The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition Tjqntxac, Michigan, December 10,1963—38 pages Bolivia Struggle Ominous dicatioo it would free the union I irMiffm »!fli iiiir nf Ifr-Arnff-1 K(iilfltip\\ ^ j;f»*r"Tnfnt massed 3,000 * -rr"- "" 77 j icans, Thomas Martin, 27, of ernment of President Victor Paz soldiers in the Oruro area* 30 Fears mounted for the safety New. York, a U. S. Information Estenssoro and an offer by Pres-1 miles north oi Catavi, bat fid* of the hostages. j Agency officer. lident Johnson of .U. S.Jieip in ‘lowed a cautious policy in hopes The ultimatum did not'spell * * *; obtaining the release of the of protecting the hostages, out what the"consequences In a radio-telephone talk with hostages. - i ★ * w might be, but observers re- $«U.S. Embassy at La Paz, the «n,e ^pen^g crj8jg raised f In exchange for the hostages, called a similar crisis in 1949, Mvian capita Marfan said fearg #f armed conflict the miners demanded the re- when miners seized four ^fwdi but* £ 5?avv the troops Md ihtlease of union leaders Irineo Pi- American engineers, held ges were welt butunaer heavy now reported in con- anH ew.h/.a w^u-r them hostage briefly, then guard. TOe Red Cross also re- ^ #f five of Bolivia’s 25 ™ental and hilled them. P0^ they weroin good health nationalized tin mines. About government said they were One hopeful aspect was a re-! an“ were being treated well. • 4,(bj miners marched through arrested , on a court order on iport that Vice President Juan j IN DEFIANCE Oruro last night, shouting “to charges of committing nonpqjit- Lechin, leftist leader of the re-) The miners’ ultimatum came the wall” with. Paz Estens- ical, or common, crimes. No do- belling miners, had had friendly I in defiance of a heavy troop soro. tails were given. LA PAZ, Bolivia (AV-A struggle between Bolivia’&_gaBam-tHentranci Communist-led tin miners who hold four Americans and 17 others as hostages entered an ominous phase today. A 24-hour deadline set by the miners for me government to release two jailed Communist union leaders : ty “suffer1 the consequences” came and passed with no immediate word of developments on either side. The government had given no in- Crash Probers Eye field,Flight Record Firm 'Bled to Doath/ ELKTON, Md. (Jt) — The tragedy of Clipper 214 moved today into a mop-up search of a cornfield and the opening of a misshapen metal box. In the field just north of Elkton still lay scattered pieces of wreckage and some of the remains of the 81 persons who perished Sunday night in the explosion attct fiery craSh of a fan* / American World Airways f . ,l - The FBI threw up a wall of silence today, arouml the case of kidnaped Prank Sinatra Jr. as fears grew for the safety of the famed entertainer's 19-year*okl . FBI agent In charge, told m newt conference. As time passed with no word, of any ransom demand from the two gunmen who hustled young Sinatra into a Sierra snowstorm Sunday night, Sheriff Ernest Carlson said there is always fear for this victim’s Ufe in every kidnaping case, Did lightning, as some eyewitnesses said, really strike the plane as it’bucked an electrical storm near the end of its flight from Puerto Rico to Philadel-TJhiaTOr was itTBomb? '(0)r air turbulence? ( TOO EARLY, Federal investigators said it was too early to rule out any possibilities. They ruled out reconstruct . tion of the shattered plane as a step toward solution of the . mystery.____ “There is not enough left to reconstruct,” said Alan 8. Boyd, chairman of the Civil Aeronau- The worried‘father spent a sleepless night in a chair by the telephone in his Reno hotel room. Friends said he caught only fitful dozing naps fn keeping foe telephone vigil he was advised by FBI agents, to keep. slaughter. Welsh said Anderson’s office is on a high professional level. Ha~aataLhc would be retained. KEY EVIDENCE-Bill Hopper of the C|yil Aeronautics ^ holds battered, bqt still intact, flight recorder of the id Pan American flight 214. The recorder was found yesterday afternoon by CAB Investigators. The plane, en route tp Philadelphia crashed, killing all 81 aboard. i tEFT FKMJNDrGAGGED- John Foss, young Sinatra’s trumpet player roommate, said the gunmen left him bound and gagged on the floor of their tike. Tahoe motel room and took young Sinatra out into the In a statement telephoned from Santa Fe, N.M-, Walsh termed Anderson’s indictment "most unfodr.^"”^ “It is unfortunate that, members of the grand jury and the office of the prosecutor felt obliged to secure public officiiIs as scapegoats for the tragic explosion,” Welsh said. Anderson and Indianapolis police Chief Arnold Phillips are charged with neglect or their required inspection duties, Senate Lands Group Gives Approval WASHINGTON (AP)-A bill to establish- the Sleeping Beajr Dunes National Lakeshore area in Michigan was approved by the Senate Public Lands Subcommittee today. The area along the northeastern shore of Lake Michigan which . would be get aside is about 49.009 acres, approxl-matcly half what had . been proposed. The chairman of the subcottv mittee, Sen. Alan Bible,' D-Nev., said the Interior Committee Boyd” said the recorder — an instrument which charts the plane’s speed, direction, altitude and encountered gusts of air— was found yesterday near the main point of impact of the wreckage. SO COMPACTED 'tit was so compacted there is no way to tell at this time whether we can derive any useful information from it,” he assia vviu ivwaj ao vv fvt, agents and more than 70 otbT er officers pushed theta* hunt By REBA HEINTZELMAN By the looks of clothes in Pontiac area stores worn-i’s styles are becoming more and more dasual every • The price of Studebaker cars made in Canada and sold in the United States is expected to remain the same as (Current prices here. Explaining the policy of silence on the investigation, Ly-num asked the newsmen “to place yourselves in the other •fellow’s shoes.” Kennedy Coin This holiday time, a husband or boyfriend should have no trouble with huge bulky sweater gifts, nylon parkas of every color Ind style, r e a l1 comfortable lounging clothes, or slim* trim stretch pants. If she — or he — is a ski enthusiast there are new poles, glasses, mittens, alpine hats and wool-lined boots for relaxing in. .The officials said severance pay will be given ty salaried /employes. COVERED BY CONTRACT Union employes are" covered by contract provisions. These include supplepnntar unemployment benefits and some pension rights.1 Asked by LBJ FRANK SINATRA JR. WASHINGTON WMPresldant Johnson asked Congress today to authorize the Treasury Department to mbit a new 50-cenl piece bearing the likeness of the late President John F. Ken- probably would consider the’hill FBI agents joined the team of CAB disaster specialists on the crash scene, about 15 miles southwest of Wilmington, Del. ★ ★ Edwin R. Tully, special agent in charge of the bureau's Baltimore office, said the FBI was helping identify the victims. Lt. A. L. Willson said there had been no ransom message of any kind, . He predicted the committee would approve the meisure and the Senate may vote on it next hottest Items this year. Next comes the little self-adjusting cameras and third, binoculars which run from $39 to $80. There'! more fun in thq toy departments than eVer before. It isn’t necessary to get a live ■ the bill, cosponsored by Sens, Philip Hart and Pat McNamara, ; Michigan Democrats, originally involved 77,000 acres, including inland lakes which cover Tl,WO'' acres and South Manltou Island Which contain! 5,300 acrcp. The Interior Department Civil Rights “cBrlsTiiSvinH'^Hlnst hia« in u. s.-alded housing — PAGE A-Il. one cent (Lincoln) five cent pat .for-a present this year, as the battery, operated animats are the very^wxtUdng to being alive. One toy, a big gray ape, walks around beating. Its chest and bellows just like the fictitious friends of Tarzan. ROBOT’S BRAIN / A robot’s brain lights up. as it walks around talking. One little spaniel walks, begs and when the' eyes light up, It barks. It also nods its WeathermanSees Snow for Tomorrow of a president on the face of the coin. Kennedy would, replace Boh-jamin Franklin on the 50-cent Lodge QOP not very excited about latest possible candidate - PAGE B-8. K's Plan New program pushes toward consumer economy ■— PAGE C-8. More snow msy he expected in thq Pontiac area tomorrow. SANTtf HEIFER Mtt This would have increased the area to more than 02,000 acres and tha shoreline to 08 Partly cloudjrmd colder with the low near 23 is tonight’s fore- Area Nows ....’.......R-8 Astrology . ....... Bridge ................B42 Comics . ...........B-12 Editorials .......... A-8 Markets ...............C4 Obituaries ... C-S Sports . ... ....C-l—C-3 Theaters ............B-18 TV-Radio Programs C41 Wilson, Earl .........C-ll Women's Pages B-8—B-ll Because of opposition from hundreds of laikeshore home owners, the subcommittee out the size of the. proposed lake-shore areato-ahout 40,000 acres, eliminating many private rest* dential properties. ★ ★ ★ j The area In the compromise bill covert 30 .miles oi bays, bluffs, beaches and dunes on the mainland and 10 miles of shoreline on South MsnltoU Island. A gi een velvet crocodile sedms to move along with every joint in motion' Press a second button and it opens its mouth to let out* a terrifying squawk. Clerks cad’t figure out why -r but “Weilrd ohs” toys are the most popular put-together Between one and two Inches of snow, the first of the season except for a few. flurries, ... ■ the Pontiac area blanketed ,, ;iil through the night. ♦ w w » Twenty-eight Was the tow recording In the downtown area pmr to 8 a.m. today/The 2 n.m. readlngitwaa 28. SHOPPMStoYf to CHRMtMAt toys in the stores. There's the “way-out-cyclist” and the horrible “Mr. Gasser.” . THEY'RE OFF! - Police In squid cere chase a steer on a Merlon, lnd., street after It got loose yesterday en route to ,a packing 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 J Most Traffic Accidents Caifeed Average Motorist (TfttyJs. the final article in a series concerning the rise in traffic: fatalities in Oakland County this year.) By JIM LONG ' The ordinary driver—the one who occasionally breaks traffic laws without being <*aught — causes the most accidents, major and minor. It fy the motorist who has passed on a curve or gone through ig red or amber light that time and circumstance finally catches up to, according to safety experts. “Their luck finally runs out,” said Orrin Lucas, traffic analyst fori the Michigan State Police. , Drivers with bad records rep-resent only^a tjtnall amount of th^se cau8in|raccldent8, he said. NO PATTERN Oakland County has had 137 fatal accidents this year, » record high, but no pattern is evident to help halt the slaughter. Young and old have died on curves and straightaways in cities and on country roads during the day and at night. Police in larger departments have found that accidents can be reducedjm major streets by selective enforcement. ' ^ "w /-'★ Records- are kept of the areas -where the accident rate is high, and patrols are alerted to look for Specific violations during certain hours. TRAFFIC BUREAU 1 In Pontiac, the job is up to the traffic bureau, headed by Lt. Clayton Randolph. Reestablished a year ago, tiie traffic bureau has been assigned 18 men to work two eight-hour shifts, beginning nt 8 a.m. and ending at midnight, seven days a week. According to the National Safety Oouoefl.Sft ideal number of men attached to the traffic division would be 25 per cent of the total police department. * a '2 In tiie case of Pontiac, this %ould be about 28 officers. — ROYAL OAK fl In Royal Oak, where 13 persons have been killed this year, Police Chief Herman Potts said that the department has no traffic division, but that, “All of- ficers perform traffic service. There is no specialization.” •We have Always tried to be rigid in oar controls and Will continue this same way,” Potts said. Royal Oak has one radar unit that to used on streets where accident rates are high. Pontiac will get radar in toe near futur^T ” ' “Speed Is tiie main element— the difference between an injury and banged fender,” said Sgt. Robert Wachai of the Pontiac Police "Traffic Bureau. “If we can slow people down, we can reduce the .chance of accidents,” he said. Numerous ether recent-mendatious to comet the traffic sttaatiou have been made by participants of the Governor’s Regional Traffic Safety Conference. Among tome are regular full reexaminations of a motorist’s driving ability, instrument eye examination when a license is issuedand renewed, more difficult tests, statewide vehicle inspection, increased driver education and increased budgets for traffic safety action. Each year, thS Traffic Safety Committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, Hie many other argsntoattons ip the county, sponsors an automobile safety check free of charge to anyone wishing to have bis car inspected for defective equip-rent ■A A , A , Ad the same time, the Oakland Comity Optometric Society conducts vision, color and depth perception tests. Of those examined, about 20 per cent fail. The committee, headed by Dr. George A. Harkless, spon- sors a safety conference for teen-agers each year, torn was held recently at Peatiae Dr. HarUess said « major problem in promoting traffic safety is that “people detach themselves when reading or hearing about an accident. “They have that ‘It could never happen to me attitude.’ ” he said. Harkless said there is one consolation to offset the futility felt by safety groups. “It might be worse if they were not functioning at all” Zanzibar Joins List of African independents ZANZIBAR (AP) - A gold, green and red banner replaced the Union Jack today as the sleepy spice island of Zanzibar became Africa’s 84th independent nation. Amid volleys of rifle fire and the cheers of thousands, Britain’s Prince Philip, represent^ ing his wife, Queen Elizabeth II, handed over an act of the British Parliament making Zanzibar a free and independent state again after 73 years under BritisbprotecUon.—— WARNS PEOPLE Prime Minister Sheik Shamte Hamadi warned his people independence “does not mean distribution of loot — nor does it mean less work and more pay. It means unleashing the pent-up energies of our people.’’ Such an effort Wilt be needed if Zanzibar is to raise its an-nuai per capita income of $56. Britain vrill grant indepen- dence Thursday to another East African territory, Kenya. Both will become members of, the United Nations Mopday. With its sister island of Pemba to the,north, Zanzibar has an area of 1,020 square miles and a population of 300,000 Africans, Arabs and Indians. In a message to the Sultan uf Zanzibar, Seyyid Jamshid Bin Abdulla, President Johnson said the United States welcomed the emergence of the new nation and has “ watched with great interest and satisfaction as the tide of freedom has rolled across the African continent.” ■ - .A - . One reason for American interest in Zanzibar , is the presence of a U.S. satellite tracking station, part of a globe - girdling electronic network. Soviet Preipier Khrushchev announced Soviet recognition of the new nation and wished it success in “the building of a new life.” > NATION PINPOINTED -The map locates the newly independent nation of Zanzibar (underlined) which' includes Zanzibar and Pemba islands. PHILIP AT CEREMONIES — Britain’s Prince Philip, representing his wife ‘Queen Elizabeth, sits with the Sultan of Zanzibar during ceremonies today celebrating Zan- zibar’s independence. The prince was present to hand over an act of the British Parliament making Zanzibar independent after 73 years, of British protection. Commission .Meeting Tonight UR Revision Up for Action The proposed plan revision for Pontiac’s R20 urban renewal project will be ready for actiqn at tonight’s City Commission ‘meeting- e' ,■ 1 ■/ Commissioners will act on a resolution authorizing the city to Ask federal urban renewal officials in Chicago for approval of tiie revised plan and budget.. Federal approval Is needed The Weather Fall U.8. Weather'Bureau Report , PONTIAC AND VICINITY~-Mostiy cloudy little temperature change today, high 31. Partly cloudy and colder fonlght, tow S3. Wednesday cloudy Utile temperature change with snow, high SB. Northwesterly winds 15 to 38 miles per hour TMMy In F r tamfSnrtur* j ;.m. T#TT^**.......| io a,m.1...a» (•tnKinM Jtwnitwn) Mih imMrt , WMthori Mow 1.1 li Hlghnt tomptroturi .... Lowctt tomporoturi,....... Moon. mnporoturp '.,. . Weather: Few llurrlei MMSoy'l Temperelure Chert »rt Worth M M HI 8 __ _ji Anosiss Is 4| MerqueHe 30 33 Miami Bch. 70 60 Sir 11K8 K ^tlaC ft K. g i rcH%cco $ 8 Cincinnati St 75 ft, ft. Mint 34 13 Danvftf I 13 iftOftia 4ft a) m JilXon ti NATIONAL WEATHER-There will be predpitafion over • large section of the nation tonight. The southern Plains and southern Mtorisslppi Valley will hiVf rail) and showers while heavy snow la expected in the northern and cehtral Plain*, flflnw flurries are predicted for toe central Rookies, toe QrailLakee and toe northern Appalachians. Colder aeeer noat of toe country. before the n^w R20 plan can be executed. It is expected to take about five months to get that approval. The revised R20 budget pro* poses that the R20 net project cost be upped from 33.4-million t> $7.8-millIon. CITY’S INCREASE A similar increase In non-cash credits ls proposed to cover an Increase in the city’sahare of the project cost. Proposed Is a slight increase In tiie size of R28 area but another 45 structures would be razed, mostly within the present project boundaries. MailTaxBills in Waterford Tax statements amounting to 84,156,263.76 were mailed yesterday by Waterford Township Treasurer Mrs. Dorothy Olson to some 30,000 property owners. Based on aerate of $86.62 for each $1,606 of assessed valuation, toe bills Include county, school and township tax ip sessments. This year’s tax rate Is up $12.43Jrom4be~4962 rateof $73.59 per $1,000 assessed valuation, Last year’s billing amounted to $3,320,512.11. Or A Or Moat of the increase In the current tax over last year it' due to a hike In the school tax rate from $57.77 to $00.40 per $1,000 assessed valuation. TOWNSHIP TAX This tyar’s township tax is $6.45 compared to *3.17 per $1,000 assessed valuation levied last year, ■*** * -A Or* *______________ The 1903 county tax rose to $13.17 per $1,000 assessed vdluatlon from $12.8d last year. A A 1 A Tax bills may be paid until Jain. 20 without penalty, according to Mra. Olson. After toll date, a 4 per cent penalty will be levied, Once approved by federal officiate, this new plan and budget will be subject to a public hearing locally and final approval by the City Commission. " “W" A A 1 , ■ ■ . It would then be sent back to Chicago for final federal approval and contract signing. EXPANDED PLAN The expanded plan and budget is designed to make up for ex-cessive R 20 expenditures to date and to improve redevelopment; plans by removing structures that are not feasible to rehabilitate, as originally planned.' ___Also on the agenda for the 8 p.m. meeting is a recommendation from the planning commission that the Perimeter Road should not be re-*•named.— 1 Action tg expected on a resolution offered last Week to call the highway “John F. Kennedy Drive.” | .r - t«W j Action is also slated o resolution whereby the city would agree to pay $18,000 to the American Legion Cook-Nelson Post No. 20 for a triangular piece of land at Oakland and Saginaw. NEEDED FOR ROAD The parcel, on which the city's annual Christmai tree now stands, Is needed foe right-of-way for a proposed Interior loop road. Public hearings anil final adoption are slated for ordinances to tyzone, from residential to commercial, properties on the east side of Oakland, Panraroto to Orlando, and on toe north side of South Boulevard, between Going and East Boulevard. A public hearing is also slated on the proposed vacating of a portion of Bondate. Other business included planning commission recommendations involving reeonlng proposals for properties on Second and East Pike. Highway conihruction workers dug up the bones of a prehistoric elephant which experts estimated had died over] one million years ago, in ItiM Rights Move by Broomfield WASHINGTON-Oak-land County’o Republican representative William S. Broomfield joined 130 other congressmen yesterday-in an effort to force early action on the - administration’s civil rights bill. ♦ ,:W ’ Brownfield said today he signed a petition to discharge the bill from the House Rules S«e Story, Pago A-5 Committee in “the hope that we can resold this issue as soon as possible. Consideration Is long overdue.” A ‘ A A’ The congressman said he looked favorably upon the bill as it now stands. But he said he could not foresee what lie will think of it after it runs the gauntlet of debate and amendments — If it ever gets on the floor to do so. v* ‘—...A A Broomfield said he had received more than *00 letters and telegrams over toe weekend urging, him to sign the petition. Most of them, he said, were from clergymen. Warren Counselor Deatfi Probe WASHINGTON (AP) - Chief Justice Earl Warren announced today appointment of J. Lee Rankin, former U.S. solicitor general, aa general counsel for the1 commission Investigating toe assassination of President John F. Kennedy. - A A' A Warren, chairman of the com-,mission, Mid a summary of the FBI report on the assassination Was given the commission Monday evening, but no announcement of its contents will be made until toe commtealon has studied It. * ‘ A A «tb! A ; The FBI summary consisted of five volumes, including exhibits, Warren Mid. Each member of the seven-man commie* lion got a copy. ™ ■!, ' " LBJ Decision Would Hit AF ReportPlan to Drop Dyna-Soar Project WASHINGTON Next, he moved to Liverpool and started the whole operation again with St - year-old Thomas Corrigan as front man. Agin the money poured in. DEMAND BIGGER CUT Then Bailey’s bodyguards deni a n d e d a bigger cut. He wouldn’t give it. One tipped off the police'. At Nottingham Assize Court yesterday Bailey was cob-victed on nine charges of false fraud. Corrigan pleaded guilty Lf 1*2200, l>l 3*7933 DU 3*6300 791*1300 ^r -: JUNK CARS Ship Hijacker's Speech Angers Africans at U. N. UNITED NATIONS, NY. (AP)~Henrique Gahrao, the hijacker of the Portuguese liner Santa Maria, waited in a New York hotel room today for a plane back to Bmtl hffer a U.N. appearance that angered African delegates who sponsored ft. ' 4r It ★ Galvao defied the threat of extradition to Portugal to appear before the U.N. Trusteeship Committee and discuss his country’s rule In its African territories, MEMBERSINCENSED African members of the committee were incensed when Galvao, former governor of Angola expressed doubts that Portuguese Africa was ready for Independence and questioned whether African unity moves would meet with success under present conditions. , * * * Galvao also denounced Portugal’s dictator, Premier Antonio de Oliveira Salazar, but said . Salazar could not be removed unless the United States, Britain and France stop supporting his regime. Sr. * * Committee chairman Achkar Marof of Guinea warned Galvao to limit his remarks to Portugal’s African territories of An: gola, Mozambique and Portuguese Guinea. Marof interrupted Galvao repeatedly .when he veered from the territories to African problems in general. HEADS FOR BRAZIL Galvao was expected to take a plane tonlght back to Brazil, where he has been a refugee since he and a band of rebels ' hijacked the Santa Maria in <1961. ....W..+ -— As he arrived by airliner in | New York a. representative of the, Portuguese Embassy In Washington called at the State Department to request Galvao’s extradition to Lisbon. He faces a 22*/ear sentence there, given hint In absentia in connection with the seizure of the liner and the killing of an officer of the ship. A State Department spokesman said the United States would fulfill its obligations under the I90tf U;s.-P6rtugUese extradition treaty. It was apparent, however, that the U.S. government would not complete processing of the extradition request until Galvao had left the ^country. Pan Am Crash 2nd for Pilot 1949 Air Collision Resulted in 2 Deaths NEW YORK (AP) >- The pilot of the Pan American World Airways plane that crashed Sunday night near Elkton, Md., killing 81 persons, was involved In a collision in the air over Long Island 1$ years ag6. « The pilot, Capt. George F. Knuth of Huntington Station, was at the controls of a Pan Am Constellation when it collided with a two-passenger Cessna on Jan 80,1949, killing the two occupants of the latter craft. < * * ★ Knuth managed to land his plane safely, saving the lives Of 81 aboard. - He brought the plane Into Mltchel Field with parts of the smaller craft still embedded In the Constellation, lie crash occurred several miles away over Port Washington. v wee I In the 1949 accident, Knuth had faced negligence charges bat was cleared after hearings by the Civil Aeronautics Board. Knuth’s wife and four children survive him. He was a veteran of 22 years service with the line and had been Air Safety Chair-man of Council 17 of the Airline Pilots Association in the New York area. mmmm v i Sm- lim ml wu: wrn Mf? In THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 Dem to Talk at Ceremonies U.S. Sen. Patrick V, McNamara will bev the featured speaker at ground. - breaking ceremonies for a new addition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Sunday. The ceremony it slated to istrator. It wUl be held oa grounds in front of the hospital. The new, five - story wing will house private, and semiprivate patient rooms and a new emergency departonent. .It is a major part of the first phase of. a long-range expansion and improvement program. FIRST PHASE 7 The first phase is estimated to cost some $3.5 million. _ Walter K. WOlman, Vice president of the hospital's lay advisory board, will be master of ceremonies. Scheduled to break ground for the addition are Mother Mary Justine, Mother Provincial of the Detroit Province of The Sisters of Mercy; Dr. Alvin R. Larson, president of the med-icai staff; Stster Mary Xavier; and Willman. ■ . * - *.... *..... The Right Reverend Mon-signor Eugene Paddock, pastor of Holy Name Parish in Bir-mtogham,'.will offer the invocation and bless the site of the new Future NavyMen Must Sign Soon College students interested in becoming officers in the U.S. naval Reserves wore reminded today that Dec. 31 is the deadline for sumbitting applications for commissions. Conunander John R. ‘Tobin, commanding officer of the Na-val Reserve in Pontiac, said the applications can be obtained from the training center at 469 East Btvd. south. After two summer cruises, earning of a degree and successful completion of Officers Candidate school, the candidate receives a cotiunissfon as an ensign. ...' 1J Bill Petition Seeks Showdown WASHINGTON (AP)-A drive i force a House vote on civil rights legislation early next year inched ahead today after a whirlwind start Monday. tidn to wrest control Of the bill from the feet - dragging Rules Committee and line it up for four days of debate and a showdown vote on the House floor, probably about Jan. 27. To be successful, the petition must have the signatures of 118 House members. Not until then Huge Protest Rally Planned in Atlanta ATLANTA, Ga. . ’ year-old Cart Hayden of Arizona president pro tempore of the Senate. Both are Democrats. The founding fathers, when Ahey put the —-— Constitution together, ducked the proh lem of saying who should resume the power of the president if the president and vice president died. They left it to , Congress. Congress passed its first act in this field in 1792. It put the' Senate’s president pro tempore and the* speaker of ' the "Hoo^*" next in succession beTiirfd tne vice pretl-dent. ★ ★ ★' Then in 1886, Congress changed the law, eliminating the two congressional officers and putting the president’s Cabinet in line of succession, starting with the secretary of state. TRUMAN ACCEDES Another 59 years passed and in April 1945, president Franklin D. Roosevelt died. Vice President Harry S. Truman became president. * If Truman had died then, under the 1886 law, his successor would have been Secretary of State Edward. R. 8tet-tinius Jr. - Cn June49rl945, eight d&yo hefore he ae- cfepted Stettinius’ resignation! Truman asked Congress to change the 1888 law. He wanted the Cabinet taken 'out of direct line of succession. COMBINATION LAW They changed the law, making it a kind of combination of the 1888 and. 1792 laws. Next in line behind the vice president ire the speaker ef the House, ti>o Senate’s president pro tempore, and the Cabinet, starting with the secretary of WASHINGTON - One of the most dangerous tendencies nowhdays is the inclination to deal with any i n c onvenience in .the life of , the nation by saying, ‘‘Le t the government take . care of ' it'.", , The latest] example of this trend is the an-1 nounced deter-' ' AWRPNCE mination of the LAWRENCE Federal Communications Commission to regulate what shall he. presented to the people on radio or television. No such power is reatly granted under the Constitution to any governmental agency.. The FCC insists it is not ap-' plying censorship but merely fixing “standards.” may become more economical. This constitutes governmental interference with price-making by a private enterprise. It negates the principle back of the' whole free-enterprise system, It is argued, of course, that "-radio and TV are different, be- cause the air waves are con-trolled by the government. It implies that," because the government controls the air waves, it can decide whether they shall be used for music or drama or comedy and to what extend each form of entertainment shall be allowable. -------- r ‘Others Stopped—Big Industry Wouldn’t’ The display of calloused indifference by big business on the day of Kennedy’s funeral was disgraceful. Big industry would not shut down. The leaders of nations from around the world could take .time to come to this country for the funeral, but industry would npt John J. Zepf Bob Considine Says: The Better Half Johnson Will Move Fast,_ Using Power as FDR Did A blunt, Just now the controversy is centering on how many "commercials” can be used in connection with a given program. . Offhand, this might seem a plausible regvtottom.__________ DISLIKES INTERRUPTIONS The average person doesn’t like to have his radio or TV programs interrupted so much ahd, on the surface, it would appear logical that the FCC should have control over “commercials." * But those who acquiesce In the use of such authority haven’t stopped to examine Just what is involved. If there are top many_“com-mercials," for instance, the public'has the right to decline ' to listen to them, and the advertisers could soon discover .1 that they are not getting the sales results they anticipated. This is the natural way for the subject to be dealt with under a free-enterprise systems NEW YORK -thought - provoking bf President Lyndon B. Johnson and a shrewd guess at the course he will' follow has Just been mailed to the 30,900 members of The Re- Inc., in this c o u n try and abroad. The chev,, chances arethey’ll take each other’s measure quickly, get down to business with little trouble. “khrushchev will immediately sense in Johnson a fellow-’ cougar from the woods. Both men stem from the soil; neither has so-called cultivated manners. Khrushchev will detect in the new president a measure of the maturity that one tough and well-scarred fighter recognizes in another.” ’Say with one of those I could sleep forty minutes longer and you could drive mo to work while I shaved and ate breakfast.” ■ CONSIDINE members are largely industrialists, corporation heads, labor leaders and diplomats. Leo Cherne, executive director of the institute, grants us permission to quote from the copyrighted'effort. “The presidency is a personal office . . . LBJ’s method Is profoundly 1 different from his predecessor’s. His tastes, bis. choice of people, his personal philosophy, his articulation, copld hardly be more different . .. In Washington: World ‘Getting to Know’ Johnson If, however, the government |s to step In and regulate media In the past week, there was increased discussion about the presidential succession. Former President Dwight D. Elsenhower, writing TnthV Saturday Evening. Post, suggested the 1947 law be changed back to the 1886 iaw. But over the weekend, McCormack said he favors the pfesent law "not because I’m in it but because I feel It's the best way, of solving the problem.” ' ■ In view of this statement, Congress Isn’t likely to change the law to eliminate McCormack and Hayden, particularly the House and particularly McCormack. He has been a member of the House 35 years. The Democrats who run the House elected him speaker. They’re not likely to do anything which might be considered an affront to him. Verbal Orchids -to— But duapltc thin ray of hope in tn otherwi«* cloudy area, the Organization of Atlantic Staten find ita economic instrument, the Alliance for Progress, face many' William' Meiers of Rochester; 81st birthday. Mrs. Minnie Adams of Lake Orion; 81st birthday. Herman Ehrckel of expression, the responsibility for a business failure that may ensue is not going to be assumed, by the government.. It la the business itself which will have to bear the expense and the losses when' it finds itself with reduced profits and diminished opportunities adequately to compensate Its employes. FURNI8HMONEY--------- The “commercials” which sustain a radio or television program furnish the money to pay for the over-all cost of the talent, the cost of the various stations and their personnel, and the cost of the services of the many Individuals/ employed . in the actual production of shows. The whole operation involves the delicate question of price-making by the broadcasting companies. ‘ To fell the radio ot TV stations how many “commercials” they can carry is in reality to fix prices. It means that, Instead of the cost being spread over several advertisers, it will have to be borne by a smaller number who will ' “He will rpove 1° assert control fast, like Truman: LBJ WANTS to be president, has no inner doubts about^ his abilities, in the job. He loves power, loves to use it. You'll see him dealing with issues In something like FDR’s way. .. PROGRESSIVE "He's neither a conservative nor a liberal. He’s actually a “Progressive in the old Teddy Roosevelt sense — a frontiersman’s prkto in his country, a passion for property, a big dam - and ■> conservation 'Popu-list,’ a belief in using government against ‘theapeclalln-forests.' LBJ has always had the Negro and Mexican volte in Texas, Is as committed as JFK on civil rights, but dislikes direct actions like sit-ins, marches; ’’What happened (its Dallas) is u blow to Khrushchev on virtually every level. Now Khrushchev can’t be SURE that the East-Wijst detente will continue. By PETER EDSON WASHINGTON (NEA)--U. S'. Information Agency — the government’s International public relations arm— has pulled out all the stops to mdke the world better acquaint ed with new President Lyn-i don Johnson. ‘This effort began Nov. 22L after President 1 Kennedy’s as- EDSON saslnation when sasinaumi nmn , ■ ■ the Vice President took the oath of office that made him head of the American government. It reached a high point with Voice of America’s worldwide, live broadcast Of President Johnson’s speech to Congress early Wednesday afternoon, Nov. 27. In those five dayi Volce of America was on the air 22 —hours a day and USIA world-wide wireless dispatches were greatly extended beyond their normal 10,000 words a day. Monitored In 111 American overseas poster tills full nows coverage formed the basis (or Information services provided foreign governments to project a dally picture of the important events happening in the United have less frequency and less time on the afar and pay a of Wallod^Ldke; 80th birthday. hlghpr price. This may force tv and radio advertisers to other media which “Tho America he saw during thp period of mourning, the quick, efficient transition of power in full public view, tin way most of the world’s peoples rallied around the U. S., the sight of Africans mourning Kennedy's death and of students In Saigon and Berlin demonstrating their support, all j conveyed to the Kremlin a shat-I taring sense of American power and influence. ' "When LBJ meets Khrosh- Tht total effect was to assure the world that the change in presidents had not changed American foreign policies and that the American government remained strong. Implement the Kennedy Ideas and Ideals and to work tor re-1 moval of the main causes of u. S.-U. S. S. R. friction. This theme was rebroadcast in many languages by Radio Moscow. But some Communist doubts were expressed on the new President’s statement that the United States would keep its commitments from South Viet Nam to West Berlin. Western European news media showed much encouragement and increased confidence in U. S. leadership after the Johnson speech. This came after the sophisticated European press had expressed great disbelief that the events in Dallas happened Just 'si reported and tor the motives given. There were other minor dissents. Yugoslavia was grateful that Johnson did not mention Cuba, but Japan’s Socialist party regretted that ho did not mention the Far East more "specifically. ““ t From Africa there was gcat-tered concern that PMeldent Johnson’s southern background might have some eftoct on his support for civil rights. Communist Chlna’i ’’People’s Daily" predicted that the U S. imperialist policies wttl not change and that Johnson will continue Kennedy policy. Voice of America has made - no answer to these criticisms, other then by following the usual policy of reporting the news straight and factually as it happens. This may have been particularly helpful in The Job now is to continue familiarizing foreign public opinion with President Johnson’s personality and views. This is the assignment that USIA television, newsreel, picture and news feature services hove taken on. •A half-hour documentary on President Johnson is now being put on video tape by two Emmy award winners who volunteered for the job. • Two complete television shoWs on Johnson’s life and career are being prepared, with Spanish voices tor Latln-Ameri* can audiences. ■,: • • Newsreel clips are being prepared tor 35 areas where there is no commercial news file. • A six-page insert photographic Ufo story of President Johnson will go into the Pol-lish and Russian editions .of "Amerlka,” > the USIA Illustrated monthly magazine. • A 16-page color cartoon book on President Johnson'S life is being prepared for distrlbu-tloii in Latin America, Africa and frn President Johnson was transmitted by wireless to USIA's throe production centers in Mantis, Beirut and Mexico City. . Both booklets, of a type popular in the developing countries, will be printed in many languages for worldwida distribution, In millions of copies. Foreign reaction to the broadcast of Presidoat Johnson’s speech, ns analyzed by UnA’i research staff, has been generally favorable. Moscow expressed cautious approval of ^Johnson's pledge to' iron curtain. Russia has made no attempt to Jain VOA broadcasts for some weeks. So Russia’s internal broadcasts that the assassination was jhe result of a Trotsky lie conspiracy with the American radical right and the «Ku Klux Klan were disproved. -resMtoe. MjjjieH Yon will find outstanding WHITE DRESS SHIRTS by ARROW, HATH. AWAY, and VAN HEUSEN In every conceivable collar style and fabric From lustrous broadcloths to luxurious oxford cloths ... the range is sure to please every man; Shown at right is the VANALUX by VAN HEUSEN. In wash ft wear all-cotton with medium point collar, permanent stays, and convertible cuffs. The pictured FREE GIFT BOX and attached Card are included with the purchase of two shirts. The Shirts: $5 each. REMEMBER: A BIG COLLECTION OF COLORED SHIRTS IS ALSO .AVAILABLE AT ALL STORES. enneiff WAYS FIRST QUALITY* MEN'S DRIVING GLOVES For dress! Sport! Give the warmth of woo], the strength of nvlon with added luxury of horsehide palm. Great to give and get Looks like much more! In black, beige, grey. STORES FOR MEN S BOYS Use One of Osman's Individualized Charge Plant FREE PARKING DOWNTOWN . TEL-HURON CENTER FE 4-4551 FE 4-4541 OPEN EVERY NITE 'til THE PONTIAC PR] SS. m TUESDAY; DECEMj MBER 10, ,1963 A—7 Foreign Newt Commentary By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst Despite determined official optimism, an undertone of disquiet rims through news dispatches from Southeast Asia where in the the States has in-Vest e d so much.' In South Viet Nam t he young, generals who took wo* . after the over- NEWSOM throw of the Ngo Linh Diem government, are pursuing the war against the Communist Viet Cong with greater vigor. Out of 17,500 American troops in South Viet Nam; 1,000 are expected home in time for the new year. eight yean way, also -fought hard against the Communists but failed to win the people. After the harsh rule of Diem and his. brother, Ngo Dinh Nhu, in Saigon, at least, the new military regime has the people’s support. Saigon has regained its gpie-ty, die bistros are filled, though guarded against a surprise Communist grenade, and Buy Vietnamese women in their bright silken gar-meats pedal through die city’s tree-lined streets. It’s as if, beginning at thp city’s outskirts, there were no war. And dut paht^TiTthr source of some of the disquiet. The Diem regime, in its own can |w translated into an afloat national effort against the Viet Cong is another matter. More and more it is being recalled that in their 10-year effort to hold Ihdo-China, the French, won every battle but the And the United States’ own experience in Laos and in South Viet Nam all too often has seemed to* demonstrate that only the disciplined and indoctrinated Communists feel a real reason to fight, and that a national will is lacking. PSYCHOLOGICAL HELP In (he end, neither aid nor military success will win the battle for Southeast Asia without accompanying political and psychological determination of the people themselves. And that b the field In which die new miUtaiy regime mast prove itself. Other events give reason for disquiet over the future of Southeast Asia. Pnompenh, capital of Cambodia, 200 Americiui advisers are getting out cln orders of Cambodia’s e 1 e c t e d chief-of-state, Prince Norodom .Sihanouk, who has cancelled the American aid program which has been running at $30 million a year, SEES NEUTRALITY Sihanouk believes the . w a r against the South . Vietnamese Viet Cong already is that he must prepare his country for a neutrality acceptable to Red China. In neighboring Laos, pro-Communist forces control two-thfads of the country. In Vientiane, Its capital, the fifth political assassination of a government official this year demonstrated that the country still is far from achieving the neutrality decreed for it by the major powers at Geneva. The news b not all bad. The Communbts are suffering losses and the cost of aiding the Communist effort in the South b a tag heavily upon the Reds rthf Viet Nam. President Johnson has reaffirmed that the United States will continue its efforts in South Viet Nam. It b a decision which may have to be reaffirmed again and again in the. years Damage to 61. Jets Probed at AF Base WILLIAMS AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz. (AP) - Federal agents investigating the deliberate damage to 61 jet trainers at Williams Air Force Base could offer no new information today. Landing gear wires on the T38 trainers were found cut Monday morning during a normal pre - flight check. Wing _ Commander Col. William C. Lindley Jr. ordered all 75 trainers grounded. T## ■*'. ★ Lt. James Ridley, base information officer, said the sev-have caused the landinggearhot'^^ and short-circuited the electrical system: OPEN MONDAY thru SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9 P. M. County Boards to Draft 28 Mon In January Oakland County draft boards will provide 28 of the 74Q Michi-military inductees in January, Col. Arthur A. Holmes, State director of Selective Service, announced. The six boards and their quota are No. 65, 2; No. 66, 5; No. m, 4; No. 323, 10; No. 67, 5; and No. 331, 2. 2nd Hearing Soughf In Drug license Case Lansing iAP)-The supeRx drug licensing issue was revived Monday as Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley declared he will rfsk the State Supreme Court for a rehearing of the case. The high court, in a 5-3 decision, last Thursday ordered the State Pharmacy Board to issue SupeRx a drug license for its Battle Creek store, overruling a 1962 decision by the board.. ............ The deebion had seemed to end the 15-month controversy by the 'case, during which Gov. George Romney asked in vain for the resignation of pharmacy board director David Moss. ’ | ■■■ stirred Keliev sought a rehearing 'because of the .far-reaching implications of this decision upon the administrative procedures as they pertain to state agencies and the appeal of decisions from these agencies.” Solicitor General Robert Der-engoski explained that, as the attorney general’s office views the admtabtrative procedures law, an appeal of a ruling by a state agency should be made in -Ingham County-Glrcuft Court. SupeRx attorneys, however, appealed thie board ruling directly to the State Supreme Court, which in turn asked Cat-houn County Judge Creighton Coleman to determine the facts of the case. After receiving Coleman’s report and hearing additional testimony, the high court made its decision. ' '* ★ •* * Derengoski said other questions would be aired at the rehearing unless ttie court restricts it to the specific issue. One such questlori, Bsrengoskf said, would deal with the so-called .‘'godfather clause” of thephaMiTOy . allows-prospeetive-owners 4o bypass the requirement that least 25 per cent ownership must be held by a registered pharmacist, if the pharmacy has been to continuous operation since before the code was adopted in 1909. The Owl Drug Store of Battle Creek, which is being operated by SupeRx, qualified for its license under the clause, according to the majority opinion of the high court. ' FU1X SIZE DESK .. . with bonus accessories pl.t. desk witambl*. Lgrg* 42"xJO" — 7 Pieces scratch* stain, resistant. Hi- . plastic lop. Two large deep—. 144 Oakland Ava. Open Evaninj Until Chri»tm< Careful Free Delivery—Convenient Terms <6nte him (Dattmn’s Slack that from 14 to tin * Slaova lengths 30 to 34 _____ OIFT. A smell deposit helds It till Christmas. Medium-ipraad "Whip" Snap-Tab collar In broad- Button-down collar In lieh collar by Arrow.------- doth by Hathaway. oxford waava by Van Hainan. $4.60 $6.96 $5 a part of Christmas since 1931 CO THIS PofejlAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1968 Our value-minded selections promise gift ideas you’ll be proud to give. Many timely savings, too. Use your convenient Hudson’s Charge Account! ‘ V j completely accessorized holiday cloth Gay Holiday Bells print makes a cheerful - setting for your table ... is repeated in matdiing accessories below to carry through your festive theme. Heavy-quality cotton requires little or no •ironing; is colorfast, stays new-looking longer. Larger 12x70.1.99 60x90.,4,99 60x108,.6.4? 68-inches round. .. .4*59 17x17 nophttij.. ,39c Left to rightt APRON of absorbent cotton imycloth TABLE RUNNER, 17x52-incbes........... TOWELS in quick-dry terry ........... PLACE MATSt 12x18. Red ground .. Luxury-smooth percale, dashed with ’Echotone1 dots1 in shades of rose, gold, blue, avocado, persimmon. 72x108“ with solid-color border; twin fitted bottom in overall pattern. (UxIOH or1 full bottom fitted . 3.9?; 42xi8 cases.. ,ea. 98e damask-weave Irish linen cloths Our own import! Exquisite woven-pattem in pure Irish linen ... an elegant beginning to any meal. Heavy-quality clod) in snowy white has reversible pattern. Lrrgsr 66x102 cloth....9.99 66x120. 11.99 Dinner-site 20*20 napkins. 69c PQyTIAC PjRESS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1968 boys' corduroy iblvts little boys' boxer waist, iinodr slacks girls' cotton corduroy warmly-lined slacks You’i*j» ^Ifilrlwg slacks. Elaaticized-back cot* ton corduroy give, so much wear, yet takes so little care. Cotton flannelette lined for extra warmth. Black, red or green In girls* sixes 7 to 14. Cotton knit tnrtl+noek SHIRT; prhti on whit*; sires 8 to 14 ..........$1 For your young man on the move ... rugged cotton corduroy slacks that can really take it. Fully lined with cotton flannelette for plenty of warmth. Full elastic boxer waist. Washable. Navy, brown, charcoal, lodan; 4, 6, 8. Uttte boyt' cotton knit SHIRT; variety of ttripot; sixes 4 to 7........79« Give him both styles . . . watch his ayes light up! Both ate long wearing, easy-care cotton corduroy with button* down collars. A. ZIPPER CLOSURE placket front. Red, blue, olive; 8 to 18. I, REGULAR button front Long sleeves for warmth. Rid, blue, gold color, olive in 10 to 20, oh what fun it is to look her Christmas-pretty best Ride a pastel poodle . . . cuddly ray on plush poodle Is full 19-inches long. TOlUt pink, lavender. , The small viewer’s TV armchair. Prat ty, rayon plush bedroom addition for tAd Brown or bales. Utile girls' emplr^style dress .*•„ in Christmas red . . this cheery cotton dress stylish with its all-around box-pleated skirt. White cottar with matching piping at sleeve*, Washable. 5 to 6x. Girls' •hagbatk-look skimmer « A-line rayon-silk dress has a fabric collar with the look of fur. Put! on military airs with its gold color buttons, fake pocket*. Panel pleat front. Sandstone only in girls* sizes 7 to Id. CONVENIENT FAMILY NIGHT SHOPPING Monday through P.M. . , Prtt Parking TOE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1968 NOTICE Of TAXIS CITY OF PONTIAC Llewellyn Thompson: Strong Strategist Side The 1963 County taxes in the City of Pontioc will be due and payable at the office of the Pontiac City Treasurer, December 10, 1963 through January 20, 1964, without fees. , On January 21, 1964, a collection fee of 4% will be added to all County taxes paid through February 29, 1964. ‘ ' ■ ^ On March 1, 1964, oil unpaid County and 1,963 City and School taxes Will be returned to the Oakland County Treasurer's office and must be paid there with additional fees. Payments made by mail must be postmarked not later than January 20, l964 to ovoid poneWes. Walter A. Giddlngs, City Treasurer 35 S. Parke Street, Pontiac, Michigan vacation. Almost immediately “Tommy” was stricken with i kidney-stone attack} anrf hospitalized tor surgery. When he at last could resume his duties behind a bi^ desk hi die State Department, his doctors ordered an “easy sched-ule.” \ How would tiie Russians react to our eyeball-to-Cyeball confrontation? Llewellyn Thompson was the man Oho might know, so he began working 18-hour days, After Khrushchev finally “blinked,” in the words of Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Thompson was among those to whom President Kennedy gave a commemorative calen- By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON—To deal with Communist strategy in the crucial months ahead, President Lyndom®. Johnson Will be leaning heavily on a western ranch-mmrnHmmmm|er’s son who ^^H|^^Hbas become our ^■recognized au- RUTH nearly an hour MONTGOMERY with Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoy-an, Ambassador-at-Large Uew-eUyn Thompson was at his side. Having recently served as U, S. ambassador to Moscow for five years — longer than any other — Thompson is the American best qualified to in- terpret the twists and turns of Kremlin policy. Those who are seeking a roadmap to guide them Along those tortuous twists should give heed to some Thompsonian advice: “The trouble with Americans is that we see everything in black or white, but there’s a lot of gray in diplomacy. Foreign relations is a very fluid business — the heads erf Britain, Germany, Italy and the. U.S. have all dunged within the last few weSa~—-antMhis is upsetting to Americans whoTike'to-maiiK Will Purchase Five for Department Use back from Cape Cod three times last summer by President Kennedy, - Presiding. over Spaso House, our palatial ambassadorial res-idence in Moscow, and whispering into the right ear of presidents has given Thompson an ulcer that might never have developed if he had stuck to ranching. —JTrst Sec. Thompson, a bachelor ir tMl, and apparently considered expendSWe, stayed on at our U.S. Embassy — a Japanese, a Swede and a Bulgarian wore the only other envoys in town —while artillery fire lighted the night skies, a tank trap was dug hi front of our embassy, and Nhzi patrols sneaked within six miles of Moscow. For that gallantry, he was later awarded the Medal of Freedom, opr highest civilian deco- Waterford Township Board members last night authorised purchase of five cars for the township “at a low base bid of Thfee of the sircjflinder Dodger wiifbfrasedby the assessing department and th*' other two by the building department. Arrangements will be made with Spartan Dodge, the low bidder, to provide toe cars early next year. The Communists wait for no man’s convenience, however, and almost immediately the October ’62 Cuban, crisis erupted. tain fixed positions. JUSTERINI “We must remember that toe sandbars as well as toe currants are constantiy shifting.” KNOWS THE TOPIC The tall, lean career diplomat who once lost 17 pounds in eleven hard bargaining days with the Russians over the Austrian Peace Treaty, knows whereof he speaks, i The board authorized car bids last month after a study prepared by Robert Richmond, assistant to toe supervisor, indicated it would be more economical to own cars than to pay mileage allowance to building and assessing department personnel. „ OTHER BUSINESS In other business, the board named Dr. -John F. Naz and James Clarkson to fill two vacancies on tiie Township Zoning Board, effective Jan. 1. not J&B rare scotch Hoffa Testifies: Automation Calls for Shbrt Week After toe war, toe precise, spoken Thompson frequently criss-crossed toe Atlantic. He was minister-counselor for a time in Rome, high commissioner and U. S. ambassador to Austria and finally ambassador to Russia. WASHINGTON (AP)-Teams-ters President James R. Hoffa said Monday he favored a shorter wpek, but added far more than that is needed to meet toe challenges of automation. Hoffa testified before a House labor subcommittee conducting hearings on a bill that would reduce the work week from 40 to 32 hours. Hoffa said “the shorter work week would create more Jobe directly in most industries” and shm members, was to offer them experienw on the zoning board. Plans call tor a consolidation of the two boards by mld-19M. A first notice of toe proposed transfer of an SDM (beer and wine) licensed business at 2548 Elizabeth Lake was read. Action is slated on toe request at a future meeting. In the interval between his first and second missions to Moscow, the reserved diplomat met vivacious Jane Monroe Goelet on the S. S. Satumia while he was en route to a State Department conference in Board members also authorized the sale of planimetric or topographic composite and^keov tion maps at 81-50 each, to builders, land developers and otier interested persons. Thompson seems always to have himself under exquisite control. This correspondent met him first in Moscow, while accompanying Vice, President Richard M. Nixon on his hit? toric tour through Russia and Siberia, The fastest growing nonwhite jgroup in the U S. between 1950 and 1960 was toe Chinese, Which increased S8.2 per cent. Thompson at that time seemed reserved, taciturn, and somewhat austere; yet he so impressed Premier Khrushchev with his precise mirid and tough bargaining abilities that for toe first time a free-world ambassador and his family were invited to Khrushchev’s dacha outside Moscow. SOUGHT NEW POST f \ “Tommy" Thompson had been angling for reassignment even before the ’00 elections- Highway Dept. Set Ready to Figh LANSING (AP) - The State Highway Department1 has bud- gan and other states, we must guarantee they can reach their favorite sports area,” said Highway ^Commissioner John Mackle. “The 80 million cost of keeping gtatehlghways open to traffic is small compared~to the^acon8m-!c losses to toe state if they You’ll find something quite remarkable about] &B Rare Scotch Whisk?, a certain quality that seta it apart J S*B Rare is a product of the two-centuries-old house of Justerini & Brooks whose patrons have included, along with the immortal Charles Dickens, many of history’s great. For flavour unsurpassed, tryJ&’B Rare yourself. has more than 1,000 pieces of euaioment valued at some 820 million ready for the annual battle against Ice and snow. stand why. Like a good soldier, however, he agreed to stay on Indefinitely at the new presi-dent’s request. He wiutiww^ Bay of Pigs fiasco in Cuba, rare scotch whisky ______ Michigan has more organized winter sports areas—some 85 at the last count—than any other state and more are opening eaeh ■11?* end rota* Wily 8hgbiboaf7JO . Doublet from $10.50 W/ Twins from $1&S0 Memeen W0mo»*aA»1i* Northwestern Michigan and TO THRILL THE ENTIRE FAMILY FABULOUS FISHER STEREO FOR '64 Flshar “Custom Electra VIP’ Radio-Phonograph offers total stareo perform-anct to delight the most discerning music lover. Extreme-sensitivity FM, AM fir FM-Multiplex Stereo Tuner has exclusive ‘stereobeam' that instantly signals a stereo broadcast. 45 watt steieo amplified Garrard four-speed automatic record changer, 2 Independent three-wey.speaker systems (6 speakers In all) — with Master Audio Control, i CHOICE OF 3 STYLES — *645 to home ownership is a short, friendly visit with ana of our qualifad homo loan specialists. Your \quastioni will ba answered by an export who will ehew you why so many Oakland County families systematically select our Over all the others. Use Your CHARGE. 4-PAY PLAN (90 days same at cash) or BUDGET PLAN. Open Monday and Wednesday Nights 'til 8:30 P.M. GRINNELL'S, Downtown Store, 27 S. Saginaw - FE 3-7168 Pontiac Mali-Phone 682-0422 BUY THAT /VOW/ the Pontiac press, Tuesday, December iq> h Bi^ Opposed U.S.-Aided Housing (EM#*: Note: The North Carolina Urn Review w its newly published “CM Rights and the South” deals' with legal issues and social implications of America’s' greatest domestic problem-. Here are highlights from the section on Housing discrimination.) ing opportunity was firmly established with die late President John F. Kennedy’s executive order of Nov. 20, 1962, which banned discrimination in federally aided housing after that date. “the .major inadequacy,” Sloane writes, “is that federally stitutions are affected only to the extent that they engage in FHA and VA loans. ★ ★ ★ —“the bulk of their home financing activities is outside the scope of the executive order These institutions — commercial banks, mutual savings law’s probable course in “Civil Rights and the South,” a symposium published by die North Carolina Law Review. While the U S. Supreme Court has not resolved the issue, Sloane concludes that decisional law appears to be developing toward very broad banning of discrimination. ' ‘APPEARS TO EXIST’ , “In public housing, this constitutional prohibition appears to exist already,” Sloane rays. Serious doubt exists, he adds, about constitutionality of discrimination by builders and developers aided by the Fedond Housing Administration and die Veterans Administration, .. “Housing discrimination is not alien to the Southern portion of the United States,” Sloane writes, despite the publicity given Northern disputes in’ recent years. WhHo JiotpitaHaod from ANY occidanti Pays for lht total pi Of hospitalization.— even for the rest of your lifel Available to readers of this publication up to ago 80 This plan1* GUARANTEED RENEWABLE for lifel This pofiey even seven so Bte-Jeh scddenlt Mi pays hi sdMsa Sloane said the enactment of fair housing laws in 12 states none ih die South — during the past six years “is one of the most significant political phenomena of the post-World War H years.” Seven other states have such laws. < However, he said these laws “have had no apparent revolutionary effect, either in terms of hampering the housing industry 1. You got paid, starting tho very FIRST day at the (raid of $39.33’ a day —- oven if you are in a hospital for only ONE day—(other than a rest homo, sanitarium, or Government hospital)— for ANY KIND of accident. You get paid for EVERY day at the same fate, $1,000 a month —even fpr your lifetimel 2. You don't have to be in a motor wreck to collect This now policy pays If you ora hospitalized from ANY kind of accident— even a smashed finger—and regardless of whore, when, or how it happened, AU' accidents are inciudedi 3. Every cent is pale) direct to yew (not the doctor or hospital) Id do wlih as you choose, regardless of how many other insurance policies or compensation payments you may receive. This folicy provides INCOME TAX FREE CASH I Mew Read This Great 30 Day Free Offer! Upon receipt and approval of the coupon below, we will immediately send you your new low cost $1000 a month Policy. There will be NO CHARGE for the first month. You will be protected FREEI The low rate for additional months Will be shown on the policy. There is no obligation of any kind on your part to continue, unless you want to. This is a rdai bargain. You will agree when you see it for yourself. You will be the fudge. No agent will call. It I* available to you NOW if you act immediately. Mail the coupon RIGHT NOW) BY DON McKEE ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Court decisions apparently are moving toward prohibition of racial discrimination in, nearly all federally aided housing regardless of when it was built, says Martin E. Sloane, legal advisor to the Housing and-Home Finance Agency. sociations — receive “substantial federal benefits and are subject to federal regulation and supervision,” Sloane yrrites. The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births «r recorded at the Oakland County . Clerk’s AffW fWv nanus nf fathrarl • Memorial Service Set for Illinois Economist CHAMPAIGN, 111. (UPI) -Memorial services were scheduled today for economist Richard C. Wllcock, 42, nationally known for his work on labor markets and mobility, unemployment, economics of aging and labor relations policies of management. ( Wllcock. professor at the University, of Illinois Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, died Sunday. He was working1 under a Ford Foundation grant at Washington University when he died. UNO USE — Hie sign at right prohibits street. T)ie season’s first blizzard dumped truck traffic, but there isn’t even room for a seven inches of snow, then whipped it into compact car on this Grand Forks, NJX, traffic-stopping drifts. Tfra pick of Santa’s pack GET RIGHT-NOW RESPONSE WHEN YOU START HP.WARM UP.PICK UP! Right oh top of Santa’s pack this year am some colorful Christmas phones to make Uving easier all year long. The little Princess9 phone, lovely in any of five colors, saves spade at bedside and chairside, has a dial that lights up. The ,familiar desk set saves time and steps in den or family roora-eny room where your family makes and takes calls. Tli handy wall phone hangs out of the way in kitchen or basement Wkshop, makes phoning easier and mom convenient. ■ When ordering Christmas extensions, why not Include the Bell Chime finger that announces your calls Srith pleasant musical tones? just call the Business Office or ask your telephone man, and make your choice of styles and colors. ^^MmJQOTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 -'/‘V (MR MMWwi DUAL FILTER • it Okr middlrna'mt ® 4. r. cs*, Pmdudqf IMHTraJ tmTi m n iTi] n ■ lilRHi TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 THE PONTIAC Proudly, PresentsThe ‘Nkur—1— Holiday Happiness For Family Living SCHICK LeSALON The Gift That Lasts throughout the Years! w ADD-A-KITCHEN Update your Present One* A NewKitchen Can Be Yours for as Little as ... *3re™# Free At-Home Estimate The Professional HAIR DRYER Designed For Til© Home Dries yeurbolr fa«ter,totter and togentfeyounever need * " It doesn't batowtth oven-like hsat and it won't effect tinted hair. PONTIAC 68 Years of Continuous, Reliable Service to the Community! lumber & hardware ■Optical Department! Tfi OAKLANDAVB.. SCHICK 25 N. Saginaw St. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Slimmest, sharpest automatic phono ever... ADMIRAL A man can become attached to this chair! foam rubber, reversible zipper cushion 11\ \‘ easy-to-care-for tweed ^ __ Your Choice! 2 FAVORITE 19" PORTABLE TV'S .SYLYANIA With e 4 speed automatic changer, • rugged compact light weight cabinet k 0 Hi fedelity Alnlco V Speaker_________ ft, - • Separate fone'bnd Volume this chair and matching ottoman are as comfortable as they look. He will love them and so will you. Covered, in -beautifully Woven, durable" tweed. Cozy and irresistable —choose from rich gold, dark brown and turquoise. MOTOROLA' our $1QQ88 PRICE 107 COMPLETE WITH RECORD STORAGE C^SE 10 45 RPM HIT RECORDS PRECISION 4$ RPM SPINDLE Free Delivery.— Free Service General Electric Stereo WitfrAM/FM^TIadro Plays All 4 Speeds and All 4 Sties. Automatic Record Player. Stops after last record has playtki. Smartly Styled Maple Cabinetry 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH FREE DELIVERY & SERVICE fcT'x Furniture Pontiac 361 S. Saginaw , 161-7901 SHOP Till 9«Vj*Y I Katy Credit Term• — No Outside Financing Drayton 4943 < Dixie Hwy.- OR 4-db2 SHOP MONDAY, tHURSbAYi FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 9 P.M. NI©HT TILLCHRIS%LASI 'YMlf ^ J OPENTONIGHT AND GOOD HOU EVERY NIGHT''TIL 1 of PONTIAC 1 ' CHRISTMAS 51 Wefct Huron gp p* * B—2 - 1 rmg THE PONTIAC PRESS. T '= TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 , Johnson Gets a Ballot for ; Vote in Texas ? JOHNSON CITY, Tex, W-Mrs. Jeffy Furber, Blanco County cl^rk, has mailed an - absentee ballot to the White House.for voting in a-Dec. 17 special Congressional election. Mrs. Furbflir dispatched tt to President Johnston an hour ' after receiving his applica-. tion yesterday. Johnson must retnrn-4he-iiallot_before fore 1 p.m. Dec. 17Tor~hts^-■ vote to eoyntr , : : The election will decide whether Republican Jim Dobbs or Democrat J. J. Pickle,'a former political aide of Jenson shall represent 10 central Texas counties. John-son held the same House seat lit 1937-48 ★ ★ ★'.......*----... -.The winnerjjsilt succeed ..Rep. HofflerThornberry, D- Tex., now a federal judge. BAKER and HANSEN Insurance Company INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- HOME OWNERS PACKAGE POLICY A SPECIALTY . J vmlVLtU* kSm Phone FE 4-1568 714 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BUHL PONTIAC 1 -Junior Editors Quiz on— PINEAPPLES QUESTION: Pineapples are not pines or apples, so why the name? _____- ..___--------+--+ ,it ■ ANSWER: — Pine cones are'of many shapes and sizes, but most have rough overlapping scales, tike die one Francis is looking at. Apples, of course, have different shapes, but the shape of die apple Bob has Is a very familiar one. Put the rough scales of a pine cone and the apple shape together and you have the appearance of the pineapple and a good explanation as to how people began to give diem that name. Pineapples do not come from trees like pine cones and apples do; they come from plants growing close to the gropnd, each pineapple heading a stalk. They are a tropical fruit and while there are plantations of them In many tropical countries, the ones we eat often come from the huge pineapple plantations of our beautiful new state of Hawaii. They are not grown from seed, for these plants do. not usually produce seed in the cultivated state; the growers use tufts of leaves from the top oUhefrults, suckers from the base of the stalks slips at the base of the fruit or “ratoons” (bud roots.) These are planted and will bear fruit In the second year. FOR YOU TO DO: Ask your mother to let you make a delicious mixed salad using cut up pineapple slices, or canned pineapple chunks. You can add pieces of pear, apple, banana ’and nuts. Mix together with mayonnaise or pineapple juice. Sen. Tower Predict* GOP Will Pick Barry HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)' - Sen. John Tower, R-Tex., says it is his guess that Sen. Barry Gold-water of Arizona will be the Republican nominee for president next year. Tower made the prediction Monday as he arrived to address the annual convention of the Texas Sheep and Goat Raisers Association. ■! A directory of services for the blirid in the United States lists 784 national and local sources of guidance, information and service. .. -___-—,——— Age limit Hike to Cost More CompOlfbry School Until 17 Is Studied LANSING (AP) *- Raising the compulsory school attendance age from the present level of 16 to 17 would mean an additional investment in state schoolaid of about $18 million a year, reports Lynn Bartlett, State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Bartlett/said the figure was -obtained from the results of a questionnaire on the subject dents around the state. — • -- - - It was estimated the cost would amount to about $600 for each pupil to be retained if the age limit were raised to 17. The total was reached by multiplying tills figure by some 30,000 pupils —roughly the number of 16-year olds dropping out of school each year. t: COST OF OPERATION The $18 million figure, Bartlett said, would only cover the cost of operation mid would not take into account such expenses as additional equipment, facilities and curriculum changes. A state advisory committee on educational needs of youth adopted a policy statement say ing it believed raising the compulsory school age limit would do little by itself to guarantee better educational experiences for 16. 17 and l8-vear oicto. —- The statement said schools should strive to melt the needs of each individual regardless of his race, creed, color or personal limitations. Bakery Man Arrested as 400 Are Poisoned MADRID, Spain (UPI) - Police arrested a bakery manager yesterday when more than 460 persons suffered fopd poisoning after eating his special Mother's Day creampuffs. Children traditionally s h a r o creampuffs wit|t their mothers on Mother’s Day, which4s celebrated Dec. 9 in Spain. Why are Plymouth Dealers _ bustin’ their buttons? Naturally, Plymouth Dealers' chests are sticking out, but. If you want to talk to somaone who Is really proud as a peacock, talk to oris of the many naw ownars of this Qat-up-and-io PlymoutH. Enthusiasm is spreading so fast that dealers |ust can’t gat enough Plymouth! to supply the demand, And they're determined to keep this telling pace going by trading right. You’d better find out for yourialf what makes this car so great. How? Taka a test drive this week! Come see why they’re so proud of Plymouth I OAKLAND CHRYSLER- PLYMOUTH, INC. 724 OAKLAND, AVI., PONTIAC, MICH. \ OFFICER— Installation of Gene Walters, 3256 Indian-wood, Orion Township, as ex-m . >f-Oakland Chapter No. 5, Royal Arch Masons, will be held 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Masonic Temple, 18% E. Lawrence. Officers will be installed by past high priest of the chapter. . , Jury Hearing 'Orgy1 Book CHICAGO (UPI) - Two assistant state’s attorneys began taking , turns yesterday reading the entire 187 pages of "The Orgy Boys” to a jury. , The attorneys, Daniel J Leahy and James R. Thompson, said theywere attempting to comply with a 1956 U.S. Supreme Court decision that a book must be judged as a whole in deciding whether it is obscene. — The paperback book is an ex- j hibit in the trial of Charles R. Kimmel, whose bookstore was raided Jan. 25 and allegedly obscene literature was confiscated. Divorces L Gwendolyn H. from Melvin Long Covet* from u; D. Ctilldi — — Jem** R. from Joan Y. Trombley Mildred M. from Leland J. Wheaton Mery K. from John R. Hell* / Venedla 0. from George* A, Kerr fits Mr from Louie A. Kromhelmer Rose.L. trom Robert B. Hamilton John W. from Nyla Kirby ptoronea M. from Kenneth M. serge ' Amy A. from Johannes K. Rasmussen Shirley J. from Joe C. Creak Willi* A. from George E. Walton Albert E. from Judy Kerbel__ 3 Italians ArefleH/n Kidnaping MILAN (JV-Three young Italian men .were held today for the kidnaping of an 8-year-old school boy whose parents paid 30 million litre ($48,000) ransom. The boy, Paolo Ratti, son of ah industrialist in nearby Monza, was kidnaped as he walked to school yesterday. He was released unharmed late last night as his father met the kidnapers and handed them the money. Police were watching and ar- spot. The third fled, but the police said they caught him later. _____________:----- ★_ dr ★ ;' i . | Italian newspapers called 1t~ an “American style” case and speculated that it might have been inspired by the Sinatra Jtidnaping. » TELLSTORY Authorities told this story: A car in which three youths were riding drove up to little Paolo, and one youth said: “Get in. We are friends of your father, He asked us to drive you tphis office.” The father, Giorgio Ratti, 38, later received a phone call “Get 30 million lire ready and wait. Don’t call police, or else...” Several hours later Ratti received another call: “Come tonight to the main square of Trezzo d’Adda (a nearby town). No funny business. Think* of yourson.” Ratti prepared the money but alerted the police. They set the trap and sprung it when the father met. the kidnapers. > The three were identified as Aldo Ferrara, 21, Emilio Gomi-zeli, 20, and 'Ermenegildo Pic-cinno, 24. Service for Architect TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) —Services will be held today for Henry Ludlow Beadel, 88, former New York City architect and widely known con-servationist, He died Sunday. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you r medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping nearby or we well deliver promptly without extra charge. A grea many people entrust« with their prescription*. May w . compound yours? PERRYPHARMACY I PRESCRIPTIONS - professionally perfect 1551 Baldwin ct E. Blvd. ft 3*7057 ;.FF 3-7152 b.qbHb5eqbSbd DONALDSON LUMBER NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION 378 N. CASS, PONTIAC FE 2-8381 : PLENTY OF FREE PARKING IS Netty, BORTABLEmRADIO tM*g •**§*• AM Bsal- M0-I6OOKC «w«wsnl.ne- 6- 18 MC e*wWi«we.i,t-4.inio MAKE ENGGASS YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL YOUR | CHRISTMAS GIFTS BUY NOW ON ENGGASS < CREDIT TBRMS— PAY NIXT YEAR! Vhll Out Complete Opllpal j Department/ JEWELRY CO. IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 25 NORTH SAGINAW STREET THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1968 Mo One Salutes When Lodge for Goes Then Eisenhower continued: “Thinking to put him on the defensive at once, I asked, 'Toil are well known in politics; why not cun yourself?’ Without {dune his answer came back, ‘Because I cannot be elected,’ and he footnote to Idstory appears in Gen. Eisenhower’s latest book entitled “Mandate For Change.” By RAYMOND J. CROWLEY WASHINGTON (AP) - tyhat seemed to be a trial balloon labeled “Henry Cabot Lodge for President” floated the political skies todpy but without discernible effect thus far on the political pros on the ground. As one of them remarked: “Until the dust settles, we can hardly see any trial balloons, lit alone gauge their effect." 7 One man who doesn’t fly jets but Whose conversation Is jet-propelled folfomHubert Humphrey, D-Minn. He doesn’t mind predicting, as follows: “Mr. Goldwater will run for re-election to the U..S. Senate—and Mr. Lodge appears to be the prospect for the Republican-presidential nomination.” f LOTS OF THOUGHT Lodge may not exactly appreciate tills tap on the shoulder from the opposition- Anyway, he is a man to give his decision a lot of agonizing thought. moit to bn active duty f tour, lasting until Dec, 23. t CAN’T TALK THEN After all, a man can't talk politics while flying a jet or what not. , Eisenhower 'recounted how Lodge came to him in 1951 and presented a massive argument why the general should run for president. ' Nothing. A major general in the Air Force Reserve, he reported and tile general’s reported at* 1 tempted to tap him is by way of a return compliment. For it was Lodge who went to supreme Allied headquarters in Europe in 195tl and twisted Eisenhower’s arm to run'for the Republican presidential nomination. It was Lodge .who helped quarterback the bruising, successful fight at the 1952 convention to. seat pro-EiserthdWer delegates, notably from Texas instead ul ilval slates favoring the late Sen. Robert A. Taft of CHflo. LODGE DEFEATED That fall, Lodge was defeated for re-election to the Senate from Massachusetts. TWO factors were running against hhA: one named John F. Kennedy and the other the bitterness of Taft admirers to the Bay State. As of now,-Lodge probably could not count many delegates to the 1964 convention to his corner. But tilings can change, as Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona realizes only too wen. nationally ADVERTISED brand names Bfd&fSt ^yKTIONS EXPERT COLOR TV SERVICE the dust he referred to, of course, was stirred up-by the sudden succession to the presidency *oi Lyndon B. Johnson. This has created real turmoil to Republican ranks—and has led to t lot of re-thinking. YOUR OLD TV IS WORTH MORE AT HIGHLAND... BIGGEST TRADE-IN ^ ALLOWANCES! jN ■ --......................................J GENERAL ELECTRIC ZENITH CiLORTV The Lelond. Ho wk rotted Wvk«Hlldv«r ^Ifbeck ache endsymptomatic pains iti joints and muscles make,, you feol miserable and tired, try wortd-. famous DeWitl’s KBs for their positive analgesic action. Besidea bringing fast palliative relief of pain, DeWSt’i Hill use mild diuretic action to help your system dear out acid wastes ten : by sluggish kidneys. DeWiu’s Pills: can relieve backache miseries and I help you lead a more active lift. I *449®* DETROIT (AP) -r Eight Michigan high school students won achievements awards Monday from the National Council The awards are made on the basis of three compositions, two tog letters from a teacher and Quality Moots Wrapped lot Ten fleeter an administrator. Combination tyRh STEREO HI-FI MM, FM-STEREO RADIO .Color TV. Storoo phonogiopl Michigan winners are Margaret Elleti Comly, Grasse Pointe; Lewis * Keith SIbiager, and Susan Marie Lauxman, both of Detroit; Marilee Gail Bedwell, Grand Rapids; Anne Linda Hatcher, Ann Arbor; Timothy Irving Mabee, Bay City; Jeanne Ellen Theodore, Kalamazoo and GLnTiflBnwfir B1 t*P Zenith «*>*«.. ’’ ' ' GOME IN - GET OUR SPECIAL LOW PftlCl COME IN-GET OUR SPECIAL LOW PRICE Glva Your Boy or Girl Bottor School Marks! to**1**' ELECTRIC OR REGULAR MODELS Combination wlfh STEREO HI-FI FM-AM, FM-STEREO RADIO ho bowhootor 01" Color TV. Iteme ZENITH COLONIAL Tho Mbiedolo. Chormlng loth Amotieongonu'no Stt a! - „t, 29,000 volte ef pleturo power. 81 I COME IN-GIT OUR SPECIAL LOW PRICE LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE COME IN-GET OUR SPECIAL LOW PRICE SPECIAL LOW PRICE Headquarters for DRAFTING SUPPLIES 21" Color picture. Black and white picture* of depth and clarity, tool Magnificent furniture cabnitry of authontlc V 18^24" w Flfnch Curvot - Triangle* T-Squarog — Protractor! Architect ana Englnaar Scalac Boam Compaico*—Pantograph* SLIDE RULES »I*®..W Everything for tho SPECIAL LOW PRICE I2S Nath SaglniwSli ^RmBI Opon Ivory Everting ’til Chrlitma* SPfCf/U ME PORT )mm\ THE POftTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1968 Documented Disorder Top Engineer Cite* 'Dramatic Changes' i PREPARE now to give Winter a WARM reception! “Button-Up” your Home against snows and icy blows ... make if weather-tight for Sag-comfort with dependable ists. some of the chief points of interest It so happens that my desk in the House Press Gallery is situated by a door that' opens onto a corridor leading to the public galleries. Subsequently, I am in frequent contact with tourists, who stick their heads in the door and ask directions. Judging from the inquiries I hear, I would say that the three main things most visitors want to know about the capital are: • Where is the nearest rest, room? • Where can I find a drinking fountain? • How do I get out of here? 3 The historical society’s book is remiss on all of these points.. Had it included a schematic diagram designating all of the the adjacent congressional, office buildings. [•-. By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - What is described as “the first full-color picture story’’ of the U.S, Capitol came off the presses a few days ago and was an im- w^pl mediate best JJsM The last.time \3Hpy !g| I checked, or- |J M ders for the book, published by the Capitol Historical Soc-iety, were com- WEST ing in faster than It could be printed. Titled “We, the Peeple,’’ it b part hfatory and part guide book. I thought the text and illustrations were excellent. This does not mean, however, that toe book is perfect. In my opnion, it would be much more interesting if 4ts scope had been expanded to embrace not only the Capitol, but Technological Improvement* herald dramatic changes in auto design, Bart Cotter, Fisher Body Division’s top engineer, told the Society of Automotive Engineers’ Detroit chapter last 'night. { Cotter, .who lives at 1115 Rathmor, Bloomfield Township, called attention to new processes {tod materials which “challenge the ingenuity and imagination of the automotive engineer.” Improved^uihesivesraay one: day make it possible to bond body parts rather than- weld them. Electrical components will see wider use of transistors and new types of wiring^ he statedr For example, the photographs include the first official portrait ever made of the Senate in action. One can only regret that it does not offer, as a companion piece, a color shot of the senators’, private swimming pool in the old Senafe Qffice Bdilding/ ONE SIDE The book tends to stress the monumental or museum side of the Capitol at the expense of its other role as a “living” in* stitution. It could have struck a bettor editorial balance, had of senators in bikini-length togas indulging in aquatic public: comfort stations, .water 1 also feel that the book omit-s ted several- important-features in a cutaway drawing that locates, for. the benefit of tour- Cotter, general director of engineering for Fisher, based his talk around development of the all-new 1964bodies for the Tem- rendered a valuable service — to me, if oot to the tourists. Finally,' the east front of the j Capitol overlooks a so-called plaza, which is ’actually a park- sw 1964bedtos4or tin ''Cwwrogr’wlii; this facility, it would have been appropriate, to have devoted a few lines to the background of the parking lot, which is steeped in history and grease spots. Pontiac Mall RESPECTS PAID — Bernard Baruch, elder statesman confidant and adviser to many presidents, presents a'floral tribute at the grave of assassinated President John F. Kennedy in Arlington National Cemetery. designing the new line of bodies to have small-car price-saving innovations, while offering conventional-size roominess and ap- at Elizabeth Lake Road Phone 682-4940 GLENWOOD PLAZA N. Paddock and N. Perry at Oienwaod CAMERA DEPARTMENT This led to bodies with shallow floors and narrow rocker panels, simplified front ends, new door interlocks, and windshields and backlights installed World News Cuba Rejects Appeal FOR YQUR HARD OF HEARING LOVED ONES CHRISTMAS SPECIAL We will COMPLETELY fit a Hearing Aid in our office or your home for as little as-". . . He's Really a Fan AMSTERDAM, The Netherlands (UPI) - Hans (Action) Starreveld, who claims,to have seen the movie "Went Side Story’' 59 times, said today he will lead a protest demonstration to prevent the picture from being transferred from a downtown theater there. F. Kennedy announced he planned to nominate a new ambassador, Benson E. L. Tim- man Communist party newspaper, Neues Deutschland. f OTTAWA (AP) -’■The Cuban military court that sentenced Ronald Patrick Lippert of Kitchener, Ont., to SO years in prison has rejected his appeal, Foreign Secretary Paul Martin told the House of Commons Monday. Contains one Viewmaster viewer/and seven reels. PORT . au PRINCE, Haiti (AP) V- President Francois Du-valier has appointed a new ambassador to the United States, giving him a job of repairing relations between the two countries and seeking U S. aid. The appointment of Andre Theard as envoy to Washington was announced Monday along with a minor cabinet reshuffle. Duvalier demanded the withdrawal of U.S. Ambassador Raymond U Thurston laat June and recalled his ambassador after the U.S. government let It be known it considered Duvalier had prolonged his term of office unconstitutionally. A month ago President John Duvalier now is reported to be seeking an emergency loan from President Johnson with which td meet his mid-month government payroll." Martin's office said he would meft with the Cuban ambassador Wednesday to discuss the case. Lippert and William Milne of Montreal were arrested in Havana Oct. 24 after landing in a small plane. They were accused of trying to smuggle In explosives. Milne was acquitted. BERLIN (AP)-The COmmtt-nist regime of East Germany insisted today on two political conditions for admission of West Berliners to see their relatives Jn East Berlin at Christmas. The conditions, always rejected by the west in the past, were that the West Berlin city administration must deal directly with the Communist regime and not through tha West German government in Bonn, and that the Communist offices for the issuing of permits must be on West Berlin territory. SAWYER’S DELUXE PAK $588 Retired Newsman Dies “TnflUNrinrTW Loomis, 79, managing editor of the East St. Louis (111.) Journal and former night editor of the St. Louis Globe-Dispatch, died yesterday of a stroke. Loomis retired from the Globe-Democrat In 1951 after 18 years with the paper. He began his career with the Evansville (Ind.) Press Cdurier. Contains one lighted Viewer • Two batteries -and seven color ffels. WITH EACH COMPUTE KITCHEN .REMODELED PRICED FROM Presented by THE PONTIAC STATE BANK MRS. S. M. DUDLEY at the Hammond Electric Organ No Payments ’Til February LaBsron Honor Choir; Rosamond Haeberle On Any Hems topovowisaf fan «m Oat . Oar Winter IMcst CD ee^TOYou ■ DEI rR P Pi BUILT-IN ■El mm OVEN and RANGE r KEl Sawyer’s REEL PAK $|I7 n Contains 7 reels -49 color pictures ,«i big selection. p Enough to use again, even for freezing SCARLET-CREAM FRUIT MOLD. . A-WORK OF ART Frutt Gelatin Lavm 1 package strawberry-flavored gelatin 1 cup hot water 1 package Fairmont Frozen Strawberries, thawed Dissolve gelatin in hot water. Chill slightly. Fold, in thawed frown strawberries^ faydudfaig juice. Pour into 2-quart mold. Chill until firm. 1 envelope ^tablespoon) 1 cup Falnhont Small Curd Cottage Cheese unflavored gelatin 1 cup fruit cocktail, wall drained ft cup Cold water 1 tablespoon lemon juice :toho£^r ts. Pour over to softened gelatin, well-set fruit gelatii The Cottage Cheese with DELICATE, NATURAL FLAVOR EASY, ELEGANT... STRAWBERRY CHEESE BLINTZES Mix lft cups Fairmont Cottage Cheese and 1 tablespoon lemon juice; spoon down the center of 12 small pancakes; fold the edges of each pancake over the cheese mixture. Serve with warm strawberry sauce (made by heating Fairmont Whole Frozen Strawberries over low heat) and top with Fairmont Sour Cream. What a delightful way to tempt your family to eat more high protein Fairmont Cottage* Cheese! Of course, you’ll discover many new and differentways to enjoy this fine cottage cheese. And that’s good reason to have plenty on hand always, in the new plastic container that keeps Fairmont Cottage Cheese fresh to the last delicious spoonful ?s^;\ I LOOK FOR FAIRMONT COTTAGE CHEESE NOW IN NEW PLASTIC CONTAINERS ForeS COTTAGE CHEESE Pretty enough to put fight on the table SHOW ^TOPPER! 1 cup canned tomatoes 16-ounce cap tomato pi ft teaspoon garlic 1 teaspoon salt SPJCY INDIVIDUAL PIZZASl lft cups (12-ounce carton) Fairmont Cottage Cheese 2 cupe prepared biscuit mix . ..i^ablsspoons melted Fairmont Butter , any preferred topping (anchovy fillets, sliced olives, mushrooms, green popper siloes). Sprinkle with grated cheese. Bake in hot oven (426*F) 16 minutes Reduce heat to moderate (860* F), bake 10-16 minutes longer. Makes • pisses. Cottage Cheese Made the UNHURRIED, NATURAL WAY COTTAGE CHEESECAKE DELUXE.. . GRAND FINALE Pet unbaked graham cracker cruet onto bottom end eldot of greeted B-Inch spring form pan. 4 cupe Fairmont Cottage Cheese ft teaegoon salt ft cup melted Fairmont Butter ft oup flour lemmi ft CUP lemon JUlCO V. cud •user 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind ft cup cream 1 teaspoon greteo oreng* rind Fisas cheese through fins .sieve or beat until smooth. Add butter gradually, bland well. Add eggs singly, besting thoroughly after each. Add sugar, than cream, beat well. Told in remaining ingredients, stir until smooth. Pour into orumb-lined pen. Bake In Blow oven (826* F) lft hours or until putter rises even with slobs end top te golden browu. Cool. Run knife around edge to loosen cake; lemove spring form, Top with crushed drained pineapple, than whipped cream, pineapple slices and chprrlse. = FAIRMONT'S NEW PLASTIC CONTAINERS... , 1 Sturdy enough to iigt aggln, fvnn for frgtzlng THE PONTIAC PRKSfl TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 106$ S. Lyon School Board Votes 4-3 to Set Election Date sftructed'On a 32-acre site at. the northwest corner of Nine Mile Road and Pontiac Trail, FOUR ROOMS The addition to the present high school would consist of four rooms adaptable dor science .classes. It is in this area that school administrators see their greatest need. Mrs. Chenoweth and Ueker were elected/to the board at that time. Both campaigned against the school bond issue. Backers of the resolution being sent to the polls say the building program would answer .the district’s needs through 1970. placed on the'Jan, 25 ballot, was offered la's a compromise by the first group, which had wanted an 900-student high school built as soon as possible. TURNED DOWN District voters turned down a request for the larger school in June by a 3-2 margin. It would have cost $1,548,000. Sharon Booth Wed to PhillipG. Moo INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP —Red poinsettas decorated the altar of the Clarkston First Methodist Church for the candlelight wedding qf Sharon Anne Booth and Phillip Gene Moore Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Edward parents of the bride. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Merville Moore of Owosso. ' ATencoh lace " appliques trimmed the bride’s floor-length peau de soie gown. The bodice featured a scooped neckline and long tapered sleeves. The bell skirt swept into a chapel train. ’. * ..... .--------------The bride’s triple-tier bouffant MRS. PHILLIP G. MOORE veil fell to fingertip lerigftfrdm ; a pearl and crystal crown. She ...:......; .... * carried Yuletide roses .and' , Stephanotis entwined with pit- tosphorum. Garage Job Goes to Firm ATTENDANTS Serving with matron of honor Mrs. Tom WiUUson of Hartford, Conn., were briedsmaids Lore Grfeen of Pontiac and ^Marcia Booth, sister of the bridei' v ; Rochester Council Awards Contract Terry Herban of Frankfort was best man. Keith KipUnger of Owosso and James Iseler of Harbor Beach seated guests. - SOUTH LYON-The date for a $1,424,000 school bond issue vote was set here last night by ■ the same slim majority which had determined the amount to be requested. District ‘ property owners wljl go to the polls Jan. 25, it . was determined by a 4-3 vote of the school board. The! proposition juIL request die money for construction of . a 650-student high school to cost -about $1.3 million-. It would be completed by the 1965-66 school year. . * • ★ Plans call for the rest of the money—$124,000—to be used for. art immediate addition to the present high school. ___The balloting date was set by supporters of the proposition— Harry Coiestock, J. W. Erwin, William Markham and Donald Rjddering. Opposing it were those board members who had been against the resolution adopted Nov. 29 t-Mrs. Rita Chenoweth, Alfred Ueker and President Wilford Heidt, • They had favored asking for AiiMNi additions to two present buildings and waiting until 1967-68 to build a 600-student hi^ school. I " ■ ~ ;Sf - j The resolution, which will be From Hobby to Business r4mt\ LEE OLSON Area News Editor ROMEO — “A vibrant new voice in the world of American textile arts.” That's the way critics describe local sculptor-weaver Eleen Auvil. Mrs. Auvil is a 1960 graduate of the Cranbrook Academy of Art with a bachelor'of fine arts degree in sculpture. She first worked with bronze and ceramics in the pursuance, of her hob-bjtf ; It was just a couple of years later that the media was altered to "textiles and the hobby expanded into a business. ENGINEER HUSBAND YAfter all, my husband can’t support this kind of a fiobby,1T" sa|d the talented craftsman, whose husband, Carroll K. Au-vik is an electronics engineer, -“My hobby was serious, but you never make a business out of something you do /by hand , — but look, we’re doing it!” With a sleeping gesture, Mrs. Auvil. indicated her weaving and show rooms on the second floor of a building in the heart of j I Romeo’s business district. The rooms are filled with all kinds - of fabrics, yarn, fibers, grasses, weeds and other na--tural materials — plus large looms and frames for making | 'woven sculpture.” HER FIRST LOVE Mrs. Auvil .. said she took bronze sculpture .primarily ft Cranbrook—'“That was my first love” — but she added weaving for ‘color because sculpture is ‘^qo 'monochromatic. ’ With her daily exposure to the colors near her home at 66466 ML Vernon, Mrs. Auvil expanded her media to weaving to express her artistic flair in color. A few months ago Mrs. Auvil opened Aer studio at 109 S; Main, where she now turns out pillows, throws, rugs and wall hangings, besides her “woven sculpture.” She handles her sales by appointment only. ’ it it it The attractive Romeo mother of two boys said she had been working for two years on how to create “this sort of thing,” meaning the woven sculpture. It combines the texture and color in weaving with the texture and form of sculpture, she said. .. • Her latest creation is an 8-foot high, three-dimensional hanging, woven of this hand-span wool in gold and chartreuse, with abstract forms flaring out from a circle. This piece, which drew rave notices from critics at an art exhibit recently in Bay City, will/ bq featured in Mrs. Auvil’s next one-man show at America House, New York City, in February. Mrs.■ Auvil has exhibited ih national shows all over the country, and in the last two years has won awards in the Mlqhi-the Detroit Institute of Arts. CARPET AWARD Last year she won the Arthur Fleischman Carpet Co. prize for her handspun flax rug, “Sunflower.’’ This year her tapestry rug “Stone Path” was awarded the Mrs. George Kataperman prize. . Mrs. Auvil also has been asked to design a nig of acrylic fibers for the next World’s Fair. Again she plans to'take her inspiration from the fields, trees and sky. 1 Her bronzes, mostly of birds like the eight-foot high Peace Memorial in die Romeo Cemetery, demonstrate her- intimacy with native. * ' 1 ★ . * I She uses raw materials, pri- . marily yarns, from all over the world and combines them with seed pods and weeds from her 17 acres southwest of town, to create unique weed screens and window hangings. ~ Her work is acclaimed as ‘^mc-citing, exquisite and imagina-live.” ..5.f ’I, .4 X3F Pontiac Pr»»« Photos MAKES RUGS TOO—Sculptor-weaver Mrs. Eleen Auvil of Romeo also turns her hand to rugs made of textured wool. Holding a shuttle, she is seated on one of the rugs she wove for the Sinai Hospital Library, Detroit. It la predominantly green and gold accented with black and brown and touches of white. Troy Council to Continue Search’ for City Planner FROM BRONZE TO TEXTILES - With “Stark Bird,” a> statue she fashioned in bronze, looking on, Mrs; Auvil shows how ’she works on her "woven sculpture.” This 8-foot high, three-dimensional hanging is woven of thick handspun wool In gold and chartreuse, with abstract forms flaring out from the bottom. 1 fr “ . . t ■ ................................._........ Only Half of Moon Eclipse WillBe Seen A total eclipse of the ipoonl will take place, on the early morning of Dec, 30, but Michigan star-gazers J will sep only the first Jialf qf . the spectacle. The reason Is that the moon will be leaving the earth’s shadow at about the time that It sets over, the horizon, explains University of Michigan aztronomsr Hazel M. Losh. “At 4:25 a m, the moon will first touch the earth's shadow, and the eclipse will begin. At about this time the full. mOoh will be found about 30 degrees above:-the™'westerr horizon,” Professor Losh says. . * * * “Soon after, a noticeable dimming at the eastern edge of the moon will show up, this dark-end area gradually spreading o\|r the moon's surface until 5:28 a m. when the moon will i be ehttreiy in eclipse. ■ ■* * * “The mld-eelipse will come at 6:07 a.m. with totality ending at 6:47 a.m., but It will take an hour for the moon to leave the- shadow completely at 7:05 |a.m. , “Throughout the entire period that the moon Is above injfocl llpse it will Church in Lako Orion Will Hold 'Ham Dinnsr LAKE ORION - The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints will hold a baked ham. dinner Thursday at the church, tpl E. Flint. Serving will be family styld from5to7p.m, . Professor Losh continues: “During the partial phase the earth s shadow will appear dark in contrast with the remaining section of the full moon, but when the moon is completely Immersed, It will not be hidden, as one at first might suppose. "During, the total stage, It Is illuminated by sunlight, which filters through the earth’s atmosphere, and Is bent arid refracted Into the shadow cone on to the moon. ' i ★ , “The moon then will shine with a dull reddish glow, having been deprived of Its blue rays by the earth’s atmosphere, which scatters and diffuses the blue 1|M.” TROY — The City Council last n i g h t voted to continue the search" for its missing Plan-ning Commission member, Robert J, Tucker. Councfl members also agreed on the reappointment of Lloyd Stage and Henry Akin to the city’s Parks and Recreation Board, as well as the appointment of William P. Marzolf, of 1383 Key West. Tucker, whose planning com8 mission data was returned to City Hall by his wife last week, has apparently qult the part-time job. I. it 1 j it it However, he has given no-formal notice, and City Manager David E. Firestone, was unable to contact him last week. NEW LEAD Last-night’s discussion turned up a new lead In the case, and Firestone Will look in Hazel Park for Tucker. Earlier It was believed that Tucker had Vnoved to Tennessee. Discussing t h commission, the city also agreed to contact t h e three members whose terms expire this month and find out their Intentions. Finishing up their terms are Alphonse Bajgier, Leo Case and Pro-, bate Judge Norman Barnard. Again this week the commission considered the problem of an Inactive parks and recreation board. The new appointee, Marzolf, was recommended by Mayor Huber. * ■ J; He Is a teacher at Avondale Junior High School, where he Instruct! cources In business and iclvloi. FIRST STEP Last week the commission Rochester Council Vetoes Apartment ROCHESTER -'The Village Council last night unanimdusly denied a request for rezoning of a lot on the north side of Parkdale, east of Romeo Road. George Clark of Royal Oak asked for a. change from the present one-family residential to multiple-dwelling classification for a 16-family apartment building. Both the regional planning commission and village planners, Vilican-Leman & Associates of Southfield, had recom-r mended too request be. denied. ★ * * Before the vote a petition containing signatures of 37 objecting residents of' the area was presented to,the council. STATUS REPORT . The council last night* also received a status report from James G. Hartrick of Ro$il Oak concerning the mid pond area at the east eand of University. Hartwick, along with Drayton Plains ^realtor Donald E. White and Clare E. Snell, a Royal Oak investor, interid to develop the site. Their report said results of an engineering study presently in progress would be turned over to the council in about three weeks, along with a plot plan that would show -the intended use. . , -*?, it In February, White presented plans for an eight-store shopping facility and 90-famlly dwelling unit on the land parcel. < DUAL ZONING | When the council adopted "the new zoning ordinance in October, it left the area zoned for nnmmairial and multiple dwel-ling. , WWW However, council members agreed that if more definite plans were not presented within 60 days, the property would be rezoned to a single-family residential classification. ROCHESTER-A new 7,000-square-foot village garage will start going up here soon. Last night the Village Council awarded the contract for the $56,825 job to low-bidder Plstonetti Building Co. of Rochester. Ih October the council rejected five bids on the project as the lowest was still $10,000 above engineer’s estimates. ■ ’it ^2 Plans call for a building with steel-arched framework and concrete-block construction. It will be located on the Department of Public Woricsyard north of Halbach field. When completed next June the garage will contain offices for the DPW and water department, as well as space for truck and equipment storage and a working area for mechanics. took the first step to rejuvenate the board by {directing Firestone to contact board members and determine their interest. w w w The board meejis once a month, but a quorum has not been present since last'March. ' w. w f‘; In 6ther business last night the CjtyCommission voted to pay board of appeals members 85 for their monthly meetings, and to have Firestone and City, Attorney Stanley Burke prepare an ordinance governing sewer tap-in regulations and costs, CAROLSUESCHOBERT Mrr and Mrs. Harold Bcho-beri/, 1334 Grqce, Avon Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Suo, to Pfc. Gary P. Lambert, ton of Mr, and M r s. Roben Lambert, 2317 Auburn Auburn Heights, No, date has been set for the,wedding, Berkley to Tell Plans BERKLEY (UPD - Mayor George Kuhn scheduled a news conference today "to announce the city’s participation in a unique $20-mlllion municipal-commercial community complex” for this cuburb north of Detroit. A&P to Build Center DETROIT (UPI) - O. Phillip Nyquist, vice president qf A&P Food Stores, announced yesterday the firm will build a $7.5-mllllon distribution Venter on the city's West Side. It will serve more than 100 A&P stores in this area. In Orchard Lake Cityhood Mote Set ORCHARDfcAKE — ViUage voters will go to the polls March 3 to Indicate whether they would prefer llvlnfc In a cljy. Village commissioners last night zet the balloting date on the question, of Incorporating the unit as'a cjty. They were acting on a petition signed by 140 residents. ’ it. i ★ ■ The petition was Circulated In October by a citizen*’ group interested in the dtyhapd' move as. a way of maintaining Orchard Lake’s, residential atmosphere. ' FOR COMMISSIONERS Besides toe election on the central proposition, voters will elso cast their ballots for nine charter commissioners, . . Sr it ----"; " Tf toe main Issue passes, the commissioners will have 90 days to draw up a new charter. If the issue fells,, toe commission will be a nullity, adcordlng to Village Attorney William Slo-cum Jr. V Sr Sr Sr, A^oapdldete for toe commie- slnn qan be nominated by 20 registered voters., Nominating petitions jgre Jjelrig prepared By the village. Pair Mark 50th Year SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP-8140 AndersonviUe, observed their 50th wedding anniversary at rfamily gathering Sunday. ' Sr ■ ;Sr " Sr. v '( . Married in Escanaba Dec.' 8, 1913, they have a son, Herbert W. Gabor of White Lake; a daughter, Mrs. Harold Weston of Clarkston; six grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. ”• ■ ' ★ * 11 * «Mi v 1 . \ .'il 1 R««l Prbprrly Payable Dieimbir 10, 1961 to February 14, , 1964. Pananal Proyarty Payabla: Dac«mbar 10, 1$6I ta |in. 20, 1994.™ ' i 1 , 31 P ' 1 WlfHOUT PENALTY Alio. 1164 Dog Ummm Nay lo Praourotf Wllh Coiflfleafo , of Faoolnaiion : HELEN V. ALLEN, Township Traa.urar ■ .Gvlv:„ i 1 THE PONTIAC TRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1063 combat n^ny scourges afflict-ing the world. • 1 I '• The resolution, backed by both the United States and the Soviet tJnion, was adopted unanimously Monday. It incorporate ed a Nigerian measure for a •pedal committee to help In die study. . ' .....................-- VLN. Croup Will Study Disarmament Savings (AP) — The Uif, General Assembly’s economic committee has approved a move to study how savings gained from die? UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. armament could he used to Ujy Away Christmas Gift a Day For the transplanted European celebrating his first Christmas in the United States, there are hound' to be. a few discordant notesheard above the cheery chimes of holiday bells. * The dissonant effects are Christmas removed ~ from- Holland, admits to bewilderment and some pain as he~ofid his family- try .to continue their Dutch customs in a somewhat alien hind.' ~ _ An airlines executive, he looks down at New York’s Fifth Avenue from his window-lined office and winces: “So many Santa Clauses! And carolers start their singing weeks before .Christmas so that it has become artificial by the time the day bdght and gayi **Upe in the fabulous** FONTAINBLMII 995 N. CASS LAKE ROAD 1 and 2 Bedroom Deluxe Apartments —-----NOW AVAttABLE____ Apartment **102** Open Daily for ■ Your Inspection! Phone Today — FE 3-7677 or FE 5-0936 with minimum effect and mfiee' fun, too. By following this schedule. you can ease any strain on your gifts Astronauts Earthbound OFFICE PARTIES Christmas office parties puzzle, him, as does , the exchange of Christmas cards with friends and office personnel he sees The separation of church and secular matters whiph prevails in Holland is difficult to maintain here, he says, in his homeland, St. Nicholas, riding a white horse in the attire of a bishop, comes on the night of Dec. 5, and next day is the time for opening presents. “For all children up to the age of 10, presents are put in If yen prefer to pay cash, use year charge accounts or other credit plan, you can stiO “layaway a gift a day.” Just Select a gift eadi day and hold it till Christmas. Remember, the find key to Yule Gifting success is io start Smoking Climbs on Eve of Report b HOUSTON UP) — America’s busy space heroes will be-just ordinary family men on Christ- Buying One Of Theta New Can? BUY THE INSURANCE By TOlk NOLAN US. Information Agency, bacco industry’s position, Sen. sums up th^ tnduatTy’s atti- Neuberger stays in “Smoke *°*e:.. i Screen”*.,; “We have complied with re- /Ridicule and derision became quests of the committee to sup-, deliberate defensive weapons in ply research materials, indud- the hands of the tobacco indus-ing results of research, which try public relations experts. Re-has been conducted through searchers who have discovered grants from the TobaccO lndus- a close statistical relationship try Research Committee. . between smoking , and disease “So far, as it concerns can? are unceremoniously labeled cer and heart disease, the cul: ‘zealots,’ scorned as ‘enemies of (writ has yet to/be found. We pleasure’ and ‘peculiar’.’! are convinced that scientific re- Sen Neuberger "also takes a search will eventually discover swlpe' aj what she labels “ad- Newspaper Enterprise Assn. WASHINGTON (NBA)— Cigarette smoking in the United States is increasing > in spite of all the attacks being made against it asasuspected cause of heart disease and dancer. < Hie number of cigarettes smoked in the United States this year will soar to a, record piles on tables,’’ he explains, from your local independant agent! them. > . “Of course, the. children be- tratton’s Manned Spacecraft Center. ? <....... i Most of the astronauts — including six- of the original Seven, spacemen — live in die Manned Spacecraft Center area ?-$ mRaa east of downtown Houston. They have no' definite plans tor the Yuletide season other than being with their families. Since they live in the same lieve St.~ Nicholas drops them down the chimney for all good children. If they have been naughty, Black Peter will leave a switchinstead.” ■ The family goes to church; there is time tor carol singing 4MJ> billion last year, according to Agriculture Depart- at home, and perhaps a reading 368 W. Huron St. of the Nativity story from the vertising abuses” general area, there probably companies. .Checking'on television testimonials endorsing a brand of popular cigarettes by New York Yankee baseball stars Mickey Mantle, Roger Marls and Whitey Ford, she found: • ‘ After endorsing a cigarette, Mantle switched to an Wil| be some family get-togethers, if only briefly, and the usual exchanging of gifts among astronaut families, especially the children. CHILDREN TAKE PART Most of the astronauts have children trnd some of these will take part in various community projects. The family of Maj. L. Gordon Cooper, the man who made the U.S, record-breaking 34-hour, 22 orbit flight in May, for instance, are active in church-activities. The two Cooper teefi-age daughters, Camala, 14, and Ja-nita, 13, sing in the choir of the Seabrook, Tex., Methodist This year’s 2 per cent rise in the smoking-age population might explain this, latest increase. Smokers might also be consuming more cigarettes per person today, although tobacco experts doubt it v REFUSE PREDICTION How long this increase in smoking mil continue after the surgeon genenral’s advisory committee on smoking and'health report, due at year’s end—after all this year’s tb-bacco' crop is auctioned off— tobacco industry spokesmen refuse to predict. Cigarette makers were not amused, however, when U.S. our strength commercials appeared. • Ford, a ■ confirmed', two-pack-a-day stacker for years, stepped ' smbking earlier this year. He now appears in a series of ads launched by American We need continued strength to hold ourworld lend on many fronts. We lead in telenet end invention... in busineaa and jobs ... living standards. But, to lead takes leaders. And the coat of leadership In a direct attack on the < to- Cancer Society. WHY FREEZE ALL WIHTEH? „„ „u, ouh hr OkrtoMM rtwH-W'W ” * T. n««i INSTALL* It MOW-HO TAYMENT* ’TIL JUNE! has gone up. Our colleges down install* it how train potential leaders and they are feeling the pinch. Many need,new classrooms, laboratory facilities and Dr. Terry makes dear that he is not* participating in Writing the report, though he has been active in directing < research for it. “Purposely,” he says while puffing'nis pipe, “I have stayed away from trying to know what the final report We must plan our futura strength ... now. We must hack opr collegee-Amerl-ca’e best friend. W Keep Out Old Man Winter) ALUMINUM SCREEN and STORM But already this long expected and much delayed project is having its political repercua- SCREEN and STORM WINDOWS CONTROVERSY STIRRED And Oregon Sen. Maurine Neuberger’s book, “S moke Screen,” has stirred up controversy as a forerunner to thp official government findings. Geerge V.-Allen, president of the Tobacco Institute lob., To find old how tW* college crisis effects you, write to HIGHER EDUCATION, Box 86, Timas Bauara Station, New York 10036. ALUMINUM DOOR RIOT! FACTORY-TO-YOU SALE! ALUMINUM jmhm AWNINGS SAVE • Table-top Work Area Lighted Bark Panel • Four simmer Speed Burner* • Reeened SpUI-Awaya • Automatic lighting • Safety Stop Ovcii Rai'ltA e iftemovable X-rav window Oven Door • • smokeleMK Swing Out Brollera • 8paclouo Storage • Tem-trol Automatic Burner ) t • Smart Electric Clock A GOLD STAR AWARD RANGI This Roper Go* Range proudly bears the American Gas Association's Gold Stdf— an1 emblem of excellence In dsilgn and construction. Lifetime beauty is enhanced by convenience and dependabll- to YOU *■ TODAY Attar houre call Jl 6-2B10. Wa coma to you MallF vtll IO p) THE PONTIAC PRESS. TOESDAY. DF.CEMBER 10, 1868 I**-'-’ l- Dwight Street r (left) und Mamet Sullivan, Branch Street, found this part, of the store fascinating. Maybe the boys were able to resist the temptation to buy live-stock-for Christmas presents. Bui it teas mighty hard. David Zwicker, Dale Brann, Farming-ton, got around under his own power. Looks as if he even had a list of wliat he wanted to Young Host Old Enough to Learn What young lady could help but like cosmetics? Annmarie Kupovits, Wdlled Lake, has a stocking full of goodies and some bubble bath. She was among the group of crippled children who did their Christmas shopping recently in a All ready for tim. check-out counter with earrings for his mother its James Frasier, East Sheffield Street, Ws. Karl J. Ross, d volunteer from Rochester, trundled James around the store By The Emily Poet Institute —Qr^Myhusband’a-toster often visits us with her young son, and the children play together. There are tots of toys for them to play with, and our son is very good about sharing his things with playmates. , However, his cousin always seems to want the toy our son is playing with and my husband insists that he give it up to his cousin. I think it is very unfair to our son to have to give up a favorite toy when there are so many other things his cousin could play With. My husband holds that our son is host to his cousin and should be taught to consider his guests’ wants before his owp. I would like your opto- in a shopping cart. Waterford Civic Chorus Members of the Waterford Civic Chorus entertained the Junior Pontiac Women’s club proceeding their business meeting Monday, evening at the First Federal Savings of Oakland building. * * * Program chairman for the evening was Mrs. J. A. Rammes who arranged, for the chorus’ performance. The chorus is sponsored by't h e Waterford Recreation department. During the business meeting several welfare projects were discussed. Perhaps the multiplicity of choice was too, much fbr Dime Hieser, Thors Street. Anyway, she seems a little confused. Mrs. Leon Skelley, Sylvan Lake, a teacher at Oakland County Society for Crippled Children and Adults tries to help her make up her mind. ' - •••' - A: Even though it does seem unfair, your husband Is right and your son is not too young to begin learning the fundamentals of being a perfect host. Q: Will you please tell me how old a flower girl should be? I would like to have my niece, who is almost 4, he a, flower girl at my wedding, but I am told she is too old. If this is true, is there any other way I can include her? ★ ★ * A: From 4 to 6 I* the Meal age for a flower girl, and unless your niece is very tiny for her age, it will be better for her to be a junior bridesmaid..' ... . . Following the business meeting refreshments were served. Social chairman, Mrs. Vilas Newcomb, was assisted by Mrs. Fred Sytz, Mrs. Margaret Hutchinson, Mrs. Paul L. Hoskins', Mrs. George H. Reuter anil Mrs. E. Verne Mc-Call. “Here's what I'm going to buy mommy for, Christmas ” Secure m her shopping cart, Robin Kay Morris of Rochester finds what she wants. Girl Should Warn Mother She'S Driving Dad Away Auxiliary Installation at Post “Want to see how this thing looks without the paper backingMichael Knust, Rochester, chooses a holiday coat decoration during his shopping trip at Bloomfield Miracle Mile. Others were Mrs. James A. Spark, Mrs. Roy B. Wright, Margaret Scott, Mrs. Edward Lauckner and Mrs. Francis D. Larkin. OU Students are a lot of good tunes played mother’s Job, not the father’s, on an old fiddle.” to discipline the daughters. OLD FIDDLER How can I make my daugh-★ ., it . ★ ter mind without telling her DEAR FIDDLER: But whp father? listens? A MOTHER’S JOB By ABIGAIL VANBUREN DEAR ABBY: I am U and love both my parents very much, but i’m afraid they *111 end up in dl- m voree court if Chief Pontiac Auxiliary No. 377 held a joint installation Of officers with the Legion, Saturday in the 'post home at Lake Oakland. Present Spanish Play Fraternity Has Holiday Party still necessary tor a man to remove his glove before shaking hands? H so, does he remove It .only when shaking hands with a lady? ★ it.....★ - A: He should remove his glove before shaking hands with either a lady or a man. Details concerning the announcement of an engagement are described in the new Emily Post Institute Charter members add past presidents will be honored at the annual Theta Sigma Phi Christmas party Dec. 17. Folk singer Skip Arthur w|U entertain at the buffet dinner to be held at 6:30 p.m. at the Detroit Press Club. . DEAR ABBY: Lam the DEAR MOTHER: Dledplln-mother of five children, but Jog children (boys or girls) my 14-yeaNoId daughter is my should be a team effort. Per-problem. sonally, I think you’ve lost When I tell her to clean up * control, her room or to turn off the And once It Is lost it is rarely regained. Unless you want even more serious problems w|th your daughter, tot her father handle her, Mrs. Joseph Phillips, Installing officer, was assisted by Past Presidents’ club members Mrs. Marshall Charter, Mrs. Charles Chandler, Mrs. George Thompson, Mrs. Joseph Charter and Mrs. Wil-i Ham Walters. Mb's. Charles Marsh was sergeant at arms. ★ ★ ★ The Oakland County Volture 411 of the ‘40 arid 8 club’ comprised the ritual team tor the doesn’t change her HET ways. Dad is a 1 a w y e r, JmPjKgj around 80, and he has a good prao- I tide. But, Ah- ■ by, If most ABBY people knew how hard a lawyer works on briefs, court arguments, witnesses, testimony etc., they would break right down and cry. > tells me to shut up! I told her she was getting out of hand and If she didn’t watch Mr stap l'd tell her father. He to very strict with the children and If they ever talked back to him they’d Min er forget It. I think It la a The portrayal of the tragic Ufa of women in the villages of Spain will celebrate the grand opening of the university’s new theater in the lower Everything connected with the theater, except the stage floor itself, can be removed to a more permanent location totef. i A brief business meeting at 6 p.m. will precede the party. t ★ h Sponsors are asked to bring prospective members of the booklet entitled. “Announcing Legion. Local residents haying national honorary fraternity to the Engagement. Ilia /Unnat* . HU *L4«ln m m Refreshments were served roles to the production include the dinner. Local Nurses— Attend Institute by. Mrs. Donald Richmond and Mrs. 'Roy Parden. * # lr The Harmottes of Farming-ton furnished music for dancing and a floor Show. vlttag all her friends to come Tonight Dad came home at 7:15. Right away Mom Mid, "Have you oaten yet?" No "hello”, just, 'Have you eaten yet?” He said, "No, 1 juaL got out of court.*'. Then Mom said, "What do you think I’m running here, a restaurant?” This sort of thing goes on all the time. Hannelore Von Zlttwltz, Ginger Smith, Bonnie Zeld, and Tenya Algor, students at OU, . » ★ . Other cast members are Paiiiatto Kimball, Liz Wollen-berg, Dawn Kostecke, J u d y Shannon, and Jo Ddodato, a semi • professional abtress affiliated with the Vanguard to a "housewarming-'' ' 1 I think she Is wrong. Aren’t housewarming parttoe' only for people who move into NEW homes? i - ! i - PUZZLED DEAR PUZZLED: No. TM house is "NEW” to her. Demonstration Shows Moods of Christmas Demonstration Set Members of Phi chapter^ Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will attend a demonstration of furniture reflnlshing at 8 p.m. Thursday In Al’s Waterford Hardware on Dixie Highway. Four Pontiac State Hospital The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mall, but all questions of general Interest are answered in this column. than 600 nurses* attending a recent Institute on nursing care of emotionally disturbed The Zebra Never Hod 'Em So Good patients. Theater. The Austrians are putting DIRECTOR William Gregory, director of the professional Vanguard Theater to Detroit, Is directing the play. He will be assisted by Rick Painter. Silver Tea Features Musical Presentation Sponsored by the American Nurses’ Association, the institute was held to Kansas City, Mo. ★ ★ *. Attending f r om Pontiac were Ruby Eargle, R.N., director of nursing; Mary Ann Wagner, R.N.; Ruth Johnston, RJf.j and Esther McGregor,' R.N. zebra stripes together the hard (and' expenalve) why, strips by strips. Cart Giro-nek foregoes the zebra Itself for kidskln, black and white, which he palnitaktogly stitches together. The not-really* zebra ara fashioned Into big bertha collars on suits and coats 11 and knee boots to match. jxvmmw* DBAR IN: I don't beUevs that children should be seen and not heard- Walt tor the opportune moment, and when your mother is aloM, has plenty of time and is tea t;Paul Johnsonof Detroit will good mood, toll her she should ba the guest speaker. Music k "»re P*Ufnt *nd will be provided by Mrs. with Dad. Sometimes, from Hugh Clarke of Barkley, the mouths of babes... * * * _ JsAtw Women of the community ; DEAR ABBY: When you are Invoked to attend- Lunch-sald A 76-year-old man was aon riiervatlonamay be mad#1 only running tor the exercise,, by calling Mrs. Judsoti Peck* you forgot fits saying, "There hem of Birmingham! Miss Moynes Is from tha home servloe department of tha Consumers Power Company. "Christmas In Song” was presented at t h e Pontiac Woman’! Club Christmas Silver’Tea, Monday afternoon at the Bethany Baptist Church. Tha Pontiac Tuesday Musical# Chorus, under the direction of .Mrs. Ferdinand Gaens-bauar and accompanied by Mrs. Walter A; Schmitz, provided tha entertainment. Engagement Told . January vows are planned by Barbara Jean Walker, daughter of the Lawrence Walkers of Clarkston and Raymond Thomas V/ilmot, son of Mrs. Ralph Kettles of Oak-ridge Drive and Lester C. Wil* mot of Covina, Calif. ' Among ,the, guests present for the occasion were Mrs. Karl Kutt, Mrs. Eugene Hlb-ler, Mrs. Clyde Howse, and MrS. W. E. van Riper. Others there were Mrs. Lawrence Taylor, Mrs. L R. Reeves, Mrs. H, E. McCulloch, Mary Hubert, Mrs. W. H. Laughlln, and Mrs. W, J. McCulloch. PtBsent Program A special Christmas program will be presented at the 7:30 p.m. Wednesday masting of the Women's Society of Christian Service of Covert Methodist Church. Ideas for New Club A demonstration of Christmas gift wrapping will bigh- Mrs. Turrts McCully was chairman of the day; Mrs. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 A total of 42 million persons immigrated to the U.S. between MMandiQQQ. HURRY! HURRY! Moke Reservations Now for Holiday Forties Also Cater to O Wedding Parties HOTEL 36 E. Pike $t. FE 5-6167 j The Word Of Sdrtdui — Lady Bird’s face shbws her grief at "the deep personal tragedy” of President Kennedy’s death: She stands beside her husband, while he makes his first personal statement to ihe nation as the new President. Victory Hug — Shoulder to shoulder as always, Lyndon B. Johnson gives Lady Bird a hug after they learned that the then senator had been elected Vice President of the tfnited States._ Jntheir Austin, Texas, hotel room presb conference they-stand behind a JFK-LBJ floral arrangement. Oil is produced commercially in 27 of the states. r: The Ranchers—Lyndon Johnson and Lady Bird love to relax in informed Texan togs at their spacious LBJ ranch near Johnson City, Texas. Such periods of relaxation mill be less frequent JMeumotfe ■ HOSIERY the perfect choice .. ‘SHEER, SHEER NYLONS •BOULEVARD || nude heel-demi toe Miracle No-Bind Tops HH •TISSUE SHEER MM ‘reinforced toes flJ./L and heels. Mirdele No-Bind Tops. t DELUXE MICRO 1Qw reinforced Heels tftiH end foes. Miracle 'vi No-Bind Tops. JflHR-1 •vanity- CH full-fashioned HR white picot tops, ^1 Uh h.^flng problem. W.lght V* oi. Try M GET YOURS WHILE LIMITED SUPPLY LASTS MAIL COUPON TODAY! PTA'sin Action BALDWIN A Christmas play entitled “Here is Christmas” will be presented by teachers and students of the third and fourth grades at the 2 p.m. Wednes- day meeting. The Baldwin School Honor Choir will assist the cast during foe performance in the may speak before luncheon or dinner instead of afterwards.' MANY ADVANTAGES “This has many advantages. The audience is more alert (I might add, so are you) and you will not be specking to nervous watch-watchers, tired of sitting. Miss MacMahon, who is currently recreating her original Broadway role in foe film “AH' The Way Home,” began making speeches when she was selected president of her sophomore class at Barnard College. Her most recent appearand as a speaker was for foe United States Information Service, The following are some of her first aids, with all of which I thoroughly agree. Don’t read a prepared speech. You might as well pass out typewritten copies and let the audience read it themselveB. If yon are going to speak before a microphone, tost it ahead of time to bfe sure it is right for yon. , Keep your voice conversational as if you were talking to foe person across foe table from you. A nervous speaker tends to become shrill. Consciously lower your tone. TIGHT GIRDLE If you hive notes or statistics to read be sure ahead of time that the lighting Is adequate. When asked hoW a, speaker should dress, Aline MacMahon said, “Dress comfortably. No woman can deliver a Smooth New experiences add zest to lifel Every time you hang back and refuse an invitation or a chance to try your wings with a new experience, or pass by an opportunity because you are sby, you grow a little older. Every time you tackle something you were afraid of and make a success of it you feel, and look IQ years younger. I think it really makes you younger because it broadens your horisons and increases your feeling of sdlf-oonfidence and self-respect. Today so many women are active in civic, church, dab and school affairs. Many thousands of them are called upon for the first time to make a speech now and then. Don't fail to accept this chel-lenge whether it is to be a' group of SO people or 300. There are tricks which will help you, and yon would not The Columbia Avenue Baptist Church was foe setting for: foe recent marriage of Glenna Lavada Gilliam to Dewey Junior Reese, with Rev. Clay E. Polk officiate school auditorium. ■ Christmas program at the 7 p.m. Thursday meeting in the multipurpose room, j Refreshments will be served - by home room mothers and a nursery provided, i MALKIM | j Grades one, two* and three • will present “The Nutcracker j Suite” for foe annual Christmas program at 7 p.m. Thurs- Mrs. Royal Exline will direct foe music. McCAEROLL Mrs. Rosemary Northon will direct-the annual Christmas. i program, “Christmas in, foe jHnHHIHHIB'F Hom9^*t 7:30 pp, Wednes- MBS. DEWEY J. .REESE 1 pose room.* Parents of foe couple are the Glenn Gilliams of Lor* berta Lane and Mr. and Mrs. Eldon D. Reese of Emerson Avenue. For foe small family ceremony; foe bride chose a street-length dress of* petal pink lace over taffeta. ’ ; ' ★ 1 ★ V . ' Her matron of honor and only attendant, Mrs. Curtis Elliot, appeared in turquoise sheer wool. KNITTING BAGS Socialite Mrs. Johnson poses in inaugural ball gown after swearing in of vice president, .January, 1961 The Knitting Needle 1458 i. Huron — FE 5-13300 one feels that you are qualified to do the Job or have I something worthwhile to suy. Aline MacMahon, one of Hollywood’s outstanding character actresses and veteran public speaker said, “It’s a revolutionary idea, but I advise anyone who is asked to make a speech to request that they Protect Your Eyes with Lightweight • Attractive• Look like Now Everyone Is Well-Rounded Remain seated it you do RemodeBHg! Building! FRA TERMS NO MONEY DOWN All Work Performed by Ikmod Draftsmen pinches her ribs.” .. ' . f Perhaps the most important advice of all is, “Be. yourself, end really feel what you are saying and all nervousness will trend in figure fashions. The old flattened look in posteriors is out, claims a well-known foundation garment manufacturing company. The new rounded, nat- Naturally, foe company Just who read this colUmn are saying or thinking1 “Women already talk enough. Why, oh why does she have to urge them to talk more?" happens to have a (new style girdle designed to mold gently any derrlere not curvace-ous enough by itself. Pontloc *r fl Bt8733 Now a Triple Threat Mink Wrap From the fabulous House of ■Furs By Robert Thorough Examination by a Registered Op *Dr* Emil Ondre, O.D. Satisfaction GUARANTEED or your mohay back Daytcwr, tweer uhi i»nt LuUtia Mink Wrap Ilk# foil, Night tint*, drop#, It Ilk# this for dlflfmnt rffret. . Shop Soars Until 9 Evory Nit* 'til Christmas Downtown Pontiac Pham FE 5-4171 P J. Woodward, Bimingbaui1 THE' PONTIAC PRES^y T15ESIDAY, 13so GEORGE'S 74 N. SAGINAW Open Evenings Till Christmas * " ‘A Combination of Service Regularly ..j Priced el 115.00 for NO FASHION (UT aaaw SPPniMTMi NT CONDITIONING SHAMPOO $1195 ArmilNTMKNT ckKam Rinhk • NECESSARY COLOR RINJIK V • v OUnCRD MALON PERMANENT Beauty Salon Phone FE 5-9257 OPEN EVERY NI• MODEST, diplomatic rathar DONALD DUCK OLD SlRUj/ J THE WORRY WART V^CHKU Sensed m. no ;n if THE PONTIAC PRgSjS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1903 B—13 Trainmen Sentenced in 65-Death Accident VQtf&HA, Italy (UPI) - A court yesterday sentenced two trainmen to 14 years in prison for multiple manslaughter for piling their freight train into a standing passenger train la ’ year, killing 65 persons. Engineer Langranco Pigtard and fireman Sorianto Fabri had insisted .that a mechanical failure of thq signaling system was responsible for the mishap. tddney44it- DOOM OPEN 6,45 11 i SHORTS AT : 7,1 a % eiMRBj Jff ^THEATRES? %«■»*’ 9,20 FEATURES 12 N. Saginaw FI 3421,1 94S mSJSSML A GATHERING OP EAGLES TAMMY I THE DOCTOR WEDNESDAY mourn ar-.-.i Journo1 HALWALUSm* RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY Tear urUmOur Famous Kosh.r Com*d iOlf Comuloto C.lryOul Sorvl.. Naked Truth: Nude Pose Is Lawful NEW YORK UB—A judge says there’s nothing disturbing about a nude posing in the middle of a deserted Manhattan street on a quiet Sunday afternoon. The court decision was handed down Monday in the case of die People vs. Jan Tipe. Miss lice, 27, a model, took off her clothes Nov. 10 on Liberty Street In the financial district to' pose for a photographer, taking pictures tor n happened by and arrested them. ★ ★ A---------------..._ ..a___ Judge Richard F. Daly acquitted them, saying a breach of the peace requires the presence of the public § and “there weren’t any people there." I ' ' ■ w ■ A . A “Actually,” he'added, “the defendants annoyed no | one, disturbed no one, interfered with no one, obstructed I no one, or became offensive to non one—except, perhaps, | the police officer,” by Financial Judgment LOS ANGELES (AP)-Actor Mickey Rooney, recently declared bankrupt, suffered another financial setback Monday when a judgment of $8,350 was levied against his present employer. 1he employer, Barbroo Enterprises,Productions, me., was ordered tojay1 fin additional. $1,500 In lawyers' feu to the Goldstone-Tobias Agency, Inc, The agency said that under an agreement signed Sept. 21,1981, Barbroo promised to pay $9,000 from Rooney’s earnings, but paid only $650. MISTAKEN BELIEF Barbroo said the promise was made in the mistaken belief that the actor was indebted to Goldstone-Tobias and demanded return of the $660. A spokesman said Rooney, father of seven children, hopes to be able soon to pay off more than $100,000 in back income taxes. Rooney has been married five times. . > OAS Hears Charges -■ of Cuban Subveriion . MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-A leading anti - Castro organization says the Isle of Pines, south of Cuba, is a submarine base used for sneaking arms to South and Central American terrorists. The Cabin Revolutionary Council tnld the Organization of American States in a telegram Monday that fishing boats, and planes also deliver arms at points Where Prime Minister Fidel Castro wants to Stir tippit at $140,861 DALLAS, Tex. (AP)-“We’re beginning to make headway,” Police Lt. Verne Hipsldnd said Monday as he added $15,000 to the bulging fund for the family of slain patrolman J, D. Tippit. Hipskind and his police department crew listed a total «f $140,861.25 in donations to the Tippit family, It was estimated funds not handled by the department would put the total near $200,000. Tippit was killed Nov. 24 as he sought to stop Lee Harvey Oswald, accused of assassinating President John F, Kennedy, for questioning. . Cleric Adds 'Reality' to New Nativity Play MAIDSTONE^ England (UPI) — The Rev. Donald Reeves, curate of All Saints Anglican Church, said today he has written a “kitchen sink” Nativity play in which a husband and wife fight and a juvenile delinquent almost stabs t> man. ‘Traditional Nativity stories are'old hat to me,” Father Reeves, 28, said. "My idea is to bring reality to the Chlrstmas story.” . 'Castro Using “The Cuban Communist regime uses a Soviet submarine flotilla to transport arms, subversive agents and Communist propaganda,” the coimcil charged. It told the OAS also that the Isle of Pines has missiles hidden In tunnels and a landing strip suitable for fighter planes. The subs and fishing nrafMhe. council said, have taken weapons to Mexico, El Salvador, Venezuela, Nicaragua; Hondur-as, Colombia, Panama British Guiana and Grata Rica. EYEING CHARGE The OAS is investigating a Venezuelan charge that Castro smuggled gups into its territory to arm antigovemment Ex-State Pair Charged With Beating Child TUCSON, Aria. (AP) - Dr. Mrs. Maurice Hunt were arrested Monday on charges of beating and otherwise mistreating their 5-year-old daughter Tina. Hunt was charged1 with aggravated assault and two counts of being an accessory to aggravated assault. Mrs. Hunt was charged with aggravated assault. The couple formerly lived in Michigan. it ★ ★ Authorities found the girl Nov. 10 with her head uniter a water heater in the family furnace room. Her body was bruised and her hands bound behind her back. Preliminary hearing for the Hunts fs scheduled Jam 10. They were released under $1,000 bond. , Gains Made on Cancer WALTHAM. Mass. (AP)-Dr. William T. Murakami of the graduate department of biochemistry at Brandeis University has purified and reduced a potent animal cancer virus to crystalline form for the first time, the American Cancer Society reports. ■ The virus Is a polyoma,Tfiean-ing “many tumors.” It produces more than 20 kinds of cancer in mice, rats, hamsters and guinea pigs. Researchers can. now inject the virus into other animals and study more Accurately just what lakes place and how the viruagoesabout its destructive business. Being able to'purify a virus enables scientists to determine Urn precise chemical nature of tiie particle and trace the chem-ical process bv which it infer1 injures and destroys cells. Set Clinics for Smokers NEW YORK Wl - The City Health Department has plans for free clinics to help cigarette smokers break the habit. Dr. George James, health commissioner, said yesterday tiie department is considering using the drug, lobeline, to help reduce withdrawal symptoms. Group therapy is also under con-sideration. He said he hopes to have a pilot project — one or two dta-ics—open by spring. Why Not? it's Nancy Kwan Star Has Yen for Chinese By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-lTelevishm Writer HOLLYWOOD — You know how expectant mothers get urges for strange and exotic foods. That happens to Nancy Kwan all the time, and to she has to drive to another country. *----- . Nancy is {he Hong Kong doll, daughter—.of a' Chinese architect and an English model, who became a star in her first film, “The World of Suzie Wong.” THOMAS Her third picture, “Main Attraction^... Alps and there she met a ski instructor and hotel owper named Peter Pock. “The first time I saw that marvelous-looking man I said, ‘That’s for me,’ ” she recalled, NEAR INNSBRUCK Within wratomwwerejmar-ried and made their home near Innsbruck. A nice romantic story? Yes. but there is a com- **I still love Chinese food,” she said. “If I go a week without having Chinese food, I become physically til; This w as especially true when I was pregnant, but the craving remains all the time. ★ *’ it it , “But there is not a single Chinese restaurant in all of Austria.” Nancy, now the mother of Bernhard Pock, made her yearning known'to her husband. HAPPY FOR WEEK “So he would have to drive me, sometimes fe the middle p hlizaaM^^rrGnrm^lTnrMu-nich in Germany, two or three hours away,” she said, “There I could get a Chinese dinner and I would be happy—for a week ” The trips became so rejpjlar jhat her husband finally said, “It would be a lot simpler to open our own Chinese restaurant.” Now they are planning to do just that, together with a hotel they are building in tiie Austrian Tyrol. Nancy Holly s here for her second in which she appears Opposite Robert Goulet and Robert Morse as a social director at a resort. Her first Hollywood film was “Flower Drum Song.” “I don’t really want to work,” she said, “but I have a contract. It -Is not so bad when I make pictures_ iu Europej then Lanr Only two or three hours from home by air. When I work in Hollywood, it is not good,” PLANS EVERYTHING Much has happened to the petite, appealing Miss Kwan in the four years since she was dubbed Suzie Wong to rep] France Nuyen. She has made films here, in her home town of Hnwg K«ngt In I-flndnn, Austria and Tahiti. She has played a Chinese girl, sin American-Chi-nese, an Italian, a Polynesian, an English girl and, in “Honey- moon Hotel,” an American. “I’ve played everything but Country Singer Dtef OSKALOOSA, Iowa (UPI) -' Country and western singer Jerry Byers, 30, died yesterday of cancer. Byers’ ailment -was diagnosed as cancer about one year ago. Local residents launched him on his singing career last Febru- what I am — a Eurasian,” she ary when they paid his expenses said. “And I, do that next, in to Nashville, Tenn., for bis first ms 1 WEEK DAKS, Op.n — Continuous 11 AH. to 12 f.U. I SUNDAY: Op.n - Continuous 12 A.M. to 12PJI. Natali* WOOD - Tab HUNTER ^ “BURNING HILLS” W Gary COOPER - Maria SCHILL “HANGING TREE” FRI. & SAT. 3;3Q P.M. to T;3fLJLilr—— MfiEDC up to jo OBe with this IfUNIallW YEARS OLD M COUPON JNEOLL Day or Evening Gasses Register while (here are still openings. Phone FID 4-2352. lift 8. Saginaw, Engle Theater Bldg., Pontiac, Michigan. PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCIOOL t/*1963 Box Score: FORD'S TOTAL PERFORMANCE TOUGHNESS DOMINATES THE COMPETITION WORLD! -Ford haachosenthe most rugged testing program cars have ever faced ... full-scale open competition on the rally and racing circuits of the world. This is the dramatic, way to. show that Fords have changed... and the yure way to be certain they keep on changings Changed? Just look at the record: STOCK CM MCMG: 2-to-l margin for Ford Ford to;king of NASCAR competition and Ford Motor Company haa the NASCAR Achievement Award to prove it. In the ’63 season, special Ford entrieo won every single race of 600 miles or longer, scored nearly twice as many points aa any other make. 600-mile races are the ultimate teat of inherent durability and dependability. In two other major stock c«r racing associations, I MCA and, MARC, Ford drivers have wrapped up Here the Cobra -with ite special Fairlane engine emerged aa the overwhelming leader in one short year.' Cobra won the coveted margin or for*_---------------- sight. And in the two major tests this fall, the, Laguna Sees and Riverside races, the new King Cobras d listed off the top "unlimited” cars from all over the world. Manufacturer*i Championship Products of Ford Motor Company and its worldwide affiliates won thel963 Manufacturer’s World Rally Championship. Ford's rally year began when two specially equipped Falcon V-8’s startled the automotive world in the brutal 2500-mile ,Monte Carlo Rally*. Other special Falcon V-8’s triumphed in Holland’s famed Tulip. Ty,' end ran away with Manufacturer’s Team Ford ends an era Advanced Ford engineering smashed precedent in the classic Indianapolis "600.” The first time out, a light alloy version of the Fairlane V*8 design in a Lotus chassis finished second. And the next time, in the Milwaukee "200” it ended the reign of the traditional "Indy” racing car by leading every foot of the way from start to finish. New laurels for Ford >ng reputation for thrift— Falcon scored first in He is a I960 graduate Of Clarkston High School and ah. Werner Mueller of Utica has been promoted to airman second class in the United States Air Force. Airman Mueller, son of.Mr. and Mrs. Jakob Mueller of 37374 Carpathia, Utica, is presently a student at the Keesler Technical Training Center at the Mississippi Air Force _ WiiliamJX-BamaggTrTrM9(i6 ‘'Orohard Lake, and Samuel E. Root, 20832 Tuck, both of Farmington, were ordered Off the road for driving with suspended Lynwood R. Shoults, commissary man third class, USN, son of Mrs. Isabelle Flewelling of 5794 Highland Road, recently was graduated from the Cora? missaryman School at the Naval; Base, Newport, R.I. Airman Third Class DannvJlJ McGowenJias-^radOStedfrom —Hie technical ~ training course for new mem-oeis of the Forte Medical|2<^W^t -S e r v 1 c e aty- W 1 Greenville A i r% | 1 s Ba,e'|m)s Airman Mc-W^X*Tl Gowen, • son of f il Mr. and Mxa. MCGOWEN ^^“C^MGGoweiLof jiS Victory Drive, was selected for further training at Brooks AFB, Tex.. While at Greenville, the airman received orientation training on the mifyion of the Medical Service as an introduction to his new job specialty. ...The airman is a graduate of Pontiac Northern High School. Army Corporal James R. Snover, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Snover, 6221 Orion Road, Clarkston, recently was graduated from the Seventh U.S. Army Non Commissioned Offi- • $25,080 Liability • $1,250 Medical • $1,000 Death Benefit • $20,000 Uninsured Motorist The airman is a graduate of field. He is returning to his including road .service -Warren High School. permanent unit at Travis AFB, David J. Garnett, seaman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard O. Garnett Sr., of 4976 Hobson Avenue, recently was graduated from tiie Aviation Mechanical Fundamentals Schopl at the Naval Air Technical Training Gen ter, Memphis, Tenn. T mi 11 m i, j! I mi n II kn i ii ■corny promoted to specialist four while serving with the U.S. Army Support Group, Vietnam, as a medical corpsman. Specialist Leverett entered the Army in September 1962, completed basic training at Fort Knox, Ky., and was stationed at Fort Sam Houston, Tex,, before arriving overseas -inMarchef-tiiisyear^________I Leverett is a 1961 graduate of Highland Park High School and attended Highland Park Junior College. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Anders, live at 299 La Belle in Highland Park. GRADUATIONS .. Luther B. Morris. aviation machinist’s mate'thirdelass.USN, was recently graduated from the Aviation Machinist’s Mate Jet Engine Course at the Naval Air Technical Training Center, Memphis, Tenn. Morris entered the servipe in The gap in earning power between holders of high school diplomas and college graduates has been widening steadily. In 1961 the difference- amounted to an average of more than $3,400 a year. ________-T. "Army Pvt. John E. Patterson, 24, son Of Mrs. Mary Terry, 349 South Anderson Street, recently complefedeight——-------__4 weeks of ad- i vanced infantry training with' light weapons Sa .adM at Fort PoMr^ ] - Patterson en- | tered the Army last August and^.t>xT§|^ completed basic < training at Fort PATTERSON Knox, Ky. He is a 1959 graduate of Pontiac High School. PERFECT FAMILY GIFT at DISCOUNT SAVINGS Cartoon Film You gitlwdV ■tobla-Top end Splicer^ Ajhptir Meat Everything You Need for Pkl C Perfect Color Movies! Ei * wm9 I \m0 I wl Eh COMPLETE COLOR MOVIE OUTFIT! WORLD'S EASIEST WAY TO PLEASURE TIME! RaisedtcTgivFy^T and rolled to make a better lift-tab. Now />. A , ? It's, so much easier to enjoy the fire-brewed flavor (of Strolfs. Light... smooth... refreshing. Pick up a six-pack of Stroh's beer today! TNI STROH BREWERY COMPANY, DETROIT 26, MICHIGAN Drivers’ licenses of 17 area motorists were recently suspended or revoked by the Michigan Department of State. Ordered to show proof of financial responsibility due to convictions of drunken driving were: James J. Bentley, Willett Street. Aubun Atkins, 31850 Lamar, Farmington; Don B. Clark, 1872 Banbury, Birmingham; and Maxwell G. Grace, 4180 W. Walton, Waterford Township. UNSATKFACTORY RECORDS UnsTO^actmyjlriving-recWt^ caused the following to be or-; dered off the road: v William K. Bock, 88" Newberry; Richard C. Cloutier, 2875 Newberry; Frenchie R. Dunivan, 1693 Elsmere; Richard P. Moline, 259 Raeburn; Richard Ai Nadeau, 3556 Brookdale; and Stephen A. Polesbnk, 490 Perry, all of Pontiac. Others were Jan D. Anderson, 3384 Frembes, Waterford Township; Dennis Michael Berling, Costume Jewelry Has Special Gift Appeal This Year JOG...___-7 under "stated7 ^slffiplicIfyoY women’s clothes this winter, costume jewelry takes on special importance as a Christmas gift. Featured this season is a fascinating “gold 1 ook,” achieved by the use of gold-coloreti fringe, mesh, braM amrwoven tuusnes. The imaginative use of colored stones add an aura of real excitement, to the new pins necklaces, bracelets and earrings that can glamourize a woman’s appearance.. * The shorter sleeves have emphasized the —importance' of" bracelets. Today’s selections- are wide and varied, from a group of small bangles, wide bangles, woven mesh, narrow and wide chains, to the lovely, colorful stone-set bracelets. STROH IS FIRST WITH THE NEW SMOOTH HANDLE ZIP-TAB... RAISED ROUNDED ROLLED R EMM i FOR GOOD DRIVERS | All These Coverages JEw* At This Low Premium THE PONtlAC PRESS; TUESDAY, D!EfCEMRilR 10, Ja^k Says It .Wa$ Possible Was Dempsey Slipped 'Mickey Before MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Exheavyweight king Jack Demp-I sey admits he may have been ; slipped a mickey before he went into the ring against Gene Tun-_ nev and got knocked off the “A doctor told me the next day I’d probably been given a -Mickey film and I probably was ill for three or four days after that,’’ said Dempsey. ... throne heid held seven years. Blit Dempsey insisted he felt fine the day and nifdit of the fight and offered no excuse fof dropping the 10-round decision « in the rain at Philadelphia qn Sept. 23,1926. More than 120,000 fans watched the fight. However, theManassa Mauler was inclined to brush the : whole thing off, saying, “it happened about 40 years ago. Who could remember what happened? 1 was a|l right. I fought my fight. “If Gene Tunney had had a Mickey Finn,, he probably could have licked me anyhow.” Dempsey .commented after Benny Marshall of the Birmingham, Ala. News had quoted him as having said he was drugged. "at the time Of the fight; "I don’t believe I have ever been as sick, before or since,” Marshall quoted Dempsey. “It was terrible. Just terrible.” Marshall said he and Atlanta restauranteur Harvey Hester, were' present when Dempsey made his remarks in New York about the big bout. Hester confirmed Marshall’s report, asserting ‘‘Jack got a ■ Mickey Finn the morning of the fight.” • —Maishall wrote that fee drug -was slipped into Dempsey’s coffee at breakfast by a trusted companion who “prepared to arrange it so. that big money back in Chicago might grow bigger, crooked money, obyi- • ously.”. ; >4*/ - - The story that the great heavyweight had been drugged has been whispered among old time boxing writers for many years. But it has never been publicly revealed, at Dempsey’s request, ; As a I said, he didn’t think too much of the incident when he was telling Marshall and Hester about if at dinner. CHANCE REMARK . “they were just some chance remarks I didn’t, think would wind up in print,” he said. Dempsey! who won the title from Jess Willard in 1919, hadn’t put it on the line for ; three years prior to his 1926 fight against ex-marine Tun-“wey. Tummy also put him a in a 10-round decision one year later, when Dempsey was 32 and Tunney 29. Alan J. Gould, former sports editor and executive editor of the Associated Press, said at New York last night that there was nothing to indicate Dempsey was either ill or drugged in the first bout. * ★ ★ Gould, who was at ringside, recalled, “it was not a very, ex-ftnff?fcdown8. and Tunney clearly outDoxed aria outpunched Dempsey. It seemed to; me that Dempsey was slow and his timing was.off. His legs were not up to what they were in his prime.” TEAM EFFORT TRIUMPHS - The ?00 Bowl had the top entry last year in the Traveling House Trophy competition of the Press Bowlerama and it produced a good defending lineup this season. For the first tirhe, in the special event, there was a repeat winner. This year’s winning 300 ~Bowl five-some included (left to right) George Chico-vsky, Joe Foster, Monroe Moore, Les Roth-barth and Larry Crake. The team had a 3196 total. The crowning moment for many of . the more than, 175 county bowler* < • whoH collected winnings in this year’s Press Bowlerama came last night at 1963 Payoffs Commence COMBINED EFFORTS - Monroe Moore and Peg Carter last hight were crowned champions of the newest special event in, the annual Press Bowlerama—the Mixed Doubles Actuals. The 300 BoW1 duo pooled their efforts for a 1259 . total for which they were rewarded with trophies and cash prizes at the awards ceremony last night. Star in NBA Doghouse; Telh How to Draw Fouls NEW YORK (AP) r- Frank Ramsey of the Boston Celtics, a self-styled master of deception, haabeen censured by the National Basketball Association for a by-lined magazine article in which he; detailed how he lured opponents into commitlng fouls. The censure was contained in a letter from league President Walter Kennedy that should be in Ramsey’s morning mall. > * * w The article by Ranptey, which was published'Jn Sports Illus-tested under die title of “Smart Moves by a Master of Deception,” was accompanied by sketches illustrating the methods the former Kentucky All-America uses to draw fouls.— “1 have always thought,” said Kennedy, “that the mark of success of ah athlete Is what he can dp within the confines of the rules rather than by \ circumventing them.*' i . ; Sr * 1 '* Kennedy said ho had no power beyond censuring Ramsey, but “will seek legislation to give me further powers at our next | meeting In Boston at the time ! of the All-Star Game, Jan. 14, “I have no intention of asking for censorship or trying to throttle players or coaches,” said Kennedy. “I, will seek legislation to enable me to take proper steps if t|iere Is a continuance of irresponsibility.” ★ ★ « * Kennedy said his letter to Ramsey “stressed the respohsl-bilty of the players to die youngsters who look upon them as heroes and who might imitate them. “Now for a highly popular player of the world championship team to say publicly n* Is a master of deception In an at-tempt to draw fouls by evasion can only mean that the youngsters will attempt to imitate Ramsey, contacted in. Boston, said he had no‘t yet received Kennedy's letter, “1 would rather wait until I see the comments," ha said, “before I make a comment,” . ,■•,**<* the awards presentation in the 300 Bpwl banquet room. and trophies were hartdSd. dirt tb the tdpwihners and other qualifiers who came despite the inclement weather. Included in the presentations were a check for $700 awarded to handicap winner Tony Ledesma (plus a trophy), and a $100 savings bond and a check for $500 to Mike Samardzija — -JrHpluo trophies) for h|s vio-tory in the Actuals Invitational and runrier-up berth in the handicap portion, Monroe Moore took home trophies as runner-up in the Actuals Invitational,. Mixed Doubles Actuals champion and winning team members in the Traveling House Trophy competition, plus checks totaling $27.50 and a $50 savings bond for his Actuals Invitational efforts. Tom Mayes collected $300 and a trophy for third place In the handicap, and Peg Carfer wbn $27. Strand a trophy for her finishes in the handicap qualifying and Mixed Doubles Actuals. Those who di($ not collect their winnings at the presentation will have them mailed to them. If anyone has not received the prize money within a week, The Press sports department should be notified. Winners are requested to cash their checks by Jan. 1, 1964. h Wings Near Record for Going Wrong Way Detroit 0-9-2 in Road Games This Season Play at Toronto Next; Bassen May Get Call to Be Netminder DETROIT (UPI) - The Detroit Red Wings are on the verge of setting a record for going foe wrong way. The Wings, who are 0-9-2 oh the road this season, will travel to Toronto today to take-on the Maple Leafs Wednesday night. The 1959-6 Oteam had an 0-7.6 record "away from home while the 1931-32 team went 0-11-1 on the road at one stretch. The slumping Wings haven’t been much better at home, either, and have won only one of their last 10 games after losing to Toronto Sunday at Olympic, 5-3. Toronto has won four straight games and has moved 4 into second place, eight points behind the league-leading Chicago Black Hawks. Detroit is in fourth place pdth 17 points, 12 points behind third place Montreal. New York and Boston are tied for fifth place with, just 16 points and Detroit could fall into the cellar this week if it doesn’t, get straightened out, The injury prospects are still it good. Goalie Terry Sawchuk is bothered with a bad back and Hank Bassen is expected t be called up for Wednesday’ clash with Toronto. r METT'.i Big Ten Bask&tmtf Teams Still Troubled by 'So Galczynski Hits 31 as Spencer Wins BUI Gatcsynskl score d 31 Joints last night as Spencer P* 1 o o r s opened the Waterford ecreation basketball sea-, ton with a 92-65 win over O’Neil Realty. John Herrington tossed in 26 for the winners who caught flrq in the last two quarters after holding a 41-38 halftime lead. D av e Struble hit 29 for the losers. * m * . In the other game, Zllka Heating downed 8truble - Frushour Realty as Wayne Zllka notched 10 points, Dick Hobson scored 10 for the losers. Wednesday at Pierce Junior High, BUT Towing will play Wardrobe Cleaners at 7:16 p.m. and O'Neil will take on a team managed' by Bob Casteel In, the Roger Crozier, who has won the No. 1 goalie job but is sidelined with a broken cheekbone, was fitted with a face mask yesterday by trainer Lefty Wilson but he’ll probably 'still be Defensemen Bill Gadsby and Doug Barkley and left winger Larry Jeffrey are all ailing. The only encouraging news is that Norm Ullman, who is suffering from a chipped bone Vm*ankre,lRatea'foflhe {felt time in almost two weeks. “Now days it’s easier to count the number of players who are hurt than the ones who aren’t,” manager-coach Sid Abel said. Crimson Tide BS Suspends TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) -Alabama's star quarterback Joe Namath. has been, suspended . gig from the team and will not ap-pear In Saturday's Miami game or the Jan. 1 Sugar Bowl. Coach Paul Bryant said Mon- day night: “Namath has been suspended from the team for the rest of the season, Including the Sugar Bow, for an infraction of training rules this past weekend. “Joe has Indicated to me that he will remain In school and concentrate on his studies. He will be allowed to remain on scholarship.” Bryant declinedto elaborate., Cage Calendar TONIOHT twitsrtWi I Milford «t Highland Para Clarkiton at Oxford L'Ama CrtUM at SriMt Lfiiir tTyKHriloy ' Warran ..Utteoln^fltaMOD,-Carunvllfa at Datkarvllla North ■ ranch at Ortonvllia mtlay city at (Mmont iaaah- at . Millington Parmlnoton 0L Sorrow* at It. rlMK'ttll cranbrook at imminMl KVOviii CHICAGO (AP)—Iowa joined three other undefeated Big Ten basketball teams Monday night but Western Conference representatives again failed to solve Southern foes.—7 While Iowa was scoring a 79-77 triumph over St. Louis, Purdue dropped a 77-72 decision to WSkeForest.-■ *,;v'' This marked the fourth time this season. that' a Southern team had bested a Big Ten team in as many games. Aside from the Iowa triumph, it Was a sorrowful night for the Big Ten as Illinois and Indiana went down to defeat in addition to Purdue. Illinois lost at Oklahoma, 105-104, and Indiana dropped a 93-84 decision' to Kansas State on the Hoosiers’ home floor. Purdue’s initial lo^s was at Wake Forest. UD VS. LOYOLA Only two Big Ten teams will be in- action Tuesday night as Midwpst interest turns toward s doubleheader at the Chicago Stadium. Northwestern Will' battle, New York University, the nation’s No- 2 • team, while Loyola,-the nation’s No. 1 team, takes on Detroit Wisconsin, meanwhile, is at home against Pittsburgh. Iowa, with,Jits third victory against no defeats, joined Michigan’, Minnesota and Michigan State with a 3-0 record ih hire-, conference competition., - Dave Roach pumped In 32 points to lead the Hawkeyes to victory while Andy Hankins added 13. Purdue blew a 39-36 halftime advantage In losing to Wake Forest. The Deacons had a balanced attack in which four players scored in double figures topped by Bob Leonard’s 16 points. . ■ ★ ★ ★ Illinois found Oklahoma too tough - on file Sooners’ home floor. Although the lead changed hands six times in the last 10 minutes, Oklahoma led by 10 points with Vk minutes left but all Illinois managed to do was finish close., - ■ — ★ Farrell Johnson led Oklahoma with 29 points. Tal Brody topped HUnoirwith 20 and Skip Thereto finished with 18. Indiana’s Van Arsdale twins scored 40 points but the Hoosiers received little help elsewhere and Indiana was foiled on its own home court. & NFL Leaders Favored by Touchdown Sunday LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Both conference leaders hi the National FbotbaD League are picked by Las Vegas bookmakers to win their final regular-season games’ next Sunday and clinch their respective titles, The New York Giants, leading the Eastern Conference, are seven-point favorites over, the , Pittsburgh Steelers. The Chicago Bears, ahead in the Western Conference, are favored by six over the Detroit Lions. the luxury beer at a popular price... After, the SKI-RUN Enjoy PFEIFFER Its great! C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER ip, 1968 H m Scot'*? OAKLAND, Cellf.-San franclsco and H Francisco, drew, 10. See the New 1964 ' Chevroiets Pontiacs • Buicks at the Only Showroom in Oakland County . Where You Can See AD Three HOMER HIGHT ROTORS, INC 160 8. Washington St., Oxford < OA s-*ste HAZELTON’S tor something dillerent giro A MONOCRAMMED GIFT LLOYD MOTORS In Hall of Fame ins' Line ^Ex^rfef Sioi^onor^ NEW YORK (AP) a thrill that comes once to a lifetime. You can’t believe it even when it happens.’* ' Henry Pete- Fund, Georgia Tech center and captain of the 1928 national championship team said it at a lunchpon Monday but these words could have been uttered by all1 the living among the 10 all-time greats who will I - die Football I Hall of Fame tonight. I The ceremonies will take [place at a-dinner at which the1 National Football Foundation i made its annual awards, j T h e s e i included foundation I plaques and Earl H. Blaik Fel-lowships for graduate study to nine scholar-athletes, the Mac- > Arthur Bowl to the University of jTexas as the nation's outstanding football team, and the Gold Medal to Roger M. Plough, former Susquehanna University star, for outstanding contribu- ★ Lincoln ★ Mercury fr-Engltetr Ford ^ ^ “ mArn Niimn 232 S. Saginaw FE 2-9131 all. COACH NAMED The new Hall of Famers includes nine players and one coach. Seven are living. All at- r^iracle Mile Pure Servicenters;,r.^ nram-SCOPE TUNE UP ROAD AID DAS-Oil-TIRES Qold Bell Stamps K 3-904® KTi | —% rimin ■»•»» a mmm tended the New York Football Writers’ .luncheon Monday and each expressed his gratification. “ft i$ very difficult to put my delight and thrill into words,” exclaimed Cliff Montgomery, former Columbia quarterback. “I want to puMidy thank my former coach, Ray Elliott,” said Aiex Agase, Illinois and Purdue “My two greatest' thrills,’ Lake OrionBaptfsT Wins 2nd Game Lake Orion Baptist was the only repeat winner as the YMCA Church Basketball League’s men’s division had its second round of games last' night. ^—-rr-~Z2 7jTiVv» Mike Wilson, Larry Leach and Ron Christenson hit 14 points each for Lake Orion as it whipped the Pontiac Ministers, 64-24. Other games saw Doneison Baptist hand First Church of the Brethren a 65-50 defeat for its second toss of the young season, and First Baptist won its first game in two starts, 54-30, over Pilgrim Holiness. Larry Farnham’s 20 market's led Doneison, while Gene 'McLean hit 17 to pace victorious said teckle Gebrge Ctonnor of Holy Cross and Notre “was when the Cross upset Boston College, 51-12 and when I was a member of the Notre Dame national champions.” ★ * ★ “My coach at high school said I’d never make the college team as an end.” said Ken Kavan-augh of Louisiasa State, who went onto become' a great pro end. It was the greatest honor I lived in my life. A mil-lion-to-one~cfi?meeT!L§aid Edwin Goat Hale, who score downs and 164 points in his sem ior year at Mississippi College*. “I am particularly happy that my. coach at Colgate, Dick Harlow, also made the Hall of Fame said former Colgate halfback. Edward Tryon. The old timers, all deceased, include Thomas Bum McClung, Charles Buck Wharton and George Woodruff. McClung, a Yale bade who playedin 1889-91, scored more than 1$0 touchdowns and 1,000 points. Wharton was a guard for Penn teams inl893-96, that won 52 and lost four. Woodruff played at Yale and coached at Penn, where his team’s compiled a 10-year record of 124-15-2. He later became acting secretary of the Interior, a U.S. federal judge and attorney general of Pennsylvania. WHAT’S THE GOOD WORD T I never owned an automobile like it I’m on the road about 500 miles a week. 1 sell wine. Very good wine. And, my car has been a ’63 Dodge Polara. In maintenance it cost me one dollar for each 1000 miles. That’s for new spark piugs, points— everything. I never owned a car like it. . . until 1 bought the big Dodge. A 1964 Dodge 880. This Is the biggest Dodge they, make. And, do you know, I get 17 miles per gallon!” Norman A. King, Detroit, *'' new owner of i * '64 Dodge 880 hardtop Those six cylinders on my new Dodge 330 eure have plenty of powbr. The brake system and handling are j that's what you've got to have. It’s a beautiful car, too. How they can sell It for so little I don’t know. Fact It, my wife likes it eo much she wants a Dodge all her own." Roy Welch, Pontiac, new owner of a '64 Dodge 330 “PERFECT! I bought a compact Dodge Dart became of its good styling, economy and rooit). Dart gives me all this, plus Dart rides and holds the road like heavier care. Tliat’a It. 1 like to take tripe and Dart's the perfect answer for me.” Betsy Schiimp, Detroit, new owner of a '64 compact Dodge Dart Spurt Boosts Oliver NHL Point Race MONTREAL (AP) - Johnny Bucyk’s return to the wars after an eight - game absence has given the hitherto toothless Boston Bruins a scoring bite and lifted Bruin Murray Oliver into the. National Hockey League point parade.) Boston's Oliver - Bucyk - Tom Williams line has been the NHL’s hottest trio since leftwinger Bucyk broke into the line-up last week after being ‘ with a shoulder injury. The comBtnatioiL£lrcked f« 21 ing pbinta and four of a possible eight game" points to move Into a fifth-place tie with New York. * ★ OJiyer. the flashy^cnter on the Boston line, cracked the top 10 hi a scoring race still dominated by the Chicago Black Hawks. Chicago’s Bobby Hull is the leader with 30 points, six more than teammate Stan Mikita. Hull’s 17 goals pace the league! in that department and Montreal's Jean Beliveau is the top playmafcer with 23 assists. Oliver, onfy neiy face among the leaders, has 24 points, good for seventh position. 4r . ♦ ■ W . / Glenn Hall of the Black Hawks Is the No. 1 goaltender with a 1.92 goals against per game average. He’s alsotopajn ahutoats with four. 17 11 U 14 If » 1 t « 32 2. Mikita. Chicago I PPHRl Chicago 5. Bathgate, New York t. bought. N«w York 7. Oliver, Bolton PNH's Carl Cascaddan Win* Individual Medley xthern Swimmers Splash to Victory Over Skip Ervin won two first places to pace Pontiac Northern to a 68-37 swimming victory over Pontiac Central last night in the' Huskies’ pool. Ervin swept to victory in the m yd. medley relay—Woo by North-l (Dick JpWiton, Max Hiller, Al Am raan. Mika Landers). 1:54.1 ---■“*" Wtto Ervin jtt), n Chambers (N). V. hTT Y Diving—1. Httfor (N). Dale OUtal 3. Cliff MMm (14), 217.S points. 100 yd. butlerffy—1. Johnson » Anderson (ttl, 3. Miller seconds. venge in the 100 by taking first while Howard was third behind Northern’s Gary Finest. Central’s Jim Howard edged Ross Coppersmith won the breaststroke handily for PCH and the Chiefs* 200-yard freestyle relay team, anchored by Ed Chase, barely edged North- Cranbrook Sextet Tops Ecorse The second line duo of Chip Brethren and Butch McDonald combined for three goals yesterday afternoon as Cranbrook defeated Ecorse, 5-2, in its home opener for the ptep hockey season. The Cranes squared their International High School Hockey League record at 1-1 with two goals in each of the first two periods, and a singleton sandwiched between two markers by the visitors in the final period. Brethren opened die scaring Aching Baylor Aids LA Win, Off to Clinic By The Associated Press Elgin Baylor’s got two aching knees and a sprained ankle but there’s nothing wrong with his shooting eye. The Los Angeles Lakers’ ace proved that Monday when he collected 29 points in LA’s 134-120 thrashtog of Baltimore in the National Basketball Assocla-tion’s Only game of the night. The game, played in Seattle, provided a showcase for Baylor who was performing hi the city where he earned All-America honors as a collegian. The 0* star made the most of It. Baylor, who sprained an ankle and limped off the court, flow to Minneapolis following the game to have his knees examined. at the Mayo Clinic. He has been troubled all season by his knees and is reported to have calcium deposits in them. Dick Barnett and Jerry West combined for 75 points to lead the Lakers against'the Bullets. The victory moved LA a half* game aheadofidle St. Louis in the NBA’s Western Division Volleyball Unbeatens Burley Mondy’s Butterfingers (21*0) and Ed Norris’ Lotus Lake team (184)) will battle for the men's 1 volleyball league ftest-half championship Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock at Pierce juntormft ___________‘1. : A best-of-three-game match will daetde the title. with a goal at 14:1$ af the first session, assisted by McDonald. Two minutes and 33 seconds later they reversed tiie roles as Cranbrook built a 14 lead. With 15 minutes elapsed In the second ‘period, Brethren again netted the puck assisted by McDonald; and. 23 seconds after that teammate Hal Weckler scored unassisted on a three-player breakaway. Dick Moon added a fifth •core in the third period with Phil Maxwtfl and [Tom Pfaff assisting. Ecorse’s goals were netted by Randy Hawkins and Tom Swearingen. Cranbrook used two goalies during toe game and John French and Larry Schiller combined for 10 saves. ....| ;;;*>?.......a*... The Cranes will hext be host to Notre Dame High at 4:30 p.m. Thursday. Tsxas Hold* Top Spot .In. Final Grid Pall _____________ " tiff tag tan football foam* wlW firat-plgca vain to paranfonn and point, on • HW4-7-4-S-4-M-1 bail*: Wit Ft*. 1. Taxa* (24) ...........to « 0 440 4. PtWltolUtl (I) ........f 1 0 340 4. NoWaaka ..........10*41 7. MiulMtol ............I i I we 0. Alabama ............,..7 2 0 lit . 5. Michigan Stata .......0 2 1 1W 10. Okiahama ........ 0-2 o to Dfoara racalvtog vafoe. listed oipba-bancallv: Air k Farea, Mm llafo, Army, Baylor, Louitlana MM. Mmahle Itafo, Mininippi Stata, Norm Carolina, southern California, SyracuM, Warning- KING KDWARD” Astirhta’o Unwet SalHnBCWBf UNITED TIRE SERVICE SNOW TIRES* ANY SIZE BRAND NfW FIRSTS!—FRIf MOUNTING! RTiitt MOirtO 710x11 100*14* 740*11 0Ni14* 0,00111* *00*14 490x13 000x11 XO 10°? riHltta, 3'Vow* A OoMIry'i''—(taatrlefc ‘'Trail* a*,r," OMR MON. Him PRI. 0 to I-S4T. I te S-pLOSKD SUNDAY UNITED TIRE SERVICE “WHIRI atiCII ARI MKOUNTID-NOT OUAUrV” \ 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC I THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 PittsburghiCity of Mixed jGrid Emotions .FAULTY TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED WHITON M-MY 6MMNIK 1956*61 ■ J ON ILL WORK :_L - PITTSBURGH (AP)-— Thb football-mad city is hartwiring mixed emotions this week over the fate of its two favorite football teams. ':. -There’s a feeling of Joy over the Pittsburgh Steelers meeting the New York Giants Sunday for the National Football League’s * It was Pitfsbest record in46 years and many observers rated die team as One of the school’s greatest. 'But It whs 1»mpletely^noredhy_all Jhe major bowls. NQ REWARD _ “It wa« a little disappointing.” out offense and play more exciting football — or else. < There has been. demands, in some quarters of die Steel City that the NCAA — which must sanction all bowl games ■— revamp impolicy on post-season games because of what happened to Pitt. because the bowls are so darn commercial,’’ Michelc&en said. “The Bowls reserve the right to ask whom they please. We just didn’t please anyone.’’ jobi They Sh6u!d have been rewarded with something and In these days it’s bonds.” ~ Paul Martha and Fred Mazurek, the two glamour boys in the Panther backfield were particularly resentful.------- raged. “When you do as Well as we did and not get a bowl bid1 it makes you feel sort of bitter inside.” Just why Pitt was not invited is almost behond. comprehen- native pro-styled offense with plenty of passing, end runs and reverses — often gambling deep • in its own territory by passing when ahead. It had the flashy backs like Mazurek and Martha and big, ferocious linemen who literally bowled over opponents^_________ Complete Eastern Division tttfe., ' v t' W Yet tl|e city is indignant and puzzled over the rebuff given to the; University of Pittsburgh’s potent Panthers by the post-season bowl Committees. ' Pitt, the fourth-ranked team in the nation, finished its sea- said Pitt Coa^JOhn Mkhelos- Martha. the fancy-dancing half-en, who urns practically on me. back. “You work ah year to-verge of losing his job before have a.gpod record* so you can the season. “The kids felt they go to a bowl and then you don’t had played the best in the coun- go to one.” * iT £ v T ' try and they did a tremendous Mazurek was even more en- glamorous and colorful chancellor, Edward Litchfield, who had publicly ordered Coacn Michelosen before the season to throw out the old Pitt grind-’em- GAMBLED It featured a daring, imagi- son last Saturday with only a 24- 12 loss to second-ranked Navy marring a 10-game schedule. SEBRING, Fla. (API-Enduring Sam Snead, who came out of the hills of western Virginia 30 years ago to give professional golf some of its great and colorful moments, is nearing the end of his tournament career. Sam Snead says so. ' He says at 51 he isn’t in as good physical shape as he used to be. L • • ;..............; He says his short game is beginning to deteriorate. He says he doesn’t enjoy tour-» nament golf any more. But don’t count him out. Snead, whose name speckles the record books like tint on a $30 blue serge suit, will play In his first PGA Seniors early next year. And look for him when it's tee-off time in the National Open, the one major championship that has escaped him so often legend is sprouting from the ashes of his failures. He ran down the generations champions with whom he has matched strokes since turning pro in 1934: Picard and Sarazen, Hogan and Nelson, Worsham amd Middlecoff, Palmer and “When 1 wqs on," he said, “I thought I, could beat any of tnem, And when I wasn’t on, I couldn’t beat anybody.” • "You know,” he said, “I’ve only played in eight or 10 tournaments a year since 1960. “I don’t hit them quite as long anymore. I’ve putted badly for two years. Your short game is the first thing that detori-rates. That’s the hardest thing to learn and its goes first. have made. I’Ve lost five tournaments this -year on the green from five inches In.” ‘ Surprise your family with the world's most beautiful Christmas present... a brand-new '“"’Tm nof ln theiJhysical con* dition I used to be,” he said. “I used to weigh 180 to 182. Now I'm at 195. That extra weight slows you up a little bit.” Snead bhunes his emetic putting on nevers, and the nerves on the game he plays. “Golf has more of a nervous range than any other sport,” he said. "There’s more waiting. In other sports, like football, it's all action. But in golf, the mistakes Just wait for you to , The waiting contributes to what he labels the golfers biggest enemy, indecision. “You look at a shot and you sav it’s a 0-iron, and you're probably right," Snead said. “But thOn you say, “Maybe it’l a 7,’ and then the caddy an 8,’ and then you’re really in trouble. “There is no such thing as easing up,” Snead said. “If you get an 11-stroke lead on them, you keep right on boring in. “That’s the way the game is Mppoeed tebO"Played*^_ And after 30 years, that’s how Sam Snead stiu plays it. WANTED USED CARS and TRUCKS JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, INC 630 Oakland Avenue,' Pontiac, Mich CHRISTMAS BONUS DEALS NO MONTHLY PAYMENT NOW GOING ON! TILL NEXT YEAR! 44 BEAUTIFUL GIFT PACKAGES The one gift from the whole family to the whole family ... the TO CHOOSE FROM one gift that keeps on giving 1 year after year III Make your family's dreams come beautifully true! I C-Hl THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 I 1? I§;lt|p . «»'' - *-*j usinessand the following are top prices covering sales otiocally grown produce by growers and sold by teem in wholesale package lots. Quotations are ‘urnit'-ed by the Det oit Bureau sf Market noon Produce FRUITS i, Delicious,' Red, bu. i, Delicious, Golden, bu Cabbage. )itandard, b Carrots, cello pak, 2 Carrots, popped ...... Horseradish! pit. bsk Parsnips, cello palu doi. . Potatoes, 25-lb. bag ..... Potatoes, new, 50-lb. bag RadtatWK black — Radishes, hothouse Aerospace Issues Falter Mart Shows Unev Bomb Thrown at Officials NEW YORK M - Wea] Slied to Impede a slight gain in the stock market thiq afternoon. Trading was moderate. The aerospace issues yielded ground in the face of possible budget cuts for. various space age projects. The rest of toe market ap-^pearedito be staging a mild and uneven recovery from a couple of sessions of moderate decline. Studebaker continued fairly Jictiye and with a slight edge to HI the upside but no longer was H -attracting, the swarm, df buyers •it did Monday on the first newr it was ending its unprofitable car manufacturing in the United States. stocks also advanced. Oils, utilities and chemicals displayed a higher trend on balance. Rails, farm implements and airlines were down a bit. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was unchanged at 283.2 with industrials up .1, rails off .4 and utilities up .3.—-——-—-—- Chrysler, up more than a point, was the; biggest gainer among the leading auto stocks. General Motors and Ford added fractions. American Motors was unchanged. Xerox ran up half a dozen points. Polaroid advanced m^ |«“] than a point. IBM dropped 2. Prices were irregularly higher in moderate active trading on the American Stock Exchange. Syntex rebounded more than 2 points. Barnes Engineering 1< about 4. 1 Killed, 39 Hurt in Aden Violence ...... fa ■PPHL m mm Irl Sf Year Ago 339.5 1IM 1324 239.3 19*3 High .:-;.40St^+49.9 15T.1 253. 1963 Low 341.1 121.* 134.9b 242. 1*62 High 377.1 127.2 142.9 262.. .1942 Low ....... 285.1 *7.0 110.3 300;* U^Thdus ................... 780*73+1.45 20 Rail. . . . ..... ... . . . . lS.05+0.39 15 Utils ..........,..... 137.11+E07 *5 Slock* .................2*5.50+0.50 BONDS Collard. bu......................j.j Kat*LRTTUCR AND SALAD ORBaNS Poultry andfeggs ULTRY IS DM tlMy IK. ISM .-it light iw» MM. The New York Stock Exchange DRTROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—frleatpaW ' at Detroit *" ““ A H' quality Hub „ MNNV btiMnTi' fryer. 3-4 lb*. whit*. 19-30» barred rock - 21-22; g**M 29-31. 1 Detroit boo* mm 34V5-34; medium 3+31; Ml CNICAOO BUTTBR, BOOS Chicago (API — Chicago Marcantlla B^a^Binar .NMK™'---'* = M,APsnf; C 5*1,ear Cgg*steady; whole.ala buying . unchanged W » rojBjWtj?* better Grade Af Whit*. % milled 341 medium* 29j checks 18. » CHICAGO POULfEV CHICAGO i^J— Mart Focus: Futures By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK ** Soybean oQ and stock brokering, tossed in an unsavory salad, have given Wall Street Olio of its worst Grain Future Mart Turns to Weak Side CHICAGO (AP)-The grain futures market made a feeble show1 of firmness today at the start of activity on toe Board of Trade then qujckiy turned toward weakness. Within a few minutes losses in wheat ran' to a cent a bushel am} an advance of well over a cent in soybeans had beep almost wiped out. Corn became mixed and rye weak. Brokers said that except for a sale of about 1.8 million bushels of wheat to India overnight, export business appeared to be at a standstill. Other commercial demand also wqs slow. Grain Prion CHICAOO ORAIN ^ CHICAGO (AP) - Opening today) 1 .......... 2.17-14* .. MW9W ..................... 1,481 •OND AVBRAGB*______ CMnpINSlf tIn A.^ preu, ■Gju iU din. rwi. k. vs | If $$J | f r 1882 Low 70.1 00.7 IS. American StocVExch. lour*. *rt*r decimal point. If* *11101. NSW YORK Naan Prt*H *3* ........ >4 ' it** ........ L meal ...imiiK" IBm* N7 American . WJ* or -Induafry .. .ft*1 |w”=s| gpeils of indiges-tkm in. years. Stockp are involved because some brokerage houses-deal both in security trading and commodity futures. The New York Stock Exchange DAWSOfl has authorized up to 12 million to help the innocent bystanders, some of toe 20,000 customers of Ira Haupt & Co., a member firm, who saw their securities accounts suddenly frozen because of disastrous deels in the commodity markets in'which they were in po way directly involved. Many of the 17 million Americans who own stocks, and doubtless countless more who have thought about entering this month’s bull market, until now may have paid little mind to commodity markets.___________ Here, in simplified terms, is what commodity futures trading normally is. The Haupt affair started this Way hut went into a maze of dealings far be-i yond the scope of ordinary com-I modify futures trading. FOR DELIVERY - Commodity futures are contracts for delivery of a specified amount of a given erain, fiber, metal, or other goods, at a fixed price at some future dato. S|y‘ MJKIlO pounds of soybean oB for X-doIlars next April. Actually, most contracts are settled without delivering or receiving the physical commodity. The contracts, in short, are bought and sold like stock certificates. The difference between toe price specified in the next ROakland, fc*' JP *%• •<•!*• By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “Can 1 buy government bonds to yield ns much ns 8 per cent? 1 have E bonds bat would like to get something to yield more. I do not want to buy stocks.” C.T. A) The highest rate obtain-able from government bonds or notes at Tecent levels is about 4.19 per cent. Yoti could this yield (figured to maturity) on the Treasury 4tt's due 1994 which have been selling around 98V*. You can do a little better on good corporate bonds. General Telephone 4%’s due 1987 were selling recently at a premium to yield 4.8 per cent to maturity. They are non-redeemable until 1972. A 4.89 per cent yield could be obtained from lnteraptional Til. & Tel. 4.90’s of 1987 which cannot be redeemed before 1972. Both of these issues would give you a satisfactory degree of security and .good call protec-on. f, In toe utility field, I suggest Texas Eastern Transmission 1st 4%'s of 1988 — non-redeemable before 1968—on a 4.57 basis. Hr ★ ; IWV"' Q) “I have about six years to retirement and therefore do not need income, bat I do need to build up a fund for my, retirement. I own Lone Star Gas, Republic National Bank of Dallas, Lone Star Stoll and American Telephone. I also have some Tennessee Gas I per cent preferred. Do yea think I should sell some of these and pat the proceeds Into stock! with n better ‘growth outlook?’’ G. R. A) With the e x c e p 11 o n of American Telephone and Re< public National Bank, your list could certainly stand improvement from a growth standpoint. Lone Star Gai la a good company,'but earnings have been on a plateau In recent years. I would switch this Issue Into Texas Utilities, Lone Stat1 Stool ts mdMng> good "earnings comeback tow year from a deficit operation in The steels are cyclical Issues and tor growth, I suggest you switch this stick into Republic National Life Insurance. I would hold for the present Tennessee Gaa pfd., which la convertible Into the around present levels. / (Copyright 1981) contract and the market price la toe time toe contract expires constitutes toe profit dr loss., w ' * ' * Those who first offer toe contracts usually are the growers, raw materials, who have tow commodity on hand tuft want to hedge against the risk of sharp and unpredictable price movements. A sudden Soviet offer to buy wheat, for example, can overnight affect toe going price for the grain—and so can toe weather conditions. The hedge works like this: To protect Ms holdings in soybeans, day, toe dealer, or processor may . go short by having his broker sell an April contract at lower than toe present price. If the price does fall, he cm fulfill his contract and use this profit to offset the lower value of the same beans he holds. If the price rises between ndw and April, he is ahead, on the commodity he holds and thus offsets my loss in settling his futures contract. SPECULATION BUY J Contracts are mostly bought by speculators willing to take on toe price change risks the bedg-er seeks to side step. Speculators buy a contract specifying a certain price at a definite future date because they aTO bet-, ting toe present price will hit that figure. Margins in commodity future trading ari^ very small hy stock cent in cash for Commodities compared to the present 70 per cent cash requirement in stocks. Thus toe leverage and cfeances of making whig profit are much ~ larger in trading on margin hr commodities than in stocks— and the risks are corresponding-ly greater, too, lf you guess wrong. Commodity markets for spot and future trading are basic to the handling of raw materials from the fields and toe mines to the ultimate consumer. A But anything from the weather to the whims of toe Soviet Union can upset current prices or scuttle future contracts— even the most' far-fetched of war scares can topple the markets for $ time. And the salad oil scandal has put the spotlight on this risk— and on the methods of supervising toe markets themselves—, and on the possible involvement of stock traders and owners to ^ their own surprise and bewUder- Roberts Seeks to Amend Constitution's Judge Rule State Sen. Farrell, E. Roberts, _ L said today he was to favor of amending the new state constitution to restore the governor’s power to fill Circuit judgeship vacancies by appointment. urged last night as toe State Senate passed, hi a 21-7 party line vote, a Republican spoil- judges to be designated ne incumbents on toe 1984 ballot. Sen. William Ford, D-Taylor, said he would introduce a resolution calling for the amendment to pave the way for its appearance on next year’s ballot. Roberts said toe method of filling vacancies spelled out in toe new constitution has turned out to be “impractical.” RETIRED JUDGES It provides Circuit Court vacancies be filled by the State Supremo Court from-xanks-Jif retired judges. They would not be eligible tor election after serving out qnexpired terms. But, there are not enough retired judges to the state, Roberts said. “There are only, Business Notes J. Rodney Layton, 648 Grao-field, Birmingham, recently was elected vice president of Devon Management Co., real estate investment and management firm With offices at 1100 N. Woodward, Birmingham. Layton, who joined the company last year, is also a guest lecturer in real estate at University of Michigan. He is a member of Birmingham Jaycees. Advancement of Thomas E. Glenn to manager of Community National I Bank’s Waterford branch at 6799 Dixie was announced today by A. C. Girard, bank president. . Glenn, who atlSS has igwftr assistant branch manager and to the installment loan depart* ment during hi! three years with CNB. He replaces Robert L. Shuellor who is now managing the Rochester office. Fifty newly registered engineers and 30 students from the area will be honored at the 7 p.m. Thursday moating at Devon Gables of the Oakland Chapter of the Michigan Society of Professional Engineers. - Lodge Calendar Waterford Auxiliary, )So. 2887 F. 0. E. meeting, Wednesday, Dec. 11 at 8 pm. Followed by annual Christmas party, fi.oo exchanged gift. Signed DoHs Strickland, Sec. -*dv. about 12 and all of them are over, 78.” "We had hoped to use them to . start out toe new appellate court before the election, bdt we couldn’t,” Robert said. Another reason he favored the return of the governor’s ap pointment power, Robert said, is that “in areas like Wayne County it’s dangeTOus to have judges running for toe Grot time. VOTE FOR NAMES People will wind up voting f jr I names rather than qualified lawyers or judges.” The new eonstitation’s method of Slling judicial vacancies is behind toe controversy over incumbency designations on too ballot for appointed Judge*. The document specifies tbs designation for elected judges, but naturally makes no mention of it to the case of appointed judges ineligible for election-Judges appointed before Jan. I, however, are eligible to seek election next year. The docu- ■ ment does not provide for sudt a situation. Yesterday’* fight was largely a political (me, since the judges affected — about 18 — are all appointees of Republican Gov. George Romney. These include Oakland County's Arthur E. Moore, — Pratt end James 8. Philip Prs Thorburn. In other action, the Senate, passed four other bills, throe with bipartisan support, ana sent them to toe House. Dispute arose over a bill permitting a verdict by 10 of 12 Jurors to decide civil cases; It passed 23-5 on toe second vote. SUCCESSION v Among the others approved was one setting up a line of succession to the governorship In case of vacancy. It provides for the succession, in order, of too lieutenant governor, the elected secrotary of state, the elected attorney general, president pro tem of the state sonata and the speaker of the house of representatives. News in Brief Ray Olms, 42, owner of Ray's Coney bland, 868 W. Huron, told Poiitlac police yesterday that hla business was burglarited of $W6, stolen from vending machines. Ftr• at 7(84 a.m, today caused an estimated 880 damage to the basement of a house at 2844 Jones, Waterford Township, owned byBurl Salncome. Firemen said oil from a leaking no was Ignited by a gaa hot ater neater, The Wednesday Dec. 11 meeting of the St. Fred’s Parent! Club is posponed until Wednesday, Dec. 18, Nice miscellaneous clothing; cheap. Wednesday, 181 Baldwin. „ -adv. ' New , Dance Class Waatad Teachers Musto Center, Ml N, Saginaw. FE 4-4700. -adV. ;V~~ THE FOJN T1 AC l’UKSS, TUESDAY, PECBMBlflft 10, I960 Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MRS. MERLE F6X , Service for Mrs. Merle (Hay I,) Fox, 80, of 2210 Lancaster will be at 11 a jn. Thiirariny |q Sparks-Griffith Chapel, with bur-ial in the Toledo Memorial Park Cemetery. «r an illness of several months. She was a member of Sf. Paul's Methodist Church and a life member of the Order of Eastern Star, Dryden. Surviving are tour daughters, • Mrs. Norma Methner of Pontiac, Mrs; Marguerite Emig of Tucson, AH*., Mrs. Philena Anderson and Mrs. Hazel Beckwith, both ot Toledo, Ohio. Also surviving nrwairgrtmri-children, 14 great-grandchildren and a sister and brother. , MRS. CHARLES LAHSER Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Charles (Maude) Lahser, former owner and operator of Price's Tea Room, was yesterday afternoon in the Neely Puberal Home, Detroit. Bur-lid was in Acacia Park Cemetery. Birmingham. ) Mrs'. Lahser of Royal Oak died of a heart attack Friday. She had opened the tea room during the 1830s and went out of business in 1942. Besides her husband she leaves tiro brothers. MRS. THOMAS G. McKINNEY Service for Mrs. Thomas G. TO LEASE OFFICE SPACE In New Building Custom Office Suites Parking, Air Conditioned Long Uke Rd. at Telegraph ltd. Phono Ml 1-5417 Mr. Petersen Mi 4-4441 Mr. McArthur KEEN AT A KEYPUNCH Sues Manpower's "Girl in the White Gloves” and temporary office assignments are her specialty. If you have extra office work — try her now! She’s great! 9 MANPOWER THIVKRV OSST IN TIMPORARY HELP NEED HELP WITH YOUR INVESTMENT PROBLEMS? ...CAU If 2-9275 Watling, Lerchen & Co. PONTIAC STATE SANK ILD8. Mtmhtrt Ntw York Stork Kxchang* (Ella B.) McKfamey, 86, of 23 Williams was this afternoon in Sparks-Griffin Chapel, with burial in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. . Mrs. McKinney died Saturday after an illness of several weeks. . Surviving are a son. Neuman F. of Saginaw; iT_ ter; and two great-grandchildren. MBS. WILLIAM M. CARLEY ROCHESTER — Service for former resident Mrs. William M. (Ida) Carley, 80, of Royal Oak will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the William Sullivan & Son Funeral Home, Royal Oak. Burial will follow In the Moan Avon Cemetery, f s MrsC Carley died Sunday after a brief illness. She was a life member of the Royal, Oak Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star. Surviving are a son, James of Royal Oak; a sister; and granddaughter. Service Set for Retired Banker, 58 MILFORD — Memorial1 service for former resident Paul H. Sinclair, retired assistant vice president and manager of die Milford Branch of the Community National Bank of Pontiac, will be 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the Milford Presbyterian Church. Graveside service and burial was to be 2 p.m. today in Homer. Mr. Sinclair died Saturday in Detroit after returning from Lucerne, Switzerland, where he had lived for the past three yean. He was 58. He was a former member of the Milf ord Business Men’s Club, the Milford Chamber of Commerce and the Milford Lodge, F&AM. He also belonged the Anglo-Swiss Club, Lucerne. Mr. Sinclair was president of the Oakland County State Bank beforp it merged with Community National Bank of Pontiac in 1958. Surviving are his Wife Mau-rine, and a sister. -JewsioAdafk Hanukkah's Start Tonight’ NEW YORK (ft- Hanukkah, the Jewish festival of lights In which candles are lit in increasing numbers for eight successive days, begins tonight with the lighting of the fint candle. Tomorrow night, two candles will be'fit In Jewish three, and so on until on the final day. of the holiday, eight are burning. Additionally, /an extra caudle is lit above the others on each of the nights. The festival commemorates the Jewish people's ancient struggle for religious freedom. ’ The candles symbolize the tradition that though ancient Hebrews had enough oil for only one day, their supply miraculously lasted eight days at S time when they were cleansing the temple of Jerusalem. , This was after the temple had been freed from Syrian control by the Hebrew Maccabees. _ MRS. GEORGE HACKNEY WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -t Mss. George (Minnie) Hackney, 98, of 9369 Maridon, died yesterday after a prolonged illness. Her body will be at the Purs-ley Funeral Home, Pontiac, aftar4 p. m. today. ' , are-two-daughters, Mrs. Sanford’was the author Mrs, hurtle Engdahl of Union oT’n?tti'YlteHHemlngHayi^ Lake and Mrs, Bonnie Gilbert, and a granddaughter. ‘ CLAYTON A. NEWPORT WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Clayton A. Newport, 50, of 3936 Fieldview, died unexpectedly early today of a heart attack. His body will be at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home after 6 p.n>. today. Mr. Newport, an inspector at the Allegheny-Ludlum Steel Co., Ferndale, was a member of the Orchard Lake Community Chrch. He also belonged to the Comipierce Lodge No. 121, F&AM; the Scottish Rite Bodies, Detroit;, and the Moslem Temple Shrine, Detroit. Mr. Newport was also a member of Chapter No- 508, Order of the Eastern Stour, and the Pontiac Elks Lodge. Surviving are his wifeLlillan; a son, Ernest, at home; a daughter, Linda, in Mount Pleasant; two brotbers atid two sisters. ARTHUR E.PLEGGE HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP r*, Service for Arthur E. Plegge, 67, of 1853 Grove will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Christ Lutheran Church, Milford. Burial Will follow in Highland Cemetery. Mr, Plegge, a retired mail carrier, died yesterday after a prolonged illness. His body will be at the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Milford, until noon tomorrow, when it will be taken to the church. A member of the Ferndale Metropolitan Chib, Mr. Plegge also a member of the Faith Lutheran Church, Highland Township. Surviving, are hi& wife, Florence; a son, Henry of Detroit; a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Nagy of Berkley; and four grandchildren. Hemingway^ Sister Dies DETROIT (AP) — Mrs. Mar-celline Hemihgway Sanford, 65-year-old sister of the late Ernest Hemingway, died today at a suburban Grosse Polnte Hospital. bode about her famous family. It was published in 1962. . ★ ■ . it She was also an Internationally known lecturer on literature and the theater. ^ native of 'Oak Park, 111., Mrs. Sanford had lived in Grosse, Polnte since her marriage to SterBne S. Sanford in 1923. WRITER OF YEAR r She was named “Writer of the Year” by. the Detroit Women Writer’s Club in both 1961 and .1962, and had completed her most recant lecture tour to die Far East earlier: this year: She is survived by her husband, and* three children. Services , will be held Wednesday in Grilse Pointe. Healthy Business Year Jeen From Spending NEW YORK (ft - Indications that 1964 will he a healthy business year are seen in the high level of projected capital Spending, the Iron Age said Monday. ...' ★ , . ★ ★ " The metalworking industry publication reported appropriations authorized by the metalworking a rid metal-reducing industries in the third quarter totaled $1,349,000,000. This fas 43 per cent higher than the total for the third quarter of 1962. He Needs Attention T Don't Ignore Stuttering Child Mothers who occasionally yell at their children can feel less guilty about it, says a speech expert from die University of Southern California., At a recent-seminar last week for Oakland Schools speech correctionists, Dr. Wil-~1l>HI I iiTitns siiiil tt*° stutterer tends to feel that people treat him as if he were not really there. “We are less likely to get stuttering from a child whose mother yells at him occasionally than from a child whose mother feels like yelling but does not,” Dr. Perkins said. « Sr ‘The stutterer has a feeling of loss of impact value,” he added. NEEDS REACTION Dr. Perkins stated that more reaction, both7 positive and negative, to the child Who stutters would add to his feeling of importance. This Is why mothers need i not feel guilty if they occasionally yell at their children, according to the speech expert. , Dr. Perkins explained that a stutterer does not stutter when he feels that he is realty there like when he is angry. He compared a stutterer’s feeling of loss of impact to a person at a party where nobody pays any attention to him. it ' ★ it fit the adult stutterer, his speech defect becomes a' defense mechanism, Dr, Perkins said. STUTTERING DETRACTS This individual, he said, feels heihas a great deal more po- tential, but tie can’t live up to it because of his stuttering. Thus the pressure from people around hint does not require that he live up to his potential, Dr. Perkins said the loss of Impact Value has been the key to stuttering to his studies of a select group of 52 people over a period of several years. According to the doctor, people tend, to-ignore the stutterer. No one seeks him out. for conversation. They walk around him. I... Children are riot born as sfot-terers, but learn to stutter, he added. He said the speech difficulty tends to be a problem of males. .. Organizations Invited to Plan Memorial Day All veteran, civic, fraternal and military organizations have been invited to send representatives to a meeting of the Pontiac Memorial Day Association Thursday at the Amvet Hall, 570 Oakland. It is the first public meeting to discuss plans for Memorial Dav next year. The, meeting ' at 8 p.m. Miners Frantic in Hunt for Victim of Cave-In MARION, HI. (UPl)-A crew of miners worked desperately today In efforts to reach a fellow miner trapped by acave-ln in a small slope mine. Ten to 14 miners alternated during the night and used picks, sledges mid hammers in an attempt to reach the spot where Hairy Hosmon, 49, a veteran 28-year miner and father of eight, had been working; There was no contact with Hosmon arid there were fears for his life. There were 7,007,538 private qnd commercial cars, or one for every 6.8 Frenchmen in France New Russian Trend K's Plan Aimed at Consumer Needs Plea Is Innocent to Two Charges A 23-year-old Mount Clemens man pleaded innocent" yesterday In Waterford Township Justice Court toy charges of unarmed robbery and assault with intent “draper HELP YOUR SON FILL YOUR SHOES BY TEACHING' HIM SOUND INVESTING ,.. you eon learn, about the modern way to Inveit by reading our free booklet, "The Modern Way to In veil." ,, ( You'll find out how to obtain the three eitenllali of 101 (I) careful (election, (2) wide diversification, (3) eomtanl supervision. I Writs for "The Modern Way tq Inveri* ~ today I : INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS | FE 2-9117 •18 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. They will appear for tinclng Dec. 18. \ By WILLIAM L- RYAN AP Special Corresponderit Premier Khrushchev hu placed before the Soviet Communist party a program suggesting he wants tov erect a monument to himself tiy plunging the Soviet Union into an economic revolution. If he gets his program on the road, it can signal sharp changes in the global cold war.,, I’.vf*1'11 ii ★ Khrushchev’s program raises possibility that the premier-wtio will be 70 in April—hopes thing whichTl®~atarrtiiem-Jte--ward a more abundant consumer economy. At last the Soviet people were being told they were entitled to more consumer goods. The program involves massive Investment — the equivalent of 946 billion — In the chemical In- Daniel L. Inscho is accused of ^o^eque^Jhepeople some-stealing night receipts totaling 9456 from a barmaid at Sharps Inn, 2881 Dixie Highway, as she left work Nov. 12, according to state police detective Robert Neigebauer. Inscho has been serving a sentence In the1 Macomb County Jail for being drunk and disorderly. He was taken Into cua-today after his release yesterday1. Justice John E. McGrath scheduled a preliminary examination for next Tuesday. Inscho was ordered to the county jail -after falling to .meet bond of 92,508 on eabh charge. Assault Trial Set for Two City Youths Trial In Municipal Court for two Pontiac youths charged with felonious assault after attacking two teen-agers Is Scheduled for Monday. ' Being held In the Oakland County Jail after falling" to meet bond of 919,000 each are Ronrile P. Heater, 17, of 81 Oakhlll arid Jay T. Sores, 19, of 879 Farnsworth. They pleaded innocent to the charges yesterday at their arraignment before Judge Cecil McCallum. -The pair, and three other youths, were arrested Friday night, after Michael Buckley, 17, of 87 S. Paddock, and James Smith, 17, of 199 state, were assaulted with a bear bottle while sitting In a parked car at Mechanic and Douglas. OTHERS CHARGED The others were charged with being. drunk and disorderly. They are Dennis C, Hyde, 18, of 179 Hurondals; Robert J. Parker, 90, of 998 N. Saginaw; and Ronald F.' Krieger, 19, of 7781 Maceday Lake, Wh ter ford dustry In a 7 - year plan. This cure-all proposal to attach agriculture’s ailments and begin providing the people with adequate supplies of both food arid consumer goods in all likelihood will require cuts in heavy Industry Investment. EXPECT OPPOSITION There will be grumbling and sullen opposition In high places, notably among unreconstructed Stalinists and among the' high military brass to whom heavy industry Investment means promise of superiority In superweapons, space and wrirld pow-■7$ i Ji>* i' vLifV The current Central Committee meeting could mark historic turning by the government toward its domestic problems. That in turn might mean Moscow would want to avoid dangerous cold war confrontations with the United States. it it Khrushchev said his program meant that perhaps “we shall have -to slow down for a time the rate of growth of some Industries.” Ifo^«tald~4ha>HP*^pfor"foag-plagued by shortages and IrrttiL ed by lack of quality and quantity in consumer goods: MEET NEEDS 'Now the state Is in a position to channel enormous means Into the development of chemistry, agriculture and light Industry, was to produce more good and goods to satisfy directly the people’s requirements.” Revolutionary - sounding slogans have been dea- to the Communist party aver since It took power In Russia, but now those are not enough, Khrushchov said. i “What we need in this case is not slogans. It is material content, practical work in the construction of a new society,” j ,1 ★ ★ ★ Stalin concentrated on heavy industry and used the output of Soviet agriculture politically for Soviet foreign policy. As recently as 1947, Khrushchev said, people were starving In some Soviet areas. He said Stalin could export grain because tie cared nothing for ttie people’s welfare. The Soviet Union must) buy grain abroad today to counter disastrous shortages caused by farm failures. This Is a different era for the U.S.5.R. Popular opinion must be taken into consideration by the party and government. The public obviously is tired of slogans and promises and Khrushchev has given voice to this weariness. Pope's Trip Slid Talk of 'Summit' From Our News Wires VATICAN CITY - The possibility of a religious summit conference during Pope Paul VPs visit to the Holy Land next month stirred increasing speculation in the Vatican today. The Rev. Pierre Duprey of the Vatican’s secretariat for Christian unity flew to Istanbul, Turkey, lust night and said , he would consult today with patriarch Atheaagoras, 77, spiritual leader of the Eastern Orthodox Church. An informed Vatican source said today Pope Paul Vl, after visiting both Israel and Jordan on his Roly Land pilgrimage^ will deliver a major speech In Bethlehem Jan. 6 appealing to all mankind for peace and unity. the source said the Pope would visit both Israel and Jordan, crossing ttie armed bonier, between than twice. Wire Service Editor Dies in Washington ■ WASHINGTON (UPI) - William E. Zimmerman, 44, a Washington hews editor of United PreBs International who had handled many of the capital’s major news stories over ttie past 20 years, died last-night at Prince Georges General Hospital. His death ended a two-month illness attributed to kidney failure. ' si SendcilsSef forEx-Coacfi John B. Dean to Be Buried tomorrow ' The funeral service fin* John Bernard Dean, former St. Frederick athletics coach, will be at 11 a.m. .Wednesday in the Our Lady of Lakes Catholic- Gburdu Waterford. Burial will be in ML Hope Cemetery. Dean passed away Monday following a heart attack. HeU I A parish Rosary is s for- 8:30 p.m. today at the Coats Funeral Home in Waterford Township, followed by a St. Vin-ent DePaul Rosary at 9 o’clock. *■ —it 4r ir? Dean graduated from St. Frederick in 1930 and began coaching the football, basketball and golf teams, the following season. He continued there through 1940, produebig several state Class C golf championship teams. ' DEFEATED PONTIAC Dean coached the last St. Frederick basketball team to defeat Pori11 ac High. That was during the 1935-36 season when the Rams won, 14-12. The series was discontinued three years later. t* , Dean also,, chocked CMC Truck & Coach Division teams during the period, end was active in football, basketball, track and baseball while at* teodiag St. Frederick. At ttie time of his death, he was the general manager of the Interstate Vending Co. of Detroit branch office in Troy. The son of tiie late Mr. and Mrs. William B. Dean, ha leaves his wife Margaret; three daughters, Mrs. Robert Phillips of Detroit, Mrs. Lloyd Collier of Wa terf erd Township and Mary Margaret at home; and a son John B. Jr, at home. Also surviving are five grandchildren; and two brothers, William J. and Charles R., both at Pontiac. Collegians Will Sing When Phone Rings . CHAMPAIGN, 111. (UPI) -Male students of Snyder Hall at the University of Illinois hope serenade residents with Christmas carols via telephone. The students said that beginning tomorrow they would launch a dlal-a-carol project and sing songs In response to local calls any timev of the day or night uniil thelr Christmas vacation begins.' ~— slipper-Y SEASON—Christmas gifts of slippers made with leather are pleasing. Clockwise from the lower left are: boy or girl leather slipper; leather scuff for mom; slipper-boot for teens; scuff for dad; stenciled boot for college or career girl. Strapped for Think‘of Leather Goods “Santa-time j . . when tye givin’ is easy/’ la tiie theme song of all gifts shoppers who put slippers high on the Christmas list. ‘ ■ ‘ are an easy-to-buy, easy-to-wear holiday gift right for every man, woman and child at Christmas and for many comfortable days to come. The range of. leather slippers for the entire family has widened this winter to embrace a score of stylos from boots to backless mules, sandals to slip* Many ankle and calf-sktmmlng boots, lined In leather or shearling, may be worn botti In and out of doors, COLOR! GALORE The spectrum of leather colors available rivals the gala air of Christmas tree ornaments. (To nuke her holiday even mare festive are glove-omooth or silly suede leather sandals and mules and still mher mules In gold or sliver leather or a combination of the two. Darling of the teen miss in the slipper department is the boot in smooth, suede or brushed leather. ★ * ♦ Particular pets Include the after-ski type, such as the white grained leather ankle • hugger with fur cuff, and the Indoor-outdoor boot in brushed or suede leather. PLEASE8 MALES ] The bedroom boot alio pleases the males of tits family, in ankle-high styles of lightweight leather lined with spearling. Classic favorite for him Is the glove leather opera-style slipper. Good gift for the traveler Is a pair of folding leather slippers. i Kids, too, love It when Santa slips slippers Into titsir Christmas stockings. They enjoy wearing snug., gaily-colored- slippers with bright linings. Pleads Innocent on Drugs Charge A Pontiac man pleaded innocent yesterday u Municipal Court to the sale and possession of narcotics: A preliminary examination was scheduled for Dec. U for Robert Reavis, 98, of 441 Midway. He Is In the comity jail. Bond of 911,890 was set ■' Reavis was arrested Friday evening. Marijuana was found in his possession, Pontiac police said, ....—<*-’ .....; Two other men arrested Frl<. day also will appear In court the same day on the charge. UNDERSTANDING Making la constant study of the needs of those who coll us Is part of our professional life. We try ^to servers we would want to be served. Outstanding in Pontiac for Service and Facilities 46 williams Street . FE 2-5841 It’s ExraordinaFy (The heritage et the gait with the egim #1 the Mure) Thatcher, Patterson & Wemet V Pontiac* OMeti fnearance Afcnc? >, 711 Community Notional Beak Bid*. VH 94HM I Mi C—a THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 196a Today in Washington > Did Cambodia Ask Assassination Fete? WASHINGTON (AP)-In the news from Washington: BROADCAST: U.-S. expressing shock ahtf, outrage, sought to verify reports that Cambodia’s government-controlled radio had called for a celebration of the deaths of Thailand’s premier and President John F. Kennedy. A State Department spokesman said a Cambodian broadcast had been heard which apparently rejoiced at the death of “state enemies” inThailand and South Viet Nam, along with “the great boss of these aggressors” —taken here as a starring reference to Kennedy, assassinated Nov. 22. Tripoli h Am government-controlled radio tod announced a week-long holiday to celebrate the death Sunday of Thai Premier Sarit Tha-narat. The broadcast was attrijh uted to the Cambodian Ministry of Information. State Department officials ordered U. S. Ambassador Philip D. Sprouse to verify the wording and pin down the responsibility for the broadcast. COFFEE: Informed sources said today the U.S.-*ponsored Bill Includes Funds for Two FloodSurvey t WASHINGTON OB—A $4.5-billion public works appropriation bill passed by the Senate yesterday includes $80,000 for flood control1 surveys of the Clinton and Huron Rivers originating in Oakland County. The MO, which is scheduled for conference with the House, would enable the Army Corps of Engineers to determine the natural flood plates of the rivers so that these areas can be preserved to prevent flooding elsewhere. The largest portion of the appropriation, $2.78 billion, would be for operations of the Atomic Energy Commission, Most of the remainder is intended for flood control and navigation projects, including It million worth hi Michigan. Harvard Hiltorian Dies CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP)— Perry G. E. Miller, 58, historian and a scholar of international reputation iiT’lffie history oT ideas, died Monday, apparently of a stroke. Miller was Powell M. Cabot professor of American literature at HdfvardUniversity. International Coflee Agreement appears in danger o! dying for lade of U. S. congressional approval of iegistatiotF to make it operative in this counter. ■ A ★ A The agreement, hailed 'as a plan to save coffee producing countries from economic chaos, provides that importing and ex- porting nations must ratify it by Dec. 31 to make it effective. - - ---- The U. 9 Congress is planning to recess forthe ChrtstffiaSTiS^ days Dec. 20. Latin' Americans here expressed alarm that the whole agreement might collapse since it cannot, under present terms, be operative without U. S. participation. ■ • There are 58 importing and exporting nations in the agreement, which fixes export quotas for procfucer countries, and proposes that importer countries keep1 tab on toffee imports to avoid any cheating by the coffee producing countries. Resume Search j for 3 Missing in Cargo Plane SANTA MARIA Ariwas fAPI —A search resumed today for three men aboard an American cargo plane believed to have gone down Monday 150 miles northeastoftheAzore8._______ ★ If ^e| i Officials said there was little, chance of survivors 1 in the heavy seas and low temperatures. The plane. identifled by ah;* pent officials as the property of the Carline A-C Co., had left Gander, Nfld., for Santa Matte. FLOATING LIGHTS A British ship messaged it had sighted flashing lights on the water Monday night. But the lights were flares dropped from a search plane. The names of the three men aboard the plane were not available. TWA Asks Suspension of Service at Detroit WASHINGTON (AP) - Trans World Airlines asked the Civil Aeronautics Board Monday for permission to suspend international service at Detrblt from Jan. 20 to March 9. TWA said its average Detroit flights during November operated at only 24 per cent of capacity. The airline had three nonstop' flights a week between Detroit and Paris test summer and fall, but reduced its service to one a week on Oct. 29. Iraq 6th Signatory of Arab Trade Pact CAIRO Ufl — Iraq added its signature Monday to a five-nation economic unity "agreement embracing the United Arab Republic, Kuwait, Syria, Morocco and Jordan. The union of the six may turn into an Arab common market. « The agreement calls for the abolition of tariff barriers and „ freedom of movement of per- j up at home can be indulged de-sonnel and capital and goods pepds on the social set ohe trav-among the nations, but "notikrlfi 'wr well as one+f inedme joint currency. / I bracket. % ■f 1■ |« I > p' J 1 U.N. Troops t in Korea at the William* Sullivan & Sons Funeral Horn,, 705 West 11 Mile .r T11|r r .. y,—, HacbeMirLCwaiwnr. j': troops killed, an unidentified^»-pers® in ’ffie demilitarized zone last niaht. the UNC an- loved ton of the We Mrs, william HOLIDAY HOSTESSES - You’ll sparkle in ankle-length skirts, with sweeping,feaky lines. Wrap skirt comes in rich, deep colors in cotton suede. The glen plaid, with its long front - pleat, can be had in brown or black with white. Also in wool blanket plaids, India madras and herringbone. Long Skirts Set Pace for the'at-Home'Clothes Heavy, lush fabrics; rich, brilliant colors; and “kooky" trimmings describe the extravagant lounging clothes for this holiday season. This trend was set off by designers who thought new income tax restrictions on expense account spending for entertainment would set off • boom in parties at home. Although the restrictions have been modified, the luxuriousness of the clothes haven’t. But the extent to which taste for this kind of dressing- Come to your ford Dealer’s big WNEWNNy USED CAR SALE! Time ifi on choice, bargain buys priced sweet and low! Our fast-selling *64 Ford line is attracting the best looking batch of trades ever! To keep ’em moving, we’re putting clearance prices on every last one! Bargain buys ... easy prices... and your present car will probably cover the down payment! Pick a winner today! Greatest get-together of used cars ever! Come buy’em for a song, folks! For thw Jot set, $11 toe rockets are released. There are magnificent gowns in brilliant floral patterns, with sweeping trains that require ballroom-size living foams to maneuver them in, There are pajama-type p*nte with wide legs and row upon row of ruffles, and others dripping with crystals. Usually these are covered with sweeping skirts. zone last night, the UNC announced today. But South Korean reports of a dash between U. S. soldiers and Communist troops could not be confirmed. A South Korean news agency said the clash took place early this morning and that nme ^lltertn Korean was killed. It said its report came from unofficial soirees in the South Korean army, A UNC spokesman said there mi ei.uli«mfc of gunfire fir: test night’s incident. It was not known if the victim was civilian or soldier. Two other persons escaped before UNC troops could apprehend them, he said. -...P The UNC did not say if American troops were involved, but the area of the border where the incident took place is largely covered by U. S. elements of the UNC. It was the second incident in the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea in the past month. Bomb Celts, Mot Wane, Says Cager NEW YORK UB—An unfortunate choice of words by pro basketball player Gene Conley was tiie apparent cause of a bomb Scare at LaGnardte Airport Monday night, police report. Conley, of the New York Knickerbockers, told police that be Said at a boarding gate in the terminal, “We’re going tp bomb the Celtics." An airline employe thought he was making a bomb threat, police said, add turned in an alarm. The FBI questioned Conley, who left the terminal about four boors after the reported incident. The Knicks play the Boston Celtics In New York tonight. Service Set for Son of Pastor-Politician ^ . . „ . M WRIGHT CITY,'Mo, (UPI)— Om designer offers a ju-Jitou Funeral services were sched-ton?c ,r?ly uled today for Kit .Anthony “way^rat” Andthe Oriented in- rfgjjj^ ^ son of the teeirTW half‘,Beepy, pUr of the St. Louis panto, half-dress creations. Baptist Temple and a candidate .; .1 *■ ■ ■♦ ■"* 1 for the Democratic nomination Incidental accessories, 11 ke for governor: sable babushkas, mink paw or; The boy was run over by his fake fur vests andblouses, father’s truck diming the week-will abound for those who can end when throvta from a front fender on which he was riding. Authorities said the boy, a brother and their parents were;working at tiie time cutting trees at the Revr Mr . Beimy1? youth ranch near here. Death Notices Dean; dear father of Mrs. Rob- 8 (Patricia) PhlllWMrL-Uwd illanne) Collier, Mary Margaret, and John S. Dean Jr,/ dear broth-villlatn J. and Charles JW S Recitation of Ihe Parish wHI be this evening at 8:30 Mowed by the St. Vincent de Paul ROMry at 9 p.m. at the Imm Plain*. weantMay, .. _,m. at Our Lem of__________ Catholic Church with Father F. j. , in ___________________ Ml 0 Lancaster Road; age 80; dear ■ :;wayt of lMrr" **-•*“— Urvl?elA wtlj11 be December 12 at Sparks-Grlffin Py ferment In Toladi Camalary. HACKN|Y, jmsNTer Mrs. Marauari ir or Mr*. Lenoi .Roy Bumoy; al_ Beckwith and - Emlg; deaf sis... IMI__________ _ Wagoner and Ray Bumey; also who Union Lake; age Hi deer mother ,t Mrs. Myrtle (George! Engdahl ind Mrs. Bonnie GHbert; also tyr* dved by one granddaughter. Fu-leral arrangements are pending PLEGGE, DECEMBER 9, 1903, ARTHUR J, 1853 Grove Street. Highland Township; eg* a) beloved husband of Florence Plegge; dear tamer of Mrs. Dorothy Nagy and Henry Pledge; also survived by four grandchildren. .Funeral service win be held Wednesday, December 11 at J p,m. at the Christ Lutheran Church. Milford. Wtth Rev. jWMMtiiifCHlH officiating. Intir WWi,, _■ Hpa Cemetery. Mr. Pto#be WHITto M state at the RlchanRpnAird i Funeral Home, Milford, until 11 toon on Wednesday at which time he . ..... Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOLLOWING DAY. if no naHflcetlon n error is mad* By that It will b* assumed the m lor that portion Whan * mao* be aura L NUMBER." larger than regular agat* type It 11 stelock noon the day previous to publication, _ CASH WANT AO RATES i-Daif 3-Days 6-Days An additional charge of 4 cant* will h# mad* for *•* c Pontiac Press Box number*., Tha Pontiac Press PROM S A.M. TO » pm. ■I offerings, from o beautiful f. kind frlanda, neighbors ____ _____ employees cf-OMf, tbcal 594,al*o-th* kindness shown us by th* staff ot St. Joseph Mercy Hospital and Dr. Hackatt during th* lots of gw beloved husband, father and broth-*r, Ralph B, Kolb. afford them, PANTS TABOO No matter what bracket you’re in, panto as such are taboo as cfothaa to be aeer far And tm-less you atay home in velvet, you shouldn’t wear it. The welkdresied middle income hostess will be veering long formal skirts In plaid wool, herringbone tweed or washable velvet, topped with a simple shell blouse phis lots of beads and clanking brace-letei* For the uninhibited there will be long aklrta of the crazy quilt variety that look as if they were just yanked off grandma’s bed and heavily crocheted skirts reminiscent of Ihcy tablecloths. ♦ ★ Sr Ipcreaslngly popular will be skirts or tops in Imitation furs pony skin, leopard, ocelot, zebra. And the ever popular brocades will be seen cut Into long doublets or tunics. 1963 FORD, OALAXIB "SOO" 1963 FORD FAIRLANB "MO" f.o.A.S. ' 1962 FORD 0ALAXII 4-DOOR 1 fj y $2^95; V , $1895 t ' $1795 JOHN MeAUUrn FORD. INC.—<30 Oaklaad Avaauf, Feathc, Mich. ir . -n Physical Set for Powers ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -Former U2 pilot Francis Gary now a Lockheed test the Lovelace Clinic Monday for what officials termed a routine phyilcal examination. ★ * Sr A spokesman for the clinic, known for its exhaustive medical tests for the nation’s astronauts, said Powars was hsre for a routine testpllot examination and tests, and "we give these tvery week.” Powers, who was shot down over the -Soviet Union May 1, i860, and remained in prison until February 1882, was emptaysd by Ldokheed Oct. tt. Wives Clip Lawyers > LONDON (UPD - The “Solicitors’ Journal,” a legal magazine, said today a poll revealed that many British lawyers have their hair cut by their wives. IN LOVING MEMORY OP EDWARD The’ rolling stream of Ilf* rolls on ~ t still th* vacant chair STATS OP^ MICHIGAN — Ip ttxr bat* Court for tho County of Ookl Juvenll# OWIjngn . ^ in th* mornr of tho potltlon coocarn-Ing Stephan, Robin, CiauSonO and Thom-*• Bondy, m)nort. Caytt No. lWt. . To Rolwrt Bondy, tathor of mm minor chlMron, , Petition having baan filed In alHwlna fhat,.th* S***nt y--~-tn* father of tout, mitor unknown and said ehlMran,. aha public for support n should bo placed ur thla Court iMMjn, 'omporaiy or parmanant Mrontaf rights and/or 130 (rcloek irt noroby th*Ii>CSs tafysk W rtf, £ r IwiiaiB, , FUNERAL HOMS „ .torvlns.pgnila* wr »Y#ar* ell 7» Oskiana A*t. p¥ HIM PONEliON'JuW pan, That imiwMi wharo fhfjSw- ^K“ra,»jx!iiarCTo ' “ “J1PUNiNRL' HOMS ''PwiSmts Nit-guntfals” ', sarlar numbar mSSwst M|chlo*n, that pddftM baito wharo fto vthidf Is star** and may S* Inwactap. DaCembar * and 10, 1943 IMA RSWARD fOR ' PERSONS , who damsssd-'IM, beris Known 1.1 IITM'Miyro SM. HA MMi. - . wwilrii fflrawirBK •RWwr.JA M 1 wlir not bis rssponsibts for onv dtbti ton- ana srJkirat \ moults, Oroyton pftlni, Mlchiosn. 8ryw8"ff1nrrYHb'tATi; fei - esmbsr fo,1Ml, 1 wlir not Eo , responsible tor any debts OOft* ww,t Anjx itroet, Pontltc, MKhigon, at )M 1. Nlto. MlIa R4#d,^ iHrhdilfc that address balnfi whirs fM MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac Stata Bonk Bldg. Phono PB >1457 BON AP IDE IMPROyBMI A INVESTMENT CO. INVESTMENT 0 15 W. Ltwffhct *> PontiocT Mich._ Fay fitt Your Sills 7 — without a loan — Paymaota law aa sio wk.. Protsct your |ob snd crodlf Horn* or Off Ico Aimlntmonts City Adjustment Service 714 W. Huron________pa 3*281 fxYvTOwS TAILllfTWh msrly -Dox-A-Dlot). WOW name, •amo formula, oiny woo. slmma Bros, Drugs. COATS Da E. Pursley PUNIRAL HOMS T~ ’ r. invalid Car larvlee (tj 4-IMI . HUNTOON" Personals ^ 41 Hslp Wonted Mate f -DAlNYY MAID SUPPLIES, 73* Monomins*. PS 5-78M. MAN TO CdLLECr IN PARKING tot. No driving. Elderly man PTO-ferred. 3100 per month. Apply ISO MAN FOR OfcY tiiANlNb ROUTE: 4480 Ellubeth Lake Rd. ANY GiRu Or woman nbediNg . •- Jrlendly v- adviser, phone Pi swer, <5jl°FE 2-O^M.'Confidential?’’' ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, DS-, camber 10, I9*jt t srtll M b* A ^respontlblo- tor rany~ deWt contracted to any -other -than my-self. Fred 4A4Mry, 2442 Mapie--crast, Drayton Flam*, Michigan. NEED 47,004 UP? Need 2 married men for protected \ routes that Mve Nm servloid ffor year*. 1122.50 weekly plus expenses ' guaranteed to start for right man. . Above Average Mon 23-42, worth Bits weekly ---- wr specie! type root* S dally. Car and phL... ________I No cokr canvaawng, experi- 3S561 a train. OR uoTii TV qualified to prepare Form UNO. Must b* experienced bl all phase* receive ' high and work m r selected > salary and bon OUT. Pontiac Off time. Call or wi HA R Block way, Flint. Michigan. CE HMI, A Part-time Job— After 6 P M. v Guaranteed MS week, paM monthly, For Information, call Mr. Prick OR 34N2% 5 to 7. ATTRACTIVE S*OWlfMNHK!ii.T..--For wide-awake man, No ogo Itm- XUTO MEd^AHTCfc WlTH TOOLS. Keego Sales A Service, Keego AUTO MECHANIC ' .CHEVY EXP. 0ESIRB6: \ ' .... 1.contactumK MILFORD 684-1025 me n business or titles. Solos , Row, 444 I V Rswlelfh, 1 kea by 75 years af -lee or write Gerald Wth; Pontiac or write pi mcl atwis, Proo- Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED WRHPoaltW* ,__S7 and HO RH Negative - . 2 DETROIT SLOOP SERVICE 14 SOUTH CASS FE 4-9947 ; 9 a.m.-4 pjw. I. Brown 8> Sharpe* Screw Machine Operator CITY OF PONTIAC * FIREFIGHTERS Salary - *4 983 - 86,04* Minimum roquirsmsnt: Height 47Vi inches. Weight 142 lbs. age 21-31 yrt,. excellent physical cfiitdnm, i nl(,h school graduat* or equivalent credit*, must have Min a resident ot tlw city of Pontiac I yoar Immediately preceding Jh* application —App'v Personnel Department, 35 S^^Parko Application must_b* r»- men*0 by°W Steady work, exc. salary, bono-fits, meals and uniforms. Hunter House, 199.N. Hunter, Blrnthighom. CheIaicAl, pHRlriLiflM AMb grass jaad- wholesaler, naads warehouse lOrWIWr, axuei lanced In ahlpplng and racalvlng. Re- ^^rtoWoT”*10 fodk Apply 819 WOOdW*fd DUE TO BUSINESS INCRBASI, 2 axgarls..... . tows tor Ramwor dealership. S4 par tour, flat raf*. steady work. Apply 540 Oakland Av*. fS3*PMlSS®!r5 AUTOMOBILE MECHANIC APPLY IN PIRSON. saa JOHN BENSTTI. AwWaNOvTI INC. M^N. PARK fLVO. LAKE OR- ‘ EVtNlNb WbliK Must have I man to help mo In my buslnoiS' — 3 hours In the evening ifttr 4 p.m. Call Mr. Dale, 4 to ;, F« 5-920. ‘rMtrbH3CT,! real astat* firm, John K. Irwin AND IONS Call PJ 5-9444 -Oav Call Pf M44 --Sint , SINCE 1925 f¥ W Humn- IWB|Afllll||Alll, FULL ‘ QlNEftAL* MECHANIC Dealership sxpsrisncs; I vacation psy, 493-4244. 2-0219. FB 2-2119. ' AIarriso MAtl 6tl SaIim. MUiT b* able to operat* milking nw-1 chlnM - aM' mm i firm SMM> manf. 2W0 N, seen*tier Rd. Management i Trainees . STATE DIRECTOR WILL INTERVIEW MEN OVER 30 YEARS QF AGE. YOU MUST HAVE SALES MANAGE- EOTTWfcwrr BEEN A SALES CREW LEADER, OR SHOW A CONSISTENTLY GOOD SALES RECORD, FOR THOSE WH0‘ARE MANAGEMENT-MINDED WE 0F-fER A BRIEF'TRAINING PERIOD BEFORE PLACEMENT IN SALES SUPERVISION' AND MANAGEMENT, APPLICANTS SCREENED, DECISION MADE SAMI DAY. BE PREPARED TO START WORK NOW, FOR INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT PHONE FE 84438. preferred, FB 6-M71, but wHI train. IENUAN I, ----------■— Standard Service, 1044 E: Mapl* at Adams. Birmingham.- SiRViCE "iTAfioST MECHANIC Wanted. Mutt b* neat and ra-liabale, apply g-^-. STATION ATTENDANT, Lake Area. M» 4^424. SERVICE STATION ATTENDANTS 14 to 50. Uniform* furnished. Oth- - TIRED OF SHOP LAYOFFS Investigate th* ogportunltlas as a Sunoco-service station dealer at a - SUNOCO OPEN HOUSE Inasdaj; and Thursday, • fal 13. .... .... n hand to answer your quesnons abou* 1. Investment a - 2. Financial assistance . 3. Paid training program.* * 4. Specific locations 5. Prolected profits If Inttmeafed but unabl* to attend, call S7M100, Detroit, !- UNDER u ^ “ I paint matt, guarani**, _paM :atlon and hoaplial plan. WnaaF ■ **M>- HoI|7< Michigan. ; To duality y ... ___ satire to mam, ... $100 iwtekly right from Start. See or writ* Gerald Row, 44* Fourth, Pontiac or writ* Rawltlgh, Dspt. MCL 446-114. Priwport, lit. , wo6l prSmIR -'S i g .."WAV chock, stoody work, paid vacation plus bonus, or «lk . tlnlshar. Voorhels Cleithars, 4140 W. Walton, Drayton Plain*. JONG man Apply Blq Dixie Hwy. INCLUDED POR T R AIMING PROGRAM ON TURRET LAWmk FRINGE BENEFITS, PAID VACATIONr REPLY TO PONTIAC PRESS BOX NO. 44. AN EOUAL OPPORTUNITY IM-FLOViR. .......- --........ Htlp Wanted hiaala 7 AN bPBNINO FOR CURS WAIT-rata.' Frost Top Orlvo-ln, IMS N. Parry. wroraniTR8------------2®#-^ WOMAN who want to b* succass-tu' and. aim good monoy m ttwlr 1 apart lima. .Minay back guarani*# , make* a von rnmnieriilp^mip In demand and easy to i*l|. Per interview writ# PO Box 91, Dray- Saby iiftiR, *!)4T6rl lf.Wi. 5 dayt, 2 chliaran. 474-0251. Saby siTtIr, Mibbt-i-AoSb. Call betwaan 7:30-9 p.m, 17 Steln-hauah. Ct. PE «-tW44. _ work, 5 .day w*«k, 4:30 a.m. • 4:30 p.m, 244* Caw Lake Rd., Keego HanwBg*,.IR!TO!uM^^ .. MM|1- IaIY SITTBR. L I O til JflUlIB- CAREER WOMAN' TgW ntntMr pi* Nit i Pontine ... field ttaff. Thla pSslton sires aSove average* anrnlng, and axillltm oppqrlunlty to advance. Pgr IntarvKw wit* Mr. Man), bast. Ill, 41*1 Broadway, Kansas CNv 11, MMsourl. ' cGUNtiR 6IRL House 199 N, Hunter, Blrmlng- Blrmlnaham Polio* Dapt, Applicant -mutt: ft.iLMW/Wrfnd a u.s. etfiMti. In* must b* abl* to pots * typing last at 40 wpnM and have hod mlrig, filing, ami dictapton* axparwnc* within th* ■*n <>im. , A Birmingham.foaMm ■■■ pro-1 farrod. Work consisti of typing no-ifea roperts, kisping racords fitts, and relieving In In* drlvar'S II-OonM bureau. Moure I a.m. te 4 p.m, Monday-PrMay, Apply tween f *,m. and noon. Roam I atta. MfWM4. icwiitv: ffKAir'TtffjiiLiTT PI4-0711, „ r 9 or over. Apply In pirsan attar 4, Dellta't Restaur ant, 49M N. Roeh-at,Id,. Roenastir. shorthand, writ# guatlficallon, srisscrj"!-*- THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1903 dren Shop, Mirada MB* si necessary but It pleasant personality and be GIRLS 21 OR OVER We have openings for I girls work h» etr office. - Must /hi pleasant tatophUnq voice and i airt full tbm emptoymant./Guan... d salary phis bonus and Inpen- LICENSED -----PRACTICAL NURSES Immediate openings for practical nurses, *317.65 par month starting salary. Increasing to SMSJft per month. Differential for Mnltfgwllf night duty. 40-hour week. Free laundry and other fringe benefits. Contact Personnel Director, Pontiac general Hospital. Laoy f6 Care for j ickobt-aga children and tojitetoMMfii live In, Ft <-1404. LADY, &4tL tOKEEPHOUSE IN Keego Harter, more for homo than wag**. 2 children welmnui. ail. I after 4:30 p.i MATURE BABY SITTER, DAYS. FE 2-441$ after 4 pirn, ______ MATURE BABY SITTER TO LIVE •' ~ B aihm. m MIDDLE-AGED BABY SITTER AND ..........................| ■ ItirS MM foT nursing” hote.” All-shTfti7~si par hour. 4123506. , pijr^anan't1 __ position dPBN REGISTERED PROFESSIONAL NURSES Pont Ik Oeneral Hospital staff positions available. Minlmun starting salary S3SS.40 SOhour week, time “■* —* --"f tor overtime, ■ director, Pontiac General aonnel Hospital SOCIAL WORKER WOMAN NEEDED FOR PERMA-nant position as social Wbrfc investigator In agency located north of Detroit. Mud be over is years wee^hi'toeSw*' islary^.Wti to atari with. Increases to'12,000. ‘ant fringe benefits. Send a of bacKgvMnd and quadra, to Ponttocv Press Box WAITE'S- MERCHANDISE-ASSISTANT FULL-TIME, BETWEEN 21 1 AND is veers of age. immediate dls-prlvlleges. Excellent op-*“ — m—icomont. Apply office. portunlty for "advar 5fe floor, penStnei WAITRESSES Apply lit person ______300 LOUNGE toe 3. Caw Lake Rw WAITRESSES CURB GIRLS Mott te it W.over. Fu.. P „. time. Meals fumtobad. Vacation with pay, life Insurance pitalizatlon benefits. Appl.HMRP Boy Drlve-ln, Telegraph and Huron Streets. Also Dtfdrlwh | ver Lake Rd., 2 till no Help Wanted -GRIL L COOK Apply In person 300 LOUNGE ■ Cost Lake Road ESTABLISHEDJhAxKINS ROUTE, aam.no atpvp ateraga. NURSE'S .AIDES AND-ORDERLIES,1 ALL SH I F T S, EXPERIENCED PREFERRED. GREEN LAKE REST HAVEN. i ■ PIZZA COOK telephone! l iqiiwiYoRS, cAjlL from your, own homo, being physically handICOPPOd, • no Mrrtor. Further information, call FE 24451, batwteh io and S p.m. Sales Help, Mob-Female 8-A SALESMAN DESIRED WHO IS willing to follow Up aalM leads for hooting equipment, portunlty for a live, Interested salesmen. M perlence. Call M. A. Bang Lumbar Co., Heating Division. F > Agoocbt EVELYN EDWARDS _ LEARN TO OPERATE Mfriiirra IEMI- DIESEL, TRUCK DRIVER ^Tlvjfa1, "*** TJOlOC. IBM TRAINING week courses available. Approved by Michigan State Board _of Education. Free placement- assistance. Free uarklng, financing Work Wanted Mole A-l CARPENTER. KITCHENS, AO-recreation rooms. All re-I — 2601Q nr OR 3-4S10. 2 WOMEN WANT CLEANING OF Income property and office' 1 Ing. fK 4-3S63. ........ ONE-DAY IRONING SERVICE. REF-tea—dte MaCowan. PE-Mwl, Building Service-SuppBet 13 PLASTERING NEW AND ' repair. ' OaLl ALL MAKES Qf FOUNTAIN PENS repaired by factory trained men. g-----r ^^'“ S ^icirsupFiy ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE—I pairing and rawtndlng. 21S S. PI Phono FE SOW!. Dressmaking ft Tailoring 17 Convalescent-Nursing CARE FOR CONVALESCING LADY (itot bedridden) In widow's home, excellent food, home-llko etmos-pher». FE 5-5643. 6®il IwA elderly 2330 Hummer IjURO _ iijFNA 7-8W3. ' . MoifiRgan^Trucldng Bob's Van, Service MOVING AND STORAGE - REASONABLE rate*-- -Paddlno-1* Year* Experience IbRT TOMPKINS OR 4-UI ALUMINUM SIDING - HOOPING INSTALLED. CASH AND (CARRY CALL SUPERIOR, FK 4-3177 HOUSE AND REMODELING ASPHALT PAVING. WORK GUAR-- anted. FEKMU. luMMogMederEbutloir mcl, OH Doors, Concrete Floors , Additions, House (Ultlra , RAUL GRAVES CONTRACTING FrW Estimates 1>R 4-1511 JMMINUM' ‘ITOUKSpiBIRS Awnings - Porch • patio • rooting. C. WlEPON CO. PR 4-&H . I llffiliBirnCi|iROVBMBN'fi Kitchens, baths, recreation, attics, house raising, aluminum ildMB'ens storms. Terms. Guinn Construction Co, Fi HIM, |rlrT' ” .mafld CUSTOM BRIDAL GOWNS—VEILS >y Frlscllia FE MWI Itrpewtry .... ^ALUMINU Ceramic Til* C AND R CERAMIC TILE INITAL-lei Ions, floors, walls end shower ■nuStE8L irfegT Fencing PONTIAC FENCE CO. ' Wit Dixie Hwy, OR Mi “bS'HBlI broken Glass RiPueia IN' s Firm, Oxford, 6221611. Heating Service NEIDRICK BUILDING SERVICE -Home, Garage, Cabinets, Additions. FHA TERMS" FE 4-6902.___________________ TALBOTT LUMBER Oiass Installed in doers and wl dows. Complete building aarywa,. 1025 Oakland a— *“ Moving and_Storaj|t F R 11H HOT PASTIES, iso place your order t hours advance. MS-I4M. 170 Canter INVBNTISNS AND IOEAI MAOE tnW wuterlnts and models, I* PIero Tuning j|^lRtNO,FREl ntTJMA^ pairs, No lob too large ar Mr small. F> %f*U. Plwiiiblng ■PPpH** PLUMBINO AND SEWER CLEAN-Tng, waller Baker, licensed mailer plumtei, "Nn«^ BROWNIES HARDWARE WflHpaptr toWT ' A6G^:lliN;i iSRrart t Service TrM Trimming wvlgi General free Sgrvicu Any site lob. PE 3-fft4 Ft MOB MONTROSS TREE IMKVlCK Tree removal—trimtnlllO. 315-7SW HAUL.NG AND nUBBI Trucks to Rent Dump Trucks — Ssml-Trallars Pontiac F0rm and AAA PIANO TUNINJ^ !SMt™TWRraE —Masxisi_________ Wall Cbmuri SMS* BARGAIN HOUSE NAVI CASH FOR uMdiurnlfurs, FI Itfn, wwhiili. Free eittmete. MMW4. T^l^l-fulT 2 BEDROOM HOUSE: 71S5 RICH-srdson Rd., Middle Straits Lake'. EM 3-S715 or MA 4-133W ^ -t • BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE, ~ Inquire l» S. Edith, FE ma, 3-BEDROOM AND BATH, OIL FUR-naca, fancad-in yard, SIS month. Write Pontiac Prats, Box to, 3-BEDROOV HOUSE 2-CAR GA- REALTY,' FE S-4095. 3-BED ROOM HOME, NEWLY OEC- “You’ve left a slice of American cheese and half a cucumber!”:. Moving and Trucking 22 PAINTING AND PAPER I „.ttTtemespn.Pi soss._______ A-l DECORATING - FaiNYiNG plastering — papering. Free as! •witoiinta'Sss eSm. omoo.____ Washing. S7MS72. C. White. PAINTING AND PAFER~HXNGfNG Mark Nation. Fe Television-Radio Service 24 HAVE YOUR •OANDTELEVr t WORK DONE YOU SHOP TransportutioR 2S BIRMINGHAM — HANDICAPPED atudont urgently needs ride ‘ Wayne U Mon. thru Prl. Fron a.m. — leave after It3t p.m. I CALIFORNIA DRIVE-AWAY Planning to go West? Drive One I our sharp jaw modal cars, we wl "m*b*5a motor sales , ..Dima, i. ier cent savings. Other In sur-i to 15 par cant In A-Plus comae. K. G. Hempstead, Realtor, M Huron, PE S-S2S4._____ Wanted OillfUn to Board 28 >y day ot ! IN LICENSED HOME. VOR V | pM ->;.sy«.................. Wrnilud HuuMhukl Ouudg 29 OR 1 PIECE ' appliances want .. f a Bargln Houa AUCtidN sauTs‘ if FURNITURE id quickly Little , Ft MW*.___■ rB R-Y-$Af0ir. cisir ..--.IwWg'win. ..... ...J*TOInTtuWe~aH5rAft- pllances, 1 place qr housetul. Pear* son's. FE 4-7SSI. .__ fFWlDYTTwWr'ifKfR YOU, OX PORp COMMUNITY AUCTION. OA S-2SSI. CASH FOR: YOUR FUftNtTlMf, appliances, mlie. Items. Or •-* — sail I* for you, Halts Audio 3-1S7I or MY MUl, Shwe Livinj| Quur1drs 33 LADY AND SON, H, WILL SHARE fWo ladles er a aaxF4'^w1l:l' 'i front horn*, In Qxtew Area with couple or 2 men. EM 2-457*. WAtiVib LADY ¥o SHARE HldB wnoblo. Child wal-uwn nedroom. 114-4323. MATHIR W8Um ”IMI • nice home In Rochester \WRttdRMTl te? 1 TO 50 __ LAND G0NTRACTS Urgently wantfd. tea us before you deal ^ Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N, Qpdyke Rd, -Ft MISS . Open Eves, rill I p,m. MULTIFLI LliTINO URVICE 2 — t in Fpntltei tmmidlati commission, Mr. Davla. •ai Value Raany. , . "csinr Wa nosd listings oil llOUias, acreage, commercial ion, wa buy and sail land contract. __ PONTIAC REALTY Will pay w w u,m tar houst, No equity, , Biwood Really________mmsio wnwiTfAinTp^ acreage .from private parly. Ba> Fiy*fri FantlM and Recntiiar. sl ..FLAN TfrMtrai‘TRA6I»... (LIT GEORGE 00 IT) CAtlTTODAY FON ACTION TODAY George Irwin, Realtor MULTIPLE LUTING SERVICE Walton fe »t*w Wa WibT7Tr’’"r"ANB "T"'W5k Sjgartmm^fwnbM^^^ MM I. (•ROOM IPMinpp'' ", Alberta Apartment* itOL>«aw \-r6Sm, TS|goll”" ",, Apnrfments-Funilgfced 3? 1- AND 2 - • ROOM EFFICIENCY spts. on Ppntliy j3Wl tiki High-land Rd. All utilities Included. Ph. Mrs. Llley, 673-IHO. SlW Highland P®iM:;KiTCHENETTE BACHELOR -----■—* Bvyndhlng tun ' ‘ ' 2 ROOMS and BATH, BABY WEL-come, $20 paE;JWtek 'with ■*-125 deposit. Inqulra at 273 Baldwin Phone 33M0S1. | 2 ROOMS, - ADULTS ONLY, PRI- JAiti, LLtAN, MUUtKN, stovG# garage. $65 I HteuinT Tw^rlnteiy-or—lmn%l^ Kns«Hen. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-come. $20 per wk. with $25 deposit. Inquire 273 Baldwin Ave. Phone 392405,. rROOMS, BATH, ALL PRIVATE, 3 ROOMS, DINETTE, Win SlbC, w children. PE 4- clixh i rm>m afakymvht; S round flpor. Sultable tor HR litmsn. AffiaM FE »726i. PontlK Lakt. adults. *71-5342. LAKE ORION. AbULTS7~35i~W. LARGE LOVELY • To May let. OR 3-1243. MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD. t KOOMS —bath, utllltiaa lumlshid. FE NICE 2 ROOMS, BA^H, ALL PIT-vata, near General Hospital, $18 wk. Utllltiaa lurn. 444-3475, Apartments-Unfurnished 38 west MM1 ARAEfMVNTS, _______tell, FE »7425. 4-r6om kut,.w'Wiyh mnr --------1- A0AMg realty, fe clean gulat coypli. Fi.. ^•K(^MANb"IATW,HAU#UIHa option to buy. *73-51257 ROOMS, BATH AND UTILITY room. 35S Weldon, 3 miles S. of Lake Orion. BEbROOM RANCH IN PONTIAC good lo 11 a.m 5 ROOMS AMD BATH, $70 PER month, deposit 125. Reference FE WML ’ 22 PINGRBE, FE 24273, STOVE and refrigerator furnished. 503 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. $20. ■ ■' ~FB 4-1241 or FE 4-2312 ■ COMMERCE fWNSMlF.',*) room, prlvdi FOR RENT: 2BEOROOM HOME, ‘ “ "“_e hooter, gaa cooking iraao. S*S par month. "Bud" Nicholie, Realtor *2 Mt. Clement Bt. FE 5-li?01 After 6 P.M* FE 2-3370 jUdah Lake homE,t4 etbROOM' ■........................ 1 2 AND 4.BBOROOM HOMES 227 W. Yeto at Slanley RENT OPTION $59.66 MONTH OUR TRADE DEALS. ARE TERRIFIC > 1 MICHAEL'S REALTY 1327555 WB 24200 UN 2-2252 BRICK RANCH HOME, GOOD Stlon. OR.2M47. hed House. SAM WARWICK HAS IN SYLVAN taka, 3-bedroom brick, 5125. 2-bed-room brick, *107, 2bedroom brick, *135. LtSSO. Will also SOli. 682-2820. OR-1714. ■ " I OR COUPLE, 2R00M entrance, 3* Norton. MODERN ROOM FOR REFINED teHBUtetetegjil ~ 2-0218. NICE SLEbPlNG RbbM FOR 1 6r .2JWiiMn-N9.jrng.Kar.*.ur HrJflktOz. plssss, FE 443247 flbOM, KITtHEN PklVILeOBi lP desired, no drinking. - FE 21032. ROOM anD 1 n 6S jSSard, tiM Oakland Avo. FE 21*54. R6oms p6B ) oil l QltNfLEA4iN. downtown, kitchen fKlIlflM available. 338-1422. •M^ptNOROOMrrbwrxtm'Tir . Ft 2*262__________________ •LlipiNO RooM f6R REHt. iit Tferfen. \FE 2177). Rent Stores 12 SOUTH :ass avenue Can Avenue I i. Freshly pain! any type builnan, RN S' id Vai I Body Parking, ,. sm^gWBrwniF«tr| 6foRSt6R"RIHTNIAI"F!iHIR Rent Offlee >pnc# 4T LOW COlf OFFien or buiiness rental. 444 N. Woodward, Royal Oak. Up to 3,oW tq. ft. Available J*n. IsLJmona Lltet^M**0. - Rent Buelneti Proyerty 47«A 30X30 buildino LOCATED AT 2 Baldwin an an Wifi tot. tom manulacturlno. call FR 25221 h tween 0i30 a.m, and noon. mar Hm1 eware conditioning, owned i and rear. Available m mt location on ■lliasbath Lite :rois from Pomlsc Mall, parking, Immadlala p0*’ "Bud” Nicholie, Realtor 4 Ml. Clsman* It. . tFE 5-1201 After 6 P.M. FE 2-3T70 :^MIRCIA^»TORAOE AVAIL- ^Ngwgi, { ..;,rr4| ■WROOM,^NORTH ^IDl, NEW, JIDRMM RANCH TYFI, IH0 dawn. Assuma payments of M4 par mo. Taxes and Insurance tool, no cieiHie oesf. OR l-7fiL . Call Miss Behrandt 4222745. 25464. Jamas Realty. • ROOMS AND BATH, ATTaChRD to trade. For datollt cad W. H. BASS REALTOR FE 27210 BUILDER "SpKlallring In Tradis" . SAND- 227 W..YALE AT STANLEY Builder 3klU accept in trade. Vacant land or your present home, regardless of condition, for new 2 or 4-tedreom. Basomant, large loL paved street, immediate occupancy. Open dally, Sunday. WE 24100 UN 22252 3327555 ------- - FE 27282 MICHAEL'S REALTY MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD BARGAIN ^Ltealy 5-room and bath colon It Sparkling oak floors - toll ba... — auto teaf *• Payments lower WRIGHT 1 383 Oakland Ava. :E 2-2U1-2 opan Cva Ives. oftOr 7, OR 22135 — OR 2041 NEAR EASTERN JUNjttfc'HtGh | k~i“-----bath, on fir floor, 2 largo bedrooms kitchen, lota ef —*— plact. Delco-gas NEAR PONTIAC H — modem, newly NEW 2BEDR00M BRICK, heat, full basement, spadtu. .... winding streets, is mlnutM from S9.39Q. MODEL - AVAILABLE: rancher. 3- badroom* on your lot, full basement, oak flodra, eat neat, birch cupboerdt. NO MONEY DOWN. SUL77 MO. Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BUILT RUSSELL YOUNG,J3W W. HURON A-l BUYS other nice features. $350 will niov you In than only $77 plus fax* and Insurance par month. Near Eastern Junior, High 2-tedroom bungalow — full mm mint and 2car garage. Paved street, nice cleen home, r* ““ Handy-Man Special NEW 2BEDR0bM>. BRICK heat, full basement, i— winding straata. ~~ | Pon|lBC..:a|w4M.... HM 1565. Marlon Bolldlno Co. NELSON BLDG., CO. OR 3-8191 HCO for 84,000. Phone OA 23466. ND money down Ttf-level or ranch--sfaa>r_hpmet fet 85x100. 13,200 M) WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor, 2821 Dixie Hi - ■ Can**73,1273 Open evenings. Associate NO MONEY DOWN Mixed Neighborhoods _ Land Contract, VA, fHA i46P»?i:«°;c,^2*«' Wyman Lewi* MS"— $56 A MONTH Bloomfield Ranch 2tedroem. 2 baths. 15 £ 1 - living room with IIreplaca.— car garage with worktnop. Lik new condition. All extras. FE i BY OWNER llitlflll 2-bedroom. Mui appreciate. Immediate potsesslc io N. Tatmanw. FE 27513. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARD 2BED-room, bi-level, 2-car attached garage. 2monttH)HI, 232*4). CASH IN YOUR EQUITY In your too amall noma, 2 b JWmr'M ' room li vn, 8*2.64 , nawly decorated, i .m 134x136'. SNLIM, i town, S*2,*4 mo, plus tax WW lr HAGS! ROM REALTOR, 4200 1 Huron, OR 20355, Evas, call 0 A INOHAM "REALTOR UL 23310 COMMUNITY NATlbNAL BANK For Horn* Ownership r It'S Easy C. 0. BALES CUSTOM HOMES MbulH - Priced right -r«Ct with Builder. Carrigan ' -—Cons't lolly *3222*1 Roch. OL 1-1742 ~~eaRl a. oil4|iitt). bROker nenn- IDZAftBTH I ■ imerior charm fife I carpeted. Recreation ewfOT'iyiiiioo oownr COOLEY LAKI-FRONT — Modern -qd frama home with 20’ f porch, stona fireplace and failures. Nice wooded lot. *2,250 With tow down payment. log i sb *2,250 Times Realty JOHN KINZLER GAYLORD Sheridan si. ... ____ „„ jwn payment. Call PS 22623 or MY 22*21. IMMEDIATE FOSIBSIION In this brand new modal lor sale. * mom ranpher. Separate dining, mom, basement, baths. 2 car j garage, gas heat, hot water healer. *0 x 220 ft. lot all for only 115,500, (arms. Call FE 22*23 or MY 21121 Lawrence W. Gaylord 3 % Flint Jt. MY 21*21 or M 22*21 Lake Orion . Jay llraai, 2-bedroom, hat wafer neat, ayar :Vi asm toWMl In, pill price 111.200 - $1400 down, 1*2 per mo. plus taxsi. . HILLTOP R»ALW < 473-1234 ImmedlatinFoiteteion Fertod for * handyman — This 2 bedroom bungilow. corner lot. Good earsda, Nice Kttgt Iocs)Ion. fxcalllpt Irlvlltbsi Sylvan Lake. Only *1,250'»mtl| down psyiwanl. MO monthly includsa taxes lo qusl-llled buyer, 'JACKLOVELANB— 2100 Cali Lake Road ’w- garage, Good HittVotP' RIALTY , VnTroy, ^ , 2B«dnsom. *»4in lWGTPIoWitoHIO ollachSd g*r*g*. Ktggo Harter -Lays down ptymml. AI Pauly, Realtor 1 Mixed Neighborhood it, sptelou I mlnuis* ...... . tiGiieL NO DOWN PAYMENT 7' NO ASORTOAOE COST O PAYMENT FIRST MONTH isos located (In all darts of itlac am* with or without1— I .Full basement, 2 bedroom.. _ kitchen and. tamny room,/brick fmnt. - model ah 472 Kinney ji*i~ Blaine. Open l lo 5 dairy an Sunday. BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS FE 22742 AFTERNOON EVENINGS AFTER 7, LI 27217 MILLER SPACIOUS BRICK RANCH *» 2 —as. lake privileges. Built IntoM, y j minute drfte -.tete af c«£ ■ ;graeiosr «»rp*tetf nving arid ing room, brick ttroplaca, (Mar >bl* .duty kitchen, plus a afr it* 4-room home which rants <40 to Iwlp make your pay-ms. You'd warn to at* mis. ly MAM down. } OOOO INVESTMENT. 2famlly Income with nearly M par cam ra turned. 5 rooms and balh, $80 mo.. J and bsth completely furnished. .7 $18 weekly. Fun basemant, oil teat 2-cat garage. Good rentol area, always occupied. $10,280, $1,450 dawn. f Nothing Down 47N SUNDALE. 3-bedroom, brick, tore* Hying room, modom kitchen, tile both. Largo let. Blacktop street Lowl Low 1 SIS par cant Intesest You'll noad about $3M tor ctotlng cost. Total price $10,200, 231 W. Cornell tofa ________ ____ Hoofs, til* Good locallon. Only $ig,400rclo*lng cost ONLY to mow* to,. ASK FOR RDN^Q:NBtfc.Pe27103^ _ OPEN FOR YOUR INSPECTION f TO I P.M. CRESCENT HILLS Brick -and stone, 3 bedrooms, mant, 2-car garage, 75* wide Ptvad street, MOO down. 11E MODEL, Watt on M-S2, than . north ys mUa fo Ride* Top Rd. C. SCHUETT ” FE M458 ""'i6CHSii,ir-,ivi'iSiy'«ii. shopping and aChdols. Owner transferred. $1,600 down ir — mortgage. $124 monthly SAUNDERS 4 WYATT mant, naw oil tofmea, Mr garage. pMtiylMi dowi payintel. Your offer vrtU b* considered. William Milter Realtor FE 2-0263 m Peon t to 0 low... : PAYMENT DOWN— Will put you in this 2 bod room W*4artomMnmii ship ranch bungatow. Six, rooms, plastic til* tel& PUM a large family room,-big lot. 77x146. SEC THIS — IT’S VACANT! - 3 BEDROOMS Aluminum stood UVatory bunga low, 3 lot% 1W - car ■pbeo. Overlooks Cos* Lake In MMgo. Carpeted 22x23 nvfnfe room with natural fireplace, gM hot wafer heat I *200 DOWN wlH -tofe lfc Humphries FE 2-9236 MMiar call PE 25222 U»»Klg, SYLVAN LAKE , —1 brick, full base________ iv.vuu. arifeoroom brick, carport, 14,400: 2bM)room brick, carteri, 12,400. Will also rant. 602-2020. 121714, , ■ 1 - ■ Templeton „. 4-Bedroom Ranch MMote'^BricK, lvh tetlw) toeati on largo landscaped, fenced k Near ffylvah Shopping Cantor Priced at 013,200. Let ua show yi today! K. 1. Templeton, Realtor 2332 orchard taka Road 4020200 UNPINISHBD 2BlbR66M HBifSi on tore* «am*r tot with wnm Lak* privileges, 1 block from M42. 402im or 007-5372. , WATERFORD-$80 MONtH FOR.SALE OR LEASE,.clear dltion 7-year-old on tore* Kapad lot. Immadlala pottaaslon. C.METT FE BG458 WELCOME SAfltA HIRE stockings on ' ith, tote* . *11,500, nothing doivn, 63.51 month, plus tax and Ina. FRESH AND SPARKLING gtoamins a formica to HM, I badr oor«, abundai iblnats, gas ______ * and seraanA S10,-172.03 mo. plus tax WESrCWN REALTY Ft lUMjg* MOW 3-iVBIfmMi I1TOK, Gas . naat, lulf Mstmanf, spi*io‘“ winding iiryals. 15 r BjawMi |4|o mowi Marlon iulldlne Co. hai birch. cablnote fermiea to Cartmic til* bath. Gleaming 1 doors. 33 it, ptntltd ragroal. room. Bssomonf, gas host, Largs Anchor fenced yard Ibf RIt Chll-dren's protection. 4W PER Cr MORTGAGE—$16,250, TERMS, SOUTH ANDERSON - 5 room bufigalow with living re kltchrn and 2 tedrooms, baser..... With gas heal. FULL PRICE -17,206 * 5100 down. ; ; Smith Wideman NEW HOMES Fulj Bailments $00 DOWN '“S®8 per .mo.. Excluding taxoi and insurancf Visit our medal at oWArbna it, (across Irom Northern nigh) OPEN 10-8 DAILY SPOTL'^TjyJO. C°. — RsK about our tr*d»ln plan -HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri Level $9,995 $1,000 DOWN' m tar .i'»Ki , OPEN wil^^k/fLI^^ oN* jWKjh LOt J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor IM *4404 16751 Hlehtond Rd. (Mil) READY ; HEART HOME" 4 miles north at Walton, out Baldwin. S63 per you in. Dionti Buildino company* SSS'Down NEW 2BEOROOM HOME $55 Month Fumltur* finished cabinets CALLAkYT.^gA(LY,*AT.ANO IRWIN NORTH END-v*ry nlc* 2b*droom bungalow with fun haagntofte fenced yard, comMn*tlari *tom» and scraans. Can te brought d to te sain to te •r gaud....I __ II house. Ha* terse tem LAKE ANOULUI LAKE FRONT - E*6*. l llrsptoea*, caryatid througn"'* —* polntn sonaMy prlcad. ’ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE » aS0«®*'*WIN, REALTOR X W. Walton PE 27—t "SMITH" An aktor family hem* with plenty y.rfeto. 2 bedrooms and bath up. .1 badroom and Vf bafh dawn Ra! madotod kitchen, full dining feom, tile basement wife shower, gaa jKWkSWNr garaga, 2 nlcaly land-scaped lots. $i*,w, farms. Sylvan Manor .Ranch terns featuring an extra i,rZ*„ wHh Ntaatoc*. 2 toll tem*, 3 bedrooms. Nicely landscaped and on* at fe* batter streets, su.tog, farms. Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor NICHOLIE swy: NORTHlUIURBAN srusasBi gv^SsirLnriB WEST lUIURBAN ~ Ranch horn* wife navaCaVU^,^ Lakt. li t vecenl, cell to taal N^ST»mtemmw,,. Jlimiani '***"'™f an NlCHOUB HARDER 'ftf'MIW 1 ANNETT; North Side-Vacant I • bedroom homo wife unftn-Ishtd 2nd Hoar, llylife rm„ dlnwia «raai_ mad2m kitcten, toll baitmanl, fear garaga. *10,(60, smill down payment. General Hospital Ana SrHM?: g®*rly!<,»|lp,Vl«^rms.^WlnB wm $IJ» ,".' 'iQzf 2room. 5-badrm. tem* near Oanaral Hetpllal. » «. from- torms, ---ill,””- *1 Seminole Hllla—Brtck 4 badrms. living rm., 13x13. torg* family tem wife ttri- mUSS* flMl 111 brasMskt spKa, balK, Fflii PrlCI rfeduefed to |i9i* SOOa WILL M TVIADB Realtors 28 E, Huron St. Open Bvanlna* and Iwfeay 1-4 FE 8-0466 V HE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER ^ 1968 IDEAL FOR RETIRED OR YOUNG couplt. Coxy 2bedroom log bungalow, 22-foot living room, oil hoot, screened porch, lake privileges. Fun prtort4W7S, tarns. LESS THAN <2,000 DOWN on this endbuliMn vanity. Ft**-Is, parquat floors, toads i space, gas perimeter, II landscaped lot. Will contract aa down p*y- SUBURBAN LIVING, plus lake Privileges wltti this neat 2-bedroom ranch. Sailing on tot wxios in nice neighborhood. Covered patio . with a privacy fence, elan nlav * house and storage building, termsjor wllMake land c PHONE 682-2211 5243 Cass-Elizabeth Root. MULTtFLBLISTING SERVICE Val-U-Way • WEST SIDE EAST IROQUOIS , A real nice brick and atuc rooms. 2-ttory home with garage, vary wall kept. Fire ' extra larga bedrooms, HVMB dining room, kitchen. Full price only SIMM. Cali hpw.. NO DOWN PAYMENT ' RUTGERS STREET 1-family frame asbestos siding, 5 rooms and bath, 2 bedrooms,- full basement, oil heat. Recently decorated, <250 for closing costs moves i, jas- toSart ndlitoned. F s. Fha tan ® full price. R. j. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 S45 Oakland Ave. JOHNSON, 11 / Bring Your Trading Problems to Us FHA TERMS. Northern High'ai older Abedroom home In good ( dition, gas heat, full baeem into. Full price FERRY PARK SUBDIVISION, cute little a-bedroom noma,, situated r-a comer tot# completely fenced, small down payment, will me you In, Law monthly payments, RENTERS, ^why^rjm , prttM Clark Wheaton, FB 4-E A. JOHNSON & SONS FE 4-2533 KENT Nt in iota HOME AND BUSINESS - Ing used for TV re< with attractive living Ismt., gas heat. Mrjg All tor SIMA terms. % air i 2% <750 DOWN « Attractive S bedrm. north side home In excellent condition. Mil to wolf~einpiM' Hi hv. rm. Tiled bath. Handy kltch-, an. Gas heat, Total price W,7S0. NORTH SIDE INCOME - 3 opts. Monthly Income 1200. 3 Moves and 3 refrigerators Included. Clean and mi good condition. Bunt.1 with ell hoot. Good location, larga tot. SIAM; farms. Floyd Kant Inc., Realtor Budget Beater Only MS par r ~ --1-- decorated 3 -_____we In* St ■ Basement, gas hi Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyki Rd. Ph. FE 341* --- Open Bves.tjll * pm___■ multiRelistingrealtor GILES |V LEVEL CONTEMPORARY, built In IMF with all tha extras. 3 ' xwns, hath*, marble fireplace, picture window overlooking front, carpot, drapae, base-', fee. room, otoctrlc garage —lore, Celt for — ^.**1 > full p ST. MIKE'S AREA BUNGALOW, large rooms, hardwood floors, full bOMmem, gar heat, garage. Only DORRIS BEAUTIFUL BRICK LAKE FRONT; Sll,730 . . . overslied living mom I3'x24' with eliding Thermopane doors to balcony with panoramic view. Kitchen with built-in*, full ceramic battl, VI bath end bath with shower, family room 13'x24', massive fireplace, 3 ---------------- EMM nfllfiwuu* -.... will admire. Vacant and : BUNGA- s ...... __________e of birch c boards and eountar tops of ... mica. Largs ceramic bath, glass Hreplaes 1 roereatieh room wlgt ■■ _ 'party, attached garage, 'biaektappad drive, lo landscaped by White brothers. LOTUS LAKE TRI-LEV6U A beat tlful brick, and frame home wltl attached 2-car garage, a com fortable living room with won dariui view of lake from pic window. A kitchen you, I___will ha wild 'about, : bright ly bill SOUTH GENESEEi 3-bedroom b gatow with full basement and heat (or fha tow price of «,! Rod hot iocation, and this ho RENT BEATER) Cute as ■■ describes this 2-btdroom bungalow with gloaming oak floors, tiled bath, gas heat, aluminum storms and Anchor fenced yard. Located off Oakland, MM will handle complete deal. DORRIS A SON, REALTORS 2536 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0324 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE BATEMAN - GETS RESULTS NEW GUARANTEED HOME TRADER PLAN TWO FAMILY Trut. Income, I rm*. down and 4 rm*. up, tech with separata gas furnace and hot water. Excellent wait slda location ctoa* to bus, 1 land ici We frets REAL COZY id a pries you esn afford w ymants of Only MS per mon v 4VS% Interest mortgage a BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS BRICK JIANCHl 2 bedrms., .plus dan, 21 ft, (Ivina rm, with natural bFW >150 with £ ";u room and ,2 car.garai Ing throughout^ jarge^ iijoo down plus cos HSNET ^3?—nof. . ' MONEY. DON'T WAIT. BRICK RANCHER Almost new and beautiful suburban area with blacktop tlraeli, 3 bedrms., jvi balhs, big roomy kitchen with bum In oven and range, Loll of extra (ealuras Including fenced roar yard and itsii are? rar. plus costs. CAPE COD PERFECT FAMILY ..HOME In Wautlfir condition with oversize rnm'-wfiffispi bidrm. and bath down and 1 REALTORS ’ TRADERS Elizabeth Lake Road . _ _____^"'TT/T---7T-.PE' 2-1532 NEAR LeBARON SCHOOL. STORES and bUs. It it a doll house you ' will have to see. A lovely living room, dining room, kitchen with breakfast space, 2 'bed add both all on on* floor, mont, gas heat, aluminum storms and screens, l'/a-car garage, f-' yard. Priced at SIMM farms. NEAR THE MALL bedroom Cap* Cod full basement with recreation room gas 'heat, garage. Donaldson and It. Benedict schools. Priced at S13.3M terms. GENERAL HOSPITAL AREA ' Big 4-raom YhShto IbCetedon Wash-Ington Street, pint floor has large family kitchen, entry hall, living mom and full dining—a •' —second /EST SIDE-------Lovely ■< IRM brick bungalow with attachod breezeway and attached garage. Lovely ret, mom In basamant. Perfect condition. Outdoor grill tnd many other extras. Located on large lot In Cherokee Hills. Horn Is real living ctos* to town. Priced at only SIS'SSO. Terms. WALNUT LAKE RD.-Hars It J WE ACCEPT TRADES - John K, Irwin - Ails?* 313 W. Huron St. E since 1929 _____Phone ME&9446 — OPEN PROM 9 «.m. to 9 p.m. KAMPSEN L. H. BROWN, Realtor SW Elisabeth Labs Rowt Ph. FE 4-356* or FE MHO SCHRAM 3-bedroom ranch with 14x13 Jly-, ing room, 10x15 kitchen-dinette, full basement, gas heat, with 13x34 recreation am*. Priced at *11,MB end *1,200 will move you Big T 3-bedroom trwaval with brick-front recreation area, sliding pat- rafti ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Lake privileges on Elizabeth Lake go with this wsll kapt, two-bedroom bungalow, dlsssod-ln sunporch, 16x13 hnasttr bedroom, 23' living room, dining room ond 11x10 kltchan, basement, gas ho«t. Only-*7,300. Terms can be arranged. THINKING OF SELLING? you —* give u*W a try. Call Ftoyd Sommers, George Jack-son, Fred Rosavara, Clair Bush, Rachel Lovely, La* Kerr or Loo Kampson. 1071 W. Huron MLS1 FE 4-1022-1 O'NEIL MODEL OPEN 3 to 6 7» SUNNYBEACH DRIVE • other exciting new modal by_ fy Rita horn**. Features of tomorrow available (or you today. Formica kitchens, master balhs with fPFwWfnlE' NIaslarad throughout clear oak floors. Complete basements painted and tiled. A real deluxe horn*, Drive out M-J2 to Tw,in Lakes. Turn left to model. Mr. Proksch will bo your host. TRADING IS TERRIFIC VACATION WHERE YOU LIVE. Secluded and privately,' on Cast Lake Front at Wards Point. Doctor Is ottering his charming nine-room homo for your Inspection and approval. An enormous RANCHER 40 IIZSM. ON YOOR LOT MODI'- A^***^,*, ■is. Aluminum siding, gleam custom fsotyrito .■^.eiWsm overhsng and fiberglass msuli ilLS. Trad© Th© Bateman Way MEMBER OF INTER-CITY REFERRAL SERVICE \ Coast to Coait Trad#* $7/1. Tglgflraph 1 Realtor FE 8-7161 really large, form modem kitchen, si room located on fi lovely bedrooms ( 15x20 ft.r and a upstairs, Basaman. small hospllallty bar. V lake. 2-car garage.________J horn* for a professional family who cap afford th* 1 at 141,000, with tai H.....jwfflif* A warm, walnut paneled living room features natural wood h Ing, lodgorock fireplace and ulous Wall to wall carpeting, An ultra kitchen Includes bullt-ln OB wsshsr, dryer combination, - matching oven and eurfac* burners. 3 nle* bedrooms. Fenced, lavishly iandicantd, trull trees, two--- Ing wlllOws protect the lak. .... polio.’ li's a one-owner, belter than new homei Peeommended al SW, SM, may ba seen anytime. GOOD LOOK!NG. flQQD ADBRESS, close So Washington School In heart of our boil residential Many axlrae, such as good carpal-Ing, a mirror ovtr lha mantli# r* Inclnarator are included In tha fi prlct. 119,1M. wa Hava a kayli (SPECIALLY NOTABLE because has/ all large, large rooms, Idi tor a couple who wlSh twp big beu-roams rathsr than j) tiny onasr buy anyway you choose, aytn 01 with no down payment. Lot's ONE OF THE VERY BBST BUYS EVER, Immediate possession on a naai s hedroom ranch In Water-sip. Extra big utility ... mt rmrrrnv~tn ■ Veteran* will niad MO, ford Township, 'TOBtfiT***• A SWEET, I room, Cuto modern kltchan, I mant, gas hsat, garags, driveway, fenced yard, one •un porch. All this at I7,0M, l N t to y M 3-7261 wHh twii Siilmsnb mMd breezewav and garage. Large Jot-Near good lake and shopping carrier. Immediate possession. Only LoHsAmoio ACREAGE regular country estate. Almost _. aero of broath-taklng beauty with large 4-bad room modem brick and Colonial home. Large iwo-car ga- > move Into. Win Wait Suburban 2 bedrooms with 11x17 llvhm room, 1x11 kltchan, oil forced a|r 01 No Down 4 bedrooms, separata dining are* _ Full, tiled basamant with .oil IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR F| 5-9471 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD, [fHir EVENINGS , nFLKLiSTll IY OWNER - 2 PAMiLY, north aid*. yy||i aeeap: trida-aS Northern proparty. FE 2-1040. Lake Proporty 51 BRBNDBL .LAKE fRONT^BRlCl^, H*’ eonsUer 1-6703, HAC- icritlce iirjW,SM. LAKE LIVtNO AREAS - LARGE privet* sand baach, excollent swimming, boat docks, 10 minutes Pontiac, 1725 — 1)0 down. OR 3-1221. FB AMM. Elooi Bros, Corn. • ^ ^ 111' ■ SMITH FRANKLIN. MICH. Rnsort Property lots - Acreage 24 ACRES Good Investment or homeslte, near Pin* Knob Ski Lodge, Oo6d access to Pontiac. Priced to ,1*11 Woods. 032,130, terms. , Annetf Inc. Realtors _____ II_____ Ills <2f00, :^MMkRCIAL CORNERS 3 seres, 646', AtKtorionvIlle Rd. 030 per :OMMBRCIAL, 15 ACRES,, M-52, (modern house), 020,0M. HAROLD R. FRANKS, REALTY 2M3 Union L*k* Road IM 3-2200 EM 3-710) BLOOMFIELD RORABAUGK WoiKlward ol Square Lake R, E Willi i , B AMI LAKE ROAD. 1 LOTS IN A drowltig.community ot Booufltul (ATKINS LAKE ROAD. 2 lots 4) 14 ACRII, Vacont near Whito Lak#, just tha ipof Idr that suburban noma,< M/OnTtirihi, William Mllkr J I Realtor FE 2-0263 mm “Why can’t he go out and heist hub cape like other kids his age?”- - BtMliwsi OppertEiiHlBS 59 FOR SALE-SFUDNUT SHOP. ... Orchard" Lake. Any reaionable of- WITH BEAUTIFUL DRAYTON PLAINS 120x150' i excellent building alto I ea of good homes. Shallow .... id oxcollent drainage. Only S225. 150x200' Ttl* lake privilege*. In a -aa. Close in- Shallow wall books. Only <13,500 down, Includes stock. . State Wide-Lake Orion 1175 LAPEBE RD. OA 8-1M0 THTFSOOr-. AFTER S---- ■■■■■ Pharmacists HAVE (DEAL LOCATION FOE new drug store in fast growing community. Wilt build to suit Pontiac Pros* Box M. SAGINAW MICHIGAN ARfA First time ofteridT built (a 1242, i--- r----“jjj buff commercial l service elevator, building; plenty of I, Ideal for car saw* ■no aervica, discount house, fwmi-ure stori and many other uses. CLARENCE RIDGEWAY realtor 22fr W. “W>lton -----PE S-7M1 Wanted!! f'RaaC ' l^flSo^down. tlui .,. OA S-2417. NEAR CLARKSTON-12 AOfttit - Ideal tor horse! - consider trade. - close to e> 510,000 down. RES — newly romodolsd ompiete sol of farm butremg*"- aiiwir * wooded - <22,OM - SH IIS ACRES -^^erly^ Amer plele set of farm buildings — ti an oparr-'** Majk “•it hrlnn* .. ___ W sppol Mtantlal ( HOLLY AREA — 127_ acrei la for eamrf — c - <32,M0 - UNIVERSAL REALTORS SMBlSI , STORE, 44X73, AT ■Emem^MB spaL. ______ w.--- handle. Call FE .. ... operating dally enterprise, that brings ajrasL»luai-4o-Mtr--er-“^stoem'Ty appolntrnent only-S32,5M Ksr____________________1 BY GWNkR. WELL ImiulH-ad, restaurant, good buslnou and ■equlatotnt.- — ...____ SlRVICE STATION FOR tfeMi 10 UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 0665 Dixie Highway, Clarkston 62S-MI5 623-11' SalB BuiIhbib Propirty 57 Business Property LOCATED AT TELEGRAPH Walton? B>vd, Small house, tot 130* with 20' alley at th* ..... Zoned tor business. Ideal for radio shop, gas station or business office. GOOD BIO CORNER. C. Commercial ■-* mi Walton Blvd., close to Dixie ’. 73x300'. <7,730. CONVENIENT CITY LOCATION About 7 or 10 lots or epproxlmalely 3 acres already zoned commercial FINE KNOB SKI AREA, business lot 200‘x3M' on .......... at expressway 1-73 and Weldon Roads. Ideal for motel Sit*. Brewer Reol Estate BMiliiese Opportanltiee 59 I :ket. 127,300 on torme, This Is i only one ilk* 1l so DON'T UTI Y.0U would need to In’-** lime* th* amount >n * hst ikt the urns profit. REALTOR PARTRIDGE IS THE BIRDJOJIE' - g'HBWnr T ^~FE 4-33S1 Exchanges U.S.A. It you went a hmi«a*« dence In env oi own o business 30 stiftt, I any type RAD*b)("#i Xl: oniy fha regular commission i so call today, anaRBALLY ,ot.... your clrcums)anMs equitably. . LEW HILEMAN.-S.E.C- -Rtaltor-Exchongor 1011 W. Huron It. ' 8 ' FE »I72 OROCERY-SCM Lake area. Approximately 020,000 volume, i-bedroom i vino wartor Lots ot parking. Only m,(IM dev plus stodt,tor valuable iraal asti "MICHIGAN BuflneisSertei.Inc.^ JOHN LANOMEIIIR# BROKER 1373 Taiaarawl , < FI 4-11 me North, Nice aparlmant, mi *fon, slSt-aiffi * *faB r to Place a v ■ Law Cost Press CLASSIFIED ADI Just Dial FE sr-8181, I vp»Wf IfWS'i1' » NO. (770 SDD-SDM. .IN TOWN pop. Nice living quarters few groceries. Main Street targe baa building RENTAL INCOME Ton rental units on 600 f lake frontage. Always full, v for Itself In 10 yam Sw Ing tap return on Vour (nva WARDEN REALTY 434 W. Huron 333-7137 ^PONTIaCbIBB St&BB ra-t, Ttock lease, located at Cootoit Lake Road Irt Pontiac. Exceptional opportunity to become-an Indm—1-ent businessman. Financial slstance and training avallabi------ ---- 1 piny. For further Incall *46-3311 day*. 426-70B3. qualified 'pi mrmatlon, t6 BUy or. sell a businBss, - CALL ' 1 NATIONAL . - Business Brokers 1143 Ordwrir fcilto / FE 3-7S4I LOCAL HEATING il contracting busl- Bws. 46S-23S7 It at capital required, ilng avallabi*. Phon* Soli Land Contracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. Sea us bafoi you deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N. Opdyko Rd. FB 341 Open Evas. *211 l p.m>. 20% DISCOUNT 173,MO worth at contract.. ... ■all all or part or wHI glva M per cant tor loan against all or part of mesa contracts. / C. PAN0US, REALTOR ORTONVILLI ' _ " —" - — 7-2813 ACTION , r- land contract, laroe Call Mr, Hlltor, FE 2-01... Broker. 3160 Elisabeth Lake Road. Wontod Contitictt^dty. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Warren Stout, Realtor to N. Opdyko Rd, FI Ml .. -. OponEvoai""*---- ABKlLUtiLY TMl FAJTllf ' ♦Ion on your land contract. Ml buyers waitingCairjt^ltor .Fari QUICK CASH LOANS UP TO $3,000 You can gat a M <3,000 or ,en though not In two day* th ter appraisal, survey or You also now racstva a h Mw>< llta insurance policy, - - Consolidate your debts, pay tmm, make hem* Improvements with our money, lee and talk It over. VOSS AND BUCKNER, INC 202 NATIONAL BUILDING PONTIAC, FH. - maFlb. eeDROOM sit. *«EL SOUND PROJECTOR. S130. Call OR 34354. 1731 BUICK CONVERTIBLE i Safa CtBthlRt *4 3 EVENING GOWNS; SIZE 11 §10 1 SOFA 110) ROLL-A-WAY BED, Siu oes end electric stove, sio up) electric dryer, 137) refrig. heater, S34.50) electric 6-piece Duncan Phyla dlnlnc *a<- lunlqr size, <32. PEARSON'S FURNITURE >|Q B. Pika 'FE 4-7111 1 WEEK SPECIALS Lltthi Job's Bargain House I4M Baldwin at Walton FE 14121 OPEN 7)30 TILL * 3 ROOMS NEW FURNITURE. WMl nice range* end HpggiRgJ beaulHul bedroom, living andav*rylhln*,GNL¥-a312—*3.30 3-PIECE BEDROOM SUITES, DOU in it rtwitirii MiBRnii ffllfF AND BOOKCASE BED, 177. LOTS OF CLEAN GUARANTEED used stoves, refrigerators and washers, 110 up. Flanty. of bargains In used fumlfur* and factory seoond*. EASY TERM! BUY-SILL—fRAPI 1 GRAND RE-OPENING „ Bargain House, 103 N. Cass Everything le used 'furniture at b EASY TERM! BUY-IBLL-TRAOI >p*n Monday * p,nfl MAhr6jR ATO R s~7iRb clothaa drvar,dR , 3-pc. wAlnut bedNmM Wifd. win iKriflet tor quick aaia. ,*a* Stanley Av*., 2nd houM on the right iMlHMlltl. ' nlluro^lvfng room, bedroom and dinette - all tor 1225. S3.00 week-&, Fwa^ii^umltura, tig Beet KfeLViNATOR, 30-INCH ELECTRIC ranfleiimoe.Fg544i2, ■ - KENMORE COMBINATION WASH- KENMORE GAS DRYER, S50 LIQUIDATING stock ot box eprir • log room an . ....yt be mCvad c building for oth* Drayton Ptaln* OR S4734 .. FiiSis bed* TV# sewing mwninv*, w cabinet and mirror# V rtfrtotre^. and mlsceilaneous ltem». FB S-T927. aiMeiy jm--atfehments Curts AppUance# OR WjSm REBUILT APPLIANCfcS Maytag wringer, rebut RCA Whlrtoowautomat rebullC installed «OODHO^S1KEEP.NG^OP^ RiFRiGlRATOR> S25, fLBCT^S Mur ruT tu# washer, „ machine. Zig zaggar designs etc. - Modern walnut --hurt. Taka over payment* ot VM anWn^'sardoM- “e 4-0705. - ... sTnq^r auYo^tic zio^ao -TOv* 1Mb” RWiGiAAfOR, A4 condition. 244 Voorhele. FB 2-7114. traverse bRAPBsr^WTf'' long. Reasonable. OR 4*1095. USId ABnIral KBCTBRR1I frlgaralor, tot* modal. Term* 11.M per wk. Taka qyar payments on *« la cubic toot froezor ot 12.50 •..“SOGDYIARSTOftl" 20 s. CAM ‘ FE Mill US6D 2V' tv# cbMaiWAtlbN aiSo iSfrlgorator# OR 3-/3II* • 1 WYMAN'S USiD BARGAIN STORE , T OUR It W. PIKE STORE ONt 5-pIko Maple dlnono sat ... - M«.7$ *-* -*aam |fgy| .......|3t.tS| Apt. slzo gas sy* .*■ uws. fpaea Living 2-plece »—*•—' BLACK ANGUS ' RQTIS-siz« 42 a£tr*riacket wmi iatt*^ •mg,..lift T • pair lOdtos Tbllar~~ skates and case, aim i. Bio ’ upholstered swivel chain, S5 *| MEATS AND GROCERIES Baby Feed, 24 tor 22c CuFUp -Frtor*. MB • tbi Dog Food, 12 for 52c Fra* Home Delivery Call tor free catalogue. W* ampm- Jbp-ttohto-jp JimlS -«iu*ntlty. Cail S47-l577. , MEDICINE CABINEtI LARGE j Inch mirror slightly marred <3.7/ large . selection of ceEmatS wit or without lights, siMIm d*~ Terrific bun. Michigan Plyt <12.73. ........I........ <32.95. ' sink. S2.95) Lavs., S2.95; . iuub, #10 and up. rbs cut and threaded# save plumbing «>., 172 s. Saginaw, FIMIOS. REFRIGERATOR, size. <15, LIL 2-3425. apar+mEnt REPOSSESSED Phll-Oa* clothes dryer, deluxe unit to excellent condition, With high spaed drying, push button selector 20 mlh. timer-and other features. 1227.75 tor 5110. PHILLIPS PETROLEUM CO., 1325 ORCHARD LAKI EO. ■BfiWt - -SACRIFICE: DIAMOND ENGAGE- ring SALE Pre-Finlshed Paneling 4’x7' Moccs Sapel) ...., 4'x7' Tropical Luau 4'x7' Natural Sapall .... $2.80 .... J 3.53 .... 14.17 4x7' Salmcn sapall **xS' Bcgno-Luau .,..*4.17 4'xS' Salmon Sapall' 4‘xS' Congo Mahogany .. ‘.'‘i 1 1t7 $ 4.64 Vinylform FoldingDoors rg"x*T ■’0"xl'l" . '0"x6'l" . PLYWOOD DISTRIBUTORS 3 N. C*>4 ...-.FI- 244 SEWER PIP£ CHANNEL Fife - perf. fife WALL COPING-FLUl LINER COMPLETE STOCK OF^FlrTiwOS 4" DRAIN TlLj-lOC EA.—PICKUP BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY CO. <1 Orct«rd u4*~Av*. FI 1-7101 •Sr 65-A paired Con6*e . ., _ TALBOTT LUMBER glam Installed in doors and win-hoToiikland AV#.’""’ FB M325 w THimwTOwpMY— RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. Evervlhtog to meat your needs, clothing, >umltura, Apnllsncas. US¥tf~?0O!MAN GAI FURNaCI, —..iSItlonJ *1^ CORNER CABINET, UPPER i WKlNpllLallFLE.....4140 HI-FI, TV A RidlBS 66 i good used television, its. . Call FE MM3. 2l INCH B'C6n0*"TV" CONSOLE, good condition. OR 34631, alffliwaj AI''p»CEi TV, hmir “* 63M. Wi Hi nplete, ■LM 137.73. B toheta .75 gas automatic wahh- Haalat s, . TKCmpson's 7003 Mm wait. —t, chairs,' fltos, drafting tablas, typewriters, adding ma-Chlnai, check writers, mlnieograph machine. Forbes Printing 4 Office Supply,^ 4500 Dixie Hwy., OR 14727 WATER 46'fYIUIB ' 141U menuel with fittings 130. FE I-1110 3i30p.m. S20i china cabinat, 120) buffet, Mil clarinet and muile stand, 140, EM S-J2M. KbwTf. sIve! Walton; CotiMr at Joslvn. itblHM'gTLVi WATBI'BLBB stove pika new 173, ir. Thorpe. ; • jeretor Freezer Comblnallon, Ml s nffimr BiALiUTONKrirtiB- 1 tag caw net-mill. Makae blind a ham*,, BunonhoMs, appllquae, ate. ' Just sat lha dial. New payment* ot S3.24 a month or cash price of 160.30, Michigan Nacchl-Ema, Fi gllcH Aiib >6RtoiCA cuiY6m cabinets. Formica topi. JiuBiLau quality Mttmta and UEM' 3 Double ^k^WM#bu«tors2.M KITCHEN INTERIORS -.MBMEf . 3117 w. Huron it, ^iatingt'sHop Custom ceblnets, venlly. tormlce tgoaTiiM Dixie Hwy.>i7W7ll4. Tittlngi — plsjiii# ttMNMtr inrjM I AUffiMAYit i Ktijiiift, Wflb f6Ri 4 dltton, finger, knaa control. MB' morning or evening. OA 4m44. H™ff^ifflMPLETi YAAftTIAV. out,.dual controls, l.tralni, 37-fl, track, many accessorial. Tabli In- - cludad, Fi I sill, -—-—■ LAROE AuLLfAtlf/rPRWff'gOT apruca, . Balsam and Scotch Pina. saeflen. Cadet >ana cnrliimss Troa)#fajrm, »70 Olxia Hwy. (clg ICTTgKWiri^'jei'ARB SAL- sam..ll.M and up; Brava Mankats, Tgmf*Bawif’iwaw > g;.«®LVk.mMTv * home*, sytMl^ cnurches^ shopping ■P AKC MALi POODLES . condition. FE MH4, wide angfa and talachcto tons, |M. lam A Thomas, cnlnw stock, llj, . MfieiHliwiui item*, inquire 52) Whllmore.___ irevetirr-wi ralght $1_____ ______ is. Phgnn or s-saos. t; ejectri^p,n ball machine,'like )LES, 8 LAI I hold until I Tools-IHIachinery 68 ♦ JIG SAW AND PONTIAC LAKE BUltplRS SuF-ply. send, gravel, till dirt. OR WELL MtLkINO MACHINE good condition. Cheap. Bright Midi., APedemy F62M. (BWW;link> SPEED GRAPHIC WITH POLAR-• old Mdb mlnox subminatura, ' bomlte tleah. Call 363-4723. CHRISTMAS BARGAINS Uied spinet piano. 839*. Used console piano • 40" high I chord organs greatly reduced ■Mm fiOM iiX GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. LATE MODEL CONSOLE-CHORD organ, IM.50, ^terms, Curts Ap- lowrey Holiday duo orGan, MOO., IIK» now. PE M4I2. New All-Electronic Organs 2 manuals. U pedals; made by pn Amorlcan manufacturer. with bench and music MORRIS MUSIC * aPSIoistered Toy poodle puppy, roasonaWa. MMBL Akc miniature dachshund, — ‘h brownmale. )me,,-att r-....... Ak£ p6obLE PU>PY, BLACK OR silver chamdlon blood tine.s OR AKC MINIATURE MALE POODLES iTmh. .Lri™. a aifi! pj Nta, Awr h$hupuppies. AkCDAtJWiHUNDpyp*, 110 down Gallagher Music Co. 10 East Huron . Open Monday Htry Friday 'til t Sat., 5:3b p.m. FE 4-0566 COLUfSl BEAUTIFUUdUDtoLY ‘ itmas puppies, $35 and up. W5 and 515 Avon Rd., Roch. LOWREY HOLIDAY DUO ORi 86ub. Like new. FE $441%. PlXtiOS, FROM «E0.00 RteCONDI- PlaVER PIANOCOMPLETELY — rebuilt with new rolls, $350. 2 Umo Mahogany spinets $395 * "tabuin' Baby Grand, new strings pMA ratlnlshed Ebony with mir—— tall board Bench and dallvt $700. Hammond Chord Organ, bt and lots ot music, MR, MORRIS MUSIC $45 S. Telegraph Rd. ..Across trim Tal-M ________FE 2-0567 tlLvMT&HI CORD ORGAN WltH ■ bench, walnut finish, 2 yr. FE 3-2065, eftst jp.m, IMAlu EiahSTTood conOitiQn Universal , A NEW GRINNELL PIANO Music lessons included Chooaa your style and fbMi All payments apply H yuU buy $2.00 PER'WEEK. Grinnell's potniAC MAt.l wuriitier, Mn-t chord and two math uai organ, new $995, now $525, / Hammond Chord- Organ/A»1 oondt* tion, now 199), now $195, Thom el ^•jronad_a_iOrgon> $1?M THESE OUTSt IfflN . ?t E ^ >uy ,,. Olvo Ui • Try wiegand Music, .RENT A Trumpet, Comet, Trombone, Flute, • Clarinet, Violin or Snare Drum Kit $5.00 A MONTH., Ron* tor os long r.ivou wish, UNLfWilTOJVMo.. Grinnell's Sieto SHlce Ijjulpr AnnUgngg. OR >)1!li .. frperHifGeedi ALPINl PRIMA 4 FT. SKI* WITH »[?%«, *18.1? sweater, iii# M, nr1- Haul Mir rmmm skis or MOST i Mm Dreyer's 15210 Holly Ed., Holly ME 4-4771 Wood-Cool-Coke-Fuel I APPLEWOOD. ALSO OAK, masoned. DeUveced. FE S-8755. i dry fjjltplac r woop: White birch, oak and mixed. ne- Ih, re the Aristocrat nt the highway, bom 22 tahdemi to 33' — Gueran-toed^for^LiFEl Modele are on Holly Trailer Sales 15210 jtorv £d„ Holly . ME -MW KC MINIATURE POODLES, CHAM-plon blood lino, shots, wormed. Deposit holds until Christmas. EM 3-3359. TrAvEL Trailer rIntal FLORIDA RATES NOWH GOODELt. TRAILER. SALE) 3200 S. Rochcyter Rd. UL 2-4550 t stud. Torms. FE 2 YES - WE WiLl stORE, -----Trailer for youll Aiyt slM HI I MM Holly Travel Coecb Center 15210 Holly Rd., Holly. ME MB| Ocon lundoyo, *, . SHORTS MOBILE HOMES Goon used homo typo trailers, to PER CENT DOWN' Cars wli and hiteho< Installed. Comniate i of parte and bottle g, FBjW $•1972. TURE SI LVE9 oken, shots, 9 mos. i silver mole. OR i«4$ 2-S E6R6M ChAUPioH^ex-cHNnt condition. FE 44152. Call, DOG HOUSES, JIRO FEEDERS. 74* Orchard Lake Avo. 0R STaTTE dog, BiAUtlFUl German shepard, S50. For an appointment coll OR $-1512. FRteE PUPPIES TO GO0b HOME. OARAK#iT, BABY MALES. $4.W ■ Rff Firnr,~RBCii»str.Otr-«39l7-, P666lE.TOmN?'Tr"TOm 11 and delivery, 571-5604. I eng pen' PUPPIES, l, NO MONEY OOWN, IMP .3 pay. PoMieiO, Dec"----- Pekingese, miked breedt. TOY MALE POODLES $50 OR 3-4792 ruiYili 6ovb, all >lf ihdF, B WIHIomi. FE 4-6433. B *1 AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 P M IVlRY SATURDAY 7.30 P, M. ■VERY SUNDAY . _ 2:00 P, M, Sporting Goods~AII Tydsp Door Prises (very Auction . Wo Buy-Sell-Trede, atoll 7 Oays conelf----- Dixie. H le Welcome infOImAA* SUCTi6kS WEDNEs6Ar6%jlJi! wjM-O-yyey Coyntrvj Mirt|. 113 W. rsTiib PLANNBk.Ti^it.AHb ft .ready to auction. FRIDAY, 6l tym* "primitives, 8PR*fo5*2i fjoN; V 1-1250, 9537 Lake- RUTH'I^WlOTf: * F4*0.;BlAill Hwy. (In miles N, of r-7|). Auctioneer, Col. Jack jmiLjtmP glesi,- ontlouoi, toplo, WmBug, household «odt etc. CONSIGN-ME NTS wi plm’. F/W.'Wlif Dec. 15,at ii I ...it be onto, P trom to o Floiit»’TrH«4l|rub| I1~A •I-TREES, CHRISTMAS ANO glfe &,nw,fc* ■MRRRIPMHPto fraMIMR March, 1 lulls, me mSj*. FiftypirTHiTpiRBsris'm stilni. Coll EM 1-5052. Mm idaIbib, nTf"Wtlitf llles, ,2500 acroo evelloble, FI liiiw^mpiHrTfAiiM'nwii urn Rd., Dtvjnurg, ogmmi. call tor , details. Riding Initructloni avail, able. Groups.wolcomo. HORSES BOARDED Eoii itolis. too ■eroo to rldo. UtoH . I>4 farm-fresh' meats ’ork roast ......... 29c lb. j.7941 WTHEltiW XL12 homIlPTe chain saw at Davis Machinery Co. HgiRfiiHi 7-3292. ARE YOU FLORIDA BOUND? an sea the altnaw-aiumlnum cmS[0RiHjaii(C. and TRAILER SALES gUlllfe —. . . SEE THE NEW MUSTANG With o private upstairs bedroon ' WINTER STORAGE TOM STACHLBR ■ AUTO AND MOBtLE SALES ‘ 9-9. Closed Sun. Mi nlferti |m-_. r length, i Wanted C.ean T 1951. paLACF, ioxso. it's A Dai “Y, 53,750. we'll take your ham r equity In trade. FRUSHOUR & STRUBLE ‘ FE 0-4025 Cash For used TraO tlec Mobile Homes. FE 5:1 ixFBkT mobile Womb, repair Mobile Home ielesTTnc. So'.k *“•— Drayton Plains. SkTlSW. HOLIDAY BARGAINS Sava galore on oil Hw 1954s and E- mobile homos, ovtr 32 floor I to aoloct trornl compare Detroiter, Alma, Pontiac Chief, tor price quality -and livability. Ye»^ you gw an^ extra bonus^on wr r"KoLJDAY^SA* E P,m^topUroirt tooav - you'll be oUd yog did) Bob Hutchinson, MOBILE HOMES 30) Dixie Highway OR 3-1202 - ----- Drayton Plains—________ pen » to * Dally Sat. 9-5 * in. 12-5, , OXFORD TRAILER SALES IWF Wrimt S3t-^-wlda^.S 3-bedroom Mariettas. One ot ben buya In mobilo Jiving tMMirti tMtoy. See the latest In niiHihJr lr " unite on dlpplay r l other now lO* wloee piua xe prices. Priced h Packhurst Trailer Sales INBST IN MOBILE LIVING-15 TO M toot. Featuring New , Moon-Buddy and Nomads tcatod half way between Orion and Oxford on M24, next to Alban Country Cousin., MY 3-451I. glut Tex and Roceppoblo Tiro ■ M hr. eorvlco on roceoping... - 333-rtl7 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE c«r. Cfm chlnw ohoi Boats—AccbsioHbs (» TIRES AND WHEELS' jet ooaie gome nearly including 64 moaiii, A FltlL -o,., trliioi Soil with, your ourchiiel ■vary boot must oof Will nko 'jJilCHiGANTURBOCRAFt 4517 PIXIE HWV. OR MW SAntA'S WAT HOOSr PINTER'S B0ATLAND 12W 9f. QpdvKe Frl, to 9 FI LOOK » NOW ON DUPLAY THE NEW AND BEAUTIFUL 1964 lo-toot cavalier custom ski boat 17-lMt Chrls Cyoll Super (port III IT TODAYI CLEAR THE DECKS I Everything Must Gof Up to 25% Discount! Larson-Due-Chetek EVINRUDE MOTORS "Inside-Outside Storoge “ BOAT-REPAIRS AND REFlNISHlNG "Your Evlnrude Dealer" Harrington Boat Works 199 S Telegraph Rd. 332-50 WBEfed Core-Tnicla lfll "TOP DOLLAR PAID" -FOR -"CLEAN" USED LARS GLENN'S 9S2 west Huron St. _ I t*m " ' FI 4-179 LLOYDS- BUYING ^GDisd^eteOTT'Cort - 2023 Dixie Hwy. Wo pay more bocausb / WojMI more FE 2-9131 M & M Motor Sales I|XIQ fit Since 1945" prices peto Mansfield AUTO SALES \ ARE YOU BUYING A CAR WE PAY MORE. 1104 Baldwin Ave. 335-5900, WB NEED CARS- TOP DOLLAR . FOR GOOD CARS Matthews-Hargreaves 521 OAKLAND AVE. n«n r im i B TVtuucu vMKQ. - Avenirs 2020 Dixie Hwy., » SB JUNK C io.iow inytlm $25 MORE fyr I Dixie Highway. Phone ALWAYS BUVlNO I JUNK CARS - FREE TOE I if CALL FE I PRIVATE PARTY WANTS ntVIlle VMto. Mutt fa ohora; MY----- WANTED: 1959-1952 tM Ellsworth AUTO SALES , WANTED FOR CHEVY 340 CU. IN, Ivorythlng to convert to itick from automatic, plus 4-speed trone-■djf same. Calf 333-7232 AfJor i coll 673-1531, mltilon, tor from 9 to 6. New and Used Trucks 103 S-PASSINOER PICK-UP, 1953 FORD DELUXE ECOtt-O-VAN, big' motor and flrar Mr. Berg. AAA TEEP - . -"Your Authorized Dealer" _ _ ■ _ OLIVER BDICK aiid jiEIP f ■210 Orchard Laki __________FE 24101 AUTO INSURANCE FOR SAFE DRIVERS _$23J0 QUARTERLY J COVERrALt-fHli. Foreign Cart 195) V , RADIO, HEATER $550. 1959 PEUGlEOt 4-d60R. THIS CAR is extra nice, and It a real economy car. No money down, $23.43 par month. PATTERSON CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1001 N. Main St. OL 1-6559 1952 FIAT SPIDER ROADSTER, , speed. Radio, heater, whitewalls. ■ ......... Interior. Only CLEAN-UP ECONpMY USED CAR OISCOUNT l»6t CHEVY BISCAYnEj 6- AUlO; malic transmission. FE 2-5450 ba- • SAAB $49 PER MONTH MIRACLE MILE MOTORS, Inc, NEWl Y AUTHORIZED DEALER 2150 S. TELEGRAPH FE 4-5000 W, 19«L SUNPR66F, BLUE, seat belts, radio, ski-rack, excellent, condition, 01545. Ml 6- OLIVER RENAULT Are you iooklng^tor^^co NAOLTWr^ ’* Oliver" 19I9VW convertible 1961 VW, 2-door sedan, .turquoise TH'rvY~Fi, Best ottor. 200 watt, Prin-' m. Pontiac, f6Fd f-500 Va Engine, ~4 M transmission, will stlf as _ PCER0US0°N, *'*Rocheflor IP Doolor, OL 1-3551, 6l 14711. . nsr- Main, liW FOkb W-TOM t collont condition. Rochestor, M2-4537. WrCHlVV 2-YtflTfRPek - MA 5-2177 or 50S4550. 195I F6r D ~'FToi, v-ir^^ffWSTic transmission, custom cob, melal to^boxo* and itool rock, Pi ii» Vtbh mRirwBB Tim.1 ''Cairua-isrs w chiw wi icfetnorBoiEi whooion, 4-ipttd Irani., $1550. Ft -----------FiK-'TOTOPTWTTR Ino, ulf - -------- i960 VW itden 1950 Chovfolot Del Roy 2-door 1962 Chevrolet Vt-tbn pick-up AUTOBAHN Motors, Inc. 1965 Ttltoroph FE 0-4531 New mid Used Cars 106 1954 BUICK, 2-DOOR, OOOD SHAPE, KQ w{«A Sijjsira orl OL 1-3501, OL 14911r -, ■ 1962. Econovan With healer, roOlo, washers, standard transmission, Only <— $1495. BEATTIE. 'Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 Setter Used 1 rucks S GMC Factory' Branch ....eAWLANE^ CAM- HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. STARFIRI C N, hlofor.'.oute power, buoki Nnlin, with a w eevei 1951 CQRVAIR ORlfBNhlflPR 9-Passenger Wagon, ra«M, heeler, 4-ipeed franimliiwn, HioBogt risk, ' Sill? 43^ MiK£hw9Kl. K youre*Lr only il,»«> Chsvrolet-Pontlec-Bulek ixtord, Mich. OA MEN nW. fulfil liiAeilk cony I A-tibia, original Ownar. Double power, iharp, $995. Low mlltago. Ml 5-40$3. T*4l AUiCk ILICYKXr W C6R- GetftS' c'fXs,n*$. ). LAPEEH RD., ORION. DeVtlie hardtop. 4-DAY- -MONEY. /BACK Guarantee ,Thl» guarantee mean) that If h any reason (except for abuse i i aeeldonf) you ora not pleased wli your purenoao wo'll refund yoi 950 LeSAtiRI WSor iplft'ki': ;!?K«M.n. :• 963 CATALINA 2door .... is ViBtum 44aorH!!1!. 963 RAMBLER Wigon . 12291 SHELTON P0NTIAC-BUICK 223 N, Main* d Ot 1-B133 ROCHESTER, MICH. CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1950 CHEVY --V5- . .. SEDAN, nice — EE- 3-1542...™ | Dealer. .... | turbothrust engine Ught "mtu* color, bodv In very good condition. M) CHEVROLET PARKWOOD station wagon, v-8 •njame, outo-motlc, powor steering,, and brakes. 2-tone turquols «nd white finish. Only $1,595. Easy torms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1M0 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIR-. MINGHAM. Ml 4-2738. Take over payments on 1942 .Chavy II. 693-1157,.„|.-------L. l961CHIVrtOLtfTn%P4LA 4-DOOR hardtop. V-0 engine,'.Powergllde, power steering and brakes, radio, heater and 5 now whitewall tires. Adobe beige fJnlsh. Only »'W5. Easy forms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.'1000 S. WOODWARD •-- BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. W--CHtoff.JMPALA~ h a r a t o p, power ite...--brakes. A-l shape, $1850. OR 3-5004. mf' «H8Vrt6LlY'lM«Dr^6R ^.,r°P',Jlo.td*'brerToSi actual miles. Spare »tHI new. Only $1,995. Easy tatmi. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, M| 4-2735. .. ....... - , .- TOTCORVAIR MONZA, WHITE. 582 W. Hamlin, Rochestor. 1952 CHivROLfft' IMPALA 4-660R sedan. V8 engine, Powerglfde, power steering. Radio, hooter, whitewalls. Maroon finish. Oiily Sl,895. Easy torms. patterson_chev-ROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1962 CHBVY~BgTAIR V6, 814057 vertlbie, V-8 engine, Powergllda, r#i;..*s?,r'whiSr.. gs? 'bir5 CO. 1000 s. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 42735, "*T963-Chevrolet Wagon with V0 angina, power braktar-•teerlna, seotv and powar. win* oOWIi automatic transmission, only ’ Crissmah Chevrolet ROCHESTER.........,..Pl-r ISrTFTfVT lI NOVA 2-DOOR hardtop. Powerglldo, radio, heater, whitewalls. Ivy green tTnlsh, 11,095. Beey terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1,000 $. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-273S. ’ (Sr^ffl'RWoiri959t' model Any You «oh or have" your dealar, COMMUNITY natio4al"banis_ i%3''t(^VAi'R’WN2A"l4>OoRi -Powerglldo, radio, heonr, wnlto-walls. Raven black finleh. Only $1,995. Easy torme. FaTtERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOOD' WARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml •—ZBm. . _— .• .. M WMONZA CONVlRTIBLBi, 4 speed, 102 anglne, radio, healer, whitewalls. Low mlloaeo- Only 12,095. Maroon with black Intar-r lor. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. IOO),*, . WOODWARD avb ., CO, 1000, "|r ' WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-27I8. 'mjtmfala iUFirireii't; n angina, automatic, powar steering and brakes, solid red finish. Only 02,495. laiy. forms, fatter-SON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4.2735. - __ V»5i' c6WItT«'lYIWb'~fFAY,'7?-speed Irontmliilon, power steering CHEVROLET CO. 1000 $. WOOL) WARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml . 4-ani., = _____. i9ircRlwirivu?mnj)Mft sedan, 5-eyllnder, toindard shift. Only 01,095, Efiy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. ION t. WOODWARD AVflf, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4 273) ^ LLOYDS' YOU PAY NOTHING FOR PARTS OR LABOR If the "Cref 53,895. Flnon- ared, OR 3-0245, 6 to 9 u58-DOdgE 4*ooor~automatic transmission, - ■*—— , steering, INI N, Main 959 DODGE CUSTOM RQYAL convertible, radio, heater, sti dard, body, engine, top--- Mint Mil efts ». tufa 5310. -W7 . Kenmore, SiiiiB', , 940 FDrd/etooRj aZ-coRDi- tlon. 8325. FE 3J585. Aher 1 p m King Auto Sales it condition. Ml 5-3235. 1959 FORD, 2-OOOR SEDAN. NEEDS 1959 FORD STATION WAGON, V-8, equipped with - power steering, radio, heator, and automatic Irons-mission. A very fine performing “n attractive bale* —3 and matching al .........i. A dandy tom , _ that has not boon used commercially and the full price f $795, NO DOWN PAM NEEDED, SMALL 5501 PAYMENTS, -..... ■ ,v-!. BIRMINGHAM Chryilor-Plyinouth 912 S. Woodward M transmission, s cylinder angina, whitewall llrM, lull authorized I960 FORD 4-DOOR ifUAGONi ADtD. ____.... . _ 43455_ fp«6 FalCon sloJOrVERY NiCi, 1 3-7542 — H. Riggins, Peeler. THUNDERBIRD CONVERT- $1595. FE 47412 after 3 p.m. i?6i ford > o6or Miasmr, with V$ engine, eutomatlc transmission, powor steering, radio, h»xtoh'--*mid hl6yL and Ts extra doom JIROMB FERGUSON, Ro Chester FORD OtoTor, OLf 1-3551, 1961 FORD, ExCELLENf^fORDT-♦Ion, boat offer, NA 7-2)35., mi FORD 2-DOOR, RADIO, HEAT' or, whitewalls. $145 down, $40 per 1952 FORD GALAX IE 500 4 DOOR, cruiianatlc transmission, VO en-dine, radio, heater, choetnut with :(te .tool One owner, extra ■I JEROME. FERGUSDn,. Ro-FORD Dealer, OL 1-3511, IMI Chester . private owner. FE. 8.5627- 1953 for6 Falcon futUra' con-vertlble, with 170 eyl. engine,- radio, heater, red with • whit# too, UN acutual miles. Factory! official ear, priced to sell! JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester- FORD LlNCOtN1 PREMtER-etUB-owner. Full p”ce*only'sm***' #n* SURPLUS MOTORS Saalnew FE $>0435 BOB BORST -------Llncoln-Mercury.... 520 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham- ________Ml 6-4538 tyjteONTLMENTAC TONVERTrBLE? nylon topr perfecT, full power; new paint >730. MA 6-6008 New and Used Car* PONTIAC WAGON HYDRA?” ____________________ 0 p.m., "3947370. "-V'* CliAH' "1959 P O N TI A C . irAll Chief, power brakes, power etoer-Ing. Beet oftor~502G$54r - 1959 PONTIAC- STAR CHIEF 4DOOR hardtop, outomaflc transmission, power steering end brant, one-owner and le extra nice! SIN down INI N. Main Sf, ... .» O N T I AC HARDTOP. > : spaed, record Trtaybr.’foL, mphk Slicks. Can $38-5547 offer 4 spw, 96i pontIac caYalina CON- Sf^-iStEyROLjlt WOODWARD AVE., BIRMING- HAM. Ml 42735. ------------ 1951 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertlbto. Bucket seats, Hydramatlb, 1961 COMET 4. - DOOR STATION ikwA Ml L E A O E. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Peymentsv of 50 per week. See Mr. Parks at ♦toroid Turner Ford- Ml 47500. lF6TMiRCURY Mfe‘TEOlJ, ’2-D(53S', auto. Tsko over payments. I5343Q4. 952 OLDS 90 HOLIDAY 4DOOR hardtop that Ii a real standout. Xha iuxurlout dark burgundy Tn-s perfect contrast, tr whitewall tires. Both in appearance and performance thl* low mileage — ‘ terms. Our low full price '^'BIRMTNGHMT AVE., >IRM)NGhJb>5. Ml 42735. PDNtlXC/:1$6i CATALINA *SPORT . coup#; Perfect condition, low mlie-ago. >1,9*0. OR 43914, 3962 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-door. One owner, IdW mileage. OR • “ terms. PATTERSON CO. 100 S. WOOD-AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml vill* Vista, very dean, S50 take over payments, owner. 652-6541, 1962 PONT I At tSMFeST, STAN-dard ihlft radio, heater, wlilte- MEMMd&M7 Ible, 4-speed transmission. Calf 4740702 after 5:30 n.m. ' . i PONTIAC 1952, STATION WAGON, stewina^brdcM^^nmn Radio and r--- 1943 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. Straight stick, Iwi than 7,ON ntlMs. Will accept trade-in. 52,325. FE 5-1215. ________ ~ ' [ aluminum wheels”, many extras 1963 Tempest 1954 OLDSMOBlLE." A 1TAUTYI 4“ door. Full power —steering, brakes, Florida*'car" *M»! 674-19& offer 1955 6L6S. POWER StBERiHG, 1955 PLYMOUTH SIN Marvel Motors 251 Dakland Ave. FE 0-4079 1959 Plymouth 2-door, SYlfik, bargain. EM 3-0H1, Conway, deal- 1963 PLYMOUTH FURY 2-DOOR hardtop- Whitewall tires and sparkling chrome accent the beauty of this lot block sports car and the ipotieas tlabaiMr Interior trim has boon protected by detn plastic -....'ice new, A fine perform- vitn an automatic trOns-powtr steering, radio, I other extras. Lika a new jocis way except our low 12,295. Financing tr- BIRMINGHAM . Chrysler-Plymouth 912 S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 1952 FONTIAC 2-POOR. MA 42177 or rallged’on Bl PONTI AC 1955, 4~DO(5R7~~S~T a R1 1957 PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP ! and It hat radio ond heater, htt power brakte end power steering full price only $397. No mon- King Auto Sales 3275 W, Huron St. FE MOM 1001 _h 1-0599 .. .."bOOR“PA"lRLANE,“4,"' STiffK, overdive. 51,085. 26 W. Kennelt. ForB"'C6untry 58dan Station Wagon. V-S' engine, automatic, Power steering and brake*. Radio, hooter, whitewalls. Only $1,695, Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. ION (..WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM. Ml 4-27S5. ¥ly :oti, own#6 *¥>010 e. 2-donr, white, radio. Ex-condition. 13,350 miles. Used Car Action Tlnie 1951 OLD* 90 Coup* Air . .. SINS 1961 OLDS 88 COUP . SINS 1041 OLDS Super Air .. 51795 1960 OLDS 88 4-door SIN) 1950 OLDS 9S 4-door . 81395 1050 OLDS 00 2-dOor .$119$ 1940 QUICK Wagon ..: 1959 OLDS ' Super 4-door, . Nice 51095 1989 BUICK 2-dogr. Nice . 1 995 III OUR OTHIR AD FOR MORE "Valu# Rated" oara at. . • Suburban Olds $65 S. Woodward Ave. Blrminghorn_; Ml 44485 BIRMINGHAM TRADES.................. Every used cor offered for retbil to the public is a bonafide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp car. 1-yoar parts and labor warranty. 1963 Bulek lkyiirk . i{4{ If®*2 1941 BuIlK Special 4 door .... sign? Bulek special t-door ..... 194! Pont oe Bonnevllio.. .. 1962 Ppnliac 2 door hardtop ... 1962 chevy convert bio ... JtuLBuuiH-.Con.v.gi'ljblo ... 1949 Suits Merdtoo * , --SPECIAL--............ 1961 PONTIAC I Safari Wagon Hat power brakes and^ power dramatic frensmfsllon/whlteweli tires and tinted glass windows. $1995 PONTIAC RETAIL . STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St, , FE 3-7954 DON'T BUY THAT USED CAR 'Til-YOU SEE THE SELECTION AT WILSON pontiAc-cadillac 13S0 N. Woodward - 4-ion Birmingham, Mlchjgsn__ COME VISIT RUSS JOHNSON^ Used Car Strip 1961 RAMBLER 4-Door Seda 1963 PONTIAC Catalina I960 COMET 3-Door, Nice I M 1962 RAMBt-ER Sedan (1295 1954 CADILLAC Hardtop, Power f i | 1941 IONNRVILLI Convertible ill 1959 BUICK 4l)01595 , 1941 ELBCTrIa 223 Convertible 11995 : 1963 WILDCAT Convertible 02995 1963 SKYLARK Conyortlblg ... 52493 1962 TEMPBIT Convertible ... 81595 1961 METRO Convertible .... * 793 _ 1950 BONNEVILLE Hardtop .. 11)91 1 1961 CHEVY let Air Moor .. 5140) I960 IMPALA 4-Door Hardtop II4M 1950 BIL AIR S-Ooor Sedan ,, I 191 1960 CADILLAC Hardtop .... 12395 ^ OLDI 4-Door Hirdtoo 1IW . 1951ITAR CHI#F 4 Door 6*dtn 13191 1941 QUICK 4-Door tadin ... 51495 " 1951 MERCURY Wagon *15*1 t95l GORDIN) 4-Door tilt) 1*53 CHIVY impola SDoop ... |MM \ 1963 BUICK LtlABRI 4-Door 625*5 1*43 WILDCAT 4-poor Hardtop $29*5 OLIVER BUICK "itm1*, m*mmf*tit» »*.rtmif C—10 ■the Pontiac press, Tuesday, pis^EiviB^R 10,1003 New and Used Car* 106 1943-BONNEVILLE 4-DOOR HARD--power-. —Hfl P .pewor -broke*. • whWewalt - «»»• FOR SALE 1959 RAMBLER, CROSS ewMrv J-**-*** RAMBLER WAGON, 1943, BEAUTi-ful condition, automatic, transmission, radio. Must sell. Reasonable. 1957 RAMBLER Station W»M. ' 3r tone blue, vary clean, 4-cyHndor automatic. Fwtt Brice 5250. W. down, $10.37 per month. 100 others fa choose from!. Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ave. New and Used Can steering, brakes, window, antenna, all light accessories. Price *199$. VILLAGE RAMBLER RamWers-Ramblprs Under the Flashing SATELLITE JEEP CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH AND . VALIANT 5ee Them Today! BILT, SPENCE • "Auto Ranch" f 4673 Dixie at M-15 Clarksten MA 5-5041 'HASKINS _Used Cars ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY . DOWN '. SPOT DELIVERY JUST MAKE PAYMENTS Full Price Pay Wkly. - Now ‘4X* Below Coot 1960 Fafcon . ...$597 $4.27 „ Used Can at Wholesale 1959 FORILv.,... .... $497 _$3.60 ROSE RAMBLER 1145 Commerce, Union Lok* j EM 34155 1958 PONTIAC Hardtop ..,^.....$297 $2.50 ,195^ CHEVY $297 ' $2.50 40*7-fWCW $1D7 -— Art YOUR FRANCHISED j DEALER ; - [ RAMBLER : TVSTXHEVYtonvei^lfrT-^-rT-r^^lVT^ - ion, reaio, oei » finish. if BUICK Electro 323 4 HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds . f’Ydur Crossroads to'loving*" uirtrandMiS ...MA 5-1071 ^OHGHTEN & Son Inc. 1963 Chevy Corvalr Monza, |dt black, white Inferior, buckets, radio, heater, whitewalls, end automatic trens-ftimwi.tlke newt.- $1995 -U962-Qlds— F-BS 4-door, with radio, hooter, automatic transmission. low mile-— “tlon through- $1795 . J962 Rambler - Custom 4-door, with radio, healer whitewalls, standard shift, go saving anginal $1201 . 196lDMa‘r| whittwalli. automatic ti'aosmja* | ‘ ? "$1595..... 1962 Chevy Bal-AIr station Wagon, with a gas. laving itandard transmission, radio, heater, 9 PASSENGER, Only* $1795 •..1960 Olds - Id 4 door Sedan, gold end beige finish, radio, bonier, automatic tranimliilon, drive by e local lady I Only* $1395 1963*Chevy Impale 3-door Hardtop, dark red, v-l engine, dutometlc transmission, radio, healer power steering and brakes, eon'f be Told from nowi $2375 £ 1960 Ford " $765 12 More _"Value.=Rai*d" "Quality" fa Choose From • TjSWT..... RAMBLERS and OLDS HOUGHTEN i I , 6t Son i 7 ll Your Friendly RAMBLER* 1 ; OLDS Dealer PLUS MANY OTHERS- NO CREDIT PROBLEMS .. Application -Either in' Person or by Phone LIQUIDATION LOT 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 Across From Tel-Huron Shopping Center GET A w DEAL LUCKY' ... $1,295 ;...... 1962 Pontiac Catalina 1961 Falcon Automatic, radio and healer. No W" $695 , 1959 Chevrolet 9-Passongor Station Wa^on.^Ona *7") .. $895, — 1955 Chevrolet “r" Just Ilka now. No money down. 1959 Thunderbird Power brakes, power^^steerlnji. . 1958 Volkswagen EMnomlcal^ transportation. No money own.^ r - * 1959 Ford Galaxie 2-Door Hardtop. No monoy downs Full ortco ‘ * ’ $495 , . L 1960 Ford Station Wagon. No money dpwn. Full price. ’ $545 — 1961 Ford V*8 Black, automatic transmission. NO monoy down. Full price $795 1958 Cadillac Coupe TH5W“pewer. {Me o#$*r. No monoy down. Full price $1,095 1962 Tempest ■gon. Real t vn. Pull prli $1,295 Lucky Auto Sales — "PAntiads. Pi scount Lot" 193 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 FINAL CLEARANCE ON . 1963 FORDS and Late Model A-l Used Cars —BRAND, NEW- • XL Convert. With Power Steering Wat $3,736.80 .80 Now -BRAND NEW-* Sprint Convertible 4 Ford-0-M«tic Tranimliilon # Loatfodl Was $3,162,10 Wow^W3U0 8 Others T~~~TirChoo»rrroitH°— New I960* and Demos ‘ Prlced From * ’ $-1694 1963 T-Bird , Landdu With rod finish, white, top; ,,V-« engine, automatic * transmission, power steering, power brakes, power windows ana whitewalls. r '$3395' ~ 1963 Ford , Galaxie 500. 3-Door Hardtop with radio, heal* er, V-e engine, eulomellc lrent, minion, wnltowalls. Only— ;------$2295 1963 Ford Fnirlnna S00 ' 3-Dor Hardtop, automatic transmission, radio,, hooter, whitewalls, Qniy- $1895 —i^Ford ' Galaxie 4-Door '"WO” 'with radio, heeler, auto* malic Irensmleslon, whllewalls, $1795 John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. -,4 5 FE 5-4101 ' , 'PICK-A-PRESENT" GIFT GUIDE 4331 Dixie Hwy. Drayton OR 3-2100 or OR >3311 .....Monday end Friday ‘tfl 9 ______Weokdays-Uti -* : HI-FI STEREO ' with all the trimmings Sparkling performance, ' Poor Appliance, Hour*. t ■ Sales, SOW 3-SW1.________ i___________ HAMMOND'CHORD ORGAN 1795 Ft MOT! 61 commerce R "THt GREATEST GIFT" . IS A BIBLE Christian Lltoroturo Sales it Owkelng Ave. FE *1591 fDrthe ' "SPORTS MINDED" ORGANS BY WURLITZER STARTING AT $995 WIEGAND MUSIC 40t Ellzabotn Lokirjfoad. Christmas Special^ 9x12 ovaJs rugs KAREN CARPET . 4528 Olxie- Nwy._ Drayton ! BOATS—MOTORS—TRAILERS CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES 63 i. Walton i FE 8-4402 Dally 9 to 9 Sunday 12 to ' REBUILT AND'GUARANTEED TV' tables, 1 coektsir table ai , springto match with 2 vanity' 5-piece dinette .Set, 4 chrome choirs, formica top table, l bookcase, 1 - 9x12 rug Included. All for $399. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. . 17 E. HURON , FE 4-49SI 18 W. PIKE____________PE 2-2150 _____________________ FE 4 , Season's Specials ' BASKET BALL --BAek-BOARpfr-T,^---------—. TRAIN TRACK BOARDS NO NOISE, 4X8XW" .. ...... PING PONG TABLE TOPS M'lNCM ................. J '.‘,-INCH.................I METAJL LEGS AND FRAME I •’hA.i'tiiw* di vuuoOD FE 2-2543 Christmas Special KAREN CARPET 4321 Dixie Hunt. "~Df OR 3-3100 or OR- 3-3311 Monday end Friday ’III 9 • weekdays/ill 0 THOMAS ORGANS With tomous 3'yeoi’ warranty STARTING AT $499.95 WIEGAND MUSIC , 469 Elizabeth Lake Rood '. -■ ■ FE 2-4924 ABOUT ANYTHINOJI'PU WANT • FOR THE HOME CAN BE - POUND AT L l S SALES. ^ _ A lililo out o< the way but e lot loss lo pay. Furniture and appliances of Oil kinds NEW AND USED, Visit our trade dept., tar real bargains. We buy, sail or trod*.1 Como out end look around,. 2- aerti ot froo parking, Pnon* fe 5-9241. Open Mon. hl Set. 9^r PrL »-9 , . 24 MONTHS TO PAY 4 miles 1, of Pontiac or I mile E. of Auburn. Height* on Auburn, "FAMILY PUN" GJJKUCERTie ICATSS -Tor Every Bowler ” enri iBi l YpdT-' COLLIER LANES Rd„ Oxford. OA 0-2S51 - PLAY SANTA To your whole family with l*i travel trollor or camper. ELLSWORTH AUTO and. TRAILER SALES DON’T GAMBLE WITH YOUR LIFE , Rear Window DeFoggor $23.00 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 85 ML Olomoni PE 3-7034 NEW AND USEO CARPITINlO' P6r sol*. Many assorted braids choose from. Also sevorol roll remnants. Select from our «l end hove, vour carpeting for —holiday*. We . also .specialize carpet and fumltur* cleaning. A Troy Corpet Sal**, 10N E. Auburn Rd., Rochester, post John P GIFTS A GIFTS For th* Ontlrsi tomlly. Cornel* lino gt booting accessories tro th* practical aide to th* fun sli on display. Priced right tor ye Christmas budget. Open , eve night top your shopping ce MAZUREK MARINE SALES ,1 Blvd. at Saglnow PE 4.9597 Santa's Boat House ■ Nautical Christmas $1696 SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND AVE. CHRISTMAS.CARDS AND LETTERS IMPRINTED BY US.--~~ • GENERAL PRINTING A OFFICE SUPPLY faWHE* LAWRENCE STREET RENAULT Are-you , looking tor ..will give you up to per gallon, RENAUlT l. ---- RENAULT DAUPHINE ...... * 490 RENAULT R-S ...... ..... *1440 SIN DOWN - Low Paymonls OLIVER RENAULT 40 East pm... FI 4-ISM. i9$7 stu6ebaker HARDTOP -Full price <197. No money down week. LIQUIDATION LOT SAGINAW, FE S-«07ly AN IDBAL ’-CHRISTMAS GIFT" "THAT SBCONO CAE'' . , ,1 Ford Country Sedan .... si,395 ; KEEGO PONT). *"“* O Orchard Lake TRIM YOUR TREE In YOUR "OWN7' HOME. 'ertheM For |h* homo of D YOURS ir choice contact HAYDEN * 3-bed room $9,995 J. C. Hayden, Realtor 10751 MW' ' ‘ ‘ AA ULAAA YOUR LOT t»d(t— Rooms 1964 DODGE BRAND NEW 16,000 MU* Five-Year Warranty “ Ao Low Ai SPARTAN DODGE.- Hardware -,..T.1 Dopbslt I Opeh ■ Evenings until Christmas PAUL A. YOUNG MARINA 4030 Dm E^ HIGHWAY ,t Christmas Shoppers MONAHAN’S BEEF BUFFET , Open Mon,, Sun, 1T|,m, to l p.m. _ 475 E. Maple B’ham. Mi eeioa WAiruffrexe , "For th* Whole Fomlly'' aa Ponllac'i only FORD Dollor John McAuliffe, Ford 430 Oakland -Ava, FE MI0I Christmas Special I KAREN CARPET 4520 Dixie -HWy. „ Drayton ' ' OR MIOO 97 OR 3-UII ■* Monday and Friday, Mil 9 Wor’-...............| Weekday OF TNEORilNT ' Farfact gifts lor yoursall I, S0.95 vd. 411-42128 X-t, Carpsf Solo* HANCTjCULPfURlD BRESWAX CANDLES To milch any decor. Frlmlllvt — Modern, tOO’s of color comblno- ATfSXCTW NWrtffV SHAPED Christmas troos,. Scotch, Balsam Fir, Red pin*, 4 to 10 foot. Pull foliage premium trees. Balsam r-i *n is lout. Ill tree* on otakoi ill oround thorn, 1019 joolyn < I Street, PofltlQC. m 'Jatnilif . GIFT CERTIPICATBS * FOR "THE iOWLER" On Your Christmas^ Lie 6697 Dixie Hwy„ clerkslon, 'mAMQiI Sent Beits toj all cars PONTIAC RETAIL *T< “Y Clvmini OVER 500 PAIRS New am Wl Buy Bernes Hi BUCKNER FINANCE FOR YOUR CHRISTMAS CASH t "FB4-0M1 ForTfie Goffer- v Buy with contldence from export-enced professional personnel. So-ioct your, golf equipment and ac-cessorles from nationally known Pontiac Country Club I33S EHzoboth Lok* Rd. FE 3-8939 A CHOICE OF 50 NEW RAMBLERS Many series and colors to choose from. We also have a few choice '63 Ramblers at terrific savings. See us before you ’dial We wilPfloT be . undersold. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND AVE. BEATTIE "Your FORD, DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. MN WATERFORO Open Dolly OR 3-1291 send him back to coLLidi .with e cor of Ms own. See the wide tOleCflon of ESTATE STORAGE CO. W B. South Bi»d. FE 3-7161 Give Your Son * Carl A Double Chocked Used Cor From OLIVER BUICK 1 106-210 Orchard Lok* FE 3-*l46 cWrarii used tllmrfiWy’. FOR YOUR SON Pontiac's Only FORD Dealer John McAuliffe, Ford 630 Oakland Av*.... FE 3-4101 moIY any'car - aMV Fiiei ' ~”F0r Brother to uso ot School” Marvel Motors i JlfPl, "ii-wNiEL DRIVE PRICED TO SELL MAM MOTORS 17 Dixie Hwy. SCHOOL CAR” 11*7 Mercury 4-Door Sharp ... S21S KEEGO PONTIAC ,» Orchard Lake Touch ii any Car ............. *1 Trailer HltcH, for *11 Pontll ' fCadlum .JSlatadl— ----« PONTIAC RETAIL STORE • ML Ciomono FE 3-7 I^EVINRUDfe. also'2S-H.P. Evtnrudo, FQRD ACCESSORIES GIV* Your Srothor on Acce** — For HI* Own Carl BEATTIE aur FORD DEALER Sine* lW* DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD BOATS AND ACCESSORIES MICHIGAN TURBOCRAFT 3537 Plxkl Hwy. OR AB3WI CAR FOR WORK Leave me NEW CAR Homo I , STOP IN AND SEE OLIVER BUICK H6-21S Orchard Lok* Fi PdidS I OF THE FAMILY a real, ewan. fine running r~-car for Chrltfmao. ESTATE STORAGE CO. IQS Bi South Wvd....PE 34UI TALBOTT LUMBER ' BLACK A DECKER CHRISTMAS SPECIAL Sandor, regular S39.9S, for II1.M W Bloc. Drill, rog. *16.93, for 110.31 ... WA" >lilM law With Cos* Rag. *79.90, for **9;9» TALBOTT LUMflR,,^ ' 1025 OAKLAND FE 4-4595 PRfffiCT YOUR CAR Wl+H “ DOOR EDGE GUARDS I Door* ..... .......... 1 Fuel Doors Guard* .. ... 1 PONTIAC RETAIL ATORS Trod* irgrovo* Hardware ... W. HURON ‘KWS!! ipt have * largo laioctlon ot ovory-Dixie HwyTcor. T*l*gr*ph_ 1*" ifmorooJi Port able TV , Light weight, Thin Lino, J99.9S Walton Rodlo A TV PE M2|7, TT oRTCV id MlNUtis iVIRV MEMBER OP THE PANtlLY CAN RliAY THE ■ * , ■ ..... ThamaAColw*GlowQcgon„ f '■■ ■ $584 WIEGAND MUSIC CQ. - 469 ill2*b*th Lake Rood PI 2-4934. '■■■■■■ politic INVITED Flrit public showing Of .the ill now 1964 Apache Comp Irollori. of big $o camping rl_—Jay I ?im» iwr ChniiWil family. Wt will »*. oi»Pn finiiy •» Sunday* JHj BILL C0LLER 'r^rLIBSIT^'’LW»W'bnM-lL FAMLYGIFT For a home of Yaur own. Dorothy Snyder Lavender rl1, MNsMo AllfO? 1943 PONTIAC ITATION WAGON power all amwiiKg 1104 BALDWIN FE 5*5900 " -1 MAICr tl A ’ JOYFUL CHRISTMAS NEW*gr dsiD PONTIAC IlfflTl ITqj|JI. /ap iHm KEEP YOUR CAR NEAT _ JMoor Mot* Front .'.TV. .T.-r.“. » Cor for Mother—For t to uo* during th* day I OLIVER BUICK 194*310 Orchard Lika 1 State storage E. South Elvd. FE 3-7141 TfeWlNillpBR "ft vAR POR^MGTHiRf' TO DO SHOFFING INI ■" ■’1 CHAIItMAS sfh6IaLs . ” J Metric Car Ctoc*. ..51152 Tompoot Car flock ... *11,1# Car Cgmpaii fwr dash) 4.91 < PONTIAC RETAIL, STORE ^ KAR-LIPE. eATTliY CS Ganarafora—Regulalora-Slarlere Batteries $5.95 Exchange «’ttr* ----TSSZTTBJSnarSW dolleiouoiy dlrnrunt. Sunday EraaMaot Buffet 9 a.m. • It Man Sunday Stop m anor mBbet" T, "TBa, ’VW »mwLTrTtTf irved from gleaming silver TED'S .r5__jiard ot iguor* Lk, F* 4-4638 19(7 FOhb t-Dddl ttARDtftft -Full grig* 3397. No money down, ' 13 a weak. UQUIDATidN LOT, .110 S. Saginaw, F# 8-4071, ' dt tar'" ~ tg do Ih# shoMlndi i‘l only FORD Daalor IcAuliffe, Ford John lAcAul 4H Ookland Av*,1’ ORdW FLdwtki TN YHI H6Wi'. w» Mm (tit ndw OffSilf Larffi Tarrmc for Atrlcih VMIots tnd MdEMj|i* fMw*rlng pionli, MmIWMI iconfi 191 i%c. KING BR6s. CHRISTMAS SPECIALS CHAIN SAWS TRACTOR ACCESSORIES « SNOW BLOWERS , BIRO FEEDERS ' MANY OTHER ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM , . PONTIAC RD. AT 0PDYKE FE 4-1662 OR FE 4-0734 Courtesy ........ » 5?5 .'IBm.Fwv, mB 'VoSViSc'iiETpiL I'+eiii tic. amans PI 1 WI'lfA— pt Striker FOR Hll CAR GIVE SPECIAL CHRISTMAS GIFTS. . OuHId* Mirror ..............35,U visor Vanity Mirror _.....u,*l.*3 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE fa €ki!4t€H RIDING LESSONS BEST INSTRUCTmN, KLENTNER RIDING ACADEMY ______EM 3-9171____ ..,JRTttW»AT?uK Bring th* kiddles io thairfayorn* ratfauranf . sPeEial menus SPECIAL TREATS TED'S -S Pal Shop - FE 3-3113 M'T&Vs-tRACYdACVcLfs lull Lint At Bargain Prlcat DAVIS MACHINERY CO. SOW E. Lawrence SfT’ mi, Stamp Supplies, Packets / and Uaid u.s. and Foralgn FOd PULLLlfJI 6P " * , /dp Her FONTIAC RETAIL STORE ---_ „li. Ciimanslt. FE s-7914 ciri»DntiFA'r',(frHTrT3Wii new lounge chair Chrlstma* morn- SIM Dixit nwy., cur, ivivgrapn !r . IN Afl USED CArt " . "Far DAP to WL* & work" —PHfttoe's only ford DaiNf John McAuliffe, Ford 638 Oakland Avo. FE MtOt Marvel Motora 131 baklond - BE SNW9 "JC1 car pdR \r61kt; foIToad Al)t0 l RANDALL SH09, , 31 Wlyna . FE 1-1434 “ GIFtS OF BirtftifY' Ror th* woman In your Ufa, I metles, perfumes, cowdnai, lews - purses, stuffed onlmeft, lomps many, nusny practical and Ml ful gifts. Also a variety of It g MERLE NORMAN 13 W. HURON FE »« jet daughter ^fe^N FjijpM MAKf .HB^T^I^BNyjY , ......Mh‘ STORAGE CO. FE.3-7141 1997 cniVT, ain,e,, e> uOWN, AS M" ELECTRIC DRILL 34,M L Kmart - Oltnwoaa Flaia 6>tn Daily 10 te 10, tun, H fe fir a Jrieiut a B ORBATEIT GIFT" Christian Literature Sales | Oakland Avg< Fl 4-9*91 “'YfflriMjfOT'iN'i'IPYi’’ ,9 r Bibles dull’* and Children’* Book* and Game* Dosk Sttf and accessories 1 ACKlNlfOlf BOOKSTORE .llspiMfvnBfil' io give tha vary, vary bail, 9440 Woodwsrd end FonHoe Null sIAmV'^ flatIC"WilCoTfiw 111 Ihe dark. Attaehti fa Dost Ian* imn* neon nam* mada up In* , alyldusiiy, Of.ft. Michigan Flu* —‘ ,191 Orchard Lake, , I1' :ff\-G£ : ■ i §f- r ■" ' ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 C—ll •—Today's Television Programs— Program* furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice TONIGHT ' 6:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “Fighter Attack.” (In Progress) ___ (9) Capt. Jollv and Pop. eye (56) American Economy 6:25 (7) Weather, News, Sports 6:30 (2)- (4) National News ?; (9) Quick Draw McGraw ”(j>6) Mental Health 7:00 (2) Hennesey (4) (Color) Weekend (7) Rifleman (9) Bat Masterson (56) French Through TV 7:30 (2) Twilight' ~ (4) Mr. Novak (7) Combat (9) Movie: “Ten Seconds to Hell.” (1959) Jeff, Chandler, Jack Pal-ance, Martine Carol. (56) News in Perspective 8:00 (2) Red $elton 8:30 (4) Deputy •••>• (7) McHale’s Navy 9:00 (2) Petticoat Junction (4) Richard Boone (7) (Color) Greatest Show on Earth 9:30 (2) Jack Benny (9) Front Page Challenge 10:00 (2) Garry, Moore — r-OEHColor) Andy Williams (7) (Special) Soviet Woman (9) News Magazine 10:30 C9) Quest ^ .. 11:09 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports IliWWliucky Score 11:30 (ZTSfeve Allen (4) (Color) Johnny Car-son (7) Movie: “The Young Don’t cry.” (1957) Sa Mineo, James Whitmore (9) Movie: “Hard to Get.’ (1938) Dick Powell, Olivia de Havilland (4) Best of Groucho 1:00 (2) Peter Gunn 1:30 (7) After,Hours WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations , 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom -(7) Funews 7:00 (2) News-* (4) Today ±1 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:10 (2) Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odie TV Features 9MMNMMMMHW Soviet Wom$n Seen By United Press International RED SKELTON, 8:00 p. nLi2) Cesar Romero and the Womenfolk, folk singing quintet, guest with Red, who stars in sketch entitled, “It’s a Treat to Sell Your Wheat in the Vladivostok Mud.” RICHARD BOONE, 9:00 p.m. (4) In comedy-drama written by late Clifford Odets, Boone plays proud old man Who must face reality. “-------■—— ANDY WILLIAMS, 10:00 p. m. (4) Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, Trigger and Don Knotts appear with Andy^ in color. THE SOVIET WOMAN, 10:00 p. m. (7) Interview with Mme. Khrushchev is featured in American documentary on -Soviet women. : • - - 7 - QUEST, 10:30 p. mi (9) Film shows Quebec’s separatist feeling, resistance to English domination. 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show (56) French for Teachers (7) M 0 v i e: “The Lady Says No.” (1952) David Niven, Joan Caulfield, . Lenore Longergan. 8:45 (56) English V 8:50 (6) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Movie: “Cafe Metro-' pole.” (1937) Loretta Young, Tyrone Power, „ Adolphe Menjou (4) Living (9) Kiddy Korner Kar-toons 9:10 (56) All Aboard for Reading 9:30 (9) ,J(ick La Lanne 9:35 (56) Numerically So 10:00 (4) Say When (9) National Schools (56) Spanish Lesson i0;15 (7) News (56) Our Scientific World 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy > (4) (Color) Word for Word ___ (7) Girl Talk (9) Chez Helene , 10:40 (56) French Lesson 10:45 (9) Nursery School Time 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration i 2 ’T 4 5 1 r ft r IT FP 111 14 15 Id™ ii 98 5T 2r 2T if IK 31 33 35“ 40 11 42 r d 4ft R 48 51 H7 53 54 bb 10 ACROSS / I Jumps 6 Direction II Trying experience 13 Harsh 14 Official program 15 Kitchen Implement 16 Hops’ kiln 17 Arles 49 Fish eggs — 20 Looks amorously 22 Dispassionate -26 Puff up 31 Turns Inside put 32 Snobbier 33 MlUt-curdling substance 84 Entreaty 35 Grimace 36 Cuddle 37 Noted golfer 40 Mongrel 43 Hen product 44 Most painful 49 J 52 Attacks 63 High homos 64 Globluos 6H*tthy“ DOWN 1 African worm 2 Therefore (Latin) 8 Drinks made from fruit ‘ 4 Confined 6 Sorrowful 6 Fiber knot) . 7 Above 8 City in Nevada 9 Woodland plant 10 She 12 Greatest 13 A few 18 Mlscullne nickname 20 MUSTELINE MAMMALS 21 Percolated slowly 22 Indian weights 23' Level , > 24 Low sand hill 25 Finnish name 27 Race course circuits 28 Pitt 29 Short-necked river ducH 32 Nicaraguan lake 38 Seines 39 Exempli gratia (ab.) 40 Ice cream container 41 Bear constellation 42 Bamboolike grass 44 Ireland 45 Mix 46 Observes 47 Convulsive cry 48 StweMWHH” 50 Kind of profit 51 Mariner’s direction I Mystery no S. Gardner (7) Price Is Right (9) Romper Room 11:10 (56) Let’s Read 11:25 (56) For Doctors Only 11:90 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Missing Links (7) Seven Keys 11:55 (56) Arithmetic for Teach- WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) love of Lito (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (9) Yake 30 12:16 (2) News 12:«6 (2) Search tor Tomorrow (4) (Color) Truth or Consequences . ft) Father Knows Best , (9) People in Conflict 12:15 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:51 (56) All Aboard for Reading 12:55 (4) News , 1:40 (2) Star Performance , (4) Conversation Piece (7) General Hospital | 1 (9) Movie: “Chain Light- ning.” (1950) Humphrey Bogart, Eleanor Parker, Raymond Massey ■:I0 (56) French Lesson :9I (2) As the World Turns (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Hollywood Theater (56) World in Focus 2;M (2) Password , (4) (Color) People Will Talk (56). Adventure in Science 2:26 (4) News 2:26 (1) Hennesey ----------- (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:35 (56) Numerically So 2:55 (7) Now - - 2:61 (I) To Tell the Truth (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day (56) Spanish Lesson 3:15 (9) News 3:J6 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Say! (7) Who Do You Trust (9) Friendly Giant * (56) Superintendent Re-. ports 3:45 (9) Misterogers (56) Memo to Teachers 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trallmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: “Arson for ■ Hire.” (1959) Steve Brodle, Lyn Thomas. (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Hercules 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot -..............-— (7) Movie: “Song of India.” (1949) Sabu, Gall Russell (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:80 (56) What’aNew _ 6:46 (9) R 0 c k y and Friends 1:16 (2) Weather (4) Carol Duvrll Cigar Smoker Smokes Up Strong Case fo IT S ~ _ _ Ry EARL WILSON NEW YORK-Edward G, smoker, who also smokes 3 been reading, the.wakings” against “ - —— tells me that he dowm’t inhale either one that he uses a holder for his dgars . . . that*he will probably continue because of his conversation witti-a doctor. “It was after my so-called heart attack,” he said, as we were having a snack at Gallagher’s. “My. doctor saw me light up a cigar. He said .‘You’ve been smoking pU your life, haven’t you?’,I said I had. Hq shrugged, eloquently .. Robinson proceeded to take a cigar from a leather case, place it in the holder,-WILSON and light up. He was here promoting_Ji&~ next film, “The Prize,” while en route to WasMngtoiTToac-cept the Eleanor Roosevelt Foundation’s Humanitarian Award, . hut he was happy Jo discuss doctors, and smoking. : “I recently addressed 1,500 members of'the American Medical Assn.,” he said, “and told them that I wanted to become a doctor. However, I wound up, not with a scalpel in my hand, but a rod, and I killed as many'as they did. I told them, ‘You guys got a medical Cosa Nostra.. One doctor says “You got I SO-And-SO,” and they all agree with him.”’ Robinson misses the days when,he bought cigars in Cuba. Each trip there, he would tell the press, “I love this country. Why, all day long, I have Havana «• my lips.” ......★ ★ ★ ■ THE MIDNIGHT EARL Carl (“The Victors”) Foreman and Columbia Pictures will next produce the film bio of Winston Churchill . . . ABC-TV wouldn’t OK controversial comic Lenity Bntee for an appearance on a TV show . . . Broadway Side List: Kirk Douglas is hack in “Cuckoo’s Nest” after a laryngitis bout; Liz Ashley’s been out of “Barefoot in the Park” with sciatica . . . Halle Selassie’s son Hapti visited the Metropole, asked Gene Krupa about drum lessons . . . Gordon and Sheila MacRae may tour In “Here’s Love” in the Janis Paige-Craig Stevens soles. TODAY’S WORST PUN: What ore Santa’s helpers called? Answer: Subordinate Clauses.—Loulo Higa, Honolulu. WISH I’D SAID THAT: When, you stop to consider what you pay for a steak, it's easy to understand why cows are sacred in India. \ ' ____ REMEMBERED QUOTE: “However long and hard the climb to the top may be, the bottom Is only one misstep away.” Megiddo Messenger. EARL’S PEARLS: If George Washington never told a then he and Ms wife must have had some dandy arguments. “What can I give a man who has everything?” asked a school girl, and Margaret Whiting anskored: “Your phone number!” That’s earl, brother. _____— (Th# H.lt Syndicate, Inc.) FOR HER—The special girl in your life will appreciate the gift- of a glamour box of sheer, seamless stockings (right) or elegant fabric gloves that are elbow-high in glitter. They will fit in perfectly with holiday festivities. Negro Soldiers Convicted of Murder During Air Base Fight EVREUX, France (UPI) -Two Negro American soldiers were convicted last night of unpremeditated murder in the death of a white airman as a result of a fight at the U. S. air base here. Don't His tag one white, were scheduled to be tried tomorrow on similar charges arising from the same IncMentlast Sept. 6.—-The verdict last night was handed down against Pfc. Raymond C. Boat Jr., 22, of Pittsburgh, Pa., and Pfc. Robert Burrell, 20, of Philadelphia, Pa. The court-martial board was made up of 10 white officers. ★ ★ ★ Boat was sentenced to 15 years at hard. labor and Burrell was sentenced to 12 years, but each of the terms is subject to ati automatic review by Army official^ in Europe and In Washington. FRACTURED SKULL They were convicted in connection with the death of Airman l.C. Robert Ladgett of Woodlawn, Va., in a base hospital a few hours after the fight. He received a fractured skull and a blood dot. The prosecution charged the soldiers rushed into an Air Force barracks carrying steel bars and sticks lit an unprovoked attack. Some other airmen were Injured In the fight, but not seriously. St Sr it \ The defense claimed the soldiers entered the barracks to discuss racial questions end that the fight broke out ~ someone shouted a racial Insult to the Negroes. Wife Hopes Reds Wilt Free Pi Airplanes Used on Guerrillas by Dominicans SANTO DOMINGO (UPI) -*■ Government warplanes strafed, rocketed and bombed presumed guerrilla positions on Gallo Mountain yesterday without reported result. ★ Sr ★ The attack, by four British-made Vampire Jets and four propeller-driven Mustang figHt-era oL World War II vintage, was the heaviest yet launched by. the civilian Junta in 10 days of sporadic conflict with guerrillas said to_bft receiving . irom^FideTCastro’s Cuba. Only two persons—one soldier and one guerrilla—have been officially reported dead in the fighting. About 50 guerrillas have been taken prisoner,, many of them without arms. Castroite leader Manuel Tavares. Justp. is believed to’ have organized the guerrilla bands in this country. WASHINGTON (AP) - The wife of a Michigan man imprisoned by North Korean communists left the State Department Monday with some hope folr her husband’s release. , Sr Mrs. Garleton Voltz, of Frankfort, aaid Roger Hislman, assistant secretory of state for Far Eastern affairs, “is hoping like all the rest of us” that U.S. efforts to tree Voltz and another American pilot will sue-, coed. .. . The two pilots were aboard a plane that went down May 17 in North Korea. Sr Sr ———I ‘I'm sure that they (U.S. officials) are doing all they can,” said Mrs. Voltz7 SENT WORD She said the Red Cross had sent word In September that the two men1 were alive and well, But mall has not been getting through to them nor have letters been received from them, she ild. U. S. efforts to free the pilots, both U,St Army captains, have been unsuccessful so far. ...★ ★ ★ iHrs. Voltz went to Washington “to receive a'full report on government efforts to seek release of her husband,” a State Department spokesman said. 1 Ex-College Head Diet 7 YORK, Neb. (AP)-Dr. D. E, Weldlor, 78, president of York XbUega4rcml938^to49£fr^9efi Sunday after a long illness. Aft-jsf retiring as president at Yorit he spent two years on too faculty of Westmar College, Lamars, Iowa. He was born In Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania Dem in Poor Condition - St. Lawrence Seaway Sets Ship Deadline OTTAWA <* — Ships that have been taking advantage of good weather will be stopped from entering the Montreal-Lake Ontario section of the St. Lawrence Seaway at midnight, Wednesday, Dec. 11, it was an-nounced Monday. TRcTseaway officially closed" Nov. 39 but minimum ice Interference provided an unofficial extension. The Seaway Authority said vessels entering the seaway by the Dec, 11 deadline 'will be able to complete their transit, weather and-iee-condl-toms^permtttlng.’’ , Australia exports of beef are principally to the United States which took 209,000 tons or 8d per cent of the exports in 1962. PHILADELPHIA W» - Rep. William J. Green, D-Pa., 53, is in critical condition in a Philadelphia hospital af te operation for peritonitis. . ★ ★ * -Green was stricken Sunday while in New York for the funeral of Herbert _H. Lehman, former New York governor and U. S. senator.' Green’s doctor said yesterday Green is in good spirits and excellent general health and “thus stands_a_mueh'betfer chance theaverage man." Foreign Students to Visit Homes in Branch County EAST LANSING (AP) - Afghanistan, Brazil, China, Laos and South Africa go to the Cold-water area next week, to learn first hand how America works. Foreign students from each of the countries and from Thai-landrthe Philippines, Indonesia, India and Pakistan, will live In city and farm homes in Branch County Dec. 15-20. The students, 25 iii All, took courses in the Community Development Institute at Michigan State University this fall. A fellow student for one night every two weeks was Boyd Wiggins, Branch Countv extension agentrWigglns suggested to Dr, John Donoghue, instructor of the course,, that the class spend some time in Branch County. tangled with an icy spot and collided with another car. Richard started to a hospital. On the way his squad car skidded on the ice. It, too, collided with another car. City police finally got Twite to the hospital. State to Probe Mystery of Dead Loons GRAND HAVEN (AP)-Bod* les of 20 dead toons were recovered along the Lake Michigan beach here Monday and were sent to State Conservation Department laboratories at East Lansing for examination as to cause of death. "k it it Conservation Officer Harold Bowditch said the birds were dead not more than a day and added that many showed traces of blood about the mouth. The die-off to believed part of . simitar occurrence noted earlier , along the shore near the Indiana state line, where bodies of gulls and other waterfowl have been found. .__it- - • ★ • —if— -ggjr Laboratory spokesmen indicated that some of these bodies held traces of botulism organ- Learn Trick* ofTradef Carlisle, England (upu-Roy Barker, head of a, hairdressing school,said today he plans to include a course in “conversation” to teach his pupils how to gossip with customers. See th* daw 11” GE PORTABLE TV ON DISPUY m|| TMMS MIU8U ISLtunpM ELECTRIC COMPANY 126 W. Huron FK 4-2628 [Rosamond Williams (ONOTONE 291. Comull FI 2-1225 Servlets ami Omnlits lor RCA COLOR ^TV $395.00 VIM P*rtt Warranty — 1 VOgT Condon's Radio & TV ns w. H.™ . II v p.m.—N«w 'll! curl PI uw —^Today's Radio Programs-r- wfiRyo) vyuYKi aw) ckl wrong eoo) wjoko aoo) whfi-fm(94.7| wwj, Ph0«# Opinion ii»-cKLyv, Tom Cloy Win, oimtnilun wxyz, j. ftaoitim 7i«»—WJR, Chord 7i«-WXVZ, AIM _ , , . lid—WJPi w«f Mt^Tonlflht ■SftSfe.. i:&,relsL tifL-wIsT diSnM ifttf aIJmri fopk Jh|, — jmj' ffi WPDNSSDAY MORHINO Ills If, NfWI) ROM . Ntvrti InjfMM a* WSDNSIDAY APTSRNoSh wwj. NfWI, Pr*n narri. WCAR, NOwi, Punt lliM-WJP. Slid OUMt Show jiltteVnhi N»w», wood WWJi Ntwii Prlondiftlp Club Mob ektwfHvRri wftif^faowifVte'ldort ■gwr IlM—CKLW, joo von DRWil DONUTS 804 NORTH PERRY Pontiac, Michigan Pbom 334-9041 BAVA1YA STICKS V Applet nypga—m TRY OUR 101 VARIETIES Charritt - Blueberries - Custards - Creams NutO r Cinnamon Spices . , , and icings aru used in abundance! mm PQJVPTS ................ Open Your '04 Today "Sock" away a little regularly in one of our CHRISTMAS CLUBS and have the cash to foot the bills next holiday season •.. Open a CLUB for everymember of the family arid make It a "Stocking Gift" .. a gift that gets more valuable every month. Chrletmae Club i I The Weather U.S. Waller Bureau Ferae Cloudy (Outsits on 1m.ViB r*n/T-. r\l KM t *■ . . - ; . ;P. I®, ^ ** * THE PONTIAC PRE voKm * no?262 ■*;* 1 ★★ POXTIAC. MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1M3—38 PAGES OVER PAfitj Crash Probers Examine Field, Flight Record Scattered Wreckage Searched for Clues to Cause of Disaster ELKTON, Md. WV-The tragedy of Clipper 214 moved today into a mop-up search of a cornfield and the opening , of a misshapen metal box. In the field just north of Elk-ton still lay scattered pieces of wreckage and some of the remains Of the SI person? who perished Sunday night in the explosion and fiery crash of a Pan American World Airways jet plane. In the box was the flight recorder carried by the four* engine Boeing 707 on its last I rate. ' Officials faintly hoped it might yield some clue to the cause of the disaster, one of the worst in the history of civil aviation. They said the recorder, about the size of a box camera, was so badly battered that its story might be lost! v...* e l ( Did lightning, as some eyewitnesses said, really strike the plane as it bucked an electrical' storm near the end of its flight from Puerto Rico to Philadelphia? Or, was it a bomb? Or air turbulence? TOO EARLY federal investigators said it was tbo early to rule out any possibilities. They ruled out reconstruction of the shattered plane as a step, toward solution of the mystery. i, “There is not enough left to reconstruct," said Alan S. Boyd, chairman ,pf the Civil Aeronautics Board. I,■■s - Boyd said the recorder — an instrument which , charts the plane’s speed, direction, altitude and encountered gusts of air— was found yesterday near the main point of impact of the wreckage. $EY EVIDENCE—Bill Hopper of the Civil, Aeronautics Board holds battered, but still intact, flight recorder of the ill-fated Pan American, flight 214. The recorder was found yesterday afternoon by CAB investigators. The plane, en route to Philadelphia crashed, killing all 01 aboard. Weatherman Sees Snow for Tomorrow More snow may be expected in the Pontiac area tomorrow. The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts cloudy with little temperature change, the high near 3S, with snow. Partly cloudy and colder with the low near 23 is tonight’s forecast. ★ ★ , * ■ Between one and two inches of snow,, the first of the season except for a few flurries, blanketed the Pontiac area 1 through the night. ★ Sr h Twenty-eight was the low recording in the downtown area prior to 8 a.m. today. The 1 p.m. reading was 30. In Today's Press 1 Civil Right* I Court?' moving against I bias in U. S.-alded hous-| ing - PAGE A-U. Lodge I GOP not very egcited | about latest possible can-I didate - PAGE B-3. K!s Plan New program pushes , toward consumer econo- my - PAGE C-S. I Arch News B-8 1 Astrology B-1S I Bridge B-12 1 Comics ... B-12 1 Editorials A* 1 Markets . C-4 E Obituaries .i'.UV.,: C-8 I Sports C-l—C-8 I Theaters ,L,,./ B-13 1 TV-Radlo Programs C-U I 'Ikon, Earl....;,.c-iy Women’s Pages B-s—B-li No Demand for Ransom in Sinatra Jr, STATELINE, Calif. (tf) —- No ransom note had been received today in the disappearance of singer Frank Sinatra Jr., El Dorado County Sheriff’s Lt, A. L. Willson said. The 19-year-old singer’s famed father kept an around-the-clock telephone vigil 65 miles northeast ,in a Beno hotel. A spokesman said FBI agents urged him to do it. Williion said neither the senior Sinatra nor authorities had been contacted by the two men who reportedly abducted the youth at gunpoint from his motel room Sunday night. John Foss, a band trumpet player and roommate of the young singer, told officers two gunmen burst Into their room and demanded “Where’s the money?” > < Foss said they bound and gagged him and then took the Sinatra youth with them, w , it ★ Sheriff Ernest Carlson, asked last night by newsmen if there was fear for the youth’s life, said, “Certainly. There always is in every kidnaping.” CHECKING CLUES “We are checking what clues we get,” i Willson, one of the chief coordinators of more than, 100 officers from California and Nexada, said, Also on the case are at least 30 FBI agents, the sheriff’s office said. Willson refused to say what dues had been received or give details on what is being done to trace the teen-age singer. Carlson said earlier that there were hundreds of resort cabins in the area which could be occupied without attracting police attention. ' ‘ ★ ★ -Sr The temperature at the investigation scene, a mile above sea level, dropped to IS degrees at 4 a.m. and was expected to dip lower. Roads were covered with a hard pack of snow and cars needed chains. The mountains were clogged with up to 20 feet of snow In spots, the sheriff’s Office said. fANTAY HELPER SMS Bf SHOPPING DAYS TO CHRISTMAS SHOP FOR GIFTS IN OUR AD PAGES Representative Joins in Signing Petition WASHINGTON — Oak-land County’s Republican representative William S. Broomfield joined 130 other congi mep yesterday in an effort to force early action on the Administration’s civil rights bill. Leaders of the move, however, are faced with rough going today and tomorrow. They’re trying to git the 218 signatures needed to discharge the bill from the House Rules Committee. Broomfield said today he signed the discharge petition in “toe hope that we can resolve this issue as soon as ^possible. Consideration Is long overdue.” , * *. * The congressman said he looked favorably upon the bill as it now stands. But he said he could not foresee what he will think of it after it runs the gauntlet of■ debate and amendments — if it ever gets on the floor to do so. BIPARTISAN SUPPORT The measure, designed to bar racial discrimination In voting, (Continued on Page 2, Coi. d) Area Chamber Extends Drive for Membership The Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce announced today It is extending Its current membership drive another week to 10 days to allow time (or reports. ★ ★ i ■ ■ • J ■ Chamber officials aimed at a minimum of 100 new members In the drive which was to have ended Dec. 7. "So far we’ve picked up 60 new members and loss than half toe membership has reported back to us,” explained Max Adams, chamber pianager. ' ‘This is , very encouraging, sinco all of our 800' members had prospects to contact.” Fear for Hostages Bolivia Deadline Near 7 Are Indicted in Fair Blast Probe toys Blame in Indiana Tragedy INDIANAPOLIS (AP)—Seven persons face fines or prison terms ‘if convicted of actions that a grand jury charged contributed. tp toe deaths Of 72 persons in the. Indiana State Fair-grounds Coliseum explosion. Five persons connected with the use bf bottled propane gas in the! building were indicted tor involuntary manslaughter Monday in connection with the RaUoween night blast. Two public fire officials were charged with neglect of inspection duties required of them by law. * | Indicted for neglect of their duties were State Fire Marshal Ira J. Anderson and Indian-apolis Fire Chief Arnold Phillips.;' >' j #1 !vi y* LEGISLATIVE ACTION The grand jury called for legislative action to improve the structure of the state fire marshal’s office. , Named in the involuntary manslaughter indict ments were, Melttn T. Ross, general manager Of 'the Indiana Coliseum Corp.; Edward J. Fran-ger, president of Discount Gas Corp., which supplied toe bottled gas; Fred J. Helms! vice president of Discount Gas, Corp.;'Richard Ensign, manager of the company’s Indianapolis office; and Floyd James, manager of the concessions business for the Coliseum. Grand jury findings on the cause of the blast agreed with previously published reports by investigating ageticies. Ask U.S. Aid Men at Studebaker Firm DETROIT MP)—-The United Auto Workers Union urged the federal government Monday to “assist the South Bend, Ind., community and some 9„0Q0 Studebaker workers and their families when the corporation ehds auto production in that city.” Raymond Berndt, director of the UAW’s Studebaker Department, said he asked Secretary of Labor Willard Wirtz to call * meeting “to set up a special task ifdrpe of representatives of federal agencies to mobilize the full resources ‘ of the national government to come to the immediate. assistance of this stricken community (South Bend) and its thousands of newly unemployed workers and their families.” Wirtz announced the Labor Department’s top placement expert, Harold Montross, w o u ld meet today with state and local officials at South Bend. Hie Labor Department also said it will explore toe toasl-. bility of setting up training programs fur Studebaker workers. Berndt said that “it is our principal concern that the approximately 9,000 hourly and salaried workers and their fami-' lies receive every assistance possible to cushion the shock of their sudden unemployment. We are therefore calling on the management of Studebaker to cooperate with the UAW to see tq it that these workers, their families and the South Bend community are protected to the maximum extent possible," Berndt said. Hie union official said that “it is no secret that.Studebaker has been in trouble for.years, caught )n toe cycle of lower sales producing a weaker dealer organization, meaning still lower sales. “This vicious spiral has raised costs per unit to toe point where it was impossible for the corporation to produce automobiles at a profit," Berndt said. Change Urged on Judge Rule State Sen. Farrell E. Roberts, K-Oakland, said today he was in favor of amending the hew state constitution to restore the governor’s power to fill Circuit judgeship vacancies by appointment. Such an amendment was urged last night as the State Senate passed, in a 21-7 party line vote, a Republican sponsored bill enabling appointed judges to be designated as in* cumbcnts on the 1984 ballot. Sen. William Ford, D-Taylor, said he would introduce a resolution calling for the amendment to pave the way fpr its GETS PEACE PRIZE -Dr. Linus Pauling today received the 1902 Nobel Peace Prize for his campaign against/ nuclear weapons and their testing. The award — totaling $49,465.32—wqS made f at ceremonies at Qslo, Norway, attended by King Olav V, Crown Prince Harald and other Norwegian dignitaries. appearance on next1 year’Hwri* military-in-space ambitions. lot. Roberts said the method of filling vacancies spelled out in the new constitution has turned opt to be “impractical.” RETIRED JUDGES It provides Circuit C o u r t vacancies be filled by the State Supreme Court' from ranks of retired judges. They would not be eligible for election after serving out unexpired terms. But, there are not enough (Continued on Page 2, Col. S) LBJ Decision Would Hurt AF in Space, WASHINGTON (AP)-Presi* dent Johnson's reported decision to cancel the Dyna-Soar manned space glider project deals a double blow to the Air Force’s It seemingly dooms what the Air Force has tagged as a critical series of experiments leading to eventual manned space warships. Its broader implications could be more ominous to the Air Force. 1 * * * Johnson long has been regarded as a believer in a strong military role in space, and Air Force advocates thought they had reason to, hope for a more sympathetic attitude from him than' from President John F. Kennedy. HOLD SPENDING The action underscores John* | son's apparent determination Jo hold down on defense spending, I to keep it next year close to or below this year’s level of be-| tween $50 billion and 951 billion. I Officially, the Defense De-j partment and the White (Continued on Page 2, Col. 0) Miners Want the Release of 2 Red Leaders Government Warned to Free Communists 'or Suffer Results' LA PAZ, Bolivia (3— Fears mounted today for the safety of four Americans and 17 others held hostage by Communist-led Bolivian tin miners as a 24-hour deadline neared. The miners warned (he government to release two jailed Cormpuhist union leaders by today or “suffer the consequences." The government gave no indication it would release the union leaders. The ultimatum did not spell out what the consequences might be, but observers recalled a similar crisis in 1949, when miners seized four American engineers, held them hostage briefly, then killed them. One hopeful aspect was a report that Vice President Juan Lechin, leftist leader of the rebelling miners, had had friendly relations with one of the Americans, Thomas Martin, 27, of New York, a U. S. Information Agency officer. ★ , it it * * j In aradio-telephone talk; with toe U.$. Embassy at La Paz, the Bolivian capital, Martin said Sunday he and the other hostages were well but under heavy guard. The Red Cross also , reported they Were in good health and were being treated well. IN DEFIANCE The miners’ ultimatum-came in defiance of a heavy troop buildup In the area by the government of President Victor Paz Estenssoro and an offer by President Johnson of U. S. help in obtaining the release of the hostages. The deepening crisis raised fears of an armed conflict between the troops and the miners, now reported In control of five of Bollvtn’s 25 nationalized tin mines, About 4,000 miners marched through Oruro last night, shouting “to the wall” with Paz Estens- Latest Casual Styles; Yule Gift Tip to Men By REBA HE1NTZEI.MAN By the looks of clothes in Pontiac area stores women’s styles are becoming more and more casual every season.' , , This holiday time, a husband or boyfriend should have no trouble with huge bulky sweater gifts, nylon parkas of every color and4 “ HAPPY MOMENT - The weather wasn’t tha bast outside last night bpt three young' Pontiac bowlers had reason to be happy Inside the the 300 Bowl banquet room. They pidked up their trophies and prize winnings t from the seventh annual Pontiac Press BowloramaMMike Samardzlja Jr. (left) won $800 and a trophy, Tom Mayes (top) $300 and a trophy and Tony Ledesma, the champion, $700 and a trophy. style, real comfortable lounging clothtes or slim-trim stretch pants. If she — or he — Is a ski enthusiast there are new poles, glasses, mittens, alpine hats and WQol-llned boots for relaxing in! Scarves are a carousel of color — versatile, soft and lovely. In the camera departments of nlmost any shopping center store, the Polaroid 100 color camera is one of the hottest items this year. Next comes the little self-adjusting cameras and third, binoculars which run from $30 to $00. There’s more fun In the toy departments than ever before. It isn’t necessary to get a live pet for a present j(hl8 year, HN the battery operated animals are toe very next thing to being (jiliva. | One toy, a big gray ape, walks around beating Its chest and bellows just like the fictitious friends of Tarzan. ROBOT'S BRAIN A robot's brain lights up as It walks around talking. One little spaniel walks, begs and when toe eyep ,|xht up, It barks. It also nods Its head. A, green velvet crocodll* seems to move along with «*' ery Joint in motion, Prase a i second button and It opens its mouth to let out a terrifying . squawk. ' ★ * ■ * Clerks can't figure pqt why — but "Weird Ohs" toys ere the most popular put-together toys In the stores; There's the “wuy-oui-cycllit" and the horrible "Mr. Gaeser." '■ . ,t|lp4t These (monster) toys to assemble are only 80 cents a unit. 'if » 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 Most Traffic Accidents Cause we can reduce the chance of accidents,” be said. ficers perform traffic service. Hiere is no specialization.” "We have always tried to he rigid in oar controls and eight-hour shifts, beginning at 8 a.m. and ending at midnight, seven days a week. According to the National Safety Council, an ideal number of men attached to the traffic division would be 25 per cent of the total police department. “Their luck finally runs out,” said Orrin Lucas, traffic anal-lyst for the Michigan State Police. Drivers with bad records represent oniy a small amount of those causing accidents, he said. NO PATTERN Oakland County has had 187 fatal accidents this year, a record high, but no pattern is evident to help halt the slaught- Police in larger departments have found that accidents can be reduced on major streets by selective enforcement. (This is the final article in a series concerning the rise in traffic fatalities in Oakland County this year.) Records are kept of the areas where the accident rate is high, and patrols are alerted to look for specific violations during certain hours. TRAFFIC BUREAU In Pontiac, the job is up to the traffic bureau, headed by Li Clayton Randolph. Reestablished a year ago, the traffic bureau has been as- By JIM LONG The ordinary driver—the one who occasionally breaks traffic laws without being caught — causes the most accidents, major and minor., It is die motorist who iias passed on a curve or gone through a red or amber light that time and circumstance finally catches up to, accord- safety check free of charge to anyone wishing to have his car inspected for defective equip* Rival Oak has one /radar unit that is used on streets where accident rates are high. Ponti* afe will get radar in the near future. “Speed is the main element— the difference between an injury and banged fender,” said Sgt. Robert Wachal of die Pontiac Police Traffic Bureau. “If we can slow people down, “They have that ‘It could never happen to me attitude.* ” he said. Harkless said there is one consolation to offset the futility fdt by safety groups. “It migit be worse if they were not functioning at all.” i In the case of Pontiac, this would be about 28 officers. ROYAL OAK In Royal Oak, where 13 persons have been killed this year, Police Chief Herman Potts said that the department has no traf-.........................All of- Young and old have died on curves and straightaways in cities and on country roads fic division, but that, Birmingham Area News Zanzibar Joins Bloomfield H Local Traffic (Continued From Page One) education, employment, public accommodations and the use of federal funds, is supported by both Democratic and Republican House leaders. The petition to pry the bill BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Improved streets and highways and the problems which accom- Opdyke would be a natural route for motorists southbound from Square Lake Road to Woodward. the City Commission last night. One result of the lengthy discussion was timtBloom-field Hills win have two rather than one police car patroling Its streets after dark, at least on a temporary basis. The two roads specifically mentioned for their traffic prob- would sttU be short ef the tit majority needed. TOo many congressmen who want the bill to reach the floor are nevertheless reluctant to circumvent the committee in this fashion, according to Broomfield. iems are Opdyke and Vaughn. ★ ★ ★ About 16 persons, residents of both the city and Bloomfield Township, attended last night’s meeting to discuss the possible conversion Of Opdyke into a oneway northbound street. USED HEAVILY The road, which passes two schools mid two churches, is used heavily by persons traveling to, and from GMC Truck It Coach. * The petition, for instance, does not have the backing of Senior House Republicans. They have endorsed a proposal by Rulek Committee Chairman Howard W. Smith, D-Va., to start the bill toward floor action “reasonably soon in January.” ' NOT UNTIL DEC. 23 Success Of the discharge petition could not bring the bill out before Dec. 23, Broomfield Clerk Robert J. Stadler, director of public safety, was authorized to make a study of the situation. Meanwhile, there will be another patrol car and police will pay special attention to Vaugjjp. Loweit tamparatur* prtcMIng • At I a.m,i Wind vtloclty » n >lrAction: Northwest Iffi «ft. WMJi.*15' JMPv - Space Plans May Be Hurt (Continued From Page One) House refused to comment on a report by the trade publication Missile-Space Dally, that the defense budget for the coming fiscal year would omit funds for the Dyaa-Soar. However, Informants indicated that Johnson accepted the recommendation of Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara who has exhibited grave doubts since last spring that the spaoe glider project was worth what it would ooat to complete It. According to current figures, Congress has appropriated IMS million for the Dyna-Soar since IMP.. Of this, about $180 million could be recaptured. $908 MILLION Over-all, the Air Force has estimated it would cost more than MOO million to complete the Dyna-Soar work by 1900, with the first of a planned 90 flights into orbit due in I960, Johnson’s public defraud that the government get a dollar’s value for each dollar spent, together with a flurry of White House statements, may give the impression that the new President is Initiating a whole series Of economy measures. Actually, several of the programs lie has stressed have been under way for nearly three years. of CWtmaa ***■'" • eighth of a Sanaa ' The Gift to the Tenth Leper By JOHN J. STEWART Leprosy was a dread disease, not only because of the dire physical affliction it caused its victim, but because it meant a life of loneliness: the leper was banished from home and family. He must live his life alone or in the company of other lepers, a social outcast. One day, as Jesus was entering into a certain, village in Galilee, 10 men who were lepers stood afay off. In their anguish of loneliness arid affliction they cried out* "Jesus, Master, have mercy on us”- n > , Jesus looked fit the unfortunates. Life for them was without purpose and without hope. They were but living dead men. He listened to their pleas for help. “Go show yourselves unto the priestsHe called to them. , PUZZLING WORDS When the lepers heard Jesus’ words they were puzzled and disappointed, though not without hope. With intent desire they had wished !that He might have blessed, them to become well. , Instead, had He shunted them off, as others had done? Or was this a test to them? Certainly I they would have to show themselves to the priests I before they could be admitted bapk into society, I if they did becdme cured. I With mixed emotions they started toward the synagogue. But as they wtukeQ along, a marvelous thing happened. One then another of them suddenly became cleansed of the leprosy. Each man’s body became whole, his skin clear and healthy. So Jesus had blessed them after all! He had shown mercy unto them, indeed, they were well. No longer would they be outcasts. No longer would their life be blighted and lonely. GLORIOUS TRUTH Suddenly, gloriously, they were no longer lepers, but normal, healthy men. It teas too good to be true, yet it was true! With a shout of jby, nine of theyt rushed into the village. But the tenth leper turned and rati back to where Jesus still stood. In tears of gratitude this man, a Samaritan, fell at Jesus’ feet, giving him thanks. “Were there not 10 cleansed?” asked Jesus. i4But whe/e are the nine?" Then he looked , down appreciatively at the I man who lay at his feet, sp grateful for the'gift he had received. "Arise," said Jqsus. “Go thy way. Thy faith hath made thee whole."' WsFMUK, List of African Independents ZANZIBAR (AP) - A gold, green and red banner replaced the Union Jack today as, the sleepy spice island of Zanzibar became Africa’s 34th independent nation. Amid volleys of rifle fire and the cheers of thousands, Britain’s Prince Philip, representing his wife, Queen Elizabeth II, handed over an act of the British Parliament making Zanzibar a free and independent state again after 73 years under British protection. WARNS PEOPLE Prime Minister Sheik Shamte Hamadi warned his people independence “does not mean distribution of loot — nor does it mean less work and more pay. It means unleashing the pent-up energies of our people.” Such an effort, will be heeded if Zanzibar i$ to raise its annua] per capita income of 856. Britain will grant indepen- dence Thursday to another East African territory, Kenya. Both will become members of the United Nations Monday. With its sister island of Pemba to the north, Zanzibar has an Urea of 1,020 square miles and a population of 300,000 Africans, Arabs and Indians. In a message to tbe Sultan of Zanzibar, Seyyid Jamshid Bin Abdulla, President Johnson said the United .States welcomed the emergence of the new nation and has “watched with great interest and satisfaction as the tide of freedom has rolled across the African continent.” * * *; One reason for American interest in Zanzibar is the presence of a U.S. satellite tracking station, part- of U globe - girdling electronic network. Soviet Premier Khrushchev announced Soviet recognition of the new nation and wished it success in “the building of a new life.” Commission^ Meeting Tonight Roberts Seek Rule Change (Continued From Page One) retired Judges in the state, Roberts Said. “There aire only about 12 and all of them are over 70.” “We had hoped to use them to start out the new appellate court before the election, but we couldn’t,” Robert said. Another reason he favored the return of the governor's appointment power, Robert said, is that “in ureas like Wayne County it’s dangerous to have judges running for the first time. VOTE FOR NAMES People will wind up voting fur names rather than qualified lawyers or Judges.” The new constitution's method of filling judicial vacancies Is behind toe controversy over m balio lodges. The document specifies the designation for elected judges, but naturally makes no mention of it in the case of appointed judges ineligible for •lection. ‘ s ★ ;*f Judges appointed before Jan. 1, however, are eligible to seek election next year. The docu-does not provide for such Yesterday' a political a fight wae largely i, since the Judges ________ . _jout 10 — are all appointees of Republican Ck>v. George Romney. [These include Oakland County’s Arthur E. Moore, Philip Pratt and James 8. Thorburn. In other action, the 8< passed tour other bills, j with bipartisan support, i sent them to the House. it jk ★ Dispute apose over a bill per-lining a verdict by 10 Of 12 jurors to decide civil case*. It passed 9841 on the second vote. SUCCESSION Among the others approved wee one setting up a line of succession to toe governorship In com of vacancy. It provides for the succession, In order, of the lieutenant governor, toe elected secretory of state, toe elected attorney general, preeldant pro tom of the •tete senate ana the speaker of the house of representatives. ENOUGH SUPPORT Although they do not expect to get 218 signatures, they hope to get enough support to force Smith to offer to hold limited hearings and a definite date for clearing the bill. Civil rights groups and others already huve begun to pressure congressmen to get on with the bill. Broomfield said he had received more than 100 tetters and telegrams over the weekend urging him to sign too petition. M<|st of them, he said, were PHILIP AT CEREMONIES - Britain’s Prince Philip, representing his wife Queen Elizabeth, sits with the . Sultan of Zanzibar during ceremonies today celebrating Zan- ■V weMsests04!.... WMffAMvW1 ' v . UR Revision U for before the new R20 plan can be executed. It is expected to take about five months to get jthat approval. The revised R20 budget proposes that toe R20 net project cost be upped from 83.4-mlIlion t > 97.8-mUUon. CITY’S INCREASE A similar increase in non-cash credits is proposed to cover an increase in the city’s share of the project cost. Proposed is a slight increase in tbe size of R20 area but another 45 structures would be razed, mostly within toe present project boundaries. Mail Tax Bills in Waterford Tax statements amounting to 84,150,263.75 were mailed yesterday by Waterford Township Treasurer Mrs. Dorothy Olson to some 30,000 property own-el’s. Based on • rate of 186.09 for each 81,000 of assessed valuation, the bills include county, school and township tax assessments. This year’s ttlx rate is up 819.43 horn the 1902 rate of 873-59 per $1,000 assessed valuation. Last year’s billing amounted to $8,390,512.11. * * * Most of too increase in the current tax over last year it due to a hike in the achool tax rate from 857.77 to $06.^0 per 81.000 assessed valuation. TOWNSHIP, TAX This year’s township tax le 80.45 compered, to 83.17 per 81.000 assessed valuation levied last > year. • k it' it The 1963 county tax rose to 813.17 per 81,000 assessed valuation from 812.85 last year. . * * * Tax bills may be paid until Jen. 90 without penalty, according to Mrs. Olson. After this date, a 4 per cent penalty wllk be levied. Once approved by federal officials, toe new plan and budget will be subject to a public hearing ideally and final approval by toe City Commission. " W" /"'# It would then be sent back to Chicago for final federal approval and contract signing. EXPANDED PLAN The expanded plan and budget is designed to make up for ex* cesive R 2 0 expenditures to date and to improve redevelop-1 ment plans ty removing structures that are not feasible to rehabilitate, as originally planned. Also on the agenda for the 8 p.m. meeting is a recommendation from toe planning commission that toe Perimeter Road should not be renamed. | . 1 Action is expected on a resolution offered last week to call the highway “John F. Kennedy Drive.” * , Nr Action is also slated on a resolution whereby the city would agree to pay $15,000 to the American Legion Cook-Nelson Post No. 90 for a triangular place of land at Oakland and Saginaw. NEEDED FOR ROAD The parcel, op which the city’s annual Christmas tree now stands, is needed for right-of-way for a proposed interior loop road. Public hearings and final adoption are slated for ordinances to rezone, from residential to commercial, properties on the east side of Oakland, Pensacola to Orlando, and on the north side of South Boulevard, between Going and East Boulevard. A public hearing li also slated on toe proposed vaoatlng of a portion of Bondale. Other business included planning commission recommendations Involving resoning proposals for properties on 8econd and East Pike. Highway construction .workers dug up the bones of a prehistoric elephant which experts estimated had died over one million years ago,\ln Italy. year. HpweveL civil rights supporters hope for action early in January. They consider Smith’s offer a trap, which would close on them when toe wily leader of the Southern conservative bloc lets rules committee hearings run endlessly. The Weather zibar’s independence. The prince was present to hand over an act of toe British Parliament making Zanzibar independent after 73 years of British protection. The proposed plan revision for Pontiac’s R20 urban renewal project will be ready for action at tonight’s City Commission meeting. Commissioners will act on a resolution authorizing toe city to ask federal urban renewal officials la Chicago for approval of toe revised plan and budget. Federal approval is needed Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Mostly cloudy little temperature change today, high 34. Partly cloudy and colder tonight, low 23. Wednesday cloudy little temperature change with snow, hip 85. Northwesterly winds 15 to 30 mites per hour MT Marwnm Albuquirqu Atlanta gjgrnarck iy'« Ttmptrtlur* Chart 33 J! Fort Worth 50 i 33 » Jacksonville 57 ! as 30 Kansas C iv w 1 hi fcaSmr# % \ I I f«Jni | 55 35 .Om*ha 23 ] 46 n 'Phoonix * | i A® ra?c ! L,V ranclsco 57 J I. Marla 34 j NATIONAL WEATHER—There will be precipitation over a large section of the nation tonight. The southern Plains land southern Mississippi Valley Will have rain and showers while heavy snow is expected In the northern and central Plains. Snow flurries are predicted for toe central Rockies, the Great Lakes and the northern Appalachians. Colder weather will cover moat of the country. a e ' " ; C NATION PINPOINTED — The map locates toe newly independent nation of Zanzibar (underlined) which includes Zanzibar and Pemba islands. mmn l THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1963 MARKETS Hie following are top prices covering sales of locally grown • produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are Airnk~ed by the Detott Bureau of Markets as of noon Monday. Produce MUin Apples, DeHetous, Red, Du. Apples, Delicious, Golden, bu. Market Mixed Aerospace Issues Still Soft Applet, cider, case . s, cello petti 3 .id Radishes, black .................... }•» Radishes, holhc Squash, Acorn, NSW YORK (AP)—Aerospace issues continued soft in the face of possible budget cuts for space age projects while the over-alt stock market presented a mixed pattern today. Trading was moderate. Most changes were fractional, except for the higher-priced and fast-moving issues. ★ ★ ★ Studebaker continued in demand, rising % to 7Vi on 9,000 shares in a slightly delayed opening. Chrysler climbed about a point. Ford steadied after its slight loss of Monday. General Motors dipped fractionally, Boeing, down more than a point, seemed depressed by a report that its Dyna-Soar space glider project is in trouble with administration budget cutters. OFF POINT / North American Aviation was off nearly a point on a similar report concerning its XB - 70 bomber. Lockheed eased despite the award of a $117-million contract. Other aerospace issues took fractional losses. Xerox ran up 7 points and Polaroid 2 while IBM slipped 3. Monday, the Associated Press average of 60 stocks dipped 4 to 283.2. Most prices were narrowly mixed on the American Stock Exchange. Syntex (new) rebounded more than ‘2 points. Moderate gains were posted for Pyle National, Sherwin-Williams and Molybdenum. American Stock Exch. Figures after decimal point* ere eighth Gen Develop .................... In* N Amor.........................- - Kalter Industry .....- m The New York Stock Exchange NEW .YORK AP)—Following Poultry and Egg* StBrend 2.20 ORTROIT poultry DETROIT (AP)—Price* p*w per pound at Detroit for No. I quality W* nouHrvt Heavy type hen* 1M*l Jpl ■ ■ft heavy ‘ lafl , .... | SHT brolior* fi£| fryer* 3-4 lb*. whltes IMO. Turkey* hoovy typo you"* 1«m* «• Detroit see* . _ DETROIT —Eg MWl smm dozen at Detroit by fin (including U. 3.) . . 'grede^A loro# 34VW4; oil Ml checks MIME. Ms.) High Lew Lett Ct I m nv» nvt-14 ifw 12V* MV* ... $ s i mz 1 IS in* 2 37* 379* 27V* + V* W7 7W TVS 7V* . i... 4 319* 31V* 31V*-V* 10 42V* 42V* 42V* - V* —T— lord* 3 33V4) SI 2MW CHICAGO RUTTER, BOO* SSifU ffrartwrYa A whites 34V*j rr>i»*d_34V»; msdiunts 2*1 standards 3ti dirties 3>t cheek* 3». CHICAGO POULTRT CHICAGO (AeMUWAH,l*f pfyltryi wholesale buyMg price* 1 towjr to » higher; roasters 33-34; special fed whit* rock fry*** lHMt; heavy hens gMM 20-20W; tew young hen turkeys Uvottock DRTROIT LtVBSTOCK DETROIT (AP)—tyiOA)—cattle 2200; most choice steers tOMM* Ike HS’ISIS1 good to low choice steers feral*; good to low Choice hellers WJM1J0; utility caws I3.50-i4.oo. Hogs TEL barrows A_ lbs. 25c higher; heavier weights and CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)-(U3DAM40R0 4,300) fairly active, butchon. end sows jam to mostly 35 tower; (hippy* teek cent of the salable Mpplyi — 200-225 lb butchers >1.00-15.U; — — >*•*■ ™i»sd 1-3 HmM 13.75-14.50; 2-3 230-: *“ “w 15.0011.50; I; 1-1 500-450 100-10-75. Cattle 5,000; calves none; trading or slaughter steers and heifers ectlve, weeri strong to 35 , sctlve,---- .. _ .Ilgher, Instances 50 higher halters steady to 35 hjBher; cows slow, steady to 35 lower; bulls steady; ot Joost tour bad* prim* 1,1)0-1,3M lb* slaughter steers 24.50; mixed high choice and prim* 1,150-1430 lbs 33.50-fi.35; *1 If 23.00-23.75; comparobl* grad* 1,300-14E lbs 22.23-33.23; loed htah, “ prim* around 1,530 lb* 21.50; 1,750 Ibo 30.00; ROM *00-1,21 33.50 ;stond*rd and low goo< load high ctwlc* to mimra 1,000 10* 32.(5; choice * “The stutterer has a feeling of loss of impact value,” he added. NEEDS REACTION Dr. Perkins stated that more reaction, both positive and negative, to the child who stutters would add to his feeling of importance. This is why mothers heed not feel guilty if they occasionally yell at their children, according to the speech expert. Dr. Perkins explained that a stutterer does not stutter when he feels that he is really there like when he is angry. He compared a stutterer’s feeling of loss of impact to a person at a party where nobody pays any. attention to him. ★ ★ . W. , In the adult stutterer, his speech defect becomes a defense mechanism, Dr. Perkins said. STUTTERING DETRACTS This individual, he said, feels he has a great deal more po- tential, but he can't live up to it because of his stuttering. Thus the pressure from people around hlni does not require that he live up to his potential. Dr. Perkins said the loss of impact value, has been the key to stuttering in his* studies of a select group of 52 people over a period of several years. According to the doctor, people tend to ignore the stutterer: No one seeks him out for conversation. They walk around im. , .' / Children are not born as stutterers, but learn to stutter, he added. He said toe speech difficulty tends to be a problem of males. Organizations Invited to Plan Memorial Day Ail veteran, civic, fraternal and military organizations have been invited to send representatives to a meeting of .the Pontiac Memorial Day Association Thursday at the Amvet Hail, 570 Oakland. It is toe first public meeting to discuss plans for Memorial Day next year. The meeting Is at 8 p.m. Miners Frantic in Hunt far Victim Of Cave-In MARION, 111. (UPI)-A crew of miners; -worked desperately today in efforts to reach a fellow miner trapped by a cave-ip in a small slope mine. Ten to 14 miners alternated during the night and used picks, sludges and hammers in an attempt to reach the spot where Hairy Hosmon, 49, a veteran 28-year miner and father of eight, had been working. There was no contact with Hosmon and there Were fears for his life. • v,' There were? ’“V,007,538 private and commercial cars, or one for every 6.8 Frenchmen in France New Russian Trend K's Plan Aimed at Consumer Needs Pleads Innocent on Drugs Charge A 23-year-old Mount Clemens man pleaded innocent yesterday in Waterford Township Justice Court to charges'of unarmed robbery and assault with intent to rape. Daniel L. Inscho is accused of stealing night receipts totaling $455 from a barmaid at Sharps Inn, 2661 Dixie Highway, as she left Work Nov. f2, according to state police detective Robert Neigebauer. Inscho has been serving a sentence in the Macomb County Jail for being drunk and disorderly. He was taken Into cus-today after his release yesterday. Justice John E- McGrath scheduled a preliminary examination for next Tuesday. Inscho was ordered to the county Jail after failing to meet bond of $2,500 on each charge. Reds Protest U.S. Patrols in E. Berlin. BERLIN (UPI) ~ The Communists today again denounced U.S. army patrol cars In East Berlin. The official East German Communist party newspaper Neues Deutschland said a a trip through East Berlin Friday hit a policeman who signalled it to slow down. Then the automobile continued on its way without stopping, the newspaper said. Western officials called untrue this charge and similar ones made by the Communists in the last few months. The new charge, however, increased to' fear the Communists might be planning to harau Western, allied patrols or even to halt them. The Americana, British and French send automobile patrols into East Berlin dally through the Frledrlchstrasse crossing point for foreigners on the East-West Berlin border. Thgre Is no connection between the patrols i and military convoys sent along the 110-mlle highway through Bait Germany. By WILUAM L. RYAN, AP Special Correspondent Premier Khrushchev has placed before the Soviet Communist party a program suggesting he wants to erect a monument to himself by plunging the Soviet Union into an economic revolution. If he gets his program on toe road, it can signal sharp changes in the global cold war. W it--' ★ Khrushchev’s program raises a possibility that the premier— who will be 70 in April—hopes to belqueath to the people something which will start them toward a more abundant consumer economy. At last the Soviet people were being told they were entitled to more consumer goods. The program involves massive investment — the equivalent of $46 billion - in the chemical in- jfewsAno/ysis dustry in a 7 - year plan. This cure-all proposal to attack agriculture’s ailments and begin providing the people with adequate supplies of both food and consumer goods in all likelihood will require cuts in heavy industry investment. EXPECT OPPOSITION There will be grumblingi and sullen opposition in high places, notably among unreconstructed Stalinists and among the high military brass to whom heavy industry investment means promise of superiority in superweapons, space and world pow- Thc current Central Committee meeting could mark a historic turning by the government toward its domestic problems. That in turn might mean Moscow would want to avoid dangerous cold war confrontations with the United States. it1- h ★ Khrushchev said his program meant that perhaps “we shall have to slow down for a time toe rate of growth of sonte industries.” He told the people, long plagued by shortages and irritated by lack of quality and quantity in consumer goods: MEET NEEDS “Now toe state is in a position to channel enormous means into the development of chemistry, agriculture and light industry, so as to produce more good and goods to katlsfy directly toe people’s requirements.” Revolutionary • sounding slogans have been dear to the Communist party ever since It took power in Russia, but now these sire notv enough, Khrushchev laid. (> “What we need in this case is not slogans. It is material content, practical work In the construction of a new society.” Stalin concentrated on heavy .industry and used , the output of Soviet agriculture politically for Soviet foreign policy; As recently as 1947, Khrushchev said, people were starving in some Soviet areas. He said Stalin could export grain because he cared nothing for the people’s welfare. The Soviet Union must buy grain abroad today to counter disastrous shortages caused by farm failures. This is a different era for toe U.$.S.R. Popular opinion must be taken into consideration by the party and government. The public obviously is tired of slogans and promises and Khrushchev has given voice to this weariness. Pope's Trip Stirs Talk of'Summit' From. Our News Wires VATICAN CITY - The possibility of a religious summit conference during Pope Paul VPs visit to toe Holy Land next month stirred increasing speculation in the Vatican today. Hie Rev. Pierre Duprey of toe Vatican’s secretariat for Christian unity flew to Istanbul, Turkey, last night and said he wonld consult today with patriarch Atoenagoras, 77, spiritual leader of the Eastern Orthodox Church. An informed Vatican source said today Pope Paul VI, after visiting both Israel and Jordan on his Holy Land pilgrimage, will deliver a major speech in Bethlehem Jan. 6 appealing to all mankind for, peace and unity. The source said the Pope would visit both Israel and Jordan, crossing the armed border between them twice. Wire Service Editor Dies in Washington WASHINGTON (UPI) - William E, Zimmerman, 44, Washington news editor of United Press International who had handled many of toe capital’s major news stories over toe past 20 years, died last night at Prince Georges General'Hospital. His death ended a two-month illness attributed to kidney failure. Collegians Will Sing When Phone Rings' CHAMPAIGN, IU. (UPI) -Male, students of Snyder Hall at the University of Illinois hope to serenade residents with Christmas carols via telephone. The students said that beginning tomorrow they would launch a dial-a-carol project and sing songs in response to local calls any time.of the day or night until their Christmas vacation begins. mM for Ex-Coach1 John B. Dean to Be Buried Tomorrow The funeral service for John Bernard Dean, former'St. Frederick athletics coach, will he at 11 a.m. Wednesday in the Our Lady of Lakes Catholic Church, Waterford. Burial will be in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Dean passed away Monday morning following a heart attack. He was 51. A parish Rosary is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. today at toe Coats. Funera 1 Home in Waterford Township, followed by a St: Vin-ent DePaul Rosary at 9 o’clock. ★ ★ ★ Dean graduated from St. Frederick in 1930 and began coaching toe football, basketball and golf teams toe following season. He continued there through 1940, producing several state Class C golf championship teams. DEFEATED PONTIAC Dean c o a c h e d the last St. Frederick basketball team to defeat Pontiac High. That was during toe 1935-36 season when toe Rams won, 14-12. The series was discontinued three years later, Dean also, caoched GMC Truck & Coach Division teams during the period, and was active in football, basketball, track and baseball while attending St. Frederick, At the time of his death* he was the general manager of toe Interstate Vending Co. of Detroit branch office in Troy. The son of the late Mr. and Mrs. William B. Dean, he leaves his wife Margaret; three daughters,vMrs: Robert Phillips of Detroit, Mrs. Lloyd Collier of Waterford Township and Mary Marghret at home; and a son John B. Jr. at home. v Also surviving are five grandchildren; and two brothers, William J. and Charles R., both of Pontikc. Pleads Innocent on Drug Charge A Pontiac man pleaded innor cent ye0tqrda& in Mupiq&#l Court to toe Sale and possession of narcotics. A preliminary examination was scheduled for Dec. 18 for Robert Reavis, 23, of 440 Midway. He Is in toe connty'jail. Bond of $18,ON was set. Reavis was arrested Friday evening. Marijuana was found in his possession, Pontiac police said. Two other men arrested Friday also will appear in court toe same day on the charge. SLIPPER-Y SEASON-Christmas gifts of slippers made with leather are pleasing. Clockwise from the lower left are: boy or girl leather; slipper; leather scuff for mom; slipper-boot for teens; -scuff for dad; stenciled boot for college or career girl. Strapped for Gift Idea? Think of Leather Goods “Santa-time . . . when /the givln’ is easy,” is the theme song of all gifts shoppers who put slippers high on the Christmas list. mules in gold or silver leather or a combination of the two. Darling of the teen m(M in toe slipper department is the boot in smooth, suede or brushed leather. - > Handsome slippers easy-to-buy, easy-l day gift right for every woman and child at Chrl and for many comfortable days to come. The range of leather slippers for the entire family has widened this winter to embrace a score of styles from boots to backless mules, sandals to slip- ★ * ★ ankle-high" styles of lightweight Many ankle and calf-skimming leather lined wlto shearling- Particular pets Include toe after-ski type, such as the white grained leather ankle • hut with fur duff, and the ind outdoor boot in brushed or suede leather. PLEASES MALES The bedroom boot also pleases the males of the family, In UNDERSTANDING Making a constant study of' the needs' of those who call us Is part of our professional life. We try to serve as we would want to be served. Outstanding in Pontiac for Service and Facilities 46 Williams Street FE 2-5841 boots, lined in leather or shearling, may be wofn both in and out of doprs. COLORS GALORE The i spectrum of leather colors available rivals the gala air of Christmas tree ornaments. {To make her holiday even more festive ere glove-smooth ,or silky ‘ ^ *- Classic favorite for him la, the glove leather opera-style slipper. Good gift for too traveler Is a pair of folding leather slippers. Kids, too, love It ,when Santa slips slippers Into their Christmas stockings. They enjoy wearing snug, gaily-colored slippers with bright linings. It’s Exraordinary (TM Mriluo* of IM SOW with iho WlrH of llw fWuri) Thatcher, Patterson & Wernet foilloi'i Oldeaf faaaraaee A gooey