y TWO '■■-I- THPrPONTIAC PRESS, :M0NDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1964 GEORGE GREA Seeks Seat fo Represent District 4 An Oakland Counfy Qepart* ment of Public Works employe, George Grba, today announced he will seek the District 4 noi ination foi* city comm^oner. Grba, 33, of 28 Kimball said he was “compelled to rmf’^y principle, not by personal ambition.” “I am a strong supporter of good government by example and setting things right, without forgetting the people,’* Grba said. ♦ * "■■"He Is Chief mainienanfe i spector for the county DPW. CITY NATIVE Grba, a native of Pontiac, will be seeking his first political office. He is the second person to enter the District 4 race running against incuihbent .'commissioner Winford E. Bpttom. Bottom hasn’t announced whether he win seek reelec-tton. If he does, a primary would noW be needed in his district. Grba is a UJ5. Army veteran of the Korean cimflict and graduate of Ferris Institute. ★ ★ ★ He is married and the father of two girls. NO PARTY In announcing his' candidacy, Grba emphasized he wiil ruil as an independent. ‘ net ihe westside control, downtown pressure group or those radical elements that create personal strife,’’ he said. “I will represent District 4 wnd support constructive programs for Pqntiac,” he concluded. Grba is expected to file a nominating petition sometime this week. The deadline for filing is Feb. 11. Cong Attacks U.S. Outpost SAIGON, . South Viet Nam (AP)—T^ito Communist guerrillas were killed and one U.S. officer wiHinded today in the first Viet Cong raid on an American military .compound since 1959. Maj. Gen.' Charles J. Timmes, commander of the U.S. Military Advisory Assistance Command in Viet Nam, flew to the mountain city of Kontum, 260 miles ‘ Saigon, to present the Army Commendation ■ to the soldiers'who killed the guerrillas, Spec, 4'Gale D. Flinn of Fowler, Kan The award is the Iiighest that Tirhmes is - authorize, to givi without reference to a higher command. MOST DARING The grenade attack was made at 4:30 a.m. on the headquarters of a detachment of 130 U.S. officers and men in -Kontam. It was the most daring Viet Cong exploit against ao^Mnerican unit since terrorists in 1959 invaded a movie, performance at" an U.S. major and a sergeant with grenades and machine-gun fire. Flinn was on .sentry duty because nine Vietnamese Civil Guards stationed at the compound had deserted. It was believed they might-have-been in-volved in the plan to attack the compound. Under cover bf darkness, four- in rank from major through colonel. guerrillas jcul Ihelr way llu'uUgli a barbed wire fence around the compound. While one guerrilla stood guard at the fence, three others ran toward a building housing field grade officers, who range Work to $tart on West Side Apartments (Continued From Page One) to range from $lj0 to |1|5 a month. Rents include all utilities except electricity. John Burni^ of Citizens Mortgage Corp. explained that “the instirahce comphn^’s dbfcislOn'to f&aiH^ t^ market survey which showed there is a ne^ for new apartment dwellings in Pontiac.” ■ w ★ ★ Mayor Landry hailed the project l^turday as “the first major development in Pontiac's rebuilding program. 'This will definitely help to strengthen our tax base and I’m sure these plans will act to spur more development In our city.” The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Fair, continued cold tonight. Low 14. Tuesday partly cloudy and warmer. High 34. Light variable winds. Flipn opened fife with his rifle but the intruders made it into the building, and each tossed one grenade.— One grenade went off in the room of a U.S. officer, wounding him and setting the building afire. As the terrorists ran for the fence, Phnn opened fire agaif»; They shot back but missed, and Flinn killed two of Them. The other two guerrillas escaped in the darkness. The wounded officer, whpge identity was norannounced, suffered bums, cuts and scrapes but was not in serious contbtion. He was taken to a field hospital at Nha Trang. BOMB BLAST On Saturday night, a bomb blast outside a Saigon bar killed an American serviceman and a Vietnamese. Six other Ameri-cans were wounded, onb critically- ' Communist terrorists often plant bombs in Saigon bars and movies where U.S, servicemen gather, but police said Saturday’s incident may have involved personal revenge among Vietnamese. Scientists lye- Space Failures Cameras Dpn't Work as Ranger Hits Moon PASADENA, Calif. (AP) Space scientists sifted through coded tapes today in a search for the reason why spacecraft Ranger 8 plunged into the moon with its cameras blind -to t||i.j^ wonders of the lunar landscapli. The agonizing end/ to a 66-hour flight came at 1:24 a.m. yesterday when -Ranger 6 reached its historic rendezvous — and six television cameras aboard wouldn’t func-|1»"; • Exiperts at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory here, who controlled the spacecraft's voyage, hope to find out what went wrong by Feb. 28 — the probable dale of the launching of Ranger 7. ★ ★ Laboratory directors went ahead with plaps for Ranger 7’s flight — an identical photo mission — pointing out that the Ranger series is designed to gather Information needed for manned U.S. landings planned later , this decade. FRUITLESS MISSION The fruitless journey of Ranger 6 was the sixth straight failure in the Ranger program. The cost to date; $168 million—figured at $28 million a shot. Ranger 6 was (he first of the costly spacecraft to complete the difficult moon-approach maneuver faiiltlessly — which made the blind crash even more frustrating for its designers. The camera system was considered one of the 'simplest mechanisms on the 804 - pound spacecraft. * * Sr A check of Ranger's radioed messages showtxi no sign of the code which, run throbgh a computer, would’ have produced earth's first close-up pictures of the moon. NATIONAL WEATHER Rain is expected tonight frpm (he (touttourn I’ialns ‘through Iho lower Ml.sslsslppl Volley Into ports of the southern (iiilf .■ilotes, with snow likely oyer tlie northern Rockies and the central Phiin.s It will be colder from Uie southern Plains Ihronidi Hic Misflsslppl and Ohio valley.-' into the north and mid Atlantic states and In the aoutherii Plateau region. It will be warnuT in the Northwest. GMC Making New Truck (Continued From Page One) windshield and wide-opening rear doors. Side doors can be ordered as an extra feature, . , * St * ' Handi-Vun Is similar to the (Thevy-Van 'which went Into production at CiMC late last year and is dlstrlbuled by Chevrolet Motor Division. liandl-Van will be handled solely by OMC dealers, LATEy-fr TREATMENT I,alest body priming and mel-ul treatment facjllUes at the I’onliac assembly plnnl offer advmiced corrosion reslstanee in the new truck. Cndetlmdy molslfre traps have b(’en eliminated, and side, roof, and Trent panels are one piece to eliminate corrosion-prone body Joints. Pwitiac Pms Photo AT HEARING^lS-yearKtld Daniel Lovaas (center) returned (jodayfor the continued Juvenile Court hearing into the slaying of Nancy Jean Jones. The boy was flanked by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Lovaas Jr. of 1042 Smith, Birmingham. Firings Asked^n^4inf FLINT (AP)-Genesee Coun- Manager Thomas Kay and (he ty’s one-man grand jury recommended today tlw firing of two Flint administrative officers and three other city , employes for alleged misfeasance and neglect of duty. . ★ ★ ★ Circuit Court Judge Donn D. Parker, issuing a grand jury rective, also recommended the firing of a contract employe of' the city for other reasons. W * A The action Stemmed from Parker's investigation of Flint's Lake Huron water supply project and an expansion project at the sewage treatment plant. Parker directed Flint Cjty Rlane Crash Kills All 10 Passengers GAINESVILLE, Fta. WP) - A South Central Airlines twmrc^ gine passenger plane burst into flames immediately after takeoff today, killing all 10 persons aboard when it plunged onto the the edge of the runway. The Bcechcraft airplane was Flight 510 which originated in Ocala and was en route to Jacksonville. Several people ran to the crashed plane and tried frantically to open a door. * ★ ★ Jo Ann Koweil, a secretary, said the sound of the engine on takeoff indicated there was some troilble. She said she immediately went outside the terminal. BLAZE SO HOT Would-be rescuers said they could see people sitting in their seats inside the craft, but the blaze was so hot they had to give up attempts to break open the door. “We were trying to get the door , open, but it was too hot,” .said Miss Rowell, who Joined those at-the wreckage. “We could see two people Inside. They were burning.” D. M. Carroll, a city employe, said; “It looked like the plane was about 200 feet high. The left-hand motor cut off and the engine made a whining sound. Theplahe tuirnea bii Its just like a plane circles an airport when it's way up in the air. ★ ★ * “Th^n it hit the runway and exploded and burst into flames.' Lt. Courtney Roberts of the Gainesville Police Department said identification of the bodies could not be made Immediately. Eyewitnesses said only the plane's tail section and wings remained Intact, FEEDER LINE South Central, a feeder line, sm-ves small cities in Florida, Georgia and the CarolInQs. It ha.s a fleet of eight of the twin-engine Uoec'hcraft. * ' a a Tlie firm’s headqunriers are at Ocala, Fla. It serves Charlotte and Wilmington, N.C.; Florence, Myrtle Beach, Georgetown and Charleston, S.C.; Savannah and Urunswirk, (in., and Tallahassee. Jacksonville, Pa-latka, GaliiMVllle, (.Icala, Day-Iona Reach, Orlando, Cocoa, Melixiurne, Lakeland, Bartow, Tampa, West Palmdleach, Fort I-ahdordale and Miami, Fja.' City Commission to take steps to discharge the six men. The City Commission scheduled an executive session late today to consider the findings. MEN-LISTED^............./.... Parker listed the following Works; Gerald Childers, city planner; Albert C. Hull, director of the liepartment of Purchases and Supplies, rand Henry M. Foley, contract employe assigned tp the city manager’s staff as •consultant on the 'water supply and sewage project. Oley L; Craft, Flint finance director; Lloyd S. Hendon, city clerk; Theodore D; Moss, director of the Department of Public ■~lfl—his report,—Park charged there had been Wrongful expenditure of at least $58,000 in public funds on the city projects. Birmingham Area News | Students Face Suspension BIRMINGHAM - The board of educatkm has clamped down on two more high school secret societies. About 12 students are to be suspended from Seaholm High School as a result of their af-rdiation with two fraternities. At a special" meeting yesterday, the board adopted the re-commendati(H) of Schools Supt. Dr. John B. Smith regarding the Cited were organizations known as KST and MSCP. ^ TO BE SUSPENDED Students who have been active members of either group during the current school year are to be suspended from school foe 20 days/ Lengto id ’ suspension f q r boys who have pledged toe or-, ganizations tois year will be 10 days. They will have no makeup privileges. Suspension ia to begin ’Thursday, after the students involved and th'eir parents are notified by Seaholm Principal Ross A. Wagner. Smith "said about 12 boys have admitted affiliation with the grdups. LAWFORBIDS The^ board’s crackdown b e --gan- were sent to parents reminding them that state statute forbids participatioh in secret ‘Societies by public school students. “Representatives of Tau Alpha Epsilon, one of the Seaholm sororities involved, last night reaffirmed that the organization has been inactive,at the high school this year. A-P John C. Swan The family of a 19ryear-old Bloomfield Township youth serving in the Air Force has been notified of his death bi Misawa, Japan. Air Policeman Jdin C. Swan -of 2375 E. Hammond Lake reportedly was shot in the head Satnrday. No further details were made known. The body is being returned to the United States. Arrangements are pending at Donelson-Johns Fuqeral Horae.--------- Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Luther Marcum Of Bloomfield Township; his sister, Margaret, at home; and his brother, Fred of POntiac. Deadirne Is 8 Tonight for Vpter Registration The deadline for registering to vote in the March 2 city commission primary is 8 to-, night, City Clerk Olga Barke-ley remmded Pontiac residents today. —The clerk’s office, -on the a main floor at City Hall, wIB’’''"* remain open until 8 to acedpt voter registrations., It normally closes at 5. THE PONTIAC PRESS. 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(EDITOR’S NOTE -The following questions and answers on income tax problems are of-— fered as a public service by the Internal Revenue. Service.) ' QUESTION: Why is it : so important for me to enter my social security I number on my federal in-' come tax return? I ANSWER; Starting with f' the 1962 returns, Social f Security numbers are also | 4 taxpayer identification with I ocial f These identification numbers will be used in processing returns through the automatic data-processing equipment ^ newly installed by the In-. I ternal Revenue ^rvice. i • ★ ★ ★ r For the answer to your question call your local | ’4 Internal Revenue Service s ii office. .. 's Aide to Erhard Takes Own Life War Crime Suspect . Found Haiigect in Cell DORTMUND, Germany (ff) — Ewald Peters, Chancellor Ludwig Erhard’s chief security officer, hanged himself during the night in the jail where he being held on suspicion of war crimes, the state prosecutor’s office announced today. The prosecutor’s office said Peters used a bed sheet for a rope and tied it lo the window of his cell. Peters had made the security arrangements for Erhard’s trip to visit President Johnson in Texas last December as well as for his recent visits to London and Rome. * ★ ★ He was arrested in Bonn last Friday after he returned from ' Rome with the chancellor.. HELD FOR KILLING He was being held in the Bonn jail on suspicion of taking part in mass killing of Jews in the Soviet Union during World War 11. ' Peters was one of two leading members of Erhard’s government accused of war crimes. The government is Investigating communist charges that Refugee Minister Hans Krueger committed such crimes during the Nazi occupation of Poland. Krueger resigned Saturday, saying he had committed no crimes but did hot want to damage the government. ★ ★ ★ Details of the charges against Peters were not made public. However, a government official .said he has been the head of a police unit. INVESTIGATE!)________ ile find been investigated in I960 by the Centra! War Crimes Office at Ludwigsburg but nothing wasrfountf^^icriminatc him. 11 was not known^ what led to his arrest. Officials all comment. Shortly after the as.sas,sination of U S. President .lohn F. Ken-ned.v, Peters appeared on a national television program. Some observers believe sotneone who knew him in Russia may have recognized him. (AdvtrOMmMt) 'CHANGE-OF-UFE itiiido m* ser««ili; at my husbaad'' If yhtKUffer from the Irritable, restless feelings, hot flashes of ehange-of-lifc’-listenl In tests by doctors Lydia E. Pinkham Vegatable Compound brought in the relief it giVfs those vous. "out of sorts" feelings of tnld-llfc "change”! Get Lydia Pinkham Compound today I JAetsttirsDSkirsvitSstle strvssi lyiteis ts rsilsw SlttrMisrksttirs*N"l For persons filing the item^ ized, or long form, income tax return, ’The Press here reprints a chart showing how much can be listed for the sales tax. ft. I. Nixon, district IRS. di-rjKtor, said taxpayers are required to substantiate any de^ duction they claim. _ ‘Ordinarily however, they will not be asked to support the sales tax deductibh claimed unless it exceeds the amount shown in- the table.” ACCOUNTED FOR Nixon said the table takes into account state taxes paid on large household items and automobiles, so these major items cannot be added to the allowance ■ •k ★ - ★ Nor is the Michigan cigarette tax d.eductible, Nixon reminded. Oakland County residents can contact the IRS office in the I mo|t^inforraatlon aboufth® <1®-Pontiac Federal Building for I duction. '' ' fL,------------------CLIP AND SAVE------------------------1 ! Sales Tax Toble < The Internal Revenue Service says this table may be used for figuring your Michigan sales tax. On Lhnf ... UiHfer t1,000 '1 -^i,inoBwnrtrv‘ I 1J.J00—*------- r2,ooo I ttsoo r 2,000 under t 2,500 . I 9,500 I I 3,500 under t 4,000 ■ $ 4;000 under $ 4,500 I $ 4,500 under I 5,000 I t 5,000 under S 5,500 : % 5,500 under $ 5,000 I 5 5,000 under S 5,500 I 4.^00 under $ 7;000 I 5 7.000 under t 7,500 5 7,500 under i 0,000 I 1 1,000 under I 1.500 I $ 1,500 under S 9,000 Army Guard Kills Woman in Korea tfEOUL^Korea tffi - A U. S. Army spokesman' announced today that a' South Korean woman^ was killed' by an AmerlMn guard' aftCT she fcespassed on aa Army compound. ■ The incident occurred early yesterday near the headqnar- shqr about ZTisiles BofOror Seoul. 515,000 ur ■ 515,000 ur I 517,000 ur er 512,000 tr 515.000 tr 515,000 ir 517,000 ir 515,000 ir 519,00r I 519,000 under 120,000 335 > 372 U-----—CLIP AND SAVE 3"tI 11 The victim, Suh Ypng-ja, 34, I i ignored repeated challenges and j [ started running, the spokesman {I said. A Korean with the woman escaped^ apparently unhurt. ★ ★ ■* ’The. spokesman said the guard’s name would not be announced until after an investigation is completed. Car Crashes Info Bedroom PALO ALTO, Calif. (APT -A car swung off a street curve across a lawn and into a house-at • 1 a.m. Sunday, caved in a bedroom'wall and hurled a woman out of bed, ..Helen Schviarze, 50, was tak^' to a hospital with head, qerations and a possible epneus- Police said the caivdrivCT Douglas Ray OlnjStead, 20, of Palo Alto. He and a passenger were unhurt^ The whale shark is the largest fish, growing to a length of 45 feet. Ex-President Aide. Dies CLEARWATER, • Fla. (AP)-Thomas W. Brahany, 87, who served as an assistant secretary to President William Howard Taft and later was secretary to President Woodrow Wilson, died Sunday. Brahany retired in 1962 as public relations director for an investment firm. He was born in. Madison, Wis, - Kadilkic 1/3 or 1/5 cut, Manila A-X Index Lotlor Siio'A-Z Loflol Sira A-Z Index Cards 3*5 Blonk or Ri ..............2.16/C 6RE60RY, MAYER & THOM M 67 N. Woodword Ml 6-4180 BIRMINGHAM* No. A Stria #/ rrj^orlf h Blet SbitU Jaigntd ft degMsint yom tvitb tit Bhit SbitU Btmfia endlbi mift buebtdk Bbu SbitU ' SUBSCRIBEKUY BLUE SHIELD, THE MEDICAL-SURGICAL CARE PLAN WHICH PAYS YOUR FOR YOU.. ] In 1953, Michigan Blue Shield paid Medical-Surgical Bills for its subscribers. In 1963, over 3,000,000 bills were paid. Because of this volume, any savings in administrative and operating costs can be significant, and all procedures are the subject of constant research and study. * , - ''Tn recent years, for example, research led to the installation of modern electronic data proiressinj; equipment that helped increase bill paying efficiency, and other Blue Shield administrative procedures. Now, as the result of studies begun several years ago. Blue Shield is inau-gurating several "Billing Procedure” requirements. These requirements are necessary to provide ever increasingly efficient and proper administration. The requirements, in brief, are these:— 1. Because your'Doctor has the final responsibility for your Medical-Surgical care. Blue Shield requires, effective February; 1, 1964, that all charges submitted for payment by Blue Shield must be signed by the Doctor performing the service. iUs signature must appear on every invoice rendered to Blue Shield for payment. 2. The.Medical and/or Surgical services being billed to Blue Shield shall be described in a manner that will enable Blue Shield to more quickly and accurately determine the amount to be paid to your Doctor. These requirements have been put into effect in the interest of better cost control, uniform billing procedures, and ovei^-all efficiency. They will i serve as an added safeguard for you, the Blue Shield subscriber. Further, by order of its directors, Bluie Shield management will, as in the past, protect without charge, any subscriber whom it learns has been improperly billed for services in fiis Blue Shield contract. The requirements cited in this report have been made only in the interest of securing the maximum amount of Medical Care possible for your Blue Shield dollar. Blue Shield, a non-profit organization directed by 33 community leaders from the fields of business, labor and medicine, is proud of the fact that over 94% of every subscriber’s dollar goes for better health' protection. Blue Shield, as always, is dedicated to remaining "The First Choice of Those Who Have A Choice.” BLUE SHIELD OF MtCHIGAN ~ ^ MI^IOAN MEDiCAi SliRVJCi / 441 I. JEFFERSON AVE. t DETROIT 26» MICHIGAN ritai* mall m* Ik* aiu* $hl*ld R • p o r I I ck*ck*d «i th*y bieom* JLUf SHIIID OP MICHIGAN-MICHIGAN MIDICAL SIRVICI 441 I. JIPPIRSON, DITROIT 26, MICHIGAN □ Ym ihniW k*nw — ih«n, cir« vtry U* dlStrtncii kitwran lira Shldd and Q Why Hu* thl*M d**» n*l ywarantra fuN payiMHl *1 iMdInil car* l**i la# ih* •vliKrIbar with an Imam* avar lYJOO □ What, h*a|Nm -Daclaf fllai l*r t far lr**lln« yaw. Q Haw and why II Mmandawily. Q Kr Imraaiiad II traaimani - and Ih* THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 19G4 FIVE Guinea's Economy in Trouble After Five Years of Marxism -■^-'^fSIXTORVS'NOTE': Andrew ’ Borowiec of the Associated Press is touring the new nations of West AJrica. Here is his report from Guinea. By ANDREW BOROWIEd CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) -Gumea’s economy is in serious tri(mble after, a five-year effort to adopt Marxism. The United States is being asked to help the former French colony in West , Africa to survive. Does BLADDER IRRITATIOH MAKE YOU NERVOUS? After 21, common Kldner or Bladder Ir- men and may make you tenae and nervoue from too frequent, burning or Itching urination both day and night. Secondarily, you may logo aleen and aulfer from Head-aehee. Backache and feel old, tired, de-preaaed. In auch Irritation, OYSTEX uaually brlnga fact, relaxing comfort by (Advertisamant) ^ People 50 to 80 Tear Out This Ad . . . and mail it today to find out how you can apply for a $2,OOQJlfe insurance policy. Once your application is approved, the policy can be carried the rest of your life. , Simply send your name, address and year df birth to_01d' American, 4900 Oak, Dept. T221A, Kansas City, Mo. 64141. The government of President l^kou Toure has asked the United States for $30 million ^orth of commodities for the current year in addition to $15. million worth of food already approved. • There are serious doubts that Washington will approve the en- better or for worse by nearly I Americans are slowly mov-2,000. ..Soviet bloc technicians, ing in. So far 50 aid technicians The number is now about half and a Pea'cb Corps contingent Tire sum. Uncertainty the future of the first African nation, to hoist the banner of Socialist revolution. The experiment has showed that socialism does not bring magie-solutiops to the problems of undferdevelbp^HBatipns. RIOTING JIEPORTS There are persistent reports of rioting in the interior jungle and bush. - American diplomats here, who are generally sympathetic to the young country’s plight, are recommending that as nup^Jielp as possible be granted. Thfey describe Guinea as an “experiment in complete inde-jpehdence,’’ in conti^f; to toblt of Africa which still relies heavily op former colonial masters. : ★ ★ ★ Potentially one of the richest countries,jn West Africa because of bauxite (aluminum ore) deposits and rich pineapple and banana plantations, Guinea cik itself off from France in 1958 and turned to thfr Soviet bioc for help. Communist money icians poured in but resulted in a series of failures and disappointments. Experts believe tljat in effect the economy collapsed. But the shock was reduced because n Japanese Y0KY( business deal between . industry and Communist Chi^ may be signed in April. / The last such hrani^ion brought Nationalist China ito the brink of breaking dipio- . matic relations with Japan. It may luqipea again. Textile industry sources ^id Japan’s Dai Nippon spinning company is ready to sell Communist China a second vinylon synthetic textile plAnt. ★ ★ ★ The. sales contract probably will be signed in Peking in April, the sources said. The pricer $27.7 million to $30 million, including a fee for technical guidance. • APPROVAL LIKELY Japan’s Conservative _ mentprobably will approve the sale as it did last year pn another , vinylon plant for the China mainland. Japanese ^ime Minister Hayato Ikcda favors trade with Red China. But he is not ready to accept Socialist de- per cent of the 3 iiillliun peup! live outside a monetary econ omy.' w BUNGLING METHODS Pessimists among both Com munist and Western observer believe ill-adopted methods anc bungling have slowed Guinea development for years. The controlled radio and pres continues to wage a vigorbi campaign against “the sequel ol colonialism’’ and speaks of leading the rest of Africa toward revolution. Some Western diplomats point out ^lat what is being described as an experiment in total independence was propped up — for DAINTY DUSJtRS Spring fashiontd to begin and end a day 2 99 Ultra shean polished cotton, Dqcron* polyester / nylon / cotton dusters. Embroidered applique, lace trims. Paster prints. Misses', women's sixes. *Hf$ t.M. thil'M ('o'p' OMN IViaV Nt«HT TO f . M*tid«r thr««ek S*tufd»r DOWNTOWN and, DRAYTON PLAINS The Russians appear to be phasing out their aid to Guinea but still keeping important long-range trade deals. They buy 90 Japan, China mwing Big Plant Deal per cent of ihe pineapple and banana crop and supply most of the gasoline and rolling stock: America’s growing interest in Guinea apparently hfik angered France, which wanted to punish the country for .choosi^ immediate rather than progressive, independence, / * ★ * Toure still maintains strong ties and political preference for •the East. 'The French-speaking Guinean elite prefer France and things French. Americans afe considered somewhat funny strangers. . Mao Tse-tung’s government. Formosa was so angry over Japan’s traiieJwith Red ,China, plus Tokyo’s repatriStKtt of a Communist/Chinese interpreter,, that it almost broke diplomatic relations. ★ ★ Nationalist China did cut off some of its trade with Japan, a big sacrifice - for- Formosa. About 50 per cent of Formosa’s exports go to Japan. ' FORMOSA PROTESTS Demonstrations' broke out in Taipei at the Japanese embassy. Windows were broken before police arrived. Some Nationalists, particularly military men who fought in Worid War IL stiU harbor personal dislike for the Japanese.. Taipei reports said a Nationalist af-my officer tri^ to seize command of the armor corps partly because he was angry the government did not take a firmer anti-Japanese stand. ^^e textile plant will be to (jornmunist China on the installment plan, if the Japanese government approves the deal. Industry sources said Communist China would make a 25 p€r cent down payment, with the balance spread over five years. Interest would be 6 per cent per year. DISCUSS PROBLEMS U. S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk was-in Japan last Week discussing trade and economic problems with the Japanese cabinet. Rusk said the-United States will nof trade with Communist China and cojjsidered the sale ol American wheat to Soviet Russia to be a special case. Sources cloto to Rusk said the United States would • voice no objections if its friends trade with Red China so long as strategic goods were not involved. But these sources said the United States would take a dim view of transactions with the Communists if the cr^it terms were so easy as to amount-to foreign aid.. let m Open The Door to your Money nnd MODERNIZATION problems!!! It’s EASY as 1-2-3 to get the Home Improvements You Need and a? the same time PAY OFF ALL YOUR BILLS with one convenient monthly payment ‘ *‘Enjoy The Finer Things In Life** G&M ^ONSTRUaiON CO. Building In Pontiac Since 1945 24 HOURS DAILY NOW THAT ALL THE SHOUTING ‘ ’ IS OVER WE WANT TO ANNOUNCE THAT THE PONTIAC GTO WON CLASS 2 OF THE PURE OIL PERFORMANCE TRIALS WE’RE NOT SURPRISED In three grueling tests of acceleratlQn, braking and economy, a Pontiac GTO with an optional 34g-hp engine outscored every other car In its class to cop the winner’s trophy for Class 2 of the NASCAR sanctioned and supervised event. This meant beating five other makes with large V-8 engines of 362 to 400 cu. In,, each a finely-tuned production car with a skilled driver at the wheel. Which merely proves the Tempest GTOle ell Pontiac. SEE YOUR AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER IN METROPOLITAN (PONTIAC) FOR A WIDE CHOICE OF WIDE-TRACKS AND G00t| USED CARS, TO, PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE OINIRAL MOTORS CORPORATION 6S MT. CLIjMINS. PONTIAC. MICH. JACK W. HAUPT PONTIAC SALES, INC. N. MAIN STRUT, CLARKSTON. MICH. KEEGQ SALES and SERVICE, INC. {3080 ORCHARD LAKI RD. ' I KIICO HARBOR. MICH. . RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 09 BROADWAT (M-24) LAKI ORION. MICH, HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, fNC. ■ w,,, UO S. WASHINGTON. OXFORD. MICH. SHELTON PONTIAC-lUICK, INC. 22} main strut. ROemSTIR, MICH. THE PONTIiVC PRESS 48 West Huron Street MONbAYv -FJEBRUARY 3, 1964 Pontiac, Michigan Advertlsins Director It Seems to Me . Voice of the People: ‘Mental Health Program Needs Area Cooperation’ age the use of public credit include those tor the insurance and guarantee of private mortgages and loans---- TOTAL DEBT “This debt philosophy has apparently permeal^ the national economy, total^ebt — federal, state and lo^, corporate, and private — ms been increasing at a rate 'ol about $65 billion a wsir. It now totals more than a trillion dollars . . . measure at this time would contribute to “sound and constructive progress.” He pointed out that a tax-re-ductipn bill also was passed in 1954 and yet, in the 11 fiscal _ years since them, net federal deficits have totaled $46.4 billion, “including the budget estimates for this year and ne*t.” ' Byrd, of course, is against the pending tax-reduction bill because he thinks expenditures should first be cut. The senator questioned whether the enactment of such a tax The senator therefore contended that, since tax reductions have not stimulated the economy to the point where deficits eatv^be removed, deficit spending has not proved successful. Bob Considirie Says: Money for Oswald Widow Is Bewildering to Friend Recent Political Happenings ^|j|^ Arousing Pontiac’s Interest Pontiac politics are popping. the French actions''sway a flock of • if if ★ African colonies to vote for Red Within a fairly shaft space of China’s admission to the U.N., de ' time, we have witnessed the. Gaulle’s disservice to the world Jaycee vote on the charter will be incalculable. If this comes amendment which carried *by about, it may be high time for the the most overwhelming margin United States, to consider picking of anything that has been on a marbles and fading from local ballot since they made the U.N. scene. Chief Pontiac the Indian of the ’ ^ ★ ★ Year. Fellowi** that, we wit- Preaideat Jehraon ia ander- aeaaed a aimrMac aad gtattfy- up and he ing interest among candidates ^ assembly meet- for the commission in Apnh irtg scheduled for September put ^ „ Several men stepped forward off until after the elections. The ‘You’ve Made My Visit A:1H^py One! from each district almost imme- President doesn’t fancy running ------------------—------^---------------------------" ■ ■ ' ' ’ ■" — ^diately and others will probably after Red China has _ ______ follow. ^ ^ bullied her way into the United Davul liaWt'eilCC Says: —"-t- — - , • ' ^ Nations over our strenuous pro- “ And now we face two added de- tests. Our prestige would suffer T/-d T-m A velopments which are pertain to- and the voters might take this JL/GDt, AS AlTCrGclSlrl^ have a direct bearing on the pri? into account when they visited----------------—-------------------------- ■ _____________ __________________________ maries and elections ahead. The the polling places in November. WASHINGTON - Public debt new City Manager, Robert A. ★ ★ . and private debt are increasing CARTER, was indicted by a Flint As Red China cracks the whip at an alarming grand jury and arrested in connec- • in Southeastern Asia,, her endorse- ^ate^ tion..with • procedures that took ment by'France suggests that de giosLd over°o? place when he was cUy manager of Gaulle either fumbled the ball ignored in Flint—and which preceded his de- badly at a psychological moment Washington, parture. " —or played it that way on purpose. if if if The Chicago Tribune states that paid to unpleas-i Mr. Carter is released on bond “endorsement this precise June- ant truths suchf and says he welcomes the chance ture, suggests a malicious intent.’* cu'sed^in a' to explain his version of the Those are strong words. speech* a f"ew LAWRENCE transactions iii court. He will be a J • /v i • by Sen. Harry F. Byrd gIveH the opportunity. There ^^nGHHl LOnClUSlOH . .^ (D-Va.) — was considerable d hs c u s s i o n well-thumbed PntiHnr rommission * ® hensiveoutline of the deteriorat-- A Til rnrfpr herauHe of notebook of your peripatetic ye** ing situation In the finances of engaged Mr. Carter because of ^ . thUnited States government. the g. After all the bills for the Estes Certainly under the doch-ine missloner W.lbam Taybr re ^ ..equal time ” Mr. Byrd -- framed from voting for Mr. ^ principal spokesman of Garter when he was officially tee of three found Itself with a opposition viewpoint and tendered the place by the other balance of $26.27 which was mailed the Senate’s Finance Commit- six commissioners. to the United Fund..............Hus- tee ^ ^ .X. band: “Guess how many famous J ★ * ^ ... , « nence in the press in telatlon And now Commissioner MifeTPN ; , Wile: to the optimistic statements Henry resigns and declares he will “I’m not sure, but It’s one less than by President Johnson recently turn his attention "to greater you think.".................Somerset I. hi. ««»n.k report to Con- things." This Is probably a ^17 Maugham Is hard at work on a ‘ sensible decision and will redound novel Involving the dime-a-dance significant facts which, it to the benefit of Mr, Henry and to girls—and he turnted ninety .. .. they continue to go unheeded by the City df Pontiac. He has been a • ■ . :“JFK': The Man and the Myth” governmental policy makers, controversial figure ever since he was on all the best seller lists when WwfsS.' Went to the City Hall and was often Ibc assassination happened and It gyrd puifu this way: the willing cause of turmoil through was immediately , withdrawn from * * his arrests and attacks on others, publication. But now the mall SUm'S . ★ ★ ★ orders have put it Into its 15th be $10 billion. Together,, these All of these factors add up to edition. will become the greatest two- a spirited primary and election ^ ★ ★ year peacetime deficit in hist^^^ . .. • rri I. iA ^ —totaling $16.3 billion, in the spring. I he cityw ide diM- - Purely u e r - cu»,ioa. will l.e a heallh, thing 1>F.P«« ngritm for .he r„mnu,ml.v and should .a t.r an result in a much, stronger gov- eapedally at- from $16 billion tb $43 billion, ernment and commission, tractive area The bigger ami faster deficits Pontiac people have really ’ younir ladv‘ Di- of the’80 s are raising the debt been aroused. ana iLer. . . . ^Ton^ Miiw.U Wnrwo ■ “There U iu» doubt about the Mutn worst ... ^ ^ Chicago Irl- fact that federal taxes are too The Asiatic situttUoiv wmmia. DIANA bune kayii at high. They ihould be cut. But You wonder now whether even least .'12 newr TV showa. are the hard fact li that the basic the impetuous Charles DE Gaulle planned for the fall. Garry envisioned the full consequences of Mmire, Milch Miller and Phil *****" * ' his nrerinitate recognition of Red Silvern have..network thumbs . China. And his own rocky ship of bending downward. . . . . . . . and natlond dete^ for the state still licads into tlie open .seas ... Ed Sullivan aaya Eddie Fish- steady rise in federal expendl- hreiikers iiliend "I Elizabeth Taylor tures, but he declared that “the with bioakn.s al.uul, »^und stupid, aa he ran out on bjg increases in spending are in . ~ y ★ ★ fkiii 1.1. ....I Ih.ir Iwn die domestic - civilian pro- S , c r .. I a ry .rifl«l. R Q R k ItaUhl. H.yn«l«to juM paints a dark pldarcfFranC. *t‘ , ,*f * ,* , . 1,1.. nn,i n..in(u mil 'ises him (In pftnt) to ‘shut He pointed out that, since the /hew assm^ nnd points out onrr.vfng Korean War, the federal spend- / graphiciilly thnl Peking is tiu i .--i, inr Tavlnr ing lotnl has increased by more current menace in South Asia . ^ H’an $:W billion, and that, out of and Is openly planning on forays if ir Ibis sum, only $7.5 billion was into Latin America. The word Overheard: “My wife’s driving has pes"sueh'as “peace” bait little place In the improved so much we can^repair wj^pplmWTH Red China scheme of affairs. instead of replhc- oft-rencal- Helligerence is the theme song. .......... Johnson’s Sercice to the growUi i She “orders de (taulle to brcnK favorite TV show Is “Bonanza” (It’s the gross national product as an with NatlonaliMt (:hlna to his Indication of remarkable prog- amazement nnd he balks; but he fjarland In ease you has deliberately let himself In it a "Increasing debt ami conlln- for this kind of international didn t, know it, the gicalcst U.S. p,,. . badgering. Either he goes itlrthg Chess player IS Bobby Fischer. He s icrn of eronotnlc philosophy .r h. Ilu,l I,. hHH vrry y.ung .ml lu,.v .nough to l.lu«iliT.f ' l'l»‘ I" “’"I'll “P ™«'’' Ito, I.C'J I. Iiwrrl,.. Illr lie’s in a self-made jam. loui;li l(u.sslHn.s... l>ept, of so-callml gross mithmnl prod- if if if (‘•hcei'.s and Jevrs: the (”s- Mlclil act.... Just as this alliance aid.s , Red gun biiNkelball leam; the J’s- He- “^laic and lontl (Hi now ap- Chlnft’s position In Asia, it clef- .schools fo\- the way cll.^adpllne Initely damages the U.S. hi/itlle has gotten out of hand. * s , tlKfre agijiinst cominunlKin. Atul if - Haiiomi A. I''iTZcn:nAi,ii ("Kcdcml prngrmn.t m cm'our- ^,ii-' , : V The Oakland County Cominunity Mental Health Board is a newly-formed group working on a plan to help adults and children. This group has made a study of needs and feels the first step is setting up mental health outpatient clinics. You do not feel it is necessary? Then take a look at the horrible crimes in our county last year and read the psychiatrists’ comniehts. - . ■ .............. ± / It was my good fortune to work for Dr. C. A. Neafie and Dr. John D. Monroe, two fine health ydirectors in Pontiac and Qakland County. These / two gave their entire professional lives to further / health needs in our area. Michigan has a definite lack of facilities for the care and treatment of the mentslly ill. How it must have grieved Dr, Monroe wheh a youngster found guilty of murder was ordered to the state hospital for treatment, but there was no room and he had to be kept in the youth home for several months. People in this area should give full cooperation to the mental health program. A. Green, R.N. ^Could Someone Have Stopped Ruby?’ Would someone explain to me how Jack Ruby could murder • Oswald while the cameras were on him? I have been trying to figure this out. . If they could take a picture on the spot, it seems someone could have said or done something to prevent the killing. Mrs. M. V. Evaos ‘City Needs Firemeii to Fight Fires’ We should not ask our firefighters to flood ice rinks. That’s up to the city’s recreation and water departments. If firemen were 1 hniiae and family, we would be V e minute late in s e very upset to hear that they were at an ice skating rink. Every run they make is dangerous, even if .it’s a false alarm. Being the mother of two city firemen, I know."" 443 S. Anderson Mary Dennis Says Educate Children in ‘How to Live’ The old saying; “When I was 16 I thought my dad was stupid, but at 21 I was amazed that he got so smart in just five years,” seemed humorous when my youngsters were small. But now that they’re teen-agers it’s not hiimorOUs, but frightening. It’s also alarming when we read that one of the nfajor causes of death among our-xollege students is suicide. Personnel direetprs tell us thq major reason for men being fired is that they can’t get along wi(h people. It seems our school superintendents and principals should do something. If they haven’t a textbook to use, I suggest Dale Carnegie’s “How to Win Friends and Influence People.^’ It might be used^-dntil they can develop- something better. It would only seem to bP coidmon sense to educate our children in how to live as well as how to make a livingf Father of a Perplexed, Know-It-AU Teenager Disturbed by Smoke-Filled City Buses NEW YORK - People ... Places . . . Things . . . My distinguished British journalist f r i e.n d, Henry Thody, is bewildered by news of approx-iiftatSly $20,000 sent to Mrs. Lee Oswald slrice the assas-8 i n a t i 0 n o( President Kennedy. “She must be cONSIDINB f 1 a b b ergast- ed,” chop-whiskered Henry said at the Overseas Press Club bar t’other night. “I was married to a Slav once. Grand girl,, curiou; mind. realize that the first eight hours are the mosUmportant. “Gum and candy are helpful substitutes. Are parents aware of the smoke-filled city buses are subjected to as transportation to and from Madison Jr. ffigh? Is there no law governing a city bus that could put the violators off? Is there no Bus driver who could enforce it? Parents have complained to the hchool board; bus company, principal and police department, but the problem remains un-'ved^ Some parents have «taruid 4rlving. the chiidron to school , "Cooperation of the. smoker’s wife must be obtained, since she will bear the brunt of the patient’s irritation.” Okay, AMA, but suppose your wife smokes like a chimney? (OlttrlbutMl by King FMiurti SyndlCbit) rather than risk the chance of clothing catching on fire. We’re disgusted with our children coming home smelling like an all-night poker party and having to comb cigarette fragments out of their hair. Maybe a cold walk home by some of these offenders will enlighten them about public laws. . . Inquisitive (Editor’s Note to ‘‘Disgusted Taxpayer For Years and U.$. Citizen Too;” We Publish no letters at ail without bonafide names and addresses for the files. A pen name can be used in many Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Advice to Parents The Somerville (N.J.) Messenger-Gazette an architect, or the contractor who happens to be a former treasurer of the Democratic National Committee. “Mrs. Oswald, thinking as a Slav, must be saying to herself: “ ‘What manner of cduntry am I in? If my husband had shot, Khru.«ihchev during the time we were living in Russia, not only he but I would be dead now. But zounds! Here thlp send me To insure the education of your teen-ager, parents need to puli a few wires—television, telephone, and ignition. Ill-Housed The New York Hetald Tribune money . The man who said that “Con- gress’ right h Meanwhile, the National Geographic Society has pusjied its new Capital home ten stories into the sky, turned the heat on and is in business for good. The cost was much less, but that doesn’t account for the quiet efficiency by the Geographic Society and the monumental bungling on the Hill. conservative. When he or she sees the federal government squandering money that it has taken from his or her paycheck, these labor union mwnbers become just as indignant and aroused as any other taxpayer. Beat quote I’ve heard (and I hope It’s authentic) in connection with the argument between the Air Force generals and the/ defen.se department over the need for a new manned bomber is crcdltes point. Work for Free The Ames Tribune Whenever conservative political candidates have appealed to Ilboi- unlOH mem-, hers and taken the time and made the effort to explain to these numbers the true facts of ecof^nic life, they have ^^clved |elltfcal iB^pert. “If somebody can prove jo me that the airplane invented the Wright brothers. I'll forget what I’ve .said aboul^' the manned bomlier.’’ Tip from the American Medical Association on how to give them up: “The smoker must be slopped completely, not even one rigarei per day permit-, led. If he were alive today he might have something further of Interest to say about a House of Representatives that preaches sermons on- thrift while spending nine years and $83 million for an unfinished third office building to be equipped with those essentials for survival like heated swimming pools, a gymnasium and three-room suites. A football coach is a man who can get kids to work harder for nothing than they would for $2 an hour'Vt home. Not All Alike Although this conservatively inclined labor union membership hgs no official or organizational representation in the AFL-CIO and other segments of organized labor, they are a definite and potent minority and a great worry to labor union officials. The State iMbor News (Columbus, Ohio) Inflation “The, .smoker sliould pick a Imgcl dale, such a.s a weekend away from..smoking a.s.soclntcs. “Up .should publk'ly -slate hl.s Inipiillon.s Jo .stop on this day. Work was supposed to have been comphded two year.s ago but occupancy of the so-called Rayburn Building is still many months, and many millions, in the future. Just why the House feels so ill-housed in its two fine edifices (Its membership hasn’t chahgc^ in half a century) isn't clear, but Its war on poverty sure (s hell. The AFL-CIO’s Cbmmlttee on Political Education (COPE) tries to give, the impresaion that all members of AFI^-CIO labor unions are liberal-s in their political affiliation. The Cherryvate (Kan.) Republican Inflation is that period tohen a mon con lose his shirt, not only in the stock market, but also In the supermarket. — MOST IMPORTANT “On D-day, (ho pnlicnt should Wo are told^ that the (;haotic state of things has nothing to do with the “arehilqiT” )vhj) Isn't This Is an exaggeration as has been demonstrated time and again In hithmal, state, and local elecMons. A tul^ stantlal minority of at least 3$ < per cent of labor union iriem-bcrshlp hSs consistently Voted (or conservative candidates. ■ ■ ‘ i : ★ \ Through the drcumslance of limited Incomj?, the average lulior union member has to be Tht AMOcItlM Prtii It « —•-■-lytly to thg ui« (or r of oil Mol no«(i prlr Ingtion. Micomb. LopOoi nnd Wotblonow.Counmi If U •ii.oo « olioOlMirySn Mltblgai, •II olhor gMb* bi, (ho UnHod tlotot tN-MA yoor, All rrfoli tub-tirldilont tWyoblt In otlv«nco, Potlogf hot boon poW of (ho 1nd> cloM rofo of Ponfloc, MIchigon. f:'.- r. ‘ i ^ - ■ !:■> ■ .1 • ■ THF/poyTIAC PRESS,-^rOXDlVV. FEBitUARY 3, 1964 '. ir' SEVEN 1-YEAl^ WARRANTY 90 DAYS SERVICE WITH FREE DEUVERY TRADE • 23*'-23,000 VOLT HAND-WIRED TV CHASSIS • GENUINE WALNUT CABINET • AM-FM RADIO-9-TUBE • 4 MATCHED STEREO SPEAKERS • 4-SPEfD STEREO^HANGER WITH SAPPHIRE STYLUS - SYLVAN STEREd S TV Sales Open Monday and Friday Evenings 'til 9 236S Orchard Lk, Rd. (Sylvan Center) Phone 682-0193 Avoid Arguments Keep MouJh ShuFBefore Medf By HAL BOYLE NE’;Y YORK- (AP.)-Things a columnist might never know if he didn’t open his mail: One way to keep peace in the family is to keep mum before meals. A survey found that most quarrels between husbands and wives erupt just before the dinner hour. > ■ ★ ★ ' If all the motor vehicles in the United States were placed bumper to bumper they would form a line long enough to reach I the moon—and some days that I seems to be just wjiat has happened. Ardent hobbyists sometimes impress us as being a bit balmy Imt psychiatrists say no. They, have found that well-balanced individuals are more likely to have hobbies than those who are either neurotic or psychotic. lousy inventions (Hir quotable notables: “We owe to the Middle Ages the two worst inventions of humanity-romantic love and gunpowder’’ —Andre Maurois. The present generation has seen a great religious revival in this country, but, according to Catholic Digest magazine, 100 million'Americans still profess no particular religious faith. ★ • * * In 1962, cancer claimed more than 275,000 lives. Doctors estimate that ;earlier diagnosis could liave prevented approximately 75,000 of these deaths. Washington is the only state named after a U.S! president. Four state capitals bear presi-totial names. They are Madison, Wis.; Jefferson City, Mo., Jackson, Miss.; and Lincoln, Neb. , BAD SIGN Folklore: If you knock over the pepper shaker, that’s a sign I company is coming. You can also expect visitors if your, eyebrow itches, you get two pieces of butter on your plate, or If a bumblebee flies 4n an open window in your home. Quickies: FTogs can*^sing under water. About a fifth of the earth’s surface is permanently frozen. Hogs fatten better and fight less if soothing music is piped into their pens, Ripe watermelons range in weight from five to 125 pounds. Women suffer seasickness more often than men. It was Ralph Waldo Emerson who observed, “We are always getting ready to live, bu^ never living.’’ The inhalation of gasoline fumes reacts on some people the same as alcohol. THOMAS FURNITURE KEEPS PPSCES DOWN SEALY DIVAN SALE 2 matiTiesses and 2 box springs on legs, four quality piecOs for one budget price , Whdt a buy! Mattresses with hundreds of resilient coils, heavy duty covers; quality box springs on sturdy legs, choice of 30,36,39", Great for children's room or guest room; also as studio-bed combo for dens! Bronzelone frame, marbelized bi-preisure lop retiilj tlaini and mart. jpx40", opens lo 48". Four padded choiri. fiornltiire DR.A.lC’TOilSr ntx.xm lacwir. • oit> 4>oBai The newest! A ■ Florentine \ w iimi . ^ ceiling lite i L '1,1 ^ijpi OQc 'CHARGE ir j .Screwi 1 n 10 any , lockel. AII1 i q u e while finish. Adds beaUly lo holl, den Or paliol OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday Inrough Solurdoy DOWNTOWN STORI ONLY THE PONTIAC PRESS/'MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3,/1964 NEW YORK m r- Five chil-ren and the mother of two of them died yesterday in,a Harlem tmement fire. A sixth child was optically injured. “Were it not for the fact that (fire) engine 58 happened to be passing by, the death toll would have mounted,” said Fife Commissioner Edward Thompson. “People Just stood and looked from t h street inst^ of pulling a fire box.” The fire truck creV saw smoke pouring from a fourth-lloor window of the tenement while ffeturhing from a false alarm. HELPING HANIWerry Holland of 664 James Town gives daughter Cindy, 6, a few pointers on how to shoot pool. They are practicing at the Golden Cue^ in Walled Lake, ope of the new modern bUliard parlors geared toward family entertainment. Colors, Lights and Music Make Pool a Family Sport By JEANMAIBE ELKINS Poof is emerging ‘from the dark, smoke • filled pool hail. Bie game^is-now being played in bowling alleys, at home and —in modem, Tvell--^ighted bU Hard parlors catering to women and fqmljy grniips ___________ No longer is the game connected with the “tbugh guys” those with long hair, dirty fin-■ gemails, black leather Jackets Enthusiasts'now include ladies and children along with some of the world’s most prominent personalities. NEW HALLS New pool halls are springing up all over the area. Completely modem, they feature ample lighting, pastel colored fables, music and other such attractions to liire the female customer and the younger set. One such establishment is the Golden Cue In Walled Idike. Opening only m short time ago in -the old theater building, it is well lighted, clewn and features thick carpeting and patio furniture as well as refreshments. The newest in pool, billiard and snooker tables are here in decorator colors of green, gold, blue and tomato-soup red. Soft music is tuned to the age group playing, pop music for teen-agers and classical and old standards for families and older groups. WOMEN’S POOL LEAGUE Club owners, William Berryman of West Strathmore and William Harris of Sylvan VII lage, are anticipating formation of women’s leagues In the spring. , Not to be left out of the picture, many bowling alleys are now accommodating the pool enthusiast. The great majority of the area bowling establishments have now installed one or more pwl tables. These range from bumper pool and the smaller or lounge size table right up to Ihe regulation 4Hi X 9-foot table, d('-pendlng on amount of s p a c c available. * W • * Some more enterprising bowling alley owners are building special additions to their present buildings to aecommod'ate a number of tables. HOWES LANE,H prices have been marked down from those in past years.” Most popular size, table is the seven fooH)r-slep—^own-si z e, according to M e y e r,' though he TCels more pe^Ie“ would buy the eight-foot - pockeL^bimard^ table If they could manage to maneuver it around corners, and downstairs to where they would like Jt, U n 1 i k e ’many other sports, pool is not overly expensive nor is It only for the skilled professional A, As long ashyou are4all enouglL to see, over the table, you are able to play pool. It is enjoyable for even the most inexper- PBACTICE HELPS A few pointers and a 1 i 111 practice is all that is required to improve your game. Most pool halls charge customers by the hour but there are many tables which nwst be fed 20c or 25c a game, / For those who wish to/really make an impression, /custom pool cues, made to youj/ specifications, are available for as little as $10 or $15. / ___ Harlem Fire Kills Woman, 5 Children I cowboy, was managing director [of the institute from its incep- Helper of Blind Dies UOS ANGELES (AF) “-^.'l^/in 1919 un#fe^r Robert Atkinson, 76, who was j ™ ^057-blinded at the age of 25 by a 'six-gun explosion and went on 1o found the .faille Institute of America and*^ spent many years He wa^ born in Galt, Backs K PetfcB Move serving the sightless, died Saturday. Atkin^, onetime Montana ^LGRADE,-^ugosIavia (Alf. -President Tito of Yugoslavia [has * endorsed Soviet Premier In , 1957, the United States exported 5,348,000 tons of steel and imported only 1,155,000 tons. Kfiru^chev’s pro^sal for an agreement to^irenounoe the use of force' in settling boundary questions. (Advtrtiwmtnl) Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping oHrritoting? l)iiD''t oe emoHiTAMCd Of loose lui^sa iDKfe^B vour tw This pleasant pnwdei sivee a a Plates m«re flrmw No «umn>y,i{otM)rluH)d enthusiasts. PENNY BRIGHT SPECIAL SHIRTS LAUNDRY SERVICE IRONED only ^ ® pound only PICKED UP and DELIVERED when included in bundle • Everything washed sparkling over 30 lbs. clean • Iduffy soft drying • E.ach item carefiuly folded (ONLY 23c in SMALLER BUNDLE) OTHER ITEMS IRONEDON REQUEST'. “Our sale* have more I hon dnuhUid over whni they wen* three or four years ago,’’ claims , George Meyer, manager of the sporting gixKls de))Br1mcnl of Montgomery Wards pool lac Mall store. LOWER FKICEH "Compelillon Is keener 'and ll()ilsf.nOT.D ART ICLES . . . DRAPKRll'.S . . . CUR'rAlN.'>... SLIP COVERS . . . I’ANCY bedspreads . . . ElNb'. TABEi: LINENS . . . \V(X)L BI.ANKETS .. .’SHAG RUGS... PIElLjWS . . . I.AMP SI lADES . . . I'tJR CLEANING & GLAZlNFCI \|. .SHIRT laundering . . . DRV CLEANING . . . MEN’S suns'... DU Esses . sweatees ... knit dri/sses ... mi:n's HATS . . . TTEb . . . (Jl.pVES ... l-VENING AND WEDDING GOWNS . . . l.i:,AT HI',,R COAT'S !. . SUL DE jAC'KI T'S. Phone Enterprise 6180 Toll Free NOW FAST SERVICE pick>4ip Twice a week delivery THE rONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3,. 1964 ■f .It NINE ~T~ Famous Doctor Dies ROCKVILLE center; N.Y. . (AP>—Dr. Louis H. Bauer, 75, eardiologis^ amt ptoneefTin avlS^ tion medicine* died Sunday of a heart ailment! He was m^icalj Many place names on Aus-director of the aeronautics traBan maps, such-as Poonda, branch of the U.S. Department, Ethel Creek, Walgun and BaU of Commerce An(^ was edito-in- j four .Downs,, indicate-not -towns jdrief-of the Jouiibl ofAViationror villages but sheep and cattle Medicine from 1930 to 1954. He i stations and individual home-was born in Boston. ) steads. YOUR KITCHEN We’li Even Lend You The Tools! MOSAIC FLOOR and WALL TILE 59‘ sq. ft. Genuine ceramic mosaic tile ’at a special, low price. OTHER BIGTILE BUYS FOR YOUR FLOORS, WALLS, BATHROOMS, REC. ROOMS, etc. • 9* X12'LINOLEUM RUGS $3.95 • RANDOM ASPHALT TILE, 9" X 9" 4e • ARMSTRONG INLAID TILE, 9"x 9" 6c • SOLID VINYL-RUBBER TILE 13c • ARMStRONG TERRAZZO, 6 FT. WIDE, sq. yd. $Z49 • LINOLEUiM WALL TILE, 54" WIDE, runhing .ft. 29c • VINYL ASBESTOS TILE, 9“n 9" 7c 2255 EUZABETN LAKEm Train Wreck' Death Toll Put at 70 onncu% ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY » ALTAMIRANfVArgentina - The death toll in Argentina’s flaming weekend train collision estimated at 70. Twelve bodies and nine sacks of human-remains have been .recovered . from the wreckage. i Railroad officials said a faul^switch may have seii| the Firefly Express, jammed with a holiday crowd of 1,030, httrtliag standing freight train 65 miles southeast of Buenos Aires at dawn Saturday. Officers said the impact of the crash and the fire were so ravaging that the exact death count might never be known. Several hundred children were aboard the Firefly, bound from the sea resort of Mar Dei Plata to Buenos Aires. Witnesses said the collision hurled the fourth coach oyer the first three and sent it crashing down on the blazing engine. Mo;|t of the dead were in the fourth coach. Their remains were so incinerated that identification was virtually impdssi-ble. I TTie wreck was believed to be Argentina’s worst rail disaster since 1926, when more than 100''Chilean military cadets perished in a train collision. Authorities said,the engineer of “the Firefly apparently didn’t! TiavelitneTo brake 1 hid the freight. i Ismael ^Mondine, engineer of; the freight and only crewhian of either train to survive, told of seeing the express bearing down on him. “You have to jump — jump!” he yelled to his fireman as he leaped from the engine. Biit the fireman apparently didn’t hear the warning in time, PENNEY’SMEIMAC. DINNERWARE 88 45-PC. SERVICE for 8-Regulgf ^19’°-NowT,-^ 44 if^QLlSH IVY It’» break resistant, washes safely in dishwashers! “Yucatan”, turquoise and Roldj with ••■«wo«AiaA ainlirlu* Pin* in aanE^alttfriml. imlfl .»tw1 rimt. With rilHt maHiIm ... turquoise solids; “California Pine Cone”, in sandalwood, gold und rust, with ri,.------ quality melamine dinnerware molded by Miramar of California. “English Ivy”, in gi and gold with avocado green solids; “Blue Bells”, with blue solids ... quality melamine dinnerware molded by Lenox Plastics Inc. i SET CONSISTS OF: 16 decoratad piacas: 8 saucars, 8 dinnar platas. 29 solid piaeat; 8 cups, S braod 'n buttar platas, 8 soup/caraai bowls, 2-piaca sugar* bowl, 1 craamar, 1 madium plattar,-1 opan vagetabla dish. I atNnn#y’f ........^ THIS LITTLE CARD DOES THE TRICK PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. Errand hoy A 24-hour-a-day i*rrand hof/ .. . that’s one of the many important roles the telephone plays in your life. The telephone in always at your seyvice... ready to help you arrange appointments, get information, Bimpllfy shopping, keep in touch, and make light work of so many everyday jobs-big and small. Your telephone actually saves you money while working for you 'round the clock. In fact, the more you put this errand hoy to work, the more you’re likely to save. You save time, and save expenses that would . otherwise mount up if you had to do everything in person. It’s hard to imagine what life would bp like without a telephone hoy to help you manage things faster and easier. And it’s still ope of the biggest bargains in your family budget. Use it often. Mit-Maau tt«U YOUR NEWS QUIZ The Pontiac Press February 3, 196't PART I. NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 U.S. chances of winning Gold Medals l,n the Winter Olympics are considered.... a-verygood b-about the same a'e In 1960 c-very poor Match word chiM With their corresponding pictures or i^nbohi. 10 points for each correct answer. 2 Attorney General Robert Kennedy told President JbhnSon that the ........ dispute could bring war for the U.S. If. not settled peacefully. a-Cyprus b-Malaysian c-Panama (a) time of day dropped ) UN Secretary General left for African visit 3 Cyprus troubles are especially dangerous becauseWestern allies might be forced to take opposite sides. True or False? (c) “Sateloon” 4 France last week became the.......NATO nation to recogr a-flrst tgnlze the Chinese Communist government, it b-third :c-fifth c-fifth (d) Integration demon- Stratton staged for —^-------------- UN visitors 5 The Saturn launching was the first successful flight firing of the second stage of what Is ber lleved to be the world’s ..... a-most powerful rocket b-flrst anti-missile missile c-flrst rocket for moon flights 8..,.. PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. (e) new $75 bond will Honor John F. Kennedy (f) Britain asked for U.S. troops here 1 causal a-wealthy, rich 2.....casual b-having to do with what made something happen 3 Ineffectual c-useless 4.....iffluent d-aocusQ of an offense eroriitte 6 Indict' e-happenlng by chance (g) Kwllu Province missionaries 1 n trouble (h) attended trade talks In Japan PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. (1) accepted Invitation to visit Canada in October one subject for dia-ousslon at Geneva disarmament talks 1...Douglas MacArthur 2...I^ame Nkrumah 3...Margaret Chiis Smith ..Chiaqt Kai-shek a-Maine Senator announced Republioah presidential candidacy b-honored on 84th birthday c-Premier, Coinmunlat China d-President, Ghana , e-President, NattonaliBt China HOW DOYOURATIt (Sean Eaeh $M« oF Quia Sspaiataly) 91m 100 polnH-TOP SCORE! •1 to 90 ^Into - iMMlUnt. 71 to ID polnl* - Oeod. 61 to 70 pelnH - fair. 60orUtofar?77-H'aMi! 6...Chou En-lai ® VEC, Inc., Madlion I, WU: Tbb dull I* part of tha Educational toogram which Thli Nuwipapar himidwi to Scbooli In Ihit araa to Stliaulato Intoratt In National and World Atlaln at an STUDENT5 ANSWERS ON REVERSE PAGE ^ V THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY J -Everythifig^ k Unstable . Situation Back to Normal in Viet Nam By MALCOLM W. BROWNE SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Many of South Viet Nam’s leading politicians were sutining themselves at tiie Sporting Club’s swimining pool 48 hours after the latest military coup. About 10 military operations against Communist guerrillas were under way in various parts of the nation. None reportedly was having much result. Viet Nam’s new strongman, Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh, walked down Saigon’s' main street with the strongman he displaced, Maj. Gen. Duong Van Minh. The apparent intention was to show there were no hard feelings. The two men did not draw crowds. Things were back to normal. U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge is known to feel that the war against the Comhiunist guerrillas will be continued without interruption. Some ★ ★ ★ other Americans do pot share Lodge’s optimism. “Any continuity in command that Viet Nam may have had after President Ngo Dinir Diem was overthrown now has been ost completely,” a ranking U. S. Army officer spid. A U.S, diplomat foresaw the U.S. Seeks Clarificdfion of De Gaulle Asia Policy By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON (AP)-U.S. officials are expected to seek clarification from Paris as to what President Charles de Gaulle means in proposing a neutrality treaty for . Southeast Asia and what he; intends to do about it. Along with Hie Gaulle’s recognition of Red China, the neutralization plan is a source of deep concern at the highest levels of the government here. ★ ★ ★' From President Johnspn down, UlS. leaders are worried about the impact of French moves in the Far East and especially in Viet Nam, where this ■ country has more than 15,000 men engaged in a fight against Communist expansion. Uncertainty over de Gaulle’s proposal was evident in Johnson’s news conference Saturday when, discussing the neutralization plan, Johnsdn told reporters, “You will have to ask Gen. de Gaulle about the details of his proposal.” U S. NOT SURE From other high officials it was learned that the United States does not know precisely what if any action de Gaulle has in mind to carry out his probability more coups and continuing delays in the war effort. “It’s too easy to make a coup here now,” he said. “The military Commands are tod conveniently organized into corps and divisions, which makes it.possible for one or two men'to control really jwwerful units. “America is going to have to live with continuing instability here and go on supporting the anti-Communiste, whoever diey may be,-against the Viet Cong. We have^no choice.” Of several hundred Vietoa-mese question in the past few days, the overwhelming majori- ty expressgdlndjto tive views of the latest coup. ★ * ★ One officer, who had been loyal to Maj. Gen. Ton That Ghih, the interior minister jailed by Khanh, said: “It I ever got the chance, I would kill Khanh.” This was an extreme view, although there are indications that potentially powerful milita groups still can make lots of trouble for Khanh. But as far as U.S. economic assistance and military aid is concerned, it is business as usual The f i r 81 wholly reinforced I States was erected in New York concrete 'fauBdifly"m'ftte^mtedt-GityJn..lj7y.--.-:___________________■ (AdvtrtiMmni) ——!!---- ______# (Advtnn«>n«"» A PURE MEDICINE! O-JIB-WA BITTERS eontoliis no harmful salts or alcohol. Successful for 49 years. Has helped over a mimon people in Michigan alone. So If yoo bovo bote • eootUfoot l0i#r lo yoor boWlo^r hoolffc. o.d ero dlioppolotof. dUcooreyod tryi.« vorie.. «odlel.o.. fr..fmoi.t. «d *'2 p«worM bof safe siodlcloo wodo ooHroly from h#fbto * FEATURED AT ALL DRUG STORE^ proposition. If he is talking about a vague, ultimate goal, perhaps years off, they see no great difficulty. But if he intends now to wage a campaign for neutralization of South Viet Nam they see serious trouble ahead. — _jlr___-k____1. Following up his recognition of Red China last Monday, de Gaulle told a Paris news conference bn Friday that he could not conceive of “a neutrality treaty concerning the states of ^utheast Asia” without the par-Jinlpatinn of Red China. He went on to say what neutrality would mean in the area—such things as ending “foreign intervention” —but did not spell out the countries to which it would apply. • Johnson said that if both Communist North Viet Nam and U.S.-supported South Viet Nam could be neutralized, ‘T am sure that would be considered sympathetically.” LITTLE CHANCE He added that he does not see any indication that the Communist forces are willing “to let their neighbors live in peace” and therefor^ he sees no alternative except to pmss the War as vigorously as possible. r-Junior Editors Quiz on QUESTION: When water evaporates. Is it lost? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: We often think of water evaporating into nothingness; yet actually water Is never lost. Instead, It changes form and moves from'place to place, all of it having come originally from the sea. These points will be clear when you study the Illustration, showing how water moves In a kind of circle, called "the water cycle.” First, when warmed by the sun. water rises from the o«»in. In the form of invisible "water vapor,” When this meets cooler air, it condenses in the form of minute droplets which appear to us as fog or clouds. Tliese are blown far over the land and when they get too heavy to be held aloft, fall as fresh water rain, the salts Iwving been left behind In the sea. Rain soaks Into the ground, causing crops to grow, and building up an underground reservoir, which supplies wells and springs. This Is the “ground water,” It’s surface being the “water table.” Other amounts of rain run down In the form of brooks which turn into, streams and rivers and finally return to the sea. Much water lies for a long time underground: yet a great deal is drawn up by plants which radiate water vapor Into the air, helping to keep the water cycle moving. ' ★ ★ ★ FOR VOU TO DO: The next time It rains, you will see the water cycle in gctlve movement. Trace what Is happening to the rain. How much Is sinking Into the ground, how much running off to join some brook or river? i . . - .1. ANSWERS TO TODAY'S NEWS QUIZ Monday. Fabrsiary S, 1964 PAllt 1 I 1-rt 2'bi .S-Trnrt 4-«*i ."t-a PAHT II 1 I-I>| 2-4*j .S-ri 4-at R-d PAHT III 1 l-h« 2-e sure you’re in the right car. A smaller steering wheel, reengineered eeat and. dnshlfoard placement make for in-lerior room that used to be availalile only in more expensive cars. All-new body stylipg—featuring modern rrisp-iined sculpturing—doesn’t give a clue to the 1964 Falcon’s price either. You begin to get the idea when you run down the list of engine options. Standard Is the thrifty Falcon Six. This is in updated verefbn of tha engine that set an unbeaten Mobil Economy Run record. Two other slightly larger six-cylinder engines are optional—both squeeze a drop of gas until there’s no more mileage left in it. Top of the line is the 260 V-8. A special version of this engine powered 1 he Falcon (earn that dominated this year’s Monte Carlo Rallye. The 260 version ruiwon, regular gua while giving any Falcon B|)orts-car scat,. Despite the ride, room and zoom, t he 1964 Falcon is still an economy-minded compact. With all the body stylei^ available—2- and 4-door sedans, l''utura and Sprint hardtops, convertibles and wagons—plus the engine and t ransmisAion options, you can pretty much dwide how far to --go^with your litlcon. Any way you do it you’ll wind up with America’s only total per/ormanfe compact. Falcon entered two classes in Europe’s 2,700-mile winter ordeal —Won them both and finished 2nd overall out of 299 cars. That’s durability! In the Rallye’s five specj,al Alpine sections, Falcon was first overall in four, tied for first in one. That’s roadability! In the Rallye’s final test around the Monte Carlo racing course. Falcons were first and second. That’s maneuverability! MONTE CARLO-The 33rd Monte Carlo Rallye started with 299 cars. Some 2,700 miles and 8 'A days later, only 163 were still in the rally when the field struggletl into Monaco —but they included all eight of the specially equipped Falcons that originally started! This eight-oul-of-eight record was perhaps more remarkable than the fact that, despite a handicap formula that favored the smallest cars, a Falcon captured second place overalh One car can have luck . . . hut eight have to have^ total jier/ormanre. Bccituse t he Rallye is run in the dead of winter and samples every variety of wither and road conditions the continent can provide, and because it winds up bn the most remote rollercoaster byways in the French Maritime Alps, it is a supreme test of all t he car’s abilities. Falcon steering had U) be flawltwB on glare ice alfove it 1,000-foot drop. ’Those fabulou* V-8’s had to run like dynamos. Abd the cars had to be comfortable, for even 8 minor diseomfort «an~baeome an agony In four nights and three days of virtually contlnumui running. The final results in t he Monts Carlo Rallye gave Falcon 2nd place overall, 1st in Class 8 of the Touring category egeinet Mercedes and Vslianl. Falcon took 1st and 2nd in Claea 5 of the Grand Touring category, beating Jaguar, Reliance Sabre and Valiant, and 1st and 2nd in the final three-lap test, on the Monte Carlo circuit. The best finish by a Valiant was 88th overall. The Falcons’ astonishing performance won many plaudits and awards: Bill France, NASCAR president, awarded the NASCAR trophy for t,he U.S. car to place highest in overall staioMilil« to proirri llirm, hul iomrliniex they nerd help. If you are ■uhjerl to re-oreurln*! headaohex, or your arm* are Km> xhorl to hold what you ore readinn, have your eyei examined. I Preaeriptionx for eye medlelnex require expert eompoundiiiR. Solution* or eye drop* muxt he free from fnreifin partielex, no matter how xmall. Some mtixt he xterile. We weleome the opportunity to u»e our eompoundiiift xhill xhoiild you need any rye medieatioii. ' ' ' • ■ ■ YOl'U nOCTOII CAN PlIONKl'S When you need a medleine. I*lek up your preRrviption if ahoppiiif nearhy, or we will deliver promptly without extra ] eharffe. A great many people entruxt^iis with their j prexeriptiona. May we compound yourx? ^ 1251 BALDWIN Naar COLUMBIA FE 3-7057 689 E. BLVD. At perry FE 3-7152 EARN MORE ON SAVIN6S SAVINGS IN BY THE rOTtLOF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1 ST AT e CURRENT RATE Advanced Payment - ^ / Shares Certificates A 1>a "A Currant Raf / Mm i w IF HELD TO MATURITY AVAILABLE IN UNITS OF ISO PER SHARI V.tUthlithrd in IH90-^Nrvrr mi»»rdpnytnfi it lUriihnil. Omr 72 yrara o/'xniintf mitniifirnwut ^yitur n»*uriinrii Ilf Miu urity. A»»i>l$ noiv nrer HO miUUin iliiUart. CAPITOL SAVINGS ft LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 W«st Huron Uownlown Daireit Olllcxi Wnthinglen Blvd. Bldg. Camar Stott SirttI WOa.103’8 FE 4-0561 Southlltid Oflirt! ' 27215 Soulhllald at 11 Milt Ronen you buy 7gallons Ashland Gasoline ivy centered with a white orchid. matron of honor Mrs. Fxlward James of Utica was matron of honor for her sister. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Donald flamed of Utlaa, SISf (er-lB-fnW of the bride, and Janice McDaniel, sister of the bridegroom. Serving with Joseph McDaniel; of Rochester. Brother of the | brldcgHKim as best man, were ushers Donnid Harned ami Ed ' wnrd .lames . * * * A reception followed the nuptials In Iht! cluurh Fellowship l^lnll. I These sparkling present crystal glasses can be yours FREE! Popular Early American design. Ideal for serving juices or other beverages. You get one glass FREE with every purchase of 7 gallons of Ashland gasoline. You’ll want to save a complete set! Drive in at your Good Neighbor Ashland Oil Dealer displaying the "FREE JUICE GLASS" sign, today! OFFER EXPIRES MA/tCH 31. 1964 IN/TATCHING 11" SERVING TRAY only For6§\mr»g0a For i»ndwlcht$ ForroH$ho$ 29^ with oil ohanfi* •tragularprlo* ASHLAND OIL & REFINING COMPANY FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, vy CLARENCE CHOLER Service for Clarence Choler, 70, of 23 Portage will be 2 p.m. tomorrow ^t D. E. Purslby Funeral Home. Burial will foHow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Choler died Saturday after a three-month illness. He formerly was a self-employed heating vehtil^ting contractor. Surviving are three sons, Jack of Pontiac,. Robert of Waterford^^ WrWhg are his mfe, Caro-i Township and Jerry of Cnion; ^ke, and two sisters. JOHN E. LOVELAND Termer Official DiesinKeego Heart ^^tack Takes City's First Mayor KEEGO HARBOR - John E. (Jack) Loveland, first mayor of Keego Harbor, and past presi-, dent of the Keego Harbor Chamber of Commerce, died of .a heart attack Saturday. He was 51. At the time of fiis death, Mr. Loveland of 3045 Atlas, was a realtor associated with the Loan Insurance Co. He served as mayor of Keego Harbor from 19M to 1957. Mr. Loveland was a member of the Pontiac Board of Real- tors, a 3rd and 4th degree mem ber of Pontiac Council No. 600, Knights of Columbus, and a past member of the West Bloomfield Township Fire Department’s board of trustees. OTHER ACTIVITIES He was also a member of tlw Men’s Club and Holy Name Society of Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church, Orchard Lake. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the C. J. Godhardt Fungal Home. Service will be JO a.tyi. Wednesday at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church,, Burial will follow in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Surviving are his wife, Leona; a daughter, Mrs. James T. Chatterton of Keego Harbor; a sister and three grandchildren. Thatcher, , Patterson and Wernet INSURANCE Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas RAYMOND T. DeLONGCHAMP Service for Raymond T. De-Longchamp, 52, of 126Q Hiller, Waterford Township, will be 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Churen, Orchard Lake. Burial will follow in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Mr. DeLongchamp died Saturday. The rosary will be recited 8:30 p.m. tonight at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. He was employed as a tool crib attendant at Fisher Body Division. Surviving are his wife, Flo**-ence; mother, Mrs. Ida DeLongchamp of Champion,-Mich.; a sister; and seven brothers, Fred and Clarence of Pontiac, Paul of Clarkston, Roy of Ishpeming, Louis of Champion and Earl and Howard of Miami. MRS. EDWARD FAIR Mrs. Edward (Giuseppina) Fair, 37, of 1189 Featherstone died yesterday. Her body ts at the yoorhees - S i pit’e Funeral Home. Survlying are her husband; two sons, Edward 0. Jr.*, and Robert J.; and two daughters, Gladys Ora and Barbara Ann, all at home. MRS. JOHN L: GIBSON Service f*or Mrs. John L. (Carrie P.) Gibson, 79, of 670 W. Walton will be at 3:30 p. ni. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Chapel, with burial in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery:; Mrs., Gibson died Saturday after a long illness. A member of First Presbyterian Church, Mrs. Gibson was affiliated with Chapter No.‘228, Order of Eastern Star and Pontiac Shrine No. 22. . Surviving are her husband; two sons, J. Frederick of Pontiac, and Clyde L, of Greenville, S. C.; and two daughters, Mrs. Daniel Woodfill of Highland, and Mrs. H,- WOyne Reaves of Sylvan Lake. Also, surviving are a brother, 13 , grandchildren and 18 greatgrandchildren. Gari Of. (Dotulion ^ ^%naQ3i. JcU Serve With Humility . . . The service of the Donelson-Jbhns Funeral Home is rendered with true humility, born of experience dnd with 0 knowledge of the strength of God's will. I FEderau 4-4511 (Padinfj i Om Our W 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC - JACOB OESCH Service for Jacob Oesch, 76, of 2467 Winkleman will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will follow ip Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. .Oesch, who operated h store and service station at Cass Lake, died Saturday after a two-mohth illness. 'He was a member of the First BaptistChurch. Mrs. Leslie Young of* Pontiac and Mrs. Robert Sheardy of Lake Orion;'a brother, Clifford of Auburn Heights; five grandchildren; and diree greatgrandchildren. To Introduce GOP Guest Oakiahd, i^iinty Vl^publican Coiigressman William S. Broomfield will introduce the g u e s t speaker at the Feb. 11 annual banquet of the Lincoln Republican Club in Pontiac, it was announced today. The gpest speaker will be a Cidleagoe of Broomfield on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Peter H. B. Freling-huysen, R, N J. The dinner Is scheduled for 6:30 pm- at the Elks Temple. Toastmastfr will be Robert L. Templin,: senior assistant prosecuting attorney for Oakland County. Templin also is ift charge of an fssay contest on Lincoln* among high school stu-dents^-^._i^ In tennis a net should be three feet high. . ' • Winners in the contest, which is held in conjunction with the annual banquet, will be hon ored at the dinner: BUFFET luncheon *1.25^ The postal zip code for Santa Claus in North Pole is 99701, the Rost Office has announced. J. thru Fri., 11 -m 1 TUESDAY TEATURE Roast Turkoy ' " ' " *U5 WALDRON HOTEL PIKE AND PERRY line; two^aughters, Mrs. Leona Wilson of Florida and Mrs. Dorothy Garrison, Waterford Township; three .sons, peonard of Drayton Plains, Charles of Waterford Township and Arthur of Pontiac; and six grandchildren. , LEO SPENCER Service for Leo Spencer, 63, of j691 Second will ,be ^7 p.m. tomorrow at Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at Lakeside Cemetery, Port Huron. Mr. Spencer died this morning following an eight-month ill- Survlving are two sisters, Mrs. Harriet Washburn and Mrs. Kathleen Washburn, both , of Pontiac, and two brothers, James of Pontiac and Andrew of Port Huron. GEORGE W. TUCK Service for George W. Tuck, 78, of 73 S. Shirley will be 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at Clark Funeral "ass Home, Vassar. Burial will follow in Riverside Cemetery, Vassar. ■yesterday after a short illness. His body will be at Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. He operated his own garage until he retired in 1961. Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Ezra Mason of Waterford Towh-ship; a son, Walter,, of California and a brother. MRS. CONRAD MAISEL WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP—Service for Mrs. Conrad (Marie A.) Maisel; 87, of 5740 Eastman will be U a.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Birmingham. Burial^ will follow in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Maisel died Friday after albrief illness, . She was a member of the Shepherd King Lutheran Church, Bloomfield Township. Surviving ate three daughters, Mts. Sharon jPutnam and Mrs. Florence Foster, both of St. Petersburg, Fla., and Mrs. Richard Nelson of Birmingham; a son, Arthur of Delroftr t h r e e brothers; a sister; 14 grandchildren; and iO great-grandchildren. WINTER DISCOUNT SALE-SAVE 10% SELECT NOW for MEMORIAL DAY Beauty, Quality, Craftsmanship in ENllUHINt; MEMORIALS REV. DAVID L. McBRIDE ROYAL OAK - Service for Rev. David L. McBride, 85, former pastor df the First United Presbyterian Church here, will be 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Chapel -of Memories, White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Burial will be in White Chapel Cemetery. Rev. McBride, who retired in 1952, died Friday in Atlanta. He was Michigan superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League of America foom 1933 to 1940. fie held the Roy a k Oak pastorate from 1946 to 1952. He was the husband of the late Mrs. Mabel McBride. He Is survived by two sons, Frank E. of Vtica and David L. of Utica: a daughter, Mrs. H. A. C. Anderson of Bloomfield Hills; and five grandchildren. Memorial conlribution.s can be made to the Fir.st United Prosbylej:ian Church , of Hoyol Oak. JOY L. NAPIER WALLED LAKE-Servlcc for Joy L. Napier, infant daughter of Mr. hnd Mrs. Donald F. Napier. 605 Lucille, was lield recently In the Bro’wn Funeral Home, Hruees Crossiirg, Burial followwl In Berglnmi Cemetery, Bergland, Surviving liesides her parents arc three sisters, Jlmltle L., Dfonnelle L, and Kitty L.; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. llehry Napier of Walhxl Lake and Mr. and Mr.s, Harney Miller of Bedford Town.shlp. INCH MEMORIALS, INC. IRA G. PIIYNE LAKE ORION Service lor former resident Ira G, Pryne, 8L of Alma will be 2 p. m. W^nesday nt the Alien’s Funeral Home. Burial will follow In White Luke Cemetery, Mr, Pryne. a retired farmer, died yesterday. Masonic memorial service will be 8:30 p. in, tomorrow under auspices of Davisburg Austin Ljixige No, 48, F&AM. r»Ta~m'mTmYinnmnrmirTT^TntmrinrTmTrnrr»TinryTinrrfrmT^^ »»e 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST, IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS Elevator Service to All Floors • Provincial • Colonial • Traditional • Modern — All by America's Loading Monufacturersl ® S in Contemporarj-Trallitional-Coloniali created by , kroehlerO Famous Make, Luxiiry Mas Values to $249 NO MONEY DOWN-MONTHS TO PAY KROEHLER CONTEMPORARY SOFA For .o new look that will itoy new for years to come, you'll be wise to see this interesting Softj by Kroehler. Here is superb contemporary styling at its finest. Cushioned in 100% foam for cloud-soft comfort. You'll especially enjoy selecting from these -lively new "Spice of Life" colors. Select yours now! KROEHLER TRADITIONAL SOFA Splendid Traditional design,.,. . in luxurious full - foam cushions and nylon Mattelasse covers. Elegant ■ Sofas with extra features not found Tn other jivakes at this populor price. Enjoy the mdTchtess Tuxury of reversible, zippered, full foam cushtone' with Kroehler's helically suspended under-construction opd famous Kroehler quality throughout. KROEHLER DELUXE FOAM CUSHION COLONIAL SOFAr With comfortable coll spring base, luxurious foam bock and reversible cushions' for "twice the wear". Covered In durable nylon. Decorator colors b enhance your colonial decor! : OPEN MON., THURS., FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. 864 N. Perry FE 5-6931 ir«nia tor Wh(l* Ch«p»l •nd Oakland Mhia at Balaw Ctmelary Prlcai a life momhrr of Ihr Davhthnrg Mn.sonir LiKlgc: a life mrmlMT of lInvAii.slin (’Imp lot, Orilor of I ho Ea.Joni .‘vlar; and a niomhor of Iho I' lixi Bap-'-(ltd r/nirk'h, Ponllao, , j Siii'vivli^jg aro Iwo daiigldork, i I' I'i 2- I2.'l I P *tiiiist hv salirfirti-^lhis irv 17-19 S. Saginaw St. .downtown PONTIAC • « 94 M 9«9n « 9 t»« » « « » * 9 4 « « »IJLLUJLAJUULmJLilUAUAUAmjJimXUJLU^ A; X.-a..: THE PONTIAC PRK^S. MONDAY, FE^jUJAlj/3. J9G4 FBI to Probe Negro's Death Found Shot Near Hi$ Mi$sts$!pp1 Home liberty, Bliss. (AP) -? The FBI begins an investigation to-, day of the shotgun slaying of a MississiK>i Negro who rq)wted-ly took part in dvil rt^ts activities. Louis Allen, a ^er in his 50s, was shot to death near his home%here Saturday. His body was found under a truck , with a 1^ of buckshot in his The U.S. justice department said itJjas asked the FBI to determine if there is any hads for federal action. The dead man’s brother, Morris Allen, said in Milwaukee tiiat Allen had taken jpart in civil rights activities. testified IN CASE Morris Allen also said h i s brother once testified against a . white man charged with slaying a Negro. He charged that Mississippi authorities had harassed his brother ever since. Sheriff Daniel Jones denied Allen had been harassed, and said he did not know Allen had taken part in civil r^hts activities. Ed Holiandale, communica-0 tions officer for the Student N(Hiyiolent Coordinating mittee in Jacks(m, said Allen “was a witness, in the fatal shooting of Liberty Negro Herbert Lee' by State Rep. Eu-,gene'Hurst.” Records showed Allen did not testify in the case, Holiandale said. A coroner’s jury ruled that Hurst shot Lee in self-defense. Charles Evers, state field secretary for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored PMple, said in Jackson the Allen shooting “was similar in many respects to the ambush slaying of Medgar.” Medgar Evers, Charles’ brother and a state civil rights leader, was shot in Jackson last summer. - Byron De La Beckwith, a white man, is being tried on a charge of first-dqgree murder in the crime. 'Hof Line' Cut by Lightning HELSINKI, Finland (AP) The newspaper Uusi Suomi said, lightning cut the Washington • Moscow “hot line’’ Saturday, putting it out of service for 42 minutes. Uusi Suomi said the bolt cut the line near Turku, Finland. The line was restored by switching to another cable pending complete repairs. The “hot line’’ is designed to give the U.S.- president direct communication with the ^viet premier in an emergency. Coffee Council fp Meet to Curb Higher Coiti LONDON (APl-'Tlie Intorna-, tinnal Coffee Organization has Summoned its 59-nation Council to mee,t Feb. 10 to take up the problem of spiraling prices. Executive Director Joao Ollvera Santos said Saturday night the council was meeting at the request of importing countries tp fix Increased Import quotas in hof)e of cutting costs. ’ITie executive board has been unable to act because It has been blocked by Indonesia. Tile council, on the other hi Is free to vote ‘ Burial Insurance Sold by Mail ... You may be qiwltflwl f'»'’ tl.ooo 11(0 inwiraiioe Will net burden your loved ones with funeral and other expensM. helpful m thoa# between 40 and 90 No mecpt. 61!», 1418 West Ktstedalc. fort Worth 4, Texas. PRICES . EFFECTIVE MON DAY AND TUESDAY ONLY Cut From Mature, Grcdn-Fed Beef! "SuperTriglit'' Quality Beef Rib Steaks '“Soper- Completely FRESH 6-INCH CUT FRYERS PIECES AND STEMS—GREAT UKES Cut-Up, ALLGOOD SLICED BACON 2 ^79* l-LB. PKG. 43 Supsr-Righr Ceuntry-Styls Thick Sliced .. .Zpkg. 2S.89* Mushrooms t. 5 "Sup*r-Right" Quolily GROUND BEEF 3 U. PKG. ^^n|C gttiz. OR JlDRt "> Pork Chops • 69* Spare Ribs • 39* Split 4 Quartered | Whole Fryers FRYER PARTS Breasts Legs 49’ a. 55! mOZEN FOOD SMI! i&P Brand Our Finest Quality INvIO-OUNCE PACKAGES I Peas, Peas & Carrots Cora, Chopped Broccoli, Spioach, Mixed Vegetables IN 9-dUNCE PACKAGES Regulor or Crinkle-Cut iFreoch Fried Potatoes Grape Juice A Reel Value! BANAHAS LB. iCr^ Banquet Froxen Meat Pies Boat, Chicken »r Turkey Special Savings! IONA TOMATOES OR SWEET PEAS A 14. 40^ CANS A|^ DOLE OR DEL MONTE Pineapple-Grapefruit Fruit Drink 3'Hi 39* Chocolate Covered Ice Cream Ban Choerios oYta 49* FIRST QUALITY SfAMUSS MESH NYLONS ★ 100% NYLON ★ GUARANTEED • Theae Ibvely nylona nre mndle by one of the world'n largeat hoaiery comppnlen. Runmiitantt SixM9-l 1 Regular Length. Every-Day Low Price Miracle Whip QUART PILLSRURY Cake Mixes ' 4c Oft Labal Swim Style Ch«4> If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! The following a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’ office (by name of lather): PONTIAC lobort C. Jenks, 33 E.'.N*w York ‘ Ounavont, M C.lvorl ■ -----ison, 780 E. Codj >r, 582 Amborwai.. V 9513 BonnI. Briar 0)9 Crocu$ ___. .._______...t, 89 Lincoln Andrew 8. Drakot, 60 S. Francli Darrell L. Anderion, 35 S. Edith Glen R. Bowen, 8X36 Highland Ted caddell, 589 California Perry Chuhn, 71 Orton Russell E. Richards, 329 E. Walton Blvd. HerhDan L. Holt, 3)31 Walnut ■Don W. Blevins, 1866 Clovarlawn Wayna H. Moore Jr., 318 Clifford Marvin F. Turcott, 97t, 98 S. Roselawn Lawrence J. Wtchell Jr., 454 Aubur Frank A. Rivard, 3910 Elmhurst James A. Gulgar, 18 Fairgrove Enoch Huckabay, 20 Clark Raymond E. Pace, 291 Oakland Fred Bell Jr., 275 Ferry Alvin Forller, 548 Colorado KL%.‘1ffeK!ls/^55?«S MlSCiLLANlOUl vPON NYLON Flush Pile Bedroom Carpet ’Atv SOUTH SEAS ’4S- ooiD The Most Extensive and . a DARK HONEY “ - - - aa_j_ • a hRONZt OREE.. _. _ - „ ,• lAOOOtT BLUE ' in This Type Fabric. : 22 DECORATOR COLORS • fern green aaaaaaaaaaaaaaoaaaaaaaa average 12x12 BEDROOM InGtallod Ov«r Heavy Rubberized Pad . BAMBOO BEIGE- , gold "•« --------------- . LEAF GREEN Su Eye Catching Colore Made: WISTERIA SAUTERNE SKY BLUE CARDINAL RED ROYAL BLUE EGO NOG MIST BLUE ONLYI »122“n 0, 3J,O0 00 M^*91 flUliMillilUi 11x12*112* PR 3-3100 .OR 3-3311 ‘ .^RTreTRY 1 CARPET THE PQNTIAC PRESS THREE COLORS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1964 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. SEVENTEEN '''—At a special \eception and dinner *dance for Pontiac dealers and their wives, Pontiac Motor Division General Manager E. M. Estes and' his wife, (left) welcome Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Shelton of Rochester and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gotham Even if Woman's Slob of Pontic. The event, held Saturday night in Detroit, marked the opening social affair of the National Automobile Dealers ^Association convention currently being ^aged in the Motor City. Man Stays Gentleman By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Just before Christmas, two ladies came into the launderette and cov> ered ali the tables with wrapping pa- When my wife saw the. laundry all wrinkled and unfolded, her face got as red as her hair. She said I should have called the owner of the place or the police. I said a gentleman wouldn’t have done such a thing. She said when a woman shows that she is no lady, a man is relieved of the obligation to act' like a gentleman. We’d like vour opinion. PHIL IN TOPEKA is compelled to prove his innocence. The burden (jf. proof is on the accuser. Get if off your chest, ^or a personal, unpublished reply, write to ABBY, care " of The Pontiac Press. Enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. ABBY W h e n my clothes were drj^, I asked politely if I could us^ one of the tables, to, fold my sheets and blankets. I can’t quote their replies, but I.guarantee you thdt if these women had been men I would have punched them both right in the mouth. State Level Organization Considered Representatives from seven Michigan Mothers qf Twins clubs are considering the formation of a Michigan Organization of Mothers of Twins clubs. Hosting a meeting Friday at the 300 Bowl Was the Twins’ Mothers’ Club of Oakland County. The final organizational meeting is scheduled for^^ay in Bay City. clubs represented included units from Northwest Detroit, Downriver, Bay City, Wayne County, St. Clair County, Fenton and Oakland County. DEAR PHIL: A gentleman " acts like a 'gentleman even when a. woman acts like a slob. A woman would never try , toi-puil that stunt on another woman. 4^ DEAR ABBY; A girl in our dorm is knitting a sweater for h'er“boy friend.” She is the laughingstock of the dorm because this boy has been playing her for a sucker all year. , He dates other girls, and when he does ask her for a date, he usually breaks it at the last minute with some phony alibi, but she always forgives him. Hon^ can we get her to realize that she is wasting her time? CONCERNED AT BIRNKRANT HALL W A W DEAR CONCERNED: Don’t waste yours. Apparently the girl likes wool — both the kind that goes into a sweater and the kind that is pull^.ovcr the eyes. CONFIDEIHTIAL to MARCIA S. AND BE;V C.: No one Party Starts With Dessert The Ladies Guild of Grace Lutheran Church will serve a dessert smorgasbord aTTheir “annual couples’ Card party Friday at 7:30 p.m./ General chairman of the event is Mrs. Arthur Kap-hengst. Committee chairmen include Mrs. Francis Olmsted, Mrs. A1 b e r t Trapp, M r s. Charles Turner and Mrs. Emery Mitchell. Hostesses are Mrs. Edward’ D e m u t h and Mrs. V eY e , Hodges. The i»rty is open to the public. ^ Wed Saturday in All Faiths Chapel, First Congregational Church, Port Huron, were Mary t Elizabeth McKim of West Huron , Street and Robert Douglas \ Paton of Albany,.N.T. Their parents are the Samuel J. McKims of Dexington [and the Robert Patons of Worthington, Ohio. Check First Invitation to Dance By The Emily Post Institute Q; A month ago a boy whom I date occasionally asked me to go to his school dance, I said I would. The dance is to take place next week. I saw him twice since then but nothing more was said about Uie dance, so 1 took it for granted that he changed his mind. .Several days ago, another boy invited me to go to a dance that same evening and I accepted^. , -k it Last h 1 g h t the first boy called and during the conversation mentioned the dance again. I told him that since he was at. fault for not having said anything to me about the dance, Lthought it was all off and so I accepted another vitation. He was quite angry. I think he was at fault for not having 'mentioned the dance again before last night and that I was right in assuming he had changed his mind. k. :k k- WHl you please tell me who is right?;. A: I’m sorry, but you are wrong. Having told the first . boy that you would |o to the d^nce* you should hot have MRS. ROBERT D. PATON Pair Visits Ski Resort Among ski enthusiasts at Whiteface Mountain in upper New York State are the Rob- Double evetything! That's ^vhat the mothers of twins have in common. Meeting to dimmss the possi-bitilies of organmng a MicHtgan , Organizatim of Mothers of Twins club are (from left) Mrs. Alfreansing. Wild cherry shade French velvet fashioned - their sheath gowns and rose headplewfS.^ * w w John Paton of Worthington . was Iwst man for his brother who is of Albany, N. Y. Tlie bride's brother Samuel J. McKim of Ann Arbor ushered with Earl Greenho of Birmingham. ■ , ♦ ♦ k .■ The bride Is an alumna of Eastern Michigan University qnd her husband waw graduated from OMlo Wesleyan Col-le^, TaecepteOva^awsphtl invitatH without first asking him if he still expected yoii to go to thd dance with h>m. Panfry/Linen Showers Given for Local Girl Two recent pre-nuptial showers honored Elaine Landry, Who will wed Ralph Curtis Clauson, Saturday, in Sacred Heart Church, Auburn Heights. . . Mrs. Elton Boehmer of Third Avenue was hostess at a pantry shoWer and Mrs. Deo Crlvea of Wesbrook Avenue gave a linen shower. Among the guests were former Pontiac resident, Mrs. Ole Clausonr recently of In-, dianapolis, and Mrs. Fred C-Dare of Pontiac and Munising. They are grandmothers of the future bridegroom who is the son. of the Oren Clausons of Spence Street. Miss Landry is the daughter .of the MauricCvH. Landrys of Donley Avenue. *■ Two Units Will Meet, Start Drive .The February meetings of both the evening apd. afternoon groups of Kappa Delta sorority, S6uth Oakland Alumnae Association, will"be"hcld at the Oakland County Society for Crippled Children and Adults. . ' * The evening group will meet at 7:30 p. m. Feb. 11. Hostesses will be Mrs. G. B. Work and Mrs. Wolcott Hall of Blr-' mingham and Mrs. George' Heine of Pontiac. The afternoon group will meet Feb. 10 for an all day workshop at the Society. Hostess will be Mrs. E. U Haber-korn of Royal Oak. Both groups will stuff envelopes for the Society’s annual Easter Seal drive to start soon. The Oakland County Society for Crippled Children and Adults has been the sorority’s main philanthropic project for many years. . Maple Leafers Elecf Officers The Maple I ConsBltaiit is HAR0t)F HEARING Tliig is Valuable " it wMI'brinfi you FREE INFORMATION about the omoxinB new CONSUL Behind the Ear Aid Dear Miss Feeieif: I am 19 and have met my dream girl-However, my mother says that I should sloW| down and kamj me thi about - mm i n g my nances in o my girl is . natural-borh been self-sup-’ :ir« and my MARY mts have FEEl^ I helping me by buying i, gas and auto r^irs for _ i^eekly trips Iwme, since I am employed about 100 miles ease give me some advice to get myself on a self-support-basis. then after I ^ be-le self-supporting, how much lid 1 be able to bank weekly (as if I were supporting another person), for I understand the adage about two being able to live as cheaply as one is untrue. My weekly income after taxes ! $54.77.. Dud on college education ($200 total): $5. Payments on auto: $13, Travel expense for auto: ? Room (missile site, so this is cheapest I found): $10,40, Food: ? • Clothing:.? .. Church: $1 Personal expenses and entertainment: ? 1 have filled hr my-fixeit exr penditures. I will appreciate any comment about * them, as well as suggestions as to what proportion of my sal^ should be spent on the other items. Should 1^ start saving a small amount now? W. R. P., Birmingham, Ala. ★ ' ★ ★ / Dear W. R, P,: I hope your dream girl Is,the patient type. She's going to have quite a while.^to wait. You can't even support yourself on your pres- ent set-up —* befcause one-diird of your income is committed to loan payments, Fm not accusing yon, understand — paying back your college loan is all to the good; and if that car is' nMessary to die job, it’s just one M those thin|(s yon have to contend with. However, the best yon can do, as the situation stands, is: Room, $10.40; food, $12; pef^ _>nal expenses, $4; miscellan-eous. Including church, $3; car operating, $5.50; clothing, $2; loans, $18. Bride Picks Lace for Ceremony Sandra Lynn Hoveyof Elizabeth Lake Road exchanged vows with Paul Thomas Col-lom before Rev. .Chalmer Mastin in Bethany Baptist Church. A reception in the Hotel Roosevelt ballroom immediately followed the evening ceremony. - ; Daughter of Mrs..Helen C. Peterson of Ross Drive and Ralph Hovey of Lake Stevens, Wash., th^ bride chose a full-length gown of Chantilly lace over white satin. Her fingertip veil^f silk il-lusion fell from a pearl tiara. Even cutting it fine, this setup doesn’t allow anything for recreation. Unless your girl invites yoit.over for dinner, you’re out of luck. Also, nothing for savings at.,this point. You’ll have to pay off fliose loans before you can figure on being self-supporting, >«ven on the most basic, stringent budget. When that is done, yon can put as much of the $1$ as possible into savings. If you’re really determined to stand on your own feet,- you’ll, have to count eveiy penny and take every short cut. Make your clothes last by taking care of them. Use that car only when you absolutely have to. Watch the coffee breaks. You’re right about two not being abie to live as cheaply as one. Your job is to support one for the time being. Dear Miss Feeley:' I am a Navy man and served all during the war. The. government paid in' Social Security for all of us, not to exceed $1M per month. Now our local Social Security office says that if "you are drawing a retainer check or retirement check from the government, you are not en-, titled to draw Social Security — say the minimuum of $40 per month. - ■ •#, _, __________________ >I have 17 quarters paid in, and I need 21 ■ quarters to be covered for minimum of $40 at age 65. Birth date. May 1, 1907. ★ * ★ ' !t~i~nowmake up the rest 61'the quarter!) In civilian em-ployment in order to draw the minimuW in Social Security at age 65? G. H. S., Escondido, Calif. ★ ★ ★ Dear G.H.S.: Yes, you’ll have to make up those 21 quarters in order to get the $40 monthly payments from Social Security. Ceremony Performed in Chapel. The chapel of Central Methodist piiurCh was the setting for the marriage of Mrs. John Ellis of Lotus Drive to Roger Dean Holm of Long-croft Drive. Rev. Ronald Thompson of the Trjnity Methodist Church performed the Saturday afternoon ceremony. ------ The former Janet Lyon is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lucius Lyon of Milford., Her husband’s parents are Edwin 0. Holm of Chester, Iowa, and the late Mrs. Holm. With her dress of Kelly green silk, the bride wore matching accessories and car-riied yellow daisies. Phyllis Lyoo attended her sister as maid of honor. Ingrid Holm was flower girl and Jeffrey Ellis ring-bearer. Maj. Rich'ard Holm, USAF, recently of Norfolk, Va., presently en route to England, was best man for his brother. Guests were sealed by Richard Hulten and Robert Dika. Short Men Can Now Stand TalL Short men should select jackets with squared shoulders and avoid stubby or hi^-rolled lapels. Coats shouldn’t be so short that they make you look ‘‘cut in half” or so long, they forshorten your legs . L . pick hats with a tall crown and medium to narrow brim,to give the effect of heighL Avoid heavy shoe styles / . . Wear the narrow ties in vogue today ... and see " that your trousers are well-taper^ and trim- 1»R0BLEM8?! j <^^' 24 j iHour Servicei 1 talei • Ssrvic* • kepafr I I SERVICE I I PLUMBINO I HEATING ■ baiatoOMMaSiMwJ Conplete Bepaii Service Mimeograph and Duplicating Machines ...New and RecoiidttioMil CHRfSTIAN LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 HOOVER VACUUM CLEANERS beats ... , as it sweeps . . . as it cleans . . HOOVER CANISTER nPE With All “^Attachments Disposable Bags $3050 HOOVER The Oood Housektcpin$ Shop of Pontiac Sl WesUiuron FE 4-1858 You Can Afford To Be In Style at the»e wonderful SAVINGS THBIFT nF.PT. Mondays thru Thursduya SHAMPOO Al\l) SET $J75 PERMANENTS Complete ^ HAIR SHAFllVG TINT TOUCH-UPS InclHdinK epoS Sliuinijoo and Set V Thrift Dept. Prioea Slightly Higher On Friday and .Saturday Open late Tueadayir '^urada^,^ Please ask about donneWs Styling Salon Prices Open 9-9 Sal. 9-6 Higher Friday and 8alur0420 Aunointmiml Sot Alumy, DICE CLASSES Enroll Now ... Classes are Limited! Fox Trol, Swing, Wulu Latin American Daneco ipM^ORTANT NOTICE! Special CluHsea Now Tr | II Being Fornicd for Aflerttooii Worker* II : For information rail TERRY IVIoGLONE KK 2-0S58 i '! ★ LAST WEEK * PWS SHOE Furtlier Reduction of SPECIAL SHOES Formerly ‘H” ’ NOW ONLY *6” SNOW BOOTS 20% OFF I’uuli’, Shoe Slorr. .I.'; N. Siiitiiinw .Si., Ponii,,, TgE PONTMC rnKss, Monday, febri-ary a. XI.VKTl'^KN ALL Permanents »395 Complete With Cut and Set Now . . . with new lanolin neutralizing. Give your hair new, life, strength, and ' brilliance with the, permanent that adds precious lanolin while it creates a's'dft long lasting wave. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOP Open Moriilngt at 8 AM. iw Over Bazley Mkt. Couple Opens Curtain on Real-Life Romance Connie Lee DesAutels and James Stevens Bennett who 'played the lead roles of John Proctor and his wife in “The Cfucible” at Will-O-Way Apprentice Theatre^ bej;ame Teal-life-marriage partners Saturday. They exchanged vows before Rev. William Palmer in the Shrine of the Little Plow-er, Royal Oak, and chos6 the carried white orchids and rosebuds. Pamela Bslyn ot Farming-' ton was maid of-honor: Robin .Turner of Bloomfield Hills '.and Sandra Brown of Orchard Lake were bridesmaids. Celia 'Bennett was junior attendant and two-year-old Cheri Des-jAutels was flower girl for her sister. The attendants wore f u 11- je aUWilL-O-Way^foa. --4eRgth-Empp«sS"gowBS-^4ut:s... The stage lights played on Mr. and/Mrs. James Stevens Bennett (Connie Lee DesAutels), at their wedding reception Saturday in Will-0-Way Apprentice Theater where they met last May. The bridal couple and their attendants were seated on center stage for the wedding ^dinner. Long Handled Spoons Prove Worth in Home By POLLY CRAMER DEAR-POLLY— Quite by scl cident I discovered how handy an iced tea spoon is in my kitch- INEISIR’S * BEAUTY SALON FE 8-1343 IN FEBRUARY Shampoo—Set ■jl;’ Haircut BEAUTY SALON 2nd floov Appointment Not Always Needed These small spoons with their long handles are worth their ;^ht in gold' in my home. — DEAR POLLY - I wonder how many people know that salt rings can easily be removed from snow boots and galoshes by brushing them witji vinegar and cold water? — I.K. DEAR POLLY - My teen-age daughter had a slip or two that were too tighLX hoHght lace insertion similar to that on her slips, opened the gidfe seams and zigzag stitfched the insertion down the sid.es. •It takes twice the length of the Slip plus four inches of lace for each one. This makes tight slips prettier and as good as new. •— MR^. W.T. DEAR POLLY - Hobbyists who paint china and ceramics will find that a plastic bag filled with beans, cereal or rice will be perfect support for the piece being painted. • Next time you are looking for a bookmark, cut off a corner from a used envelope. Slip it over the corner of the page. • To keep a spool of thread frohi dropping off the table as you sew, lay the spAY fok IMCM I’hikI hKI.IVKKV 9Ry CLEANERS 719 WohI IIiiHhi m: Mr>:ui Save ironing puffed sleeves by stuffing them with plastic bags until dry. " reception. ♦ ★ ★ Daughter of the Raymond M. DesAutels of Orchard Lake, the bride had studied ballet, for seven years and dramatics at Will-O-Way for two years. Her husband, who attended Michigan State University, is the son of Dr. and Mfs. Grant S. Benhett of Berkley. He played dramatic roles with the Clarkston Village Players and enrolled at Will-O-Way' last spring. ► IfTAUAN SILK With her full-length gown of white Italian silk, the bride wore a cap of silk leaves and a bouffant illusion veil She quoise satin and held nose-gSys of white and pink Tose- Charles Bennett stood as best man for his brother. William Rudnik of Hazel'Park and Duane Peck of Dearborn ushered. Michael DesAutels served as a page. The copule, presently^in rehearsal for the April production of “Pajama Game,” will live in Royal Oak. Alumnae Unit Wilt Meet Alumni of.Centenary College for Women, Centenary Junior College and Centenary Collegiate Institute, Hacketts-town, N. j., will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday in the hpme of Mrs. Mary Conlisk Bru*ce, Grosse Pointe Shores. Assisting Mrs. Bruce are-Mrs. Stanley F. Novaco and .Mrs. Sheila Flaherty Wilson, iwth of Allen Park,^ class of ’58. - Bylaws for the Detroit chap-' ter of the Centenary Alumni and officers elected. Make It 'i^rself Coyer a cejldlose sponge or steel wool ^cwring pad with a bright ^ap of material to make s pincushion for your se^g basket. JMeumode 2ALg!, SHEER STRETCH -/SEAMI^S FOR THE Toughen Trousers Press heavy tape just inside the lower edge of your son’s new trousers to prevent fraying where,, thq trouser rubs the shoe. - Tape adjoining legs of two or more card tables together for an. improvised buffet table; GIRL IN rf yOUR HEART L Free Gift Wrapping 82 N. Saginaw St. TWENTF TrtE PONTIAC P: Vocabulary Level Important to Teac , By LESUE J. NASON, Ed. D. - “A scurvy elephant! That’s what you called my boy, Jim.” Hie mother of the eight-year-old had c 0 m e to school with blood in her eye after receiving this report from her offspring. “I have never called any child a name; however, I did say your son was a ■dl^rbi^g The mystery wa&«olved. What a teacher says. and what an eight-year-old ' hears, are often very different. Beginning teachers are in a particularly difficult position: In college they are required to use a sophisticated vocahulary-rthe language of the pedagogi sometimes called “p^agese. Like most persons they speak two languages — adiilt talk baby talk. The language , of the 7 to 11-year-pids is in between. At this age a child , is adding many new words to his vocabulary. Usnaliy; they are watered down adult words. Many of the new words the child uses lack the precise meaning to him ,that adults place upon them. It requiri^ a conscious effort for any new teacher to speak on the vocabulary level of the children. There is too little opportunity Jacoby on Bridge MOETH ♦loss „ . V70S ♦ OS .♦AKQCS r- EAST ♦ KQJS-V Jt08 ♦ K1074h ♦ 0 ♦ 654 TOO 5 4 ♦ Q86 ♦ J 4 3 (l» ♦ A87 VAKS ♦ AJ8yy< ♦ 1087S Bodi Tulnenbla SoaOi Wool Nofth Bast TW.T. Paii=.3K.T7 Vm Pass Paso________ Oponlnclaad—♦K., JACOBY ' By OSWALD JACOBY . Anybody knows enough to ' play a low card when he is not vtrying to win a trick. It takes experience to ' learn when to play an unnecessarily high card in-order to guard against ^ ah embarrass^ mcnt of riches! Iat6r on. South -let' West hold the first trick with the king of spades. West continued with the queen. South took this trick and led the deuce of clubs to dum-mj} Doc It): ha — ------- . arlvartarlai with intlla , ppruach wini tlllai, Formar rid now maka gattura oh a Uiarltabia Show you ora *ciRFRKORN''7Dar, ISJon, SO): Cur-rant compiicationt a«iit which ora tarn-pgrary: Rlnlth prolaoti. Look to tulura,, 7001110 your piaitlga li ON 1H« RISS. - ‘nltlotlva Ra indapandohl In thought, tiiiginol .ill oittnooih ■Mlgn. Othiavahianl, ItOy tot AliVANCR ,,V”tfs.riks ICES IFab lOAAot, «):. Tina day It . oaotnpla. no obiarvanll Rood 11. In ony ograomani, conirotit, * ■ ft R . IF TUESDAY IS YOUR BIh , you ala ahia In hondla I mallorc But oUan yiiu Irariirna It for rolUlIl Slilva tm BAI ANCB , etN TBNDRNrif -------- ---------- ------------ .. It national lljhrra. . (COByrteht IH4, tSonarai FAtiMtaa CarR I the club suit for a moment and led dummy’s ten o^jpades. . Had West beep in a thinking mood, he would have distrusted South’s generosity and refused to cash hjs last spade, but )Vest wasn’t'thinking. He did cash that fourth spade and South was able to . discard a club from hh band. This unblocked the suit and gave him his contract., South solved his problem with for finding a way to unblock the club suit, but everything would have been much easier if he josHed the seven of -dul start and dropped the ten und nine on the second and third leads of the suit. This way he would have been left with the deuce and the unblocking problem would never have arisen. 0—The bidding has bMti: Weat North Eoat Sooth 1T Pans Pass Dble. Pass 2 ♦ Pass ■You, South hold: ♦K J10 87 TA 4K 5 41 4AQ8 Whst do you do? A—Bid .four BpadeO. Ton have a sound dooble and food for d teacher to listen carefully to . an individual child when faced with a group of 30 or 40 children: TEACHER MUST ADJUST It is.unfair and unrealistic to expect the children to make the adjustments to the teacher^ level of speaking. If there is4o be understanding between ^ch-er and child, it is the^acher who must learn to i^just. Somewhere intraining of an elementa^school teacher, there be an oppOr-Innity for ^ to-getacqua^ ed with/and talk at lettgip with, children of the age/^e wil^be teaching. ^ ; . lii order that hi pass on information and learning, there must be a clear understanding between teacher.and child. ★ R * Once communication is established on a firm basis the teacher can help a. child develop a wider vocabulary. While this vocabulary is being developed it is extremely important that the child form Utokabit^of grafpthg the precise meaning of each new word...... INDIVIDUAL STRESSED An important element in the training of elementary school teachers is the opportunity for each to develop^ personal need! Such d^elopment calls for something more than a series of cawses. San Piendsco State College attempts to ac-cdinpllsh this training through seminar taught by a team of specialists. Grades are abandoned. At the epd of the seminar students are either recommended for certification, or not recommended. .■ ■■'*' ■ - ■* ■*' ■' A teacher-training program should enhance the strengths 8f an . make it possible for him to develop, needed background and skills. . . LEARN LEARNINg _ If he is to facilitate a child’s learning, he must, be skilled at learning. If he is to help, a child become skill^ in reading, writing Slid arithmetic he, too, must possess these skills. / ■ * * * S/ teacher-training program must inclu»***’-^ TWO AOADEMY I lophlA Lcrtn “Two Wowon” Passenger Liner Sent to Aid of Freighter * TOKYO (AP)—’The passenger liner President Wilson, en route from Hawaii to Japan, has been diverted to aid a stricken Liberian freighter about 600 miles oS-Japan’s coast, maritime safety officials reported today; Officials said the 7J50 - ton Agia Erinil reported early Sunday it was leaking badly from tWo cracks in its hull. It was bound from Portland, Ore. to Japan with a cargo of scrap iron. All its’ 25 crewmen were reported :safe. » Hotel and' motjel construction and modernizatioln expenditures in 1962 ^reached $832,687,078. Fumes Overcome 80 During Church Service PARKERSBURG, W. Va. (fl -j-Carbon monoxide fumes leaking from new floor heaters overcame 80 persons Sunday as they listened to a sermon at the First Assembly of God church here. Police said all available am- bulances were summoned to take the victims — most of the congregation — to nearby hospitals. Only six were admitted for treatment. About 15 were given oxygen and sent home. Horticulturist Dies AMHERST, Mass. (AP)-Dr; Arthur S. Ckilby, 76, a profes.sor, emeritus of horticulture at the University of Illinois, died Saturday. He was born in Tilton, N.H. Sawfish, found - maihly in warm seas, use theti sharp teeth to slash for food. Focus on Fashion Good vision important . . . and so is your oppeoronce— Nu-Vision has over 400 frame styles for your selection. Shapes for every facial “ contour, colors to. compliment, every complexion, design? to drornotize every perronolity. htu-Vision offers i complete optical service including examination, contact lenses, precision lens grinding, fast repair service arid complete eyeglass manufacturing facilities. DIVIDED PAYMENTS AVAILABLE E. STEINMAN, O.D. 109 North Saginaw St. Open Daily 9il0 to Slip; Friday BtiO to B:10 Phono FE 2-2895 BARGAINS GALORE F0Rb4 OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY and MONDAY TIL 9 P.M. - FREE PARKING AT REAR OF WKC! NO MONEY DOWN-3 FULL YEARS TO PAY- * FREE SERVICE » FREE DELIVERY • FREE WARRANH 3 COMPUTE ROOMS S|moda, 21 mottroHoi, 2 •gringa, guord roll andfoddor. Uio •• twin stylo or bunk •tylo. 30-Inch. » 57“ BED •nd INNERSPRING MATTRESS Set Comgioto with Innortgring moHrota, boa igrlng, woih-oblo gloatic •Aeodboord Ond ' lega. Sgeclol low gric#... *68“ WKC, 108 North Saginaw Street... ■■•-f/rffr-rj! I ' -;f 't ? F. - r- - f- ■ f fA ’ T, f ^ ; / '7 f 11V'- • ' ■ ■■ ■ /" THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, FEBRtfABY 8, 1864 'M- Silver Medal Added to Bronze US. Olympic Hopes Brighfer INNSBRUCK, Austria (AP)-Plucky Jean Saubert of Lake-view, Ore., added a silver medal to her earlier bronze with a flashing run in the women’s giant slalom ski race and young Yank figure skaters got'off to a stronf start Mondays ■ Unitied States’ brightest day in the ninth Winter. Olympic Games. •Miss Saubert, 21-year-old Oregon State co^, br-oke the monopoly of France’s brilliant Alpine sister team by tying Christine Goitschel for second ^ fraction of a second behind ' WHAT’S GOING ON HERE? Only a fight ‘ or the puck could attract-such a crowd at an -ice hockey game and neither one is visible here.. Action occurred during Sweden’s 74 win . oyer the U. S^Hocfeey^jquacLat the Winter '•i Olympics Saturday. Player on ice with mouth open is the Swedish goalie Svensson. New York Rangers’ prospect Ulf Sterner is No. 10 for Sweden. Bill Christian (5) and Tom Martin (2) are the identifiable U. S. performers in the scramble. ■Christine’s sister, Marielie, the gold medalist.' ■ ' ★ ★ ★. The winning time was 1 minute, ^.24 seconds. Jean and Marielie did 1:53.11. On Saturday, it was Oiristine, at 19 a yearyblder than Marielie who zoomea home iir^ in the slalom, with Marslle' second and Miss Saubert a happy third. The three clash again Thursday in the third leg of the Alpine competition — the downhill tind MisriSuBeirhasTow^^ “I will go ail put for the gold.’ RUSSIAN ROMP Jean’s two medals are the only ojnes collected so far by the U..S. team, the Soviet Union, on the other hwd. is making a team nmaway of -the Games, wiUi a total of 15 — six gold. thought too old for such a rigorous skiing test. * ★ ★ Rallying after placing second behind defending champion Georg Thomas of Germany in the jumping Sunday, Knutsen ‘ I sped the 9.3 miie.«i of the cross-' epuht^ in*50 minutes, M.6 seconds lot 469.20 points. Graded bn both jumping and the cross-country , Russia’s Nikolay Kiselev was second with 543.04 points, followed by Thoma with 452.89. . five silver and four bronze. The Russians picked up another silver in the Nordic combined, the only other final of the day, with the gold going to Tor-mad Knutsen, a 32-year-old Norwegian clerk who had been had the ninth best cross-country time with 52:26.4 but finished 15th in the final combined standings with 403.76 points. HIT BY FLU Jim Shea was 27th with 346.76 - 1- points, after racing the crosscountry in 53:04.2. The to “U.S. ent^, Jim Page of Lake Placid, N.Y., scratched because of an attack of influenza. * * * In the start of the men’s fig-urS'iffiatlngi^Mmpetitien at the Ice Stadium, Scotty Allen, the 15-year-old schoolboy national champion from ‘Smoke Rise, N.J., shot into fourth place in the first two of five compulsory figures. The final three will be skatedTuesday. Monty Hoyt of Denver, former U^.S:Thampion, war ninth-end Tommy Ljtz of Hershey, Pa., who shines in free skating, was 15th. ★ * Manfred Schnelldorfer of Germany assumed the lead with 363.0 points, followed by Kierol Divin of CzechMlovakia, 353.9, and Alain Calmat of France, the s^ong favorite, with 347.7. Allen, third after the first figure, was close with 342-6. ★ ★ ★ Hoyt’s score was 321i and Litz had a total of 306.3 points from the judges after two school figures, in which the contestants trace involved fixed designs on the ice. ★ ★ ★ The- compulsory figures, a strong p^t for Europeans, coiint fio per cent in the_final— judging. The free skating, a phase in which young Allen rates among the world’s bestr counts 40 per cent. The free skating dim a x is scheduled Thursday. ' . Rangers Pass Detroit in NHL Race as NY Wins . DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Red Wings managed only one point over the Weekend and found themselves in fifth place In the Natiehal " continued their surge. .Detroit was bombarded by Montreal, 9-3, Saturday night as Bobby Rousseaii scored five , goals. The Red Wings salvaged a 2-2 tie with Toronto Sun^y night on ' Parker MacDonald’s goal in a wild third period. Chicago moved back into a first place tie with Montreal by beati^ Boston 5-2 Sunday, after 'playing a 2-2 tie with New York Saturday. New York upset Mon-t4»al 4-2 in Sunday’s other game. Toronto defeated Boston 5-1 in Saturday’s other contest. TOUGHER SLATE The Red Wings also find them-■ selves playing a toughef schedule before playing host to New York next Sunday. 7 Detroit plays Chicago in ' home-and-home series, Wednes-■' day and Thursday, then journeys to Boston next Saturday. New York, meanwhile, has two games with cellar-dwelling Boston this week before playing • at Montreal Saturday. * ★ ★ Frank Mahovllch’s goal at the five-minute mark of the first period kept Toronto ahead Sunday until Norm Ullman knotted it at 8:48 of the third period. ■ The Maple leafs moved ahead again less than three minutes later when Dave Keon drilled the puck through Terry Saw-chuck’s legs. MacDonald tied it again a little more thap a minute later after tajting a pass from Gordie Howe on a faceoff. The assist was Howe's -700th In regular season play— —Tommy Jacobs Is getting a little bolder and Jimmy Demaret Is getting a little older. Which Is not only a rhyme but a reason the 150,000 Palm Springs Golf Classic turned out the way it did: Jacobs won It, beating De-marel on the second hole of a sudden - death playoff Sunday after they finished the regula- Hayes Jones Will Retire This Season BOSTON (41 - - Michigan’s flashing hurdler, llayi's Jones, says he wants to run hi the Olympics again, lull plans to retire" after this year. Jones won his Wth consecutive hurdles event Saturday night In the Boston A,A. Games. • This Is It," the Detroit school teacher said after his victory In the 45-yard hurdles. "This Is Uie IjltB Tfil-I'm going to keep on until the Olympics. If I make (he Olympics, fine. If I don't flue." , , Jones, a former Pontiac resident, said "Running U8(t to the left of the green, was lying three when Jacobs holed' Tammy Jntbt, •5.500 U.54-54-00-n5~lS5 Jimmy D*m«r»l, 54,000 5,5.a-*5-7» 71-W Jatobi (WfaMMt Dwusrat on Iho •— hola at • luririaa.riaalh playolf. ».7t.74».5l W • III Caipft. 51.500 Dava Mart. 51.510 •ruca Pavllni ll,5N ____________ Oaoroa KnMion, 11.410 71T0.7M7- Oana LHIIaa, 4hM« 7H*HU>7»-74-M5 ........Jr„.wi7.io owaTO-r- ■“ iiir'iu’ii!,. Sob McCallllfiir, 4t«7.50 71 7t taMi Jarry emrn««, HU. 4».7» tl-Tt-j. I, fhisf nnnnn-m ■, 1715 50 70 7«M71.74-^5«0 Jock NIcklaui, 1715^50 Jullui Boroi. 1717 50 Stan Think, 1550 'ack Rula Jn, 55W nita Cramptoh. 5IM rank SaarO. 55M atl-Waavar; 5WO’“- a1l(ty*w!''*ai', 1550 71-74 7(771.74 HO 74 71-71.71-70- 541 74-74.74 U-71 541 74 40-4* 71.71 541 trdon .101141. 1544 H 7i^t icky rvpil. U44.M 71 7} 7 liaVIraitlu. 554AIMI 75 74 7 iiiy Wowiy. 454MI 70 74 4 ’17) 541 I Oon 'solrtlaw, I544.M 7J 71 40 7|.74 Hi Babby NIctwil. 1544.01 7140 40 TO H-'HI D«P* $onolnts he managed l5i tlw first visit there, I’arllcu-larly since Colton Nash iS avef-aging 27 a game and Ted Keek-en 20. , f A A A ■ The game Is Oii« of three Involving nationally ranked titams tonight The others have second ranked Michigan at Ohio State In an Important Rig Ten struggle' and Nil. 5 Vanderbilt at Ala- State 9.5-79, Mar,shall tripped Western Michigan 87 to 82, Minnesota - Duluth knocked off Northern Michigan 85-72, Buffalo downed Wayne State 73-72, Jackson JC beat Benjon Harbor JC 89-76, Defiance outscored Spring Arbor 18-101, Northwestr ern CC defeated Port Huron JC 84-71, Alma downed Lawrence. I’eboundlng department for Tech 101-89, Indiana Tech bent Olivet 7.9-58 and Ferris State defeated Soo Tech 94-,78'; ln other games Saturday. LITTLE CHANCE While holding Indiana Tech well below its 98-polnt average, Olivet had little chance with Its top scorer, Mike llabbors, out of atition because of Injury and Dave Cprroll tossing In 32 points tor the winners. Bud Acton and Bill Moore scored 35 points each in Alma’s Victory over l4iwrenco Tech, Die high scoring battle between Defiance and Spring Ar-lair featurc'd Individual marka-inanshlp. Pkul Shahan and Norm Krueckoberg fired 33 and 26. respectively, tor' the winners arid Dave Baker SO foe ,Spring Arbor. Wayne State ran out of time In ita loaa to Buffalo, Thd Tartars shot nine straight potnta in the last 80 seconds, missing a tie by one point. ||4eb«rg Sarvict Stt DETROIT (UPl) ■ Funeral service for l.iiclei) Iteelierg, 21-year old Detroit Llonsi tackle, were scheduled for Wednesday night at the lliessalonlani Bap UsI chuix'h In Brynx, N.Y. , fore Buntln fouled out. The Spartans rallied briefly and twice closed to within eigh’ points. But the Wolverines coi>-tlnued to control the boards and to get any closer. Marcus .Sanders topped MSU scorers with 21 points, while Stan Washington added 17 and Gent and Fred Thomann 13 each. . , Larry Tregoning pitched in with 15 for Michigan, with Darden adding 11. Darden also topped both squads with 17 rebounds. ★ A A “We felt this time we’d get on the backboards," said Michigan coach Dave Strack. The Wolverines lost out In the first time this season in the first meeting with MSU. The Spartans are the conference rebound leadr ersj MSU coach Forddy Anderson said he didn’t fee) his team took full advantage of the situation after Buntln went out, "we played better In the game at East I-ansltig,V he added. Barnum Takes 1st (n PGA Tourney PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP)—A final round par 72 gave John Barrium of Belmont, Mich, his second straight PGA National Golf Club medal pliy me chai lampionship by mday. a single slrbli Barnum posted a total of 281 to defeat .^m Snead of Boca Raton^ Fla., who finished With 282 In the 72-hole 825,000 tournament. Barnum won 81,700 and Snead 81,300. Jack McGoWan of Largo, Fla. picked up 81.200 tor hl« third place finish wl(h 385 and Pete Coo|ier of Lake Worth. Fla, won 81,400 tor his 288 IsilamI (Ilhson Of Kansas City, Wo finished with 290 and Won 81.00H V-''/. '■ ir- I' ■ V ? ■II I. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOypAY, FP^BRl^ARY ‘f, 1964 ; -'•f ■ TWEXTY-THKEE THIS? OR THIS! I £x-7;ger Mahush Among Group Six Players Namd to Baseball Hall of lame Your Choice With a TAYLOR TOPPER No need today to look other thaiVyour best. When you know you do, you feel better, do your job better:—and you're^ more funl’JDon't be -ignored because you look older than you are7"Clean, cool new flexible ■base, contoured to each individual bald area. NO'NET, NO GLUE, NO puss, NO MUSS. The only answer—TAYLOR TOPPER. BE YOUR I--------M*'*- DETAILS” BEST YOU! i I TO: Taylor topper, in w. ntti straet - TBylwTppperTnc.-|-^^^'^=^^^~ 123 W, 28 St. I w FREE, N.Y. 1, N Y I details on TAYLOR I NAME............. j -STREET.....r...‘...,;.:. Wl 7-1820 Offices In Principal Cities, Coast-to-Coast. Time Payments. ^WA L K E S £ Hiram Walker Quality in a Great Bourbon Buy TiN:pfcH'| it slow and easy— enjoy its full rich flavor M Proef Straight Bourbon $394 *347 4/S Qt. Pint Cotft No. $M Codt No. U9 Alae Bviftebit In 100 PROOr. BOHLEp IN BOND-0 Yttn OM TEN HIGH—Your Best Bohrboin Buy 86 and 100 PROOF . HIRAM WALKER ft SONS iNC., PEORIa] ILL AUTO SERVICE COUPON SPECIALS Clip ’Em Out-Cart ’Em In-Count Your Savinct BEST TERMS Qn Auto Sarvica InThisAraa 20l»6 Mote to p«y c Tile, and Wed. Only! 1^00 A ■V E antMUFFLER GOODl^Al DOUBL^LVE ACTION SHOCK UlSORBERSa. BrakaTFM End SraplJ .C95 his n 'Upon A' Correet Camber, Caller, Toe-In, Toe-out. ★ Re-pock Front Wbtol Boarlngg Adiuet Broket, All Four Wheeli ★ Chock Balance of Front Wheeli •pr Rood felt WHEEL BEAHINQS REPACKED ARFour’-f-fVid. I WITH Whtilt tllll I oouKn RY appointment I by APPOINTMENT Brake Adjustment > 33' 79' “Now . . . IntlAiit Ciodit at Goodyoof* For all halileri *f Oi«rpe A>PI«tBB und National Cradit Carrfi. 0H»a In, praMnt, Flat* or card. Yaur charfla III bt aptned while year tirei ate being G00DYEA|l SERVICE 30 S. CASS / FE.5-6123 Open to 9 P. M. P^ldby' NEW YORK (AP)-The spit-ball is legal in the Hall of Fame even if it is Out of bounds in. Organized baseball.' Burleigh Grimes and Urban (Red) Faber, two of the last pitchers to ttoow the spitter legally, were among the six new members named Sunday by the Hall of Fame veterans’ committee. - ★ ★ Miller Huggins/the little man who managed the New York Yankees to six pennants in 12 years, and Heinie Manush, the powerful outfielder with a lifetime .330 batting average, also made thp grarip along wifJ from the pre-1900 era—John Montgomery Ward and Tim Keefe. Grimes, Faber and Manush are alive. . FORMER 'HGER Manush, 62, piped in the majors from 1923'to 1939 and spent most of his career in the American League with Detroit, St. Louis, Washington and Bos- ton. He finished up with Brooklyn and Pittsburgh in the National and later managed in the minors, scouted and coached. In 1^ he wqn the batting tiUe at I^trOit with a'.378 average. -’In some ways Ward was the HEINIE MANUSH day night. Last week, in fact, they scene stealers. The second place Kandy West Hair Stylist te|im — the lone female squad in the field — had an actual 1009 game. Jo Gobi had 211 and Doris Lanktree 212 in the game with Rec Quintets in Title Bids Championship drives continue ip jthejecTfiatiofi basfetball spot:, light tliis week. ----------- Spencer Floor Covering needs only one win to clinch the Waterford Township Class A title while O’Neil Realty is one game from tying for the Class B crown. la c i t y action, unbeaten West Bloomfield Heating has become the first team to clinch a berth in the city Class A playoffs. A change from the normal procedure will find the city American League playing at Madison Junior High School Thursday night instead of Pontiac Central as usual. TOWNSHIP-BAtKaTDALL. Spcnccr Floor Covering . Lakeland Pharmacy ....... Five R'l Conitructlon In the Airway First League Wednesday, Betzi Waisanen scored well with 234 — 582 tnt.al.s and .limp Rliim hit. 220— 545. A^es Wolf had a 501 and Vi Rosie a 522 in the Airway Angels League. The Mrs.’s took three points from the league leading Alley Gats and closed the gap between first and second place. At 300 Bowl last we§k the scores included a Jt45 — 631 duo by Bob Rebennack and 234 - 61V pair by A1 Bornak in the Tuiesday GMT & C American League. , Jerry Mazza had •^215 ^ 610 and Eri^ Kulazewski 223 in the Tuesday night House League while the 300 .Bowlerettes re-cot-d^ a 208 — 511 effort for, Jean Swayne. Gerry Upcott made the 6-7-10 split. The house team was in the GMC National lOop spotlight Tuesday with a 1090 game and a 3123 series. Fran Pretto’s 198 led the 300 Bowlers League the same night. O'Neil Realty ..........7.,,. ... 7 Ellka Healing ................ ... ] Fruihour & struble ............... 3 - " obe Cleeneri ................. I Towing ] THIS WRBK'S SCHCOULR Waterford Townehlp Mendiy el Crery JHS p.m. -- Lekelend Pharmacy ( ... _.irs Towing (B)i 6:30 p.m. -- O'N Realty vs, Wardrobe Cleaners (both 1 - Fruthour A Struble Realty both P'- —-- .1. Wnrdr... _______ Thursday at Crary p.m, — Spencer Floor Covering 1. Bill'n IB)( 8:30 p.m. •• Five R's • Hoys' Club.* If Lineoir ■— Neopolltan Club. Wednesday at Llncaln JHt 7 p.m. ■ Auburn Haights BC vi. Nao-pollten: 6:30 t.m. — New Hope Depllit VI. Minute l unch. City Netlaiial Laagua Tuesday at Madlaan JHf 7 p.m, — Memleh ftapHat Church vs. Wilton's All Sleri; 6:30 p.m. pracllce ym*. American Laagua Wadnasoay at Pantlac Narfharh Wesl’’'BlbdmileW^eat1n^^^ Southwail Community Club vi. Bache-lor'i Club. Thursday at Madlsan JHt 7 p.m. — Corn Fuel 6. 0" * * Prep Slate BASKETBALL Tuesday f City Csniral at Saginaw Arthur / City Handy at Saginnw Berkley at Royal Oak Dondero Lamphere at L'Ansa Crausa. Flushing at Lapeer Troy at Warren Cousino FItigerald at Clawson Lake Orion at Avondale Madison at Rochester New Haven at Dryden Brown City at Capac Almont at Armada Memphis et Anchor Bay "iSSk^arirar crantirooK Country Day, at Emmanuel Christian SI. Michael at St. Agatha. WRIITLINO kley at FItigerald lord Union at Cranbi mington OLS at Will igton OLS at Willow Run eld at Royal Oak Dondero Oak Park at Detroit Thurston It Northern at Pontiac Central Southtleld el l-lttgorel Firearms • Archery Village Sport ft Hobby Shop 1M I. Woodward, Birmingham MIdwatl 4-3616 HARb TO RESIST . . EASY TO OWN Pick [vlnrudo Pow6ir _ 9 MODELS -1 ta 96 H.F. ALL MODILI ON DIftPLAY HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS I6H t. TalagrapM FU I-6MI T” Speak Effectively 't| ... ona of tha 10 ways you'll banafit from tha iDale Carnegie iCoui'se AniNO 1st SESSION AS OUR QUEST TUESDAY^^eWIjT 7*0^^ PbNTIAC MALL -r Communif/Room Neat ta Maill OWlea - tllugbath faika R»pd «t lalaQtaipk Fiasaniast lijy LiMdatihlp Training Inslltuta. 11000 MeMshols / Coll UN (6-9991 Callocl, lor Addlllonol Inlarmoilan U most remarkable of the group. A jack-of-all-trades as a player, Ward was. the only man to collect more than 2,(K)0 hits, 2.151, and also to win more than 100 games, 158, as a- iiiMiwm LAte rm6 Seealltheboats.^ G*** Annual GREATER MICHIGAN BoatShow FEB.15-23 Daily Door Prizes > Free Boating Clinics Isle of Champions Weigh anchor and steer for the biggest,' most exciting boat show in the Great Lakes Area. New boats, new motors, new accessories, new boating fashions, camp-Trig arrdTFaVel trailers. Daily door prizes*—outboard motors, boats and others. Don’t miss it. Bring the whole family., youltl all have a iJoattozuLof fun. DETROIT ARTILLERY ARMORY West 8 Mile Road, Near Northland ADMISSION *1.00 Children under 12 FREE . SHOW HOURS ALL DAY PARKir noontoiOp.ra. (Exc6pt8p.m.la8td6y) 25c Owned ond-produced by MICHIGAN MARINE DEALERS ASSOCIATION SKILLED HANDS SPECIAL TC5QLS GENUINE GM PARTS TAKE THE GUESSWORK OUT OF CAR CARE Your Guardian Maintenance serviceman is trained and skilled to do the job right. He has the advantage of professional training at one of the 30 national General Motors Training Centers. The specialized equipment he uses means a faster, finer job. This distributor tester, for example, takes the guesswork out of a distributor overhaul. It analyzes the problem and makes more precise adjustments possible. He has available genuine GM parts engineered to original specifications for replacement whenever necess^ary. See your GM dealer regularly for long^ run service savings. • BB YOON ''®" giBNVICB^ d > Guardian Maintenanci CHBVROLBT* PONTIAt •OLD8MOBILH • BUICK • CADILLAC ^GMC TRUCK rWKNTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS.^OyDA^, FEBRUARY 3> 1964 Ex-Con Sought in Two Policemen Killed in Los Angeles Store IX)S ANGELES (AP) - Ai> ^ ex-convict who learned printing in prison was being sought today. Police say he klll^ two officers who tried to arrest him for trying to pass a'forged check. Police said a nathtawlde manhunt has been ordered for Leaman Russel Smith, . 33, with emphasis on Las Vegas and Chicago,, as well as the Los Angeles area, Police said Smith, reload from Leavenworth Federal Prison last October, opened fire in a Sears Roebuck store," Saturday night, killing Sgt. Charles Paul. Monaghan. 37, and officer Robert M. Endler, also 37. ■ ’ ★ ★ A third policeman,JSadeLJur^ man, 27, and a .store clerk, Stephen S. Sumki, 5S, were wounded in.the shooting at the Los Angeles store. ASK ABOUT CHECK Jurman, at a hospital recovering from bullet wounds in the chest and arm, said I yesterday the shooting began wliile he Md his partners were quejjtioning Smith about a |167.4{) xdieck he and a woman were trying to cash. Jurman said Smith asked “are you a poHceman?“------ “““W ifld when he wnswered the head and officer Endl< was shot through the heart. The officers were in pla clothes. The woman, Mts. Barabara Walker, 25, did not attempt to escape, officers said, though she had a 2S J.MO tquar* ( ..........• SastM ayliM SltlMr Lmim asisa 114m Vewirs 1011 W. Maple aosa >M aiebtoh -i Laka, Ml ■ ........... 41*0 Ouplax LhMOln Part-Mn. amatf Chariot, M Mrt. Pot Szaldtr Mra. BaMy BraMlI Norma Jaan Butlary Mrt. Blliabalh StoyanovIcB W Wtllailay Driva . . ... 41444 Sathama USI1 Pratio BoaU S17M Ivarsraan Plaaaant RIdga, Mich. Mount Clomont, Michistn aooovillo St. Clair Shorai Wallad Laka, Mlchlpan Hlshlaml Park Mri. Anna SchuH Mra. Haijry lltian Mra. Marparat Campball - Mra. Taylor - 11MS Clomonra CInlo 11147 Llndon.aood 1414 Myron Olondolo Avonvo Ltronlo, Mlchlgon Clio, Michlsan ■ Mrs. a. Briiao J Linda L. WInar otto Lovalind ^ ttSO Chrlctnar PUY WALT DISHEY'S SWORD IN THE STONE! Here Ara M Masiy Hwiidred Peilw-Wiiiiiers! John Pluakoto - 1^ MtMt-Wyaoo------ I OVER’50,000 ootroa, Michison at. Cloir Shoro* * * sort. Dorothy Kompr . Mra. Both Polonon \ Mr. Hugo Hortol Mary Bannorpun ^ B RDITEC ISIS Chilton Road 141 N. 21nd Straat ' 414 NoiTh Parry 0147 ttaal j III I It ill rKIliCj HowOll, Michigan • BaNIt Craak, Mich. Pontiac, Michigan Datrolt, Michigan | 111 %fWll r Mr*. Charlotta Jonoo Mn. Oaorga Cutting Mra. Imary Randolph Arlano Batran E ........ --------- tStJMIIl.. - i - SW«lll»Of4M«.«4- Chase & SenboAi Initent . ^ . (•Kee *1" Duncan Hines — Wkite • Yellow - Devils Food Mixes 3 ^1®® 49* ~\ Beef Stew A'S.39' Pliimp, Pan Reddy, Whole Round Steaks Flavote Dinty Moert Always Lean ~ ^ide SeversI Timet Daily Fleshly Ground HAMBURGER Pffeat affactiva Ihfoeeh Teeidev. fthreery I Wa retafva ffc# right fe limit fveatltlai. Velvet Smeelh or Krunchy ^ Peanut Butter ^ M* WITH THIS eOUPOH AND puaqHAsa op Part* or Cut Up FRYERS IxquIaNo llberta Sliced Peaches Seva S4c on 4 No.2VkCan 25* Dole Juke Sale aPRUPPU , a PINEAPPU-ORANGE * PINE4PPlE-GR|iPEfRIIIT SoveSla 5-99' laokoot loo ClMM M 0 I E LARGE GRADE “A ” BLUE RIBBON MflfIt Coupon et Right 39: mUABLEWRIGL£Y coupon URGE EGGS 39* do.. Limit Ono With ThI* Coupon ond tho-Purchoio of iSAO or Mora Ixcludins B**r, WIno or Tobacco. Coupon txplto* Siturdoy, Pohruory S, 1*44. Limit Ono Coupon Por Cuttomor. ClilSII0t3^59 mUABlEWRIOLEY COUPON Con 20c Limit Ono With ThIt Coupon arid Ih4 Purchtta of MAS or Mora Ixcludlng Boor, vyin# or Tobacco. Coupon Ixpiroi Saturday, Ptbruary I, |*«4. Limit On* Coupon Por Cuatomar. VALUABLE WRIOIEY COUPON TOMATO SOUP 3 c.„3S* M-.s.lsj-.ts-ri.V'Ss Coupon Por Cuat^r. Sealftel Golden Nugget Bufterittilk Seva lOc 39 Mel-O-CruM Whole Wheal / Bread < C l 1 i THE POyTIAC PRI^^.SS! MOXDAi\ FEBRUiftlY I TWEXTY-FIVE ^SBasmessr and Finance ^ '<^*5rvx^<'t«- MARKETS Airlines Show Some Strength The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wh^esale package lots. Quotatidns are furnished" by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. ^ Market Stays at Dead Center NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market moved at around dead center early this afternoon with —fmSSu~ • FRUITS Apples, Oeliplous, Red, bu......S3.S0 Apples, Ocllelous Oolden, bu......... 3.75 Apples, Jonathan, bu. ................3.00 Apples, McIntosh, bu..................3.00 ■Apples, Northern Spy, bU. .......... 3.2^ and selected issues. Most changes of key stocks were small although a few moved a point or so either way. !, Red, b !! 3.si VEOETABtES .. 240 Cabbage, tu/ly, bch...............1.50 Carrots, cello pi . 1.75 Celery, Riof V:50 Horseradish, pk. bskt..................240 Leaks, bch. .. 2.00 Onions, dry, 50 lbs................ 1.70 Parsley, root, bch.................... f25 Parsnips - ............... , Potatoes, 25.1b. bag Potatoes, 50-lb. bag ... Radishes, black .......... Radishes, hothouse ...... Rhtibarb, hothouse, box The market seemed to be feeling its way cautiously, after racking up a gain for January and now entering February^ month with a spotty record, historically. News of strong demand for steel and of vigorous gains in new orders for business firms in January served to strengthen the market background, but the .high level of stock prices caused, hesitation; ^ . [GHER Steels, cigarette issues and aerospace stocks were slightly higher on balance. Farm implements, rails and building materials worked lower. Chemicals, oils and nonferrous metals were mixed. iociated Press average of'60 stocks at noon-was off .1 at 290.5 with industrials off .1, rails off .6 and utilities lip .3. Among blue chips< du Pont was up about 2 and Union Car- bide around a point while General Foods slipped more than a point and American Telephone was about a point lower. %ars, Roebuck lost about 3........... Caterpillar, affected by a strike, fell more than a point. IBM recouped ,4 points, U.S; Smelting more than a point. Prices moved generally higher in quiet trading on the American Stock Exchange. Atlantic Research spurted about 2 points following an article in a financial magazine. Prophet Co. also gained about 2. Corporate and U.S. Government bonds were mixed. eHATTANiXKJA, Tenn. W -A former Teamsters Union of-' ficial offered a promotion to a Tennessee state trooper whose wife was on James R. Hoffa’s conspiracy trial jury in 1962,' a union member testified today. • Oscar Pitts, like hooper Janies Paschal from Woodbury, Tenn., testified reiuc-tahfly that Ewing King — on ,trial with the Teamsters Union , president and four others on jury-tampering charges — discussed Paschal while Hoffa’s earlier trial was in progress in Nashville. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Exchange—Butfar steady; ing prices unchanged; *3 92 A S7'/2I. 90 B Si'Al 90 B 57; 09 C Si'A. ^ , Eggs about steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 70 per cent or h«««r Grade * ™iv~r -a, tni „ „ .....is 33; nrilxed 33; mediums :i standards 32; dirties 30; checks 29. CHICAGO POULTitY CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)—Live poultry: Wholesale buying prices w"**"!*? lower;.roaster«-33-<4WT ■special T#d Whitr "Rock, fryers 10VJ.19W. livestock - DETROIT tlVRSTOCk , DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)-Cettle Bulk .early . ...... •*“- Bulk s ited ihowrng , cows In short suppi slow, good and choice sreers niu.,- er; cows strong 50c higher; 9 head high choice to prime 1045 lb steers 23.75; most choice'^ 900-1150 lb sf^rs 23-23.50; 1150-1250 lb Meers 22.50-23.00; good to low choice steers 20.50-22.50; utility cows 13-14, few 14.50;. canners and 11.00-13.00. . ’ Hogs 000. Barrows and gilts 24 c lower; sows steady; U.S. 1200-2450 Arrows gilts 15.75-15;a5r » S. 2 1»230 'b 15.75; 2 a. 3 190-230 lb 1M5.50; w.j. 1, 2 8, 3 300-400 lb SOWS 11.75-12.75; 2 a. 3 400-600 lb 11.00-T1.50. ■ Vealers 125. Steady; high choice and prime vealers 34-40; good and choice 25-35; standard ' Sheep 1500. Not enough established. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - fUSOA) 9,500; butchers steady to 25 itcners siHooy b butchers 15.50-15.75 ; 32 nw at 15.85; mixed 1-3 lfO-230 IbS 15.00-15.50; 230-250 Ite IS 14.00-14.50; W290 325-400 lb sows 12.25-iJ.uu. Cattle 10,000; calves 25; steers strong to 50 hlghe;, high choice *"<1 nrinie .. .......... -------- 2.30-M.25I holce 900-1,250 lbs 21 T ,300-14,50 lbs 20.00-21.50. ^ ^ , Sheep 2,100; slaughter lambs steady to around 100 lb wooiea sieugnier 2075; good and choice 80-115 lbs 19.q0-20.50. decks choice wooled slaught 10115 Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVBR THE-counter STOCKS “ e) following quolellont do not neces- J -------1 transactions but * approxl- unties. Bid Asked Aj^lM^.' Truck "............1 Braun Bnglneerlno . Charles of the Rlir CHItens Utilities Class 23,3 25 Diamond "Crysial ........'.........]*■] Paschal’s wife was removed from the jury in the 1962 Nashville trial after the government reported attempts to contact her. Ewing asked me if Paschal lid take money,” Pitts said. T told him r diAi’t think Paschal would take money from nobody . . . We wanted to get him a promotion. NEVER PROMOTED “Paschal has been a patrolman 20 to-22-years and-never has had d promotion. “Ewing says he could get a promotion . . . Ewing says he could get him a promoUon Clement Special prosecutor John J-Hooker of Nashville asked Pitts repeatedly what conditions King attached to the offerJif help in winning- Paschal a promotion. “I don’t think there was nothing said that day about what he. had to do. Not at that time.’’ There was a long pause, then Pitts added, "We were talking about his wife being, on that jury,. There ainlt no use in me lying. I’m telling you the truth.” S0 liliisis acy.—-lEj»; "il Is la lists Primlna .:"".!:::i2.7 14.8 Cllla»Sv 2.60 , 7 46 6» M + l?/il Vornori OIngar winkaiman't .................. Wolvarina Shoa ..............?J-| «•’ Ml FUND. Chamlc^ Fund KaiMlorrtMncor -5:42 3;92 ^ Orowlh aysr'".: :;;is73 u.ia . . 8,95 9.78 :;;i473 1'los , 14.61 15.88 COi^i'w'w I<1W • Jr' Iff ; I' z ’isau »V< 8I)'/1 +2 Ita 40'/4 -i- 6k I 294k -f IH 22 . - 4k Malrom ,40a Mid SU 1.16 MlnarCh .70 BOND AVBRAOBf Contalnar 1 Conllni 4.20 Day 10.9 102.2 88.2 ADO 11.2 102.1 88.1 .: Age 80,8 101,8 874 Ago 80.8 100.9 89.3 14 High 88.8 1“' “* _____fey 8 '! fS! IfiMISrS H”*ri ahatca.,, onian 1, ontpu 1 onl^ard 18 1 1963-44 ...... .... .... 1983-64 Low 79.7 99, 1962 High 79.7 102. 1942 Low I*. I, 98' Changg Day .......4UJ in.i jw** - AM 411.2 154.0 151.t 291.1, ....M 4 tu.l 149.9 287.9 I8( T S.1 }«•» »“■» II ll'k ie'4 18'k-- —D— } 174k 17*k 171k I-10 21'r 316k 21*k -n w'l 24''» 241k •) * -/Vk 44 75 . 744k 747/*-f-'4k IT 71'/a 704k 714* +14* 52 35 34'* 35 +4* 4 30'* ISk 20v5 + 1* 12 834* 33'* 234k + W 19 ,31'* 1044 304* + ■" 4JX *5'' 4^-:::. ' 1 42'* 42'* 42'* + 1* ~M—. ■ 11 374* 371* 37'* + '* 13 2044 207* 2(714 I- '.4 13 14* 14k 14 , .. i 33[; 33'/, 33'., - Ik 34 397* 39V* 39'* - ■'< II ik I 9', 9»* 9'k -7 '* 50 19«k 191* 19", + '* 7 75 744* 75 + 1, 24 88'/, 531* |4* +3 1 30 30 30 4 29'* 294* 29* ,. * 3 407| 404* 407*a-|' Vi 10 20' 20 20 , 31 13*4* 1357* 134'* -I- .4* 37 49^ 48'* mt - '* X50' 44'* 't 29 347k 344k 244* -L V, 3 BivS 80V* I0v5-W' Kiii?s i|£Fi=s J !! !!». ~ i'k'8..'8..ia j jis sa Kis 2 34', 34 >k ,144* -t '* l5 19'* 194, 194k * I 80', 79', 80 . 4* 1 ilTi H'* 384k + 4* 8 34^ 34M 34M .... I 50 50 50 19 444k 44* 44* + V* I II Vr rvii WUnTH 1 WsIgA^^ I 304* 284k 214k + Worthln 1.50 Xarox Corp Unlaat olharwlia n ,aml-anm»r Oocloratlon. 5pacl< ,ir« dlvldoiMt or paymanik nol u,,., ■lad ai raguiar ara kfantlflad In fiia Mowing fooinota,. r'axdlkl r"W d itdcK dividand. a-bacrtrad or paid I far mu yrar. I Paid In ilock dyrlnq ....."mafod caiih valua on ax dividand i *dlvlSaod qano omiiaii, oararriio or . nl la,I dividand maaling, r Daclarad . paid In 1984 Diui Ilock divMtnd. 1 -P§y abla In iMck during 1984, tilTnialad cailn valua an tx-dlvIdM or tx-dliirlbuili^ , lu-lalti In full. dij;Ss''S(.rkr?urs!3«'-j[?'dr.fX': ................................... Irltefad. wl-Whan liiuad.' nd-NaxI SS*'BTn« Act. or Mcurllloa aiiumod by auch corrt-panlH, ta—Foralgn latuo aubltci k> pr*. g«8td Inftraaf tqualliallon lax. fp fc lf*k Iflk lS - .#is C; ,3 I > Indui ..... -» Hall, ... BONDS lOHiiSr grada riMa . ' . : . . .ntsr 5™ FarroCp i.j PhllaRgg ib, rRiitwi, PllPlata 8*40 lafij Pullman t.40 hgiiOll 1.60 American Stock'Exch. PlOura. allfr da81mol palnit ara algnlhi NEW YORK (API . Amarltan SMck Ex-Teamster TellsofOffer By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)—Return of the public to the stock market after its fright back in the 1962 crash is seen by many in* the i been gettng a big ride reminis- Grain Prices Firm to Brisk Demand CHICAGO (AP) - A fairly brisk demand firmed up grate futures prices today at the opening of the Board of Trade,-but they quickly attracted more liberal offerings and backed down slightly. Wheat and soybeans started off with gains of around two cents a bushel in spots with the support credited largely to speculative short covering and reinstatement of long positions. Rye also was firm but the feed grains mustered only small fractional gains. Wheat was 1% cents a bushel higher to % loWer near the end of the first hour, March $2.19%; soybeans V» higher to M lower, March |2.69*; corn Vi to % lower, March $1.20; oats unchanged to Vi lower, March 68 cents; rye *.i to 1 cent higher, March $1.49V1* Cov eiac Cam Av I. I tioota P 'Jll LANSINtJ (AP) - The Mich-J,jlgnn Fxlucatlo/i Association has 9* announced the appotetment. of *8* I George Brown, currently with *f;;i the Montana Filueatldn Assoola-fo«8|tten. as public relations dl-’Tini rector. ) 14.078.841.358.87 8 5,344,387,74* 14 il» riwal Yaar July * 41,179,419,999.44 57,940.481.450 90 77,404.171,783 34 8«.a4l.4 (UtOA)~F»>al08* ■ ‘ 119/ on (rack 2)8; iDial U^^. I DtmanU I9r«?»! m«rnw9 mr ruiMY« itr. for Plodn coriof ■ ---- ............. “IhM , fiouhtf Modi M0I.10 TWENTY-SIX S;. ,. S "^: ■ ■ ■ ,.;• THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY'S. 196i Ape Kidneys Given to Teen MIAMI Ufh-A 14-year-old boy, his own kidneys useless, bank^ today on four kidneys transplanted fcwn two baboons to save his life. A Miami medical team at Variety €hiMb-en’g Hospital performed flie rare surjfery in six and a half hours yesterday. A spokesman said the transplant itself was! a success. He said it will be weeks, perhaps rtionths, before doctors' know if the boy will IS’e; FUNCTION PROP,ERLY j The new kidneys were func-j tjpning properly, doctors Said, i may occtir or the transplants will not “take.” Four kidneys were used because the baboons were small and doctors wanted to be sure that transplanted organs were aihple for the job. The divorce rate among Brit^ ish aristocracy is about three times as high as that of the general population. Farm Workers Shot in Tenant House SODUS (AP) — A man and a woman, both farm workers, were shot and wounded in a tenant, house on a farm near Sodus Sunday night.' A third Injured were Della Cuzam, 46,. and James Cars 32. Berrien County sheriff’s men said Vernon Lewis, 5L admitted shooting both with a shotgun. Ho was quoted as saying the two harassed him. He was held without charge. worker was taken into custody.' near here. All were employed on a farm Police HoM Suspect in Woman's Murder .YPSILANTI (AP> -. Police held Linzie Gardner, 21,' of Ink: 4ter today in connection with the fatal shooting of Mrs. Martha Claybrooks, 35, who^ body was found on a bank of nearby Ford Lake Sunday. Police said Gardner told them he picked the Claybrooks home at random for robbery,' kidnaped Mrs. Claybrooks and then shot her Saturday. Special Space Glue DRAMMEN, Norway (AP)-A special Norwegian glue’ will be exported' to the United States for use by spacemen. The glue will hold electrodes to the heads and bodies of astronauts to check their physical Control Cure'-Alh Ads MADRID, .Spain (AP> -The Spanish government has ordered sharp control of advertisements for claimed cures ef a wide variety of diseases in-, eluding cancer. Kansas Democrat Dies KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) —George .V,.. Aylward Sr., €3, lawyef and factional Jeader in 1 the Democratic party in KanMS. City, died Sunday of a cardiac condition. , ■■ ■ Stop Bad Breath Swietins Moutli-Stoinacli In 5 Mimtst 5BSaSS!5»S»3S TABLEWARE SAVE *1®® Si% 775 EXTRA «»S> STAMPS WITH COUPONS IN THIS AD AND YOUR MAIIED COUPON BOOIftET - SEE DETAILS BEIOW Totif 0*n«r#nd. Flv» Hundrad Fitly S»v» OO'lOO dollar# tor tha paymoni , dabt#, a«pondllura» ond llablllila# manllonad In Sat lion 2 ba appro lorlhwllh tarllllad by tha Clark Cliy AiiaMoi and that tha lama i lavlad and tollaclad upon lha a valuation ol all la»abla proparly •aid City ol pl*ivfichl0an"pnd IhV Chorlar ol laid Cliy if PonllPc lor lha lavylnr —‘ ot la«ai upon Iho 1044 CM fha?:’ii7 ol PohMae**!# fai^i^V^VoiidlCoviity dolliwjudii* •ry fir IfU pursuenf to the Pontlec City Chirtfr »t«wt«« ot iho SMI* 4. Thti y 6rcMn#nA« withih fh WHITE SAVE lO-KROGER SLICED RAISIN BREAD : .T..^.v.19‘ SPECIAL LABEL-SAVE TQf \ ^ GOLD MEDAL flour SAVE 23*-BETTY CROCKER WHITeXyELLOW OR DEVILS FOOD CAKE MIXES. ........ 3kF| VELVEETA^HEIllSE. 2.%,79‘ SAVE UP TO 30*- OLD FASHIONED OR EL8|E ri HAMBURGER 37! 6 MORE MTS n SAV ON pioei# no FREEZER SALE! ______QSSapUBBBBWl' WITH THIS COUPON^S *3 PURCHAM-BORDEN'S ■ c'SaSANDWICHESI ■ Coupon valid at Kroflor In Dolrolt ond loitdi ■ Tuo»dm mlMlM 111# 30lh day ol January A O, "**'• nOBB«T)A. lANDBY . OLOABAnnBLg; 'Pabruary }, l»44 348 Coupon volld ol Kiogor In Dolrolt ond l«l•l•rn Mlchloon thru ■ a Tugadov. Fobruory 4, 1964. Umll ono doupon por family | tmmmmmmm ^ I WITH THIS COUPON & *3 PURCHASE-LIQUID g Ikandudeteroent: 43 SAVI 14* SAVE *•*»■"*• purahoao ’of ono 4-PImo ploao aollinf ond SO- ON Coupon toworda ibo TuXULho! "• *•' •”* miNLISS STin TABLIWARI KUI >S0 IXTRA TOP VAlUl STAMPS WITH STN WIIK MAIUP COUPONS. *• W WW. pUNiHrt. of 1-US. or MORI OOtOIN VIUOW SANANAS. puplioao of I US. Of lATMORI MAROARINI. ^ F®'*®*® •» POUR loox. jars KROORR JRUMI. •• »p YAWI IfAIHPt wM. purtiMMo of 1-US. OR MORI PRISN OROUNO HAMRUMMR. ** Mlil ITAMM wMi puNfNMO of VOUMU NO. • NUiSTRATRD mu ST^URRARV. Coupon volld «• Kroflor In Dolrolt ond loilom Michigan thru TuoiVoy, Fobruory 4, 1964. Uml^no^pon^r ■■ ■ ■ mmm m m ■ vn ■ iii i 2S KIRA VA%I STAMPS JlOO EXTRA vVTui STAMPS j WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASI | WITH IMIS COUPON AND fURCHASI ! OP 106 Cf. PRO. IRST-RITI . OP 100 CT. PRO. ^ | I INVEIOPIS ! KROGER TEA BAGS ICouoon vo«d ot Rioior In DotioW _ I Coupon volld ol Rrofor M DotroH m Mlchh^ thru Iwoa-XSb I ond loilom MkM|on Hiiu Tuoa- I ©I ond loilom MI«M|^n Miiu Tuoa- i 10 EXTRA vi^ STAMPS! AND PURCNASI NS COUPOI4 "OP 14)1. JAR VASBlil NAIR TONIC Coupon voM ot Krofor In O^l SO EXTRA VAUII STAMPS ; THIS COUPON AND PURCNAM I I IcA iiTDX Jo%o STAMPS I 100 EXTRA vAilii STAMPS . ■ SB EKTRA valur SiXMrO | coupon aNd purchasi I n -----------a. ---------CUI-UP FKfIRI OB I S. IITIB PARTS OR ' ROASTINi CNICHINS I aaiu m ■#■•»•#. ■, Coupon volM ot Riopor In Potaolt R CoUponivnRd nl Rropoa In ItetroH P Copyiifhl 1964, I nnd Roatom Mlabtonn thru SoIun A* nnd Inalofn MlaMfOn ttwu loiub A fboRroior Com- J^**®*' -a —— o^w —WT-— ------- p wiin ini» s I WITH THIS ^Wl Am PURCHAU | qP TWQ € •mMUWgonmru OP ANY PRO. ■ m mmm.* ■pdbk#a«aia«faiini<4n~l ntaii Gov. Romney Asks Editors to kill 'Myth' EAST LANSING (AP) - Gov. George Romney has asked the annual convention of the Michigan Press Association for cooperation in correcting what he called “the false myth that government solve all our problems.” Romney asked the editors to help push a new concept of citi-er responsibility in public serv-ic*. especially at the local level. Winners of awards for general ekcellence among Michigan’s weekly newspapers were an: nounced at the banquet Satur-night. The winners : Circulation up to 15,000 — 1, Ravenna Times; 2, Morehci Observer; 3, tie between Millington Herald-and Shepherd Argus. Circulation up to 2,500 --- L Crystal Falls Diamond Drill; 2, Sebewaing Blade - Crescent; 3, Frankenmuth News. Circulation up to 4,000 — 1 Manistique Pioneer Tribune; 2, Fenton Independent; 3, West Branch Ogemaw County Herald Circulation of 4,001 and up—1, Lapeer County Press; 2, Caro Tpscqla County Advertiser; 3, tlason Ingham ^unty Ifews. Suburban class —, in Wayne, Macomb, 6 a k 1 a n d and Kent Counties, 1, Wyandotte News-Herald; 2, Birmingham Eccentric; 3, Dearborn Press. _ School Credit Union . Declares a Dividend Waterford Township Schools Employes Federal Credit Union has declared a 4 per cent dividend dn shares and a 15 per cent refund on interest paid. Newly elected officers of the credit union’s managing staff are Vera Taig, McVittie School; Iva O’Dell, Donelson S c h o o 1; Beulah Sutton, Waterford Township High| School; and Robert Kimmons of the administrative staff. Deaffi t Noim THE POlfTIAC PRE1 MOyDA1i^ FEBRliJARY 3, 196-t^ / ,-4l SPENCER, FESRUAHY 3, l?64, LEO, <91 Second sireM; age 43; .^ar , brother of 7 Mn. Harriet Washburn, Mrs. Kathleeg Waih- from the Huntoon F wh»r» Mr.. Spencer (Suggested i state. 3 to 5 .... , --------------- fuck, FE'&RUARY 7, (9*4, OfiORttE '! a« Tit d ra Mason i ..jlaw* Tuck. Funaral service will w„held Tuesday, February 4 at M? JJlTersTde Cemetery Michigan. Mr. Tuck *.........- '•"* - ‘-t Donelion-Jotins L-, (Suogestrt“'vr$ltlna lwu'r$'''3 LOVING MSMSrTI As long as life and memory .Iasi ' Shalt remember thee.' Sadly missed by his daughters GET OUT OF DEBf ON S SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT . -COUNSELORS 702 PONTIAC State Bank Bldg. ....- FE-frOSM....... s oldest and' largest budget assistance cothpany. TRY DIADAX TABLETS merly Dex-A-Dletl. New __________ same. formula, only S 9Sc. Simms Bros. Drugs._______________ BONAFIDE IMPROVEMENT «. INVESTMENT CO. 15 W. Lawrence ________Pontiac, Mich._____ PAY OFF YOUR BILLS AND REMODEL YOUR HOME , widow, retiree or even those w . _________ _ ties, con be eligible providing tt home Is hn|f Or more paid for, , EXAMPLE Nasaau, British colony of the Bahamas, consists of about .3,000 islands and covers an area that stretches out to more than miles in length. BILLS ............... . MODERNIZATION HOUSE BAL. I Total Owed........'.... 1 MAIL COUPON OR CALL FROM-ANY PLACE IN MICHIGAN FE 8-2657 , BONAFIDE IMPROVEMENT & INVESTMENT CO. Death Notices - ireet; age 70; dear father of Robert, Jack and Jerry Choler; ---- - ' -,f Mrs. Marie (Rob- d Mrs. Iva (Sidney) Funeral service will neral Home with Dr. Emil K V officiating. Interment In P Mount Park Cemetery. (Vis D. Delongchamp; beloved son of Mrs. Ida Delongchamp; dear . brother of Mrs. George N. (Mao) Beaupled, Roy,-Louis, Fred, Clarence, Paul, Earl and Howard Delongchamp. Racltetlon of fhe Rosa-rv wiu be this (evening at 8:30 at tHo C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, February 4 M y;30 a.m. at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church, Orchard Lake, with Rt. Rev. Msgr. Thomas A. Jobs oftlclatlng. Interment In Lakevlow Cemetery, Clarkston. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 - pAlk, h6BhUAiro!^T9iA^DS¥P-PINA, 1189 Foalherslone; epa 37; beloved wife of Edward Fair; beloved daughter of Mrs. Caterin Tencich; dear mother of Gladys Ora, 1 dear sister of and RWrt .. . Natale Tencich....... .........- earthy and Mrs. Tefessa CelHna. Funeral arrangements are pending from the Voorhees-SIple Funeral fhe^ Voorhees-S^ljs ' In state. (Suggested/visiting 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 m 9 o r STFsbN.TiBRUARV (Mertha) Reaves, J.. Frederlek and Clyde L. Gibson; dear sister p( Ernest Green; also survived hy 13 grandchildren and 18 great-—--.'-‘-'.-‘-in. Funeral ,. service t Tuesday, February 4 at 3:30 p.m. at the Spart Cliapel. Interment In Parr Rark Cemetery. (Suggest Ing hos;rs 3 to S p.m. a IwISnI Keego Harbor; age 51; b< War I fKathli (athleen) Chalterton; deer broth-of Mrs. Charlotte I. Oerndri; dito survived by three grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosery will be Tuesday, February 4 at 8 p.m. at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego harbor. Funaral larvica will be held '—day, February 5 at 10 a.m, Lady of Rafuga Catholic with Rt, Rev, Msgr. Thomas «, Jobs oftlclatlng. interment In Qiklend Hills Memorlel Oerdens, Novi, (Sugg ----------------- to J p.n d visiting hours 3 MAf^jXlTOAlV^ 317^847 I., 391 Blliabeth Lake P-* • Jntyra, N Mlam L. I ... .. . great grendtf neral servica will be day, February 4, at 1:30 p.m. at tha Dontlson-Johns Funeral Home, ---------- ,. ...A.r., c(,,p,| ceme- ilsltlng ho— ison-Johns P ....._____ In While L. tery. (Suggested vislllr------ Qeorgle, lormerly of 3ll3 '' ... ... „ Anderson, Frenk b., enn bavid L. McBrldai also survived grvbwrt'W T»' ilril United *Pres^lerl»n I'hvrth of Royel Oak, It will be epr Intormatten call the »P*rhj-' Funerel Home where Mr. Mco, .--wlll He In stale. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to ^ p.m, aild 7 to husIMltd of Caroline Oe»ch; de»r lather nt Mrs. I eop* WlllOn, Mt *^ •----- • .....-on, I foneril, Che by" iik"'’gramk:'hlUen.' >u sefvlt# )l/m-be held ' visllihg hours 1 Id 8 p m. and / ADDRESS . Nearest pho ........jrmeaiaTes cultinja and th\f s,a*wrdav fs 4adie inOS. VvwMwwMv., .w ----r- £af:&Wn.w^««: Indoor arena. Call for, appoint- | The Western Horse C -BOX REPLIES-At 10 g. m. today there were replies at ’The Press office in the following boxes: 4 _ 12 _ 14 - 18 -l 19 - 20 - 59 - 63 — I 69 - 73 - 83 - 95 --108-116. . Fufiornl Dlroctors^ LOS^^^tALMATIAtr DOG, WHITE - with black. spots, 1 brown, 1 '' eye, Bloomfield-area. 626-559. ward. l6sT: german' SHEPHERD. TAN 'Rebel." Reward. OR 4-0415. G LOST IN -FRONT OF GlIX-rt otf Dixiw Hwy. f=E M32<: FOUND, BOSTON TERRIER, FE- Halp Wonted Mah MIDDLEAGEO MAN FC lobs. Mora for honw th FE 6-4338 Of FE 6-0358. t.l PLUMBING REPAIR AAAK, ... tarested In making money, state qualifications and age. Write P.O. Box No. 282, Farmilngton, Ml(~ ALERT MEN . isive men willing to work ana follow directions to. earr ‘ ter than average income, Mr. T. E. Brown. 12-1:30 ... dally at FE WMJR. Other .times 473-0993. Assistant Manager FOR Auto ' Service tunity for a man With a mechanical background and executive ability to help man- , - age our busy Auto Service garage. He must have potential fpr advancement. S«l-. ary plus many company benefits. Apply Personnel Of- Montgdm'ety' . Ward AUTO BODY' BUMPER, AP/l John McAullffe Ford Bump Ghop. AREA SALESMEN WANTED High earning potential,/ every person'8 prospect. We t/ain —' furnish leads and working IMMEDIATE OPENING $129.50 Jn area tor rar anrt horn, nhnne m average $12S v part-time openings at $3 hourly. MANAGER that offer: cation In : Apply ms- Ordiai tego Harbor. - TRAINEE IN F career type |c lt;6n?*p|lus dlversifi-ts. M have following qualifications: 1—21 to 30 years of age. - ,2-AbtlHty to meet pi—'- LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTE Apply to Airport Service ' Waldron Hotel, Perl- " MAN FOR GRILL, WORK, E) fenced In kitchen n--------- fringe benefits. Good ■for assistant r____ restaufann Reply 11 . ... Box 110 stating quallfilwtions < -------------ted. ^ LIFETIME. CAREER vide good charac contact Mr. Smith, 338-0438. WITH RETAIL SHOE EX- GIRLS AND WOMEN FOrTIlF. phone sj^rvey work, from dOr Oown- Pontlac Stgte Bank B^g. bown-town Pontiac, Room 409. 5^30 Blood Donnors URGENTLY NEEDED ' ts RH Positive $7 and $10 RH Neoatfve CAB DRIVERS WANTED. 25 OR ■ght shifts. • Waldron Chief Cab Parlor B, CHEF FOR FIRST CLASS KITCH- statui, reierences''and salary expected., Write Box 19, Pontiac Building Division. Salary 8 re'suma''*'i '-----------------" . 60 West Wattles CIRCULATION PROMOTION MAN sltlon t _____ Sand bflat r mingham Bcci Birmingham, Michigan. COATS FUNERAL HOME ^ DRAYTON PLAINS _ OR ^7757 tjrOObHARDT "FUNER ........ OK xM.mnn D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalld^Car^ServIca ~‘DdNELS0N*J0HNS FUNERAL HOME, „ __ "Designed (or Funerals HUNtQON 79 Oakland Ave.______ “ SPARKS-GRIFFIN funeral HOME "Thoughtful Service" f e.,»:884i ““ VOORHlES^LE Vift3J.‘'co“n(Wanl~^ Iaint'. Menominee. tor 4w debU confraclad by any ■ reeponelble tor any aebis conn-aci- WhHKVs5*Be!!i"y, TfhTp)', New/ port, Rhode 1 eland. / reward TO>lNpi«"W an t)N-oostmarkad Drayion postmaf Plains ofw"' .,, VVAfiRfOlb CRBOlT t reporli collectloni « 1I71M. Loit anil Fownd lost; , . 3317137 "Jd^(rqm^anyona^*F4‘ u.M IJLONO COCKER »RANHL mala, vkinliy of Alr^rt M. and M.l», Chlldran'i pat, OR _ LOSir >BMALM WEIMllAtJlni gray. FB 8»80(i, Reward. _ _ „ t‘6lY INVil bf»6 CONjAlHfNft (harltii downtown PonllWi Ra * ‘ FE T308I or OR * __________Roword. .. lOTT: SCiOif,'BROWN and vvMitI mix malo------ ______ Child'! ,. . Oaklond and Clin villa Rd. OR 3 4534 raw|«l. No^ Motur Whot Ih# N««d, (1 PrEis Wont Ail Is Alwoyt Avnilubl* to H#lp You Fulfill If -and Fasti „ EASY DRIVE TO WORK On naw InlarstolO 7S, plant to-calad 'ft milt tram 12 Milo Intor-chongo. Long program, pension. Blue Crosi, sicknasi-accldant, sav-oranca pay, sup-unamploymonl. Ilia - DIE MAKERS MOLD MAKERS -BORING MILL OPERATORS 2 D-MILL OPERATORS DRILL PRESS* OPERATORS JO 4-6580 ROYAL OAK TOOL R MACMINIt CO 0 Good Houeakaeptng Shop ■ “mlloc ron SfM EXCELLlNrSALES OPPORTUNITY For largo compony epoclollilng In an avaryday nacaeelly. In ordar to l;a your own '— ' moetor you muif bo willing lo ba SS yri. or older ana nava a car. We will train you al compand axpanee. Call 338 0438 daye and \OR 31145 nighti, Mr. Inydar. ^ IkPERllNCgO JANlTdR/'.MUn a 30 yaari of a ilatue and ralarancat. Wrila Bo J3, Pontiac Praee. EXFERIRNCED G I Boy. Talagraph RlicTRICAl CONTROL DRAFTSMAN Ixparlancad, Apply al 123 Voodward, Ponllac, FURNITURE FINISHER 8. UPHOLSfERER Muit bt axpariancod. P...... Boiiiion (or tiohi man, Apply Mr. Paur. WKC, IN N. Itglnaw. ikFRRiftNfie ('.aR waikir: ply 149 W, Muiqn, , p.,„. FULL TiMi DilWWRjHfirTkTPlV ..........■ RocMifer fid., ft I WILL GUARANTEE MIftimiltn aatning* of OUO « log HuaHlle:l mOirl wHh tilgh tdiool ai lool aduratlim. d «Fb'an' I Hlghlanda; M Olxia, Monday, I high straight gommlsilon. We train and aid you to obtain excellont results. Inter view ot MESC, 242 Oakland, Wed. Process Engineer Experienced In writing r 'aid holidays, Insurance and vacation. . M. C. MFG. CO. Road REFRESHMENT STAND Immediate openings available Pontiac Drive-In and Miracle A theatree, age 19 or over, apply In -'s office only el the manager' .....-n ll-a.m. a^ 4 p.m, _ SERVISH station ATTBNDAtiT, ----'onced, allernoon aRItt, Kest ■Woodward and Square Lake Rd._________________________ Tool Room Machinist Rochester Road ARWELL, INC. . NEEDS” SALES-SERVICE MAN For Established Pontiac Area Route permanent year-round employ-monii paid vicationi • protruiir-Ing, rallramani (paniloni plan, ..... ...J lurgical hospllallta-I Ineuranca, group Ufa ineur-- - Company poyt all _______ ..J train. All repllat bald Iriclly conlldantlal. For eppolnl-nent, phona Mr. Rynax al 333-7421. STEP UP TO AN ALBEE HOMES SALES CAREER la, 10 ditfarani (i i> axcaad tha Ina WANTED - SI atteijdants. mOs. Apply 6756 PIxio WANTED .jpervise compounding ond »n of seml-pneumatic tires/ wheels, door ma^ ^leo ^ 'V;.16th St. —isnowB" H.0 W TAliON iMsaranc TWEXTV-3EYEN ,, ROUTE SALESA^AN Food store experience. Well k Used prod- selimg to ...... estabtlshed territory., *125 PER WEEK GUARANTEED WITH COMMISSION WontMl'aiMrR^to' Board-28i> FOR CHILD. DAY Wonted Household 6e^~sl9 , ,V DOCTORS OFFieiX nployment state a^ andv f'20. Plus hospitalliallon’ Plus life insurance J^26|Apartme'nfs-Untumisked^ 38 Sale Heoses 5 ROOMS, GAS heat. Nqpysrj^:ght_trU For top earnings and tunity ,to advance witii a sumuikei us oui growing organization, send rosutnel YOU. O.XFC of experience plus age 4nd tele- AUCTION. OA ..... -----.K.. - pontjjc, PressiRUTH'S AUCfi ALL OR . ------------ . -..... or appliances wanted quickly. Lime Joe's Bargain House, FE ^8. AUCT|6n sale every SA'TUR- - -----Bird_Auetlon. We'll .1, foo1s“if»a appliances.-' MElrose 7-5159.' FURNITURE AND AP- S-BEDROOM, 7-ROOM -TOTAL WhittOmore. FEM432. RGGMSi-.-BA'Wl.-CL0gi stove, TOWgerefpr, |ar9a,,'?l.. Adults. Call FE 2-4984. FE PIECE 0? FURNITURE — 3-BEORQOM HOME . NEAR CEN-trai High, attached garage, fenced yard, basement, low down payment, laed contract. FE 2)4)923. -I InItyCi /buy tumiture, f( CASH F (D COMMUNITY Box 104. \ DIVISION MANAGERS ___________________ , \rernandous top level , Wonted Miscenoneous ■ . - SCHOOL Children OR 3-0172. | ■RAIO^.^^-eXfRF ....... ir styilng. Imperial Boauty Salon, 158 Auburn Ave. __ baSy sitter nights;* own transportation. Lake Orion area. rgelPORTABLE' TYPEWRITER, I sonable, OR 3-1301. - "Y w I USED OFFICE FURNITURE, fTl'ES portable typewriter and other busl------------------------- I • nes% machli— — .. .., Employment .Agencies 9 " 33^7B48. lines. OR 3-9767 or Wanted to Rent, 32 CHRISTIAN WOMAN NEEDED.I " ■■ or part-time — lifetime se-| ty. Experience Sunday School, ilstry helpful. Earn 3101) weekly John Rucin C?, ^West Madlston ROOMS AND* BAT)?~W.ITH y jedrooms, partly torn:, “-*■ welcome, 425 per ww 850 deposly Inquire al 'dMe Alberto Apartments ■ l-ROOM EFFICIENCY N.. Paddock F E 2-2098 BbOOMFrELD. Range, ' refrigerator, 1 conditioning, large room, plenty closets. .Ample parking: From $1 per mgnth. 31j;-5728. '________ •NO MONEY DOWN Mixed Neighborhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA - ASSOCIATE brokers .5 Franklin Blvd. FE F0663 . Wyman Lewis . - . Manager '■ „ lOWNER, 5ROOM MODERN ' house in Oxford, lull garage. OA 8-1437. BUILD A HOME TO SUIT YOUf We have 800 plans to help you. We'll "Qualify Build" it, Uw -prices. Let's exchange homes. .W, .H. bass- realtor ' FE 3-7210 . BUILDER J • - !______"Speciehzlng In Trades" One end 2 bedroomi r^-'patloi -iSY OWNER, HUNTOON' LAKE, 3 balconies — beam ceilings.. k.-------------------- „ CONCORD PLACE LUXURY APARTMENTS ! BLOOMFIELD HILLS ADDRESS | Immediate Occupancy l *........ - ivate Living"! Children invited. Neer churches, shopping,, recreation. VO ml'- '■ Chrysler. Freeway. "'**"*! lns^ctlF»f|jSchool», . 2 FURNISHED MODELS CLARINET aVd SAX LESSON B ci». Ait^'and Bass Clarl- GM -SUPERVISOR NEEDS 3-BED- ■-—-GU-RB--- WAITRESSES Ted's have Immediate openings fpr curb waitresses on the day arid night shifts. Must be 18. Apply In person only, TED'S ^ at Square Lake Rd. Woodwari . .Quality '[instruction ............. ... Pontiac - location... 682-4040, 9 a.m _ weekdays, Mr. Abler. MIDDLEAGEP COUPIT poodle - - ------------------ RENTALS FROM $150 I days, good location. 625^25«;_ i I Shore li«ia9.-4hiartere—331 IBM training. Xea"rn ■ 'TfeM— H^ypunCIr-t chine operation and\ wiring, a weex-courses available. Approved by CHRISTIAN WOMAN TO SHARE! Michigan State Board ot Educa-| apt Call FE 2-7620 after 5:7“ tion. Free placemdpt assistance, young Free parking, finpnqlng ----- Located at Square Lake OpdyKe Roads _ Drive ^out^ Wt to Opdyke :arpeting, alui screens. Anchor, fenced yard. 4-BEDROOM CAPE COD. NEW - e feet. 2 baths, l J Opdyke Road. Wi mg at the corner. CALL TeT^SlT o YOUNG MAN ‘ SYSTEMS lNS,f\TUTE 62 E. Nine Mlte^ H^izel Park S47rS303 j MEN --WOMEN VOCATIONAL TRAI Wanted Real Efsote ' 1 36 greater BLOOMFIELD REAL ESTATE CO. 9^5_Telegraph Road ■“ __ 1 EXCEPTIONALLY i room home, V' ilshed. Recreation _ ■ EXPERIENCECT BEAUTiti'AN. ^ 332-9279._____. EXPERIENCED GIRL t=OR GEN.j HOMES. LOTS, ACREAGE jCEtS^-FARMS;--BUSINESS PROP-Dozers,'PTIES and land CONTRACTS. I graders, cranes, etc. 4 Wks. 1 Urgently need tor Immediate lalel - DIESEL ENGINE .MECHANICS.]'. ... •' „ . .' Factory training a»ail., .T.S. , WarrCn StOUt, Realtor EXPERIENCED CONEY IsDTnd'4. GIRL FRIDAY, Exc. secretarial I °’’‘‘''t)aliv‘'tlll 8 waitress, part tirtie. 152 S. Sagi.l training,vsteno.rtyping, gkpg. 1. MUDIPLE LISTING'SERVICE EXPER7EWED''FULDflWWA^^^^ ress. Apply In person. Town and l-A.S. Homestudy course^... Country. 1727 5 '[elBgraph. I, ). Call FE 4- I2,00(L E. Blvd. 845 r month.- Children welcome. 1ELWOOD REALTY Mt. Clem- Immediate Possession EAST SIDE 3-bedroom, full basement, bullt-ln kitchen, fenced yard. $950 to move L>RGE,.,A>ARTMENf,;^-Ni iTndln.’J^an'c,"’"?”’' ished. FE 4-5413 iHILLTOP REALTY ROCTmS, fiLE --------------- plenty Of clot. LOVELY 'n'ew ' bath, stove, retr:g„ at and cupboard si ., ground floor, large iVATOR OPERATOR^ APPLY agrapn. _ i, rno ADDi V * ' A-T CARPENTRY KITCHENS, AO-dltlons. Recreation Rooi ' ' modeling. FE 5-6010 CARPENTRY, / CEMENTTv PAINT-_!ng, OR_^9t._ N^n .B] ■FINISH AND ROUGH CARr work by (Ob or hour. FE _ , , , , HAVE PICK-UP TRUCK vifOULO .lllfA tinht 'hniillnn ‘ JILL COOV AND WAITRESS, -•-1 be. neat. Union r --1 Union Laid). KITCHEN llELb. CLARKS DRIVf- RTtCHEN HEI.P FOR RESTAU-rant, evenings, SI71 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains._____________________ LEGAL SECRETARY, OVER -3C years of age. Dictaphone, stale fully exporlencif and .ceterences. girl for laundry, cleaning, general. Recent reference?, good children, own transporlatio out. MA 6-5797..___________ _ MOTH6P'S HELPER. PLEASANT tive ■ MA 6-.1746. ______ MATURE. WOMAN TO CARE luring day and rvise stov^lns n surgery, Mon. thru _ -5 p.m, Call 62iW17. SECRE'ta'RY" WlTh GOOD LEGAL experience for Pontiac Lav flee,''top salary for right girl, education, pxperlenca. referi age, salary desir SALESGIRL Evenings and Saturdays MATURE WOMAN TO LIVE n'urse aides and < Baldwin. Pine Cope Ni "/r- . WAITRESSES CURB GIRLS tr.! 'I55e’a'l.‘’'.u7n'f,h,^“" with pay, me Insurance ____________ pitallzation benefits. Apply at Big Boy Drive in, Telegrobh ................- Streets. Also Dixie ow^ Iransporlallon, 338-8489. WAITRIsS WANtBb 'FOR pi time employment. Apply In person only. Huron Bowl Snack Bar, phone calls accaptaO. _ WAITRESS WANTED/MUST BE -- -ver - Call OL 2 37SI after WOMAN FOR BABYSITTING AtiD housekeeping, llvt-ln or own Ir -porlallon, l-E 4-7/17 alter 5:30. WOMAN FOR OFFICR WORK, ' 'lence, Kendales, 45 W. Hu 1 Jas. Couzens, Detroit Work Wonted Male Work Wanted Female - 12 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING and house eloanlng FE 3-7381. babyslTtIng evenings.' * 332-9039. GENERAL.HOUSEWORK BY THE hour. FE,4-1687. IRONINGS WANTED, BXR'fRl-onced. FE 8-2y37. , . IROtiiNGS. reasonable RATES'. Crowfoot and Webster A Building Service-Supplies BUILDING TO BE MOVED, 17'X ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS repaired by factory trained men. General Printing & Office Supply ELECTRIC MOTOR SERViCE-RE-pairing and rewinding. 218 E. Pike, Phone FE 6-3981. _____ FREE'ESfrMATES ON ALL WiS-Ing, will finance. R.* B. Munro Electric Co. FE 5-8431. Dressmaking & tailoring 17 CUSTOM dressmaking, TAILOR- Ing, alterations, One week service, GUARANTEED. Pick up and delivery, 644-0387. __ _ ■ DRESSMAKiNO, 'tAlLORTNO " AND -“-'•allone. Wrs._Bodetl^FE 4-9053. Income Tax Service < 19 85. NONE HIGHER, LONG, FORM prepared ond typed In vour ho~-George Lyle FE 8-0252.*^ "“■acc u r A'f E • D BP' e"n Ba bl¥ KEYS A NACKERMAN , _ J-8171 FE 8-2297 AiriVORKINO •'PEO'FlIS'' TAXES. 83. and up. J. Schimka. OR 3-2943. . A. MELTON TAX SERVICE. OR 3-3332. 1424 ^1, Poiltlac^ _ "■fHrPiOUSINEsTSERVICES 239 Voorhels, Off-Sfreel P»rklng„,^ ) Years experience FE 52244 LONG FORM'iTEMiZE'D'IN VOUR le ,FE^ I H C O'M e ~ tAX "R EPORTS PR E-pared,’ Baldln-Wallw; area, Mrs. Hayward. FE 4-7035. ........INCOME TAX ' mediately, Daily ..and Sunday 9-9. | 'orchard' court Af^ARTMENTS ■....... EVERY DETAIL ____ .. . -------TE 56918 lONE BEDROOM "—-NEW-RURNU iO per month. Adults only, “CASH 4B HOURS land CONTRACTS - HOMES EQUITIES . WRIGHT 382 Oakland Ave. __FE 2-9141 ' getTrkuIts' WE ,NEED'‘listings. (Talt Rent House*, Furnished 39 3-bedroom "home, 2 childr¥n welcome, rent with lease. Watar-tord Twp. Call between 9 and 2, ,'qul«k ! valuer-tf-ll'y-TOBf estate, » WHITE,^1NC., SMALL* HOUSE: PARTLY nished 1131 /lAlller Road, prion. Phone 693-1218. Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 JOHNSON SAYS: • have tho ealasmen who can s ' mUST JOHNSON 1704 S. FE 4-2533 TUrpi WE need' Cash on the line ». ... .... . new. 3 or 4 bedroom bon vocont land. Call today I MICHAEL'S REALTY sa«” ,WanteV CLARK, • 2”'R6bMsri5RivTfr'«t4Tft'ATO Y Raeburn St FE 5-0494. <• 3 ROOMS, 875,"CAsf LAKE ARBa, e.| 1182 4 394. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, Office Space for Rent Offices or suites In new building, choice ,of carpeting end panoling. , Excillenf location with ample parking. 2091 Dixie Hwy. One mile north ot Telegraph, >1 850 d I soml-privalo. {ome. Inquire 27,3 Baldwin, DON WHITE, INC. PER 2091 Dixie Hwy. _ jOR_ ' iSai|i Houses •Ht.4j7.S-rt: stale approved.] 33J.4054 j..-a. , .......- ro5m5 and' bat'h',' 'la 'g'&Ll-'; 1 iwdfoom Moving and Trucking 221 LIGHT HAULING, ODDS, ENDS; nirkarf tin. basements, attics po-i Cleaned. FE 2 3091. ROOMS, BATH, wBVT H6S, L per, adults, 120. Ft 8-6275. ROOMS AND BATH, CMIlb W( FRAMr 'HOlTSe ■ "TO Intor^iuaMon*#* 379 E. ^'ike'l, i-A MOVING SERVICE, REASON-able rates. FB 5-3480, FE 2-2909. 1ST CAftEFUL MOVING. t-OW ■9,428-3518._ Bob's Vnh Service MOVING AND STORAGE .........'jLE R/'-* posll. inquire 27> Baldwin Avenu: Phone 338-4054. ROOMS and' BATtir *471 POt line Lake Rd. ■ Rcib/yir'ANb“6XtH with bedrooms, t ‘ lo oiiiypoi Iho ahlllly Hh.*' •xperlonce Ir '0 ore 0 mulll-mllllon DAOIIy rKognliod compan,. .... ... on'i largoil doilgnor producer custom planned pro cut' homer *'■-eedy orowlh oftors many miMos tor rapid advatiLometnl, Aiianga your li Jack M. Pall w by calling SWlons, Va"2-'tfM" fSTARI ISHKO WAYKINI ROUfE, earning above avaraga, FF 2 trtVt SALkMiN WANfiD: Expertencart Real EsI needed by aslahtlshed lohn K. Irwin **4**^,Jj’7* seaea * Nigl> (f)C)L ia7 :gram, lull or pat I lime. Apply in parson 0 'iilfCHB'N WANtlb Ft 8-9971 ]PaINTINO, TtHRN Hli>- WANflI57‘fllbMT! Washing, ililll, neat and dapandabla. Apply: I AOY I n parson, ^Crackor^Barrtl_ Drlva;i I'aparlng. .REAS'InADLE rates I win Ava. Ph )M 41 iMNil-ro. p.is:i.,aa.c».ii., - zj '“i ;r “ ’ '■ ROOMS WITH BATH, UPPER, l/jNELSON B|. fitrfJtpr Informutlon bL D R 00 M I, buluJn stove, lon< F.ljpearly, 673-S234 Kettering High Area TRI-LEVEL 1 Imlrooms, bum-ln kitchen, fi carpeting, garage, t_______ yard, paved street, $14,930. HILLTOP REALTY 673-5234 ■ Mixed Neighborhood^ WESTOWN RIALTY - 486 Irwin off East Blvd. =E 8-2763 otternooni. LI 54677 Bvoi. 3-FAm'ilY INCOME, BY OWNIR. ..........FE 2G043 ■ NEW HOMES Full Basements • $0G DOWN $68 per Mo. ' (across* from' Northom F New 3-, 4-Bedroom Homos Basement, paved itrael, large lota. Northern High and Hawthorne school disiricts. MOVE IN NOW FROM $69.50 MONTHLY Excluding TaxM and Inturancas ZERO DOWN OR TRADE ■ Land Contract - FHA — VA credit problem." Model Open Daily, Sunday 325 WEST YALE 2 Blocks West ol Baldwin MICHAEL'S REALTY JB-75JJ WE''54200 FB 57902 UN 52282 Handyman's Special Rochooter. Sava thouoandl 1$ on this one. Somo (Inloh k to ba dona. 5badroom ranch. gas h„....... .... ... lot. .Balance owing *4,700. Bool offer tokos It. Act now. WARDEN REALTY W. Huron 3I3-7I87 ■ONLYWcliSir* 88,500, J bodrodmt. 840 Mo. ' _ 89,000, 3 bedrooms, 863 Mo. $I(1'4(I0, 3 bedrooms, garage, 871 Mo. Open Thurs., FrL, Sat., f III 1 OIrottlons: Joilyn Road to FMnt-r:dg! (1 milts bej/ond Bxj)rossw(|y) corpotod ~ (Iroplaco ~ oak II car garage ------ 0000 FURCHAIER. 8300 DOWN TO WRJ6HT i2 baTlottd X Avb. o. 3 BEDROOMS living room, dining ruom, beau-lllul kitchen, ' full bosemonl, gas heat, 2-car garagt. 116.650 TERMS. NEWINGHmM RFAITOR UL 2 3310 3 and 4 nFbSObM MODfil 9». ■’h)”'^J,*5o" ’talii T'rabe' Mixed Neighborhood > 3-Bedroom SRIOR • 0I143. ! I N 0, WALL 3-7061. I OSCOEATOI*, OR 3 I191 KITCHI?N$rtTfe ARARtMiNT,' ‘1 6n 1040. ' ' I'xr.l) NEidllBOHliftob, BA<,Hlr 1 iii: obT, 2 room'., I;alh, ulllltlas. raping and i:l( lima, 11 p.u. Bux No. 212, Farn Mich liala qualifications, i PAINTING ;ash.'482'0020, - InIFE, AVBRAGB RbOMi.l bath ............PR 4 2074. i Clo" t'AdNlSft AND TAdNlk bteORAj - Custom paper hanging, businaii a tfiratr. Plonly at i tunlly lor llvowlra. hevi Cali finishing. Bast o tnci nf All Mndk: 7> fw type, give i ' Palm- EAn 3 ROOMS ANbj walk-ln closals, I linen | L private. Near Oakland! PE 59JII. TWb EDOmS.' MOb«EW;*'(CAlU 'FI $3$0 DOWN 1 bAdfooma, OH fOfnttc# I Art &$i:,";,r]„,rv"n'" ' J. C, HAYDEN, Realtor IM :I 6604 10751 Highland Rd. (Mt BGDROOM HOME AT i66 I taiinysnn, Cnrpaling, hill baiemai Pull basamant Many locations Noniing Liown-$62 Mo. 073 0324. Apartments-UnfurnishEii 38 n idci^llo: Sales Help, Mol*-Fomale 8-A $400 Month Guorontee Earn 850 par day or more os a properly codlullani tpt a naw be ilntareiy inlarcslJd In kar» p«H>la 4nma raligioui hackgro i,olpli.l^(Iall^^r»»»r«sl :tl»iiauei ' HUSBAND Wll) . Add 8001120 lu your wrnkly 32* 6*<87 Talovfsion-Rodlo Service 24 HAVE YOUR _ RADIO AND TELeVlllON REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP Trained lervico Man, Reasonable new; prlcps. Free Tube. Testing. , tuil ,Monlgon;»ry .Ward Ponllac Mallj Tronjiportntloa 25 [ lormlta cupboards; Marble window si h»al,| plaslorod pel: „ .. floors, plenty ol parking. An 'AcW I Court Yard with heolod Swimming CALIFORNIA DRIVE-AWAY PlOnnlng In-sgo Drlv4i^oni^|> Pool ond shulflo board couTls, Certainly an anioyable place lo llvt and play, lorry, no chMdrtn, no pels. DrWt out West Huron one block wool ol BlUobeth lake Road, The Fontainolleuu Apartments SMITH"- MODEL - now avallabla. T Clarkston Villoqe 2 slory older hOma^ with liirTrfMiedronm ***> wm ^ Sinn* iifeplafa cilnlnu rtihm, : rwm and kitchen ha* • turn: and water, heal-r /car gara Walking distance to rtfain str .............................. 5#L'L'»rYifAbE -ifbRTBdbiysw: ' -am house, full basamant. ivy-uaragt In nice locallon. PE No Money Down TRI-LEVEI. MODEL -- Off Jealyh fMiurIno Clorkston One of Pia law remaining lake from budding alias on Parke Lake YOUNG-BILT HOMES PE 53IN " “NfAl HtdHTCiTbSC--------- 6 rooma modtrn, o*o heat, *8,9Sp-I7M OARcIbn* / OrOuin modorn, gas hagi, BAcaiPi' ll(f,M<)|l.10Cdbwh PAUL JONES REALTY PC AU80 EbCHUffM ................... n*iy*'|jLa!»'^»*RlMllvr^ ‘ . only 81 21, Ul, I : ISM. TWEXTY-EIGHT the/: PONTIAC PRE&S. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3.A964 Sdt Hmmi . .SERENITY Of »r*« lined street, excellent lo-cetlon,' peecefullness and spadou-j, abound. Alum, sided. Ilvin|| . room, hall >and dining room lus-urlDusly' carpeted, IVi baths, 3 big bedrooms, rec. room In basement, J' basement, bath and a half and 2 ear. garage for less than $20,000 This grey' ranch colonial has a IS lovely carpeting. Door v utility rom. large lamlly 4 BEDROOMS? This Hitalns, large living everything f pending community grows. Only Beauty-Rite. Center foyer entrer .,,. woodburning tlreplace In large living room, -beautllul kitchen with terquolse bulll-lns, largt dining area, 3 bedrooms, IW ceramic Iliad haihs, largt vanlly and ..... 1 main bath. Full - Id I'Car garage, oost Irom. Oriv. n Icll al approach lo RAY O'NEIL' REALTOR 3520 PONTIAC LAKI RD. OPEN 9 to 9 E ,3-7103 MLS OL 1-0575 FREE Storms and Screens Installed Including 2 Doors with purchase ol any one ol our 4 model homes, Prices slert at $12,750 ' $450 MOVES YOU INI bedroom. Spacious rolling loti. Pavtd streets, will consider trades Localatl beiwaen Orion end '* lord Twps. West ot M-^s. This otter expires Peb. 15, 1 CRAWFORD LAKE FRONT tUMMBR COTTAOl, neat and clean, knolly pIna- Ing. an. Ideal hema Ihel < ACRES OFF JOSLYN, near 1-75 Expreaiway. - nice 4-room home full besement, breeiewey, leer perege 1s pen#led. Cofnplete barn Only $19,500, terms. KAMRSEN Off Joslyn $10,950 — Terms. Income Bargain _ Two lamlly local "Plains. S""rooms apf:To^,'Tfoom" oil heat, two car $8,950 — Terms. Royal Oak Area —'t miss seelr' room bongs titloned—Insl _ ... carpeting throughout, kitchen Is out of this world.-Enclosed rear- porch, 1W car finished ga., has over $21,000 Invested sell for $17,500 for a fast da Drayton Woods You'll fall In love with this charming five room brick rancher, decorated In the finest selections you could ever imagine. I8'l0"x10'4" kitchen and dinette, log burning fireplace, family room, attached garage, 100x153' lot. You will be pMBSantly surprised — Only $17,-500 and terms can be arranged. 1071 V MLS FE 4-0921 MILLER CITY NORTH SIDE. A 3-bedroom OTTAWA HILLS Spanish’ style ti level. 6 large rooms, 2 full bath carpeted living and dining root Large kitchen with dining spec Basement rec room, gas heat, g nelghlwrhood. $17,500—terms. I $14,950. < since writing this i Vacant, move in el once. 5 roor and bath all newly decorated, ft. screened porch alum, atom end screens, auto oil heat. E William Miller • Realtor FE 2-0263 CLARK BRICK BUY. ONLY $10,500 FOUR BEDROOMS. Older home off east Pike Street. Hat S rooins and bath down, 2 bedrooms up, full besement, 3-car* garage, .extra lot. IMMACULATE CONDITION. West suburban. Highland area. Only $11,000. Terms. S-room modern 1 floor bungalow, built In- 1953, lot 80x156 teat, 2-car garage, cedar shakes on exterior. Has well lo wall carpeting, oak floors, plastered wellw separate dining room. OFF ELIZABETH' LAKE ROAD, Lr garage, buTit In anirence and closet. iC "BUD” Nortli*rn< iJigh Atfta Tip-top 3'bedroom .^leh'lly hor near bus and ichoblti w|lh tli place, dining rmm, dandy kite Ottered at 114,500, rt.?,*rp;r.‘t."%nrrm,''“i bedrooms, full belh, (Jlshmasler, enclosed front porch. Quic posietilon. "Bud" Nicholi#, Realtor 49 Mt. Clemens St. FE. 5-1201 ........ AFTER 6 P.M. FE 2-?37p North Sid* Ronclii slormi end straans, aKcellenI con-union, Situated on a nice lend-seeped, fenced lot, Welking distance to schools and shopping area, Price $14,900 with $4$0 down PHA. 57 S. Roselawni Lovely big femlly home In very g^ eondlllon. Living room, dining room, modem kitchen, end one bedroom idown. 3 bedrooms end reallon iponi, i and Kreani, Uv I look - you wl Priced el W,9S0 end $75 per monti Huron Streeti ly brick Ian condition. F ice, lour rtpomi end bain ui isement. Pas steam heal, gereg -ge lot. Cen elso be used i :onie properly, Priced el eie.ll Ih $$.000 dovU end 814} p< John K. Irwiri MU 111 Weil Huron Ilnceil92i -Phone PE 30446 ^ i . Xl AND ’/2 BATHS /Full Size basement, gas heat, coig-plelely Carpeted. Bijlt on 92 ft. wide lot In Waterford on Ridge „ Top. Paved6street. Total PTice only $15,300 for - *hl$, dulte new master-built home. VACANT — MOVE IN. Reasonable terms.____ C SCHUETT FE 8-0458 BATEMAN GETS RESULTS A JEWEL . OF A BUY In this brick tri-level in a Clarkston prestige area. Beautiful wooded lots, family room with fireplace, Srbedrm., m baths, and oversize garage. Lots of ex- S. ACRES, $50 DOWN, NEAR^I-7Si BLOCH BROS. CORF. OR-3-1295. -21 acres at CO.RI4ER OF BAl^ HUNTOON LAKE PRIVILEGES: builf In 1957, all brick, full basement, and 2-car garage-. All Stainless steel kitchen , bullt-lns, carpeting and drapes and plenty of tall stately - ” * with $1 t $18,900 WILLIAMS LAKE AREA WITH EXTRA NICE lake privir leges. Convenient to schools and shopping. Real cute 2-bedroom ---1,1.... garage, bullt- OPEN DAILY 5-7:30 FURNISHED MODELS, budget conscious. 3 terrili __-| - Trode, _ ’ The BotemarTWay Coast to 'Coast Trades 377 S. Telegraph'Realtor FE 8-716) Open 9-9 MLS Sunday 1-5 A-1 BUYS- So nice on the inside ■bedroom—tandU-JuU.. Jiasem*.nt. completely tiled and cel" ~ -- reatlon room with knotty ^_____ plywood paneled walls, built-in bar, baseboard heat,, carpeted living-room and hall. Lot 91,5 x 333 ft. $12,750, terms. Near New Chrysler Plant 3-bedroom brick ranch, plastered and heated 2-car garage, lYz bath, fireplace in cedar finished family room, located Ih area of very, nice homes on acre sized lots. $24,900, terms. Building Lot ^ V,., Nice level’building lot 75x215 feet on Pontiac La^e "Road, $1,200, -$200 GAYLORDr SCHRAM Brand New 3-bedroom ranch with 14x15 living room, 10 X 15 kitchen-dinette, full basement, gar heat with 13x14 recreation area. Priced at Big T 3-bedroom tri-level with brick front, recreation area, sliding patio door-wall gas heat. Priced at $12,950. Completed and ready lo move Into, Will duplicate on your lot or ours. West Side Brick 3 bedrooms (with room for expansion), carpeted, living room 11FL* IAK*»*»0NT;' V ACM l*nc«d. MA 5-/946, room ^th fireplace, 1 ba'sement, new oil furnace a recreation roprn. Ideal for. gi family. Owners leaving state. Only $22-500, $2,500 down, $125 month. NARoTo'iT FRANKS, REALTY KALKASKA 5-ACRE CAMP SITE, . wooded, $5*5- xxilh . $25 down and . $10 per month. Adams Realty, FE . LBt»-Acr«ug* S4 4 ACRES WITH BUILDINGS,. 19 ACRES seres of woods. IdeaK for ' heme. $3,995. Terms. APPROX. 10 ACRES Near Clarkston, $ 12 l,OTS READY FOR BUILDING. Very good location with privileges on Williams Lake. Will sell ail or^work out partnership deal with BLOOMFIELD Woodward-Square Lake area — Over luo large rolling, wooded lots to choose from. Most have all Improvements, schools, churches, stores, etc. Priced from $990 up. Easy terms. RORAB-AUGH Woodward at Square Lake Road e stream, plaCe to put a 28x32 with a shed 12x32. Atso a new shop 12x12. This land can be . divided and sold off for new home sites. CaU.-££-a-9693.or-MY 2-^L- - Vacant 4 acres, lust right for a new home with a walk-out basement. Price is $3,000. HI-HILL VILLAGE * A" community of selected home sites where you can bUlld ,your own with assurance o( a protected value. Many on hillsides. Ideally located for exposed basements or .trJ _- levels. Raved streets, some ■ trees. Low at $1,850. !91 or OR 3-12; _______Open Sunday,-1____________ LARGE LEVEL LOTS, KINGMAN, ‘ ■- Water, ......... Free pictures, maps. Oil KINU/ViAN/ .. _______W95 full price, $10 month. No interest. Kingman, Ariz. LAKE FRONT Well restricted lake front lot or large lake In Waterford Tofcnship surrounded by nice homes, 95x250 ft. lot. $6,750, TERMS. Brewer Real Estate :E 4-5181 Eves. 646-5104 MIDDLE STRATTsTAKE”"” Off Green Lake Rd., 96x100', wooded, $1,000 cash or terms, MA 4-1292 —Eve. MA 4-2555. PERRY ACRES SUBDIVISION, ( Ion Township, MY 3-1645. WATTS MaL ESTATE NA 7-2 — • M15 al F--------- ■ WANTED-^WILL pay UP to $100 ed, high and scenic, $13,200. II acres—Clarkston schools—$8,500. 10 acres between Fenton 4nd Flint— river—woods — $275 per acre. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 5 Dixie Hlohwa •urs^ to 5 625-2615 ___r out'bulldlngi. Excellent buv/ $21,yoo« Terms. C. PANGUS, Realtor Sale Business Property 57 2 STORES $4,000 DOWN PAYMENT -INTERESTED PARTIES CALL FE 2-5102 FROM 12 NOON TO 4 P.M. 193-POUt “ FrtONf AGl~ON’n5fXli HIGHWAY near Old Mlir Tavern, Excellent location for motel, aparl-menls, reilawani, *lc. Priced lor quick sale. Mr. Prokich. OL 1-0575. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 3520 PONTIAC LK. RO. OPEN 9-9 ■" 3-7103 MLS OL 1-0375 Marvelous Business Location Wonderful commercial lot 200x300'. Brewisr Real Estate FE 4-5181 Business Opportunities 59 I, FE 2-1289, BEER STORE ... PROPIRTY ’ “."I'"'' ' ■" . Living quarleri, 1. Ryan, It LAUNDRY Po^ac,*BunXg*24x^iK'’w ntope'ly could ^ used lor many ?!?ir,rrd“;'"”-‘’ CLARENCE RIDGEWAY NEAITOR M»mb«f nl Mulllpl* Uillhg Servit* 291 W Walton >* 5-7051 B*AUty SHOP. C6MPL“etlLY anyippad, 5125 monthly Including ylimiai. wtlle -Pontiac Praii Box dairy QUEEN e*t1 Incaiion on 1 laq* highway near Pnnilac. ijt.aaa —-*k**«n An nulila '5*4Mn t SKHlUAf PR«B, .,r,T 4 BUSINI'll ^UIDI REAL10R PARTRIDGE "1$ THE BIRO TO SEE' 50 W, Hi»on "TOY SHOP" displays In markets, drug, variety stores, etc. You get expert company advice and guidance. However, you must replace toys each week, and collect money. R«>WRte-^NW-f€W-- HOOhS EACH WEEK This is not 8' lob but a chance to get into something you may have always wanted — a business o( your. own. One that can t-handled In spare, time and sti leave room for fuli time expansloi NOT A GET-RICH-QUICK SCHEME! li you.. Iiave a "desire to betti yourselt-,i=,..lf sober, honest, at really sincere, have a car ar., $398 (minimum required), apply at once, giving complete details . about yourspH, phone number, A1 TOY MERCHANDISING CORP. 34-10 58th Street Woodsjde 77, New York SHORT ORDER RESTAURAN Vulilwn dppoi S9, HAKDWARE Suburban self-serve h e _ _ . . grosmng 870,000 in 1M3. Easy to Qpeoate — easy to o“- -• $15,000 down. Exceller purchase rest estate. realtor partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" TOY ROUTE VEHY small STARTING CAPITAL GOOD ■ INCOME OPERATE FROM HOME SEVERAL CHOICE TERRITORIES AVAILABLE SOON PONTIAC AND ALSO BIRMINGHANL---- BERKLEY flint MT. CLEMEh- PLUi SEVERAL OTHER AREAS vyjLwIII appolrit ai sincere mi or woman to use our sales ah In establishing and servicing WoBfad Contracn^Htg. 60-A 4fAVE »t5j000 TO INVESt IN LAND ----cts at 15 tb 30 per cent div Pontiac Press Box 71. ' . BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $1,000 - OFFICES .IN Drayton Plalns-Utica Lake—Birmingham LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick friendly, helpful. r FE 2-9026 Is the number to call. , OAKLAND LOAN CO. Pontiac State Bank . Bldg. LOANS' $25 TO $1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN' CO. 30 E LAWRENCE,,_F£,8HhBl .. . MONEY TO LOAN-■ Templeton TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER ROMEO 214 E.-ST. CLAIR LOANS $25 TO $1,000 AUTOS “I*. ____ ) 7»1 PL 2-3510 LOANS $35 to $1000 Insured Payment Plan BA)(TER 8. LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac Slate Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 Lake area — grocery i ---equipment In, veryi-good Showing good gross of $2 TAXI CAB COMPANY 4 Late model radio equipped cabs. Volume growing - every month. MiGHfGAN Business Soles, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 1573 Telegraph HOT-SPOT TAVERN A real money meker. Loaded v business. Well-equipped. Low o head. Only $7,000 down. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron,. Pdntlac 333-7,157 BUSY WELL-KNOWN RESTAU-rant, by owner. Call FE M775 eve-nlngs and Sundays. "to BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS CALL ..................... NATIONAL Business Brokers 1843 Orchard Lake____p|J-^Ml MAJOR OIL COMPANY .HAS.'for lease 2 modern stations. Good I MAJOR OIL COMPANY. HIGHWAY Service Statloij location on busy M24 (Lapeer Roed) for lease. Call $82-3344 for Information on this opportunity.___________________________ ' $30,000 on terms. See this or . day, ^ LAKE AREA BAR * mos. liquor. Seating capacity 250. Price $4L000 on Jprms or will trade. Cell %w for an eppolnl- BATEMAN leelly Company, 367 S. Telegraph OPPORTUNITY Beautiful lake front convalescent ., home, reasonable down paymenj,* will fake home or land contract ■■ part payment. ELWOOD REALTY $82-2410 PARTY STORE and clean operalTon, t parking facllltlas. F ther Information, c Realtor, 1450 t S-8)$5. Td.d. Wonderlul opportunlhF tor a phar-maclit. Take over this established drugstore. Excellent location, .par" Ing and good lease. Terms a ranged. Breiver Real Estate FE 4-51^81 liquor' BAR ANb 'RESTAURAIiT rated. Fixtures and equipment excellent condition. Only 18 mil south of Traverse City. Lois cuslomors come from there. Loci ed In heart ol town. Only 810,0 State Wide-Loke Orion 175 U^^EER-Rp^- OA 8 I$» WHEN YOU NEED . $25 to $1,000 We will be glad to help you. STATE'FINANCE CO. 508 Pontiac State Bank Bldg, FE 4-1574 Mortgoge Loons D. Charle lauie i-arm Loan Servii 'S. Telegraph. FE 4-0521. Sale Household Goods THE PONTIAC rKf^SS. MONDAY, FEBRUA«^Y|3, t\venty,-xine ’ 65!CAfeNI^L 'll r ROOMS OF BRAND NEW FUR-, ntture, living room, bedroom ..and . dinette - all for $2»5. $3.00 weekly. Pearson Furniture, 210 East 1 BIG BONUS SALE IS — 9x12 RUG / — Extra, bonus — box spring ai MATTRESS. ALL FOR $119.. rooms brand new furniture JSED STOVES, REFRIGERATORS AND WASHERS, all sizes $9 - $99 Clean guaranteed. Bargains on all used furnifure. Plenty of factory seconds'at Vh price. EZ TERMS-BUY-SELL-TRAOE LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Open '111 9 p.m. daily, $at. 'til $ 460 Baldwin at Walton FE 8-9$2;a t LJNEOLUM,.,RUGS BATHTUB area 31 INCH USED TV. $35. WALTON "E,JJ2SV-epe«-9-9r itS-E.-,,Comer of Jostyrr. GUARANTEED SlNGER V -------- for b signs, i Full price $ ic........... FE 8-'4!i3i'. FOUND ------------SALES. iTiie out of the way but a less to pay. Furniture and- ----- of all kinds 'NEW AND .Isit our trade dept, for ___ bargains. •We buy, sell or trade. Come out and look around, 2 acres of free parking. Phone FE 5-9241. Open Mon. to Set, 9-4;. FrI. 9-9 . 24 MONTHS TO PAY 4 miles E. of Pontiac or I mile E. of Auburn Heights on Auburn, Sale Household Goedi 65 STORKLINE CRIB, MATTRESS, BLOND DINING ROOM SET, 4 chairs, table, and china cabinet with sliding glass doors. First S75. CONTEMPORARY 'CHAIRS, 1 brown, 1 beige, good condition. ................ COLONIAL FURNITURE, LARGE selection, everything for your I- Farriily Home - Furnishings, Dixie Hwy., cor. Telegraph. CASH Loans to $3>000 Consolidate your bills with only one payment. No closing costs and life Insurance Included on unpaid balance at NO EXTRA cost. Repay over a convenient term IPhone or Apply In Person Family Acceptance Corp. 17 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron -------PE - CEILING TILE . Plastic wan Tllr ....'■■r^4. HOME OWNERS CASH UNLIMITED 'Exclusive plan. Re(nodel home. Pay .past or current ! Consolldale Into one low moi payment. And extra cash If need some. Call anytime. Big-Construction Co, FE 3-7833. CLEARANCE SALE Brand new living rodm suites, 849.501 bedroom 'suites, l$9.50 5-ple'ce chrome dinette, $33.50; large 7-piece chrome dinette, $59.50; 5-piece drop-leaf sets, $44.50. Bunk and trundle beds — 15 styles. In maple, walnut, blond and wrought Iron,. $39.95 up — -complete with mattresses. 9x12 foam-back rugs, $14.95; also 9x13 linoleum rugs, $4.95; 6 year .cribs, $14.95. Loads of other Items. Easy PEARSON'S FURNITURE ... E. PIKE FE 4-781 CROSLEV '34’' lliiSTRIC RANGE 'Norge 'relrlgerator, $75 both. F Q0ICK CASH LOANS UP TO $3,000 ;Yo(j can get a monthly paymen cash loan of $3,000 or lets on youi home even though not fully moderi usually In two days tinrie. We give you the Consolidate your debts, pay taxes make home Improvements with our money. See and talk It over with us without Obligation. VOSS AND BUCKNER, INC. 209 NATIONAL BUILDING PONTIAC, PH. FE 4-4729) DAVENPORT, 80 INCHES, GREEN "Slip covers, sound condiflomjea. soneble Mirror ptOtO glass, oval 34" long, black frame. Rocking chair, high back, 40 yrs. old, mahogany finish. . PE 2-3383 Swops 63 3-BEDROOM HOME IN PONTIAC near Central High .'' ' housetraller. FE 8 2442. 1954 ford''for''small USED freeter. 3243 Donley. UL 3-2420. ICE*SKAT1s, NEW AND USED* Hargraves Hdw.'742 W. Huron. JAMES AUTOMATIC piSHWASHtS, r 1075 V DRYER, refrigerator, TELE- FLOOR MODEL SALE Amana Chest Freezer "-Queen Dryer _„..J-Queen auto, washer Amema Refrigerator-Freezer -GO, GO FEBRUARY-REBUILT APPLIANCES Maytag wringers _________ Speed Queen washers ........ Easy Spinners .............. Automatic Washe;* .......... Refrigerators, renewed 21" TV's new picture tube . THE MOVE IN TODAY; WILL TAkS gun, goW clubs or "what have you?" In trade on this ■■— attached garage. Large and lake privileges. Ful . .. .. 700 BATE MAI? REALTY, FE 8-7141. ^ __ 6iTT'URNA(:E,'''5E'nr“6R fSATBi lor what have you. OR 3-3723.^ ARMsfRONO GAS FURNACl,'' 100, 000 BJU. LIkt new* t150 or ‘ 473-m. _________ BUYER'S PERSONAL WARDROBE slir 910. 424 5e()9. JIM'S SALVAGE , OUTLET Children's clothing, lots through teens. Sport coats, light-weight tackels, sweatshirts small. Shirts, 1 lallorir-ale price port, 474-081B._______ Sole Houiehold Goods I 2-4247. / By Dick Turner I Uvoifock E GUITARS . aners and les* PIANOS-ORGANS . SEVERAL GOOD B'UYS CHORD ORGANS PROM 899 UP SPINET PIANOS FROM $388 UP GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. OPEN EVERY MON. -and FRI. NIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. 18 E. HURON ~_____FE 4-0544 SAXAPHONE conn ALTO, CASE •nd stand, used 4 months. 479-4454. HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN able. Groups welcome. HORSES BOARDED , Box Stalls, 100 A&a to Ride ■"■TVEAR-OrbMARE. FE S-1W- PLACK "ma'RE AND PLATINUM tailed bay gelding, 3 gaited saddlj horlses in fop 'torn;, good record - big shows, *xc. for ywng ama- FOOT PACEMAKER, ntfj. $300 and taka ovt $67. Call 602-4534.: "Brush your teeth! Wash your ears! Comb your hair! Gee whiz, Mom, will I always have to be this much trouble to myself?’’ Monte Furnishing WKC SERVICE dept: : : 20 W. Alley ,F£ 3-7114 We Service What We Sell ... Frigidaire, Speed Queen, Maytag, Admiral, RCA Victor, Philco, Magno'iiox, TV, Appliances, Stereo—Hi-Fi„— Radios phonographs. WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE AT OUR 18 W. PIKE STORE ONLY Chrome Dinette Table ..... $ 9.95 Apt. Size gas stove ...... $19.95 2-piece living rdOm suite ... *""" Apt. size electric range . . Guarsnteed elec. ' 5-plece bedroom s EASY TERMS Antj<|ue8____________j65-i COCtECf WA^ HAVE 3 OLI ones. 682-3139. _____ Hm, TV a Rndlot ____________^ OVERSTOCKED , Used colored, black-white comblni tion TV, some at repair cost. Aut( mobile radios, n " " - For Sole Miscpllonpoui 67 CRONE OIL FURNACE, 170,000 BTU output with all cheap. FE 4-2214,______ EXTRA HEAT FOR THAT CpLD room - gss fired baseboai ' under windows, $120. ■"— 7005 M-59 wei).____________ FIREPLACE FUEL T” FIREQUETS, 15 LB. BAG - 45<- package coal; 4 pkc. $t.ii PINE COMBINATION DOORS COMPLETE WITH SCREEN AND STORM 30"x80" OR 34"x80" - $13.95 -----1 STORM SASH NEW, $3.9' EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAIR ;®fvice free estimates. Also parts and accessorfes. Bob Hutchinson, Mobile Home Sales, Inc. 4301 Dix, le Hwv., Draytdn Plains. OR 3-1202 Rent Trailer S|wce ^ W DON'T RENT, BUY. 65 x 120, $20 down, $20 month, black top road. PROS COR^*"cu?^3d»?' new" TRAILER 'Sl>ACES.~TONTtA'C 'm Wanted Cur^TrucI^ 101 OP $ FOR 13LEAN CARS OR truck> Econoiny'Cars, 2335 DIxIo. ALWAYS BUYING AND pXViNO MORBeFOR GOOD.CLEAN CARS. ASK FQR BERNIE AT— , BIRMINGHAM CHRVSLER-PLYMOUTH INC. . PiiTtno Specials $695 Fall Size CONSOLE Your choice of finish, Ebony, - hogany, 'Welnut, White and French Provisional. SPINET $399 ALL NEV.' . PIANOS Srinnell's ■ontlac Mall 442-0422 Downtown Pontiac_______haul. 85c del. OR 3-94_________________ Office Equipment 72lwntAf straw for sale. praxlmaterv 2900 hales. OA»-2/ii). i ART METAL 4.DRAWER LETTEf AI^ALFA, BROME AND T'^bTHY i file with ball-bearing suseensinil:,- Hay. 5351 Williams Lake Rd. »•*-. - .. 85: Bicycles lumphs, world's M&U Motor Sales "Since 1945" - We want' sharp late models . Highest prices paid 127 Dixie Hwy. WE NEED GARS TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CARS MATTHEWS-HARGREAViS -431 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-4547 Junk Cnrs-Trucks 10U 1 TO 10 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS ALWAYS BUYING • I JUNK CARS — FREE TOW t TOP SS CALL FE 5B142 SAM ALLEN 8, SON INC. - 1 to 5 - JUNK CARS Trucks—Scrap Metal OR 3^8659 ■ New and Uied Truckf 103 1952 FORD '/i-TON, VERY OOCIB condition. 343-7431. ERAL PH+NTING"; SUPPLY, ' 17 W. STREET, -matched r AND swivel, executive, arid convcnlance. mm anoui brushed alumthum and vinyl tr mad. Brand new. Famous make.r Selling for 10 per * ......... wholesale cost. Call for ai ---------- ■ ___ jofter 4;______ I Booti-Accessorjes_________VI 14 FOOT TROJAN; 25 HORSEPOW-EvfrirudeT^OlOO lb. trailer. 334-• »n t 4 g.m.________________ '64 WILL OFFER'^YOU MORE Fun In The Sun! BUY NOW FOR SPRING Larson - Duo - Hydrodine BOATS ; Evinfude - Homelite . MOTORS ■ Harrington Boat Works "YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER" IW S. Telegraph Rd. 332-8033 1956THRISIRAFT 23' CRUISER Sound doqble-plank mahogan' dependable. 95-h.p. engine. X- ful condition. Compass, windshield wiper, (1hrls-o-matlc transmission. Bilge pump,’ Head Ice box, double bunks and canvass.. $3,135. Ca" Jim, Ext. 235, Fp 2-8181 betore '■ weekdays. __________ ALL-WAYS A BETTER DEAL BOATS-MOTORS MERCURY-SCOTTJ ■ 1954 Ford 1-Ton Stake body truck, dual' wheels. Vl, 4 speed _ -TON PICK-U|57~A-t condition, FE 5-5218._______________ 1955 CHEVY - TON aANO A HALF truck., 482-4550 or IVA 4-2177, 1954 CHEVY HALF TON PICK-UP, good’ condition, no rust 8500. FE-"’4-7OT^ _________________ ____ Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer. " McCandless Carpet.___________ MAPLE BUNK BEOS, MA-TTRESSl Remote control lospital bed. 8100. OL 1-1479. " meats'and grocer 16$ „„ __________ advertised brands, saving lip to B19$.. Soap, sugar, coffea, flour, butter, cake mix, cereal, . soup, vegetables, trull juices. Baby Food, 34 tor 99C Cut-Up Friers, Ite/b Lb. ' 12 Wr 5»' special offer LIMITED TIME ONLY-FREE With every TV purchased, one 20-plece set of Melmac dinnerwera. Prices B. F. GOODRICH STORE , -IH_^N. Perry ________^FE 2-0121 Water SoftBiw . 66-A RENT SOFT WATER 82.50- PEIT COQLEY S<9FT WATER CO. L “~7FE'4-'4404'_ 7"V USED 'ROYAr'WATER SO'FTBNE'R at $45. COOLEY SOFT WATER CO WATER SOFTENER R§NTAL I limited gAllonagCj 13 per moi.. <62>307Q> Unlverildl Soft Weter. jiM'S'TALVAGE OUTLEf O’odspreadi and lamps, mi. . .. choose Irom. Famous reproductions of oil paintings, cloth backing, over^ 400 ^ln stock, ^ sites Fraction ol orlignal cost. 4005 Hatchery Rd., corner of Airport, 474 0818. tIRBY ''v'acUuM,' late MODEL . 859.50 Singer portable ........... 119,50 New portable typewriter ... $33.50 Nerchl console . - $39.50 "' console eulo zlg-tag $59.50 Curl's Appliance LINOLEUM RUGS 12 > 12 X 12 $9.95, 9 " " *’ Sole liinj Con^ ^60 1 TO 50 ■ LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us bffore you deit. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8145 Open .... - - action 2 0179. Braker,. 3840- Elliobeth eUlC'K CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS Clark Real Ittpla, FE 3-7481, Res. _FB 4-4813. Mr. Clark. uni6n la'kr arIa ' 2W yaar, sold 89,200, . balance $7, 900, 1$ per can! discount, MA 4 1292 Eva, MA 4,2555....... Wanted £ontro^Mt^^ 8BASON8D UAND' CONTRACTS TTO’Sr LAND COFJTRACTS you*d»al **• Warreii Stout, Realtor 1450 N. pliflyHe Rd, ^ PS »ll*» «»tr^ fAN*d"W M, ,<1,’ Van Well, 4540 Dixie Hwy., OR $.1355. / , CASH / For Lend ConIracI, aqullles or / morigagas. Don’t lose that home, ' Smell mortgages available, Call ' led McCullough »r.. M2’18M. ARRO RSAITY . , 5143 Cass ElUnbelh Road fieipi WEI Nfipo useo Mowii Cash on lha line or we will irada haw 3 or 4 l»adroom hotn# for vacant land, call loaayl _ MICHABL'I RBAITY........ . PS ?r4 illguai. FE d^fng sef $59., J! |15„ iflaciric Itofier bar stools »I2„ port-tubs $5., drasier $9, bai and elaciric stoves, relrlgera- "%«Yn'ETL ^d‘ 2,0 e'^^P^Kr^ ■ " T ONLY 52 gsllon iire„e"rr$t2’»'5’.’Dro,S"';bl« W.95; $15,95. Table lamps $X95. Elec. up Lowest prices In used. Slop Ir '"^nWfACTORY SECONDS 8Z 'TB*RMS -BUY -Sei-r-iTR*®* °'*Varoain”hou'ib ''' Johnson or Osl^nd to N, gold slip JOdf. cold" “>• 5184 Angslui Dt., Crayton Plains. 474.0717. lavaraTKad V*' TaVvislofts. %t*ji and up » day warranty, ix retienf buy oft ttdor mtidei '^Tinaer W i»r II,JU P*r wiek. GOODYEAR STORE 30 8^ CASS No Matter Whaf the . Need, a Press Wan| Ad Is Always Available to ' Help You Fulfill It -ond Falt^ MAPLE TABLE AND CH Poster bed, complete, elsO hollywood bed, collea table For Sale MIscellqneouf_____67 COMPLETE SET OF U.S. DIV-Ing equipment. Less than 20 hours bn II. Call FE 2-5945.____ I'x7'xV4" Birch, 2nds. $3.95 I'X 8'X 3/14" Mahogany, Ul. $3.95 4'X 7'X 3/14" M4hogany, 1st. . $3.49 Brass Passage Sr'-PONTIAC Baldwin 7 AND 4 X 8 TWO WhIel ■ OR 4 4 83wI9. Ponrsons Furn plica. FE_4-7eei. ioiSr'suTfE, NEW.'pi --■LK'r««c---QttyJiL__4 BAYifRiWM piKjtuPBfe Ail a> , nti . ;(n, HcJI water and slei ulomali ■ ■■■'■ elec. _______ 'pa'nl, and Ruilolaum. OR 3-45I4. MOWHetA'-fA B'l'I!'“ YV.....$15. ----- Appllanca. EM 3- ' and rampants. Salad spaclallia In rure claaning. M -Avon Troy^ Car^d^S; ____ .................iocheslar, pest John R. 852 2444 ______________ 15(io ITEMS, APARIMMT OA*-electric and ragolar ranges. $9 50 /. and up. Heir Igttalar*,- TVs, _bact-room suites, chesl ol drawers, name It. J 8 L Mart, 4184 Dixie Hwy„ open 'III 8, 473-1421. lt'IMIl0MR'Af6H;““S f 6 V e, 6|. nelle, bedroom Hi. PE 4 1832. rtlSfitABLnw TR E 0 11. Why dp without lha 'hinos vou need lot your home? ¥amlPy'''*Hr. VuMilcgf*???* . .9! * I* .... designs, ______ modern jbaymenlk ol 8 Makes but ■ Dial Moc ilnal. Taka o' par monlh ; PLYWOOD DuroTherm CIrci 8 6442. tlRES '7.22.5 3 MOUNTED Oil F-500 rimi, 2-825 ‘ cd On chevy rim ' lln^dshet and charger, See FE 3-9040. MNCiH TV, AND 7‘ llk^new. 482-4297, _ A~WORLb'l'AMOU8'NSi'CHr loitiille lewlng machine In cabinet. Buttonholes, blind h monogremi, scallops, etc....... without any allachmenis, Paymenli pries. Michigan Nacchl-si One 15 tlnguTsher, one radar, electronic ----'ir alarm and one ballery See al 2385 S. Telegraph. "p60L'TABLE, 8 4.521. Wi______ . gas lurnacas. Aulomallc water healer ippPai, croc ..tiings. Lowe Paint, Super Kemlona ^nd-GrnveCTrt PONTIAC l'AkE builders SUP- ‘ Sl'ss SAND, 0*AVEL, FILL, ETC., d6-llvertd. Morria WahT. OR 4-1741. iToad-CoqlCoke-fOTl 77 hi?,' : .----^Twrr-TRAVWDRS'STER AMJSTANG - SAGE Stop and Inspect O' travel trailers. Let 01 aquaint your family wit pleasure of Irevet trallejlng. EASY BANK RATE? TOM STACHLEH AUTO AND MOBILE SALES Open Toes., Wed., Thurs., Sat. 'Ill 4 Mon and FrI. 9 to 9. Closed Sunday 3091 W. Huron St,_^all^J^d^B AIRSTRBAM yOMTWilOHt TRAVEL TRAILERS Call limit "MOVING SALE. tna $3.50, Della Faucet 3- ____American made kitchen feuceX$4.49. 21 x 32" link $10.00, - ...... $0.50. Current pat SEASONED FIREPLACE WOOD, pIck-up, or delivered. PE >0500. sfAS0NfD'~"S5BT“ WodbT'TAR, Maple, Hickory FE M104. SEArdW~FIREPLACl ■ WbOD, ' 338-0291. A. H. Coulter. SE'vtRALTc INDS OF "f'I R EPLACE i, will deliver, OA 8-3238. Peti-Hunting Dogi D & J CABINET SHOP 1055 W. HURON 334-0924 AFTER 4 P.M. 343-3343 ' AiX~i?iNDS. TOY TERRIERt AT^BTUD. AL8G Chow; Collie; Poodles. NA 7-2931. _ rpfR"CtNT OFF, PSOOLES, parakeets, canaries, fish. Crane's Bird Hatchery, 2409 Aoborn. UL 2-2200. Ret euppilee. AKC APRICOT POODLiS. 4 WBitTS AvIS CABINETS ^ 1570 Opdyke . FE 4-4300 RTywOOD OISTRlbUTpRS 375 N. Cess Ave. !FEJ;M» healer, $49.95; 3-plece bath sets, $59.95. Laundry trey, trim, $19.95, shower itelli with trim, »3Z9S. 2-bowl link, $2,95; Levs., $2.95; tubs, $10 and up. Pipe col end threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 172 $. Saginaw, FE 5-2100. SONY -' mo'STEREO "TAPE RE-corder, like new. Cell Ft 2-5945. ■ THE SALVAfidN aRmY JtED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meal your heeds. Clolhlng, Furnllure, Appllencei. TALBOTf IUMSER 1025 Oakland Ave.. PE 4-4595 VANVTY 'ANb''HANB~BAilN TIY up, complete, $59,95. B f“"*“ • looA nitn uliinmfttic w«tar dogia at stud? Terms. FK 2-06f9. AKC^boTjrTUP's^^^ small mlnlalUra, 7 weaks old. $75. 473-0242. Me SHl PHlfi'D, MALeT' OR ADU-•ta ol .10 w“- ............... WEDDING ANNOUNCS'MRNTS' AY Muiicol Ooodi SPECIAL 120 A MON1H BUYJ 3 ROOMS OF FURNiTUHE - Conilsls iHi l-piece livini room «Uft« “ebiei i-,£ocklall table and i t oiece’bedroom luita with i pssei ap* ’'1^5 Iptete'dinelie set 4 ihrorde r.hsiri; WYMAN FURNITURE' CO- ANCHOR FENCES N_OjMONEY DOWN FI 5-7471 ~A VaT«ntlne SpBcldl out wrappad links, dishwe and laucels. 334 4329. PONTIAC KITCHEN IPBCIALTIES ---- *17 -Oreherd Lake Bd, - — 6iE?' ANBr PoRk ' HALTTdfb ^quarters, Ojdyka Mkl. Ft 5-79£l. Bottle Gas Installation Two lOOooond cylindari and bciuinrnsnl, $12, Oraal Plains Gas fii,, l>R 5-0877 tOMPlfl! Sfodk QF PlPt aN6 IIMIngi - plastic, cnoper and cast Iron lor drains. Plaille, coppar and galv. for walar. Black tor gat. ra«5-*4*it'" UL 2 42ti, ' ' . ' eCWRiTl It&CK 6F PIRI ATO , lltllngs. custom Ihraading. tmmadl-aletervlca Menicalm (upply, 154 W, Monltalm. FE 5 4712. ■ CASH AND CaWV"' 4x1 Pra finlihad oak ta« 14.9$ 4x7 Pr* tinlsh*d oak i»c ... I$.*$ 2811 Dixie Hwy. OR, 2-8812 I looKiNo keyed, ,15 ee. Morey's (kbit and I ^uomry Club. 2280 Union L.k. DHIV|-WaY RirNFClftClN6 . WIRB SUITPIY CO. Wally'Byam's exciting ceravent). DUE tSTEXTENUATING CIRCUM-stences wa iwlll ba closed until 79 8;2538: Jacobsen Trailer Sales 5490^W^ILi.lAMS LT ly). “ ARE YOU FLORIDA BOUND? ELLSWORTH’ AUTO and T-RAILER SALES 4577 Dixie Hwy.________JMA 5 SAtE _______ / "Rental Units' Right Campers, Wolverinr nebago Pickup Campers. Trallbiszer Travel Trailer F F. HOWLAND OR 31454 'RUCK EATIA'Pi ■ _ ________ Ph. EM 3 3S81. OPEN ALL WEEK........ ur Travel Trailer will be healed on the weekend lor your-viewing FAiT.CB£El.....FRANKLINS AND STRE,^M11NES ! Special I 1959 DODGE Va TON F 1960 CHEVY SkYON* FLEETSlOE, V-0, custom cab, . radio, heater. Evee, or Sunday, -OITM229. - 8095.. 1955"00DGE PICK-UP; 1955 DOpGi ‘ Vanatte. MA 4-3412, EM 3-35U. 1943 JEEP Universal WITH "fHf BILL SPENCE Chrysltr-Plymouth-Rambl*r-J**R 4473 Dlxla Hwy. ^ CLARKSTON MAS-8841 PINTER'S MARINt "WHERE SERVICE COUNTS' , I370 0pdyk9 at l-7'5 FE 4KI924 CLOSE-OUT 1943 Johnson Motors, Star Craft boats end Gator Champ tellers. OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES $94 Orchard 'Lika______ Cjiff FOreyor's , Gun and^ports Center Authorized Dealer For MERCUm^ LONE STAR BOATS Arriving Dally for yopr Inspecllonil USED OUTBOARDS Many Models and Makes In tip-top Condition. ily MB -la Sundays— EVINRUDE- MO'rdR " Bests end Accessories Wood, Aluminum, Plberglts LOOK Bttter Used "Trucks GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS ____« 5-9445 •- , jeep' FCI70, ■f957"'MOBlL, 4 wheel drive, Werrtn hubt> radia, leeter. 81.200. 42S-53a». _ SALE SALE January Clearance I 194$ VW Double Cab Pickup IS $1895 8*1* PRICE 8I7SI 8*1* PRICMlSZl 21' Owant Skill a BOX'iiS, 830, liAOLES, ____... DACKY'S 835, POODLES, S75 AND 22' FANS and FRANKLINS MUTTS, TOO. See Jack oPiTEv^mGs i ' Holly Travel Couch HUNT^ PET SHOP, 1-3112 "5210 Holly Rd, Hody, ME 4477 CEMETERY'ANd^ F®2nd ' 'Tr'aII/R SACWs* AND^ENTAl'- 1 Pel MemoHel Park, NA 7-3341. * Rochester RX COMKfe'ti'POODLE on' Also other breeds. 473 5404. HoUSetroilerS 89 DACHl'HUNd'S' AKC ■ReOtSteiltD., ....... 1 OL 1-4525._ . . ‘zbxio, 1*43 WOLVERINE . BOUGHT | OERM'an" SHE'phERD pUppiES, 4 InOcl. Is now locfted In Leesburg, , ---- AKC, high pedigree. Mil F'»- «il $4200, Will sell very ree | Fritz - Landscaping, 2531 *®|JJJ'® *® 'ntereiled perly. OR oSr-sFd-VrL^ mmx. Male and female. UL 7-3437. lent condition 474 0435 Airer s p rn TERRm REo- Living I Evmrode Oulboerdi 3 to I WE TpADE Alter low down poyments, i I merdi 'til April HI, 1 MAZUREK MARINE SALES ,.L BEAT •9>87 pups. Male and female. MALE toY p( lllered.aFE 2 MALi "SOXER,' 5 YEARS DLD Excellent with children. Need yard. 343-3419. ...AaBV'.MALES, .|4.95, Roch*sl*r: lJU T-4S72, ...TROPiCALFISH^ALE HUNT'S PET SHOP, OPEN EVERY J4IOHT TILL * “ “ Bank, OR 3-9747 or Ml 7-2>,. W'AfEH,'IfEAfiC "W O^LON, aliCirIc, 10 yr, goerahl**. Ilk# nwr, 84f 'A24-7344, and drawar Ironli, glua, ale, OR --^-^.WI_l^h•r*_*.m.________ _ CnmerflB' StrvIcE 70 FOR SALE. OMEGA B2$ ENI.ARO-er ertmoil n*w - with or without ris.__Or will trade for Omege 2 with or without lenses. Cell after 4;00 LI 44192. WAfftlbT'bMlSA'B T'INCARo-er. Cell alter 4:00 p.m. LI Ttieo. 71 4 VIOLINS, SJS UP. LEE HACKNEY Violin Repair. 474 0524. . fJkLbwiN bfiaAsdfiif: 6RoaN, % waTnul, ywd eondlllon. Pi 4-18.W. “ January $aT« On the floor n^l a tor organs end plant frit ragolar price. MORRIS MUSIC $4 I. Telegrtgh Reed (Across From Tel-Huron) FE 2-056/ THEY'RE ............... OiseouNTi NOW ON rypiwRif ... . ,1 i M a markirtax. naxXx WANT AD Phoni 332-B1B1 IN THE PONTIAC PRESS I, 85 Williams. I WE ARE FREE NY OeAL Lake grion ■ JET BOATS REAL GOERS MICHIGAN T-JRBOCRAFT 2527 DIXIE HWY. OR 4^0308 ” TONY'S marine ' EVINRUDE MOTORS, BOATS, canoes and tupplles. Bargains ge< lors. Open 9-9.^2-9a40. WantEd Cori-Trucki 101 ’^’OxTorcT Trailer Sales „ ____ .. __ Orion on M24 MY 2-0721 .... ....r „ ........a SH'ftllTS MbBlLll Hdk^tS- wf«i";M^i™ANb'>op;iLd's^ . - . JENT - id hitches installed. Complete lli ur peril and bdllle gas. Wantad Clean Trailers F 4 9743 1172 W, Huro Porkhurst TrotlEf Saks I brolhtr! eoei 4j buddy and Nomads who Is block a be smell puppi companions. It , , ^ , , tereiled m leklng us end giving US a very good home, tell FE $ 7244 enyllme. p.l. our breed Is eM American, mainly larrjar. , AictlonJnlE^^^___________________M jEoeYibMi wtbHfsBiYi; rf:« WIM'O’Wiy COUfi»7 M#PI. Ill w. I AAA E AkA Rd. Ml M4II. lls 1 i Days I’ IvIRY lUNDA Sporting 0*™.—-'" Door Priiaa tvarv Aoefk W# Buy-Sell-Trade. Releii 7 Consignmenis Welcome 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR $2717 CAitf 'F6R " YbOST'JfattfillTJIU,' ppllentes, m'lic, Hems Or lei- us ill II lor you. Hells Aucllod. MY ^ 1*7t-pr MY *4141, UvEltKil 13 RiOIITEREO HERtrORDI, MElF- 4301 - . “•-‘■er-MIschlel endM , ling. MO 4lll2jf SPECIAL CLEARANCE , new 1943 modtls, ell must NEW DETROITER 51'xlO' l.badroom. was 11,1*5 n 13,791. NEW DETROITER 54'xlO* l-badroom, wat I5,*9» n 14.470, NEW PONTIAC 2b*droom, tionl dining room a 84,475 now 13,8*5. NEW ALMA SO'xlO' Ibodroom was 84,940 n 11,7^5. NEW ALMA ll'xlO' 2 badroomi. island ktichan, was ll.atO now 14,199. W* hov# 94, ihobllo hotni Free 50 GALLONS GAS With Each Truck Sold 1963 CHEVROLET ','1-ton pickup, has 4 low OLIVER ^ RENAULT 40 B PIk* FB 4IW2 _ i*9*' VOLKSVVAdiN ' PAtilt. 'i»9 lull prlto with no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Ponuoc's OiHounf LoP'-1*1 S s*glft*w ■ FE 41214 ISIS MfnefiBItUfKir'MOpiL llO A ruidslor. This on* li • oloss-iij Only 7 ol lh*so In this vWhlrY-Only $199$. tfiv lerme. PATTER- MAM. Ml 4-1738. : ,s TrilRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOXDAY, FEBRUARY"^,-I«ft4 Ndw and Uied CarV v 106 1M1 RAMBLER 4, 4-DOOR CLASSIC,. looks and runs like new, excellent rubber. Monderful gas mlle- "“PEOPLES AUTO SALES 4S Oaklaiid .FE 2-»51 1963 rambler 4-DOOR 77p WITH full equipnnent, everything startdart and buckets,, it's • yours for only $1,945. BILL SPENCE . ChryslercPlymouth-Rambler-Jeep 4673 Dixie Hsvy. CLARKSTON , MA 5,5861 WINTER SPECIALS 6 Chevrolets, '53 to '57, $35 up 5 Cadillacs/'52 to'57, $95 up 9 Fords, '53 to '58, $35 up 9 Olds and Pontiacs,.. '541® '59, $35 up 6 Dodges and Plyrrtouths, '55 to '59 Plenty of other models and-makes CCONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE HIGHWAY BIRMINGHAM- -TRADES Every used cor offered for retail to tl’e public is a bonafide 1-owner, low mile-. age, sharp.car. 1-year parts-and labor warranty. 1963 RIVIERA, power ... $3595 .1963 BUICK wagon . $3095 1963 BUICK Electra .. $2895 1963 BUICK 4-door .... $2595 1962 BIHCK Electra, air ... $2495 ' 1962 INVICTA wagon ..'. $2395 1962 BUICK 4-door .. $2295 1962 BUICK sedan . .... $2095. 1962 OLDS 2-door ... $2095 1961 ELECTRA hardtop ./. $1895 1961 INVICTA hardtop-. $1795 1941 OlOS hardtop $1495 1959 CADILLAC DeVille . $1895 1960 BUICK 2-doOr ..... $1395 1960.aUfCK 4,door ... $1295 I960 BUICK 2-dOor .. $1195 1960 OPEL, sharp .... $ 695 1960 OPEL, wagon ..... $ 495 1958 IMPERIAL 4-door . $ 895 FISeHER BUICK : 515 S. W&odward Birmingham Ml 4-9100 Farai|« Cars Naw and Used Cars . ! New and Used Cars 196t ANGL lA. EXCELLENT CON-dltlon. FES-1731 after 4 B.m. 19S9 MEftCEDES-BEMr WITH RA- Patterson Chrysler-i Pfymouth tter 4 p.m. i ;k 2-door _______ _JOR HARDTOP $495 III price.:^o money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot;' 1956 ROLLS ROYCE SILVER Cloud Salon. Built to last a lifetime. Silver with red leather Interior. Extra clean. Priced right. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 S. WOODWARD! AVE., .BIR-MINGHAM......... 1*63 „ ---- VOLKSWAGEN.' 3.400 actual miles. Driven only.In — many. Practically new. 1 332-2250 or 33219818. . __Renault "Authorlied Dealer" OLIVER BUICK and JEEP Corner of Pike and Cass FE 4-ISOl ■ 24.43 per m Patterson condition of this beauty. . SALE PRI.CED $895 2-year gw warranty SPARTAN DODGE S. Saginaw FE 8-454r Is guaranteed ir steering, ifower transmission, r 7-3214 1959 BUICKS SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM 2-YEAR GW WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE- S. Saginaw FE 8-4541 r. FE 3-7542 1959 BUICK HARDTOP very pice, private own< Chrysler-Plymouth j H, Riggins, dealer. gOCHESTER ^*’’”0L —- is 'iusf tike.. tAUPT ------- BIRMINGHAM IMPORTS 1959 OPEL wagon •. $695 1961 RENAULT, radio $695 1960 VW $unroof . $895 FISCHER ■ BUICK PONTIAC, Clarks- iw” ca'dTllac“sedan“'6evTlle, air conditioning, full power, must see to appreciate. New car trade ini $190 down. Payments of $87.48 per month. ____ LLOYD*' i . LIncoln-Mercury i232 S. Saginaw St. __FE_2-9I31 1.940 CADILLAC,' DeVlLLE’ SEDAN, Clean, one-owner, low mileage. All power equipment. Owner sacrllic-_ Ing for 82,JM._FE 2-5544. „194V CAt)ILLAC COUPE'de' v interior. 5, •r Rd., Orion. 8 1963 CHEVR HARDTOP. _________ power steering and bn__ _____ heater, whitewalls. Adobe beige finish, with brown interior. Only WAPO AVE.a iW2 CH^VY verfible, mu___ big" engine, with a 4-speed Never been abusecf, 1184 < payments of $65.14 per month. .LLOYD Linebln-Akercufl' 232 S. Saginqw - FE 2-9131 t96rCORVAt*^ 4-DOOR SEDAN. Powergllde, radio, "heater. Solid cream finish with fawn Interior. «nly:SH95r"e8srterr-SON CHEVROLET ( WOODWARD "AVE., HAM. Ml 4-2735. ..PATTER-i/>, 1000 s. BIRMING- power steering and brakes, and white finish-with red mienor. Tinted glass, low mllewge. Only $2,495. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml "4-273_5.________ _ 1942 IMPALA“sports COUPE, VO, auto, transmission,' low-mileage. $1795. FE S1958.________________________ 1962 BEL AIR 4-DOOR 8-cylInder, standard Iransmiss radio and heater, $1,595. VAN CAMP CHEVY marmaduke: By Anderson & Leeming “What does it need?” 1943 VW SEDAN, ROBY RED, WHITE UPHOLSTERY. LOW MILEAGE. . IDE AND OUT. 1942 VW. ANTHRACITE IN COLOR, RADIO, RED INTERIOR BEAUTIFUL CONDITION. 1950 VW. BEIGE. 30,000 MILES, GARAGE KEPT. . MERALD DAN. COMPLETELY RE- 4-910011350 N. .Woodward WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC IBIrmlngham, Michigan-1M3' CHEVY CONVERTIBLE,' $I7_. Al's Marathon, 125 Oakland. FE 8-9225.__• 1955 CHEVROLET 6-CYL. TnOIFTE automatic transm’ -' “ ' * ^car tor the wife. .$5-dowAr-$6,-l 7-pep Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ave; __ FE 0-4079 • !955 CHEVY’2-D00R, RUNS'bOOO, good tires, 895. 682-4857. l'954 CHEVY, CORVETTE ENGINE. FE 4-8308. 1958 CHEVY 'iMPALA HARDTOP, giwd -shape, $495. OR 4-0620. 1958 'chevy nomad WAGON brakes. 8645. •Ing , ai BILL SPENCE JLUTOBAHNl Motors, Inc. ' POWER Naw and Used Can _________10 f964s THROUGH 19S9| - Any make or modal You pick It - We'll finance It ■Suburban Motors BIRMINGHAM Trades 100% . WRITTEN GUARANTEE Every Cor Listed Carries This Guarantee. Take the Guesswork Out of Buying. Get One qf Our Certified Used Cars I 1963 Olds Starfire Jet black wl5^black buckal seats 1963 Olds 98 4-Door liaAR.KSTON 1959 CHEVY WAGON, gllda^, ^ engine like ne 959 “CHEVROLET "BEL'air STA'-tior^ wagon, 6-cyMnder, PowergMde, terms. CO„ LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" 193 $.. Siaglnaw _ FE 4-2214 j'9S9 'CHIVROL E1 rON.'jCK-UP^ "O '[uckyTuTO sales "Pontiac's Discount Lot" 193 S. Saginaw ^ FE 4-2214 1959 CHeVROLE'f BEL AIR 2-bOOR sedan. V8 engine, powergllde, ra- PATTERSON CHEVROLET CC 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., B1I MINGHAM. Ml 4-2735._ 1959 CHEVROLET ft¥L AIR "SEDAN RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments ol $5.92 per ■Turn. . Patks , I960 CORVETTE COtJVERTIBLE. 3-speed, 230 engine, radio, healer, whitewalls, Light blue Mnish:' Only $2,195. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, Ml •Boor' se- Is. turquoise end while ■ —- - ' ' ms, PAT 4-2735. tasy term! OLET CO kvC, Bin 1962 Olds F-85 ^^-door, VI angina, automatic. 1962 Olds 98 4-Door _ J56^lJChiYyJipjiflJo._-„ lardtop, V8, aulomallc power T961 Pontiac Hordtop Marchlet, rad with r»- • ' Inttrlor, tinted glass. 1940 cSRVEtW vjhi HAM. Ml 4-2735, I960 Chevrolet : 4-DOOR STATION WAGON This extra sharp V-8. one-owni trade Is now reduced to only $995 ’spartan dodge' 11 S. SAGINAW FE el45, 160 CHEVROLET t 1963 CHEVROLET, SUPER SPORT ---1 V8 engine, autor^tlc, power, ring and brakes,-”^,000 actual !s, color Is aqua. Only $2,595. Homer Hight Chevrolet-Bulck-Pontlec OXFORD OA il-2528 1962'chevy" ir STATION WAGON, 6-c»linder ,en*lne, radio, heater, whitewalls, raven blqpk with red Interior. Only $1295. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIR.' MINGHAM Ml 4-2735. 1963 CORVAiR “MONZA SPYDER convertible. 4-speAd. 150 HP Tur-. boalr engine. Radio, heater, white-v8alls. Black with red interior. Orfly $1,995. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO; 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. PLYMOUTHS-JEEPS, and .•BILrSPENCE GhrysleV-PJyr CLARKSTON _ 1962 chevy' VmPALA Sports', 327 engine, full poi 673-9974. 1963 CHEVROLET IMPAtA T-i hardtop, 6, dark red, exjcellent shape. •‘S3.100. 682-0389. 1963 MONZA, EVERY ACCESSORY but air conditioning. Parlect. $1675. 482 0555. LLOYD ' . Gold Crest Warranty '■“itn?rj............ 232 S. Sagina' FE 2-913. _^ • i CHR'ysLeR" ''5iEW"PORf," Ice l.s only $1988. BIRMIfjGHAM "hrysier ■ Plymouth 2-DddR HARb-AUTO- ' FORD V-8 GALAXIE CLUB 1958 " "ford" COUNTRY' SQUIRE How and Used Cars 1061 Newjnn^ Cars, ; 106 1963 Falcon 4rDoor with a beautiful beige finish,.and radio, heater. Only $1,595. BEATTIE' "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD Home of Service after ' OR 3-1291 Wagon. padded whitewalls. $475. 682-3^I^aMer. 5., 1959 "ford 2-b66R CUSTOM“"36b" has V8 engine, radii) and heater, has a beautiful tu-tona finish and price is only $695. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD , 630 Oakland Ave. _______ . FE 5-4HI 19'S9 FbRD"''C0NviRTIBLE, R A'-DIO, HEATER, AUTO, TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. ‘ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of > $4.95 per week. See Mr, Perks at Harold Turner, Ford. 1959 FORD WAGON, EXCELLENT , condition, new tires, $695. Call after 4J0 -_673-2613. __ 1959 FORD STATION WAGON, engine, automatic, white fl lull price $295, $5 down, $-,-per month.' 100 others to choose from. y j Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ave. FE 8-d079 1960 FQRO FALCON^ 2-OOOR STA* tion waaon. 6-cyllnder engine, transmission, radio, Rot^fi&ter SON, Rocheston F 1960 FORD FAIRLANE, 4-DOOR.^ cyl, engine, automatic, radio, heat--dJCtcftfltean, $950. JEROME FERGUS^^'Rochester F O R D _Dealer, OL_M71l._ _ 196t FALCSN 2-ObOR SEbAN WITH radio and heater, sparkling white finish and it has whitewall tires, price only $1095. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD. » 630 Oakland Ave. _ FE 5-4101 ___ 1960 FORD ' FALCON.STATTON ZTe. .................. 1.954 CHRYSLER, 7 DeSbTO 4-OOOR V nolle transmission, $ ig aod brakes, extra Patterson Chrysler -• Plymouth Patterson thrysler-Plymouth 1001 N. Main Street ROCHESTER OL 1 8559 1957 DODGE HARDTOP, $135 SAVE '57" dodge' v-i. "all power, new tires, clean, private owner, ' 1963 Dodges FACTORY OFFICIAL'S CARS FROM $1845 huge guarantee SPARTAN DODGE SAGINAW_________FE 8-4^ B bobbE CONVERTIBLE WITIi khlle finish. .Only $1295 Ea terms. . PATTERSON CHEV8 ET CO.. 1000 .S. Woodward Av Birmingham Ml 4-2735. .1 'tHEVROl.ET BEL AIR 4 poOR ledan. V8 engine. Powerglldr -- celleni condition. BA )61..CHEVROLET flISCAYNE 2 dooi sedrn, 4ryllnder, slandari woodward, BIEMINOMAM, mi 'rtio, heater: go^'ilres.'or 3-967,5. 1956 FORD FbUH-bbOlk^^SEOAN ibMAD STA-' le, automellc, prakei. Radio, .... ..... Turquoise and I white finish. Only 8 , 495. Easy . 'Aims, PATTERSON CHEVROI FT 1960 Olds Dynamic ! co., looo s, woodward ave , 4door hsydiop, eutomellci n RMINOHAM. Ml 4 7735. ' er, old car down 1961 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 DOOR woodward, 4-27JS. 1961 CHEVROLET door, 6‘cyl„ ita cond., $950. 332 372 iial CHEVROLET NOA. - - lion wagon. V8 engine, automellc power steering —' -heeler, 1962 Renault Gordini radio, haata*’ whitawalln. up 40 MPG. 1963 Olds Jetfire 1961 Pon4iac Bonneville Coupe aulomatlc, power . , $189 SEE OR CALL Don Wilson or Bob Martin Suburban Motors 1941 CHEVY BISCAVnE WifH AU Momallc, radio, heater, whitewalls. BILL SPENCE lAftKSTON _ MA', .S86I F6I CHiVY ImPAIA hardtop. “ “la. Radio anji brakes, 8157 down ^and pay "■’■LLOYD' '■ I ineqin-tAertury 232 S. Saginaw SI. FE 2 9111 1982 CHivEOlBt ImPAlA 4bOOR sedan| V8 angina, PowergUde.^pow 1962 COJ^VAIR 2-OOOR Owned qnd driven by e Bloomlleld Patterson Chrysler Plymouth 1001 N. Mein Streel ROCHESTER ~ OL 1-85.59 I960 dodge''"9 PASSENGER" STA- This dandy I II tires, Original are'lmmacMlale. lerclally, and It 1956 FORD 2 DOOR. ObOb CONDI-lion. FE 2-6971. 1958 FOrtO 6, .2bOOR, 1275. EM WE.BELIEVE WE HAVE THE Sharpest Cars Around! HILLTOP AU10 lloYds $50 to $1,000 No Money Down I No Credit Problems! Car for Need We Have in Deed I )G| FItkwp w5 *. Woodward Birmingham MI 4-4485 $945 2 YEAR OW WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 711 5 5a|(Mew TR 8 4541 ITerCMiVV BRI 4|R, SfVUNbBR, 4 door. Red. II,.500 OR 3-0151 fOAi .CMiVRrtl FT imMAIjA 2 DflOR haidiop. VI engine^Powerdtide, radio, h"--" '' fiRlON" iOOO $ M.iNOHAi I9st MERtURY (3) 1957 DODGE 9 pass " 1957 ENOI ISH FOR I960 RENAULT 1951 CHEVY Wagon slick 8 1959 MERCURY (21 Irom 1960 MBR- — -' Ford nev2 e standard transmission, one uwnrr, sharpll $795. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL I-97II, 1960 '“falcon..2'DbbR, " RADI S, HEATER, AUTO. TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL' TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments ol $6.95 per w,eek. see Mr. Parks at Harold JurnCG Ford. Ml 4-7500. I960 f-lHRb WITH BLACK lEAfTl- . LLOYD LIncoln-Mercury S. Saolnaw ?:?P' $5 ‘a mile lUR SAVINGS BY DRIVING TO "The BIG LOT" STARK HICKEY FORD ,14 Mile Rd. E. ol Woodwaad ; WHITEWALL tiRES, LOW MILEAGE. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of $0.95 per Four door sedan with full factory ar'.nS'''; buy^Now ■ ” $1295 2-YEAR GW WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 211 5. Saginaw PE 8-454) 1961 FALCON STATipN WAGON 4 door deluxe model with automellc moldings. and contrasting 1961 FOR"0 FaIrla'n'E'2- new car trade. No Money' Down, $38.46 per month. ’ , ' Patterson Chrysler-Plymouth 1001 N. Main Street ROCHESTER . , . OL 1^8559 IGGS-Faioon'' )" Station. Bus ' BEATTIE^ "Your FORD Dealer Since- T930' ON dixiE 'Hwy. in WATERTTTRL Home of Service after the sale . OR 3-1291 _ lYsr MERCUR YCOMMUTER “STA-tIon wagon, has radio and heater, power brakes and power steering, whitewall tires; lull price .only, $397, ESTATE STORAGE COMPANY, I09 E.‘South -Blvd. -at Auburn, FE 3-7141. 19M^M^ERbURY M SURPLUS MOTORS I S. Sagin^ F;g '8-3036 }'962 Falcon ■ Station Wagon , i 4-door 6-paSsetigeT, beige flnl.Sh, r. dio, heater, automatic transmission. This one Is- yours tor lonh • $1,595. BEATTIE; ''Your FORD DEALER Sfnee 1930' ON DIXIE HWY. IN Y/ATERFORD Home ol Service otter the sale 0R;«3-1291 1956' ’MERCUR'?"'S'TATr6N WAGON good shape. Save AutOj_FE 5-3278. 1*60 '/iaERCURV “'IIdoor; ’ - Auto-, matic transml$s1on, radio,, healer, whitewalls. One. owner, and Is extra nice throughout! No 'TWoney Down, V36,62 per-rVionIh. Patterson . Chrysler- Plymouth" 1001 N. Main Street' ROCHESTER -OL. 1-855? 762 ■■mercury,- meteor ^-DbOR. V8 engine, standard shift, radio, heater, whitewalls. *A real beauty^ Oiiir$U?5, Easy terms- PATTERSON CHEVRQ^ET CO.7 1000 X WOODWARD AVE., BIRMING-.ham. mi 4.27>,5.„. . ■ __ 762 mercury meteor, V-8 EN-glne, automatic transmission, power steering and brakes, iDvv mile-' age official car, $1,495. JEROME FERGUSON Rochester .F O R D Dealer, OL l-9fll. 1961 COMET STATibN WAGON U, ---------- automatic Iransnrils- price,'$795.' T"' . LLOYD ' ' UncOli^-Mercur? ' 232 fr. Saginaw St. 1PE 2-9131 CQMF' VISIT RUSS JOHNSON'S Used Car Strip Radio, h itCon^ 1943 MBRCURY METEOR 2-OOOR hardtop, beautiful burgandy finish, has radio and heater, whitewall tires and is rear throughout. Full price only JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. 1963 Comet Custom 2-Door With radio, heater, Merc-O-Matlc transmission, whitewalls, $1J»5. BEATTIE "You* FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY, IN WATERFORD Home of jSerVice after the sale OR 3-1291 - IDelivered NEW 1964 PLYMOUTH-VALIANT $1754 Seeing Is believing OAKLAND 1953 OLDS, CALIFORNIA CAR, I rwL _reas._OR: " 1961 M E R C U Hardtop; Radio, sfeering __________ _ ........ trade! $135 down, payments LLOYD LIncoln-Mercury 232 S. ^ginaw 1956'olds" '881 w and Used Cart 1061 New and Used Cnrf 106 1959 PONTIAC 4-DOOR CATALINA automatic, low mileage...... 1943 PONTIAC TEMPEST 363-7631 8 a . to 2 p .... PONTIAC 2-DOOR AUT085AT1C transmission, new car trad* in. owner. No money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES .'’Pontiac's Discount' Lot" lj>3 S. Saginav FE 4-2214 1960 PONTIAC SEVERAL TO Ch60SE FROM 2-YEAR GW WARRANTY . SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. Saginaw PE 8-4541 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 28,000 IT" ' • — *"■ PONTIAC VENTURA, ONE 'ner, double power, auto, trans-ssion, other extras, low mlleagr. PONTIAC SAFARI STATION igon. Hydramatic, power ------ g and brakes, radio, h riitPiM/AlU. FvtrA r|eah. OhlV PATTERSON 1941 TEMPEST 4-DOOR SEDAN, condition.. OL 1-1579. 2-DOOR HARDTOP, e, automatic, radio, ---- brakes, good Priced from $695 2 YEAR GW WARRANTY . SPARTAN DODGE : Saginaw , . FE 8-4' JEROME ■Motor Sales 280 S. SAGINAW FE 8-0488 BR STEERING, POWER BRAKES' HYDRA., RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments ' "olds, 2-do6r - hardtop, ^ 1-owner. ULMISO. BILL SPFNCF Chrysler-Plymouth-Rambler-tleeip 6673 Dixie Hwy. CLARKSTON M.A 5-5861 JeHor, sharp. I with 1963 VALJANT FACTORY OFFICIAL'S CAR HUGE GUARANTEE SPARTAN DODGE 2II_S. JiAG|NAyV F E8-454 1959 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR, AUTO malic transmission, radio, healer whitewalls, naw car trade. N( Money Down, $14.68 per month. Patterson L, Orion. MY-2-2041... 3 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR. steering and brakes, automatic transmission, 'whitewalls, new car trade, $142.12 down, payments of $48.38 per month. LLOYDL PONTIAC CATALINA, LIKE n payment and low monthly s. , 1AMBLET2, an ideal buy for a nd car. 31,089-originef -miles, le youF monthly payments, ONLY AT SUPERIOR RAMBLER PONTIAC'S VALUE DEALER CAN YOU GET THESE BUYS FE 5-9421 550 OAKLAND AVE. 1941 PONTIAC CATAUNA 4-DOOR, automutlc transmission, radio, heater, whitew^ls, one ownerl $150 down, $44.52 per month. Patterson' Chrysler-Plymouth 1001 N. Main Street ROCHESTER MUST SELL. 1962 PONTIAC GRAND OLD CARS NEVER DIE 1963 TEMPEST 2-%}J95 full priep with no rr “°Yucky auto, sales "Pontiac's Discount Lot" 73 S.'SagInaw______ FE 4-2214 fHE INSIDE STORY- Of a used car Is more Impo than the outside. Our cars all checked and carry a G Warranty. SPARTAN DODGE FE| t _OL 1-8550 jOR., P'b'W E R id seals. 334-5534 ROCHESTER _ 1958 'PONTIAC ■ steering, brak 763 PbNtlAC""sf'At^^^^ Power rear window, brakes and steering. Has safety group and decor group, Two-tone paint, dark 10,000 miles. I OR. 3-7665. t to suit your budoel w lull-price’is only $5088. BIRMINGHAM 1963 PONTIAC conyerllble 1963 PONTIAC hardtop, blue 1962 RAMBLER 4door, i " 1958 CTtlvY 4*d(»rl* V8 1958 T BIRD bill* nn"-i 1958 PONTIAC $2895 I ■dlop $1395 I ler $2495 I igon $ 7*5 Tcyl. 1 TEMPEST 4i.door, __________ CHEVY 4-door, 6-cyl. . BUICK Elnctra 225 -PONTIAC 4-dodr I 1969 RAMBLER wagon, Vg Ml 7i9ii' *’*' sedan, carrys 9-pass V''" I I960 CHEVY 2-door, 6 cyl. CONVERT I 1963 PONTIAC grand, dlicouni ............. 1963 RAMBLER Claisic, tfU. 163 FORD FALCON, 2 DOOR, BIO 6-cyllndar aulomallc Iransmltilon, ewlle. - heater^ .-87,39$.JBtlOMB-. FERGUSON, Rochester fMD Dealer, OL h9?H. Liquidation Lot WHERE THE CARS ARE BOUOHT ’ FOR "NOTHING DOWN." “ SEE US TODAY AT LIQUIDATION LOT 150 S, SAGINAW . ,3?3-4071 Buy Your Newx Rambler or Olds FROM ' ^ Hougbteh ^i Soir 128 N. Main. Rochester , OL I 9761 HASKINS Sharp Trades 759 OLDS Dynamic lop, hydramaiif. i radio, solid s jinith. Ir 4 door hardfb beaulllul red tl vjJOODvjf enoii'f 'Powergllde, whiWalls fiMis DWARO AVE, BIR- alRCURY u LINCOLN Pun power ii CHEVY Convertible p UlOOSK FRtjiMl Ask for Stu I 2023 Oakland > INear TelForaph) ' E I 405,5 ' ^ F E 8 40M :HtVY impale 2door hardtop. Powergllde, radio, like new BUICK 2'door hardtop, byna' I, radio, RhowroOm naw) ma-I and while llnlih. tut oi.61 llarflie idoor hardtop, ‘--ilad with powar and equipment, w room new maroon llnlsh, CORVAIR Monia, Coupe, 4 ed| big ' angina, 'Fadio, solid ck’flnisn. a -xMJSS. IQHNSON Pontiac-RamblerHB^aler M-24 'at the stoplignt,'Lake Orton IWY 3-6264 WAtCH tHIS SPbtj " $5 DOWN . WE ARE^OEAUNG ONE-OWN^R TRADR -SAVE: %\i ik MONtH. I960 rORO 4DOOR, RADIO, HRi6,T-ER. I ' I960 FORD STATION WAOON, RADIO, HEATER, I960 FORD STATION W75O0N, RADIO, HEATER. I96| I^M^LEN, 4DOOR, RADIO, '* FORD 9 “ WAGON, .95,g&Eri RADid, Hf 1960 RAMEIBN HlATiR, 1961 STUDfEA STOP BEFORE YOU BUY YOUR NEXT CAR . SEE THESE 'EXTRA SHARP CREAM OF THE CROP CARS! 742 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-doOr -Full powerr low mileage.,. .. $179 742 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, 4-speed, trl-carbs. Low mileage .... $199 759 RAME*ER V« STATION WAOON, lull power, Colllor-nla cor, no rusi, ... $79 »58 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN 2-door hardtop unusually nice running condition , $49 KEEGO SALES ,:8. SERVICE 3080 ORCHARD LAKE 682-3400 J OLIVER -3UIGK-. ITATION WAOON, ,_.lTfR, AUTOMATIC, iTATION WAOON, RUr--“T: AUTOMATIC, IQOOR, RADIO, t LARK, ObqORS nnsi 4UCHm8, RADIO. HEA1-ER, AUiOMATfCS, FOR CrIoI'T approval. ^ ASK FOR GENE OR JIM VILLAGE 1960 RAMBLER Classic 4'deor 1963 BUlCl^ wagon. Special 1963 BUICK LeSabra 4door. .. 1963 BUICK Skylark cqnvarl. 1961 PONTIA? Catalina 4 door $1688 1943 SKYLARK 2 door hardtop 82495 1963 SkYLARK 2door hardtop 1942 MERCURY Monleray 4?dr." 1959 PONTIAC' CaialinB 4 *ior $1095 1962 INVICTA wagon, 4-door $2385 1960 i.eSAlIRE 4 door green . 81395 1943 BUICK Wildcat 4 door ., 1962 CHEVY impala convtrl. , 1961 PbNTIAC Calallna 2door . 1961 LaSABRC, hardtop 4-door 1961 BUICK LeSabra 4 door .. 1961 BUICK Riviera 2-door ... RAMBLERS-RAMBLERS Under the . Flashing SATELLITE Used Cars Wholesale Prices Special This Week: I960 CADILLAC COUPE, ORIGINAL 1-OWNER, beautiful CONDITION INSIDE AND OUT, A REAL BUY. ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commerce, Union Lake JM 3-4155 Free 50 GALLONS GAS With Each Used Car Bought ALL IN A-l SHAPE ' , 1962 FORD Galaxie "500", V-8 engine with automatic, radio and heater, white-wall tires. One owner and sharp. $1595 1961 RAMBLER Amefl'cen Convertible, stick shift. Red with White tOp. It Is In beautiful condition. 1962 CORVAIR 'stick shift t’rihsiTlIssion, really a $1295 $1095 1962 DODGE walls, *lr-condltloned. One $1195 ' : ' SPECIAL $695 FULL PRICE ^_Chrys_^er Saratotja, hardtop. Power brakes, radio, healer, whllawalll Automatic transmission. One o 2% valll ““^WttYMtStJTlT-.... lelvedera, 4-door, V8, ’Sulbmatlc ransmisslon, radio, heater, while- '.$795 OAKLAND . Chrysler-Plymouth 1963 GRAND PRI.X BLACIc, I-- tjgst. " Oakland 2326 943 'PONTIAC, SILVERLEAF-gl-een, standard, transmlj^on, 3-speed, 389, Ventura, trim, custom wheel discs, dual, eahaust, ------- seat speaker, very studnlng, sell, OR 4-0214. .harp, — -------------— 1715 Baldvyin. FE 5-4871, 1962 RAMBLER AMERICAN 4-DOOR with a beautiful finish, and is a new 1964 trade in, rbady to fly, only $995. . BILL SPENCE Chrysler-Plymouth-Rambler-Jeep XXT-I niviM Mun, 3 RAMBLER AMERICAN, HARD- RAMBLER 4-DOOR SEDAN, King Auto Sales 3275 W. Huron St. • FE 8-4088____________ SALE OF THE CENTURY 1963. PONTIACS , Only $1795 Yes, that's right-Seeing is believing-No strings attached—They are Oakland County cars and cCirry a one year warranty. Better hurry! '• ' (PLEASE, NO DEALERS) 1960 PONTIAC stafion wagon. Pow- ‘matic, radio,* h*eaterf whitewalls. 1-owner, new ; e'er trade-in. Low 1940 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-Dpor Seden. Automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. Beautiful blue finish with matching trim. Extra . Power steering ai 1959 PONTIAC BOl^NEVILLE steering, and Ic, radio, heat- 1960 PONTIAC BC hardtop. Power sle brakes. Hydramatic, er, whitewalls. Yes. Ing Ilka going first c 1964 CHEVROLET Carry-All. Big 6 cylinder engine, 4-speed transmission. 4-wheol drive, radio, heater. 061 pueranteed actual miles. Yas (oiks, It's new, New car warranty is tranaferraDle. Save a bundle ; , . D' $2896 1960 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop. Vehlura trim. Power sleerlno and brakes, Hydramatic, sportiest carj on the road $1495' 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop. Power steering end brakes, Hydramatic, radio, heater. 1942 PONTIAC STAR-CHIEF 4-'Door. Power steering end brakes, Hydramatic, radio, heater, white-walls. 13,800 guaranteed actual miles. Yes, folks, that's right, just Ilka a new one .......... $2195 . Dynaflow, i alls. Nice blur ng trim. Local!' serviced aj St 1942 FORD WAGON. Standard Irahsmissloh, 6 cylinder engine. Most economical. Nice blue llnlsh, rides and flrlves Ilka a new one. Price Is right ...............$1395 FALCON 2-Door. Beaulllul finish. Most economical and I to Jelli from a new one. wuur naruTop. rower steering fiSa5er';'*!L*hWX*"’lilf/lr;*?lSi finish with malchlno- cloth trim. r-------------------------------- Aujom^c, ^radlo.^^heater,^ white- call going*'strictly first Mass, I’he price Is rlpnr,~ar 1TOJTV TT ;-$2395- THIS GUARANTEE MEANS THAT IF FOq ANY fiEASON lEXCEPT FOR ABUSE OR'ACCIDENT) YOU ARE NOT PLEASED WITH YOUK PURCHASE, WE'LL REFUND YOUR MONEY. Get More - Pay Less PONTIAC-BUICK ' ' Rochester OL I-8I33 . HASKINS jRAMBLEef Chevralet Oldsj ’ Ml 6 3900 JovvA^li » t,HF T BUICK - ABSOLUTELY-NO MONEY DOWN SPOT DELIVEBY-IUST MAKE PAYMENTS - ^ __— 1962 BUICK L^abre hardtop I9S9 BUICK lnvlcl« 2door' . I219S I109S Car Price. A Week Car Price A Week 1961 BUICK leSabr* kdoor 8I89S' 1957 Ford 97 ' $1.02 1955 Chevy ., .. $147 $1.51 1941 BUICK Speclkl wagon 11781 )9p Chivy .,,, $197 $1.63 19$5 Cadillac .... .'■...,$197 $1.63 1958 OPEL wagon, stick 1960 CORVAIR 2 door $ 895 1958 Chevy .. , $297 $2.35 1957 Mercury ..,. $297 - $2.35 I 1960 ELECTRA 2-daor Viardlop ,1495 1957 Hillftian , . $397 ■ $3.14 1957 Buick Y .$397 $3.14 IN PERSON OR BY PHONE LIQUIDATION LOT -no 60 S. Telegraph ' FE 8-9661 ' Acroji From T*l-Huron Shopping C«nter .If THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBIU ArV 3. {jhf ly. i —^Television Programs— Programs fumishod by stations listod in this column art subjoct to chongo without noticfr TONionr «:00 (2) (4) News, Sports (7) Movie: “The Giant Claw.” (In Progress) (9) Capt. Jolly and Po|v eye (54) New Biology 6:25 (7) Weather, News, Sports 6:53 (2) (4) NationaPNews (9) 87th Precinct (56) Japanese Brush Painting 7:00 (2) Highway Patrol (4) Town Meeting (7) (Color) Adventures (56) Under the Banner 7f30 (2) To Tell The Truth (4) Movie: “Phone Call from a Stranger.” (1952) Shelley Winters, Gary Merrill, Michael Rennie, • Bette Davis (7) Outer Limits (9) Movie: “Danger Signal.” (1945J Faye Emerson, Zachary Scott 6:00 (2) I’ve Got a Secret 8:30 (2) Lucy Show (7) (Ctolor) Wagon Train 9:00 (2) Danny Thomas - (9) Playdate. 9:M (2) Andy Griffith (4) Hollywood and the Stars 10:00 (2) East Side/West Side (4) Sing Along with Mitch (7) (Special) Winter Olympics • ‘ id} Inquiry 10:30 (9) Provincial Affairs ^M:45 (9) Mary Morgan -11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News Weather, Sports 11:25 (9) Lucky ' 11:30 (2) Steve Allei (4) (Ciolw) Johnny Carson (7) Movie; “The Rains Came.'- (1939) Myrna Loy, Tyrone Power, George Brent \ (9) Movie: “The King and the Chorus Girl.” (1987) Fernand Gravet, Joan Blondeir 1:00 (2) Peter Guiin (4) Best of (jroucho 1:35 (7) After Hours TUESDAY MORNWG 8:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) NeWO 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Funews 7:00 (2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:05 (2)'Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show 8:30 (7) Movie: “Mqlly and Me.” (1945) Gracie Fields, Monty Woolley 8:45 (56) English V 8:50 (3) Warm-Up / . 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go Round 9:00 (2) Movie: “Kind Lady.’’ (1951) Ethel Barrymore, 'Maurice Evans (4) Living (9) Kiddy Korner Kar^ toons - 9:10 (56) Let’s Read 9:30 (9) Jack La Lanne 9:35 (56) Numbers and Numerals :00n(4) Say When - — (9) National Schools ARABIAN NIGHTS r* 5 r* TT M 12 13 . i4 i5 16 T~ k ar 22 ii 1 27 Si 33 34 jiH il 45 ■ r 4T M bi i)J S4 B7 58 3 ACROSS I “Aladdin’s------” ' 5 Arabian name 8 Sinbad’s bird II Giver 12 Knave pf clubs 13 Nigerian tribesman 14 Bizarre - . 15 Having corolla pajrts ' 17 Adriatic port ' 19 Ascend 20 Swine enclosure 21 Lewis Carroll heroine 22 Struggle 25 Fanons 27 Arabian ruler 29 Collection of sayings 30 Roman garment 34 '■'Ali---r and the Forty Thieves” 35 S(ight bow 36 Arid regions 37 American dominion 40 Greek letter 41 Foe 43 Indiana (ab.) *i45 Tyead heavily 46 (Iroups of nine 50 Soup bowls ' '52 Amble chief divinity- --- 53 North Caucasian language 54 Operated 55 Woody vine 56 Miss Lillie 57 Orgah of vision SB Halional DOWN 1 Frown 2 Opposed to (coli.) . 3 Customs 4 Quickly 5 Cathedral section 6 New Guinea port 7 Transfix. 8 Survival , 9 Stout 10 Signal system 11 Point 16 Bristlelike appendage 18 Despotism 21 He owned a magic lan\p. 22 Spider’s home 23 Candlenut trde 24 Chest bone 26 Wild ox of Celebes 28 Infloresence form 31 Mineral rock / 32 Obtain 33 Arabian commander 38 Electrical unit , 39 Chronicles 41 Musical study 42 Water wheel 44 Feminine name 45 Counterfoil 46 Slave 47 Wolfhound ^ 48 Scandinavian 49 Pronoun 5i Negative answer ^AnsWef ln Prcvloug Puzzle (56) Spanish Lesson 16:15 (7)'-News. (56) Our Scientific World 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Word for Word (DGlrlTalk (9) CTiez Hchme 10:40 (56) French Lesson 10:45 (9) Nursery School Time 16:55 (56) Spanish Lesson .11:66 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Price Is Right (9) Romper Room 11:16 (56) Let’s Riead 11:25 (56) Japanese Brush Painting 11:31 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Mis^g Links (7) Object Is 11:55 (56) Reading for Teachers TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:09 (2) Love of Life (4) (Ck»lor) Your First Impression (7) Seven Keys (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Obr) Truth or Consequences (7' Father Knows Besf (9) People in Conflict 12:35 (56) Spanish Lesson * 12:45 (2) Guldipg Light . 12:50 (56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News :00 (2) Star Performance . (4) Conversation Piece . . (7) Ernie Ford (9) Movie: “Under Eighteen/’^ (1932) Marion Marsh Z 23: 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Make Room for Dad- TV Features 1 The {Papuans of Redisfriefing Eyed By United Press International ^ ^ _ TOWN MS^PTN0» 7:00 p.m. (4) Cochairman of Michigan’s legi^tive-apportionment commission, -Richard H. Austin and Wilber M. Brucker, will discuss pending apportionment plaiw^for state. WAGON TRAIN, 8:30 p.m. (7) Burgess Meredith stars as man wanted for murder who joins train with daughter-in-law, grandson. EAST SIDE/WEST SIDE, 10:00 p.m. (2:) Repeat performance of the most provocative drama on television this season, about liberal couple in Suburbia, forced to take stock of their beliefs when a Negro family moves in next to them. ^ ■ WINTER OLYMPICS, 10:00 p.m. (7) Continuation of ABC’s coverage from .Innsbruck, Austria, with men’s giant slalom, women’s figure skatingf - . 22 iimal prbtenii'/ the lew Guinea get is from ants and grasshoppers, or feasts on pigs, which occur only once a yar. , • :..L thirty-one dy (7) Hollywood Theater (56) World’s History 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal (56) MaUiematics for You 2:25 (4) News 2:30 (2) Hennesey (7) Day in. Court 2:36 (56) Numbers and Numerals 2:56 (71 News 3:00 (2) To Tell The Truth (4) Loretta Young (7) General Hospitol (66) l^anish LesiiiM 3:16 (9) News 3-26 (2) News 2:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say! (7) Queen for a Day (9) Friendly Giant 3:46 (9) Misterogers 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News ... j 4:30 (2) Movie: Bowery Boys (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Hercules ' 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Flame of Calcutta." (1953) Denise Dar-cel, Patric Knowles (9) Larry and Jeiry 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (56) What’s New? 5:45 (9) Rocky and his Friends 5:55 (21 Weather (4) Carol lJ»uv8ll 5 Children Diein-Fireat Texas House DALLAS W — Flames leaping 45 feet into the ain trapped and killed five children last night in a small frame house occupied by two families. A woman and three other children escaped before the blaze destroyed their home and spread to a church next door. At a- hospital, attendants identified the dead as Catherine Gilbert, children of Mrs. Rubv Gilbert, 40; and Robert LouN King, 5, Marcia King, 2, and Verlie King, 1,"children of Mrs. Barbara Jo King. ' ★ ★ -A Witnesses credited Mrs. King with saving the other children by pushing them through a dow. She also is a daughter ot- Mrs. Gilbert, who was away from home. One of the rescued youngsters, Warnie Gilbert, 8, "suffered burns on his face and hands. He was reported in fair condition. Fife Capt. Jim Lyde said the flames started in a kitchen where the children were playing near a gas range. R*quir«m*nt YourSineof*D«»ir» *0 Gat Out of Oobi MICHIGAN Credit Counsellors T02 Pontiao State lank BM|. fontiac t OIHmi «c iMfgrki Crftiil 4rYZ, Allix Dr«l*' WWJ, Buiintit wjs, Low*ii Tt*om« 'TlOO WJS, I sSS-fe'S'cis, hU^WPOH, I »iie»-WJS, Dimwifw CKI.W, Tom ci*v FiW-WJS, Chorol N«w» WWJ. NWI, Ml/tit e*000 H,1*~WWJ, worw (WJ»* niS-wwj. tl,M.WWJ, NOW* WJS. N*W*. Iport* WCAS, N*w«, epofll (III* WCAS, Puhllt lIiU-WCAS, Boyd Citondor lliN-WJN. Mu«k ; TU8IImV mOAnino ........M Of Afftc. WXVt, Fr*d Wot», Mtf*le. Now* CKLW, ?»rm, TiJi Opooor WHFI. SOMi MMItC 4H»~WJS, M«*IC M*H WPON, Now*. Dt)0 Trio BilS-WJS, NOW*. OUMI ikM or ttw Urtm fiee-WJS, t^ow*. Morrl* CKLW, MdfV Morton OiM-WJS, Loo Murroy lOiee-WJS, Now*. Korl HAM WWJ, N»w*, A*k NoMibor WXYZ. Sr**M**l Club , fKLW, Jo* V*t« WfON, Ntw*. OiMn inie - WJK, Now*, Arthur tiKst'fsr"” Arll« WMelW* iiiee-CKLW. Jo* Van .ZV8(0*Y AFTBSNOON IhH-WJS, N*w*. F*rm WWJ, N*w*. Fr*«i Harrl* WMPI, N«wt, Burdick llil»-WJN, Bud Oumt CKLW, Jo* Van riN~WJN, Ntwt, Art LI* IlM-WJS, Oarry. Moor* WXYZ, MbMtIan, Mutk CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY SPECIAL OFFER FIVE-IN-ONE COMBINATION COOKER AND EGG POACHER WITH THE PURCHASE OF A FRIGIDAIRE WASHER OR DRYER Cookwara is mada af thick aluminum fa gain tha graotast advantaga fram madam Vitamin-saving, .flovar-ratainlng, watarlaes caaking. WIda, flat haating surtaca glvai quick, avan haiiTng and fual acanatny. May b# oiid as a caraal coakar, cavarad soucapan, saucaftan, pudding pan, cassarala, ar agg paachar. BUY NOW DURING ms Modal WO-64 waehar hai olant 12 pound tubi • Sptot yawr clathai axtrd light, 4X1*0 dry a Un-darwatar Action Zona haipt got wooh fobulou*-ly cloan a Soak* automatically, watbo* automatically a Froeh rupning-wator rlnsoi • D#** pondablal It's tha sturdy Frlgldolro woihor. Modal DD-64 dryar "think*" (or lt»ol(l Dryar ihuf* off automatically whan clatha* ora |u*t-rlght dry. a Now, improvad Flowing Hoot I* tpaodlar than avar, drip* braasa-frath. a Dial «ati to iu*t-rlght fabric hoot a Eoiy-roach, no-etoop lint leraan in doar, I Phone n, Davi**, WJS, Mtitlc HdU -----CKLW, mtw*. B*yIM WWJ, N*w*. aumiwr CKib CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY THIRTY TWOy ^ the; rONtiAC press, MOXPAY, Fy.BRUARY „3, 1^64 DID THE DR0UNDH06 SEE HIS wow? OF A FOR COMPLETE ,HEATING SAfiSFAlBTION Hi Tor Complete Heating Satiefaetion Call FE 5-8181 According to logend tlio Gtoundhog (woodchuck) comas out of hibornotion ot]i-Fobruory 2nd .., should tho day be sunny and he sees his shadow, he returns to hjs Winter bufrough to sleep for another si)f weeks of colder weather, if the day_ is dark and there is no shadow, the groundhog remains out and wg shall have an early Spring and warmer weather. Regardless of the prediction of the groundhog our climate has remained the same for years and years, cotdif Winter days, windy stormy days, some nice Spripg weather and a general mixture when you need steady warmth in your home with a most dependable •fuel. You can depend ap Gee and New MobilheOt to keep your home warm and comfortable regardless af^e weather. I O**'* ® vo'» ‘V*'« , V —— » '-J.ARKSTON /OXFORD E ORION r N \ W—rj—r' 3MFIELD HIl^S i m I's OMC truclii dlilributs batter quality I ell In Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Water. I, Clarkiton, Orion, Oxford, Rochester, turn Heights, Bloomfield Hills, Keogo bor. Walled Lake and the surrourtding • y««- It costs no more to get CompleteHeating Satisfaction ... NOW IS THE TIME TO SWITCH TO GEE AND NEW MOBILHEAT! There is no substitute for quality... Quality of the product, Quality of the service. With this in mind .away back in 1925 The Gee Coai Company established their business in PontiaC . . . throughout the entire 38 years this one factor has won hundreds and ^ hundreds of warm friends and customers for Dependable. Gee Fuel and service. Today, as in 1925, you can depend oi^ Gee. There is no safer fuel than oil . . . There is no more dependable distributor of better quality fuel than Gee. The new modern methods by which your fuel needs are computed assures you of dlways having plenty of dependable fuel oil when you need it. SEl Get Holden Red Trading Stamps at He Extra Cest... QbI Complttt HBBting SatiBfaotiQii ... Call Oaa Today... PC 8-IIII IF YOU DON’T KNOW FUEL . . . KNOW YOUR FUEL DEALER V.' I ■ \ . Jhe Weather < " i '■,|.»T'r ;r --I' V, ' -■! f II . 'f ' l./rvn'.v " , ' ' ■' . ';Zr t rkiir" AAi.nlirv r.s. W«*ther Buretu Forecast Fair, Cold (Details e^ Page 2) THE PONTI AC infftfims VOL. 121 XO.308’ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ a PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAV. FKimCARV 3, .32 PAGES -r- senteeisiyand some teachers :hing in the civil rights Jtlii NY Schools Boycotted by Integrationists Board Is Not Moving Fast Enough, Claim Leaders of Protest NEW YORK (tT)—Thousands of Negro and Puerto Rican children, joined by many white sympathizers, boycotted the n a t i o n’s largest school system to-■ day demanding total integration. A spokesman for the one-day protest movement estimated that 262,000 pupils participated —about 65 per cent of the Puerto Ricans and Negroes among the miilion pupil/in New Y6rk City schools. X j But the city’s/850 schools remained opeirlp the face of the demons^tion — even those instit^ons with high ab-iny ' marching picket^^ines. Shortly after class bells rang, authorities reported about 2,700 pickets outside 300 schools. This was far short pf the 8,000 pickets the demonWation leaders had forecast. Pickets made no effort to interfere with or dissuade pupils arriving at the schools for the start of a new semester. POLICE PATROL About 2,000 policerhen were assigned to schools and another 6,000 were ready for duty if jpeeded. The boycott and picketing dramatized minority group dissatisfaction with the Board of Education plan for coping with school racial imbalances resulting from living patterns. Sponsors of the protest declared that the board’s intention to ktart busing children from one neighborhood school to another next fall is not far-reaching enough. The board of education called the one-day boycott a “lawless course of action” and urged all pupils and teachers to be at school. SCHOOLS WARNED The Rev. Dr. Milton A. Gala-mison, leader of the demonstra-tion^ warned that the boycott •will be repeated “as often as necessary” and may be climaxed with a “sustained boycott of indefinite duration if the board of education does not bydge from its position." ★ ★' James B. Donovan, president of the board, said he would not ‘^ield one inch to pressure.” He | said he would hold Galamison “per.sonally and criminally responsible” if any children arc Injured during the demonstration. Radar Car Patrol Set Pontiac police reported today that its radar car will patrol Walton, Joslyn, Baldwin and Montcalm tomorrow. In Todidy's Press Viet Nam New government is not pressing the war as yet — I PAGE 10. Guinea Africa Marxist govern-' ment in economic trouble - PAGE 8. Sfranglings Boston terrified by bizarre murders - PAGE 12. ^ f Area News ........ 13 Astrology *6 ' Bridge 20 Comics .............20 Editorials ......... I Markets „ ......... 25 Obituaries ........ 14 Sports ......... 22-23 liieaters.........21 TV & Radio Programs 31 Women’s Pages ...17-10 :|^Pi liiSf* Architect's Sketch Of Village Apartment Complex To Be Built On South Telegraph Groundhogs Can't Agree $1.6-Million 'Grand Prix' ---- —---------— Coast Guard Holds Work to Begin on Apartments 14 Cuban Vessels House to Hear I Senators Amendments Dig In on oh Antibias Bill Reduction WASHINGTON (,AP) - The LBJ and McCormack|senate get.sdownt(>business to-Predict Passage After Itax cut bill with a Winter’s last weeks will be mild or cold, depending upon which groundhog you watched yesterday. Two cities in Pennsylvania, both claiming to be official groundhog cities, forecast six weeks more cold. Quarryville and Punxsutawney groundhogs both saw their shadows. In Michigan, groundhogs ducked back into burrows without casting a shadow of a shad-V. While the Weather Bureau insisted Michigan will be cold, even bfelow normal in spots during FebruWy, the five-day forecast sides with the local groundhogs. REiTURN TO NORMAL / Temperatures will return to above-normal by Wedne.sday, with mild conditions persisting into the weekend. There was one fifth of an inch precipitation Ihis weekend. The lowi before 8 this morning was 14. By 1 p.m., it had reached 28. Work will begin tomorrow morning on a proposed $1.6-mil-liort “village - type” apartment house development on Pontiac’s west side. Construction plans were announced by. a group of Detroit developers Saturday at a meeting with Mayor Robert A. Landry and other city of-firials. , Preliminary plans for t h e apartment complex were u n -veiled last October when the city rezoned the seven - acre apahmept site on the ea.st side of Telegraph between Hazel and Edna. The d e v e I p p m e n t is to be known as thfe Grand Prix Apartments and will be owned by Grand Prix Apartment Co., and built by Aristocrat Building Co. of Detroit. COMPANY OFFICERS., x Both companies are headed by Jerome Keywell, president; J. Phillip Levant, vice president; and Kopel I. Kahn, secretary - treasurer. ' The original plan and re- zoning request had come from Henros Building Co., also owned by the Detroit group. “We hope to have the f i r st units ready for rental by June,” Keywell said Saturday. “Our current target date for c o m -pletlon of the entire, project Is Sept. 1.’’ The development is being financed by a loan from John Hancock Mutual f,,ife Insurance | Co., through the company’s De-j troit correspondent, Citizens’ ! Mortgage Corp. EIGHT BUILDINGS Keywell said the development! would consist of eight-two-story, buildings housing 154 living | unite. There will be 108 one-bed-' room units and ,46 two-bedroom units with basements. There will also be off-strcct parking for 180 cars. The development is being designed by Wah Yec Associates Architects of Detroit. Vee said tlie apartments would be “of a contemporary styling designed to protect the village image. WOOD FRAME “The structures will be of wood-frame, conerrie block construction, with face brick, large expansive glass and aluminum sHdlng-type windows.’’ Rental rates are estimated to range from $110 to $145 a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The Coast Guard said today four-Cuban .fishing vessels it boarded in U.S. territorial waters off the Florida coast are being escdilftd to Key West. A spokesman said the boats were expected to arrive at the Coast Guard base around noon. An investigation started by Scientists Eye Space Failures Cameras Don't Work as Ranger Hits Moon , COI.I) .SCULPTURE Winning entry In (lie snow sialue judging dtinng Oakland Uni vermty/s wpkend Snow Carnival wa.S litis musslv^ bu.st of President Kennedy. Judges (from left I Hemard Toulanl. Mrs. Ernest Hhode.s atid Dick llobinsoh awarded first, place points to Newman Club, Mfhich titled (he work “Ecumenical Brotherhood.” PASADENA. Cahf. (AP) -1 Space scientists sifted through I coded tapes today in a search for the reason why spacecraft Ranger 6 plunged into the moon with Us cameras blind to the wonders of the lunar landscape. The agonizing end to a 66-hour flight came at 1:24 a.m. yesterday when Ranger 6 reached its historic rendezvous — and six television cameras aboard wouldn’t function. Experts at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory here, who controlled the spacecraft’s voyage, ho()0 to find out what went wrong by | Feb. 28 - the probable date* of; the launching of Ranger 7. l,aboratory directors went' ^head with plans for Ranger 7'a rUght — an identical photo mis-siw - pointing out that the Ranger series is designed to gather information ne(!ded for manned U .S, landings planner! later this decade. FRUITLESS MISSION The fruitless journey of Itang-er 6 was the sixth straight failure in the Ranger program. The cosi tp date: $168 million--fig-uriKl at $28 miilion a shot. Ranger 6 was the first of (he costly spacecraft to complete tbe difficult moon-approach maneuver faultlessly -*• which mude the blind crash even more frustrating for Its designers. Th(* camera sy.steni\was con-.sidcred one of the simplest mediani.sms on the 804 - pound spacecraft. A bheck of Ranger’s radio^ messages showed no sign of the code which, run through a com-^ puter, would, have produced earth's first elose-up pictures of Ihe m<«)h. will be completed. The ultimate disposition of the four fi.shing vessels is uncertain. but they are being detained j at present for violating U.S. ter-■ ritory by fishing within the three - mile limit. Guardsmen sent to board the boats were directed to examine their papers and cargo and determine whether "any U.S. law had been violated. They later were directed to take the boats | to port. Only Minor Changes WASHINGTON (TP)—Bipartisan 'forces backing the civil rights bill test their strength today as the House starts considering amendments to the measure. Both sides have been talking since debate opened Friday. President Johnson and Speaker John W. McCormack, D-Mass., have predicted the bill will come through the process without being .seriously weakened. Southerners are unhappy with every provision. Members from other parts of the country have doubts about some of them. The heaviest Jire undoubtedly will be directed at proposals banning racial discrimination in employment, piublic accommodations and federally aided programs. * * * The V a r i .0 u s sections will be open to amendment in the order in which they appear in the bill, which brings the one dealing with voting rights first under attack. EQUAL VOTING This provision, mainly amending existing laws, is designed to speed up cobrl action on voting cases and to ensure that any voter qualification standards are applied equally to whites and Negjroes. Southerners say the area of voting qualifications belongs solely to the states. They plan to offer an amendment clearly limiting the proposal to federal elections. The controversial public accommodations provision will come up next. fight over a college education amendment expected to provide the first major test. ^ Debate on the top-priority $IL6 - billion administration measure began last'Thursday but only a few speeches have been made on it so tar. However, Senate leaders put their colleagues oq notice that there would be long sessions all this week in an attempt to pass the measure by Saturday and it to conference with the House. Democratic leaders held out some hope of finishing by Thursday night. FLOOR BATTLES It appeared likely that there would be only five or six major floor battles on the bill and that , these would not involve the most, important provisions. No change is expected in Ihe rate cuts, which benefit practically every individual atid cerperate taxpayer the nation. , The first roll call vote on the bill may come today on support for the Finance Committee’s decision to knock out of the measure the cut in capital gains tax rates inserted by the House. The decision put into effect the only change in the House ver-sipn asked by the administration. President Johnson’s supporters are expected to have little difficulty in repeating this Vico In the floor vote. COLLEGE EDUCATION A proposal by Sen. Abraham A. Riblcoff, D-Conn., to allow a tax break on college education costs is up for debate today, with a vote expected Tuestlay. Ribicoff’s amendment would allow tax saving pf up to $325 a year for each student that a family has in college. Opponents estimate this would An attempt to knock it ^ cost the government $750 mil-oiit entirely is certain to be, lion the first year, made and if that fails, a variety ' * * ★ , of amendments to limit its eov-' Democratic leaders look for a erage have been prepared. [close vote. ' LIGHT TRUCK DEBUT - This high-load capacity delivery van today mak(!s it.s entry into the economy truck field as GMC Truck & Coach Division’s Handi-Van. Only 167 6 inches long, the truck can carry up to 2,100 IKiiinds of cargo. It also boasts GMC's latest anticorrosion protection, GMC Making New Light Van 'I /iMC Truck & |Loach Diviaion tdday announced that )i forward-control delivery van will be added U) it.*! line of light-duty trucks. Calvin .1. Werner, division general manager, said production of the new vehicle, called \ the llaudi-Van, Is already under way here at GMC'o assembly plant. “I’liis devcloptnenl brings a new dlinedsion to our light-dc-' livery Mile, " said Werner, '■'niese vehicles are tailored to the needs of those who require economical, durable and easy to maintain trucks " Handi-Van has a 211-cubic-' foot'*'cargo space with a load j capacity up to 2,100 pounds. Curb weight is listed as approximately 2,!H)0 pounds. MANEUVERABLE Built on a 00-inch wheelbase, with 167.6-lneh overall length and 74-inch width, thp highly maneuverable truck has a turning radius of 16 feet. The light van is powered by a 90 horsepower four-cylinder engine, with a 120-horsepower six available as an option. Three-speed manual transmission Is standard, but,an automatic Is optional. .Self adjusting I) r a k e s are standard, as Is flat, one-piece I Continued on Page 2, Col, 4t 7 f TEX THE rONTlAC IMtKSS SATr^RDAY. FERRIJARY 1. 1004 1 Jacoby on Bridge ♦ 852 VJ1084 ♦ Q104 ♦ 75 AAJa SOUTH (D) ♦ AKQ7 VA92 ♦ AK73 ♦ K9 North and South vulnerable South West North East 2 N.T. Pass 3N.T. Pass Pass Pass OpeniDE lea^:—4J Strike Deadline Is E)^fended in Network Fight SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - By OSWALD JACOBY “I expect you to make bad plays,” growled West. “I usually keep quiet, but when you accom-pany your bad play with a speech the combination is too much for me.” JACOBY It^ seems that South had won the opening spade lead and played his king of clubs. East the other 11 tricks. Had East stopped to think when that first club was led he would have seen that declarer would have to continue clubs if he wanted to make the contract. He would have let the king hold the trick and won the next ,club. Declarer could still set up the rest of the club suit, but hu would have had to get over to dummy to do it and that would 'use up dummy’s only entry so that the last three good clubs, would be useless. ^ ' There would still be lots of play left to the hand, but assuming that East and West played carefully South' would make only eight tricks instead 0-11- How should a player know when to hold up? There Is no absolute rule, but in general you ' have nothing to lose and a, lot to I gain if you hold up when your j opponent plays -his own long ' suit. and the National Association of Broadcast Employes and Technicians expired at midnight Friday. ★ * ■ ★' Both sides hgreed to negotiate beyond the deadline, a company spoke.sman said: A union spoke.s-man .said the exten.sion was at the companies’ reque.st." ■ Affected are 1,800 employes in 'New York, Washington, Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles and San F'rancisco. SEEK I’ftOVlSIONS The union said it v'as seeking job-security provisions and a pay hike to equal sfilaries for comparable jobs at the Columbia Broadcasting system. A different hnion represents CBS employes. ★ The union said ABC would be hardest hit by a strike since a majority of tho.se affected work there. They include white collar Ol!R ANCESTORS Legislature Will Face Income Tax Proposal (AP) - The le proposal that Michigan’s voters be asked to approve a 3 per cent income tax. The bill, -If. approved by voters, would impose “a specific tax of , 3 per'cent upon the taxable gross income of every person, whether a resident of this state or a nonresident who derives taxable gross income from .sources within this state.” THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert Mother, 4 Children Suffocated by Fire LA SALLE, 111. ;(AP)(- A mother and her four childreii suffocated Friday in a fire i their two-stbry brick-frame residence. Fire Chief Manning Heffron said the fire'had begun in the; living room and spread up the' stairway to the second floor. I Its cause was undetermined. The father, Charles, 38, was at work. By Quincy * » ' * *!• Astrologicai * * Forecast m Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 1V Pa.ss Pass Dble Pass 2 A Pass 2 V 2 Pass 4 ♦ Pass 5 A Pass ? • "You, South, hold: . THE PONTI AC PR |T/»e Weather U.S. Wfather Bure«u Forecast Fair, Cjpld (Oelailt on Page 2) ' Wim *i >1 X- 121 xo. 308 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ POJl^TIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY. FKBRl AUV 3. l!)(i*—3;.> PAGES NY Schools Boycotted by Board Is Not Moving i Fast Enough, Claim j Leaders of Protest NEW YORK (yP)—Thousands of Negro and Puerto Rican children, joined by rndny white sympathisers, boycotted the n a t i o n’s largest school system today demanding total integration. A spokesman fof^[he one-day protest. movement estimated that 262,000 pupils participated -^about 65 per cent qf the Puerto Ricans and Negroes among thie million pupils in New York City schools. ■ But the city’s 850 schools remained open in the face of the demonstration — even those institutions with high absenteeism and some teachers marching in the civil rights picket lines. Shortly after class bells rang, authorities reported about 2,700 pickets outside 300 schools. This was far short of the 8,000 pickets the demonstration leaders had forecast. ★ T*r ' ★ Pickets made no effort to interfere with or dissuade pupils arriving at the schools for tjie start of a new spmester. POLICE PATROL About 2,000 policemen were assigned to schools 'and another 6,000 were ready for duty if needed. The boycott and picketing dramatized minority group dissatisfaction with the Board Of Education plan for coping with school racial imbalances resulting from living patterns. Sjwnsors of the protest declared that the board’s intention to start busirtg children from one neighborhood school to another next fall is not far-reaching enough. ★ * ’ * The Iward of education called •the one-day boycott a “lawless course of action" and urged all pupils and teachers to be at school. SCIIOOlil WARNED The Rev. Dr. Milton A. Gala-mison, leader of the demonstra-tion^ warned that the boycott will be repeated "as often as nece.ssary” and may be. climaxed with a “sustained boycott of indefinite duration if the board of education does not budge from its position.” .James B. Donovan, president of the board, said he. would not “yield one inch lb pre.ssurc.” He said he would hold Galami.son; “per.sonally and criminally responsible" if any children art injured during the, demonstration. Groundhogs Can't Agree Architect's Sketch Of Village Apartment Complex To Be Built On South Telegraph $1.6-Million 'Grand Prix' Coast Guard Holds Work to Begin on Apartmenfs] 4 Cuban Vessels ,Taxes House to Hear i Senofors Amendments Dig In on on Antibias Bill :'^sdudion i WASHINGTON (AP) - The LBJ and McCormack: sg^ate gets down to business to- Predict Passage After cut bill with a I fight over a college education amendment expected to provide the first major test. Debate on the top-priority $11.6 - billion administratioir measure began last Thursday but jinly a few speeches have been made on it so far. Work will begin tomorrow Winter’s last weeks will be| « P'-Tf'* mild or cold, depending upon which groundhog you watched I^ yesterday. , west side. Two cities in Pennsylvania, both claiming to be official groundhog cities, forecast six weeks more cold. Quarryville and Punxsutawney groundhogs both saw their shadoiys. In Mieliigan, groundhogs ducked back into burrows without casting a shadow of a shad- While the Weather Bureau i Construction plans were announced by a group of Detroit developers Saturday at a meeting with Mayor Robert A. Landry and other city officials. Preliminary plans for the apartment; complex were u n -veiled last October when the city rezoned the seven - acre apartment site on the east side sisted Michigan will be cold. even below normal in spots dur-; . ing February, the five-day fore-1 development is to| would consist eight-two-story cast sides with the local ground- be known as the Grand P t i x | buildings housing 154 living Apartments and will be owned unite. Tl\ere will be 108 one-bed-by Grand Prix Apartment Co., | room units and 46 two-bedroom and built by Aristocrat Building units with basements. There will also be off-strcct . „ , , . j . j. , ,u MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The zoning request had comc from i styling designed to protect the; „ ^ . ., , . : Henros Building Co., also ‘ village image. ' Guard said today four owned by the Detroit group. WOOD FRAME vessels it boarded “We hope to have the first “The structures will be of,*” t-^rritorial waters off the units ready for rental by June,”; wood-frame, concrete block' Plorldd coast are being escorted Keywell said Saturday. “Our; construction, with face brick, current target date for c o m - i large expansive glass and ali|m-pletlon of the entire project is inum sllding-type windows." Sept. 1 ★ ★ * The development is being financed by a lodn from John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance | Co., through the company’s De-|. troit correspondent, Citizens’! Mortgage Corp. EIGHT BUILDINGS Keywell said the development! Rental rat^s arc estimated to range from $110 to $145 a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Scientists Eye Space Failures RE,TURN TO NORMAL 'I'emperatures will return to above-normal by WCdne.sday, with mild conditions persisting into the weekend. There was one fifth of an inch precipitation this weekend. Co. of Detroit. COMPANY OFFICERS Both companies arc headed by Jerome Keywell, president: _______________________ J. Phillip Levant, vice presi- Thc low before 8 this morning | and Kopel I. Kahn, secrc- a s 14. By 1 p.m., it had tary - treasurer, reached 28. The original plan and rc- to Key West. A spokesman skid the boats were expected to arrive at the , Coast Guard base around noon. An investigatioa started by boarding parties yesterday will be completed. ' The ultimate disposition of the four fishing vessels is uncertain, but they are being detained j at present for violating U.S. ter-: ritory by fishing within the ) ! three - mile limit. Guardsmen sent to board the n / \*/ I i directed to examine Cameras Don t Worki^heir papers and cargo and de-Q u-i u Itermine whether any U.S. law as Konger nits Moon violated. They later Only Minor Changes WASHINGTON (A*)—Bipartisan forces backing the civil rights bill test their strength today as the jlouse starts considering amendments to the meas-ure, Both sides have been talking since debate opened Friday. President Johnson and Speaker John W. McCormack, D-Mass., have predicted the bill will c5me through the process without being seriously weakened. Southerners are unhappy with every provision. Members from other parts of the country haye doubts about some of them. The heaviest fire undoubtedly will be directed at proposals banning racial discrimination in employment, public accommodations and federally aided programs. The various sections wil be open to amendment in the order in which they appear in the bill, which brings the one dealing with voting rights first.' under attack. i EQUAL VOTING This provision, mainly amending existing laws, is designed to speed up court actiop Ing buses and to ensure that any voter qualification standards are applied equally to whites and Negroes. Southerners say the area of voting qualifications belongs solely to the states. They plan to offer an amendment clearly limiting the proposal to federal elections. However,: Senate, leaders put their colleagues on notice that Rfere would be long sessions.all. this week in an attempt to pass the measure by Saturday and send it to conference with the House. .,*■*.* Democratic leaders held out some hope of finishing by Thursday night. , , FLOOR BATTLES It appeared likely that therC; would fee only five or six major floor battles on the bill and that these would not involve the most ,, important provisions. No change is expected in the rate cuts, which benefit practically every individual and cerperate taxpayer b the nation. The first roll call vote on the bill may come today on support for the Finance Committee’s de- , cision to knock out of the measure the cut in capital gains tax rates inserted by the House. ( * * * The decision |)ut into effect the only, change in the House version asked by the administration. President Johnson’s supporters are expected to have little difficulty in repeating thi-s Vico in the floor vote. COLLEGE EDUCATION A proposal by Sen. Abraham A. Riblcoff, D-Conn., to allow a tax break on college edubation costs is up for debate today, with a vote expected Tuesday, Ribicoff’s amendment would allow tax savings of up to $325 a year for each student t|iat a family has in college. Opponents estimate this would parking for 180 cars. The development is being designed , by Wah Ycc Associates Arch- I itccts of Detroit. Radar Car Pqtrol Set Pontiac police reported to-.day that its radar car will patrol Walton, Joslyn, Baldwin and Montcalm tomorrow. In Today's Press Viet Nam New government is not pressing the lyar yet —. PAGE 10. Guinea Africa Marxist gov^n-ment in economic trouble PAGE 8. „ ' '' , Sfranglings Boston terrified by bixarre murders - PAGE Area News .....,.,,13 , Astrology ...... 20 ' Bridge 20 Comics ........... 20 F^KoHalt .......... • 'Markets .......... 25 Obituaries ........ H Sports..........22-28 Theaters 21 TV & Radio Programs 31 Women’s Pages ,17-l» COU) SCULPTUhi: Wlmiiiig entry In Ihc snow .statue judging during Oakland Un), versity's weekend Snow Carnival was lhl.s massive liu.sl o( President Kennedy. Judges PASADENA. Calif. (Al’t Space .scientists sifted through coded tapes today in a search for the rea.son why spacecraft Ranger 6 plunged into the moon Yee said the apartments with its cameras blind to the would be “of a contemporary ! v;onders of the lunar landscape. The agonizing end to a 66 hour flight came at 1:24 a.m. J, yesterday when Ranger 6 reached its' historic rendez-i I , t vpus — and six television cameras aboard wouldn’t fune-; tion. I, Experts at the Jet Propulsion I Laboratory here, who controlled ! the spacecraft’s voyage, lio|)e to i find out what went wrong by I Feb, 28 - the probable daU> of I I the launching of Ranger 7. I Laboratory directors went I ahead with plans for Ranger 7’s j flight -- an identical photo mis-I sion - pointing out that the I Ranger sebies i.s designed to, ' gather information needed for I matimsl U .S, Imullngs planned later Ibis decade, FRUITLESS MLSSlON ' 'I'he fruitless Journey of Kang-,, er (i was the sixth straight faii-ure in Hie Hanger program. The , cosi to date; $168 million--figured at $28 million a shot. Ranger 6 was the first of the costly Hpaeceralt t^ complete : the difficult moon^pproaeh maneuver faultlessly — which ! made the blind crash even mure frustrating for Its de-signert. I Tiu’ eameru system was eon- i sideretl one of the simplest ' mechanisms on the 804 - pound I .spacecraft. j 'A check of Ranger’s radioed messages showed no sign of the I code which, run through a edm-puler. would have produced earth's first close-up pidurcs (*f the iiusm, Thtmst A. .NtMti, Tan rOvrni pr* The controversial public accommodations provision will come up next. An attempt to knock it oo.sl the government $750 mil-out entirely is certa'in to be, lion the first year. ___ _____ __ made and if that fails, a variety a * a were directed to take the boats; of amendments to limit its cov-1; Democratic leaders look for a to port, erage have been prepared. iclo.se vote. U<;ilT TRUCK DEBUT - This high-load ('apaeity delivery van lodny makes Its entry Into the economy truck field as GMC Truck & Coach Division’s Handi-Van. Only 167 6 inches long, the truck can carry up to 2,100 IHiinul.s of cargo It also boasts GMC’s latest anticorrosion protection. GMC Making New Light Von ‘ ' epnllpc PrPH Phpl# (from Idli Heriwinll ToulanI, Mrs, Ernest Rhodes and Dick Hobinson awarded first place points to Newman Cli/ih, which tilled the wnrk "Eeumenieal Hr,oll)|rih(H)d " GM(’ Truck & Coach Division today announced that a forward iwntrol delivery van will be add ed to lU line of light-duty trucks, Calvin J. Werner, division general manager, said production of the new veble^le, called the ilandi-Van, is already under way here at GMC'’» assembly plant. This development hring.s a new dimension to our lighl-iolf adju.sling li r a k e s are standard, as is flat, one-piece (Coiilinunl on Page 2, Col 4i r TWO -i, J' ' I > , ■ THE PONTIAC PR14SS, MOXDA^ , FEJmUARV 19fi4 .'V" 1 GEORGE GRBA Seeks Seat to Represent District 4 An Oakland County Department of Public Works employe, George Grba, today announced he will seek the District 4 nomination for city commissioner. Grba, 33, of^28 Kimball said he was “compelled to run by principle, not by personal ambition.” “I am a strong supporter of good government by example and setting things right, without forgetting the people,” B r b a said. He is chief maintenance Inspector for the county DPW. CITY NATIVE Grba, a native of Pontiac, will be seeking his fir/kt political office. He is the second person to enter the District 4 race running against incumbent commissioner Winford E. Bottom ^ Cortg Attacks US. Outpost SAIGON, Squth Viet Nam in rank from major through (AP)—Two Communist guerril-' las were killed and one U.S. officer wounded today in the first Vieb Cong raid on an American military compound since 1959. Maj. Gen. Charles J. Timmes, commander of the U^S. Military Advisory Assistance Command in Viet Nam, flew to the mountain city of Kontum, 260 miles northeast of Saigon, to present the Army Commendation Medal the soldier who killed the As the terrorists ran for the guerrillas. Spec. 4 Gale D. Flinn fence, Flinn opened fire again, of Fowler, Kan. | They shot back but missed, and The award is thp highest that' Flinn killed two of them. The Timmes is authorized to give' without reference, to a higher colonel. OPENED FIRE Fliiiri opened fire with his rifle Plane Crash TakeslOLives Would-be Rescuers Can't Get Door Open but the intruders made it into the building, and each tossed one grenade. One grenade went off in the room of a U.S. officer, wounding him and setting the building afire. command. MOST DARING The grenade attack' made at 4;30 a.m. on the headquarters o| a detachment hf 130 U.S. of- ficers and men in Kontum. It was the most daring Viet Cong exploit agaiast an American unit since terrorists in 1959 invaded _ movie perfomrance at an American billet and killed a U.S. major and a sergeant with grenades and machine-gun fire. Flinn was on sentry duty because nine Vietnamese Civil Guards stationed at the compound had deserted. It was believed they might have been involved in the plan to attack the compound. other two guerrillas escapped in the darkness. The wounded officer, whose identity was not announced, suffered burns, cuts and scrapes but was' not in serious condition. He was taken to a field hospital at Nha Trang. BOMB BLAST One Saturday night, a bomb blast outside a Saigon bar killed an American serviceman and a Vietnamese. Six other Americans were wounded, one crit,jcal- ly. Communist terrorists often 'plant bonibs in Saigon bars and movies where U.S. servicemen gather, but police said Satur-day’s incident may have involved personal revenge among Vietnamese. Bottom hasn’t announced whether he will seek reelec-tiOn. If he docs, a primary would now be needed in his district. Grba is a U.S. Army veteran df the Korean conflict and graduate of Ferris Institute. He is married and the father of two girls. NO PARTY In announcing his candidacy, Grba emphasized he will run as an independent., Cl will not align myself with the weslside control, dojwntown pressure group or those radical elements that preate personal strife,” he said. “I will represent District 4 and support eonstruetivc programs for Pontiac,” he con- Grba is expected to file nominating 'petition sometime this week. The deadline for filing is Feb. 11. Under cover of darkness, four guerrillas cut their way through a barbed wire fence , around the compound. While one guerrilla stood guard at the fence, three others ran toward a building housing field grade officers, who range Juvenile Court to Keep Case WCTU Will Hear Prohibition Leader Probate Judge Norman R. Barnard today accepted juvenile court jurisdiction over 15-year-old Daniel I.«vaas in the Jan. 24 knife-slaying of 14-year-old Nancy Jean Jones. Dr. Delmar D. Gibbons, executive chairman of the Prohibition Party national committee, will be guest speaker before the Pontiac WCTU Federation 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. Representatives of the seven unions in the Pontiac Federation are expected to attend the public meeting and p 0 11 u c k, at First -Presbyterian Church. Dr. Gibbons, 51, is a key Prohibition worker. He h^^il-cd the/party’s Michigan Statesman^blication since its inception/m 1943 and also serves as cjKtor of the National States! Judge Barnard announced his decision this morning at the end of a closed-door hearing that began last Thursday. Daniel of 1042 Smith, Birmingham, was returned to the Oakland County Children’s Center where he will be examined by juvenile court psychologists, the judge said. Daniel still denies knowing the victim of the slaying or being on Purdy Street tie morning of the crime. GIBBONS FATAL STABBING Nhncy was fatally stabbed while walking to school On Purdy. A teacher at Birmingham’s Seaholm High School was questioned In the hearing this morning about a 2'ii-page composition written for an English class about three months ago by Lovaas, a lOth grade pupil at the high school. The teacher, Richard Bagg, s in the hearing about a half After the hearing. Judge Barn-lu^jMIked with Daniel privately ijj/^is chambers and Jhen con-erred with the boy’s parents and a caseworker before announcing his decision. Senior Assistant Prosecutor Robert L. Templin said he still did not know whether he would ask for a waiver to permit the boy to be tried as an adult. Templin indicated, however, that he may decide later today. Daniel already has been examined by two psychiatrists retained by defcn.se attorneys Waller R. Denison and Richard P. Condit. IDENTIFIED The boy has been identified by several witnesses as the per-.son they sdw at or near the scene of the crime. Another witness told |)ollce that Daniel gave him a knife moments after Nancy was slain. Tlirce wltnes.ses have corroborated this, j Stains on llio knife liave been identified as lunnan blocKi by stale police but there was loo little blood to establish whether or not it was tlie girl’s blocKl type. GAINESVILLE, Fla. W'l - A South Central Airlines twin-engine passenger plane burst into flames immediately after takeoff today, killing all 10 persons aboard when it plunged onto the the edge of the runwhy. The Beechcraft airplane was Flight 510 which ori^nated'in Ocala and was en route to Jacksonville. Several people ran to the crashed plane and tried frantically to open a door.' Jo Ann Rowell, a secretary, said the sound of the engine on takeoff indicated there was some trouble. She said she immediately went outside the terminal. BLAZE SO HOT Would-be rescuers said they could see people sitting in their seats inside the craft, but the blaze was so hot they had to give up attempts to break open the door. “We were trying to get the door open, but it was too hot,” said Miss Rowell, who joined those at the wreckage. “We could see two people inside. They were burning.” D. M. Carroll, a city employe, said: It looked like the plane was about 200 feet high. The left-hand motor cut off and the engine made a whining sound. The plane turned on its left side, just like a plane circles an airport when it’s way up in the air. “Then it hit the runway and exploded and burst into flames.” Lt. Courtney Roberts of the Gainesville Police Department said identification of the bodies could not be made immediately. Eyewitnesses said only the plane’s tail section and wings remained intact. FEEDER LINE South Central, a feeder line, serves small cities in Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas. It has a fleet of eight of the twin-engine Beechcraft. The firm’s headquarters are at Ocala, Fla. It serves Charlotte and Wilmington, N.C.'; Florence, Myrtle Beach, Georgetown and Charleston, S.C.; Savannah and Brunswick, Ga., and Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Pa-latka, Gainesville, Ocala, Daytona Beach, Orlando, Cocoa, Melbourne, Lakeland, Bartow, Tampa, West Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale and Miami, Fla. Work to Start on West Side Apartments (Continued'From Page One) month. Rents include all utilities except electricity. John Burnic of Citizens Mortgage Corp. explained tliat “the insurance company's decision to finance this was based on a market survey which showed there is a need for new apartment dwellings in Pontiac.” Mayor Landry hailed the project Saturday as “the first major development in Pontiac’s rebuilding program. 'This will definitely help to strengthen our tax base and I’m sure these plans will act to spur more development in our city.” GMC Making New Truck Viets Discover Twist Is Big Pain in Back NATIONAL WEATHER Knln is ex|)eclcd lonigtil from the southern Plafns tlirougli the lower Mi.ssl.ssippl Valley Into parts of the .sbutliern Gulf .stales, wllh snow likely over tlie iiortliej'ii Rockie.s arid tlie ceniral I’l.iins. It will tie colder from the southern Plains through tlie Mi.ssi.ssi|ipi and Ohio valleys into the north and mid Allaiilic .states and in the Boulhern Plateau n'lgion It will be wi|irmer in the Noitliwesl. SAIGON, South Viet Nam (iT) ■ The November coup that overthrew President Ngo Dlnh has re.sulted in two or three additional back injury carres per day at Saigon’^ biggest hospitah 'The casualties'are girls who try to dartce Hie Tvil.sl loo energetically. All forms of dancing were tianneji Iry Mrs. Ngo DInli Nliu, Pre.sidenI Diem’s sister-in-law. After she and her luisband were overthrown, the lian wa.s lifted. (Continued From I’age One) windshield and wide-opening rear doors. Side doors can be ordered as art extra feature. Handi-Van is similar to the Chevy-Van which went into production at GMC late lost year and la distributed by Chevrolet Motor Dlylsion, llandl-Van will t)c handled solely by GMC deal- iJVTESfT TREATMENT j Latest body priming and met-' al treatment facilities at the j Pontiac assembly plant offer I advanced corrosion feslslnnce In the new IriK’k Underbody mo|sldre 11/ a p s have been oliminaled, and side, rtMift and front panel.s aie one piece to eliminate corroslon-i prone Iwdy joints, STACKED UP — Tugboats in New York harbor are tied up at the dock today by a strike of some 3,000 members of Local 333, United Marine Division, National Maritime Union. During the strike, the liner Queen Elizabeth was forced to dock without the aid of tugs, The ship crashed into a peer, causing some damage. Indonesia Goes on Warpath JAKARTA, Indonesia (Al — Indonesia vowed today to mount an all-out diplomatic campaign to smash Malaysia even as it prepared for peace talks with the neighboring federation. Foreign Minister Subandrio told newsmen Indonesia has been neglecting the diplomatic field in its campaign to crush Malaysia, which has included a trade ban and — until the Jan. 24 cease-fire — military harassment of the new federation. “AH out confrontation against Malaysia has been reopened unconditionally” in the diplomatic field, said Subandrio. The new threats gave little (lope for success of the foreign ministers’ talks' which Indonesia, Malaysia and t h e Philippines open in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday. D. N. Aidit, leader of Indonesia’s 2.5 - millidn - meipber Communist party, promised to back Sukarno’s new Malaysia strategy, including sumniit talks and the cepse-fire, “only as long as it ip designed to crush Malaysia.” Speaking at a party rally, Aidit recalled Sukarno’s recent declaration that his tactics might change but the basic goal of wiping out Malaysia remained the same. Birmingham Area News Students Get Suspended for Fraternity Affiliation BIRMINGHAM - The board of education has clamped on two more high sdiopl secret societies. About 12 students are to be suspended from Seaholm High School as a result of their affiliation with two fraternities. At a special meeting yester^ day, the board adopted the recommendation of Schools Supt. Dr. John B. Smith regarding the groups. Cited were organizations known as KST and MSCP. TO BE SUSPENDED Students who have been active members of either group during the current school year are to be suspended from school for 20 days. Length of suspension for boys who have pledged the organizations this year will be 10 days. They will have no makeup privileges. Suspension is to begjn Thursday, after the students involved and their parents are notified by Seaholm Principal Ross A. Wpgner. Smith said about 12 boys have admitted affiliation with t h e groups. LAW FORBIDS ’The boardls crackdown b e -gan last summer when letters were sent to parents reminding them that state statute forbids participation in secret societies by public school students. Representative of Tau Alpha Epsilon, one of the Seaholm sororities involved, last night reaffirmed that the prganization has been inactive at the high school this year. A-P John C. Swan The family of a l9-year-old Bloomfield Township youth serving in the Air Force has been notified of his death in Misawa, Japan. Air Policeman John C. Swan of 2375 E. Hammond Uake reportedly was shot in the head Saturday. No further details were made known. The body is being returned to the United States. Arrangements are pending at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. .Luther Marcum of Bloomfield Township; his sister, Margaret, at home; and his brother, Fred of Pontiac. Deadline Is 8 Tonight for Voter Registration , The' deadline for registering to vote in the March 2 city commission primary is 8 tonight, City Clerk Olga Barke-ley reminded Pontiac residents today. The clerk’s office, on the main floor at City Hall, will remain open until 8 to accept voter registrations. It normally closes at 5. APPLIANCE BUYERS: OLLIE FREHER GOES WILD! STORE SCRATCH and DENT SALE! I MEAN BUSINESS, AND HERE’S AN EXTRA $10 TO PROVE IT! 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SOq ORCHARD LAKE RD. i Mile Sorth ofMtracU Mile 4 OPEN SUNDAY - FE 3-7951 OPEN DAILY 10-9 SON. 10-7 ^ . NO MOMIY DOWN - UP TO 18 MONTHl TO PAY FERNDALE STORE-201 W. 9 MILE-M 7-4400 Open Mon. thru ,Fri. 9s30 to 9:30 - Set. 9 to 9 iRRRilBsaliaeiiBaeeeBeBReRReeBBBReReeRRBSSMBeReeBliRRRRWREeeBRea 1 . TgE PONTIAC PRESS. xMOXDAY. TEBRUARV 3. 19W r -' i«(" f" Guineas Economy in Trouble After Five Years' of Marxism : (EDITOR’S NOTE: Andrew Borowiec of the Associated Press is touring the, new nations of West Africa. Here^ is his report from Guinea. . By ANDREW BOROWIEC CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) -Guinea’s-economy is in serious trouble after a five-year effort to adopt Marxism. The. United States is being asked to help the former French colony in West Africa to survive. . (AdvirtiMmMt) UIRT{R mflSTfil Amtrlco'f largtft Stiling TOILET TANK BALL Th» •IRdMt Water Maitar inaantly aopi th* flaw of water after each flushing 7Sc AT HAKDWARe srom (AdvertiMintnt) Does BLADDER IRRITATION MAKE YOU NERVOUS? After 21, common KIdncr or Bladder Ir-HtAtlMe^ffect twice as many women as from too frequent,''“burnlrm^or “ltS?ns urlna.ion bothday and night. Secondarily, you may lose sleep and suffer from Headaches, Backache and feel old, tired, depressed. In such Irritation, CYSTEX usually brlngs^fast, relaxing comfort by urine and by anllgeslc'p^ln *rel?ef. ^et OYSTEX at druggists. Feel better fast. (Advertisement) People 50 to 80 Tear Out This Ad , . , and mail it today to fifi^ out how you can apply for a $2,000 life insurance policy. Once your application is approved,., the policy can be carried the rest of your life. Simply send your name, address and year of birth to Old American, 4900 Oak, Dept. T221A, Kansas City, Mo. 64141. The igovernment of President Sekou. Toure has asked the United States for $30 million worth of commodities for the current year in addition to $15 million worth of food already approved. ★ * Hr There are serious doubjts that Washington will approve the entire sum. Uncertainty shrouds the future of the first African nation to hoist the banner of Socialist revolution. The experiment has showed that socialism does not bring magic solutions to the problems of underdeveloped nations. RIOTING REPORTS There are persistent reports of rioting in the interior jungle and bush, American diplomats here, who are generally sympathetic to the young country’s plight, are recommending that as much help as possible be granted. They describe Guinea as an “experiment in complete independence,’’ in contrast to most of Africa which still relies heavily on former colonial masters. Potentially one of the richest countries in West Africa because of bauxite (aluminum ore) deposits and rich pineapple and banana plantations, Guinea cut itself off from France in 1958 and turned to the Soviet bloc for help. Communist money and technicians poured in but resulted in a series of failures and disappointments. Experts believe that in effect the economy collapsed. Bu> the shock was reduced because 80 per cent of the 3 imWon people live outside a j^etary economy. BUNGLIN€TMETH0DS Pessimists among both Com-rmwlist and Western observers (elieve ill-adopted methods and bungling have slowed Guinea’s development for years. ^he controlled radio and press continues to wage a vigorous campaign against “the sequels ol colonialism’’ and speaks of leading the rest of Africa toward revolution. Some Western diplomats point out tliat what is being described as an experiment in total independence was'propped up — for better ★ ★ ★ ' And now we face two added developments which are certain to have a direct bearing on. the primaries and elections ahead. The new City Manager, Robkrt A. Carter, was indicted by a Flint grand Jury and arrested in connec-• tion with procedures that took place when he was city manager of Flint—and which preceded his departure. Mr. Carter is released on bond and says he welcomes the ch.ance to explain his version of the transactions in court. He will he given the opporUinily. There was considerable d i s im s s i o n «1ien the Pontiac Commi.ssion engaged IMr. Carter because of the situation in Flint and Commissioner William 'lay lor refrained from voting for Mr. Carter when he was officially tendered the place hv the other .six commissioners. ★ ★ ★ And now Commissioner Mh.ton I Henry resigns and dodares he will turn his attention “to greater Ihitigs." This i.s probably a wry ■»> sensible decision and will redound to the benefit of Mr. Henry and to the City of Pontiac. He has been a controversial figure ever since lu' went to tlie City Hall ajul was often the willing cau.se of turmoil through his i,UTcst.s and attacks on others. ★ ★ ★ All of Ihese fadors add up to a spirited primary and elec!ion in the spring. The eitywide dis-eussions will he a health) thing for the community and should.' rcsull in a imidi si l onger go\-eminent and eoininission. Pontiac people have really been aroused. Much Worse ... Tlu’ Asiatic situalion worsens. You wonder now whether oven the Impetuous Chareeh de Gaui.ee ^envisioned tlie full consc(|Ubnces of ' Ids precipitrUe rocogniUi'ii of Rod China. And his own rocky ship of state .still heads into tht' ojicn .seas Willi breaker,s ahead ★ A ★ ,S e c r e I a r \ of Slate R u s k paints a dark picture of I'lance’s j new associate and points out graphicall), llial I’ekiiig is tlie current menace in South V^ia and is o|)enl> planning on forn.x s into l.atin .tiiieiiiii. The word •‘|)eace” has little place in, the Red China sdieiiie of affairs. Helligereiice is the theme song. She ••orders*' de (iiiulle to break with Nationalist Chiiui to his ama/.enieni and he hulks; hut he has deliberalely lei himself in foV this kind nf iiilernalional badgering. Killiei he goes along or he must acknowledge (hat lie blundered. lie's in a self made iiini. Ju.sl as this idliainr auks h'rd China',s position lu Asiif, il del ' Initely damages tlic UtS liatllc there agaiiEsl goirmuii'ilsui Ami if the French actions sway a Hock of African colonies to vote for Red China’s,admission to the U.N., de Gaulle’s, disservice to the world will be incalculable. If this comes about, it may be high time for the United States to consider picking up her marbles and fading from . the U.N. scene. ★ ★ ★ President .Johnson is understandably wrought up and he wants the U. N. assembly meeting scheduled for September, put off until after the elections. The President doesn’t fancy running for office after Red China has bullied her way i|ito the UnHed Nations over our strenuous protests. Our prestige would .suffer and the Miters might lake, this into account When they visited the polling places in November. ★ ★ ★ As Red China cracks the' whip in Southeastern Asia, her endorsement by France suggests that de Gaulle either fumbled the ball badly at a psychological moment —or played it that way on purpose. Tbe Chicago Tnbii7ic states , that “endorsement at this precise juncture, suggests a malicious intent.’’. Those are strong words. And in Conclusion... Jottings, from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter : After all the bibs for the Estes luncheon were paid, your committee of three found itself with a balance of $26.27 .which was mailed to tlio United Fund........ Hus- band: “Guess how many famous people there are in Pontiac?’’ 'Wife: “I'm nht sure, but it’s one less tlian you think.''.........! . .Somerset Miiiigham is hard at work on a . novel involving, the dime-a-dance girls-r-and he turned ninety...... . . . .“JFK: Tlie Man and the Myth’’ was on all the best .seller lists when the as.sassinatioii happened and it was imnu’diafely wilhdrnwn from j)iiblicaUon. Hul now the mail orders liave put it into its l.'ith edition. ★ ★ .sViual nomina-I i 0 11 f 0 r a n c .s p c cially attractive area ^ young lady: Diana Rader. . . . ..........The Chieago T i -DIANA hune say.s at lea.sl .‘12 new . TV hIiowh are planned for' I he fall, (hirry IMoore, Mitch Miller and Phil . Silvers have network thumhs bending downward.............. . . . Ed Sullivan says Eddie Fislu er’s blasts at Elizabeth Taylor ".sound slnpiil. as be ran out on Debbie Reynolds and their two cbildren himself." Sullivan ad-\ises him (in print) to “shut up." ,\nd Sullivan isn’t carrying (be torch for Ta>lor. ★ ★ ★ Overlieurd: “My wde’s driving ha.s improved so much wc can repair the ear nowdays Instead of replacing it,"...........I’rez Johnson’s favorite TV show is “Honunza." (It’s my wile's, to(^') And if imnk Judy Oarland, , .......In ease you didn't know 11, the gii'utest US. chess player is Bobby Flsc'hcr, He's .still very young and has enotigh lime to work up to Iho.se two rough, liMii'.l'i RussiaiES......Dept. Of aliens and Jeers: the i“s Miclil , |■,au ha.skellnill leaiil, I he J's f)e-• Inul .schools lor the way diseipline lues gotten out of haiul, llAUOl.U A, Frl'ZC.EHAM) rturcl) p e r - ) ‘You’ve Made My Visit A Happy One!’ David Lawrence Says: Debt Is Increasing Alarmingly WASHINCTON - Public ^ebt and private debt are increa.sing at an alarming rate. The facts are being ' glossed over or' ignored in Washington .Scant allen-tion has been j)aid to unpleasant truths such! as were dis-l closed in a speech a few LAWRENCE days ago by Sen. Harry F. Byrd (D-Va.) He gave the Senate a comprehensive outline of the deteriorating situation in the finances of the United States government. Certainly under the doctrine of “equal time,” Mr. Byrd — as the principal spokesman of the opposition viewpoint and the Senate’s Fihapee Committee chairman — deserves for his arguments equal prominence in the press in relation t.) the optimistic statements by President .lohnson recently in his Economic report to Congress. Por Sen. Byrd’s speech contains significant facts which, if they continue to go unheeded by governmental policy makers, could cnu.se a worse catastrophe than occurred in the 19.')0'.s. Sen. Hyrd put il Ibis way: * * * "The federal deficit last year was $(i.:t billion. This year It will he $HI hillioii. Togellior, tliese will heeonii' the greatest two-\'('ijr peaeelime deficit in history lolaling $16.3 billion. DEPItE.SSlON DEFICITS “The depression deficits of llie ':t()'s r a i s e d the federal debt from $16 billion io $43 liiflion. Tlie bigger, and faster deneils of the ’(id's are raising the debt from $286 billion to .some $320 billion. "There is no doubt about the fiiet that federal taxes are too high. They should be cut. But the hard (net is that the basic reason for federal taxes is to meet federal expertditures,” The Virginia .senator said il is easy to blame war, “cold war” and national defense for the steady rise in federal expenditures, Init he deelarcst that'“Uie l)ig increases lu spending lire in the domeslie - civilian programs." * ■* He pointed out Ihal, since the Korean War, the federal spending lolal has increased by more lliaii $:tll billion, and Ihal, out of this sum, onl,\' $7 6 lilllion was for military and rclaled aelivi-lles, such as foreign aid. C.NP (iHOWTII Hyrd eritlel/.ed llie oft-repented refei'cnee to the growth of llie gross nnlioiml product as an indleallon ot remarkable progress, and said: “liureiisiiig debt amt eonlin-uing detielts follow (he piil-lerii of eeohomle philosophy whk'h has lieea dominating lederal policy in recent years. Debt used to Increase the so-railed gh)s||i nalional pi'ml- ticl.......... ! “Stale and local debt new ap licars to be rising at a rate ap imiaiTii'ng $10 billion a year .... Kcdcral programs |lo cncour age the use of public credit include those for the insurance and guarantee of private mortgages and loans .... TOTAL DEBT “This debt philosophy has apparently permeated the national economy. Total debt,— federal, state and local, corporate, and private — has been increasing at a rate of about $65, billion a year. It now totals more than a trillion dollars . . . .” Byrd, of course, is against the pending tax-reduction bill because he thinks expenditures shpuld first be cut. , The senator questioned whether the enactment of such a tax measure at this time would contribute to “sound and construc-tiye progress.” '.' *** He pointed out that a tax-reduction bill also was passed in 1954 and yet, in' the 11 fiscal years since them, net federal deficits have totaled $46.4 billion, “including the budget estimates for this year and next.” , ★ * ★ The senator therefore contended that, ^ince tax reductions have not stimulated the economy to the point where deficits can be removed, deficit spending has not proved successful.' (Copyright 1M4, Now York Harold Tribuno Syndicalo, Inc.) Bob Considine Says: Money for Oswald Widow Is Bewildering to Friend NEW YORK -- People . . . Places . . . Things ... My distinguished British journalist f r 1 e n d, Henry Thody. is bewildered by. news of approximately $20,000 sent to Mrs. Oswald CONSlDfNK Ler since the a s i n a t i 0 President ni'dy. “She must be flab b ergast- 0(1,” chop-wiiiskered Henry said at tlie Overseas Press Club liar t'other nighf. "I was married to n Slav once. Orand girl, curious mind. “Mrs. Oswald, thinking as a Slav, must be* saying to ber.sclf: ★ “ 'What manner of country am I in',' If my husband had shot Khrushchev during the lime wo were living in Russia, not onlyi he but 1 would be dead now. Rut zounds! Here they send me money . . ” Best quote I’ve heard (and I hope it’s authentic) in connection with the argument between the Air Force generals and tlie defense department over the need for a new manned bomber i.s credited to Oen. Curt I.eMuy. “If somebody can prove Io me Ihal the airplane invented Ihe WrighI brotliers. I'll forget what I've said about the inaiined liomber.” Tip from tlie Ameriean Medical As.sociation on bow to give them up "Tlie smoker must lie stopped eomplelely, not even one eigaret per day permitted. “The sinfclier should pick a target dab', such as a weekend away tnvin sniukiiig as.soeiales. “He should puhliely Stale his mienlions to slop on Ihis day. MOST IMPORTANT ' ('ll D-day, Ihe iialieiil .should realize that the first eight hours are the most important. “Gum and candy arc helpful substitutes. “Cooperation of the smoker’s wife must be obtained, since .she will bear the brunt of the patient’s irritation.” Okay, AMA, but suppo.se your wife .smokes like a chimney? (Dlitributed by King F#»iur«»-Syndlcbte) Voice of the People: 'Mental Health Program Needs Area Cooperation’ The Oakland County Community Mental .Health Board is a. newly-formed group working On a plan to help adults and children. This group has made a study of needs and feels the first step is setting up mental health outpatient clinics. You do ,pot feel it is necessary? Then take a look at the horrible crimes in our county last year aind read the psychiatrists’ comments. ★ It was my good fortune to work for Dr. C. A. Neafie and Dr. John D. Monroe, two fine health directors in Pontiac and Oakland County. These ' two gave their entire professional lives to further health needs in our area. Michigan has a definite lack of facilities for the care and treatment Of the mentally ill. How it must have grieved .Dr. Monroe when a youngster found guilty of murder tyas ordered to the state hospital for treatment, but there was no room and he had to be kept in the youth home for several months. People in this area should give full cooperation to the mental health program. A. Green, R.N. ‘Could Someone Have Stopped Ruby?’ Would someone explain to me how Jack Ruby could murder Oswald while the cameras were on him? I have been frying to figure this out. If they could take a picture on the spot, it seems someone could have said or done something to prevent the killing. ' Mrs. M. V. Evans ‘City Needs Firemen to Fight Fires’ We should not ask our firefighters to flood ice rinks. That’s up to the city’s recreation and water departments. If firemen were one minute late in saving a house and family, we would be very up.set to hear that they were at an ice skating rink. Every run they make is dangerous, even if it’s a false alarm. Being the mother of two city firemen, I know. 443 S. Anderson Mary Dennis Says Educate Children in ‘How to Live’ The old saying; “When I,was 16 I thought my dad was stupid, but at 21T was amazed that he got so jsmart in just five years,” seemed humorous when my youngsters were small. But now that • they’re teen-agers it’s not ‘ humorous, but frightening. It’s also alarming when we read that one of the major causes of death among our college students is suicide. Personnel directors tell us the major reason for men being fired is that they can’t get along with people. It seems our school superintendents and principals should do something. If they haven’t a textbook to use, I suggest Dale Carnegie’s “Ho.w to Win Friends and InRuence People.” It might be used until they can develop something better. It would only seem to be common sense to educate our children jn how to live as well as how to make a living! Father of a Perplexed, Know'It-AlI Teen-ager Disturbed by Smoke-Filled City Buses Are parent.S'aware of the smoke-filled city buses our teen-agers are subjected to as transportation to and from Madison Jr. High? Is there no law' governing a city bus that could put the violators off? Is there no bus driver who could enforce it? Parents have complained to the school board, bus company, principal and police department, but the problem reniains unsolved. Some parents'have started driving the 'children to school rather than risk the chance of clothing catching on fire. . We’re disgusted with our children coming home smelling like an all-night poker party and having to combi cigarette fragments out of their hair. Maybe a cold walk home by some of these offenders will .enlighten them about public laws. Inquisitive (Editor's Note to “Disgusted 'laxpayer For Years and U.S. Citizen Too:” We Publish no letters at all without bonafidc names and addresses for the files. A pen name can be used in many cases.) Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Advice Io Parents The Somerville (NJ.) Messenger-Gazette To insure the education oj your teen-ager, parents need to pull a j^w xvireS'-tclcvision. telephone, and ignition., Ill-Housed The New York Herald Tribune The man who said that “Congress' right hand talks economy while its ilcft hand pours money down a ralholc” may have been guilty of a mclapimrical atrocity, but he made his iioint. * * ★ If he were alive today he might have something further of interest to say about u House of Hepresentulives that preaehes sermons on thrift while spending nine yenrs and $83 million for an unfinished third office building to be equipped with those essentials lor survival like heated swim-ming |N)ols, a gymnasium and three-room suites. Work was suppo-sod to have been completed Iwo year.s ago but occupancy of the so-called Rayburn Uuiiding is still many months, and many tfiillions, in the future. Just why the House, feels so ill-housed In its two fine edifices (its membership hasn't chnnged in half a century) l.sn’l cleiir, but its wnr on poverty sure is bell, , We are told Ihal the cbaolic stale of things has nolliing to do with Hie “anlbilect" who Isn't an architect, or the contractor who happens to be a former treasurer of the Democratic Nalional Committee. Meanwhile, the National Geographic Society has pushed , its new Capital home ten stories into the sky, turned the heal on and Is in business for good. 'I’lie cost was much less, but tliat doesn’t account for the quiet efficiency by tlie Geographic Society and tlie monumental bungling on the Hill. Work for Free The Ames Tribune A fool ball coach is a man who can get kids to work harder for nothing than they thould for $2 an hour at home. Not All Alike The State Labor News (Columbus, Ohio) The AFL-ClO’s Committee on political Education (COPE) tries to give the impression that all members of AFL-CIO labor unions are liberals in their |m>-lUleal affiliation. * A ★ This Is an exaggeration ns has been demonstrated time and again In national, state, and local elections. A substantial minority of at least 35 per cent of labor union membership has eonsislenlly voted lor eoiiservatlve enndidotes. * * A Through the elrcumslnnce of limited Income, the averagO labor union member has to be conservative. When he or she sees the federal government squandering money that it ha.s taken from his or her paycheck, these labor union members become just as indignant pnd aroused as any other taxpayer. * * * Whenever conservative political candidates liniic appealed to labor union members and taken the time and made the effort to explain to these members the true facts of economic life, they have received political support. * * t Although this conservatively inclined labor union membership has no official or organizational representation in the AFL-CIO and other segments of organized labor, they are a definite and potent minority and a great .worry to labor union officials. Inflation The Cherry vale (Km.) Republican Inflation is that period when a mori enn lose his shirt, ml only in the stork ' markH, bu! also In the supermarket. — -n '-''X .'' ■'^irr .';«■ ':» M-'W:' i,i 'iTr:- J'. . rr ji I ■. •f' ■■. > /[ yr : ■ ,,-■ -k'. fi •■ ■ THE POXTIAC PRESS, yfOXDAY -FEBRVARV r .1; - -i;; Enjoy The Best During 1964 1-YEAR WARRANTY 90 DAYS SERVICE WITH FREE DELIVERY TRADE- • 23"-23,000 VOiT HAND-WIRED TV CHASSIS • GENUINE WALNUT CABINET • AM-FM RAOIO-9-TUBE • 4 MATCHED STEREO SPEAKERS • 4-SPEEO STEREO CHANGER WITH SAPPHIRE STYLUS SYLVAN STEREO S TV Sales 0|3en Monday and Friday Evenings 'til 9 2363 Orchard Lk. Rd. (Sylvan Center) Phone 682-0199 Avoid Arguments Keep Mouth Shut Before Meal By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)-Things a columnist might never know if he didn’t open his mail: One way^to keep peace in the family is trf keep mum Jjefore meals. A survey found that most quarrels between husbands and wives erupt just before the I dinner hour. , I *■*■-*■ [ If all the motor vehicles in the United. States were placed bumper to^ bumper they would form a line’long enough to reach the moon—and some days that seems to be just what has hap-pehed. Ardent hobbyists sometimes impress us as being a bit balmy, but psychiatrists say no. They have found that well-balanced individuals are more likely to have hobbies than those who are either neurotic or psychotic. LOUSY INVEN-nONS Our quotable notables: “We owe to the Middle Ages the two j company is coming. You can worst inventions of humanity—! also expect visitors if your eye-romantic love and gunpowder’’I watermelons range —Andre Maurois. 1 also expect visitors if your eye- The present generation has | brow itches, you get two pi^es seen a great teligious revival in 1 of butter on your plate, or if a this country, but, according to'bumblebee flies in an open Catholic Digest magazine, 100' million Americans still profess KEEPS PRICES DOWN no particular religious faith. window in your home. Quickies: Frogs can sing un- der water. About a fifth of the earth’s surface is permanently In 1962, cancer claimed more better and han 275,000 lives. Doctors esti- f‘gbt less if soothing music i than 275,000 lives. Doctors estimate that earlier diagnosis could have prevented approximately 75,000 of these deaths. Washington is the only state named after a U.S. president. Four state capitals bear presidential names. They are Madison, Wis.; Jefferson City, Mo., Jackson, Miss.; and Lincoln,! Neb. i BAD SIGN Folklore: If you knock over the pepper shaker, that’s a sign piped into their pens. Ripe watermelons range in weight from five to 125 pounds. Women suffer seasickness more often than men. It was Ralph Waldo Emerson who observed, “We are alw'ays getting ready to live, but never living.’’ The inhalation of gasoline fumes reacts on some people the same as alcohol. SEALY DIYAK SALE 2 mattresses and 2 box springs on legs, four quality pieces for one budget price NO MONEY DOWN I^OWNTOWN STORI ONLY ,7f EIGHT ■ '.f :// ; ; , ■ THE PQKTTAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUAfiY 3, 1964 ■»r HELPING HANH-Jerly Holland of 664 Janies Town gives daughter Cindy, 6, a few pointers on how to shoot pool. They are practicing at the Golden Cue in, Walled Lake, one of the new 'modern billiard parlors geared toward family entertainment. Colors, Lights and Music Make Pool a Family Sport By JEANMARIE ELKINS Pool is emerging,, from the dark, smoke - filled pool hall. The game is now being played in bowling alleys, at home and in modern, well - lighted billiard parlors catering to women and family groups. No Ihnger is the game connected with the “tough guys" those with long hair, dirty fingernails, black leather jackets and foul language. , Enthusiasts now infclude ladies and children along with some of the world’s most prominent personalities. ^ NEW HALLS New pool hails are springing up ail over the area. Co pletely modem, they feature ample lighting, pastel colored tables, music and oth^r s u ' attractions to lure the female customer and the younger set. One such establishment is the Golden Cue in Walled l.ake. Opening only a short time ago in the old theater building, it is well lighted, clean and features thick carpeting ami patio furniture as well as refreshments. The newest hi pool, billiard and snooker tables are here in decorator colors of green, gold, blue and tomato-soup red. ★ ★' Soft music is tuned to the age group playing, pop music for teen-agers and classical and old standards for families and older groups. WOMEN’S POOL LEAGUE Club owners, William Berryman of West Strathmore a n d William Harris of Sylvan Vi 1 -. lage, are anticipating formation of women'.s leagues In the spring. Not to be left out of l h e picture, many bowling alleys are now accommodating t h e pool enthusiast. The great majority of the area bowling estahli.shments have now installed one or more ptK)l tables. These' range from bumper |K)ol and the smaller or lounge size table right up to the regulation 4'4 X 9-foot table, depending on uniount of s [> a c e available. Some more enterprising bowling alley owners ate building special additions to Ihcir present buildings to nccommiMlate a number of tables. | HOWES LANES j One such couple is Mr, and Mrs. Ix*slcr Howe of llowcs Ltines in Clarkslon, Their addi-} lion accommodates six regula- i lion - size pool tables In a Itril-1 liant' shade of tomato - s o ii |> rdd, and they anticipating' installation of a smxtker laitle. I “Wc feel p«H»l has lH‘emne u e I c a n game," rmphuNlzes Mrs. Howe, who uIho states that they plan dn beginning, leagues In (he near future, possibly next season. Home owners arc now purchasing smaller tables, The recreation rtKtm, family rtKim, den or haseincnt Is likely to laasmic the haven (or nclghlKirluHid en-thqsiasts. “Our sales have more than doubled over what they were three or four years ago," claims George Meyer, manager of llih s|H)rllng gtiods (leparlinent ol Moiitgoinerv Witirds I’onllac ^ Mall store. f ' I,OWEU I’lUCKS I * “Com|)elitlon is keener and prices have been marked down from those in past years.” Mokt ipibpular size table is the seven foot or step - down size, according to M e y e r, though he fefils more people would buy, the eight-foot' pocket billiard table if they could manage to maneuver it around corners and downstairs to where they would like it- Unlike many other sports, pool is not overly expensive nor is it only for the skilled professional. ★ .d * As long as you are tall enough to see over the table, you are able to play pool. It is enjoyable for even the most inexperienced hand. PRACTICE HELPS A few pointers and a 1 i 111 e practice is all that is required to improve your game. Most pool halls charge customers by the hour but there are many tables, which must be fed 20c or 25c a game. For those who wish to really make an impression, custom pool cues, made to your specifications, are available for as little as $10 or $15. Harlem Fire Kills Woman, 5 Children NEW YORK (JF) — Five children and the mother of two of them died: yesterday in a Harlem tenement fire. A sixth child was critically Injured. “Were it not for the fact that (fire) engine 58 happened to be passing by, the death toll would have mounted,” said Fire Commissioner Edward Thompson. “People just stood and looked from the street instead M pulling a fire box.” The fire truck crew saw smoke pouring from a fpurth-floor window of the tenement while returning from a false alarm. , ♦ * * Willie Byrd, father of three victims, told, authorities he found the couch on fire and. a drunken man in the apartment when he looked in on the children at 3 a.rn. Byrd said he doused the blaze, chased out the man and went back next door to his sister’s apartment. TWO HOURS LATER Two hours later his children, Thomas, 10, Josh, 6, and Terry, 5, .were dead, along with Mrs. Jane Rodriguez and two of her children, Jerry, 8, and Victor, 7. ★ ★ ★ Another Byrd child, Joy^e, 13, was critically burned. The smouldering fire in the Rodriguez apartment apparently had renewed Itself. Chrysleif to Enlarge DETROIT (AP) - Chrysler Corp. has announced plans for an estimated $8 million enlargement and modernization of its Detroit Lynch Road Plant. The plant makes rear axle assemblies, brake drums, hubs and other parts for Chrysler vehicles. ‘ Helper of Blind Dies LOS ANGELES (AP) - J. Robert Atkinson, 76, who was blinded at the age of 25 by a six-gun explosion and went on to found the Braille Institute of America and spent many years serving the sightless, died Saturday. Atkinson, onetime Montana cowboy, was managing director of the institute from its inception in 1919 until his retirement in 1957. He Was bom in Galt, Mp. ■ .' , In 1957, the United States exported 5,348,000 tons of steel and imported only 1,155,000 Backs K Peace Movie BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) —President Tito of Yugoslavia has endorsed Soviet Premier KJirushchev’s proposal for an agreement to renounce the use of force in settling boundary quesUohs. 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I pitchers to throw the spitter le-1 ^ .u I ^8^*^ ‘o ^894, I rtniiir tiroy,> „r«,r,v.n *u„ somc ways Ward was the rnanaged three clubs, acted as president of the Boston Braves, even if it is out of bounds in |, organized baseball. Burleigh Grimes and Urban | . .... (Red) Faber, two of the last he won the b. -ng ' Detroit, wj.h a .378 avc.. je. minors, scouted and c Your Choice With a TAYLOR TOPPER No need today to look other than your best. When you know you do, you feet better, do your Job better—and you're more fun! Don't be ignored because you look older than you are. Clean, cool new flexible base, contoured to each individual bald area. NO NET, NO GLUE, NO FUSS, NO MUSS. The only answer—TAYLOR TOPPER. BE YOUR BEST YOU! Toylor Topper Inc. gaily, were among the six new members named Sunday by the Hall of Fame veterans’ committee. » FREE DETAILS i: TAYLOR TOPPER, IJ3 W. JBth w York I, N.Y., Dept. «02. 123 W. 28 St. i N.Y. 1, N.Y. I Wl 7-1820 I NAME Offices in I „„pp. Principai Cities, i STREET.. Coast-tb-Coast. IIIIIIIIIIM^ Hiram Walker Quality in a Great Bourbon Buy Hiram Walker*^ A True Bour0* Sip it slow and easy— enjoy its full rich/* flavor 66 Proof Straight Bourbon pitched a perfect game for Providence in 1880, organized the Players’ Brotherhood and also was the lawyer for the National League. SET RECORD Ward also set a record of 12 assists for a second baseman that still is in the book. The addition of the six new men boosted the total membership in the Cooperstown, N.Y.,i museum to an even 100. The! new members were picked by: the veterans’ committee fromj players who had been retired at I least 20 years. The Baseball Writers Association, who consider only ' those active within the last 20 years but retirdr at least five, are conducting a second ballot after failing to name anybody on the first vote. The writers expect to announce the results later this week. Grimes, 7C, and Faber, 75, were among the group of four pitchers permitted to continue use of the spitter after it was legislated off the book. Grimes actually was the last. He was active until 1934, retiring with a 270-212 won-lost record. ! Seealltheboat^... 6*''Annual GREATER MICHIGAN FEB. 15-23 f / mnici Daily Door Prizes ★ Free Boatin^p Clinics Isle of Champions/^ Weigh anchor and steer for the biggest, most exciting boat show in the Great Lakes Area. New boats, new motors, new accessories, new boating fashions, camping and travel trailers. Daily door prizes*—outbbard motors, boats and others. Don't miss it. Bring the-whole family. Yod'il all have a boatload of fun. $247 BOmtb IN BONU-li Vei The women are holding their own in the North Hill Lanes men’s House League Wednesday night. Last week, in fact, they were scene stealers. The second place Randy West Hair Stylist team — the lone female squad in the field — had an actual 1009 game. 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Friday Championship drives continue in the recreation basketball spotlight this week. Spencer Floor Covering needs only one win to clinch the Waterford Township Clas.s A title while O'Neil Realty is one game from tyjng for the Class B crown. ' In city action, unbeaten West Bloomfield Heating has become the first team to clinch a berth in (he eity Class A playoffs. A change from the normal procedure ' will find the city American League playing at Madi.son Junior High School Thursday night instead pf Pontiac Central as usual. TOWNSHIP^^BASKETBALL j Lakeland Pharmacy'^*''* . * ° Five R'5 Conslruclien , , O'Neil Really *“■ Zllka Heafina ....... : Frushour & Sfruble ......... THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE Walarlord Townthip Monday af Crsry JHS Wadnasday at Plarca JHS In the Airway First League Wednesday, B e t z i Waisanen scored well with 234 — 582 totals and June Blum hit 220— 545. Agnes Wolf,had a 501 and Vi Rosie' a 522 in the Airway Angels League. The Mrs.'s took three points from the league leading Alley Cats and closed the gap between first and second place. At 300 Bowl last week the scores included a 245 — 631 duo by Bob Rebennack and 234 — 615 pair by A1 Bornak in the Tuesday GMT & C American League. Jerry Mazza had 215 — 610 and Ernie Kulazewski 223 in the Tuesday night Rouse League; while the 300 Bowlerettes recorded a 208 — 511 effort for Jean Swayne. Gerry Upcott made the 6-7-10 split. The house team was in the CMC National loop spotlight Tuesday with a 1090 game and a 1123 series, Fran Pretto’s led the 300 Bowlers League the same night. <» Prep Slate BAS^KETBALL Bfiy City Handy af Saginaw'^ Flint Southwesfe^^ at Flint Northern Flushing at Lapeer Troy at. .Warren Cousino Fif/gerald at Clawson PONTIAC'S NEWEST MUSICAL SUPPLY CENTER Speciolixing in Drum and Mallet Instruments AVTHOBttED DEALER FOR: Ludwig - Roger* Prenitr — SUngmtland — Degas — Muitui — /esCo PONTIAO PERCUSSION CENTER OpM BAm., Fli., Sal. 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PONTIAC MALL — Community Room N#«t t« Moll OHita Hl«nt.»th lol.« Wood ot T»l»g,oph Wd TAKE THE OUE88WORK OUT OF CAR CARE Your Guardian Maintenance serviceman is trained and skilled to do the job right. He has the advantage of professional training at one of the 30 national General Motors Training Centers. The specialized equipment he uses means,a faster, finer job. This distributor tester, for example, takes the guesswork out of a distributor overhaul. It analyzes the problem and makes more precise adju^stments possible. He has available genuine GM parts engineered to original specifications for replacement whenever necessary. See your GM dealer regularly for long-run service savings. >4 Guardian maintenance CHEVROLET • PONtlAC • OLDSMOBILE • BUICK • CADILLAC • GMC TRUCK TWKNTY-FQUR Ex-Con Sought in Shooting Two Policttmen Killed in Los Angeles Store WS ANGELES (AP) - An ex-convict who turned printing in'prison was being sought today. Police say he killed two officers who tried to arrest him for trying to pass a foraged check. Police said a nationwide matahunt has, been ordered for Leaman Russel Smith, 33, With emphasis on Las Vegas and Chicago, as well as the Los Angeles area. Police said Smith, released from Leavenworth Federal Prison last October, opened fire in a Sears Roebuck store, Saturday night, killing Sgt. Charles Paul Monaghan, 37, and officer Robert M. Endler, also 37. A third policeman, Endel Jur-man, 27, and a store clerk, Stephen S. Suzuki, 55, were wounded in the shooting at the Los Angeles store. ASK ABOUT CHECK Jurman, at a hospital recovering from bullet wounds in the chest and arm, said yesterday the shooting began while he and his partners were questioning Smith about a $167.40 check he and a woman were trying to cash. Jurman said Smith asked “are you a poiiceman?” He said when he answered yes. Smith started firing. Sgt. Monaghan was shot through the head and officer Endler was shot through the heart. The officers were in plain ■ clothes. The woman, Mrs. Barabara Walker, 25, did not attempt to escape, officers said, though she ' had a 25-caliber pistol in her purse and was carrying five California driver’s licenses, ail apparently filled out with fictitious names. w ★ w Detectives said they later found 848 bops payroll check blahks bearing the names of a well known soap ccnnpany and a headache remedy firm at Mrs. Walker’s apartment. PRISON MATE Meanwhile, a former prison mate of the suspect, who had taken a course in engraving and photography, was arrested in El Moate, Calif., as part of the bops check ring, officers said. ★ * The former prison mate was identified as Donald Castner, 30. A third man, Dennis H. Andcr-.son, 21, also was arrested, police said. 14 U.S, Astronauts Join Space Team HOUSTON, Tex. (flV-Fourteen new astronauts head intc class-, rooms today to start training for the next big space projects the two-man Gemini and Apollo moon flights. Introduced here Oct. IS, the spacemen bring membership In the U.S. team to u 29-mcm-ber total. Mo.sl of them /inislu>d moving families to Houston within the past wet^. For the first three or four hionihs, they’ll stay busy witli majhcinalics and astronomy, l(K)king often at celestial formations on a planetarium dome to learn ‘road signs" for space travel. lipecializcd training for the actual journeys will come next at the manned spacecraft center which is east from downtown Houston. Gov. Scranton Urged to Seek Nomination HH(K1KVII.LE. I’a. (AP) -Pennsylvania (iov. Wllliani W .Scranton slwtuld declare himself an active presidential candtdati say 001’ chairmen of eight western Pennsylvania counties. SiTunton was urged to take this action In a resolution adopted Saturday night by county chairmen of the 23rd Congressional District, .,i— IP’ 1’ OFFICE SPACE f y Pontiac Moll " Office Building i e/om 700 to I,MO MUSH •»*l. . ” ion# conirollod h##l and lully sir (onrtllifmM. Will p»rOtlon » your »li#tlllt»ll*''*. otouna or totona Rahtrl Wittbald 612-0123 THE PONTIAC PRKSS. MONICAY, I;EBRUARY/3, 1964 PLAY WALT DISHEY'S SWORD IN YHE STONE! Here Are More of the Many Hundred Dollar Winners! Adrian, Michigan Byllao Fisher 1011 W. Maple Road Waited Cake, Michigan Mri. Henry Eltien 13147 Linden Road Clio, Michigan Linda L. Winer 3210 Christnar Flint, Michigan Mri. Dot Szaldar 38 Walletlav Drive Juanita Tafllowdd 191M RIopella Detroit Mrs. viola Jordan 19430 Albion Mri. Ruth Potorion 148 N. 22nd Straot Battio Creak, M'ch. »Mn, Oaorga Cutting 114 W. Farkhurit Detroit Loona Esiett 234 Richton Highland Park Mrs. Margaret Campbell 1414 Myron Lincoln fark Mrs. Yvonne M. Rolandion 5311 Ring Priva Monroe, Michigan Mrs. BeHy Braiall 42444 Bathama John Pluskota 1055 Woit Buder Flint, Michigan Detroit, Michigan Mn. Emery Randolph. 160 Auburn Street Pontiac. Michigan Mn. Stella Janaiewikl 1MOO Manor Detroit, Michigan*, Mrs. Taylor ' Glendale Avenue Detroit, Michigan Mrs. Carolyn Prator 4860 Hlllcrast Waterford, Michigan Norma Jean Buttery 16551 Prazio Road Mn. M. McKarman 26121 Culver St. Clair Shore; Mary Bannarman 9267 Steal Detroit, Michigan Arlene Batren 9591 LIHIgfiald Detroit, Michigan Louie Landvay 4196 Duplex Lincoln Park Mn. Ernest Horn Route #2 Charlotte, Michigan Mrs. L. Shianka 14259 Wade Detroit In. Elizabeth Stoyanovlch OVER^50,000 IN CASH PRIZES HUNDREDS OF $100.00 WINNERS. THOUSANDS OF $1.00 WINNERS. • Free Trips to DisneylanJ • Free Sword in the Stone Rings Details at Store Plump, Pan Ready, Whole ChasG & Sanborn Instant Save 30c $149 14-Ox. Jar I Coffee Duncan Hines — White - Yellow - Devils Food Cake Mixes 3 ^1®® Assorted Flavors _ Jell-0 s- 6^^»‘V'''49 39 Dinty Moore Beef Stew Exquisite Elberta Sliced Velvet Smooth or Krunchy _ Peanut Butter s-69 Peaches Dole Jui€c Sole • PINEAPPLE • PINEAPPLE-ORANQE e PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT 5“S9* SaolUat Ice Craom on o Stick Mel-O-Crust Whole Wheat emms \ Vf'V ' ^ V V"''' * . irV" ,.:r ■' 'i^r ' ..y • ;^-' ':ft I ■' ■ ', 1 " s ■ /If- t ■-f t-' s iffi; •' The following are top prices covering sal^s of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce , FRUITS Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. . Apples, Delicious ^Golden, bu Apples, McIntosh, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, 1 Apples, Steele, Red, bu VEGETABLES Beets, topped .•............. Cabbage, curly, bch. ......... Cabbage, red, bu............. Cabbage, standard, bu........ Carrots, cello pak, 2 doz. ,. .. Carrots, topped ........... Celery, Root ................ Horseradish, pk. bskt. ....... Potatoes, 25-lb. bag . Radishes, hothouse .............. Squash, Acorn, bu .................... Squash, Buttercup, bu............... t.25 Squash, Butternut, bu.............. l Squash, Delicious, bu.............. ] Turnips, Topped ' ...... 2 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) — Prices paid f pound at Detroit for No. I quality II Heavy type hens 19-20; Light type Browns Grade A 35. . CHICAGO BUTTER, EGOS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile -Butler steady; wholesale buy-unchanged; »3 --------------■ Ext I B' 57; A 57Vj; .. . _______ .7 C 55; cars .7 C 56Vx. Eggs under graded easy, graded barely steady; wholesale buying prices changed to 1 lower; 70 — —• better Grai' ‘ " livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (ISDA) - Hoos 7,000; butchers fully steady; 1-2 206-220 lb butchers 15.75-16.00; mixed 1-3 190-230. lbs 15.00-15.75 ; 23C.250,1bs H.75-)5,25 ;2-3 Cattle 3,000; calves, none; slaugt steers 25 lower to 25 higher; at l( a half-dozen loads high choice and pri 1,035-1,250 lb slaughter steers 23.00; ml high choice and prime 1,100-1,350 lbs 22.00- 22.75; choice 900-1,250 lbs 21.50-22.50; comparable grade 1,200-1,450 lbs 20.00- 21.75. , „ Sheep 600; slaughter lambs fully steady; slaughter ewes scarce; full deck ...........0;’’X’‘.hU’"e»" 19.00-20.50 Stocks of Local Interest ^?5Jcla?eyiruck Bln-DIcator Broun Engineering Citizens Utilities C Diamond Crystal . • E)hyl Corp......... Pioneer Finance MUTUAL FUNDS Commonwealth Stock Television Electronics Ralls Ind. Util. Fgn. L. Y( Nel Change .. „■ ■■ Noon FrI. 81.0 102,4 88.2 90,2 91 Prev, Day . 81.0 102.4 88.2 90.2 93.1 Week Ago 81.1 101.9 88.0 90.3 93,1 Month Ago 80.7 101.5 87.4 90.4 93.1 Year Ago 80.5 100.8 89.3 88.5 94.1 ill ,ii;l i; Ind. Rallt Util i 16.2 154.3 152.2 292.2 Marf Moves Irregularly Highet NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market moved irregularly higher early today in moderately active trading. Small gains outnumbered After a mixed opening, a higher trend was established among airlines, motors and steels. Gains were fractional. Most other major groups were irregular. TransAmerica spurted more than 2 points following news directors voted to issue one new share for each four shares held and, in effect, to pay a higher dividend. , OPENING DELAYED MacDonnell aircraft was delayed in opening and rose 2 to 54Vi on a bl()ck of 1,500 shares. The renewed speculative interest in Brunswick continued. It gained % at 11% on an opening block of 15,000 shares. Qn Friday, the Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose .1 to 290.6. Prices on the American Stock Exchange were generally high- and Fmancev* Solons Debate State Budget Record $624 Mill ion Requested by Romney Stockholders Eyed er. Gains were narrow. Others upside were Aerojet-General, Data-Control Systems, Technicolor, Barnes Engineering and Paddington “A.” Corporate bonds showed scant change. American Stock Exch. NEW YORK (AP)-American SIqck Cohu Elec ... Creole P ...... Gen Develop . Imp TB CA , The New York Stock Exchange Doug A DowCh 1 Treasury Position WA5HINOTON (AP)-The c«»h po«l1lon o1 the Ireeiury compered with correi-pondlng dele t yeer egoi Jin. 29, 1964 Jen. 19, 1961 15,513,045,976.59 15,927,748,863.64 (X) InCludei $364,394,221.05 debt not lubiect 10 iletufofy limit. FrueKl ; 5094 509# 50? B - AmCyan 1.60 AElPw 1.16b AmExpoiT 1g AHome t.44a Am Hosp .30 Am MFd .90 AMet Cl 1.40 AmMolors la Am NG 1.60 AmPhoto .33 A Smelt 3.20 AmT&T 3.60 Am Tob 1.60 Am Zinc la AMP Inc .45 Ampex Cp AmpBorg .80 Anaconr 2.S0g AnkenCh .40 ArmcoSt 3 4 65Vj 6598 '65W 10 18Vj 18?B 18?» 3 '3798 3794 379e 11 17 1698 16"» 30 11'/8 11'/8 llVa 5 90'/j 90 90'/2 13 19'/4 19'/4 19',4 I 509a 5098 5098 - Can Carrier 1.60 Carter Pd la imjjS 1.80 _... MStP P ChPncu 1.40a CRI Pacll 1 Chrysler 1 Cl TFIn 1.60 CItlesSv 2.60 CleyEIIII 1.20 CocaCol 2.70 CoIgPel 1.20 CollinRad .40 X90 , 39'/« 38'.'J 2 3 37'/» 37'/« 3 3 65'/s 6594 t 7 32Vj 32'/j 3 22 118?/4 1I6'T 11 .531 Col C Col F .. CopilSol .' ConEdls rio ConEI Ind I 'SrV° Cont Con 2 “ ‘ ni 2.20 Mot .40 B 62V4I 62^/4 623/4 - k —K— 12 34'i 34 II llB'i 118^^ 2l i ' r GranCS 1 G1A8.P 1. .GtNoRy : HercPdr .20e 3 5998 5998 599, -- 55 1998 19V, 19'/4 4 51 309, 30'-4 3098 4- I 7394 7394 73?4 - Jon Logan .1 4ones8.L 2.! Joy Mfg 1 ' Timken 2.40a ; Unit Cp .35g 2 8'4 ) 4098 40'.!l 40','3 10 38 38 38 LANSING (DPI) - The Senate Appropriations and House Ways and Means committees open a major job this Week — hearings on Gov. George Romney’s requests for a record general fund budgpt of $624 million. The chairman of the Senate Appropriations Com inittee. Sen. Frank Beadle, R - St. Clair^ said today he thought the budget would get through without drastic changes, but Rep. Arnell Engstrom, R-Traverse City, the longtime boss of the ways and means committee, wasn't as eptimis-tic. “It might have a little rough sledding,” Engstrom kaid. “Most of the legislators when they first see it shudder a little bit because it’s so high.” ■ The budget is $74 million ■ more than * Romney asked last 1 year and there is little chance ‘ he'll wind up like he did then! with more than he asked for. ’ 1963 OUTLAY ; Instead of the $547 million re-' quested the legislature appropri-* ated $550 million in 1963. I Both houses of the Icgisla-’• ture were scheduled to meet 4 tonight and the budget hear-, ings are expected to get under ‘ way Wednesday. Higher education, where Rom-4 ney wants to spend $138.3 mil-J lion for operations, may be one area House economizers will seek to' reduce, Engstrom said. ★ ★ ★ ' “I have no personal feelings ; about the buiiget,” Engstrom said, “but some of the mem-" bers of the committee think it is pretty high. We’re going to look it over pretty carefully.” Return to Mart Slow By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)—Return of;who bought stocks a few years the public to the stock market i back? , after its fright back in the 1962 1 Some glamour stocks have crash is seen by many in the been gettng,a big ride reminis- rise in speculative activity. But I cent of the flush days of 1961. is it the same kind of individual Trading Volume h^s been heavy 5. Jl V Successful Investing i % $ # Sales figures are unotllclal. Unless otherwise noted, rotes of d mds In the foregoing fatfle are anr Isbursemenfs based on the last quarli semi-annual declaration. Special i $ By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I have just received $2,000 in Bar Mitzvah gifts, which means, of course, that I am 13. I would like to invest it so that it will help my college tuition in a few years. What would you advise?” G..S. A) With .several years to go on many days thi$ month. But whether- the activity of individuals traders, as distinct from the many institutions that play an ever rnore important role in the market, is for in-and-out speculation or for relatively long term investment is a ques9 On. ' The big jump in the number of individual Aniericans who -stocks that marked the previous four years seems to haVe slowed markedly in 1963. The role of the institutfons as owners goes on increasing, NUMBERS DECLINE Some top-riiame corporations, traditional choice of the long -term investor, have seen the number of individual stockhold-deefine in the last 12 or 18 months. Others have seen the long advance in numbers slack-1. Many of the stocl^ splits announced in recent ■ weeks have frankly named as a reason the desire to bring share prices into the reach of more people to widen the' ownership. The move to make stock acquisition easy and attractive for employes also is spreading among corporations. " POTENTIAL ADVERTISERS -Stockholders are potential customers for and advertisers of a company’s products. Also, wide ownership makes for Stability, narrows the opportunity for a take-over raid, by one clique or an outsider. Large shareowner roils tend to make future corporate financing easier. Corporate executives usually deny domination by the institutions—pension funds, bank trustees, insurance companies, mutual funds—whose ever swelling piles of cash to invest have spurred their stock purchasing. But the role of institutional traders in the stock market it- self is closely watched by federal regulafory agencies and exchange officials alike. And the part they play or could play in DETliOIT (AP) — Tlie United; It wimld permit retirement corporate affairs is also oN4n-Aulo Workers Union, who,se con- after 25 years,’regardless of a,-'el|ercst to individual stockowners, tracts often set nalivinaf pat-j at half pay: retirement after 30 big and little, and to corporate terns, is going,to drive hard for years at two-thirds pay, and re-1 management. I improved fringe benefits, par-1 tirement now for anyone aged 601 Exactly how many individuals tieularly pensions, in 1%4. ! at twice the cunent pension of own some stock in American en- I The ,UAW is leaving no doubt $2.80 monthly foi each year of.ierprises Isn’t known. Adding tliat fringe improvement will be service. Current retirement age! up tlie number of share owners AUTO PIONEER HONORED - Charles S. Mott, (lower left) was honored by top men of the auto industry yesterday at an “Oldtimers” juncheon in Detroit. Next,to'Mott is Arthur Summerfield, former postmaster general. Above is Roy Abernethy Heft) president of American Motors, and Ed Cole, president of General Motors. (See stories, F’age 21). Auto Union to Drive Hard for More Fringe Benefits an all-out goal, even if the union j unexpectedly were to pass upi .seeking a substantial wage in-| crease, or possibly profit-shar-! mg, in the wake of one of the. auto industry’s most lucrative | years. , * ^ UAW President Walter P, HeutheCsaid he will not ask con-; tracts which would result in [ price increases, but he wrote | President Johnson the industry 1 could cut car prici's $200 and | still grant wage inci'ea.ses and' 65. -_V- Quiz Starts for Widow of Oswald: NetDIst 1.20 NnlGen .411 NaIGyps 2b I 65V4 65'/4 651/j + 1,3498 3498 34’n Mock ‘dMSen*d?Vc)«cRrr« ■dlslrlbutlon dnte. g-P«ld last Y««r. cinrpd or paid alter slock dividend )llt up. k -De,clared or paid this an accumulative. Issue with divl-In arrears, p Paid this year, divl-omllad, deterred or no action taken it dividend meeting, r -Declared or In 1964 plus Mock dividend. I -Pay-n slock during 1964, esllrnatcd^cajh WASHINGTON (AP)-A pres- '“in before you reach college age. 11 panel today questions believe-your money .should be Ifoutlicr termed 1963 industry the young widow of Lee Harvey put Info strongly growing stocks I Hjs U'tfor Oswald on what slie knows that should enhance vour capi-' •h'hnson dwelt on before-tax- about Itie assassination of Pres- tai over a period of lime. ' *•* billion report- ident John F, Kennedy. I am going to suggest a good "'*•'* ''<-‘i'eral Motors The first witness to appehr bc- packaged food company and a i rammission headed by strong utility. The first of tlie.se | COST OF FRINllES ' Karl Warren, Consolidated Foods, whose; ]\/iolor (’o reported that Pn.ssian-born Marina Os- ..■..... ‘.... ..............lu- ';Ex Djvi belter known brand nnrne.s tringes .such i ■|)ortC(l that ' •,, , , ,, , ■iisioiLs', lilc I'ving in ; rs suni us pensions, me zi i r $ Ik . hospitalmedical iri.surance "'f of her tlmatcs even r - . husband on Nov. 24, two days' reported by various firms v give the answer; Too many persons own shares in more/ than one company, many leave their shares in the names ol their brokers or bankers. 17 MILLION But .sampling surveys have indicated that the number has swelled since World War II, some say as^high as 17 million individuals. Counting those, who have an interest in corporations as owners of mutual fund shares or as participants in pension fiipds that own .stocks, would bring the total still higher—if only an estimate at best., But tile drop in the number of share owners reported by some leading corporations, and the small gains reported by others used to steady and sizable year-by-year iiicrea.ses, makes es- 1.' tentative Grain Prices CHICAGO (API Q) “We bought shares of At- | las Credit. Lah-r we found j that a statistical service no | longer Issiu's a report on this st(H'k. We cannot find a quota- ! lion in our newspaper. Is | Trial for Hoffa in 3rd Week CllA’n’ANCKK’.A, Tei . (UI’li ; elude Kitchen of Sant I,ee at ' Monarch. Tlie second i.s Texas ;,nd supplemental unemploy- , „ , • Utilities, serving an expanding mciii licnetils cost 77 ce.its for K^“'"'‘^'ly was murdered ! area in and around Dallas ami ,>very hour worked by every pro-1 ^ ■ offering one of the fine.st growtli; (iijction employe in 1962.’ A Mrs. Oswqld, 22, has been in I records in lhe utility group. : .spokesman csliinalcd 1963 costs Hic cu-stody of Secret '.Service^ ! ★ * * ' were "sub.stantially higher.” agents, and several pre.suinably * * * I were aboard the plane that I General Motors said employe i Washington .Sun-j insurance cost it $175 million ip fro'” Dallas. Other i 1962; supplemental unemploy-j agents were at National Airport menl benefits $42 million, and when she arrived. 40,236 retiree.s drew $42 million The Warren commission has ‘ K'wernment was x a- there ■■..n^tiilng" wrVng ' with j in pehsions, j said that Mrs. Oswald is lestily- ", this stock and do vou reeom- f'^urc breakdowns for I mg vo untarily^ IHans originally ^ J"< 1 irt^U rs mend holding?” D.E. 1 "<»t availuhle from anv were to hear her in Dallas, diiigen jut ■ of the automakers. The Bure AI I know yf iiotlilng wrong siallslics reports the with Atlas (redit. On Aug 7, ||,,iniv .straight time pay of auto lhe.se shares were listed on the workers averages $3. New York Stock Excliange, 'n„.re will he .strong rank and ,, ,, , , where they trade regularly. And i fp',. pressure i,t the UAW Allan- '' the stalistic;.l service to which j ,.onvenlion not onlv for you ref(,'rml recently Issued a ; fo,- earlie new reiiorl on the eoinpaiiy Indi-, |•,.)jremenl. euling its Big Board Hliittis. ' were to hear her in Dallas, , CONVIN(’E|) OF (iUIl.T I,asl Tiie.sday in a copyright ' interview with radio - televTslon dalion KlUJ). Dallas. Mrs, O.s-convinced r inishand killed Kennedy, “I don't want to believe; hut I him' t(X) nnieh facts, and facts tell me Hull I.ee shot Kennedy, ’ F»nit*«l M*t Fd F»lr ,90 Ford Mot 2 Por»mD .40 I 12'/8 m 1 I 33'Y 33'/8 J ) 37"i 37'8 3 ) 1494 3594 J O Oynsm OonEloc 2.20 Gon Food* 2 G Mill* 1.20 0*fi Mol 4g OProcn 1.20 GPuhUI 1.28 OToI6.fi .88 C.onTIro .50 OotlyOII lOu OIMollo l.lOo I 1758 17*8 1758 6 1258 1258 12*8 1 26*8 26'A 26*8 H yi..,- . 'a I Bright Meteor Spotted ; II in Sky Over Flint Area FIJNT (AP) ■ A bright . meteor was sigliled at 9 p m. ; T* Stipr cent of all "facts” came from Secret Serv-poor and Hie shares sell for only | General Motors locHl.s for its ice ageiils, ten limes estimated eaniings for so-called “25-30 and 60 "nxu” * * * progyim. istimaled fiscal 1964. This low multiple appears to be due to llie relative disfavor wlilcli slocks as-.soclatwl witli real estate loans are encountering. 1 would definitely liold this issue. Education Association Gets New PR Head \s the jury taiiipering triul of llolta iiiid five others entered its (hint 5veek today, none of the 22 go\eriimeiit witnesses suninioned so far hud iiiipllenti-d the s | o e k y teamsters official directly. U .S. attorneys, however, said iiey planned to coneentrate on uio count of the nuiltlple-churge indlelment alleging Hoffa mid formttr Nashville teamsters local president Ewing King attempted to "eorrupt'' a woman juror in the 1962 trial in Nashville. Oswald. 21, had been charged wilti tile attsassination of Ken-nedV, the tatal slumling of a Dalia.M policeman, J D, Tlppill, and Hie allempted murder of •I’exas (iov. John B tempt to link Hoffa with three who was wounded m the attack; they said, the proseeu-tion wtmki backtrack and other count.s on which there already has been testimony., Mr, Spear cannot answer all| i.aN.SING iAI’i ...................The Mich- on the president. mail personally but will an.swer i Kdueation A.s.s(K,'|ation has As Oswald was being trar all i|iiesllons possible in Ills eol- ,„in(iiincc(l the appointment of ferred from Hie Dallas Uily Hall OTHER JHlAl, limn, W'lTle General Feature,s (;,,,,rge Bniwn. currently with to the t'otiiily jml he was latally F ,'s District (’mirt trial here Gni'p, '2.5(1 Park AvemiC' New |i„, M„ntun« Education A.s.soela-' shot Jack liiihy. On,Has night is an outgrowth ol lloHa's 1962 ' York 17, New York i as pnhilc relations di cluli operator, is charged wiHi trial on charges of slutnng $1 (('opyrlghl, 1960 rector the slaving /million in illegal kickback,s, ) I ' ' /, rWENTY-SIX r ^ ^ ' I f ^ f .. ■ THE I’OXl'IAC PRESS, MOXD^Y; FEBRUARY 3, 1964 _L^: Ape Kidneys Given to Teen MIAMI UPt-A 14-year-old boy, his own kidneys useless, banked today on four kidneys transplanted from two baboons to save his life. A Miami medical team at Variety Children’s Hospital performed the rare surgery in six and a half hours yester-' day. A spokesman said the transplant itself was a success. He said it will be weeks, perhaps months, before doctors know if the boy will live. FUNCTION PROPERLY may occur or the transplants will not “take.” Four kidneys were used because the baboons were smjaH and doctors wanted to be- sure that transplanted organs were ample for the job. . The divorce rate among British aristocracy is about - three times» as high as that of the general population. Farm Workers Shot in Tenant House. ' Injured were Della Cuzam, 46, and James Gar, 32. SODUS (AP) — A man and a woman, both farm workers, were shot and wounded in a tenant house,on a farm near Sodus Sunday night. A third worker was taken into custody. Berrien County sheriff’s men said Vernon Lewis, 51, admitted shootihg both with a shotgun. Ho w^ quoted as saying the two harassed him. He was held without charge. . All were employed on a farm near here. Police Hold Suspect random for robbery, kid- naped Mrs. Clayb'rooks and then in Woman's Murder YPSILANTI (AP) - Police held Linzie Gardner# 21, of Inkster today fn connection with the fatal shooting d^f Mrs. Martha Claybrooks.^ SS, whose body was found on a bank of nearby Focd Lake Sunday. Police said Gardner told them he picked the Claybrooks home shot her Saturday. Special Space Glue DRAMMEN, Norway (AP)-A special Norwegian glue will be exported to the United States for use by spacemen. The glue 'wUl hold electrodes to the heads and bodies of astronauts to check 'their physical condition. Control Cure-All Ads MADRID, .Spain (AP) -The Spanish government has ordered sharp control of advertisements for claimed cures of a wide variety of dii^ases including Cancer. Kansas Democrat Dies KANSAS CITY, Mo.-(AP) -George V. Aylward Sr.,„ 63, lawyer and factional leader in the Democratic party in Kansas City, died Sunday of a cardiac condition. KAdvartlstmcnt) Stop Bad Breath oryouraSd-back at druulst. Chew Beilina tablets whenever you thmkyour breath may offend. Bell-ans neutralize acidity, sweeten “ ......................., No ha Orangeburg, N. »., for liberal free sample! ^1 V' The new kidneys were functioning properly, doctors said. TO SAVE TABLEWARE iuV% 775 EXTRA vSS. STAMPS f WITH COUPONS IN THIS AD AND YOUR MAILED COUPON BOOKLET- SEE DETAILS BELOW The chief dangers, the spokes-, man said, are that an infection WHOLE ORPINANCE NO. 1489 Annual' Appr— year 1964. priatlon Ordinano Adopted—. --.luary 30, 1964. ' Effecflve—Januarv 30, 1964, An Ordinance In appropriate the sun-of money necessary fo be raised by lai ation af the next city lax levy of Juh 1964 upon all the taxable property In th City of Pontiac, Mlchlpan, to defra the debts, expenditures and llabilltir. ol said city, lor the fiscal year ending the 31sf day, ol December, A.D, 1964 and regulrlng and authorizing the levying on the said tax roll of July, 1964 and also requiring and authorizing the return Of iquirlhg and authorizing the return Of le , 1963 City, school and County delinquent taxes and unpaid special assessments on the delinquent tax roll in accordance with, the Charter of the City ol Pontiac and gene" ' .......... Slate o< Michigan. I laws of the by taxation upon a I the taxable . . Ponflac, Michigan -.■ the sum ol-Pour jndred Slxly-Threi Thousand Five Hundred Filly Seven anc 00/100 dollars ($4,463,557.00) tor the n„r pose of defraying .the debts. > fRfSH FRYERS Million, '•%-v* 24 SMOKED or FRESH LIVER SAURARE It Wfjr Beef Sale t chuck ROUT, POT lb. ROAST COT lb. ^ Dc'cemt V the Cl^y.Commission of r 59 Center Cut Rib Pork Chops < ib. Cut Rib Pork Chops.... lb. 59c ^ | Bacon......... ">45' ......... '^29 PORK ROAST Meat prices & coupon., effec- lb. RIB or lb. FIRST CUT Slab Bacon........ 4YGRADES SLICED, 6 VARIETIES Luncheon Meat.... SHANK PORTION SMOKEP i HAM SIRLOIN CHOCK STEAK.. T-ff— 79‘ 59° jOWE STEAK .. lb ggi FRESH GROUND HAMBURGER 37! lb. TASTY Pork Sausages . 3 -^ 99' .'A. FLAVORFUL Hoi Dags................3 "DS' 6 MORE DAYS TO SAVE OH KHOGER BIG FREEZER SALE! SUN GOLD SLICED B.-_ WHITE BREAD. .... 2^«39‘ SAVE lO-KROGER SLICED RAISIN BREAD ...: .rvf". 19* SPECIAL LABEL-SAVE 20* GOLD MEDAL flour aS-’l"’ SAVE 23'-BETTY CROCKER WHITE, YELLOW OR DEVILS FOOD CAKE MIXES............. .. .3=n KRAFT'S AMERICAN OR PIMENTO VELVEETA CHEESE . 2^ 79* SAVE UP TO 30*-OLD FASHIONED OR ELSIE BORDEN'S ICE CREAM. 69‘ mmmsrn WITH THIS COUPON & ‘3 PURCHASE-BORDEN'S ■ cIleSANDWlfflES; C ■ I2PKGS. ■ OF 10 2069 Coupon vulld ot Krogor In Dolrolt and lo.torn Michigan thro Tuo.doy, Fobruary 4, 1964. Limit on# coupon por family. save! 29‘ ■ upon por family. m WITH THIS COUPON & »3.PURCHASE-SWIFT'S SHORTENING SWIFT'NING 349 SAVE I 20' ! PACKER'S LABEL Coupon volld at Krogor In Dotrolt and lo.lorn MIchlgon thru ■ Tootdoy, Fobruary 4, 1964, Limit ono coupon puj; m ■ ■ “SS CREAM STYLE CORK POTATO, BEEF NOODLE OR ASSORTED I0‘ BUTTERFIELD WHOLE, SLICED OR DICED IRISH POTATOES SAVE 8'-BORDEN'S HI-PROT BUTTERMILK TOMATO JUICE KROGER OR TRELLIS WHOLE KERNEL CORN NORTH AMERICAN 10' I0‘ WITH THIS COUPON & ‘3 PURCHASE—LIQUID STEAK SAUCE. . . .'*/». 10* SAVE 8'-BORDEN'S HI-PROTEIN MILK OR H OAl. OTc 0 0.0 CTN. tj# SAVE 10'-KROGER CRUSHED OR SMOOTH PEANUT BUTTER.'t°i '.«.49* IKANDU DETERGENT: 49 32*OZ. BOTTLE SAVi I4‘ Ceupen valid at Kroger In Detroit and la.tern MUhlgon thru Tuo.doy, Februory 4, 1964. Umit ei^^^^r_fai^y_^ SAVE with SO' Otf coupon loworili ih. purcheio of « 4-Pl.c. ploco »„|ng JO- OH Ceupen teword. the " P‘-J*.bU.p..n end STAIMIISS STill TABLEWARE PLUS ISO IXTBA TOP VAIUI STAMPS WITH StH WIIK MAIIM COUPONS. I. 10 IXTRA TOP VAIVI STAMPS with purthoM of 2-UI. O* MORI OOlOIN S US. OP lATMORI MAROARINI. POUR 10-02. JARS KROOIR JIIUII. ne* '•'•b P-^b-- l-Ut. OR MORI PUSH OROUND NAMIUIOIR. *• '“'•b pufkheM .t VOlUMI NO. S lUUSTRATIO IIMI STORY UBRARV. I 25 EXTRA v'aTui STAMPS ■ 100 EXTRA VMUI STAMPS I ~ o! ail W. r.i.rve th. titht I. Ilmll quentllle.. ,Prlc.. L ■-------------- vnp end lUm. effect- | TOT cTAUDC ■ 100 EXTRA VAIUI STAWPS Ive el Krefet In " 50 EXTRA VAIUR STAAAPS | COUPON ANO PUICMASI Detrell end leil- | COUPON MO PUICMAtl | qI TWO CUT;WP^ JI55 Ab I •eld to d.elert. Cepyrlghl IVA4, The Krofoc Cem- ■ I OF ANY PKO 0 ■ PoBshSewteteerRinf Boletn* I ‘TWb'ROASTlj 1 PNGS. PRTif PARTS OR . __________________________________ . *TW0 ROASTING CHICKENS J I Ceupen veltd%l K..«ei In Detrell ,|^ Ceuper. ''•'***•' *2**',^ m end loclern Mlchlfon Ihru lelur- ■ end le.Urn Mlch^n thru Set l^dey, Februerv I, UM ^ MP lU