Tint Weather m U.S. WMttrar Bureau Forecast Cloudy and cold 1 ' (Details ‘ftotl - '* m •/’ rtorrl#^. Edition: '★ mlH ★. W1<)e Proposed Pontiac Budget Set at $69Million City* Manager Robert A. Cart- submitted a proposed provemertt and debt retirement $6,948,234 city budget for . 1964 to the City Commission. ' .The budget proposal includes operating expenses, capital lm* Johnson Talks i U S. Okays mu Aides m-000 Conference Covers for Project • The proposal wenMp'cOijrifels* sioners by njail ttus weekend, just beating' dip HATS OFF -i In a symbolic gesture, Max Adams his fiat to the, community, signaling the.stgrt of Pontiac Area Chamber of Cbmmerce Week,. Adams. manager of the chamber, is'wearing one of'the advertisements which will be seen downtown and in-shopping centers this week. The eyenf is ''designed to show bow an active, chamber, aids community -'progress. '*••' ? • IMx ^.....:....x—‘.........uiu,. funds. It Is $179;348 above the 1963 budget total. . .-J Preparation’ of the proposed I tudget, glider ujay for the past two months, was supervised by I Assistant City Manager John F.1 Reinhck, > . Commissioners . Will how have until Jan. 31 to study and revipe the proposed alio* -j cations. The City Charter re* ] quires the budget be adopted it : before Feb. 1 each year. j ’ I Reinetk proposes that . the I A $500,000 federal grant for. budget be financed by a $4,514,-1 ■ Waterford Township’s $7.35-mll- 043 tax levy with $2,434,191 es- wy WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres- jion central water system was timated as income from ’other - ijent Johnson dalled two Cab-1 approved today by the Housing > sources. inet officers and his budget di- an(| Home Finance Agency, redor 10 the White Hpuai to-.. ^ ^ public works money, actually will go to the Oakland County Department of Public Works which acted as agent for the township on the application for funds. ' Economy, Defense Large Turnout Backing leorii for President Betancourt's Party' Candidate Has Edge of 90,000 Ballots day fof conferences on economic and defense matters. ^ 1 The sessions with Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, Secretary of Commerce Luther ! H. Hodges and Budget Director Hermit Gordon follow, hard on I ,the heels of a busy Sunday at The proposed tax levy is $38,-859 above- the ,1963 tax levy. .. The -city’s operating budget, | which accounts for most of the total budget figure, is. proposed at $6,261,834,. or $175,731 higher than this year’s operating budg-! «k" ’ • - ... Wyi (gifts: of Christmas , Work on toe water system . ... . - ■ ,, the White' House for th4 new was—scheduled to begin next: IMPROVEMENT FUND President. > | spring whether'or not‘the fed-j Reineck proposal a $518,400 At Ms ' deik'/yesterday, j*ral *rant had been aPP^ed capital improvement fund,] Johnson drafted a letterto I hp theh. about. defense contractors asking f ' . ______ their cooperation in cutting The, central water system defense costs, and the White lP»*.~t about $3,949 above the .1963 capita! improvement fund. CARACAS, Venezuela (ift — Raul Leoni, candi-date of Venezuela’s -anti* Castro .government, surged into a strong lead ' today in the tabulations V for the presidential elec-. tion. ' With unofficial ’ tabulations one-third completed, Leoni held a margin of nearly 90,000 votes' ,, over, his. closest rival. . . >&k The mounting vote fof lbeonl appeared to indicate resounding popular support for the strong stand outgoing President Romulo Betancourt has , taken against Prime Minister Fidel Castro’s Cuban regime. In recent days, Betancourt’s- I government called for, strong measures ag (The spirit of giving is particularly present in the Christ mas season, and the 12-installment series, “The "Gifts of Christmas," is 'an -interpretation tof 12 classic and eternal -gifts of Biblical history. Written by a lay author and uni: versity professor, the stoyies arc nondenominattonal and . have been, approvedby cifrgy.(d, pJJi:faiths.) ■- Flrtt « * fSWMu- i«i Ludwig Erhard,----, . . , . , President Antonio Scgni and overhead storage tanks and ln-British Prime Minister Sir ^taUation of an underground Alec Douglas-Home will visit ■tank, him. . ^ , j fct. SERVED ' m* T. The Gift of God !today with an early rnormSgl^S^after construction begins, [visit from Whitney Young, ex- the water system could service j 65 to 70 per cent of the township ' 1 population, according to Town-_ - . ■ . _ ship Supervisor James EUjSee- See Picture, Page A-2 terUnT^ By JOHN J. STEWART With heavy heart old,Father Abraham plodded His way up Mount Moriah, his tUtile son > Isaac by his side; Isaac, dearer to him than life oar Go( itself. And nets1 God had commahdedsJtim to Offer Isaac as a <*acrifice. ecutive director of the National ' Urban League, 'Existing township water systems serve about 4,969 residences and business ,e«-tabllshments, or about 25 per cent Of the population. measures against Castro, • including armed:action if necessary, by the United States and the nations of Latin America on die ground that Cuba was trying to export its revolution . ,' \ to the hemisphere. WASHINGTON WP)—Unionsr lost a skirmish in thTj a big .victory by Leoni, can- hand HB, under- Major increases in the pro- | that if a state bans the agency shop, State courts may ■ enforce the bap. The APL-OK) Retail Clerks Union, in a case coming from Florida, h|^ aygued that' the National Labor ■’•■'■^RjBlaitiond.; Board (NLRB) had exclusive power in this Jntercon- debt retir^ept fund re- « Court today in their continuing war against didate of Betancourt’s J ln the pro- includes construction"* of two. posed budgqt stem from the need to staff a new north side fire station and a community recreation Center scheduled for completion next year, gthir increasedd uejtofin-creased life insurance tor city employes and- hikes in street lighting and election costs'. The budget, according to Reineck, is based on the city’s present $280,480,500 total assessed valuation.' Cold, Snow Predicted As they walked ala&g together, carrying a knifef a stick jof fire, and , a cord of wood, the ■ puztled boy ask^ htefGiherr-,sWfiere is the lamb , for a burnt offering?” ' . - ' ★ ★ The trusting lad’s question pierced deep into Abraham’s tortured soul. Tears flooded the old man’s eyes. °My son, God will provide [Himself' a lamb for a burnt offering.”. ... .1 it t ■ ★ - ■ j * Quickly the anguished father builjt the sacrir. ficial altar, laid, his son upon it and raised the knife high Jo slay him. But at; that moment, having proved tiis faithfulness and obedience even in so great a test, Abraham was released by God from the command to sacrifice his soft, ’ G0D SUFFERED . \ * * - ifet God Himself suffered that which He Spared Abraham. To satisfy the demand of eter• /■mil' 'JhMtoetj ■W'fadeem^a'-wfrld fallen inta sin, , God offered as a sacrifice His firstborn and beloved Son, Jesus, His only begotten in the flesh, i - . j jfithpid the Lamb .of God " . ■ ‘j ' ‘ , ★ dr - dr Into a world of sin and sorrow did He have Him come, born in lowly circumstance, to descend below all things: Jesus the Christ, the one rr: ^-------y~~~~...............^-jpwn- - ■ (Continued on pj.ge/Two) : Johnson, his . wife and two .daughters attended services yesterday at St. Mark’s Episco-;pal church. Then the Johnson family drove, to Arlington 'National Cemetery where, he! pWced a bouquet of red roses j connecUng to the water sys-pn the grave of his assassinated tem upon its completion will be predecessor; John F. Kennedy. j optional to residents, according TALKED. TO’ STA'Ff to SeetoNin. „„„„ .. . ”kJ! tAhi Construction bids on the wa- m .proi«‘prub.b'y .111 be tel 'Thp President conferred' with bF ^ January. ,, I some members of his staff and ' talked by Mephone to McNamara. Gordon: and Comptoller [ General Joseph CajnpbeU in LOWER COST r The sanitation and Waste collection appropriations Occasional periods pf. show flurries and a low tonight of 20 Will - have area [residents bringing out their electric blame- ets. Tuesday’s high will be 34 to be iwlf sustaining. It will be io wer cost of Pontiac’s new h.--.thwesterto 10 to financed by revenue from con- combined curb-side pickup pro-. min,.tamftrrnw y necting fees and from the sale'gram. [ mnes tomorrow, of water, Seeterliti said. j ★, * w | Temperatures for the next Other departments and their j five days will average two to recommended budget cuts, in- four degrees below the normal elude street srtd highway main- u‘-w— ..... ig tenance ($140,000), parks ..and recreation ($54,000), library ($32,000), judicial ($11,000), and public service facilities ($158,-000), area. • In what is known afln agency shop, employes do not have to join'the union which {has bargaining tights blit, if they elect not to join, must nevertheless pay the union the equivalent of union dues as a .fee for acting as bargaining agent. Unions have sought to win such „ agreements from management in the’ 20 states which' have right to work laws — that is, statutes forbidding agreements requiring' that' employes join the union. The legal situation at present connection, with his appeal to defense contractors to help in carrying out his pledge to “get, a dollar’s value tor ip[ dollar spent.” ' .... ... ' The visits of Erhard, Segni and Douglas-Home, are,.Jn line' -with Johnson’s vow to carry out Kennedy’s objective. of strengthening ties within die Atlantic'alliance., •In Today's Press Erhard wl|l confer with'Johnson Dec. 27-28 pt the Johnson ranch near Johnson City, Tex. Segni, Will pay. a state visit to Washington Jani 14-15, and ] Douglas-Home will come to ' Washington for talks witiuJohn-' son Feb. IMS. ij • President Charles de Gaulle of • France also is expected to visit the United Stales next year, but H no date has,been set. . Gifts of the Magi. O. Henry’s fam°us Christmas story starts today-■' * PAGE A-S.’ Special Session. State Legislature must act on extension to county terms ~ [ . PAGE A-7. V 7 Jackie’s OrdeaL Mrs. Kennw showed courage during tragedy of husband’s ■ deatlX PAGE A-fO.- .Area/New* .... B-10' Astrology * ., . D-8 ■■■ D-8 Comic* D-8. /Editorial* . .. ,.v',...A-8 Markets ../S...D-7 Oidtojiries ..... ... D-8 Sports .......... D-l—D-8 Theater* . D4 L TV-Radlo Program* D-13 Wilson, Earl | , , JJ-I3 Women’s Pages B-i—B-4 '' ^ ■ Cr' ■’ "' " ■ 'J State to Send Gunsell Home JACKSON, (ffl - Alonzo Gun-sell is going! to be fredd op parole to return to Colorado where lie 'became a respected citizen after escaping fforri Camp Pontiac ln White; Lake Towiishlp 10 ybari ago. [Francis Buchko and JohiT J. Spencer, members,of the Mich-, Igatt State Parole Board, voted, today to free Gunselivand said there was a good possibility he would be released fropi Southern Michigan Prison, this week. highs, of* 36 to 39 and normal js that the fight to work Jaw lows'of 22 to 27. j - in some states does not ban, the In downtown Pontiac, the low agency g^n but in others .lt betore $ this morning was 22, £joes. n depends on the wording By 2 *>,m. the temperature had l:6f the 8tate slatu.te. ■ risen to 29. '■ • , t*n~- :.7 ’ T.........: : I. Justice...Douglas., who wrote the court’s opinion' today,jiald Congress, when enacting the TafLHartley labor . chose to abandon any search for uni* formity in dealing.with the problem of state laws in the unions security field. He called it a de-clsionfcby Congress “to suffer a medley* of attitudes aftd philos-I ophies. ground m Venezuela its second major setback since yesterday, when voters turned’Out in record numbers despite threats of attacks by snippers. ' UNOFFICIAL TAB ,X , t ^ ", The unofficial result of toe tabulation Of 33 per cent of more than 3 million votee: Leoni, 293,332; Jovito Villalba of toe Republican Democratic Union, 205,281; Arturo Uslar Pietri, an Independent, 139,812; Rafael Caldera of the Social Democrats,' 176,178; Wolfgang Larrazabal of the Democratic Popular Force, 83,631. * . . Voided ballots were running nhout 4 per cent in toe unof-cicial tabulation. The Castro-ite terrorists had called tor voters to ca*t blank ballots. There was no way of telling < at this stage how many of the \ voided voten. wore blanks. . \ INTERIOR VOTE Leoni, who has compared his worker ON HER WAV- - Judy Pipper .of 7139 ***» ««w.ss Capri) White Lake TowAship,', jots an ttvatloh seniors, will be held Jan. 24*» at Pontiac. ‘ Saturday alter being chosen Milford's entry Northern High School. Selection1 will be based in the state Junior Miss Pageant. The ; Jay- on appearance, poise, scholastlci*achievement, cee-sponsored contest, open to high,, school fitness, talent apd mental ale"' v ^ e| * ________ ii Jm ’A •• . lv# depce in his frial. • in an unsigned opinion, called fpr further ridings by the Florida Supreme Court before a final decision on appeals py 10 freedom riders convicted 4n Tallahassee, Fla., in 1961 of unlawful assembly. The questions put to (be Florida court: concerned the circumstances of the arreifs and the jurisdiction of the Florida court*. ‘ • Agreed to review a decision i by a three-judge federal court here that Upheld the constitutionality of the State Depart-mcritx denial of passports 1 to ‘members of thf Communist, parly.,, * ccs* and Lord Snowden are delighted'..” ttlfftf HELPER 5AW SHOPPING days TO CHRISTMAS SHOP FOR GIFTS IN OUR AD PAGES 4 858$ A—2 IJ- Railmen Seek Hike hi Wages CLICVELANP (AP) - The Brotherhood of Locomotive. Firemen and Eriginemen — the key operating union in the eur-rent railroad work rules dispute -r- has demanded a 25(ger cent wage increase from the nation’s raJtroadT Other demands served Son-day by the/78,000-memher union were for supplemental pensions and _ company-paid ‘Ttrnilli ffirrnfr The Broth-erhodaTpf Locomotive-, Engineers previously had asked' the railroads for pay 6b creases. x KARYN KUPCINET Police Quiz Friends of SlairrStarlet HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Homicide officers worked in teams today to question ’ Karyn Kup-cinet’s host of friends, hopeful ’ of finding some lead to the strangler of the vivacious Ac- Miss -Kupcinet, 22, a petite brunette who had appeared in a number Of fop television shows, wqs found Saturday night in her modest apartment near the famed Sunset Strip. .The body waanude and lay face down on a couch. The actress was the only | daughter of Jrv kupcinet, a Chicago newspaper columnist : and television moderator. Among those questioned was Andrew Prine, 27, a television actor identified as Miss Kupcin-et’s. steady boyfrietid until a recent disagreement caused them to break up. , ^ Prine, a costar of the “Wide Country” series, told, investigators he khew nothing of the slaying but hud telephoned Karyn twice on Wednesday evening to discuss their differences. Investigators said he may have been the' last person to hear her voice when he placed his second call about midnight. Officers believe the slaying took place in the early hours Thursday. . Also- questioned were two friends of Prine—‘Edward S. Ru- bih, 22, a free lance writer, and /actor Robert F. Hathaway, TfC In Washington, for. the American Association of Railroads said the organization would have no immediate comment. • An arbitration board issued recommendations" last Tuesday that could involve the elimination of up: ;to 33,000 firemeb’s -jobs. The five operating unions and the railroads were 6b settle wages and other issues between themselves under the emergency rail arbitration law by Congress last August to halt the threat of a strike then. Failure of negotiations could resalt in the dispute being thrown back to Congress Feb. 2$, the expiration date of the .rail arbitration law.’’ , H. E. Gilbert, Union president ^aid wage adjustments for locomotive engineers, Jocqmotiye helpers, firemen, hostlers and hostler helpers represented by the brotherhood were tong overdue. Gilbert said the last wage increase became effective March 1,1961. He said the railroad industry is operating at near-peak prosperity despite official management statements to the corn trary. , Included in the wage demands was a stipulation for a daily earnings minimum of 640 for-engineers and 635 for firejnen, in all classes of road service. The current wage scale was* hot available. The ..supplemental pension plan would augment the present Railroad Retirement System to which the companies -and employes contribute equally. Ihe unlon asked thi railroads to provide a 110,000 life Insurance policy with endowment at age 65 for each employe,’ and hospital and medical coverage for employes and dependents, including a 660 weekly benefit for employes who become incapacitated. ' . 1 THE EONT1AC PfoKjSS, MONDAY, QECE^IBER 2, 1963 WILL VISIT JOHNSON * Leaders of * ' President Antonio Segni and British . Prime Europe plan visits to\the new U.S, President Minister Alec Douglas-Home. The men will In the coming montw. From left, West Ger- visit separately for conferees. . man Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, Italian * , Ex-Educator Will Ru District 2 Bus, Car Cras.H in Rain; Mari Killed in Texas A retired educator, Norman L. Wittkop, 66, has announce he will be a candidate for District 2 City Commission seat in next spring’s municipal election. , Wittkop of 1025 Argyle is the. first to fill a nomination-petition for the 1064 election. Normally, nominating petitions don’t begin coming in'until late in January. Wittkop said he was. filing early because he plans to leave shortly for an extended vacation in Florida. ' ' ;■ ft ; Although a political mew-comer locally, Wittkop has1 been active in community affairs and is currently -president of the Park Civic Associa-1 tipn. ' FROM MILWAUKEE ’ . He moved to Pontiac from Milwaukee, Wis., in 1957: He was a vice principal .in the Milwaukee . school system . from 1934-1951 and again, from 1955- 57. DAYTON, Tex. UR— A crosscountry bus and an automobile collided in a drfjole today, killing the cat; driver, A. D. Garrett, 54, of Center, Tex. Five bus passengers- were injured. The bus was en route from New York to Houston. The injured, none believed furiously hurt, were taken to a Dayton hospital. Wittkop was superintendent of schools in Custer, Mich., from l9$f-53. Though his background Is mainly in' toe field ‘of education, he has also Served in supervisory positions for several department stores. He bolds a Bachelors Degree from the University of Wiscon-sin, - a • Masters Degree from Marquette Universjty and received his Doctorate in Education from the University of California. • Wittkop is a 32nd Degree Scottish Rite Mason and member of the Moslem Temple in Detroit. He is married and has two tfMs. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Constderable cloudiness and cold through Tuesday with occasional periods of' snow flurries. Highs today and Tuesday. 34. Low tonight 20. Wind variable 5 to 15 miles today and .tonight becoming Northwesterly 10 to 18 miles Tuesday. Twtay In Ponfiic Lowed temperature preceding I I Sun sate Monday at 5:01 p.m. Ion rlMi Tueeday at 7;44 e.m. Moon rltei Monday at A:53 p.m, li oil* In II Year* Sunday's Temperature Chart Lowed tempareture .... . Moan temparatura ...... ‘Waathari Partly cloudy. ■BIsmarcK NATIONAL WEATHER—Cight snow and snow flurries are forecast for tonight fore the northern tier of states from / Mississippi Valley eastward with generally fitir weather elsewhere. It will be on the cold side except In the extreme Southeast with temperatures below the freezing potyt from the north and central Rockies to the north and central He would oppose Charles H. Harmon, the present commissioner from District 2, if Harmon files tot reelection. . 3 Git.Killed, 10 Hurt in Helicopter Crack-Up CUSSETA, Ga. (6) r Three soldiers were killed and 10 injured today in the crash of a helicopter on a mission from Ft. Benning, Ga. Army spokesmen withheld the. names of the dead pending notification of the next of kin. Junta Denies Shake-Up SAIGON, Viei Nam. m -possibility that three of South Viet Nam’s top field commands ers will be reshuffled is not expected to t materialize in the near future, qualified sources indicated today. The American military high command in Saigon heard un-offieiaHy 'last week that -three of Viet Nath’s four corps com-manders would be transferred but over the weekend the riling military jifnta said this is not the case. senior U.S. officer commented-: “We are just not sure: what the junta ia-pianning these days. Many rumors like this one just don’t tupi out true.’* American authorities a r e known to 'have favored one rumored change in command— that of Maj. Gen..Nguyen Khanh from command of the 2nd Corps to the 4th Corps, i GREAT USE «T , Americans tell Khanh’s leadership'and ’determination have resulted in great progresfc in his mountainous region and could be put to good use to give more punch to tiie war in the Mekong D<a. / The rumored command changes indicated that Khanh would be moved to the 4th , VATICAN CITY <0- Archbishop Ngo Dinh Thuc of Hue,-South Viet Nam, 'said the daily Mass at the Vatican Ecumenical Council .today and dedicated it to his slain brothers, President Ngo Dinh Diem and Ngo Dinh Nhu. « ' I, ,i A council spokesman: said the lass marked the first month anniversary of their death in the Vietnamese revolt: The spokesman said Archbishop Thuc offered the Mass “for the of his brothers’ touts.” See Story, Page A-13 Corps to replace Brig. Gen. Nguyen Huu Co, a relatively /inexperienced officer who would be put in command of the 1st Corps region: The 1st Corps commahHer, Brig. Gen. Do-cao Tri, who identified with Diem re^mq repressions against Buddhists,' would have been movM to the 2nd Corps in place of Khanh. ONE CHANGE However, end key command change has ben made. The 7th Division commander, C61. Pham Van Dong, regarded as a fine Officer, by the Americans, has been given the . post of deputy commander of the 3rd Corps. The 7th Division area is one of the most Important regions in the country. It stretches south from Saigon to the Mekong River. Americans HIGHER THAN ESTIMATED Want to know if Dong’s new post Wfc 0Htsi of CWtmasf (•Continued From Page One) I perfect Being, who alpne could atone for. the 1 sins of man. I "EVERLASTING LIFE i “For God so loved the fvorld, that He gave I Hie only begotten Son, ,that whosoever belieieth I in Him should not perish, but hope everlasting I life- \ I Even would the Father see Hfm hang upon the cross. „ ,■ “Behold thy beloved .Son, in whorrt l pm well pleased.” •. • ~~ .’J‘ ' * i ■>' -fit #- 1 *' • This shprerpe gift did;a doirtnp father give to His Children, that they-we-^might each have the privilege of eternal life. This was the first' great gift, of Christmas. Nntr Thg out to th» virgin Miry 1 (CoprlghllMJ by John J, lliwirl) . increases his effectiveness or diminishes iii t<&Jf ’ ■ , ‘ /American authorities say they can detect a power stniggle in ruling junta over control of/field forces’. . , / The coup d’etat gaye Maj. Gen. Ton That Dinh a good power position. Be/has proved reluctant to give m command of the a^ CorM/region, which surrounds Saigon. ■. “7^ Viet Nam Archbishop Sayo Mass for Brothers Ruby sCase' Lawyer Confident as Murder Trial Looms DALLAS, Tex. (AP). - A defense lawyer .predicts .the find-: ings of federal Investigators Will bolster the case- of Jack Ruby, who shot down the accused assassin of President John P- Kennedy.- • ---- There are increasing- signs, njeanwhile, of probable- delay hi the murder trial of Ruby, tentatively set to start next Monday. %by, .52, owner of a downtown strip tease joint, remained under cldSe guard today in the county jhil. He has been/held without bond since the televised _ NOv. 24 of Lee Harvey JaldT charged with firing the its which killed Kennedy and Brfltas policeman two days earlier. Beverly Elementary School will ha the ' ‘ ‘ When m government’s report of the Oswhld case comes out,” defeiisp lawyer Torn Howard said Sunday night, “I be-. lieve then that public opinion fir favor o& Ruby will be stronger than ever because, it will prove conclusively there was absolutely ne connection between Ruby and Oswald..” ' Marguerite Oswald, mother of the slain, suspect, asserted she was sure her son did not kill Presided TfenflMyr ln -angry tones die blamed authorities on guard and asked In a Fort Worth Interview why Oswald, who sought to renounce U.S. dtlzenship when he went to the Soviet Unfou in 1959, was not -under surveillance. Mrs. Oswald was; also reported to have insisted that on the night of NoV. 23, about 17 hours before Ruby shot her son, an agent from the FBI showed her Ruby’s photograph. Mrs. ' Oswald - contends' that the episode as she describes it, Indicates that authorities,., had advance' knowledge that Ruby might try, to kill her son, Snow Isolates Resort LUCHON, France (R—A snow storm Isolated this Pyrenees ski resort today. Snow plows were dispatched to free 156 guests In‘a hotel and about 40 cars caught in drifts. No. one reported missing or injured. J R20 Project in Cash Crisis (This , is the-third in a series on urban renewal.) JBy DICK SAUNDERS Upeg his taking over as city manager, one of Robert A. Carter’s first impressions of Pontiac whs from Its urban renewal program. ' ■ He told the City Commission, “You have reached, a point where you might ns well get used to your urban renewal-office coming up with at problem every day, and « crisis twice a week.". One of those crises Is money. The R20 project Is broke. Of the original 65-million budget, there is less than 66,000 left in the till. . The copt of buying land In the R20 project Is one reason why the project is behind a financial eight ball- It was 6230,000 above the estimated cost, according to James L. Bates, direct?? of planning and urban renewal. “Remember, we didn’t have previous experience to base our R20-. budget on,” Bates Mid. 'We had to guess. Some of our guesses were .good and Mme weren’t.” • J The long candemfml which resulted In hi cost, also helped penditures for legal.* appraisers’ fees and other acquisition costs some 652,600 above tiie original budget eSti- lget Is At present, the R20 bui all but spent, There’! a I balance showing. The catch is that abput, all of ti is already committed and can’t be touched. On top of all this, /Urban renewal land values have dropped from the resale, prices estimated when the project began. Present appraisals , Indicate that urban renewal will receive softie 6020,000 less for land than originally estimated. in cost to the city is hard to determine, because must of the difference is en eiVic center property the city is supposed to buy from urban renewal. ‘“We couldn’t appraise civic center land for that use since there was no such zoning,” Bates explained, “So the appraiser was asked to pick what HO felt' was the (host likely alternate use to base his appraisal on,” , . ■ PICKED COMMERCIAL The appraiser- picked commercial, and the appriHoal price for resale of civic center-land came In at about 6600,000, according to Bates. This was done, as required, before the R20 project was approved by federal officials and the city commission. Early this year an ‘“updated resale appralMl” was required. Civlq center land was reappraised based on a Residential-3‘ alternate zoning and the value was pegged at 6,100,000. This represents* a 6500,000 drop In the value of land to be bought by the city. “In one way,” Bates added, “it means that the project, which Is one-third financed by toe city, won’t get as much in proceeds as fleet budgeted. “In another way, It means the price the city has to pay for the land has Juit dropped a half-million dollars.” Bates said there woh’t be ally drop In the R44 resale values “because toe R44 appraisals are more recent and less subject to change before we’re ready*to t foot, top R44 project Is doing will, both physically and fi- nancially d Steps have already been Initiated to get the R20 project budget off toe rocks. They are ilution part of a long-range sol whjch will be dismissed In toe final story Of this series tomor- Citizen Unit Sett.Report oh School Curriculum BIRMINGHAM—What Johnny is ^reading In school, as well as why, will be evaluated tonight in the final report of the Citizens’ Elementary Curriculum Study Committee, Chairman William Lyman and the beads of the 12 subcommittees will present the findings of tbnojr year-long Study during an 8 p.m. meet-ing’with the Birmingham PTA Council. Also attending the session at elementary principals, DR. JOHN a MONROE Health. Official of County Dies Students at Wing Lake Elementary School in Bloomfield Hills have planted not one tree -but a whole forest in memory of the late President John F. Kennedy. ' The memorial forest it Proud Lake State Recreation, Ann was planted by SW students and their teachers. Bach child placed 10 pi ne seedlings. A four-foot blue spruce also was planted, near the outdoor education center in honor of the late President. A bronze plaque commemorating the event is heing p ur-chased by the students and will be placed en a marker at the center,- according to Manager ■Jwiffitisiiik—— Masini and other Michigan/ Department of Conservation park rangers directed the plaftt-ing. . Many Offices Served by Pontiac Physician Dr. John D. Monroe, 71, of 61 Wenonah, who has been Oakland County’s health director Jfoince the department was organized in 1028, died this morning after a-brief Illness. Dr. Monroe was also medical examiner for the county, and health director for the City of He held, numerous profession-■* offices, the inost repent be- ing his election early this year as p r e s I d e n t of .top Michigan Public Health Association. Dr. Monroe ..also served as president of the Oakland Coun-mMedical Society. TONGEST RECORD He had the distinction 6f holding the longest service record of any county health director in Michigan, since the Oakland County department was the first of its kind organized* in the- He ,1s survived by his wit! Mary; a' daughter, Mrs. Robert Hackett of Waterford Township; a son, Army Sp-5, Jack Turner of Washington. D.C.; a sister and four grandchildren. Service will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at First Presbyterian Church. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Anti-Casfroife Leads Voting (Continued From Page One) about 96 per cent of the eligible voters, cast baljots. POLICEMAN KILLED During the. day a police agent was killed and his wife, wounded in a gun fight between a terrorist gang and police and troops in Caracas, Five bombs exploded in Caracas. ^ One explosion in an apartment building hallway injured a child. Special pat roll disarmed 80 other bombs. Major gun battles broke out after nightfall and after the polls closed. Avenue Urdaneta,, in downtown Caracas,, was a no man’s land of machine-gun and small arms fire. During a prolonged sniper attack on a poljce station a volley of fire poured Into the windows. of the United Press Inter? national agency on toe night floor Of an offlpe building. A bullet nicked the chest of cam-erman Carl Warner, of Miami, Fla., Othqr bullets knocked out the lights and power supply. Another gun battle raged out-fijdO the building., hOusing The Atfeociated’PfoM until Notional Guard troops blocked ■ the streets with barbed wire and drove U)e snipers from the rooftops. who will Implement ’adopted recommendations with t h e 1 r staff members. The chairmen are planning to report to the board of education sometime next week, pointing out strengths and weaknesses (n the present curriculum structure. WORK DIVISIONS . Their work wap divided into the following categories — art, language arts, mathematics, physical education, social studies, music, kindergarten, science, foreign languages, library, special education and fact finding. ~ •• Harold W* Holmes Service fo? Harold W. Holmes, 70, of 512 Madison will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Christ Church Cranbrook. Burial will be in Grahd Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. 1 Mr. Holmes, onetime industrial tool company owner in Detroit, died' yesterday after a long illness. * • ' IBs body will be at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. until noon tomorrow. Surviving are his wife, Susie;’ a son, WtiUam E., and two* sisters, Mrs: Rolf Spinning and Mrs. Ruth Gordon; ail of Bir-. mingham. * Prime Minister Quits in Turkey ANKARA^ Turkey (D - Prime Minister Ismet Inonu, .80, re-tigned today. Re had treturned only Saturday from Washington, where he attended the funeral of-PresMedt Kennedy. In his absence, two members of his governing coalition — toe New Turkey party end the Peasants National party — de- cided" to pull out. This lqft ihe ■i" ti veto 80-year-old political veteran in toe position either qf forming a new government or-xaljlng parliamentary elections. Reports that Inonu was to be isassinated circulated in Turkey Saturday and a heavy security guard was thrown around him as he arrived from the United Sjates. Inonu, head of the Republican party, has been in office almost all the time since the corrupt regime of Adnan Men-deres was toppled by an army coup in 1960. Couple Overcome by Gas;, Man Dies A Pontiac man died and his wife wasifibspitalized early this morning after coal gas frpm a small fire filled their home. The death of Willie Johnson, 05,, of 44 Murray, was . attributed to asphyxiation and exposure by the coroner, Dr. , Isaac Prcvette. -Johnson’s >wifa, Louelia, 49, was admitted to Pontiac General Hospital for smoke inhalation. She is In fair condition,' Pontiac police said that the couple had built a fire in a small.bucket in toe house and that it was the (Ally heat In the building. POLICE ARRIVE When police arrived at 4:40 a.m. to investigate reports of they fpund Mrs. John- son hanging out a second story whujow^' .' l • ., This Pontiac Fire Department ' a resusdtator on Johnson avail. He was dead at tha r1 ■ lAaremscmenu st^Bad Breath th and stomach like magic. drugs. Get 8elt-sns. Send postal to Bell-sns, Debarred Firm m NOTICE of CHANGE Of PUCE V Kiwanis Travel and Ad- morrow night . . ^ Tuesday - • , . Curtis Nagel — presents -*■ 3 "ROAD to MANDALAY" 8:00. P. M. LINCOLN JUNIOR HIGH ' SCHOOL 131 Hillside Drive ' MW-'YOitr W)-j. 'ju wit liston" &‘Beane, Inc., financially troubled firm' suspended two days from the New York Stock Exchange, has been absorbed by Walston & Co. The firms said Sunday night that Williston & Beane’s 16 offices- woyld Qpen today, with Walston clearing and'confirming orders. Walston was one of toro firms loads totaling which, provided 6S00,000 to help. Willtstoh Beane win reinstatement on the stock exchange. It was suspended Nev. 20. MMMlMIJMIMIlMmRIMMB GIFTED COSMETICS 1 Hare At SIMMS! H. H. AYER 2-PC. SIT « $1 value cologne 'MVtfMek B ond Hand & Bod/ 78* LENTHERIC CLASSICS $1 valiik'— 3 piece J IQ' 3-PIECE GIFT SET EVE. IN PARIS SET $2 set has: colOgae, i d| I Toilet Waterp-end——H_. GREENSBORO, N.G. (AP)-Mrs. Cleze, Gill - Morris, I ft WAHL 'Portable* [ Electric Hair Dryer j I $21.95 Seller, 1388 ■ As shown —, 'Collgeiata' model | 1 is cbbipletely portable -* lets X u- dfy your hair and keeps I E your hands free. $1 holds. I K CUTEX MANICURE SET nut** set witktpot- : hi i 1«‘ l $5 JEWELRY BOXES 6nd StriMff, velvef cdsti 388 S WRISLEY^S DUO SET I ■ $5 deluxe dueling po*. ^48 1 B der .giid sp’ray niisi. __1 pm ■ 98 N. Sogmaw — Main Floor 8 NMMMMWIMMMNHl WERE SUSfcENDEED Williston Sc Beane and Ira Haupt & Co., were. suspended for failing to meet minimum capital requirements after- a customer applied for bankruptcy. The stock exchange . took oyer liquidation of Haupt. ' Williston & Beane has., about 9,000 account holders. Most of its' Stockholders also will become stockholders in Walston & Co., the announcement said. Station Thief Demands Premium on His Loot SAN JOSE, Calif; (AP )-; gunman robbed a gas station < $78.50 Sunday and then deman< ed: "Now the trading stamps! Ai‘endant.,Gaylord Anderson 29, handed over'180 stamps and: the robber fled. Tallest Woman Dead forme^ circus o performer billed tallest woman in the world," died Sunday. Mrs. Morris Stood 6-foot-8 and traveled most of her life with the Rifling Brothers, Barnum and Bailey Circus! She was born4 to Of illia, tSRc ' PRESTO 4-Qt. ALUMINUM Pressure Cooker ] 9” 4-Qt-STAINLESS STEEL Pressure Cooker wlm ' ; i Won’t tarnish or d| AfiQ I ru;«. Exclusion | r.gulot.r. 31 10. ' ' 91 N. Saginaw- 2nd Floor Bring In YOUR Favorite Negative ..... Choice of Sew (\1 i ChrUtmai De*ign» Send greetings lhat .you, and YOU alone con send . . . PHOTO cards "Tronryotir favarffinnapihat, ORDER NOW! | PHOTO G3EETIN5 CARDS THE PONTIAC PRESS, liTO^PAYV-DEGliMifiil 2, .1968 ' AHf immm/w SAVE Up to 1/3 Horo it SIMMS DIAMOND RINGS and BANDS ..tXMt S» DIAMOND UTS . $ 66.87 .,$166.00 $133.33 There toertt onlj> 19 cities in jtidhs exceeding 1 million. Npw the^worh^|ii MO with pbputo-[there afeabout ft ■d—jAiai j&hrisfms Christmas Gifts For The Heine Cost Less At SIMMS 25 SOUTH Choice of 4 Smart Style* and VANITY LAMPS r-rT-ta si.no Sellera idnipj ■ Jri S'hlart decorator style lamps ibfor 1^7'TV or bedroom... . . plastic globes bn stylish -bdses. 6fhW Vdnity Lamps to $4.88 3-Lite Pole Lamps 588 $9c88 Croup Choice of.tree pole lomp or-3 color life pole Ifrmp with •. poles 'of block;.brown or.. White with brois trim.' (Other styles for Overy room to $9.99) DAILY HOURS tIViilti. ^TugMiTufisrofe ■ OPEN Every HITE Till BROTHERS CHRISTMAS Except ; SATURDAY W for CHRISTMAS GIFTS > an$ for Yourself Ladies’ 1st Quality SEAMLESS $1.00 Value . PAIR.. | I Smart seamless deml-toe style nylons [ for that smart dressy look. Popular ; tones and shades to. choose from., as SVS to J1. No limit —- buy all you want af this price. ' , BETTER GIFTS COST LESS at SIMMS! Sf3^0 Get Ike Trie Fisk Stery With Fisherman’s De-Liars (21 The Original TfMBERlAND Sleeping Bags Folding Stool $ISS Va\ue — Vow T At sho>up .— folding I camp stool with mjetal I frente, sturdy canvas I seat, holds up to 300 j pobndi/ / ■ 1 For All Winter Sport- Use HAND WARMERS -Wow Sf-00 tellers -Imported hand . warmers .give 12 to 24 hours of J comfortable heat. (Fuel -p!pt 39c) , ianadian TOBOGGANS 6-FOOT , 8-FOOT |99 V 388 999 |3I I All sturdy wood toboggans with vhang-on f side rider rope*. Genuine Canadian toboggans at lowest prices. *amou* Brands in AIR RIFLES GROSSMAN Air Rifles ^ QA8 1 $ 12.95 Value — model 910 air rifle . W BENJAMIN .22-Col. Pellet MRS $24.95 seller — pump action rifle ........... mmm SHIRtDAN Pneumatic.Rifle 4)088. $27.50 Value-4. pump action Here's Mote Proof YOU SAVE MORE AT SIMMS Tenite & Tuesday SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT _ Genuine BEACON JO x 80 Indian Blanket* 99 All ’first quality. 70x90” COTTON SHEET $1.89 r Valuer 1 29 2 for $2.50 . blanket; ’ Large 70*9O-lnch with • stitched/ edges. Fully washable .Lilac color. MEN'S VINYL PLASTIC Dress GIqvss 50%'," Sp% fleece llnedwirhv,R ■' — 'knit sidewalls. Black, grey and' brown ‘ colors; Sizes S-M-L. .. Fleece Lined Tot Extra Warmth HEN’S SWEATSHIRTS American Made v peck/style, some \. vyith • raglan .■sleeves.,: White in’ s S.M-L-XL and ’ .red ' irt«.S-'L Slight irregulars. loop I •' 1 > $ ■ .i Boys 13%'Ounce Western Size. 6 Dongarees 457 $229 Value 2 for $3.00 Zipper cloture, change, pocketa. rlvet* •tfid bartacke at] aU atfeto jw|nle>^.yi1fh' 2-jiron-on patches. 9S North _ Saginaw | Street, eme To SIMMS For YOUR FUEE TICKETS Ort $1000 GIFT CERTIFICATES No. purchase required—simply oak feihfree tickafa-here at SHmm.’ Deposit one in container, keep-the ether end for identification. Look for winning numbers in Simm* and ether participation stores . slotting Dec. 11 th.",- . . ’ • ■ >' ., CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS ‘Sylvonia’ FLASHBULBS AG-1-Size lannawfe: i ! FLASHBULBS j 1616 $1.44 carton of AC-1 ^rfilt# bulbs for modern cameras. ... r Blue Dot for sure shots. Limit 10 cariom. PRESS 26 or M2 FLASWUlsBt $*1.56 "carton of white flashbulbs. with -.the blue dot iof shur-shots., 12 • bulbs tn wlon. Limit 10 cartons. KODAK ‘Fiesta’ Camera Outfit MMtMMUU i l SHOP SIMMS T0NITE & TUESDAY JU"f VJUSE 0UA FREE LAYAWAY FtAN 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS FURY 7-Inch ELECTRIC PowerSaw *129.91 Value IF Develops . I Vi-H.P., amps, .5,000 rpms, an- { gular * adjustment ,ind 1 self* lubricating bearings. | 3-wire conductor cord, Mir- , ror finibhi $1 holds l|.free ] layaway. Dozens of Ueee—Bern*-C-Matic ' Propane Torch Kit 767 Simms' Trice box. loyowoy for Chriitmatglvlng, 5 V* -Quart Automatic Electrfc Cooker and Fryer j Simms Price 999 f for dn*p frying. Steel li ilgnof light. Us# ou 2-Quart Electric Corn Popper Simms Price Pops corn faster, easier. Buy. now HRM Christmas giving. Complata with glass c'.vcr. Cord extra. v 3-Speed Portable Electric Mixer 707 \Simm Price r30»watt mlxer for mojt any'-kitchen mixing chore. Cotaplfto with beater elector and cord. $1 holds In layaway, V ' . American Made—'Dark Chaser' Floating Lantern 444 t 91 Nnrth ( ',\9ngtonw I 12 for 69^ darn cameras sHBULBL l2-89e Regular S9.95 Valu«-At Stmtm Cambro ..compleii .with, flash,, film/ battferies and bulbs, 'Take slides, color snaps anH. black- ond white on ]^7 film. $1 holds In lay* KODAK ‘ZOOM’ Movie Camera ■Regular $119.50 Value —At Simnu and' doses automatical- , to ligM'. condi- 1 i. 8mm roil load ■ i type A filtar, rapid I crank - wind. $1 ( holds In ARGUS ‘AUTR0NIC II’ Eleatrio-Eyn MBb. 35mm CAMERA SET $119. W . Value 7408 Complete with case and flap — f2.8 coated Ians with dutomatic electric *ye, rapid wind, shuttar speeds to i/500 sec. Double exposure. preventton. Built-In rongi finder. $1 holds. tw ' DISCOUNTS on TRANSISTOR RADIOS Reattono ‘LARK’ 9 -TRANSISTOR POCKET RADIO £98 • Compare $19.95 Complete with cosh, battery and .igrpflonfc. ■Powerful 9 transistor with 1 thermistor and I’ diode. $1 holds, REALT0NE 10:Trw»l*tor (n 3-BAND RADIO $49.9$ Value - Nose AM-IW-SW I 21“ REALT0NE 6-Tube Table Model FM-AM-aFC Radio 'Oiled walnut Two-In-One FM-AM Table Radio ilF 6 tubes plus 4 ^ diodes. Plugs Into i electrical aiullat. $1 holds., . *" FM-AM ‘MagnHique’ Model Radio A» Shown 69« 1 transistor battery-powered 6r electrical table radio with 4 crystal 'diodes'built In AFC eoritrol, deluxe Skood walnut cabinet; $1 holds. ToM Talk and Listen Without Wire*' 9-Transistor ‘TRANSCEIVER’ Walkie-Talkies Anyone eon operate these walkie-talkies,.. cam* > -plate with bajteffes, leather case, earphone ofid telescope whip antenna.- Perfect for hunters, boaters, offlee-to^itockfponry.parklflg tot attendants, Invalids ^ etc. No IlcOnse petded to operate. - a THE PQNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, meflMfrEK 8* TOGg 7';:# Junior Editors Quiz o SPHINX Abbut-45-men’s clubs to'Doh-donrtjuster .around, Pall ‘Mall [and St. James’ Street Some [trace tjfeir ance’stry back to. '18th Century coffeehouses. . . ; -i SHOP TILL 9TONIGHT arid EVERY NIGHT TILL CHRISTMAS use « Waite's Charge Amount FLEETWING ^ BICYCLE SALE EVERY PIKE IN STQCK REDUCED! CHRISTMAS SALE ^ of MEN'S SWEATERS BoriilinsHrance Sold by Mail . OEDI PUS SOLVK5 ..TXC HIODLE OF • tub eaeoAN \ SPHINX • ' ■ . ; you may be Qualified tor —Jt000 life insurance . . . so you —will' not burden your loved ones with funeral and other-expenses, . This NEW policy is!. especially helpful to .those, between 40 and 90. No medical examination • necessary. - • _ ■ ■ ■ OLD LINE LEGAL RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE. ... No agent will ,callr'6n you, Free inforfnalion,'no obligation. .. Tear out this ad right now. • • .. . ."Send youi: name,' address . and year • of birth to: ‘ Central Secunty Life' Insurance' Co., Dept. V-139, 1418/ West Roseddle, Fort Worth 4, Texas. SPECIAL PURCHASE QUESTION; What is a sphinx „and what H its iadlle?,. '■ it it . W; ANSWER: In the past people .knew .only-a small part and suites W.ijjy Singles from $7.50 M' Doubles frem $10.50 ^r/Yyvinptrem $13.50 AVerrieoti HOTEL . Clark and,,Madison Street* « Chicago, IU. •Tel. 372-9500 Tasmania JFK Bridge HOBART, Tasmania (APHA $15 • million bridge across the Derwent River in Hobhrt wbuld be- named for President John, F* Kennedy if officials adopt a suggestion from the Tasmanian Tourist Promotion Council. The bridge is * due for completion next year.. GIFT BOOKS for year roUnd reading pleasure MIDDLEWEIGHT BICYCLES Reg. 39.95 • Double Headlight • Built in Tank • No Money Down Wallo't Herein — Tilth floor Mk tn* yitimsfa authority tin *ood •taata and (racism Irving. Complain,’ huiory. Literary' plata saw adition.’ ■' Contalna mara thai 3,500 rhclpss. • 45 chaptara, liberally Illustrated. Up-to-date lnfarmit|ai an c echini techniques, an Ideal horns reference book. 57.50 1WM. SKtinfiiithad storyteller. » diagonal mefiurt A MARTIN GAS FYRELOG WILL ADD GRACE TO ANY FIREPLACE -MtANDAr t < 1 Ganaral Claan-l I SLACKS' • & $2bJD: SUCKS ■ sew 5.98 Jl t. - ' ■ SUPS 911 ^2°° Reg. $A22 3.99 0 Reg- 6144 5.99 > .Keg. 0E22' 7 ■ 5.99 • - J ’ / 3&3 for 5488 Light and warm 94%* Rayon, 4% acrflan, 3$"x50". Large 42"x60" 100% noh- allergic Acrilan. ' • »-■ All white background/ with print. S. M. L. 7 ■ /- Slim or regular 6-12 .10-oz,-weight. Western cut. White only. Wash taJmwaVv 'fabrics. , / • Pinwale cord. Come in sizes* 6 ‘ Solid or plaid wools. iStzes 7 to' 14. ' ^ Whjfc with lace trim. Sizes 32 V0' Infanta .. . Second Floor Infants .. . . Second Floor Infants . . . Secojid Floor ' Boy's Wear ;.. Second Floor Girl's Wear ,.. Second Floor ■ Boy’s Wear ... Second Floor Girl'* Wear ... SecondjFloor Lingerie ..Second Floor ♦/OPEN 9:30 to 9:00 Sorry* - No Mail or Phone Orders* No ' SHOP. TOMORROW 9:30ta9 p,M P. M. UNTIL CHRISTMAS Dolivonason These Sp*cialsExcept for Lorge Items Shop the easy, convenient way . ,’y Open a Waite's Charge Account! 100% Nylon PANTIES Reg- 690 C 2 f"‘1 Brief.style. Sizes 5-6-7-8. Lingerie , .. Second Floor . Famous Brand PASTY GIRDLES SOW Reg. 5.95 *3* I sizes In white. Foundation* ... Second Floor Seam or, Seamless MILLAY HOSE Reg. 99c TP, lit quality, reinforced toe and heel. Proportioned lengths. 8 Vi' to 11. , Nylon* ... Flrtt Floor Large Selection HANDBAGS tat ««■ saw / 3.00 Grained or smooth* vinyl. Black, brawn, combinations. ' Handbag* ... First Floor ' Watlra^le Cotton CORDUROY 'Reg. 1.69 Yd. 97' popular -corduroy In all th popular colors. Fabtieu ... Fourth Floor Famous • Brand a TOWEL SETS Keg,, 6J00 4.99 f| Boxed lift sets In solid colors or prints. To wols... Fourth Floor Fogm Rubber PILLOWS Reg- 5.99 2F* *9“ Bellealr solid foam rubber With sip off covers for laundering. Domestics... Fourth Floor , Dacron Filled COMFORTERS ' T Reg. 9.99 * 'Early American Patterns In percale. Reversible. , DuPont Dacron flilid. / Blanket* .. . Fourth Floor \ . Famous Brand purr emus •5" Assorted sizes In white; Foundation* .. . Second Floor Reg- 8.95 Leather Palm DRIVING GLOVES 169 "2.00 T Acrylic knits in 6 colors. S. M. L. . ... Gloved;. First Floor; ■ Cultured Pearl JEWELRY to Reg. 2.00 T Gold filled with' genuine. cul< turjd pearls. Necklaces, brace* lets, pins, earrings. . Jewelry ... First Floor < Everglaze Cotton FABRICS Reg. 1,79 Yd. 77V ?6" widths*ln print cotton fabric for blouses and dressas. Yard Good* ... Fourth Floor Smart Print* In - BLENDED PRINT '0 Ti Reg. 1.99 1.49 to 45" fabric, for dresses and' blouses, , Fabric* ... Fourth Floor Belleaire Percale WHITE SHEETS 2 For $4 81x108 (Ref. 2.79 2 for $4) Reg. 2.49 '3 Linen*.,, Fourth Floor Bates Heirloomed BED SPREADS .. , Tain ' Beautiful Heirloomed pattern. Dome# lies... Fpurlh Floor 48x84 or 72x84 DRAPERIES Keg. $066 to 19.88 g Your choice In tllub weaves all completely cotton lined.. Drbperlee... Fourth Floor Famous Mftke Ski Jackets and CAR COATS 22.99 to 29.99 Vblues M290 Choose from corduroys, wool fneltons, cotton' poplins. Many are pif* lined, H(p. and % length, knit and leather \trlms, some have hoods. SIMs 9 t^ 15 and 8 to 18. . Sportswear . Third Floor. .. Boy's Hooded PARKAS Rag. 14.99 $| |99 100% cotton poplin ojr 100% nylon qnd completely machine wash-"able. All pile or quilt , lined for, extra'.warmth Colors ores grey, olive, black, Sizes vo 20. Boy's Wear... Second Floor . PRINT TOWEL ENSEMBLE Reg. $1.99 Bath .. $1.79 Reg. $1*29 Hjaiid . . . ' 996 Reg. 59t Washcloth 49c ‘ Cut dglsy design, jacquard. In white pdtterri on pink, blue, mint ;• or maize, . • , LInone ... Fourth Floor SMART walking casuals with . ’ , oilTSo/. Jnvi Women'* Shoe* .Street Floor Kentneld Wash 'n Wear DRESS SHIRTS fh,*E** Wash and waar quality shirts In your choice of, spread eoflar broadcloth or Oxford. BD styles. Both havtl convertible cuffs. Sizes 14-17! 312, 85-Inch sleeves. Men's Wear. •. street Fleer. !f?^v ?*'■; i ' Kapok Filled SOFA PILLOWS Reg. 1.99 TT Wide choice of colon, sizes snd -shapes. Safe Pillow .. Fourth Floor Hoode^d Reversible sn PARKS Reg. 11.99 $099 Zipper pbeket. Comes In red, blue or black. S. M. L, ' Sportswear.., Third Flow Lined, Proportioned WOOLSUOKS UN Reg. 5.99 *4* Proportioned >: sizes In well tailored slim slacks. Sikes 10 to 20. ' Sportswear... Third Floor Men's Insulated UNDERMEAR id Reg. 9.99 10. tan shell, 5 az. edlecloud ln-interlining.' S, M, L, XL Men's Wear,., Street fleer ! Men's Broadcloth . PAJAMAS 2**5 Reg. 2.99 Coat of middy styles. Elastic waist band., Slzaa A-B-C-D. , Men's Wear . f. Street Floor Men's Leather WALLETS T Re.. 5.00 Choice of styles, gift boxes. Genuine leather In mahogany, black or brown, Men's Wear .. . Street Floor Jumbo Six* GARMENT BADS Reg. 4.98 . 2"*5 Heavy vinyl “ cover. Mats) {rams. Suit or dress Isngth.*.' Motions... Street Flopr Gleaming Stainless FLATWEAR Reg. $150 2.00 Ea. 1" I ” /... Three patterns. 5 pi . Throughout the* year, your regular'sources of supply carry wide, lined of goods for your • personal perusal and selection. / 'These firms render year-round > assistance and are geared to V; care for all the needs of yourself and y°ur community. Be as loyal to them now as they'have been to you% Buy from ttjem. It’s more economical and demonstrates the suppori they have a reasonable right * to expect. Remember, you are contributing . directly to the prosperity of. your own area — which In turn means more business for. you.i • ★*' ★ . ★ The * out-of-towner attempts .to '/ 'y swoop down on-.you at Christmas' with a multicolored folder thaj/is especially designed for'the. occasion ' __and to ensnare you. Thd goods are the same they have been selling * 'aU'.year, but the booklet seeks to * excite you ttrtth & souped-up holiday i-... ' approach. ;■ ... ★ . ★ . Stick with our regular merchants. They deserve those extra pur- . chaises that you plan to make at this time df thryear. They have ' . earned your business. They are nr“: 1 the dependably, reliable, year-round; friends that ijerve. you loyally and render extra help When you need it. ★ ★ ” ★ ' 4 , •• And here’s another important* < .point. When you buy out of town, any correction or error entails ah Immense amount of work. You have to repackage the article, and often ' % that’s difficult, for you lack the !' facilities. Then you have to get it to the post office afid write a letter/Of explanation. The distant peopletry to correct the mistake, and, again they send back something you’ve never really seen. All you have is a picture. When you buy at home, you view the purchases and know exact-. ly what you’rfe getting. And correc- '» tions are- simple,, when they’re . necessary. ’ ★ ★ ★ Your own living and the bulk of your own income originates , right here. Being a good neighbor means returning the. same privilege to those who’ are supporting you.* Buy at home. •. • This helps local employment, local taxes and local prosperity. - All of these directly affect you and your own financial position. ‘ _ • It’s smartt to buy here. 4 j ★ ★ ★ ’ It’s the better part of loyalty and community decency, tod. People in this rfrea can’t do business with you . unless you help provide them with the money to do jt. It’s a two-way street. What goes out comes baclv^ i(,all of us show others the courtesy l^and friendliness we likpourselves. “NuU” ^jlCive^mn'hberty or give me death” - , * *w V ; , «No taxation without representation.” •; • V* “Perdicaris alive—or Raisuli dead” Ti^rsources: 1st—Stephen Decatur; 2nd-iseIf-explanatory; - 3rd— Nathan Hale’S last words on the_ gallows; 4th — Gen. McAuikmt * at Battle of the Bulge when the Ge’rmdfis asked if he wanted to surrender; Patm,C3k Henry; 6th— the remark that led to the Boston Tea Party; 7th—Sec. of State Hay's cable 'to^ our counsul .in-Tangier. Perdicaris was ■ promptly released. Do you know a bettdr?. "Voice of the People: ■Automobile Horsepower eeded for Eificiencyf WitlKless horsepower the automobile would lack necessary efficiency". Try passing a trailer truck without itOur highways demand horsepower and-good drivers enjoy v' \ ★ • ★ ★ ' . ’ . -If drivers would obey traffic regulations they would use needed speed , only when necessary. Drivers should slow down as they approach * curve and slowly accelerate. It is when « egr ' enters a carve at high speed and the driver has to brake that he loses control. Handling a car on curves should’be stressed In driver education. . -•:V'-';:. ■’ft . k v/• ■ .o ";;~ * Drivers wh*q fiddle with radios, lighters, cigarettes and ash trays,while chiving cause h^adpn collisions, A safe driver keeps his eyes on the road, .his hands on the wheel and uses horsepower for ifftetency.' Lady Driver No One Should Act as Judge, Jury, God’ ill " w- .. .,.ipP , It becomes a. terrible world when wercan decide Jo become judge, jury and God. I’m talking about the morbid way in which’ Lee Oswald was nearly buried without thO aid of a clergyman to pray for him. . • . No penalty on earth couM be more severe thap the penalty he may receive. V. ‘ ... • • Unforgettable What He ■'Can Expect Among the.JBouqttets? ‘World Should Protect Lowell Thomas’ David Lawrence Says: Mrs. Kennedy Is an Inspiration We couldn’t protect our President, but how about protecting Lowell Thomas? Is there anyone in the United States who is -tovedany more than he? • Please don’t wait until he is gone to give him credit-for the wonderful things he has done for the people of this world. , T Bill Clancy 104 S. Johnson k' .*'•' ;,.v' ^.v -V-ii-—--------------—r Favorite Qulptes " When a New York newspaper interviewed. a cross section of the. city's citizens on our .nation's most patriotic utterances, the answers were Interesting: . , Here they are; ,, \ » "Oar country, may Me al-ways be in the right; mt our country, right ok vqpnQ Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. i ui only regret that l have but one Ufa to give for my country” . /, . - r ... '___WASHINGTON - The untold AHH IH conclusion ••• Story ^ ^acquenne; KBme^f .Jottings from the well-thumbed may inspire the poets of tomor-■notebook of your peripatetic re-.jjjj porter: ■■ edv almost^ un- AAA issues warnings on. winter paralleled: in night driving. Only one-third of thg history. ■ traffic oceurs then, but we record 60% of the deaths. L. G. Xbnhardt to the hospital insists 30 minutes before ..and after in a ^peedinfej sunset' is the .deadtat. tejt the Sl4 hburs.......Overheard: final word of' ___ "Bo wonder a newborn baby cries, jhe physicians; L,A”liEiW It’S hungry, naked and already Owes as she traveled by plane to , ample to everybody that she was ber’ m^ JPenn- thinking ,.of the1 great sacrifice * ii ip- ' svlvania girl her husband had made to public BEVERLY whV won the sendee. national junior. Kunter chain- On die hillside where her pionship.........‘It*‘. . Wayne. hu»band Is burled, she lit a bower as the GOP presidential testimonial this time not to an nominee. That’s pretty, feeble unknown but to a known sol- support; .......... The White • ‘ dier who also,gave his-life for | House may be. the scene of a his country. wedding next- year as Lynda* She came in the evening a , Bird. Johnsoh, 19-year-old i Jw the funeral,and . . , '' • j .. .... . Jtnelt, beside the grave,- where daughter, has definite plans to 9he wept |n the da^ne88 „ Un; marry a Texas ensign........ . observed by the multitude. . . Atacama (Chile) is yie ★ ★ * driest place bn earth. The cur- SOU ip her thirties, Mrs^Ken-rent drought 1. now 1. .U Vm ^ ^ consecutive year. of state, to artists, to poets, to .. . * distinguished authors. H w \ " DEDICATED TO ARTS Here are the first, ten TV shows, , She. has dedicated herself to according to one' of the "official the arts and to %.encourage-* xTiiiViHiiocf -fin ment of Cultural as weir as ratings”: Beverly, Hillbillies Bo- char,table’ endeaV0r8. She is nanza; Dick Van Dyke; Lucy Snow; fond of horseback riding and Andy Griffith,- Petticoat Junction; •- water skiing., • Danny Thomas; Red Skelton; Yet, despite her many ac-Perrv Mason; and Ed SullWan. .. , tlvltles,’ she htfs never failed • J ~ ■ as the mother of Wro little ... Overheard: “Just when ypu cMmn ^ ab#1|t catch up with the Joneses, you find- their schooling and the over- they’ve rpfinapeed.” .......... emphasis that, could coma to The .worki biympic delegaffthti heard the™ fr?m„Ahc,r consplcuou* German ChanceUor ErharT's first P«s'tion niiie. _ official appearance as the top rep- mat^thoughts theM last Jew resehtafive of his nation. Htf im- days may nevq^ be known, but pressed, everyone favorably; . ..... there might have passed through . . . The only photo ih the master her mind sentiments llkrtthose .... UK uiAijr expressed just Jwo. hundred bedroom-at the Kennedy s Virginia - yearg J,g0 by George Wither, an retreat was-rA)BRAHAnk Lincoln. «, . English, poet, who penned “A. i,,... Dept, of Cheers and Jpers:. Widow’s Hymn.”• the O’s—President Lyndon B. John- r . B reads In part as followii son; the - The Dallas police “How near me came the hand T . pf death, Ydrce. ‘ V * ,, , , < » “When at my side he struck -.-Harold A. Fitzoehald mydear, :■ t . ,, v, /•' v*..•“f i ■ * -1 •,, >4 - ,.i ‘ . v.’v “And took away the precious-breath-; “Which quicken’d my beloved 'peer!,.. “Lord! Keep me faithful to the ' trust :; “Which my dear spouse reposed in me: ■ 7prrV “To him now dead preserve me just ~ , .. “in' all that should performed be! . “^For thoup our heiiig man and wife! ’ “Extendeth only' to this life, ‘‘Yet neither life nor death should end , “The being of a faithful friend.” Group Working to Combat Atheism BoB Consjdme rSays: Mention o(joeJName Caused Father to Weep ‘ - hur gwniip,-iiaa'h«>».ii MuuGihirJdT^Wa^W^ifflSriithei^ in our country. ; , - &t. ? ' ~**r' . 1’ ’ I An editorial Nov. 2 warned of the possibility of future moves to remove God’s name from court procedures and perhaps money. We were encouraged fry the warning against complacency by all men and womep of spiritual integrity and good will. ^ .y-■' if- ★ We have decided that a great emphasis on enlarging our Sunday schools and’ making them more effective would be • . a step forward. Wh have the children one hour a week; file public schools hajve them more than 25- hours. *. , •’ ■"''ik Thr' ytf y‘. . We are writing to our government representatives and the Supreme Court and hope; everyone will do likewise. Aside from the religtous viewpoint, now that * America has become a. great nation, “under God,” wouldn’t it bejpure ungrate-^ fulness to-start erasing His iiame? , - ) The Twelve Lakeville Methodist Church NEW YORK John Fitzger-I aid Kennedy _wanted to^make writing his life’s work. Preferably journalism -‘style writ-,, “Joe” one of the toughest men , of 'our time dropped his fork and bnrst into die most tacking, tearful sobbing I had ever seen in a man. The tears sim\ ply gushed. He was trying W” 7 say something but the sounds did not shape themselves into Lakeville The Better Half It was a terrible scene, and I felt like a bumbling oaf who had scraped sofne hidden wound. NSIDINB ; ,dU/ uu^ivciiuvii. i-v isuii/iivs JJC had done some work for at the birth of the U.N. at* San Francisco, as. well as. several special articles for the Hearst, newspapers on conditions as he found them on a postwar Euro-pean trip. "But I never had a chance . after, Joe was killed,” he said! “Joe was alwayi ticketed to be the politician, of the • family. When h( went, my father turned to me. If I had been killed .in the war( Bobby-would’ve been tho one.. Now’ he was coming around to makinj-words. “Ask her that ondi” he paid, pointing at the mother -4 who had sat impassively through the ‘ whole performance. ^She can talk about him. I can’t.” Very quietly Mrs. Kennedy ran down d list of her eldest son’s attributes, and (he somewhat disastrous luncheon party ended. “This science fictiea staff is quite possible—I can just imaglnw a little green man with antennae floating in our window and saying, ‘Lady, why aren’t you 'kjpder to you Reviewing'Gther Editorial Page's / “It was like freing drafted. My father wanted his eldest son in politics'. ‘Wanted’ Isn’t'(he right word. - He demanded ft. You know my father.” Yes, I did... LUNCHED WITH KENNeHYS What had happened wag that my wife and I were Invited by the elder Kennedy® to have lunch with them at tjieir Palm Beach place. v,. ■; ‘ Everything was going along line there on the sun-splashed pntio. I- had -asked Mr. Kennedy to give me his estimate . of his children, He was off " and running in- his positive sljde, beginning with a thumbnail sketch of Jack; Old Calendar? ,The State Journal (Lansing) For centuries historians and achaeologista have been puzzled by the odd formation .of rocks known as Stonehenge) near Salisbury, England. Hugh rocks, foreign to the area, were placed, in a circular design whose meaning has been lost with the «g«8. 1 No meun, architectural feat for early man is Involved as many of the 'boulders weigh i, All are aligned, and had his answer in approximately one miftute. Computerized historical r e -search might become the glamor profession of the future, not; to mention the possibility of archaeological expeditions conducted from the control panel of advanced electronic wlzairds,, Some 25 private agricultural associations had tapped the government till for more than. $1 million in foreign travel allowances in the last four years. Reserved? concert with a ring of deep ’ rith The Worcester (Mass*) Telegram , ' Night club: Where the tables are reserved but the guests are not. “Fine boy, Jack," he said. “A real brain. A fellow who’ll stick with a job until HVs. done. He wrote most of ‘Profiles in Courage* right out there bn that lawn when he could hardly move. His back was killing him but, by God. he wouldn’t give up." . . Bobby,, In his father’s eyes, turned out (o be "as tcugh as I am.” There were other proud estimates of (he man who whs to become the attorney general of the United States.. ‘Jle’s so touch like. me. Never stops i, in concentric circles wltl a grass aisle In the center.' The buildefs are still unknown* but a meaning has been suggested1 for the stones. They form an ancient caleiidar, says Dr' Gerald Hawkins, after attending’ last summer'measur-ing .locations of each, stone to another, and correlating, the results with known data bn the; rising jgmj setting of the moon and 4he sun around 1500 B.C:, tho estimated conitruqjjon date of the formation. Costly Carving The Adrian . Dalfy Telegram fighting. Never forgives an enemy* A great boy, Bobby." FORGOT JOE JR. He mentioned everybody except. Joo Jr. „ . ( I waited for a time, then asked him. At the soeud of the name of ■ J ■ '• Down through the ages, scientists must have attempted many times to measure the • place m e n t of Stonehenge against data collected from ancient astronomy tables, but the herculean task would have kept an army of researchers busy for a lifetime. Dr; Hawkins fed his data into a Harvard University computer Counterpart funds — t the money ' In foreign currencies our government gets fpr surplus foods and some other forms of foreign aid — are figuring again in the Washington news. The money has to be spent inside the foreign countries where It accumulates. And Congress not only is willing to spend It;. some recent ltejns straw it has gone out of Its way' in its hurry to do so.. i___ In another incident a bevy of lovelies went abroad for several -weeks, at government expense, wearing cotton dresses produced by Paris designers. It is desirable to promote the sale of American cotton and other farm products abroad. But this reckless spending Is closer to raiding the treasury than an honest effort to sell American products; There is no excuse lor the attitude that counterpart money is to.be tossed around with wild. abandon. It is money that came In the first piece out of the pocketbooks of American taxpayers. It merely'has a different label nbw, but it Is real enough. It will be used up soon enough without the help of junketing congressmen or turkey carvers. A Chicago congressman has done some digging Into such spending. ’ He discovered, sprang other things, that a former akniy cook had toured the world for ten months, at, $1,000 a month, plus expenses." of course, to show how to carve • turkey. * um for ropup i saw i li (WWsrojY Tin Pontiac Prou .. TJSC. corrlor »r to confo ejggjl mnllnd In Olklind, OOMOM., - "—Tib, UMOff JIW itin tnSwia.uo • ■r plaet! U.oo r v acrlbtloni pMtOOO hRR um ci*m raft at l Mambair af AIC. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. r>FrTr\fBV.B vaqwi . A-r Nigerian Officers to Aid Congolese UNITED NATIONS, * N.Y. JAP) — Authoritative squrces said Sunday night 'that, when * the U.N. force iyiffidraws from the Congo no# June- 30,* 400 Nigerian policefnen will stay on indefinitely i police. train Congolese The Nigerian police have already started this traipiqg under a Congolese-Nigerian Bilateral agreement reached months ago. * 1 ‘ Nigeria also has a 600-man battalion in the U^N. force' which currently number^ about ! .6,000 men from about a d<* countries.' • r 1 Scientist taGet Award of AEC Oppenheimer; Was Called Security Risk WASiDNgTON^IDPD - Of. J. Robert Oppenheimer, the controversial scientist who 10 years ago was declared., a security risk by the Atomic Energy Commission, 1 receives the AEC’s highest award today from Presi-j dent Johnson. The Chief Executive; acting to carry out the intentions of President Kennedy, was scheduled to present the $50,000 En-. rlco Fermi award to the 59-year-old nuclear physicist at brief. White House ceremonies. • The award, to jt^penheimer, first anounced in April, seemed likely to stir new controversy. Sgn. Burke 8* Hickenlooper,, R-Iowa, a member of the* joint' Senate-House Atomic Energy Committee, said he could not. "in good conscience” attend the ceremonies: OPEN EVERY. NIGHT T0 9:30 P.M^~ * - - -T--- f0ntU€hHitmasi toy offer Func/fcuihenlcoT Ocjuncil^turts^ to Convict JFK Killer DETROIT (AP)—A budlhei man And his • attorney fiunday offered a reward for Information las) Work Day of Session VATICAN CITY (AP) — The | showed’in the vote that they’ Vatican Ecumenical Council to-1 overwhelmingly favored the cob day began-the final working day l legial concept that all bishops of ife.i^ond session -Two more ^ share with the* Pope . day s of ceremony.remain before i in authority over the Church. iAnting to the conviction df any I the 2,200 prelates return home | The council alto debated sober person involved in tjie slaying of Tor another nine-month recess, mata on the nature of the , President Kennedy. . ichurch On bishops’ ppwers and j3L**We.~ feel that it is possible ; jn 'a,e Mine weeks since Pope |diocesan government, and on ! tlbt other people were involved” Paul VF resumed the council, | Christian unity of ecumenism. * in the death of Kennedy, bus!-' nessman John G. Muthlea* and his attorney Gregory .M. Pillon said in a Voluipn-iength newspaper .ad. r Police in Dallas, Tex., had 1 ■ SALE! Christmas fun all year round 47.88 boys' and girls' bicycles <88 Mode inU.S.,24 or 26”. Chrome Nriro, - coaster broke, dual headlights. $1 - holds in lay-a-way. SALE! \ 14 court tennis table folds., easily, for compact storage 99 ^Sturdy, 30" high, "c< ’ plete with 2 "p a d id I - Weed- IT Sale! Wood black board 199 ‘CHARGE I Santa Claus special. £ sided writing surface. 50x30". Chalk, eraser, included, Sturdy peg . table Desk opens 9m 99 Into table. Mm 60 pc. Battle Set Battle ground, ^ 99 over 60 pcs. 3-keye game A real. fun game for all. 199 Steel tool chest J4. , Kit Indtudes ten pieces. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS “He’s ^h able Scientist, but I don't thinkjhe measures up to the Fermi award,” JHickenloop-I W 8aid. rT dbhTt Tinow of isuiy specific - accomplishments he contributed to atomic -energy that put him. in the top flight of those who already received the award. GREETED' BY Princess Gra.c„e of Monaco is greeted#! New jock’s Idlewild Airport yesterday on her turivar morn Paris by Gus; a poodle belonging to the princess’ family in Philadelphia. The princess arrived to take care of ^‘some family business,” and said she hoped to go to Washington to extend condolences to Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy. - \ . which Pope John XXIII called, | NOT YET ASKED the /Roman Catholic prelates j The ecumenism, schema was took .dectsite action in four | before the council today. ' The areas^They^also^ebated three.)memWs still had not' bden of the 16 sitoemiFteror-tep^ whether two ontheirprograrrt for renewal of [ omteoveri^^ charged Lee HaiVey Oswald j Catholicism and advancement j schema — on Jews and on ie-with the killing, but Oswald was of the cause of -Christian unity, ljgious freedom -~ .Wflte.acc(^t-' slain by nightclub owner / Jack | They approved two schemata: | abie for detailed debate. . Ruby before he could be brought one permitting major changes Many,(bishops were eager for te .trial _ . ‘ in thig^tewns of CathoBclsm’s clear council action, evenif oftty PLEDGED $1,500 . •j worship and the other a state- j a vote oL general acceptability, Muthler nnH Piiinn p|o^goH j Blent on mass communications ! on me two chapters. Ameftcan-$l,^toWarcl “an ever-growing [ n?ed*®- ”... j Catholic bishops were especial4, amount of reward money” they WERE DEBATED * ' ly eager for some Kindof action said Would be pledged by other! 'Both topics were debated at 2” to further me. individuals and firms. ~ theTBrst cbuheil session in -1962 m®vement tom* . United States. •) . “We feel if there is a group involved in the assassination, an , appeal to greed is the only Way to. bring it to foe1 sWface.” TAX-FREE “This Fermi award includes 56.000 tax-frw» rinllpfs — Extension of County Terms Paces legislative Action ~~ ! Muthler said. Muthler is presi-. dent of, and Pil* Pillon is attorney: for, 20th Century Sales, Inc., an TMieWpH Automati who took a stand favored the position taken in the bill The Governor will'speak oh this and ofher recommendations Tuesday, evening ai a special I session on implementation of ' Romney has never answered^ the new Constitution. *. j Strange’s questionnaire.. Publisher's Widbw Dies RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (AP)" —. Mrs. James C. Kennedy Jr., 68, whose late Tiushand- owned and published yachting magazine, ■died Saturday. Her husband also was cofounder of the For-hans Toothpaste Co. and revised during the recess. In one major vote the prelates decided that theology ‘ on .the Virgin-Alary should be treated within toe framework, of a schema oh the nature of the Church rather than in-a separate seller ma devoted entirely to her. Op* ponents Of the latter procedure argued that it would put undue emphasis on the place of the Virgin in Catholicism, one area of Cathoiic-Protestant disagree- ■ Another key vote was held to guide the commission that will write amendments for toe schema on toe nature of toe Church. Despite considerable dissent” in debate, the council fathers Tuesday toe* council, with Pope Paul present, will commemorate the 400th anniversary) of the closing of toe Council- of Trent. . On Wednesday the full body of prelates, together with the Pope, will give anpther formal approv-' al and promulgation of toe-worship and communications schemata as solemn decrees. HEAR BETTOR THIS CHRISTMAS mn MONTGOMERY WARD HEARING AIDS HT -The bill, which, in effect,! “I’d like to hear from him, grants present, county officials sai(j strahge, “but I’d be more a two-year extensibn of their | inclined to think he will nof take tefms until 1966, is-the work of j a position andjust let the legis-a legislative committee on im-liature handle it on the floor.” I plementation. It is based on the1 Constitutional Convention’s in-1 _ _ j tent that county officials run op! n , rr™ Pr“e: tee same ballot with the gover-! nually in memory of the Italian-1 nor, in -oven-numbered years be- jj boranuclear pioneer, was j tween presidential elections, awarded. .Oppenheimer for his . •* * outstanding contribution ^%q- | Romney and Atty. Gen. Frank retical physics and scientific j Kelley, who also opposes -the j and administrative leadership in bill, fqel the officials should run development of the atomic for reelection in 1964. ■ Canada-Eire Air Route) OTTAWA (AP)-Canada’s Air | Transport Board has announced' approval of a license* for Irish International Airlines to operate commercial! air; service between Montreal and Shannon, Ireland. DECEMBER 1st thn 7th Pontiac Area Chamber ol Commerce Week ★ Do Business With Those Who Support Community Progress . YtMr Ckaaber of Cofflmerca Members 1 bomb. ' j UNWIELDY BALLOT 1 ' The committee fears this may create an unwieldy “bedsheet, ballot.” Their findings had the guidance of - one of Kelley’s ! staff, but/; the attorney general later ruled that the new constitution gives the legislature no j-authority to extend the forms of ! officials beyond toe duration for1 ! JACK-SON (AP) Rep. Nell which they were elected.^ |sxa-e4»J-*-«v ,D-Mieh., predicts- ■ Staebler Sees Nixon as GOP Candidate in '64 j, former vice president Richard M. Nixon will be the Republican nominee for president in, 1964. * - ★. Sr , I Staebler made the prediction ) Saturday at a meeting df Jack-son . Democrats. He * said the assassination of President Jbhn F. Kennedy put the “extremists” out of business, and that New York Gov. NNson 'Rockefeller's divorce will hurt his chances for the nomination. Staebler declined comment on his plans as a possible candi-aate for the Democratic nomination for Michigan governor next yea^*. Although executive office sour-ces Indicate • Romney will sup-1 port this position, Rep. RusSellj Strange, R^Clare, chairman of | the five-member elections sub-1 committee of the implementations committee, said he did not J expect Romney to take formal position on tHe-matfor. Strange opposes Kelley's opinion and said he may seek a Supreme Court advisory opinion i regardless of how the legislature, acts. > “I think we ought • to have that, just to cfoar the air,” he | said. “If we are wrong, we; ought to know.it qs soon' as possible. Our whole objective Is: 78 North Saginaw Street SPECIAL TUESDAY t WEDNESDAY ONLY I KOSHER STYLE CORNEDBEEF Y00I CHOICE —Buy Now And Save! 5 lbs. MUd'Cute SLICED BACON *2 lbs, Tender. Juicy MINUTE STEAKS ■EEC The Pontiac Press December t, 1963 M YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART j - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give. yourself 10 points loir each correct ;.i answer. _____ „ —t1- During tlwniourning-ttariod-for John F. Kennedy, ’ it is. proper to display the U.S. flag after dark . if proper lighting is provided/ True or .False? 2 When Lyndon Baines Johnson took the oath of office for the Presidency of the United States, he promised to protect and defend... a-thft Cnnatltutlnn—,-- b-the United States of America c-the office of President t 3 One pf President Johnson’s first official acts was to. inform persons in our Foreign Service, such as Ambassadors, that they*need not.....;1 h-returh to th*»U<& , , . " > b-take new oaths of office . “ N c-resign from their positions *4 The new dollar bill, just put into circulation, is much like the old exgept that it does not refer to..... - ■ '■ _ * • a-silver b*-gold c-thp Treasury Department 5 A Federal board, established by Cpngress, ruled ' that railroader*..... of the firemen-on diesel locomotives in freight and yard service, a-must Keep all b-pan gradually eliminate 90% 1 o-can eliminate all ' ’ ' • PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning., a-handing down of o toms or bellefs b-painful to the feelitigs 3,,exude c-a change from one condition to another. d-glve forth ..transition e-regular^ way of' doing '• things , PART 111- NAMES IN THE NEWS Tttkg^ points for each visiting'dignltary whose name you can match with the proper clue. , l.i...Lester Pear son ,, a-Japan’a Premier 2...«.Ana|tae I. Mikoyan b-represented Premier ‘ . Khrushchev , J ....Queen Frederlka , c-Preeident, the Philip-' - pineq!;. ’, 1 - ’• 4...Hayato Ikeda d-from Greece e-Canada’s Prime Min- * , fster *’ • 5...DlosdadO||Macapa-r ghl , ® VEC, he., Madison 1,’Wlieenih Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10'points for ..fach correct answer. (a) Soviets sqt May 21 dqadUne for any U.S. shipments' (b) former Democratic President ‘.'(c) Kinzua Dam causing . -.relocation problems ,here■ 1 1. ■. 7(d) first memorial of its kind in Arlington cemetery * -,.. . • (f) former Republican President . (g) worried about losing ' farm land to growing Cities. ' (h) new President ad* dressed joint sea* r sion ■ (J) delegates met Club Congreee Chicago HOW DO YOU RATE ? (Sears Each Side of Quls Separately) 91 la 100 point* - TOP SCORES Ilia |0 point! - Exeel lant. 71 to 80 potngA - Goad. * 61 to 70 point* - Pair. , . "iO or Under???** HW' , Tbf* Quit It part af the Educational Program which 7hli Naw«p|per tomlihei to Saheeli In this area to Stlmulata IntMMt In National and World Affair* si an aid to Developing Good Cltlsamhip, STUDENTS ANSWERS ON REVERSE PAPE k L % ■'A—& mM. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2> 1908 Crucial Period of Probing Allies Watch for Policy Change make their first pitch for such-and indication- when they meet with U.S.. Secretqry of State Dean Rusk at the NATO minis-, teirial council ift Parts Dec. 16. (EDITOR®-EOfEi In. the ■ . aftermath of the death eh President Kennedy ' European allies of the United States^are . ashing themselves, “Where do * we go from. here?*‘ The follow' ing vdispatch by UFb’s chief. • diplomatic reporter in Europe sums tip the international out- _ now., assumes special J oak from, various, capitals. ) The 'mt'eting, which had been planned 9 long time-be-Kc ‘ fore Kennedy's assassination, confident of future Anglo-American co-operation under Johnson’s leadership and voiced hopes BritalrKWill be able Vto take a posiftvK role" in\£old War^peace movek, British pressure for an early resumption of talks with Russia was thus expected to build up before long. phasis on the go-lt-alone strategy- De Gaulle is likely to pursue his demand for a revision of NATO and to oppose Salt-West negotiations. France) it appears will at any rate remain cautious until Johnson’s moves become clearer. M • Bonn — Government quar- By K. C. THALER 1 Against the background of . .- ® ... th?se first' high-level, interallied *ers «*** 8 T !{om ^efr‘h ,, exchanges. top allied leader!. ■PPro“h by Johnson Ta inter- LONDON UPI) “ Aenea s ,an fitot hand-clarifies- ?a.tl0-nal F°b «®-. But ^ European allies,- reas ured .by ^ h p^sideht himself President Lyndon when th^mee?k.-a series of pJedge of in Washington early now hope that his preoccupatiohV. . the ^ V(J?; * with- mdRflivp Hnmpstir nroh- " * « with- massive domestic problems will not impare U.S. initia-1 , . * • • • tivea abroad. — • Britain’s Prime Minister Sir TheResident’s & prom- \ W ise of continuity in America’s major policies has given new confidence to the uneasy alliance and perhaps averted some dangerous “probing” on • the part of die Kremlin. But while the Europeans, now 'know where the new President of the United Stated intends to the lead, them, they are still anxious for a pointer as-to the*means.his administration will use. They have tacitly set a period of about : two months in which to find out. ! Some Western dip— =4omats4efflr#^^idaiT!^ iod of interallied probing;— “ : FIRST PITCH • Allied-. forplgn ipini«t<>r07095 ZENITH 23" Consols TV Ar lirylu Sav*r chassis . . . _ x ‘ “ ind wired circuits Jl Ofl A........... 103 EMERSON Decorator Stereo ■k, rioc.s an Tublu k Fits in r|»m dlvM Oycnlug prio,d at . An • Fill . TAPI RU080IR J w/purika.u C. 1 1 VOLTS I |N| j i 1” 1 lii r lii^J ADMIRAL COLOR TV l&Sr25 j399 Opening priced pt. ■ FREE 5 LBS. COFFEE ' if frpttpr can't beet your belt price and teevlce.'' SALE DAYS ALL THIS WEEK! HERE'S A SAMPLE OF THE FANTASTIC OPENING PRICES IN ALL OF MY i STORES * ! ,Sylv»|it» JJ“- Lowboy wood opening priced............... Weitlnghoiiie It" porleble Hptp^lni lb'1 euto. *172 ^TT3 WeiilrlflhgiiiJ 'iT cu. It. refrlg *158 Weitlnel ecrou tup (reeier, SI Oi , thected down lot iMi ul. l 04 IW porteblo dlihwesher, i iloor l»120 opening priced e ’46 Mdytaq . dtluxt 2 wwiherl ’•* Gpgriinq prTctd H.rdwlc. 30" g.i n.w In- cr.t.i .11 ilor.i ;... Emarion portwblg TY| I9A4 il?d»tor f,,h l,i#d# $|00 relilgeretor, opening priced rzr«“±..!,26* ,'122 , starling it.,...,,. o wlahati: *59 *187 Sylvenle wood console ) I 00 stereo, selling below coit.,,.' *V" . PC A Whirlpool deluxe dryer, $ | flfl lerge cepeclly, opening priced 1 U3 f LOA, mgdeli, opening period. * FREE TAPE RECORDER TAPPAN HI-OVEN RANGE dr rproololu visual life ovou dr VieuoUlt# broiler ' MAYTAG HALO OF HEAT , AUTO. DRYER dr Puik-buttop control . . ju junc WilPtflltw • S1QQ95 » Urge eupuelty 103 ‘r I storo oponlag prle#____ NO MONEY DOWN—UP TO SI MONTHS tO fAY PONTIAC WAREHOUSE Telegraph Rd. V* Mile S. of Orohard Lake Rd. OPEN SUNDAY -FE 3-7051 Ferndale Store 201W, 0 Mila LI T«4408 ASK TOUR gtlRHIOHe Hl-WILL- REOOMMENO US V$!£ thjtpjoint AUTOMATIC WASHES * All p k PeUntoM niter we W Writtee 40-dey dug oeMou ■ *1891 AND HERE'S WHAT THE P8UCY PAYS Column at right shows how benefits increase to a maximum of $15,000 after ffve years* continuous renewal lecmtatai 10% a Ytir (or 5 lon-tatae PATS W ADOTTUIN TO ANY OTHER INSURANCE YOU MAY HAVE! And you can get one of these individual policies for every family member in your household, regardless of age, with no medical examination needed, like Press Press All-Coverage Accident S Polio Insurance; this freeway Accident policy Is underwritten by the Washington National Insurance Company of Evanston, III, one of the nation's largest underwriters of personal casualty insurance. FOfc LOSS Of: iTnn UN J10.000 mr~ m it m Em SI 0,000 510,000 Bath Hinds Sii,om 510.000 llttFllt 510.001 515.000 On Hand mi On fiat 510,000. 515,000 On Hiri nl Sllht il Om Eeyi 510.000 510100 On fnt ni m it on Eyi 510,000 511,000 On Haiti 5 5,000 5 7,000 On Foot ^MOO 5 T.500 Sdht If One Eyi . 5 2,500 51,100 FU OUT AND MAI TODAY Complete this application nttw and }oin flie thousands who already hm applied for FNi Press Aeddsni Insurance: Send 5100 for -Nell parson in bn Insured. Why not (ltd policy for each mem-. her of your family? (Residents of Midi-igan only.) Mall ♦#: PektH Ffe# Fre*#, F.O. leg YM, WeVreH. Mkb« 41211 Liaa,1«»N,r ,'rr.wj: 4»H H it iMUPd. IM.l. ehpek puv.bl. »• »• Dphilt »•», rrwt.1 n pi..,, arreaae to lave Ike Datralt Ftoa >toM drilvered to mv heme at ekaeked 0 mcmm.h. iihtion a 11 WSSUggg&gwm Pru# Prm I* NOT avallabi#. Q I am aaw a «abg«Hkep, a* alieekad'afcavf, aad agraa to geaHaae. NAMII Iffeate flto*) ^ *......f'jg...........-• 1 ..................................MOM.. I. ............*..................*................ ». .......................yi...jiW.. MUM .................... Vn will hm to aggartoalty h wflW li Rj toanolwy.W W «WW wkaa m HUG. .'. ;V"\v ’’\.; r,», 3 L I! PONTIAC Pfr£SS. MOiyPA Y, DE,CrKMBE^'^968 A—0 Foreign New$ Cbrrinrientqry; i*?.. Soviet Moves in Berlin Not Likely Before January By PHIL NEWSOM UPlForelgn News Analyst . If the Soviets are' la test the new U.-B. administration’s de* termination over Berlin, • the guessing hi West Berlin is that 1+ win hofnre -J ary. The German winter usually restricts targe scale tNtop movements. However, some time in January, a battalion of about UN men stationed in Berlin s mm ^amK1^ is expected to esehange duties with another battalion now in West Germany. This will plean a week-long Series of cpdvoys in both direc-ovar the otitrthahn, with possibilities of a Russian challenge on control procedures. CHANGES: [ London gossip columnists are claiming that U- S. Ambassador tp London David Bruce may re- tire and be replaced by Me* George Bundy. There is no official confirmation in either American or-British quarters of this sug- . gestion. The .reports claim "Bruce, who has been ambas-sador tar Britain since 1961, feels he'wants to return to private life. Bundy is well known 1A London and, While officialdom keeps diplomatic silence, little: doubt js left that he would.be welcome. ' . A major earthquake may he building up for Italian labor unions. This could Come about' as result Of p walkout of tfie^tfehg pro-Cptiununlal wtngTTrom i^ cialist party ranks,as result of. the party decision! to join die centerrleft government of Premier-Designate Aldo Moro. Communists now hold about. ?0 per cent, of all key post-' World News 70 Killed, 60 Hurt in Senegal's Elections . DAKAR, Senegal (AP)-More than 10 persons were killed and . about 60 were Injured during ria-tional elections' in Senegal Sunday. , President; Leopold Senghor, an unopposed candfdate for re-election, received 90 per cent Of the registered vote, Senghor’s Senegal Progressive- Union also won overwhelmingly in contests for 00 legislative seats, nearly complete official returns reported. •" ilr Violence erupted in the old Nagaland, with an * area of 6,500 square miles of jlimalayan terrain, is India’s smallest State. It has * population of 400,000. FRANKFURT, • Germany (AP)—A West Germqn industrialist says Communist China is eager to Increase trade, with non-CommuniSt nations to offset losses resulting from the Sovjet-Chinese rift. ^ ■ „ #\ ★ r'," ■’ Alfred. E. Schulz, director of West Germany's huge machine- ing wtth Peking. Schulz returned Sunday after a three-wee^ visit to Red China, where he discussed possibilities. of increasing West German-Chi-: nese trade. - quarter df Dakar when several nuddng form Dinmg; urgM (lAtrAmmdnt businessmen to follow ,—— —r— — the example of other non-Com- ■ Tiuops "tiieu to l)oitTthenr=hf TntnrigtTifflfoiis ' ' ' ' -center^the^^d^ check and fighting broke out, The demonstrators apparently were organized, by extremists of the African Regroupment party, which received only about 4 per cent of the vote. y„u .. KOmMA, India. (AP)-Prta» Minister Nehru’s government created^*dia^Wthrsfot6iTSum‘ day to counter fiery Nagi tribesmen demanding their ototi • nation. . •- President Sarvepalli Radha-krishnan. presided at ceremonies ihaugUtftlng Nagaland just-below the eastern border of the Northeast Frontier Agency; which .was invaded by.Communist Chinese troops in October 1962. ' . LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo 4AP) —. Foreign -Minister Auguste Mabika-Kalanda, who has been et odds with Premier Cyr-ille Adoula, is under arrest and has been dismissed. The government says Adoula is taking personal charge Of foreign policy. < PASSPORT ISSUE Government sources said Mabika-Kalanda.. was dismissed Sunday because he gave former President Mofae Tshombe of Katanga a Congolese passport without consulting other govern* tneat officials. — Mabika-Kalanda, 80, a teach-' i brought into Adoula’s last April Jts psrt-eHrf nonpolitical element injhe gov« CHRISTCHURCH, New Zea-LAND (AP). - The U.S. Navy, icebreaker Atka.lost a propeller and shaft while cutting a channel thrbugh the ice of antarc-tick’s McMurdo Spund, the U.S. Navy said today. ■ 4? ★ ' ★ ' The ship Will leave' Tuesday , for New Zealand. The Icebreakers Glacier and Burton Island will remain to cut the last three miles of the channel for cargo-ships to .the' U.S. expedition’s antarctic headquarters. , MOSCOW (AP) - Nikolai A. Voznesensky, Stalin’s wartime economic chief- who died, after a 1949 purge, haa been -reinstat--ed into the good graces of the Soviet Communist party. The pariy organ wavda eul ~ ogized Voznesensky Sunday in an editorial which approvfiigly described some of Voznesensky’s economic policies, since adopted by Soviet Premier Khrushchev. tions in the CGIL, Which to .turn controls about half of ltalianr labor. , A Socialist split would reduce the socialist moderate»-©f party. leader Pietro Ncnnl to a small minority in CGIL ranks and might force them Into quitting. It would post dramatic, problems of allegiance, for ^many. members.. ’ ;? NEW PEKING LOOK: .Bresident-Charleg de /Gaulle is reported to have deeded to send a full-time French economic * mission to/Peking — possibly as *an opening' wedge toward fuif recognition of Red China-later. / French officials lay he be-’ believes France could guarantee herself long-term economic prosperity by establishing. outlets for French Industrial expqrfo in Chinn. A^main stumbling block:, de GauflP is not ready to sever relatlons with Chlang Kai-shek’s Nationalist China on Formosa, regarded as an inevitability in evaiit of French diplomatic recognition' of the Reds.. JAPANESE OVERHAUL: Japanese Premier 1 Hayato Ikeda’s 1960 program to "double the Japanese .people’s real income in lO yCafs alreatly has fiPfn a M por jnmpJn.lMOh- lncome in less than three years,, Buf fo"has'shown weak spots In small farming, coal mining and in “Intrastructure” such as roads, railroads, bridges and harbors. As result, the program probably will be overhauled. A— , LUXURY BEDSPREADS !£B!JSW' the practical, peifect sift ^Kitts faster; Wife, Then Shoots Self ' SHEVfLLE, N.C. (AP) — A convict walked into an Asheville church Sunday night and killed his divorced wife, the minister and himself with blasts from a shotgun. Police said Walter H. Bailey, ~S7, entered the .Wesi Asheville. •Assembly of God church just before the Rev. Lester Cobb, 44, started the sermon and demaAtf^ ed to see his ex-wife, Ruby Bailey, SO. * ★ * . w As Mrs, Bailey huddled on the floor between pews, hidden. uri*> der the coats of other members, the Ray. Mr. Qpbo pleaded with* Bailey to leave. ‘ J. D. Taylor, a member of the church board, said - Bailey warned the SO' persons in the congregation not to leave, and told Cobb: “You aren’t going to let her (Mrs, Bailey) come Out. I know she’s here.. I’ve looked everywhere for her. I’m not gr ing to leave until I see Ruby. , Sr ★ ★ ; Police said Bailey shot Cobb with a sawed-off shotgun from a range of about five feet, t Bailey then found his former . wife, shot her Inrthe head with one blest and killed himself with another shot from the dou-ble-barrtod gun. Dr. John C. Young* Buncombe county coroner, ruled the shootings a double murder suicide. NAACP Plant to List Senate Rights Bill Pots NEW YORK (AP) -r The National Association for the Ad-. vancemeqt of Colored People says It expects to Issue next month a purge list of congressmen who oppose civil rights, bills backsd by the NAACP. An NAACP spokesman said Sunday night that the list won’t be prepared untU after Congress ‘votes on tbir'administration’s civil rights bill.. % \ and Werner INSURANCE «M|4 "ADELPHI" GRACE AND ELEGANCE 795 Colors especially selected to harmonize with any decor. 100% cotton—modern block-design quilting. Neat, trim styling mf^iine wash and ' ■ dry ... full & twin sizes. "SOVEREIGN" Colors to Your Dreams ao The ageless beauty of an early American . design — reversible bedspread with handsome knotted fringe to lend the finishing touch. Pre-idirunk 100%' cotton; machine washable in lukewarnt^ivatdr. Full and twin - sizes. i - PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORS HOURS 9t3

ii«r ^ sianmi^ ffiio- House years, recreates in step-shouted: _ , “My ( by-step detail the former First } they’re going to kill us all. ’ .fjuiy’* nrdp.nl from the start I * ‘ ^ this-car out . of .here, ?e. jlfrs. “Let me walk, let me walk,” general H Kennedy walked I In the next two days, Jacque-p.m. to kneel and kiss the caa-f dent at Ms ancestral home jn band’s favorite passages from coffo?* ' *..... - 11 - : - *- ScriptureS and excerpts wucn n"u y- from his inaugural address to be RETURNS 5 TlfiES ", read at the funeral instead of Five time!, Mrs. Kennedy re> eulogies. ’ turned jtoJhe-giwe-m-^fafH*^ Tpinc rnMF ^^^^Ififee^s, once late at night. TCAWCOhffishe took Caroline once. Tears came when Mrs. K^Rarfirged President-Johnson uedy had to watthalfway-doWn] v r^name cape Canaveral to she urged the attorney general i HAND IN HAND.——*-------"theirathedral aisle while the j Kennedy in memory other movedTTSIasp Mrs. ,v*nrM,oy Bpaieu 1,CIDUU ‘nJuli“b‘..as they ret offjtivbugh tteCap^| She met heir cWkb^at-thr^^WM placed ot the caisswi . te hu^md’s interest in space •.hands in deep empr IN PROCESSION t . . , itql crowd. ~ {churd) door-aiHfrhand-fo-hand for. thelast ride to Arlington, j ^l^Hnn — and it was done. I'aS she aiftv&r. She took her>Mldren to ride The funeral of John Ri^jagata, took them to watdi, _ 4- | -----'* "#* 'r"~" ■. » w * in the Sunday procession to de- aedy came on Monday^Nov. 25 j Richard Cardinal ^Cutotag, j hardly able to grasp the signlfi- j . . lefti#!for sedusion first^lk appe7ranceas|verTftnfiedy"s bddy to lie in -three endless days after his j who had married the.Kennedys, cahee M lt_aU, saluted as the,'nien, bunion grieviSg widSw was to Sate in the Capitol rotunda. assassination and on toe Wrd | baptized their chiMren and sMd coffin, left toe cathetoaL Jg» at • . . . . .... . i_ Ik. M.. KlrtM.v A# Tnhn .Ir Tho ntpe--doJ^___ . She was dazed and shocked. *ou oug*11 w go nacK ana ue j ~ j A priest administered last rites. | d^mr ’-^lra^Kenaedy repuedj Luigi Vena, the tenor who sang at • their fashionable Newport, R.I., wedding ta 1953, agata sang Schuberts’ “Ava Maria’’ at the funeral. sounded and"she had lighted the I Many memorials have. b«en kernel flame, Mrs. Kennedy i suggested the worid over for suddenly turned to Gen. Max-1 Kennedy. But what could maten well Taylor, chairman of toe toe oneJtaM«tfe-gave him. Joint Citiefs of. him cheek against his, her eyes - *' ★ '-"tr' •, ling. Mrs! Kennedy picked her bus- j But, toe walked firmly put of % Mrs. Kennedy, though, Gen. Douglas MacArthW’s con-. message seemed to tell her story: “IBs death kills something within me.” • s There was the inevitable bou-l vice President and Mrs: Lyndon “Thanks, I’m fine.” She went to quet of red rdses as PreskientiB. Johnson, friends , and aSsdlSl-1 sty j>y Kennedy’s casket on the and Mrs. Kennedy arrived ta’lates hovered about. 1,500-mile; 2%-hour journey. Dallas, 'Jex., that fair Friday in EVES ^ i EERIE HOMECOMING ; , Iff .5 'I?ei.!.ed-C^St!l Tnd A cn.rfpnf lnipr rie- | in contrast to the many happy j uie pinx nr ner- wooi “ l ^«.ihpH Mrc ir'®nf.prfv ‘The homecomings, it was an eerie * „iiiw hai . scribed Mrs..' Kennedy. -r , • -i PThev stenDed into the big {.look in her eyes was like an [sight at Andrews Air F&rce dark blue convertible they had | animal that had been trapped, > Base in • Maryland, where a “ SSt - brave, St sions and the winding 11-nule1 fear wd in her eyes.’ | canwramen am) motorcade began. . >r, 1 »her grief, Mrs, Kennedy re-1 n . ,y yellow car.. CHEERING CROWDS ' ■ .-J . >» ‘ The crowds stopd 1°, b> .,18 j . -pray for him,” ’ : kftt witH Mrs. Kennedy stand- _h„ ket, witH Mrs. Kennedy stand-■' - bosido it, holding tightly to. ■H the hand of her hrother-ih-law", u . • - ' Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy. Her voice was clear and au-1.. -. , _.j ,v^.:___—,i„u ■^theirn. They sat, there smiling— -'President Kennedy; • Gov. John Connally of Texas and their. wives-saying what a fine wek prayers with others. There were come the Kemitedys had been £ ^ 1 given after aU. K^mklv was declared dead I A ^ay Navy ambulance wait- Wrs. Kennedy, just resuming .j14, m ^ ntorosur- WJ- With •» W ‘bcre to felp Afftrsial oMivitmc qftpr tnp flfa&Ln ... M J1U, Her'face showed her anguish, dible to she. said responses tol w shg retained composure. - ~^Hh^iUu^ities after toe death K r,.,* ffentlv —• . -v ^ • . gton. Dr. Kemp Utm, genuy | reachnnfldv staved there Dallas, a center of political con*] ^. mtlesl that. foflbwed for ^ want to JUt S Mr8 Kermedy ww* ,ike • KThe Ly aidtstad She was being described ps mag- Gwk tragedy I took no sedatives. ‘‘M? President thev can’t I * * * ' ' With courage rarely seen, she make vou believe now that There was hardly time to! began almost at once^ to plan there are not some in Dallas think. )N*re was to be. no pri- the funeral. She wanted^ it to be j Lhn inv« nnrf anweeiafe vou’’. i vtoy for this widow. She had “as distinguished a tribute as ^G^. cinrSny’r^ po^Ible^^Wte HoWsaid . I ago and now her husband, just nviniNr vn 11 INCHEON at a, time when the family was HEADING TO LUNCHEON preparing to observe toe birth- “You should know,, you sure can’t," said the President as the big car, taking them to luncheon at the Trade Mart, approached the* sl»-stot7 Texas School 'Depository Building at 12:30 jp.m. Sudden^, there were those She approved the burial ta a site among Arlington National Cemetery’s 126,000 dead, she requested an eternal flame in his memory, toe started discussing plans for a monument. * ; days of their two children, Car-! oltae, now 6, and John Jr., 3 * and to spend a happy Thanksgiving with the Kennedy family ’ at Cape Cold. .SPARED LITTLE In the 75 hours from Kenne-three sharp Acraeks that , sound-j dy’s death until his coffin was ed more like fireworks, lowered into a grave at Arling- * * '; ton National Cemetery Monday, MrsTT^hhedy-cried out, “Oh, ] n0v. 25, Mts. Kennedy was [funeral mass and - said she ’’ as her husband-felt back, l gparet| little. i would walk behind ]he' hoi'se- „ L..,. — • The death and funeral of Jphn Mrs. Kennedy chose to pattern Kennedy’s funeral after that,, of Abraham Lincoln, similarly martyred almost 100 yeark -It.was announced there would 'be. a marching .procession to the' face down on the back seat,| blond spurting from wounds in j Fftzgerald Kenheidy and h5*wI3T-his head and neck, ow’s grief were a public display.' She tried to lift him and era- w ★ * The wofld ltnew ol the prt.-- , ' l L ,, _hp nriWi j ate and touching moment at toe my husband, she cried. 4hospita, when Mrs. Kennedy ’JACK, JACK* * had tearfully kissed her husr '".Jack,'Jack,” she called to band’s lifeless lips and put her the handsome, 46-year-dld man wedding ring on his finger, who had been smiling beside J Then the bronze coffin was her moments before. But John dosed, never to be opened agata F. Kennedy, the man she had | jn public. -married 10 years, ago, never re- WA(JKED BESiDE COFFIN gained consciousness. - drawn caisson bearing the body. It was belfeved/to be the first A Secret Service man came leaping over the back of the car to throw himself spread-eagled time a president’s widow had done this. BLOODSTAINED badge , 4:25 a m. — 16 hours after he was shot — Mrs. Kennedy brought her husband home. She would not' chaqge her 'clothes and the bloodstained badge was the're as she followed the casket | Into the White House. Already signs of. public mourning were in evidence; TTie | , . front door was draped iii black. | A little over an hour and a East Room was set to re- half after Kennedy had been' taken to Parkland Hospital, his body was carried out^r rear en- ceive Kennedy’s body. Art honor guard Was there, candles burned, priests prayed and the three great crystal chandeliers were draped in black. ■ • i ♦ it'*! • it , Once.home, Mrs. Kennedy had (o face her children, and'make plana for a future home sh$ quickly decided would be in Washington. The first .terrible day was over* TAKES CHILDREN The next day, Mrs. Kennedy took her children to pray at the casket in the East Room. Then more than' 4,000 friends, officials, congressmen, diplomats, staff members and newsmen came to .pay respects Iq n daylong downpour of rain. Mrs. Kennedy stayed in seclusion and the new President left the White House to the-grieving Kennedys. Tense Nerves Block Bowels ATTENDS KENNEDY SERVICE — Queen Elizabeth II • Is greeted by Tfte Very Rev, Robin Woods as she arrive! at Si. George’s Chapel in Windsor, England, yesterday to attend i memorial service for the late President Kennedy. . The Queen heard Woods, toe Deanrof Windsor, describe the death of Kennedy aa “In i way, similar to Moses.!' ^ Your colon ha norm that control regularity. When you »ro tern*or oerv-our, normal bowel ImpulMR may b# blockod—*od you becomo oomtl-t>Med. New COLONAID tablet* relieve i his misery with • mw principle—• W|i__________..etlon Overnl|ht You feel grotll dot cllnlcelly-proved Colonmu lodiy. Introductory elr* 43A m ;4 PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS I: a FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS J, Q|wA«peneVftrt «■«». W» e.M. | . VA.tA.VutoP.M. I B m vam.-hivr,M. ■ yaMSn,zM-,u<‘l . ■ 1 M I 461 L P1K( IT. )*•» t A,( ' 3e«i I7B0 AUBURN ST. i V a.m. Vtior M. OrmED.,.. laRIMI Op«n V A.M. ‘Mt V V.M. eoAYlAWUK t‘ OWN|UNOAV»H>« IMMtoMML llZMSaldwtolvt. 1 WICssIsyUke Ri. ' miem wtoMMieeoetb < 1 ef CetemWe 1 ,v« | OffN tUNOArg 1 OPEN SUNDAY & i THEPONTIACPRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 19Q8 A—1L y6ie tStronghoid No Longer Secure Barry's Chances Hurt by Assassination By LYLE C. WESSON United Preas International Hie bad political news for Sen. Barry Goldwater is that there seems now to be a solid chance that the; moderate or Eisenhower Republicans wQl.) tain control of the party and of ' its 1984 nominating convention. The ballets that struck President Kennedy also hit the Goldwater -"for - .President movement, Goldwater- for -President strategy, had been to concede die big eastern industrial States iTJFK in 1984. {These concessions were to be offset by Republican pins in -.fluL South. Somp Republicans; argued that party gains in the South reflected fiscal conservatism; a desire for reduced federal spending, a balanced budget and. thereafter, tax reduction. Other Republicans conceded that Republican developments in Southerrf states reflected Democratic dislike of the Ken- nedy administration more precisely, Southerners were voting Republican 'in protest, against the' Kennedy brothers’ ail out efforts in behalf of civil rights. NO DIXIE PLAY Republican officeholders elect* ed In the big industrial states resisted- any party play for Southern votes. The realistic political reason for their resistance was that Republican identification in the South with segregationist Democrats Would invite racial minorities to penalize Republicans in the North. These Northern Republican.. officeholders probably could expect to fare better on election day with a Republican presidential candidate who went all out for Civil Bights ■ and. lost than with a candidate fho had played for white Southern votes and was elect-ed. The weakness of the Northern Republican officeholders has been that they could not offer any assurance that JFK could be licked next year in the big, indqstrial states. How. President Johnson will Stand with the Negroes and other racial minorities next au-.[ cannot be known now. .But'" at this moment he does not command the political support of such states as New. York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania as John F. Kennedy was presumed to command it. bf Wdyhfo ^Rmnf^frirli-Says^ kteff Drugs Ease Hodgkin's Disease I Q — My lister is 25 and has i usual- dose for , dje large size A — Nephrosclerosis is the ; A — NeO-CorJef par drops com -mfoUnfu disease Win irradia- JWi probably are hoi taking * .......................................................... . - What is nephrosclerosis? [j Is it the same as arterioscler-! osis? Can it be cured? MIDDLE PATH Therefore, the Republican moderates are invited by ciiy cumstances to adopt in 1964 the strategy that won party control for them, at every Republican National Convention after 1928. That strategy is to take a middle path down the political roadway. Habit is a force of don-sequence .collectively as well as individually. ’ - The Republican habit of sur-rendering to the stern voice of the moderates at nominating tfine is well established. What' the stern voice said of the late Robert A. Taft was -that he could not be elected be-cause.be could not carry big industrial states, notably New York. |' That frightened the fat conservative cats of the Republl- Hodgkin's disease. Will irradia-! you probably are not'taking too tlon with cobalt help her? In family doctor this disease hereditary? is the best-judge. A — Hodgkin’s disease is a malignant disease characterized | _ “ by enlargement of the 1 y m p h nodes. It is not hereditary. Surgical removal Vof the tumors is helpful .if me disease is localized In only one or two; I C/lfL. Cni,,mn areas, but more often thwi not! I • ITT FI yOlUfTW the disease .is; widespread by I . . • j • \a/__ the time it is recognized. | i‘ ^ tfiaiCI VY dS ar Photo«x j irradiation is beneficial In I C0/co Pbnnrf ft ENTERTAINER DIES - j some cases. Nltroger mus* [ | rwwftcpufi J Phil Baker, entertainer of the XR-ywir gas, has beerTT J 1 Ziegfeld era and, one-time used,hut more recently a re- 1 /-NEW DELfll Wt—News-1 quizmaster. ; of radio’s (84 tated substance, oyclophOs- J| paper reports 0f a Cora- I * }I muhlst f^th cotomn-arta^ 1 cause it is better tolyrated. I ih Calcutta until SepteS I I ' Another drug, vincaleukoblas- I her arose out of a comedy 1 tine, is said to be better than! 1 0f errors, parliament was S any other drug tried so far. |.......... These drugs bring about a § marked improvement,--for a {1 Time, even in persons with far [1“ advanced disease. ; i | Their effects vary greatly in | different persons and the dosage 18 is hard to adjust without un- I pleasant side effects. Noelaiml § The ] can be made that any drug will I ‘ give a permanent cure,. i [ft disease that results when the I tain not only hydrocortisone but also the antibiotic, neomycin. changes of.arteriosclerosis i , . , __ seen chiefly in the kidneys. These drops rarely cause ride it usually occurs In person. ineremto the who have had a hVblood |1f®1Jirri^tion’ they shoU,d pressure for mauy/years. The JNmp.p.r «RWrprtM Aw,.> victims have albumin In the ! > ................. ■Jirlne. If the condition is recognized : 11 early in its course, measures to! 11 reduce the bldod pressure -Will: 1-1 I | ’ ........ Two East Germans Jump Ship in Turkey Question, died Saturday at hiS> home in ‘Copenhagen, Denmark. Baker and his wife ! moved to Denmark when he ! retired from show business in I 1955. Kennedy’s Grave* Visited by 45,000 - ‘iand his family. J< -0Mld! a bouquej of red roses on the WASHINGTON (A?) grave Of President John F. Kennedy was visited Sunday by an estimated 45,000persons, among them President Johnson and his family. Johnson placed [ rather Win than be right Among the forces giving the 7 told today,' Home Minister R. M, Hajarnavis said the Chinese 5th Army had .an office in downtown Calcutta during World War n from October 1942 to January 1948. The office hands many times after j mat nut electricity bills j check the progress of the dis- ISTANBUL,' Turkey (AP), — ease, but treatment of the high 1 Five persons identified as East. Mood pressure before- any kid- Germans jumped a Communist Jiey- damage bafr oeeurrod Is 1 eruiseshipinthe Bosporus Sun-even better. day and asked for political asy- • V- :: - Uum, police reported. Q »- For a recurrent external I It was the second such defee-ear . condition, * my doctor has tion of Communist-bloc tourists for the last 10 years had me use in Istanbul In the last two Neo-Cortef ear drops. Is its- con- w e e k s. ‘Twenty - one Poles tinued use likely, to cause corti- [jumped the Soviet ship Pobeda sone side effects? Nov. 18 and asked for asylum. Apartments for Rent “live in tho fabulous” FOMTAlMMMtr grave. f W continued to he paid four Equaniirate piUs a day. Is |:last. September n the A -EqUuanitrate js “a combi,) | of m CWne8e 5& nation bf/'mephobamate (a 1 - ., P . ... Hie line of visitors formed be- quilizer) and pentaerythritol 1 I . ,, ^ P* ***** ot Na- (to dilate the coronary arteries). 1 ing momentum this year was tional CemeterV were ouened'at te i« tn an«rin» n^ UL-CfilMnin had heeni ft Army. This led to the false im- < , .... . - < _ JF tional Cemetery were m* S irnTTObsq wS the ceme- against the Democratic party. SD ~ I in line When the gates were Goldwater strategists listened j closed at 5 p.m. unimpressed to warnings that) their man could not carry New! York, or for example; Penjte; aylvania.____......... _ ,< ....: 1 For answer, they replied: ! “Okay, Buster, we don’t peed It isgsedtoprevont anginapec- [1 toris. and is said to work better | | tery were permitted tpjmmaimjhnn cither druit nionr- v 995 N. 'CASS LAKE ROAD 1 and 2 Bedroom Deluxe Apartments NOW AVAILABLE Apartment ”102” Open Doily for It comes in a large and small I i ®8°> Jlajarnavis said, size. Since four a day is the' ^ m>. Phone Today — FE 3-7677 or FE 5-0936 t And, away "they went, whistling Dixie : , Off the figures of the Gold-water strategists, the only Re- j j publican then who COULD be I elected was Goldwater. I Times have changed. •' r Motorist Okay After Crash Dies in Rescue Try AARHUS. Denmark (AP)-A motorist escaped unhurt from an auto crash on a lonely road outside. Horsens, Jutland, Sun* day night, then drowned when he trlecPTb gel help for his wifr and four other passengers. Knud Poulsen, 34, ’ staggered out., of his car after crashing Into.a tree and set out into the darkness... A passerby found the wrecked car soon after, and an ambulance took-the five injured per-, sons to a hospital. All,were reported out of danger! Shortly before midnight Poul-1 sen's body was found In Meet Ford’s lively family of hardtops. There’s an all-new Falcon Sports Coupe. A 2-door Super Torque Ford Hardtop (the 4-door has its own special roofline). A hot new Fairlane Sports Coupe. And a beautifully different Thunderbird. ,Bred in open competition, built for total performance, TRV1^SSfAIiC1 they’re at your Ford Dealer’s now where FORD the \ear ol‘ the.Tdst Drive is in full-swing. Falcon • Fjurlane • fbrd -Thunderbini RENAMED FOR KENNEDY - The diagram shows the ^ ^ | ____ NASA - missile launch operation center lft Florida rihich | wwri" PnH«» President Johnson has announced a name change'from Cape 1 Canaveral to Cape Kennedy in honor of the assassinated President. •said he apparently had fallen Into'the water iss he ran toward a nearby farmhouse. ""rgggpq CHRISTMAS ALL nvm.). ., .rinnelus Downtown PONTIAC STORE | ONE-OF-A-KIND FLOOR SAMHK, TRADE-INSI PIANOS ORGANS Phuo-Sitno STUDENT g| UPRIGHT I PIANOS 1 » ssr *50 ORGAN ¥V GRINNELL CONSOLE XX STEREO UU orn> in ill HAMMOND ft|h|P SPINET HUH ORGAN UtV FAMOUS MAKM Cril Jt A STEREO VIQD RADIO PHONO Iftftll USED $|| ORAND I j PIANO VI !9 S *695 usio maonavox -nriejn HI-FI VCQ CONSOLE DO Orl|. ISAM . ww war™* *429 PIANO TlfcV ssr tOQE SSM5L, Ww TRANSISTOR (P RADIOS 3 vssr toflfk PIANOS ZUII Sava » atao . ; ■ , =-•695 ■xtr» IpHktr , ™™“ MOM snu la sssl *9! PIANO Ml » HAI40MORGAN IDO 41 Charfo DO WMiMseh AUTOMADC i||ny RECORD f77 PLAYERS m 1 a«s. OM '■* [ r‘ > T OMN IVIRY NIGHT -Tit • F. M. LOW IASY YIRMt Falcon Futura , Sports Coupe, FACTS ON THE ,1964 HARDTOPS FROM FORD: Eleven different models •.. Falcons, Fairlanes, Super. Tbrque Fords and Thunderbirds ■ Choice of five distinctive, rooflines E New interior luxury ■ Ford's famous ’IWice-js-Year Maintenance features ■ Optionii include bucket seats, 4%peetl floor shifts, air conditioning ■ Four transmissions including America’s only fully synchronized 8-speed manual ■ Wide choice of V-8’s up tO‘425 horsepower in the Super Ibrque Ford.' SEE THE 1964 TOTAL PERFORMANCE CARS AT YOUR FORD DEALERS * yy Mi > Ford preaenu "Arrest and THal’-ABOTV Nfctwork-check your local listings'for time and channel ■ -If;/ ' -A* wm A—12 tHE PONTIAC. PRESiS, MOEfoA’y, DECEMBER 2, 1663 News erf Area Service Fersohnel '.Two' soldiers, from Pontiac, Specialist Four Bruce W. Brady, 23, aind PFC James R. Newsum, 20, and other members of the 3rd Armored' Division acted as a mock aggressor force dUriftg. die second phase of Operation BIG LIFT in Germany- 1 Following their arrival far Frankfurt, .Germany, the 2nd Armored Divisflun began a week-long training maneuver in which the 3rd Armored ; . Division acted' anenemy. 'The . ___exercise ended recently. Specialist Brady, son of Mr. and Mrs. Trqrnan F. Brady, 4481 Clirdoiiville Road, is a - clerk in Cdmpany B, 2nd Armored Rifle'battalion of the 3rd Armored’s 36th 'Ihffflfitry regularly stationed near Kirch Gons, Germany. He entered the Army in September 1960 and was stationed at Fort Gordon, Ga.,before arriving overseas in January 1963.' Brady is a graduate qf Water--.ford High School. ’ Newsum; soil of Robert J. Newsum, 689 Lookout Drive, and the late Mrs. NewSum, is a tank crewman in Company A, 2nd 'Medium Tank Battalion of the 3rd Division’s 32nd Armor regularly station-ed near Kirch Gons, Ger-' .many. 1961 and . was stationed at Fort .Riley,. Kan. before arriving overseas in May 1962. Newsum attended Pontiac Central High School. . * ■ ★ ★ 2 ■ Stall Ser-| geant Alvin E. -Shadowetos^oYl ( Stonefort, 111., I recently received t hel United Sthtes| Air Force Com-■■‘"m end a tl ohj Medal while serving at1 Mildenhall SHADOWED Royal Air Force Station, to the 82nd Airborne' Division at Fort Bragg; N.C. ' Specialist Drayton, an automatic rifle man in Company' E, 1st Battle Group pjf the division’s 187th Infantry, eh* - ter ed. the Army in. November 1961 and completed basic training. a.t Fort Leonard , Wood, Mo. The 23-year-old soldier 1959 graduate of Pontiac tral High School. Harold’ E. Johansen., son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Johansen of 3889 Carriage Birmingham, was recently promoted to specialist four while' assigned to .the 80th Artillery iJf Italy. Specialist . Johansen, a clerk typist in die artillery’s 1st Battalion near Vicenza, Italy, entered the Army in February 1962 and completed basic training at Fort Dbt,. N.J. He. arrived overseas Ih July 1962. the 22-year-old soldier is a 1959; graduate of Mamoroneck (N.Y.) High School and attended Pensylvania State University in College Park, Pat * DYER PROMOTED Johiiy L. Dyer, 19- son ol Mr 7 ahd.TWrs.;Fred W. Dyer, 361 N.. Perry Street, to Great Lakes for 16 weeks* to begin his schooling in the H9snttal Corpsman’s school in 3 preparation for his training to he a pharmacist. He-is an August 1963 graduate of Pontiac Central High School.*. ♦ - r‘dr ^ 'Hr ^ Army Specialist Four Eugene C. Meyers, sonYf Mrs. Ada Meyers, 76% Lafayette Street, and the late Mr. Meyers, was recently -graduated from - the Fort Lewis * Non-Commissioned Officer Academy at Fort Lewis, Wash. w The 24-year-old soldier is a 1956 graduate of Lincoln High School in Detroit. He entered thp Army in I960.-Pvt, Ogretha. Rogers, daughter of Mrs: Lilia Rogers, 286 Louis, Highland Park, completed eight weeks of basic military training at the Women’s Army Corps Center, FOrt McClellan, Ala. Private Rogers is a 1961 graduate of Highland' Park High School Her father, Samuel D-. lived at 2332 Tuxedo, BRINGS OUT THE BEST IN US DISCOUNT PfllCmllvERY DEPARTMgNT-SAVEl SAVE!- .Better Measure of Value' Cartoonist Dies of Hea rt Attack 'LittlO Iodine* Creator -Succumbs at Age 65 Detroit, ' * w , ★ ‘ Spec. 4 Gary R. McGee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell A. McGee of 725 Bigbam Avenue will be home on leave for Christmas. Specialist McGee is stationed CARMEL,'Calif. (AP) -Jimmy Hatlo won’t giver a “Jip of the hat" ariy more to the* thousands of persons whose suggestions helped him characterize human frailties with his cartoon “They’ll Do It Every Time.’* Shadowens was awarded the' medal in' recognition- of his meritorious service as a pas* x senger service specialist at ., Nouassour Air-Base-Hnr Morocco. The sergeant, who is now assigned to the 1625th Support SquadroiT at Mildehhall, entered the service in March, 1957. He is the son of Mrs. George cal -specialist jwith _the 2nd Evacuation Hospital near~Baj inCar you sit down' to eat a steak, , .. , ’, , , ’ paste of New England. Nearly, stop and think 9* w"a* W_*nt *nto j a of .snow covered areas it — about 17 pounds of corn, j east of Lake Ontario. / 1 pounds of hay and 2 pounds ' of protein supplements. been 70 recorded incursions byj groups from Indonesian Bhrneo. 1(1 What Good Steak! What Went in It? Indonesian-based guerrillas. A: military source in Kuching said 58 terrorists - have been According to North Dakota State University, ' livestock « wttbi> way: morale oi me „ Nazis Protest Naming WASHINGTON (UPTT-Seven members of the American Nazi party picketed, the White, House for a time yesterday to-protest the appointment of Chief Jus-lice Earl Warren as head of the commission to investigate the, assassination of President Kennedy. a 10-ounce cooked steak -represents L3 pounds of carcass beef, or about"12 pounds of Jive-at«6L___/ Since a feeder steer" gains about two pounds^ a day, one steak is equal to about a day’s red meat production of the steer. ." ★ . ★ ★ The feed figures are the approximate daily diet of the average steer. Show and cold also was reported in . other parts of the Great Lakes and in .Midwest areas. 'Temperature? edged to near zero in northern. Wisconsin.' Readings in the teens were reported in most of north cen-* tral region. The 20s and 3D& covered most other areas in the Mild Gulf air kept tempera-, times near 60 in-the lotoer Rio. Grande Valley of Texas, ' * United States farmers paid about $300 million in sales taxes in 1962: One Yank Killed One Hurt in Viet Narii . SAIGON, South Viet Nam. (UPlt — One U S. soldier was killed’ and another seriously wounded in a Communist guerrilla ambush last night near the Cambodian border, a U.S, military spokesman said today: Nine South Vietnamese "troops also were wounded in the clash, the second serious. encounter between govern-; ment and Viet Cong forces within a few hours yesterday. In the .first, battle; also 'near-iotm1 niunists killed, wounded, or cap-' lured the entirfe garrison "of a government outpost before being driven off. | , The guerrilla? lost an estimated 50 men in the six hours of fighting, but 42 of the‘60 troops defending - the outpost were killed, and 15 to 20 of their wives and children also died; BROUGHT TO I The American casualties lle^umbervir U.S. combat deaths since Large-scale assistance to South Viet Nam began in January 1961. The death toll from all causes now is 142." : Names of the two U.S. servicemen were withheld pending notification of relatives, /and there were few details available on" the attack. The* Americans were accompanying -a . Vietnamese troop convoy in the border area about 115 miles west of Saigon. , > The Communist assault on the. outpost was' almost a carbon oopy of an attack.a week ago db a governmenFtrainihg odmp 3D miles west off Saigon. In that fight, 37: Vietnamese soldiers were, killed and four U.S.. enlisted meMapUiredr-A-TfSTor ficerwss"critically wounded. V • Yesterday, the Viet >Cong J opened fire with Vnortars and other big -guns about midnight .4 They knocked offt two of three " blockhouses on the corners-of j the triangflfir stockade, cut! .through barbed wire,.-waded a ! moat; and scaled the walls. . The third blockhouse poured heavy fire on the invaders but " the guerrillas kept . up their I assault. They finally wUhdrew_j_ about 6 a.m. taking tgeir dead j and' wounded* with them, and | some captives. The outpost is on the. edge n( an ^teshheaVityThfested by Communists. It is just north of Black. Virgin Mountain, which is considered sacred by the Cao I Dai sect. " , In another development yes-1 terday, reliable sources ' said 1 Viet Nam’s 7th Division com: mander,. Cdi. 'Pahm Van Dong, has- been replaced at the insistence of * security minister -Maj. Gen. Ton That Dlnh, although he is highly inspected by U.S. military advisers here. The division guards Hie area -immediately south of Saigon. It • is part of the corps Dinh com-i manded before andy^Sjiffieialrsaid Dong pur-"sn^dThe war against the Communists, in the Mekong Delta are? effectively. His replace-. ment is Brig. Gen. Lam Van Phat. UlHitH mm TOILIT TANK BAU TtoeNllteM WN* MnDr MNN IW S— U —Hi mil NmM«n 75c ATHARDWAHSSTORKS your O t nlue Club NOW This beautiful China SANTA CLAUS. BANK Yours tor . only WREN YOU OPEN YOUR CHRISTMAS CLUB WITH US! I#*#*#* #*#’#! SEND TOURCHILD a Letter ^Santa Send Iyour child a FREE Tetter from Santa Claus! How? Pick one up at any of. our offices. Simply address it . 'stamp it and drop it in our special mailbox. It will be mailed from Santa Claus, Indiana. DON’T DELAY-DO IT TODAY! PONTIAC STATE BANK main riffice, Saginaw at Lawrence Auburn Heights, Baldwin atYale Drayton Plains Miracle Mile! M-59 Plaza! 9 to 6,4 E. Lawrence! 910 W, Long Laki Hd.l <&ttt* lytm ©amutt’a fnr (Khriatmaa We mean the whole store. get with every gift certificate.. the Courtesy, the extra rush can affect. Arid you get the quality ■-namfijbrahds, like: McGREGOR’s “CAMELOT” ZIP (CARDIGAN (shown), Soft, luxurious, lambswool and camel's hair. Note the smart zipper styling-dashing! Camel or Bottle, Green .. . $15.95. And here are, lust a few examples of the many dozens of sweater Styles we-hav^e • in jstock. 4 STtlHO SHAGGY ItAZER CARDIGAN kyMin Iw. Button style in toft wool blend. 3 color combinations............ *13.95 ARNOLD PALMER ALPACA BLEND CARDIGAN . kf Mtrt Srwe . ' ‘' V< 40% Alpaca—>00% wool in 8 handsome shades.. .v*. ....................*19.95 CREW NICK ZIP SWEATER ky k*Mm Tyrol type with chain closure,, elbow yxrfehW*-. .... ............. *13.95'' 100% ALPACA PUUOVIR Ay N.w Y$ik Knit Popular V-neck style. Pure luxury in many , shades.../.....................*21.95 See Our llg Selection of Shi end Ski-inspired Sweaters. vMany unusual imports included . % • .*8.95 ta *45 GIFT BOXES ? OF COURSE. LAY-AWAY YOUR GIFT! A small deposit holds it till Christmas y a part of Christmas since 1931 ^ Vn’s^II STORES FOR MEN & BQYS ' . 4 ; , ' A ' . ■ ■ • . Use&ne of Osmun’s Individualized Charge Plans FREE' PARKING. , TIL"ggMiilTi* OPEN EVERY. NITE 'til 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MQlfoAY, t)&l&MBER 2, 1993 Floridians ReatlyBask in MIAMI (AP) Shpppers in shorts making the rgundsjrf. air-conditioned stores,' dls-‘ placed ^northerners dressing their lawns in white sand toJ remind them of snow, and "trees which produce red berries only tell, the tale /of. Christmas hi Miami.; l; - The holiday season is the time when die long - time: “native” and the recent “na-' live” go to war.,pyyr merits of tf semitropical- Christmas. can into- the Christmas spirit when there’s no snow oh the ground, when stores .feature swimming suits and sun tan lotion's, and when . hot chocolate?” complains the more recent native. “This is the true Christmas,” replies the n a t i v e whose - blood has thinned t h r o u g h the years. “There was no snow in Bethlehem'or r kjciles hanging from the manger. And think of die money you’re saying in heating, bills arid anti-fireeze.” SPRAY FROST , Nonetheless, many who long • for a northern “white Christmas” find soma, consolation . in making “frost” patterns on their windows with spray can decorating material. - , Others smile smdgly as ■ they reiriember long - gone days of snow shovels, tire Joshes, gloves and frost-ten toes. They find Christmas in the skin-diving equipment; and for-the children, bicycles, with, trainer wheels, roller skates, tennis racquets. / ; doesn’t Notice The* Miamiyy o u-n g s t e r dpesn’t seemao notice the absence of skis, sleds, toboggans and ice skates. Little rainfall occurs during the Christmas season, iso home - owners decorate their yards with papier-: mache Christmas figures with litde fear of having, them ruined. colored Tights reflect in swimming poete. ■= - — * TREE ON RAFT . One Miamian e re eta a Christmas tree on a r a f t floating in .the lake bordering his home. He s t r i n g s underwater power and sound cables for lights on die free and speakers on. the raft, tbenJillsthe area with recorded Christmas music. Northeriil ydimgsterT Tiold" their Christmas caroling forays in horse - drawn sleighs,, but what does the " Miami youngster-do? * ", V One croup of Girl S c o ut S paddles thraigh canals in the Coral Gables area in a flotilla of seven canoes, singing YuJe songs. - ■ ' ^ iisfedFair After Collision Two persons, injured -last night when the .car in which they were riding collided with another in Waterford Township, are in fair condition af Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. Merrial Crabtree, 4B j»f 3300 Elizabeth Lake Road, Waterford Township, suffered possible internal injuries,' while Loren Burk, 34; of 7SL "Summit, Milford, suffered multiple abrasions and a possible broken nnkle. j Robert Osborne, 21, of Tra-verse^C!tyr^h4veiuj)f_Jhe car bearing the two injured p< told" police, ho was driving east On W. Huron at'8:45 p.m. when his ,car struck another^ .east*,n bound car driven by Harry Cm- EXQluinQTIOn line, 29, of 62- Rutgers. Collins,who was uninjured, told police he waS' stopped to tujmJfeft at Ptestoit when .Ms oar was hit In the rear. .Osborne sald her didn’t see Jhe stopped car. • Elder Kennedys Leave for Palm Beach Home HYANNIS PORt; Mass. (91 -j Former ‘Ambassador and Mrs. JosepiPFT Kennedy took off today fop Palm Beach, Fla.; aboard the family plane; Caro- line. -The parents of the late President were accompanied by their niece, Ann Gargan. The Tdane-»dU:.stpp at New York en route south,to ter home. OemaadedJn TrafficDeafh Preliminaiy examination- to, Justice Court for a Pontiac! Man charged with , manslaughter in a traffic death is scheduled for Friday __________. ^ ' Thomas Rapson, tit, of 41 S. Merrimac demanded the hear-1 ing Saturday at his arraipm ment before Avon Township justice Luther C. Green. Rap-son was released , on $1,500 -bond. A passenger In Rapsop’s'car, Gerald D. Cartier, 25, of 8477 Clihton River. Drive, Utica, was fatally ihjured Thanksgiving Day when Rapson. rammed, rear of another car.: «eeurred-at“Gp- dyke arid Aubura;'l| pontlaC ' Towflshlj). • • The driver of the other car, •< Dennis Arnett. j2, of iH8-Au»— burn, Pontiac Township, s u f-fered only mirior injuries. Sheriff’s deputies Said Rapson refused to make a statement at the. ■scene qf the accident ' The European., midwife toad lays her eggs in a string like , mass and abandons it. The male entwines the stftng afound his. hind legs and carries- it for several weeks. , When, the eggs « tire ready to hatch, he finds a pool where there are no other tadpoles. PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL center gftnrr—wflr II 8<30 P.M. S82-1I13 Some residents paint Christmas scenes on one” aide of their heavy plywood ■ sheets Which serve otherwise as hurricane shutters. /Many residents string lights through the frojjds of their palih trees. Others buy traditional Christmas trees and erect them in sheltered corners of their patios, where 4* Address Cofcfs £os>/y many .huge poinsettia bushes, the graceful Adonidia palm which 'produces a crop of acorn 7'sized, bright red berries just in time for Christmas fhf a* 1 " r I a « hnlly in* ■ which is covered with thou4 sands of small red berries each December .. . Opening of the Christmas season signals a rebirth of commerce along' Florida's Gold Coast. RACE SEASON The winter racing season "opens with the horses at Trop-’ leal Park, and there is also pari-mutuel betting at the dog tracks and jai-alai frontons. Sumptuous mansions scattered along Miami Beach and on Islands ip Kay Bis-cayne are given a little extra shine by mhlbtenancO-staffs in preparation for the annual winter visits by their owners. High society springs 4q-ttfec with black-tie banquest, charity balls, country dub golf tournaments and ocean yacht' racing. it it;." The FloiJjii • sun also Ai tracts Hollywood and New York ' entertainers and soon the list of names featured by Miami Beach hotels com4 pares with the line of b111* bqards along the Las Vegas strip on a summer night. SHOPPERS AFOOT Sidewalks fill with shoppers — the codple who arrived on one of today’s jet flights, uncomfortable in their heavy wool shits, and the casual Miamian In capri pants or ,ber-tnuda shorts, thong sandals and bright - colored shirts.. ' Mothers deposit their chil-' dren at one of the many carnivals which take up winter residence In suburban shopping center parking One carnival lights up the dbwritbwn> sky with is sparkling ferris wheel and o t h e r rides are set up on tfie rpof of a large department store. Gift ciounters feature, o u t-door barbecue sets, golf clubs, swimming pool apcessorles, by Revising list Now^ j Those gay Christmas cards that decorated mantel and mirror and tree cah serve a; practical, purpose when you take them down. That is the (best time — and they are the simplest means for making . up ypur 1964 Christmas card list. If the list is revised now, while new names and addresses are readilyat hand, the addressing of cards next ' Christmas will be almost effortless. For thoSe to whom maintaining a list is a problem in itself, the card maker offers WOUND UP — A half-ton spring for use in am underground Atlas m i s s i! e site, serves as a resting place for inspector Robert Wilson as. he completes test ’data an the spring at a Chicago Heights, 111., plant. ; * • a number of easy solutions, some of which are available in stores and others hand-fbshioned at home. FILING SYSTEM If your list runs to several hundred people and you must of necessity be meticulous about it, then probably the best "system^~is-4o--post.. tbe_ names arid addresses on file ■cards - and index them in a .small file box, An advantage of this system is that the cards offer 'ample space to jot down information about the- person and his'family as it Is received during the year. For those with shorter lists, the. personal telephone directory is a handy refefence. MMMMMJULMMOMMNIUMUtolKMIlMUMMlmKMUnil UNION rOY SALE 1 Now union mombers in Pontiac can share the benefits enjoyed by union members | in Chicago, Detroit^ Flint and lansing. If you are a member of any union, this sale I is for you I ! 0PENT0N6HT TS 9:80 » Admission by Union Card or Badgo only, this salo is not opon to tho gonoraI public. All merchandise sold at this sale carries a full money-back guarantee. o This sale sponsored by United Auto Workers Locals, AFL-C|0. If you ane a member of any union in Pontiac you may shop at this sale. SPECIALS FOR MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY December 2, 3 and 4 ONLY. A tifty check mark beside a’ name may be used to indicate that you two exchanged cards the, previous Christinas., A second marie couid be useq for those tb wfiom you send gifts. ' . SPECIAL CARD Hallmark cards this, year created a special cdtnblnation {aH’dandbookletforChrist* mas addresses. It is 5x6 with eight spiral-bound pages. . A humorous verse, appears at the top of each page and the last sheet expends a Merry Christmas to the recipient. Hallmark, as well as other greeting card firms prepare date books each year which are ideally suited for compil-' ing Christmas address' lists." 1 The date book is part calendar and part address pad, and here again there’s a place on-which to note birthdays, anniversaries and other special ocoaslons of the coming year. These are Available without cost at stationery counters in stores. Eyo Ban on Rickshas ZANZIBAR (AP) - Min-drawn rickshas, a tourist feature in Zanzibar town, would be abolished next mopth under a motion before the Zanzibar National Assembly. The motion Is expected to he approved. Complete HOME OWNERS Insurance Your monkey gun may be used as a machine pistol by removing the grenade launcher barrel. MANSION DOLL HOUSE ’Complete with doll house furniture for all 3 floors. Large enough* 4. to stand up in. •* ( $4 44 FREE BARBIE DOLL WITH EVERY DOLL HOUSE PURCHASED ETCH and SKETCH vDrow, write or make any design you want. $1 88 8K BRUISER TRUCK.. V MOUSE tlttP GAME Crakiest G;6ip'#;'!«ver, 1 dreamed up. , ; $3 19 Give-A-Show PROJECTOR Projects full color^plc-tures on wall or celling. Great all-new showsl SASH ELDON B0WL-A-MATIC Automatic bowling fun - no batteries * over four feet i! ‘ , v Wi: KE§ERVf] Till] HlOJftT TO LIMIT QLAXT1T1ES UNION TOY SALE 121 WAYNE ST. at WARREN — PONTIAC OPPOSITE OAKLAND COUNTY JAIL Open Daily, 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. & IMUMWNJMW MMm LADIES’ ft MEN'S MW.tolM.toia Yellow wi> White Special Oiowp of 114 WNGS Alton* WATCHES Vl *«*<•»'■ and Men' 2Jli?£i!KD0NBUl0^ ■LOIN, BENRUS, HAMILTON ORIICN AND LONQINEo°N watches: For Mon And Womin-Many Smart Stylo* GOLD GIFT RINGS Yellow end Whlto Solid told and BIRTH-STONE RINBS f, All in solid gold w tattings ^ /Take your choice at sensational low price. | W-flo. Service for • STAIN sJSi! uJSmV Che*# *nd COMBINATION lour choir* t-PIEOE MATCHED UIRRARE SET % ' Beautiful ■ vinyl covering — Mby to keep clean. 3 pieces ■ I 3-CHAHNEL STEREO TRIPLE 'SOURCE STEREO. SPEAKER SYSTEM Officer Shoots WaylnfeWest ,v eSCWEGE^' 6er^ttanjF 4» An East German' artny ’officer shot his way to West Germany jarly today, police reported: „ The uniformed officer said he was detected by an East German border patrol while trying to flee. The patrol opened fire on him, (Re officer told Western police, end he ^ returned the fire withs his ] pistol. He lost the weapon 1 later, he added. | -The name of the 22-year-old j second lieutenant was not dis-\ closed. Police said he told them he fled because he disapproved | of communism and reported * that'morale’ among East troops I guarding ‘the border was low. I '' ' ' - ★ Sr ( ...... A 17-year-old youth from the ; East German province of i Thuringia also reached West j Germany during the weekend, f police said. In northern Germany, near * Brunswick, four Bast German workers fled to I West Germany over il&. weekend Without incident. Three, aged 17 and 18, came in a group; another, 40, came alone. Best Students Smokeless THA BONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, PORTLAND, ■ Ore., (A?) — There’s less smoking among honor students than others, a, survey of Selah, Wash., schools shows. iW study was .presented Sunday by Dr. Albert R. Allen of Selah at the 17th clinical meeting of the American Medical Association. In the survey of some 800 youngsters in the 6th througi the 12th grade, Dr. Alien found that generally “smokers in school do not. compete successfully scholastically, athletically, and do not even participate in seryice clubs"” Wedding Gift Blamed in Death of Couple HASLAND,-England (AP)^A wedding present wan blamed today for the electrocution o£ a young couple. Anthony Bayliss, 20, and his bride of three weeks, Roseary, 18, were found dead in bed Sunday. They were lying-bn top of a gift electric blanket which police said was faulty. Tormenting Rectal Itch Stopped In Minutes Science Finds New Healing Substance That. Promptly Stops Itching and Pain of Piles New York, N. Y. (Special) — One of the most common afflictions is a condition known u “itching piles.* It la moot .amharvasslnsr for tho victim daring 1he: day and es] * ” aggravating At night No matter what tout. naea without reunite— hart V good For the Brat time, adenee has found A new healing sc stance with the natontihing _____, surgery. Mt_____ ence has proved this aubatanca produces a remarkably effec- tive rite of healing. Its germ-killing properties also ’ vent mzaeooi In one hemorrhoid case after snotheruvery striking improve- Thls improvement was maintained in cases where a doctor’s ing-l observations were continued “ i over a period of months l Among these sufferers wore n wide Variety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 years' duration. The secret is this new healing substance (Bio-Dyne*) — dis- _ mmmm, Ask for, Preparation H Suppositories (convenient to carry. If Away from home) er Preparation H Ointment'with special applicator. Available at nil drug SPECIAL THIS WEEK! MAPLE TWISTS <8 ** 35®. | 29 N. Saginaw Open I A.M. Ylfl $ P.M. KILLED—Mrs. Iona Stafford, 41, and her children, Wayne, 11, and Donna, 7, were found dead In their Rosell, N.J. home Saturday. Police believe the wdfhan’s husband went berserk and killed thenv smothering tite Wfe and shoeting-tae-chfl--dren In the head, then kilUng himself. Maris Life Family of Four Dead ROSELLE, JU. (UPI) - Police today conttaued"inyestlgafc4 -ing the background of a man they said apparently smothered his wife, shot Ibis two children and then committed suicide.. The bodies of Donald Stafford, 42, Mrs. Stafford, 41, ,ahd their children, Wayne, 9, and Donna, I, were foun' in their home Saturday night At first, police thought Mrs. Stafford had died of natural chuses. However, an autopsy showed she had suffocated. Deputy Police Chid Charles F. Raidecki said he believed her husband smothered her with a pillow. The bodies of the children, each shot In the head with a .22 caliber rifle, were fopnd in their bedroom in'separate beds. Stafford was found dead, also shot through the head, on a "bed alongside his wife. Relatives said Stafford had appeared to be under a se- vere mental sfrain in .recent Weeks. They said he had undergone psychiatric treatment about 10 years ag^gRRst {be-fore he moved: Jo Roselle., He was originally from Bush-kill, Pa., and attended a high stfiool in the Stroudsburg area. , His wife was from Caldwell. r|ltt:Tfey had been married about IS years. , Police found two .notes which Stafford had written,. One, found kitchen table, said in part: v LOVED FAMILY “I love my little family, now we’ll always be together,." Stafford was employed as a mechanic by an Elizabeth, NJ., auto dealer, and was known to neighbors as a steady worker and a good family man. Police said tiie autopsy showed that, Mrs. Stafford was killed on Thursday night They said Stafford was apparently grief-stricken and killed the children and himself the next day. Live in Oakland's Exciting ^ FONTAINBLEAU! APARTMENTS FOR RENT WITH ALL the conveniences for gracious living 84 Fabulous Modern Apartments! • Photo R 3-7677, R 5-0636 Hoc tile t nlque “Designed for Living” Arrangements and Utilities. APARTMENT 162 OPEI DAILY For Your Inspection ‘ YOUR CHOICE OF 1 and 2-Bedroom Apartments, Beautiful Park Court With Heated Swimming Pool, Air conditioning, Electric, Range, --Refrigerator, Heat" and Water — --The Very Latest, all furnished! WE’RE SURE YOU’LL LOVE IT1 FOINTAIINBLEAU APARTMENTS, 995 NORTH^SS LAKE ROAD Corner of N. Cass LakeRd. and' Pbntlae, Luke Hd. A—15 2, 1 BIG PRICE CUTS! SAVE ALL DIAMOND RINBS IMST 80 at FRACTION of WORTH SPECIAL GROUP $175 to $200 Values NOW only With beautiful Wood Chests Bog. 99.95 n.w 4550 Bog. 85.00 Now 4210 Rog. 74.50 now 32” SPECIAL GROUP $49.99 to 79.96 Values I FULL CARAT DIAMOND " Regular $410, Now ALL OTHER DIAMONDS NOT LISTED 00 FOB 60% to 75% OFF 148.08 I SOUTH SAQINAW ST. Open Tonight *TU 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY’ DECEMBER 1963 YOURS AS A Glffl A—16 WITH WiH SENSATIONAL OFFER This 1280-PAGE "T WEBSTER'S BICnOHA JUadffrtHfffrrlfone of the most amazing introductory offers ever made. A chance to re-ceive FREEf( theWEBSTFft’S New American DICTIONARY, Thumb-indexed—the one book that educators agree is a MUST in every library. It's a reference book every family needs In order to understand the correct Usage and meaning of words, phrases, sentence structure; grammar—andio broaden its vocabulary and master the English language. It's yours FREE... to introduce you to what wl'believe to be one of the greatest achievements in publishing hiftory—the new WORLDWIDE ENCYCLOPEDIA! So reajd everyword of this message carefully-THIN ACT AT ONCE! for this is truly the opportunity of q lifetime. COl'MI 10 DELUXE VOLUMES 3200 PAGES OVER 2,000,000 WORDS MORE THAN 1,000 ILLUSTRATIONS Each volume 5% x 8Vs inches, over 1 inch Thick. DUO-TONE COVER. COMPLETE! UP TO DATE! AUTHORITATIVE! Yee, you can new be the proud pec-eeiior of a truly tine encyclopedia eat el a price so amazingly law that * ‘ •oundi unbelievable. "And In fdil> •ion to Introduce the new World-Wide encyclopedia, we are giving—FOR A LIMITED TIMI ONLY—the WEBSTER'S NEW AMERICAN DICTIONARY lllus- Thls it truly an emaxlng otter worth taking advantage ef. ' AIL 10 VOLUMES For years, many American famillei who wanted and neidedld really comprehensive encyclopedia were kept from giving their children the educational advantage of owning such a cat, (Imply because the price was always prohibitive. So months ago, and at America's leading publisher*—In conjunction wlth faUjcational ’ ; Foundation—decided to overcome this problem and to preduca d suitable encyclopedia at a price ANYONE could afford. 'And new, at lastl IT’S HERE—THE WORLD-WIDE ENCYCLOPEDIA!-in ten compact volumes. Makes for greater speed, ease ar\d clarity—putting any information you may’went at your fingertips for more easily than cumbersome, oul-of-date ssls that cost a great deal mere, v ,f,‘ brond n#w *nd up-to-dpte In-every respect, fresh off the presses. It Is replete with dynamic, vital knowledge to Tv which you agd year children will turn again and again throughout fhe years—reference beaks you can enjoy for a lifetime. WIISTiR'S, NIW‘ AMERICAN DICTIONARY FREE OF CHARGE! YOU’VE ALWAYS WANTED TO OWN A SET OF ENCYCLOPEDIA-NOW YOU CAN AFFORD IT! Send No Money! W* would wilts pint and pigsi of tiles srgumSnli about'why you Should own a Ml of thfwORLD. WIDE ENCYCLOPEDIA--but we.1 Lnow'-thit' iVi herd teSsll sny* thing without first thawing whst -you get' for your pteney. Thetis svhy we w«nt to tend you thli NsiuMRouit ef knowledge for ERIE EXAMINATION—tqflrllur wim tne wtBSTER'S N«W American DICflQN. ARY. Wa wint'yeu to axsminrlt carefully. Show ll In VAtir (tianrli. vmir likMtian_nMUAnm ums wltli that the World-Wide Encyclopedia It a "college education in llisll"—a reference library that (vary home should own and can afford. ■ And don't” 1st ths prlct fool you, TSe WORLD-WIDE ENCYCLOPEDIA Is e cempleta and authoritative encyclopedia, In which top-neleh eupeili have sevtred ayery ‘fpld el knowledge n limply end forcibly |hal, mere Ijredlng convey hat, mhre (hiding conveyi _____. ______________this li eimcUlly valuable where children ef tcheel age.me them notable , If to your triends, your librarian—anyone you with, Cent pare It page by page with other nil of itt kind tolling for thro* limes si much. CrUb-TONE COVER—Itt aify.te.r«d two*—Its clarifying thousands of llluitrstloni, photogriphi end aligremt, many In color, See how quickly, how ceilly you cen gat full Infer, (nation on Itt 20,000 iubleed, Haviyour children uis It, Then end only then,' is* If you don’t sgrst racily what is nttanl. ..hers children of sch_ velumat'si an aid In their etudiei. Indead, thcia ere volumet every member ef your family wll| cherish . , . will ut(l and turn to lime and again through the yssri . . . and which yeu will shew with pride to yogr frlenot and neighbert, Sp 'don't fall to take advantage ef tha tree Offer. Just mall tha coupon at ths right, Just fill in and mail the seupon ef rights We will immediately send yew • set ef the WORLD-WIDE INCYCLOflDIA, together Here’s All You Do! witk the Free Dictionary, Examine, them carefully. You and you alone mult ee fully satisfied. If yeu ere senvinsed, as we are i. sure yeu wilhbe, that this is truly an smiting educational bargain, hasp the set and your Free Dictionary, and pay for the same on easy farms af *1.00 in I days and mo hoi* ansa In sanvenlent installments ef $1.00 a' week, a total of only Sf.tl (which inchtdea , delivery charett). Olharwite simply return , . the beaks—YOU ARE NOT OBUOID TO KEEP THEM, ft don't delay. Be sure Ion taka advantage ef this limited offer. Never, before hSI'lt boon so essential fe Mye ft hand an authentic, up-to-date encyclopedia •wand never before has there been one prised sefdw, to help yew and your children meat tha demands af tediy and tamarrawc THIS OFFER EXPIRES IN 10 PAYS i I fljii|lljllMl ... VALUABLE GIFT CERTIFICATE EDUCATlONAll FOUNDATION oser e 908 PENN AVENUE, PITTSBURGH 22, PA. Without any obligation to me, plena sand m* lmmsdlataly, pro-paid, for ft DAYS FREE EXAMINATION, the 10-volume sat it the new WORLD-WIDE ENCYCLOPEDIA. After 8 days I will either return th* sat and aw* you nothing, or kaap It and sand you 91.00 down, and tha balance *1.00 a wtak until thssnsclal Introductory price of only f0.88 has basn paid (no other charges), , , frFIe gift City and lists.......»................‘...Numhsr............... (It under ill yeah ef et», (•'»*•* ir adult iIsmIun MMiury) THE PONTIAC PRESS FdKTXAC. M6HIGAK, MONDAY, DECEMBER S 1063 Bloomfield I Girl Wrong to Linger Over Candy Site of Re Wed Saturday in Christ ■ f Church I Cranbrook \were Madeline McMath, daughter of A reception in the Bloom- Illusion with overlay ofheir-field Hills • Country Clubi_JFol-.„;hMmi-Al«teon-lace, lowed the marriage,of Made-. • end of the chapel train.'The line McMath to Charles Her- bride carried phalaenopeix or-man Sloan of Ami'Arbor, Sat- chids and Stephanotisr Virday, in Christ Church Cran- * * ' * By The Emily Pest Institute Q: Yesterday afternoon while my teen - aged daughter and I; wore visiting in the house' of a friend, the hostess passed around a box of candy, . When it was passed to my .daughter she looked at each piece before selecting one that khe liked. I tofcdher later that while it was all right to dO .thir flt hrtwip, mtum- offered candy in someone else’s house she should just take a. piece and not look the candies oyer-before -taking \Mrs. Robert R. brook. Mrs. Robert A. Adams of l McMath of [Bloomfield Hills and \~the~1Me Dr. McMath, I to Charles \ Herman Sloan 0/ Ann Arbor. The bride, daughter of Mrs. Robert R. McMath, of Bloomfield Hills and the late Dr. Me-Jlath^was given-ht-marriagr by her brother Robert T. Garrison. For the single-ring afternoon ceremony performed by Rev. John H. Albrecht; she chose a gown of candlelight satin styled with Sabrina neckline, pearl beaded diagonal sash Elkhart, Ind. as matron of honor/, appeared Tn.Tose silk and hdd-aweetheai't Toseartb^ match her floor-length gojvn. * Best man was Helmut F. Stern Of New York City. Guests were seated by the bride’s brother Kearny R. Garrison of Birmingham; Robert A. Adams; Donald H. Lentz of Milan and Lawrence Czap of Ypsilanti. A cathedral veil of French FLORIDA TRIP JlL, . After a two-week -honey-moon in Florida the cpupfo-lrill be at'home in Aim Arbor. Bofo are University' of Michigan graduates and Mr. Sloan is also an alumnueefctheTeeh- Of course she thinks I am just picking on her. Doh’t you agree that this is not good manners? MRS, CHARLES- HERMAN SLOAN A: If she fingered'the candy .. , on took a long time in select- ClotnOS yOr UOtlCeS ing a piece, then you are v ' - . ■ . right. But if she merely looked at them quickly before, choos* Refresh Your Memory wrong. Q: The other day while 1 u n c h i n g with a friend another woman friend whom I had not seen for a long time came into this same restaurant and as she passed our table,. stopped and spoke to me fcr a few minutes. ~*r~ I did not introduce her to the woman with whom I was lunching, and have since wondered whether I was wrong not to have done so. I never know what to do in a situation of this, kind. Will you please had a death in our family, Is it propeir to send out Christmas cards as usual? I have heard .it was considered bad teste. NEEDS TO KNOW top “Fm-Dancing with a Dblly with a Hole in her stocking”? And foe “Big Apple” should have oeen left in the Garden of Eden. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN • DEAR ABBY: Why do adults make fun of t e e n-agers? They laugh at our clothes, our hair styles, our music and our dencagr-—— If foey would just sit back and 1 remem-, ber what they M were like m when they I were teen ■ 1 agers, maybe' || they would a stop criticiz- M ingwtteasea At If foe person with whom -■ print this let- a you.were lunching was busy.- ter, Abby. It'™ looking at the menu or other- means an aw-wise occupied, ,it was not nec- ful lot to us kids, essary to introduce her. DISAPPOINTED IN ADULTS But if she sat there doing DEAR DISAPPOINTED: nothing and foe other person Adults who make fun of to-lingered at . your table, then day’s teen-agers must have you should have introduced amnesia. . . her. Ask them to refresh their Keloa Alumnae committee members came early to set up the tea table for the annual pre-Christmas event. Mrs. Marion&odges Renter, East Iroquois Road (left); Mrs. David Tucker, Old Orchard Drive; and Mrs. Gerald Flessland, Empire Street, mere among those working Saturday at the YMCA. Alumnae home for Thanksgiving and present members, as well as the auxiliary group: enjoyed a social afternoon. Sponsor Drive fprChfisIraiaS The Women’s. Committee of Pontiac Motor Division UAW' Local 653, is sponsoring a Christmas gift drive for patients at Pontiac State Hospi- DEAR ABBY: Hdw does a host and hostess get rid of a guest who has been invited tof a cotfktail party- from five until seven but hangs around as long as drinks are being served and a few others remain? This can be very embarrais-sing when orte has invited, say, 30 for cocktails and only 8 for dinner, immediately following the cocktail party. Thank you. ' PARTY GIVER -DEAR PARTY GIVER: There is NO way “grScJtfully” to inform a gue§t that his welcome has expired. You will never out - drink him, so either hand him his hat, or Invite him to slay for dinndr. (And remember him foe second time around.) . DEAR NEEDS: A death in foe family is no reason to withhold holiday greetings to, your friends. Send them as usual. Pre-Christmas Tea for Keba Alumnae They are asking local members donate gifts such as candy, cigarets, nanHes and small articles of‘clothing. Items can be left in a container at foe union hall, where interested persons can also get more information. - . CONFIDENTIAL TO “BEATINGMYKKAINSOUT AT V.M.I.”: Perhaps this old Chinese proverb . will help: “Re who knows not, and knows not that he knows not is a fool. !Shun him. He who knows not, and. knows that he knows not is a child. Teach him. He who/ knows, and knows not that he knows is asleep. Wake - him. He Who k n o v s and knows that he knows is a genius. Follow him.” ■ For Abby’s booklet, “How TO Have A Lovely Wedding,” send 80 cents to Abby, care of Tim J^atiaOPrsps. advise' foe? Keloa Alumnae, gathered for foe annual pre-Christmas tea Saturday In' the YMCf0 club- ABBY Kappa Delta Tea for Both Groups Presiding at foe tea table were lama C. Hook, honorary sponsor; Carol Jo Go-doshian, Keloa Auxiliary president; Mrs., Donald Bronson, Mrs. Donald Bailey, Mrs/Max Evans and Mrs. David Tucker, past presidents of Keloa.. Watch Towel Size Keep laundering a simple job by buying towels in sixes and weights that Will be easier to handle for home washing - drying, and more economical at per pound laundry rates. The December meeting of. Kappa Delta sorority, South Oakland Alumnae Association, will be a Christmas tea for both afternoon and evening groups.' The affair will be held at foe Birmingham home of Mrs. Richard Mange, Deo. 10, from ,1 to 3 p.m. The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this in Drayton Plains Capture the starry magic of Christmas Rev. Walter J. Teeuwtesen They carrion tenflarlna oar-Jr. officiated at foe nuptials nations and yelfyw pompons, of Ann Leie Lowrie and Rob- Talisman ipses accented ,bou-ert Lewis Giilis, Saturday, in quet for Ellison Murton of Defoe Dayton Plains Unit efi troit, her cousin’s maid of Ptasbyterian Church. ' ......... A supper reception in the Coral Reef room of'Airway Lanes followed the candlelight ceremony. William Giilis assisted his brother as best man. They are foe sons of Mr. and Mrs, Louis Giilis of^Clarkston. Danne Sullivan of Flint, Earl Lewis Daughter of the Keith Low- of Lachine and James John-ries of Andersonville Road, ' son comprised the usher list, the bride appeared in a gown of white peau satin. Aiencon lace applique edged the Sabrina neckline and accented a Dior bow-on her chapel train. BLUSH VEIL a A lace-covered pillbox held her blush veil of French illusion and her bouquet includ- j ed white roSes, carnations and Stephanotis. ‘____ nmiiliync with a unique new concept of contour UllllnUllMO mountings for unexcelled brilliance. Say it with perfection... a Merry Christmas that goes on saying "I lava you" for a lifetime. Orily a Regency Perfect diamond from Rosa can say it so well, so baautifully ... because there's something special about a perfect diamond. Its wnmanred splendor and brilliance Is forever exciting, forever a source of pride. All-the romance of your love is tenderly expressed in a Regency Perfect Ving from Rose. Choose hers in exquisite contour settings of gleaming 14 karat gold. The bride is an alumna of Central 'Michigan University and member of Delta Z e t a sorority. The couple will liver In Rochester while he is attending the University of Michigan, Flint division. Perfect Diamonds Priced from $100.00 to $2500.00 Guest Is Hprtored Mr. and Mrs. Jerold Hice, Wearing identical gowns of YUvard - Street; entertained t a n g e 10 peau satin were Tang Thl Ti of Saigon, Viet bridesmaids Mrs. Richard Ed- Nam over the Thanksgiving erer of Saginaw, Mrs. Harold weekend, Mrs. Hice and her Knight of Tawas City and visitor were college friends at Mrs. Fred Metz of Clawson. *»MichiganState University. v Vse your credit! Convenient terms! 18 months to pay! 90 days like cash! dainty, fnmininn cam. 17-fawcl I Ann Lee Lowriei, [daughter of the Keith Lowries I Andersonville Road and Robert Lewis GilliS, son of Mr. and Mrs. I ^h°hiS’ Giilis of ClarkstOn were wed ^Saturday in the Dray ton Plains United Presbyterian i Church. KODAK INSTAMATIO (uf»n .... DftlllT NEW RONtON M200” “1M” CAMERA OUTFIT ELECTRIC SHAVER Extsluslva 'Safeguard Clip' Lightweight, streamlined does away wlth pushbut- design shave, fast, close, hm. a»kt .f cchn. OIH- tZ'fcSLfficSiJT W"1 <" *» sms Olft-boxed. w#n* If f TUrriHwiitrliiri'*- r • ~ a I PP'j - m MRS. ROBERT LEWIS,, GILLIS tmm MALL SHOPPING l Toon4gortl Opart Your Oi Rose really of Christmas givl^^ * THE' PONTIAC PRESS* MONDAY, DECEMBER &T96g' Shower Honors Rebecca Odell Odr Lady of Refuge'S for Exchange, of Vows Rebecca Ann Odell was honored Friday evening at a Unen shower in the S jw a n 'Lake home of Mrs. Charles Coppcrsmtth.'Assisting host*, tessm werrMrs: Allan Mcm-teithj- Mrs. Robert Haskins, Peg Coppersmith and Nanette Haskins. Twenty-five guesti), including the honoree’s mother, Mrs. Carmi J. Odell; ware present. • Miss Odeirwilt, wedRoger Laurance Clough of Chicago 'Use. it. He is the son of the Laurance L. Cloughs, Pelmar, -NX *•; accenting the fitted bodice' and full chapel-length skirt. ■ A petal headpiece held her trouffantveH^pure^ilkJOt, ltision. She carried a nosegay of white.carnations. ■ ■ Katherine -Ffernak! of Brown City was honor maid. Carol J6l£k m a n 0f Minneapolis, Mfon., defto- Ritter, and Mary Backus were bridal maids. . - • Satin trains highlighted their floor-length gowns of au--tumn rose velvet worn with pillbox hats. ..Their nosegays , were white and cinnamon car- ----[-----—II Pa^iria Diane Eckxnan ex- - changed nuptial vows with -ISKtSTHwH Thomas"Hugh Ritter before Msgr. Thomas ArttobfrSat-^ •35rnrjl; 1 urday in Our Lady of Refuge u00u UIQ uays Church, OrchardLake. ____Matins* . Daughter of the-Walter T. TOES.-Adult* Mo 0:45 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. the bride appeared in^white silk faille with Guipere lace THIS CHRISTMAS YOU CAN AFFORDi TO BE IN STYLE « at those wtindtrfltl SAVINGS Catherine RittSHvas-flower. girl Ind Gregory Ritter of Lansing carried the rings. The bridegroom, son of the Kevin J. Ritters of Edgefield Drive, had James Kennedy for best man. His, brother, Dennis Ritter ushered with Robekt Burns and Narbert Hofman. •' After the evening -reception in the VFW Hall, KeegO Harbor, the couple left for a New England honeymoon, r _ Mr. Ritter attended Detroit Engineering Institute._____ leather Suit; Hit the Beach THINK ABOUT GIVING. THRIFT DEFT. . Leather swim-Suits are. just liWffHMMhe corner-for one wellJmowtTm3tST~'———£= AND SI$T than swimming itr such a suit; However, Tecent technological improvements have produced a lightweight, malleable leath--erwMelr kisses-offwater-and retains its (and the wearer’s) shape. * eral Savings of Oakland, are (left) Mrs. Karl Schultz of Ogdyke Road, chairman, and . (right) committee South Sharon Street. Admiring an arrangement designed by Mrs. Bud Holznagle of Kenwick Drive (center) for the Sotoptimis&Glu&of-PoniimaMtml^ Kard - Kapers, Friday, at f- First Ffd- STYLEDHAIR SHAPING Husbahd Worth More Than Bank Fund TINT TOUCH-UPS ZOTOS AlivetandLovcly (iOLD WAVE # e™ on how I can get started now? Pat, RosSford, Ohio Dear Pat: I’m all for knowing wEat you want to do and going after it. Talked your situation over With one OL the finest music schools in the country and -theirjuivice is tWpr Don’t rush into training. There’s such a thing as injuring your voice by putting too much strain on it too early. ...... ■ ^ harder to do because a person always needs things and when you have the mon^y in your.. hand it is hard to put it away. What do you think? Afra^Al_AJH., Amboy, Wash. By MARY FEELEY Consultant hi Money Dear Miss Feeley: My husband and I recently sold some property and will have about $10,000 coming to us. Now'the. question is, we have About $700 worth of small debts which we intend to clear up. This I am in ! favor of, but. on the next question my husband and I are divided. We bought a new car a year Thrift Dept. Open lateTuesday, Thursday. Friday Evenings My reasoning is that “a bird in the hand is Worth two in the bush.” My husband says “We could put the amount we pay back in the bank, little .by little.” Please ask about donnell’s Styling Salon Price* Dear Mrs. H.: Looking at the situation strictly from a money point of view, you’re paying out five and one-half to eight per cent interest on tbe caiuJUUyQiL bank the entire $10,000, your money will earn, say, 4 per cent. So you’re putting out more than you will be taking in. ^ J grant you the human instinct is to spend rather than SApd very likely you n’t put an amount equal to the car payments into your savings account Regularly. But even if yon .pay Off the $2,200 in one swoop, plus the $700 in small debts, you’ll, still have better than $7,000 to stash away. That’s not a bad emer-. gency fund. ' *' ':- Of course, if you could make that $10,000 earn more interest than you’re paying on the car, the answer would be simple— invest the $10,000 and keep on with your car payments. But you can hardly expect that kind of guaranty on ahy investment. EjlSilHill St Iwitcutincluded BEAUTY SALON; 2nd Shampoo uiSeff* Margie’s “Waldron** Beauty Salon PSRMANINTS rfhV- jn AS LOW AS CU.JU Marge Salisbury, Owner •ml e nu,. ct am hjMIt MRS. T. H. RITTER Open 9*? Sat. 9-6 donnell’s PONTIAC MALL 682-0420 Appointment not alway nocCuary . MEET to EAT HIKER FOUNTAIN In the lobby of the . a. Riker Building ' IS W. Huron Sf, ZENITH a great new STEREO valuel MOTOROLA 19 Inch Portable "Roll-around” TV Tuesday Morning, 9:30 at thfe Pontiac Mall Community Room .“Woman’s World” Since you aren’t goihg to be too bad off financially either way you decide, my observation is: marital harmony is your most important consideration. If this matter has become a real bone of contention, one of you should gWe in: And Which one? WeU, yon know which of you has tiie greatest capacity for stubbornness! For thousandsof years it has proved a pretty goad rule to let the man be the head of tiie house. ZENITH FM/AMTable Radios RUBY DUNSTON .. of Dutoton Flowers A. H. BEYERS... Christmas Tree Grower V',1. Will Present “GREATER SATISFACTION FROM YOUR CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS’* 9:30-10:00 A, M. — Coffee Time 10:90-11:00 A. M. — Formal Program 11:00-12:00 A. M. -rn Informal Question and Answers FRGIDAIRE Freezer below . . . priced low! General Electric Automatic Washer * Dear Miss Feeley: I am 11-years-old and in the eighth grade. I have a good voice, and like to listen to the radio, because 1 love to sing along with the records..... .'*........ I’d like to be a singer and a recording star when I get older. But I would very iquch like to get started now. Could you please give me some advice 1963 Modol .Closeouts A sift that show how much son Wily "dirt" Tho.JJIC 12 lb. capacity deluxe Vnodel with ill plus featureic Water level eontrol, temperature eonlrola, load aiie control and tnuoh, mueb more. - free Delivery- , Flee I nit filiation A big deluxe family size Refrigerator-Freezer at our season’s lowest -price... In* time for Christmas. Features large automatic ‘ defrost refrigerator and 1$3 1b. capacity freezer. 1963 Model Closeouts RCA VICTOR Total Sound Stereo Hurry . .*» only 5 left of these beautiful furniture styled stereos. Only, 47% Inches wide, 0 speakers, 4-speed auto, changer, FM/AM Stereo Radio. FRIGID AtRE Now fabric eolootor mate hat. hen to fabrlo tifoly drying any mo* . , tsrial. For a limited lime, FRKS. IiiMaliaiinn Ineludee 220 voir wiring on Detroit Kditon linen. ONLV $140 110 DOWN Ills ;* % ; ADMIRAL \ / | Deluxe Portable PhonogniphCj ^ rirantlfiil modern, comport styling. Plays «U (lie, *0 Include* Record Cate, 10 Record*, 4!t rpm iplndlc Reserve One Now for hr ip nut* 'Eve DeRveryt Al| Men Are Cordially Invited to Attend HOOVER Deluxe > Upright Sweeper Modeling *-i- Refreshments of PONTIAC elegnt. Modern Myling 51 West Huron w«- ■£$, * * * have one delivered Christmas Eve OPEN TONIGHT •TIL 9 P;M. Jy : { THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, jbECEMSER 2, 1968: The word adobe comes from -Egypt. Coptic descendants of ancient - Egyptians . called mud brick "“tobey” dr “dobey.”. Moors transmitted the name to fheSpanlards, who ultimately took adobe brick-making to the American Southwest. be »Htart-look smart TfO CLASSES 1 Teachn to 1 Papil Plan II Ability-Grouped Woikshopt Open at Seduced Jfafosll PrefMMT *1 K.M.U. PHONICS-READING f* 5-6212 CLINIC Mrs. Lem Stkkney, North Fraitr cis Street.PTA presid^atPoritiac’ CentraiMxghrSchool, listens inona^ rehearsal. Dennis O’Neill, Walce Street (fronV and John Ddelt, Ogemaw Road, are accompanists for the student■ group presenting a hopt-, enanjiy Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the 'poys’ g^m; P~rocee^ from the concert wiWgo to the PTA scholarship fWKd."*KcUOts We avaUabJe^at the door. ' $ pL'. Junior Musicals Program . The senior leaipiq of Ppn-tiac Tuesday Musicale gathered tor a Christmas pro-gram, Sunday, hi the home of Mrs; Glenn H.Griffin of Oge-maw Road. ^ #’ -★ ■ ★ ' Kay Sirling and Toth McCulloch; Jill Anderson and Jane Be(anger; and Cheryl .Smith apd Michael .^Veldon performed duets. The group sang carols with-instrumental accompaniment. hi it f , New members Patty Mach- iela and Jane Belanger were welcomed. j Raff Dry Towels Shake out wet towels before drying on a rack- or line. Huff dry in.an automatic drypr or request laundry lo do same. Smooth just-dried towels with your hands before folding and putting away. This removes wrinkles before they “set,” * The first time Christinas cards went on sale to the American public was in 1875. Prove Male Is Weaker Sex As any female could have told you, boys are the weaker sex! A team of Pittsburgh researchers has found that male infants, from birth on, are hit twice as often with “jitaph” infections that cause boils and’1’1 ikuflfo Ms m famalrlnfinita^ To make matters worse: many scientists believe the male of all species — human as well as other mammals—is unable to deal with his environment' as successfully as the female. An Evening Ceremonyfdr Local Couple Dr. Milton H. Bank official-: rd at the marriage of . Joan Colette Lehman and Daniel4 Lee Johnston Saturday in the Central Methodist Church. A reception in the Knights of. Pythias'' hall followed the, evening ceremony, . y Parents Of the newlyweds are the Walter H. IAbjnans of North Tilden Avenue and the Clarence M. Johnstons of ' Scott Lake road. Medallions of Chantilly lace accented Ute-judneess-bodiceT skirt front, and chapel train of the bride’s bouffant gown of white nylon taffeta. 'She wore a veil of French, illusion with. lace4 and pearl tiara, and ear-.-ried gardenias w i t h Steph-'anotis. blue satin with matching nylon .bodices were Sharon Geasler, maid of honor, and the bridesmaids, MTs.: Duane Spurlock, M r ‘s. Warren Webber, Linda Rouse and Jackie Gottschalk. , ... CARRIED MUMS Their bouquets' we5T "white" Fuji chrysanthemums with blue-tipped Stephanotis -designating the honor attendant. Brothers of the bridal couple, Max, George and Richard Johnston with Richard Lehman, seated the wedding guests. Warren Webber was best man. /rfthr a brief northern hon--eymoon, 4he couple will-live-on Liberty Street. Check T runk Load * The Chicago Motor Club ad-vises motorists not to overload the car trunk. Top much, weight in the rear of the automobile. affects the hnlnnpfl there?s still time • . to have your furniture OPEN THURSDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS K milk, the protein ‘ foods, fruif juices and fruits and vegetables: These are* the years when - acne_ threatens because of the increased activity”bFfoer~0fl- A linen and bafordbm shower honored bride elect Jennifer Clark of Diff Road on Kat-~urffay.~'~ Ann Hodges, who will be maid of honor fftr MIm fflnrk^ Dec. 7, opened her Ottawa . Drive home for foe affair. Some 25 guests attended. foe luncheon affair.'Among those present were Mrs. James Scott of Memphis, Tenn,, who will be bridesmaid for her sister, and Lynn Vieriech of New Orteahs* La.r who will also be a bridesmaid. Also present were foe hon-• wee’s, mother, Mrs. John Clark apd Mrs. Charles A. Stark, of Carlos Drive, mother of .the future bridegroom Fred Louis Stark. V ■ ’'A, > ALL Permanents Before Christmas glands. . Blackheads often oc-company the oily state. Making down ratKer >“than making -up .is essential for a pretty skin. RGMQVE MAKEUP ' At night remove your makeup thoroughly with two shapings and warm water rinsings so - that your- cosmetics don’t ' have a chance to clog your pores. AJso Wash your face with l soap and water a couple of , times during the day. Tweezing your eyebrows mays# he a new event in your grooms ' ing curriculum. Study your face to see what shape is best for you. material* and axoert workmanship ■throughout! Phone today — we'll be glad to bung fabric samples to your home. •No obligation! \«5srsr Sis. and Set , : ‘t#, Now . . . with new lanolin neutralizing.' Give your hair new life, strength, and brilliance with the permanent fjhat adds precious lanolin while it creates a soft long lasting wave. mWb to 35% FRISKY HOULYWOOD ^BEAUTY SHOP EASY BUDGET TERMS OR 90 DAYS CASH All Workmanship' ' Guaranteed S Years Our Cuddly, Comfy Shearling Boot with gold elasticizing, hook and eye.*So wonderful to give and to marvelous to get. In Red, Peacotk, Blue, Jt 333.9660 Soda Stops Fire If fat catches fire in a skil-Tet or broiler, throw beking soda on foe blaze. Soda smothers the fire by forming carbon dioxide gas which shuts out the oxygen. ^ Mallard Serving Oakland County Over “/|fi So Pleasant Shopping in Bloomfield" 32 Years FOR THE HOME s Hand Hooked Caealc«r e Baldwin Percussion Ensemble • Self-contained , 3-channel amplification Authentic Replica of Charming Antique MILK GLASS LAMP Perfect for Earty American de- 1 - 1 cor, with Its milk glass shade and base ... gleaming solid O-w pd brass fittings , . . and crystal I LL font In choice of ambttr, blue. - I t) or ruby. 3-way switch. Stands 201/2" high. .? J Perfect^ for dll jrood-seat chain! SPINET ORGANS Early Ahnerican CHERRY TABLES win Spinet Oran Will Yon Find Such Qnallty In ; O CLARINET * VIOLINS • TRUMPETS. ■ niter *1 the keyboard of the Baldwin, no .matter ire • professional or' beginner, will Instantly you can find In no other home organ don't -today) Also, available wlfh the Leslie speaker. FREE PRIVATE LESSONS Specially Priced! .Handsome tablet In the authentic desighs of colonial? days ... with a deep, hand-rubbed finish that brings out all the beauty of the rich cherry wood! Wonderful gift for the homi.' wrosomc CHOOSE YOUR PIANO. as the ARTISTS DO!! The wonderful new Baldwin pianos will-charm you completely ■•. let-us show you oar latest, models They are built |tf rigid standards, with the lightest gotlon of any piano in the world today. Deep, rich, resonant tones - found only in the BALDWIN ACROSONIC PIANOS. Above: COMMODE TABLE 27" long, 20" wide, 22" high Left: ROUND LAMP TABLE 25",diameter, 24" high . Below: .COCKTAIL TABLE 48" long, 20" wide, 19" high Available in Mahogany, Walnut, Cherry or1 Ebony finishes > LAYAWAY NOW! A Small Deposit Will Bold for Clfriigtttuis, Delivery NO OUTSIDE FINANCING NECESSARY MUSIC COMPANY 4080 Telegraph Rd. At Long Lake Road 644-7370 Open Every Night, 'Ml Christmas ‘ 24vW. Huron St. In Downtown Pontiac ' FE 4-1234 Open Evpry Night, •'til Christmas _ . . 11^ North Saginaw ^ ,y . FE 5-8222. I THE PONTIAC PRESS MOCTAY, DECEMBER 2, 1963 Traffic Deaths Reach Marie foT3ed Year The count during the 102*hour period which started at 6 p.m. (teal, ffin^^lfoffiesdiy and ended at midnight Sunday showed 510 persons lost their lives in motor vehicle accidents. The death toll during last year’s four-day Thanksgiving Weekend was SH, the highest since The Associated Press started the count for the holiday peribd in 1958. The low toll for the holiday is 412, set in 1900. —; : Deaths appeared running-at about the rate of a nonholiday weekend until Sunday when with heavy traffic on the highways, about130 fatalities were reputed. Highway deaths in the first nine months Ibis year have av-eragedaboutlWa FAMILY HOLIDAY The National Safety Council All "Super-Right" Steaks art , cut from Mature, Grain-fad Beef DM ^otquAiiry’ Roasts advance of the holiday. Officials said Thanksgiving is a family holiday and highway travel fa "Super-Right" Quality weekend at this time of year. ...The. Associated Press, for comparative purposes, made a survey of a nonholiday period of 109 hours from 6 p.m. Wednesday Not. 13 to midnight Sunday Nov. 17 and counted 477 traffic deaths.. ★ ★ . w There were several multiple-death accidents. The latest was Sunday night near Glenville, W.Va. Six persons were killed in a head-on crash on a mountain highway near foe northern West Virginia community. There was one survivor ^n each A&P SAVES YOU MORE ON MANY, MANY LOW MEAT PRICES Not Just a Few Specials,*. Pork Lotus FORDO Whole Fryers Frying Chickens Chicken legs » Chicken Breasts Sliced Bacon *• "SUPER-RIGHT' QUALITY Thick-Sliced Bacon 2 Polish Unveil Memorial to Nazi Camp Victims WARSAW, Poland » - A memorial for the 000,000 victims of the Nasi concentration camp in Beiaec near Lublin was unveiled yesterday. Bebec was bufit by the Nazis as an extermination camp, mostly for Jews from ell over Europe. When the Russians advanced westward hi 1944, die Germans abandoned the camp, evacuated the Inmates and 1-U: 13-OZ. CANS ' 141. A&P Pineapple 3 Iona Tomatoes Crispy Critters” Hormel's Spam Peaches SPECIAL SALE Grapefruit Vanilla, Chocolate, Neapolitan, Butterscotch-Marble, or Pudge-Marble , CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakland Art. FI 4-9191 Fudgsides JJuper Markets Del Monte Catsup 2 m Waxed Paper ■ 'ss- 29* 23* MARVEL—A&P's Fine Qualif ICECREAM r M HEINZ or BEECH-NUT BABY FOOD — ALi ST1AINID VARIRTMS 10 89 • All MeatVarleties Campbell Soups ^ 97* Kraft's Salami Dressing NUmdeWUp “45* CIAPPY STRAINID Baby Foods VEOKTABLI VARIRTMS Campbell Soups ANN PAOI CORN OH Margarine 12^ 99c ■Nart.Onlm, dL MO. ^W^UC “A ^ 00* ■P QTR’D jg gf f Roman Cleanser KINO SIZE SURF •LIACHfeS AND A AeJusne DISINFECTS ffg BOTTLE B 89*™ JHB MQfXlAC PBESS, MOJSnDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1868 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY DECEMBER 2, 1963 AT DRASTICALLY INDUCED PRICES NYLIN SUE WEEK OF SALE! We Close at 5:30 P.M. L Saturday Karen's have over $200,000 In fine breadloom carpet to offer, the people of Oakland County her this tale Because of our high volume, we ore able to sell of big savings to you! Check ear price. See for yourself We guarantee to save you money on any brand of carpet available. Stop at our show room at 452$ Dixie Hwy and see thousands of yards of, brand name carpet in every conceivable quality, texture, pattern, weave arid color p tweeds, wools, cottons, acrilans and nylons. Be assured, buy with confidence. Karen's is by for the largest and finest carpet store in the Pontiac area Don't buy o yard^bf cdrpet until you get Karen's price.* Remember quality for quality. Korea's will not knowingly be undersold Ever! • . * DUPONT SPECIAL Sale Price COLORS raa Rio Coco—Coffee Kljl ¥Wri^ds|-5^BlueN jgftJJj Persian Blue-4stec Gold Rosewood - Avocodo Bronze—Surf Green , Spanish Gold—Chany Wlina French Martini—$orffle Beige JMS1MUEII OYER RUBBERIZED PAD Just imagine ... 30 yards of this stfft# 100% DuPont Nylon in your home for 12.28 per COLORS Cocoa-Bronze Rea-Autumn Brown Topaz Royal Blue White Frosted Cocoa Mist-Green Beige COLORS tatoPrjo* Antique Gold -Maple Sugar R7G1 Glad* Graan-Blue Flams CjLgXSfiJ Cordovan-Dawn Grey FmI Sand—Coppsrtons Crams dsMsnth-DsIta Blus Save $S / Biscuit Balga-Bay Leaf Per yard Save $3 Per Yard 100% 501 NYLON PILE Savanna by Alexander Smith ' Dealers Cut Order Price KAREN’S CLEAN-OUT PRICE * I Contlnuou* Filament Nylon 11010 YEARS IN WRITING 3 ROOMS INSTALLED WALL TO WALL 30 TUBS INSTALLED < OVER RSBOERIZED PAD 5 Just Imagino v m. 30 yards of this 100% Dupont Nylon In your homo for only $9.46 per month. 30 YARDS INSTALLED OVER RURRERIZED PAD Just Imagfn.... 30 Yards of thl. 100% Dupont Nylon In your hum. for 8.35 por month. COLORS: 100% WOOL PILE PACE by MOHAWK 1-ROLL: BEIGE TWEED Cost ' KAREN’S CLEAN-S' rd. OUT PRICE ... v Think Karpet 100% WOOL PILE AXMINSTER SAXONVILLE fay RGXBUR Y 2 ROLLS ONLY ... . Dealers Cut Order Cost KAREN’S GLEAN- $C4 v «|.Yd. CUT PRICE 10 YEAR UNCONDITIONAL WEAR GUARANTEE Karan'* Heaviest and finest 501 Nylon Carpet Made to Sell for*14»* Sq. Yd. Save *4 yd. on This Special Offer) Think Karen's COLORS: 100% CAPROLAN NYLON PILE WESTERN Trails by MODERN tufting 0,,lw» Sirt Order 7 KAREN’S GLEAN-OOTf fc HI D«kAM turquoise 30 YARNS INSTALLED SAID ORIENTAL PLUM IH.H Ninthly "flU ROSEWOOD HONCYOOLD PALTINUM BEIGE MANHATTAN BLUE SURF GREEN RIO COCOA CHIRKYWINl WILD HOlMEY avocado AZTEC GOLD BROPjZI STRAW BIIOE 4628 Dixitr Hwy. DRAYTON PLAINS KAREN1 KAREN1 YARDS CASH PRIGS Monthly Paymonts..... 35-o $308 $10.87 40 7 $351 $12.39 45 $395 *13,94 50 $439 s $15.50 55 $483 $17.04 6Q 3527“ *18.59 YARDS CASH PRICE MONTHLY PAYNMTS 35 / $406 $14*33 40 $464 * $16*5$ 4$ 1 $522 $1141 50 *530 *20.44 v -J*# $638 t $22.54 7 _l40 $696 *24.05 YARDS CASH PRICE MONTHLY PAYMENTS 35 $270 $ 9*75 40 530* $10.87 45 $346 $12.21 50 $385 ■ *13.59 55 1423 . $14.93 60 *442 416J0 YARDS CASH PRICI Monthly Pay. 35 • $48$ 3 $17.22 40 US* “ .$19*69 $628* *22.18 50 | $698 $24.12 fill $768 *24.4* 6P * $136 “ $28.82 | 1—--3B— ■; AwawMeBbeu* T«t, vmmmm - m JvKbdKk* 1 vumi i ni$21 "7 - Nyfan nUeMWGroon ^ 105 - li WHBk 2! - -13x17-0 •: ■ Wool POe-liWtt.iAraiUgiiecinittt:: ■ *1159 ®S *jtit : 1 #2x15*0 ■ jiSif iMki&io i 15x9-8 : iiSiib-5 ■ ' AcrilanPlIe.Beiiie ' ' git Ife* pUyt Kiao > I 1*100 [S' ■ Super aOl.^r.F^.Martt.U M _ilI2 IJBujj Special 501 Nylon, Mushroom WSM i $100 12x14-6 Nylon Plu«H, Wi»t.rio HI *80 j&l l : Nylon Plushy Bamboo Beige ! « i; T fiS Mi fa 1 Rosevi^^I i1"pl$6 "-■ 2x1 3*1- Acritax Acriian Pile, Bamboo Belfflit,^ ^ $100 > - , -■»-tldurali|yfoh,i^rt B ::$83 • ^i'^ibIio' - Sttfter.501 iNylan PHa. Rasawoad . $102 i» Ct^lMoIdh Nylon Grean ® f n S fP ® )&' HytooeW.eo-n.OoW ..-foe *1*24' . ' U-Nyibn jBHf m! iMHW 77$^$' • i Mil ''s^fol 501NYf^^efoH^:f^tH $80 ifili m ^hmISEB S' ffp Super 501 Nylon, Avocado " ' * ' '. 11. $96 t50i Nyli»n, /Island Grey'Wveed ^ ^ % ■■■■,12x1 l^jt 1 , . Meter Caprolan ffyfon, Clnnamen1' la | S : j feffiki-3'11 ■:;'5ii*^l'*dt'",Ni4eei-eM«*9^jA^'^'5 »saf Fill NyfonPlush,-Petdl'Wnk' ' 7 45 SHrTCT 1 Tycoro Nylon, Lilac m u mu j ^ I Kii wit ill i'JSi . HMI , 9x12 "'Mm. ■' NyiAnM.. PPf*S| S! ' IPSii?? 1 pi' *}f .. 1.12x84*0 : ■ . Ttwf4 , , . *42 -ifilf ■|tM4 1 CwOHiAcHleB,SoAdelwwd il» j;i;L2xlf5 1 12x8-3 H sIsj^bkIP . i )®$k10u1f) W*»l Wih»n. T.rtvr*i( B*io. ii || „.p9 10-4x10-0 SMkil 501 IMmi. Ofn «? ®l R- «|* 10x10-4 SOTjMyfow PlNbSeeh TweecF:: [ 7 ■ SoweSOI Nyton,SkrMm. jfffljffia;.. f'p THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1968 .rote^-Jad^Daughertyr^r* father of three, after his attest. His wife, Jacqueline, 30, was reported in fair condition at • Detroit hospital.. • ■' ★ ★ '* ^,'1 Police said Mrs. Daugherty told t*M«» her husband shot her twice in the stomach when she threatened to leave him. Daugherty attoiptod to kill himself with a third shot from, his service revoiver hut failed police Ask Raisa for Kfag________ KUALA LUMPUR (AP)-Ma* laysia’s Parliament- will be asked to raise die king of Malaysia’s living allowance from 172,000 a year to $88,000 a year, thenewspaperStraitsTimes te-, ports. The state of California produced almost $600 million worth of gdld between 1849, when the Peking Raps "Aggression- t- ——the plane a I Is fatal to Pitot LA GRANGE, Ga. 1» ~ A * U2 plane which. went down in l the Gulf of Mexico Nov. K0 1 carried the pilot to his dead!, * the Air Force; says. w Members of the family of A Coast Guard cutter found die wreckage of die high-level reconnaissance plane about 40 miles northwest of Key Vest, Fla., the day after die crash. DETROIT (AP) —An 10-year force was held todajrforhivesti-gation of felonious assault in die shooting and wounding of Ws wife Saturday night. TOKYO (AP) -t The Peking People’s Daily, official Red Chinese organ, called today for d? forth to 8top 'what it termed intensified U.S. aggression in South Viet Nam. {pild rush started,' aud 1869. Easy way out is to ask her *mies in the Libyan Desert. U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED TENDER, PLUMP, WHOLE California, Sunkht, Soodlou Naval VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON An article by the paper’s so-called commentator again charged die United States engineered the Nov. 1 military coup in Saigon and said ’^.S. 4mper-ialism is going all out to'step up its aggressive war in South Viet Nam.” “ ■ The article, broadcast by the New China News Agency .and monitored here, asserted that “only by waging a resolute _______________ UtS. Imperialist maneuvers^ military and political, can U.S. imperialism be made to end its aggression and honor the Geneva agreements.” Tulsa Bank OpensWffh New Policy Mart Fac Charge of fi Threat on LBJ BONUS Extra Stamps TULSA, Okta. (AP) - The Southern Hills National Bank of Tulsa reopens today, but die name is the only thing similar ‘'to the operation that was shut down Nov. 8. Southern Hills was ordered closed by Comptroller of Currency James’ Saxon when a noservice-charge "offer to bi"‘ depositors caused more busl-ness than could be handled. REQUIRED CHARGE Hie new directors are head-edby Lynn R. Helm, president ef the National Bank of Commerce in Tuba. Saxon also required the new bank to have a service charge on checking accounts. ★ «« ★ All accounts of the defunct Southern' Hills National Bank will be transferred to the new model bearing the same name with an “of Tuba’’ added. Many Tulsans who took advantage of the no-service-charge offer found themselves without funds when the bank closed. Unless they had other funds, they had to depend on merchants to hold their checks until the bank opened. TOO MUCH TIDED UP As the days stretched Into weeks, many businessmen found themselves with too much money tied up. Signs became mmmnn in Tulsa stores reading, “Southern Hills checks not accepted.” Hie new directors ran full- Blue Ribbon Large VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON E l Blua Ribbon Orodo A <* m. c.„ I URGE EGGS 39* ST Limit On# Damn With TMO CovM* lib Tha rurtoooo MJfM or ltSTti Del Monte Cream or Whole Kernel CORN VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON WOO*. Kt39eW Limit On# With TMt Coupon and tho PurchiM o# WiO# #r Mat* axcHMIno Boor, Win# or Tobacco. Coupon Mm Wadnoadoy, DMOmbdf 4, IHL Limit Odd tolling depositors, “You may start enjoying the normal and rightful convenience of your account Monday morning.” Save 21c 699* Dal Mont# Cling, Sliced or Halvoi WASHINGTON (AP) - Robert A. Weatherlngton, 40, was to he arraigned today in General Sessions Court on a charge of having made an oral threat against the life of President Johnson. 5N*r99* mmTcocicTAiL4^89’ catsup “ter 6 us*-99* IM Monte -Save tlf TOMATO JUICE t *-‘89* Secret Service agents arrest- _ ed Weatherlngton at his home Saturday night. ' Police said Weatherlngton has a record of erratic behavior. He was Identified as a former federal construction engineer. PRINT DRINK W 2 ^ WAS DISCHARGED Hie agents, said WeSthering-ton complained that be had been discharged by the Army Corps of Engineers because of a nervous condition,' He alleged that tha President and heads of time local'banks were involved -in • news blackout of files w‘' * would clear hto record. Dol Mont#.$avo 9o 3 4£.‘ 89* TUNA 4’2? 99* ide —• Sava lie BMP HASH IHYGRADE CHILI eggs39 Gold Modal, Robin Hood or Pillsbury ^ flour 39 Michigan Pionetr SUGAR!™ Morton or Banquet Froztn n ildOz Al DINNERSJl Country Kitchen—Sore 9e \ ^ COTTAGE CHEESE --19 Florid* Seed*** ttAKHNN 3&q«®1 4£*|h 45 S. TELEGRAPH & HURON-PONTIAC MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 TO 9 — SATURDAY 8 TO 9 1495 N. MAIN-ROCHESTER MONDAY, TUESDAY, SATURDAY 9 TO 6-WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY, FRIDAY 9 TO 9 i THEPONTIAC PRESS MONDAY^ DECEMBER 2, 1963 Russian Report oh Oil Spurs Brazil to Pursue Developriient reported that Brazil’s petroleum possibilities were small. He found promising areas in Bahia and other northeast states but said, in general, Brazil's geological makeup was • not promising. Wells inBahia. turn outmost of1 Brazil’s anneal production ol 84 million barrels. and. has announced plans to buy | tion claim it is- top-heavy other exploration equipment I Communists. Silva, a left from - Poland, Russia and pos- er, has said he-to unable to sibly the-Ujiited States.- firm or deny that there Enemies of the state corpora* | Communists in Petrobras. ® Two .Soviet scientists — one a petroleum engineer! the other a specialist in Soviet-manufactured drilling equipment-spent nearly six months here this year and studied previous reports, fo- Silva quoted scientists E. A. Bakirov and E. I. Tagiev as saying they found Link’s “pes-‘ simistic and negative evalua- The company hired Walter Link, former chief geologist for Standard Oil, and commissioned hlm -to chart Brazil’s potential opinion that there doesn’t exist petroleum in grand scale in Brazil is not exact," tag equipment, accelerating installation of injection sys-*stems (perfected by the Soviet Onion) in *»tatfag «ril previewing the same step for other fields ofiriagnitade.” At another point the scientists advocated "introduction, of the ! use of‘turbines f&r drilling.” The turbo-drill is another method pushed by the Soviets.« Silva in presenting the report dwelled on Soviet advances in AT HQMWN YOUR SPARE TIME AS LOW AS CjrAA Americans Getting Y and Older ctfthe Same Time FREE BOOKLET nationalistJsader.—------^ The campaign slogan in battling for a state oil company was "The Petroleum Is Ours,” The stafo company was created cent were those of people over 65 who fall. JLONGEST SERMON The longest sermon, delivered , by Clinton Locy of West Rich-mond, Wash., in 1955, lasted 48 hours and 18 minutes. When he finished, eight members of the congregation still were on hand. There are 15,000 different kinds of wine in the world. Chess is the most ancient game of pure skill Portugal has nonfarm families has mi income of $10,000 or more a year. New England folklore: If it shows foe day you marry, you will wind tq> rich. If a young giri likes cats better than dogs,' she will bebome an old maid. If you’ve tost all your teeth, you’re suffering from agomphi-asis, or toothlessness. Turkeys are polygamous. The baby who doesn’t fall downstairs before he is -a year old jrUL tumult a fooL By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)—Things a columnist might never: know if he didn’t open hisjmail:». " As more of us are bom and more.of us Jive longer, Amerl- petrofoum technology. . I “The U.S.S.R. is one of the • most advanced countries in the I world in petroleuln technology,” ) he said, adding that Soviet-made i equipment "challenges the Eng-> lish and American-made prod-; ucts for first place in the world market.” Brazil products about 100,- get ting both older and younger. By 1970, it is estimated, | half the populsi-l tfon will be uti- HALF SOLES RUBBER HEELS TOE PIECES own- size. If you can’t read 250 words a minute,- you’re slower than the average. It was Benjamin Disraeli who observed, “Every man has a right to be conceited until he ls successful.”- , 7 Experts say that about 75 per cent of the reading areas in American homes are seriously underlighted. j There are more than 28,000 deaths from home accidents each year — and' about 40 per •Venezuela sends 55 per cent of the imports. Saudi Arable In the last 15 /JJT ; years the per- r MY centage of file BOYLE i average consumer dollar spent on clothing has fallen from 13.7 J to 11F.I; but we’re spending more < on such things as housing, foreign travel, education and medical care. supplies 42.6 per cent. The Soviet Union 2 per cent and Algeria .4 per cent. „ ----------—r~ Petrobras has ordered 12 new sounding drills from Romania It has been found that kissing speeds ‘up the ordinary man’s pulse only five beats a minute. The greeting card industry reports that more 50 - cent ‘'To My Wife” Christmas cards are sold than 50-cent “To My Husband” cards.- Most wives prefer to stay in the 35-cent or under range. % Our quotable notables: “Sorrow is the mere rust of fin soul. Activity will cleanse and brighten it”—Samuel Johnson. FIVE PER ROOM In Singapore 29 per cent of the dwelling units contain more than five persons for each room. One in every five American EAGLE SCOUTS - Charles H. Fell (left) and Roger W. Putnam now have one more fiitag ta connnon. Both have at-tained the rank of Eagle Scout, the highest in scouting. Both also are 16 years old, juniors at Pontiac Central high school, members of scout troop No, 7, and residents of , W. Iroquois Road. Charles lives at 827 W. Iroquois, Roger at 369. MISTER OH There's priceless security for the whole family with oil heat. Fuel oil in your tank is like money in, the bank. It's yours when you want it... ready for instant use .. . and no one can deprive you of it! Regardless of weather conditions, or freak accidents to a central source of supply, nothing can take away your family's supply-vof fiiel oil. Keep your heating independence and family heating security with non-explosive oil heat. The pick of Santa's pack The handy wall phone hangs out-of the way in kitchen or basement workshop, makes phoning easier and more convenient ‘Wljen ordging Christmas extensions, why not include the Bell Chime ringer that announces » ; _ your calls with pleasant musical tones? ; Just call the Business Office or ask yovfr telephone man, and make your . choice of styles and colors. ,, , Right on top of Santa's pack this year are some colorful Christmas phones to make, living easier all year long. . The little Princess® phone, lovely in any of five colors, saves' space at bedside and chalrside, h^s a dial that lights up. . * The familiar desk set saves time and steps in den or family room-any room where your family makes and takes calls# SAFE—‘CLEAN—DEPENDABLE MICHIGAN BELL TELEP'COMPANY fill. •p/B-io. Ml THE PONTIAC; PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER ft* 4-H'ers to Hold Lower Peninsula Members! Will Close 1963 Projects Show Nearly4QG4-H Qubpiember^frpinthroughout the Lower Peninsul? will be closing, out 1963 livestock projects during the Detroit Junior Livestock Show in - Uie Motor City Doc: 9 ■ -Ifc.-..- • Sponsors of the 34th annual show ItlRFWichigan^ State Fairgrounds are the Michigan State University ■4-H Club department, and . industrial, business and livestock firms who are 2 Area Girls Are Co Winners f Two Oakland County girls were among the seven winners in the d i s tri-ct.-finals of the , Make. - It - Yourself - With-Wool Contest Saturday. Both Donna M. Horning, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Horning, 6420 W. Maple, West Bloomfield Township, and Kathy Grocner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Groener, 1678 Crooks, A v 0 n T o w n s h i p, carried home awards from the' Detroit com* petition. Donna’s royal blue dress was designated the garment best co-ordinated with the girl. The 16-year - old seamstress chose American loomed wool for her entry. members of the Detroit Junior Livestock Society. Society members and 4-H Club extension agents alike believe that the prime benefit of the show hi the education of youngsters who will be tomorrow’s commercial farmers and meat producers. . ; These youths learn more about producing the steaks and chops being demanded by i consumers through participation in this show. Ralph Morrow, M§JJ 4-H live-' stock specialist, expects a rac-ord' number of entries mid keen competition in the laipb, steer and pork carcass classes this year. The red wool dress which Kathy-wore to toe contest was named the best garment by a 14-year-old. CONTEST ENTRANTS The contest, sponsored by toe American Wool Council,, drew 37 entrants this year. Mrs. John E. Rose, 670 N. Adams, Avon Township, fas contest director for th4 district composed of Oakland, Lapeer, Macomb, Wayne and St. Claw counties. This is toe second year the competition has beta held in Michigan and the 17th in the nation. Exhibitors will judge their own animals “on-the-hoof” and in meat coolers of Detroit meat packing firms following slaughter to see the kind of steaks and chops they are producing., VIE FOR GLORY Youths not exhibiting carcass animals will arrive on Dec. lOr Judging will take place on Wednesday when youngsters vie for the glory and glamour that goes with owning one of tod grand champions. The 4-R’er« wlll stay at the Sheraton - Cadillac Hotel in downtown Detroit during toe week and wiU be special guests of toe society at the^ annual banquet Wednesday evening. • „ Special awards will -include recognition of toe grand champion exhibitors and showmanship winners together with the presentation of a four year MSU scholarship by. the Independent Slaughters of Detroit. Livestock buyers will be on hand for the annual livestock sale on Dec. 12 Which closes out the week’s activities. The buy-.... always active supporters of toe show, paid more than $101,-for some 700 lambs, steers and hogs last year. Yule Films to Be Shown In Lake Orion LAKE? ORION — A Christmas film treat is in store for students of Blanche Sims Elements School later this week. The movies “Christmas Spirit” and “The Uttlest Angel” will be shown along with cartoons and short subjects at 7,p. m. Friday and 1 and A 3:30 p. m. Saturday. * Tickets for the' movies will be sold, at the school tomorrow and Wednesday. Any tickets hot sold on these two days will be offered on a first-come, first-served basis the two days of the showings. Length of the movie plus cartoons and short subject will be IMr houhs. The shows are being sponsored by the school’s PTA, Walled Lake Area Sets School Talks Gypsy King] % Stabbed 5 Robbers DETROIT (ft—“Gypsy King” Thomas, Stanley was abducted and stabbed by four men and a woman who, he said, invaded his home last night and stole a bracelet made of gold coins. * ■ ★ . ★ Stanley, 51, who styles himself “King of the Gypsies,” Was in fair condition at Wayne (founty General Hospital today. Her underwent surgery for a stab wound in the left side of his abdomen. The bracket, containing fourteen $20 gold coins, was taken from Mrs. Rose Stanley, 25, nis daughter-in-law, Stanley said. Stanley told police toe five invaders forced him at gunpoint to leave his hqme and accompany them in a car. He said they freed him in Dearborn after stabbing him. A passing motorist saw Stanley lying at a curb and called police. , SANTA’S ROYAL HELPERS — Santa arrived in Oxford Saturday mid was aided by toe village’s Snow King and Queen handing out scores of candy canes to children who visited him in toe village park. Eight-year- old Jeff Chapman and Linda Conner were picked from 44 local children vying fur toe royal positions. Their parents are M$. and Mrs. Richard Chapman, 106 Spezia, and Mr. and Mr6. Bill Conner, 16, East. Stanley said he could identify all of toe group. He said they were gypsies from New York, Boston" and Washington, D7C." One of them threatened his life, he said. If Reports Warran Change Agriculture at MSU Faces Revise EAST LANSING (ft - Agriculture education at Michigan State University may be revised in 1964..-...*..... Courses and major fields how are being studied by committees that are scheduled to report their findings early next year. Changes — if found necessary or desirable — are slated to go into effect by next fall. ment, qr floraculture, or in farm equipment sale! and servicing. Among toe four-year students, toe most popular specializations are forestry, fisheries and wildlife, packaging, and agriculture education, Swenson said. MSU’s agriculture school last went through a revision in 1958. New majors were instituted, such as agriculture_science and aiplcultore bustness, while eight survey courses were dropped and the deglee of specialization required of toe student was reduced. TWO PRINCIPLES Two basic underlying principles in toe reorganization ward to increase the science content in pie curriculum and to students better preparation for graduate studies. Of toe students enrolled in undergraduate four-year programs, reports Richard Swenson, assistant dean and director of resident Instruction, about five per cent , now actually go to work on farms after graduation. A long-term survey of graduates showed that an average of about 11 per cent went into farming, Swenson said. mm IT-53 FREEWAY . — EXISTING ROUTES — OTHER ROADS to ENTRANCE AND EXIT qbmme UTICA BYPASS - A new lO.fr-mile stretch of highway will be constructed east, of Van Dyke where it passes through Utica, to eliminate the the traffic problem there now. * Bids for the $16.5-mllllop project, due for completion in fan 1965, will be opened Wednesday. The two Junior high schools In the Walled Lake district are | scheduling parent-teacher conferences for Thursday night, t The sessions will begin at 7:30 p, nf at Walled Lake Junior HJgh School, 615' N. Pontiac Trail, Walled Lakq, and at Clifford H. Smart- Junior High School, 8400 Commerce Road, Commerce Township. . Parents can make appo|pt-ments by Calling toe school offices. A much higher percentage of so-called “short course” students at MSU. go Into actual farming. YOUNG FARMERS ; About half the short -course students are enrolled In the young farmer program' and most of these go Into farm work, he said. The other half are enrolled In industry courses training them In grain'and elevator, i work, or landscape manage- While enrollment at toe East Lansing Campus jumped from 24,014 in fall 1962 to 27,669 this fall, agriculture school enrollment skewed comparatively slight changes. r CHANGES SLIGHT Enrollmenthrtoe unqlergrad-uate four-year course went from 1,155 to 1,176; graduate school figures weht from 467 to 498; while short course enrollment dipped from 392 to 378. , Agriculture school dean Thomas Cowden commented recently on agriculture education at a Chicago convention Music Slated Rochester of the Association of State Uuiverlities ’ and land-grant colleges. “Urn fact that agricultural enrollments may not increase as fast as other segments of toe university provides fl golden opportunity to,. prepare belter graduates,” he saia. Cowden also saw a pair of responsibilities for agriculture schools beyond the teaching of undergraduates. RELEASE SCIENTISTS One such responsibility involves releasing scientists from epm*teachingdutiesfor~parti» cipation in research projects sponsored by private funds, foundations and governmental agencies. Colleges of agriculture cannot retain their beat scientists without participating in some of these programs, Cowden The other new responsibility involves participation in foreign programs. ' 'Colleges of agriculture will have to accommodate themselves to having their best staff members away for extended periods,” he said. Before leaving the house toe group tied up Stanley’s wife, Anna, and toe younger Mrs. Stanley and her husband, George, 27. In another theft, Dr. Joseph Curhan, 55, chief of obstetrics at New Grace' Hospital,.reported theft of $13,500 in Jewelry from his home on toe weekend. Dr. Curhan said toe jewels were token from his wife’s jewelry box. He said $H3 hi cash also was taken. Police said a rear second floor window had been forced while the Curiums were away. ^|-0riorrfatlier Dies in Crash MARY ELLEN HARNED The engagement of Maty T^n HarnedTo John ML Mc-Daniel is announced Jty the bride-elect’s parents* Mr. and Mrs. Norman Haraed, 2150 Haroed, Troy. -Parents of toe prospective bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. C.'Earle Cook, 3846 Kern, Orion TJownship, A Jan. 18 wedding is plahned. Home Is Damaged by Blaze in Troy TROY 4 A fire yesterday at the home of Burton Taylor, 1012 Eimsford, destroyed toe utiHty .room and caused extensive smoke damage to toe bouse before it was brought under control by the TToy Fire Department. , Chief Lauren Ford Said flames were noticed ? bjr--Troy police shortly after midnight. The Taylor family, which was up north, were notified of the fire and have returned. Cause and an estimate of toe damage have not been deter-ipined. ' Milt,J? Dgyghter* v ^ Are Hoopjtatized ORION TOWNSHIP — An Orion Township father of three was killed In a two-car amash-up near Cadillac yesterday which also hospitalized his wife and two daughters. Jesse P. Mann, 55, ef 838 Orion, died shortly alter his car skidded through a- stop sign out onto M55, about 12 miles west of Cadillac. State Police from the Cadillac post said Mann’s car was hit broadside - by an automobile driven by Henry Zawacki of Manistee. They said toe pavement was wet from an earlier snowfall. ?* - ★ i Reported in good ;condition today at Mercy Hdjpital, Cadilr lac, are Mann’s wtfe Martha, 50, and his daughters, Kathy, 17, and Yvonne, 20. All suffered cuts and bruises. A son, Gregory, 15, was treated at toe hospital and released. , He is staying with friends of the Manns in CadiHac. $200,000 Borrowed by Rochester Schools nuwiwuBu The L-—---ter Community School District has borrowed $200,000 for operational purposes in anticipation of state aid. The announcement was made by the State Department of Public Instruction. Directors Set Parley on Adult Education Tickets Available for Annual Dinner HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Michigan directors of-adult education will discuss changes in their field during a two-day conference at Haven Hill Lodge this week. ROCHESTER — There is still t(me to make reservations for toe annual Christmas dinner of toe Rochester branch, American Association of University Women. Scheduled for 6:90' p.m. Dec.' 11, toe event will,be in toe ^Wn GIen Inh, Troy." A program of Christmas music and a seasonal play will be featured. Reservations can be made with either of toe cophairmen of toe event, Mrs. John Yasaitis, 190 Baldwin, Orion Township, and Mrs. Merelyn Marshall, 8500 Thendara, independence Township. Ex-Dom Senator Dies DEARBORN (AP) - Former Democratic State Sen. Patrick J. Doyle, 75, died Sunday in Wayne County General Hospital. Henry Ponitz, former chief of adult education for. the department of public instruction, will speak on “Reflections on Exploration in the Okl World" at 7 p.m. About 40 educators are expected to. attend the meetings, sponsored by the Michigan Association of Public S c h o ol Adult Educators (MAPSAE) and the Michigan Department of Public Instruction. The session will open at 9 a.m. Thursday at the lodge, 5200 Ford. G. P. O’Connell, of General M o t o r.8* educational relations section, will open Friday’s session with a speech entitled “The | New Frontier in Adult Education.” "X council debate and chuck wagon luncheon will dose toe conference at 12:30 p.,m. An open discussion period will be held at 10 a.m. Topics will indude dropouts, selection of classes and teachers, publications, annual reports and f 1 nances. STATE RESPONSIBILITY Df. Ferris N- Crawford, assistant .superintendent of the Michigan Department of Public Instruction, will discuss “T h e Responsibility of State leadership” at toe 1:30 p.m. general session. meeting of the MAPSAE board of directors is set for 3:45 p.m., and a banquet will be held at 5:30 p.m. MStHs 7thr at Exposition Dublin Polio Clinic Sot WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -The second of ,two Dublin School PTA polio ciinlcs will be held from noon to 1 p.m. and 8 to 8, p. m. tomorrow it the school. Scholarships Won by 18 CHICAGO (AP) - Eighteen rural youths and girls were named winners today of $500 college scholarships for t h e 1 r 4 - H Club work in dairying, bread and' field crops produc-tiort. The national awards were announced in connection wl t h the 42nd National 4-H dub Congress opening tomorrow In Chicago for a five-mile ntn. The winners included Glen Sparks, 18, Cassopolls, Mich, in field crops. , 'ROCHESTER — This year’s Christmas music program at St. Phllip’|i Episcopal (jhurch will be held noon Wednesday in the church undercroft. Sponsored by the Episcopal Churchwonien of St. Philip’s, the concert will feature mem-hereof toe women’s club, the Rochester Tuesday Musicals and Oakland ' University's Madrigal Chorus. The university chorus, finder direction of R. I. Kegerrels, is comprised of students from foreign countries who. wiU present selections of music from their homelands. An 11 a.m. luncheon will precede the concert. Reservations can be made through tomorrow at the church office, 100 Romeo Road. A baby-sitting service will be provided at toe church. The events are open to the ppbllc. Ham Supper Slated by Thoma*, Church THOMAS — Everyone is welcome to the Thomas Method Church’s ham supper Thursday in the Thomas Community Hall. Serving will begin at 6:90 p. m. Proceeds from the meal will be turned ova* to .the Thomas Methodist Church Building Fund. , ' CHICAGO (UPI) t Michigan State University finished seventh in international collegiate livestock judging contest allclass ranking yesterday with a total of 4,385 points at the international livestock exposition. Miss .Irene Chlelewskl Michigan State, finished second In the individual ail class rankings with 918 points, six points behind dinner Mike Henderson of town State University.1 Miss Chlelewskl placed fourth in individual hog judging, tied with Stephen Hammack of Texas A&M, both with 332 points. She also finished in a thlree-way tie for third in the individual sheep judging with 241 points. Susan Miller of MSU finished in a three-way tie for ninth in toe individual sheep Judging with 239 points. READY FOR SHOW-Yuletlde decorations for mantel, table find door wiU be’ on sale at the greens market and flower show to be held from 9 to 9 p.m. Fridayand' 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at Avon Park Pavilion; Rochester. Cochalrmcn of {he two-fold event, “Prelude to \ Christmas,” sponsored by toe Rochester branch of toe Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, are Mrs. Weldon Keast (left)1 and Mrs. Donald G. Scripture. ’ State Road Tpli 1,668 After Holiday Traffic EAST LANSING (UFI)-State • police provisional reports today showed 11668 persons have died in traffic accidents in Michigan this rear thrpugh the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend. The death toll in road crashes through Dec, 1 last year was 1,465. Vandals Pull the Plug on Chattanooga Lake CHATTANOOGA (ft - Somebody pulled toe plug,,and a city park lost its lake. Police said vandals broke a valve controlling a drain In' too rock-wall lined lake. The water ran out. , ' The University of Michigan was the first university, in toe U.S. to give a course in sanitary • science, to 1888. THE PONEIA^ 2» 1968 fitting from this program will' have-to* pay more for miik. or 'will obtain leaslrdlk,~iiFlWthr- Woman Dies of Injtfirfo GARY, tad. (AP)—Bertha D, C/osses on fncdme l oxesigi fiProve Po^brini^ Mich., died in . a hospital hare Sunday of injuries suffered in an auto accident on the bdiana toll road last Wednesday. Mrs. Gragg was thrown from a car “The taxpayer gets no benefit. The school children are deprived of this mt& But the milk is . still produced and jammed into storage where it continues to, burden tile taxpayer with storage costs,” Prox-mire said. • 7 WASHINGTON (UPD - Sen. William Proxmire complained 'today that Yphony economy” In Congress hasforced a reduction, in milk for the national school lunch program. s~ The .. Wisconsin Democrat Said in a statement that the taxpayer will gpt no saving from the i per ccent cut in reimbursements for school milk purchases* The federal government will save to buy the additional surplus, Proxmire said.. i The order means, he said, that “all children who are bene- driven by hef husband, Raymond W. Gragg, 84, when it struck a bridge railing after a rear tire blew opt. . »■ i------BY BEN BURNS LANSING (UPD - The thought of Income takreturns or ar summons to the local internal revenue office brings a twinge of concience to the minds of most adult Americans. After an Instinctive tightening of the stomach muscles on receiving a notice, John Q. Taxpayer, responds with a to the smoked fish jndustry, is concerned about its public image. v'u' -V'-v ★ ★ >' . So for the past nine ytars In Michigan, more than 3,000 teachers are estog HtS~ kits and student participation exceeds 150,000 according to -John H. Grant, chief of the administration division of the Detroit division. '■The teaching taxes program is designed to stimulate voluntary compliance-'With federal income tax laws by furnishing, cost. free, teachers’ kits and student guides- to schools whose teachers de&e them,” Grant said. "Thesematerials have a nine-year success record withvfp-proximately 86 per .cent over- taxes program" with free workbooks to students and kits to teachers who asked for them, throughout the United States. SUCCESS STORY And the story of the program is one of success. More than $.2 -million students and 80,000-teachers participated in the program during the past academic MOST digestible! a mistake or irritation over HALE AND HEARTY - Fred. W. Bushner, 103, of Yuma, Colo., celebrated his birthday yesterday and hoisted a weight to show, his fitness. Bushner, a retired Colorado fariner, has lived through eras which saw the assassination of four Presidents. izations from funeral directors Michigan ” he said. Frightening Asthma Attacks End h Minutes As New Formula Unblocks Lung Passages Fast New Medical Formula Restores Free Breathing Without Vaccines, Shots Or Narcotics. Cabas Anxiety. No Prescription Needed. on U. S. 31 just north of here. Sheriff’s officers reported Mrs. Sneary’s husband, Leroy, 78, turned his car into the pith of another auto. Woman Killed in Crtreh FRANKLIN, Ind. (AP)-Mrs. Eva M. Sneary, 73, of Traverse City, Mich., was killed Sunday in a collision pf two automobiles STUDENTS DOUBLE , The number of students Marta ing how to fill out federal income tax forms has doubled in the papt decade, according to school officials, j : , --— Each kit contains a teacher’s' manual, student work , book, instructions for preparing forms 1040 and 1040A and Tor teachers in farm areas* the kit also contains workbooks Which are designed by the government to apply specifically to farm problems and a farmers’tax guide. .. Nearly 50,000 applications for materials were mailed to superintendents of schools, directors of education, deans of colleges and universities as well as junior and senior high schools'on the IRS mailing list in Septem- U.S.D.A. CHOICE MAIL MATERIAL Materials will be mailed hi February coinciding witiv ^e next filing season. “The purpose of the program-is to enable teaqhers to: • Increase student iMder-Standing of civic responsibilities. • Enhance the student’s understanding of internal revenue; service functions. • Encourage good habits of preparing and' filing tax returns.”^ Which is all a tancy way of saying that income taxes are a headache to both Mr. Taxpayer and the Internal Revenue Service officials who must deal with the returns from a large number of very different individuals. It would make the IRS official's job easier if everyone would file honest returns while understanding their civic re-sponsibilities. And it o>nfirmt~the suspicion that It takes a teacher or a tax lawyer to explain an income tax return. STEAK 79£ FULLY GUARANTEED 4*mj| JM Q Attachments ap ■ Jfl W Included ■■■I $1.25 Weak R ■ Free Heme Demenetretfen OR 4-1101 Within 25 Mil* RadiuM "PORK ROAST BOSTON STYLE " Fresh ^ Ground SELF-ADJU8TINQI New Noralco ’floating-head’ Speedahavtr SO. Heads awlval to hug (lbs. Rotary blade.. ‘Flip-open’ claanlng. Adapts to wbrld-wlde uaa - UQ/220V. (AC/DC). Srtiart travel oata. Shavei anywhere on tour tiny batteries. No bulliyri#h.rger. Rotary blade*. Mirrored Upper travel mm. Campbell's TOMATO SOUP Rotary blade*. Economical price. ‘Slip-top’ claanlng. 110 volt, only (AC/DC). Travel caae. SOI. WALTON Men. thru Thurs.B tel rri, I to I, •un.lto 9 ■ Midi New Lady Noralco Shaver SOL Shavei lege and undararmi with no razor cut*. New lew price. Lovely datlgh, Iw v, (AC/DC). Smart-looKIng caae. See Wage shavers * demonstrated on TV! Rotary Blado Shovon ON TOP QUALITY FOODS Christmas headquarters for shaving comfort GIVE A N0RELC0 WITH ROTARY BLADES ....ihe third way to shave! FIRST CAME THE RAZOR BLADE. THEN CAME BACK-AND-PORTH ELECTRIC SHAVERS. ■ NOW TRY NOREUCO WITH ROTARY BLADES. Spartan-Sliced ^ w BACON Tray Pao 1-h.pkg. Lean and Tally PORK STEAK Kraft-Velveeta CHEESE 2-lb. leaf Michigan Beet SUGAR 5-lb. bag Charmin - Whit* or Color* 4 roll pkg | AP TISSUE 1 Spartan Sliced HUE HEAD to lb. Loaf I 1 5* Nabisco 1-lb. 1 box | RITZ CRACKERS Ir till W. MR0N Men. thru Sat^lte II lwMlay,lte1» THE TONTIAC TRESS, MQ&frAYl DECEMBER 2,1963 United States lost $26 million in trade. N(iw some means must be found to compensate the United Stages, either th^odgh increased U.S. tariffs on European goods or lower European tariffs onUnited-States goods. Muminarf/Britdn£yeSfat&^ Co/d Increased tariffs on poultry already have shut the United states out of the frozen chicken market in Europe. This is the key to-the celebrated “chicken war.” : ■ ■ • ' MAIN TOPIC Iq Brussels, that was die main* topic in a two^ay meeting of Common Market foreign ministers. It was learned they will be advised by the market high commission to accept the chicken , war settlement recommended last month by an international board.' Wallacn'sDaughter to* Wed in February MONTGOMERY, Abv IUW) fe Gov. and Mrs. George C. Wallace yesterday announced the engagement of their daughter, Bobpi Jo Wallace, to James Thomas Persons of Birmingham. . • • The .couple .will be married Feb, 22 in the St. James Methodist Church here. " ■ Weaker-Sex Really take, heart! Women KINGSTON, EnglandTU are. the weaker sex after all. . • „• Dr. Frey Ellis and Dr. Michael Cox announeedloday that they made a survey of 102 patients who complained of fatigue, and discovered that .78 of them were women. The old saw about “women’s work if never done” had nothing to do with it, the doctors said. In the. first place, women bring on most of their fatigue by worryinfc too puch, they said. Secondly, they claimed, siding at a desk all day is more tiring than' scrubbing clothes. . • f. ie '★ ★ The doctors noted that women got their reputation for being the hardier sex because they live’-looger. This,tbey said may actually .be due to fatigue. I They explained that the. fatigue induces women to rest, which relieves the strain that eventually kills their husbands. Eighteen states requite time off with pay when needed for workers leaving to vote. More Comfort Wearing FALSE TEETH 'Here is a pleasant way to oyercujne loose plate discomfort. fABrEBTH, an Improved powder, sprinkled on upper and lower plates bolds them turner so that tner feel mors p<)m- As the WEU delegates gathered for their meeting here, two conferences in Luxembourg and Brussels were .taking up Common Market trade problems. PROPOSED HIKE Minister of the trading bloc The Kuril Islands lying be-, tween Alaska and Siberia derived their1 name from Russia’s “kuril” which is- the word for smoking, Active volcanoes* are were discussing a proposed in* Common Market. Use Our Yankee Layaway A Small Deposit HoldsYour Selection) Dncoratnd, with 30-ox. fittantir and 6-ox. m 9-inch docantor and glass stopper with 6 2-inch glasias • Loaf pat-tom is otchad into tho glass a Cap-turn tha romance and mood of Neo-politan night Whan sorving wina or. liquor to holiday guests f Buy for youriglffornaw, or for gift-giving* Rich, delicious fruitcake. Superbly mads by mdsttf bakors. YOnkoo low prico. Beautifully docoratod, snow covorod. Stripes, solids. Various sixes and shapes to choose from. Light and delicate. Full six# C-6 multicolor bulbs • U.L. approvod 'string. 10" High eandlo onclosod In cathedral-like stainod glass typifying tho real moaning of Christmas... #■ A truly grson frss a Heavy foliage o Safe for dll lights o Sparkling reflection a Stores easily V5 dainty tiny multicolor bulbs a Blink on and off at random. • UL Appiovod. ' MEN’S LONG-SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS Sanforized cotton flannel. Coat stylo. Assorted Stripe' pptterns. Sixes A to D. print pattern , sport shirts. 2-pockat model. Sanforized. Sizes S-M-L. EMBOSSED FOIL WRAP 3- big 26" wide tolls to a package • Quality aluminum decorated wrap. DRESS SUCKS Check This List For A Few Who Are Often Forgotten! YOUR MAILMAN YOUR MILKMAN YOUR PAPER BOY THE WOMAN NEXT DOOR FELLOW WORKERS ** ELEVATOR OPERATOR YOUR SERVICE STATION MAN YOUR BREAD MAN' YOUR DELIVERY MAN ’ YOUR CLERGYMAN ** SCHOOLTEACHERS 19 mil O 0 better Ji ■ 9ifts°fLVQri^fcfe"* «^ssi£- I Early American Christinas SUGAR BUCKETS crafted in mellqw hand-rubbed Salem finish maple! Magazine Bucket Height 14", diameter 15 %'* I' Wheel- barrow a$6’5 Catchall Bucket Helpkl 10", diameter 13" A *6” THOMAS/ECONOMY Shop from 9 ’til 9 njen’s finer quality sport shirts Sears Gift Price 139? say, “Chargelt” The latest in fashion • • • elbow-patch shirts of 100% cotton . .. makes laundering a breeze. Choice of prints in small, mediant and large sizes. Buy him several! Sears Main t 761 r. Huron HOODffir OLD-FASHIONED RIBBON CANDY CHOCOLATE NOVELTIES FINE CHOCOLATES Orders Mailed Everywhere! CHRISTMAS IS CANDY TIME Sweethearts, Mothers* . Dads, Friends and Employees.. .andof course in very good taste. Don’t forget the Paper Boy or the Mail Man. :-- It'f a Pleasant Drive lo... 4642 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD " Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” Wonderful - jjthr the Family! SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 Specially Priced! BASIC UNIT Includes host rsducsr and basest grots , Swing Out Barbecue Grill.... $8.95 Fire Screen..$8.95 $13995 PIPING HOT FASHION BRD s JEFFS What sweater lover won't revel In the ele-i styling of this tth iamb's wool cardlganl The touch pf. contrast piping where It 'counts,.. r add the modicum of daring — and differ-' epee — which single out a Lord Jeff masterpiece. ' Mot Sure What Give? ' »HH| e SANTA MAIIIA • LYRE - • HORSE HEADS • GOLFER At MALLARD DVCKS SAIL FISN TWIN MIL BOATS AND MANY OTHERS • LEATHER GOODS k- • PARKER i SOHEAPFRR PEN SETS • jBlOBES, Big SelMltoN A Several GREGORY, MAYER & THOM 167 N. WOODWAip Ml 6-4180 BIRMINGHAM « _ - Give A Gift Of BETTER SIGHT If e member of yopr family is having difficulty reading or »can’t see fine print, chances ace they need glasses. Give them a gift certificate for an eye examination and riev glasses. Pontiac Mall Optical Center Dr. Paul C. Felnberg, Optometrist Phone 682-1113 STOP! Don’t Buy Until You See Our ROAD RACING SETS WE SERVICE THE SETS WE SELL (No sanding back to the factory) SCARLETT’S BICYCLE and HOBBY SHOP YOUR FLOORS NOW... . FOR THE HOLIDAYS • Armstrong Inlaid TilO ...., *,, iV.ih .... 8o DO* • Vinyl Rubber Tilo (9x9”).................... 13o ea. • Solid Vinyl Tllo (9x9”) » ...V.................46e ea. • Ceramic FloofTilo. v....».....*......,..sq.ft.39o FLOOR SHOP 2 Block* Wett of T«Ugraph ... FE 4-5216 1 Mon., THur.., FA, 9 till 91 tJ**.» Wed., Sot., 9 till 61 ONRISnUS BOAT SPECIALS SEE US FOR YOUR BOATING, FISHING, M SKIING FUN. COMPLETE BOATING 1 OUTFITS READY FOR WATER AT 1 SPRING DELIVERY TIME! Lat Us Halp You Maka Your CHRISTMAS SELECTION TO FIT YOUR BUDGET ON DISPLAY NOW NEW 1964 MODELS INBOARD - OUTBOARD - BOATS and MOTORS USE OUR LAYAWAY PUN ' . A FAMILY GIFT FOR ALU BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER 1218 S. WOODWARD at Adamp Rd., BIRMINGHAM jo 1-4121 Open Dally M<• Men., Tfcura., Prl., 1-1 Mll-Bltl 4 ■■ w* i ■ Ct-4 1, iitjMi THE PONTIAC gRESS, MONBAY; DECEMBER 2, 1963 rt:.M Give Your Family The Precious Gift of Safety, This Christmas Safety belts save thousands of fives every year. But they can only Bavoyourj ifyou have them and use them.; " per set—installed FREE. Look Over This List of Other Per/ect Gifts, Rear door safety locks. Hazzard flasher switch. Non-glare rear view mirror. Tissue dispenser. Battery booster cable. Undercoating, Gas cap lock. Litter basket. Touch up paint. FOR A SAFE HOLIDAY SEASON HOmer Hight Motors, Inc. Chevrolet-Pontiac-Buick 160 S. Washington St., Oxford OA 8-2588. [IWWWWHWWWSl New Location Special A Christmas Gift Free! Wilt a pair of ladies' genuine *hand —tooled Icother shoes andmateli-ing handbag free. No Obligation No Purchase Necessary Now thru 12 noon Dec. 7th IF YOU WEAR THEM .. WE CAN REPAIR THEM Wa specialize in orthopedic work prescription work to perfection no build uptootarge or too small. ; Stop by Toddy • Shoes dysd any color e Shoo and handbag repair 1 • Factory finish-Invisible-HpItaoling THE TOWN COBBLER 4444 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 673-0501 ;BY Samsonite? TOY LAND LEGO 18 A WAY TO PLAY k ' ,n j 0 ■ M MltMMppMItWMIlN hIiPATIVP 9tytotypywrthtld'gnml Gift "*s5S® FOR ANY CHILD WT sirs MOM njoi BARNES HARGRAVE meg=m ' HAR0WARE dgegpujtfa 742 W. Huron FE 5-9101 COMFY SLIPPERS for CHRISTMAS GloveteeilHerwKh' warm orlon llnlncj* in bona or block. $7.50. OPEN EVERY/ EVENING 7119 Oriental brocade * In , white gold, mink blue and black. $6.00 ' THE FLORSHEIM STORE PONTIAC MALL Wild Bird Feeders of'Califomla Redwood 1.95 - 2.95 - 4.95-5.95 Regal Wild Bird Feed-20% Sunflower 25 lbs. ’2" Mixed Grain, 28 IDi. $1.48 Sunflower seed, 1 lb. iio BEGAIi land] f SUPPLY CO. LAWNS Pontine.. ♦ •.).» 2090 Woodward, FE 84803 Drayton .............4206 Dixie Hwy., OR 848441 Clarkston. a traveling companion that's a constant dolightl Slim-*il-houatto styling and oasy-to-uso top Controls. You'll bo proud of its beautifully-tailored plas-1 tic cabinet. 19-inch diagonal picturo fubf — 1 72 square inches viewable picturo aroa. Only *149”.... HAMPTON’S ELECTRIC COMPANY 128 W. HURON-OPEN EVES. TIL 8 EXCEPT SAT.-FE 4-2525 Ftf9$t0!t$ Limited Offer ADJUSTABLE IRONING BOARDS For Only $2.88 Ona to Cuitomar-'^AddlttonalB«ardl“L ! $1.95 140 N. SAGINAW I 4-9970 FIRESTONE “SSSt" THE PONfl ACTRESS, M6nT)AY, DECEMBER ^TrWW Semi-Annual Sale! LAMPS Pifftmand OrjtarL •960 up Nave Your Clothes Spotlessly BUGLES METRONOMES rS^ScTTftiriiqr—*■« Meatu BeUerMueic •1495 SNARE DflUMS World'* Finest „ Ludwig and Ludwig PARK FREE REAR OF STORE Two weeks only: seamless sheers bnd dura-mesh at great savings. Proportioned sizes short 8-10V&. med. 8’Al-l 1, tall 916-12. DISCREET: blush beige PARAOISEi tun beige TAUPETONE: beige taupe BONGOS from *759 up MUSIC CO. X19 North Saginaw CALM Everything In Mimic fc 5-8222 I Pillows WtyW Dishmaster ? Because it is the most for Christmas giving! practical way of doing dishes! ' „ _ ^ With remote mike, 2 mot* ors, push-button opera* tion, includes tape. THIS WEEK ONLY! Layaway No fits hhy sink! Imttull* in minute*. One*8tep liygienicaliy clean dithwatthing. Save* on water and detergent.1 90 Day Same An Ctuli A/lo/fo The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP ' of PONTIAC : J • 51 West Huron open Evening* *illWpM FE 4-155 1666 S. Telegraph • Open Monday end Friday Ivea Ml 9 PM Regular $90.00 Tailor Made CONVERTIBLE 1WS ICE YACHT A small highly maneuverable on* des ice yacht that dan be sailed on small -frozen ponds or larger bodies of ice. Seampis balaficed soa child can "" sail it easily, yet Resigned to carry an adult of over,200 lbs. at speeds in excess of 50 miles per^ \o.VB Sar-on Plastic by ■" Robert Bruce-andJantzen ~J FIBERGLAS I ‘ RUNABOUT! 15 ft. fiberglai runabout lap stroke. Front seat upholstery, windshield, steering, lights and hardware. Motor well. B1U Kelley’ FREE Christmas Tree With Eveiy $10 Purchase | or More The- perfect gift Tor any boy in button Cardigan, Special zipper and pullover styles.. 119 Myrtle It. Just Opposita Tel-Huron Shopping Canfsr Juat Off Telegraph Reed One Bleck SewMt Of Wett,Huron Stieet TELEPHONE FE 2-M15 ,w OPIN DAILY • A.M. to ft P.M. - SATURDAY I A.M. te 1 P.Ur^ CRUISE OUT BOAT SALES on ,1 Open Daily 9 to 6 FE 84402 Give Comfort This Christmas Give a luxurious Quilt Top Mattress Set RCA VICTOR TOTAL SOUND STEREO Softblue tint added 4o GE's picture screen results In whiter whites, sharper contrasts brighter, picture. Dust sealed safety- window. Rich textured Hi-lmpact polystyrene cabinet. Built-in antenna. FM STEREO RADIO Twin or full sloe. Mattress or box springs Family HOME FURNISHINGS 21S5 Dixie Hwy. Cur. Telegraph Open Dally 10 tp '9,8un« 12 to 6 FE 4-0526 ^ LOOK YOUR LOVELIEST t FOR THE HOLIDAYSt, ■ STORE MIRACLE MILE PLAIN SKIRTS 4f T~ SWEATERS Cleaned end Finished - law Monty Savin. Prico 49* THE PQNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. DECEMBER 2,1968 m • from PEARCE floral arrangers.__ Cherub, Violet and Roses White porcelain hold* a. colorful arrangemenT of permanent Pink Rose*, Violet* and Christinas' ball* and a Pink Candle. Uniisuak tfieWHt BEAUTY YOU CAN SEE.,. QUALITY YOU CAN FEEL Aeduef ofjGL-THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY spAnjaink^— Tpne ’ J0tar NEW! ly artistic. 50-PIECE SERVICE FOR 8 : Handy washable We rife Anywhere in. the World. Here's a variety to please all. tastes ... creams, ’ fruits, nuts, crisp and chewy centers ... ideal for, fqmily gifts. ' t PEARCE Floral Company 559 Orchard lUlie 1%. 332-0127 72 North Saginaw FE 2-0161 CLOONAN'S BWIIilBillBwBlJBliiipiBIliM They’re All Dressed Up for j%. The Holidays in Brand New # Shoes .From Bill Lewis Ono Way to Ploaso Your ,_____ Youngsters Tbit Christmas St Ifs O.K. l)JL to owo W MAY! “EVERYTHING Jnr the family" Authentically Boys' Black “Sureflex” site *7" fiw HJW Both Styles by Otaris •Where Fit Comes First’ MAYS ftSiU cJLewis9 Junior Bootery 1060 W. Huron 3344725 (Heron Centre, Next to China City) Shop Dally 9s30 tilt 8, Mon. and Frt. tlN ♦"‘t- DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 18 N. SAGINAW 2135. DIXIE HWY , COR. TELEGRAPH Open Dally 10 to 9 -- Sun. IS to 6 .335-8124 Ideal for Christinas Giving! POOL ft PING PONG TABLES BRUNSWICK BRINKTON CAMPBELL COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES Special • COVERS • CHALK e TRIANGLES t BRIDGES e BOOKS, ETC. • CUES $3.95 - $59.95 READING LAMP * PBPMDBNMB3MDM)MOMOMOMOMnMt The Perfect W* . * nntl Prartlrnl, TjMt SCHOOL JACKETS .Ladies’ Dressy Blouses Matching PUNT MUSH SET Int Brush#* ■ W Dang hleeve blouses In Pima cotton or crepe. For Suits, Jumper*, or Skirts. >' 24 E. Lawronpo • PONTIAC SUMS *MICHIGAN'S LARGES1 JEWELERS' STATIONERY * SUPPLIES V tMWWMM' WSmE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER & 1963 \mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmMmmmMm&m ■ LIONEL Electric Train with purchase of this 5-PC. SET DECORATOR GROUP SAMSONITE CARD TABLE I ■M, ;■ With 4 Folding Chairs- FOAM CUSHION SWIVEL ROCKER Mqple_wood _ wing and Luxurious, -comfortably reversible" foam cushions and ‘pillow -back* Covered In durable, Iweed or print covers. KROEHLER . "SofematSofa 100% -WtQM COVERS Wingback ^IngWlth-luxurioos foam filled cushions and ■ foam back. Coil springs, decorator tweeds. A $229 Value. always admirfed ■Just the thing.for year-round entertaining. Hugged, strong, and long lasting, this 5-piece group comes in soft luxurious vlnelle cove'rfng. - OPEN Mon. thru Friday MOAM-ftOOftM* WARD-WAY Budget Plan Budget Terms A WARD'S CHRISTMAS VALUE Delivery 17-19 S. Saginaw St. downtown PONTIAC 17-19 S. Saginaw St 17-19 S. Saginaw St. downtown PONTIAC EARLY AMERICAN LAMPS 8-PC. MODERN DESK SET DANISH MODERN TABLES^ Soektail Table 14W" High designed I -J A stMTsbiS^ri Classic In /Manner, w»ir. tv —carters ~M5relY:T '^Richly Finished in Warm Walnut, Incorporating New Resign Freedom in Distinctive Fashion. These Tables are styled to blend with any decor. $1 Weekly flAMP • BLOTTER 4 HOLDER • PEN ••penholder,; • CALENDAR • LETTER , OPENER A beautiful selection of,early American Idmps in a wide variety of styles to choose from. Sturdy with heavy base, she'll receive many compliments. See them today!.............„ Choice MATCHING CHAIR ANi IN ELEGANT WALNUT. I / Weekly ■ 29.95 Value FE 2-4231 J7-19 S. Saginaw St downtown PONTIAC 17-19 S. Saginqw St. 17-19 S.‘Saginaw St Family Size 7-Pc. DINETTE Op. ELEGANt WALNUT 5-Pc. DINING ROOM GROUP With Plastic Top ^ 7 Tnhlfi jL-lJIfooits— TREE & READING LAMPS famous UGHTOLER Choice of beige fabric or blaclT vinelle. Rectangular or round table. Rectangular tablet 36" x 467 to 56", one 10" filler. An exceptionally outstanding value In quality, Hyrryl ^ Swivel-mounted shades and engineered light diffusion are'the principle elements of flexibility in' these versatile accent and reading lamps. Circular grid louvre Improves light diffusion, prevents direct glare. Black, white, beige. entire family $149 Value ALL 5 PIECES Reg. $29.95 50c WEEKLY Beautiful formica-top table with sturdy bronze-tone, legs. Complete with’ 6 shaped back chairs in durable vinyl, OPEN MQN., THURS., FRI. 'TIL 9 p.M. ELEVATORj-SERVICE TO AlVLOORS, ’2Weekly 17-19 S. Saginaw St. downtown PONTIAC 1.00 WEEKLY NO MONEY DOWN 17-19 .S. Saginaw St. downtown PONTIAC 17-19 S. Saginaw St. ENTERTAIN at HOME in STYLE decorator » designed 'L BEAUTI- BAR,. jJPiKteLl Big 4 foot 1 modern'bar p|us |ff i Wn^n • 2 matching , stools J ^ I The.Famous "LANE SWEETHEART' CEDAR CHEST LUXURIOUS' FOAM RECLINER Soft, deep tufted form fitting 'pillow back of blended foam rubber. Reversible zlppered foam rubber, cushion oyer floating foam deck, foam padded 'foot rest. ( Attractive rlaugahyde, . for her | treasures $129.95 Value > Elegantly styled, this large roomy Cedar Chest Is fully cedar lined for lasting protection. Foul'styles to choose from, It has dual linen departmentlied storage traysi Choice of beautiful walnut or limed $ak. , Complete ’ , j ALL 3 PIECES High pressure' Melamltf plastic top In 2 tone walnut and white finish, 48" wide, 40" high, 17" deep and 2-12" drop leafs. ^pPEN Mon. thru frl. 9:30 A.M.-9 R.M. WARD-WAY Back-par. *30" x 36" to match with 14" x 20" mirror, and 2 shelves 34.95 downtown . Or PONTIAC FE 2-4231 WARD-WAY BUDGET PLAN f , $1.00 Weekly g 17-19,S> Saginaw $t. downtown PONTIAC -19 S. Saginaw St. 17-49 S. Saginqw St. downtown PONTIAC ISMMMneWWMMBWWMWOMMMMMlWMWPWI THE TONTIAC PBBSSl MONDAY, DECEMBER 2. 1M8 In Deluxe sJ@ATTACHE.CASE LOOKS Like Leather, FEELS Lfkrteather OUTWEARS Leather 5 to 11 GUARANTEED S FULL YEARS 9’xl2* ♦S99S *where quality furhiture it priced right" DECORATOR : PILLOWS your ehoieo of color*-washable! Tailor-made for bu*y executive* or talesmen on the way upl Its at* adds color loa home -tractive styling anti inherent quality create a lasting impression on Thie fine quality 3 expanding pockets in the lid and it lined in washable TUFIDi.' . Largest Stock of Brief Cases In Fontiao All Guaranteed 5 Yean At DISCOUNT PRICES $«j-j95 McCANDlESS Everything in Home Furnishings CLAYTON'S,12133 Orchard Lake Road Opeo.Monday and Friday 'til 9 P.M. — 333-7052 FE 2-0135 lauMMaanewauuMwani ROYAL Portable Typewriters yfITH THIS AD I v\ on any taw above » \4 5H.P. ■ WORLD'S FINEST SEIWICE WHAT WE SELL In great demand because of its practical lightweight design and durability. Built to take on the hard* est of jobs. Dollar for del* lar, feu can't beat the GET OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY Everything in Electronics WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL No Need to Shop Around — SeeThemAll at STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS Pontiac's Office ' Machine Headquarters «■■■—WBBMMW • pS^WBBBBWBO>CUMCe>OSMW>8>PiWBi>Bi brand name CHRISTMAS SPECIAL ‘CLINIC1 OF LASTING BEAUTY! “Daniel Green SLIPPERS1 FrdmJUrwa^LaniSs PftOSIfflPI This 2 piece Console Set fabulously styled by famous Syroco. Use it in Vestibule, Foyer or Powder Room-It will odd a note of charm. Comet in Metagold or Antique White with Gold Highlights. Mirror 29”xl8M, Hanging Console Table 24? x 10” x 8Vk” BOWLING BALLS mm $1995 , BOWLING BAGS from. $3.95 SHOES from $4.95 “Nunn Bush” Complete ‘EVANS LAYAWAY NOW • for Christmas! AIRWAY GUARANTEES A Proper Fitl • “Give a Gift Certificate** | SUPPERS’? PAULI’S SHOE STORE 35 NORTH SAGINAW ST., PONTIAC i«O.Uo,J Av». Mg/m/JA..ME /fw* » Cartful Free Delivery—Convenient Term's Ai/uutu/ Latin iiqiaiaiinaianMflMBiMMMMBaWBHMMHiaBBaBW: laMaOWSMCWBMaMOMMBaapMMMWMPMpJ • A Suite That Say» **Merry Christmas1 Gift with a lifting) BERRY AUTOMATIC Profeaalonal Styled Family Sixe! LAY- AWAY SPECIAL1 EARLY AMERICAN BEDROOM GROUP Selected veneer topi ,and end panels. Mortise and Ttnontd construction. All drawirslompltttly dovetailed and fully center guided. Antique Brass Hardware. Opens, closes garage door flam inside your car Family HOME FURNISHINGS 2135 DIXIE HWY. COR, TELEGRAPH ; i 335-El 24 Open Datlr 10 to 9 - Sun. 11 to 6 2495 ORCHARD LAKE RD. PHONE 182-1600 HOURS; 7:30 A AA. tq 5 P.M. r Saturday 7130 A.AA. to 2 P.M. j iinrnuaur mu to y - .vim. a* to u ItaaMamnMMnaiMmnMnanwMnungaMMcd ' f—■—■-WWM .\v TOB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2,153B Give a Gift Certificate It'* JllHt, the Ticket. . . ThU Soft Little, Light-Weight Bag The ATLANTIC LAMPETTE High *"mP KHyMUfM-glllM >■«« [Miff wtllto lljjtll just where you need it. Teleecepes into itself for easy porta* bilify. Perfect for traveling, heme, office or school. Can be wall NEW PERMANENT LOCATION ■3369 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD Kecgo Harbor 682-92 Available In blue Dobbyweave Nylon; Black Watch or' 'Queen's Rifles Plaids; Gray or Red Granites; Caviar, Green. , Chianti Red Vinyl. LEWIS FURNITURE S. Saginaw St. at Orchard Lake. lOi.YJ.UIV S TOWN and COUNTRY f V;-.' Tql-Huron Center Open Every Nite 'til 9 P.M. I Telegraph at Huron (Across from West Bloomfield High) (West Bnts. not affiliated with any other salon in Oakland County) [WWMWWMiffiWMMiMIMtMIMiHtealealealealnaeMiesiesnessaaS dCONN ORGAN Softblue tint added to GE's picture schran result! in whiter1 whites, sharper contrasts brighter" picture. Dust sealed safety window. Rich textured Hi-lmpoct -polVbtyrene cabinet. Built-in antenna. a revolution in found The newest concept in. a professional, I quality built instrument by the world's! largest manufacturer of band instro-| ments. See the. remarkable new meth-| od of learning enabling you to pray] up to 39 popular songs in minutes like a professional... using both keyboards, foot pedals, and special effects! Compare the many outstanding features1 and hear the 'true' organ sound that pda only be CONN! JVo Payments 'til February Ideal Gifts For The Home! BEAUTIFUL BEDSPREADS • Choose from many delightful styles ... $*1 A98 in all your favorite colors... I ll I Celiaway THROW PIUOWS i ■*-'996 a u MORRIS MUSIC GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE Arden’s * Curtains e Draperies e Slipcovers Plenty ofFrti Parking FE 2*0567 ifiifwmiiHiiriafiisufisfMWMiisisfuiwwwttMWMwwwww Open Daily.lO to 10 Sunday 12 fo 7 SjHi) QLENWOOD PLAZA Open Dally 10 to 10 Sunday 12 to 7 uSSmBSm olenwood plaza STEAM IRON SAVE $ J.00 $ 2.00 $5.00 $10.00 |£|2& with large “gentle dry” IZfelfl good and air • flow. mmmn “Whisper • quite” Hr motor. Hood fits' over mOm big-size rollers. ELECTRIC HY-FRYER you can. deep*fry, roast, stew and simmer with this fryer. JFast, even eooking beat. Aluminum. Glees Ud. FEDERAL SAVINGS By Proctor. Lightweight iron with clear-view heel. Upfront fabric dial. You get more steam . . faster! '' ' Open Daily 10 to 10 Sunday 12 to 7 G. E. REFLECTOR TMSTER WESTINGHOUSE 4-Tube CLOCK RADIO’ Charge Itl Toasts both tides at once:.. bread, muffins, pan* cakes, etcltoasts desired shade and -shuts off. Convenient con* trols. Revolution* ary design. > ■ And Make It A i^i^lDouble-Chepked Choose from a largo selection pf 1963 Buicks ar other fine cars, Ea<;h has been reconditioned by experts. Buy with confidence. OLIVER BUICK With front mounted ‘ Alnico speaker, built • in antpnnu. High intact polypropylene Case. Ceffisref Orchard Lake Avt. and Williams THE PONTIAC rftESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1968 TgMMMMMMMWMmMMMMMMni Daintily Designed! Exquisitely Finished! Choice of 6 Colours! G.ive Him a "Cable" Sweater For Cigarettes or small accessories. Graceful pie crust .edge. Sure support and tripod -base —' cherry, black, blue, gold, green or white. JEveryone loves to receive smart, light American Tourister I.ug; gage. Sure action lucks that ean’t pop opfeh. Stainless steel closures that seal out dust and damp. Scuff-resistjint Permanile covering with hard protective .aibes. Eight fashion colors. “34. style* for Men and Women. "Coble's" the thing! This hondsome authentic coble kfitT* cardigan of soft luxurious .100% wool will please the man of your choice. Wide selection of colors. • A gift means mare from a quality stqre ■ftfam's [flank State * w PON II AC MMmmMmMMMMamn Pre-Cooked or Cooked While You Wait Liv • Lobster and Lobster Tail* • Fresh Shrimp In His Fantasy Land Igloo » $1 each 3 m5350 plus sales tax and 10c postage • Oysters ♦ Cidms Want to save shopping time and still come up with the finest Christmas gift a. man can enjoy! Simply purchase a Florsheim gift certificate in minutes, he redeems if at leisunk • WE ALSO CARRY FROZEN I • Pros Legs • Aboline ’ • King crabs, meat, olaws • Scallops LOBSTER OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 SECURITY CHARGE ACCOUNT SERVICE Tel-Huron Shopping Center UMidCLMM FE 4-0259 jJaaMBB “Oakland County's Largest Shoe StbreV Sherlock’s POUND PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER 5500 Auburn (One Mi. W. of UTICA bet. Ryan arid Mound Rds.) Open Dolly 9 A.M. Til 9 P.M. 7 Days a Week! • wkwOWfo tumps lus kat! Pontiac's Only Authorised, ■_g+ ZVMTH l iiat Dealer / Recreation Rooms Wrfr *27#“ Tills can be yours for Christmas with convenient financing or 90 days same The Gift That Lasts A Lifetime! of PONTIAC 11 West Lawronoe Street FI Open Dally 9 to 6 ~ Erldey 9^to 8 - Saturday 9 to’V Call for Tree Estimate For , the Young Lady TtaRaot f WEST fringed ihlrta find bantt. Brown Cnd Goid^ of Rad and Black. Slim 4 to 7......$4.98 Sliti 8 and IChl.. $1.98 Value Buyl Truly portable . . r go«« with yeu every where! One full year guarantee. Built-In ante In ante nna. Hand-wired precliloircrafted ehaisls. Triple-cheeked for quality. (Overall diag. tube meal. 172 tq. In. pie4 for the Holidays Younglund end Chrlltmai Poily Flinders Organdy . / ^ 1 4'% • - V; 'v ' • •’ f p-F, WittTlfiC fTRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER s mm wm an ’.. j -./ . Authentic I Pendleton* 1 Shirts 1 ' ^1 • .theoutdoorsman’s choice * $1395 g I ilar-collar thirti w.’v. That* ragul •pacific Mali of outdoors man: long tailt that stay in, button-flap pockets, comfortable collars. R & H Itpirtmcit Store 1553 Union Lake Road Union Lake Village . *10;a.m.to 8p.m. Mon. thruThur*.*fri. &Saf. 10a.m; tg 9 p.m. ■MWaMOMPWBMBWMWBMMMMnMBBWOI THE ULTIMATFIN SIMPLICITY FireHOOD’s free-flowing functional Unto' and choice of nino Western «olg tones make it a welcome addition to any room. In contrast or Harmony, FireHOOD will enhance the decor of any setting . . . and it is a decorative unit in its Wn right. The exclusive conical design (often copied put .never equalled) allows good draft and maximum heat-radiation; the high arch gives you ,old fashioned “open hoarth hotpilalk„ Wfou’ll bo amazed at the ease of installation and moderate cost! >— MICRO-TOUCH 2G tone arm with 4 'free-floating cartridge Tho MONET • Modal ML2S00 in genuine Oiled Finished Walnut ill veneers and Select Hardwood Solids- L-= F HOD’S TV-RADIO SERVICE 1 TTO Orchard Lake Ave. FE ?:^t2 . Complete 5-Pc. DINETTE GBOflP $91195 Beautiful with heat resistant top—4 padded, completely washable chairs. nMnm Complete 7-Pc.DINETTE GROUP *59” Family HOME FURNISHINGS 2435 DIXIE MWY. COR* TELEGRAPH 335-8124 OPEN DAirY TO to 9 SUN.Uta6 IPLICITY 1 For the young at heart there If the metal conical open hearth fireplace. Ideal for contemporary design... provides comfortable ra-dlant heat, __ AS LOW AS -uiinnuiuiiuumuiiiiiiniuiiiidu}! BURKE Lumber 4495 Dixie Hwy. —OR 3-1211- OPEN WEEKDAYS M nwy.—OR 3-121 l—i EEKDAYS MONDAY thru FRIDAY j j I A.M. to 5:11 P.M. I I IDAYS from I A.M. to 4 P.M. | j Make It a Joyous Christmas .. With Carpeting from MeCANDLESS CONTINUOUS FILAMENT CARPETING Simply luxurious. . Extremely long wear . . . Easy care! 1 w MeCANDLESS 11 N. PERRY ST. ia»anMan«a»»anaixmnanKMlllliaiM«M FE 4-2531 g 1 *1 I Quality I Work j ALWAYS! FREE! with every incoming $5°o DRV CLEANING ORDER OFFER GOOD UNTIL DEC. 24TH lununtoiiuiiniiiiniiinHmMiniiiuiiiiiiniiiiiimnans^' Sylvan CLEANERS 869 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4-9881 MMU Carpet, Your Home for the Holidays 11 GIFTS for the Bowling Family i fi CARPET YOUR Living Room, Dining Ropm and Hall with 100% Nylon Carpoting. Plus you got tho Underfelt and tho Installation all for just One Low Prico. o BIG NEW „iHBWRBflIL—1_ • FREE ESTIMATES • BINDING, LATINO, REWEAVING • restretching • REPAIRS 0> ALL TYPES • PICK-UP DELIVERY j —Joist Arrived A New Shipment of Used Carpet ts>AVON TROY 1650 E. Auburn Rd. Rochester CARPET SERVICE 852-2444 ! 1 EMERSON jW True Lightweight Portable TV With Personal Listening Jack Telescopic . •Hide-Away___ r "Monopole Antenna 1 | 14-Inch'Wide-Angle | 114-degree Bonded [ Shield Picture Tube ..'125 sq. Inches of Viewa ble .Area Balls. 19” Bags.. 3" Shoes.4” • Towels • Banks e Novelties for the Bowlers Hmdm Lowm Kmmm: \MMMMWMMMMMWMM, ALL PURPOSE 12” SQ. CLASS WALTON TV 515 E. WALTON BLVD. . „ FE 2-2257 Special UIHlIllM B & G TILE A 6flt For lie Vlole Fanily 9 A Complete 2 Keyboard ■ ^mWwl °W™* Percussion tOWRff STARLET Ye*Llt*s tree, Mow you can bay a real organ for only $495. And beat of all, anyonn can play. From dad on down to daughter... ; even if they’ve inever played a note... they’ll be playing tunea in minutes. - , j Alaoi Choose From New Pianos S59S Up GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. Open Every Evening hil 9 P.M. Sat. *til 5:30 P.M. 16 E. Huron St!. FE 4-0566 _Downtown Pontiac DREAMY GIFTS , : of ROBES and LINGERIE ROBES Cotton' dusters, hostess lengths and brushed raybn or corduroy lounge robes. 4“ to 9M LUXURY ROBES Is vduatera and hostess length quilted satms, nylons and cuddly soft kodels. 1098 to 29*8 LINGERIE Half Slip Gowns — Pajamas - Dorm Coats, and Nylon trloot,brushed nylon and flannel. Mulching - - 39B to M1 Panties. - Lace. i..... trim set. ( , \ 3” BOBETTESHOP CHARGE )T 16 N. Saginaw Street !MM«a««»mmigmnrinmmNnwianiM)B)iaianNaS MflWI \i iW"'. »km > THE 7WTIAC pia&SSyk^ 1m& PORTABLE PHONO VALUE PACKAGE. ADMIRAE ; a gift for the entire family! Hr-FjDEUTY —^iot ife .... finest i.T~ Compact, complete In new 'tilt-out* style design for even more beautiful reproduction of your* recordings. .quipped for alt-spaed records and genuine Sapphire stylus makes aH records sound better. Included are ut" stand with built-in i and 10 free 45 RPM HJ favorites . . . you can •depend on A1 <.**79*' | Other Models from.,... *3 I EASY TERMS j JOHNSON’S N 45. EasiWatton Vi Block East of Baldwin FE 8 in a WARM Gift THE WHOLE FAMILY Wilt ENJOY V'Vllt HUM SIDIMB Oualfty lniUlifid ildlnf beep# year {route wfroter tot winter, reduces your fuel Mill, Sind ends yeur painting problems. Call Howl X Fair Priest” m.-tiir.wm'?y E osiiistisn SAVOIE INSULATION 4112 W. Walton Blvd. Brightest Color EVER SEEN ON AN RCA VICTOR TV Screen SEE RCA COLOR RGAVICTOR TV 2/ewHsta „ERE COIOR TV . -fr Super-powerful "New and VI»tal, Tuner provides MMmsbiii amazing picture-pulling RECEIVE power. ★ 24,000-volt ntutl f (fgetBty adjusted) New Vista polor Chassis. ★ Dependable Space Age Sealed Circuitry.* Glare* ----‘ - * ' "’Window reduce A FREE ’SIFT! Sealed Circuitry.* Gli proof glass safety wini Is bonded oh to reduce -JL .jm« aiUAMY reflection*. * Two keyed • M»,kss.rWtt«-Ms. color controls make tun* j*s«i.i»iutew» Ing ao simple a child can ^ | | 1 THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TELEVISIOH CONDON’S RADIO & TV ■SKS* ORDER NOW FOR CHRISTAAAS A Large Selection of FRESH From Our Own Flook A POULTRY ~ 3tL\ r For o Reel Hetldpv Treat i Prepare ^ Whold or Canned HICKORY SMOKED NAM j a sisters’ market j 608 W. Huron OPEN DAILY 3 0 A.M. TO 14 P.H. H>rtO‘ ALL STYLES IAAE lo*5 Sizes to 14 L Width* » EEE STYLE plut COMFORT in the famous Porte-Fed SHOES of thrift, he, KNOWS Perto-Pede art a really superior buy, He w,,. year-long comfrot, and up-forihe-minute style In these quality shoes. Famous Braftd Shoe'Store (C.ro.il.t^ 37 N. SAGINAW-DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Brighten Your Home , . ■ ’ gjiiiiflu jfov the Holidays Special All New Colors VINYL ASBESTOSOA: Interior and Exterior Paint Reedy Mixed .$i79alli ell Purpo«eT 1 I fln1, 9x12 Unoloum Rugs *395 Ea First Quality Vinyl Asbestos Floor Tile 714 c ■ Crob.wir.MNMmis»flstn ■ • * *0> | T>iiT 1075 W. Huron 334-9957 Opan Man,, Thuro,, Frl. ’til 9:00 P.M. Fraa Parking In Roar A GIFT BOXED! ITALIAN i HANDKNITS TEXTURE LUSH PASTELS lift. 6.98 ' Ha rd-to-beat value! Machine washable card iga ns of softly brushed Orion® acrylic, have a much more expensive look 'n feel, (yet they're priced so low! They're moth-proof, won't stretch out of shape. Choose from blue or tan. $ (8-10), M 0 2-14), L (16-18). , . & -PONTIAC MALL • ,8824940 Open 9:30 to 9:30 Monday thru7 Sat. Save now on the year's top evreater M S fashion . . . heavenly soft mohair- s* Wool-nylon . sweaters handknit • in ' gf Italy. In pastels that say the prettiest |jf Njf things about your skin and pyes. tof Sj[ Both pullover and cardigan styles, , W interesting patterns—Choice of pink, a 9 blue, white or beige. Sizes 36 to 42. § Save at Wards! * * If S PONTIAC MALL 682-4940-Oppn 9:30 to 9:30 Monday thro Saturday, j mmxxxxmMmMmm FOR THE SPORTSMEN Mighty worm yet almost weightless. This water repellent nyltfn zip-jacket is interlined with Kodel polyester. With at- NEW NORELCO 30 PASTEL PRINTED! tached hood that rolls'^ into collar4 when not in user nylon zipper pockets. Machine washable. Black and 'Blue in sizes S, M, L, XL. “FLOATING HEAD” SPEED SHAVER I heads with self-sharpening X 682*4940-Open 9:30 to OlM Monday thru Saturday. | | "•"** 6B24Mli||p^n I.M to 9:30 Wnday thru Saturday. § MXxmxx'XMmxtmxxxx'xxxxxxx gwansaa»iiaEM»MnwwwaHSM»aa»anwaaieeaiM m PONTIAC MU.I xxxxxxm THE VERY LATEST! WARDS DELUXE WARDS TILT-DOWN PORTABLE STEREO Slim design, with turntable unit mounted on tilt-down panel. 2 speakers. 4-speed THE PONTIAC PHKSS. MONDAY, D^AlBER 2! 1963? ,'!;f An Important style note on the Fall V Winter scene it the ombre plaid. Translated here by Wards info a softly brushed rayon sport shirt wim spread collar, two* matched pockets and 2-button adjustable cuffs. MachbvKwcthoble. Imported. Wide range of colors. PONTIAC MALL 682-4940-Opaii 9iSC to 9:30 Monday thro Saturday. rotary blades promise, you a closer \/» every time. Sidp flaps provide sha< 19“ easy access for cleaning. Travel * m jUT case included. NO MONEY DOWN g PONTIAC MALL 682-4940-Open 9:30 to 9:30 M$Adoy thru Saturday. S -* PLENTY OF POWER DEPENDABILE 8-TRANSISTOR AIRLINE Powerful cHdliis with excellent reception and tone. Has giant 4‘,f ■ QQ speaker, pin-point tuning and battery wWm Converter ta play on 110-120 V, AC. fa Handsome tan case. NO MONEY DOWN NJf P0NTIA0 MALL 682-4940-Opon 9:30 to 9:30 Monday thru Saturday, fa GETS STEREO FMJ AIRLINE 4-WAY STEREO CONSOLE *199 Automatic 4-tpeed stereo phoi graph, FM, AM, and Multiplex! 6 big speakers, no-scratch tone arm. In mahogany veneer. Other cabinets and styles, add $!& NO MUNEY DOWN • jjj. PONTIAC MALL 692-4940 - Open 9:30 to 9:30 Monday thru Saturday, jg s. DIRT CANT HIDE! VIBRA-BEAT DEEP-CLEANS 3 WAYS Beats, sweeps, cleans with powerful ' suction. Vlbra-beaters loosen deep J|''J|ftfl dirt, brushes whisk up surface litter, *■ suction leaves * rug dean clear through! t NO M0N1YD0WN PONTIAC MALL 682-4940-Opon 9:30 to 9:30 Monday thro Saturday* ZIG-ZAG MACHINE “BUILT-IN” BUTTON-HOLE MAKER « Dlal-o-matlc pattern maker—dial i * fijf , the stitch you want, Sews ertdleit k variety of fancy stitches, embroidery. O Doe» flawlet* straight stitching. H Pushbutton reverse. NO MONEY DOWN g g- P0NTIA0 MALL 682*4940-Open 9:30 to 9:30 Monday thru Saturday, g* muwMWMXxxxxmxxmxxxmMXxmxxxx *149 7-F00T HEAVY-DUTY POOL TABLE Genuine walnut veneer finish, pro- RkdMb^Vlf^ sise bumper cushions, 100% wool J M\ NO MONEY DOWN clpthrfeldlng legs, Imported 2 Vi-inch lathe-turned bails, I* P0NTIA0 MALL 112-4948-Open 9:30 to 9:30 Monday thru Saturday* fa mxmXXXXXXtfXX'mKiMXXXXaXXXXXXX y Can be wall-mounted < with optional bracket! ^ PONTIAC MAIL 882-4940 - Open ItSO to 9:10 Monday thru Saturday. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBE1 Qualifying Total Now Reaches T(66 Bowlers 702 More Qualifiers Enter Finals Sunday The' seventh annual Press Bowlerama closed its regular qualifying yesterday with 102 county bowlers entering ’ Sun* day’s growing finals at. 300 Bowl. .........:______ The 102 joined MprevTous qualifiers, making a total .of 166 from the. 12 participating houses, A special one-night qualifying trial has also been arranged tor Wednesday J see related story, column 5): Yesterday’s. action at Air- way. Lanes, North Hill Lanes, [received at the six sites, led by Montcalm Bowling .Cesubr^g-’ Wonderland Lanes, 300 Bowl and Howe’s Lanes had the . best turnout for this year’s tournament. More than 400 . entries were lanes where. George. Fuller, a co-owner of Edgewpod Country Club, turned his talents tq the bowling game and posted a 715 total. FIRST TIME Fuller, si 140 average. bowler who qualified for the first tithe, • Entering yesterday’s action, a 648 by Jim Shipp was best at “300*’ but 11 entrants either tied or topped that Sunday.. j There were two 700s rolled • at Howe’s yesterday, also; but neither displaced leader j Don Krause who" had. 736. hpd a 126-pin spot. He was one of the few. keglers with more than a 100-pin handicap who tried"to take advantage, of it Ihis yearT-Tfiere is a noted absence of 140 average bowlers, yet several of those entered have made the^finals, 1 Harold ^Dobratz (721) and Nick Nicholas (704) both qualified easily, however. Montcalm saw: three men post totals above previous fender Jim Wheatley’s 654 wltb the 673 of Chus RAMS l| Roiling yofSogo Fatiai (ntarcapti ■91 ) run (Vlllanuavi kick) run '(Vlllmutvo kick) 4f pool from McHnn (Oavli Ha ta»r* ttfkT from Wafcrc (Davis Ties 197th TD Pass Breaks Layne's Record DALLAS (APW A. Tittle, whose age Is discussed as much as his touchdown passes, set a record but. never thought about it until afterward—when it was too late to get the game baljl. Tittle^ the 38^year-old quarter back of the New York Giants, pitched the 197th • touchdown pass•„ of his career Sunday in beating Dallas 34-27. It was one more than the National Football League record set by the retired Bobby Layne. > The bald Texan, now In his 14th seasoti of pro football, Had been worried a lot by ttye Dallas pass rush which saw. three of his throws intercepted in the first half. Dallas was ahead a 27-14 at intermission and Tittle and his Giant mates had to really strug-gle to pull that one out and continue In a tie for the Eastern Conference lead. Sot after Tittle had thrown a 17-yarder to his Texas pal; Del Shofner, to win the game, Y. A. was asked if he got the game ball. Naw,” said the durable man from Marshall, Tex*, “I didn’t get the ball. I wasn’t thinking about collecting, souvenirs., I never thought aboltt that record out there. I 'just wanted to get the ball into the-end zone the best way T could, and get that game over. 197 TOUCHDOWNS For the record Tittle in his professional lifetime has attempted 3,499 passes, comojetfed 1,944 for 20,092 yards and 197 touchdowns. His completions better the lifetime record of Layne, who had 1,814. And his yardage is only 876 away from Layne’s record of 26,768. Tittle has 31 touchdown passes for the season. This Is only two away from his record set last fWft ir ....4-45.1 im&k' 4 ■ , uy ouArtcrs Punfi Fumbina 1 lost Varda panalliu ICORR °*w*V r NY HIIInBrnnd Intnriapllon In .... ..... JChandlar kick). OAL“-firk|ni J run (Baktr kick). NYj-OlftorU 1 p./rfmm'Wfl./mindltr OALtMirih 3 run (kick fallad). ft'!!}: ' bn,, “Sure, ties don’t, coilnt,” says Rozelle. “But remember, they work in the percentages in, directly. For example, 'PH&-burgh has three ties and is still in the running for the Eastern Division title. If' Pittsburgh can win its last two games and both New York and Cleveland split their games, then Pittsburgh could win Its divisional championship.” » Halas said he-felt better about the tie against the Vikings than he did with the tie against Pittsburgh. BEARS’FLAT’ “We should have scored 21 points in the first half against the, Steelers,” said Halas. “But we didn’t and we were flat in the,, second half. were flat against Minnesota" In the firs’ half and the Vikings took advantage of it. I’m happy that we bounced back in the second half. We needed it.’’ 1 The Bears’ final two games are at home against San Fram cisco arid"DSf6R7Hfilasiral"the' ^owingfhe dismissal -ofBbwdeiv l est of his team have high hopes of clinching the title.next Sunday. This can happen If Green Bay loses at Los Angeles Saturday and the" Bears defeat San Francisco Sunday. San- Francisco, the only team to defeat the Bears this season, has the worst record in the-NFL with a 2-10 mark. Extra Date to Qualify Arrangements have been made With the American' Bowling Congress and manager John Eldon of Auburn Lanes to hold one more qualifying session in the 1963 Press Bowler- Vo Is Coach Moves 'Up7 After Firing Due to the recent postponement because of the President's death and the frequent .com-plaint*' that too many bowiqrs work all, day on 'weekends, there will be two squads run Wednesday night at the Auburn Heights establishment. The first 48 to sign up for, a 5 p.m. shift and the first 64 to sip up for a 9 p. m. squad will be given the opportunity to qualify for Sunday’s finals at 300 Bowl. Donafd Oaa Floyd Armstront Jim Shipp e£ln. AFL Standings KaniM City ...... | 7 i .in Dtnvgr ’ . . S'I T .ffi SUNDAY'S RRIUITI San Diaao 17, * ~ BMtw) muh t£2BV tan Dingo at Oanvar at Katviaa c Rtitan at HauMon aw Y«7K .at sot at (f., V *. tHE^PONTIAC PRESS, MjfeP&Y, DECEMBER 2, 1963 Bowl Bid Hinges on Academy Game Ifavy^jfashwas pushed back one week and a 30-day period of mourning;/waa declared for the armed services. -The*^hBddtes-defimteiy^raBt go if they fail in their bid for their fifth straight victory over Artay. If they win, the whole delicate situation will land in lap of the Pentagon and may even end up on the- desk of President Johnson. By The AssociatedJPtess—-—5%e—majofitjr of the major college football bowl berths still unfilled hinge on just one game -Army-Navy. — When that ope ls decided, the Cotton Bowl visitors' spot will be filled—either by Navy or Pitt. And when the Cotton Bowl is decided the others are expected to fall in line just like knocking over the first of a row of dofri- Injuries Mount; Club Colls Basstn to Fill pool Tending Post DETROIT (UPC-If things get any worse for the ailing Detroit Red Wings, Sid Abel may have to pull his old uniform out of The crippled Red Wings, using their fourth goalie in three games and suffering ^rom a host If Navy doesn’t go, the honor almost certa^jrill-go^to^tttr which haa lost only to Navy and marked up its eighth victory with a 31-30 decision over Miami, Fla. Saturday, night. Washington won its way into the Rose Bowl on the running of fallback Junior Coffey in a 16-0 triumph over Washington State that sealed tod Big Six title. Saturday. The Huskics tako only a 6-4 mark into the. game against Big Ten champ, Illinois, of other injuries, put op another feeble performance last night gnd suffered a 4-1 setback at get control of the disc are Bruce MacGregor (16), Larry Jeffrey (14). Maple Leaf in center is Carl Brewer and on leftis Frank Ma-hovlich (27). The Wings lost, 4-1. the hands of the Toronto Maple Leafs. RECORD TD PASS—Y.A. Tittle of the New York Giants, is hit by Dallas’ George Andre as he gets off the winning !?!, yard touchdown pass to end pel ShOffner in the fourth period that enabled the Giants to post a 34-27 victory. It was Tittle’s 197th TD pass, one. more than the former "NFL record set by Bobby Layne. 'M' Unleashes 12 Punch; D—2 GUARD DUTY — The entire squad of the Toryito Maple Leafs forms a cluster around the goal In defense.onjDetroit Red Wings' rush in the first period of the game last night at'the Olympia. * Detroit players trying to Alston Signs 3 Contract Los Angeles Manager In 11th Season . SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) -Walter Alston, dean of active major league managers In point =*4. continuous service with one duRxipedJar his lfth season with the world champion Los Angeles Dodged today. ★ .★ a Alston immediately announced he wants to retain all his coaches, including Leo Durocher. No salary figure was released but a reliable source said Alston will make $50,000, about 67,000 more than he recelved drtryear . Like all his previous Dodger contracts, this one runs one year. . Since . Alston became manager in 1994, the Dodgers have won four National League pennants and three world championships, They have finished second three tiknes, third once, fourth once and Seventh once. They never Won a World Series before he became manager.. INVITED BACK Asked about his coaches, Alston said: , “I’ve invited the safcne gang .back,” “Have they all accepted?’’ he was asked. ■'That I don’t know/’ he said. The coaches, besides Durocher, are Pete Reiser, Joe Becker and Greg Mulleavy. I Alston, JS2 years old Sunday, Is toe first National League manager to stay with one club more than 10 years since the dbys of John McGraw and Wilbert Robinson. McGraw was with toe New York Giants from 1903 to 1931 and Robinson , managed the Brooklyn Dodgers from 1914 tnltBlThe-onlybther man to manage one club more thaif 10 years In modern National League history was Fred Clarke, who was with Pittsburgh from 1900 to 1915. NBA Standings ■AITISN DIVISION I WM Lott Pel. itftln Boston ........ II 1 .nt Clnclnnotl ..... IS 10 .*» 41V WSStSRN DIVISION 9 11 .104 Dot roll ....... . I 11 ,tM SATURDAY'S MSULTS Boston tot, Son Prandtco M ■olllmoro 110. Dftnslt 101 Philadofpnlo ist,now York ill Lot Angolti 07, itrtoolt oo-------- SUNDAY'S IIBSULTS Lot Anoolos 114, Cincinnati 100 Phlladalpltla 1M. Oatroll <11 TODAY'S OAMSS Na fltmoi schjdulod. TUISDAY'S OAMI San Praneltca at Now York NHL Standings WBBKINO PIOMTS _ ty Yha AaaaalatM ProM NINO* NOV, «TH6lsVMBSSSrt, 101 to, lorfimy, cant., knockod ajrt Oava Sal-By, ml PMiM»tphi*i: a. oil. 171, South Africa. 10. SLUGFEST—Officials Neal Armstrong (left) and George Hayes break up the fight between Montreal’s Ralph Back-Strom and Boston’s Doug Mohns (19) foreground In toe game< in Boston last night. Backstrom had to leave the game and have five stitches In his face. Montreal won, 3-1. Records Keep Falling as St John Triumphs CHICAGO (AP) - Jim St. John of St. Louis rewrote the record book Sunday as he won the $48,000 seventh annual World’s Invitational Bowling tournament by the widest margin in history- —St. John, 33, who still resides in' Chicago although bowling for a St. Louis Brewery, 1set 11 world’s records oh his path to the title and the $7,500 first prize. , , A A A ’ The slender St. John finished almost 30 potrits ahead of second place Johnny Meyer of Nes-conset, N.H., who had 314.17 Petersen points as compared to 343.26 by St. John. Meyer collected $3,750 as a runner-up and Bill Johnson of Kansas City got $2,000 for his third place finish. In the women’s division, - the defending champion and* throetime winner of the event, Mrs. Marion Ladewig of Grand* Rapids, Mich., downed her fourth crown by beating lefty Joanne Chapman of Blencoe, Iowa, in the final round. AVERAGE 233 St. John, a former Navy career man, average 23$ for toe 04 games In the finals of the 10* day tournament.- He took, the top spot after the second game and was never pressed by toe other 15 finalists, Including some of the nation’s top-ranking bowlers. The'Original field was 128 men and 64 women, The victory was the first In a major bowling tournament for St. John, who also gave the crowd a thrill with a 300 game, ine of the three perfect game! rolled in the tourney. Sr Sr * Don Carter, 37, of St. Louts, who had won five of the* six previous tournaments, was tor off hts usual pace and finished his long grind on the new lanes at McCormick Place In 15th place and a prize of $915. Mrs. Ladewig, 49-year-old grandmother, obviously tlredHt toe-48-game grind in four days. But she still had enough left to shoot 246 In her first game and kill whatever chamra Mrs. Chap- man might have had of taking the title. And Tne first prize of $4,000. In certifying her claim as the Woman bowler of the year and making another drive toward The Associated Press title of Woman Athlete of the year, Mrs. Ladewig averaged ,199 plus for 48 games In tne women’s field. She had a high game of 278 Which was matched on Sunday by Mrs, Chapman, toe wife of Iowa farmer. Pinal Men'* standing* W L Pint Plj John SI. lOUll 45 19 14,996 343.1 BPBmr# N.Y. 33 91 14,941 314.1. Johnton,, KC 33'Y 30’ i 13,011 309.36 Alllion, SI. Loud 32V lUo Tuttd, N.C. 331, HH ..................... Smith, Baltlnioro 33 , 31 13,507 304.37 Conning, PMd. 32v, 3iv* 13,525 303.0* •...au Ja. Louu 33 31 13,44* 302.1 tleooor 34 30 13,416 902.1. 13.527 300.27 2 Ex-Chiefs Flgura * In Cleveland Switch 1 Two former Pontiac Central grtdders figured In toe latest roster change of the Cleveland Brawns. Walt Beach, who was op the Browns’ taxi squad, was reactivated f 0 r yesterday’s game with the Cards, while Jim Shorter, who has been Injured most of the season whs dropped from the squad. Beach Is being used as'defensive back and on kick returns, same as shorter. The Browns play the Lions next Sunday in Tiger Stadium. Detriot is now wihless in seven •straight’ games since Nov. 10-toe night Gordie Howe (who hasn’t scored since) collected his record-breaking 545th goal Sidelined by Injuries were „Terry Sawchuk,Roger (Seder, Bill Gadaby, Norm UU-man and Alex FaaBmer. Four other players, Marcel Proao-vott, Doug Barkley, Irv Spen-cer and Larry Jeffrey, were suffering from injuries but still playing. * Sawchuk was injured Thanksgiving night and Harrison Gray had to fill-in the last two periods for him. The Wings brought Crozier up from Pittsburgh and he did a sensational job Saturday night unfolding Tproiitf to a 1-1 deadlock at Toronto. /But in the process Crozier suffered a broken' cheekbone and joined the hospital platoon. The Wings called Hank Bassen in Pittsburgh and he flew to Detroit. The game was delayed 20 minutes because of his late arrival. RUSTY REPLACEMENT Bassen also has been injured and was sidelined for almost three weeks. As a result he was rusty. He gave up goals to Dave Keon, George Armstrong, Tim Horton and Bob Pulford. • It was the 200th goal of Armstrong’s career and defenseman Horton got two assists to raise his total to the night to three points. Keon scored in the first period and then Bruce MacGregor tied it for Detroit with just 31 seconds gone in toe second period. V. But Horton scored at 3:55 and Armstrong pt 9:12 of the second and the Wings were' finished. Here’s toe way it works: The Rose, Sugar, Orange and Bluebonnet Bowls have their teams. Still to be filled are toe visiting roles in the Cotton and.Gator an both spots'in the Liberty.' . ’Second-ranked Navy is the top contender for toe Cotton Bowl berth, but won’t go if it loses to Army In their classic clash in Fhiiadeiphla--.-on~-Satordiiy..It. may not go even if it wins. Fifth-ranked Pitt is the No?2 contenderwitoJ^ wnd witfi one game to go, against Penn State Saturday. Pitt, However, also is* consid-dered a candidate for some of toe other bowls, so they all must outcome nf the Arrhy. Navy clash. BOWL LIST Here’s the bowl picture at a glanpe: Rose—Illinois, 7-1-1, vt. Washington, 6-4. Sugar—Mississippi, 7-0-2, vst Alabama, 7-2, Oranga—Nabraoka 9.1, va Auburn,' 9-1. Cotton—Texas, 104), vs. Navy, 8-1, or Pitt, 8-1. Liberty, at Philadelphia, Dec. ►—Neither team selected: Syracuse, 8-2, one top candidate Bluebonnet at Houston, Tex., Dec. 21—Louisiana (State, 7-3, vs. Baylor, 6-3. 43ator, at Jacksonville, Fia., Dec. 28—North Carolina/8-2, opponent to be picked. Leading prospects are Mississippi Stat 6-2-2, Air Force, 6-3, and Syracuse. Maples Wtn ‘ RO Relays for 4th Tim Royal Oak Kimball challenged Birmingham Sea-holm’s swimming dynasty in the 7th annual Royal Oak tie-lays Saturday night but n o t enough to prevent the Maples foam winning their 4th title in seven years. ' ’ Seaholm rolled up a total of 82 points end won only three events compared to the 102 points of last year and seven victories in eight events. Transfer students helped both Seaholm and Kimball. A pair of former Detroit Pershing high school swimmers were on opposite teams helping to score points against each other. . I Fete Adams, distance state, freestyle champion, helped Seaholm to' victory In toe 400 freestyle relay, while Jim Mathews, 6 r Pershing swimmer helped "Kimball's 200 backstroke relay team sat a new relay record of 1(50.8., TBAM TOTAL*'! ii n, Kimboii ... , ii itiurinn ... mu mm #nsmr rai <*, Ponton I*, flliiorolil 14, Doortern it) Pirniilo 'iFJwiwrt. MLAYS'IVINT TIMM 400 mmltoy tolny KImbOll (M»lh«w», rtn on, wobitoi’, worn). Tlmot litlil now roloy record). 400 tiMilyl* roloy — liWwIm (Coup, .owton, Smith, Adorni). THnoi ItMJ. \ NO brooiti»rolto„roloy—Oravios (Mitch-in, Honlemr, jvwKwwm), timoi iiW.i m bockitrok* twhy—KImboll (Kjrocn, AothOWI. tcho«nhall, WabiUr). Tlrrw: itO.i. (Now roloy* roeord), -NO buttordy rbloy-Tlo iooholm (Wbl-loco, Cronondor, ailkMloy, Kosomo). Orovtt (toomi, Jonoi, Mood and Mltch-011). TliMI Ii4l,4. (Aocort In prolim by Oroyot li*0,4). . . , 401 individual .moolOy roloy—Klmboll (Johnitott, IchoonhoTo, Torry, Willi). Timoi 4iTi,0. too modioy n Pyon, froomon ____ , MM liffi.1. .(Now roloy roeord), No Irootlylo roiay—saaboim (Hondor-»n, Lawton, Kotinody, Coop). Tlmot HU. Originally, toe Middies, with exciting Roger Staubach, * the Helsman Trophy winner; was considered a shoo-in for the visiting role in the Cotton Bowl, to oppose mighty, unbeaten Texas. But those plans were knocked asunder by the assassination of President Kennedy. The Army- American Net Pair Advances in Meet /MELBOURNE (AV) - Bandy legged Marty Riessen of Northwestern followed his American-teammate Dennis Ralston Into toe quarter finals of toe Victorian tennis singles championship Monday with an easy 6-2, 6-3, 6-3 third round victory over Australia’s Tim Clayton. The main feature of Riessen’s game was toe,amazing number of first services he got in and the high percentage of aces he had among them. M' Finishes 3-4-2 ANN ARBOR (UPI) - The heralded Michigan basketball team, with Bill Buntin back in toe good graces and CazZie Rus-sell fresh from a sensational collegiate debut, tonight kicks off—its long-awaited home season. 1963-84 home The Wolverines, who opened the season with a 90-76 triumph over Ball State Saturday night/ host Tulane tonight. Coach Dave Straek got 52 poipts from two sophomores — Russell and Jim Myers -- lh toe opener. Michigan (a figured to have a chance to foil Ohio State’s bid tor a fifth straight Big Tan cfown. The Wolverines, long a basketball doormat, are expected to jump Into the national cage liemlight this season. They’D do that, tab, If the opener was any indication. Russell scored 30 points and Myers 22. as Michigan won easily although Buntin was suspended for disciplinary reasons and didn’t even make the .trip to Muncie, Ind., where toe Wolverines helped dedicate a new fieldhouse. | "■; •v'/Wi ★ * ' Buntin/ who was the Big Teh’s leading rounder and scored ,3 points a game last season while leading the club to a 16-8 regular' season mark and an 8-6 Big. Ten record, was reinstated yesterday and Will play against Tulane. EAST LANSING (UP*), -The Michigan State basketball team, after demonstrating prolific point potentialin Saturday’s 109-86 victory over. Northern Michigan, win continue honing its attack this week with two more pmes^aiainst smaller Wednesday Western Michigan will be in from Kalamazoo and Saturday toe Spartans host Bowling Green of Ohio in toe last home game until Wisconsin comes, to town Jap. 6. MSU will be the favorite In both games and wito victories could come wltliin one win of equalling all the triumphs they were able to amass hi toe disappointing 4-18 campaign last season. Thtscoring eutburstegainst Northern Michigan set a record —the Spartan^ previous high was 103 points scored against Michigan in 1959 f- And came through a balanced attack. Pete Gent, toe Spartan captain,; was toe scoring leader of the night with 21. He .got assistance , from Marcus TSanders,' who added 20, and BUI Berry, who counted 16. Sophomore Stan Washington made an impressive collegiate debut by tossing up 15 points. BUI Schwarz had 13 and Fred Thomann 11. Northern Michigan, despite the lqpsi(teUnes8 of toe score, showed 1$ wUl be a tough opponent for teams of its own caliber. Player Struggle With AFL Nears San Francisco Opens NFL Draft CHICAGO (AP*)--™ ll National Football League teams draft the top college talent today, to be followed shortly ,by a checkbook struggle with top ir American Football League! ★ * * The Sqn Francisco 49ers, bottom in the league standings, get first pick In toe NFL. The other teams follow In revecw order of thp current standings, with the Chicago Bears picking last. ★ ' 4r Hr ' The 40ers, hurting at quarterback, might grab Rato Beath-Bret of Southern California, a Rose, Bowt hero. TABBED BY AFL That would start the money fight4 right away^ BeAtoard was the No. 2 pick In thq4FL draft held last Saturday In New York. The Kansan City Chiefs tabbed him and reportedly have been In close contact with him. ** At # • ’ If that Is the case, toe 49ers might go for George Mira, the Mlajtnl All-America who js high- ly regarded by NFL people here for the drift meeting. Mira wasn’t tabbed until-the 18th round at the AFL session, which may mean that he is pointed toward the NFL. , The NFL draft will go 20 rounds, until bidding ; rights within the league are reserved on 280 players. The eight AFL clubs earmarked 160 players.' Tne same collegians for toe most part will appear on both lists, with,the highest bidder landing toe man. It’s been a players’ market since toe AFL was fofmed four slasons ago. Each NFL club retained its first round pick, but trades have been made down the list. The Bears have a total of ]24 choices, Greerf Bay 23, Los Angeles 22 and Detroit and San Francisco 21 each. KEPT *0 EACH Dallas, New York and St. Louis huve the regulation 20. Cleveland, Minnesota .and Philadelphia have 19 each, Baltimore l$ and Pittsburgh and Washington 17, The AFL by-passed the' glamor boys generally and concern trated on beefy linemen. The NFL may hive the top names higher^ lndudlng quar-terbacks such as Billy Lotoridge. of XJeorgia Tech, Dick Shiner of Maryland, Larry Rakestraw of Georgia, George Bork of Northern Illinois, Perry Lee Dunn of Mississippi and Craig Morton of California, in addition to Baathard and Mira. ' i*r . * ii k The NFL probably wlU bypass Jack Concannon of Boston College. The' AFL Boston Patriots traded for the tint' draft choice In their league and tabbed Con-cannon, a homo town hero. The NFL also Has a backlog of 64 players selected as futures last year. These ate players whose original clauses have graduated but who had eligibility left. Some have been signed In the last couple of d*ye. Included on the. futilrAs list are Do A Trull of Baylor, pennla Clarjdga of Nebraska, Vam Burke of Orpon State and Mike Talliaferrf of Illinois. OSU Prevents Wolverines Improve by One Game' ANN ARBOR—The University of Michigan footbaB team made progress this season--but you have t<) use a short yardstick to measure it , ' Last yen* the club only won two games but the Wolverines were convinced that they would do better this seaison. They did—they won three. Hie Wolverines suffered a 14-18 defeat at the hands of Ohig Stgje Saturday to finally close thefar season only a few hours before the basketball team started Its season. Although Michigan did win only bne more game toan last year, the record was actually a little better than It might seem at first glance because the team did tie two games. %■ * . The club finished with a 342 record this season after going 2-7 last year.. Of course, the overall team performance was much better and toe club was the only team this year to beat Big Ten Cham-, pion Illinois. BuHt was frustrating for the Wolverines to finish the season with another game they should have won. • J ^ . EARLY LEAD The Wolverines jumped into a 104) lead early In toe second period but never scored again. Bob Timberlake kicked a field goal and an extra, point and Dick Ripdfuss plunged over for, a TD to account for all of the Michigan scoring. Obfo State scored with lust 41 seconds left In the first half when Paul Warfield made a sensational catch In the end zone of a 35-yard pass from sophomore quarterback Don Unverferth, After* a scoreless third period, Unverferth then directed an ex-cellent 76-yhrd TD march and capped it with a five-yard rollout on third down around'left end while toe whole Michigan team was looking for a plunge into tha line. ONE MORE CHANCE Michigan had one more chance. The Wolyerlnes charged down to the aeven-yard-Une a to two minute* left. It would ve ended the aeaion With a perfect touch if tog Wblverinu had pushed it across. ‘But Bob Timberlake threw two incomplete passes and that was the game. On toe second one on fourth down, both Craig ‘ Kirby and Rlndfusa missed shots at It. "# ^ A A' i Woody Hayes, dressed In, his usual short white sleeved shirt despite the biting cold, was vary gracious in vlctofy. Perhaps, m was trying to jniks Michigan forget that 50-20 score. m 'T \ HI ‘ 1 1 tVA ; * -*i 'A > THE PONTIAC PiaESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1963 fi-fr No Respite asJ*i$fom~ Lose Agmfir By The Aiaodated Press the Detroit Pistons have been having trouble winning with 10 players. Sunday night, they tried to do it with seven. ~r They now have a 'six-game losing string. —JhflJgiatons lost Bob Ferry In the first period, lost Don (Mil, Jack Moreland and their^ ^l halftime lead in the third period and went on to lose to the Philadelphia 76ers 131-121 in a National Basketball Association game played at Cleveland. In the only other game scheduled Jeriy West Scored 37 points as the Los Angeles Lakers built their Western Division lead to 1% games oyer idle St. Lends by ' defeating Cincinnati 114-109. The Lakers edged the Hawks 97-96 _ Jjtgday night. _ . ■ -; In other Saturday action, Baltimore whipped Detroit 120-101, Boston downed San Francisco 109-96, and Philadelphia beat New York 132-125. NEEDED HELP The 76ers needed all the hell toey.could get to beat the Pistons,Sunday night and they got it in the form of three injuries. : Ferry was sidelined aafter. being hit»in the eye in a skirmish under die basket. Oh] and Moreland both twisted ankles, Ohl While landing after a successful jump shot and Moreland in a colllifoirw^ a layup attempt. Philadelphia moved ahead for the first time with 9:30 remainr ing in the third quarter when Ben Warley connected for his only basket of the game. The_Flint quintet did not have speh an enjoyable opener, losing 67-66 to Ann Arbor SatUr-night. The Indians are favored »' capture the SVC title and PCH-is ratfa a contender. FUnt^s-initsilSth season~un- CreloM 111 Tatllf 4,34-37 ,3t ......40 U M M—111 ........M » m at—im Peroonal feul«—Datrelt, Egan X Ferry X Howell 4, imholf 4, Jone» 3, .More- land J. Ohl 1, Scott X Mwanmn. JNlO-adelphia, Blanchl 3, Clerking X1 Greer X Neumann X Schayei 5, Walker ' Wartay3,WMtfr,IfSpl - AMmancy xssi. ... , ■ ; I . JIKBINh ../problems?! ^ 24 1 iHour Servicei I Salaa a Sarvtoa • Repair I ■ SERVICE | ■ PLUMBING ft HEATING a SPECIAL! GARAGE FRONT REMODELING 2 CAR GARAGE Complete $OQQ ' PONTIAC CODE 099 GRAVEScwnMm* Chiefs Win,"Eye Tough Flint 5 Pontiac Central will move to Flint tomorrow night to open foe Saginaw Valley Conference basketball race after handily disposing of Gros.se Pointe Saturday night, 71-52, In the* season opener. -5^.1." Gage Scores ■RH to, Baii stata n . Michigan data 109, Northern Michigan B Ohio State M, Caltfomla-Oavl, 42------ Minnesota 16, Kantaa Stata 66 m, Butler 52 1 Southern IHInala *5 WntHwi — •“ der coach Joe Dowdy, and a veteran lineup back. Six varsity played, however, were doing double dut^untjl' football season ended Thanksgiving Day. The Chiefs pulled ..away from a hapless Grosse Pointe squad in the tirst quarter Saturday night on foe losers’ court in a contest.that was a typically Sloppy opener. a* one period, PCI1 led 19-10; but midway through the [. second-session, Grosse Pointe began chipping, away as play grew hectic on foe floor. • A it. ★ TheBlu&Devilseutthe-margin to four- points three times, 5~title Aftei the last being, 34-30, just before Pontiac ran off six straight points in the fined minute for its 40-30 intermission lead, DE WALT HOT * _ Mel Die Walt, the game’s' top marksman, had 15 of his 25 jfoints for the Chiefs in the first half. Gerald Henry and Bill Morgan gave increased production in the' final half and the toad grew. „ , ■ W ----- The biggest spread was 69-44 With four minutes left in . the game, but the’ Chiefs only hit I, Lawrence Tech 41 cannon ill, Lowrente icui Northwood 93, Detroit Tech 71 Twm** flijirl ■ Cincinnati 101. Gaorg* 45 Wichita >2. Wyoming 67 ' Bradley 53, Hardln-Slmmont 43 Dayton 15, Akmn 44 V , k |j( Colorado 72 __ IS, Air Force 44 Draiii -01, William Jewell 71 M. LouU 100, South Mkoto 70-DePaul 80, North Dakota 50 tOMoM, Tulano 40 Kent State 7) a State 67 St. joooph',, Po. 73, St. Mary', «2 • Cenlslus 94. Scranton 61 Harvard 44. BowdWit 40 . I Columbia 09, CCNY 04 (two overtimes) Northeastern 15, Brown 55 SOUTH Duka OX Penn r-- o 74, Ttxas Tech 75 MEL DEWALT Sparked PCffs Victory Cage Calendar TUCSDAY' Chippewa *t Anchor Bay. Bay City Handy at Saginaw Ar Avondale at Richmond Saginaw at Bay City Central (me rtiorb two-poihter after that as the resents tobk over.. PCH held a wide margin rebounding in the contest, 45- 7 11, although coach Fred Zittel elected to start a lineup that had no one over 6-0. - However1, it had ohly seven more shots than foe host\team, 57-50, losing the ball frequently on violations. The Chiefs were able to' start their fast break I foiHy Well, but “the ball handling broke down too often in the front’eourt. '' ^ ★ it ★ 7 —The slinr DeWait ^lit 10 of 20 field goal attempts to top the shooters, while Henry and 6-3 reserve Jim Johnson led the rebounders with 11 and 13, respectively. Ndw coach Zittel, while not (displeased with the PCH first-, night I showing," had’, the Varsity preppfng yesterday for tough Flint Central. PCH 471) . ©FH (Ht Morgan J.5-7 II VonS'arti 2'.3-4 7 AJ04& ' b '^-O 0. Reynolds 0 0-0. - 0 Sniq^afeBt fro. -d Conti 1 M i Totals 34 19,32 II Totals It 14-34 51 SCORE by QUARTERS Control ,. _________ 19 21 14 V5-71 ... Imloy City Clawson at Madison Lamphero ~OraMMn.il ft.Mi-4.Miy .1 faiurtfY n«y . • Madison Heights at Cranbrook East Detrblt at Port Huron Whitmore (.aka at Emmanuel Christian St. Francis at Farndale St. James Pontiac Central at Flint Central Fenton’at Holly .Flint Beecher at Lapeer Livonia Franklin at Wayne L'Anse Creuse at Van Dyke Lincoln Flint Northern at Midland Pontiac Northern at F WRESTLING—TUESDAY Sauthlleld at Kattoring North Farmington at Northviiio Fitzgerald at Pontiac Central _ Bowl Decision Due . EL PASO, Tex. (AP) - Sun Bowl. officials say a decision may be made sometime this week on one or bofh football teams for foe Dec. 31 Classic. Mamilton Trims Favorite Mt Canada Grey Cup TORONTO (AP)-The Hamilton Tiger-Cats got their#Grey Gup victory; Halraterson got a scoring record, and a television network got a break in the Canadian pro football championship game. ★; ★ • Hamilton ended a frustrating run of four pIayoH losses Iry trimming the favored British Columbia Lions; 21-19, at Vancouver, B.C., Saturday. Paterson, Veteran Ti-Cat flanker, scored his fifth. touchdown hi Cup competition to top the old mark by one. ^ And WADC-Tv beamed the Banning SAN DIEGO; Calif. (AP) -High level trade discussions involving front liners Felipe Alou, Dill Skowron, Jhn Burning, Jim Kaat, Ray Sadecki and Claude tateen gave promise of several (.major player transactions today ns the National Association-offi-dally opened its 62nd baseball convention. ■ ★ ★ ■ 'V, The most sought after player appeared to be felipe Alou, the star right-fielder of foe San Francisco Giants. 'At least two dubs, foe St. Louis Cardinals and the Detroit Tigers, have made overtures for foe 28-year-old' Dominican Republic native #ho batted .281, hit 20 homers and drove in 82 runs last season. St. Louis has offered Sadecki, 4-hn4-p-~ promising * 23-yeir-old southpaw, who divided 20 decisions with the Cards, winning four of his last jHve decisions. The Giants, on the lookout for a starting left-hander, expressed interest but asked the^ Cards to "sweeten” the oiffer. h it ■ < s”; The other proposed deal involving Alou Is moFe complicated. ITie Tigers would like to have' Alou but do not. have a left-hander 'foe Giants consider .of equal value. The Giants,, on the other hand, are interested In (Drive 'em and You'll buy ’em) 1962 Ford Gnluxla 4-Dr. Sedan ..... . $1645 1961 Pontiac Catalina 4-Dr. ... .. . $1495 1961 Ferd Country Sadan, Power .... $1195 1962 Mercury Monterey 4-Dr....... $1495 1957 Mercury ..........________ . $ 295 1963 Pontiac Star Chlaf 4-Dr. Hd. Tor $$795 1959 Ford Galaxla 4-Dr. . .......$ 595 MaHy Other* to Chooto From! 11 KEKOO SALES & »HtE 3080 Orchard Lk. Rd. . t Keego Harbor Soma Location for NMrfy 50 Yoars Phono 613-8400 TEMPEST , PONTIAC GRAND PRIX Minnesota southpaw Jim Kaat. The Twins are looking for a starting right-hander. , “We would like to have Jim Bunning of Detroit* and foe Ti- Champ Beaten by Young Kidd NEW YORK (API Bruce Kidd of Canada looms as the potential new king of foe world’s distance runners — But, he may find ole Pete McArdle .’aro to shake. . The'20-yeaF-olHTO of oronto speedster • established himself a big threat* for 5,000 and 10,000 meter honors in . the Tokyo Olympics by winning the National AAU cross-country championship Saturday. "j ‘t,, it it v'"ifc—i— He covered foe ,10,000-meter t6'/4 miles) course of hills and vples at Van Cortlandt Park Jn, the good time of ?0 minutes, 47i He beat out McArdle, ’tie 34-year-old defending champion, in p close finish. McArdle crossed the finish line only three yards bacW Kidd- clocking 30:47.6. with the third place man, William Mills of the U.S. Marine CorpSi a good 125 yards farther back, finishing in sl‘: 12. V was the second AAU cross country title for Kidd, .who won at Lbuisville as an 18-year-old in 1961 when MeArdle finished fifth. The Canadian skipped last year’s event in Chicago because he was competing In the Eiritish Empire Games - at Perth, Australia, where he won1 the slx-mile race. The Loa Angeles Track Club won the team crown with 47 points, followed by the New York Athletic Club's A team with 74. The Toronto Olympic Club wtis third with 81, followed by the Golden Gate Track dub of San Francisco, 88, and the Marine team, tl4. If Ihftift'i inch ft thiBfr if ft ikltr'i ctr, you're looking «t It. A SAAB I* doolgnod for tOUftl Scandinavian Mntort whore It bllo* through blltzordi, pulla through toy ruttod rood*, god ptrform* flawlottiy at 40* below. An MBBleor for Olympic »kl champion* Ilk# Egon and t Mil unutual J cyllndor, 2.otroko engine Mart* wtrriintod for 3 yo*ri or 24,000mHot (long onougti lor 2 wlnloro). A root win lor conf Real winter people Ilka Egon SMS^.Z $4900 MIRACLE MILE MOTOR), Inc. 2162 I. Tglggraph Rd. ' 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. Dully iRoaft Wod. Phono 334-6000 gers are interested in Alou,” a Minnesota spokesman said. ‘II understand Calvin (Calvin Griffith, owner of the Twins) has offered' Kaat to foe Gi&nts for. Alou with-the intention of sending Alou to the Tigers in exchange for Bunning.” ^ APPEARSSi|v*^ A trade between the Los Angeles Dodgers and Washington Senators appears imminent. The Dodgers are said A to Mve. offered Skowron and' an unidentified player tq the Senators,for Osteen, Washington’s ace lefthander despite his 9-14 record. The two general managers, Buzzie Bavasi of the Dodgers and George Selkirk of the Sen: ators. huddled for over an hour Sunday mgbt then agreed to get together again. . ★ ★ ★ More trade talk was expected today when the club officials gather for tine annual draft. The Senators, having first pick Because of*foeir last place , finish In thf American League were expected to select one of two pitchers, Camiio Estevis of Albuquerque or Howard Koplitz of Syracuse. The draft was divided into two groups. The Hirst selection was to be made from veteran minor leaguers at a cost of $25,000. Most of the activity, however, was expected to center, around foe first' year tdraft, which includes young ' bonus players signed after Dec. 1,1962. These may be acquired "for the $8,000 price.; it it it '' 1 ^ Last, year, the majors selected 56 player-s M a rocord outlay^ $695,000. Of these, 45 were first year men. The Cards announced Sunday they had given veteran catcher Carl Sawatski his unconditional release. • \ -game throughout Canada and the United States in little, more than three hours after struggling through a two-fay' nightmare last yea’r when a dense fog caused a halt in play oh- the scheduled date. The Tiger-Cat Victory, which > gave the Eastern Division -|ebamps their Jirst title since 1957. was a personal IrfompTTfor' 30- year-old Paterson and his' 31- year-old batterymate, former Maryland quarterback Bernie Faloney. . BITTER BLO W For the Lions, Western Division doormats for 10 seasons, and foeir 36,465 partisans' the pounded By the second quarter loss of star halfback Willie (The Wisp) Fleming. . . Fleming, B.C.’s leading; breakaway threat, suffered a, slight concussion when'tackled by Hamilton’s Joe Zugar and 258-pound Angelo Mosca on a play that had the crowd. screaming for a roughing penalty and Mosca’s scalp. ‘ 4 (' SA A ’ ; Hamilton led, 7-0, at, that point but pulled away on Faloney’s-pin-point passing and a stout defense to bring the Cup east for. foe 25fo time in 36 East-West encounters. The West had taken seven of the past nine meetings, Faloney completed 14 of 20 passes for 272 yards and pitched scoring strikes of 70 yards—to Paterson—and five yards to Willie Bethea. Art Baker, ex-Syracuse star, scored foe other Hamilton touchdown on a one-yard plunge. Joe Rapp’s five-yard pass to Mack Burton and a 29-yard field goal by Peter Kempf Accounted for the Lions’ total. } - $a/USc/teifr DOUBLE BARRELED SPECIAL! v V 4^re’s-'the greatest offer I hav« ever made in liny 27 year* of Auto Painting, Right now, fit patntany ca r with my Diamond Gloss custom quality auto paint; 1 Job for only $19.95. Choosa from ~six"bwtrttfuLcQlflrsi in addition^ you receive $10.00 in metatwork— | ABSOLUTELY FREE! AUTO FAINTING NO UPS • NO EXTRAS NOW ONLY! V ANY CAR! 6 BEAUTIFUL COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM! Includes all this: Noorty SO,000 cart ptlntad m FREE metal WORK OFFER GOOD WITH ALL EARL SCHEIB AUTO PAINT JONS! Sam# low metalwork »»•*««► to effect Provo ft to yourgglf krttfTi#^ Scheib’s axcluglvg —. automatic ESTOMETER ONE DAY SERVICE IN BY 9 OUT BY 5 OPEN 7:30 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. T 100 CITIES COAST TO COAST Be sure it's £ml Sc/teifr WORLD'S LARGEST AUTO PAINTER 19 YOU CAN’T ORIVI IN TODAY 'CALL FOR AN APPOINTMINT 147 S. Saginaw FEdaral 4-9955 TEtis Is Cozy Comfoxt "There is no safer fuel than oil and no more dependable fuel all service than Gee , . . with New Mobilhedt furnace oil in my tank and Gee o& my fuel oil distrihutor. am sunr~of a Winter of cozy warmth and'comfort for. my family. "With Gee's automatic delivery I know that we will always have plenty of better quality New Mobilheat fuel oil . ., with the modern 'degree day' method the folks at Gee^ know when we will need fuel oil ahd before our present supply is exhausted. . their modern GMC truck is at our door with the fuel oil we need. i "Gee's convenient, budget plan assures me of never haying’ large fuel oil biBs" ev.fr In the coldest months of winter. AAy-heQting worries are o thlng of the post." NOW IS THE TIME TO SWITCH TQ GEE AND COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION! Whither you hove a five room or a five bedroom home you will appreciate the persdnalized service given by Gee, Pontiac's oldest and largest independent Mobilheat distributor. This locally owned and operated fuel company is made up entirely of Pontiac and Oakland County residents who know how to combat this changeable climate with fuel that you con depend on. Delivery l,s made in. new, modern GMC trucks, meter equipped for accuracy and radio, dispatched ,fpir cftiickfl’ ftftivlce. ) t»|* t More and moirft Pontiac and Oakland County rftftidftnlv are switching to Get and complete hftating satisfaction. May we odd your namo to our ovor growing li$t of truly 'satisfiedcustomers. Dial FES-8111. Ne Matter Where You Llvs . • . You, tee, Con Enjoy Safe, Dependable Warmth, Comfort and Economy! Gee's fleet of new, modern GMC trucks (meter ■ equipped 'for accuracy and radio dispatched fat better service) deliver jleantf burning NEW MOBIU-HEAT in Pontiac, Dnayton Pldlni, Waterford, Gorki* ton, Orion, Oxford, Rochester, Auburn Heights, Bloomfield Hull, Kisao Harbor, Wailed Lake and, the surrounding area. Call PI $6161 tadayl Holden Rod Trading Stamps HEl Important •' fo Tou, Who Hmat With Coal ... « _ W« tiny a (BtHplaNi line att regular gradai of coal. Including SEE POCAHONTAS “LITTLE JOE” Tka All Pirpota Sioktr 0*al D—4 ! .■ tim ■ ■ p ■ . * *jns - ■..* 11 THIS PONTIAC PRB$& MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, im I f n ■ ^sfrawwM i iui» 4 of a Mil VAOtON • WARE 12 OUNCE BOWL. « SO EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS with purcha*. of TWO 12-OUNCI SIRLOIN STEAK* Tf T-Bone or Cube Steak ,b 89( TASTT- TA8TY KROGER REG. OR DRIP REGliuLR'^pM WITH COUPON BELOW BORDEN'S ELSIE 4ts@d 1 Star-KisL Union Loko thru Tuesday, Oooomber. 8, tilt. None M SPECIAL LABEL WITH COUPON BELOW ZIPPER SKIN The following Is a list of recent Pontiac area births if recorded at the Oakland County Cleric's Offtpe (by name of father) i 16‘i-OZ. CANS DOZEN _ RED DIAMOND LARGE Ingiish walnuts OR PAflR DEr.yC shiu PIvANi VITH THIS COUPON—Suva 14' SPECIAL LARIt KROOIR RIOULAR OR DRIP VAC fAC COFFEE 21 EXTRA vl. STAMPS | >25 EXTRA vmui STAMPS I 50 EXTRA vfiui STAMPS | WITH THIS COUPON' AND PURCHASE I WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE I WITH THIS, COUPON* AND PURCHASf a OP TWO SI OZ. CANS KROOIR ■/ OP KROOIR VAC PAC DllUXI J > OP TWO US. /CARTONS ■ PORK & BEANS 2c'ans^T‘ I Mixed Nuts er firsInie Pe,omits I AUSWBET MARGARINE | ■ . y.. lAi | Coupon valid at Krosor In Detroit and I Coupon valid ol KmR0» In Dotrell end I volid 0| Krofl.r in and I MMv thru Tool,, Dec. t, I OSS. ! leiwm Mich, thru fOt«,, 0*c. 9, 1901k J VALUABLE COUPON r FLJNT(AP) — A juvenile boy _ has admitted the stabbing and shotgun slaying of a F e n t om Township man Saturday while raotheryouth-acted as a lookout, Genesee County sheriffs' men said Sunday, Detective Raymond J)u4 ley identified ihe-heysWfiatyJHbk land, 1$, and Danny Mungall, 14, both neighbors of the v 1 c t i m, Gordon Bowen, 44, a factory * . worker. Dudley said the Holland boy admitted he stabbed and then shot Bowen after Bowen struck him. Holland was scheduled to nnnpnr hafnrr Judgn George D-Stevens in a probate court near? tog today. Both boys were held in the juvenile section of Genesee County jail. The Mungall boy acted as a lookout during Ihe slayinig, Dudley said. LYING FACE DOWN ; Bowen's body was found tying face down in his home in the Po-nemah Lake area between Linden rad Fenton, about 12 miles south of Flint A telephone was stiU clutched in bis band. Police said he had used it to call for aid before he died. Holland told Dudley he had gonetoBowen'shouse Saturday to borrow bread. He said Bowen accused him„ of stealing $235 last summer and. had struck the boy with bis fist. Dudley quoted Holland as raying he stabbed Bowen with a kitchen knife rad then ran home, got a 12 - gauge shotgun, returned and fired at Bowen through a window. Dep-utiesratorHoIIaiitl’s bools filled = footprints under a broken window at Bowen’s house. ★ w1 * Dudley said the boy told him he returitod later rad fired a second sfiot into Bowen’s, back as he lay on the floor. Dudley raid Holland admitted taking the $235 from Bowen last August and giving $11# of it to - Mungall. \ ; Robert F. Leonard, Genesee County Prosacutor. sald Bowen, a Fisher Body employ#, often kept an eye on neighborhood children when their parents were out. L , I An autopsy indicated death came from either the first dr second shotgun wound. The knife was hot found. Skipper Sails on to Hawaii After Mishap SAN DIEGO, CaUf. (AP) — Fells Noble has had nothing but trouble with his homemade boats, but he is once again sailing toward Hawaii, the first leg of his planned world cruise. Noble, 61, and his crewman, Andrew N. Paldra, 18, of Detroit, Mich., were rescued Saturday by a Japanese fishing boat 860 miles off San Diego. They had been adrift for four days with a-broken-puddaiL. >aldan decided he had mgh. He got a ride back to ire on a U.S. Navy radar iket ship. Noble stayed with ; boat, fixed the rudder, and let his course for Hawaii. * 'Hr won’t give up-*® he’s id," said Noble’s wife, Mary-in San Diego. "I'm real ppy that he’s been found—but don't think he’s coming jm.m I ■ table's other boats smashed Blast rocks. GRbUND “ " “ FRESH HAMBURGER . , . -37- center CUT RIB PORK CHOPS ..,..,....... '- 59° FRESH SPARE R1BS ................. ,b39# ASSORTED COLORS KLEENEX TISSUE..... 4s89' OSAGE BRAND FREESTONE peaches . . . 4 ^*1 All PURPOSfe 1 * | ’’ ", PILLSBURY FLOUR 25 -sl” refreshing—1 ' . KROGER TEA BAGS :~r. 99‘ CREAMY SMOOTH - ’ ^ HELLMAN'S mayonnaise 59c CANNED EVAPORATED, ’ V CARNATION MILK...... 7ss*l TASTY & FRESH • KROQER FIO BARS 2- 491 SAVE 10‘—BORDEN'S . ™ T~ ^ :ti!_■ V— COTTAGE CHEESE KOTIX KROGER ALL PURPOSE SAIftD OIL D4r6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, Crucial Time for Freshmen GirtsfbmjrfsoJ^llege Dropo Season BylESLIE J.NASON Christmas vacation Js\acrus «cial time for ‘{he college freshman. This is ti^e period during . Which the fainthearted choose to run rather than to stand and i and disillusioned with college, they feel their choice of subjects must have been an unhappy one since they are not. interested in doing “ all the~workrequiredto pass. So they give up, oblivious of the fact that months of hard work will be required to off* .set a disasterons semester, which will remain forever a part of their college records. All on his own the potential dropout has decided that college work is too difficult for hint. He has a rathdr hazy feeling about each of-his courses. It ' hard for him to follow the in-| structors’ lectures. , ■■■ ft Bnciei :: ♦ KJS VAQ81 ♦ A843 + 86 WIST EAST (D) + A652 +97 84 WKJ107S ♦ K ■ ♦ Q J 10 9 2 + AQ710793 +1 ____+ Q1084 ' fTfi— ---------1 ♦ 768 + K94 Iwt and West vulnerable East South West North Pom Pus 1 + Double MF Pus 2+ Pass 14 94 9+ 3 + Pus Pus Double Fan Pus Puss BY OSWALD JACOBY Bouth managed to go down' Blur tricks at his three spade doubled contract. He probably could have saved a trick fat ttje playT but , the discussion that Mowed did not "concern itself with that North seemed to think . that ■ South's two spade bid was -inexcusably'bad and aaid so in pointed language. ' South did nof really defend his two spade" bid except to point out that it had told North what to Jlead against West's three club contract and that a spade lead would leave West somewhere between a rock and and a hard place when it came to making three dubs. Furthermore Sooth felt that the Only excuse North had for going three spades was that North wanted to make his op- partners* overbid. This was true. here. South took his life .in his .hands when he bid two spades, but as South pointed out, his bjd worked! No -one doubled two spades. Instead West went to tfiYee clubs and North could have d a spade, and set the hand one or maybe two tricks. > . *• How about North? His takeout double was alt right, but~ when South could not bid over East’s one heart North had no excuse for any further bid. Not only was South marked withsa bad hand, but in addition East’s one heart bid had reduced the value of North’s queen of hearts from two points to zeftw and without those two points North did not have a takeout double. _. .-So there was ooCexcuse North’s three 'Spade bid and the loss was due entirely to him. V*CRRD Sente** Q—The bidding has boon: North last South West \ . Pass 7 • ♦Ml.. _____ What do you bid? j A—One diamond. There is no 1 hurry about bidding the spade salt' • tODATS QUESTION Your partner rebids to one | heart Now what do you doT ! The Whole thing seems to be confusion. A Even cram sessions have failed' to straighten out the courses. Parents and college counselors stand helplessly by white young people decide to throw in the sponge and leave college at the beginning of the vacation with no intention of returning. Neither is consulted .before the move. •- Over a period-of years, under the.leadership of Dean.Harper Wren, counselors at Long Beach City College have worked out a procedure which salvages more than half of the probationary group. = "■ SAVING PLAN Any -student following a similar plan on his owq initiative could retrieve his. tattering semester and save himself the pain of the long comeback trail. Here is the plan: . , v • The procedure of reporting to a counselor with a record of current .grades is made one condition of a student’s probationary status. (Why do we have to force students to face their problems?): • Immediately , after mid-semester examinations a: student receives a form tetter to be circulated to his instructors. Hie form allows space for present grades and the instructors’ amir ments. • A conference with the counselor follows. The sthdent is given suggestions and help regarding study procedures and) technique s in any troublesome courses. The plan has been in operation about five years and becomes more successful each year......-fmrS- ■k Jt ■ * But what of the students not yet on probation? If students even considering droput would' follow such a plan on their own, they could salvage themselves. The niatter was referred to me as - arbiter and it seems worthy of comment /in this column. — When someone goes down. „ 1100 thd chances are that both mbbe T»i Astrological, % Forecasts I «| W By SYDNEY OMARR ______ Repay friends for pail c insld- eretloni, FULFILL OBLIGATIONS. Good fW worK ^wlfh clvlc^ toclel orjamri [Ions. ________jb’Makemore *wbi do so first IN THB home. Making onai happy Is no« of utmost impor* GEMINI (May 21 • Juno 21) i'Chat advancemant duo. RKant ofrorta no ” **NFipaNCB. I WDNC&2 \WV PBOPLB ALWAYS &6retuB0oa4 a&AMULE e 77“ / ^ By Ernie Bushmiller > both spoken and written ex-..... Avoid lumping to conclusions. Illlng to COOPBRATI.. > (July 22 • Aug- 2l)t Heppygo-•ftitude may bo pleasant- but »VO COSTLY. Be pOSitIVi ,0V Hirn-iw m —- a, Be willing to expand, But I (Aug. 22 - sept. 22)1 Q lie." Meani be awar* of d«, associates, ilias wide app .JJIsplay- KsTTM accept status quo. Tak< own ebllltlot, Intuition. . ssga. You can ba happlt SCORPIO (Oct. 29-Nov aspect encourages area around you. Hava court , day that It . most SIGNII parsd. SAOITTARIU8 ..... IP Avoid being top sentimental. Fact --- tit they axial, Recognising truth today could novo many problems tomorrow. AppUot especially to attain of “ - ' * - Ba logical, CAPRICORN '(DM. 22 • Jan. Pont rotated to past ca Strength It on your slds get accordingly. Daley decision* until you ni wiySjl moy require ADDED ATTENTION, rush, pupil dr itt"1™* will tote out. Key GEMINI message. . approach It carefully. Fiscal (Fob. • Mg plnost duo In rolotlon to younotr persons, including cltlIdron. Incowraga hobbles, 1 educational activities. OS In Indicate** through written word. Stress knowledge. •IF TUaiOAY td Y fruits Apples. Delicious, Red, bo. .........$3.7$ Apple?, Delicious, Golden, bii. ' “ Early Advances Cut Stocks Go Up in Mixed Day Apples, Mclntorti, bu...............3,00 Apples, Northern Spy, bu........ ■ " VEGETABLES Beets, dot. belts................. Beets, topped ...-.............. Cabbage, curly, bch....... ... Cabbage, SprtHits/bu."...'. A'. Cabbage, standard, bv. .......... Carrots, dot. bens. ....... Carrots, Cello pak, 2 dot. ........ Onions, dry, iM'lbs. ........ .............. Parser, curly,<’bch........v..............85 Parsloy, root, both. showed fractional NEW1. YORK (AP)—A stock 1 tion contract awards in October market advance lost some of] over a year'earlier.' its ppsh early' this afternoon but prices remained irregularly higher. T The trading pace slackened After having, been active. ' • • */ * . ★ Changes of key issues ranged from fractions to about a point with a few wider moves being made. The advance came as trading tagon in. the usually bullish month of December, SENTIMENT HELPS Sentiment was helped by favorable business ’ news, including-a rije i|T steel orders and a 26 per cent gain on construe- Steels gains. * -Mg International Business Machines and Xerox were delayed in opening by ‘an accumulation of buy orders. IBM opened at 490, up 4%, ■on a 2,000 shares. Xerox soared 10-M to 385 on opening Mocks of 4,500 and.500 shares and later increased its gain by .a point. AVERAGE UP The Associated Press average at. noon was up 1.0 to 280.6 with industrials up 1.9, rails off .3 andutilities,up -.7. Among the more active gain- ers were General; Instruments Vt at 17, Delta Air Lines * ah 69% and Zenith 1% at 81%. AMERICAN EXCHANGE Prices on the American Stock Exchange were irregularly, higher in moderately active trading. Pyle National advanced more than 4 points. . Government bonds1 were slightly higher and corporates were mixed. American Stock Exch, Figures uttur decimal points are eighths ■ NEW YORK (API — American Stock Exchanc ______me: Cohu Elt- I -Cont Av & En S’/l Creole Pet •... WVt 4%AAead Johh . ..... \ P Rint Radishes, b.............................. Radishes, hothouse ................ 1.7$ -SXBtpatb Acorn, br ish. Buttercup, bu................ 1.25 ah, Butternut, ; . 44$ sh, Delicious, bu. .............. I B The New York Stock Exchange i\mtW * * * 10.50-11.00. 1 _ _ ' vealers 200 steady, Choice and prl 30-2*1 Standard A good 22-30) Cull I utility 1442. Sheep 1S00. No early CHICA00 MVRITOCK , CHICAGO, (AP)—Megs ately active; butchers * ui under 230 lb steady to 2$------— weights fully steady to strong, t steady to 25 lower, loss mainly weights over 410 lb) shippers took 80 ... ■cent of salable supply; l-2_ 200-22$ lb butchers 15.25-50, around 150 heod -15.50 tnd 100 hood Ot 15.40-45; mixed 1901230 lb 14.75-15.as; 220-240 lb 14.50-Ts!lJDT~%-a-~24ftap0 lb 14.00-14.50; 240-200 lb early Wedneadayi ... en0l—■- |.. • 23^5,'Tneruding r'aavaral prime 1250-132$ lb at 23.7 high choice and prime 1400-14$ 22*50; choice *00-11.40 lb 2J,C.„.--. _ loedi high ehotco 1000-10JO lb 2375; , choice iiio-1350 ib H.lraJUfi comparable grade 1350-1550 lb 21.30-21.50; load 1530 lb 10.507 good *00-1250 Ib 2ijm$0; taw Standard and low good l*.00-».50; high choice ind,prime *00-1050 Ip halters 22.50-2240; mosr choice 400-1100 Ib 21.50-22.2$, good 20.25-21.50; utility Ohd commercial Cows 12.75-14,00;------------ U “■ Virginia Judges' Vote. Hits at Integration RICHMOND, Va. * The Vto ginia Supreme Court said-today Prince Edward County had the ri^it to close its public schools to avoid racial integratiou. . In a 6-1 split decision, die. majority s aid - the Virginia Constitution gives its localities the option of operating or not operating public schools. - The dissenting judge was Chief Justice John Eggleston, who held that the state legislature was obliged to provide pub-lie-education in the county winch' abandoned it four years ago. ★ * ixM. The final adjudication in the long - fought school case hinged in*part on thoction of the Virginia high court. The case is already before the U.S. Su-r preme court on,.its latest trip. FUNDS REFUSED Prince Edward abandoned its i public school system in 1959 in L. the face of' court • ordered integration. It took the move by {refusing to appropriate local, matching school fuhdf,V - ’ A private educational foun-daikrn immedidtely organized a school for wMte pupils. Negroes turned'down,offers of assistance in opening similar private schools and continued to fight for opening of schools ip the courts. # The first hreak in the education blackout for Negroes came September when a free privately - financed system'was setup and is now providing education for tjhe 'Negroes. The new free schools are being held in former public school buildings. ■ |’ Firming Trend Seen in Grain Futures CHICAGO (AP) - The grain futures market showed a mostly firming trend today in early transactions on the bogrd of trade although wheat and rye came under weakening pressure. Soybeans and oats posted moderate gains while com traded narrowly mixed. Wheat recovered-some of the. ^ ness orn support believed to bp largely short Cbverihg. Trade was riot more than moderately active. Brokers said the weekend apparently had failed ' develop any significant new irket factors. However, India and Pakistan were understood to be in the market for large amounts of wheat. Grain Prices Shi*p 500; trading modtrituly Ktlva, lughMr lamb* fully iMady, not Hiough oolrd tlaughlar aw«l for price trend; f»w packagai choice and prim*i *0-110 Ib wooled ilauphter Iambi I9.5MO.OO; bulk good to choice 11,00-19,50; cull end utility l2.00-14.Q0t belt deck choice end prim# , loa lb ihoMtstlaughter lamb# with No. 1 pelt* 20.00; double deck oholce —“ —io$ lb fall Bhcrrn end No. 1 Treasury Position WASHINGTON, (AP)- too. ^K tftO Traaiury compared |m||g|gma MW «ooi Stacks of local Interest Plguraa attar decimal point! ere eigftthi OVER THB COUNTER STOCK! The following quotation! do not nte*!-“•(tv repretent actual traniaclloni but Intended n a guide, to the epproxl-“ trading range of the securities. BID AIKID Braun Vnglnaerlng ..........* Cherles ot the Rift ....... 2 Diamond Crystal ............1 Frlto-Lay, Ine. ............J Maradel Product! ........ Mohawk Robbar Co............I Michigan^aamiau Tube Co. 1 Satren Printing . . 1 Santa Pa Drifting ..... .9 Vernor't Ginger Ale ........ Wlnkelmen's ................1 Wolverine Ihoe .............2 Wyandotte Chtmleal .1 MUTUAL FUNDS •ID AIKID 1.04 |7Q 12.1* 11.11 IOND AVRRAOB* _ a ihnn tain ind Util. Pin. I* v i Of# §$ Slllii Ntf Chung* Noon Mon. a ® !!:! &MUI slid ... „w. -■ ffi illI! l 1 it* Jm Hr®* ’ilirii’S f r fife [Ijte sS Lzi WtV will 1 if PatiiTlr ,ff 171 I bt Bill! »•* i S L, 8 +!? Rf J-C » F r B iriemants based o........ -•, Jeml-ennuel decierellon. special extra’ dividends or payments not dn " ** rSKLu, *r* ln * “ rtrat, ......... -Liquidating or paid In 1*41 plui -Paid lest year, f—Fay--i,,,..10 1*01, estimated cash ilot on ex-dividend or ^ritrlMHon Jo. i Declared or paid ta tar thli .jar, n—Declared or paid attar dividend or spin up. k4}MlarM or ")i| . V*er, Qil. accumulative litue In. arieari. p-Pe|d Hit* ““'***“ deferred or no i Ittw, r ttock xneyerone unmm w-i ...... w.fi mwr Men. Invertors Growth .......I.fl }.** xMess, Investors Truit ... .15.15 14.14 ’ Putnam Growth.,, ......... 5.74 •. f.M ' Tetevjilon Khiotronici-...... 7.N 1.04 ' xwaillngton Find .........,.14.17 H.4i ' WMMfPilM .m............14,01 il.io " VnlhOf quotations. IONBI NOON AVIRAOII dend and aalai In ?uQ. x dls I ttoB. xr-ix ’ right!; xw-WI t~fa}ai In rid -called, x—bx dividend, y-lx Olvl> ........................ill - *x dliirlbu ______ j-Wlthout war- h warrants wd-Whan die-,i wi .When Issued, nf Next day bankruptcy or rtcolyarahlp or ““" ■Tl under mg Bankruptcy ■ aiiumad py ...Mil .Miw aulifact Intereil equell»«l|on tax. STOCK AVRRAOfl . ■ Compiled by The'Associated nrei Ind. Mill Ifflk 1 »at Change. . oon Mon, ml 1 frw, 6ny . ,1*7,* j Waak Ago . Month Ago Year's End Critical Doubt Fogs Business By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst -NEW YORK (AP)—Business —and all the producers and .consumers whose, affairs are tied directly or indirectly to it— today enters the final stretch of 1963 with mot-e than the visual quota of question marks.’*. • What happens in the next three or four weeks can remove or deepen - more than ■ in most years — theuncertainties that cloud the future as the final miopth starts.- * December is the month that traditionally makes or breaks the year for rfioSt merchants since it usually is their, biggest; sales period.'And this, in turn, sets a patternrfor their, suppii-ers all the way back to raw materials and countless jobs. -v; -v-->■ 1" It is also the month of bonuses for workers ancj for stock; holders and of the semitraditfon-al year-end rally in the stock market. It is the period for the DAWSON adjusting of accpunts-ior -tax purposes, for assessing Hie temper of the times, and the prospects for the months just ahead. But-today plans—private, corporate and political-are being reassessed. Predictions .rushed out in advance already are be* fogged with doubts, ± ’ V: J MANNER CHANGED - Most businessmen venturing an opinipn say that President Johnson’s administration promises changes of manner more than of policies. They , expect him to continue President John F> Kennedy’s major programs. But the manner in which the new chief executive goes about it interests them most just now. It could determine both the chances of putting these plans-into effect and their effects. ★ + * .......... : Some are counting on his $ast ability to command congression-al support to get the tax CTfr most businessmen want faster than his predecessor could have. They also hope this talent may settle many other legislative un-certainities, domestic and inter-itional, in coming weeks. Many note that Johnson’s congressional voting record signals that he^wHHttra-spMiaiHrPrSr' ident—that is, undeterred by fiscal theories or priorities If be feels projects are needed, either for .themselves dr for aiding the economy should it stumble. LE& AT HOME Soirie have commented that Johnson seemed less at'home • with economists than did his predecessor and perhaps more at ease with businessmen themselves. ' Since many industrial leaders tend to link economists with theorists, they breathe more easily in /the more practical approach. r -Response to Johnson’s addresses to Congress and later to , the American people has been largely favorable among businessmen. If none was surprised, none was alarmed, and many were calmed by his manner. Consumer conhdence will be tested this month in the stores, . at ihe auto dealers, at the fi- nance and mortgage offices.. In the relatively few trading days remaining, traditional December shopping could recover lost ground. Retail trade, in the first 10 months was running ahead of 1962, even if it faltered in the final tragic days of November. '■fur ♦J: ♦ ♦ ! ♦ Hounded mo ♦ | -♦ I; » WILL OPEN SOON - A new A&P store designed in Early American will open! Dec. it at 3400 Floraldale, Waterford Township. Located in the Dixie-Walton area; the , new 'store will replace the existing A&P building on the same site, When the old store is razed after the first of the year, parking facilities : for 175 cars will be available. Dick McCarius, manager of the present store, and Orl Man-love, assistant manager, will continue in their respective position to the new store. New Director at Motor Unit Marlow O. Alsager of the AC Spark Flug Dlvislpn ln MllVau-kee has been appointed director of cost, factory! ‘and general ac-coun tlngatl Pontiac Motor, Division, effective tomorrow. Alsager, whol was director of pricing^tnd program \analysis| at the Milwau-| k e e division, Joined AC ln ALSAGER Flint In 1949. He is a graduate of the University of Minnesota. He moved to AC’s Milwaukee operations in 1957 and was named factory accountant and general accountant in 1958. * In 1959 Alsager was awarded an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship fn executive development; at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, JHte Is married and has a 9-year-old son. Blind Man Excels in Golf and Bowling IRVING, Tex, W -Kenneth Bucher, 21, has been blind since illness struck nine years ago, but he leads an active life ns a coin dealer, stamp collector, jewelry maker, miniature golfer and howler. • The youth operates a coin and gift shop, grading coins -with hiii fingertips and using a Braille price tag system for his merchandise. > In bowling, where his average Is ISlj he lines himself up with the ball return .before taking three steps,'and In golf he locates the ball and hole then paces Out In the ball’a route before sending It on Its way. Dliildondi Dfclind P# its. at pau- _.it6a Tran icon Un*lu„vtM._' 'H IH0 its n t, % %’-firtfM I Successful *tnvesttn&l St. #,!)4a,‘;.'s -« By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) ”1 am interested in joining an investment club. I "‘Mild yniir igHIng me how to get in touch with . one or two chib presidents. I hold 100 shares of Producers Cotton Oil. What do yob think of its growth?” L. L. A) To answer your last qhesr tion first, Producers Cotton Oil appears to be a soundly -managed California company. Earn<-togs over the past decade have shown fairly wide variation rather than growth. I believe it would be a good idea for you to belong to an investment dub but I’m afraid that' you’ll have to form one in your own neighborhood or business. I cannot give out the names of any1 investment clubs. .These are strictly^ private organizations which depend for their success largely on the mu-tuallty of interests of the I r members. If yob ere Interested In getting a few* friends together to Newj in Brief J. W. Boyette, 3871 Breaker, Waterford Township, told police yesterday‘that his 14-fodt boat valued at 9100 was stolen from, a subdivision landing on Lake Oakland. - A wall clock vilued at 920 was reported stolen yesterday in a break-in at the house of Harold Watts, ’5008 Dunham, Waterfon)Township., > Klwanis ■ Travel & Adventure Series, Tuesday, December 3rd at 8 p.m. Lincoln Junior High School, 131 Hillside Drive, uirtle Nagel presents "Road to Mandalay." , —hdv. Pancake supper it First Federal Savings and Loan Bldg. Tues. Dec. 3. 5:30 to 7:30-p.m. Adults, 91 >00 and ’ Children, 9.75. Pst Chapter of Sigma Beta Sorority, edv. Pontiac Lions. Club rummage sale Knights of Columbus Hnh 'South Saginaw. Frl. and Sat. Deer, 6 and 7th. Open 9 a.m. form a club, mention my name and write to the National Association of Investment Clubs^ 1246 National Bank Bldg., De- “ troit, Michigan. I’m sure they’ll help yotT’get Started. . Q) “I own Hawaiian Telephone, Green Shoe and Northwest Natural Gas. Do you believe now would be the proper time to invest more money in any of tbe above stocks?”' J. M. A) You, have a good list of stocks, only one of which has acted relatively poorly. That one is Green Shoe, which his sold off this yeaif as earrings declined 10 per cent in the’ 9 months ended August 30 — a , poor period for shoe, sales. Green's sales dropped about & per cent in the face of an estimated 8 per cent decline for the industry as a whole. I would retain but not add to present holding*. Hawaiian* Telephone is an excellent stock, but I think the , shares are fully priced and. again, I would retain but dot in- • crease my present holdings. Mr. Spear cannot answer all mail personally but, will answer all questions possible In hli column. Write .General Fenturib Corp., 250 Park Ave., New York 17,-N. .... (Copyright 1993) "Nationwide Open at Mall Nationwide Insurance Agencjf In how open at the Pentlac Mall Profetilooal Building, with a service booth located in the nearby Pontiac Mall concourse. Arthur Lange, 3024 Ridge mont, . Commerce Townahip, one of the participating agent*, said complete agency offices and claim service In the Profes- . »ionai Building formerly ware located at 2M 8. Telegraph. Other agenta are Donald Kemp, lilt Dudley; money Jones, >509 Omira, Waterford Townahip; and Frederick Red-path of Berkley. . D'—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1968 DeKitfhs in Pontidc, Neighboring Areas MRS. S. CHRISTIAN BATHUM ^ Senricefor Mrs^ S. Christian (Japetie^C.) Bathum witt be 1:30 p.nf. tomorrow at-the Don-elson-Johns Funeral Home. Burial wiU be in Oak HiU Cemetery. Mrs. Bathum, 14-/Mark, has been a member of First Presbyterian. Church of Pontiac, S h e died Saturday after an illness of six years. Mrs. Bathum was ah Ijfctive member of the Music Appreciation Club and for many years was associated with the Pontiac —anrf-OaklandXQuntv Republican clubs. , Surviving are a son, Edgar. C. of'Flint; "a sister, Miss Mary Chapman of Pontiac; and six -'grahdcba$lrpi.' ' t BABY BOY- BROOKS Service for' Baby Boy Brooks, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Brepks, 154 Lincoln, was today at 10 a.m. at White Chapel - -Cemetery, -j Tt)e infant was dead at birth Saturday. Arthur domaim —MOUNT VERNON — Service for Arthur DeMain, 85, of 2745 28 Mile will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Mount Vernon Methodist Church with burial MfoUow in Mount Vernon Cemetery. Mr.. DeMain died-Shturday after an extended illness. H i s body wiU.be at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester, uptil noon tomorrow. - ...... ' . . Surviving arve a daughter, Mrs. Ora Arnold, of Mount Vernon, with whom he teade his home; two sons, Ren of Cleve-■fanHT-fthift-ianri Rollanri nf Tjkw —Also surviving'atb aTbirothSF, threw sisters, 14 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. C. RAY TAYLOR ORION TOWNSHIP - Requiem Mass for C. Ray Taylor, 52, of 98 Summer will be 11 a.m, tomorrow in St. Joseph* Church. Burial will foljow in St. Joseph section of East-Lawn Cemetery, Lake Orion. Mri Taylor died Saturday after a two-year Illness! Rosary wiU be recited atT:30 p.m,- today Iif the Allen’s Funeral Home, Lake Orion, Orion; 16 grandchUdrsnanHTT A retired-easstation operator. great-grandchildren'. MRS, LAWRENCE MARINACK ORCHARD LAKE - Service for Mrs, Lawrence J. (Marjorie L.) Marinack, 42, of 5502 Garden Terrace wiU be 3..p.m. morrow at the Church of the Advent, West Bloomfield Township. Burial wiU follow in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. -Mrs. Marinack was killed in a brother, Jerry jr., at home; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Giglio and 5%. - and Mrs. Horace Pugh, all of Pontiac.' CLARENCE E. MARKESON - Service for former Pontiac resident Clarence E. Markeson, 70, of Kaleva, Mich., wiU be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Tweringer Funeral Home. Burial .will follow * at Kaleva. Mr. Markeson died yesterday. He was a retired employe of GMC Truck k Coach Division. Surviving are his wife,. Hilda daughter, Mrs. Burt Rockwell of. Sylvan Lake; a son, Clarence of Ann Arbor; and three grandchU-dren. S*rvlce-f Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial .will follow In Perry Mount Park Cemetery, P o n-_ tiac. Mr. McCord died of ajheart attachyesterday. He was a member of the North Jackson Baptist Church, Jackson, Tenn. ’ 'Surviving are his wife Annie M,; two daughters, Mrs. Jack Preston and Mrs. Robert H. Iro-meli, both of Pontiac; two sons, W. H. of Pontiac and Robert in theU.fi. Air Force. Mr. Taylor was also a former member of the Lake 0 rio-n Lions Club. [. Surviving are his wife Ange-line; a son, Charles Ray Jr. of St. Clair Shores; a daughter, Margaret, at home; and. two grandchildren. mrs. Louis Nowak t MILFORD — Requiem Mass, for Mrs. Louis (Katherine E.) Nowak, 95, of 221 First wiU be 8.45 a.m. tomorrow at the St. will foflovTnrSf; etery. Mrs. Nowak died Saturday after a long illness. The Rosary will be recited at 8:30 p.m. today in the Rich-ardson-Bird Funeral Home. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Ralph Trites of Milford and Mrs. A.. P. Brass of Pittsburgh, Pa.; a" son, Donald of Detroit; a sister; and 30 grandchildren,. * . J. EVERETT WOOD 1 DRYDEN TOWNSHIP—Service for J. Everett Wood, 78, of Rochester wiU be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the , Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Alrtiont. Burial will follow In Drvden. Center Cemetery. j * Mr. Wood, a retired truck five-week illness. Surviving are* four sons, Claude of Oxford, Everett and Robert, both of Dryden, and Charles Of Metateora;' six daughters, Mrs. Marie Burgess and Mrs. Dora Folster, both of Metamora, Mrs. Helen Hicks of Allenton, Mrs. Wilma Guenther of Memphis, Mrs. Virginia Baker of Dryden and Mrs. Betty Robinson of DuBols, Pa. Also three brothers, two sisters, 52 grandchildren and 32 great-grandchildren,. • “ ! CARLTON B. TIPPER. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for former resident Carlton.Bi Tipper, 61, of Harrison will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Fanning Funeral Ho^ne. Harrison. Burial will fol-Bwlh Greenwood Cemetery, i Mr. Tipper died Saturday after a brief illness. Surviving are,his wife Helen; his mother, Mrs. Edith Tipper of Wyandotte; a son, Carlton Jr. of West Bloomfield Township; five daughters, Mrs. Carolyn Mabeus of West Bloomfield Township, Mrs. Geraldine Wil- son of Walled Lake, Mrs. Bar bara Millsap of Northville, Mrs. Alice Warner of Kentucky and •Mary, at home. . Also surviving are two_ sisters, , Mrs. Henry Nowlen of West Bloomfield Township and MfsTStantey Lambert of Taylor; two. brothers, Everett of Milfbrd and L. E. Tipper of Belleville; and 10 grandchildren. - ■ ■'I-. Three Are Injured IrrPonfiac Crash A two-'car crash at Oakland and Johnson last'night; injured Pontiac woman and two youths. ~^~Tirtirir-iHmdW®n-atJB®tia^ -General Hospital with pessible chest injuries and severe lacerations is Mrs. Mary M. Mc-Carroll, 84, of 122 Mark. The driver ef the other car, Patrick Allen, 20,: of 7 Short, suffered multiple lacerations and to listed'in'Satisfactory Com dition. ■ i- ~ . ... -- ..... .. A passenger in his car, Jack Wilson, 2L of 4560 Independent, was treated and released/ ' dice gaid Mrs. Me-Carroll failed to ~ of way in attempting a left causing the 8:50 p.m. accident. Waterford Twp, Dems Postpone Annual Party The Waterford Township Democratic Club’s 7th anniversary dinner and dance scheduled for Saturday has been postponed in obsiervatwe of a 30-day mourning period for President Kennedy. . Tentatively the dtp tier Is scheduled for Jan. 18 at Eagles Lodge No. 2887. 4761 Highland. Waterford Township/ Pravda Says U.S. Asking About Oswald Trip Money MOSCOW Uf) - Pravda’s New York correspondent said today U. S. authorities investigating President Kennedy's assassination are asking where Lee Harvey Oswald got money for a trip to Mexico last-summer. Boris Strelnikov, correspondent of tiie Communist party newspaper, .said Oswald was jobless for long periods of time bnt managed to' get money for theta ip. He said, newspapers leaiiied that thie FBI was trying to find wbo gave him the money. Aid American newspapermen to] ands of letters were pouring into the White House and the Justice Department “with a unanimous demand that the killer of the President be found and piin- Pravda quoted newspapers New Delhi and Vienna as accusing right wing “ultras? of being responsible for Kennedy’s assassination. OFF THE DEFENSIVE None. in recent days hajs made any serious attempt to defencl Oswald, a sharp contrast to the cry put -up by the. newspapers Immediately after Kennedy’s assassination when Dallas police began associating Oswald with Communists. The communist newspapers are now seizing on Western reports that Oswald really was anti-Soviet and under the influence of relght-wing extremists. Strelnikov said the RBI was conducting their investigation with less: pubUclty than was la the case with the Dallas police. Chinese likes England His 6 Children Baptized •LONDON UP)—Ho Sung Leung Is Chinese. But he Is so proud to be living in England that he has given his eight children English names, Atjd yesterday he took six of them to be baptized at All Saints Church in suburban Ealing. . “My wife and I thought 11 years ago that it would be easier to have all our children baptized at the same time. But we didn’t know then how big. the family was going to be,” said Ho. The two oldest children, Tommy, 14, and David, 13, were baptized when they were babies.. He quoted the New York Times as saying Americans were fearful and: distrustful because so many questions spout .the assassination are unanswered. He: cited a newspaper report quoting the chief superintendent of- the jail where Jack Ruby is being held for the murder of Oswald, as saying that fee was fearful Ruby might be poisoned before his trial, i ' ‘QUOTE SUPERINTENDENT’ He said American papers abo were quoting the supwtatendeht as saying Ruby was claiming his friends would not let him antiy throws light on the prob-able reason for Oswald's trip The Pravda reporter added" that tile chief superintendent, whose name was not given “probably suspects Ruby’s role In the attempt on the President's life.” Pravda yesterday published a report from Harry Freeman, Tass reporter to New York, citing a Fort Worth report that a stenographer told a newsman .she once typed some notes for a book OgwaM wanted to write. She said the notes criticized the Soviet Unlonr *,------------ ★ ★ Hie Communist party newspaper quoted French papers as saying that “Oswald felt an obvious antipathy toward the Soviet Union and on his return to. the United States (after a stay to the Soviet Union) made slanderous statements against the Soviet system. That, appar- avoided printing anything about Oswald’s throe-year stay to the Soviet Union beyond a mention that he once worked to Minsk and later returned to the United States with a Russian wife and their baby. on Testimony of 2 Men MINNEAPOLIS IS) - When a murder trial/ jury retiree behind clewed doors, probably this week, their thoughts will dwell cm the words they have heard from two 38-year-old men. One ls,T. Eugene Thompson, a lawyer charged with instigating the killing of Ms Bretty wife last March ^ The Other Is Dick W C_ Anderaen, an ex-Martae who wound up the state's case against Thompson by adihit-ttog he killed the woman/ They are the same age, somewhat similar in rather steal! stature, both dress well and speak dearly. There the similarity- ends.. COME TOGETHER Yet, fata has directed that in yesterday’s cpremony were Lucy, 11; Peter, 10; Paul, 8; Margaret, 7; Steven, .5;. and baby Geoffrey, 6 weeks. WHY THE NAMES? ' Ho Sun, 44, who runs a chain of Chinese restaurants, was asked why he gave his children.English names. He said: . “I like England so much and. I am very proud to live here. I had the Children baptized to the Church of England, because I intend them to stay to this country.” • The vicar of All Salntalthe Rav. Max Hmttphrcvrtarid: — • ‘Tve never before baptized six children at once.” ‘ There were 18 godparents at the ceremony for the six children. Fourteen of them were British. Sports Cars to Microscopes Toys Duplicate Adult World Toyliuid, 1903, will continue the trend toward the reality of the adult world. From space orbiting down to automatic can openers, (his year’s toyft will provide children with the widest scope ever for Imitative play» Santa’s pack may include a “cub set” of heavy gauge steel that permits a boy -to custom design a station wagon, sports car or a utility pickup truck, by using Interchangeable roofs and doors. •,, 1 ★ ★ ir A playroom housekeeper may be thrilled with what she can-do with a miniature washing machine. WATCH CLOTHES It has a door that opens to receive a load of laundry, and ail automatic timer she can set to whirl and tumble the clothes in a simulated buildup of suds as she watches through a window In the door. That o 1 a i i l e, musical chair*, has been reduced to table-top proportions suitable for modern apartments and houses that lack room for the uaual hub-bub. A -merry-go-round of plastic has a fhuaic box to the center, to play gay tunes ns the wheel fs whirled. * o * When the music stops, teddy beer places to an outside ring are moved to an/,inner [ ring where one space is removed On 'I / each turn.. Play proceeds until all) but one piece is eliminated. TALKING DOLLS Talking dolls still abound. And a new twist Is one In p'stroller that a little girl can make talk without ever touching the doll. Shq activates the dou’i speech by pulling a cord attached to the stroller handle. A child’s yearning to participate in the space age can be catered to with • now construction set with which ■ space wheel, two foot, four In-chjgs tall, can be,built. When assembled, the space wheel with Its eight satellites can be turned on through a battery-operated control. And if Junior sayg he wants a volcano this Christinas, don’t panic.. He’s tost asking for one of the new chemistry sets. Another chemistry set tolls how to fUl and operate a miniature plastic fire extinguisher. NEW PROJECTOR Another realm of science Is opened with a new mlcroprojeo-tor set. Slides or specimens can be enlarged many times and projected on a viewing screen or on a piece- of paper for tracing, and the fact of the instrument can be used for accurate-: ly tracing the viewed objects too. The mystery of flying still ures children. And a new ilane comes complete with a mechanism that ejecta a pilot from the cockpit and parachutes him to parth. T Novelties among toys this year Include a dog that catches a bal) when it is rolled Into Its mouth, gives If back when his ear ie tweaked and then walks •way. /” .it W. it Latest voice command toy is a cannon which shoots only when the child says “fireI” The toy is keyed to bucaneer atyla warfare and Includes pirate figures for targets. Fun for aU ages is a new ver-on of the marble maze principle. The object Is to shake marbles enclosed' in a plastic lollipop totd the Stick handle of the toy. , 1 1 m mm %: »«■ six, r TMffl DO IT YOURSELF - A multitude of do-it-yourself gifts are available for Christmas this year, like the decorative will plaque of an African tribal mask (left) and a makeup kit for the Junior Miss (right); It comes u equipped with a demonstrator head which > Ex-Official Is Dead in Commerce COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — Lee Smith, Welch, a former Commerce Township clerk, died yesterday after an illness of six months; Hewn 89.’ Mr. Welch ef 2160 Pontiac Trail was a member ef the Commerce Township Board for 21 years, and a former Commerce Tbwnshlp justice of die peace. A retired farmer, he was a descendant of one of Oakland County’s pioneer familial, which settled to Commerce Township to 1831. ★ ★ * Mr, Welch was also a life member of Commerce Lodge No. 121, FAAM; past worthy patron of Commerce Chapter No. 301, Order of the Eastern Star; and a member of the Welled Lake Methodist Church for 57 yeera. ! SURVIVORS. -Surviving are hie wife Mabel; two sons, Edwin L. and James A., both of Walled Lake;* daughter, Mrs. Nina L. WUtae of Covington. La.; a brother, Erie A, of Walled Lake; arid •even grandchildren. * * * i , Service will be 3 p. m. Wednesday at the Walled Lake Methodist Church. Burial will follow in Walled Lake Ceme-tery. , Mr, Welch’s body will be at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Walled Lake, until U a.m. Wednesday. their Uves .come together in the courtroom where Thompson's' murder trial goes Into its sixth week today. -Thompson’s lawyer has «told the jury he “whs incapable of committing a horrendous crime of tills nature.” — Anderson. alsiutoaiydJrith/L ^ nr~r-,.----- the murder, not only-admitted-/Jhc-MlG»-*rfr-r^ -S ■ - . . CAmo r>lncc with 4km A mOninnn to detail how he carried out the crime but says he was given instructions that came from Thompson. ; ' : ;■ ’ ;',- Although the jury will have heard , thousands of words from dozens of other witnesses, their decision likely will come from the weight they attach to the words of these two men. SERVED AS MARINE Anderson was born in. Al-den, Mich., served as a Marine to the Korean conflict and was twice wounded by enemy fire. He has been described as quiet and unassuming hilt high strung. He has a minor police record. He was divorced by a wife In Michigan aad has jumped front job to job. Since coining to Minneapolis two years age, he found a job as a salesman for a home improvement firm and covered a six-state re- • gtOB. His boss says Anderson was a good salesman; yet; Anderson said he was short of money when he accepted a “contract” to kill 34-year-old Mrs. Thompson. -. * ★ j * Described as a hard-drinker who sometimes gulps narcotic pills, Anderson Aid he had some of each before he set out on his murder mission. MINUTE DETAILS Thq story of murder was told matter-of-factly by Andersen, his eyes sometimes closed as he seemingly searched his mind for mite ute details. Russian Jets ! to Get Missiles NEW DELHI IS) - Soviet MIG21- fighters to be built to Lidia will be equipped with air-to-air guided- missiles, a defense ministry spokesman said today./, //*/"-. TMf was the first official confirmation that the Soviet Union has agreed to let Lidia ■nn its delta-wing supersonic jets with missiles/. .The disclosure came after the defense production minister, K. Raghu Ramiah, told parliament a new electronics factory to be constructed at Hyderbad will make eulded missiles and other equipment including radar for Migs. Indian officials estimate the first planes will be ready The Indian Air Force has six MJG21s and will get six more from the Soviet Union under an agreement signed about 18 months ago. A >— ■*— -BE ARSOUT STATEMENTS Manufacture of radar for the MIGs bears out U S. official statements that American ground control radar supplied to India wilLnof be used in the MIGs for obvious security reasons. Raghu Ramiah aha told parliament Indie had asked the Soviet Union to Brake some improvements In MIGs to be manufactured hi India based on experience gained since the Chinese Communist attack on India in the autumn ef 1962. The Indian Air Force saw no combat against the Chinese because neither side used air power to the short Himalayan war.. same class with the American F104, of which Pakistan has one squadron. < American military aid to India has included no tighter planes. Youth Listed Good After Truck Mishap, A Troy youth is in good condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after the pickup truck he was driving overturned yesterday on Aufeurn near Avpn Man-ir in Avon Township. Ronald W. Keselowsky, 17, . of 828 John R suffered scalp cuts to the 11 a.m. accident He told sheriff’s deputies he was forced off the road when a car he was passing pulled out root of him. W other driver, Ernest K. fa, 18, of Cheboygan, said he did not. see Keselowsky until it wal* too late. - • - ’ _ Passengers in Iboth vehicles, were not hospitalized. NEED HELP WITH YOUR INVESTMENT PROBliEMS? ...CALL H 2-9275 Watling, Lerchen & Go. PONTIAC STATI BANK ILDI. Ex-Envoy Dial MIAMI, Fla, (ffl - Grant Stockdals, former UJ, am- close personal friend of the late President Kennedy;/ dropped to bis death today from the 13th floor of til* du Pont BnlMlng In midtown Miami. litem, lepards, tlgere and (oih*r cate at the Johannesburg Zoo haVe bean given flu shots to •t an outbreak of the fo-. Infectious enteritis. The shota wan given with darts. THE PON tl AC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER %' 1963 30-day forecast - Hie US. Weather Bureau has predicted near, normal temperatures for the Pontiac area for the, next month. The precipitation outlook is also near normal. Visitors Alter French Noel By CLAUDE CASPAR-JORDAN PARIS (I) - Two World Wars, the meandering of tourists and sharpened advertising techniques haver remodeled the face of Christmas in France. , ■tome .was wnen the heliday season meaty an elaborate dinner on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, midnight Mass ea Christmas Eve, formal greeting" calls on New Year's Day, and presents’for children on St Nicholas Day. But no more. The presents are trundled out for Christmas. Gaily decorated department stores remind parents of their duty weeks in advance. Postal clerks' are >almost drowned by the tide of greeting cards. And a week’s stay In a mountain ski resort is becoming routine for tens of thousands of children. The transformation has not come quickly or without pain. British and American soldiers brought along their customs ip -World War; l, and fftnrtnat time ion the Christmas free started making inroads in France. CHRISTMAS VOGUE . Foreign visitors who struck up friendships launched the Christmas card vogue. NEW NOEL-Located under the Eiffel Tower in Paris, thin brightly lighted1*41 Christmas tree is symbolic of the new Christmas in France. In contrast to more, traditional wistoms, depart-stores throughout the Hie quickened tempo ot are now gaily dec- communication, and transpor- * orated ^ appMi to the tatlon helped it to spread. German occupation in World* Christmas shopper. War. II and the Invasion of British and American troops gave a new impulse to the popularity of Christmas trees. y At' one time, Roman Catholit priests frowned on, the Christmas tree as a pagan symbol that wa«' detracting' from the religious spirit of Christina*. AGAINST SANTA Even after World War II some priests were railing, against Pere NoelFather Christmas, as Santa Claus is known hers. / But the criticism has almost died away In the fact of Pere Noel’s popularity with chil- i The traditional Roman Catholic symbol of Christmas Is the model manger with Christ child and others of the Biblical tale set up in most chliirches for tbs Christmas season.. MANGER SET UP In southern Franca, these, "creches" also wars often set up in village squares, or in homes* Here are • number of •*> sentlals for • typical French Christmie feait-oysteri, turkey or goose, lobster, foie , gras, the rich and dreamy “bm-he re Noel’’ cake mads in the form of a tree trunk, Outdoor home decorations are almost unknown in France, except in Alsace, where the German Influence in heavy. In Paris, most famlllss live in apartments. A .holbi wreath on file door, or apodal lights in an apartment window usually means that an Amarlcan family is living (hire, Last Laugh 44 Years Later MIDDLEBURY, Conn. -In 1910, while students John Coe and Bob Brandegse were living In the phi Sig house at Williams College, Coe decided to play a practical Joke on his1 friend. Braudegee was going to New Jersey for the weekend. While he was at breakfast, : Coe unpacked his suitcase and substituted Tqiisig’s text on economics and a few rocks for his clothe*. On Brandegee’s return, neither mentioned the'ftuitcase, and Coe had to buy a new economics book. About a month ago, tha express office in Waterbury notified Coe he had received a package from the R.L. Braudegee Co. As It was express collect, Coe forked over M.&O-for hie old Tauslg text and some rock*. Oldest Catholic Bishop Gravely jll in Romt Vatican city (apj - The world’s oldest Roman Catholic bishop, the Most Rev. Alfonso Qarlncl, was reported grkvety 111 today in Rome's, Fatabene-fratell! (Do Good Brothers) Hospital. The Italian prelate celebrated his 101st birthday Nov. 9 by attending the d«M*a session of the Vatican ecumenical coun* 4 Getting Back in Stride-Industrial Construction Industrial construction is Just hitting its stride, after, a. period-of decline.' This year’s level of $3.3 billion will be 3 per cent higher than 1062, and next year should jsee the rate of gain, double, yearly high of $3.5 billion. jf Pontiac, Michigan, rf January. IfM, I ‘“THSa ... .... day of eaid election and wha It not already registered upon tha regfStrttlOn books Of said city, may register at tha CHy Clark's Office any day pracgdlng December id, 1963, during tha ■jtmMf liaum — * “ * 8:00 o'clock fay thru Prk....... Monday. December 16, 1903, to ragfsf " ” o'clock p.m. the last day to register the office of .... CHy Clark will accept registrations from. 9:00 O'clock. e.m. to f:M ■astern Standard Time. application, tor the special i Dated November I Death Notices •mm JmMsi HH _________I Jerry Brooks Jr.t dear grandson of Mr. and. Mrs. Paul Gtglib and Mr. and Mr*. Horace Pugh. Orava-slde service was held today at 10 ............... ....^"SlUter,. Arrangement! ware by ffta..Sparkf-Grlftln Funeral Home. bEADMAN, NOVEMBER 30. 1963. LOWELL' A., kai Lopn Lake Wlxomi age 46/ beleved hu of Mist Hazel D sr of Robert — A memorial S husband i; beloved der the auspices of the p.E.S. «50t will be held T|wtd*y_aFJ p.m. followM by o sarvleaby the walled Lake Masonic Lodge #521 at 1:30. Masonic funeral service wui be iMtiOHMneaday. Dacam-bar 4 at the Rlchardson-BIrd Fu- ‘-mtuH I i.......... _________i chapel Ctmiwry. race, Orchard Lake, age 42t beloved .wife of Terence J. Marl-' nackt door mother of OMPEto L. and Grant H. Marlneeki dear sister of Douglas MS Gerald p., and Albert B. 0. Maynew. Funeral service will be held Tuesday. Da- «r,ASU.,pmw.S,M£iS Npyl. MS, .—|R m -. state at the C. J. Gndhardt Funer-'al Home until 1:30 Tuesday, at which ^Uma aha will M taken to the church to llo In stata until .. Ilih r liM MAHvII, NOVEMBER W. 19*1, BABY BOY JEPPBRY ALLEN, 4194 South Mill St.. Drydon, Mich- Lori* M. Marviit .............. orandton of Mr. and Mr*. Elmar . C. Marvls St. and Mr., .and __ h. c, Marvls, III, Funeral service will . be held Tuesdey, December 3, . at Funeral Home, Kaebo Harbor, aft Rev. W. C Grate officiating, lota manf In F ltw L*M Cemetery. D, DICtfMSIE IRT Ni, 9350 Bin .... MRr of Wl Mc MM Mrs. Robert H. Immail, W. H. add Robert McCord, door brother of Carver, end Toi C. Rogers, Ml*. O. Mrs, jjlaud* Rfchan grandchildren. Funeral sarvlc* w Be, held Thursday, Oacambar 5 m 1, g.m. at the Donelson-Jphn* Funeral Horn*. Interment In Parry Mount Park Camatary. n6wak, November W, mac KATHERINE E„ Ml First StraoF, Mlllord; ag* 95i dear mother of Mra. Ralph Tritos, Mrs, A. P. Bruss and Donald Nowak: dear sister of Mrs. Sarah Radtliff; also this evening at 1:30 at th* Rlch- ■MV . .... si Horn*. Milford. Htrjr^frvlco wlll^oa hald Tust; E, December } at l:,_ _........... ,. Mary's Church, Milford With . Fothor Lawrence Edwards attli-h|flnq. interment in St. Mary's Frank A. (Sheila) Pamlanoi dear sister of Rav. Father ugaagh • Burk*. William and Comailus Burk*, also survived by two grand-S “ Recitation ot tha Rosary will b* today *• 1:30. o,m. at th* n* In state at th* i FunBml rtoma. I.........> Summer Street, Leke Oriont age if; aglSiad huaBaiw of ji-j 0f Chari** qa dear father of Charles Ray and Margaret VflMl (Peggy) Taylor, service will be halo Tuesday, December 3. at 11 a.rn: at St. Joseph catholic Church, Lake Orion, with . Rav, Father R. Vincent Myrlck a,jiriaiinn interment In St. Josagh Eastlawn Cemetan Section of Bastlewn Cemetery, Lake Orion. Mr, Taylor will II* In stato- at Allan* Funeral Horn*, wiKRrfei^lMlR i, ltdsriii SMITH. 2160 Pontiac Trail. Wallad Lake, age 69; beloved huiMlM of Map* Knapp, dear father of Mrs. Nine L. vyiltse, Edwin l. and Jamas k Welch, dear brolhar of Erie A. Walch, also syrvlvad by seven grandchildren. Funeral sarvlc* will b* held Wednesday, December 4 *13 p.m. « th# EK4'i!^>i6S jntarment In Waliad . Lgka. Cem#; day, at ymlch lima h* will m »' ma church to. II# In fairg w Tyww,........... 1 THfl FAMILY OP RUSSELL J. Brook* wish** to express our linear* thanks to ail th* frlandi and Mlahbera who halpad.and comforted during our time of baraava- Poy Off Your Bills Home or ^Ica Appolntmants City Adjuitment Sarvlc# nil w. Huron sa 5-tasi PAY OFF YOUR BILLS AND RIMODEL YOUR HOME Any horn# owner, widow, reiir#* or Ivin thosa with cridjl tflfflcul-tias, can bo allglbl# providing (hair Soma Is haH^or inof# Bald tor. Pn^HEi Total Qwsd Li. S7,ooo FRO^f anyC^lS?I/ Itf Michigan FI 8-2657 , , lONAFIDE IMPROVEMENT & INVESTMENT CO. namu ^MSShHOBSSSSSn ad^Iri* ;! !i;:i; Hama Phan* or Nag roar Miin* ■ i, fjrt ynf 1 -frt'iit i r tf iti • "» GET OUT 0F DEBT_ , wlttLuivminli ondW*rtiO.OO ^BUDGET SERVICE " l* w, Ninon ' fe *0901 Help Wontod Malo Additional Christmas income with career opportunities, part and - full time, STfpar evanffl®r,Ttu 9 p.m. Ml 6-11SS. BAKERY —y dFIVFr ialeiaaan -^usftfleed ^lafyiBjMa^eanslon free Insuranca, fra* hosplfsTl ration Contact Jack Ralph 19* W. “.....— * * -.to 1p.m. .^pn. j*Y torduph Friday. REMODEL YOUR HOME Lat u* combine your bills ntg eng low, monthly payment EXAMPLE PLAN, , ... ..................blow Remodejtng^ „ , - ,-.v:-.---.r.T"H3ilO Total ............. 64,000 Monthly poymonts as low it. " ' $38 No bIHs for 6 month*, ALUMINUM SIDING SPECtAL - CALL US! “ Additions Gutters Knenan* Recreation Attic* Roofni. credit. 200 home necessi i; ‘iYa F'T issn.fi ....try, Qppor . tunlfy to own plaasant profitable */ business bmUF ^. ftt' 75 years ' W . 7-IMg or MI 7-1206. r time, equal opportun-over. 15 MllfhCaOlldga Industries Inc., Ml Brown $i Sharps Screw Machine Operator ......H|....... p and msln- tsln own machines. .MICHIGAN CREDIT „ COUNSELORS 701 PentlK State Bank Bldg. Wonte« M< D—d Full tlm*. Ample floor"'.. ....... —^tor Mr7 lfeaB*n. FE -2-fll56r— J-AT+ENbBNOTl LL ■ - time, experienced Wallad L a k # area: MA A9424, ______ " STEADY "WORK, . .. Due -to expansion, 3 min ter fult' time, 1 tor part tlm* work for ■ company who In Several years of operation has never had a strike or a layoff. Sfitady, year around work, in axeess or S90 full tlm* or Sib part tlm*. Apply kt 2615 blxl* Highway, l:W p.m. sharp, *Tuaaday afternoon. Young Mon 18 to 25 ' With auto to confirm telephone orders.' Full or ‘part. tlma. Some i helpful but hot necessary. Apply 415 Pontiac State Bank Bldg., t to 10 a m, only, Qr 5 to * pTm. FE 8-0656 Pontiac'* oldest and largast' budget —1y company. COATS funbrAl home DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-7757 t J. GODHARDT FUHFRAL HOME D. Ei Pursley FUNERAL HOME HUNTOON DONELSON-JUHNS_________ ’ __FUNERAtrHOMU - "Designed for Fvnarals" — -SPAR^ShSRIFFIN . FUNBRAL HOME "Thoughtful Sarvlc*" FE 2-5*41 . Y0orhEes-siple r , FUNERAL HOME FE 2-4371- Rttobllshad Over 40 Year* Cemetery uti * ANY OIRL OR WOAMN NEEOING a friendly adviser, phana FC 2-5122 before 5 p.m., or It no an-swar, call FE 2*734. Confidential. BTSiNTY MAIQ' IUFfUII, 739 Mtnommea. FB 5-7W5. ..... LostjRR^ Found LOST - BLACK AND TAN OER-man Shepard, 7 month*. Named , "Buddy'.'. Reward. ~...... LOtT: LADY'I OLASSES IN BLACK .case, vicinity ot 1. 474-0*90. ^ ■I _____ Ri_______yf citTF# 5*192 early »jn. , _ ,LOST* - .PARTIAL FLAYt WITH Kitchen FrldayUtov, 30, 1941. Reward. UL 2- 1757 attar 5 p.m. LOST - GERMAN SHEPHERD, F#, mala, vicinity of w. Kannatt Rd. Reward. 338-8523. LOST: POObLE, SILVER "BLACK, no collar. Sylvan Lake area. Re-ward. 682,2835. LOST: CORNER OF PERRY AND LOST: BROWN AND WHITE PUP-py, malt, about 4 mos. old. vie. of Woadhull, Lake. 473-4898. • One large fbmali RSO Tick ■ Had pups racantly. *50 inL’ Fred .Boman, Oladwln, -BOX REPLIES— At 19 a. m. today i there were, replies at The Preio office to the following boxe«,: 12, 34, II, 93, 94, 95, M, 98, 69. 70, 75, 74,*85, 1,102,107,109,112, 111. Holp Wanted Mult_____6 10 MEN-NEEDED AT QN(| l lero* electrical manufacturer. W* W i Tl trim those men selKteg by an un- _____J aptitude test and to atari working Immediately, and go on— our salary er profit aharlng bails, *" tarn in iiicais af ftp i ■ waak, r lntormatlM call FE 5-92*1, 5 Vi gWy. to 7, lehtmif at..._______ a wiifTTf nbiftT'fc h6Ward Johnson's Rsstauranl, 1450 Dixie Steady |ob, minimum plus commission guaranteed me right man. Andy Cstki Oarage, 772 Baldwin. A Port-time Job ' After 6 P.M. Guaranteed ISO weak, paid month- t, paid owRRP cali-Mr, Frick i j-wtiHj ■ w r,. .. . - ■ . '■'Am^TTvIr fdsj’f\6H ir wide-awake man. No age I Far wide-awake man. No ag* limit, naat appearance, good character. Stoady work, no layoffs. Call FE Mlli f-- • 5*115 tor appointment. ■ Automotive m'bch an i c. *r* Intarastad ln only fo* aw gnd pro wining m pay for It. Straight day, no Sunday!. Carroll's Standard Sarvlc*, Wait Mapla at 1 Cr.nbrook, Birmingham. Ml 7-0700. fffW. tor rtllabto man. No olhor need apply. All trlng* banaflts Inclbd-ad. Sa* Ray Turner, Jerome Motor Sales. e«tlUgmgwbA|iaM||Nta 280 s' saglnaw. Ad . Watching? take 2 Minutes IF YOU ARE BORED, FRUSTRATED, OR STYMIED IN YOUR PRESENT FIELD AND EARNING POTENTIAL, A 2-MINUTE PHONE CALL IS ALL IT TAKES TO SEE IF YOU MEET OUR SIMPLE QUALIFICATIONS. FOR APPLICATION AND CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW CALL 338-0438. , . STOWnOUWiR" * EMPLOYEES YOuf recent .mlitoflun* with ■EH* “ Rubber Iff •sing of Baldwin Rubber laavas ...l ottr will* open1 to m« enanco ot your ImflmC OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS ■ lutigM ttfafi in oggorfunliy in pgnilac *|M wnh an Incoma ui •If,MB A YBAR. i No Ixparr"" ---------------- finkncial asi ■ AVBlfablO ARC WELDERS Copabl* of passing Navy weld test. Apply in' parson Q A W Engineering Inc., 2900 tndlanwood Rd„ Leke Orion CARPlNftia TO SUBCONTRACT labor.. W. W. Montcalm.__ CITY OF PONTIAC FIREFIGHTER! Salary — S4,9«] - 14.049 .. Minimum rtqulremant; Haight67W -inches, Waight 142 lbs, ag* 21-31 yri,, axcallant physical, condition, t,-n Khool graduate or mediately preceding the ippllcetlon Apply Personnel Deportment, IS S. Parke. Application mint b* re- am- x-------C Bapart- ir iC iw, : concession Menegers, trainees and waif —many ogportunltlM .wtm a g company. Musi be over In person drift U e.m Have an Immadlat* w tor a good tollable men. M drinkers. Apply In a On. to 4 p.m., Pontiac Mil* drlyo-fr TED'S WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD. BLOOMFIELD HILL! DUE Td BUSINESS INCREASE. 2 experienced mechanics with own. tools tor Rambler dealership. S* par hour, flat rate. Ste-— — Apply 138 Oakland Avt. ORItt hands-wanihl, Exparjancad drjll pi. ' lobs, oxporianco on muHIpjos, Nat- HXPERICNCep CAR WAIHiRS, 149 W.' HutOR, -EXPERIENCED DlOiniR RE' qultod tor days. Oakland TOal and Mig. Co., 3245V Oaqulndra, Midi-son. Hatohtt'JU 1-7424. -■ errUrienced — is, txperk— ......PgMR .... I and Bakers. Nlghtajjltf. Car* | ^ ‘ rp« IS# Crgokg PHPMHPiPtEik* iijjLi^ wantad. Carter-Rymlll, Inc., Cltov-' l-Oldsmoblle, Romeo. Call 712- Sfflp. ■XFBRlUflCBO YQUNO MAN fd work In raatauranf, *“ EXFellfcNCED ROOFERS, HIGH-*41 pay, yrar-'round work. Apply. 7-9 «,m., 54 I tw Like OAS'lVAtibh attendants, FulL and part-tlm*. Must be inachanl-cally Inclined. Shell Station, Woodward and Long Lake Rd., Blaom- GENERAL MECHANIC Daalarshlp.axperlanca. Blue Cross, vacation pay, 493*244. 1 Immadiate Opening Pontiac araa for daptndablo mar-r led man under 45 with good car r, 111! guarantaad 4 n*rt time open-R 3*565. JEWELRY i tpr leading I* experienced, | SeoTn*1 MAJOR PUMRI-.t. Paid training 4-1811, MBCHAHlii WAMTI& WITH F6R- n car axparlanca, apply In par- . ... ....— .... .—, >;J" son, 447 Auburn Ava., from _ ;ffi^60T5WAl^‘TlWieTHS and light malnfananc*. Should bo abto to fak* rasponslbllty. P r *-far married man oatwaan 25 and 45 years, fntorvlawi will b* halo Tuesday and Wgdnaiday, 4*. No tatoghon* calls gtoata, Commander Aviation, Pontiac Municipal Air- pbrf,\ PART-TlMS HELP WANTED. TO ~ ' EM* 3-9I7L Klantne REAL ESTATE SALESMAN Michigan Buslnti* Si __ PS 4-li»2_ "Tll'ALTSTAtrfALBSMAtr' 4**d two fuiMim* r- lull time solas paogl* to iy and ut**\horn**. Plan-ty of laada and floor tlm*. Expa-rlenc* preferred, but Will trim, Call FE 5*471,- ask for Mr. Schrem.______________________ SALESMAN ' Man thoroughly axparlancad in sail-• ing lurnlture, axcallant opportunity, company banatlli. Apply Personnel Montgomery ward \ : Pontiac mall . _A: SALESMEN WANTED Experienced Rail -1 list* talesmen needed by atlabilehed .Real Rs- John K. Irwin SURFACE QRINDERS Experienced. Ejxpsrigncsd on small tooli. Manufacturer located < in .Wallad lake area. Generous fringe benefits.' Plsase record in detail your work hlftory and perionol data. Write Pontiac Press Box 71. ‘ * Blue Cross and other (ring* _________ fits, bonus plan for curb : 0lpls. Apply In person only, Bluo -Star Drive-In. 2M8 Oodvke Drive-In. 2aoa Opdyke. "AVON IS CALLING" - itf ’YfltlR Neighborhood thrpugh TV, be an. . Avon representative and turn spar* ' Salss^Help, Malc-Femals 8-A ■SAIESMBMH Announcing in opening In Oakland : County for an executive type salesman.. Salary, bonus and Cbrnnil*. field. Only applicants~age 28-to-'*5, -marrlad, with a minimum of two ■ ply. This Is, a career opportunHy, not a lob. For confidential interview call 228^573, Mr. O'Connell. MUTUAt OF OMAHA ■. INSURANCE CO. salesman dIsTreo WHO 1$' willing to follow up sales leads for heating oqulpment. A {food importunity tor a live, wide-awake, parlance. .Call , M. ■ Lumber Co., Heating Division. FE Employmant Agencies $375 MONTH PLUS EXECUTIVE SECRETARY ■ (Age 3Q-50) background. Good shoHtkand. $280 Month- CLERK TYPIST ^ . (Age 20-25) —EXEANOlNG tempeny has_p ' .gl. Scafos Agency,. 8 Deer Precesslag A-l licensed deer processor, • may-sarvlc*- FE 53*88, have Your deer frocessUd HERE. CALL. FU 5^941. ^ - m Wanted Children to Bo«r4 28 Wanted Household Gmdt 29 ALL OR 1 Fiece OF FURNITURI or appliances wantad quickly Little Joe’s Bsrgln House, PE MtoS. AUctioU SALE EVERYlAtilR->d«y at Blue Bird Auction. Want buy fumltue*; Tools end appliances. ' OR 3*847 or MEIros* 7*191 tASH FOR FURNITURE aRo AF-pilsners, l piece or houseful. Faar- san'A PE 4-7181. .... lIt Ui buY it oR iiLL-iT For • YOU. OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION. OA H4PL .. . Wanted MIscellaneBOB 30 SewiNG MACHINE 8—TYPBWRIT- nliy for experienced refined worn- $325-5346 MONTH LEGAL SECRETARY (Age 2SdO) L our office if you art an client tvnlif. Tfa thnrthsrrd PlalnsJ_____________________ BTiwnir"8 a.w: 1 to *" >tm Own transportation. >20 ' weakly $300-325 MONTH ....._____GIRL FRIDAY EDUCATIONAL^lnitltutlon It Inter-•Viewing for a good publle re]*-, lions girl wlm good lyplr-preferably with - key punc to tral ... CDNCKSI0N Managers, trainees and waltraasas. ■ - Many opportunltlat with a —‘-1--cwnpany. -M—-i-.- v CALL.'KAY 646-3663 PR6STON WALKBR SMITH Female Placement “380 W. Maple Sultr321 Birmingham, Michigan COOK, LITTLE BROWN JUG. 2325 Union Lak* Read. EM 3-0611. Apply atfir^l j.m, Midwest Employment “ FE 5*227 405 Pontiac Staff Bank euikling ■ CURB WAITRESSES Yeung ladles over 11, far curb waltrasiM on th* night shift. Top . --earnings,, uniform-provided, and vaifalfSliV Insurance-benefits. Apply In parson only at? EVELYN EDWARDS BOOKKEBFBR- -24'/4 East Huron Instructions-Schools cbuNtkR sAlEI birMinoham Cleaners, 1253 S. Woodward, Ml 4M620. ^DEPENDABLE GIRL p6R COUN-\ter and grill, itaady.- Eva*, or days. Apply In parson, Lanas, iigi W. Huron LEARN TO OPERATE Dozers, graders, cranes, etc, Key, 4330 W. * Ml., Detroit. Ol l-TT* Diesel Heavy EQUIPMENT RC WAITRES it you are between the ages af 11 and M. meehanfoellv--iBcllned. ^or I information about ... ■a ptogram ,can help yi gran, w* will tram you to ,.*,. Ted's waitress. Night shift work available, ' f ' ' Itoyi Top Earn.ngs • • ..1 Paid Vacotlons ..-5 Industry, take „ now.. We hevt been doing a suc-eaistul '-" ting man for the I* Tt , In i *$*£_ WasTT Mlle~ D*trolt. uti pest 18 years. Writ* Tractor Training Servlca, Box I, In care of Pan-tlac 'Fraas, , . . iRV YRAIN'NO AVAILABLB DIESEL MECHANIC., 1,T:S.,. ___ I days, stay . 3 nights, prlvat* quartsrs with "7. WI 4-72ft fjTpSllliNCiB RXlk itVUfts wanted. Philip's SHhouatt* Hair Da-tfghlu]HW279. ‘ Tull or farJ tiME _____ no axparlanca nacaaaary. Apply Pontiac Btwf* Bank lW|., room 415, batwaag 9 and lO a.m. and 5 to 4 p.m. _______ 01N Ir Jii L H6UibwoRK aKid care ot I klndarosrtan chile, Wa-" tarford area, 473-5734. housEkebpbr To livi itf. 335 4402. call pr-- I NOUS E KEEPER. aubu*n talghts araa, 2 school chlklran, i !SXL Live. in or cammuto. UL d..ch|ldran. Live li i. a»5"' days par weak. wiiiib.--- . HOUSEKEEPER AND BABV SIT-tar, live In. 332-4436 after 3:30. ! j^wiELRY Salas girl for latdlng lawairy dag*., must ba axparlancad, all am- LAbY lO fllLP WITH INVALID, for room and board and tom* pay. FE 8-4805. —j—---------------- Mjrersir assistant; , poNViAd area, experienced, reply In own hand writing giving reference!, Pontiac Pres* Box 8. NO SXPBRIBNbl 'UlClIlAhY. Local firm new hiring woman be-tween 17 to 38.1a d* plaasant *•!•- NEW »AB9'7 VAOTIBWI1 ble, mature experienced wilt cart for yqur children home. EM HM Ml 4*345. ONE-DAY IRONING SERVICE. REF-------->. Mrs- McCowen, FE 51471, pulUlwg SimcB-tupplif 11 A - l.i BRICK, BLOCK, CIMBNT . lice. No txperlence ni Ing gay 81---------- . .. . Pontiac Stato Bank Bulktlne, 21 N. Saginaw.1 Roam 40f Monday fee-* - *i. and 12 nr~~ tween: 9 a.m. and 12 noon. NijllRi XBililfiCID preferred, but we will traW high-quality, woman. Apply In parson 9 to li'a.m., Bloomfield Hospital. PART-TIME Needed at one*. 2 ladies, 19 to ; ,• . estimates. PE 4-0448. Busings* StrvIcG wJ". 11 ALL MAKES OP FOUNTAIN PENS repaired by factory (rained men. 1 General Printing A Offlca Supply Co., If yy.'tawr—* B |aH|| Mr. Frick: t ie 7, 6R 3**)ii PART-TIME WAiTRiii: BAR WOl'K PE 8-1743 PARf-fiMi HELP WAfiffb:"f6 Work with horses: Sam* sdtnlngt. EM 3-9171, Klsntnsr. personnel AttistantTage 2i. 30. 2 years «r moto ot taflagt d«-tlrabla. To handlt ganeral personnel and clerical But Its, Including preliminary mlarvlawlng, payroll record, toiling, ate, Flense submit * resume Indlcat Ing personal b»ckground, work r#C' ord, educational history, and salary range deslrad. Writ* la Pontiac Prate Bpx 4. 1 ‘ ; _> RlPitfiff XftW PAN) ON ifflP housskeeper (of tldtrly lady. N let small Imm* naaf bus,' live In/ FE 2*002 attar J. u ' l»X1Yfl*K NIOHT5. NOnl'XIlRI' anca, nacassery. Apply1 atler 4, Dali's Inn, 14M BliiaMtn Lak* Rd. , WaItWIsI. LlTTLt fcSSS'N JUO. ' 2J25 Union Lake Road. EM 3 0411 Apply afttr II a.m. , _____ WaitreSSFS CURB GIRLS - Must M 18 pr pairing *' Phone PE FRll* fSTiM'ATTrW~ALL Wif-Ing, will tinanc*. R. B. Munra jiactnc-C- PE W431. Dressmoklm A Tollerlng 17 - LBL* Convalnscant-Nursing 21 AAA 5-0291. ItONYiflSPTIJUWTRG' Rochester - Licensed - 682-3504 will care'for"'iLbiaXYTtS-• i.enis Jn tyv home. Reasentbl* , Moving uwg Truc1llB| 22 T-A m'OVINO JERVICB, RBA8DN-PC 53458, FI f2909, Vovg It furnlthad. Vacation wilts pay, Ilf* miurancs And hot iltolliatlon |------“* -* Ku HI______ Apply a* Si# Fey Orlv* in, Tsltgrapn and Huron Iraafs. Also Dixie Hwy, and 8H-tor Lake Rd., * till noon or 2 to .wAUTIbP iXnERiEMCIb VaTT-rats met can qualify at mtnaair. Apply 1748 N, Ttltgraph, Wtsforn -. Rastauranf. TOOTITOW To wark full or part tlma, elating tolapnona orders, iom* txptrltne* working ,with public (Avon, Pgrty ........... .jt isibiM (Avgni |..., Plan, *to.) haipful but net ,hK-astiry, ' Apov* avarags aarnlngi, = Apply 9 fe to g,m. or 1 to 4 B,m. t\i Ponllia into bank fldg. NEW HOUSE HlLPIR Goad (toy' to beginners m Rga Is- ^f-‘-"J*‘^o'PlN" --- 1st*. "HOLD OFIN" hsw houses In davelwmshl In watortord , near M J9, house A to 5 or 4 to I. Also naatf experienced rati estate person for ’PSRtONAL IN TlRVllW. Phone PE 1-0411 dr aeteti d|« Raperlenc* pr*- i If ngwMry. •18 T '* IX r IF u t'■'‘'m6vM6." rita*. ui 2t8999, 4253518.'__ T lob's Van SsrvTcs MOVING AND STDRAGI REASONABLE RATES RaddlnD-liyssrs Experience ROPbRT TOMPKINi OR 4-1818 PuliiViBg~l jBtiiurutiwg 23 A.I PAINTING AND PAPiR HANO- g. Thompson. FI 4-8J4*. A-Y dfcoraiino - PATHfiW plliterinq — ptparlng, Free e ------- -r-,., M2-0«?0. discounts for eiih. ^ a lady' mfjr»'lbrbXc6F'AttfM; Ptparlng, PI 8-W48. __■■ repair sarvlcfl, OR H4M, nma^pian li# hull waihind. Tuppir, OR 3-7041 _ Painting and'PAAtR‘T4AtfSI»d. Mark Nation, PE 8-1894. » ' ' ■agagg"”- Talavitlon Radio Sarvlce 24 .wSWisisI ypuiHOP , Trained teryjc# Man, Reetonebl* prices. Pre* Tub* Tailing. MontgomtryWsrd PdhllscMall Tna mill illp & P0 y788t or _ _____ Triuiq^rtuHqu _' ~28 CALIFORNIA. DRIVE-AWAY araaLUfiarss’vjr.iB ■f MilRI MAM MOTOR SALES 37 ^Ixl*. hwy. . ‘ OR 4*9 era, Cu>fi Appliance. OR *1ipi.——?—* 'JSEO ®FPICE-FURNTTyRE, pilib Wanted ta Rent PAST RENTAL lIRVieB Credit and rataranca* checked. Calf Adam* Realty. FE 54895. Share Using Qtorttff 21 FE 4-7704. lady anxious-to sha'MI LaR6I-~ nappy homa With 3 career women kwklng.for enloytble living and surroundings attar working hours. EM 3-2478 after 5 'or Sunday. Wanted Real EttUfS 1 TO 50 . / ■H ) CONTRACTS Urgently wantad. lea ua before Worren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyk* Rd. PI 8*141 Open Eves. 7111 pm MULTIPLE LI8TINO 81 avoN area homes - Nix Rial Estate. UL 52111 or UL S-537S. BUILDER CASH 48 HOURS land contracts - HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT 388 Oakland Ava, PE s*i4l JOHNSON SAYSt to aur HM flp*—411 wm i. L«t your home wlm u*. W# ' »n* talesmen whe can tell. AUGUST JOHNSON RIALIOR "War CLARENCE RIDGEWAY 129| W. Waltof|,*LT°lt PE 5-7651 3 ROOM* AN6 •ATH, l_ „ come, 194 Qelug-* corner Bf W arW^ATH, "Agocri: 'UPFIR', w#st.aide, 82ft PE 1*275, 3~S60MlAN_rtA7W,”aiCT, --■'foanly. PEtjfi. downtown. Inquire 2338 Dixie Hwy; 3"H66mi, private IhtRAfKl. PE 8-99W. i Rofltol’ Aff6"*'«WH;..1WIK- ’ encet. 287 Oeklend. , naoMS, RRfUATI th- Northern Hlgl), adults only. FE fniflwnrANB'BAT antranca, UL 2-1328, 5 R06mC _BAtH. Mil _ borhood. Pvt, tnlranca. . PI f-8919 aft' ■' iXiD Vllfl&H- nc*. Bus line. Pontiac Lake, a Road. 4751040, LAro“rT3VirrrTHB~tn'iT, ntar airport, man and wife only, y-Ta May Isl. OR 51043. _ MIXED NBiGHBORHMBT 3 R66mI and bath, utlMiiai lumlshad, Pf 57404. Wail APAiYMiNf. chRap. i woman. 141 chamboriom. PR 8*702, ' wshirgiwKfVf--------- XEbb — ton nltoTy furnlshad — ----------------- icliian large modern 3 room a at a din:. Plenty Of elosat space. U 1111114s (urn, (30 Wtokly. EM 3-330u or 117-841 f. ■ Apartmentt-UnfurnlsiiBd 38 1 BEDROOM, ADULTS, *90 PER month, 130 Itminoii. 2)0*311, Ft 4.1559, 2‘BibR6i5SC UYillfiii RTTR' nishtd^PC 1*718 after 4 a.m. Lake. 3 HEDRSlWlTANfr fNTiincTmfr. Itova# refrlgara-ter an* uYjlltiai (urnlthad. No drinkirs. PI HIIL u <“iia^rAW TOiH: xswir. ctoM In, ciaan. haaiar, adult*, na drlnksri, Rtlsrsncat. |7I Rto, Pi 4 MOrtM* AND *> •roncti tnd I 4TOrwH:iiii|r heat, prsfer ogy rs^rimr ' MB, IIIHCTMWtv die egad couple. 44 Friu Wont Ads ' )u»t Dial 332-8181 D—lu ixxi* l ^xxiiAC l ltiiiba, iUOlvOA^, QjalviiiAlMit 2, ltfQO Apartmenh^Unfurnished 38 5-ROOM DUPLEX, PARTLY FUR-_ nlshed to mldd leaped' or retired cgup1e‘ no chi Won or pets,-Rochas- 40 huf twliwi Preperty 47-A TIZZY COMMERCIAL ON W-K LAKE OR/' ’ Ion. tollable for any professl business. Parking area. MY B? Kate Osann Sale Houses .'.iliampw5 Children, no . _ -Xrotreilylqcatgd. FE 2-2098 ^BEDROOM BRICK HOUSE r Waterford. 2V4-car heated garage. I ROOMS,- STOVE, I Newly carpeted living room, finished .recreation room; L«‘ edges. OR 3-3782 after 5 AND BATH. NO l^-ROOM Mb'figsa AbULTS :oratlon: * dr FE 2rS420 daytime. NEW LOWEfc DUPLEX HEATED1 rrtment. . 1-bedroom, full bath, —-trie range, refrigerator *55/ ", 1298 E. Highland Rd. (M-59), 1 1 " ■ 1- of Mltford. Rd, Bsmat—f- _ 4-4923. «. . i ■j'lte'ar t'toOMr 'uAt HfcAl. p~ 1 ------please, FE * *— V DEPOSIT Rd, EM-3- OPEN DAILY APARTMENT 102 Is furnished your Inspection. IMMEDIATE CUPANCY. Rent *125 to *150.. THE F0NTAINBLEAU 995 N. Cass Lake Road O'NEIL ■ ; FE 3; _ ORCHARD COURT, APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL Adults Only . FE 8^981 PARTLY FURNISHED 3. ROOM, I ROOMS, FE -4-3941 "ON FE 4-9312 390 FNRNYST, 4 rooms and bath aU . on Children- permitted. *45 per month as Is. K. O. Hempstead Realtor, , 348 W. Huron, PE 4-8284. > 475 LAMOTHE OFF COOLEY LAKE Road on Canal, Elisabeth Lake. Klwdroom.^flrejjlace, 2 adults, *75. Michigan, GAS-H HOUSE FOR RENT. 114 W. HOP- Rant House*, Furnished 2-BEROOM LAKE-FRONT. 424-3933 2 ROOMS. BATH, RELIABLE MID-dled-aged couple. FE 2-9797, ' * 1 ROOMS. REFERENCES RE-* qulred, 3 weeks rent In advance. 3330 Crooks Rd., Rochester. Fro6m MODERN-HOME; refer-ences. 3844 Mapleleaf; FE 5-4249. Attention, Executives! FIRST ..T.IME.._0EFERED - This lovely nIcily furnished lake front (TOO ft. lake irontage). Spacious living room end dining room, 2 room,. *70, OR 3-7204. MODERN DUPLE)*, 5 ROOMS AI4D ■ Aik..Close InTnt" “ Coal heat, I FE 4-1753. ----- DUPLEX naeds decorating, will furnish paint Nice location, *40 - —*“■ •-qulre at 550 Oakland SMALL HOUSE. UNFURNISHED. Also Apt. furnished. Couple preferred. FE 4-0081. SMALL 4-ROOM HOUSE. GAS Store Building* 4,000’ square feel.__ _____ ■ with brick front, busy north side comer location, part basement __. (1,500, equate Honing, owned parking slda and rear. Available now. Stpre or Office - _ tlftTop Jocation- on Elliabeth Lake Road across from Pontiac Mpll, some parking. Immediate posses- "BUD" Nicholie, Realtor 49 Ml. Clemens St. FE 51201 AFTER 6 P.M. FE 2-337Q Rent Miscellaneous 48 torYtoraoe U jjji j ■ Sale Houses_________________49 2- BEDROOM, NORTH SIDE, NEW. • *500 down. Ml 4-1432 altar 5. 3- BEDROOM HOME ON & JESSIE. *500 down, *40 per month balance on land contract. Call UL 2-3014. 3-BEDROOM BRICK, MODERN, Attractive Immaculate condition, • basement, fenced yard, paved drive, city, 81200 down. ------UNIVERSAL REALTORS \ 334.3551 _ 448-2387 3 - BEDROOM Rent Houses. Unfurnished 40 2 - BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE, -Inquire J29 S. Edith. FE 4^378. -' f~BEDROOMS, NlWLY IbECORAT- AND 4-BEDROOM HOMES. 97 W. Yale at Stanley * RENT 0P.JI0N *ejj $59.66 MONTH t?5n I Basem.nt n.uitJ |.I||||'I Mudel men" 1 Daily and Sunday " , R CREDIT IS 600D HERE" OUR TRADE DEALS ARE TERRIFIC MICHAEL'S REALTY ' i . W)E 3-4200 UN 2-2552 42 $45 A -MONTH 2 oedrooms, Union Lake area; I privileges. S5.400. Insurance i taxes included. , HILLTOP REALTY 49' Sale Houses 49 Sale Houses Orion Area—Owner 3-bedroom ranch typ4'Tiome‘r_ 2 74 AUBURN __________FE >7041 Snow-White Homes bedrooms, large rooms, beseem, on furnace, 2-car garage 11 h workshop. Spick-and-span, itlt to last. Lovely view of lake —s street. Definite bargain, *7r- SYLVAN LAKEFRQNT Large fenced-l* and nicely landscaped lot, 125'x 142. Plus 4-room bungalow. Basement, gas heat. — "svarfy attached Third Street, *71 per- n taxes, 3 bedrooi— storms, screens. Fireplace, Also 3-room apartment with large living room and fireplace. Apt. is JKtusJte-aJiQmAlia-Jlsett^ILjhk plus 2-ear garage. Only SIM"* ’ Templeton DRAYTON. PLAINS TRADE BWd. Nbrth —• niwy/decoritad inside end out — full basement -B“hM BARGAIN 219 S. Marshall — 2-bedroom e« lontal —large screened porch -newly decorated -Inside ’ and - on BOTH HOUSE* VACANT WRIGHT ’ 312 Oakland An F E 2-9141-2 . won Bm Eves, attar 7, OR 3-2835 - OR 3-0451 STOUTS Best Buys . -Todays NEW HOMES; Full - Basements $00T : DOWN per mo. Excluding N OPEN 10-8 DAILY SPOTLIGHT BLDG. CO. . FE 44935 pr trede-lnplan RESALE SUBURBAN WEST Attractive frame ranch with brick and stone front. 3 bedrooms, cherry-paneled dining room, large knot--fat-nlne-aaneled kitchen. 10x12 feat. 8 closet*bid* cinple- steraga'spacei^. Oil ham. Many excellent features end bisuranOa. 4V2 per cam Interest. WHY WAIT, CALL NOW! “If she brushed after every snack we’d go broke!” $56 A MONTH , A qqOTiatA awn tor 2-bedroom home, llv- 4 WOVL/IU l w jRent Rooms 2-BEDROOM TERRACE, NEAR Ponttoc Mall. FE>2422- 2 LARGE BEDROOMS. 2 MILES *3!. fe 2-M54. ne,r TWAAWI I 3 ROOMS AND BATH, GAS~Hli$t, 1 month free rent for redecorating, AT BUS STOP. FRONT, CLEAN, warm, quiet. FE S-7332;-R'OOM NO MONEY .DOWN Mixed Neighborhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA SLEEPING ROOM designed ai — easy terms. Lesl . ____baths, i custom built ------- occupancy SLEEPING ROOM, 1 OR 2 ADULTS FE 5-5249 i SINGLE AND. DOUBLE- ROOMS, R. Tripp, Reoltor _-A'west Huron Street FE HW (Evenings Ml 7-3279 *400 DOWN: NICELY DECORATEO. BLOOMFIELD RANCH. 3 BED-rooms, 2 baths. 15 x 25 living room with fireplace. Loads of storage. Stove/ refrigerator, freezer, carpets, drapes. 2 car garage, work H OPTION .T _______R______ near Wa» . terford Township High School. Oft 11' RoomsWith Board , BEAUTIFULLY ' &JT laEDROOM HOUSE KAt' 6A-. rage, commercial shop, together or separate. OR, 3-2159 after 5 p.m 3-BEDROOM HOME, NEWLYOBC- reasoneble.mR E A** VALUE, V(S? GENTLEMEN ONLY. AFTERNOON FURNISHED ... m side home, delicious gentlemen. 742 W " Cctrrigan Cons't 4349241 Roch.OL l?17l Custom Built Ranch vn. e large, well-shaded lot In e: , elusive neighborhood featuring IT'S SO EASY to Placo a, v Low Cost Press CLASSIFIED ADi Just Dial FE 2-8181 BUILDING 20x70 SUITABLE FOR " any type business. OR 3-8415. Rout Offlca Spaca $9,390 AVAILABLE: rancher, , muruurn* on your lot, full basement, oak floors, gas heat, birch cupboards. NO MONEY DOWN. Y0UNG-BILT HOMES. REALLY MEANS BETTER BUILT RUSSELL YOUNG, S3'/j W. HURON 5/XRL A! GILFORD, BROKER % BlBrf7r I wills CARPENTRY, ALUMINUM ' °l J-°M5. ; r target Service stalls, FB 8-1483,_; Convalescent Homes STONYCROFT NURSING HO.M(' Rochaitar -UcsnsM- 48MW8 Dressmaking, Tailoring - ALTIRATIONS ALL TYFiS, KNIT dresttSf lssthar coats, OR 3-7193, PRi« B8TIMATB8 ON ALL WIR-0TI* JON Floor Sanding GAYLORD i. largo lot and largo garage. A y nice family homo you will .. proud to own. Only 817,500 gives you plenty* of value. 12x14 ’0. Call FE 8-9493 or MY 2-2821. m/?2821 Lawrence W. Gaylord FE 8-9493 or MY 2-2821 Broadway and Film Lbke Orion Glass Replacement roof repairs, work guaran- Mwi. Sin and im. JIL 9.1090. BROKEN glass REPLACED l windows and storm doors. Bring < your frames to WARWICK SUP -PLY CO., 2471 Orchard Lake R< 482-2820. ' Hay and Sleigh Rldos~ PARTIES FOR CHURCHES schools,' Scouts, clubs. Club hous. end meal, horse .drawn. Upland Fermi Oxford, 428-1411. television, Radio and HI-FI Service HifTER- of land. Largii living room, ____ztway, attached 2-car garage, chicken coop. Many fruit ‘r««s. Only 111,900, terms. More, land callable. IW DOWN PAYMENT — On Kill Heating Service M. A. BENSON LUMBER COMPANY Heating Division_______FE 3-7172 Landscaping MERION BLUE SOD, PICK OP OR delivered. 2401 Crookt. UL 2-4"" Licensed Builders 3400 Elisabeth Lake , Tree Trimming Service ACE TREE - STUMP R B M O V A 1 Trimming. Get our bldJ402-24ip. BIILi/s.Tft egf iNG'ATib removal. Very , low cost. FE'S-^*’ General Tree Service Any tin lob. PE 5-9994 FE 5-302S .. MbkTRWTRlOKftVICl Tre« ramovaMrlmmlno, ,335-7150 Trucking MAKE AN OFFER contract. Every extra lor quality living is twturdd hare. Why not call Mr. Vic Smith tonight and have him explain the details to REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE"' 150 W. HURON FB 4-2501 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION In-'any of the 4 models available; 3 and 4 bedrooms. West suburban, basements. *12,900 to (14,950., Take Elizabeth Lake Rd. to Pine Grove, turn right to model. Trade considered. OR 34191 Nelson Building Co. LAKE-FRONT m NEW AND used, J. L. Dally Realty ““ 3-7114. . Mixed Neighborhood MODELS OPEN AFTERNOONS 14 AND SUNDAY WESTGWN REALTY , PE t^ 'attorTwnt^LrB4417 Eves. NO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COST NO PAYMENT FIRST MONTH “‘family I at 479 BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS fON 2-7327 Nothing Down 4700 SUNDALE. 3-bedroom, brick, largo living room# modern kitchen, tile bath. Large lot. Blacktop street Low! Low! 5'/4 par cent Intesest. You'll need about *30^ for closing k cost. Total price *10,900. 231 W. Cornell-----You'll like this ■ bungalow ii- focallon7'Only *i6.4o6rcios NO MONEY DOWN on your lot. Model open 10-4. G. FLATTLEY, BLDR. / 343-4981 q* Eves. EM 34482 galow with attached breezeway and garage. Full basement. Quick possession. Only 10 per - cent down. Price only *12,500. Here I* * reel bargain. orr *E*i»rn tipenALi Over 1500 eq. ft. home with beautifully panalad sunken entry with wrought Iron rail, 23x23 ft. "L" shaped functional living room, * -Side location, ^bedroom* brKk .rancher with attached garage — paved street. Full basement. Love-( ly recreation room. Oak floore. Ce- closets, ivy baths, basement < Wded, large recreation room wl hobby end tool room, also leu dry area. Gas heal. Attached 2 ft. garage, custom quality , built < vour lot or ours. Imagine on., SJM50. Easy down payment. Low W. H. BASS OUR TRADE DEALS ARB TERRIFIC NEW 3- AND 4-BEDROOM HOMES 297 W. Yale ai Stanley "0" Down—$59.66 Month Excluding Texas and Insurance. Quick Possession, Payed street Pull Basement '"YOUR CREDIT IS OOOD HERE" jgModei Open Dally and Sunday MICHAEL'S REALTY | FE 5-79*2 UN 2-2252 TALBOTT LUMBER Moving and Storage . Passport fhetegre FOR *2. READY IN 1 LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and grav-pl and front and loading. FB 2-0483 - - Truck Heirfol*, .Trucks to .Rent Industrial Tractor Co. 12 S. WOOOWARD FB 44441 PE 4-1442 Qp#n Pally Including Sunday Typing llookkeejilng, typing, plCk-Up dal I Upholstering O'NEIL MODEL OPEN 3 to 6 758 SUNNYBEACH DRIVE by Beauty Rito Homes, Features of 'V'n,.4vallabia ,k, vanities. Plastered throughout, dear „„ pim^and tllsd.A Real ^Deluxe Home. Drive gut AAA PIANO WIBOAND'S ~ “a,PfOfi'fNO AN6~lffWCI Oscar Schmidt - ----- PIANB’YUHTRT Racondiiionlng, key Covering Cell Chuck , P1 5430* PlaiferTngiService THOMAS UPHOLSTIRINO . "■»* W. WALTON BLVD. FE 5-8888 rSTsorUPHOLsTBRINO I • -« Estimates FE 81854 «r. Proksch wlii be your hoStV oL 7-0173i" ' TRADING 16 TERRIFIC A LITTLE MORE IN '64 **• Xi "f?!1 surely owe If to youraell in a fine Wail Side, all brick home. All seven room inlal are in me best possible condition: I va* i beautifully decorated, handsomely carpeted, boast room on • first level, this In addition to • (Inishei K-l PLAITIRINO AND RfPAIRS. Reason able. Pal Lea, PI 2-7922. ?airvmtidi,,?Rii,liirim'Ti|i. 3. M*v9ri , ________EM 3-8143 a delightful Per reereetlon room ..... ...... ,„u player lor the klde, also a 3 piece beth end a summer kitchen, H r™J. J'lSLntIr?rv? ,*ar DrieK garage, metehlng tile root I reel beauty el 119,588, must be Intoecled to appreciate. YOUR CHILDREN CAN GET TO SCHOOL linn nuaranlaod. PE i-lCTto, ■inqing (Well, almost i) H*r.9's a tour bedroom am My home, Big 24 foot living room with a - a blousing tor fyarv one ot you, 3 ear i uiS mi 40 AND SBWBR clban-ilier Beker, licensed mailer r. MU9-MIB. . Wallpaper Steamer Floor senders, polishers, hand sMidera. tumnea vacuum cleaners. Oakland Fuel hiJBm, .MOP. Chard La# Ava. 'pi rtuo. WssHS NwulisM S« Wood-Coke Cool-Fuel CANNIL COAL—THE IDIAL FIRE- til1wik PAIN1‘45 Thom*' $1800. DOWN PJHf^Li,l7,uS!,rs (E I price * ALICE STREET M'hWKtI Any tour bedroom with «n extra stool Icnoqf and you WON'T JUST ( (room, hewer J stool end tunny Vela J NMD A Ol FOUND uni an eligible Vetera RAY, O'NEIL, REAL' | (-262 S. TELEGRAPH OP FI 3-7103 J , M.ImS. THE D0LI HOUSE 2 bedrooms, (pH basement, storms . and screens, automatic heat, l acre of.. ground, only *4,500 with 8700 NEWINQHAM REALTOR UL >3310 Newly decorated. Elbow rdbn 134x134'. *10,100, no down, I,_ month plus taxes and Insurance. HAGSTROM REALTOR 4900 W. Huron Street. OR 44358. Eves, call 402-0435. i • MiLLER Young Executive- Live In Bloomfield area tor only *1,500 down. Immaculate 3-bedroom brick rpnchfcr, carpeted living and dining area, custom kitchen, den, attached lVs-car oarage, spacious landscaped lot, pdtlo, out"— “* --‘al prtce. Only *14,500 to Walk ta School- Take over existing . mortgage, 3 bedrooms, all on one floor Cer- -S^.-ga^aaV^C^ &ack yard] OPEN Eves, qutej paved street. | $1,350 Down- St. Mike's end public schools only a f*v blocks from this 3-bedro~» --- basement, gas h 1 street. *750 d Immediate pos driveway- New reot. new -gas nace. Naw kitchen with snack Full basement. Will trade ft. . bedroom house In suitable location. FULL PRICE, *8,950. Smith „Wideimn. . WESTSIDE I -j.;- ... . ’s-room modern- bungalow, newly -painted and decorqted, new Hot-land gas furnace, 2pen 8:30 a m. to 9 p.m. MuHIpl* L. H. Brown, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Road Rhone RE 44544 or PE KUO TRADE entertaining and MO.'wmT“lake'your home In trad*. Outside John K. Irwin S SONS ReeHort .Since 1925 . 213 W. Huron 7 FE *44 Evenings, FE 24*03 HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri Level $9,995 $I,000DQWN 1VS-CAR GARAGE 03' LOl FAMILY ROOM , GAS HIA1 , OPEN — ■' . pA‘(LV 9 TO 0 PjM. ’ ’ SUM3AY JJO S P.M. WILL DUPLICATE ON YOUR LOT J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor EM 34404 10731 Highland Rd. tM*9) CHEAPER THAN ' RENT . IN NORTH PONTIAC $69 Down NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME * •’ $55 Month tolng taxei one, qualm IRWIN LAKE FRONT -'lovely lake fi THREE BEDROOM BRICK Almost naw home In an are_ new homes in WatkftHh Hills — Lovely kitchen with eating THINKING- OF SELLING? W* will gall it for ----- call Fred r, Lao kampitn, Floyd Som-nS, or Georg* Jackson, MLS 1071 W. Huron Street H| OR 3-5*44 ing distance to dow: would be suitable for speculation, near Mun Ing lots. Only *7,500, payment. WEST SUBURBAN .1 bedroom bungalow with, attached J car^ garage very .nicely as office and home. ’ Price Is Tight. auto.; heat hot water^ and gareye. low monthly p'eymenti. . MULTIPLE LISTING'SERyiCE Frushour & Struble ■ALTORS ’ TRAOIRS B 1-4025 PE 2-1*29 3930 Elizabeth Lake Road A-1 BUYS CALL ANYTIMfe DAILY, SAT. AND SUNDAY 4244575 NICHOLIE LAKE PRIVILEGES 29* W. Walton ^,PE3-7M2 'BRiCK RANCH - 3-BEDROOM. — finished recreation room — 2-car garage — large scenic lot — In. good neighborhood — newly decorated ^j-^neer The. Mall — *16,- 3-bedroom ranch home, located oh largo lot, paved atreet, automatic heat, til* bath, recently. recondl- Roomy 4-room home in smell town — is miles from Pontiac - large you In and payments less then *75 NORTH END 2-bedroom home, hardwood floors, scenic lot — borders mill pond — convenient to shopping and good roads, — (4,950 r *750 down. Lake front In aDrayton area — 4 bedtoonu^—^roomy ^7-ro»m housa dining area. In perfect condition. Closing colts move you In, CLARKSTON AREA 3-bedroom brick and frame, t»r- Wh-l,,n«lurMowf$ LAKE' FRONT FOR SALE trad* equity tor late modef « THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1963 • WHITE AND SHINING Big lOtwMO' (acre) M. 2 bedrooms, tile bath, easy-clean tile floors, * "<000. No town with phi* taxes' paneled famttjrroL- ___ turn from hunf. 2 bedrooms, ....... kitchen,, utility, m-car attached • garage. Nestled among-trees corner lot. *9,200, 1350 now, $52 month plu* taxes and Insurance. HAGSTROM 4900 W. Huron OR 44350 e Evenings calt:«0$4435 ARRO >ZY 2-BEDROOM RANCH In west wbumqn Tocatfonw I t h lake privileges.-Handy -kitchen, oil heat, cover*drp*fle with privacy fence. Playhouse Is storage ere*. Plenty $• JK* *.„8?.rd#n W» i Northern -This lovely home can be bought with $34100 down. 01 TERMS on this Stodroom aluminum aided ranch. Family room, IKylS ' foot,: oil heat* aluminum storms end screens. Large lot part-- ly fenced, lake privileges. Selling for $11,990. A STEAL ON THIS. ATTRACTIVE ■ 3-bedroom ranch. Knotty pine in handy kitchen oah floors, full base-. nient, ’gas heat and recreation %SS Lots • AcrsBflg $79 per month Including taxes and insurance. '’ - ' PHONE 682-2211 •5143 Cass-Ellzabelh Road • —MULTIPLl LISTING SERVICE ■Established In 1915 ________ rm„ tiled bath, handy kitchen, heat. Total, price $9,7{w. - WISHER' SCHOOL AREA - Only. $950 down for this 3-bedrm. home with futf bsmt., gas heat, paved street. Thlt Is a good buy fbr the money. Total price $$.950. DRAYTON AREA — Attractive Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 otxle Hwy. at Telegraph FE 241 a - or - FE £7342 CRAWFORD INCOME SPECIAL 4 AVART- — MENTS, -ell beeutltuliy malm talned, nehr 1-75, only $23,850 terms- Chill today. - . SEE THIS EXCELLENT, 4-ROOM ranch home, 3 bedrooms, living room with, wall-to-wall car--paring, btautlful kitchen, - large enclosed porch, 2M-car 'attached garage, 120x240' lot,-only *15,900 terms. Call today. , IDEAL LOCATION, WILLIAMS LAKE RD.7 187' frontage, 5-room home, with attached garage. This ''property has many possTblll*'" $15,875, terms. Phone today. SileHome » , WE TRADE 3*edmom, m be*" . to?*™®* tfowsjhort. —._ .. ss,'s„sf.ss’sss: SgSMASK*a integrated. Efwood Really 683.2*10 Income Properly. £!rlJ28?n% n# a month. SI6.500, Sj^down.,Cart Rydlng Real «»!mi 1385 N*wlxom • Wbt0,n- WlgT SIDE INCOME-*lJ& r!XL ~=-"' D—11 nlco. Will tr lake Property 51 thing, boat dodw.. is n Ponflac, $795 - 810 down. „„ 3-1295. FE 44509. Bloch Bro«. Corp- SYLVAN LAKE FRONT Large 34jedroom: brick ranch h ? . baths, 2-car attached garage, W sandy beach. Owner leaving •own, m ust sell. *27,500, 395. Clarkston-Orion Rd. to 1 Rd^to sales office, at |||j| j^LVAN, 682-2300 - 625-1884 WOODED, CABIN AND ~~ XjXGfll 20 ACRES MR well, Kalkaska____ NORTHERN MICHIGAN ACREAGE, 10 acres, $1,250 - $1,500. 7 -Wr SMITH FRANKLIN,' MICH. Resort Property 54 2 TO 5 ACRES. SASHABAW-RAM-sey Rd. Clarkston area. 10% doWn-, $2,385 or 15% dlscounh tor-cash. Low as 882 par month, UN 45810. John K. Irwin ACREAGE a Acres with $< fenced* a tremen ._ mm acre; rencea* a Only $202 j C. PANGUS, Realtor ORTONVILLE NA 7-2813 m Mill Si. BLOOMFIELD Woodward-Square Lake area — Over 180 largo rolling, * * ■ ■ " —' ‘ I, Most h schools. Priced -fra to choose fr Easy-term*. a all Unchurches, 8998 up. RORABAUGH Woodward at Square Lake Road . CRAWFORD AGENCY. Office hours 9 to $ 25* w. Walton . . FE 8-2306 <09 w. Flint - , MV 3-1143 SCHRAM DANDY . . Humphries Multiple Listing » DRAYTON WOODS Brand New ' I range* ”rm* ,r’ 3-bedroom ranch with 14x15 llv- wMdhull. Lake Farms, mar lake, big room,, 10x5 kitchen ? dinette, | 70x150, terms. _ ffibaaajtiant, gas heat, wl11h PONTIAC REALTY > 13x14 recreation area. Priced at: „7 R>lrtuu,n $11,600 ind$1,200 will move you ^Baldwin----------- --- fB 54275 in. will duplicate on your lot or howlanc- avenue, 50X150 ALL _ _ n trl - level with brick front, recreation area, sliding po-' Mg gas Mat. Priced —dy P .... .... on your lot or Gl No Down 8. PI 24122. Selected. Hortte Sites A wide.- choice of beautiful homo altos. Many on hills and paved roads. Some low at $995. LADD'S, INC. Priced at *12,950. Completed and ___________TKT ||U ready Jo move Into. Will dupll-* SB5 £agfi*rorRdA- *5^ cate on your lot or ours. FE ™'1 „?r *:!*?! fimr 's* schools. Only $10,500, dosing coats moves you In. West Side 2-bedroom with 13x11 living i 13x13 rumpus room, full men! with gas heat. 1-car g close to Pontiac Mall- $950 down, .plus closing costs will handle. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5:9471 .948 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD OFlN WnNtNai AND SUNDAYS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GILES and bath. Ineomi of $154 a ir---- Rant both or live In one and other will make payments for. you. l • BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL - Near schools and stores, yet suburban. 229S6 r CARNIVAL By Dick Turner S i For Sola WbcoMwiww 47 PLUMBING BARGAINS- FREE. 1 .Standing toilet, *18.95; 30-gallon heater, Me.95> 3-plece bath sets, $59.95. Laundry tray, trim, *19.95. shower stalls with trim, *32.95. 2-bowl sink, S2.95; Lavs., *2.95; and up. Pipe cut and SAVE PLUMBING CO. 472 S. Saglnaw, F8 WHI0. — •OLAkOID QktaERA AND AC cessorles model 110-A. Like new Lovely white wedding dress,. sin 13. FE 84694. : REPOSSESSED PhlFGas clothes dryer, deluxe unit In excellent condition, with 1 doors and win- Ired Com' ‘ALBOn LUMBER JjMau Installed'' 1025 Oakland Ave. FE 44595 +Ht SALVATION ARMY -RBD SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs. Clothing, Furniture, Appliances. G E R AUTOMATIC -ZIG-ZAG BHfc“““— 'Tier model. But-hems, designs, denes In any of own a business .. real estate in this you will be there In 1964, . There ere ho hidden charge*, only the regular commission rates, so call today, and REALLY change your circumstances equitably. LEW HILEMAN, S,E-C Realtor-Exchangor 1011 W. Huron St,______Fe 4-1579 BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY CO. 81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-7101 GAS FURNACE, I Sales, m • USED BATHTUB PR 3-3701 VANITY AND HAND BASIN up, complete, . *59.95. B toilets $19.93 gas automatic water heatr— **j. Thompson »~ 7005 M39 west. FOR ^SALE—SPUDNyT SHOP, _ Orchard Lake. Ahy~rea»onabl4 ob-far considered. fAVERN"______________ No, 2040. A nlco bar for couple. fn.Baart of_ town, good iii,„,_ _ I rectory In town. M.. .. State Wide-Lake Orion , 1175 LAPEER RD. OL 1-3603 AFTER S There once was a man from Waterford From 1iis job no luxuries could he afford He didn't hesitate Saw Partridge Real Estate From his own business his income has soared’ FQF YOUR-BUSINESS PARTRIDGE . "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" FE 4-3581 I Garege Or Warehouse Downtown area, 5 000 square feet with /allroad siding available -Price Includes equipment (or going garage and brake service business. All tor *45,000. Make a data to see thijj, .Terms., Al Pauly, Realtor , 4516 Dixie, rear OR 34800 _______Eves. FE 3-7444 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY J WHERE YOU CAN __, .IMiMIF^O^OGOr" ■ OFFICES IN.. Pontiac—Drayton Plalne-Utlca WalladLaka—BIrmlngham TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER^ ROMEO 214 E. ST. CLAIR LOANS S2S TO $1400 AUTOS "Friendly Service". Mortgage Loans CASH Loans to $3,000 Consolidate your bills with only one payment, No closing costs and life Insurance Included oh unpaid balinr, at no EXTRA cost. Repay over a convenient farm Phone or Apply In Person Family Acceptance Corp. 317 Notional Bldg- 1* w. Hun Telephone FE 8-4022 . 9x12 LINEQLUM RUGS ... MP FUSTIC TILE -2 FOR 1c TILE, CEMENT, TRIM FOR BATHTUB^ AREA ....... .ASPHALT TILE ....... ---- THE FLOOR SHOP ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 7Sf, HOME OWNERS CASH UNLIMITED Exclusive plan. Remodel your Pay piit or currant PETOSKEY, MICHIGAN — 3-UNIT ' motel. Reasonable. 473-5142. paCkagB LIQUOR STORE payment. And extra cash II Med some. Call anytime. Big Construction Co, FB 3-7833. street parking r. Finest equlp-l sell. Pay only SERVICE station FOR LEASE 10 miles West of Ppntlac on M-59. Small amount of capital required. Dealer Training available. Phone Sale Load Coatracts »1 TO SO LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us before you-deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 150, N. Opdvke Rd. FB >4165 Open ft— guj— 20% DISCOUNT 175,000 worth of contracts. Will sail all or part Or will olve 20 per cent (or loan against ail or pari of those contracts. C. PANGUS, REALTOR ORTONVILLE 22 Mill St.________ NA 7-2815 Sale Forme It Kras mar Clarkston — a q •and peaceful small estate stream — 3-Uedroom home — u barn — garage — Ideal ror he — 819,500 —Will consider trad*. Dlxw Highway — Oroveland area —7 acres —. oloar lypa. farm home •— 4 bedrooms — small bam — naads soma paint and minor rapalr bur batclalTy sound — offer* advantages to. someone With a large family — $10,500 — $1,0M town. y\ 95 ACRES Choice farm land with co set of. buildings, modern . room farm home with oil (oread air heat, basement, 2-car garage^ corn crib, baMmant barn, tool *Md chicken house. Year round stream on properly, paved road frontage. Only,lM,508 with farms. Warren Stout Realtor, 1480 N. Op-dVKt Rd. Fl 84165. ______ A Real American Farm SO ACRES. If you I0V6 horses and outdoor living this modern 3-bedroom horna is tor you. Barn and out buildings are In ixcallant condition. and almost completely tliia- C, PANGUS, Realtor ORTON VILLI .. n Mill »t. lari 30ACRES with 1,000* of food, -.. ssr.."a,ssr ROAb-FRC 18 wTlhthodan,___... and 2-ear oaraga- W n of l-ri, 113,000 cash. FRONTAGE. 1300* ~*—^'--n]ty farm wmln a C. PANGUS, Realtor ORTONVIUR •________ 423 Mill »h ~ NA'7-1818 WkllP WIW'WiiW'TiWCBm* yoriad Industrial, on PfOPOIMl 4-lam highway, Unibh uke>efc 24.4 gar can? increase in trafflo count Mr til veers, Excallenf ‘ 3343551 L ",ALT0"Jt«jar ACTION on your lend contract! loro* or small. Call Mr. Hiller, FE 24179. Broker, 3860 Elisabeth Lake Road. Wonted Contracti-Mtg. 60-A i to so * '..m LAND CONTRACTS Warren Stout, Realtor 10 N. Opdyk* Rd, _ PE 54168 »■ TH i ^ IVHWl ’VdU NE66, ' * $26 to $1,000 sfMiitfAR^cjr' m HOME OWNERS ; CONSOLIDATE YOUR BILLS FIRST AND SECOND MORTGAGE LOANS CUT PAYMENTS UP TO 60% MONEY IN 1 DAY Foreclosures STOPPED PRIVATE FUNDS CALL DAY OR NIOHT UN 1-1743 MORTGAOE ON ONE ACRE ui with iso-foot frontage. No ajdiroTt fee. B. D. Charles, Equitable Fan Loan Service. 1717 8 —z QUICK CASH LOANS UP TO $3,000 You can get a monthly paym cash loan of 83,000 or less on y home even though not fully mod usually In two day* time. pay ta lams -----------receive a tree d life Insurance policy, Consolidate your debtu . moke home Improvem, our momy. Sea and falL .. ... with ua without obligation. VOSS AND BUCKNER, INC. . 208 NATIONAL BUILDING PONTIAC, PH. FE 44729 ICE 8KATQ8, NEW AND USED W* buy, sell and trade. Barnas-“*----to 743 W, Huron. Sole Clothing BIOS large irorjiijau lAdymnT, 18, peed condition, F> 24013. LIGHT WEIOHT WOOL SUIT, MB-d um grey with muted overplald. Bile^40^ Excellent condition. 820. Sale Houiehold Goods 65 d 1 GRAND REOPENING Bargain House 103 N. Cass Brand Brand new sera mo Brand new dlnettat ‘rand now mattresses ..... $10.98 Used furniture snd factory seconds of fall kind*. as or eleclnlc sieves, l9-tt9i guar-anli*d rafrlmrators, *19 upi rabulll Maytag -washer*, *39/ big picture TV, $24, upright horn* freanr, Ilk* new, $124, drassern, ch#»ls, bad), springs, tables, dinettes, lamps ihd rug*, Bvarythlng in uMd furniture i. at bargain price*. r * EASY TERMS BUY—SELL—TRAD! Opan Monday and Frldsy till 9 p.m, 1 WEEK SPECIALS Little Joe's Bargain House 1 ROOMS ftfew FURNITURE with me# rang# and rafrlgerator. IncludH baautilul badroom, jiving roam and kitchen suite*—with bo! Spring, mattress, end tables, lamp* and everything. ONLY 8319-82.80 FURNITURE^ 3 ROOMS OF BRAND NEW FUR- 4 nlture, living room, bedroom and 2 dinette - at) for *295. *3.00 week- , A 3,° 8a*t5 6-PIECE BEDROOM SALE -brand new double drstaar, .bookcase bed; chest ot drawers; box spring end Inter-spring mattress; 2 vanity imps; all for 0119, 82 -“nkly. PEi 9x12 RUGS, (BRANO NEW) bKk. 114.95 up. Braltod *24.88. Axmlmtor k------ $9.95. Llmleum a rug pad: M, Peer .ABOUT ANYTHING rou WANT E9R JHf, HOMB_CAN FOUND AT L & S SALES. -A utile out of' the way but lot tow to pay. Fumimro :_ appliances of air kind* NEW AND USED. Visit our trad* tor* m and look Around, 2 acras ot fri parking. Pnom FE 54241, Open Mon. to Sat. 94; Fri. 94 ,24 MONTHS TO PAY , _4 miles i. of Ponflac or i mil* TV FB 2-2257. Open 9 9. slS Walton, Corner of Joalyn. ANTIQUE ORGAN, 100 VEArS ADULT TWIN BED, HEADBOARD. mattress, springe, $38, FB 8-5389. APARTMENT SIZE BOTTLE GAS range. 815. EM 3-2257. AUTOMA11C WASHERS ... $49.1 v,,._ >4. *19.95 and u SWEET'S RADIO 8. APPLIANCE 422 W, Huron St.___. 334-5677 A-l Carpal Salts BEDS (BRAND NEW) Specials Christmas Admlral'HI-PI, all »........ albums, cast .......... * 39.95 ■E. 4speaker stereo, portable, wl|h stand'............... $99.95 14" portable TV now, 8)09.98 Si Plastic Will Tile Vinyl Flooring MMVMPI BEG Tile FE 44957, 1075 W. Hill COLONIAL FURNITURE, LARL-salKtlon, everything lor your home. Family Homa Furnishings, Dixit Hwy.. cor. Telegraph. CRIB, NEW MaYtRESS: HIGH ilbc, i nit a T V v ■, {tnOLLIk, crib, mattress, FE 24605. GAS WATER HEATER *24.95, 40" electric range $29.95, Hotpotnt refrigerator, *29.95, tabl* modal TV, 119.95, rebuilt FrlgWalre washer. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3445 Auburn Rd„ Auburn Helghti, PE 6-3873 HAVING MADE OUR OLD HOME Into aparimanti, we have washer, Ironer, drop-leaf and round table, radiator cover*, antic- jI”*-framu, .Victorian love _ model top dreiter and mlKellane-OUl Item*. At 272 S. Broadway, Lake Orion. nolle Ht, glass top mlK. FE p54332i~* LIKE NEW, ELECTRIC RANGE, $2 per week. Used washer, Ilka n 11.80 per week,, 1943 TV atei combination, damo. Like new. P*P 'GOODYEAR STORE* 80 8. CA88 ____FB 54123 JlWHYLYNW"lSIIB7^WTrNlS i i waiher, wardrobe. Holly wo ' ' Zenith TV, mine, OR 34644. “1'MOblL KliBYTl v.-Gurri Appliance, C LIQUIDATING LOTI OF CLEAN OUARANTEBO UMd itovai, iwlgeroior* ar " liu up, Fianl’y. of gar , ... up. Fitftfy.... u.«d lyrnjiura and factory Hcondi, EASYTERMS BUY—IELL-T|tADl Bnllre (lock of box iprlng maltretiet, living room and room set*, Myit m moved out. Ra-modeling building, tor, other btr mu. Baiy lerm*. BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4763 Dixit Drayton Plain* OR 34714 In lovaiy wood caalnat. No, attachments needed to to designs, blind hen**, buttonhole*, mw on button*, etc. All Nature* built Into michlm. rake over payment* or 84.93 monthly •* lull palanca of Mjhw. Michigan Necchi-llM. FB Npfwrrninr ‘CDafLiYi llr\fWtj4l(oTCTW Mil, Wi ipMiillH In urpat claan-[ng and rapalr, Avon Troy carpal Salai, 1450 B. Auburn Rd., ROChee ter, pa»t John R. *52-1444. Riel KInMOKI'wRInBVR'WUH- jsr, 138. 332-4267. iWF'lTOjWXTir ing machlna. Cabinet modal, Pay oh account In t mot. at 89 par or HL Cash balance, unlvar- In,, Fl 4 0901. . PORT ABIE All ICiMAf IC ZIO lAG linger, no etUchmtnta. needed, Ull Curt* tapilsnce, ON 4-1181, RiPNIGfiftAfDR, I2S, ilJCfNlC ifavt, Nli li'7 TV/ mTi wiihin iiti; roirlgarator with lop irMiir, Wijiii *tove, Mil. V. , Horrli, refOND {filpfSBi1 Dixie' Hwy. OR 34767. t-A ALUMINUM SIDING AND STORMS See wild VINYL aiding Imtallad at 6600 Orton Rd„-Rochester,. |u*f north of shopping cantor and 810 Ptoasont Rldga, Lake Orion, .OB VALLELY CO. FBS4545 NO MONEY DOWN OL 14423 17-FdOT, ItiBOARD BdAT WITH‘55 ---------,-x- —fiberglas, 870. .N AUTOMATIC CABINET STYLE sawing machlng, 1963 model.«Buh tonhofes hems, fancy stitches, etc. Single or doublt needlework. *5.05 monthly for 0 months or toll plrce of S4K40. Michigan Nacchl-llna, FE Mill. s 8 Mings. Low* r Kemtone * ible Sinks, *9.50. Faucets, *9.50 KITCHEN INTERIORS 3304813 . 3127 W. Huron St. Brown's Cabinet Shop Bottle Gas. Installation Two 100-pound cylinder* < man. tlS Dl,ln, Cash and carry V-Grove Mag. 4x8 ...... .... *3.39 Pre-finlshad Mag. 4x* ...... 13.95 V-Grova Mag. 4x7 -t?W85Bl>MnN§ PRBPINI8HED . IRREOUI ""GENUINE CHERRY ..... „ GENUINE WALNUT ..... W" NATURAL JLM ........ ANTIQUE ELM ------- COLONIAL BIRCH 1481 Baldwin $3,91 FE MM3 PLYSC0RE* OAIH AND CARRY • to" 4X8 C-D 82,64 Vb" 4x1 C-P *3.51 H" 4x8 C-D *4.00 4x8 C-D 18.47 PREflNISHED PANELING 4x7 AAoaea lapell 82.80 4x7 Golden Mahogany 13.92 4x7 Troplggl Mahogany U.9I 4x8 Bcono-Luan 11,64 % 30 Ofhar Varlaito* In Stock > INSULATION Widlum 837,00 per M fl. VINYLWRM Folding Paml Door* COMPLETE PIRE-curtain typo, must be nice: tiro hall tree. FE 4-4324.' waFIehOuse clearanceT~5S- chairs, files, drafting Supply, 45 or Mf 7-34 Christmas Trees 18.000 WELL SHAPED BEAUTIFUL-ly colored scotch plnos. Real bar-^ OA OG7M, 4517 boughs, _____ Pontiac. <2 ML N. of 175 Intor-sectlon. C * d a r Lino Christmas Tree- Farm, 8970 pixla Hwy. (old US 10). MA 5-1922. m, 75c. wKmmmmm 25c row run. 5 to 9 ft. Near La-pear. Call Farmington *74-7696. t REE'S OP "ALL SIZES. FOR LATE MODEL CONSOLE CHORD : organ, SS6.50, forma. Curia *-pflanqq, OR 4-1101. SMALL HOUSE TO SB MOVED Or tornrdown.,Total price, 8100. Floyd Kent, Realtor, >E 54108. "•2 SHETLAND. PONY MARft KLENTNER RIDING ACADEMY »st Inatructlon. EM 3-9171 'NEW RIDING STABLE, 13650 NEAL Rd., Davlsburg, 6344951, call tor details. RkUpg, Instructions avetl- Gallogher Music C6; , East Huron Open Monday thru Friday 'til 0 -FE 4-0566 WALNUT FINISHED APARTMtNt size Melodl Grand piano, t1 old, exc. cbndltlon. FE 54769. Offjce Equipment TY *34.50. Unclaimed layaway. Curt* Appliance. OR 4-|10l,~ . . . USED- OFFICE FURNITURE — chairs, desks,. files, typewriters, bookkeeping machine, etc. 'GEt+-ERAL PRINTING AND OFFICE SUPPLY. 17 W. Lawrence Street, Store Equipment COMPLETE STOCK OF RIFLES -SHOTGUNS. Assortod ammunition. Must be sold. SIUa. 33' H. - GUNS - Bb Y -SiSELL A TRADE ICE SKATES, NEW AND USED We buy; sett and trader Barnev LJ~roraves Hdw. 742 W, Huron. i. You pick and cut. 20-INCH GIRLS' BIKE, t?i STROL-lar, *4; tricycle, $2; Wonder horse. *8; power lawnmower, 825; baby chlffrobe, $10. Cute, mostly (tocker puppies'. 682-3227. LIONEL TRAIN, 3 - TRAINS, switches, 360W trenstormor, . small transformarr, mounted on J^d ^jroln board, axe. condition. TRAIN SET, 2$ CARS, 2 ENGINES, ‘ransformers, 4 auto, switches. I value., $50 firm. 681-6354. RENT A NEW GR1NNELL PIANO Music lessons included Choose your style and finish Ail payments apply If yvu buy $2.00 PER WEEK Grinnell'S ELECTRIC HARMGNY MEfB5R amplifier. Llk* new I tratotoMtomjmmmtom Guitar M JMRHPI *175 or wlTl trad* tor . outfit. Orotsch C-molody new'padi'*40.’ Caii'Remo 'P^fsm LON D MAGNUS ELECTRIC chord organ, like new. 8*5. OR 44)154. ORETCH GUITAR, *135. HARMONY Guitar, .I50i^ Both excellent condition— electric. FB s-0198. 'AMMOND CHURCH MODeT1>R-gan. 5371 Cooley Lake Rd. RENT A Trumpet, Cornet, Trombone, Flute, Clarinet, Violin . Or Snore' Drum Kit ’ • $5.00 . ». A MONTH Rent tor at long as you wish, all monays apply If you buy. INLIMITED RENTAL PRIVILEGES Grinnell's OWNTOWN STORE PB 37168 ONTIAC MALL 682*0482 New All-Electronic Organs 2 maquels, 13 pedals: mada by an American manyiicluror. , with bench, musto and lessons. MORRIS MUSIC . 34 8. Telegraph Road (Across from Til-HOron) „ FE 2-0567 PRt-HOLIDAY’i'ATE- WANTED! DEER stems AND RAW furs. Muskrat meats for iala. 500 PontlK Trail. Walled Lake. “MAri -ket 44732- T ' ' HAVE YOU PUT THAt GUN In Lay-Away for Christmas at _ Cliff preym4— "Qui* and Sports Canter ■ . ■. ■ Ytni ■■ * atop carry a complete line ... ice skates, sporting clothing, al types ot fishing equipment and hunting equIpntoAL ' ■ See the most ■ Complete Sports Cantor la Hoily, Mlchlgsn Todeyll Cliff Dreyer's BUCK5K.N TENNESSEE WALKER mart, MOO Including tooled sad-dles. EM 345*!. ‘ , „ Hoy-Grain-Feed WHEAT STRAW, *60e BALE DE- Poultry A P'PCErTPIftYEDr HAVg_lMSUF^ ficients!Bia6e^45iHnreSSri and —-up. Klce-Loata Road, seven-tenths mile north of Seymour Lak* Rd. OA *-3544. . ■■ ■ APPLES, PEARS. SWEET ClOlR. N. Spy, McIntosh, Jonathan, pott-ckxis — miny others. Special bargains on utility grades. 8 a .in, to 8 p.m. dally air winter. Oakland Orchards, 1 mile east ot Milford . on E. jCommorco Road, PRODUCE, SEE Bob & Bill's Produce Co. . 7605 Highland Rd. (AW •‘*>63, ■port r*lT" Sand-Gravel-Dirt PONTIAC LAKE .BUILDERS ! ply, sand, grarai, Till din. $■1534. * • Wecd-CeaKektoFael A-1 DRY FIREPLACE WOOD. Whlto birch, oak and mixed: De-llvarod. 682-0530. AL'S . LANDSCAPING, WOOD OP place wood, call 331-3645. 6ry apple trEE Wood for ■ sa.e MA 1-3815 after 6. 5EASONED-a ‘ “ 1J _StUd toe*,_Fi 8-M38 AKC POODI plon "-J OODLE blood lln 3-2134. I Chrislmu 3128. OR canaries, fish. SMALL AKC POODLES, canarlWi 8-2200,— Poodle*; black,’ 850 « f-3569.____________ AiAEbALE Fups, Fureored, 6 • wks. old. FE 4:1116. boa hOu’ses, liKb'plEblHk. 74a Orchard Lak* Ave._____■ bbalRMAfl MIMiaturE " PINCHERS, 835. FE 6-340L FREE TO GOOD HOME. LON6-haired kltlen*. 6741970 after 4 p.m. FREE PUPPIES Tb GOOD HOME, 8874188. ____ GERMAN SHfePtiiRD PUPS, tl* MA 5-6483 before 6 p.m. HOUlB IrSkIN PEKINGESi'S 1 weeks old, 3324)346. ATlTOffD'RineSSbilE. ALL SHOTS ano clipper*, 871 MMllt; NORWlGIAN iOiiWbDND PUPPlfi PB 5-5428 Frtfi8'1ilJtYA"l2'»l"pEN mGWYW, Full ailowanc* If purchatad later, Qallagher Muiic Co, . 1*.Bail Huron. . ion Monday jhru Friday 'til t FE 4-0566 ' ^ sAtEi ; Mid Chord Organ, A-1 condl-M new 8891, now *396, Thome* Serenade Organ, Wllnyt tint l*h with bench, new $t,7M now wy • • • Qlvo us» Try WIEdAUD MUSIC 489 Im^ytg ^|jte Road 1 and tollvary. 673-5604.__. Pbbbllir' PbR SalF, " "EXc¥l- ! — Jniate, mixed _----------- FE_ 8-3IH Hunt'* Pet Shop registered ’ hioWly p toi- 2-0076, , REoTsfiREb toy"FOX YEFSiER puppies, 835. Toy tox and Chl-huanua »lud tervlce, FB 2-1497, smallTWenci* POODLE STUb (arvlce 825, 3384055 I p.m,-11 p.m. ViLVlR oWAY ARC minTature poodle, 850. FB 34661,- aHo poodle clipper*, *20. $?r BERNARD, MAI(17 3“WAr5 Old, with papers. Labrador Retriever puppies, 9 weeks old, with papers, Pigeon*. Nanny goal, $ — old. Bunnies, <5y tsrrTbr I Old, FE 44129. rUEnrlf"TSSvI, all PltlHOP; 55 Will-- .... ’CHRISTMAS r" POODLES The gift that llvea and tovaa. Whlto, slivar, apricot, brown, black toys miniatures, registered AKC, All eager to love someone.-Ctah, lay-away, lima. Stanley Kennela, 316 Farr; Commerca 363-4863, AactloiTSaleJ Id SV.BRY SATURDAY 7:30 F. M. EVERY SUNDAY 2:00 F. M, l Sporting Goods—All Types Door Prize* Every Auction W« Hoy Sell Trade, rlall 7 Day* ciin*lgnm*nti Walcom# SOM Dixie Hwy.____ OR 3-27)7 wctonj ‘wiBNi'ibAYr^r ttm; Auctionber, lion, », N, I—...... ____ prISST a UTYToTi*coNiiGD- rnonla accapted. Wqd, thru r -124, OA a-1240. MV taker Rood, Oxtord. Planti-Trooi-Slirubi A-1 TRBRS, Nursery, 80._... You 1 cut or did. mile* wa;' ot Cc Daily. 684 0635. Hobblei t ____1 bk CHRISTMAS AND Jp*r, 17 USED TRACTQffiU-^ —All sizes and make* KING BROS. PE 44734 FB 4-1663 PontlK Rd. at Opdyka see U3 ptRif^^1^ iAyg,"J6HN DEE RE. HARTLAND ' AREA Hdwe., phone HARTLANP 2511. 'Ei THE NEW XL12 HOMElITB chain adw at Davis Mach Inary Co. ~~Vaur pwi ftaaia, Naw tdaa and Mome'lte dealer, drtonvlito, NA save over $ ALL HEW YAAVBL YftAlLlEi • —’"on display - Aim Plow ProF .. Trotwood, Wo.lt a, Garway, Driftwood, Skampor and truck Clampers. Soma used rentals left from 8250 up. Hffcttoa Installed. Everything tor trailers.— we have It. ShKlaTrataa on winter rentals. Traitor atoraoa. Jacobson Traitor , Sales, 5690 williams Lake Ed. OR AIRiTREAM LIGHTWllOffY • TRAVEL TWAlUife » Sine# 1932. Guaranteed far life. See them and gat a demonstration at Warner Trailer Sale*, 3098 W. Huron (plan to loin one of Wally Byam't axcltton carovwni), ■*-, . AM YOU FLORIDA BOUND? Also, Holly and Taw** Brave travel traitors, 16 to V (fiat. Aba pickup campars. “ ” ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 4577 OUlt HWV, MA 5-I4M ", travce*lNt^h,brs SEE THE NEW MUITANG With a private upstairs bedroom. mNTEOf&RMw ' ^.. tom stachlIr AUTO^AND MOBILE SALES Opan 9 to 9 Mon., 94. Closes Sun. 3091 West Huron St. 332,4920 Right Campers, Wolverine and Win-naBwifWawp Campers. 1 Trallblazer Travel Yrellers. ... . E- .E- HOWUND , ... —pR 3-1*16 Salt-contained and .regular pricad ■ oxford Trailer sales mile south ot Lak* Orion on MM MY >4711 . .tiviL^RAlJSlrt* Aro the Aristocrat of tha highway, from 22* tandems to 33' — Guaranteed tor LIPKI Models aro on display now at,- * TT: Holly Trailer Sales 15210 Holly Rd., Ho«y Ml 46771 Ot "Top'orada" ’OK* Which Can B«------ Down, Terms to Suit Youl [..‘mg* .INCOLN CINtl *0 TO 62. IXTRA Ijy untirryig * No Matter What the Need; a Press Want Ad le Always Available to Help You Fulfill It-and Fasti Bob HutcKInion MOBILE HOMES Dixie Highway, OR 3-1181 Drayton Plain* ’ Open 9 to 9 Dally Bat. M ___________6un. 124 _______' Ixpiftt m6IIl| IjMAI ilRSDl aarvlca, tree aitimate*. Also aarT* and accaaaorlaa, Bab HuhdllhMn, Mobil* Horn* Sale*, Inc. 4301 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plain*. OR 3-12w. _ Pa rkhursTTrallerSaiBS FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 TO 60 tort. Featuring New Moon Buddy end Nomad* Located halt way between Orion and Oxford.. on M2L next to Alban Country Couain. MY 24611. #HdIt» MoeiL'rt?6fi(tfl' Goon UMd home type trailer*. 10 PER CENT DOWN, Car* Wind and hitch.; Installed, Complete lln* ol part* and pglile ga*. Wanted Clean Trallar* E 4-9743 8172 W. Huron r 6xF6rB TRAliil * ., SALES •W 80' and EQf - lit wide, t and 1-bqdrOom Marlene*, one of the part buy* in meblla living #~-whara today, laa tna latort m ul modern, M> ■ 18' wide VagaF deluxe. For -' jh# Mil. I' x 16' wide Gantrol, a complata homa, I or i bedr4omi. The*# unit* orv display rfijnf jow. J, Other new io' wide* piu. 20 used roadie., all price*. FriCM to Wit > Mila aouth of Lika OrBn an MM _____... mtTwii TireiAuto-Trvck H ALL IIZBi: No TO 8*. SOME mounted, cheeper In lot*, Rayal Auto Pfrtf, fife ^ flaiWna. , * Ante tervlee ^ ■' :,|j 1 CRANKSHAFT ORINDING IN THE sfcxrbT&.is'K I* vagabond > Nam only B—12 Boots—Accessories Autolnsurancs --AttenrionTtoatenf-- DON'T WAIT-OONT HESITATE L UP TO 30% DISCOUNTI CHOOSE YOUR OUTFIT NOW BOATS MOTORS TRAILERS -^TXRSSSy and terms MERCURY-5COTT-WEST BEND Boat-Motor Storage - CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES d E. Walton ♦ to 4 ■ FE 6-4402 CLEAR tHi" DECKS! Everything Must Go! Up to 25% Discount! > Larsort-Due-Chetek •* EVINRUDE MOTORS Inside-Outside Storage • BOAT REPAIRS . AND REFlHlSHING "Your Evlnrude Dealer" Harrington Boat Works H99 8. Telegraph Rd. il^WM 17 FOOT CNRIS-CRAFT, 120-HORSE-with trailer and ------- CLOSE-OUT > Motors,-Stir Craft Utah '■“-•np tralle— IPPCTES" FULL. COVERAGE' ABOUT S* quarterly. ■ j fi « >7416.—r Foreign Cars JAGUAR 3.4-sedan, RED LEATH-" Interior/ bucket seats,. pitralll -as, no rust. Ilka new throughout, ust sell at once. $1,250 fakes. •Ivate. Ryan, m$467, EJftRAS/. EXCEL- "HARD TO FIND' - , DAWSON'S • SAL^S Tlpslco Lake - “ ‘MA fr-2l79 JET BOATS * j Set boats going at nearly cost! Including 44modal*.-A FREE boat Event E3; must ygol Will take 'mTchigan turbocraft 2527 DIXIE HWY. OR WOO* TERRIFIC DISCOUNT AT TONY'S ■ Marine, Kongo Harbor. 682-3660. » VOLKSWAGEN, SUNROOF, NO "TIjCKY- AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount LeP* 173 S, Saglrfcw ■ PE *4 1057 HILLMAN, REAL GOOD, * ---- * >tO, FE 5-3278. —--- MICRO BUS, EXCELLENT SAVE-SAVE BRAND NEW 2t FT. OWENS SEA-SKIFF Oellvtrad only SMOO Attar tow down payment — no hi thar payments till April 1964. , MAZUREK MARINE SALES f, bi»m at Saginaw__FE 4-7507 CHRISTMAS GLFJS!, JOHNSON MOTORS—ACCESSORT winter Skis—Sales—Rentals PINTER'S BOATLAND 1270 N. Opdyke (WITFE N L Itei OPEL. RADIO, HEATER. VERY ~~fE-MKB Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 -Mansfield AUTO SAtES 1501 Baldwin Avt» 335-5900 ARE YOU BUYING A / LLOYDS BUYING. /Good Clean Cars 2023 Dixie Hwy. Wi pay mor# becaust We sell more M & M Motor Sales "Since 1945" wt want sharp lata models Highest price, n.irf V Plait Hwy. "TOP DOLLAR PAID" FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS GLENN'S 752 West Huron Sf. FE 4-7971_FE 4-179 FQf THAt "TOP DOLLAR" Of •HARP LATE MODEL CARS. ■AveriH's truck- wanted. OR 3- r tS ib JGfcK CARS AND TRUCKS wanted, OR 2-I72S.____):■ 1 OR 50 JUNK CARS AND fRUCKS $25 MORI hloh gride used cat 1540 dixie Highway, 'phone ALWAYS BUYlJjg M I I JUNK CARS - FREE TOE M TOPW<&Us'rlJ*l«---- SAM ALLEN li SON INC. ----WAfifib: lflO-1743 dAlt'S Ellsworth AUTO SALES 1177 Dixie Hwy.___ASA 5-1400 WE NEED CAftS , TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CARS . MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 521 OAKLAND AVE. ________FE 4-4547 ■ - 104 Hew and Used Core NO RATE INCREASE —No membership fees $71 QUARTERLY .000 liability, $1,250 midle• 10.000 uninsured motorist covi v rates ter collision and compi enslve. Including road servlet. BRUMMETT AGENCY ada Mile:. FR -id -Next w-Pgntlec State Bank 105 1*57 VOLKWAGEN I owner. $775 or baa 6433 otter 3 p ITS S _ 1757 CHEVROLET^ 4-DOOR BIS-cayne, 6-cyl., Powergllde. 1-owner. Very gpod condition. 7(7-4757. ...... 157 CHEVROLET 2-b06R, BCYLtN-der, standard shift, radio, beater. Turquoise- and white finish. Only $705 Easy -terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.' 1000 S. WOOD-WARD AYE„ BIRMINGHAM. M 4-2735. . y CORVETTE, WO. »5 HOR8E-power,. 4-speed, posltraction. Radio and hearer, whitewalls, ’FM Chroma wheels. *2395. 124 Andrews Tn Lake Orton attar « p.m. or weak ends. . ■ ■ »- 160 CHEVY STANDARD 0, $1300 .450 Emerson, before 4:30. 17M-. CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, ALL blue, drafted. $1250. UL 2-3057. / 1961 CORVAIR MONZA coupe, Sautlful*maro«i Nnimj-jwllji oufjttji- Crissmdn Chevrolet ROCHESTER OL >7721 CORVETTE, 230 y HORSE-3-speed, 2 - .topi. $2,550. UIQQLAIIIDl '“"Pontiac's Discount Lot" 172 8. Saginaw FE *2214 I960 PEUGEOT 4-OOOR, SUNROOF, SURPLUS MOTORS A Choice of 35 New and Used Sports Cars! Complete Service and Parts of All Imports! Authorized Dealer fort JAGUAR ____..TRIUMPH HILLMAN SUPERS RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND AVE; tM ENGLISH FORD, MUST SAC-rlflcp, tlrst $450 takes It. FE 54434, 1*62 FIAT SPIDER roadster, the poimac PRESS, MONDAY^ DECEMBER 2, 1963 By Anderson & Leaning dltton. OR 3-004Q. 762 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-DOOR hardtop. VI engine, Powergllde, power steering and brakes. MOO actual miles. Spare still new. Only SL775. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml _______ _____ Milter walls. Maroon flnrsh.-Only $1,775. Easy " ” top, 13/000 actual mllas, V-8, .. dlo heater, whlMwaHe, sacrifice. 1962 CHEVY “4-DOOR HARD-TOP, V-0, power brakes, steering, auto-excellent condition.-$2,075. 1-owner. 1762 CORVAIR 700, 2-DOOR, EXCEL-lent condition. 01,275. Cell BB 045443 H , steering. I _______I After 47 coRvirr* coNvfck+ibLl, speed transmission, 340-h.p. or*1' $1,495. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 10BL.S~-WOQD-{ WARD AVE7, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. . j ar, 10,000-mlle warranty, i. - Raven' black finish. Only »,„,5. Easy terms. patjeRSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000$.WOOD- 1964 DODGE-NEW A» LOW As __JtU69-----------—- 5-Year Warranty SPARTAN DODGE S. Saginaw . /FE.0-454| 1954 FORD. $125. 026-1342 - 195J FORD WAGON RUNS GOOD $125:602-0651 or 626-3014. „ FORD V0. HARDTOP SAfc-tain. EM 3-0061. Conway Dealer. 1757 FORD - "CUSTOM .BUItf," has 3-apeed floor shift, radio, haat-er, spotless Interior, new paint, whitewalls, runs p**r t ec t. FE 2-4359. S. SAGfNAW, Ft 0-4071. ■ t* ft' ?bRtrCONVERT!BLE AND --- radio, and heater, eutom* authorized liquidation price $»7. ESTATE STORAGE COMPANY- 100 J. South Bl»d„ at Auburn, PE 3-7161._________~ ________, 1750 FORD 2-DOOR, STICK, GOOD. EM 3-0657 after 6 PW. 1757 FORD 6, STANDARD SH1FT, " Author lied Dea ler" OLIVER BUICK and JEEP ' Corner of Pike and Caeo 1963 Sting Ray Convertible Red with White Tap •s^peeR -with- 250 angina— *3,375 ' Van Camp 'Chevrolet Milford nm SAAB . $49 PER MONTH STURDY—STYLISIV-SWEDISH NEW AUTHORIZED DEALER MIRACLE MILE MOTORS, Inc. 2160 S^ Telegraph - FE, 44000 OLIVER RENAULT Are ypu looking for a ca give you up to 40 miles i RENAULT1 OAUPHINB .. RENAULT R7 ...... 0150 Down on above < low low piymenti OLIVER RENAULT 40 B, Plkt 1737 VW standard station y green end white. 1762 VW 2-door sedan, black. 1757 VW convertible. 1701 VW Idoor sedan, turqur 1963 MONZA . 2-DOOR COUPE, ‘--■-it seats, IdVv mileage, one-r. *1,775. :' ____i___ SUBURBAN OLDS 565 S. woodward Ave. Birmingham - Ml 4-4403 CORVAIR MONZA, 1702. RAtllO, heater, white' sidewalls, back-urn lights, large angina. Garaged -> Auto, transmleston. Exc. condition. SI,045, MA 6-5422. 163 CHEVROLET. BEL AIR 4-bdblt sedan, 6-cyllnder, standard shift. Only $1,895. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMING-HAM. Ml 4-2735. *'«0 *1640 a tan finish. Only — "-TTERSO" L woo) 1961 CROWN IMPERIAL CbNVEBT-Ible. Puli power. Special finish. White leather Interior. Only $2,495. Easy forme. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 WOODWARD AVE,, BIRMINGHAM. Ml M735, AUTOBAHN ■< Motors, Inc. FE 0-4531 New and Used Tracks 10$ 3 TON STAKE, RUNS GOOD, 0350. io2r’raro~He, YOn-JYakIT-i I peed oxlo. 971 W. Huron. Rea' F6fc6~Fido W-Y6n piCkUA custom cab, 0>cyl. .angina, rap-oround rear window; Our company, plcktlpl Lika nawl JEROME-PBR-GUSQN Rochester FORD Dealer, OL I<79t1. TBriSRi TOM hbRb truck. Good tires and r FiTesHT lWrtairbi'Fiik1 up. sfter I p.m. W FdRD FVoirvf-rtfN'^ieRW 6-cyl. engine standard trensmie •Ion/ radio, heater, tu-tone paint short box. JKROMl-FEROUOOh Rochester FORD Doaler, OL 1-7711. ffit BFwB dual wheeled, 4-speed trsnamlaslon, *1710, I960 Ty-ton Ford wo mol— 105*. F6 5-9057, 23 W. Kenneth lt«'FA're5Fn,tfkffF." AFTER 4 p.m. caflORS cfmtvm „JIO, ML.... - i- iew condition. JEROME-FBRbU-ION Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 14911/ HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. 1901 CORVAIR OREBNBRIIR 1 PdMOngOr wagon, radio, her-- , red and . whgr Cars 106 1(50 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, BEAU-titui, block finish with white Oom Top/ running condition. 0470 price. Only 14,71 per week, SURPLUS MOTORS 171 I, Saginaw ’ FE *• iwOWitk'S, i-DbflR HARbfOPj end _ 4-door sedans. No >““■ ^UCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" 193 1, Saginaw f PI 4-2214 IfSTCHEVRSLlt' StAtlfflTWAG- On, (60. SOVO AUtO. PE 5-3271. Coup*, privet* ownor, radio, -power, 6-way otat, good rubbor, *1150, PE 5-7*28., 1954 CHEVY,' dSOD CQNDITION, 1*14 CHEVY pile* 0171. cgNOi 125 Oi ?500k, BLAtOllLl. ___________ . ii ndVA. S-666E hardtop, powergllde, (radio, heater, whitewalls. Ivy green finish, Jl,775. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-27 “ I 1°4 AUTO INSURANCE tzWSiWV drt* 'eoHliSn ■MR, SSJSfc--. to eh*d(( trotnl Marvel Motors 251 Olktsnd Avt, FE 1-4077 __ HU CHIW o Vdoor, Nidi. 3-7542. H. R logins, dealer. iwtMivvrtrieK'injBwspi- sums payments pt 05 por Week. LIQUIDATION LOT, Jl* I. SAGINAW, FI 1-4071. BftHiyVW AWBMXTIffr IS- ceptlonally clean. FE A0472,_ Must BE SEEN, 175* CH1WT> door, JL sun., runs and looks good. OR, 3-ia2*. . rtBwit HARDTOP, RADIO, HRATIR, AU-TO. TRANSMISSION, POWER STIIRINO, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments »t *7,25 par week See Mr. Parki,sl Harold Turnsr Pord. Ml 4.75*0, ' ■*- "’ Joi“ch'IvY oT'Itick' 04M,"' _ 425-20W ■ i , whin' in doubt ,*». USE FASI/ACTINO PRESS WANT ADI HAUPT ■ PONTIAC 1941 TEMPBSf 4-DOOR, AUTOMA-tie, powsr steering, gold finish, car I* |u«t ilk* mwi (Uttl. Your old 1701 CHRYSLER 4-DOOR HARDTOP, eutomatlc tran*mlislan, V-* engine, radio, heater, whitewalls, power steering and brakes, one-owner. $155 down, 156 por month. PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth »1 N. Main St.___OL 1-0557 ~T743* THRU 17547 - • ' ■ . Arty make or modal You pick li - We'll finance It You call or havt your daawr call FE 4-0944, It's easy COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK YOUR FRANCHISED > DEALER foi; RAMBLER JEEP' CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH VALIANT * See Them Today!, BILL SPENCE "Auto Ranch" <673 Dixie at M-15 Oarklton t MA 5-5061 l94r.CllR VILER "300" 4-D6oR hardtop, equipped with automatic transmission, power ste*rll)g, povf- Iras. A low mileage new^car trade-in that will please you both In performance and appearance. Gu»- 1962 FALCON, OWNED BY FORD 61 Executive, . 2-door white, radio, f! excellent condition, 13,350 miles. 01295. AAA Hob. ' 1962 FAIRLANE 4-DOOR. i, automatic transmls.... „. Priced at only *1^95 -JEROME - FERGUSON 1 FORD Dealer, OL 1-7711, 19453 T'BIRD 2-DOOR HARDTOP, 4^59Ford Fairlane 2-Door Oden with 6-cyllnder engine, $ti erd transmission, heater, radio washers, $695. , "Your FORD DEALER Slnce l9M" ON DIXIE HWY. |N WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-T291, , 1959 FORO 2D00R, RADIO, HEA11 ERi A U TO. TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" K Saginaw . FE , — —— ittDia, FORD 630 Oakland A Power steering and brakes, lots of PtOrEA, vriOKUtMinC transmission, private, $2,550. FE 0^215. 1963 FORD CLSTOM 300,,, . jjijifo-»* ^— trwtal' $T,^-JEROME-FEROD-I SON Re ' 1-7711. WINTER SPECIALS ........- ■ lutek Convertible ......m •57 Gambler Sedan ........$87 .75* Ford, Good Running *'** 1956 Dodge Sedan — —*TY OF OTh—r. -—i —--UP. ALSO LATE MODELS ____AND TRUCKS ECONOMY USED CAR DISCOUNT 2335 Dixie Highway 1963 FORD GALAXIE "'500" 2-DOOR hardtop with radto, haetar, automatic V-8 engine, power steering, " vails, sparkling flnlshl $2,- JOHN McAUL'IPFE - FORIT" 630 Oakland Ave. 1963 FORO 2-OOOI automatic,1 radio, ___ _____ ir, Ilka new. *171 down, $59 por month. > ... PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth ■ 1001 N. Main St. OL 1963 FALCbN FUTURA RE# vertible, consul* shift, with t. seats. jOnrowner Birmingham trade. Has only 4,000 milts. 01,095. 565 S. Woodward Ava. Birmingham ' i59 Pontiac bonneville con-vertlbie. No-money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES ' "Pontiac'* Discount Lot" 772 5. Saginaw ...Pj tel PDNTiXc bDnnEviLlE 6on-vertlble. Bucket seats, Hydra— power steering, brakM anC ddws. Exrra stiaan. only *1,775. Easy term*. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 Sv*.WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1961 PONtlAC VENTURA 2-hardtop. Hydremetic, power Ing, power brakes, radio, I-- whitewalls. Flamingo rad finish. Only $1,495. Eaiy forms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE.,- BIRMING-HAM. Ml *2735. 3 JEEPS. 4-WHEEL DR I V E. Priced to sell. MUI MOTORS 2427 Pixie Hwy. ( 1959 LINCOLN PREMIER 24DOOR hardtop, v-8 engine, Cruls-O-" *'-transmission,' full power. On* ar, extra sharp. JEROME; OUSON, Rochaatar OL 1-9711. 1962, . 2-DOOR AAUST - herd!-. ____ I960 COMET1 2 PE <7500. . - DOOR, RADIO, safety package, vt~' MSP. FE>7770. - B 4-2214 75 per w irold Turn IRD 6ICY 2-door. "“"lIlICKY’ AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot;' 8. Saginaw______ “ quIcksal^NA V-295L. ________ I960 FOpb STATION WAGON, RADIO,- HEATER, ECONOMY ENGINE, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. .. Payments of *6.75 par weak. Sea Mr. Parks at Harold Tumar Ford. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" 73 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 961FORD PAIRLANC 500 4-DOOR sedan, 6-cyllnd*r, automatic, pow-* ar steering. 17,500 actual miles. Light blu* finish. Only *1,095. Easy forms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 $. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4*2735. [961 falDDn SB5(5K PAB16, HEATER, ECONOMY ENGINE, WHITfWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of SS.45 per week. Sea Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500. 1961 pord 2-Do^Tr oXTaxTI Hardtop, with radio, heater, automatic power steering, whitewalls tool 11,375,.* ... ... JOHN McAUILFFE . 747 MERCURY CLUB COlIPE, Like Nawl Black Beauty! S5 down, $20.58 per month, 100 ** choose from! / 1 Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Av*. , PE 8-4079 175* MERCURY 2-DOOR HAROTOP KING AUTO SALES 3275 W. Huron St. T . FE 0-4001----------- 157 MERCURY „ PARKLANt CON-vertibiq, automatic, power s— Ing brakea, windows, axcallant dltlon. FE 0-3510._____________ 1960 MERCURY COLONY PAhK, 7- --------- wagon, radio and haat- r steering and brakiis, condition, 646-9417. It PONTIAC I run.. to PONTIAC black with r»e R CHIEF 4-bOOR erlnij, brakei i^Sp^Oday /Rack, push-button dtlvo, new ca .iworunly. WHO. _____ 'LLOYD'S ■ YOU, PAY NOTHING FOR PARtS OR LABOR If the "Cr«t" -Sign It on the Windihleld 1741 MBRCUjlY^ 4-door ....... JIM 19*3 MERCURYUidoor Hardtop 12275 i»6l CHSVy ^4-door - „, 1962 MERCURY Convertible 1763 CADILLAC CoujM . . 1760 MERCURY Wagon 1762 RAMBLER Wagon . . . 1760 CQMjf 2-door ^ 1762 FORD 2-door Victoria , 1763 MERCURY 4-door 1760 CHEVY Wagon 4door 1763 COMET Convertible VI 962 COMET 2-door 1762 TEMPEST Wagon ., ., 1761 FALCON Wagon 1 1762 CADILLAC Sedan .... 1762 T-BIBD Hardtop .. 1762 CORVAIR MOflU . .. 1761 MEACURV 4-door ... *3975 . eiaei FORD 630 Oikland Ave. PI 5-4101 1961 Ford Galaxie 4-Door VI angina, automatic transmission, radio, heater, Only 01,375. BEATTIE ■ "Your PORD DEALER 6lnc# 1730" ON DIXIR HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIOHT . I OR 3-1291 1762 FORD 4-DDdR COUNTRY Stf-dan with V-8 englhe. Cruls-O-Matlc steering, whltwielli, extra sharpl Many other top wagons to choose from JEROME FERGUSON Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-7711 • 1961 FORD 2-DOOR. RADIO, H ar, whitewalls, *145 down, sac mon,h “paYtIrson Chrysler-Plymouth 1001 N. Mam St, OL 1 1761 FORD 4-bOOR OALAXll WITH •Ion, radio heater, solid black tin- COME VISIT RUSS JOHNSON'S Used Car Strip liiw I960 COMET 2-Oodr, 1 CLEAN-UP 24 cars-^AII at.016 each 1957 Plymouth hardtop, V-0 $ 1756 Olds Conv't. All power, n . tires , . ■ -. •.*-- ECONOMY USED CAR DISCOUNT 2335 Dixie Hlahwey_ 176T MORCURY CONVERTIBLE, automatic transmlaalon, V-8 engln-whltewalle, power steering « brakes, oneowner, 6145 down, 146. per month, PATTERSON Chryaler-Plymouth door hardtop, V-0. onglne, Merc-O- fuii power, factory otNclat carl JEROME - FERGUSON Rochastor FORD Daator, OL 1-7711. Oakland CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH Whera tha eustomar la ALWAYS "KING" Impartal - Chrysler - Plumou 7 PONTIAC HARDTOP, VB hj HASKINS UsedCafs 160 CHEVY 2 door Poworolido ri dio, like now* Il0ht blu# finish. New «mI Used On Sg' OR 3-8390. ______________■ 1962 TEMPEST --013B-down and 36 month* to pay. ___.__ a |at black beauty, ■ brand new andiul^aqulppad with wMM sidewalls, automatic transmission, radio, heater. A gam for ddr, automatic tranamlulon, radio, heater, whit* •$*walli.R#al etoan and only $575,1*45 down and *7 VILLAGE RAMBLER BIRMINGHAM *66 S. WOODWARD . . *M 6G70* Homa of tha Tbtal Valu* Dan^ 17*1 CHEVY Impala____......,.. angina, Powsronide, redid, $hbw-room condition, aolid black flnlaH. 1(62 RAMBLER ‘ sBzi angina, standard edto. beautiful • red ih. l7*1 BUICK Eiectra 225 4 door hard-top, goaded with ^power^end equip- HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds ir Crossroads to Saivlni —U.3.1« and Mil— BIRMINGHAM TRADES Evstymed cor offBrad for retail to tho public Ti bonafide 1-ownor, low milar ago, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor warrbnty. 1763 II___■■■ i(63 Riveri*. air condltlonad . 1763 Rlvtrlai all power ... . 17*3 Bulrk Elfctra ........... 1763 iulck wildcat ........ 1943 Bulck, Skylark .......... 1963 Bulck/ Special 4-door .. 1963 Corvalr. stick . 1742 Br-1 |l------| ____k Elec ra hardtop ... 0247 -42 Bulck Invlcta hardtop .. $299 i*2 Bulck 2-door hardtop ... (217 '62 Bulck 4-door (Man .. Ml? 162 Bulck Special 2-dcior .... (167 >42 Chtvy 409-4 ipaad . 1209, 157 Bulck hardtop, (harp , <•/. (127. FISCHER BUICK "$150,000 Stock Reduction Sale GMAG -. FINANCE COMPAEB OUR PRICE! CADILLACS 1963 Convertible, bolga, sharp t 1962 Coupe, green ..* 1762 Coupe DeVllle, blu* ..... * 1762 Convartlbto, blu« 1962 Sedan DaVIlfo, 1961 Sedan DaVllla, r( 1760 Sedan DaVllla ........ 1959 Sedan DeVllle. (air) P0NTIACS < ' 1763 Star Chief Sedan, (elr) te w,v •“* .................. 1*63 Catalina Vlite sedan . car ... *3575 ip** IrV ... *3495 1, (air) 12795 ........12295 ,,.>1175 brakes, electric wfndow " rquolie wf“ mnavlle V .13375 ...$2375 1757 Bonntvlll* hardtop . 13 Moni* Coupe, automatic $2045 Ii VallLnt sedan, automatic 07*5 WILSON USED CAR CLEARANCE SALE power ataorlng , ......... 1757 Mercury 4-door sedan .... 1742 Falcon Wagon, automatic .. 1762 Mercury Monterey 4-door sedan ...... .........'■■■■ 1959 Bonneville V OLIVER BUICK 1762 BUICK SpTClal Wagon 1763 L7SABRB 4-door 1943 BUICK Convertlbl* .... 1763 LtlABRB 4 4-Door Se- 1762 TEMPEST LeMANS. AutO-matlc, radio, twatar, whltewalla. Blue whh the matchtng leather bucket .saato. This la tha top of tha TMhpoat lino .714*5 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA Moor hardtop. Hydramalfe radto, IMR1- er, whitewalls. Solid whit* with rad trim. Low nflloago and. was locally owned <1(75 1*62 PONTIAC CATALINA Convertible. .Pgwif llaartnQ, power brakat/ Hydramatlc, radio, heater,' whltewalla. Rad With a white top.'Spare never been dawn. This it e flrmlnghem car *2195 1763.. OLDS HOLIDAY Qeor Sedan. Power S,n,%?t«.cnLm. 1761 BUICK LeSABRE 2-Door Hardtop: Power steering and griMt, Dynallow, radio, jfiMmr, whltewalla. Solid whit# wfnrfM trim. Thar* la nothing lik* that .Bulck rid* *1*75 17*1 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-boor Hardtop, Powsr; itaarlng and* brakaa, Hydramatlc,. radio, haatar, whltawal a. Sunflr# red 1 nlah with mafchjng cloth trim. ooramtoM actual mim., 02073 11761 PONTIAC VENTURA 4d0or i hardtop, power steering and brakai,. Hydramatlc, radto, heater, wnlWw«1l|, white flnlih, with blue leather trim. New car trade-in. ,.010*4 1741 BUICK ,, RLECTRA "IS*" Convertible. All power, bynfflow, radio, Motor, whltewalla, Whit* fimin with rad trim. Lecaiiy owned and, traded In on o new “car. 01075 Juat Aik tor Any Of Thai* Courtloua Saleamen-jim Bamowtky-Paf Jarvla-John Dontoy-Oua Goriilha-Joo oaiardi ■ Waynt lilwll / * .ROUN.DAY MONEY BACK OUARANTEE THIS OUARANTEE MEAN! THAT IP POR ANY REASON (EXCEPT POR ABUSE OR ACCIDENT) YOU ARB NOT PLEASED WITH VOUB PURCHASE, WE'LL RBPUND YOUR,MONEY. Get More • - Pay Less SHELTON PONTIAC'- BUICK, , Rochester * I ;'OL;^8133 t U11& POM XIAc PKESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1963 D—18 —Today's Television Programs— Programs fumishod by stations listed in this column art subject to chango without notice Channel Z^JBK-TV Chomgj 4-wwj-TU Cfc—j( 7-WXYI.TVQwiwW | ^CKW-TV cCEl 56-WTUS^ TONIGHT 6:M (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “Mask of the Avenger .’UnProgress) (9) Capt. Jolly and Pop. eye (56) New Biology 6:28 (7) Weather, News, Sports «:«• (2) (4) National News ' (9) 87th Precinct (56) Self-Encounter. 7:99 (2) Highway Patrol (4) Town Meeting 1 (THOutar) Adventures (56) Confronted 7:89 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Movie: “House 6Rr*-TM67)—i Palance (7) Outer Limits (9) Movie: “Twinkle God*rEye^96&)&tekey Rooney, Coleen Gray, Hugh O’Brian 8:99 (2) I’ve Got a Secret V (MV Great Books 8:39 (2) Lucy Show (7) (Color) Wagon Train 9:99 (2) Danny Thomas (9) Playdate 9:39 (2)'Andy Grittit,. (4) Hollywood and- the Stars 19:91 (2) East Side/ West Side (4) Sing Along with Mitch (7) Breaking Point (9) Inquiry 19:39 (t) Nation’s Business 19:41 (9) Mary Morgan 11:99 (2) (4) (7). (I) News «. WeatherrSports 11:29 (9) Lucky Scores 11:39 (2) Steve Allen , 44) (Cohr) johnny Carson (7) Movie: ‘Ten* Tall Men." (1951) Burt Lancaster, Gilbert Roland (9) Movie: “The Prime Minister.’’. (1941) ‘John Gielgud 1:49 (2) Peter Chma -(4) Best of Groncho 1:39 (7) After Hours TUESDAY MORNING 9:15 (2) Meditations 6:29 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) NeWb ' 4:29 (2) Sunrise Semester . ' (4) Classroom --L- (t)Funews 7:C9 (2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:05 (2) Fun Parade 7:41 (2) King and Odie 1:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show (56) fVench for Teachers 3:39 (7) M o v i e: “Love Is I TV Features Rhonda flemStars . By UdRed Press International MONDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES, 7:39 p m. (4) Jack Palance plays dual role'in “House of Numbers,* story of convicted murderer who uses his resemblance to brother to escape from San Quentin. WAGON TRAIN, 8:30 p.m. (7) Singer (Rhonda Fleming) objects to trail guide’s attentions toward her daughter (Cynthia Pepper). EAST SIDE/WEST SIDE, 10:06 p.m. (2) When Negro family moves into “nice” white neighborhood, real estate agents try to panic whites into selling. Stars Ruby Deer News.” (1937) Tyrone * Power, Loretta Young (56) Industry on Parade 9:49 (56) English V 8:59 (9) Warm-Up 9:55 (9) Morgan's Merry-Go Round . ' 9:99 (2) Movie: “To Be or Not to Be.” 0942) jack Benny, Carole Lombard ' '(4) Living (9) Kiddy Korner Ker-toons 9:19 (56) Let’s Read 9:36 (9) Jack La Lanne 9:35 (56) Numbers and Numerals 16:69 (4) Say When (9) National Schools (56) Spanish. Lesson 19:1$ (7) News (56) Our Scientific World 19:25 (4) NeWs 19:39 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Word for Word 0) Girl Talk (9) Chez Helene 19:49 (53) French Lesson 19:45 (9) Nursery School Time 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:66 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (?) Price Is Right (9) Romper Room 11:16 (56) Let’s Read 11:25 (56) Self-Encounter 11:16 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Missing Links (7) Seven Keys 11:65 (56)-Spanish for Teachers (9) Movie: “The Right to Live.” (1935) George Brent, Josephine Bmddn^ son TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:64 it) Love of Life (4) (Color) Yout First People m the News Ticket Scalping! Teen EndsI to te Probed 5-Day “Science is much too serious 'a matter to be left to thescien-tist,” says' David Sarnoff, board chairman of the Radio Corp. of America. Speakipg to a meeting in New York of the American blends of the Hebrew University of Jent- within a f< satemSarnoff said: “Techno* logical progress will inevitably create new problems, and the scientist alone cannot be expected to provide all die solutions.” King Paul of Greece arrived By The Associated Press International playboy Fran-cisco (Baby) Pignatari has set-, tied into a five-room suite' at a luxury hotel at Lab Vegas and says he Is establishing residence to get a divorce. -: • His wife is the former Virginia Ira von Fursfenburg, ex-wife of Prince Alfonso Hohen-lohe of Austria. She married Pignatari at.Reno, Nev., in 1960. Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s! son-in-law says U&*8oviet re-1 lations “were constantly 4m-j' lowing” under John F. Ken-j nedy, and adds: “I'want to hope that President Johnson will continue the line of the late President Kennedy.” |----’* AsketHTheTid^any-doubts, Alexei Adzhubei, editor of the Soviet government newspaper IzveStja, told a newsman: “I|. -------- —— have no telephone line now to; MORRISTOWN, N. J. <* -the I&eml|n.” j This pTe-Revolutionary town, Adahubei was in Bangkok to which has succeeded through attend an international confer-Jthe years in preserving the sponsored f spirit of ’76, has also managed the United Nations. I to withstand the commercialism in Madrid to await the birth of the first child of his daughter, Princess Sophie. . The princess is the wife of Juan Carlos de Bourbon, heir apparent to Pie vacant Spanfeh _____________ throne. Hie birth is expected; much as $75 apiece. MfH|| | “ *—days; ■ — - - • NEW YORK (AP)-The state attorney general’s office will conduct hearings next peek on reports of collusion between the- for Mother WHITEHALL (AP)-A pretty, ater people to scalp tickets to | hit Broadway shews for as wholeft home l^tMonday to search for her missing mother, returned—cold7. broke, hungry Princess The Dec. 16-11 hearings, announced Sunday by tyty. Gen. mother, Louis F. Lefkowitx, also will Sophie’s . P| _______________| ____ QueenFrederika,arrived toMa- investigate allegedbribes "to Arid last week- from Washing- theater employes to . supply ton, where she attended theihi-neral of President John F. Kennedy. They Keep It f-SahfaTown President- eject Chung He* serve the spirit of Christmas. Park at South Korea says his political opponents "should assume a constructive posture to bring about political stability and try to alleviate the economic hardsHipa at the people.” Santa la triplicate. He reignS supremein hlscom- The statement was Park’si fortable c^ta^ in Santa Land, first formal comment on last which is the holiday name given week’s election, in which his to the two-acre green at the party won 116 of the 175 seats | town’s center. ' i the South Korean House. . • ★ 1* * < Several opposition candidates' Outside his curtained living have accused the military gov-j room windows, a line of chii-ernment headed by Park of! dren is in constant formation, i electioii irregularities. I For his off-duty hours, there is (7) Ernie Ford (9) Take 30 12:28 (2) News 12:81* (2) Search for Tomorrow ____(4) (Co!ar) Truth or Consequences , (7) Father Knows Best (9) People in Conflict 12:35 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:46 (2) Guiding Light 12:89 (56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:69 (2) Star Performance (4) Conversation Piece (7) Genera! Hospital ' ! 1:39 (1) As fliTWdrld Turns * (4) Make Room for Dad-tty (7) .Hollywood Theater _ (54) World History , 2:80 (2) Password . -1 i (4) (Color) People Will 'Talk (56) Mathematics for You | 2:26 (4) News 2:38 (2) Hennesey * j graph fans” who tape-record little speeches from Bob Hope and (4) Doctors, • MK|RRgj@jM other heroes now have their parents mailing (7) Day in Court “ “ a mailbox, and the quantities of letters that pile up are faithfully answered by staff members of foe local dumber of commerce who neatly straddle the question of gift requests by of the holiday season and pre-| saying, “When I get to your house on Christmas Eve, I will undoubtedly have SOME of . the things you asked tar.' TOO YOUNG? “Sometimes, you know, little boys and girls ask me for presents that they are not old enough employes to -supply blocks of choice seats, alleged kickbacks, to producers.. from theatrical supply houses, luid practices “which may have victimized some investors.” Lefkowits said some investors in Broadway productions “never received* an adequate accounting of their money? or any re-poi t of how The money—' spent.” .-------— | Producers, directors and per-: formers are expected to testify, i Lefkowitz- said his office began the probe more than eitfit months ago after investors in productions both on and off Broadway complained of loose bookkeeping practices by some producers. and alone-Saturday. :★ # h April Jill Cooper went to Grand Rapids police for help after sleeping outdoors three nighty and waking up Saturday “covered with snow. » "I was frozen,” she told policewoman Mrs. Betty Kossen. “I decided I’d better do something.” ( IThere is only oee Santa Claus la town at YuleUde, probably the only town in the Vanderbilt Has the Brass to Travel Tourist Class lave, or maybe shouldn't have, tor some reason. I always have to keep this ip mind loading my sleigh.” The town Christmas celebration originated back hi 1849 with Santa and a few cutout figures ornamenting the green. New Parents Find Lot to Be Thankful For ________________| L O S A N G E L E S (AP) -J when ! am filUng^nypack and Thanksgiving 1963 was espec- By EARL WILSON ially meaningful to four Michigan couples who left Los Angelos this weekend Tor home with their newly adopted Korean War orphans. They had arrived on a char-. tered plane from II San, Koresi, -After a hiatus during World the site'of an orphanage near War U, the green decorations I Seoul, is part of a group of 51 became an artistic project, head-1 American couples who adopted ed by the chamber of commerce; 73 orphans. The children ranged with the help of the town of | in age from six months, to 13 Morristown, the churches, bus- years, ineu firms, , and fraternal, pa-1 + * * tfiotic and civic organizations. j The Michigan couples were The new Christmas greeting gimmick is sending personalized I. *T?€n governed Ujr> and Mrs. DavidLubbenof j tape-recording salutations about* three mihutes long. The “audio- a s*“*P«rP*toating commit- Holland, the Rev. and Mrs. I Morris Bauman of Elkton, Mr. Jand Mrs. Frederick. Katz of ___had dwindled froiiTl meals consisted of a candy bar Friday and a hamburger Saturday. i She tokhpotice she headed for Detroit to look for her mother Theresa, who, her father said, left home last month, leaving only a note that die would" lead money home. ★ * w April left her 'father, Cart, who is employed as a mechanic, a note Monday In which She said: ' ■ “I really don’t want to do this, but I can’t stand to aae you grieve for Momma as if she was dead. She isn’t and I’|l find her and prove it.” 1, 1 CHECKED RESTAURANTS She tofer Whitehall Police Chief Robert Vanderlaan that die Rad checked eveiy restaurant die passed. Her mother once had worked as a waitress. She never made it to Detroit, but turned around and beaded for home Thanksgiving day’aft-er she reached Lansing. April said she had slept out- > doors, covered only fay the clothes , she wore, which in-chided t quilted jacket with s hood. “I just zipped up my coat and went to sleep curled up,” die said. TV Police said there still was no word of April’s mother. TOP PLACES r a__ II 12 13 . IT 15 16 17" Is P • ■ r 23 ■ 71 \ K j U 1 H 52 99 34 j E , i i L H . 11 r „ \ JT r IT W r if U 49 50 52 5T Si 56 50 i' w 1 ACROSS 1 Head man 5 Top aviator 8 Supervisor noncom tab.) UJPriend of Pythias 12 Veto 13 Mr. Hunter 14 Miss St. John 15 Deviating 17 Top soldier 18 Miss Dunne 20 Small state (ab.) 21 Large number (slang) 22 Dude 25 Advanced student 27 Redact 29 Operated JO No. I man in Eden J4 Brewed beverage 85 Metal , 86 Story 37 Egg dlSh to Tree U Belonging to a period 13 Fabulous bird 15 2nd year man 16 Paving material 50 Tout 52 Scottish musician 53 Whole > ■ MWtge 56 Instruct 56 Grain, 57 Fish 56 Repose DOWN 1 Ordered 2 Foretoken } Repaired aihoe « Traps 5 One ol Eva’s ions (Bib.) 6 Auto h:"’ 7 Mr. Caruso 8 Quoted 9 Aches 10 One time 11 Loose end 16 Biblical mount 18 Warned 21 Evildoers 22 Winter month (ab.) 23 Poem . 24 Dessert 26 Spike. 28 Fidelities 31 time unit 32 Tavern drink ' 33 llawk’s cage 36 Halfbreed .39 Top hat 41 Small napkin 42 Fruit 44 Scold 45 Top actor 46 Soviet sea * 47 Egyptian sacred bull 46 Radical group 49 Attempt 61 Before Answer to Previsas Puzzle 2:35 (56) Numbers merals 2:55 (7) News , 3:69 (2) To Tell The Truth (4) Loretta Young . ' (7) Queen fOf a Day (56) Spanish Lesson 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:39 (2) Edge of Night ^----(4) (Color) You Don’t Say! _^.(l)WbnDoYouTrust? (9) F/iendly Giant 3:45 (9) Misterogers 4:09 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:21 (4) News 4i89 (2) Movie: “The Kansan.” (1943) Richard Dix, Jane Wyatt (4) Mickey Mouse Club : (9) Hercules 1:91 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Cobra Woman.” (1944) Maria Montes, Jon Hall (9) Larry and Jerry recorded greetings .Troy Donahue and beau- y*,r thSfl’U.Jc 50 tifty Penny Kim|nel were at a restaurant where t ^f.8’ strun8 w th thousand* °* I Raymond Troy hoisted his pants legs qnd showed a wound, i u*htf; 88 we'* a® 8 large comT Lake. , as m In Hoqplulu, a gorilla in a zoo kept throwing! mVl? * tree and a permanent . The flight was sponsored by i longest in the water at him till he crashed Into some concrete. F°w 8tar trea J American Mothers of Adopted . . . Which prominentiy-mentioned Presidential! ON GUARD Korean Children, an organiza- prospect wants to resign his present office be-1 Ten toy soldiers will stand at tion started by an Oregon farm-fore the national convention? stiff . attention. Two rocking er- Henry Holt, to (hid homes I Alfred QRynne Vanderbilt and Pat D1 horses and a locking reindeer] lor the youngsters. Cicco met at ldlewiM after they’d returned will stand r*«dy to give thous-from Europe on the same plane, and Di lands of children ancxhilarat- Ckco was amazed that they hadn’t seen each other oU the >n6 ride. * plane. “I was In first class, where were you?” asked Df _[ And in one corner of the Cieeo, . . . “I rlde tourist,” sa1d the wealthy Vanderbilt. stately camels will ap- ★ ★ ★ preach the Nativity scene. Rudy Vaiee unselfishly phoned me that Phil Shukin, who] In the late fall there will be wrote Carol Burnett's “Calamity Jane,” show, saved the life of d man Who'd fallen asleep cmoklng a clgaret in their apt. house " „ I Raymond Btowct of Sprint, mNo. Huqahitt lo ] Virginia as a single ctty— the WILSON Assassination Cost Networks $32 Million on E. 56th St. “Phil once played sax for mis,” Rudy said Eddie Fisher's contract with the Wjn. Morris Agency is expiring. Whoever comes up with the best TV deal will probably reprQr sent him. , George Wallace, Mary Martin's tending man, and Jane A. Johnston of “The Boys from 8yrncnso,” revealed marriage plans dining at “The Apartment” . . . Folks now telegraph flowers on the holidays to say thgnks to those who helped 'em. I wired flowers to Greta Garbo who gave me an ’ exclusive interview long ago. (I chasedjper and she1 ran ont * 1 nth). . . . A beautiful TV and movie star is dating actor whose showgal bride ain’t gonna like it. ★ ik dr a Jingle Bell breakfast where | WASHINGTON (CTO - It cost j merchant?- volunteer to donate the nation’s radio and television funds for refurbishing Santa|networks an estimaUgl $32 mil-Land. . I lion to broadcast the events * Uk * surrounding the assassination Says Ken Kostenbader, execu- 0f President Kennedy, five director of the chamber of commerce,; “It costs about $8.- SAVE S 89 Hoy# Your FURNACE CLEANER 'WM 5:45 (9) Rocky and his Friends 1:56 (?) Weather (4) Carol Duvall MSU to Giv« Degrees EAST LANSING (AP)-Mlcb-igan State University will award degrees to 1,254 graduates at its fall term commencement exercises Friday. Durward B. Varner, chancellor of Oakland University and a former member of the MSU East Lansing administration, will be a speak- A modern electric light bulb gives 10 time! as much light as the first incandescent lamps and at about one-terith of the cost. stake so tar; 8750,000 .*. . Shelly Winters may star In "The Owl and the Pussycat” (which Kim Stanley turned down because she wouldn't OK any of the directors suggested); ... . Bruce Baxter (who dated Mrae. Nhu’i deughter), was at the Chateau Madrid with model, Betty Jo Jones. , . . Jean Martin’s off to Hollywood to see old friend Fred Astaire about adding some choreography to, her cafe act. ★ ★ AP 500 a year to keep the decorations up to date.” 45,199 ON HAND . By the first week of December1, Santa Land will be ready. When Santa’s arrival date Is announced, there’lll be about 45,000 people at the green to see him. • Arriving (supposedly by helicopter) on the top of a de-I pertinent store, Santa conus 8:15 (56) Americans at Work I THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... 1:80 (50) What’s New? j Janet Leigh and her husband are due here en route to Europe and the winter Olympics. . . . Yul Brynner got only $35,000 to film “The King and L” but got royalties on the album. His stake so far: 8760.000 shriiv winters ntnv star in "Thn: jown Ug (tre department lad- d e r, rides triumphantly around the green on a fire truck, and then steps down to push tin switch that sets Santa Underflow. j A murmur goes up from the „„„„. . . . . . ,s. crowd. Children ripe high on TODAY S BEST UUGH: “Don't be hard on the fellow who! th«|r fathers’ shoulders for a disagrees with you,” says Jop Silver philosophically. “After all; better view •ven he Is entitled to Ms own stupid opinion.” , , ^nd the magic of Christmas REMEMBERED QUOTE: "Men are as lazy as they can af-1 has come 'again, ford to be, but not as laty as they want to be.” ’ , • EARL’S PEARLS: “When I argue with my wife,” reports! _ , , , . Jack Herbert, “words flail me.” , Death for Illegal Arms : ■ ♦tiyKCw, P.W ShaWr WWJ, Vf IGcl fjE is WHFI, h„ IT WJV, iMrli rito-wjli, DhMMito CKLW, Tom Cloy wlmmh— jlW-WJR, Svonlng Concoi iij wwj, Muote Mono Wja, N*if|r toirtl U.1HVCAR, VuWlc iorvko iitu.Mnnr lIS—CKLW. Itf-WCAA Si^S iiiji-wJft 880tSfcLr & StOMOUK, VMM of A«rK. w*M*f . CKLW. TMM to Chot WJBK, Nowo, Avory - "Vrrwoio. nowo, potm WWJ, NmOOi FrOn Ho,. _ Hlin ..an-'c,? CKLW, Joo vin nos-wjn, Nowi, Art Link' Post Offlcg Chief Dies DETROIT (API—Dominic N. Tesauro, 59, senior field service officer of the Chicago region, j U.S. Post Office Department, I died In a hospital here Sunday. Services for Tesauro, jwho joined the post office as' a letter carrier in 1923, will ,be held Wednesday lh St, Matthews Church- Ar | OiW-Wjl, nowo. Voonion- W&s&hs 'UK INSTALLED AND | EET'SRAD Jil CTr^DI WORRYING ABOUT O I \Jr! BILLS! BILLS! BILLS! LOANS TO ANY HOMEOWNER OR HOME BUYER lift 2nd A 3rd Mortgages NO DtLAY ONI DAY SIMICi Amount of Lmi\ 10 Yre. 15 Yre. 20 Yn. 91000 10.37 3.13 6.99 12000 ’ 16.23 13.98 83000 31.11 24.33 20.98 APPRAIISO VALUATION • IV All Ym_______ 1 > 9«r AM Amsimii • far All Y««r Lmuh • Pay AH Ywbo Royalro • foy Taxoo p • ri«M fair* OmK M Yn BiL MORTGAGl SIOVTCI CO., INC SUITS 732 LAFAYETTE BLDQ. 144 W. UtoretM SM.. D.froit 36, Mtob. •62-3530 00T Of twm CMi, COUfCT-OfOWlOOt 00 WIT H H01 AfoJjorOurM^ .WfttoM fHONI orraoiT D—14 th 'r■ <, .1 m_ TllE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1963 kpOKTWGWirsTO®' ADMIRAL CLOCK RADIO > SILEX TOASTER OVEN SUNBEAM ELEC. FRY PAN *11” TODAY* p.!n:i^ 9 p.m AiirSKi : CONTINUES TUES., WED., THURS., FRL Hfflu - and SAT. 9 a.m. to 9 am. DAILY ADMIRAL COLOR TV Brilliant 21" color picturot.. . . brighter black and white pictures. Low price plus big trade-in allow- DETROIT JEWEL 30” GAS RANGE Thermostat oven control. Spacious full-width ovOn. Pull-out broiler. Brand new In crates.' WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE KCA WHIRLPOOL AUTO. DRYER Soft fluffy drying. Temperature control. Previous year's model. Don't miss this terrific buy I WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE 0Sk »fl &®sr HURRY FOR THESE BARGAINS - LIMITED SUPPLY * I 97 . GENERAL ELECTRIC 149 SHETLAND ’ SUNBEAM SUNBEAM —--------------, ’ . Floor Polisher MEN'S SHAVER LADIES’ SHAVER $0942 Chroma bast. Deluxe . . . Mi If 3 *13” *111" *678 ——----------------— ■ llr-—- PROCTOR 4- v S4 Afi7 Compl.1. Will. di»p.oi.r D.lu». t.olor.1 Com- llwMe. Dthno f.otur»». ilica automatic ■ -h.l and rug dolly. ' • pW* •» hand.om. 9.ft H. gift box. toaitar. i W. ^*29 4-TRANSISTOR' 9-TRANSISTOR GE 6-TRANS- TAPE RECORDER M-FM RADIO POCKET RADIO *8” $f jSS $077 With’ cony coin, m»*, aarphono, tap., and bat- •orphan* and barton#., carry co.o, oorphont hnd m GENERAL ELECTRIC *29#1 arssjr s|3” N0RILCO "FloatingHoad" *16” »*»,$ «97 OLYMPIC CofofTV-SlWrM ZENITH 23" TV. Decorater 6ENERALELECTRIC 23" $437 *159 *151 WEITIN6N0USE Store© console comb, with AM/FM radio ....... ©.*31 *93' oo RCA WHIRLPOOL Au» Deluxe big copocit'i 00 *228 ©*141 ^ *127 *157 * *168 *38“ •^*133 *135 *128 *68” RCA VICTOR COLOR TV-STEREO Combination with AM-FM, FM-Stereo radio. 4-speed changer. 1963 Model 213-H-396. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE RCA VICTOR COLOR TV Big 21" color TV. Glare-prpOf RCA High-Fidelity > Color Tube. New 1963 Model 213-F-115. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE PNILCO 23” TELEVISION Push-pull' off-on volume, control. Built;in antenna. Superbly styled •lim cabinet. Prev. year's floor model. , WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE ADMIRAL 4-WAV TV-STEREO COMB. 23" TV, 4-speqkers, 4-speed auto*, .mafic ‘changer, with AM-FM radio. Magnificent tyood lowboy cabinet. Prev. year's model. , > WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE - -- vvNnBiivvvb «Rbfi thivk ^ *363 933 *239 ADMIRAL . 30” ELECTRIC 1 Fu|ly automatic. Large lull-site oven. Deluxe features.1 Full warranty. In crates. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE ORCQA ELECTRIC CHORD ORGAN Easy to ploy by notes or numbers. 37 full siu organ ItOys.-24 touch-button chord section. Swedish stainless steel reeds. Walnut finish. Book of instructions. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE ZENITH 19” PORTABLE TV .Top Zenith features in this onel' Sound out front speaker. New bandewltch tuner. Built-In antenna. . Prev. yssr’ji floor models. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE *111 *8837 $126 HIGH-FIDELITY PORTABLE PHONOGRAPH Automatic changer. Plays all six# records. Luggage-type case with handle. New in cartons. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE * .63 HOTPOINT Automatic Portable Washes, rinses, dries a big load — , all automatically. Easy dial operation on easy ,roll-around casters. . Pull guarantee. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE Nationally Advertised Nationally Advertised WESTINGHOUSE 13 CU. .FT. 2-DOOR IB'/i GU. FT. 2-DOOR UPRIGHT FREEZER No defrost refrigerator. Freeser holds 105. lbs. Twin crisper. Steel shelves. Smear warranty. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE Giant bottom frccicr holds 190 lbs. Auto, defrost ' refrigerator section. Very deluxe. 5-year Warranty. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE Convenient upright style. Holds 333 lbs. froren food storage. Prsv. year's model. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICE m w 957 *213 *129 SALE BEGINS TODAY-MON. 6 P.M. to 9 P.M. CONTINUES THRU SAT. 8 to 9 DAILY 100% SATISFACTION GUARANTEED PONTIAC MAL \ Illyrobeih Lake ltd., Corner Telegraph vi Nsut Deisr to J, L1 Hqdeen Oe. The Weather ■ U.S. W«»ther Burtau Forecast Clondy and cold .. ■ (Details Pig* t) THEiPONTIAC PRESiMt ii VOU J2i NO. 255 .. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1903 —56 PAGES UNITED PRESS l^mTERN^TIONAL ; Castroites Beaten in Vote On Economy, Defense Johnson Confers With Aides WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson called two Cabinet officers and his budget director to the White House today lor conferences on economic and defense (natters. The sessions with Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, Secretary of Commerce Luther 'Findings Aid Ruby's Case' Lawyer Confident as Murder Trial Looms H. Hodges and Budget Director Hermit Gordon follow hard on the heels of a busy Sunday at the White House for the new President. At his desk yesterday, Johnson drafted a letter to defense contractors asking their cooperation in cutting defense costs, and the White HOuse announced the dates when West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, Italian President Antonio Segni and British Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home will visit him. Johnson begins his work day today with an early morning visit from Whitney Young, ex- DALLAS, Tex. IAP) - A defense lawyer prediets the findings of federal'investigators will bolster the case of Jack Ruby, who shot down the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy. There are increasing signs, meanwhile, of probable delay in the murder trial of Ruby,' tentatively set to start next Monday... Ruby, 52, owner of a downtown strip tease joint, remained under close guard today in the county jail. He has been held without bond since the televised shooting Nov. 24 of Lee Harvey Oswald, charged with firing (he shots which killed Kennedy and a Dallas policeman! two days earlier. . *. <# a /\ “When the government’s ref port of the Oswald case comes but," defense lawyer Tom How-1 ard said Sunday night, “I believe then that public opinion In favor of Ruby will be stronger than ever because it will prove conclusively there was absolutely no connection between Ruby and Oswald." * . * * Marguerite Oswald, mother'of the slain aspect, asserted she was sure her son did not kill President Kennedy. In angry tones she blamed authorities on guard and asked in a Fort Worth interview why Oswald, j who sought' to renounce U.S, I citizenship when he went to the | Soviet Union in 1959, was not under surveillance. ecutlye director of the National I Urban League. I Johnson, his wife and two daughters attended services j yesterday at St, Mark’s Episcopal'church. Then the Johnson ! family drove to Arlington'National Cemetery. where he' placed a bouquet of red roses 1 on the grave of his assassinated {predecessor, John F. Kennedy. TALKED TO STAFF From the cemetery, the Johnsons drove to the White House, i The President conferred with some members of his staff and talked by telephone to McNa* j mara, Gordon ’ and Comptoller General Joseph ^Campbell in connection with his appeal to defense contractors to help In carrying out his pledge to “get a dollar's value for a dollar spent.'* The visits of Erhard, Segni and Douglas-Home are in line with Johnson’s vow to carry out Kennedy's objective of strengthening ties within the Atlantic alliance. Erhard will confer With, Johnson Dec, 27-28 at the Johnson ranch near Johnson City, Tex. Segni will pay a state visit to Washington Jan. 14-15, and Douglas-Home will come to Washington for talks with Johnson Feb. 12-13. President Charles de Gaulle of France also is expected to visit the United States next year, but no date has been set. LBJ Welds Political Coalition ' > By JACK BELL : WASHINGTON (AP) -dent Johnson lx losing no time welding the labor-Negro-Uberal political coalition he will need behind him for any successful bid for election next year. The new Chief Execbtive already has enlisted organized labor in his cause by numerous calls to union leaders asking for their help in bearing the burden thrown on him by the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Negro leaders like Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, have been brought into consultation. ’ , i- 'a{ A A- ■ ' Wilkins’ reaction after a White House visit was that he had “very great faith” in Johnson’s stand on civil rights, Whitney Young, executive director of the National Urban League, is a White House caller today. LIBERALS RALLY Democratic liberals like Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota have rallied to Johnson’s side. The President has asked Kennedy’s liberal advisers, 4not» ably Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., to stay dn. Most observers believe Johnson will adopt the Kennedy administration’s strategy for the 1964 campaign of concentrating on the populous industrial states while trying to , hold on to at least part of the South. , There will be differences* of course, because Kennedy was HATS off — In a symbolic gesture, Max Adams doffs his hat to the community, signaling the start of Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce Week. Adams, manager of the chamber, is wearing one of the advertisements which will be seen downtown and in shopping centers this week. The event is designed to show hpw, an active chamber aids community progress. ■.*, Ruling Made in Virginia Court Upholds School Closing of Ctjrfetmaff (The spirit of giving is particularly present in the Christmas season, and the 12-installment scries, “The Gifts of Christmas," is an interpretation of 12 classic and eternal gifts of Biblical history. Written by a lay author and university professor, the; stories are nondenominational and have been approved by clergy of alt faiths.) Flril of # Soria, 1. Th® Gift of God By JOHN J. STEWART With heavy heart old Father Abraham plodded his way up Mount Moriah, his little^ son Isaac by his side: Isaac, dearer to him than life itself. And now God had commanded him to offer'Isaac as a1 sacrifice. As they walked along together, cbrrying a (Continued on Pcge Two) In Today's Press Gifts of the Magi 0. Henry’s famous Christmas story starts today -PAGE A-8. Special Session State Legislators must act on extension to county terms -' PAGE A-7. / , ■ Jackie's Ordeal Mrs. Kennedy showed courage during tragedy of husband’s death - PAGE A-16. Area Newe .... Bin Obituaries D4 Astrology. , D-t Sports D-l-D-8 Bridge D-4 Theatorl D-4 Comics D-« TV-Radlo Programs D-1S Editorials A4 Wilson, Earl * » D-13 Markets , ..'.... D-7 Women's Pages B-l-B-4 IZZti who in turn was more popular in the South. But no’ one close to him believes that Johnson Is going to Soften the vigorous stand he has taken foi* civil rights legislation and he may be considerably less popular in the South next No-, vember than he is today. 1 INDICATED IN SPEECH Johnson indicated in a speech to the Liberal party of New York in mid-October how the Kennedy-Johnson team expected to meet what he predicted would be "Incessant criticisms of national pol|cy" from the op-position. A A A Critics would be asked, he said, if they were “really opposed to a tax cut that will atlm-, ulato the growth of the American economy, provide more jobs | for Americans aid, In the end;? produce more tax revenue from higher darnings." / Cold With Flurries; Says Weatherman Occasional periods of snow,, flurries and a low tonight of, 20 ''will have aroa resident!, ! bringing out their electric blank-i fits, , ., J I Tuesday’s' high Will be 34 ; with the wind being variable five to 15 miles tonight and becoming northwesterly 10 to ! ,18 miles tomorrow. Temperatures for the next five days will average two to i four degrees below the normal-highs of 38 to 39 and nbrtoal: j lows of $2 to 27; , j | Inr downtown Pontiac, the low | before 8 this morning was 22 i By 1 jp.m. the temperature had 1 riaen to 30, r 1 . | ||| ||| || / RICHMOND, Va. f- The Virginia Supreme Court said today Prince Edward County had the right to close its public schools to,avoid racial integration. In a 6-1 split decision, the • majority said the Virginia Constitution gives its localities the option of operating or not operating public schools. The dissenting judge was Chief Justice Johfi Eggleston, who held that the state legislature was obliged to provide public education in the county which abandoned it four years The final adjudication in the long - fought school case hinged in part on the action of the Virginia high court. The case is already before the U.S.,Supreme court on Its latest trip. , FUNDS REFUSED Prince Edward abandoned its public schpol system in 1959 in the .face of court • ordered in* tegration, It took the move by refusing to appropriate local matching school funds. Venezuelans Back Leoni for President Heavy Turnout Gives Betancourt Support Despite Terrorists I CARACAS,, Venezuela ($ — Raul Leoni, portly candidate of President R©-tnulo, Betancourt’s Democratic Actibn party, main-| tained his lead today in unofficial returns from Vene-^ ! zuela’s presidential elec- i tion. ' " { | An overwhelming' turnout of j | voters in yesterday’s balloting j handed a crushing defeat to Cas-I troite terrorists who sought to j scuttle the election. ■ Unofficial returns from 17 per cent of the votes gave ' Leoni a lead of nearly 14,000 over an independent rival, Arturo Uslar Pietri, a former assistant professor of Spanish-American literature at New York’s Columbia University, pfficial' returns' from 3 per cent of the votes gave Leoni the lead but put Uslar Pietri in fourth place. After a night of gun fights in Caracas between police and the pro-Communist terrorists, vote tabulations appeared to be sJow* | er than usual. There was no ex* | planation. The unofficial returns gave Leoni 134,391 votes; Uslar Pietri, 120,733; Jovito Villalba of the Republican Democratic, Union, 112,654; Rafael Caldera of the Social Democrats, 68,404; Wolfgang Larrazabal of the Democratic Popular Force, 52,-895. The remainder of the votes were scattered among the lesser candidates, Rual Ramos Glmenez, dissident Democratic Action; and German Borre-gales of the Rightist Authen-Movement. 1 Betancourt Casts His Ballot $6.9-Million Proposed City Manager Robert A. Carter has submitted a proposed $6,948,234 city budget for 1964 to the City Commission. The budget proposal .includes operating expenses, capital improvement and* debt retirement funds. , ‘ R20 Project in Cash Crisis Land Purchaie Cost Seen as One Reason It Is $179,348 above the 1063 budget total. The proposal went to commit sioners by mail this weekend, just beating the Dec. 1 deadline for submitting the budget proposal: Preparation of the proposed budget, under way for the past I two months, was supervised by Assistant City Manager John F, ' Reineck. I Commissioners will now j have until Jan. 31 to study [ and revise the proposed allocations. The City Charter require! the budget be adopted before Feb. 1 each year. j Reineck proposes that the budget be financed by a $4,514,-043 tax levy with $2,434,191 estimated as Income from, other Official returns gave Leoni 27,291; Villalba, 17,766; Caldera, 17,748; and Uslar Pietri, 16,410. Returns from the congressional race were lagging. INTERIOR VOTE Leoni, who has, eompared his worker-peasant party to Britain’s Labor party, looked to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) ON HER WAY - Judy Pipper of 7139 Capri, White Lake Township, geta an ovation .Saturday after being chosen Milford's entry in the state Junior Miss Pageapt. The Jay-cee-aponsored contest,, open to high school ............ ; t . seniors, will bs held Jan. 24-25 at Pontiac Northern High School. Selection will be based on appearance, polae, scholastic achievement, fitness, talent and mental alertnesa. ' \ 1 ,? The proposed tax levy is $36,-859 above the 1963 tax levy. The city’s operating budget, which accounts for most of the, total budget figure, is proposed at $6,261,834, or $175,731 higher than this year’s operating budget. T-nmninr, , , IMPROVEMENT FUND Reineck proposed a $518,400 capital Improvement fund, about $3,049 above the 1963 capital Improvement fund. The debt retirement fund remains at $168,000 in the proposed total budget. Major increases In the proposed budget stem from the ifeed to staff a new north sjde fire station and .a community recreation center scheduled lor completion next year. Other Increases are due to Increased life Insurance for city employes and hikes > in street ' lighting and election costl I The budget, according to Reineck, Is based, on the city’s present $280,480,500 total assessed I valuation. LOWER COST The sanitation and waste col- j lection appropriations have been reduc'd $51,377 due to the Inwer cost of I'oniiac’s new combined curb-side pickup program. Other departments and. thelr( recommended budget ci|ts Include sired and highway maintenance ' ($140,000). parks and recreation ($54,000), I I b r a r y . ($32,000), judicial ($11,000), and public service facilities < $158,-000), Flash A federal grant of $500,000 for W n t e r f o r d Township's $7.3t-mllllon water system announced today by the Rousing and Homo Finance Agency. mmk* ii,(Hint* ¥ , .lirlii, N*Mt Tuiioiy, dm, l, ins Lincoln ar. High School; mi hiiuis* (This is the third in a eerie* on urban renewalJ By DICK SAUNDERS Upon his taking over as city manager, one of-Robert A. Carter’s first impressions of Pontiac was from its urban renewal program. He told the City Commission, “You have reached a point where you might as well get used to your urban renewal office coming np with a problem every day, and $ crisis twice a week." One of thpse crises is money. The R20 project is broke. « . A A A', i Of the....original $5-million budget, there la less than $8,000 left in^he till. . The cost of buying land in the R20 project is one reason why the project is behind a financial eight ball. HIGHER THi^N ESTIMATED [ It was $230,000 above the estimated cost, according to James L. Bates, director of planning and urban renewal. “Remember, we didn’t have previous experience to base'our | R20 budget on," Bates said. “We had to guess. Some of our guesses were good and some weren't," Tbc long condemnation case which resulted In higher land cost, also helped boost expenditures for legal services, appraisers' fees and other acquisition1 costs some $82,090 above the original budget estl- At present, the R20 budget la all but spent. There's a $454,600 balance showing, The catch la that about all of it is already committed and can't be touched. On top of all this, urban renewal land values hart dropped from the resale prices estimated when the project began. Present appraisals Indicate (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) ma helper m THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBBB 2*1963 Birmingham Area News Railmen Hike in Wages Citizen Unit Sets Report on Youth Reading Study Presbyterian Leader Urges U. S. Council CLEVELAND (AP) - The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen — the key operating' union in the current railroad work rules dispute — has demanded a 25 per Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. untjl noon tomorrow. Surviving are his wife, Susie; a son, William E., and two sisters, Mrs. Rolf Spinning and Mrs. Ruth Gordon, all of Blr- BIRMINGHAM—What Johnny is reading in school, as well as why, will he evaluated' taught in the final report .of the Citizens’ Elementary Curriculum Study Comipittee. Chairman William Lyman and the heads of the 12 sub- •••* PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The chief executive of the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. called today for church unity and a more active participation in the field of civil rights. 1 Dr. Eugene Carson Blake said he hoped the week-long triennial general assembly of the National Council of Churches “will be the occasion of our churches realizing more fully than they have before the vital importance of church unity and cooperation in our kind of world.”. I In an interview preceding today's plenary business session,! Dr. Blake, a past president of ] the council, said: “The unity of the church is’more dearly visible than it has been for centur- findings of their year-long study during an * p.m. meet* ing with the Birmingham PTA Council. Also attending the session at Beverly Elementary School will be the elementary principals, who wil l implement adopted recommendations with their staff members. , |f ' • If' :| The chairmen are planning to; import to the board of education sometime next week, pointing WILL VISIT JOHNSON — Leaders of President Antonio Segni and British Prime Europe plan Visits to the new U.S. President Minister Alec Douglas-Home. The men will in the coming months. From left, West Ger- visit separately for conferences, man Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, Italian 1 KARYN KUPCINET Police Friends Slain Starlet HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Homi-. cide officers worked ip teams today tp question Karyn Kup-cinet’s host of friends, hopeful of finding some lead to the Strangler of the vivacious actress. Miss Kupcinet, 22, a petite brunette who had appeared in a number of top television shows, was found Saturday night in her modest apartment near the famed Sunset Strip. The body was nude and lay face down on a couch. The actress was the only daughter of ITv Kupcinet, a Chicago newspaper columnist and television moderator. Among those questioned was Andrew Prise, 27, a television actor identified as Miss Kupcin-et’s steady boyfriend until a re-cent disagreement caused them to break up. ... Prine, a costar of the “Wide Country” series, tdld* investigators he knew nothing of the slaying but had telephoned Karyn twice on Wednesday evening to discuss their differences. * Investigators said he may have been the last person to hear her voice when he placed his second call about midnight. Officers believe the Slaying took place in the early hours Thursday. Also questioned were two friends of Prine—Edward S. Rubin, 22, a free lance writer, and | acta* Robert F. Hathaway, 24, cent wage increase from the nation’s railroad. Other demands served Sunday by the 78,900-member onion were for supplemental pensions and company-paid health coverage, The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers previously had asked the railroads for pay to-. creases. *In Washington, a spokesman for the American Association of . Railroads said the organization would have no immediate comment. An arbitration board* issued recommendations last Tuesday that could' involve the elimination of up to 33,000 firemen's jobs. The five operating unions and the railroads were to settle wages and other issues between themselves under the emergency rail arbitration law passed by Congress last August to halt the threat of a strike then. Failure of negotiations could result In the dispute being thrown back to Congress Feb. 25, the expiration date of the rail arbitration law. H. E. Gilbert, union president, said wage adjustments for locomotive engineers, A locomotive helpers, firemen, hOstlers and hostler helpers represented by the brotherhood were long oyer-due. Gilbert said the last wage increase became effective March i, 1961. He said the railroad industry is operating at near-peak prosperity despite official management statements to the contrary. Included in the wage demands was a stipulation for a daily earnings minimum of $40 for engineers and $35 for firemen, in all classes of road service. The current wage scale was available. The supplemental pension plan would augment the present Railroad Retirement System to which the companies and employes contribute equally. The union asked the railroads to provide a $10,000 life insurance policy with endowment at age 65 for each employe, and hospital and. medical coverage for employes and dependents, including a $60 weekly benefit for employes who become incapacitated. Bus, Car Crash in Rain; Man Killed in Texas DAYTON, Tex. (ft - A crosscountry bus and an automobile collided in a drizzle today, killing the car driver, A. D, Garrett, 54, of Center, Tex. Five bus passengers were injured. The pus was en route from New 'York to Houston. The injured, none believed seriously hurt, were taken to a Dayton hospital. The Weather Full U.8. Weather Bureau Report ' JPONTIAC AND VICINITY-Consklerable cloudiness and cold through Tuesday with occasional periods of snow flurries. Highs today and Tuesday 34. Low tonight 29. Wind variable S to 15 miles today and tonight becoming Northwesterly 19 to 18 miles Tuesday. I EEJ «»&!*• Ea 0*. ANKARA, Turkey (ft -r Prime Minister Ismet Inonu, 80, resigned today. He had returned only Saturday from Washington, where he attended the funeral of President Kennedy. In his absence, two members of his governing coalition — the New Turkey party and the Peasants National party — decided to pull out. This left the 80-year-old political veteran in the position either of forming a nlw government or calling parliamentary elections. * * ■ * Reports that Inonu was to be assassinated circulated in Turkey Saturday and f heavy security guard was thrown around him as he arrived, from the United States. Inonu, head of the Republican party, has been in office almost all the time since the corrupt regime of Adnan Men-deres was toppled by an army coup in 1960. Couple Overcome by Gas; Man Dies A Pontiac man died and his wife was hospitalized early this morning after coal gas from a small fire filled their home, The death of Willie Johnson, 65, of 44 Murray, was attributed to asphyxiation and exposure by the coroner, Dr. Isaac Prevetto. j Johnson’s wife, Louella, 49, was admitted to Pontile General Hospital for smoke Inhalation. She is in fair condition, i dr ★ ★ Pontiac police said that the Couple had built a fire In a small bucket in the house and that it was the only heat in the building. POLICE ARRIVE When police arrived at 4:46 a m. to investigate reports of screams, they found Mrs. Johnson hanging out a second story window. - The Pontiac Fire Department used a resuscitator on Johnson but to no avail. He was dead at the scene. SAIGON, Viet Nam (ft — A possibility that three of South Viet Nam's top field commanders will be reshuffled is not expected to materialize in the near future, qualified sources indicated today. The American military high command in Saigon heard unofficially last week that three of Viet Nam'S tour corps com- bat over the weekend the ruling military junta said this is not till case. A senior U.S. officer commented: “We are just not sure what the junta is planning these days. Many rumors like (his one just don't turn out true.” •, * ★ a ,v American authorities are known to have favored one rumored change in command— that of Ml). Gen. Nguyen Khanh from command of the hid Corps to the 4th Corps. GREAT USE Americans feel Khanh’s leadership and determination have resulted in great progress In his The 7th Division area is one of the most important regions la the country. It stretches south from Saigon to the Mekong River. Americans want to know if Dong’s new post increases his effectiveness or it American authorities say they can detect a power struggle in ruling junta over control of field forces. The coup d’etat gave Maj. Gen. Ton That Dihh a good power position. He his proved reluctant to give up command of the 3rd Corps region, which surrounds Saigon. Ex-Educator Will Ru District ies and yet there seems, to be a division and controversy increasing in some quarters which weakens desperately the clear witness of the Christian WORK DIVISIONS church.” Their work was divided into MORE ACTIVITY' the following categories — art, „ii,n ui.m, .„u. I,* 'language arts, mathematics, nee? tL? alterably l^suwwrt P^®1681 education, social stud- by ihe general board and to j JJ® urge all our churches to a more education and fact find-active participation in toe effort 1 to achieve liberty, equality and , , • _ . __ justice for all Americans.” Students at Wing Lake He-The National Cobncil of Churches is the cooperative ^ agency of 31 Protestant, Angli-1 ® J can and Eastern Orthodox com-jth®.^ Prest Slim or regular, 6 oz. or J oz. White only. Wash W wear Pinwale cord. Come In sizes 6 Solid or plaid wools. Sizes 7 to White with lace trim. Size* 32 6% ecrilan. 36"x50" Acrilan. print. S. M. L weight. Western. : fabrics. to 12. 14. to 40. 1 Infants ,., Second Floor Infants ... Second floor Infants ... Second Fldot . Boy's Wear ... Second floor Girl's Wear... Second floor Boy's Wear... Second Floor G!rfs Wear... Second Floor lingerie... Second Maoe 11 mean SHOP TOMORROW 9:30 to 9 P.M. tOPEN 9:30 to 9:00 P.M. UNTIL CHRISTMAS Sorry, No Mail or Phono Orders, No Deliveries on These Specials Except for Large Items Shop the easy, convenient way . • , Open a ‘Waite's 100% Nylon PANTIES Reg, 69c % 2,w*1 Brief style. Sizes S-6-7-8. Lingerie .,. Second Floor Famous Brand PANTY GIRDLES T Assorted sixes in white, foundations... Second Floor Reg. 5.95 Seam or Seamlass MILLAY HOSE ye Reg. 99c IT 1st quality^ reinforced toe and heel. Proportioned lengths. 8 Vi to ti. Nylont . .. first Floor Large Selection HANDBAGS $2*4 Reg. 3.00 Grained or smooth vinyl. Black, brown, combinations. Handbagsfirst Floor 1 Washable Cotton OORDUROY m Reg. 1.69 Yd. 97* Popular corduroy In all th popular colors. fabrlea • • • fourth floor Famous Brand TOWEL SETS 00 Reg. 4.99 boxed gift sets In solid colors Or prints. Towolt•,. Fourth Floor Foam Rubbar PILLOWS 2 ¥or tQB §* 5.99 Bollaslr solid foam rubbar with sip off covers for laundering. Domestics.., fourth floor Dot|BB| Fillid COMFORTERS tjoo Early American Pattern! /In parcel!. Reversible. DuWtnt DMron filled. l( r ItufllrelS fourlii' Floor R«f‘ 9.99 Famous Brand PARTYfilRDLES SC88 Reg. 8.95 •5* Assorted sizes in whie. foundations,., Second floor Leather Faint DRIVING RL0VES Res- $469 2.qo ; j Acrylic knits In 6 colors. S. M. L. > Gloves • •* First Floor Cultured Pearl JEWELRY $109 Reg. 2.00 Gold filled with genuine cultured pearls. Necklaces, bracelets, pins, earrings* Jewelry... Finl Floor Everglaze Cotton FABRICS C Yd. Reg. 1.79, Yd. rr 96" widths In print cdtton fabric for blouses and dresses. Yard Goods . , . fourth floor Smart Prints in , BLENDED PRINT $ Yd. Reg. 1.99 Yd. 7? 45" - fabric for dressas and blouses. fabrics • •. fourth floor Ballalra Percale WHITE SHEETS Reg. 2.49 2 For $0 81x108 «Rug. 2,79 2 for $41 Pillow Casts Rug. 1,38 $| pr. Linens,. • Fourth Floor Batts Hairloomad BED SPREADS Twin Full Beautiful Mlstle Medallion pat-tarn. Domes tics. •, fourth Floor 48x84 or 72x84 DRAPERIIES Reg. fe 18.88 T Your choice In elub weaves all completsly cotton lined. Dreperfea ii«* fourth FJedlr Famous Maka Ski Jackets and CAR COATS 22*99 to 29.99 Values $1280 Choose from corduroys, wool meltons, cotton poplins. Many a pile lined. HlR.and Vt length, knit and leather trims, soma ha\ Mds. Sizes 9 to 15 and 8 to 18. Sportswear... Third Floor > Boy's Hooded PARKAS Reg. 14.99 $||98 100% cotton poplin or 100% nylon and completely machine washable. All pile or quilt lined for extra warmth. Colors are: blank and blank. Sizes 8 to 20. ItyifMtM.lwMfJlNr, PRINT TOWEL ENSEMBLE Reg. $1.99 Bath .. $1.79 Reg.$1.29Hand ... 99c Reg. 59c Washcloth. 49c Cut daisy design, jacquard. In white pattern on pink, blue, mint or, maize. Linens... fourth floor SMART WALKING CASUALS with Ins. Meeker stone. Kentfield Wash 'n Wear DRESS SHIRTS 1.50 urn your choice of spread e bresdcloth or Oxford; BD it Both have convertible cuffs.! 14-17, 82, 35-Inch sleeves. Men's Worn • •. 8tree) Floor | Kapok Pilled Nylon Acotnto SBFA PILLOWS Streieh Slacks i* TI# !| .; «• If ; vni Wide choice of colors, sizes I and shapes; Virtually snag proof In slzae 1 10 fa 18. Loden, Cranberry or black. I Sofa Pillow . • Fourth Fleer Sportswear... Third floor Hooded Reversible Wool Flan, or Twood SKI PARKS JUMPER «* $A44 11.99 Q R* $794 9.99 1 Zipper pocket. Comas in red, AH In 100% wool, junior blue or black. S.M.L. sizso 5 to T5. Sportswear... Third Floor Sportswear... Third Float *' Lined, Praportfonad Cotton or Nylon WOOL SUCKS MEN’S NOSE R* $19$ 5.99 l| **• 4 F.r it ,0# L 1 Proportioned size* In well el- 100% cotton argytab 10Vk-> lored slim slacks. Slzss 10 to 13. 100% nylon stretch. Sol- 20. ids, patterns. Sportswear... Third PJear Neib Wear... Shoot Floor Men's Insulated Long SImv. UNDERWEAR SPORT SNIim Reg. $6188 9*99 Q & 2fc,5 i Nylon shell, 5 oz. celscloud In-training. S. M. L XL Man's cotton or cotton flannel 1 shirts In prints, plaids or stripes. S. M. L XL Men's Wear • •. Street fleer Man's Wear... Sheet floor Men's Broadcast Mon's Driving PAJAMAS GLOVES > A For IE *•» $199 " 2.99 / J 2.99 | Cost or middy styles. Elairie Leather palm and wool knit. waist band. Sizes A-B-C-D. Black or gray. S. M. L ' Men's Warn... Bfraat Floor Man'* Wear *.. Street floor Men's Leather Famous Brand WALLETS Olff Links-Tin Bar ‘ R* $000 5.00 j) ft* OOb to 2.50 00 Choice of styles, gift boxas. Genuine mahogany leather in Gold or allvar finished. All gift black or brown. boxad. Man's Warn • • • f traet Floor Map's Wear... Street floor jumbo Sis# Thermostat Control GARMENT BAGS OVEN BROILER ««• A F.r SC ft* $coo 451 L 9 8.95 Q Heavy vinyl COVfli Metal frama. Suit or draw length. Broils, bakes, grills or toasts. UL approved, 6 ft. cord. Hollons ,, , Street floor Noeseweres. •. Lower Level Gleaming Stainless Famous Wist Bond . FLATWEAR 00RN POPPER R«g. I $2 Each «|N ft* $199 5.99 l| Three patterns. 3 piece place Electric com popper, boxed for 1 settings of italnlass. Modarn rift giving. SeM can to used or traditional crafted shape*. for saparste hwtlng unit, J Housewares ,«. Lower Level ffausewarve *. .Lew** Level _ This beautiful China SANTA CUUS BANK %J5Q WHEN YOU OPEN YOUR CHRISTMAS CLUB WITH US! SEND YOUR CHILD o Send your child a FREE letter from Santa Claus! How? Pick one up at any of our offices. Simply address it . stamp it and drop it in our special mailbox. It will be mailed from Santa Claus, Indiana. DON’T DELAY-DO IT TODAY! • Miracle Mile M-59 Plaza 9 (b 6,4 E„ Lawrence 970 W. Long Likt RdJ mam office, Saginaw at Lawrence Muburn Heights Baldwin at Yale iDravton Plains TIIE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1063 A—13 One Yank Killed, One Hurl In Vief Nam Red Ambush BRUNEI (AF*) — A British! cursions. He said some of the military officer says terrori$tsj attacks were led fry Indonesian based in Indonesian Borneo un-l regular1 officers and that one In-doubtedly are planning more j donesian commando officer was and heavier raids on East Ma- killed on Sibatik while on a relay sia. j connaissance patrol. . The officer,•"stationed at the y, * *' W. Brunei headquarters -of Brit- j Indonesia’s present aim, the ain’s North Borneo command, j Briton said, is to weaken the said he expects terrorist activi-1 wiu 0f the border tribes in Sara-, ty to spread along the 800-miie j wa^ and North Borneo and to jungle border between Indonesia j .encourage dissidents. in. the and the Malaysian states of Sa-' states in the hope they will re-bab and1 Sarawak, which sur-j ^0]t. round Brunei. j A government source in Sara- “Undoubtedly things will get ^ said a third Indonesian aim worse,” the, officer said. “There! jg t0 create the impression that will be more incidents as the j the peoples are in revolt against terrorists try to bully the bor-| the’formation of Malaysia, der people into (Shifting their al-, xhe .i Indonesian government legiance from the Malaysian . claims the attacks have been government.". „ I made by “freedom fighters” In the past seven mon’ths. ter-: an(j that Ihdorjesian forces are rorist attacks have been con-: not involved. , r- fined to Sarawak. Some source's! The British have adopted a predict North Borneo toon may? strategy of systematic destruc-be a ' trouble spot. Indonesian [ yon 0f terrorist bands in an of* ' commandos are reported in fort to destroy the morale of the place on Sibatik Island, just off; Indonesian-based guerrillas, the east eopst and shared by j a .military source in Kuching Malaysia and Indonesia. said 58 terrorists have been Authoritative sources report killed since the first border at-some Indonesians working in; tack ini. April. British and Ma-North Borneo have set up jungle i laysian losses are .known to be training camps for guerrillas, at least 10 dead. The British officer said there The source said there have is conclusive proof that Indo- j been 70 recorded incursions by nesia is behind the border' in-1 groups from Indonesian Borneo. Five Killed in Crash of Private Plane INDIO, Calif. (UPI) Five persons, four believed to be teen-agers, were killed late yesterday in the crash of a small private plane 30'miles east of this Southern California desert community. Sheriff’s deputies said the pilot was identified as Andrew D. Robertson, 48, P a I m Springs, Calif. One. of the other victims was the pilot’s son, Andrew Jr., 16. Deputies said the pilot’s wife told them her husband was fly* ing their son and three of his friends back from a holiday, visit to their home. She said the four boys ail attended Justin Boarding School in Scottsdlale, Ariz., and were returning for classes today. , It is believed that the other three, boys, as yet unidentified, were from New York, Hawaii and Mexico. What Good Steak! What Went in It? • FAR<30, N.D. (UPI) - When you sit down to eat avSteak, stop and think of what went into it — about 17 pounds of corn,, 4 pounds of hay and 2 pounds of protein supplements. According to North Dakota State University, livestock people figure It out this way: a 10-ounce cooked steak rep* resents 1.3 pounds of carcjass beef, or about 2.2 pounds of live steer. , Since a feeder steer gains about two pounds a day, one steak is equal to about a day’s red meat production of the steer. , ■ , Hr ' dk-Ur The feed figures are the approximate daily diet of the average steer. Operatic Tenor D$ad TOULOUSE, France (AP) -Louis Tharaud, 85, operatic ten* or, died Sunday, He made his debut in 1907, later sang in the Paris Opera and toured the opera houses of Europe. He was born ip Toulouse. Nazis Protest Naming • WASHINGTON (UPI)-Seven members of the American Nazi party picketed the White House for a time yesterday to protest the appointment of Chief Justice Earl warren as head of the commission to investigate^ the assassination of President Kennedy, Wintry Cold Covers Most of Nation By The Associated Press Cold air, with snow in 'sdme northern areas, spread across broad sections from the Rockies into northern Florida today. The mercury dropped to 30 degrees in Gainesville, Pit., early today as the cold air snipped deep into the southland. * Wintry weather, with heavy snow and temperatures near zero, hit upstate New York and parts of New England. Nearly a foot of snow covered areas ist of Lake Ontario. # ’ *.;/ < ' , Snow and cold also was reported in other parts of the Great Lakes and in Midwest areas. Temperatures edged to. near zero in northern Wiscon* sin. Readinis in the teens were reported in most of north central region. The 20s and 30s covered most other areas in toe cold belt. . w w ★ Mild Gulf air kept (temperatures near 60 in the lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas. United States farmers paid about $300 million in sales taxes in 1962. Terrorists Rot SAIGON, South Viet Nam (UPI) — One U.S. soldier was killed and another' seriously wounded in a Communist guerrilla ambush last night near the Cambodian border, a U.S. military spokesman said today. Nine South Vietnamese troops also were wounded in the clash, the second serious encounter between govern-ment and Viet Cong forces within a few hours yesterday. In the first battle, also near the Cambodian border, the Com*, munists killed, wounded, or captured the entire garrison of a government outpost before being driven off. The' guerrillas lost an estimated 50 men in the six hours of fighting, but 42 of the 60 troops defending toe outpost were killed, and 15 to 20 of their wives and children also died. BROUGHT TO 1 The American casualties brought to 114 the number of U.S. combat deaths since large-scale assistance to South Viet Nam began in January 1961. The death toll from all causes now is 142. Names of the two U.S. servicemen were withheld pending notification of relatives, and there were few details available on the attack. The Americans were accompanying a Vietnamese troop cpnvoy in toe border area about 115 miles west of Saigon. The Communist assault on the outpost was almost a carhop copy of an attack a week ago on a government training camp 30 miles west of Saigon. In that fight, 37 Vietnamese soldiers were killed and four U.S. enlisted men captured. A U.S., officer was critically wounded. Yesterday, the Viet Cong opened fire with mortars and other big guns about midnight. They knocked out two of three blockhouses on the corners of the triangular stockade, c u t through barbed wire, waded, a moat, and scaled the walls. The third blockhouse poured heavy fire on the invaders hut the guerrillas kept up their assault. They finally withdrew about 8 a.m. taking their dead and wounded with them, and some captives. The outpost is on the of an area heavily infestec^b) Communists. It is just nortn*^ Black Virgin Mountain, which is considered sacred by the Cao Dai sect. ’ In another development yes- terday, reliable sources said Viet Nam’s 7th Division commander, Col Pahm Van Dong, been replaced at the insistence of security minister Maj. Gen. Ton That Dinh, although he is highly respected by U.S. military advisers here. The division guards toe area immediately south of Saigon. It is part pf the corps Dinh commanded before toe Nov. 1 coup, and U.S. officials said Dong pursued toe war against the Communists in the Mekong Delta area effectively. His replacement is Brig. Gen. Lam Van Phat. muse TOILET TANK BALL Dm Hnd«H, M* MutM*. 7«jc AT HARDWARE STimK* (giue Ijtm ©Btraitt’a lor Christmas ; We mean the whole sforf. That's what you * get with every gift certificate... whether you spend $5 or $500. You get the people, the courtesy, the extra attention that no rush ca^ affect. And! you get the quality name brands, like: McGItEGOK’s “CAMELOT” ZIP CARDIGAN (shown). Soft, luxurious lambswool and camel’s hair. Note the smart zipper styling—dashing! Camel or Bottle Green < • • $15.95. And here are just a few examples of the many dozens of sweater styles we have . in stock. STRIPED SNAGGY BLAZER CARDIGAN 6yltrf.rfBr.ee Button style In soft wool blond. 3 color combinations..................... *13.95 ARNOLD PALMER ALPACA BLEND CARDIGAN ky Mirt Ink* 40% Alpaca—60% wool in 8 handsome shades................ .......,...*19.95 CREW NICK ZIP SWEATER MmM* Tyrol type with chain closure, elbow 4tl patches.................... . ... *13.95 100% ALPACA PULLOVER ly tftwTMk Rett Popular V-neck style. Pure luxury In many shades................................J«*.*41.95 Set Our Big Selection of Ski sad Ski-inspired Sweaters- Many unusual imports Included... .*3.95 te H5 I gift minor course. LAY-AWAY YOUR GIFT I A small deposit holds it till Christmas a part of Christmas since 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN & BOYS Use One ofOsmuns Individualized Charge Plans FREE 1OPEN.EVERY NITE ’til 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, "DECEMBER 2, 1963 Semi-Annual Sale! k our own RB LAMPS mo ihd Orga •9«®uP Hove Your Clothes Spotlessly Cleaned and Renewed by Voorheis BUGLES p,S. Regulation' wwpr. Reg. 1.05 pr. 3 pairs 2.55,6 pairs $5 Two week* only* seamless sheers and dura-mesh at great savings. Proportioned sizes short 8-10VS*. med. 8 Vi-1 1, tall 916-12. METRONOMES Perfaet Timing Meant Bttur Music (FORMER INSTRUCTOR ANDGRADUATE DRY-CLEANER PLUS YEARS OF PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE) Your coat,, suit, dress and other garments carefully dry cleaned and renewed by experts PARK FREE REAR OF STORE SNARE DRUMS World’* Finest • Ludwig and Ludwig VOORHEIS “I-hour” Cleaners BONGO’S from *750up iiiiimniiiniiiiniiiniiinii'^...iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiinnasy MUSIC CO. Everything in Mutie 119 North Saginaw fe 5-8222 CALBI Pillows ¥hyS{ Dishmaster? ideal far Chriotmap givingt ... because it is the most practical wav of doing dishes! ^ PAYMENTS TO SUIT YOU . ' Layaway Now! ; . , , ......—m. ■ , , , , 90 Day fits any sink! SammAt Cath Installs in minutes. One-step hygienically clean dishwashing. Saves on water and detergent The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC 51 West Huron Open Evening. Til 9 P.M. FE 4-155 I MERCHANDISING I CORPORATION Phone 332-9137 7 666 S. Telegraph 14-0516 OpMi Monday ami Friday Eras Id 9 P.M. wnwwniw Regular $90.00 Tailor Made CONVERTIBLE TOPS A small highly maneuverable one design ice yacht that can be sailed on small fltozen ponds or larger bodies of ico. , jeftamp is balanced so a child can. sail it easily, yist designed to cany an adult of over 200 lbs. at d* speeds in excess of 50 miles perx-, ^P Regular 24,95 Sarah Plattlc SEAT COVERS Mad. to Fit Yaw Car Madam I.d Whll. You Walt ei Kew COMPLETE and ^ I H a INSTALLED ■ W ? Bill Kelley’s Robert Bruce and Jantzen 15 ft. fiberglas fwnt seatupholstery/ windshield, steering, lights and hardware. Motor wall. FREE Chriatmot Vr The perfect gift for shy boy in button Cardigan, zipper and pullover styles. Special CRUISE OUT BOAT SALES on Open Dally 9 to 6 , FE 8- IsnwMownwsMiwBBiWPaHWMWWiPiSMial i Give Comfort This Christmas The Mark VI RCA VICTOR TOTAL SOUND STEREO Give or Luxurious Quilt Top Mattress Set Softblue tint added to OE's picture screen results in whiter whites, sharper contra its brighter picture. Dust sealed safety window. Rich texturod Hl-lmpact dftyrana cabinet, Min antenna. FM STEREO RADIO Family HOME FURMSHINGS 2135 Dixie Ilwy. Cor. Telegraph Open Daily 10 to 9, Sun. 12 to 0 III Oroh.rd Lit, j FI 4-0526 Y THE PONTIAC PKKSS. MONDAY, PKCKMBKK 2, 1968 Year's End Critical Doubt Fogs Business By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)—Business —and all the producers and. consumers whose affairs are tied direcUy or indirectly to it— today enters the final stretch of 1963 with more than' the usual quota of ques-tion marks. What happens to the next three foqf wee^s can remove or ■ wH deepen - more than to most years — the un-certainties that ! DAWSON cloud the future as the total month starts. / December is the month that traditionally makes or breaks toe year for most merchants since it usually is their biggest sates period. And this, in turn, sets a pattern for their suppliers all the way back to raw materials and countless Jobs. that he will be a spending president—that is, Undeterred by fiscal theories or priorities if he feels projects are needed, either for themselves or for aiding the economy should it stumhte. LESS AT HOME Some have commented that Johnson.seemed less at home with economists than did his predecessor and perhaps more at ease with businessmen foem- Gains in Early Trading adjusting of accounts for tax purposes, for assessing the temper of the times, and the prospects for the months just ahead. But today plans—private, corporate and political—are being reassessed. Predictions rushed out jto advance already are befogged with doubts. MANNER CHANGED Most businessmen venturing an opinion say that President Johnson’s administration promises changes of manner more than of policies, They expect him to continue President John F. Kennedy’s major programs. But the manner to which toe new chief executive goes about it interests them most just now. It could determine both the chances of putting these plans into effect and their effects. Stocks BeginSe Action Sought for January Showdown With theorists, they breathe more easily to toe more practical approach. Response to Johnson’s addresses to Congress and later to the American people has been largely favorable among- businessmen. If none was surprised, none was alarmed, and many were calmed toy his manner. Consumer confidence will be tested this month to the stores, at the auto dealers, at the finance and mortgage offices. In the relatively few trading days remaining, traditional December shopping could recover lost ground. Retail trade to the first 10 months was running ahead of 1962, even if it faltered to the final tragic days Of November. Cohu Elec Creole Pet Ply Tiger Gen Devel Some are counting on his past ability to command congressional support to get toe tax cut most businessmen want faster than his predecessor could have. They also hope this talent may settle many other legislative un> certainities, domestic and international, to coming weeks. Many note that Johnson’s congressional voting record signals It is also the month of bonuses for workers and for stockholders and of the semitradition* al year-end rally to the stock market. It is the period for the WILL OPEN SOON — A new A&P stork designed to Early American will open Dec. 11 at 3400 Floradale, Waterford Township. Located to the Dixie-Walton area, the new store will replace the existing A&P building on the fwme site. When the ora store is rased after toe first of the year, parking facilities for 179 cars will be available. Dick McCarius, manager of the present store, and Orl Man-love, assistant manager, will continue in their respective position to the new store. MARKETS Thefollowing are top prices covering sates of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them to wh'tesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of ‘noon Friday. Produce I i FRUITS Apples, Delicious, Rod, bu. Apples, Delicious, Golden, bu. Kohlrabi . Looks, bcR, ......... Onions, dry, SO lbs. . Parsley, curly, beh. .. Parsley, root, buch. . parsnip* . Parsnips, CORO pak, d Squash, Acorn, bu. .................. ... Squash, Buttercup, bu. ............... J-g squash, Delicious, bu. ,.............. {•» NEW YORK (AP) - The) stock market advanced irregularly early today as trading in the usually bullish month of December began. Trading was active and some large blocks crossed the ticker tape. * a. „ ★ ★ The business news was favorite with steel orders continuing to rise and construction don-tract awards in October up 26 per cent over - a year earlier. General Dynamics rose % to 27 on successive" blocks of 4,000, 3,000 and 1,000 shares. OTHER ADVANCE Opening on blopks of 5,000 shares, Sperry Rand added % at 18 Vi and Jersey Standard gained 14 at 71. I ★' i' .■# Gaining nearly 2 potato, RCA reached- a new high for the Bar. ... .★ * * • U. S. Steel moved up half a point while Bethlehem eased fractionally. - Chrysler and Ford added fractions white Gjeneral Motors was down slightly. UP THREE Polaroid advanced nearly three points. Control Data picked up more than 2 points. /,*/ * * On Friday toe Associated Press average of 60 stocks advanced 2.6 to 279.6. Prices on the American ’stock Exchange were slightly higher. Up fractions were Aerojet, Plastics, Breeze Corp., Molybdenum and Technicolor. Oc- cidential Petroleum dipped fractionally. n American Stock fxch. Figures after decimal points ar» eighths NEW YORK (API—American Slocks: ... mt n... j9j4 Kaiser Indus 4% 4 vs Mead John . . 22% 37% Mohawk JOT • ,4% tvs M*sk P Ring 19% 5% NJ Can Import Canaries Live canaries, valued at $5 or under, may be imported into this country with a customs duty of 19 cents a bird. * ★ ? * : If imported far personal use and not intended for sale, they may be included to a regular customs exemption of $100 per person. _______ Turnlfie..toppad, bu...... I GREENS CabbatN. bu. CollartL bu. Kale, wi. ... Mustard, bu. Sorrat, by. . spinatih, 6u ..........!" fii Swiss Chard, bu. .................. j-s Turnips ....................... ':_r_ lettuce and salad gnbens Celery, cabbage Poultry and Eggs The New York Stock Exchange PIT <* - Prlcas pak itt for No. 1 qualify ' iroiiars S to*™ Jt4 i barred rock 21-22. DETROIT BOOS ft ding U.S.). Vhitos grado ge ISVMSWl nw Ida A largo 54*37/ —---- CHICAGO BUTTBB AND BOOS -HICAOO (AP) - Chicago MorcantMo ^l^^unor'^ay^losalo buy-i prices unchanged; 93 score AA 57%/ AP 57%/ MR P; It C 56/ cars »0 E tagi steady?' wholesale buying price* hanged to 1 lower/ 70 per cent or STunr^/^^ia.», *», " Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CAGO, (API—Hogs »,000/ moder-ki>*phApi uneven i wftlohts } lb I4.75IS.35/ 770-240 filtJO-2-2 240-260 lb 14.00-14.50/ 24MM lb AM, i.j 300-400 lb SOWS 12.00-11.3; lb 11.30-12.00; 2*3 430-300 to 11.00-300-40 lb 10.7HI.00. to 7,300; celvos nono; trading on itor ..stoors slow, ritedyto 30 .wwor v, steady with or niottly 23 J WASHINGTON (AP) - Tax and civil rights legislation may reach important milestones this week which could move them toward showdown votes next month. President Johnson called last week for congressional action on toe late President Kennedy’s unfinished legislative proposals. , ★ Unless there is a change to plans, the Senate Finance Committee will told next Friday its long public heartogsj on the Ill-billion tax-cut bill passed by the House last Sept. 25. That would clear the way for toe committee to start shaping up the bill for action to the Senate. Leaders are hoping toe tax HI, cornerstone of toe administration's economic program, Wjll be ready for a Senate vote shortly after toe second session of the 88th Congress convenes to January. SAME TARGET They have toe same target-month for a House vote on a broad civil rights bill approved last month by toe House Judiciary Committee. The bill is to difficulty to toe House Rules-Committee headed Iqr Chairman Howard W. Smith, D-Va, . ♦ . j ik '4§' On the theory* that Smith will do all he can to retard the measure’s progress, its supporters last week took the initial step to a move to by-pass toe Rules Committee. Smith has seven legislative days to which act on a request for clearance of the bill for a House vote. SUBJECT TO PETITION The seventh dpy is next Saturday. If the bill still is stalemated then to the Rules Committee,/it will be-the subject of petition to take it Smith’s group, an actibn that requires toe signatures of 218 members. u the move succeeds, the measure would be in tote for a House vote during Christmas week, or during any week beginning with the second or fourth Monday of any month thereafter. ineNsyi »iwu7t . i bull* tor teat of trends/ 4 loads .1200-1230 lb eleugtiter eteer» 24.00/ tola and prime 1180-1800 lb 83.88-IDeluding *#vtr&l loodt nrvoiHy 1350*1580 lb ziiawasiwf iyou 0; good M0-12S0 lb 21.00-22.50; rd end low good 19.00-20.30; high end prlmo 9WM050 tb holleri 22.S0-moat choice 000-1100 lb 21.30-22.23; tO.25-21.Mi utility And commercial 2.75-14.00; cenner ehd cutter 11.00- p soot trading moderately active, ler iamb* hilly ittody, not enough I (laughter ewa» for prlco trend; ickogot choice end prime 90*110 lb l (laughter Iambi 10.5040.00; bulk 0 choice 11.00-19.50/ cull and utility M0, hell deck choice and prime thorn (laughter Iambi with I 20.00/ double deck choice Yard Turned Into Paradise TULSA, Okla. iffi - Mrs. Date Barnas has nothing to her backyard but a driveway, a garage, a picket fence, and some small chairs. t Hut wldi an unending supply of love, she has turned It into a paradise for neighborhood children* When Mrs. Barnes retired as children's director of the First Christian Church, she passed word along that she planned a summer project in the backyard. dr * * AH the children in a two-block area were Invited. In a, short time every child in the area was attending to* one morning r week session of his own vtjilltiori. CAN FLAY The children can do tempra painting, modeling with clay, slut-painting or play games - Though she is an experienced worker with children, Mrs. . Barnes says, “Anyone could car* ‘ r* on such a project who has a place large enough for children to gather and hau-a-day a wash to give to them.” f ' j IMA n lift r ft 1 42% «% MM + ft (14 62% 511k 52 T H 21 25% 13 S% + % 14 37 Mb 47„ +1 J 231b 23% 23% ..... 4, Sib 38% 3*Vk + ft if ii so% si + ft A 54% 54% 44% + ft ■I 54% 54% 54% + % 10 24% 24% 24% II ■ ft 51 ft . + % 32V* 32% 32% . 11 42 41% 42 ...... 57. 55% ft +,% 37% 27% 37% ..... 2 24% 25% 24Va - % 9% 9% 9% ... • 2 61% 41% 41% -I- % 1 21 21 21 + % i T»% ]*% lift + % 1 19% 9% 19%-.% 42% 42% 42% + % 1 14% 14% tOk + % 82% 82% 52% T Vk Ij 16% 16% 16% .. 91 139% 139% 139% + % 44 24% 24% 26% - % 7 Mk 29% | % 29 19% 19% 19% -f % M% £4% + % IK' Schick AIH8CM9 .50 KlumLta .40 AmEkport lg SoPRS S:^d/^3g MOHCai nfandStl ' 2 SU% $YM 51 Va T i K*i| 1 27% 27% 27% + % 27 75% 75% 75% +1 t lift 13% 13% + % I 23% 23% »% ... 7 50% 49% 50% +1% II 1% 1% 1% ..... oneST" 2.50 33 11% 11% II 17% 17% 3 13% 13% Grain Prices Bucvir -40a Budd Co .60 Plywood Rub 2 i ir. 3 31% 31% 31% f % 1 47% 47% 47% -i- % 1 42% 42% 42%-% —W— 37 7% 7% 7% + % 1 13% 13% lift 4 % 6 26% 26% 24% ..... Stocks of Local Intorost Figures tfttr decimal points trg alghlhi CanSW 1.1 Cerro 1.10 cSiiinoAlrc Champs 1 OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Th« following quotation, do not no rlly raprasant actual' transaction. it actuar transoctloni but K a guide to tho approxl-ranga of the (acurlttot. 1 17% 37% 37% -Y-r ' union ofhirwlM (iwijfw dondj iSi thi terjgjiSj dlsbursomtnfa bated on mg Ian quortorly or uml-annual docloratton. SmcIoI or extra dlvIMndt or poymanU.not doita-nated at riiaular gr* Idantlflad In tha following toornotae. . B dUSiTpYkiil vaarj tSSSlarad or mW ftor* tl«i SSlLL-caV^L'Mfy'rm CnNGet MUTU Putnam Growth , Talevlilon Bloctronlci Treasury Position NSIaPw 1. imatad cash pr dam in tuli. du nd salat in run. x-i if—|x rights, xm ww—WHh warranfk i wl—Whan Issuac Without wd-Wnon phAiX 8 8# « l$S \l 2$% b km1 go nia Ohio Rd 1.90 oiln Math. n H k Owanslll 2.30 OxIdPap 1,20 Nay, ml 1941 •alaiMt .................| 3,374,140,374.24 Dapoilfs fiscal yaar Total dtM ...............X 8308,022,127,796.07 OOld 866*16 .............. 6 15,381,373,346.42 I 71014,227,013.4) in In. | ™ Pac Ml J Esaf w UN] paabCoal 70 Penney 1.20a Pa Rl .Mg PepCola 1.40 Pffipr .80a WfLr' MS Vi laials llMAl Vr." ItfiBftff ■I dtM ..... 6J08,6?7,539.948<47 I snail n.I, IMLJjfiTrfitolWrW - Includes WM.4Ml14Sii dtM net sub* try HmH, sT p% 7 51% 8S $82 RaM rlda Retard aWa cant Chars# SOHO AVERAGES I by TM MMalaMd Prvu Mils Ind. Util. Pm. L. VS fX n&«.s BSr New Director at Motor Unit tacton jickina, m 'mmm li li li i | -1 ■ii •• Marloqt O. Alsager of the AC Spark Plug Division to Milwaukee has been appointed director of coal, factory! and general ac-countlngat Pontiac Motor, Division, effec-| tive tomorrow. Alsager, wh was director ofl pricing and program anatyslsl at toe MUwaiM koe division,1 joined AC to ALSAGER Flint to 1919. He Is a graduate of toe University of Minnesota. He moved to AC’s Milwaukee operations to 1967 and was named factory accountant and general accountant to 1988. ★ ★ * In 1869 Alsager was awarded an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship in executive development at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is married and has a 6-year-old son.______ Blind Man Excels in Golf and Bowling IRVING, Tex.