi la Oat IMP and Waynp Cauntiti — Om la Mind* MNP 3-Day Yule Traffic Kills 578 in Nation CHICAGO UP — The nation’s traffic deaths over the Weekend totaled 578, second highest toll for a three-day Christmas holiday weekend. The record toll for-a three-day Christmas holiday period is 609 set in 1955. This year’s total compared with 396 fatalities reported in a three-day nonholiday weekend earlier this month. ★ , ★.. it The National Safety Council had estimated between 550 and 650 deaths during the 78-hour holiday period. For a similar period for the New Year’s holiday weekend, toe council estimated a traffic death toll of from 300 to 360. Four million, ninety - eight j thousand and twenty babies were bom in the U.S. during! 1963. CREDIT UNION HOLIDAY HOURS! Open All Day Wednesday, Dec. 30th closeb... , Saturday, Jan. 2 Season's Greetings _ ^7 Employees Federal Umqfi 939 Woodward Ave. — Pontiac 338-4001 WHAT'S LEFT SHELF CIEAIANCE SALE! SAVINGS from OFF! We’re Cleaning House of All Merchandise Left Over Here's One Example of Hundreds of Savings! LADIES’ICE SKATES 3M Nothing Held Back! Everything on Sale TRADE FAIR Corporation6 DISCOUNT CENTER-Phone 332-9137-1108 West Huron '*VV ft ' THE royTIAC PRESg. TjjgSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1064 THIRTY^OTfefV • WOLVERINE GBOWLS—Michigan’s Larry Tregoning (35) goes high into the air to snare this rebound in the first quarter of the game with Manhatten in the Holiday Festival last night at Madison Square Garden. Tregoning, Michigan's a graduate of Femdale High School, was too fast for teammate Cazzie Russell (33) and Manhattan’s Larry Lembo (23). Michigan won, 90-77. Report Players Get Incentives Teams Deny Bonuses By The Associated Press. Officials of the Buffalo Bills and Baltimore Colts denied reports Monday that their players were rewarded with incentive bonuses for victories. Both American and National Football League rules prohibit bonuses for winning a game or a title. Ralph Wilson, president of the, Bills, denied a report that be | had given each player 32,000 for beating the San Diego Chargers for the AFL title Saturday. A A A AFL Commissioner Joe Foss said Wilson called him to say it was not so. The Baltimore News-Ameri- can, in a story written by sports editor John Steadman, said owner Carroll Rosenbloom of the Colts distributed 9100,000 among his players “as a reward” for winning the NFL’s Western Division title. The Colts lost the championship playoff to the Cleveland Browns 27-0 Sunday. UNOFFICIAL MONEY This means,” Steadman wrote, “that each man collected 92,500 in unofficial money from the Colts’ organization.” General Manager Don Kellett of the Colts sqid the report was “absolutely untrue.” Rosefibloom refused to comment. “We' have an incentive pita,” said Kellett, but he denied the pita had anything to do with the title. ★ A A Steadman said the money “can be a gift or even a gratuity; for professional services dered.” He said several Coil firmed they received tbd extra compensation. The Colts will receive about 95,000 anvway for their losing effort in the championship game. WILL CHECK NFL Commissioner Pete Ho-zelle said he would check into the Baltimore report as a matter of course but said he bad not made any attempt to reach Rosenblopfn yet. stories crop up from timq/io time and usually are said Rozelle. “I will it in touch with Rosenbloom to Took into it but I wouldn’t cal! it a probe or anything like that. A it it.- “Our only rule On |t is this: No blanket bonus for incentive can be given to players in money for winning a game or a title. An individual player can have a bonus arrangement in his contract. “But-UJs customary for players to be given rings or watches at the end of a season by the chib.” PNH Mentor Is Confident; Zittel Wary Unbeaten PCH Enters Huskies' Den Seeking Sixth Triumph- is Bradley BASKETBALL scms Spartans Fall in Tournament LOS ANGELES (AP)-Michi-gan State put a scare into unbeaten Utah Monday night before dropping a 96-96 thriller in the first round of the Los Angeles Classic.. The Spartans met Southern California and Washington took on^ Arizona in the consolation bracket this afternoon. it it it Utah, now 9-0, meets Iowa and Minnesota is pitted against UCLA in the semi-finals tonight. With less than two minutes to play, and Utah holding a comfortable 97-84 lead, MSU caught fire. The Spartans scored 10 points in a row to close the margin to 97-94. The Wes’ George Fisher sank a free throw to bredk 'the Spartan scoring string. A 15-footer by Bill Curtis left MSU two points short at the buzzer. Colorado 70. Nebrilhe St Mbtouri S3. Oklahoma Stole 41 CHARLOTTE INVITATIONAL MM Rewild Davidson 70, Alabama 42 Ohio U. 73, Duquetne is HURRICANE CLASSIC MM isMM Maryland M. Tulsa St Miami, rid. M, Yale 71 MOTOR CITY OVEN other sedan Ohio State 9b, Dartmouth S? • Bradley 101, Moaaachujetti 71 Stanford OS. Wyoming 75 California M. Tulane ft . West Texas Stole W. ldaho State * AP Cage Ratings UTAH MICH. STATE OFT a, w T The lea ton with Orel place votes In Cham'rt F idler ||B 4 1-2 13 Sanders I W 17 10 44 34 Johnien 2,1-1 J 1 44 4 Curtii 17 7-7 27 games of Monday Dec. 24, and potnti on a 104-4-7-4-5-4-3-2-1 bade (Voting bated on Kreeger Rausch 4 0-1 12 Wath'n 5 4-4 14 lo-i 2 Mick I 2-4 4 gemot through Sat. Dec. at):. 1. Michigan (21) . 7-1 190 Lath Day 11 H 25 Crary 4 1-2 11 7 04 14Kupper 1 M ^1 '2. Wichife (4) 3. Mlnnetole (4) 4. UCLA . 7-0 249 7-0 167 Tetole 43 1M7 74 PT«eun 3424-24 74 4. Illinois CIS 7. Indiana (1) 7-2 160 0-0 153 Michigan Stele „ • ■ ■ S3 <3-76 Fouled out—Michigan State, Stock. Total foul.—Utah 20, Michigan Stale 14. Attendance 7,544 • •‘.Duke .......; io! st! Joseph's *!!!!!! 1-1 129 ft 09 9-0 03 U-M Whips Manhattan 5 90-77 Victory Puts Squad in Semifinals NEW YORK (AP)-No Broadway producer could have picked a better stage for the head-on clash tonight between Midiigan’s Cazzie Russell and Princeton’s Bill Bradley. The two superstars, who just may be the best two collegiate basketball players in the country, will take the boards before ar. estimated 18,000 cage fans in the basketball mecca—Madison Square Garden. A • it it Michigan made the semifinals of New York’s Holiday Festival with a 90-77 victory over Manhattan Monday night Princeton held off Syracuse 79-69. Both Rusaeii and Bradley, a Rhodes Scholar, scored 36 points. Cazzie got his on 15 field goals in 26 ties and six of seven free throws. He added 13 rebounds and five assists. Bradley hit 11 of 30 flow shots and 14 of .15 free throws. He managed eight rebounds but made no assists. FIRED AWAY The 6-foot-6 Russell helped the Wolverines to a 45-39 halftime margin with a 22-point burst. While the rest of the No. 1 ranked Michigan squad succumbed to the jitters that often beset teams unfamiliar with the musty Garden, Cazzie fired away. He scored seven points as the Wolverines came, alive to out-score Manhattan 17-2 midway through the final half. The spurt gave Michigan a commanding 84-60 lead as it rolled up its seventh victory in eight games. ■ ■ ir it it. Bradley, playing with a far inferior supporting cast, was equally impressive. He scored 12 straight Princeton points over one stretch, pulling the Tigers from a 39-42 deficit to a 51-46 lead that stood up the rest of the way. RECORD CROWDS Cincinnati blasted Temple 63-56 and St. John’s of New York held off LaSalle 78-71 in the other first rounders, which attracted a record total of 33,652 to the two doubleheaders. That sets up this line-up for Wednesday: Consolation semifinals in the afternoon: Syracuse. 1-6, vs. Manhattan, 5-2, and Temple, 5-3, vs. LaSalle, 5-2. Championship semifinals Wednesday night: Cincinnati, 7-1, Vs. St. John’s, 5-2, and Michigan, 7-1, vs. Princeton, 6-2. The finals are scheduled for Saturday, > MICHIGAN . MANHATTAN _ _ - J O-1 10 B. Ch'ta S 4-5 M 7 5-4 ION. Ch'H 4 1-2 0 1 1-2 TSdm'f 3 M II 14 4-7 24 LM 7 0-1 14 1 1-1 I Crews 1 44 2 10-1 2 Bruns 0 M 0 2 0-0 4 Flam'll 0 H O TOtaii M 11-77 77 .........4$ 45—00 .. ... 30-77 out—Michigan, Clawson, uls—Michigan 24, Manhattan 17. Detroit Penn in Title DETROIT (AP) — It will be host Detroit against defending champion Penn State tonight in the finals of the 13th amual Motor City basketball tournament. . . / Both teams survived first round ball control, tactics Monday to gain the finals. Detroit nipped Valparaiso 59-56 while, the Nittany Lions overcame a Houston rally'to edge the Cougars 5957. a; ..At it a I Valparaiso and Houston, whose stalling offensive tactics often drew catcalls for the crowd of 5,721 fans, are matched in a Consolation game for third place. The host Titans, who have averaged around 96 points-a-game for two years, were held to a 26-24 halftime lead by Val-pariso, a team from run-and-shoot Indiana country'. Substitute forward Jim Boyce and guard Lew Hyatt kept Detroit in the game. Hyatt, who led the Titans with 18 points, broke an 16-16 tie with a corner jump shot with 5:^8 to go in the first half. SHORT LEADS Detroit never trailed again. But.the Titans, who have scored more than 100 points three times this year, never got more tiian eight points in front of Valpo. The shooting ofi Rich Enyoh and Ken Rakow kept Valpo on the Titans’ heels, but taller De-tage proved too much in the end. A * * A Baskets by Steve Cook and Paul' Schulz cut the Detroit margin to 55-54 with 1:32 to play, but a layup by Boyce and a tip-in by 6-foot-8 Titan center. Dorie Murrey.,Iced it for De>; troit. Boyce had 14 points and Terry Page 13 for Detroit. Enyon led Valparaiso with 14. Houston led cold-shooting Spartan Runner Joins North 11 for Senior Bowl MOBILE, Ala, (AP) - Michigan State halfback Dick Gordon was added Monday to the North squad for the 16th annual Senior Bowl football game here Jan. 9. The .selection committee said Gordon, an All-Big Ten performer, will replace Utah end-flanker Roy Jefferson, who suffered a shoulder injury in the Liberty Bowl game.. Both Gordon; and Jefferson are Negroes. Gordon was the Big Ten’s second leading rusher with 571 yards on'81 carries against conference ’ opponents. Against all teams, he carried 123 times In* 741 yards. He will play In the East-West game at San Francisco before coming to Mobile. F*enn State most of the first half despite the absence of starter center Jim Jones and No. 1 reserve Wayne Ballard. They, were benched by coach Guy Lewis for missing a Sunday night bed chedk at a Detroit hotel. dstroit FOFTTF je 4 Mil Cook •tf-omm l 0-3 2 Enyon my ' 5 04 10 Rakow lit I 2-2 10 Smith Non 1 04 2 Curtis BOPPER - John Watson, U. of D. guard gets bopped in the head with a rebounding ball as he battles Valparaiso forward Rich Enyon for it. The Titans defeated Valparaiso in the first round of the Motor City Classic, 5956. SOCCER BOUNCE — Temple’s Ken Morgan uses his head to stop a loose basketball in the Holiday tournament at Madison Square Garden last night. Temple lost to Cincinnati, 83-56, while Michigan won over -Manhattan 90-77 in first round games. Hull Is Aiming at 100 Points MONTREAL (AP) - Bobby Hull, making his run at the 50-goal barrier, could become the first National Hockey League player ever to score 100 points. A A A Chicago’s blond bombshell is halfway there according to statistics released by the TiHL today. Hull has 29 goals and 21 assists for 50 points in Chicago's first 31 games. He is 19 games ahead of the pace he maintained when he tied the record of “ goals in a season in 1961-6. SHARES MARK Hull shares the 50 goal mark with' two former Montreal Cana- S, Maurice Richard and te Geoffrion. 1. Hull, Chicago ........ 2* 21 i 2. Miklta, Chicago ..... 12 27 9 3. Ullman, Datrolt ...... 14 17 9 4. Provojt, Montreal .... 11 i» 9 5. Eipoaito, Chicago .....<. 14 IS I 4. Bathgate, Toronto .....'. It 14 9 Howe, Detroit ............... A 17 i I. Henry, Now York ......... 14 11 9 Gilbert, Now York .......... 13 j) j Goyetto, Now York ........... 4 17 1 Pilate, Chicago ............ » 25 S Nebraska to Meet Arkansas Common Factor for Cotton Bowl QBs DALLAS (AP>—There’s A difference in their ages and experience but the quarterbacks of the Cotton Bowl game have a great deal in common when it comes to playing football. It was the third game of the season before each took the chance to show what he could do. * : A • A ’ ’ A Nebraska, under sophomore Bob Churchich, rolled to a 9-1 reedrd. Arkansas, under five-year senior Fred Marshall, never lost a game. Churchich got to show his stuff when the regular quarterback, Fred Duda, want out,with an injary. * Marshall, who had become the starting quarterback on the basis of what he did in spring training, was terrible in the first game against Oklahoma State. NEAR DISASTER He suffered a shoulder injury, to be sure, but that was pvt of the excuse to hold him out of the second game — against Tulsa. This and the fact that he had been too tight, had overshot his receivers and had gained only seven yards running with the baU. Coach-Frank Broyles wasn’t going to put him back in because of the possibility of wrecking his football career. Two bad games in a’row would have meant.the finish. A A ,A- Then Broyles tried him against Texas Christian in the third game of the season and he cable through. He ran, passed and directed Arkansas to a 296 victory. From then on there Just wasn’t any doubt about who would be the Arkansas quarterback. Marshall compiled 1,094 yards in total offense, passed for four touchdowns, scored, three and made the Ali-South-west Conference team. FOUR TOUCHDOWNS Churchich was untested the day he was called upon to take over for the Injured Duda. But that didn’t last long. He got the Cornhuskers swinging down the championship lane. He scored four touchdowns, passed for seven, ran for 152 yards and threto for 893. Pontiac Northern basketball coach Dick Hall is confident; Central’s Fred Zittel takes a more wary position on the outcome of tonight’s game between the city rivals. 'We are going to win,” flatly stated Hall, roe of the most optimistic coaches in the state. 'The attitude of the hoys (PNH) is excellent. This is the game they’ve been waiting for.” j A A A | Zittel, - on - the other hand, points to Northern’s home court advantage that “should be worth at least eigh{ points.” Ha also febls that “it is going to ba difficult to stop Roger Hayward.” And then there’s the experience factor,” commented the PCH coach. “They have more players with varsity ex-' perience than we do. This will help Northern.”. One fact remaias clev. The Chiefs are unbeaten in five games and will be favored when the team’s line up for the 8 p.m. tip-off. The junior vvsity contest starts at 6:30. PCH hasn’t really been pressed while defeating Waterford, Flint Central, Saginaw Arthur Hill, Bay City Central and Midland. EVEN RECORD Northern has a 2-2 record with the losses being close tilts Flint Southwestern and strong Highland Park. ML Clemens and Roseville have been defeated. Central’s success is built around the shooting of Carl Arnold, the rebounding of Jess Evans and Willie Adams, and the improving play of John Hooper. Evens has Mine on strong in the last two games to up his scoring average to 17 points. Arnold is averaging 29 points a game. Jim McClendon probably will bC the fifth PCH starter. Hayward, Larry Frye and Dave Sudbury ail . top the 6-4 mark for Northern, giving the Huskies strong board play. In addition to a waging 17 rebounds a game, Hayward has. been scoring at a 21.7 clip. John Bailey is averaging better than 10 points for PNH. The other starter will be Larry Cushist or Bobby Harris. A capacity crowd of over 2,009 is expected in the PNH gym. Central holds a 124 edge in the court play between the two schools. Northern’s lone victories were recorded during, the 1902-63 season. The Huskies like to , fast-' break whenever possible. Central’s offense, which has turned in 66 points a game, is a little, slower but the Chiefs Will run if the opposition leaves the door open. 'M'Ice Unit Trips Harvard BOSTON (AP) - Sophomore goalie Greg Page helped stave off a furious Harvard finish and Michigan downed the Crimson 4-2 in the opening round of the Christmas College Hockey Tournament at Boston Arena Monday night. Northeastern knocked Boston University from the ranks of the undefeated In the first game of the doubleheader, 4-3, with Larry JJone of Newmarket, Ont., getting the winning goal. Michigan built up an evly 3-0 lead on first period goals by Hank Brand and Mel Wakaba-washi and Barry MacDonald’s long screened shot in the second stanza. There's No Room Left for PNH-PCH Contest Tonight's Northern - Central basketball game is said ant Athletic Director Eldon Johnson of hast PNH repvtad that all remahdng ticket* ware said yesterday. The 419 tickets allocated te Ceafral were napped up lest weak. , THIfcTY-TWO THE PONTIAC TRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER SO, 1064 Took Snvwral Strolls B06T0N (UPI)-Ted Wil: liami led the American League in bases on balls received eight different gears. SNOWl TIRES NEW NYLONS Note Recap •LACKWAU-TUBKLIU Weather Looks Brighter for Rose Bowl Injury Dims, Bama's Orange Bowl Hopes MIAMI CAP) - Too-ranked Alabama probably has lost star quarterback Joe Namath for the Orange Bowl football game here Friday night, but Texas isn't chortling. ‘We’re more affaid of Steve Sloan,” said Texas Coach Darrell Royal, upon hearing that Namath’s fragile right knee had buckled on him again in Monday’s practice. "This Sloan is a FAULTY TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED 1956-*61 RELIABLE Transmission 756 N. Porry St. ____FE 4-0701 good passer and runner. He’S the boy who brought Alabama through.” ★ . * -Sloan also handicapped by a bad right knee, probably will have to carry the signal-calling burden for the Crimson Tide if Namath’s injury ties him to the sideline. This appeared likely today three days before the night game between the nation’s No. 1 and No.-5 ranked collage elevens — and Sloan himself is a doubtful quantity. ROUTINE PLAY Namath, called by Coach Paul Bryant “the greatest football Player I ever saw, went down in pain while executing a simple handoff during a drill Monday. “Oh, 'no, not this.” Bryant groaned, as the rugged S-foot-3 passing whiz from Beaver Fails, Pa., was carried to the dressing room. Later, Namath was on crutches. The injury threw a blanket of gloom over the camp of the Alabama team, rated i six-point favorite over Texas, which was national champion in IMS and lost only one game on its 10-game schedule this year. That was, a one point setback by Arkansas. Alabama hadn’t figured to run against Texas, the country's sixth strongest team on defense against rushing. Its principal hopes lay in Namath’s accurate arm. “Figuring to play Namath, we had discarded Sloan’s option plays in our preparations for this game,” Bryant said. “Now we have to stmt from the beginning — and we don’t have much time.” » * * , 'it'. . . Bryant announced that Slcan W, Oregon Drills Continue Ctoar'Skto Expected for Pasadcfha Battle PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — It’s getting to a point where every minute counts for Michigan and Oregon State as they continue football drills for their Rose Bowl meeting Friday. The weather took a turn for the better for the first time In a week as Michigan held a two-hour practice session Monday. W it it Oregon, meanwhile, practiced for only 46 minutes before coach Tommy Prothro called his boys in, saying he was displeased with their work. “We still don’t knees how far along our boys are in preparing for the game,” Michigan coach Bump Elliott told a meeting of the Southern California football writers Monday. 4 “I like the way it looks out there now, and hope it stays that way for the rest of the Elliott said, looking out ROSE BOWL FOES MEET — Rose Bowl Queen Dawn Baker poses with opposing coaches Bump Elliott (left) of University of Michigan and Tommy Prothro of Oregon HMi State at a sports writers’ luncheon yesterday in Pasadena. Bump and the Wolverine* will meet Tom and the Beavers New Year’s Day. Coaches Pick 8 for Honors hOCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI) -Eight coaches, who appear to advocate that winning isn’t everything but the only thing, have been nominated for the 1M4 major college coach-of-the-year award by fellow members of the American Football Coaches Association. . , On the list, which includes Paul (Bear) Bryant of Alabama and Ara Parseghian of Notre Dame, there’s a conspicuous absence of losing coaches as the nominees won an aggregate 68 games while dropping only 11. OTHERS LISTED Completing die list of nominees are Harold Lahar, who guided Colgate to its best record in 30 years (7-2); Richard Colman of unbeaten Princeton; William Tate, whose 5-5 record was his starting quarterback j * He moved Buddy French, a sen- BEHIND CLOUDS in his first season at Wake For- 66-55 in the opening round Honest is significant because the day, while Taylor overcame a Deacons had won only one game the two previous seasons; Robert Devaney of Nebraska, who who hag only kicked and held the ball on place kicks, and sophomore Wayne Trimble, a half back, into the quarterback slot. If Sloan’s knee also should fail, Alabama wffl have to function with these inexperienced signal caller* Three Games Slated Today of State 5's MARSHALL (AP>—A triple-header today will determine Wednesday’s championship finalists in the Marshall Optimist Holiday Basketball Tournament here. A couple of losers—Earlham and Albion—will open foe play at 5 p.m. Two hours later, Central Michigan plays Anderson, Ind., followed by -a game between Ferris State and Taylor, Ind. Anderson defeated Earlham But midway through the afternoon practice session foe sun went behind the douds again. . Overcast skies and a week-long rain- has bothered both team* during their first week of preparations. The forecast is for more rain in the next two days, with clear skies expected Thursday and again for the game. . it it it' Neither team has played in the rain this season. Michigan played Ohio State in bitter cold and wind on the final day of foe regular season, while the Beavers played during a brief shower hi their game at Colorado. Prothro said he wouldn’t have held practice at all Monday if the rain had continued. # *h ' While Michigan completed its first week of practice without incident, except for the usual number of bumps and bruises, OSU has-had a number of its players come down with the flu. Five players were sidelined Saturday, and two' more reported sick Sunday. Pistons'Coach Helps Team Triumph, 123-117 By The Associated Press Player-Coach Dave DeBusschere, who someday could be replaced by fired St. Louis Hawks coach Harry Gallatin, stayed In foe saddle Monday nqght by leading foe Detroit Pistons to a 123-117 victory over the New York Knicks. trimmed Los Angeles 12 in the other half of foe Beat) Town National Basketball Association doubleheader, anotho’ NBA game, Cincinnati nippeef San Francisco 113-106. it it.... it DeBifcschere hit seven straight shots'to help the FIs* tons turd a 38-33 deficit midway through foe second period into a 70-58 le^d. Teammate Terry Dischinger o edge 10-point halftime deficit I Albion 93-92. Tavlor’s Ron Bocfcen led his! Loop to Consider Move SEATTLE (UPI) — Pacific Cage Hawks Name Guerin Head Coach ST. LOUIS (AP) - Ben Ker- directed foe Comhuskers to a teammates with 36 points, and Coast League President Dewey i ^ ^ gt. Louis Hawks owner 6-1 slate and the Big Eight title; j Larry Downs, wHh 26, was foe Soriano said Monday the PCL ^ changes coaches with foe Frank Broyles of undefeated Ar-! high scorer for Albion. ' win take, under consideration at MtTW, thflt New Year’s res-kansas; and Rose Bowl bound Oregon State’s Tommy Prothro, the winningest coach in foe Pacific Coast Conference (9-2). high scorer for Albion. win laxe.unoer consideration at ume eage ^ New year’s res- Consolation finals are ached- a meeting next month foe trans- olutions are broken 'is ready to uled for 7 p.m. Wednesday, with I for of Seattle ownership from imr with a new one. tVin AltemnSAMakLt —* - ** ai S. OA I Ika DaoIam DeJ Cnv llut Y m _ foe championship playoff at 1:30 J the Boston Red Sox p.m. I Angeles Angels. Where do you find Scotch lightness and Canadian Quality in one bottle? (At a money saving price) Renter dropped foe ax Monday on Harry Gallatin and named veteran Richie Guerin as player-coach of the. National Basketball Association club. Gallatin must have known his time was short, realizing be had , been leading foe Hawks for seasons. Keraer has had nine j coaches in the 10 seasons the club has been in St. Louis, and 1 none has lasted that long. I Kemer explains it this way: i “I’m at foe point that if I | don’t finish first I’d just as soon finish fourth (last). There’s no | glory in second to me.” j Under Gallatin the Hawks finished second in the Western Division foe last two years and are the runner-up now,. 3tt games behind Los Angeles. took up the cudgel to foe third period with a 10-point spurt. Hie Pistons led by as much as 28 points before New York rallied to foe waning minutes. DeBusschere and Dischtoger led Detroit with 23 points each. Bob Boozer of the Knicks led all scorers with 29 markers. Gallatin, NBA Coach of the Year in 1962-63, was fired by Hawks’ owner Ben Kemer Monday. He was replaced by Hawk guard Richie Guerin. HIGH ON LIST Gallatin would be “high on the list” of possible successors to DeBusschere if the Moot-6 forward is replaced, said Don Wattrick, Pistons’ executive manager., But Wattrick said DeBusschere Would remain coach “for a while.” When DeBusschere replaced Charley Wolf as Detroit coach last month, Wattrick indicated the appointment would be an interim affair. Under DeBusschere, the Pistons have won 11 and tost 14. They are now fourth to the Western Division with a 14-23 record. 74 § I-J M Total, 44 2M4 7 Ate' land 0 1 &r M. . 17 Totals 4i asm 11 »* J4 33-133 TODAY'S NBA •V Tkt Associated Press / EASTERN DIVISION New York . jo U .271 \ WESTERN DIVISION i Anpeles ... 21 14 400 Louis 17 14 31* Detroit 123. Now York 117 - Boston 133, U0 ANMM III -Ctaclnnoll 113, Son Francteco I0S Today's Homo Son Francisco at St. Louis Son Feandico v Memo Los Ansoloo at Philadelphia Boston at Baltimore America’s Lightest Whiskey (It’s a smooth American Blend) *436 *2.75 SUNOCO WHISKEY. M PROOF, *0% STKAIGHT WHISKEY—COft GRAIN HEUTRAl SPIRITS. G000CPNAM I W0PTS LTD., PtOttA, ILL ■■El 1 RBN sSM 1 Space is ng problem | with the New J _L2|3| ii|iiilil JiJlIililllililitllllifilil |H Rheemglas HIGHBOY Winter Air Conditioners Enjoy Folly Automatic, Whisper* ^B -.-*•** A 1 Quiet Warmth with on* of these ^■9 Space-saving New Units—Many Models to Choeea From—One For Every Home. Khernngjae lining of the Combustion Chamber Inside and eat, effectively resists rust Brffllinsilir ■n<* currosloa. CASE’S HARDWARE 235 MAM ST. - ROCHESTEt, MKN. - 01 14111 Mercer Heating & Cooling Co. 1»7 W. MAPLE ID. - WALLED LAKE, MKN. - *24-1569 Walled Lake Pagers Lose in Tourney Walled Lake fefi to a fired-up Bedford Union quintet ind Southfield emerged as foe team to beat in foe opening round yesterday of foe Northwest Invitational basketball tournament: it it it Redford Union clipped Wailed Lake, 6652, and Southfield routed Ypgilanti, 96-73. In foe other Northwest games, Farmington stayed alive with a 74-89 decision over Wayne Memorial and Livonia Bentley turned back Berkley, (353. -Four players hit to doable figures for foe Redford Union ■quad. Mike McCrea led the way with II poiats, followed by Oria Newton (It), Leland Bjerke (16) and Allaa Maibach (11). Randy Alderson collected 13 for Walled Lake. Rick Hughes added 11 and Terry Lehman collected 10. Ray Schlaff paced the South-. field attack with 30 points. Helping Sdilaff were teammates Rick Smigielskl (19) and Rick Qoleman (1C). CRANBROOK FALLS In a game at Riverview, Cran- . brook fell to Schafer, 7350, in the opening round: Larry Mazo-la tossed in 49 points for the winners. it it h At River Rough, Detroit Thurston handed Northville a 6353 setback. John Page led the winners with It points. Jerry Inisland collected 15 for North-ville. * W. LAKE (HI) R. UNION (41) FOFTTP P#FTTP Grant J (V0 4 Bltrkt 7 1-5 14 A Karan 4 J-4 13 AAKbaW A S MU WMMk 2 1-4 I McCrea j 14 II Godfrey I 51 I Newton 4 44 14 Hugh*, 4 >7 11 Kendrick 11-5 3 Streeter 2 1-2 I Mech 4 1-4 1 Clark 0 2-2 2 TuKIt 17 14-31 S3 TWIN 31 NV37 41 SCORE BY OUAJITERS ' Waited Like .......... *Mt 14-52 Radford Union ........ W IS 17 17-44 Six Schools Gain NCAA Membership KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Three active and three allied members have joined the National Collegiate Athletic Association ho the NCAA’s membership continues to spiral upwards, Executive Director Welter Byers announced today. ★ . ★ ★ New active members are Jacksonville University of Jack son ville, Fla.; Pan American College of Edinburg, Tex.; and Sonoma State College of Rohn-er Park, Calif. Ml became immediately eligible f o r N C A A championship events. ★ ★ New allied members are the Indiana Collegiate Conference, the California Intercollegiate Baseball Association and The State Universities of New York Athletic Conference. NHL Standings WIT Nil. OP 0A »ntr«el ... 14 1 f » 74 74 8»,1,Uf§ 8 Toronto .... 12 11 | 32 ft If N4te York .. 10 14 7 27 74 77 ~oston .../.. 7 24 4 14 70 T47 Monday's Ratult* No S*"|4* scheduled Today'* Same , Chicago it Now York / Wednesday's Ban* J Montreal at Toronto J m H1 r i mgr Til® PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 THIRTY-TH««Bl For' the Hight of Travel Values. Chevrolet^ Pontiacs • Buicks At The Only Showroom la Oakland County Where You Cut See AH Three. HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC/ IN 8. WaaMagtoa 8t. Oxford ICE TICKLE Stores (con hoot} . $5.95 up Tip-Ups........ 99c Decoys.........$1.50 Spuds..........$4.95 Fin-Bore Auger.. $19.95 Ice Sled......$9.95 Rods..........$1.25 Spears........$4.95 S. C. ROGERS SPORTING GOODS 24 C. lewrtnee FE 2-23SS Blanton Collier revealed the Cleveland Browns’ master plan for victory Monday in the wake of his smashing 274) victory over the Baltimore Colts in Sunday’s National Football League championship. Collier, a modest man who in-lists on shunning the role of mastermind and passes on the credit to the players and assistant coaches, pulled a game plan out of Ms coat pocket at an interview in his stadium office. Win Over Co Its Called for Strptegy Browns Coach Reveals Master Plan CLEVELAND tAP) ■ revealed U tion waa in what area. We found be could get yardage up the middle la the first half.” “We had decided to run Ernie Green at the start and see what they were going to do about covering Jim Brown. It didn’t take long for me to decide that they weren’t going to stop Jim. You could see this was going to be another one of his real good days. “Once you knew Jim could run on them, the next quex- However, the score was 0-0 X half time so a change in strategy obviously was dictated. “WeWept to the double wing, just as mhy. did against us,” said Collier, “our version is a little different than tlieir version. We put Green outside and play Paul Warfield in tight on the left. John Brewer is in tight on the right and Gary Collins is the flanker. “If the linebacker tiys to hold CoUlns at the line of scrimmage, be can’t get out to stop Brown going wide. If the linebacker moves outside to stop Brown, that leaves Collins with a one-on-one situation against their safety.” PLAN WORKED The plan worked. Brown ran for U4 yards an 27 carries, including a 44-yard gallop. Collins caught three touchdown passes from Frank Ryan, setting a title game record for most scoring passes caught. At the end of the wintry afternoon on the windswept lake front, Collins had caught five passes for 130 yards. Arkansas Golfer Takes '64 Rookie Pro Honor NORWALK, Conn. (UPI) -Golf Digett .magazine has selected Dick Sues of Springdale, Alt., '1964’s pro golf rookie of the year. • V Sikes won $23,353.09 while competing in less than half of, the official PGA tourneys in order to complete Ms studies at the University of Arkansas. Collier said his defensive platoon had gone back to fundamentals for the first of their two Weeks of preparation for the game, Stressing position play. "There was no master minding,” be said. “We all worked together on defense. Howard Brinker, Ed Ulinski and Nick Skorich assistant coaches specializing in defense and we were very fortunate. “We tried to cover Johnny Unitas’ primary receiver and farce him to look for a second receiver, giving our line a chance to get te him. If yea leave his first receiver open, Johnny will destroy yon. “We knew he liked to throw to Raymond Berry. He did complete three passes to him. & set up a double coverage on Berty. I told Walter Beach, our right edrner man, to get all over Berry, play Mm like an all-court press in basketball, get in Ms face and don’t worry about any zone. “That permits our deep man, Larry Beni, to play loose to protect against a long pattern. Fortunately they went to the short pattern with Berry moat of the Pettit Set to Return to St. Louis Lineup ST. LOUIS (UPI) - The St. Louis Hawks were heartened today by the announcement Bob Pettit would return to the lineup Wednesday night against the San Francisco Warriors. Pettit, one of'the top‘scorers in the National Basketball Association, had been sidelined with a back injury since Dec. 10. Special AT 6 Cyl. V-8's STANDARD ENGINE REBUILDERS | . .$95°* ..huH This includes . . . Rings, Rod Baar-ings, Main Booring, Grind Valvos, Fit Pins, Doglaxo Cylinder Walls, Gaskets, Oil and Labor! > --------------ALSO..... FACTORY REBUILT ENGINES 695 AUBURN RB. S3 Tennis Title for Peaches • Air RMm • Rentalx-Charten • "T" Hongor. e Inside Storage (.Mina • Sale* Service BARBERS Pontiac Airport SI4-M16 MIAMI BEACH (AP)-Peach-es Bartkowitz, tennis pride of Hamtramck, Mich., won the Orange Bowl girls junior singles championship and shared the doubles title with Sue Layden of the same* city Monday. Peaches defeated another Hamtramck girl, Susan Dykes, 6-1, 6-4 for the singles title. Christine (Plums) Bartkowitz, sister of Peaches, won the girls 10-and-under event, 6-0,6-0, over Chris Evert of Fort Lauderdale. Spartan on North Unit j HONOLULU (AP) — Michigan State halfback. Lou Bobich , was signed by the North squad Monday for the 19th Hula Bowl I football game Jan. 8. ALLSTATE BATTERIES 36-Mo. Battery, No. 32 1^99 •SS.'62 Chev.j ’S6-’63 Plym., U«.lge, DeSoto.......... XVJ.«'h. 36-Mo. Guarantee, No. 90 1Q99 -Sfr*'63 Old.; ’5S-’63 Buick-12-volt System.. X 36-Mo., No. 22 and No. 52 1 f.99 *60-’63 Falcon, Comet; NO. 22 -moat Corvain .. XKJwefc- No. 36 Guaranteed 36-Mos. ] ^99 Kit.; ’62 Mercury; ’60-’64 Faleon, Fairlane.. X 4 «?■*• No. 18 Guaranteed 48 Mos. 9A99 »56-’63Forda,Mercury.;’S8.’60 Ed.de ... Vf<•»<•■>• Auto Accettorie*, Perry St. Ba*ement Battery Cables to Start Cara Safely Now at 96* Sealed Beam'Dual Headlight Bulba For 12-volt ear*. Mu rubber innulated aluminum cable.. • Heavy page .tee! clamp.- ' For 4-hea m • mi m c itfti ft B *71*1 M c 1714, Eggs weak; wholesale buying prices it to 1 tower; It per cant or better (Trade A white* 30; mixed SOl medium; Mi standard* Mi dirties unquoted; check* 23V*. CHICAGO (API — (USDA) — Llvt i buying pries* un H 23-24) tpaclal fat ■LJ Rock fryers 14-l»fti heavy ham lmw. ito buy-A 57V*; changed; roastar* Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) - (USDA) -Cattle dM Small supply steers vary atowj ‘— early sales; standard lO tow C atoara steady with Monday** full lata decline; cow* active, fully sk •mall tot tow cholc* steers BJtl good steer* 21.23; itgndwd b tow 14.90-20.50; utility caw* 13.50-14.50 Hogs 300. Barrow* and gilt* He t________ sows steady, titMd l A 2 190-230 B barrow* and I 1 — Trading Is Dull Stock Mart Continues to Slip NEW YORK (AP) - Stock market weakness increased in dull trading. Fractional losses shown in the morning widened to declines of a point or more among key stocks. Wall Street seemed to be giving up hope for a traditional year-aid rally and traders were reverting to last-gasp profit taking. Steels, coppers, tobaccos, drugs, electrical equipments, oils and electronics were among die losers'. MORE THAN POINT Losses of more than a point were taken by Anaconda, Ken-necott and Sears, Roebuck. U.S. Smelting dropped 2 points. Losses of about a point were shown by IBM, Goodyear, Eastman Kodak and Comsat. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon .was offj.0 at 321.2 with industrials off 2.2, rails off .2 and utilities off .1. Ford held steady but Chrysler erased a small early gain and eased. General Motors was fractionally lower. Prices were mixed in moderate trading on the American Stock Exchange: Corporate and U.S. Government bonds continued to drift aimlessly today. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)—Following at selected (lock transaction* w Stock Exchimg* with not —A— r AbbottLb JO A|C CM .70 ACFInd 2.50a - (hds.) High Law Lad Chi. 2 134* 139* 1 12 4444' -44V* 4 5 1544 154* 1 I 534* 53V* 53V* .. g Cp .20e 15 1044 gh Lud 2 10 41 _ _*PW 1.04 I 2* AllledCh 1.80 25 51 Alttod Stn 3 10 744* AlllaChoi .50 RUM GamSk 1.20b GAccept 1.10 Can Cig 1.M GenMIlla 1.20 GenPrec 1.20 GPubSvc Jl* G PubUt 1.34 GanTatAEI 1 GanTIre .50 , x-|p*eHlc 1b M 594* 59V* 59'/! - V* 7 434* §14 !3'/4 -IV* II 434* 43 43V* + ,\4 7 144* 1444 144* - 44 0 514* 5114 5114 + V* 49 424* ,424* 424* — 4k, W* 444* + 14 iUSyr^ iff 1_ .... 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' I Rift Aerolet JO AmPatrofA .1 ArkLaGaa 1J A samara Atld OIIAG Atlas Cn wt Barnes Eng MfpSTjOr Brown Co .10 Campb Chib ; \ Can So Pat | Cdn Javolln Cinerama Con Mm MO emftjLfMh ■ Folmt Pat .15* ‘ Fly TJgar Gen Davel Gen Plywd Giant Y« ' Goldflald Gt Bai Pet ' Gulf Am Ld * Hycon Mfg ■ Isram Corp Kaiser Ind ; ; Cottar JIB 1 ■ McCrary wt hdt.) High Law Last Chg. 12 2414 24ft SM . 9 5ft 5ft 5ft + ft 3 Hft 41ft 41ft 4- ft 14 11-14 ft 11-14 +1-14 ■34 7 4ft 4ft — ft 1 15-14 ft ft 19 M4t 24 aft + ft A 444 4ft 444 — V* 19 7 7-14 7 7-14 7 7-14-1-14 Camp Tl/ Can Dry \y CdnPae 1.50a CaroR Lt 1.14 Carrier MO . . CariarPd JO i lift 4- ! 24* V-51*4- r f* + ft : i& RIC Group 3-2* M Scurry RObl 1 1 Sbd W Air 19 , Signal OIIA la 14 1 . UnCc4*"-t ’.1 WebofcKnapi lift aift m 44* I 511 514 Treasury Position TREASURY POSITION WASHINGTON (AP)-Th* cash posit* of th* Treasury compared' With corr Dac. 33, 14 **I*'^“mB4MU7»41 0 7JM.049J35. Deposits Fiscal Year July 1—_____. 83JM.HM0.14 5.11MS2J44.71 Withdrawals Fkacal Year— 4M43J8L145J4 40.408,430,313.79 X—ratal Debt- .. 318,441,183,212.47 310844,141,447J1 Stocks of Local Intorost Figures attar .decimal points are eighths sarity rogroaant actual transactions bui • are Iwtandad as * guide 8a the approx) mat* trading rang* at |h* rocurRto*. Enqlnaerlhb........ * Utilities CM** A . Diamond Crystal ........... Ethyl Coro. ...... Mohawk Rubber Co. Michigan Spamto** Ttoba I Pioneer Finance ........... jaWa Prtatoig ............. WyandotSa Chemical MUTUAL FUND* i i 34.2 M.1 .. 13 J 144 . 99J 105.1 .ki: .Si .5:1 ...13 7J . 11.0 12.1 .. U4 jZi 13 J 14.2 42.4 44J 34.0 S3 ............. 0.11 0J3 .....nil mm adc ........ 11.04 te.7* noysiona income K-l . ..... 877 Madam Orowth K-2 ...... pi Maas. 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Robert Grosvenor, director of the Michigan State Employee Union, reported the finds in a building used as a recreation library by the patients. Grosvenor said the discoveries uphold union charges that it is unsafe for female attendants to work alone at night in buildings in the area. The union has protested unsafe working conditions and has been picketing the hospital for more than a week. Civil service investigators are visiting the hospital to check the union charges. CHECK ORDERED The check was ordered by state Civil Service Director Franklin Dewald for a report to the commission at a meeting at Lansing Jan. 4-5. Meanwhile, an interim legislative committee which has been investigating charges of mismanagement and patient abuse at Ionia State Hospital was due to make a final report today. Rep. David Upton, R-St. Joseph, committee chairman, previously said he could “see nothing that looks like a major scandal” at the hospital. NO SUBSTANTIATION We have so far not been able to substantiate the various charges,” Upton said earlier. Rep. Joseph Kowalski, D-De-troit, speaker-elect of the House of Representatives, had said he did not consider the investigation complete and that it would be continued next year., trlboM 1J70 Unit Cp .354 Un Fruit .40p UGatCg^LTO ___orox J0o USGypsm 3a yiiMMt USPlywd 1.20 US Rub 2.N us mm2 US Stool t unit mm UnMatch .40 24 40ft 50ft 40 4 44ft Mft 44ft — 1 3 Oft Jft A 46 34ft M 15 £. 17ft — 1 341* + 1 25ft 25ft VanadCp .25* vartoPAt VaEIPw 1.12 VaEIPw * “ 10 107 105ft 104 -1ft 151 5114 51ft Uft — ! 4to Til 4ft-22 13ft lift !*» — 1 3814 Mft Mft -10 Sift 51 51 — —V— 1 32ft 32ft 33ft — 9 14ft 14 14ft - ft 37 lift Uft 12ft-ft —w— 11 Mft 38ft 38ft + WUnTol l.f "igEI 1J * (pool 2 l.2l Wilion Co 2 WtnnOIx.'• Woolworth Worthing 1. Xerox Cp .M MM 12 Mft 29ft Mft — i 1 MV* 54ft Mft - ft ) 300*. Mft 10ft I Mft Mft Mft 43ft 431* 41ft - 1 8 unofficial. | t*rni, ★ ' ★ ★ All of these uncertainties are why economists are offering a wide range ofc predictions on just how high the 1965 economy will go. Some think it will rise only ~ moderately above this year’s 6623 billion total of national production of goods and services. Some say it (kill go to only $650 Wilion. Moot put it at 6655 billion to 6660 billion. It would have to go above 6665 billion to equal the growth rate of 1964 over 1963. Buccessful*lri\/etffrt§i wmmm By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I understand that owning good stocks is a hedge against inflation. Will yen please explain to me what happens to the stock owner in a depression? I know the valne of stocks will below-ered but what of the dividends? I am not expecting a real depression, bat would like this matter cleared up, nevertheless.” B. M. A) Because of the strong powers given to the Federal Reserve Board, as well as the passage of the Employment Act of 1946, I agree with you that a depression similar to the early 30’s is highly improbable. We best performers on the Big Board, and in your position this at present would be my choice. Roger Spear’s new ( Guide to Successful Investing is now ready. For your copy, clip this notice and send $1.61 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of this newspaper, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York City, N.Y. 16617. (COPYRIGHT 1964) now in their predictions for 1965 win have, however, business re-as a whole. 1 cessions from time to time and ! j during these periods, stocks will | Any letdown after these spe- for the most part — but hot Move to Dismiss Suit Against GM Frederic-G. Donner, chairman of Genefal Motors, made the following comment today following the granting in Federal District Court in Chicago of a government motion to dismiss . a criminal indictment charging GM with monopolistic practices in the production and sale of diesel electric locomotives. “We are gratified that the Federal District Court has granted a government motion for dismissal of the grand jury indictment against General Motors. * * * As I stated on April 12,1961, when the government action was filed, we did not believe that General Motors was guilty of the monopolistic practices charged in the indictment. "General Motors is proud to stand on its record in the development, production and sale of diesel electric locomotives. This record clearly demonstrates a major contribution to the railroad industry.”. '64 Revenues Up at Edison Detroit Edison’s gross revenues were 6341,175,761 for the 12 months that ended Nov. 30, 1964. Gross revenues for the corresponding period of 1962-63 were $316,443,909, according to a statement released by the company. Sr, ★ ★ Net earnings of the company for the 12 months through Nov. 30, 1964, were $51,901,107 or $1-80 per share on the 29,807,779 shares outstanding at the end of the period. Fpr the previous 12 months, which ended Nov. 30, 1963, net earnings were $46,171,042, or $1.60 per share on 28,706,107 shares Outstanding at the end of that period. ^ DOW-JON15 NOON AVBRAGIS .. 543.24-3.77 ... 2074-0.11 10.55-0.44 .. 10.44—1.21 ir grad*-n * W*S.n cial stimulants are withdrawn might make bbth businessmen and consumers nervous. If the fast growth rate of the economy in 1964 now put at around 7 per cent — slows down perceptibly, in late spring, business could pull in its horns, consumers might worry and postpone some purchases. There are other hazards that economists nee ahead, without being sura thaj real cures are in sight. * * a The laborv/orce will grow rapidly next year. Much of the growth will be from youths untrained for the jobs mechanized industry offers. The great hopes now being expressed, that the economy will grow fast enough to absorb all the newcomers seeking jobs, may be dashed. And the public is notorious for changing quickly from too much confidence to too much caution. NOT A PROBLEM Inflation isn't a problem now and seems unlikely to be in the months just ahead. But beyond that a number of economists are 2 County Men on AAA Board Two Birmingham area resi- in every instance — sell off. The ordinary recession -may ; dents have been elected to the cause some dividend cutting in Automobile Oub of Michigan's weaker holdings; but I do not board of directors, Club Presi- believe it will cause strong companies to reduce their payouts. Q) ‘Is quate savings, insurance, about 625,696 invested in common ftockf. I have $1,666 which I would like to invest in a growth stock in the field of communications. Which would yon recommend? American Telephone or General Telephone?'' S. L. A) American Telephone is the giant of communications and is so powerful in science that it is called the mother of electronics. General Telephone is much smaller, although it is the largest independent company. It has been building up a strong growth rate, due partly to good results of the Sylvania division-I think it is usually wisest to let the market tell its own story. American Telephone has be* haved badly since a run+ip following the stock split. General far from reassured. They cite I Telephone has been one of the Luncheon to Honor Edison Employe Leo Lysinger, 1975 Wellington, West Bloomfield Township, of the Detroit Edison Co.’s overhead lines d e • partment is being honored this LYSINGER the company. Lysinger joined the overhead lines department of the company in December 1924. He is a member of Local 17 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, and has no plans for retirement in the near future. News in Brief Sabina Jantz, 1297 Toll, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that a $50 personal check was stolen in a break-in at her bouse. Vandals broke the windows in 20 trucks at Boice B u 11 d e r s’ Supply at 545 S. Telegraph. Damage is estimated at $480. UC ConCo RC ConCo .. 4 Dhnoondt Doclorod - Pp- 8th. of Pay-Rato btoP Recant akta INCREAIBD .. W] .. 1-U 1-21 STOCK , .. • i-ii mi REGULAR Avon Man Is Honored A Presidential Citation in special -recognition of outstanding contribution to greater economy and Imnrove- ....... ment in govern-jj m e n t opera-] tions has been awarded to; John H. Patterson, 2748 Tien- i ken, Avon, Township. Patterson director Qfiality Assur- PATTERSON ance Division, Detroit Procurement District, U.S. Army. The citation was awarded as a result of Patterson’s continued efforts to provide the Army with efficient management of the quality control activities. Ford Dealer Joins Rent-a-Car System John McAuliffe Ford, Inc., 630 S. Oakland, yesterday became one of the first area Ford dealers to join the Ford Rent-A-Car system, which is designed to provide daily or weekly rental bf automobiles for neighborhood emergency or casual transportation. The system provides for the rental of Falcons, Fair lanes, Mustangs, Fords, Thunderbjrds, recreational unite, station wagons and other vehicles. Ed Lacey will serve as rent-a-car manager for the dealership. dent Williama G. Walters an-( nounced today. They we Ed-1 ward A. Wami-I ca of 1290 N.l Glenhurst, Bir-1 mingham, and I Richard C. Vanl Dusen of 322061 Bingham RoadT Bingham* Farms. WARNICA They replace the late J. Lee Barrett and Roy M. Hood, former Blr-I mingham resident, who recently retired to Florida. Hood was given the title, “di- __J rector emeri- VAN DUSEN tus.” Wamica is retired senior vice president of Standard Accident Insurance Co. and a current director of Standard Federal Savings and Loan Association of Detroit. . ★ ★ He is a first vice president of Crittenton General Hospital, planning its new unit at Rochester, and a member of Detroit Athletic Club and Detroit Coin-mandery No. 1, Knights Tern-plar. YOUNGEST DIRECTOR Van Dusen, 39, is a partner in the Detroit law firm of Dickinson, Wright, McKean and Cud-lip. He is youngest director elected to the board in modern history. Van Dusen served two terms in Michigan’s House of Repre-. sentatives (1954-6) and during' 1963 was Gov. Romney’S legal adviser. Business Notes Lawrence H. McEvers, 3549 Culbertson, Avon Township, has been appointed assistant d i s -trict manager of the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. McEvers has been with the company since early 1961 and has qualified each year for the company’s honor chib. The architectural firm of Tar-; apata - MacMahon Associates, ‘ 1191 W. Square Lake, Troy, has -been notified that a new senior high school in Alpena, designed by the firm, has been selected by the American Association of School Administrators for a special citation for design excellence. The project wai selected by a jury compdsed of school administrators and architects as one of six top projects out of more than 300 entries. , * V j THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1064 THIRTY-^IVE, Washington News Briefs See? 3 in Race for Dem Post WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen., Monroney said in an interview A. S. Mike Monroney of OUaho- Monday the contest is a dose ma believes the race for the;one amon8 three senators — assistant Senate Democratic leadership will end with his own selection as a compromise. John 0. Pastore of Rhode Island, Russell B. Long 6f Louisiana, and Monroney. : ♦, ★ , it The second spot is being vacated by Vice President-elect Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota. A Democratic caucus — voting by secret ballot, according to Majority Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana — will choose Humphrey’s successor Jan. 4. Long has claimed at least 30 votes. Monrohtsy believes Long will fall significantly short of that total. He is offering hirm-elf as a compromise choice between the Southern conservative bloc, from which Long1 draws the bulk of his support, and the eastern liberal senators backing Pastore. WASHINGTON (AP) - The CALL WOW Typing, filing, calculating, statistical work — she can do it all. MANPOWER' THI mtt SCST IN TEMPORARY HSU 14 S. CASS 332-8386 Important News ...for Pontiac Investors! Watling, Lerchen ft Co. now brings you the Dow-Jones Closing Averages, plus closing prices on sixty-six leading stocks, daily, at 5:55 P.M., over Radio Station WPON, Pontiac.. .144000 your ' dial. ■ *4* For the latest, up-to-the minute news from Well Street,, tune in today and everyday. Watling, Lerchen & Co. Member! New York Slock Exchange 2 North Saginaw St Pontiac, Michigan FE 2-9274 Israelis Claim Syrian Attack Shots Are Exchanged While Tractors Plow TIBERIAS, Israel (UPD—Syrian border troops opened fire today on Israeli tractors sowing fields on the eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee, an Israeli military spokesman said. Armored tractors carried on the work despite the Syrian'fir-ing, the spokesman said. He said U.N. truce observers had authorized the Israelis to sow theland, which was ploughed under Syrian fire in October. “Our forces returned the fire," the spokesman said. The gunfijht with the Syrians followed five clashes yesterday along the Israeli-Jordanian border. * ft .* The tractors started work at 7:20 a.m. and had sowed one field iwhen the' Syrians opened up at 9 a.m. with heavy machine guns, 14.5mm and 37mm guns, the spokesman said. TWO POSITIONS The fire came from positions at Amrad Azeiddin and Upper Tewfic, he said. The fields are east of the settlement of On. The spokesman said the Israelis gave the U.N. truce organization full data before sowing >egan. He said the organization posted observers on a nearby, height to oversee the sowing. State Department says investigation is continuing into the reported illegal export of two American fighter planes to Haiti last September. A department spokesman denied Monday published reports that it had persuaded authorities to drop the inquiry in order to avoid unveiling techniques of the Central Intelligence Agency, ft '.ft The New York Times and New York Herald Tribune accounts also said prosecution of a Haitian consular official had been dropped to avoid reprisals against U.S. Embassy representatives in Haiti. ft ft ft’ I “We have not been asked by CIA to ask dropping ot prosecution" a State Department spokesman said. If events should warrant prosecution, he added, “there would be no objection on our part to normal judicial procedure being followed." WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI has asked police departments to spell out the precise nature of morals offenses against government employes when submitting fingerprint cards to the FBI’s central print files. ■ ** ; .ft/ ft ■ A bureau spokesman said Monday the FSquest merely reiterates a policy of long standing and has nothing to do with the recent Walter Jenkins case. Jenkins resigned as an assistant to President Johnson after two arrests on morals charges were made public. His resignation was asked by the President. Jlth Victim of Gangs in Boston Area ALL THIS FOR MET — Israel Kalhis, a 14-year-old first-year student at Ner Israel Rabbinical College, Baltimore, Md., is bewildered after receiving a $10,000 treasury note in the mall from a Western Maryland At PMM.X bank, Kailua had written the bank asking about an account. His reply contained a $10,000 note. A bank employe put the note in. the wrong envelope, it seems. Husband, Wife Dead FOR STOCKS, BONDS AND MUTUAL FUNDS CALL FE 24117 “Pontiac'i Oldnt 1 nr fitment Firm" 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG- Our concern for floral offerings Is proven by the fact we take a colored picture of each arrangement. This becomes 9 permahdnt record for the family. This is only one of our ' many services that are unusual. ■■■// Thoughtful Service BOSTON (AP) - The new 'count in Boston: 11 men slain in unsolved gangland style : ders in the greater Boston area since March. ♦ ft ft ' The latest was George E. Ash, 43, stabbed more than 50 times and shot in the head before his body was found in a parked car early, yesterday. Ash had worked as a bartender in Boston’s Brighton section after his release eight months ago from Rhode Is* land State Prison. He had served four years after conviction for his part in the I Providence slaying of Albert G. (Porky) Freeland, ft , ft Police found the body after j an anonymous telephone caller I said, “Check the sedan parked ; across the street from St. Philips Church on Harrison Avenue and you’ll find something there.”:. APPARENTLY SHOT Dr. Richard E. Ford, Tnedi-. cal examiner, said Ash was apparently shot after a frenzied stabbing attack. * | Police said Ash had last been seen Christmas night I when he took presents to his | two nieces in Marshfield. It was then he borrowed the car — owned by his sister-in-law, Mrs. Mary Ash. A Boston police official said a feud between rival gang factions may account for the 11 killings and a half dozen attempted murders recently, ft ft He said, “The men we are looking for are tough, fearless hoodlums — tailgaters who rob from open trucks, and holdup men — not syndicate racketeers and bookmakers." * Ash’s body was identified by his brother, William, a Boston policeman assigned to city pri- Outstanding«in Pontiac, for Service, Facilities 6 Willioms Street FE 2-5841 Double Death Baffles Policej LONDON Ufl — Shortly before dawn yesterday Charles Bailey, 43, roared down Britain’s speedy Ml motorway. Near Friar’s Wash, the -car ploughed into a concrete pillar of e bridge. “I’ve seldom seen a car so damaged," said a policeman. “The length of the car was reduced from 14 feet to $ feet.” Beneath the twisted steering wheel — with his safety belt .still around him — was Charles Bailey, dead. ft ft . ft • * ■ At Bailey’s suburban London home — 60 miles from the crash — a policeman knocked at the door to inform the family of Bailey’s death. © ‘UPSTAIRS ASLEEP’ “Where are your parents?” the policeman asked 20-year-okl Janice Bailey. “Upstairs asleep,” replied the girl. “Wait here and I’ll get them.” A few minutes later she ran down the stairs and said, “Mother — I’m afraid mother’s dead, and father’s not here.” The policeman found Mrs. Bailey’s fully clothed body in bed, beneath the covers. She appeared to have been suffocated, ft ft ft In addition to Janice, there were six other Bailey children in the house. WENT TO BED They told the police that when they went to bed the night before, their parents were sitting in the living room having a drink before a Christmas tree. ft ft ft “At this point, we’re completely baffled,” said a spokesman for Scotland Yard. Detroit Lawyer Join$ Race With Swainson DETROIT (AP)—Former Gov. John Swainson will oppose by Seymour Markowitz, a Detroit attorney, in the April 5 election to fill a vacancy on the Wayne County Circuit Court bench. . * ' ★ ft .* Markowitz filed for the office Monday before the closing deadline for nominations. The vacancy was created by the death last August of Judge Miles Culehan. We're Closer to Being Worms Than Insects MONTREAL (AP) - “If your wife calls you a worm, she’s closer to being scientifically accurate than if she calls you an insect,” a U.S. government insect expert said today, ft ft ft Hie reason, said entomologist Arthur m\ Heimpel of Beltsvjlle, Md., is tfuit worms, like humans, have proteins in their tissues, but insects do not. Pagan, a ruined Burmese city whose founding dates back to about A.D. 100, covers 16 square miles beside the Irrawaddy River. .'About 5,000 pagodas still stand in Pagan, most built between 1057 and 1284, before the Mongol invasion. Pedestrian Is Killed DETROIT (AP) — Clarence Morgan, 80, of Detroit was killed in an auto-pedestrian ac-I cident in Detroit Monday. Death Takes Area Official Long-Time Treasurer of Springfield Twp. DAVISBURG-- Mrs. Robert (Eva M.) Walters, Springfield Township treasurer for the pgst 24 years, died today after a short illness. She was 60. Mrs. Walters was an employe of GMC Thick & Coach D i • vision, Pontiac, and a member and treasurer of Austin Chapter No. 390, Order of the Eastern Star. She lived at 794 Broadway.” Funeral service will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Davisburg Methodist Church, with burial in Da-visburg Cemetery ★ ★ ft The Austin O.E.S. will conduct a memorial service at 8 p m. tomorrow at Dryer Funeral Home, Holly, where her body wUl be until noon Thursday . Surviving are a d a u g h’t e r, Mrs. Lyel Weichert of Dayis-burg; four sons, Robert of Pontiac, Carl of Holly and William and Calvin, both of Davisburg. Also surviving are her father, Carl Samuel; two sisters, Margaret Samuel and Mrs. Alvin Schneider and three brothel's, Theodore, Walter and George Samuel, all of Davisburg; and 17 grandchildren. Youth Is Hurt in Car Crash A West Bloomfield Township youth was injured early this morning in a two-car accident on Dixie Highway near Big Lake Road in Springfield Township. In fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital is Robert E. Farms, 19, of 2440 St. Joseph, ft ft ft Sheriff’s deputies said Farms’ car collided with a vehicle: driven by Mark Phalen, 16, of 114 East, Holly. Phalen was treated at the hospital and released. Deaths in Pontiac Red Border Guards Fire 70 Flares in Air BERLIN (AP)—More than 70 flares were fired into the air by the Communist border guards of East Germany last night along the fortified border surrounding West Berlin, Western police reported today. • ft ft ft Red guards also fired seven rounds from rifles and submachine guns. West police said the flares and shots, fired at the western and northern sections of the border, presumably were aimed at refugees. GERALD S. BEAMER Service for Gerald S. Beamer, 51, of 101 N. Merrimac will be :30 p.m. tomorrow in the Hun toon Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. B e am e r, a garage mechanic at the Pontiac Post Office, died Saturday. Surviving are his wife, Dottie; his father, Lawrence; three chil-1, Gerald L, Laurie ahR Mark, all at home; two sisters, Mrs. Florence Myers and Mrs. Barbara Pickel, both of Pontiac; and two brothers, Robert and Richard, both of Pontiac. RALPH A. GALLIE Service for Ralph A. Gallic, 66, of 123 Norton was to be this afternoon at Sparks - Griffin Chapel- Mr. Gailie, an employe of GMC Truck & Coach division, died Sunday. DR. JOSEPH B. KINGSBURY Service for former Pontiac resident Dr. Joseph B. Kingsbury, 47, of Flint was to be this morning at the Brown Funeral Home, Flint, followed by burial in Oak Grove Cemetery, Milford. Dr. Kingsbury died Saturday. He had lived in Flint since June 11,1946. Dr. Kingsbury was a member of the staff of Flint Osteopathic Hospital, Elks Lodge No. 222, (Md. Newsboys, the Masonic Lodge Bay City Consistory and had served as chairman of Genesee County Welfare Board. Surviving are his wife, Joan; two sons, Jack and Joseph at home; three daughters, Jill, Jinx and Jan, all at home; and his mother, Mrs. Minnie Doig of Milford. Also surviving are a sister, Mrs. Raymond Bergin of Milford, and a brother, Fritz of Milford. RUSSELL MeCALLUM Service for Russell McCalium, 72, of 510 Third will be at 1:30 p m. tomorrow in the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. McCalium, a retired cement contractor, died Sunday after a long illness. MRS. HENRY TUPPER Service for Mrs. Henry (Muriel) Tupper, 83, of 1365 Baldwin will be 11 a.m. Thursday at Bos-sardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will follow in the Vesta-burg Cemetery, in Vestaburg. • Mrs. Tupper died yesterday after a long illness. She was a-member oF the Pontiac Free Methodist Church.. Surviving are three sons, Au-drid of Detroit, Floyd of Lansing and Cedi of Waterford Township; two daughters, Mrs, Lela Kennedy of Ellse and Mrs. Beatrice Norris of Stevensville; a brother; and three sisters. MRS. GEORGE AGATE WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. George (Jettie I.) Agate, 66, of 7195 Ellinwood will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Rlchardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will follow in Acacia Park, Cemetery, Birmingham. A retired restaurant proprietor, Mrs. Agate died yesterday after an illness of t h r e e years.- Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. John Kaake of Milford and Mrs. Richard Giovannini of Dearborn; a brother; apd «six grandchildren. . FREDERICK BARGE BRUCE TOWNSHIP — Serv-, ice for. Frederick Barge, 84, of Tart will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo. Burial will follow in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. A retired employe of Chrysler Corp., Mr. Barge died Sunday after a long illness. Surviving are a son, Elmer, with whom he made his home; two grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. JUUE A. UETKE LAKE ORION - Requiem Mass for Julie A. Lietke, 17, of 140 E. Jackson will be 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at St. Joseph Catholic Church. Burial will follow in the St. Joseph section of East Lawn Cemetery. A senior at Lake Orion High School, the girl was killed in an Orion Township traffic accident eer|y Sunday morning. The Rosary will be recited at 8 tonight at Allen’s Funeral Home. Surviving are her m 01 h tr, LEAVES HOSPITAL - The Duke and Duchess of Windsor walk past a small crowd that gathered in Houston, Tex., yesterday as the pair left the hospital. It was the first time the duke has left the hospital since he was operated on Dec. 16. Mrs. Mary L., with whom she made her home; her father, Martin of Detroit; grandparents, Jack Cox of Lake Orion and Mr. and Mrs. William Lietke of For* estvUle; two brothers, Martin Jr. and Michael J., both at home; and two sisters, Mrs. Ernest May of Pontiac and Mrs. Dennis Burnia of Unka^ Lake. ALEXMANKO WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP — Requiem Mass for Alex Manko, 61, of 61716 Jewell will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. element Catholic Church, Romeo. Burial will follow in St. Lawrence Cemetery, Utica. A mushropm farmer, Mr. Manko died yesterday from injuries received in a fall at his home. , The Rosary will be recited at 8 tonight at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo, Surviving are his wif&, Anna, and a son, Stephen, at home. JOHN A. MARTIN LAKE ORION - John A. Martin, 67, of 44 E. Shadbolt died this morning after a lengthy Alness. His body is at Allen’s Funeral Home. MRS. FRED PARK OXFORD - Service for Mrs. Fred (Ina M.) Park, 76, of 16 Dennison will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Bossardet Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Park died yesterday after a lengthy illness. She left no survivors. MRS. GEORGE PETERSON ROMEO — Service for Mrs. George (Belle) Peterson, 86, of 372 N. Main will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Birmingham. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Peterson died yesterday after a long illness. Her son, Milton T. Johnson of Detroit, survives. ALLISON R. STODDARD PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — Service for Allison R. Stoddard, 59, of 285 Oakmont will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Burial will follow hi Aaron Webster Cemetery, Auburn Heights. A retired truck driver, Mr. Stoddard died yesterday after an illness of several months. MARYLAND WALLACE AVON TOWNSHIP -j- Service for Maryland Wallace, 62, of 3164 Auburn was last night at Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Funeral service and burial will follow in Genoa, W.'Va. A sanitation department employe at GMC Truck & Coach Division, Pontiac, Mr. Wallace died yesterday after a short Bless. He was a member of Church of God. Surviving are’ eight sons, Arnold and Hurston, both of Avon Township, Boyd of Pontiac, Lewis and Charley, both of Utica, Hezekiah and David, both of Rochester, and Henry of Fort Riley, Kan. Also surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Marie Cliff of Bay City, Mrs. Polly Berry of Utica and Spicy of Ronteo; a brother; five sisters; and 36 grandchildren. VA Doctor Succumb$ WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - Dr. Rudolph Chess, 19, chief of medical services at Topeka Veterans Adihinistratlon Hospital, died Monday after suffering a heart attack Saturday. Ha was born in Brooklyn, N.Y. N h Hi . iMj. • ••to rt ( itTTJ.WT nigneef moovr. ID* m3J Wan. th« plac* of storaga. I: if21-44. AMKlatM Discount Corporation 5y*S Wrt' Mich. . Dacembar 2* and SO. 1*44 notice of public sal NOTict ’ i»HT*isr«iviB hwitanod Ihit January 4, it O'clock A.M, at JUMM. Wi Royal Oak, Oakland Caunty, 4 public it la of a 1*44 Jaguar Co baaring strlal number SS131I, hew, Jor cash .to the highest 'nsfwcllon thsreot may be made address. Royal Oak, Oakland Jtiaca of storaga. »y 1 December 2f a _____NOTICE OP PUBLIC SALK NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by tha undersigned that an January 4, mi, at ta.vi_i. Au -MtMi Woodward, Pern-- “r=Tlj*i. public Fury 4-Dr., ---------- -------,.5777, will bt cash to tha highest bidder. Inspection thereof may be mgide at above address, Fsmdtle, Oakland Caunty Mich-•gen, tha plecs of storage. Dated: 1M1-44. INVITATION TO BID PLIIT AUTOMOBILE INSURANCI-This Board Js desirous ^ of obtaining *» - “jt22sss(3sS:!S saned and read a mud. Bidders are ^'^^^•isrWhttaM- OAKLAND ______U MlehiiBj THIRTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS,, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 Judge Raps Proposal to Limit News PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Jue-tice Michael A. Musmanno of the State Supreme Court has Joined Chief Justice John C. Bell in voicing disapproval of a set of guidelines concerning crime news proposed by-’the Philadelphia Bar Association. “Curbing crime news is1' like recommending that no one talk about cancer on the theory that silence will cause cancer somehow to disappear,” Musmanno said Monday. * 4r a The chief Justice said Saturday be was “astonished at several of the recommendations made recently by the bar’s Criminal Law Committee.” The code proposes limiting the amount of infonpation about a crime or a suspect that policemen and lawyers could release. The code also proposed limitations on the arrest and questioning of some suspects. The bat association is to vote on it today. LIGHT NEEDED Musmanno arserted that crime today is a cancerous growth on the American people ar d the means to cure it “can be more successfully arrived at in light than in darkness.” “instead of darkness on crime activities, there should be flaming torches,” Musmanno 3aid. “What we need is an acceleration of crime news, not a retardation.” tee The chief Justice said the public, rot criminals, needs more protection. And he said the pjb-lic needs more, not less crime news. He said the proposed guidelines would restrict the amwuit of news about crime. He said if news media are “muzzled or gagged.’' crime will be more rampant “Justice is a two-way street,” said the chief justice, ’where the rights of the peaceful citizens are at least as important as these of a criminal.” PLAN TO WED - Gregg Shefoood Dodge, 41, former wife of the late auto multimillionaire\Horace Dodge Jr., confirmed yesterday she would marry \Daniel D. Moran, a former New York City policeman. The announcement was made from her Palm Beach home. 120 Whiles Are Rescued From Rebels in the Congo LEOPOLDVILLE (UPI) -Congolese troops led by mercenaries today rescued about 120 white hostages from the rebels in the northeastern Congo town of Wamba, sources close to army headquarters said, ewe Wamba was one of the last towns in the northeastern Congo known to hold a concentration of whites held hostage by the Communist-backed rebels. Preliminary reports\said nothing about the condition of the whites. Nor did it mention whether any massacres n a d taken place, as had been feared. V Missionary William McChes-ney, the last American unadr counted for in rebel territory^ was believed to have been held' at Wamba. There was no immediate word on him. Jailed Writer Raps Sentence Writes Utter to Court Criticizing His Cate WARSAW, Poland (AP) -Melchior Wankowicz, the Pol-ish-American writer facing an 18-month prison sentence, has written a letter to the Polish Supreme Court criticizing his trial and conviction on charges of slandering the Polish government. Relatives said the letter was an explanation of the 72-year-old naturalized American’s decision not -to appeal his conviction. They said Wankowicz believed an appeal would constitute an endorsement of proceedings which he considered unfair. ★ w it Wankowicz and his wife, So-a, appeared at Warsaw airport today to say goodby to their daughter, Marta Erdman, as she left for her home in Washington, DC., after a Christmas visit. I don’t know what is going to happen to me,” Wankpwicz calmly told a reporter, adding that he felt it inadvisable to discuss his case with newsmen. FIGURED IN CHARGES A letter from Wankowicz to Mrs. Erdman figured in the charges against him. The government contended the letter, complaining of repression of Polish intellectuals, found its way to Radio Free Europe. Mrs. Erdman, whose husband works for the U.S. Information Agency, told a reporter, “That letter has never left our home.” Lawyers said Wankowicz’s. sentence became final a week ago but the government could postpone it because of lack of Hace in prison, the age of the •fendant, or without giving a S. S. Cohen Chief of IRS WASHINGTON (AP) - Sheldon S. Cohen, who says he wants Americans to 'feel “the Internal Revenue Service is not an agency to fear — it makes the government run,” hap been selected by President Johnson , to be the nation’s top tax collector. ★ ★ ★ ■ Cohen, 37, a native of Washington, is chief counsel of the IRS — a post to which he was named by Johnson a year ago Wednesday. His nomination as IRS commissioner was announced fay the President Monday night. ★' * The nomination requires Senate confirmation. Cohen expressed delight over his selection and said he had no specific plans at this time for IRS innovations. He said former Commissioner Mortimer Caplin had done “a remarkable job of bringing the mission of IRS home to the public” and that he would work for close cooperation between the service and the public. TO SUCCEED HARDING Cohen will succeed Bertrand Harding as head of the IRS. Harding was named acting commissioner to succeed Caplin last July 10 when Caplin resigned to reenter law practice, on June 20, 1027, and served in ; Cohen was born in the capital the Navy in 1945 and 1946. He was graduated from George Washington University here in I960 with a degree in accounting. He completed his law course at George Washington in two years, finishing first in his class in 1052. A year later, he qualified as a certified public accountant. He has been an associate professional lecturer at George Washington since 1058. j In 1960 he joined the WMhing-ton law firm of Arnold, Fortas and Porter. . He married Faye Fram of Baltimore 13 years ago. They now live in suburban Chevy Chase, Md., and have four children, Melinda Ann, 8, Laura Eve, 5; Jonathan Adam, 3, and Sharon Ruvena, 10 months. CHIEF COUNSEL When Cohen became chief counsel a year ago, his salary was 810,000. This was increased to 826,000 undo- the government Something Missing in Back of Car FRANKLIN, Ind. (AP) Thirteen • year - old Linda Aim Sipes of Battle Creek, Mich, was asleep in the back seat when her parents stopped at Whiteland north of here today to get gasoline and use the rest stations. ★ ★ * Linda Ann woke up and went to the rest station, missing her mother en route, WW W Thpe hours and 135 miles later at Warsaw, in northern Indiana, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Sipes discovered Linda Ann wasn’t in the back seat. Sipes got in touch with the Ligonier State Police Post. w w w The post asked other units to check filling stations in the Whiteland area and sure enough there was Linda Ann waiting at one for her parents to return. SAT TO WAIT State police took Linda Ann 9 miles to the sheriff’s office at Franklin, where she waited until her parents returned for her. w w w The family was en route home after a holiday trip. . Observers said the lack of precise news did not necessarily mean all the whites in the area are safe. PLANES SET TO GO Official air force sources here said at noon: “Our rescue planes are at stand-by to take off as soon as we get word to do so.” Wamba has no landing strip able to handle big transport planes. The liberated whites most be taken to the nearest strip at Paulis by helicopter or along the 54-mile road. There has been considerable apprehension over the fates of the whites at Wamba. w w w Until now lack of strength has prevented the National Congolese Army .(ANC) troops and the white mercenaries who lead them from advancing on the town. ‘DROP OF GOLD’ “Every white who comes out of this area is a drop of gpld,” a military observer said recently, reflecting the anxiety felt for the hostages still in rebel hands after the American-Bel-gian rescue operation ended last month. The Belgian paratroopers rescued whites from Stanleyville and Paulis only. salary bill paised. last August. Ject back to the sea floor. Such As commissioner, he’ll get $28,- Sea Bottom to Be Source of Minerals NEW YORK (AP) - Mining on the moon? It’s doubtful! But the sea bottom will eventually be a source of minerals such as manganese, cobalt and gold and they will be mined by processing plants 50 to 200 feet under the sea, an expert predicts. . * * * Prof. A. M. Gaodin of the Dept, of Metallurgy of Massachusetts Institute of Technology says the lack of a n y . each energy as gat, coal or oil will make moon tabling an impossibility. Hubert Quits as Senator in Minnesota^ WASHINGTON- UP - Vice President-elect Hubert H. Humphrey forjnally resigned as a Democratic senator from Minnesota today. The resignation, effective at the close of business today, cleans the way for the appointment by Gov. Karl Rolvaag of Walter- Frederick Mondale, 36-year • old Minnesota attorney general, to serve during the remaining two years of Humphrey’s Senate term. came with his release of a letter to the governor, dated last Wednesday, saying he was resigning at the close of ’badness today to permit die appointment of a new senator effective tomorrow. The governor announced Nov. .. .. t . .. , ... 18 he had chosen Mondale, who At the VII International Min- ____„ ... h,i d,___ ______„______. h“ described himself as a lib- eral Processing Congress meeting, held here hi observance of the 100th anniversary of mining education at Columbia University, he said that a submarine processing plant at great depth in the sea would operate by sucking up ocean bottom mud containing metallic nodules for treatment and dropping the re- a plant would be insensitive to stops, he added. eral with views that, “closely coincide" with those of President Johnson and Humphrey, to replace the vice president-elect. Although Humphrey goes off the Senate payroll tonight, and will not begin drawing his vice presidential salary until his inauguration Jan. 20. He quit the Spnate early- to give Mondale seniority over other new senators. Detroiter Reappointed to state Banking Post LANSING (AP)—Gov. George Romney. Monday reappointed Charles slay, a Detroit Democrat, as state banking commissioner. \ Reappointment of Slay, whose present term expires Dec. 31, is for a two-year term expiring Dec. 31, 1906L The post pays $14,500 a year. Senate confirmation is requires Death Notices JER 28. 1W AGATE, DECEMBER)!!, 1944, JET-TIE I., 7195 Elllpwood Drive, White Cake / Township; *gt 441 dear mother lot Mrs. John Kaake and Mn. Richard Gtaeannlnl; dear (liter of Charles Jenkins; alee survived by six grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednes- the Rlchardson-Blrd Funeral Home. Milford wHh Pastor Ivan C. Ross officiating. ------ ‘ ‘ BAILEY, bECEMBER 27.\ 1944, BARBARA JEAN, 214 Seym Bald-, win Read, Orion Township,- age 12; beleved daughter of Mr. and jay. Funeral service will be held Wedneedey. December It at 2 p.m. at the Allen's Funeral Home, Lidia Orion wSTmn. Alfred Eddy wiwms. HM— Chapel Memorial i Baamer; beloved son of bars Plckd, Robert and Richard Beamer. Funeral service wilt be held Wednesday, December X at 1 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral i wHh Rev. CheMes Whitfield —‘ In Oak Hill ested visiting CLARK, DECEMBER 24. 1944, JOEL E„ 41 Moreland Avenue; age 77; beloved husband m Mary Efiftl dear father *1kM if. Clark; dear brother dl Irvin Clark. Recitation of the Rosary will be - this evenkm at 0:10 p.m. at the SptrkeGrlffln Funeral Home under the auspices Of the Knights of Columbus. Fwasral semes win be held Wednesday, December* at w a.m. at St. Michaels Catholic Church. Interment Ini f Cemetery. (Suggested visiting 7 to 9 pjn.T ieraonvihe Road. Ip; age 79; dear te Farley. Racl- t the Roeary will bs l—r evening at I pjn. at the Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Heme, Clarkston. . _____!— u, MI k, h*M Our Lady of the Lakes bAt-Llt. bECEMBER 27, 1944, RALPH A„ fa Norton Avenue; age 44; dear brother ei Mrs. Myr- tle lumbv and Mrs. Margaret Webster. Funeral service was held today at S;2B p.m it the Spatks-Grlffin Funeral Homp. GAREAU, blCEMBER 24. IPoTJO-SEPH A., 1121 Mandrake, Union Lake; age SS; beleved ion of Mrs. Elizabeth Oarrow; dear father of Mrs. Gayle Smith, Mrs. Sandra •tellers, James Herbert and Arthur Gareev; dear brother of Gerald Gareev; aim survived oy-one grandchild. Recitation of the Roeary will be this evening at S pjn. at the Rlchardson-Blrd Funeral Rev, Fr, Lewis EH Interment In St. Mar MIHord.___________ LIETKE. DECEMBER #,' mi JULIE ANN, teS Beet Jackson street. Lake OHmi iis T7j Her loved dwimr of RSHnCjM Mgj^^Cwke^b^ Lietke? . ' dee and the MO December^! >. and Mil ■jrowW —. m aunts^Re^ttatton of . Lake Or tan ML Karev etti- •"JSinfe Death Notices * GRAHAM, DECEMBER 27, 1944, MMAC Wu S44I Rad Arms Union 3 John W. and Robert W. Graham; STOMA Fundral , service sntl IK -1|B8 rr*yb<«^rvu£cm.-. Home. Interment in while Chapel Cemetery, Trey. (Suggested vlslt-tnq hours • te 5 pjn. and 7 to 9 p.m.) MgtALLUM. bECEMBER 27, 1944, McCollum; dear lather of Mrs. Frank jltiM . Ifok Charles Numbers, Mrs. Floyd Senner and Rob- S^&mr^soM by mine grandchildren and one great-grandchild. FuneraTlerylce Edmond I. Watkins officiating. In-torment In Perry Mount Park Cemetery. (Suggested visiting hours 1 to 5 p.m. end 7 to 9 pjnj SPEZIA, DECEMBER 27. 1944, KATHRYN MARY, 449 South Baldwin Road, Or tan Township) age 144 beloved daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Louis Spezla; beloved granddaughter of Mrs. Harold (Anna) Ftgk and Louis B. Spnla Or.; deer sWar of James u caroie a., Angelina K, and Linda ,G. teazle. Recitation at the Rosary will be M c pjn. at the AF with Msgr. Arthur M. Karev officiating. Interment In St. Jeesph section of East Lawn Cemetery. Lake Orion, __________ STODDARD. DECEMBER 21. 1944, ALLISON R., 215 Oakmont, Au-age 5f; beloved hi rr^ —§ -*■ _ „ J ...Jl service iHR _____■______ day December is at 11 a.m. at the Harold -R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Interment In Aaron Wobetsr Cemetery. MARYLAND, 1144 Auburn Rood, Avan Township; age 42; beloved husband of Bessie Wallace; dear father of Mrs. Merle Cliff, Mrs. Fatty Berry, JUjft Lewis, Boyd, Charley, Hurston, Hemklah, David, Spicy and Henry Wallace; also survived by one brother and five sisters, Mr. Wallace has been taken to Genoa, West Virginia for service and burial. Arrangements by the Harold R. Davis Funeral r Row Tournament and Jubl- Ads, Los Angeles, California, 90051. GET out OF DEBT ON A FLAM You Can Afford MICHIGAN CREDIT . COUNSELORS I -702 Pontiac State Bank Building FW 1-0454 Pontiac's oldest and largest budget LOSE WEIOtn '' SAFiLV WITH Dex-A-Dlet Tablets. Only IS cents at Simms Brothers Drugs. WATERFORD COIN SHOW. SUN-day January 1. 9 aJh.-T p.m. BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there ] | were replies at The | < Press Office in the fol- ] ! lowing boxes: 4, 10, 19, 58, 72, 84. COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR 1-7757 SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME ‘ rice* FE 2-544 D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalid Car Sarvict ‘ HUNTOON 79 Oakland Ave._ VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME FE 24 Established Over 40 Years Psrsanab 4 4-PIECE COMBO Net rock and i tor club wort, _________ weddings, parties, ale. FE 44517 after ip- Pontlac Frew Bax tt.____________ ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 before 5 p.m.. or It no on->wtr, call FE 24714. Confldontlel. BELL DANCE STUpiO. S PRIVATE hours plus S claes lessens for only (IS. Loam Che i. FE M500. . D: Monty on e 6:30.iiS-2tC ^6UNO NEAR FLAlAy 1 ! t______...... ... l. Womans' M-4ocal gl cell ORHS44.. LOST; SIAMESE AAALB, VICINITY Ferry and Pontiac Rd. 1144159. LOST: LADY'S TIMEX WATCH. AT K-Mert or Seven, Set. Reward. WMtg teat end lar. Near Indlan-weeo uene. upward. MY H4I9. LOST: CHIHUAHUA, MALE, TAN with white on each pew, vk. of Payton and Dtcktr Rd, Walled Lake. MA 4-2447, reward. LOST; FUlii A? BEDELL'S ntaaaa return blue wallet contaln-valuable Identification. 1104975 xv Dwight 2-S5P 4 LOST: BLACK AND WHltl MALI shaggy d*s. Lest in vicinity of Like Oakland. Reward. OR 14147. LOST: BLACK AN6 WHITE POINT-er pup, female, 5 mos. eld. vicin-Hv of Airport Rd. and MS9. J919 St., Pontiac er phene OR tier 4 p.m. Reward. BLACKSMITH'S SWEDGE letween Auburn Helghtt and UhMMI, IOAN FOOTBALL, SMALL WATCH CASE, FISH, BIRb. PLUMB BOB, HOamiWE, SHELL, JTC. LIB-. ERAL REWARO. TR 3-2914. .. Lake si. Reward. FE 1-7111, Ext. TwT * _______ l6I^ BLACK MALE, MIXED LOST; LARGE TAN DOG, HALF iMv ~ iM Came VtaMty gf 12Vb Mile and Tetsgreph. Answers to Kenel. Reward. 357440s 2 MEN-EVENINGS We would Nko f man la work with us, who can werk 1 or nights g week. Ooed pay for 4514424. F44. TO 7 PM. AND ASK FOR 2 FULL TIMl Afib 1 FART TIME lOMlN NEEDED AT ONCE NEW CAR FURNISHED No exporlanco necessary to work with Pontloc facility of a largo •tactrkol manufacturer. We will train theae men selected by an unbjesed sot Ituds test and to dart salary er proflUheHng basis te earn an excau of SIB a week. Far Information call FE 5-9243, Appliance Salesmen Pontiac's Largsst Retail Department Store . Salary-Commission ... Earnings to $8,000 year ... To replace salesman rsctntly promoted . No canvassing ... Car Necessary . . . Permanent opening— 5 days a week. . . Profit sharing, insurance and Retirement Programs. . . . Apply Personnel Department daily be-' tween 9:30 a.m. and 9 p.m. Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL AUVb-Parts, torch a or morr — 44509. ’. No drinkers er Could this be you? Married, under 50, good work record, not enough pay, stymied with, no future In earnings? I can teach you to earn 17,000 up annually. Phene OR 34S4S ter appointment. C06k WANTED FOR FULL TIME : employment. Apply In person only. Frank’s Restaurant. ^eago Her- MURRAY-WAY CORPORATION DO YOU NEED MONEY? I NEED availawe, car necessary. FE ' 2-9019. DRIVER SALESMAN — /EXPERI- entee end commission, 5-dey week, state ego end background. Writo Pontloc Press Bex No. 49. DRUG, TOBACCO OR STOCK clerk. Experience preferred or will train. Complete fringe btneflft. Top salary. Apply Ferry Pharmacy,' 445 Joslyn between 94 dally. Service, 5995 Highland Rd, Pontiac. EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATION , servlet men. Huff Refrigeration Co^Htahleyid. 414-5445 tor appolnt- fuLl TIME REAL ESTATE SALES- FURNITURE SALESMAN, EXPERI-enced. Fine store, good pay and hours. 1 Excellent opportunity to BraWHOUSE Op' BEDROOMS ® ir Interview. OR 44427. ' LIQUOR SALESMAN Call on tleenssei in Oakland County. Natlenelly known firm. Needs cor. Soiling exportanco In' some lino desirable. Not over IS. Salary and exponent. Furnish details In letter. Including phone number.-Reply te tax No. St, Pontiac Frets. MECHANIC WANTED. TOP NOTCH onlv. For used cars et Matthew ry Lane, Pontiac NATIONALLY KNOWN COMPANY seeks aggressive self starter, salesmen. - Married, age 24-44, grocery experience prefer red. Guarantee 5125 e week. Must own car. Hospitalization. Ilto Insurance benefits, paid vacation. Cell Mr. Novak, Holiday Inn, 024151. OWNER OPERATORS WANTED, PAINTER First, Class only. No drlnkors or drlftars. All new faclllftat, profit sharing, other fringe benefits. Ask tor Carl. Shelton Pontlac-Bukk. OL 1-1115. . ____________ , PART-TIME MIDDLE-AGED HANDY SYSTEMS SALES ENGINEER. SAL- Field Sales Engineer, Industrial salary open. Programmer with computer experience, salary open. Sales Rapresentetlvs with chemical or plesik experience. Salary 111,000. Jr. Copywriter, I yr. expert--- “ retail. Salary 55,200. *------vtaltOi a - - Industrial Salas Men, Salary open. Time Study man. Industrial Engineering experience. 57400. Electrical mg Steer, 0 It 10 yrs. practical experience. Seiary'open. MICHIGAN PERSONNEL SERVICES CORP. 770 S. A FART TIME MIN 19 TO 40 YEARS OLD We would like mm to werk wt us Who cm earn 550 weekly wor ing part time tor 4 or I nigh • wook. Far Information call 0 M922T4 pjn. to 4 pjn. Ask f it pen xse ipps > area. Must know Pontloc 0315, Utility Real Estate. iHblf OROlk cSSkTmust hAve bseekfpef experience, apply el Big Boy Drtvo-ln, Totagrapn and Hun TRAINEE Per machining and grinding operations. Alert married men, age till with seme previous experience , preferred. Submit applications to 4411 Be tame re, two blocks oaot of 14 Mite and Csoiligs.__ TIME FOR A CHANGE PUNT SUPERVISORS PERSONNEL MANAGERS HIGH CALIBER MEN ACCUSTOMED TO DEALING WITH PEOPLE IP YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED IN LASTING AND PERMANENT EMPLOYMENT THIS MAY WELL •I YOUR OPPORTUNITY OF A LET US PROVE IT TO YOU MUST SB ABLE TO START WITHIN 1 TOS WEEKS POR PERSONAL AND CONPI* DENTIAL DISCUSSION OF THIS POSITION, PHONE MR. SMITH AT FE S44M FOR INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT. . - WANTED FOR DAY SMlFT, COUN-ter help. Apply Red Sam Drlve-ln, 4«l Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 14141. ■ . 2397 Elizabeth Lake mac. H. Hicks, manager ZxferIBnced body hand tools, guaranteed wage and ■fgaSy work, pirn eptat Incentive. SUPERIOR RAMBLER. 550 Oefclend^Ave. Complete new le- WANTED—HEATINO AND PLUMB-ing bide en large houses and apartments. Call M-MM, 9114201 or 152-2*90. Michael's Realty, WANTED—SALESMAN FOR LUM- WANTED - CAB DRIVERS. ' steady and pert time, days and nights. 101 W. Huron. YOUNG Min IP-15 POR RBSTAU-rent work, no experience required, dishwashers, bus-boys, good werk-■ vacations. Haig Wanted Fsatale I WORKING ADULTS, DESIRE girl ter general, laundry and as-list cooking. Home nights. Phono 1544471. S BABY SITTiR,. LIGHT HOUSE- References. 424-2271. AVON CALLING WOMEN who want to be successful and earn good money Hi f spare time. Monty-back guar a makes Avon Cosmetics very n In. demand end easy to sell, rer Interview please call FE 4-4SM or writ* Drayton Plains P.O. Box 91. BABY SITYdd. LIGHT HOUSE-work. Prater to live In. PE 54450 BABY SITTER, TUESDAY THRU Saturday, l:2M:3B, have own transportation. FE 54112. BMY SITTING AND LIGHT HOUSE-keeping, live In. 471-24*2. BABY SITTkR, Jill TO * PM Drayton Plains are*. OR 14770. BABY SITTER MORNINGS. OWN Umax am h«rh ftafl. Bitch l:M.. Bskt- BAR AND FOOD WAITRESS -Untan Lake tree — EM >4112._ BOOKKEEPER light typing Legal Secretary MICHIGAN PERSONNEL SERVICES CORP. 771 S. Adams R CASHIER COUNTER GIRL FOR DRY CLEAN-Ing plant. Will train. Apply Flesh Cleeners, VH W. Huron.__________ CURB GIRLS - AND WAITRESSES For day end night shift. Top wages, free meals, .hospitalization, Ilto Insurance, paid vacation. Apply In .person et the BIG BOY DRIVE 1 INN, Telegraph end Huron, or Dlx-la Hwy. end Silver Lake Road. DISHWASHER, APFCy COURT Dining Room WAITRESS top tamlMs, g ance benefits. Apply In TED'S PONTIAC MALL DRUG CLERK. Pbli bR time. Will train respom' ' Rum's Country Drugs. PART- person. Eliza- DINING-WAITRESS . CASHIER Ted's ' of. Pontiac Mall has mediate openings tor dining Apply In person from 74 p.m. TED'S PONTIAC-MALL. DRUG, TOBACCO OR STOCK Apply Fa ilyn befwsm EXPERIENCED NURSES AIDE, 11 - pjn. to 7 s.m. Apply In. person IMS W. SUvertell Rd. EXPERIENCED Key Punch. Operators lor 4 months estlgnmsnf evenings In Hh DtvmniiHi nMn GIRL FOR GENERAL OFFICE wSrkT steady employment, good PAY. MUSTBI EXPERIENCED IN ALL TYPES OP OF-FICE WORK. FE 44MI. I « HOUSEKEEPER THAT CAN cSOlC, live In, 4 days week. OR *4114. housekeeper, live in. ..m6re tor home man wages. Cell after 5 p.m. FE 44249. , hSUsekeeper, 5 AFTERNOONS. LADY FOR HOUSE CLEANING. Fridays, own trsnsporteflen. Ml 7-llM. _________ LEGAL SECRETARY Excellent opportunity far secre-' y, experienced end tyerklng w attorney • short hand"sp*td oT'SoToa wji.m., a typing, gated of S9 w.p.m. and be able vo operate * dfeteehane. Position located fei Pmttac i LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING, 8 BaV| wesfLoaidib. I MIDDLEAGED LADY CARE POR 4 RECEPTIONIST - OVElt 21, ObOO at mathematics. Apply in person * to 12, Donnell's Pontiac M*H. SALESLADY FOR PATTERN DE-' pertment, Stewart's Fabric Shop. 202 E. Maple, Birmingham. SECRETARY FOR LAW OFFICE. Typing, shorthand and filing re-quirtdT Must havs office ex per i-ence. Cell MP4551. SECRETARY to THfe PRZilbtNt, medium sized manuftcfurlng company, in Birmingham suburban area, requires thoroughly experienced executive secretary. Send' resume to Pontloc Frees Bex 7S. TEMPORARY WORK FOR EXPERIENCED Typists, Stenos, Demonstrators ant Business Machine Operators. Interviews. 9-11 and 14 Tuesday Friday Manpower Inc. 14 S. CASS WAITRESS AND KITCHEN GIRL. Super Chief, FE 24451._ WAITRESS, Alio BARMAID. AD-klnt Bar, IIS North Main Street, Welled Lake. WAITRESSES FOR DINING ROOM, ■ood pay plus bsnefltt tor right person. Reel's, OR }-7in lor Interview after 4 pjn. WOMAN TO WilH WALLS AND clean apartment In Auburn lleljKds. UL 2-29X1.________________ 1219044 between tt ajn. • 2 pjn. WOMAN OVER X FOR ALL phases of general office work, typing roquirod, write F.O. Bex *12. Pontiac, Mich, giving age, education, family status, lab and pay experience. WAITRESSES, EXPERIENCE HUT required, geed pew excellent tip*, paid lunch end rolltf periods, hospital benefits, paid vacation*. Midnights and afternoon ahlftt.. Pleasant counter, no cooking, dishwashing or portoring. Apply In person et ISIS Telegraph et Maple. WAITRESS. FULL TIME EVENING work. Apply Recce's, S171 Dixie BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED IH Positive tioo IN Nap. 57.00, SI0.00 B 012.00 DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE in Pontiac RE 44047 MS.Com • y apartment. 547-HAVB OPENINGS FOR PART TIME Inquire at RCA Seivtc* Co. 27)1 Elizabeth Lake Rd. or phone Mr. McCracken at FE S4I10. An equal YOUNG MAN High school graduate to sell retail oh our Mlesfloor. On the lob training program. We er* leeklnp tor men with a future In a growth organization. Vacation, group insurance, retirement plan end liberal bonus Incentive. Apply In person only. Firestone Store, 14S W. Hu- EVELYN EDWARDS PUBLIC RELATIONS....... No typing. 22 to 40. MICHIGAN PERSONNEL Services Corp. 770 S. ADAMS RD. .BIRMINGHAM 647-4660 iRstractieos Icfaeeh _If A Better Income by Learning IBM Machines ..EARN IBM KEY PUNCH, MAr CHINE OPERATION AND Wilt ING. COMPUTER PROGRAMMING. 4-WEEK COURlES, FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE, NO MMWbOWN. GENERAL INSTITUTE Aut^Soc^Smsslon ' WOLVERINE SCHOOL 1400 W. Ford, Detroit WO 14092 FINISH HIGH (CHOOL AT HOME, - Diploma awarded, write er phene tor FREE , booklet. National School of Home study, 27741 Mound Road, Dept. P>, Warren, Michigan. Rhone sl 7 3420, . IBM TRAINING Learn IBM. Keypunch! machine operation ahd wiring, 1401 computer programming. Mich. Stale -Beard el Education approved. Free placement service. Free parklna > Cony tote financing - No money 'SYSTEMS INSTITUTE FE 44100 ■ 1474104' Werfr WamiTiftrie 11 EX<»ERI geitant I lent work, FE 2-5504. AV /i. . ' ai' 'j:......; ; THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 TH1KT V-SEVEK Work Wflutoi Mob pervlsory position, M years cor Dined experience. OL 1-3042. PAINTING AND .ObD JOBS. add Iota. often*., Werit W—Mi It CLEANING AND WALLWASHING. Phene FI HW.___ Dioiiwkbl * t^bifagly dressmaking, tailoring and elltretlone. Mrs. Bedell. PE mu SKW1NG ANb ALt ERATIONS ClerfceSsn area. MA 5-2191 Moefat mi TifucMug 22 A-f PAINTING AND PAPIR HANGING THOMPSON Ft 4W344 rXAby intIriop DECORATOR. Papering. PE 0-0343. •AINTINO FAPEKINa, WALL WASHING, MINOR RCPATRS. -REASONABLR PRICES. FE 5-3402 quality work assurrd, PAINT-Injj papering wall waUilng. 473- TeltvisioR-Rwfip Servico 24 HAVE YOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP Trained service — BdHBWBkBUI^M CASHPOR FURNITURE AND AP- HIGHWAY ENGINEERING BXBCU-live, assigned to Pontiac district desires to rant 1 # rj bedroom ---- In Clerketpn or adlacont I 10-yeer-eld deuhter. Will 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE, PAR- WARREN STOUT, Realtor 4S» N. Opdyfce Rd. FE MISS Dolly‘tilt MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ALL CASH FHA and Gl EQUITY All homes anywhere, even if „ hind in payments. No listing, no red tape, no Oolays. Cash *— mediately. DETROIT. SR 3-04X0. 2 OAKLAND AVE. GET RESULTS ! NEED listings. Cal quick sale and top - HOMES I 14141 Homes-Farms—Acreage CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY Realtor reasonable I 230 W. Walton 331-4064 ■Su«i aa Mutflpk Lilting Strvlct -5=&c LISTINGS WANTED You can get more for your home ;__t by listing with us before you DRIVER TO TAKE CAR TO Call us today! Florida, leeve^ M^-lacuary JB. | AUGUST JOHNSON REALTOR 1 1704 S. Telegraph ~ ~ iSfi Car expenses furnished. Phone SS2- I lnsvrai.ee 26 Quality Automobile Risk insurance Budget Terms BRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle MHa PE d-Ssdt Wonted Heweehetd beb W 1. PIECE OR HOUSEFUL OP PUR* OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION — Open 01 all times for consignments. Also buy estates. Auction Saturday of T p,m. Still on M24, now t miles north of Oxford. 670-2523. QUICK CASH For homos In good locations, discount to exchange your homo. ■W. H. BASS REALTOR FB 3-7110 BUILDER NOTICE! i acreage parcels ________s, Si Clorkston Real Estote SS S. IWoln MA 5-5121 VACANT LOIS WANTED In Pontiac. Wo Bay more. Immediate elating. REAL VALUE REALTY. 42MS7I. Mr. Devil. AfMnuMr QdbrafaheOt Golf Vbw * Apartments Apertwenis, fRndbid 37 EFFICIENCY APARTMENT WITH — * to, gflp TOcum ON Cttt-Ellzo- 3 ROOM*? private, near ymEa. ROOMS AND BATH, MOOERN, adults eMy, lake etfvReges. 75 Bellevue, Lake Oftow. MY 3-6031. 6 NICE ROOMS AND UTILITIES. APARTMENT FOR MEN NEAR Fisher Body. FE 3-20W. r BACHELOR 3-ROOM, CARPETED, rlvete, nice. 332-4376. BEAUTIFUL ELIZABETH LAKE front. 3 rooms, completely and exceptionally wail (umlahwi, TV light, worm, clean, utilities Inciud-•d. Exclusive location. SIM monthly or woekly rate. Mrs- Et 1 SC-2410. ____________„ ■ • CLEAN, WARM, 2-ROOM, .FOR coupie, no drinkers. " FE 3-6443. efficiency. vekV ervlhlng furnished IN S2S depot It required. 54341.______________ LAKE FRONT—2-BEDROOM WITH utilities, adults. 602-6753./ LOVELY 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE. ____ ________________adults only Deposit and rat. FE S-3471. ONE BEDROOM APT. SISO PER month. No children, no acts. SMALL • MOOERN APARTMENT, nlr» for 1 adult, SIS a week. utilities WINTER RATES WEEKLY RATES REDUCED PHONE AND TELEVISION INCLUDED SHERWOOD MOTEL SO Dixie Hwy._______3354417 AyrtweBts, UnfarnUhed 31 1 BEDROOM, UTILITIES, I nlshed. I child welcome, f , IS7-410S. ROOMS,'BATH. MATURE WORK- 5 ROOMS, HEAT, UPPER, 170 ,)(¥ |f„ lnltm i month. 403-549S after S. w or more. Large ICLARKSTON LAKE VIEW APART-country acreage ment: l bedroom, Mr. Portrldat or balcony feeing let JEANNIE BEA APARTMENTS tSTm- January 15. Coll E. TSOI 'tlf 5:0* 625-1752 Ol _____________3-72376 or OAK GROVE APART* ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MOOERN IN EVERY DETAIL Adults Only PE S-SflS ONE BEDROOM APT. $125 PER Rent Meases, taralifced 39 3-BEDROOM HOUSE, 1 YEAR OLO. ir schools and Flatter Body. FB ROOMS NEWLY OECORATED, gas hoot, bus slop dose, cor-—fata fo hospital and downtown To poo contact V wGRoa ROOMS. ADC OR WELFARE AC-coptonco. 750-6104. 4 ROOMS AND BATH. _______________... polo. GR 3-6603.__________________ LOVELY HOME, 3 BEDROOMS, matditGsw SWlfc W l*oEu WARM AND COZY, 2-BEDROOM peting, drapes. HHMH vacant. Children okay. 0147.lt — 27>7406. In Lota Orion. 073-3HI. Alnminvin Stdiwf ALUMINUM SIDING-STORMS , ROOFING. SUPERIOR FE ArckHsctvral Drawing j NEW HOUSE AND^REMODELING I Basement Waterproofing AIR 6*3-2997 Excavating LAKES, PONDS, BOAT SUPS Now Is the lime to have your beaches, lake bottom or boat slips duo out. We also dig small lake, ponds and drive sheet pilings., FREE ESTIMATES. CALL HARRY WHITE » SON, FE 6-4597. Pbstnring Service A-t PLASTERING AND REPAIR. Reoeonobte. George Lot. FB 1-7922. PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. D. Moyers ___________ F E 40446 PLASTERING, NEW AND RlPAIR, tt removt ’ - 0-2702. Private Investigators Fencing PRIVATE DETECTIVE „ Harold L. Smith — lnvtstlg*tfon: — • Fi 5-4222 - 14-hour w • KAR-LIFE BATTEHYXO. G«ner«tor»—Regulators— Starters Batteries $5.95 Exchange PE S-1014______________3*0 Auburn Bbck Inybg BLOCK LAYING^ AND C E i Boats—Accessories ' TURN A KEY PUSH A BUTTON AND GO I Hours of endless .anlnyment Larson or Hydrodine Boat Powered by o , ltss EVINRUDE MOTOR IMS HOMELITE MOTOR Harrington Boat Works 199 s. Telegraph Rd. wMj ___ _______.. 25 years -xperlence. 332-6975. . LA FLOOR SERVICE. GUARAN- ar 673-2937._________ G. SNYDkR, FLOOR LAYING, Rental Eqaipmant BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - OWER SAWS 953 Joilyn Open Sun. PE 6-6101 Rent Office Space Bateman or L. H. Grimes FB s-mi. ____________________ MODERN, CONVENIENT WHO side near airport. Reasonoblt. OR Rent Business Property 47-A LEASE WITH OPTION TO I Business comer on main artery with garage suitable for burr RodHor. FE 54105. t-BEDROOM HOME. CAN BE IN-—— x* ▼—nqrdlno Rd. Shm Coll MU t-0013. 2-ST0RY FRAME Be Jtam Modernization 2-CAR GARAGE, SOW m. windows, doors, siding. ADDITIONS RAVES CONTRACTING..... Jstlmotss OR 4-IS1I CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WORK OL 1-0255 _____ INTERIOR F Camat Wart Cement Work Licensed cement contractor. . FE 5-9122 CEMENT WORK, REASdNABLE. Free ostlmofos. OR 3-44Q0 efler t CONCRETE FLOORS, 40c SQUARE 1. FE 4-2S7*. OR 34217. FL66W AW drivewaVs. woxk that cannot bo boot, city and!*»■*• licensed. Oort Commlns. FE S4345. EXCITING FUN II >' BOB'S RESTAURANT, ISIS JOSLYN through snow covered Kek then to club house tor ho» - spaghetti, french brood, ta 1 j NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS. INSURED] - 3-BEDROOM BRICK. PULL BASE-ment, 2-cer garage. Sylvan »*—-674-ISIS. i 3 - BEDROOM HOME, CONNER home. Fuller end Clara St.-walking distance to grade, |ur!- —■ i — cc*- **——f, FE Home Improvement ’ Tran Trimming Service -s--........- - A. E. DALBY TREE SERVICE Guinn Construction Co. Trot, stump romevo?, trim, tron FE 5*9122 planting. FE S-3005i FE 5-302S. k. -feistammel ENdiNEERiNG Tessner free Service Co. Rooting, sheet mstal. Sanitation | AM types of •'tree work. Free osl • OA 8-3155. 92 S. Washington, Ox- motes. Topping, cabling, cavil lord. ', . I work, fortllKlng. <37-2721 • WIEPMAN CONSTRUCTION, COM- TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL plate service. Free estimates. FE ------------*«-** - HOUSES FOR SALE TO BE MOVED - All modern, delivered to your let. DTwndt Wrock|ng Company. JaoHerbl Service___ SOUTH SIDE-COMPLETE MAINTE Tracking HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any time. FE SOWS. LlOttt AN6‘ HEAVY TRUCKING rubbish,, fill dirt, grading and grav-el end fronfwnd loading. FE 2-0403, LIGHT HAliUNG, GARAGES AND be somonis cloonod. *24-1343. Chimney tleoniag Dressmaking, TaHaHag ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, MU GUTTER COMPANY Complete eevestroughlna OffUiefc Oalvonlzod or aluminum, rrif estimates. *734044. TALBOTT LUMBER Glass Installsd In doors and win dows. Complete building service. 1120 Oakland *— “1 ‘-A“ Mlviag mi: Ibroge Trucks to Rent i '/5-Ton pickups IVS-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AW EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - Semi-Trailers Pontjac Fom. ond i industrial Tractor Co. Us s. woodward I FE 4-0401 FE 4-1442 ! Open Polly Including Sunday 8 ROOMS Combine your city and vocation homes Into 1 close-in year around lota Irani homo. Face brick level on upper Long Lake, maculate condition, excellent be Motor boats showed, carpeted drapes Included ot 039,M0. GORDON WILLIAMSON GALLERY OF HOMES tti W. Maple 444-2535 Birmingham $9,990 HURON GARDENS BRAND NEW 3-bed room ranch homo, conveniently designed kltc(~ an with birch cupboards, full bo* ment, oak floors, a FULLY It SULATED homo. Only 111,000. 01 .300 down. WE TRADE Y0UNG-B1LT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSEL YOUfiO, SOW W. HURON — 4-3130 205 HARRISON m. gas heal, garage, i and dryer. Nothing « Muting and Decarafiag A-t INTERIOR A ND EXTERIOR | guaranteed. Reasonable refot^ MS- 0420._________ - . .. kAA PAINTING AND DECORAT-■— M years «m. Ross. Fra* **-I. Fh. UL 2-139S. IS FE 0-10S4 nar 1LOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Walls md windows. Roes. Satisfaction guaranteed. FE 2-1431. 47M ALLINGHAM. WHITE LAKE -3-bedroom ranch. 2-car garage, n* tural fireplace, utility room, swli ming and taMttir iJmmmm, J only—0 down, 070 per month. O collect. KE 7-4600. Gainer Realty. BIRMINGHAM WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE No Matter What the Need, a Press Want Ad is Always Available to Help You Fulfill it ■* By Dick 'Turner “This window is for customers, Miss Jones! I don’t have a thing to do with restoring coffee breaks.!” * 491 Salt Houses AT ROCHESTER I and mallow, but In tip-top MMtn ft Oils 6-bedroom homo h 2 baths, firaplact. 2 porches, waring trees, on Tlenken Rd. ir Adorns. *27,500. Phono OL SOS tor Inspection. FRANK SHEPARD DONLEY STREET In Elmdale Subdivision near Auburn and Crooks Road. C.B.S. home, needs finishing. Must sell. SI 400 cosh or forms. Call 3*3-702*, WE 3-4200 or 341-4374. Michoel's Rdslty. ________. Drayton Plains Area Elizabeth Lake Estates 4-room bungalow with -two bedrooms and bath on main floor. Partly fWdied second-floor bedroom. Full bosomont. Hot water NORTHERN HIGH AREA 3-bedroom, wood floors, large utlll-Immodieto possession. FIRRY PAltiC S ROOMS PLUS utility and bath, new gas furnace. Paved street, terms. FE S-M45. RANCH HOUSE ANb 1 ACRE. Schuott. OR 3-7W1. Our New Address Is l-l-l-i Joslyn Ave., corner Third Cozy Bungalow Large kittJian—dining area. 'Wall-to-wall carpeting bl living room. Til* bfjeomont^gas hoot, only *350 Handymon Special lW-slory, 3 • bedroom ,0n 2 lots with 2-car garae*. Needs soma work but tha price Is low. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE SAUNDERS A WYATT REALTY Templeton WALLED LAKE AREA Only 300 foot from lake. E— nice. 7-raom bungelow. Mahogany paneled family room and kltcnon. Nearly now oil furnoo. Traly* very wall kept ham*. Only Of,500. TRI-LEVEL, BASEMENT, 3 BED- WALDON AT ALMOND LA CLARKSTON. Brick. 1350 SC S17.1M. ARISTOCRAT BUM-PI SIrs. . WATERFORD AREA Spacious 3-bedroom ranch hor featuring carpeted UVIng room a hall. Gas he*t» enclosed patio, < tached 3-car garage and laroe 95'x250'. Full price only *13,0! you this today. Coll MY 3-3S21 or FE M6f3. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD W. Flint St. MY 3-2S21. FE t-XK Lota Orion. MlftMon IT'S COLD OUTSIDE But cosy warmth from living room fireplace will kotp you snug and lim------------------ 'n kitchen rogo, t >18.900 LAKE ORION 335 N. Broadway. Income, 5 a bath down, (now ranting for SI per month), 4 and bath up, pi tially finished. 3-car garage. 31 SCO, 03,000 down, balance on I* contract.. Coll wm. B. Mitchell. WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE NOTHING DOWN JAMES A. TAYLOR, Realtor 7731 Hlahlond Rd. (MJ9) DR 4-0306_____Evenings EM 3-7546 WEAVER AT ROCHESTER/ IN THE LOVELY HILLS thl , hug* • ir attach* MILTON WEAVER INC.. REALTOR 111 W. University Rochester Evs WEST SUBURBAN PRIVILEGES ON BEAUTIFUL. watkins Take — 2-bedroom BRICK RANCHER — FULL BASEMENT— BREEZEWAY WITH ATTACHED GARAGE: MANY OTHER FEATURES TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION - $1,500 D~"“ TO NEW MORTGAGE. WRIGHT 301 Oakland Ava. FE 3-0141 . OR 3-4QS5 Toll At this pre-ownod Ilka-now 1-bed-room ranch, basement lots, no stops to climb, tosy clean til* floors spills mop up pronto. Comfy oil .heat, attached garage, easy maintenance of aluminum aiding. *11.-500. S3S0 could move you In. Then only Mill month plus taxes and Insurance. Yes, you con trade. HAGOTROM REALTOR. 4900 W. r garage, 4 large ri 121,000 terms. ' J. J. J0LL, REALTY LAZENBY I lot (214'xtOT). Prlc multiple listing service MIXED AREA TUCKER REALTY Mixed Neighborhood WEST0WN REALTY 470 Irwin off East Blvd. FE 0-2741 afternoons. LI 2-M77 Eve FIRST IN VALUE MUST SELL BY OWNER. A houses, Incomes and tomi properties. 01.775 up. E< TOM REAGAN, REAL ESTATE O'NEIL SAVE YEAR-END MODEL CLOSE-OUT Choose From 4 New Custom-Quality BEAUTY RITE HOMES 4| 75 |>L*do**lpne Zeller's Real Estate "Custom-Builders" 2040 S. Rochester Rood 0L 1-0221 IEW 3-BEDROOM BRICK HOM¥, 2-cer garage, both and Vi, and soparof* dining area. fATTS REALTY NA 7-2050 19S0 MIS of Bold Eagle Lota New 4-feedroom Colonial * Full bosomont, loro* lot, dolux* feature*. Best otter tokos It. Silver Lake Const. Co. 673-9531 • OPEN 11-8 . EVERY DAY $500 DOWN Buys totally completed 3-1 brick ranch in Crotcanl HI division. Largo htai, dn ment, gas heal, family size on, large dining a rax. Ox Ing, Oleg Includes *TiFX Crescent Lata Rl.< W mil* north Ot M59. Phono Ml 44100. C Schyett .’ FE 8-0458 22m TY RITE. Featuring, a specim family room with fireplace, set arete dining rbom, marble wlndo sills. 2Vk-cor attached Mrage an (nany. many extraa. Several i our happy Beauty Rite cutton ers could not have purchased oi home If w* hadn't tolkod trad*. It's easier than you Ihlnkt Drive through Clorkston to Exprasswoy, turn loft on Bluograss Drive. Modem built-in kitchen, li lly room, walk-out bosar attached 2W-car garage. OPEN. 2 to 5 Mon. thru Fri. 1 to 5 Sat. and Sum LET'S TALK TRADE RAY O'NEIL Realtor 3530 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN M OR 44417 , MLt RMrf-3475 l oversize 2 nld cement d .See models pn HAYDEN NEW HOMES 3 BEDROOMS . TRI-LEVELS RANCHES IVt-lOr Garage 03' Lot Included Family Room Gas'Heel FROM $10,500 ' 10 PER CENT DOWN < WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOT OR OURS — -z--'u Sot. 0-5 RENTING ■ $59 Mo. $10 Deposit MIDRQOM HOME GAS HEAT _ LARGE DINING AREA v •TcjrnrfwiM w r t j EDIT PROBLEMS ANO RE !EEI. For Immediate Action Call FE 54676 626-9575 ANYTIME SAT. OR SUN. OR COMETO 220 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY SPOTLItE NEAR PONTIAC MOTOR KAA coraotod living room, dMng room, contract art tte ttrmt. . WARDEN REALTY Mixed Area ideal for SMALL FAMILY, UNhon?* taSK^tMTS COZY AND COMFORTABLE. 34*d-reom, porwtBolono and Mumbium siding, extra large living room, klKhon with dWng space, full bath, oorage and fOncsd yard. 11400. HERRINGTON HILLS. Attractive 3-bedroom brick ranch. Car— living r^and^hal^^dinetts reatlon room, gas hoot, 0750 down on FHA. ah -Mrs. Howard FE 3-4412 'GILES ANOERSON STREET - 0400m buri , galow, 3 bedrooms, carpeted living and dbima room. Now wm furnace, full oooemont. Vltx clean tamo. Only 02.900, . . KENNEDY JR. HIGH — Otar* )-bedroom ranch, oak floors, 15hr JOHNSON RENTERS — Are yi its at lew as 0200. Monthly its loos than rant on land t. Call us today. AFTERS CALL OONNSfl JOHNSON 0034061 JOHNSON & SON NICHOLIE NORTH END homo lust decorated, ml, auto. heat, tard-tlle bail. A rail buy oslng cost* move you WEST SUBURBAN ^ttaHOr ranch, goe hoot, b. M Attechod garage. Clo*- $250 Moves You In Northern High Area Room for the kids to romp. 3 bod-rooms, lull bosomont. hardwood floors, Ilk* now. 0*0 month. Herrington Hills landscaped, fenced yard. Storms and sc roans. LOOK-* l-car attached garage. Only 011,700. / Smiley Reajty FE 2-8326 Open Daily 9 turn, to 9 p.m. ROOMS. LARGE 2-STORY HOUSE >4,500. . EM - Low i LAKE FRONT - LOVELY 2 'ROOM. Full tiled' I----- cor garage, *0'xl< HIGHLAND AREA peymdnt. Full price, arjuw. mediate possession. EM 3-7700. -BEO-toT.' Priced to I >14,900. TOf ---------------1 3*3-7700. I. 343-4703. 10 ACRES — vseant. Highland area. 04,500. Easy terms. Land contract. 343-7700. PROFITABLE 2-MAN OPERATION RESTAURANT — Roll hot spoil *7,550 down plus Invtntory. Ideal sol*. Call now - EM 3-4703. BEDROOMS - Lake privileges. $4,000. Low down payment. Coll EM 3-7700. A-l BUYS HUNT00N LAKE AH brick ranch — 3 bo lull bosomont, attached 1-car go-rag*, fireplace, kitchen with built-in dishwasher end disposal, WxZl' family room, hlc " | and Iota It lust *< Priced to soil at .$350 DOWN 2-femlly -Incoma, Pontiac N Side. 2 bedrooms, living root dining room down — 3-room !*t,™J2li Just 313,900. ON'T MISS CALLING ON THIS wall built largo family homo. Fireplace, bosomont, now gts heat, *Mt floors throughout! 2-car^garyge. 01040* land can- GILES REALTY CO, ^MULTIPLE LIOTI^uBtytCB**'' Val-U-Way Gov't Representative ' High « tor ■ergo llv is turnace. Orion Township room homo an a largo lob' Paved street, family-sized kitchen, gas boat, full prica only 07450, FHA forma. Near Lincoln Jr. High / living room, wniy uw auwn., R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR /FE 4-3531 345 Oakland / Open 9-7 After hours. PE 0-4410 or FB 0-1300 LIST YOUR tfOME WITH UP venlngs can Mi FE2-727 /TIMES ' LAKE OAKLAND Lovely ^Mroom rancher, lerg* , floors, s wall*. Nicely landscaped k 224. Call us today tor an Includes carpeting. 39,950. DO YOU Want t homo, with 2 fireplaces? One In the large family sin kltch-tn and on* In th* living room. This house has 3 bedrooms, garage, largo corner lot. Very desirable neighborhood. What more could you ask tor at th* lew prlc* ot 015,900? W* can -arrange financing for you. Don't |ust wish, T‘ TIMES REALTY 5319 Dlxi* Hwy. ML3 474-0394 ANNETT Waterford Village 3-bodroom bungalow, radiant floor hoot,-utility room and gprago- Privileges on Van* Norman Lake. 19,930, forms. West Side Brick Seminole Hills, 4-bod room homo In vory good condition. Living room with no- Elizabeth Lake Estates Custom built 3-bedroom whit* aluminum Cap* Cod homo, bosomont, FA hoot. Breezeway to 2tt-car garage. Lok* privileges on Ellnbofh Lake. Vacant. Immediate posses lion. Prlc* raducod to 121,50' Don't mis* this on*. Mak* an at polntmont to so* Itl The Price Has Been Slashed slot! entry byposolhg _________ to * potto, Kltchon PR maple cupboards, formica top* and built-ins. Lowor level has ponolod family room with fireplace end sliding picture window to oocond potto. Plaotorod 7-car garaga. Must be shown by appolntmont. Second Street 6-room ono-story bungalow with aluminum exterior. Lovely living room, dining room and kltchon. 3 nlc* ilzo B*dr-~— “-------* (yflLLER fACAirr 5 ROOMS ANO BATH n*4 the mall. 12x10 living room, tils bath, garage and fenced yard. J*i BEDROOMS I FLOOR 20 FT. living .room, fireplace, lovely dining room. Family kltchon, full bosomont. now gas furnace, garage. All newly decorated. S11,9I0. ---------J. Everything privet*. Th* amazing low price Is only 012,500. BUILDING THIS SPRING? Sea thisl — “ ‘ I. Perfect tor Irl-ItvOL lust oH 1-75, north oi 3 bedrooms and bqih up.' Pull bosomont, 2-csr garage. Nicely tondteaped tot, alee extra tot available. ' ‘ Elizabeth Lakefront Attractive ranch homo with living room, llroploco, dining braakfast garage. Good beach, k lichen, IR | bl ' 2-car a WE WILL TRADB Realtors 28 E. Huron st. Open Evenings and Sundays 14 FE 8-0466 "BUD" West Suburban 3-Bedroom Brick sndy, close - in location, wall-todod tot, 1-car gorago, paved rivet and featuring coraotod llv-ig and dining room*, itl* both, I ttlat li Mock mont _______ _ to Wlsnor, -Sfchool * floras. Cdtl today! WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson Realtor Von Won Bldg. 4540 Dixie Hwy.; OR 3-1273 John-K. Irwin SHOW HOUSE BUILDER'S MODEL "For Sale" Occupy January 15th Bi-Level. PamHyRoom $700 "MoveTYau In Only $122 ?er Month 0, closed Thursday Take Commerce Rd., turn toft — South Commoroa, t miles to Glen-gory him right to !?"■ D'LORA LOOK! Ranch ,$12:375* Bi-Level $12,875 Only $125 Down LARGE LOTS, LAKE PRlYl-LEGES, PAVED STREETS, CENTRAL WATER SYSTEM. OCCUPY JANUARY . Coming About Jan. 15th New lVi Bath Bi-Level Buy Before Prices Increase Open 1 to S. closed Thursday Toko Commerce Rtf., turn toft ol South Commofto, 2 miles to Glongary turn right to modal*. Americana Homes 6244200 For The Thrifty i. brick torv north old* ond school) “Bud" Nichulie* Realtor 49 Mt< Clemens It. FE 5-1201, AFTER 6 P.M. FE 5-0198 . TRADING, IS OUR BUSINESS Immediate Possession - YOU CAN SAVI rancher on large rambling, over 180 eluding electric garage Bloomfield Highlands cl cnie privileges •vollobto end no mortgage costs. Price Reduced OWNER SAYS sell right. NOW. ExW’- sharp a rancher with attached garage. Bultt-ln range a paneled family, room, andgood rear porch and ExoiHont^teatlwMn ^Drayton ora*. Price now Lorraine Manor BRICK RANCH—Throo bedrooms, scaped corner alt*. Low, wig and ng or**. Lois of extra features (n-oor opener Moetf convenient tocMton in •pr!!e '^uc^Tiarioi fcjsf Tn erecting. blacktop, sower. w 11,301 down plus c t bedrooms, freshly decorated, got hoot, carpet- Weft Suburban RIAL NICE and almost new.* Three bedroom brick and atomtoynt rancher ytth Wjar rarogtj Nowjy decorated, studio — and coreotod throughout. Vary desirable W privileges. Excellent value it lust $12,500 w Clorkston Area 3;BEDEOOM RANCHtR with iWcor. gerege._ Close to schools ^omt ping; p very desirable iroa. Sharp ar Budget-priced et only 112,401 with 1 like this one so don't wait. Select West Side Areo FIRST TIMI f landscaped corner tot. and Immadltto possoti ilKIWSBS Wonderful Location CLOSE TO pdNILBON SCHOOL-3-badroom JHH B___________ with racrtatlon room, living room Mil jMtural tireclaci, garago. blacktop etraot, sowar, warn- and oas. Wonderful family homo In a Wondorful area. The chlldron can walk to achooi. Ft lead at luat *16,500 wltti 11,650 down phis coots* GUARANTEED NOME TRADE-IN . 377' S. Telegraph Open 9-9 Realtor ' M L S. . FI 8-7161 'Sunday 1-5 THIRTY-EIGflT THE t»ONTIAC PRESS. ‘TUESDAY,' DECEMBER 29, 1964 Frushour Struble on the north (Mo of the city. $400 down plus costs. Vocont. Lets Trade . HR. Thar* Is a ______________v basement, breeze- way with Scar Baraga and a 9Sx 125' lot. Selling Mr SWJUe. Immediate possession. Lot 100x337' With a 5-room ranch home. Herd-wood floors, plastered stalls, full KENT Established In 19H EAST SUBURBAN — 2-bedroom and utility room**deep lot, S*,95e'. Only family n ARRO WALLED LAKE AREA. 5-bedroom brick ranch, lovely Formica cupboards In handy kitchen, cap petlng and drapes, Hi tiled bath largo lot In vary nice neighborhood. SIMM. Terms. STEAL AT sued, Cent Mod-room bungalow. Full basement, oil hoot, aluminum siding, Worms and screens, low JaaMt. privileges, SSM moves you In DORRIS NEW LISTING, TRI-LEVEL, almost an acre of ground In the Orion School District, locates MS MW new home that Is built of only the best of materials. Spacious kitchen with beautiful birch cupboards, sliding glass doors, gleaming o floors throughout, 2 full baths, fang bedrooms. ' " brick fK *11,380. WEST SUBURBAN - JTi-level 3 ft. carpeted living room, paneled wails and tiled floor Or basement ________gas heat, lake prlv- l Now at $11,000 with S2.1M Floyd Kant, Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Tatagraph FE 20125 or FE 3t9ta TRADE OPPORTUNITY Large S- 'area 2 blocks 15x21' living IRWIN fireplaces, 2W-car STOUTS Best Buys Today Lakewood Village multipuTlisting service OIOROS IRWIN, REALTOR 2te W. Wslton______FE 5-7» SEMINOLE HILLS ..num sided. I throughout. N ___ formica coun urel fireplace In living Tiled besement with dxfre _ lory, goe motor, gas range and water softener. Gas hoot.. RIGHT IN - IT'S VACANT. SUBURBAN LIVING At ITS BESTI ONE-ACRE LOT. Asbestos sided ranch, with 1 largo bedrooms. Dining room combined with kltch- Itxll ft. Refrigerator, Wove, ------ or end dryer Included. HOME IN EXCELLENT CONDITION - SEE Smith & Wideman SELL OR TRADE - Terms con bo arranged. LIST WITH US — We OCC trades and In this way many si rssutt Inst would not olherwl Open 9-9. Multiple Listing Ssrvl L H. Brown, Realtor S0t Elizabeth Lake Road Fh. FE 4-55*4 or Ft 2-4 O'NEIL CLARKITON GARDENS Thra* bedroom brick ranch, tv baths, carpeted living r ~ “ "large lot. Closo M school and 1-75 expressway. Priced tt f” *** Approximately $2a00 down. PONTIAC WATKINS ESTATES One of me nicest hemes L._________ area; a. brick, broom, 4-bedroom bMoyat. t full baths, s large family rdbm. an It x II* recreation room, living room. Largo kitchen with electric bullt-lns, 0 •— *$J* lendsceped°*lol**Prlce reduced ■mm CBrtNMfl. ItT priced at tractively of enly *12,508. We'l, arrange E-Z financing. / AVON TOWNSHIP UV O'NEIL. REALTOR snt PONTIAC LK. RO. OPEN OR 4407 MU OL 1-0575 KETTERING HIGH AltEA HILLTOP REAUJf PHONE 682-2211 . 5145 Cass-Ellzsbeth Rood MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN DAILY t TO t f aluminum construction. distance to ochoob. Carpeted living room and dining area. lVt ceramic tiled bathe, 5 bedrooms, basement, MM concrete drive 12x24* covered potto In tho chad garaga. $15,400. Trade nice 2-bedroom home In Ron- • beater, brook that rent * ■si Ms very live-ingalow located I Walton. $500 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE dining roc commnatlw fireplace, $.1’baths. Ing lake, s , A real 5-bod room byn • .... rancher near Adams Rd. Select oak floors, tils bath, spacious kitchen and dining area, basement, gas heat, aft ached 2Wear garaga, king tin tat. Only MO. with aasy farms. $7950 Total price for this neat : room homo, nr*' shopping center, heat, storms on utility parch, 1 lot. Easy tsrms i 'SMITH" ram outside stairway to the 2-room and broom apartments. Full besement with oil furnace. Gao wafer heater and lauhdfy tube. R0LFE E. SMITH, Realtor, 244 S. Telegraph :E 5-7SG_________EVES. OR S-75tl Lefcs Prsparty H HOME SITES, 00* X NO', SUNNY “--ch overlooking beautiful > Lake prlvflages. 2 l dies, docking, STSt, $10 i 4-4507, OR 5-1295, Bloch Bros. m HARTWICK FINES AREA, NEAR PETOSKEY. Dud T6 ILLNESS owner will sell or trodo 1 unlit completely modern motel with flying quartan on 2nd floor, tor floe, lifts. SM dawn, in • month. Bloch Bros.. OR 5-1225. . WHV AIUTt fcUY FOR LESS PER Bros. FE 4-4M2. OR S-I27S. Lots-Acreoge 54 ID ACRE PARCELS SitJO UP, • _ Vhlte Lake at Ormond Rd. Term* AL PAULY, REALTOR ___451* DIXIE^ REAR^_ .. cIaTTotT Choice building sites — Connected with Sylvtn Lake. JACK LOVELAND 1110 Cass Lake Rd. - 00x147. CHOICE 1-ACRE LOTS IN SUB- Weirted CiBtract»-Mt|. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wonted. See us btfoi WARREN STOUT, Realtor 450 N. Opdykt Rd. FE 5-1145 Ousn Eves. *TII t $ " HI-HILL VILLAGE A Planned Community FINANCING AVAILABLE _ TO BUILD YOUR OWN HOME C holes ostate-size parcels on paved roads. Many excellent homesItes with good drainage. LOW AS 02.250 WITH 0250 DOWN LADD'S, INC. . 5005 N. Lapeer Rd. Perry (M24) ARRO REALTY . . CASS-ELIZABETH ROAD CASH FOR LAND CbAYflAttS- C*H Collect NA 7-201S Oxford Area—135 Acres Vacant, gontly railing te rain, W mile frontage I paved road, private lak Ideal lor subdivision dtvolo mont, mobile yllloge, dl Only SSM per acre, torn Clarkston Area frontage, located dose to 1-75 and Dixie Highway. Priced right at 175,000. Annett, Inc., Realtors 20 e. Huron FE 0-0444 Qpon Evenings owd Sundays 1-4 carpeted living on i kitchen, brookfoi on first floor, S t bath up, bosom* one-car garage. O will handle. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. OpdykC’ Rd. Fh. FE 5414! Open Eves. Till I p.m. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE KAMPSEN Your Neighbor Traded— Why Don't You? DRAYTON AREA I Kroons. Nlcoly gage coots and S00 par month. Call now l This ana won't last. HAMMOND LAKE ESTATES Lake privileges. Over 1,800 squors feet llvliy ■ specs. 5 large bed-" "six!?* family heal" attached Tear' ____I _ ,» garage, SjOx Only 121,500. Terms or THINKING OF SBLLING7 WANT CASH9 Wo will got It lor you, give us a try. Csil Dave Bradley, Rachel Levely, Byron Rogora, Hilda Stewart. LoaKorr, Fred Rose- Pine Tree Trail Near Klrk-ln The Hills BLOOMFIELD KHOOLS Sole ferns 2W ACRES basement, coal furnace, I IS ACRES — High scenic corner near Fenton Rd. Like now 5-bod-room ranch, basement, garage, $22,500. term*. 20 ACRES — broom tamo, barm garage, trait. Holly Schools. 021 47 ACRES — Form tame, barn, blast to 1-75 Holly, S27.500, con-altar small home In trata. 240-ACRE DAIRY FARM - Ready 7to go. Between Flint and Holly, ' River through property. $325 - per UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 0445 Dixie. Clarkston 4W ACRES - 2-BEDROOM f Kras - 2 bedrooms tinlshoc 5 roughad-ln. 200-acre dairy farm. H. C. NEWINGHAM REALTOR •______ItHM CLARK 3-BEDROOM RANCHER . With full baaamant, fenced rear,yard, excel- | lent garage, very nice kitchen WEST BIDE — Comfortable 24 room homo with towing room separate dining room, oak fta full baaamant, prlca only tit, Owner will consider trade I housetrailer. PONTIAC LAKE FRONT — 7 Good deep lot. Only 110,400. ' CLARK REAL ESTATE 3101 W. HURON, FE MM * TO BUY, SELL B TRADE Multtoto Ltotlfd Service RHODES MULTI-LEVEL HOME. Ideal location. f rooms, 4 bod room*, 3 baths. Ideal far tha large family with plenty of room to roam. Largo recreation room, family room and Ploy roam. Lots of Ctotaf space. Gat heat plus 5-ton air condition unit. Attached garage. $44,100. Terms. STATELY SUBURBAN 0-room brick home. Beautiful shady lawn. It acres of rolling lend. An Wool country estate for the largo family. ----------W baths, full base- !<£2 OOt. forma. WATERFORD. with IVb baf______ In living room. Drapes '/Inclutaa. Gas heat plus air conoi-flan unit. M-foot tol. Lake privileges on Oakland Lake. 015,000, 450 down plot closing cools. (24 NICE 4-ROOM HOME a family: Only 3 Mocks from Baldwin Avo. Near but and shopping oroo. Only (M40. NICE RESIDENTIAL LOT. Wool ALBERT J. RHODES/ Broker FE S-2304 2M W, Walton FE 34712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE > 160 Acre Dairy Farm -Sbuth of Lapeer GreenhdHJse and Adjacent Home Lapeer Prudential Real Estate M S. Main. Lapat 664-8484 Waterford Hill Manor Lorg* estate lots on one of Oi lend County's most beautiful si divisions. Priced from S3.7S0. OPEN DAILY TO I P.M. DON WHITE, INC. OPEN DAILY TO I P.M. SOtl Dixie. Hwy. Business OppertuefHes 59 volume. R«0> N MICHIGAN Business Sales, Itic. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER IS7S s. Telegraph FE 41512 CORNER,. 400 ON OflDYkfc, 255 HOT-SPOT DRIVE-INN A lop-flight investment. Opp funny for your money to dou and triple here. Mein highway cation. Inslta and outsld* sarvl seals 40 paopto. tl*,500 down eluding VALUABLE rail estate. WARDEN REALTY 454 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 Win Opp Sri—Mbs 59 TIZZY MOTELS C. B. CHAPIN, Motet Broker Profitable 2 man operation laMaurant. Real hoi aaet. — “ down fEt Inventory. Ideal __ Aon tar 14 hour day agoraflan. Oh main highway. Mines* tore#* sal*. SSKdJT ***'■ HACKETT REALTY 77M Cooley Lekq Rd. SHltLL OIL C&AapAny' HAS SfeRV-tot Station available ter lees*. Located at 04 Orchard Laka and Harden, Pont!" ■** “— IwfermMkxi call 5 Tovenv-Mocontb County No. OOOl Owner wants to rtfli This nlcaly tqulpped bar wflh re MMta and 2 apartments tor on *53400. E-Z forma. STATEWIDE-LAKE ORION HUGO PETERSON, Ragfler 5340000 What Do You Have? We Have: 3. Drugstore 4. Hardware 5. Party Store — __________dings B. Acreage for developing 2. Commercial sites 10. Industrial sites tl. 4-acre home or church alt* BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 347 S. Telegraph Open 9-5 After S:< FE 14441 ______FE 2-171 Sale Land Contracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS lentty wanted. Set a* bef Safe HeesebeM Goods 61 1 BIG SAVINGS FOR CHRISTMAS! CASH equity or lend contract. Small-MMnr ____igbto - 402-1220. available. Call Tod McCullough I. J. Van Walt, 4550 Dixie 2 OR 3-1355.________ Nlttb LAflb CONRACTS. I Realtor, *417 Commerce Road. EMpire 3-2511 EMpIre SEASONkO LAND CONtllACTS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE . BRAND NEW $317 $3.50 WK. Includes 3-plecs bedroom tulle with box spring and mattress and 2 boudoir lamps. Nice frieze living room with end tables and beautiful lamps. Formica topped dinette with 4 chairs and nice range and refrigerator. BARGAIN BASEMENT Used stoves, refrigerator* and washers. All slzss. Clean, guaranteed, tit to $150. Plenty of other LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Qulc friendly, tatohll. . FE 2-9206 It the number to call. - OAKLAND LOAN, CO. 202 PontiK Stott Bank Bldg. 9:30 to S;S0-— Sat. 9:30 tol 3-R00M OUTFITS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $288 $3.00 WEEKLY NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS — (brand new) living room: LOANS f$25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTRR 0. LIVINGSTONE. Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 FINANCIAL WORRIES Let Us Help You! BORROW UP TO $1,000 Si months to poy credit lift Insurance avallabto BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY OFFICES NEAR YOU LOANS with courteous experienced coun sailors. Credit Ilf* Insurance avail able. Stop In or phone FE 54121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 N. PdTry St. PE 54121 ,9 to S Dally. Sat: 9 to 1 WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $1,000 Wa will bt glad to talp yi STATE FINANCE CO. SOt PontiK State Bank Bld< FE 4-1574 1st and 2nd MORTGAGES S1200 OR MORE NO APPLICATION FEES CASH - CASH FOR Home Owners WIDOWS. PENSIONERS CAN. BE ELIGIBLE. CHECK, LOWEST RATES tlNI .............. I 4.25 lull ............r $4,000 I 2nd mortgages slightly high* Borrow tor ANY ueoflil pui Consolidate. Bills ' Naw New Furniture Heme repair and modemliatk FE 8-2657 MORTGAGE ON ONE ACRE With 150-foot (rentage. No apt — al toe. B. 0. Charles, Equitable Farm Lean Service. 402-0204. Swaps ~ U 3-PIECE BLACK NYLON SECTION- 335-53(4. ItM Joslyn. If I 3343081.___________.- 10-INCH CRAFTSMAN TABLE SAW I h.p. motor and estras, coat 1335 --saflllM. 1200 4CV Renault 4000R, 1171, trata tor car, pick-up art EM 3-7047. t BLOND TV, 34" FOR ELECTRO dryer. OP 33475. _• German shepherC feaaales, months. AKC beauties. Sell c trade ter 7. UL 1-14S7. WE eOy, SELL AND TRAM ICE skates, skM toboggans, ‘ktatata Sole Clethini HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE USE PRESS WANT ADS EVERY DAY-AND GET RESULTS! . ) ■' ’ ' * By Kajji Osann “I don’t care about the old pocketbook, but there’s a lot of sentiment attached to the money — It'* my allowance!’* „ _____________..TEE tor gta. Metacalm Supply. 154 W Montcalm. PE 44713. CASH AND CARRY 4x7 pro-flnteltod maho|anj DRAYTON PLYWOOD . ,J. Walton ON >#12 D & J CABINET SHOP HURON _____A cabinets, HIM of formica, sinks. ___ __ faucets. COMPARE OUR PRICES. / lino SuBa^Matfe! times. MPrau4rm" _____________. fiW4 WMOt, buttonholes, rtek-rade and many designs to numerous to men-Ctn be parchtaed on oey- ____i or $4.70 par month or $147.31 cash. Rlchman Brothers Sewing Center, Pontiac’* ONLY gagHwiBi SBl Dealer. 444 Elizabeth Lake Meats aMErMfftoO Free home delivery SAVE UP TO 40 PER CENT J All name brands Call tor Free catalog and toitormatldn Quantities limited, no dealers 417-1177 FOR' DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Fleer Hardener Simple Inexpensive Application let ialldOre Supply HAGGERTY HAS IT! 3x4"-4ft. Fir or Hem. . .34c Each .....-ft. Fir or Ham. .42c Each _ -ft. Fit* or Ham. .42c Bach Haggerty Lumber MA 4-4551 HEAT FOR 1-3 LEU WITH GAS. JEEP STATION WAGON G O O I Last Minute Christinas SUGGESTIONS E Heir Dryers ..........Mljg peed Record Player wHh wl----- •adlo dell -____ * GE Television ’with hood Phones *99.50 GE 4ip**d Show-N-Tell Player 012.25 --------- . . . 042.95 and SS2.9S Roberts 400 Stereo Top* Recorder 1725. Repossessed model r— TE RMS AVAILABLE HAMPTON'S ELECTRIC SINGER SLANT-NEEDLE DELUXE •owing machine, zlg-zagger tor embroidery, etc - used. Maple cabf- MICHIGAN'S GREATEST BUYS l-Z ffAMi ORLAYAWAY BUY—SELL—TRADE I Frl. 'Ill 9, Sat. Iona, 2 step-fables, matching cettoa table, 2 decorator lamp*. All tor SI22. Only *1.40 weakly. NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS Bpiaca (brand naw) tadrooma: double dresser, book-case bed and cheat, box spring and innarserlng mattress, 2 vanity lamps. All tor fWt SI .50 Mtkly. Visit our trada-ln department tor more bargains, PEMeON'i FURNITURE 10 E, Pika FE 47(01 Ohm MM. and Sfrl. 'til 9 P. m. Id City Hall SPECIAL 10 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists of: -piece living room suite with tablet, t cocktail table and ■piece bedroom suite with drasHr chest, full lire be innersprlng mattress ant. spring* to match with 2 vanity 5-piec* dinette tat, 4 chroma chairs, nice top tabla, 1 bookcase rug Included. All tar 1372. WYMAN FURNITURE CO, 17 E. HURON FE 442(1 10 W. PIKE__________ , FE 42150 USED 'TV's ............ MOJf REFRIGERATOR .......... S32.9S Sweet's Radio 4 Appliance Inc. “ “ Huron “ ~ OSS FRIGIDAIRE WASHER AND dryer. Clean, good condition. Set, HOP cash. FE 44143. A World. Famous Necchi • zlg-zagger tor button* », ..antograma. Mind tarns. No complicated attach#ments buy. Lllatlme guarantee and i instructions at Rlchman Broth-Sewing Contor, Pontiac's ONLY inSP.Nacchl price SU.00 or $5 . Elizabeth Lake Rd. II. 335-9233. AFTER HOLIDAY SPECIALS ool Table .... $59JO Deluxe GE dishwasher . $199.50 Humidifiers ............. *49.95 Electric dryer ... . $79.50 GE 4-tPted show-n-tell player $23Jl r—1 color TV . $199 JO 1 TERMS AVAILABLE HAMPTON'S ELECTRIC (25 W. HURON FE 42525 OPEN TILL 9 P.M. THURSDAY, TILL 7 ONLY AAA MEANS: ALL PARTS, ALL SERVICE, ALL LABOR Singer sewing machine In wain cabinet, used. Makes batten tak monograms, all sewing lobe do BUNK BEDS Choice of 15 Ityl**, trundle triple trundle beta end bunk_____ complete. .549.50 and _up. Pear- ’a Furniture, 3 i E. Pike. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE ••to,. BRAND NEW. Larflo and •moll slid (round drop toot, rectangular) tables In 3, 5 and 7 pc. sets. S24.95 and up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE -It E. Pika FE 47111 COLONIAL FURNITURE, CMOS selection, everything for your tame Family Home Furnishings, 2135 Dixie Hwy., cer. Telegraph. DAVENPORT AflG CHAIR. BLOND Mbnd’tton.m*FE 8-3095. DUNCAN PHYFE DINING ROOM •at. s-p|r- mmN— • —Sj ,flon- OR ELECTRIC RANGE, 30", SHORT wave ractlVK, FE 42735. ELECTRIC STOVE, 42" WIDE, 35' *5" daap, *25. Ml 40424 34" Gas rang* 322.20 Easy Spinner Naw S12I 21.5 Chest Freezer s3n GE Portabto TVi $02.96 13-foot Frost Free Gibson' Refrigerator (2) S225 Frigidaire If relrlg. *171 FREIGHT -DAMAGED* STEREOS _ RANGES REFRIGERATORS WASHER AND DRYERS FIRESTONE STORE 144 W. HURON smnr , FRflflZER UPRIGHT, LASt YEARS IBM Models. Guarantoid tor. 5 mors, S229 value IIS2< scratched. No down payment. Michigan Ftoer-eacent, 323 Orchard Lake. 7 . f6A SALE KENMORE 30" GAS range, good condition. Beit offer. Coll after $ p.m. LI 40122. GAS RANGE OH,‘kf^RIGERATOR Sola HtaieheM Seeds 65 LONG WALNUT STUDIO COUCH. KINGSLEY IMPRINTING MACHINE cewilato M 3-2767. LAVATORIES COMPLETE voluo 314.95, also bathtubs, h shower stalls. Irregulars, N values. Michigan Fluorescent Orchard Laka I.___________________ V-grooved mahogany . Reck lath.. .......... Burrneister's id 4 days a week S a m. t EW AUTOMATIC WATER SOFT-ener. also removre Iran. S249. O. A. Thompson, TOPS MS2 Wtaf. OFF-SET PRINTING PRESS NO. 221 Davison- — Forbes — OR 40707~ , WINTER CLEARANCE 1 30" Frigidaire rang*. 1244 m 1 Frlgldelre freezer, upright. 1 Frigidaire Dishwasher. ALL SPECIALLY FRICEO. CRUMP ELECTRIC 344S Auburn Avt._______FE 43S73 WASHER, $25, ELECTRIC STOVE, S3S. Dryer. SIS. Refrigerator with top freezer, *49. Sa ~*— 21-Inch TV SIS. Refrl V. Harris. F* 4P44. . POOL TABLES-BELAIRE LI 40900 plumbing bargains, f r d I jfatiiito.jonaL _su.2s. -i*»ofly WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At our IS w. Pika Store Only la and floor lamps tram . S 2. ;. Ironers from ...... *32. Size gas stove ...... *32.25 . dining room salt* .. $39.95 . living room salt* ...... S42.9S Guar. alac. refrigerator EASY TERMS S42.2S FE 41144 ORIGINAL BUGGY, IN PERFECT condition, also driving harness. $150. will Nil soporotely. OR SPECIAL DISCOUNTS ON MANY HI-FI, TV & Rowes S3 BOTTLE OF COLOGNE FREE till after now Years with any color TV, itorao, portable. Phil co-Zenlth Dealer — OALBY TV- ' BLOND RCA. 24" GE, BRAND II Harmon Kardon A RECONDITIONED AND GUARAN-taed TVs. SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM. JOHNSON'S RADIO & TV 45 E. WALTON * FE 44549 I CABINET TV. RCA HI-FI AND RECORD CABI-net, cost sfnb.NlI *50. FE 2-3344. TWO 21-INCll-TYs, t CAR RADIOS ___________ FE 44911 473-1277. unhreriM S< For Sole Miscellaneous 67 Vt- AND 8.V3-HORSEPOWER ______ pumps, new, used and exchanged, bronze bases, guaranteed, your — ---------- Cone's. Ft 5-5443, 1 WEEK ONLY by S', by to Sapall panall.._ 4' by T pre-flnlsbad mahogany S3.37 9 X12' LINOLEUM RUGS S3.75 EACH Plastic wall tile to Celling til* — well paneling, B4G Tito, FE 42257, 1(75 W. 10-GALLON JOHN BEAN POWER sprayer. Excellent condition. clud*s[,«pKl*l spray gun. STt. 21-INCH USED TV " 122,95 Walton TV FE 42257 Open 9-9 SIS E. Walton, corner ef'Jptlyn HOLIDAY SPECIALS I TV, SIJS ear 1 electric range. Bottle Gas Installation Two lOOweund cylinders end tqi ment, S12. Great Plains Ota ( FE 5-0872. BATHROOM PlkTUllii, &IL Aflb trlcal supplies. Erack. Mil, per, Mack and galvanized and fittings. Sentry and ____________ Super Kern-Tone GOODYEAR STORE ____CASS PONTIAC HAND WEAVING LOOM. WEAVES BEAUTIFUL AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG sewing machine In walnut used. Monogrem), makes helm, designs, no attai needed. Full price 544.44 i 42537.* I 415(1 ■PHPHIII chain ... hj. riding mower. OR 41741. IM't SALVAGE OUTLET, EVERY-flilng brand ^— Prlcae whotoaato---------- Airport at Hatchery. OR 4(314 Fire salvage. '—K. Corner mshT i Christmas i type, Forbes, OR KITCHEN UNITS-BY KITCHEN KOMPACT Visit our models on display./ Terms Available * -Of Pontiac Plywood Distributors t N. Cat* HAND WEAVING LOOM Michigan Fluorescent, 323 Orchard LUMBER ptSTjJ $19.95; i|4Ml Z-Powl SUNS, sz.vs; Levs.. S2.95; tuba, tit and up. Plot- cut are* threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO. S4I Baldwin. FE 41510. . ROLL-TOP DESK — FORBES — SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK Supply, 2471 Orchard Laka. 4(43*70 STAINLBSS STEEL dOubli* SAL! GUITARS , . . ACCORDIONS Laanare and Ktaota. FE 4S42*. GRINNELLS YEAR END Piano. Clearance Baldwin Piano Racandltlenad and restyled 1?75 Used Grands $165 Used Uprights $59 Floor Sample Pianos save up to $175 LOW EASY TERMS Grinned's (Downtown) S. Seglnew______FE 4714t IEO PIANOS: UPRIGHTS FROM S4t - spinets from S2H —' consoles from *392 — tome new pianos, fleer samples, mem music studio used. Inquire at Grtoneii't, Mask Lessens ACCOROiON, GUI r« 714 LESSONS. Sales-Servlce PulonKhI, OR 43926' Sporting Goods the areal ling 33 rlfl •rby II r MERCURY OUTBOARDS 1.9-100 im and Sport Center 9 Rd., HOlly ME 44771 m Daily end ~ ground or Sand—Gravel—Dirt TOP SOIL, SAND. GRAVEL, FILL. _______FE 41433 PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply, sand, * gravel, fill dirt. Oil ■»—i - *----» SEE OUft LINK OF HOMELITI u»b f * a z e r r6t6tillers, parts a no iiRvicl. L. W. Avia IS7( Opdykt. . FE 443M USED WC CU$ « L0-B0Y TRACTOR ’ WITH SNOW BLADE A-l SHAPE, S112S. KING BROS. FE 40734 _ FE 4||(| Penttoc nead at Opdvfto 4 MODEL SLEEPS S 1 1945 MODELS ON 'bllPt>Y For al deal an a quality travel trailer Inspect CENTURY-TRAVELMASTER 3 1244 19-toet Canturtot tatt TOM STACHLER AUTO and MOBILE SALES Ft 442a ARf YOU FLORIDA BOUND? °AVALAIRS, CREEsT' H0LLYS, TAWAS eu!s W0R?H *auto and TRAILER SALES 577 Pixie Hwy._____MA 4I4W AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Sine* 1232. Guaranteed for Hto. See them and get * demonstration at Warner Traitor Salas, 309t *" zagp f- —^ 1 f Byam-s BOOTH CAMFER i caravan*). any pickup, OR 3GB4, ' PHOENIX TRUCK CAMPERS 414104 franl and side metal*. Pioneer Camper Salta. FE 432(2. ~ PICK-UP CAMPERS From SIN up T 4 R CAMFER MFO. CO. SS« Aubumdale, Utica 731-I2N SAVE New '44 medals. 14 and 12 ft. Winnebago's. Large discount. Pickup box covers. ' vacation until March 1st. Thank AL. S498 Williams. Laka Rd., Dray- ton Plains. OR 45211■__________' TnAVn. TRAILERS AND TRUCK camper*. , Pontiac Auto Brokers, 10'x44', 2-BEDROOM BROOKWOOO. Call FE 42404. WOLVERINE TRUCK 6UlfliflS bumpers, ladders, racks. LOWRY CAMPER SALiS. EM 41441. MARLETTE, VAGABONO, GARO. ner. Skyline, General, 1412 and 20 wlta. 40 Hear plant. WoGd-CeEKske-fnel 77 14 AND 34INCH OAK FIREPLACE 1-A AGED WOOD, *7 UP, ALSO slab. FE 4S7S4or FE 4----- side colors. OAKLAND FUEL 4 PAINT. 45 Thomas St. FE 40139. AN AND LARRY'S - DRY SLAB wood, lit cord, 2 lor 119 delivered. FE 2-1449 or 4734514 IAK AND HICKORY FIREPLACE weed. OR 490(2. _________ 1 OP THE BEIT AKC DACHSHUND pups, stud dogs. Jehelms, FE 43530. 4GALLON AQUARIUM, PUMP AND AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. STUD dogs. ESTELHEIMS, FE 2-08W. AKC REGISTERED BEAGLE PUPS L. E. Wilts, 70------ H BRITTANY PUPS, II WEEKS OLD, AKC registered. EM 33052. DACHSHUND PUPPIES, AKC REG-' UtotaWH Oxford Trailer Sales 1 mile *oulh of Lake Orton on M24 MY 14731 Coloniar Mobilhome Salta Special Offer Vagabond: 12* Wide "Factory Cast" AaBawi (MN) *t Opdyka (M24) YOU SAVE $$$ 1945 If wldas. 3 bedrooms, S39S down, peyments of in par montlb including Interest and Ireurenee. Delivered and set up. Mast units heeled tor your itagplng convenience—A good selection of used f end If w5i*s as low at *195 down. Terms to your satisfaction. BOB HUTCHINSON 4301 Dixie Highway bR 312N Drayton Plalna Open 9 to 9 dally Sal. 9 te 4 - SUNDAY, 12 to S Buddy end Nomad*. Located halfway between Orion and Oxford on M2*, next to Alban Cousin. A*** "*■' n Fluorescent, 323 O TALBOTT LUMBER Feint closeout Sale. Interior Laytex,, ------ Tam< s, t0 1025 Oakland! Ave. FE 4-4525 TH| SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE m W. LAWRENCE ST. Evarythlng ■ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUP, FE-mala, AKC registered, *75, EM 3-4443 after 5. __________ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUP, FE-male, AKC registered, 6 weeks eld. Will swap nr 20 gauge stat- .I-FOLD MAHOG-any doors to fit flnlohod opening 5*11" wide by VT* fifi — — —i togotti »r unit c. OR>7y71. _________ ________ AND OIL FURNACES. Chandlor Hootlnga OR >5*3^. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT PARAKEEt, BABY MALES, S4.95. 335 First, Roetaatar, 6514805. POODLE PUP3, tit and S20 ______________MA 43433_______________ supplies. CRANE'S, UL 32200. PERSONALIZED POODLE C L I ping. OR 34220; >. Also International Ca- Comeras • Service i. New condition. Call I EXAMPLE: NEW PIANOS FROM 3399 - USED PIAMW FROM »t“ GALLAGHER'S MUSIC IS E. HURON FE 4-0544 Royal Oak Store 4234 Woodward ■•tween 13 and 14 Mil* Rd*. . Open dally 9:33 to 9 p.m. OPEN SUNDAY FROM I TO 3 P.M. FREE PARKING AT GALLAGHER'S Brand new aplnat plane* from Naw Lowray organs from S499 Shop ua before you buy. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC II E. HURON FE 4-05A6 Royal Oak Sfora OPEN SUNDAY FROM 1 TO 5 P.M. FREE PARKING BEfTBRLY'S BARGAINS Used Organ* No Down Payment CONN Spinet S13.S0 mo. CONN 25 pedal walnut . $15.75 mo. HAMMOND Mlnat ... S15.75 me. BALDWIN Spinal $24.75 , BY DEC. 31 1244 Now It fh* time to bay LEW BITTERLY MUSIC CO. Across from Birmingham Theater Free Parking Ml 4 MM CONN MINUET WITH LESLIE Cabinet*. Sustain and ' percussion, RimniirBlgre. a12a.ee value $1,550.00 MORRIS MUSIC 34 3. Telegraph Across from Tei-Huron FE 2-t547 M9.3 terms. From $210. GRINNELL'S (Downtown) REGISTERED BRITTANY SPANIEL a months old. Must sell. MS. FE 44318. Richway Poodle Salon All breed professional grooming A complete line ef pel supplies SINGER CANARIES. ALL PET snap. SI williams. FE 4443S. . TOY TBRRldfe, 4 MONTHS,425. kN AUCTION GETS YOU CASH. Phone Ston Perkins Swartz Creek OPEN DAILY 8 to 8 i—t TroBtf lfCE ft NEW SPACES, NATURAL GAS ■ PONTIAC MOBILE NOME PARK TlrBS-AEttHTriKk ^ 92 truck Tirt Specials *25x30-10 ply, highway . .. S42Jt 123x20-12 ply, highway .... tSt.M (25x20—10 ply, mud and snow , nylon ..... $49.12 200x20—It ply, mud and snow nylon ....... $47 32 l(k22.S—la ply mud and snow nylon .......... *45.71 Ask for special deal on sets of four FREE MOUNTING Budget terras available FIRESTONE 144 W. Huron 3137217 Aot» ttrvkt tl CRANKSHAFT GRINDING .IN THE raboUdlng , Ck Machine FE 32363. ______, . ________ ..Ji'a Auction ' Sal*. 70S W. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion. MY 3t«7i — MY 34141. Retail 7 days MfltorcyclGf f> Clearofice Sale 1(44 Honda Hawk ' *395 194344b 74, SI95 IM3 Honda Trail t19S ' 1944 Honda Trail 9t, *275 12(3 Triumph 450, *725 t*41 ESA M. *525 1244 Yamaha, 1125 1245 Honda tsa, *450 1244 Hand* 110, S225 1244 Honda Scrambler *595 1244 Triumph 500. (72$ 12(1 Allatlto 175, 1195 1244 Simplex Mini-bike, sill Low dawn payment, easy terms. ANDERSON SALES S, SERVICE “* ‘"te FE 2-1309 YAMAHAS All New 1245 Modal* KAW CYCLE 2436 Auburn 1 Utica 731-0328 ; Boots-Accsssories 97 ENGINES AND DRIVES seta Dixie Hwy. ________ t66aV, dICbmber 12, at t pjm. .. At the premises of Golden Chain Truck Stop Restaurant located on Highway M-34, 13 mil** north ot Pontiac or t mil* *outh of Oxford. Going out at business. Complete Tox Reduction Sale WED., DEC. 30 ENTIRE STOCK OF NEW AND USED MERCHANDISE WILL BE SOLD TO REDUCE PRGPERTV TAX. COME ANb Tam ADVANTAGE OF THIS SPECIAL SALE. ENTIRE CONTENTS OP BUILD-INGl MUST BE SOLD, WALL TO Terms-Cath 2 Auctioneers Leon Hook, Sales AAanagar Write, Phone, Wife for Details -B&B Audtion 5089 Dixie Drayton OR 3-2717 Hobbies l Supplies 82 USED WHEEL HORSE TRAC-tors qtarflng tram tuo. Used chain sew. Evans Equipment. 4331711 EE USkFIRST AND SAVE. JOHN DEEM, HARTLAND AREA Hardware, Phona 4337141. We can convert your outboard boat K AT REASONABLE COST tt per cant down—Bank Rates OAKLAND MARINI 391 S. Saginaw________FE >4181 A(Uib TO FIND BUT EAsV TO dezj with-" Rlnker, Steury, Cherokee boats, Kajtot pontoons, Evln-rude motors. Femco trailers. Taka AAJ2 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Road tt Da mode Road, loft and follow signs to , DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO / .LAKEi Phota M — JOHNSON'S ARD HERE CLOSE-OUT ON '64 MODELS, beat* — Canoes Tffllara' OWENS MARINE SUPPLY J 326 Orchard Lake F 1^2-8828 SPfCIALS / lets Johnson Motor, S h.p. S227.5t PINTER'S MARINE I37B Opdykt Open 'til I p.m. SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES ' On 12(4 boats and motors tor Christina* or tor Christmas gift No interest to p. BIRMINGHAM BbAT I North ¥ 14 Ml Special Deal '44 1341. Owen*, express cruiser, . "new" S* h-P. 1»M reduction gear, hardtop, leaded. Fra* (hip to ...itata radio and depth sounder. WE TRADE _ BANK FINANCE , J-AKE.A SEA MARINA ... . Yourlecal Owens daeler 34S Sj. Blvd. E._________FE 495S7 TONY'S MARINE f6r JOHNSON MOTORS \ i wml: THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1964 THIRTY-NIffR “SPORTS MINDED" / BE SURE to VISIT OUR NEW a-^as motor,. I n°BOA?i—MOTORS—TRAILER CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES __JR). IT'..‘ K*ft PMVPB MMhs by Trada-a- «LFiJ!S* fi% , always b 110, SUN. C Waited Cm-Trucks 101 always buyimo and paying I more for good clean cars ask FOR BERNIE AT - BIRMINGHAM CHRYW-RR-PLYMOUTH, INC. AVERILL'S California Buyers tor stow* cor*. Coll . . . . m&m motor sales Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER MANSFIELD AUTO SALES i buying ihorp, lot. SPECIAL PRICE PAID FOR 1,55-1,43 CARS VAN'S AUTO SALES GLENN'S ,52 Wool Huron St. FB 4-7371_____ FE 4-171 . WANTED: 1MMM3 CARS • Ellsworth . * .AUTO SALES an pinto Hwy. I ■ . ma ho WE NEED CARS! TOP DOLLAR FOR ' GOOD CLEAN CARS Matthews-Hary reaves 63) OAKLAND AVENUE FE 44547____ Jswfc Corf-Tnscta 101-A 1 OR 10 J U N K CARS - TRUCKS two tow anytime. PE 2-2666. WANS M jUNK CARS - trOcKs Free tow. OR 3-2936. ALWAYS RUYINO SSJUNK CARS—FREE TOW** TOP SS CALL FE 54142 ___SAM AU-ENfc SONS. INC. JUNK CARS HAULED AWAY Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 I,SI CHEVY VS ENGINE. CALL OR 34351 0War 4. 1951 MERCURY 3W MOTOR, PER-fect, will W Ford. SIS. 334-7WI. Neweed Used Trucks 103 IMS CHEVY PICKUP, S-FT. 6cylinder onglnt, 6-pty tiro, ond drives porfoctl SOM. JBI- FERGUSON Inc. Rochester FORD IN STOCK -Ready For Delivery- '1965 Ford MOO '/.-Ton Pickup BEATTIE "Ytur FORD DEALER Sine, WK ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Homo of SERVICE oft, OR 3-1291 1,60 FORD FICKUF tt-TON, LO box. VS angina, now rubber, cl* JEROME FERGUSON I Rochester FORD Poolor. OL 14, Ferei|N Cur. IIS New tad Used Cars _CONVERJJ- f excel- ST3rf®.13L.« Horotg Turnbr Ponl Ml 6-H00. iST VW CONVERTISlE, ■ X t j L IMI FIAT _______ ___ FE 5-3614 VW. WHITE, RADIO, GOOD 00iy financing 01_______ SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland • FE 5-94 _ Immediate Delivery Eo$y Financing-Bank Rota, SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Ooklond FE 5-9421 , money A 5 2604 , (■IMS, RED. FULL MUlMINt, IkO now, SUM, 651-0451. I STATIC Autobahn Motors, Inc, AUTHORIZED VW DEALER . 14 mils norm of Miracle Mile IMS S. Telegraph FE 5-4531 New —d Baud Csn lit CLEAN UP SPECIAL NORTHWOOO AUTO SALES OVER 100 CARS to choose from. Priced tram I_ si,,75. We finance. Economy Con. Tel-A-Huron Motor Soles 1*5, SUICK CONVERTIBLE. 5-CYL-Inder automatic, double power, lull pries onto 54,5. COOPERS—4371 PIXIEt-ORAYTON tWd BUICK 4-DOOR ELECTRA 225. I owner car, SS down. Wl FINANCE Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 (Acceoo open to lots white street under construction) mi Euick invicta convirti bte. Like now. 472-SIS,. Mri jluibc umiU +6o6it 81,400. Call 330-4541. *■ stt ud fir*t BOBBORST 1959 CHEVROLET Parkwood I pinengir station wagon. Igirkltel White, VI onglno, radio, boater, whitewalls. OMy SMS. Patterson QteVrolet Co. ties C. Woodwork Aye. Ml 44735 BIRMINGHAM Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance .Youl 100 Cars to Select From! Call Mr. Dal© FE 37863 LLOYD'S 1250 Oakland Ave. 1962 Chevrolet! 25 Months Chevrolet OK Warranty Patterson Chevrolet Co. Sited S. Woodward Avo. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM IMP CORVETTE HARDTOP. GOOD LLOYD'S LINCOLN-MERCURY NEW LOCATION 1250 OAKLAND AVE. FE 37863 New tad Used tee 104 MARMADUKE HUEM ELLSWORTH AUTO ond TRAILER SALES an OIxta Hwy. MA 5-14M 1,64 MONZA CONVERTIELE, LIKE I, 4-speed, radio, lte Is. 11,775. 442-0555. 4 c ti tv V chEvelle, 300 4- outre clean I Only SUM. JEROME P ERGUSON. the. Roc"-^~ FORD Dealer, OL 14711. 1M4 CHEVY ImPaLa S-bOOft , power steering, hMWb UflM lea, extra mars — jlmoot who el SUM. JEROME PRROUSON L Rochester FORD Dealer. . 1964 CHEVROLETS 25 Months Chevrolet OK Worronty impale Sport Coupe. Lagoon i with ague trim. VI engine. Po glide, power steering, very i_ Oniy ................... SUSA rnj Impala^Ldpor seden._ Daytona Powergllde, power Usering *2,4,5. . Impale Sups, Sport coupe. Satin sllvsr with block vinyl top, black Interior. VS onglno, Poworglida, power steering and power brake. An unusually llke-now cor 524,5. Impolo Sport Coupe. . Ember rod with block trim. VI onglna. Power- Ir 4-door » fawn trim radio. • 4-cyllnder, (tick Biscoyno 2-door sedan. Meadow green with all vinyl Interior. 6-cylinder engine, Powergllde, |--------- — brakes, radio Patterson Chevrolet Co. list S. Woodward Avo. Ml 4-2) | BIRMINGHAM t,4t CHEVROLET V • S +OOOR hardtop, oxc. condition. Low mite- ego. FE U4S3.______________ INS CHEVROLET ^PASSENGER station wagon, 4-door automatic 4-cyllndcr, radio, boater, gtelteWBllL red with white top. DON'S. 477 S. Lspoor Rd„ Orion. MY 2-3S41. ... 1,60 CORVAIR, A-l Ml 6-4538 transmission, i__ earing, power brakes, radio, tt I glass and other extras. St rlad at only 19M BIRMINGHAM Chryater-Ply mouth ,64 LaSABRE. 4-DOOR HARD-top, double power. This car It worth shouting about. Only S24M. FISCHER ' BUICK 1M2 CADILLAC SEDAN Dl VILLE, 1-ewnar, excellent condition, low mlteiige, merry extras, MA 54061. fidl 5150. jfROME-FEROUSON, Inc., Rochester FORD Dealer. OL 14711, R 4-DOOR, STA- PATTERSON CHEV- AVE« BIRMINGHAM. * 1M4 FORD Vi TON. V-i 25 Months Chevy OK . Worronty Brook wood 4-door 6-passenger wo on. Sparkling turquoise finish, i vinyl Intarior. 4 cylinders, powe glide, radio heater, whitewalls. 51,0 Parkwood ,-passenger wagon. Fawn beige finiiti with fawn Intorlr-V-i engine, Powergllde, pow steering, whitewalls. Real aha Potterson Chevrolet Co. 1104 s. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2725 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT RAMBLER-JEEP CLARKSTON MA S-2435 IM2 CHEVY WAGON, 5-CYLINDER. ll *1,275. c. Roch- 4-DOOR 30000 miles, I_______ JEROME FERGUSON ester FORD Peeler. OL »3 CHEVY tMPALA hardtop, V-d automatic, steering and brakes. OA 1-2044. IN* tObVAIR, RAOIO, HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTE-LY NO MONEY DOWN. Taka ever payments/ at *37.,* par month. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. MI 4-7500. CLEAN 1,42 CHEVlOLET IMPALA, “ - “■ ^1 1,62 CORVAIR 2-DOOR COUPE, 55 down. WC FINANCE Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 MARVEL Homer High! 1,5, CHEVY 51,7 ~ King Auto Sales w. Huron St. FE 8-4086 GMC PFT. STAKE, II good runner. Onto *4,5. Easy ■IfcfCfATTBllONCHl^ CO. 11*4 S; WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-3735.__ G.M.C. Factory Branch New and Used Trucks UlfflL in stock -Ready For/delivery- ; 1965 Ford ' . F-250 k-ton Pickup BEATTIE 'tVour FORD DEALER Sine* 19W" /ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Horn* et SERVICE attar the sale" OR 3-1291 JEEP 1963 C-170 Pickup with 4-wheel drive, Jong box, l< tor snowplow, excellent eondlt PATTERSON CHRYSLBR-PLYMOUTH-VALiANT DODGE—DODGE TRUCKS ism N. Mein St. ROCHESTER UL 15551 AUTO INSURANCE FOR. ANYONE DON NICHOLIE ' FE 54113 1960 CHEVRpwTS 25 Months CheVy OK Warranty Biscsyne 2-door sedan, ermine white finish with blue trim. 4 cylinder, stick, shift. A real beauty CORVETTES 25 Months Chevy OK Warranty 1,5, Corvette convertible. Powei glide, radio, heater, whitewall! Red and white exterior, rad k terrlor with black tap. Only 11,7,1 . Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1104 L woodward Ava. Ml 4-273 J BIRMINGHAM . Patterson Chevrolet Co. 104 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2725 ■ BIRMINGHAM ler powergllde with power steer-1, finished In spotless teal blua t —— white-—"- “ * like-new id Just -rulL ( I weekly. | t Co-ordlne NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) (Just tt mile north of Cass Ava.) Spartan Dodge “ AUTO INSURANCE Stop In today for no obligation quotation. Anderson Agency FE 4-3535 1044 Joslyn Ave Foreign Cars ___________105 7,** VW, VERY GOOD CONDITION. CORVAIRS 25 Months-Chevy OK Warranty 1M4 Morns convertible. Lagoon aqua wilt! white teg and aqua .. *1,M aqua with adlo, heat- Mania coupe. Autumn gold fawn trim. 3-ipeed, radio; ■, whitewalls. Only 114,5. Patterson Chevrolet Co. 104 t. Woodward Avo. ' Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM . 1963 CHEVRPLETS 25 Months Chevy 0K: Warranty or, whitewalls. Only . er steering, radio, I with matching ^ car and only Bel Air 2-door gild*, radio, Iwa Impale 4-door witn matching Rowerglide, pov Heater, whltewa VI onglna. Power- wagon. I s, VI er Patterson Chevrolet Co. hardtop, vary ,.w mfloae*. _ • Must aoU- SUM. LI HtK CORVETTE STING RAY. 1M2 FAST-bock coup*. Eyo-cstchlng motolllc blue. Powerful 4-sposd transmission with 350 snelrto. Excellent condition. For th* person who onlays driving. 114,1 tell price will low bank rates. Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER tt.-mlit north of Miracle Mite 1745 S. Telegraph FE 5-530 WE ARE A VOLUME DEALER '65 Chryslers —TODAY— —We Can Deliver— '65 Plymouths —^TODAY— — We Cin Deliver - '65 Ramblers - Today iw \ BILL SPENCE By Anderson A Leeming New and Used Cars 106 me PONTIAC F4AUENOER STA- Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Soginow FE 4-22 H or FE 3-7853 utSyawterudten! “Now dirn’t you start on me!" New end Used Core 106 ___ HEATER, WHITEWALL T I R t S. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Taka, aver payments et 331.1,, par monte. CALL CREDIT MGR.. Mr Parks at Herald Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500. Ml FALCON STATION WAGON, RAOiaHEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Tekd over payments of 0745 par montn CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks, at Harold Turner Fprd. Ml 4-7500. Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Con Finance Youl Call Mr. Darrell FE 8-4528 —ANYTIME— SPARTAN DODGE INC. NT FORD COUNTRY SEDAN STA-tion wagon. Bright red finish, with matching Interior. V4 ----*i' ----- steer haetet.....I _____ ______ _____ Only *1,1,5. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. IM| S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. IMI PALCON 2-DOuR, RAD 16, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITRWAL* TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Taka over payments of 53,75 par month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks, at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4.7538. / I LIKE NEW 1M2 FORD VICTORIA . X— :352 V-5, cruiso-■r, 25,000 , miles, >, Ft 44710, New and Used Cars 116 ,64 FORD FAIRLANE 2-DOOR hardtop, standard transmission, radio. Ilka mw throughout! *1.0,5. JEROME FERGUSON, Inc, Rochester FORD Dealer. OL 1-,7)1. New and Used Cars 106 JEROME OLDS and CADILLAC New Car Savings Today CALL FE 3-7021 >H4 bONTIAC CATALINA, BbOOR 1961 Tempest 2-Door VI eon-I to 34 LLOYD'S LINCOLN-MERCURY NEW LOCATION 1250 OAKLAND AVE. FE 37863' 1M1 PONTIAC HARDTOP, l' OWN- eut *11,5. JEROME______________ Inc., Rochester'FORD Dealer. OL 14711. 1.57 MERCURY HARDTOP CHRIST-mas special. SITS, 625-241,. 1.57 OLDS SO, 69,000 MILES. POW-er brakes,' steering, excellent an-Bine, dean Inside. Ml 4-7445. OLDSMOBILE, 1*41, SEDAN, FULL Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Con Finonce Youl 100 Core to Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 37863 . LLOYD'S 1250 Oakland Ave. SHELTON ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 4572 Plate Hwy._____MA I- Hilltop Auto Soles, Inc. f Annual Station Wagon SALE '63 Falcon Wagon ... *1.1,5 '42 Ford Wagon .51.5*5 '43 Country Sedan .. 51445 '64VW Wagon .. *1,795 '41 Chevy Wagon ..... 51441 962 Oakland FE 8-9291 Lew mileage. Law down payment. ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES an Dlxte Hwy. MA 5-1400 Autobahn Motor^, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vi mite north et Miracle Mite 1745 5. Telegraph FE 5-4531 Russell Young. 334-3200. 1,42 OLDSMOBILE DYNAMIC „ Holiday 4door hardtop. Glacter 25 Month’s Chevy OK 'Worronty Oniy 7400 actual milts. Economical 4-cyllnder engine, Pow- IN STOCK —Ready For Delivery- 1965 Ford F-250 %-Ton ' Pickup BEATTiE ! "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD ] "Home of SERVICE after th* sale" OR 3-1291 Oldsmobiles 1959-1964$ —Many Models on Display— Birmingham Trades Suburbon Olds BIRMINGHAM tion inside and out I This of-state car with absolutely no run. No $ downs and lus $4.43 weekly. Mr. Darrell, Credit Coordinator, 338-9222. NOW>OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. Spartan Dodge BIRMINGHAM INTAKE 1,55 DODGE, S132,#TAKE OVER parts I put In. If interested In seeing Is-at Edison and Chamberlain, ask tec S. Egbert. FE 1M7 FORD 2-DOOR, STOCK, NO FORD 4-DOOR, GOOD TIRES, . cellent bod/, enginot needs work. 130. Call OL 4-1474* 1,56 FORD FAIRLANE, COOPERS—4275 DIXIE—DRAYTON 1,9, FORb FAIRLANE 500, aWort beautiful black- ONLY Crissman Chevrolet ' (An Tab at Xnuth Mill) OL 24711 >60 THUNDERBIRD LOWNER, new car trade-in, 55 down. ' ' WE FINANCE Lucky Auto, 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 (Access open to tots wMl* strsat ____under construction) FALCON 1M0, GREEN 2-DOOR, AU-tomatk shift, goad whHswall tints, vary clean. *450. FE S-7S17. (962 Chevy Convertible LLOYD'S LINCOLN-MERCURY NEW LOCATION 1250 OAKLAND AVE. FE 37863 - Brand New Shipment of 1964 Ambassadors FULLY LOADED: RADIO, POWER STEERING, POWER BRAKES, TURN INDICATORS. OIL FILTER, DOUBLE ACTION BRAKES VjS]ClLTTY,GMyP. LIGHT GRpUR. INDIVIDUAL ’lit CLININO SEATS, WHITE- -WALL TIRES, FULL WHEEL COVERS. From $1,97777 699 down, 34 months on balance VILLAGE- RAMBLER 666 Si Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 E-O-Y End-of-Year Sale December 22 — Janudry 1 CADILLACS 1M0 TO 1,44 PONTIACS 1,40 TO 1,44 FORDS 1M1 TO 1,64 OtfifiM to mT- TEMPESTS 1,61 TO IW4 WILSON PONTIAC - CADILLAC 50 N- Woodward Ml 4-1,30 ___Birmingham, Michigan 62 FORD FTMALANR 500 4-DOOR > n.autitul burgandy finish 6 fawn Interior. V-8’eh-' at only PATTER- id pickups. Easy terms, p Phil Dorn Salesman: Jack Cooper FE 2-5641 ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 6577 Dlxte Hwy, Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance Youl 100 Cars to "Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 37863 LLOYD'S .1250 Oakland Ave. ,64 PALCON HARDTOP, V-ft 646 with Made Interior, only 3,700 mites. 52,250, FE 4,305. IN STOCK -Riady For Delivery— 1965 Ford F-100 Vi -Ton Pickup' BEATTIE' "Your FORD DEALER Since 1,30" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD ‘Horn* ot SERVICE altar tlw sate'' OR 3-1291 look no further . . . PONTIAC RETAIL STORE Is the place to shop. They hpve only, "First Class" "Gaod- riced honestly. You don't settle tor second phone call, to FE X ben. S-7W4 iM4 Plymouth fury 4-door, v-5 automatic, power steering, ' -akes, radio, Ilka new I Only Delivered New 1965 Plymouth Valiant $1,739 Heater, defroster, electric wlnd-shfeld wipers, dual sunvisors, directional signals, front arm rests, 101 horsepower 6-cylinder sngiM, front seat baits. Sating Is believing. OAKLAND , CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland ______335-9436 PONtlAC CONVERTIBLE/ __ powers new top and narta. Bast attar. Ml H4W. 1,60 PONTIAC. CLEAN, 57,5, D Tr. 473-13,1 or OR 4-1312. PONTIAC 4-mileage, g a. 5425, 343-421,. GOING INTO SERVICE? T______________ over payments on ‘40 Pontiac, 2- dtor hardtop/)------ -- -------- and '51 Chav* top. 152-9702. ira, good si ila, 2-dpor I OLIVER.' SPECIALS 1962 Retioult Gordini $695 * I960 Pontiac, Catalina 4-door hardtop, hydramatlc transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls, tinted glass, cordovan finish, real sharpI $995 1964-Buick LeSabre 4-door, turbkw drive, radio, hd* power steering, b *‘ ‘ $2595 1961 Olds 88 4-door hardtop, automatic tran mission, radio, heater, power stea Ing, brakes, tinted glass, whll wells, deluxe wheel covers, a baa $1295 OLIVER BUICK 1962 Tempest 4-Door with automatic transmission. A shape! Ready to go with any < LLOYD'S LINCOLN-MERCURY. NEW LOCATION 1250 OAKLAND AVE. FE 37863 KESSLER'S Sales and Service ird___ 07 ffM-RAMBLER dto?°rautomatic'**” heater and the __ - I white body. Full Fried 51,7 Estate Storage Co. 10, 5. East Blvd. -----FE 3-7T61—- BUY YOUR NEXT OLDS OR RAMBLER FROM H0UGHTEN & SON ROCHESTER 50 "SELECT" USED CARS Mostly 1- owner new-ear trades. Easy financing, bank rates. No fair offer, deal or trade refused. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland FE 5-9421 3 1963 RAMBLERS. STATION WAG-ons, priced from 51,1,5 and up. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Ooklond FE 5-9421 1,62 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DQOR HAUPT PONTIAC M2 TEMPEST LtMANS CONVERT-ible, radio, heater, 4-speed, white-walls, light blue cater, old car dawn! I M4 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door sedan, pay man 11 34 months on balance. M3 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE, rad finish, white trim, automatic, radio, heater. Whitewalls, a dandy for only 5114,5. HAUPT PONTIAC On* Mil* North of U:$. JO on MIS CLARKSTON .________ MA 5-5964 1964 Poatiac Bonneville Sport Coupe this on* automatic, radio, haarti ----- irltia, brakes, back r ___jtNuT r — ! bronze u lights, beautiful alamo bi $1000 Discount Russ Johnson R AMBLE R-PONTI AC On M24 In Lak* Orion ‘“E ORION ‘ We're wheeling and dtalirig the all-new 1965 Ramblers. See them now I Used cars are being sold at wholesale to make room for the new cor trades. ROSE RAMBLER 1145 Commerce, Union Lak* EM 3-4155 ________ ,44 TEMPEST 4-DOOR, VI EN-glne, automatic power steering, brakes, radio, only 12,095. JEROME FERGUSON, Inc, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 14711. ,44 PONTIAC GTO. 4-SPEID. TRI- FI 4- ELLSW0RTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Hardtop i-door, this hwjuty^has brewn^h $1500 Discount ,, Russ Johnson R/LMBLER-FONTIAC On M24 In Laka Orion AK1 ORION . MY 54244 1964 Rambler “770" 24)oor Hardtop consol, * povnir steering, brake, and the 2S7 cu. In. engine, white- “$800 DISCOUNT Russ Johnson raMbler-fontiac On M24 in Lakt Orion LAKE ORION-_____ MY 34244 NEW 1,45 RAMBLER 2-DO heater, full equipment, 5,5 - lii.M per week. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland FE 5-9421 YEAR- END Specials . 1961 Pontiac Bcfnneville Convertible jar pricV $1297 1960 Pontiac Catalina 4-Door Full Price $897 1964 Dodge Polara “500" 2-door hardtop Full Price $2297 1963 Valiant 2-Door Sedan Radio, heater Full Price ! $997 j 1963 Dodge 4-Door V8 automatic, with power Full Price $1297 1962 Ford ' 2-Door V8 automatic trenwnlsslon * • Full Price .$1097 These cars can be purchased with n« $ down and frn 1965 Plates I <* SPARTAN DODGE 855 Oakland Ave. Additional Location (Outdoor Showroom) (Just tt mite north of Com Avo.) 338-9222 : * HOT . FINISH For the Year at McAuliffe's Twenty 1964 FORDS That Must Go! By the End of This Year New'64's •nd Demo's 1963 T-Bird Landau This beauty hat radio, haatar, power steering, brakas and win*. “"$2791 1963 Falcon 4-Door Wagon Radle, heater, automatic transmission, whitewalls, only— $1595 1963 Ford Convertible With radio, heater, automatic, power steering, whitewalls and medium blua finish. Only— $2091 1963 Mercury 4-Boor Sedan mllfic°andh!«h!tewal lsf°Only— $1999 1962 Ford Galaxie 500 Hardtop 4-Door with radio* heater, auto* mafic, ^jower steering, white- $1696 1963 VW Convertible Radio, heater, whitewalls, heat-tr, dafrosterf. Only— ' $1593 4 1964, Ford *Galaxie 500 Hardtop 2-Doer with 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION, radtei heater, white-walls, beautiful burgundy flnlahl Only— $2191 1962 Ford I < Galaxie 500 ||ardtop 2-Door with radio, heater,JK|t> ^$1594 1963 Falcon Futura Sprint Convertible With ‘ radio, heater. 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION, whltawallt, solid white with rad Interior! '$1696 1965 Mustang Convertible . automatic. knock-off hub*. Only — $2987 JOHN McAuliffd ./Ford 630 Oakland FE 5-4101 : I forty ^ f . rWMj :r - • THIS PONTIAC PRESS,- TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, *964 Romney Hears Plans for State 'White House ; LANSING (AP) — Gov. George Romney heard proposals Monday for a $750,000 governor’s residence, complete with swimming pod, and said ihey “make the present opera-fion of the governor’s office seem like small potatotes. Nam Deafness Caa Ba Helped! Nerve deafness is the principal cause of hearing impairment. There is no treatment or surgical operation that will cure Nerve Deafnes^. People that say "I can hear but can't understand" usually suffer from nerve deaf ness. We have available a brochure telling the inside story of nerve d e a f n e s s. Write to The Pontiac Press, Box No. 33. Frigidaire Jet Action KEEQO QUICK CLEAN CENTER 2945 Orchard lolw ltd. RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY I’m not for. spending any more money than we need for this,” Romney told the ‘ ' five study committee which outlined the plans for him. WWW They included a master bedroom and four others, a library den, a family living room and dinjng room, a recreation room, a place to accommodate groups as large as 150 for informal dining, an enclosed swimming pool and a four-car garage. There also would be room for receptions, a state dining room tar accommodate persons, two state bedrooms and a sitting room, service i, utilities including a kitchen and serving room, a' laundry and elevator and quarters for a staff including a driver-guard. PRICE TAG Such an official governor's residence could be built for about $750,000, A. N. Languis, head of the State Building Division, told the committee. It was the first time Romney has appeared before a legislative committee in his two years in office. But the topic — what kind of official' residence to build for the governor — was considered unusual. w w w At one point, he, shrugged and said: “I don’t expect to occupy it anyway.” The committee’s concept, Romney said, “ceases to be a governor’s residence and becomes a governor’s mansion.” The two-story and basement dwelling, descried by the committee as “modest yet dignified in character,” would be air conditioned and would include terrace and gardens and parking for 15. cars. The family portion of the house would be isolated from the state portion. “You ought to make it possible for the family involved to have some privacy,” Romney observed. The governor agreed with the committee that the residence should be made a part of the capitol development area directly to the rear of the State Capitol, or should be near it. TWINVENTORY — Twins Jeanelle (left) and Jeanenne Yadon are examined by twin psychology students Brertda (left) and Linda Bradley. All are students at Abilene Christian College, Abilene, Tex. All were born on Dec. 31. Jeanelle, an English major, and Jeanenne, majoring in education, are 20-year-old juniors from Kansas City, Kan. Eighteen-year-old Brenda and Linda are freshmen from Weatherford, Tex. From Invisible Light to Sound Waves New Methods to Fight Pests in Works By FRANK CAREY M O N T R E A L — Science is building an arsenal of new, bizarre and potentially safe weapons against insects and weeds— in a range from invisible light to lethal sound waves. I Some already are paying off in the fight against pests which cost the United States more than $2 billion a year in lost crops, to say nothing of livestock mortality and disease. Dr.- Nyle C. Brady of the U.S. Scientist to See if Man Can Fly by Imitating Bird SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MATINEES! NOW! thru THURS. at 1:00 & 4:50 HURON "MbUMTQQKr TECHNICOLOR' FANAVtiUON' t BATJAC HMCim - Mm~ », AND at 3:12 only A 4 GIRL’S INCREDIBLE ADVENTURE ONA LOST ISLAND! ffeL SEAFORD, Del. (AP) -Flying by flapping your own wings is for the .birds, but it may. not be much longer, A" practical-minded scientist named John S. Seney, 50, of Seaford and a college junior, Stephen Moore, 19, of Fairfax; Va., have set out to determine whether or not the age-old dream of man flying like a bird can be made a reality. -WWW Seney and Moore are hoping that electronic instruments, and _ bird — A buzzard named Leonardo — will teach them how. Leonardo gets his name from the many-sided genius, Leonardo da Vinci, who tried, but failed, to solve the challenge of flight back in the early 16th century. LITTLE FOLLOW-UP The odd thing, as Seney sees it, is that so tittle effort has been made in modern times to follow up Da Vinci’s idea. Steve contacted the Langley Field people, the biggest flight development center in the world, and consulted their librarian, and we just couldn’t find anything on the actual dynamics of bird flight.’'' NOW! mtiae’S POPULAR THEATER l^fF-Barrter at *£OQQ m 1 Howls Plus ipiiureR To Airlift Toys for Appalachia MOUNT CLEMENS (AP) -Several more tarns of toys, clothing and food will be airlifted from Selfridge Air Force Base near here today to bring holiday cheer to poverty-stricken families in Appalachia. - * * * It will be the third planeload of such gifts to be flown from Michigan to Whitesburg, Ky. They were donated by citizens responding to a plea broadcast by television and radio last week. Several agencies, including the Salvation-Army, volunteered their assistance in the collecting, sorting and crating of the contributions, which may still be made until Friday. That’s where Leonardo the buzzard flies in, Seney, who heads the electromechanical research laboratory of the DuPont Company here, plans to start Leonardo flying while electronic Instruments and high-speed cameras record how he does it and how hard he works at It. ANALYSE MAN Thelfthe experts, medical and mechanical, will-be s' analyze Pie anatomy of a healthy young man — Moore — and help figure out what he could do to convert his strength into effective wing-flapping. Preliminary calculations indicate Moore, a 6-foot-2,175-pound chemical engineering major at Virginia Polytechnic Institute probably would have to flap wings with a span of about 36 feet, and a width of about 6 feet. ' h *■ k' “It won’t be just a simple matter of waving his Seney warns. “He may have to work his jaws, his neck muscles, just about every muscle he can contract, to channel all his energy into the tremendous effort it will take just to get off the ground.” There won’t be anything as spectacular as a carefree leap . Adi mi, f SS1SEIN CONNERY&007'' , uii fm“GOIiDFINGER' . . • ADDED • “LITTLE STAR BETHLEHEM* FEATURES AT 7i1Q and 930 TO P8 1• Red. Coach Inn • Coachman’s Lounge Special Dinner Menu YOUR FAVORITE COCKTAILS NO PRICE INCREASE • NO MINIMUM NO COVER ' JACK C. MAJOR AT PIANO & ORGAN RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED. SwjwL 1801 S. TELEGRAPH FE 8-9623 m THE PONTIAC PREgg. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1964 m FORTY-OEE —Television Programs— Program• furnished by stations list'd in this column or* subjoct to change without notic. TUESDAY EVENING 6:99 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “Blackjack Ketchum, Desperado’’ (fa Progress) (9) Woody Woodpecker (59) (Special) Man and the Atom A look at the Atomic Energy Commission 1:39 (2) (4) National News / (7) (Color) News, Sports (9) Bat Masterson (Repeat) 4:45 (7) National News 7:44 (2) Naked City (Repeat) (4) (Color) Weekand^X preview of skiing season > at Boyne Mountain (7) Rifleman (Repeat) ft) Detective (Repeat) (54) Tennessee Williams 7;99 (4) Mr. Novak (See TV Features) (7) Combat (54) Challenge 4:44 (2) Joey Bishop Joey wants his pregnant wife to halt housework, so he announces he’ll take over. (9) Target: Corruptors (Repeat) (50) Government in America 4:34 (2) Red Skelton McGuire Sisters are guests. (4) Man From U.N.C.L.E. Solo runs into former girlfriend who wants him to smuggle Gypsy King out of county. (7) McHale’s Navy - Prisoner of war Fuji accompanies crew to native Luau and faSs in love with chiefs daughter. (54) Heritage 9:44 (7) Tycoon Reluctant Walter finally agrees to take a vacation. (9) Year-End Review (54) Psychology of Convalescence 9:19 (2) Petticoat Junction (See TV Features) (4) (Color) That Was the Week That Was (7) Peyton Place George and Julie find their 20-year marriage in danger. 14:44 (2) Doctors—Nurses Life and death drama is unfolding on window ledge across from hospital. (4) (Color special) Projection ’45 (See TV Features) (7) Fugitive (See TV * Features) (9) Film Feature (Repeat) 19:34 (9) Other Voices <11:49 (2) (4) (7) (9) New Weather, Sports , 31:29 (7) Les Crane 11:39 (2) Movie: "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon” (1949) John Wayne, Joanne Dru, John Agar, Victor Mc-Laglen - (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (9) Bingo 42:99 (9) Movie: “West of Zanzibar” (1955) Anthony Steel i (4) Lawman (Repeat) News, Weather WEDNESDAY MORNING 4:19 (2) On the Farm Front 4:15 (2) News 4:29 (2) Sunrise Semester 4:39 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 4:59 (2) News 7:49 (2) Happyiand > (4) Today Year’s best films si plays reviewed; correspondents discuss year’s events. . (7) Johnny Ginger 4:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 4:39 (7) Movie: "Cover Girl” (1944) Rita Hayworth) Gene Kelly, Phil Silvers, Eva Arden. TV Features Foreign Affairs in '65 By United International MR. NOVAK, 7:30 p.m. (4) Poison pen letters accuse Novak of secret romance with married teacher; with Geraldine Brooks, Karl Swenson. PETTICOAT JUNCTION, 9:30 p.m. (2) When Shady Rest becomes occupied by soldiers on Army Maneuvers, chief “targets” are Kate’s daughters. PROJECTION ’18, 10:00 p.m. (4) NBC foreign correspondents offer forecast oh what new year will bring. FUGITIVE, 10100 p.m. (7) Kimble finds himself working with woman (Janis Paige) who bears strong resemblance to Ms late wife. . 4:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:49 (2) Movie: “Annie Oakley” (1935) Barbara Stanwyck, Preston Foster, Moroni Olsen, Chief Thundercloud. (4) Living (9) Romper Room 19:44 (4) Make Room for Daddy (Repeat) (9) Ivanhoe 19:30 (2) I Love Lucy (Repeat) (4) (Color) What’s This Song? (9) Across Canada 14:55 (4) News 11:99 (2) Andy Griffith (Repeat) (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk / (9) Friendly Giantf U.S. Baritone Is Fired From Italian Opera PARMA, Italy (UPI)-Ameri-can baritone Cornell MacNeill was fired from the Parma Opera Company last night for “grave, unjustified and willful behavior,” onstage and back-stage. * * * The singer, who shouted “Enough, Cretins”, in midperformance at an unruly audience Saturday night and then stalked from the stage,’said he had acted in protest against boos directed at another performer, soprano Luisa Maragliano. Bat Miss Maragliano said today, that “ . . . there was no need for him to come to my defense because I was in perfect harmony with the public ... the whole public, without exception, joined in applauding me at the end of die performance.” “Mr. MacNeill,” she said, “was scared of facing the public and left the stage. Apart from everything else, he did not prove a gentleman by leaving me alone t» stage." - , “All. I can say is that I am going to consult with my, lawyer,” was MacNeiU’s only comment today. * * * Giuseppe Negri, Vice Mayor of Parma, manager of the opera company, and participant with MacNeill in a backstage scuffle after the performance Saturday, wrote the baritone advising that *hb contract hid been terminated. 11:15 (9) Chez Helene 11:39 (2) McCoys (Repeat) (4) (Color) Jeopardy (7) Price Is Right (9) Butternut Square 11:59 (9) News AFTERNOON 12:44 (2) Love of Life. (4) (Color) Say When (7) Donna Reed (9) Bingo 12:2l (2) News v 12:34 (2) Search for Tomorrow (I) (Color) Tnith or Consequences "* (7) Father Knows Best (Repeat) 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 1:99 (2) Jack Benny (Repeat) , (4) News (7)- Ernie Ford (9) Movie: “Ready, Willing and Able” (1937) Ruby Keeler, Jane Wyman, Allen Jenkins. 1:14 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 1:15 (4) Topics tor Today 1:34 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Co)or) Let’s Make a Deal (7) Bachelor Father 1:55 (4) News 2:49 (2) Password (4) Loretta Young (7) Flame^in the Wind 2:39 (2) Playhouse 2 (4) Doctors .(7) Day in Court 2:55 (7) News 3:49 (2) To TeU the Truth (4) Another World . (7) General Hospital' -3:15 (4) News 3:25 (2) News 3:34 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 4:49 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:39 (2) Movie: “Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters” (1954) Bowery Boys. (4) Mickey Mouse Club (Repeat) (9) Popeye 5:49 (4) George Pierrot Highlights of film visit to Spain. (7) Movie: “Cat Girl* , (1957) Barbara Sheila Robert Ayres. 5:15 (54) Friendly Giant 5:34 (9) Rocky and Friends (54) What’s New 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:55 (2) Sports (4) Carol Duvall ACROSS I —hock 4 Audio device 9 Primate 12 Thoroughfare (ab.) 13 CoosteBatkm 14 Deringed 15 African worm 14 Accumulate 17 Anger. II Penetrate 20 Arab chMftaln 22 Viper 24 Indonesian of Mindanao 25 Asseverate 24 Fishing pole 30 Tardy 34 Cover / 35 Winglike«art 34 Narrow" inlet 37 Bounder 31 Blight 39 Table scrap 40 Exclamation 42 Folding bed 43 Female sheep (pi.) 44 Pastry 46 Female Saint (ab.) 48 Portable chair 51 Command 55 Egg (comb.' form) 56 Golf club 60 Hawaiian pepper 61 Noise 62 Flush with success 63 Permit 64 Malt brew 65 Novices 16 Bitter vetch DOWN 1 Robust 2 Shakespearean stream 3 Flesh food - 4 Bellows Purdue Professor Dies FRANKFORT, Ind. (AP) -Willard A. Knapp, 79, who retired in 1956 after 48 years on the engineering faculty at Purdue University, died Monday. He was born in Pratt County, Illinois. S Through (prefix) .7 Moths I Assault 9 French “girl friend” 19 Peel II European river 19 Auricle 21 Evil (comb, form) 23 Swagger 24 Adjusts 25 Genus of auks 26 Small glass bottle .37 Icelandic saga 29 Hodgepodge 31 In a line 32 WeAry 33 Consumes 41 Mineral spring 43 Always (contr.) 45 Inflow 47 Musical qualities ' 48 Term in faro 49 Wicked 50., Finished 52 Trough 53 At all times 54 Rodents 57 Plait 58 Rowing gadget 59 Siouan Indian Answer to Previous Puzzle Dining Room Has Problems CAVE CITY, Ky. m- Mrs. W. Ray Scott has some special problems in her dining room. Among.them are dampness, crickets, bats and a constant 54-degree temperature. i She operates fee Snowball Dining Room in Mammoth Cave - 247 feet below the earth’s surface. “Natkmal Park rules don’t allow us to harm the crickets of bats,” die explained. “Once they migrate in, they like it so well they stay. They all seem to know it.” ★ * * Mrs. Scott can keep only two days supply of food in her un-derground kitchen. ALERT STAFF Telephone calls from guides bringing parties into the cave help alert the staff in preparing the meals. The dining room has served more than 1,400 in a single day. 2 3 5 r r J- 5~ nr rr nr L iF r FT iF k" if I t fir w M ■ w 23 i 26 27 ra W i ■ aaaa W ST r TT 5T w sr JF 43 1 44 i (6 w 47 r a NT ST 52 53 54 5S] §T 171 58 59 §F fT BF ST 5T 5F 5F rJl Say'Man in Trunk' Will Plead Guilty JERUSALEM, Israel (UPI)-Mordecai Louk, the “man In the trunk,” and Shmuel Baruch will plead guilty to, at least some . charges of spying for Egypt, reliable sources said today. The two men are awaiting trial in unconnected cases involving espionage. Both face a maximum penalty of life imprisonment if convicted. WWW Louk won notoriety recently when he was found,'bound and gagged, inside an Egyptian Embassy trunk at the Rome airport. Police released him from’ the trunk, then extradited him for trial here'at Israeli request. Leaders Snub Confab Election Crisis in Nigeria Bud Abbott Admir'd to California Hospital WOODLAND HILLS, Calif. UR — Bud Abbott, surviving member of the Abbott and Costellb comedy team, is being treated for a mild stroke at the Motion Picture House and Hospital. A hospital official said yesterday the 66-year-old Abbott was admitted to the hospital Dec. 16. He said the comedian is doing well. Abbott’s rotund part-I ner, Lou Costello, died in 1959. — Radio Programs- WJW740) WXVZQ 270) CKLW(400) WWJ(930) WCAR(U 30) WRONG 440) WJSK(ISOO) WHH-PM(»4.7) 4:S*-WJR, News WWJ, N*ws CKLW, Naws WPON, News, Sport* WHFI, Now*. Wally Saar WCAR, Nows. SacarWIa WX YZ, News iili—WJUK, sfiftss VHFI, Music t CKLW, Tarry Knight WXYZ, New*. Ala* Draler WHFI, Music basis of IQ, achievement test' scores, sex and age. WWW The pupils took more standardized tests at the end of the year.. the study was conducted under a grant from the Royal McBeC Corporation. Noted Agronomist Dies LINCOLN, Neb; /AP) - Dr. Theodore A- Kiesselbach, 80, retired University of Nebraska agronomist who was internationally known for his work in developing hybrid corn, died Sunday. He was born in Shelby, Necchi Sugar Automatic $50.50 Lat* Than Brand "A” \ $79.00 Lata Than Brand "I” $79.00 Lass Than Brand "C” Pontiac's ONLY Authorised Jtacchi Daaiar RICHMAN BIOS. cWHi Across Prom Pontiac Mall 465 Elisabeth Lake ltd. Phone: 335-9283 Hefty Take in Robbery LOS ANGELES (AP) - By the pound,-it was one tf the heftiest bank robberies in years. Police said a man held up a teller Monday at a south side branch of Crocker-Cltizens National Bank and ordered her to fill a canvas bag with coins. She tossed in 50 pounds qf than. ,# ★ 1A t Lugging the bag, the robber mariaged to escape police. But his reward 'for all that effort was only $750, police said. State Ju$tices Uphold Fall Court Election LANSING (AP),- The State Supreme Court Monday refused to upset a lower court ruling holding that the Detroit Recorders Court election should be held in the fall and not in the spring. * 9 9 ' , , Harry, PDskow of Detroit petitioned the high court to take supervisory control and overrule a decision by Wayne County Circuit Judge Victor Baum in the case. The petition was denied without comment with Chief Justice Thomas Kavanagh> writing the order. CASH NOW! •ST BANKERS PAY OFF ALL ACCOUNTS Replace with one payment One Place YES... you can ramedel your home and pay your bills too! One low monthly payment includes everything. Widows and pensioners eligible. CALL for free appraisal FE 4-6141 Oprrular on duty terry day U houn. Ifunahl, la cult, mail caution BANKERS I I Investment Co. | 66 W. Lawrence L, PONTIAC NAME. CITY.. * PHONE. ~ ’ Clearance •ices regularly at $2.27 Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS FORTY-TWO THE POKT1AC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29. 188t [ Junior Editors Quiz on* Music ACTUAL SIZE Vt QUART Brewed Right... Tastes Right... Priced Right... and 11.97 Jackets for Men & Boys! Men’s Suburbans reg.Sl3.99 I IM7 to $24.99 XI: Charge It Others at a low..... .7.97 Handsome 100% wool and wool blend suburbans with pile or quilt linings. Choice of colors in broken sires, 36 to 46. Be early for best selection, doors open at9a.m.! Nylon Ski Jackets T97 re’ Ski Jackets regularly at $12.99 Chargelt Stylish ski jackets in the latest boy-pleas* ing colors. Luxurious high-count nylon taffeta quilted to Dacron® polyester ... washable. Has hidden hood/Save $4.11 on sizes 12 .to 20 now, at Sean! Doors open at 9 a.m. . / regular $12.99 Charge It Quilted nylon jackets with drawstring hood . . . hand washable. Choose from bine, black or olive in sizes small to X* :large. Hurry in save $5.02! Men’s Ski/Stvles See these ski-look jackets in nylon taffeta and/synthetics; some quilted, some pullovers. Choice of colors in s 36 to 46. Save up to $8.02! Han't Sport Sears After Christmas Men’s Suit Sale Brand New Stock for This Event regular $60.00 Charge It Extra pair of pants, only $10 - Sears Warranty Suits—guaranteed perfect fit; longer wear. All-wool wonted models in medium dark to medium light shades. Popular patterns include solid and iridescent sharkskins, multi-color stripes, step weaves, random fancies in greys, blugft and browns. Enjoy big savinp on Regulars; Shorts, Longs; alterations free. Hanford I-Pant Suits Regular $49.95........... > * • • EXTRA PAIR OF PAINTS ... .$10 39s® Men's Clothing, Main Floor Men’s Wash *n Wear Pants Boy reg. $15.99/ | 1 97 to $19.99/ - AA Charge It 9.88 7.97 Boys’ Zip-Hood Parkas reg. $11.99 reg. $13.99 sizes 12-20 Charg Norpole nylon zip-hood parkas with pile lining ... wind, waterproof. Assorted colon. Boys' Wear, Main Floor Reduced Over .26% men’s assorted white dress shirts just say, “CHARGE IP* at Sears Sears fine white cotton broadcloth shirts with medium-spread or snap-tab collar. Choice of short or long sleeve styles in sizes 14 V& to I6V2. Stock-up now, at our extra low clearance price. You save 61c on each one you buy! Hurry in for best selection, doors open at 9 a.m.! Look for Our-Other Clearance Specials in ALL Departments! j Men’s Furnishings, Main Floor regularly at $4.99 Charge It : Machine washable, wrinkle-resistant blend of | rayon and acetate in plain front, no-belt styles, i Choice of gray, brown, olive; checks in sizes | 29 to 36, Don't wait, they'll go fast at this low, > low clearance price. Save at Sears! Moss's Sportswear, Main Floor Shop Today, Tomorrow and ' Thursday Until 5:30 P-M. Save at Sears Tomorrow and Thursday! Men’s Underwear Sale Your Choice ... regularly 69c Charge It Athletic Shirts, Reg. 44c ........ ,3.8c Men! Stock up now on Sears quality underwear . . combed cotton knit T-shirts a'nd briefs, cotton broadcloth Yoke style and boxer shorts—now only 48c each. Machine washable, dryable. AH designed for comfort and long wehr. , QUESTION: How did flats and sharps come to be used in music? FOR YOU TO DO: Put your fingers on a piano keyboard u in (1) and {day up onr the white keys to next C. It will have a cheerful sound. / Now try (2) where you play the black note E flat instead of E. This will give the melancholy but beautiful minor scale gimg a hint of the variety sharps and flats brought to music. AT LOCAL 12 OUNCE PRICE b • ORIGINAL ey/ABOL FOR NOT* b (8) b H THE NATURAL OR FIRST FOm ww THE SHARP, ' A HAU» TONE * HIGHER ANSWER: We are accustomed to think of musical [scales as being based on groups of eight notes (octaves), but when musical notations was being worked out in the 10th century, the groups had 6 notes and were called hexachords. They represented our notes C-D-E-F-G-A. These can all he played on the white keys of the piano. Try them and you will find eadj, note is a full tone (two semitones) above the other except for the interval between third and fourth—for F is only one semitone above E. Then, musicians wanted to start hexachords from F. But here was a problem! Start with F and the interval between third and fourth notes is a full tone instead of the half one as in the C hexachord. The musicians decided there should be a sign to put near B in such a case, which would show it was to be lowered by a half step, or softened. B had been shown by the sign at upper right; the sign to show B was to be softened was drawn with a rounded shape and became our modem flat. - When one wanted to come back to the first B, the “natural” sign was to be used — we still pse these today. Sharps were invented in the 1500’a to show a tone was to be lifted a half stop. We show the original cross sign, then the sharp sign as we use them today. Sharps and flats gave so much richness to music that they soon/became used fott* other notes besides B. / MORE AT NO EXTRA COST 1 \ ■ wi The V y~s U.S. Weather Light Rain, Warm THE PONTIAC PREWfi Ci VOL. 122 NO. 279 ir ★ ★ 4c ★ ’ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY. DECEMBER 29. 1904—42 PAGES ASMCIATIO PRESS -I UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL . Romney Reports on State H ,; ;—|§———»—-— Western States Start After-Flood Cleanup SAN FRANCISCO lift—A^nghty force of men and machines shouldered* the task today of cleaning up after the West’s Christmas week floods, called by the governor of California “a major American disaster.” A passive airlift hoisted food and emfc pair equipmen\into ~T strickej? northwestern California. Snow and falling temperatures aidded to the misery of refugees fr6m high water and threatened REPEAT OATH — County .Clerk-Register of Deeds John D. Murphy (center) and ^Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson (right), are sworn in by Cirtuit Judge William J. Beer during ceremonies yesterday in the courthouse auditorium. Both men will assume duties Jan. 1. Murphy is the first Democrat . to win hte position, and Bronson is the first Democrat to be elected prosecutor, since the 1930s. Five new members ', of Bronson’s staff were also sworn in. ~ Water Work Probe Is Urged k Waterford Man Raps again to block helicopter de-Contractor, Inspection livery of food bundles to hundreds marooned in the high ,. „ .. ■ . California timber country for' A resident’s aUegation that the ninth rtraight ^ one of the water main con- - 7 See Story, Page 23 LBJ Ey$s for Fast Transit WASHINGTON* (UPI) —President Johnson plaits to propose a high-speed transportation program that could lead to Americans rocketing between cities on cushions of air, through tubes or on electronically guided cars within 15 years. High administration sources said an-immediate re? • ' suit could be the fastest Between 4M and 5M persons were isolated* in veafc pocket lumbering and mining communities along the Klamath and Salmon rivers in extreme northern California. -They have been cut off since 'side alleged that Schwab Broth- Dec. 21. Civil defense workers ers Co. of Buffaly, N. Y. was said they, undoubtedly were get-not using sufficient sand. fill ting desperate for food, where the main is laid and that * •* * cleanup work following main Dozens of helicopters were in laying is dragging. Yreka, Calif., near die ..Oregon “You're paying for a first ^rder ntercymis- tarctors in Waterford Township waa doing an incompetent job resulted last night in the Township Board requesting a full investigation of - the contractor’s performance. . Currey of -2540 Silver- EMPTY MONEY TRUCK - A Brink’s truck was left abandoned in the Chicago suburb of NorHdge, last night after three masked gunmen captured it when the truck made a pickup at Divine Savior Church. The banaHabound two priests and a guard before driving away with the truck and looting it. 'An undetermimd amount, collected during the day from stores and churches, was taken. Second Brink's Loofecf While Making Church Stop ctefl Deta^ief KB SmrtT looked • virtual replay of made off with the truck contain- t™ ... ™.v- residents in h« ^hborhood CWl Defense ch£ Billlasl week-s half-ntlllion dollar lug 3513,010 after binding four gUDman and complishment is daW^tetid 5*. *£!!!£ holdup in Paterson, N.J. priests and guards wtoentered hit a* “was legislative re- ise of insufficient damndest airlift out of here __________________________... iL rJZlrZ ^ Z7**- After the guard was hit, he rfMrjr-tin0 th* gerrymander “An area for which Gifts Await East Coast rail service in history in 1965. These sources said Johnson . . probably will unveil the three- First finnv or y*** r®**8"* «xl test program I HOI LVi in his state of theunion message _ . ’ to Congress negt Monday. . 7 OA S i *-» A reset The long-range- program will l 7III rtl CTVJ {or an injtia| *20 million out- « • 4 . lay itr the first year, a figure re- Special gifts, from some 20 P&rted to have been approved by Pontiac area business places are Johnson 'in his forthcoming waiting for the first baby to ar- budget. 4 Vive after midnight ThUtsday. class job,” Carrey, a retired Consumers Power Co. superintendent of told board members, you’re aot getting it.” Currey cited ki least five in the where access is cut off because impaction where main was laid, you’ve ever seen. After the fill settled, depres- “This is very, very rugged, sions of ruts of a foot to II monatuinous country. Tn some inches were reported by some wc'U have to evacuate residents. and in others we’ll have to IMPROPER FILLING drop supplies. He pointed out'also that there “We have a report Sit 14 chil-was indication of improper fill'* dren in one house at Oak JBot-tom 70 miles west of here oq the Klaiqath. I’m concerned sion; but unable to take off. be-cause of snow and * icing conditions. 3-HOUR BREAK 'sail* Brink’s guard in a rectory while it was picking up the Sun- “W# apt R thrpp-hfMir hnik yeaterda>'. looted an armpred day collection at St. Anthony’s we get a tnree^iour Drgut truck and got away in what CathoUc church. The bandits CHICAGO (AP) — Three ban- gunmen wearing Halloween rived and alter -the three • / dits overpowered two priests masks robbed a bank truck masked men had tied Father and a Brink’s guard in a rectory while it was picking up the Sun- Morris to a chair with surgical .tape and gagged him. Father Burke was knocked to . Gains Cited i in Economic, Fiscal Areas 'Have Lifted Michigan * Back to Its Former Place of Prominence* LANSING (*> — ‘‘Our tremendous strides in fiscal soundness, economic growth and the creation of new jobs,” were highlighted by Gov.' George Romney - yesterday 6s he issued a 1964 Michigan progress report. “A record number .of people are working, unemployment is the lowest in many years, improvement in personal income tops the nation, investment in plant and business expansions is the greatest ip the state’s his- . tory, fiscal integrity has been restored," the governor declared^ Romney continued: , “We’have made tremendous strides in reducing longtime public service deffeiences in . meeting people's needs in education, mental and physical. * health, problems of youth and senior citizens, working stand-\ardi, welfare programs, and maw other areas. ' “AnaNge have. raised michP gan back to its former place of prominence atnmg the states,” he added. iti^no i In yesterday’s robbery, the the reetoiy^to pick up* the waS Uea to pather Burke with guard was hospitalized with money, head Injuries, but the priests Joseph W. Tottingham, as-werenptinjured. - - • Winner of the First Baby Contest for 1965 will be determined Tuesday from entries submitted to the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. To be eligible to Win, the baby most be the earliest born Friday morning to married parents who live hi Oakland If Congress approves that amount, $11 million would be spent for research and development of pew ground transportation systems, fi million for demonstration projects and 32 m H1 i o n for statistical studies. ■. n j , ; One purpose of the studies will be to determine whether Ameri- ing along Dixie. Currey requested the Township Board take formal action to correct the matter. He said he realised the County DPW was inspecting the job and. that the township had no direct control over it. Currey also termed the inspection Incompetent. x about those people and I’m concerned about the people on whom We Have ntf. The gunmen, wearing Halloween masks and a ski hood, bound two priests in a Roman Catholic chnrch rectory in BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -Two gunmen robbed the city treasurer's office of an esti-poiice reports'll. mated today, reported. Brink's Chicago office, said -be was unable to estimate the amount stolen yesterday. He said it wag a, “chain store track,'* which picks up funds for deposit from chain stores, small businesses, filling stations, and churches. Here is thC account of the holdup told by police and church officials: districting, the gerrymander . system imposed by the courts .. . . .in contradiction to the new State The three masked men, one of constitution.”-' them reported as very nervous, then went into action. One rob- EXCERPTS her put on Johnston's Brink’s $scei;pts from Romney's uniforip and went outside. He itemized report: gained" admittance to the ar-^ • Economic growth: Total mored truck and slugged the driver, Bernard Gendek, 27. 6:30 p.m. It arrived about the minutes after 6 p.m. County north of 14 MBe Road, /cans actually want to travel at EWry mest be made though speed o{ 200 miles ah hour on the family doctor. thq ground, or Whether they The family doctor should send would fear such fast rail travel, a statement to Pontiac Area • * "w-—i* Chamber of Commerce, listing While the research and devel-the exact time and date of birth, opment program is designed to sex, weight and name’ of baby solve nagging inter-city trans-together with, the names and portation problems between address of phrents. such municipalities as Boston * * * and Washington, administration Entries must be delivered by officiate said the results would 5 p.m. Monday to the “First be used nationwide. Baby Contest" in care of the .“A ‘jeep carrying four people with supplies left for Scotts Bar on the Scott River Sunday morning at 7 and we haven’t Kenneth Squires, superinten- beprd from them." dent of the township’s water d?- . pprtment, said hte office has , ' guard’s uniform and gained ad- Turn in rtiAiR received several complaints on The massing four are Tom mittance to the armmwd truck TIED IN CHAIR the Schwab operation, particu-P«yne. hB wife Cawie, and outside the Divine Savior larly on cleanup. These have brother Pat, and Don Reynolds, church. He slugged the driver, hem referred to DRW inspec- residents of tM area. - • - 1 tora.-w : ■ *. * * SAND BEDDING Roughly the northern third According to Squiers, speeifi- ^ California, all Oregon and cations on fill call for four M counties to Washington had inches of sand bedding under been declared u dhaster urea, new water main and one foot re|ion to receive of Impacted sand over the (Cohtinued on Page 2, Col. 7) main. i|-.. ’ .'—i. The armored truck usually gets to the Divine Savior church on Monday’s between 5:45 and ----------------’ J 1 it i. suburban Norridge, t h e n jumped the Brink’* guard when he drived to coUect the cnwch's Sunday collections. One gunman put drove the truck to a nearby cemetery and the three men . fled with the mpney in a car. ^ w " Brink's officials deeltal to hind by onc of Ihc guMncn. Dem Violation in Campaign' personal income in the first nine months of 1964 grew 9.2 par cent over the' same period to 1963, ranking Michigan behind only the resort states of Florida and Nevada. Economists estimate continu-ance of this .rate would produce a 31.9 billionVyicrease over 1963-3236 a person. estimate the amount taken until after an inventory. In the Paterson robbery; three before the Brink** guard ar- . Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, Riker Building, 35 W. Huron. iri Today's •Press *White House* LONG RANGE AFFAIR ^ The research aspect of the program is a long-range affair — looking ahead to 1980. The demonstration project could take place next year. Administration. source* said talks have been - under way with representatives of the Pennsylvania Railroad and New Haven Railroad about participation in the demon-Romney hears proposals I stration project. One official for state g&vertior’s resi- I described tee talks as “very derice—PAG&46. Italy President , Socialist is chosen after 21st ballot in parliament —Page a. / Aid to Egypt U.S. |oing through with plans despite Nasser rail-ing-PAGE S. Area News .. .......... 4 Astrology .............27 Bridge ................27 Comics ................27 Editorials ........ 6: Markets ...............34 Obituaries ...........35- Sports .............31-33 Theaters ............. 40 TV, Radio Programs , 41: Wilson, Earl . ....... 41 Women’s Pages . . .17-19 mm-limrfiiii The resolution approved unanimously by tee..board will cite tee fact that several complaints have been received and ask that a full investigation be made of the Schwab operation. The resolution will be directed (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 'Where Do We Go From Here' Scrap Yard Feud Gets Bitter n _ ca a r* ~ ~ In addition, Romney said, Romney: state Group -Michigan b,s seen some 3900 C..I-J million' more in announced . . , Muled on Pamphlet business and industrial con- Guard Robert Johnaten, 33, of — . . struction than two years ago.” L*NSINO * - me >uie'» ml* EDUCATION Morris, 58, pastor of the church, Fair Campaign Practices Com- • Education: “Support of our sitting tied in a chair. Johnston mission has found the Demo- iq stale colleges and universities ‘ ■ ............ cratic Staje Central Committee was increased by 321 million, “guilty of an unfair practice" sharpest single-year increase in in the 1964 gubernatorial cam- Michigan’s history, with an ad- paign, Gov. George R o m n e y ditional 331 million provided for, said today. their* capital expenditures, in- He said the practice was dis- eluding starts on 20 new faciii- tribution of a pamphlet which ties, accused iiinl of opposing equal ,>Th {i_ t ltate ^hoUrship opportunities in housing. p^^X^tTte Romney said “hundreds af * thousand” of copies of the pamphlet not only violated fair campaign practices but also a bipartisan agreement not to make civil rights a partisan issue. Father Richard Bqrfce, 31, had walked into the room just. already benefiting 1,300 stu-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) A long-standing.fued between claim is in violation of several the Ctty Commistion; owners of city ordinances. r, . the Sam AllenJsi Son, Inc., a made PROTESTS scrap yard at 22 Congress,, and bert said. “You can hardly carry on a conversation in our parking lot.” Mrs. Gilbert and several of IT Mild Ipmnpratlire5 residents iri the scrap yard area Varying numbers ^the P*0- h -eiahhor* have retained At - rlllU ICIlipCI QIUICj, h growing more bitter as 1964 tioners have appeared at nearly iSSSito complaint with the commission dwriidles into 1965. everv mtemtainn torney Paul M. Mandei .to help fihortlv after the election The commission told Democratic ’State Chairman Zolton Ferency of its findings in a letter dated Dec. 15. Romney personally filed every commission meeting It was understood , the demonstration project would include 100-mile-an-hour electrical rail service between Washington and New York, possibly as far as New Haven, Conn. The experiment wotyd cut the traveling, time between New-York and Washington to less than three hours, compared to the four hours or more-it now takes for tee' 256-mile train trip. TO MAKE SURVEYS There would be statistical surveys made to find out if passengers will ride trains if they are fast, dean, on . time and fre- them goad the City Rain Are Forecast * * * Sim*^e machine was iqataUed h^ action. • ' , “Where do we go from here?” to protest its operation. - ■ The calendar says it’s wurter, was a question asked today by . but the. slather doesn’t. Mild Mrs. Robert Gilbert d the D. * * * temperatures and light rairi is E. Pursley FUnferal Home as But it continues to operate ^ Mr, Gilbert explained, reaching its decision. Ihe prediction through Thure she told of 1h«r efforts she and -sometime* 24 hours a dfey, «ani, we shouldn’t have to. It’s ~ . . __ „nvitlon tar .day. her netehbors have made to- according to Mrs. Gilbert. * the city’s job to take it there, *2 With cloudy skies,, the mer- wart eliminating the riuhtenqe “We’ve called the police, the. h®t ours." JJM fate _ nr.dN^.ta^tt.SAIDfLLEOAL “ * ” ." ’ . ' summer when an a5to-body dty attorMy. Chamber of City Manager Joseph A. War- Romney, asked if he consid- .Pertly cloudy weather U wag ^ ■ Commerce and everyone else ren has told the commission-ered the pamphlet a smear, stalledat the scran yard we think might be able to do teat the scrap yard operation is said, “It was a distortion.” something about it,” said Mrs. illegal according to existing zon- * ’*’ * forecast tomorrow, along V a high of 43 to M. . Winds today are Jrm the fr”"1? Gilbert. “Nothing has bee south and southeast at 12 to 25 *»»■” ' miles an hour. They wfll be ^ b * w a, diminishing tonioirow. oper w * * Press Is Offering Book Featuring Top News of '64 “The Wgrld in 1964", a pic-CONTENT, TIMING . torial — editorial digest of the The commission said it coo- P8*4 y** la being offered to “We can’t stand the expense sidered both the content and *[®a read*rs PF irontiac of takir^ thte _ma t te r into the timing of the pamphlet th "ross and the Associated Press. * Subtitled “History as We Lived It,” the 300-page volume Is being presented by this paper and more than 300 other news* papers across the nation. The 9H-by-12tt-iKh hardback edition contains hundreds of the best rnwo photos of the > year in cdkr and black aad clSsZ shortly after tee election. ing ordinances'and recommend- Quotes attributed to the gover-ed that it be stopped. nor were made from a speech wWt*- . * * * he made to an open state meet- The book is being produced for The scrap yard owners built ing Of the Michigan Real Estate delivery by the same AP news The administration’s program Is aa outgrowth of a proposal made in 1963 by Sen. (Continued on ftge 2, CqI. 1) In July Mrs. Gilbert and some pu-iM unm. jmiu uwuns wuu ui| ui uie mfLiugaii neai Miaic aeuvery oy me same at news •horn a “« 0 u n d P r o o f 1 n g". struc-’ Association in September. experts who turned out “T h e • • ■ trom ture around tee cruslteg ma- . Ferency said the central com,- Torch la Passed” and the “War- **“ -e| 'to to.................. ■ ■*'" memm the thermometer register) in downtown Pontiac.. 1 take action to eliminate the “We can’t sleep when it’s nuisance, which the petitioner^, running at night,” Mrs. Gil- noise of the cranes I creased ,rom »» fo $140 and BIRMINGHAM - After 10 years as the dty'4 chief administrator, L. R. Gare attended Us ^last City Commission meeting yesterday before retiring Jan. 1. ★ •• Mayor Charles Renfrew praiaed Gare, saying, “He has contributed tremendously to the development of the city.” Prior to becoming city manager, Gare, II, served as director of public works and as city .engineer for five years. He announced his plans to retire last October.' ★ * * “The city of Birmingham has excellent government and it really has been a pleasure working with officials these last 10 years,’’ Gare told commissioner last night. ‘COULD SHAKE HANDS; “There have been differences but afterward you could gojup and shake hands with friends. “Tbt people tkould appreciate those they have governing.” - „ Succeeding Gare as city manager will be Robert S. Kenning, present assistant city manager and a municipal employe Since 1950. members last night adopted an ordinance pertaining to the opr eration of the township’s central water system. - Besides providing for management procedures, the ordinance also specifies rates and establishes rules and regulations governing toe-system. The Township Board reviewed language of the proposed ordinance at a special meeting three weeks ago. In other business the board ipened bids on two cars for the building department and referred them to the clerk and building department s u p e r i n-tendoht for study. BjUtSpence Inc., with a bid Of $3,871, was the lower pf two bj'dders. Proposals Included trqde-in of used building department cars. TEMPORARY PERMIT: , nounced a systemwide strike against the -Southern Railway today, effective at 6 p.m. EST. J. W. Jennings, vide president of the AFL-CIO union, said the walkout resulted from a company move to operate .locomotives without firemen, He said both tides had agreed to meet Jan. 3,' 1965, to negotiate the issue, and called the company move a breach oV contract. Headquarters of the 8.10B-mile line declined immediate /comment. A spokesman said there would be a statement as soon as I information had been rounded up. , . Reports of picketing came inj from various points along the 14-state Southern system, Which services such cities as Washington,. Atlanta,* Birmingham, New Orleans, Memphis, St. Ltyis and Louisville. , . _ ... .v | those in their own homes were k Da"'2,e- “^[boosted from $80 to $90.. halted at Tippet’s Crossing — a pv~ Z 1 major switching point- -r at frj a m. Firemen set up picket lines immediately. 'Southern sources said the strike would not afreet passenger service in and out of Danville. I Blue-Blood | Beat Ball I Is Soopah The board approved a dance HOLIDAY TRAVEL Eve only Cass permit for New Year’ for Mitch’s Taverp, Elizabeth. The action is subject to ap- j proval of the township’s -fire and, police departments a n d •the Liquor Control Commls- j sion. In other business the hoard/ rescinded a resolution passed last week calling for bids bn gasoline for township vehicles. \* + * An examination of the present gasoline contract revealed that it continues through 1965 so bids will not be required^ until next December. The Weather aHnMHMMMMMHMMMnMIMMMMMMWWNNiMWIINW Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITy - Cloudy pad warmer today ud tonight with light rain. Highs today 41 to 47. Lows tonight IS to 4$. Partly cloudy with light rain tomorrow with Utile change to temperatures. Highs 42 to SO. South to southwesterly'wimb II to 2$ miles an- hoar today and tonight', diminishing tomorrsw. Outlook for Thursday: cloudy with lights' ■ M Water Work Probe Is Urged I (Continued From Page One) | to the DPW and a copy will be sent to the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. "Although the carrier began violating our contract at 12:01 a.m. Dec. 26, the brotherhood refrained from strike action until today, sp that holidaf travelers: , would not be stranded,” Jenriings said in his statement. - He said the carrier could hpve precipitated the crisis, as early as Nov. 13, 1964, when proce-dures of the Railway Labor Act would have permitted either side to move on its own on |he WINDSOR, England (AP: Like it was a rave, man. And absolutely dishy,' simply soopah for the gels. With records by the Beatles, the Animals, the Stones, and this swinging new-disc jockey,' bluest blooded in the business. In other business, the commission authorized the city’s participation in an engineering study designed to eliminate . ;odors icaused by an overflow “Under the Medical Assistance {rom ^ Bloomfield drain. , for the Aged Act, we increased J n ... j allowable infcome levels to per- shahh. uanyiue, ^ M 22,000 | The city’s share of the cOet of tional needy senior citizens to | the report isf estimated at be-qualify.” j tween $700 and |$00, with the miusini rRFATFn \ remainder to be paid by Bloom-! COUNCIL CREATED \!fWd Township and Bloomfield . • Human resources: Romney i cited -creation of a human re- i j sources council to help “pool! “ * I help for our underprivileged. j ****** ,c5.te|>^nt ,rfm . | side of Cranbcook immediately “One major target of anti- *—-------------- poverty programs are our youth. We have taken several : notable steps toward making them more employable... “For detention and correction of wayward youth,* we have | 1 opened 300 more beds at Boys j Training School and will have (Continued From Page One) more early next year, started special government assist-an extensive halfway- house pro- ance. ' gram, expanded our youth iwy habitation camps, apd added beds at Girls Training School." north if 14 Mile Read to the Nina Pond. The Birmingham firm of Hub-belj, Roth k Clark will undertake the $1,800 study. - #-.*•* ( Because of the increased 'work load encountered by the city’s legal counsel, Howlett, Hartman k Beier, Pontiac, tiw commission approved an additional $1,-750 for the firm! ANNUAL FEE - The appropriation covers the" months December 1984 through June 1965. The firjn has been receiving as annual fee of $8,588. The administration, on t h e suggestion of Mayor Renfrew, also will prepare a report on the feasibility of hiring a full-time attorney. .* * * “The commission should give consideration to a full-time city attorney because Of the large amount of work involved wjth a growing city,” said Renfrew. 4 A request for the closing of Ridgedale Avenue and a petition to rezone property on Phrdy Street between Frank and Brown for an office complex were referred to the plan board for- study. / Western Stated Start Cleanup It was the first beat ball in the history of British royalty, given at Windsor Castle Monday night by Prince Charles, 16, and his sister, Princess Aime, 14. The castle’s crimson drawing yoflm was turned into a discotheque. That’s a nightclub which provides only recorded music for dancing. ,ssue | TAPED NUMBERS ' “Why the Southern’s manage-i ghartes h*d ^ ^ num. Jient waited until the midhoh- la ed {romT^record col- day season to force,? strike is lection ^ cut himgelf ln as s we ca"not master of ceremonies, derstand.^ehnings said. Queen Elizabeth and Prince In Charlotte, pickets paced1 before the Southern station. • Labor : ‘‘A highlight in this area ., . was passage of the long-needed minimum wage law .... a constructive study of our antiquated workman’s compensation program will soon bear fruition, providing a foundation for improvements next year, . . ‘ESSENTIAL ROLE’ “As governor it was* necessary for me to play an essential role in resolving two major labor disputes,— the Essex Wire Gorp. strike at HiUsdale last summer and the Detroit newqiaper strike thjs fall.”- • State and local government: “The general election included selection of our new Appellate Ceurt and our revamped State Board of Education under the new constitution ... “We also declared a tempo- Philip looked on with Princess mu ,, „ . Margaret for a while 'and They said the strike was called danced ^ ,ively roeasurt! to^hnprove general workmg whi,a youngsters Twisted, conditions. 1 | The older folk stayed only brief- RICKETS COMPLAIN, I ly; - T ‘ ' Pickets also Complained they ] ' i ★' ★ 1 ★ , have nd paid holidays and are Most of the 120 guests were using unsafe machinery,. a.1- schoolmates of the host and though they did not elaborate, hostess — Anne’s from Benen- Jrary moratorium on new taxing Forty-one firemen were re- den School in Kent and privileges of local government , , ,u. u , ported out at Asheville. They! Charles’s -.from Gordonstoun in I pending development of a sound, Thot^h.critical of the Schwab alg0 were rted stljkin at | Scotland statewide approach.^ contracting and inspection on i the $7.5-million water system, Currey said the engineering job on the project is excellent. 10 SYSTEMS The DPW is acting as agent for the township on the project Uncounted thousands of men were at work in the three coast states, and Idaho and Nevada, -also hit by floods, beginning the j restoration of roads and highways, railroad service, and communications and power Many northern California contractors halted work on construction projects and sent their men and heavy equipment to the aid of htate, county and city crews in the mop-up operation. Farratll Roberts Files for 14th District Seat Sen. Farrell E. Roberts yesterday filed in' Lansing for the special election called to fill the 14th District vacancy caused by the death of Sen.-elect Paul Chandler, R-Livonia. it . a -W_ • Roberts, 42, of West Bloomfield Township gave up Iris own seat to run unsuccessfully for the Court of. Appeals. He is the first Republican to file for Chandler’s seat: JAMES A. CORWIN Pontiac Bank Elects Director^ Milo J. Cross, president of Pontiac State Bank, announced today that, James A. Corwin, of 170 Marblehead, - ,Bloomfield Hills, has been elected to the bank’s board of directors. Corwin, 57, attended Pontiac public schools, Album (College and Babson Institute. He, entered the Corwin Lumber .and Coal business in. 1930 with .his father, who had operated the business for many years on Cast Avenue. Corwin operated it after his father’s death until 1963, when the property was taken over by the city’s, urban renewal program. He has been active in civic affairs and is presently a director of the Pontiac YMCA, the Pontiac Community Finance Co. and the Pontiac Community , Loan Co. He is also pcesident of the Oxford Lumber Co. Corwin is married and has a daughter and son. Romney Reviews First Years in Office that will interconnect the pres-10f confidence in Michigan is tne ent 10 separate water systems I No l accomplishment of his ____I _ Leonard Kapizi, Schwab first administration, Gov, » m ’I -*3 Brothers vice president and i George Romney declared Mon- ----“ “ superintendent of (he Water- j day. ford Township project,’ said In a’ 40-minute private intertoday the job is being per- / view with the Associated Press, formed according to specif I- / Romney summed, up his first cations. two years in office and looked Kapizi acknowledged the! [or^ard t° the next two, which possibility of isolated cases-of b*gin Friday with his second in- LANSING (AP) — Restoration I law without fear or favor and ruts on "dirt-or gravel roads said ' generally the surfaces where main has been laid-is In better condition now than be-: focethe project begin. His firm will perform a final cleanup jLtto spring when the. job is mnpWtetj, Kapizi said. This will include ^ seeding and sodding bn some areas. NATIONAL WEATHER ‘ Northwest and showers in Likes. Snow flurries an snow showers in part* Of uj - northern Plateau. It wifl be ^Plateau and milder In ‘ letter parts of Mkj Minor Hiurt U Fatal CANTERBURY, England (UPI) -y- Construction foreman Albert Arrowsmith, 47, hit his, New England and snow in • thumb with a hammer while ' working and died when compli- cations set In, a hospital spokesman said. fo auguration. Excerpts frqni the interview text: Q.nWhat one accomplishment would you list first in your first term? A. The biggest thing that's happened is that the confidence in the state has been restored-As a result we got to make real progress again. I think there is an excellent degree of confidence in the state at this point, We^hM(ld do the tilings neccs-: sary to m|p it. I think pwhAM the No, 1 thing that hai brought out a change in attitude ii eyidence (hat this, is an admiaimatkm that is determined to apply the put an- end to a long history of special interest government in Michigan. I think No. 2 has been the recognition that you can’t really meet the needs of the people adequately without recognizing your obligations and commitments in meeting them.. .we have made use of all the means available .to meet our obligations, to put ourselves back on a solid financial basis. We have adopted a program based on .solid fundamentals of undertaking to increase personal responsibility and load responsibility and to meet our state responsibility. We have adopted * policy of making our state attractive to those doing business here.. .we have used our strengthened economic and fiscal situation to begin to overcome deficiencies that baye built up in important public service areas over a period of time: I, refer to the fields of education,... mental health, traffic safety and many of the other fields. Q. When you took office did you think restoration of confidence was your most important task? A.. In looking at the inaugural talk I made two years ago I said that restoring confidence in this state was the most important thing that could occur. PRIMARY OBJECTIVE Q. What is your primary objective for the next two years? - A. I think to pursue programs that will justify that confidence and retaiiL.it and enable us to build on. it....wbeh I say progress I’m speaking broadly and not just speaking in narrow terms of economic investment. I happen to believe that the more fundamental areas of progress relate to the individual and family life and community life and not just to the economic aspects of our society. -Q. Will the treasury surplus give you problems as did the deficit? A. it creates a different situation] in some ways more difficult tha^the one we faced two years ago. When people think all is well there is a tendency to relax and say “let’s forget ,it.” And yet all is not well. HARD LESSON One of the hard lessons „ I think I’Ve learned from experi-ence is that it*1s very difficult in a free society to get fundamental action that is needed except rin a crisis situation or where there is sufficient concern about some major public need so there is wide public support for.a particular course of action. The fact of the matin’, is.we have needed to put ourselves in this sound position in order to meet educational, mental health and public safety needs more adequately than we have met them in the' past. • Q. Does one need stand out above the treat? * * * . A. You take it from a human standpoint, I think soma of the problems relating to those who are physiclally and mentally and educationally disadvantaged represent ^ of our major problems because it affects a number of fields. Q. How do> you plan to keep pressure of national politics from Interfering: with your job' in Michigan? A. By devoting adequate attention to my job here. At the same tim£ what we’re doing here in Michigan is not unrelated to the country. As far as my involvement in the national situation is concerned. I’m simply one governor among 17 Republican governors who are in a position to be of-some help in strengthening the Republican Party and thus maintain the vigor of our essential two-party system. . * * . Q. Have you given any thought to what you’ll do in 1966? *; A. Sure, you think about tilings of that type now and then, but as far as trying to determine at what point HI make any decisions, I haven't tried to nail it down. I have decided. this: I’m not going to discuss « it with anybody^-what I think or tvlisyh plan to do. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, lOfo SEVENTEEN Winning Hand in Every Gafne By JOY MILLER AP Women’s Editor It was • year to do a an’s heart good. Never had she been so ap-. predated, appointed, awarded and elected. ★ if ^ The Resident boosted so , many women into high office —and kept the talent search going full steam — that ^ at' point he felt it to reassure Bureau said that women were more plentiful than men by million — that for every. 100 women there were 96.4 men — there was a silver Single men still. outnumbered single women,, and it made Leap Year hunting more of a sporting event. Jwo top pairings of the year: actors Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, who First Lady: campaigns farther husband in 1964 election. Mrs.byn- * .Mon B. Johnson ivhistle-stopped t6 help the President win election, Here, she greets an enthusiastic crowd. . Ferris Dean's List Names Area Students [. ‘forty-five Oakland County residents were . among ' the» more than 650 Ferris State College students who were named to .the Dean’s list, during the past quarter. From Pontiac are: Robert - L. Hoadley, son of the C, R. Hoadleys, Second Avenue; Ross R. Lqxon, son of the Ross Luxons, Third .Avenue; Caleb B. Martin, son of Mrs. Pattie Martin, Orchard Lake Avenue; Arthur G. Rendzi-peris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chris 'Rendziperis of Park-hurst Street. Gall Friend, Mention Town Trip By The Emily Post Institute Q: A woman I know Invited me to lunch but did not set a definite day. She merely said that whenever I was ih the city to call and she would take me to lunch.. had been going steady for some time; Sen. Maurine Neu-berger and Dr. Philip Solomon, Beaton psychiatrist. Along with Lefcp Year every 46 months comes the Presidential Election Year. And U.S. women in H, politicked more and more. .'•>■■■* * ♦ X^Frem the First Lady to the prjecfact worker who rang doorbells, thousands of women lived, breathed and talked * politics until the Ust vote was counted in November. SHE SETS PACE X Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson set the pace. When she became the nation's 32nd First Lady she said that her role must , “emerge in deeds not words." * • * She set to work underlining her husband's program in travels around the country; she called'attention to the ever expanding role of worn-. en as citizens by giving White House luncheons far the women “doers.” After the Democratic Na-‘ tional Convention nominated her husband, she hit the campaign trail on her own, the first President's wife to whis-tlestop independently. * ■* - *• Politically adept Lady Bird Johnson was voted Woman, of the Year in the Associated Press PoH, even as last year’s-* top woman newsmaker, Mrs. John F. Kennedy, sought privacy. JACKIE In Nfew York the gallant widow of the assassinated President lived quietly, with two,, chief aims: to, bring up her children,, Caroline and John-John, 7 and 3 in November; and to perpetuate the memory of her husband. * * . * , She had left Washington . its memories when crowd curious tourists packed the street in front of her Georgetown home day and night. In 1965 the home still loomed as the No. 1 place to be for a majority of women, but President Johnson' made it plain he thought their place was also in government service.' sluggards in getting laureld^ for themselves. Outspoken yet ladylike Hazel Brannon Smith, punisher of tour Mississippi washes won a Pulitzer Prize for “steadfast adherence to her editorial duty in the face of great pressure and opposition-” * ;*• * W Over the years she has battled bootleggers, racists and extremists, but she says: HI don’t call myself a crusader at all. All I've tried to.do is meet the issues as they arise . . ... and to report the truth,”. \ WON MEDALS ' Four women won Medals of Freedom, the highest civil honor the President can bestow: actress Lynn Fontanne, opera Singer Leontyne Price, Dr. Lena-Edwards, who three years ago gave up private practice in New Jersey to devote herself to medical care of * migrant workers in the woman to hold the office. • ' * w . nik ‘One of the most glamorous — and hardest-working — women at the United Nations, Mrs. Maretta Tree has been a delegate since 1961. * * * In November she became 'the first woman to serve as permanent U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Her mother, Mary Parkman Peabody, made news too in ■1964. J&he went to jail. 'That’s because the peppy Mrs. Peabody, 72, wife of an Episcopal bishop and mother Of five, in-: eluding the governor of Mas- - Mrs. Malcolm Peabody (left), wife; of retired Episcopal bishop and mother of Massachusetts Gov. Endicott Peabody, takes stand in desegra-tiori fight in St. Augustine, Fla. ' hours in a voting booth to protest against voting machines because she thinks they infringe on her privacy.' * * a She’s the lady, you may remember, who refused to act as. a tax collector and withhold taxes from her employes’ salaries 16 years ago. '. a a a Then there was -embattled atheist Madalyn Murray, wpo fled with her family from Bal- < timore “in fear of our lives.” From Honolulu she is' carrying on her fight to tax Churches. •' SPORTS CHAMPS In the' field of sports, Alice. ' Marble got fleeted to the National Lawn Tennis Hall of Fame. And in Tokyo at the Olympic Games the U.S. track and Fiejd team won 2 gold medals out of 12. U,S. women swim-. mers captured 7 out of- M , events and 13 PM.t of 16 gold medals. ■ a ' a a‘ , Blonde,. 15 - year -old swimmer Sharon Stouder from Glendora, Calif., won -three* gold medals and missed a fourth by a half-second. American women, it would seem,, not only are marrying younger these days, they are winning gold medals at tender ages. Sports enthusiasts aren’t objecting, but does it make a girl a has-been at 20? Marietta Tree-isa beauty who achieved fame in 1964. Niw^Consut to See Art The new German consuNfw Detroit, Dr. Wolfram HuckeY and Mrs. Hucke, will be among the guests, Jan. 4 in Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries for a special showing of the current exhibitign “The Spirit of New Berlin inhabiting and Sculpture.” \ * WS. * • ,« Df. K. Erich Rombach, Mr. and Mrs. Gunther Lasto anda Mrs. Agnes Chestohin, of the German consulate, will also attend. * ’ a . a ★ The guest list includes patrons of the galleries, members of the board of trustees of Gran-brook Academy of Art wd of the other Cranbrook institutions. - Gala Event Marlas End of. Yuletide . 16th annual Twelfth ^NighXGala will be held Jaii. '6, in Cranbrook Houses Mr. and Mrs. Henry S. Booth will be hosts at the event, scheduled from 8 to 11 p.m. He is executive director and chairman of the board of trustees of the Cranbrook Foundation, a a a Entertainment will as usual be-mummery but details in advance are never released. GUESTS ■ . . Guests will be members of the faculty and staffs of the sjg Cranbrook institutions, trustees and directors of the-institutions, board members of the Cranbrook Music Guild and St. Duhstan’s Guild, choir members of (^hrist Church Cranbrook and spouses of the same. : ‘1 . ; * a. a Committee members working with Mr. 6ooth in planning thisyear’s program are: Don-ald Willett, Elizabeth Boyne, Mrs. Jlck U. Klarr, Walter F. Read, Mrs. H. Leslie Schaefer and Margaret MacKenzie. Others from Pontiac are /Louis Schneider, son of the * Oscar Schneiders, Second Avenue; Ronald P. Toroni, son of the Rev. and Mrs. John Toroni, Otsego Road; Larry E. Wagner, son of the Lloyd Wagners, - Woodbine Drfre and Shurle.A. Warren, daughter of the Vasco Warrens, Harvey Avenue. , . BIRMINGHAM From Birmingham are Mi-^ chael J. Bodary, Robert R. Cuddie, N. ^ Richard Elliott, Gail A. Hamilton, and Don B. MacDonald, also Dennis K. and Gary -F. Long of Beverly Hills; John E. Erdmann, ‘‘Castle Drive. > David T. Bower, Barry J. Johnson and Claudia G. Wallis of Franklin Village are among those listed. ~y. . Others are- Paul ‘E,, John-'' son, ton of the Ernest John-. sons, Dixie Highway; Jame-sina M. Riddle, daughter of the James.Riddles, Highland; Joseph H. Griggs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Griggs,wAvon Circle, Avori Township;* Carl W. Wilberg, Sashabaw Road, independence Township. alsoImmed ’*• From Walled Lake are Dale E. Caplin and Daniel M. Godfrey, also Robert G. Nelson, Holly; John G * Hatfield, Lake Orion; Wayne E. Graham, Leonard; William C. Jarski, Lakeville Road; Oxford Township; The Remold , Yeagers 1 ■ of East Howard Street announce the engagemertt ■ of their daughter, Kathleen fluth to Thomas Howard Eley, son of the Enoch. Eleys of Hightnoor Way, The# -fire Eastern and ku;w TtiAutn V/wffiS-I" "\\ I live in the suburbs and go into the city every so often on business or to shop. This woman works and lives in the dty. • * .*. I plan to go in some day and would like to know if it would be proper to cali ber and remind her pf her lunch invitation. I'm sure her Invitation was sincere but some-, how I just don’t feel right about* calling and'-“inviting myself to lunch.” . • ’ ’ X„ What do you advise' my do- * ing in this situation?- .• * ★ fi ... ' A: You may quite properly ; cali ber and say that you are coining into town next Wednesday and that you hope she will be free to see you. She will then most likely , ask y/u to lunch with her. • YjfT f-'-i 4 • Q: I received a thank-you note in'yesterday’s mail for, a wedding present I sent to a young .1 ' ; His appointments—and they ' numbered in the hundreds— included women ambassadors (Margaret Joy* Tibbetts to Norway, Katharine . Elkus White to Denmark) Dr. Mary I. Bunting, president of Rad-cliffe, as the first woman mem-, her. of the Atomic Energy Commission, Mrs. Ehzabeth S. May, the first woman director of the Export-Import Bank. Meantime, wtfmen weren’t Out-of-Towners Visit C. R, Haskills Mr. and Mrs, Clyle Haskill, Woodbine Drive, have as house guests Mrs. Has kill’s' parents, the Glen Richmonds of Largo, Fla. Present also? for the annual Christmas day family dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Richmond of Long Island, N.Y. • Marilyn .Mt& Igou of Clarkston became Mrs. k Gerald Allen Hqnnig Monday in Our Lady of the fykes yChtfch. N Their parents are Mrs. Marvin lgou of Grdensburg, Pa., the late Mr. lgou the Hennigs of Allen Road, Independence Township. Following t h a i r. * evening vows and reception Monday, in Our Lady of the Lakes Church, the Gerald Allen Hennigs left for a northern honeymoon. . < f-: ■ The former Marilyn May Igou of Clarkston, daughter of Mrs- Marvin Igou of Greens-burg, Pa. awTthe late Mr.-. Igou, was escorted by Jack Hagen, at the nuptial- Mass . offered by Rev.' Thomas Ker: win. SEED PEARLS With her gown and train of white peau de sole appUqued with seed pearls and Aftncon lace, the bride wore a bouffant Illusion veil, False Birth Certificate Isn't Something You Demand MRS. GERALD ALLEN HENNIG Marilyn May Igou Weds Gerald Allen Henning Roses, carnations and Steph-anotis comprised her all-white bouquet. * * * Wearing princess - line red velveteen styled with long sleeves, were Patricia Heimig, maid of honor, and Jennie Hagen, bridesmaid. ♦ * * James Hennig stood as best man for his brother. They are (be sons of the Theodore Hennigs of Allen Road, Independence Township. W. * ; * Robert Hein'add William Hasloek assumed the ushering duties. > a - ? * • The couple will reside in Clarkston. 1 DEAR ABBY:-Our baby was born last March. My mother, who lives in , < ■ - < aqother state, asked, me if the baby had g __ been baptized -Vn &■tof. * and I replied w S m no. \ Then she s u g g e s-ed that I make sr-rangementsto p have the baby baptized in the city where she lives, which is my home town. , The reason I’m writing you 'is because I’m sure the priest who will baptize our baby will want to have the birth certificate, which may put me In an embarrassing spot. You see, I told my mother the baby was born in June because I didn’t want her to ] kqow that I was pregnant1 j when I got married, and I’d rather she didn’t find out the i truth. Please tell me where 1. can I rth certificate stating was born in June. ON THE SPOT DEAR ON: Don’t risk embarrassment by asking anyone to falsify a legal document. If you have the ‘baby baptized in your home town, hope your mother doesn’t notice the. , date on the birth certificate. . *- * * . DEAR ABBYr I am a girt of ■ 15. I love my parents but I j hate my'grandmother on my father’s side, and I mean I 1 really HATE her. She has lived with us ever \ since my grandfather v died. ' This woman gets on my ' nerves so much that I could j just scream. I try to ignore her as much \ as possible, but her slightest j faults disturb the living day- \ lights out of me. We aren’t on j speaking termsvight now, but it’s best this way because I. despise the sound of her voice. . 1 don’t feel like being friends j with her because that would j be worse, believe me. What' should I do? ' BUBBY TROUBLE DEAR TROUBLE: You.; “hate” tod intensely’ for a 15-year-old.. The chances are that . you are taking out all ■ your frustrations and hostilities on. the one who is least able to fight back. * .* * • X Tone down your bitterness, youpg lady, arid get this out of your system by having a Hold Open House Rev. and' Mrs. Elmer Snyder and son David of-Tyrone Street were hosts at an open 'house dh Sunday. Assisting them were Mrs- Earl Hunt, Mrs. Fremont Alden, Sandra Elliott and Dolores Knapp. frank discu^ion' with y o u r parents. i *. f. w ‘ C O N FI DENTJAL TO “LOVE-STRUCK BELLE”: BREAK AND BREAK CLEAN. ANY OTHER COURSE WILL SHELL DISASTER TO SIX INNOCENT CHILDREN. • ♦ •. * ' : it Problems? Write to ABBY, is care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal rppiy, enclose , a stamped, self-addressed envelope. . '< \ * * **L;: Hate to writo tetters? Send one dollar to Abby, in care ef The Pontiac Press for Abbyjs booklet, “HOW TO WRITE LETTERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS.” IM 1 $laudia Diane Marks Patricia Anne Kizer - Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd E. Marks of Lor berta. Lane, announce the engagement., of . their daughter, Claudia Diane (left) to Wayne -Douglas Keiser, son of the Melvin Keisers of Briscoe'Street. Her fiance attends Lawrence Institute of Technology. ’ Winter A optos in 1965 are planned. The engagement is also announced of Patricia ^Ariue Kizer, daughter of the Clyde L: Kizers of Sashabaw Road,, to Robert Ed- , ward Marks, son of Mr: and Mrs. Lloyd E. Marks of Lorberta Lane. Th« couple plans to toed in September 1965. EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 89, 196* Area Girls Set. Dates and Make Wedding Plans ■I ■ ^ Mr. tuid, Mrs, Donald L. SanderUn of Flint announce the engagement of their daughier, Janice Joy to Elton ■ Caulwell Houston Jr., sod of the. senior Houston*. of Meigs Avenue. Mid-August vows will he ' token bay the couple who, are Flint Junior, College students. V- J * The engagement of ^ Barbara Jean Towers to Gary Evan Simpson is announced by her parents,'the Louis J. Towers of Oxbow Lake Road, 'White Lake Township. Her fianceis the son of Mr. and Mts. , Adam Wild of Cranberry Lake, Independence Township. BETTER PERMANENTS f10 up HAIR CONDITIONING, TIPPING FROSTING AND TINTING $7.50 UP Appointment not necessary Specialists in Scissor Haircutting FREE PARKING CouS.#u,f ARE YOU ON^KBUDGET? NOT TRY'. OU)K\CLlNIC f ^iraY Happy Now Tear to OurCuetomers and Friends from the Staff and Students • II'/, S. Saginaw Ph: FIG 4 *352 The Savings Are Great! END of YEAR SALE! Save 10 to 55% • FAMOUS NAME FURNITURE • MANY ONE-Of-A-KINO • BUDGET TERMS, TOO! /-•> Here Are A Few Qf The Many Reductions! Famed Borca-Lounger Qtair with low back $1OQ50 silhouette-ivory hdagohyde, was'. .$199.50 ■ mmV Drexel French Dining Table, continental $10000 Height - 50"* round, was ... . . .$) 99.50 IfcO - Dr«xel Breokfront with grill and' glow $OOQOO doors, 50',' wide, was... .... S315 00 tdmm w Lone' Wplnut Bed with 6-drawer chest $1IQ00 S-Otjwer bachelor -chest by American $ A Q50 t Only, was. .......... ........$89:50 Nylon-covered couch in turquoise.- • Mr' ‘ fond Mrs. Choirs in'.Coffee, iour pieces, $04 Q00 was... . SS.9.Q0 4*10 ' Cortemporary Sofa, gold, orange and $04 QUO brown. Was . ..... ^.$33900 elv Free Decorating Counsel! Planned Inferiors for Homo or Office! Announcement is made.of the engagement of Carol Ann demjner, daughter of Mrs. Charles A. Clem-mer of West Reading, Pa., and the late Mr. Clemmer, to Gordon A. Kelley Jr.,> son of the senior Kelleys of Orion-, ville Road, Independence Township. A spring wedding is being planned by the pair who both attend Albright College in Reading. Df . and Mrs. Louis R. Newlin of Romeo, announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Louise td Fred Evans Shumaker. He is the Stm of Mr. and Mrs. Fred S. Shumaker of Mt. Clemens. She is Ja junior nursing student at the University of Michigan where her fiance T» a senior. The couple is planning an August wedding. Late January vows will unite Stella Marie Duncan and Chester Graycheck. Parents of the engaged couple are Mrs. Edward Dodson of' Hampton, Va., and Cds-sell Duncan of fast Avenue. Miss Duncan’s fiance is the sontof Mrs. Bernice Graycheckutf' Crest. Road, Orion Township. Polly's Pointers Keeps Sewing Orderly By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY—I do lots of sewing for my three daughters and myself. There are always several garments -in various stages of competition.. I keep each folded in a seperate suit-box with its pattern, buttons, zippers, thread and so on and _ »I am ready to sew on a cerUlhV garment I have it all ready. . ■ * * * . I found boxes tiW height of pattern envelopes, grouped my many patterns according 'sizes and categories such as suns, dresses and so on and they ar^ filed in these boxes. My dahghters receive many corsages and. I save, the pins that come iq them to use when working on heavKfabrics as they have sharp points and do not leave holes in the materials. Cur bakery packages bread in plastic bags which I savg, for my daughters’ shoes. The bags not only protect the shoes but make it. easier to find the right ones when they have so many different color!. We recently decorated our den and the assorted colors of the books on our shelve!'gaye cluttered look to the room. I bought shelf papti* in colors that would look well in the room and made d K Cocktail Hour; Special Low Prices \ 4-4 PM. Monday thru Saturday f-W Ml Meadey Mre TtfWMy ^ ^Yhe Elsmer W. Kreegers of West Bend Drive, announce the en- * gagement of their daughter, Karen Jan to Cadet Robert Anthony Agli, son of Mr. and Mrs, Alfred Agli of-JA ar lb 0 rough'Drive, fhey attended Valparaiso University and Michigan State University, respectively. He is stationed at the Pensacola, Fla., Naval Air Base. ‘ Half price sale on Bonne Belts uRefiesher Coursen for complexions FIm JOHonM«.(ol>«i*J00 Iff WM flw JO Hornmn*Ota* *2*® titf MOV ruts TAX Don't let your lice tell time. Plus 30 Cream at-night...Plus 30 Lotion as an ideal make-up base all day. Here's a full month's supplyot youth-giving estrogens. You’ll find they absorb quickly, to help nourish and lubricate dry skin. The Way skin cells are revitalized' . helps bring a fresher, more youthful appearance. Bonne Bell Plus JO Cream and Lotion have been the choice of discriminating women for over 20 years. PONTIAC 619 E. Blvd.t 1251 Bridwia BIRMINGHAM 597 5, Adasit 647-4470 TEEN-AGERS LEARN TO DRIVt . • Llcantad by Steti at Michigan SAFEWAY DRIVMG SCHOOL re Min - 4SS GRANADA — PONTIAC SHOE CLEARANCE Odds and Ends Girls' Patents Wert $*%* 8.99 A, Women's end Big Girls' Slippers Reg. 3.99 $1 and 4.99 _ | Shea Shine Kit! and Footwear Gift Items 20% OFF JUNIOR IOOTERY 1050 W. Huron 134-0725 West te China City 0 J TH1BTY-F0UR THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY/DECEMBBR 20, im praxpvfiPvnnriTiHR t-ii \ i hhh Bf MARKETS ,Jb* following an top prion covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by dam In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Poultry and Eggs MTROIT POULTRY E..'Kisr«’K.wSiS» DBTROIT BOOS__ S&UFAfliijrtyfi -SKkfjBwii (umbo Mi *rg# 34*04*1 imOM| n MWl small tfi w^'XsmnrrimjI *»ejw* •tffSSjSfe ?&* madlums 27; standards MW' “iHia. unquotadi (hacks 23*. CHICAOO POULTRY CHICAGO (API — (USOA)— Llva , Livestock „ DBTROIT UVBSTOCK ____ DBTROIT (API — (USOA): ttaars l pood to t war Ms HORS 600; Ml..— ■■ ■ ... f .-i.-- srTi».?surtt'jsrw» SV 111 17M3B B» 17JS-I7 75I MS; mo ii> (Cmatii u> SOWS 12.50-13.50. yaalart ' lb 20.50-21.50; American Stocks moon American c — Ho* S* Exchange NEW YORK (API - Following U AaroMJO SST.* 1Z Z XI Trad i ng Moderate Market Is Irregularly Lower NEW YORK . 1 is* 15* j LaaaCCam 1 ~ “ “ 4 Lone? Gas 1 LonglsILt .03 ,1,1*10*10* + * Lorillard 1J0 4^1* 41* 41* — * MackTr 1.35P 11 33* 33* 33* Mad Fd l.Me 3 ® 3H» W ..." easa? Mar MM 1J0 2 3AJ 34* 34 - * SfflLn .3SB ?S8BS + 8 MarChap .10a 5 fi 10 - MGM 1.50 *?*?!* i 0 40 JO* 50 * + 7m ij im m m . Pd 1 f IlH 3IH Bi i ISO 5. 51* 51* 51* .... —V— 1.40 1 II* 33* 33* ko* 3? Tk 13* im" ,-r, iPSau —w— a Co 1 # ' W + T 3 A* IE* n .00 15 32* 32* 32* -. j as«+ Say Weapons at Hospital Conditions Chockod at Nowborry Facility LANSING (API—A state employee union lays a hunting knife '‘with a razor sharp d blade” add a live 32-caliber rifle shell were found in a building uaed by patients at Newberry State Hospital. Robert Groavenor, director of the Michigan State Employes Union, reported the finds in a •"tag used as a recreation library by the patients. Groavenor said the discoveries uphold union charges that it is unsafe for female attendants to work alone at night in buildings in-tbe area. The union has protested unsafe working conditions and has been picketing the hospital for more than a week. Civil service investigators are visiting the hospital to check the union charges. CHECK ORDERED The check was ordered by state Civil Service Director Franklin Dewald for a report to the commission at a meeting at Lansing Jan. 4-5. Meanwhile, an interim legislative committee which has beet} investigating charges.of mismanagement and patient abuse at Ionia State Hospital was due to make a final report today. Rep. David Upton, R-St. Joseph, committee chairman, previously said he could “see nothing that lodes Tike a major scandal” at the hospital. Other charges were made before the committee that gasoline was improperly used by a hospital administrator, that patients were cheated when buying through the hospital store and that some patients were deprived of food for as long as a weekend NO SUBSTANTIATION ‘We have so far not been Able to substantiate the various larges,” Upton said earlier. Rep. Joseph Kowalski, D-De-troit, speaker-elect of the House of Representatives, had said he did not consider the investigation complete and that it would be continued next year. Economy Stimulants Readied Fear Dip in Confid i a letdown beta is inclined to i m 45 M* 33* 33*4 1 W\4 73* W . —N— I It M 57* J7* -*5 74* 74* 74* + semi-annual declaration Special « " - — payments not ■*•*- are McntlfM ______ footnotes e—AIM extra dividends 1 SSRbfffitt.J OxfdPap 1.20 . 3 Jl . 2 37* 37* 37* 5 34* 34* 34* - i 43* 43* 41* -f J '34* M* 34* 3 TsT 73 73 j M* »* S3* PublKInd .341 Pullman 3a PuraOH 1.44 RCA -40a Rayatta M Rayon ler 1.11 RcMMM JO M X RepubAv ,50p RepubSteel 1 10 It* 31* 11* — * 1 12* 12* 13* + * 15 fi* 11* if* Roy Out 1.73r ,4 38 42* Bt 10 33*Y23* 31* I 4*\4* 4* 2 MM 55* + ' I Mb 8 B* + -f 70* 7Mb 70* - * 5 71* »l* 71* + * B-S8 »38*8 , xr-Bx rlQtHa. xw-rWRhout .........545.94-2.20 _ ............ 204.50+0.02 fl (pa.:..................IS2+S-5 i 45 Stocks ........a....... 303J3^0J2 'Spelunking' 1s Popular With Students MIDDLEBtJRY, Vt. (AP) -The sport of “spelunking” or cave exploring la becoming more and more popular among college students looking ,, for something different to occupy, their time and energy in tor nonskiing season. The tgis spelunker a freelancer with a do-it-yourself approach to upderjground explora-*ion. ★ w , Anrf^spelunking does .not require expensive equipment — just dungfcrees, sneakers, sweat shirt, tonta toad covering and perhaps. gfoves, plus a flashlight, a bag of sandwiches, and a sturdy rope.\ Spelunking is also a good way to wear out clothes that have became too shabby for the high-style slopes. \ ' '64 Revenues Up at Edison Detroit Edison’s gross revenues were 8341,175,761 for the 12 months that ended Nov. 30, 1964, Gross revenues for toe corresponding period of 1962-83 were 8318,443,909, according to a statement released by the company. 4r ★ Net earnings of the company for the 12 months through Nov. 30, 1984, were 851,991,187 or $1.80 per share on the 28,807,779 shares outstanding at the end of the period. . For the previous 12 months, which ended Nov. 30, ,1963, net earnings were 848,17i,042,. or $l.«h~f^r share on 28,798,107 shares outstanding at the end of that period. By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK—This year has been 10 good that fears are felt in many quarters that next year may seem like a letdown' because the public is inclined to expect too much •f it. The federal a ,d minis-trqtion reportedly is getting plans ready for any such slump in confidence-plans to stimulate the economy with more DAWSON tax cuts or greater spending if toe pace falters when compared to this year's fast growth. 77 Sr * 4r Almost all economists in and out of government agree, however, that the first few months of 1986 will be even more bountiful than toe final ones of 1964. They , die the special incidents that held back the economy in the autumn, particularly the auto strikes. And they dte special reasons the first few months of 1965 will be more active than they normally would — such as pent-up demand for autos due to the short supply in the closing weeks of 19M, and fear that labor trouble in steel could cut off metal shipments in May. ECONOMISTS VARY Alter that — there’s the rub. And that’s one reason economists are varying so widely just now in their predictions for 1965 as a whole. ■: * Any letdown after these special stimulants are withdrawn might make both businessmen and consumers nervous. If the fast growth rate of the economy in 1964 — now put at around 7 per cent — slows down perceptibly in late spring, business could pull in its horns, consumers might worry and postpone some purchases. There are other hazards economists see ahead, without being sure that real cures are in tight. The labor force will grow rapidly next year. Much of the growth will be fromrwwths untrained for the jobs ~ industry offers. The grea\hopes now being expressed, that, the economy will grow fast to absorb all the nev I seeking jobs, may be dashed. And toe public is notorious for changing quickly from too much confidence to too much caution. NOT A PROBLEM Inflation Isn’t a problem now and seems unlikely to be in toe months just ahead. But beyond that a number of economists are far from reassured. They cite the recent scattered rises in some bask: materials. They note that the auto labor contract and the one the steelworkers are expected to seek could puqh production costs up faster than factory efficiency is increasing. All this could lay the seeds, for future inflation. ~ * * * Other economists, especially those employed by the banka and other financial institutions see .as far from allayed as yet the international financial problems^ which reached toe crisis stage in November when the British pound was tottering. Measures that may still have to be taken to get the pound back on a sound basis, and to keep the dollar from catching toe infection, are still wcertain. And drastic measures could upset toe American economy as well as that of other noo-Com-munist nations. * * *• A0 of toes^ uncertainties are why economists are offering • wide range of predictions on Just how high the 1986 economy Will go. Some think it will rise only moderately above this year’s $623 billion total of national production of goods and services. Some say it wfll go to only $850 billion. Most put it at $655 billion ,to 8860 Ullion. tt would have to go above 8865 billion to equal toe growth rate of 1964 over 1983. tSutxessfuhlnvemm‘ mtm s mok-' «iH ■ Nows in Brief Sabina Jants, 1297 Toll, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that a 850 personal check was stolen in a break-in at her house. Vandals broke toe window* in 20 trucks at Bolce B u 11 d e r s’ iy at 545 S. Telegraph. Damage is estimated at 8480. ni R B&uSf* «c.:8 ! By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I understand that owning good stocks is a hedge against inflation. Will yon please explain to . me what happens to the stock owner la a depression? I know the value of stocks will , below-ered but what of toe dividends? I am not expecting a real depression, hot would like this matter cleared up, nevertheless.” B. M. A) Because of the strong powers given to the Fed^al Reserve Board, as well as the passage of thp Employment Act of 1946, I agree with you that a depression similar to the early 30’s is highly improbable. Vfe will have, however, business recessions from time to time and during these periods, stocks will for the most part — but not in every instance — sell off. The ordinary recession may cause tome dividend cutting'in weaker holdings; but I do not believe it will cause strong companies to reduce their payouts. ★ - s4r ★ ' Q) “I am retired, with adequate savings, insurance, and income to meet my needs and about 835,900 invested in common stocks. I have 81,800 which I would like to inveat in a growth stock in the field of communications. Which would you recommend? American Telephone or General Telephone?” S. L. A) American Telephone is the giant of communications and is so powerful in science that it is called the mother of electronics. General Telephone is much smaller, although it is the independent company, tt building up a strong rate, due partly to good Sylvania division. I think it is usually wisest to let the market tell its own story. Telephone has behaved badlyjiince a run-up following thfe' stodc split. General Telephone has been one of the best performers on the Big Boafd, and in your position this at present would be my choice." Roger Spear’s new 48-page Guide to Successful Investing is now ready. For yonr copy, dip this notice and send $1.99 with yonr name and'address to Roger E. Spear, in care of this newspaper, Bpx 1618, Grand Central Station, New York City, N.Y. 18917. (COPYRIGHT 1984) I been l Luncheon to Honor Edison Employe Leo Lysinger, 1975 Wellington, West Bloomfield Township, of ther Detroit Edison Co.’s over-head lines d e -I partment is bell ing honored this Lysinger joined the overhead lines departintedof the com-pmiy in December 1924. He -is a member of Local 17 of the International Brotherhood of Electrfoal Workers, and has )lans for retirement in the near furare. * Man Retires Twice but Still Not Tired PORTLAND, Maine (AP) -‘Marry Blanchard has retired twice, but toe 95-year-oki man is as busy as ever. A former elec-trical contractor before he retired, he went back to work in a shipyard at\72. In spry and energetic, he does oil patatfogs, framing them ijtonself, takes care of a large Vegetable garden and fruit trees ana aids his wife, a semi-invalid with the household chores. Avon Mars Is Honore A Presidential Citation in special recognition of Outstanding contribution to greater economy and improvement in govero-i ment operations has awarded John H. Pal son, 2748 ken, A Township. Patterson dire c4or Quality Assurance Division, Detroit Procurement District, U.S. Army. The citation was awarded as a result of Patterson’s continued efforts to provide the Army with efficient - management of the quality control activities. Ford Dealer Joins Rent-a-Car System . John McAuliffe Ford, Inc., 630 S. Oakland, yesterday became one of the first area Ford dealers to join the Ford Rent-A-Car system, which is designed to provide daily or weekly rental of autotpobiles for neighborhood emergency or casual transport tation. The system provides for 'the rental fit Falcons, Fairlanes,, Mustangs, Fords, Thunderbirds, recreational units, station wagons and other, vehicles. Ed I mtaistrators and archil Lacey will serve aa rent-a-car one of six top projects manager for the dealership., I more than 300 entries. 2 County Men on AAA Board Two Birmingham area residents have been elected to toe Automobile Club of Michigan’s board of directors, Club,President William G. Walters announced today. They are Edward A. Wami-ca of 1298 N. Glenhurst, Birmingham, and Richard C. Van |i Dusen of Bing-wARNICA ham Farms. They replace the late J. Lee Barrett and Roy M. Hood, former Birmingham resident, who recently retired to Florida. Hood was given the title, “director vemeri* VAN DUSEN tus.” Wamica is retired senior vice president of Standard Accident Insurance Co. and a current director of Standard Federal Savings and Loan Association of Detroit. He is a first vice president of Crittenton General .Hospital,. planning its new unit at Rochester. and a member of Detroit Athletic Club and Detroit Com-mandery No. 1, Knights Templar. V '' YOUNGEST DIRECTOR . Van Dusen,, 39, is a partner ip the Detroit law firm of Dick-inson, Wright, McKean and Cud* lip. He is youngest director elected to the board in modem history. \, ■k * '■* • Van Dusen served two term* in Michigan’s House of Representatives (1964-8) and during 1963 was Gov. Romney’s legal adviser. i Business Notes Lawrence H. McEvers, 3549 Culbertson, Avon Township, has been anointed assistant d i s* trtot manager of the John Ham cock Mutual Life Insurance Co, McEvers has been with the company since early 1961 and has qualified each year for the company’s honor club. Th^ architectural firm of Tar-pata • MacMahon Associates, 1191 W. Square Lake, Troy, has been notified that a new senior high school in Afeena, designed by the firm, has been selected by the American Asaedation of School Admintatratanior a special citation, for desijm excellence. \ The project was sekfead by a jury composed of school ad-chitecto as lets out of ? A