DECEMBER THRU 1 ^ U 19G6 MICRO PHOTO DIVISION bell & HOWELL COMPANY The Weather U.S. Wnltar Bureau Fortciit Ftarries, Frigid (0dU> on Pit* |) VOL. 124 - NO. 255 THE PONTIAC PRESS ★ ★ ★ ★ k PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, J966—68 PAGES UNneDSpR6SSB|NTEftNATI0NAL Home Edition ioe HARBOR BEACH (AP) -Rescue forces fanned out over lake Huron today in search of survivors of the ill-fated Daniel c 3- Morrell Which sank in a storm with a feared loss of 28 lives, % ★ * ■ ' One crewman miraculously survived the Great Lakes’ worst disaster in eight years. Three bodies were recovered today after an all-night search. All were in an area about 20 mills southeast of the Harbor Beach light. Gale-force winds and heavy snow hampered overnight rescue operations. Enlisted in the search were three Coast Guard helicoptes, three cutters and three other vessels. ■ The search tanned up several orange life jackets and waterlogged life preservers, all stamped clearly with Daniel J. Morrell. Orange-colored oars and other debris also were recovered. Eleven bodies were recovered yesterday. Its fate concealed by the storm for 34 hours, the 003-foot Morrell snapped in two Tuesday morning and sank in 145 feet of water 20 miles northeast of Harbor Beach, a town in the northern half of Michigan’s Thumb district. Twenty - nine crewmen were aboard, said John Hanninen, a legal representative of Bethlehem Steel Co. which hod leased the 60-year-old ship. “I saw two lifeboats launched before the ship sank,” said deck watduhan Dennis Hale, the survivor. Plucked from a life raft by a helicopter, Hale was clad in undershorts, pajamas and a pea jacket when found lying beneath the bodies of three crew mates who died from exposure. An empty life raft bobbed on waves near the coast and a life ring and debris from the Morrell washed up on the snow-covered shore at the northern tip of the Thumb district. storm grounded Coast Guard aircraft during most of the hunt. Any crewman not in lifeboats would have died within; three hours in the 36-degree water, the Coast Guard said. alarm. The ship was breaking in half,” Hale said. He launched a raft with three other crew members. ‘BUCKLED, SANK’ “As we were floating out on this raft I could see the two halves hitting each other,” he' said. “They had separated and the back part still had power and kept ramming the front part. “She buckled and sank,” Hale said. The wreckage was found bv a 100-man search party tha - scoured the shoreline during < heavy snowfall. But the blinding snow hampered the search by three Coast Guard cutters over a 400-square-mile area of Lake Huron. The Hale, 26, of Ashtabula, Ohio, was sleeping when he “heard a hard thump. “I thought me anchor was dropping,” he said. 'Books tumbled off a shelf in his room and he jumped out of bed. “1 heard the emergency Area Executive Chrysler Chief NEW YORK (UPI)—Virgil A. Boyd, who came to Chrysler from American Motors in 1062* was elected president "of the company today, succeeding Lynn A. Townsend. ★ ★ ' * Townsend moves up to chairman of the board but continues as chief executive. Boyd was designated chief operating officer and was elected to Chrys-ler’s e x e c u t i v e and finance committees. ★ ★ ★ As chairman, Townsend succeeds George Love, who continues as chairman of the executive committee. , Townsend and Boyd will assume their new posts Jan. L Boyd, 1370 Forbes, Bloomfield Township, previously 'served as vice president and group executive in the automotive sales department. • * * * \( _ / He joined Chrysler as vice president and general sales manager in 1962. He was born in Butter County, Kan. Coldest Night of Season Due The Pontiac area is headed for its coldest night of the season tonight with temperatures expected to plunge to 5 to 12. Snow’is also on the way. t New snow is forecast for the Pontiac area the next two days. The weatherman predicts colder with occasional snow flurries through Saturday. ★ ★ 4r West to northwesterly winds at 12 to 22 miles per hour this morning will become 15 to 28 miles late today then diminish a little tonight. Temperatures dropped from 32 At midnight to 18 at 8 a.m., a new low for the season. At 2 p.m. the mercury stood at IT; News Flash CHICAGO (UPI)—A Criminal Court judge today ordered that the trial of Richard Speck on charges of slaughtering eight nurses be held outside Chicago. See earlier story on Page D-ll. Area Man on Ill-Fated Freighter By JOE MULLEN A Waterford Township man was one of the 28 seamen who apparently perished when the freighter Daniel J. Morrell sank In a Lake Huron storm Tuesday. Presumed dead is Ernest G. Marcotte, of 2210 Rosewood. ★ ★ * Marcotte, 62, apparently died on what was- planned as his final voyage before retirement. The ship’s third mate, Marcotte was one of 29 crew members aboard the Bethlehem Steel Co.-owned vessel when it left Lackawanna, N.Y., Saturday. Only one of the crew members has been found aflve since the Morrell split during a raging storm and went to the bottom of the lake. ★ e if Dermis Hale was found 34 hours after the sinking as a Coast Guard helicopter spotted him huddled under the bodies of three fellow crewmen mi a raft In the lake. * * * The neat Marcotte brick ranch home was for sale and he and his wife Ruthie presum-• ably planned to relocate in Alpena after the sale of the house. They had lived there eight years. Both were interested in guns and usually were hi the Alpena area at this time of year deer hunting. ★ ★ s A crewman on the Great Lakes since 1924, Marcotte actually held a rating of first mate but was acting third mate on the fateful voyage. VIRGIL A. BOYD 24M?S Ml WSTIMS i his wife, he is survived by four stepchildren, Mrs. Josephine Kline of Pontiac, Clayton Beach of Swartz Creek, Sylvester Meeley and Mrs. Loretta Bloss. Also surviving are a sister, Mrs. Alfred LaForest of Detroit, and 16 grandchildren. School Study Given Challenge By PAT McCARTY Citizens committed to investigating the equality of educational opportunity in Pontiac schools last night were challenged to make their study both broad and deep. „ They received a pledge of full cooperation from school officials and were told their study is to be more intensive than any pre- ID LOOK AT SCHOOLS — Discussing intergroup relations in Pontiac schools are (from toft) John T. Rogers, chairman of the citizens coopittee that will Investigate equality of educational opportunity in the district; Monroe M. Osmun, school board chairman; mid Julian Cook, committee vice chairman. The three were ffhnfti officials and citizens who attended the committee’s organizational meeting last night. vious review of intergroup relations in the district. “What we’re really delving into is the question of honesty — the honesty of the school board and administrators,” chairman John T. Rogers said. “How do tile facts square with their pronouncements?” The organizational meeting of the Pontiac School District Citizens’ Study Committee of Equality of Educational Opportunity was attended by 33 persons appointed by the board. Committee membership, including additional representatives of groups which have not yet submitted nominees, is expected to number about 50. r GREATER SCOPE Its scope is “far more intensive, covering a far greater area” than that of the school district’s human relations committee, Rogers said in answer to the questions of several persons. Rogers, an attorney, also serves as chairman of the human relations committee established by the bond IV*' years ago. Charles M. Tucker Jr., president of the Oakland County -chapter of the National Assoda-, tion for the Advancemeptof Col- \ ored People, sots ana of those to question the apparent duplica-tion of purposes. He asked if the new committee bad not bean formed “on the (Continued on Pago 2, Col 4) ESCAPES DEATH—Dennis Hale, 26, of Ash- apwiiWmao tabula, Ohio, shown here .with his family, sur- the’bodies of three shipmates who died from ex- vived the sinking Tuesday of th^Treighter Daniel posure. With Hale and his wife Bertha, 29, is J. Morrell in Lake Huron. Hale was plucked from their son Billy, 10, and their daughters (from a life raft yesterday. He was found lying beneath left) Cathy, 4, Cindy, 6, and Debbie, 8. Only One Crewman Is Found Alive HARBOR BEACH, Mich. (AP) — When Dennis Hale signed on the freighter Daniel J. Morrell, it was reluctantly and witii a 'Tear of Great Lakes storms. \ “He was'awful scared about storms,” said his wife, Bertha. “He was always afraid.’* Bat Hale was the lucky one —he survived. At least 12 of his sailing mates perished when the Morrell split during a raging storm and plunged to the bottom of Lake Huron. ★ ★ '★ Sixteen other crewmen were missing. THE WHEELSMAN ‘ One of the dead recovered by the Coast Guard was Charles H. Fosbender, 42, wheelsman on the Morrell. Only a few hours earlier, Fosbender’s wife, Jan, of St. Clair, had received a letter from him. With the coming end of the shipping season, he wrote: “If our luck holds with us, it will be our last trip.” ★ ★ Arthur I.- Crawley,47, of Rocky Riyer, Ohio, the bachelor captain of the Morrell, had held !> similar view. CALLED RELATIVES Hie vessel had completed its Voyage to Buffalo, N.Y., when Crawley telephoned relatives in Rocky River. “He had thought that was Ms last trip,” said Crawley’s brother, Joha. “But he told ns they were going up again far another load.” Hale was rescued 34 hours after the Morrell went down in freezing temperatures. A Coast Guard Helicopter found him huddled under three bodies on a raft eight mills' northeast of here. ★. k k He was suffering from exposure. A priest administered last rites. ‘ DOCTORS HOPEFUL, Doctors said they expected the deck watchman, hospitalised here, to pull through. »\ Mfs. Hale said for husband, • onetime Ashtabula hotel chef, had been reluctant to join the crew of the Morrell three years ago because of the dangers. But he signed on anyway. 7 DEBRIS FROM SHIP — Coast Guardsman Roy Dalzell sorts through life jackets and a lifesaver from the ill-fated freighter Daniel J. Morrell that were picked up floating in Lake Huron today. Fourteen bodies of crewmen from the ship have been recovered along with one survivor. No trace of the Morrell has been found other than small pieces of debris floating in the lake. At Pay Hearing Warren Airs City Finances More than two hours of testimony by City Manager Joseph A. Warren yesterday brought to an end the formal presentation of evidence in the police-city fact-finding hearing. •k k\ ★ • Following Warren’s discussion of the city’s financial picture, State Labor Mediation Board-appointed examiner Harry N. Casselman set Dec. 15 as the next meeting date for the two groups. In- the interim, Casselman said, he would study the city’s preliminary budget along with other exhibits introduced by both city and police representatives. Yesterday’s session, the third since Casselman initiated the hearings Nov. 9, followed the pattern of the two previous meetings. Attorneys for the Pontiat Police Officers Association (PPQA) again sought to establish existence of unappropriated surplus monies in the city treasury. " Warren admitted to n surplus of roughly (850,008 in the sewage collection and disposal fund. Transfer of the monies, however, Warren nidi, would in- volve a “considerable” policy change on the part of the City Commission. “It would be extremely hard for me to recommend (such a transfer),” Warren told the hearing. The city manager had previously died city budget policy in opposing sale of city-owned lands to finance a police pay raise. ★ *.'*■ An unappropriated surplus of between $750,000 and $1 million in the dty’s general fund has several times been defended by Warren and City Attorney Philip (Continued on Page 2, Col 3) In Today's Press Aren News D-10 Astrology E-6 Bridge T E-6 Crossword Puzzle .. F-ll Comics E-6 Editorials ..A-8 Food Section ... D-2-D-3 Markets F4. Obituaries F-4 Sports E-l—E-4 Theaters ..... F-* TV-Radio Programs F-ll Wilson, Earl .... ...Ml Women’s Pages . B-l-B-7 Hale was reported in good condition at a hospital. “The- weird thing” about the 12,500-ton Morrell, said a Coast Guard spokesman, was “There was no distress signal.|| NO SOS . Winds up to 60 miles an hour and waves 25 feet high lashed See Related Stories, Pictures, Pages A-2, D-9, D-72 the Morrell and she apparently sank without radioing an SOS. Not since the freighter Carl D. Bradley sank Nov. 18, 1958, have so many crewmen of n a freighter died on the Greit Lakes. The Bradley lost 33 of its 33 crewmen when it plunged to the bottom of Lake Michigan during a similar storm. Like the Morrell, tiie Bradley was as tong as two football fields. ★ * ★ Ten crewmen of the limestone carrier Cedarville died in May 1965 when the vessel sank during a storm (n the Straits of Mackinac. WORST TRAGEDY But the worst in a long history of Great Lakes tragedies was 53 years ago when 19 ships plunged to the bottom in- a five-day November storm. An estimated 250 sailors died. The last time anybody reported hearing from the Morrell was at 12:15 a.m. Tuesday when she transmitted a routine message giving her position as 25 miles north of Harbor Bead. The Morrell was bound north for Taconlte Harbor, Minn., from Cleveland, Ohio. The freighter had Only ballast in her holds. Two hours before she sank, the freighter G. A. Tomlinson passed the Morrell and saw nothing wrong. BODY SPOTTED A day and a half later, at 1:12 p.m. yesterday, the motor vessel G. G. Post spotted and recovered the first body. The next three bodies were found by the Tomlinson. , “All were floating face down,” said Cap). Joseph Fitch of the Tomlinson. “All had on life jackets with Morrell markings. They were in a space of about a mile,” The disaster occurred during the same storm that broke apart a grounded German vessel, the Nordmee, about 80 miles north of the Morrell, and which grounded a car ferry off Lading-ton in Lake Michigan. Marine Probe Is Urged in Ship Disaster CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -Rear Adm. Charles Ughe, commander of the U.S. Coast Guard 9th District with headquarters here, recommended today that a marine board of investigation he formed to investigate the sinking of the ore carrier Daniel J. Morrell in Lake Huron. A spokesman at headquarter^ said the recommendation, which went to Adm. Willard J. Smith, the Coast Guard commandant in Washington, indicates the sinking is regarded is a major marine, disaster. He said that normally the closest marine official would make the investigation. A marine board of investigation would be composed of met) \ of higher rank than tiie official who normally investigates \ marine disasters, the spokesman said. ' Tighe said his recommendation was based on a preliminary investigation of the fKte available in toe Morrell A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 Record Defections in Viet Cong Ranks . SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) - U.S. officials today reported a new peak in defections from the ranks of the Viet Cong. They said 2,505 returnees' came over to the Allied side in November for the monthly total since the chieu hoi — open arms — program was launched nearly four years ago. The previous high was 2,082 last February. At the same time, the U.S. Command reported a rise in American and enemy war casualties last week, while Vietnam- ese headquarters reported drop in casualties among government forces. In other developments, highflying B52 bomber? pounded Viet Cong positions only 27 miles from Saigon. On the ground, Hghting died down after a one-day spurt. U.S. headquarters disclosed two new ground operations were under way involving American infantrymen and one new action by Australian troops. The U.S. air offensive over North Viet Nam continued at a low pace as it has for the last three weeks because of rainstorms and generally' foul weather. ★ ★ ★ The U.S. Command reported American troop strength in Viet Nam reached 361,000 by last Saturday, an increase of 1,000 men over the previous week. The record number of , Viet Cong defectors reported for November also- exceeded a five-week high of 2,336 in March, U.S. officials said. Mostly Unpleasant November Held Surprises i Like Pandora’s box, November held many surprises for Oakland County residents. From an innocuous beginning of sunshine Nov, 1, a j late afternoon drizzle turned into the season’s first snowstorm of file year dumping nearly seven inches of the j white stuff in the next 48 hours. Another storm blew in from the north Nov. 28f j with winds of 25 to 40 miles per hour and a total snowfall of six Inches in 48 hours. " | Only eight days of sunshine were sprinkled through | die month which brought a total rainfall of 2.57 inches and a total snowfall of 13 inches. ★ ★ ★ This compares to a total rain and snowfall of 3.40 inches chalked up for November 1965. TEMPERATURES Temperature high.for the month was 60 degrees,on Nov. 8 and 9. The mercury slid to the month’s low of 21 degrees Nov. 28. High and low for November 1965 were 39.2 and 24. I The monthly mean of 39.55 was slightly lower than the area’s expected normal mean of 40.4. City Manager Testifies at Pay Hearing (Continued From Page One) A. Rowston as needed for “payroll and operating Casselman yesterday questioned, however ^whether the city would be able to transfer funds “for a short period” to meet police wage demands. The PPOA is asking for a $1,276 annual raise in addition to longevity benefits. City representatives, in t h e >urse of file hearing, also have cited the Pontiac Finance ■ Committee as seeking a long-range solution to Pontiac’s budget problems. ★ ★ ★ The committee, composed of civic and agency representatives as well as businessmen, is reported to be considering,recommendation of an increase in the city’s current property tax rate of 10 mills on the general fund. FREIGHTER THAT SANK - This is the 600-foot Daniel J. Morrell which broke up and sank in Lake Huron Tuesday. The ore freighter, b&sed in Cleveland, carried a crew AP Wlraphsto of 33 men. A lone' survivor was found clinging to a liferaft near Harbor Beach yesterday. ' -» Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND ViClNITY-Cloudy, windy and turning cold today with occasional snow flurries and falling temperatures. Much colder tonight with occasional snow Jlurries. Lows 5 to 12. Friday considerable cloudiness and cold with «w-<-a»tnnnl snow flurries likely. West to northwesterly winds at 12 to 22 mtlpf per hour this morning and northwest winds 15 to 28 miles this afternoon diminishing a little tonight. Outlook for Saturday continued cold with possible snow flurries. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today 50, tonight 60, Friday 40. Wednesday In Pentlac (a* recorded dstgratewn)' temperature ............ 34 Lowest temperature .............27 temperature .............. 31 titer: Partly tunny Sun rise* Friday at 7:43 ajn. Moon eats Friday at 12:03 pun. Moon rttea Thursday at 0:12 pJn. , Oowntown Temperatures Wednesday's Temperature Chart , tf S Detroit 31 W Etcanaba 33 -1 Duluth Or. Rapids 40 II' Jacksonville 44 33 Houghton 28 i Kansas City 44 22 Lansing 37 17 Los Angeles 71 S3 -------— 33 .j Miami Beach 70 50 m 40 14 Milwaukee 32 10 New Orleans 47 33 i C. 3S 0 New York M M so 31 Omaha 27 10 SI 30 Phoenix 71 44 * -0 Pittsburgh 44 34 St. Louis 42 14 Salt Lake C. 34 30 S. S. Merle MATimiAf. WEATHER—Snow and snow flurries are in wight tooigbt for northern New England, Great Lakes, Ohio Pwiiay and higher elevations of the Rockies. Rain is ex-pf-HUnthe Pacific Northwest. It will be very cold in the Mritan Habit and upper Mississippi Valley. Birmingham'Area News Firm Rents Original Art^Wdrk BIRMINGHAM - Offices and homes can add to their decor by renting original arti work from the Art Rental and Sales Service at the Birmingham Art Center, 1518 S. Cranbrook. ★ ♦ ★ Starting'Sunday, the front gallery at the center will contain a rotating show of available work. Included are more than 100 paintings, graphics, sculpture and weaving. ★ * * Works may be rented for periods of from one to four months. Rental fees are deductible from the purchase price. day his hours will be 2 to, 5 p.in. and 6 to 8 p.m. On Dec. 9, he will be there from 1 to 5 p.m. and from 6 to 8 p.m. \ Other hours are 10 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 pm. Dec. 10; 1 to 5 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. Dec. 12 through Dec. 16; 10 a.m. to noon and 1 Jo 5 p.m. Dec. 17; 1 to 5 p.m. and 6 to ^ p.m. Dec. Pontiac Pratt Photo ARTISTS AND THEIR WORK - Artists pose with a sample of the work which can be rented through the Birmingham Art Center’s Art Rental and Sales Service. They are Donald F. Snyder (left), sculptor in residence at the Bloomfield Art Association, and Laurence Barker, head of the graphics department at the Cranbrook Academy of Art. Santa Claus will usher in the Christmas season when he arrives in the area Saturday. Abandoning, his sleigh and reindeer for the more practical helicopter, he will arrive at Shain Parti at 4 p.m. and stay there uptil 5:30 p.m. Next Tuesday through Thurs- Broad School Study Is Urged (Continued From Page One) direct suggestion of the (Michigan) Civil Rights Commission” because of the previous lack of investigation of racial problems. Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer said the Civil Rights Commission«had investigated a number of complaints in Pontiac and had proposed establishmei of the committee shortly after parent-pupil demonstration at Eastern Junior High School last spring.. Charges of discriminatory discipline practices toward Negro pupils were dramatized when parents and pnpils picketed the s c h o o 1 briefly last June. In retaliation, two-thirds of the school’s faculty did not go to work for two days. Opening Statements Due in Cheyz Bribery Trial Quint Suffers Setback, Not Likely to Live PITTSBURGH, Pa. (AP) Sg Roni Sue, the surviving Aranson quintuplet, suffered a convulsion today and her doctor said he feare«r“she will not live. ‘Roni Sue had a very bad night,” Dr. Lee Bass, the infant’s pediatrician, announced shortly before noon. “Her condition is very grave. ★ ★ ★ “Until about 6 a.m. she was toing very well,” the doctor ‘but at about that time she had i convulsion that lasted for a short time. * ★ ★ ‘The convulsion along with the breathing difficulties that are now present make it almost certain that there is, brain damage now," he added. ‘OUTLOOK POOR* Then Bass, who earlier had said he was hopeful the 5-day-old child could surmount the many medical problems facing her, said: The outlook for life is very poor. It is the feeling now that she will not live.” ★ ★ ★ About 75 per cent of Roni Sue’s blood was exchanged Wednesday in an attempt ,to check a jaundice condition that doctors said! could lead to brain The school board managed to come to t$rms with both parents and teachers. Rogers noted that the human relations committee is an on-go-v lng organization while the study committee will be dissolved after it presents a detailed, written report to the school board. He admitted that the human relations committee’s “follow-through on recommendations has been very bad, very sluggish.” The group’s material* are to be made available to the study cpmmittee. School board member Dr, Robert Turpin added that the Civil Rights Commission and State Board of Education also I be called upon for resources, along with other s cies. A jury of nine men and five women today began hearing the case against White Lake Town-Supervisor Edward Cheyz, accused of conspiring to bribe and bribery by the Oakland County Grand Jury. Members of the jury panel were selected late yesterday afternoon, and then sent home until 10 a.m. today when opening statements were to be made. Asst. Prosecutor James Roberts had no preemptory challenges of the jurors, while* Cheyz* attorney, Joseph Loui-sell, requested that wily two be excused. Before deliberation begins on a verdict, the 14-member jury will be reduced to the normal 12 through the drawing of lots. The tiro additional jurors act as a safeguard from delays if any of the members are absent because of sickness. The charges against Cheyz were brought in April by one-man Grand Juror Philip Pratt. ★ * ★ The 39-year-old township supervisor allegedly was involved in^a bribe whereby he would use his influence to have a parcel of property rezoned for an apartment project. Probe Resumes DETROIT (AP) - Wayne County’s one-man grand jury continued its probe Wednesday into the Detroit suburb of Ham-tramck. George E. Bowles, the grand juror, called John Kry-ckowski, a Hamtramck school board member, to testify. Kry-ckowski said he understood other board member^ have been subpoenaed. Earlier, Bowles heard testimony from Ham-itramck policemen. r Afterward, Bass said, “Despite the risk of the transfusion, the baby did quite good and took the procedure quite fcood. We are hopeful of a suc-| cessful recovery.” — STUDY COORDINATORS The school board has named John F. Perdue, its community-school and human relations director, coordinator of the study. Perdue said he has held several meetings with Civil Rights Commission representatives and that they were involved in file selection of study committee members, who represent a cross section of organizations and interests. He emphasized that the purpose of the study is twofold. The committee is to report to the board-on the strengths and weaknesses it discovers in the system, making proposals for improvements. . * ★ ★ However, its report also is to be made public so that other citizens are informed of the situation, Perdue noted. In answer to a question from Lawrence Beamer, president of the Pontiac Education Association, Perdue said the committee was not organized to “cap an explosive situation but to look at the system before there is an explosion.” Rogers has appointed attorney Julian Cook to serve as his vice chairman. He also announced that he had named acting chairmen for four subcommittees. ★ I *• * They are George Googasian, pupil distribution and characteristics; Charles Harrison Jr., employment distribution and personnel policies; Thomas Fowlfer Jr., school organization, curriculum and special services; and William Beianey, climate of relationships in the school and community. The group’s second meeting was scheduled for 7:30 p.m. next Wednesday at Lincoln Junior High School. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. SIMMS Weekead Drag and Cosmetic Discounts1 We must reserve thp right to limit quantities, DRUGS and COSMETIC DISCOUNTS ] 19 through Dec. 23; and 10 to noon and 1 to 5 p.m.'Dec. 24. Dieiorf Icy Road onsVILLE (AP) - J a m e s Feltz, 41, , of Coluihbiaville was killed Wednesday in a two-car collision on an icy road southeast of Otisville. The Unusual Gift From SIMMS Cost You Much Less —Hera’s Proof. Shop ’em Now-_. DRUG DEPT. DISCOUNTS ’GENERAL ELECTRIC’ One-Stop Heat ’n Serve Baby Dish No more fust with hot woter and no extra pots and pans ... Pink 788 ’GENERAL ELECTRIC’ 1 Manicure Setsi New, elegant ensemble gives quick and ec ’venient nail care. Nail shaper, cuticle brush,, I cuticle pusher, buffer and callus smootli Long cofd ranches fool and hand easily. A Ton Year Around SPEKTl Portable Sun Lamp $19.95 1*788 Seller 1 § As shown — portable adjustable tun lamp concentrates rays for maximum intensity and coverage. With 425-watt light, protective goggles and cord. Alt New R0NS0N ELECTRIC Hair Brash 24“ $29.95 Siller As shown — rotary brush styles, stimulates hair gives 100 brush strokes in -seconds. Famous Ronson brush with full guarantee. Clean Your Tooth Just Like The Dentist DUAL-PICK’ Tooth Cleaning Aid ^27® 8 The new way to clean teeth and gums . . . ideal for hard to reach placet! Genuine 'lodent* oral-pick . . .a new dental hygiene aid. « ‘Saunda’ Facial Sauna Fpr a More Lovely Complexion 29“ A significant new system utilizing misty clouds of warm vapor to help ^produce a smooth, lively and complexion. Sectricq! unit. SIMMS..','!, glowing g unit. V |iJ * THE PONTIAC TRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 A—8 . Open Everyday 9a.m. to tOp.m. 'til Christmas Every Gift Under Your Tree Will Cost Less If You Get ’em At SIMMS .. ’Cause We Guarantee Cut-Prices - Even At Christmas Save On ICE SKATES at SIMMS Compare Simms prices on comparable items anywhere and you'll see what we mean, that our prices stay cut even at Christmas. Many stores get their highest prices of the year during Christmas, but at Simms we still sell for less because more people buy and we are happy doing millions of dollars in business with profits in pennies. All specials good this weekend and all prices subject to stocks on hand. We also reserve the right to limit all quantities. Main Floor SUNDRY DISCOUNTS Gifts for Seieneo Students - Hobbyists 90QX-Z00M Microscope Complete Compact Lab Figure and Hockey Skates » Your Choice • Girls’ White Figure e Children’s White Figure e Boys’ Black Figure e Boys’ Hockey Skates ed. dll metal Include! real frog 4-TURRET 600X MICROSCOPE -action book 4-TURRET T50X Microscope Book, extra slides, dissecting kits 4-TURRET 1200X Microscope With zoom lens, instructions BIOLOGY LAB STARTER KIT With scalpel and preserved frog ott-Johnson or Arco skates in girls' end chlldr ; figure in sizes 11 to 6. Insulate style in sizes 12 • 13 - 1 ■ 2 only I Girls’ and Ladies' Figure Skates White Hi-Style Sf97 Men’s Tubular Hockey Skates Choice of men's tubular hockey skates O *9 or black figure'Skates. Leather lined in • Sizes 7 to 12. Ladies’ Insulated Figure Skates Better-figure style skofes ore insulated for Ch *7 warmth while skating. Sizes 5 - 6 - 9 - IQ only ® Regular $10.95 value, w Kids’ DoublrRunner Skates 388 Genuine 'Arco' double runngr skates for the beginning youngsters. ’With leather uppers. Sizes 10 to 2. -Basement SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT ‘Royal Traveler’ I by SAMSONITE bUggCIgV giving c lining, comfort grip handles. Mode by ____________ —Basement LADIES' WEAR $25 Ladies’ Beauty 1 WJO Case 11 $21.f0 Ladies’ 21” overnite.... .. 19” $12.50 Ladies’ 24” Pullman.... .22” $27.50 Man’s 21" Companion.. .. 19** $12.50 Men’s 24” Companion.. 22” $42.50 Pullman 25” Goto 29” $42.55 Mon’t 2-Suitor eaao.... .29” 545 Lodioa* Wardrobe...... .28°° yourself. Long-wearing vinyl. The Warmest Gift You Can Give i.. LACIES’ FLANNEL Pajamas and Gowns Scwns sizes 38 to 40... 1" Gowns tint 42 to 44... 189 2»» Gowns liio* N to S2... Cuddly worm cotton flonnel, full cut for comfort, first c.uoliry, with lace trim. Delicate flower prints and pastel pink or blue. Size $2 to 40 Pajamas 2"» Washable Orion Acrylic Girls’ Sweaters Your choice of hi bulk orlon knit or soft turbo knit. Cardigan style. *!&)} ruffle neck. Sizes 3 to 14. —Main Floor ■V ' A-—# THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY; DECEMBER 1, 1966 Assorted Style WOMEN'S ROBES Reg. 15.00 $090 and 16.00 O Choice of quilt or flooco nylon robot in several stylo*. Size* S-M-L. Charge Jt. Lingerie... Second Floor blouses in print* art. ghffti _ WM -)| fr... Third floor ! Fine Wale Corduroy • BOYS'SLACKS Reg. • *) . $C00 I 3.99 Im for J Completely washable corduroy slacks in fine. wale. With belt .loops. Sizes 6 to 18. Charge It. Boytwear... Second Floor Zipper Opening . GARMENT BAG$| • Womens Famous ftrana; If Perfect 4.00 ' $W*. an# 500 VvV Shght^negulors fotbw^jtt^erendpeoty Foundation^.'. v Second Floor Suburbia Style CAR COATS Reg. 25.00 $1 "790 to 29.99 I / Suede and corduroy with pile trim, lined, and t‘elf trims. Sizes 8 to 18. Charge-It. % ■ Coatt... Third Floor 7 2.00 Large size Sturdy, washable with a damp cloth.4-; Chbose from assorted colots ‘'lU~ ' 1 Soitont. .. Sfr»u»t Floor , , %JL.' J m>«Lt STRETCH SLACKS Women's Famous Brand rl' \ Jphfte Cotten ;i «6YTCRfW^CiCKS ■*of* wfcftst cotton *«fc* w»ft ^Sfrtd e (■Mill7 * M ¥ |. . SecondFtoor Choice of several styles in famous maker brat. First quality and tome tUght irregulars. Charge It at Waite's. Foundationt;.. Second Floor Sporittcrrti-Thirdi'iteF* iiPlis GIRLS' BLOUSflfr’ S» Sill 100% Visual Quilted Nylon BOYS' SKI PARKA Reg. $A99 10.99 \J Reversible with concealed hood. Toosty warm for winter play on ice or snow. Sizes 6 to 18. Charge Yours at Waite's. Boytwear.. .SecondFloor Sizes 5 to 15 Junior WINTER COATS Reg. 29.99 $0£< to 39.99 AJ Junior and petite junior warm winter coatt i and solids. Sizes 5 to 15. Coat*... Third Floor WahI LAelt/vn Mfg. Close-Out GIRLS' KNIT TOPS Reg. 3.00 O H $Q25 to 5.00 £m for O Reg. 49.99 $0000 to 59.99 . vQ ' Tweeds, soli#*, and novelties, in wool winter Coats 1$, - >.* /.if'-ti Third Floor f , Fine quality knit tops In solids or stripes. Several collar styles. Sizes 7 to 14. Charge yours at Waite's. Girltwear... Second Floor —__I , Famous Brand SKIRTS, SWEA1TO, JUMPERS jWxOnd match girts’ Or solid tweeter*, $*«* 3 to $x«nd? I» 44. Charge If 4- ^4 ' % i«v'v GirltWetcr.., Second Floor V'.JV , Assorted Style GIRLS' SWEATERS Reg. 4.99 $066 to 6.99 'O Choice of cardigans and pullover*. Wool and wool blends. 100% orton. Sizes 7 to 14. Charge It at Waite's. 4birlncear... Second Floor Permanent Popes GIRLS' SLIPS f 1 ■ ■ $23*i Your Choice ALTEST TOILETRIES Reg. 99c to $1.75 / D Choose from night cream, moisturizer, or freshener. Charge yours at Waite's. Cotmelict.., Street Floor IRK Size 7 to 14 GIRLS' DRESSES Reg. 6.00 $C00 to 9.00 *J Choose from a wide assortment of famous maker girls' dresses. Charge It. Girltwear... Second Floor Girltwear ... Second Floor ' * .Proportioned Ijjwj Hxtsla^sI j amtVrfdowate ca^WrtttKk* In west* 1 Floor Slight Irregular* LADIES' HOSIERY If Perfect 1.35 A Pr. $1 to 1.50 pr. H for. I Choose from several beautiful shades in the* fashion hot*. w Hotiery. •. Street Floor Womens Better GOWNS, SLEEPWEAR Reg. 8.95 $C97 to 10.95 Beautiful selection of nylon overlay gowns in short i waltz lengths. Sizes S-M-L. Charge It at Waite's. Lingerie... Second Floor Women'* Vi Children's Winter MITTENS and GLOVES Reg. 1.99 $100 and 2.99 , r I Choice of 'several stylet in toasty warm mittens < glove*. Charge It at Waite's. Children’twear... Second Floor fispWri Women's Nylon \ PANTIES ij£,i ?*oV 2 I 97e Choice of white or colors in band leg or elastic leg briefs. Size* 5 to 8. Lingerie.. .Second Floor Large Assortment JEWELRY Pins, bracelets, or earrings. Gold, silver, finished. ■ Charge Yours at Waite's. Jewelry... Street Floor £ as . Needs More Patriotism—Dirksen WASHINGTON (AP) Everett M. Dirksen says what this country needs is a patriotic rebirth. Dirksen, 70, ruminated at a press conference Wednesday to marie the issuanch of a record he made cm American history. *TAI11 hope,” the -Senate Re- publican leader said,-“is that I can make a contribution to the tranquility of my own blessed land. “This dream of liberty and freedom, this glorious tapestry we call America,*’ he intoned. Dirksen said he made a tape recording last year, “Battle Hymn of the Republic” and among other things a piece he wrote titled “Viet Nam anid Flanders Field. “I rather liked it as a matter of fad,” he said. The tape turned into a record, with appropriate musical background. Dirksen said the musk} background was a superb job — “it might have been a little on the loud side. ★ When somebody asked if he intended to challenge the Beatles, Dirksen replied: “Well—if I ( were interested in being knighted by the queen, Wink Short Term LANSING (DPI) - A Muskegon attorney yesterday won election to The 14th Circuit Court bench Tour-week term after convin&ngf state officials that votes cast tor bis father in the same election should go to There are about 800 mills in this country that make wood pulp, paper anq paperboard. U S. Yule Tree Steals Into D.C. WASHINGTON (AP) - A fir tree nicknamed George — chosen and guarded as carefully as a beauty queen — has arrived in i the capital to be the 1966 national Christmas tree. ♦ i ★ Ip secrecy [that would, be a credit to the PHI, George was hidden for 10 days near Wash- ington, being fed and watered for his debut. The 80-year-old 65-footer didn’t drop a needle. BIG WELCOME A hundred federal government, congressional and city officials, bundled against chill winds and snow flurries, welcomed him at the railroad yards Wednesday. Most wanted their picture taken with him. * * ★ George then was installed on the ellipse, an extension of the white House backyard that runs toward the Washington Monument. Within two Weeks, he will be decorated and when a date Is' set, 2,500 lights will be turned \ 1 - HIM | * l. h. . IHHi - - mm sii: Mi SHOP till 9 EVERY NIGHT till CHRISTMAS TERRIFIC SAVINGS THROUGHOUT THE STORE! SPECIAL PURCHASE AND STOCK REDUCTIONS! .dec miMi zwz Imported Begged DOUBLE KNIT DRESSES $38°° Reg. 55.00 to 65.00 3-pc. dresses in misses' sizes. 10-18. Slim skirts, shell, and jackot complete the ensemble. Black, groan, royal,’ gray, and coral. Chargo it. Drettet... Third Floor Tufted Corduroy chair Fads $3°o Reg. 2.00 O | each . JLm for Comfoitablo chair pad* aro completely washable and com* in brown, rqd and gold. Notion* ... Street Floor Misses'and Half Size WOMEN'S DRESSES Reg. 12.99 $000 to 14.99 O Street and afternoon, or cocktail drottas, in 1, and 3-pc styles| Charge it. «pr.. Third Floor Wide Assortment WOMEN’S HOUSESLIPPERS Reg. to 8.00 $3®® Junior Sizes CORDUROY SKIRTS Reg. $099 6.99 O Reg. $099 6.99 O Print corduroy skirts in hip huggor stylo. Sizes 7 IS. Charge ft. Sporttwear... Third Floor Choota from a wide assortment of stylos and colon. Not oil sizes. Shoes... Street Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1^1966 A—5 2 Cities Await Word on Bond Issue OKI .fiifii LANSING (AP)—At least______ Michigan cities, which thought they passed bond issues Nov. 8 but now jiren't so sure, are hoping the Legislature can clear up the situation next week. ^" ' ★ -* *■ * The question is whether home-rule cities heed a bare majority or 60 per cent of the vote to pass a bond issue. State law used to require per cent, but that was changed to a majority last March 31. Apparently, the lawmakers accidentally repealed the change May 17 and the requirement went back to 60 per cent Bond issues passed Nov, 8 in Midland and Coldwater with a majority vote — but not with 60 per cent. Officials of the two cities have delayed authorizing { issuance of the bonds. The first bullfight in; Mexico was held on Aug. 13, 1529. LANSING (AP)-k— Dr. I John D. Ryder, dean of Mich-wan State University’s Engineering College, plans to leave next month to spend IB months [helping develop a master plan for higher education in Brazil. Ryder will serve in Rio De Janeiro as- a member of an advisory team sponsored by the Midwest Consortium tat International Studies. ■* Clerk Sldin as Throngs Watch DETROIT (UPI) - It was near dosing time yesterday and throngs of Christmas shoppers, laden with purchases, began leaving the huge downtown department store. •, * \ t '■ * One tall, slender young' man slipped quietly through the coat department on the second flcfcr of the J. L, Hudson Co. store and headed toward the escalator. Minutes later he stabbed a 30-year-old clerk to death and fled with a stolen $185 suede coat. “I'd rather be a live coward than a dead hero,’’ one bystander said, recalling how hundreds of shoppers stood by in hprror as the shoplifter repeatedly stabbed Willisp Fredericks, 30, of Royal Oak. > , ■- We just stood there, then watched him go.” Only 2 per centjof the United States population lived in California in 1900 compared with t per cent in I960. I gi§ : SALES DAYS SORRY, NQ MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS, DELIVERIES ON LARGE ITEMS ONLY. SOME LIMITED QUANTITIES. CHARGE IT. Charge More Now With Smaller Payments Use Waite's New E-X-P-A-N-D-E-D Flexible Charge V < , " "?’r\ A?'' W"’' ^7^ ' 100% Polyester Tricot Men's DRESS SHIRTS : IZ 54M t loo% mkoj the* Ant aXar. White only. Stats WfNMe r ..^Street-hamr’ Men's 100% Nylon Stretch/ DRESS or SPORT HOSE Reg. 1.00 3-*2 00 Choose from either (port or droit hot* in 1 stretch nylon. Noot 1x1 ribs or bulky knit c solid colors. Ono six* fits alk Mentteear ... Street Floor Men's La mbswool V-NECK SWEATERS $788 Reg. 12.95 100% fin* knit lombswool sw*at*rs with saddle shouldor. Sixos S-M-L-XL. Charge Yours at Waite's. Mentteear .. . Street Floor MEN'S SKI PA *r days end {rights elreed S«*r S-M-L-XL ^ ^ ' Jtfe" Memwenr , . . Street Floor First Quality JACQUARD TOWEIS *1** §!§& 59c CHwpmp WMWfUkl + _ % 14 Beautiful Colors Solid COLOR TOWELS 98c 38c 100% cotton torry in a host of colors. Linens ... Fourth Floor Linen CALENDAR TOWELS Reg. 1.00 2 « si 00 Linenj . . . Fourth Floor nsi 11 ||«| DACRONCURTAiNS "J^icial.. far Ctwasa fre» Aw wwtr-HJW, 36. 45. Volanw 2 for S3 00. D«p dry 100% SKreton. ’ '' fSsoFuStt. 'Fsfarth'f&oe 18x30*tiwh Oofid** TrsW * > ANTI-FATIGUE MAT Rag/’ 1,9* Pure foam rubber far the nfted thing gndw two teat. 1 Choose from O.wide tenge of tolar* Use'Ywr;£hpr»«:! Noils . .. Fifth Floor Famous Ambassador 25" COLOR TV Reg. 549.95 $4970° ibinot in 2 stylos. No Monty Down. Easy TV Dept. p.L«ti»r Level Import^ 1 13'/a“ FASHION DOLL 2.1 IHUnnUMt |YL GLOVES $]69 Sracsvt leather like vinyl' glove* with worm fleece * Ti!t% "tl 5~*M*jL / * ; Chwtfh. Yovts di Wort*'* • 1 v;i •-j - * Mentteear... Floors t -> * Famous Maker MEN’S PULLOVER SWEATERS Reg. 11.00 to 17.00 Choice of many stylos In famous maker sweaters. Crew nock, V-nock in solids or plaids and patterns, j Sixes S-M-L-XL. Mentteear . . . Street Floor $990 , Slight Irresulaiii’i; NAPPED THERMAL BLMGET 100% ocr^tc fibor'lw wveral calore. fl/nti^tit.. . Fourth FWr , ' White or Linen LINED DRAPERIES Rgg. 9.99 R<0. 17.99 Rea. 22.99. Reg. 34.99 SWx84 1 Vsx84 DWx84 TWx84 $666 $1166 $1566 $2386 ‘ Solid colors, fully lined. Draperiei. . . Fourth Floor Men's Wash and Wear Cotton Broadcloth PAJAMAS 2 t«r *500 Reg. 2.99 Choose from coat or middy stylos in those coxy warm pajamas for Christmas giving. Sixos A-B-C-D. Charge Yours at Waito's. Mentteear .. . Street Floor ^Assorted Coldr BONDED KNITS /vr%> JhMKHdpdw* *0 bands *i” Large 72x90-lnch Size VALMOR BLEND BLANKET Reg. 6.99 $488 ftobrfcsW. Faterth Fidar - Blankett.. . Fourth Floo 45" Wide BROCADES R*g. 2.00 . R.g 3.00 $]18 $2'8 Many patterns and colors to choose from in those-45" wide brocades for holiday dressos. Fabrics . . . Fourth Floor * - Dacron Filled. ,r „ .HR OlRINT COMFORTfRS we^bt. Chefqe ft, ^ ^ ^ ■•■"V . ■ C fa»»rth Flnorv Choice of Men's BEHER NECKWEAR Reg. 2.50 3 M$4 oo Choose from 100% Silks, 100% Polyesters, or blonds in a wide assortment of stripes, paisleys and undarknots. Charge It. Mentteear . .. Street Floor ’Ctioow From 4 Colon and liratSMTfB : s 1 h” ■ ' ' \ Belleair ACRYLIC BLANKET Reg. 8.99 $6 88 100% acrylic fiber in several colors. 72x90-inch six#. Machine washable and dryoble. Charge It at Waito's. Blankets . . . Fourth Floor -'X ,v Ty^n^rFii^ ^' ’ QUatlDSW«AD$ ■ fe ■>'" ?9 potgatt ■ ; v . - S.. ,,. Fourth flow <4 Battery Operated GIANT CONSTRUCTION SITE $477 Reg. 5.99 Lots of action. For ages 2 to 8. Toyland ... Fifth Floor Assorted Styles HASSOCKS Reg. 7.00 $622 Several styles and colors to choose from In those lovely Christmas gifts. Hattacks-... Fourth Floor 100% Gotten Tsny : -:J^GUAR»W>VW^': I&jS ..»1« »p 49<.<• 4 lovely cobrs to dtwiste in'th«isa"f(M»d»* J. P f toons ... fourth floor Imported Deluxe HORSE and CARRIAGE 00 Reg. 24.95 $21 for boys 6r girls. Use like a pedal car Christmas giving. Toyland .. . Fifth Floor Sj *22100% Sonfc tWto'tm imfr mso iii Solid and Check ACETATE FUNNEL .. :« V4 •*-» M| >morr wwfu ,n mw collar styfog. 5i»s S-M-L-XL Wq^Jtwrs at .Wjgto ■ "v> 4- 0? • ft i MktumoBr... Strem ftoo? Reg. 3.00 197 Reg» to I 2499 h2« 4-Speaker AM/FM Stereophonic CONSOLE 00 Reg. 159.95 $149 53B Dftiifll CARVING SI Fabrics . . . Fourth Floor the with lovely; # - Villon . Fourth Floor \ ’V’h | I ......^..1.. _______ _ MHI WSM 2 stylos to choose from. Listening pleasure for a long time to coma. Choose your now while selection lasts. TV Dept. . . . Lower Level - m 3, $7“ Genuine stag handle with ShrMess *t**l bk)d*s. FQftYOVit v'y/- ° Men's "Super Touch" SPORT SHIRTS Reg. 5.00 3 . $397 Wash and wear brushed rayon flonnal sport shirts in a wide rang# of muted plaids. Sites S-M-L-XL. Charge Yours at Waito's. Mentteear ... Street Floor Springmaid Percale WHITE SHEETS Reg. 3.00 72x108 or Fitted Rag. 3.40 81x108 or Fitted $258 $278 Snow white cotton percale. Fitted Linens ... Fourth Floor Rep. 1.70 $]48 xes have elastic S yi!^. 54.95 Com.^ste with dlsposal^e -bags yaersMMoMy Chorg# hi B i|: v | '*$- sStpfi** a 12 to 30-Cup Fully Automatic WEST BEND PERCOUTOR Special $Q99 Shuts off automatically when coffee it brewed. The ideal thing for the holidays ahead. Charge It at Waito's. . Housewares . . . Lower Level IpNiyair»1 Slight Irregular TERRYTABLECLOTHS Reg. 3.00 Reg. 4.00 Reg. 4.00 S2xS2 52*70 60" Rd. $]68 $2*8 $268 Several prints and colors in no iron terry dotl Charg* It. . Linens .. • Fourth Floor Permanent Press Men's SPORT SHIRTS R«fl* 5.00 $3 97 Dacron and cotton blond sport shirts in regular or Ivy cohort. Sins S-M-L-XL Charge Yawn it Woite's. Mentteear . >. Street Floor T 14.2 Cubic Foot AMBASSADOR REFRIGERATOR Reg. 219.95 ‘187 00 Appliances . . . Isower Level gt Wtfwmjt Campift* eiftt* ^ . t .’‘tester ^ Imported Linen PRINT TOWEIS Reg. l.OO 2».r^l00 I Several prints in several colors for Christmas giving. Charg* It. Linens ... Fourth Floor Imported 7-Pc. CRYSTAL SALAD SET Reg. 12.98 $588 ,#a., Yourebt Waite's. Housewares .. . Lower Level THE PONTIAC PRESS 9 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 * THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 Hueu A. FxtkcdaU) Howard H. Fitrgerald, II Chairman of the Board President and Publisher , John W. Rntwu John A. Rltkr ARM McCouy Executive Viet President Secretary and Advertising Circulation Manager and Editor Director Harrt J. Ren Rxcharh M. Fitzgerald G. Marshall Jodoan Managing Editor ^easurer and Finance Local Advertising Manager Cheer City’s Fast Snow Removal In our complex and highly specialized society, individual welfare is dependent in large part upon the .Work and ministrations of others. The advent of winter heralded by a couple of snowstorms of disruptive severity serves to remind us of the superb job done whiter after winter by DPW supervisors and workers clearing our streets of clogging snow. This army of civil caretakers is out in force at the first indication of a developing snowstorm, speedily clearing and de-icing primary traffic. routes before attacking feeder, roadways. It goes without saying that much of this yeoman service is performed during night hours, under conditions that would quickly drive an Eskimo to cover, while John Q. Public is comfortably wrapped In slumber. The Press renders a grateful salute to those whose devotion to duty keeps the wheels turning in an essential area of public service. Help Yourself by Helping the Handicapped There are an estimated 5.5 million mentally retarded persons In the United States. More than 2 million of them are of employable age. Many think of the mentally retarded person as someone unable to hold a job or contribute to.the pro-, ductive stream of life. In reality, less than 5 per cent of the mentally retarded require institutional care. The majority can lead happy, productive lives if given the opportunity. A growing number of business firms is cooperating with the government and various other agencies ti> help provide employment for the ipen tally handicapped. ★ ★ ★ This trend toward industry-* government cooperation in providing jobs and opportunities for the retarded is producing tangible results. A major chain organization in the variety retailing field has sent a thoughtful guide to all local store managers to be Urge U& Take Off on Final proposal for a supersonic transport have been submitted to the Government by two,major American aircraft manufacturers. ★ ★ ★ In the words of U.S. Senator Mrici Monronet, “If the U.S. does not build an SST, our airlines will have to buy them from abroad. This compounds the loss to the economy. The effect on the national balance of trade ... and the gold flow could well exceed $50 billion. And you can’t calculate how much of an indirect boost to the economy a successful SST program would represent ... in terms of employment ... in taxes ... in all the other economic fringe benefits that come used in job placement of the mentally retarded. Based on previous experience with these people, the president of the company wrote his store executives : ‘‘We discovered that the employment of such people; while a social responsibility of business, is likewise good business too, for they may actually be better qualified for certain types of work than are more, normal persons. Moreover, none can dispute the economic soundness of changing the status of a person from that of a charge on society to a wage-earning, taxpaying citizen.” Retail distribution offers excellent opportunities for all kinds and types of people. It is appropriate that the chain stores, which have led in merchandising innovations that have brought substantial benefits to consumers and a steady advance in living standards, should now take the lead in widening the horizons of employment for the handicapped. Supersonic Transport from infusion of billions of dollars into the economic cycle.” Moreover, in t h e oninion of Juan T. Trippe, chairman of Pan American World Airways, “When many hundreds of millions of men and women are being taught—brainwashed, if you will—to hate America, nothing is more necessary than personal relationships between people everywhere w.. This is a newjob for air transportation overseas.” Few will question that a successful, American-built supersonic transport is vital to the continuance of United States air supremacy, and to the role our international airlines are playing*in developing commerce and good-will between peoples of all nations. GOP Wounds May Be Reopened By james Marlow Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - After the Republican gains id last month’s elections in Congress and in the states—the party naturally’ perked up and began dreaming of the possibility of winning the presidency in 1968. With the Democrats in a bit of disarray, with President Johnson losing popularity, and with toe chance the war in Viet Nam might last two years more, Republicans began thinking big about that next i election. It could be their best chance in yetfs. But eyen toe sunniest among them know that any real chance depended on melting the antagonism between the light wing and the . moderate and liberal Republicans, the ppposita has just happened. > * * The presidential try of the right wing’s hero. Sen. Barry GoMwater, was a disaster In 1964. Now, Michigan’s Gov. George Romney, elected to a third term this month, was the Republican front-runner in the polls. LEFT A WOUND But Romney had refused to support Gold-water in 1964 and this left a wound in the party. Without hill Republican support in 1M, his prospects would, look dim, even if he got toe presidential nomination. ^ » »aw csuld Itba hentod? By «omc salve, perhaps, plus a lot of political maneuvering, political convictions, and perhaps large doses of political expediency. But with the Republican nominating convention still more than a year and a half away, the Republicans seemed to have plenty of time to doctor themselves. ★ ★ ★ Then a little more than two weeks ago, Goidwater said that, while he wasn’t closing toe door on Romney, the Michigan governor had a lot of “homework” to do with party leaders for not endorsing Goidwater in 1964. PAST CATCHES UP But on the same day, Romney said, “I am not interested in going back and taking a look at toe past.” Then, this week, the past caught up with both men, but hardly in a way to take toe pain out of that wound of two years ago. The New York Times published a let-' ter Romney sent GoMwater six weeks after toe 1964 election; although no one so far among toe Republicans his admitted being the one who gave the Times toe letter. Romney’s letter was in response to one from Goidwater plainly expressing the latter’s irritation, if not anger, over Romney’s failure to endorse him. ★ it ir , . “Where were you, George,” Goidwater asked, “when the chips were down and the going was bard?” Romney’s letter was a 12-page explanation of his position and, in the process, was a complaint and a criticism of GoMwater and of extremism. MARLOW flglSj Because It's There! David Lawrence Says: Truce Violations Are an Issue Voice of the People: Seek Help in Promoting A Chib for Teen-Agers Parents, are you making a quick judgment of your teen-agers? Da you provide adequate recreation and stimulating activities for them or do you just want them “out of the way?’’ Have yotl forgotten you were a teen yourself? Did you feel let down, rejected, unwanted, when you heard people talk about you and /your friends? Let’s not let our teens feel this way. Let’s give them tile opportunity to grow into respected and responsible adults. We wish to give them our support by forming^ club for them, put we need your help, support, and prayers; Let’s show our teens we do care. MR. AND MRS. HOWARD L. WHITED MR. AND MRS. TOM SKUSE 239 STATE STREET, APARTMENTS 1 AND 2 Agrees Sunday Should Not Be Working Day I certainly agree with “non-Sunday shaper.” God gave us 6 days torlabor, and He only asks that we put aside the 7th day for our Sabbath or Lord’s Day to keep that day holy. Sunday employment may fatten toe pocketbook but bring ^ leanness to the sonl. Let us honor toe Lord by dedicating this day to Him. / *■ /BETTY HALE / 3565 OVERTON ‘Need RailroadViadtfct Over Huron Street’ I would like torknow why the railroad does not build a viaduct over Huro/Street. The trains have caused children to be late for school. And suppose someone gets hurt or becomes sick downtown/ the gates were down, they would have to go three blocks down to Orchard Lake Avenue to get to the Hospital. -, viaduct would eliminate traffic jams and do away WASHINGTON - While South Viet Nam and allied governments, including the United States, have announced agreement with a Viet Cong proposal of a LAWRENCE is still unanswered. What will be done if the truce is violated this time as it was last year? Most people have forgotten that the 30-hour Christinas truce in December 1965 had been in effect only a little while when seven Viet Cong violations occurred. Gen. Westmoreland then promptly rescinded an order for the extension of the truce. The South Vietnamese and aMied forces obeyed toe trace, bat there were at least 84 violations by the Viet Cong and North Viet- / namese before it ended, and 12 Americans and 50 South Vietnamese were killed. One of the sneak attacks occurred early Christmas morning. Tlie State Department at the time commented that the violations were unfortunate. But bombing raids were jieverthe-less halted until toe end of January, for a total of 37 days. ,vj Will toe United States again go through with the truce and a deferment of bombing, despite violations that may occur? MORE LOGICAL Instead of waiting for such happenings, it is more logical for an announcement to be made nowthat, while a truce has been proclaimed, it will be terminated immediately if there are any violations by the other sMe. Allied commanders have standing orders to take countermeasures for defense if attacked during a trace, but a specific warning could persuade the Communists that they will gain nothing by violating the trace. It has been argued that the North Vietnamese are not able to control some of their troops in the field. But this makes it even more neces- sary that the United States take precautions against further casualties that could result from irresponsible action. ★ ★ * It is a temptation, of course, for toe North Vietnamese to make attacks when American soldiers are presumably taking toe day off to celebrate Christmas. But if it is emphasized in advance that instant resumption of the fighting and bombing will occur, there may be less of an inclination to test out American readiness. CAREFUL SCRUTINY The whole world will watch carefully the behavior oh toe Communists i n connection with the truce this year. , * ★ * / If the Communists violate the truce, they will doubtless claim that orders had been disregarded in the (iad. But the decision has been made that the truce will be honored by the force/of the South Vietnamese/and their allies and that toe risks are worth taking./ / ★ ★ * If violations ,do occur, it ipight be one way to convince. toe world that toe only logical course to follow thereafter is to pursue toe war intensively to a successful conclusion. ' (CDpyrisht, im. i toe signal operator. Bob Considine Says: Puddits Are Bewildered by China’s {Red Guards HONG KONG — There is this to say about the Red Guards, China’s latest pestilence. They have completely bewildered celebrated “China watchers’' who operate here on Mao Tse-tung’s doorstep. The view of resident American consular officers is formulated from endless hours of reading tons of propaganda now being shoveled across the CONSIDINE border. They also monitor Radio Peking, question endless refugees and, of course, the British are of help. They move in mid out of China more or less at will, having diplomatic relations. The view is clouded. The briefing officer tends to wander when visiting reporters ask questions. He says he does not know who gives Red Guards their orders to go, bat feels Chon En-ini is toe man who gives them orders to stop. Sometimes they do bat sometimes they don’t, so that is unsettling to a good diagnosis. He thinks the whole business of eight or 10 million hooligans terrorizing 700 mil- The Belter Half lion persons may be a gimmick dreamed up by Mao to piirge the Chinese Communist party of incompetent bureaucrats’ and deviationists who think it should rub noses and make up with the Russian commies. Hie Chinese Communist party itself could not be involved officially in such public purges, our man reasons, else it would lose face. WHAT IS KNOWN What is definitely known is toe Peking government is underwriting these lawless young hordes to the extent of food, drink, clothing, shelter and printing presses. To give them time for their mischief and mayhem, all upper and middle schools have been closed. “The Red Guards are far worse than toe Hitler y o u t b,” an Englishman fresh back from Peking toM os. “They are absolutely without rhyme or reason. They operate on the premise, that this is the year A.D. 1 and everything that went before it or had association - with toe past is fool.” The same' traveler reported that one of China’s foremost authorities on cancer, a surgeon of international reputation, now is forced to work several nights a week on a Peking garbage truck after attending to his professional duties. The Red Guards imposed this sentence on him for “past associations,” MRS. W. M. BROWN 308 ANDERSON ‘Clean-Up Law Test for Total Action Team’ A writer wants Rep. Crowley and Sen.’O’Brien to introduce legislation to clear the countryside of ugly campaign litter. Why not give pur new total action team the opportunity to prove that new brooms sweep so much better? v< The ‘sporting proposition’ to let the losers inherit the task of cleaning up sounds like a game rale made up by a rare bird indeed. Cheer np, fella. A man’s disposition makes him a loser, not the outcome of an election! I. SMITH CLARKSTON Worries About Cigarette-Smoking Adults Store managers haresist mesh nylons Entire stock of 3.99 cozy Christmas robes Entire stock of 2.99 slips and sleepwear Ladies7 stretch pants, sweaters and skirts 33: 3.33 2 *5 ! 2 *7 Budget-priced to save you money. Tantone, beigetone; nude heel, run-resist&nt top and toe. Available in sizes 9 to 11, medium length. Stock up at fabulous savings. Sold only in 3 prs., 99c 100% cotton quilts, velvety acetate fleeces, more! Dainty applique and embroidery Trims, roomy pockets. In pastels, all-over prints. Sizes S-M-L Nylon tricot slip*, pj's, gowns; cotton broadcloth pj's, brushed rayon and cotton flannel gowns,' -pj's. In sizes 32-40, S-M-L. Lovely gifts! I 3.97 each 5.99 values! -Orion® acrylic bulky knit sweaters; V-neck,* cardigans, 34* 40. 100% wool skirts in many styles, 6-18. Pants: proportioned 8 to 18. FEDERAl'S FRIDAY & SATURDAY ON SALE AT 6 P.M. TONIGHT . . . ALL DAY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Men'$ regular 3 for 2.29 fine "Waldorf71 underwear 100% cotton. No-sag T- ■ shirts, A-shirts, S-M-L-Xl. • Brief or boxer shorts, 30 3 to 44, in the group. pf*c In white, fancies, colors. ‘ 197 Ladies’ handbags, Women’s scarves Save up to 50%! casual or d..;sy regularly $1-$2 Swingin’ earrings 1.67 211 69-. Simulated leather hand- Nylon Italian imports, bags in casual or dressy Choose from squares, ob-styles. Black, brown, tan. Idngs, many more tool The latest and greatest! Op-art swingers in metals, plastics, more. Not at Drayton Women’s reg. $2 Waldorf hose for Choice of men’s driving gloves men..savings now plaid sport shirts 1.59 3/1.44 3.44 Black, beige. Many styh to choose from in the collection. Complete line of hose; cotton fancies, stretch or sizes 10VL13. 100% rayon flannel, also 55% rayon, 45% cotton. In sizes S-M-l-X-Xl. Tots' cotton knit sleepers with grow-a-year features Permanent press men’s twill pants Men’s reg. 5.98 washable jackets Men’s sweatshirt, ...regularly 4.50 First quality combed cot-ton in pastels and jewel tones. Plastic non • slip ■ole. Shrinkage-controlled. Sizes 1 to 4, 3 to 8. 1 66 4,19 544 4.19 75% cotton, 25% poly- Sanforized* cotton denim, ester, never needs irobingl 4 patch pockets. Sizes 40-30-44 waist, 30 length. 46 in group. Hooded, with fully thermal lined body, hood, sleeves. Sizes M-L and XL. Boys7 reg. 5.99 western 'Ponderosa' velour shirts Our own 'Sire Brgnd' washable cotton velours in 'burgundy, blue, green or gold. Knit waist, cuff, leather tie. §izes 8-20. Big savings! 3 44 Toddlers' 2.29 bib front pinwafle corduroy overalls Boys' or girls' styles With adjustable straps, zipper back, snap-crotch. Fine pinwale cotton corduroy. Red, royal, turquoise, pecan. 2-4. *88 FEDERAL'S OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 10 P.M DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS OPEN SUNDAYS i* T1 A.M. TO 9 P.M. A—9 «r THE PONTIAC PBESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER I, 1966 Men's reg. 2.99 to 3.99 dress shirts 2.44 Waldorf and Sir* brand whit*, blue dress shirts. Regular and snap-tab collars. All cotton wash and wear. Great for gifts. Sizes 14*17. 4.44 Ponderosa style with leather lace fronts in navy, green, gold, burgundy. Some cotton sued* in group. A fashion-must. Men's sizes S-M-L-XL. 8.99 "Silver Skates" only at Federal's 6.94 First quality. Tempered steel chrome blades. Padded tongue. Women's white leather; sizes to 10. Men's black leather; sizes to 12. Corduroy covered jumbo bucket bed rest pi I lows 5.00 Large size, poly-foam filler, cotton corduroy * covered bed rest pillows with roller welt edge, button center. Contour shape. Gold, brown, turquoise and beige colors. ' Washable, colorful Hilo loop cotton area rugs 24x36" six* 2-*3 Eajy-to-wash. Beautiful solid colon. Non-skid latex backing. For every room. 27x48" six*....2.69 3x5' six* .. 4.69 24x70" six*....3.69 4x6' six*....6.99 Men's 5.99 cotton knit velour shirts BELL-RINGERS LIMITED QUANTITIES . . . SHOP EARLY WHILE THEY LAST! < Girls' reg. 16.99-17.99 warm winter Coat valves Cotton corduroys, plaids, wool tweeds, morel Many acrylic pile lined for added warmth. All the fashionable winter colors. Sixes 7 to 14. 36x50’’ Beacon soft crib blanket Susy Smart doll with the high I.Q. Electra 6 string Little-Pro guitar 1.24 7.88 1.48 Cut from first quality blan- She talks, spells, and does Just right for the little ones ket doth. Fleece, thermal arithmetic. Complete with to learn to play. Comas weaves. Bound. her owr. desk. Clothed. with pick, instructions. Girls' reg. 3.99 holiday dresses in festive colors Natural waists and straight lines. Lace or rufflo trims. Belted, tie and button backs. Cottons, rayons, blends. Sizes 3-6x,'7-T2. Don't miss itl "Seal of quality" 12.99 Infant*’ 1.39 corduroy crawlers 1.00 Bib-front pln-wale cotton corduroy, ladder back. 4 colors. S-M-L 36”x6-ft. room darkening shade* 1.00 Heavy duty vinyl shades with tension roller. Keep out light in all rooms.. Reversible loom-woven bedspread 7.77 Loom woven Early American pattern. In white. Bullion fringe. Twin-full. 3-quart elactric 4-piece king else cotton corduroy slock sots Cotton corduroy slqcks In smart solid colors with matching tops in solids and novelty trims. Turtlo neck, crew neck, long sleeve. Sizes 3 to 14. tended pine chest 8.77 Itoady to paint or slain. Wood set in bade, weed drawer bottoms. Savel alum, com popper 2.67 A 3-quart electric com popper with glass cover. All atuminumbody. trey table seta 3.47 Decorated metal tray* Bran finish with tubular legs. Ideal for serving. automatic twin blanket Sleep In com plot# comfort this winter. Just sot the dial to dosirod warmth. 14.99 full sis* $12 1JL99 duel control, $15 Cuba Exile Airlift Is a Year Old MIAMI (UPI) - The Cuban refugee airlift, one year old to* day, has poured nearly 45,000 exiles into the1' United States since last Dec. 1. But this end oftoe Cuban exodus is nowhere in sight. In fact, it may just be getting into high gear as the biggest thing since the “multitudes” led by Moses fled Egypt. Both the United States aBd Communist Cuba seem to want it to continue indefinitely, although for different reasons. Exiles have so far filed more ‘ than 1.1 million names — .some of which may be duplicates, of relatives in Cuba that want to leave the Fidel Castro regime, according to the Cuban < refugee center here. If they were all to be brought out, at the present rate of 3,000 toe 4,000 monthly, it would take another 25 years — provided the U.S.-operated airlift were to continue that long. NO FORECASTS At the moment, there are no forecasts on how long the unique “air b r i d g e” between Miami and Varadero, Cuba, may be kept intact. There is no indica-i tion that it will be either speeded up or slowed down. Hie United States charters private airliners* for two flight a day, five days a week. Exact cost of the charters is not known. But it apparently totals between $400,000 and $500,000 if figured at an estimated aver- -age cost of $800 per flight for 536 flights sines last Dec. 1. ★ * * That sum is only a fraction of federal fiscal allotments for handling and resettling the refugees. REFUGEE BUDGET The 1966-67 refugee budget of the Health, Education and Welfare Department — which operates the refugee center — calls for $51 million, for example. Observers here believe It ?would be equally “sticky** for either the Johnson administration or the Castro regime to suddenly halt the airlift, unless tensions between the two countries flare. The United States’ position was set Oct 3, 1965 when President Johnson said: “I declare to the people of Cuba that those who seek refuge here will find it.”' * ★ ★ ★ In addition to that, the 300,000 Cubans already in this country badly want their relatives and friends to get out of Cuba. CASTRO SIDE For Castro, shutting down the air ferry would be tantamount to putting the lid on his still fermenting communization of the island. Internal pressures would build up without an “escape valve.” In the United States’ view— as expressed by Johnson a year ago — the very fact that Castro wants toe exodus “stamps toe mark of failure” on his red regime before toe world. The airlift, in line with traditional American policy of of*, fering refuge to victims of oppression, also keeps the door open for the possible release of thousands of political prisoners, some U.S. officials believe. • * * * There are a number of Americans among these prisoners. BARRIERS UP American authorities apparently feel also that operation of the airlift may somehow figure in the removal of barriers to thedepartureof about 950 Americans and their Cuban fam-illies, stymied for years from leaving the island. For the Castro regime, the continuing outflow of Cubans thoroughly disgusted with communism is undoubtedly a major embarrassment to not only Cuba but to other Communist countries. But the bearded premier seems to regard the immediate “benefits” — including an easing of domestic economic strains . —as more important. Loans for College BlG RAPIDS (AP) - Paris State College said Wednesday it had. received approval of a $2,-110,000 government loan for construction of a new dormitory and dining facilities. The Department of Housing and Uri»n Development approved the loan. A^-10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 Is Golf the True Course to World Peace? ByBEM PRICE {the modern game known as WASHINGTON (AP) - The 1 possibility that anthropologists have unwittingly discovered aspect of human behavior which could unlock the doors to peace is under some discussion herd. A number of studies have accumulated in government archives which show that some primitive peoples work off frustrations by. banging the ground with sticks. FAVORITE CAPITALIST—America’s top salesman in,the Soviet Union, Romaine Fielding (right), is sjjown at an exhibit in Moscow’s Sokolniky Park with Russion boss Leonid Brezhnev (with hat) and friends. Red-Hot Salesman Puls Laundromat in Moscow The significance of this activity for modern man was almost universally overlooked until a political science student detected the extraordinary parallel between ground-pounding and From this he has postulated — tentatively — the theory that a nation’s peace loving quotient Union Rejected KALAMAZOO (AP) — Er ployes jjf the Fetzer Broadca; mg Co. owner of WKZO radio and television stations, have voted ll-8 to reject Union representation by* the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists AFL-CIO. The election, sponsored by the National Labor Relations Board, covered newsmen, announcers and p e r-formers. can be accurately established by counting the numbers engaged in golf. FIRST REPORT Preliminary investigation, indicates that where golfing is widespread no dictatorship can long survive. Hie anonymous scientist’s initial findings are impressive and are here reported for the very first time. For example, there are no known golf courses in the Soviet Union, Red China, Poland, Romania, Bulgaria or Albania. The number of courses in once-democratic Czechoslovakia has been reduced to two and they are primarily for the use of decadent Western diplomats. The Communists reportedly object to golf on the grounds that it creates capitalistic class Try to Save Tree OAK PARK (AP)—A drive t save a 30-foot elm tree which stands in the path of a proposed school addition has been launched by a number of Oak Park High School students. The students have named the tree Arthur.” Some 400 of the school’s 1,460 students have signed petitions to have the tree transplanted instead ' of cut down. “Arthur is the only tree we have,” explained Mitchell Z. Hauptman, 17, a senior. distinctimm, Obviously, anyone who plays golf requires considerable capital. One of the most significant findings in support of the theory involves Japan. RENOUNCED WAR Since 1945 the Japanese, a hard-driving, aggressive people, have renounced war as an instrument .of national polity. • * * * As matters now stand, Japan is developing golfers at a greater rate than any other nation in the world. Japan currently has courses and nearly three millioh golfers. The mere fact that three million Japanese crowd 300 courses proves be- yond a doubt that they have adopted a policy of live and let live. , ★ ★ Of equal significance is the fact that the English-spealdng peoples, who have a long and unbroken history of self-government, are the World’s most avid golfers.* ★ * * For example, there are 8,667 volf courses in the United States and around eight million golfers. The Australians have approximately 1,100 golf courses and 500,000 practitioners, while the English and Scottish countryside maintains around 1,000 courses for 1.5 million golfers. By DICK KLEINER West Coast Correspondent Newspaper Enterprise Assn. LOS ANGELES (NEA) sians a complete, packaged shoe repair shop. Big American firms, hearing H , about the Los Angeles man who When you’re a red-hot sales-! do business with ^ Rus. man, you find your prospects |sianS) asked ^ to represent where you may even if they them. Now Fielding handles happen to be in Russia. many accounts of top U.S. man- t, ufacturers anxious to sell their Romaine Fielding, the son of products to the Soviet Union. . a silent screen star by the same * * * name, is America’s top. salesman in Russia. Since he discovered the untapped market that‘Is the Soviet Union back in 1958, he has peddled some $15 million worth of equipment there. Before then, Fielding’s business was running coin-operated laundries throughout the West. He wanted to expand and, casting about for a likely spot, took stock of himself and his talents. He had been a lieutenant commander in the Navy in Work! War II. Afterwards, he had used his GI Bill educational privileges to study Russian — 1,000 hours of study — because be felt it was a mental challenge. Since hs is a chess expert, he looks for mental challenges. “My friends used to razz me,” he says. “They would accuse me of being a Commie. So I used’to say, ‘No, I’m just planning to. put Moscow.’ “I even had a slogan: “Rcd|they”owe when it’s due. Square Automatic Laundry — | Now Fielding spends almost as much time in Russia as he does here. He married* a beau-tifuL Russian girl (^Galina — and has many close friends in the Soviet Union. His business card typifies his current life. On one side it has the name of his firm and the address in English. Flip it over and the same information is in Russian. See Lenin’s Tomb and Have Your Clothes Washed at the Same Time.’ ’’ In 1958, Romaine Fielding said — why not? * He heard about a trade fair in Moscow and arranged to display an exhibit of’ automatic laundry equipment. The fair folded when his machinery was halfway to Helsinki, so he talked his way through the Soviet red tap and put on a private ex-| hibition. ★ ★ ★ I His wasvthe first commercial | Tnllf in NY exhibit from the United States 1 '*JirK y 1 since the Russian revolution. EQUIPMENT SELLS NEW YORK (AP)—Vice Pres- anA ident Hubert H. Humphrey and Gradually, the ^uipmpnt; “J j Michigan Gov. George Romney more like it sold. Fielding made | wm tho 4h flnniI?i, mane and more visits to the. Soviet Union. He finally persuaded them to open a coin-op- VP, Romney era ted laundry and dry cleaning establishment in Moscow. It opened the day President Kennedy was killed. From laundry equipment, will address the 29th annual national conference of the United Jewish Appeal here next week, it was announced Wednesday. Romney will speak at the inaugural dinner Thursday, Dec. 8. Humphrey will address the Fielding moved to shoe repair conference banquet Saturday, equipment and sold the Rus- | Dec. 10. lit GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP Open Evenings ’til Christmas-Free Parking Downtown Pontiac Fieldings says the Russians are just as anxious to have American products. But they want only the most modem. BEHIND INDUSTRIALLY “Industrially," he says, “they are in the 19th century, but they want 21st century equipment with no stops in between.” In most ways, he finds they are very good to do business with. Yon have to learn to accept the red tap and the slowness of decision stemming from their bureaucracy. And you have to be prepared for the fact that they will attempt to copy your machinery— although generally the attempt is unsuccessful. But they pay promptly ■ “lik;e a slot machine,” Fielding «ays — and they live up to the terms of their'contracts scrupulously. They Will try to haggle over Laundromat in [prices first but /Once the contract is signed, they/pay exactly what Make It a GE DISHWASHER This Christmas! A MODERN CONVENIENCE FOR THE HOME PORTABLE “Mobile Maid”*? AUTOMATIC WASH-DRY and RINSE — Eliminate the Dishwashing Time! PUT IN LAYAWAY Reserve Yours for Christmas Delivery! now you m m ?55## ON THIS FRIGIBAIRE PAIR! End of Model SALE! 90 Days Same as Cush No Money Down Other Models from *158 Mil Slate Portable Stereo “A Gift for Your Home** ZENITH the Advanced SIX-SPEAKER SOUND SYSTEM with the famous Micro-Touch Tone- TOP DRAWER—Two miles of metal ribbon such as pretty Marianne Kowaleski is peering through is needed to wind the superconductive magnet she is holding. The magnet will be used in high-energy physics experiments in addition to "ynHiral and biological research. Engineers for RCA, who developed the magnet, say it has a field strength 300,000 times as powerful as the earth’s magnetic field. RCA VICTOR SOLID STATE "SWINGLINE” PORTABLE STEREO The All-New Solid State STEREO Rollaway STAND FREE! NO MONEY DOWN *7995 Layaway for Christmas! Big 560 Pound Upright Freezer Big 16 Ft. PHILCO “The Buy of the Season” LIMITEDQUANTITY 30” wide - 65^” high for Christmas Delivery SAVE NOW NO MONEY DOWN! ZENITH 21” NEW 1967 SPECIAL COLOR TV RCA VICTOR 25” DECORATOR LOWBOY BIG PICTURE Big aa life Color TV (hat give* a fall STS square inch** of Ike finnt color Pay Only $419 Per Week Delivered, Serviced, Warranted 90 Days Same as Cash For Christmas! THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC, 51W. Huron-FE 4-1555 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER I, 19 A—11 Response of Young in Wake of Flood Impresses Italy FLORENCE, Italy (AP) -Young people from all over Italy and from foreign lands are helping this historic city of books and art reemerge as it once was. ★ T * .. *, The rushofvolunteers in their teens and early 20s has im-pressed Italy almost more than any other single aspect of the flood disaster and Its aftermath. Italian papers see it as a con* tradiction of adult criticism of the beateik, rock ’n’ roll generation.. Italians work side by side with students from Germany, England, the United States and the museums ^ and libraries, moving the millions of books and archives that remain in mud-matted masses awaiting movement to drying sheds de the city. The stench of water-soaked paper and glue bindings is sickening. Hie youngsters sing as they lift, carry, and para the precious cargoes into trucks. ★ * ★ The adult worldniay see their work as an example of sacrifice. Kit the young don’t see it that way at albFor them it is ^obviously fun — the fun of working in a multilingual group their own age, of putting tip with ms-comforts and hardships that dung that is undeniably important and historic. Judith Rosner and Joanne Newman, each 21, were language students in Florence when the floods hit Nov. 4. Judith of Glencoe, HI., says: wllenge their bodies and spir- «“e , and of taking part in soak- day. “We stayed for a, while after the flood but our parents got so worried they insisted that we leave.' Joanne and I went to Rome to fTy home but decided no, we missed Florence so much we had' to come bade and help. Sales, Use Taxes Record High Again So here we are again. We have not told our parents yet but we will and it will be all right.” Judith] and Joanne of Highland Park, 111., went immediately to the National Library on the Lungarno just a few yards from where the Amo River tore away a whole section of paved bank and inundated the library basement and ground floor. LANSING (AP) - Michigan collected $57.1 million in sales aixLose taxes in Nqvember, topping the figure for the like period a year ago for the 58th consecutive time, the State Rev-Department said Wednes- The department said the collections were an increase of $2.5 million or approximately 4.7 per cent over November of 1965. ★ ★ ★ Sales and use tax figures for the month are based on the previous month’s business. “We came right here to start working again,” said Joanne. “We didn’t report to anybody. We just picked up a pair of these .rubber gloves given to volunteers and started to work. It’s terribly sad what’s happened to so many beautiful and precious books. It’s wonderful to be able to be here to help.” NOW OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL CHRISTMAS SI say Merry Christmas with Gifts from Sears tots’ gala holiday dresses 49" Charge it For your perfect Christmas angel! Pqrty perfect with dainty bows and .ribbons. Choose from more than 15 styles in her favorite colors. Sizes 3 to 6X. boys’ 10-way holiday suits Jacket, vest, two trousers. Wear as 2-pc. or 3-pc. suit. Assorted fabrics and <. Two button jacket is fully lined. N est is reversible. Favorite I sizes' 3 to 6\. hoys’ easy-care white dr Just the thing to complete the outfit for that little fellow. While dress shirts to compliment his new suit. Shop at Sears and save on all , your Christmas {tjlftk! tots’ Perma-Prest slips Delicately trimmed slips of A .TO Dacron* polyester and cotton broadc loth. Needs no ironing. White. Sires :tlo 6X. Infante' Dept., Main Floor 997 Charge It ’ess shirts Reg. $1.79 157 Reg. $1.99 Juniors’ 2- and 3-piece Knit dresses 1398 Sizes 7 to 15 Charge II 3-ftr. Styles, sizes 5-IS . • 14.98 Juniors make the holiday scene in bonded knit.dresses . .. individualists leave tbeir mark on the holiday scene in these versatile styles ... so elegantly tailored, and trimmed to perfection. Sices 5 to 15. Many colors to choose from. women’s night-warmers Long Gown Regular $7 £99 Long P.J.’s Shift Gown Regular $8 Regular $6 6" 4" velvet and brocade holiday dresses 1798 Scars price It's your time to shine ■ . . bright a elegant. Smart sheaths, 2- and .'i-pc. < senildes. Misses’ 8-18, Petite. 6-14 sizes. now reduced . .. Spandex Panty Regular ^99,’ $7.00 Cl say, “CHARGE IT” at Sears Sleek nylon and Lycra* spandex panty smooths to I**-'"- down from waist. Double front panel gives tummy trimming, then glides over hips and dips jjp hack lo lift and mold derriere. In white, black Small-extra large. ■ • Reg. 84. Brw... Canttry Dept., Second # W Bedtime lovelies, irresistibly feminine . j irresistibly priced for Christmas-budget savings! 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Pura Virgin Wool THE PONTIAC MALL I' NOW OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL CHRISTMAS NOW OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL CHRISTMAS "Satisfactionguaranteed CpADQ Downtown Ponti. or your money back” O-L/xlivO Phone ft, ' guaranteed or your money back” A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1906 PR Men Face Test—Proving They Know Something By DICK WEST would i n d i c a t e the quiz is United Press International I pretty formidable, WASHINGTON - The public! ..........„ ^ . relations business, I’m told, is I How*ver; one member who seething with internal strife over J*183 a“ewy taken it told me a move to im-^,^ prove its own! imagfe Hie object of I dispute i creditation proc-a ess worked out ; by the Public Relations So-i Ciety of Amer-f lea. To become* “PRSA accredi- WEST jgjttykt ‘‘any working journalist” could pass it without difficulty. Nevertheless, some PR men bitterly oppose the accreditation program. They resent having to I submit to testing, they claimed ,PR talent cannot be reduced to I paper and in some cases they I suspect it will be used to try to 'force them out. ; I ran into one of the dissidents the other evening when I stopped in the National Press ing deep draughts, punctuated by1 sorrowful sighs. “I am what we used tocall a press agent,” Flack said when inquired into the cause of his melancholy. “But thd term isn’t used any more. “While we were busy improving the images of our clients, our own image was.to going to pot. People somehow got the ted,” a member must pass an club to participate in a seminar eight-hour written test followed 0n African violet cultivation, by a three-hour oral exam. the indoor smog The idea is to give the PR - - - - - - 6 business more of a professional aura. The Washington PRSA cbap- was rather thick, 1 espied at one end of the barroom a local PR man whom I shall identify .______.. ... _ ,1!!" here as Esterhazy Flack. ter recently held a cram ses; I £ sion to help its members I He had a flagon of mead at prepare for the ordeal. Which ihis elbow and was morosely tak- | Ocean Yields Elephant Teeth By Science Service J WASHINGTON^Scientists have been amassing a hoard of ancient elephant bones and teeth from the Atlantic Continental Shelf, sometimes under 270 feet of ocean water. Valuable mammoth and mastodon teeth as well as other kinds of Ice Age bones have been discovered along the 300,000-square-mile shelf extending 80 miles into the sea, and ranging 450 miles from Georges Bank east of Cape Cod to the coast off Virginia. The find is a by-product of a five-year Search for mineral deposits and other valuable resources, undertaken by scientists of the U.S. Geological Survey and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. [impression, that press agents were undignified. “Then the good fairy came along and turned us into publicists. “That helped some hut it still didn’t sound properly dignified. So all of us publicists went to Baltimore for an operation that us into public relatioi consultants. “Now they’re trying to give us a professional status, like doctors and lawyers. Accreditation exams! Did you ever hear of anything, so ridiculous? a ★ * T/tm 20 years in this business now I’ve'got to waste an day proving that I know Sw to take a newspaperman to lunch.” PARENTS! Is Your Child Taking BAND Next Term? iarair A Trumpet, Comet, Clarinet, Flute, Trombone, Violin or Snare Drum Kit • Rent fbr as long as you wish? • Unlimited return privileges! • If you buy, all rental payments will apply! • Conrrand-oifier fine makes! ONLY A MONTH (Minimum 3 Month*) GRI NNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27-S. Saginaw, FE 3-7168 Reduced $20 . .. Sears Big 25-Inch Classic Vanities With Top and Bowl Regular ; $99! NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan An elegant bath beans with this gracious Classic in white with/ gold-color trim. Spray coated with clear plastic to guard against moisture, adds long life! With high style top and wash bowL For the bathroom you can boast about... see Sean for a fashion vanity today! Reg. $99 Country Style with top and bowl.., ..$79 K i —| A y Trim Extra HratinglPlumbinf Dipt., Perry St. Basement FREE Water Analysis Bring a sample of your tap water to Sears. We’ll test it’s condition, and recommend the right softener to buy. Jb" Sears wxV Arranges Quality Installation Let Sears arrange for installation of your “Super” Automatic-Water Softener... In time for Christmas. PHONE SEARS Now for Your Full Capacity Automatic' Water Softener ... Sears Automatic Water Softeners Regular $269.95 INSTALLATION EXTRA, Sears “Super” Water Softener give you a clearer, fresher life! Soft water makes dishes gleam, laundry brighter; is kinder to your skin. Sparkling, conditioned water from every tap in vour home . . . automatically. Softener backwashes, brines, slow rinses and fast rinses itself... just add salt Abundant water supply. A special cycle gives you extra soft water for peak periods... And handy manual bypass shuts off softener for lawn sprinkling, etc. $319.95* Super Hi-Cap...................$289 NO MONEY DOWN •on Sears Easy Payment Plan Heating!Plumbing Dept., Perry St. Basement NOW OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL CHRISTMAS SALE Power is Sealed In 100% epoxy bonded lop and cate won’t deteriorate or soften. Fights rust. High Voltage Design for More Power and Faster Starts ... ALLSTATE 30-Month Batteries 3 Day Sale 14## JB. JBL Trade NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Revolving Charge IlilflflM . 30-MONTH BATTERY GUARANTEE 3 Free replacement within 90 day* of purchaie, if battery prove* defective, .gfe After 90 days, we replace the bauery, if defective, and charge yon only for Sag the period of ownership, based on the regular price less trade-in at the time s|jE of return, pro-rated over the number of months of guarantee. . .SBC IMiiiiiiiVB , Sale-Priced Hardware Specials! Fits: Many BUICK, 63-66; CHEV, most 55-66; DE SOTO, DODGE, PLYMOUTH, most 55-66; RAMBLER, STUDEBAKER, 56-66; Pontiac, most 55-66; olds, Jqtstar and F-85 8-cyl, 64-66; CHRYSLER, Windsor 56-58, 61; Saratoga, 57-58; Newport, 61-63; also many imports. ! Save *30! Craftsman 80-Pc. Mechanic’s Tool Set Regular $69.99 Q fj QQ 3 Drives and Tool Box nl ^ ** NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Perfect set for home-shop repairs and for professionals. All parts made of “Super Tuff’ alloy-steel, heat-treated and tempered for strength. Chrome plated. 80-pieccfs with 3 drives, assorted tools and tool box. Save at Sears! llanhcare Department, Main Basement NOW OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL CHRISTMAS Sears Soft Water Brightens Your Family Living BATTERY Sears High Voltage Design Thru • partition connectors let more power reach the terminals. Craftsman Steel Mechanic’s Chests Reg. S59,93' 26*12xl9-inch high. Ten drawers and . liftout , tray. Lock and two keys. 4£" 59" Reg. S81.99 Measures 26%xl7%x40-in. Welded and reinforced. 4-in. ball bearing casters. THE PONTIAC PRESS r*T1— PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER I, 1966 _ _ B—1 Displaying two of the Christmas market chairman, Mrs. Howard W. LUd-, decorations for sale at their annual Greens wig of Tienken Court and Mrs. James E. Market are these members of Rochester Sammer of Darien Court, both of Avon branch, Woman’s National Farm and Gar-. Township, den Association. Shown from left are Help Your Son Make ; It's Past Time for Him Now Rochester Unit of WNFGA to Hold Show “The Twelve Days of CSirist-mas” is the theme of the winter flower show and greens market b£fng sponsored Dec. 9 and 10 by the Rochester branch, Woman’s National Farm and Gar-' den Association. * ★ ★ Avon Park Pavilion in Rochester is the site. Hours are Dec. 9 * from 3 to 9 p.m. and Dec. 10 from 10 a.m. until 3 p m. * * *, Mrs. Donald Scripture and Mrs. Raymond Storm are co-chairman of the flower show with Mrs. Howard Ludwig, chairman of the greens market. • ★ ★ ★ Flower show judges are Mrs. William Dehm, Mrs. C. A. Nickel, Mrs. Boris Osojnak, Mrs. Fred Stefansky and Mrs. Fred Trickey. * * * Judging the horticultural segment will be Mrs. John P. Cochran Jr. with Mrs. James Sam: mer as chairman of this group. ★ * ★ In addition to the above, there will also be a display of rocks and minerals of the state. Browns Mark Anniversary By SIGNE KARLSTROM Dr. and Mrs. Audrey 0, Brown of Cediff Hill Drive had been married SO years fest Saturday. Their children, Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Husband, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Calvin R. Brown honored them with a reception in the Husband home on Overhill Some 200 friends came to enjoy the occasion, including a very special friend, Mrs. Still-som R. Ashe who had been a bridesmaid in the Browns’ wedding party. * ★ * Their grandchild, Nancy Husband came from DePauw University and their grandson came from Western Reserve University in Cleveland. The Browns have 11 grandchildren who were all participating in the festivities. Following (the reception, the Browns’ close friends of many years, Mr. and Mrs^ Ivan Lud-ington, entertained the immediate families for dinner at the Birmingham Athletic Club. On Sunday, more pests came to the Browns’ home so there was a great celebration over the entire weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Williams of Hammond Lake Road are entertaining for dinner in their home on Sunday honoring Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Alvary who will be in Detroit for a short stay. Dr. David DiChiera will include in the Opera Overture this spring an opera of which Mr. Alvary owns the producing rights. John Broome of Meadow Brook Theatre will be stage director. There will be a lively opera discussion around the dinner ta- ble with the DiChieras, Mr. Broome and Mrs. Williams Who is well kno^n as the former opera singer, Barbara Gibson. ' * ★ ★ The principal reason for Mr. ‘ Alvary’s coming to the city is that he is here to judge the candidates for the Grinnell Opera Scholarship auditions as well as , the Metropolitan Opera district auditions. ★ ★ * Mr. and Mrs. Alvary who have their permanent residence in New York but also commute to Europe and her former home in LaPorte, Ind. are entertaining at dinner Saturday in the Pont-chartrain Hotel. Mr. Aftary is famous for some of his comic opera roles with the Metropoli- tan in 'New York. He has appeared in Detroit with the opera many times and he has also been soloist with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra on several occasions. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I’ve just had ' another scene with my husband over our four-year-old-son, and I am at my whs’ end. My son likes to play with dolls. He spend hours in the doll house playing with doll clothes and (foil d 1 s h e s. This- annoys his father no end. Other adults tiave made ABBY some rather unkind remarks about it, too. P e r s o n a 11 y, I see nothing wrong with it. Why is it when a little girl plays with cowboy, guns and climbs trees everyone calls her a cute little tomboy, but when a boy plays with dolls they say he’s queer? Please answer as I am pretty shook. MOM DEAR MOM: It’s easier to get a little girl down from a tree than it is to get a boy out of a doll house. Encourage your son to play with toys tor little boys. ,j£L' -J DEAR ABBY: I am sure other wives of traveling men have the same problem. When my husband is out of town he will sometimes' get a long distance call. The operator asks, “Is Mr. So and So home?” I say, “No, he isn’t.” . She asks, “When do you expert him?” Young Girl Hesitates to Attend By ELIZABETH L. POST, of the Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Post: I am 18 years old and have been dating my boy friend for two years. His family received an invitation to a cousin’s wedding, addressed Mr. and Mrs. John Doe and , Family. His brothers do not plan to attend die wedding, so his mother replied to the invitation saying that four would attend — Ms parents, my boy friend and me. I fed I'was not formally Invited and I am uneasy about attending. Also, if I go, I would be required to bring a gift and, since I do not know the bride, I don’t really want to incur that expense. What should I do? Maria. Dear Maria: Since you are not a member of the family, you really have no right to attend the wedding, even to take someone dae’s place- Nor do I see any reason, since you do not know the bride, that you should send a gift. You do not say that you are ongagwi, so it would ,no* be strictly proper to jota with your boy friend in sending a present Myadvice is to skipthe whole thing — tdl your boy friend to 3 -***- *-*- «“ -~i make I say, “Not until next Friday.” She asks, “Where can he be reached?” . I reply, “I don’t know. He’s on the road now.” WeU, Abby, as you can see, it could be someone right around tiie corner, or very near here just trying to find out if I’m alone and how long I will bp alone. With the crime rate rising, shouldn’t nanething be done about this? Maybe someone at the telephone company h^s the answer. LONE WIFE * ★ ,★ DEAR LONE: When someone calls for your husband and he is out of the city, you need only aSk, WITHOUT REVEALING THAT HE IS OUT OF TOWN, “Who is calling Mr. So and So, please?” ★ * ★ If you don’t recognize the name, say, “If your party will ' . leave his name and operator's number, I will have Mr. So and So return the call.” That way you disclose NO information whatsoever. , ★ ★ ★ ”, CONFIDENTIAL TO “HAVE REGRETS": Tell her youT* sorry you told her secret. Strange how we can learn how ■ to talk in two years, but sometimes it takes a lifetime to learn how to be quiet Victor Stokes, assistant professor in 56th Michigan Artists’ Exhibition at the the art department of Oakland Community Detroit Institute of Arts which continues College, won the Art Directors Club of through December. Over 1,600 entries Detroit award for his collage, “Hill View were submitted for the competition With of Duluth in Winter.” He entered it in the 159 selected for exhibition. aImpi6ssive Savings Serving ‘Heces.HExdusivey at°E^e Mwm. rogersVsilverplate Now you can own or give some of the world's most beautiful silverplated treasures, fashioned by two renowned silversmiths and offered at costs far below what you might expect. Each will prove to be a proud heirloom that will be cherished by your family for years to come. Generous aiae silverplate Well and Tree serviei platter for festive dining. Reg. $16.50 now *9.50 Magnificent Six-Piece Footed Tea Sendee will be a cherished gift or a lifetime treasure to own. Reg. <80.00 now *49.95 Luge Buffet Tray beautifully designed and etched makes dining a regal experience. Reg. 913.50 NOW *9.50 Exquisite Covered Double Vegetable Dish in silverplate with engraved decorative border. Reg. 916.50 now *9.50 Distinctive scroll etched silverplate Gallery Trays adds touch of serving splendor. Reg. 915.00 each now*9.00 *GMeety6u overtKe dock atGRQse^Xuri RADIANT NEW DUO TWO-SOME She'll live -in this cordial gan and skirt set. Fluffy angora cardigan with gold flowers. is 1798 Matching full-lined A-line skirt in all wool, new no-waistband- . Bothi Sea Mist, Strawberry or Yellow. STARTING FRIDAY, OHC. 2,OWEN EVERY N»HT Til 9 Ttt ^HWlStMAS EVE GIFT FOR A QUEEN A snuggly, long, quilted nylon tricot hostess robe. Embroidered satin collar and 3-way belt. You'd love one for yourself, too. Pink or blue. Sizes 10-18. JMl MaMirap ELEGANT PURSE For her after-five wardrobe. Imported hand-beadtsd bag of sequins and pearls, with convertible snake chain handle. Black or alabaster. PRINCESS GARDNER* PURSE ORGANIZERS with • your gift of Princess Gardner accessories. New exotic "Aztec" design of genuine Cobra enhanced with gold markings on Buffalo Calf. Beautiful Colors. A. Continental, French $COO Purse .7 .M.... • *5 SPECIAL B. Registrar Billfold Tri-PartHe, French Purse....___________ Others from 18.98 v Cigarette Lighter D pgarette Case . What a splendid opportunity to indulge her love of luxury. There Is nothing like tj*e glow of mihk under her Christmas tree! In pastel, ranch or dyed Mack. * E. Continental Clutch A Sunday open house in the First Federal Savings of Oakland banquet hall in Lake Orion will mark the golden anniversary of the Charles A. Haffners of Pine Tree Road, Orion Township. The 2 to 7 p.m. celebration will be hosted by the Haffner’s four children: Marvin D. of Minton Road, Orion Toumship; Kenneth A. of Forest Drive, Mrs. Fravicis St. Arno of Fox Bay Drive, White Lake Toumship; and Mrs. Paul Wheeler of Foster Street. The couple who were married Nov. 30, 1916 have seven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Paul Schoenfield Solos at Pontiac Symphony By BERNICE ROSENTHAL As soloist for its second concert of the season on Tuesday, die Pontiac Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Felix Resnick presented Paul (Schoenfield, brilliant young Detroit pianist. In spite ot the inclement weather and the difficulties which it undoubtedly caused for the dress rehearsal Monday evening, the fulLgrches-tra of dedicated music!) was on hand for a spirited performance at Pontiac Northern High School. ★ ★ ★ Mr. Schoenfield is a tremendously gifted pianist. His maturity, his uncluttered,, direct approach to his instrument— refreshingly without the mannerisms so often seen on the concert platform these days— his complete understanding of the difficult Brahms Second Concerto — were equaled by his depth of tone and his ability to interpret the music with extremely good taste. He displayed sentiment without mawkish sentimentality, virtuosity without ostentatious display, remarkable control without overplaying. His careful phrasing and , immaculate technique, his Winter Tune-Up SPECIAL Bring your sowing machine in and have it cleaned, oiled and tension adjusted. Only . . . In home $5.00 ^ ALL WORK BUARANTCEP! New T-Ft, Vacuum Cleaner Hose All Cloth, No Plastic 1st Quality All Makes Exchange With Your Rt-usablo Hoc* Ends RICKMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER AeroMFrem Psntiac Mall 415 EUzabath Laka Rd. Phona: 335-9283 Set Christmas Concert The annual alumni Christmas reunion and benefit con-cot of Musical Youth International will take place Dec. 17 in the Pease Auditorium, Ypsilanti. Time of t|ie performance sponsored by 'the Roosevelt High School choir of Ypsilanti will be 8:00 p.m. MYI includes d band and chorus whose members 'are carefully selected from outstanding high school musicians between the ages of 16 and. 18. They are chosen annually and travel each summer on concert tours abroad. Begun in 1965, under the direction of Lester McCoy, MYI is a member of the People-to-People program, having been recommended by former President Dwight D hower. ■ * * f It is the first group of its kind to receive such an honor. * * ★ The public is invited to at-tend the reunion concert. Tickets will be available at the door. Proceeds will benefit the MYI scholarship fund and the Roosevelt High School Music Department. beautiful rhubato in the sustained passages, his full-bodied ton* which came from the use of the large body muscles which he has learned to control at his discretion, made for an inspired performance, the like of which has not been heard in this area in many moms. Mr. Schoenfield has a great future in store for him as a concert artist. Equally as important qs the score of the Brahms concefhsis the parallel orchestra! score. Brahms thought of his solo instruments as extensions of the main body of the orchestra. His orchestrations have a sweep and a flow which are as symphonic in scope as any of his symphonies. # ★ * Resnick and the orchestra played the difficult music with depth and great understanding. The many off-beat re-trances were smooth and carefully handled, and the quality of tone was mellow and flowing. Light, sparkling and refreshing was Kabelvsky’s Overture to “Colas Breugnon’’ which opened the program. Its humored, fast-moving was interpreted with spirit and delicacy. The ambitious program completed with Mozart’s “Haffner” Symphony. . Deceptively simple-sounding, this symphony is difficult To play smoothly and well. The burden lies heavily on the string section which was a little unsure in its attaches and releases. Only in the rapid and fiery fourth movement did the orchestra hit its stride and give a masterful performance of one of the great works of symphonic literature. Adoption Topic of Discussion Mrs. Marion Shepard presented a program on “Adoption” at the recent meeting of the Waterford Child Study Club. Hostess at the event was Mrs. Russell Jacobson of Ter-ness Street. Mrs. Amos Vaught was the cohostess with Mrs. Donald Wisner as a guest. Mrs. Ernest Shegina will be the Dec. 12 hostess. ACT NOW! MAKE HER DREAMS COME TRUE Our collection of Natural Minks is so PARING IN VALUE and so breathtakingly beautiful that ARTHUR'S makes it possible for you to give her the "GIFT OF GIFTS" Come in and see for yourself. You'll be delighted —and so will shel ENJOY THE FESTIVE Wo&feuj 5 Cht Rotun&a Country Inn MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW PHONE 682-0600 Famous Smorgasbord Fur Solon - Second Floor THE PQNTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER I, 1966 200 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC FE 54561 CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS? SELL THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. May vows are being planned by Jeanne Ann Featherstone, daughter of the Norman Feather-stones of Allerton Road, Pontiac Township, and Daniel Irwin, son of the Cecil:Irwins of Pioneer Drive. More Beautiful Women Today Thtan in the Past - “Are women more beautiful today?" The question was put to Nancy White, editor-in-chief of Harper’s Bazaar, which just launched its 100th anniversary celebration with a special December supplement,, “100 Great Beauties of the World." , i '“There are more beautiful women today,” Miss White replied, choosing her words carefully. “I wouldn’t say that women are more beautiful. There have been great beauties in every era. But today there are more of them.” ★ *,1 *. Asked why this great wealth of beauty in our time, Miss t|Vhite pointed to the time, money and freedom that is available to millions of women throughout the world today “to a point that their ancestors would find hard to believe. ^ Especially in our country, women have been relieved of so many burdens that they can now put their time and their intellects to use in making themselves attractive, v Never has there been so mueh interest in high fashion, in beauty products, and in events of elegance where feminine glamor holds the spotlight.” She recalls that not too many years ago the couturier fashions unveiled in Harper’s Bazaar each month were envied by millions but could be afforded by only a comparative few. M a n y American women werereadingHarper’s Bazaar the way a small child studies ■i toy store window. It was where you saw what you wished you could have. ★ ' * , * But today’s average woman ‘participates* in the fashion world. She is no longer just a spectator. “Just as the U.S. fashion industry never came into its own until after World War I, the American woman came into her own after World War II.” A “MUST” “For instance, one of the major reasons why there are more beautiful women today, Miss White notes, “is the acceptance of the beauty salon as a ‘must’ in the weekly routine of the average American woman. The attention given to hair styles, cosmetics, and special beauty aids has transformed the American woman’s everyday appearance, her coloring, her features, her entire personal appearance. it it it “Add to these today’s concern for weight control, physical fitness, and active recreation,'and you further understand why the number of beautiful women is increasing daily." ' Discussing the special supplement that accompanies the current Harper’s Bazaar on the newsstands, Miss White stresses, “Note that it is called ‘100 Great Beauties of UIRBD| OPEN TONIGHT TO 9:00 P.M. 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. 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Your Choice of Color and Cover Positive stool TV Recliner with 5" crpwn, natural foam rubber zippered reversible cushion over floating deck supported with imported Danish rubber straps. Foam padded foot rest. Deluxe shredded foam filled back. Go big! Go. budget! If you go for comfort, you'll go for the Burris Chqir with solid urethane construction throughout. The chair that enjoys the rough and tumble of the recreation room. $9995 OUR REG- S' YOUR' ONLY PROBLEM WILL BE HOWTO KEEP OTHER PEOPLE OUT OF YOUR CHAIR! Super soft pillow back to give support to your head, neck and shoulders. Regular $89.95 Tweed—Now $79.95 the Workl,’ not ‘The 100 Great Beauties of Ibe World.’ “Ibere are so many thousands of beauties in our world today that it trsald be pro-sumpuous of us to say that we have named THE 100. We have gone through hundreds and hundreds of names and selected those ladies who reflect the various elements that we feel comprise beauty. “Beauty, you know, is much more than physical appearance.” INNER GLOW Editor Nan Kempner reinforced this observation of her editor-in-chief. “In classifying the many mirrors of beauty we kept- one all encompassing quality in mind: truly great beauties have a special inner glow that goes beyond physical features in creating their itura of beauty. “Certainly Jacqueline Kennedy reflects this magnetism, as do Margot Fonteyn, Marlene Dietrich and others in' the special supplement.” w V . ★ Mrs. Kempner added, “We hope that our selections will also prove that age has nothing-to do with beauty. The 100 ladies we have pictured range in age from the teens to the eighties, and a young man would encounter many an argument from more experienced authorities if he should insist that Jane Fonda’s age makes her more beautiful than, say, Gladys Cooper. - “It is a good sign, however, that today’s teen-age girls are so beauty-conscious,” Mrs. Kempner agrees. “They are willing to set the pace in fashions, to try the newest innovations .in cosmetics, to experiment with changing hair styles and colorings. ■ Jt bodes well for the next' generation of mature young women: In fact, in 1976 we may have to expand our selection of great beauties to , 1000.” Mrs. Kempner lists the description categories into which the Harper’s Bazaar Centennial supplement on beauty is divided: Beauty is Freshness, Electric, Regal, Perfection, Ageless, 'Alive, Magic, Mysterious, Impact, Tender, Bold. ★ ★ ★ “Every woman’s beauty can be associated with one, and usually more, of these descriptions,’’ says Nancy White. ‘‘If , one or more of them can apply to you, polish it to perfection — and work from the inside out.” Give incomparable excellence from our BULOVA Collection of fine watches. , Wont to relax those tired muscles? 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You can find exactly the witch you want, In our extensive Butova Collection of fine watches. , WHITCROFT EASY CREDIT TERMS , WMHI 7 H. SAWN AW T THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 B—5 p / Mi>‘:r The Richard D. Mer-vyns of Estdn Road, Independence Township, announce the engagement of his sister Nancy to Vivia.no L. Martinez, son of Mrs: Vica Martinez of Ovid and the late Mr. Martinez, The March bride-elect is the daughter of the late Mr. dnd Mrs, WilUam'Mer-vyn. There's Tie Between MSavagery By MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: As mass murders by individuals are becoming everyday news, please discuss gun and knife interest in boys of U to 16. My 13-year-old son owns a gun and knife but mas shown no interest in using them. Just the same, I think we mothers should be alerted to savage tehdendes in our boys. These continuing explosions of murderous vibUttoe in men who have seemed normal are terrify- ANSWER: I am. aware that this is going to be an unpop- ular pnlmnit- Nevertheless, 1 ithrust the bayonet into the flesh-, the man who uses them to kill am going to reply to it land-blood Of the fellow human with. Wm m ___ being called the “enemy,” they, I think that murderers are tt,.t **7 sfahPkWdc- Ifsj^ can pretend that they are (people whose ability to experi- been known and used by every savage, people. You define a man as a person who feels no pain. That’s what savage puberty rituals are about. The witch doctor subjects the boy to some 'form of pain. If the boy suc- not inflicting'pain. I think we have to do every tender thing we can to convince oar sons that we do not, regard manliness as imperviousness to pain but think that true men are as unafraid ceeds in pretending not to feel to taaw they can feel hurt as it, he’s in. ' - > they are unwilling to inflict it We dvilM People h^e ouri „„ someone else" tricks, too, for making skilled / warriors out of boys. We give You’rfAsking me, you knqw, them straw dummies to thrust;how the child who thinks of bayonets Into. So, when they I weapons as toys is turned into ence their own pain, their own hurts, their own human vulnerability has been atrophied and destroyed. I agree that these persisting mass murders are terrifying. I share, your anxiety over boy children. I see no way to counteract the influence of exterior violence upon them except by refusing to-define manliness as that deadness to hurt which makes it possible to inflict it others. The Kenneth Render- *\ sons of South Baldwin Road, Brandon Township, announce* the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Ayn, to Clarence Leon’Scott Jr., son of the senior Mr. and Mrp. Scott of Grafton Road, Orion Township. A June wedding is being planned, COLORS; White • Pink • Yellow • Mint • Lilac • Petal Green • Blue • Coni • Olive • Mulberry • Navy • Loden • Brown/ Sizes SB-40. t • X? THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER I, 1966 After-Dark Intrigue.... Three from our elegant Holiday Collection in long fluid lines. In our newly enlarged AFTER-FIVE SHOP you will find Fashions for Splendor-ln-The-Night... Scintillating Separates and Short Cocktail Dresserencased in sheer chiffon ... all you could ask for the Gala Season) Moon-Bright Festive colors., High-climbing waistline lit with bead embroidery. Sweeping back. NOW’S THE TIME TO PREPARE FOR HOLIDAYS AHEADI Stairway To The Stan. Regal column glowing in silvery , sequins. Understated elegance. *50 Clean Candles Before Storing After the holidays, remove decorative candles from their holders and wipe each one — including the '‘well’' around the wick—with a cloth dipped into cool soap or detergent suds, then “rinse” with a clean damp cloth. * ★ * * Trim the wicks, let the candles dry, wrap each one separately in foil or wax paper, and store them in a cool place until next December. Makes Patches Save all the leather from old purses and leather gloves and use them for patches to mend or reinforce elbows on jackets on boys’ play clothes or men’s work clothes. Everyday Psychology By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE A-591: Dr. Kenneth Edgers served as my host while I was in Seattle recently to address his state dental convention. As the former state president, he took me to | dine atop that] American ver-j sion of the Eiffel Tower, DR. CRANE with its revolving restaurant that makes one complete revolution every hour. Thousands of you readers visited it during the World’s Fair. But during our luncheon we were discussing child psychology. ■ * *, * "Dr. Crane,” h? began, “my mother used some vary clever psychology on us boys. “Like most youngsters* we were always afraid die other one would get the larger, piece of cake or the most milk. “So my mother made a very wise decree! “The boy who divided the cake had to let the other one take his first choice! “So you can be sure the division was very exact! ’’ You good mothers often can surpass our Supreme Court Justices in your wise decisions. In fact, it is very likely' that King Solomon's mother fed many cleve^ ideas to him, for which he later got the full credit. ★ ★ ★ Many of our psychology textbooks deal with abstractions and stay up in the stratosphere, thus failing to pre-' pare the students for the everyday practical problems that beset us. This daily column was devised to keep psychology down on terra firma where we live and bump into dilemmas that the textbooks ignore. If the textbooks translated psychology into its specific daily uses, I wouldn’t need to address the hundreds of denial, medical, engineering and sales conventions throughout America. Alas, the usual textbook author is a “braintruster” who deals in vague generalities but doesn’t get down to practical cases. * So in this dally column I by to iqeet but acute need by showing you bow to answer Junior’s query when he bluntly asks: “Mommy, where did I come from?’* Even you college graduates didn’t get the answer in your four years of Liberal Arts. Herein I pdur the useful rules from a dozen psychology courses, as well as the practical hints from the psychiatry department of oilr medical schools, so be grateful to your newspaper for thia serv- .jzsnjrtsa-, SIBLEY’S Miracle Mile Pricid *6 to M0.50 According to Style drtd Size Famous for Fashion plus Fit! Or. Posner 6hoet took so smart and last so long. Carefully constructed of the finest leathers with excellent workmanship. Trust our trained fitters to choose the right Or. Posner shoe for your child. “Michigan’s Largest Florsheim Dealer** Use Your Security "shoes Michigan Bankard BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9 FE 8-9700 The V Golden Touch In brocade. Slim empire-bodice gown, flam-back bolero jacket. Skin Blooms Again with 2nd Dehut ilbce lift, lined, With this i ___________n the most fearsome uoa of on-coming crows feet and crinkles that inconsiderately shouted your age just a Short time ago. Smoother now is your skin to a fingertip touch with * frash young feeling of moisture beneath, ana roses tinting your cheeks. For 2tid Debut dees a simulated lift without the surgeon's scalpel—a lift that lasts a long time, an ageless look that’s much more intriguing than common eputhfulneas. the lift comes from underneath as yon apply 2nd Debut . on the surface. 2nd Debut [with CEF 600] for the woman of no more than 40.2nd Debut [with CEF 1200] | for the impatient lady a few years; older-at good department and drug ARRIVALS, LTD., CHICAGO, U.SJt I A LIMITED TIME OFFER ON BASIC SETS OF TOWLE STERLING Sava up to $ 17 on four 4 pc. pi. settings. Save up to $46 on sight 6 pc. pi. settings. Sava up to $69 on twelve 6 pc. pi. settings. ^ Mr. and Mis. Austin P. Webb of Port Austin, former residents of Pontiflc, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary Tuesday. A reception was held recently in their honor at Maurice’s Hall on Edison Street. Their children were hosts for the1 occasion. They are: James A. Webb of Manning Road; Mrs. Jesse Bradburn of Grosse lie; Mrs. Donald Sharette of Liberty Street; Mrs. Albert Weckle of Oxford and Mrs. Donald Viau of Hudson Street. The couple have 24 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren. They were wed in Flint Nov. 29, 1916. Another Chaptei Added The City Council of Pontiac Beta Sigma Phi Sorority conducted the final meeting of the current year Monday evening. The group met in the Chamber of Commerce Board meeting room on West Huron Street. < . ★ ★ * . ■ A Nu Phi Mu degree chapter of the sorority from Birmingham became the 16th area chapter to become members of the council. Guests present for their first meeting were Ruth Clevers, president of Phi Gamma Chi So- rority and Mrs. Bruce Barker, recording secretary. * * . ♦ Iota' Omicron chapter was hostess for file refreshments. Phi Gamma Zeta chapter announced that they need a new advisor. Handy Crumbs Two plastic bags of bread crumbs, one plain and one tered, will often hasten preparation of the main dish for dinner. Keep the crumbs in the freezer. SKIERS’SPECIAL skis, poles, BOOTS BINDINGS *54.96 SKIS HARD METAL..,...$79.50 Up DYNASTAR........ ...$190.00 ATTENHOFER .........$99.95 Up BLIZZARD. ........w. $115.00 1 YEAR GUARANTEE KAZAMA-EPOXY $72.50 2 YEAR GUARANTEE APOLLO WOOD......$49.95 1-YEAR GUARANTEE IER SKIS AT .... $25 0 $39 CHILDREN’S SKI SPECIAL m Ski Poles and Bindings. .. *........ $12.95 Up Complete Line of SKI CLOTHINQ Henke Buckle Boots..... $45 Up Bindings, Marker, Look, Attenhofor ALSO CUBCO TYR0LIA After Ski Boots and Car Top Carriers Comer off Walton . and Sashabaw DON’S SKI WAIIS StfT PEGGY'S THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, i960 B—7 Michigan Artists fo^how Work in Bihnjngham /is " v , Local Michigan artists will have their varied work eo display Dec. 4 throughJan. 4 in a “Christmas Group S h o w” at Stanger’s Garrett in Birmingham. Creations in weav-. tag, drawing, graphics, ceram-lics, tapestries and silver kill comprise the showing. Those exhibiting work will be Beth' Lynch of Bloomfield Terrace, Ronald Goodman, Clinton Mackenzie, Nancy Schmidt, Robin Torrteano. Also Included is recent prize winner in the 56th exhibition for Michigan Artists, Charles W. Schmidt of Birmingham. A reception to introduce the artists will take place Sunday from 2 until 5 p.m. Daily hours are 9:30 a.m. to S p.m., Thursday and Friday 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday 12 noon to 6 p:m. Picasso Exhibit Is Midwest's Largest Display The largest exhibition of Pablo Picassp works ever presented in the Midwest will go on public view Dec. 13 at «p;m. in the new London Arts —Detroit Gallery in the Fishier Building. !*>j\,* ★ Assembled in. Europe by gallery director, ' Gugene I. Schuster, 52 major drawings and more than 200 graphics will be on view. * • a This exhibit Is one of a number of commemorative ones being held around the world in honor of the artist’s 65th year. * ★ * The new gallery is one of the largest graphics dealers in the world and operates branches in London and New York City. Make Poncho From Towels Make an after bath poncho robe from two large bath towels. You can use giant safety pins to fasten your poncho at the top and midway down each side if you don’t want to stitch them together. permanently. This way you can wear different towels to match your mood. RICHARDS The Pontiac Mall ititouneu DANCING-Tuesday Thru Saturday THE JERRY LIBBY TRIO MONDAY’S — Now Featuring GYPSY - Fabulous Flamenco Guitarist DETROIT'S NEWEST MUSICAL ] SUPPER CLUB Complete Menu Selections SPECIALING IN STEAKS ± BUSINESSMEN’S AND SEAFOODS ^ LUNCHEONS IMM suffiikUB ^ Vl JUST NORTH OF JOHN LODGE Your Host TOM DEAVfflAUX CLOSED SUNDAYS Phone 861-3306 PARK JEWELERS PRICE CUTTING IS OUR BUSINESS PARK JEWELERS There will he a new businessman in offices across the country this season, reports the American Institute of Men’s and Boys’ Wear. To give him a fashion lift for Christmas the Institute suggests, dr ess shirts in unde-space stripes of con- trasting collars and cuffs, wide boldly patterned neckties, Heavy Silk squares and perhaps a grained dress leather belt. For added dash, a gift of cologne may be just the thing. Pastor's Wife Will Be Guest Mrs. Robert Armstrong, wife of the Pastor of the War-rendale Community Church, will be the speaker at Wednesday’s luncheon meeting of Die Birmingham-Bloomfield Christian Women’s Club. * * * The event takes place at noon in Devon Gables. Ski fashions by the SpbrthauS will be seen with background mu- sic by Mrs. Marian Nyeberg. The subject of Mrs. Armstrong’s talk will be “The Song of Solomon.” The Scof-field Bible describes this book as “the picture of a true Christian marriage.” * ★ ★ Information about reservations may be had by contacting Mrs. Loren Brunsink of Detroit. May Brush Off Furniture which has become mildewed should be taken outdoors ami brushed well. Fresh air and sun often are enough treatment if mildew is caught early and brushed thoroughly. Rugs Will Be Flat When drying rugs, hang them mi the UAe with clamp-, type trouser hangers. They will lay flat when dried. DISCOUNTS ON ALL DIAMONDS Matt Go At Fraction of Value! SPECIAL GROUP •45" to *S9*° SPECIAL GROUP *115“ to ‘150°* SPECIAL GROUP *250“ to *500*° $3088 $7088 $14288 Up To 50% Off Qn All LADIES’ and MEN’S RINGS Men'* Diamond Rings $JA|| A* Low At NO Pearl Rings $Mg At Low At * / DISCOUNTS ON ALL MERCHANDISE 1 PARK JEWELERS 1 N. SAGINAW ST. /CHECK OUR LOW PRICES PONTIAC MALL, Shop Evory Nit* 'til 9 ■ BIRMINGHAM, Shop Thun., Fri. 'til 9 GIFT ROBES FOR HER LEISURE HOURS Quilted elegance fashioned in cozy warm nylon tricot, nylon fleece or luxurious quilted satin. Robes of all lengths, for the favorite girl on your list. As shown \ 1695 Others 11.95 to 34.95 PAJAMAS and Gowns 4't SWING-ON T GLOVES Christmas well In hand with a gift of 'Grandoe' gloves. Leather palms for driving ease arid Orion fleece for warmth . . special rugged Thumb Guard. One size fits aH . . . takes the guess-work out of sizes. ♦4 IN BRUSHED NYLON TREASURE FASHIONS FOR GLAMOROUS EVENINGS SPORTSTEMPOS in a platinum or silver knit with a gentle shimmer that's as flattering ao candle light. Lunxt metallic yam bonded to acetate. Elegant at home or late date simplicity. - ," !, Scoop Neck Shift.......;... J| •.... 2995 Long Sleeve Shirt (not bondod)........ IT95 Slim Pants........................ 1695 Softest fleecy nylon far t of your dreams ... warm, fabric that washes like a NRRI Pastel pink or blue. Sizes Petite, Small, Medium or USE YOUR PERSONAL, SECURITY CHARGE OR MICHIGAN BANKARD Lemmon Excited Over 'Wildest Rote Yet' riAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 By BOB THOMAS AP Mn^Televiiin Writer HOLLYWOOD - A fellow has to look' after himself it) the movie business, and that’s {he puffed on a cigar stub' “The! cheeks hollow -wJie dropped 25 pounds to 140 for the role. He wore baggy pajamas, a shabby robe and sneakers that looked MIC m —o like Howard Hughes discards, why Jack Lemmon has formed)He {days one of life’s losers, a his own Company, Jalem wouk,'be suicide from a N~ Productions. York bridge, i During the first dozen years! . *m *a*cin8 a big chance of his film career, the Harvard- f^'s L^innwm dech educated actor placed his des-t i n y in the hands of other producers. TT»e results were gotten good—one Oscar, supporting actor, “Mis-: ter Roberts." 1955: and four nominations as star. Some THO Like It Hot." "The Aj “Days of Wine “Irma la Douce,"/ * Y * But in between those milestones were other films which did littje to enhance the Lemmon/image, though most were financially successful.' He found -Mmself cast as a satyr — “Un-/der the Yum Yum, Tree" — of as the man who sacrifices his principles to go along with the system — “The Fortune Cook- ' Now Jalem has joined with producer Martin Manulis for the film version of Murray Shisgal’s far-out comedy play, “Luv.” “It’s wild,” Lemmon reports. “The wildest part I’ve ever played.’’ His appearance bore this out His hair was unkempt, his guy goes against all comedy principles: h^/feels sorry ‘m himself. ’s a dangerous thing to with a audience; people im-liately lose sympathy with a character who feels sorry for himself. The greatness of Chap- the underdog but he neyer was beaten. “Even when he was starving, he remained indomitable. Instead of becoming defeated, he figured out how he could make a meal out of his shoe. KEEPS MOANING “Now'Harry Berlin (his char-was that he alwavs Dlaved acter “ . »s noting like y P y^\m ue jjggpg moaning about how badly life has treated him, how he suffers from attacks of deafness and blindness, even temporary paralysis." ★ ★ ★ The role of Harry Berlin was created on Broadway by Alan Arkin, the brilliant corAedy actor who scored in “The Russians Are Coming” as the bewildered Russian submariner. * ★ * “I saw Arkin do it mi the stage, and he was fantastically good,” said Lemmon. “I thought at the time no one else could do it as well, and I had no inkling that I would play it.’ -FILM PHOTOS—Actor Jack' Lemmon, playing what he calls the “wildest” role of his career, displays some still photos of his co-star, Elaine May, in their new movie^ “Luv.” He plays a would-be suicide. Road Projects LANSING (AP) - The Highway Commission reports completion of seven road construction projects costing a total of $2.2 million. Largest are a $1.72 million modernization of 10 miles of M47 in Saginaw and Shiawassee counties, a 1.5-mile, $225,297 modernization of Shat-tuck Road in Saginaw County, and a $131,923 modernization project on business U.S. 27 in Gratiot County. MODERN MAID SINGLE Electric OVEN with COOK TOP Manor House, fits on standard 30* base cabinet with drawer space underneath, or can, be installed above dishwasher. SALE Big 21* eye level oven. Lift-up top. pp|Q£ Reg. Price $209.95 Each MODERN MAID DOUBLE Electric OVEN SALE PRICE Double Manor House oven. Two separate ovens with bake and broil elements, in upper and ##Kai M 00 flower ovens. Lift-off lower oven a 11 J| An door for easier cleaning. ” % I (A Reg. Price $349.95 Each ^ ■ EACH WICKES OWN QUALITY DISHWASHER) SALE PRICE ‘137S Leaves dishes sparkling and hygieni-cally clean. 2 pushbutton automatic. Two wash, four rinse. Two separate spray arms. Cpppertone finish. Reg. Price $149.95 Each ^ BUY NOW! SAVE $ 8” BENCH SAW 8” tilting Arbor circular ww w/8" combination blade, %-H.P. built-in motor, cord, plug, twitch, rip fence and mitre gauge, (extensions not included.)' NOW ONLY WlP Each I SEE IN ACTION POWER TOOL DEMONSTRATION, SATURDAY OEC. S, 1966 . 9A.M. TO I P.M. FREE! COFFEE AND DONUTS! (GRAND BLANC CENTER ONLY) $89 88 YOUR $1144 CHOICE linen Medicine Cabinet Styled for convenience with overhead fluorescent lighting. Has a mirror size . of 14" X 18". 2 aluminum shelves. One piece stainless steel frame. Reg. Price $26.95 Each M00RE-0-MATI& Garage Door Operator For convenience and safety, install this electronically controlled operator. Opens door from BO feet away. Automatically turns onfrsrage lights, closes and locks door. A SALE! SENSATIONAL REPEAT OFFER!! p^YOU ASKED FOR IT! OFFER GOOD DECEMBER 1ST THRU 31ST! life;; ALUMINUM ALUMINUM [gT [fit COMBINATION COMBINATION IH mm WINDOW DOOR ■ IJ3- ■II • ALL STANDARD SIZES K ppj. up to 106 UNITED INCHES • PRE HUNG • HARDWARE INCL. • 2 8 X 6 8 AND 3 X 6 8 - $795 “'*1777 ) LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER ' BALDWIN ft NOLLY DOS. - 5 Milos South of GRAND BLANC, i||€H OPEN EVERY FRID AY EVENING! IMPORTANT NOTICE: 7St«ad carefully, ifcen hurry to “Wiggs ^^**KW* 12? W^tyneTPontUc, across the street from the Oakland County jail! Wiggs Pontiac Warehouse 121 WAYNE ST. Opposite Oakland County Jail REMOVAL SALE! , Friday and Saturday, 9 ’til 5:30 P.M. % on Furniture Save Up to Wiggs has a new warehouse; and many tfainp in the old one must be disposed of - w® diately! All item, ere uncrated and must be .old “as is.” We would rather .ell these item, at discount to you than pay moving costa! All sales finaL No layaways. Dining Room Pieces: Reg. $30 each, 4 matching Captain’* Chain in antique maple finish, each..............$20 Reg. $139.50 Dining Table, 48” round plastic top, 2 leaves, maple colonial....... $99.50 Reg. $126.95 Colonial dining tables —36”x54”, opens to 84". Plastie tops, antique maple finish, each................,..$99.50 Reg. $122 set of 4 Mate’s Chaim in antique maple. Colonial styling, now..................,.$99.75 Reg. $23450 Dining Room Table, Colonial maple. 54" round, ex-’ to 99", now........$179.50 tends u Large Grouping DINING ROOM CHAIRS, ODDS and ENDS Vs to Yz Off See them, they may match yours. Savings are tremendous! All Are Scratched. Bedroom Pieces - Matched Pieces: Reg. *139.50 40** White dresser base, plaids jog................899.50 Reg. *f09.50 30” White chest, plastic top./.....................$69.50 Ro. *174 30” Chest and bookcase top......................*119.00 Reg. *99.50 Dmtting table with fitted vanity, 30”, now..........869.50 Reg. (62.50 Solid Maple, fhll rise starter bed to match tome other very famous furniture.....p'.........S39.50 ODDS AND ENDS SALE Box Spring and Mattresses Twin and Double Sizes SHARP. REDUCTIONS! Living Room Pieces Reg. 8295 Red Tweed Colonial Sofa. Rag. 8139.95 Colonial Patchwork Rocker, ....................... 899 Antique Pine Colonial Living Room Tablet, strictly “«» is”t Reg. $69.50 Rectangular Coffee Table, now................844.50 Reg. 899.50 Drop-leaf Harveat Coffee Table, now.........869.50 Reg. 877.50 Butterfly drop loaf Lamp Table, now..... 859.50 Reg. 877.50 Dough Box Ump Table, now................859.50 Colonial Nutmeg LIVING ROOM TABLES Were $67 Now, each $44 Coffee tables, magazine tablet tind atep-end tablet in gronpin|k Colonial Nutmeg Maple Tables, strictly “as is” . Reg. $52.50 Dough Box Lamp Table, now...........$89.50 Reg. $52.50 Spoon Foot Harvest CoclctaU Table, now... $39.50 Reg. $39.50 Spoon Foot Cocktail Table, now .........$25.00 Reg. $42,50 Gallery Trim, 40” Cocktail-Table, now... $29.50 SALE! ODDS and ENDS TABLE GROUPING 20% to 50% off 1 and 2 or few of kind tablet in assorted finishes and styles 1 iic|| Loveseats and Chairs From Wigg* Warehouse - Tremendous Savings Just a few of these wonderful pieces left. Matching loveseats and chain in tweed fabrics. Reversible foam cushions, traditional styling. No special orders possible. Hurry for this splendid value! Many More Item* Also on SaleI WAREHOUSE ADDRESS IN PONTIAC: 121 Wayne, 1st Block Off Weal Huron Across from Oakland County Jail Reg. $180 Chair $88 Reg. $180 Lbveaeat $125 SHOP FRIDAY and SATURDAY 9 to ItSO ALL HALIM PINAL! NO HPM.IAI, ORDERS! NO LAYAWAYS! c—i TIIE PONT! AC TltKSS THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 Sign Talk Called Language All Its Own By Science Service WASHINGTON - Sign talk iy the deaf is a, language own, not simply English into gestures, a California researcher told the American Speech and Hearing | Association meeting here. It takes 60 pages of type to analyze “sign,” Miss Elizabeth A. McCall of the Monterey In-stitute for Speech and Hearing 'said. Her description, of sign as a language touched on a 30-year-old controversy between proponents of sign and those who believe the deaf should be taught to speak English at the earliest possible moment. Like any other language, sign differs from country to country and even shows changes of ‘dialect” within the United States, said Miss McCall. ★ * * The elements that make it distinct from English include: • A grammatical sentence does not always require a subject. • Tense is not in the verb, but in adverbs such as “yesterday,” and' “tomorrow.” • Sign has no verb like the E n g 1 i s h “to be,” said Miss McCall. The deaf communicate “I tired” instead of “I am tired.” Plurals, she said, are made by repeating gestures, which in English would be something like “big, big, dog, dog, dog.” Miss McCall and hat colleague, Dr. Cletus G. Fisher of the University of Iowa, proposed that once the deaf know the rules of sign, they can more easily learn English as a “second language.” i r —-----------------— There are more than 12,000 kinds of paper and 100,000 uses for them. VERSATILE NEW CRAFT—A newcomer to aerial warfare flies in formation over Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. It’s the tilt-wing transport named the XC-142A that can take off and land vertically like a helicopter and can fly at more than 400 m.p.h. It carries 32 fully equipped combat troops or four tons of cargo. It is one of three such vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) Craft being tested. In the photo sequence at right it is shown: 1. Dropping cargo by parachute. 2. Hovering and picking up a man in a rescue mission. 3. At slow speed, dropping cargo wjjhout parachutes. Pravda Urges 'Purge' of Padded Expense Accounts MOSCOW (AP) - And then there was the kindergarten which gave a banquet featuring Armenian cognac, vodka and Turkish coffee. ★ ^ ★ This cost $342.and the menu: included, amon^ other delicacies, jellied sturgeon. ★ * 0, The guests were not children, but men from the hydroelectric company in the town, called Mary, near the Iranian border. The company ran the kindergarten, and the staff conven- iently made use of some of its funds to have a good time. .* ★ * . The case was one of a number of this kind exposed by Pravda, the paper of die Soviet Communist party. It urged a crackdown on die practice of holding banquets, sometimes with hundreds of guests, and falsifying documents to make them look like legitimate expenses. HEAVY DRINKERS Pravda cited a fishermen’s collective in the Leningrad area which carried out “cultural activities and public after a business meeting, These turned out to be a heavy-drinking banquet attended by 280 persons and costing $836. * * * “But perhaps after that the fishermen thought things over and became conscience-stricken, resolving in the future to pay tor their own drinking?” Pravda asked. * * * No, it answered, citing another banquet later by the same fishermen. That one was for 313 guests and cost $2,862. •k It ★ Turning its attention to the south, the paper noted that the 'hospitable” city of Tiflis in Georgia enjoyed 198 banquets at just three of its restaurants ih recent months. At these 7,901 persons wined and dined, GREAT INGENUITY Pravda reported- that great ingenuity was shown in charging such things off to expenses and getting the state to foot the biU. Pravda warned: “Everybody who handles public money, from! street car conductors up to lead-1 ers of farms and plants with j budgets in the millions, must show great care. * * ★ “The state treasury is an inanimate object incapable of self-defense.” More dollars are lost on the average ranch or farm through livestock deaths than through fires or vehicle accidents. | MMCTCR COLONIAL CHARM •lor 25" tube (overall dieg.) $CQC RCA VICTOR‘"hew Vista COLOR TV • Powerful 25,000-volt Color chassis • Rectangular RCA Hl-LlTE Color Tube • Super-powerful New Vista VHF Solid State UHF tuners • New RCA solid integrated . circuit performs key FM sound functions RCA VICTOR tfewKstd COLOR Ty COLOR TV OH CASTERS! RCA VICTOR Color TV Home Entertainment Center e “Wireless Wizard" Remote Control tunes VHF, adjusts volume, tunes “tint" and “color,” turns TV off and on, even turns power completely off • Rectangular RCA Hi-Lite Color Tube e Powerful 25,000-volt Color chassis e 6-speaker stereo sound e Solid State FM-AM and FM Stereo radio % Solid State 40-watt peak power amplifier „ •Studiomatic changer, Feather Action Tone Arm, diamond stylus • Dependable RCA solid copper circuits ELECTRONICS INC. • Powerful 25,000-volt Color BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9 FE 8-9607 coiorfiibe CMLOR T Serlts K 708 25"tub#*ovarill dial.) QUICKSILVER and sparkling CHAMPAGNE put a gleam in glittering LUREX double-knits by BUTTE. When five o’clock shadow8 fall, pull I the glitter switch and cast glorious reflections into the wee small hours. ..in a dazzling Butte knit. Our sparkling holiday collection of dresses and three-piece suits is sprinkled with Lu^ex and intertwined with double-knit wool. (A) The sleeveless shift; in silver, or champagne, sizes 8-18, *35 (B) Crocheted edging on textured Lurex: open jacket, matching shell, straight shirt; in silver, sizes 16-20, *45 (C) The long sleeve shift with drape neckline; in silver or rmpagne, sizes 8-18, *35 (D) Lurex e. embroidery and edging on open jacket; matching blouse and straight skirt. In silver, sizes 10-26, *45 OPEN EVBtY NIGHT TILL CHttSTMAS TO 9 PJL (Exception: Birmingham «pm Sat. H 5:10) c—a THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1066 Photo Analysis Continues Lunar Spires Set Scientists at Odds By Science Service WASHINGTON - The mysterious spires spotted on the face of the moon by Lunar Orbiter 2 have the moon theorists bade clawing at each others theories. They’re just h o u s e-sized chunks of rock tossed up by meteoric impact, says Dr. L a w-rence Rowan, chid astrol-ogist with the US. Geological Survey team analyzing Orbiter’s photos. Tbis theory is pooh-poohed by Dr. John O’Keefe, National Aeronautics and Space Administration lunar authority. The survey team, he contends, is against any evidence of volcanic activity bn the moon at all. * * ★ Dr. O’Keege contends that the spines are like those that thrust up through the floor of volcanic craters on earth. And he points to the volcanic spines in Mt. Pelee in the Caribbean as evidence of a similar phenomenal on earth. s JUST CANT BE The survey specialists say that the lunar spines can’t be the result of, volcanic activity, since they don’t all appear in craters. You don’t need craters, coun- I ters Dr. O’Kee f e. Volcanic I spines can just ooze up out of I a crack in the ground, “like | toothpaste out of a tube.” ' * * ★ Dr. O’Keefe points to a 1,000- I foot tower of lava that arose I out of Pelee’s heart in 1902 as I the answer to the elongated | shadows Orbiter photographed. BARRELSET designed for tomorrow^ home 5 pc. BARREL REFRESHMENT SET ConUctkrm. coffee or oocfaib . • **** ment or M) drier'far fte mm* eri. UUkt nU( in tbe deep cuihianod bend cbriwttet uM net, you'd ueuur bdw» o bund could bo to. comtortubjo. - Vfocoid qamt, nedtimu or psrtytbes Stagne **. e Defrost drain; lock, key Huge Signature 16.1 cu* ft* refrigerator at $70 savings! *279 • Thin-wall foam insulation takes less floor space e Never defrost again—all-frostless top and bottom e 4 adjustable shelves; 7-day meat keeper; crisper e Poor storage; covered butter keeper; egg rack e 154-lb. bottom freezer with swing-out basket, shelf REG. $219 NO MONEY DOWN WHITE or COPPER THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 C—8 OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. • 682-4940 RELEASED 'FfiOM PMSON-Mary Katherin Hampton of Sandy Hook, Ky., who was convicted of two Louisiana slayings, bites her lip at the New Orleans airport after she was .released after serving five years in a Louisiana prison. Miss Hampton was the girlfriend of a convicted killer who boasted of 30 slayings. Miss Hampton, now 24, was arrested at the age of 18. , ' Common Mart Entry a British Challenge LONDON (AP) — If Britain joins the European Common Market, the changes in ibis island’s life will be deep and subtle: Pood will cost more. Common Market farmers are guaranteed higher prices than Britain’s state-subsidized fanners, and the cost is passed directly to the consumer. Britain will have to change its farm policy to conform. Beef win probably cost more, and so will butter. Most livestock prices may go up because of the higher cost of grain used for feed. it C ♦ The government estimates this may boost the cost of food by 10 to 14 per cent, although the rise will be spread over several years, lie price of imported fruit and vegetables probably win come down. The farmers’ union warns the cost will be about 83 a week extra, or almost twice the government’s estimate. The entire British economic pie is expected to grow, and the breadwinner’s slice of it should be larger. Greater industrial opportunities in a huge market now fenced off by a 12 per cent tariff* represent the major argument for going into the Common Market , COMPETITION' The big unknown is whether British firms can compete. Rising British sales in Europe al- New Typology Crime Panel Urges s Updating of System By Science Service WASHINGTON — When the National Crime Commission submits its report to President Johnson next January, it will propose a method for typing personalities that promises to update the nation’s correctional system. The aim is to tailor correctional measures to fit different types of individuals. Traditional treatment of the criminal population has been unsophisticated to say the least — "We’ve been firing with a shotgun," said Dr. Elmer K. Nelson, who heads the commission’s task force on corrections. “Uatti we can break down tiie offender population,” said Dr. Neboa, "we can’t get very • far,” v . The “typology," developed by California psychologist Rita .Warren, would put offenders in one of nine categories according to their style of dealing with other people, or their “interpersonal maturity." One type is the manipulative personality — the type skilled at working others for Ms own purposes. Another is the anxious personality. Ideally, the first should get firm handling, greater discipline; the second more permissiver treatment and ten-. der cara, ~ - ready indicate they can. Of t|ie 10 largest companies in Europe, four are British. They are ideally scaled to compete In the huge Common Market which already has 180 million consumers. Britain would have to make a host of adjustments in tax and immigration policies. The Common Market’s founding treaty provides for free movement of workers on equal terms. For women, the treaty means equal pay, long a sore point in Britain. ★ * * The average British worker will discover that he is not necessarily the best-paid or best-cared for in Europe. Fringe benefits — vacations, unemployment compensation, sick leave and pensions — are often better under other European governments.'^* Common Market countries spend 16 to 18 per cent of their Gross National Product on social security, Britain 12 per cent. WELFARE BENEFITS The British finance welfare benefits largely, out of taxes. The Common Market underwrites social security largely through employers’ contributions. That means businessmen hesitate to carry surplus Work-Applied in Britain, this would mean less job security. But Ore resulting tax savings might allow Britain to lower income taxes, long a brake on personal incentive. Britain’s prospective European partners may demand that the British pound end Its role as a world currency. Devaluation could be one price of British entry. It is more certain that other Common Market countries will be protected from the fiscal shocks Britain absorbs as a price for playing banker to naif the world. •k it k This may seem a distant abstraction to the man with $140 in the post office savings bank, but Britain’s foreign investment and banking have helped underwrfte its world influence for more than a century. The dividend for the average Englishman has been a pride in his country’s international role in trade, politics and colonization. Entry into the Common Market would spell an aid — and a healthy end, some say — » what are now often seen as only national illu-ons. British membership in tire Common Market still is vague, but Prime Minister Harold Wilson has expressed interest _ w .*■ it ■ Even if the transition is smoofiied by , up to seven years of special arrangements iBrtadn, the drift toward Europe is bound to come as a shock to an island which has always regarded itself as so far above European quarrels indeed. Its policy has long been based on manipulating the disputants for its own benefit Agatost this must be set other shock to the entire nation if Britain does not enter the Common Market The British can then count on waking up one (fry and finding themselves an offshore island, still separated from a dynamic Europe by Channel fof,. / 04 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 Wrap Keeps Food Gifts Fresh Why battle the bedlam of,other see-through plastic bags, stores? Hie makings of the best [they’ll stand up stoutly beneath . ... „ the weight of the heaviest fruit gifts of all . , . those that bear^^ witilstanc| punctures from the home-made with-love stamp ^ shapest nut-studded brittle, . . . can be whipped up in the an(| completely seal off the air peace and quiet of your own ^ that your gift will arrive at kitchen. ' _ its destination fresh as the min- A single gift of goodies . . you popped it out of the cookies, cakes or candy . . . lOTen. does for an entire family, from* •_ young cousin Joe to aged Aunt i GREATER ROOMINESS Mabel, saving you the quan-! Other definite advantages are dary of what to give to eachjthe side gussets which give with the resulting accumulative greater roominess allowing the cost bags to accommodate more So this holiday season, set to eXpCCt with the baking Do it in nice or those with odd shapes, leisurely sessions, scheduling 1. And the bags’ lack of either fruit cakes for one morning, static or vaccuum cling make cookies for another, and so on, I them a cinch to handle and setting aside a half hour or I fill. so for wrapping each day’s You-re sure to find the perfect harvest. [fit for whatever it is you baked, This can be done simply and for you have a quart and a gal-effectively this year thanks to Ion size to choose from, a new wrapping medium . . ★ ★ * double-wall quilted plastic bags Since the quilting^ gives them appropriately called Hefty. a sparkly look, you need little ★ ★ i ★ \ more in the way of Christmas More than three times strong- dressing than one bright bow er and seven times stiffer than | and a wee sprig of holly. By Sch LOS ANGELES - A molecular beam that realistically simulates conditions facing a space vehicle moving at about £,000 feet per second 100 miles above the earth has been produced in GLAMOROUS, NEW — To make sure your homebaked Christmas gifts arrive oven-fresh yet beautifully festive, pack them in new double-wall quilted plastic bags which are three times stronger and seven times stiffer titan any other see-through plastic bag! And since the quilting gives them a shimmery effect, all you need add in the way of dressing is a bow and a bit of holly. Beam Simulates Space in Lab After years of experimentation, Dr. Eldon L. Knuth, head of the molecular beam laboratory at the University of California at'Los Angeles, has produced a molecular beam of two electron volts (ev), which is within ihe approximate energy range in which upper atmosphere partides collide with spacecraft. Shooting the beam at metal and glass surfaces, Dr. Knuth and graduate student Jack Alcalay got a surprise bonus by discovering that the particles bounced off the solid surfaces in different ways than had been generally assumed. They had expected that particles in this energy range would bounce off and scatter either completely at random or In one preferred direction. Instead, the experiments showed that t h e particles scattered in several preferred directions. * * * I The findings, the first of their kind ever reported, can play an important role in future space research, Dr. Knuth believes. “As we determine how molecules interact with the surfaces of spacecraft, ’we will be able to predict the actual useful life-span of a satellite,'’ he said. Past estimates, he added have “THRIFTY’S MAN IN WHITE’’ A MAN OF MANY TALENTS Your Thrifty Phormoeiit mu*t not only havo the training and (kill to bo ablo to fill yovr doctor's proscription accurately and to tho latter but ho must Awpyi bo studying and reading ond looming tho latest medical discoveries so that he can render hit bast service to tho medical profession. Ho It alto acquainted with non-prt script ion itomt to help remedy your various achat and paint. Ho hat tpocial knowledge abbot non-altergenic countries that will bo kind to your skin. Sod why you should too Thrifty's ‘MAN IN WHITE1? free almanac a host of Other feature ttorioi. been off by as much as a factor of two. ★ ★ ♦ Results of the studies are also of value in calcuiatihg the density of the atmosphere at different altitudes and predicting the heat load on a spacecraft as it reenters the earth’s atmosphere. The latter'may allow designers cut down on the protective heat shield and reduce the ship’s overall weight. The Voice of America is the radio network of the U.S. Intelligence Agency. FAT J : OVERWEIGHT Available to you without a doctor’s prescription, our product callad Odrinex. You must Iota ugly fat or your monay back, Odrinex is a tiny tablet and easily swallowed. 'Get rid of excess fat and live longer. Odrinex costs $3.00 and is sold on this guarantee: If not satisfied for any reason, just return the package to your druggist and gat [your fug money back. No questions asked. Odrinex is sold with this guarantee SIMM'S CUT RATE DRUG STORE — 98 N. SAGINAW — MAIL ORDERS FILLED BUY, SELL, TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT . ADS! OPEN SUNDAY 1P.M. to 6 P.M. EVERYTHING FOR A (MM COLONIAL LIVING ROOM Luxurious Early American styling which gives you comfort and styling that cannot be matched. You'll find one of Oakland County's largest selections of styles, colors and fabrics to choose from. SOFAS CHAIRS *179 - *69 THERE’S ONLY I ONE WAY TOI lose WEIGHT,’ i _ .... ■■ lett, and lose pounds and jjiches natur-I ally. On the Ayda Plan you eat I what the family *aU, but you I don’t overeat. Safa—effective. Va-I nitia Caramel or Chocolate fudge I tapis. Month’s supply only $249 City-wide FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY! Have Your Doctor Call Your Noarost THRIFTY for PROMPT FREE Delivery Service ' IrtNpedle IppRaeees e BaeRlepperts Ilastie Slot Mags o Beth Mato and female traduste fitters tPrivate Fitting Keen (This service ot dewotaon stare only) Maple STUDENT DESK An ideal Christmas gift for grown-ups or children. Styling in Maple to make It look like it belongs. Choose from sevoraldiffarent styles. Choose From a Very Large Selection of Christmas Gifts * • Smoking Stands • Lamps • Magazine Baskets o Sewing Baskets L • Wall Pictures o Clocks o Ottomans o Table Lamps o Decorator Wall Pieces PLUS MANY UNUSUAL DECORATOR PIECES YOU MAY NOT FIND ANYWHERE ELSE. PRESCRIPTION FILLED B1 US QUALITY DRUGS LDWEST PRICE 14D North Saginaw Huron Street Corner Telegraph 4895 Dixie Highway Next to Savon i 4405 HIGHLAND Road • Corner Pontiac Lake Rd. 1 Mile West of Elizabeth Lake RcL Open Daily 'til 9 P.M. Phono 674-2251 Terms Arranged — 90 Days Cash OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 6 P.M. TffE PONTIAC ERESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 C-tflU- Communist Split Is Hindering Latin Reds Vy WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent FWel Castro’s Cuban Con&nu-nists have just thrown a new scare into Latin-Ame-ican governments, says a report from Chile,, by announcing the establishment in Havana of a new university for guerrillas. Gradu-ates, the report says, will be shipped around the continent and to Asia and Africa to foment “people’s wars.” Hie project, however, has a look of desperation as far as Latin America is concerned. Communism and guerrilla war- riors in general have been far-ing poorly there. Confusion generated by the world Communist split and increasing confidence of governments in ^dealing with the threat have Contributed to the sagging fortunes of violence* minded revolutionaries in the Western Hemisphere. * ★ h For some time, there had been a letup in Castro’s program of shipping trained guerrillas to other countries, probably because of Cuba’s own vexing internal problems. Now there are reports that new ’-Junior Editors Quiz on- HORSES QUESTION: Why are horses mounted from the left side, yet cows are milked from the right? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Horses, like many other animals, are creatures of habit. They like to have things done the same way each time. They have been trained to understand that when you approach from the left side you may mount them. If you tried to mount from the right side, they might be startled. Using the left side is said to have come from the old days when riders, such as the knight in chain amor which we show, had to mount a horse with a long sword hanging by his left side {A). If he had mounted from the right, the weight of both left leg and sword would have to be thrown over the horse’s back, making it a clumsy operation. Cows are by no means all milked from the right side. Most cows are milked by machine, in which case the side doesn’t matter. Since most people are right-handed, most hand milking was from the rigt|t side in the old days. It is more natural for a right-handed person to reach under the cow with the right hand, as our pictures (B) and (C) show. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Imagine there’s some enemy standing in front of you which you have to knock out fast, Take a swat at him. If you are right-handed, chance are you used your right hand; if left-handed, your left hand. This shows how you do what comes naturally unless there is a specific reason to do otherwise. batches of guerrillas are ready, some reportedly trained by instructors who have returned from North Viet Nam. The guerrilla, university, sponsored by ^“solidarity organization for Asia, Africa and Latin America,” is a project that grew out of the socalled tricontinental, anti-imperialist conference in Havana early this year. GENERAL FEELING For the most part, there appears today to be a feeling in Latin America that the threat has subsided considerably. Directly after Castro came to power in Cuba, guerrilla war was something new for Latin-American military and police to cope with. Since then, they have learned much. The job of containing guerrillas is not so difficult as in the jungled Orient. Guerrillas in the Western Hemisphere often have to rely on urban violence and that, with a steady rise in city living standards, has tended to ease off in recent years. ★ ★ * Here is what the Latin-Ameri-can guerrilla situation looks like today: VENEZUELA The Communist movement is badly split in Venezuela between the cautious, Moscow-line wing and the violence-minded supporters of the Revolutionary Movement of Leftists — MIR. Even Communist sources report the movement in sad shape. The Armed Forces of National Liberation — FALN — as the guerrillas call themselves, have been having a hard time. Their commander, Pedro Medina Dg va, reported earlier this year that 500 of them had died and 1, 000 others were in prison, although he boasted that the movement would be intensified with prospective help from Cuba. ' PEOPLE HUNGRY But other sources on the scene say the Venezuelan people are hungry for an end to violence and turmoil and the FALN has been faltering for lack of support. It has been unable to recruit effectively. It has lost sup port in the cities, and among the peasantry. Because of their own political blunders, the Communists have run afoul of the government, which has banned both the regular Communist party and the MIR, thus depriving them of any legal positions. Many leaders have been arrested. The police and army have exerted heavy pressure on the FALN. 1 Two arrested guerrilla leaders, brought to Caracas and military prison in September, provided under interrogation a picture of a swiftly fading guerrilla movement. One reason, they said, was entirely too much interference from Castro’s Cuba. The founder of the MIR, Domingo Alberto Rangel, jailed this year in San Carlos military prison, has turned his back on the guerrillas. Castroites now call him traitor. GUATEMALA Guatemala is one of the more sensitive hemisphere spots but the guerrilla movement there suffered a heavy blow in October, with the death in an automobile crash of the top guerrilla leader, lean and intense young Luis Augusto TurcioS Lima. The command now has been taken over” by 23-year-oki Cesar Montes. But the Guatemalan guerrilla movement already had been badly spljt, also because of Castro’s interference. but lacks influence. Its secre-tary-general, Saturnino Paredes, now denounces Castro for making peace with the Soviets. He has been trying, without much success, to form a “patriotic liberation front” of peasants and workers. Paredes tried to launch a guerrilla war more than a year ago but police and army respoiise was quick and effective. There was considerable fighting in mountain areas for about eight months but the lack of the guerrilla effort appeared at last to be broken, at least for the time being. DISPUTE AROSE A dispute had arisen between Turcios and the man "he had served as deputy, Marcos Antonio Yon Sosa, head of the I3th of November Movement. Turcios founded his own movement with the backing of ihe pro-Moscow Communists, while Yon Sosa retailed the support of the more violence-minded Chinese-lean-element. Then Castro I All Work Guarantees? | WHILE YOU WAIT SERVICE S. S. KRESGE’S I DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORE T THIS WEEK ahd EVERY WEEK VISIT PONTIAC'S ULTRA-MODERN COCKTAIL L0UHGE Designed With An Atmosphere With Your Comfort in Mind! AND WHY NOT TRY ONE OF OUR MANY SANDWICH SPECIALTIES :7jl N. Saginaw — Downtown Pontiac 338-8048 Phase of Cancer Probe Hints Smoking Negative NEW YORK (UPI) - A slight Indication that cigarette smoking may protect against one variety of cancer has again appeared in a statistical hunt for cancer causes. Dr. John Higginson, the medical scientist who found it, had no faith in it. Nevertheless, it could be neither explained nor dismissed statistically. s “A slig h tly higher proportion of colon and rectal carcinoma patients did not smoke cigarettes as compared to the controls,” he reported to the technical journal of the National Cancer Institute. “These results are not dear-cut but it is of interest that some previous reports from North America also show a slight negative association between cigarette smoking and, carcinoma of the large intestine.” * ★ ★ Repeated and s t r o n g statistical “positive associations” have made cigarette smoking a suspected cause of lung cancer and of heart disorders. CANAL CANCERS Higginson applied similar statistical techniques to cancers of tiie alimentary canal from the stomach downward. There were 03 stomach cancer and 340 colon and rectal cancers. The “controls” were 1,020 other hospital patients who were free both of cancer and of alimentary tract diseases. Cancer patients and "controls” were matched as to ages, sex, marital status, occupation and education. ★ ★ ★ Then the habitual food-and-drink patterns and personal habits of cancer patients and “controls" were compared statisical-ly in the hope of revealing significant differences. ANIMAL FATS The stomach cancer patients consumed more in animal fats, cooked fats, fried food and bacon than did their “controls,’ and less in dairy produce. But, Higginson added, “the differences were not statistically significant.” Nor were there signifeant differences “regarding marital status, religion, occupation, bowel habits, tobacco and beverage habits, and usage of individual foodstuffs.” Hie differences between intestinal cancer patients and “controls” were the larger number of smokers among “cprt-trols” and “a more frequent history of constipation and use of laxatives which were of doubtful significance” among the patients. WHY GAMBLE? Don’t pay $100 to $4W too much for any ear. Take the gamUaaat of ear toping mad deal with us. BIRMINGHAM • KHVICE CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH >11S. Woodward, Binriaghun _ Home of Birmingham LEASING ALL MAKES and MODELS Where the Action It ___________0474111 "YOUR CHOICE" PIANO OFFER! 4 elegantly-crafted Mendelssohn Spinet Pianos, all specially priced S Because of a fortunate purchase, Grinneirs can offer you this fine piano in your choice of 4 authentic styles at a wonderful special .price ! How lovely any one of them would look in your home this Christmas ! They have sparkling tone, northern spruce sound board, finest repeating action, full 88-note keyboad. Outstanding value ! Choice of 4 Styles $ 645 VISIT GRINNELL'S FOR THE LARGEST SELECTION OF FINE BRAND NAMES STEINWAY Chore* of greot ortists, th* Steirv way it a piano to be treoswd for generatiqris. Shown, th* Heopie-'white consol* In11 ft nrA walnut. 40“ high. lOjU Knabe The piano famous for its "singing ton*." the Knob* is thp officol piano of th* Metropolitan Opera. ■ Shown, the Cohtsfn- > $ | ^25 ' Bench extra porory in wolnut. GRiNNELL Our newest Grinned spinet has spruce sound board for full, rich tone, top-quality 'features such os nickel-plated tuning , }/Qr pins. Lustrous walnut. w/J STECK HOLLY This beautiful Steck spinet will inspire your young pionist Hn» new open tonal louvres tor qreater Volume. Chorming curved S0*7 C Music desk. Figured wolrjut O I, J Bench extra Christmas Special! This distinctive spinet has full 88-note keyboard. „ tost repeating action. beoutMsd ...rich tone.. 5CCQ ' Very specie! value el ... Jv7 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as. cash), Budget Plan or Christmas Layaway GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 — Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 THE PONTIAC PRESS; THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1. IBM C"..8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER I 1966 , Author Rex Stout Going 80 By MARION E. PRILOOK I Rex Stout to become the over-Danbm-y News-Times weight, dark-haired, clean-sha-DANBURY, Com. (AP) — It ven Nero Wolfe whose adven-would take a considerable mets itures in criminology have been morphosis for spare, gray- j the subject of 40 of Stout’s pub-haired, white-bearded author'lished works. TAKES A BREAK-Rex Stout, author of 40 Nero Wolfe mysteries, takes time out from writing to take care of some plants in his Danbury, Conn., home. Stout observes his 80tH birthday today by starting a new Nero Wolfe story, and he says it should take 1pm the usual 39 days to complete. In tiie first place, Nero Wolfe, despite 32 years of literary detecting, is ageless. Rex Stout celebrates his 80th birthday today, and is marking the occasion by beginning a new Nero Wolfe story. Writing the borne will take the usual 39 days. Stout neither rereads ngr rewrites. Allowing for time out for the holidays, the book will be published, according to Stout, on May 9 or 10. LOGICAL THINKING Both Styxit and Nero Wolfe credit a good part uf their success to logical thinking. Stout describes logical thinking as the ability to consider a problem without introducing the extraneous. He ascribes this ability — ergo, Wolfe’s — to an arrangement “somewhere in my head.” * * * He holds this same arrangement responsible for the fact that by the time he was 10, he had read the 1,200 betoks in his parents’ library. His sister, author and gardening expert Ruth Stout, says Rex began to read when he was 18 months old. SAVED MONEY “I rather doubt that,” says Stout, “but I do remember that after I. was 2, I started saving my money to buy my mother a gift. On my third birthday, I gave her a book.” Born in Noblesville, Ind., Dec. 1, 1886, Stout states unequivocally that he left Indiana at the age of 1, “because I was fed up with Indiana politics*’ He grew up near Itopeka, Kan. ★ a * His appearance belies statistics. He neither lodes nor acts his 80 years. He is keen and vital, and exudes a lusty masculinity. Stout’s biographical data says he has been, successively, an office boy, store clerk, bookkeeper, sailor, hotel manager, inventor of the school thrift system — adopted by schools in 432 cities in the United States — and author. In pdditibn to writing 54 books in the past 36 years, Stout was master of ceremonies for the ‘Speaking of liberty” radio programs in 1941 and the “Voice of Freedom” programs in 1942. * * * Devotees of Nero Wolfe will And contradictions and similarities between the fictional Wolfe and the factual Stout. Does Stout, like Wolfe, admire orchids? “No. They are not my favorite flower.” Stout grows varieties of tall, bearded iris. He also grows numerous varieties of day lilies, vegetables and fruits. TIME OUTDOORS Unlike Wolfe' Stout spends a great deal of time outdoors. In winter, he enjoys playing chess and tending his plants. Like Wolfe, Stout enjoys good food and its preparation. He cooks dinner about three times month at Highmeadow, the estate straddling Danbury and Brewster, N.Y., where he has lived for the past 36 years. Says Stout: On sex: “Most boys and girls act the same now as they did 100 years ago.” On beards: “Fifty years ago, when I went packing into the mountains in Montana, I discovered that it was very lovely not to shave. I haven’t shaved since. All this furor over beards on the young men today is silly. * * ★ “Wearing a beard or not wearing one is purely subjective. If , any man wants to permit the hair that nature put there to grow, what right has anyone to comment, jet alone condemn?” Pre-Christmas Sale FLOOR CARE NEEDS- Christmas Is Hera! SSI DISCOUNT PRICE ■star Sat (4)........ »•« piece Tool Set...... 11.88 Powerful suction for deep-down cleaning, Durable hose is guaranteed. Home cleaning kit is included. 1% H.P. Motor Gets Hidden Dirt COURIER CORD-REEL VACUUM CLEANER VACUUM CLEANER, ELECTRIC BROOM 28.88 Ready to use on rugs or bare floors. Powerful 400-watt motor. Stands upright, hangs up. on walL Charge it 88 Charge It Discount Price By Sunbeam! Built slim to move between furniture with ease. Features mighty 134 H.P. motor, superstrength hose guaranteed for 5 years, inside storage for tools, automatic full-bag indicator. Five-piece tool kit includes floor/wall brush. Buy now and save! Other Courier Vacuum Cleaners, from 49.88. RUG AND FLOOR CONDITIONER I-qt. liquids dispenser automatically feeds liquid waxes,, floor cleaners and rug shampoo. With attachments. “TOUCH ’N’ GO” VACUUM SWEEPER Lightweight cleaner with hi-speed revolving brush, nylon roller for use on carpet or bare floors. Disposable; bag. RUGSHAMP00ER, FLOOR POLISHER 28.88 With exclusive rug foam chamber. Scrubs; waxes, polishes and conditions carpets and floors Charge it at Kmart! GLENWOOD PLAZA . . .Perry Street at Glenwood this is the superb imported velour Chambord by Dobbs It's one of the most luxurious hots we've seen in a long time. Dobbs crafts it of smooth, velvety velour imported from Canada, models it Tyrolean style, adds a colorful feather ornament, a multi-color braided velour band, and neat medalion. Black, vicuna, or winter green.? $20 Give him the Detroit Linebacker boot: it's o must for gome watchers If you're watching outdoors, that is. It's a great outdoor boot made especially for HHS. Wonderfully warm with a snug fleece lining; waterproof soles. Smart zipper-front model In black leather. Sizes 7 to 12. 12.95 Oar Peafiac Mall Start Opoa Ivory Evening to 9 P.M. 309 N. Telegraph M. Oar SfratiaglMM Stare Opea Fri. te 9; Sat. la S:30 I Mom St. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 C—9 FOR YOUR NIGHT LIFE SETTING V? /3-pc. modern suite-ywO?f Formica® plastic tops CHEST, PANEL BED, 9-DRAWER DRESSER WITH MIRROR /7,/£/3-Pe white French wW Provincial bedroom WARDS LOW PRICE TRIPLE DRESSER WITH MIRROR, SPINDLE BED, CHEST 3-pc. solid maple bedroom suite WARDS LOW ” PRICE SPINDLE BED, TRIPLE DRESSER «WITH MIRROR, CHEST 3-pc. bedroom in Mediterranean mood Bedroom suite is beautifully styled with deep moldings, shaped bases end brass-plated puds! The dovetailed drawers era dustproof ;.. end glide on center guides. Each piece has a satin-smooth maple finish. 299 99 Make Ward’s Your One-Stop ChristmtK Gift Stop Sale End* Dec, 3rd., 9 PM., impressive block-front styling in this solid ash suite suggest tho spirit of Spain. Has intricate Old World hiardwera in ioltd brass. Tho dustproof drawors glide on confer guides. Mar-and-stain resistant tops. $ 324" NO PAYMENTS TILL FEB. 1967 Tho chest end dresser fops are protected with mar-resistant Formica9. Every other surface is covered with select mahogany veneers in • rich welnut finish. All drawers ere dustproof. Each one has a center-guide. t. Set has extra long drawer pulls for added beauty. 199 Reg. 219.99 NIGHT STAND 39.99 CANOPY BED, 6-DRAWER DOUBLE DRESSER, CHEST This charming French Provincial bedroom furniture is .authentically styled with Serpentine-drawer fronts In glowing white. Center guided, dustproof drawors, mar-and-stain-resistant tops of high-pressure plastic. Detailing Is beautifully accented with alegent hardware. *219 Reg. $241.97 MONEY DOWN OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:AO AM. TO 9:00 P.M.. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO (> P.M. # 682-1910 i C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUNDAY 12-7 THURS.. FBI., SAT. Bright, colorful and Christ, masy! Seals, strung tags and gift cards to glorify your packages . . . make gift-wrapping fun. MINIATURE TREE UGHT SET Miniature tree light set with 50 replaceable lamps. Green wire with add-on connector at end. Charge it. Don’t let lack of cash spoil the holidays! Charge it at Kmart! NINE COLORFUL RIBBONS ON SPOOL! 120- TOTAL Our Reg. 52c 3 Day* Only! Si* Add an extra special touch to your gifts with lustrous ribbon. 9 ribbons, Vi” and H" wide, totaling 120 feet Holiday col. on. Sbop Kmart for all your Christmas gift wrap needs while the savings are big. Just say, “Charge It.” CHEERY CHRISTMAS GREETINGS! BOX OF 25 Our Reg. 88c 3 Days, Only! 68* Box of 25 one-of-a-kind cards, regular and slim shapes. Conventional and religious subjects with warm wishes inside. Envelopes included. Shop now and say, “Charge it.” CHRISTMAS CARDS ... ALL-OF-ONE-KIND Discount Price Charge It 1.27 Box of 25! Choose conventional or religious, regular or slim shape. Each design expresses the beauty of the holiday season. Envelopes included. Chaige it SIX-ROLL BOX HOLIDAY GIFT WRAP FOIL or PAPER Discount Price Charge It 6 pH* embossed foil, each 26 x30 (total 180 ); or 6 rolls of quality paper in attractive Christmas designs, each 26”x88” (total 528”). bargains. Shop Kmart and just say, “Chaige it” Both ai GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC'PRESS. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 1, 1966 C—M GOLDENHEART SET WITH A DIAMOND 14K GOLD CROSS WITH DIAMOND 14.7/ 29.7! Our Beg. 16.71 Tiny 14K „ D .. „ _ , gold heart pendant set with ®nr 34.71 Woman • a sparkling diamond. Buy 14K white gold cross now" at tills 3-day price, with a sparkling diamond on Charge it. a chain. 3 days only! • .Sow Warty of d.toil MIVS BMLLIMT WOMEN’S, MEN’S ■SSifiim1 UNDE STAR MHOS 34.71 29.71 Opr Reg. 39.71 Massive 14K yellow gold mounting with all white, slightly imperfect diamond. 3 days only! Our Reg. 39.71 Brilliant Linde Star sapphires set in 14K white gold mountings. Hers with 2 diamonds. 3 days only! Buy Diamonds by Carat Weight and SAVE! Glorious radiance now .at Kmart’s low, low prices. Each guaranteed to weigh a full Vi Cant, Vi Carat or 1 Cant in fabulous brilliantly cut all-white slightly imperfect diamonds as specified. Imagine how thrilled she’ll be when yon surprise her on Christmas with one of these superb creations. Each sold with a 30-day money back guarantee. Charge it at Kmart! '/. Carat TOTAL WEIGHT Cut for finest brilliance, 6 diamond bridal set in choice of 14K white or yellow gold mounting. 59*4 'A CARAT TOTAL WEIGHT A bunt of brilliance radiates from eight sparkling diamonds in this bridal set. 14K gold mounting. Kmart LOW PRICE 99** 1 FULL CARAT TOTAL WEIGHT Eight sparkling diamonds in this bridal pair totaling 1 full carat. In 14K white or yellow gold. Kmart — . LOW 1QQ84 PRICE @1 BUTANE UGHTER 9.97 | Our Reg. 12.97 Bonsonvar-1 aflame butane gas lighter, Adjustable flame. ! Low Discount Price 17*7 Here’s the pantsuit with a bonus... trim matching skirt! Popular doable - breasted “Pea” jacket style in wool heather bonded to acetate tricot for shape retention. Orange, blue, green and lilac in sizes 5-15, 8-18. See Our Vast Selection of Other Weekender Styles and Fabrics Ranging from 10,77 to 17,871 Soft, Heathery Shades! 3-PIECE BONDED WOOL WEEKENDER Shop first class at economy prices! Kmart carries “seconds”! 17-JEWEL FINE SWISS PRECISION WATCHES Our Reg. 17.63 Choose from pend* ants, bagles, and classic bracelets, casual^ sport styles; men’s thin models, drees styles, sturdy shock-proof and water resistant watches. All SURPRISE HER WITH A NEW SKIRT AND SWEATER SET Pajamas GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD C—If Colleges Try to fill Truck Driver Shortage fi^Hu X ; LANSING (UPI) - “The man THE PONTIAp PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER l, 1966 trice command of a situation, pass Ike physical and mental aptitude requirements. . .will Owl excellent career opportunities awaiting him.1' Sounds like a recruiting pitch from the Marine Corps) Army, Navy or dir Force. Bat it's not. It’s a plea for more track drivers. Two Michigan junior colleges, one in Lansing and the other in Highland Park, near Detroit, are training men to meet an increased demand for “big rig” drivers. ★ ★ * “The trucking industry is cry' big for qualified drivers. Unless more' truck drivers are trained the American trucking industry is headed for a very serious crisis,” said Marvin E. Snyder, chief instructor at Highland Park Community College. LCC WAS FIRST Lansing Community College, which started truck driving training classes nearly t years ago, was one of the first in the country to do so. “Michigan alone wfll need 2,000 truck drivers next year,” explained Leonard Snide r, head of the Lansing College training course. The Michigan Association claims the business is the state’s fourth leading industry. Snider said the industry offers good pay salaries ranging from 18,000 a year for beginners in cities to $15,000 for long-distance haulers. ★ ★ * Early retirement, promotion to better jobs and more trucking business are responsible for creating the demand for more drivers. FIRMS DONATE TRUCKS Snyder said some trucking firms offer their own training courses blit prefer the college workshop because of centrated classroom instructions. A federal grant of $75,000 provides the financial backing The Lansing school depends on an enrollment fee of $200 tropes and is pai the Lansing operath Both offer 80 hours of classroom work with emphasis on debt prevention, safety, freight handling, maintenance, first 'aid , use of emergency and fire equipment, driverx situations, ' and the history of the trucking industry. Special test tracks for training the drivers in making turns and in maneuvering in tight spots have beea set up at both schools. Highland Park trainees use the huge Michigan state fair grounds in Detroit. In Lansing, a five-acre abandoned commercial parking lot hi used for training purposes. Before graduation from the four-week course, the trainees must make two 400-mile round-trip night runs and also complete 400 miles of city driving. trucks are loaded with steel and sand to allow the trainees to get tile feel of heavy loads. Both schools have small enrollments, mostly because they have been.unable to get new students, said Snider. 'A four-week course which he now instructs has only eight students. new class will begin at Highland Park Dec. IS and is expected to . have about 20 students. Furniture Firms * Hire More Men GRAND RAPIDS (&) -Metropolitan Grand Rapids furniture factories were reported Wednesday to have increased their employment by 4 per cent in October, compared with the (same month »i*|,', buttermilk 1% cups finely chopped suet ftcup brandy late fine dry bread crumbs ft teaspoon frsktog soda ft teaspoon mace ft teaspoon cloves ft teaspoon allspice ft teaspoon cinnamon ft teaspoon salt Combine raisins, f r u i t s and peels, walnuts and ft cup of the flour. Combine eggs, molasses, buttermilk, suet and brandy. Combine remaining flour, crumbs, baking soda, spices and. salt; add to egg mixture. Add floured fruit, mix well. Spoon into well-greased individual molds, filling ft toll; cover. (If no covers are available for the molds, use aluminum foil.) Set molds on rack in deep kettle; add boiling water to about 1 inch below covers of molds. Cover kettle,. Steam lft hours. Serve with hard sauce. Makes 8 to 10 servings, depending on size. Flame with warmed brandy. Combine one cup rlcotta or creamy cottage cheese with ft cup chopped California walnuts. Flavor to taste with sugar, nutmeg and rum or brandy. Very refreshing served over warm Q. What is Ifae name of this cut of meat? A. Fresh pork hocks. Q. wkwe do they come from? How are they Identified? A. Fork hocks come from the lower potion bf the front shank or leg. They're thick, usually two to three todies. Oval to shape, they have an outer cover of skin and fat They contain lean meat as well as the two front shank braes. Pork hocks come either smoked or fresh, each with its characteristic coloring, a light pink for the fresh ones, with deeper pink for the smoked variety. 4. How are they prepared? A. By cooking to liquid or brdring. Fresh bodes may be cooked by either method. Smoked hocks are cooked to Squid. The skin is left on tor cooking. Tbey are covered with water, if cooking to liquid is desired, covered nhd ■ simmered for approximately two hours. If 'they’re braised, brown first and |add a small amount of liquid | (approximately ft rap) and cook about an hour and 45 mto- Make Cheese-Walnut Sauce , gingerbread, chocolate cupcakes or a fruit cobbler. Eight to nine egg whites measure about one cup; New Booklet Tells How to Man food . fielps" also features assorted i recipes that have been carefully "travel-tested.’’ . *9h enter a free copy, twite to ;TbetPUlshury Company, Mall Station No. 988, 600 Second Avenue Smith, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402. Some good books tote to add chopped celery, along with the onion, when they are preparing chile con came. HOME OF NATURALLY TEHDER MEATS GUARANTEED TENDER BUTORIN BOY STEAKS OR SWISS ROUND STEAK Norm Higher PONTIAC PRIDE SPICY PINK BABY LINK PORK SAUSAGES SLICED FREE PONTIAC PRIDE SUGAR CURED HICKORY SMOKED SLAB BACON m MON., TUES» WED. OPEN M FOR FREEZER ORDERS OR BEEF LOINS RETAIL STORE 9*6 FRI.'AND SAT. CENTER CUT BLADE CHUCK ROAST 39L NONE MlfiNER “It’s the Finest In & Say Our Customers! Alike) HAMBURG Is 6-Lb. Lett or Mere 391 Lesser Amounts 49* BONELESS^*^ ROLLED 1 RIB ROAST m NOME FREEZER SPECIALS OUT, WRAPPED end DELIVERED FREE FULL FRONTS m NO DOWN, PAYMENT JUSY SAY, "CHARGE IT” PARK FREE IN REAR HOFFMAN'S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, INC. 526 H. PERRY ST. QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE PRICES WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES FE 2-1100 » Taste of Coffee Is in Filling and Frosting Hw’. a bi.cuit variation note that ferec* eaBs fsr tnats so simple to make you’ll enriched fleur,'lie wort ‘ten-want to serve it often. Quick Mia to *tedd to the and uncomplicated, yea — and *“***•*•” thtf* exactly oh, so good to eat! Coffee-Nut ***.*"*-**? Scone Rolls win make your fam- iZS^ZZSL M ** £ -SJTSS.'Sg * ^ ^ ■ aiM> thtomtse, aiacia, and any quick breads, they do taste K SS *- «* SiT*’ The enrichment process—now Of COHI"S#. AN a nAnc/iSoHiiAmi apii. " 111^^5 s • . ; ,>V Bake Appetizers Bacon-wrapped chicken-liver halves, water chestnuts or pi-miento-stuffed (dives may be placed on the flat rack of avery shallow roasting pan and then be baked in a hot oven for about » minutes oT until hot through and tbp bacon is crisp. Crisp the Lettuce f\\ Far lettuce that to ifaft place in a towHd Ice water. Orato, place in plastic bag and then on the coldest shelf in your refrigerator for JO- minutes. 4 COFFEE-NUT SCONE ROLLS 2 cups sifted enriched Bern* Vi cup sugar 1 tablespoon baking powder 1 teaspoon salt H cup shortening 1 egg,-beaten;.. ' Vi to Vi cup milk 2 tablespoons butter or margarine, melted ' Vi cup firmly packed light \ brown, sugar :A J tablespoons chided nuts Pour bottled coleslaw dressing over shredded crisp western iceberg lettuce and sprinkle with poppy seeds. Address. Roll up jelly-roll fashion, sealing edges securely. Cut into l-inch thick slices. Place on ligrtly greased baking sheets Bake In preheated 425 degree oven 12 to 15 minutes, or until golden brown. While rolls are baking, blend together confectioners sugarf"2 COFFEE-NUT SCONE ROLLS — When the neighbors drop in for a kaffeeklatsch, or the youngsters clamor for an after-school milk “break,” serve them a special treat — Coffee-Nut Scone Rolls. Spices and Herbs Will Add Flavor Be a creative cook the easy oust pastry; add Vi te way with the use of spices and nutmeg to 1 cup pancake herbs. Here are a few sugges- fie mix; for a zesty d tions to add to your recipe file: teaspoons chili powder For interesting texture, use 2 cup each of mayonnais* teaspoons poppy seed in a one- sour cream. Bon appetit! Sno-Bol cleans better because it’s liquid. Deodorizes, sanitizes, makes boms gleam! The modern liquid sure, level eQ, then remove two level tabiespooofulsi according to USDA recommendations. ( NOTE: If self-rising flour is used , omit baking powder and SAVE 25* ON MORTON PELLENS iron oxide or rust is ih the water. Miens contain an iron fluidizing agent, rust accumulation and washes It down the drain when the water softener Allow 1 pork chop and V& cup rice for each servings Season chops to taste with salt and pepper. Brown in melted shortening. Remove chops and brown uncooked rice in the drippings. For 4 servings, add about 2 cups chicken stock, Vi teaspoon thyme and Vi cup each diced green pepper and diced onion. Arrange rice medley in baking pan; place browned chops over this. Cover and bake one hour at 350 degrees. SAVE ON MORTON SAIT PELLENS (my sirs). Sprinkle mashed potatoes with roasted diced almonds and POT ROAST PORK CHOPS FLORIDA Easy to Peel GRAPES Fresh, Lean IN 3-POUND OR VORE PACKAGES SAUSAGE CHUCK STEAK YOOR CHOICE—Buy Now and Save! • 10 ® Chuck Patties M • 3 lbs. mu Sliced Bacon *1 • 3 S Chopped Sirloins • 4mmm Poric Ghoppies • 3 lbs. XSS Hot Dogs Grads 1 SKINLESS HOT ■ MARKETS Quality Meats Since 1931 4348 DIxieHiehway-Drayteit Open Wednesdays 9 A.M. to 6:30 PM. Thursday thru Saturday 9 AAA. to 9 PM. THIS COUPON WORTH 50c 608 W. HURON Si., Near Webster School beef Pot ROAST 49* SMOKED-Vk or Whole BACON 59* FRESH PORK STEAKS 59* ROOK HENS 29* FRESH BEEF LIVER 39* POLISH ' SAUSAGE cn CO 50 CHUNK ONLY BOLOGNA 39i •SPARTAN W OLEO 5“ $|05 TANGELOS FLORIDA SWEET Doz* ORANGES FLORIDA n„ JUICE Dox* 1M THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 Group Looks to Congress to Crack Down on Labor WASHINGTON (AP) - A national contractors’ group, accusing construction unions of “excessive” wage demands, joined in T**"1***"" today that the new Congress may act to week down on organized labor. Tbe development followed White Horse confirmation that a presidential task force is studying ways to protect the national interest in major strikes. ♦ * ♦ ted it added to organized labor’s fears that tire more conservative tone of die new Congress convening Jan. 10 may lead to demands for die first new strike legislation since the 1947 Tafi-Hardey Act “Certainly the recent elections improve die prospects of securing passage for legislation to curb union irresponsibility," said the Associated General Contractors of America. FIRST TARGET Construction unions were the first target Of an unsuccessful Johnson administration effort last year to bold wage increases down to White House guidelines v of 3.2 per cent a year. ~vThe contractors’ association said Its survey of 216 wage set- tlements in the Industry showed average pay hikes of about 6.6 per emit a year. Hie Labor Department has estimated major construction contract wage hikes in 1966 at 5.9 per cent. In Texas, White House spokesman George Christian said the Justice, Labor and other federal departments had been studying the pdblem of strikes, but that no recommendations had been made to President Johnson. Asst. Secretary of Labor James J. Reynolds said the White House task force study was in line with increasing concern over “the whole question of labor disputes that injure die public and the image of labor." MOVES EXPECTED AFL-CIO President George Meany said recently he had no direct word from the White House, but that he expected congressional moves for some kind of strike legislation, and possibly wage-price controls. The contractors’ group also said drastic changes, including wage controls,* “are inevitable unless unions show more responsibility and restraint at the bargaining table next year.1 TEACHER OF YEAR—Arlyne E. Phillips, head teacher in Dearborn’s 3-year-old school program for mentally retarded children, has been named Michigan’s Teacher of the Year. Miss Phillips, 48, and a staff of seven teach 55 severely retarded children. She will be entered as Michigan’s candidate in nationwide competition, the winner becoming a member of the Presidential Scholars Commission. Girl Hopes for Christmas With Parents INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)-Del-mara CorreU Perrine, 17, Kalamazoo may'have what she terms die find happy Christmas of her life. She has a baby due on Christmas day—and she may also see her parents die same day—for the first time in 17 years. Dehaara mate a letter re-cendy to Indianapolis Police Chief Neal Jones saying her parents had separated after three months of marriage and bar mother, Manoela, left her at an aunt’s hone when she was only 4 weeks old. She said she has been trying track down* her parents most of ho- life. Mrs. Perrine said die found out her mother is a nurse in Chicago and her father is working in Indiana. successful search Chief Jones put Lt. Robert Morrison in charge of a search and he found Delmar Correll working for a stone company in Logansport, Ind. The letter to Chief Jones reads in part: “I am writing to see if you could find my daddy who I have never seen in my life, and I would like to have him and my mother for Christmas. “My husband is fighting to Viet Nam ... and so I need my daddy very much." . ★ 11! * Mrs. Perrine added, “My mother and daddy burned their marriage license after three months of marriage, and my daddy doesn’t even know he has a daughter. “I got a new certificate for them and maybe they could start over and then we could all become a family. “Please Mr. Officer, could you have it put to an Indianapolis newspaper and maybe my daddy will read it" Good to the taster-smooth, mellow, satisfying. Good to the pocket, too. It costs only $4.80 and it’s really worth much more. And, if you’re skeptical about a value like that, here’s how McMaster’s does it. McMaster’s is made and aged in barrels in Canada. It’s bottled only after it reaches this country. That means solid savings on taxes, shipping, handling, etc. (m Price is only one reason for trying McMaster’s Canadian, a taste or ^^^^|two of its goodness ■will tell you the 1 rest of the story. McMaster’s Canadian] Good and expensive? Najustgood. CANADIAN WHISKY. A BLEND. 80 PROOF. IMPORTED BY McMASTER IMPORT OQjDETROIT, MICH. BUY, SELL4 TRADE , . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Short-Term Anesthetic Tested at'M' * ANN ARBOR (AP) -University of Michigan doctors say they have found a new, short-acting anesthetic “of utmost value’’ far children, some adult burn victims and a variety of office procedures. Dr. Guenter Corssen, professor of anesthesiology, said the anesthetic has been used on more than 800 patients at University Hospital in die past two years. Sr ★ * A bit of the watery-looking fluid, Obrssen said, produces general anesthesia lasting from 10 to 20 minutes when injected into a veto or muscle. The patient recovers rapidly and is usually free of tbe effects of the drug to 30 minutes, he - said. USE LIMITED Hie new drug is limited to investigational use. * ★ A A spokesman for the company that produces the drug said the company will soon seek approval from toe Food and Drug „ Administration to make the drug available commercially. Six Americans Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (A?) - The Defense Department announced yesterday the names of six dead as result of combat to Viet Nam, three dead outside of combat and three missing to combat Killed as a result of hostile TENNEStaa - Spac. 4 Rtxto L. Arm#*, Olivsr Spring*. TEXAS — CpI. Jlmml# Tuch, Gonzales. MARINS CORPS FLORIDA — Sgt. Daniel M. Bennett, Boynton Botch. TEXAS - CpL Rodolfo M. Gonzalez, Died of wounds: MARINE CORPS TEXAS — Pfe. Edward A. °D5d not as a result of hostile •eft#: B ARMY . MASSACHUSETTS - Staff Sgt. Buddy OHIO - Pfc. Donald A. Jactoon, VWaKinGTON - Spec. 4 Jama* W. Cmm, Olympia. • ~ Missing as a result of hostile SMAfridM, Tt&fti «. Adi II Spectacular Savings Days! A BECKWITH-EVAHS CARPET SALE YOU WILL LONG REMEMBER Spectacular! SOI Textures— DuPont Nylon PH* £98 SI S choice colors—(illustrated)-m and 20 odd rolls in oven boH. mmmS TwW* *••*. Wun SH or* DuPont *N* certified. FINE CARPET UNDER *7-0dd Lines at ‘Giveaway’ Prices! LUXURY CAMEO TEXTURE t E98 a drop color.—compare at 8.98 .iO.YO. W CARVED DEXTER TEXTURE A beautiful carpet-spocioI purchase-8 color* .SO. YD. THICK WOOL HU TEXTURE VERONA NYLON HU 9csi#n-s«r4.9l tollae..... SO. YD. 501 SPACE DYED CARR. 498 2 col*™—fin* quality—comp, of 7.0#. ..SQ.YD. ™ COMMERCIAL NYLON HU 098 15 rolls - 4 twood colors-tight loops-long waring.SQ.YD. w 501 PLUSH NYLON HU 498 ......saYn. ™ 4 colon pirn 35 batoncoo.. SAVE SOX TO 40X ON WOOL HU SAXONY WDS. 12 fad* - S «#lot» - din. pold owr THICK WOOL PILE TWEED 15 rolls—3 twood colors - doctors paid ovor $7.. A.SO. YD. COMMERCIAL LOOP VEL. 2 colon-wo von thru to back quality—dtn. paid ovor $9-80, YD, LUXURY DUALITY SHAG lor-loct than din. pald-SQ. YD. SIZE COMP. SALE 12X10-1! Gold Loop Glad 41.95 12x12 Blue Conrad Trumpet 14.95 12x13-7 Saiga Quaan Tweed 1448 12x11-9 Bluo-Groon Twaad Hally . . . . 80. 49.95 12x25-3 Candy Strip# him 13x13 Groan Stroll Hampton , ....270. 11MB 12x13 Gold Pluth Monty .. .125. I9.M 12x9-6 Gold Random Shear .. i. .149. •848 12x10-6 Groan Loop Torch ....70 49.96 12x18 Beige Bark Glendale ..... .180. •Ml 12x11 Black and White Penguin .. . ... 90. 19.95 SIZE 12x12-10 Groan Plush Mono COMP. SALE IMS 12x13-4 Gold Twirt Dob 8445 12x9 Green Medina 49.95 12x10-0 Blue Loop Rondo ... .140. M.M 12x14 Blue Scroll HHI 139.55 12x12-2 Green Scroll Satwo 140. 1MB 12x18 Purple Loop Glad ... .120. •MS 12x13-8 LHacPIu.h. •1.11 12X9 v Beige Riverviow....... ... .108. 55.95 12x16-7 Green Twood Phllman ... ... .220. 11MB 12x17-6 Martini Loop Kingly .,.. ... .144. SMB SIZE 12x9 Green lyric COMP. 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'■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, I960 Justice Dept; Sifts Cases for Eayesdroppingl £3?* WASHINGTON (AP) - The Justice Department .is investigating all cases it has prosecuted — and those headed for court — to make certain no evidence on which they are based was obtained by electronic eavesdropping. The review could go back to early days of bugging devices -but department officials could not say how many years or how many cases might be involved. * * * The department announced the investigation in a supple- mental memorandum filed in the Supreme Court Wednesday night in the ease of Joseph F. Schipani, convicted of income tax evasion. Acting Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark also disclosed to the memorandum that he sent aQ C-S. attorneys a notice Nosir. 3 warning they “must never proceed with any investigation or case which includes evidence illegally obtained or the butts of that evidence."' The memorandum said that If any material discovery is made during Us review of cases the MVerament will “promptly notify the appropriate court.” The government also made PMbUc a motion it filed several days ago wijth the U.$. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati. Ohio, • ;-0 . * * * There, the government arid tim Federal Bureau of Investigation had monitored the conversations of three defendants who were convicted, but arid the material obtained was not part of the .evidence against them. * ; Hut case involved Frank De-niro Jr., Michael Deniro and Louis Deniro, convicted of eon-spiring to defraud the government and attempting to defeat an estate tax. LftflUE CHANCE A department spokesman estimated the chances at “one in a thousand” that cases already tried would he reopened for reason of illegal bugging. The spoilsman did not say when the review begin, but said U started “because this problem arisen in a case or two — and the department wanted to find out whether other cases were affected. The memorandum said the department recognized “its obligation not to Use evidence obtained in violation of a defendant’s protected rights in any criminal prosecution.’’ ft said results of the investigation are being sent to Clark. It added: "A careful review of pending and prospective prose- . 1 '4 K ' cutions is being conducted by the department-for the purpose of determining what other cases might fall within this category?’ Principals Meet DETROIT (AP) - Nearly 800 Michigan sec d nda r y school principals opened a convention Wednesday in Detfoii Chief topic before the principals is their relationship with teachers, in view of recent legislation that gave teachers the right to Organize and bargain collectively. Neurits Inni COCKTAILS BUSINESSMEN’S NOON SPECIAL* •Steak • French Fries • Salad SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNERS Featuring Lobster Tails Regular Menu Also Available 75 Dixie Hwy. ‘ OR 3-24 SAVE 13.00 NOW ON WARM AUTOMATIC BLANKETS lap ml” finish redness shedding Luxurious 100% virginacrylic blanket has nylon velvet binding. Thermostotit control adjusts to every change in room temperature. Just set and forget itl The snap-fasten comers convert blankets from a throw to a fitted style. Beautiful' reversible solid tone on tonpl x colors! Machine washablel Twin Size Single Control REG. 26.99 Reg. 29.99 Full Size, Single Control.. •. 14.99 Reg. 34.99 Full Size, Dual Control...... 1749 Reg. 59.99 King Size, Ddal Control... •. 29.99 MCNMK IT’ NT WARDS Boxed gift sots for kitchon or bath CHOOSE TOWELS, PUCE MATS.. 2 AHANDSOME GIFT FOR EVERYONE ON YOUR UST! TERRY KITCHEN TOWEL SET (a) Two big, thirsty kitchen towels in colorfast cotton terry, 4 ceramic turn- biers with matching pattern. B-PIECEPLACE MAT SET ® Gift-boxed, four rayon linen or 199 drip-dry cotton mats and 4 napkins | with delicate embroidery trims. 3-PIECE BOXED TOWEL SET (c) Rich, reversible cotton terry in jacquard design. Fringed ends. Bath JWmw towel, hand fowei, face cloth in set. SATIN BOUQUET TOWEL SET (D Beautifully printed bath towel, JM&9 hand towel, facecloth in cotton terry, Eg| bordered with soft rayon satin. SOXED KITCHEN TOWEL SET w Two towels, a dish doth and a ■ QQ pothoider in deep-tone jacquard cot- ■ ww ton terry. Attractively boxed. SAVE HALF! # automatic blankets with 5-year guarantee ■yr 16&S JlikjL.UJm&S- Pontiac Mai OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A;M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON. TO 6 P.M. • 682-4910 THE PONTIAC PEESb, THURSDAY, DECEMBER i, 1966 1/4-Lb. Leaves mm )USDA{ A (chm) TinyLink Pork Sausage BP SUGAR lALr DATES Thurs. Dec. 1 Thru Wed Dec. 7 Including Sunday Dec. Gv 4 Coffeemate * F&di>$ : $ DOLLAR SALE $ JUICE &f| ■ | BANQUET S* W UForH PIES ■ fmmM' m STRAWBERRY A ■ I || ■ • -CRINKLE CUT IDAHO FRENCH MKr §r Wax PAPER 125-Ft. 22* f Spartan WMtf or Yellow POPCORN 2-Lb.Bag 21 ■ Alcoa-Heavy Duty ALUMINUM FOIL. & 4 Shurfine Evaporated MILK i4Vk4s We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities. OLIVES .Wore Angel Re COCOANUT • ■ PSltfwy . '' AmUmfmrmm*' He tract Sticks Pancake Syrup *-f IWTOi/i FOODLANDI FOODLAND I FOOOLANO • J8HB.,I W&nsiI •asBsSF ^ U.S. He. 11daho ^POTATOES mw BAHAMAS I « |Qt 1 1 CUCUNBERS,ea. your choice fl RADISHES, pkg. ; GREEN ONIMS.bunch ||1C % OtRRtTS, pkg. tip If D-S THE PONTlAc PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 ’No Vacancy Haunts Mpuse-Hufigry Area appearance to two homes. The rundown effect seerfis to carry over to the neighborhood. FHA PROPERTY — nils m on the city’s South Side represents Federal Housing Administration and Veteran By L. GARY THORNE The “No Vacancy" sign is proving a starkly realistic symbol of a desperate need being felt by many Pontiac area families. Specific numbers are yet undetermined, but the giant need has been expressed by spokesmen for labor unions, minority nationality groups, businesses and most loudly, by the displaced themselves. Widesperad concern has been focused on the problem. A variety of public officials have repeatedly termed the housing shortage as “drastic” and “critical.” But, what is the housing situation? What is its cause? I ★ ★ ★ Ironically, record auto production and the accompanying prosperity that has embraced the nation also appears as the number one cause of the housing shortage. POPULATION BOOM Growth has been dictated not only by unprecedented prosperity but also by rapidly increasing population. Once rural In character, Oakland County appears destined to be the center of an urban complex stretching from Detroit to Flint and beyond. These are large forces at work. However, the immediate problem is housing. v Tentative figures collected to show the extent of the housing situation reflect the area’s growth. For example, employment at the three General Motors Corp. plants has risen steadily for the past 514 years. ★ ★ * * In 1960, the local GM plants employed 25,342 persons. There had been a 42.9 per cent increase by the end of the last year. The total number employed had jumped to 39,124 by dune 30,196ft—a gain of 13,782 persons. FELL BEHIND Meanwhile, the construction of housing has not kept pace. In some 25 communities in the Pontiac area, there has been a net gain of 19,330 residential dwelling units in the 1960-1966 period. (Subtracted from these dwelling units are demolitions during the same time period.) According to a housing tally secured from the Detroit Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission, building activity has been on the rise. ★ ★ | tir In 1960, there was a net gain of 1,952 residential dwelling units.' In 1965| there were 4,441 such units, GAINS MADE And through June of this year, there were 2,641 units constructed, less those demolished. Of tiie 25 Pontiac area communities, new housing is most prevalent in five municipalities — West Bloomfield, Avon, Bloomfield and Waterford Townships and Troy. Bloomfield Township has experienced the most new housing with 4,024 dwelling units wife Waterford Township in second place with 2,383. (Pontiac has had 872 new units, less demolitions.) What is the condition of Pontiac area housing? CENSUS FIGURES Based on 1960 census figures, there are 204,554 housing units in Oakland County. Some 94,167 are in the Pontiac area. A total of 13.3 per cent or 12,504 are termed deteriorating or dilapidated in the Pontiac area, compared to.lOJ per cent or 22,015 for the total county. Of the total housing units in the 25 area communities, nine per cent or 8,451 of tiie units are unoccupied. This compares to 7.6 per cent or 15,646 for the total county. (An undetermined number of the unoccupied units are cottages.) ★ ★ ★ These statistics would appear to Indicate that there is some housing standing yacant. However, still to be determined is whether such housing is both available and adequate to shelter those seeking a place to live. BEGINNING EFFORT There is a beginning effort to determine what housing is needed, where and to one of the city’s residential areas, illustrating some of the problems that face those who haye found shelter but find it undesirable. CAR LOT—A nearly! new, but apparently nonoperating automobile joins two other cars-and a pickup truck in a south side Pontiac neighborhood to offer a "used car lot” latest monthly tally of FHA and VA prop-half-a-dozen homes. v EVERYTHING BUT . . .-This collection of tfash has everything but the kitchen sink, substituting an outdoor grill. Located back of a store, this trash pile is adjacent how. A- blue ribbon committee of 17 community leaders has attempted to analyse tiie “crisis." " gjjk Initial research, mittee members, the housing prob and is hugely mi some housing proponents previously indicated. There is a need, at least it would now appear, that a variety of housing be built for nearly all income brackets. “Strangely ^enough,” explained a committee member, “we need housing priced from $5,900 to $30,000.” ★ ★ ★ In recent montin, particularity in Pontiac, there has been considerable agitation for added public housing. The past ban on such housing has been lifted, but even more public housing is expected to meet only a small part of tiie demand for housing. VARIOUS STUDIES The various studies of housing have shown that those in the Pontiac area seeking it are not necessarily the poor or downtrodden. Often tiie head of the house is gain-fully employed, earning reasonably good wages. But, for one reason or onother, the family has to leave its rented house or, perhaps because savings-sapping sickness, has caused a foreclosure. Usually such a family is large enough so an apartment of one or even two bedrooms will not replace the former quarters. Financially, the family can not purchase a home, and rental property is scarce. Although the facts and figures are not yet complete to draw a full picture of the housing situation, initial findings indicate meeting the current demand plus that projected for the future may be a giant endeavor. NEEDS REPAIR Still another wrinkle in the problem affects some areas, including Pontiac. As indfoated by the 12,504 units listed in some state of advanced decay, a substantial amount (13.3 per cent) of existing housing needs repair. This added fuel for the housing crisis, a problem made difficult by its proportions. GCQD BOUSING—Pontiac’s housing comes in variety of shapes, sizes and conditions. Here, the Pontiac Knolls subdivision north of Mount Clemens represents some of the city’s newer and better housing. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1/1966 D—9 Cruel Month of November Brings Tragedy to the Lakes DETROIT (AP) — November is month upon the five inland seas known as die Great Lakes. Many great strains have sprung is if frem nowhere in this month. One such sent the freighter Daniel J. Morrell to the bottom. * ★ * It was only eight years ago this month (hat die giant freighter Cart D. Bradley—as long as pro football fields end-to-end—suddenly broke apart and phuneted to the bottom to a Lake Michigan storm. Thirty-three of her 35-man crew died with bar on the night of Nov. 18, 1958. Until now no other ship ever has taken so many with it to a Great Lakes sinking, but the worst disaster of all swept the lakes 53 years ago this month. 19 SHIPS LOST Between Nov. 7 and Nov. 12, 1913, a total of 19 ships went down, 11 without trace or survivors, and 20 others were grounded to strains. An estimated 250 sailors died in the fury of those six days. Insurance companies acknowledge the ravages of winter cm Great Lakes shipping. Insurance rates climb through November, double on Dec. 1 and double agaip after Dec. 3. ★ ★ ★ The rate then doubles every few days until by Dec. 12 or 15 it becomes prohibitive and toe line elects to carry its own insurance or lay up the vessel for toe season. The same strain which sank' the Morrell in Lake Huron Tuesday broke apart the German freighter Nordmeer which had grate aground rat a reef off Alpena Nov. 19. SOS SENT The eight crewmen who had remained aboard sent an SOS at 3:03 a.m. Tuesday. A heli- copter pilot who said “God was real fcice jo us,” plucked them off during an unexpected break to a gale-force snow squall at dunk Across Michigan’s Lower Peninsula to Lake Michigan a railroad car ferry with 184 passengers and crewmen aboard, aground for three days on a sandbar, reached part Wednesday night . * ★ * The Bradley, a limestone carrier, riding empty, was beaded up Lake Michigan through heavy seas, about 100 miles from her Lake Huron brake port of Rogers City, Mteh., when disaster overtook her at 5:31 p.m. The Cedarviile herself went to toe bottom to the spring of 1965 after a collision with a foreign ship near toe fogbound straits of Mackinaw. Eight perished to that mishap . BROKE APART She broke apart so quickly they were was no time to lower lifeboats; time only for the first mate to shout “May Day” and rattle off position, then report: 'We’re breaking up!” After that toe Bradley was silent. Doctors said survival of two crewmen found ice-sheatoed 14 hours Inter aboard a raft was “an amazing piece of human endurance." ★ ★ . ★ Four made It to the raft which gushed up .Mth flotsam from toe sinking ship, her bade broken. A wave washed one man away into toe night. Another, apparently crazed by the torture of encrusting ice, jumped overboard only an hour before rescue came at dawn on Nov. 19, 1958. Loss of toe 615-foot Bradley of the U. S. Steel Corp. fleet brought heartache to many homes in little Rogers City, which had a population of 4,722. Fifty-two children were toft fatherless. Elmer Fleming, then 42 and toe tout mate, and Frank Mays, then a 33-year-old seaman, were l top survivors. Fleming and Mays agreed after rescue, there suddenly was “a big taid. " • * * • * They also agreed toe big atop had broken in two. almost immediately. The rdason never determined. Some theorized she might have been suspended in air by simultaneous waves at her bow and stern. Others suggested rivets might have been rent amidships in wallowing in the towering seas. When rescued, after befog spotted by plane, Fleming's and Mays’ raft had been driven 15 miles northward by 62-mile winds. Spray torn from wave tops formed the ice sheath on them. Five years later both Fleming and Mays wanted to forget, not remember. Fleming refused to be interviewed or photographed on toe bridge of toe freighter Cedarviile, a sister of the Bradley’s which he then skippered. AT Wlrtphoto NORDMEER RESCUE!—Eight crewmen were rescued from toe German freighter Nordmeer Tuesday as it broke up in Lake Huron, 80 miles north of 'Harbor Beach, Mich. Top photo shows toe freighter before toe rescue, as it begins to break up. In toe lower photo, a rescued seaman is lowered to the deck of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Mackinaw. Partial List of Crew of Stricken Vessel DETROIT (AP) — Twenty-nine crewmen were aboard the freighter Daniel J. Morrell which sank in a Lake Hurra) storm, said a spokesman for Bethlehem Steel Corp. which leased toe vessel. Survivors: 1. Dennis Hale, 28, of Ashtabula, Ohio, deck watchman. Crewmen identified from papers on their bodies as dead: 2. Chester Konieczka, 45, of Hamburg, N.Y. 3. Charles H. Fosbender, 42, of' St. Clair, Mich., wheelsman. 4. Arthur E. Stojek, 33, of 134 Thompson, Buffalo^ N.Y. 5. Charley J. Sestakauskas, 50, of 212 N. Walnut St., Georgetown, Pa. 6. Joseph A. Mahsen, 59, of 7603 Auer, Milwaukee, Wis. * * ★ '■ Bethlehem Steel Corp. de-dined immediately to release a list of toe crew. Here is a partial list of crewmen believed to have been aboard the ship, as based on the ship’s Oct. 29 roster and a report from the Marine Employes Beneficial Association in Toledo, Ohio: -Arthur I. Crawley, 47, 2725 Lakeview Rd., Rocky River, Ohio, captain. -John H. Schmidt, 4629 Monac Drive, Toledo, Ohio, chief engineer. -Valmour Marchildon, 146 School Rd., Kenmore, N. 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She cried . . . and cried ... and cried. -Alfred Norkunas, 6222 Tyler Ave., Superior, Wis., second as-sistant/engineer. -George Dahl, 529 E. Third St, Duluth, Minn., third assistant engineer. -Stanley J. Satlawa, 40 Kim-mel Ave., Buffalo, N.Y., chief cook. * -Milo Becker,^ Buffalo, N.Y. -Norman Bragg, Niagara Falls, N.Y. -Franklin C. Busch, Buffalo, N.Y. -Stuart Campbell, Marinette, Wis. -Larry G. Davis, Toledo. —Hjalmer Edwards, Ashland, Wis. -Saverio Grippi, 53, 242 Columbus Ave., Ashtabula, Ohio. I -John M. Groh, Erie, Pa. -Clare Haley, Lexington, j Mich. • -Nicholas Homick, Hudson, Pa. ■Frank Matuszak Jr., no address. ■Henry Rischmiller, Buffalo, N.Y. -Stanley Pomchak, Minneapolis, Minn. -Albert P. Whoeme, Knife River, Minn. -Leon R. Truman, 45, 1804 Raynor Dr., Toledo. -Donald Worcester, Columbia Falls, Maine. #lf MONTGOMERY WARD WARDS Okudm S/W f-p elveteen holiday fashions. 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CHAJtO-ALL ACCOUNT TOOAT PONTIAC MAI,I, OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. • 682-4940 P-yio THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1066 Groveland and Progress: Companions for Future By JANICE KLOUSER GROVELAND TOWNSHIP — Progress & catching up* 1 with this once quiet, predominantly agricultural township. For years, the population remained fairly stable and there was very little construction. The majority of the residents made their living from the land. Suddenly, within the last two years, things have started to move. This year alone, there has been more than $1 million in new construction compared to $100,000 in past years. * * * -‘And this is a conservative estimate,’* said Township Supervisor Earl B. Rhinevault, who is all for the progress. NOT UNITED Apparently not all the residents agree with him, however. “This boom is really going to shake people some day,” he said. “There are many who don’t want to see a change come about.” The 62-year-old supervisor probably knows his township as well as anyone. A lifelong resident, his present home at 8139 Buckell Lake is only a short distance from where he was born. Sl A ★ Located in the northwest section of Oakland County, the township is roughly 25 miles from Pontiac. With expressway travel, Detroit is only 35 minutes away. EXPLANATION The close proximity to Detroit and Flint, which is only 20 minutes away, is given as one explanation for the growth Old Hall May Soon Bow To Progress Romeo to Get Aid on Plan, if It Will Pay Part of Cost which continues as people move from the cities to the wide open spaces of the township. And with toe influx of population, the rural face of toe community is changing from agricultural to residential. Twenty years ago, when Rhinevault became supervisor, there were 125 farms. Today, there are but nine. A * A The population which had remained constant for years jumped from 1,306 in the 1960 census to mare than 2,200 in toe last two yehrs, according to Rhinevault. PROBLEMS ARISE The growth is starting to create problems, however. More people mean a greater demanid for services. New residents want more fire and police protection and garbage collection, all of which require money the township doesn’t have. It may soon be up to the people to help solve their own fire protection problem. Township officials are considering a vote to establish a fire district accompanied by a one-mill increase in taxes. Currently, the township pays about $5,000 for fire protection to OrtonviDe, Davisburg and Holly. A A * Another sign of progress is the proposed new township hall which residents may be asked to provide with another mill increase in taxes. NOTHING FINAL No final decision has been made yet on either proposal. If a new township hall is approved, the site for it is ready and waiting. A year ago, the township purchased a 214-acre site on Barron and Grange Hall, but funds were not available for toe new hall. The present hall, built in 1875' on Wildwood near Grange Hall, is rarely used except for township meetings. A A A Officials keep most of t h e township records in their own homes. Taxes this year totaled about $289,666, mostly ia property taxes, but about 85 t per cent of it goes to the ’ three school districts which serve the township. Two large camps, which between them take up 1,100 acres, are tax exempt. However, township officials are trying to get one, Camp Tamarack, mi the tax rolls. The matter is now awaiting an opinion from the attorney general. AAA At least a quarter of t h e township’s land area, about 5,000 acres, is state owned. While not tax exempt, it is land which can’t be used for industry. A FOOTHOLD Industry is nevertheless beginning to gam a foothold. Within the last few years, such businesses as Holly Mining, Ann Arbor Construction Co., Holly Ready Mix, Jennings Transport and Mount Holly Ski Ftesort have moved in. Water and sewers would undoubtedly attract more industry, but the township isn’t ready for it yet, according to Rhinevault. Also adding to the tax rolls are 30 new homes ih the $20,000 to $30,000 price range, 185 new families in the new mobile home park, and a proposed new toboggan slide area. AAA Evidence of the growth is the jump in assessed valuation this year from $1 million to $3 million. “We will probably need a master plan some day,” said Rhinevault, “because we are really going to grow.” Trustee Carl Lozier's Farm On Wildwood Road Is Proud Reminder Of Agricultural Past Police Are Probing Fatal Lapeer Crash Lapeer State Police are investigating a two-car accident early yesterday morning which proved fatal to James M. Foltz, 41, of Columbiaville, and critically injured a passenger in a second car. Officers said Foltz’s car col ed head-on with one driven Charles Matia, 42, also of Columbiaville. Both Matia fnd his wife, Marion, 40, are patients at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Flint, where she is listed in critical condition. Foltz was driving alone. Icy roads were the cause of the accident, said State Police. Director Resigns Job Corps Post BATTLE CREEK (AP)-The resignation of Col. E. Wilson Purdy, director of the Ft. Custer Job Corps Center near Battle Creek, was announced Wednesday. Purdy will become sheriff of Dade ounty, Fla., which comprises Miami, He was chief of police in St. Petersburg, Fla. for five years and later served as commissioner of toe Pennsylvania State Police. KALAMAZOO (UFI) - Western Michigan University yesterday received a $4 million loan for construction of a new cottage-type residence complex. The loan was approval by toe Department of Housing and Ur: ban Development. Construction will begin on the project in 1968. Loan Approved for WMU Work In Romeo District Field Upgrading Eyed ROMEO — A decision to hire i) engineer has given impetus to the program to upgrade the school district’s athletic field. A "A A The Board of Education voted this week to ask for an engineering survey following a report of a committee composed of teachers and board members. Daniel Barnabo, Romeo athletic director, cited the need for lighting, a better seating capacity, and track facilities at the field. The field is located on Morton, a block from the junior high school and three blocks from the senior high. It is used by both schools, by the community recreation group and by adult ball clubs. Serving with^Barnabo on the committee are David Olson, Ray Gamelin, Walter Sewell, Rex Matzinger and Robert Randell. OPEN HOUSE An open house at the new Indian Hills Elementary School was set for 2 p.m. Dec. 11, prim* to Romeo’s school bond vote Dec. 19. The board will meet again Dec. 12. Administration offices were moved this week from temporary quarters in downtown Romeo to the junior high school. Schools Supt. T. C. Filppula said the area allows room for School District to Open Center TRAVERSE CITY (AP) - A $40,000 instructional materials center is being opened Dec. 12 by toe Traverse Bay intermediate School. District The center is one of 10 of its kind in Michigan. It was built under toe Federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act. Its books, recordings, films and other materials wiH be available to-both public and parochial schools. Dem Club Elects Trustees, Delegate INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP—TWo trustees and a delegate-at-large were elected at a recent meeting of the Indepen-dence Township Democratic Club. Named trustees were Stanley Eaton of 5324 Pine Knob and James Humphrey of 4851 Clin-tonville. E. R. King of 5550 Mary Sue was elected to toe delegate-at-large post The club elected Charles Curry Jr. of 5729 Warbler as its 1966-67 chairman at a meeting in September. Elected at toe same meeting, Paul Derryberry of 5208 May-bee and Robert G. Phillips of 55 Orion are serving as vice chairmen of toe club. The club will meet next at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 19 in the home of Bernice M- Fuller of 5200 Pine Knob. Shipments of iron ore, coal and grain over the Great Lakes in May reached a nine-year seasonal high. Bazaar This Weekend ORTONVILLE — St. Anne’s Church will conduct its annual Christmas bazaar from noon to 6 p. m. Saturday and Sunday in the parish hall. A chicken dinner will be served Sunday afternoon. 1 ROMEO — The village has received approval on a federal grant to assist in working out a master plan for future growth, according to toe Department of Housing and Urban Development. Clerk Norman Engel said wond was received last week that , the government will pay two-thirds of a $14,910 planning project Romeo will be expected to pay toe otto* $5,000, if it * takes part in the program. The Village Council will discuss toe matter at its next meeting Dec. 12, according to Engel. lage’s financial picture has changed somewhat since then. Said Engel, “Five thousand dollars is a lot of money for a small town to put out. We need the planning, particularly since Ford Motor Co. has moved here, but it will be up to the council to decide.” Children's Home to Hold Annual Benefit Dec. 11 Application for the aid was FARMIN&TON _ The________________ a* according * Engel, » A «“ $ dren will hold its annual benefit Christmas tea from 2 to 5 p.m. Dec. 11 at the home, 12 Mile and Inkster roads. Proceeds from the tea will be used to purchase large playground equipment for the new Mother Seton School. Board Takes Land Options MILFORD |jJpThe Hurot Valley Board of Education this week approved taking an option ori two parcels of land to be used for future elementary school sites. The parcels of land, one 13 acres and cne 16 acres, are located in toe southeast and the central portions of the district. A A A Also discussed, but tabled until the next meeting, was liber- Assisting president Mrs. John C. Malpeli will be Sisters of the home and committee members. use of school buildings by outside groups. Part Of The 5,000 State-Owned Acres Lake Opon Concert Event Aids Interlochen Fund Party Dec. 17 in Rochester ROCHESTER •— Rochester Goodfellows have set this year’s alizing toe policy covering tivi Christmas party for needy chil- 4 . ... Hrpn at 1 nm iW 17 et r«n. Children's Night Stone School PTA will host a children’s night at 7:30 p.m. next Thursday. V, Members of toe 4-H Club, Girl Scoots, Cub Scouts, Campfire Girls, YMCA and Boys’ Club will demonstrate with slides and pjqyt toe after-school activities d children. dren at 1 p.m. Dec. 17 at Central Junior High School. Last year the group entertained 225 children with dinner, a toy each and candy . Support for toe program, plus the distribution last year of 33 family Christmas dinners, comes from the sale of Good-fellow papers. Some 75 salesmen ire expected to take to the streets tomorrow and Saturday to raise money for needy families this year. LAKE ORION - A concert by members of the high school band has enriched toe Joseph E. Maddy Interlochen Memorial Fund by $800. As a gift to the Maddy fund, toe contribution qualified for an additional gift of $50 from toe W. Clement and Jessie V. Stone Foundation of Chicago. The foundation pays $1 for every $4 contributed by others in Interiochen’s campaign to raise $25 million. Maddy was founder of the National Music Camp. The local concert was the inspiration of Roger Faulmann, conductor of the Lake Orion High School Symphonic band and former student and staff at Interlochen. both Faulmann and his wife had been summer students and on the staff there. AAA The Lake Orion benefit concert, presented by the band, the Girls’ Glee Chib, barbershop quartet and mixed chorus of the School, was Owe first given outside of Interlochen since Ih*. Maddy’s death last spring. The band will present its annual Christmas concert at 8 p.m. Dec. 15 at toe Lake Orion High School. Lake Orion has been sending students to the All-State division of tile National Music Camp and Sex Education Talk LAKE ORION - MrS. John LM|Ie, assistant director of toe Flint Community Schools family relations program, will speak on sex education to the Lake Orion Area PTA Council at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Lake Orion Junior High library. THE MANY SPLEND0RID CHESTERFIELD: ALPACUNA’S VELVET COLURED CASH- MERE Alpocuna adds luxury ta luxury: pore cashmere collared la velvet. This most dressy of styles is trim and flattering, accented with L-shnped lapels. Cheese from jit Mack or vicuna shades. N't n saperb holiday choice it, $145 Our Pontine Mali Star Evening to 9 P.M. 909 N. Telegraph U Our Birmingham Store Open Thus, end \ A\ Fri. to 9; Sat. to 5:30 800 Fierce St. D—11 SAVE 48# WITH this COUPON .Limit (1) Cm Limit (1) Nylon s tripod long sloovo mock lwl|lmiocjt tept-dyod to match nylon atitelioi croMO front solid colored stock* with isoll stirups. Colon:. Rod, blue, plum 188 | EACH DEODORANT by'ClCLETTE SAVE M« O C WITH THIS Vr COUPON Ww THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 IP " WASHINGTON (AP) - What Sea. Everett M. Dirksen describes as a very interesting struggle is developing between Senate AcpabUcea liberals conservatives over their Difksan, the Senate Republi-can leader, took refuge in file statement that “nothing has been settled” when asked by a reporter about What now lcfbks like a three-man race tor the bb held by Sol Thruston B. nfy. ' AWAY IRS GO—University of California police made short work of agitators during yesterday’s sit-in demonstration in the Student Union at Berkeley. Here they remove one of 10 persons arrested during the protest of a Navy recruiting team on campus. Some 3,500 of the Berkeley campus’ 30,000 students later attended a meeting and voted overwhelmingly to strike classes starting at 8 a.m. today. Speck Ruled Fit to Stand Trial CHICAGO (UPI) - Richard Speck is mental^* competent to stand trial on chaises of slaughtering eight young nnrses. The rilling was returned — on orders — by a jury yesterday, Criminal Court Judge Hubert C. Paschen overrode die objections of public defender'Gerald W. Getty and ordered the seven men and five women to return the verdict. Paschen said he would con-side a change of venue motion hi a hearing today. Getty, who objected to the hearing in the first place, again raised a dissenting voice yesterday when Paschen told the jury "The preponderance and the greater weight of evidence — of all' the eminent doctors who testified — shows that Richard FranUto Speck Is competent to stand trial.” "It’s a sad day for Cook Coun- Getty said, 'When a jury cannot take the evidence into its own hands and return with its Own verdict.” VERDICT The jury was out only two minutes. Its verdict read: "We, the jury, find that Richard Franklin Speck was at the time of die empaneling of this jury and is now able to understand the nature of the charges against him and is able to asist in Us own de* fense.”' Hie only witnesses to appear during the three-day hearing were doctors chosen jointly tty the prosecution and defense to examine Speck. J ■* ★ * ★ All seven testified that gpeck was mentally competent to stand trial and aid in his defense. SAVE WITH YANKEE COUPONS GOP Seh&fot’s Face Over Fund Post By custom Morton will step out of the Campaign Committee chairmanship in January because his Senate seat will be at stake in 1168. I In an atmosphere charged with presidential politics, Sens. 'George Murphy of California, Scott of Pennsylvania and __ G. Tower of Texas are behu advanced as prospective candidates. AFTER JAN. 1» The next chairman will be chosen by the conferencf of Republican senators, meeting after tim 90th Congress convenes Jan. Dirksen has assumed a neutral attitude up to this point - a stance he might not be able to maintain much longer. *' * \ The campaign chairman’s primary job is to raise money for Republican senatorial remittees and to distribute it equitably among'them. 1 But the assignment also Includes travel about the country, speeches at fund-raising dinners, huddles with local political leaders and the drumming up of likely candidates for senatorial contests. Barry Gold water held the job for two 2-year terms. ★ * * The liberals, still outnumbered among Senate Repiddi-cans despite addition to their ranks in the Nov. 8 election, are expected to rally behind Scott while Tower is the candidate of some — but not necessarity all of the conservatives. Moslems regard relit images with abhorrence, and an image of Mohammed as a desecration. AMAZING PIZZA RICKY’S TAKE OUT Call For 1S Min. Seryfc 335-7164 or 338-T Across From St. Joseph Hospital RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 3328181. m, YOUR MICHIGANBANK IS HERE! CL0THIN6 6IFI IDEAS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 10 UNTIL CHRISTMAS BOYS WARM BULKY KNIT ORLON ACRYLIC SWEATERS 287 GIRLS 4-14 HOLIDAY QUILTED COUMBSAT 3.91 Choose from assorted acetate solid colors, prints end cotton quilt prints too. Pockot and pi pad data! I trim. GIRLS. 4-6X - 7-14 HOLIDAY GIFT BLOUSES COMPABE AT 2.39 Assorted styles end colors - many trim*. Short and 3/4 length sl**v*s. Sites 4 to 6x end 7 to 14. Com.and pullover styles. Pop* , ular "Poor Boy'* ribbed pull* overs. Novelty pattern cat Styles. Washable, retain tbelr shape. Sizes S-M-L. l*a® BOYS COTTON SUEDE PONDEROSA SHIRTS REGULAR 4.99 VALUE Long *l**v*d shirt* with leather thong nsek toe*. Good looking, worm tool Si*** S-M.Lt ■J^Si BOYS SCRUB COTTON BENIN DRESS UP IEANS Nationally advertised "Laramie . 100% cotton I IR| slim trim western sty- 1 ■ D Is. Th* most popular H Rm V loan with th* tough faded leek. Situ 4-H. ■ BOYS DOUBLE KNEE COTTON CORDUROY SLACKS Durable thickset corduroy. Elastic waist -*ippor front-solid shades. Sites 4-12. BOYS CREW SOCKS 27*' TWO YANKEE STORES IN THE PONTIAC AREA ★ MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ★ CORNER OF PERRY AND MONTCALM STREETS ★ FREE, EASY PARKING D—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 Choose from 26 * of the world's most famous I paintings, magnificently vr reproduced on canvas, m now available from the Bank of the Commonwealth office near you. fVXoNTGOMERY WARD of Major Disasters in Great Lakes Since l900 Spirits Of Passengers Undiminished As Ordeal Ends 3 Days Stranded on Lake Ferry Freed, All Safe LUDINGTON (AP) — “Thei last time I went on the ship a man jumped overboard. j “This time we got stuck on a sandbar. I don’t think Fll make the trfo again for a while.” * ★ ★ Mrs. Walter Knowles, whose hnshand is a porter on the car ferry “City of Midland, 41” voiced the closest thing to A complaint among all the 128 passengers and 56 crewmen when the ship broke loose from the sand and docked here Wednesday. , The ordeal, which began Sunday night when the 4,000-ton ship was blown.aground during a violent storm, ended happily when the-tug “John Porves’' pulled her free shortly before dark. CHEERING CROWD - To the accompaniment of automobile horns, ship whistles and cheering onlookers the 407-foot vessel steamed into the channel under her own power. Nearly all the passengers said the three days of being stranded were “really kind of fun,” and had nothing but compliments for the crew of the Chesapeake ad Ohio Railway ship. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. David Schmidtke of Midland echoed many of die comments of debarking passengers. “We really had a fine time. I hate to go home to day own cooking and housework,” she said. WORRIED WAITERS Among worried relatives and friends waiting on the frigid pier was E. W. Born, of Manitowoc, Wis., whose daughter, Mary Ann, 22, was returning to her teaching job in Kalamazoo. * * * “I drove all night to get here,” be said. “The worst part was not * being able to communicate with the ship and not really knowing how they were doing. We were really pretty worried a good part of die time.” ★ * »* Most of the passengers passed time at bridge tables, over coffee and just talking. * * * “One thing for sure, there were no snobs aboard. Everybody was very friendly and we all, got along real well,” said Mrs. Ralph Hicktaott of Oxford, Mich. CHILDREN ABOARD Many small children came off the ship in their parents’ arms. Some were crying, but others said they enjoyed the extended trip. Tamy Lyn Ledger, 6, of Reed City, said she wanted to make the trip again. * “They gave me some cards and I played with the other kids. It was tan,” she said. A John Miller, second (took aboard die Midland. iaid there were few problems in/feeding the passengers and “We’ve still got some food left in the gaUeyand could have stayed out while longer,” he Now 26 of the world's famous paintings. superbly reproduced in full color on mounted canvas, ready for framing. Yours for just $6.95 each when you add to or open a savings or checking account in the amount Of $50 or more at any of our offices. The reproductions are 2# x 28r and they duplicate the original painting with such clarity and detail of dblor and brushstroke, you'll surely want several for your home. See the sample exhibit at any convenient Bank of the Commonwealth office. But don't delay. This offer is good for a limited time only. Place your order right away. See the sample exhibit at any of our convenient offices. - WOODWARD-SQUARE LAKE ROAD he Associated Prow disasters to Great sailing since 1900 to- r, 1966 - Freighter Ce-with another Mackinaw and D. Bradley sank to Lake Michigan, 33 killed. May 11, 1963 — Ore carrier Henry Steinbrenner sank in Lake Superior, 17 killed. Oct 29, 1961-Freighter Po-inobscot and ofl barge collided to * * * Buffalo Harbor, 10 Nov. 19,1958 j- Freighter Carl I Sept. 17, 1949—Passenger ship Noropic burned at dock in Toronto, 119 kilted. Sept 24, 1947—Freighter Mel-erton exploded and burned aft-r collision with oil tanker Tnanslake to St Lawrerice River, 12 kilted. June 4, 1947—Freighter Emperor to Lake Superior, 10 killed. June 4, 1944—Pleasure craft Olga to&|eEde, Killed. April 17, 1844 — Freighter James' H. Reed to Lake Erie, 10 killed. Dec. 2,1942 -TUg Admiral to Lake Erie, U killed; Barge Cleveeo in Lake Erie, 18 killed. Sept. 22, 1942 — Pleasure freighters, toe Novadoc, Da-vock and toe AnnaiC. Mtoch, sank to Lit killed. 1915 — Passenger ship East-land, capsized In Chicago Elver, m drowned. I Nov. Ill, 1913-19 ships lost to hurricane, including the freighters Ctoarles S. 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SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. • 682-1940 THE FONTrAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER R—"T Tempo Increases on Prep Basketball Schedule PCH, Northern Entertain Flint Quintets Friday Central Opening Loop Race; Huskies Ready for 1966-67 Debut ^ The Chiefs of Pontiac will get an idea of how well they’ll fare] in the Saginaw Valley Confer-] once while Pontiac Northern | will take the wraps off its young basketball squad ini games tomorrow night. ★ ★ ★ Both schools are entertaining Flint foes. PCH takes on Central while PNH’s Huskies will take on Southwestern on the north side of town. On the scale of small, big and bigger, the Chiefs’ game with Flint Central stands pretty tall The Flint quintet was a preseason choice to battle Saginaw for the SVC crown and the Indians romped past Ann Arbor in their opener last week,.71-42. ★ ★ ★ PCH was impressive in its opener earlier this week, downing Roseville, 7647, with a lineup dominated by newcomers, but the Chiefs are expected to have a little more trouble with the Indians. PACE TEAM Guard Prentice Hill, a 6-foot senior, and Junior forward Alton Wilson (6-1) are the lone holdovers from last year’s PCH ■quad and both gave good performances against Roseville, mil contributed 24 points and Wilson added 14. ★ ★ Tonight at PCH, the Central varsity and reserve wrestling teams open the season against SVC for Saginaw Arthur mil at 6:10. Coach Dick Hall may wind ■p with five juniors in the lineup when Northern takes the floor sgainst Southwest- Hall and the Huskies struggled through s 4-11 season last year and they’re hopeful they’ll be able to reverse that record. Don Hayward (64) and Dana Coin (6-2) are tabbed for duty at the forward slots with 6-3 Stan Allison at center. OTHER STARTERS Bob Traylor (64) will also see action at the forward while Mike Clancy (6-6) will guide the team from a guard post ★ ★ ★ Among Hall’s reserves are guards Jack Brown (64), Rick Rhoney (5-9) and Craig Deaton (5-10). Hall lost only one lettermen so it’s understandable why the outlook is optimistic at Northern. Indications are that the PNH quintet could be a high-scoring unit. Clancy, Coin and Hayward averaged about 12 points a game as sophomores last season. PCH Tankers Take Opener Pontiac Central opened its swimming season last night at Flint Central and the Chiefs won the meet 5348 in a close and exciting struggle all the way. After being disqualified in the opening medley relay, PCH stayed behind most of the way. Divers Ken Franks and Norm LaMotte pulled the Chiefs within two points 23-21 and Roger Fox’s win in the butterfly, with Dick Chase close behind gave PCH a 29-24 lead. Hie lead changed two more times until Bill Kimmins won the breaststroke, and the free-, style relay team won the final, event. Double winner was John Mason in the 500 free and 100 backstroke for PCH. , PCH a. HUUT CENTRAL « *** Raiay-fitot c**?1 Kettering Five to Open Away TURNING HIS BACK?—At first glance it might appear Oakland University basketball coach Dick Robinson has turned his back on the members of the school’s first intercollegiate cage squad, bu$> actually the players are being reflected by a mirror. The Pioneer varsity will make its debut at 8 tomorrow night in the Oakland gymnasium against Alma College's junior varsity. The players (from the left) are Tom Allan, Ozzie Carlson, Jon Blocher, Jim Nyberg, Chuck Clark, Jay Shutt and Gordie Tebo. OU in Debut Local College 5 s Play Four of Oakland County’s five college basketball teams will be in action Friday night around the Pontiac area. Oakland University will make its debut by entertaining Alma College’s junior varsity at 8 p.m. This will be the Pioneers’ first season of intercollegiate cage play. ★ ★ ★ Oakland Community College’s Auburn Hills and Highland Lakes campus teams will tangle at 8 p.m. mi the Clifford Smart Junior High School floor. Auburn propped for the meeting !by losing a 106-90 decision to Jackson Community College last Ranger Pair Sinks Hawks Giacomin, Fleming Spark 5-0 Victory The Nikes won an earlier meeting with Highland Lakes, 106-100 in overtime, at the Schoolcraft tournament. TOURNAMENT » The other college game tomorrow night will have Michigan Christian Junior College entertaining Grace Bible of Grand Rapids at 8:30 p.m. in the Avondale HS court. By the Associated Press Ed Giacomin and Reg Fleming — Mr. Zer and Mr. Zap in New York’s National Hockey League resurgence — have done it again. Goalie Giacomin turned in his second successive shutout and toft - winger Fleming uncorked second straight two-go burst Wednesday night as the Rangers whipped Chicago 54, extending their winning streak four games and climbing within a single point of the league-leading Black Hanks. The Toronto Maple Lots also shot within one point of first place, edging Montreal 3-2 on rookie Brian Conacher’s third-period goal in the only other NHL game. Conacher’s sixth goal snapped a 24 tie with nine minutes remaining, giving Toronto a 34-1 record in four meetings with the strugging Canadiens. It will be the nightcap of the Warriors’ first Invitational Basketball Tournament double-header. Northeast Christian College from Pennsylvania will play Ohio Valley College of West Virginia at 7 p.m. Oily Midwestern Baptist College of Pontiac is idle among the county colleges this week. Saturday afternoon will find Oakland U. entertaining Aquinas’ jayvees at 3 o'clock; while the MCJC tourney will have its consolation game at 1:30 and the finals at 3:30. The county high school basket-] ball season moves into sharp ifocus Friday night after a few 'scattered games last month. ★ ★ ★ { Joining the county’s Catholic .circuits who began league play last week will be the Wayne-I Oakland loop. In the outlying I areas, Southern Thumb teams also will hit the league trail. Debuting in a nonleague encounter is the Waterford Kettering team that could be the best in the school’s brief cage history. Kettering will invade North Farmington where the Captains opened last year’s 15-1 regular season campaign with a narrow 58-57 success. ★ ★ ★ That team posted the second best mark in Kettering’s history, surpassed only by the 1963-unbeaten regular season quintet. All of last year’s regulars are back. LEAGUES In the Wayne-Oakland circuit, Clarkston will visit West Bloomfield, Milford will be at Bloomfield Hills, Holly at Brighton and Clarenceville at Northville. Armada will invade Almont in the Southern Thumb highlight. Also on that league’s slate will New Haven at Dryden, Brown City at Capac and Anchor Bay at Memphis. opposition at Ortonviile in a non- ■ leaguer. Walled Lake’s Vikings will begin their campaign at Plymouth; Avondale will journey to Oxford. Others on the County schedule include Port Huron at Birmingham Seaholm, Groves at Uranbrook and Grosse Pointe University School at Country Day in a 4 p.m. contest. Royal Oak Shrine will travel to Detroit Servite while Birmingham Brother Rice will challenge Detroit Austin. ★ ★ ★ Saturday’s prep calendar cage has Rochester opening its season at Clarkston, Southfield at Royal Oak Dondero and the traditional North Farmington at Farmington encounter. GUIDING THE ATTACK - Guards Tom Allen (31) and Randy Nicoson (43) will be among the starters when Clarks-ton’s Wolves open the basketball season tomorrow night at West Bloomfield. The twosome will also move onto the court Saturday night when the Wolves entertain Rochester. All-Staters Named The Northwest Catholic loop] action will have Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows at Royal Oak St. Mary, St. Francis del Sales at Orchard Lake St. Mary! and St. Benedict at St. Rita, i Honorary QB on 'B' Team ST. MIKE Detroit St. Rose and Holy Cross Ln will be at Richmond St. Augus-j tine. Bathgate Travels in Wings Shake-Up By tiie Associated Press jdent, averaged 8.7 yards per Anchor Bay Catholic will meet . over his three years of t Michael at Kennedv Juniorplated Press All State football varsity play and scored a total igh School in Macomb Paro-1 teami th.is ^e®r has an honoraryj°f 41 touchdowns. Oscoda lost chial olav St Fred will invade I tluar'*rback *n memory of a only three games in Lane’s st‘H«iw fv««lrine yw"8 foo*aU Player killed three years. Lane, who kicks an auto wreck. soccer-style, booted 14 extra He was Dave Fraser, a senior quarterback at Albion. Fra- mravjg n, . . ■ ~ T . ... iser, the son of Albion College Walerford to. Lady of Lakeajoach Morley Frasar, was fated will provide Brandon, opening;^, ^lerbacka § i in the state, but be only played S i one game this fall before injur- H j ing an arm. He was just getting ■ | ready to return to practice H : when he was killed. n \ DETROIT (AP)- Andy Bathgate, the ninth highest goal scorer in National Hockey League history and one-time NHL Most Valuable Player, today is a minor leaguer. The Detroit Red Wings, floundering in a six-game losing streak, sent Bathgate to the Pittsburgh Hornets of the American Hockey League Wednesday. ★ n ★ ‘He’s supposed to be a goal scorer and he hasn’t been scoring goals,” said Manager-Coach Sid Abel. "I told Andy I’m hoping that three weeks or so at Pittsburgh will start him shooting tiie Way he used to shoot. If he gets going, there’s no doubt we’ll be able to use him here again.” The 34-year-old Bathgate has played 17 games with the Red Wings this season, scoring three goals and four assists. Last season, playing over an injury much of the time, he scored 15 goals. Bathgate, who tied Bobby Hull for the league scoring championship in 196142, has a total of 309 goals. He won the Hart Trophy as most valuable player in 1958-59. The tall forward came to Detroit from Toronto in an eight-player trade May 20, 1965. Also sent down were left winger Ab McDonald and defense-man Bob McCord. Center Ray Cullen was recalled from Pittsburgh Tuesday. Pete Goegan, called up Saturday, wins a regular job as a defenseman. Center Ted Hampson, called up Oct. 30, also remains on the roster. ( n« eirv “ i ran | The Swami Association has cfosed its Grapevine picking for the season, and what a topsy- TO Fr««wi*-Bob (FC), »m Jrtn-lturvy race it was. < r £ 1 | „ i n R^rJwt^iohT bean On the last weekend of the season, Swami Spews edged out Swami Craig by a single ■■j If game to defend Ms throne and it all happened in tiie Bayior-Rioe game. ■ It was a tie after three-quarteri, but Baylor poshed to a last-period victory. Swami Chrig had Rice and Swam] Spears had Baylor, In the battle to stay out of the cellar Swami Kearns moved from 12 games behind Swami Vogel in the last time weeks of the season, made a big pick with Oklahoma over Nebraska! andi finished hi:tie with Vagd, ■ 4 v e ''W' l(v I a- These are how the Swamis finished for the season. Hatl the champion Swami Spears. We’ll dee you at Gridiron time nett year! SPEARS CRAIG VOGEL KEARNS (2M-1I64S) (293-101-13) (285-169-13) (285-116-13) ■ (FC). Jim 200 ino. AMiiHI---- Sfeva Wags (PCH), Jtff Blwnz (PCH) Diving—Kan Franks (PCH), Worm Mott (PCH), John Simpson (FC) 1« jammy after Pas (PCH), Cham (PCH), Sob Nelson (FC) 100 Ff smiyit aablaiw (FC), Jtaft Cat- i Osltr, Dick Chase) McDonald and McCord came to Detroit in June of 1965 in a seven-man swap with Boston. Cullen, 25, scored six goals and nine assists in 14 games with the Hornets. Goegan, 31, had 15 points in 15 games witii Pittsburgh. The 29-year-old Hampson has scored three goals and six assists in 12 games since joining the Wings. The Hornets rolled to their third straight League Victory Wednesday night by trouncing Springfield 5-1. McDonald and Billy Harris knocked in Hornet goals in the first period and Pittsburgh’s Don McKenney scored the only goal of the second period. The Hornets made it 44 in the third period on a goal by Bart Crashley, and Gerry Foley followed _with Springfield’s only score. The final Hornet goal was knocked in by Terry (fray, assisted by McCord. W. Bloomfield Five Shares Piston Clinic Coach Art Paddy and members of the West Bloomfield High School team will participate on the program during the annual Detroit Pistons’ basketball clinic at Cobo Arena on Saturday/ Paddy will shard the spotlight with coaches Dave DeBusschere (Detroit Pistons), John Kerr (Chicago Bulls) and Bill Foley (Detroit Catholic1 Central) during tiie 90-minute' event which will precede the Detroit-Chicago game. The clinic will begn at 6 p.m. Paddy will run' Ms players through a series of offensive drills in their first appearance on the Pistons’ annual schoolboy clinic. JU1 area schools ate invited to attend the clinic rad remain for the gams that follows, They should call the Pistons hi ad- Terry Weiss of Frankenmuth, a 5-11,170-pound senior, is quarterback on the Class B. team. Weiss, an honor student, passed for 17 touchdowns and scored 119 points. He did all the Frankenmuth kicking. Rushing, he got 235 yards on 34 carries. Coleman Lane of Oscoda, a 6-1, 190-pound back, would provide much of the power on the Allstate dream teapi. He scored nine touchdowns this sea-on. Lane, another honor stu- The Pontiac Open Bowling Tournament reaches the t w o-thirds mark this weekend witii the deadline tonight for the second of three qualifying rounds to be held Sunday. Pantlac Prill Pliate GARY HAMBELL Pontiac Keg Tourney Entering 2nd Round portion of the tournament which brings together the top average bowlers and the top actual qualifiers for special trophies and prizes. The Mg names in last Sunday’s opening qualifying round were Wiley Keeth whose 742 total at Huron Bowl topped all At 300 Bowl Monroe Moore’s 712 and 691 actual was tops, while at Airway Lloyd Benson finished with 719 and at Cooley, Bowlers who wish to bowl and shoot for the “600” target score Sunday should have their en- bowlers for the day. tries in at Huron Bowl, 300 Bowl Airway Lanes or Cooley Lanes this evening. The squads will be made up at their respective houses with ... . tiie first squad at each site ex-! _ Harris totalled 672. pec ted to start at 10:30 a.m. CHANCE TO RE-ENTER Those who fail to Mt the mark in tiie early squads will have the opportunity to re-enter in later squads at any of the establishments. Last week 77 bowlers, a first week Mgb> bowled 600 or better ^o gain semi-final berths. points. The son of an Air, Forco sergeant, he learned the sidewinder style as a grade school student in England. FENTON STAR Don Madden of Fenton, 6-1, 180 pounds, is another high scorer witii 106 points. In seven |H Genesee County Class B League mmm games he gained 1,213 yards op 241 runs. His 17 touchdowns In league play led Fenton to its seventh straight league title. Gary Boyce, the smallest man on the Allstate team, rounds out the backfield. Boyce scored 16 touchdowns for St. Johns, which lost just one game. He added 23 extra points. Boyce, at 69 and 155 pounds, gained 1,861 yards rushing, the second Mgfc-est in the school’s history. The ends are Jerry Dutcher qf Corunna and Ron Goodin of Marysville. Dutcher is 6-2 and 185. Goodin is a tall one at 64 and 175 pounds. He caught seven touchdown passes this year and snagged 24 passes with an average of 20 yards per reception. Art Bergman of Saginaw Buena Vista, the Class B mythical state champion, is one of the tackles and tiie only junior on the team. He stands 5-10 add weighs 185 pounds. Tie other tackle is Gary Hambell of Royal Oak Shrine, a 6-5, 205-pound- Hambell has been a three-year regular and key performer on the Shrine team which lost only to Detroit city champion St. Ambrose. He is also a member of the All-County class B team. Guards are Jim Mannar of Dundee and Bob Thibodeau of Detroit Cathedral. Mannar is 5-9 and 184 pounds toMle Thibodeau stands 5-9 but weighs 205. Chuck Faulkenstein of Buchanan, at 5-11 and 196, anchors the center spot. ■y Tbi Atioclated Fnu The Michigan Aisociatad Pratt data • Allstale high ichool football laam: Honorary quarterback — Dava Frasar, Cooley led the number of qualifiers with26. Qualifying trophy awards will go to the top score at each house following the final qualifying day, Sunday, December If past tournaments are any indication, at least another 100 may Mt the mark Sunday at the four sites. 'ft It * _ Some 300 bowlers are expected to compete in the semi-finals Sunday morning December 18th at Huron Bowl and then follow witii the top 12% per cent in the fihais at 300 Bowl that afternoon. Also that afternoon will be the Actual’s Invitational, a prestige There will be no extension of qualifying, thus bowlers should get the times and sites they desire for this Sunday and next as soon as possible. Building Program Sat DETROIT (AP)—Wayne State University has announced plans to spend 62 million on handball courts, squash courts, football and baseball fields, tracks, tennis courts and intramural sports fields. 8—Coleman Lane. Otcoda, 4-1, IN, ar. 8—Don Maddan, Fan ton, 4-1, no, ir. 8—Gary Boyca, St. Johnt, 5-7, 155, ar. E-Jerry Dutcher, Corunna, 4-2, lti, ar. E—Ron Goodin, MarytvHte, 4-4, 175, ar. T—Gary Hambell, Royal Oak Shrlna, -5, 205, ar. T—Art Bergman, Saginaw Buena viita. ______ r# willow Rum HI, 1*5, ar. B—George Vailcek. Reed CNy, H, 14a, E—Curly Garrett, DowegVac, 5-11, 1 roe CaMeHc C G-Sten Phmkitt, MaryavDta, 5-10, 144, G-Tom sautor. BliufteW, 5-11, iffc ar. V THE PONTIAC PftESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1066 UNITED TIRE SERVICE HUNTERS’ SPECIAL! HEAVY DUTY SNO-CAPS 30-MONTH ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE! 9 88 into'* f 4 full 1:25x14, $10.88* Retread Fad. Tax .56 to .61 •EXCHANGE Whitewalls $1.88 Mere 1 ALL CREDIT CARDS HONORED 1 OPEN MON. HMU FRI. 84—SAT. 8-6- CLOSED SUK Irish Were Gunning for No. 1-Parseghian UNITED TIRE SERVICE “WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNT!D-NOT QUALITY’' 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC NfcED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 3324181. DETROIT (AP)—Notre Dame Coach Ara Parseghian said his team was trying for the national championship and points to the latest Associated Press poll as proof that he used the right strategy in the final miiuites of the Michigan State game: Notre Dame was ranked No. 1 nationally and MSU No. 2 going into the game Nov. 19. With the score tied 10-10, Notre Dame ran out the clock rather than go for the long pass. “Notre Dame plays in no conference,’’ Parseghian told a football dinner audience here here Wednesday night. “We play no postseason games. The national polls mean everything to us, and those who vote in the polls put a premium on being undefeated. JbAD POSITION “We had bad field position. , “Another big factor is that for I MSU it was all over with that game. At the end of that game, they hang up the pads. There is no more,” Parseghian said. But we had an overtime. We could control our own destiny. For us, there is another game, Southern California. So didn’t try for the bomb. * * * “If you say this is wrong, then look at the national polls today,” he concluded. Notre Dame smashed South-Cal in the final game and increased its poll margin over MSU. “Actually,” the Notre Dame coach joked, “it was an easy decision to make. When I first became coach at Notre Dame got a telegram from an alumni group telling me, ‘We’re with you, win or tie.’ “But,” Parseghian concluded, 'judging from the mail I got after the MSU tie, I guess ‘ word ‘tie’ can be dropped. DRILL TEAM Chief Pontiac Post No. 377 at Waterford Township High School Gym 3 SHOWS - 2:30 - 5:00 - 8:00 P.M. DECEMBER 3 PRESENTS THE K-MART ★ STARRING ★ Del Reeve* Tom Paul and The Glasier Brothers Mel Tillis Bobby Brandon Archie Grammer plug Many Other* * * 50c TICKET DISCOUNT COUPON AVAILABLE AT KMART * * TICKETS: MAILORDERS: Available at Kmart, Lakeland Record Shop, GrinnelPs—Mall P.O. Bex 3062. Pontiac, M OR CALL FE 8-2246 ¥ Quintet Makes Debut Wolverines Rebuild After Russell Era By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE Football’s Foremost Forecaster Egad, friends, seldom has the Hoople System functioned more beautifully than it did last wed:. There were upsets galore and the Hoople Plan had most of them analyzed perfectly, including the upset of the year. On Saturday we had a brU-lant record of 16 winners, losers, for an .800 batting average —kaff.kaff! To refresh your memories, i my Turkey Day forecast I wrote, “Watch for the Oklahoma Sooners to treat a national TV audience to the upset of the year as they ‘feast’ on Nebraska’s Comhuskers!” And — ahem — just as I predicted they would, the Sooners, with a spine-tingling display of dogged determination, prevailed 10-9 on a last-minute Held goal to knock Sugar Bowl nominee Nebraska from foe ranks of foe unbeaten — har-rumph. KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -What will foe University of Michigan basketball team be like without Cazzie Russell? U-M fans will find out tonight as foe Wolverines open the 1966-67 season here against Tennessee. Saturday Michigan plays Duke at Durham, N. C., then returns to Ann Arbor for foe home opener. That comes Monday night against University of Houston. But not only is twb-time All-America Russell gone from foe Michigan squad, so are such men as John Thompson, Jim Myers, Oliver Darken and John Clawson. Only three lettermen return from foe defending Big Ten championship team: Craig Dill, Dennis Bankey and Jim Pitts. Head Fencing Squad DETROIT (AP) - Louis Fox and Andy Haliw have been elected cocaptains of foe Wayne State fencing squad. We Hove Them Ready For Immediate Delivery 1967 Chevrolets WHY BUY A’66, WHEN YOU CAN BUY A NEW '67 WITH 5 YEARS OR 50,000 MILE GUARANTEE? You Can Get Immediate Delivery On A New Camaro and Have It For Christmas! NEW BUSINESS HOURS TO BETTER SERVE OUR CUSTOMERS Service and Parts Departments Monday and Thursday ... Open til 9 P.M. Closed All Day Saturday New A Used Car Sales Department 1 and Thursday... Opan ’til S P.M. Open All Day Saturday Matthews hargre Savings Service Satisfaction Vfe'-' . & 631 OakhMl at Can FI 64161 Major Hoople Boasts c of Hot 'Grid' Hand Ring Greats Raise Funds for Ex-Champ NEW YORK’W) - A benefit program raised (10,800 Wednesday night for former boxing champion Barney Ross, who is suffering from throat cancer. The benefit was held at Sun-nyside Garden and Ross listened to and addressed foe proceedings by telephone from his Chicago apartment. The former lightweight, junior welterweight and welterweight champion is being treated as an outpatient at foe Chicago Veteran’s Research Center. ★ * * The event, which featured a regular boxing program, was attended by 14 former champions, including Floyd Patterson, James Braddock, Mickey Walker and Rocky Graziano, and two current boxing title-holders, Carlos Oritz and Emile Griffith: Most of foe money was raised by the sale of 100 tickets at $100 each, but 1,677 persons paid (2, (3 and (4 to attend. The money was presented by Father Frederic P. Gehring, a Naval chaplain on Guadalcanal when Ross was a Marine there during World War II. Canadians Take U. of D. Trophies DETROIT (AP) - Fourteen University of Windsor students walked into foe University of Detroit athletic center Tuesday and walked out with 11 drill team and marching trophies. No one noticed foe loss until leaders of foe Windsor raiders, Jim Cunningham and Nick Men-ican, called to report their 6hul. The two schools meet in a basketball. game Thursday night. But as gratifying as foe Oklahoma prediction was it was on Saturday foe Hoople System excelled! On foe last big day of the regular 1966 season your favorite forecaster' correctly tabbed Army’s “fourth quarter” upset of Navy, foe Miami Hurricanes’ upset of Orange Bowl bound Florida, and foe Georgia Bulldogs’ triumph over previously undefeated Georgia Tech, who will face Florida in foe New Year's classic! \ ★ *t * ★ \ The Hoople System gave you underdog Holy Cross to upend neighbor Boston College, Florida State to triumph over Maryland, and Notre Dame to trim Southern California—hak-kaff! * * ★ Notre Dame’s 514 thrashing of foe Trojans gives foe Irish undisputed possession of first place in my personal ratings! It also makes foe South Bend lads foe unofficial Rose Bowl champion by virtue of their early season conquest of Purdue’s Boilermakers, who will meet Southern California on New Year’s Day—umpkumph! * * ★ For a rundown on the results I on Saturday’s card, see my selections reproduced here along-; side foe actual results of foe day’s proceedings. And now, dear readers, your peerless prognosticator will repair to his laboratory to prepare his annual bowl games forecast. Watch for my selections in this newspaper. HOOPLE SELECTIONS FOR SATURDAY, NOV. 26* Alabama 33, So. Miss. 13 ' Arizona 17, Arizona St. 16 Army IS, Navy 12 Baylor 21, Rice 7 Holy Cross 26, Boston College 16 Brigham Young 19, Pacific (Cal.) 9 Miami (O.) 23, Cincinnati 21 Clemson 31, So. Carolina 15 Colo. St. U. 26, Iowa St. 6 Florida St. 12, Maryland 10 Miami (Fla.) 22, Folrida 19 Georgia 16, Ga. Tech 15 | Utah St. 27, Hawaii 7 Houston 31, Memphis St. 6 Mississippi 28, Miss. St. 9 No. Carolina 21, Virginia 20 Notre Dame 24, So. Calif. 21 S.M.U. 24, T.C.U. 22 Utah 15, Tex. Western 14 Tenn. 20, Vanderbilt II L ACTUAL RESULTS SATURDAY, NOV. 28 Alabama 34, So. Miss. 0 Arizona 17, Arizona St. 20 Army 20, Navy 7 Baylor 21, Rice 14 Holy Cross 32, Boston College 26 Brigham Young 38, P a c i f I c (Cal.) 0 Miami (O.) 28, Cincinnati 8 Clemson 35, So. Carolina 18 Colo. St. U. 34, Iowa St. 10 Florida St. 45, Maryland 21 -Miami (Fla.) 21, Florida 16 Georgia 23, Ga. Tech 14 Utah St. 48, Hawaii 0 Houston 13, Memphis St. 14 Mississippi 24, Miss. St. 6 N. Carolina 14, Virginia 21 S.M.U. 21, T.C.U. 0 Notre Dame 51, So. Calif. 0 Utah 20, Tex. Western 27 Tenn. 28, Vanderbilt 0 Spartan Five Duels Btoncos in Lid-Lifter CHICAGO (AP) - The Big Ten basketball season opens Thursday night with Michigan State, 4 prime pre-season title favorite, one of four conference teams hi action. The Spartans entertain West-era Michigan, coached for the first time by Sonny Means, who was assistant to MSU coach, John Bennington, last season. Michigan’s depleted champions visit Tennessee, Minnesota js at Kansas State and Ohio State is host to Butler. All Big Ten teams are on foe firing line Saturday. Butler is at Illinois and Houston at Minnesota for afternoon engagements. At right, DePauw is at Indiana, Miami Ohio at MSU, Ohio U. at Northwestern. Cincinnati at Wisconsin, Iowa at Washington, Michigan at Duke, Ohio State at Iowa State and Purdue at Virginia Tech. . Mtrcury Ontbaarde lad State Ortvaa • STARCRAFT • SHELL LAKE • IMP BOATS Fibaralae Fiborala Aluminum 'm BoJfcENtlfr "Boating's On* Port of Call* IMS S. Woodward at Uni Bead JO MIN Ml 14fU Mm., Thurs., Fri. • • S Automatic TRANSMISSION • SERVICE • ALL MAKES ALL MODELS “fully guaranteed** RELIABLE TRANSMISSION 022 Oakland - FE 4-0701 AUTO... 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WHEELS 50% OFF WITH PURCHASE OF SHOW TIRES WE (PECIALIZE IN FOREIQN AND SPORT CAR TIRES! We catty all fix* truck tiros, now, used and rocaps. From $7.95. Cash and Carry only. FREE A CHRISTMAS TREE WITH PURCHASE OF A SET OF NEW SNOW TIRES HOP IN AT AREMCO TIRE NOW AND 0ET YOUR NEW SNOW TIRES TO IRSURE SAFE HOLIDAY DRIVINO FOR YOU ARO YOUR FAMILY AND ENJOY OUR FREE OIFT OF A CHRISTMAS TREE TO YOU. FREE "MMINT1N* ALL CREDlt CARDS HONORED MM. THRU FRI.., SATURDAY ... .. 1 A.M.-9 P.M. IAJMPJ0. AREMCO TIRE CO. Phone 338-0370 and S38-0S79 CORNER OF M4I ARO ELIZABETH LAKE HOAD WATERFORD TOWNSHIP AREMCO MAKES EASY DEALS mu THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, .DECEMBER 1, 1966 NOW OPEN QffMQFS BILLIARD'S 'M' in Ice Contest ‘ ANN ARBOR (AP) - Hie Michigan hockey aquad plays Waterloo Lutheran College at Ann Arbor Friday and Saturday nights. 1 "Lot my experience work for you." A. fair daal and honest service. Ed Bethune JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101 DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Lion Coach Harry Gilmer heads toward the setting suit this, week, looking for a little day-light. Not much. Just enough for some of the Lion ball carriers to through. The Lions, their running attack showing little or nothing last week, face the Rams at Los Angeles Sunday. “They’re a tough bunch to run against,” Gilmer said. Last week the Rams limited CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON? - - - SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD.---EASY TO USE. - - - JUST PHONE 332-6181. VALUABLE COUPON All Sizes - Black or White RETREAD TIRE Choice of MUD and SNOW or RE6ULAR $' Plus 30c to 90c per tire Federal 'excite tax, depending on tizo and 2 retread-able casings. Lions Need Room Gjlmer Looking for Daylight Baltimore to just 33tyards rushing. That’s less than the Lions got losing to the, San Francisco 49ers. The 49ers held the Lions to 47 yards rushing and quarterback Karl Sweetan, who twice called himself on running plays with long yardage needed, led the Detroit runners with 19 yards on three carries. The Lion defense last week gave up 486 yards, 214 rushing. “We’re stressing running in practice,” Gilmer said Wednesday. “You have to have a little Kimball Swimmers Win Opener, 58-47 NBA Standings running attack or they just tee off on yqu.” He said the trouble with the Detroit ground attack was “they just don’t Wock anyone. I don’t care who your back is, they have to have a little daylight to run in. Of course, the backs have to do their share of blocking, too.” Sweetan, the rookie who took over when Milt Plum was injured Oct. 16, has thrown 228 and clicked on 115 of them for 1,389 yards. He faced a heavy rush by the 49ers last week and expects another this week. see what’he’s going to do with the darn thing.” Detroit, now 4-7-1, faces team that is 7-5. Royal Oak Kimball may have a better outlook in swimming this season than expected. The Knights defeated Warren Fitzgerald, 58-47 in the opener for boQi teams. Fitzgerald was was expected to be tee class of county area teams this year. “ ad McCarty, the Kimball All-America, won the 200 freestyle and 100 freestyle while teammate Gary Gotchling won in the 100 butterfly and 400 free- The SUrs style. Les McCormick was the other double winner. Cincinnati ....... 9 It .4! Baltimore ........ 4 20 fti Western Division Francisco . IS I 4 “Let’s face it,” Sweetan said, “there’s nothing dull for a quarterback any time he grabs the football and a bunch of big guys from the other team rush in to Lot Angelos .... I 14 .344 — I 17 .320 Wednetday'* Results Angeles 124, Baltimore 11 Today's Games No games scheduled. -- Spartan Team in Semifinals ERNIE DAVIS ERNIE DAVIS Formerly of Frank O’Brien’s Barber Shop on Telegraph Will Now Bo Att CAPITAL BARBER SHOP 560 W. Huron »t. BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI) ■ Michigan State, just as power-i ful in soccer this season as inj football, puts its undefeated re-| cord on the line today against once-beaten Long Island Uid-l versity in the opening game of the NCAA soccer championship semi-finals. Hie undefeated University of San Francisco face twice-beaten Army in tee second contest. Finals are slated for Saturday. Complete Service Dept. And Bump Shop All Makes - Free Estimates HANKNUfigm^PS FE 8-9222, Sure-go in hub-deep snew,SaleEndsSa'- 9:00 p.m. smooth and quiet on dry pavement! > 2 Miscellaneous 15 27 i 9 The Stars 14 24 I 20 The Chugs 2 40 KIMBALL M, FITZGERALD 47 ) Medley Retay—Kimball (Miiter, •onskas, Mattox, McGowan) 1:51.1 200 Freestvle—McCarty (Kl. Soencer ----- —........- Chugs, IS-11, 10-15.1 The Darts daf. The Jets. 9-15. IS-! 10. 15-10; The Volleycats def. the Miscellaneous, 15-y. 154, 15-12; The Darts det. the Miscellaneous, 15-2, 154, 14-14; The Volleycats daf. The Chugs, 15-2, 154, 154; The Jets daf. 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SI M)\Y 12 NOON to (> P.M. 682-19 tO / x nit it E—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 Irish Dominate Teams Bubba Tops Vote-Getters NEW YORK (UPI)—Notre linebacker Jim Lynch on de- Smith, Webster and Phil-Dame players won the most fense were the Notre Dame lips are repeaters from the l^erths and a Michigan State stars honored. ( 1965 UPI All-America, star the most votes on,the In addition to Smith, Mich- The Midwest with eight 1966 United Press Interna- jgan State, last year’s na- players dominated the team tional All-America football tional champions, also placed geographically followed by teem. end Gene Washington on the the South with five. The Far The Irish, No. 1 team in offensive team and lineback- West landed four players, the nation, placed four play- er George Webster on the the Southwest and Midlands os on the 22-man squad defensive squad, giving the two each and the East one. while defensive end Bubba Spartans three berths. Named to the second team Smith came within seven Here are the players they were: votes of being a unanimous chose as the best in the land choice, the strongest individ- offensi Ends—Washington and Jack Clancy Minor Deal May Spur Trades ■I PITTSBURGH (AP) — Relief was on his way to the Reds with |! pitcher Darold Knowles, wholMllt Pappas and Dick Simpson, i: unwittingly helped trigger the and Frank Robinson was on his I:trade of the year — decade?!way to the Triple Crown. I Century? — when he changed [ uniforms the last time, may be flat it again, r Knowles was traded for the [ second time within a year Wednesday night, going from | [Philadelphia to Washington for | {center fielder Don Lock, and ^strangely enough that s6t the { Baltimore Orioles on the trail of y possibly satisfying their pri-mary need — an experienced 'starting pitcher. showing in UPI All-I Americas since the World I War II days of Army’s Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis. In the balloting of 267 football writers and broadcasters, Smith received 260 votes, just seven short of perfection. Guard Tom Regner, the leading vote getter on the offensive team, and halfback Ends—Jim Seymour, Notre Demi end Rey Perkins, Alabama. Jack Calcaterra, Purdue. Guards-Edgar Chandler, Georflli Guards—Regner i__ ________ ... Center—Jim Breland, Georgia Tech. Quarterback—Stave Spurrlar, Backs—Eddy, Mel Farr, UCLA and Tackles—Iduranko and 1 lips, Arkansas. Middle Guard—Wayne M Linebackers—Lynch and Pi otf. Tennessee. Halfbacks—Webster, Na “Washington has some possibilities too. Ther&’s Richert, Dick Lines, Casey Cox and Bob Humphreys. Only Richert is a starter, but Lines is a left-handed reliever, which is okay. The other two are righthanded relievers, which is the least of our desires, but we’re still interest- McDonald, Idaho. DEFENSE Ends—Alan Paga, Notre As soon as Personnel Director Harry Dalton of the Orioles heard about the trade, he tried to reach officials of both the n state- llPtoN*68 and the Senators. | nd Ray nj He didn’t get them immedi-Ilately, but he knew what he was! me and 1] after — pitching help in the Georgia form of Philadelphia’s Ray Culp | or Washington’s Pete Richert Sports Events Meanwhile, a one-time Oriole pitcher, Chuck Estrada, found his way into the New York Mets’ chain when he was purchased by their Williamsport farm club of the Eastern League. ★ ★ ★ While the Knowles deal, and the purchase of Estrada were the only transactions Wednesday, the New York Yankees continued to pursue shortstop Maury Wills from the Los Angeles Dodgers and reportedly were offering one of two pitchers — southpaw A1 Downing or right-hander Jim Bouton. The Reds and the Minnesota Twins also were reportedly talking about pitching. The Reds supposedly offered. pitchers Baldschun and Jim O’Toole for right-hander Jim Grant, but were turned down. ★ h ★ In another development, the player representatives talked with club owners about raising the minimum major league salary level above the $7,000 mark. The players reportedly want to hit the $10,000 level. Further meetings on the subject were expected to be held at a later date. rnMti jjarK* intended to pursue it to- ff Nick Eddv on offense and south.™ California) | tackle Pete Duranko and jjgJgfB ,nd Mar,in* Berch#r' Detroit Drops to Third Rung Tom Schoan, Notre Dame; Wachhollz, Nebraska and Hughes, Georgia. 76ers Ovepwer Pistons, 128-119 DETROIT (API—The Detroit Pistons cojidn’t cope with Wit Chamberlain & Co.* and today have slipped into third spot by half a game in the National Basketball Association’s Western Division. Idle St. Louis climbed half a] Walker led the 76ers with 30 game past the Pistons, both P<»nts- followed by Chamberlain trailing San Francisco, when 23 and Greer with 22. —.......... — ■ ■ Rpokie Dave Bing got 26 for Detroit. Linebackers—C h a r I a s Thornhill, s i . Michigan Stata and Townsend Clarke. IlUay. Halfbacks—Bobby Johns. Alabama) 1| CHANGE DEAL : “Both teams changed their 'decks with the deal,” Dalton {explained. “We want to find out now if we have anything to talk about. “We have a good right-handed hitter in Sam Bowens who is available. Maybe Washington or Philadelphia has a pitcher available. We want to find.out. The Orioles were in a similar situation last December — only they were seeking an accomplished outfielder then. They NFL Owners Approve Pro Realignment NEW YORK (AP) - A long rapge look at 1967 in the National Football League presents a strong possibility of a Cleve-land-Dallas game for the Eastern Conference title and a Green Bay-San Francisco tilt for the Western Conference crown. The two winners would meet for the NFL title with the survivor meeting the winner of the American Football League championship. The NFL owners realigned the conference Wednesday when they placed the new New Orleans franchise in the East and the Atlanta Falcons in the West. Each eight-club conference was split into two four-club divisions. After much deliberation the owners came up with a grouping of Cleveland, Pittsburgh, New York and St. Louis in the Federal Division of the East. The Capitol Division of the East will include Dallas, Philadel-j ophia, Washington and New Or-| leans. SHIFT-IN 1968 In 1968 New York will shift to the Capitol and New Orleans to the Federal in a compromise move designed to give all eight of the Eastern teams a chance to play the Giants home and home in one of the two years. The Green Bay Packers will be joined by the Chicago Bears, Minnesota/ Vikings and Detroit Lions in tine Central Division of the Western Conference. San Francisco, Los Angeles, Baiti-I more and Atlanta will comprise the Coastal Division of the West. No decision has been made on the 1969 alignment. The NFL and AFL are due to merge into! one league 1970. the Philadelphia 76ers whipped Detroit 128 - 119 Wednesday night. The New York Knicks edged Cincinnati 119-115, and the Los Angeles Lakers rolled past the Baltimore Bullets 126-111 in other games. . * ★ * Philadelphia, leading the Eastern Division, won its fifth straight victory and 20th of the season against only two losses. Detroit had won five of its previous seven starts and jumped into an early 17-11 lead. But Chamberlain and Chet Walker sent the 76ers ahead 33-29 at the end of the quarter. GOT EVEN The Pistons got even at 37-37, but Chamberlain and Hal Greer shot Philadelphia ahead 60-53 by halftime. In the third period, Walker picked up 12 points and Greer nine to send Philadelphia ahead 90-84 at the three-quarter mark. The 76ers never were pressed again. Walt Bellamy was deadly in the clutches and totaled 32 points as tiew, York beat the it Pontiac Norttwrn Waterford Our Lady c vondala at Oxford Clarencevllla at Norttivi m^m city at Capac da at Almont Anchor Bay at Memphli Sagina it Bay City H the player they wanted, though, until Dec. 6 when they shipped Knowles to the Phillies with Jackie Brandt for relief pitcher Jack Baldschun. The Cincinnati Reds, who _________ Norther Berkley at Fordson Ingham Groves at Cranbrook i Huron at Birmingham Seaholm Grosse Pointe University School at Country Day St. Benedict at St. Rita Farmington Our Lady of Sorrow! at Royal Oak St. Mary Marine City Holy Crosi at Richmond St. Augustine oyal Oak Shrine at Servlte tica St. Lawrence at St. Gertruda I ' East Detroit >adlson Lamphere at Hamtram<;k arren Lincoln at L'Anse Creusa adford Union at Southfield L -WURjKZ ■IBNICALIT ANALYZES __■... „... WFfmmfa *MEDI-CAR (A trade name of Method Matter Corp) it a specialist in BRAKE LININGS FROM....... 59.95 SHOCK ABSORBERS INSTALLED. *19.00 WHEEL BALANCING All 4 Wheels .*5.00 FRONT END ALIGNMENT .*9.95 «W - - - rot A LIMITtD TIME ONLY, MIDI-CAR will til your tar with sufficient Prestone anti-froezo to give you complete protection to 20* Maw zero . . . with any of the above mnmwrm m m m 1 your cm with a LIFETIME GUARANTEE (SMSCWU. GUARANTEES UN TUME-UW) ■ItLICRAPH at JAMES K, , (Just North of Orchard Like U) MOJt thru SAT. Royals. Howard Komives andihadn’t been satisfied with the Dave Stallworth chipped in 20 each for the Knicks. Cincinnati’s Oscar Robertson and rookie Flynn Robinson nearly pulled it out, scoring 19 of the Royals’ last 20 points. Robertson finished with 26 points and Robinson 21. I Jerry West led the Lakers to I a 73-50 halftime lead and Los Angeles coasted in over Baltimore. West scored 29 of his 38! points in the first half, DETROIT PHILADELPHIA. previous Orioles’ offer, suddenly perked up. They liked Baldschun. Bay .CUtfeJ^atoLbt So three days later, hardly time enough to let him get used to his new employer, Baldschun Navy Renewing Elias' Contract at Clarkston mlngton at Farmington Livonia Franklin WRESTLINB Thursday Saginaw Arthur H"' - - - Birmingham Seaholm at Warran Fltzi Midland at Saginaw Royal Oak Dondero at Southfield Pontiac Norther at Warren Lincoln it Walled Lake Saturday I Owosso Invitational ANNAPOLIS, Md. UPI - Navy ,5! will renew head football co?rh Pon1 “Bill Elias’ contract “in a 1,0 tine fashion” Jan. 1, despite a Hem losing 4-6 season that ended with 20-7 loss to Army. Capt. Alan R. Cameron, athletic director, confirmed the renewal Wednesday. t Detroit Thurston t Bay City Centra! Invitational SWIMMING SCHEDULE Henry Ford at Oakland University Saturday RO Relays at Kimball COMPLETE HARRY MCHOL1E Calling Let Our LIFE INSURANCE DEPARTMENT Serve You And Your Family! H. R. NICHOUE TcCY 49 Mt. Clemens Street FE 3-7858 Get personal. Have all your gifts initialed VO. this year. Known by the company it keeps Seagram’s V.O. Canadian (Advertisement) All-Weather HARNESS RACING ACTION! TIM) tf'ljindsor Racewaxj WINOSOR, ONTARIO __________________________________ WGnmxnr o*t-*mpwi »t no htmoost.chmi* wisiiM eune or satcuo wttrawts su rues m e»i woof. k»g**k wmtws eo. etc TIRE SAVINGS MAJOR BRAND TAKE-OFFS • Firestone • Goodyear e General 8.25x14 Black • U. S. Royal • Goodrich • Others 8.15x15 $1795 ™ SNOW TIRE SPECIALS Limited Quantities Factory Blemished 8.25x14 Black ONLY *15* plus $2.36 Tax MANY OTHER BRANDS, SIZES, AND TREAD DESIGNS AT HUGE WAREHOUSE SAVINGS! EASY TERMS! BLUE RIBBO warehouse: Direct Factory Distributors for 1910 WIDE TRACK ALL TIRES MOUNTED AND BALANCED OUTLET MTOS TIRES 334-0519 FRONT END ALIGNMENT # front end aligned a Camber, caster, toe-in corrected a Brakes adjusted, cleaned repacked . Brake fluid added ar $4%95 BRAKE SPECIAL 880 COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP We check and service: plugs, points, condenser, carburetor timing, fuel bowl, belts, ignition, starter, generator compression, choke. GOODYEAR RUSTPROOFING • Critical points on your car • Sure-sealing compounds used . Applied by our trained experts EASY PAY 1________ TERMS complete Rustproofing $25 |95 ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT USED TIRES Expertly rec.nditi.ntd. 75% treed still remaining. ANY SIZE $' IN STOCK >750 COMPLETE STOCK AND SERVICE HEADQUARTERS Compare... Today! ALL TIRES AND SERVICES ON EASY PAY TERMS GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 1370 West Wide Traek FE 5-6123 Open Mon.-Fri. 8:30-6 Set. til 2:31 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER i, 1966 Ifi*4—fl Holiday Horn* Furnishings Discounts No Ironing Ever With Thete Sparkling NEW 84" 63" FIBERGLASS WINDOW DRAPERIES Discount Price Charge It 3271 A touch or artisby for your windows! Sparkling Fiberglas® ... in beautiful colors. Draperies are 50” width ... a pair, with 10 pinch pleats. Bottom hems are IV2”; side hems (blindstitched) are 1” and top is 4”. Wash and dry in 7 minutes ... no ironing. ANTIQUE SATIN DRAPERIES IN 84" AND 63" LENGTHS MI Discount Price Charge It Nobby texture rayon and acetate “antique” satins. £: They’re pre-shrunk ... wash by machine ... let them | drip dry... and they require little or no ironing. Pleat* ed top is 48” wide. Solid colors. ' “No-Press” Avisco® Rayon-and-Cotton “THERMAL" DRAPERIES FOR “CLIMATE CONTROL” TIER CURTAINS ... VALANCES TO MATCH! IN 3 STYLES! Discount Price Charge It 377 pr- Avisco® rayon-and-cotton with a Thermal backing . . . these drapes work summer and winter for your comfort . . . keep cold out, heat in during cold months (vise Versa in the summer!). 84”, 63” lengths* 48” wide ... and pinch-pleated across top. Easy-laundering, no ironing. White, colors. •FJM.C.CWS-TJHL A. Thermal brushed glass tier ... care-free glass fiber curtain that keeps winter’s cold out, heat in. Washable. No ironing. Decorator colors ... valance-to-match . . . 88c. B. All Avril® rayon tier curtains . . . 84”x36” per pair, with bottom hems 3” deep. White, gold, olive and melon, with matching 60”xll” valance . . . available at only 88c.- •f-M.C. Corp. R.g. T.M. C. “Perma-Press” tailored tiers, white eyelet insert. 60x36”, in white, pink, gold, turquoise. Valance-to-MATCH, 54”xl6Vi” .... just 88c. “Charge It.” Discount Price V48 Matching Valances... 88c Cash in on A Christmas Bonus of SOLID COLOR SCULPTURED FIBERGLAS® WINDOW DRAPERIES 177, Discount Price Charge It 84” and 63” length draperies in all glass yarn Fiberglas®. Pinch-pleated tops... 10 pleats to a pair... and 48” across. 1” blindstitched side hems, 2” bottom hems. Choose from white and many colors. Easy-care, long-lasting beauty. SO— Cumins R«». T.M. A Specially Priced Selection of I TIER CURTAINS WITH SEPARATE VALANCES! SAVE! Discount. Price |4 8 Savings at Kmart9s Low Prices! SOLID COLOR “NO-PRESS" COTTON RAYON JACQUARD DRAPES 4.41 Discount Price Charge It Jacquard-woven rayon-cotton . . . rich-looking window draperies with the added advantage of washability ... and . no ironing! 84”, 63” lengths. Pleated top is 48” wide, heading 4”; ride hems 1” (Blindstitched); and bottom hems are 2”. White and popular decorator colors. Matching Valances, 88c A. Burlap Fiberglas®... tailored tiers. They’re 100% glass fiber... beautifully washable ... iron-free. 60x36”. Multi-stripe blue, pumpkin. 65”xll” Valance... 88c. ODuNnt R*g. TJd " B. “Neva-Press” Dacron® polyester arid ninon tiers, frill 80” wide per pair! 5” bottom bem and 1V4” side hems. Machine-washable. White and colors. 72”xll” Valance ... 88c. •DoPMtlka.T.M. C. Burlap Fiberglas® in bright Bower , prints. Tailored tiers are 60x36” (and for just 88c yon get die matching 65xil” valance). The splashy flower prints are in predominant gold, red and turquoise. SOnMCn*«hsm EXTRA WIDE 60”x81" TEXTURED CHENILLE BOUCLE PANELS 1.41 Discount Price Charge It Extra wide 60” tailored panels in a handsome all rayon textured chenille boucle weaves . . . pretty “Wedding Ring” pattern. Bottom hems 4”, woven side hems. White and a selection of colors that you’ll especially like! Save at Kmart! BOUFFANT TIER CURTAINS IN FILMY FLOCKED DACRON Discount Price Charge It Dacron® polyester marquisette . . I_n-1>nr_ Each panel is 42”x36” ... and youVe a choice of sparklini white, pink, blue, yellow. Wash beautifully, diy so fast iron so easily! Valmee-to-mateh is St"x!2H. •Maiha.tA MI drip-dry fine cotton a choice < * GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1960 Jacoby on Bridge MATH (D) 1 4 A* ♦ J64 4 A 36 4 3 4 A J 8 WEST EAST 4KJ8542 4Q87 WQ7* WA82 ♦ JO ♦ Q 10 8 7 4102 - 4065 SOUTH 4100 ♦ K10 0 3 ♦ K 5 4KQ743 Neither vulnerable Went North East South 14 Pass 2 N.T. Past 3N.T. Pass Pass Pass Opening ked—4 5 By' OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY We don’t know whether to-1 day’s hand should qualify asj strategy in bridge or just highway robbery. _ South was the late Fred Kaplan, a brilliant lawyer and avid! bridge player! who believedj that the ele-j I ment of sur-j I prise would win' both lawsuits i and bridge tournaments. Fred’s two no-trump call il- lustrates the dement of suprise. Any other good player would respond two clubs or maybe one heart and try to steer eventual no-trump play to his partner, but not Fred. He liked to day all hands and he hoped, that be wquid get the benefit of a heart or chib lead if he. concealed strength in both suits. Such hopes are usually 91 j founded, Somehow or other opponents lead their best slits | which are likely to be your | worst and West opened file ! five of spades. | Fred looked over dummy and •studied file opening lead. It was I surely fourth best which meant (that West hdd four, five or six spades and that East would hold j at least three. The situation J looked hopeless. Fred could run leight tricks but that would be all. He could accept one down if he wished but Fred was not a man to accept one down. He saw one chance to make his contract. It wiH risk a set of several tricks but Fred didn’t i his one down had been changed to game made. Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 34 Pass Pass Dble. Pass 3N.T. Dble. 44 Pass Pass t You, South, hold: 43> VQJIt ♦ J1018 4AKS What do you do now? A—Pass. You should be happy to defend quietly against this below-game contract. Yon aren’t going to hurt it. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of running out to four clubs West goes to four diamonds, after you double three no-trump. What do you do now? Road Travel Up LANSING (AP) - Travel on Michigan’s highways increased 3.7 per cent in October compared to the same month last year, the State Highway Commission said Wednesday. 'Service Said Frontier in Auto Field WHITTIER, Calif. (AP) -American business men concerned about the missile gap, the cultural gap, the gold gap and the anti-missile-missile gIp have been urged by a Ford Motor Co. executive to turn their attention to the nation’s “service gap.” Leo ,C. Beebe, general marketing manager of Lincoln-Mercury said there were service deficiencies hi the auto industry but said that progress was being made. He cited a multimillion dollar program recently launched by Ford Motor Co. and its dealers. ★ ★' ★ Speaking at the opening of a diagnostic center at Urich Motor Co., the first such facility to become operational for Lincoln-Mercury, he said that “service is the guts of the auto business,” “If there is a frontier left in this business, it certainly must be service,” he said. JACOBY He won the first spade trick with dummy’s ace and led the jack of hearts. What would you do if you were East? This East assumed that Fred had the king |of spades and played low. Fred jhopped up with his king. It held BERRY’S WORLD ♦ ' V * ’ ** * «-‘* * THE WILLETS By Walt Wetterberg - m.*AY0NETHlM6 FORTWSBOOK READY IVV3SNTAMO110RC.YGLE f By Carl Grubert iii rape fpljlgg I VNANTYC N <#.i r THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom stroloeical F< By SYDNEY OMAR* For Friday "The wise man control. Mi do,tiny . . . Astrology point* N» W-ARIES (Mor. 21 - Apr. »>: A«llr* of heart occontrd. Evoryon* poor* restless, an tho movs. That's your view of surroundings Consider new crootlvo outlet. Seme tions ore answered. TAURUS (Apr. 30 - May 20): Expend homo Interests. Moons emphasize im-provemsnt, greater hormony. Older women could play significant role. Be amiable . . ■ avoid needless argument. Stress mature ludgment. GEMINI (May II - June remplatlve. LEO (July n - Aug. 33): Cycle up. Beauty surrounds you. Lo% romance enter anew. You dynamic. PorsoNM magi.................RM Members ol opposite sex are favorably Impressed. Very good I < VIRGO (Aug. II - Sept- *»: F&" " t for attending theater, dining opt. ____ _.„e to chest. Key It be DISCREET. SCORPIO (Oct. a - Nov. 31): ... J. Hawkins, 207 Orchard IMam R. Hufford. 3SS Auburi In W. Rainney, Milford i directly to responsible ice If maturity ' J cooperating The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): Jack 0. Payment, M Ellwood George K. Bain, ai Oakland Paul e. Lifted, 14 Liberty Gerald L. Sehedlbower, 1135 Genelle Richard K. Bredow, 205 Florence . Herman R. Curry, »4 South Sanford Bitty I —------------------- -•-- Willie . Clarkston Ronald L. Brown, 2437 Rlchwood David G. Cook, 1500 Tull Roger E. Dees, MIHOrd Gordon R. Fleming, 23SS Cheltlngham Milton R. Gauldin, 30 Crescent David R. Helland, Drayton Donald R. Schell Jr Q Francis W. Vergo, Paul R. ZMn, Holly Vemon T. Bunn, IBS North Perry Marvin L. Costello, Clarkston Edgar H. Marikt/l* South Edi Claude- i4MiMk4|44 Peter E Ic Allster, 22 East Bev Douglas E. Shabby, Milford Kenneth P. Slewert, Rochester Ross G. Baler, Farmington Adelard G. Quintal, 1375 Whittier Thoe H. Stoln, Bloomfield Hills Richard L. Bozynskl, Rochester Edward D. Jaris Jr., Ortorville Myron G. McIntyre, Oxford Larry L. Minard. Utica Lowell R Richard Gibson, Birmingham Kenneth O. Johnson, Clarkston John W. Myles, 571 Franklin Leonard R. Sadrs, III West Far . John T. Van Velzor, Walled Let Jerry V. Fakner, Bochetter Curtis L. Hutcheson, 420 North Saginaw James P. Shedlowsky, Milford Stanley Swierczynski, 335 Nek Donald L. toecAlplne,-■ Donald C. Moshler, 241 West AMaLYirkTMilford Ranald M. Massey, Farmington (Twins) H \. Tarket, I17J Atkinson Patrick R. Strahen, 304 Dumitru G. Voss, HaroM C. Enlott', ——M AdsSrto Flores, SO West Columbia Jam* F.JfartertdL mm* tout Drayton eI^E:a5!Muke( 3BS*»fc5srr, — * m Mill. BodMsler Poland’s papulation estimated at 11,00,000 has been teroasing at fbe rate of 500,000 aanually. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1,1966 E—t Kosygin Lands in Paris for Political Discussion PARfe (UPI) - Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin {tew here today for a nine-day state visit aimed at opening tip new areas of Franco-Russion political cooperation. ^ it h > it It was his first visit to Western allied power as head of the Soviet government. President Charles de Gaulle greeted the Kremlin official at Paris’s Orly Airport after the six-boar flight from Moscow. Soviet and French flags bedecked the airfield and a 101-gun s a la t e boomed out a welcome. * ★ ★ Kosygin was accompanied by his daughter, Mrs. Ludmilla Gvighiani, who was replacing the premier’s ailing wife at state functions during Kosygin’s stay in France. Saint Lucy is the patron saint of the blind. Bureau of Prisons WASHINGTON (AP) - The government is reorganizing its [Bureau of Prisons, aiming at improving rehabilitation of convicts. President Johnson said in Austin, Tex., Wednesday that he is concerned about the high rate of crime among ex-convicts. A division of community service will be created to administer a recently established work release program. A new division of institutional service will direct prison programs such asl education, vocational training, recreation and religion. 2 Red Nations Due Envoys WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-| an charge d’affaires in Wash-| on the ambassadorial level, dent Johnson is expected tolington, and Luben Guerassimov,! The same, of course, applies name ambassadors to Hungary the Bulgarian minister here, are to Hungary and Bulgaria. Diplo-and to Bulgaria shortly, fol- likely to be elevated to the new mats 0f these two counfries inflowing up his announcement ambassadorships for their re-private conversations have rep-this week raising the American spective countries. eatedly expressed disappoint- diplomatic missions there to the Both have ambassadorial ex-tment that the step was not tak-ambassadorial level. perience, Radvanyi was envoy en long ago. ' There is no indication as yet to India, and Guerassimov toj officials note that the United who the new envoys will be. The the Soviet Union. , States has embassies in much expectation is that John M. Me- in explaining the! upgrading of [smaller countries than Hungary Sweeney, a career diplomat and the two diplomatic missions,[and Bulgaria. There is, for inminister to Sofia, will be named u.S. officials caution against stance, an American ambassa-ambassador to Bulgaria-, but a any speculation attaching undue dor appointed to Gambia, the [new man will be appointed to importance to this step. It is, tiniest of all African countries Budapest. they sayi m the U.S. interest to with a population of about 300,- | Janos Radvanyi, the Hungari- be represented in every country!000. OLDEST GRADUATE HONORED—Lillie Lester, at 104 years, is achieving her lifelong dream in learning to read and write. After five months of perfect attendance at the State-Federal Adult Basic Education Program in Athens, Tex., she finished the first phase of the course and can write and do elementary arithmetic. Federal, state and local officials today are attending graduation ceremonies for the woman, believed to be the oldest ever to complete the course. Stale Canvassers Make Fast Work ot Certification LANSING (AP) - It took the Board of State Cs about five minutes Wednesday to declare Gov. George Romney and U.S. Sen. Robert Griffin winners in file Nov. 8 election. None of the unofficial results reported by foe news media immediately after the election was overturned. ★ ★ ★ The four-member board, two Republicans and two Democrats, certified returns showing Romney a winner by 527,164 votes over Democrat Zolton Ferency. Griffin beat former Gov. G. 1,490,547 Mennen Williams for a six-year. Senate term by 293,324 votes. The official totals: GOVERNOR Romney Ferency 963, i U.S. SENATE (Full Term) Griffin 1,363,808 Williams ............ 1,070,484 MINOR PARTY James C. Horvath got 8,017 votes for governor and Ralph W. Muncy got 6,166 for senator on the Socialist Labor ticket. Votes for other candidates totaled 79 in the governorship contest and 185 in the Senate Hare Accepts Resignation of Deputy Secretary LANSING (AP)—Secretary of (State James Hare Wednesday accepted the resignation of Deputy Secretary Gordon Traye but denied that he had asked his top aide to leave. Hare said the resignation had nothing to do with his announcement Monday that he would replace between 10 and 20 of his branch managers who, in his opinion, didn’t work hard enough or contribute enough money during the election campaign. ★ ★ ★ “It Was coincidental in time, but it had nothing to do with that situation,’’' Hare said. Emerging from an hour-long meeting with Hare, Traye also denied that he had been asked to resign. Jewelry Exhibit Set for Saturday Colored diamonds and other rare gems worth a total of $1 million will be viewed at the annual jewelry showing at Connolly’s Jewelry Stores Saturday, according to Norman L. Patti-son, store owner. The exhibit will be at the store on 18 W. Huron from 9:80 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday. It wifi be at the Miracle Mile branch for display from 0 to 8 p.m. “The jewelry,” never before shoton in the Pontiac area, eludes yellow, pink, blue, and greed diamonds set in differed combinations and 12*4 carat emeralds,” Pattison said. CHARLES CUSTOM PAINTER DECORATOR 332-8971 Also certified were victories of the only two Democrats to win statewide partisan contests. Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley got 1,-232,149 votes to 1,091,892 for Republican Lawrence Lindemer. And Secretary of State James Hare beat GOP challenger George Washington 1,337,138 to1 ,030,086. Kelley’s victory margin was; 140,257 and Hare’s was 307,052. Some 2,331,463 votes were cast in the attorney general race and I voters cast 2,374,459 votes in the! secretary of state contest Certified returns in the Supreme Court race, a technically nonpartisan contest where the top two candidates are elected, showed: Thomas Kavanagh 1,085,526) Thomas Brennan 824,857 Otis Smith 775,534 Meyer Warshawski 445,5221 INCUMBENT LOSES Kavaiiagh and Smith were iii-j cumbents. The state board certified all statewide races, all Circuit Court contests and elections in legislative and congressional districts which comprise parts of more than (me county. ★ * ★ The candidates other than would-be legislators have two days to appeal for a recount. Legislative candidates appeal to the house where they sought a seat under rules established by that house. CULTURED PEARL NECKLACE MEN’S and LADIES' LEATHER WALLETS $2495 SfcWMUr *16** MEN’S SMART BIG BOY-BEST GIRL ELGIN TRAVEL JEWELRY L 0. BRACELETS ALARM CLOCK ™ *|S5 roue cHQKt $4^ *09S "‘•mat m w>m&. A" iyi ^ -‘vjyfc Oil' MAN’S or BOY'S BIO BEN • BABY BEN WIN0PR00F ------ POCKET WATCH ALARM CLOCKS ZIPPO LIGHTER! Y*„r Choica^W From *3“ $JW *395 GOLD FILLED CROSS with CHAIN iH ELGIN CORDLESS FAMOUS MAKE American Tourister ELECTRIC CLOCK ELECTRIC SHAVERS LUGGAGE SETS 15 *19“ SI .00 Weekly 100 Weekly 100 Weekly t HAND SUNBEAM CAN I 1C MIXER OPENER-SHARPENER If {OS PORTABLE TRANSISTOR PHONO R0NS0N BUTANE CAN0LES II OO Weekly ^£4^ FASHION’S NEWEST PENDANT WATCHES IOQ95 *«| *14“ VV 50c Weekly gjipr MAN’S BIRTHST0NE* MAN’S DIAMOND OF ANY MONTH ONYX RING *14“ *24“ PARK FREE IN WKC’s LOT it Rmr tf Stars OPEN EVERY MGHT UNTIL 9 .. .TIL CHRISTMAS 108 N. SAGINAW-FES-7114 E—% ' v , ■: , " jg THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 ^PPUM*5^°* THISYEA | BETTER! RCA VICTOR GENERAL ELECTRIC TOP BRAND COLOR TV COLOR CONSOLE COLOR TV 25” COLOR TV COMBINATION Rectangular ,lim dsiign UHF/VHF. New "ram-raith' Now 1967 model with 25* Combining21" color TV, tuba. Genuine wood veneers pho.phor. preturs tube. 60 (lim h ' | and solids. Big 180 tq. in. *9- pietui* ona.Free 90- aarth" phosphors, ppturn arna. UHF/VHF. day t.ryic. and fra. de- cabinet. UHF/VHF. _ *329 $249 $397 $497 FREE TREE FREE TREE FREE TREE FREE TREE ,hll»bl63>! WESTINGHOUSE ZENITH 10” 10" UHF/VHF i WITH UHF/VHF cabinet. UHF/- Big 16*. Built - in anlanna $2377 ... . _ BiWiWWVAMWIMlWWIWBWB^ i ^69®® ^99*® ^97 ^119®* PHILCO 21" COLOR TV f An extraordinary value at this Highland prica smash! Big 21* brilliant, r exciting color picture*. Black and white pictures of depth and clarify too. 4 Simplified color control. Smart decorator cabinet. Use on table in any J| i, patio or don. •297 J|g £ > SUNBEAM ELEC. m ALARM CLOCK y Attractive COM. Accu-JH rate electric tinw-pitcB. jfflb Sweep second hand, g Model B-001. GENERAL ELEC. SLICING KNIFE The temeus OF electric slicing Imife. Stalnlsn blad.a. With card. Sunbeam Cordlsss TOOTHBRUSH Sefe,.h||gts«lc, 4 hrudi- I *1” *10” nV J ^^?rans. S' POCKET RADIO TRANS. RADIO Powerful 10 tramiitais. GEAM-FM CLOCK RADIO C Fewer - packed. With Earphone lack. A.F.C Rugged com with cany td»*fe Attractive cabinet. I $d|88 *14” *iyy $ SUNBEAM < MEN'S SHAVER jP Smartly ttylad. Deluxe SUNBEAM LADY'S SHAVER Ixdtnlve ton • sided micro - twin shaving SUNBEAM SHAVEMASHR ' The aew Dewhl. Action shnsps Stabiles, itsal hsod w«h 6 bind... S gift box.'No. 444-2. « *10” Model IS-4, *6” Bnrihsr . tops .id.burn trimmsr. Modsl 777. *19** SPECIAL! RCA VICTOR 23" TV CONSOLE _____, , _______|____f upright wood console specially Highland low-pricedl Luxury do-tails — sculptured lege and fins-meih grille. Quality RCA Victor new Vista tap parformonca chassis. Sharp pictures on all UHF/VHF channels. Largo speaker. *177 GENERAL ELECTRIC STEREO COHSOLE Solid state stereo Hi-Fi... no tubas to bum out) 4-spssd automatic record changer. Walnut vnnaots. Ample record storage. T95 WESTINGHOUSE STEREO COMB. Combination stereo HI-FI with AM - FM, FM - stereo y decorator cabinet. De- Danish madam cabinet of genuine veneers and hardwoods. 4 - spaed automatic record changer. 4 speakers. TOP BRAND 10 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR Cant mention famous name at this low prica. Big fieexer chest, slide - out shelves, or. Warranty. *117 *138“ *117 iSI»bli.V rJFBTJlFfW RCA WHIRLPOOL 14* BOTTOM FREEZER Giant soparato bottom freezer holds 167 lbs. Uft-aut • freezer basket. Twin crispers. Moot pan. Dnluxa. Free delivery, service. bottom. Freezer holds 105 lbs. 22 sq. ft. storage area. Free delivery and service. an and light. Pull-out .... Largo full width n. Modal 1414 in color. HOTPOINT 30” ELECTRIC RANGE. Glare In dear. Fully auto-' matte with clock and timer, appliance outlet, oven light. Clearance 1 ' ZENITH 23” 82-CHANNEL TV Brlngi in all UHF and VHF channels. New deluxe model. Handwired chassis. Decorator cabinet. $167 $16988 FREE 20-LB. TURKEY ■ WW 4T ADMIRAL II IMPERIAL DELUXE Side - by - si^e refrigerator freeier combination.' Only 33" wide. Freezer holds ever 200 Ibe. Deluxe. 2 SPEEDS, 3 CYCLES IN THIS DELUXE Philco Ford Washer Now! Worry-free 2-year warranty on all part* and service with this now Philco dnluxa wathat. Exclusive Blades-of-water action. 2 speeds for aH fabric*. 3 cycles — gat it and forgot it. Soak cycle. Automatic filtar-digpansar. Reversible lid. Variable water savor. Fra* delivery, installation and 2-yeer contract for senriceand parts. *159*® SUNBEAM 1 Va-H.P. VAC. CLEANER [Mighty VVk-H.P. motor gets hidden deep — movesbetwee storage arpa. Heav quick - chanp- •" I_ ff .. .. *49** WITH ATTACHMENTS NEW LOW PRICE PHILCO FORD 12 n: 2-DOOR Terrific lew prica for this profaned fop brandl Hate's big family size convenience features. Two separate appliances in anal True zero degree top fieexer holds 90 lbs. fraxsst food supply. Full width porcelain crisper. Dairy storage, egg rack, tad bottle storage. Trim styling looks "built-in." Dnluxa in ovary way. Frse delivery, sanies, FULLY AUTOMATIC PHILCO FORD THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 Michigan Bawkarp *100% nylon shall ski jackets. ‘Assorted sty Iss - Dacron Poly os tar quilt roversibles-Orlon Acrylic pile lined and mandarin collar stylos. Black, blue, burgundy. Sizes S-M-L-XL. ; ■ \ t, ' FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY H string neckline. ‘Nylon tricot shell. I 3.3 as. dacron in* ii su lotion with cotton | thermal lining. Red 1 or navy. Sizes S-M- 4 l-xl. Lightweight tapered aluminum shaft with plastic grip. Leather wrist strap, metal ring. Available in popular lengths. See them tonight at Yankees. Laminated hardwood skis with metal tip and heel protectors. Excellent for the beginner. Steal edges. Yellow bottoms. Lengths 5* 9" to 6* 9", JWras vision and protection. Ventilated frames. Furnished^ with end'dork. r Throe feet child's *100% nylon tricot shell. ‘3.3 at. Dacrod Polyester. insulation. ‘Warm cotton thermal lining -mode to be worn under clothing. Warmth without weight. Shirts or drawers. S-M-L-XL. LUND COMBINATION WAX Combination ^ h , ssite CQ ttKX 03 condition. Sold as unit. ARLBERGSTRAPS your welcome here MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER AND CORNER OF PERRY AND MONTCALM STREETS • FREE PARKING F—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, I960 US.T/ests Mightiest Rockef BAY SAINT/LOUIS, Miss.lles with a.miBkm pounds of (AF) — The mightiest rocketj thrust todayin the first success-booster ever tested by this ha- fill captive firing of a flight tion strained against its shack-l model The S-H-I, troublesome second stage of the Saturn S rocket designed to carry American astronauts to the mom, was ignited four months later than was first scheduled. NOW SHOWING AT 7:00 and 9:00 Span official, termed tha six- HIGHLY RECOMMENDED FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT CHANNEL 50 Enjoy Your Favorite Sports On Our Big COCKTAIL Color LOUNGE TV! IS North Saginaw-Downtown Pontiac Open I A.M. to 2 AM minute static test an apparent success and said it occurred within the timetable of the “big picture” — to land a man on the noon by 1970. At 12:13 a.m. a great yellow flame gushed sideward from the booster’s base deflected by a huge shield froip curling back " the engine. EARTH TREMBLES Generating 21,000,000 horsepower, as powerful a$ 90,000 automobiles, the engines made the earth tremble for more than a mile. The sound, a dull and deep roar punctuated by crackling noises, buffeted clothing of viewers 5,000 feet away. It made breathing roughen, made it exhilerating like speeding over a dip in the road. It gave the insides of ears an itching sensation. ' Fire licked through jets pf water trained on the flame-deflector to keep it from melting and sent a dirty gray plume of vapor rising an estimated 1,000 feet into the clear sky. As the cloud boiled higher, cold air caused it to condense, and rain, tinged pink by the rocket’s glare, began falling from about 300 feet down around the gantry. It was awesome. At 12:19 a.m. it ceased. There were some murmurs of excitement, but many spectators continued to stare before turning away. Air Ann Poised (or Truce Violations WASHINGTON (AP) merican and Allied forces in Viet Nam will use air power If necessary to defend therriselves against any Viet Cong vkdaticps Of fiw holiday trace, sources disposed today. Thaw officials expect file fighting pause to be more diffi- cult for the Communists to coft-trol than for the Allies. OonaMpttaUy;instructions are being given to lit the response to the degpee of Communist attack. Ih Chicago, Secretary of State Dean Rusk told reporters Wednesday, “Everybody members last year and the vio- lations of the trace by the other side. We will have to watefc ourselves and keep ourselvps in a poaifion to shoot btek." * * * Asked whether he thought file Rica might be a step toward a talks, Rusk said, have not seen i that" 'We basis for Heard* C Voider NORTH as* SOOTH RECORD SHOP Tap Caoatry A Western M*»lna—, We»t—nee, Texan-oe, PiMrtorriqutflos, Y UHm : 13 M. SAGINAW PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 4» Japanese Premier SAUSAGE LINK - British actor George Sanders has been criticized for his part in a sausage venture resulting ip a $3.5-million crash. The long-suppressed report was made public today by the British government Denies Report Muzzles Press TOKYO (AP) - Prime Minis-| ter Eisaku Sato was re-elected today and said he would do his I'best to clean tip corruption ( I bis government But the vote retaining Sato as I president of the ruling Liberal 1 Democratic party for another | two years, a post which automa-1 tically gives him the prime min-I istership, reflected dissafisfac-I tion with his handling of the <*>r-I ruption issue. He got only 289 of I the 459 votes cast, less than the I two-thirds he sought as a sign of I party confidence. His closest rival and bitterest critic in the party, former For Minister Aiichiro Fujiyama, polled 89 votes. BENTON HARBOR (AP) -The president of the American Bar Association said Wednesday controversial report drafted by the Advisory Committee on Fair Trial and Free Press does not “muzzle or hamstring the press." Speaking before the Berrien County Bar Association, Orison Marden said, “In reading some press accounts of the committee’s report it would not be difficult to get the impr that the legal profession was trying to tell editors how 1 their papers. ★ * * “It just isn’t so." Marden said file report’s recommendations are directed almost entirely to lawyers, courts and law enforcement agencies rather than the news media. He said the report proposes a new canon of profession ethics specifying certain types of prejudicial information, the release of which should be deferred by lawy*rs or court employees in pending criminal cases. ★ * it “In other words,” he said, ‘the committee has recognized that lawyers and law enforcement officials are themselves the sources of most prejudicial news reports that are published and broadcast.” In periods ol drought, alfalfa sends roots as deep as 17 feet below the surface to reach moisture. House of Seafoods • Live Lobster Tank eemr mamma ••a *v.ry WM. Si etwylkwt. FROG LEGS Roadhouse Styli French Fried Gulf SHRIMP Goldon Fried Maryland SCALLOPS Broiled LOBSTER TAILS Broiled WHITEFISH LOBSTER Newburg OYSTERS on the Half Shell Tty Our Special Steak Dinner Also Selections From Our Regular Menu SOME CHOICE OOLF LEAGUE DATES AVAILAIU FOR INI NOW! WINTER RATES ENTERTAINMENT HOOEY'S COUNTRY CLUB MM Union Lake Read eff Commerce Reed Phene MI-4112 2 Thais Tell of Training by Viet Reds ! BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)-Two young Thais told a news conference today they were enlisted by the Communists in northeast Thailand and sent to North Viet Nam for guerrilla training. I Boon Praknb, 25, a farmer; {from Ban Nkham village in the northeast Thailand, and Sod Netra, 18, a fellow villager, said Communists convinced them to join their ranks ih 1962 by telling them they should fight to jfree Thailand from the “Ameri-ican imperialists.” it it it They said they were sent by land across Laos to the North Vietnamese town of Vinh and eventually to a guerrilla warfare training camp near Hanoi, where they received training for 18 months before being sent back to Thailand’s northeast, focus point of Communist terrorist activity. MIRACLE MILE I *JSJM€ I BLUE SKY raKEECO HORRORS taiUWhMxttwAMrr*' MB ictrmbBirwMt NhMntama'isu-an OH TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER 8R0S. ■ in mi. cumin m. OPOYKE *0. AT WALTON BLUf auteem mmate n mi Fit*!, Between the lew a Hunt NOW! “ARABESQUE” “LETS KILL UNCLE” TEENAGERS tel* Cflc UP TO 2* PON QU Teen Bid : LAST 6 DAYS! s CiYfytn ;c£orce My wife, iiMeiuvira^'i *aQon scofiYairiNMi’f! 5 —""n viina with f COLOR c/v NATALIE I‘* Potatoes, 20 lbs. .... .............. Radishes, black, to bu.................. t. Acorn, bu....................1 JO The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)—Following Is a list of selected slock transactions on ftie —— York Slock Exchange with noon pi Johnson says now he will decide by the end of the year whether to ask for an income tax increase. and demonstrations being in vogue this year, Wall Street is talking now about hav-of its own — a year end rally. It may or may not come, for the market is not a faithful ready was depressed 3! more than a million starts, the figure was difficult to believe. In 05cto^ her, however, the rate dropped to 848,000—a 20-year low. One of the great concerns about a housing slump is its effect on other industries. Cutbacks fn residential and commercial construction already have been associated with apmacn, nu.........................UO rz i-jj Turnips, *•» LETTUCE AND GREENS Poultry and Eggs s 20-21; roasters heavy DETROIT (AP)—Egg p 30-32; Browns Grade A I umbo; lar( medium 40. CHICAQO BUTTER, BOGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange — butter needy; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA; 46%; 92 A 66V,; 90 8 65to; 09 C 63%; cars 90 B 66V,; 09 C 64%. Eggs steady;! wholesale buying prices unchanged; 70 per cent or better grade A whites 43:1 mixed 43to; mediums 37%; standards 41; Admlral JO Air Red 2.50 AllegLud 2.20 AllagPw 1.20 8 46% 46to 46to - 240 33to 3214 3314 +1% 17 Slto 53 $3 20 2Sto 25V, 2514 — 14 in /lee 2.6( -jn Fds 2.21 GanMIlls l.S GenMot 4.55( GenPrec 1 .SC GPubSvc 4»i AmCrySug I AmCyan 1.25 A EIPw 1.44b AmEnka 1.30 AmHome 1.80 Am Hdsp .50 AmlnvCo 1.10 Am MFd .90 AMet Cl 1.90 7 7644 76to 7044 + to 26 7644 74 74% +1% 91 6544 64to 45to +1 12 1944 19to 1944 -1- 14 7 7Sto 7514 7514 — 44 ~) 6714 4644 4714 -1- 44 Gen Tire JO Ga Pacific lb GerberProd 1 Getty Oil .10e Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid .70 Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 1.35 GraceCo 1.30 Granites 1.40 GrantWT 1.10 GtA&P 1.20a _ PHi GtWSug 1.60a Greyhnd ,f0 GrumAlrc 1b GulfMO 2.60a Gulf Oil 2.20 GulfStaUt .80 7— -7—7— -7 „ , i--.ac„c om„,* ___________friend. However, stock prices measurable decreases in these day night by Dr. WUUaA Had-, .. . ■ ‘ usually rise in December. 'industries: lumber, stone, clay don Jr., directorof the National jAnd the pohtical face of the na- of the year end and glass, fabricated metal Ifighway Safety Agency. The 76-j , rally begin invariably soon after j products, stone and earth min- page document made public | Johnson s first move was ^ Optimists give upwaiting for'erals, iron and steel manufac-today spells out the proposals in ^s^ndth^percent invest-' £te sumLr rally ItIs a hiring, - metal mining, metal technical detail event that ties in cu- products other than iron, paper, * * * °”usts. Sail,^“ ma,kna with childhood expecta- petroleum refining, chemicals, Hiey range from a ban on easy for business to continue, * Christmas ! rubber, and printing and pub- winged nuts for wheels to brake spending. Such spending, they | 0 * q sadlishing. je^aid, was inflationary. * —----------------- i H® | fmount °LglVeiWht‘? T®!iCANCEL 0R DELAY are nothing but somebody else’s a j5% »to aw - « incorporated into the steering^ wee|c> Johnson an-losses. Year end selling is often! si 35to aw 35v, j mechamsm. ___ nounced plans to cancel or de-1 for tax purposes — to establish .. ....... .......... 2M “to 9 ”% + J ,Inc'luded in tije list are s®yer-:ja 35 3 billion in federal pro-losses that can be written off 4444 45 + to Rohr' Cp .88 15 MW 23 23 I al proposals already criticized , nrp«,nt fiscal tav navmpnts .— ato 3244 + to'Royccoia .72 2 23 23 23 + % Kt, inrinsfrv ac landahlp I®rams tor me present tiscaitax payments. ® 5* *5* £* +i%j Royput i.79« 24 Sto 34% S% - * “*e auto industryas lauaame year the purpose being to re- Forced to sell because their but impractical at this ume. | lieve inflationary pressure'stocks have taken big losses }* GOVERNMENT ■ ,----—----------—----------------:-------'-------------j (Ml.) High Li 50 52% 51 i «to ato - to RyderSyt JO 14 59to 5lto j a 044 1% VSchenley 1 4 Schick . ov. . 4 SCM Cp ,40b 541 63% 62% M-ito It 27 i to Many of the standards are a a% 5s% aw + %! derived from those used by the « ilw «% S% + vs! General Services Administra-63% t.totion for government vehicles JoJJ ~ JJ and from the auto industry it* n self. ’ 16% 1644 1644 — 14 Halllburf. 1.70 I 1344 13% 1344 {Ham Pap .90 I O 41% 41% +*to'Harri» Inf 1 i 7to 7 7 HeclaM 1.15a CHICAGO -POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - I poultry; wholeiaia '—'— ------ changed; roasters .... Std 1 Am T8,T 2.20 255 j Am Tob 1.80 - 41 3 AmZInc 1.40a 1 1 12 7344 73% 73V, - M 65 6% 6% 6% ... a 57% 57V, 57% — % 21 19% 19to 1944 4 i 2344 — to Houst LP I f % Serve Sharon Stl V Shall Oil 1.90 f to ShellTre J7e 4- to SharwInWm 2 2 31% 31% 31% 4 % Sinclair 2.40 14 40V: 39V: 40to + V,! SlngerCo 2.20 37 44% 43% 44% + to SmlthK 1.80a 26 Mto 3744 Mto 4-to SoPRSug JSe a 49to 49 4944 41 to SouCalE 1.25 - 12 10V4 10 10 4 to South Co 1.02 5 3644 36to 36% JouNGai 1.30 44 43 5to «to 4 % SouthPac 1.50 70 S7to 56% 57% 4 % SOttih Ry 2.00 •? du nu nu — u Spartan tnd Sperry Rand SMBrand 1 30 Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) - (USDA) - Caltla 100; not enough steers or heifers f Vaalers 25-; not enough for market test, i Avoe Co Sheep 25; not enough for market test. Avnat JC Hogs 25; not enough for market ‘ — % HuntFds 4 Ashland Oil 1 AssdDG 1.48 Atchison 1.6(1 AtICLIna 3a A»l Rich 2.80 Atiat Cp , ,Aveo Cp 1.20 [ Avnat JOb 7 47(4 47% 47to + 27 46% 46 46to I 41 4to 4% 4% —I— 4 14to 14% Mto 2 5to 5to 5to 12 35% 35% 35% 62 26% .... 27 40% 40 37 a Mto 38% - _____ *4 iito i5% f«4 4 %| Haddon said many of the 4 iito 3i 31 - % standards are already incorpo- 9 19% “% 19% + % rated invo most of the vehicles w 43% 42% Mto?!*4!they will cover. 74 4i 40% 40% - %; Under law, the department *3 §to Sto aw 4 to must publish by Jan. 31 a final ■MSI 82* - (mwm IjAs anfAttr ofonrlnrHc Ia Ha , Waterford Man Is Named to New Pontiac Div. Post 3 Are Hurt in Separate Accidents Squan -Vfc SlOJICal 2.50 , StOillnd 1.70 StOIINJ 3.30e l i/4 StdOilOh 2.40 St Packaging . 1/4 StanWar 1.50 |. t/4 StauffCh 1.60 Treasury Position BeachAr .80b WASHINGTON (AP)-Tha cash of the Treasury compared with sponding date a year — Nev. 28, 1968 Balance— 8 5,215,800,585.42 8 7,166,147,055.22 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— ___ ~ "42,494,741.02 46,912,614,870.53 Nev. 28, 1965 71,103.885,200J5 56,957,160,944.81 134I74MJWJ7 .......... (X) - Includes 8244,204,304.78 debt tubjact to statutory limit. 29 32to 32 32V: V ____Stl l J0a Bigelows JO Boeing U0 BoiseCasc .25 Borden L20 lorgWar 2.20 jrlst My .00a Brunswick BucyEr 1.60a Budd Co JO ,,™ Bullard 1 l 33 32to 32to - ' » 37% 37% 37% - 1 ' 16% Mto 14% — 1 American Stock Exch. NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) — Following Is list of selected slock transactions on th American Stock Exchange with noo Burl M _____ B______________ I Burroughs 1 136 84% 13% I Calif Pack 1 CalumH 1.20 CampRL .45a Camp Soup 1 26 3% 3% 3% — 1 Aerolet .50a AjaxMagne .10* AmPetrofA .40) ArkLaGas 1 JO Asamera Assd Oil t G Atlas Cp wt Barnes Eng Cdn Javelin Cinerama Ctrywlde Rti^ Is.) High Law Ust Chg.jcarrler lJOa 2 24% 24% 24% CartarW JOa 24 16% 15 16%42% Case Jl t 1% 1% 1%.. I 25% 24to 24V:- % 9V, 9% 9to ‘ I 20% 20% 20% — 1 4 10% 18% 18% I 41 M 36% 37 40 46% 45% 45% - 7 26% 36 36% - KayserRo .60 Kannacott 2 KernCLd 2.60 KarrMc 1.40 KlmbClark 2 (Coppers 1.60 Kresge .80 Kroger 1 JO Leh Val Ind Lehman l.97e LOFGIs 2.80a LlbbMcN .491 LlggetiBM 5 Litton 1.54* Llvlngstn Oil LockhdA 2.20 Loews Theet LoneSCem 1 LoneSGa 1.12 LorSlard 2.50 LuckyStrs .60 &» sti 1 Cessna A 1.40 Champ S 2.20 Ctias Oh 4 to ChIMII StP 1 ' ChiPnu 1 JOb ChrlsCraft 1b Chrysler 2 Fargo fills 5 211-14 2% 211-16 Fly Tiger 1.349 100 45% 44% 4S%+ ' Gen Dave! S 5% 5% 5%+ 1 Gen Plywri It 70 15 14% 14%-t- < Giant Yel JO 23 7%71W4 7%-M Goldfield M 2% 2% .2%. Gt Bat Pet 46 2% 2% 2%- to Gulf Am Ld 2 7% 7% 7% Hoemer Wald J2 1 10% 11% 10% .. Hycon Mfg 3 llto tlto llto-t- to lmj> Oil 2a " " M CltiesSvc 1 ClevEIIII M CocaCola 1.90 Coto Pel .90 CollInRad JO CBS 1.40b McCrory wt Mead John .40 MlchSugai' -I0e 12 9% J 8%— 1 2% n 1.60 a 26% J 26 84%—86 06 6 28to 20% 2lto + 145 60% 59% B% + 2t a uto a + 16 57% 57% 57% J MayDStr 1J0 Maytag 1.60a McCarr ,40b McDonn .4* MGM 1 MldSoUtll .74 MlnerCh 1.20 MlnnMM 1.20 Mo Kan Tex Panes! Pet 4 % % % .. 'Cent Ini 2 Scurry Rain 5 17% 17% 17%+ to Cent Mot .60 Sbd W Air 65 25to 24to 25 ....leant Oil 2J0 Signal Oil A 1 1 25% tSto tfto— to Control Data Sperry R wt 128 0% 1% 8%+ to I Cooper Ind 1 Stotham In I 19% 19% 19%-j- tojCom Pd 1J0 *»»<« rn 40 2U 76% 7S% 76to+l%;CorngGWk 2a jCoxBdcas .40 13 296 M4to 296 r decimal points art eighths Curtis Pub Curt Wr I OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS i Quotations from the NASD art repre- j panRIvr 1.20 tentative Inter-dealer prices of approxi- ,oayco nIJO matoly II an. Inter-dealer markets Qey PL 1.32 change throughout the day. Prices do! Deere l.80« not include retail markup, markdown or;Delta Air 1 DenRGW 1.10 I; OetEdls 1.40 AMT Carp. ....... Associated Truck Boyne . Braun Enblneerin Citizens Utilities i Detrex Chemical Diamond Crystal Frank's Nursery Kelly ‘ ------ ... 12J M-6 13-7 Dresslnd 1.2S Nursery ..............« 8J duPont S.79S rvtoes ............... 16.2 17j0 Duq Lt 1.40 Rubber Co. .......... 2S.0 23.4 DynemCp .48 North Central Sefran Print!; Scripto U"H* 1 li l£5 EastAirL 45, .....:• nA EKodak lJOa _ , ■ ..........}•» *•”, EatonYa l.» Chemical ........24.4 2S.2: sa 106 62% 63% +2% i The department fixed Jail. 3 duction manager. i» 64% «% 2% + vS as the deadline for receiving] Duross also announced a re-i1 to** 9% i?4 + % comments on the current pro-jaiignment of responsibilities » 53% 53% a% + %|posals and Alan S. Boyd, under-within Pontiac’s Gerneral Mo-los JT% 4i% 4i%+ % secretary of commerce for tors Assembly Division parts 25 36% T ".^ transportation, said the propos-|plant which includes: » «% Ji*4 5i% + %' als could be changed in the light • v i c t o r E. McNair, 2060 —-T-— of' any comments received. Rosewood, being named super- .1? 2* 2?* IT* --------- intendent of the GMAD plant with responsibilities for all shipping, receiving and storage. . • Russell H. Rogers, 13995 Salem, Detroit, assuming the I duties of senior engineer in charge of material handling and I packaging. All appointments are effective immediately. 135 *7 16 21% 21% 21% — to | 53 73to 72% 72% - % 15 20% 20to 20% .. 267 107% 104% 107% +1% 73 lOTto 105% 107to +2 | ?5 T S% SS- 37 a 30% 2 1 i4%’ r ' a 21% 21% 21% x30 35% 35% 35to —lT— 20 13% 13% 13% *1 46% 44% Ml 12 25V* 25% Bundestag Elects New Chancellor ST 78% 77% 78V* UnTank 2 JO UnltAirLIn 1 UnitAlrc I JO UnltCorp .40e Un Fruit .7Se -/■ < UGatCp 1.70 I Unit MM 1.20 mMm-% US Borax la 62% 63 + %1 USGypsm 3a XPt 23% — V*IUS Induit .70 14% 14% 1US Lines 2b 19% 19% + %. USPlywd 1.40 20% a% + % US Rub 1.M 42% 42% — % US Smelt le 17% 17% +,%iQ$ Steel 2.40 a% a +' viiiUnit Whelan UnlvOPd 1.40 Upjohn 1.40 26 V: »% - % ^ , ,. BONN, West Germany (AP): Dalton, who has been gen- 56% + % — The Bundestag today elected era| material director since 'S a% T +i Christian Democrat Kurt Georg 19Mi will be In charge of all M2 58% 57% »% + %;Kiesinger West Germany’s third - - i6 *8% 8% *J% _ V4 chancellor and head of the 17-j Ti n% ra% 52% _ % year-old republic’s first Chris-! io 24% 24% 24% - J^tian Democratic-Socialist coali-41 m% 55% 55% + %'tion government, i a% a% a% -'% The vote in the 496-member m 1?% a% 40% + % i lower house of the West German 'ti 36% 36% 34% Wi^Tlament was 340-109, witii 23 4 ♦% 9% :blank ballots. This indicated, - --■v‘ %'that a large number of the 202 j 312 41% 40% 41% -I 24 a M% SI - 7 27% 27V. 27% 6 12to 12% 12% -I ** ’ 34%'H iWarnPIc JOa i* | Warn Lamb 1 ulwashWat 1.16 v5 WesfnAIrL 1 35 65% —V— 2 27 , 3 45% 45% 45%' —W— 15 19 10% 11% . a 39% 30% a% Three persons were hospitalized yesterday from injuries received in separate area automobile accidents. A 31-year-old Holly woman, Mary O. Cornell of 211 N. Saginaw was injured in a two-car ! crash on 1-75 at Dixie Highway in Holly Township just before noon yesterday. She is listed in fair condition in St. Joseph Hospital in Flint. The other driver was George J. Prose, 57, of 12671 Anderson-ville, -Springfield Township, according to State Police. Sent to Pontiac General Hospital following a two-car accident at Dixie Highway and May-bee Road in Independence Township yesterday was Elwood C. Elwell, 28, of 4725 Midland, Waterford Township. IN FAIR CONDITION Listed in fair condition, Elwell was involved in a crash with 8 car driven by David L. Strainer, 24, of 5890 Rowley, also of Waterford Township. Waterford Township. A three-car accident at Elizabeth Lake and Cass Lake roads in Waterford Township yesterday afternoon resulted in the hospitalization of 65 - year - old Gladys F. Kendall of 4962 Sher-well, Waterford Township. Drivers of the other vehicles, Pontiac’s GMAD plant, known 'according to Waterford Town-in Pontiac’s manufacturing op- as Plant 49, is used to store, ship police, were William R, erations. pack and ship sheet metal com- Ball, 47, of 4570 Dickerson, Wa- McNair joined the division in ponents and purchase parts to terford Township, and Charles 1947 and has worked in plant final assembly plant and to H. Hadden, 52, of 6395 Water-layout, time study, senior lay- ei8ht fie,d assembly plants. jford Hill, Independence Town- EDWARD F. DALTON material phases of Pontiac’s plant operations. He joined Pontiac in 1948 and has hold various supervisory positions Charles L. MacDonald w i 1 continue as assistant production d manager with responsibility for h the traffic department, parts C warehouse and production con- 1 trol. Id Cp 1.90 V $n 1.25 3 29% 29% Nat Blsc 1. Nat Can J NCashR l.w ” NatOairy 1.40 JO 37J 87 20% 2 266 105 IO* IP! 7 21% 21to 21% —N— • 32 81% 81 81% 38 50 Mto Mto f) Sto 23% Jmj fngEI 1, r Cant 3 N lag MP 1 Norflk Wst 46 26to 25% 26 X29 $5% 55V* 55% 19 37% 37% 37% - 4 HP 11* 6 Mto 25% »to 4 Mto 16 W* . P 108 >7% 27 »to — to 40 88% 65% ' I 21% j i 21%- 2 100% Wto 100% — to 324 30 29 W% +1to 144 W% 119 120% —2to 6 20% 20% 28% PacGEI I JO Pac Ltg 1.50 Pae Petrel. PaCTRT lA Pan Am M Perth EP 1.80 tHIBW la Peab Coal 1 PamOixia J* Pa RR 2.60a Pennzoll 1.40 PepeKo 1.60 PMmC 1 JOa PhatpD 3.40a PMIa El 1.40 PMIRdg 1.20 ■totiMar MR Sf •RPiate 2JO •R Stool tolareid Jl wSm g Pullman I , .... Mto M% P 75 iHb 57% 57% + % 11 19% 19to 19% + to; -P- 8 24% 24% 34'%— to 4 26% 16% 26W ... 32 9% 9% 9% 21 21% 21% 21% ia «% |j%" jjto - % S3 33% 33% 33% - % in m a* £% + % riPSjl ss*s s“ti % 8%..8S 17 74% 74% 74% — % S3 49to Mto 69% + % 6 62to 11% 62%-% 4. 31% 31% 31% — to 14 38% ato a% - to s 32% m ato + to rICp 1.60 Social Democrats (Socialists),!0^ engineer amd was most re-t perhaps as many as 50, had vot-|cently superintendent Of s h i p-w ed against the 62-year-old ex-Pln8 and Pac^8- 'Nazi. , ★ ★ ♦ |n«9 Chang WW'l West Berlin’s 22 members . Rogers c a m e to Pontiac in lli4 m cast 16 votes lor Kiesinger, 2 1955 ™d has heW various plant gj* m1 SI against and 3 blank ballots, jlay°ut positions including senior v.., ^ % __ llayout engineer prior to his most % j Their votes were counted sepa- recent assjglunent. rately because as members 'ship. ! »% i9% t Sjfrom territory still under mili-! ! Si% m*4 _ tojiary occupation, their votes on 15 34% 34 3 30% 30% wn 21 24to 24% 24to (5 30% 30 30% . ■ fi 17 44 43to 43to —1% , 1 34% 34% 34% — %l, 40 79% 78 78% - %., U Z S**,i'”* 79% S!I??DI«C0- " ■j i9 S% S “% + % W°r"'lnfl —X—Y—"* ’] substantive matters have nu 14 Mto Mto 14% - %) Xerox Corp 1 243 207% 203% 207 +2 Weight. s jiW Jo% 30% - to SntthRad’u io!- a% !f% «% + to Kiesinger’s election was as- 1 £» Copyrighted by Th. A»oeiaMd Pr«« sured during ^ night whe„ the mm of p,v,. Bundestag members of the two, deiwf* In tha foregoing table are annual major parties agreed to Support I dlsburtementt baaed on th* last quarterly J j* . j ** , or saml-annual declaration. Special or a Coalition Cabinet beaded by, S1S5 ^u^ora^’rt him to end the 34+iay govern-1 ’"S-aS S*®- extras. b-Annua. "lent Crisis. srM* rkssrs ^rrtsL.p^ «**»»» p^a how plus dock dividend. •—Declared MlkHlMIMlMBMH to far tbit year, f—Payable If | ing 1965. estimated «r—Rid 1966 High 1966 Low 1965 High 138 Industrials 85.3 38 Ralls 15 J If Utilities 85.5 65 Stocks .... 66.0; BONDS 91.7148 Bonds r. h—Declared or paid after s ‘ split up. k—Declared or l accumulative Issue « r paid 447 seats, not counting those ^X+jfor West Berlin. The two parties have been * &£ rivals since the republic’s birth in 1949. ____... ______ ______ _____ p-Paid . this year, dividend omitted, deferred or 1 no action taken at list dividend meeting. S-ySSSrr^S; Th®ir coalition was generally; estimated cash vatu* on ox-dividond or e« considered a temporary expedi-^smn |ent until the general elections; dt^Slrt1 viS^^dirtribi! in 1969, if it holds together that Non. Kr-lx rights, xw—Without ' war- |nnir . rants, ww-with warrants. wd-When die- IU116- tributM. wi—when issuad. nd-Naxt day Kiesinger succeeds Christian; ti^nSlSupiw Democrat Ludwig Erhard, 69, j "securities' assumed hy such com- whose Coalition frith West Ger-j subiact to third party, the Free) Democrats, fell apart Oct. 27 In] a budget dispute ova* raising taxes to pay for U.S. arms. lil ■ 9 43% 43% ..B‘. 141 41 44 _ | „ 1 47to £% - to News in Brief Loll Jimenez ti 281 W. Columbia reported to Waterford Township police.yesterday the larceny of a car radio, valued at $150, from his automobile which was parked at Pontiac Malt Bazaar, Bake Sale. Fireball, Auburn Hgts., Dec. 3,10-3—Adv. Buaar, Bake Sale, 69 S. Aster. 1st St. fi, or E. Blvd. Between Pike and Auburn. Fri. 9 to 9, Sat 9 to 1. Some used items. Both Erhard and his predecessor as chancellor, 96-year-old Konrad Adenauer, took part in the vote as members of the Bundestag. Mayor Willy Brandt, leader of the Socialist party, will be vice chancellor and foreign minister. Dixie Dinette* ,. sigma wal toe - 13-14 3 ^ Ferry Ordeal Ends Area Voyagers Hit Land By JEAN SAILE An Oxford Township couple and their 5-year-old son are reported safe and on their way home today following a three-day ordeal as passengers on the stranded car ferry, City of Midland 41. Mr. mid Mrs. Ralph Hlckmott and son, Mark, were allowed to debark at 6 p.m. yesterday in Ludington. They had been aboard the ferry since 12:30 p.m. Sunday along with 178 other passengers. Mrs. Donald Hickmott, 3825 Noble, sister-in-law to Hlckmott, told this morning of having received a phone call from the passengers last night. She said they had become tired of their confinement on the ferry, but that everything was fine. They’d had plenty of food, played a lot of cards and Mark had enjoyed the experience tremendously. The voyagers were more interested in what was happening in Oxford Township, according to Mrs. Hickmott, and wanted to talk “to their 16-year-old son, Paul, who had remained at home to take care of the farm and to attend school. , HOLIDAY TRIP Ihe Hickmotts left fra- Milwaukee, the Wednesday before Thanksgiving, to spend the holiday witii former Oxford residents, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Cemke, who now live 11 miles from the ferry ' dock there. • The heme folk were told last night of how the City of Midland, driven by high winds, had careened apparently out of control onto a channel dime at the entrance to Ludington Harbor. That occurred at 8 p.m. Sunday after passengers had already been aboard the ferry four hours longer than the normaherossing takes.' ' ,N(-1 x \ They told of the arrival oKa tug early yesterday morning for the purpose of freeing the ferry, the necessity of sending for more, and eventual release from the dune at 6 p.m. yesterday. Bud Hickmott is an auctioneer in the area* He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hickmott Sr., 26 Mechanic, Oxford. I F—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 Deaths in Pontiac Area James H. Johnson i Mrs., James Johnson Service for James H. Johnson, PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv-56; of 76 Branch will be 10 a.m.jice for Mrs. James (Peggy) tomorrow at Camithers Funeral Johnson, 21, of 1525 Collier will Home. 'be 1 p.m. Saturday at the Baird- Mr. Johnson, a member of [Newton Funeral Home, Lapeer. Mount Hope Baptist Church in;Burial will be in Stiles Ceme-Knoxville, Tenn., died Mondayjtery. • after a long illness. ' | Mrs. Johnson died Tuesday.' i Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.j Surviving besides her husband Irma Jean Simmons of N e wiare her parents Mr. and Mrs. York City; and a son, James H. John Lake of Pontiac; two Jr. of Boston, Mass. daughters, Sherry and Linda, • both at home; her grandparents, Wilfred Stephens Roy McManus 6f Manitoba and I I Mrs, Grace Winn of Lum; a Service for former P o n 11 a Edward Lake of Pon- resident Wilfred Stephens, 55, of Uac; and two sisters> Mrs ^ 3327 Elwood, Royal Oak, will be;^ Bey ^ Qarkston and Mrs. 10;M a.m. Saturday at Sparks-^ jsiizgbcth Anderson of Pontiac. Griffin Chapel with burial in White Chapel Memorial Ceme- Mrs. David Johnston tery. Mi;. Stephens, an employe of I ORION TOWNSHIPjg Serv-Pontiac Motor Division, * M B Tuesday after a long illness. He was a member of St. Paul Lutheran Church. Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Winnifred Evans of Pontiac and Mrs. Hazel Akkala of Chatham. ice for Mrs. David (Myrene A. Johnston, 50, of 650 S. Lapeer will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Boss-ardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Johnston, owner with her Ihusband of Johnston Elec-Mrs. Richard Will trie Co*, died Tuesday after a ■ lengthy illness. She was a mem- , Service for Mrs. Richard ^,. 0f Orion Methodist (Clara) Will, 70, of 19 N. Rose- Maccabees lawn will be 11 a.m. tomorrowi Surviving are her husband; at Pursley Funeral Home with two sons william c of E Lans. bunal in Ottawa Park Memorial ing and David j 0f Clarkston; Cemetery, Independence Town- L sjster, Mrs. Neva Redman of * .P- , Drayton Plains; and a grand- Mrs. Will, a member of the] First Church of the Brethren, died yesterday after a long illness. Holly Founder of Firms Dies A pioneer Holly businessman, Eric A. Hartz, died yesterday after & brief illness. The 67-year-old Hartz was the founder in 1919 of American Spring and Manufacturing Corp., and in 1948 of the Hartz Spring Co., both of Holly. Service will be at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Holly Presbyterian Church with burial in Lakeside Cemetery by Dryer Funeral Home. Hartz of 105 Hartz Drive, a former Holly village president, was a life member of Holly Lodge 134 F&AM; past president of the Holly board of Commerce; and former chairman of the board of First State Savings Bank of Holly before it merged with Citizens Commercial & Savings Bank of Flint. Surviving are two sons, Elis and Hubert, both of Holly; two daughters, Miss Edith Hartz of Holly and Mrs. Linea Wild of Winnepeg, Man.; a brother; six grandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren. Mrs. Jesse Campbell COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Jesse (Nellie M.) Campbell, 69, of 1559 Robell will be 1:30 p.m. Saturday at Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Burial will be In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Campbell died yesterday, She was a member of the Loyal Order of Moose No. 1009 of Terre Haute, Ind. Surviving are three sons, William Keller of Walled Lgke, Edward Keller of Chicago, 111., and Arthur Keller of Auburn Heights; three daughters, Mrs. Jess Wright of Orchard Lake, Mrs. Steven Kyle of Union Lake, and Mrs. Howard Schwerin of _ Auburn Heights; a brother; and dred **.) Rosebush, 38/of Mon-a sister. trose will be 2 p.m. Saturday at - j Bossardet -Funeral Home. Burial will be in the Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Rosebush, a member of Holy Cross Lutheran Church, .TZTrk tSJtomp Hail,"4200' rVq died Tuesday after a long ill-£»R°o? '^^in"P\foTow^iness- She was a calibrator op- Allen McCrory HIGHLAND - Service for South Lyon Township Trustee Allen McCrory, 71, of 1595 Kings-way will be 2 p.m. tomorrow atl Phillips Funeral Home, South Lyon. Burial will be in South | Lyon Cemetery. Mr. McCrory died Tuesday. He was an insurance salesman for Hastings Mutual, a member of the Lyon Township Board for 15 years, and of the South Lyoftj Methodist Church. Surviving are his w i f e, Marion; a daughter, Mrs. Howard Poole of Davison; a sister, Mrs. Raymond Schoening of South Lyon; and two grandchildren. Mrs. Harold Rosebush OXFORD — Service for former resident Mrs. Harold (Mil- Fatal Shooting I Ruled Accident Pontiac Twp. Man] Ordered Released h EARLY LESSON—It's none too soon for 5-month-old Martin Vivas to learn that shopping with a woman just means waiting, waiting and more waiting. Sucking philosophically on his thumb, Martin resigns himself to this fact of life as his mother. Mrs. Raoul Vivas of 900 S. East Blvd. purchases an item in the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital gift shop from Mrs. John Georjian of 2192 Yorkshire, Bloomfield Township. The transaction floored Martin. Osteopaths to Review College StatPlans A 32-year-old Pontiac Town-; ship man, held for questioning! I in the Tuesday night fatal shoot-; ing of his wife, was released] lyesterday by order of the prose-' cutor’s office. pe shooting of Peggy Y. state osteopathic medicine of- ithns?"’ ’ ^un,ng a stru8gJe finals were scheduled to meet with her ^usband, James, 32, today at Kingsley Inn to re. [ ruled/accidental after an in-|CejVe a report on the current ivestigation by sheriffs detec-igtatus of the Michigan College 1 tives and the prosecutor’s office. of Osteopathic Medicine Johnson called sheriff’s dep> |(MCOM) in Pontiac and to re-uties to the family home at ] view future plans. 1525 Collier about 9:30 p.m. I Meeting in a joint session willl^1' ‘ of ^trustees" Of Tuesday, according (o Capt. be the corporate board Of the; based college, said that a special resources study will be presented at the meeting. This report, prepared by a New York consulting firm, is termed “a milestone in the development of the college” by Dr. Alan M. Potts, chairman Leo R. Hazen. {college, the college’s board of] „ . , , , trustees and the trustees of the He was holding his wife’s body|MCOM Foundation, up against a sofa apparently.! trying to stem the flow of blood' BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARIk NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, Public Hearing will Da held by the Planning Commission of the Township of ----------------------- Michigan, - t7' Ordinance No. 67, to be known Section 1300 : SOME . OCCUPATIONS ARE -X :-: CONSIDERED MORE AT- v. :X TRACTIVE TO PERSONS X; OF ONE SEX THAN THE X-X OTHER, ADVERTISE-'.:-X; M E N T S ARE PLACED « ;-: UNDER THE MALE OR -X -X FEMALE COLUMNS FOR X-■X CONVENIENCE OF READ- X; ers. Such listings are :•: not INTENDED TO EX- -X X CLUDE PERSONS OF -X ;X EITHER SEX. Help Wanted Male 2 MEN NEEDED, PART ’ $500 Per month AIRCRAFT AND AEROSPACE INDUSTRIES SMALL PRECISION PARTS TOOLMAKERS PROTOTYPE WORK PRODUCTION GRINDER CROWING C O M P A N Y. DAYS, MANY FRINGE BENEFITS. STEAOY EMPLOYMENT AND OVERTIME. M. C. MFG. CO. 116 Indlanwood Rd.' Lakt Orton RHONE 692-2711 An Equal Opportunity Employer The gailMra Invite applicant* presently In Industrial m> counting to dltcuaa with us, or any^ member of our, staff, the op- L H'ffi, Knight, I . Blrmlnt ibutor, nationally established route, Pontiac area. Exp. not necessary, must . be young and aggressive. Call collect, S36-0274, Mr. Corby, automobile ’me^hXnics, me- ACCOUNTANT BIRMINGHAM CFA Firm needs ambitious young accountant with at toast 1 yrs. public accounting ax^erlanct. ^la- Call ass.ssst'ter appolnIwMWf. BROWN AND SHARPE AUTOMAT. Ic screw machine operator, Harding* operator, hydraulic ten>. nician, electronic aervlce tf-"-—Apply Pegasus Lit- 1— BUMP AND PAINT MAN, GOOD working conditions,’ Near by eom- munity 6S4-7M1. _________________ BUS BOYS WANTED. MUST BE II or over. Top wages plus tips, apply at Bloomfield Canopy, 6560 Orchard Lake Rd. 626-1567. training programs In H CHEVROLET DEALER HAS IM-medlate opening tor maintenance man, good wages, fringe benefits. Contact Jim Taylor, Taylor Chevrolet Sales. 624-4501. CLEAN-UP MAN,' DAYS, ' USHER and concession help. Apply Blue Sky Drive-In Theater, 21S0 Opdyket, Pontiac. Apply after 1 p.m.______ CRANE OPERATORS Good working conditions. Good pay. 12 months a year work guarinteed. 135 Branch. F6 *0200.___ DELIVERY BOY, FULL OR PART time, excellent salary. Apply — Sherman Prescriptions Maple and Lasher Rds. BIRMINGHAM DESIGNERS DETAILERS CHECKERS PROPOSAL ENGINEER Permanent position with spec THE GANGLER CORPORATION ROYAL OAK, MICHIGAN 547-6206 days 625-3777 ave. ________MR. TAYLOR DIE MAKER BORING MILL RADIAL DRILL Days and nights, loumeyman only, steady employment, top wages. Progressiva firm with 26 years In Liberty Tool & Engr. Corp, 2250 w. Maple Rd., Waited Lake DRIVER, SALESMAN. ESTAB- llshed beverage route, 334-3465._ ENGINEERING TRAINEE, PlTf-ferrahle man with soma shop or tooling experience. Apply Brlmlng-hem Hydraulics, 1675 E. Maplt, Evenings Part-Time I. Call OR 4-2233, EXPERIENCED A EXPERIENCED FURNACE AND duct installers. Steady work. Call Joseph Gauthier, Chandler Heating EXPERIENCED Automobile Salesman lop throe lines of automobiles? We offer BUICK-CHEVROLET • PONTIAC at our showroom. Fringe benefits. Apply in person only to Homer Htoht Inc. On M24 In Oxford, Michigan. EXPERIENCED OIL BU RNE R service men for large local Oil Co., needed due to expansion. prentices also needed. Call' for appointment. Torrence Oil Co. Blr- EXPERIENCED FARMER FAMIL-lar-whh modern machinery, ptont-Ing, harvesting, axe. living facilities, send refs., age, marital sta-tus. Reply Pontiac Press Box 46. EXPERIENCED ROOFERS, ~FULL time, year around work, top pay, Insurance, vacations, and benefits. 673-7570. EXPERIENCED PARTS {MANAGER to handle Jeep and imported car parts. Inquire 700 Oakland Mr. Grimaldi.____•____________ FULL TIME BUILDING MAINTEN- pleasant surroundings. N Hills, BtoontftoM. “— Telegraph and Maple Rd. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, EX- . perienced, mechanically Inclined, local rat., full or part time. Gut), Telegraph and Maple. ______________ GRILL MAN Day shift. Night shift. Part Kmc. Good wages and 4" 1— Manufacturing ' Engineer Growing Company Located In The Mid-Thumb Area is in need of a qualified person to fill the above position. Stamping and Assembly Experience required. Attractive starting salary with frinjge benefits. Send Complete Resume tot" \ ’ . , Pontiac Press Box No, 72 Help Wanted MRab i GRILL COOK Full time. Good pay. Pin % 11 Irina* benefits paid. Pint Piper • Restaurant 4370 Highland Rd. PE Help Wanted Mole GUARDS r nme, eves, and weaken f to atari. WILCO. 447-74 Full I GUARDS city i part l INSURANCE AGENT OVER 11 YEARS OLD' Collecting and tailing an at llslted debit. 1100 a week g |MA ''sffm*. or" !• lift In*. T-rLi Utica and ^rmlng^l ham Inc udjd. Bonded Guard Sarv-I &JFtMJttJrr* GAS STATION ATTENDANTYuLL " servicing a* PRODUCTION ___________________ stone Retread, lOM Gatl Dr. Pan- terlard. 0 Dixit Hwy., Wa- GUARDS, FULL OR PART TIME, Services, Inc. 27347 W. 10 Mila, IMMEDIATE OPENING In Industrial operation. In Flint, Michigan. Must ba experienced. Excellent opportunity far advancement with a nationwide food service corporation. PaM benefits. SaM resume to PO Box 474, Toledo, Ohio. Replies confidential. HIGH SCHOOL GRADS 0 program f. 21-30, r Ki Immediate Assign- . ments DAILY PAY types of temporary work avail-‘ I •—a----- Register - JOURNEYMEN TOOL MAKER BENCH HANDS Machine Builders l Utility Men Production Machinists and General Shop Help. JereS* Industries !9f Axtell, Troy, Mich. 674-1200 seated near Maple and --------------- An equal opportunity ~ JANITORS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR FULL TIME WORKERS. BEST WORKING CONDITIONS, GOOD BENEFITS, APPLY IN PERSON. JACOBSON'S 336 W. Maple_____ Birmingham parson at; rear entrance to*IH Saginaw. 4:30 a.m. - 10 a.m. KELLY LABOR Immediate Openings JANITORIAL : Staff those who qualify. JHHPPPJI t letter covering background, and phone number to MAN TO MANAGE - Carry-Out Food Shop—must have soma restaurant or food experience, must be able to furnish good rat., good starting salary. Call Ml 4-5131 for appointment.________ IMMEDIATE OPENINGS for Linemen Installers America's soundest, industry offers you steady work, new line, year in—year out, NOT JUST IN "BOOM" PERIODS. High School Education Required ENJOY GOOD PAY On-tha-wb training at full pay Paid vacation ana holidays Group health and medical Insurai Group Llta Insurance plan Association with friendly people Opportunity for advancement EXPERIENCE NOT NECESSARY But Mechanical or Electrical Background Helpful APPLY IN PERSON between 1:30 a.m. and 5:0t p.m. Monday through Friday at 134S Cass Avenue, Detroit. MICHIGAN BELL ,n Equal Opportunity Employer MACHINE AND BULLARD OPS. Orchard Lake, PORTER d Work, y p.m. ly at Big Boy Rastat _ »d Sliver Lake Rd. *2.50 par ftr„ car n Port Time Delivery Man MORNINGS \ $1.97 to $2.45 \ driving record essential. Ri * * —Michigan cluiu £Bh 422 W. Huron PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION Has Immediate openings for CLERKS . Cass Ava. Pontiac, 334-2581 quel Opportunity Empleror WANTED TRUCK DRIVER. MUST Apply or sand resume to SALARIED PERSONNEL DEPT. Glen wood Ave. at Kennett Rd. Pontiac, Michigan (An Equal Opportunity Employer) PURCHASING FOLLOW-UP Young man experienced In have mechanical ability. Soma college preferred. Many fringe benefits, steady em- ployment and overtime. Prestige SALES THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. DECEMBER I. lit 7|H< F—5 TRAVEL U S. A. Under 22. Neat Ww, ambitious. Free to travel Florida,'Calif., and return. Cars and taaaneot turn. SJ5-S150 wk., commiralon, bonus. Start tmmadlalely. WHl train. Sea Mr. takiay, 11-4 pm. Friday only. Rlti MotaL 1044 S.Waedwiiixl. , TURRET LATHE OPERATORS J automatic VARIOUS MACHINE OPERATORS CRESCENT^ACHINE CO. ism Williams Dr., Pontiac J LATHE; OPERATORS, r1 night MNa. n I setups ' OPERATORS. Is, capable of I reading Hue cooking. In Walnut .Lake « children alt In school, Thors. M Sun, aN. Mutt drive and have staewhara* can JhaST-bath, separata tram main I ■*“ — — “* 4-4415. MATURE WOMAN, CARE FOR child and light housekeeping. Sui days ..aft, live In. call before mm ------------iraosi-MM. ; FLORAL DESIGNERS, FULL ^ar* -— ----------,t, gijo _ Call Harold Jacobean, FE 3-714S. I Work Wanted Ftmalt IS MIDDLE • AGEO W housekeeper In home « aft children While mot S day* a wk. jxwfor ii WAITRESS, SOME GRILL WORKiFART TIME SCHOOL BUS DRIV- EXPERIENCED WOMAN WOULD experience. No Sun. * or holiday i ers. Men or woman. Minimum Ilka to work private parties and work, SI .SO per hr. Apply In par-! *4 per day. Apply Rochester | banquets. 6*2-0321. son. Mlnlt Lunch ? E. Pika St. | JchooU Garage 3*0 S. Llvernois iROtnSGsTyAiffiB ------ *51'404* _________.________ 33S-17M h 2 school r teaches. > In. Long Ml 6*6» Monty for Christmas \ . EX-CAREER GlItLS 1 Stenographers, secretaries, r Temporary openings now. ' CALL MANPOWER 332-0344 FLORAL DESIGNER, PERMANENT jwUHon^fo^eqwrlenced^detlgl^r. fU “• Coppersmith, Pearce Flor- al Co. 554 Orchard Lake. GIRLSl gas, no exp. I. Telegraph a GENERAL HOUSEWORK. 1 r_j Track M ______ E-AGED wIFmA.. id housekeeping wages. I 4701 eve; >. Mora for home than • call 424-3353 or 343- WAITRESSES Full time, part time and * Excellent benefits, paid mi Pltalliatlon, pension plan . Elias Bros. Big Boy Telegraph at Huron Dixie H—• - |U— • fd rx YOUNG WOMAN l to assist me In my business, it ba neat appearing and high. tody. Competl-nve oany rare or pay. Call 330- Administration Building' 350 Wide TYPIHG DONE p and deliver. 447-14 WOMAN WANTS SMALL BUST-Inessas to clean thoroughly once a week. >14, 15-mlle radius at F tlac. Phone anytime. FE tf/M S 4-4300, IGS. PICK WASHINGS AND IRONINGS, PICK- d deliver. 330-17W. SEMI-| w RETmEOjouPLE for : Building Servicts-Supplies 13 f^^turo.W|Sme,andbwaoes dmus» CUST0M *UILT KITCHEN CABI- , OFFICE—CLERICAL To handle typing, billing, filing,!' ate. In our contract dept. Pleasant working conditions, new modern HELP WANTED.' 'de.l°Jj Own transportation. 434-4091._______ GIRL FOR GENE R..A L OFFICE typing required. Apply In ,D*.Y A. L. DOMMAN CO. HtlpJWmttd M. or F. ^ ^ ^ ^ JPJ PLUS NEW BONUS SjftjjjiU11 ,f no rwPlY-j1 ’['‘Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A CUSTOM BUILDING ANDERSON-GILFORD, INI ^^0|jj|||ww-id Designers GIRL FOR PHONE SURVEY WORK Insurance Agency. Guaranteed imum wage S1.S0 per hour. Up 3 par hour possible. Call FE PART TIME, I i growing t Bloomflek ... .... M .n Pontiac ar for short trips to ustomers. Air Mall k. I Pres., American Lubricants ox 474. Daytdn, Ohio. 45401. BANK TELLER me Immediate openings. Ex-1 :ed only. Excellent opportu-. if Michigan's |------------* PERSONALIZED HOMES Bank, CRASH PROGRAM! sales Managers can earn $21,000 AND UP |Credit Advisors 16-A iOEBT AID, INC., 710 RIKEP BLDG. I. See announcements. MAN FOR DELIVERY a at appliances and weirs. Must be alfle to Ilia some hand tools, be GOOD HAIRDRESSER WANTED nMfh some clientel for top sa' itlac. LaVergne's Hair Fas . BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED | Convalescent-Nursing 21 LARGE FRONT ROOM FOR AMBU- I FE 4-351 Rest Xk 84741. 0’Highland*1Rd^FE _Sntll.lrt0. RECEPTIONIST, CLEVER, t groomed, ready to work, $2M Angle Rook. 334-2471, Snellin e factors $14. ( RAY TECHNICIAN, SOME EX-jGROOM TO WORK WITH HORSES parlance, many benefits, $4,000 — I public riding stable. EM 3-4171. Call Don McLean, 334-2471, Sn*tl-'GRILL COOK and WAITRESS Ing and Snelllng. _________; goon |„b tor right girl. Aoolv lr YOUNG MEN . .....|...........| | Wa need 4 men, 14-24 for i ool g elligently. Salary: $124.50 j ek. Calf Mr. Johnson, 334-03 GRILL WOMAN AND ALi — 2-7400. ____ LIVE YOUNG MAN INTERESTED IN restaurant future. Wilt train. Apply Burger-Chef Drlva-ln, 511 " Telegrai REGISTERED J LICENSED __widUiin-%f^ y PRACTICAL NURSES _ Nratfod fo sfoH new ..ddlllonjn g ANK TELLER LITTLE OR NO NIGHT WORK! LEADS FURNISHED! EXCELLENT MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY! I.. Ortonvil vacancy for lady nset Nursing Home. OR 30002. I Moving and Trucking 22 iursing home. S iCOMPLETE MOVING SEttVICE. it 3»ns2> Ext. J n. 334-29S3 aft. 6 t. 334-2471, Snelllng | Hel? Wanted Female HAVE OPENING FOR CASHIER* full time. Apply eft. 6 p.m. 332-1000 HIGH SCHOOL GIRL FOR AFTER-noon and weekends. Real Estate office In Waterford. Must have! good typing and shorthand. OR * 1245. . SWilnole Hill Pontiac. competitive Salary___ SECRETARY NEEDED FOR GEN eral office work. No shorthand Call 444-3842 for appointment Del TRAINEES COMMISSION PLUS BONUS! Painting and Qecorating 23 Experience Not Necessary MR MITCHELL ' WED , THURS . FRI. _ EST. WATKINS ROUTE GRIFFIS B SONS. | P AINTING___________i QUALITY WORK ASSURED. .! KITCHEN HELP SHORT ORDER COOK I night st Rtslauran s1Sn^AR5ri, foV^.'Vpfo.sini Must be at least 21 years/f.y^Vyj^o.TME. ^47°1HwC.^slneJ,?inflM*r"n' of age, hove good arithmetic real ^state^sales fPEOFL ' aptitude and be capable of ford realty, fejym.___________ Employment Agencies PAPERHANGING-PAINTING, ' PLAS- 2-1743. Big Boy Restaurant. Telegraph a e Far an ambitious s personal Interview. Press Bex 13. i Pontiac, proven n e A-l CHILD CARE WANTED FOR! gbx 45 Pontiac typing raquirad, write giving xtucatlon, family status, lob ey experience to Post Office SECRETARY AND STAFF ASSISTANT Position open for highly skille person. Must be able to meet th Kmc, type S0-S5 WPM., shor 100-120 WPM and have some; j-t t-k Timt r Minimum* ft.XSsSl4% COMMUNITY ! per mo. with automatic roiradji^^^g creases. Apply Pontiac Prt meeting the public. Apply In Person I. Rochester Rd. Machinists ed record at growth and since 1420^ one of the tot ixcefient reward verage Intelligence, age 25-a daslrt to loin a company solid past and healthy fu- Close ' Attention Mature Women wt-srs large Bloomfield I transportation, Frl., -----'' 447-2404. TYPIST, BOOKKEEPING BACK-1 ground helpful. Some posting and billing. $240. Call Jo Martin, 334-' 2471, Snelllng and Snelllng. PLEAS-i NATIONAL BANK OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN DOCTORS OFFICE BOOKKEEPERS GENERAL OFFICE MALE CLERK INDUSTRIAL SALES MEN L- PAINT, PAPERING Tupper. OR 3-7041 9 SMALL JOBS BEFORE CHRISTMAS. Painting end papering. You're next. I Orvel Gldcumb. 473JM44.__ Transportation 25 RIDE > OR NEAR HARVEY'S D MANY OTHERS 30 North Saginaw Pontiac MIDWEST EMPLOYMENT SERVICE 405 PONTIAC STATE BANK F E 5-4227_________ HEAP BETTER WAY TO INSURE TEEPEE! 11 sharing,*** International Personnel live-in housekeeper, ! (0 S. Woodward Birmingham! |ry*mVvjjr TR 3-7200.1 Work Wanted Male J IP. A-l CARPENTER WORK, srt! kinds. OR 4-1074. ' ■■ ps. CARPENTRY, SMALL AND LARGE SAVE WAMPUM I I BRUMMETT AGENCY gBcle Mile FE 4-4544 Deer Processing 27 «rtiffle. An*6quai ’Spportbnily Employer | QUALIFIED GUITAR TEACHER ...... WA^ED TO WORK iN MAR-l !»'SXW’p^l^ HARBERSTUMP-HARRIS d CLYDE CORF. — —. Maple, Tray TYFIST anl working conditions, S240. L . Angie Rook. 334-2471, Snelllng a ......K Interested In futl-tlma LIKE PEOPLE? TIRED OF THE I Snelllng. _____ v employment and have any officei ordinary. Part-time fun |ob? $245 T0P ^ cfirsHT—ste^OGrXpher iHUSBAND AND WIFE TEAMS, ' ............ you. Call I plu$. Call Cathy Diamond. 334-2471, ton fob KtowMot rf promote and demonstrate a fi Celling jnd^Sndnng.------------1 auaaa helw.‘$350. Call Cathy Dla- .F*’11 .®Op‘ 334-1471. Snelllng ana Snell-| Eounty^pvj itormatlon phone 474-2210. Ask UGHT HAULIN KIENlfEi^ANTED P^lWilT(T^S^SlNTENANCE!, °P5^Crolev°Lk.M Rd^ooih Bar" 363-6398 or 338-7B79 __________OL 1-7800_____. Can live In. <25-5862.________ 3031. _ WOMAITpART TIME FOR Wpi'NG „f°R inBS0A,lJvT'.XlSFEC'AL DELIVERY, PAINTING, iQg'gu j5~K |”n”|*TED, CUT AND " O—. nu.r. mobile home P*rL-. *r«*.| mlsc 334-3570.____________■ wrapped lor freeier. 244 Auburn mall? stetlng* quaMflcetlCKit, YOUNG FAMILY MAN, HOUSE- Rd. 6e*ween Rochtsfor-John R. 1 and age to Leo Tremblay. 144151 h"1'1 »"d oalntlno. Horn executive secretary. Pontiac Laundry, 540 s. Telegraph. -=r-s-5V!MOTEL MAID, OVER 2S, PART Mariv nmaP silu time, special on weekend. 3354417. jm" ^ * ' ' MATURE WOMAN TO CAlE'FOR BABY SITTER MORE FOft HgME URGENTLY NEEDED BABY SIT- ter. 442 3740 attar 4 p.m._I WAITRESS — FRIDAY AND SAT-urday, nights. Sundays, 425-1431. I COMPLETE DEER PROCESSING. I Post Offlc 451-3733. "'RETIRED POLICEMAN IN UNI- NEW CAR PREPARATION AND RETIRED ............... VP man tor new car dealer- time In coin laundry. Apply Lakt-I In, Bltmlngham. Goad pay, land Laundry, 2530 Orchard 11 1 WAITRESS SATURDAY NIGHTS Apply In person alter 4, Dell's Ii 3411 Elizabeth Leke Rd.___■ WAITRESS WANTED, GOOD TIPS fringe benefits, ideal w 1 con- Rd., Sylvan. Now North American Offers Big Earnings NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY North American offers a haullm program designed to provide yo ■ North t tractor, a financing RMIINImt REC jr benefits Include: 5. Liberal mileage p I 214-742-5451, Ext OPPORTUNITY ADVANCEMENT DO YOU WANT IT? ROUTE MAN 21-34, married, capable .. work, chauffeur's license. Company fringa benefits Include medical insurance, two v vacation, guaranteed sal age earnings S135 • - « Culllgan Water ' BABY SITTER VICINITYOF EAST 30FE"%tS>,r Conditioner, . 744 S. Woodward. From „ MAID TO LIVE IN, GENE some cooking, $35. 442-2752. MEDICAL SECRETARY home 3 tl "motherless MUST BE ABLE TO START WORK Kelly Services '_________IMMEDIATELY _ tHUMv Ml, y MOPX- KELLY GIRL DIVISION WOMAN FOR GENERAL CLEAN- BAR^IO- SUNDAY WLY, W N Stglnaw 33$ WM Ing. 1 or 2 days . week. With Equal Opportunity Employer rat. 334-2453 aft. 4:30 p m. B BABY SITTERl L^E^IN^, DAYS >3432. * city limits. FE per lance necessary. OR BARMAID WANTfb, APPLY Person. Avon Bar, 3442 M ■J near Adorns ~J Architectural Drawing Excavating RETIRED, CLEAN, SOBER GEN-tleman with rat. tor odd lobs in exchange tor room and board. Reply Pontiac Press Box 32. SHIPPING-RECEIVING ASSISTANT. This is a good opportunity, $5,200.! Call Harry Sweat, 334-2471, Snelllng and Snelllng._______________ STATION ATTENDANT, NO EXP. nacasiary, must b* dependable 10 p.m.-7 a.m. Apply 5 N. Telegraph at Huron or Caff 334-4043.____ STOREKEEPER CITY OF PONTIAC SALARY 14,442 Graduation from high school, typin') required, 2 yrs. experience (n stock room and-or gen. offlc*- Exc. fringe benefits. Apply Hell, 450 Wide Track Dr. E. BEAUTY OPERATORS—2 $100 GUARANTEED PER WK. 10 Opidyke, Pontiac. CHRISTMAS ASSIGNMENTS KELLY GIRL. Temporary Chris mas assignments now available Pontiac. Full or part time, d< ■H and afternoon shins. 14 or ova; c,~l experience not needed lor all a s qualified high si ______________M NR DON'T DELAY - CALL TODAY, ask for Chuck Hopkins. . Associates Consumers Finer _________673-1207 _ PIZZA HELPER 1 EMPLOYERS TEMPORARY SERVICE INC. who give you a wider choice when you give us time sheet. OL1-: MANUFACTURING RESEARCH ENGINEER a manufacturing and asstmMy ideas and ci PROCESS ENGINEER TOOL DESIGNER TOOL DETAILER Outstanding opportunities with In lit* design, development ar hydraulic and pneumatic davi; rapidly growing * company engaged I manufacturing of highly precision is for th* aircraft and aerospace ■ benefits, ovartlme, semi-annual v M. C. MFG. Co. 118 Indionwood Road Lake Orion Michigan 4 EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER tin, CLAWSON ...... Rd., FERNDALe ■ 27324 Grand River, REDFORP TRAINEES who says a good , technical , man can't work with the public? Not IBM FOUNTAIN CERKS Call or apply now. KELLY GIRL DIVISION 125 N. Saginaw 33$ 033$ __An equal opportunity employer. CLERKS, FULL OR PART TIME", excellent salary. Apply — Sherman Prescriptions Maple and Lasher Rds. * BIRMINGHAM CURB GIRLS No experience necessary, t — Full time ----------- Paid hoapltallzation. Insurance, vacation and pension plan. Apply Elias Bros. Big Boy, 20 S. Tele-graph “---------- GIRL, TOP PAY, Electro-Mechanical Technician Trainee Detroit Metropolitan Area SALARY OPEN Major office equipment company needs several trainees. Expenses paid while in training. COMPANY CAR'PLAN TUITION AID PUN COMMISSION PENSION PLAN PAID VACATION GROUP LITE AND MEDICAL INSURANCE PHONE 567-2555 MR. GRANET OR MR. BUS An Equal Opportunity Employer And that's the kind of guy w« is * Customer Engineer fo Offlc* Product* Division — l with a good knowledge of basic electronics, and an ability to meet tootatlcal training i equivalent experience and median- . Moor* at 233-7434 ( Equal Oppartunlty Employer IBM A WEEK: TUES. 5 p.m.; Sat. and » Apphr 9 Boy Restaurant, Telegraph and CLEANING WOMAN FOR OFFICE 2 days a wk. Apply 5440 Dixit Hwy. Waterford. , DENTAL RECEPTIONIST, EX>ERI-anced, 5 day Including Sat. Good salary. Miss Cota, 3354145. OAY WAltRESl. APPLY (N PER-: ton — Burger-Chef Drlva-ln, ill DINING ROOM | SUPERVISOR j Excellent benefits plus pension ‘ *■— gjlrtKWDs- $ Bros. Taiagraph at h DOMESTIC HELP, 1 MILE FROM 1-4*4, awn transportation. GR 4-im, DOMESTIC GENERAL HOUSE-wqrk, Tu*e._$ hrs. Own transper- MICHGAN BaL TELEPHONE CO. Has IMMEDIATE OPENINGS for KEY PUNCH OPERATORS and CLERK TYPISTS in Our Southfield , Accounting Office —No Experience Necessary— —Full Pay While Training— Requirement b School Gradual* APPLY IN PERSON 8i30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday at: Northwest Office Center Room S-101, Service Center 23500 Northwestern Highway Southfield, Michigan AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER any kind of design and! 1 drafting work. 343-4544. BULLDOZING. FINISHED GRADE. Sand and grovel. Max Cook, 413-4145. A-l NEW, REROOF - REPAIRS -Call Jack. Sava th* lack. 331-4115. OR 3-4540. Asphalt Paring | ASPHALT DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST i Guaranteed no waiting. I Call now. Free estimate. FE 5-4480. A S P HALT DISCOUNT. HURRY , Hurry] I Winter price. Fre* esti- GENERAL EXCAVATING—TRUCK- 47>2432.Z n9' * LIGHT EXCAVATING, PERCOLA-tion tests and Install septic systems, Holmes Excavating, FE 4-*451 or FE 2-1324. HOT TAR ROOFING-SHINGLING. -' R. Price. FE 4-1024. QUALITY ROOFING. BONDED MA-terial. Free estimate. Reasonable. 442-7514, ' SPECIALIZE IN HOT TAR ROOF-' inq. L. J. Price. FE 2-1036, Brick & Block Service Fencing PONTIAC FENCE CO." BLOCK CREW AVAILABLE. FOOT- Floor Sanding BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT IR 0 JNYDER, FLOOR LAYING worjt, fireplaces speciality 335- sanding .and Inlshlng. FE 5-4542. Building Modernization 2-CAR GARAGES, WXW. 0075. WE are local bullderi and build any size. Cement work. Free eatlmates. Pedy-ttuilt Garage Co. OR 3-5618. ADDITIONS-REMOOEUNG ANDERSON-GILFORD, INC. Builders and Designers FE 8" ANY TYPE OF REMODELING Large or small lobs. Local work. Fair prices. 27 years Floor Tiling PWlMPil..... CLEANING ELECTRIC SEWER CLEANING SINKS, DRAINS, TOILETS NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR EMERGENCY _______________ 24 HR. SERVICE CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. Ll-i476-7244_Marvin Lang* Owni — a—... 4". -..I n Perry. . 673-8496. Septic Tank denning ‘ GORDON LANG SANITATION SERVICE RESIDENTIAL—COMMERCIAL Mrvlce LANG'S iANITARY SERVICE SEPTIC tI formica, t FE 2-4444.______________________ Hand Made Articles Snow Plowing ). Alter. 544-7455. Tree Trimming Service Heating Service FURNACE REPAIR CARPENTRY AND REMODELING ° OL 1-4255 I Y**22** COMPLETE MODERNIZATION, AD- -ditions, etc. Earl Kline, Bldr. OR 3-1424 Days. OR 3-3142 Evas. < • MASTER CRAFTSMAN I do beautiful carpentry, from -; rough to finish, beautiful cabinets. 7 DALBY & SONS HH .......... I___STUMP, TREE, SNOW REMOVALS mobile homes. Wolters.FE 5-3405 TRIMMING FE 5-3425, •m-wq.----------— Lakes Tree Co., Trimming ; Stump and Tra* Removals Flraplac* Wood — Plentlnjs^^ Janitorial Services possible to beat. 334-4430._ Lumber TALBOTT LUMBER 473-2134 Carpentry Trucking HAULING .AND RUBBISH. NAME! Building and Hardware supplies, i your price. »ny nm*. re a-aura.. !5 Oakland FE 4-4545! LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING ----- ----------------------------at any kind. R*a$. FE S-7442. Moving and Storage SMITH MOVING CO. VING, TRASH HAULED CARPENTRY, REC ROOMS, KITCH-ens, fra* estimate*. Phil Kil*,i 452-1337._______ ' PORCH AND STAIR RAILINGS, columns, room dividers. Modern Metalcraft, 335,3442. Pointing and Decorating INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR itlng, tree estimates, "ld| laranteed. Reasonable rates LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS, ------cleaned. 474-1242~FE 5-3BM kND HEAVY TRUCKING, " dirt, grading and gra< Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. FE 4-7477 Eves. FE 5-4122 Help Wanted M. or F. 8 Help Waited M. or F. Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, KNIT ttWeR. DINING ROOM WAITRESSES TOOLRdOM LATHE OPERATORS Screw Machine Operators Do you *n|oy meeting paopl* and working with children? Wo win train you as a waitress to work In «“ hiMdk, atmosphere at our FnaJHiia Cross and OVERTIME Paid HMWaya-Vacatlena-Slua Cross PROGRESSIVE WELDER 415 Oakland (US-W) Pontiac F| 4-4741 TEDS ...........Square U Ed- DRUG CLERK. GOOD FAY. LAI Canter Drugs, 2347 Orchard La «XP^RItKgdbWAITRESSr~ EXPERIENCED DETAIL HARD- PART-TIME JOE TO MAKE THE EXTRA MONEY we all have need fqr \T CHRISTMASTIME? WE ARE TRAINING NOW FOR SALES AND CATALOG CLERKS. COFFEE SHOP CLERKS AND OTHERS, MOST OF THE OPENINGS REQUIRE EVENING AND WEEKENO HOURS OP EMPLOYMENT IMMEDIATE EMPLOYE DISCOUNT APPLYNOW PERSONNEL DEPT. MONTGOMERY WARD • ' mm PONTIAC MALL Eavestroughing AAA ALUMINUM GUTTERS MAS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE •evettroughiog service, free eat mitet. 878-8886.__________________ Electrical Services ABTEC CO. Residential Commercial Indui BOYER'S ELECTRIC Truck Rental Trucks to Rent- 0424*11 Piano Tuning Plastering Service A-1 PLASTERING New and Repair. FE *-?702 PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES D. Mayers, 34A454S. PLASTERING Kline. Call 332-457$. id front-end loading. FE 2-4443.. ANO EQUIPMENT Dump Truck* — Seml-Troilars Pontiac Farm anu Industrial Tractor Co. 425 S. WOODWARD E 44)441 F t 4-1441 Open Deify Including Sunday Wall Cleaners WEDDING INVITATIONS ALL TYPES WELDING. 24 HOUR portable service. Work guaranteed. aaa wawiiM. 'to* (Tyrnm- graph. 334-1747 or BMBi - WALLPAPER STEAMERS F—6 W—ted HowehtH 6—di 29 MX HOUSEHOLDS - SPOT < CASH FOR FURNITURE ANO Appliances, 1 Met or houseful. Peer-0Mft. Fi *3wt. HEAR OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU! toko to MHo tor your ton-*-—■ or appliances and what Itove y WOM Miction It or buy It. B & b Auction A^iteRRtE.UtotealARd88jRROiB»WrtfcBRard I AND J BEDROOM NEW, NEAR BEAUTIFUL ROOMS. EXCELLENT MaM. immediate occupancy. Alrj moolo. Lunches pocked. Ft S-7W9. am^lonod, m«pmoL|GENTLEMEN, DAY SHIFT, HOME *4 Poplar.' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, iZZY 1 carpeted, stove, refrigerator. ____’ WEST SIDE HOME, 11 jags—iipppp ottowor both, tor I or I men, flood Sr*s5i -g^. 09!*^- FE *-3330,_______ 43Hdi Bbesbs 4f ATTENTION HANDYMAN tocttod'to west nShSm ares? Fes-lures now foundation, new fire-place, lot 100x140, needs finishing: Full price 16.000, *1,000 down. Im-—-----------■— Cell OR 4-03S4. Mm*4 COPPER, 40c; BRASS; tore; starters end ee. C, Pinson, OR 3 ____30|*1 RADIA-j 5 ROOMS ANO BATH LOWER, DEP. ay Pork Place._____ ATTRACTIVE a-BEDROOM By Kate Oaaiuil Sole Hbesbs J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY Reel Eststw-tnsursnee—Building 7732 Highland Rd. (MS9) OR 40306 Evenings Coll EM 3-7937 ANCIENT EGYPTIAN MUMMIES • mommy WANTED TO BUY 1944 EDITION! of Womans Home Companion cook-hook, S52-3M0. , , " ; Wanted old fashioned! rolled lop desk. Call MY 3-6568._I Wanted to Rent 32 j In a hilltop lewel setting. A mag-120x120' STORE AT SYLVAN SHOP-nificent view of 100 sq. miles of. ping Center, available J»n i«t countryside, lakes and towns. S200I Sylvan 625-1884 or 3344222. a mn. includes gas stove, refrige re- - , dryer, carpeting, pa-fireplace, and other unload | terms. ' Rent Office Space UNFURNISHED HOUSE WITH ATI least 2 bedrooms, Pontiac area. 2 school-age children. FE 5-4349. Short living Quarters 33 MIDDLE-AGED LADY, DAY WORK- it $145. 336S Welkins L . Luxurious | office rking, available Dt AUBURN HEIGHTS ATTRACTIVE .m.. Office space 16'x24', Ample parking. Ml YORK VE BUY I r WE TRA >R 40363 1 ' OR 44 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plain: Brown Wonted Real Estate 36 ~7 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCEL*. FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor I. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-81*5; Open S 1 >ntly need for Immediate Sale! [ Open 2 I LAKE OAKLAND MANOR APTS. 3610 W. Walton Blvd. ! FOR^RENT OR LEASE - 2 OF- I also 20x40 "ft. shopS'area* ly0*!!. I high ceiling. Ample parking, Dixie Hwy. frontage. Cell alter 4:30 FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED office apace, available immediate-1 ly. 23*3 Orchard Lake Rd. in the. Sylvan Shopping Center. Sylvan.1 jl 625-18*4 or 334-1222.___ Sat hoot. 2V> car garage. Fenced yard. Cloee to schools and shopping- Phono 6514503 bytaro I p.m. WShepard's R«al Estate ..ATtnACTIVd-"I Waterford ROCHESTER ............... bedroom brick ronchor. 2 __ rooe. Largo lot. Quick possession. FAMILY HOME BMOO. Nix Realty. 6l 1-0221, * bedroom older family UL MB ML >4174, _______________ basement. Gat heat. 3 DRAYTON PLAINS —> 3 bedroom bungalow located clow to Sasha-bow. Nice, she living mom Alu-mlnum siding, storms and semens. Lika privileged tot at end of timet, Priced under 110,000. Near Tel-Huron. —"“Tie. Full garage. SYLVAN LAKE Sam Warwick has In Sylvan Lake! 3 bedroom, 2VS baths, custom built,* _______....________________paint colors. 1*60 Strafford. *31X100. Open Sunday 2 to 5 p.m. 6*34*2*. WATERFORD REALTY I Dixie Hwy. i , *73-1273 Multiple Lifting Service Frushour THE THREE C'S CUTE... COZY..-. COMPACT “So far, the only one on my Christmas list I’ve bought anything for is ME!” Les Brown, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Rd. (Across from the Mall) FE 2-4810 or FE 4-3564 GAYLORD COZY FOR A COUPLE Completely reconditioned 2 bedroom BEAUTIFUL five acre home, painted inside anil out, new, Indtanwood Rd. - MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE | NEW 1 BEDROOM ON PONTIAC Lake. Carpet, air conditioned, heat, laundry 6125 EM 3 7376 .WMOW] lONE BTDROOM CARPETED, AIR 1. Call FE 2-1686. | in land contract. HAGSTR0M, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Pertly _________ property. This is *4,000. FE 8-9693 d IDEAL STARTER for newlyweds. kling clean inside LOOKING FOR A HOME? DON'T;over owner*-overlook this outstanding bargain! at *92 per 3-bedroom bilevel. 3 years old.let 5 per cer Aluminum siding, gss heat. Large move right lot. Buy owner's equity and take I South Blvd. MMhmortgega at 514 per ante, *89 per MtoriM ! Struble ’] LAKE FRONT THIS IDEAL BUILDING site is lo-I Cated lust 15 min. from downtown | Pontiac, with community water and gas. Blacktop street. And has 90' frontage on the lake In e well restricted area. *7,90* with terms | available. $400 DOWN s FHA mortgage and costs, will ve you Into 6 rooms, 3 bed-m home with full dining room, car garage all city conyenl-es already approved by FHA JACK FRUSHOUR ■HRH MILO STRUBLE ... _. 1bouT*ii;S0jRea|tors — . MLS -Ln ,j£’ Hl9hl"nd *«*• m w73 ment. Don't delay, call today. YORK WE BUY WE TRADE Of 4-0343 OR 44343 4713 Dixie Hwy., Dreyton P TUCKER IMMEDIATE POSSESSION — Mod-i------ - ---- m bai€J sV?kr.! Baldwin. Payments, No closing ai E 2-7251 or nl •wVal-U-Way ALL CASH 10 MINUTES ran if behind in payments or ft- foreclosure. Agent, 527-4400. WRIGHT *02 Oakland Ave.______FE 2-9141 j DO YOU WANT IT SOLD? OR JUST LISTED? Tired of waiting and hoping? We| need more property for a reason .... WE SELL IT. Let: us discuss selling your home at. YORK " |OXBOW LAKE, decor at-i NEW BUILDING irenw'^ffi pe? * 0F.FJCES_- furnished an dep. 10444 Elizabeth Bateman. FE 1-7141. j CRESCENT LAKE-HIGHLAND I unfur-1 LAKE ESTATES r Tom Two 2-bedroom bungalow, modern . ail for *13,500 cash to close estate. I a West _ _ . _ . K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 'Lek* orian, Rent Business Property 47-A 2339 orchard Lake Rd. 4*2-0900 -------! LAKE FRONT ■MlRRtLovely 5 bedroom bi-leve •oe living, family---4-------- ■fed near tton ro ... iMual noloh-l ------- 6-9493 or mV*2-3 OPEN SUNDAY02-S ' Ml 4-4500 4190 Telegraph ?4?0 down at 273 Dellwood. I EAST SIDE VACANT - Large 2-story frame on Osmun St. 3 bed-| FteheV Body” In'welikept neigh- S™er AH thte for ui&r tar *150 down on fasy terms. I living room. Only $500 t — ' _Total.price snly *11,30. rKhWcn" lart l«g-cVll™s4-BEDROOM COLONIAL - Newly FHA terms. *'• for appointment. i constructed, IVa bibs, attached ga- GREATER BLOOMFIELD rage, full basement, Insulated, gas REAL ESTATE 'heat, sliding glass doors to patio.| LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD Michigan FE 8-9493 i left In Pontiac Knolls. Only CORAL RIDGE APARTMENTS Rochester, Michigan I near Pontl i sale outlet or light manufactui Has 900 sq. ft. office sp— " ceiling, 10x12 ft, freight remodel to suit. 4*2-0435._________| LARGE. LIVE; VACANT SHOP with income, 334-7253._____ STORE f6r LEASE, AT "ABP "--------- ------ Michigan. foZSti Crestbrook j NTTTFR ^•iMODEL OPEN'wesiniiilLn LAKEVIEW ESTATES LAKE ANGELUS Immediate Occupancy *400 doWn will r shopping center, Fenton, A Hopiet business. Call >■ Petrol JUST SOLD MY HOME. AND HAVE $2,500 DOWN FOR A HOME IN THE WATERFORD - KETTERING AREA. PLEASE CALL MY AGENT AT 474-1490. J. C. Hayden Realtor N* need listings* equities bn fend sold. i Rd. 879-6029, 693-6647. EVES. 625-5275 $500 Down ull basement. Warm gas ountry-size kitchen withj ji maple cabinets. Located RENTING S78 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME I GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS,:. WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY LM„' , N0RTH SIDE rfai too I Attractive 2 bedroom bungalow with 20 W. Walton T 338-4096 2!* “T?*’1"?' ‘ J Multiple Listing Service JUST COMPLETED AT PLEASANT - Highlands. On wooded corner contemporary redwood model , 3 bedrooms, fireplace, gi private beach, beautiful vle\ 0. Langdon-Dyer. 482-0340 i Dan Mattingly KENT^: CALL 'TIL 7 P.M. FE 5-9497 or FE 2-2444' REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 Opdyke it 27 F BASEMENT APARTMENT NEAR Fisher Body, *50 dep. FE 4-7918. EFFICIENCY APARTMENT, COM-pletely furnished, including utill-ties, eir conditioned. 363-7571 or 402-2144. ____________ I RdCHES-large bed-udio living jRent Rooms Every-;2 SLEEPING ROOMS I iVal-U-Way, 345 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-3S i Pontiac's FHA Appointed | Property Management and Sales Broker 11 After 7 p.m, FE 4-4467 or FE 8-196; H US OPEN OAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 296 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY j For Immediate Action Cali FE 5-3676 626-9575 CLEAN SLEEPING ROOMS, !6 61588 DOWN Buys your new home contract, lot Included. GILFORD REALTY______________I FIRST IN VALUE OF FINE HOMES Evenings after 7:38 U 2-7337 WESTOWN REALTY FE 1-2763 afternoons Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2288 Dixie Hwy. et Telegraph ^------------— FE 2-19S4 KEEGO BARGAIN 3-bedroom bungalow, basemen. *960 down. Quick possession. Cash tor all kinds of property. WRIGHT REALTY CO. 382 Oakland Ave. NEW HOUSE CLARKSTON GARDENS Immediate Occupancy BRICK 3 BEDRO0M. Ito baths. Family room with fireplace, basement, gss heat, attached 2-cer garage, large lot, 1,350 sq. ft. living area, *20,390. Orion Rd. at Snow Apple v* mile east of Clarkston. Open Set.-Sun., 12-5 p.m. Arlsto-crat Bldg. «_____________________ NO MONEY DOWN terlor complete. FLATTLEY REALTY ’ R I V A T E PARTY HAS 7 BED-room home In Pontiac, axe. repair, *12,500 with *2500 down on land contract, 68*4837. Me agante. WAITING FOR THAT NEW HOUSE? DRAYTON-AREA - FOR EM-| Kitchenette cottages, sleeps 4, *45 ployed lady. Phone 6734243. , weekly, Pontiac Lake Motel, *2301 . p; oonu 11'^ Hiohlend Rd. M59. LOVELY ROOM *13 R 3-7539 FHA Repossessions >! PRIVATE ENTRANCE, KITCHEN ing, no money dn. tenge bedroomY overiooking lake. Privileges, close to town. FE *-3328. RFnpnnjL'C couple «nly. *135 per mo. security ROOM AND OR BOARD. 135V4 JOtUKOUIVia OeMehU Ave. FE 4-16S4 j brand NEW with lull basement, _______ vw^JPING ROOMS. SHARE LIV- close to union Lake and College. NORTH END - Widow wishes to. ing r00m, twth. TV and private' Only *16.900, terms. We trade. For ell Pontiac t pie. f child welcome. Refer Sisfock & Kent, Inc. 13B9 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. mm*' 338-929! wIKm....tdMFORTABLE" APART menf lot 1 person, no drinkers ■ \\ ' ■________ Aporteeiits, Uoforrished 38 SLEEPING ROOMS. SHARE LIV-, ing room. bath. TV and private I SLEEPING RpOM FOR YOUNG Y0UNG-BILT HOMES I lady, home privileges, dose to REALLY MEANS BETTER-BUILT town. FE 4-3842. Russell Young 334-3830 SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE DC-!_______S3V7 W. Huron mm A-A-A BETTER BUY L. ___:j REPOSSESSED FHA AND VA HOMES LAKE FR0NT-$17,200 sparkling 3 bedroom ranch i a beautiful lot with several she: trees. Has carpeted living roo with fireplace, paneled fami room, Tappan range and ovs dishwasher, attached 2 car g rage. An exceptional buy g,! *17,2*0. G.l. lust dMlng cos ^Warden Realty, Waterford area 50x160 ft. lot with well* sep end basement completed. *2500. 3 BEDROOM carpeted living room, panel walls, hardwood floors, auto, heat. Only *1500 down on land a Dixie Hiway—Industrial — Over Vj acre close to Tele- 4-0358' graph Road. Ideal for small shop at rear of property; good 3 bedi------ton *■— Infrc ‘ | In front. Reasonable terms. {Orchard Lake Ave. ^ Comm'l. comer 60x130. Rea- Ijj | sonably priced at *8,200. !■-. WE WILL TRADE -IREALT0RS 28 E. HURON ST. 1 Office Open Evenings & Sundays 1-4 i 338-0466 CLARK AVON TOWNSHIP — 6 PER CENT LAND CONTRACT. 2 bedroom, full basement, aluminum siding floors and plastoreS walls, 2Vi car garage on 4 lots. Completely fenced. Good garden spot. Price to sell et 613,000; 62,525 down on SPECIAL NORTH SIDE—Nice I'/, story, 2 bedroom with unfinished upstairs bedroom. Oak floors and plastered walls. Beautiful basement with new stool and rough plumbing for shower and bowl, gas hsat, In excellent condition. TVi car garage on good land contract. City sewers end water, 614,9S0, with no down pay-, ment, lust closing costs. Canal Lot — Sylvan Lake. 60x15* IF YOU PLAN TO S ■move___-y... Tr-.T ■ v weaver i.KINZLER Rochester-Utica Area 4-BEDROOM BRICK, 2Vk baths, family room, fireplace, kitchen built-ins, formal dining room, new carpeting, attached 2Wcar garage. This home In the hills of Rochester llage of R rally WEST BLOOMFIELD, SQUARE Lake — Mlddlebelt, 2455 Ivanhoe paneled family room with fireplace. IVk baths, breakfast room, attached 2 car garage, on large lot. *22,900 terms. Ovmer trans-terred. 6M-2916._________^ STOP LOOKING I s sure to call today tor nr formation on this sharp room aluminum sldad b Rochester. 2 car attached garage natural fireplace, almost 2 i- of lend. Cen be purchased YORK 'SERVICE MAN'S WIFE MAS J SIN-gie rooms, tomato only, kitchen ahd family room privileges. Walled lake, 343-7523. - SHTfiIoiT ””|NICE CLEAN ROOM. CALL AFTER tow as <60. Gill us t ANCH0R-P0WELL CORP. Dial L-l-S-T-l-N-0 Of LI 7-9000 Y OWNER, HOUSE WITH Val-U-Way; 345 OAKLAND AVE. FQ 4-3531 Pontiac's FHA Appointed j | Property Management and | { Sales Broker v j tr^. -----------— f No down payment, now dosing j cost. If you have good credit It's a buy at S9000. Oh! It has • garage. Cell OR 4-1106 tor appointment. Ask tor Ro~ LAKEFRONT ] IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Aluminum siding, 3 bedroom modem, nice kitchen and breakfast I room, 12x24 combination living-dining room, carpeted, 15x20 family! room with picture window facing' take; m car garage. Winter priced i at only *12400 with *3,100 down on1 lend contrad. Hurry! J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY | teal Estate—Insurance-Build 7732 Highland Rd. (Mft) OR d RIVER FRONT WATERFORD 1051 Edgeorge Lovely 3 bedroom ranch has river frontageT It* ii"*L cated In the heart of Water-tom Township. .Only *16,000 wHA land contract terms. Dan Mattingly CALL 'TIL 7 P.M. FE 5-9497 or FE 2-2444 90% Financing On these lovely, well-built lake front hemes at LAKELAND ESTATES 4-bedroom Colonial 4-bedroom Quad-Level 3-bedroom Split-Level $31950 Including lot Quality Homes By ROSS Lakeland Estates On Dixie Hwy., lust pest Walton Btod.-Wflilams Lone Rd. interwr Open Daily 1-7 p.m. Except Friday Ross Homes Inc. OR 3-8021 - FE 4-0591 walk-out recreation . .. JHR trail alr-condlttoned. Plus carpet-! Ing and draperies throughout. Nlce-i ly landscaped and gentle slope to safe sand beech. Now too large' for present Owner and priced way; be'°LArKErO0|,|0N AREA j Here's a beauty in a ranch colonial .with attached 22' x 22' garage. 6 delightful rooms, 1 Va baths, day- G?eamlr MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR NEW BRICK RANCH. 3 kitchen with SuilMns! Lai lly room with V glass doors ana fireplace, l v» ceramic baths. Full basement, gas heat. Attached 2-car garage and tots more. Only *29.900 with easy terms. 4 BEDROOM BRICK, New condition. Well to wall carpel, tiled bath, family size rooms, large kitchen, plastered walls, full basement, gas heat. Paved drive, garage and tote of landscaping. Just *19,900 to--- ~ Ai™koi?hL.t,towWt!2!S' GOING TO BUILD? Ltl us give DUiiT-ms, gas neaT* ww raxes. vmj - Drlc. on vmjr or AUrs, cr BRICK RANCH This is the most attractive home, 4 nice rooms and finished recreation room. Paved street, sewer end water. *500 down plus costs' on FHA or closing costs only to ,■ Gl veteran. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor | 621? Dixie Hwy. 474-2235 SCHRAM IRWIN WATERFORD VILLAGE AREA Very attractive thr bride ranch home, i many features Are: 1 tile balm; kitchen ._ _ area combined with fireplace ai built-in barbecue, dishwasher ai built-in oven ji ' — - — Png and "drai .SOUTHFIELD 1 acre M land ■.......... roam brick ranch, attached ga- I *1® NORTHERN HIGH AREA 3-bedroom with 23' living n ... .. . ' lendwiaped «*-1 CHIPPEWA ROAD )n Pontiac. Three-bedroom home. Living roam With Targe picture window; dining area. Ceramic MtlMh. Full basement. Gas heat. EjnsHiMt er '" gas heat, nicely lands toll prip*: (14400 wtth list With SCHRAM and Call Tho Van loshrn Ave. FE 5^4711J13 W. TOR --- ‘ MLS' Buying or Soiling Coll FE 5-9446 i THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 49IM* Houses F—7 VON Veteran? Information Your are now altglbte to buy horn* with no nwify down — 1 invite you lb vtrtt our "dlspl of homei" In tha Moll. Sovotli - save moiwyl Find Out fro... our experienced sales staff what price range of a homo your income will attpw. Lake Privileges—Oakland Lk. Shorn '3 bedroom brick ranch, full basement, alum, storms, screen, and door*, gat heat, fenced yard, paved streets, community' water, cement drive. Owner is moving out -»*’of the area. Full price SIMM. VON REALTY GEORGE VONPERHARR, Realtor In the Mall MLS Room 110 tt2-30(tt or tat-sr* O'NEIL TRADE LAKE FRONT ESTATE Privacy and seclusion can be your In this extra large 3 bedroom rand living room wife fireplace, dlnbt LAKE OAKLAND HEIGHTS 4 bedrooms, IVk baths, Ideal for the growing family. A short walk to school' or the lake, convenient to everything. Large livlr«---- country kitchen plus brec_.._, __ tm ar attached garage. Excellent at 010,730. May consider small JOHNSON VACANT Oakwood Manor Subdivision, 6-room l-story brick ranch, 3 rooms, fireplace M living n nicely planned kitchen witti dl area. Full basasnent with tile I and recreation area. IVk-car __ rage with rxt<* rear porch. Large well landscaped lot and take privileges. Good neighborhood. MOBILE HOME Complete furnished mobile home, now vacant and ready for Irnmedl- i, ceramic bath. Full b_________ .... rec. room and bar. Recently decorated. 130 car garage, sns, fei___ ______ yard. Call today for an appointment —, .—------------------- •-■ma for No. 3-43 *15,000. 3 lovely bedroon Inr large carpeted I kitchen cabinets and dining ----- Full basement, fancad lot. landscaping and shrubbery is charm-Home' Is fully ■ insulated, — fuel. Also tuiswrifewiMM It Included. Call A. Johnson & Son, Realtors 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4*2533 RHODES CLARKSTON — walking dtstan_ schools. 4 bedroom rancher. Wall to wall carpet In llvlng room._1Vt EXTRA NICE 11 room lakefront home on .Lake Orion. S^bedrooms. LIFETIME ALUMINUM RANCHER —only 3 years old. immediate possession, independence Twp. W~“ to wall carpet In living mom, m ter bedroom and hall. Extra n 193 ft. lot. Only 321,900 fled Gl't $2100 down p WEST * FAIRMOUNT - site today. Raasonably priced. 20 per cent down, balance land con AlIeRT J. RHODES, Broker FE 1-2306 253 W. Walton FE 54712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE STOUTS Best Buys Today $450 D0WN- Plue smell closing costs on thli sharp 3 bedroom north tide ranch er, carpeted living room and hall, tile bath, custom kitchen, family room, storms and screens, 2Vi car garage, paved drive. Only S14, 300 total price. EAST SIDE— immediate possession on this new ly remodeled 3 bedroom IV, story home. Shiny oak floors, kitchen with formica counters, basement. Mi Hmkm 49 KAMPSEN “THE HOLIDAY MONTH IS UPON US" SNOWY DECEMBER nights will moke you gled .you oum this three bedroom i *(*5 room, utility ^ifTlurd Scnoois, tented yard, water and sewers you ' to^seT* ** W >l tMV t 5.5 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 43 Mt, Clement St. FE 3-795 "H.N.P.S." GIFTS FOR WIGS—WIGLETS Assorted gifts for "HER" Randall Beauty Shoppe 33 Wayne ___________FE 2-1424 might need Is in stock. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 63 Mt.' Clemens S». FE 3->9S4 KEEP YOUR CAR NEAT WITH FLOOR MATS "THE GREATEST GIFT" IS A BIBLE Christian Literature Sales pe. 44391 brakes. VeryTcieen, 31093 at SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2733. " Want Ads Bring Advertisers and Prospects Together' EMERSON COLORED TV $399.95 WALTON TV FE 2-2257 Open 94 515 E. Welton, corner of Joslyn r. FE 4-3177. All Types of Remodeling Kitchen cupboards, additions, attic rooms, recreation rooms, garages, aluminum tiding, roofing. Free est. No down payment. G & M CONSTRUCTION CO. 36 N. Seglnaw__________FE 2-1211 5-I5C EXCITING NEW THOMAS ORGAN, prices starting at $495. Also Incomparable wurlltzer TOTAL-Tone organs 3795 up. Wurlltzer ahd Westbrook pianos. Trade-In specials during the holiday suson. Open dally 9:304:30 JACK HAGAN MUSIC CENTERS 469 Elizabeth Lk, Rd. Pontiac 332-0500 0192 Cooley Lk. Rd. Union Lake, Mich. _____________363-6300 _________ REPOSSESSED NORGE GAS RANGE 31.75 PER WEEK. Goodyear Service Stare 1370 Wide Track Dr., West - _____________Pontiac 1965 CHEVELLE 2 DOOR HARD-top. 3 cylinder and automatic, , power steering. 31695 at SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. * • , ! CHRISTMAS SPECIALS Luggage end utility .......*6,65 Park and Brake ............$4.60 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clenlent St.___FE 3-7954 HARD TO PLEASE? Buy a gift for his car. Me wheels, tachometers, all acc HERK'S AUTO SUPPLY 23 E, Walton__FE_ KESSLER'S DODGE Oxtor OA 3-1400 MAKE HIS NEW CAR COMPLETE This Christmas give the men In your family e trailer hitch tor his car, priced from 10.95. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7934 MAKE QOLF MORE FUN FOR HI with a new or reconditioned Gas or electric golf car. Easy term GOLF CAR D1ST., INC. 372 3. Seglnaw___________FE 445 ! FOR ALL 1963 CHEVROLET STATION WAG-on, 8 cylinder, automatic and power. 3995 at SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2733.______ H.N.P.S. Hank Newman ploys Santa at Spartan. Get a second car for tho family. ISS Oakland Ave. FE B» . OODLES OF STOCKING STOFFERS We make candy lust a little bit different at — “CROCKER'S" Pontiac Mall Woodward A 1962 CHEVY II, 2 DOOR, 6 CYLIN-der automatic, radio, heater. $575 at SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Binning-, Hi M{ 4-2735. SANTA RECOMMENDS Horses and ponies Mr Christmas Tarim avallabla \ DOUBLE D RANCH ’ 673-7657 4 F—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1906 M— OffWipWlH St Sole Meoeeheld (hMi II M» HuicIwM teed* 41 Nr SalemscehMeae 47 PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" CUSTOM MEATS Mlgh-qucHly seuseg* and meet manufacturing plant. Owner will teach you his famous recipes. High price, high profit. Business grossing *189,000 plus rent- to FRANCHISE DRIVE-IN High profit soft drinks and sh order restaurant In top local! 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $476 (Best) $4.00 Weekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-plece (brand new) living room 3-piece living room suite, two ste tables, matching coffee table, tw. decorator lamps, all for S1D3. Only Si .SO weekly. NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS t-piece (brand new) bedrooms: Double dresser, bookcase bed and chest, box spring and Innersprlng mattress, two vanity lamps. All SINGER DIAl-A-MATIC Zig-Zag sewing machine — In modern walnut cabinet — makes designs, appliques, buttonholes, etc. Repossessed. Pay off SS4 cash or SO PER MONTH payments. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 men* and 30 cars paved Ing. A solid growing business for *10008 down. .. _j* parte plus coin-op ( laundry. Across street from steel c plant. 3-bednoom living quarters.: : A tremendous Income investment l tor *31,300. Hurry! . ! partridge real estate 1 1050 W, HURON, FE 4-3581 I OPEN 'TIL 9:00 P.M. „tl' SEND FOR NEW FREE CATALOG ( SUNOCO io couch, MS; Earl SINGER & CABINET Ittle used with zig-zagger. He embroidery, button holes, payments tfoo monthly or $3 cash price. Call credit mam at 33S41I3. RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At our 11 W. Pike Store Only I Chairs ......... . .. $ o.tj , ngle Iron ... ........ .814.95 POOL TABLES PLUMBING BARGAINS. F R E E Standing toilet, SIAM. -------- heater, $49.95, Solace „ Ut.tl. Laundry tray, trim shower ttaiie *- — tl Baldwin. FE 4jSW- RIDE-O-MATIC BOLEN Garden Tractor. With plow, „ tor and disk, SSO. 887-5011. RUMMAGE SALE — HOUSEHOLD goods, clothes, baby furniture, mlscytSS^LaktvIfw, opp. Tel-Hu- rummageT-is4 mark, 7-13 noon. Saturday Dec. 3, “—ItoM |— clothing, toys. t l,en15' | Guar.eiec*nelrlg< N.: ran>----. Guar. elec, washer .......»».»»' Sunoav Dec" a.. , " GAS STOVE. 1 REFRIGERA- Your Credit Is good at Wyman's J -, 1 small barrel type chalr EASY TERMS FE 2-21501 I $25, REFRIGERATOR, oed rooms,, living n Service Station] rll'SIwSCrtKlj FOR RENT top freezer $49, Dryee S35, $25, Ges Stove 135, Wash.. M Dryer Set SIS; V. Harris, FE 5-2766. • Has good gallonsge r< ■ Unlimited Possibilities • Located In Union Lake • A Fast growing ares • Financial Assistance Qua Idled Parties COMMERCE OIL CO. Ask For Mr. Sanders 3-PIECE MAPLE BEDROOM 5UI double bed plus springs end n tress. OR 3-0387 after 4:30. Antiques ANTIQUES, RUMMAGE: ODDS, ENDS, TREAS-ioeeci ure> ,n® trash. itL'ji Comer, of Squirrel end Shimmons Rd. Pontiac Twp. control, metal cupboards, **clo custom lewelery, books ar ‘ ■ other Items, Reasonable! 11_ SEVERAL GOOD USED FURNACES M. A. BENSON HEATING DIV„ jjStf 333-7)71 Fi, TV & Radios COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE Joe's Bargain House,, FE 2-6442 RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES DRAPES, SILVER AND .1. webtomf nohalr, good condition. $45.1S oreth. Ilk* fi y**- --------=-----------____| Bom for S2S. 3 's Radio and Appliance, 9x12 Linoleum Rugs .. $3.8? ! Solid Vinyl Tile ---- Vinyl Asbestos tl J34J477 USED RCA ■ .. COLOR SET ..$19 RHP. TV, FE 2-2257. Open 9-5 515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn DAYS 3634108 U EVENINGS MA 6-6701; V fe 5-3102. ETT*E R**S "w A^ EyH?USE*0?rrL ET FOOT CHEST FREEZ- 150 S. Telegraph___________FE 3-7051 WILL BUY » 0F beautiful WILL DU I treatment. Lined ofM Or lease existing ges stations or. utjn draperies in 2 , land suitable tor stations In Oato 53, wide pane), 0« , n Water Softeners Sale land Contracts ~ 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS See us before you deal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54145 .Open Eves, til » p. 426 MIDWAY Recent*sale, $7,500 balance. D counted to $5,450. VALUET REAL ESTATE FE 4-3531 ACTION On your land contract, large or small, call Mr. Hlitor. FE 2-017». Broker, 3793 Elizabeth Lafca Road. Wanted Contracte-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. Sea us before WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-1165 _______Open Eves, 'til 9 p.m._ Cash- for land contracts. H. J. Van Welt. 4S40 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1355. ADMIRAL UPRIGHT FREEZER, -xcellent condition, S45. GE re 'Igeralor *10, OR 4-3315. After CASH For your equity I or land contracts. Don't lose that home, smallest possible discounts. Call 4*2-1920. Ask for Ted McCullough Sr. ARROW REALTY 5143 Cass-EIlzabeth Road NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL discounts. Earl Carrels. EM 3-2511, EMpIrs 3-4806._____________________ OUR OFFICE SPECIALIZES IN land contract collections. FLOYD KENT, REALTOR 02Vfr N. Saginaw______ FE HUB QUICK CASH FOR LAND CON; glass with ebony base con porary tables, oval cocktail | "■‘■lamp tables. 624-Otto ev GE ELECTRIC STOVE, EXCEL-nt condition. FE S-351S.____________ 0 Far $aie^ MisceBaneeus 67 i* VS OFF ON SPECIAL BOXED Christmas cards, big selection, discount on personalized Christmas cards. Forbes Greeting Card Store, 4500 Dixie, Waterford. OR 3-9747. 1 GERMAN BABY BUGGY, I 483-4513. -_____________ 4 piece bedroom, 5 piece dinette, f Stove $225. Terms, S2.25 a C Cell Mr. Adams, FE 44)904 VI ‘ to K-Mar»). I'xiy LINOLEUM RUGS S3.9S EACH ■Ceiling BAG Tile. FE 4-9957. 1075 W e — wall paneling, c tor, excellent inning ci 5-2744. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale. BRAND NEW. Large and smell size (round, drop-leaf, rectangular) tables In 3, 5, and 7 pc sets. *34.95 up. PEARSON'S FURNITVRE at E. Pike ______________FE 4-7981 BUNK BEDS Choice of 15 styles, trundle beds, triple trundle beds and bunk bed complete, $49.50 end up. Pearson' Furniture, 218 E. Pike. . :HINA CABINET, vfpy firvv condition. 692-4653. ANTIQUES, DIVING EQUIPMENT, portable TV, console, odds end ends. 335-4376.________________ ANTIQUED MILK CANS. BEAUTI-' lly done In Early American otif. Make unusual useful Christas gift. No prico over nheno. zme see them. 353-9162. CHINA CABINET, OLD. $35 DREXEL WALNUT DINING SET, with pads end hutch, FE 4-4047. DRYERS; REFRIGERATORS AND stoves, good working order. Mich I-gan^Appliance Co. 3292 Dixie Hwy. ELECTRIC STOVE, *25; MATCH-Ing wether and dryer set, $85; built-in deluxe ges range end oven like new, carpeting and pad *25; inside doors *5; gas dryer *45. V. Harris, FE 5-2744. LOANS *25 to *1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER A LIVINGSTONE Flnanca Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 ELECTRIC DRYER, 025. FRIGID-olre dishwasher, $35. FE 2-3222. FRIDGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR, good condition. OR 3-2244. LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick, frl ly, helpful. FE 2-9026 Is the number to cell. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 9:30 to 5:30 - Sat. 9:30 to 1 LOANS TO $1,000 To consolidate bills Into one monthly payment. Quick service with courteous experienced counselors. Credit life Insurance available — Stop In or phone FE 5-8121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 1 M. Perry St. FE 5-0121 * to 5 dolly. Sat. ~ ■ GE REFRIGERATOR, C dltlen, $45. 447-1724, GE ELECTRIC RANGE. 34", GOOD —jltlon, *75. FE 2-9100. LOANS *25 TO *14)00 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. *0 E. LAWRENCE,_FE $0421 Swap* 16' FIBERGLAS SKI BOAT, 75 H Evlnrude, Selecfrict shift, pot tilt.. Fast, fully equipped with co Cost SZ400. sell I auto, surface burners instant-on oven Coppertone or white. A give-a-way at *139.95 35 MILLIMETER GERMAN CA h all attachments *75, Imperial •zer exc. condition, upright, 3. FE 54)992. ___ . IRED BOILER, new, only 1 left, *199. G. A. Thompson. 7005 <459 ' ANCHOR FENCES ) MONEY DOWN FE 5 : SALE, ’’ wk.~10.10, 015 Chalmers oft Pontiac Lk. Rd. BISHMAN ' BASEMENT SALE, BRING YOUR cash. We have trash and treasure. Clothing. Rugs, antiques, household mlse. Nov. So, Dec. 1, 2, 10 HI 4 p.m. Comer Rattoloa Lk. end El Rd. Off (M-15)._________________ 1ABY BASSINETTE, CHEST, BU6-gy, car bed, all like new. 332-7430. BOLEN RIDING TRACTOR WITH snowplow and mower, 8 MM movie camera and projector. OR 3-5024, CORD ORGAN. SONY TC 102 TAPE recorder. 23" Zenith TV. 2 sets of water skis. Call FE *4505. COAL HEATERS, OIL BURNERS. Taylor. 602 lM|g||ri^M DOG HOUSES INSULATED, ) RUMMAGE. 5025 ELIZABETH LAKE '. ANDREWS THRIFT SHOP. WIN-■■■01111 * family. Small ----- M taking con- . Hatchery Rd. Fridays, 40P HERE FOR CHRISTMAS, ell Ilka new. Walking doll; jewelry; silver; auto, fryer; car-bed; mlsc. Clothing; shoe$. 334-7426. V 1_ SWING NEEDLE ZIG-ZAG '-fi^cred ___. RICHMAN 1 SEWING CENTER '3 Orchard Lake TALBOTT LUMBER PS house paint No. 219, $4.95 gal. PS ranch house white No. 740, S5.95 gal. ook-Dunn alum, roof paint, *5.50 gal. .Oil base brtertor,- 1025 Oakland , THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELDETORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to--- Clothing, Furn Int, 50 cents a UP TO 20 PERCENT DISCOUNT on used end new typewriters, adding machines, office desk, chairs, files, tables, storage cabinets, mimeograph end off-set machines. Forbes Printing A Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie, Waterford. OR 3-9767. tank with i looks and i WATER SOFTENER WANTED TO BUY Leaded glass lamps or loaded i I--ehjdoa. PE 4-— WASHED WIPING RAGS, 19 CENT YQUR WELDW00D HEADQUARTERS Christmas Tree* 67-A SCOTCH PINE, CUT i-l CHRISTMAS TREES. SELECT now, Cut your convenience. Lend- dig. 2922 SHwth, 3 miles wi Commerce Village. 694-0635. CARNIVAL By Dick Turner COW AND HORSE HAY. WE DE- — Rd. FE 4$M* or PE 4-3663-EXTRA GOOD HORSE AND COW hay, will deliver. 427-3229. FARM-ALL A WCTO* WI ft — ( and cultivator, recondlf repainted. A-l shape *495. KING BROS, FE 4-1442 TRACTOR SNOW BLADE, $30 AND Up. Homeltt* chain tews. Chains sharpened on mechlno. John Deere end New Idea parts galore. Davis Machinery Co- Ortonvtlle. NA 7-3292. : STREAM, 1945 SAFARI. “You know that Higgins boy you said was tied to his mother’s apron strings? Well, he got loose this morning!” Pot*—Hontlng Dogs 79 1-AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. STUDS TREMENDOUS SAVINGS ON USEDl pianos and organs. Organs from I *250 up, pianos from $350 up.: Several to choose from, early for bargains. Gallagher _ Ic Co. 1710 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 44)544. Lots of freo parking. Free lessons with every organ wd USED BAND INSTRUMENTS All In good playing condition Flutes, Clarinets, Comets, Trumpets, trombones, Saxaphones. Bargain prices. MORRIS MUSIC 3 AKC BEAGLE PUPS, SHOTS, $35; stud service, wormed. 42*0015 3 PUPS, FEMALE, *3.00 E f USED ORGANS Wurlltzer spinet and Leslie speaker, big sound, lew price. AIREDALE, BEAUTIFUL MALE pup, good for witch dog, fM&j pet end hunter, exc. bloc else adult male. 625-5589. AKC SABLE COLLIE STUD. WILL 'eke puppy «» fee. FE 541415. AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. __________67441713.______ LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. (Across from Free Parking Used Organs Choose from Lowrsy, Wurlltzer, Hammond, Sllvortone, etc. Priced *->m. $450 GRINNELL'S Downtown . 27 S. Saginaw AKC POODLES, SMALL miniatures, malt and fen weeks. 179-0730, Mul* St.', Watertord, Juna'Pearlng.* PIANO, ORGAN, GUITAR LESSONS. SMILEY EROS. ----- Stors Equipment CHRISTMAS TREES. BEAUTIFUL bushy Scotch pine, highly pi 85c to $1.50. Delivered In loads. Phone Mount Clemons, Igan, 443-1542 or 448-4598. DUO-THERM SPACE HEATER, | DEWALT SAW AND STAND, S135 HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL It A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE — Consists of: •-Piece living room outfit with 3 ENCYCLOPEDIAS J964, Lame Bllto.rS3S living r cocktail 7-piece bedroom i _ . _____, full size b spring mattress and r ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES FOR all rooms, 1947 designs; pull down, balloons, stars. Bedroom, $1.19; porch, $1.55, irregulars, samples. Prices only factory can give. Michigan Fluorescent, — I — 4-0442. 5-plece dinette set with 4 chairs and table. All for S] credit Is good st Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. « E. HURON FE 5-1501 II W. PIKE FE 2-2150 GARAGE SALE, 1 WINDOW AIR off Rlvei IRONRITE AUTOMATIC 1RONER. ,condition. Sit i controls. Very i If Cass-Elizobeth. IKE NEW DREXEL 4 modern round walnut tepie witn 4 matching chairs, original cost *350—now $150, FE 2-5816.. LOUNG CHAIR, SWIVEL, EXCEL- mmm________________. rattain B bakia RdT, Clarkston, 625-4446. _ GARAGE SALE - CHILDREN'S, ■ , women's, meternitv clothes, Items, starts Nov. 2^ through Bale Clothing LATE MODEL LADIES DRESSES. LARGE SIZE, I condition. FE 2-7442. CHILD'S BOOTS SIZE ladles camel hair coat size iz. sweaters, blouses size 10-12, I Quality ladies size io and 12 dresses end skirts, toms maternity cocktail, reas. 447-7434. WE DO ING GOWN, SIZE 14 OF 2 FORMALS. nt condition, S3S. FE 2- MUST SELL ANTIQUE DINING Sale Household Goods 65 6 NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC Zig-Zag sowing machine — cabinet model — embroiders, blind hems buttonholes, etc. 1963 model. Take over payments of S5.90 PER MONTH tor 9 mos. or S53 cash lUNIVERSIAL CO. FE 4-0905 I, sacrifice, S35. I Farmall A tractor. John Deer 4 tractor, 116''' trailer' plow. 1 . section drag. Other - numerous giant community rummage and Bazaar, C.A.I. Bldg., “4® Williams Lake. Frl. Dec. 2, GIFTS, JOKES, GAGS AND NOVEL- rted accessories, *75. 887- RONRITE IRONER OELUXE MOO-el 95, never used, posture chair eluded. $125. Deluxe Reynolds ter conditioner, auto. 58-gallon brine tank model T-121 used ' up. Also bundles of pine boughs. ,:uger 44 Mag. Special *19JL H&R 38-38 elngle Barrel Convertible, (30-38) (20 GU) '(410 shotgun barrel) end (22 REM Jet Rifle) -all one-low as $74.50. GUNS, GUNS GUNS — BROWN-ing, Remington, Winchester, Weather by, Ithaca. Rifle* and shotguns. Coif, Smith & Weston pistols. Bear and Browning archery hunting end target equipment. Gun repairing, scopes, mounting. Browning hunting shoes for man and women. All sizes. Complete selection of shells. We have a rifle range and trap REGULATION SIZE DELUXE Valley bumper pool table cues, balls, like new, WS. 2-7993. After 4:30 p.m. MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAW MODEL KING BROS. :E 4-1462 I Pontiac Rd, just east ot Hand Taals—Machinery 68 34' SEMI STORAGE VAN, A-1. Fork lift trucks, $800 up Blvd. Supply S00 S. Bi IYA4? \ $277 'THREE ROOM OUTFIT BRAND NEW Fl^flTURE 7-PIECC LIVING ROOM 9-PIECe BEDROOM 5-PIECE DINETTE May Be Purchased Separately B-Z. TERMi7 little joe-* \ BARGAIN HOUSE KEEP CARPET CLEANING PROB-'—s small — use Blue Lustre well well. Rent electric shampooer, _____Hudson's Hdwt- 41 E. Walton. LAVATORIES. COMPLETE, *MJ0 ' - $14.95, also bathtubs, toilets, r stalls. Irregulars, terrific . Michigan Fluorescent. 393 ALTO, TENOR, BARITONE SAXO-phones. Comets, Trumpets, Trom-II bones, French Homs, Flutes, Clarl-i nets. Used, many like new. Bar-gain. Peoples. FE 4-4235. BUFFET CLARINET, EXCELLENT condition, *100. FE 5-7535.______ COROOVOX, FOR SALE. EXCEL-lent condition. Call EM 34327. REFRIGERATOR AND LIVING SWING NEEDLE DIAL-MATIC ming, designs, buttonholes, oil your plain and fancy tewing. Must collect $46.61 cash or pay-. ments easily arranged. 60 monTh guarantee. Call Mr. Richards at 363-2622/ * CERTIFIED SEWING CENTER NEW HOT WATER BASEBOARD, V length. $1.35 ear toot. G. A. Thompson. 7005 M Pontiac Press Want Ads Pay Off Fast bicycle. FE 2-8033._______ \ O D E R N FURNITURE; G C clothing; toys; baby Items; oil tank, reas. 682-4583. NEW GREETING CARD STOWdi —to parking. Oreetlng^cards. NECCHI ZIG-ZAGGER Cabinet model. Makes button holes, overcasts, hems, 'guaranteed. Pay *47.21 bilance cash or. *5.80 monthly. Coll Mr. Richards otj 363-2622. I CERTIFIED SEWING CENTER | FENDER JAZZMASTER GUITAR, like hew. 444-8774. HAMMOND CHORD ORGAN, EXC. HAMMOND ORGAN M108, EARLY HAMMOND SPINET f M-3. LIKE REYNOLDS ’SLIDE TROMBONE, Ilka new, *125. OR 3-3332. SEE THE NEW WURLlTZEf-AND THOMAS OROANS INSTRUCTIONS AVAILABLE JACK HAGAN MUSIC 449 Elizabeth Lakt Rd. 3324580 8192 Cooley Lake Rd. 343-5500 Sporting Good* SCI yeau ____ _______ in trade. 638-3752. CHOCOLATE POODLE PUPPIES, COLLIE PUPS *5 EACH. HOLLY ME 4-3371 or ME 4-3)75. DALMATION PUPS, AKC REGIS-- J ~$gaaks eld-*50, 625-1931. EXCEPTIONALLY MARKED CALI-H kittens, house trained. To warm 'Ing homes. Will hold tor Chrlst-S *2.50 ea. OR 3-3375. drive on wheels', don't wilt till winter. Cliff Dreyers Sports Center, 5210 N. Holly Road, Holly, ME 4-4771. Open 7 days a week. GOLF CARTS, I worth of Snowmobiles, Johnson canoes. Marine < ........ ...... skis. New aluminum canoes S149. Sleeping bags I models to cboost from starting at *4.95. Reg. *2.95 Rend McNally c-------- - “ Snowmobiles See tha naw T-BIRD Close-out '66 boats and motors RAUL A. YOUNG, INC. SKI DOO'S GUNS-CAMPERS CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 Walton Dally 94 p.m, FE $4482 WANTED: USED SKI MACHINE, pontoon boat. Browning 12 gauge, 32" barrel, 3" magnum, OR 3-7788. Sand-Gravel-Dirt 3347.j FILL SOIL PIT- FOR LEASE Baldwin at 1-75. FE MI44. GOOD RICH TOPSOIL ANO BLACK dirt. Dal. FE 4-6588._________ PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply. Sand, graval, fill dirt. OR 3-1534. WoodKaal-CokBsFoal 1945 M TON GMC TRUCK AND GERMAN (ASSET PUPPIES, 7 WEEKS OLD (28-3280.__________ I L PUREBRED RED BEAUTIFUL PART COLLIE PUP-■■■ Mother tricolor, t weeks old. -------------each. 338-4444. BEAGLES YOUNG AND OLD. 517-372-3744. Eves, or GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS AKC, reasonable. Ber-G Kennels. Holly 6344787.______ _______________ LABRADOR-SETTER PUPS, *5 end large popdlt. 424-2454._ PART BRITTANY — PART COCK--------- 9 week*, *18 each. 335-3316 POODLE PUPPIES, AKC, QUALI-1y bred, apricots and blacks, shot*. 451-3445. POODLE, TOY MALES, KENNEL reduction sale, very reasor-'-'-624-3078. _________________ SQUIRREL MONKEY AND CAGE-OR 3-9084. ST. BERNARD, st offer. FE 24243 oft. 4 YORKSHIRE T E R R I E R S. AKC champions, pedigree, 4-week tiny poodles, available soon. 451-9329, 13 MthHi Home* VELCH PONY, HALTER, BRIDLE, saddle end saddle blanket. *145. Very gentle. Ideal for children. 1508 BALEt OF ALFALFA AND ' clover ml:—1 ■)( OA 9-3541. 1944 LIBERTY IfxSS', ENTERING sorvlco. Must sdiL 334-7121. 1966 MOBILE HOMES Display ClearancB ALL MUST GO mg * day pre-inventory Is Dec. 1st thru 5th. Special hours I t.m. to 7 p.m. on T day, Friday, Saturday end day. Sunday 10 am to 5 Over 25 different models ot ovtr pickup campers to choose from. Brands: Del-Ray, Camp-Mate, Wildwood, Wego end Tour-A-Home. Here'* a few examples $219 aluminum (' pickup truck , covers $149. New 1944, IO* self-contained 6 sleeper model *995. New 19*7 r. 4-sleeper, self-contained, *895. New 1944' Skv Lounge model regular FOR WINTER FUN WR HAVq THE new T-Bird Snowmobile from *485. Kar's Boats A Motors, lake Orton. MY Will*. Open weekends For Information a I-----A COUNTRY MO- BILE HOMES. 747 NEW MOON. It'xM'. BRAND I ___________ I 332-1657 (Cornar of M-59 at Opdyka) 5410 Dixie Hwy. 674-2818 ^ “ H Waterford) MICHIGAN TURBGCSAFT SALES, INC. 0lxl*-HWY- ^ "’feV™ Snow Mobiles EVINRUDE SKEETER IMMEDIATE OEUVERY taka & Sea Marina *45 So. Blvd. E. FE ONY'S MARINE TO* JOHNSON motors, boots, mi canoes. 4824440. Urploaai ____$9 PRIVATE PILOT GROUND SCHOOL, ] wMo^-oM: II display n reduced | Wantid Cnr* • Track* 101 Alabama Buyer DON'T RENT, BUY. 108'X20ir tor meWle. 28 minute* Pt______________ *39 mo. Bloch Bros. OR 3-1295, FE 44*89. 1947 uy sleeps 9, self-contained model at *1895. Self-contained meant toilet, water, heater, cook stove, gas and electric lights. Regular *710 F.O.B. New Apache Eagle camp trailers *549. Over 25 different models of pickup campers to chooso from all at pre-inventory prices. Over *100,800 worth of Apache camp trailers, snowmobiles, pickup campers, Johnson FORESTPARK PARKWOOD HOLLYPARK All el reduced prices. 16 to 40 ft. long, I to 20 ft. wldo W* have parking spece^' MIDLAND ’TRAILER *SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. Z3^T72 1 block north of Telegraph MARLETTES 50'-40* long, 12* to 28' wldo. Early American, Traditional or modern decor. Space available in 4 Star Perk, no extra charge. Also see the famous light weight Winnebago Traitor. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 94, CLOSED SUNDAYS ____ ______ _____ _______I mile south of Lake Orion on M24 luipment and camping supplies'__________MY 2-8721 ferythlng at pre-inventory prices MUST SELL, ist in time for Christmas. Sale: --•— •“ i. This v Coder Camping A Marine Sup- 1940 CAMPING TRAILER. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston 425-1711 Mon.-Frl., 94 BOOTH CAMPER See t it Werner 1 Seles, 3098 w. nuron ipian io loin one of Welly Byem*. exciting caravans). COACHMEN AT JOHNSON'S FE 4-5853 FE 4-0410 Streamlines—Franklins Crees—Fans-Monitors Truck Campers by: Cree-Franklin-Mackinaw ALL SELF CONTAINED -SIDE DINING AREAS possession. 338-3896. IMMEDIATE Waterford Sales CLEARANCE ON 1966 MODELS PMke?Vbook. Open*0dally*n9:3M* 11-4 Sundays. 4333 W. Highland Rd. Rent Trailer Space 90 TRAILER SPACE SOON AVAIL-ebl*. Pontiac Mobile Home Perk. VILLAGE GREEN MOBIL ESTATE, new and different, 2285 Brown Rd. Near 1-75 »nd M-24. FE 2-5295. *el)FW600f’1 HONDA 98 SPORT, 3500 MILES, c. condition. $225. EM 34119. 1965 YAMAH TRAIL IO, LIKE NEW, ~ Christmas gltt, FE 4-2494, 2-24' rounded c Ellsworth Trailer Sales *577 Dixie Hwy. 425-4408 Pickup sleeper. MINI BIKE ORIGINAL PRICE $145. SPORTCRAFT PICKUP SLEEPERS. Stronger welded tubular fr 473-7*43 TRAVEL WITH THESE QUALITY LINES— Luxury In a BOLES AERO, 20-35' FROLIC, 14-24'—BEE LINE, 13-24' YUKON DELTA, 17-24' "THE RED BARN" Jacobson Trailer Sales 5490 Wlllleme Lake Rd. OR 3-59 TURAHOME CAMPER, FE 1-8654, SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-250CC. RUPP Minlblkes as tow as *139.95. Take M59 to W.' Highland. Right on Hickory Rldgo Rd. to Dtmode Rd. WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and sleepers. New end used, *395 up. Also rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping, bumpers, ladders, reeks. Lowry Camper Sales, 1325 EM 3-3481. Spare < VOUR APACHF DEALER EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwv.. Clarkston ______425-1711 3 BEDROOM, NATIONAL 10x56, I 200. 424-1495 or 4244952._ 1(7X57* NEW MOON 2-BEDROO 10x50 GENERAL MOBILE HOME, real cheep. FE 44914,_ I' HOLLY, LOCATED AT KEEOO Trailer Park,, No. II, *780, After 944 — 50x10 — FURNISHED, mediate possession. 338-1258. HERE NOW 1967 H0NDAS All models'end colors Easy ferms-^ihHriow'arto' save. SUZUKI 1 SCRAMBLER—THEY'RE HERE TUK0 SALES INC. I E. AUBURN - ROCHESTER UL 2-5363 signs to I TIPSICO L Beats — Accessories 97 14' AERO-CRAFT ALUMINUM RUN-ebout, cost *449 new. Leaving state must sell. FE 5-9132. ___ BOAT STORAGE Sell Out —1966 Models PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER Cruise-Out, Inc. I E. WOlton FE >-4402 DEMO SALE Come In and Seel SAVE HUNDREDS ON l-O’S OUTBOARDS. FEW '44 JOHNSON MOTORS. WE TRADE, FINANCE. PINTER'S 1370 Opdyke 94 FE 4-0924 (1-75 el Oakland University Exit) EVINRUDE SNOWMOBILES!! WE have them all! Wide Track, end electric start. Alto single and . double snowmobile trailers. Coming soonII The ndw end different —-1 end snow vehicle. The Scetmo Take M59 to W. Highland. R on Hickory Rldgo Rd. to Don Rd. Left and follow signs to D SON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LA Phono 629-2179. EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Averill HELP! need 300 sharp Cadillacs, P s. Olds and Bulcks for out • market. To» dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Av*. _ ,. FE 5-5900 ----- MORE MONEY iy tot, that Is * full city block GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Sales 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Across trom Pontiac State Bank STOP HERE LAST e pay more tor sharp, let* mOe car*. Corvettot needed. M l0n m 522*5 . IMS CHEVROLET Bel Air 2-Door mission, V-8 engine, radio, heater. Folks, this on* Is almost like new 814*5 1*84 KARMANN GHIA. Her* Is the sportiest car on the road and it Is fleshy red with spar-, kllng trim $M*S 1M5 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-Door Sedan. Power steering and brakes, automatic transmission. You can't beat foe price ' *19*5 1*88 PONTIAC Bonntvill* 4-Door Hardtop Brougham. Air condl- Ing. automatic. 2,000 actual milts. Real class 830*5 1*84 BUICK Special, Deluxe 2-Door. Has bucket seats, radio and heater, automatic transmission, power steering, look no more— 813*5 1964 BUICK Wildcat 2-Door Hardtop. Custom bucket seats* arm rests* cordovan top and WOW* It Is first class $$95 1*83 BUICK LeSabre 4-Door Sedan with extra low mileage, automatic transmission, radio, heater and power brakes and steering. WOW HT... S13M 1*82 OLDSMOBILE ?uper "88" Station Wagon with factory air l conditioning, full powar. Go first | class for Httte money her*. *11*5 1963 PONTIAC Bonnavllla 2-Door Hardtop. All whit* 'with black 1 leather trim. Hare is one for you | to go first class in !.* $1495 1*84 COMET 2-Door Sedan with standard shift transmission, 8-cylinder angina, most economical and almost lika new *1095 marnm, PONTIAC-BUICK 651-55001 Ed Broadway—Dewey Petiprin-Stan Roat-Tommy Thompson, Sales, Mgr. 885 S. Rochester Rd., Vi Mile South of Downtown Rochester PUT YOUR CHRISTMAS ON WHEELS! Treat your family to the finest this year ... A completely winterized used car from the “OK" used car lof at MATTHEWS HARGREAVES. December is the month to take advantage of low used car prices and wide ^election. Both can be found ot '631 Oakland Avenue. BRAND NEW TIRESt*) FREE With The Purchase of Any 1963 thru 1966 Used Car ) (1) .Firestone (2). U.S. Royal (3) General (4) Goodyear COMPANY OWNED DEMONSTRATORS 1966 Impala Super Sport Save $$ Save " 1966 Chevy Biscayne 4-Door SEDANS. W« have TWO TO CHOOSE FROM, Powerglide WERE $2195 NOW $1995 1966 Chevy Impala Wagon • Arctic* whiijj?ini Jh! Save $$$ Save 1966 Chevy Biscayne Sedan Has thrifty 8-cyllnder angina, r< WAS $1795 NOW $1695 New Business Hours Effective December 5, 1966 SERVICE AND PARTS NEW AND USED CAR S , Saturday WBRS" Hank Newman Spartan Dodge 1966 Caprice Sports Coupe Hai V I angina, aiitomatic trans-minion, radio, haatar, whitewall liras, nlca bucket seats, vinyl lop and sand baiga finish. Save $$ Save 1965 Chevy Biscayne Wagon 8-PASSENGER MODEL with V-8 engine, standard shift transmission, radio, heater, luggage rack on top, whitewall tires and a nlca artesian turquoise finish. WAS $1995 NOW $1795 1964 Pontiac Catalina Sport Coupe Has v-8 engine, automatic transmission, radio and heater, power Drakes and steering, whitewall Hres and a nice Tropical turquoise inl,h' WAS $2195 NOW $1595 1965 Monza spSts WAS $1595 NOW $1395 1962 Buick. ... $ 795 1964 Valiant ...$695 2r.r,r.-tr S5££!”“' Radio, heater, stick, 8-cylinder . Afotodcartor 1964 Opel . ... .$ 695 1964 Buick.. ‘..$1495 Station Wagon. Red. A perfect second car. 4-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, whit* 1966 Buick . ...$2995 1965 Buick .. .1995 LeSabre 4-Door Sedan. 12.000 miles, factory warranty. powar steering and brakai, and is ready to, •go, \ V \ \ , \ ■ 196-210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165 Oakland County's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer USED, CAR HEADQUARTERS 631 Oakland at Cass FE 4-4547 631 Oakland at Cass F—10 ■odd twiow m Cash Low, Want to Go? N vou tan • tab, end UO i Kg I I m mj FORD, FAIRLANE /*00 HARDTOP WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE (Mb ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Weakly payments of 0.71. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Pasta at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7580. *44 FORD FAIRLANE 7-DOOR cylinder automatic. 1S.000 actu miles. Can't be told from net $1.1*5 full price, $*» down, I monthly. 50,000 mile new car wa r*"'5j't only takes a minute" to Gat "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffo Ford 030 Oakland Aye.________FE 5-411 1*44 FALCON STATION BUS, HAS 2ND ROW SEATS, RA-010 ANO HEATER ANO WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE 07*2, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments of *775. CALL CREOIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1*65 FORD MUSTANG 2, DOOR I lardtop, with hawthome green with i matching interior, 4 cyl. 3 speed,! Pick, fantastic buy at *13*5 full; price. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE S-4I0I |*64 T-BIRO, CRIMSON RED WITH j 1*66 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR I 3*00 Actual Miles: Ter “t.c Sav ings. Jerome Ford, Rochester's FordsPOaler, OL 1-9711. Mow m§ Hid Coro It* IMS MUSTANG 2 PLUS 2 Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO „ CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's i FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $49 Oown And $49 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-7500 Mow pod Bool Caw 1t6 BEEN BANKRUPT* NEED A CAR with as low as SS down* Try fjowir1"*1*1"*' “* MERCURY 4-DOOR HARDTOP, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAyV DECEMBER 1, lU'i 1W New Bud Used Con 106 Manttieto automatic, radio, I rr : power' steering, brakes, $ mile new-car warranty. Ontir * full price. II only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at John McAuliffe Ford t Oakland Awe. FE 5-4101 H.N.P4 Hank Newman plays San with this extra-nice FtS s 1*63 LEMANS 2-DOOR SPORTS coupe - Ivory, rad buckets. Auto. Clean price to sen, OR 3-2705. 1*63 PONTIAC 2 DOOR HAROTOP, doubt* power, low mlloagt. FE 5-9540 after 5:30. ' er^stoenng, 1*43 PONTIAC 4 Oakland Ave. FE I- Olds sedan, automatic and power. No money down, low weekly payments. Full price, 1*65 OLOS 98, 4 DOOR, BLACK vinyl lop, midnight blue, all power, new premium fires, tor quick solo *2100. 652-2995 or 652-2158. LUCKY AUTO 1*41 W. Wide Track FE 4-1506 or FE 2-7254 1*65 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. full power, best offer. 355-4736. 1N3 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, --------- *“* Ft 5-5744. DOOR SEDAN, reilenl condition, ions Auto Setae. New end Used Cm 106 H.N.P.S. Hank Newman Plays' with Rite soft blue Ti LeMans coupe. AuT "325" V8, Power I with matching bye seats. Full price *“• NEWMANS Ne w god Used Cm IMS PONTLAC CATALINA. STATION wagon, ixc. condition. Turquoise. PONTIAC CUSTOM TEMPEST SrA-^litatag at, 1*54, taw mltaaat, ‘ war brakes, mdto, Tjta to. transmissionJ 327 1 tltlon 11,4*5. Day: I 1*64 TEMPEST LEMANS,. 2-0058 hardtop, VI automatic with power steering, *17*7 full prlca. LUCKY AUTO Birmingham Ml 6-3900 Rochester* Ford Dealer. OL 1- DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 7® CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1*63 BONNEVILLE Convertible, full power, auto., re 1963 MERCURY 1965 CHRYSLER 1960 RAMBLER 4 DOOR, BLACK, good condition. SIM. 2155 Denby. Drayton. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-41 1964-1965-1966 T-BIRDS Landeaus, Hardtops, Convertibles Sottie heve^ elr conditioning^^ whitewall tires, ali with Ford fi lory warranty. As low as SIS HAROLD TURNER i. VI, automatic, p_____ be sold. Full balance Low weekly payments. Mr. Cash 338-4528, Spar- 677 S. LAPEER RD. Lake Orion MY 2-2041 „ _ _ 7,000 MILES. 1*64 PLYMOUTH, BRAND NEW: " *3,050. 674-067*.______________motor, body In good shape. MY| *66 FORD 4 DOOR, FAIRLANE!-*" 4 PLYMOUTH. 4-DOOR. VI. I 1*45 PONTIAC i * passenger wagon :1c, power steering, i LLOYD LLOYD $1889) $89 Down I Lloyd Motors | 1250 Ookland 333-7863; k PLYMOUTH, 2 DOOR, I CYL I ‘snderd tra---• E CHEVR 81 4-2735. *‘|1»63 TEMPEST 2 DOOR. RADIO, s' stick shift, 626-2155. b 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-DOOR,. .. hardtop automatic, power steering. q. ! and brakes, 51,2*7. -'LUCKY AUTO ! 1*40 W. Wide Track canoy appie reo ana wnne too. I PE 4-1006_or_FE 3-7854 . Just what you havebeentooking|iM3 PONTIAC CATALINA » PAS-1 ”’1* “0,is_*«.r£- _r“LSI I senger station wagon, power steer-! - aST^^SincTSS“WPsSwlI yiVuL ilSTo!5' *“■ cond,,,on' ASk ^BIRMINGHAM ^^itto^f-! Chrysler-Plymouth I _ sms after 4, _________yys I 0 S. Wodward_ Ml 7-3214; 1 **4_CATALJNA CONVERTIBLE.! $1669 $69 Down Lloyd Motors 1250 Oakland 333-7863 THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING oy—Pontiac—Birmingham Ar Maple, across from Berz Air GM PLYMOUTH » PASSENGER Htator JS xonn. nnwvr. n. ml a«.11T> an2. steering and brakes. Radio. E S-1W1. II 1*65 PONTIAC, Catalina 2-door hord- Blrmlngham_______________Ml 4-7500 i*m FORD GALAX IE 500 HARD- 1*65 FORO SQUIRE WAGON, FORD TOP 2 door, VS, automatic, radio, - st-VL outomaticredlo, heo* i ^ST’^SSL »|c BBPi__________________I . 2 monthly! 50,000 mile new car warranty. { ‘ "Itonty takes a minute" to Get 1 « "A BETTER DEAL" it: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4101 _______n, 4* monthly. I only takes a minute" to Get -"A BETTER DEAL" it: John McAuliffe Ford Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1966 BARACUDA i»64 pontiac grand prix. pow-| 2-Door, 6 cylinder, automatic.! »*fwlng and brakes, whitewalls, steering. Ermine white w'“ 1 "*-“n Jirmingham \ i1995. BIRMINGHAM RRP> 1964 PONTIAC it only Bonneville hardtop and it Is equipped, has automatic i end weekly payments! 1*65 MUSTANG ms MUSTANG 1 OWNER, AUTO* mafic transmission, —■"* —M ♦ion. 624-3930. 1965 FORD Station Wagons 7 TO CHOOSE FROM Squires, Country Sedans and Ranch Wagons ALL FULLY EQUIPPED As Ldw as $1195 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-7500 LLOYD 1964 LINCOLN Continental. Full power, factory oir, five new whitewall tires. Sold and serviced by us since new. Full price $2469 $169 Down Lloyd Motors 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1962 COMET CUSTOM 4, STICK, 1*63 MERCURY 4 DOOR BREEZE- LUCKY AUTO GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC HAROLD TURNER Morroklde Interior, .full power and Mag wheels. Santa priced at fust *695. HANK NEWMAN SPARTAN DODGE INC.. 055 Oakland Ave. FE 0-4528. 1*57 PONTIAC, *100, NO REASON- ’ able offer refused. 682-57*0._| 1*5* PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE,' real good *165. Save Auto FE > »5» PONTIAC, RADIO, HEATER, auto., *250. 682-3321._ 1*55 CATALINA, GOOD CONDITION' ^—5 tire*. *275. 363-4228._______ - 1*63 MERCURY METEOR 2-DOOR WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE *5*2, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, weekly payments $6.55. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. 1*60 PONTIAC WAGON! LOW MILE-low prlt?WFEl7-9132. ^ LLOYD 1964 MERCURY "Colony Park" 9-passenger station wagon. Power, luggage rack. Full price $1095 $45 Down Lloyd Motors 1250 Oakland 333-7863 iwi* Pon'tiei! Catalina* REPOSSESSION I|ga ------ 1964 PON- ______He hardtop. - automatic* low week-payments. Full balance < tiac Bonneville ! 196* PONTIAC CATALINA CONVER-i tible, power brakes* steering. Good | shape* 673-3954* after 4._______ 1965 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertible. Radio* heater* power BOB BORST DOWNEY 1960 PONTIAC , heater, stand- $295 Downey Oldsmobile, Inc. 1084 Oakland 338-0331 338-0332 ss from Pontiac State Bank 1 Across from Pontiac State Bank Ing, Sacrifice *275. 157-509 WOULD YOU BELIEVE Cash Needed Sedan *29 ® R S,U rJL,/*ONTCLAIR, i,M® Corvalr Coupe (IF hardtop, radio, heater, automatic, h;ei Corvalr Couoe P®wer steering, brakes, spanking m3 chevy Bel Air , d00r NOW OnLy^VT^ prlce?°Thte|,W1 Fort V4 1 ** m week only. 19* down and 163 Xn More From l*66's Down 50,000 m"* new “r, 0PDYKE MOTORS gX 0&& S: l~i%E?NTI*C rd- at John McAuliffe Ford ) Oakland Ave. »■ FE S-4101 FE 0 1*65 MERCURY 4-DOOR. RADIO, GOOD 1*61 TEMPEST STATION heater, automatic transmission.: wagon. Standard bore. *3*5. 340 Power steering, power brakes, Midway. _____________________ air-conditioning. Priced at only 1*62 CATALINA HARDTOP. ALL BOB BORST I On Main Street / CLARKST0N _______MA 5-5500 1*43 FORD GALAXIE it VI, automatic radio, heater, steering, brakes, this is luick one. Only 51*95 Full 630 Oakland Ave. LLOYD ! 1965 MERCURY Monterey Sedan. Automatic, full factory equipment. Full price $1397 $45 Down Lloyd Motors 11250 Oakland 333-7863 1*62 PONTIAC STARCHIEF. GOOD tires. Double power, Low mileage. *650 or make offer. EM 3- ! OOPS._____________________ 1*62 CATALINA 2-DOOR VINYL i hardtop, *650. 625-5504. KEEGO PONTIAC OFFERS YOU 5 TOP USED CARS 1965 Catalina 4-door sedan ... ...............$1795 1965 Catalina 2-door hardtop .................$1795 1965 Grand Priz, red and white ..............$2295 1962 LeMans 4-Door .......................... .$ 595 SPECIAL OF THE WEEK 1966 Catalina, 2 plus 2, 2-Door hardtop demo, power, radio .............. ..... $4295 KEEGO PONTIAC 3080 ORCHARD LK. RD. KEEGO HARBOR , 682-3400 fnwmfWW chevy OLDS Our Guarantee (Oh 25 Months on ^ “OK" Cars |PLAN 1965 OLDS Luxury Sedan, full power, white with cordova black top only. .....$2395 1964 CHEVY 4-door sedan, radio, heater, automatic new car trade, only .,... ......$1295 1963 CHEVY Greenbrier, radio, heater, full seats, only ......... ...... ..... .....$895 1962 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door sedan, radio, heater, automatic, power steering, brakes! only .... $895 1966 CHEVY Caprice Coupe, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, 7,000 miles, only . $2595 1966 C0RVAIR 4-door Hardtop, radio, heater, automatic, one-owner, only .. _...... $lj Wont Mart For Your Money - \ __________ 40 Others In Stock \ \0N DIXIE HWY. AT M15 v “Your Crossroads to Greater Savings" CLAMCSTON MA 5-5071 COMPANY DEMO'S and OFFICIAL CARS "TOP BIRMINGHAM TRADES" 1966 BUICK LeSebre Convertible (Demo) with double power, burgundy finish, Only— $2688 1966 BUICK Demo Skylark 4-Door Hardtop. Automatic, V-8, custom trim, power steering and brakes. Only— $2588 1966 BUICK Elccfrt "225" 2-Door Maintop. Full power* air conditioning* !0>- ' '"$3388 1966 BUICK Electra f-Door Hardtop. Turquoise factory air conditioning. Your* " $3588 1 1966 BUICK Electee 22* Convertible. Yellow with Mack top and black trim. Full power .tend elr conditioning. Loss than 5,088 mile*. $3388 1963 FORD Convertible with V-8, automatic. This week's special for Only— \$888 1966 BUICK Demo Special 2-Door Hardtop. Yellow with a black vinyl top, V4, automatic, power steering. °",y~ $2488 1966 BUICK Demo LeSebre 4-Door Hardtop. Blue with s matching Interior, double power, with 400 teensmis- " ""$2588 1964 TEMPEST LeMans Coupe. Gold with a black vinyl top end black trim. Automatic, v-8, power steering. Yours ^ 0n,V~$1488 - DOUBLE CHECK -- USED CARS - 554 S. Woodward y&zsr * wd^,no- ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP KM *4155 er EM >4151 t»«5;RAM|Le* «ftAT>ON_yAO«<. coitowSi** qkC.' eondltloa. tlr 476-1ML milet. burgundy, {SSogTg" — .E, 4-DOOR, 7JM0 VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Finance at 1% Per Month ledge 6-cylinc 1968 Pontiac I) Chevys, 1 1*62 RAMBLER. 4 DOOR SEDAN WITH RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE 5565, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Weekly payments tlhm mi Mn4 Cm 106 1963 AMBASSADOR WAGON BRAND NEW 1967 RAMBLER $1839 FULL PRICE ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP 134155 ar EM W 0 1965 VW 9-Passenger Bus with radio# heater. Ilka net throughout! $1495 HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. On M24 In Oxford, Mich. Chrysler-Plymouth - Jeep EASIEST GROWING Deoler IvM CHRYSLER 300 2-door Hardtop, fully equipped, 44,000 miles, new car warranty left..........$1695 1964 PLYMOUTH Fury Convertible, fully equipped with air condition, like new............... $1295 1965 CHRYSLER Newport, 4-door hardtop. Idedl family car. Warranty tool ..................... $1995 1963 VALIANT 2-door sedan, looks like new throughout, special ................................$ 749 1965 FORD Galaxie 500,2-door hardtop, fully equiped, very nice! ................ . ■ v............$1695 We have 3 CJ-5 jeeps available with plows, as low as ..................................... $ 995 1965 OLDS Dynamic 88 2 door hardtop, new car war-ranty. Fully equipped .......................$1895 ON DIXIE HWY.- NEAR Ml 5 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE ; 1966 — Cetalini Tampesl — GTO AS LOW AS $1995 1965 AS LOW AS $1495 1964- Bonneville — Grand Prlx — C i — Tempest. 58 ti $1195 to $1595 1963 Catalina 2-Door Hardtop $1195 and heater. Almost Ilka now. SfECIAL 1960 Falcon i roof reck, automatic, r $595 65 Mt. Clements St. At Wide Track Drive Prescription for the Cold . . . A RED HOT DEAL ON A BEAUTIFUL LATE MODEL USED CAR FROM JOHNSON'S One of Our Prescribed Cars Could Be "YOUR REMEDY" 1966 Pontiac.. $3395 4-Door loaded with automatic, power tleering, brakes and windows, power vents, air conditioning, automatic temperature control, black cordovan top, fontalne blue, whitewalls. Many, 1966 Tempest $2495 d brakes, rally wheels. I 1962 Pontiac.. $995 Star Chief 4-Door Sedan with a beautiful gold finish, matching trim, automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater and white-well*. Locally owned. 1963 Pontiac.. $1295 1964 Pontiac.. $1795 Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop. Guaranteed actual 1966 Pontiac.. $2895 Catalina Wagon, 9-Passenger. 1965 Chevy.. $1995 Bel Air Station Wagon with turquoise finish and matching trim. Automatic, radio, heeler, power steering, power brakes, whitewalls, V-8 1936 Packard.. $695 4-Door with e sparkling black finish, gueren- 1965 Pontiac.. $2095 Catalina 2-Door Hardtop with a deep blot finish, light blue matching frim, automatic, radio, heater, power steering end brakes, whitewalls. Locally owned, one-owner. 1964 Olds...$1295 "St" 2-Door Hordtop. Jot black finish, radio, 1965 Pontiac.. $2095 ..Catalina 2-Door Hardtop with burgundy finish, Mack cordovan top. automatic, power steering end brakes, whitewalls. Beautiful, one-owner. 1964 Pontiac .$1795 4-Door Hardtop. Beautiful light blue with matching interior, 234)88 actual miles. Power steering and brakes, automatic, radio, heater and whitewall tires. A real sharp, 1-owner car. 1966 Pontiac.. $2995 Bonneville Convertible. Finish It Mayfair maize with white top, leather trim .low mileage, has automatic transmission, power brakes end steering, whitewall tires. A real beauty- 1965 Catalina $2195 Convertible with Mayfair maize finish, black top, block trim, 12,000 mile*, radio, hooter, power steering end brakes, whitewall tires. 1965 Pcpit.iac .$2195 Catalina Convertible with ivory finish, blue top, blue trim, automatic, radio, heater, power steering and power brakes, whitewalls. Beautiful car all the way. 1965 Chevy... $2095 Caprice 4-Door Hardtop. Sparkling turquoise with black cordovan top, black trim, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater and 1964 Pontiac.. $1695 Catalina 2-Door Hardtop. Here Is a beautiful ____ tires, automatic, steering end brakes, w with matching Interior. 1966 Chevy... $2595 Capric* >000# Hardtop. Platinum gray finish, black cordovan top, Mack trim, automatic, radio, heater, power steering and brakes, 1965 Buick... $2395 Wildcat Convertible. Light blue with black top, automatic, radio, heater, power steering and brakes, whitewalls, locally owned, one-owner. 1965 Pontiac.. $2395 Bonneville Convertible. Platinum finish, white top, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater and whitewalls. One-owner. 1965 Mustang $1695 3-Door Hardtop. Gold finish, black Interior, 3- 1966 Chevy... $2495 Impale 4-Door Hardtop. Sparkling blue finish, black Interior, automatic, power steering end brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, 9,888 miles, factory warranty- 1956 Buick. Super 2-Door Hardtop. Here's with automatic, radio, heater, power brakes, Whitewalls. Blu .$495 1964 Pontiac.. $1295 Tempest Wagon, 4-Passenger, Automatic, 4-cylinder engine, radio, whitewalls and a bronze finish with matching interior. 1962 Pontiac.. $1095 Bonneville Convertible, m.......................... metic, power steering end brakes, burgundy with white top, matching interior. 1965 Plymouth $1795 1964 Buick., $1595 Wildcat with power tleering and brakes, automatic, whitewalls, radio, and a tinted windshield, tool Nice throughout! '-STOP 'N'*SEE-A Few of Our Prescribed Cars- Ask for Pat JarviS — Ken Johnson RUSS JOHNSON - ON 24 IN LAKE ORION -MY 3-6266 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1966 - g r; ■ F—11 20" Regal *»“ 21" Muntz $29*5 21" Philco •39“ This and That aSS®* !£&.«■ Usas*. of Jm ■ -* h*“ ft 33 Purpouv* 2V $39 6E l*» 21"Truetone $39*5 2I*SyMnia $3995 21" Westinghouse $39*5 *21" Hudson $39*5 24" Admiral $39*5 24" Olympic $39*5 18 DAY EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE FE 2-2257 WALTON TV 515 E. Walton Blvd.f CORNER JOSLYN OPEN 9 to 6 32 Achieve by ................... , effort 4 TaU wading M Small rodent 34 Tailor'* Mrt 25 Love |od amoothina Iron* 5 French itreem 26 Onager* 35 Indian conical «Bryophytie 27Kind of .tptfwJl 42BeM*t 43 Biblical .woMua 44 Nobleman 46 Get up . 47Liquid mean r- l 3 1 3 6 , B r 12 ii 14 nr id B is 14 1 ST 25 28 28 30 sr sr 42 41 44 l! 43 W St 52 53 54 5T 56 57 t —Television Programs— Programs fumtoHed by stations ttolod talfctocoluiimawoiibioettadMiigowItliotf notice t.WJBK.TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYz1tV, 9-CtaW-TV, 50-WKBD.TV, 36-W7VS THURSDAY EVENING 1:99 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “Baghdad” (IMS) Maureen O’Hara, Paul Christian, Vincent Price (SO) Superman ( SO Friendly Giant 1:15 (56) Science Is Everywhere 1:39. (2) (4) Network News (9) Twilight Zone (SO) FUntstones 7:00 (2) Divorce Court (4) Michigan Outdoors (0) Rogues (50) McHale’s Navy (56) Wayne State Sports Desk 7:30. (2) Jericho (4) Daniel Boone (7) Batman (50) Alfred Hitchcodc (56) Modem Supervision 0:00 (7) F Troop (9) Secret Agent (50) Perry Mason (56) Master Class 0:30 (2) My Three Sons .(4) (Special) Jack Benny (7) Dating Game 9:00 (2) Movie: “Love Ha - # Many Faces” (1964) Lana ; ; Turner, Cliff Robertson, Hu^h O’Brian (7) Bewitched (9) Horse Race (50) Movie: “Invisible Stripes” (1040) George TV Features Jack Behjjy Returns DANIEL BOONE, 7:30 p.m. (2) Half-breed Mingo, pnaing as a white ™»", investigates the mysterious disappearance of a Cherokee Indian. MY THREE SONS, 1:30 p.m. (2) Robbie’s pretty chemistry tutor (Susan Oliver) is sparking a different kind , of chemistry in the Douglas household. JACK BENNY, 0:30 p.m. (4) Jack Benny welcomes Madcap Phyllis Difler, singer-guitarist Trinl Lopez and file Smothers Brothers In his special toolkit. THAT GIRL, 0:30 p.m. (7) A jealous Ann Marie tries to solve a problem: If Don isn’t fickle, why is he seeing another woman? DEAN MARTIN, 10:00 p.m. (4) Arthur Godfrey, country mid western singer Eddy Arnold, comedian Dom Da Luisa and singer-dancer Elaine Dunn are Dean’s guests • • • , m HOT DOOI WITH THIS H6T0RE OF (WHO ELSE?) Man Testifies on Illegal Meat GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - A witness has testified that he processed unstamped meat for one of more than a dozen defendants charged in an alleged plot to sell meat of uninspected Allen Myers, 32, of Battle Creek, said he worked part-time in 1963 and 1066 at the Rockford farm of Roy and Doris Cooper ami handled the alleged unstamped beef, which he understood was to be sent to the Holland Meat Co. of Holland. ★ it it'- • The Coopers and the meat company are among the defendants. * ■ * * Testimony in the examination is being heard by Municipal Judge Louis Simhauser. COLOR TV SERVICE 6 AJLT0SP.M. "WeService AU Makes" OBIL TV SERVICE PHONE 334-9911 BUY, SELL, TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! National Post LANSING (AP)—Highway Department Safety Engineer E.D. Suino has been elected to the Executive Committee of the National Safety Council's Public Employe Section, the State Highway Commission said Wednesday. Jtafltfriit* RCA-ZENITH See Our Selection of Now RCA and ZENITH COLOR TVs Chock Our Low Solo Prices on PORTABLE TVs . Quality Color TV Service! ts YEARS EXPERIENCE . . . WE IBRVICa WHAT WE IEU.I --- - i, MlrtliM T.E.SA. Open Saturday 'til 1:00 P.M. Open Men. and Fri. Eye*, 'til 9.-00 P.M. CONDON’S RADIO & TV 738 West Huron - FE 4-9738 HOME IMPROVEMENT IS OUR BUSINESS Why Hot Deal Direct? Direct Supervision mYaur Job! Sinatra Fits Into the Role of a Doting, Dutiful Spouse- By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Frank Sinatra was a portrait of felicity and domesticity (that means a blissful husband) backstage at CBS’ ‘What’s My line?” show after he and “Mia Sinatra” signed in as mystery guests ... in fact, Frank told me one reason they’re in town “is to do some Chrlst-j mas shopping.” “Hey,” he said to John Charles Daly, “we gat to get together at Truman Capote’s ball (tin Mg masquerade for the Jet Set at the Plaza. Even to her mask, yon can spot Mia—in that haircut!” “I think Frank was really surprised about me being a guest,” said Mia who, by the way, has a new long grey mink coat gnaw Frank mentioned to me why he said he’d go to Capote’s ball despite the mob scene and hordes of photographers. “I got to go," he said. “She’s got a new gown." “Why aren’t you going to Truman Capote’s masquerade ball?” a friend asked Irving Hoffman, who replied, “Nobody masked me” ... ★ ★ ★ When I go to El Morocco, something nice happens, like the hatcheck beauty Eileen McKenna smiling at me. The other night, Maurice Uchitel, the proprietor, wrote out a check for $2506 to my pet charity, Fight for Sight, and gave it to me to tarn ever the Mildred Weisenfeld, the bund girl who runs It (Try to knock night clnbs after that!) ★ ★ ★ tHE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Prince and Princess Radziwill (Jackie’s sister) entertained Const Agnelli, of Fiat, at Voisin . . . Aren’t JnUe Christie and Terence Stamp very chummy again in “Far From the Madding Crowd”? .. . Sonny Werblin, Jets prexy, was at Danny’s after tough loss at Shea Stadium, was cheered up by Guy Lombardo. Secret Stuff: A famous baseball star is upsetting cafe performers with his bad manners ... A new movie mogul is acting like a veteran mogul — he’s already silencing a paternity Suit against him . . . Songwriter Eddie Lawrence’ll make his Broadway debut in the musical, “Sherry.” French star Charles Aznavour signed with Sinatra’s Reprise label to record his first album in English ... Mrs. Jerry Vale was stopped at the door of the Copa, where her husband’s starring: She was wearing pants . , . Sue Ane Langdon’U go nude again, in “Guide for a Married Man.” ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: “Ronald Reagan’s trying to get Hie California constitution changed to give him a run of the state contract.”—Win Elliot. WISH ID SAID THAT: Altai & Rossi described modern teenage etiquette: “The party is formal if the girls wear dresses,’ RKMRMBEMiP QUOTE: “Trust everybody — but cut the ds.” (Finley P. Dunne.) EARL’S PEARLS: Morty Gunty once played a small town restaurant featuring spaghetti roulette: Every sixth meatball was a hockey puck. At the Gagwriters Workshop, Joan Griffith reports she went out with a hip, swinging fellow: “But he turned out to be a Mp-swinging follow.” . •. That’s earl, brother. m* Hall lyoElcH. I*c> Raft, William Holden, Humphrey Bogart 9:36 (4) Hero (7) That Girl (56) N.E.T. Opera 10:96 (4) Dean Martin (7) Hawk (9) Telescope 16:16 (9) Chansons 11:66 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports (9) News 11:31 (2) Movies: 1. “Gun of Zangara” (1956) Robert Stack, Robert Middleton 2. “The Plainsman” (1637) Gary Cooper, Jean Arthur (4) Johnny Carson (7) Movie: “The Paradine Case” (1917) Gregory Peck, Ann Todd, ValU (9) Nightcap 12:36 (9) Window on the World 1:96 (4) Beat the Champ 1:11 (7) News 1:39 (2) News, Weather (4) News (7) Wanted - Dead c Alive FRIDAY MORNING No 8eleapiM’« Commi—ton—No MldJiaMB Profit! FAIRLY ROOMS “ *1,295 NO MONEY DOWM-FHA and BMW Mitt no rAYMmrs th. march war Member PatiNoc Chowfeaf of Commerce 1:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:29 (2) News 1:39 (2) Sunrise Semestert (4) Classroom (7) Three Stooges 7:99 (2) Bowery Boys. (4) Today 7:39 (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:09 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Romper Room 5:39 (7) Movie: “Golden Boy” (1939) William Holden, 'Barbara Stanwyck, Adolphe Menjou . 9:09 (2) Merv Griffin I (4) Living (9) Bonnie Praddaij Show (56) Rhyme Time 9:19 (59) All Aboard for Reading 9:39 (9) People in Conflict (59) Numerically So 9:51 (♦) New* • (58) Let’s Talk Spanish 19:99 (4) Eye Guess (6) Canadian Schools (59) Yoga for Health 19:19 (56) Numbers and Numerals 19:25 (4) News 19:99 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Wizard of Oz (SO) Love That Bob 19:25 (56) Science is Everywhere 19:19 (59) Let’s Talk Spanish 11:99 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Pat Boone (7) Supermarket Sweep . (9) Butternut Square (50) Dickory Doc 11:99 (59) Art Lesson 11:25 (9) Tales of the River Bank 11:20 (2) Dick Van Dyke (4) Hollywood Squares (7) Dating Game (9) Friendly Giant 11:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:59 (56) Memo to Teachers MORE-MORE FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:90 (2) News, Weather, Spurts (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:31 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Swingin’ Country (7) Father Knows Best (9) Communicate (50) Movie: “Boy Meets Girl” (1938) James Cagney, Pat O’Brien, Marie Wilson 12:35 (56) Let’s Talk Spanish 12:15 (2) Guiding Light 12:51(59) All Aboard for Reading 12:55 (4) News 1:15(2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “YeUowneck” (1955) Berry Kroeger, Lin McCarthy 1:19'(56) Science 16 Everywhere 1:25 (2) News (4) Doctor*! House Call (56) Adventures in Science 1:39 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) Newa (56) American History 2:55 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Newlywed Game. 2:20 (55) Numbers and Numerals 2:39 (2) House Party (4) Doctors . (7) Hme for Us (50) Peter Gunn 2:45 (56) Let’s Talk Spanish 2:55 (7) News 1:98 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (SO) Topper 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:39 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say! fj?^ — Radio Programs— WiNT»l)W«raH70)CM.W»0(l)WWJ(W01WCAIiaH0)WTOtl ALUMINUM SIDING YOUR COMPLETE HOUSE 22x24x1 Your Choice: FINANCE FUN AVAIUBLE UP TO 8 YEARS TERMS > COLORS • WOOD GRAIN $389 $25.95 par 100 oq. ft. As Low At • 0EDR00MS o REO. ROOMS 0 DORMERS o KITCHENS o FIREPUCES o HEATING $goo FAMILY ROOMS Per Weak a BATHROOMS » BASEMENTS • ATTICS »GARAGES » ELECTRICAL -BASEMENT A Han end Idea te left Veor Needs As Low _ New • IDEAS • MATERIALS 6QM STORMS F—IS THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 1, 1966 YANKEE +\tfl * n cmistmas 9VEI 7,500 MMOOS NOME TOYS BY: STORES • MATTEL * IDEAL • HASBRO • GILBERT • ALLIED DOLLS BAY SHORE • MILTON BRADLEY • OHIO ART • MARY OTHERS REG. *1.00 TO *5.00 TOYS OPEN NITES TIL 10 P.M. SUNDAYS 'TIL 7 P.M. Matters Chatty Baby 1 NURSERY I IOUTFIT 45-Piece Rocket MISSILE SET Unbreakable Nurse ............. Kir TV'S POPULAR e GUMBY 66 ROAD BUILDING READY-TO-FLY TRUCKS AIRPLANE QQC All the thrills ■Ul and authenticity ^^B ^^B of a real plane. ^ PRESIDENTIAL FAMOUS KENNER BONANZA PUZZLES COIN BANKS BAGPIPE BY M. 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