i
Editten
0N«A1’, JANUARY 4,1963 -44 PAGES
PONTIAC,
- ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNAT'ONAL
as Viet Battle Is Renewed
time being a pol of the struggle Cong guerrillas affair \ln whli
be reviewed International

1st Gl Killed in '65 Action
BINH GIA, .South Viet Nam (AP) — The Viet Cong reopened the battle of Binh Ola today, attacking Vietnamese units around the outskirts.
The Communist guerrillas killed another UJS. adviser, the first American to die in the Viet Nam war jn 1965 and the sixth to perish in the fight for this Roman Catholic village 40 miles east of Saigon.
TwO [other Americans are missing from last week’s fighting and presumed cap* hired. '
about five miles outside the village. -	-
VIET TOLL •
Eleven Vietnamese t r o o p $ were killed, 27 wounded and 40 are missing.	'•
■ Then another Vietnamese unit fell tmderlunbush on the Binh Gia-Baria Highway this afternoon.
000 hard core regulars broke off their fight* Saturday and slipped into hiding after handing government troops their worst mauling of the war. ...
Government casualties were believed in the neighborhood of sop.. *.*: ::^/v
U.S. officials expressed Concern about the Binh Gia operation.
i Sap ★	★	★
The toll of U.S. combat casualties since increased operations began three years ago rose to. 347/ si ' r*; * ..
★ t. it ★
The American was killed during an ambush of last night
The Vietnamese high command came under fire for failing to commit enough troops to the fight since its start last Tuesday and Vietnamese paratroopers were said to have behaved sluggishly.
A Viet Cong force of tip to 2,-
The government pulled back its command post from the Binh Gia region to the province capital of Baria, apparently fh the interests of safety.
The 4th . Marine Battalion, half-destroyed in an ambush Wednesday, moved out of Binh Gia, with nine truckloads of dead — over 100 bodies. The Marines had taken days to find their casualties.
OUT OF FIGHTING
THis battalion will be out of the war for-months, a U.S. adviser said.
The last, remaining officers from th| 33rd Ranger Battalion demolished by the Viet Cong Tuesday were killed in the new. ambush.
challenge Halleck for the leadership.
Rep. Melvin R. Laird of Wisconsin won Ford’s former job;
Viet Cong casualties during the week-long battle were believed to have been, heavy, but were not known, since the enemy carried off almost all its dead apd wounded.
★	★	4r
Other major Viet Cong buildups were reported in various parts of the country, and similar battles are expected soon.
Rusk Urges
AP Photofax
States
and
the
DEMS IN CAUCUS - Sen. Russell B. Long of Louisiana is the picture of optimism as he and Sens. Thomas J. Dodd of Connecticut (left) and Paul H. Douglas of Illinois
enter the Democratic caucus room to vote on the post of majority whip. Long was chosen on the second ballot. He succeeds Vice Presidentelect Hubert H. Humphrey.
Key Address Tonight
Congress
LBJ at Presession Rites
WASHINGTON (/PI—President Johnson Worshiped with dignitaries of the nation today in the traditional early morning service -of the opening day of Congress, then headed back fb his desk for more polishing and pruning on tonight’s State of the Union message.'
He may take the wraps off some tax cut and budget secrets in the unusual
Starts 9 ■" .. »*'; • , / * i ....
Fireworks'
In nominating Ford for floor leader, Rep. Elford A. Ceder-berg of Michigan said, “Millions of Republicans are awaiting our decision' and hoping House Republicans will provide them with a fresh and forceful image.” :
Cederberg . also predicted Ford’s election would improve the prospects for Republican gains in Congress in 1966.
, ★ ★ ★
The shattering defeat they suffered in last November’s elections helped overturn Hal-* leek. . j - ■** ASSISTANT LEADER
REP. GERALD FOtUD
Calm, Caution
HOWLING DEMONSTRATOR - Marines witfr bayonets push a howling woman demonstrator aside during a disturbance at a Saigon, waterfront today. The mob later took to streets in a campaign to overthrow the Viet ernment.
Rules Out Settlement in Anti-Cong Struggle
US. Road
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The nation ended its three-day observance of the New Year at midnight yesterday, breaking all previ-ous traffic death records for the holiday and surpassing the worst fears of traffic experts. ■,-Highway accidents during the 78-bour period
WASHINGTON (P- Secretary of State Dean Rusk has counseled against “reckless action” in Viet Nam and said-he would not have the United States abandon the war or expand it.
★ * ★ also ruled out for the settlement against the Viet —r a drawn-out which the United invested men, money
★ ★
The South Vietnamese can turn back the^Communist insurgents, President Johnson’s chief foreign policy /adviser main, tained yesterday the war and scene generally InXp year-end review, on television/
nighttime address to the legislators.
Johnson and his vice president, Hubert H. Humphrey, arrived separately for the 8 a.m. service at the National Presbyterian Church, but sat together and left together in the President’s limousine.
Members of the House and Senate were among other dig-nltarfrg on hand.	±
Several were among the ruling elders officiating in serving the Communion.
English Girl Has Legs Shortened; Surgery Success
WASHINGTON (AP) — The new Congress convened today in fireworks over leadership posts and legislative rules, and with battles looming over measures President Johnson is expected to propose for his “Great Socle> ty.” “ r‘ '	’
NEW* WHIP
OSWESTRY, England (AP) -Surgeons termed fully success-ful today the project to shorten Anne Rowston’s legs, o ★	★	★
Anne, 19, was 6 feet 7Ms inches Johnson and Humphrey sat on tan Now she js just
over 6 feet.
le right side of the church in . . ... ,	....	.
J third row from the front, In And J-* was Lthe ldea‘ to make her a shorter girl.
She underwent surgery for the fourth time at the Oswestry Orthopedic Hospital last Saturday. Today she smiled in her bed as a hospital bulletin described her condition as “quite satisfactory.”
Sen. Russell B. Long of Louisiana won the job of Senate Democratic whip, formerly held by Vice President-elect Hubert H. Humphrey. V
‘ Contenders against him were Sens. John O. Pastore of Rhode Island and A. S. Mike Monreney of Oklahoma.
The position of'assistant GOP leader, or whip, upw held by Rep. Leslie A.- Arends of Illinois, is not filled by caucus vote, but by the new leader.
A r e n d s supported Halleck, and Ford is certain to choose a new assistant, but there was no Indication when the new whip would be named.
★ ■* ■■■■ ★
In the contest for the conference chairmanship, the vote was 75 for Laird and 62 for Rep. Peter H. B. Frelinghuysen of New Jersey a" member of the liberal - oriented Wednesday Club, a group of about 20 House Republicans.
Falk: 55 Die
Rep. Paul R. Fino of New York had announced his candidacy but withdrew to leave the contest between Freling-huysen and Laird.
the new once reserved for former President Dwight D. Eisenhower who regularly attended the church.'	,
PRAYERS There were prayers for the
Two ballots were taken.XOn the first. Long received *34 votes, Pastore 20 and Monroney 14. On the second, there were 41 for Long, 25 for Pastore and 2 for Sen. Philip A. Hart of Michigan.
In contrast to the battling among House Republicans, GOP senators quietly ami. unanimously reelected their leaders.
Laird was considered by some liberal-wing Republicans to have identified himself too closely with Sen, Barry Gold-water’a forces in the fight over the party platform at the Republican Convention in San Francisco last summer.
\	★	★ Sr
Laird was chairman of the Platform’ Committee.
Ideologically the Republicans had little to choose between HaUack and Ford.
FLOOR LEADER
nation, the President, Congress, for all in authority, and- for peace.
10 in Michigan
By The Associated Press Twenty persons died on Michigan highways during the 78-hopr 1965 New Year’s holiday, including three teen-agers killed In a one-car crash near Allegan. * e * w
The Asloclated Press tabula-
claimed 471 lives, passing the New Year’s high mark set during a four-day holiday ip 1955-56 "when 409 persons died. *
The previous three-day record was 374 In 1959-60.
Before the holiday started, the National Safety Council estimated that between 300 and 360 persons might be killed in traffic.
California, with 68 fatall-ties, recorded the highest dumber of deaths and broke its three-day New Year’s record toll of 48, set in 1960.
A spokesman for the Califor-
Rusk conceded he shares with many Americans “a sense of frustration that things are not somehow moving more rapidly toward a conclusion.”
J
But, he said, the situation calls for persistence and cool-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1),
By removing pieces of bones from her legs in the four operations, the doctors’reduced her height by more than seven inches.
Xrays later this week will re-The speech, which the Pres* veal whether the ends of her ident hopes will set guide marks .K„„. „ .	.... . „ _ _
for the irorft of Coijro™ to tho ’“T*1 “ “W 'T busy year, will” be broadcast k p 111 i n g together. Glandular live by. television and radio net- trouble is sa)d to have caused works/	Anne to grow so tall.
ting finishing touches on his annual message, to be delivered personally at a Joint session of the Senate and House at 9 p.m. E8T.
Sen.. Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois was returned as floor leader, Sen. Thomas W. Kuchel of California as assistant leader or whip, and Sen. Leverett Sal-tonstall of Massachusetts as conference chairman.
House Republicans chose Rep. Melvin R. Laird of Wisconsin as chaimian of their party conference, a post given up by Ford to challenge Halleck.
w w1 < ★
Laird won 75-62 over Rep. Peter H. B. Frelinghuysen of
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6)
City Optimistic About '65
tloh of holiday fatalities began jnla Highway Patrol, Kent Mil-at ( p.m. Thursday and ended ton, said he is “sure alcohol will at midnight yesterday.	be found to be a tremendous
/	I ' factor” In accounting for the
t *	*	bleak total,
flu deaths placed the ifate	*	*	*
In seventh place ln»the n* For comparative purposes, tlon, in comparison with The Associated Pres* counted third place during the traffic deaths during a non-Christmas holiday* when 85 holiday three-day weekend last
persons died on the state’s highways.
Sixteen persons died during the 50-hour 1964 holiday.
★ ★
1 This year’s death toll com*, pares with II dead In the last California's "toll far surpassed comparable 78-hour period In the neat nearest state’ —» Texas, 1982. Sixteen died In a similar .with 45 fatalities. New York and period lit 1881 and 38 in 1980. Illinois followed with 24 e^h.
mpnth. The total then was 396. DEATH INCREASE;'^™ J, Last week, 578 deaths were counted durlng/the three-day Christmas period.
i ★ ft h'
By L. GARY THORNE
Pontiac municipal affairs enter 1965 on a note of optimism .
The steady grip of Joseph A. Warren, new city manager, has been felt at city hall and likewise, the hand of one of Pontiac's more popular City Commissions.
Warren, who has given Indications of running a proverbial “taut ship,” joined the city last August. )	/
— that are supported by their own millage or revenues.
★ ★ *
Warren’s crackdown on substandard bousing and code enforcement has further demonstrated his Interest in running a “taut ship.” '
CALL TO BATTLE Meantime, the noje of optimism that heralds the new year might also be a* call to battle.
Recognizing the need to document their case, commissioners, nevertheless, are confident voters will back them.
SWITCH EMPHASIS If their expected support rolls up a favorable Vote, Pontiac In 1965 will switch the emphasis of Its taxing power from real estate to Income.
Their voting records have been virtually parallel during their 16 years of overlapping service.
Hallack’s ouster was demanded by congressmen who Insisted' that the thumping Republicans took in last year’s election — they lost 38 House seats—called for new leadership.
★ ★ +
A similar clamor arose in 1959 after the GOP suffered heavy congressional losses. It resulted in replacement of the veteran Joseph W. Martin Jr. of Massachusetts by Halleck. Martin lost by four votes on a secret ballot.
But, unlike 1959, when the Halleck candidacy did not formally surface until the day be-' fore voting. HaUack had known for two weeks that Ford would challenge him. Both camps were thoroughly organized and conducted vigorous personal campaigns.
“I heard a roaring noise and looked up and saw the center of the roof coming down, but I didn’t have time to get out.”
Officials said most of those who escaped JnJury werie seated at the back of the church, where the roof had not been completed.
In Today's Press .
Malaysia
Retaliation threatened against Indonesia . . . PAGE 2.
Winter Goes on Vacation
Burch
I Urges GOP unity, re-1 sponsible opposition In 1965 I . . . Page 44.	, •
The 44-year-old manager has his own way of doing bill-. ness. For example, he /has Insisted in liscnl matters that •very dollar of revenue and .expenditures be budgeted.
In addition, Warren has Bald that the tymerel fond as a rule shquld not subsidise any specialized funds —sewage, water, etc.
The City C o n mission, headed by Mayor WUilam H. Taylor Jr.,' has proposed an income tax for city residents and nonresidents working in the city.	1
One of Uie first Jobs of 1965 will be the scheduling of a erendum on the controversial tax.
In any oveht, an austere budget is proposed lor lies. It won’t Increase tax bills, but also won’t Increase city services.
Pontiac’s 700 city employes, who staged a demonstration In front of city hall in 1964 lor higher wages, enter the new year with new pay Males.
However, the added wages are
(Continued on Page 2, (Joi. 3)
While tomorrow won’t be exactly bathing suit weather, it will be lair and warmer.
A high of 36, to 44 Is expected with the low dipping between 22 to 30. Mild weather is also predicted for tonight.
The clouds wUl roll back Wednesday as the temperature continues to climb.
The low before 8 a.m. todaji was 26. The thermometer spurted to 36 by 2 p.m.
New Feature, Press highlights “People In the Newi” , . . PAGE 28.	; 7	, i
.Area News.........
Astrology .......
Bridge v»*J Comics ...........
Editorials .....
Income Tax Series Merkels ..... Obituaries
Sports ...........
T| outers ....
TV, Radio PregraiM , . .4»
Wilson, Earl ....
Women’s Pages ....2041
WASHINGTON (#)—Rep/'Gerald B. Ford of Michigan was chosen today to leacKHouse Republicans in the 89th Congress, unseating R^p. Charles A. Halleck of Indiana. r .
•Ford, 51, backed by younger meihbers who wanted a “fresh, forceful image” for their party, defeated Halleck 73-67 .Halleck, 64, had held tim job for six years.	*	"Iff/ i
Ford gave up the post of chairman ofc-tKe party conference in order to
Ftetcil Mishap at N*w Building in Mexico. ’'
PUEBLA, Mexico Fifty-five Mexicans were killed and 63 injured when the roof of a new Roman Catholic Church collapsed yesterday at Rijo, 7S miles southeast of Mexico City.
The concrete roof crashed during a Mass to dedicate the building. About 308 persons were inside.
Officials said a preliminary investigation indicated defective construction bad caused the tragedy. The building was of brick and concrete. Among those killed was the priest officiating at the Mass, Father Ezequlel Alvarez Ortega, whose brother designed and built the church. *
Police said the brother would be questioned.
“It happened so fast nobody had a chance to run,” said, Alfonso Escamilla, 15, one of the Injured survivors.
I H

THE PONTIAC PRES&, MONDAY, JANUARY 4, .1965
.ia Set io Against the Indonesians
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — The Malaysian government announced today it is prepared to retaliate ^against
See Story, Page 3
Indonesia “under the rule of hot piweuit when and if forced to.” Prime Minister Ttinfcti Abdul Rahman met with his Cabinet in
Rusk Urges Caution in Viet Nam
(Continued From Paige One)
ness, not “reckless action which would move u$, over thoughtlessly in either the direction of 'defeat or in the direction of a very great catastrophe!
Along the way, he said he dobs not favor expanding the struggle or having the United States pull out of it.
SUBJECT ASIANS The first, he Said, would subject Asians to devastation and lead down a trail “the end of which no one in any country could possibly see with assurance.” \.. '	;• .
\B
The second, he said, would rage \ Co
encourage Communist China to become more aggressive.
He dismissed a political set-1 tlement — a, third alternative to present policy — as impossible because the Communists haye refused to give up their aggressive designs.
Elsewhere , the debate on Viet , Nam continued as four senators urged a reevaluation of the U.S. role in the Southeast Asian, country and Japan’s new prime minister, Eisaku Sato, said in a copyright interview in U. S. News and World Report that Viet Nam will be an important subject during his forthcoming talks with Johnson.
ISen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., advocated the reevaluation and got agreement from Sens. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., A. S. Mike Monroney, D-Okla., and Carl T. Curtis, R-Neb.
-'The United States, said Morse, should be fighting- in Viet Nam “as part of the United Nations organization or as part of the SEATO organization or as a part of the 14-nation Geneva conference organiza-tiqp, but not on a unilateral basis.”.
Jackie, Children Home After Week of Skiing
NEW YORK UPl - Mrs. John F. Kennedy and her children arrived home in New York last night after a week's skiing vacation in the Colorado Rockies.
emergency session following Indonesia’s announcement that it is withdrawing from the United Nations.
Rahman announced that in view of the “mounting threat” from Indonesia, the Cabinet-also decided to:. ,
1.	Ask Malaysia’s allies in the British Commonwealth, to send reinforcements if necessary.
SERIOUS THREAT
2.	Inform the United Nations “on the seriousness of the threat of more intensive Indonesian attack pnd request the United Nations to assist us in defense of our nation in the event of such a happening.”
«i3.\ Establish more training centers to expedite the expansion of Malaysian armed forces.
The withdrawal from the United Nations by. Indonesia,” said Rahman, “follows a series of actions by that country in defiance of world opinion, the rule of law hnd the United Nations.
The existence of small, inde-
pendent sovereign nations like Malaysia is being threatened by aggressive bullyihg land expansionist tactics of our neighbor.”
ACTION PREPARED
For this reason, Rahman said, Malaysia is “prepared to take retaliatory action under the rule of hot pursuit when and if forced to do so for its own existence.”
Malaysian and British Commonwealth forces Jiave heretofore confined their operations to Malaysian territory and waters. ★ ★ ★
A British-aided military buildup already is under way in Malaysia.
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — A mob of 1,000 rioted through Saigon’s main streets for more than three hours today, calling for the overthrow of Premier Tran Van Huong.
Squads of armed marines made no attempts to stop the demonstrators in Saigon, but the rioters manhandled photographers and any police who got in the way,-.
Fights broke out repeatedly as gea ah
the crowd charged about the city.
At one point, the mob unfurled a banner denouncing “involvement of the American government and Ambassador (Maxwell 0.) Taylor in Vietnamese affairs.”	•	,
SCORE INJURED
At ledsT a score of persons was believed to have been injured. Among those hurt was Associated.. Press photographer Huynh Cong La.

The Weather
-t‘V\s..	, i

Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Fair and mild tonight and Tuesday. Low 22 to 30. High Tuesday 36 to 44. Winds 5 to 16 miles. Wednesday outlook, increasing cloudiness and warmer.
Today in Pontiac • Lowest temperature preceding
At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity, 5 •Direction: Southweiterly.
Sun teti today at 5:15 p.m.
Sun rliet Tuatdey at 1:02 a.m. Moon aeti today at lr90 p.m. Moon rIs>es Tuesday at 10:08 a.
6	tuvi.
7	njn.
8	t«m.
Downtown Temperatures
......27	11	a.m.
.	27	12	m.
27	1	p.m.
2 p.m.
30
Saturday and Sunday in Pontiac (as recorded downtown)
Saturday, tnowj
One Year Ago In Pontiac Highest ‘temperature
Lowest temperature ..............
Mean temperature .	........
Weather: Sunny.
DRAW, PARTNER—The latest in fashion for 'ladies with dangerous occupations is a brassfore gun holster demonstrated by a housejtffe in Johannesburg, South Africa. The
f	“	AP PhtMix
designer claims it can be worn without visible detection. Id a-test,-a woman was aide to draw and fire in three seconds. * <	.
(Continued From Page One) not expected to keep city employes from' asking more. Acting through a joint council, em-
ploye groups reportedly will submit their damapds in the near future.	'
NEW PAY SCALES New pay scales were adopted in 1964 after a survey by the
Michigan Municipal League. A reclassification study may be undertaken In 1965.
Finances, with or without
an income tax, will continue as a. major concern in 1965 at city hail. 1,
In the early part of the new year, federal urban renewal officials should rule on the city’s latest revised R20 plan.
$75,000 Taken
Force Man to Open Bank
BRAINTREE, Mass. (UPl) -Gunmen invaded a bank manager’s home early .today, abducted him while one stayed behind to guard his wife, and looted his bank of more than 675,000.
Sr - Sr ★
Three bandits, working quietly in the predawn • darkness, broke into the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Dowling in Hanson, 20 miles from here.
The couple and their 2-month-old son were asleep.
' The bandits roused the couple and forced Dowling, 25, to accompany them to tile South Shore National Bank in a shopping center of this community 15 miles south of Boston. >,
★ ★ ★
The bandits looted the bank’s night deposit vault. Police said the loot “was in excess of $75,-000.”
WOMAN TIED
Before leaving the Dowling
house, the bandits tied and gaggeid his wife, Donna, 20, to the crib of their infant son. One of thq bandits remained behind to guard her.
At one point the child, Geoffrey, awoke with a cry. Mrs. Dowling was released of her bonds by her captor to feed the baby. The she Was tied and gagged again.
Two gunmen and Dowling drove to the bank at the South Shore Plaza, a shopping center.
4	★ . *	★
The bandits forced Dowling to open the bank.
MANAGER SLUGGED The bandits slugged Dowling on the head with a pistol before fleeing in his late model gray sedan 'which later was found abandoned on busy Route 128, about one-half mile from the bank.
The bandits presumably switched to a second car for the getaway.
Juveniles Apprehended
Mink Stole Is Stolen
Pontiac Police Saturday apprehended three juveniles, ages 14, 10 and 7, in connection with the theft of a mink stole valued at $199 from Waite’s Department Store.
Police said that during questioning the three youths Implicated two more juveniles and admitted thefts of jackets, shirts,' pants, pillow cases and sheets from other area stores.
Hlahtit aiife l.owaaf Tamparaturaa This Data in 91 Yuan 58 In 1874	8 in 1888
Sunday
Alpena
Escanaba
Gr. Rapid!
Houghton
Laming
Marquette
MuiktQon
Petition
Trav. City
Albuquerque
Atlanta
Bltmarck
Chicago
Cincinnati
Denver
Detroit
T Temperature Chart 29 25 Duluth
31	15 Port Worth 35 23 Jacktonvllle 29 11 Kantai City
32	2$ Lot Angela!
29	21 Miami Beach 37 28 Milwaukee '30 27 New Orleant
30	22 New York 43 24 Omaha
5$ 31 Phoenix 25	2 $. Lake City
37 32 8. PrancUco
40 18/$. S. Marie 44 23 Seattle 34 28 T ampa
25 13
50	44 57 44 40 30
51	42
74	55 40 25 54 45
32	25
33	28 83 40 42 35 54 50 30 19 35 30
75	55
The theft of the stole took place Saturday at about 12:30 p.m. The youths were apprehended on Saginaw about 10 minutes later.
FORECAST
SkewHi „ l*eW
fluwtei Qj
Until Tw#*4ey Memlng \J Plgum ihew Uw tenuNPOhw spotted flgg* -	.
,	. AP PtWtttH
NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow In the northwest Pacific C«a*t and the north and central Plateau, with ruin In the ecu tfal and southern Pacific Coast is the prediction for tonight. It" will be ooldor In tha north and central Pacific Coast and Plateau area* and the eastern seaboard, but warmer from the Plains through the Ohio, Tennessee and Mississippi valleys,,
1 1 ■ 1	. a ' ■ lh , .	„ ,	( : ' )
Ify , . .■ & w •
The stole was in the bottom of a shopping bag the oldest youth was carrying.
The two younger youths took the stole, police said, while the older boy acted' as a lookout The younger youths said this is the way the three normally operated.	»
SOLD TO ADULT The youths told officers they
sold the merchandise to an adult, who would then dispose of it. .
The -boys were released to the custody of their parents pending outcome of continued investigation by police.
Two Bandits Rob Waterford Motel
In addition, a revised plan may be submitted far the city’s second urban renewal project, K44. V-.'..
NONCASH CREDITS "The key to both projects is noncash credits for the Clinton River tunnel project, completed in 1964 at a cost of $2.5-million.
There are two-methods by which the city can pay Its share of urban renewal costs: A straight cash appropriation, or a noncash credit (money already spent on related Improvements which the federal government agrees to “credit” toward’ the city’s share of the urban renewal tab).
The city has requested added credit for the river work. If successful, tiie city could avoid an actual cash outlay at the conclusion of the urban renewal projects.
★ ★ *
And 1965 should bring other developments: The start of An osteopathic college, M59 freeway development and other projects yet to be disclosed.*
Says Monty Was Scared at Invasion
Birnti|i9hom Area * News
Pontiac State Police are investigating the Sundav morning robbery	of	the	Highlander
Motel, 2201 Dixie Highway Waterford Township.
Sr	Sr	Sr
Night clerk Lewis Messenger, 53, of Fenton, told troopers that two men, one of them carrying a revolver, held him up at 1:15 a.m. Sunday.
★	Sr	*
The pair took $129 in cash and fled, Messenger said.
WASHINGTON UPl - Gen. Omar Bradley Says British Flefij Marshal Bernard. L. Montgomery "w a s sto d a r n scared” during a key battle in Normandy during World War II that he failed to close an allied trap on a German army.
★	Sr Sr
Bradley, who commanded more than 1.3 million American soldiers In the European invasion, said ‘he often has wondered “If I should have taken Monty’s job and we cduld have closed the gap by ourselves.”
The five-star general, how 71 and a watch company executive, spoke of the long- ; standing Falaise Gap dispute in a little • noticed interview in a U.S. Military Academy publication, “The Pointer”
Bradley also reminisced about the late Gen. George S. Patton, the flamboyant tank commander who served under him.
*	Sr *
“Gen. (Dwight D.) Elsenhower and I discovered that if we gave him (Patton) a headline, he’d go 20 miles,” Bradley said.	>
More than $22 billion in taxes were collected last year by the nation’s 50 states, according to Census Bureau statistic.
(Continued From Page One)
New Jersey. Rep. Paul R. Fino, of New York, who bad announced his. candidacy, withdrew. Mr~s‘ ■ W:'	/
The leadership Issues were settled in party caucuses pre? liminary to the noonrapping of gavels that brought the 89th — and best paid-in history. — Congress into session.
- By vote of the last Congress, the pay of members in the new one rises Ur $30,000 a year. It had been $22,500.
President Johnson Will deliver his State of the Union message to a joint Senate-House session at 9 p.m. EST. Radio and “television networks plan live coverage.
★	. Sr ★
The President expected to
present, in broad outline some of his major legislative hopes from this most heavily Democratic Congress since Franklin D. Roosevelt’s 1936 second term.
But. details of Johnson’s desires likely will await a series of later messages.
INCLUDE REQUESTS Almost certainly,-they will in-elude requests for increased Social Security benefits and hos1 pital insurance for aged, some excise tax cuts, and expanded antipoverty program, federal aid for education and an economic ’development program for the U-state Appalachian area.
In both Senate aod House, there are members intent on getting changes in the rules. What success they have, may greatly affect Johnson’s chances for getting some of his more controversial proposals. -
Generally, the efforts to change the rules center on mak-ing it easier to break a filibuster in the Senate and to curb the power of the House, Rules Committee, a bastion of conservatism, to delay or block legislation.
Sr ' 4r	★
Scrapping over rules changes could, at least in the Senate, go on for many days.
Also confronting -the House was a challenge to the seating of the Mississippi delegation, four Democrats and one Republican.
Sr ★	Sr'
The Mississippi Freedom Democratic party contends their election was invalid, (Claiming Negroes were systematically excluded from voting.
SETTLES DOWN Once these organization problems	are disposed	of	and	the
Congress	settles	down	to	busi-
ness, it will have a mass of legislation to grapple with.
High on the agenda are increased Social Security benefits and hospital insurance for the aged, excise tax cuts, an expanded antipoverty program, federal aid for education, and an economic development program for the 11-state Appalachia area.
In dealing with these and other measures ranging from im-migration to presidential succession, the Democrats will have the advantage of a 68-32 margin in the Senate and a 295-140 margin in the House.
91 NEWCOMERS There are 91 newcomers in the House and eight in the Senate.
Among the freshmen .senators will be former Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, brother of the late President John F. Kennedy.
Notably missing from the Senate is Goldwater, who gave up his seat to run for president.
*	Sr ' Sr
His successor from Arizona is his long-time friend, former Gov..Paul J. Fannin.
5 College-Level Classes' Offered at Cranbrook
BLOOMFIELD {RULS college-level courses, including two in which credits can be1
earned, will be offered this year at the Cranbrook Institute of Sqience.
wThe University of Michigan is offering two courses which can be taken on a credit or noncredit basis.
Teaching of science In the secondary school is a 15-week course w h I c l will start Jan. 19.
To meet from 7:30 to 9:30p.m. Tuesdays, the class will be taught by Dr. Burton E. Voss,
to Ship Eyes
DETROIT WV— Four, human eyes, to be used as corneal transplants for victims of blind-ness, were on their way to India today, thanks to the combined efforts of several ham radio operators and three airlines.
■4t ■ Sr St
A Detroit ham radio operator, George W. Finegan, 32, was inspired in the project by,a letter from an opthamologist friend in India who wrote to him of the extent of blindness ih India.
Finegan, a member of the Eye Bank Network, a national radio hams’ organization that operates under the Eye Bank Association of America, put fo a claim under tito rales of
the group — for a surplus of eye bank supplies.
Eye banks ih Iowa City, Iowa, Oklahoma City and Omaha responded. •
2 Local Homes
Fire swept through two Pontiac homes during the weekend causing damage estimated at $2,150.	v
Early Saturday morning firemen wore called to 176 Dellwood to extinguish a blaze caused by children playing with matches ih an upstairs bedroom.
Damage to the two • story brick building and its contents was estimated at $650. Occupant of the home Is Helen Bullock.
Fire fighters were called to 263 S. Shirley at 2:41 a. m. today when fire of undetermined origin broke out in a bathroom closet.
•k h Sr
Officials estimated damage to the contents and the two-story frame building, owned and occupied by Charles Taylor^ at $1,500.
associate professor of science education at the university. & , The other 15-week course is geology for teachers, to 'Jneet frt»m 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Thursdays beginning Jan. 21.
ORIGIN OF EARTH Dr., iWld F. Eschman, tJ. of M. professor of geology, Will discuss the prigin of the earth and its surface Features.
The three courses offered by Oakland University and the institute will he giv^ on a non-credit basis. V Demonstration equipment in the institute’s Hall of physics and Atomarium will be featured in a 12-week physics course for laymen. It will start Feb. 11.
- k ★ Sr
The 7:30-9:30 p.m. sessions Thursdays will be taught by Dr. Richard E. Michel of General Motors Corp.’s research laboratories.
Instructor for the 10-week astronomy course will be Doris McMillan of the institute. Starting Feb. 11, the classes will be held from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Thursdays.
There will be four eight-week sections in lapidary techniques. The institute’s Donald E. Tompkins will teach techniques for the sawing, grinding and. pefishing of semiprecious stones.
The four sections will meet frdm 7 to 10 p.m. Thursdays beginning Feb. 4 .and April 1 and from 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays beginning Feb. 6 and April 3.
Further Information can be obtained at the institute office, open from 9 a.m, to 5 p.m. weekdays.	/
Schools Hold Clothes Jan. 11.to
Pontiac Public Schools- will hold their 10th annual clothing drive Jan. 11-15.
The goal of 20,000 pounds 1 of clothing
amounts to one pound < per student in the school system.
The annual clothing drive"' originated In 1967 when 6,600 pounds of dothlng was collected. Last year the drive netted 26,000 pounds of garments.1
Clothing gathered during the i drive is distributed to three local charities. The charities then make the goods available to needy Pontiac school children.
Parents of children in need of the clothing are given clothing requisitions by the school officialsNLast year, 466 requisitions were issued, according to Don DeVoe, clothing drive chairman.	^
Persons having clothing to contribute, but don’t have children in school, may call the nearest school and the clothing will be picked up.
15 Cruise Passengers Treated
Raging Atlantic Storm Delays U.S.
NEW YORK (AP) - The American liner Independence docked . Sunday—a day late— With 907 Mediterranean cruise passengers who spent a rugged and at times terrifying New Year’s Eve in a raging storm ih the North Altai tic.
Fifteen pasemgers were treated for bruise:). A crewman suffered a dislocated ankle when he was hurled across a deck. n
Capt. Charles Reilly, skipper of, the 26,000-ton American Export Lines ship, said the storm
was "as bad as anything I’ve seen in 38 years at sea.”
The storm, with 60-foot waves and high winds, hit the liner about 600 miles east of New York as it was returning tram a 22-day cruise, The captain
brought the shio to a practical standstill for more than1 so
hours-, heading the bow Into the waves at about two knots to keep the Ship from turning side-wise Into the troughs between the waves. -	. >	<
RIP OPEN DOpt /-/
The waves ripped /open a
weather door and smashedyport’ holes on upper decks.
» A .couple to bed In their cbbln 60 feet above the water line nad a rude wakening when a wave shattered their porthole and they were showered with bits pf glass and about half a ton frigid water.
After hearing of this Incident! some passengers napped ft)lly clothed In public lounges.
Many passengers became seasick.
The ship began to lurch In tha storm Thursday night aa
things were being set up for the New Year’s Eve celebration. Hundreds of champagne glasses were smashed, hut the waiters replaced them. The drinks were served, and the band played on. But the number of dancers and drinkers dwindled rapidly aa the night worq. on. CM New Year's Day, entertainers sought to pep things up/
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The captain wag able to jit « ship moving again tarty iturday. It docked at 7 a m. Sunday. '	/ -’VY
AS Mwm«x
STRICTLY LOWBROW - Sam the “swingin’’ chimpanzee owned by Henry Sprlster of Rochester, Ind., tries his band at rock 'n' roll music. Sam Is already a successful ice-skater and though the sounds he makes are unintelligible, he doesn't e* pect that to hold-him back. Ha knows tha tarns will go “apt" over him.	/ v. j/ //	i::
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1905
THREE
to.Call for Rival toll.IL
|H.,
- JAKARTA, .Indbnesia (AP) — Indonesian President Sukarno is Gxpected to try to form an organization of yotmg nations as a rival to the United Nations. c\j1 It is believed here that in* donesia’s opposition to the seating of Malaysia on the U.N. Se-• curity Council was only a pre* text for quitting the world organization, which the Indonesians claim has <Jdegeqerated into a mens tool’’ of foe United States and Britain. ,
^ v *.* ' * >'.*■
Sukarno is thought to envision Indonesia taking the lead in a
i pomes
Start Drive on 'Hubs' -
MANILA (UPD - The govern-' ment launched a massive drive today against Communist “Huk” terrorists hi Pampanga Province, a principal center in foe recent 'outbreak of anti-Americanism in this country.
About 2,000 troops moved into foe province yesterday to hunt down Red “liquidation squads" blamed for a series, of killings in Pampanga in the past two weeks. '
new- organization of what he calls the Nefos — new emerging forces — as against foe Oldfos — old established forces. He has had no success with such'ideas in foe past!
In 1963, Sukarno got little support when he withdrew Indonesian athletes from foe-Olympic Games and set up the games of. foe new emerging forces — Ganefo.
LITTLE SUPPORT
s It was not' certain whether there was any connection between foe renewal of -Huk activity in the area and the anti-American outbreak, which included an attempt to bomb a U. S. Air Force elementary school.
The focus of foe anti-American campaign moved today to Manila, where youth groups had obtained government permission for “peaceful picketing” outside the U. S. embassy to protest foe killing of suspect-
ed Filipino pilferers oh U.' S. be
military bases in the Philip* pines.
★	Sr
. Demonstration leader Primo Ross said foe pickets would de-. mandthe recall of U. S. Ambassador William M. Blair Jr., who has been bitterly criticized for telling newsmen about the attempted school bombing.
LATEST KILLING
The latest killing in Pampanga occurred on New Year’s day when three Huks who had surrendered to 'foe government were ambushed and shot while riding in a jeep near ArayOt. Mayor Eduardo Tiangco of Ara-yat had been shot and killed a week earlier.
General Alfredo Santoy, armed forces chief of staff, ordered foe troops into Pampanga.
He said military intelligence reports indicate the Huks are trying “to disturb peace and order” during the campaign for foe November national election. ■k k	ir
, “We want to saturate the area with troops and bag foe Huk bands still roaming the countryside," he said.
“We have information that fop Huks want to. influence foe elections by. coercing officials apd other t>eople and killing them if they don’t cooperate."
Nor did he draw much support last October at foe second conference of nonaligned nations in Cairo when he said their approach . was outdated and should be replaced by his concept of foe new emerging forces.
However; Sukarno might propose a regional grouping similar to the. Organization of African Unity that. Would not require other nations- to pull out of the United Nations. An occasion for. him. to put forth this proposal would be foe second African-Asian ^onference in Algiers in March.	'
^ H k	k	it,,	!,
There was no word from foe presidential palace in response to U:N. Secretary General U Thant’s appeal to Sukarno to reconsider his withdrawal decision, Foreign Office Officials were not available for comment since today is a	Moslem	holi-
day. ,
Indonesian diplomats at U.N. headquarters in	New	York,
were believed preparing a formal withdrawal statement to follow up their oral declaration on Friday.
BEYOND MODERATION
Philippine newspapers noted with concern that both Communist China and ‘Indonesia, foe Philippines’ two largest neighbors, were now out of the United Nations and beyond its moderating influences. The general expectation in Manila was trouble ahead.
In Gairo, the government-controlled newspaper All Masaa said it disapproved of Indonesia’s Withdrawal from the United Nations and called on Sukarno to reconsider. The paper said the move would be “tantamount to fleeing from the international battlefield where Afro-Asian nations are scoring a series of victories against imperialism." * * *
In Malaysia, a. British-supported defense buildup was. under way amid expectations that Indonesia would step up its military campaign against foe 16-month-old federation,, which it charges is a device to perpetuate British colonialism in Southeast Asia.
The first members of a 509-man British paratroop battalion were due in Malaysia tonight. A battalion of Gurkhas is due from Hong Kong later this month. There were reports that Indonesia is massing men in Sumatra and along the Borneo border.
Malaysian troops fanned out
(Advtrtiumtnl)
does Getting Up Nights
MAf
1AKE YOU FEEL OLD
Aftsr M> oommon KldttW or Blnddrr Ir-. rlUtlorit often occur nnd mar make you tenia and ntrvous from too fraouont panatet both day and nlthf. Secondarily. you may hue deep and aufTer from Headaches.JBaokaohe and feel old. tired, depreeeed.'; in such Irritation. OYSTBX utuelly brines-fait, relexlns comfort by turbine Irrltatlnt (ermi In strong, acid urine and by analsealo pain relief. Get
OYBTEX at druggists, Feel better fast.
along the1 peninsula’s southern (foasV after a ■ British mine-sweeper captured four armed Indonesian infiltrators in a boat off foe southern tip of Singapore. Lt!». d
Opera Singer Expires
MODENA, Italy (AP) - Italian^ Opera singer Vicenzo Guic-ciardi, 75, died Saturday..	"
II This Week at Simms
Complete WATCH OVERHAUL With PARTS and LABOR of this price.... your watch wjll be-/1 disassembled, cleaned and oiled, m #
— adjusted and timed eiectroni- gmm cally, genuine factory parts used and you get full year guarantee] bn labor. Parts Include stemst, crown, mainspring or balance [ staff at this; price.
''Badly rusted watches,'..automatic*, chronot and broken crystals crt small extra cost, ,_
OVERHAUL AND WATCH CLEANING Only . . . 5.95 j
-SB North Mnnpmini WATCHES Saginaw la fT»TKlH(( M -Main Flaor
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Today-Tues.-Wed. 3-DAY SALE Of ‘The Expensive Look’
Af SIMMS Lower Prices!
SIMMS BASEMENT DISCOUNTS
Save On Bed Pillows
.29
Sellers
Soft and plump bed pillows with plump and1 soft shredded foam rubber, large 17x22< inch size pillows. Colorful floral ticking.
. Heavy Gauge Vinyl—Assorted
6-Ft. Shower Curtains
$1.88
Setters
Long lasting heavy guage vinyl needs no liner---hangs beautifully, won't billow or blow. 72x72 inch size curtain, in assorted.colors and patterns.

3-PcTankette Ensemble
$3.99
Value
IBS
Tankette set of heavy cotton chenille climates tank moisture, snaps on and off easily . . . made to fit any size tank. Lid cover, tank cover and tank top cover. Blue 'Floral' on while.
Special Group Of Our $8.99 Sellers
Deluxe Spreads
Irrs. of $19.95 Value
Our everyday $8.99 sellers now at $2.19 savings. Solid colors In this group of twin or full spreads In popular quilts. Buy for yourself or gift-giving-
rich your child
SIMMS..?*.,
DOMESTICS — Discount JUajnvjnJJj:
ire With Tflusic!
GRINNELL
PIANOS
«r« owned by more Michigan families than »ny ether piano!
TVi§' "Allegro" splnat shown ha» .acoustically designed open louvres. In flva finishes: cherry, ndahogany, walnut, early American maple, French Provincial cherry.
Priced from $695, bench Included.
RENT a piano
Grlnnell'i Rental-Purchase Plan iallows you to rent a new piano. If you buy, ell payments apply.
Downtown Pontiac Store - 2T S. Saginaw St. - Ft 3-7168 Pontiac Mall Store - Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph - 682-0422
i • '	''' ?l *■' :,i ; ;	\* *, ' f *;•,*-	^.-4	•' • ■4.,- %	'» \’v..
Oil-Gas Pioneer Dies
TEMPLE, Tex. (AP) - Clyde H. Alexander, 83, a pioneer in foe oil and gas Industry, died Sunday. Alexander started work
in Pennsylvania when he was 14, 4nd in 1923 became vice president and general manager of Phillips Petroleum Co., a post he held until 1934. ** K I l"
SIMMSS
tonife » 10 4
X (
Save During Our Very Own
JANUARY WHITE SALE
. . . STEEL CABINETS in White Enamel Finialiee!.
therm'ea cabinet for you in this group - our biggest over selection, seconds, but all are in almost perfeet condition. All prices subject to stock on hand. .
Utility Cabinets
Most useful cabinets in assorted style to choose •from. Sturdy all steel cabinets in white enamel^ finish (some beige too). —*r—■£—^—1
Wall Cabinets
Most popular sizes to choose from, easy to open double door styles. White enamel finishes.
Large Wardrobes
All metal construction. — styles to choose from in sliding dopr, double door,.some-with shelves
etc. These are in beige enamel finish.
14“
$29.95
Rase Cabinets
AIL steel cabirtets, Borne with porcelain and Formica tops. 16 to 40 inches in 36.inch height. White and beige enantel finish.
K1-5
■ W $34.95;
China Cabinets
All metal cabinets with sliding glass doors. Choice of 2 sizes — 30 and 40 inches in 65 inch heights. White finish.
® W $34.95
Park Free On Saginaw St. — Use Our Free Layaway-Small Delivery Charge Furniture Store Phone FE 8-6839
SIMMS 25 SOUTH Saginaw Street STORE
Is#*®

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Needed Items At SIMMS ...
Proof! Shop These Tonife & Tues.
2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS
For Hot or Cold Liquids - 9-0z. Size |
Insulated Tumblers
Simmt
Price
6 99
Insulated plastic tumblers with smart straw mat weave pattern. Keeps drinks hot or cold longer than ordinary glasses. Limit 2 sets.
Sturdy Ail Steel Construction
Folding Step Stool
$4.95
Value
297
As shown all steel step stool with 2-itepi with safety stair treads. Chrome with baked enamel finl|hj 9Vi" overall height.
2nd Floor PAINT DEPT.
Seals and Finishes Woods
HKEEHjCK
WATERL0X ««
HEAVY BODY FINISH COAT
TRANSPARENT Pints.....$1.15 Quorte.... $2.00 Oollom ... $6.75
HEAVY BODY ‘
Pint....... $1.30
Quart* 111 • $2.30 Gellone.... $7.95
Seals and (Inlslies fine floors and all Interior wood turfares. Rubs to liigli lustre, makes It much easier to lake care oi your floors and wood surfaces.
2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS
Handy Car LITTER BINS
Fits Over Car Flooi1 Humps
As shown in choice of colors. Holds lifter or accessories. Use In front or back seat.
t
49
W;
Install Yoursalf - Aooordian Style
Folding Vinyl Doors
$4.95 Value—Installs easily with |ust a screwdriver. Fils 32x80 Inch doorways. Cloudy while'' or b#lge colors.
yi voors
947
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Anything In You’d Be
letter
Only one# a year does Simms have a c!ea)xmce in the caUMH^i dept. — true, ouKprices are low every day — but in January
w« want to clean up the one or two of; a kind, so we hovf
• tonife ond Toes*
this annual clearance. These specials are for day only.
once-a-year
Save On Famous BELL & HOWELt
Cameras & Projectors
Auto-Threading Model 245PA
i
$99.50
Value
—Note
Full automatic 8mm projector with raversp., stdl and forward projections- Blower cooled, wide angle lens. $1 holds for 30 days.
Zoom Lens Model 266Y
$164.50 Value —Ndw
128
98
HOWELL
$12440 Value —Now
Model 315 movie camera for 8mm movies . a in full action, color. Easy to handle with >16.95 pistol, grip. Automatic electric-eye for par-?.
Automatic threading, projector with ZOOM, lens, reverse, still and forward projections piys slo-motion ana speed control $1 holds for 30 days.	•	•	* T-
Pistol Grip With This 8mm
BELL ‘ ZOOM Camera
KODAK SAVER Movie Camera
$19.95 Seller ; —Now f
As shown — 8mm roll load camera with f2.8 lens, rapid crank Winding,! enclosed viewfinder. Free rail coloc film and movie making booklet included. $1 holds.
.Instant Loading — Auto Electric • Eye
KODAK Insfamatic Cameras
Model 300 Outfits
$49.50 Instant bade alee* trie eye camera for color snaps, slides or 'black 'n white prints. Bulb In flash. $1 holds.
35“
Model400 Outfits
$39.50' seller — It bods instantly, electric eye for perfect pics and built-in motor advance. Built-in flash for auto flash pi a too. $1 hold?.
45“
Model 600 Outfits
$94.50 Seller^—compact and lightweight, (2.0 lens with electric eye. Instant load* plus shutter speeds 0 time to 1/500 secs. No guess*, work. $1 holds. *
liii
Automatic Movie Maker — 'KODAK*
ZOOM Movie Camera
Formnr $119.50 oulO el«ctrlf eyn, built In filter, fast ft.6 InnsM and ZOOM for dramatic movin shots. $1 holds.
S9»
‘BAIA’ 8mm Action Editor-Splicer
American Made — $22 Value
Ai shown — with targn rewinds, rawest dry spllcnr with vtewer for ndit-Ing film. $1 holds.
Genuine 'BUSHNELL' 7x35
Rinoculars
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SIMMSlf

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THE frONTLAC PRESS, MQNDAX JANUARY 4, 1965;
In the early days try, silver coins of nations were made
of this coun-1 hold silver find foreign coins, all denomi-1 There were no silver mines in from house- “the U S.
Almost 30 per cent of capital# spending by American manufacturing firms is done in Canada.
Resume in Pay Dispute
‘ CHICAGO (UPI) -..Rail and union negotiators meet today for the first time in a month of hopes of settling a 20-month wage dispute that could flare into,a nationwide rail strike. I If both Aides stick to their promise to offer nothing new at today’s meeting, the session 'will be a short — and perhaps futile — one. *	//
Joseph *W. Ramsey, v i c e president of the international Association of Machinists, wrote James E. (Doc) Wolfe, chief rail negotiator, last week asking for talks to reopen today.
The railroad machinists, electricians and sheet-metal workers have refused to sign contracts along the lines 13 other railroad unions signed with the carriers. T h e contracts p r o V i d ed for nine-cent-an-hour pay raises for each of three years. *. '* ,
The three holdout shopcraft unions are demanding h i g h e r increases for skilled Workers, but. said they, are willing to accept the nine cents for unskilled workers. .	>-'/>$
Wolfe insists that to grant any j of the workers more than nine-cents - an - hour increase would “be breaking faith with the unions that have signed.”
The 13 unions that agreed to t e r m s represent 650,000 workers. The t h r e .e holdouts have 52.000 members.
But a strike by them could, tie up 187 of the nation!s rail-; roads, shutting down more than! 80 per cent of all rail traffic. " I Ramsey said he asked for a resumption of negotiations “because we are aware of the.economic effect a strike would have on the nation.”
S ^HAppliance Buyers, Oilie Fretter Says, “Don’t Miss This Sale

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THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965

’ i
a SE^MA, Ala., W- CivU rights workers plan to* meet here tomorrow to organize Dr. Martin Luther King's new voter registration campaign in. Ala-bama. £*
King ceiled for the new civil rights drive Saturday in his first major speech since winning the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize. v " ;
He promised a “march on Hie ballot boxes by the thou* sandS’’ unless the campaign is successful.
After the speech to a crowd -that filled, the Drown Chapel A. M. E. Church and spilled out into the street, King returned to his home in Atlanta.
vote everywhere in the .next
The SCLC field -secretary said Negroes with th4 ballot could wield the balance of power to 1966 when Alabama elects tf new governor, is legislature, si U.S. senator, eight congressmen, and hundreds of local officials.
King had urged the -"Negroes not to rest "“until the whole of Alabama and the rest of the Deep South cuts out tbe pancer of ftacism.’’
PLAN APPEAL The chrU rights leader promised that if . Negro voter registration applicants are turned down, an appeal will be made first to Gov. George Wallace and then, if Wallace foils: to remedy' the situation, to the legislature in hope of broadening the registration laws. .. .. .
He said he would return “in just a few days’’ to take personal command »f the voter registration driVe.
STAFF MEMBERS He. left behind the Rev. James Bevel, S field secretary, and other staff members of bis Southern Christian Leadership Conference, ’ v ,
Bevel called tomorrow’s meeting after vowing that “If we get organized and work hard, we should be able to
Selma, a city of long-simnier-ing racial tension and scene of violence last summer after past sage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, was apparently quiet in the wake of King’s call for the dew drive.’
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Tf:
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Jt West Huron Street
Pontiac, Michigan
MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965
ud Publisher
Bowies H. PmoBiu n Executive Vice President and ' Business Uiniger
John A. Rust ' secretary and Advjjrtisins Director
Haut J. Ran Managing Editor
It Seems to Me ....
Auto Makers Are Confident
’65 to Be Another Big wear
This, is the interesting1 season when automobile leaders define our economic condition and their own prospects for the ensuing year. Everyone is interested.
And especially are we in Pontiac.
★ ★ ★
Hence, your humble scrivener will try and piece together the m o s t relevant and significant comments from these capable administrators.
The consensus (shows a definite unanimity in regard to 1965. Although the fourth quarter of 1964 seemed to produce several “best weeks,’* it didn’t equal the high hopes of some industry leaders. Those- damaging s&lkes were mry tainly the bete noire jot the Nation’s automobile plants. ' Wf > • pfj-'j
★ ★ 4 -The ,1 eaders are coiivincH,LvI that 1965 should equal—or pass—1964. And yet- hi 1964 t hS i-' industry- set’ production recoidKII; galore and kept .employment at highest levels. The first quarter pt of the year is never the best, but forecasts say in 1965 it will run from “satisfactory” to “impressive.” ■
★ % ★ ; ★.
Lynn Townsend, Chrysler president, and one of the sage and conservative industrialists in the Nation, . suggests his companies will steam through the first three months1 at record levels.”He even cast a covetous eye on the ten mil-lion mark for the whole industry for the year.
* , ★ ★ ★
Several automotive men look for an increase in winter production over 1964. Pontiac Motor’s first quarter was so strong last year, I don’t see how this could apply to us and a plain, old-fashioned replay of 1964 will leave us very happy. /
Henry Ford declares 1965 jn a y reach a 7% increase over last year, an astounding achievement as 1964 was a champion in its own right. Mr. Ford has always been reason-. ably conservative in his predictions. ★ ★ ★
American Motors’ Roy Aber-nethy foresees “five years of optimism’’ which would constitute the longest streak of high level prosperity in history. He, loo, believes the year at hand will produce “record sales for the industry.”
And finally, to get down to case cards locally, we quote Frederick G, Donner, chairman of the largest corporation in the world and the proud papa of Pontiac Motor Division, Pontiac’s Fisher Body Plant and CMC Truck & Coach' Division. This city is a very important— unit in the most far-flung. Industrial giant of them all. An eloquent method of showing Mr. Donner’s belief in the 12 months ahead is merely to quote his declaration that GM plans to spend $1.1 billion in capital investments this year. This Is about 20% more than wjim ploughed hack into the huge industry in the phenomenal year just ended.
“This step,” he said, “reflects the continuing growth oT motor vehicle demands worldwide.
★ ★ ★
Automotive figures are sometimes bewildering because of the ways In which they can be expressed. One speaker discusses passenger cars In the U S. and another includes overseas. The ensuing talker tak<«H in trucks and finally you can be con* fuscg ikj /fljttisUcs that are actual
‘ ■ • V,
IH
Bp1 /£.
sales in a calendar year followed by f a man who discusses, production. However, from this welter of divergent factSj one thing stands out. sharply:
; - The current trend is strong-1965 should be prosperous. Locally^ for several consecutive years, we have basked in the luxury ‘ and limelight of an outstanding automotive achievement and accomplishment'.
It’s this: '	,
However well the industry as a Whole lids fared, Pontiac has done {fetter.	tk ’ * ■ ' ":
w Don’t forget that, ®
★ ★ \||f
Over this prolonged stretch of. increasing automotive business and record^Bmashing years, Pontiac Motor Division lias led the parade 1U percentage'; pf upswing. We hayei fonght our way into the top ranks f h r b n g h shber merit and customer acceptance. y	\
Ana n o t hing — absolutely nothing —can replace this last.
E, M. Estes and his Capable associates are in the van in automotive know-how. Their success has-spelled, the well-being of this whole general area, always bolstered by a big, powerful ally on South Boulevard that turns out the best bifses, trucks -and coaches in the business. In fact, during the last month, GMTC chalked up an all-time record for one week by completing .3,309 trucks and buses. The previous mark was set nine years ago which speaks graphically Qf the current achievement.
Voice of the People:
pM' fioSVatrioiisin Suffering (in Local Area
Doesn’t the national anthem mean anything to . Americans? I was at one of our school’s football games, when the national anthem was played. Some people continued their conversation,-hats remained on men’s heads, and even laughter could be heard., Most of these were adults. Teens have more respect for.theiFcountry. Adults should try to set a better example. -BRENDA FRITCH CLARKSTON-

How can a man fly a flag of a foreign country in front of his tavern and call himself a good citizen? The flag of die United States is beautiful Jto me and I respect it.	, .•
» /	JUST .DRIVING PAST
★ ★ ★
And by the way, if Unde Tom down in New Orleans, and Aunt Clarissa up in Fairbanks want to buy a new car or truck, make sure they get a GMTC or Poqtiac. That’s where YOUR bread is buttered,
Never forget it.
One of the few specks against the •horizon is the Wall Street yackety-yak about international monetary "crises. “They say,” the'recent British bank move should act as a depressant on European trade. The effect, could be felt here. “They” also sayr; the British face' another monetary crisis late in February and the results of that are problematical.
* ★ ★ ★
This negative feqtpre is like the gold standard to me: I don’t understand it. Once, I asked the late Senator Arthur H. Vandenbero to explain the gold standard and the Michigan great half-arose and said: “Only five men In the world today really understand It well enough to explain it—and I’m not one.”	,	,
Some of President Johnson's adminiMtrnUrn Analysts “foresee a slowdown in 1963, but no actuul slump Is expectsd.” They’re considering a few palliatives if it happens, including another tax reduction and immediate public works projects. Also, some labor lenders sense un economic Weakness ahead, although, again, no one of them is’out waving a warning flag,
"it A	■$*' 4
Sooooooooo, we bring this resume to a dose with a parting thought that I've expressed before:
No matter what happens in 1965, Pontiac will fare better than the average. Our basic Industries are so firmly entrenched now and so well handled that we'll prosper above the general run. If it’s a great year, we'll do a bit better than the rest. If
F»
—I
‘Gasoline. Stations Perform Real Service’
lb me, any profession where one pays the high dollar is not really a service—it's a money-making proposition., p . t '■’it*	★	★ •
The people who need our happy holiday greetings are the gasoline station attendants. They get fferid only for the gasoline, but toe service they give is unpaid for. They check toe car and clean toe windshield for free. 1. f -’	, \ W. F. SHEDLOUSKY
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP *
‘New Veterans Law Will Hurt Disabled’
David Lawrence Says:
Constitution Is Being Eroded
WASHINGTON - This is the 'beginning of a new year in government—and the start of an era unprecedented in American history.- For it marks the climax in a gradual, erosion of the written con-g stitution adopt-l ed bthe! people in 17881 and amended in 1791.
"■ It confirms the emergence of an unwritten Constitution whose mandates are being set forth ftom time to time not by the people on their representatives, but by an pligarchy or “presidium” of five to nine mien who are appointed for life.
14 last by the Supreme Court on, the novel theory that the objectives sought by the “demonstrators” have since been sanctioned by a new federal law which wasn’t in effect when the offenses were committed.
lawmaking powers were ever granted to toe Supreme Court.
Yet the Constitution specifically forbids Congress to pass any retroactive statute in criminal cases, and no such
, A momentous change indeed has come to the American governmental system. Some day the people will become aroused and will take steps to restore the written Constitution and require the Supreme' Court itself, to Obey “the law of the land.”-—'
I commend /»ov. Romney and his colleagues on the Veterans Homestead TaarExemption law. Increasing veterans’ taxes by twofold is your Way of saying, “Thanks for a job well done,”
. ★ ★ ★ .
Disabled veterans are handicapped today and are denied the privilege of performing top rate jobs because ef toe injuries they receivedsin war. I am sure they will all thaak you and support you in toe future.
Why don’t you take all the tax exemption? You could hurt a little more.	,-j it*;; ‘	■: ,
CHARLES ANDERSON WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
Man Tells Why He Supports Socialists
IAWRENCE
Capital Letter:
I support and advocate toe principles of the Socialist Labor Party, and have never, been a member of any other political party.'A person’s head and heart should be where his feet are. Let those of other countries solve their own problems.
SAMUEL HAGON 8119 GARDEN
PPT_
How Will LBJ Interpret His November Mandate?
The Better Half
More than ever, they feel free now to retain or to discard whatever they please from toe old Constitution.
The 1788 document has in it a provision specifying that amendments cSuld be made only as the result of a two-thirds vote of both houses of Congress and ratification by three fourths of the states. , < ■k +	*
This no longer appears to be obligatory, as the Supreme Court of the United States now has assumed the right to make “interpretations” of its own which are supposed to have the same legal effect as constitutional amendments.
Just three weeks ago—on Dee. 14, 1964—the high court handed down a ruling which illustrates how completely the process of making, constitutional amendments has in recent years been revolutionized.
The Supreme Court has just proclaimed that toe power of Congress to “regulate commerce” means the right to prescribe also what personal services must be rendered by one citizen to another if in his business he happens to use property or goods of any kind which at some time In toe past may have crossed a state line.	V
Even the provision of the Constitution which reserves to the states the right to maintain order within their own boundaries is no longer considered by the Supreme Court to be binding.
Thus, certain trespassers in restaurants who were convicted In state courts in a previous year for refusing to leave private premises when ordered by the police were freed on Dec.
things decline, we won’t recede as far.
What more can we ask?
★ ★ ★
And with that comforting a thought and happy conclusion I say sincerely
“Happy New Year.” Yes, that’s what lies ahead:
, A new and a happy yearl*
—Hakold A. Fit2qinXld
-By RUTH MONTGOMERY
WASHINGTON - As Congress sets up shop at its old stand on. Capitol Hill toiS|gg| week, Presi-F dent Johnsonj has been do-1 ing some soul-searching’ to determine exactly! what his “man-j date from t h e L people” means, f Some critics, 1 fearful that RUTH LBJ is “t o oMONTGOMERY power-hungry,” flinch whenever he uses the word “mandate,” but since President Eisenhower was accused of the other extreme. — of' insufficient use of presidential power—it is interesting to review what Ike had to say on the subject at his first press conference following his own reelection sweep eight years ago.
The old soldier told assembled newsmen that he had “a mandate froin the people to convert toe GOP Into modern Republicanism.”
Declaring his intention 1 of spending the next four years working for that concept, he said the people reelected him for only one reason: to push to completion the program he had already begun.
Ike spoke out vigorously In favor of balanced budgets, and achieved that goal In '56, ’57 and '60. President Kennedy reversed the trend: but LBJ halved the deficit during his first year In office, and hopes to change the Democratic Image of fiscal Irresponsibility by hold-1 ing down this year's budget to around $100 billion.
The Eisenhower-Johnson technique of flattering and cajoling Congress, rather than using the sledge - hammer approach of Presidents Roosevelt, Trumun and Kennedy resulted In a high degree of success for their legis-Ijitlve programs, Including far-reaching civil' fights acts and tax cuts. ’
Only history can show to what extent LBJ shares Ike’s dislike ot deficit spending, tor although Johnson is demanding economies in federal bureaucracy, his spending plans for education, Medicare and anti-poverty programs could set off an inflationary spiral.
One thing at least is certain. President Eisenhower’s ballooning hopes of "making over the GOP into modem Republicanism” made a crash landing with the capture of the party by Goldwater conservatives in ’64.
(DittribuM by King FMturti Syndlcnltl
‘The only good thing about snow is that no one ever / sends us a bill for it.”
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages
Father’s Turn
The Craig (Colo.) Empire-Courier
A,
Weddings today have become so costly now that it’s the father of the bride who breaks down and weeps.
sion of being uninterested In the problem, which is vital for her. But after all. the experience they have gained, they know qn|te well that their initiative will remain sterile.
Tardy...
The Toronto Globe
Reunification
First Cabinet Change
Pe Genepe
(Geneva, Switzerland)
Ogden (Utah) Standard-Examiner
At that first press conference after his ’56 landslide, Ike said he plffered from toe Democrats In Insisting on the integrity ef toe government's fl*c«i policy, a sound dollar, and toe dlapersion M as much power As possible to states and local communities.
In the ’64 campaign it was Goldwater rather than Johnson who talked of returning the pow-pr to the people, but the pre-
ponderance of voters apparently were content to leave it where
One would have to nourish strange illusions to*believe that the new Kremlin masters 'will show themselves ready to consider the reunification of Germany.
★ ★ *
Even if one would suggest to them toe creation ef a unified neutral state possessing only a modest army, they would reject such a proposition, because they know quite well that this would entail toe Immediate liquidation of Ulbrlcht and his colleagues, wee
Besides, unloss compelled to, a communist state never abandons one of Its conquests. Moreover, for the Soviot Union, which is always preoccupied with Its security, the eartarh zone constitutes an additional protection. From the polHtnal as well ns from the milnary pint of view, the Soviet Union is Interested in maintaining toe 1'status quo.",
★	★ k '■ l jl
la Paris, the western ministers believed that adequate steps should be taken flth the Soviet Union so (Ifit toe German people should be iNe to exercise their right of aelf-determlnnUon. The intention
President Lyndon B. Johnson has made the first change in his Cabinet since his election to a full term In the White House.
W ' , - tor . k
Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges has resigned and will be succeeded on Jan. 15 by John T. Connor, New Jersey industrialist and president of the Merck & Co. drug manufacturing firm.
The level of water In the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence ays-tem, too high or too low, Is a recurring problem. Loss and damage result from either condition. Now, the International Joint Commission has announced a study to discover whether there is a possibility of controlling water levels. Such a study surely is needed. The question to 1m asked immediately is why it has been so long delayed.
' ★ k k
Mr. Hodges, former Democratic governor of North Carolina, said he was quitting because of his age—he’s 17.
k k k
Washington sources also expect Douglas DUIon, secretary of the treasury, to step out of the Cabinet soon.
These changes are to be expected as President Johnson burns his “LBJ" brand e v e n, deeper on the admlnletretlon. r
Eight United States states, Ontario end Quebec are chiefly concerned lu toe problem. In toe atmoephere of crisis toll year, several of these authorities (including both Canadian provinces) have held conferences. The results Invariably amounted to agreement that the problem Is serious and growing more so, that something must be done, and that It will require cooperation.
★	★ k

It has taken the United States
and Canadian government**an unconscionably long time to take Ivan preliminary action In a problem which Is clearly a matter of national Interest for both.
Scientists Say
The Danville (Va.) Commercial Appeal
It Is —' In Washington.
•/
L wi ^
Is laudable and Germany's allien must net give the Impree*
■	m.
Scientists tell u* that w#»r« taller In the morning toon we are hr the evening, Most of us have noticed, too, that we're shorter around the end of tjhe totMtoiC*,,'«,,	»,
, I ■ ’V. - ,	'	’
: 4' "
Th* Pontiac Pr*M to dcItociM by ' tor so cento • wctki whor*
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moiled In. Oakland, Oanataa, UV-..Maw jm
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utting on Pressure
Ott-Base Bias Still Exists in Germany,\bui Not LiketQld
“The way I see if, a Negro soldier goes to (he joints where Negroes, predominate because he knows that there he won’t overhear any racial slurs. CHARACTER GUIDANCE “The. only way to, try to get the men to stop going to -these places is to try first Die idealistic approach in lectures, character guidance periods and so on.
If that doesn’t work, then they have to he shamed into realizing that they are wrong and acting against their own interests.”
The Army claims that it cannot put segregated \ places off limits , to soldiers but a spokesman for the German Justice Ministry disputes this, sayings-“The U.S.' Army is not prevented by anything in-our laws from using off limits to stop dis-
Bad Kreuznach’s Mayor Gerhard Muhs told bar owners that Germany could, not tolerate such practices. As a result, bars Which once were segregated and where there was the constant -danger of brawling now have mixed crowds. •	, ^—
Lt. Col. C. M. Hurtt, Baltimore, Md., post executive officer at Hanau, said:

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Limited quantities , « . while they lest

THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANU&BX 4, 1965
- By JOHN WEYLAND
BAD KREUZNACH, Germany (AP) — It used to be that a Negro soldier entering certain bars here would be thrown out. If toe bar manager tried to ihsist on racial equality, white GIs might threaten to smash up toe joint — and the manager quickly excluded Negroes to save his property and his business.
Things have changed. You find mixed groups of white and Negro soldiers in bars that used to be segregated.
The same appears' to be true of most towns and villages in West Germany where American troops are based.
But there are still many bars and restaurants where voluntary segregation .. is practiced either by white or .Negro, soldiers, and bar owners toe toe line set by their customers. PARTICULARLY ACUTE
A U.S. government committee studying overseas discrimination in the armed forces report-ed last week that problems of discrimination in off-base bars, restaurants and housing were particularly acute in Germany and the Far East. ;
The U.S. Army in Europe replied that “toe heat has been on this situation for 2% years and we feel we have made' tremendous strides. The report is. not reflective of the current situation.”	* *
★ A *
An on-the-spot check of dozens of GI bars and restaurants in Bad Kreuznach, Frankfurt and Hanau, where there ate heavy concentrations of U.S. troops, shows some changes from conditions of a year or so ago.
In these cities it is still easy to find voluntary segregation, but Army authorities, in cooperation with mayors, have been putting pressure both on soldiers themselves and upon bar; keepers and restaurant owners.
SETUP CODE The police chief of Hanau, which has 17,000 American soldiers among a German population of 50,000, recently called all bar and restaurant owners together and set up a code of rules. ,	*
They call for good behavior, no sales to drunks, no. credit and H9Q dlscrimiriation-dufi-Jn.jrace, religion or nationality.
. Despite all the efforts, there are places in Hanau, Frankfurt and Bad Kreuznach where only people of one color, white or black, are welcome. . > •
In Hanau, despite official efforts, one bar owner said he does not - want Negro soldiers. He tglls them there’s a “private party” going on. He was the only barkeeper who admitted discrimination.
SIGNS GONE
Two years ago, many bars in Germany had signs: “We reserve the' right to refuse service.” These have disappeared.
'Boom Times' Are Ahead for Chicago
CHICAGO (ifl — Strategic Air Command bombers will streak high over Chicago today, begin; ning a three-month training mission expected to strain windows and perhaps nerves to the breaking point
Residents have been warned to expect repeated sonic booms caused by B58 Hustler bombers flying at supersonic speeds, w ' ★ v
The planes are attached to the 30Sth Bomb Wing at Bunker Hill Air Force Base in Indiana.
The Air Force said Chicago was selected for toe simulated bomb, runs because it “resembles a target similar to one In potential enemy territory.” The potential target was not ldentl-fled
(Advartlaamanl)
IT'S TRUE
; a feed teele ■«* remedy will de wander* fer yeer fcealtfc. le sere It It made tram pare kerbs end eat frem barmfel dtp* ar ebeml-aal draft wbleb aftaa have ■»> wanted tide effeeti. Yea ana’t bay a better teale thaa 0-4IR-WA airrill, Me all.harb mad), alat made tram •ad’t barb*. Tbit famaal remedy bat brnafbt tan attentive retell* It Wlllldnt dar* lag lb* pail 10 . yaart «ad «ae ...tadi
crimination. If the Americans want to do it, they can:”
AH authorities admit that what problem is left i$ primarily created by American soldiers themselves."
When it comes, to" housing for Negro soldiers and their famines, both the authorities and Negro soldiers say some progr ress has been Made although Germans still go to Army bases
and say: “I want to rent — but not to Negroes.”	>
Theoretically, such housing offers won’t be listed at all.
But at some bases, there still are two lists — one for white Soldiers and one for Negro soldiers.
There are evidences, however, toat-Army headquarters is cracking down on officers who maintain such separate lists.
The United: States had an av-lmi erage of 50.5 persons per square [i960 census.
,1 ii i........wr	' .1	-..1,1111. .iiiiiaiitiiiai
CWimSHOR .»
Bloomfield Miucle
WILL BE CLOSED
Tuesday aid Wednesday—January I and I SEE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY FOR IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
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MKHFI1
World News Round
GoastGtiard
m
VSHINGTON Wi—The Coast Guard says U.S. ships are picking up refugees from die waters around Cuba at the rate of 1,000 a year. / >
In a report last night on the service’s 1964 activities, the ■ Coast Guard said more than 6,000 Cubans have been brought to the mainland by its vessels since the Florida Keys patrol went inot operation in 1958.
It said" many of the Cubans had been rescued from boats that were pot seaworthy.
In all, the Coast Guard said it saved 3,000. lives last year,
THE PONTIAC HESS. MONDAY* JANUARY 4, 1965
along with ship?' and cargo valued at $2.1 billion.
Latest polls Indicate that American prestige overseas is higher pow than a few years ago. despite recent raids on U.S. libraries abroad, the, United States information Agency reports.	.
USIA Director Carl Rowan said one recent opinion study in France “would indicate that the average French citizen has a far better opinion of'the U.S. than the general comment about troubles-with President de Gaulle, conflicts with France,
Waterford liirtship High School
CREDIT COURSES
Registration: January 5,6', 7,1965. - 7 to 8 P.M. Waterford Township High School
Both first and second semester courses will be offered.
FEE: $18.00 (Special tea $2.00 if you were enrolled by September SO, 1104 working for high school diploma and a resident of the Waterford School District.) *
Glasses Begin the Week of January 11,1965
For Additional Information Call: Mr. Merritt OR 3-1241 or 682-5084
TIME: All Classed Begin et 7:00 P.M. and are 10 Weeks lb Length. •
COURSE	BLOB.	BOOM	DAY
Algebra (Elem.)........	.... WTHS	217	M-W
' Algebra (Adv.),........	...vWTHS	203	T-Th
Amer. Government.,....	.... WTHS	204 ;	T-Th
Amer, History	....WTHS	202	M-W
BluePrint Reading (Bldg. & Mach. Trades)..-.	...WTHS	Drafting Room	M-W
Basic Mathematics. . ...	...WTHS	205 ,	M-W
l Bookkeeping ..		216	T-Th
Chemistry (Beg.)					113	M-W
Commercial Law				218	T-Th
Crafts (Leather, Ceramics, Metals)					Art *	T-Th
Drawing, Sketching and Painting				*..WTHS	Art	M-W
Economics %				204	M-W
English (High School)....	...WTHS,	102	M-W
French (Beginning) , .....	...WTHS	109	M-W
German (Beginning).....		• 109 '	T-Th
Mane Geometry				203	M-W
Shorthand (Beg.)				220	T-Th
		102	T-Th
Trigonometry .......	...;%THS	201	T-Th
Typing (Adv.) and Office Machines.. A....	...WTHS	221	T-Th
Typing (Beg[)				223	M-W
World Geography.......	...WTHS	208	M-W
World History i.........,		202	T-Th
Sociology of Family Life.. -		213	T-Th
and so forth, would have yob believe.”
Another stock-taking in India, Rowan said, indicated that both Indian students and the general population hold America “in far higher esteem than waslifeTwe a few years ago."
of Gangster Is Bombed
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Arson investigators said today the fashionable home of gangland figure Leo (Lips) Moceri, which 5was destroyed by an explosion dnd Saturday, had been bbrnbedU. *	-
Neighbors reported that several hours before the bombing they saw “more- persons travel to and from the house than are house hunting in the summer."
4	4	4 ♦ -
State Arson Investigator Harold Carter said’the blast “definitely was not accidental.” Authorities declined to speculate if the bonding was an attempt on Moceri’s life or a warning.
The house in suburban Northampton Township - apparently was empty when the incident occurred. Moceri and his brother, Mike, Mid sister-in-law, Ann,’ who live in the house, were reported' to have been visiting relatives in Detroit. DESTINATION UNKNOWN No attempt was made to reach Moceri in Detroit because, Sheriff’s Detective Mark Hef-ferman said, “We don’t know where in Detroit he went.’" Carter estimated damage (o the three-story stone home at $25,000.
4	4	4
”* Moceri, who now uses the name-Leonard Martin, was re leased from the Ohio Penitentiary in 1957 after serving five years on his guilty plea to. extorting a bootlegger, in Toledd.
In the late 1940s he was listed as the nation’s, most-wanted trigger man. Moceri has been questioned, but nevfer convicted in gangland slayings in ffetroil California and Yourjgstown. Currently, he is under indictment for income tax evasion.
The nation’s 34,498 post of fices handled more than 67 billion pieces of mail last year.

era
OF QUALITY MS
f/roes Clearance of All -Fall and Winter Stock
Regular $12.95414.95
$C^80
NOW
i
FLORSHEIM SHOES		FLORSIIEIM SHOES
Tor Men		for Women
1MSCONTINUED STYLES		DiVonlinucd Full Pulternn
Regular $19.95 to $24.95		Regular $16.95 to $19.95
al$1680 . IJgBO		NOW *1390
I Rack of	ij!;
MEN’S DRESS SHOES	fzTQO j
Urol, fn Shot 6f 912.95 to $15.95 at....O
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LA PAZ, Bolivia—Gen. Rene Barrientos’ military junta says it has put down an attempt by the national police to overthrow the government,
. 4	'4	4
sThe Interior Ministry announced that 20 persons' were detained at the National Police Academy after an outbreak there was crushed /without a shot being fired. Col. Augustin Morales, commander of .the police, was among those held,
NOVARA, ItBIy—The five children of a Britishatomic physicist perished last night in flames whidi destroyed a wooden Alpine chalet where they were holidaying with their parents.
Police said the Ike in the cottage at Macugnaga, near the jSWibs frontier, probably was caused by an overheated wood stove.
Their parehts, Dr. Clement Green, 30, and his wife, Rosemary, 32, were dining with friends at a restaurant when the flamesr broke out in the ski cot-
The children were Miranda and Rina, 9, David, 6, Dominique, 5, and Matthew, 3. y
M<5&30W--Reports from Mongolia indicate that efforts7 are still under way to topple the Soviet-oriented regime/ in the Soviet Union’s only ^sian satellite.
4,	4 / 4	- '
Mongolian Communist party chief Yumzhagin Tsedenbal attacked three 'members of a presumably anti-Soviet faction he has been fighting since 1962 at a party meeting, two weeks ago in Ulan Bator, the capital:- The three were expelled for “factional, antiparly activities/’
Learned Philosopher
LONDON, Eng. (ffl -T.-By-a strange: twist, the narae/of a learned theologian and philosopher Of the. 13th Ceqtury, John
O&tap' Scotys, has come to mean a^^impletbn/^f i ::J,‘ Opponents of Ms doctrines called hik' followers “Duiiuses” and the n&me hag stuck fate iguage as a term of derision.
UmontetS,:^ M jmembern, are the majority party fn the Northern Ireland ^fprliament. the Nationalist Partyhas nine tpembers. There qrefiwne other scattered parties repifesented. -
111
18a /\ III
§X>f
1 as i
Thru the Storms Tomorrbw .1.
B, F, Good rick KOROSEAL j Rigid Vinyl Doors and Whjte Clear Through Non Gonductore
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Member afPontiac Aren Chamber of CohapetCe _ |
Waterford	Oil |45M_
WE DRASTICALLY NEED CASH!
OUR INVENTORY PERSONAL PROPER" IS DUE AND WE NEED DOUGH REAI
OVER-STOCK INVENTORY!
WORLD WIDE’S 10-GIGANTIC STO.RES AND WAREHOUSEARE ALREADY JAMMED TO THE RAFTERS AND CARLOADS OF NEW MERCHANDISE IS ON THE WAY. WE MUST RE-> DUCE THIS STOCK IMMEDIATELY WE’RE THI!
SACRIFICING THIS SURPLUS BY OFFERING
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OPEN NITELY 111 9 NO MONEY DOWN, NAME YOUR OWN TERMS
EMERSON WE CHALLENGE THEM ALU PORTABLE TV
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n
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JANUARY 4, 1965
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CUT FROM MATURE CORN-FED. BEEF—"SUPER-RIGHT"
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BONELESS RUMP OR	|
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Sunnybrook Fresh, Grade "A1
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DOZEN
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MILD AND MELLOW
mmamA	:v|B; i qt.
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Orange Juice. .
A&P GRADE "A"
Blended Jiiice •
AW GRADE "A"	.	?' ’^'v
HIGH?
Miintu «on*i
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THE PQN'tUC^RESS/KOyPAVt.^^Ny^Ky
slip: TpS^s^mS^fiw?f^:
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tSHECK U&r. Evwy-Dey Law Mem w A^S&I^ - if rfE... „ iT-If"
HMinmIry Needs *
COMPARE
mmmrnm
WHAT
mm
i-Yi PAYING?
® jy
ii-oz. CQc • a f t a MUjflP
6-oz.
KP^fF
SHI
Hm GmuSikt*	1!S*3W<
jpii* VICUII 1^* • p e^e • / fii .«§3f.
, '' _*■ * llliilllil
Ajax Cl #*J*e"di
Kr^sr,	3
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v 1 J»
DETERGENT # # #B*JJ
12-oz. 59*
LIQUID
Vi GAL. SIZE
25
gfflj
39
■ V* GAL. LIQUID $iz|
*-1 iright sail Vizi 39
Spray Starch
; - si| in4 , ,..
. Bright Sal FABRIC CONDITIONER PLASTIC 59
. Climalene w*™ *»™« ■ ■ 5$ j Bright Sail Bleach «b 44* . Action Bleach ’^««v|:69* Bright Sail cleanser % $$ 25* all Detergent *«*.., vM 71*
3-LB. |W
giaht.^JA'
Cheer Detergent Oxydoi Detergent
Wisk Liquid WnsaPlue ftinso Blue
6c OFF
LABEL f • • 25e OFF
KING SIZE	i
5c OFF
URGE SIZE »
Ivory Soap Ivory Soap Spic & Span
URGE BARS
MEDIUM SIZE BARS
I-LB. Ole WG. 40	•
Comet Cleanser Lux Liquid
• 1-LB. s • Va-OZ. PKG! 2 FOR 43c
1-PT. 6-OZ. SIZE
$wm - PKG.	W
3-LB. 1 '/4-OZ. PKG.	79
. 2»LD. i’k-	55
$h	*i
5-LB. " 12-OZ.	1M
1 PKG.	■
Y-LB. 6-OZ. 1 PKG.	26
2-LB.	mill
6-OZ.	#8
PKG.	
) FOR	35
J so.	31
3-LB. r 6-OZ. B PKG.	82
1-LB. 15V2-OZ t PKG.	79
1-PT. 6-OZ. t SIZE	58
2 S. 14-OZ. PKGS.	29
. Sli	80*
) IATH l CAKES	35
| REG.	
1 BARS	41
I BARS	3T
IbrIDB Bright Saif
mm, :	wm s-lb.
&m m.... •§ i&
59
HAND	J
SOAP 0 0 0 0
3-lb. *ft CAN JH
4, yo S	j i
PAYING?	
3 & 55
*84* 19
REG. OR T#'#H ELBOW PKG.daap
»$v?-oz.%®
CANS 49
Tomato Pasteco*rAiw**4 ^ 49Ji
43

B-OZ.
CANS
A>P Tomato SaW3 ts 29
CHECK ' AND COMPARE
AGP'* Every-Day Low Price on
Healths Beauty Aids
i WHAT I ARE -YOU PAYING?
Imeiit »■>■■ “Hn * 65 Seddee Beauty JtMS' £69 Lustre CMNnssrHff ^ I ixcederin ... ;i 100™^ 99 "	17*
47*
UB TEST
25-CT.
BTL.
Alka Seltzer ....,
Bromo Seltzer ....	59
CHfCK AND COMPARE
ASPi A Every-Day Low Price* on
Waxes and Polishes
i%UAT
ifpRE
tyou i
PAYING?
FLOOR WAX
DUSTING
WAX
Johnson's Klenr
J*	.........3
Johnson's Glo-Coat Johnson's Pledge
Silver Polish WRIGHT'S o a
Simoniz Vinyl Wax Simoniz Vista &
A-Penn Floor Wax •.
ws9
79* 791 BP-9P&
SIZE
1-PT.
ID-OJT
CAN
T-OZ.
SIZE
B-0
'll
QUART OAc
size Olfn
QUART (|||C SIZE fT
V> GAL. AO< CAN fl
CHECK	AGrP'e Every-Day Loy Prices on	WHAT 1 ARE (
V AND COMPARE	Paper Products	YOU 1 PAYING? J
Kleenex Napkins Fucial Tissues
LUNCHEON PKG. f A< Of 50 |||
SIZE ANGEL SOFT
«,49
FACIAL
TISSUES
PKGS. Of 400
45*
BOLLS IN PKG.
■ je' |j fiMJ
hi '£* ■■ mm* -	‘
Toilet Tissue Toilet Tissue
Aagd Soft ToM^-2 « 29
D!i« WAXED 4H	IESM^Si
iut-Kite o &( o ««m- •» Scot Towels .... S”sr 29 NortheraTowelf .. *«


tS5*!».v£25 6’$? toa Soup	S*;_K
BuiMi
—^IslRLi. ^ ^	, 12.QZ. 9QI
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COMPARE
Ml
ACrP's Every-Day |W Prices
Bl ^^kivAw# • These IMms, Tm
ANN QUART PAGE JAR
■ ^°z.J*b<
f:-#
45*
s*
8-OZ. 4fl«
B.MCora ReBsh ... Kf 25* PeaoufButter	2' t!-\
titami-
3-OZ.
CANS
U CHOY MEATLESS
> , T-LE.
e e .9 ®an
3-OZ.
PKGS.
□BPGELATIN	' f ‘ ’*T®
w ASSORTED FUVORS fc 0 0 .#
IrOVIM Ifllllw'w^ a e o e.
««
GERBERG^ 10 4%-OZ.
STRAINED
Seasoaiag Sait
jeBM’ . S“ 3 M’1“
#lollBiPBI APPLI-RASPBIRRY # 0 W GLASSES "
Chib Crackers H,K^ -
riVrwerated '	47*
Pillsbury Biscuits o. ■ 5"A 10*
AUkl .Ar_ 3H-0*i#Cc ANN PAGE. ffL
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AND
COMPARE
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FROZEN FOOD
t
m
mi
'Mm
|:«v,
PAYING?
MINUTE MAID 9 4-OZ.
m
CONCENTRATE
UMBRECHT
INHIIHRe
cans ,
wSi
t-Li.
4-OZ.
SIZE.
9-OZ.
69
Orange Juice
Cheese Cake A & P Green Beans ">mcr 4
Morton's Dinner ^ S
m . ill	with
V«VT Plisa CHEESE
Cut Corn»"»»**• • o o o 33*
io-oz. 90*
• e if! wo- Air
Sweet PensflHHHHH
fIt| f-__ uses SYS VAC SACK IO-OZ. 4A
viiy iorn	%
Dsa-ov BIRDS EYE VAC. PACK n 1Bfli " —'Wl(|!» latter levee || ^ | ^ §
Meat Pies
BIRDS IVI
Sic
3
o-oz.
KGS.
BANQUET , BEIfy CHICKEN OR. TURKEY
ipzi • ffCGk1
liMfi
PKG.

i&H

i-oz.
PKGS.
THE PONTIAC PRESS MOlfDAYr JANUAJlY 4, 19& >Xlp

kbF* Every-Day Low PHc« on
Coffee, Tea, Cocoa
WHAT
BARI''
YOU
PAYING?
Evnry-Doy UwPricw
CHECK
AND
CW^AW
CHICK
| AN© 5 COMPARE

wwiiiMiimiiwiw1...mwim
VACUUM
"-PACK
QUICK
«t ?0« OPP f^S
Our Own Tea
iv-t H ■ m 'a	{
12-OZ.
fK(L
a5-' iy§|| .
MrS ‘11
14-t ‘ ci;
istant yarn-
R REG. 12-OZ.
UPTON'S. SALADA «» : or\RED ROSE	©I 48
Ilk CHOCOLATE can
STRONGHEART
• CANS

Ivory-Day Low
PLAIN or CHOCOLATE

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CHICK An b • compare
A&P'e Every-Day Low Price! !on
Baking Needs
XYOW
PAYING?
Mott's Apple Sauce # 26’ Stewart's B#lei|af^^
Cap'n Crunch Cheerios Wheaties
11V2-OZ.
PKG.
GENERAL MILLS
Sunnyfield Flo
IM
iWr-OZ,
PKG
SUNSWEET
Post Raisin Bran
"IK' ■	‘	/ § H
iff Instant f§ ineapple Juice
«tt*0Z.
PKG.
.A&P'e Every-Day Lftw' Prices on
Canned Vegetables
CHECK AND v COMPARE
/F'Ail
YOU
PAYING?
SLICED
2]l4Va.0Z.M7< CANS *|#
3	89*
____ , CANS
A&PTomato Juice 4 Si 99*
p»P^als 0^, . 3	88*
,Apricot Rector 2Si89*l Lemon Juice ^ 2 Hawaiian Punch •. 3 A# Pineapple e,w?,B#S7f? Dole Pineapple
Oole| Pineapple CRUSHED t?*
W|B Cocktail DtL M0NT
fruit Cocktail SULTANA
fruit Cocktail Ijona Peaches Iona Peaches AppleMulce MOTr’ • . 4 "&99* %elch's Crape Juice 3' feS V°
4mm
e Filler fn& M
1-L8. 4-OZ. CAN
4 I'Ll.
m
i'll. CAN!
linit^NA %$£
YELLOW A 141. CLING a|
YELLOW ( ,
CLING
CANS
m 141. A I9-0Z. ^ CANS
IfrvJ
*■»!
SugarlO w 99*
Bisquick •im «oci<« , , t	- 61*
Baking Chocolate"« 35* Nestle's Morselt , . .1^ 43* Nestle's Morsels ... Stt 22*
Mazola Oil . . . yi-., Log Cabin Syrup . . .
, ivrv-D
PI.
SIZE
12-OZ.
RTL
Check
and
COMPARE
Very-Day.'Low Prleet' on
• Canned "
Moat and Fish
WHAT
At|K*
YOU
PAYING?
BROADCAST	IS'/a-OZ.
CORNED # | t CAN
Beef Hush Cornei| Beef Maine Sordines Tuna,fish	*&8*36*
26*
LIBBY'S # # # CA KEYLESS 2
8119
23
4-01.
CAN
ma n ea :	. • np
Del Monte TunacHUHK .»
LIGHT fft'OZt
Potted Meat
ARMOUR'S
Chicken Stew Beef Stew Beeflflash
one BOUNTY
Stt'OZ. IT CAN I #
12-OZ.
CAN
....4i&59* Del Monte Corn ™-4 ^§69* Iona Pens .'%• .-." 8j^ ,49*
v:) .?:-gTa:-,	' ‘dflik 01^
lonaTomatoes • f • 2 CANS 29
Dei Monte Spinach2 35* A&P Spinach . . .. 4 ® 49* A&P Potatoes 4	49*
Kidney Beans as 2 ^ if* Cut Green Beans jsl 4 «« 89* Baked Beans .K»>., .$29* Sultana Pork GyBeans «»10* Brook's Chili Beans A&P Beets™' .. 4 & A*
.UtTANA 2’^39*
WHOLE
GreeiL Beans A&P $auei%rauf 2 Vlaslc Sauer Kraut Si 25
141.
ii'OZ,
CANS
n^.rl7<
B
n\y. ■	u-.
JLW: V
3 m
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"SUPER-RIGHT' QUALITY
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ImUMM
otouautv1
Fryer Breasts Ifp * Round Steak — *
Chuck Roust BLADE CUT IB.
Pork Roast —«•*■» W
ANN PAGE CREAM 0F
Smoked picnics 3 Halibut Steaks . • »1
lOVk OZ. CANS
CALIFORNIA ELBERTA FREESTONE
.n..•- &i*i •.^	..
Tomato Soup x
MEAT VARIETIES	£
-^mnimIiaII CAline * me
WalIRpDvIl MUpf v
10V4-OZ.
CAN
Halva* or Sliced in Extra-Heavy Synlp
JkdtMik.. .. ! .... .. ..... t.ijtftidk&i t***.	‘
Fruit Cocktail..
A&P — GRADE "A"	? ~
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• -A „ '	. #M,Kv"SqvV	...;■/••	,r	.	,
\ f	> y ** . , „ '
Marvel—5 Flavors—Half Gallon	x,J
1-Lb.
13-OZ.
CANS
4 “8V
Champion
Brand
serves
, | /&}
4	V.
RED PLUM
Special—Save 16*—Jane Parker 1 kin.
uvi hc—imw r«faf.
Cherry FiDed
Turnovers
' Dated Fresh Dally
Sandwich Bread
Blended Syrup
SUNNYFliLD
Pancake Mix •
12-OZ.
BTL
JANE PARKER
1-LB.
4-OZ.
LOAVES
CkonloraFudgo or Coconut Venilia
Devil's Food Squares
HEARTH BAKED —JANE PARKER 5 VARIETIES
Rye Breads
Cherry Gold Squares
AGP FANCY, SOLID PACK "	''''
Albacore Tuna •... 3 j '
ALASKA PINK
Coldstream Salmon 2
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Corned Beef • •.
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HEIFETZ POLISH STYLE
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SIZE
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U.S. No. 1 Grade All-Purpose
Michigan
A&P FROZEN FOODS
IN 10-OZ.HM(Q|i X
Peas, Tut Corn, Mixed Vegetables, /Spinach,
Peas and Carrots, Chopped Broccoli
•-0*. Ron. or Crlnklo Cut
French Fries ,m
12-OZ.
CAN
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price
*
Super-savings In sets of two! Powerful RIV-SYN tread means Safety Nylon delivers long mileage. Armed with over 2700 road gripping edges to resist skldst Tough 4-ply nylon cord* Jbody.
When you hay 2nd ST-107 at Wards law,aa« trade-in price
Built to outperform new-car tires I With more RIV-SYN1 than Safety Nylon, ST-107 packs extra, mileage, delivers lower-cost-per mile service. Its stronger nylon cord body absorbs impact. '27 Month Road’Hazard Guarantee
40-GALLON GAS WATER HEATER
15 YR guarantee	ft JLO*
REG. 85.99 . ........
‘ ..,	.	I*N. will1
30-GALLON GAS WATER HEATER
15 YR. GUARANTEE
REG. 85 99 ... ....a
fake with
40-GALLON GAS WATER HEATER
15 YR. GUARANTEE W4HIV REG. 95.99.........Tg Jf
Tat* With
30-GAL GAS WATER HEATER
$49
Tubal... Sltai	Prko Without Trade
4.40-15	""	UTOf—" -
y.id-i4 4.70-15	20.45*
1.00-14 7.10-15 .	23.50*
7.40-15	24.10*
4.00/ 	MfrlA		24.45* ;
any sun
YOU PAY ONLT *4* roc nssv TIM
Tubeless SilOl	price Without trod* 2nd Tlr#
4.00-1)	18.15*
4.50-13	50 75*
w 4.40-14	23.33*
7.00-141	24.45* .
8.40/ 8.30-1 J	21.93*
Any Six*! You Pay Only $6 For tint “ Tiro
1 Tub.la.4a 1 I Si,at !	rrcri Wlffcaat 1 JtftL 1
mil	
1.00-14 7.10-15	2845*
lio-ll 7.40-15	30.50*
““mil" 4.00/ 420-15	34.30*
Any Slxol You Pay Only •
se*
For
fihl
Tire
*PIm. attlt ton. No twMlt-in raowbad.-Whitawalto, S3 nw. p.r i>r«.
NO MONEY DOWN-FAST, FREE MOUNTING
DUPONT*
501 NYLONCARPET
X *§ INCLUDES PAD AND

’ i * • .0X
•	•	*■ V
10-YR. GUARANTEE REG. 55.99....
For the best in hot water heaters go SIGNATURE. Everything you want . i't deluxe quality, exceptional performance and an extra low prlcel Gave now at Wards Sale of Sale prices.
INSTALLATION r
>88-
Reg. 10.58 Sq. Yd.
1 00% nylon carpet is your best bet, for almost any room in your home. Long wearing NYALLE CARPET add* 'that extra touch to your home, Why not sat for yourself, stop in toddy and see this eoloet piece of carpeting. In your choice of * decorator colors. Save now.
Pontiac Mall
Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road \ PHONE 682-4940 *J .

k
FOUKTftto
THE ^QNTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY
/'	...wi
ChiangMay Not Wait for Uprising
hi ; By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst
In his NeW Year’s message, Nationalist Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek said the Na-| tionalists should [d e s t r oy j Peking’s nu^ I clear install I tions before the I Reds develop'a [delivery sys-Item.
officers who Worked with him in' staging the 1961 milgary coup d’etat.
BLOW AGAINST SUKARNO: Look for a sharp British strike against Indonesia if President Sukarno steps up his aggression against Malaysia.
British units reinforced in the
BJar East last fall are ready for such , a blow whichmigtit be in the pattern of the U.S. retaliatory strike against Communist North Viet Nam forces in the Gulf ofiTonkin. '
★ . ★ ★
Britain wants to avoid such a move but may be forced into if under pressure from Malaysia and provocation from Sukarno.
Chiang re-Iportedly consid-r .. ... .. >ers his avowed , NEWSOM ' task of destroying Communist China more urgent now .than ever before, particularly since Red China now has an atomic bomb
Therefore, it is considered possible he may unleash attacks on die Reds with or Without a general uprising on the China mainland.
1964’$ Must Go!
Chiang repeatedly has predicted anti-Communist revolutions by the people on the China mainland.
;	h ★	★
It also has been understood he - would not order his 600,000-man army across the Formosa strait until such revolutions take place.	►
Formosa observers believe that Chaing may be changing his mind. V

" V;
m


? M .y.v
| gl jjG&lr
Buy Now! And Save!
•	Stereo’s, TV’s
•	Ranges, Refrigerators
•	Dishwashers
Special Savings Orr All
NUCLEAR TALKS DE«. LAVED: plans for five-nation talks in January between the. Unified States, Britain, Italy, West Germany and The Netherlands bn an allied nuclear force seem to be coming unstuck.
No date or place for the meeting was set when‘ the NATO council meeting broke up Dec. 17.
Now enthusiasm seems to be wiling among several nations involved. , .	,• "
The British, always cool to-' ward the U.S,-proposed multilateral nuclear force (MFL), already have declared the plan dead.
Terms Available
ELECTRIC COMPARY
FE 4-2525	825 WEST HURON STREET
President Charles de Gaulle of France always hag opposed it. \ Sp?
But it also is speculated that with the MLF plan bn ice for months to come and the Common Market farm, crisis over, de Gaulle now may be in ’an unusually conciliatory mood toward the United States.
KOREAN POWER STRUGGLE: »An internal power struggle appears to be in the offing within South Korea’s ruling Democratic Republican party with the return home of former Party Chairman Kim Chong-pil
Kim, former No. 2* man of South Korea, flew home from more than six months’ self-imposed exile in the United States.	‘ *
Although Kim has stated hr would not try to regain power, political sources believe he is certain to maintain influence from behind the scenes.
He was the driving force behind the government’s efforts to establish early normalization of relations between South Korea and Japan.
A considerable number df’his supporters still are in the party.
They are mostly former army
EARN
MORE
ON
SAVINGS
SAVINGS IN BY THE 10TH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1 ST AT
CURRENT
RATE
COMPOUNDED .AND PAID QUARTERLY . . . OR YQU CAN PURCHASE
Established in 1890 — Never minted paying a dividend* Over 74 yearn of sound management — your asnurance of security* Assets now pver 110 million dollars •
CAPITOL SAVINGS
$ LOAN ASSOCIATION
75 Wbst Huron	FE 4-Q561
Downtown Detroit Office Washington Blvd. Bldg. Corner State Street WO 2-1078.
Homo Office Lansing
Southfield Office* 27215 Southfield at 11 Mile Road KE 7-6125
Member Federal Home Loan Bank Syitem

Country Kitchen Grade A
SKINLESS FRANKS
z&W
Fresh Grade A
Fresh Grade A
With
Backs
Attached
Top Frost Boneless Fillets, Ocean
Perth or Cod
PACKER COUPON
100% Coffee
INSTANT
NESCAFE
Special
Label
Save up to 34c
Limit ene with this coupon oftor tho purchase of $5.00 or more. Coupon •xpjrat Wednesday, January 0th, 1965. Limit one coupon pot customer.
\ Breakfast Cereal
KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES

Save Up To 9c
, Limit ono with this coupon after tho purchase .eJ 55.00 or more. Coupon
expires Wednesday. January 6th, 1965. Limit ono coupon pot customof.
CiMnuiity Activities, Inc.
5640 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD DRAYTON PLAINS, MICHIGAN
“WINTER ACTIVITY SCHEDULE”
oust
Air Rifle Class..........«...
Art Class (Adult)....../....
Art Class (Children)......
Baton (7-16)................
Foncing . . , , ,..... .....
Favors and Cantor Places
for Special Occasions.......
Gam it Minarol Club (Adult)... Gam A Mineral Club (Children).
Guitar............... ......
Judo—Beginner,..........
Advanced...............
Ladles Exercise.............
Knitting-Beginners..........
Advanced ..........
Advanced...........
Madam Jati /.................
Photography Course..........
(Beginners)
Plana.... i v .......>Hu;
Rug Hooking Class...........
Saturday Gym Program (7 14) (14.11)
Saif Oafenio Course (Women)... Tap Dancing < *< •,• • ••«<> > • • > < Youth Night Dance..........
TIME	DAY	STARTS	INSTRUCTOR
. 9:30 o.m.	Sat.	Jan. 16	Mr, Pat Wolfe Jr.
. 7:00-10:00 p.m.	Wad.	Jan. 13	Mrs. Koto McLean
. 9:30-11:30 a.m.	Sat.	Jan. 16	Mrs. Kata McLean
. 4:30-5:30 p.m.	Tuot.	Jan. 12	Miss Nancy Hines
. 7:30-9:30 p.m..	Mon.	Jon. 11	Mn. Barbara Krumwmidm
7;30 9 30 p.m.	Thurs.	Jon. 14	Mrs. Cloa Carpenter
. 7:30 9 30 p.m.	4th Thursday of every month		
. 9:30-1 1:30 a.m.	Sat.	Jan. 9	
, Time on Request	Sat.	Jon, 16	Mr. Don Parrln
. 0:00,9:00 p.m.	Mon.	Jan. 4	Mr. Otto Chanko
, 9:00-10jp0 p.m. . >:00 9:00 p.m,	Tuot.	Jan. 3	Mrs. Carol Wolfe
. 7:30-9:30 p m.	Tuos.	Jan. 1 2	Mrs. Lena Meier
. 1:30-3:30 p.m. , 7:30-9:30 p.m.	Mon.	Jan. 11	
. 5:30-6:30 p.m.	Thqrs.	Jan. 14	Miss Jackie Roe Voorhee*
. 7 00-8 00 p.m.	Mon.	Jon. 1 a	Mr. Joseph Franx
7:00-8:00 pm.	Wad.	Jon. 20	
7:00-8:00 p.m.	Thurs.	Jon. 21	
, Tim* on Request	Sal/	Jan. 16	Mr. Dan Perrin
. 9:00.11:30 a.m.	Tuos.	' dan. 19	Mrs. Longalr
9 00-10i30 o.m.	Sat.	.Jan, 9	*
i 7 oo C=oo y»sm.	Man.	Jan. 4	Mr. Otto Chanko
, 5:30-6:30 p.m.	Wad. ,	Jap. 13	Miss Voorhoos
, 8:00-11 iOO p.m.	Every Fri. Night		Mn Gary Slovens
Mel-O-Crust Fresh
White
Bread
20-ox.
Loaf
19
£ Save Uf)
To 5c on 2
Everyday Low Price
	Sealteit Homogenized		Ready to Eat	
	Fresh		Campbell's	
	Milk		Soups	
	'/a-Gal^CC °T" Glass Jm M Save Up ggp To 2c		8-os. 1 Save Can Now	
Frit	Everyday Low Price •s effective thro Wednesday, ion. i. 1	US	5 Assorted Variotioi Mil reserve fka riahl is limit mmilil	
Country Kitchen Creamed
Cottage
Cheese
1 -lb. Ctn.
WC’Save Up To 9c
Low Calorie Cheeie
I
11

Hr Further Information Call ON 3-0102 - Register Now
UNITED FUND AGENCY	J
WASH CLOTH OR GUEST TOWEL ''J Youn FREE With Purchase of
BATH TOWEL
at
99'
snd coupon from msller sterling Jsn. 4
fgpj&Liita DISH CLOTH OR "‘■"WeIi • POT HOLDER
Youn FREE With Purehaio of DISH TOWEL
snd coupon from maiu> Stirling Jin. 4

mmmm
mi< ker's (Pretty CProdixc
From Michigan's Fnast Apple Orchards
U.S, No, 1 Extra Fancy
Orchard Fresh,
All Hand Picked and Graded to Packers Rigid Standards.
Mix Cm	or'Em
moo's
sli ■, mm

4-lb.
Rage gi
•	Mciatssh
•	ROE OellcIsM
•	Steal Rad
Laaaer Amounts 39e
DRAYTON PLAINS	WflLLLU LflKL
6060 DIXIE HWY N Of WALTON DLVO, 700 PONTIAC TRAIL AT MAPI!
mi's WOOL) W AMD AT 14 MIL
P
,’ 1
m'r I
m

m
wsm
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JANUARY 4, 1965
Quaker Lace Dacron® Blend
Shop Tonight, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Nights 'til 9 .'. . or Phone FE 4-2511 y'
An 18fh Century flora! design, picked from the golden past to make today's exquisite tobfedoth. Bring back to your table the tong vanished elegance and loveliness. Requires little care, spots sponge off easily. Machine or Hand washable. Dries quickly. Sizes for every need.
‘DuPont's Polyester pier
TABLECLOTHS,
54x70" Reg. 10.00	$500
60" Round Reg. 12.00	$£>00
70x108" Reg. 12.00	$600
$800
70, 108" Reg. 16.00
"TERRYTOWN"
-Yoor Choice Ty«n or Regular 10l99
HEIRLOOM SPREAD
By Concord Mills
. $999
"CONCORDIAN" HEIRLOOM SPREAD
By Concord Mills
Your Choice Twin or Toil Regular 15.99
Choose from Snow or Aftfique white. Lovely reversible pattern in the early American Srorftiof'. Constructed of 100% long staple cotton. Completely machine washable *qwgi drydble. Charge Yours.
Choose from Snow or Antique.white. Constructed of 100% long staple cotton. Exquisite French Knotted Fringe. Completely machine washable and dryable. Charge Yours.
NO NEED TO CARRY CASH ... CHARGE THEM ON WAITE'S FOURTH FLOOR

Bleached Cotton Filled
Flat Mattress Pads
Reg. 2.99	Reg 3.99
Twm Size	Fuji Size
*2.49 i *3.49
fiied wifc bteoched oo*cm bier. San-farized    	Aodwr bands.
Assorted Print
PILLOWCASES
$j00
Manufacturers' Close-Out
Print Terry

Reg.
1.50
Reg.
1.00
PLACE MATS
2- *1
KITCHEN TOWELS'
2 - n
Reg.
79c
Choose from several lovely prints in completely washable 100% cotton.
Famous manufacturers dose-out. Vinyl just wipe clean with a damp doth.
Gay kitchen I prints to beautify any kitchen. Untiess, extra absorbent!
ANNUAL
JANUARY
fabulous MARTEX TERRY-DOWN
c "INVITATION"
Two textures, one side deep, looped pile and tfwMsther is‘sheared. Blue Willow, Ginger or Hibiscus. Mode to porn per you dry . ||| cuddle you
softness.
Decorous As It Is Decorative
"CASTlLlANT >“
SHOP IOMIGHT. THUR I Rl. and SAT. NiTES ... UNTIL 9 PM.-Phone FE 4-251!	/
Regular 1.99 Bath Towel
White^lowers on Colored Backgrounds
MARTEX ''MARGUERITE"
Regular 1.99 •	.	it zo
. ' BaljLfowel mz. vv , i
/	-A r,. V" 'V	*"$
Jwg. 1.89 Hood Towel .	.»...«*«.* • * JJ69 A.
t/' Reg. 69c Washcloth - .	X • * * •.».,, ..LA yw-.. .59-
JTKe finest? name m luxury foWeH, loomed by Mgrtex. Choke of 8lue Mist, Lemon Ice/ Misty M^t, Whik^ Geranium, Rosebud or green. Chorge Yours,	:‘	1 V ‘	l, |
mm
MARTEX BiggerT^Thicker, M^H^^iiibenfei^VFl A
Bigger,-Thicker, More Absorbent
"CHARLESTON GARDENS"
Regular 2.99 Bath Towel *
Reg 1.79-Hand Towel...1.49
Reg 69c Washcloth.............,. f .59
* Reg 79c Fingertip Towel............. .69 :
fobylouS MARTEX TERRYDOWN! Two textures, one side tsi thick, terry. The other sheared to velvety .softness. Chooser.
$1.99
Regular 2.99.
Bath Towel A* '
Reg. .1.79 Hand, Towel... Reg£. 69c Washcloth . . ., Reg. 79c Fingertip Towel..
Colors Mix and Match With Prints
"WESTMINSTER" T
$1.69
. Regulcr 1.99 r ‘
Bath Tow-el
Reg 1.29,Hond Towel........................ii
Reg 49t Washcloth..........;............t. y. . .. j
Reg. 49c Fingertip Towel . ......J
from tender to torrid in "the Mortex quality terry you iovi Gold, Sufterscotch, Blue Mist, Lemon Ice,. Turquoise, Diablo i in anymore.
Reg. 1.39 Hand Towel .
59c Washcloth Reg: 69p, Fingertip Tcm An exquisite Spanish deitgn, jocqudrd-loomed in hiih-plush ■ Terry. Choose from Antique Gold; Lavender, Fern, Petal Pink, Ginger or
OrientaMnspired Beauty
"SHALIMAR"
Bath Towel
Regular 4.99 Bath Towel
$4.49
' Reg. 1 .'2 9 Hancjl Towel . . . . ,s Reg. 69c Fingertip Towel Reg. 59c WoSh<tloth « . ..
Reg. 2.99 Hajjd Towel.......... , V. ... u. . 2.49
Redj 99c WoihsHofh	j.. i,.........69
Ada a new dimension io the art pi the both with'oriental inspired ,beauty... Raised ;f»etob of TERRYDOWN create a^deep-corved effect.
targe white daisies on- rosebud, blue mist, misty! m»« grounds.-The flowers have a. hond’ carved look on* the other colors to choose from. . ’ •	• '
RpBtty BLUE - PERSIMMON
candteUght back thicVJerrvf. Many
Big Thick; Deeply-Piled
"LUXOR*'
a tW6 „ '		THE ^ON^YacTpRE^S, *K	>Nl^	iY, JANUARY 4, 196.5 \U	/
#**%***«»nr***#	■wr*. - --	1 *■■>*«» V**-- * - 'La'- r I			——:—				
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 4. 1965
111
SEVEN
BELLEAIR BLANKETS
SOLD IN FINE STORES COAST TO COAST-* EXCLUSIVE AT WAITE'S IN PONTIAC

BELLEAIR ELEC 100% Acrilan
BLANKET
tSUL $1099
Single Control I X
80x84" Full Size *
Single Control..24.99
80x84" Full Size
Dual Control........ 29.99
What a wonderful way to keep worm this winter. 100% Acrilan blanket with 100% nylon binding. Full 2-year replacement guarantee. Contour corners for holding power. 5 colors and white. Charge Yours.
	
	
	
85% Rayon, 15% Acrylic BELLEAIR "SUPREME"
BLANKET
3- 2 f°r'
Regula 6.99 ea
Ml
Waite's Fourth Floor
Waft "Extra-loft" fqr double the fluff a:	Ae
weight,- and "Nap-tac" stops the p4&^L.72x9b" size for foil or twin ssze.bed?. Choose from 5 fceautS-fo! odors.
i i i
BELLEAIR CELACLOUD® MATTRESS PADS
*3" T£5£*3W ^'S H99
Approximately 1-lnch Thick . . . , FOAM RUBBER MATTRESS PADS
Twin Flat $299
Reg. 3.99
Full Flat Reg. 4.99
Twin Size Reg. 10.99
*6
99
Keg. 12.99
$8
99
Sturdy close-woven fabric remains snow white. The soft plump filling is pure Celacloud'S. acetate by Celanese that's quick drying and can be tumbled dry. Perfect for all of your beds.
Cushiony foam rubber transforms your present mam-ess into blissful, comfort. Hundreds of tiny vents allow cool air to flow underneath you. Shop and Compare then shop Waite's.
1st Quality Martex
HAND TOWELS
Zippered Pillow
PROTECTORS
1st Quality Martex
WASHCLOTHS
Reg. 1.39 to 1.89
2 .»»1
-Assorted prints, solids and Jacquards, i Several lovely colors to choose,from.
Reg.
89c '
Combed cotton Zippered closing
69'
sparkling whiti
Reg. 6?c and 89c
4-*l
Print .Linen
DISH TOWELS
5QC
Keg.
1.00
Choose fr: quards. 1 > to choose

or easy washing.
Charge Yours On Waite's Fourth Floor . . . Phone FE 4-2511
m solids, prints and Joc-0% cotton. Many colors rom. Charge Yours.
Jumbo size. Beautiful print towel to esAasce the beauty of your fotofe&a. Charge Yofirs.


n
3252?* 1
in
CUM ±
From Waite's Fourth Floor to the Nicest Bedrooms in Town . . . And at White Sale Savings!

Regularly 7.98 Twin or Double
I s quiet in the bedroom ,.. with beautiful Safari on your bed. It expresses the new"mood in stripes .i . subtfe. suave ... Never shouts. All in a bedspread so handsome, it looks hond-crafted. Machine or hand-washable. White rounded corners. Disciplined finish. In red, green, blue, brown.
PRIDE OF SHELBURNE
STIVAL PLAID BLANKET
10O% virgin AcrSaw blanket - in three exciting plaid color combinations, bound with 100% nylon suede. Disciplined* finish. Standard size only 72x90" Available in Avocado green, Siamese p«ic. Papaya orange.
Reg 10.99 >(jyy Reg 12 99 f Tyy Reg 24 99	-799
Twin Size* >r	full Size |	. King Size | y
A charming, richly detailed Colonial counterpane inspired the design of this Heirloom® pattern. Pre-shrunk, reversible, bullion fringed — richly looped — rounded corners. Available m snow or antique white	*
Fourth Floor
“ * - . - -
4 Warm, Cuddly Soft .	. Floral Print
4- DACRON® FILLED i COMFORTERS ^
*eg '4 99 Reg. 19.99 r« Size Fuh Size
Reg 24.99 Keg Size

$999 $]Q99 $1999
This fluffy comforter is filled with DuBaot "Red Label" Dacron polyester for the utmost in softness and fluffmess thru many washings. Colorful floral on avrii and cotton coves'. Pink,, blue, yellow. Shop, early for the best selection.

gi Manufacturers Over Stock
DACRON* FILLED COMFORTERS
Reg. 10 99 to 13.99
>8
99
Assarted Acetate, Percale and Corduroy covers for long life. Filled with fluffy DuPont "Red Label" Dacron polyester fiber-fill. Choose from a wide assortment of colors and prints..

Wife
Luxurious Combed Percale “;x 45hee*»^'/
Springmaid Fitted Sheets with % the Fantous Spring-On Elastic Combrs • from COT to KING /
If you have a Queen Springmaid has it!
Cot, 30x72", Reg. 3.29. .A. ....;2.99 Youth, 33x66", Reg.	....'... 2-99
Day, 33x75" Reg. 3/29 ...... -.. /2.99
Single, 36x75'% $Bg 3.29......,2.99
Twin, 39x76", Reg- 2.99........2.49
foam Twinw39x76", Reg. 3.29	2.99
Extra toof} Twin, 39x 80", fog. 3.69 3.09 Three,'Quarter, 48x76", Reg- 3.6? 3.09 Double, 54x76", Reg. 3.19 : . . . *. 2.69 foam Double, 54x76", Reg. 3.69 i'3.09 Ex. Long Double,. 54x80",-Reg. 3.99 3.59 Queen, 60x8O'^-4teg. 4.99 •	/. .4.19
King 72x84", Reg/^2? . . . . ;< /. .5.49 Hollywood, 78^76",’ Reg. 7i79 , . , 6.99 px- Lg- Hollywood 78x80",Reg^7>?9 7.29 Tbp Twin fitted; 39x76", Reg. 3.793:09 Top Double Fiffed, 54x 76", Reg. 3-99 3.49
Springmaid Combed Percale Flat Sheets
Double Full, 81x108", Reg. 3.19 . .2.69 Ex; Long Dbl.‘81x120", Reg. 4.29 3.79 Ex, Long Twin, 72x120", Reg. 3.79 3.39 Ex. Wide Double, 90x 108", Reg. 3.99 3.59 Queen, 90x120", Reg. 4.99 ...... .4.19
King, 10§xl22", Reg. 7.99..... .7.29
Pillow Cases
42x38", Reg. 1.50.;....... .. ...1.39
45x38", Reg. 1.79.......... .1-69
If you have e King Springmaid has it!
if you need extra long - Springmaid has it!
DurableWhite Springmaid Muslin Sheets
Twin Flat or Fitted Bottom, Reg. 2.49 ............. . . . ..
Double Flat or fitted Bottom, Reg. 2.69 . ............, ...,
Muslin Pillow cases, Reg. 1.20 ........F..............
Echotone Stripes or Dots. By fqr the mosf popular stripe of oil! features stripes or. dots in alternating soft and hold tones. Eleven sparkling colors. Hi-Tones Hibiscus, Avocado;. Desert. Sand, Delft. Blue Persimmon. Postels also available.	$	'• .
- 72x108", Reg. 3.39......................._____%*2,99
■. _	8>xl08", Reg. 4.39............3;99
42x38" Pillowcases, Reg. 2.29 ......... 1.99
FABRICS O
Dyed-to-Match Solids in colors, colors, cotars .— 10 beauties in all — fq^o with every Springmaid fashion sheet. Hi-tones.- Hibiscus, Avocado, DeSert Sand, Delft Blue, Persimmon. Pastels: Blue, Yellowj Pjnk, Green and Utec^'	’
‘	.	.	-	•	\ T'	‘ '' ‘
72x108", or SpHngOn twin fitted, Reg. 3.39 ..... 2.99 81x108", or SpringOrMfouble fitted, Reg. 3.99. .3.59 42x38" Pillowcases, Reg. T.99^........; ..,. 1.79
Shop Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Nights 'til 9,for all of Your White Sale Needs
Fresh, New Scatter Rugs Everywhe
Phone FE 4-2511
in Your Home!
Introducing KODEL8 The Fiber For Luxurious Living!
Cotton and Vinyl Tablecloths
Patterns
ALLEGRO" Hand-Carved KODEL8 RUGS
OVAL Shaped KODEL® RUGS $099
B. "FRUIT FIESTA"
A. "BOMBAY" /
Alt cotton, laminated with vinyl for easy cleaning. Soft flannel back cushions dishes. 5-colors. Charge Vows.
C "FLEUR DE LIS'
Reg. 3.99-52x70-inch
Reg. 4.99 60“ Round
Will wipe clean .instantly .with damp gloth. «AII cottom laminated with vinyl. Choice ,df 3 colons. C w
Soft flannel back tablecloth cushions dishes. -Wipes clean with a damp cloth. No ironing. Choice of 6 rolprs^;
Contour
27x48“
The newest fiber 50% Kodei texture mokes the most distil once of ony_ room.
Is smart ovoi-shape rion. The texture ret
'CHECKMATE" Cotton and Vinyl Tablecloth
'DAMASK ROSE"' Cotton and Vinyl Cloth
GLASS 1C" Acetate'ai
:	•	j ' ■	• jt ‘	. iteg.-3.99 52x52"
All cotton laminated to vinyl	no
for easy cleaning. No ironing needed. Choose from 5 colors. Reg. 7:99 60x88'
WALL-TO-WALL BATHROOM CARPF
No-ironing needed, wipes1 dean with- a -damp cloth, AH' cotton . laminated to; viny|fe Charge Yours.
fhine washable
Completely
mod
and dryable. Wide assortment •of colors to choose from.
60" round. Reg. 7.99 .... 6.99
Machine Washable 100% Nylon Non-Skid
BELLEAIR BATH RUGS
24" Round
MAGNIFICENT MANTILLA
by Callaway, "The Label of Luxury"
Face Cloth
Contour
99
Bath Towels
Hand Towels
FINGERTIP TOWEL REGULAR 79c . . . ■; . , ........
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Domestics . . . fourth Floor

AfoUB - V' v -fCCr-	M ' ;					THE PONTIAC PRESS: MONBAY, JANUARY 4, 1965 T	*					FI YE
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
1965
CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY
FOB A UNITED TIME YOU CAN GET THIS
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WITH THE PURCHASE OF A
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CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY
Fuzzy . Forecast for Future
BOYLE tAP) - The a buzziqg.’lpe throughout 1965 —and you’ll have' to watch your step to keep from being stung.
■Vghfc ie re-vealed in our, aflQual uncopy right fuzzy forecast of the future. *; ■
The crystal ball is even ipore clouded BOYLE than usual; but a peak into its mystic depths discloses that during the next 12 months- these things probably will happen: ' ?' t*	v 'kf*
President Johnson will indig-nantly deny an accusation from Peking that America plans to solve its poverty problem by shooting aU its poor people to the moon.
Wedding bells will ring, in the White House.
JOB IN FRANCE Former Premier Khrushchev of the-Soviet Union will solve the Soviet government’s. biggest unemployment problem by accepting a post as public, relations adviser to President Charles da Gaulle of France.
Germany, whieh made less out of.war than anybody, will continue to make more out of peace than anybody. Japan will announce plans to build the world’s firft all-plastic aircraft carrier.
! *"ii ' A' riir Nobody will swim the English Channel in either direction during January, ' February or -March. In June, however, an Egyptian swimming east will collide in midchannel with a girl factory worker from Manchester swimming west. They will wed in July — underwater.
A .scandal will break out in Merrie Okie Englande when one of Her Majesty's ministers is caught .chedtlng at darts in a local pub. Calm will be restored after a televised appeal by Sir Winston Churchill for the nation to stand steady.
SOME IMPROVEMENT Don’t look for much change in Viet Nam. The only noteworthy imprevementwill occur about the middle of the year when, after a bloodless revolt led by three students and an unfrocked Buddhist, a new government will be installed Jeaded by a fellow whose name can be pronounced in English,
On the domestic front, keep an eye open for these possibilities:	\
- '★ ' ★ A J. Edgar Hoover will be quietly offered a post as quarterback of the New York Giants football team — because pf his reputation of never having been thrown for a loss.
A sensational new dance, known as “the Queep,” will sweep society circles. This is how it will work: Two partners will lie down on opposite sides
of the room and “queep” toward eafch other like serpents, without the aid of hands or feet. While some ministers will denounce the dance as degrading if not immoral, a.prominent psychiatrist will defend it on the grounds that it is a harmless way^ of getting rid Of
FOR SURVIVAL	8
A movement led-Gy Richard
« - | KPI11 J
SMBm will seek to find out if America oaii survive under a two-party system.Former President Harry'S: Truman will denounce It as totally unnecessary;	if.
Late in the year an invisible man from Mars will landJn the outskirts of Washington, D.C., to check Into the possibilities of using earth Us a vacation resort for Martians. After three, days be will return to Mars ahd re*
Picture
►	, *	vt,,*, , ;
port to his superiors: “It’s no place for us.” '
(! " Ik A *' '(A .''Vf	< >
But, ail in all, 1965 will be a good time to be alive. Just lay in a good stock of aspirin.
Thirty-five merchant vessels were buijt last year in the nation’s shipyards compared to 27 a year previous, according to the American Bureau of Shipping. ,
A very smooth whisky, indeed!
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TWENTY
THE PONTIAC CTESS, MONDA^ JANUARY 4, 1965
Spring
w
Feminine
Fashion-conscious women in , - the Oakland County area need wait no longer .lor word oh the newest trends for spring ’65.
Word has come from the New York Couture Group, that this season’s look is fluid, feminine, and flared. The costume will be much in evidence and wiU feature combinations of prints, solids, and unexpected detail. ''	.
I To emphasize the fluid influence, suit jackets are longer and tunic effects will be shown extensively. Low-slung belts on jackets‘And coats impart a relaxed look.
SOFTNESS^
A softness fe evident in this year’s collection as skirts become pleated and hill for. a dirndl effect.	* '
Cascading ruffles', traveling from:waist band to hemline, will be seen on otherwise
straight skirts, again repeating the feminine trend: •
The “My Fair Laty’* influence can be seen in the number of ruffles being shown in •late - day and evening creations.' -
The recently popularized double breasted closing is still very touch in the limelight and will be used extensively on coats and suit jackets.
This year’s fashions create a mood of easy action in a feminine and graceful atmosphere.
NEW NECKLINE
Most daytime ensembles are designed with rolled or round--ed, but tiny necklines, leaving the more daring plunge for evening. News is the scarf neckline and a softer turtleneck effect.
The drawstring face - fram-
ing seems to be effected in a number of this .year’s collections.
A pale luminous behuty can be . found present in the pastels. At the other extrtope, are the bold checks and bra' solids that complement these 'original designs.
Checks, wild and otherwise, predominate in this season’s group.
Navy is always a favorite but seems to extend itself into • evening as well this year. ,
LACE
L a ce is important, along with printed linens, embossed cottons, knits, and of course
dna. rag
The sUto t d t a l of th Is spring’s collection seems to point to a more graceful, put-together, disarmingly simple look for the American woman.
Film Featured at WSCS Luncheon
The Woman’s Society for Christian Service of Central Methodist Church will have a luncheon at 1:00 p.m. Thursday hi the church.
Mrs. Harry Martin will be chairman of the day.
Hostesses from the Helen DesJardins circle will be headed by Mrs., George. Diet-rich.
“The Wake of the Santa Maria” a film strip, will digfa-light the program.
Discuss Emerson
“The Concord Sage,”. Ralph Waldo Emerson’s essay on politics, will be discussed by the Waterford Great Books Group, at 8 p.m., Tuesday at the CAI building.
Mr. and Mrs. K. B. Valentine’ mil lead the discussion..
Newcomers are welcome.
Call For Your Free Hour of. Beayty
IEBLE now
COSMETIC STUDIO
fotn^Semrar^ Batyrs
Reception
yliw'
A "Fly-Away” silhouette Branell’s interpretation of the fluid, influence this season. Shown here in pale gray Cascadine, 'i[ it features a j peignoir top.
BY SIGNE KARLSTROM Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Tor-gerson entertained at a supper and family gatheriflff following the recent dhrlstentag of their daughter Nancy/ Ann, and son Richard Mallory, in Christ Church Cranbrook. fe Nancy, named after her mother and paternal grandmother, the late Mrs, Joseph Reynolds,- will be called Aim. Richard is four years old. > Godparents are Mrs. H. Bradford Aarons, Dr. Robert J. Schoenfeld and the junior Alfred J. Mackseys. '
HAVE SUPPER The George W. Walters of Delray Beach, Fla. were guests at-the supper.
Lysanne Kathryn, daughter , of Dr. and Mrs. Roy T. Hawk-inson, was a Iso baptized at the same time. Her godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Woods ProctOr and Dr. and lira. John Heyde.,	"	• ”*•
Barbara' Ann, little daughter of Mr. and MrsV- JOhh Appleford HI, followed her older sisters to be christened
Originala has 5 created a skinny coat . with low placed pockets and shaped back belt,
Get Expert Advice
You’re in TrCuble, Boy
in Christ Church^ Christmas time.	,	-
| Her godparents are Jane j Widman Leader, Albert C. deader and Mrs. Appleford’s former college roommate,
: Mrs. Clifton A. Dowell HI of Carpus Christie, Texas. Re-| ception blithe Appleford home followed the ceremony.
SKIERS RETURN
Skiers are returning from various northern Michigan re-f sorts and many young people will resume their studies tills morning.	.
Among those at Otsego have been Donna and Diane Rich-- ardson, Nancy and Susan Judd, Marflyn . Flint, Joan . Nimmo, Majorie Foren, Kina Spitzley, Heather and Barbara Stirling, George and Steve ! Higbie, Tim Young and John Braid-
Others are Mr. and Mrs.
; Jamison Williams, the junior R. J. Williamses, Tod, Kim and Wendy Williams, the Le* , | Roy Dahlbergs, the J. Robert y ip., Swansonsthe Robert S. Swansons and the John Kerrs.
Mrs. Martin Archangel! and her daughter Christy left tills week-end for Otsego to spend some time there b e f ore Christy returns to the University of Pennsylvania on Jan, 18.
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: A woman who claims to be 60, but who looks and acts
emphasizing the narrowed look. >

393 E. MAPLE
Married inOrtonville

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The James Lynn Fricks (Mrs- Jane Reits McGrath) who were wed recently in the Ortonville Methodist Church are residing in Ortonville/fol-lowing a.southernhoneyrtioon.
Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Clgrence Reits of Decatur, Mich, ana the Donald Fricks of Ortonville.
The bride chose a chart-
SINCE
Ne w Year
SALE
pagne beige Chantilly lace jsheath dress over crepe and 'carried gardenias and ivy on a Bible belonging to her husband’s late great-grandmother.
Attendants at the ceremony performed by the Rev. A. A. Carmitchel were Lecia Stotz of Long Beach, Calif., Don DeLano of Royal Oak, Clifford Zenda and Harvey Arna-son.
Tlie reception was in the Davison Country Club.
much younger, comes to my house on week • ends to clean and do my laundry.
In bad weather I drive her home. She always invites •me in for a few drinks.,
One night weTwth got high and I spent most of the night withlter^
Npw she tells me that she is going to have my baby and ishe is suing me for money to pay for her doctor and hospital bills, and for sufficient funds to keep the child until it is old enough to care for itself.
I consulted a doctor friend and he said that a woman that -age could not have a baby..
My lawyer says she has •nothing on me unless she wants to press a rape charge, which would be hard to prove under the circumstances. What is your honest opinion?* ON IN YEARS
DEAR ON: A pregnancy can be affirmed by a doctor’s examination. Your lawyer can tell you what your rights (and hers) are.
And next time you hire a cleaning woman, send her home in a taxi or YOU’LL be the one who’s taken for a ride.
DEAR ABBY: I am 32 and have fallen in love with a 49-year-old woman. We are both Christians and live simple lives.
Abby, the difference in our ages does not mean a thing to me, but it bothers her. She ryone will think we’ve ur minds.
She is very nice looking and a good figure and. to my eyes she does not look her
DEAR NO SLEEP: Such marriages are “working” every' day. All that is required for a good marriage is thai the two people really need each other.	^
dr ★	★ •
Catehdar
Dr. and Mrs, Maxwell L.; Shadley of Ottawa Drive were; hosts at a home reception fql-' lowing the marriage of their-daughter, Barbara Ann, to Timothy Andrew Graul on Saturday,	I II''J
Rev. C. George Widdifield officiated at the toidaftemoon candlelight ceretoony to All-Saints Episcopal Chhrcji. \ A silk illusion veil with pearl headpiece complemented the bride’s sheath gown and chapel train of white peau de soie. Her bouquet of camellias and Stephanotis was arranged in a cascade.
With Mrs. Michael Jordan! hdr sister’s matron of honor! were bridesmaids Suzanne Ko-prince, Virginia Gfaul. a n 4 'Mrs. John Richards of.. Milford.
Cascade bouquets of pink carnations shaded into dark winfe red; matching Velvet bodices featured in their Empire gowns of off-white silk crepe. 5 '	§	’1
David Barkman of Ann Arbor was best man for. the bridegroom, son of the Robert Graub of Alton, 111.
Seating guests were Steven Chaiken, Maris Graube, Robert Kress, Arthur Stuart and the bride’s brother David.
The newlyweds who are graduates of University of Michigan will reside In Alton.
I love this woman dearly but she says I may not feel the same way to ten years from now. Could such a marriage work?
NO SLEEP FOR TWO
Time, however, does change people and alters their situations. When you are S3 and she is 70, your “needs” might change, and hence your feelings. v
* + *
Troubled? Write to Abby, in care of the Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, 'enclose a’ stamped, self-addressed envelope.
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Wed Saturday in the Central Methodist Church were Diana Ellen Rigotti, daughter of the Ferdinand F. Rigottis of Spokane Drive and Robert William Richards, son bf Mr. and Mrs. James L. Richards of Lafay Drive.
TODAY
Internationai Order of Job’s Daughters, Bethel No. S; 7:39 p.m.; Pontiac Masonic Temple; business meeting.
TUESDAY
Past Noble Grands club of Welcome R e b e k a h Lodge No. 246; 6 p.m.; South Edith Street home of Mrs. Orrln Hettinger; annual dinner.
WEDNESDAY
Parliamentary Study club;'1:30 p.m.;. Pontiac Masonic Temple.4
THURSDAY
Friendship Circle of Welcome Rebekah Lodge; noon; South Edith Street home of Mrs. Orrln Hettinger; cooperative luncheon.
____1 FRIDAY_____
Wayside Gleaners, First Baptist Church; 12:30 p.m.; smorgasbord lun-chon; Speaker, Peter Banks; chairman, Mrs. John Cowe.
IS!
8 ■ m fi
L McLeod
Carpet Sale
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MRS. ROBERT w. RICHARDS
Candlelight Cerpmony for Richards' Wedding
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Diana Ellen Rigotti and Robert William Richards were wed in a candlelight ceremony, Saturday, in the Central Methodist Church.
Reception in Fellowship Hall followed the rite performed by Dr. Milton Bank.
★ ' w
Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand F. Rigotti of Spokane Drive and Mr. and Mrs. James !,». Richards of Lafay Driven
WORE TAFFETA
Styled with coachman’s skirt and chapel train, the bride’s gown of white peau taffeta was appllqued with French lace and seed pearls.
6	* Sr
A pearl tiara capped her bouffant illuaion vail and a gardenia corsage centered
her bouquet of white roses and ivy.
With Mrs. Ronald Downle (Carol Ann Riley)> of Detroit were bridesmaida, Judle Richards and Katheryn Shoemaker of Cambridge, Neb, junior maid.
White fur hats and muttt complemented the attendants’ full-length gowns of red velvet.
COUSIN
Jack E. Campbell of Birmingham assisted his cousin as best man. Bill Shoemaker, Victor Rigotti and Jack Chambers Jr. seated the guests. Kenneth Richards was junior usher.
After a northern honeymoon, (he couple will resume their studies at the University of Michigan.
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THE PQNTIAC FRfiSS. MONDAY, JANUARY #, 1965 \
. V
«-u,p j f -* m 3w;
1	,	% A	s	^f'-l
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Treated Cotton Fools Fashion
Cottons m heavily embossed they look like dull silks run
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8 LB. WASHERS 20# 12 LB. WASHERS 25# 20.1% WASHERS %St
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through the spring fashioncol-lections.	7” ,
Designers use the’. cottons for late day and evening, notably in whiter Bill Blass of. Maurice Rentner, New York, for example, creates a simple, sleeveless, princess dress with a high-slashed neckline. A i deep front pleat adds ‘grace to the A-shaped skirt.-
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&
Rubinoff and. his famous violin made 6 surprise visit Jo the Pontiac Kiwanis Jubrecently, The club is sponsoring his concert at Pontiac Northern High School Jan. 18. With Rubinoff are Clyle Haskill (left) arid William Beldney, members of the local service organization.
Renowned Violinist to Present
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Rubinoff and his violin will be heard Jan. 18 in Northern High ‘ School auditorium at 8:15 p.m.
★ ★ ★
The silken strains of the master’s two-century old Stradivarius will Be heard on behalf of the Child Activities Benefit; sponsored by the Pontiac Kiwanis club.
*	w ■ w
The famous conductor spends nine months of each year on tour. He has visited some 125 citigs and performed at more than 250 evening concerts.
*	* *
Born in Russia, the artist,1 *was graduated from the War-,, saw Conservatory at the age of 14.
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Clyle -Haskill is chairman of the' concert. Tickets are available from Pontiac Kiwanis member;.	i
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Michigan's 2 Negro Congressman Discuss Issues
(EDITOR’S JVOTE\- Michigan is the only* state ikthe na-... tioh which will haue tumSlegro " congressmen. The Associated Press talked with each of tn$m and teamed their views on sues and on psychological fac-’ tors. This first story of a two-' part series deals with issues.,)
By DICK BARNES Associated Press Writer DETROIT - “The Northern Republican, Southern Dixiecrat Coalition is in its last phases,’’ says Michigan’s newest Negro congressman, Rep.-elect John Conyers.
But Rep. Charles Diggs Jr., who With Conyers gives Michigan the only pair of Negro representatives in Washington, is wary that House leadership may try to compromise liberal Democrats out of. their challenges against-certain of these
Southern congressmen. ---------
★ ★ ★
The two Detroit Democrats looked into 1965 in separate interviews with the Associated ..Press.	*
Conyers said 1965 should be a . year of decision for Democrats .who rode President Johnson’s landslide victory into overwhelming control of Congress.,
END OF ERA .......
* “We hopefully will be coming to the'end of an era in which we have a party that consistently goes in two directions,” said Conyers. * “The Southern wing goes in its direction, which is usually Republican, and the rest of the Democrats are left to try to form a winning team with the Southern colleagues defecting, “I tfiihk the Northern Republican, Southern Dixiecrat coalition is . in its last phases, .but we really won’t know until v>e actually test it.
OWN STRENGTH “Part of its strength or weakness will turn on how strong we are. We have 71 new Democratic congressmen. Nobody knows what a lot of these gentlemen are going to' do.”
Diggs, a 10-year House veteran, and Conyers both are com-mitted to push for stripping two party-bolters of their caucus and committee privileges, and challenging the seating of five Mississippi congressmen.
■■ * ★
The two* bolters, Rep. John Wiliiams, D-Miss., and Rep. Albert Watson, D-S.C., supported Republican Sen. Barry Gold-water for president. The five Mississippians have been chai-lenged by the Freedom Democratic party on grounds of voter registration discrimination in Mississippi.
Diggs, sees the situation .shaping up this way:
“You hear varying reports about the strength of those who are opposed. I think it depends to a large extent on the position of the leadership. Stories keep coming Out of the White House that the President is going to be neutral. I think these are public positions . . .
NOT SURPRISING “I would not be surprised if there is an attempt to maintain harmony and therefore not get involved in this sort of business.
I would be surprised if this were not the attitude of the administration i despite all of the evidence* that would seem to support the other (challenging) side.
“I am also being a little wary because the speaker (Rep. John McCormack, D-Mass.) has agreed apparently to most of the recommendations which have been made by the liberals' in the Democratic Study Committee.
★ * ★
“He has agreed to the restoration of the 21-day rule and various other (procedural) recommendations like that. I envision this as undercutting the more drastic recommendations that they’re making with respect to the rights and privileges of the two members (Williams and Watson)...
“They might use this (procedural recommendations) to say, ‘well, my goodness, this is certainly more important than a couple’of congressmen.’...”
NOT ENOUGH VOTE Diggs said the challenge to seating of the Mississippians could also be undercut but added, “I don’t anticipate realistically that we have enough
THIS OOUPOH Worth 10< Off
Oft, o Dozen Or Mora Donuts
votes to make a challenge ■stick.”
Conyers said compromise is almost certain but added, “we’ve got to do something to really make Congress responsive to this-mandate we have fallen heir to. One way is to
ring up to date the machinery of the Congress.
★	, it jr ,
BothNjnen believe the next major civil rights legislation, should dem with voting rights.
' Conyers put it this way;;
“I feel thahwe’ve got to move into this whole area of voter registration. I am sure that we can no longer wait and see how many -more Negta-Americans are going to be p&mitted to vote in places like Mississippi, Alabama and South Carolina.
5 PER CENT
" “Mississippi has 5 per cedt of the potential Negro voters re istered. I don’t know what per\ centage of them actually vote, hut this We know: there is historical, systematized,, legal
methodology of disfranchise-federal authority in voting ment, Coercion and mtimida- rights to the front. I think this
tiqp... ,	_	.......... "
“We’ve goUrtp move out and really bring the full gyight of
should be done in\i965 in implementing the Civil Ri; ~
in
THREE RIVERS (AP)-Two fishermen drowned hear Ibis southwestern Michigan community Saturday St. Joseph’s County Sheriff’s deputies identified the victims as Donald Boris of rural Three Rivers and Ronald Regel of Mendon. Both victims were reportedly in their 40s.
A witness told deputies he saw the pair’s boat capsize on Corey Lake, five miles west of Three Rivers.
Michigan State Police skin livers said they had recovered te of (hejiodies but were still seVching for the second.
Bomb Explodes 1 at Chile Building
SANTIAGO, Chije fltSbA homemhde bomb exploded at The American-Chilean Cultural Institute last night two blocks from the presidential "palace.
The blast damaged a door and shattered a window. No injuries were refloated,
An investigation Was still under way into an. explosion that rocked a terrorist hideaway in a Santiago suburb Friday, killing two men. Police found 35 dynamite sticks intact- in The wreckage.
The hideaway, used to make bombs, was demolished when a bomb accidentally exploded, po-lice said.
2 Flee With $18,000
“Unless we come in with an poverty. - stricken person in DETROIT UP)—Two bandits all-inclusive omnibus voting bill j America. It* so hard for me to overpowered a clerk at De-as we did'in 1963 with an omni-1 conceive how we’re going to do troit’s Receivihg Hospital Sun-bus bill affecting all the facets!much more than make the be- day and fled with $18,000 from of tpe civil rights problems I ginning of a beginning in a :*the property room Vhult. T h e ’ then I think that we are justj program that’s wrapped in this robbery took place only a few delaying the resolution of this* kind of a framework.”	, feet away from a busy corridor. ‘
Act...
w.,..
“I don’t , think we chn go on much longer in this country claiming to be'a model mstitu-tioh of government without real picking up on this problem^ Diggs said the problem with, past voting legislation is that it dealt piecemeal with .the problem. pPP • '	„	I
NEXT MEASURE The next such measure “ought to be (me which will settle this matter from a legislative standpoint once and for all,” he said, “It ought to make fhe requirements for voting almost as simple as the requirements for being drafted...
matter as far as. the legislation is concerned...tf the bill comes to the floor it would pass.’1
it ^ .
Both men agreed that Medicare should pass in 1965—“R should be gotten out in the first month of Congress,” said Conyers, who added that generally;
“If we can’t get things through with a 2-to-l majority, if we don’t produce now, we aren’t going to produce in 1966.”
★ ★ ★
The , two agreed there is some Communication problem in making, the campaigns of the War on Poverty known to those who are supposed to be’ helped.
Conyers said the present $35 million limit’ ^should be increased because “$35 million doesn’t get a dollar to each
A vejy large * still yield about t
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When you take in everything, there's more room inside this car than in any Chevrolet ds far back as they go. It’s wider this year and the attractively curved windows help to give, you mom shoulder
Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe
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So, besides the way a '65 Chevrolet looks and rides and is powered, we now have one more reason to ask you: What do you get by paying more for a car—except bigger monthly payments?
[k+-
Chevelle Malibu Super Sport Coupe
CHEVELLE-The most popular intermediate-sized car you can buy.
Of all the cars its size, Chevelle is,the biggest seller. Why? Because it has a smooth Full Coil suspension ride. Because most models osyge with thick deep-twist carpeting, wall to wall; and all-vinyl interiors; and all are available
with
Corvair Corea Sport Coupe
CORVAIR" Theenly rear engine American car made.
You should read what the car enthusiast magazines say about the ’65 Tforvair. They’re wild About its ride. They think there’s nothing else this side of the Atlantic that can touch its styling. They say if you haven’t driven a new Corsa with 180 Un ,'A"	'*'”***	—s—«•**
CHEVYH~As economical a car as you can own, but.. *
But those rust-resisting rocker panels, that buttery-saving generator, those self-adjusting brakes and those smooth dependable engines have never been in more beautiful surroundings. Come see what some very expensive looking styling changes and yards of luxurious upholstery can do.
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CORVETTE “The only true sports car Atheric
Now everybody claims to have a “true” sports car. But other dealers cati\say they have one available with a fuel-injected V8, as Corvette does. Or with 4-wheel disc brakeband 4-wheel independent suspension, as Corvette does. They can't say they have ope with a clem, conscience.
Drive something really new-discover the difference at your Chevrolet dealer’#
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Think of three top Shirtrnakens and you've probably, guessed the labels that are on . these shirts. These are all from our regular stocks and from manufacturer's close-outs —^and you'll find'them in regular finish white broadcloths, wash V Wedr white broadcloths, all-cottons in white and solid shades and fine ^oxfords in white, solids and stripes. And you'll find them in all your favorite styles — regular spread, button-down and snap-tab models with regular or convertible cuffs. Because the price is so low, we can't mention the makers' names, but you'll see them on the shirts. We can tell you that this is the kind of sale that happens once in a blue moon — and it's happening now at HHS. But come quickly — the supply is limited, and they'll go like lightning at this price.



fine broadcloth aiid oxford shirts by oar best makor at groat savings
groat sayings on fino whito cotton & broadcloths by a loading maker
We wouldn't have to mention this maker's name—even If we could. You'll recognize the quality the minute you see these shirts. The broadcloth Is lustrous and silky smooth; the oxford is beautifully woven, And AA the craftsmanship is beyond reproach, with the mm fine stitching and careful attention to styling. gS Regular spread, short point, snap-tab and P 'lutton-down collar models.
One of the finest groups of shirts we carry, by a maker you'll recognize—even before you see the label. The fabric Is a lustrous combed white cotton broadcloth.	PP AA
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TWENTY-FOUR
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 4,1965
Tension Cause, Exposed
'Knock/ kJnnieodedMneos
By DICK WEST v WASHINGTON (UPI) - Early last month, the Society for Advancement of Management |held a conference here on. [the subject ] “Living with [Executive Ten-Isiohs!”
Its purpose I was ‘ to discuss I the various fac-I tors that cause ' strain on executives, and to ex-
WEST
plore ways of coping with them.
I amnow convinced that none of the things mentioned at ihe1 conference is responsible for the rise in executive tension^m this country.	/
I believe that the real cause can be found in An article that subsequently Appeared in the Wall Street^ Journal. It discussed the risp in hemlines of women office wooers.
over how short skirts can be at work “without-seriously im pairing the functioning of the American economy.”
:	' dF ★ dr
According to the journal, America’s tycoons of business and captains of industry are caught up in a lively controver-
No Wonder those poof chaps are riddled with tensions: 7 hardly qualify as an executive, but nothing makes ,me quite as tense as a woman office worker with her, bare, knees hanging out.
-Junior Editors Quiz on-
DRIFTWOOD
| HAVING I
iFUNwrm is
[DRIFTWOOD! S
TRAFFIC STRAIN * It is bad enough when the woman is your co - worker When you are her boss, the mental and nervous strain must be terrific.
As Dr. Francis J. Brace-land, a prominent psychiatrist, pointed but in his address at the conference, persons on the management level must endure the .“loneliness of command.”
An executive who is continually confronted with one or mori sets of female knees throughout the working day undoubtedly is the loneliest of all.
★ ■ dr .	★
He must constbntfy be on guard to avoid spying things like “take a knee,7 Miss Jones,” or “take a letter, Miss Knee.”
QUESTION: Where does driftwood come from?
.ANSWER: Bits oLdriftwood turn up on most ocean beaches, often deposited by* the high tide and left stranded as* the water recedes.
They come to the beach fihmany ways,, often being dead trees and branches which float down rivers and, out to sea, where they are carried around by ocean currents.
Broken boxes and wreckage of Various kinds are another source. The action of the wateKmakes driftwood strangely beautiful, smoothing it down to* silvery sheen and often showing the rhythmic nature of the wood, making it look like fine sculpture,.	\
Of recent years, fine pieces are frequently used for such ornamental purposes as lamp bases (left).	N.
One does not need to live by the sea to enjoy' the interest of such wood, for dead trees and* stumps often take fascinat-ing shapes as the soft wood rots away and leaves the harder grain showing.
In fhe picture, Ted found a bit which looked like a funny head (1). He scraped out two eyeholes, filled them with white cardboard.
'* Finding another piece for a body, he has drilled a hole in it and put a wooden dowel ip the bottom of the head. In (2) he glues in the peg and there, hi (3), is the final figure. It was fun to make — he’s going to try some more.
FOR YOU TO DO: Other people have imagination besides Ted. Get in on the act — watch for some old wood stems or roots which remind you of heads, hands or bodies. Then see what you can do putting them together.
HARD TO IGNORE The situation doesn’t become-critical as long as women who wear short skirts to the office remain standing. But owing to a peculiarity of the feminine anatomy, when a woman sits down, her knees become twice as difficult to ignore.
If I were an executive and wanted to reduce my tensions,
I would remove all the chairs from the office.
Although ascending hemlines generally are classified as a passing fashion, I strongly suspect they are more than that, dr 'dr . dr The evidence indicates they are part of a female plot to wrest control of the business world from men.
it it it -
Women obviously are trying to create conditions under which all male executives Will either have complete breakdowns, or will have to go away on long sea voyages to forget about knees.
Bartender Fatally Shot by Rowdy, Police Say
DEARBORN (UPI) - A Dearborn bartender was shot and killed yesterday after he ordered. a man to leave a bar for “being too loud,” police said.
Police said Eugene Walinski, 37, was shot three times in the chest. Witnesses said the man returned! to the bar after Walinski ordered him out for being too loud and shot the bartender.
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«><►<><>


Isrcfel to Open Branch of Consulate in Detroit
such branch office in the Unil
States.
m
)IT (UPI) - Israel will open * branch office of a consulate here this month, the first
Israel already has in 'New York, Chicago,
Boston, San Francisco and Atlanta.'
DeathFails toRide \ Delaware's Highways
WILMINGTON,’Dd. (AP) -Delaware, which had an, all-time high of 117 traffic deaths
for the state fa 1964, went through theNowYear’s holiday period without a highway fatality reported.
Alaska has 5,580 mites of seacoast. ,	* s
Hlbre than 16.8 million chfi. drqn participated in the federal school lunch program lest year. They consumed 775 million pounds of food, according to the
1
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IN THE MIRACLE MILE SHOPHNilfllTEB AND PERRY AT MONTCALM
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MONDAY, JANUARY
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN,
TWBNTY-PIVB
Proposed Bttilcftfig Projects Involved x
Presentation of the 1964 Corn Contest awards and jelection of directors will highlight the annual meeting of the Oakland County Soil Conservation, District Jan. 13.
“To be held at St. Benedict’s Church in Waterford Township,
Acting as toastmaster for the 7:30 p.m. affair will be SCD Chairman James L. Reid of White Lake Township. The invocation will 'big given by Lyle Abel, dir^or, Qounty Cooperative Extension Service.
ton of Oakland Township for the two 3-year terms. .
Nominations also will be accepted from the floor.
to attend whether or not they are eligible to vote. J
lie district report will be given by Robert McCrary of Lyon Township after wbleb Poffenberger will present the (kmi Contest awards. :
Young Ross’s talk on Poland will conclude the evening program.
Tickets pan be obtained from directors Samuel Miller of Springfield Township, tycCroiy, Middleton, Reid and MitdteQ.
ORION TOWNSHIP — Two public hearings are slated for Jan. 23 and both involve proposed building projects.
If ■ W ipf < i» * J A 7 p.nju bearing will geat with n proposed amendment to the township’s zoning ordinance which would atom a trailer court in the township.
Rezoning from residential to accommodate a trailer court tentatively planned for 2285 Brown has been approved by the zoning board and dm Oakland County Planning Commission.
The Township Board will consider the rezoning aspect at its Jan. 12 meeting.
- Any landowner or occupier of three or more acres of land in
the banquet also will feature a talk on life in Poland by Richard Ross of Caro.
Richarg, who spent six months hi Poland as an International' "Farm Youth Exchange (IFYE) student, will fllnstrate his remarks with colored slides.
SCD' Director Keith Middleton of Oakland Township will introduce board members, special guests and county officials present.
DIRECTOR ELECTION Next will follow the election of directors, with Harold Mitchell of Holfy Township presiding.
The terms of, Reid and Middleton have Expired, and the nominating committee has' nominated Jeff Holm wood and Reid of White Lake Township, and Stuart Braid and Middle-.
They also are available at the Soil Conservation District office^
the Oakland County Soil Conservation District is eligible, to vote in the election.
ALL INVITED
Jay Poffenberger, county agriculture agent, urges everyone
35 E. Huron, Pontiac; the Cooperative Extension Service office, 155 N. Saginaw, Pontiac; or at the door of the church on Lynn Street and Voorheis Road, Waterford Township.
W0M
THREE IN ONE — All three adults in the George H. Goble family of Oakland Township head Rochester; organizations. They are Mrs. Goble, her husband and her father, Thomas Thomsen, shown here in an unlikely arrangement of sharing a common
table, for their individual jobs. Mrs. Goble is president of the Rochester branch of the Women’s National Farm and Garden Association, her husband of Rochester Kiwanis and her father of the Heart of the Hills Senior Citizens Men’s Club.' *
Each Heads Organization
By LEE OLSON •- , Area Newt Editor OAKLAND TOWNSHIP1 - The chiefs now outnumber the Indians in the George H. Goble household.
With the advent of the New Year, the presidents of area organizations in this five-member family has reached a total of three — all the adult mem-bers. -.	».
Goble himself was installed as president of the Rochester Kiwanis Club Dec. 28.
His wife* Eveline, is now serv-
ing her second term as head of the • Rochester Branch of th Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association.'
Not to be outdone by his jun tors, although he was elevated to his top job before his son-in law, is Thomas Thomsen. pilEN’S CLUB
The 78 - year - old Thomsen is president of the Heart of the Hills Senior Citizens Men’s Club which has a membership of 50.
Having responsible positions in organizations d AV 0t e d
Adult Class Registrations
FARMINGTON - Registra ttona will be taken this week for tiie more than, 40 courses offered during the second- term of the Farmington Public Schools adult education pro gram.
★ * *
The program operates f o r three 10-week terms during the school year.
Director Richard Tyler has scheduled classes for Monday through Thursday at Farming-ton High School, 32000 Shiawassee.
Registration will be c 0 n -ducted from 6:30 ,to 0 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday at the adult education office in the high school.
New this term is a seminar on charting and technical analysis. Participants will learn the basic principles of charting, the Only organized method of eliminating, poor stock market timing.	VW . -
NOT FOR BEGINNER Not for the beginner, the class requires some familiarity with stocks and securities. The three sessions will be held Feb. 3,10, and 17.	,
Also new to the program is a course tailored to modern . life — creative problem solving.
Donald Nichols, experienced in guidance and counseling, will use techniques and exercises that have proved valuable to Individuals In their personal, professional and community roles.
NEW COURSES Other new courses are creative writing Interior design and charm and poise.
Also offered will be business courses, crafts classes, plus fine arts* language and liberal arts. Homemaking) recreation and bridge will be Included along with courses In American dance, Latin American dance add yoga.
Among the special and cosponsored classes is one for diabetics conducted by Botsford General Hospital staff members. Sessions will be held from 7 to 0 p.m. Jan. 12, 10 and 26 and Feb. Bands.
Registrations can be made at
the Oakland Coiiiiity Health Department, Pontiac.
A 15-week course on major English authors of the Romantic period will be held from 4:30-6:30 p.m. Mondays. Graduate or undergraduate college credits can be earhed.
A .great decisions class is being cosponsored by the Farmington Friend* * of the Library. The eight-week discussion sessions will begin sometime In February.
Registrations should be made at the county health department for an eight-week course for expectant parents. Taught by * public health nurse, the clas8 will start Jan. 13.
High school credit? can be earned through a modified correspondence program. The courses are open to anyone needing not more than four , credits for graduation.
Gifts Shower First Baby of 1965 at Alrhont
ALMONT - Just over two hours after the New Year started, Sherry Ann Bonczak pul in her appearance as the first baby bqrn in 1665 at the Community Hospital.
Weighing In at six pounds, 8V4 ounces, the baby is the daughter of Mr, and-Mrs. David Bonczak, 141S. Bailey, Romeo. She is their first child.
Because of her timely birth the Infant and; ter proud parents, both 22, were showered with presents from area merchants.
The hospital also added Its traditional gift - the delivery charge “on the house.'*
★	★ dr
The young father Is employed at Ford Tractor Dlvisl^ni Birmingham.
Dr. George P. Chabator of Romeo delivered the baby at 2:10 a.ffl.
largely to community betterment and cnltural advancement is no novelty to any one of the three “chiefs.”
For example, Mrs. Goble started working on community projects at age 14 in her home town of Newburgh, N.Y.
... ★ a ★
A master’of organization, she comes by it naturally, her father, a former professional engineer with Allied Chemical Corp. in New York City and Camden, N.J., believes in order, and his shelves of files show it.
OWN APARTMENT ,
In his own apartment on the lower floor of the Gobles’ split-level ranch home at 5621 Orton, Rd., he can find anything he is looking for on a moment’s
notice/____________________
.	' G * ’
So can Ms daughter and Son-
in-law. Their trademarks are “tote boxes” for her and briefcases for him.
The Gobles both have held many posts in area organizations since they moved to Rochester nine years ago.
In recent years they ,h a v e twice served together as co-chairmen — of the Avon Players ticket committee and just last-year as heads of the Rochester Area Committee promoting the Meadow Brook Music Festival at Oakland University with their friends, Dr. and Mrs. Oscar J. Sorensen Jr.
MEMBERSHIP DRIVE Goble, manager of reliability and quality assurance at the Chrysler Missile Division, has
one prime objective for Kiwanis it
right now. He wants to spark a drive to add to the club membership which now totals 60 men.
Mrs, Gobel’s job as president of the WNFGA involves directing the activities of 130 members of the local branch which is the sixth largest in the state.
Boat Is Lost, but 3 Saved on Lake Ice
FLINT (UPI) — Approximately 100 feet of water separate James E. Bailey from the boat he took all summer to build— but he really doesn’t care, v *	*	*
Bailey, his young ton Gregory, 5, and his father-in-law, Keith H. Day, 56, are all alive to tell how the boat, which ran on three skis and was powered by an 80-horsepower motor, got to the bottom of Silver Lake, 18 miles south of here. '	'
The trio went to the lake yesterday to test the iceboat. After zipping around for Some time, they hit a patch of ice which could not bear the weight of the boat and crew.
As the ice cracked and the boat began to submerge, Bailey, 27, tossed his son to firmer’ice.
He then jumped into the icy water to pull his father-in-law to the surface..
RESCUER ARRIVES Another iceboater noticed their plight and threw a rope to Bailey and hauled the twe men out of the water.
, ★ ★ ★
. Day was taken to Hurley Hospital for observation. Bailey and, his son went home.
All three had a story to tell.
The beauties of nature also are of concern to her father who is ,«< member and past officer of the Men’s Garden Club of Rochester.
★ ★ ★
And all of the trio’s activities are undertaken with the full support of the two Goble daughters, Sue, 12, and Diane, 10.
FATHER’S COMPLAINT In fact, there’s only one common complaint on their father’s part — with Mis family such a busy one:
“I just have trouble finding the telephone not Ih use when try to call home" — but he refuses to fix the blame.
Fire Damages Area House
Apparently Caused by Careless Smoker
• ROCHESTER - Fire appsr ently caused by a careless smoker yesterday caused $3,000-$4,000 damage to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Sheldon 200 Williams.
★ ★ , ★
Rochester firemen were called to the scene shortly before 7 a.m. by the Sheldons, who we awakened by smoke.
Fire Chief Lyle Buchanan said the fife started in a living room chair, which was destroyed along with the floor underneath it.
Buchanan said the Sheldons retired at about 1 a.m., and that the fire must have smoldered for hours.
Heavy smoke made It necessary for firemen to wear masks, but they had the fire under control in minutes.
SMOKE DAMAGE
The fire caused smoke damage throughbut the house, which is insured against fire damage.
Recommended Adding Urea to Corn Silage
Addition of 10 pounds of urea per ton of com silage was recommended by 20 dairymen whp successfully used the practice In 1603, says Don Hillman, Michigan State University dairy extension specialist.
Economic advantages of using urea far outweigh the disadvantages when protein supplements are costly.
Growing Warren Paces State Cities
WARDEN (AP) - This Detroit suburb, already ,Michigan's fourth most populous city, reported the state’s highest growth rates in population and home construction in 1664 for the sixth consecutive year.
Mayor William A. Shaw said today that Warren issued construction permits last year for 4,158 new dwellings worth a total of about $60 million.
He said .the suburb added more than 1,000 new residents a month during 1064, raising its population to more than',140,000. That figure Is exceeded only by the populations of Detroit, Grand Rapids and Flint. ;
ROCHESTER — Overcrowding at some Rochester School District elementary schools and new facilities at others will mean tiiatrat le'ast 200 school-children wiU attend different schools next fall.	. •
Schools Supt. Dr. William T. Early will present adrainistra-t i o n * s recommendations for changes in attendance area boundaries to the school board at its Jan. 18 meeting. -
The transfer of children from one school to another that will result from the changes is expected to relieve overcrowding, primarily' at Meadow Brook and North Hill schools.
From those schools, the children will be transferred to the
nearest available school, three of the four other schools now being increased in size with additions.
~T~
Eighteen classrooms are now being added to the district’s elementary level capacity, with additions at Baldwin, McGregor, Brook lands and Woodward schools.	#
NO ADDITIONAL STUDENTS
Brooklands will receive no additional students from other schools, inasmuch as its own student body is large enough to fully utilize tiie addition.
In pointing out the need for transferring students next fail, Dr. Early stressed that only those children now being
transported to school would be shifted toother schools.
No child now walking to his elementary school will be transferred.
This is to minimize the effects of the transfer on the students.
NOT SUDDEN MOVES The superintendent alao pointed out that the moves being recommended by the administration are not sudden or lightly taken.
“We’ve been studying this for a year and a half,” said Early, “we know where we’re going and how we’re getting there.”
He said that he hoped the board would act on toe administration’s recommendations Jan. 18.,
The 78-acre site being considered for the trailer court lies in Orion Township, hut is included to the Pontiac City School District rather than the Lake Orion School District.
REQUIREMENTS "The amendment Ifo the zoning ordinance would establish requirements for the new “Trailer Court District No. 3A.”
A second hearing at 8 p.m. will cover the proposed re-zoning of 21(4 acres at the northwest corner of Baldwin Avenne and 1-75 {ran residential to business classification.
Such action would* allow planned construction of a motel, gas station and restaurant on the property, which lies in both Orion and Pontiac townships.
.- ★ ★ ★ 1 The buildings, however,-would be constructed only on the Orion Township portion of toe property, adding to the township’s tax base.
“Please, just one cookie?”
Not long ago, Mrs. Barbara Saylor, Michigan Bell telephone operator in Flint, heart! the hesitant voice of a small boy asking her if it was all right if he ate a cookie.
“But it’s so near dinner,” was her reply.
“Mommy’s not here to make dinner, and I’m hungry.”
“Where is your mommy?” Barbara inquired.
“She called,% .the par broke... she’ll be late. I sure would like a cookie.”
Barbara hesitated a moment.
“Please, justone copkie?” pleaded the boy. "•
“Instead,” suggested Barbara, “why don’t you spread yourself a nice slice of bread and butter? I m sure Mommy will give you a cookie after dinner. Will you be a good boy and do that (or me?” “Okay,” replied the youngster, disappointed but reassured that—somewhere—a nice woman was it hand to offer a hit of motherly advice until bis own mother arrived home.
Nothing unusual about this little incident, another example of how. telephone people naturally friendly and thoughtful. You see, Michigan Bell, friendly service is a way of
Michigan Ball
Part of the NitionwMa bad Systam
S19
^ w	m / -'f'
$1 wkn^^-six - rA/r^
s®
~iif - V ’■'* I£pK‘
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY A *»M

People in the Mews
A LIFE SAVER Mrs. Daphne Handley disapproves of the U.S. attitude toward cats, so she buys from shelters and ships them to her native England.
★ ' ★ ★
\
★ ★ ■ ★
Can't Bear ,Cats Killed
Pussycats, the Surplus kind, are the cat’s meow to Daphne Handley.
, She loves them — and exjtorts them, all the way to her native England. .
' ★ ★ ★
Mrs. Handley, currently in Los Angeles, said she is indignant at the way Americans treat stray cats. She thinks cats Wouldn’t be killed just to get rid of them.
“I spend all my spare cash on cats, she declared while . petting a big feline named Bruce. She said she makes.fre* quent trips to the city pound to buy all the cats that .will be put to sleep, the ones, she said, “vriho-don’t have a chance.”
“On one trip to the pound to buj/ cats,’’ said Mrs. Handley, “a dog looked up at me. I enddd up getting that dog and a German shepherd and two others that looked up.
★ ★/ ★ \
“I felt', at any rate, no dog would die that day,” she said.
“I had 12 cats at home at the time. Dogs and cats had to go into different rooms. I managed to find all the dogs homes,” she said.
17 CATS SENT HOME
She said she has sent 1/ cats off to Great Britain, Where they are boiarded until she returns to her Chelsea home.
She had 10 cats briber rented house in suburban Woodland Hills when the/city suggested she obtain a kennel license. Later, she left to visit a brother in $an Francisco —and took ail the cats with her.
Isn’t it somewhat expensive, shipping all those cats to England and boarding/them? Somewhat, she replied. One lot cost $100 and something to ship.”
j ★	★ ' ★
The care of/the 17 cats costs her $16.80 a. month. But the cost, she said, is unimportant.
./
Puss Is Booted in Detroit
/
The/Detroit Persian Society today is looking for a new placq to hold its cat sfibw after being booted out of a Detroit hotel in favor of a veterans’ group.
"t j	★	★	★
»; fk hotel spokesman said a conflict of convention dates fcaused the mixup.
L However, Mrs. Virginia Daly of suburban Berkley,
/ manager of the cat show, said her group has filed suit k to enforce its contract to hold the show in the hotel.
*	“We’ve had reservations for the finest cats in America « . . from California, Canada, Florida and New York.”
*	“Naturally,” said Hubert Warnecke, manager of the hotel, ‘'veterans have some precedence over' oats.”
6 imm wluj
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During Our
Many are one of a-kind and quantities are limited?^ merchandise will be sold bn a first come basis don't wait. Our cpologies, but' no mail or phone orders dwlQg this clearance sale, - - •
OPEN TONIGHT 'til 9pm.
UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
MR. & MRS. CHAIRS & OTTOMAN 2 only, Colonial, 3-pc. group • In , Avocado or Gold Tweed covers.
Reg. 149. NOW
COLONIAL ROCKER
4 only. Wood wing design. Foam rubber cushion, pillow back, green or gold print. Your choice
Reg. 99. NOW
57.
WINGBACK SOFAS
2 only. Colonial, foam rubber cushions, self decked and arm covers, durable tweeds in brown or turquoise,
Reg. 199. NOW
COLONIAL WOODWING SOFAS 2 only, foam cushions in lovely beige or brown print cover.
Reg. 169. NOW
144.
133.
COLONIAL WOODWING SOFA ~t unlywlth foam cushions In-beautlful ~ •gold print cover.
Reg. 149. NOW
'KROEHLER COLONIAL SOFAS
2 only, wingback with foam cushions ;ln textured cover, Gold or Avocado.
Reg. 199. NOW
166.
ri 4-3635
%mMm
NYLON COLONIAL SOFAS
2 only,, wingback design with foam cushions in char/brown.
Reg. 189. NOW
PROVINCIAL (3-Pc.) SECTIONAL 1 only, beautiful fruitwood trim in Rosebelge cover. ~
Reg. 349. NOW
219.
Reg. 149.95 — 5 only
Modern or Colonial Foam Cushion Sofas
Tweed or Textured Covers In decorator Colors.
99.
.COLONIAL SOFAS 3 only, loam cushions, tweed covers ■In gold, green or lovely brown,
Reg. 149. NOW
FRENCH PROVINCIAL SOFAS
2 only, foam rubber cushions, fruitwood trim. Mottelasse natural cover.
Reg. 229. NOW
COLONIAL QUILTED SOFA 1 only, Foam rubber cushions, selfdecked, toast print quilted cover.
Reg. 249. NOW
99. '188. 197.
'COLONIAL WINGBACK SOFA
1 only, foam rubbor cufthlom, M»lf d«c,k«d and arm covori, brown nondlnpoinf covor.
Reg. 229. NOW
KROEHLER CLASSIC SOFAS 3 only, loam rubber cushions, nylon matebite cover,, beige or itatural.
’ Reg. 199. NOW
Reg. 59.95 to 69.95
Reclining Chairs-Rockers and Occasional Chairs
fabrics and vinyl
NOW
KROEHLER MODERN SOFAS
4 only, 84" (3) cushion sofas, foam cush ions, textured covers. Avocado, brown or
red.	Reg. 199. NOW
KROEHLER MODERN SOFAS
2 only, 78" foam cushion sofas, textured covers, Avacado-gold and beige.
Reg. 179. NOW
KROEHLER (3) pc SECTIONAL 1 only, deluxe, foam rubber cushions and foam back. Nylon cover, green.
Reg. 299. NOW
f 133. 99. 199.
ICROgHLER LIVtNG-ROOM SUITE — 3 only (2) pc. Sofa and matching chair with foam cushions and nylon covers. Brown, green, grey.
Reg. 279NOW
(2) pc. LIVING ROOM SUITE
3 only, by Kroehler, Spfa and matching chair in brown or beige:
Reg. 199. NOW
177.
144.
BROYHILL SWIVEL ROCKERS '3 only, foam rubber cushions, self decked and arm covers. Lovely Gold or Blue.
Reg. 89.95 NOW
STRATFORD MODERN SOFA I only, foam cushion^, textured cover, lovely Avocado.
Heg.219.NOW
COLONIAL WINGBACK CHAIRS 4 only, foam cushions, tweed covers 'In gold, turquoise or russet.
Reg. 69.95 NOW
188.
133.
BEDROOM	
, ▼	’'
PROVINCIAL (4) pc. BEDROOM 1 only, french provincial luite with triple, dreiier, mirror, cheit and panel bed. | Antique white with gold trim*. Reg. 239. NOW 1	189.
MODERN (4) Pc. BEDROOM* 3'only, In lovely walnut with double dresser, mirror, chest and panel bed. Plastic tops. Reg. 199. NOW	169.
KROEHLER (4) pc. BEDROOM 1 only, Modern triple dresser, mirror *1 chest and panel bed. Formica tops. 1 Reg. 229. NOW 1	89.
Reg. 199. — 3 only BASSETT ~4. PC MODERN BEDROO'M Double dresser, mirror, chest and panel bed. formica •op*. /'t 'V’ : .now l’4y,jp	
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OTHER ITEMS HOT ALSO SALE PRICED.
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STANLEY (4) pc BEDROOM t only. Modern Triple dresser, mirror chest'and panel bed.
Reg. 229. NOW
LIMED OAK.(4) pc. BEDROOM
1 only. Modern double dresser, mirror chest and bookcase bed.
Reg. 219. NOW
Reg. 39,95
9'xl2' ROOMSIZE RUGS
durable nylon tweed with foam backing Jn decorator .	colors.
NOW
MODERN BEDROOM 2 only, (4) pc walnut triple dreissef, mirror, chest and panel bed.
Reg.219.NOW
PROVINCIAL (3) pc BEDROOM 1* only, triple dresser, mirror and panel bed In lovely cherry.
Reg. 179. NOW
179.
129.
WALL MIRRORS
7 only, by Bassett. 26" x 40", In heavy plate glass..
Reg. 29.95 NOW
14.
TABLE LAMPS
12 only, modeYn In white or tangerine. 1
Reg. 10.95 NOW,
DINING ROOM
GROUP 10 95 to 29.95
BUFFET WITH.MATCHING HUTCH ,1 only, colonial maple with full 52"
' width. ______ '
Reg.269.NOW
Decorator Table Lamps ■ Pole and Floor Lamps
to 72 OFF
5 pc DINING GROUP 2 only, in Provincial with oval ext. table and 4 side chairs.
Reg.199.NOW
BREAKFRONT CHINA 1 only, full 48" china in lovely cherry. Provincial style.
Reg.149.NOW
55
133.
•47.
,5-PC. DINING GROUP 1
4 only, Salem Maple, Round Ex tension table, and four (4) Captain's ■ 4 Chairs. Reg. 179. NOW
166. 129. 99;
DUAL PURPOSE FURNITURE
FAMOUS MAKE HIDE-A-BED 2 only, foam cushion*. A sofa by day, O comfortable full size bed with Innersprlng mattress by night.
Reg. 249. NOW
DINETTES
MODERN SOFA BED 1 only, by Berta, Walnut finish. Brown and beige striped cover.
Reg. 119.95 NOW
179.
97.
7-Pc DINETTES	,
5 only, Table and (6) chairs, Fprmlca top table, branzetone legs.
Reg. 99.95 NOW
Kroehler Steep or Lounge 2 only, foam cushions. A sofa by day, a comfortable full-size bed with innersprlng mattress by night.
Reg. 199. NOW
9-Pc. DINETTES
5 only, table and (8) chairs, Formica top toble, bronzetone legs.
Reg. 129.95 NOW
5-Pc. DINETTES
2 only, toble and.<(4) chairs, Formica top toble, bronzetone legs.
Reg. 79.95 NOW
5-Pc COLONIAL DINETTE 1 only,'table and (4) chairs, maple fin* lihed plastic top table.
Reg. 149.95 NOW
OCCASIONAL FURNITURE
STEP TABLES	■	.
4 only, limed oak with rugged Formica*
1 tOp. 1 n
Reg. 19.95 NOW
COCKTAIL TABLES 3 only, maple with
plaitlC 1001.	41® '' '‘.Lip';
Reg. 12.98 NOWUt
MATTRESSES and BOX SWINGS
Group, Fbmout make Twin and full Slit
skmtm
Reg. 849.9$ to 869.98 NOW
37.
Mi .
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Mon.-Thurs.-iri.
'Til 9 P.Mr
iSSmii mWmSrnM
liOT/Mi'M MM
174ft S. Saginaw 5k' downtown PfDNTI AC / >-r
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THE FQNTIACPREiSS MONDAY, JANUARY
mekm IP
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Ws a Pleasure to Shop and Save at
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A DAYSAWEfX OWNfUNBAY
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ISM HIcMand Road I Baldwin Avt..| 8ST5 CooleyLakeRd.
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Chicken, Turkey,Beef
FooS Tonwi-Noplt’t Uonui ItRiwp 0wm«
Food Town-People'i Bonin Btama 0«upon
FnaiffaVn^fro ala'll Bonu» ItiiiSf Ooupon
He* Tsw-PSoplli Bonus Stamp Ooupon
rood nwn-Ptupiu* itwii stamp M
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Stamps With Purohns,
of two or mor« j.i
Whole or Cut-Up Fryers
| FREE BOLD BELL 1 Stamps With Purohaia, of any
BEEF ROAST
FRBI COLD BILL Stampi With Purohata of any 2 pkgt. of~~
OKIES , AWREYS
lli rail BOLD BILL || Stamps With purehise
of 8 pound* or moro of
POTATOES
Ell FREE 00L0 0ELL' y|||; stamp* With purchase,
of ony 6 con* ef
DOG or CAT FOOD
Um» I Cwiimm. Nww m]W *e Beeler. *r miner.. • 6>ti|wa «*<**» Wed., J*n.0,1He. j.
limit I Ce**en. Nem teM to tlettlen or ntln*n. CettpieweeRlte. WeAiiKw. A >0*0.
limit I Coupon. Nett* ecM to 0e*l*n or minor.. Cooitoit *e*h*i Wed., J«». A10*>. , ,

Minll.l COoiMin, Nono.oUtoileolot.or ntliior.. ’:SB
& i,.tc*«P|Mia »ttinfi>j*Wteu.; j»nt.,o,'e»ag .* ■


FOOD MARKETS
SUPER MARKETS
ROMEO 16-oz. can APPLESAUCE ■f V v * . • 1	1te
PINECONE 16-oz. can gM gg W RED TOMATOES 1le	
COUNTRY KIST Whole Kernel CORN ~~	11°
	FOOD TOWN-PEOPLE'S BONUS COUPON
	
	COFFEE 1
ioH	: v ^- ROC Vac. Can lliP timitl |
	Limit 1 Coupon. None sold to doalott or., minors*
	- Coupon oxpire* Wod., Jan. 6,1965.
»ji.


i"V I
02181871

5#^5bfOwn Td>
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 4,, 1965
i
M&-
zsam.
Congress Made Big Changes on Sick Pav^Credit
,§ BY RAY DE CRANE ]| Newspaper Enterprise Assn
It’s still possible to say that, you can make* (and keep) more money while being home sick and drawing your pay than it is by going to work every day: •But possibly because of abuses of the sick pay credit in Jformpjr years, this is one .area where Congress made drastic changes in 1964.	• «
Before sick pay becomes a factor in your tax return there must be present these elements: You were absent from Work because of sickness or injury in 1964 and during this period of enforced absence from work you received compensation from your employer. (If you received payments utndeir an insurance contract, the amounts so received, are not reportable on your re^ turn.)
If yah were off the payroll | while you were absent from work, you nave no sick pay credit and none of the following applies in your case,
★ • ★ • ★ .
The new sick pay rules will probably become known as the 75 per cent-$75-$l06, formula. Here’s how it works:
Yott were absent'from work because pf sickness or injury and ,your employer paid you your Ml/tale or more than 75 per cept of your full rate white werp away. "After you were awdy 30 days you would take A sick pay credit of the actual] amount received weekly up to a maximum of $100 a week for | the Balance of the time you ! were away .
NO DIFFERENCE Contrary to the old rules in this situation, it makes no difference whether you were hospitalized or not.
If you received more than 75 per cent of your normal . salary While you were absent, you get no credit until you have been away more than 30 days.
Fpr example, an employe was absent because of illness for 60 days in 1964. His employer continued to pay him during this time his full salary of, $600 a month. Sirice his payment was greater than 75 per cent of his
a credit of the $100 weekly maximum.	'
1 '■	ir'' *	’ K
Now. take th^ case of a worker whose employer paid him 75 per cent of less of his normal pay while he was absent becairse of sickness. ’	:/-r
NO CREDIT /.
Unless he was hospitalized at least ope day during the period of absence there is no credit for the first seven consecutive
days.
y Thereafter, for the remainder of the 30 days, he would deduct his full pay up to a maximum of $73 a week. After the 30th day the maximum deduction would be $100 a week, assdining the
employe received that much or more/ (■ lift *
Assume the same facts but the employe was hospitalized at least one day.
• • ★	★ j- ★ ' Y
He received a sick pay credit for the full period of absence. His maximum credit was $75 a week for the first 30 days. At the end of the 30-day period the maximum credit advances to the actual pay or $100 a week, whichever is lesser.
TAX BREAK
Notice the attempt to equalize the tax break between the employe who -receives full pay while he is sick and the one who receives a reduced rate during such time.
The former must wait 30
"Cut Your Own Taxes"
In Care Of The Pontiac Press P. O. Box 489, Dept. A,
Radio City Station,
New York 19, N Y.
Please send me:.copies of "Cut Your Own .Taxes" at 50c per copy. Inclosed is my check or mopey order for
Name
Address
City
.State
(Please allow three weeks lor delivery!
Texas Woman Dies in Car Fire After Smash up.
LA PORTE, Texr (AF) - A woman was trapped and burned to death and her husband injured when their car left a highway Sunday night, hurtled through an airplane hangar and burst into flames. Ten airplanes were destroyed.
The woman was Mrs. Paul Troy Crawford, 23, of Houston. Her hUsband, 34, was hospitalized with second- and third-degree burns.
Cliff Hyde, owner of the flying service bearing his ’name, 'said several other aircraft were damaged. He estimated damage to the planes at $120,000 and ex: tensive damage to his new $35,-000 hangar.
The hangar at the La Porte
pay he would receive no credit Municipal, Airport east of Hous-for the first 30 days. For the ton is located only about.20 feet remaining 30 days he would take | from the highway.
Stranded Man
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HIT REEF
The boat /hit a reef off the island and sank Dec. 3, and Haas apparently lost the four-month food supply he had put aboard at Miayaguana.
The search for Haas, began Dec. 28 when his wife called the Coast Guard in Philadelphia and reported she had not heard from him since Nov. 30.
At that time Haas wrote he was leaving for the Virgin Islands Dec. 1 and would tele-phone when he reached St. Thomas in about 15 days.
* ★ *
When a Coast Guard commun-ications check of all the ports and docks in the Caribbean area failed to locate Haas, an all-ships bulletin Was issued to be on the lookout for the Mel-O-Dee.
LONE REFUGEE
A Navy plant patrolling the Crooked Island passage last Friday reported sighting what the pilot believed to be a lone Cuban refugee on Mira por Vos Island.
The Miami Coast Guard sent an amphibious plane to check the island, spotted the man, and dropped him a package of food and water. •
The frigate Rothesay, which was In the area, wag notified and got the Philadelphian off the Island, then transferred him to the cutler Ariadne,
Ado About Nothing
^ZURICH, Switzerland fUPIl—Po« J lice were called when two mo-j torists involved in an accident argued over which one would pay the damages. Police estimated the total damages to boUi cars was three Swiss francs (7ft cents).	.
days before the credit begins; the latter waits only seven days. And if he is hospitalized any time during his period of absence tie starts , to get instant credit.
Wherever sick pay credit applies it presents an opportunity to make a substantial tax savings.
'Hf k k k .Take the time to give a full explanation of the circum-
stances and attach this statement to your return. Your statement should recite the date you first missed work, the date you returned, the amount of pay received as . contrasted to your normal wages, nature of the illness,, the name of the hospital and the date you were hospitalized. J ’
V
(NEXT: New Tax Breaks for Older Citizens.)_______________*
More than 97.5 million persons have viewed exhibits of Ameri-
can firms at 155 international trade fairs in the last 10 yeata, ■
family of Scientist .Returns toRedGhma
HONG KOliG (fl - The family of scientist Yang Chen-ning, now an. American citizen, returned 10 Red China yester-. day after a tearful reunion in-Hong Kong with tfie Nobel Physics Prize winner, ~
It was the first meeting in 19 years. Several hours after seeing his father; mother, brother and sister, Prof. Yang flew to Tokyo en route home to Princeton] N.J., where he teaches at the university.
There are an estimated 1.5 minion migrant farin laborers in

Spent 30 Days on Tiny Uninhabited Island
KEY WEST, Fla. (UPI) -William F. Haas Jr., Who lived like Robinson ■ Crusoe for 30 days white shipwrecked on a tiny uninhabited island off southeastern Cuba, returns to civilization today.
Haas of Philadelphia was plucked from Mira por Vos Island by the British frigate H.M.S. Rothesay and transferred to the Coast Guard cutter Adriadne Saturday. The cutter was due here early today about 7 a m.
Mrs. Haas is scheduled to fly from Philadelphia iu This-island city to greet her hus-‘ band.
A Coast Guard spokesman said the 52-year-old Haas “appears to be in good condition, considering he’s been shipwrecked for 30 days.
★ ★ ★
Haas was en route from Miayaguana Island, British West Indies, to St. Thomas in the Vir^ gin Islands when “unfavorable winds and seas’’ drove his 24-foot auxiliary sloop tyel-O-Dee toward the small island about 70 mites from Cuba’s southeastern coast. ,
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THE POJ^IAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965
TWENTY-NINE
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) j§ Northern California’s emergency food airlifts and temporary housing will stretch on for weeks in the afteimath of the Christmas week flood, the Air
states — Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Nevada.
, Sr' [h it ,
Oregon Red Cross officials reported that most of their state’s 8,000. temporarily home-
ported its Flying Boxcars and the Northern Calif Globemasters have airlifted one nities of Orleans, 'million pounds of supplies since Eureka, Fernda Dec. 23 into Northern Calif or- Scotia-Rio Dell, M nia’s Humboldt County, de- ville, Red Crest, ( scribed by the federal Office of Guemeville, Yrek Emergency Planning as the Camp.
West’s hardest-Wt flood area. The Red Cross
MORE AIRLIFTS	'	^	b
' •	.	7\ ,	predicted up to s
Food and supply airlifts may assistance.
ctoritinue three more Weeks, the	___________
Air Force said, since smashed c
roads and bridges are stalling oUrgeons to
ground traffic. . f	_ *	_	.
About 30 Army, Marine and\ 5cars r'rom ' A^ Force helicopters are also j new YORK on dropping relief supplies.	i year pilot project
Force and Red Cross predicted today. d?	& J
Gloomy prospects for Northern California contrasted with a; brighter forecast in the West’s four other flood-distressed
I gggg | MMhjBfi **:
- The Red Cross said it will be Eureka on the; Pacific Coast,;make the prisoners’ readjust-a month before these families f reported most of its homes were ment to normal society ^easier, can move back into their' niired in five feet of silt.	The program is supported by a
homes. More than 1,000 families - Red Cross recovery centers $240,000 grant from the Vo6a-have no homes tO go back to. j distributed food and clothing on tipnal Rehabilitation Adminis-The Air, Force Reserve re- a “ho-questions asked” basis at tration.

BLIZZARD ADDS TO WOE—A snow storm yesterday thwarted attempts to send food to to the flood-stricken Salmon Mountain area north of Red Bluff, Calif. Highway 99 lead-
Rescue Efforts Pail
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HOLIDAY BEHIND THE WALL - West Berliners yesterday took advantage of the last day of the holiday period allowed by die Communists to visit East Berlin. Residents " going through the wail at Qberbaum Bridge are met by rein* \ttves.-;--- f"
Coecf Is Buried by Snowslide
NORDEN, Calif. (AP) -What happens when a highly trained ski patrol goes into action to rescue a skier buried in an avalanche?
.★ fir J*
•s A volunteer patrolman described today how his unit sought -and failed to locate before too late a University of
s
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Kit efficient Watar Matter Instantly stops Hit How of wotor after ooch Hushing.
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Acta Ihrouih sympathetic ntrvoui lyitum to rillfV* dlitron of “boot wav»»”l
California coed buried eight feet deep under an avalanche.
Molly Goodman, 26, a graduate student from Sail Pedro, was on snowshoes With her companion on the southeast shoulder ,bf Mt. Lincoln high in the Sierra near this resort.
A sudden slide swept Miss Goodman tp her death. "> ‘
LOST SKIS
Her companion, Jofin Hurst, a psychology professor at the university’s Berkeley campus, lost hie skis in the avalanche but escaped with his life.
Hurst saw Miss Goodman disappear about t p.m. He found her pack but no other trace.
★	* .fir'
He tramped nearly two miles down the mountain through foot-deep hew snow to the Sugar Bowl Ski Lodge and reported the accident.
A rescue operation b.v highly skilled ski patrolmen, most of them members of the National Ski Patrol system, swung into action.
TAKES CHARGE »
Joel Readio, 36, of Carmel Valley, Calif, an engineer and college professor on weekdays but a volunteer ski patrolman on weekends, took charge.
fir , fir fir .
Readio called the Sierra Club, half a mile away, for patrol reinforcements. Within minutes Francis R. Shoemaker, 43, an electrical engineer of Berkeley and other volunteer patrolmen at1 the Sierra Club were headed for. Sugar Bowl with emergency rescue equipment.
A 1 A ★
Readio organized the main search party into three units equipped with walkie-talkies. 'One headed for the avalanche with packs and probes —war surplus tank antennae. A second group set up as a radio communications relay team. The third wept to the top of 8,383-foqt Mt. Lincoln to get a cached rescue toboggan.
It was long since dark. A blizzard raged. One patrolman said It was "one of the nastiest
storms I’ve seen here i years.”
PROBE GENTLY Just after 8 p.ni.,. walking in echelon and probing gently -r first at the left foot, then dead center, then at the right foot — the pajtrolmen found Miss Good-man’s body under eight feet of powdered snow. ■ >
★ ‘ dr fir
They dug an 8-by-14-foothole, recovered the body, and had It back at Sugar Bowl Lodge by 11 p.m. " ., t ■
Princess Under
Margaret Threatened During Dublin Visit
One hour
mmim
TUI HOST IN DRV OLIANINO DRAYTON MARKNIZINQ
warnsft
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Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain
New York, N. Y. (Spodsl) -For the first time science ha* found a now healing substance with the astonishing ability to
wtthi tho astonishing ability to •hnnk hemorrhoids, stop jteh-fng, and relieve pain - without
mw**'. ,,
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Hand most amazing of aU -I improvement , was maintained In case* where a doctor’s observations were continued
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DUBLIN Iff) — Police maintained a strong, guard around Princess Margaret today after threats against her by die outlawed Irish Republican Army.
Two big trees were felled across the route which the princess and her husband, Lord Snowdon, normally would have taken .last night from Dublin to Birr Castle, their Irish holiday home.
Five, other, trees were partly rawed through, and b r o ken power lines blacked out villages in the area, Bat the royal motorcade took another route, ostensibly to avoid iced roads.
The queen’s sister and her huabqnd flew to Dublin yesterday to visit the earl and countess of Rosse at Birr. The countess is Snowdon’s mother. • Margaret’s two children stayed in London.
Police said young IRA extremists were .campaigning against the princess’’ visit with leaflets urging the people of Birr to “show your hostility.”
200 CHEER
But a crowd of about 206 cheered as the royal limousine entered the castle gates.
At the airport, police tore down pesters raying "Maggie Go Heme” and "Down With the Queen.”
Security men stood every hundred yards > along her . route through Dublin.
The IRA, banned both in Britain and Ireland, demands reunification of ,the Irish republic with the six counties of Northern Ireland. They are still itart of the United Kingdom. ' »
World Food Products Will! HaYo to Triple
WASHINGTON MR - Current estimates by agricultural economists show world food production, in less developed areas will have to triple from 433 million metric tens in I860 to 1.25 billion tons byd.OOOA.D.
ag, films assumes an anticipated
M per cent per capita increase In food consumption. in such
areas and an increase from the present population of LMdlUon teflfllftiL A* "
ing to the area had to be closed off due to < bliraard snow conditions yesterday evening, | ana further storms are expected today.,
YEAR
END ■■■■■■
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• ' ?|	'l>	- If
the Pontiac press.mondat, jantja&y *,
Seer^fra/necf Pakistani. St lies^While //3dfe4id ,Cprfflni^
r ■ • ■	5
/ ' : :^7
RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (AP)-*- President Mohammed Arab Khan says U.S.-Pakistani relations will remain strained
as long a$ the'United States keeps ^jsupplying India' with arms. Vf ' > ‘
dr 91 ‘ A k
"I would like to see our relations With the U.S. as friendly as they once were but the United States giving military aid to, India will continue to remain cause for our grave concern,” Ayub said in an interview.
Pakistan has regarded India
as its archenemy ever since the two countries were partitioned out of British India , in 1947. Their feud centers on control of tbs Himalayan state of Kashmir.
Ayub denied rumors that Pakistan Was drawing closer to Communist China and might poll out of the West’s SEATO and CENT© alliances.
The 61-year-gld .field marshal
won the country's first presidential election Saturday. He had ruled Pakistan under martial ldw since 1958, when he seised power in a military coup.
•J*. ■ ?»i ♦ ,‘Hk ‘'i ★
He won in electoral college balloting by 49,402 votes to 28,-225 for Miss Fatima Jinnah, 71-year-old sister of Pakistan’s founder. His term runs for five years.
“U.S. policy in this part of the world has changed hi a fashion that has imperiled our security,” Ayub said. '■;* ’:'i	>
k/kA* * ,
“I know the United States has its commitments and I don’t blame the Americans in a sense tor their global‘ attitude, but aiming India does not make sense to hie And I feel very strongly about that.,	■
“China is not going to attack India. India will -use these* American' weapons against smaller nations and continue 'hying to intimidate us as she has for the past 17 years. India is not going to act m a fashion that would further U.S. policy.” The United States rushed arms to India after Jbe start of the 1982 Indla-Chjna border war. U.S. economic and military aid
has totaled almost 0 billion to Pakistahhridpbout f8 bigion tig
Alaska U. Prof Dies
^EAKBANKS/Ala^i CAP) •* Dr. Ivar Skarland, 75, chairman of the anthropology department of the University of Alaska, died Jan.l. His body was found in a snowbank near hfe cabin Saturday. «	.	‘ !
There are about 8,000 different items on supermarket
Others AidWtingrx;
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -United,Air bines asked its 8,000 bay area employes last week to contribute one H Of tip each to,stranded Northern <?alitbniia flood victims, Tfe.■ m'myy The air line reported that everybody complied, except one man. He donated a six-pack of beer.
Leaves of teak trees are as rough as sandpaper. ,
HARRISON CROUSE
Bid to Commit Perfect Crime, Says Student
WfLMETTE, 111. (AP) - A University of Illinois freshman described as studious and ambitious has been charged with murdering his parents and teenage sister in what he allegedly said was an attempt at the perfect crime.
ft was' tired of the whole thing,” Harrison Crouse said Sunday after he was charged with the triple murder.
k. * ★ i ★
police quoted Crouse as saying: “I thought I could get away with R. I thought I could commit the perfect crime.”
they said he had admitted planning the shooting for two days but could give no reason for it.
$40,00Q HOMES
Crouse was accused of fatally shooting his father, mother and sister with a 22-caliber rifle Sat* urday evening in the family home op Oxford Lane, a street lined with $40,000 homes in the fashionable North Shore suburb of Chicago.
k , k k
Crouse, 18, an art and drama major, was a C-plus student at Illinois. ' He was described by classmates and neighbors as quiet, studious and ambitious.
★	k k
Before the incident, Crouse, Who was home for Christmas vacation was reading “The Quintessence of Ibsenism” by George Bernard Shaw. His sister, Sally, 16, a sophomore at New Trier High School, was Writing a letter in her room; the father, Morris L. Crouse, 47, a certified public accountant and partner in the nationwide accounting firm Haskins & Sells, was dismantling the Christmas tree in the living room; the mother, Norma, 47, was cooking dinner.
THIS VERSION
Police said Crouse gave this version of the slayings:
He walked into his sister’s room and shot her in the back of the head. When his mother ran upstairs from the kitohep, he fired at her, but missed. Mrs. Crouse ducked into another bedroom. “
*	* *
The elder Crouse ran In from the living room and was killed with a bullet in the face.
When Mrs. Crouse opened the bedroom door to look out, she was shot between the eyes. The rifle was found near her body. ‘GONE BERSERK’
’Police quoted Crouse as saying he discarded his bloody trousers and climbed out a bathroom window, crying: “Call the police. My mother has gone berserk.’’
Police said Crouse originally maintained that his mother hud killed his (atiier and sister, then shot herself.
k k k
Crouse was held in Cook County jail without bond.
Church**—Schools Groups t
CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES
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THIli PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965
( THIRTY-ONE
91 New Fdces
tf&’k-W r \ * - r 7 ‘ j
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The 89th session of Congress features D1 new faces in The House of Representatives — a 'doorkeeper’s nightmare.
The new lawmakers range from a just-old-enough-to-qualify representative to a Japanese housewife. -
Rut for the harried doorkeeper there will, be at least lome shortcuts in the games bf matching faces and names. One new lawmaker has a famous name. Another favors flamboyant vestt.
There is a sample of what the' house employes have to digest <$p a priority basis: • ,
One new member, Rep. Ted -Johnson Jrr, D-Okla., is so young he might be aifstaken for a page. Johnson, sod of a former member Who died last year, actually was a House page, and ntit too long ago.
■ , ,, . fa -, jte;	j
He come , to Copgress just-1 turned-25 anil the youngest mem-
A Jitile oyer a decade ago, I were processed products. To-y 11 per.ceitt of the potatoes] day, about 35 per;emit of the used for food ih this country | potatoes we eat are processed.
The economic loss from accidents of all types fo^uberi-cam ; last year Was estimated
at $16£ Wllion; This Included
her ever to serve in the House legally. The Constitution sets age 25 as the minimutn qualification.
UPSET PRIMARY One Tennessee youth of 22 once made it however by falsifying his age
Johnson made it by bea Rep. Victor Wickersham, Okla., in an upset wjniary election, then defeating a Gold water Republican in the general election, and finally— on Dec./ST—celebrating his 25th
He-is expected to vote cop--servatively. * ’ \ p.
congressman ndard Democratic' — education, world . job opportunity, add "Medicare — in his campaign, and attacked the conservative stands taken by Rpp. Pat Minor Martin, R-Calif., his predecessor.	# v
^Another relative youngster| fresh on the capitoi scene is. Rep. John V. Tunney, VD-Calif., I who is 30 and the son of former | heavyweight^champion Ge ne Tunney. !;
The younger Tunney is a lawyer, not a prize fighter. He is a close friend of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., with whom he studied at the University, of Virginia law school.
Rep. Etigio de la Garza, D-Tex.; adds a further Latin touch to the House, as well as a tendency to colorful dress.
★ ★ ★
In 10 years et a state legislator, the 37-year-old McAllen lawyer was nOted Torhts good hu-mor.and his flamboyant vests.
EXOTIC DISHES He likes to .cook exotic dishes and considers himself an expert on Chinese food. He boasts a near-arsenal of hunting guns, and either cooks his kills or per-
Rep. James D, Martin, 46, is not only a new face in the House but a symbol of political change that shook, the South in the recent election.
He is ode of five new Republican House members fr.om Alabama^
OUTLINES VIEWS-Sen. Everett Dirksen (right), R-lll., yesterday told how he would like to see the coming session of Congress handled in talks with Jack Bell, Associated
GOP to Back Tax Cut, Says Dirksen
By JACK BELL
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen says Republicans are “not insensible” to President Johnson’s spending problems but will try to cut the budget judiciously in the new Congress.
Dirksen predicted in an interview that his party will give strong support for a reduction in excise taxes Johnson expects to propose.
★	. * -k
On other matters, Dirksen:
—	Called for creation of task forces to give congressional Republicans expert and nonpolitical advice on critical foreign and domestic issues. He said this would be “Infinitely better” than .petting up a party advisory committee, as GOP governors have proposed.
—	Said Johnson should sit down with GOP leaders to spell out his intentions in the South Viet Nam war. He added that GOP members want to be heard before any major decision which they would have to support ih the interests of unity.
BARRY’S VIEWS
—	Said Barry Goldwater, the defeated GOP presidential nominee, is entitled to speak out on any subject he chooses' “but that does not, mean that we necessarily follow, any view he expresses.”
Here are some questions and answers:
★	* ★
q. if the President does not keep his budget under $100 billion, will the Republicans try to cut it back or will they try to cut it back anyhow?
A. There is something psychological about $100 billion,, and I am not insensible to the President’s problems in that field, particularly with the figures that have betfn disclosed that the request Itself amounts to wejl over $108 billion, metin-tag the regular requests.
DUTY TO CUT
I think we have a duty to cut the budget wherever and when-iver we can without Impairing the essential functions of the
Svernment, and those things at are the legitimate object of government.
Bow about excise taxes?
•A. Well, there you give me a chance to preen my feathers a little. As you recall, I introduced the proposal in the Senate
Finance Committee to the four categories of excise taxes that were put on during the Korean struggle, namely jewelry, cosmetics, luggage, and handbags and so forth. I really won by a huge vote, 2 to 1, the first time around. But before final action was taken, something happened.
But we Republicans were the pioneers in the field, and it did not make me a bit unhappy when the administration announced that it was going to do something in that field. So all I can say is I hope they will give credit where credit is due.
HEALTH CARE
Q. Are you coming around to the idea of financing health care for the elderly by payroll taxes?
A. No, not necessarily. The question is, are there alternatives or can you build up Kerr-Mills? 1 was amazed in the last session when we had witnesses from Health, Education and Welfare with respect to medicare, as to what this was ultimately going, to cost the man who carries the dinner bucket as well as management, because in a period of a few years they speculated that it would run up to 10.4 per cent on the employer,
* i ■■•k k ★
Now, in addition, they would have to raise the taxable base, $5,200, $5,400, $5,600, perhaps. And there have been speculations,that it will go way beyond
Capt. Anders-on was in charge when the Nautilus in 1958 traveled from the Pacific to toe Atlantic under toe polar ice cap.
He retired in 1962 to become President Kennedy’s consultant on establishment of a domestic Peace Corps.
★	jtr k ,t Rep. Patsy Takemoto Mink,
D-Hawaii, established several “firsts” in her election.
MANY FIRSTS She is the first woman of oriental ancestry (Japanese) to serve in Congress, the first woman to represent Hawaii here, and the first (and so', far only) new female to be elected to the 89th Cangress.
★	★ ★
She is 37, and a wife, mother,
repeal, that. The result would be what? ^(.lawyeLa\we]1 as le}er™ y I, , „	-	.. politician She has servecT In the
The fellow with a reasonably■ tpj-rjtoriai an(i statelegislatures
average wage, a skilled worker,1 since 1955.--
certainly, would be paying more Social Security tax with medicare added than he would direct income tax. I don’t think he has ever thought of it.
Press political affairs writer. Dirksen said he-would like a special task force developed to provide expert advice for Republicans on foreign and domestic affairs. /
NARROWLY MISSED
Martin narrowly missed win ning. a seat in the Senate two years ago.
He is president of an oil dis- / tributing firm in Gadsden. He is a former president of . the Gadsden Chamber of Goto--mereer-and has- been Gadsden’s “man of toe year.” -
He is active in civic work and a member of the board of stew; ards of Gadsden’s First Method dist Church.
*	•'* /k
Rep. William R. Anderson, D-Tenn., takes the 6th District seat of Ross Bass, who now is a senator. It is assumed he will establish among other congressional attainments a reputation for a calm, unruffled disposition, no matter how rough the legislative weather becomes. NAUTILUS SKIPPER - With any other temperament he never would have made it as a submariner in World War II and later as skipper of the Nautilus, the first atomic submarine.
VOW NEWS QUIZ
PART I- CONGRESSIONAL QUIZ
Give yourself 10 points for each correct
answer.
1 My state has ..... Senators in Congress. a-2	, b-6 c-Il
2 Each Congress meets for ..... a-one year b-two years c-three years
3 Senators serve a.. a-two b-four
. year term, c-six
4 Representatives serve a....year term.
a-two b-four ‘ c-six
5 A bill passed, by Congress becomes a1 law only when toe President- signs it. True or False?
• (Falie)	• >
PART II -CONGRESSIONAL VOCABULARY Give yourself 4 points for each word that you can match correctly with its^ Special Congressional meaning. •
a-political party with few-
nat Ail
l.....the Majority 2....constituent
3;....the Minority
est Members
b-political party in control c-used to delay or prevent
,4,w»veto‘
5....filibuster
voting, d-a voter
e-what the President can do
PART HI - CONGRESSIONAL OFFICES
Take 6 points for each correctly matched
answer.
1.....Speaker
a-presides in Senate in absence of Vice President of the U.S.
2..	..Whip	b-presides in the House .
3..	..Chaplain	c-represents no particular district ,v
4..	..Congressman large”	"at d-sees that all are prfesent for voting
6..	...President Tempore	Pro e-opens daily meetings c VEC, Inc., Madison I, Wis.
Pontiac Press
Mmlm
January 4,1965
mM£M.
■	- i

Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for bach corrsct answer.*

(a) authority for Congress
(b) Republican Party symbol
(c) Democratic Party
(e) The House begins bills dealing with this subject. *.
(f) Some, is done by roll call.
435
(g) the nation's Capi-' ' tol M ,	" *
J S-SSSS «.
100
(h) number of Senators

(i) number of Representatives
(j) The Executive, en-, forces the laws.
HOW DO YOU RATE?
(Scoca Ead* Sida of Quiz Saparataly)
9tto 100 poinb - TOP SCORE! 81 to 90 point* • Excal lent.
71 to 80 points - Good.
41 to 70 points - Pair. ’
40 or Undar???- Wiwn!
This Quiz is part of tha Educational ftogram whichThlt Nawipapar fumishas to Schools In this araa to Stimulate Intaraat in National and World Affairs as an aid to Davatoping Good Citizenship.
1,
Her husband, a hydrologer (a geologist specializing in water), will be working in the Washington area. The Minks have a 12-year-old daughter.
Sava This Practice Examination! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Materiel For Beams.
ANSWERS
TO TOOAY’S NEWS QUIZ
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TH# PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY, 4, I9t
First Interest
By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed. D.
Should our collies antj. universities allow, their professors to wander away from teaching into research? \
Certain authorities would make universities primarily centers of research and publication rather than halls of learning. Some colleges have a 'long - standing “publish or per-
Iish” philosophy.
To ‘be promoted, a college instructor must demoii-NASON strate through
publications that he is carrying, on scholarly research in his field. '	\\
Recently, there has been an added incentive for research in the form of.grants from the federal government and Industry. Time off from teaching for the purpose of research, has become a status symbol among college professors.	.
professor a better teacher. But there Is evidence that, carried to extremes, it has opposite effect and makes him lose interest completely in teaching. As one university professor is reputed to havs said:
“Teaching would be wonderful if it weren’t for the stur dents!”	'
RESEARCH ROAD
The less they teach, the* - Fortunately, the research
higher their status. Unis, the most money is being paid professors who-spend the least time in the classroom and -are least ava"'ble for conferences with students.
Continued study can make a
road is not the main one for most college and university professors. The majority go about quietly presenting their subjects to the best of their ability. Their exploits do not appear in print.
The published research coming out of colleges seldpm deals with students.
his rightful place on the campus. , |	V 'W§
SPECIFIC TRAINING To teach in kindergarten requires specific training in the teaching-learning processes and a credential from the state.
But, at the other end of the scale—the university*—there is no such requirement. ' College teaching is the only pro-. fession for which no training is demanded. -
Jacoby on Bridge
■

NORTH 4k K Q10 4 WKJ102 ♦ 98 7
m0i: v
WEST |kJ87A *854 \ ♦ K1008
+«* r
EAST 4k US 3 2 WA 9763 ♦ 4
41074
*	SOOTH (D)
1	♦	a	.7
§■ ' VQ, "
♦ AQJ3 2
|	4AKQJ02
Both vulnerable South	West	North	East
2	4	Pass	2 4	Pass
4 N.T.	Pass	5 4	Pass
Pass Pass :
Opening lead—A 6.
I Bf OSWALD JACOBY A* lady from North Burnaby, Brmsh Columbia, writes, “It locked as if we had enough points for a ■ an small slam but ,we c ou 1 d,n’t even make five clubs. We could have made three no-trump i so where did | we go wrong' The answer JACOBY	Is that they
went wrong	when they dealt
North all those nice cards and didn’t give South any way to get to use them. It is my considered opinion that if any expert pair in the world picked up those North-South cards they would work their way well beyond three no-trump and probably all the way to six clubs or six diamonds.
Incidentally, since you can see all the cards, you should note that there is Off defense against five clubs and that
sh cyvA-iy#.,
m
By SYDNEY OMARR For Tuoidoy
"Tho wlw man controls his destiny .	. Astrology points tho way/4 ..
ARIES (Mar. 21 lo Apr. 19): Fine time to break from tradition. Make your own way. Throw out unnecessary concern. Replace it with confidence. Others will respond# coma to eld. Many due to prove friendship.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to MAy 20): % Suppress desire lo expend upon achievements. Leave well enough alone, sociotes tend to be envious today. Utilize innate ability to say right thing. USE COMMON SENSE. ‘
GEMINI (May 21 to June 20): Key Is being PERCEPTIVE, developments may occur "under cover/4 Be aware. Expand activities. Realize you pre Ing in right direction. Don't be < couraged by "minor characters."
CANCER (June 21 to July 22): Friends tend to make demands. You must keep aye on budget. Be generous ~ but not foolish. Attend to details. Stress practical approach. *Then othars appreciate what they receive.
LiO (July 23 to Aug. 22); Avoid attempting to "press" Issues. Maintain relaxed attitude, important people now
beginning to observe. If you are tense# you could defeat basic purpose.
Think
ft overt
VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22): Key Is being tactful. Exercise restraint. Family members appear excitable. Stay out of disputes. Fine for travel plans. Look to future. Unexpected communications due.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to -Oct. 72): Fe able lunar aspect coincides with creased romantic opportunities. Creative forces surae. You are better able to express beliefs. You can gain attention, admiration.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21): Arguments Concerning "who owns what" would prove fruitless. Avoid trivial disputes by careful ludgment.^ Quiet dignity wins the day. Remember past lessons. Then you will take proper steps.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 72 to Dec. 21): Indirect method will gain objective, Be subtle . . . don't attempt to force issues. Realize others may be extremely sensl five. Rest end probe. Make no dlract assault,
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22 to Jan. 19): Work alone. You can gain most through INDIVIDUAL action, Have faith In your own plans# convictions, Ideas. Othars may me^n well- but they don't ansoss answer i,1	■-/
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Fefc* Cycle moves up. Obtain hint fragy today's CAPRICORN messaoe/ Wess self* reliance Put forth original Ideas, Be careful of personal appearance. Others WAR to be Impressed.	■
PIACRS (Feb. 19 to Mar, 20)1 Favor
vow granted recently due to o&v ^ Realize advantage, ‘““I	“
Move Ahead. Throw Off ion tern. Many In vour. tbaarfng section Key to success !« VERSA-Wty.
it’ it ' ir
IP TOMORROW IS YOUR BIRTHDAY . . . you ere creative# able to think on your feet. Greater recognition due this
y§R
W A W
OINIft/U. .TBNDINCIfli Cycl* r* malhl MW? Mr AQUARIUS, Imclsl
71 It(fO> II you sr* r*c«pllv«, vaiiMbl* civ*, riwunl PMturM Csrp.i

WfS
H
u
we,
MM
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There are, however, signs <jf a xhange for the. better. For ex-
ample, the Office of Education is making a few grants for the investigation of college teaching and learning problems.
Perhaps a credential requirement would force more attention on how students learn and so restore the public’s image of the university as a seat of learning.
★ ★ ★
Legislatures should require a breakdown in requests from colleges for funds. The money
unless a heart is opened by West there is no defense against six clubs.
Assume a spade opening: All South need do is to draw trumps, ' lay down the ace of diamonds, lead the queen of hearts and overtake with dummy’s king. If East takes his ace, he will have to lead a spade or heart and South will discard four diamonds on the good major-suit cards in dummy.
Assume a heart opening and a spade return: South plays two rounds of trumps andt he ace of diamonds and then leads the deuce of trumps in order, to force East into the lead. East will have two tricks, but will have to give South the rest.
These are sure to bring about a change of emphasis, so that the college professor interested primarily in teaching can keep
requested for research, including all related costs, should be so specified.
The cost of educating a student should be a separate item. Without h breakdown, the public gets the impression that a college education, is far more expensive than it really is.
MERRY’S WORLD
tty Jim Berry
eACBRDjivfcK’AA
Q—The bidding has been: West	North	East	South
14	Dble.	Pass	14
2 4	3 4	Pass	?
You, South, hold:
47543 fA54 4QJ10S 432 What do you do?
* A—Bid four spades. Ton' have .high card points.
TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bidding three spades, your partner jumps to iour spades. What do you do in this case?
Answer Tomorrow'
“Due to circumstances beyond our control, the regularly scheduled show will not be seen ...”
BOARDING HOUSE
TO SUMMARIZE, TWEN,PROFESSOR OBSCURANTA DISCOVERED THE problem-solving PROCESS/
BASICALLY, YOU OUTLINE THE. PROBLEtA, LIST ALL POSSIBLE
solutions.then Select 1he-
BEST OME/^HAK-KAFF/—-THE OBSCURANTA SYSTEM CAN BE APPLIED anywhere-—-IF YOU HAVE THE
HE‘4 BEEN GOING ON LIKE.THIS
For half an HOUR, AMD ALL I'VE GOT OUT OF IT IS ANEW PROBLEM BLISTERED EARL I DRUMS'
•TO USE THE ) PROFESSOR'S 6VSTE/W, WE' HAVE A -CHOICE OF WEARIN6 EAR PLUGS OR MUZZLING YH' MAJOR/
UNDER-
> stand
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by HIA, lug, T M. >—■ U.t. I
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HOOPLE, Scientist *

OUT OUR WAY
BEN CASEY
r. andvou haven't seen
/WKTHINS UNTIL yDUVE SEEN (kf BROTHER,CHUCK,BUSTER
MAKE '
THRO* HOURS and WE'LL TALK OUR WAY THROUGH A CUP OF COfTEE'AFTERWARD!
THE BERRYS
m ’
PETER.™ J , THE JANUARY CLEARANCE SALES ARE ON..™ X
THATfeNICE BUT t'DONT f NEED— ANYTHINS-
THE TIES ARE BARGAIN AND TM GOING TO MAKE YOU BUY ONE
GO AHEAD/ PICK ONE OUT/
m
mm
_________By Carl Gruber t
r NOW I’M GOING TO MAKE MYSELF BUY SOME
BLOUSES AND THINGS / j
DC
DRIFT MARLO
THEN THIS' IS FAREWELL (5RES! THE TIME DRAWS HEAD!
By Dr. I. M. Levitt, Tom Cooke and Phil Evans
m
IT WONT " BE LONG i NCW,FELLOWS.'
ALLEY OOP
By V. T. Hamlin
MGHTY NICE OF VOU TLET OUR. LITTLE KOOZUH USE VOUR CAVE FOR TONIGHT.'
CAPTAIN EASY
PRAT THAT \ CHEER UP, PAL! WHEN MOTHERLY OLD \K0ONTZ SE1S MS PICTURE BIDDY! I’M SICK OF TODAY, WELL REMOVE OUR HER DOcrORINdJ I PAINTIU6S IKSIPE, AND X CAVT SURVIVE /~~i LEAVE TOWAHTi MUCH MORE/
ares,
TO McKEE AND EASY.
By Leslie Turner
I OUTFOXED HIM ANP ' PERHAPS GOT IT... AMP HE NeVER A GESTURE OP FORGAVE MEL I'M WIUIU ATONEMENT TO WRY THE HATCHET™ ON YOUR PART BUT NOT IRA KEMPi^ MIEHT SOFTEN HIS ATTITUDE!
7m. TM I. II,t Ht. QW.
MORTY MGEKLE
		' ? VI) i
//—^	j	
/	/	
, ■ ,		i-
iff: i	\\	\ f 1
		
By Dick Cavalll
NANCY
OFFICE
of the PRINCIPAL
By Ernie Bushmiller
GRANDMA
TOMORROW NIGHT THE LAPIES'CLUa 16 HAVING AN "ALL VOU CAN EAT
FORA DOLLAR"
By Charles Kuhn
DONALD DUCK
THATS MY YOU THHVINS j RACCOON! j**'
' r



OKAY, I’LL SMOKIS)
• — ■ —■ —*# .

YOU OUT/
r
By Walt m«ney


<4 f

C|^r|;	l



££ THE PON1'jAC PRESS* MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965

THIR
KIMBERLY ANN CONWAY
Kimberly Ann Conway, 16-month-old daughter of Mrs. Rob-
•	ert L. Conway of 2799 Mott, Waterford died,yesterday after a short illness. '
Her body is'at the D. E. Purs*, ley Funeral Home.
Surviving besides her mother are one brother, Lonnie and two sisters, Rebecca and Roxattna, all at home, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Conway of Pontiac.*	S ig
MARION G.DAVIS
Service for Marion G. Davis, 60, of 4009 Quillan, Waterford Township, w i 1 l be 1 p.m. Wednesday at-"Coats Funeral Homer Waterford Township, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery.	' „i 1 ,
Mr. Davis died today ..after a long illness. He*was employed at GMC Truck & Coach Division.	|
-' Surviving are ^. a - daughter, Mrs. Ernest Southard and a son, Robert N, both of Waterford Townshfo; a brother, Rqy ofl _ Bono, Ark.; a sister, Mrs. AU . bert Wilkinson of Pontiac; and six grandchildren. | .A
MRS. ROBERT GARNETT
Servi ce for former Pon-tiac resident Mrs. Robert (Maggie M.) Garnett, 82, of Speedwell, T e n n., will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Yakum Chapel Church, Speedwell, with burial in Moyer’s Cemetery, Speedwell.
Mrs, Garnett died Saturday after a long illness.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs, Susan Brewer of Speedwell and
*	three stepdaughters, Mrs. Cleva Davis of Pontiac, Mrs. Estel Brock of Detroit, and Mrs. Edna Liming of Birmingham.
SIMPSON HILL
Service for Simpson Hill, 74, of 522 Branch will be l p.m. Wednesday at Trinity Baptist with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. His body will be af the Frank ~Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 pm. tomorrow.
Mr. Hill died Thursday. He was formerly employed at Pontiac Motor Division.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Barbara Terrell of El. Paso, Texas; two sisters; and a brother.
MRS. FELTON TOULOUSE
Secvice for Mrs. Felton (Eamestine) Toulouse, of 137 Raeburn will be at 1 p.m. Thursday at Mt. Olive Baptist Church Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Toulouse died Saturday after an illness of four weeks. She was a member of Mt. Olive Baptist Church.
Her body will be at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. tomorrow.
Surviving besides het husband are four children, all at home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hayworth Williams of Wichita, Kan.; and two brothers.
CARL A. ALGRIN
WIXOM - Service for Carl A. Algrin, 75, of 49345 Pontiac Trail will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Richardson • Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Burial will follow in Mount Hope Cemetery, Lapeer.
A real estate broker, Mr. Al* grin died yesterday after a long illness.
He was a member and past noble grand of the International Order of Oddfellows Novi Lodge No. 486 and a member of the Encampment.
Graveside service will be conducted by the lodge.
Surviving are four nephews.
EDWARD D. DALL
BEVERLY HILLS — Service for Edward D. Dali, 66, of 30870 Vernon was held this morning at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham, with burial In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
A former sales engineer for Houdaille' Industries, Inc., Detroit, Mr. Dali died Friday after a lengthy Illness.
Surviving are his wife, Ben
trice; a daughter, 'Phyllis, at W
home? his father, William of Bedford, Va.; and a sister.
CLARENCE A. HULL BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Clarence A, Hull. 66, of 6904 Valley Spring will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Ball Chapel of the William R, Ham Uton Co., Birmingham. Burial will follow In Mount1 Pleasant Cemetery, Dryden.
Mr. Hull died Saturday after a long UIimmwb.
, He was president and chair-mah of the board of C. A, Hull Co.. Inc., Bloomfield Hills.
Mr. Hull was a member of Dryden Lodge, F & AM, Dryden /etfrana Club and the Michigan
of Dallas, Tex; a sister; and
MRS. GISORGE
COMMERCE Mrs. George V.-fl ley, 05, of 9 yesterday. Her Elton Black 1233 Union -Lake, f-
Surviving besides band are,'two sons, |
Neil W . , both of Cot Township; her raoflii Bertha Gutakunst of Wis.; a brother;'a sk HH grandchildren; and one greatgrandchild.
■ , A •' - „
Moufrt Park Cemetery, Pontiac.
A retired contracting mason, Mr. Westeriund died Friday after a long illness. ”	>
Surviving are Am daughters, Mrs. Thelma GeSfiae 1 Minneapolis, Minn, and Mrs. Lillian Carlson of Mound, Minn.; two sons, Gothard E. of Minneapolis and Carl of Mound; a sister; seven grandchildren; great-grandchildren; end five
> .Surviving are hli^wlte, Ruth; a daughter, .Mrs, Jeanette Davis
MRS. OWEN R. MILLER TROY — Service for Mr Owen R. (Anna B.) Miller, 72, of 2975 Hylane was fo be held at l p.m. today at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham, with-burial in White Chapel Menforial Ceme-, fory. '* * - ’; ■- 'f*. sff\ J Mrs. Miller died Saturday after a long illness.
Surviving besides her husband are a son, Robert H. of Fern-dale, and two granddaughters.
FRED G, WORKMAN BIRMINGHAM ^ Service for Fred G. Workman, 76, of 1427 Humphrey will be 1 pm. Wednesday at Manley Bailor -Funeral. Home.' Burial wilLfot low in White Chapei Memorial Cemetery^ Troy.
A retired employe'of Pontiac lotor Division, Mr. Workman ied yesterday after along 111-
ness. He was		a member of	the
Met!	lodist	Church of Jerome,	
fowl	i; Birmingham Lodge		No.
44,	F&AM;	Birmingham Chap-	
ter	to. 93,	RAM; Scottish	Rite
of 1	Detroit;	and Moslem Tern-	
pie,	Detroit		
MRS. THOMAS PICKARD HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Thomas (Bessie M.) Pickard, 46, of 1575 Hickory Ridge will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Milford.
Mrs. Pickard died today. Surviving besides her husband are two sons, James of Union Lake and Bruce of Walled Lake; two daughters, Mrs. Thomas Tu-san and Barbara, both of Union Lake; and her mother, Mrs, Jane Hamsher of Milford.
Also surviving are four broth-ers, John of Walled Lake, Charles Hamsher of Wolverine, Clyde Hamsher of Milford and Raymond Hamsher of Highland; two sisters, Mrs. Florence Beach of Milford and Mrs. Flossie Steinke of Detroit; and seven grandchildren.
Ma
ic memorial service will be y p.m. tomorrow at the funeral noma, under the auspices of |he Birmingham Lodge.
Surviving are his wife, Bertha; three \daughters, Mrs. Chester Stinson and Mrs. W. Fred Stinson, both of Birmingham, and Mrs. J.\C. Birrell of Royal Oak; three prothers; four sis-randchildren; and
ters; seven
two great-grandchildren.
State
Road Plans
MRS. OSWALD WALLACE
ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. O&waUM Agnes B.) Wal lace, 68, of 500 Seventh will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Haley Memorial Chapel. Interment will be in Mount Avon Cemetery.-- '
Mrs. Wallace died yCstefday after a brief illness.
Surviving are a son, James, and two daughters, Mrs. Clarence Rewold and Mrs. Herbert Hames, all of Rochester; her father, .Charles Crowe; a brother, Joseph Crowe of Troy; a sister, Mrs. Roy Knust of Rochester; 17 grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren.
The State Highway Department has announced that highway construction projects totaling $166.5 million will be placed tinker contract in Michigan during 1965.
Included will be rilore than $22 million in Oakland County paving and modernization projects.
ERIC P. WESTERLUND ' PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Service for Eric P. Westeriund, 92, Of 2103 Rich wood was to.be held at 1:30 p. m. today at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial following in Perry
Statewide, the Highway Department has scheduled . 612 miles of construction! a'a d
modernization la 64 of the 83 counties.	\
- More than $1.5' b i 11 i o n has been spent on highway construction in Michigan since 1057, \
★	★ w
Projects in the six-county Detroit metropolitan area alone have totaled nearly $500 million.
Cows Kick Up Protest
OKEECHOBEE, Fla. (AP)-r In this dairy area, dalrvmen report that when electric power fails, cows accustomed to milking machines kick in protest when milked by hand.
Oarl Q¥.
CDonaL) 3t. Joltm
If Time is Required for Payment,. .
,. Just o$k us. We consider it our duty to give every reasonable aid in time of bereavement.
Long experience with the good word of the people of Pontiac leads us to offer this cooperation freely.
one
FEDERAL
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St. Louis Outplays Green Bay in Bowl for 24-17 Victory
JM1AMI (APr
. “Billy (Peanuts) Gambrell, one of the wallest players in tile National Football League; made himself a big target for Charley John-son’s passes and the St. Louis Cardinals upset the favored Green Bay Packers in the Pro Playoff Bowl Sunday 24-17.
J lie 167-pound Gambrell, a free agent picked up by the Car* dinals from South Carolina, caught two touchdown passes from Johnson, orje .an 80-yard play, as the Cardinals took a 17-llead in the third quarter. , -
II ★	★
m Green Bay attack in . the final period put the Packers tek into contention, hut the mbat died with Jimmy Bur-son’s end zone interception of Paul Hbrnung’s pass meant for "'WE Kramer....
Gambrell who had seen regular service only since mid-sea-son when Sonny Randle was ' injured, was voted the mosf valuable player. He caught six ■passes for 184 yards, setting a playoff bowl record.
‘FIRST Wltf*
By HAROLD A. FITZGERALD
Publisher, Pontiac Press §| • . ***''*■	:ii
PASADENA - The Rose Bowl crowd of 100,488 was 90 -percent seated half-an hour before the game started. It was 75 per cent there an hour ahead, partly in the stadium and'partly wandering about outside.* «
They boasted one hawker J never saw before: an. itinerant vender selling film.
For half a century, Michigan has bud the g re a test marching band in the world and when 300 champion musicians stomped into that thrilling musical epic, “The Victors,’’ the place went wild, led
It was the first victory for the East in the game of NFL run-
ners-up.
I j“We looked like we were sleep :witting,’* growled Green Bay Coach Vince Lombardi. “We ?c|me out of the huddle like we ’.were dying.”
The Packers, six-point favor-Ites, moved into an early 3-0 ‘ lead on a 40-yard field goal by Paul Hornung.
-• j|t	<# \ ★
* In the second quarter, Gaitt-brell got behind Jesse Whittenton, caught Johnson’s perfectly placed pass over his shoulder at file Green Bay 48 and raced in for the initial touchdown.
Johnson took the Cardinals in twice in the third quarter for a field goal and a touchdown for a 17-3 margin.
*	★ ★
A 28-yard pass from Johnson to Gambrell put St. Louis on the Green Bay seven, but when Bill Thornton was stopped at the one on his third rush, Jinff Bakken was called in to kick the seven-’"
- Oakland County was well represented. I saw or heard about tbe Edgar Flints, Dr. Vent Abbott, Goodloe Rogers, the Ed Coles, Bob EMred and two sons, Bob Oliver, Eddie Maier and the NlchoUes. They were alP whooping it up—for the football teams, that is.- 4 ‘
SHORT GAINER — Boyd Dowler, Green Bay end takes a 11 yard pass from quarterback Bart Starr in the second period Sunday’s Playoff BOwl against the St. Louis Cardinals. Card defensive backs Larry Wilson (left) and Pat Fischer make the tackle. The Cardinals wpn the game, 24-17.	,	'	*
ard field goal ET UP TD The Cardinals, who had held ,reen Bay pasSer Bart Starr in heck with a fierce blitz, threw ie Packers back from their wn 25 to the 14 after the next ickoff and set up the second nichdown.
After the klckout to the Jpack-r 47, Johnson ran for 15, hit bornton for 11 and Conrad for even, then threw 10 yards to iambrell for the score.
Green Bay’s first touchdown ame ehsily. Burson fumbled a iunt to Elijah Pitts at the St. ,ouis 16 and Jim Taylor got icross in two plays.
Another St. Louis drive high-Ighted by a 49-yard pass from lohnson to Gambrell was killed >y a fumble after the Cardinals cached the Packer six. Lee toy Caffey knocked Johnson ooose from the ball and recov*
U-M Wins
. ANN ARBOR (UPI)-“Cham-pions of the West,’’ and “Victims of the East.”
The University of Michigan claimed both titles today.
A mere 28 hours, after Michigan’s football team whipped
On the next play, Starr suf-red his first interception after 1 throws. Jerry Stovall picked off and ran 30 yards for a uchdown to make it 24-10. WWW
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State Teams Grab 2 of 3 Hockey Tilts
By The Associated Press Michigan college hockey teams won two or three games on the road Saturday.
Michigan boosted Its season record to 6-2-1 with a 7-1 victory over Cornell wt Ithaca, N.Y.; Michigan Tech edged Minnesota Duluth 4-3 and Michigan State bowed 6-8 to Providence In the second of two sudden death overtimes In a consolation match of the Brown Holiday Hockey Tournament.
WWW to* (jr,
Bob Boyson, Wilfred Smith and Mej Wakabayashl each scored twice as the Wolverines walloped Cornell, posting their fourth straight road vlotpry Cornell is now 6-4.
Michigan Tech swept the two-game weekend match et Duluth by scoring all four goals In the flret four minutes. Fred Derta led the charge with a goal and two assists.
w w w A goal by Fred Sullivan beet M8U In double overtime after the Spartans blew/ a ft-2 lead with qlght minutes to play In regulattonv time. LWlefc Jacobsen scored twice for. MSU, now
m ,!:■ = w ™
Oregon State, 34-7, |o dike the Rose Bowl title, the1 Wolverine basketball team 'wa# an upset victim of St. John’s of Brooklyn in the finale of the Holiday Festival in Madison Square Garden.
The Redmen overcame a 18-point deficit In the final nine minutes'to dump the Wolverines 75-74, Saturday night.
It was Michigan’s second hiss in 10 starts and probably meant the loss of its No. 1 national ranking again, The Wolverines were dropped into the No. 2 spot last month after losing a orte-point decision at Nebraska, but regained the top spot by whipping then top-ranked Wichita the next week
"I didn’t think we could go eight or nine minutes without a score,” coach Dave Strack confessed. "And I still can’t believe it.
“St. John’s went into a halfcourt zone press and I f«U we really had the game wrapped up. I didn’t think they could hurt us with It. '* .
STOLE BALL
“But they stole the ball twice and tied us up another time. You've gotta give credit to St. John's. I don't fault my team, they had several good shots, we just couldn't make a basket”
Russell topped aril scorers with 94 points and Bautin added 16. Sonny Dove, a 6-foot-? sophomore, led -the Redmen
warn , ,
St. John's outscored Michigan 10-2, in the stretch with the Wolverines' lone points coming on free throws by Caule Russell and Bill Bunfin,, Jerry Houstou'g free throw with 30 seconds left gave the Rwttpij their victory margin. ^ 'X
When the first quarter ended even, the Oregon rooting section gave its team a standing ovation. And when the Beavers scored their touchdown, the West Coast contingent joined them and the mighty roar ripped the petals off ten million roses from the parade.
You’ve seep the parade on TV but you can’t quite grasp the significance by remote control. It’s a magnificent spectacle that lasted two hours and you almost become inured to the breathtaking displays.
Most of them are occupied by local beauty queens and they’re the type that don’t need lavish costumes.
They could command attention in dotted swiss or bargain basement ginghams.
And you don’t sit through a single commercial.
There’s a sprinkling of Hollywood celebrities throughout the march.
vAWPHgMM
CARDINAL BREAKS LOOSE — St. Louis Cardinal end Billy Gambrell (3) tallied six points on this 80-yard play against the Green Bay Packers yesterday. Gambrell moved
behind the Packers’ Jesge Whittenton, pulled in a pass from quarterback Charley Johnson and outran Whittenton to paydirt. Cards won 24-17.	’ ,
Wings on Target: Pelt Boston, 8-1
★ ★ ★
★ ★ . ★
★ ★ ★
Rochester, West Bloomfield in
■ Local yokels insist more than a minion people are-, lined along the m a r c h. They’re afoot, in a'huge suc-cesslon of grand stands erected in vacant lots and in front of homes. They even sell a small step ladder so you cbn look over the heads of the people in front.
West Bloomfield will be gunning for a share of the lead in the Wayne-Oakland League and Rochester’s basketball squad will have an opportunity to take over the top spot in the Oakland A'League in gamgs tomorrow night.
★ ★ *
Hie Lakers of West Bloomfield are 2-1 in league play and they move into Holly to take on the loop-leading Broncos (3-0). " ■*
New Year’s Eve, the night spots in the whole area really flip into outer space, with visiting firemen hanging from the rafters. The modest spots begin with an $8 charge and this Inches up to $30—apiece, that is. You get pennants and noise makers that outdid the Oregon cheering section after the first quarter.
WWW
I took my granddaughter Annie and to keep her mother from seeking me out with lethal weapons, I add we didn’t go until 10:30 for dinner and left at ten minutes after midnight. *
WWW
This departure set ap all time Rose Bowl record and will be entered in the books along with other top marks. Gilbert, the Impeccable Maitre d’Hotel, looked startled when we left as Ann appears more than her age and in her evening finery she looks qualified for a wee spot of nocturnal hilarity on a harmless New Year's Eve.
It was a hard fought game but very cleanly played. Both teams were aware they were l» the top spot of the football calendar and conducted themselves accordingly — .Inst as they did throughout their regular schedules.
The bluvest hand — and it was wholly spontaneous —
given any exhibit In the paring
rada, went to tha one carrying Sharon Stouder.
Sharon’s a high school girl and she seemed limply amazed at the steady applause she drew.
A placard on the front identified her: the youngster who won three (3) gold medals In swimming at the rfecent Olympics. S. *
The float was fflarkad: "A ••lute to teen-agers.” And more than a million people bowed.
Rochester (24), tied with four other teams for the O-V lead, travels to Fitzgerald (0-3) and a victory would put the Falcons on top.
Other key games on the Tuesday slate have Avondale at Oxford, Clawson at Lake Orion, Warren Woods at Emmanuel Christian, and Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows at Royal 0hk St. Mary.
w w w
In games played Saturday, St. Michael romped^to a 56-36 decision over Waterford Our Lady of Lakes, Royal Oak St. Mary downed St. Agatha, 89-59, Serv* ite dumped Royal Oak Shrine, 89-75, St. Andrew tripped St. Jambs, 82-65, and Detroit Austin pinned a 7849 setback on Birmingham Brother Rice.
NEAR SECOND
The victories by St. Michael and ROSM put the squads within a half game of second place FOLS.
For the Mikement the win was their fifth of the season and fourth in league competition (4-2).
The Mikemen fell behind, 8-7, at the end of the first quarter,
but they came back with 13 points in the second stanza to lead at intermission, 20-18.
.Sr ' Sr W
St. Mike blew the game open in the third, outscoring the Lakers, 17-8.
Rick Lavoie paced the Mikemen with 19 points, followed by teammates Gary Lamphere (10) and Greg Glynn (10). Tom Springer tossed in 10 for WOLL*. Bob Conley picked up- 21
----------«-----U------jg,----
points
and John Dorr added 19 to lead ROSM.
Sr Sr /★
Forri

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Rick
L*vol«
French
Stanton
Olymv
Backes
• M 1
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Springer
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in
Ullman, MacGregor Tally Twice Each* Ujidsay Scores
10-0 l1
Total* 25 10-14 50 Total* IS *4 36
SCORB BY OUARTBRS
St. Michael ........1 is 17 »-S*
Waterford Our Lady ... 0 10 4 11—34
Pros Plan No Discipline for Viking, Houston 11s
By The Associated Press
The National and American Football Leagues, heading for court battles over two- college players, plan no disciplinary action against Minnesota and Houston for signing four Oklahoma gridders before their college eligibility expired.
A larger problem confronting the belligerent, pro leagues, though, could be whether they plan to co-operate with the schools and each other in eliminating the practices that have aroused the wrath of college officials.
Executive Director Walter Byers of the National Collegiate Athletic Association is hopeful but also realistic about the prospects of co-operation.
“We have urged these people to set their drafts back until after Jan. 1, but they have refused to do U,” Byers told the Associated Press Sunday night.
“We’ve met with them before but not with both leagues together as far as I know. To my knowledge we’ve never had them in the same ropm together.”	'
MAY ATTEND
Byers was talking about the possibility of a joint meeting at next week’s NCAA convention in Chicago Both leagues have indicated they would have representatives at the meetings.
The NCAA’s concern stems from the signing of four Oklahoma players before the Sooners’ Gator Bowl clash with Florida State Saturday. The AFL Houston Oilers signed tackle Ralph Neely, who later also signed with Dallas of the National League.
The Minnesota Vikings of the NFL signed fullback Jim Gflsh-am, receiver Lance Rentzel and end Wes Skidgel,
Big 10 Cag« Standing*
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DETROIT (UPI) - The Detroit Red Wings took target practice Sunday night and'Bos-ton goalie Ed Johnston served as the bull’s-eye.
The Wings fired 80 shots at Johnston and connected on 10 per cent of them while rapping to an 8-1 victory over the hapless Bruins before a Sunday night crowd of 11,748 at Olympia Stadium.
Johaston, who made 6 saves while suffering a 1-1 loss Saturday night at Montreal, stopped 48 shots against the Wings.
Detroit had 24 shots that weren’t on goal. Meanwhile, tha Bruins managed only 31 shots at Johnston’s Detroit counterpart Roger Crazier. Crazier stopped 19 and 11 were wide of the net.
STOOD BY WATCHING
The only defense weapons Jphnston had were two leg pads, a glove and a stick. His telmmates, who were supposed to be playipg defense, wero practically non » existent. They stood by watching the Wings bombard their goalie and twice got in his way to provide Detroit with easy goals.
W Rr Sr
Today is the day writers in the six National Hockey League cities cast votes for All-Star teams and various individual awards. Johnston^ should rank No. 1 for a purple heart.
He stopped shots with Ms arms, stomach* shoulders and head In addition to miking saves with his other pieces of armor.
Without his sensational play, the Wings might well have become the top-scoring team in the NHL. The game had to be stopped -four times while Johnston recovered from Injurlea suffered while making a save with a part of hhs body that wasn’t covered with padding.
The victory kept Detroit In third place.
it
Bruce MacGregor and Norm Ullman scored twice and Pit Martin, Ted Lindsay, AlexsDel-vecchlo and Ron Mhrphy once (in’ Detroit while Tom Williams was tha lone Beaton scorer,
NHL Standings
.<it
Jay
off for these area prop hoopsters wlu and abrupt^ tomorrow night as Important games for the three arc Included In the limited •chedule. Hie Rochester Falcons will attempt
IfBltM Pr*«* PRMM
when they visit Warren Fltigerald. Dave Gall (left) la a regulsr for the falcons. Holly and-West Bloomfield will contest for the
Monl
NtW V •won
Wayne-Oakland League lead and (wo of the ' be Jim Hanks (44) of Holly
opponents will
to take first place In (he Oakland A kqgus and tha Lakers Jay Williams, ^Ight)

3M PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965
THIRTY-PJ
Nationals Fall SiFoes
NAIM. leaders Trip
Sillf'	l I I
Pontiac Pro Cagers
Third Time at Home
BENTON HARBOR — If Op 8-10 point home court advantage appttas.in the North Americt|i Basketball League, util the Pqji-tiac Nationals need to bea con* tender Would be a’few borne games against the Grand Rapids Tackers and Twin City Sailors.
Saturday night the Nationals concluded a holiday weekend road/btp by dropping a 127-118 verdict to the Sailors. This makes Pontiac 4-5 and still in third place,/throe games out of first.
■ | ★	| it ;	★
Tttedefeatfl have been by five, 26 and tiine to the pace-setting Benton Harbor, and by 14 and six to Grand Rapids — all away from home.
The Nationals had a good shot at winning their third straight Saturday when they trailed by only two points with 4:15 to play; but Benton Harbor held them scoreless for almost a minute and a half at this point.
Baskets by Jerry Harkness (formerly of Loyola) sad Larry Comley (ex-American Basketball League player) — two each ~ and one by Johnny Egan (also of Loyola) poshed toe wore from 113-111 to 1H-IU J. * 4 .
* The visiting Nationals couldn’t dent the deficit in the closing two and three-quarter minutes to the delight of an estimated 1,700 fans.
* • H . | %
It was a discouraging loss for the Pontiac quintet which had fought stubborn^ against the league leaders’ balanced at-* tack. The losers were hampered by the ineffectiveness of cocaptain Henry Hughes and rugged center Dick Dzlk. FAILED TO SCORE Hughes, flu-ridden, had tallied !5 points in Friday’s win over Chicago at Grand Rapids and entered the Saturday game as the team’s top shooter; but he couldn’t sustain an effort the second night and failed to score with seven shots.
' Far the second night in • row Charlie North and WUUe Merr(weather were the workhorses. North hit his season high with 35 points (on 14 of 21 from the floor) and hauled down 18 rebounds — both game highs.
Cocaptain Merriweather — the team’s most consistent performer —, connected for 30 points, and had 13 rebounds. This was the third straight game he’d hit at least 30. During the span Merriweather an All-American at Purdue, has converted 20 of 31 free throws.
, it ir it
Pontiac outrebounded t h e winners, 55-30, but could only get one more shot from the floor. The Nationals also had better luck at the Charity stripe, but were outshot 52-45 from the floor,
The Nationals return to Muskegon Saturday for a bid at their third win on the Panthers’ floor.	*:
/ ■ it it	’ it
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SKIER’S DILEMMA - There was nothing in the textbook to help Earle Murphy, a Farmingdale, N. J., school-- teacher, who lost a ski on a jump in the season’s first meet at Bear Mountain State Park, N. Y., Saturday. He landed on the lone ski, took a spill but suffered only bruises.-
Prep	Cage Standings
SAGINAW VALLEY CONFERENCE , lmiim Oyjr-AII
Sports Topic
site
New President-Elect ■Slate* Confab
BALTIMORE (AP) — the!seats becoming less conspicu-dim light was just what you’d ous.
expect
tor such an intimate But it was only an accident, not dime on purpose.
Only five minutes of toe National Basketball , Association game at the Civic Cento? had been played Sunday afternoon when a short circuit blacked out half of the ceiling lights.
Jl’’ v# * w
The mercury vapor lights Went out, leaving only the incandescent bulbs in operation The cozy gathering of ^T,78fr seemed to draw even closer together, -with toe 11,000 empty
As the" players milled around, waiting help from’the electrician someone yelled to 7-toot-2 Wilt Chamberlain of the Warriors:	4	.
“Hey, Wilt, reach up and Change the bulbs.” “ ■
ASKING PRICE	V .,
“That would cost you 65,000, Chamberlain replied, sounding
A ★
GallatinNew
KnicksCoach
Candidates for Post in Detroit Dwindles
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YMCA Cage Squads Resume Action Today
The YMCA’s recreational bas setball church league-program ■esumos today with three games n the men’s league beginning at 1:30 p.m.
. , a * a a Play In the senior division of he junior chui&h league hoop migrant will pick up Wednea* lay and Friday with twin bills Mch bight. &£
YMCA MIN'I LSAiUS __»f1 Lukf'
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Pontiac Control ..  4	0	4	9
Saginaw 1	....3	|	.4	1
Flint Southwaatarn ...... 2	1	3	1
Flint Northern „.. 2	V	3	2
krWhMr,HM'.::;: I f J
Bay City Handy	I	3	9	«•
IHTER-VAKBl '
0^ *1!
Wollod Lako .. . ..f.	0	3	3
KBCttr*t ’ r'i I
Farmington ... ... 9	9	3	0
WAYNE-OAKLANO
Avondale
tadlson
lochootor
W L W L
lolly iloomflold Hills lorkoton
tidily
IHl EioomllaM
HtkikckrJ
Vooioo Ovor-A I v	W L W L
; * ii.:, t	j	3i
Prep Calendar
noon OT uxroro
mon at Lako Orion	. _	.
ningham Brother Rico at U o( D High it BtoontfMd at Holly
•AIKBTSALL
Avondolo ot Oxford,
Clown ‘	-
Blrml
wool	... H
Brown City of imloy city Rothootor ot Fltidorold Worron Woods ot ■ntnwntwt Christian Michigan school for Doof at Orydon Farmington OL* Ot RO St. Mary FOmdoit ot Royal Oak Dondoro FamdsM if. Jomos of», Thorloo Flint Northwootom at Flint louthwoslprn Saginaw MocArlhur ot Isglnow Arthur
Olll	i i>.	V
Harbor Booth St North Huron
Cllniondoit ot L'Anoo Crouoo
Romulus st Livonia Franklin
Mini Pork at Rooovlils
Rgyal Oak ihrkw ot Dotroit St. Anthony
St. Agatha
Wednesday
at it. MpooT.
WRRSTLINO
Fonllac Control at Wattrlord Royal oak Dondoro oil Barkley pomlt ThurSn at HoioilPerl; Farmington OU at potrolt Colhoilc
Control Soulhftold ot Radford Union Thorodoy
Barkley ot FontlM Northern ittorlng of Royal - ■ -
..MO
'Soirolt'Thurtl
Kolltrlng ot Royo .
Rosovllloot Waterford Irmlnghem Droves at Livonia Franklin
at Oak Park.
North FormkMton ot Woyno John Olonn Formlngton of loot potrolt Farmington OLS tt OrooM Ho worron Lincoln ot Lake Orion L'Aiiu Crouoo at Uljeo
Flat Rock eLNorthvllle
........«eli
Fort Huron at FjO^jrajd #
loyal Oak KlmhHiM Soyel Oak Oondai
Wodnaoday
Livonia Franklin if Ponlloe Northern mmMIiiw at Radford union
Warren Couslno Lake Orion
Clawson .........
Fitzgerald .....
Lapeer Romeo
Oxford .......
Kettering L'Anse crouoo
Of.,.
„r 2	9
... 1	9
... T	1
... 9	1
.9	2
SOUTH BRN THUMB
Orydon	I
Now Haven	2
Anchor Boy-...,......, 3
Almont ...............S|
Armada ...........
Brown City ........
Copac ...............  I
Momphto .........}>'•*•»
.OUTH.A.T.RN ^CHWA^j,
olo	...if B T 9
Forndale Birmingham Sooholm
Southfield...........
Barkley
Royal Qok Kimball .. Hazel Park..........
DETROIT J[UPI) — The list of candidates for the job of coach of toe Detroit Pistons dwindled by one‘Sunday when former Piston Harry “The Horse” Gallatin signed to coach the New -York Knickerbockers:
Gallatin, fired a week ago as coach of toe St. Louis Hawks, was named to replace Eddie Donovan as coach of the Knicks, last-place residents of the National Basketball Association’s Eastern Division.
. ♦ ★ *
Donovan was appointed general manager, taking over for Fred Podesta, who had doubled in that capacity while serving as assistant to Madison Square Garden president Ned Irish.
■Hie 37-year-old Gallatin, who played for the Knicks and Pistons and coached at Southern Illinois before joining the Hawks in 1962, was a prime pnitdldata to take over as head coach of toe Pistons in February.'
Present player - coach Dave DeBusschere probably will request an early leave of absence to attend spring training with toe Chicago White Sox.
The Pistons will meet St. Louis in toe first game of a double-header Tuesday night in New York. Detroit will take a 14-25 record into toe game and a two-game losing streak.
NORTHWBIT PAROCHIAL
LBxqut^ Over-All
Orchard Lake St. Mary 5
Farmington OLS ...... 4
St. Mlcnial ..........A
Royal Oak St. Mary ....4
St. Fradtrlck	 1
Watarfora Our Lady ... 1 St. Agatha ...........1
SOUTH CRNTRAL
Laaoua^ Oyjr-A|l
^«Krh-.:::::::::: if
iHhRi	9	1
Jvar-Ail
r
NORTHWRST SUBURBAN
Cw*5v °WvASl
ilrmlnghoiVi -Grove* iorth Farmlngton ,,
DETRCHT (UPI) — Dr. Wl-liam Rea Keast, 50, newly-appointed president of Wayne State University, was scheduled to make an announcement today on toe future of WSU’s athletic program. "
'h *«-'★	dr ★	* f
Keast, who is an avid sports fan and boasts of never having m i s s e d a Cornell University football game in the 13 years
as if he m^ht be willing to give he #0^ 4t Cornell, was ap-
pointed to his hew post Satur-■ day:	^
1 A university press release Saturday said Keast’s appeiat-J ment to succeed retiring Dr.
Clarence Bv Bilberry,
| “aroused new speculation as to tiie future of WSU’s athletic program.”- -
Wayne, which has a deem
it a try for that price.
Wilt then ambled over to the Baltimore bench: had needled,
Coach Buddy Jeannette: ‘“This1 is only a warning. You’d better pay your electric bill." ' j Bob „ Ferry of the Bullets couldn’t understand the reason! for toe delay despite the power, failure.	........ .... j
“This is just like daylight in {
toe Cow Palace,” he said, refer- j phasized athletic program, is a ring to toe home floor of the member of the President’s Ath Warriors. l	llectic Conference. Members of
HOT SHOTS A ,>i.~ the. conference are Eastern By the,time, the engineer had j Michigan, Western.. Reserve, turned on a setvof flouorescentiTech, Allegheny, Thiel, lights, giving toe court an eerie Carroll, Bethany and appearance. But it didn t affect | ivashington and Jeff Arson, the shooting eyes of the players ''	- ,
because:;	£•;!«}
The two. teams combined for a Civic Center record of 174 points! as Baltimore won 142-132.
Chamberlain broke his own)
Civic Center individual high | with 53 points. He even made four straight from toe foul line, I where he is notorious for his misses.
Rec Quintets Resume Play
BASKETBALL
scoia/U
... HBL iwM—
ECAC HOLIDAY FESTIVAL ~nvifei CkMupHRIklF SI. John'3, N.Y. 75, Mhchlgin 74. TMftf FlM*
Cincinnati TL FrlncaMn 99 FHHi Plan
. enr
CltainFlaMlilp Virginia 49, Connecticut 41 T	Third Place
Cornell 9ft Canlaiua 94
turncii rar vuuwiu* jw g	,•
' Lake Michlgan Callaga HalMay Teur-
(Championshlp)
Vincennes (InO.) 199, Lake Michigan 99 (ConsolfHon) _ HMaasaa (Tenn.) 95, Lincoln (in:) 57 Spring Alter Twenty ,
(Championship) Cadarvllla (Ohle) 95, Ollvat 75
(Consolation)
Oreee (InO.) M. Sgrmg Arbor 79
: Pravioonce 45, St. Joseph's, Pa. 41
Duquesne III Columbia 45 NYU 19V, St. Petefa 79
SOUTH Duka ft. Wake Forest 94 Vanderbilt 77, Tannassaa 72	';
Davidson 77, william A Mary 0 Kinl()Cky t07, Daiimoulh 47	'	.
Fordham 73, Memphis Slat* 71 North Carolina St. 91, Yale 44 West Virginia 194, Furman 45 AtobMM 91, Mississippi 0	.. ;
Florida 95, Tulane 53 Auburn 71, Mississippi State 79 Louisiana State 7ft Georgia a George Washington 70, Virginia Mill tary 42
MIDWEST
Taylor (Ind.) 0, Lawrence Tech 93 Kalamazoo .49, Franklin (Ind.) 40
Detroit If Cecilia CL HlgtiMod >SI. Benedict B ,	* .
DdSlt IDeLaSallo 7S, Unhr. of Dotreft
\Royal Oak Sf, Mary 19, Oaf. B. PonNae St. Michael 54, Waterford Our
n Servile 99, RO ShriM M _ Detroit St. Andrawd 12, Forth St JortMa 45.
Detroit Signs Tackle
DETROIT IB <» The Detroit Lions Simdf^ nnnouiKed tK e signing of Florida State tackle Avery Summer to a National Football League contract, ;! ^
ICOUFONl *spiei Ai*
Michigan Lutheran 94, Salem (Ohio) 77 Wheaton 194, Hopb 10
Wlchlfa 10, North Taxas 99 Minnesota 40, Dotroit 44 St. Louis 42, Drako SS Ohio State 73, Georgia Tech 4t
leorgla TOt
DePaul 72, Marquetto 54 ^ ay ton 71, Akron 45 hlo U. 84, Bowling Groan 49
Miami, Ohio 95, ToMk><44
Sralghton 10, Air Force It 'astern. Michigan 124, Western Ontario
Evansville 199, Ball Stats 92 DePauw 90, Butler 99
SOUTHWEST
New Mexico 0, Denver 45 Arizona State 102, Rhode Island 93 Houston 114, Trinity, Tex. 79	.
Hardin-Slmmont 71, Taxas AAI 54
it it it
Bailey Howell of Baltimore sank aQ 14 of his shots from the floor.
Baltimore hit $6 per cent of its Shots, and San Francisco connected oq 51 per cent. .
The lights were fixed by toe titne' Baltimore and Quebec clashed in an American Hockey League game at night. But goalie Gji Banville of Quebec had more trouble under normal conditions.
He didn’t see, so to speak, 20 per cent of toe shots taken by Baltimore. The Clippers won 9-1K., .
The Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department’s adult men’s basketball program will resume tonight with its final two weeks of practice games prior to the start of toe regular season.
ADULT .‘RECREATION BASKSTRALL Wwk'i schedule Today
Madison JHS—All-Stars vs. Tha
dents, 7 p.m.j White's Unbeatables vs. Lloyd Motors, 4:39 p.m.
fuosdoy
Madison JH$ — The Hawks vs, was! Bloomfield Haatlng> 7 p.m.,- Coulados Insurance vs. Booth Builders, 8:30 p.m.
kU.lk.M UCl Dmnall TmmlrtMM t,A kla
Northern HS—Powoll Trucking vs, Neph Halting, 7 p.m.i Tha Packars vs, KO
TV-Radlo, 8:30 p.m.
Wadnasday ■ Nartharn HS—Kan Johnson's vs. White's Unbeatables, 7 p.m.; McDonald's Drive-in vs, Ths All-Stars, 9:30 p.m,
Lincoln JHS—Opan for practice, 7 p.m.
Thursday v,
Central HS — Lloyd Motors vs. Tha Hawks, 7 p.m.; Tha Students vs. Cauls-cos Insurance, 1:30 p.m.
naroin-simmons /i, lexas xai Pan American 85, Sul Rots 59 Mldwestam 95, AWIatw Christian 99 par WRIT mmw Idaho Tit Montana 59	^
Montana Stall 77, Snttta 74 ,
Las AngaNs State 90, Cal Paly, Pamene
87
HIOH SCHOOL Detroit Holy Redeemer 41, St. Ambrose
0
Harper Woods Notre Dame 41, Detroit SmMlalt 0. , . , - '.:L:	'vii -.Li'
Detroit Austin 7», Birmingham Brother Rica 49
Detroit Catholic Centra) 94, Cathedral 90 Grosaa Points St. Paul 44, Detroit 0. David 41	;
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KANSAS CITY (AP) - A Don Pierce Athletic Memorial Fund for	a	scholarship	to	a	high
school athlete of high character has been established in memory of the University of Kansas sports publicist who died Sunday. *	. ,
★	it	it	*
Pierce,	45,	served the	past 20
years in the KU post, was the Big Eight Conference historian and one of toe nation’s top track experts. « 1
★	★	*	'«
He never regained consciousness after his head and neck were injured in a highway accident near Lawrence, Kan., New Year’s Eve. His wife, Vivian, 48, is in fair condition at the i Lawrence Hospital.
11-7 Win Over East
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Since they warn 10-year-olds, Craig Morton and Jack Schraub have been playing catch with a football, : „
>they did It In grammar school, junior high, high school and finally at, University of Gall* fornla, where Morton set pacific Athletic Conference passing records and Schraub set school marks (Or catching, Than’both •toned professional contracts with the Dallas Cowboys of the NationalFootball Lasgue. i a |* • "W *■ it a / ' ■
Bo lt should have come a* no surprise to till Bast AU-Stars that when Morton fadod to paaa
Saturday with 1. minute, 4 sec* ends Jett In tha 40th Baat*Waat
Shrine game and Jill West loam trailing 7-4, ha was looking for hto long-time teammate.
Moron found Schraub In too Best end sons with a six-yard •coring pass AHit propelled the
West to a comeback 11*7 victory before 60,OW fans.
GRIDIRON SWAMP
A steady rein, driven by strong winds, foil throughout most of the game. And the field* already sopping from several weeks of rain, resembled a swamp.
Neither team could manage anything approaching a scoring drive through too tint two periods. Fumbles ware frequent and players often slipped to the around with no one close to them.	' M ...
WWW
Then Navy qusrterbeck Roger Steubeoh/tna 1661 Halsman Trophy wlnnar, got off a 37-yard pais to Michigan State’s Dick Gordon at tha lest 12. ■
*» : ’ w wit
Gordon and Indiana’s Tom, Nowatake lugged the ball to too five, then SteUbachtoplashod to
im
the one where he was knocked unconscious by Washington State All-America Clarence Williams on a driving tackle.
W it W
Fred Mazurek of Pittsburgh replaced Staubach and plunged for tile score. Nowatzke booted toe extra point and the West led 7*6.
The next two scores came In ah unlikely — but understandable *» manner.
m mmm ^	★
Dick Butkus, the two-time Illinois All*America signed by tha Chicago Bear*, twice centered the ball High over too bead of Michigan State’s Lou Boblch and out of too end zone on punt attempts. The West was swarded two points each time pn toe unusual safeties.
W J ★
Staubach won too William M. Coffman award as the game's outitahdjing player,
1#
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY1 4,1965
Every year an estimated 500 million people suffer from disabling diseases associated with unsafe water supplies, according to the World Health Organization.
If Army Gives Up Waikiki Resort, Whc$s Left?
Michigan Bank
y$ NATIONAL ASSOCIATION ^ ' « Apdlti found up la $10,000 by Hit F.O.I.C.
investors!
WE ARE OPEN TONIGHT
t... and every Monday Eveningfrom 7 to 9 p,m. for Your Added Convenience.
Come In and Discuss Your .Investment Problems with a Registered Representative, i *
Watling,
Lerchen & Co.
Men^bere New York Stock Exchange
2 North Saginaw St. Pontiac, Michigan FE 2-9274
By MALCOLM BARR
HONOLULU (AP) - The Government Accounting Office has suggested that if the Army can’t operate a mountain recreation resort for servicemen in Hawaii at less cost, it should dose it.
This would leave, in effect, only one major recreational area in the state for the 120,000 military people and their families Who are stationed here. It | evoked severe — though off the record — criticism from officers and enlisted men.
★	-★ it
“If they take. much more away from us, we’ll have nothing left to be taken,” was a comment typieal of many.——
Most Hawaiians took only an academic interest in the recent GAO assertion that the Kilauea rest and recreation area on Hawaii Island —200 miles southeast of Honolulu — went in the I red by 1850,000 & 1963.
ANOTHER FACILITY ! -But the controversy brought to mind another military facility that has aroused state officials and private individuals over the past few years. It’s Ft. de Hussy in Waikiki.
Rumbles were revived about the state' or private industry taking over this area, and grumbles from officers and enlisted men began from Schofield Barracks to Pearl Harbor. it' it it
Popular opinion is that sunny > Hawaii is a desired station for j members of thearmed services. This may be/true for upper echelon officers whose pay is reasonable,/whose housing is generally good and whose on-base recreation facilities are excellent. J
j But/for me young soldier,
I some insist, only Korea is worse
— and it is designated as a hardship post. Many young officers say they’d take Seoul or Saigon to Schofield.
LOST ALLOWANCE When the military got a pay boost last year, servicemen here lost, their overseas allowance. That just about took ewe of the pay raise for Hawaii based GIs. ., /
Civilian landlords boosted rents for many servicemen living off base because of the publicized pay increase. That 'made the average enlisted man worse off then before.
★ ★ ★
One of the main complaints,
budget their pay to Hawaii’s high prices.
The single men see Ft. de Russy, particularly, as an off-base area-with-maximum facilities and entertainment they can afford. Married servicemen consider Kilauea an. excellent vacation spot, operating at" low weekly rates, to which they can take their families.
Ft. de Hussy, bounded by multimillion-d o 11 a r	hotels,
boasts one of Waikiki’s best swimming areai	1
The 72-acre/beach-front area is worth 672 million.
it	* ■
There, servicemen can buy a hamburger for a quarter, get a bed for 50 cents a night, and sunbatjie a stone’s throw from one' of the mbst popular tourist spot/in the woild. •
U.S. Marine Corps master lery Sergeant didn’t appear too concerned about what hap-, pened to the remote Hawaii island recreational spot normally used by military families for
however, is not being able to vacations. But he said if Ft. de
Russy is ever closed, servicemen will disappear completely from Waikiki.
TOURIST PRICES With tourist prices prevailing, it costs 75 cents to $1 for a bottle of' beer in Waikiki, a hamburger runs anywhere from 35 cents to 75 cents!	*	*
State officials! watching the
steady increase in tourism — 500,000 visitors by the end of last year — see Ft. de Russy as an expiansion of already crowded public recreation facilities.
★ . it 'if -
r Real estate agents' eye it as the only major piece of Waikiki frontage property that still is open land and could be put to hotel use. - <	. ' /./;
The tact is that Ft. de Russy is one Of the best investments the U.S. Army ever made.
72 ACRES
The Army started buying the land in 1904 and by 1915, the entire 72 acres had been acquired from 11 different owners — for $201,506. C
But in those years, it was marsh land, and never intended as a resort. It wasn’t until 1934 that the Army had foe inundated acreage reclaimed ami planted with topsOil and grass. *
PUT ON PRESSURE
In 1957, the statobegan pressing the Army to sell or lease the
land for development as a tourist facility. The Army said no.
The closest Hawaii ever came to getting some of the property was in 1961-61
/ ■ - it it ★	«
Then, Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara proposed that the military Sell some of the land, the proceeds to be used to relocate the facilities to less valuable federal land. /
That brought grumbles from enlisted.personnel who, if thcly are single, are hard-pressetUto find a girl to take out afayFay, and would be in bp even tougher spot if they couldn’t take her to Ft. de Russy.	/
‘ONAPAR*,
A 29-year Army sergeant said base facilities hi Hawaii are “about on a par wirn those on tap mainland*’ but that few facilities exist downtown except the 'decaying aimed services YMCA. ;	.
Mostly,i servicemen spend their time in the pinball parlors and the barf of -gaudy Hotel
whtaw juices, if not sur-i match Waikiki, three
U.S. Ben. Daniel K. taouye, D-Hawau, Army combat veteran of World War Q, went to bat for HaWaU’s servicemen when he hedra the Government Account-fata'Office criticism of the Kilauea rest camp operation. f He said the camp was valua-
offlce used pverly striot erfleria . in its cost analysis. Hesakt that if. the same accounting were' used by HafaU’s hotel industry, the tourist business would appear pretty sick. Actually; tourism here is enjoying its biggest boom in history. ■	s%' t
to 1963, a survey made for the European Travel Commission shows, only 45 per cent Of tin visitors to Europe were on the first trip, as compared to 55 p
cent in an earlier poll ma
bteformorale, and anyway the 11955.
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COFFEE CAKE
NHHD	'ewwt	leeuery A, MJM. ■ VelhMbiu tvetogt.
irnmmmm'mmmkm	tmmmmmi
WITH THIS COUPON ON
$5 PURCHASE OR MORI
IXCIPT BMW, WINI OR CIOMITm Vdllii Ihrw TuPidciy, Jnnunry fi. |vPi Limit oho coupon |>#f fnmily
9

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MM\h

'THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 4, ie«8
MARKETS
The following are top prices covering sales of (ocaliy grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday.	\
Produce
FRUITS
Apples, Golden Delicious, bu. ..	.. *3.75
Apples. RMi Delicious, ,lw..........3.»
Apple*. •JeSjlwn» bu- •	......
Apples.' Hjjpy,	u«&jsO»
Beets, lopped. »■	 v*l-2
Cabbage. «iSy, T*f..................  “
cabbage. Red. bo. .,*..............
ralhgflt. _Sy. .....	s >«. * * Mj
Carrots CfrjjP ................'•••
Carrots, tapped, bu............. ••	f"®
Horseradish .	i.,........
Leeks, dz. bchs. ...4,.,.;........ J-'*
onions, dry, 50-lb. bag .............US
Parsley Root •••	7M.v'.......... }•'*
Parsnips, eello pak . ..... ........?•"
Potatoes, new, *5 to. ............
Potatoes, new, SO lbs. ............2.10
Radishes, hi.	.......... * * 1 • • •
squash, Aeon), bu. .................. US
Squish, Buttercup, bu.............. 1.75
Squash, Butternut, bu. ........... 2.00
Souash, Delicious, bu. ........“...	1.75
Squash, Hubbard, bu.................. US
Turnips, topped, .bu. ............ 2'50
LETTUCE
Celery, cabbage, bu...............*1.75
Poultry and Eggs
DETROIT POULTRY . DETROIT (API - Prices peld	per
pound for No. 1 quality live poultry: Roasters over S lbs. 23-JWj Broilers and fryers 3*4 lbs. Whites •nWO DETROIT BOOS
DETROIT (AP) S- Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (Including U.S.): Whites Grade A Jumbo 34-37; extra large 32-37U(iz large , 3l%-34; medium 25-26; small 20-23; Browns Grade A large 30Vj-34; modlum 2$; small 20-21; chocks 19-30.
CHICAGO BUTTER, BOOS CHICAGO (AP) -i Chlcago Mercantlle Exchange — butter steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 03 score AA 57%; 92 A 57%; 00 B 5616; 80 C 54ft/ cars 00 B 57%; 0?( C 3714.
Eggs about steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 70 per cant or bettor Grade A whites 28; mixed 28; mediums standards 2S; dirties unquoted; checks 22.
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) — Live poultry:, wholesale buying prices unchanged; roasters 23-26; speclol led White Rock tryors . IB-lOVb.
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK OETROIT (AP)-(USOA)—Cattle 2000. leers and heifers active, 25-50 cents Igher then last weeks low close; cows stive, siady to SO’cents higher,, full ad* snce on-cutter end utility. Few loads igh choice steers 25.00, most choice eers 24.00-24.75; good to low choc# ears 21.50 24.qo; small lot high choice tilers 23.25; lew choice hblfors 22.00-1.00.
Hogs 100. Barrows end gilts 75 cents w6r than lost Wednesday; sows steady; . S. I 200-225 lb. Barrows and gilts .40-16.75) Tend* 190-230 lb, |6.25-tfJ»; and 3 190-& lb. 15.50-16.M; 2 end 3 10-260 Id. 14.50-15.50; 2 and 3 260-300 ft.
1.50-	14.50/1 (£$. 1, 2 and 3 3OM0O lb. >ws 12.50-13.50; 2 and 3 400-600 lb. sows
1.50-	lljEf
vealerf ISO. Fully steady, choice to rime 35^0.39.00; good 25.W-35.0O; slan-srd 11.00-25.00; cull and Utility 10.00-1.00. y!?	.	.	.
Sheep Woo. Slaughter desses fully eady, BOholce and prime wooled lambs 105 H>7 21.50-22.50: good end choice
1.50-	21.501 choice end prime shorn 1 end pelts 30*105 lb. 20.50-21.50; good and
tolce 19,50-20.50.
CHICAGO LlVRSTOCK CHICAGO (API - (USDA) - Hogs 0.000; butchers steady to 25 lower; 1-3 90-225 lb butctwri 16.50-16.75; mixed 1-3 90-230 lbs 13.7W6.507 2-3 240-270 lbs
4.50-	15.25- 1-3 350*400 lbs sows 12.75-3.50; 2<3 500-600 lt» 11.75-13.25.
Cattle 13)500; slaughter steers strong » 25 higher: four loads, prime 1,200-.250 lb slaughter1 steers/ 26.25; high holce end prime 1,150-1,lbs 25.W-6.00; choice 1,000-1,450 Ibf 24.00 • 35.00; ood 21.00-33.00; couple loads high choice nd prime 1,000-1.090 lb slaughter elfers 24.00-34.35; choice B0O-1.100 lbs 3.00-23.75; good and choice 22.50-22.75; lood 21.00-32.25; Utility and commercial ows 12.00-14.25; cutler or commercial mils 14.00-11.00.	,	,
Sheep 700; wooled slaughter lambs 1 eady to strong; choice end Prime 90-10 lb wooled 'slaughter lambs 31.50-23.00; ull lo good slaughter ewet 5.50-6.50.
American Stocks
NOON AMERICAN
NEW, YORK (AP) - Following Is 0 list ol ssltcled slock transactions on Ihs American Slock Exchange with noon prices:	'
lotos	. . NSf
(Ms.) High Low Lott Chg. 7 I 4JIA 4il/s 4- V*
Aorolst .50	' 1 *4ft 34'4 3614 +
AmPstrolA ,15 13 6,	6 ‘ 0
ArkLsGss 1.20 30	41%	4IV,	41%	+ %
H	H	It	It
30	614	6*6	4%	+ '4
' 7	1	15-1615-16—1*16
10	26’4	2566	26	+66
A samara Astd 0116.0 Atlas Co w Barnes Eng
Brez Tree u IW TR ■ Brown Co .60	3 1266 1216 1266.
Cempb Chib 1 3 15-16115-16 3 13-16 + 1* Can So Pot 4 2 15-16 2 15-16 2 1SJ6 Cdn Javelin
Cinerama Creole P 2.60a Dele Coni Draper 2 Equity Cp 05r Fargo Oils _ Feimt Pel ,15e Pl» Tiger Gen Bevel Gen Plywd Slant Yel ,60a
Grtldlleld
of Bat Pat Suit Am Ld
imp Oil uoa Isram Corp Kalsar Ind Kratlar ,10b Mackey Air McCrorywt
1(6	8%	+	’4
3*4	366	366	+	%
,4666	■ 46'4	44ft
5766	5666	3666
5066	5056	5056
3(4	-	|
+ 66 + 56 + 16
766
4ft 416
60 6	564 6
+ ft + 64
1656 1664 1664 - 64 IN Mi., |Vb . ..
15	O*	5ft	fjb	*♦•	Vb
9	SV6	466	466
Hvcon MfO	22	966	656	366	+166
ImpOII l+Oa	1	5356	3356	5356	+	V4
12	2	2
29	714	716	716	+	14
4)	1114	106*	1966	-	ft
29 16	556	0	+	4
10, lie	366	366	t	ft
if	1*5	1766	1766	+	ft
Molybdon	74	3114	3116	3166	+	%
With Sugar	,100 I	6ft	466	4%	+	ft
NawPkMho	,121	20	7ft	7ft	(ft
Pencil	Pol	*	10	ift	114	ift
RICOroup 3.251 SbdWAIr	•»
tlgnolqii A la I SperryR wl 1 SynloxCp ,3M	81
Tachnlcol .50 I UnConlrol .20	21
Webb li Knapp 3i
256	264	256	+	%
614	6'4	4ft	4+V6
2856	2866	2866	-	[4
iVi	6<4	44	+	4
lib — 14 T5'4 + 14 464 + 14 66 +1-14
m it
464	464
Mart Dips in Active Trading
r p5|p$ * C’ ' 7 '' '	r ' ^	'
Motor and Steel Stocks
NEW YORK (AP) - Weakness in motors and steels bigh* lighted a lower stock market as 1965 trading .began today. Trading was active early this after-noon,
The market was mixed at the start then headed lower, widening its loss on average despite a strong performance by scattered issues.
y. Steels sank on weekend news that President Johnson had asked his economic advisers to take a hard look at recent steel pried increases to see whether they are inflationary,
General Motors declined more than 2 points, dampening other
auto stocks and the list as a whole.
Brokers ascribed GM’s weakness to the fact that du Pont is making distribution today of its final 23 million shares of holdings of GM stock of the original 63 bullion it held before the Supreme Court ordered du Pont to get rid of it."
Oils, electrical equipments, gold mining issues, drugs, mail order-retails and aerospace issues also displayed a lower trend.
Ford was a fractional loser despite estimated record quarterly sales. Chrysler dropped a point...
As gold share$ continued to retreat from recent highs, Hom-estake was off about a point %and American-South African Investment about 2. ‘	' _
V"	- ★ • ★	★
Prices on the American Stock Exchange remained generally higher ip moderate trading. Hy-con rose more than a point. "Fractional gainers included Seaboard World Airlines, Mol-
ybdenum, Magellan Petroleum, CompuDyne, General Plywood and Reeves Industries. Kin-Ark Oil was off about a point and Ford of Canada more than a point. Giant Yellowknife lost almost a point.
NEW YORK (AP)—Following Is a list of selected stock transactions on,, the New York Stock Exchanoe with noon prices:
Sales .6 ?-;'T	' Net.
(hds.) High Low Lest Chg. Abbott L	.90	8 4464	44<4	4456	—	Vi
ABC COO	.70	Id. 1766	17	17V4	. .	. .
ACFInd 2.500	4	79	70V6	78'4	-1
Address 1.20	15	47	4564	4414	..
Admiral	4	1564	1564	1564	+ <4
Air Red 2.50	17	$466	5356 -	5466	+ 14
Alleg Cp ,20e	$	10'/,	10'A	10'A	+ '/,
Allegh Lud 2	5	4056.	4064	4064	...
AllegPw 1 04	9	2866	2314	2866	+ '4
AlliedCh 1.80	-45	5156	51V6	5IV6	- V4
Allied Sirs 3/	. 7	7356	73	73 ’	— 66
AlllsChal .50	19	1966	1966	1966	- V,
Alum Ud .80	28	2856	2864	2864	— '4
Alcoa 1.40	SO	4114	41	41	- V6
Amerada 2.40	7	8256	8266	8266	- Vi
ArnAIrlln 1.35	14	4456	44V6	4464	...
A Bosch .50e	3-	1416	14V6	1416	+ <4
AmBdcst 1.40	3?	54	5366	5364	+ 66
Am Can 2	32	4366	43	43'4	+ 14
Am Cyan 2	21	4*56	40	4856— 16
AmEIPw 1.24	25	4466	44	44V6	— V4
Am Enka 2e	13	48V4	47V6	676«	— V6
Am FPw .75	9	1 766	17	1766	..
A Home 1.56e	9	4514	4514	4566	— 14
Am Hasp .35	33	2966	»66	2966	- j*
Am MFd .90	70	1864	18'4	1864	+ Vi
AMOl Cl 1.40	13	4266	4166	62	- 5«
AM Motors I	86	14V6	14	1416
AmNGas 1.70	8	4i<4	46Vi -	4414	+ 64
AmOptlc 1 10	5	38'4	38	3866	- '4
Ampnoto .20	93	716	454	7)4 + 14
ASmelt 140a	7	4y56	, 49’4	49'4	-'4
Am Std 1	12	2066	. 2064	2064
Am T8.T 2	472	4914	4864	6964	+1V4
Am Tob 1.6 0 65	34	3364	3354	+ 64
Am zinc 1,40	7	2966	2966	2966	+ 64
AMP Inc .45	5	2866	2866	2864
Ampex Cp	.17	1414	1574	1556	— 16
AmphBorg 1	I	2364-	MW.	23'4	- ’4
Anacon 2.50e	15	5216	52	5216	— 16
Anken Ch .20	1	10'4	10V6	10V6	+ W
ArmcoSt 3	38	44W	M66	MW	-»
Armour 1.60b	31	5314	5214	5264	1,.
Armst Ck la	12	4214	4154	4156	- 4
Ashl Oil 1.40	3	.3914	3914	3954^-14
AssdDG 1.40	2	48'A	N	M'4	...
Atchison 1.40	33	3366	3314	3364	+ 14
AtICLIne 2a	8	4T4	SM:	48'4	- '4
Atlas Cp	”3	It 264	'Si	",264	-■
- P j || i 4 -’17	1464	1864	-	14
40 21V6	21 Vi	«14	-	14
10^1254	126*. WJ4	+	W
ANOS Cp ’ AutoCant .40 Aveo Corp 1 Avnet .4d| , AvonProd .80
Treasury Position
Washington (AP)-Tho oojh ooiltlon t iho irooiury oomporod with eorro-
P*K""#	Dm, If, 194*
, 9 7,402,155,354.57 iipoilts rltcej tOOI', July l—
M,319h7J4,205.51	52,995,5*7,944.37
yithdrowoii pJmK YooPr, ...	..
- » 42,233,517,310.75	41,527,424,150.44
t_TO,"31U^4,4M,I7J.I5 311,313.731,473.90
miliC
14,3^,100,131,17 ' 13,ll*,4»4,7»o.ja neludM »H5,9«,77I.I0 doyt not wb-to statutory limit,
18,112,424,750.45
BOND AVBRAOB3 lemplM by Tht Assoclattd Prow
BabcockWI II BaldLllna .40 Balt GE 1.32 Beaunlt 1.20 Beckman in BeechAIr .60 Ball How .40 Bandlx 2,40 Banguaf Bastwbll .90a Bath Stl 1.50 BlgelowS 1.20 Boeing 2 Borden 2.10 BorgWar 2.20 Brlggt Mfg '... BrlggsS 1.40a Brtif My la Brunswick BucyEr 1.40a Buda Co .60 Bullard .60 Butova .60b Burl Ind 1.60 Burroughs 1
Cal Flnt .301 CallahM .201 Calum H .60 CampRL .45a Camp Sp .90 Can Dry 1 CdnPic 1.50a CaroPLI 1.16 Carrier 1.40 CarterPd .40 Casa Jl CatarTrac .10 Celanese 1.80 Caneomst .5 ( Cent sw 1,28 CarroCp 1.40 Cert-teed .70 CassnaAlrc it ChampSpk 1 Checker MAt Chat Oh 4 ChIMII SIP 1 ChPneu 1,60a CnlRklsPac 1 ChrlsCrft .401 Chrysler 1b CIT FI nl.60 C It "del Ind 1 CltlesSv 2.80 ClwvBIIII 1.20 Coca Cola 3 ColaPnl 1.20 ColflnRad .40 Colt Indust CBS 1.20b Col Gas 1.22 Col Piet .541 ComICre 1.00 ComSolv 1.20 ComwEd 1.00 Comsat ConEdls 1.30 ConllfKlnd I CnNOas 2.30 ConiPw 1.70 Container 1 Coni Air .40 Cant Can 2 Cont Ins 2.40 Cent Oil 2.40
*1	5364	S3'A	3366	,
____B. _	. ■
I	35	3514	3514	- '4
7	1416	14	14
3	3866	3866	3866	+ V;
5 /3714 3466 3466 - 66
*8	72	7066	7066	-156
1	1*66	1956	“1956	+	’A
31	*47A	2666	2466	-	V6
91	4464	4414 .	44V;
182	164	166	166	-	16
' 8	54	3366	3366	—V6
97	3514	3466	3456	— 14
II	23	2766	2766	— 16
18	4856	4816	48(4	- 16
I	||V4	8*	12	-166
n	4864	4816	4864	- 66
4	566	566	566	+	16
*1	38 V;	3B'/4	38	+ W|
347	«66	48	48	,-rl.'.
147	9V4	9	9	.....
10	3964	3966	3966	.....
15	14V6	1356	14
3	2064	2064	2064	+	14
ID	19'	1864	1864	+	16
14	5966	»V4	59'4	-	W
13	2514	25	2516	—	Vi
—c ....
I 5'/4
5'A	5	- 66
-4 1864 1816 1864 + 'A t0 23	2164 2164 -166
10	3864 38Vi 3866 — Vi
2	32	3156	3156
XlS	5416	5416	5416 +1
4 4266 4216 4216 — V,
4	5416	54	5416 +	66
15	1816	1866	1816 +	w
14' 1766 1716 1716 + V6 48 4164 41'A 41<6	-
23	7414	73W	7356 + <16
13	57V<	5416	57'6 -	16
5	5014'	50*6	5064 —	'6
34	3566	3466	3466 -	16
5 1416 14	14+1(6
8	3216	3166	3156
]	4164	4164	4164 +	<6
J	41	31	21	+	66
13	7164	71'A	71'6 +	Vi
3	2816	2816	2816
1*	3|V6	38	38*6 .+	Vi
4	3264	3266	3264 -f	16
- 4	1356	.7356	1356 +	16
122	41	4014	4014 -	64
13	3416	34	34	+	V6
19	30	30	30 ,
25 7966 79'6 79'6 —M
9	3956 3966 3964 r
'4 140'A 140	140	- 64
32	49'A	4066	4856
8	1966	1916	1966
40	1266	12	,12'A
32	4056	4066	4056 .
27	3166	3166	31'A -	66
2	2266	2214	*266 +	16
11	34	3564	3564 +
+ 66 + 'A + 16
_	55'A	55	95'A	+	16
77	5316	5IV6	5116	-156
19	9416	94	94	-	16
12	^Jdl ji'A , J2V6 + V6
13	7161	7116	7166	-	'A
4	5466	S4V6	5466	+	16
5	3266	3216	32Vi	-	V6
9	2016	1964	1964	-	16
14	50	50	50	+	vi
8	4116	4056	41	+	66
23	74	7516	75'6	-	64
45	5466	5316	5316	.....
33	5466	5416	54V6
184	2566	25	2566	+	14
51	3464	3414	3466	—	66
14	54'6	5466	5416	.	.
4	2256	2264	5*56	+	16
1016	1016	1016	+	16
814 8	116 + 66
1766 1766 1766 + 14
Ills	2016	2066	2066
7	2066	2066	2056	+	16
24	45’A	4466	?!
9	3066	3066	3066	—	66
8	4166	4116	4)16	-	'A
if	1116	*1	21'a	-	16
{	3416	34'A	3414
I	1316	U	11	+	16
5	44	4564	4566	+	14
34	3056	3066	3066	+
37	3866	38	3816
10	2914	2916	29V6	.,
28	7466	74	74'A	-	14
ij.lClf+116
—K—	’
42	4IM	4116	4IV6	-166
4	SiVp.	H	88'A
21 13916 139 139 . to	44	4314	4316
3 lH	1466
IV6	1866
-114
iP's.l
iff
sK*
L-
Fllntkote 1 Fla Pow 1.20 Fla PL L40 FoodFair .90 FMC Corp 1 Foote M ,20a Ford Mot 2 Forem D .40
GomSk l.tob GAccept 1.10 Gan Clg 1.20 Gan Dynam GenElec 2.20 Gan Foods 2 GenMIlls 1.40 GanMot 4.45a GanPrac 1.20 GPubSvc .44g G PubUt 1.34 GenTelBEI 1 GanTlra .50 GaPatiflc lb GettyOII .IN Gillette 1.10a: GlenAld 1 Goodrch 2,: Goodyr 1.1 GraceCo 1.10 GrandU Granites T.40
GtA&P l.JOa Gt Nor GW Fin /,87f Greyhnd
Grumn ____
Gulf Dll 1.80 Gulf SU 144
Halliburl 1.50 Hanna/ Co la HaclaMng 1b Here /Pdr lo Hartzl 1.20 Hewlett Pk Holt/ Electron Homestk 1.40 HOWWII 2.20 Honoywell wl Hook Ch 1.20 Housa F 1.40 HdUtt LP .84 Howe $d .40 Hupp Cp .as*'
Solos .	Not
(Ms.) High Low	Last dig.
13	23V6	2314	23>A	+ 66
3	47 .	47	47	— 66
32	'7566	75	7566	— 16
2	2156	2156	2156	+ 16
5 4064 4064 '4064 + ’A 17	17	1416	1416	— 'A
99	5466	5356	5356	— 16
10	1314	1316	1316	..: .
,7	4466	4416	44V6	— 66
30 JO	30	3016	— '6
5	/38	3764	3764	+ '6
2/21	Jl ,	21	— (4
7/ 5116 5016 "’5064	.
58	3566	3516	3566	+ 66
9264	9156	9214	—1
81'A	8016	80V6	— 16
48	4764	48	— 16
9456	95'A	95'A	—266
2814	28'A	2814
/H
556	556
3756 3716 3756 — 'A 3756 3716 3716 —
90 20 ,4044 1956 +1 Jt 19	55'A	55	55
8	2466	2466	2466 +	16
23	30'A	30	3016 -	16
47 1366.13'A 1314-------
5	58	57V6	57'6 —	14
24	4564	45’A	4514
19	54l6	54	5466 +	66
12	2466	24'A	'2466 —	66
22	2416	24	24	—
28	4266	42 ,	42	—	'A
11	5066	5764	5756 -	66
.33	1164	1166	1164 +	'A
14	*256 -	2264	2256 +	'6
84	53'A	53	J3'A —1'6
44	5816	5764	5764 —	64
13	4766	4456	4766 +	66
—H—
4	37'A	37'A	3714. +	16
22	3864	3866	3866 +	<A
19	3366	3316	33V6 +	'6
3	44'6	44	44	+	'A
33	3464	34	3464 +	64
2	2266	2266	2266
4	416	416	4W	+
27 5366 5214 52’6 — 66 1 12014 12016 120*6 + 1A 7	41	40'A	40'A —	16
9	3764	3766	3766 —	16
4	JOW	4956	4956 —	64
7 . 52	5166	52	—	V<
1	1166	1166	1166 +	14
44
+-I—
2164
554	556 -'6
'Saiti '	■	Not
(Ml.) High Lew Lost Chg. PfizerCha la 19 4916^ 4966 4966
PhelpsD 3.40 Phlla El 1.32 PhlIRdg 1.20 PhllMor 3.40 PhllllpsPet 2 Pltn Bow .90 pjtPieta 2.40 Pit Stool Polaroid .40 ProctStO- 1.75 Publklnd .341 Pullman 2a Pur^OII. 1.40
RCA 40a RalstonPur 1 Rayette .48 Rayonlar 1.20 Raytlfon ,40b Reading Co RelchCh .20a Repub Aviat RepubSteel 2 Revlon T.30 RexallDr ,40b Rexall Dr wl RaynMet ,50a ReyTob 1.80 RheemMf (80 Richf Oil 1.00 Rohr Corp 1 RoyDut 1.73r Royal McBaa Ryder Syst
71 ^4916	4966	—	64
9 - 3566	3566	3566
4	34	34	34
4	7314	73	7316	+	14
32 5366 52V6 5214	'
13	3064	3814	3864	—	<6
7	4854	48<6	4856	+	16
5	1414 14
18 183'A	18166	18156	—	66
18	8164	B0V6	8164	+	'A
1	7'6	716	7*6	+	'6
12	2956	3*64	3964
23	5414	54'A	5414
-R—
Says VISTA 1$ Mo Breeze
First Volunteers Hear Warning of Director.
.DURHAM, N.C, (AP) - Domestic Peace Corps volunteers who see their task as a “glamorous chaH^ge” have been warned ‘‘it’s q^te another thing to do the grubbing ^ork.“ , | ,. The warning camh frpm Morris H. Cohen, director M hraiin-ihg fpr the North Carolina Fund, as he explaised the train-' ing program to the first 13 Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA). :	•" -	' ■ ‘ *• 1
They began Sunday six weeks of training designed “to bridge the gap between their quiet home background and the new tasks they have undertaken.” The North Carolina Fund is conducting the tcaining.
The volunteers, who range in age of 20 to 81, will serve a year after training and will be sent to work with migrant workers in California, with the poverty-stricken in Appalachia, and with retarded persons in clinics cross the nation. /7
For Firms in New Year f
7 1 y c mg*,r, _____

^ProfitsTop Tune*fM&
By SAM DAWSON AF Business Analyst
NEW YORK — One ojf the. happiest tunes in the opening days and weeks. of the New Year will be entitled ^-Record Profits;*' :
Many corporations have reported notable gains over their previous year’s figures. .This week the leading banks of the nation are expected to an- DAWSON nounce increased earnings for the year just ended. The glad tidings from industrial firms should reach caroling volume by the. end of the month and early February.
★ *
. Largest reported to date is American: Telephone & Tele-graph’s Bell Systetn, which had 12-month record earnings pi. $1-7 billion, up from $1.5 billiojn in the. 1963 period.
When all are reported some weeks hence, before-tax profits for the nation’s corporations in 1964 should total around $58 billion or more. With Income taxes taking about $26 billion of this the after-tax net would, be around $32 billion, a record, and compares with $26 billion in 1963.
were going against the trend of their own industries.
Meat packers are almost unanimous in reporting sizable gains over the previous year.
Since 1961,(many corporations have seen profits after taxes rising mucofaster than earnings before taxes: Part of this is due to the adoption in 1962 of new guidelines for depreciation allowances for income tax accounting, and to tax credit voted that year for investment in new plants and equipment. Last year, the corporations also had another fillip — a cut in corporate income tax rates.
In 1965, there will be another such cut. And also-this month still more tax -relief win come
from revised depreciation rules The profit prospect is further enriched by continuing high production and sales, and by
only a slight narrowing here mid there of the ratio of profits to sales, known as the profit margin.
Decreased earnings are reported by 4i few companies, including: U.S. Envelope, Hat C o ?-p. of America, Tractor Supply, Northwestern Glass, tftid by Frouge Corp. which l(^| a net loss in its. last fiscal year.
Hie nation’s biggest corporations are yet to be heard from officially. Yet many have given year-end estimates, that Show increased earnings. In many cases, records will be set.
In lend Stl 2 InterlkSt 1.40 IntBusMch 5 IntIHarv 2.80 intMlneroli l IntNIck 2.50a Inti Packers IntPeper 1.20 In* T8.T 1.20 ITECktBr .40
JohnsManv 2
JonLogon 70 JoneseiL 2.50 Joy Mlg 2
Kaiser Al .90 KayserRo .40-Kennecott 4 KernCLd 2.40 Karr Me 1.20 KlmbCark 2 KlrkNot .40 Kdpprs 2.40a Korvatta Krasge 1,20 Krogar 1.20
Lear Slag .50 LahPorCam 1 Lad Vol Ind Lehman l.Slg LOFGIs 2.80a Lib MCN .759 Llggett&M 5 Lionel Corp Uttonln 1.87t LlvIngsO ,74t LockAlrc 1.40 Loews Thaat LoneSCem 1 LoneS Oat 1 LongTilLt .9*
Mack Trucks MadFd 1.58a Mad 5q Oar MagmaC t.40 Magnavx ,90
II >6 2164 + ’A T6 5116 .....
10	4064	4066	4066	..
34	4366	4314	43	—	64
7	3266	3216	3216	—	64
27 4-1016 405'A 403V6 —4 20	756*	75	Ti -	66
49	39’A	3814	3856 +	56
22	84	8364	84:.
J.	11	II	TV, +	Vb-
'J2	3256	3266	3264 ■
48	59V4	59	59’A	.
38’A	3814	3814	+	1A
--J—
19	54	5314	5364	+	'A*
7	2764	2764	27V6 —	V6
41	4764	4456	4456 —	56
2	4564 4514 4564 + 'A
—K—
14	2966	2966	29'/j	66
1	2314	2314	2314 —	'A
4	92'A	9114	91'4 —	V4
1	41'A	41'A	41'A	...
23	4566	4456	4566 +	66
8	5764'5714 5764 +'A
3	146*	*466	146* +	66
11	5514	5456	3514 +	16
15	4064	39'A	3914 —	64
4	Jl	5016	50*4 —	*4
11	3864	38	3814 +	66
—L—
15	1366	(256	1366 +	*4
3	1716	17	1716 +	V6
42	31A	2’A	2'A — 16
9 30'A 3016 3014 ......
14	40	5964	5964	.
1	1466	1466	1466	+	V6
8	81	B2V6-	8266	+	V6
14	4	356	4	4-	*A
35	75'A	7466	7456
Ts	15V;	15V6	lS'A +	V;
19	38	38	38'4 —	V6
9	17'A	17	1716 +	V6
1*	20V;	20	20	—	14
12	2466	24V6	26*4 —	V*
20	3466	3314	3364 —	64
24	76*	714	714
73	426*	42*4	426*	+	64
5	UV;	1766	1766 +	16
10	6*64	40*4	40'4 —IV;
—M—
86
12
“Merethon 2 MarMIc Marque MartlnMar f MayDStr 1.20 McCall .40b McDonAIr .60 Merck la MerChap .20g MOM 1.50 MW SUt 1.24 MnorCnem 1,
MlnnMnoM 1 Mo Kan Tex MoPecRR 5e Mohatco .60a Monian 1.40b MontDU 1.40 MonIWard 1 Morrell Co 1 Motorola 1.50
NCashR 1.20 NalDalry 2.40 NltDIit 1.20 NitPuel 1.40 Nit Ganl .14 N«OyM 2b N Lead 3.25a Nat Steel i Nat Tea .00 NEngEI 1.20 N JZmc NYCant J.30a NiagM Pw 2
2156	2164	2) 54
214	2'4	214 + '4
,	41	41	41+66
40	3164	31'4	3164	+	14
21	4464	64	4414	+	'4
3	3456	3464	3456	+	66
iT 9	864	9	+ 14
34	18V;	1816	18'A	+ 'A
16	5716	5466	5466	— 16
2	24	24	24	+ 'A
35	3314	3464	35'4	+114
15	4956	4966	4966	.....
1	18	18	II	...
1	38	30	38	— 'A
5	49V;	49
J6	5456	5556	5456	+1
2	666	666	666	+	16
I	7814	7114	7IV6	—	66
5	IW	MB
50	BS'A	8416	8466 —	56
8	4064	4014	4066 +	V6
28	3964	3966	3966 —	66
17	3266	Sir	12	—	V4
12	9514	9l(b	9314	.....
—N—'
17	6364	4514	4564
21	59	MV;	8556
8	1766	17	1766
22	»	74	74'4
11	(516	(5	85	—1)4
21	2564	24'A	26% -	%
7	32V;	32	32V; +	V6
9	TlV*	Tl%	11%
12	4064	40%	4064 +	'4
10	72%	7214	7* ' ,	_
48	83	5164	5164 4*	ft
12	175*	T/V6,	T754 +	'A
4	28V*	28V,	2114
5	23	23	23
67	4|H	45'	4| —	'A
10	53'A	52%	32% -	%.
11	in" 114IA IM14 4* Va
+ % 1 %
+ ft
Mar .so Gill }■» Pop 1.20
it	54%	3?16	34%
1	5556	5(56	5856	+ V4
5	5216	52	H	- %
4	4016	40	40	-	V6
16	2056	2066	2056
19	4314	4316	4114
1	sift	loft	(toft	- ft
12	49%	4i%	4216	+ ft
—O ,
31	2156	21ft	*866	+ %
16	5914	5916	((ft	- ft
43 4166 lift
fa	iw	l4Ab	j¥ ”	+ ft
i f J8 ’8
—.p—
If	34ft	94ft	34ft	- ft
||	lift	(Oft	jl.	+ ft
52	8%
(56 + %
P + ft
r«M 45ft - V,
J 1 m b;JS
Safeway St 1 StJos Lead 2 SL SanF 1.40 StRegP 1.40b SanDlmp .44t Schenley 1 Scherng 1.40a Schick
scMCorp .set
ScottPap .90 Saab AL 1.40 SearlOO 1.10 SearsR 1.80a Seeburg .40 Serve!
Shall Oil 1.50 Sherwln Wm Sinclair -2 Singer Co 2 SmithK 1.60a Socony 2.60a SoPRSug .40g SouCalE 1.20 SouthnCo 1.80 SouNatG 2.20 SouPOc 1.40 SouthRy 2.80 Sparry Rand Spiegel 1.50 SquarD 1.40a Stalay 1.20 StBrands 2.40 Std Kollsman StOilCal 2.20 StOIIInd 1.50a StdOII N J0a StdOltOh 1.40 Si Packaging Stanwar 1.20 StauftCh 1.40 SterlDrug .70 Stavans /1.50b Studebaker Sun Oil lb Sunray 1.40 Swift Co 2
Tenn Oas lb Texaco 2.20a TaxGSul .40 Texaslnstm 1 TexPLd .35a Textron 1.40 Thlokol .579 Tldawat Oil TlmkenRB 3a Trans W Air Transam .80 Trantltron
TrlConl 1.47e Twant C ,40b
UCarbld 3.40 Un Elec 1.12 Un Oil Cal 1 Un Pac 1.80 Un Tank 1.80 Un AlrL 1.50 Unit Alrctt 2 Unit Cp .35a Unit Fruit UGasCp 1.70 UnltM&M la USBorax .80a USGypsm la US induit USPIvwd 1.20 US Rub 2.20 US Smelt 1 US Steel 2 Unit Whalen UnMatch .40 Unlv oilPd 1 Uplohn 1.20
VanAIISt 1.40 VsnadCp .25# Vrtrlnn A8 VendoCo .40 VailPw M2
WarnPIct .50 WamLam .10 WnAlrl,ln .10 WnBanc i.io WUnTol 1.40 WtttgEI 1.90 Whlrlixx>l 2 WhltoM 1.20 Wilton. Co 2 WlnnDlx 1.20 Vpoolworth I Worthing 1.50
Xerox Cp .50
Yngittht 1.80
Zenith i.20a
220	34'A	33%	3366	—	16
2	3456	345s	345*
9	39	3864	39	+	%
: 33	40'/;	40	40V;	—	%
X12	216*	21%	21'A	+	'/;
6	1166	11%	,11%.+	V6
11	12	1164	1156	....
3	1356 '	1356	1356	...
41	4256'-	42	42	—	V4
]4	4466	44V;	44%	...
44	57%	57	57	—	16
4	29%	2916	29V6-...
40	35	34%	3464	—	V6
34	39%	39%	39%	+	%
19	195s	19%	1956	+	%
29	43	62%	62%	—	%
3	1156	1864	1864	+	V*
17	45%	4516	45V;	—	56
6	1666	14%	16%	-
12	13%	13%	13%	+	%
—*-S*— -
■ 31	37%	37%	3714	—	ft
6	4266	42V;	42V;	—	ft
6 305s “30% 3064 + ft 31%	3116	31'A	+	ft
44 8ft 8
- ft
11	225s	22%	.	2264
22	57%	57.	57%
I	7ft	7ft	716	+ ft
I	17%	17%	17%	. .
31	34V;	34	34	+	%
5	4464	4464	4464	+	%
16	48V;	67V;	67%	—	64
39 129	128V; 128'/; *-l
II	24%	24V;	24%	+ %
17	4ft	416	4%
28	59%	59	59	—	%
3	49ft	49ft	4916	+	%
94	57ft	J466	54V;	+	ft
30	79V;	785s	79ft	—	%
II	72V;	71%	71%	-	66
25	9164	91	91	-	64
26	31V;	305s	31ft	+	%
26	37%	3716	37%	+	ft
4	6564	65%	65%	—	ft
1	67%	67%	47%	—	ft
17	385s	38%	3866
5	575s	57%	5756	+	ft
119	14	135s.	1356
9	28%	2866	20%	+	ft
8	63V;	63	6314	+	ft
3	3466	34% .	3466	+	ft
1	79V;	79V;	79ft	+	%
2	866	866	866	+ 'A
44	73%	71V;	71V;	—166
25	42%	42%	42%	—	%
72	8964	89%	89ft	—1
3	49%	49V;	49%	+	ft
II	10%	10ft	10ft	+	ft
3	26V; '26%	24V;	+ %
7	4064	40%	.	4064
48	30V;	30	30	—	ft
19	43%	43V;	43ft	—	%
6% + ft
NG PROBLEM _	RISING TIDE
jstssSHS
what they the volunteers hive	in some
decided tp do,” said Cohen.
He explained that after two weeks training at Camp New Hope near Durham, eight vol" unteers will do field work in Winston-Salem and five will go to New Bern, N.C.
★	★ Pr
The North Carolina Fund sent, the North Carolina volunteers, mostly college students, to help some of North Carolina’s poverty-stricken last summer.
Elizabeth Brown of Kinston, oldest volunteer at 81 and the only North Carolinian, has had 18 years Experience as a clinical psychologist.
Richard P. G\i§ke, 20, the youngest member of the group, had beep involved in search and rescue operations in flood-stricken Oregon.
Seven of the volunteers, are SO, including Mrs. J. E. Holmes, 63, and her husband who is 66. iTMte, Holmes are from Spring Lake, Mich., and will-be sent to California.
2- 63	63	63
%
27 246V 24% 24% ...
50 87	8666 86V; — 56
61	5164	50%	50% -	V;
19	94V;	9466	9466 —	%
2	18%	18%	18% +	ft
2	53%	53%	53ft -	ft
44	12%	12ft	12ft +	ft
11	3256	32%	32% —	ft
6 85	84ft 84V; .......
8	48	4764	4764
21	45ft	44%	45ft +	%
18 5% 5ft 5ft — ft 17	49	4(64	4564 -	ft
4	23%	2364	2364 +	ft
102 127	124V; 126% — %
6	29%	29ft	29% +	V;
41	34%	35%	355; ...
19	.42%	42%	4264 ...
2	505*	50%	50% ....
26	5964	59ft	59V; ...
14	6564	65%	65% .
7	8%	8%	1% + %
20	17%'	17%	17%
18	34%	36ft	34% +	V;
18	26%	24%	26% -	%
4	34%	34V*	34% —	%
7	80V;	80	80ft —	ft
II	11%	11%	11% +	%
- 1	42% •	42%	42% —	%
18	62ft	42	62V;	...
4 107	104V; 104ft-..
304	50%	50%	50% —	%
3	4% ■ 4%	4% + ft
18	14%	14ft	14ft —	ft
7	40%	40	40%	+	%
x!2	52%	52V;	52% +1
+ V;
i + %
+ ft
16%	16%
23 13% 13	1}	.......
10	21%	21	2l
6	48%' 4814	48V;	-	ft
—W—	' *
I	19	11%	19	+	ft
14	32%	32%	3256	+	%
30	3166	31%	3tft	-	ft
0	39ft	39	39ft
12	30%	30%	30%
244	43ft	42%	42%
11	49 ft	48%	49'A
10	*9%	*9	29ft
6	53%	52%	52%	—1%
9	3964	39%	39ft
77	26ft	2764	21ft	+	ft
9 51	50V; 50% ...
—X—
48	99%	97%	97%	—1
—Y-----
J] 45% 44	44 —1%
—z—
If	63%	69V;	43V;	+	%
toll* llguroi mi* unofficial ,
Union* Olhorwlio nolfd, rnloi of, dlvl-dindi In th« lorogolng tsbl* or* annuil dliburitmonli baiod on Iho last quarterly loml-onnuol ooclorollon, Spfclol or
bxtrb dlvldond* or poymonli not doilg-notod si rogulor an* Idanllflad In tht following fooinqloii
aim oxir* or axtrai, b- Annual rota plui itock dlvldond. c-LlqyldiJIno dlvldond. d-D*c!*r*d or paid In 1945 plui Block dlvldond. •—Pold. iotl.^yopr. f— Poyopli In itock during 1985, aiilmolod cosh valut on ix-dlvldind or ok-dlilrlbu-lion dolt, g—Daclarod or paid to far thli year. H—DMtorod or paid otlor Hock dlvl-d*nd or ipllt up, k rnw lorod or paid Dili voir, an Kcumulitivo liiu* wiln dlvldond) In irrgiri. p—Paid thli voir, dlvl-Hond omlliM, doMrrod or no ocllon tokon Of last dividend meellhg, r . D*;.l»red or paid in 1954 plui •tack dividend/}—Paid jh itock (luring 1944: oitlmotod eoih value on ex-dividend or ex-dlitrlbutloh dolt, V z~»«Ji«, ,n tun*
c Id—Call
dona end ■■ „. ....JH______
tlon, kr—■H .irlghti.' xw—Without war rintl, ww- Wllh W*rr*ni». Wd -Whan d|) iribuiod, wl—whah i**u*d. ■ nd—Next d*y
v| IX bankrupuy nr rtcelverrhlp or being reorgenlied under the BanKrupliy Act, or wcurliTii iiiumad by men com-penloi. fn-foriign I%u4 luolocl to in loroit oquallialwn tax.
. I -Ex dlvldond, y—lx Dlvl-qi In.full, x-dli—Ex d.litrlbu-
18,000 Are Displaced
by Algeria Tremors
ALGIERS (UPI) -About 18,-000 .persons were reported displaced today by earthquake shocks which began rumbling through the Atlas Mountain area near M’Sila New Year’s Day. Four deaths and 40 injuries have been attributed to the tremors.
M’Sila is about 90 miles south of Algiers. Rescue workers said more than 2,800 flimsy homes had Collapsed during the shocks, and thousands of other Algerians moved out of their homes to camp out in tho mountains.
Stocks of Local Interest
Figure* sftar decimal points ar* eighth)
OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Tht tallowing quotations do dot necessarily represent ectuel transection* but ar* intended es a guide to the approximate trading range of the securities.
Bid Asked
AMT Corp. ................... 7.3	7.7
Associated Truck ............14.4	15.6
Braun Engineering .......... 17.0	18.4
Citizens Utilities Clots A ....	24.4	28.2
Diamond Cryital ............ 13.3	14.3
Ethyl Coro. ................ 33.5	33.4
Mohawk Rubber Co. ...........33.3	*5.1
Michigan Saamtasi Tuba Co. .. 21.6 - 23.6
Pkmatr Finance ...........i■ ■ 6.0	8.7
Barren Printing ............X14.3	18.3
vernori Ginger Ale	.... i.. •..	6.6	7.4
Vetoly Co. ..................11.1	12-1
Water Coro. ................ 18,0	16.0
Wlnkolmon't ................ 14.7	15.7
'Wolverine Shoo ............... 43.0	45.4
Wyandotte Chemical .. r. 33.4 35.6 MUTUAL FUNDI
.HU Asked
Affiliated Fund ........... ».05	9.55
Chemical Punt) ............13.71	14.99
Commonwealth Block .........  7.62	8.21
Keystone Income	K-1 ....... 9.80	10.70
Keystone Growth	K-2 ....... 8,73	4.24
Me**, investors Growth ...	8.99	9.13
Matt. Investors Trust ....X17.04	1162
Putnam Growth ............. 9.44	10.54
Television Electronics ..... 1.11	5.54
Wellington Fund .......... . 15.04 10.39
Windsor Fund	  15.57	14.92
x—Nominal Quotations
DOW-JONRI NOON AVIRAGIf STOCKS
30 Indus ................... 849,50—4.63
20 Rail!	301.24~0.10
15 Ullli ,	  I54.I8-.0.44
65 Block!	304.41-1.19
BONDI
40 Bondi	.......’89,10+0.03
to Higher grid* rails ....... *3.72
i0 Second grade	rolls ...... 93,40+0,02
10 Public ulllltlot ....... ns *51 0 03
io inoutlrlalt	94,32 1 o.oi
Monday's HI Dividends Daclarod
Po Ilk. of Pay-RoM rlod Record able
IRREGULAR Diver Grlh Itk	.37	11-11 1 28
RROULAR
ltd Brands paini	.475 Q 1-151	1-8
* ITOCK AVERAOE*
Compiled by Tho Associated Frost m nr 15 l-Ind. Rolls Util, Hacks
Net Chong# Noon Mon. Prov, pay . Week Ago Month Ago , Year Ado , 1944 46 High ifliM LOW
j943 lUgh ifil Low .
444.1 149.4 147.3 323.
iaf.O 144,6 323, 173.4 167.1 335, iM.J 149.9 M7,
m h!:i p
n?’ \i\i n
668.7
doi.4
474.1 406,6
607.1
341.1
including the majority in some industries, already have shown how tha profit tide is rising. Only-a handful have reported decreased earnings, and usually these individual companies
m $' pk t t Successful %
% Investing *
s % ■ Pm
By ROGER Hr SPEAR Q) “My Wife and I will retire with the following assets: insurance annuity, bringing $1,548 a year; 50 U.8. Steal 24 Consolidated Edison; 50 City Products Corp.; 24 A.T.
& T.: 30 shares in a family holding company; $26,000 in mutual funds and $58,000 in savings. Our approximate total income will be $6,372 a year. Is this program adequate to protect us against further inflation?” R. A.
A) You’re in a fine position retirement, and your holdings are reasonably in balance I do not believe I would retain U.S. Steel which has been acting badly, apparently on the possibility of a long steel strike.
would switch this stock to Northern Illinois Gas.
★ * ★
Your other holdings are satisfactory but your large annuity and savings are fixed as to principal and offer you no inflation protection. I suggest you invest an additional $10,000 in equal amounts of Texaco and Continental Illinois National Bank.
Q) “I would like your opinion on borrowing $15,000 on real estate at 7 per cent putting proceeds into mutual funds for long-term .growth.
I have thought of putting the interest the loan would, require into a monthly investment plan, hut it seems that investing the money in a large a mou|it immediately, the growth would be better. Which would you advice?” S.C.
A) I am very much opposed to borrowing large sums of money at relatively high interest rates to buy stocks, including mutual funds.
If this market is going to move up continually with only minor corrections, Investing a large amount now sounds very attractive. Thjre Is, uhfortun-ately, no assurance that it will do so.
I think the course of prudence Is better served by your second plan Take out a monthly Investment plan on good growth stocks, or buy mutual funds with money available to you periodically without borrowing. „ You will In this way be dollar averaging your purchases and over a period, you should do very well.
(Roger Spear's new 48-pnge guide to Successful Investing Is now ready. For your copy, clip this notice and send $1.00 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, care of The Pontiac Press, Box I6l8i Grand Contra! Station, New York, N.Y. 10017.
Copyright 1005)
CAREY
Business Notes
The formation of R. G. Carey (^.. specializing in marketing, merchandising, and distribution planning, was announced today by Reginald G. Carey, 2l5iAvon Lane, B i r in i n g -ham, who heads the new company.
Formerly vice president „end account su-pervisor of Campbell - Ewald advertising agency, Carey has been in advertising and merchandising for over 25 years.
The new company, located in the Jaikins building, 1100 N. Woodward, Birmingham, offers services to manufacturers and businessmen with limited marketing, merchandising and advertising staffs.
Russell W. Pringnitz, of 1230 E. Square Lake, Bloomfield Township, has retired from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers after more than 33 years.
Pringnitz began with the corps early in 1931 as a clerk. He was a supervisory accountant of disbursing aptivities at his retire-ment.
William C. Long of 1656 Crooks and Morgan W. Dawley of 1181 Hattie FoX, both of Avon Township, will present technical papers at thp 1965 Society of Automotive Engineers International Automotive Engineering Congress and Exposition to be held Jan. 11-15 at Cobo Hall, Detroit.
Thomas S. Watts, 6797 Wood-bank,, Bloomfield Township, has joined MacManus, John & Adams, Inc., as group copy director. Watts has been with Camp-bell-Ewald, where he was a group copy supervisor, and later in radio and television.
Wayne A. Yager, 1205 Brambles, Waterford Township, a representative of the Life Insurance Co. of Virginia’s Pontiac district office, has been promoted to associate manager, according to Louis Pohl, manager,
Yager joined the company in 1954 and Is a member of the Pontiac Association of Life Underwriters.
NOTICE OF HEARING on Estabflstting Normal Haight and Level at Wafer in Cemetery and Dollar Lakes in Independence Township . Oakland County, Michigan To Wham It May Concern. " PARTICULARLY —^ — All owners at property fronting on, abutting or hqvlng access to rights In Cemetery and Dollar Lakes, or who are interested In having fixed and maintained the normal height and level of said lakes pursuant to the provisions of Act '46 of the Public Acts of 1941, f as amended, said lakes, being located In • Sections 20, 29 end- 30 of Independence Township, Oakland County, Michigan.
You Are Hereby Notified that the Oakland County Board of Supervisors has caused to be filed in this Court a'Complaint praying for the establishment by this Court of the normal height and level of Cemetery and Dollar Lakas, said lakes being located In Jectienb 20, 29 and’ 30 of Independence Township, Oakland County, Michigan;
You Are Further Notified that a hearing on Ihe matter will be held In tha Circuit Court for the County ot Oakland at the Oakland County Court House Tower, 1200 North Telegraph Road, Pontiac, Michigan, on Wednesday, tha. 20th day of January, A.D., 1945, at In# opening of Court on that day at 9 ajn., before the Honorable Frederick C. Zlem, Circuit Judge, or as soon thereafter as Counsel can be heard.
You Are Further Notified that on eaid date the Complainant intends to .ask this Court to establish- the normal height and level of said lakes at 948.50 feet above sea level and If you desire to oppose the .establishment of the level at, 168.50 feet above see level you should ,hen and there appear and,, show cause.
If any you have, why: . tel The -normal height and level ot .. said lakes should not be establishes!;
(b)	Why"’ 948.50 feet above sea level should not be the level fixed as
. the normal * height and level of said lakes; n.
(c)	Why such othsr and further relief as to the Court seems fitting and proper should. not: be granted to Complainant. V
a . RICHARD P. CONDtT, Prosecuting Attorney, Oakland County, Michigan, BY: ROBERT P. ALLEN, Corporation Counsel, HAYWARD WHITLOCK |Z.
CHARLES J. LONG,
, Ass't. Caro. Counsel tor Oakland County, MlcMtiffl
___	ROBERT P. ALLEN*
Office Address:	. L/.	'./M
Oakland County Court House ’ » 1200 North Telegraph Road Pontiac, Michigan	j, 1
Phone: 338+751
Two Ambulance Attendants Fight Over Hurt Victim
- NASHVILLE, Tenn. UP) - A woman lay critically injured in a street last night for several minutes, police said, while competing ambulance attendants fought over who would take her to a hospital.
The woman, Mrs. Anna C. Whitehead, 70, was transported by other attendants in one of the ambulances, and was re; ported in critical condition today yylth a broken back.
She whs struck by a car while crossing n street.
Police arrested Jerry Tate 27, and Sammy Womack, 18, at tendants for competing ambu lance services, and charged them with disorderly conduct.
Officers quoted witnesses as saying they scuffled on\ the ground for several minutes he* fore Womack's ambulance took the injured woman to the hospital. •'
News in Brief
Pontiac police nre Investlgat Ing the theft Of a $90 check from a mailbox at 102 Bagley.
NOTICE'OF HEARING 1 % To Whom If May Concern, •	4
Oakland County, Michigan »' PARTICULARLY	r i
All owners ot property fronting m, abutting or having access to rights In Greens Lake, or who are IntarestM In
Saving fixed and maintained the normal height and level of said lake pursuant to tha provisions of Act 144 ot the PiMpc
Acts of. 1961, as amended, said uka being located In Section* 29, 31 and Slat independence Township, Oakland Ceuily, Michigan. '	..M
. You Ar« Hereby Notified that the Oakland County Board of Supervisors has Caused to be filed In this Court a complaint praying tor th« establishment by this Court at the normal height and sans Lake, said laka . being ...—. ... .actions 29, 31 and 32 of Iti-deoandence Township, Oakland County, Michigan;	?
You Are Further Notified that a hearing on the matter will be hold In Oja Circuit Court tor the County of Oakland at tha Oakland County Court House Tower, 1200 Norm Telegraph Road, Pontiac, 'Michigan, on Tuesday, tha inti day ot January, A.P., 1945, at the opening of .Court on that dev at 9 a.m., before the Honorable Stanton G. Dondero, Circuit Judge, or as soon thereafter as Couosel can be heard;	7
- You Are Further Notified that on eald date tha petltienar Intends to ask this Court to establish tha normal helpnt and level of said laka .at 944.70 fee? above
(a)	The normal height and level of
sea level and If you desire to oppaea the. establishment of tho level at 944.70 teat above see level you should then add there appear and show pause,* If any you have, why:	.	» ■	,
on Establishing Normal Haight and:
Level of Water In Grains Laka . In, should not be tha level ftxad Is
(b)	Why 946.70 Mat above ssia level said laka should not be established; the normal height and level U
Independence Township, | said lake;
(c)	Why such other and further relief as to tha Court seams fitting and proper should not bo granted to petitioner.
RICHARD P. CONDIT, Prosecuting Attorney, Oakiam County, Michigan By: ROBERT P. ALLEnT Corporation Counsel, HAYWARD WHITLOCK and CHARLES J. LONG, Ass'l Corp. Counsel tar Oakland County, Michigan,
7, 14, il t 4, 19(5
Pontiac, Mlchig;
Phone: 334+751, Ext. 508
November 30, December . and 20, 1964 and January EXHIBIT B
, NOTICE OF HEARING i on Establishing Normal Height and* Level ot Water In Macaday and Lotus Lakes In Independents and Waterford
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCB PARTICULARLY
All Owners of Property Frontjni
'9
ints
Oh,
Macaday and Lotus Lskes, or Who AM Interested In Having Fixed and Malt-talnad the Normal Haight and Level at Said Lakas Pursuant lo the Provision* ot Act 144 of tha Public Act* at 1961, «s Amended. Bald Lakes,Being Located In Sections 3l and 32 ot Independence Township end Sections 5, 4, 7 and 0 of Waterford Township, Oakland County, Michigan YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that tfia Oakland County Board ot Supervisors has caused lo bp filed In this Court a Complaint praying tor the establishment by this Cburt of tha normal halght and leva! of Macaday and Lotue Lakes, sdd lakes being located In Sections 31 end 32 ol Independence Township, and sections 5, 6, 7 end 0 of Waterford Township, , Oakland County, Mclchlgan;
YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that'a hearing bn the matter will be held In the Circuit Court for the County gf Oakltyid, at the Oakland County Court House Tower, 1200 North Telegraph Root), Pontiac, Michigan, on Friday, tha inn day ot Fabruarv, A.D., I960, at tM opening of Court on that day at 9;{9 a.m., befora tha Honorable Jamas S. Thorburn, Circuit Judge, or os sain thereafter as counsal can be heard. , You ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that on said data the Complainant Inlands lo ask mis Court lo establish tho normSI halght and level ot said lakts at 944.70 feat above tea lavot end If you doslro lo oppose the establishment of tho toyol at 966.70 feet above so* loyal you shouw then and there appaar and show cause, It any you hove, whyt .
(a)	The normal height and level of, sold lakes should not be established;,
(b)	Why 964,70 toot above sea level should not be Ihe level fixed as theY normal,height end level of sold lake*;
(c)	Why such other end further relief a* to ttsss Court Mama nttjnc and proper should hot M granted, to Complainant,
RICHARD P, CONDI El PfUSMUtmO Attorn(hr Oakland county, Michigan By: ROBERT P, ALLENc -	\	Corporation counwl
. HAYWARD WHITLOCK
CHARLES .J. LONG
Hr®*
laiHTY-ElGHT

ALGRIN, JANUARY 3. IMS, CARL ' A.. 41345 Pontiac Trail, Wtxom, Michigan; age 75; dear uncle of Anthony Oehockl, Sylvester Brady,
* Wednesday, January 6 at 1 pan. at the Rlchardson-Bird Funeral Heme, Waited Lake with Pastor Robert Shade officiating. Interment In Mt. Hope Cemetery, Lapeer. Mr. Atorlnwlll lie In state
after 7 p.m. this evening.________
C&NWAY, JANUARY 3, 1M5, BABY KIMBERLY ANN, 2799 Mott Street, Waterford Township; beloved Infant daughter of Mrs. Melva Conway; beloved Infant granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Conway; dear baby sister of Lonnie, Rebecca and Roxanna, Conway. Funeral arrangements are pending from the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home where Baby Kimberly Ann _wtll lie In state after 6 p.m. this leaning.
DAVIS, JANUARY 4, 1M5, MARION jOWf. 4049 Quillen, Drayton Plains; -‘age 40; beloved husband of Laura Davis; beloved son of Mrs. Callle Heath; dear father of Mrs. Ernest (Freda) Southard and Robert If. Davis; dear brother of Mrs. Albert (Mary) Wilkinson and Roy Davis; also survived by six grandchildren. Funeral service will be held January 4 at 1 p.m. at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains with Rev. Preston Griffin officiating, interment In Ottawa Park Ceme-tery. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.) WUkTtUTV, JANUARY 3,	1965,
RITA A., • 9249 Commerce Road, Commerce Township, formerly of SauHe St. Merle, Ontario; age 65; beloved W)fo of George-v. Flattieyf
.. beloved daughter of Mrs. Bertha
Gutakunst; dear mother of Gordon and Nell W. Flattley; dear sister , of Mrs. John Lezotte and George Bwt; also survived by five grandchildren and one great-grandchild^ Funeral arrangements are pending from the Elton Black Funeral Home, , 1233 Onion Lake, Road where Mrs. Flattley will lie in etate- after 7 p.m. this evening.
LOSS WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Dex-A-Dlet Tablets. Only ft cents et Simms Brothers Drugs.
Funeral Directors
C. J GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Keeps Harbor, Ph. 6*24200
COATS "
FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-7757
D. E. Pursley
FUNERAL HOME Invalid Car Service FE 4-1211
D0NELS0N-J0HN5
HUNTOON
FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 50 years 79 Oakland Ave.	FE 241*9
SPARKS-GRIFFIN
FUNERAL HOME
'‘Thoughtful .Service" FE 2-5861
VOORHEES-SIPLE
FUNERAL HOME	FE 2-0378
Established Over 40 Years
HILL, DECEMBER 31, 1964. SIMP-SON, 522 Branch Street; age 74; dear father of Mrs. Barbara Terrell; dear brother of Mrs. Luclelle Whittaker, Mrs. Silva Ford and Willie Hill; also -survived by four , nephews and three nieces. Funeral service .will be held Wednesday, January 4 at 1 p.m. at the Trinity Baptist Church with Rev. L. A. Gregg officiating, interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Arrangements by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home where Mr. Hill will lie In State after 7 p.m. Tuesday. _ Hull, January 2. 1945, :lar-
ENCE A., Birmingham; beloved husband of-Ruth Hull; dear father Of Mrs. Jeannette Davis; deaf brother of Mrs. Howard McDermott; also survived by one grandson - and several nieces and nephews. Funeral service will .be hew Tuesday, January 5 at 11 a.m. at the Bell Chapel of the William Hamilton Company.
To Buy, Rent, Sail - .. or Trade
Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS - -Office Hourst 8 am. to 5 p.m.t Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. Day Following First Insertion
Personals
41
ON AND AFTER THIS DATE JANU-ary 4th, 1945, I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself.,
Kenton C. Willoughby, 111 Cottage 5t„ Pontiac. Michigan.
Lost and Found
$50^ REWARD FOR SIAMESE TOM cat lost on Jan. 1 near Pontiac Road at Oakland University. 332-9401. '	r	' S?
FOUND: /MAN'S TINTED BI-FOCAL glasses, Camp-Fire tree lot, Clark ston. 473-0147.	'
LOST; MALE BEAGLE- BLACK-brown and white, wearing Rhine-* stone. collar, vicinity of Second and Joslyn. Cell 330-3503.
LOST: WALLET. PHONE BOOTH et Pike end'Perry. Reward. Carl E. Rose, 2855 Ferris Ave. Berkley. LI 5-8115.	*	■-
LOST — SMALL BROWN PART Beagle, female. White feet and chest. Black collar. Near Indlan-wood Lake. Reward. MY 3-1459.
LOST: MAN'S WALLET AT- AIR* way Lanes. Finder please call OR 3-4474 after 3 p.m. Reward.
LOST: j On1 December 21. Female brack7 and white walker. In vicinity of 14 Mile and Haggerty. 424-2952.
LOST;. 1; SMALL TERRIER DOG, reddish-brown, answers to Peanuts. UL 2-1414.	;
Help Wonted {Male
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUA
6 CARNIVAL
Rf 4,
1965
By Dick Turner
ENERGETIC SALESMAN
Long established vocational school needs responsible and energetic - salesmen as field representative. Bona fide . leads furnished. Car necessary. Expense account, commission, bonus, and excellent potential for advancement. Write Mr. Plcha, Box 13, The Pontiac Press.
EXPANSION PROGRAM
for‘ North Oakland area — 58-year-old company — Guarantee to start. 22-45 - stable‘family man seeking a career. Call DR 3-0545 for Interview appointment.
				
•	1	|? i	*	
■ -		fl		; :; ig|
zr.
T
EXPERIENCED SERVICE STATION men, full and part time. Top wages and Vacation pay. Call for appointment. Ml 7-0700.<
FULL TIME REAL ESTATE salesman. Phone,. Ray Q'Nell tor Interview. OR 44427.
GAS STATIC^ ATTENDANTS - 1 days. 1 afternoons. 347 So Hunter, ■^Birmingham, Ml 4-9654.	«
GENERAL KITCHEN HELP.-PIED Piper . Restaurant. 4370 Highland
HIGH SCHOOL,, GRADUATES AND college students, , part and full time work. 625-0931.
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT, 18 OR Over, for part time pizza maker. No experience necessary. FE 5-6151.
LOST: WHITE WITH BLACK WIRE-,, haired Terrier, vicinity of Long Lake and Telegraph. Reward. 3955* BroQkside Dr., Bloomfield. Mi >1313..	a
LATHE
Manufacturer located, in Waited Lake has several openings for experi-• enced, top notch lathe operators. This Is steady employment with good wages and fringe benefits. Apply at:
Valcomatic Products
2750 W. Maple Rd.
An Equal Opportunity Employer—
Personals
4-PIECE COMBO
4-B
Not- rock end roll. Available . for club work, receptions, weddings, parties, etc... FE 4-8537 after 4 p.m. *
-PICKARD, JANUARY 4,	1965,
BESSIE M., 1575 Hickory Ridge Road, Milford; age 46; beloved Wiht of Thomas Pickard; beloved daughter of. Mrs. Jane Hamsher; -dear mother of Mrs, Thomas Tusan, James, Barbara and Bruce Pickard; dear sister df Mrs. Florence Beach, Mrs, Flossie Stelnke, John Franklin, .Charles, Clyde and Raymond Hamsher; also surylved by seven grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 6 at 3 p.m. at the Rich-ardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford with Rev! G. McDonald Jones officiating
ANY <JU?L OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, ohone FE ' 2-5122 before 5 p.m., or If no answer, cell FE 2-8734. .Confidential. BELL DANCE STUDIO. 5 PP'lVATE hours plus 5 class ‘essons for only $15. Learn Cha-Cha, Swing, Fox Trot. 335-0372 for appointment.
LICENSED PRIVATE DETECTIVES Don't worry, know the facts, domestic or commercial Shadowing.
’ Free consultation. FE 5-5201.
ON AND AFTER THIS DATE JAN 1, 1965, N will not be responsible - tor -any debts contracted by any other than myself. William F. Napier. 117 Bernstadt, Walled Lake, Mich.	* * ,
LIMITED OPENING j|OR BASS-lead guitar player. For local rock band. 13-15 .years. FE .4-4753 or 693-6266. Ask for Jim Barnowsky.
TOULOUSE, JANUARY %	1965,
EARNESTINE, 137 Raeburn Street;
?ge 33; beloved wife ot Fotton oulouse; beloved daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hayworth Williams; also survived by four children;, dear sister of Rayfletd and CharlesJWil-llams. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 7 at t p.m. at Mt. Olive Baptist Church with. Rev. B. Dyer officiating. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Arrangements by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home where Mrs. Toulouse will lie in state attar 7 . p.m. Tueaday.
WfSTERLUNO., JANUARY 1, 1965, ERIC P., 2103 Rlchwood, Pontiac Township; ago 92; dear father ot Mrs. Thelma Gesme, Mrs. Lillian Carlson, Gothard - E., and Carl Westerlund; dear brother of Mrs. Mena Forsted; also survived by seven grandchildren, .eight great grandchildren and five great-great grandchildren. Funeral service was held today at 1:30 p.m. at the Voorhees-slple Chapel with Rev. Arthur W. Maalott officiating. In-1 ferment In Perry Mount Park Cemetery. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 tb 9 p.m.)
In Memoriam
IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR deer husband end father, Rudolph M. Olson, who passed away January 4, 1964. Wa have mlssad you sadly for a year, but In our hearts you're still near and dear. Sadly missed by yvlfw, children end grandchildren.
LOST: MALE BEAGLE, DECEM-1 . ber—Sb—vleintty—of—Offer—Lake.
1 ^1SXSES ,0 Freck,es- Reward- MAKE BIG MONEY TAKING OR 334-6875.	. ders for Stark Dwarf fruit trees,
Everyody can now grow giant size apples# peaches# pears in their yards. Also shade trees* shrubs# vines, roses# etc. Outfit FREE. Commission basis. Stark Bros. Desk 32115# Louisiana# Missouri.
LOST: SMALL FEMALE BEAGLE# vicinity of Pontiac Mall. 1034 La,; Salle, FE 8-2867.	-_______•
LOST:	PURSE AT BEDELL'S
lease. return blue wallet cohtafn-ng valuable, identification. 338-0975 after 6.
LOST: BLACK AND W*HTE MALE shaggy dog. Lost In vicinity of Lake Oakland. Reward. OR 3-6867.
STRAYED SMALL POODLE# RED - collar with leash on# license 4684, Dec. 31# phone OR 4-0283. Waterford. reward.	  -
MALE TYPIST FOR AUTOMOBILE dealership. Soneone who has an understanding df auto service ter minolog/ preferred. See Mr. Ernsf# Wilson Pdntiac-Cadillac# T350 “ Woodward# Birmingham# Mich.
MANAGER TRAINEE TO LEARN photo-studio management. Kendall1 45 W. Huron.
Help Wanted Male
EXPERIENCED MEN FOR wheeling and polishing in automobile clcan-up shop, FEa5-8767.
MAN AND WIFE AS CARETAKERS for an apartment bldg. Part time job. Must be sober# honest# handy# furnish references. Reply to box Nb. 29# Pontiac Press.
A-l' CARPENTERS WANTED, Experienced only. :Non - union. No others need apply. UL 2-1912# AGGRESSIVE YOUNG ^AAN TO grease trucks and pump gas. 554 Franklin Rd.
Appliance
Salesmen
FOR	*
Pontiac's Largest Retail Department Store
. . . Salary-Commission
. . . Earnings to $8,000 year
... To replace salesman
MANPOWER
Needs men for temporary labor assignments. Apply 14 S. Cass., 7:30 a.m.-l p. m. No phone calls.
MEN NEEDED IN CONSTRUCTION industry. See our ad "Earn $170 i week" under instruction—Schools, No. 10.
MEN
STfADY WORK
No layoffs, no experience necessary. 3 character .references .required. Car advantages. For appointment call FE 5-6115, ask for personnel manager,_*
HOLD
IT!
here's a
Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads
FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISER!
ADS RECEIVED BY S F.M. WILL BE FU8LISHBD THE FOLLOWING DAY.
All errors should be reported Immediately, or no later than the day following publication. If no notification of such error Is mode by that time, It will be assumed the ad It correct. The Press assumes no responsibility for errors other then to cancel the charges for that portion pi the first Insertion ot the advertisement which has been rendered valueless through the error.
The deadline for cancellation of transient Went Ads Is 9 a.m. the day of publication after the first Insertion. When cancellations ere made be sure to get your "KILL NUMBER." No adjustments will be given without
Closing time for .advertisements containing type alias larger then regular agate type Is 13 o’clock noon the day previous to publication.
CASH WANT AD RATES
	* (when	cash	
	•ccompnnlett order)		
Un«i	1-Dey	3-Deyt	6 Day*
t	$2.00	$2.46	83.84
3	2.00	3.60	5.58
4	2.44	4.6$	6.96
5	3.05	5.40	8 40
6	3.66	6.48	10.08
7	4.27	7.56	11.76
8	4.88	8.64	1144
f	5.49	9.78	15.12
10	6.10	10.80	16.80
An	ftddttlonel	cherot	Of 50
ctnta	will be mede for		use of
The Pontiac Press
FROM 8 A.M. TO 5 P.M,
better way to earn extra moneyl
Announcements	3
aredebtF
WORRYING
YOU?
Gtt out of debt on e plan you con Afford;
•Fwftmployor not confacftd
—Mrolrhr* your dollar
<*• No charge for budget enelyil*
Write or phone for free oookiet
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS
702 Pontlec Itete Bank Bldg,
FI 18416
Ponfiet'i oldest and largait budget atilitanc# company Mambari
—Michigan Aiioclafioh of
CnMfir Counselor*
-American AllOClitlOO of 7 Credit Counselor*
"AffSUY 6F BIIT'QN A FlAW You Can Afford MICHIGAN CREDIT
781 Piwtlee jlijijlank Building
Fenllec'* oMmI ami lorgesl budget -MlttJlstt compiny,
At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office to the tallowing boxen M# is, ii, n, tt, li, 7t# n i
It's quick, simple and productive. Just look around your home, garage and ' basement and list the many items that you no longer I use. Hundreds of readers are searching The Press's 1 classified columns daily for just such articles. Perhaps the piggy bank itself would bring more thun the change that it holds I Try it I
YOU'LL BE
GLAD YOU DIDI
CALL
332-8181
FOR IMMEDIATE
CLASSIFIED SERVICE
Pontiac Press
WANT ADS
Permanent opening-5 days a week.
. . e. Profit sharing, insurance and Retirement Programs.
. , . Apply Personnel Department dajly between 9:30 a.m. and 9 p.m.
Montgomery
Ward
PONTIAC MALL
PIZZA COOK, EXPERIENCED PRE-ferred. Will train right party. Good pay. Insurance, paid vacations. 4378 Highland ,Rd. FE 8-4741.
P ORTER—FOR AUT
rernntlv nrometed i Mtdaalershlp. See Mr. Ernst, service recently promt l eu ^ppmanag,r> wilson-Pqntlac Cadillac,
No canvassing Car Necessary
1350 N. Woodward, Birmingham-PIN SETTERS WANTED. ALL STAR Bowl, 19 N. Perry St. Afternoon and evenings.
AUTO MECHANIC, FORD EXPERI-ence preferred for Ford Dealer In Milford, 484-1715.
CAR WASHERS. FULL OR PART time. 149 W. Huron. _____
CHECKER
DRAFTSMAN
Power
Tool
Demonstrator
(PART TIME)
Man- thoroughly skilled in wood stop and powei tools to demonstrate ir the evenings and Satur days. Must have a sales personality. Apply per sonnel Department be tween 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. daily.
Montgomery
Ward
hV
• 1K5 h NU. he. TJ4. U 9* 4*
“You’re a hard one to dope out Sometimes, Fop? First you tell me not to waste time on things I don’t intend to do later in .life, and then you insist \help on a deal like this!’
Help Wanted Male
WANTED—HEATING AND PLUMB-ing bids ■ on larga houses and apartments. Call 548-3834, 933-4201 or. 353-2898. Michael's Realty.
WANTED: HIGH SCHOOL GRADU-ates for outside work on construction of golf course. Apply 380 E. Drahmer Rd., off M24, between Lake. Orion end Oxford
WELDERS, FITTERS. AND LAY-out men for light structural steal and conveyor work. Plant at IS Mile-Crooks Rd. area, call 447-4091
week days between 9:30 and 3._____
YOUNG MAN, )ft TO 25. ANSWER telephone and do clerical work. Steady job. No telephone calls. Cooley Soft Water Co., 2T4 W. Walton. .
Help Wanted Female
HOUSEKEEPER, CARE OF 2 CHIL-dren, own transportation or live in call after 4# 673-5037.	_________
Sales Hub# Male-Female M
a
Man to call on Churchts, cluba and other civic organizations with guaranteed money ntaklM>. plan. Must have car and be free to travel. Wa will train you and demonstrate In flu field that you can earn , commissions of 8320 and more weekly. Exclusive territory. Permanent year around work. Liberal bonus. Call aftar 7 p.m. In, Detroit, Mr. Ernie Matron* at WO 1-8D3S.	-.3. :.’i	"
NEW MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR ’ corporation, offers exceptional opportunity to' men and women 21 and ovor. Commission earnings $15,000 annually plus stack, option. Inoentive program.. Neat appearing, willing to meat public. Automobile necessary. Call or ’write 20th Century Guardian Life Ins. ' Co., 28905 Greenfield, Southfield. 357-4555. .
REAU ESTATE SALES PEOPLE — Look Into this four-fold opportunity. Houses, lake properties, farms and new building lobs. Increase your Income — Sell all - these. • <* , •	...	' 1 • '"*.
LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD
MY 2-2821	or FE 8-9493
Broadway St.	Lake Orion
YOUNG MAN.
High school graduate to sell retell on our salesfloor. On the lob training program. We are looking for men with a future in a growth . organization. Vacation, group In-, surance, retirement plan and liber-al bonus Incentive. Apply In person only. Firestone Store, 144 W. Hu- { ran St.	•'	j.
An equal opportunity employer
tastruction-Sdiaab
10
A Better a ^ .Income
\ by Learning
IBM Machines
LEARN IBM KEY PUNCH, MACHINE OPERATION ANO WIRING, COMPUTER PROGRAMMING. 4-WEEK COURSES, RF-REE PLACEMENt S E R V I C E, NO MONEY DOWN.
GENERAL INSTITUTE
22915 Woodward ,	. Farndala
T CALL CQLLECT
543-9737	FE 4-4509
EARtr SlTO A WEEK AND UP If you are 18 and Over, you may qualify tor Immediate field training as a heavy equipment operator or mechanic (n highway and construction, o n a of America's fastest growing industries. No previous experience or special education needed. Men In this field art taming exceptional weekly wages, You will learn on bulldozers, cranes, motor graders, - and self-propelled scrapers. Complete 220 hour course. National School of Heavy Equipment is NOT a correspondence school. It Is government approved and .budget terms are available. Free |ob advisory . service upon graduation. Get toll details now. Send name, address, age, phone number, hours heme, to P.O. Box 70, Vicksburg, Mich.
v
Employment Agencies EVELYN EDWARDS
IBM typist ........8
Age 25 to 38.
784 Rlker Building
TELEPHONE FE 4-0584
FEMALE ~
FINISH HIGH SCHOOL AT HOME. Diploma awarded. Write or phone fop FREE booklet. National School of Home Study, 27743 Mound Road, Dept. PP, Warren, Michigan. PhSite SL 7-3428.
GENERAL’TUTORING FOR JUN-ior high, high schoel, and college - students. Also counseling. 473-5277.
S LADIES 8
Help Wanted Female 7 2 LADIES
I for special type Office work analysis, of seml-tochnical material. Prater some college training, typing not a requirement but Is helpful. Permanent salary position, paid vacation and other benefits; also have opening for part time typist and clerical, schedule flexible. FE 5-9248.___________
$40 Guaranteed Salary,
Work, 4 to 9, p.m., 3 .evenings week, Cer_ necessary. Call before
A BEAUTY OPERATOR, DON-NELL'S, 482-8421.
AMAZING! NEW RUNLESS SEAM-less nylons, only 59c a pair, our low direcMrom-mill price. Make extra money fast taking orders everywhere. Send name for free sample stocking end klL American Hosiery (Mills, Dept. #> polls, Indiana.
SITTER
Accountant	   S488
Experienced, fringe benefits, typing
Time Distribution	  8388
Fringe benefits
Office Manager »	. $5,288
Experienced, no shorthand
Secretaries	—........i. 5325
Executive secretary ...........* 8450
Beauty Is-ctor'business. Why	not,Bookkeeper	    $350
make It yours? An excellent earn- |	MALE 1 :	•
ing opportunity tor women Who- Programmer	salary open
qualify. Sell a product uncon- .	Computer data
ditionally guaranteed end adver- Field Sales Engineer salary open tised. Yds, it's "Avon Calling" tor Ek^ (Chem. or general Industrial women who want, to earn. Far I processes) information Please phone FE 4-4508 Sales Rep-	811,000
or write Drayton Plains PO Box ; Plastic or chem. exp., tee pay ''91.	| jr Copywriter '	85,808 UP
LEGAL SECRETARY FOR BIRM.	***' is 400
. Ingham law firm, send resume of Systems Salesman .	. *5'400
experience and references to Pon- ! f*utyre ®.®rnin8 poten”a' t7 ^
tlac Press Box 103.	I Tim«	......... *7’000
LPN FOR NURSING HOME,_SOME sales Eng^neir ,' saiar^(OP«<
, IBM TRAINING
Learn IBM, Keypunch, machine operation and wiring, 1401 com-puter programming. Mich. "State Board of Education approved. Free plecement service. Free perking. Complete financing — No money : down.	j
SYSTEMS INSTITUTE FE 4-4300	547-8304
Work Wanted Male
IT
A-1 CAEPENTER, SMALL JOSS A specialty. Low rotes. FE 8-8821.
i-t CARPENTER, smelt jobs. 682-5t3r.
supervisory responsibility. Days For appointment. FE 5-6094.
MATURE HOUSEKEEPER, years or older, ref. FE 4-6336.
Read blueprints and meCh. apl Architectural Draftsman salary open 50 I Apt. and housing projects : I Industrial Sales ... commission
MIDDLE AGED WOMAN TO HELP [ Ac,nuntan{?elrOPOllt*" "nlsry open care for elderly invalid woman,. Accountants
light housekeeping. Must have own . ExR- *ccoum'ns ,n «g
trancnnrtatlnn nr’’ llx##e within A I "lOCiriv	5-lOYMn 6XP
*500*
transportation or ' live within	Iw»w#
few blocks of Fairgrove Ave. Call productk)n supervisor
FE 5-8639.
MIDDLEAGED LADY CARE FOR 4 children, and light housework, 6 days a week, from 6-4. Call anytime. UL 2-2618. '	«
NEED BABY SITTER WHILE mother In hospital. 132-5946.
Indiana-
BABY SITTER NEEDED# MUST have own transp. 6-3:30 p.m 8-1645, bet. 9:30-4 p.m.
FE
PONTIAC MALL
>gs or small precision _
dA missile components. ROUTE DELIVERY MEN FOR ES tablished routes, all fringe oene tits paid. No layoffs, 4S pay checks a year. Apply 8:30-11 a.m. and 3:30-5 p.m. or call for appointment. 196 W. Howard, Mills Bakery. Equal Opportunity Emptoyor. SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, part time and full time. Colonial Standard Service, Maple and Adams, Birmingham.
For drawings of small precision aircraft
Fringe benefits, steady work.
M. C. MFG. CO.
118 Indianwood Rd.# Lake Of ion An Equal Opportunity Employer
COOK WANTED FOR FULL TIME employment. Apply in person only. Frank's Restaurant# Keego Harbor. No phone calls accepted,
DISHWASHER AND BUS BOY FOR night shift. Must be 16 or over. Apply at Big Boy Drive-In# Tole-grapn at Huron.______.
DISPLAY
MAN
Man to learn store and window display. Some experience helpful but t> not necessary. Age 23 to 45. Apply personnel Department between 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. daily.
Montgomery
Ward
PONTIAC MALL
DRIVER-SALESMAN
. ESTABLISHED ROUTE Salary, commission and bonus plan, Ptfislpn and profit sharing too. Must llva to Pontiac or clota vicinity, marrlad, physically III and bondabla. agas 22 50. Truck (vr-nlshad, you k»«p It at horn*. Wa pay all tkptnsai. CALL DETROIT LA 7-7932 COLLECT OR SEE MR, DWYER AT SAVOY MOTEL, 128, S. TELEGRAPH, TUESDAY JAN. 5TH, 8 P.M.
ELECTRONIC
MBCMANICAl
TECHNICIANS
LEADING manulaclurar ot ot-fica aqulpmam machinal has optnlngi tor man with ada-quata mtchanltal and alactrl-cal-alactrpnlc ability to par-term maintenance and rapalr work,
MUSI BE bftween agae II75. mtatAffnyifcal raqulramanli, noi.aW- piaaaanl parMnallly and anloy working with pao-pla. Mbit be High icnool ■ graduala, 1 to 2 voara col-laga prtfarrod.
gklT working condl|loni and literal company.uaici imploya
, paflarni. Paid vacation and holiday!, noMtllinftliat), ra-iirtmanf plan,, ate. salary PlUi axoatlta allowance while in training.
THU COMPANY 1$ an equal
opportunity employer.
ilkmal Background, won 'lance, etc,, lo ronllai i Box 4.
SERVICE STATION MAN, AFTER noons# full time# top pay. Kast Sunoco# Woodward and Squaro Laka Roads.
SURFACE GRINDERS
Experienced grinders a re headed by manufacturers heated In Walled Lake. Steady employment with good wages and fringe benefits. Apply at:
Valcomatic Products
2750 W. Maple Road _ An Equal Opportunity Employer SHORT ORbiR"cSSk, MhSf HAVE breakfast experience, aop y at Big Boy Drlve-ln, Telegraph and Hur-on.
SWITCHMEN
Ago# 18-35; minimum height# 5'5"; vision 30-20. AppTv In person# Wednesday# Jan. 6# 8 a.m. - 3 P.m. Yard Office# Johnson Avos and Railroad# Pontiac# Michigan.
GRAN TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD THIS IS IT!
Add up to 150 a week to your family Income by doing spare-lime, Interesting work tor national company. Flexible hours, No experience needed, Excellent opportunity. Phone Ml 6-1253, alter 6 p,
A
CHANGE
PLANT SUPERVISORS , PERSONNEL MANAGERS
HIGH CALIBER MEN ACCUSTOMED TO DEALING WITH PEOPLE
IP YOU WOULD BE .NTURE5TBD IN LASTING AND PERMANENT EMPLOYMENT THIS MAY WELL BE YOUR OPPORTUNITY OF A LIFETIME. SEVERAL POSITIONS OPEN IN 116,000 to $38,000 RANGE
LET US PROVE IT TO YOU
MUST BE ABLJ TO START WITH-Iff) TO 3 WHNKI FOR PERSONAL AND CONPI DENTIAL DISCUSSION OP THU POtlTION, phone MR. SMITH AT FI 8-0418 FOR INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT.
TRAINEE
For machining end grinding operation!. Alert merrletf men, age 21-36 with some previous experience
preferred, submit eppllcsiloni to 4411 Delemere. two OKCKI easP Of 14 Milt and Coolldge. fSUeif MieHAHiC, 8NIV WAtl fleu need apply. 854 Prenknn Rd, WAhlfIB P6R DAV JHiFY. fiOUH-tor help. Apply. Red Bern brlvd-lh, 441 Eliiebeni Leitf Rd. FB 2-3I4I.
WANTEb I
2 Weal men for sales end servlet
department Of llOClrolUX Corporation. oilict, mi fiiiittom lake Rd.. Ponllec, It. Hicks, manager. WANTIO |Ai BIMaN PON I ilM-- her counter selling lumber end modernliaMon, Apply 7940 Cooley Lake Rd.> Union Lake,
baby sitter, union lake
area, $20 week. 363-2552
BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN, ONE school aged child, 1 5-year-old. Private room, W. Bloomfield area. MA 6-0)79.	,
BABY SITTER 7 A.M.-4 PM. WILL. provide transportation. FE 4-3972.
BABY SITTER, LIVE IN OR OUT. Monday throuon Friday, 7-5:38. East side. Prefer older woman.
ME 7-1721.	________________
BABY SITTING AND LIGHTHOUSE work. Middle-aged woman, 1 child. 335-7378.
BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN, WILL accept expectant mother. Apply
#,,er «:30 p.m. 161 S: Edith. _____
BABY SITTER, 4 DAYS, LIVE IN or out, east side Pontiac. Top pay. FE 5-2814.	'	•
BARTENDERS
AND
WAITRESSES
NURSE
$5,200-$5,800
Permanent position for registered nurse interested In the care of children and infants. Must be registered with state ot Michigan. Prefer woman between ages of 25 and 58 who Is willing to work afternoon shift and weekends. Excellent fringe benefits. APPLY: | PERSONNEL OFFICE. OAKLAND COUNTY COURT HOUSE. 1200 N. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac._
Exp. in union shop, fringe benefits Insurance salesmen -,. salary open Sales background, toe paw
MICHIGAN PERSONNEL SERVICES C0RP.
770 S. Adams Rd.- -—Birmingham 647-4660
TRUCK. LIGHT HAULING AND
i Rvvtvi-. Mwm r
odd lobs. 682-66)4.
Work Wanted Female 12
Business Service
15
ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICR-RE-palrlng and rewinding. 211 E. Pike, Phone FE 4-3981.
MURALS BY MARTHA, HAND painted muryls, anything you want. Also sign painting, reasonable. FE 2-664) days, FE S-11.39 evenings.
Dressmaking 1 TaKering 17
DRESSMAKING, TAILORING AND j alterations. Mrs. Bodell. FE 4.9053, SEWING AND ALTERATIONS; Clarkston area. MA 5-2293._ i
CanvnUscent-Hnrrtng_^21
room" iH NURSES HOME F O R ' elderly teoy: Reasonable. FE 54371.	,
STONEY CROFT NURSING HOME
fW;......9Mgj|
Rochester OL 1-8092
Moving nod Truckfaw 22
careful, enclosed vans, tosimiB.
Cow rates, frta astlmajtos, UL 9-3999 or 628-3519.	/-
1-A MOVING "service, REASON-able rates. FE 5-3458, RE 2-2909.
light hauling -AW^moving.
cheap. Anv kind* FB.5-4393.
A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, PawVlna. FE 84343.,
PAINTING AND CAULKING Interior,^ extorter, Taaaortabte rates, Free estimates. 363-4668.
FAINTING PAPERING. _ W A L L' WASHING, MINOR REPAIRS. — REASONABLE PRICES FE 5-2482.
PAINTING AND, PAPJRING. YOU -.ere,next. Orvel Gldcumb, 673-0496.
FAINTING, PAPERING, WALL washing. Tupper. OR 3-7061.
QUALITY WORK ASSURED, FAINT-ing, papering, welt washing.. 673-Wi nr 682-4I81.	___
Television-Radio Sorvico 24
* HAVE YOUR .
RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP .'
Trained service mom—reasonable prices. Free tube testing. ' Montgomery Ward Pontiac Melt
Insurance
2*
15 PER CENT SAVINGS ARf Possible on home owner policies. In A plus mutual companies. These are excellent dependable companies, who make prompt loss settlements. Just phone FE 442S4 ter a quo-alien. K. G. Hemptseed. Realtor.
HOMEOWNERS, $18.55 ANNUALLY. Scales Agehcy. FE 2-5811, FE 2-7425.	■	.
Quality Automobile y Risk Insurance
Budget Terms
BRUMMETT AGENCY
MifCl* Mile ‘Fli 4W9
Wantod Household Goods 29
1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL OF FUR-ntture. end stoves. Needed now! More ceht—Little Joe's, FE 2-6842;
CASH FOR FURNITURE ANO AP-pllahces. 1 piece or houseful. ' Pearson's, FE 4-7881.	1	,
OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION -open et all times tor consignments. Also buy estates. Auction Set. et 1 p.m. Still bn M-24, now 9 miles north ot Oxford. 678-2523.
Wanted MIscbII«m«ws 30
CASH PAID FOR YOUR USED furniture end appliances. FE 6-1166. Days only- ask for Mr. Grant, Wymdn Furniture.______________
ROWBOAT. GOOD
Income Tax Stryico
19
WANT TO BUY IBM ELECTRIC typewriter. Must be In good condition end reasonably priced. Call .682-5348 attar 3:38.
36
Wonted Real Estate
Instrvctions-Schaols 10 ATTENTION 1
Mechanics needed, enroll now „	Auto Mechanics
Auto Body Collision	i
WOLVERINE SCHOOL
1400 W. Ford. Detroit WO 346921
EHLERS'BUSINESS SERVICES 339 Voorttels, off street parking FE 5-3244 Experienced 312 )698 homes.
1 TO 50
INCOME TAX
85 UP
H%& R BLOCK CO.
Nation's Largest Tex Service 20 E. Huron St.
FE 44325
Weekdays 94 Sat., Sun. 9-5
LOTS, ACREAGE, PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES ANO LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed tor Immediate sale!
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
1450 U, Opdyke Rd.	PE 5-8145
Dally 'tit 8	«
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
NURSES AIDES
Needed — all shifts. Apply 532 Orchard Laka Ave. between 9:30* 11:30 a.m.
RECEPTIONIST - OVER 21# GOOD at mathematics. Apply in person 9 to 12# Donnell's Pontiac Mall.
R.N/s NEEDED
Full and part time. Call 338-7154 for an appointment.______
RN FOR DOCTOR'S OFFICE. Medical Bldg.__________334-4536
Over 25# experienced In better ready to wear and sports wear# full lima ana part lima.
SALESGIRL
md hpndbai end Set., telary plus ape 21-& Becker's SI Mall, -682-0511. SALESLADY,
Hosiery and handbags. Evanlngs and Sat., salary plus commission, Shoot, Pontiac
BEAUTY OPERATOR, STEADY IN Rochester.' Call OL 1-1322.
BAL
BOOKKEEPER TO TRIAL ance. Mutt be experienced.- 6129 Highland Rd., OR 3-1254.
FULL DP PART time, sportiwaar and accattorlat, Suzatta, 241 Plarce, Birmingham. Lounga. 100 SALESLADY FOR PATTERN DP partrnent, Stewart's Fabric Shop, 202 E. Maple, Birmingham. SECRETARY FOR LAW OFFICE. Typing, shorthand and filing required. Mutt have office experience. Call 338-4553.	-i
GENERAL OFFICE GIRL. MUST . be experienced. 6129 Highland Rd.
OR 3-1254,___________________________
CASHIER WITH EXPERIENCE FOR Restaurant work. Call Ml 6-6188. CHILD CARE. LIGHT HOUSE-keeping. 3-day weak. 2 children. Relofoncet. 821. Ml 7-1964.
Aluminum Siding
1-A ALUMINUM SIDING-STORMS FE 54545 Vallaly___OL 1-6623
KAISER ALCOA ALUMINUM SID-ING, AWNINGS, GUTTERS, STORM WINDOWS—OOORS, PATIOS. ROOFING. SUPERIOR FE 4-3177.
Architectural Drawing
Basement Waterproofing
Enveitruugking
MBS GUTTER COMPANY Complete eeveatroughlng service. Galvanized or aluminum. Free estimates. 6734866.
Piano Tuning
Excavating
LAKES. PONDS, BOAT SUPS Now It the time to have your beeches, lake bottom or beet slips dug out. We alto dig small lake, ponds end drive sheet pilings. FREf ESTIMATES. CALL HARRY WHITE t SON, FE 4-4597.
COOK WANTED FOR FULL TIME employment. Apply In person only. Frank's Restaurant, keego Harbor. No phono calls accoptod. _
COUNTER GIRL, MINOR 'SEWING helpful but not essential. Full time. Quality Dry Cleaning Plant, Douglas Cleaners. 534 S. Woodward.
Birmingham.___________
CURB girls no-!xpI«i¥n£1!
necessary, top wages, good tips, apply In person only. Blue Sler Drive 'In. Corner ot Pontlec end OpdykeRoads.
CURB ‘OIRL’ 'AN5“TNliBe WAiT-rest, cashier and kitchen help. Super Chief, Telegraph at Dixie.
CURB GIRLS
AND
WAITRESSES
For day and night shift. Top wages, tree meals, hospitalization, Ilia Insurance, paid vacation. Apply In parson at the BIG BOY DRIVE IN, Telegraph and Huron, or Dixie Hwy. end Silver Laka Read, ~m7W6WOT5AV4.
332-7556 between 4:38 and 6.
blftlUBAVirjiffAIVTTfTnC IX-
pertoncetj, 5 days. 198 E. Huron, ofepBn&ablM qiRl FO&' COUN. tar and grill, atoady evenings and part days. Apply in parson, Lake-wood Lanas, 1121 W. Huron. drapeSv" ' ITIOTfirri, equipped to do cuitom work. OR 34923.__________
BftWnroirxfiiM t t ic~e Lt & k. Full or part time. Rust' Country Drugs, 4588 Elizabeth Lake Road. Drug 'CLiRk DvlR ii fDr oiN.
aral drugstore work. Ralerances required. Gallagher Drugs, M59 and Williams Laka Rond.
* ■	• nr
___53 for appointment.
TELEPHONE WORK# WOMAN 1$ for work In office# $1 en hour to start# cell between 9 end 11. 651-8424.
waITrIss
ATKINS BAR 111 N. Main, Walled Lake WAITRESSES, EXpfeRiENCTTTOT required, good pay, excellent tips, paid lunch and relief periods, hospital benefits, paid vacations. Midnights and afternoon shills. Pleasant counter, no cooking, dishwashing or portarlng.' Apply In parson at 6535 Telegraph at Maple. WAlfftfe'ss, PULL TWOvMiN& work. Apply Rocco't, 5171 Dixie
* Hwy.	»___
waItressesTtSp wagIs, har-vey's Colonial House. 5896 Dixie.
W AITR E S8 W ANTE 0 >UiXTlMi, Ask lor Mrs. Brown between io a.m. and 4 p.m. S. i. Kratge Store, Miracle Mila.
W A I T R I 5 S WANTED. iflXDV and part time. Good wages. Sport-A-Rama Lounga, 856 Oakland,
WAflTgB: EXpIriBHCID ilAu-
ty operator. Union Laka. 362-2943. womaH'Tor HOUSEWORK, OWN car, rat,, Farmington OR 6-1581. WOMANnraOABYTTff(WorC7iiS» Laka area, half dty$, must have trnnsportetlon. Call alter 4 p.m,
Batteries
KAR LIFE BATTERY CO. Goner atofs—Regulators—Sterteri
Batteries $5.95 Exchange
FE 5*191/	368 Auburn
pisbck Laying
i»porl
4218.
682
WSman fqr UGHT MOOSSWORK and cart for girl, 9. Llva In. OR 4*1592.
WOMAN~tO LIVE IN FOR 6BH-aral housework. 1 school-aged child 738-9064 between to a.m. - 2 p.m.
womaH oVi* it WILL " YWAIH
for counter and office work. Steady work, good pay. Apply.FbX Cleaners, 7if W. Huron. *
Boots-Accessories
TURN A KEY PUSH A BUTTON AND 601
Hours of andtaiB anloymant with a
Larson pr Hydrodine Boat
Powered by a 1965 EVINRUDE MOTOR or a
1965 HOMBUTE MOTOR
Harrington Boat Works
1899 5. Telegraph Rd. 3324031
Building Modernization
2 CAR GARAGE. 8899 Alum, windows, doors, siding. ADDITIONS
GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates	OR 4-tllt
ISXiWRTWTDnrilKWWteR
OL 14151
Carpentry
Help Wanted
ply Box 94, Pontlec Press.	,
i DETROIT eiooo iaimctt.'
BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED
RH Posllvo	$ 4,08
machine operator, good at figures Apply 5660 Dixie, Waterford between to and 12 waekdovs.
BXPGRlSNCBD WAITRESS WANT
ad. Phone tor Interview. UL 2-1410. Ask for Mr. Elwell. expSRIiNClD WOMAN, 6BNSR ei clashing end Ironing, Men., Frl„ own transportation, sis. Ma 6-M64,
'tlMi
CASHIERS
reedy to wear sports-wear Excellent salaries, 40 hour week. Hoipltolliallon, paid tick deys end olher liberal baneful. Mult oe ex-iter lanced. Apply In pe/son, Mlis 1*8, ai nPRTI'i Pontlec Mb (I Tilegroph fl lliiabefn Liko Rd, aFNCtiiAL CLBAniHA AND IA3H-jng, 5 doyi a week, II an, hour, 1 ip s p.m., own tfmiBSrfellon, Cell after 5 p.m., Ml 64541. ttNHRAL HOOtNKIVFKH, U9I in, more for home then wage*. | children. Ml 7-2Ht
offlca work, bookkaaplno and typ>
Tng, FI HW.
dlAt FOJt
WORK, ITEADY iMPlOYMINT, QOQD PAY. MUIT || EKfERI-Kncid IN ALL TVPil OP OF-Fica WORK. FI 49941.
in Pontiac	Pi 4-9947
14 S. Cats
Mon, thru Prl,, 9 a.m,4; 70 p,m.
wad., I p.m.-7 p,m, COUFClTOANAGI'iMAL|i"MD-TIL - M FkiTs FO^toHlS
sr
Di fHWAIHfl, APKtV’^TTOORT House Inwk Ber, $ to sjn.
»AL«»LA6y 8* lALilMAM, DYIR
< lii wieiliit titopnsnt panenoilty, salary and eonunmlon. Apply In person hafora | p.m, Montgomery warn HMrfnc Aid Di|Hii pan-flda MBf.	,	-
Salts Htlp, Malp Femalt S A
DEALER WANTED. OOOO RAW-toign business now span In Fan-Has mf mm towns, it willing to conduct Homt tarvica busi>
Add $4081io a weak to your income. ’Work 8-9 pTm. I evenings
CARPENTRY, NEW AND RBFAlR.
Free astlmatas. 3354911,
_ 2-1235.
Ing, racraallon rooms. Terms. Free estfmetai, References. Call after 4 p.m^sti'Otsi..
Coment Work
Cement Work
Licensed cement contractor.
FE 5-9122
“Cl'MtWfWDllOiA'tW'ABtfr Free asllmatas. OR 2-4460 after 4.
mSlF*1
FLDDRf AND DftVIWAYl, WD1K mat cannot ba beet, city and itate licensed. Bert tommins. Fl 8-0245.
T7RmiJdI^|^W'»£BCR“
- ChlHIMy Cieaning
chimnry A N D , FIRIFLACI cleaning, Alio chimney repair, Ree-sonliwe roles. MS-ltfl.
Dressmaking, Tailoring
ALTIRATIONI ALL TYFII,.KNIT dresses, wsinsr ststo. ORa-TlM,
Fencing "
PONTIAC FENCE CO.
5932 Dixie Hwy._____ OR 34595
Fjonr Sanding
CARL L. BILL! SR., FLOOR SAND Ing. FE 2-5789.
jShn TaylDr, FI65r~layTRo.
sanding and finishing. 35 years axparwnca. 2314975.
aabA floDr tIRVIClE, oUARAtt-toad, Imhnadlata service, FE 5-2955 or 673-2937.
R. G. CHYbiR, FLODR LAVING, tending and finishing. F FE 54592.
Hoy and Sleigh Rides
EXCITING FUN IN FRESH, CLEAN outdoors. Bring your group, onloy thrill ot horse-drown slolgh rides through snow cpvarod flolds, woods, then to club house tor horn# cooked spaghetti, frandh broad, tatty salad; •teaming coftoa. Write, cell tor free brochure. Upland Hills Farm, 411 Lake George Rd., Oxford, 42b-1411.
Plastering Service
A-1 PLASTERING ANO REPAIR. Reasonable. George Loe. PE 1-7932.
plaitIBiHD. Free, estimates.
D. Mayer*	FE 4464*
PLASTER I Ho. NEW AND REPAIR, well removal, calling lowered. FE 8-1702._____________
Rental Equipment
BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - OWER SAWS 951 Joslyn Open Sun. FE 44109
Wallpaper Steamer
Floor senders, polishers, hand senders, furnace vacuum cleaners. Oakland Fuel B 'Feint, 436 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 54IS0.
Home Improvement
Home Improvements
Porches, additions, slaps, general ramodallPQ end cement work. Owlnn Construction Co.
FE 5-9122
tTTgrsTAlTO*ri(irdIH*DRYHo
Co. Rooting, sheet metal, iamtatlon OA 0-3151. 91 $. Washington, Ox-ford,
WIIDmaH CONSTRUdTldH, cDm-ptotf service. Proa estlmetes. FE S-7966, day or night,
Houio Moving
HOUSES FOR SALE TO BE MOVED — All modern, dellyerod to your tot, D'hondl Wracking Company. 9it Joslyn.
Janitorial Sorvico
Lumber
TALBOTT LUMBER
Glass installed In door* and win. dowa. Complete Mlldlng service. 1023 Oakland Ave.	FI 6-4393
Mo^ iiOtoroga
COAST WIDE VAN LINRI SMITH MOVING____ FI 44864
Painting' and Dscuratlng
At INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR FSlhllhBi free asllmatas, work juaranfead. Raasonabto rates. 61*.
AfflpAlkTim AN6"BBeflRAT-
KTOr7'" *■
Restaurants
BIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE AT Silver Like-Telegraph et Huron. BOB'S RB5TAURANTT)01I JOSlYN ________ FE 3-98)1
Roofer
NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS. INSURED end guerentsed. Coll Tom, 8S24S63.
rDoAsi Hew, r'Kpair
Oentral Mtlntenenco	6834448
Snow Removal
SNOW PLOWING, SAND - BEACH work, tlreplKO wood. FE S-328S.
Trss Trimming Sorvico
A. E. DAI BY TREE SERVICE Troo, stump romovel, trim. Iron* planting, FE 5-3805, FE 1-3025.
Tessncr Tree Sorvic#
All types of trao work, Free asti-mates. Topping, cabling, cavity work, tortlllzlng* 427-2721,
T'RiB'TAT^W'A'fiB'T(lW!6viyL
- Low rates, 3244866.
Trucking
HAULING ANO RUBBISH, NAMH your prices. Any lima, PI 84095.
Dd^AFrTi«A9Y~rir(imR'o
rubbish, fill dlrf, grading amt gravel end front4nd loading. FE 24603. ODWT "HAlTONGrDXRADIinSND b«sements cleaned. 674-1I62:
j# TruckRental
Trucks 1o Rent
MhTon Pickups	Ivq-Ton Stake
TRUCKS ~ TRACTORS AND EQUIFMlNT Dump Trucks - Semi-Trollars
Pontioc Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
^ MSS. WOODWARD fB t;066t	FE 4-1441
—Ojtoh Djily including Sunday
Upholstering
■<F.7WWVM<JVVt * «w»«#hi( ■# '^1 i#VtotbhFWhJI
wiraSSv :
r* ■»	y* *
•kOPMFJlILD WALL CLIANIRI wafl* and windows. Reas, taii>-tMlIsn puaranlaad. FB 1 tail.
I
■ THE PONTIAC PRBSfeMQTllJAY, JANUARY 4, 1963
*
TIHJlirV-JilNIE
36 Sab Houses
ALL CASH
HU and Gl EQUITY
homes anywhere, even „ If behind In paymtntt. No listing, no s-'- C*i|rlrt»-' TOQdlQtQly. DETROIT. BR 2-0440.
a *-bedr6om RSmse in>ontiac
- Nee^j^reoms IWbetti on 1«t ItoeriFt/MOiL-i' 1
CASH
>' X HOURS
LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES
'Mm WRIGHT
382 Oakland Ave.	PE 2-9141
GET RESULTS
WE NEED listings. Call today for quick tala and top market value. If It's real estate, wa can sell Itt ;	-
DON WHITE, INC
«M Dtkfe’Hwy.
Phone 074-0494
HAVBbUYfcRS FOR ANY KINO - of property for quick said, call: Paul Jonas Realty — FE 44050.
Homes—Forms—Acreage CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY Realtor
228 W. Walton	330-4084
Multiple Listing Service
LISTINGS WANTED
You. can set more for your home by nstin# unto us 1 trade. Can us todayl)
us before you
AUGUST JOHNSON
* NOTICE!
.If you have acreage parcels for sola—email or large — wa have . the buyers, call in todayl
Clarkston Real Estate
5854 S._M8ln__________AAA 5-5821
VACANT LOTS WANTED
In Pohflac,W* pay more. Immediate * closing. REAL VALUE REALTY. 424-9575. Mr. Davls.
Apartments, Furnished 37
2 ROOMS AND BATH WEST SIDE. Clean, raas., professional woman, non-smoker. FE 5-5944.
i" ro6m¥.~ private bath -
Adults only. 79 Clark.
2 ROOMS AND BATHi WE$t SIDE. Clean. Reasonable. Professional woman. Non-smokers. FE 5-5944. 8-ROOM, MODERN, WITH JU*Y|M-tles, adults, TOM* Dixie, 425-2544.
No children, Williams Lake Road. OR 3-4549.
3 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-come, 825 per week with 850 de-posit. Inquire 273 Baldwin Ave. ■ Call 338*4054,*'	..............._
3 ROOMS AND bath, modern, adults only, lake privileges, 75 Beljjsvu*,. Lake Orion. MY ><031.
4-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT. 872 Stanley	FE 8-1445
5 ROOMS AND BATH, 1ST FLOOR with 2 bedrooms, 835 per week with 875 deposit.. Small child welcome. Inquire at 213 Baldwin Ave. Call 828-4054,
DUPLEX, 4 ROOMS, 1 BEDROOM, bath and garage. Married couple. No pats. No children. No drinkers. 34 Myra.
KITCHENETTE SUITABLE FOR 1 pr 2 adults. 473-1040._■
6nV61dWoom Aft. si«o per -■ month. No children, no pets,
1 please. Fontainebleau Apts. 995 N. cm Lake Road. FE 8-8092. SLEEPING ROOMS! KITCHEN privilege*. mixed area, FE 5-0494.
Apartments, Uwfurwlghed 38
2-BEOROOM APARTMENT, NEAR Walton oil Baldwin. FE 1-1455.
4 ROOMS ON LAKE ORION, PART-ly furnished. OR 3-5*49.
par FMmi. pwoSn required. Adults onty.FB >4629.
Golf View. Apartments
Clerkslon area. We still have * few two bed roam 'apartments to lease it *150. NO Children, No pet*. For Informetlon cell FE 2-4085
i^KSVllWAFARTMEN+S.CLAftk-ston tree. t-Bedroom. 8125 month Includes ronge, refrigerator, slr-condltion end heat. Quiet surroundings. Cell E- Nett, 333-7*01 or 425-1752 on or otter Monday the 4th
iNE BEDROOM APf. $125 PER Month, No children, no pets, pfopse, Fontainebleau Apts. 995 N. CPS* like Rood. FE S-«002-
ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL Adult* Only	FE 54911
Rent Houigi, FurnisliEd 39
2 LARGE ROOMS, BATH, NEAR Clamstan. 425-7921-
Rant HoutBS, Unfurniihtd 40
2 BEDROOMS WITH 4 ACRES OF land, outskirts el city. Inquire 2335 Dixie Hwy.
2-BEDROOM M>MB WITHFOIL . basement. 224-018),
Park subdivision. Fully carpeted. Executive or prwosstonai *175 month. Roforoncoo. FE 2-9814. ROOMS. ?ifib BAfh, EAST tHGH-land, MS a month, available Jan. 25th, Will consider older children. Rot., call Highland 8*7-4178. i RAPib. VACANf:'WvTlI5HT Tn, almost now ranch, 2-bedroom, no basement, no garage, available
lain----....—i-c. i ..... needr
■1511.
only approximately f veer, needs psiht, StorTusiecufltyi li *-i Boulevard keioiW* -2-Bedroom Unit—
*75 For Month Contact Resident Manager 544 Best Bivd. at Valencia Ft 4-7*33,
living room 20-tt. dining, •kitchen, den end bath, first floor, second, t bedrooms, belt! and extra lavatories, vj acre. Mi 5-7373.
(all i-lIbR^M,:jjRT3N UkS
sree. for further informetlon .cell 157-18)8, soutmield.	______
rage not Included, *85. 2492 Harrison, Avon Twp., noor Auburn. FE 2-1451.
II University, Beautiful 3-bodroom ml. BullMns, go* hoot, can 1 ilshod basement,
■ gating, drop#*, fin,—.. —JR.--., vacant. Children okay. *147.50 month. 272-7404.
WALOTTTAl»rT'^^^, ranch, larg* fenced yard. Refer-ences, IIP* e month, MA >34i*.
Rent RoBItlt ___________42
NICE HOUSEKEEPING ROOM, Everything furnished, elder woman. *12. 334-9*32.
*—wgMiRBnsfc
__12IW Oakland Ave. PE 4-1*54.
IlIeAINjI tOoMk AiHlI bMty, near deklena Umvirillv. i»0
' Peril Read,
Room* With Board
OINTLEMAN, PRIVATE ROOM -home cooking, 14 Fapl*t-
Kunt Office Space 47
1-ROOM OFFICE FOR RENT IN new twining. 145 per month Including hoof end light*. Coll Tom ■elgman or L. A. Grime* at
side near airport. Reasonable. OR
tWtiii
>«tfcT, Weal for >fwe**wn»r men offices. Locsied downtown oroi.
w»*H**n.'.»Ks~iii MSSiS4i»ilri»M<8N»Rep0mt*48l*S«SwwswmNh>i|ttt,^F
*nt Builnm Property 47-A
» 20.000 .
Ml. FT. ,
'	Industrial
or Warehouse
Rent Or Uaeo modern building pi Formic, corner of Sen-ford end Irwin Street* Call Mr* llmon.FiJmM.
Ademe forleifo, gr’mnt, Torge
POyntalnebiaey lee Lekettoed. OR 44417.
MERRY CffRyiTAAM~ANDHAF^ 7* TOM RBto^«mE«TATte
FE
2-0157
2-BEOROOM HOME, CAN BE IN come an Teggerdlne Rd, Shown 1 by ogpehttmeot <a>B Mp 94018
iTBEDROOMS, LARGE CARPED-ed .living room, ell new kitchen end bath,' 2-car garage, 3 lots. Northern High area. *13,000. W3S-' 3347. ,	. r	& .
2-ST0RY FRAME “
; 3 bedrooms, I e r go living room, combined dfnfeg area /and Kitchen, 1V5 baths. Built In WU. Lot Wx-18P*, 114,900 —	on land
contract,	-v-
FLATTLEY REALTY
9iM9 COMMERCE g «	3434981
3 BEDROOMS, ON LARGE Lot, . kicetad In cierkston - sdtool district, ' large kitchen end living ' room, built-in book cafe -end record cabinet, pull-down (fairway for convenient attic storage, gas heat and Wstar heater, completely Insulated, aluminum stermt’ and screens. OR S4378,........
3-BEDROOM BRICK, FUtL BAsE-ment, 2-car garage. Sylyeh Manor,
- 474-TStS. ' FW-w" " ...
4-BEDROOM HOME IN OXFORD, 27,500 Wlth $l,500 down-' Atova aright in. Gas heat, forae living room, 3-bedroom ranch home, 8 years old, . full basemaht, large family room In Oxford. 812.700 with ftooi down. 80 acres and real nice 3-bedroom brick home, large bam and other out-bulldlngs. Lots of equipment. 15 miles north of'Lapeer. 832400. Terms.
HUMPHRIES REALTY
OA 8-2417
$9,990
Rancher on your lot. Lovely 3-bedroom ranch type hdme, full basement, birch cupboards, oak floors. FULLY INSULATED. Designed for better living. No money dawn."
HURON GARDENS
BRANO NEW 3;bedraom ranch home, conveniently designed kitchen with birch cupboards, full basement, oak floors, a fully insulated home. Only *11,900, si,-200 down.
WE TRADE ’ t'r' ’’
young-dilThomes
REALLY MEANS'BETTER-BILT RUSSEL YOUNG, 53W W. HURON FE4«» m
A NEW 3-BEDROOM 1'/5-BATH RANCH HOME • ’ QUICK POSSESSION On nearly %-ecrO suburban lot, with pevtd street, close fo parochial and publle schools. Has 20'x-14' living room, foil basement with extra large recreation area. Gas HA heat, Aluminum siding. 815,950 with 10 per cant down plus mortgage cosi*. Might trade.
W. H. BASS
BIRMINGHAM
NEW CLASSIC, New England colonial with four fine bedrooms and 2vs baths. Large family room. Dressing room off master bedroom. Black top drive, attic fen. Seeded lawn. Paved street. Great value. $38,900.
WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE
298 S. Woodward, Birmingham 444-4300 PHONES ^	544-2323
BRICK RANCHER Early possession. Built on 75-tt. wide lot. He* 3 bedrooms, full basement, attached 2-car garage. Solid drive. Only S500 down.
OPEN FROM I1A.M.4 P.M. PHONE 473-9926
Also 4-bad room brick colonial ivs baths. Immediate possession. See models on Crescent Lake Road. VS mile north of M89.
C SCHUETT Ml 6-8500
DONLEY StREET
In Elmdele Subdivision near Auburn and Crooks Road. C.B.s. heme, needs finishing. Must sell. 11400 cash or forms, cell 343-7020, WE 9-41M or 341-4374. Michael's Realty.
Elizabeth Lake Estates
Six-room bungalow With two bedrooms and bath «n main floor. Portly finished second-floor bedroom. Full basement. Oil hot water heat.	'	•
LESLIE R. TRIPP, REALTOR
FE 84141 (Evenings FE 4-4278)
GAYLORD
BUILT IN 1989 — Three-bedroom tench bora. Basement, plastered wain. All ’in good condition. 30 doyt possession. 814,750. Terms. Call MY 8-2831 or FE 8-9493.
10-ACRE FARM — 8-room house. 4 bedrooms, bsrn, good lend. 3-csr garage. Large dining room. Total price 824,000 with Mod terms. Call MY 2-2021 or FE 8 9493.
LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD
MY 2-2821 or FE 8-9493
Broadway St.	Lake Orion
HIITER
WEST SUB. — 5 rooms end bath, 19 ft. kitchen, dining room, gas heat, attached garage, workshop. 811,500, forms.
WEST BLOOMFIELD - 4-room brick ranchor, ivy glass tlisd baths, large kitchen with built-in*, 2 fireplaces, recreation roam, attachad jvi-cer garaga, large lot. 8at this on* today. CALL B, C. HIITER, REALTOR. 3792 Elliabsth Lake Road. FE 2-0179, eves, 482-4453.
HERRINGTON HILLS
8830 DOWN
3-bedroom ranch, basamant. hardwood floors, newly decorated, landscaped, paved, vacant. 4 y a a r a old. Excellent location.
RORABAUGH
Woodward at Square Lake Road
FE 2-5053	______ Realtor
HOUll ANb ImFtV lOiLDiho on corner lot. 559 5. Sanford and 541 8. Sanford. *4,O0O-liWO down. 1402 Baplay, Detroit,
3-bedroom brick
Hi ill ft"
( home.
Bullt-lns.
sowar. Bxcaiianf loceilon. 114,700.
FRANK SHEPARD
OL 14188
KETtCRING HIGH ARlA~
3 Mdroom, 1V9 belhs, full hasp' ment With walk out door, Immediate possession.
Also 4-oedroom, ivy baths, dining room, full basement, 2 nice homes tor 2 Ideal families whe went the
HILLTOP REALTY
4734204
UKEira
835 N. Broadway, Income, -8 end bath dawn, (now ranting for 3)15 par monthV, 4 and billt up, partially finished, i-cer garage. Bid,* 500, 83,000 down, balanca on land contract. Call wm, B. Mlichait. WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE
94 E, Huron FE 44101 or 4024141 L'X'K't"> AIVltjiWf iV" W Ac iB A V Leko, 5-room brick on forgo lot. Full lllod > basement, gas heel, excellent condliron. Termi. r AL PAULY, Realtor
45
OR 3-3000
in mgrblo fireplace in muiil-pur-poM fivliii room like new Brick »-bedroom rgpt, Gudawd among irtow capped spruces.
mature t Oleje tiled
foyer,
J'pmeni In suniwMch-W ep water. Quiet J at streets and way
Ing equipment Oyer. Or end peicatul Toll'
treat.
'S°H ANGSTROM
rIrede equity.
RIAlYOA H
7 LI -MinWAnBik ■
tUCKlE REALTY ■	8044700
WHATEVER YOU WANT TO DOt USE A ,; PRESS WANT AD
.. ^ To *fo m
Sob Housek
49
LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS
3-BBbRDciM ^ basenAn# !. .; GAS HEAT-^ MEAff .SCHOOLS AND STORES'V CLOSING COSTS ONLY.X -
■ WRIGHT UJ
.	382 Oakland Aye.
- P ■	-
;EyM/-;nfwr(;8.S/OB?^0455;i,Woll:Flee
LAZENBY
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, foil bath, extra large living roam, 20'xl4' .country else kitchen .wm cup-. board* gelore. Sttueted on a . beautiful fenced-in yard, frolf . trees and; garden spec*.' Prlcsd , Jit onlyii0,500. Terms.
ROY LAZENBY, REALTOR 4893 Dixie mf '-rr qr 44301
multiple Listing service
Mixed
Neighborhood
No down payment No mortgage cost Fltbf month free Payments ilk* rant
MODELS OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-} AND SUNDAY
WESTOWN REALTY
478 Irwin Oft East Blvd.
FE 8-2743 afternoons. LI 2-4477 Eves. FIRST IN VALUE
MODEL
3 bedrooms end full basement, 812,900 on your lot.
Zeller's Real Estate
-S' "Custom Builders" " 2040 S.Rochester Rd.
0L 1-0221
NEW ^.BEDROOM BRICK HOME, 2-ear garaga, bath and V3, and separate dining are*-.	,
WATtS RiALTY-- NA 7-29® -1954 MIS at Bald Eagle Lake
New 4-Bedroom Colonial
Full besement, large let, deluxe features. Best offer fake* if-WE TRADE AND TRADE
Silver Lake Const. Co. 673-9531
N6W TRf-LEVBL, BASEMENT, 3 bedrooms, gsrtg*. -Let 42x1*8. 443 Clare St., PMtl*C. 4934432.
igage f
No payment me 111 month . NEW MODEL /
BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS
FE 8-2783	•	1:30 fo 5 p.m.
EVENINGS LI 2-7327
NORTHERN HIGH area
3-bedroom, wood floors, large utility room, Immediate possession, $10,900, 1900 down.
HILLTOP REALTY * .
473-5234.
NORTH SIDE: 3-BEDROOM, UTILI-ty, wood floors- Gl 4Vy per cent. <10,500. Sell or trad*. FE 24755,
ROCHESTER AREA HOMES . Nix Realty Ub 2-2121 UL 24875
SAUNDERS & WYATT REALTY FE 3-7S41
seminoLe Hills - 1-bedroom. large living room, separate dining room, family ’ room, new kitchen with dishwasher. BY OWNER. Cell FE 2-3454.	-
"SMITH"
HOME AND INCOME
Live on the first floor which consists of 5 rooms and bath and ' let the apartment on the second ftoor make your payments. Separata outelde stairway to the 2-room and 3-room apartments. Full . basement with Oil fomace. Gas water heater and laundry tubs.
ROLFE H. SMITH/Realtor
244 S. Telegraph
FE 3-7840	EVES. OR 3-7302
TEGGERDINE
OFF M59
3-bedroom trlloytl,12 yoer*.old, . like now, nice kitchen with bullt-lns, finished family room, oa* hoot,1 IW baths, attached garage on a large lot among comparable homes. Price, 111,300.
HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty
2583 UNION LAKE ROAD . EM 3-3208	243-718)
T6 BUY OR fO SELL
waYERford all Brick
BUY OF THE YEAR
8 bedrooms, full basement.
IT'S BRAND NEW
$340.00 DOWN
Includes gas heat, 2car brick attached garage- solid drive, side? walks, paved street, central water, fully Insulated- Early poMMrioq-phone 473-9924.
C. SCHUETT N Ml 6-8500
W A L DON AT AtMONO L A N E, CLARKSTON. brick 1350 *q. ft. 817490.
ARISTOCRAT BUILDERS
WEAVER
AT ROCHESTER
Ntw colonial with 2,350 square feet.' 2 - family rooms, 2vy baths, formal dining room and 5 bedrooms. Roody for occupancy and priced *1 only 830,900, terms.
MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR vavy— W. University Rochester	OL	14142
“ V.A. Buy 61* ?H'B"WlgK 3-bed room ronch norm of Drayton Plains. Newly dacorotod, easy clean Ilia floors, 100x215V lot, *9,750, 853.(5- month plus tax end in-surtnee, Approx.' *800 move In, HAGSTROM REALTOR, 4900 W. Huron, OR 44851, eves, cell 482-0435.
9	ROOMS. lAROB J-*Y6lfY HOUSi
—	Union Lake are*. Only 84,100. Land contract. 31,100 down. EM 84703.,
HIGHLAND AREA - Low down payment. Fuil price, 87,000. Immediate poisesilbn. EM 3-7700,
LAKE FRONT - LOVELY 2-BBD* ROOM. Puli tiled besemenf, ivy-car garage, 90'x14O' lot. Priced to sell *1 014,900. Terms arranged. 848-7700.
OXBOW' LAKE-FRONT HOME -80,400 cash. Sandy beach. 343-4703.
10	ACRES — vacant. Highland are*. 84,100, Easy terms. Lend contract. 343-7700.
PROFITABLE 2 MAN OPERATION restaurant - Real hot spoil illuo down plus Inventory. Ideal focal Ion tar 24-hour-e-dey operation
—	On main highway. lIMeti forces sal*. Call now Z- EM 84701.
3 BEDROOMS - Leko privileges. *4,*oo. Low down payment. Cell
EM 3 7700.
HACKETT REALTY 7710 Cooley L«k» Rd. __
LOOK!
Ranch * $12,375
Bi-L©v©l
$12,875
Only $125 Down
TRAL WATER lYiTlMa
mm
OCCUPY JANUARY.
Coming About Jon. 15th New 1 'A Bath BI-LeveI
Buy BsforE Price* Increase
ORMI1 to I, Oloeed Thursday
Tekg commerce Rd., fum left gf . Mum commerce, t mijei fe Glen-> gery turn right to models, • w,
Americana Homes 6244200
Sale Houses , r:„	, 49 TIZZY
^ WATERFORD AREA'
- Specious 3-bedroom ranch ‘ home featuring carpeted living room and hell. Gas heat, encioaad pqtte, gt-' tachad l^ir.Mrege and Igrg* M ■ 95'x250'. FWirprlee only *13,910. Tarmt fo suit.	,
NOTHING DOWN
, 2- end 3-bedroom homes, city and • suburban. Payments less than rent,
: Call today for further Information.
JAMES A. TAYLOR, Realtor
7732 Highland Rd. (M59)
OR 44804 . Evenings EM 3-7541
; WEST SIDE
Hoar Orchard Lake end Telegraph, cledn 5-roam modern, beaement, gas heat, carpefad flvlng roam, garage. Quick sale tar 87!m. si.-900 down — *40 a month. _
J. J. JOLL REALTY
FE 2-3488 - ■ or
SPOTLITE
Walk to Work
It feels like home the mlnuft you enter this very clean 340droom home, modem kitchen and bath large living room, utility room, paved street.
$250 Moves You fn Northern High Area
. Room for the kids fo romp. 3 bedrooms, full basement, hardwood floors, like new. *49 month.
Herrington Hills
3-bedroom, full basement, go* heat, landscaped, tedded yard, .storm* and screens. LOOK—a 1-car attached garage. Only 811,700.
Smiley Realty
FE 2-8326
Open Daily 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
FIRST IN VALUE
...vvw.fW.	'• ; (.i •
RENTING
$59Mo.. ,
Excluding taxes and insuraiice ONLY
$10 Deposit
WITH APPLICATION *
3-BEDROOM HOME '• v GAS HEAT -LARGE DINING AREA
WILL "ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS - WIDOWS, divorcees; people with
CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES.
i	..
For Immediate Action Call FI 5-3676	626-9575
ANYTIME SAT. OR SUN.
OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN
REAL VALUE REALTY
DORRIS
*
QUALITY PLUS Id this Immaculate 3-bedroom brick ranch home In Pontiac Watkins Estates. Oak floors, luxurious carpeting, 2 full baths, beautiful paneled family room with fireplace and sliding
glass door fo spacious fenced ack yard and an attached garage, 817,500.
HUNTOON LAKE ESTATES. One of the most desirable locations In the west suburban Urea within 2 blocks of the suburban beech locates this extra large 2-bedroom ranch home with full base-merit, 2 fireplaces, hot water
INDIAN VILLAOS INCOME. Live In 5 very comfortable end large rooms with exclusive use of the full besement and rent out this large 3-room apartment upstairs. Top location on a corner lot. *11,950.
INVESTORS, TAKE NOTE. 3-bed-room bungalow In Waterford for the I6w price of 88,500. Check these features and then cell. Fireplace, new gas furnace, oak floors throughout, feiiced backyard, ivy-cer garage and lake privileges.
DORRIS E SON, REALTORS 2534 Dixie Hwy.	OR 44324
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
Lots in Utica
We have several building sites between 21 Mil* Road and 22 Mil* Road In Utica, Sites ere 150' frontage add, 94' In depth. These lots are priced fo sell tor 82,000 each.
Romeo
lVk-story frame home with garage and 3 bedrooms, nice deep lot with residential location. Total price, 811,000 with approximately 82,000 down.
Prudential
Real Estate
44441 Van Oyk*
Romeo, Michigan
PL 2-9391
Open 9 '111 9	, Sunday I rill j
II
BUD
//
Quick Possession
on this worm, comfortable 3-bedroom brick home with well shaded '‘let, 2-car garage, paved drive/ close-ln suburban location and featuring carpeted living add dining rooms, til* hath, full basement, gas heat and not .'water, storms and screens. Priced ei 815,900, *pprdxlm*f*ly 10 per cent down, tjlqp costs.
Lake Privileges
on beautiful Elizabeth Lake go with this cozy 2-bedroom home with attached*- one-car garage, large storage attic, fireplace, part basement, ges heat. Only 81,000 down, balance on lend contract. Make • del* now.
“Bud" Nicholie, Realtor
'	49 Mt. Clemens St.
FE 5-1201
After 6 P.M. FE 2-3370
ANNETT
4 Bedrooms
Close to Crofoot end High School, north of Huron St. Large living room, dining room, kitchen, bedroom end Vk-bath on 1st floor. 3 bedrooms, bath end sleeping porch an 2nd floor. *1,090 down, plus mortgage cosis.
West Suburban-5 Acres
Brick ranch bum In 19U Living room witn cul-msrble fireplace, dining ell, country kitchen with all hulll-lns, birch cabinets, 3 Igrg* bedroom!,
rooms, igl* of cloiets, 2 beihs, utility roam on ground level. Mill basement, paneled
Spcreeiion room with see-i rough fireplace; seperetg workshop, Mw baseboard heat. Attached 3-car gareg*.
• (fabi*. gncMMd outdoor grill, back all fenced for keeping pony. Only 8)3,WO,Terms.
Oxford Area-135 Acres. 1
' vacant, gamly rolling terrain, to mile frpmaSe an private
paved roSn. private Tike Ideal for subdivision develop
a am, mobile village, eic. — my *100 per acrertermi.
Wl, WILL /TRADE
Realtors 28 E. Huron St.
Open evenings end Sunday* 14
FE 8-0466
By Kate Osann
‘Irma has all the luck. Her birthstonejs a diamond! ’
Sub Houses
49 Sub Houses
QUICK POSSESSION — Spotless 3-bedroom ranch with carpeting in living - room, dining room, hall and 1 bedroom. Loads of closet space. Chbery kitchen. Pull-down stairs, to aific. Covered patio end ga liege. Large lot. Trad* your small home on this ort*.
OVER 1 ACRE OH PAVED ROAD with 3-bedrobm ranch, loads of beautiful birch cupboards, snack bar and double sink In handy kitchen,, oil furnace, aluminum storms'end screen*. Fenced yard. School bu* at door. $11,900 — Terms.
STEAL AT 84,300. Cozy .2-bedroom bungalow. Full basement, oil heat, aluminum siding, storms and screens, low taxes, lake privileges, 850g moves you In.
PHONE 682-2211
5143 Cass-Ellzabeth Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9
TIMES
WATER FRONT-TRADE
On beautiful Bevarly Isles to Otter and Sylvan Lakes. Roomy 2-level brlqk ranch, built by an exacting owner In 1940. 3 bedrooms, family room, recreation room and 2V9 baths. Gas hot water heat. Too large for present owner. Will sell on land contract or trade for a good-smaller city or lake home.
wIlmams lake
A/*a. Aluminum exterior and extra spacious 3-bedroom rancher with breezeway and 2-car garage. Model kitchen and 12'x8‘ breakfast area, all tiled basement with. bar. Cyclone fenced lot, I00'xl50'. Owner anxious end ready to move into larger new home. Only 8400 down, plus costs.
TIMES REALTY
5219 Dixie Hwy. MLS 4744394 1 OPEN 9 TO 9
49
SHOW HOUSE
—GUILDER'S MODEL
Z/TM-	O 1 II
For Sale
Occupy January 15th
v Bi-Level
—	3 bedrooms •• -Sj '::v-
—	Pull basement
; — Custom Wall Papered
—	Carpeted Throughout
—	Paneled Family Room
—	pull landscaped
$700 Moves You In
Only $122 Per Monti
Open-^ to 8, dosed Thursday
Take Commerce Rd., turn left at South Commerce, 2 miles to Glen-gary turn right to modals. D'LORAH ,
Americana Home 624-420C
SEMINOLE HILLS
7-room home -with 3 bedrooms. Living room with natural fireplace. Newly decorated Inside. New Formica counter top* In kitchen. Tiled besement with extra lavatory, gaslnator, gas range and water softener. Gas heat. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION.
NORTH END
Close fo Fisher Body and Universal Oil Seal, sharp 2-bedroom bungalow, full basement, ^'xSO* recreation room, gas heat, enclosed front porch.. Paved drive, large lot. PRICED AT ONLY *7,250.
Smith .& Wideman
REALTORS FE 44526
412 W. HURON ST. OPEN 9 TO 7
Val-U-Way
Gov't Representative CLARKSTON AREA
Clean as a pin. You must sse this hous* for yourself end It Is really spotless. 3 bedrooms, IV* baths, larg* living end d|plng area, nice lendscaped lot. Fantastic buy at 19,259, (300 down.
OFF PERRY
School Is only 2 blocks away from this cozy 2-lMdroom home, large kitchen has plenty of cupboards, living room Is, larg* end roomy, gas heet. Sailing price I* 87,300, 8300 down, 172 per month Include* taxes end Insurance.
EAST SIDE
Copper kettle whistling In th* kitchen end a log fire crackling In th* fireplace In the living .room. In thl» home * feeling of friendliness. This 5-room bungslow has many feature* that you will like, such as a large roomy basement end almost new 2-c*r garage. Only 89,950, 1390 down.
R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR	FE 4-3531
345 Oakland „	Open 9-7
Alter hours, FE 5-4410 or PC 81344 LIST YOUR HOME WITH US____
O'NEIL
VILLAGE OF LAKE ANOBLUS Prestige area and th* nicest lake frontage In Oakland County. Reinforced see well, boat Iioum, and over 1 acre nicely landscaped, with many tell stately oak trees. 2-story family home, 4 bedrooms end 3 baths. Living room Is 24x14' with field sion* fireplace. Many other nice features. Priced at 145,-000 or wiil lake a trade.
COMB TO O'NEILS we have th* key for on* ot the finest homes In Silver Lake Area, All large room* fo Include 3 spacious bedrooms, * hug* living room, "reunion" sir* kitchen and family room ell on on* floor. Beautiful, paneled recreation room, exlre kitchen end second lull bath In basement. Oorgeous carpeting and many other extras Included at 823,100. TRADE.
HOME ON A HILL Overlooking Lotos Leko In * sotting or trees, This leg hous* he* two levels for ftmlly living, 3 bedrooms, two belli*, large living room end a family room, Lot size 87x400'. Priced at 810,900. Lei's Talk Trade, TODAY.
ADAMS ROAD AREAl ‘
All good ilfod room* In this 3-Mdroom brim ranch. Attached i-enr garage plus extra geragt, totaled tin Ito at!,**, well lend-scaped. This It * custom bum heme offered it 880,800, will trade. Wo Invite your Inspoctlon,
4
JOSLYN AREA , <
J bedroom bungalow with base
men) end garage. Musi be sold to senl* *n #,tale. Priced *1 *7,100, 10 per con) down plus closing eoit*.
RAY O'NEIL, Realtor
JIM PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 9 to 9 OR 44417 Ml| OR 3-MM
RHODES
SUBURBAN, 10 acres rolling lend ideal for those desiring .horses, swimming pool room to ream. Older 8-room brick home In excellent condition, 4 bedrooms, 2Vfe baths, hardwood floors. Can be modernized and become a shew -place for the new owner. $30,000. Terms.
KEEGO HARBOR. A beautiful exec utlve's mansion with 9 .spacious rooms, 4 b0drooms. 3 full baths, large living room with fireplace, studio ceiling, -wall-to-wall- carpet, dining'ell with glass-wall to patio. Large recreation room' with fireplace. Gas heat. Air conditioning unit. 2-car attached garage. Near schools and shopping. Lake privileges on Casst Lake. Only 844,900. Call on this one today.
WATERFORD. Nice 3-bedroom home with 1VV baths. Gas heat. Air conditioning unit. Ideal location, lots ot shade. Quiet neighborhood. Lake privilege*. Only 813,000. 8450 down plus closing costs. 194 per month. No mortgage costs on this one.
RANCH HOME. Aluminum siding, a bedrooms, 2 baths/ full basement, Northwest'of Clarkston. 2 acres of land and 2M-car garaga. Ideal for the gardener. $14,400.
ORION TOWNSHIP. 15 acres, corner location, 1,400' road frontage. Ideal for development or country estate.
- Only 818,000.
ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker
FE 8-2304 258 W. Walton FE 54712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
59 Willard
7-room home. Nice living room, dining room, kitchen and bath on flrat. floor. 3 bedrooms and bath up. New get furnace, wall-to-wall carpeting, stove and draperies. Newly decorated. Garage end many extras. Price 810,000 FHA $300 down. Immediate possession.
Down, Down, Down Goes the Price
New price reduction to 821,100 makes this 3-bedroom home e terrific buy. Located on Motorway Drive, Elizabeth Lake Estates, this home otters e large llv ng room with fireplace, family dining room, kitchen with bullt-ins, batn and 2 large bedrooms on the first floor with on* large bedroom ‘ up. Basement, recreation room. Enclosed breezeway to large 2Vj-car garage. Lake privileges Immediate possession.
Second Street
4-room ons-story. bungalow with aluminum exterior. Lovely living room, dining room and kitchen 3 nice sit* bedroom* end bath, Besement, gas heet. Excellent condition. Near bus and stores. Price 813,500. Terms. Make an ap polntment to see this beautifully kept home.
John K. Irwin
a, sons
-. REALTORS
313 W. Huron	since 1921
Phone	Ff 1-9444
Evening Cell __________FE 24103
KENT
Established In 1914
2 ACRES - Room to onlov privacy. Good 1-room home with full bath. Cabinet sink In kitchen, m-car garage. West suburban location. — 810,100 with 81,900 down.
4M ACRES — Wetortord ere*. Bilevel 3-bedroom home with 22-ft. carpeted 11 v I mg room. Built-in kitchen appliances. Tiled bath. Pull basement with recreation rodm. Extra bath in basemem. HIc* condition. Spring fed pond. 2W-car
»*. Clarkston schools. Sea this ,500.	*
DRAYTON AREA — Immediate, possession to this 5-room and bath. 24-tt. living room, kitchen with Breakfast nook. Pull basement, 2 lets. Lake privileges. Now at 17.950.
Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor
2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph PE 24128orPE]il9|4__
MILLER
m ACRES, PONTIAC LAKE PRIV ILBGflS with this cut* 5 rooms and bath. Oas heet, 2-cer garage The (ridge end range go with deal Lovely garden that will feed you *11 year, Only 010,500,
OWNER transferred. Must eetit *t bargain price at 07,500. 8 room* end both on 1 ’ ftoor, full base-ment, gas heat. MOO down on contract,	,
2-YEAR OLD RANCH. Lecefod In the best of the West. 3 bedrooms, iovely living room and kitchen Full basement, ges heet end only 114,200.
THE MALL Is lu*f (round the corner from this Indian viilago home, i floor layout, carpet, large ctosets, lull casement, ges heat, garage end much, much more. (13,500, Shown by appointment.
BUILDING? See fhlt beautiful 94‘x-no' tot on povod street In a lovely selling overlooking a lake scene, You can't beat mis for location, Only 02,750.
REALTOR
070 W. Huron
FE 24262
Open 9 to t
Sab Houses
49
;<	. OurjNew t
Address Is
;1-1-1F-
Joslyn Ave., Corner Third Carpeted 2-Bedroom
Home has expansion attic for. 3rd bedroom, tiled besement, gas neat,. lV4-car garage, and Is on a fenced lot. Close to but, stores and schools. Only 811,200 on FHA forms.
Near lostern Jr. « .
tO'xil' dining roam. 9*xl2' kitchen, garage In need of,some .repair, but cheapness recommends if —' Only *5,000.
IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR 1 FE 5-9471 Multiple listing service
A-l BUYS
CLARKSTON
New 3-bedroom brick - ranch, paneled family room, 1V4 baths, foil basement, 2-car attached. garage-gas heat, city-..water — 100 x150 ft. tot with scenic view. Priced at $15,990. See H today —r Wa , trad*.'
‘	$450 DOWN
Drayton pfalns area. Attractlva 3-bedroom ranch, family room with fireplace, carpeting and, drapes, 1 Vi -car attached garage. V e r y neat and clean throughout. Just. Vi block to lake privileges. Cell tor appointment to see.
MACEDAY LAKE
Neat 2-bedroom bungalow — % block to lake — owner transferred from area. Priced to sell S8»500 with $850 down. Call today. ->
WATERFORD' RIALTY
D. Bryson, Realtor' Veh Welt Bldg. 4540 Dixie Hwy.	OR 3-1273
Sab Houses
49
Erushour 1 Struble
$400 Down
Is the complete cost to move you i Into this 3-bedroom 4-room home! an the eest side. There Is e base-1 ment and TVh-car garage- W h y j rent7 *10,950 full prlbe.
North Suburban
Dandy 5-room lVi-story home with foil dining room and besement. Lots of. yard space In this 427' -, deep tot. Selling for *9,950, Let's trade in your, hdme.
Tratle—Vacant
7-room, 1V»-sfory home-20 ft. Itvlng room, wall-to-wall carpet, formal dining room, 3 targe bedrooms, basement, breezeway and 3-car garage; Kettering High area, quick . possession, lust *1,700 down. •;/« > I
JACKFRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE • 1 REALTORS	ML?
FE *-4023	482-2431
INCOME SPECIAL - 'Ueefcdta : Oxford. SftfltHp oMer tocMW but a wonderful tevsetroent. Will shew *175. per i moMh’-mceiM *i#:frfeed at only *7400. New septic tank amt field syUWi..'. Waflttog distance ft , downtown.' Utpt desk term* to right party.	" -	,
i WEST SUBURBAN — Near MighUnd situated on Vd acre of land end only e yean old. 3-bedroam rancher with on ac fornace. FuH_ beth. [ J Frto* only *0^00. WE TRADJf. ^
LIST WITH US — W* accept trade* fe-fnd to tnis wey many seier ra-suit that would net etherwtae. Open [ 9-9. Multiple Listing Service,
L H. BROWN REALTOR
509 Elizabeth Lake Road Phone FE 2-4*10 or FE 4-3544
Best Buys Today,
Builder's Model '' s
Attractive 3 bedroom brick end aluminum ranch home n a a r Adams Road, hardwood floors, 1 Vi bath*, spacloUs ctosets, large well lighted easement, gas heat, • attached 2 Vi-car garage, storms and screens included at only *19,900 with easy terms.
Lake Front
Year round 3-bedroom home on Lake Orton, 22-ft. living room, separate dlnlnd room, walk-out basement, ges heat, high scenic lot, new cement breakwater. - — Only *10,500 with terms.
Auburn Rd.
Neat 2-bedroom home on large 100'x200' corner lot near Crooks Road. Ideal location for professional servlet, etc. Priced low to settle estate at only 89.400. Immediate possession.
4 Bedrooms
- Attractive aluminum sided family. home, convenient to downtown. schools and bus line. Basement, new gas fomace, aluminum storms and screens, 2-car garage. Only *9,950 with term*.
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
1450 N. .Opdyk* Rd. Ph. FE 54145 Open Evenings till 0 p.m. , Multiple Ltoflng Service
O'NEIL
4 New Custom-Quality , BEAUTY-RITE HOMES
OPEN ■
2	to 5 Mon. thru Fri.
1 to 5 Sat. and Sun.
J . . 4175 LEDGESTONE . . .
3	bedrooms end foil basement. All Beauty Rita features. Dixie Highway to Waterford Post Office, turn left
. on Ledgestone.	■, ■■■-•
. . , 4808 BLUEGRASS .
' You are. Invited to Inspect our lovely Beauty Rite ranch with a walk-out basement and ell the deluxe features found wily In f toer homes.
. . . 4027 BLUEGRASS . . . if you like colonials, we can shew you styling dt Its finest In the 4-bedroom BEAUTY-RITE. it feature* a spacious family room with fireplace, separate dining room, .marble window ctlls, 2Vi-car attached garage and many, many other extras. .Several of our/iep-py Beauty ■ Rite - customers' could not have purchesd our home if we hadn't talked' trad*. It's easier than ypu thlnkl Drive through Clarkston to me Expressway, turn left on Btuegrass.
, . . . 3154 ANGELUS DRIVE . New 3-bedroonl ranch on the golf course. Modern built-in kitchen, large family room, walk-out basement plus attached 2'A-car garage. Dixie Highway fo Silver Lake Road. Right to Walton Blvd., left to Angelas Drive, right to mdd--itfl. ■
1 LET'S TALK TRADE
RAY O'NEIL, Realtor
GILES
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Owners out of state. Must tell large mobile station. Could be used for most business purposes. Good loekle. Immediate possession — *25,000, terms. -
NEW YEAR INVESTMENT. Last -property of estate to be sold sharp Income. Plastered wells. Gas heat. Garage. Won't lest long. Only *11,500.
WEST OF CITY. Sharp bl-level. 3 bedrooms, lto baths, get heat. Carpeted living room. Family room. Good local*. Only *15,900.
GILES REALTY CO,
KAMPSEN
East Off Joslyn
In LeBeron, Northern end- Madison School Districts. Within walking distance to Pontiac Motora. Owner hat outgrown this 5-room, 2ibed-room with partially finished attic lor third bedroom, carpeted living
room, basement, gas heat, linear garaga with 22'xO' screened patio, aluminum storms and
screens, paved drive. Only *12.950 , — Term* or, frag*.
Pioneer Highlands
Three-bedroom, story -end • e • half brick, carpeted living room, ceramic tile beth, full basement, gas heet, ’recreation room, un-car garage, paved street and lake privileges.' Only *14,230. Terms or trad*.
100 Acre Farm
Grovelend Township, 10-eer* lake and four-bedroom modern home, 34'x40’ horse barn, 3W miles from 1-75. In Holly Recreation area. Only (400 per acre. Terms.
MLS
1071 W. HURON ST. FE 4-0921 AFTER 0 PM. CALL FE 2-3417
HAYDEN
NEW HOMES
3 BEDROOMS TRI-LEVELS RANCHES
lvn-C*r Garage 03’ Lot included Family Room	Gat Heal
FROM $10,500 ■
10 PER CENT DOWN WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOT OR OURS
Open Mon. thru Set. 9-5
J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor
BM 3-4404, 1075) Highland Rd. (M59)
CLARK
LOON LAKE CANAL ~ Brick ranch. 2 bedrooms plus family room, for possible third, dining room, IW baths, bullMnt in kitchen and combination refrigerator end freezer, large bedrooms, gas heet, water softener, Incinerator, 2-c*r attached garage, fenced yard nicely landscaped, lot 7S'xl92', carpeting, dock Included, underground sprinkling system. 129,900, 10 per cent down Plus coiti..,
WATER FRONT ON LOON LAKE
—	3-Mdroom aluminum bfleyot, 2 kitchens, 2 belhs, 2 llreplecet, gam* room, recreation room, den, 2to-e*r attached garage, nicely landscaped, lots of cxtrac. Owner he* bum new hem* end will give Immediate nottsetton, *30,000 — Terms,
WEST SUBURBAN LAKE FRONT
—	Exclusive Area, 4-bed room brick contemporary ranch, 2 fireplaces, family room, bullt-lns, 2 full belhs, carpeting, drapes, deck and rail Included, attached tVy-cer brick garage. Beautiful, beautiful toi, tooV 250-, with loir of sandy beech. Whit* Lake town*hip, kilt Waterford School District. Ml,900. forms.
' R|AL.J*IATtt 3101 W. HURON IT. FE 3-7tM>-W* Buy, 8*11 and Trade Multiple Listing Service
BATEMAN
YOU CAN TRADE
LAKE FRONT	'
SPACIOUS 7-room brick rancher, 2-car garage and large 100-X240' site.'Loaded with extra features, family room with outside balcony feeing lake, puflt-ln bar with-Sink and runnlhg water, and outside petto. Beautifully landscaped, lust west of town and less than 2 years old. Priced at lust 832,900 with reasonable" down payment and terms. Compsro and convince yourself.	i
MOTORWAY DRIVE
OWNER TRANSFERRED. Wonderful lake privilege* on much desired Elizabeth Lake. Property overlooking Pontiac Golf Club, 3-bedroom 2-cer garage. Superb landscaping and fenced yard. IPs ’real nlcel You should see It today at lust *18,950 with 81,900 down plus costs.
ON THE WATER
CANAL FRONT between Otter and Cass Lakes. Real nice, large 2-bedroom. Spacious living room with fireplace and beamed ceilings end tots of room. Kitchen wife bullt-lns, duo-paps windows1 throughout and attached garage. Wonderful for boat lovers as you have easy access to both Otter and Sylyan Lakes. Prided to sell quickly so don't wait. *14,950 with *1,500 down plus costs.
FRINGE- BENEFITS
A-PLENTY In this 3-bedroom brick rancher with all the extra features you desire. Putt basement with recreation room, oversize 2-ctr garage, end complete swimming pool with all the accessories Including pump and filter. Excellent lake privileges on Lotus Lake makes this a real deal at . *17,500 with *1,750 down plus costs. Call todayl
COUNTRY' BRICK RANCHER
CHARMING AND RESTFUL atmosphere In this scenic Oxford location. Over-size woodad tot overlooking park with lake privileges on 2 privet* lakes. Two hug* bedrooms, family room with fireplace, IV* baths and attached 2-cer garage. Country living at Its finest that you will enloy. Custom quality and value priced at (23,950 with *2,400 down plug costs.
IDEAL LOCATION
CLOSE TO TEL-HURON and city bus lust one block. Three bedrooms all on one floor, forced air heat end excellent condition, ideal for newlyweds or retired couple. (8,950 with *950 down and no mortgage costs. Your credit mutt be good.
NO RACE
, FOR SPACE HERE In thl* new three-bedroom trllevel. Beautifully finished family room tor the children with adloinlng Vi-bath, combination range and oven and large roomy kitchen with factory built prefinished cabinets. Brick and aluminum and flbraglat Insulated. Convenient location on blacktop street |ust outside town. Yours for only *14,050 Wtth *1,500 down or you may trade your present home equity. CALL NOWI
GUARANTEED TRADE-IN PLAN
TRADE-IN PLAN
BATEMAN REALTY will guarantee sal* of your present home on our GUARANTEED HOME TRADE-IN PLAN. Call tor appointment.
377 S. Telegraph Realtor PS 0-7141
Open Dally 9-9 MLS Subdey 1-3
dorriT
tot 100x347' with email creek bordering \ ..property. Spoil year-old home for tel* becai owner transferring to Kslsman 3 large bedrooms. * kitchen
wit* will be crazy about, fm _______
family room with natural fireplace. 2 belhs, folly automatic water sottner end attached g* rag*. 818,300.
PRICE REDUCTION, vacant and ready for occupancy la this "Show i Boat Home.'* 3-bedroom brick ranch homo located west suburban with oil ally convenience*. 818,900 win now buy this | homo wtth wall-to-w*ll carpeting, living and dining area, tv* belhs, ) lull basement end large covered psilo.
CLARKSTON SCHOOLS, locale* thl* large 3-bedroom ranch home within 1 block of 1-71, 14x14' living room wtth fireplace, loxlt* kitchen, foil beiemenl and attached garage. 113,930.
OAKWOOD MANOR — Lovely deluxe 4-bedroom ronch typo borne. Located just one block tram excellent beach. Has city wafer, 2Vi baths, 3 fireplaces, full basement - partitioned Into 4 room* amt -the master bedroom has private -full bath. Situated on largo wooded tot and Is In the Pontiac Northern High end Kennedy Jr. High school district.
4-FAMILY INCOME — Lalrge brick home converted-into Income. Completely furnished. Has full .basement, separate utilities . except heet. 3-car garage, income 'at present ‘ Is S3S0 per month. A sound investment situated on wosf side.
NORTH END — Vary nice 2-bedroom bungalow with hardwood . floors. Carpeting, full besemenf with new gas fornace. New eieefrlc hot -water heater. 1 car garage end -situated on 2 lovely lots. On paved street near bus and shopping canter.
CaMMERICAL - 214 feet of frontage dn Union Lake Rd wife a well constructed building. Hat 2 apartments up, one Is finished and the other roughed in. Would rent for at least 875 with living qoar-,-ters free. Down stairs Is a large area that could be used as a garage repair, or what have you. A good chance to get into business for yourself. Moderate down payment on land contract to responsible ouyer.
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR 298 W. Walton	FE >78*3
NICHOLIE
CLARKSTON AREA 3-bedroom ranch home located -on . paved street,. automatic:, heat, til* bath, lust decorated. A real buy and you need only closing cost* fo move In.	"
EAST SIDE	> '« '
3-bedroom brick with full basement, auto heat, hardwood floors, tlto bath, decorated and about S80O . moves you In.
R3t»drooms for only 87,950 — dec-oraed, auto, heat, payments less than rent.
OFF BALDWIN
3-bed room homo with felt -basement, hardwood floors, decorated and payments less than rant.
Eves Call Mr. Casfefl FE 2-727$
Income Properly
50
TO SETTLE- ESTATE, FURNISHED 4-apirtment income, 810,000. FE >3048.	■■ I-
Lake Property G/-Y3I.
BEAUTIFUL DAIS LAKE FRONT, wards Point. Custom built, Rumen brick, tiled -roof ranch Mam*. Koto sized room*. Country kitchen. Buiit-in* gator*. Carpeting. Drapes. AH appliances. 3-car garage. Excellent beach. 0 yaari old. 345,000.
Blwood Realty 402-2410	462-003S
HOME SITES, 80" X100', SUNNY Beach overlooking’ beautiful Wel-. ters Lake privileges. 2 taMy beeches, docking, $750, *io down, *10 month. Owner. MY 241940. __
~ LAKE FRONT '
Water levels ere below- normal — so ere the prices. NOW Is the time to BUY THIS close-in 24-unlt water-front apartment site and 15 beautifully wooded lake-front and leko-vlow home sites- All tor only 800,000. 23 .per cant down — Pay balance In 5 years — no fntorest. 1
GORDON WILLIAMSON
GALLERY of HOMES 4044 W. MAPLE ^	444-2535
BIRMINGHAM
LAKE FRONT HOMES, NEW AN& used. J, L, Dally Co. EM >7114.
LAKE LIVING, PONTIAC 15 M(l> utas, lot* $795, 010 down, S» month. Swim, fish, boat docks. FE 4-4509, OR >1295, Bloch Bars.
WANT YOUR PRICB9 CALL NORM RICE - REALTOR '
Northern Property	51-A
HARTWICK PINES AREA, NEAR Grayling. 10 seres, 01,IW. ,820 down, 820 a month. Bloch Bros. OR 3-1293, FE 4-4309. •	: wfr.
Suburban Property ,	53
A COUNTRY HOME
On an acre ot land. 3 bedroom*. A modern kitchen wlttt built-ins. Full basement. 814,895. 01,490 down.
C. PANGUS, REALTOR
430 M15	Ortonvllle
Cell Collect NA 7-2018
Lots-Acreage	"'J#
ACREAGE
10 WOODED ACRES. CIOM M expressway. *3,495.
41 ACRE*. Good 'and for subdividing Into > Ond 10-ecr* parcels. (350 par acre.
C. PANGUS, REALTOR
430 M15	Ortonvllle
Cell Collect NA 7-201S
Building Sites Vi * 10 Acres
MANY ON PAVED ROADS LOW AS *1,230 LOW AS *250 DOWN
LADD'S, INC.
3805 N. Lapeer Rd, Perry (M24) FE 5-9291 or OR 8-12)1 attar 7:30 Open daily ll-o, Sunday 1M
CANAL LOTS
Choice building altos — 40x147. Connected with Sylvan Lake.
JACK LOVELAND
8110 Casa Leke Rd.
413-1258	>	.
cHDici..1-At!Ri~T5YT~iri IUb'-
dlvlston near Oakland university-Also near 1-71 interchange. 81,200 (1.800, Beautiful rolling country side.
BUY NOW-BUILD LATER TROY REALTY 500-4400
YOUR CHOICE, s-lo f6 140. 6A 8-2013. A. Senders, Rep, H. Wilson.
Solo Farms
TS
___ .	„	___ beater
tor Ih* newly weds Is wrtsi this 2 bedroom bungalow located ell Walton would be. Just 8800 down and 170 month will move you Into this folly tniuleted homo with ook floors end shaded toi.
0DRRI3 4 ION, REALTORS 88)4 oTxi* Hwy. r 6r 4-03*4 MIIL rlPt h LISTING SERVICE
H. C. NEWINGHAM
8L
Lands for iHvuitmtnt lAcreags for Building Farms With Buildings UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATf
l8T0 VlIHNMTWIWriWSiM No. 3 new available.
CRAWFORD AGENCY J,
MY 1-11431	MY >4871
Wot
Ur
rforcl HiiT Manor
Large a,kata tola On on* of Oakland county's moot heeuHftrt out, division*. Priced
OP&nVdAILY TO mi, v
D0N\WHITE, iNCT,, '
4IPEN txAll.Y TO • P. M,
1891 Dixie H
,-ih
t’OHi 1 '
m
TriE PCXj^'IlAC PRJ^SS, MONDAY,	4, 1965
-	Preperty 57
. ?T ' 12ACRK
' M-2. General Industry. Waterford Township. $21,000 terms. Drayton Plains ares.	■ ■ ■»	.
jhsj	1V4 ACRES
Watortord. Township, zoned C-2. Over 500 ft. road frontage.
1;m i acre
' 450 ft. road frontage, zoned C-1.
p	4.35 ACRES
Telegraph Road, zoned industrial.
: Waterfqrd Township.
BATEMAN
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 367 S. Telegraph
Open Mi	> After 5:00
FE 0-9441	■, V ; PE HCT
ORCHARD LAKE FRONTAGE
40* With access from another street — Sewer and water. Priced for quick tale. . -Tt,'
K. L. Templeton, Realtor
2339 Orchard ‘Lake Road - 402-0900
Business Opportunities 59
BEAUTY SHOP. FULLY EQUIPPED for 1 or 2 operators on Dixie Highway. 462-4563.	’’
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY MAN OR woman In this area to own and opearte a route of machines dls-triutlng nationally adv. products. We establish route, car and references desirable, minimum Investment 8985 reqiured. Good opportunity .tor spare time income, or full time business. - write king DIST, Co., 37)0 Central Ave., M, DlST CO., 3710 Central Ave., Mpls., Minn., 55421, include phone.
Monty to low
(Licensed Money tnrtderj^
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
it
Mortgage Loons
62
1st and 2nd MORTGAGES
SI,200 OR MORE k NO APPLICATION FBfeS 682-2300 SYLVAN 625-1886 24 Hour Service — 334-8222
CASH - CASH
FOR
Home Owners
WIDOWS, PENSIONERS CAN BE ELIGIBLE.
CHECK, LOWEST RATES
SUM ....:.......i..... S 6.25
Slow  ........ ......... 812J9
$4,000 ................ 825.78
2nd mortgages slightly higher Borrow for ANY useful purpose Consolidete Bills	New Car
New Fumltura
Home repair and modernization
FE 8-2657
If you can't call . . . Mail Coupon
Loan-by-Bhone
15 W. Lawrence St., Pontiac Rush details Of your new plan
Name ____...___..._________
Phone ........................
city ........:	;	...	.
Sole Household Goods --January Specials—
65
fafaefaKijtoHieefa
GAS FURNACE, USED, LIKE HJE ? ;': - v FE 2*7764	\ ..
HEAT FOR 1-3 LESS WITH GAS/ Hday service A !■ H. MA 5-1501
GE 12* family size refrigerator,	STL’* x,.v.e.r eueaii
big ffaezar	.	■	$178.001 JIM'S SALVAGE OUTLET* EVERY
big. freezer
2-door, automatic defrost refrlg
orator, Phllco, now ... $198,80
Easy spinners, new ...... $128.00
THE
- GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP
OF PONTIAC 51 W. Huron St ‘ FE 4-1555
KIRBY VACUUM CLEANER
thing brand new. Fire salvage. Prices wholesale or lower. Corner Airport hi Hatchery. OR 4-0818.'
KITCHEN UNITS BY KITCHEN KOMPACT Visit our models on display. Terms Available
Plywood Distributors
1	of Pontiac * i
375 N. Cass _______w FE 2-C
LATE MODEL HEARING AIR cost S34S, sell tor 3128. OR 3-4757.
nDUifonnBEDS' S°FA AND i LAVATORIES COMPLEX 'iRMJO value $14.95, also bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls* Irregulars, terrific values. Michigan Fluorescent, 373 Orchard Lake, 1. -.................. ■■■	: "
chair, OR 3-5100.
METAL BUNK BED, $8. COM Piete, $20. Call FE 5-4392.
NECCHI (“AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG sawing machine. Does embroidering, regular stitches, button-holes, everything. Used. Pay off occount
9 ™?,hhs »' « per,nm0^!l " 4x8 plasterboard	-
472 cash oalanca in modern Avj v^iroovod mohooshv walnut cabinet - Universal Co. 4X7 v-groovea manogany FE 4-0905.
LUMBER
! Rock lath
SECRETARY DESK OVER 100 ;x8xto Plyscora ................
years old. Used furniture. G-M Huron cement
Paint Store. 1619 Auburn Rd.,	(Abovrln 15-or more)
Rochester.
SPECIAL
$20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE — Consists of
$ .99 $4.45 $1.19
Burmeisters
ffiSSSl &C j	8^m.
POOL TABLES—8ELAIRE .	41 4-0900
CORNER, 400 ON OPDYKE, , 335 on Mt. ClemOns. $42,500 OR 4-0118 - or — OR 3-9001.
ORIVE-IN DOG 'N SUDS Drive-In . Corp. invites you to attend PROSPECT MEETING . IN Pontiac, Michigan, at Holiday Inn on Telegraph Road, January is, , 1965. Learn how you can become financially Independent -by associating with the world's fastest growing drlvo-In chain, with more man 500 stores from coast to coast. NO ROYAL, TIES! Contact Dog 'n Suds, Inc, Box 546, Champaign, Illinois, or phono 356-7296 for details. FRANCHISE AVAILABLE TO OWN and operate your own, business from your homo. Excellent opportunity for full time, husband and . wife dr retired man. Reliable 40-1 year-old film not presently in this area Is mating a line of plastic coating products known as Plasta-! told.,; These products will cover-j and protecr any materiel and they I ate superior' to anything on me market today. This 1$ a rare opportunity mat will enable you to go Into a full Or* a part time bull-1 ness wim a good income. Small | Investment required for stock. Ex i elusive fights available for all or 1 part of Oakland County. Write particulars to:
Bloomfield Distributing Co.
P. O. Box 394 «T Bloomfield Hills, Michigan fan, $3. OL $4)865.	______________ I
MORTGAGE ON ONE ACRE UP. With 150-foot frontage. -No appraisal fee. B. D. Charles, Equitable Farm Upon Service. 682-0704.
7-piece bedroom suite with double \ NEW AUTOMaTIC'WFTER^SOFT-dresser chest, lull size bed with f M	~
Innerspring	mattress	and	box- ;
springs to match	with 2	vanity
.. lamps.
5-piece dinette set, 4 chrome chairs. 1 Formica top table, V bookcase,
9x12 rug included. All tor $399.
WYMAN FURNITURE CO.
17	E. HURON	FE	4-4981
18	W. PIKE	FE	2-2150
Swaps
63
1955 MERCURY, 312 CU. PONTIAC AFB 4 barrell on ‘ Ford intake. Floor shifty. Elec, guitar and AMP. Prefer bass considered for trade In. FE 2-1470.______
BLOND TV, 24" FOR ELECTRIC
dryer. OR 3-3473.__.»	‘
GllRMAN SHEPHERD FEMALES, rnonms. AKC Beauties. Sell or trade for ?. UL 2-1657.
SHORT ORDER RESTAURANT equipment complete, includes booms. $800 or trade equal value. „ FE 8-2348. ■	'■	' -
WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE ICE skates, skis, toboggans, ski boots and guhs dally: 'til 9.. Barnes-• Hargrave Hardware, 742 W, Huron, FE 5-9101. Open Sunday.
-USED ELECTRIC DRYER, GOOD condition, $40. Treadle Singer sew- j ing machine, $5. 4 oak chairs with ! arms, $3 each. Electric window -fan, $3. OL 1-0865.	” i
USED TV's 1	'	$19.95
REFRIGERATOR	$39.95 ;
Sweat's Radio & Appliance Inc.
422 W. Huron	,	' 334-5677 j
; WINTER .CLEARANCE j
1 30" Frlgldalro range,' 1964 model.
1 Frigldaire freezer, upright.
1 Frigldaire Dishwasher.
ALL SPECIALLY PRICED.
? ' CRUMP tLtCTRlC
3465 Auburn Ave._________FE 4-3573
WASHER, $25, ELECTRIC STOVE, j $35. Dryer, $25. Refrigerator with top freezer, $49. Gas -stove, 325. 21-inch TV $25. Refrigerator $25. V. Harris. FE 5-2766.
PLUMBING BARGAINS. FREE-Standing toilet, $16.95. 30-gallon heater, $47.95; 3-piece bam sets $50.95. Laundry tray, trim, $19.95; shower stalls with trim $34.95;
2-bowl sink, $2.95;.Lavs., $2.95;
tubs, $10 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 84) Baldwin. FE 4-1516,
Kfci) TAG SALE
20 par cent discount on any article bought with red tag. New and used-typewriters, adding machines, desks and other office -pieces — CALL FORBES, OR 3?W.
MOTELS
C.B. CHAPIN, Motel-Broker
EL 7-0600
' PARTY ST0RE-SDD
MICHIGAN
Business Sales, Inc.
John landmesser, broker _
1573 S, Telegraph_FE 4-1582
PROFITABLE 2 MAN OPERATION restaurant. Real hot spot. $1,500 down plus Inventory. Ideal location (or 24 hour.day operation. On main highway. Illness forces’ sale. Call now ask for Mrs. Motley, 363-6703.
HACKSTT REALTY .
■	7760 Cooley Lako Rd. :
Root Beer—Drive-In
No. 5173. Excellent location on main highway In town of 1,200 population. Present owner storied . 2 years ago with franchise but can only operate 2 months a year because ot teaching lob. Only $16,000' tor equipment and real estate with only. $6,000 down. One payment per year ot 81,000 plus 6 per cent interest. Due Aug. IS each year.
STATEWIDE-LAKE ORION
338-0000	____Attar 5, OR 3-7000
: WANTED
Any type of good going business. ^Buyers with cosh,waiting. List with us for fast, action in the sale or trade of your business.
WARDEN REALTY
414 W. Huron, Pontiac ,	333-7157
San Clothing .	64
BARGAIN BOX
465 S. Woodward,, Birmingham (Just So. of bus station)
January Clearance Sale
WINTER ITEMS REDUCED, I ft-CLUDING ALL WHITE TAGS WHICH WILL BE W OF PRICE ' MARKED ON TAG.
WINTER CONSIGNMENT CLOSED. NOW ACCEPTING SPRING CONSIGNMENTS.
Hours — dally 10 a.m.-5 p m„ Tues., 1-9 p.m.. Sat. 9-12 noon. Consignment hours — Mon., Wed., Thurs., 10 a.m.-2 p.m. '
IYman's
SPRED-SATIN PAINTS; WARWICK Supply# 2678 Orchard Lake. 682-2820 STAINLESS STEEL DOUBLE: SINKS $29.95. G. A. Thompson# 7005 M59
West. ___________• ,	-*
s i a l l Showers complete with faucets and curtains. $69.50 ' value $34:50. Lavatories complete with faucets $14.95# toilets $18.95 Michigan Fluorescent# 393 Orchard Lake 37.
STEAM CLEANER# $100 QR 3-1179
$29.95
$39.95
$39.95
$49.95
$49.95
TALBUil LUMtitK
Pafnf closeout Sale. ‘Interior taytex. enamel and Plastra Tone# |l to
USED BARGAIN STORE At our 18 W. Pike Store Only Table and floor lamps from $ 2.95 Eiec. Ironers from ...
Apt. size gas stove 6-pc. dining room suite 2-pc. living room suite Guar. elec, washer
Guar. eiec. refrigerator	.......... .. ______ f..,	______
EASY TERMS	FE 4-1866 I Clothing, "Furniture# and Appliances
THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE ■	118 W. LAWRENCE ST.
$69.95 , Everything to meet your needs
WE TAKE TRADE - INS. FAMILY j TWO PAIRS OF BI-FOLD MAHOG Home Furnishings# 2135 Pixie Hwy. . any doors' -to fit finished opening
Antiques
65-A
wide by 6'9" high or units can be used together in' finished 7'1Q". $20 per unit or $40 for both units. Phone OR 3-7771.
LARGE RUSSELL PAINTING OF .	._________________
"Scene in Venice." Smaller < of USED GAS AND OIL FURNACES. "Mousetower#" "Scene in Winter-, rhundipr H«Atina. no %.uao time"-,and Scene "In The Summertime"’. Must be seen to be appreciated at 3340 Eastwood Dr.,
R. E: Thompson.________*
OPPORTUNITY SHOP, — OPENS again January 5th. St. James Church, 355 W. Maple, Birmingham — Good clothing for the entire family. Tuesday. Thursday, Frl-day, 9:30-4:38. Sat. 9:30-1:30.
Sale Hausehald Goods 65 3-R00M OUTFITS
BRAND NEW FURNITURE
$288	. $3.00 WEEKLY
NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS
7-	piece (brand new) living room: davenport and chair, foam cushions, 2 step-tables, matching coffee table, 2 decorator lamps. All for $129. Only $1.50 weekly.
NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS
8-	plece (brand new) bedrooms: double dresser, book-case bed and chest, box spring and, innerspring mattress, 2 vanity lamps. All tor $129. $1.50 weekly.
Visit our trade-in department for more bargains. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pike	FE 4-7881
Open Mon. and Fri. 'til 9 p. m. Between Paddock and City Hall
Sale Land Cantracti
60
12 STRAIGHT BACK USED WOOD CHAIRS. Must be sold on a bid basis. 63 Oakland Ava.
*■	1 TO 50
LAND CONTRACTS
urgently wonted. See us bo (ore you deal.
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
1450 N. opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 _____Open Eves. *tll 8 p.m.
ACTION
on your land contract, large or small. Call Mr. Hitter, FE 2-0179 Broker. 3860 Elizabeth Lake Road.
Wantad CantractfMtg. 60-A
1 TO 50
LAND CONTRACTS
Urgently wanted. See us before you deal,
WARREN STOUT/Realtor I
1450 N. Opdvke Rd. FE 5-8165 !
Open Eves. 'Til I p. m.
CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS, I , private. FE 2-5961.
CASH
For equity or land contract. Smallest possible discount. Mortgages available. Cell Ted McCullough at. 682-1820.	i
AftRO REALTY SU^CASS^ELiZABETH ROAD CASH FOR LAND "CONfftACfS-H. J. Van Welt, 4560 Dixie Hwy., OR 3-1351
f NEED LAND CONRACTS, REA- j sonable discounts. Earl Garrets, Realtor, 6617 Commerce Road. | EMpIre 3-2511	EMpIre 3-4006 j
QUICK CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS Clark Real Estate, FE 2-7888, Ros. FE 4-4813, Mr. Clark.
Seas one d ~l and~o5nt r ac t s I wanted. Gel our deal before you sell. CAPITOL SAVINGS A LOAN , ASSN., 75 W, Huron. FE 4-0561.
Money ta Lean	611
(Licensed Money Linder) ‘
FINANCIAL
WORRIES
Let Us'Help You! BORROW UP TO $1,000
$6 month* to pay credit lift Iniurtnct available
BUCKNER
FINANCE COMPANY
OFFICII NEAR YOU___
LOANS to $1,000
To consolidate bills Into one monthly poyment. Quick service, with courteous experienced counsellors, Credit lilt Insurance available. Slop In or phono FK 58121.
HOME & AUTO LOAN CO.
7 N, Perry It,	P* 14121
_ 9 to 1 Dally, lot. 9 to I
LOANS
*25 to 81.000
L COMMUNITY LOAN CO.
20 «. Lawrence	F| 8-0411
LOANS f6
$1,000
,T*-„ on flrtt visit- Quick, friendly, hflptui.
#f 2-9206
lit the number to call.
OAKLAND LOAN CO.
usually
friendly,
102 Pontiac Itata Bank Bldg. 9l30 lo 6:20 - laf. 9:30 to 1
,,
IU to 81.000 ,
Insured Poymsml flan bakTrIi * LivinoItonr
ft 4-1538-9
BUIktlnO
$1.00 1vp $100.00 OFF Save 20 to 70 Per Cent “ CLEARANCE SALE
2<pt. Colonial living room suites# $172.00
2*pc. living room# .$79.00 4-pc. bedroom suites $69 to $99
bofa beds $59.00 Odd dresser $4.95 Rockers $15.00
3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE
BRAND NEW	\
with nice refrigerator end range
$317.00-$3.00 Per Week Basement—Factory Seconds
Plenty of clean guaranteed refrigerators# washers# and stoves. Lots of used furniture and factory seconds at bargain prices.
LIlTLk JOLS BakGAINS
1461 Baldwin at Walton FE 2-6842 First traffic light south of 1-75 Across Irony Allas Super Market
A SINGER
with walnut cabinet, used. Makes buttonholes, monograms, sews on | buttons, fancy stitches. All by selling of finger-tip dial. Payments ot 8135 e week. Guaranteed. Do- | melco, Inc., Formerly Michigan Neccnl-Elna. FE 8-452)._
AFTER HOLIDAY SPECIALS |
Pool Table	$59.50
Deluxe GE dishwasher ’$199.50 ;
Humidifiers	..... ,$49.95 ;
Electric 0ryer	$79.50'
GE 4-speed show-n-tell Player $23.88 ' Used color TV	$199.50	j
TERMS AVAILABLE
HAMPTON S ELECTRIC
825 W. HURON	FE .4-2525
OPEN TILL t P.M.	|
___THURSDAY* TILL FONLY______
~ AsiNGlR
Dlal-a-matlc In hardwood console, used. Just dial lor buttonholes, monograms, overcasting, blind hemming, etc. 5-year parts guarantee. Cash price 856,19 or $5 per month will handle. Rlchmen Brothers Sewing Center, Pontiac's ONLY authorized Necchl Dealer. 465 Elizabeth Lake Rd., across from the Pontiac Mall. 33S-92S3.
A World Famous Necchi
1964 Demonstrator# In brand naw cabinet. Has tig zegger tor button* holes# monograms# blind hems# ate. No complicated ettachemants to buy. Litetime guarantee end free Inatructions at Richman Broth* ars Sewing Center# Pontiac's ONLY authorized Necchi Deeler. Pull price lfr|*M or IS per month. 465 Elizabeth Lake Rd.# across from the Pontiac Malt.
IuIOeBs
Choloa ot IS styles, trundle bads, triple trundle bads and bunk bads complete. *49.50 and up. Pear-sun's Furniture, 210 I. Pika, tfdNZl OR CHRbMl DlNfetTd salt, BRAND NEW. Largo and small size (round drop leal, rectangular) • labial in j, 5 and 7 pc. sets. *24.95 and up,
PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 fc. 7Pika	FE 4 78*1
fURM, C A r G1 selecllun,“everything for your homo Family Hama Furnishings, 2135 Dixie Hwy., cor, Toltgraoh. IlECTRIC 49-INCH RANGE, 001) ble oven. Mod working condition, _ clean. SJ0. OA * 2*72.
FREIGHT DAMAGED
TV'S
STEREOS iANOII ■_ REFRIGERATORS WASHER AND DRYERS
FIRESTONE STORE
146 W, HURON ni-7917
FOR...SAC1 kINMORC Id" OAs
range, guod condition, Beil otter. Call after f p.m. U 64191.
SPECIAL DISCOUNTS ON MANY items this weekend. Y-Knot Antiques, 10345 Oakhill, Holly. ME 7-3,98. Vi Mi. East ot Dixie Hwy.
Hi-fi, TV & Radios - 6a
$5 BOTTLE OF COLOGNE FREE till otter New Years with any color TV, stereo, portable. Phif-co-Zenith Dealer - DALBY TV— FE 4-9802 — 348 East Lehigh St.
" BLOND RCA. 24" GE, BRAND 21" G6 .with doors, $49.95. Bill Petruska & Sons, Tel-Huron Shop-ping Center.
WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT discount prices. Forbes, 4500 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9767,
hanu l oo.i-i#lachmury
PRECISION1. TOOLS AND TOOL chest, $250.\673-4749r Table saw.VGkill press, shap
er. Power hack saw. FE 4.0031.
Cameras
70
FOR SALE PENCTAX 35 MM CAM-era H3V modal with black body and case. New (condition. Call LI 6-8192 after 5 p.
JANUARY CLEARANCE
USED ENLARGERS
Kodak 8x10........A..... ... $ 60
Solar 5x7	. .......V....... $ 50
National 45 Cold Life ......$ 60
Ocean 45 condenser \........ $95,
DeJur 45 Condenser .. A..... $ 75
Soiarmatic 120	.....\...... $65
Solar 120 .	......\.... $40
Rondo V/4 condenser . A.... $ 40
Row! 2«/4 condenser ...\..... $50
USED CAMERAS
WEBCOR TRANSISTOR TAPE RE- Crow" Graph!c 45 ’	S109
FOR !>ALE HARMON KARDON award series FM Stereo tuner. F500X. Excellent condition. $1/9 new, will sell for $115 Cash. Call after 5:00 p.m. Li 6-8192. Also soil Harmon Kardon Award Series A500 Interpreted Stereo Amplifier 50 Watt output, excellent con-dltlon. Good price at $100.
RECONDITIONED AND GUARAN-teed TVs. SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM.
JUHNSON'S RADIO & TV
45 E. WALTON	FE S-4569
MARMADUKE
id Leaning Boats-Accessories
‘‘What’s THIS? ‘Afternoon
. $25’I”
Sporting Goods
741 Travel Trailers
97
i SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES , Oh &19*6 boots, end motors tor - Chrlstmbi* oT tor iCbristmas alft purchases. Use our Lay-away Plan. No Intorost to pay,
BIRMINGHAM
BOAT CENTER North ot 1.4 Mtto »t Adams Rd.
1 "SPORTS MINDED'
BE SURE TO VISIT OUR NEW \ SPORTS DISPLAY DEPARTMENT Vice tkafas, hockey sticks, skis, Sleds, toboggans, guns, toetball, baseball,	ihuntlnp
goods. Mercury, Scott-McCulloch f motors, marine accessories and
TOBOATS-MOTORS—TRAILER S CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES ■ 63 f. Walton ’	v i j F6 8-4402
paint 9 to jt Sunday 12 to 6
KrSpe
ipeciai Deal * tp*
’66 28-ft. Owens express cruiser, "new*- 225 hj>. . iyis-V reduction gear, hardtoP, toaded. Free shin to shore radio and depth sounder.
WE TRADE BANK FINANCE WALT MAZUREK ■
LAKE 8. SEAMARINA Your local Owms dealer .
245 SI Blvd. E. I’ k " FE *9587, TONY'S MAR INE For JOHNSON MOTORS
Foreign Cert
1 105
2-OOOR,. SUN. ROOF heater, blue. DON'S. W 5. la-*jbr&; f*YS3«
1959 VW,
peor# -urwm«u mi'	^ m
1960 KARMANN G H I A CONVC^-ibto with black top and.: iynp pealing black finish. Radio# tiro* almost IIkenaw..Extra low mlto and true compact jeainomy. HOLIDAY SPECIAL. Futt' jtrtoo only sins' With *95 down antf tow bw*
t,«.TW•wi,SR^TY“n,
Autobahn
Motors,inc. .
authorized vw dealer
Vt mile north cl Miracle Mtte 1765 S- Talapraph ' FE 8-6531 1*81 RED MGA COUPE. WRE whaala and radio, car ln-A-1 shape. Ml 7-1740.
1963 AUSTIN HBALY SPRITE, good condition. Take over_ pay-
mants. OR 4-1313 between 3 and 8:30. |	I
WE WILL BEAT ANY DEAL Kart Boats, Motors, Lake Orion
Airplanes
99
88
BANKS ARCHERY SALES 24, Michigan Ava._____ FE 5-6264
GUNS: BUY-SELL-TRADE' Burr-Shell, 375 S. Telegraph SNOW MOBILES - FOR WINTER fun go Skl-Doo. All models on
SJlay. Up to 40 m.p.h. on bare und or snow. Only weighs 250 Come in and toko a ride. BILL COLLER Boats and Motors, 1 mile east of Lapeer on M2I.	.
1956 CUSTOM FORNEY- — RATES as No:, t in Michigan by Trade-e-Plarie, 98 HP, 47* TT, new King 150A radio, RB full panel, fresh ’ licensed, always hangar. $4,200. Less radio, $3,500. Call 7 to 9 p.m. Mt 6-2064. Will accept land con-tract, in trade, ■.:
METROPOLITAN, 19M.HARU I OP,
good cortdltlen. 626-0355.	-
REPOSSESSION ;
1964 vW 3kdobr; aadan, no mow
down) call Mr. Johnson, MA 5-2604, Dealer. ■
Haw and Iliad Caw	10*
1501 BALDWIN	' ,
2 BLOCKS NORTH OF WALTON Always a good selection ot fine cars and pickups. Easy terms.
Bob Rapp	Phil Dorman,
Salesman:
Jack Cooper FE 1-2641
SALES
Sand—Gravel—Dirt
76
ARE YOU FLORlOA BOUND?
Get your travel trailer now.
AVALAIRS, CREES, v HOLLYS*TAWAS^
14W to 28 ftv self-contained ^ '' Winter storage available.
ELbWOtTlH MfO
and iRAILEk SMF.S	always buying and paying ....	. T,'."/ f. aaab
6577 Dixie Hwy.	MA 5-1400 MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS I960 BUICK LeSABRE. 4.-DOOR
STINSON 108-1, J5 HORSEPOWER. 225 hours SMOH Oh A 8* E, 1516 : hours XT* VHT-2, olrcratt completely reullt 12-14-63. NS194 K at METTETAL airport, 4 $3,400. PA 8-2210. . ' .
Hew ami Used Cnrt 106
_1»» CHEVY S197.	*
King Auto^ Sales
3275 W, Huron St.	*-40**
1959 CHtEVY	AUtOMAHt
power steering, brakes, radto^ now tires. Engine needs work. 6787*1#
ottor 6.	- ' ,	_____ ■
1959 CHEliOLiT *, WL AIR jJ-door. Vary nice. FE 3-7542. H. RIg-glns, Dealer.
I960 CORVETTE HARDTOP. GOOD condition. FE 5-0901 bWora 5 pjtt.
. 1960 CHEVROLETS
25 Month! Chevy OK ” Warranty
Blscayne 2door sedan. Ermine white with tparkllgn gray trim. 6-cy Under engine, PowOrgllda, radio, heater. 29,000 actual miles ami only ,,,	....8*95
Parkwood Station Wagon, 6-passen-senger. Cascade green: with match-Ing ijrlm, V-8, Po^ltoa. povmr steering, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only .........*895
Patterson Chevrolet Co.
1104 S. Woodward Ava. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM
Wanted Cari-Trucks 101
Tel-A-Huron Motor Sales
sells carl with NO MONEY DOWN,
s 36 MONTHS TO PAY, CREDTT NO - _____________
problem. We trade UP or DOWN. 1765 S. Tatograph
All trades ACCEPTED. Wa sell |	----M
all makes from 1955 to 1962. All priced,frdm $39 to $1,OOP.
FE 8-9661	1
1961 CORVAIR MONZA COUPE. AU-tomatlc transmission^ M*nd( JI7,J*# certified actual mttM.jBF»l«6n» Autumn Gold, showroom condition. Only *995. Thror tg choose from, (t) with aapoodjranimlaaton. All only $95 down with tow bank ratee on the balance.
Autobahn
Motors# Inc#
AUTHORIZED VW DEALER . Vk mile north of Minqln Mile_
REPOSSESSION
196) CHEVY cortvortlbto, no monav down, call Mr. Johnson. MA 5-2604, Pooler. *_____________________
BILL MALE'S PIT. FILL, GRAVEL, dozing, back hoe work. EM 3-6373.:
: ; save, , \ -v,
New r64 models. 16 and. 19 tt. Winnebago's. Large discount.'pickup box covers,	' \
E SALES # -RENT ■ . \
^	F. E. HOWLAND
LAKE DREDGING.- BEACH SAND, 3255 Dixie	OR 3-1456
gravel and till. OR 3-5850.	, --------------------------
TOP SOIL, SANO, GRAVEL, PILL.,
FE 8-1622	’	. ■
CHOICE RICH BACK DIRT, SIX yards tor 8i0, delivered. FE 4-6588.
PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS Supply, sand, gravel, fill . dirt. OR . 3-1534.	-	V
TERRIFIC SALES UP UNTIL JAN, 10th whan we will close for our vacation until March 1st. Thank you for .your patronage. JACOBSON TRAILER SALES AND KcNi-AL, 5690 Williams Lake Rd., Dray-ton Plains. OR 3-5981.
Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel
77
TRAVEL TRAILERS AND TRUCK campers.' Pontiac Auto Brokers, Perry at Walton, FE.4-9*00.
ASK FOR BERNIE AT -
dirtMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC.
912 S. Woodward_______Ml 7-3214
AyERtU'S ‘
We have ordars tor 100 late models.
L	"Check the rest ■
\	but get the best"
AVERILL'S
FE 2-9878	2020 Dixie • PE 4-6896
hardtop, Rmtor, ’ whitewalls, .radio and heater, excellent condition: Vary reasonable. 66 W; Princeton. FE SwO^aftor 5 p.m. iwi BUICK, 4-DOOR. 1-OWNER. $795. OR 3-2877.	’ .	■
Housetrailers
8$
Ldiiiorma buyers , §
tor\i»rp; .cars.*'Call . ’. j.-
#VV& M MoTOft SALES
• 7- , (vV, 2527 Dixie Hwy ,
■■ OR 4-0308
1963 BUICK WILDCAT; 6-SPEED, 2-door hardtop. Bucket seats, real fast. Only $2,088.	.	:
FISCHER A < ' BUICK
: 515 s. Woodward
\MI 4-9100
18- AND 24-INCH OAK FIREPLACE wood, also slab wood. 338-0291.
CANNEL COAL - THE IDEAL	______MIH
fireplace fuel, ttreplace^ wood£ fire- 1959 SKYLINE, 10x45, ASKING $1800 Man	A“n BUD *■ best offer, 8)9-6440 between
DAN AND LARRY'S - DRY SLAB wood. $10 cord, 2 tor $19 delivered., FE 2-8449 or 673-8536
,962 ALMA. MUST SELL. FRONT Kitchen, 2 bedrooms 10'x55'. Lest oWer. MA 4-2967.
Pats—Hu.rting Dogs 79
I OF THE BEST AKC DACHSHUND pups# stud dogs. Jaheims# FE 8*2538. 3 COCKER PUPS# 2 AAALES# 1 FE*
Colonial
AAobilhome Sales
Special Offer
Did . You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER.	!
Pays more for' ANY make used car Call for Appraisal
666 5. Woodward	Ml 6-3900
MANSFIELD AUTOSALES	i
we're buying sharp, lata modal cars ... nowl Sea us today!
HIM Baldwin Ava,
FE 5-5900
1963 BUICK
Skylark,' 2-door hardtop, ... . steering, vinyl tap, sharp. $1,895.
VAN CAMP QiEVY v
MILFORD	MU 6-1825
1961 Chevrolets
. 25 Months Chevy 0k Warranty '
I madia 4-door sedan. Twilight turquoise with matching trhn. y-e angina, Powergttde* power steering, radio, heater, whitewall*.- 20,000 actual miles. ........ *1.195
Parkwood 9-patsangar wagon. Pawn beige finish with fawn Interior. V-8 engine, Poworgttde, pdWdr steering, whitewalls. Real aharp and' 'Only .,.....;.v,... „ $1,095
Patterson Chevrolet Co.
power i .1104 S. Woodward Ava. kJ Ml 4-2735
mala, AKC available, *60. 879-6440 Vagabond: 12' Wide "Factory Cost"
between #3:30 p.m.
5-GALLON AQUARIUM, PUMP AND ,, filter set, $9. 10-gallon setup, $12
Crane's. UL 2-2200.	______
II DARLING MUTTS, FATHER AKC Coilie, Mother Toy Collie. S10 to gpod homos. MY 3-2867.______j
$50 REWARD FOR SIAMESE TOM Cat Ipst on Jan. 1 near Pontiac Rd. at Oakland University. 332-9401.
A-1 POODLE GROOMING, $6. STAN-dard, $8 and up. Toy males at - stud. 674-0215 or 673-3743.
AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. STUD dogs. ESTELHEIMS, FE 2-0889.
JfcT ULACK maLe TOY FOO-dle puppy. 682-0189.
Auburn (M59) at Qpdyxe (M24)
LOOK WINTER SALES
AAARLETTE, GARDNER, YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS. Also many good used trailers.
OXFORD’TKAILER SALES
1 mile south ot Lake Orion on M24 MY 2*0721
SPECIAL-TRICE
PAID FOR 1955-1963 CARS	,
VAN'S AUTO SALES	!
4540 Dixie Hwy.________OR 3-1355
TOP 5 FOR CLEAN CARS OR trucks. Economy Cars, 2335 Dixie.;
BRITTANY PUPS, 15 WEEKS OLD, AKC registered. EM 3-3052.
SONY CAR TV, FE 4-3235, attar 6 p.
Six weeks old—one male-one female—AKC registered— Papers furnished. ’
CALL MA 5-1517	_____
Pancnurst i railer Sales
FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING IS TO 60 feeL Featuring naw Moon*
WANTED; 1959*1983 CARS
Ellsworth
AUTO SALES
6577 Dixie Hwy.	MA i
corder, S75. 335-3709 after 6 p.m,
Water Softeners 66-A
WATER SOFTENER RENTAL, UN-limited gallonage# $3 per month. 673-1277. Universal Soft Water.
For Sola Miscellaneous 67
'A- AND 8.M1-HORSEPOWER SUMP
B, new# used end exchanged#	-
bases# guaranteed# your mo-. 8X,U iraVs tor or oufs# Cone's. FE 5*5643.	kl ^ i #*	-
■ New Dark Room Course
STARTS JAN. 12
Speed Graphic 34	—....... $ 89
Speed Graphic 2?	  $60
4x5 Graphic View
with 8*inch Ektar .... $147.50
USED MISCELLANEOUS
Lott 23*inch Dryer .......... $ 34
Spotlight and stand .......... $ 9
Sheet Film hangers ............ 55c
Sheet film tanks ............. $ 2
Contact Printers ........* — $ 5
Enlarging easelif ...... ..... $
75c
1 WEEK ONLY
i. *■> by,,'4, Sapell paneling, $3.95 Enrollment Is limited. 6 weeks 4 by 7 pre-flnlsh^ mahogany *3.39 course only $1$, We also have re-30 end 36 Birch by-fold doors with touching courses starilng end of hardware $9.95.	j,n
PONTIAC PLYWOOD	!	A 11 TAMCDA
1488 Baldwto___________FE 1-3543	A-U LAIVltKA
2 OIL SPACE HEATER'S, GOOD	»30 W. 9 Mile Rd.
condition. 682-0254.	,______, P»fnt|6|e_________■______Ll 3-1730
9'X!2' LINOLEUM RUGS ml"EACH ; MusIcOl Goods	71
Plastic wall tile	1c ea.
Richway Poodle baton
All bread professional grooming A compioto lino ot pot supplies 821 OAKLAND (next to Ziebarts) Open dally 8-4	Fe 8-0826
.PKINGbR PUPPIES, AKC, lOP
quality. Ml 6-9856.____________
T. BERNARD PUPPIES, ARC registered. *150. Phone 517-337-1561. 49u2 Grandview, Okemos near Lan-
sing-_______________‘_______
TROPICAL FISH AND SUPPLIES. Union Lake Peed. 7215 Cooley Lk. Rd.	... •	____________
86 Tiros-Auto-Truck
Celling tile — wall paneling, cheap. BAG Tile. FE 4-9957, 1075 W. Huron 2MNCH USED TV	$29.95
Walton TV FE 2-2257 Open 9-9 515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn A CUSTOMitlcIlG-ZAG SlWINO machine with wood console, used. Monograms, horns, makes button-
ontee. Domelco, Inc. (Formerly Michigan Nocchl-Elna). FE 8-4521.
ANCHOR FENCES
NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 I
A SINGER
In walnut console. Zlg-sagger makes blind hems on dresses, buttonholes, overcasting, etc. Used. I Take on payments of $5 per month j tor S months or new balance of i $36.80. 5-vear parts guarantee. Richman Brother Sewing Center, , Pontiac's ONLY authorized Necchi Dealer. 465 Elizabeth Lake Rd., acrossi from the Pontiac Matt. >
_33jL9283.
AUTOMATIC liO - ZAG "SEWNO I machine. "Fashion Dial Model." Makes button-holes, overcasts, appliques, etc. Used blond cabinet. Take over payments of $5.40 per month lor 8 months or $43 cash balance. JJnlvtrial Co. FB 4-0905. ,
Bottle Gas Installation |
Two KXFPOUMt cylinder* and ©quip* mant# $12. Great Fiain* Gas Co.# | FE 5*0872.__
BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL' AND gas furnace and bolters, automatic watar heaters, hardware and electrical supplies. Crock, soli. Copper. black and galvanlzao pipe ana fittings, tarnry and Lowe Brothers paint, Super Kem-TOno and Ruslqltym,
HEIGHTS SUPPLY
26SS Lapeer Rd,	PR 4-8431
BE IKA15B POkK—HXtf 'AND quorlofi. Opdyke Mkl. FB 5-7941. CASH ARB*£AllRV
2 colors, 4x7 pro-llnlshod mnhoqeny
W"
Open MON,____
Evas 'till* p.m.
DRAYTON PLYWOOD 4112 W. Walton	OR 3-5912
CLEARANCE WOW Of FILE furniture end machints. Forbes,
4500 Dixie Hwy. OR 3 9767. W*
•Iso buy.
eGftPlftnrdCK BK'PiPI'ANo .tilings. Custom throadlng. tmma-dlato sarvlct. Montcalm Supply, iMW, Monlcalm, FI M7II,
D & J CAUlNt I bhUP I ACCORDION, GUITAR LJI8QNS, 924 W. HURON .	334-0926	..fflC.iliPli
Custom cablnots, formica topi, Cnortina Asms	74
sale, of formica, links. Iwods and, »PornnB >	:■..
faucets. COMPARE OUR PRICEI.
iLidrt ic uqrif P I XTU1 e» GUNS GUNS GUNSI
rj„7ooms otslons putt down, i w# carry ona of the most complete balloons .#tars, Badroom tl.1t I flnas er new 0%
A PIANO WANTED TO BUY -any Kind. 338-0108. _
BfTf R R LYCB AR GATN* '
Usad Organs No Down Paymant
CONN Spinal	*13.50	mo.
CONN 25 pedal walnut	815.75 mo.
HAMMOND Spinal	815.75	mo.
BALDWIN Spinet	824.75	mo.
LOWREY Spinal	•	*15.75	mo.
Used console piano, also upright, real good buys.
ALL ORGANS AND PIANOS MUST GO BY DEC. 31, 1964 Now Is the lima to buy LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Across from Birmingham theater
Free Parking _____ Ml 6-1002
CONN MINUET WITH LBSCIl Cabinets. Sustain and percussion, demonstrators.
$2,190.00 Vatu* *1,550.00
MORRIS MUSIC
GALLAGHER'S ANNUAL YEAR-END CLEARANCE
Pianos and eroani, ill stylet and finishes. Wilt sail at tremendous savings. Buy now — lava now — pay lator. -
GALLAGHER'S MUSIC
IS e. HURON	FE 4-05*6
ROYAL OAK STORE 4224 WOODWARD BETWEEN 13 AND 14 MILE OPEN MON.-FRI, TILL 9 P.M.
„ Wfc PARKING
IF YOU# WiNT TO SELL VouR piano, call Mr. tuyar at Grin-nail's, Pontiac Mall. Mi-0431. LliYik'‘iEiN'(iTTiA)(6riCR>HY
USED ElANOS; UPftiOfffi FROM $41 — spinels trom $2M — con solas trom $399 — some now pi anos, floor samples, soma music studio usad. inquire at Orlnnall's, Pontiac Mall. M2-0423. iALOWAffnTT'Aef6R D16N8 Loaners and HtlWni, PR 5-542$,
W*6TOT“
Choose from Hammond, Lowery, Wuriilur, Baldwin, ate. Low easy farms, From 1350.
GRINNELL'S (Downtown)
>7 5, Uglnaw	FB 5-7161
Music Usion* ,	71-A
Truck Tire Specials
2:00 P.M. 825x20—10 ply, highway All Typas _1 825x20-12 ply, highway
Auction Sales
EVERY FRIDAY EVERY SATURDAY EVERY SUNDAY
Sporting Goods - .... • ,r~	,	.   .
Door Prizes Every Auction	1.835x20—10 ply, mud end
Wo Buy-Soft—Trade, Rafail 7 days f mow .nylon Consignments Welcome BISB AUCTION
5089 Dixie Hwy.	OR 3-2717
NO AUCTION ' UNTTITjANUARY 9 •t OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION, but always open tor your consignments. Como see us. amt on Hwy. M-24, now 9 miles N. of Oxforq in Moiamoro Twp. 678.2523.
OPEN DAILY tt to tt.....
T. accept consignments lor our January 9 sale. Hall's Auction Solo, 705 w. Clarkston Rd„ Lako Orton, MY 3-1671 - MV_3-6l4l.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 10:30 A.M.
BERTON BRENDEL FARM (SOLD)
11875 Mlltord Rd„ Hotly Cattle, Produce; Tools, Ka>‘cs STAN PtzKKINa, AUCTIONEER 635-9400, Swartz Crook_____
porch IliSfi Irregulars, samples, 1 the areal Wtt.ee only factory gen give, Mh h- Browning '
* t • j Weafherhy
used guns In
PrlCM only factory can give. I wan Fluorescent, 393 O r e h
Lit*, (is _
:	YRltJfrt DWNE Ri '
NON-FREEZER OWNERS Mails and grocarlas Free home delivery SAVE UP TO 60 PER CENT All name brands Call for
i Fro* catalog and information Quanflfiai Ifmltadi no daalars >	667 1577
f»0R' DUITY c ONcRITI PI DDR* Use Liquid Floor Hartlener Slmpla inaxpanslvo Application Metis a iulldan lupply FE S8186
Drowning II fiflt	81
Wiaintroy it rill#	H
R#m(ngton 1 rim	,
wa hlv* ovai 3M guns In	itoeft
1 Colt Pistol, Timflir scout ,	» Cil 869.30
BE A(J ^Arxhsny ^equipment
Burl hoard or pad8al Board
mercury OUTIOARDI 3.9 100 *s low as Ilf*
Cliff Dreyar'i
Gun and Snarl i aniar 1*318 Holly Rd,, Holly MB 4 67/1 - opan Dally and lundayt—
PERSONALIZED POODLE C L I P-
plng. OR 3-8920._______________
POODLE PUPPIES, SfUD SERV-ice, fish, parakeets, canarias. Pel supplies. CRANE'S, UL 2-2200. fWllSrALL PET SHOP, 55 WIL-Irams. FE 44433.
WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and sleepers. Naw and used $395 up. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping bumpers, ladders, racks. LOWRY CAMPER SALES, EM 3-3681.
YOU bAVE $$b
1965 Kf wipes. 2 bedrooms, $395 down, payments of $69 per month, Including Interest and Insurance. Delivered and sat up. Most units heated lor your shopping convenience—A good selection ot used 8' and 10' wldas as <ow as 8195 down. Terms to your setlsfoctlon.
BOB HU'ICHINSON
4301 Dixie (lighway OR 3-1202 Drayton Plains
Open 9 to 9 dally—$at. 9 to 6 SUNDAY, 12 to 5
Rest* Trailer Space
90
WHY RENT: BUY FOR LESS PER month. Mobile home, lots, iS'xW *2,795, $25 down, „$35 per month, Blocktopped, gat, batch, rlsh Bloch Bros. FE 4-4509, OR 3-1295.
92
May—Grain—Feefl
84
flMOTHY ALFALFA HAY AND tirojy, 50 cants biila, FE 6-/469.
Farm fcquipment	87
3 USED WHEEL HORSE TRAC* lort starling iron) $250. Used Chain taw. Evan* Bgulpmanl, MS-1711.
SEE OUR LINE OF HOMELifis chain taws; Davit Machinery Co., OrtonvHli, NA 7-3292, Specialist tor (arm tractors and machinery, pans.
DEERE, HARTLAND AREA Hard, ware. Phone 623-7141.
ui»cr? i rnrr KSTSYfciiki,
PARTS AND SERViCl,
L, W. Avis
1370 Dpdyk*	FE 44330
USED IHC CUB LO-BOY TRACTOR WITH SNOW BLADE
A-l SHAPE, *1,395.
KING JROS.
FH 4-0736	FC 4-1663
Pontiac Road at Opdyke
Travol Trailort	88
14' 1964 MODEL SLEEP* 6 81,0*3. Goodill, 3300 I, Rochist#r, UL
SB#: ’	'	■ :
*‘MIV(WW061^V'fiR'ttiWLiLy””* pgr « a**l on * quillly lr«v*l trtltor InipMl
CENI VRv—fRAVELMASTER
, 3 1966 (Moot Canlurlai let!
TOM 5TACHLER AUTO and MOBILE SALES
i«i W, Huron *1. F1 14928
,* fRAVEL TRAiLlEI Man 1932, 0u*r*ntt*tl tor III*, i«* thorn »nd a*t * damonstra-1 flan *t Warner frailer tatotr 2098 VkL Huron (plan to loin dM of W«l|y Byam's excttlng edravans).
''“'iijiifH eAWPlx—"
Aiumingm cov#r| and campers for
ronl and aide mM#l|, J’lunaar Camper Salas, r* »-3»a9.
>ieg;uprMMP»RiJ“
; From *189 ug ^ ,
• TAN CAMPER MFD, CO,
8220 Aubuimfal*, Ullc*
849.82
900x20-10’ ply, mud and snow nylon	  867.32
10x22.5—10 ply mud and snow nylon	865.78
Ask lor special deal on sals ot lour FREE MOUNTING Budget forms available
HRESTONE
146 W. Huron	:	333-7917
Auti itrvica	93
ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF Ooklond ChryslertPlymouth's now bump shop. No fob too small or (oo big to be handled by us,
' insurance Work , Froo Estimates
OAKLAND
CHRY8LER-PLYHOUTH
724 Oak lend	FB 5-9436
CRANKSHAFY'WiNOINd TN THE car. Motor rabuttdlng and valve grinding. Zuck Machine ihop, Hood. Phone FE MM3.
Motorcycles	95
Clearance Sale
1964 Honda Hawk 1942 H-D 74,
1961	Honda Trail 1964 Honda Trail 90,
1962	Triumph 660,
1941 bSa 650,
1*44 Yamaha,
1945 Honda IU,
1966 Honda 110,
1964 Honda Scrambler 1964 Triumph 500,
1961 Allstate 175,
1966 Simplex Mini bike.
“TOiAHTf
85*5 *195 *1*5 *273 *795 8591 *595 9450 *231 8593 *793 1195 1150
____IS.
_ (VICE
FE 3-53Q9
97
k A w cycL
3436 Auburn
,	731-0290
BMt8-^AcCBI(Ari8l ^
8m"owin. m. .uppJa
2(4 Orchard Lake	FB MM
iNdiiiirxMfBiinvpi
tor Inboa rtkOulboard Naw and Used
Wa can convert your outboard boat
1% ■ *•,
AT NIAIONABLI CttlT I'
Ml I, Saginaw	.pi (-4101
"hanu td wsp iur'iAiv it, deal wlfh." Rlnkof, Staury, Cherokee boats, Kapof pontoons, Bvln. rude motors.' Pamco trailers. Taka MW Id W. Hljjjr 1 Htekofy Rldga l^r .
LAKE, Phone MAIh 9-2179,
jrlulAtl
1961 Johnson Motor, I h,p, *217,N
■	PINTErS MARINE
fti-IM ltjto Dpdyk* Open fill I p.m,
REPOSSESSION
1964 Bulck Wildcat, candy appW rad, 2-door hardtop, call Mr, Johnson, AAA 5-2604. Dealer.
•uT0P DOLLAR PAID"
FOR "GLEAN" USED CARS
GLENN'S
WE NEED NEW CARS!
TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS
Matthews Hargreaves,
631 OAKLAND AVE.
. FE 44547	, -
Junk Cars—Tracks________101-A
OR 10 J u N K CARS - TRUCKS tree tow anytime. FE 1-2466.
-2 AND 10 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS
Free tow. OR 1-2938.____■
ALWAYS BUYING SSJUNK CARS-FREE TOW**
^ TOP ** CALL FE 54142 HAM ALLEN A SONS, INC. JUNK CARS HAULED AWAY 473-1509
Usad Auto-Track Part* 102
1955 PONTIAC, ALL OR PARTS.
FE 5-9724. _____ '
SHOP AT
OLIVER'S
tor your how
BUICK
RENAULT
“ OR
OPEL
and
DOUBLE,
CHECKED
-WED CARS-
OUVER
BUICK
19*-210 Orchard taka
FE 2-9165
BIRMINGHAM
1961 CHEVY IMPALA 2-DOCfR hardtop, automotlc, radio, whnowall t, Flrattona 'SOV tire*, beauti-lul condition. 81,250- Call 616-212*.
CLEAN 1962 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 2-door, power steering and brake*,
\ Powargltda, l-ownar. OR 3-6*10.
1942 CHEVY WAGON. KYLlHOER. Automatic tranamiulon. Radio. I owner. FE 88589.	’■ ’
l*(5w and Used Trucks 103
1953 FORD W-TON PICKUP GOOD condition, now tiro*, robullt engine. 5295. standard Service, 3419 .Elizabeth Lake Road.
1951 FORD WRi'CKER, TELB8COF-Ic boom, (O-lon wench, dual whaoli 3795. Standard Service, 3419 Elizabeth Lake Rood.
1955 CHEVY PICKUP. 5-FT. BOX, 6-cyllnder engine, 6-ply tlroi, runt and drive* perfectl Sava. JEROME FERGUSON Inc. Rochailar FORD Dealer. OL 1-9711.
1*40 f<5rd pi?KUR wton, Long I
box, V6 engine, now rubber, cltanl i JEROME FEROUtON Inc. .	|
Rochailar FORD Dealer, 0L_I47H. I liH EC6NWtiriWi^“BUi, RADIO, . HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES,-SECOND ROW SEAT. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY OOWN, Taka oyer payment* ot $31.78 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Park*, at Harold Tumor Ford. Ml
4.7580.	■______■_______
(961 CORVAIR "95" PANkLI IHAfeA lurquo.se and white flnlah, excel-lanf condition inside and out.
1956 CADILLAC
COUP# DeVllle 2-door hardtop with power brake* and power steering radio, hooter, automatic Iran*-mlulon. Full price 8197.
Banker's Outlet
3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd.
FE 8-7137
1962 CADILLAC SEDAN 6fi VILLA, 1-owner# excellent condition# low ' mileaoe# mony extras# MA 5-0041 1964 CADILLAC CbUPt baflLLE,
tent condition. Ml i
1962 CHEVY ll, 2-DOOR, 37,000 mites in top condition. Good rubber. Snow tiro*, boater, standard shift. Lilted at 09SS In NADA book. Th* first 1300 takes ». Writ* Pontiac Praia Box )(L Sot It In downtown Pontiac._________________
1962 Chevrolets
25 Mohths Chevrolet OK Warranty
Impale convertible. Bright rad flnilh with Matching trim and white top. v-4 angina, Powarglkfa, power steering, radio, boater, whitewall liras and priced at; only ..*1,4*5
Bel Air Adoor sedan. Azure Aquo with Aqua trim. V4 engine, Power-
Sltde, power steering, power raket, radio, heater; whitewalls. Only ....................  $14*5
Bel Air t passenger wagon. Honduras maroon wlm tewn trim, v-s engine, Poworgiido, power steering, power brakaa, power rear window, root rack, radio, heatar, whitewalls. Extra sharp. ,
Only ..................  )#t<*93
Impels Super Sport coupe. Tuxedo black with rad trim. v-S, power-
glide, - power steering, power rakes, whitewalls .........8179#
Patterson Chevrolet Co.
1104 5. Woodward Ava. Ml A2715 BIRMINGHAM
Ready to go to work, Only IW9J easy tertol* PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735.
i?« ‘>3r2T PlfcWP, sfXNtiAhp shift. 6<yl., - neater, DON'S. 677 8. Lapeer Rd., Orton. MY 1-204). f9«'mvY^^nfLr«T¥i61. Parted condition. OR 3-1179._.
1963 CHEVY Pickup
VI ton box, with 6 cylinder angina, stick shllt, color of bluo. Only-81,493.
1959 CHEVY Pickup
With to ton box, 4 cylinder stick With to ton box, 4 cylinder, slick
Crisiman Chevrolet
(On South Hill In Rgcheiter) ROCHESTER	OL 89721
(144 dtoiib W f6H, WIHSWIT, stick, radio, 6 ply tiros, *1,773. JEROMB FERGUSON, Inc. Roch-aster FORD Doator. OL 1-9711.
G.M.C.
Factory Branch New and Used Trucks
FE 5-94*5 .	475 Oakland
------JZK.;—jjjggr-7-----
1965
GMC
Vi lon Pickup >
with tha 8-fooi oox, heater, defroit-•rs, oil filter, washers.
$1810
Houghian A Ion
ROCHElTdir	OL 19/61
525 N. Main It.
“WRITTra---------
AutO Ittfuraiici	104
AUTO INSURANCE PON ANYONE DOli NICHDLlI	Ft H1U
__.gallon quoliiton.
Anderson Aoiney FE 4-3535 1044 Joilyn Ave fairt ^	‘ 105
1919 VW« SLACK, WMITSWA1.L8, radio, a* Is. *M0. 1511401.
Lata Model
Cadillacs Cost Less
than a lot of medium priced NEW CARS!
Come in and Check.
EXECUTIVE CAES AND LOW MILEAGE USED CADILLACS FROM 1961's TO I9*6'l AND PRICED FROM 52,295 to *4,695. SOME WITH AIR CONDITIONING.
ALL IN
Factory Warranty
OR
Wilson 1-Year Warranty
WILSON
PONTIAC-CADIUAC
1150 N. Woodward	Ml 6-1910
Birmingham, Michigan 1951 CHEVV/NUNi 868. iAVr'AU-
)o. Fe 5-3271._______
~WTHiVV'‘BlL"Ailki; t(M.
UL 83561
1957 OhIVV bIl aiA 4-bodR, itA-tton wagon, wlfh aulomallc trans-mliilon, V4 angina, vary iharp —■ fgni almost Ilka newl
down, only 14.25
condition I Rune almolt llita No money (town, only 8445 tyl coil Mr, Irwwta Ooatorl
MARVEL
251 Oakland Ava. _ FE 84071
PROBLEMS?
We Con Finance Youl 100 Can to Select From!
Call Mr. Dal© FE 3-7863
LLOYD'S
1250 Oakland Ave.
v C0RVAIRS
25 Month* Chevy OK Warranty
19*4 Monza oanv*rtlbl*, Lagoon . aqua wlm white topgind aqua trim. Pgw«rglda, ram, heater, whitewalls. Only	11,9*5,
INI Mann Cow*, Aiuro *w» WHh aqua trim, f-OWargllda. radio, H**h *r, whitewalls, iparo n In* ground, only
1961 "7W" 4-door iikten, bright rod
& white tmlfii with fawn trim, rglido, radio, IWMtr, N*aj and only
1941 Menu coup#. Autumn wlm ww’mniiliFVM# boater, wblMw*fll< only
Pattenon Chevrolet Co,
1
m
1962 CHEVROLET STATION WaO-ON, RADIO, HEATER, ECONOMY ENGINE, WHITEWALL TIRE*. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take over paymant* ot 831.75 par month. CALL CREDIT MGRu MT. Parks, at Harold Tur-
nor Ford. Ml 4-7500.	_________
1863 CHIVY IMPALA, 4-DOOR, V-« auto, radio, hooter, whltewalla, power steering and brakes, blue with mmblnr I	-
dltton, MY »1i
CORVETTES
25 Months Chevy OK Warranty
1959 Corvette convertible. Power-glide, radio, hooter, whitewalls. Rad and smite exterior, rod In-terrtor with block »<*>• Only *1494.
Patterson Chevrolet Co.
1104 8, Woodward Av*. Ml 4-2718 BIRMINGHAM
“1943 CHEVY BEL-AlR 4-6661, V4 engine, automatic, radio, heater, 30,080 mlioa, and root sbarpl 81,895. JEROME PRROOION Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer. OL l-»7lt.
IffJ CORVETTE (TIHgFaY, FlJlL Inlacted, 4-*poad, (liver. Bait otter. MA 6-1986.
"for a iiYTirewiviwnn1'""
SEE
PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.
1000 I. Woodward Avo. Ml 4-2715 BIRMINGHAM. MICHIGAN
1	t-noer.
Full power. 81,575. Ml 601*8.
mi..chBW....rriMIrt esuw
Novo 400, hardtop, vary Rood condition, low mlwog*, onawwnar, Musi roll. 91.350. LI M998._
1963 CHEVROLETS 25 Month! Chivy,OK Warranty *
Sol Air 8door sodan. Autumn Gold with motchlne 'trim, v-8 angina, (tick shin, radio, hoatar, whitewalls. Only ...r..*1,6*5
Impel* sport caup*. Potemtr r*d with black trim, V-l angina, Pow-ergllde, power SbMrlnB, radio, healer, whiteweiis, a one-owner (raw. Only 1149 down.
wnn black top, VI angina,'. Pdmfr-gild*, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only .,7../ IMH
Bel Air 6gaisangar wagon. Aiuro aquo, VI arigwa, Powargllda, power steering, radio, hooter, while-
wall*. Only
11,89*
Impala sport coupe, laddto tan wltn matching ■ trim. ilMi shift with radto oniT heater. A vary nldj
with mafchlng 1 wlih radio and1) car ana only
•el Air 8door sedan. Illvar bid* wim blue trim. VI angina, Powar* gild*, radio, baaiar	, *i,4*a.
inwall 4deor sedan, laddla tan wlln matching trim, VI ttwlna,
■ Potterion Chevrolet Co.
im~CTiwjufnn pgi, ecu-
yartTbja, laHn-sllvar wlm blank top, loll .of •xbas, pMlMM Mwl|Mn,
jpwsffipm,
hardtop, VI (Mm*, autaenatk, radio, powar anSm brakaa, TlAie
±#(SS%fcr«,.S
ML.RMnaiW FORD Dealer, OL
AY
I
1
>


1 M*
sm i

MI.4-7500
TURNER I 1 FORD
'62 COMET
2-Door
'60 T-BIRD
2-Door
'60 DODGE
4-Door
'61 FORD'
Bus
$888
*60 FORD
V*8
$444
'59 FORD
V-8
$333
'63 FORD
Station Wagon
$1661
'62 MONZA
4-Speed
V
$999
'64 RIVIERA
Air-Conditioned
'65 Mustang
V-8 V
$2525
MOLDS
F-8S
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD
484 S. Woodward
Birmingham
MI 4-7500
v iy
New and Used Cars 106
1*44, CHEVROLET RIPER SPORT, 2-door hardtop. Bahama-green — POwor steering, power brakes. VI Powergllde. Low mileage: Sharp 0.450, OR 3-4472.	^
CHEVY lh
25 Monthp Chevrolet • OK Warranty v
1264 TOO series 2-0oor sedan, Alt: fomatic. gold with town trim. 6-cylinder engine, powergllde. radio, Malar; whitewalls. Only 7.000 ac tual miles. Real nice Olid only
HA2£
Patterson Chevrolet Co.
1104 3. Woodward Ave. ; Ml 4-1735 ____ BIRMINGHAM
Credit or Budget
PROBLEMS?
We Con Finance You!
Call Mr. Darrell FE 8-4528
1264 CHEVY CHEVELLE, 300 4-door, v-8 automatic,, radio, heater, extra cteanl Ortly 32,025. JEROME FERGUS O N, Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 14711.
1264 CHEVELLE SUPER SPQRT, black exterior and Interior, 327 cubes, 4-speed, posltractlon, heavy duty suspension, power brakes.
. 334*024.
1964 CHEVROLET
25 Months Chevrolet OK Warranty
Impala Sport Coupe, Lagoon aqua with aqua trim V-8 engine, Power-glide, power steering. Very nice. Only ...................... $2,325
Impala sport sedan. Ermine white with aqua trim. V-8 engine. Power-glide, power steering. Also a-Day-tone blue one with blue tr'm. Has radio. Mater- whitewalls. Both low mileage beauties. Your Choice for *2,325. . v
Impala sport coupe. Ember red - with white interior, 300 h,p, engine, 4-speed and posltractlon, ra dlo, heater, whitewalls. 10,000 ac . tual miles. Only $142 down.
Impala Sport Coupe. Ember red with block trim, V-8 engine. Power-glide, power steering. Only $2,325.
Bel Air 4-door sedan. Palomar red with fawn trim, V-8 angina, stick shift, radio; heater, white-walls	....	81,925
Blscayne 2-door * sedan Meadow green with all vinyl Interior. 6-cylinder engine. Powergllde, power steering, power brakes, radio, heat
jar. U/hifouialla I lira nail, Aiwa aa
er, whitewalls. Like new. Also on ermine white with red trim. Both very nice. Your choice, for only
(Patterson Chevrolet Co.
1104 S. Woodward Ava Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM
WE ARE A VOLUME DEALER
-Wa can Dellvar-
'65 Chryslers
—'TOOAY-f *
V- y
—WoCan Deliver—
'65 Plymouths
New and Ueed Can 10A
KESSLER'S
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965
FORTY-ONE I
DODGE 8	'
.CARS AND TRUCKS Salas and Service;
Oxford	OA 8-140#
1955 DODGE S132 TAKE OVER paymehtvSl# amestttvfwede motor work, body good, tires like hew, new battery, wont 350 for parts l put in- If Interested in seeing Is at Edison 'and Chatn-borlaln, Ask for 8. Egbert. 33S-4B72,
1963 DODGE POLARA, HARDTOP, Mack, white Interior, automatic, 383: Excellent condition. 334-6326.
105
Bargains at HHNTER t DODGE
BIRMINGHAM'S NEWEST DEALER
DURING OUR
YEAR END CLEAN OUT
OF 1965 D00GES IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CREDIT NO PROBLEM
hunter dodge
Ml 7-0955
492 S. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM 1953 FORD V-#. AUTOMATIC transmission. 3225. 332-7528.
1952 FORD FAlRLANE 500, GOOD condition with snow tires. 3265. Save Auto, FE 3-3278. ■ -	,
1952 FORD 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN " Take over poyments of $16.75 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Packs, at Harold Tumor Ford, Ml 4-7500.
1960 FORD 2-DOOR, RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Toko over payments of $18.90 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR., MR, Porks, at Harold Turner Ford. Ml'4-7500,
New and-Usad Can 106
t p Credit or Budget j
PROBLEMS?
We Can Finance You!
1100 Cars to Select From!
Call Mr. Dale FE 37863
LLOYD'S
1250 Oakland Ave.
1M2 GALAXIE 500. AUTOMATJC, Radio; heater, power steering, new . tires. 620-1583.	M
1262	FORD FAlRLANE 580 4-OOOR sedan., Beautiful burgandy finish
; with sharp fawn Interior. V-8 angina, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall tiros. Priced of only 81,295 and carries our 25 months Chevrolet OK Warranty.. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. WARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2733.	____________
1263	FORLi FAlRLANE 500. AUT6
radio, heater.
Lapeer Rd„ Orion. MY 2-1041.
1963 ford
Custom ”300" 2-Door
Only-
BEATTIE
New and thed Cart ^ lOA
: JEROME
$ OLDS and CADILLAC "New Car Savings — Today' CALL -FE 3-7021
T T962 OLDS
F-05 Cutlass converflMa. 1-owner. Clean and sharp' 31,195, terms. Russell Young. 334-3200;	.	.
Oldsmobiles
1959-1 ?64s
—Many Models on Display—
Birminghdih Trades Suburban Olds,
USED CARS • • ‘
565 S. Woodward Ava. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-4405
1952 PLYMOUTH CUSTOM SUEUR, ban wagon, power steering, radio, heater, large luggage rack. Airlift rear springs, very good rubber, whitewalls, good mechanically, 612-
*253.	_______•
6- CYLINDER
"Your FORD DEALER Since 1930 ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Homo of SERVICE after the sale"
0RT3-1291
? 7 ?
If a newer Used car Is In your Immediate future and reasonably priced dependability Is o must . . y Then look no further . . . PONTIAC RETAIL STORE Is the place to shop. They havo only, "First Class" "Goodwill" used Cars .that are priced honestly.' You don't have to' settle for second best. A phone call to FE 3-7254 or a short drive to 65 Mt. Clemens St., downtown Pontiac, talk with any ot the friendly salesmen. They'll solve your used car problems to your absolute satisfaction. - -
New and Used Care 106
1264 PONTIAC 4-O00R, SKY BLUE, to#: mileage; one-owner; automatic transmission, power brakes, steering, radio, , hooter. Price-S2.30O. 31 '-Henry Clay.JFE 4.1344,
1964 GTO Convertible
this beauty Is a sun flrb,red, 4-SPEED, almost llkenew throughout!	T > v
. Only $2495
Homer Hight
-COME VISIT
RUSS JOHNSON'S
Used Car Strip
1963	CHEVY II Nova coupe ... $1725
1263	CHEVY 2-door hardtop .. 32195
1964	FORD pickup ............ 31625
1264	GTO hardtop .........  32725
1940 VW Micro bus ......... S 225
1262 DODGE wagon' ......... $1425
1962	PONTIAC Starchier . . SI225 1952 FORD Galaxie 4-door . s 424
1961	PONTIAC hardtop, power $1225
1963	FORD Galaxie 2-door $1525
1962	BONNEVILLE convertible 32075
1964	CATALINA Vista, OUto. ,, . 32795 1961 CHEVY wagon; auti 31325 1961 CHEVY Bel AIT hardtop 31325 ,1952 DODGE 2-door hardtop ... 3 425
1961	PONTIAC Catalina ^31195
1962	RAMBLER 4-door Classic 3 225
1960	CORVAIR "700" 4-door 3 725 1964 BONNEVILLE Vista ... 33025
1961	TEMPEST wagon, auto .. $ 22S
1963 RENAULT R-8 4-speed ... 31195 1961 CORVAIR ,Monza 4-door 31095 1963 TEMPEST 4-door; V8 . . $1425
New- and Used Can , -'ifiA
1964 Pontiac
Bonneville 6-Passenger
Wagdn with a beautiful white finish, radio, heater, power steering - and brakes, whitewalls, chroma rack. Only—	’
-$3095;,
BEATTIE
1 "Your FORO DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORO 1 "Home of SERVICE otter the sale"
OR 3-1291
Credit or Budget
PROBLEMS?
... We Can Finance You! 100 Cars, to Select From!
{Sail Mr. Dale r FE 3-7863
LLOYD'S
1250 Oakland Ave.
I960 FORO 3197
King Auto Sales
3275 W. Huron St, FE 3-4008
FALCON 1960, GREEN 2-DOOR, Automatic shift, good whitewall tires, very clean. 3375. FE 5-7517.
16CTORD, BARRACUDA.
FE 4-3235, otter 6 p.m.
I960 T-BIRO HARDTOP, EQUIPPED WITH POWER, RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Toko over peymonts of 331.19 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks at Harold- Turnqr Ford. Ml 4-7500.
1961 FORD 2-DOOR, RADIO, HEAT. ER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL, TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take over payments of 327.64 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR.. Mr. Parks, Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500. ; 1961 FALCON, RADIO, HEAffl, DELUXE TRIM, WHITEWALL TIRES, ECONOMY ENGINE. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take over payments of $27.64 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks, at Harold -Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500.
— Wo Con Deliver —
'65 Ramblers
— Today -r
BILL SPENCE
chrysler-plymouth-valiant
RAMBLER-JEEP
CLARKSTON	MA 5-2635
1963 Ford
Fairlone 500
6-pessenger wagon, with V-3 . engine, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only—
$1745
BEATTIE
"Yobr FORD DEALER SiflCa 19317 ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Home or SERVICE otter the solo
OR 3-1291
1962 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN. 9-passenper wagon, V-8, Cruise-O-Matlc, radio, hooter, steering and brakes. Ilka new throughout! Save 33. JEROME FERGUSON Inc. -Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711.
1963 Ford
Galaxie 500 4-Door'
With the 390 V-8 engine, Crulse-O-Matic, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only—
BEATTIE
"Your FORD DEALER Since 1930' ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Home of SERVICE after the sale'
OR 3-1291
1964 FALCON HARDTOP, V-8, RED with black Interior! only 3,700 . miles. 32,350, FE 4-9308.
1964 FORD GALAXIE 500 2-DOOR hardtop, auto. 8, radio, heater, whitewalls, green. DON'S. 677 S. Lapeer Rd„ Orion, MY 2-2041.
1964 .FORD FAlRLANE , 2-DOOR hardtop, standard transmission, radio, like now throughout! 31,895. JEROME FERGUSON, Inc., Rochester FORD Dealer. OL 1-9711
EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN 1955 Mercury, runs perfect, no rust OR 3-3603. 3275.
SEE US FIRST
BOBBORST
LINCOLN-MERCURY 520 S. Woodward	Birmingham
MI 6-4538
1961 Olds
”88" 4-Door Sedan
With a black finish, radio, heator, automatic, power steering, brakes, whitewalls. Only—
$1495
BEATTIE
"Your FORD DEALER Since 1930' ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Home of SERVICE offer the sale'
OR 3-1291
164 PLYMOUTH FURY 4-DOOR, | v-8 automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, like new! Only, — $2,295. JEROME FERGUSON, Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711.
1960 VENTURA, POWER STEER-ing and brakes, $850. FE 4-0897.
1960 PONTIAC WAGON, FULL POW-er, good shape. $625, 363-6219.
1962 PONTIAC, GOOD CONDITION. 3 1963 Remblers, ' big discounts. 6 Chevrolet! and Fords, lots models.1 .	-	i ■' is- ■ ;
Also a few trucks. and; transportation cars from 317 up. We finance.
ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dixie Hwy.
1963 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR hardtop. Shiny midnight blue with matching Ventura trim. Hydra-matlc, Power steering, power brakes, tilt wheel, radio, heater, whitewalls. Extra sharp and only 32,095. Easy terms. This car carries our 25 months Chevrolet OK warranty. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735.
1963	PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vertible. Power-Hydramatic-White with black top. FE 2-4713.
1964	WHITE BONNEVILLE WAG-on, hydramatlC, "power steering and brakes, with other extras. 32,950. 332-2143.
1964 PONTIAC CATALINA. 4-DOOR sedan, whitewalls, power steering, brakes. 32,350, 682-2227.
1964 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-DOOR hardtop, automatic transmission, - radio, whitewall tiros, spotless condition. 32,500. FE 8-0076.
hj4upt
PONTIAC
JOHNSON
Ponttac-Rorribler Dealer
1964 TEMPEST 4-DOOR, VI EN-glne, automatic* power steering. Brakes, radio, only $2,095. JEROME FERGUSON, Inc., Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711.
We're wheeling and dealing the all-new 1965 Ramblers. See them now! Used, cars are being sold-at wholesale to make room for the new cqr trades.	'
' ROSE RAMBLER
New and Used Cm% 104
f 1959 RAMBLER
4-Door station Wagon, has radio, heator, automatic transmission; and the original all whtta finish. Full pried 3197.
Estate Storage Co.
S3 ■ 109 S. East Blvd.
NEW >965 RAMBLER 2-OOOR heater, full equipment, $95 down $11.88 per week.
SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland FE 5-9421
Brand; New
Shipment of
1964 *;
Ambassadors
FULLY LOADED: RADIO, POWER STEERING, POWER BRAKES, TURN INDICATORS, OIL FILTER, OOUBLE ACTION BRAKES VISIBILITY GROUP, LIGHT GROUP, .INDIVIDUAL RECLINING seats; white-WALL TIRES, FULL WHEEL COVERS.
From
$1,977.77
399 down, 36 months oh balanco
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
1959 RAMBI ER AMERICAN—NEW
Ires, $176, good condifL
-’4-2470.
50 "SELECT" USED CARS Mostly 1 - owner new - car. trades. Easy financing, bank rates. No /air offer, deal or trade refused.
SUPERIOR RAMBLER
550 Oakland
FE 5.-9421
666 S. Woodward
Birmingham
Ml 6-3900
1959 STUDEBAKER LARK, 6 CY-linder, automatic, good transportation, 3150. UL 2-1834, after 5 p.m.
STUDEBAKER, 1960, 4-OOOR Lark Deluxe. V-(. R-2 engine,, stick .radio, hooter, 36,000 miles. Body and liras excellent. Quick sale. Private. 3495. Ml 4-1741,
1964 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, white with red Interior, very clean, old car down I
loie, reoiu, nearer, .-speea, wmre-.
walls, light (>lue color, old car down 11
1963 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE, red finish, white trim, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls, a dandy tor only 31,495.
HAUPT PONTIAC
One Mile North of U.S. 10 on MIS CLARKSTON	MA 5-5566
Winter - Summer - Spring - Fail
We Out Deal Them All;
You Are Always in Season
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
1965
FURY
COMPLETE
Deluxe Heater—Washers—Dual, Visors-Wheel Caps Electric 5-Speed Wipers and Full Factory Equipment , Call'or Drive Out to See Us Today
Chilly Winter George Summer
Herb Spring , Ray Fall .
happy new year from all of us
PATTERSON
CHRYSLER-IMPERIAL-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT-BARRACUDA
1001 N. MAIN ST.
ROCHESTER, MICH.
START THE YEAR OFF RIGHTI BUY A CAR FROM
— SHELTON —
1961 CHEVROLET IMPALA Hardtop. Power steering end brakea, automatic, v-8, rsdlo, healer end whitewalls. A one-owner with low miles	3139]
1961 MERCURY MONTEREY Convertible. Power steering end brakes, Merc-O-Matlc, radio, heater and whitewalls. 23,880 ac-Only ....................... 39*5
1961 PORO GALAXIE 2-Door Hardtop, v-8, automatic, radio,
Shatter, Whitewalls. This one [r 'most like new Inside and out, nly ............. ........... 3995
1963 ECONOLINR VAN. Has ',4,088 guaranteed actual miles. alM has 1,080,001 uses. Door* open both In tha rear and on tha right side. A real, worker ....... 11591
1964 P p N T I A C BONNEVILLE Convertible, . -tower brakes and ■tearing, radio, heeler, Hydremat* Ic, and other accessories. Let's po first class with a naw car factory warranty ............ 12995
4-Door Sedan,
•m
1964 BUICK EIRCTRA "321" 4-Door Herdtop. Full power, Dyna-flew, radio, whitewalls, Let of car, little money	>1299
1963
4-Doer
.... BUICK WILDCAT Hardtop with poWer steering end brakes, Dynaflow, radio, neater eng whitewalls. Beautiful brqnia finish.................. $1493
,19*4 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Ceiipg with power ateerlng end ' emaflc, radio. In
brai___ ......
and whltewa finish end
IydrfmaTfc, radio, neater ewalle. BaauMful glut I matching Trim 11195
1963 BUICK SPECIAL Custom Se-
dan, Automallt, v-l angina, radio, haalgr, whflawills. tc< the hlg car rlna
1964 PONTIAC STARCHIEF Hardtop. Power afeenitd eng brakes, Hydramatlcs. radio, heater, white-walls. White wlih red leather trim. New car warranty . 33795
yerflblt.Power steering and brekea, HydramatlC, raelo, hitter and whitewalls. Aqua with white top .............31795
1963 PONTIAC CATALINA Convertible. Power brekea and steering, HydramatlC, radio, healer end whitewalls. A real sporty car ......................$2295
1964 PONTIAC CATALINA Coupe with venture trim, power ateerlng end brakes, Hydramatlc, radio.
and brakes, Hyd liealrr, whitewalls
32495
1960 CHEVROLET BEL AIR SP dan, Automatic with wr angina, radio, Mtnr, whitewalls. One owner and axlra nice ........31095
1964 CHEVROLET Super Sport Herdtop. Power ateerlng end brakea, automatic, radio, heater and whitewalls, bark blue with matching bucket aaata .... 32695
1961 CHEVROLET With AcyUnder angina Slid standard transmission. Most ocenontlcot and sharp 31295
1939 PONTIAC STARCHIEF 4-Doer wlm power steering end brakea, Hydramatlc, sdlO, heater and whitewalls. Priced to sell at only ......... ........ 1526
1964 PONTIAC Wagon. Power steering and brakaa, Hydramatlc, Tdk -
laclory warranty
1963 OMC SUBURBAN WAOON, :i seater. A red and while beauty, rugged end ready to go anywhere ,	11695
1964 BUICK, WILDCAT 4-Oopr Hardtop. Power steering 'and brakes, Dynaflow, radio, heater and whitewalls. 11,000 guaranteed actual miles with new car warranty ........................ $2896
i960 OLDS 4-Door Hardtop Super "88". Power steering aria brakes,.
1962 PONTIAC BONNEV'LLE Hardtop. All ppwer, Hydramatlc, radio, ntetor, whitewalls. A one-owner beauty............ 31996
1964 GTQ. Yes, folks, only one In stock. Blq angina, radio, neater and whitewalls. Black cordovan top, custom steering wheal, and many other accessories. Better hurry ........................<2596
1963 GRAND PRIX and It'S leaded. Aluminum wheels, power windows, III) steering wheel, power brakes and altering, Hydra-malic. Black ................ 33496
1962 BUjCK 2-Ooor Hardtop. Pow-
radio, heator .Jed 24,000 actual miles
1962 MERCURY CUSTOM 4-Ooei1. Power steering and brakaa, auto-miflc, 21,000 guarantaad actual miles, bailer hurry ......31696
1964 PONTIAC BONNEV'LLE Hardtop. Power altering, brakes and Windows. Hydramatlc, radio, whitewalls. Naw car factory warranty .................. BMPS
1961 MERCEDES • BENZ, Yaa folks, that's rigwi Never had one like It, but we're sure proud of It. Please hurry	12196
OL 1-8135
855 ROCHESTER ROAD
ROCHESTER
JANUARY JAMBOREE
SUBURBAN OLDS
- - New - Used Car Lot - -
635 S. Woodward Ave.
Over 75 Late Model Birmingham Trades
and Executive Cars
NO MONEY DOWN
1963 Olds
"98" COUPE
With lull power 'and bucket seats! Only—
.$2395
1961 Chevy
MONZA 4-DOOR With automatic, heater, while-wells, Only-
$895
1963 Chevy
IlSCAYNE 2-OOOR With the 6-cyllnder engine end automatic transmission. Only—
$1495 1963 Olds
4-DOOR SEDAN
With power steering end brakes end Is only—
$2095	;
1961 Pontiac
TEMPEST 4-DOOR With automatic transmission, radio and whitewalls, Only—
$845
1960 Olds
4-DOOR HARDTOP ''ll" with full powar, A real •harp one-owner. Only—
$1095
1961 Olds
IRE eONVIR power, tha Only—
$1695
STAR FIRE CONVERTIBLE With lull power. Sharp 21,040 milt earl Only-
1964 Olds
"98" COUPE
With full power and bucket seats. 30-day unconditional warranty goes with this unit I Only—
$2995 ' 1964 Olds
DYNAMIC "88"
2-Door Herdtop with the 30-day unconditional warranty. . Only—
, $2495 1964 Olds
DYNAMIC "88"
4-Door with powar and tha 30-day unconditional warranty. Only—
$2395 1963 Olds
"98" LUXURY SEDAN With lull power end factory elr conditioning. Only—
$2895 .1963 Olds
2-OOOR HARDTOP “88" with lull power. Yours tor only-
$2095 1964 Pontiac
CONVERTIBLE
Catiline with ell power, sharp I
Only—
1962 Olds
UPCR 4-DOOM malic tranimli ■I Only— »
$1495
SUPER 4-door
With automatic transmission and foil powar l Only—
1962 Comet
STATION WAGON With 6-cyllnder engine and stick. Eaonomy special el only—
$995
1963 Olds
> DYNAMIC CONVERTIBLE "88" with e red finish and white top. Two to choose Irom. Only—
$2195 1962 Olds
"88" CONVERTIBLE Alt power and air conditioning. Only—
,$1795 1963 Buick
$1995 1962 Olds
STARPIRE CONVERTIBLE A beeutllul red finish end lull power. Only— ■:
$1995
1963 ?6rd
XII "500" AC engine, euton nly—
$1495
OALAXII "500" 4-DOOR with v-l engine, automatic end power, Only—
1963 Olds
Mt CONVERT engine, autoir Only—
$1995
- CUTLASS CONVERTIBLE With V-t engine, automatic and con solo. Only—
I960 Chevy
BISCAYNE
4 Door with v-8 engine, automatic, power steering. Only—
$795
1963 Olds
F-85 COUPE
With V-l engine and automatic. Two, to choose (roml Only—
$1495 1962 Olds
DYNAMIC "II" • *
4 Door with power ateerlng and brakes. Only—
$1495 1962 Olds
STARPIRE COUPE With' lull power. Raial aharpi Only—
$2195
1961 Chevy
IMPALA CONVERTIBLE With, power steering and brakes. Only
$1095 1963 Olds
"SI" 4-OOOR HARDTOP This sparkling beeuty hes toll powerl Only—,
$2495 1962 Olds
CUTLABS COUPE .Comes with V-l engine end automatic, Only—
$1595
, 635 S. Woodward Ave;, Birmingham
--- - ,     —f---- ■ ■ f r—-r ]—L  
674-5111
{« ifi
t		1 «...	1 ; -V	■
sk		\ \		
|4.\	, =		i	
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. V.‘l 2| ,v %J‘ . Wifjr K' ,	, . ,;i * '
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■;HOT*£
FINISH.
For the Year t at
McAuliffe's;
We Have Over
Twenty
1964
FORDS
That Myst_ ’ ■ Go!'
By the End of This Year
New'64's
- 'end
Demo's
1963'T-Bird
> Landau
This beauty has radio, heater, power steering, brakes and windows. Only-
$2791
1963 Falcon
4-Door Wagon
one wntrewain. umy^
$1595
1963 Ford
Convertible
With radio, heater, automatic, power steering, whitewalls and medium blue finish. Only—
$2091
1963 Mercury
4-Door Sedan
1962 Ford
Galaxie 500 Hardtop
4-Door with radio, heater, automatic, power ateerlng, whitewalls., Only—
$1696
63 VW
Convertible
1964 Ford'
Galaxie 500 Hardtop
2-Door With 4-SPESD TRANSMISSION, redie, heeler, whlte-
mission, radio, neater, wtme-we|ll, beeutllul burgundy flnlshl Only-
$2191
1962 Ford
Galaxie 500 Hardtop
2-Door with radio, heater, automatic, power steering, white, walls, red end white finish. Only-
$1594
1963 Falcon
Futura Sprint Convertible
With radio, heeler. 4-SPIiO TRANSMISSION, whitewalls,
solid white with red Tnterlerl
$1696
1965 Mustang
Convertible
With r«dio# h«*t«r. Automatic, pow«r Bt«trinOa whlt»w»Mt with Knock off hubi. Only
$2987
JOHN
McAuliffe
630 Oakland
FE 5-4LQJ,,,,
t1
¥
t. A:
mm
m
FORTY-TWO!
, jfy.i,,' ( *	’’tT' ' , v
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965
mfm
WASHINGTON (UPI) - FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover says the Communist party is trying to increase its influence hi .the civil rights movement ana step up its recruitment of American youths.
Hoover made the statements in a report to acting Atty. Gen.
Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATER Weak Days: Cant. 11 a.*. It 12 p.m. Sunday: Continuous 12 a.m. to 12 p.m.
NOW! “WITCHCRAFT" ’’THE HORROR OF IT ALL”
TUESDAY
LADIES’ DAY
10:48 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. LADIES 30c MEN 65 c
iues.
EAGLE
SHOCK and SHAME STORY ofa NIGHT GIRL!
CONSTANCE TOWERS ANTHONY EISLEYMICHAEL DANTE
Also
Henry	Maureen
FONDA OHARA
“SPENCER’S
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Nicholas Katzenbach on FBI activities during 1964. Warning that the Communist party is a continuing threat to the nation, Hoover said:
“The party is making every effort to increase its influence in the racial struggle and continues to promote the false impression that it is a legitimate political party.
“It has assigned priority to a recruitment campaign aimed at gaining new members from the ranks of America’s youth. To implement this program, it initiated a new national Marxist youth organization last June— the W.E.B. DuBois clubs of America.
★ ★ ★
“Chapters of this group have already appeared on several college campuses,”
NO NAMES
Hoover did not name the colleges.
The 70-year-old FBI chief said his agents had been active In civil rights law enforcement, investigating 960 cases during the year. This represented a “sharp trend upward,” he said.
He cited the FBI arrest of 21 persons in connection with the slaying' of three civil rights workers in Mississippi. He also noted that FBI investigations were conducted into alleged police brutality, and the bombings and burnings of Negro homes and churches.
★ ★ ★
.Hoover said final tabulations for 1964 would show the apprehension of about 13,200 fugitives and recovery of more than 20,-500 stolen automobiles in FBI-investigated cases. Both figures are increases of pearly 1,-000 over the previous year.
PAYS ITS WAY The FBI director said fin^s, savings and recoveries, resulting from FBI cases totaled more than $203 million, more than paying the' way of the bureau. The annual FBI budget is about $150 million.
He noted FBI participation in counterespionage activities, including the arrest and convictions in 1964 of John William Butenko, an American engineer, and Igor A. Ivanov, ah employe of the Soviet Amtorg Trading Corp.
★ * • *
Hoover also said the FBI identification division had identified about 20,98ft, fugitives through its master fingerprint file last year, an all-time record.
TOP 16 AT BOX OFFICE - The annual poll of Motion Picture Herald of Exhibitors picks the above film stars as the top 10 box office draws. In order, of rank, they are (top, from left) Doris Day, Jack Lemmon, Rock' Hudson, John
Wayne, Cary Grant, (bottom, from left) Elvis Presley, Shirley MacLaine, Ann-Margret, Paul Newman and Richard Burton, who edgAd out his wife, Elizabeth Taylor, for 10th place. :	■ ‘ .
DC. Squadron Future Clouded
Status 'Up in the Air7; Barry Yields Post
To Get Outline of Detroit Birth Control Program
DETROIT (UPI) — A birth control program for the City of Detroit was to be outlined to the-board of health today by John Hanlon, city health commissioner.
The four board members had previously said they were in favor of a birth control plan for the city. „
Hanlon told the board several weeks ago Detroit could obtain federal funds to aid in the program.
Mayor Jerome Cavanagh recently asked the city’s health and welfare departments to review birth control policies for possible adoption.
★ ★ ★
Hanlon said Detroit could receive funds from the government’s antipoverty campaign and from the United Sidles Children’s Bureau.
Noted Painter Is Dead
WASHINGTON (AP) - With Congress back, Capitol Hill’s brass-studded Air Force Reserve squadron will soon hold its first training meeting since last June.
The 9999th Air Reserve Squadron will also be getting a new commander to replace Barry Goldwater who is vacating his seat as Republican senator from Arizona. Goldwater gave up his command of the squadron several weeks ago.
★ ★
For the longer range, the squadron of 54 Senate and House members and congres sional staffers faces a doubtful future.
* rrtThis is undetermined," the Air Force said when asked whether the 9999th will remain in existence when congressman reservists are shifted from the ready to the standby reserve, along with other key government officials. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara has ordered such a governmentwide shift.
TOP HEAVY
The 9999th is heavily weighted •with brass. Its roster has included Maj. Gen. Goldwater, 2 brigadier generals, 4 colonels and 15 lieutenant colonels, plus an assortment of majors, captains and a few first lieutenants, w	w	w
The squadron has no mobilization mission as a unit. Its members individually do have “mobilization designation.”
*1 ★	★
Among the squadron members is Walter Jenkins, a reserve colonel who resigned as President Johnson’s aide during the political campaign after it was disclosed he had been arrested twice on morals charges.
The 9999th was formed in January 1961 “as a vehicle to afford inactive duty, nonpay training to members of Congress and their professional staff who are Air Force 'reservists," the Air Force said.
IN SESSION
While Congress is in session, the squadron members gather at 8 a m. each Tuesday morning in an auditorium of one of the Senate office buildings.
The weekly sessions are divided to Intelligence briefings by Pentagon experts, a lecture, and a question end answer period.
May Be Biggest '65 Movie Project
Filming of	'Hawaii' S
THOMAS
By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer A HOLLYWOOD - Filming will start on Washington’s Birthday for what may be the biggest movie project of 1965.
The site ofini-tial shooting:. 150 miles above the Arctic Circle off Bodo, Norway.
If that seems like a strange place to begin a film about the history of Hawaii, director George Roy Hill explains:
“We’ll do the scenes there of the missionaries sailing through the Straits of Magellan err route from New England to the islands, The geography is very similar off Norway, and we will be near towns where the crew can headquarter. That wouldn’t be possible at the straits.”
* - * . ★ ★
'Director Hill — “The World of Henry Orient” — and producer Walter Mirisch, “West Side Story,” discussed their monumental project at Mirisch Bros, headquarters. The filming will come 5& years after the James Michener novel was purchased prepublication.
WHY SO LONG?
Why so long a wait?
“We	had	an	unfortunate
start,” explained Mirisch. Fred Zinnemann worked on the picture for^a long time, and he came to the conclusion that the story should be told in two pictures. We decided that wasn’t feasible. The whole idea of two pictures being made and shown in tandem wasn't a commercial venture.”
★	★	★
Zinnemann left the project and Hill was enlisted. But the weighty	Michener	tome	may
still end up as two films.
‘We’ll	take	the	story	from
prehistoric times up to about 1862,” Hill explained. “That will include the Polynesian period, the story of the missionaries,
some of the Chinese and a little of the Japanese.
ANOTHER FILM “If the’ picture is well, received, the rest of the novel might be put into another film. We would jump to a whole new generation in the story.”
The film makers said the Norwegian shooting would include none of the principal cast members — Julie Andrews is the first to be signed. The cast will begin .work at a New England location which is being selected. The company would then report to Hollywood for New England interior scenes.
★	★ Hr
The preponderance of the movie will be shot in Hawaii, of all places. The site will be an old Army howitzer base at Ma-
kua on Oahu. A second unit will also film some backgrounds at Bora Bora, whence came the prijmitjve Hawaiians.
Shooting time: 120 days of major production. That’s a hefty schedule by todays standards, but far less than the time taken for overweight epics like “Cleopatra" and “Mutiny on the Bounty.”
NOT A CAREER
“We’ll have a finished script before we start shooting,” HiU assured. “I don’t intend to make a career of ‘Hawaii.’ ”
Wayne Begins Movie
Film Star Routs Burgh
Ex-Canadian Aide Dies
OTTAWA (AP) - R. Watson Sellar, 70, former auditor general of Canada, died Sunday. He had heid> the post for 19 years, until his retirement in 1959.
HOLLYWOOD t(AP) - John i Wayne began his first movie today since his September operation for lungedneer —/and disclosed he had an unexpected rehearsal for his' he-man role, that of routing.a burglar from his home.	- ' - , .
Before leaving for location in Mexico Sunday, Wayne -told newsmen at plane-side:. “It was not exactly a comforting way to prepare to leave home.”
Wayne said the burglar apparently scaled the fence at his home in suburban Encino Saturday night and broke in at the back door, “scaring the maid out of her wits.”
“My little daughter came to get me,'" he said. “Her face was frozen with fearr**
‘LOST HIM’
“I tried to get the guy, but he was outside and I lost him in the dark."
Wayne said he telephoned police. A short time later they booked Dennis Lee Parker, 22, of Hollywood, on suspicion of attempted burglary.
, ' ★ jh' ' '*
Wayne, 57; all-time movie box-office champion, disclosed last week that his surgery had been for lung cancer and that he had “licked It."
Sunday he said he felt great and was teady to swing a fist, leap aboard horses and plunge into 50-degree Mexican waters for his role in “Sons of Katie Elder.”
“I’m cured, thank God!” said Wayne. “Everybody should
have checkups —at least annually. I had mine after an 18-month lapse.”. f \
Wayne, a former five-pack-a-day cigarette smoker, said: “Now, I’m chewing gum."
JOHN WAYNE
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NEW YORK (AP) - Milton Clark Avery, 71, noted American painter, died Sunday. Avery’s works appear in major galleries in the United States and recently hjls canvases have sold for as much as $10,000.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY t
Television Programs-
ISP
Program! furnished by station* listed in this column ara subject to change without notico.
eWmtri 2-WJaK-TV Chonnstl 4-WWJ-TV Chonnat 7-WXYZ-TV Channnl 9-CKfcW-TV Channel 56-WTV5
MONDAY EVENING j 6:00 (2) (4) News, Weather,
(7) Movie: "Jet Attack” (In Progress).
(9) Magilla Gorilla *.	(56) New Orleans Jazz
6:36 (7) (ColorfNews, Sports •'* (9) Bat Masterson ;; (56) Pathfinders 6:45 (7) News 7:90 (2) Dobie Giliis f ® Dobie vows to starve until !. he gets a date.
(4)' (Color) George Pierrot Visit to islands in the South Pacific. \
(7) (Color) Adventures
_*]- (9) Movie: ‘‘Princess______
.O’Rourke” (1943) Olivia ‘^d6: Havilland, Robert . Cummings, Charles Coburn, Jack Carson, t (56) (Special) Czechoslovakia Today 7:30 (2) .To Tell the Truth (4) 90 Bristol Court Karen’s date has to leave town.
(7) Voyage
Group of Nazis kidnap Nelson.
(56) (Special) Seven Up , 8:00 (2) I’ve Got A Secret (4190 Bristol Court Alan has to beat the clock to return yule gift.
8:30 (2) Andy Griffith . Barney enters real estate business. ",
(4) 90 Bristol Court _ Dick belieVes in the power of home remedies.
(7) No Time for Sergeants Wifi seeks talent for an-, " nual show.,
9:00 (2) (4) (7) (Special) President Johnson (See TV Feature!)
(9) Mystery Theater 10:00 (2) CBS Reports (See TV Features)
(4) Alfred Hitchcock (See TV Features)
(7) Ben Casey Illness victim finds family’s attitude difficult.
(9) The Sixties
10:30 (9) Don Messers Jubilee 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News,
* Weather, Sports 11:30 (2) Movie): “White Witch • Doctor” (1953) Susan Hayward, RobertMltchum. Walter Slezak, Mashood Ajala.
‘	(4) (Color) Johnny Carson
(See TV. Features) i (9) Bingo
12:00 (9) Movie: “The Weaker Sex” (1949) Ursula Jeans, Derek Bond.
1:00 (4) Lawman (7) After Hours 1:30 (2) Highway Patrol
TUESDAY MORNING
6:10 (2) On the Farm Front 6:15 (2) News 6:20 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 0:50 (2) News 7:00 (2) Happyland (4) Today
Teen-age movie makers discussed.
’	(7) Johnny Ginger
8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater
8:30 (7) Movie: “Four Poster” (1952) Rex Harrison, Lilli Palmer.
1:45 (?6) English V 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round
9:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Living
1 '	(9) Romper Room
9:10 (56) Let’s Read 9:30 (56) American History 10:00 (4) Make Room for pad* '	dy (Repeat)
(DhCanoda Schools 10:10 (56) Our Scientific World 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (Repeat)
;	(4) (Color) What’s This
F WSNpP
j * (9) Let’s Look at Farm-I i big ,.
0:35 (56) French Lesson 0:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:51 ((4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith j	(Repeat)
(4) Concentration !	’(7) Girl Talk
11:20 ( 56) What’s New 11:30 (2) McCoys (Repeat)
(4) (Color) Jeopardy (7) Price Is Right • |	(9) Butternut Square
11:50 (9) News l	(56) Reeding
TV Features
State of theytlnion
■ m <’
Si
By United Press International PRESIDENT JOHNSON, 9:00 pJl. (2) (4) (7) State of Union message is. carried live ,by all networks.
CBS REPORTS, 10:00 p.m. (2) Harry Reasoner anchors round-table discussion of presidential address. _
ALFRED HITCHCOCK, 10:00 pin. (4) Peter Lawford, Julie London, Martha Hyer, Joanna Moore, Roger C. Camel in story'of brotherly un-love. _ j_i_ i.
JOHNNY CARSON, 11:30 p.m. (4) Comedian Bill Coshy subs for Johnny tonight. ; j ‘.	'
12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News'
1:00 (2) Jack Benny (Repeat)
, (4) News (7) Ernie Ford
,	(1) Movie: “Women Are
Like That” (1938) Kay Francis; Pat O’Brien.
1:10 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (96) Children’s Hour 1:15 (4) Topics for Today 1:25 (96) Arts and Crafts 1:30 (2) As the World Turns „ (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal
(7) Bachelor Father (Repeat)
1:55 (4) News
(56) American History 2:00 (2) Password
(4) Moment of Truth "
(7) Flame in the Wind r 2:20 (56) Safety Circle -2:25 (56) Families 2:30 (2) Playhouse 2 (4) Doctors (7) Day In Court 2;50 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) Genera) Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) New:
3:30 (2) Edge of Night
\ (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 4:00 (2) Secret Storm
(4) Match Game v(7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle
4:25 (4) News
4:30 (2) Movie: “Slaughter Trail” (1951) Qig Young Brian Donlevy.
(4) Mickey Mouse Club •
*	(repeat) '	' - *
(9) Adventures in Paradise.
5:00 (4) (Color) George Pier-. ■ rot 'u
*	(7) Movie: “Wyoming Renegades” (1055) Phil Carey, Gene Evans.
5:15 (56) British Calendar
5:30 (9) Rocky and Friends (56) What’s New?
5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny
5:55 (2) Sports
(4) Carol Duvall.
Slide in Austrian Alps Kills 3 of 21 Students
SALZBURG, Austria m - A giant avalanche in the Austrian Alps trapped 21 Dutch students last night, killing three of them, The others freed themselves.
Their deaths raised the winter death toll in the Austrian Alps to nine.
Free medical service is provided by public hospitals'sin Argentina.
AFTERNOON
lliOl (2) Lovs Of Lif*
]	(4 (Color) Say When
I (7) Donna Reed (Repeat)
I	(0) Bingo
II	20 (56) British Calendar U:M (2) News ' V 11:90 (2) Search for Tomorrow I (4) (Color) Truth or Con-, sequences
;	(7) Father Knows Best
(Repeat)
11:1V (56) Spanlah Lesson
A Peerless Seer Peers Into New Year's Outlook
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK—So you wonder what’ll happen this year? , Well, don’t go around asking strangers.
I lead off my Fearless Forecasts for 1965 with a solemn prophecy that a great reform wave’ll hit America ... the pendulum will swing away from filth . . : Gov’t, scrutinizers will attempt a drastic cleanup of dirty movies, novels and
^ 'fa tUt h. •
With the Pope likely to visit ns (forecast here months ago), there’ll be a boom in all religions in America.
The Bible will become a bigger best seller than ever thanks to the movies, “The Greatest Story Ever Told” and “The Bible.”
I see—in my crystal ball—a discussion of plans for a White House wedding'. . . With business men optimistic, tips will gej bigger .
Sen. Jacob Javits will be mentioned increasingly for Mayor of NY .. . Men’s clothes will become more elegant and “high-fashion.” ... Petrocelfi, j taking a fashion show to Moscow in May, wifi ! also push “the shaped suit” whlch’ll have a gentle suppression at the sides giving a leaner I look—even to us fatties.
★ ★ ★
WILSON
■ Strife-Torn Campus Gets Acting Chief

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■i
FORTY-THHEE
■
Folk music, long “in,” wifi be in trouble. “Good music” will come back .., American sexbombs will be outsexed by Virna Lisa, Italian; Catherine Deneuve, French, and “our own” Xnn-Margret, Swedish.
It’ll be a great year for Taureans (April 21-May 20) in their love affairs, especially in February, May, August, September, October and December .. . Nancy Wilson’ll be the new singing rage ... Elvis Presley, turning 30, will be acclaimed a marvel it the movies. His pictures always makO money. One reason: Ms manager Col. Tom Parker kept him off TV except at the start.	v .
THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . .
Milton Berle and Ben Makslk, owner of Brooklyn Town A Country, are in a hot feud over the end of Berle’s 4-week engagement'. It got so heated that Berle’s got ulcer trouble .. . Andre porumbeanu claims he tried to deliver Christmas gifts to his sons but Gamble Benedict’s kinfolk turned them over to the Police Athletic League. t }
Gower ChampionTl direct “Everybody Out, the Castle Is Sinking’’ (whose cast Includes his wife Marge)... Sophia Loren told a reporter (on the “Lady L” set) that she never diets: “Carlo has never complained, so everything stays Just as It Is!
,.. The Paul Fords celebrated their 40th anniversary, and Ford told his publicist jokingly,' “Don’t mention it—I don’t wont to lose my Imago as an available young bachelor,”
TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Joe E. Lewis announced that he Is looking for a cure for a New Year’s Eve hangover—last year’s.
WISH I’D SAID THAT: “The time for playing Santa Claua la over for another year,” note* Harry Kali, “Unless, of count; you’re a husband.” ; -	■
REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The wise public epeafesr uses (he hop-sklp-juinp method—he hop*. to the. platform, skips hi* introduction and Jtimpa to his conclusion.”—Anoa.^
EARL’S PEARLS: One of the shortest distances In the world is between easy and uneasy,payments,
If the government’s no interested In getting young people Into tile space program why don't they build a rocket with a phone and a,pm oven? , •, . That’s earl, brother. *	<
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BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) - A fast-moving new chancellor took over the strife-ridden Berkeley campus of the University of California today, on the optimistic note that turmoil over student political activity can be settled by February.
Dean Martin Meyerson, 42 Was elevated to acting chancellor hi a surprise move by the university’s Board of Regents Saturday night.
^ ' #P|| A ,,
He succeeded Dr. Edward Strong, 63, who asked for and was granted an indefinite leave of absence to recuperate from a recent illness.
Immediately : after his appointment, which came to him on a 24-hour notice, Meyerson telephoned an emergency faculty committee considering the campus speech situation marked by mass demonstrations and sit-in arrests and summoned them to a Sunday morning meeting at his Berkeley home.
AVENUES OPEN Sunday afternoon Meyerson called a news conference and read a statement declaring: “Civil disobedience is warranted only when there is no recourse to reasonable deliberation. Avenues of recourse now are available on this campus.-Sunday night Meyerson issued a set of campus rules covering what he called “those matters of greatest concern during the next few days.”
OPEN DISCUSSION The rulefc permit open discussion on the steps of the administration building, Sproul Hall;, establish hours and places where students can set up tables and receive donations, distribute literature and recruit for causes, and reduce from 72 hours to 48 the advance notification required for off-campus speakers to be brought on campus. ’
• ★ it . ★
A minority group of the 27,000-member Student body demanding virtually unlimited freedojn on campus to espouse off-cam-PUs causes such as civil rights, had slated a noon rally on Sproul Hall steps today.
ACROSS
1 — Hampton, reconstruction statesman.	V
*5 Light-Horse Harry ——
8 Ku — Klan	'
12	Seed coat
13	Eggs ‘	,
14	Ckfid’s counting word
'15' Reconstruction collaborator
17 Fence bar	'', t y‘
18 Combreads	' tf.V
19	Theatia* district
21	Typist (coll.)
22	Gill *:>
23	Vegetable	§
25 Moslem bible
29 American wild plum ' >•.
33 Compression 35 Dance.
37	Grafted (her.)
38	New Mexico state flower
39	Bitter vetch
41 Egyptian maternity goddess
43 ——Kefauver	r
43, Reddish decomposed rock
51	“Waving the bloody —”
52	Asiatic mountain range
53	Pieces of mosaic 56 Stitched 57'Before
58	Finest
59	Suspend	.	.
60	Rodent
6) Greek god of war
Rams Barge
NEW YORK* — The luxury 1 i n e r Nieuw Amsterdam rammed an anchored railroad barge in predawn darkness today in the narrows off Staten Island, the Coast Guard reported.
There apparently were no injuries.
The Coast Guard said the 30,000 • ton 750-foot Holland-America Line ship was returning from a West Indies cruise when the accident occurred.
The vessel was reported proceeding toward its Hudson River pier under its own power.
★	Sr	it
The Coast Guard said there was no one aboard the barge, and that the liner was not seriously damaged.
READ FOR SCENE
Four Coast Guard cutters, New Yo^k Harbor Police, fire boats and a coast guard helicopter were dlaphtched to the scene.
Sr	★	it
The liner and the barge stuck together momentarily after the mishap, but by the time a Coast Guard cutter reached the scene the barge was floating free and the liner was proceeding into port.
DOWN
1	Stingers
2	Town in India
3	Feminine appellation
4	Girl’s name
5	Moo
Min Tanguay 7 Tidal Flow 6 Horny material 9 Loyal (Scot.)
.10 Distinct part « , V 11 Wood (comb, forte) ; V 16 Sopping ;
20 Writing fluids 22 bagger” J fT 24 Roof firdal *
26 Operate	;
27 Craft ' >	**	1
28	Born '	‘
29	Timid ..
30	Mr. Holtz ''
31	Grampus
32 Eh^osing .	' V
34 Always (contr.)	1.
36 Father 40 Soap-frame bar 42 Penetrate
44	Biblical queen
45	Exhauster
46	Rubout , 4fBroofreaders* directions
48	Deep cut
49	Olive genus ,
50	Cut
5* Time period 55 Harden, as cement
Gas Threatens 2 East Cities
~. By The' Associated Press:"
Loaded propane gas -tanks were overturned in populated .arehs Sunday in two derailments of tiie Boston A Maine RMfroad -r at Dovet, N.H., and Hoosick Falls, N.Y.
There was no fire or explosion, but both communities experienced tense hours as the tanks were surrounded by firefighting equipment and inspected, • 'Y“' ^ :M: ■■
W , it - ,ft .
Two tank cars, containing about 40,000 gallons of the gas, overturned in a business-residential district of Dover, 300 feet from a church where services were being held.
—A 30,000-gallon tank car was (me of eight cars derailed at Hoosick Falls near a number of homes and only a few feet away from large fuel oil and gasoline storage tanks. The homes were evacuated until inspection showed no leak in the tank.
Pioneers' Kin PigpJJL'1
SANTA FE, K.AL '(AP) — Maria Adelina Hteeite COtfro-Warren, 83, a descendant of pioneer families of New Mexico’s Sapnish settlement, dted day. Her family history in Norm America extends back to the time of Hernando Cortez’ conquest of Mexico.

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Town Tree Toppled
•YAKIMA, Wash. (AP) -Many people took down Christmas trees yesterday.
But in Yakima, somebody did it differently.
Police said vandals c h o p p e d down an 85-foot community tree, erected Dec. II on a downtown street divider, before dawn.
The tree fell across one lane of traffic and knocked out street and traffic lights.
★ ★ . '★
The vandals fled.
Water supply Is a big industry. In tile U.S., by weight of material handled, it is seven times bigger than a!i>other Industries put together.
U. S. Fires Kill ,900 in 1964
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BOSTON * - Fires killed 11,900 persons in the United States in 1964 and destroyed property worth 91,575 million, the National Fire Protection Association said today. Almost 30 per* cent of all fire victims were*children.
The number of deaths increased 100 over the 1963 toll but was less than the record mark of 12,100 fire deaths set ip 1954.
it it it
The property loss figure, $113,-100,000 under " the previous year’s record high, reversed a three-year trend of constantly rising dollar losses from fire.
About 4,550 of the fire deaths occurred in U.S homes, the report said.
'Symbolic Drinking' Isn't Bad
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. *?AU drinking isn't bad, from a social point of view, according to an Australian sociologist writing in the quarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol.
The author; Dr. Harold Fallding, says only one type,. serves a useful social function.	*
He labels It “ornamental, community-symbolic drinking.” This drinking acts simply as a symbol of kinship among the persons who drink, he wrote. ‘
“The alcohol Is not needed to generate any relationship, but to express the pre-existing solidarity generated by trust.” ★ ★ ★
This probably “still occuraf to pockets at social gatherings amongst ourselves, but its rarity may perhaps be taken for a sign of the eclipse of community amongst us,” the article states.
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T’OETY-FOUR
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JAJJUAEY/4, 1965 iit	- ■ |
4 V ■; Y
BffCSk Republicans	Mvstl^nife
WASHINGTON (AP)*- Dean Burch, the embattled chairman of die Republican National Committee, said today die new year should be one of GOPuhlty •and responsible opposition — and not “the year of the scape* goat.”	./
“If 1965 becomes a year spent In division and recrimination,” Burch told a Republican women’s group, “then we ’Will also fail our larger duty to the nation as the party of responsible opposition.”
The theme of the young chair-
man’s prepared adifress to the pH less conservative hands
District of Columbia League of Republican Women was that Republicans must put aside their differences, reexamine the principles they hold in common and present a united challenge to the Johnson administration where its programs run counter to. GOP philosophy.
Burch, a political ally Of Barry Goldwater before the Arizonan selected him to head toe National Committee, i^ the target of some Republicans who want to put toe party machinery
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
to
WASHINGTON UP) - Dean Burch’s plea |n letters to all 132 members of toe Republican National Committee thkt he be allowed to stay on as chairman seems to . nave produced no change of heart.
If tt$y were for him before they beard from him they still are; if they were against him, they are still against him, an Associated Press survey indicated. ! \ i*	^ *
Burch’s argument that he Ought to be retained was keyed to tile theme of an earlier leiter written the committee members by Barry Goldwater, the 1964 GOP presidential candidate who picked Burch for toe job.
Goldwater had said firing Burch would be “a repudiation of me” and “those Republicans Who have supported me and the principles for which I stood.”
■	dr dr
Similarly, Burch said his resignation has been urged on toe grounds that he is a symbol of Goldwater and "of toe so-called ' ‘conservative faction’ of toe Re-publican party."
PULL REPUDIATION “If this is true,” Burch said, “then my resignation under pressure ‘at this time would clearly be interpreted as a full repudiation by the Republican party of all those voters who identified themselves with responsible conservative Republicanism-" \	..
Several of those commenting in the AP survey noted that no other candidate for the Job was on the horizon and that “personalities” were involved. Here are some of the replies stating no change in-view:
Said California Committee-woman Ann Bowler: “I’d already told the party I was going to vote to retain Dean Burch . . , f don’t see why any one man should be made toe scapegoat.”
★ ★ ★
Texas Committeeman Albert Bel Fay declared “now is not a good time to make a change. That’s been my position all along. I’ll do anything I can to help him (Burch) stay.”
‘HAVEN’T CHANGED’
Illinois Committeewoman Audrey Peak said “I haven’t
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changed any — I’m still going to vote for his (Burch’s) retention.”
Virginia Committeewoman Hazel K. Barger retained her previous position that Burch should be replaced, bat said whether she votes agidnst him will depend on whether .gn adequate replacement can be found.	1 v
She said “we’ve got to change this image that we’ve projected ip toe last campaign.”
★ dr ★
New Jersey Committeewoman Katherine Neuberger said “I still think he represents one sei ment of the party and we n« someone who will represent all segments of the party.”
DUSTER MOVE
The move to oust Burch is expected to come to a head at a meeting of toe National Committee in Chicago Jan. 22 and 23. It began to gather momentum immediately after President Johnson’s landslide victory over Goldwater Nov. 3.
Bum Cross in Yard of Negro in Atlanta
ATLANTA (AP)- A six-foot cross was burned in the front yard of a ‘Negro home in a racially mixed neighborhood early yesterday. _
Neighbors reported that several white men placed toe cross against a free in toe yard at the home Of Edgar Teasley Jr., 29, an automotive assembly plant worker. One of toe neighbors also called police, but they were unable to trace the movements of those who lighted the cross. ‘
Teasley, who said he was asleep and knew nothing of the incident until informed by others, could not account for being singled out by the crossburners. He said he has not been active in civil rights movements or belonged to any civil rights organizations.
Expect Forest Products May Double Output
HARRISBURG, Pa. (ffl Forest products constitute a $1.5 billion industry annually in Pennsylvania.
Findings of the Governor’s Council of Science and Technology, recently released, indicate that with proper research, development and promotion, this could be more than doubled in 10 years and redoubled after that.
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Referring to his fight to hold on to his job, Burch commented, “perhaps the search for scapegoats is an inevitable consequence of defeat.”
“But,” he continued, “as I have said many times in recent weeks-the real challenge for Republicans in 1965 is not what to do about Dean, Burch: It is what to do in order to atrength-
en our party’s role as-toe ic spokesman for responsible government and those principles which have made our country great/ *iuT >	' 1 '
“The question we should* be
asking if our party is to achieve unity is not: Who lost toe .flee
* • dr * ** **	'
As he examined these reasons, Burch found grounds for
| the Johnson administration. ,	^ M
, “We are Republicans,” said Burch, “because we know that before, toe great society came the free society. And because
we understand that stoat ton. Democrats really aim for fe jpt a great society at all — merely greater government control over all segments of American society." 1
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ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNAT'ONAL
smm
The Weather
U.S. Weathtr Bureau Forecast
t flair and warmer
i	(Details Page 2)
VOL. 123 NO. 284
★ it ★ ★ ★
PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JANUARY -4, 1965 —44 PAGES
US. Road Toll
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The nation ended its three-day observance of the New Year at midnight yesterday, breaking all previous traffic death records for the holiday and surpassing the worst fears of traffic experts.
Highway-accidents during the 78-hour period claimed 453 lives, passing
20 in Michigan Are Fatalities
HOWLING DEMONSTRATOR - Marines with bayonets push a howling woman demonstrator aside during a disturbance at a Saigon-Waterfront today. The mob later took to streets in a campaign to overthrow the Viet Nam gov-\erment.
Three Teens Killed as Car Slides on Ice
\ermem.
Rusk Is Urging ,
Caution in Viet War
the New Year’s high mark set during a four-day holiday in 1955-56 when 409 persons died.
The previous three-day record was 374 in 1959-60.
Before the holiday started, the National Safety Council estimated that between 300 and 360 persons might be killed in traffic.
California, with 68 fatalities, recorded the highest number of deaths and broke its three - day New Year’s record toll of 46, set in 1960.
A spokesman for the Califor-including three teen-agers killed tQn> ^ .<sJe’alcohol will in a one-car crash near Allegan. foun(j to be a tremendous *	*	*	factor” in accounting for the
The Associated Press tabula- bleak total, tion of holiday fatalities began	*	★	★
at 6 p.m. .Thursday and ended For comparative purposes, at midnight yesterday. ’ The Associated Press counted
By The Associated Press Twenty persons died on Michigan highways during the 78-hour 1965 New Year’s holiday,
Fireworks Due
Over Rules, Party Posts
New Lineup Gives Dems Better Than 2-1 Margin in Each House
WASHINGTON UF— Sen; Russell B. Long, D-La., was elected Democratic whip for the 89th Congress today and House Republicans selected Rep. Melvin R. Laird of Wisconsin as chairman of their party conference.
WASHINGTON W)—Secretary of State Dean Rusk has counseled against “reckless action” in Viet Nam and said he would not have the United States abandon the war or expand it.
Rusk also ruled out for the time being a political settlement of the struggle against the Viet Cong guer-...	rillas — a drawn-out af-
fair in which the United States has invested men, money and materials.
The South Vietnamese can turn back the Communist insurgents, President Johnson's chief foreign policy adviser maintained yest(|rcjay as he reviewed the war and the international SAIGON, South Vi#t Nam scene generally in a yearend (AP) — A mob of 1,000 rioted review on television, through Saigon’s m!ain streets
The deaths placed the state in seventh place in the nation, in' comparison with third place during the Christmas holidays when 35 persons died on the state’s highways.
Sixteen persons died during the 30-hour 1964 holiday.
,k k ★
This year’s death toll corn-
traffic deaths during a nonholiday three-day weekend last month. The total then was 396. DEATH INCREASE Last week, 578 deaths were counted during the three-day Christmas, period.
★ ★ ★
California’s toll far surpassed the next nearest state — Texas, with 45 fatalities. New York and Illinois followed with 24 each.
SENATOR RETURNS - Sen. Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy, D-Mass., uses a cane as he walks wtfl his wife, Joan, and their daughter, Kara, at Washington’s National Airport
after their arrival yesterday from a Florida vacation. It was the senator’s first trip to the nation’s capital since his back was broken in a plane crash last summer.
55 Killed Key Address Tonight
Saigon Rioters Call for Ouster
pares wUh 11 dead in the laSt Q^y eight states went through comparable 78-hour period in the holiday without a truffle 1962. Sixteen died in a similar death _ Alaska Delaware period in 1M1 and 36 in 1960. Hawaii, North Dakota, Rhode The dead include:	Island, South Dakota, Vermont
and Wyoming.
The safety council said 1964
as Church Roof Falls
LBJ at Presession Rites
PATCH OF ICE The three teen-agers
killed instantly when their car traff‘c0defhs.	?
.	. , .	. ti U-. reach a record 48,000. The coun-
slammed into a tree after hit-
....	.... cil plans to report the 12-month
ting a patch of ice on M40, ^ later month.
Rusk conceded he shares with many Americans “a sense of frustration that things are not somehow moving more rapidly toward a conclusion.”
But, he said, the situation
for more than three hours today, calling for the overthrow of Premier Tran Van Huong.
★ ★	★
Viet Cong guerrillas ambushed another Vietnamese ranger battalion near the town of Binh Gia and killed a U.S. calls for persistence and cool-adviser, the first American to ness, not ‘‘reckless action which die to 1965.	would move us over thought-
Nlne rangers were killed ]es®ly 1° cither the direction of and 30 or 40 were missing. defeat or in the direction of a ,	.	,	. very great catastrophe.”
So far six Americans have	+	*	*
been killed In the fighting Along the way, he said he around Binh Gla, which started doeg noj favor expanding the last Tuesday.	struggle or having the United
_	..	. ,	, . States pull out of It.
Two others are missing and
presumed captured. Government SUBJECT ASIANS causualties are estimated at The first, he said, would sub-about 500.	ject Asians to devastation and
Since December 1961, 247 lead down a trail "the end of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) which no one in any country
seven miles north of Allegan.
The victims included the driver, Terrance Richard Westgate, 17, and Gary W. Peters, 18, both of Allegan, and Sharon Lee Unruh, 17, of Holland. ’
In Today's 1 Press
could possibly see with assurance.
Malaysia
Retaliation threatened against Indonesia . . . PAGE 2.
Burch
Urges GOP unity, responsible opposition In 1965 . , , Page 44.
New Feature Press highlights "Peo-
pie in the News” PAGE 26,	. . .
Area News		. 25
Astrology 		32
Bridge	.. 32
Comics ............	. 32
Editorial* ,,,,,,,,,,	6
laconic Tax Series	28
Markets		37
Obituaries 		 .	33
Sports . 		34-35
Theaters 		42
TV, Radio Programs	48
Wilson, Earl	43
Women’s Pages	20-21
The second, ho said, would encourage Communist China to become more aggressive.
He dismissed a political settlement — a third alternative to present policy — as impossible because the Communists have refused to give up their aggressive designs.
*	* k
Elsewhere the debate on Viet Nam continued as four senators urged a reevaluation of the U.S. role in the Southeast Aslan country and Japan’s new prime minister, Ejlsnku Sato, said in a copyright Interview In U. 8. News and World Report that Viet Nam will bo an Important subject during his forthcoming talks with Johnson.
Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., advocated the reevaluation and got agreement from Sens. John Sherman Cooper, U-Ky., A. S. Mike Monroney, DOklu., and Carl T, Curtis, H-Neb.
The United States, said Morse, should be fighting In Viet Nam “as part of the United Nations organization or as part of the SEATO organization or an a part of the 14-nation Geneva conference organization, but not on a unilateral basis.”
Mrs. Lillian Horton, 62, the mother of Detroit Tigers outfielder Willie Horton, died Saturday at an Albion hospital of Injuries suffered Friday in a car-truck crash near Jackson. ★ ★ *
Her husband, Clinton, 65, was killed in the «crash and seven persons, including three other members of the Horton family, were injured. One, Horton’s brother Billy, 26, is still hospitalized.
3-CAR CRASH
Mrs. Fannie Faszhplz, 70, of Webster Groves, a suburb of St. Louis, Mo., was killed yesterday in a three-car pileup on U.S. 127 just south of Jackson. Police said five other persons were injured in the crash, and two Detroit men are being held
Is Winter Planning to Take a Vacation?
While tomorrow won’t be exactly bathing suit weather, it will be fair and warmer.
A high of 36 to 44 is expected with the low dipping between
MILD
PUEBLA, Mexico CW—Fifty-five Mexicans were killed and 63 injured when the roof of a new Roman Catholic Church collapsed yesterday at Rijo, 75 miles southeast of Mexico City.
The concrete roof crashed during a Mass to dedicate the building. About 300 persons were inside.
Officials said a preliminary investigation indicated defective construction had caused the tragedy. The building was of brick and concrete.
Among those killed was the priest officiating at the Mass, Father Ezequiel Alvarez Ortega, whose brother designed and built the church. __
Police said the brother would be questioned.
NO CHANCE
"It happened so fast nobody had a chance to run,” said Alfonso Escamilla, 15, one of the injured survivors.
WASHINGTON (A1)—President Johnson worshiped with dignitaries of the nation today in the traditional early morning service of the opening day of Congress, then headed back to his desk for more polishing and pruning on tonight’s State of the Union message.
He may take the wraps off some tax cut and bltd-;	get secrets in the unusual
WASHINGTON 'UP) — The heavily Democratic 89th Congress convened at noon today with some opening day fireworks a certainty.
Leadership contests in the House and Senate, skirmishing over rules of procedure and a challenge to the seating of Mississippi’s House members promise to enliven the festive air that always marks the Start of a new Congress*
To cap off Hie day, President Johnson win deliver his State of the Union message tit a joint session of the legislators at 9 p.m. EST.
In it he is expected to outline his domestic legislative program.
★ ★ ★
Radio and television networks plan' live coverage.
BIG MAJORITY
Johnson, landslide victor over Republican Barry Goldwater in last November’s election, win have a better than 2-1 Democratic majority in both the Senate and the House.
English Girl Is Satisfactory After Legs Shortened
22 to 30. Mild weather is also predicted for tonight.
★ ★ ★
The clouds will roll back Wednesday as the temperature continues to climb.
The low before 8 a m. today spurted to 33 by 1 p.m.
“I heard a roaring noise and looked up and saw the center of the roof coming down, but I didn’t have time to get out.”
Officials said most of those
OSWESTRY, England (AP) -Surgeons termed fully successful today the project to shorten Anne Rowston’s legs.
Anne, 19, was 6 feet 7V4 inches tall. Now she is just over 6 feet. And that was the whole idea: to make her a shorter girl.
She underwent surgery for the fourth time at the Oswestry Orthopedic Hospital last Saturday. Today she smiled in her bed as a hospital bnlle-tin described her condition as "quite satisfactory.”
nighttime address to the legislators.
Johnson and his vice president, Hubert H. Humphrey, arrived separately for the 8 a.m. service at the National Presbyterian Church, but sat together and left together in the President’s limousine.
Members of the House and Senate were among other dignitaries on hand.
This is the most lopsided linenp since Franklin D. Roosevelt’s second • term Democratic sweep in 1936.
With Republicans searching for a comeback trail, GOP House members meet in advance of the session-opening to vote on whether to replace Rep. Charles A. Halleek of Indiana as their leader with RCp. Gerald R. Ford of Michigan.
★ ★ ★
Also to bo selected by House R e p u b 1 i c a n s, their ranks (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6)
Several were among the rifling elders officiating in serving the Communion.
★ k ★
Johnson and Humphrey sat on the right side of the church in the third row from the front, in the pew once reserved for former President Dwight D. Eisenhower who regularly attended the church.
Hailed*. Ford Down to Wire
By removing pieces of bones PRAYERS
who escaped injury were seat- from her legs In the four oper-	There were prayer8 {or the
AH At Ihn Knnh nf (La aLhhaL ntiAmj ihn nnAinro rnniuinn nAP	*
ed at the back of the church ations the doctors reduced her natlon the Pr^it congress, where the roof had not been height by more than seven fn_
completed.
inches.
City Optimistic About '65
JOSEPH A. WARREN
By L. GARY THORNE Pontiac municipal affairs enter 1965 on a note of optimism.
The steady grip of Joseph A. Warren, new city manager, has been felt at city hall and likewise, the hand of one of Pontiac’s more popular City Commissions.
Warren, who has given Indications of running a proverbial "tight ship,” joined the city last August.
The 44-year-old manager has his town way oI doing business. For , example, he has insisted in fiscal matters that every dollar of revenue aind expenditures be budgeted.
In addition, Warren has said "that the general fund as a rule should not subsidize any specialized funds — sewage, water, etc.
— that are supported by their own millage or revenues. WWW
Warren’s crackdown on substandard housing and code enforcement has further demonstrated his Interest In running a "tight ship.”
CALL TO BATTLE Meantime, the note of optimism that heralds the new year might also be a call to battle,
The City Commission, headed by Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., has proposed an tncoine tax for city residents and nonresidents working in the city.
One of the first jobs of 1965 will be the scheduling of a referendum on the controversial tax.
Recognizing the need to document their case, commissioners, nevertheless, are confident voters will back them.
SWITCH EMPHASIS if their expected support rolls up a favorable vote, Pontiac in 1965 will switch the emphasis of its taxing power from real estate to income.
In any event, an austere budget Is proposed for 1965. It won’t Increase tux bills, but also won’t Incrcatf city services.
Pontiac’s 700 city employes, who staged a demonstration in front of city - hall in 1964 for higher wages, enter the new year with new pay scales.
However, the added wages are
(Contlhued on Page 2, Col. 3)
for ail in authority, and for peace.
The President was still putting finishing touches on his annual message, to be delivered personally at a joint session of the Senate and House at 9 p.m. EST.
The speech, which the President hopes will set guide marks for the work of Congress In the busy year, will be broadcast live by television and radio networks.
'Sr k k
Johnson was departing from tradition in making tt an evening speech.
NOON ADDRESSES Most presidents have addressed Congress during the noon hour but Johnson wanted to get maximum television and radio exposure In unveiling a preliminary blueprint of what he calls his “Great Society” program.
For the second straight year he was expected to announce annual federal spending at less than $100 billion.
WASHINGTON Off - Rep. Gerald R. Ford of Michigan was chosen to lead House Republicans In the 89th Congress today, unseating Rep. Charles A. Halleek of Indiana.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The 140 House Republicans decide today whether they want to be led In the new Congress by Rep. Charles A. Halleek of Indiana or replace him with Rep. Gerald R. Ford of Michigan. e it it
The decision on Halleek, 64, and Ford, 51, may affect other leadership positions, Including the chairmanship or the GOP conference and the party’s policy committee.
Ford now Is conference chairman and Rep. John W. Byrnes of Wisconsin heads the policy committee.
In advance of the voting, scheduled to be done by secret ballot, both the Halleek and Ford camps predicted victory, but the total votes claimed by the two exceeded the number of Republicans In the House.
•k k k
Confidential lists shown to newsmen indicated that some members had pledged their support to both candidate*.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY f 4, 1965
Against the Indonesians
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — The Malaysian government announced today it is prepared to retaliate against,
See Story, Page 3
Indonesia “under the rule of hot pursuit when and if forced to.” Pripie Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman met with his Cabinet in emergency session following Indonesia’s announcement that
Mob Urges Overthrow in Saigon
(Continued From Page One)
Americans have died in combat in Viet Nam.
Squads of armed marines made no attempts to stop the demonstrators in Saigon, but the rioters manhandled photographers and any police who got in the way.
Fights broke out repeatedly as the crowd charged about the city.
At one point, the mob unfurled a banner denouncing “involvement of the American government and Ambassador (Maxwell D.) Taylor in Vietnamese affairs.”
SCORE INJURED At least a score of persons was believed to have been injured. Among, those hurt was Associated Press photographer Huyph Cong La.
The mob was not allowed to enter Buddhist headquarters, and Buddhist spokesmen claimed they were not involved.
But the mob had assembled originally at the call,of Buddhist leaders to protest the trial of students arrested last December In antigovernment protests.
The trials were canceled when the mob appeared on the waterfront.
LIMP FIGURE
Marines pushed the demonstrators away from the waterfront, and they made their way through the streets to the city’s main marketplace, carrying the limp figure of a student they claimed had been beaten unconscious.
The mob dispersed shortly after noon.
Saigon’s military governor, Brig. Gen. Pham Van Dong, called on the population to “remain calm and don’t let yourselves be foiled by the insidious plots of the Communists.”
Dong said he was aware that “dissatisfaction is a sign of democracy, but once again I wish to remind you that democracy is not anarchy.”
it is withdrawing from the United Nations.
Rahman announced that in view of the “mounting threat” from Ipdonesia, the Cabinet also decided to:
1.	Ask Malaysia’s allies in the British Commonwealth to send reinforcements if necessary. SERIOUS THREAT
2.	Inform the United Nations “on the seriousness of the threat of more intensive Indonesian attack and request the United Nations to assist us in defense of our nation in the event of such a happening.”
3.	Establish more training centers to expedite the expansion of Malaysian armed forces.
★ ★ ■ ★
The withdrawal from the United Nations by Indonesia,” said Rahman, “follows a series of actions by that country in defiance of workkopinion, the rule of law and the United Nations.
“The existence of small independent sovereign nations like Malaysia is being threatened by aggressive bullying and expansionist tactics of our neighbor.” ACTION PREPARED
For this reason, Rahman said, Malaysia is “prepared to take retaliatory action under the rule of hot pursuit when and if forced to do so for its own existence.”
Malaysian and British Commonwealth forces have heretofore confined their operations to Malaysian territory	and	waters.
k k	★
A British-aided	military	build-
up already is under way in Malaysia.	.
★ ★	★
British Meet on Asia Crisis
FATAL TO FOUR — Firemen and an emergency worker attach a cable to a plane that crashed yesterday into a farm pond near Henderson, Ky., before dragging the plane
to shore. The crash was fatal to a family of four believed to be returning to Minnesota from a vacation trip. A
Optimism Key '65
(Continued From Page One) not expected to keep city employes from asking more. Acting through a joint council, employe groups reportedly will submit their demands in the near future.
NEW PAY SCALES New pay scales were adopted in 1964 after a survey by the
Michigan Municipal League. A reclassification study may be undertaken in 1965.
Finances, with or without an income tax, will continue as a major concern in 1965 at city hall.
In the early part of the new year, federal urban renewal officials should rule on the city’s latest revised R20 plan..
$75j000 Taken
LONDON (AP) - Prime Minister Harold Wilson met with his top ministers today to discuss1 the crisis boiling up around Indonesia’s threat to crush British-backed Malaysia.
Informants said Britain has been in close touch with the United States, Australia and other allies since the crisis began Christmas Eve with intelligence reports of the arrival in Indonesian Borneo of a full division of Indonesian troops.
★ ★ ★
The northern part of Borneo is occupied by Sarawak and Sabah, two states joined in the federation of Malaysia. Indonesian infiltrators have been raid*, ing both states.
British alarm came from the regular army status of the Indonesian troops. Up to now, Indonesia has maintained that the hostilities and infiltration of Sabah and Sarawak came from volunteers and Malaysian rebels.
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Fair and mild tonight and Tuesday. Low 22 to 30. High Tuesday 36 to 44. Winds 5 to 15 miles. Wednesday outlook, increasing cloudiness and warmer.
Today In Ponflac
Lowest temperature preceding l a.m.,
At 6 a.m.: Wind velocity, 5 m.p.h. Direction: Southwesterly.
Sun «eti today at 5:15 p.m.
Sun rite* Tuesday at 8:02 a.m.
Moon sets today at 8:50 p.m.
Moon rite* Tuetday at 10:06 a.m.
Downtown Temperatures
6	a.m......... 27
7	a.m.,........27
8	a.m......... 27
9	a.m........ 28
Saturday and Sunday In Pontiac (ai recorded downtown)
Mlgheit temperature . Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather: Saturday, cloudy.
One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature	40
Lowest temperature	. jh
Mean temperature	34
Weather: Sunny.
Highest and Lowoit temperatures This Date In 92 Years 58 In 1874	~6 In 1896
Alpena Escanaba Gr. Rapids Houghton Lansing Marquette Muskegon, Pellston . Trav. City Albuauerque Atlanta Bismarck Chicago Cincinnati Denver Detroit
Sunday's Temperature Chart
29 25 Duluth
31	15 Port Worth 35 23 Jacksonville 29 It Kansas City
32	25 Los Angeles
29	21 Miami Beach 37 28 Milwaukee
30	27 New Orleans 30 22 New York
43	24 Omaha 65 31 Phoenix
75	2 S. Lake City
37 37 S. Pranclsco 40 18 S. S. Marie
44	23 Seattle 34 28 Tampa
25 13 50 44 67 44 40 30 61 42 74 65 40 25 64 45 32 26
35	28 63 40 42 35 54 50 30 19
36	30 76 56
Force Man to Open Bank
BRAINTREE, Mass. (UPI) — Gunmen invaded a bank manager’s home early today, abducted' him while one stayed behind to guard his wife, and looted his bank of more than $75,000.
★ ★ ★
Three bandits, working quietly in the predawn darkness, broke into the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Dowling in Hanson, 20 miles from here.
The couple and their 2-month-old son were asleep.
The bandits roused the cotiple and forced Dowling, 25, to accompany them to the South Shore National Bank in a shopping cehter of this community 15 miles south of Boston.
★ ★ ★
The bandits looted the bank’s night deposit vault. Police said the loot “was iii excess of $75,-000.”
WOMAN TIEi)
Before reaving the Dowling
house, the bandits tied and gagged his wife, Donna, 20, to the crib of their infant son. One of the bandjts remained behind to guard hi
At one point the child, Geoffrey, awoke with a cry. Mrs. Dowling was released of her bonds by her captor to feed the baby. The she was tied phd gagged again.
Two gunmen and Dowling drove to the bank at the South Shore Plaza, a shopping center. ★ ★ ★
The bandits forced Dowling to open the bank.
MANAGER SLUGGED The bandits slugged Dowling on the head with a pistol before fleeing in his late model gray sedan which later was found abandoned on busy Route 128, about one-half mile from the bank.
The bandits presumably switched to a second car for the getaway.
In addition, a revised plan' may be submitted for the city’s second urban renewal project, R44.
NONCASH CREDITS The key to both projects is noncash credits for the Clinton Rim tunnel project, completed in/I964 at a cost of $2.5-million.
/ There are two methods by which the city can pay its share of urban renewal costs:
A straight cash appropriation, or a noncash credit (money already spent on related improvements which the federal government agrees to “credit” toward the city’s share of the urban renewal tab).
The city has requested added credit for the river work. If successful, the city could avoid on actual cash outlay at the conclusion of the urban renewal projects.
k h k
And 1965 should bring other developments: The start of an osteopathic college, M59 freeway development and other projects yet to be disclosed.
Juveniles Apprehended
Mink Stole Is Stolen
Pontiac Police Saturday apprehended three juveniles, ages 14, 10 and 7, in connection with the theft of a mink stole valued at $199 from Waite’s Department Store.
Police said that during questioning the three youths implicated two more juveniles and admitted thefts of jackets, shirts, pants, pillow cases and sheets from other area stores.
The theft of the stole took place Saturday at about 12:30 p.m. The youths were apprehended on Saginaw about 10 minutes later.
The stole was in the bottom of a shopping bag the oldest youth was carrying.
The two younger youths took the stole, police said, while the older boy acted as a lookout. The younger youths said this is the way the threo normally operated.
SOLD TO ADULT
The youths told officers they
sold the merchandise to an adult, who would their dispose of it.
The boys were released to the custody of their parents pending outcome of continued investigation by police.
Two Bandits Rob Waterford Motel
Pontiac State Police are investigating the Sunday morning robbery of	the	Highlander
Motel, 2201	Dixie	Highway,
Waterford Township.
- ★	it	it
Night clerk Lewis Messenger, 53, of Fenton, told troopers that two men, one of them carrying a revolver, held him up at ):15 a.m. Sunday.
*	*	*
The pair took $129 in cash and fled, Messenger said.
Soys Monty WasScared ot Invasion
WASHINGTON UR - Gen. Omar Bradley says British Field Marshal Bernard L. Montgomery "was so darn scared” during a key battle in Normandy during World War II that he failed to close an allied trap on a German army.
★ * ★
Bradley, who commanded more than 1.3 million American soldiers in the European invasion, said he often has wondered “If I should have taken Monty’s job and we could have closed the gap by ourselves.”
The five-star general, now 71 and a watch company executive, spoke of the longstanding Falalse Gap dispute in a little - noticed interview In a U.S. Military Academy publication, “The Pointer.”
Bradley also reminisced about the late Gen. George S. Patton, the flamboyant tank commander who served under him.
★ * ★
“Gen. (Dwight D.) Esien-hower and I discovered that if we gave him (Patton) a headline, he’d go 20 miles,” Bradley said.
More than $22 billion In taxes were collected last year by the nation’s 50 states, according to Census Bureau statistics.
89th Congress Opens Session
(Continued From Page Onef thinned by the loss of 38 seats in the election, is the chairman of their party conference — a post now held by Ford. CANDIDATES
The announced candidates are Reps. Melvin R. Laird of Wisconsin and Paul A. Fino of New York.
Senate Democrats pick a new party whip, or assistant. majority leader, to succeed Vice President • elect Hubert H. Humphrey.
Vying for the post are Sens. Russell B. Long of Louisiana, John O. Pastore of Rhode Island and A. S. (Mike) Mon-roney of Oklahoma.
★ ★ ★ .
In both branches of Congress, after the. traditional swearing-in ceremonies, proposals for a major change in rules could touch off an explosion.
KEY ISSUE	a
The key issue' in the House was whether to curb the power of the rules committee to keep legislation from going to, the floor tor a vote.
In tiie Senate it was whether to make -it easier to choke off filibusters.
Also confronting the House was a challenge to the seating of the Mississippi delegation, four Democrats and one Republican.
•k it k
The Mississippi Freedom Democratic party contends their election was invalid, claiming Negroes were systematically excluded from voting.
SETTLES DOWN Once these organization problems are disposed, of and the Congress settles down to business, it will have a mass of legislation to grapple with.
High on the agenda are increased Social Security benefits and hospital insurance for the aged, excise tax cuts, an expanded antipoverty program, federal aid for education, and an economic development program for the 11-state Appalachia area.
In dealing with these and other measures ranging from im-migration to presidential succession, the Democrats will have the advantage of a 68-32 margin in the Senate and a 295-140 margin in the House.
91 NEWCOMERS There are 91 newcomers in the House and eight in the Senate.
Among the freshmen senators will be former Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, brother of the late President John F. Kennedy.
Notably missing from the Senate is Goldwater, who gave up his seat to run for president.
★ ★ *
His successor from Arizona is his long-time friend, former Gov. Paul J. Fannin.
HIGHEST PAID The members of the new Congress will be the highest paid in history.
Under legislation passed last year, their salaries will be $30,000 a year, a $7,500 raise.
Prior to the opening of the new Congress there were these developments:
k . k k
• Draft — Rep. L. Mendel Rivess, D-S. C., the new chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said he does not favor ending the draft, a subject currently under investigation at the Pentagon, and that he has drafted a bill to Increase military pay about $800 million or $900 million a year.
Birmingham Area New*
5 College-Level Classes Offered at Cranbrook
BLOOMFIELD HILLS Five college-level courses, includinjg two in which credits can be earned, will be offered this year at the Cranbrook Institute of Science.
The University of Michigan is offering two courses which can be taken on a credit or noncredit basis.
Teaching of science in the secondary school is a 15-week course which will start Jam 19. r \	*
To meet from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesdays, the class will be taught by Ih*. Burton E. Voss, associate professor of science education at the university.
★ ★ ★
The other 15-week course is geology for teachers, to meet from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Thurs-, days beginning Jan. 21.
ORIGIN OF EARTH
Dr. Donald F. Eschman, U. of M. professor of geology, will discuss the origin of the earth and its surface features.
The three courses offered by, Oakland University and the institute will be given on a noncredit basis.
Demonstration equipment in the institute’s Hall of Physics and Atomarium will be featured in a 12-week physics course for laymen. It will start Feb. 11.
■ ★ ★ *
The 7:30-9:30 p.m. sessions Thursdays will be taught by Dr. Richard E. Michel of General
Fire Damages 2 Local Homes
Fjre swept through two Pontiac homes during the weekend causing damage estimated at $2,150.
Early Saturday morning firemen were called to 176 Dellwood to extinguish a blaze caused by children playing With matches in an upstairs bedroom.
Damage to the two • story brick building and its contents was estimated at $650. Occupant of the home Is Helen Bullock.
Fire fighters were called to 263 S. Shirley at 2:41 a. m. today when fire of undetermined orig|n broke out in a bathroom closet.
★ ★ ★
Officials estimated damage to the contents and the two-story frame building, owned and occupied by Charles Taylor, at $1,500.
Motors Corps.’s research laboratories.	„
Instructor for the 10-week astronomy course will be Doris N. McMillan of the institute. Starting Feb. 11, the classes will be held from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Thursdays.
There will be four eight-wed: sections in lapidary techniques. The institute’s Donald E, Tompkins, will teach techniques for tiie sawing, grinding and polishing of semiprecious stones.
The four sections will meet from 7 to 10 p.m. Thursdays beginning Feb. 4 and April 1 and from 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays beginning Feb. 0 and April 3.
• ★ ★ ★
Further information can be obtained at the institute office, open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays.
FORECAST
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Ptecipitafiwn Nil ln4l««»o4- Caniwlt
15 Cruise Passengers Treated
Raging Atlantic Storm Delays (J.S. Ship
: NATIONAL WEATHER - Snow in the northwest Pacific Cpast and the north and central Plateau, with ruin in the central and southern Pacific Coast is the prediction for tonight. It will be colder in the north and central Pacific Coast and ' Plateau areas and the eabtern seaboard, but warmer from the plains through the Ohio, Tennessee and Mississippi valleys.
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NEW YORK (AP) - The American liner Independence docked Sunday- -a day late— with 807 Mediterranean cruise passengers who spent’ a rugged and at times terrifying New Year's Eve in a raging storm in the North Atlantic.
Fifteen passengers were treated for bruises. A crewman suffered a dislocated ankle I when he was hurled across a ! deck.
Capt. Charles Reilly, skipper of the 20,000-ton American Export Lines ship, g«ld the storm
was “as bad as anything I've seen In 38 years at sea.”
The storm, with 60-foot waves and high winds, hit the liner about 500 miles east of New York as it was returning from a 22-day cruise. The captain brought the ship to a practical standstill for more than 80 hours, heading the bow Into the waves at about two knots to keep the ship from turning side-wise into the troughs between the waves.
RIP OPEN DOOR The waves ripped open a
weather door and smashed portholes on upper decks.
A couple In bed in their cabin 80 feet above the water line had a rude wakening when a wave shattered their porthole and they were showered with bits of glass and about half a ton of frigid water.
After hearing of this Incident, some passengers napped fully-clothed In public lounges.
, Many passengers became seasick.
Hie ship bfgan to lurch in the storm Thursday night as
*
"A A ‘	’
things were being set up for the New Yaar’s Eve celebration. Hundreds of champagne glasses were smashed, but the waiters replaced them. The drinks were served, and the band played on. But the number of dancers and drinkers dwindled rapidly as the night wore on. On New Year’s Day, entertainers sought to pep things up. , ‘ ' ■
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The captain was able to get the ship moving again aarly Saturday. It docked at 7 a.m. Sunday.

Jackie, Children Home
After Week of Skiing
NEW YORK un - Mrs. John F. Kennedy and her children arrived home in New York last night after a week's skiing vacation in the Colorado Rockies.
Schools Hold Clothes Drive Jan. 11	15
Pontiac Public Schools will hold their 10th annual clothing drive Jan. 11-15.
The goal of 20,000 pounds amounts to one pound of clothing per student in the school system.
The annual clothing drive originated in 1957 when 6,500 pounds of clothing was col-lected. Last year the drive netted 26,000 pounds of garments.
Clothing gathered during the drive is distributed to three local charities. The charities then make the goods available to needy Pontiac school children.
* ★ : .*
Parents of children in need of the clothing are given clothing requisitions by the school officials. Last year, 466 requisitions were issued, according to Don DeVoe, clothing drive chairman.
Persons having clothing to contribute, but don’t have children in school, may call t h e nearest school and the clothing will be picked up.
20 in State Die on Roods
(Continued From Page One)
for investigation in connection with it.
Charles E. Robinson, 32, of Detroit was killed in Detroit Saturday when, police said, his car hit two parked cars, broke a traffic signal box and rammed against a utility pole after speeding at 100 miles per hour.
Etta Adams, 27, of Few Era died in a Muskegon hospital Saturday after her car smashed into a tree.
mm
STRICTLY LOWBRO#.- Sam the “swlngln” chimpanzee owned by Henry Sprinter or Rochester, Ind., tries his hand at rock ’n’ roll music. Sam is already a successful Ice-skater and though the sounds he makes are unintelligible, he doesn’t expect that to hold him back. He knows (he teens will go “ape” over him. '


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Suffering in Local Aha
Auto Makers Are ’65 to Be Another Big Veal
Doesn’t the national anthem mean anything to Americans? I was at one of our school’s football games, when the national anthem was played. Some people continued their conversation, hats remained on men’s heads, and even laughter could be heard. Most of these were adults. Teens have more respect for their country. Adults should try to set a better example.
BRENDA FRITCH *	* CLARKSTON
This is the interesting season when automobile leaders define our economic condition and their own prospects for the ensuing year.
Everyone is interested.
And especially are we in Pontiac.
Hence, your humble scrivener will the*
try and piece together the most relevant and significant comments from these capable administrators.
The consensus shows a definite unanimity in regard to 1965. Although the fourth quarter of 1964 seemed to produce several “best weeks,” it didn’t equal the high hopes of some industry leaite?*. Those damaging ’	werd^K
tainly the bete noirei of the Nation's automobile plants. |||f
★	★ tjhfr *■:&. s
The leaders dp convinced that 1965 should equal—or surpass—1964. And yet in 1964 ^§4 industry set production records galore and kept employment ttiy highest levels. THK^pn quarter of the year is never the best, but forecasts say in 1965 it will run from “satisfactory*’ to “impressive.”
★	★ ★
Lynn Townsend, Chrysler president, and one of the sage and conservative industrialists in the Nation, suggests his companies will steam through the first three months at record levels. He even cast a covetous eye on the ten million mark for the whole industry for the year.
★	★	★
Several automotive men look for an increase in winter production over 1964. Pontiac Motor’s first quarter was so strong last year, I don’t see how this could apply to us and a plain, old-fashioned replay of • 1964 will leave us very happy.
★	★	★
Henry Ford declares 1965 may reach a 7% increase over last year, an astounding achievement as 1^64 was a champion in its own right. Mr. Ford has always been reasonably conservative In his predictions.
A
American Motors’ Roy Aber-nethy foresees “five years of optimism” which would constitute the longest streak of high level prosperity in1 history. He, too, believes the year at hand will produce “record sales for the industry.”
And finally, to get down to case cards locally, we quote Frederick G. Donner, chairman of the largest corporation in the world and the proud pupa of Pontiac Motor Division, Pontiac’s Fisher Body Plitft/ and GMC Truck & Coach Division. This city is a very important unit in the most far-flungpln-dustrlal giant of them alkAn eloquent method of showfili Mr. Donner’s belief In the months ahead is merely to' quote his declaration that GM plans to spend $1.1 billion in capital investments this year. This is about 20% more than was ploughed back into the huge industry in the phenomenal year just ended.
“This step,” he said, “reflects the continuing growth of motor vehicle demands worldwide.
★ ★ ★
Automotive figures are sometimes bewildering because of the ways In which they can be expressed. One speaker discusses passenger cars in the U.8. and another includes overseas,, The •qsulng, talker takes in trucks and finally ypu caq be icon-fused by statistics that are actual
sales in a calendar year followed by a man who discusses production.
However, from this welter of divergent facts, one thing stands out sharply:
The current trend is strong.
1965 should be prosperous. Locally, for several consecutive years, we have basked in the luxury and limelight of an outstanding automotive achievement and accomplishment.
It’s this:
However well the industry as a whole has fared, Pontiac has done better.
s ’ Don’t forget that.
' ★ ■ ★Mhm
'	mpjp llygp
Over this prolonged stretch of increasing automotive business and record-smashing years, Pontiac Motor Division nigged tlMr&de h| percentage of upswing. We have fought our way into the top ||nks through s^^-;:: merit ||md custom** ac-
ceptanewft^J . jltfli.
! -**8Mid n o t h I n g — absolutely nothing—can replace this last.
E}.' M. Estes and his capable associates are in the van in automotive know-how. Their success has spelled the well-being of this whole general area, always bolstered by a big, powerful ally on South Boulevard that turns out the best .buses, trucks and coaches in the business. In fact, during the last month, GMTC chalked up an all-time record for onp week by completing 3,309 trucks and buses. The previous mark was set nine years ago which speaks graphically of the current achievement.
★ ★ ★
And by the way, if Uncle Tom down in New Orleans, and Aunt Clarissa up in Fairbanks want to buy a new car or truck, make sure they get a GMTC or Pontiac. That’s where YOUR bread is buttered.
Never forget it.
One of the few specks against the horizon is the Wall Street yackety-yak about international monetary crises. “They say,” the recent British bank move should act as aidepres-sant on European trade. The effect could be felt here. “They” also say, the British face another monetary crisis lftte in February and the results of that are problematical.
★ ★ ★
This negative feature is like the gold standard to me: I don’t understand ft. Once, I asked the late Senator Arthur H. Vandenbero to explain the gold standard and the Michigan great half-arose and said: “Only five men in the world today really understand It well enough to explain It—and I’m not "one,”
■;	★ dm v A
fi »	mjb	JBF . imf
r	gomfe of President Johnson’s
JJ: administration analysts “foresee slowdown in 1905^ but no ' actual slump is expected.” They’re considering a few palliatives if it happens, including another tax reduction and immediate public works projects. Also, some labor leaders sense an economic weakness ahead, although, again, no one t»f them ’ * is out wavjpg a warning flag, \
.ir vi *j 11
SooooooObo, we bring this resume to a close with j$ parting thought that Tv* expressed before:
No matter what happens In 1965, Pontiac will fare better than the average. Our basic Industries are so firmly entrenched now and so well handled we’ll prosper above the general run.«it’s a great year, we’ll do a bit better than the rest. If

How can a man fly a flag of a foreign country in front of his tavern and call himself a, good citizen? The flag of the United States is beautiful to me and I respect it.
JUST DRIVING PAST
.X _/v
‘Gasoline Stations Perform Real Service’
TO me; any profession where one pays the high dollar is not really a service—it’s a money-making proposition.
.	.	★	★	,	’ '"r ■ ;■
The people who need our happy holiday greetings are die gasoline station attendants. They get paid only for the gasoline, bat the service they give is unpaid for. They .check the car and clean the windshield for free.
W. F. SHEDLOUSKY WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
Cloud Nine!
‘New Veterans Law Will Hurt Disabled’
David Lawrence Says:
Constitution Is Being Eroded
WASHINGTON - This is the beginning of a new year in government-end the start of an era unpreee* dented ini American history. For It marks the climax in a gradual erosion of the written constitution adopt-! e d by the people in 17881 and amended in i^WRENCE
14 last by the Supreme Court on the novel theory that the objectives sought by the “demonstrators” have since been sanctioned by a new federal law which wasn’t in effect when the offenses were committed.
lawmaking powers were ever granted to the Supreme Court.
Yet the Constitution specifically forbids Congress to pass any retroactive statute in criminal cases, and no such
A momentous change indeed has come to the American governmental system. Some day the people will become aroused and will take steps to restore the written Constitution and require the Supreme Court itself to obey “the law of the land.”
I commend Gov. Romney and his colleagues on the Veterans Homestead Tax Exemption law. Increasing veterans’ taxes by twofold is your way of saying, “Thanks for a job well done.”
v" •	★ ■ ★ "k ' ^ mx y\ *, »
Disabled veterans are handicapped today and ere denied the privilege of performing top rate jobs because of the injuries they received in war. I am sure they will mil thank you and support you in the future.
★ ★ ★
Why don’t you take all the tax emption? You could hurt a little more.
CHARLES ANDERSON WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
Man Tells Why He Supports Socialists
(Copyright, IMS,
New York HtraM Tribune Syndicate, Inc.)
Capital Letter:
I support and advocate the principles of the Socialist Labor Party, and have never been a member of any other political {party. A person’s head aAd heart should be where his feet are. Let those of other countries solve their own problems.
SAMUEL HAGON 3110 GARDEN
1791.
It confirms the emergence of an unwritten Constitution whose mandates are being set forth from time to time not by the people or their representatives, but by an oligarchy or “presidium” of five to niile men who are appointed for life.
How Will LBJ Interpret His November Mandate?
The Better Half
By RUTH MONTGOMERY
More than ever,' they feel free now to retain or to* discard whatever they please from the old Constitution.
WASHINGTON - As Congress sets up shop at its old stand on Capitol Hill this| week, Presi-1
The 1788 document has in it a provision specifying that amendments could be made only as the result of a two-thirds vote of. both houses of Congress and ratification by
three fourths of the states
This no longer appears to be obligatory, as the Supreme Court of the United States now has assumed the right to' make “interpretations” 9 of its own which are supposed to have the same legal effect as constitutional amendments.
Just three weeks ago—on Dec. 14, 1964—the high court handed down a ruling which illustrates how completely the process of making constitutional amendments has in recent years been revolutionized.
RUTH
The Supreme Court has Just proclaimed that the power of Congress to “regulate commerce” means the right to prescribe also what personal services must be rendered by one citizen to another if in his business he happens to use property or goods of any kind which at some time In the past may have crossed a state line.
dent Johnson! has been dq-1 ing some soul-1 searching to de-1 termine exactly f_ what his “man-i| date from t h ej people” means.!
Some critics, 1 fearful that LBJ is “t Q ©MONTGOMERY power-hungry,”, flinch whenever he uses the word “mandate,” but since President Eisenhower was. accused of the other extreme — of insufficient use of presidential power—it is interesting to review what Ike had to say on the subject at his first press conference following his own reelection sweep eight years ago.
The old soldier told assembled newsmen that he had “a mandate from the people to convert the GOP into modern Republicanism.”
Only history can show to what extent LBJ shares Ike’s dislike of deficit spending, for although Johnson is demanding economies in federal bureaucracy, his spending plans for education, Medicare and anti-poverty programs could set off an inflationary spiral.
One thing at least -is certain. President Eisenhower’s ballooning hopes of “making over the GOP into modern Republicanism” made a crash landing with the capture of the party by Goidwater conservatives in ’64.
(Dl*trlbut*d by King PHlurtt Syndic*!,)
“The only good tiling about snow is that no one ever sends us a bill for it.”
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages
Father’s Turn
The Craig (Colo.) Empire-Courier
Weddings today have become so costly now that it’s the father of the bride who breaks down and weeps.
sion of being uninterested in the problem, which is vital for her. But after all the experience they have gained, they know quite well that their initiative will remain sterile.
Tardy...
The Toronto Globe
Even the provision of the Constitution which reserves to the states the right to maintain order within their own boundaries is no longer considered by the Supreme Court to ».be binding.
Thus, certain trespassers in restaurants who were convicted in state courts in a previous year for refusing to leave private premises when ordered by the police were freed on Dec.
'things decline, we won’t i recede as far.
What more can we ask
And with that comforting thought and happy conclusion I any ninccrqly
“Happy Now Y ear.” Yen, that’s what lien ahead:
A now and a happy year!
—Harold A. Fitzqerald
Declaring h i s intention of spending the next four years working for that concept, he. said the people reelected him for only one reason: to push to completion the program he had already begun.
Ike spoke out vigorously in favor of balanced budgets, and achieved that .goal In ’56, ’57 and ’60, President Kennedy reversed the trend, but LBJ halved the deficit during hip first year in office, and hopes to change the Democratic image of fiscal irresponsibility by holding down this year’s budget to around $100 billion.
The Elsenhower-Johnson technique of flattering and cajoling Congress, rather than using the sledge - hammer approach of Presidents Roosevelt, Truman and Kennedy resulted In a high . degree of success for their legislative programs, Including far-reaching civil rights acts and tax cuts.
Reunification
First Cabinet Change
De Geneve
(Geneva, Switzerland)
Ogden (Utah) Standard-Examiner
At that first press conference after his ’56 landslide, Ike said he differed from the Democrats In Insisting on the Integrity of the government’s fiscal policy, a sound dollar, and the dispersion of as much power as possible to states and local communities.
In the ’64 campaign it was Goidwater rather than Johnson who talked of returning the power to the people, but the preponderance of voters apparently were content to leave it where it is — In Washington.
One would have to nourish strange illusions to believe that the new Kremlin masters will show themselves ready to consider the reunification of Germany.
★	A	*
Even if one would suggest to them the creation of a unified neutral state possessing only a modest army, they would reject such a proposition, because they know quite well that this would entail the Immediate liquidation of Ulbricht and his colleagues.
★	A	it
Besides, unless compelled to, a communist state never abandons one of Its conquests. Moreover, for the Soviet Union, which is	always	preoccupied
with its-	security,	the	eastern
zone constitutes an additional protection. From the political as well as from the military point of view, the Soviet Union is Interested In maintaining the “status quo.”
★	* *
In Paris, the western ministers believed that adequate steps should be taken with the Soviet Union so that the German people should be able to exercise their right of self-determination. The Intention Is laudable and Germany’s «l-llea must not give the Impres-
President Lyndon B. Johnson has made the first change in his Cabinet since his election to a full term in the White House.
★ '	★ Or
Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges has resigned and will be succeeded on Jan. 15 by John T. Connor, New Jersey industrialist and president of the Merck & Co. drug manufacturing firm.
The level of water in the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence system, too high or too low, is a recurring problem. Loss and damage result from either condition. Now, the International Joint Commission has announced a study to discover whether there is a possibility of controlling water levels. Such a study surely is needed. The question to be asked immediately is why it has been so long delayed.
A ★	★
Mr. Hodges, former Democratic governor of North Carolina, said he was quitting because of his age—he’s 67.
WWW
Washington sources also expect Douglas Dillon, secretary Of the treasury, to step out of the Cabinet soon.
These changes are to be expected as President Johnson burns his “LBJ” brand even deeper on the administration.
Eight United States states, Ontario and Quebec are chiefly concerned hi the problem. In the atmosphere of crisis this year, several of these authorities (including both Canadian provinces) have held conferences. The results Invariably amounted to agreement that the problem is serious and growing more so, that something must be done, and that it will require cooperation.
★	*	★ v 1
It has taken the United States and (Canadian governments an unconscionably long time to take even preliminary action in a problem which 1$ clearly a matter of national Interest for both.
Scientists Say
The Danville (Vju.) Commercial Appeal
Scientists teU ys that we’re r taller in the morning than we are in the pmtng. Most of us have notioda, too, that we're shorter around the .end of the month.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965
t; 1
Treated Cotton Fools Fashion
Cottons so heavily -embossed they look like dull silks run
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through the spring fashion coir lections.
Designers use the cottons for late day and evening, notably in white. Bill Blass of Maurice Rentner, Nq,w York, for example, creates a simple, sleeveless princess dress With a high-slashed neckline. A deep front pleat adds grace to the A-shaped skirt. .

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Rubinoff and his famous violin made g surprise visit to the Pontiac Kiwanis club recently. The club is sponsoring his concert at Pontiac Northern High School Jan. IS. With Rubinoff are Clyle Haskill (deft) and William Belaney, members of the local service organization. ‘
Renowned Violinist to Present Concert
Clfear Polish Keeps- Finish
To keep a metal compact gleaming, coat it as soon as
you get it with a clear fingernail polish.
★	4. it.
Repeat in two or three months. The same goes for metal buttons on clothes.
Rubinoff and his violin will be heard Jan. 18 in Northern High School auditorium at 8:15 p. m.
★ ★ ★ '
6
The silken strains of the master’s two-century old Stradivarius will be heard on behalf of the Child Activities Benefit, sponsored by the Pontiac Kiwanis club.
★	★	★
, The famous conductor spends nine months of each year on tour. He has visited some	125	cities^	and	per-
formed at more man 250 evening concerts.
★	★	★
Born in Russia, the artist, was graduated from the Warsaw Conservatory at the age of 14.
VALUABLE violin
The magnificent violin of Rubinoff, one of the most pre-
All Shampoo Leads to Gaul
Legend has it that the first man to enjoy a shampoo was a warrior in ancient Gaul. After anointing his head with ceremonial oil and * wood ashes, he stepped out in the rain. Presto—“instant” clean hair!
★ ★ *
With today’s wealth of efficient shampoo products, no ceremony is required to achieve shining tresses.
u*».ESL,KVRED CROSS and CORBIES ' HOW ONLY *8" and *10"
Nunn Bush Pedwin
Edgerton
Regularly $11.95 to $27.95 Values
cious instruments in the world, is insured for $100,000. It was madte in 1731 by Antonie Stradivari in Cremona, Italy.
★ ★ ★
Clyle Haskill is chairman of the concert. Tickets are available from Pontiac Kiwanis members.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965
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Pontiac Pros, Photo
THREE IN ONE - AH three adults in the George H. Goble family of Oakland Township head Rochester organizations. They are Mrs. Goble, her husband and her father, Thomas Thomsen, shown here in an unlikely arrangement of sharing a common
table for their individual jobs. Mrs. Goble is president of the Rochester branch of the Women’s National Farm and Garden Association, her husband of Rochester Kiwanis and her father of the Heart of the Hills Senior Citizens Men’s Club.
Each Heads Organization
3 Chiefs in Area 'Wigwam'
By LEE OLSON , Area News Editor
OAKLAND TOWNSHIP - The chiefs now outnumber the Indians in the George H. Goble household.
With the advent of the New Year, the presidents of area organizations in this five-member family has reached a total of three L. all the adult members. ,
Goble himself was installed as president of the Rochester Kiwanis Club Dec. 28.
His wife, Eveline, is now serv-
ing her second term as head of the Rochester Branch of the Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association.
Not to be outdone by his juniors, although he was elevated to his top job before his son-in-law, is Thomas Thomsen.
MEN’S CLUB
The 78 - year - old Thomsen is president of the Heart of the Hills Senior Citizens Men’s Club, which has'a membership of 50.
Having responsible positions in organizations devoted
Adult Class Registrations To Be Taken in Farmington
largely to community betterment and cultural advancement is no novelty to any one of the three “chiefs.”
For example, Mrs. Goble started working on community projects at age 14 in her home town of Newburgh, N.Y.
★	★ 4r
A master of organization, she comes by it naturally, her father, a former professional engineer with Allied Chemical Corp. in New York City and Camden, N.J., believes in order, and his shelves of files show it.
OWN APARTMENT In his own apartment on the lower floor of the Gobles’ split-level ranch home at 5621 Orion, Rd., he can find anything he is looking for on a moment’s notice.
FARMINGTON - Registrations will be taken this week for the more than 40 courses offered during the second term of the Farmington Public Schools adult education p r o -gram.
★ * ★
The program operates for three 10-week terms during the school year.
Director Richard Tyler has scheduled classes for Monday through Thursday at Farming-ton High School, 32000 Shiawassee.
Registration will be conducted from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday at the adult education office in the high school.
Sr Sr it
New this term is a seminar on charting and technical analysis. Participants will learn the baric principles of charting, the only organized method of eliminating poor stock market timing.	*
NOT FOR BEGINNER
Not for the beginner, the class requires some familiarity with stocks and securities. The three sessions will be held Feb. 3, 10 and 17.
Also new to the program is a course tailored to modern life — creative problem solving.
Donald Nichols, experienced in guidance and counseling, will use techniques and exercises that have proved valuable to individuals in their personal, professional and community roles.
NEW COURSES
Other new courses are creative writing, interior design and charm and poise.
Also offered will be business courses, crafts classes plus fine arts, language and liberal arts. Homemaking, recreation and bridge will be included along with courses In American dance, Latin American dance and yoga.
A m o n g the special and cosponsored classes is one for diabetics conducted by Botsford General Hospital staff members. Sessions will be held from 7 to, 9 p.m. Jan. 12, 19 and 26 and Feb. 2 and 9.
. Registrations can be mode at & : v %
the Oakland County Health Department, Pontiac.
A 15-week course on major English authors of the Romantic period will be held from 4:30-6:30 p.m. Mondays. Graduate or undergraduate college credits can be earned.
A great decisions class is being cosponsored by the Farmington Friend., of the Library. The eight-week discussion sessions will begin sometime in February.
Registrations should be made at the county health department for an eight-week course for expectant parents. Taught by a public health nurse, the c 1 a s s will start Jan. 13.
High school credits can be earned through a modified correspondence program. The courses are open to anyone needing not more than four credits for graduation.
So can his daughter and sop-in-law. Their trademarks are “tote boxes” for her and briefcases for him.
,	\ vj § if Ijj Mm
'64vCom34wdr<fs/
Set for Soil
- Presentation of the 1964 Corn Contest awards and election of directors will highlight the annual meeting of the Oakland County Soil Conservation District Jan. 13.	(
To be held at St. Benedict's Church in Waterford Township, the banquet also will feature a talk on life in Poland by Richard Ross of Caro.
Richard, who spent six months in Poland as an International Farm Youth Exchange (IFYE) student, will illustrate his remarks with colored slides.
Boat Is Lost, but 3 Saved on Lake Ice
FLINT (UPI) — Approximately 100 feet of water separate James E. Bailey from the boat he took all summer to build— but he really doesn’t care.
WWW
Bailey, his young son Gregory, 5, and his father-in-law, Keith H. Day, 56, are all alive to tell how the boat, which, ran on three skis and was powered by an 80-horsepower motor, got to the bottom of Silver Lake, 18 miles south of here.
The trio went to the lake yesterday to test the iceboat. After zipping around for some time, they hit a patch of tee which could not bear the weight of the boat and crew.
As the ice cracked and the boat began to submerge, Bailey, 27, tossed his son to firmer ice.
He then jumped into the /icy water to pull his father-in-law to the surface.
RESCUER ARRIVES
Another iceboater noticed their plight and threw a rope to Bailey and hauled the two men out of the water.
WWW
Day was taken to Hurley Hospital for observation. Bailey and his son went home.
All three had a story to tell.
The Gobles both have held many posts in area organizations since they moved to Rochester nine years ago.
In recent years they have twice served together as co-chairmen — of the Avon Players ticket committee and just last year as heads of the Rochester Area Committee promoting the Meadow Brook Music Festival at Oakland University with their friends, Dr. and Mrs. Oscar J. Sorensen Jr.

Gifts Shower First Baby of 1965 at Almont
ALMONT — Just over two hours after the New Year started, Sherry Ann Bonczak put in her appearance as the first baby born In 1965 at the Community Hospital.
Weighing in at six pounds, 8V4 ounces, the baby is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Bopc-zak, 141 S. Bailey, Romeb. She Is their first child.
Because of her timely birth the Infant and her proud parents, both 22, were showered with presents from area merchants.
The hospital also added its traditional gift — the delivery charge “on the house.”
Sr ★	★
1 The young father is employed at Ford Tractor Division, Birmingham.
Dr. George P. Chabator of Romeo delivered the baby at 2:19 a.m.
MEMBERSHIP DRIVE
Goble, manager of reliability and quality assurance at t h e Chrysler Missile Division, has one prime objective for Kiwanis right now. He wants to spark a drive to add to the club membership which now totals 69 men.
Mrs. Gobel’s job as president of the WNFGA involves directing the activities of 130 members of the local branch which is the sixth largest in the state.
The beauties of nature also are of concern to her father who is a member and past officer of the Men's Garden Club of Rochester.
WWW
And all of the trio's activities are undertaken with the full support of the two Goble daughters, Sue, 12, and Diane, 10.
FATHER’S COMPLAINT
In fact, there’s only one common complaint on their father’s part — with his family such a busy one:
“I just have trouble finding the telephone not in use when I try to call home” — but he refuses to fix the blame.
Fire Damages Area House
Acting as toastmaster for tie 7:30 p.m. affair will be SCD Chairman James L. Reid, of White Lake'Township. The invocation will be given by Lyle Abel, director, County Cooperative. Extension Service.
W i W i ★
SCD Director Keith Middleton of Oakland Township will introduce board'.members, special guests and county officials present.
DIRECTOR ELECTION Next will follow the election of directors, with Harold Mitchell of Holly Township presiding.
The terms of Reid and Middleton have expired, and the nominating committee has nominated Jeff Holmwood and Reid of White Lake Township, and Stuart Braid and Middle-
ton of Oakland Township for the two 3-year terms. Nominations also will be accepted from the floor, w w w
Any landowner or occupier of three or more acres of land in
AREA
NEWS
the Oakland County Soil Conservation District is eligible to vote in the election.
ALL INVITED
Jay Poffenberger, county agriculture agent, urges everyone
to attend whether'or not they are eligible to vote. •*
The district, report will be given by Robert McCrory of Lyon Township after w h 1 c h Poffenberger will present the Corn Contest awards.
Young Ross’s talk on Poland will conclude the evening program.
Tickets can he obtained from directors S a m ue 1 Miller of Springfield Township, McCrory, Middleton, Reid and Mitchell w w w *
They also are available at the Soil Conservation District office, 35 E. Huron, Pontiac; the Cooperative Extension Service office, 155 N. Saginaw, Pontiac; or at the door of the church on Lynn Street and Voorheis Road, Waterford Township.
ROCHESTER — Overcrowding at some Rochester School District elementary schools and new facUities at others wiU mean that at least 200 school-children will attend different schools next fall.
Schools Supt. Dr. William T. Early will present administra-tion’s recommendations for changes in attendance area boundaries to the school board at its Jan. 18 meeting.
The transfer of children from one school to another that will result from the changes is expected to relieve overcrowding primarily at Meadow Brook and North Hill schools.
From those schools, the children will be transferred to the
nearest available schoql, three of the four other schools now being increased in size with additions.
Sr ★	★
Eighteen classrooms are now being added to the district’s elementary level capacity, with additions at Baldwin, McGregor, Brook l a n d s and Woodward schools.
NO ADDITIONAL STUDENTS Brooklands will receive no additional students from other schools, inasmuch as its own student body is large enough to fully utilize the addition.
In pointing out the need for transferring students next fall, Dr. Early stressed that only those children now being
transported to school would be shifted to other schools.
No child now walking to his elementary school will be transferred.
This is to minimize the effects of the transfer on the students.
NOT SUDDEN MOVES The superintendent also pointed out that the moves being recommended by the administration are not sudden or Ughtly taken.
“We’ve been studying this for a year and a half,” said Early, “we know where we’re going and how we’re getting there.”
He said that he hoped the board would act on the administration’s recommendations Jan. 18.
Slated Jan. 22
roposed Build in g Projects Involved ’
-ORION TOWNSHIP - Two public hearings are slated for Jan. 22 and both involve proposed building projects.
St
A 7 p.m. hearing will deal with a proposed amendment to the township’s zoning ordinance which would allow ' a trailer court in the township.
Rezoning from residential to accommodate a trailer court tentatively planned for 2285 Brown has beep approved by the zoning board and die Oakland County Planning Commission.
The Township Board will consider the rezoning aspect at its Jan. 12 meeting.
. ' I , '.;	A ★ Sr
The 78-acre site being considered for the tratier court lies in Orion Township, but is included in the Pontiac City School District rather than the Lake Orion School District.
REQUIREMENTS The amendment to the zoning ordinance would establish requirements for the new “Trailer Court District No. 3A.”
A second hearing at 8 p.m. will cover the proposed rezoning of ZlVt acres at the northwest corner of Baldwin Avenue and 1-75 from residential to business classification.
Such action would allow planned construction of a motel, gas station and restaurant on the property, which lies in both Orion and Pontiac townships.
Sr h It .
The buildings, however, would be constructed only on the Orion Township pbrtion of the property, adding to the township’s tax base.
Apparently Caused by Careless Smoker
Recommended Adding Urea to Corn Silage
Addition of 10 pounds of urea per ton of corn silage was recommended by 20 dairymen who successfully used the practice In 1963, says Don Hillman, Michigan State University dairy extension specialist.
Economic advantages of using urea far outweigh the disadvantages when protein supplements are costly.
ROCHESTER - Fire apparently caused by a careless smoker yesterday caused $3,000-$4,000 damage to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Sheldon, 200 Williams.
Sr *	★
Rochester firemen were called to the scene shortly before 7 a.m. by the Sheldons, who we awakened by smoke.
Fire Chief Lyle Buchanan said the fire started in a living room chair, which was destroyed along with the floor underneath it.
Buchanan said the Sheldons retired at about 1 a.m., and that the fire must have smoldered for hours.
Heavy smoke made it necessary for firemen to wear masks, but they had the fire under control In minutes.
SMOKE DAMAGE
The fire caused smoke damage throughout- the house, which is Insured against fire damage.
Growing Warren Paces State Cities
WARREN (AP) - This Detroit subfirb, already Michigan’s fourth most populous city, reported the state’s highest growth rates In population and home construction in 1964 for the sixth consecutive year,
Mayor William A. Shaw said today that Warren issued, construction permits last year for 4,158 new dwellings worth a total of about $60 million.
He said the .suburb added more than 1,000 new residents a month during 1964, raising its population to more than 140,000. That figure Is exceeded only by the populations of Detroit, Grand Rapids and Flint ,
a» dim m, rife mm
“Please, just one cookie?”
Not long ago, Mrs. Barbara Saylor, Michigan Bell telephone operator in Flint, heard the hesitant voice of a small boy asking her if it was all right if he ate a cookie.
' “But it’s so near dinner," was her reply.
“Mommy’s not here to make dinner, and I’m hungry.”
“Where is your mommy?” Barbara inquired.
“She called..... the car broke... she’ll be late. I sure would like a cookie.”
Barbara hesitated a moment.
“Please, just one cookie?” pleaded the boy.
“Instead,” suggested Barbara, “why don’t you spread'yourself a nice slice of bread and butter? I’m sure Mommy will give you a cookie after din* ner. Will you be a good boy and do that for me?” “Okay,” replied the youngster, disappointed but reassured that—somewhero—a nice woman was at hand to offer a bit of motherly advice until his own mother arrived home.
Nothing unusual about this little incident. Just another example of how telephone people are* naturally friendly and thoughtful. You see, with Michigan Bell, friendly service is a way of life.
Michigan Ball
Put of the^NstlonwIde Bed System
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YHK PONTIAC PRESS, MONjDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965
91 New Faces
Mouse* Dooffnarw fa&ng Test
A little over a decade ago, I were processed products, To- ^	,-y^ ~ -I
only U per cent of the potatoes day, about 35 per cent of the eidents of all types ^ Araerj-	' *
used -for food in this country | potatoes we eat are processed, [cans last year was estmratedl other easts.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -"The 89th session of Congress features 91 new faces in the House of Representatives — a doorkeeper’s nightmare.
The new lawmakers range from a just-old-enough-to-qualify representative to a Japanese housewife.
But for the harried doorkeeper there will be at least some shortcuts in the games of matching faces and names, (hie new lawmaker has a famous name. Another favors ^flamboyant vests.
There is a sample of what the house employes have to digest bn a priority basis:
One new member, Rep. Ted Johnson Jr., D-Okla., is so young he might be mistaken for a page. Johnson, son of a former member who died last year, actually was a House page, and not too long ago.
, ■ *. ■ ★ ★
He come to Congress just-turned-25 and the youngest mem
ber ever to serve in the House legally. The Constitution sets age 25 as the minimum qualification.
UPSET PRIMARY One Tennessee youth of 22 once made it however by falsifying his age.
Johnson made it by beating Rep. Victor Wickersham, D-Okla., in an upset primary election, then defeating a Goldwater Republican in the general election, and, finally— on Dec. 27—celebrating his 25th birthday.
Another relative youngster fresh on the Capitol scene is Rep, John V. Tunney,. D-Calif., who is 30 and the son of former heavyweight champion G e n e Tunney.
★ ★ *
The younger Tunney is a lawyer, not a prize fighter. He is a close friend of Sen. Edward M, Kennedy, D-Mass., with whom he studied at the University of Virginia law school.
Gene Tunney stumped the district for his son, along with Jack Dempsey, from whom the elder Tunney wrested the heavyweight title.
The . new congressman plugged standard Democratic issues — education, world peace, job opportunity, and Medicare — in his campaign, and attacked the conservative stands taken by Rep. Pat Minor Martin, R-Calif., his predecessor.; v
Rep. Eligio de la Garza, D-Tex ; adds a further Latin touch to the House, as well as a tendency to colorful dress.
•' ★ * *
In 10 years at a state legislator, the 37-year-old McAllen lawyer was noted for his good humor and his flamboyant vests.
EXOTIC DISHES
He likes to cook exotic dishes and considers himself an expert on Chinese food. He boasts a near-arsenal of hunting guns, and either cooks his kills or per
OUTLINES VIEWS-Sen. Everett Dirksen (right), R-Ill., yesterday told how he would like to see the coming session of Congress handled in talks with Jack Bell, Associated
Press political affairs writer Dirksen said he would like a special task force developed to provide expert advice for Republicans op foreign and domestic affairs.
GOP to Back Tax Cut, Says Dirksen
By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen says Republicans are “not insensible’’ to President Johnson's spending problems but will try to cut the budget judiciously in the new Congress.
Dirksen predicted in an interview that his party will give strong support for a reduction in excise taxes Johnson expects to propose.
★ * ★
On other matters, Dirksen:
—	Called for creation of task forces to give congressional Republicans expert and nonpolitical advice on critical foreign and domestic issues. He said this would be “infinitely better’’ than setting up a party advisory committee, as GOP governors have proposed.
—	Said Johnson should sit down with GOP leaders to spell out his intentions in the South Viet Nam war. He added that GOP members want to be heard before any major decision which they would have to support in the interests of unity.
BARRY’S VIEWS
—	Said Barry Goldwater, the defeated GOP presidential nominee, is entitled to speak out on uny subject he chooses “but that docs not mean that we ne ccssarily follow any view he expresses.”
Here are some questions and answers:
★ * ★
Q. If the President does, not-keep his budget under $190 blK lion, will the Republicans try to cut It back or will they try to cut it back anyhow?
A. There is something psychological about $100 billion, and I am not Insensible to the President’s problems in that field, particularly with the . figures that have been disclosed that the request itself amounts to well over $108 billion, meaning thi regular requests.
DUTY TO CUT ,
I think we have a duty to cut the budget Wherever and whenever we can .without Impairing the essential functions of the government, and those things that are the legitimate object of government.
Q. How about excise taxes?
’ ★* ! Ar ★	,
A. Well, there you give me a chance to preen my feathers a little. As you recall, I Introduced the proposal In the Senate
Finance Committee to repeal, that. The result would be what? the four categories of excise The fellow with a reasonably taxes that were put on during average wage, a skilled worker, the Korean struggle, namely certainly, would be payingmore jewelry, cosmetics, luggage, s0Cial Security tax with medi-and handbags and so forth. I care added than he would direct really won by a huge vote, 2 to jncome tax. I don’t think he has 1, the first time around. But be- 'ever thought of it. fore final action was taken, -------------------------------------
sonally supervises their preparation.	FJf,r
He is expected to vote conservatively.
Rep. James D. Martin, 46, is not only a new face in the House but a symbol of political change that shook the South in the recent election.
He is one of five new Republican House members from Alabama.
NARROWLY MISSED Martin narrowly missed winning- a seat in the Senate two yeans ago.
He is president of an oil distributing firm in Gadsden. He is a former president of the Gadsden Chamber of Commerce, and has been Gadsden’s “man Of the year.”
He is active in\civic work and a member of the board of stewards of Gadsden’s First Methodist Church. V
★	★	4r\
Rep. William R. Anderson, D-Tenn., takes the 6th District seat of Ross Bass, who now is a senator. It is assumed he will establish among other congressional attainments a reputation, for a calm, unrdffled disposition, no matter how rough the legislative weather becomes.
NAUTILUS SKIPPER ■
With any other temperament he never would have made it as submariner in World War II and later as skipper of the Nautilus, the first atomic submarine.
Capt. Anderson was in charge when the Nautilus in 1958 traveled from the Pacific to the Atlantic under the polar ice cap.
He retired in 1962 to become President Kennedy’s consultant on establishment of a domestic Peace Corps.
★ ★ ★ -Rep. Patsy Takemoto Mink, D-HaWaii, established several “firsts” in her election.
MANY FIRSTS She is the first woman of oriental ancestry (Japanese) to serve in Congress, the first woman to represent Hawaii here, and the first (and so far only) new female to be elected to the 89th Cangress.
* A ★
She is 37, and a wife, mother, and lawyer as well as veteran politician. She has served in the territorial and state legislatures since 1955.
Her husband, a hydrologer (a geologist specializing in water), will be working in the Washington area. The Minks have a 12-year-old daughter.
YOUR ICWS QUIZ
FART I - CONGRESSIONAL QUIZ
Give yourself 10 points lor each correct
answer.
1 My state has . q-2.	b-6
Senators in Congress, c-li
2 Each Congress,meets for a-one year b-two years c-three years
Senators serve a. a-two b-four
. year term, c-six
Representatives serve a....year tqrm.
a-two b-four c-six
A bill passed by Congress becomes a law only when the President signs it. True or False? (False)
PART if-CQNGRESSIONAL VOCABULARY
f
Give yourself 4 points for each word that you can match correctly with its special Congressional meaning.
a-political party with fewest Members
b-political party in control
c-used to delay or prevent voting
d-a voter
e-what the President can do
1....the Majority
2..	M. constituent
3..	...the Minority
4....veto
5.....filibuster
PART III - CONGRESSIONAL OFFICES Take 6 points for each correctly matched
1.	....Speaker	a-presides in Senate in absence of Vice President of the U.S.
2.	....Whip	b-presides in the House
3.	.... Chaplain	c-represents no particular district
4.	large”	“at d-sees that all are present for voting
5.	Tempore	Pro e-opens daily meetings ® VEC, Inc., Madison 1, Wls.
PontiAc Press
January 4,1965	. ,{3
gga TteMPufum
Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer.
(a) authority for Con gress
(b) Republican symbol
(c) Democratic symbol
Party
Party
3....
(d) the nation's capital
(e) The House begins bills dealing with this subject.

$

(f)
Some is done roll call.
by
4...
435
(g) the nation's Capitol
(h) number of Senators
100
10...
(i)
0)
number of Representatives
The Executive enforces the laws.
HOW DO YOU RATE?
(Scon Each Side ef Quiz Separately)
91 to 100 points - TOC SCORE!
81 to 90 point! - Excellent.
?l to 80 point! - Good.
41 to 70 point! - Feir.
40 or Under???-HW This Quiz U pert of the Educational Program which this Newspaper furnishes to Schools In this aroa to Stimulate Interest in National and World Affairs as an aid to Povoloping Good Cltizomhip.
ANSWERS
TO TODAY’S NEWS QUIZ
Save This Practice Examination.'
STUDENTS Valuable Reference Materiel For Exams.
')-0l iq-6 la-8 !**L !e'9 :3 S h-9 fq-E ip-1 IF l :ZMD 100WAS •e-s fo-fr ie-£ ip-Z iq-l Mil IHVd •3-s ie-tr ie-E ip-Z !<H Ml JLWM •as|Bj-9 !•-* !d-c !q-z !e-i M lUVd
something happened.
But we Republicans were the | pioneers in the field, and it did not make me a bit unhappy when the administration announced that it was going to do something in that field. So all I j can say is I hope they will give J credit where credit is due.
HEALTH CARE
Q. Are you coming around to the idea of financing health care for the elderly by payroll taxes?
A. No, not necessarily. The question is, are there alternatives or can you build up Kerr-Mills? I was amazed in the last session when we had witnesses from Health, Education and Welfare with respect to medicare, as to what this was ultimately going to cost the man who carries the dinner bucket as well as management, because in a period of a few years they speculated that it would run up to 10.4 per cent on the employer. “
★ ★ ★
Now, In addition, they would have to raise the taxable base, $5,200, $5,400, $5,600, perhaps. And there have been speculations that it will go way beyond
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P ;	*
: THE POjSTIAO PRKSS* MONDAY, tJAR'y 4, 1965 ... ;■	- v>:
mmmmmm
Deaths in	Pontiac, Neighbo
KIMBERLY ANN CONWAY Kimberly Ann Conway, 16-month-old daughter of Mrs. Robert L. Conway of 2799 Mott, Waterford died yesterday after a short Illness.
Her body is at the D. E. Purs-ley Funeral Home. '	-
Surviving besides her mother are one brother, Lonnie and two sisters, Rebecca and Roxanna, all at home, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Conway of, Pontiac. 7*
MARION G. DAVIS Service for Marion G. Davis, 60, of 4009 Quillan, Waterford Township, w i 11 be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Coats Funeral 'H o m e, Waterford, Township, with burial in Ottawa, Park Cemetery.
Mr. Davis died today after a long illness. He was employed at GMC Truck & Coach Division.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Ernest Southard and a son, Robert N., both of Waterford Township; a brother, Roy of Bono, Ark.; a sister, Mrs. Albert Wilkinson of Pontiac; and six grandchildren.
MRS. ROBERT GARNETT Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Robert (Maggie M.) Garnett,, 82, of Speedwell, Tenn., will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Yakum Chapel Church; Speedwell, with burial in Moyeris Cemetery, Speedwell.
Mrs. Garnett died Saturday after a long illness.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Susan Brewer of Speedwell and three stepdaughters, Mrs. Cleva Davis of Pontiac, Mrs. Estel Brock of Detroit, and Mrs. Edna Liming of Birmingham.
SIMPSON HILL Service for Simpson Hill, 74, of 532 Branch will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Trinity Baptist Church, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. His body will be at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. tomorrow.
Mr. Hill died Thursday. He was formerly employed at Pontiac Motor Division.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Barbara Terrell of El Paso, Texas; two sisters; and a -brother.
MRS. FELTON TOULOUSE Service for Mrs. Felton (Eamestine) Toulouse, of (137 Raeburn will be at 1 p m. Thursday at Mt. Olive Baptist Church. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Toulouse died Saturday i after an Illness of four weeks. I She was a member of Mt. Olive j Baptist Church.
Her zody will be at the Frank | Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. tomorrow.
Surviving besides her husband are four children, all at home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hayworth Williams of Wichita, Kan.; and two brothers.
CARL A. ALGRIN WIXOM - Service for Carl A. Algrin, 75, of 49345 Pontiac Trail will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Burial will follow in Mount Hope Cemetery, Lapeer.
A real estate broker, Mr. Algrin died yesterday after a long illness.
He was a member and past noble grand of the International Order of Oddfellows Novi Lodge No. 486 and a member of the Encampment.
Graveside service will be conducted by the lodge.
Surviving are four nephews.
EDWARD D. DALL BEVERLY HILLS ~ Serylce for Edward D. Dali, 66, of 30370 Vernon was held this morning at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham, with burial In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
A former sales engineer for Houdaille Industries, Inc., Detroit, Mr. Dali died Friday after a lengthy illness.
Surviving are his wife, Beatrice; a daughter, Phyllis, at home; fils father, William of Bedford, Va.; and a sister.
CLARENCE A. HULL BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Clarence A. Hull, 66, of 6904 Valley Spring will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Burial will follow In Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Dryden.
Mr. Hull died Saturday after a long lllneAs.
He was president and chairman of the board of C. A. Hull Co., Inc., Bloomfield Hills.
Mr. Hull was a member of Dryden Lodge, F & AM, Dryden Veterans Club and the Michigan Road Builders Association.
Surviving are his wife, Ruth; a daughter, Mrs. Jeanette Davis
Of Dallas, Tex.; a sister; and a grandson. X
MRS. GEORGE V. FLATTLEY
COMMERCE TOWNSHIP —. Mrs. George V. (Rita A.) Flatt-ley; 65, of 9269 Commerce died yesterday. Her. body is at the Elton Black Funeral- Home, 1233 Union Lake.
Surviving besides 'her husband are two sons, Gordon and Neil W., both of Commerce Township; hfer mother, Mrs. Bertha Gutakunst of Phillips, Wis.;' a brother; a sister; five grandchildren; and one greatgrandchild.
MRS. OWEN R. MILLER
TROY — Service for Mrs. Owen R. (Anna B.) Miller, 72, oif 2975 Hylane was to be held at
1	p.m. today at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery.
Mrs. Miller died Saturday after a long illness.
Surviving besides her husband are a son, Robert H. of Fern-dale, and two granddaughters,
MRS. THOMAS PICKARD
HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP. -Service for Mrs. Thomas (Bessie M.) Pickard, 46, of 1575 Hickory Ridge will- be 3 p.m. Wednesday at Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Milford-
Mrs. Pickard died today.
Surviving besides her husband are two sons, James of Union Lake and Bruce of Walled Lake; two daughters, Mrs. Thomas Tu-san and Barbara, both of Union Lake; and her mother, Mrs. Jane Hamsher of Milford.
Also surviving are four brothers, John of Walled Lake, Charles Hamsher of Wolverine, Clyde Hamsher of Milford and Raymond Hamsher of Highland; two sisters, Mrs. Florence Beach of Milford and Mrs. Flossie SteiAke of Detroit; and seven grandchildren.
MRS. OSWALD WALLACE
ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Oswald (Agnes B.) Wallace, 68, of 500 Seventh will be
2	p.m. Wednesday at Pixley Memorial Chapel. Interment will be. in Mount Avon Cemetery.
Mrs. Wallace died yesterday after a brief illness.
Surviving are a son, James, and two daughters, Mrs. Clarence Rewold and Mrs. Herbert Hames, all of Rochester; her father, Charles Crowe; $ brother, Joseph Crowe of Troy ; | a sister, Mrs. Roy Knust of j Rochester; 17 grandchildren; j and nine great-grandchildren.
' ERIC P. WESTERLUND I PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Serv-j ice for Eric P. Westerlund, 92,
I of 2103 Richwood was to be held at 1:30 p. m. today at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial following in Perry
Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac.
A retired contracting mason, Mr* Westerlund died Friday after a l°n6 illness.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Thelma Gesme of Minneapolis, Minn., and Mrs. Lillian Carlson of Mound, Minn.; two sons, Gothard E. of Minneapolis and Carl of Mound; a sister; | seven grandchildren; eight great-grandchildren; and five0 great-great-grandchildren.
FRED G. WORKMAN I
BIRMINGHAM - Service for Fred G. Workman, 76, of 1427 j Humphrey will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Manley Bailey J Funeral Home. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
A retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, Mr. Workman died yesterday after a long illness.
He was a member of the Methodist Church of Jerome,' Iowa; Birmingham Lodge No. 44, F&AM; Birmingham Chapter No. 93, RAM; Scottish Rite of Detroit; and Moslem Temple, Detroit.
Masonic memorial service | will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home, under the aus-1 pices of the Birmingham Lodge.
Surviving are his wife, Ber-| tha; three daughters, Mrs. Ches-1 ter Stinson and Mrs. W. Fred j Stinson, both of Birmingham, and Mrs. J. C. Birrell of Royal j Oak; three brothers; four sis- j ters; seven grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
State Outlines Road Plans
The State Highway Department has announced that highway construction projects totaling $166.5 million will be placed under contract in Michigan during 1965.
Included will be more than $22 million in Oakland County paving and modernization projects.
Statewide, the Highway De-partment has scheduled 512 I miles of construction and modernization in 54 of the 83 ! counties.
More than $1.5 billion has been spent on highway construction in Michigan since 1957.
Hr. ★	★
Projects in the six-county Detroit metropolitan area alone have totaled nearly $500 million.
Carl Q¥. CDonehon
Cows Kick Up Protest
OKEECHOBEE, Fla. (AP)— In this dairy area, dairymen report that when electric power ' fails, cows accustomed to milking machines kick in protest I when milked by hand.
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AT ctnd LOSE
^ IIP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK
CAPSULES! Easier to take and more effective than tha powdered and liquid food supplement, and costs less including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M.D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way cape. DON'T DIE I —JUST EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! MEDIC-WAY
MEDIC-WAY 335-9205
1 Olllcsi In OihlMS and Wayne Counties - On* In MlMCl* Mil*
Spare Ribs
39
Delicious Served with Sauer Kraut
Country
Kitchen
MS A	I America’s Finest Indian River
H®L"“ SEEDLESS a* C iA<
28^1 Grapefruit ? W
DOLLAR SALE
SAVE
Food Club Devils Food, Double Choc., yellow or white
CAKE MIXES 1 Boxes01'
Food Club Canned Milk	Save 18c on 8	g 14-ox. ® Cans	$|°0	Chicken Noodle or Mushroom Campbell Soup		dt IO'/j-ox. $**00 ® Cans ■
Star Kist Chunk Tuna	Save 16c on 4	M 6'/i-ox. Cans	$|°0	Cypress Garden Sectic Grapefruit	jns Save 16c on 4	M 16-ox, $«00 *8 Cons 9
Pine Cone Tomatoes	Save 16c on 7	m 16-ox. " Cans	$|00	Brooks—Shot Chili Beans	Sove 23c on 7	m 15-ox. $a00 " Cons ■
Vegetable or Vegetarian Campbell Soup'lT		O lO’/i-ox. © Cans	$1oo	Food Club Applesauce	Save 24c on 4	jm Pt. 9-ox. 00 ■* Jars ■
CANNON
Dish Cloth or Pot Holder With purchase of
CANNON DISH TOWEL
69'
CANNON
Wash Cloth or Guest Towel With purchase of
CANNON
BATH
TOWEL
White or Assorted
% Scottic — Soft
Facial
TicciiR
169*
2-Ply
Boxes Save 12c on 3
Fresh, Crisp
Gayla Saltines
Save
6c
l-lb.
Box
19'
Vi-Gallon	plus	e gc
Glass	‘’•p0*1’ JtD
at

Sealtest—Homogenized
Fresh Milk
Mel-O-Crust Buttermilk
White Bread S“ VC 2 SZ 39‘
Top Frost
Ice Cream
Choc.-Vanilla	Va-Gal.
Ncopoliton Ctn.
59'
MON., TOES., WED. ONLY
COUPONS
M* with Pure Colombian Coffees FOOD CLUB
INSTANT COFFEE
10-os.
Jar
Limit
On#
SOVO up to 30c
'<, Limit one with this coupon after the purchase ot sS.OO aj or more. Coupon expire* W*dn*ld*y, January 6th, 1968 4	Limit on* eoupon p*r customer.
45 S. Telegraph at Huron I
TELHURON CENTER I
■tyTIM R aVM*!t*llI J«f
Hair Spray
AQUA NET
2’ST. StOO
IHUI M T	M
Save 54c With Thli
Coupon
Limit two with tHIi coupon *tt*r th* purchase of SS.OO or mor*. Coupon *xplr«* Wednesday, January 6th, IMS . Limit on* coupon p*r customer.
With Thli Coupon end Pureh*** ot Preih' Froxeh Pour 6-oi. Cans of
MEADOWDALE ORANGE JUICE
Limit On* Coupon Expires Jan. 6, 1965
With Thlt Coupon and Purchase of
Two 1-lb. Pko*. of
HOT DOGS
Limit On* Coupon Rxptre* Jan. 6, 1060
PiiiPMIMg
With Thlt Coupon and , Purchase of Two Pko*.
CUT-UP or WHOLE FRYER
Limit Ono Coupon txplroi'Jon. 6, IMS
536 N. Perry
AT PADDOCK
398 Auburn Ave.
AT SANFORD
50 S. Saginaw
AT AUBURN
f
f \

•f) ;l\‘ ‘	1	--sen •	' t -p gpp||g|»!
^" f v i vt / t 1 ft "' t 111" v^yW]4 4f
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965/	»
MARKETS
The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations arefurnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday.
Produce^
FRUITS
Apple*, Golden Delicious, bu. Apples, Red Delicious, bu.. Apple*, Jonathan, bu. ,... Apple*, McIntosh, bu.
Apple*, N. Spy; bu, ,........
Apples, Cider, +gal, case .
VBORtABI.ES
Beets, topped, bsi. ........
Cabbage, curly, bu, .........
Cabbage. Red, bu............
Cabbage, Std. ...............
Carrot*, Cello Pek..........
Carrot*, topped, bu.........
Celery, Root, do*. .........
Horseradish .................
Leeks, dz. bchs. .	....
Onions, dry, 50-lb, bag-....
Parsley Root ...............
Parsnips, bu................
Parsnips, cello pak ........
Potatoes, new, 25 lbs.......
Potatoes, new, 50 ibs.......
Radishes, bl.	.......
Squash, Acorn, bu...........
Squash, Buttercup, bu.......
Squash, Butternut, bu.......
Sauash, Delicious, bu. .....
Squash, Hubbard, bu.........
Turnips, topped, bu..........
LETTUCB
Celery, cabbage, bu.
$3.75 .. 3.75 2.50 .. 171 .. 3.75 . 2.50
. *1.75 .. 2.00 .. 2.25 .. 2.50 1.75 .. 2.00
. 1.75 . 1.75 . 1.75 . 1.75 . 2.00 .. 1.15 . 2.10 2.00 . 1.75 . 1.75 . 2.00 . 1.75 . 1.75 . 2.50
$1.75
Poultry and Eggs
DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API — Prices paid per pound for No. 1 quality live poultry: Roasters over 5 Ibs. 23-24,’ Broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. Whites 18-20 DETROIT BOOS
DETROIT CAP) - Egg prices paid Iter dozen by first receivers (Including U.S.): whites Grade A Jumbo 34-37; extra large 32-371*; large 3IW-34; medium 25-26; small 20-23; Browns Grade A targe 30V*-34; medium 25; small 20-21; checks 19-20.
CHICAGO BUTTER, BOOS CHICAGO (API — Chicago Mercantile Exchange — butter steady; wholesale buying prices Unchanged; 73 score AA 57V*; 72 A 57V*; 70 8 56V.; 07 C 561*; cats 70 B 57V*; 07 C 57V..
Eggs about steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 70 per cent or better Grade A whites 28; mixed 28; mediums standards 25; dirties unquoted; checks 22.
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Live poultry: wholesale buying prices unchanged; roasters 23-26; special led White Rock fryers I0-17V*,
NY welfare Syst on Strike
NEW YORK CAP) - The city’s vast welfare system was on strike today, threatening to halt care and services to thousands of destitute persons.
In launching the strike, , workers for the city’s welfare department spurned both a court order and this state’s Condlln-Wadlin Act banning walkouts by public employes under threat of dismissal. ,	,#	;
★. ★ w
“Our families have to eat,0 declared signs carried by pickets.
The department handles a flow of public aid to about 500,-000 impoverished 'adults and children.
OUTBURST OR BOOS
Welfare Commissioner James
R. Dumpson, arriving at the department’s headquarters amid an outburst of boos from pickets, promised action “as the situation demands it.”
He said volunteer help was being sought and obtained, in some cases.
★ ★ ★
Two unions, representing 11,-600 of the department’s 12,5(H) employes, voted for the strike Sunday night in a demand for higher wages and improved Working conditions.
A State Supreme Court judge had issued a restraining order against the walkout.
357 PICKETS
A check by police at 28 Welfare Department centers in the
city’s five boroughs showed 357 Pickets marching at the sites.
At some of them, persons seeking welfare assistance lined up at entranceways in the sub freezing temperatures and biting wind. One woman held a baby in her arms, a weeping child at her side. ' ’
, ★ . ★ ★
Outside welfare headquarters in lower Manhattan, strikers shouted “Scab!” at persons entering the building — apparently clerical help.
A union spokesman said essential services would be main tained at three children’s homes and a home for the aged in Queens. Dumpson said a sufficient staff reported at these institutions.
The New York Stock Exchange
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK
DETROIT (AP) - (USDAI - Today's receipt*. Cattle 50, calve* 25, hogs 25, sheep 25.
Cattle compared with last week's close slaughter steers and hellers vary slow, demand narrow for the small supply, prices 5c lower, cows very active Hilly 50c higher; bulls strong to 50c higher. Small supply high choice 10M-1154 lb steers aoW early at 24.75; only around SO head at 24.75; most choice 700-1200 lb sold 2160-24.50. Good to low choice steer* ranged 21-23.50. Standard tO low good steers 14.50-21. 22 head choice 035 lb heller* sold early at 22.75; most choice heller* 21.50-22.50; good to Mtw choice heller* 17J0-21.50. Standard la low good heller# 15.50-17.50 Utility cow* 13.50-14.50, C*nntr and cutter cows 11-13.50; cutter to commercial bulls 15.50-18.50.
Vealer*	compared with last week's
close veelers fully steady choice to prime 35-37; good 25-35; standard 18-25; cull and utility 10-18.
Shaep compared with last week'l close slaughter lambs fully 50c higher. Slaughter ewes steady; choice and prime wooled slaughter lambs 80-105 lb, 21.50-22.50; good and choice wooled ,20 50-21.5; choice end prime shorn lambs 1 & 2 pelts 80-105 lb 20.50-21.50. Good and choice shorn 17.50-20.50; cull to good ewes 4.00-7.50.
American Stocks
NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) - Following is list of selected stock transactions on the American Stock Exchange with noon prices:
Seles	Net
(lids.) High Lew Last Cltg 13 24% 24% 7rn + ft
NEW YORK (AP)—Following Is a list of selected stock -transactions on the New York Stock Exchange with 10:30 prices:
Sales	.	Not
Abbott L .90 ABC Con .70 ACFInd 2.50a Address 1.20 Admiral Air Red 2.50 Allegh Lud 2 AlliedCh 1.80 Allied Sirs 3 AMIsChal .50 Alum Ltd .80 Alcoa 1.40 Amerada 2.40 AmAIrlln 1.25 A Bosch .50e AmBdcst 1.40 Am Can 2 Am Cyan 2 AmEIPw 1.24 Am Enka 2a Am FPw .75 AHome 1.55a' Am Hosp .35 Am MFd .90 AMet Cl 1.50 Am Motors 1 AmNGas 1.70 AmOptlc 1.10 Am Photo .20 ASmelt 1.50a Am Std 1 Am TAT 2 Am Tob 1.50 Am Zinc 1.40 AMP Inc .45 Ampex Cp Amph Borg 1 Anacon 2.50e Anken Ch .20 ArmcoSt 3 Armour 1.50b Arms! Ck la Ashl Oil 1.40 AssdOO 1.50 Atchison 1.50 AtlCUne 2a Atlas Cp Auto Cant .40 Avco Corp 1 Avne! .40b AvonProd .80
Bald Lima .40 Balt GE 1.32 Boaunlt 1.20 Beckman In BeechAIr .50 Bell How .40 Bendlx 2.40 Benguef Bestwall .90e Beth Stl 1.50 Bigelows 1.20 Boeing 2 Borden 2.10 BorgWar 2.20 Briggs Mfg * BriggsS 1.40a Brlsf My la Brunswick BucyEEr 1.50a Budd Co .50 Bullard .50 Butova .50b Burl Ind 1.50 Burroughs 1
4	46%	46ft	46ft	—	ft
s	174*	17**	17**	+	%
6	79	78ft	78'*		I,- -
n	47	46%	46%	+	ft
2	13%	15%	ISVs	+	>*
II	54ft	54	54	+	V*
2	40%	408*	40%	+	ft
30	51%	51 Vs	51ft		ft
1	73%	73%	738*	+	ft
9	19%	19%	19%		V*
16	20%	TfIVs	28*4		ft
16	61ft	61 Vi	611*		
1	02%	828*	02%		ft
14	44%	44ft	44%	+	ft
1	16ft	16ft	16ft		'*
23	54	53%	54	+	**
14	43ft	43	43ft	+	ft
tt	60ft	681*	60ft		ft
1/	44ft	44	44ft		i*
4	60ft	68	68		
2	17%	17ft	17ft		ft
6	65ft	65ft	65ft		ft
23	29%	29 ft	29 ft		
44	10%	18ft	18%	+	%
7	42%	42ft	42ft		%
SO	14ft	14	14ft		
3	46ft	46ft	46ft	+	%
3	30ft	38,	38		ft
49	7	7	7	+	ft
3	698*	49%	49%	+	ft
9	20%	20%	20%		
304	69 ft	68%	69 ft	+i	
46	34	33%	34		%
1	29%	29%	29%	+	%
5	288*	28%	28%		
0	16ft	16	16ft	+	ft
3	23%	23%	23%	+	%
5	52ft	52V*	52 ft		ft
1	10ft	10ft	10 Vs	+	ft
3	64ft	64'*	64ft		%
11	53ft	53V*	53ft	+	%
s	62ft	62ft	62ft		
3	.19ft	39ft	39'*		ft
1	60ft	68'*	68'*		
24	33%	331*	33%	+	ft
3	68ft	68	68		%
It	2%	28*	28*		
4	17	17	17		
20	21ft	21%	21%		ft
3	12%	12 Vs	17%	+	ft
15	53 Vs	53 Vs	53ft	—	%
—B—					
3	14	14	14		
2	30%	388*	36%	+	ft
2	37ft	37	3/		
1	72	73	72		ft
1	19%	198*	19%	+	ft
21	26%	26%	26%		
14	44%	44%	44%	+	ft
130	1%	1%	1%		ft
5	34	.33%	34	+	ft
36	35ft	35	35		ft
9	28	27**	77%		%
4	60%	60%	68%		
3	83ft	83 ft	83ft		ft
12	40%	40 ft	40%		ft
S	5%	5%	5%	+	ft
1	30 ft	38 ft	38 ft	+	ft
361	60ft	68	68	—1	
66	9ft	9ft	9ft	+	ft
1	39%	39%	39%		
16	14	13%	14		
3	20Vs	20%	20%	*1*	ft
4	10%	10%	18%	+	ft
$	59ft	59ft	59ft		ft
7	25	25	25		ft
Gen Elec 2.20 Gen Foods 2 GenMills 1.40 GenMot 4.45e GenPrec 1.20 GPubSvc .44g G PubUt 1.35 GenTelAEI 1 GenTIre .50 GaPaciflc lb GettyOil lOe Gillette 1.10a GlenAld .5a0 Goodrch 2.20 Goodyr 1.15 GraceCo '1.10 GrandU .50b Granites 1.40 GtAAP 1.20a Gt Nor Ry 3 GW Pin .871 Greyhnd .80 Grumn 1.50 Gulf Oil 1.80 Gulf SU 1.24
Malllbut 1.50 Hanna Co la HeclaMng 1b Merc Par 1e Hertz 1.20 Hewlett Pk Hoff Electron Homestk 1.60 Honeywell wl
Ideal Cem 1 IllCent Ind 2 IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InterlkSt 1.50 IntBusMch 5 IntIHarv 2.80 IntMlnerals 1 IntNick 2.50a Inti Packers IntPaper 1.20 Int TAT 1.20
Sales	Net
(lids.) High Low Last Clio,
1	48	48	48	*im
93 96ft 96ft 96% -1ft .4"	28ft	28	28ft	.
4	6	6	6	+	ft
12	37ft	37ft	37ft -	ft
46	37ft	37%	37% .....
23	19ft	19%	19% +	ft
8	55ft	55	55
2	26ft	26ft	26ft +	ft
11	30ft	30ft	30ft ...	.
24	13ft	13ft	13ft +	ft
2	58	57ft	58	+	ft
45%	45ft	45ft ....
3 55	55
56
15	5ft	5ft	5ft
5	41ft	41ft	41ft	+	ft
11 1H6	ft
11	6%	6ft
17 11-16 ft 15-164-1-16 13* 25ft	25ft	25ft	+	ft
48	4ft	4%	4%
12ft
_ 7ft+M6 ms 12%+ ft
33	4 3ft 3ft — ft
30 3 1-16 3.M6 3 1-15—1-16 55	9 8ft 8ft — ft
102 3ft 3ft 3ft ~y% 6 44ft 44 ft 44ft-frb | gdH 54ft 54ft f ft
Aerojet .50 AmPetrofA .15 ArkLaGas 1.20 Asamera Assd OIIAG Atlas Cp wt Barnes Eng Braz Trac Brit Pet .30r Brown Co .60 Campb Chib Can So Pet Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creole P 2.60a Data Cont Draper 2 EquItyCp .05r Fargo oils Felmt Pet .15e Fly Tiger Gen Devel Gen Plywd
Goldfield Ot Bas Pet Gulf Am Ld Hycon Mfg Isram Corp Kaiser Ind Kratter .80b Mackey Air McCrory wt Mead John ..
Mich Sugar Motybden
New. Pk Mng .121 9	7ft 7
Panel! Pet 13	1ft 1ft
Scurry Rein 14	15%	15%
Sbd W Air 39	6ft	6	6
SlgnatOII A la 19	29	28ft	29
Sperry R wt If	5ft	6ft	6ft	—	vt
Syntax Cp .30e 156 67ft 66ft 67ft flft Technlcol .50 xd 5	lift	15ft	15ft	r	ft
Un Control .20	91	4%	4ft	4ft	-	ft
WebbAKnapp 61	S-M	6*16	5-16-M6
2	50ft	50ft	50'* +	ft
18	3W	3ft	3ft ..	
21	2'* 2 7 14 2 7-16			
1	9%	9%	9% -	ft
	9ft	9ft	9ft -	ft
69	4ft	4	4ft +	ft
92	5%	5	5% 4- %	
119	17%	16%	16% -	%
147	?v*	2	2 -	ft
59	2%	2ft	2** +	ft
33	5ft	5	5ft 4*	V*
1	6ft	6ft	6ft..	
2		1%	1%	
44	7ft	7	7 —	ft
38	lift	if*	in* +	ft
12		5ft	5ft —	ft
10	Sft	3ft	3ft	
46	17%	17%	17*4 +	ft
i« 6	4ft	4ft	4ft	ft
47	31%	30%	31ft 4*	%
15%
+ ft
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (AP)—The caih position Of the treasury compered with corresponding dele * yeer ago.
Dec. 17, 1784 Die. 17, 17*1
Balance—
t $7,570,34,101.57 I 7,803,155,358.57 Depoilt* Plicel Year July 1—
53,317,738,105.50	51,775,577,748.17
Withdrawals Fiscal Year—
Of,133,517,310.75	81,537,818,350.44
X-Totel Debt -
317,774,803,373.15	311,213,731,473.70
Gold Asseta—
15.307,000,131.17	15,5t 1,818,750.44
X ...include* 1185,700,771.00 d*bt not tub-lext to statutory limit,
BOND AVBRAOE*
Complied by TH* Associated Pr*ll M 10	10	10	10
.Roll* led.	Util.	Fob.	L.Yd
Net Change —.1
Noon Thur*. $3.3	101,1	II.J	71.1	*3.7
Pray.	Day	03.3	101,3	88.1	71.1	73.7
Woek	Ago	13 4	101.0	01.4	71.1	73.0
Month Aon 01.5	101.0	80.1	71.7	73.8
Yeer	Ago	10.5	101.5	$7.5	70.5	71.3
---- ii.f	103.5	08.4	73.1	04.3
|0,5	100.8	|7j	70,1	fi.f
ill	103.4	80.5	71.1	75.1
77.7	77.5	17.5	88.4	73.1
CallahM .301 Calum H .80 CempRL ,45a Camp $p .70 Can Dry 1 CdnPac 1.50a CaroP Lt 1.18 Carrier 1.80 CartarPd .40 Cata Jf Cat*rTrec .80 Celanesa 1.80 Cencolnit .50 Cent SW 1.28 CerroCn 1.40 CostnaAlrc 1 ChampSPk 1 Checker Mot Ches Oh 4 ChPneu 1.80a ChlRkljPac I ChrlsCrlt .801 Chrysler lb CIT Pin 1.40 Citadel ind 1 Cities Sv 2.80 Cltvillli 1.20 Coca Cola 3 CoIgPal 1.20 ComnRad .40 Colt Indust CBS 1.20b Col Gas 1.32 Col Plcl .547 ComICre i no Comloiv i.2o Comwgd 1. 855+ ComwEd 1.80 Comsat ConElecInd 1 CnNOas 2.30 ConiPw 1.70 Container I Cont Air .40 Cont Can 1 Cont Ini 2.40 Com oil 140 Control ipala Corn P(T 1,50 CrowColl .771 Crown Cork Crown Zell 2 Cruc. Stl 1.20 Curtl* Pub Cwt Wr I
1784 High 1784 Law 1783 High 1783 COW
stock averages „
Compiled by TM A**eclated.Prei*
r+3
SSip
Month Ago
'	HI
Hi . ip
IS:)	)&	1)
1*83	High . 407.1	1)18	151.1	308.1
1783	LOW .. 341.1	111.0	134.7	143.7
Jf II 80
Mil* UNI. Hacks
188:2
IS
185.1 141,f
m
I
134.4
314.7
Den River 1 DeycoCp ,40b Deere 1.40a DaltaAIr 1.80 DanRIoGW t PetEdl* 1.30 Del Steel .80 Dliney ,40b Plat Soag I DomeMn ,80a DougAIr 1.411 Dow Ch 1.00 Drasiar 1.20 duPont 7.25r Duq LI 1.40
Bei'OP 2471 EaitKo 2.40a iaton Mfg 2 EtBondS 1.40 g Aiioc .441 ■IPaaoNO 1 End John IrltLack RR BvnnsPd ,40r
Rvershrp
3	168*	18'/*	18W	+	'/*
13	13	22V*	32’/*	—	**
8 31’/* 38'/a 38V* — ’/<
1	32	32	32	+	V*
x3	58'/* 58V*	58V*	+	W
2	428*	428*	428*	+	V<
2 54	54	54	+ V*
7 18V4 18'/* 1BV* + W II 178* 17V* 178* + 'A 24	4188	41V*	41'/*	+	'A
20	74 'A	738*	7388	.....
7	57'A	57'A	57>A	—	8*
I	5088	50V*	5088	—	(A
17	35	348*	3488
4	318*	318*	318*	.....
1	4188 4188 4188 + V*
2	31	21	21+8*
« 7188 718* 718* +8*
7	308* 30	308* + 88
3	338* 338* 328*	...
4	138* 138* 138* + V*
27	61,	6088	51	.....
5	3414 34V* 34V* + 'A
16	30	30	30	....
8	77V*	77V8	77V*	.....
$	378*	378*	378*	+	Vt
5	140'A 140	140'A — V*
6	47'A 47	*7—8*
0	178* 17V* 178* + 8k
17	128* 12	128* + 8*
17 408* 408* 408* + V* 13	318*	318*	318*
1	22'A	22'A	22'A
7	36	3588 U88 + V*
16	31	3488 3488
•A V8 3'AV*	50 545
55'A	55'A	55'A	+	V*
32	S3V*	52
10	32V*	32V8	32V*	+	V*
8	71V*	71V*	71V4	J-	8*
6	548*	54'A	548*	+	V*
2	328* 32V* 328* + V*
3	30V*	20	20V*	'
4	50	50	50
4	61V*	408*	608*
1	H	75V*	75V*
7	538* 5388 538* + 8*
13	54V*	54V*	54V*	....
102 2518 25 25Vb ......
17	3488 34V* 341* — 'A 7 568* 568* 568* — V*
2	2288 2288 2288 . .
1)	01*	0	IV*	+	8*
5	178* 178* 178* + 'A
—I)-------
13	201* 208* 201* + V*
1 208* 208* 208* + '* 7 45	448* 448* — 8*
5 4188 6188 4188 ...
1] 211* 2118 2118 — V* 2 34'A 36'A 34'A .
4 131* 13	13V* + Vt
4 46	44	44	+ 1*
7 308* 3088 3088 + 18
14	368* 30'* 30V*	8*
7 27'A 2718 27'A + V*
11	748* 7418 768* — V*
10	338* 338* 338* + 'A
( 342	241	241V* + 8*
4 3518 348* 348* — 8*
—E—
11	4288 42V* 42'* - '/-
1	Of	05	65
15	137'* 137'* 1371*
4 4188 43'A 431*
j	P	as«
43	23	228*	23
4 24V* 238* 238*
2	4	58*	6
4	49	43	41
2	171* 17V* 17V*
■r vi
+ 1A T '•* + 'A
P* rCam ,50* gnirch Hiller PahilHl Met PedOStr 1.50 Pod Moo 1,|0
Piimkot# j Fla Pew 1.20 III JPL 1.40 PoodPelr .70 PMC carp i Pootd M .20e Pord Aim 2 Forem D .40 PreiM. 5 1.20
FruehCp 1.50
Oemlk 1.20b Oen c iu 1.20 Gen Dynem
-F-
24 21V* 2788 20V* + 8* 6 ,71*	71*	71* + V*
j ‘
43	428b 418*.
441* J418 44Vi ■
17	2388	758*	25)8	~	W
2	218*	im	111*	+	V*
2.	6088	6088	4084	+
2	17	16M	1488	......
4	548*	fit*	file	-	1*
2	!3'A	13'*	13W	...
. 4 tm 441* ,44m — 1* 7 30'A 30'A 30'A ...........
tmtmfjfttttti
3	38	30	31	+	M
1	80’*	10V*	50V*	-	Vt
18	358*	3SW	35W	+	W
JohnsManv 2 JonLopan .70 Jonat&L 2.50 . Joy Mfg 2
Kaiser Al .70 KayierRo .60 Kannecott 4 KcrnCLd 2.40 Kerr Me 1.20 KlmbClark 2 Kopprs 2.40a Koryette Kratge 1.20 Kroger 1.20
Lear Sleg .50 LehPorCem 1 Lehman l.SIg LOFGIs 2.00a LlooettliM 5 Lionel Corp Llttonln 1.877 LlvIngsO .76t LockAlrc 1.60 Loews Theot LoneS Com 1 LonglsILt .72 Loral Corp Lorlllord 2.50 LTV .50 LukonsSt 1.80
Mack Trucks Mad Fd l.soa Mad Sq Gar Magnavx .70 Marathon 2 Mar Mid 1.20 Merquar .25g MartlnMar 1 MayDStr 1.20 McCall ,40b McDonAIr .60 Merck la Mid SUt 1.24 MlnarChem 1 MlnnMngM 1 MoPacRR 5a Mohasco .60a Monsan 1.40b MontDU 1.40 Montward 1 Morrell Co 1 Motorola 1.50
Nat Alrl .80 Nat Blsc 1.70 NatCan .40b NCeshR 1.20 NatDalry 2.60 NatDIst 1.20 Nat Fuel 1.40 Nat Ganl .16 NatGyps 2b N Lead 3.25a Nat Steal 2 Nat Tea .00 N EngEI 1.20 NYCant 1.30a NlagM Pw 2 Norfolk W 6a NA Avia 2.00 NorNalGas 2 NorPec 2.40a Nsta Pw 1.44 Northrop 1 NWstAlrl .60 Norton 1.40a Norwch 1.10a
Occident ,25d Ohio Bdls 2 OlInMilh 1.40 QtlsGlev 1.70 Oulb Mer .60
PecO&E i.io Pec Petrol PacTliT 1.20 Pen Am .60 PanhEP 2.40 PeremPIcl 2 ParkeDev la PaabCoal .80 Penney l.sOe PePwU 1.44 Penn RR 1* Penntoll 1.20 PapCola 1.40 PllitrCha la PhalpsD 3 40 Phlie El 1.32 Phi Rdg 1.20 PhiiMor 3.40 PhllliniPet 2 Pltn Bow .70 PitPimo 2.40 Pit steal Polaroid ,40 Proct&O 1.75
■ ' '	.341
3	261*	24'A	26
1 $	24	24	24	—	W
17 42M 42'A 42’A ...
3	508*	588*	588*	+	V*
27	1188	118*	1188	+	'A
U	228*	2288	22'A
76	53'A	53	53V*	—1’A
7	50V*	58'A	58V*	-	8*
2	466*	468*	466*	+	V*
—H—
3	37'A	37'A	37	+	'A
16	3888	38'*	388*	+	'*
14	338*	338*	338*	+	8*
1	46'*	46'*	46W	+	8*
17	348*	34	34'A	+	18
2	228*	228*	228*	...
2	61*	61*	4'* + Vt
18	53M	53	53	—	'*
5	41	61	41	+	'A
6	3788	37'*,	37'*	...
5	518*	518*	518*	—	8*
' 1	21’*	21W	21W
2	52	52	52	+	1*
6	408*	408*	408*	..
23	'438*	43’A	43’*	—	1*
2	328*	328*	328*	—	18
5 410'* 407	407	- W
7	758*	751*	75W	-	'*
16	37	38'A	,3688	+	88
8.	84	84	84
1	II	U	11	+	'A
10	3*8*	3288	326*	+	1*
34	57'A	57'A	57'*	+
2	53W .53 W 53W .....
5	2788	278*	2788	+	W
11	6788	47'A	67'A	-	W
2	4588	45'*	4588	+	Vt
—K—
3	276*	276*	276*	.....
1	231*	231*	23’*	-	'A
2	72'A	92’A	721A	+	'A
1	61'A	61'A	61'A	. .	. ,
20	4514	446*	45’A	+	'A
4	5784	57W	5788	+	18
4	55	546*	546*	—	V*
6	4088	40V8	40'A	+	'A
3	5088	5084	5088	—	W
4	30'*	30'A	301*	+	8*
—L-
7	138*	126*	138*	+	'*
RoyDut 1.73r Royal McBee Ryder Syst
Safeway St 1 StJos bead 2 SL SanF 1.40 StRegP 1.40b SanDtmp .461 Schenley 1 Scherng 1.60a Schick ’ SCMCorp .oaf ScottPap .70 Saab AL 1.60 SearIGD 1.10 SearsR 1.80a Seeburg .60 Serval
Shall Oil 1.S0 Sinclair 2 Singer Co 2 SmlthK 1.60a Socony 2.60a SoPRSug .40g SouCalE 1 20 SouPac 1.40 SoufhRy 2.80 Sperry Rand Spiegel 1.50 SquarD 1.40a StOIICal 2.20 StOIIInd 1.50a StdOII NJ 3e StdOllOh 1.60 St Packaging Staley 1.20 Sfanwar 1.20 StauffCh 1.40 StariDrug .70 Stevens 1.50b Studebaker. Sun Oil lb Sunray 1.40 Swift Co 2
Sales	Net
(Ms,) High Lew LasLChg. 10 458* 4514 458*".....
1 168* 168* 168* ........
• 10 13'* 138* 13'* + '*
12	378*	371*	37’A-
|	421*	421*	42'*	-
2	306*	308*	306*	-
2	3IM	318*	31M	-
16 ' 8V*	0
18
226* 2288, 226* ......
17	57	57	57	—	1*
1	7'A	7'*	7'A	+	14
1	17'*	17'*	171*	...
12	34V*	34	34V*	+	'A
5	4488	4488	4488	+	1*
11	68'A	67'*	67'*	-	84
17 127	1286* 1286* — 8*
5	24	24'A	24'A	+	8*
5	414	4'A	414. + Vt
15	578*	57'*	578*	—	W
26	57V<	566*	57	+	8*
7	77'A	77V*	77'*	—	8*
6	72'A	716*	716*	—	W
11	7184	71'*	71'*	—	1A
16	3114	306*	31'A	+	8*
10	378*	37V*	378*	+
12	386*	3884	3884	+	’*
2	578*	578*	578*
50	14	14“ '	W	+	V*
6	288*	28W	288*	.....
3	63	63	63	.....
11	738* 73Vi 738* ........
15	42'*	428*	421*	...
35	8988	871*	$7’*	—	8*
2	47'*	47'A	47**	+	'A
7	108*	lOVx	10'A	+	14
1	34M	348*	348*	..
1	261*	26'*	26'*	+
4	40'*	401*	40’*	—	'A
17	30V4	30'*	30'*	—	V*
13	,	438*	438*	438*	—	'A
32	6'*	61*	4W	+	'A
2	63	63	63	—	'*
5	32V*	32V*	32V*
5	58'A	58'A	58'A	+	'*
4 17
17	17
8	30'A 30'A 30'A + W
11 60	5784 5784
3 83	82'* 03	+ '*
7	4	36*	3'* + V*
16	746* 748* 74’* ... .
6	15'A 15W 15'A + Vt
11	30'A 30V* 30'A ...
2	17V< 17'A 1718 + Vt
5 20'A 20	2018 + V*
3	348* 348* 348* . .
4	78* 7W 78* + 1*
0	42'A 42W 42W + W 4 1784 1784 1784 + 'A
1	6188 6188 6188 ....
—M—
35	39	37ft	30	+1
1	21%	21%	21%
1	2ft 2ft 2ft + ft*
26	31% 31ft 31% + ft
4	64ft 64ft 64ft + ft 3 34% 34% 34% + ft
5	0%	0%	0% 4- ft
22	10ft	10ft	10ft 4-	ft
3	57ft	57ft	57ft 4-	ft
2	24	24	24	4-	ft
17	35ft	35	35	+1
19	49ft 49ft 49ft ....
3	49ft	49ft	49ft 4-	ft
1	27%	27%	27% -	ft
16	56ft	55%	56ft 4-1ft
1	70ft	70ft	70ft —	ft
2	14ft	14ft	14ft +	ft
30	05ft	04ft	05	—	%
7	40%	40ft	40% 4*	ft
14* 39%	39ft	39ft —	ft
9	32ft	32ft	32ft 4-	ft
6	95ft 95ft 95ft .....
—N-*—
12	65% 65ft 65% *.....
16 50ft 50ft 50ft .....
4	17ft 17	17	....
6	74	74	74	4*	ft
7	86ft 05ft 85ft —1 i
12	26%	26ft	26ft
3	32ft	32	32ft
6	lift	11%	lift 4*	ft
6	40%	40%	40% 4-	%
8	72ft	72ft	72ft
7	53	53	53	4*	%
1	17ft	17ft	17ft
3	28%	28%	20%
16	49ft	49%	48ft 4*	ft
5	53ft	53
2	133	133	133	4- ft
9	54%	54ft	54%
1	56%	50%	50%
1	52ft	52ft	52ft
1	40ft	40ft	40ft
5	20%	20%	20%
6	63ft	63ft	63ft
1	40ft	40ft	40ft -f	ft
7	42%	42ft	42% 4ft
27	28%	29%	28% 4-	ft
2	59ft	59%	59ft
20	41%	41%	41%
10	43%	43ft	43ft
15	16%	16ft	16%
—P—
34 20% 20%
Term Gas 1b TexGSul 40 Texasliisfm l TexPL<) .35e Texfron 1.60 Thlokol .57! Tldewat Oil TlmkanRB 3a Trans W Air Transam .80 TrlCoilt l.67e
UCarbld 3.60 Un Elec 1.12 Urt Oil Cal 1 Un Pac 1.00 Un T0nk i -80 Un AlrL 1.50 Uni! AI reft 2 Uni! Cp .35e Unit Frulf UGasCp 1.70 UnifM&M la USBorax .00a USGypsm 3a US Indus!
US Rub 2.20 US Smelf 3 US Steel 2 UnMatch .40 Unlv OMPd 1
VanAIISt 1.60 Varlan As VendoCo .40 VaEIPw 1.12
WarnPIct .50 WarnLam .80 WnAirLIn .80 WnBanc 1.10 WUnTel 1.40 WestgEI 1.20 Whirlpool 2 Wilson Co 2 WlnnDix 1.20 Woolworth 1 Worthing 1.50
13	24%	24ft	24ft
24	51%	51ft	51%	4-	ft
14	94%	94%	94%	—	ft
1	10ft	18ft	18ft
1	53ft	53ft	53ft	—	ft
28 12% 12ft 12ft 4- ft
3	32% 32% 32% — ft
4	85	85	85	4- %
4	47%	47%	47%
7	44%	44%	44%
14 49	48% 48%
94 127	126ft 127
2 29% 29ft 29ft
16 36	35% 36 4* ft
4	42%	42%	42%	4-	ft
1	50%	50%	50%	4-	ft
10	59%	59ft	59Va	4-	ft
12	65%	65Va	65%	4-	ft
7	8ft	0%	8ft	4-	ft
17	17% 17ft 17ft
0	36% 36ft 36ft 4- ft 10 26ft 26% 26% 4- ft
1	34%	34%	34%
4	80ft 80 90ft
2	lift	lift	lift	4-	ft
13	62ft 62	62	— ft
3	107	106ft 106ft + ft
73 50% 50% 50% — ft
14	14% 14ft 14% ...
1 40	40	40	— ft
1	33ft	33ft	33ft	...
5	13ft	13ft	13ft	4*	ft
5 21% 21ft 21% 4* % 3 46ft 40ft 40ft .....
—W—
3	1»	18’* 19	+ V*
J 3288 328* 3288 + Vt
4	3188 318* 3)8* ...
Vt
4 39	39
39
+ W
•f 1*
+ Vt
3 41	41
41
Publklnd Pullman : PureOII uo
RCA .GO*
Rayette .48
Reybnler. 1,20 Raylhon .Mb Reading Ce
SelchCn .20e tpiib Avlai RepubSteel 2 Revlon 1,30 RexaMDr 60b Rexall Dr Wt ReynMet '.50a RtyTeb 1 8o Rheemjyif .10 RlchfOII 1.80 Rohr Corp I
6688	~ 'A
!	3088	38=18	3888	+ W
21	3888	3888	388*
19	45W	45	4SV8	+1
5	59’*	5988	598*	- V*
15	49'*	49M	498*	- W
8	71	70W	701*	+ V*
3	358*	358*	358*
4	34	35	36	...
3	73	73	73'A	.
8	538*	53'A	53'A	- 18
3	38V*	38W	38'*-,8*
3	588*	688*	688*	-	W
1	141*	14W	14W	+	W
' 5 183W 182'* 181W +118 12	II	I0W	81	- W
1 7W 7W 7W + W 3	39’*	3988	398*	+	W
jr^MW	56W	54W	+	88
IJ4	34'A	34	34V*	+ 18
3888	3888	4 8*
401*	40W	40W
1188	1188	1188
J	1188	11)8	1188
138*	lift	lit*
t6	J2M	42V*	41W.
T	441*	44 1	44'A	.
13 34ft 3488 .1488 — W
1* !?^
IT 63	63
2 108* 1888
308*	30’*	308*	+ 1*
163	4318	42W	428*	+ 8*
4	69	688*	688*	— 8*
3	53’*	538*	538*	— 8*
5	3988	3988	3988	+ Vt
27	28W	28	28	+ 8*
5	51	5088	51	+ ’*
—X—
14	99’*	99	99	+ 8*
—Y—
8	458*	45V*	45 V8	- V
—l—
Zenith 1.20a	6 43'* 63'A 63'A +'*
Sales figure*, ere unofficial.
Unless otherwise noted, rata* of dividend s In the foregoing labia are annual disbursements based on the last quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular are Identified In the following footnotes.
a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rata plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1963 plus stock dividend, e— Declare or paid so tar this year, f—Paid In stock during 1963, estimated cash value on ax-dlvldond or ex-dlstrlbutlon date, g—Paid last year h—Declared or paid after stock dividend or split up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulation Issuo with dividends (n arrears, p—Paid this year, dlvl-
pald In 1954 plus slock dividend, t—Payable In stock during 1944, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or ex-dlstrlbutlon date.
i—Sales in full
cld—Called, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex Dividend and aalea In full, x-dls— Ex distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without war rants, ww—With warrants, wd—When distributed. wl—When Issued, nd—Next day delivery.
v|—In bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such com-
fienltt. fn—foreign Issue sublect to in-erest equalization tax.
’ First Volunteers Hear Warning of Director
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Domestic Peace Corps volunteers who see their task as a “glamorous challenge” have been warned “it’s quite another thing to do the grubbing work.”
The warning came from Morris H. Cohen, director of training for the North Carolina Fund, as he explained the training program to the first 13 Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA).
★ ★ . ★
They began Sunday six weeks Of training designed “to bridge the gap between their quiet home1 background and the new tasks they have undertaken.” The North Carolina Fund is conducting the training.
The volunteers, who range in age of 20 to 81, will serve a year after training and will be sent to work with migrant workers in California, with the poverty-stricken in Appalachia, and with retarded persons in clinics cross the nation.
BIG PROBLEM
“Our biggest problem will be to instill a sense of reality about what they the volunteers have decided to do,” said Cohen.
He explained that after two weeks training at Camp New Nope near' Durham, eight volunteers will do field work in Winston-Salem and five will go ‘to New Bern, N..C.
ir ★	★
The North Carolina Fund sent the North Carolina volunteers, mostly college students, to help some of North Carolina’s poverty-stricken last summer.
Elizabeth Brown of Kinston, oldest volunteer at 81 and the only North Carolinian, has had 18 years experience as a clinical psychologist.
IN OREGON
Richard P. Guske, 20, the youngest member of the group, had been involved in search and rescue operations in flood-stricken Oregon.
Seven of the volunteers are 50, including Mrs. J. E. Holmes, 63, and her husband who is 66. The Holmes are from Spring Lake, Mich., and will be sent to California.
★ t* ★
A lack of practical experience does not worry Jacquiline Stein-gold of Detroit, a 22-year-old graduate in sociology and psychology.
for Firms in New Yeer
jftf pr* •	«Ji$8e* % 4

DAWSON
By SAM DAWSON AP Business Analyst
NEW Y0RK - One of the happiest tunes in the opening days and weeks of the New Year will be entitled “R e-cord Profits.”
Many corporations have reported notable gains over their previous year’s figures: This week the leading banks of the nation are expected to announce increased earnings for the year just ended. The glad tidings from industrial firms should reach caroling volume by the end of the month and early February.
★ ★ ★
Largest reported to date is American Telephone & Telegraph’s Bell System, which had 12-month record earnings of $1.7 billion, up from $1.5 billion in the 19b period.
When all are reported some weeks hence, before-tax profits for the nation’s corporations in 1964 should total around $58 billion or more. With income taxes taking about $26 billion of this, the after-tax net would be around $32 billion, a record, and compares with $26 billion in 1963.
were going against the trend of their own industries.
Meat packers are almost unanimous in reporting sizable gains over the previous year.
. ★ ★ ★
Since 1961, many corporations have seen profits after taxes rising much faster than earnings before taxes. Part of this is due to the adoption in 1962 of new guidelines for depreciation allowances for income tax accounting, and to tax credit voted that year for investment in new plants and equipment. Last year, the corporations also had another fillip — a cut in corporate income tax rates.
★ ★ ★
In 1965, there will be another such cut. And also this month still more tax relief will come from revised depreciation rules.
FURTHER ENRICHED
The profit prospect is further enriched by continuing high production and sales, and by
Thurtdey 1*1 DIVIDENDS DECLARED Pa- Stk. of Pay* Rata rlod Record able IRREGULAR
Outlet Co. ..	.45	1-21	2-2
REGULAR
Conti Motor*	.10	MO	1-29
Boomerangs No Hit With Aborigines
SYDNEY, Australia Iff) - One of the best boomerang throwers in Sydney is Steve Salldy, a native of Yugoslavia.
Hie current champion is Frank Donnellan, a white Australian.
“White people seem far more interested In the sport than aborigines,s ay s Donnellan. “There are clubs all over Sydney but the aborigines won’t join."
'Bomb' Takes Ride in Plane
DALLAS, Tex. Iff) ■— Bennie Franks, petroleum engineer, carried a bomb onto a plane in Dallas and still got to make his flight.
When asked about the ominous-looking steel gadget he carried by the stewardess, Franks replied that it was “a bottom hole pressure bomb.”
“A what?” gasped the astonished stewardess.
Franks quickly explained that it was a guage for recording oil well pressures and temperatures commonly c a 11 e d a “Bottom hole pressure bomb."
Franks was en route to an oil company’s new well in Florida.
Stocks of Local Interest
Figure* after decimal point* or* eighth*
OVER; THE COUNTER STOCKS Th* following quotation* do not noca*-tarllv repreiont actual transaction* but are intended a* a guide to th# approximate trading range of the securities.
Bid Aikod
AMT Corp...................... 7.0	7.5
Associated Truck .............14.6	16.0
Braun Engineering ............17.2	18.5
Citizen* Utilities Clast A ... 26.3	38.3
Diamond Crystal ..............13.4	14.5
Ethyl Corp................... 32.2	35.4
Mohawk Rubber Co. ............23.0	24.6
Michigan Hamlets Tubs Co. 21.4	23.3
Pioneer Finance .............. 7.7	8.7
Safran Printing ............  14.4	15.4
Varnors Ginger Als ........... 6.5	7.3
Vesley Co.....................11,0	12.1
Wehr Corp.................... 15.0	14.2
Wlnkelman't ..................14.7	16.1
Wolverine Shoo .............. 42.6	46.0
Wyandotte Chemical .	. 33.0 35.4
MUTUAL FUNDS
Bid Asked
Affiliated Fund ............ 8.83	9.55
Chemical Fund ..............13.71	14.98
Commonwealth Stock ........ 1S.03	19.70
Keystone Income K-l ........ 9.77	10.67
Koystont Growth K-3 ........ 5.70	6.22
Mess. Investors Growth ..... 5.97	9.10
Mess. Investors Trull ..... 17.14	11.7]
Putnam Orowth ...............9.63	10.52
Television Electronics .....bo*	l.ii
Wellington Fund ............14.99	16.54
Windsor Fund .............. 15.33	14.17
DOW-JONES NOON AVERAGES STOCKS
30	Indus	................ 175.71+7.02
20	Rail* ................. 205.93+0.99
15	Util* ................. 155.12+0.36
65 Stock* ................ 306.31	+ T.89
BONOS
40	Bonds	................. S9.I1~0.02
10	Higher	grade rolls .... 83.72—0.20
10 Second grede relit ..... 02.59
10 Public utilities ........ 88.40	tons
10	Industrlels ............ 94.32+0.07
RISING TIDE
Corporations with fiscal years ending before the calendar one, including the majority in some industries, already have shown how the profit tide is rising. Only a handful have reported decreased earnings, and usually these individual companies
mm *
t Successful ^Investing??
Stf Jl’f\9if9’ *
By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “My wife and I will retire with the following assets: insurance annuity, bringing $1,548 a year; 50 U.S. Steel1 24 Consolidated Edison; 50 City Products Corp.; 24 A.T. & T.: 30 shares in a family holding company; $26,000 in mutual funds and $58,000 in savings. Our approximate total income will be $6,372 a year. Is this program adequate to protect us against further inflation?” R. A.
A) You’re in a fine position retirement, and your holdings are reasonably in balance I do not believe I would retain U.S. Steel which has been acting badly, apparently on the possibility of a long steel strike.
I would switch this stock to Northern Illinois Gas.
★	★	★
Your other holdings are satisfactory but your large annuity and savings are fixed as to principal and offer you no inflation protection. I suggest you invest an additional $10,000 in equal amounts of Texaco and Continental Illinois National Bank.
■k	it	k
Q) “I would like your opinion on borrowing $15,000 on real estate at 7 per cent putting proceeds into mutual funds for long-term growth.
I have thought of putting the interest the loan would require into a monthly investment plan, but it seems that investing the money in a large amount immediately, the growth would be better. Which would you advice?” S.C.
A) I am very much opposed to borrowing large sums of money at relatively high^inter-est rates to buy stocks, including mutual funds.
If this market is going to move up continually with only minor corrections, investing a large amount now sounds very attractive. There is, unfortunately, no assurance that it will do so.
I think the course of prudence Is better served by your second plan Take out a monthly Investment plan on good growth stocks, or buy mutual funds with money available to you periodically without borrowing,.
You will In this way be dollar averaging your purchases and over a period, you should do very well.
(Roger Spear's new 48-page guide/to Successful Investing Is now ready. For your copy, clip this notice and send $1.00 with your :name and address to Roger E. Spear, care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10017.
Copyright 1965)
Business Notes
The formation of R. G. Carey Co., specializing in marketing, merchandising, and distribution planning, was announced today by Reginald G. Carey, 2154 Avon Lane, Birmingham, who heads the new company.
Formerly vice president and account su-CAREY p e r visor of Campbell - Ewald advertising agency, Carey has been, in adl vertising and merchandising for over 25 years.
The new company, located in the Jaikins building, 1100 N. Woodward, Birmingham, offers services to manufacturers and businessmen with limited marketing, merchandising and advertising staffs.
Detroit Broach & Machine Co. is adding 4,800 square feet of manufacturing and storage space to its plant in Rochester.
According to company officials, the new structure, when completed, will provide for a new materials handling system, allow the relocation of its welding facilities, and provide space for machine'tool rebuilding activities.
Russell W. Pringnitz, of 1230 E. Square Lake, Bloomfield Township, has retired from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers after more than 33 years.
Pringnitz began with the corps early in 1931 as a clerk. He was a supervisory accountant of disbursing activities at his retirement.
William C. Long of 1656 Crooks and Morgan W. Dawley of 1161 Hattie Fox, both of Avon Township, will present technical papers at the 1965 Society of Automotive Engineers International Automotive Engineering Congress and Exposition to be held Jan. 11-15 ?t Cobo Hall, Detroit.
Thomas S. Watts, 6797 Wood-bank, Bloomfield Township, has joined MacManus, John & Adams, Inc., as group copy director. Watts has been with Camp-bell-Ewald, where he was a group copy supervisor, and later in radio and television.
Wayne A. Yager, 1205 Brambles, Waterford Township, 0 representative of the Life Insurance Co. of Virginia’s Pontiac district office; has been promoted to associate manager, according to Louis Poh|, manager.
Yager joined the company in 1954 and is a member of the Pontiac Association of Life Underwriters.
' News in Brief
Pontiac police are investigating the theft of a $90 check from a mailbox at 102 Bagley.
Old Material Makes
Her Brandi New Dress
KEY WEST, Fla. (ffl - Mrs. Glenn Altland of Key West has just made a new dress. At least, you could coll lt that. You could also say It's over 50 years old.
Mrs. Altland used a dress length bought in 1913 by an aunt. The aunt was killed in an automobile accident a short time later and the material was tucked away in a cedar chest.
Only recently was it discovered and put to use.
only a slight narrowing bore and there of the ratio of profits to sales, known as the profit margin.
Decreased earnings atfef reported by a few companies, including: U.S. Envelope# Hat Corp. of America,' Tractor Supply, Northwestern Glass, and by Frouge Corp. which had a net loss in its last fiscal year.
The nation’s biggest corporations are yet to be heard from officially. Yet many have given year-end estimates, that show increased earnings. In many cases records will be set.
NOTICE OF HEARING on Establishing Normal Height end Level of Wafer In Cemetery and Dollar Lakes In Independence Township Oakland County, Michigan To Whom It May Concern, PARTICULARLY
All owner* of property fronting on, abutting dr having access to rights in Cemetery and Dollar Lakes, or win are interested In having fixed and maintained the normal height and level ot sold lakes pursuant to the provisions ot Act '46- of the PudMc Acts of 1961, as amended, said lakes being located In Sections 20, 29 and 30 of Independence Township, Oakland County, Michigan.
You Are Hereby Notified that the Oakland County Board ot Supervisors has caused to be filed In this Cduft a Complaint praying for the establishment by this Court ot the normal height and level ot .Cemetery and Dollar Lakes, said lakes being located in Sections 20, 29 and 30 of Independence Township, Oakland County, Michigan;
You Are Further Notified that a hearing on the matter wtll be held in the Circuit Court for the County of Oakland at the Oakland County Court House Tower, 1200 North Telegraph Road, Pontiac, Michigan, ort Wednesday, the 20th day'of January, A.D./ 1965, at the opening of Court on that day at 9 a.m., before the Honorable Frederick C. Zierti, Circuit Judge, or as soon thereafter as Counsel can be heard.
You Are Further Notified that on said date the Complainant Intends to ask this Court to establish the normal height and level of said lake* at 960.50 feet above see level end If you desire to oppose the establishment of the level at 968.50 feet above see level you should then and there appear and show cause. If any you have, why:
(a)	The normal height and level of said lakes should net be established;
(b)	Why 968.50 feet above sea level should not be the level fixed as the normal height and level of said lakes;
(c)	Whv such other and further relief as to the Court seems fitting and proper should not be granted to Coitiplalnent.
RICHARD P. CONDIT, Prosecuting Amrngy, Oakland County, Michigan, BY: ROBERT P. ALLEN, Corporation Counsel, \	HAYWARD WHITLOCK and
^	CHARLES J, LONG,
Ass't. Corp. Counsel tor Oakland County, Michigan . .. ROBERT P. ALLEN Office Address:
Oakland County Court House 1200 North Telegraph Road Pontiac, Michlqen Phone: 338-4751
November 30, December 7, 14. 21 and 28, 1964 and January 4* 1965 EXHIBIT "B" wl
NOTICE OF HEARING To Whom It May Concern,
Oakland County, Mtehtdail PARTICULARLY
All owners of property fronting on, •butting or having access to rights In Greens Lake, or Who ere interested In having fixed and maintained the normal height and level of said lake pursuant to the provisions of Act 146 of the Public Acts of, 1941, as amended, 8akt lake being located in; 5ectlpns T9, 31 and 32 of Independence Township, OaklandXounty, Michigan.
You Are Hereby Notified that the Oakland County Board of Supervisors has caused to be filed In this Court a complaint praying tor the establishment by this Court of the normal height and level of Greens Lake, said lake being located In Sections 29, 31 and 32 of Independence Township, Oakland County, Michigan;
You Are Further Notified that a hearing on the matter will be held In the Circuit Court for the County of Oakland at the Oakland County Court House Tower, 1200 North Telegraph Road, Pontiac, Michigan, on Tuesday, the 19th day of January, A.D, 1965, at the opening of Court on that day at f a.m., before the Honorable Stanton G. Dondero, Circuit Judge, or as soon thereafter as Counsel can be heard;
You Are Further Notified that on Mid date the petitioner Intends to ask this Court to establish -the normal helgnt and level of said lake at 966.70 feet above
(a)	The normal height and level of sea level and If you desire to oppose the establishment of the leyel at 966.70 feet above saa level you should then and there apoear and snow cause. If any you have, why:
on establishing Normal Height and
Level of Water In Greens Lake In should not be the level fixed as
(b)	Whv 966.70 feet above see level said lake should not be established; the normal height and level of
Independence Township, said lake;
(c)	Why such othtr and furtMr relief as to the Court seems fitting end proper should not be granted to petitioner.
RICHARO P. CONDIT Prosecuting Attorney, Oakienc County, Michigan By: ROBERT P. ALLEN, Corporation Counsel, HAYWARD WHITLOCK and CHARLES J. LONG, Ass't Corp. Counsel tor Oakland County, Michigan, Attorneys for petitioner, ROBERT P. ALLEN
Office Address:
Oakland County Court Hou*e 1200 N. Telegraph Road Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 338-4751, Ext. 508
November 30, December 7, 14, 21 end 28, 1964 and January 4, 1965
NOTICE OP HEARING on Establishing Normal Height and Laval ot Water In Macaday and Lotus Lakes In Independence end Waterford Townships, Oakland County, Michigan TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, PARTICULARLY
All Owners of Property Fronting on. Abutting or Having Access to Rights In. Macaday end Lotus Lakes, or Who Are Interested in Having Fixed and Maintained the Normal Haight and Level of Said Lakes Pursuant to the Provisions ot Act 146 of tha Public Aclt of 1961, as Amended, Seld Lekes Belnu Located In Sections 31 end 32 of Independence Township and Sections S, 4. 7 end S ot Waterford Township, Oakland County, Michigan. YOU ARB HEREBY NOTIFIED that the Oakland County Board ot Supervisors has caused to be tiled In this Court a Complaint praying for the estebllshment by this Court of the normal height and level of Macaday and Lotus Lakes, said lakes being located In Sections 31 and 32 of Independence Township, and Sec-lions 5. 4, 7 and I ot Waterford Township, Oakland- County, MClchlgan;
YOU ARB FURTHER NOTIFIED that a hearing on the matter will be held In the Circuit Court lor the County of Oakland, at the Oakland County Court House Tower, 1200 North Telegraph Road, Ponllac, Michigan, on Friday, the 19th day ot February, A.D., 1965, at the opening ot Court on that day at 9:00 a.m., before tha Honorable James S. Thorburn, Circuit Judge, or as soon thereafter as counsel cen be heard.
YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that on said data thd Complainant Intends to aik this Court to establish the normal height and level ot said lakes at 946.70 loot above see level and It you desire lo oppose the establishment of tha level at 964.70 feef above tee level you should then and there appear end show cause, It any you have, why:
(a)	The normal hatoht and level of . seld lake# should not be eatabttohed;
(b)	Why 966.70 feet above tea level should not ha tha lev** fixed aa tha normal halght and level of said lakes.
(c)	Why such other and further relief as to tha Court seams fitting and proper should not bo ' or anted lo Complainant.
RICHARD P, CONDIT PruMCUtlng Attorney Oakland County, Michigan By: ROBERT P. ALLEN Corporation Counsel HAYWARD WHITLOCK and CHARLES J. LONG A let. Corp. CouMtl tor Oakland County, MKhlgan Office Address:
1200 N. Telegraph Rd.	+
Pontiac, Michigan Phone: J30-47SI
January 4, It, IS, |9 and February 1 and S, l*45i EXHIBIT "C*
m
THfc PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1965

Burch: Republicans Must Unite and Offer Responsible Opposition totems in |
WASHINGTON (AP) - Dean Burch, the embattled chairman of the Republican1 National Committee, said today the new year should be one of GOP unity and responsible opposition — and not “the year of the scapegoat.” t-
“l£ 1965 becomes a year spent in division and recrimination,” Burch told a Republican women’s group, “then we will also fail our larger duty to the nation as the party, of responsible opposition.”
The theme of the young chair-
man’s prepared address to the District of Columbia League of Republican Women was that Republicans must put aside their differences, reexamine the principles they hold in common and present a united challenge to the Johnson administration where its programs run counter to GOP philosophy.
Burch, a political ally of Barry Goldwater before tne Arizonan selected him to head the National Committee, is the target of some Republicans who want to put the party machinery
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
Burcfi's Letters to Committee Bring No Shift, Survey Shows
WASHINGTON Hi - Dean Burch’s pled in letters to all 132 members of the Republican National Committee that he be allowed to stay on as chairman seems to have produced no change of heart.
If they were for him before they heard from him they still are; if they were against him, they are still against him, an Associated Press survey indicated.
changed any — I’m still going to vote for his (Burch’s) retention.”
Burch’s argument that he ought to be retained was keyed to the theme of an earlier letter written the committee members by Barry Goldwater, the 1964 GOP presidential candidate who picked Burch for the job.
Goldwater had said firing Burch would be ‘‘a repudiation of me” and “those Republicans who have supported me and the principles for which I stood.”
★ ★ ★
Similarly, Burch said his resignation has been urged on the grounds that he is a symbol of Goldwater and “of the so-called ‘conservative faction’ of the Republican party.”
FULL REPUDIATION “If this is’ true,” Burch said, “then my resignation under pressure at this time would clearly be interpreted as a full repudiation by the Republican party of all those voters who identified themselves with responsible conservative Republicanism.”
Several of those commenting in the AP survey noted that no other candidate for the job was on the horizon and that “personalities” were involved. Here are some of the replies stating no change in view:
Said California Committee-woman Ann Bowler: “I’d already told the party I was going to vote to retain Dean Burch ... I don’t see why any one man should be made the scapegoat.”
★ ★ ★
Texas Committeeman Albert Bel Fay declared “now is not a good time to make a change. That’s been my position all along. I’ll do anything I can to help him (Burch) stay;"
‘HAVEN’T CHANGED’
Illinois Committeewoman Audrey Peak said “I haven’t
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Virginia Committeewoman Hazel K. Barger retained her previous position that Burch should be replaced, but said whether she votes against him will depend on whether an adequate replacement can be found.
She said “we’ve got to change this image that we’ve projected in the last campaign.”
★	★ it
New Jersey Committeewoman Katherine Neubergpr Said “I still think he represents one segment of the party and we need someone who will represent all segments of the party.”
OUSTER MOVE The move to oust Burch is expected to come to a head at a meeting of the National Com mittee in Chicago Jan. 22 and 23. It began to gather momentum immediately after President Johnson’s landslide victory over Goldwater Nov. 3.
Burn Cross in Yard of Negro in Atlanta
ATLANTA (AP) —A six-foot cross was burned in the front yard of a Negro home in a racially mixed neighborhood early yesterday.
Neighbors reported that several white men placed the cross against a tree in the yard at the home of Edgar Teasley Jr., 29, an automotive assembly plant worker. One of the neighbors also called police, but they were unable to trace the movements of those who lighted the cross.
Teasley, who said he was asleep and knew nothing of the incident until informed by others, could not account for being singled out by the crossburners. He said he has not been active in civil rights movements or belonged to any civil rights organizations.
Expect Forest Products May Double Output
HARRISBURG, Pa. I/P) Forest products constitute a $1.5 billion industry annually Pennsylvania.
Findings of the Governor’s Council of Science and Technology, recently released, indicate that with proper research, development and promotion, this could be more than doubled in 10 years and redoubled after that.
New 7-Foot Vacuum Cleaner Hose
Braided Cloth, All Rubber
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ffo«w Knd$ Rt’Kulnr $7.50
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\
in less conservative hands.
Referring to his fight to bold on to his job, Burch commented, “perhaps the search for scapegoats is an inevitable consequence of defeat.”
“But,” he continued' “as I have said many times in recent Weeks the Teal challenge for Republicans in 1965 is not what to do about Dean Burch. It is what to do in order to strength-
en our party’s role as the historic spokesman for. responsible government and those principles which have .made pur country great.
“The question we should be
asking if our party is to achieve unity is not: Who lost the elec-cans?” *	-
★	★	V.v
As he examined these reasons, Burch found grounds for
attacking file Johnson administration.
“We are Republicans,” said Burch, “because we know that before the great sofciety came the free society. And because
we understand that what file Democrats really aim for is not a great society at all -- merely greater	government	control
over all segments of American society.” i -	/
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GENERAL ELECTRIC toaster-ovens. $"|71 Toast, broil, trill at table	*• 1	HOOVER floor polishers with at- $<f tachments. While they lest....... | f	G.E. Hand Mixer. 1 speeds. $Q63 Clearance.....		 0
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OUR REQ. DISCOUNT P^IGE $117 S$1B	$1
RCA VICTOR 23” TV LOWBOY WITH UHF/VHF
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PROCTOR Automatic 4-sHce toaster. Deluxe.....................
EUREKA voouum cleaners. Canister type. Complete sot tools. . .
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SUNBEAM eleetrto try pan. With coyer and probe................
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RCA VICTOR 21” Color TV Set. Orent ter quick
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ADMIRAL 21” Color TV Comb, with Starao Hi-Fi, AM-FM, FM-
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ROA 21" Color TV Comb. With Stereo, Hi-Fi, AM-FM, FM-Starao radio. Very	SECT
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PHILCO 21” Oolor TV with all UHF/ VHF tuning.
Wood lowboy .............*317
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PHILCO TV-Ster*o combination Traditional wood furniture $4 net Don’t miss this. Only I left. , I 3o
STEREO • HI-FI
MOTOROLA Stereo. Long, low and
coffee table	*69
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westinohouse stereo console combination with AM-FM radio. tiaq Fine furniture. Illegal.. 1*10
Nationally sold I speakar atarao combination with AM-FM,
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PHILCO wringor washers. Largo capacity.	*68
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ROA-WNIRLPOOL Elcctrio 2-cycle auto. Dnrar.	$QA
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ROA WHIRLPOOL II eu. ft. upright (racier.	84 QQ
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