The Weather VS. WmIImt BurMU f THE VOL. 128 NO. 275 ★ ★ a PRESS —^---- IHREE CHJIRS Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24 1965 —38 PAGES Christmas Eve Truce Sis Guns in Viet Nam 12 Are Killed as Oregon Bus Skids off Road Crowds Pack Saigon Streets f30'Injured as Vehicle Hits Ice and Plunges Down Embankment ROUGE RIVER, Ore. (UPD .-rm Twelve people were killed and an estimated 30 were hurt early today wh£n a Greyhound bus skidded off icy Interstate Highway 5 and plunged down an embankment. Nine were killed outright end three persons died later in a hospital. The Portland to San Francisco bus was travleing southbound through a cold rain when it left the road between Rouge River and Medford in southern Oregon shortly after midnight. It wound up SO feet from the road upside down. When police arrived on the scene, they found nine bodies, including the corpse of one woman pinned beneath the vehicle. Ambulance companies from Grants Pass, Medford and-Ashland took the injured to hospitals in' surrounding communities. Private cars and taxis helped out A spokesman at the Rogue Valley Memorial Hospital reported that “It to 20” injured had arrived from the crash. The Sacred Heart Hospital in Medford and the Josephine General at Grants Pass reported 11 more injured. r RIVER HURT Among the injured at Sacred Heart was driver Joseph Bailey of Battleground, Wash. The extent of his .injuries were not revealed, pending Xrays. Police said the accident was the worst of a chain, of mis-haps that occurred'on the “black ice,” created when rain falls and partially freezes on the highway. State patrol officer Charles Conway said when he arrived shortly before 1 a m., “injured were lying in the bus, outside the bus and on the highway. Ambulances were taking them away as fast as they could.” “The civil defense had set up a spotlight and the beam cut - through the rain. Ibis was really a nasty one — the worst traffic accident I ever saw. In fact, it looked more like a plane crash.” SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — A Christmas Eve truce declared by both the allied armed forces and the insurgent Communist Viet Cong appeared ' tonight to have stilled the guns, the terror and the slaughter that has tortured South Viet Nam for jfears. The American-South Vietnamese decision to stop all offensive action for 30 hours went into effect at 6 p.m. and the Viet Killed in Viet Combat WASHINGTON (UPD-The Defense Department reported yesterday that, as of late Monday, a total of 1,546 Americans had been killed in combat in the Vietnamese war. MMMNMMBMMMMMMHNMWM In'Today's - - Press—- Arizona Hundreds forced to flee flooding — PAGE 2. Holiday Plans Nation’s notables plan varied festivities—PAGE S. Loot List List shows variety, thieves imagination — PAGE 12. ^ Astrology .........21 Bridge ....... ....27 Crossword Puzzle ..... 37 Comics ....... 26-27 Editorials .........6 High School.......21 Markets ...........26 Obituaries ....... 22 Sports..........22-23 Theaters .......24-16 WOso*, Earl .......26 TV ft Radio Programs 26 Womea’s Pages ..16-16 Yuletide Stories.6,11 By GEORGE W. CORNELL. AP Religion Writer There is no way of determining when he came to know it, 'iow. There is no way of finding out whether the knowledge cgme to him instantaneously or gradually, or what particular circumstances or event may have disclosed it. J re (EDITOR’S NOTE: A divine \ mandate rested on the child bom in Bethlehem, and when the hour came, he shouldered it. The following relies primarily on his own statements about it, made later in his life. This is the last of a five-part Christmas series about the hidden years of Jesus.) By The Associated Press As the Christian world prepared today to observe Christmas, war and tension once more marred the celebra-01 ,ta f No?aroth “ thfr* id an- . ... of Nazareth. .. there is an-another who bears witness to The details of that realization are deeply inaccessible. But at some point, He recognized it. There came a day, and He was certain. Sometime before Jesus reached his fia- The Fattier is in me and am in the Father.. .1 came not of my own accord, but He sent It was a stunningly awesome fate to confront. CANCELLED SELF “My yoke,” he would call it It was as if He had beat made both sovereign and servant at the same time, both everything and nothing. He cancelled out elf. “I seek not my own wifi, but the will of Urn who i sent me ” On Hun, had “God the Father set his seal” begins to know what Every youth, turn, passes through he is and where he is « only dimly. Nor- inf Im swn individuBty, ®l tvtn ^ tret version re- peering hard at himself With new, critical faculty, as if observed from outside himself, judging his own person. The sounder the man, the considering the character of men about Him, was plainly excruciating. mains partial. But in one case it was complete — in the complete man. That did not make the going easy, only sure. The prospect, The Son of Man will suffer at their hands.” In Christian belief, Jesus is considered fully human, sub- ject to the conditions of finite existence, sharing men’s nature, needs, delights and travail, but also ■ perfect pros jection of God — the divine functioning flawlessly in the flesh. Cong seemed, lo have been faithful to their announced promise of a 12-hour truce as of 7 p.m. The cease-fire in the embattled country turned at least some of it back to the little people. Most noticeable was the reac? lion in Saigon, the capital. The streets were a mass of humanity. People who have not been on these streets perhaps for months were out in force with their children. v The three million population of Saigon strode out in confidence as though all of them had heard directly about the truce. The thousands of Americans in Saigon were, on the other hand, confined to their billets until dawn Christmas Day under a curfew imposed Dec. 18. The curfew will be lifted at 6 a m. Saturday. RELIEVED ATMOSPHERE The atmosphere was electric, but loaded with a sense of relief. From the jungles and the outposts, reports filtering into Saigon indicated that the cease-fire was just that. From An Kne, where the U.S. 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Division is deployed, Associated Press correspondent Bob PoOs re ported “All’s quiet.” From Da Nang on the northern coast where the Marines are based in strength, the word was of holiday feasting—turfcpy or baked Virginia ham after shrimp cocktails and winding up with mince or pumpkin pie. The, truce orders went to fantrymen in tpe jungles, , to Air Force units that had been strik-j ing.in both North and South Viet Nam and to 7th Fleet carriers plying the South China Sea in support of the ballooning war effort. The Communist Viet Cong unnounced three times on their radio today that they would undertake no offensive action or acts of terrorism from Christmas Eve. ane hour after (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Two Flint Men Killed on Dixie Car Rips Into Utility Pole in Holly Twp. Two Flint men were killed last night when their car hurtled out of control on Dixie Highway near Tripp, in Holly Township? and ripped into a utility pole in front of Mt. Holly Ski Lodge. Dead are Kenneth D. Hodges, 23, Oakland Highway Toll in ’65 driver of the car, and Dale*R. Huneycutt, 24. Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies said the car skidded and rolled 435 feet after leaving the road at an estimated 90 miles an hour. Both men were thrown from the car. Hodges suffered a skull fracture and Huneycutt, internal injuries. They were dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital shortly after 10 p.m. Both worked at the Federal Steel Corp., 9615 Dixie Highway, Springfield Township, and were apparently on their way home, according to deputies. „ A witness told deputies the Hodges car had passed him at a high rate of speed shortly before going out of control. Unrest Grips World at Yule In Viet Nam, both the United States and its allies on one side and the Communists on the oth-announced the start of Christmas truce—30 hours on the American side and 12 on the Communist. But the 24 hours before were as bloody as ever, and U.S. officials expected the war to resume in full violence after midnight Christmas. India and Pakistan stoed entrenched in hostile positions along their borders, deadlocked in the Kashmir dispute. India aba confronted the menace of Communist China, been involved ia recent shooting incidents with Indian patrols. Unrest and fear still stalked the streets of Santo Domingo in the wake of last Apirl’s revolt in the Dominican Republic. kept yp demands that Britain $8,500-a-year job in 1960. invade Rhodesia and crush the white minority regime. The British, who limited their reaction to economic sanctions, are worried that the tensions may burst into a race war. Postmaster Faces Irregularity Charge But, as always, there were prayers and-hopes for peace. Pontiac Postmaster William W. Donaldson has been ordered to reply to charges of irregularities in the operation of the post office. The irregularities, described i of a “procedural” nature, were reported following inspection by postal officials in' April and September this year. Pope Paul VI in his annual Christmas broadcast appealed for peace negotiations in Viet Nam. Of 256 Chippewa, said sock irregularity reports are normal after inspections. He will submit his reply by Dec. 30, he said, to regional postal officials in Chicago. Donaldson, a former Pontiac mayor, had an insurance agen-In Africa, Mack-ruled nations cy before his appointment to the Indonesia, though wracked by instability at home, showed no sign of letting up in its “Crush Malaysia” campaign. Iran was reported reinforcing its border with Iraq witha squadron of fighter planes after two alleged attaeks by Iraqi MIGs. “I and the Father are one. At some point before Jesus jtook up his predestihed vocation; the man who had reared Him as an earthly fattier died. Old Joseph didn’t live to see the lightning impace of the life of the young one whom he had guarded so fiercely. Legend says Joseph lived to 111, and describes the deathbed scene at the family’s meager abode in Nazareth. Marj^sat at hk feet and Jesus at his head. TROOPS VISITED In Viet Nam, Francis Cardi- nal Spellman flew by helicopter to bring Yuletide greetings to troops of the U.S. Army 1st Division. Throughout South Viet Nam, U.S. troops planaed parties for Vietnamese children around their encampments. Americans at home had sent vast stares of toys, clothes and Christmas goodies for the little Vietnamese. LAST REQUEST The old crapenter clutched the youth’s hand. “I requested thee, O my .beloved son, to be quiet in all things.” He apologized for once pulling Jesus’ ear in shushing him. Jesus wept. Mary stroked her husband’s feet and legs, which grew cold. After washing and annotating the body, they buried him there in the hills of Galilee, it is related. Jesas, who had toiled with him there in the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Prime Minister Nguyen Cao! Ky of South Viet Nam issued a| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) No Paper Tomorrow The Pontiac Press will not publish tomorrow so ttrnt Press employes may spend Christmas Day with their families. Publication will resume with Monday’s Forecaster's Gift to Area: Snow on Way Santa better be wearing snow-shoes with his traditional apparel when he arrives in. the Pontiac area late tonight. The weatherman predicts precipitation conducive to rapid transit from the North Pole, Santa-style. .It will be a white Christmas, wittr T to 3' inchesof snow predicted in the Pontiac area tonight and early Saturday. The lows tonight will be in the 30s and it will be windy. Heavy snow warnings were ssued at noon today for the Upper Peninsula and northern half of the Lower Peninsula, where 3 to 7 inches is expected by morning. Tomorrow will be windy, and colder ta the Pontiac area. The high will be in the 30s. Gearing weather is forecast for Sunday with colder temperatures predicted. Winds this morning were southerly to southwesterly at to 40 miles an hour. Becoming southeasterly.to easterly thi afternoon, thefy will be northerly ,to northeasterly tonight and tomorrow. The low mercury reading this morning was 43. At 2 p.m. it was a balmy 45 in downtown Pontiac. Woman Wins Driving Award A-JKestfBloomfieid-Township"" woman is $25 richer as this week’s winner of a safe-driving award. Mrs. A. J. Eckhart, 3333 Pine, will receive a $25 U.S. savings bond as her prize in the awards program sponsored jointly by the Pontiac Exchange Gub, the traffic safety committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and the Pontiac Police Department. The bond, one of four being awarded during December, was donated by the Pontiac Exchange Club. Mrs. Eckhart was cited by Pontiac police for stopping traffic on Perry to permit an elder-. ly couple to cross the street. The couple had reached the middle island, but busy traffic prevented them from crossing until Mrs. Eckhart stopped her car. The safety program has Pontiac policemen on the lookout for good driven during their regular patrol for bad drivers. Yet, no matter how harsh the rejections and blindness, “He who has sept Me is with Me; He has not left Me alone.” It was up to Him, as man, to manifest in natural terms which man'understood the supernatural concern they did 4] j Muskegon 45; Pellston Travers* C. Albuquerque J Atlanta 4 Olsmertk' ly. None of the gifts was announced in advance. The President, his wife and two daughters actually got off to a running start on the holiday, driving Thursday night to his renovated boyhood home here; 15 miles east of the LBJ ran :h, Emerson was a passenger in & car driven by her husband, Lloyd1! 52, according' to Oakland €ounty snertfrs deputies. %e accident, at the intersection of Union Lake Road in Commerce Township, also re- and Luci, before the THE PONTIAC CHOPPER CHAMP — Pontiac hosted the annual Forester’s Field Day yesterday at Murphy Park. Involving a three-way competition between the forestry crews of Pontiac, Femdale and Birmingham, the team trophy went to Birmingham after. Luther Parker (above) of 740 Southamp-; ton, Pontiac Township, broke a tie with Femdale by chopping a log in half in' 35 seconds. Christmas Truce Stills Viet Guns (Continued From Page One) the allied cease-fire started, until 7 a.m. Saturday, 17 hours before the U. S.-South Vietnamese truce period ends. The Viet Cong had offered! their 12-hour truce in a/U‘oad-cast Dec. 7. The Americans and the South Vietnamese countered with their longer cease-fire order earlier this week. It remained to be seen If the| truce will work. But around the world there were expressions of hope that it would be extended after Christmas and would pave the way to peace negotiations. ON THE ALERT All American and allied units were on the alert and had orders to react sharply in self defense. The American cease-fire was confined only to a prohibition against initiating any new offensive actions. Disengagements from conflict or defense against any obvious threat were clearly within the discretion of field commanders! obliged to protect and preserve t their men. RIVER RIPS OUT BRIDGE - The swollen Rillito River left only a piece of railing and a cable where a bridge had stood after sweeping past Tucson yesterday. After several days of rain and snow, rivers in'Ari- AF PhotoUx zona left roads and farmlands flooded and filled reservoirs to capacity. Hie residents of several communities were forced to take emergency measures. Arizona Braces for More Hundreds Are Forced to Flee Flooding PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) — Asible new flooding today from1 the it * * Itorrents of water roared down east. All branches of the a 11 i e d nofflially dry washes and riv-forces were keyed up, however, erbeds, then receded Thursday Hundreds were forced to flee; to observe what happens at thejnight, Arizona braced for possi-ltheir homes to higher ground, end of the Viet Cong moratori- um while the American truce still was to be in effect for another 17 hours. Expect Injury, Accident Totals to Set New State Record in '65 QUICK DECISIONS Officials conceded this might call for some split-second hairline decisions. As of midnight Christmas, however, the U.S. forces will be free to resume “normal operation,” a senior Army spokesman said. Jesus Takes 'Yoke' (Continued From Page One! EAST LANSING (AP)—Mich- creased for the fourth straight igan’s 1965 traffic death toll year and were 11.$ per cent won’t set a record, but the 1965 above last year’s 284,446. jnjury and accident totals wtili wow J»it a new high, State Police Other records set in 19C5— predicted Thursday. 40.1 billion miles driven by * In a year-end report, Col. Michigan motorists, 4,066,826 Frederick Davids, State Police registered motor vehicles and director, said an estimated*, ^ Ucensed driver8 2,100 persons will have died on _ . Michigan highways in Each marks about a 5 per cent fourth worst record in 33 years increase over 1964. of record keeping. I The death rate of 5.2 per 100 it it it 'million vehicle miles was down The number of injuries wfflif* cent from the 5.5 rate reach 157,000 and the number| 1964 of accidents 318,000, and the .. . . year’s combined casualties- LCr‘me c0^“* to rix * deaths and Injuries-will set a1!^" n* 19“ rate <4 record, Davids said. woodworking lean-to, faced His own calling. Aware of the pattern of his growing up, He later.— in talking to tiie apostle Peter — cited ;nf . „ , the curious changing outlook of We shall resume normal op-j that progression into responsi-orations at 2400 hours Dec. 25^ manhood; unless we are forced to do so + + *_ before that,’’ the officer said. While the Communists repeated their announcement of a 12-hour truce, neither North Viet Nam’s Hanoi radio nor the Viet Cong radio made any mention of the longer period proclaimed u. »»>, w. tomorrow mostly in the 36s. Era) ED Jesus, as he entered manhood, spent much time alone in prayer, apart from the fractious babble. It may have been this, in part, that caused Nazareth neighbors to start looking on this once-favored youth as an odd, disturbing news to the poor proclaim release to the captives — to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable year ot the Lord.” They ran Him out of town. So began the public life of the babe of Bethleham — the true man, the “man for others.” Also, ih the practicing Jewish| The Christmas-spirit brought tradition in which He was [relief to some prisoners in sever-raised, young men were sup-!ai countries including France, posed to marry by about 18. Not South Korea and Venezuela to do so was considered pecul- where sentences Were commut-iar. “Cursed the man who, at ed or reduced, 20 was not married,” the saying Fire officials said none of the went. | more than 40 persons who lived in the three buildings would be An entire Indian community of 150 persons was evacuated. Complaints on Trucks Result in Traffic Survey BIRMINGHAM - A survey of traffic on Maple and Southfield has been authorized by the Cfty Commission with an eye wards an ordinance establishing controls over the vehicles. Area residents have complained for some time that trucks traveling the routes disturb their sleep and that vibrations have caused damage to homes in a few instances. Some data on the problem already has been compiled on the request of the city administration by the Michigan Trucking Association. Sound tests and radar checks on Maple revealed that large oil tankers create the most noise due to their size and the power required in their operation. It was also discovered that one of the factors adding to the noise problem was the thumping of metal against metal on large gravel trucks. SPEED NOT FACTOR The average speed of trucks was approximately 38 miles per hour and while the posted speed is 35 MPH the speeds were not The swollen streams, fed by | unreasonable, according to Po-heavy snows and rain, racedjiice Chief Ralph W.Moxley. through a mining area of east- One Troy trucking firm approached by the city has already directed its drivers to reduce their speed to a maximum 25 m.p.h. when traveling empty through Birmingham and to bypass Birmingham when returning with full loads of gravel. According to traffic consultant, John J. Dobelek, the traffic study will be completed within 36 days at a cost of $325. The Rillito cut away two miles pf the Tucson sewer system, ^muring an estimated five million gallons of sewage into the river in 24 hours. Some of the sewage flowed into the Gila River. Health officials, warning it would seep into wells, urged families along the river to boil their drinking water. SWEPT ACROSS A Papago Indian village was evacuated when water three feet deep swept across the flat-between Tucson Phoenix. Two major bridges and several mobile homes were away at Tucson. Volunteers worked to prevent further damage in the area where five acres of ground had been swept off by tiie muddy water. Record-breaking runoff into the chain .of reservoirs which serve the Phoenix area brought a threat of flood into Arizona's most populous areas. After several weeks of mountain snows and rain at lower elevations, the runoff rate of 150,000 cubic feet per second broke a 1941 record foe | velt Lake. Water threatened to splash over the spillways- off several protection dams. World Unrest Mars Yuletide Celebration (Continued From Page One) Christmas message expressing ‘respect and gratefulness” for the sacrifices of the U.S., Australian, New Zealand and Korean forces that have joined the fight against the Viet Cong. In the quiet hills of the Holy Land, 15,000 Christians were expected to visit Bethlehem, where Christ was born. BERLIN WALL In Berlin, thousands of West Berliners passed through the Communist wall to bring Christmas cheer and gifts to relatives in East Berlin. On the island of Cyprus, still smoldering from sporadic violence, Canadian troops of the U.N. peace-keeping force Kyrenia put the final touches on an alined patrol car they have converted into Santa’s sleigh. It will bring Santa, gifts and candy to 31 youngsters at a Red Cross hospital for crippled children. ' In another traffic matter, the commission voted to prohibit parking on Southfield from Lincoln rad 14 Mile between the hours of 7-9 a.m. and 4-6 p.m. REQUEST DENIED The commission, however, rejected a recommendation from the police department t0 remove parking on Southfield between Lincoln and Brown. Residents there opposed the proposed parking ban. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — “The Christmas Star” will be the topic of special planetarium demonstrations at Cranbrook Institute of Science next week. The programs have been scheduled for 2:30 p.m. each weekday. Regular demonstrations are held at 4 p.m. Wednesdays and 2:30 and 3;30 p,m. Saturdays andSundays. Suspect Arson in Fatal Fire 8 Die in 3 Blazes in Newark, N.J. Section NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Eight persons died and more than 50 were evacuated from their homes in a series of three predawn fires today in a low-income residential neighborhood. Fire officials termed the fires highly suspicious and the department’s arson squad was conducting a n Investigation. Two of the three fires started at the back of the frame buildings. A fourth fire, which also started at the back of- a building, broke out on the neighborhood shortly after sunup. The death toll might have been higher among the sleeping residents of the frame apartment houses if passersby had not dashed into the hallways and awakened residents. SIX KILLED The first fire, at 197 16th Ave., reported about 2 a.m., took the lives of six members of one family and killed a woman and her brother in an adjacent third-floor apartment. Fire officials said the fire started in an enclosed stairwell on the second floor and then went up to the third floor. All eight bodies were found in the fire-charred third floor. While firemen were still battling the blaze, the second and third fires were reported on Camden Street, eight blocks away. The second fire, at 304 Camden, started at the rear and burned part of a garage and the back apartments of the three-story frame building. The third fire three doors down, destroyed the fourth floor and badly damaged the third floor of a four-story building and dhin-aged several apartments next door. Crash Hospitalizes in crisis, He went His solitary way hearing that primordial, prodigious call; “Before Abraham was, I am.” Johnsons Holiday Traditional Pontiac Woman A 57-year-old Pontiac woman is reported in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital with injuries suffered in a. three-car, rear-end collision yesterday on Cooley Lake Road. LONELY PATH It was as if He were totally | at home in this world, loving its. beauty , and feeling its agonies, yet also bearing a universal embrace. It was a lonely path. ‘No one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son. . .’ other persons. None were hospitalized, deputies said. Teen Listed 'Fair' JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP) President Johnson, still ploughing through accumulated paper work, was ready to open Christmas gifts with his fqjnily tonight. Traditionally, the Johnsons set aside Christmas Eve to open ■jH ‘ 1 within the fami- “I will make it known, that the love with which Thou hast loved Me may be in them, and I in them.” That passion glorified, yet effaced Him. "Not After Commerce ;■"» "“i. ™“" Auto Accident NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain and showers are fore-east tonight from the lower and middle Mississippi Valley to the mid and North Atlantic Coast states. Snow is expected, in tbl Great Lakes area and northern New England. Heavy awwJgjBXMctod in parts ot the northern Rockies. Rain is predicted tor tin Pacific Northwest. Richard E. Sharp, 18, of Detroit was hospitalized yesterday after receiving internal Injuries In'an accident on Glengary in Commerce'Township. He is reported in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital. was over, he hoisted in his arms the 11-month-old daughter of the choral director and, though she tweaked his npse — or perhaps because of that, made believe he was going to carry her away in his waiting sedan. But the 5-year-old sister of the infant didn’t like this idea and “ President, a tool -1. _______________I John- ) with mock seriousness, then 1 the baby back to the Strangely, in receiving “all authority,” He gave up all of Himself. “He who believes in me believes not in me, but in Him who sent me________My teach- ing is not mine, but His...’’ PRIDE SPURNED More than any descriptive words, however, it was His behavior that distiiqpiished Him. to hear Christmas carols sung by the combined choirs of the town’s three churches—First Christian, Methodist and Baptist. Except for the chief u five, the family did better__ listen. Wife Lady Bird sang heartily throughout the occasion —as she sat beside her I on a wicker porch 19th century < daughters T " 18, joined 1 serenade was over. WARMS TO OCCASION Oakland County sheriff’s dep- ^e spurned pride, the will- uties said Sharp’s car went out of control on a curve one mile east of Wixom Road. Two passengers in the car received minor injuries. power. This singular difference was dramatized jn His temptations by the’ Devil before His ministry began. In those subtly revealing Johnson, dressed. , _______ kervatively and looking a bit dour upon arrival, wanned ct the sight of his neighbors—mqre than 50 strong—assembled to greet him with traditional Christmas tubes. Before the after-dark affair MANY GREETERS Nearly one in every six inha- mother, the wife of the Rev. Carl Taylor, pastor of the First Methodist Church. bitants of Johnson City—population 611—was on hand for the occasion. When the singers had completed their concert, the Johnsons heard-theRev. Mr. Taylpr “Merry Christmas to the presidential family from all of us in Johnson City.” Mrs. Johnson rose from the porch swing and, clapping her hands, sad: “(Mi, we thank you. That was so lovely.’r REFRESHMENTS Within minutes, Mrs. Johnson announced that hot chocolate and cookies would be served to t everyone. Luci began pouring the chocolate and the First Lady made her way through the group With cookie trays. Lynda passed a holiday-decorated wicker basket filled with candies. First Family Serenaded At Johnson's Boyhood Home V THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 ^THREB This We Believe . May all the spiritual blessings ■ of the Christmas season be with you and your loved ones, and your hearts be filled with peace and true contentment Ik " C. Byron Gilbert, Director 3>. £. FUNERAL HOME 151 Orchard Lake Ave. Varied Noel for U.S. Notables NEW YORK (AP) - Notable Americans will spend Christinas this year everywhere from their family bearth-eides to Viet Nam and Kona. People such as presidents, expresidents .and would-be presidents tended to plan quiet at-homes with their families. * ★ * Other well-known figures, including Cardinal Francis Spellman, comedian , Bob Hope and actress Helen Hayes, were off to the Far East to cheer up U.S. servicemen thousands of miles from their loved ones. I President and Mrs. Johnson were all set for the usual old-fashioned family celebration at die LBJ Ranch in Texas. Daugh- ters Lynda and Lud decorated the tree—a pinon, or Mexican pine—and there was even a rednosed reindeer of sorts, actually a hatrack deerhead with a scarlet doth on its schnoz. Four red satin socks were hung from the living room mantle. FAMILY CUSTOM The Johnsons customarily open their gifts on Christmas Eve and have the holiday dinner Christmas night. A * ★ Ex-President Harry S..Truman and his wife traveled to New York from their home in Missouri to spend Christmas with their daughter Margaret, son-inlaw Clifton Daniel, man- aging editor of the New York] Defense Secretary Robert S.j Times, and three grandchildren. I McNamara and his wife booked * it * accommodations as usual at the U. A TVi.rr.fm >>nter resort of Aspen, Colo., Mr. and Mrs. Truinan, stay* . , _im pl-*! EfnJfl Residence b whl iTttere maTskSgwftlihis son aS two Daniel residence, will go there.. . 6 Christmas morning to open1dau8hters-presents under a tree Daniel KENNEDY KLAN was “as tall as the celling j Sun Valley, Idaho, another will allow.” Later the family; western resort, braced for an will sit down'to a traditional invasion of Kennedys. Already on hand were Sen. ang Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy and most of r MERRY CHRISTMAS from all of us at THATCHER-PATTERSON. INC. “Sine* 1889 — Tailored Policies, Total Protection" - 711 Community National Bank Building, Pontiac, Michigan FEdaral 2 *224 WOodward M656 Christmas meal. Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, recuperating Trom a heart attack suffered last month, plans to spend Christmas at his Gettysburg Pa., farm. FAMILY VISITORS Eisenhower and his wife, Mamie, will be hosts to their son, John, and his family over the holidays, a spokesman said. Barry Goldwater, the Republican nominee in the * their eight children. Mrs. John Kennedy planned to spend Christmas in her New York apartment with her two children and head for Sun Valley the following day. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York tossed a party for his staff at his New York City office and then left for his Pocantico Hills estate in Tarrytown to spend Christmas quietly with 'his wife, Margherita, their son dential election, will hold a big and her four children by a prefamily gathering at his hilltop vious home in Phoenix, Ariz. Gold-water announced he would play “Silent Night” on a trombone he [received for Christmas some years ago and has been : struggling with intermittenlyj ever since. Probe Arrest by Dixie Pair in North City PHILADELPHIA (UPI)-State 'Atty. Gen. Walter E Ales-David and his wife and son Gre- sandroni said today he has or-gory. -fi, son Richard, a student [dered an investigation into the at Cornell University, andremoval of a Negro youth from daughter Peggy, a high school his Pennsylvania home to Ala- Another stay-at-home was Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Due at his Washington residence to help him and Mrs. Rusk celebrate were their son imms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Wish y • dnd. a. ^ .F Y\^?Fy New ye&*\ This is SIMMS Holiday Wish to All of You -Our Wonderful Friends Neighbors & Customers From the SIMMS Family & Associates I senior . NEW beginning January 1st, 1966 44 FOUR AND FOUR TENTHS per cent anticipated rate paid or compounded quarterly No matter how you say it, Capitol’s new rate gives you the best return on your money. Whether it’s a “nest-egg” savings, or an investment of surplus funds, you earn more and enjoy the security of safe investment in *a Michigan institution. So plan now to open youpsavings account at Capitol. Or plan now to move your surplus funds into a higher earning account. We’ll be glad to help you arrange the transfer. bama by two Mobile bail bond 'agents. “I have ordered special agents, to get all the facts in this case,”, _ Alessandroni said. “If they are /!•: they were reported, at least by the youth’s mother, I think it is so shocking that it is hard to believe. “We are looking into it and after further investigation, we will take whatever action is appropriate.” Rep. Richard S. Schweiger, R-Pa., charged in Washington yesterday that Tryone Collins, 18, was handcuffed in his Norristown, Pa., home at gunpoint by Alabama authorities and forced to return to Alabama without an arrest warrant. * * * Schweiker demanded that the FBI investigate the incident, which he described as “a grotesque and unwarranted abuse of power, smacking of police state tactics ... a throwback to the days of the bounty hunters.” JUMPED BAIL Frederick R. Anderson, an employe of a Mobile, Ala., bonding firm, said he and a partner, Stonie Stewart, returned the youth to Mobile becuase he had jumped a $500 bond. Anderson'said under the law anyone who sips a suspect’s bond is empowered to return Mm to the city where it was signed if die suspect fails to appear for his trial. He said he notified Norristown police before going to Collins’ home and that Collins telephoned his mother during the trip to Alabama to tell her the journey was “like a vacation.” But^hweiker said the Nor-ristpwn p>0 I I c e had not sanctioned the removal, and that when Collins’ mother reported it the police had put out an arrest alarm for Anderson and Stewart. CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION INCORPORATED.1890 • LANSING, -MICHIGAN 75 West Huron Street * Phone: 338-7127 Detroit Office Southfield Office 234 State St (Wash. Blvd. Bids.) 27215 Southfield Rd. (Near 11 Mile Rd.) Peace on Earth. Good Will * Toward Men. MX ewi5 ’ Junior Bootery -1060 Hinson Center Phone 3344725 For Fast, Quality Processing Of All Your Christmas Pictures Bring ’em to SIMMS Monday Morning. 24 hr. Developing FILM Service T: Black ‘n’ White Prints Enlarged to SUPER-SIZE From all popular size films — enlarged to sopc size, dated and decaled edges. Guaranteed per feet prints by Electric-Eye process and yoi pay only for the good prints. Mailed Direct to Your Home Color Film Processing BY TECHNICOLOR $1.85 Value 85* Processing by Hollywood. Technicolor for 81 super 8 rod, 8mm magazine. 35mm, 20 e 127 super slide or Inslamotic slides. Limit 10. FREE ££ Photo Album With KODACOLOR Processing Fast Service and Returned to Your Home -Leave your Kodacolor film here at Simms for fast, low cost processing ... and When you pick up your pictures, you’ll get absolutely free this flip page photo album. Plastic windows to hold your pictures. 620-120-127 Size & Instamatic -KODACOLOR Processing Prepaid mailer for* the above films — 12 exposure rolls moiled direct to your home when processed. (By Hollywood Technicolor) 289 Mailed Direct to Your Home KODAK Color Film Processieg 8mm roll, 35mm 20-exp. roll, 127 ivper-slide, or- Instamatic slides. , Mailed to 189 I K/ 030 Smm Magazine ..... me Load for............. 1” SIMMS,"!,, FOUR TfiE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 24. 1965 A .Fourth Is Hospitalized 3 Captive YanksFace Another Dreary Yule in China Prison HONG KONG (AP) - For three Americans spending their 14th and 15th Christmases iq Communist China’s prison cells, .Saturday will be Just another ■fold and dreary day. ; A fourth American, the Most Rev. James E. Walsh of Cum* berland, Md., will be spending bis third Christmas in a prison hospital. ; Six years ago, the Roman espionage charges 15 years ago. The following year, Jbhn T. Downey, 35, of New Britain, Conn., and Richard Fecteau, 38, of Lynn, Mass., were sentenced to prison after their plane was shot down allegedly over Chinese territory. Because of his advanced age. Bishop Walsh has been kept in the ' Shanghai prison hospital since 1962. His brother visited Catholic bishop was sentencedihim in 1961 and later reported io a 20-year prison term onjBishop Walsh’s parting words: yague espionage charges. He is “We will meet in heaven.” now 74. I All attempts by the U.S. gov- Hugh F. Redmond Jr., 46, of eminent and personal pleas by. Yonkers, N.Y., a former busi- the prisoners’ relatives to obtain nessman in China, was sen-jtheir release have been rejected' fenced to a life term on similar by the Chinese. Traffic Safety Hints: No S n*s "■ " Following too closely, commonly called Mtailpting”, is one of the most hasardous driver actions. It it also a traffic violation. The driver behind is usually responsible for rear-end collisions. Remember to increase the distance between your car and the one ahead when speed is increased or streets are slick. Looking at the whole traffic pattern may save the driver from a rear-end collision. brought to you by your Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce Traffic Safety Committee Fecteau may be the loneliest of the four. He has had no visits since his imprisonment. But Fecteau is likely to come out of Red China first. He has five years left to serve. The last American to visit her imprisoned son in Communist China was Mary Downey of New Britain, Conn., who made her trip in November 1963. She said later'in Hong Kong this could be her last trip to China because of her age and financial condition. British Red Cross officials here said Christmas parcels Jot; these American prisoners were sent to China early this month. Each parcel included one small Christmas pudding — the only reminder" of Christmas for these lonely American prisoners. It is impossible to get a full [ firsthand picture of the life of the American prisoners in Red China but sketchy reports Cure Reported for Fatal Illness ! BOSTON (UPJ) — Researchers at Children’s Hospital medical center believe they have found the cause and a I possible cure of a fatal form of kidney disease. | They have reported that the drug thioguanine, used in the ; treatment of cancer and leukemia, has maintained the lives of two otherwise doomed children, one of them for more than a year. The disease is a form of ! progressive nephrosis, which strikes seven of every 10,000 children. i Victims exhibit severe swelling due to scanty urine output, fat retention, loss of blood proteins, chronic kidney damage and high susceptibility to infection. Fifteen years ago, the disease i was fatal in almost all its forms. Today, antibiotics can save 75 per cent of those i stricken. brought out by visitors shed some light on the subject. Christmas means nothing to the Chinese Communists. Aside from a few Christmas cards received from families and close friends and tiny puddings sent by the Red Cross, there is no touch of Christmas for the four Americans. On Christmas Day, they follow the dreary daily routine they have followed hundreds of other days. Bishop Walsh reportedly is confined to bed. But the other three clean their cells in the morning. They walk In the yard for 30 minutes, morning and afternoon. For the rest of the day, Christinas or any other day, there is little to do except read, think and pray in their cells. Visitors to some of the prisoners said the four Americans were given adequate food. In addition, each prisoner receives a 22-pound food parcel from their families every month. Several American turncoats of the Korean War who came out of Communist China reported that foreigners, is jail or out, were better fed than ordinary Chinese. GUatixa. I Lets PLAYS A MAJOR. ROLE IN WE JET AGE. ^/etplanes expel them extremel y HOT EXHAUST THROUGH METAL TORES often hardened by gas heat AND COATEO WITH CERAMIC FINISHES INGAS CNENS. (§1 AS ALSO HELPS 7CU6H6N OTHER METAL PARTS SO PLANES MAY BE BUILT LARGER AND STRONGER, CAPABLE OF FLYING HIGHER, FASTER AND FARTHER. NATURAL GAS — Does So Much, Costs So Little consumers power Gtfpwasf joV * [Here’s hoping Santa leaves all the dreams of our loyal patrons in bright array beneath their Christmas trees. / A hearty “thank you” to you aUI BURKE LUMBER 4495 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1211 OFFICERS Jamea M. Rahl Executive Flea President and Secretary Warren D. Newton Vice President Robert C. Peek, Jr. Vice Pretldent Robert W. Stogdill Treasurer nnd ‘ Controller Richard E. Cavil! Asslstsust Vice Pretldent Ronald N. Facer Assistant Vice President Tboralf Ulaggh Assistant Vice PNsldent •ssd Brssnch Manager C. Bartow Clark Assistant Vice President ssstd Branch Manager Leroy Hartman Assists*?Vice Pretldent end Branch Manager Irving F. Fleming Assistamt Vice Preside* nssd Brssnch Manager Earl Fortin . Assist asst Vice President and Branch Manager Richard D. Morriaon Assistant Treasurer and Branch Mssnager Corabdle M. Bell Aseistsssst Treasurer M. Eraeatine Griffin Assistant Seer tary Marjorie E. Todd Asslstsust Secret my Ellen M. Htaeaeh________. Assistant Treasurer Jamea H. Rohm Asslstsssst Treasurer BOARD OF DIRECTORS dirk If Adana Mahlon A. Benaon, Jr. Conrad N. Church James Clarkson R- dare Connings Delos F. Hamlin Janes M. Rahl ATTORNEY C. Bryan Kinney AUDITORS As oti that holy night when Christ was born, the joyous message of Hie birth reechoes throughout the busy world, filling every heart with peace and good will. May this true Christmas spirit enrich your life and th6 lives of your loved ones. : 761 W. HURON STREET ' DOWN I OWN PONTIAC-CLARKSTON-DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER-WALLED LAKE-LAKE ORION-MILFORD THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 F1V» Got Transplant for Yule Kidney Patient Grateful DETROIT (AP) - “This is the finest present I’ve ever received”, says James Fitch, who waited eight months for a donor to give him a healthy kidney. Fitch, 27, of Delta, Ohio, has been hospitalized at nearby Lake Lob! Lake Angelas LAKEVIEW ESTATES FE 4-9921 KAMPSEN Realty 1 Building Wayne County General Hospital. Last Monday, Bradley Van Newkirk, 7, of suburban Plymouth, was struck and killed by a car. His father. Dr. Karl 'Van Newkirk, consented to donate his son’s healthy kidney to' Fitch. Both of Fitch’s kidney’s were removed last April because they were damaged, he has remained hospitalized since. An [artificial kidney machine re-j , moved his body wastes twice a week. His weight dropped from' | ISO to 106 pounds. Doctors at Wayne County' General said it would be several weeks before they could tell if the operation was a success. There is a possibility! Fitch’s body will reject the! transplant, they said. A jt'Zm • Traffic Safety Hint*: No. 4 On making a left turn at a busy intersection, it i* beat to keep your front wheel* straight ahead as you wait in the intersection lor the oncoming traffic to clear. Should you be struck from the rear, with your wheels straight the collision will drive you straight ahead where there should be open space. With the wheels turned, yoit could be driven into oncoming traffic or even into pedestrians.. Brought to YoubyYour Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce Traffic Safety Committee CLARKSTON GARDENS “An Urban Community1* Directions from Pontiac Dixie Hwy. (US-10) to M-15, turn right 1 mile to Weldon Rd., right 1 mile to models or 1*75, thru Clarkston. Left at Waldon Rd. off Main St. WALDON ROAD AT ALMOND LANE THE CHRISTMAS LIGHTS - The greetings of the season are extended by the lights surrounding Pontiac’s City Hall on East Wide Track (top)1 and the Oakland County. Court- house (bottom), in the Oakland County Service Center on Telegraph'. This view of the courthouse complex is taken from the south side of. the auditorium wing. > WESTERNER *18,990 LOT INCLUDED! 1,350 SQ. FT. of Living Area MINIMUM DOWN Payment (890 We Trade Homes — Will Build on Your Property! Built A Sold by ARISTOCRAT BUILDING CO. , Designed for Living J Features!I I it Spacious Family Room a With Fireplace* | it Large Kitchen and Dining Area * ★ 1 and Vs Baths ★ 2-Car Attached Brick | Garage $ *\ ★ Full Basement ★ Gas Heat | \* Lots 115x150 it Community Water ^ MANY ADDITIONAL FEATURES I •OPTIONAL *700 -._ S WALDON RD. at ALMOND LANES Open Daily 12 to 7, Sunday :j at 11 A.M. - Phone 625-2882 $ M Christrum, so were taking this joyous time to wish our fine customers all the best of the holiday and to express thanks for your patronage. KAST 463 South Saginaw HEATINGAND C0OLING COMPANY FE 8-9255 Yugoslav-Cuba Pact | BELGRADE, Yugoslavia! (AP) — Yugoslavia and Cuba] have signed a trade agreement for 1966 which provides for a 20 j per cent increase in mutual trade. Ford Is Probing Fatal Explosion Christmas Greetings To Alii From All Of Us At LEE'S 923 Mt. Clemens PONTIAC • DEARBORN (AP)-An explosion that took the lives of two men and seriously injured two others at Ford Motor Co’s, huge [Rouge complex was under; [investigation today by company ^ 'officials. Sr - Si it Ronald Dybalski, 28, of Allen Park and Fred Wilson 51, of Dearborn Heights were killed Thursday in the accident. Dybalski, a pipefitter, had been with Ford eight years. Wilson a boilermaker, was a 29-year veteran of the auto firm. I William H. Bunce Jr., 26, of E>earbom and John Hensley, 36, of Garden City were hospitalized. Officials at Ford hospital in Detroit decribed their condition as “serious.” A Ford spokesman said the; men were repairing a liquid | vaporizer unit at the oxygen I plant when a weld broke on an oxygen line. There was no fire land no damage to the plant, I the spokesman said. ; He said the oxygen plant; l makes' oxygen for steel-making {and foundry operations though-1 out the Rouge plant. Legion Gives $5,000 for Vietnamese People ! NEW YORK (AP) - The na-jl tional commander of the Amer-, ican Legion has presented a |check of $5,000 to CARE fori J use “aS a gesture of friendship; j and compassion for the South j Vietnamese people.” L. Elson James said the mon-★ * ★ ey, contributions from legionnaires' and auxiliary members, « will be used to provide food, 1 drugs, farming and carpentry S tools. He said the legion hopes1! considerably more. *1,000 to 1*1 or 2nd HOME f mortgage | “t5XS“ | | CREDIT LIFE § % INSURANCE. $ | aT no extra cost! g Cash when needed/ Without obligation, tee and talk' with Mr. Merle Yon or Mr. Buckner, who have been 'loaning money to hundred* of people in Pontiac during thS past 40 yekr*. All borrow-er» will testify to receiving fair, honest. and courteous treatment. (Do not take a chance dealing with stranger* or fly-by-night lender*.) When yon deal here, yon receive the full amount of your loan in rath at once. No paper* to vign until the loan i* rioted. No charge for inspection, appraiaal or survey. 1 No charge for abstract, title search or title Borrow from us to consolidate your debts, to pay off-the balance yon owe on your contract. to pay taxes to make home repairs or improvements or for any other good pur-, pose. See n* today. SPECIAL free Parking on county lot comer N. Saginaw and W. Huron Sts. each time you bring to oqr offko a full moe “ Free Parking whenever you apply for an approved loan or renewal. Iring us your parking ticksft to bo stomped. VOSS and BUCKNER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING - FE 4-4729 j British' Honor Menuhin j LONDON (AP> - Violinist Yehudi Menuhin has received his honorary Knight-command-jer of the British Empire in a | ceremony at the Foreign Office. The award, announced last month as honorary because of Menuhin’s U.S. citizenship, was ! made for his services to music. PONTIAC’S OLDEST AMBULANCE SERVICE Air-Conditioned Cadillac Ambulances, Oxygen Equipment, Firat Aid Trained Personnel, Special-iting in Transfers! GENERAL AMBULANCE SERVICE 57 Wayne St., Rlkor Bldg. FE 4-7333 WISHES YOU A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND MANY HAPPY RETURNS we really expect them 24 Hour Service % cJoijous Ohniittnas Cj/iatuujs jlhs bells are merrily ringing with joyous notes of good cheer to bring you, our customers, special greetings of the holiday .season and our special “thank y 605 Oakland Avenue -,'FE 4-2579 IFsanta goofs ... ■ . • •• ~ If youalrendy.haveAclQzenpoir ---- or It was bought with not much care It just won't fit around your waist or ! Another of those just can't be faced , Blue you wanted but red you got or The style for you is not so hot, THEN Don't Be Bashful . . . Don't Delay MONDAY IS HAPPY "RETURNS" DAY We'll be glad to swop, switch or replace .. and we'll do it with a smile Not just at Christmas time, but all year through. This is the- way we feel at Waite's... you must be completely satisfied in every way. ONCE AGAIN ;. . MERRY CHRISTMAS i 4 j'jrM* THE PONTIAC PRESS Pootiac, Michigan FRIDAY. DECEMBER 24, IMS y.«#w n A Preridtnt ■ John W. Pitigum IIMlto and AdvertUlnc Director a. iinitm fontm Significance of Christmas ' Offers Hope to All People (EDITOR’S NOTE: In keeping with our policy of running guest editorials from time to time, our Christmas message has been written by Rev. Roy F. Lambert, pastor of the Lakeland United Presbyterian Church, Waterford.) • By REV. ROY F. LAMBERT In the fourth verse of hi* famous Christmas poem “I Heard the Bells I on Christmas D a y,” Hews y Wadsworth Longfellow expresses] this sentiment! which is certainly appropriate to the days in which we| are living: rev. LAMBERT MThen pealed the bells more loud and deep, God is not dead, nor doth He sleep. The wrong shall fail, the right prevail, . With peace on earth, good will to men.” \ From every side it seems we are being pressed with the confused and confusing notions that God and faith are irrelevant to our lives today. Some are saying that a “new" religion without God is our need. A “new” morality without standards . is being called “freedom.” ★ ★ ★ Science is presented as our “Savior,” the “Messiah” of a new age which reaches for the moon, while here on earth the acquisition of material possession is encouraged as the chief end of man in the annual “Christmas A Go Go.** Add to this the prevalence in large areas of the world of war, famine, disease, and international distrust and the picture is truly a dark one. But thank God this is not the whole picture. “God is not dead, nor doth He sleep.” God has spoken as the Scriptures reveal: “When the time had fully come, God sent forth his Son ... to redeem those who were under the law .. Galatians 4:4, 5; “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us .... John 1:14. As a little child the eternal Son of God took upon himself our nature and being and was made in the likeness of men that in the midst of darkness there might be light. But even here the story is hot complete, for “Peace on earth, good. will to men” are pious platitudes if this is all. We must never forget that the Christmas Child grew up. He liyed among us. He suffered es one of us. He died for us, and He lives again that in this dark world of sin and suffering there might be a joy unspeakable, a “peace that passeth all understanding,” a peace anticipatory of God’s eternal presence. The implications of such a concept for nations, races, and families are yet to be fully worked out, but we believe that the “Living” God is at work in his universe and that in His good time and manner “the wrong shall fair, the right prevail, with peace on earth, good will to men.” . Meanwhile, let those of Us who believe so live as to demonstrate in every area and aspect of life the significance of Christmas, for “God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself . . . entrusting to us the message of reconciliation.” (II Corinthians 5:19) ■ ★ ★ ★ This is the message which alone offers hope for the healing of divided lives, divided peoples, and divided nations by bringing men into a living relationship of love and peace with God and neighbor through Him who is “The Prince of Peace.” Noisy Liberal Now Sir Echo MARLOW Verbal Orchids to - Mr. and Mrs. Ray Shankelton Of 20 Blaine; 55th wedding anniversary. Joe Spear • of Oxford; 87th birthday. Mrs. Helen Couper of Union Lake; 05th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Vernal Lloyd of 3114 Willett; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Emery J. Moot of Union Lake; 53rd wedding anniversary. Mrs. Bertha Bates of Waterford Township; 870) birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Elliott of Milford; 51st wedding anniversary. Fred T. Dowling of 396 Boyd; 87th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. CIarence Brooks of 8144 Mandon; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Haslock of Davi8burg; 55th wedding anniversary. Roland Kilgore of 64 West End; 86th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Stepieton of 41 S. Genessee; golden wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Foster Berdan of 52 Poplar; golden wedding anniversary. Mr. and lilrs. A. L. Nique of Ortonville; 54th wedding anniversary. Dr. and Mrs. Hettry H. Savage of Muskegon, fonnerly of Pontiac; 53rd wedding anniversary. Jacob L Dean of Birmingham; 88th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Webber of 82 Haxel; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Ziegler Of Waterford Township; 53rd wedding l^ro. Margaret Wells of 1280 N. Telegraph; 90th birthday. Mr. aai Mrs. Benjamin H. Owens of Prahk; Sard wedding anniversary. By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — Hubert H. Humphrey is the busiest vice president in history -less Lyndon B. Johnson ' M very unsensational way, which is the way President Johnson wants it. This is a switch from those days 16 years ago when Humphrey first arrived in the Senate, a noisy, controversial liberal who talked too much and antagonized the old-timers. He’s still a liberal but over the years he learned how to do business in the Capitol, got along with the old-timers, worked smoothly with Johnson when Johnson was Senate majority leader. And now he is a Sir Echo of all Johnson wants and stands for. His liberalism hasn’t diminished but as he says: “I did not become vice president with President Johnson to cause him trouble.” * * A ■ It’s an impressive sight to go through a newspaper library folder on Humphrey . and look at the pile of stories which show how he has been hopping around. GETS AROUND Just in the early part of this month alone, on one day he spoke in Washington on better cities and on the same day in New Hampshire talking on disarmament; on another day he talked in New York about closing the science gap between nations and on the same day in Massachusetts about propaganda. « This was after returning from a western speechmaking trip in which he denounced antiwar demonstrators as tr-• responsible, indecent and unpatriotic. In between speeches this year, he has been mixed up in Hie Peace Corps, voting rights, school drop-outs, antipoverty, talked with mayors, dashed to Paris with Gemini astronauts, presided at a carnival. * * ★ If it seems strange all this .activity has not stuck in the mind, and it hasn’t, it’s because Humphrey is carrying out the role assigned him by Johnson, a busy one but secondary. SAME POSITION This is exactly the position Johnson was in when he was vice president. Kennedy and Johnson seemed to have had an identical view of vice presidents: They should be seen, but not in critical situations; heard, but in a minor key; and they should always be. on deck to run errands, patch up various kinds of braises, and play handyman on a moment’s notice. Now after Christmas, Johnson is sending Humphrey to Japan, Korea, Formosa, and the Philippines on a goodwill mission, which makes him the highest U.S. official to visit the Far East since Kennedy sent Johnson there in 1961. Voice of the People: Veteran Say s OUr Nation Is Greatest in the . World My father is a World War I veteran atol l anm,veteran of WorM War II. I have been reading opinions and hearing complaints until it makes me sick. We have the greatest country in the world .and the best qualified people running it because we chose them. To those who have never seen the homeless, the hungry, or the blood of a t^r-tom country, let’s he glad our leaders can keep it over there because if they can’t it will be our homes as well as our sons. ★ ★ ★ - I have two sons who will be of draft age all too soon. I hope by this time the Communists, the civil rights situation, etc. are all back to God-fearing levels instead of people-fearing. If they aren’t, I will have to tell my boys the same thing my father told me,, “Son, I hate to see you go but you must. If you ever go over the hill, don’t come home because this land is worth the price.” To those who can only complain, it’s a wide, wide world and there are ships and planes leaving every day. DISGUSTED This talk of draft dodging and tearing up of draft cards should make some people real proud of their sons. I’m a mother of two Marine sons and I’m very proud of them for being men and Americans who saw their duty. ★ A * How about you fellows who think it IS easier to play on cam- ___,____*_____________\_______________________________ pus than enlist and be Americans or even support them? Why didn’t you go to Viet Nam and let our sons come home for Christmas? My son hasn’t been home since 1961. He’s helping keep you Soviets Turn Realists on Religion Sara^rSTSSss physically able to go yourself , at least be men and be of help to the ones who do go, and keep America on its toes for peace. A MARINE’S MOTHER The Enduring Message Of Hope I By LEON DENNEN Foreign News Analyst NEW YORK (NEA) - For the first time in pearly half a century Russians will celebrate Christmas this year in an atmosphere relatively free from fear. To be sure, the Marxlst-Len-inist doctrine still sees religion as “opium” invented by capitalism to enslave the working class. But the reality of political , life finally is forcing the Kremlin to seek some sort of accommodation, however hypocritical, with religion. Since 1917, Lenin’s successors have been striving to eliminate belief in God from the lives of Russia’s more than 200 million Christians, Jews, Moslems and Buddhists. However, their pressure on believers fluctuated with the Kremlin’s domestic and international situation. INTENSIFIED DRIVE When the Soviet leaders felt strong they intensified their drive against God. They relaxed their atheistic propaganda whenever, faced with a critical domestic or international situation, they needed the support of the people. Before World War IF Stalin had practically driven underground all religious organizations in Russia. But after Hitler's attack, to assure the wartime loyalty of the people, he was forced to relax antire-ligious pressure. ★ ★ ★ Most religious groups were permitted to reorganize with Such recognized rights as limited autonomy and still more lim-. ited privileges of publishing Bibles and prayer books. FAITHFUL COMMUNIST This lasted until Nikita Khrushchev came to power. Khrushchev, who regarded himself as a faithful Marxist-Leninist, apparently decided that the task of exterminating religious faith was to be pushed to completion. He resorted to a violence comparable only to the darkest year under Stalin. The Kremlin’s latest “liberal” policy on religion — in the view of specialists on communism — is due primarily to the uncertain political position of the faceless men who now rule- Russto and--to the disarray in the Red world that has resulted from Moscow’s conflict with China. ANOTHER ISSUE Religion, in fact, has become ‘ another important issue that divides Marxist-Leninists behind the Iron Curtain and wherever they seek adherents to their cause in non-Communist coun-' tries. Shortly before he died a year ago, Palmiro Togliatti, Italy’s Communist leader, warned tkat “the old atheist propaganda is no longer of any ase to communism.’’ He drew a dividing Une between Communists who believe that coexistence with religion is possible and necessary and those “who still cling to the old atheist propaganda.” . wee Togliattt’t; “liberal” partisans in Europe especially; for some time now, have been attempting to convince Christians {hat reli- gion and communism can live together and even cooperate. Of course nii)is idea is not glared by all Communists and even less by all Christians. But it seeips possible that this time the Maridst-Leninist strategy bom of expediency will have some lasting and significant effects. The Communists’ new peace overtures to religion cannot be divorced from other changes taking place in their collectivist, materialist society. New political and cultural winds are blowing behind the Iron Curtain from which religion is also likely to benefit. The Red rulers seemingly have come to the belated realization that all forms of pressure, atheist propaganda and violence againSt believers, have not smothered religion in their world. Bob Considine Says: Space Rendezom Lets Taxpayer Breathe Easier NEW YORK - Proof positive that rendezvous in space is possible, even “easy.” as Wally S c h 1 rra said, should come as a relief to the American taxpayer. Tons of his money have been spent on the premise and the promise that one of these fine days CONSIDINE we’d attend to the 10,001 details and put two manned objects together Out There. Project Apollo, the man-to-the-moon-and-back program, has advanced too far to stop. It has been costing $10 million a day for several years, and the price tag on it will be, about $25 billion by the time we' pull off that proposed one-day initial visit to the big dead ball that has been' doing things to poets and. lovers since man walked on all fours, e e e Yet not until last week, when Schirra, Stafford, Borman and Lovell staged their tet-a-tete, 185 miles up and at speeds just beyond 17,500 m.p.h., could we be absolutely sure that Apollo could be pulled off. It depends entirely on mastery of rendezvous technique. HARD TO BELIEVE Apollo’s “hardware” is hard to believe, its costs stupefying. The Saturn V rockets which will be the launching vehicles -will bMssembled in-e building Quit must be seen to be comprehended,. and even then it isn’t believable^ It is a sophisticated box that stands 525 feet 10 inches tall. It could hold six.football fields. The U. N. Secretariat Building could slide in and out of its doors. It is the.tallest building south of the Washington Monument. The assembled Saturns must be moved a few miles from this building to the launching pad. The 36-story-tall rockets, each costing about $100 million, will make the little journey in upright position — without supporting wires! e e e This will be done by placing the Saturn aboard a crawler-transporter that looks like something the Green Giant would buy his kids for Christinas. It is a pad 131 feet long and 114 feet wide. Propulsion (at a l maximum speed of one mile an hour) is supplied by four huge tankUke monsters mounted under each corner of the platform. Each of these crawlers has two separate treads. The crawler-transporter weighs 5.5-million pounds, was built to carry a load weighing 12 million pounds. There is a Bight grade running up from the assembly building to the pad from which our lunanauts will take off. * * ★ The mover is equipped with computers that figui$ out exactly how much its platform’s posture must be altered to keep it level while climbing the gentle hill. If they don’t work, the rocket falls over. The only commodity that can be classified as a bargain, in the space business, is the spaceman himself. The Viet Cong destroyed a village hi Soufli Viet Nam, killing wpmen and children, Another time the V.C. purposely cut off a small girl’s fingers because she was on a school bus against the Viet Cong’s orders. * * * They have kiUed and wounded a lot of our GIs in their , attempt to bring communism from the north. Jut maybe one of those GIs was GI Martin’s buddy. I would feel the same way in wanting to hunt the V.C. Nothing but mad animals would do what the V.C. have done. ★ * * /X * Millions more Americans are proud of the step towards assuring the freedom our men in Viet Nam are taking. These demonstrators against American policy should all go live in the villages of South Viet Nam. .ALLEN SPARKS HOLLY ‘We’re Lucky to Have Services of The Press’ I was interested in the letter in the Voice of the People that showed The Press gave us news six hours before’ we got it from outside newspapers. This is true and I want to add something. The very day that letter was printed, The Press ran a fine photo of. Gemini 7 off in space and the same picture appeared in two outside newspapers the following day. ★ ★ ★ This area is lucky to have all the late news and late pictures brought to us so rapidly by The Press. MRS. C. B. ‘Citizens Not to Blame for Deer Shortage’ If the Conservation Department representatives continue to make irresponsible statements such as “There is no law that says does have to be shot. If hunters don’t want antlerless deer taken, then they should quit shooting them,” they will lose any respect the people of Michigan might have had for their sincerity in trying to maintain a reasonable and healthy deer herd in our State. ★ ★ ★ — Did the department advocate shooting a lot of does and fawns by issuing thousands of permits, or just to sell a lot of extra licenses? I hold the department responsible. They are paid to know how the herd stands and the permits they issue should be in line. Let’s not blame the citizens who shoot legal does or fawns. A SUCCESSFUL BUCK HUNTER Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Upon Completion... The Washington (la.) Journal Education is something you get when your father sends you to college. But it isn’t complete until you send your son there. Say 'No' The Holland Evening Sentinel r^ Everyday; "irOTTTTffT"^ speeches are made before assorted groups around the country. But very few get wide coverage, evefi though they may seem profound enough. Recently, Roger Fleming, secretary treasurer of the American Farm Bureau Federation, made a speech that was rather simple in content, but it said something so basic, it had to be heard. AAA Mr. Fleming told Congress it had to learn to My “no” if It expected to survive. This is the very heart of the problem in our highest legislative body. Handreds of pressure groups are constantly urging the Congress to act on this or that , bit Of legislation, and threatening dire consequences if the vole isn’t delivered. It takes a strong man to say “ao” to that kind of pressure. But if it isn’t done, the duties of the legislators will have shifted to another, braach of the government hi as real. istic a way as if they had been handed over. •In every session there are a number of bills that have been labeled “must” and, for lack of time, these are carried over into the next session. Somehow or other the^ country seems to carry on without them, and on a number of occasions, the interest has fallen with the passage of time. We know only too well that the legislation. coming before Congress continues to increase... and also "becomes more technical and Involved. This gives to those close to the legislation an. aura of authority, and Congress often bows to this authority. Congress will have to have ite own specfallsts to aid it in saying “no.” There is Uttie doubt that no representative body can endure if it'doesn’t maintain ita independence. This is what makes Mr. Fleming’* speech so important It recognizes that the deterioration seta in when yon can’t say “ao.” _ Highway Safety . .. AAA Motor News Highway Safety has been helped again, this time by General Motors. The world’s largest auto maker has announced it will increase the allowance to dealers loaning passenger can for high school students up to $160 ji vehicle. The DrivcrTrain-ing Car Dealer Allowance Plan, pioneered by GM in 1955, provides for sharing between the dealer and manufacturer the cost of loaning vehicles to high schools. ★ ★ > We commend GM for its public-spirited effort to help youpg driven gain the experience they need. Certainly the driver education program, in which Auto Club has pioneered for Michigan, deserves the utmost sup- Good Housekeeping... The Oconomowoc (Wis.) Enterprise Have you heard the one about the movie queen who was the perfect housekeeper? Every time she got a dtbone , she kept the house. r as «nh m te J* THE P< jpNTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 SEVEN Yule Rules Irrefutable Code Covers Christmas Calamities By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ever since Jhe adjournment of Con* gress, I have been diligently at work on a compilation of thej self-evident law of man and nature. The purpose the project wm to encourage Jay citizens to w^ite their own laws during' this period that the Ration would not be left in a legislative void. Thus far, it has come along WEST swimmingly. The collection recently was enriched by the addition of. Hill’s Lam, I and H, propounded by Boyd Hill of Honolulu. They readies follows: “Whatever is done, somebody bitches about it,”\ “Complications increi the square of the number of I people involved.” \ : I fear, however, that the\! holiday season will produce a \ lull in do-it-yourself lawmaking. In order to avoid that, I have undertaken to codify some of the laws that govern the yulettde. They are called “The Nine Laws of Christmas” and, barring unexpected complications, should be enough to keep the project going until Congress returns in January. L The number of batteries that can be found in a house is always one less than the number required to activate a battery-operated toy. 2. When “X” represents the number of guests invited to a Christmas party, and “Y” represents the amount of eggnog Vie host has prepared, the equation “X equals Y” becomes 4. The point of diminishing returns is reached when the value of the wrapping exceeds the value of the gift. 5. When laws Nos. 1 and 3 are in effect, the nearest open store is at least 25 miles away. 6. The hour at which children awake on Christmas morning varies in inverse ratio to the hour their father went to bed. ★ '* * 7. The disadvantage of driving 25 miles to buy batteries is exceeded only by the disadvantage of not driving 25 miles to buy batteries. . * 8. The complexity of new bi-U cycle assemblage bears no re-j lation to the simplicity of the’ instruction sheet. * a a 9. The length of a 25-mile I drive is determined by the in-] tensity ctf JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID We Pick Up FE 2-0200 pa thematically impossible. W . a a Law No. 1 is only valid after all of the neighborhood I stores have closed. i i®F®ro Tis the season for joy, thoughtfulness and thank yous. So we're taking time to soy just that, and wishr you a very Hoppy Holiday. CHURCH'S Inc. ... Auburn Heights — Utica — Washington — Lapeer Europe Air Defense i Chief Is Appointed WASHINGTON (AP) - Maj. Gen. George V. Underwood,] who has been chief of Army information for five years, will] become commander of *11 U.S. Army air defense units in Europe, the Pentagon announced] yesterday. ★ * a He will report to headquarters' in’Kaiserslauten, West Germa-] ny, about Feb. 14. Upderwood currently is on an inspection trip to Viet Nam with the Army chief.of staff, Gen. Harold K. Johnson. There was no immediate announcement on a replacement iin the information post. To our many good friends, the very/ Merriest Christmas ever! CRESCENT U.S. ROYAL r^WSTMAS ~T7me At the Christmas bells gladden your heart, we wish all our friends and patrons the happiest Holiday Season ever. See Us for last Minute Needs JIMS OUTLET & GARDEN CENTER \ 2301 Dixie HWy. \ FE 4-8205 REP E FI JK (DRAYTON PLAINS STORE ONLY) OPEN, SUNDAY DECEMBER 26 NOON T06P. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAI NS CLOSE TONIGHT AT 6:00 P.M. V GET ON YOUR MARK*... GET SET... GO... MONDAY! SCRATCH AMD DENT SALS *a reminder not to mtss^Thomas Furniture's full page.—_— color advertisement in this Monday's Pontiac Press- .-savings of 25% to 50% on damaged items;floor samples, etc. PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW • FE 3-7901 NEXT WEEK ONLY, OPEN MON. and THURS. TIL 9 I DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY• OR 4-0321 NEXT WEEK ONLY, OPEN MON. and THURS. TIL 9 DON’T MISS IT! BOTH STORES OPEN MONDAY ’TIL 9 P.M.! M EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1065 Drug Helps Learning, Memory Best Wishes for Christmas House of Bedrooms 1662 S. Telegraph Rd. 334-4593 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -New hope for mentally retarded children and persons approaching senility may come with development of a new drug to stimulate learning and memory, the San Francisco Chronicle reported yesterday. * * ★ A group of Ghicago researchers has found that by injecting a mild stimulant, magnesium pemoline, into the nervous system of rats, they learn much faster to avoid electric shocks and remember the lesson longer. First experimental trials with human beinp are under way, the Chronicle said. The drug does not alter the basic nature of the brain, but rather stimulates the production of ribonucleic acid (RNA), Christmas: Wishes Our vary bast wishes for a truly wonderful Christmas. JOE'S ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS 19N.S NATCHEZ, Miss. the north. Even as Charles Evers exhorted crowds Thursday, night, the Grand Dragon of the United Klans of America swore out an affidavit charging Natchez Police Chief J. T. Robinson with willful neglect of duty. ★ * * Thi segregationist maneuver came after civil rights chieftains ordered a renewed boycott against merchants in Natchez-accusing them of violating three-week-old treaty mi racial differences. Skarwii-WlllUai Co. PAINTS — WALLPAPER 71 W. Huron Tho Pontiac Mall which has been found to increase in brain cells as animals increase their knowledge. ★ * * The researchers found that the stimulation provided by magnesium pemoline increases the amount of RNA in brain cells, and they hope that this added RNA will make learning come easier and memories longer. RAT EXPERIMENT , In the rat experiment, Dr. Nicholas Plotnikoiff, a pharmacologist for Abbott Laboratories in Chicago, attached a buzzer to a cage and sounded it just before running an electric current through the floor of the cage. ★ * ★ He found that some rats. Ileamed to jump to avoid the shock faster than others, so he took the slower learners and injected them with magnesium pemoline. Further tests showed they learned to jump four-to-five times faster than before. ★ * * Dr. Alvin J. Glasky, a bit chemist for Abbott, warned hod ever that the drug, given/the trade name Cylert by Abbott, would be no shortcut to xnsdom. Rather, it has possibilities of making mentally retarded children more amenable to training and education, and might Istrengthen theme mor i e s of i older persona approaching senility, he saicr mvm&m mmm mmm mm mmm&m iiilDf HMRS CHRISTMAS GREETINGS With gratitude tor your loyal friendship and support, we extend our warmest wishes fpr a very cheery holiday seasoh* , / / • t 17 - 19 $, Saginaw St., Downtown Pontiac For 'Black Christmas' Two Dixie Marches Set TodaV 'Don’t carry guns, knives or sticks,” he said. OFFICIAL CHARGED The affidavit by Klan Dragon E. L. McDaniel charged Robinson with refusal to arrest persons violating state laws. The specifics of the charges were not learned. Natchez had been calm since the Dec. 3 agreement until the list fight Wednesday resulted In charges ranging from assault and battery to disturbing the peace. ★ ★ * Evers claimed two officers sat Negroes unnecessarily with their clubs. Officers said Evers complained that Negro policemen hired by the city followed the same practices which led them to accuse, white officers of brutality. HEADS UNIT - Edward Morey, 8470 Wise, Commerce Township, owner of Morey’s Golf ti Country Club in Union* Lake, was recently installed as president of the Oakland Licensed JJeverage Association. S SIMILAR BOYCOTT Evers, field director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, scheduled the Christmas Eve march in Fayette to dramatize a boycott similar to one which shackled the economy of Natchez, until it ended Dec. 3. Sixty state troopers were ordered into the tense rural town to keep order during the demonstration—which Evers said would include 2,000 marchers. * * * Evers told his followers they/ must go on the streets of Nab chez later in the day unless faro policemen involved in a racial flareup Wednesday were fired. Traffic Safety Hint*: ROa 6 In Keavy traffic, keep in your own lane./Weaving from lane to lane under such conditions is dangerous, discourteous and is a traffic violation, fxtra care when passing in bad er, at night or any other unfavor-s conditions when it is difficult to ^judge speed and distance. brought to you by your Pontiac Ana Chamber of Commerce Traffic Safety Committee OPEN TONIGHT til 9 P.M. FOR LAST MMUTE CHRISTMAS SHOPPING SO THAT EVERYONE MAY BUOY A WONDERFUL AND JOYOUS CHRISTMAS... Closed Sal. Doc. 25 • Son. Dec, 26 • Open Moo. Dec. 27 FAMOUS FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM MEH S-eonON UNDERWEAR KNIT BRIEFS 3 Q05 FOR Mm COTTON T SHIRTS BOXER SHORTS ATHLETIC SHIRTS BOYS T-SHIRTS BOYS BRIEFS 3 FOR 1 69c ea. 45 40c Bl. AT BOTH PONTIAO YANKEE STORES was the night lefore Gmsfmac UJhen all through the house Tlot a creature was stirring,not even a mouse the stockings were huna by the chimney with cart In hopes that Stlticholas soon mould he there* ric children were nestled all snug tn their beds* While visions of sugar-plums danced in their heads, And tnarnma tn her’hwhief.and^^ l in my cap, Had just fettled our trains for a long winter’s nap, then out on the laum there arose such a clatter. I sprang from the bed to see what was the matter. Away to the window Iflew like a flash, Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash. jBfche moon on the breast, of the new-fallen snow ^^Gave the lustre of mid-day to objects below When, what to my wondering eyes should appear, But a miniature sleigh,and eight tiny reindeer, jith a little old driver, so lively and guide, II knew in a moment it must be $t.tllck * Wore rapid than eagles his coursers they came. And he whistled, and shouted, and ailed them by name fpw,Dasher! now, Dancer! now, Prancer and Vixen! On!Comet, on! Cupid, onlDutukr and BlitzeuJ To the too of the porch! © to the top of the walll tlow dash away) dash away! dash away all!" s dry laves that before the wild hurricane flu, Ulhen they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky, So up to the house-top the coursers they flew, A With the sleigh fall ox toys, arid St.tVicholas tooT itrd then, tn a twinkling, I heard on the roof The prancing and pawing of each little hoof. ^ As I drew in my head, and was turning around, * Down the chimney Sttlicholas came with a bound. .e was dressed alt in fur.from his head to his foot! ww*And his dothes mere all tarnished with ashes and soot* A bundle of toys he had flung on his back, And he looked « like a peddler just openinq his pack, : ,is eyes how they twinkled! his dimples how merry! i His cheeks were like roses, his nose tike a cherry[ His droll little mouth was drawn up £»* like a bow, And the bard of his chin was as white as the snow, (S£he stump of a pipe he held tight in hts teeth, •^And, the smoke encircled his head like a wrath* He had a broad face and a little round belly. That shook when he lauqhed,like a bowlful of jelly* rewas chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf, And 1 laughed when I saw him, in spite of myself* A wink of his eye and a twist of his head, 0 Soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread* ^SsO e spoke not a word, but went straight to his work And filled all the stockings; then turned with a jerk, And laying hif finger aside of his nose, And giving a nod, up the diimney he rose* ,e sprang to his sleigh, to his tarn gave a whistle. And away they all flew like the down rtafhistb* But I heard him exdaUn.er? he drove out of sight, tUERHY CHRISTOAS to all and to all a good night, CUMfNT UAJUe MOOT* titerMf CkfUtw* Jwn the Cftt/ttcifeAStaff Ht. A* lumber Cc. and Heating hitiAfon PONTIAC £ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 mi SHINGLED ROOF 4109 ssas?!J5s la# Ml Lat* inciudM | IVOl All Material incluM SU HOOFING *cow»ny® Romney Adds Word to Drivers LEGENDS , OF CHRISTMAS SANDERS FOR RENT TRAVIS HARDWARE * Lake A*a. fi him m A' 'Bnkfcfc id: Ckitww 'JVc wish for yon a Oiristmas plowing with joy ami foml frinulsliips. HOD'S TV-RADIO 770 Orchard Lake Ave. LANSING (AP)-Gov. George Romney issued Christmas greetings to Michigan citizens Thursday, sind included a message of caution for motorists. The governor’s message: I “Die birth of Christ is a time .when people throughout the world, of many faiths, pause to reflect on the blessings of life. It is a time to emphasize the great spiritual and moral values. “Christmas time is also a period for family and friends. And in this year when once again many families are separated by the necessity of defending the principles of freedom in far off places, Christmas will bring memories of the past and hopes for a better future and gratitude for this great nation. “I join each of you in prayers that the next year may bring forth the realization of peace that will unite men of good will everywhere. SAFE DRIVING Your full observance of this holiday weekend requires safe driving and avoidance of traffic accidents that will dim the bright spirit of the Christmas so many Michigan families. Last Christinas Eve 22 people were killed on Michigan highways. | “Too many Michigan motorists continue to mix alcohol and automobiles. Special efforts will be made to insure that those who drink and drive do not ruin the joys and blessings of the weekend ahead for others. By Kreigh Collins Mother asked him if he felt all right. "Yes," he told her. "I feel _ WONDERFUU'y'T^g But Sandman Comes Early Waiting for Santa Is Child's Big Game Lappy iristmas ' May all the jays of the season be yours in great abundanceI BUNKLAND I 1672 S. TELEGRAPH PONTIAC MICHIGAN T urge Michigan motorists drive with their headlights on during the entire holiday weekend, including daylight hours, to serve as a constant reminder to others of • the need for safe) driving. ’The greatest sources of accidents in Michigan are excessive speed, driving and drinking, traffic law violations, inattention and fatigue. By avoiding these problems we can ensure a Merry Christmas for everybody. “The spirit of Christinas is to give of ourselves. Thank those who have given of themselves this year. The progress of Michigan is an added reason for gratitude this year. Mrs. Romney and I wish all of you a very Merry Christinas and a most prosperous and happy New Year.’’ - By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)—Waiting up for Santa Claus is childhood’s greatest game. Every child at one time or another has the ambition to become the first kid in his block greet the jolly old saint on his nocturnal mission Of goodwill. And no wise parent tries too hard to frustrate this desire. The child, dressed in his suit, takes up his vigil in a chair fay the fireplace, and announces firmly: “I’m going to stay up and see| Santa.’’ DECORATING TREE The parents, who are busy decorating the Christmas tree, exchange significant glances. “Didn’t you see him at the department store?” says mother tactfully. Yep.” I know that. But Santa Claus won’t mind. He has got a lot of little elves that can fix it.” The child climbs out of the chair, solemnly looks up the chimney, smT climbs back into the chair. BOYLE you to stay awake.” ‘All right, Mama.” LONGTIME \ He sure is a long time coming." “Oh,” says father,\“he get here until midnight—and it isn’t quite half past nine now. Anyway, Mr. Sandman probably won’t let you stay awake until Santa gets here.” “How’ll he stop me?” “He’ll throw sand in your eyes and make you sleepy.” INVISIBLE “I’ll duck when I see him. That’s just the problem«-you won’t see him. Mr. Sandman is invisible.” ’Well, I’ll hold my hands in front of my eyes—and then he can’t throw sand in them.” house to the top of the next house.” “Maybe, dear.” The warm milk begins to take] NOT AFRAID effect. The small head nods, andj „j wouldn’t ^ afraid. Maybe; stays there longer. he’d even let me hold the “Mama?” says a drowsy |rejnS” V°“Y . j “Maybe, dear.” dear‘ I He starts another question. SURPRISED |“Mama, maybe—.” Then there “Won’t Santa be surprised | is silence. Mr. Sandman has1 when he sees me here waiting come and gone, up for him?” I The little ambassador Yes, dear.” Ibeen outwitted on his first diplo- * * * matic assignment. The small Maybe be’U let me ride in j soldier slumps asleep on guard his sled from the top of our duty. —! His father picks him up and carries him ip bed. And when1 _ 'the child wakes up,, morning TWO Quintets Advance I light is streaming through the window. Conversation dies down. A small head nods, then snaps back alertly. Eyes close slowly, “Dien why do you want to see then spring wide open. More [him tonight? You know he’ll be and more often a small hand very busy.” reaches up and stifles widening "* want to give him ayawns. present.” j “Maybe you’d like a nice 'A present?” jwarm glass of milk,” suggests FIRE TRUCK |mother. Yes, that fire truck brought me last year.” She Stole the Stuff; Store Bought It Back DULUTH, Minn. (AP) - Authorities say Faye Ellen Panet-tti, 31, of rural Silver Bay not only shoplifted merchandise this week but returned the stolen goods for a $41 refund a few hours later and then went back again to do some more shoplifting. Store employes recognized i her, however. She pleaded guil-l ty in municipal court to a theft charge and was fined $80 by] Judge Donald E. Anderson. coming to you this Yuletide are our warmest holiday greetings and good wishes for a joyous season. in Recreation Tourney ______________________! 1 WRAPPED GIFTS Tjie Roy White Unbeatables He races into the living room, id College All-Star quintets ad-,Brightly wrapped presents are vanced to the championship fi- stacked under the Christmas nals of White’s Iinvtational Rec- tree. Santa Claus has come and reation Basketball Tournamentlgone. Thursday night with wins. | The child is both glad and re-The All-Stars beat a team ofigretful. Looking up the chimney he says apologetically: “I’m sorry, Santa, I guess I| just got too sleepy. Next ] Detroit Northern High S c h o o alumni, 103-84, as Alvin Keel hit 36 points for the wiimgafc-y * * *%/ The Unbeatables nipped the sure. Amigo’s Club, 85-83. The finals l Andmaybe he will, will be 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Jefferson JHS, preceded by a 7| o’clock consolation contest. j WATERFORD LUMBER COMPANY, INC. 3875 Airport Road 674-2662 I’ll stay up and see you forlRENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. “But it’s broken.” he'NOT THIRSTY I It is estimated that son\e 40: “I’m not thirsty.” million people participated in' I “I know, dear, but it may help I recreational boating this year. /Profiles' for Germany MUNICH, Germany (AP.) -The American television series based on President Kennedy’s book, “Profiles in Courage,” will be shown on West German television beginning next month. Sound will be dybbed in German. 20 W. HURON Merry Irnm to All A Closed All Day Christmas Dayl We Will Close Tonight at 9 PM Wg extend sincere greeting to all our good friends and customers who shop and save at our store. We hope that this Christmas will be Happy and Merry. And may the New Year bring you happiness, health and wealth. Serving you during the past year has been fun, so we join together in saying MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYONEI PAUL FELICE JIM FELICE AND EMPLOYEES Felice Quality Market 1116 W. Huron St. ennetis ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY * PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDlAY, DECEMBER U, 1#M ■Happy -Holiday s Our best withes for a merry eld fashienedjChristmai go out to ell our customer*. May you enjoy dll of the happiness that the season brings. BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE S. Telegraph at Sq. Ik. Rd. OPEN EVES. TIL 9* WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Philip A. Hurt, D-Mich., Thursday asked Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach to rule whether the Selective Service may cancel draft deferments of students who demonstrate against the Viet Nam war. In a letter, Hart said he did not agree with the view of student demonstrators. He added: I do feel that the rights of dis- The Builder That Makes A House A Home! A Christmas Prayer With all the happy peacefulness of a child's prayer, we greet you during this holy season. KUNGELHUT BRICK CO. 4162 W. Walton * Drayton Plains Hart Asks Draft Rights Ruling r senters in a democracy have to be very carefully protected. * * * Hart last week disputed the contention of 14. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, National Selective Service director, who said reclassification and speeded-up induction of what he termed draft delinquents were practices followed through the years-with the approval of the Justice Department. The issue arose over reclassification of 10 University of Michigan students, convicted of trespassing after they staged a demonstration inside an Ann Arbor Selective Service office. APPARENT DANGER Hart added in his letter: "No court has ruled that the Selective Service Aet was violated. . .only Gen. Hershey. The danger here is apparent: Should CurrenfBooks Prom all of us to all of you, in gratitude and deep appreciation for your contin- | ued friendship. | Watch For The Blue Ribbon Announcement Monday, December 27th RICH MAN, POOR MAN, FREUD AND FRUIT. By Alexander King. Simon & Schuster. $4.50. The late Alexander King’s ul-tracynical book, addressed to '‘Amorous Ladies,” is full of practical advice on snaring hap-ess males, and coincidentally is pretty devastating critique of his own sex. Chapter after chapter he evaluates all the flukes and weaknesses of the various types of males, attached or unattached. King seems to favor artists and bookish men as prizes; or teachers, for less ambitious females. He warns against alliances with musicians (too self-centered), athletes (improvident and soon out of the money), politicians (too conservative and compromising), publicity men (too phony) and various g biers, alcoholics and addicts. * it W This may or may not be a guidebook for the girls; one suspects most of them are far ahead of the author. This is a modern comedy of the war between the sexes — an ancient war. I THE UNFINISHED EXPERIMENT, by Joan Bosch (Praeg-er $5.95) : “Without a democratic! I revolution in Latin America, |. {there is no way out,” says | Bosch, deposed president of the I Dominican Republic. I The unfinished experiment was the attempt to bring de-, mocracy to his country after i the overthrow of the Trujillo ! tyranny. I “The Latin American revo-lution which is inevitable,” continues Bosch, “even if it takes IS, 29 or 25 years, should not be Communist, but the fear of the democratic revolution will make it sooner or later fall into the pattern of a Communist revolution.” The fear of communism was responsible for his own downfall only nine months after his election, Bosch admits. it it * With considerable bitterness, Bosch continues: “Anyone who idoes not demonstrate in a satisfactory manner that he regrets' and will continue torespecF'the established order in Latin Amer-j ica, that be will not touch a single hair of the vested interests, and that, on the contrary, he will dedicate himself to defending them with body and soul, day and night, is transmuted into and suspected of being a secret Commimist.” THE PETER FREUCHEN {READER. Selected by Dagmar Freuchen. Julian Messner. $9.95., This anthology contains some 'of the most ruggedly heroic adventures of a wild personality. Freuchen' was a Dane who many yean ago went natival among the Eskimos;' a profes- sional explorer who combined the talents of sociology and journalism; a man of dash and upsmanship who appreciated the reverse boasting (deprecation) of the natives. There are two “The Eskimo Way of Life” and “Love and Marriage,” which no doubt will remain classics in the interpretation of Eskimo customs and psychology. For sheer terror, in the way of grim bravery at the point of death and survival, few essays can equal Freuchen’s story of a expedition which he led across Melville Bay to bring out some lost whalers. * The whole collectiori is an amazing record of an individual’s exotic combat against nature and man. a federal official be allowed to decide when a law is broken and then proceed to punish those he has branded as lawbreakers?” Last week Hart called on local draft boards to ignore Hershey’s policy and refuse to reclassify the draft board demonstrators as delinquents. Such a classification makes them eligible for immediate induction. Will Leaves $55,000 for Care of Animals BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) Miss Lillian Knoedler, 77, who| died Dec. 2 as she tried to save! her pets from .a fire, has left ai $55,000 estate to animal care institutions. Miss Knoedler’s will provided i lat the estate be divided UP equally between the Baltimore and the Maryland Antivivesec-| tion Societies and the Society. for the Prevention of Cruelty to! animals. Istmaua Phone- 335-1066 'eetlxxg1* uuu Flow Covuiiq 2685 vyOODWARO AVE CQerru Best Sellers (CmisIM by Pubiishtn' WMkly) FICTION THE SOURCE, Mlchen-er. THOSE WHO LOVE, Stone. UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE, Kaufman. AIRS ABOVE THE GROUND, Stewart. HOTEL, Hailey. NONFICTION / KENNEDY, Sorensen. GAMES PEOPLE PLAY, Berne. THE GIFT OF PROPHECY, Montgomery. YES I CAN, Davis. ' INTERN, Doctor X. OLD-FASHIONED WARM WISHES TO EVERYONE AT CHRISTMAS SAVQIE INSULATION 6561 DIXIE HWY. Clarkston 625-2601 (j-httSlfiAS It's hustle and .bustle ■■ • ' Til all is done . . . when it’s finished we enjoy the fun. Happy Holidays! STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS - 1157 W. HURON PONTIAC (Jim Good times, good cheer, good friends... moy they r ^ oil be yours • of this happy season! L & V AWNING & WINDOW go 163 W. Montcalm FE 5-2102 » QIljiB te tip tjagpg fltuum, uit}?n umrm join tngrttyrr in lauglftrr anil song. It’o Iljr time rolpn wr muni nur bUflOingH atth nljar* nur goob fortune with frtwiiu anb atrangera, a-lihr. In ityo trur (Mjrtnimafl irahttion, u»*& lib* to *x-lrnii in gnu anb gnura, nur brat utialfra for a Mrrrg (Hljrtaitnaa. 210 Orchard Lk. at Williams FE 2-9101 t the Yuletide, we especially rejoice in the opportunity to turn from the routine of everyday business and in real sincerity convey our appreciation to our many valued friends. Your favors and good wjll have made “everyday business” a very special pleasure for us. To all, our wishes . for a happy, hearty holiday rich in good old-fashioned joys. 3511 Elizabeth Lake Rd., jFE 4-7775 THE PONTIAC PHESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 Here Comes Santa with a pack of Christmas • wishes for everyone ... tesa of Oakland county^ Dealer Listing ... Condon Radio-TV FE 4-9736 C A V W, lac. F{ 4-1515 144 Oakland, Pontiac Dolby Radio & TV FE 4-91 J4S l»igh, Pontioc Johnson, Radio-TV FE 8-4569 Lakeldnd Elec. 7629 Highland lie Obel TV FE 4-4945 3480 EliiabMk Lakt Rd„ Pontiac Al Rooding TV MY 3-1124' ’• 1700 W. Clorkiton ltd., Lok. Orion Slefanski Radio-TV FE 2^967 . 1157 W. Huron, Pontioc Sweet Radio & TV FE 4-5677 422 W. Huron, Pontiac Troy TVdlodlo TR 9-0060 * 5943 Livernoi*, troy WALTON Radio-TV FE 2-2257 SIS E. Wqlton, Pontiac ELR> EN. Santa and the Zabbazara Bus BY LUCRECE BEALE UUwitnuu . Mewuj Here's Hoping You're On Your Way to a Happy Holiday Season! uHaa Furnilun and Vitality Carpeting Sin, r IMS” % 5390-5400 DIXIE HWY. Og 3-1225 2 EASY BUDGET TERMS it Birmingham Ctutamm MI UMN1 - S« Toll Chart* £ By LUCRECE BEALE LAST OF17 CHAPTERS AP News Features The little boy did as he was told. He jelled and screamed andhbwied. Presently he stopped end whispered, "Why am I hollering?” * -rr1 . “To make the Voodoo man come back,” said Mr. D. "He cast a spell over this room for all who sure nonmortal He is nonmortal. If he .comes In he will be caught in the spell.” He put his ear to the door and listened. He beard tfie Voodoo man hopping back down the corridor. VOICE DISGUISED When the Voodoo man was outside the door Mr. D disguised his voice and said, “See, my power is greater than his. I even kepi him from casting a spell over this room!” The Voodoo man flung open the door. He stared at Mr. D I and the boy. He peered at the 1 door. There was no X mark there. ■ "You must make a big noise,” he sneered at Mr. D. "You have no power at all. I must have overlooked this room. Thanks for reminding me.” ★ ★ ★ He stepped into the room. THUNDER, SMOKE .There was a small clap of “Merry Christmas to Ail! A JOYOUS FOR ALU OUR crocodile and the donkey and the Fabulous Dunklebum they had left In Santa Land. He told the princess how the crocodile yearned for beauty the donkey yearned for sense. (^reefiruj$ .. of the warmest, old-fashioned kind, from all of us to all of you! POOLE LUMBER & HARDWARE 151 OAKLAND AYE., PONTIAC MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER, TELEGRAPH RD. Then Mr. D remembered the|driver is ready we had best he on our way. It’s Christmas Eve, and if we htnry we’ll make it just in time!" The princess smiled and said “I cannot make the crco-dile beautiful but the Fabu-lous Dunklebum will think her so, ind that is the same thing. And I cannot give the donkey sense but I will give him sensibility, which is a better thing.” "Always ready!” replied Mr. D grandly. SAILING HIGH They went to the beach. The princess gave. Jhem balloons to carry them to the bus. In a few minutes Santa and Mr. D were sailing high above the sea. The little bdy who was now prince waved and shouted, “Merry Christmas!” Santa and Mr. D'waved back.j LAKE ODESSA (AP) - Mar-Now Santa said to Mr. D, “If and Santa cried, "Merry Christ-.v|n stahl, 51, of Clarksville was the Zabbazara-Santa Land bus'mas! Merry Christmas to all!” I killed Thursday when his car I collided with a truck on M50 'near Lake Odessa in Ionia County. 2 Dogs Take Ride in Auto; Rip Up Town BARTON, Vt. (AP) - This village was serene as usual yesterday until a dog named Porky/ drove through town. Yes, indeed, through town — across the bank stain and over the street sign and into the electric Appliance store. . * , ★ ★ Porky, a terrier, and Gibby, a cocker, were driven into town by their mistress, Miss Dorothy Hastings. Miss Hastings had business at the post office. She left the dogs in the car. She also left the engine running. ANSWER BARK It seems a boisterous dog began barking at Porky and Gibby. They barked right back. And they jumped around a lot inside the car. Porky bounced too much, and shoved the gear shift lever of, the automatic transmission into drive. The car rolled across the1 steps of the Howard National Bank, knocking down an iron railing and snapping off the intake pipe of the bank’s oil tank.1 RUN SIGN The car ran over a street .sign then through the big plate glass window of art appliance'store and into the kitchen section of; the showroom, hit a range and demolished some cabinets. Total damage: about $3,000. and a burst of smoke and the Voodoo man was no more. In his place was ■ crimson carpet. At the edge of the carpet lay a tiny woven ring. “It worked!” cried Mr. D. He has been caught in his own spell! He snateched up the woven ring, and he and the boy raced through the palace shouting for Santa and the princess. They found them in the garden hiding1 LANSING (AP) — The State jin a golden banana tree. iHigh way Department, an- OVERJOYED nounced plans Thursday to Howard HiU, state highway Wishing All the Joys of the Season To,Our Many Friends! ★ SAM LIVIDOTTI ★ NORM TRAVIS ★ MIKE MYERS ★ GERTRUDE GABERT ★ WAYNE GABERT WAYNE GABERT 121 N. SAGINAW —FE 5-6189 Man Is Killed in Crash State to Spend $6 Million to Beautify Its Highways and said, “All the spells cast! . .. .._i________ ___nuwdiu rail, auiic iiiKiiwav broken except the spell he Sdirector> said ^ Proposed pro: i tS- - ^ gram has been submitted to the |U.S. Bureau of Public Roads south of Ann Arbor, M14, Plymouth Road, 1-75 (six interchanges between Flint and Clarkston) and 1-75 at Birch Run Road. The program also calls for nine planting projects io screen junk yards on 1-75, 1-94, U. 8. 23 and U.8. 131. Merry Chriatmat to all TOWN & COUNTRY J GARDEN CENTER 5812 Highland (M59) Santo Mid that Mr. D and the boy would be remembered forever by all of fairyland, because if it had not been for them all good spirits would have vanished from the earth. '■Merry Christmas from the staff MAX BR00CK, INC. MA 6-4000 WISHING ALL THE JOYS OF THE SEASON TO OUR MANY FRIENDS. McCANDLESS FE 4-2531 NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181. r funding. * * * Projects totaling $2,992,500 would be paid by highway beautification funds authorized by Congress in its recent session. The princess said they should Most of them would be on major have anything they wished, for noninterstate highways, she now had the power to grant Projects totaling $3,090,500 ft. along interstate routes and re- The little boy said he had nojquiring 10 per cent state partici-home and he would like to staylpation also are proposed, Hill in Zabbazara if that were/pos- said, sible. . REST AREAS GOLDEN THRONE The princess said he notsoply well, and have a golden throne beside her own. *• Mr. D Mid he liked being a bus driver and he loved his old bus but he wished he never had to drive down Main Street again. “Hereafter,” siad the Prln-i cess, "Your bus shall be known as the ‘Zabbazara-Santa Land Bus and you will make one round trip a day between these two magic lands.” The plan includes $4.05 million for installation of modern toilet couid stay but he could be prince facilities at a total of 36 road-- ■ ■ 'side rest areas, including 16 new rest areas. Roadside planting projects include three previously announced — on 1-496 near Lansing, 1*96 near Lansing and 1-94 In Battle Creek - and eight new projects. These are on U.S. 23 near! Ann Arbor, U.S. 31 near Muskegon,. U. S. 31 in Muskegon, U.S. 131 in Kalamazoo and at four interchanges — U.S. 23 Our New Address Is 203 N. Perry St... % Block North of Seora COUNTDOWN For A Safe Holiday Easy AS 3*2*1 At Cape Kennedy they won't dream of launching a rockot without a countdown. Why? If them's trouble they want to spot it baford lift-off, not afterwards. Wo think Yuletide would bo a safer and happier time for motorists if they would toko a tip from the folks at tha Cape: Make sum things are A-OK before launching thf car Onto the street or highway. •Ham is a ^Driver's Countdown far Sofbty** developed by Auto industries Highway Sotety--^ Committee to Help you do juet that. Wo'm pleated tp pass it along with our hearty bast •-* wishes ter safe motoring thii Christmas season . . . and all year long. 5 Car in safety shape—especially brakes, lights, steering, tiros? 4 Enough time allowed to maka tha trip without rushing? 3 Driver sot for possible weather and traffic conditions ahead? ' 2 Rest breaks mapped out along tha way, if trip is long? 1 Seat belts fa stoned —snugly? 0 Take a deep breath; relax, and drivo for safety. A Public Service By Potifiat Rctal£ fitwi PONTIAC ♦ PONTIAC-TEMPIST 68 MT. CLEMENS STREET DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FE 3*7961 ' l'{ TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 WPON Radio is happy to offer you a full Christmas Eve program of traditional Christmas music. Join with us tonight as we bring you and your family a variety of Christmas programming. On the eve of this joyous holiday may all of us at WPON Radio wish you a most Merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year l f jLr ike jolly old Santa himself, we’ve a pack of good wishes for a holiday season that will long be remem%to$(l for its good cheer, and its enduring happiness. jjH “The Nativity”—A Christmas drama starring Ann Blyth and Jeff Chandler. “The World Today”—Special Mutual Network. Christmas Eve program. Villanova University Choir in a program of Christmas carols. OR 3-2100 - OR 3-3311 4520 Dixie Highway Plenty «f Free Parting ARTISTRY IN CARPET NEW YORK (NEA) - There was no kitchen sink stolen in 1965 but some of the other purloined items made up for the jdifference. Thievps in Whittier, Calif., stole a new lawn while neighbors watched, thinking the men were working for the owner. And the entire front porch was stolen from a house in Norfolk, Va. .t In Auburn, N.Y.,' an ambitious thief stole a 3,509-pound steamroller. Valued at- more than $3,000, the vehicle has a top speed of wily five miles per hour. A ★ * Blackouts seem all the rage, for in Ithaca, N.Y., seven 27-foot-long light poles were stolen and an entire section of an English - Scottish railroad was blacked out for a distance of seven miles when thieves stole all the signal and telephone cable. STEAL ANYTHING I Some thieves will steal any-[thing. An Ovid, N.Y., farmer had 10 bags of beans weighing many hundreds of pounds stolen and in Beirut, Lebanon, someone stole one-half of the city’s (telephone booths. They had only itwo. A tree was stolen in Ballston Spa., N.Y., and was found by police standing in a tub of water in the thief’s home. And three live oak trees were stolen from a home in Atlanta. Some robbers may have been planning a party in Syracuse, N.Y., for they took 40 cartons of cigarettes, three gallons of ice cream, 12 cans of instant coffee, 10 cartons of soft drinks, 30 packages of pastry and a transistor radio. ★, * * Police are looking for a well-fed burglar in St. Joseph, Mo. He made off with 500 pounds of roll sausage, 120 pounds of meat patties, 72 pounds of bacon, 50 pounds of ribs, 100 pounds of lard and 60 pounds of chili. Enough for quite a barbecue. LACK DELICATE TOUCH Some robbers just don’t seem to have that delicate touch. In San Pablo, Calif., one set off a burglar alarm, another fell off the store roof and another got stuck in a ventilator shaft. And, in Waycross, Ga., police answered cries for help and found a housebreaker stuck fas the chimney. Some just don’t check before lifting. In Trenton, N.J., a thief stole $1 million worth of securities, all of them either cancelled checks or normegotiable. ★ * ★ Thefts continue to climb. A police chief estimates that a million automobiles will be stolen in 1970 if the present rate continues. EVERY 32 MINUTES The FBI reports that a burglary is committed once every 32 minutes, and New York City police last year received a total of 45,693 burglary reports. Police came in for some-hard raps in the larceny field. In Nagpur, India, a police payroll of $1,676 was stolen from the police station. In Wichita, Kan., a department store security officer, after a hard day watching for shoplifters, discovered that all the had been siphoned froiR his car’s tank. The thieves also took the gas cap. * * ★ Another thief in Klamath Falls, Ore., blamed police for leaving keys in the paddy wagon. “I took it because you left the keys in it,’’ he told police when caught. i SUSPECT HASKEYS And speaking of keys, po-l lice were really startled when they found a suspect with keys to the front door of the new city hall and police station in Ashtabula, Ohio. The building was so new that even the police didn’t have keys. And In Austin, Tex., burglars looted several coin-operated vending machines in the police station. Nothing is safe. In New Orleans, the wig snatch racket is really booming. One thief carried off hair pieces valued at $22,609. A Kansas City, Mo., thief snatched the wig off a ' woman’s head while she was dining in a restaurant. WWW Robbers use all kinds of tools. In Syracuse they used a cannon to blast a hole in a vault. An- Wjj M longed to a mynah bird, pet *u“ ‘ || of the store owner. more than it had when he left his own money oq the counter in Twickenham, England. SWINGING BATS Six masked bandits swinging iseball bats, with only armed with a gun, held up a bank in S o u t h Woodford, England. The only thing that a Schenectady, N.Y., burglar took after breaking into a home was a bath. Wishing You the Peace That Christ Can Provide at Christmas and Ail the Year "For God so lovwd tho World that Ha gava HI* only bagotten 5on. that whosoavar beliov-ath In Him should not parish, but hava avar-lasting Ufa." Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE _ NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION 185 Elisabeth Loke Rood FC 4-8284 camar Murphy St., < Blacfct east at Nana* Ma* A home’s burglar alarm was stolen in Los Angeles. A London store lost a bunch of phonograph records. All the recordings were the same selection: ’Thou Shalt Not Steal.” Sometimes it doesn’t pay to be too observant. A supermarket manager, after phoning the police to report a forged check, re-i turned to find his waiting cus-j tomer long since departed with the cash register’s contents of $835. The check was for $48.27. Some victims defend themselves. Accosted on a London street by two thugs, the intended victim grabbed the lid off a garbage can and hurled it at the pair. They fled. GRANDMA NAILS HIM A 70-year-old California woman saw a thief stealing hubcaps from her grandson’s car. She Some prisoners are honest. Ini took after him, caught him after La Spezia, Italy, ah inmate a chase of several blocks, made found a valuable diamond and la citizen’s arrest, and then held turned it over to the warden. |him until the police arrived. He got a reward. HOSPITALIZED Another robber broke into a hospital in Baton Rouge, La., jumped from a window when discovered and was admitted to the hospital as a patient. “What d’ya want?” g voiee shouted as two burglars broke into a store in Atlanta. They left in a hurry. The voice be- Two women slammed the lid on a man’s crime career in Dallas. Spotting a man kneeling inside their car trunk, they closed the lid and drove the man to police headquarters. ★ i Thieves also have complaints, j A note left in a La Porte, Ipd.,1 home read: ‘‘You people surei are poor; a good burglar can’t make an honest living.” You’ll See The Blue Ribbon Announcement Monday, December 27th Announcing A Consulting Service for Industrial and Commercial Building Projects why not lot 28 years construction 'experience "package" your building problems and insure that the building you want it delivered at a price you can afford? ARCHITECTURE AND ENGINEERING SELECTION SITE SELECTION COST ANALYSIS PROJECT CONSTRUCTION From $5,000 to $5,000,000 we offer a complete construction service — and you are spared the headaches! BUILDING CONSULTANTS DIVISION Schurror Censtrucfion Company 2431 Pontiac Road Pontiac, Michigan 48057 i: 335-9461 If RINGING OUT YULETIDE WISHES It’s a real pleasure to wish all our friends the Merriest Christmas ever! SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC USE PONTAC PRESS WANT ADS. BUY, SELL, TRADE. '65 Loot List Shows Variety Ml-I TM '‘Handel’s Messiah”—Per-IU II I ITI formed by the Independence Messiah Choir of the Church Of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Franklyn S. Weddle, Director. 11 10 DM Christmas Eve service proad-| |“|/_ | lYI cast direct from St. John Lutheran Church of Rochester. I2 Mint to conclusion—special broadcast direct from St. Vincent De Paul Church of Pontiac. Season's Greetings from daily weather-bul-in the United s originated by Hitchcock during an 1870-72 winter Mt Wnahinfftflfl. Hitchcock THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 THIRTEEN BleadiVup yHay the hope, the peace and the lov6 that is Christmas remain with you and your dear ones forever and ever. EVANS Sales & Service 6507 DIXIE HWY. 625-1711 It Will Be Hite Monday December 27th %r.. Announcement Of Qn Blue Ribbon Another War-Yule for Our Boys By HUGH A. MULUGAN SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — “Sleep In heavenly peace, aleeeep In heavenly peace.’* i Tonight under the timeless stars, In hundreds of sandbag chapels under the rubber trees, in lonely special forces camps deep in Viet Gong country, in coutless jungle clearings around the makeshift altars on the hood of a jeep, the sweet silver of high-pitched Vietnamese voices will unite with sturdy, rough American baritones in the beauty of. “Silent Night.” A A A But for the American fighting man away from home in time of war, Christmas has seldom been a silent night or a holy night. For the soldiers in his foxhole ; peering across a darkened perimeter and listening for the rat- j tie of sniper fire, “peace on ] earth’’ is a pleasant fantasy I printed on a pretty postcard ' from home. LAST CHRISTMAS At 6 p.m. last Christmas Eve, as last-minute shoppers hurried along Saigon’s gaily decorated streets, a thunderous explosion shattered windows within a five-block radius. Two hundred pounds of plastic, planted in a Jeep by Viet Cong terrorists, rocked the seven-story Brink officers’ quarters, an American billet for majors and colonels located within a block of the main shopping section. Two persons were killed and 107 wounded, 65 of them Americans. A * A Hie same silent stars that looked down on the streets ofj Bethlehem looked down streets littered with dozens of American servicemen and dozens ' more Vietnamese women and children, maimed and bleeding amid a rubble of shattered glass and twisted tinsel. The peace of Christmas had vanished in a bursting bomb. Extremists Behead Six in Peru Family ANDAMARCA, Peru (AP) -A farm couple and four children were beheaded by extremists for reputing Communist activity to authorities, police said today. AAA Fourteen extremists trapped the family in its home 40 miles north of Andamarca in the Peruvian Andes, a police official reported- A A A Five meii labeled Communists by police have been arrested in connection with the slayings. Michigan Credit Counsellors 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Phone FE 8-0456 Our 11th Year ... of service to the Indebted families of the Pontiac area. Member of American Association Credit Counsellors—Michigan Association of Credit Councellors. John M. Hanson, Director... locally Owned and Operated I Killed in 2-Car Crash WARREN (AP)—James R. Budde, 36, of Warren was killed Thursday in a two-car auto collision in Warren. Deep In Viet Jungle, Thoughts Are Far Away Hius was it ever for the fighting man at Christmastide. Down through the years in America’s wars, the same silent stars have echoed to the mournful whine of artillery in a snow-heavy sky, the tramp of marching feet along lonely roads, the dying notes of a distant bugle echoing across scenes of similar despite the early Southern victories and despite what others are saying, the war will be a long one and his heart goes out to her at Christmas. rescue along the icy roads. Soon the Battle of the Bulge will goj down .in history as a memorial to American doggedness, a| memorial built on the frozen! bodies of 8,600 GIs lying in the) Before the Christinas of 1863 Ardennes mow. comes around, Stonewall Jack- NOW Is the Time to Use Yoir CHRISTMAS CASH 1965 Close-Outs Special Savings an All STEREOS RANGES TVi DISH WASHERS REFRIGERATORS HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron St. Op«n Eves, 'til 9 FE 4-2525 Christmas night, 1776. Soft in the bitter cold night, oars muffled, lamps oqt, the boats move out from McKonk-ey’s Ferry into the ice-choked Delaware River. A snow-laden northwest wind, howling down from Bowman’s Hill, molds the great tunic around the shoulders of Gen. George Washington, still looking for his first major victory after taking over the battered Continental Army. “The game is almost up,” he had written his. half-brother, Lawrence, .a few days before. This, the surprise attack on the ; Hessian garrison at Trenton, [N.J., is to be his final thrust, ON JERSEY SHORE I By 3 a.m., the last boat has made it to the New Jersey side |of the river. By 8 a.m., Lt. James Monroe, later to become [the fifth president of the new [United States, is taking the lead eompaity Virginia Regiment down King Street. Victory without a (hot being fired. Christmas Day. 1861. Abraham Lincoln, drawn and gaunt, paces the uncarpeted corridor outside the Green Room, where a congressional committee on the conduct of the war is meeting to decide whether his wife, the tormented Mary Todd Lincoln, is a security risk. AAA A Kentuckian, she has a brother and three half-brothers in gray. A favorite sister is married to a Confederate brigadier general. Upstairs In a tiny bedroom, Willie Lincoln, 10, the grave, scholarly child too much loved by his parents, lies dying of a fever. In less than two months, he will be dead in Qie Green Ropm, and Mrs. Lincoln will nem: enter it again. The snow falling outside ail but Mots out the tents of the Army of the Potomac, which has yet to take on die enemy after the disaster at Bull Run. Its commander, George B. McClellan, sticks to his tent, stricken with typhoid fever. Seventy miles West, in the Shenandoah Valley, Gen. Thomas Jonathan Jackson is writing a letter to his wife at a small I table in an upstairs bedroom of |a farmhouse in Winchester, Va. The general, whose 1st Virginia Brigade stood like a stone wall at Manassas, tells her that, son will be in another tiny bedroom, at Chandler House, Guinea Station, uttering his last words: 'Let us cross over the river and rest under the shade of the trees.”* Christmas Day, 1917. Four battalions of the 1st Infantry Division, predecessors of the same Big Red 1 now in Viet Nam, are a thin line along the frozen Marine-Rhine Canal between Luneville and Nancy. HOLIDAY DINNER Late in the day, after a Christmas dinner of bully beef and stale bread, two .companies tramp down the snowy road to rig up a Christmas tree in the little town of Gondrecourt and distribute candy to sad-eyed French orphans. Coming home in the gathering dusk, German artillery hisses out of a dun-colored sky and the American Doughboy contributes casualties to the war to end all wars. The mayor of Gondrecourt sends his regrets and the heartfelt thanks of the nuns at the orphanage. Christmas Day, 1950. i A Navy recon plane from thei carrier Princeton looks ,down on: the long line of ships inching out into the Sea of Japan, nose to tail like a long line of elephants, With the star of Christmas over our land, we |oin in the full spirit of the holiday to wish you and yours every joy of the festive season, and many more to come. 3 SISTERS MARKET from the smoldering port city of Hungnam. The railroad tracks are twisted and the cars scattered, like the toys , of a tired child at Christmas, and a black column of smoke rises from what had been the gas works. “Merry Christmas,” the pilot messages the final American destroyer going in for the parting shots against the abandoned city. FINEST PRESENT And half a world away, President Harry S.-Truman acknowledges the “finest Christmas present I ever received.” , The U.S. 7th Fleet, now deployed off Viet Nam in the South China Sea, had pulled off one of the great rescue missions in the history of war, evacuating 105,-000 United, Nations troops and 91,000 Korean refugees from the jaws of the advancing Red Chinese. Christmas Day, 1944. | This was the famous Christ- For the first time in a week, j mas that Gen. Douglas MacAr-the skies clear °ver the small'thur had hoped the Americans snow-blanketed village of Bas-jin Korea might be home for. togne, Belgium, and the Luftwaffe drops some lethal Christmas presents on the be-‘ paratroopers of the 101st Airborne Division. Forefathers of the same “Screaming Eagles” now in the jungles of Viet Nam, the 10,000 “Battered Bastards of Bastogne” have held against three German divisions, numbering 45,000 troops and equipped with mighty Tiger tanks. Their stubborn defense is frustrating Field Marshal Karl Gerd von Rundstadt’s brilliant plan to hurl 30 divisions through the Ardennes Forest in a last-ditch effort to cross the Meuse River and turn north in They had reached the northern border of North Korea on Nov. 21, and the war seemed over. But on the day after Thanksgiving, with blaring bugles, clanging cymbals, -shrieking whistles, 200,000 Red Chinese “volunteers” came pouring in at night with convoy lights on despite the constant ah' war. The Chinese onslaught quickly recaptured the North Korean capital of Pyongyang. LAYOUT IN TRAP , Falling back from the Koto Ri Plateau, the 1st Marine Division fought out of a trap in the Chosin Reservoir in weather as prim strike at Antwerp. Already “ “y Ih. Arotrkan lirei h.v« been, f***, chosin, . duet of blue «2*fltaB** the blood of strayed, two are in full flight, I, ^ but Bastogne refuses to surren- a a A def. , FAMOUS REPLY BOYS CLUB of Waterford Township hiMmas n SOLD AT 3 WATERFORD TOWNSHIP" RICHARDSON DAIRY STORES 1851 Highland fid. Waterford Twp. Mil Plaza 4142 Dixie Hwy., Drayton At SMkiWjfM ‘Nuts,” Brig Gen. Anthony McAuliffe has said to the German offer of surrender three days before, and now .out of a clear Christmas sky . enemy planes are pouring down the payment for his impertinence. But already Gen. George Patton’s tanks are clanking to the But thanks to fierce Marine fighting on the long retreat down the bitter road and the effective Mocking by the 1st Cavalry Division, the Chinese were unable to move in for the kill. And so the world turns over in its time, and the stars look down on another war and another Christinas — Christmas in Viet Nam, 1965. BUY, SELL, TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS ' We wish feu the happiest of holidays, 'with ell the joys end delights of the season. Beckers SHOES The Pontiac Mall 5800 Dryden Road Drydon, Michigan HOLIDAY GREETINGS FROM THE STAFF OF SHELL 'FLOOR COVERING And our sincere wishes for a New Year that's filled with peace, good health, and prosperity. A hearty 'thank you', too, to all our valued customers for making this past year such a good one. We hope you'll visit us often in 1966. Shell FLOOR COVERING 3330 DIXIE HWY. • Pt-* 0R3-1209 FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1005 Gl'sWidow Plans for Yule Trying to Carry Out Husband's Wishes Controls Mighty Colorado River btoayer Dam Opened New Vistas in U S. By JOHN LENGEL tarnation says, the Colorado will LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) — In flood no more, a time when aerospace actiyl- * ties dominate, automation is a The problem of making the COLUMBUS Ga (AP) — It Prob,em, ®nd plastic clothes a Colorado respond to rein for the was the last ’letter., “If some- P08siWUty> Hoover Dam »eems first time was fantastic. The thing should happen,” he hadl1*® t*1"* stuff- Isolution, the dam, ranks as ooe written, “try to give the kids a! But the dam is one of man’s of the seven engineering won-good life, a good education. And greater achievements and this|ders of America, according to try not to be sad ” I year marks its 30th anniversary1 the American Society oJ/Civil Spec. 5 Carl Thomas Baal, • <* "J*J® *** raJ"' Enginee"‘ native of Lebanon, Pa., wrote Pf*ng^ Colorado River, maker Vegas. Boulder City was huflt near the dam to house them. A, railroad and highway were built as were two concrete-making plants, a gravel-screening plant, an aerial tramway between the canyon walls, and power lines strung from San Bernardino, Calif., 300 miles away. velt dedicated the dam in Mari of 1936, opening hew vistks fir an area sometimes called the American Sahara. Called Hoover Dam when construction was started in 1928, Roosevelt dedicated it In 1935 as “Boulder Dam” and that name i continued until April 1947 when ii/L __ _n „,nn ,i_tmiuiiuou uiiui fiyru mi wntrn hwTI two«, West dam In the ssrld «Mdimtfc „ Hoover Dsm. fyWi Our wish 1s V vl „ that you may know all tho joys of Christmas. GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING 3401 W. Huron St. Just W. of Eliz. Ik. Rd. 338-0484 We’re joining Sente’s reindeer ell our friends * and extending to them our warmest wishes for a very Merry Christinas KING TIRE CENTER- 31 W. / 'Call Montcalm 333-7068 Edward’s 6 N. SAGINAW ^ M| H ____ y highest dam In the world stoodi the letter to hk wife Sonia" test theGrand Canyon and lifeline BaaicaUy, the builders - nx 80 stores high, 680-feet thick at November from a battlefield in ^ the desert Southwest- giant Western cototruction com- the base, 46 at the crest, holding j- ■ VtanJam. towas Wiled in thS * * * parties - hadStitree mUes of back Lake Mead which could | And the dam wfute Army Lt fichtinc a few davs later ! Until Hoover Dam, the 1,400-idiversion tunnels through the cover all New York State with £• C. Jvea, a^t to look over the ugnung lew days .aie ^ ]ong rlver flowed thraghsteep, stidrock sides of BouW-'water one foot deep. by theWar Department in c«n>k rq.i sn atfmMivp seven states, sometimes barely, er Canyon, built one eartnen Hoover was the first of many_ ' lves at «“S part cf ark hairpH unman ie Irvins tni®®*1, times causing floods such dam to divert the waters intoigreat dams along the Colorado|®y0!in* n®|ion 8J*?radng8 jrrv n-TW husband’s wi8hes°las in 1905 when the river sunk titatunnels around the dam cite,land forerunner of higher dms|?lJexica".War and observed in Slants children to rich Imperial Valley & another dam to stop the !jn Switzerland, Rhodesia and Ws report^ have a nice Christmas of Southern California. / water from backing up, then India. I • * * * ™A silver tnsesbarkles in the' Now the dam's respr^oir, built Hoover itself. j The dam Itself was finished inj ,“The region Is, of course, al- television room. And outside Lake Mead, holds tvny year’s * * * two years — two years ahead of together valueless, near the front doorh gix-footr*ver Bow. Colorado^rat*r irri- Some uncommon logistics schedule — at a cost of $48 mil-j “Ours is the first, and will spruce glimmers with ^Christ- gates moat southwestern crops were involved. Some 5,0n01ion. {doubtless be the last, party of mas lights \ and its energy Ughts millions of:depression-era workers were! * * * I whites to visit this profitless L__ ...\ homes. And, the Bureau of Rec-|hired and brought through Las I President Franklin D. Roose-1 locality.” i NICE CHRISTMAS \l - I “My husband always wanted | us to have a nice Christmas,” Mrs. Baal said softly. “It ir most important that my children have a real nice Christmas. It wouldn’t be fair to lot them suffer because of my filings.” This Christmas Eve, the! mother and children planned a quiet trip to the post cemetery at nearby Ft. Benning where Baal was stationed. His company, 147th Ordnance, shipped out in August, shortly before the 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Division was sent to Viet Nam. Baal was one of about 100 Columbus soldiers killed in the war during ithe past three years. * * * “It’s pretty rough once in a while,” Mrs. Baal said. “But when you think you can’t go o you get the strength somehow. I believe in God and He will give me the strength I need. I believe He will. That’s what keeps me going.” She said the family would have turkey and the trimmings for dinner, then listen to Christ-1 mas records and sing carols. . | TO HANG STOCKINGS | “The children will hang up stocks — you know the excitement.” Patti, 8; Linda, 7, and Carolina, 6, all want dolls, book satchels and tea sets and assorted I little-girl gifts. Lucy, 14, wants a guitar. Tommy, 4, is hoping for a bicycle, cowboy outfit and, 'naturally, “a whole bunch of toys.” . * * . *' 1 The baby, Steven, 16 months, has caught the excitement. He builds houses with tree ornaments and joyously smashes them in the process. Mrs. Baal said she has made many friends in Columbus, jof the children were born here land Baal planned to retire in this west Georgia city which is half-surrounded by sprawling Ft. Benning, the Army’s infantry training center. ! Baal had 19% years in the |Army. {MANY MEMORIES I “There are so many memories here,” Sonja Baal said. I “We’U stay here. It’s home to me." Slowly the children beginning to understand that their father will not be coming home. Lucy spoke of her feeling in simple, poignant words. "It feels kinda lonely without ihim around.” BLOOMFIELD M1RA0LE MILE Has Everything for Christinas! KMC THE UTTU ONES EM REE MET EMM SANT* Outstanding Selections la Every Store! THOUSANDS OF ~ GIFT ITEMS, HOME DECORATIONS, PARTY 1 NEEDS, HOLIDAY FASHIONS — EVERYTHING YOU AND THOSE ! ON YOUR GIFT LIST WANT FOR CHRISTMAS WILL BE FOUND NOW AT Bloosifield Miracle Mile _ Shopping Center TELEGRAPH ot SQUARE LAKE RD. OPEN EVENINGS I Want a home! to Ht your needs and pocketbook? j Let’s Discuss Your Needs Vou «ouW aave • lot of time, effort and money. Ufa mMS| by allowinrus to apply our wide experience end 8* V 1ISMD technical skill to eld your selection of a home. SVjJ *ow you several that will fit your needs. Wit 11 also mvide you with sound, reliable ad-vke regarding the fair price to nay and the ben location to wit your needs. We'll assist you In aacuring a suitable financing program from a leading lending agent. Many families have dfs- , cohered, as you will, thee the sensible approach eajioaie^ownerahip j, m call at for your real FRISHMJR & STRIBLE 3881 Highland Road (M-59) Phone 338*4025 FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES SHOP SFA1YAN 9:30 A.M. TO 10 P.M. DULY... SUNDAY II MOON Y0 1* P.M. Corner nf Dixie Highway aid Telegraph Dei ACRES OF FREE PARKING PONTIAC PECCA j BWB’| togmm iouigmjj LADIES' Bottor A Hug* Sint 8 to 1 MERCUR* • Mohair ilend. o 1 00% Orion • Coat A Pollovor • Sint $>484. • BOMBERS • TANKERS • CLICKERS • SURCOATS TOYS!!! 1 wmwm TREMENDOUS SAVINGS! LADIES' FASHION Solid and Plaid WOOL SLACKS • Sid* Zipp*rt J 90 • Sint 10 to 18 | 4* o In Many Colors I • GIRLS' Hand Knit BULKY SWEATERS A00 0 Solid and Multi-Colors ' o Sint 3 to 14 ACRES OF FREE PARKING N-Mine Issue Faces Erhard Report Preparations Made Along Border BONN, Germany (AP) — Chancellor Ludwig Erhard’s government is trying to figure out how to get Germans used to' the idea that it might permit nuclehr mines to be exploded under theta* own sail if the So* viets tried a massive assault. The greatest part of the Iron Curtain runs along West Germany’s eastern border. Erhard's government seeks to defend the country as close to that border as possible. ★ * ★ Well-informed sources say preparations have been made to lay nuclear mines near it. The mines have not been planted. That would only be done if the danger of war were acute. One reason for this is that U.S. law requires nuclear explosives be kept in the hands of U.S. troops. They have to be stocked in advance depots until there is a high-level alert. PREPAREDCHAMBERS Apparently die mines could be quickly placed in prepared chambers, deep enough to minimize the dangers of radiation. If they had to be exploded, efforts would be made to get the local population out. It would not do for the U.S. troops to bury the mines and then go away with the secret of how to set them off. An informed source says the mines are small enough for a man to carry. ★ ★ ★ None of this has been wideh explained in West Germany. J year ago the first reports* of “nuclear mine belts” caused indignation in the border areas. Many people got the idea that the mines were already in the ground. During the fall election campaign a member of the Socialist opposition in Parliament claimed to have seen demolition chambers. A i government spokesman told a news conference that the member had made the statement “against his own better knowledge.” INCREASE N-ARMS Last week, Robert S. McNamara, U.S. secretary of defense, said the United States was increasing by 20 per cent its 5,000 nuclear weapons in Western Europe. This did not specify whether some of the increase would be in the form of improved mines. Dep Spiegel, a popular news weekjy, carried a picture of what it called a demolition hole, with the caption: “ATS 10 million Germans in danger?” * ft . * There was no comment on this from official sources. Restaurant Is Sued for Burning a Duck LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - It was a regular birthday party until the roast duck flared. The result: four court suits, asking damages totaling $243,500. p It h It happened last April, but the suits were not filed until this week. The defendant is Tangier, Inc., operator of the Louisville restaurant where the party was being held. The plaintiffs claim they are due the damages for injuries received when a brandy-treated roast duck fired during the party. ' A, O’BRIEN HEATING 371 VoqHimIs FE 2-2919 m24 Hew Doty THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 FITT^KN FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES SNIP SPARTAN 9:30 AJL T9 IIPJL DAILY... SUNDAY 12 NOON TS10 PJL Corner of Ban Highway A Telegraph Read - IN PINTIAC PRESSES Selection of Styl*, a .. 30 and 1414 to 22H. *3-$4-*5 UDIES- Quilted PAJAMAS • Rayon Satin and AAfl Acatata Tricot /»• • Sisee 34 to 40 ■ mm LADIES' Acetate Tricot ISi ENSEMBLES • Laca Trim* 177 • Sins S-M-L LADIES' Cotton Flannol GOWNS- P A J AAAAS a Print, and Solid* 4 flA • Gowns, S-M-L-XL I ¥W • Pajama., 32 to 40 I GIRLS' 2 and 3 Pc. SLACK SETS • Cotton or Knit Top. e Matching Top. • Sixe. 2 to 14 GIRLS' Holiday DRESSES MEN'S JACKETS In Vinyl., Cotton Corduroy, Cotton., PROM I Vinyl Su*d«. ... I LADIES' S-T-R-E-T-C-H SLACKS a Cotton Denims o Wool* and Lycra Spandex a Sins 8 to 18- LADIES' Cardigan and Pullovar SWEATERS GIRLS' Butter JUMPERS MEN'S Cotton CORDUROY SLACKS • Largo Salaction ^6 fill SIZES yWli 28 to 40 mm MEN'S SWEATERS BOYS' JACKETS HOODED PARKAS BOMBERS a CLICKERS InVinyl^Cattoos, FR0M Q33 Cotton Corduroy . LADIES' Itqlian Wool Blond WOOL SKIRTS • A-Lino., Shaaths • Regular and Tab Waietlinat 0 Basic, and Bulldot o Crow and V-Noclu a Sixas 34 to 40 a Cotton Corduroy o Wool and Cotton 0 Sixo. 3 to 14 WINTER RECORD CLEARANCE! 133 TOP ALBUMS! 133 TOP STARS! CAPITOL • BEATLES '65 • SINATRA SINGS • DINAH '62 ‘ • BASIE AT BIRDLAND • BASIE/BENNETT • BIO BAD JOHN • BOYS, BOYS, BCHYS t BORN TO WANDER • DARIN AT THE COPA • CLEOPATRA • RAY CHARLES STORY • LESLEY GORE • THE PLATTERS • BILLY ECKSTEIN • THE DRIFTERS • PAUL ANKA • THE VENTURES • NAT KING COLE • BUCK OWENS • AL HIRT • BILLY VAUGHN • LAWRENCE WELK HI-FI and STEREO LP ALBUMS NATIONALLY ADVERTISED AT 3.79.4.79 & 5.79 45 RPMA SINGLES DRIFTERS COASTERS THE THE REEVES JIM SNOW HANK ROGER MILLER BEATLES THE SUPREMES THE LESLEY GORE EACH MORE! MANY MANY i Janet Odell 'oNflM: SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC EKKSS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER } Personals It will br a family day on Christmas at Judge and Mrs. Cecil McCalhim’s home on Cherokee Road. Coming for dinner will be the Edward M. Greens of Taylor with Heather, Erin and Kevin. Mrs. William McCallum of Birmingham will be on hand along with Mrs. Morris J. Green of Lansing. The McCallums’ son, C. Leland McCallum and his wife and children, Brian, Bruce, Lori and Craig will round out the family picture. ★ ★ * Dr. and Mrs. Cyrenus G. Darling Jr. of Bloomfield Hills will have with them for Christmas their son David who lives in San Francisco. ____ They will alwr welcome a grandson, Timothy James born Dec. 16 to Mr. and Mrs. Cyrenus G. Darling III (Carolyn Howarth) of Beverly'Hills, who dre also parents of four-year-old Christopher. * * * The Richard M. Pattersons and son Tom of Birmingham will be hosts at family dinner on Christmas Day to the Stuart Austins, Mrs. Harry Austin, the John Austins of- Lake Orion, and the Richard A. Pattersons of Detroit, MANY GUESTS Dinner guests of the Robert J. Altons of West Iroquois Road and son Rodney (home from Ferris State College), will be the H. G. Nicholie and Donald Nicholie families, Mr. and Mrs. William Rogers and the R. S. Castells, all of Pontiac; also the Roger Smiths of Hartford, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Fitzgerald, of Lake Crescent Drive, ♦ and children Janet and Richard, .. will be hosts Christmas Day to his parents, the Harold A. Fitzgeralds. ★ e ‘a- Dr. and Mrs. Paul L. Connolly and children, Elizabeth -, and James, and Mrs. Richard Fitzgerald’s parents Mr. and Mrs. George Strickling of Cleveland, Ohio, will also gather around the festive board. * * * Dr. Dorothea Wyatt of Flint, will be coining for the Christmas weekend to be the house guest of the Edmund Princes of Lake Angelus. Madeleine Doeren Jeanne Nelson Margaret Brown Abby Sends Her Greetings .‘Merry Christmas, Men’ Guests Come Newlyweds From Afar in Chicago for Yuletide After Rite Plan Festivities Dr. and Mrs. Clifford T. Ekelund of Ottawa Drive* 1 are looking forward to entertaining their family Christmas Day. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce H. Smith and children David, Michael and Grregory, will arrive early from Birmingham and daughter Mary Sue will be here from Detroit.. Other guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Newton Skill-man Jr. and children, Christopher, Amy, Tony, Stephan and Timmy of Lake Angelus. Coming from Garden City will be a niece and family, Mr. and Mrs. William Hoeft with children, William Jr., DeeDee and a new baby. ★ ★ ★ * ,, The Collis Scotts of Cherokee Road are looking forward to the arrival of their daughter and son-in-law,’the William Clarks of Port Huron for the Christmas weekend. . Seated around the holiday table will also be the A. W. Dickinsons of Lake Angelus, the Osborn A. Campbells of -Birmingham, the William G. Dickinsons and Mrs. Talbot Bowers of Dayton, Ohio. On Christmas morning the Scotts and the Clarks will'go to the Arthur H. Scotts II on Menominee Road to be with Shelley (age 1V4) when she opens her presents. The other set of proud grandparents, the William W. Donaldsons, will also be there. ★ Christmas festivities for the Donald Murphys of Union Lake begin early. First comes breakfast with guests, Mrs. Howard W. Casey, Mrs. Daniel Murphy Sf. and the Walter-Harrods. Others will include the Daniel T. Murphys with children Jerry, Gwen, Kevin and Lori; and the Thomas Murphys of Royal Oak and the Gene R. Cudenys of Lansing with Mark, and David. WILL SPEND DAY Except for die Harrods, the whole group will stay through the day and join in a buffet slipper later along with their host and hostess and their children, Sharon, Michael, Timothy, Patricia and Barbara. ★ ★ Sr Family dinner and the tree will be enjoyed Christmas Eve in the West Walton Boulevard home of Circuit Judge and Mrs. Clark J. Adams. Their guests will include Mrs. Adams’ mother Mrs/ M. M. Clark, Highland Park; the couple’s son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Vernon C. Burris, with children Roger and Janet; and Judge Adams’ brother and sister-in-law, Probate Judge and Mrs. Donald E. Adams with son David. ★ * * Friends of the family, Mr. and Mrs. Everett K. Garrison, also will be present. ♦ ★ * Harcourt P a 11 e r so n Jr. is home for Christmas vacation froni Culver Military Academy in Indiana with his parents, the senior Pattersons of Hammond Lake. arrive from Indianapolis, Ind. as houseguests. ★ * ★. Some 25 members of the H. Vere Hodges family will attend the candlelight Christmas Eve service at Gface Lutheran Church. ★ ★ * After church Mr. and Mrs. Hodges will be hosts to the group at their home on Ottawa Drive. Among those present will be the couple’s son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brown. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Lee Kremer, Dwight Street will spend Christmas Eve with their son’s family, the James Aldriches and Lee and Jimmy of Mohawk Road. Present also will be the Kremers’ daughter and son-in-law, the Theodore Co-hasseys of Rochester with John and David. The family Christmas dinner will be at the Cohassey home. Another guest will .be Mrs. Earl Phillips. ★ * ★ Among the countless area families entertaining on Christmas Eve will be Mr. and Mrs. George Scholtz of Illinois Avanue. ★ * ★ Their guests will include: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wells and family, Chicago; the Robert Zimmennans and family, Bloomfield Township; Mr. and Mrs. Mac Fick, Lapeer; and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wells, Livonia. A Christmas Day dinner at the Pattersons’ will include k|rs. Patterson’s mother, Mrs. E. L. Page and her sister and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Wix-am of Grand Rapids. Party to Fete Couple Sunday at Local Club By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN Dear Readers: The Pacific Stars and Stripes, a semi-official daily newspaper, under authority of the Department of Defense, has a readership of some 200,000 servicemerj in the Far East, including Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Okinawa, the Philippines, Guam and Viet Nam. James H. |» Shaw, their as-| sistant feature I editor, asked I me to write a | special Christ-imas letter to I the “guys" who lyead my col-I umn in their ■'paper. I did. And I want to ABBY ef, Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to the A m e r i ca n armed and special forces across the seas! * ★ ★ We love you and want you back when the job you are doing for all of us is done. God bless you, kids. Sincerely yours, Abby CONFIDENTIAL TO “DICK IN DIXIE: A “pro" is one who can do a first-class job whether he feels like it or not. ' * * ★ Problems? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal, reply,, enclose a stamped, self - addressed envelope. * * * Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, in care of The Pontiac’ Press, for Abby’s < booklet, “How To Write Letters -For All Occasions." Bloomfield Hills Families Hosting Holiday Visitors share it with all my readers, since I knqw I reflect your senti- * ments as well as my own’. Here. IliSL_____________________________ * * * Dear Guys : How does one say “Seasons Greetings” to men in action where seasons are scarcely noted and the surroundings are nothing like home. Hie Yuletide in your America^ homeland won’t be quite, the same without yob. And I know that millions of Americans would like to send you personal greetings with gratitude were it possible. * *. * I have no official right to speak for anyone else to convey a holiday message of love and kisses, and of a deeply-felt prayer for your success and safety. ★ a*'- But I can feel the pulse of your country, boys, and I say it is steady and strong and in rhythm with, your efforts. So, strange as it may sound, in a place where merriness it a naunory and happiness a strang- By SIGNE KARLSTROM Around the Christmas table at ^Jh£.-hnme-,of, Mr**M. M> Bun— gess them w*h be 22. Her daughter and son-in-law Dr. and Mrs. T. S. Torgerson and their 3 children; Dr. Torgerson’s mother Mrs. Thom Torgerson and the Albert J. Mackseys and their son with family. * • ★ From Charlottesville, Va., will come Mrs. John S. Kingdon and Mr. Kingdon and from Philadelphia, Mrs. Kingdon’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stewart. The Richard Jamison Williams will be surrounded by their entire family including the senior Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Williams’ parents, Mr. and lira. K. W. Culpan. After Christmas Day they will head for their home on Torch Lake' and ski at Otsego Ski Club. 'v* - * * Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Pew will have with them their two sons and families ’ Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Pew with sons Scott apd Stephen and Mr. and Mts. Ore At the Fred Sanders’ home will be daughter and son-in-law, Mrs. and Mrs. William Chick-ering and their children; Mrs. Sanders’ sister Mrs. H. H. Hartman. ★ * * As in former years, Jane Runyon, executive secretary of the Bradford College Alumnae Will qpme. On December 27 Dorothy Bell, president of Bradford Jr. College, will visit for a few days. * * : Mrs. Don Dasher of Colonial Court will be with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr and: Mrs. Jack Waters, and their sons, Don and Jack on Beacon Hill. • Mrs. L. A- Denman of Cap-perhill, Tenn. arrived Wednesday to spend the holidays with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John L. Denman. Sons Jim and Troy will be home from Michigan State University for the holidays. Patricia Hopkins of Dighton, Mass., is, a hoyseguest at the Cherokee Road home of the Addison Oakleys; she came from Albion College with Jim Oakley. Jan* Jim’s sister, is on vacation from Michigan State University. ★ ★ *’ • Dr. 'and Mrs. Roy Schaeffer of Lorain, Ohio, are joining the Oakleys for Christmas, bringing their children, John, Bill, Tane and Narda. ★ ★ . The Harry J. Woodmans of South Telegraph Road have daughter Stephanie home for the holidays from Central Michigan University. * : Mrs. Earl Montgomery of Northville will be' joining the Woodmans for Christmas day dinner in their new apartment. •-■it - Home for“ffi^ho®ays Tfom " Bennett College, Millbrook, N. Y. is Susan Fitzgerald, daughter of the John W. Fitzr geralds of Bloomfield Hills. "]> Susan and sister Julie will enjoy Christmas dinner at home with their parents. The Arthur Seldens of - Sylvan Lake Will greet week-end guests, the David Seldens of Highland Park, 111., on Christmas morning. Son Join will be traveling with his parents. % i1 ' it it, The Edward Maiers of Illinois Avenue are expecting two of their daughters, and families on Christinas day for. a buffet. Those coming include the Michael J. Ashleys with children, Mike, Eddy, Sally, Ann and Amy and the William Bonners. The day after Christmas will be bringing the other Maief daughter, Mrs. Henry S. Willard with her husband and children, Henry, Nancy and Simon of Wellstoh' Ohio. The newlywed Richard Lee Serwins (Harlynn Mae. Izner,) will honeymoon briefly in Chicago before resuming senior studies at the University of Michigan and the U. of M. Medical School, respectively. A * - * A reception in the Grand Ballroom of the Hotel Sheraton-Cad-illac in Detroit followed the candlelight ceremony performed by Rabbi Leon Fram Wednesday i hi the-Crystal Ballroom. ★ * ★ Parents of the couple are Dr. and Mrs. Sanford M. Izner of Detroit and the Harry P. Serwins of Oak Park, formerly of Pontiac. • ' ■ * * ■ » ' • ' . The bride’s sleeveless Empire gown and chapel train of gardenia 6>lk satin was designed with overdress and front panel of rose point lace. SILK CAP . A crownless cap of silk held her lace-appliqued 'shoulder length veil. Her bouquet was white gardenias. * * * Lauren Izner attended her sister as honor maid,'along with ' bridesmaids, Sarajane Serwin, Maryann Dunitz, Victoria Las-ser and Mrs. Bruce Serwin. ♦ * #•" With Bruce Serwin, his brother’s best man; were the ushers, Donald S. Beser, Mi • chael Nosanchuk, David J. Olen Michael D. Surowitz and Barry N. Tilds. Btadley Serwin carried the rings. Mayor and Mrs. William H. Taylor Jr. of Ottawa Drive and two of their daughters, Janet (home from Western Michigan University) and Laurie, will be hosting Christmas Day dinner for several) guests. * '* # Expected are the N. P. War-reners, Mrs. William H, Taylor Sr., and the Robert Storeys^ ' With Lori, Chris and Joan. - * ★ * Then there will be the Joe Carters with Lynn and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Carter Jr. and Mrs. Frank Shorey of Royal Oak. *. * . *'• Coming from Berkley will be the Paul Jollys with son David; Alvin Warrener will also be present. On.Sunday the Gerald War-reners with their son Gerry will A party at Orchard Lake Country Club, Sunday, will honor the newlywed John. L. McDonalds of Los Angeles, Calif. She is the former Katherine Adams Jerome, daughter of the Arnold K. Jeromes of West Iroquois Road. He is the son of Mrs. A. B. McDonald of Bryn Mawr, Pa. and the late Mr. McDonald. * * ★ The couple arrived here recently following their nuptials in St. Jerome’s Cathedral, Los Angeles. The honeymooners will spend Christmas with her parents along with Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Jerome Jr. who are here from Indianapolis, Ind. Rounding out the family picture on the holiday will be the Jeromes’ other son, Tim. Harlynn Mae Izner, daughter of . and Mrs. Sanford M. Izner of Detroit, and Richard Lee Serwin, son of the Harry P. Serwins of Oak Park, formerly of Pontiac, were married Wednesday in the Hotel Sheraton-Cadillac, Detroit. • SERWIN THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 seventeen JwkeSSk tmiSTMAS GREETINGS /iStork . A. JvStark—Jessie Stark • J Jack Ostrander—Joyce Roberts Pharmacy and GladysMcVean—AlecMcVean Medical Supply TMmaGood m Greetings From all of'us to all of you, we send our greetings and best wishes for a merry, old-fashioned holiday season. MILLER FURNITURE 144 Oakland Ave., Pontiac Personals Dr. and Mrs. John Prid-more will again be entertaining at Christmas day dinner. Those coming for the festivities include their parents, the J. B. Applewhites of Pontiac and the George Pridmores of Femdale. ★ * * Also on hand to celebrate will be the Howard J. Pridmores with Peter and Susan and Mrs. Louis Rouse of Ann Arbor. Helping their parents with hosting duties will be Colby, Amy, Alison and Libby. i • ★ e #. Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Michael of Malibu Drive have their daughter, Toni home for Christmas from Michigan State Univarsity. Mrs. Charles Merz of Battle Creek and the Dennis Qualk-inbushes of Chicago with son Scott will all be houseguests for the holidays. WWW \ Dr. and Mrs. Clare G. John-son of Lake Angelus will entertain his parents, the Elmer R. Johnsons on Christmas Eve. Helping to celebrate with their grandparents will be Jackie, Jari, Josie, Chris and Greg. ★ * The children’s other^set of grandparents, the F. A. Fawcetts will come for dinner on Christmas day, along with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Chandler and Phil, Tim, Jill and Steve. ★ * ★ Others coming are the Jack Fawcetts of Birmingham, the George Woodys, Mr. and Mrs. Reynold Lutz with Kerry, the Frank Sassos with Kim and the John Pilkintons of Detroit with Linsey. Solons From Michigan Enjoy Yule’s Vacation JNeumode PERFECT 1 NYLONS the I PERFECT GIFT 82 N. Saginaw St. To all of our customers, we want to say “THANK YOU** for your patronage — and for so ofteA recommending Carpet Center to your friends and neighbors. Also, we want to thank our employees who have worked so hard to help make Carpet Center one of the largest chains of carpet stores in America. The Management Of CARPET CENTER 3127 WEST HURON ROAD All 7 great stores will be CLOSED Christmas bay only Late July votes are j planned'by Karen Sue | Ledger, daughter of the \ Albert £. Ledgers of i Mariner Street and Arden K. Vanderburg, J son of the Harold Sr j Vanderburgs of Fern-dale. Her Reply's Same to All SAINT JAMES, Ark W -Arc welder Merle June Dehls has built enough curious art objects for her front yard to get tourists to stop and ask ^What is it?" She admits that’s a part of her aim, for she enjoys creating tmiws that arouse tourists’ curicSify. ' * V * Visitors arexoarticularly drawn to a large "bird" which could resemb»\an ostrich or a large fowl of\pre-historic days. It is made from automobile parts, 61 plow\ shovels as feathers and other odd scrap metal. Her stock answer to a visitor’s “What is it?” is “It’s, whatever you want it to be." School Colors Go to Feet (UPI) Left blue and right gold shoes — or other color combinations — glittering all over the campuses shortly. Forty coeds at Hofstra University came up with the idea of shoes in their school colors and the result was a rush to shoe stores in Garden City, N.Y. ★ * ★ The idea of wearing school’s < colors afoot came from Delta I Chi Delta sorority. Evelyn I Kalenscher, sorority president, | said this is one way to show j school pride. WASHINGTON SIDELIGHTS , Esther Van Wagoner Tnfty The older men in the Michigan congressional delegation j tend to have Christmas "back bom$," but the members with young children stay in Washington. ‘ * * * Topical is the family of Congressman and MrSfc^arles Chamberlain, of East'Lansing. It just isn’t practical/to driVe to Michigan when/ the twov younger children, Chris- \ tine and “Chip," did not get out of school untilThuraday. ★ * * The elder daughter, Ellen, ,. came home the same day j from Newton College, Mass. ★ e ★ Besides all the neighborhood children would be unhappy on Christmas Eve if the Congressman wasn’t here to make a snowy pile of pop-corn balls, a treat he started back in East Lansing a long time ago. ★ it *> Special guests this year are i old friends from East Lansing, Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Harper, who now live In Charlottes- I ville, Va. ★ * * Christmas "in Washington” | will be enjoyed also by two other families with school-age children: the William Broom-fields of Royal Oak and the j James Harveys of Saginaw. GOSKHING An exception is the Gerald Fords. Every year “no master w h a t" including b e i n g House Republican leader, the 'Grand Rapids Congressman ahd his wife take Mike, Jack, Steve and Susan on a skiing holiday\at Boyne Mount Lodge in BoyneXalls, Mich. * | A n o t h e r exception is the ’ John C. Mackies of Flint. ★ * Having missed ouK on an Easter vacation the Congressman and Mrs. Mackie ami their three daughters, Anne (at Vassar) and the younger Margaret and Lora, are going to combine Christmas with a Florida vacation in Marathon Shores. ■k it it Senator and Mrs. Philip Hart and their eight children will have a country Christmas down on the farm ... not in Michigan, but in nearby War-renton, Va. ■ ★ * ★ .-■■■ Congressman and Mrs. Billie S. Famum and son Ronald, 16, -will spend Christmas In Lansing, where the two f older sons, Eugene (Secretary of State Senate) and Norman live with their families. KINNEY'S SHOES For tho Whole Family PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE NOW OPEN EVENINGS Dp. E. D. Van Deuaen Foot Specially \ 5648 Highland Road \ OR 3*1335 1 lit You Don’t Know. CARPET Knew YoemCarpst Dealer, Call George C'TmXu'k A Q kl CfliilnflW St. 46 N. Saginaw St. TO ALL OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS > One of the Joys Of The Holiday Season Is the Opportunity It Affords Us at Arthur's • To Say "Thank You" and Extend BEST WISHES FOR THE COMING YEAR. Use Your Christmas Gift Checks to take advantage of our Annual \% Mwdk >2ofe Beginning‘Tuesday, Dec. 28th Bargains Galore Throughout Our Store. GEORGE TUSON Mgr. of Carpet Dept. ELLIOTT’S Furniture Co. 5390 - 5400 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1225 May the spiritual Light of Christmas brighten your day. Pontiac Business Institute 18 W. Lawrence. St. May the spirit of Christmas be with you and yours all through the New Year 1680 S. Telegraph Rd. - FE 2-8348 Just S. of Orchard Lake Rd., Park Free EIGHTEEN THE PONTIA9 PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1963 VBtA M. DANIELS W—" M. E. DANIELS May Your Holidays Be Merry As A Christmas Bell And Moy The Joy and Warmth of This Wonderful Season Long Endure DANIELS INSURANCE AGENCY 563 West Huron FE 3-7111 Area Personals Postmaster and Mrs. William W. Donaldson of Chippewa Road are anticipating a three-week vacation in Pompano Beach, Fla., beginning the day after Christmas. ' W * . The Donaldsons’ holiday guests will be their son-in-law, daughter and grandchild Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Scott with Shelly, and Mr. Donaldson’s sister Mrs. Robert Rowley of Detroit. Planning to ski at Iron Mountain during the holiday teaching recess are Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Balzarini, West Lawrence Street* with children Angela and Andrew William. They will visit with his parents, the Angeio Balizarinis. ♦ . * * Mr. and Mrs. James Ben-sken of Baybrook Drive and daughters, Debra and Nancy, will entertain on Christmas Day. Their guests will be Mrs. Bensken’s parents, the George at Ckrittmtu • Dorothy McKinniss . Hazel Clements Carol Synder Darlene Senevey Marilyn Abdre Mary Ann Leather berry Ora H. Randall to All lhank you, dear friends and customers, for the generous measure of partonage you extended to us throughout the past year. You have made it our most successful ever, and it is with sincere gratitude and pleasure that we wish you the finest of everthing, always. Merry Christmas! CALBI MUSIC COMPANY 119 North Saginaw FE 5-8222 FREE CUSTOMER PARKING REAR OF STORE CHRISTMAS EVE Mfs. Thomas C. Fitzpatrick of Mary Day Avenue is planning a “family open house” this evening, along with daughter Judy who is home from Eastern Michigan University. * * * Christmas morning, Mrs. Fitzpatrick will be at the old Orchard Drive home of her daughter and son-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Douglas C. Treats and their six children. Dinner will be at the Waldo Street home of her son and daughter-in-law the Richard C. Fitzpatricks. w w w Arriving from Los Angeles , on Christmas Eve will be Jan- j et Fleming* daughter of the Ernest R. Flemings of North Pine Center, West Bloomfield Township. ★ * * Christmas dinner for the family 'group and a house-guest, Allen Rucker* of Day- s' ton, Ohio, will be at the Roy- 1 al Oak home of the William Breitmosers, Janet’s aunt and uncle. Janet formerly attended Oakland University and is presently a junior at the University of Southern California. * * w Christmas day will find the Leonard Sundahls of West Iro-uois Road hosting dinner for her parents, the J. W. Bakers. Joining Steve and Joan Sun-dahl in welcoming their grandparents will be Linda, home from Olivet College. The J. Julian Bakers with daughters, Brenda and Marcia, will be guests in the evening. OTUAL YEAR-END STARTS MONDAY, DEC. 27th Through DECEMBER 30th DON’T MISS IT! REDUCTIONS IIP TO M% THRDUQHaUT THE STORE! Select from dining room, upholstered, bedroom, living room, oecasional furniture ... lamps, accessories, bedding, odds and ends; soma manufacturer’s close-outs! • Early American • French and Italian Provincial • Contemporary • Spanish • Traditional • Modern 1680 S. Telegraph Rd. - FE 2-8348 Just S. of Orchard Lake Rd., Park Free Open Thursday, Friday, Monday Evenings 'til 9 There seems to be great confusion in the mind of many readers concerning the difference between perfume,-toilet water and Cologne; and also between cold cream and lubricating cream. * * w Perfume is made of oils from flowers, fruits, spices or gums, alcohol and a preservative It is more expensive and has a much stronger frgrance than either toilet water or co-longe. ALCOHOLIC CONTENT Toilet water is made with a large amount.of alcohol. Its scent is much lighter than perfume. Actually toilet water and c o 1 o g n e are much the same, the main difference being that cologne usually de-pends on citrus and floral bases. Toilet water and cologne can be used much more lavishly than perfume because of their lighter scent. The larger amount of alcohol also makes these refreshing to the skin, especiallyin warm weather. Many women use toilet water and cologne generously on the body after their baths. CREAMS Cold cream is a more general term than lubricating cream. It is used mostly as a cleansing agent and is a water and oil emulsion, Cold cream is not usually left on the face and neck for as long as lubricating cream. The latter should remain on all night when feasible or at least for several hours when possible. A lubricating cream’s main purpose is to soften the skin and relieve dryness. It contains a lubricant. Many also have a moisture-attracting ingredient. The skin should be cleansed first with soap and water or a cold cream or cleansing cream. After the dirt and dead cells have been re- moved the lubricating cream ! can do its best work. WWW If you would like to have i my leaflet “Reconditiong at | Home” (recipes for masks, creams and bleaches) send a stamped, self-addressed e n-velope with your request for it. Address Josephine Lowman in care CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY that our employes can enjoy the Holiday with their families. F.N.TAKIS and the KINGSLEY INN STAFF Seasons Greetings THE ROTUNDA COUNTRY INN will be open all" Christmas weekend. Plan now to join us for your family dinner. • RESERVATIONS 682-0600 3230 Pine Lake Road Orchard Lake 0, come all ^jc JattltjuL We lift our voices to wish you and yours all the blessings dl Christmas. May your day be truly joyous. AUSTIN NORVELL Insurance Agency 70 W. Lawrence at Wide Track Drive (greetings . ur wish for you: that you and your loved ones may find the peace, hope and abiding love of that first Christmas filling your hearts and your home, throughout the joyous holiday season. The Store Where Quality. Counts , fPED HpGJltli Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry Store . 28 West Huron Street FE 2-7257 kiwetton' SINGER SEWING CENTERS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - 102 N. Saginaw FE 3-7929 PONTIAC MALL Phon* 682-0350 ... and deliver this wish to everyone* - STAPPS # Customers^ *We do remember you grand folks at this Christmas Season f6r your patronage and for you and your children we wish you a most Wonderful Christmas. Special lial Thanks tOO to those, who thru the years shopped in our Downtown Store ... be sure to visit our New Store when we ojsen soon on W. Huron Street. f\*r A nrvf' JUVENILE. BOOTERIE V I A UU V. ROCHESTER JUNIOR SHOE STORE O I #\r I V W- HURON FAMILY SHOE STORE Happy New Year Too From All Of Us! *1 1 • ,•: •. • 'i; ■■,;■ V *i ^ . f' 't (< :• 1 v -v | .i THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 A. J. BAUER Gcntral Manager NEIL WARD Naw Car Salas Manager WILL CROSBY Used Car Sales Manager The MANAGEMENT and Entire Sales Staff GEORGE OERTEL Truck Specialist CHARLES OERTEL Truck Specialist President RICHARD HOYIS Now Car Sales MATTHEWS HARGREAVES Chevrolet BRUCE KIND New Car Sales MARTY JACOBSEN HENRY GEORGIA New Car Sales New Car Sales t THE PONTIAC AC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DE PRESS ^74^ School's AeUvH'ns PONTIAC, DECEMBER 24, 1965 TWENTY-ONE imm WTHS Students Deliver Christmas Baskets to Needy Genie Burns Honored Kettering Names DAR Award Winner By JAMIE SCHUTT Senior Genie Bums was recently informed by the Waterford Kettering staff that she was the recipient of die Daughters of the American Revolution Good Citizenship Award. Winners of the award are chosen on the basis of dependability, patriotism, service, loyalty and leadership. Genie, a cheerleader for four years, is a member of both the National Honor Society ud the Student Council. was president of the junior class last year. With eight other girls from area schools, Genie was honored at a tea by the General Richardson chapter of the DAR. DAR SCHOLARSHIP She is now qualified to apply for .a special DAR scholarship by composing a theme on a selected subject. Holly Spending a Quiet Week By LINDA LONGSTRETH Holly High School is spending a quiet week during Christinas vacation. Activities will start up Jan. S, when school resumes. A Christmas assembly for the student body wag held yesterday. Seniors received their graduation pictures last Friday. The Tell-Tale yearbook staff met their first deadline Saturday with the first 32 pages. Holly High School’s Future Teachers Club is planning tea for teachers and prospective cadette teachers in the near future., Ralph Windeler is a semi-finalist in the Michigan Mathematics Prise Competition. Gilt’s Athletic Association completed their Christinas project this week. They sewed colorful Christmas stockings, and filled them with tangerines, candy canes, nuts and other holiday candies. Members took the stockings to the Children’s Center on Telegraph Road. GET CLUB CARDS Ski Club and ski team members received club cards this week. The student body attended the annual Christmas assembly Wednesday. The Chorus, directed by Janet Hunt, provided a program of selected holiday music. The play “Second Marriage of Santa Claus” was presented by the Thespians. Cast members were Danalee Cook, Charlotte; Jon Hoke, Fred Pearson; Patricia Tackaberry, Emmy; Judith Beilfuss, Mrs. Crowder; Penelope Young, Aunt Caroline; and Thomas Johns, Santa Claus. 2 Yule Assemblies Presented at PNH By ALICE TURNER Two Christmas assemblies, featuring the music department, helped get Pontiac Northern stu- tee modern dance interpretation dents into the Christmas spirit this week. Christmas favorites were presented to the student body by the various choirs and ensembles in the first and second hour class period. The choirs were under the of “The Night Before Christmas presented by PNH’s cheerleaders, under the direction of Madeline Thomas. VARIOUS CLUBS A Christmas stocking was presented to PNH’s exchange student from Germany by the International Club. Emmanuel Drive Team Effort Helps Orphans By LINDA WRIGHT The true spirit of giving was put into practice the last few weeks by the students of Emmanuel Christian School. The junior high and high school undertook the task of getting together articles of clothing and toys for Christmas boxes to send to orphanages in Mexico. Frank Gonzales told of these orphans earlier in the y e a r when he visited oar school. Gonzales is president of one home and his concern for the youngsters became ours. The plan originated in the jun- ior class, but it was not long before everyone wanted to have apart. GRATIFYING To those of Emmanuel who helped, this should prove a gratifying Christmas. To those less fortunate youngsters who receive the gifts, it will be a happier one. Wednesday afternoon, the Pep Club presented a Christmas play for the entire student body. Christmas vacation with the dismissal of school Wednesday. Classes will resume Jan. 3. direction of Judith Davis and John Tousley. Highlighting thie assembly was School Council Conducts By JEAN PRIESTLEY Another WTHS senior, Gay-Waterford Township High anne Mansfield, was crowned School Student Council representatives finished delivering Christmas baskets yesterday after a three-week campaign to aid needy families. Every homeroom “adopted” one or more families to provide them with a Christmas dinner, toys for the children and money to purchase clothing. The baskets were taken to the homes by the council member of each homeroom. One class, Mrs Arden Newell’s eleventh graders, collected two boxes and one large bag of gifts. Donations from the various clubs and organizations about the school provided the funds for Monika’s Christmas. PNH students are still anx-tonsly awaiting tile arrival of the two exchange students from Argentina. It was announced this week that one of the two would arrive Sunday. The other is scheduled to arrive Jan. 8. MERRY CHRISTMAS - The holiday season will be a happy one for needy families adopted by Waterford Township High School homerooms. Pictured filling the last of the Christmas boxes which were delivered yes- terday are Student Council officers Julie Appel of 70 S. Avery, recording secretary, and Michael McIntyre of 272 Highgate, president. Both are Waterford Township residents. Items of Interest at Area Schools Lady of Lakes served for the last dance of the year, “85 A-Gone-Gone.’ The senior class sponsored an all-school dance Wednesday the cafeteria. The theme was 'Christmas CarnivaL” Homeroom B-47 received first place in the door decoration contest. Students were served ice and received a letter -of commendation. Honorable mentions were awarded homerooms B-45, A-21, B-46, B-32 and B-10. By CECELIA PARKER Seniors at Our Lady of the Lakes High School, in preparation ter graduation, recently selected class symbols: Chosen were dark green ivory, class colors; yellow tea rose, class flower; “Ebb Tide” (instrumental version), class song; and SL Michael, class patron. The selected class motto Is “Not the dusk, but the dawn; not the end, bat the beginning.” Wednesday is the date re- It will be presented by the seniors in the school gym from 8 to 11:30 p.m. Featured will be the “Chosen Few,”, formerly known as “The Manchesters.” 4 Dress will be informal. Rochester By KATHY MORGAN Richard Goldsworthy, instrumental music instructor, led the Rochester High School band in several selections at its Christmas assembly yesterday. Joining voices, the treble and concert choirs performed the “Hallelujah Chorus.” The Madrigal Singers, a group of five boys and five girls, presented one song. Eloise Tallent, speech teacher, directed her classes in skits and pantomimes. Santa Claus presented the school’s "spirit jug” to the class contributing the most food in the student council canned food drive. PACKED FOOD The Goodfellows of Rochester packed and distributed the food. Foreign language classes went Christmas caroling this week. Three Exchange Students Recall Yule in Homeland By RON MOORHEAD Three exchange Students at Walled Lake High School recently told of Christmas celebrations in their homelands. Sylvia Trumit, from Germany, said the Christmas season starts four Sundays before the 25th and is called ‘Adventssonntage." Wreaths are made with four candles on them and, each Srnday, a candle is lighted. There is no Santa Claus as we know him. relatives come to dinner and then await the arrival of Jul* tomten, the Swedish Santa. He is usually a member of the family and, in Lisbeth’s case, her grandfather. On Christmas morning, Lis-beth and her family go to church in a sleigh drawn by horses. They carry torches to light the road and keep warm. Their small white church is decorated with candles and a Christinas tree on each side of the altar. Instead, the people have Nik- • - ---->.~Tfrt laus, who tiresseff lifcrSanta ■ West Bloomfield but brings no toys. FRUIT COOKIES If the children have been good, they receive fruit and cookies. H they’ve been bad, “you’d better vanish,” says Sylvia, I “because he carries a long stick!” Marjatta Turunen, from Fin-land, revealed that, on Christmas Eve, they go to the Helsinki War Cemetery where the people light candles on the graves. After this, they return home for Christmas dinner topped by a rice porridge with a “lucky almond” in it for dessert. FEUZ NAVIDAD—Gaily wrapped Christmas packages of clothing and toys are on their way to Mexfean orphanages, thanks to students of Entfttnuel Christian School. The junior class of the high school launched the project and as soon as the plans became Kv 5lliS> - known, everyone was eager to take part. Preparing the gifts for piailihg are (from left) Jane Iler of 3660 Rohr, Orion Township; Faith McCormick of .156111 Williams, Livonia; and Leonard Lovless of 2662 hittle-tell, West Bloomfield Township. ALMOND TREAT Whoever gets the almond is supposed to get married or engaged during the coming year. Lit bet k Winqvist, from Sweden, related that, on Christmas Eve, the closest The drive is an annual project, but this is the first year homerooms have worked to aid a particular family. PORJECT’S COORDINATOR Chairman and coordinator of the project was senior Carol Petar, Student .Council vice president. Lou Best, a senior, was named first-place area winner of the local Voice of Democracy speech contest Thursday by unanimous decision of the judges. Students from Waterford Kettering and Our Lady of the Lakes high schools also entered the competition with original three - to five • minute taped speeches. . The speech topic was mocracy — What It Means to Me.” It was chosen b^the sponsoring National Association of Broadcasters and the local Veterans of Foreign Wars post. OTHER CONTESTS Louis is now eligible to enter the district, state and national competition in January and February. Five WTHS graduates were recently honored at a dinner given by Michigan State University for enrolled students who achieved All-A academic records during the spring and summer terms. The five were Kathryn Jones and Sandra McKinney in the university college,. Lautal Marshall in veterinary medicine and Divid Smith and Richard Toles in social science. Waterford’s Junior Miss in the contest sponsored by Waterford Jaycees last weekend. OTHER REQUIREMENTS More than a beauty contest, the Junior Miss competition required talent (Gayanne did modem dance), poise and speaking . ability from the winner. She is an honorary member of Student Council and the daughter of the Arthur Mansfields of Durnham Drive, Waterford Township. Art Club is responsible for some of the holiday decorations that appeared in the school last week. A diorama picturing a cozy parlor decorated for the holidays was designed for one showcase in the front entrance and three six-foot wise men in black and gold stood in the north stairwell. Student Council decorated the Chrsitmas tree in the lobby. Art Glasses Decorate PCH Halls Milford By RICHARD WIXOM Milford High School’s Drama Club recently cast its first play of the year, “Harvey.” The play, a three-act comedy by Mary Chase, is tentatively scheduled for production in February. One part, that of Duane Wil-Cm, a sanitarium attendant, remains unfilled. Grace Leppala, English teach-r, will direct the production with William Gray as student director. By HELEN COLLIAS To decorate the halls for this festive season, various art classes at Pontiac Central High School made huge and colorful Christmas cards. They were displayed in several doorway windows throughout the building. .Gaily trimmed bells and posters were displayed in the Clarkston Students on Yule Vacation By CATHY RICHARDSON Today is the first day of Christmas vacation for Clarks-tn High students. Yesterday school ended with a Christmas assembly, the joint product of Student Government, vocal music department, and the Student Government members acted out a skit “ Twas the Night Before Christmas.” Vocal and instrumental groups presented various selections. Earlier in the week members of the Student Government sold raffle tickets for a Christmas present. Christmas assembly. Mrs. Charles Smite is the head of the art department. Central’s all-girl synchronized swim team, the1 Dolphins, has chosen a “monopoly board” theme for their annual presentation. Soloist this year is Constance Vanderlind. Two duets will be performed by Marcia Luther and Susan Ninotte and Cynthia Howlett and Nancy Hsu, respectively. TRIO TO PERFORM Also featured will be a trio performance given by Lynn Henderstein, Kathy Kendrick and Mary Jo Myers. Four Dolphin members recently took part in a swim clinic held at Eastern Michigan University. They learned new and improved methods of synchronized swimming. Each school entered contributed one routine. Central’s was flapper routine with background music of the 1920’s. Officers for the coming year are Susan Ninotti, president; Nancy Hsu, vice president; and Peggy O’Neil, secretary. Other officers are Mary Jo Myers, treasurer; Sonya Hutchinson, historian; and Cynthia Howlett, social director. Mrs. Arthur Chantier is the Dolphin instructor. Clubs Holding Sales for Funds By MARGIT MISANGYI Various clubs and organizations at West Bloomfield High School are holding sales campaigns to benefit the individual clubs’ treasury and assure each of a financially happy new year. The American Field Service Club is selling Christmas note paper. - Future Homemakers of America are offering W. B. pennants aad the junior class is selling candy. Individual competition was held in the junior class. Among the top sellers were Michael Williams, Diane Parker and Browney Mascow, class president > School ended Wednesday. It will resume Jan. 3. of West Bloomfield High Schoo are determined their groups 1966 'in the black” a$ they comp schoolwide sales campaign. Pictured are (from left) Nancy Mason Of 3227 TWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24. 1965 FROM THE SPORTS DEPARTMENT Wings; GEORGE MASKIN, the Pistons; PAUL PENTECOST and DICK WILSON with the local tracks and all the other fine public relations men in sports who measure success in victories and ink. " Be especially kind to our golfers and golf pros, with an anti-slice ball pnd hole-in-one club for everyone. The men of golf and the pro shop, WARREN ORLICK, FRANK and LLOYD SYRON, DEC. 24, 1965 DEAR SANTA: We know you left the North Pole several days ago. Our Gemini fliers reported your take off from the Arcitc Pancake House where they spotted red - nosed Rudolph locking racks with Blitzen, Dasher and Dancer. We hope your Internal deer problems are solved before you reach our great sports kingdom with all your gifts for our Tigers, Lions, Wings, Pistons, Spartans, Wolverines, Titans, Tartars, Chips, Broncos and the rest of our menagerie of athletes tonight. As you cross the warm Pacific Eastward, be sure to stop at Pasadena to water the roses for DUFFY DAUGHERTY and the Spartans and bring back an everblooming variety for BUMP ELLIOTT and the Wolverines at Ann Arbor. Leave our local lad STEVE JUDAY with a IK per cent completion record for his date with UCLA next week so that the pros will swamp him with offers. When you arrive in the Pon-triac-Detroit area leave a couple breakaway steeds for HARRY GILMER, a defensive coach-of-the-year award for CARL BRETTSCHNEID-ER, and a this-ls-your-life day as the NFL’s greatest linebacker for retiring JOE SCHMIDT. ★ Sr h Stop at EDWIN ANDERSON’S and find that lucky yellow shirt he had when the Lions used to win, and tighten the strings in BOX FORD’S racquet so he can be in shape to swat again. RUSS THOMAS wants a couple sleeper draft choices, FRIDAY MACKLEM wants bigger locker rooms, trainer MILLARD KELLEY wants-) PASADENA, Calif. ,(AP) —Inext week," announced coach people to put the “E” back jThe honeymoon of socializing, Duffy Daugherty, into his name when they spell late hours and outside distrac-l As of Friday, Daugherty is it. tions will end abruptly for thelclosing his practices to all out- For our associates 'on the Michigan State football team skiers except working newsmen. Lions’ beat, GEORGE PUS- |after the Christmas holidays. {Preparations for the Rose Bowl) CAS and BEN DUNN, leave a | “We want complete concen-! meeting with UCLA on New LOONEY - LESS winter, and Itration on ganv? preparation Year’s Day will follow the LINE, BILL FREEHAN and NORM CASH and 50 victories between HANK AGUIRRE and DENNIS McLAIN. Nearby at Cobo Hall the Pistons are desperately in need of a 7-foot Stilt and a rookie in the line of BILL RUSSELL. It’s only a short jaunt over to Olympia where SID ABEL and the Red Wings want another season title and a Stanley Cop playoff erown to go with it. ■ A few more 600-goal HOWE-type players would be appreciated and you might throw in a couple LINDSAYS, BELI-VEAUS and HALLS. ★ h h . For basketball coach DAVE STRACK at Michigan leave a ball control device to fight off the late court press and a couple CAZZIES to get back the No. 1 spot. For JOHN BENINGTON at Michigan State change the St. Louis Blues to the East Lansing Green & White capped with a couple transfer cagers. BOB CALIHAN and the U. of D. quint need Mandrake’s wand to pull out the big win and JOEL MASON at Wayne wants a another team of the Primas-Wagfler-Kline era. Don’t forget a lot of headlines and winning sports news for all the drumbeaters, FRED STABLEY at MSU, LES ETTER at Michigan, HAL MIDDLESWORTH of the Tigers; LYALL SMITH, the Lions; RON CANTERA, the AF Pbotofax COACH OF YEAR - Michigan State’s Duffy Daugherty was a strong choice in the Football Writers Assn, voting as national college Coach-Of-The-Year. Duffy polled 45 per cent of the votes cast by 627 members. GENE BONE, KEN WILSON, ED MOREY, RED WILSON, AL WATROUS, BOB GADJA, TED KROLL, TOMMY SHANNON, RAY MAGUIRE, BILL KENNEDY, PAUL VAN LOO-ZEN, ELMER PRIESKORN, BILL GRAHAM, LEO CONROY, BEN LULA and the rest deserve chaplain’s medals for hearing the daily, lament of dubbers. Put pros JO&N CHESTER and TOM COSMOS together in every tee-off group in every tournament so that they can write a book, “How to laugh in golf and like it." As a personal request, extend a Wednesday June 1,1966 challenge date to CHET REYNOLDS and HARRY REED from FLETCHER SPEARS and BRUNO KEARNS to avenge that glorious REY- NOLDS - REED “upset" in the match last season. For Pontiac diver MICKI KING, a sweep of women’s diving honors is requested; for PCH swimmers a big pat for their big win over Arthur Hil) and many triumphs for the PNH candy-stripe swimmers. Seaholm and Kimball are deserving of a state swimming co-championship and Oakland University needs a telephone in the pool area to report their swim results. ★ ★ ★ Help DOLLIE LEPLE Y at OU get those handball courts finished, and put safety straps on the paddle bailers at PNH with a rule book on using the backhand. ★ * ' ★ Recuperating commissioner CHUCK DAVEY wants a revival of good boxing in Michigan; MORT GRADDIS, FRED MOUTOR, JOE KOS-IK and the other ski area operators want snow, snow, snow; water skiers and fish- Wing Victory Cheers Abel Socializing Over MSU Starts Grid Dril for the Lions in general leave a rifle-armed quarterback. TIGER STADIUM While at Tiger Stadium, don’t forget the home tennants the Tigers, a book on bunts for CHARLEY DRESSEN, some .300 bats for AL KA- ular season schedule. The only late date allowed j the MSU footballers next week |will be the Big Ten dinner on! Wednesday night. MAY MOVE | Daugherty also is thinking of! {moving from the Brooksktej LOS ANGELES CAP) — The Park practice field, adjacent UCLA football team got creditthe Rose Bowl, to the East Los Bruins Win 'Meal' War R#K0hj)ll ^fhpHlllpC for outeatin8 Michigan State—|Angeles junior college Held. UUJCUUII JUIGUUIGJ but the Bruins needed help from He started kicking around the —a,——y——rrT lT -the-Rose- Bowl Queen and herktek of the transfer Thursday Hrpp Aflpnt Draft cotirt 10 do it. after spectators again jammed iivvnyvm i/iuu • The Bruins and their guests—.the field sidelines and ringed {including Queen Carole Cota the fence. NEW YORK (AP) — The ma- and her six princesses — con-| “It lodes like we have more jar leagues’ winter free agentjsumed 241 pounds of prime ribs,people here today than we had draft will be held in New York of'beef Thursday night. {for our open house (Wednes-on Saturday, Jan. 29, William | That was nine more pounds day)," Daugherty observed. But Eckert, the baseball commis- than was served to the 44-man it would take 50 state troopers sioner, announced Thursday. Spartan tearn and its guests the'to keep them all away. Eligible for selection in this *tight before. . % 'j ★ * * semi-annual draft are high T think they’re eating topi “I’m not so much interested school graduates who have much,” commented UCLA in the security angle as in con-passed their 17th birthday and {coach Tommy Prothro, observ-|centration. Anytime you have DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Red Wings Manager Coach Sid Abel got an early double Christmas present Thursday night — the return of three starters and a 4-2 victory over the New York Rangers. It was the only National Hock: ey League game played. ★ * ★ Defenseman Bill Gadsby, sidelined for three weeks because of a knee operation; forward Ron Murphy, who has played but two of the last 18 games because of assorted injuries; and forward Floyd Smith, out for three games because of a shoulder injury, returned action. All three figured In the sc ing as the Red Wings moved 'into sole possession of third place, thanks to a pair of third period goals by Paul Henderson. {QUICK GOALS The 22-year-old right winger, {who was criticized by Abel recently for lackadaisical play, scored twice in a 45-second span to lock up the victory. Garry Peters put the Rangers lin front with the only goal of the {first period, but the Red Wings bounced back and fired 21 shots at goalie Don Simmons in the second period with Gary Bergman and Smith notching goals. * * ★ Wayne Hillman of the Rangers tied the score again early in the third period and things seemed destined to remain that way until Henderson’s flurry which started at 15:37. “I was going to pass the puck over to Jimmy Peters and' thought Val Fonteyne knocked the puck in," said Henderson, who has eight goals — the same number he had in 70 games last year. The puck on Henderson’s first goal hit a New York defense-man and went through Simmons’ legs. TWO IN NETS Simmons kept the Rangers in the game almost single-handedly as he finished with 36 saves to 23 for Detroit’s combo' of Roger Crozier and Hank m. Crozier was hit a glancing blow on the cheek by the puck early in the first period and sat out about five minutes. The only damage done was a chipped tooth. The loss kept the Rangers nine points in back of fourth-place Toronto. New York has RAMMED OUT — Head coach Harland Svare was fired today as head coach of the Los Angeles Rams of the NFL. Svare, 35, replaced Bob Waterfield with six games remaining in the 1962 season. His record with the Rams was 14-31-3. ermen on county lakes need a peace pact without unfair boat laws and the city needs a sports center and auditorium to inject life into die recreational and athletic needs of the citizenry. Many more years of pro football for WALT BEACH, JERRY RUSH, JIM SHORTER and LeROY MOORE and more archery championships for the KEAGGY’S, senior and junior. National and world championships for Bloomfield Hills Ice skater TIM WOOD, and dittos in roller skating for the BERT ANSELMI proteges at the Rolladium are also requested. Emmanuel Christian needs a bigger male enrollment to allow scrimmages; PAUL DELLERBA wants another football year at PCH as the past season, except a few more extra points which cost the Bay City loss. ★ ★ * JOHN MOFFATT.at Waterford needs more backs, JIM LARKIN at Kettering bigger linemen and Clarkston needs more DAN FIFES as PNH needs more HAYWARD boys. A clean sweep all the way is wanted for Walled • Lake’s wrestling coach RICK SCHNEIDER, and St. Mike and St. Mary basketball teams LA Rams Dump Coach, Search for Successor LOS ANGELES (AP)-»Christ-mas in reverse came early for young Harland Svare and today the Los Angeles Rams were looking for their eighth head coach since 1947. President Daniel F. Reeves, expressing personal regret, said Svare’s contract would not be renewed for 1966 with the western cellar dweller in the National Football League. WWW The announcement, not entirely unexpected, was made Thursday, and promptly triggered the usual speculations on a successor to Svare. There have been recurring rumors that John McKay of the University of Southern Calif oris under consideration. collegians either -past 21 orjlog the feed, going into their junior year. The first draft of high school and college players was held last June when the 29 major league clubs and their minor league affiliates selected 814 free agents, of which 421 have signed professional contracts. Later, another dozen American Legion graduates were selected. The. January, draft is expected to be comparatively light Baseball people estimate no more than M players will be picked. Basketball Scores tuih tt ». Mary's, caiif.. to Cato. Mail U. ft Idaho Stele y Kansas It, Oblo State M Sutler tt OilaMM « _ Utah State *7, Minnesota n Utah lot. Air Force 57 Wyoming n, If. Josei' ■Mir A, ft Peter2*. .. Youngstown M. III. Wesleyan St U. Ian Fran. 17, tt. Louis <7 Santa Clara Tt California 71 U. of Pacific tt, U. of Portland 61 Ocdentel Coll, tl, Pmiens Cell. 71 TOURNAMENTS people along the sidelines it interferes with the concentration. distractions might have .served a useful purpose this week. I didn’t want them ready to play this Saturday^’’ I. Joseph's, Ph*„ tl fray State ft Jacksonville State tt Irish Middleman Out SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) J Notre Dame’s starting center, Tom Caldwell, who broke his foot in a basketball game with Indiana Tuesday, may be lost to the Fighting Irish for the remainder of the season. AP Photefex TULANE COACH-Jim Pittman, chief assistant coach at University of, Texas, was named yesterday as head coach at Tulane University. He signed a five-year contract Whether McKay is considering the matter is not known. WILSON MENTIONED Other names kicked around, all well known in pro circles, include George Wilson, late of the Detroit Lions; George Allen, an assistant with the Chicago Bears, formerly a Ram aide, and Buddy Parker, most recently with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Svare, handsome 35-year-old bachelor, issued a statement through Jack Teele, the Rams publicity director and a close personal friend. In effect, Svare noted the philosophy of the pros, football or baseball: It isn’t how you coach, but if you win. In the Rams’ case, it has been se and lose and lose for more than a decade. {won but one game and tied two others JiMi^iAotarts-Mnce EnH- to- Upper Peninsula * lie Francis took over in the dual . r capacity of manager and coach.! Upper Peninsula resorts offered the best holiday skiingj conditions today as spotty snow made good skiing questionable in some parts of Lower Mich-igan. The sld conditions: UFFtR MICHIGAN CLIFF'S, RIDGE, Msrquette — 16-Inch pTnJT'mOUNTAIN, irw Mountain -hit-inch bait, I Inch now, vary good. I INDIANHEAD MOUNTAIN, BcSSOmer —ll-74-lnch baa*. 6 Inch** now, excellent. | PORCUPINE MOUNTAINS, Ontonagon - t-lnch bate, } Inch)------- BRULE MOUNTAIN, 30-lhch base, S Inchai_ ________ BIG POWDERHORN MOUNTAIN. Bes-*om»r If winch ■ * ■ *——* j MOUNT RIPLEY, Houghton—1J Incha* . WEST MICHIGAN look forward to longer stays in tournament play nn their new lower classifications. A master planning board and all strikes for SHIRLEY N POINTER, a masterful tournament director, and no splits for MIKE SAMARD-ZIJA, MO MOORE and all of the bowlers in this great keg area. Arrange smooth sailing for BUD ERICKSON with the Atlanta Falcons and leave a few wings for GEORGE WILSON' as prime candidate for the job. Put a couple more feathers in the hats of the Pontiac Arrows, PAUL PARKS, LYLE WELLSand company and give KARL SWEETAN a “Lions’ Share" of the quarterbacking in the Detroit Lions’ camp next year. ★ * •* The Missouri Mule DAN LAROSE needs a break with an NFL team, and ditto for TOM TRACY with plenty of know-how still in his legs. Drop off an Eastern Division title for EARL MORRALL with the Giants, and All-Couft-ty, All-State and All-America honors to our fine area prep and college athletes. We know we’ve missed many names, but Mr. Claus most of all be good to all our sports page readers. May their holidays be joyful and their New Year be Blessed and prosperous. Respectfully We Remain, Bruno L. Kearns Donald Vogel Jere Craig Fletcher Spears. Seaholm Sinks Groves, 68*37 Birmingham Seaholm gave city rival Groves a holiday dunking in the Maples’ pool last night, 68-37, with Seaholm’s Bob Kircher setting two of the best marks in the state this season. Kircher won the 50 freestyle in a school and pool record of 22.4 and he won the 100 freestyle in 48.5. ★ ★ ★ Tom Draper, Jr., a breast-stroker, swam in the individual medley and won the event in 2:23.5. Groves, with several swim-mers out with the flu, won the butterfly, bgpkstroke and.400 event and tied in the diving. 4 All-Star Elevens in Action Saturday ■ By the Associated Press A couple of all-star games, showcases for some of the nation’s top individual collegiate football talent, serve as appetizers Saturday, Christmas Day. Six All Americas will be in action, three on each side, when the North plays the South in Miami The other is the Blue-Gray, matching seniors from above and below the Mason-Dixon line, in Montgomery, ' Ala. Both games are. Christmas afternoon. Each is scheduled for national television. ABC will handle the North-South, with kickoff set for 4:30 p.m. EST. CBS has the Blue-Gray game, with kickoff at 4 p.m. EST. BOYNE HIGHLANDS. Harbor Sprlngs-6-lMnch bate. —~t BOYNE MOUNTAIN LODGE. Boyne NUB'S NOB, Harbor Springs — open. THUNOER MOUNTAIN, Boyne Foils -Open Sunday or before, conditions per-mlttlng. HOLIDAY, Trtverse City — Opens efUTERN, CENTRAL aad PONTIAC AREA II Vary Poor. ■ - 1 t HOLIDAY SWIM — Seaholm High School’s Tom Draper Jr., took part in. the Christmas swimming meet between Seaholm and Groves last night and placed first in the invitational medley. The Maples gave Groves a holiday dunk, ing, 48-37. TifE -PONTIAC,PRESS,\ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 TWENTY-f HKi I. Prefit Today is a •f better management CLARKSTON FARM EQUIP. 828-2231 628:2000 MERRY CNRISWRS Good thing to do, A warmth to stay ... Our wish to you on this holiday. Slate Pool Table Company (Pool Town) Rloomfiold Miraols Milo Hornung Is Money Player Pistons Make Trade for Two From Hawks DETROIT (AP) — The De- said Player-Coach Dave DeBus- troit Pistons announced the _v quisition today of guard Charles Vaughn and forward John Tresvant from the St Louis Hawks in exchange for guard Rod Thorn, and the farming out of former Michigan All-America Bill Buntin. schere in Los Angeles. The Pistons have won only nine of their' first SI games. The latest setback was to the Los Angeles Lakers, 122-1U, last night Buntin, the team’s No. 1 draft pick, will be listed as the team’s 12th man. Packers Await Playoff Game Lombardi Pondering Colts' QB Strategy GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI) -Vince Lombardi says Paul Hornung has no peer when the pressure is on, and the erratic golden boy likely can smell the championship dollars that* will emanate from a victory over Baltimore in the National Football League’s Western Division playoff Sunday. Flight now, however, foremost in Lombardi’s mind is what kind Vaughn, who is 6-foot-S, is ini his fourth season in the National Association. TroK vant, 6-7, has been used sparingly during the past tw sea- LITTLE SERVICE sons by the Hawks. | ^ averaged 8,8 points and of *'pressure player makeshift Jhad 194 rebounds in 29 games ^ ****** To® Matte ’ with the Pistons. He has seen! ^ preparing little service in recent weeks, ifor this game is that we don’t * * * know if Matte will use roll-outs ' “Maybe this will shake up or drop-back passes,” the Buntin,” said DeBusschere. “He was overweight when be reported (three weeks) late and he hasn’t lost many pounds since. By JERE CRAIG Christmas trees come and are soon gone; but the good, sturdy stands that support them are valued' possessions that last for years. The Pontiac Women’s Bowling Association had such a dependable foundation for its "daily require-1 ments for 19 years; now the nearly 12,000-member administrative organ must~——----------------------- drew its strength from a new secretary. , John Conwell of Pontiac Sun- “We had to do something,” Tresvant and Vaughn will report to the Pistons in Los Angeles Saturday. Thom, who played at West Virginia and was hitting at a 14-point clip, will join the Hawks in New York the ley relinquished her duties as a very capable president (for 11 years) and was elected as the replacement. Packer coach said. Matte, a halfback who had his first taste at pro quarter- backing the past two weeks, will take over for the injured Johnny Unitas and Garry Cuozzo. Matte was a quarterback at Ohio State under Woody Hayes’ “three yards and a cloud of dust" philosophy, and did a tot more running than passing. I Hornung, who had one of his 'greatest days in pro football T. against Baltimore two weeks ago when he scored five touchdowns, injured his ribs in the San Francisco game. HE WILL START However, he has been running well this week and Lombardi says “if the game were today, I’d start Hornung.” Matte goes into the crucial tost against the Packers with crib sheets. Matte has had to learn plays, audibles, pass patterns and most important, enemy defenses. Since it takes most quarterbacks years to master their jobs, Matte is being ' ’helped” along by the use of crib sheets, plays written with red ink on a plastic band on his wrist. day night will bid to be the' second Huron Bowl qualifier to “Peggy” Bender, secretary for the PWBA since 1945 stepped?^*? PKt,n i .. ..._____ „_____, Beat the Champ” on the Chan- down last summer. Gen Brad-^, 4 ^*0 bowling show.| He qualified last week and; the 172-average kegler from St.! Benedict’s League is paired ati 11:15 against Detroiter Hal Jol-j ley for a color video set. “Peggy” was practically ★ ★ * “Madame PWBA” until a lin- Many local establishments gering illness forced her to re-have revised operating sign last summer. Even now, ules during this weekend and next. Bowlers are advised to call before running out to test that new equipment or exchange the gift certificates from Santa.1 Igh Series—Ed Austreng, 245-211—<59. h Gama—Art Newby, 255. Monday Junler classic Igh Geme and Series—Rlcherd Shore, -til. Friday Pontiac Motor Black, Axle and Cam les—Ed Frenak, Beagles, 2 Beagles, 1059—3162. MONTCALM BOWLING CENTRE Wednesday Doublet Classic High Series—Joe Roerlnk, 220-215-226-211-072. High Game—Tom Yerfc £1$. M0 BOWL Sunday Night Mlxups High Gama and Series—Jerry Sonnen-berg, 246-621) Nancy Fisher, 531) Carol Mkneelton, 214. LAKEWOOD LANES Shell Heating Oil now climatized for PONTIAC And it't available from H. H. Smith Oil Co. Shell scientists have created over 10.differenl blends of Shell Heating Oil foc.different climate condition*. One is blended specially for this area. We’re —happy to take yonr order. /sms H. H. SMITH OIL CO. 890 S. Paddock St. fe 2-8343 May the spirit of good will to all men be your guiding faith forever. 6i SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland High Game and Series—Les Grlpentrog, 226—607) Hsian Fry, 220-561. _ AIRWAY LANES Split Conversion—Haul Hudson (Sighted helper), 6-7-10. COOLEY LANES Wednesday Kings and Queers h Game-Dick Vilas. 212. Buffalo Bills' Kemp Picked Most Valuable PEGGY BENDER while not able to bowl or visit many leauges, she is close to the sport. She is the only honorary member of the PWBA executive board and serves as an adviser when able to make the meetings. There are 28 elected members, plus Mrs. Bender. “Peggy” moved to Pontiac in 1933 with husband Jack and joined the Pioneer League which is still activfe. She became active in the association and after its incorporation in 1941, was elected president in 1943. This position she had to resign when her bus-band was transferred back to thussdav's fights Cleveland, but they returned1:'.tokyo - .Cove. Aiiotuy, i3ov>..:g»«nu, . . J knocked out Yoshinkl Numata. 12M6. la- here in 1945. Jim Brown Rates Nod NEW YORK (UPT) - Jimmy Brown, whose fantastic achievements as a ball-carrier are unmatched in die history of professional football, today was named the 1965 National Football League player-of-the-year by United Press International HONOLULU (UPIKThe Ma-kaha International s W f 1 n g championships, post pVn e d Thursday because of spbfty wave action, were to resume today with the senior and junior men’s finals. Then began her seven-term SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) — tenure as PWBA secretary. “Peggy” also was the local delegate to 15 Women’s Inter national Bowling Congress Conventions. Filled with the spirit of Christmas, n^mkind takes pause to make peace with himself and the world • •. to thankfully recall, during this holy seasonf the joyst the blessings received. The dawn of Christmas morn, brings with it the promise of a fuller life, of Peace on Earth, Good ’Will to Men. And this we heartily wish for all our good friends and patrons. Haggerty Lumber & Supply Co. 2055 Haggerty Hwy., Walled Lake — MA 4-4551 We will close Friday, Christmas and Sunday A* ‘■I*'' :-F L, Quarterback John Hadl of the San Diego Chargers has a special reason to try to impress Buffalo quarterback Jack Kemp When the two meet in the American Football League championship game Sunday. Kemp, the league’s No. 4 passer, made the all pro team and was voted the league’s most valuable player by an AP panel. Hadl was merely the league’s No. 1 passer. He completed 174 passes out of 347 attempts for a .501 percentage, 2,796 yards and 20 j touchdowns. The Chargers were one touchdown favorites to win the championship from the Bills as San Diego coach Sid Gillman announced that rookie Gene Foster will replace injured Keith Lincoln as starting fullback. San Diego beat Buffalo 34-2 in their first encounter of the sea-1 While never a headline-grabbing bowler she still can point proudly to a 155 average one year and a trophy as a member of the Elks Ladies National championship team. ★ ★ ★ The job of being secretary for the plus 300 local women’s bowling leagues is now a fulltime assignment that eveir inquires some assistants occasion- Cruur, 11514, Dallas, Tex., I. The bells ring out • with joyful notes and voices merrily echo their song: Merry Christmas to all} , CASS AVE. TIRE BRAKE SERVICE _ 109 N, Cass - Ph. FE 2-9422 jf ally. “I didn’t realize there was that much to do,” new secretary Gen Bradley admitted recently. She, more than anyone else, can appreciate what Peggy Bender did for women’s bowling here. May many more remember! i. The second game ended in'her during the current season' j a 20-20 tie. ’ for. cheery holiday wishes. IERRY, ME1 Y RISTMi From the Staff and Management of Jim Butcher*$ Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., 724 Oakland Ave., Pontiac Phone 335-9^36 PLYWOOD SHEATHING 4x8 ParShaat %"CD... .. 2 44 VkuCD. ..3.12 %"CD %"CD .<% Plug gad 1 Sida (touch sanded) SAVE today! SIDING, per square Aluminum, without backer, whfyb. Aluminum, with laminated bacltor, white.... .>*«# • • ... 24” 28" KILN DRIED BOARDS lx 6 Boards, surf. 4 sides,85.50 m 1x12 Boards, surf. 4 sides 89.50"* FIR PLYWOOD 4x8, per sheet 1/4" AD Interior, good 1 ride ... .. . 2.5* */." AB Interior, good 2 aides . . . ...7.56 %" AC Exterior, good 1 side ...3.89 Vi" AC Ektorior, good 1 sido .... .5.15 Vi" AC Extorior, good 1 sido ... .. .6:30 Vi" AB Extorior, good 2 tides ... ...7.65 Cutting tervice onyourfliU shoot of Plywood I) available at cash .avlng rotas. STEEL GARAGE DOOR All-Steel doon, cam plat* with hordwora, lock 9x7______ 46.50 1 6x7.... 9] .00 (Glazing on all doors available) FELT, per rail 15-lb. 432 sq. ft. Roll........ 2.10 30-lb. 216 sq. ft. Roll •...'... 2.10 Aluminum Combination Windows, ah Size? to "60 United., inches" Each $18.95 TfiTEETfllorTO Each 2x4 66 .77 .92 1.07 123 128 153 Each 2x6 .73 . .91 124 158 1.95 221 2.46 ,Each 2x8' 1.14 143 1.94 226 258 325 329 ‘ Each 2x10 151 1.88 246 257 328 3.87 420 Each 2x12 2.10 242 3.14 367 4.19 4.72 524 5 Big Centers to Serve Youl CHURCH’S INC. T 107 SQUIRREL ROAD, AUBURN HEIGHTS, UL 2-4000 tltiea, 781-2000—Washington, ST 14111 -Romeo, PL 24811-Upoor, M0 44811 HEATING DEPENDABLE EFFICIENT SERVICE .Call Ua—Then°Forget Ik*‘Wo Kemp 'Em Full'* twenty-four THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1963 Year-End Splurge Annoys CriticsAudiences By BOB THOMAS like Scrooge than Tiny Jim, As long as we’re grumbling, I AP Movie-Television Writer jlet’s take on the newsreels. Re-jhow about those ads on bill-HOLLYWOOD - Notes while m^ber when they used to be!boards around town that prowaiting for the fat man with the with news and entertain-1 claim: "Merry Christmas to all whiskers: ment? They gave ydu every-!— except fbr the finks, and you Such madness, this last- thing from summit meetings toiknow who you are — (signed) minute crush ||M iwater skiing, a must, to Lew Daisy Clover?" How nice ofi of movie re- Lehr's nonsense: “Monkeys is'Warner Bros, to help spread the leases to hit the |decwaziest P^P1'” spirit of Christmas. Christmas trade What do you 8et m “ewsreels * ★ * and make the'^^^^lv P0*? Commercials. Most feted Britisher since Oscar deadline. MmzW RECENT REEL Princess Margaret is Michael; Critics are irri-|^&|jL| I caught two in a recent reel: Iffi?*5' w tated by the on-HH A blatant ad for a luggage eon- U,£*S; rush of films^RWH cem in which a “packing con-ifiS 2£'j£ and can’t give^^HH sultant” supposedly was show- w S. „«n.G ^\ wth fair evaluations.IBM Ifog pro footballers how to pack Pli I* Academy voters THOMAS for traveling; also a puff for the ?-,? " K*l are confused. The public is MGM president who was feted ! rpnumhpH «* . v„_l. ____i Tki. !. Wards as well as Watusi. Miss I There were less than 10 milesli of paved roads in the nation in I IMO for an estimated 8,000 I hides. ? * SPECIAL POPULAR PRICES SPECIAL SCHEDULED PERFORMANCES renumbed. at a New York banquet. This is we"as Seems to me a more orderly news? • MacLame acted as hostess, release of hopeful blockbusters i Another failing of the new TAKEN IN STRIDE through the year would be easi- news reel is devoting space to Then Paramount, which also er oh all and make a more sen-the premieres of movies. I saw has Caine under contract for sible Oscar race out of it.- |One in a Universal reel about films, tossed an elegant dinner * * * I the opening of “War Lord” in for him at the Beverly Wilshire Now that I’m feeling more I Detroit. Hotel. The mild-mannered [Caine took it all in stride, dis- JEWRY LEWIS .. [THE FAMILY JEWELS (A JERRY LEWIS PRODUCTION) i? TheWild/w wonder^/' hilariously happytaie * -of a bigrm ^“IlESN vwnti IT’S WORTH A TRIP TO DETROIT •. • TO SEE (MIXON REX HESTON HARRISON 20th Century Fox Amm two £ I**™ I tit AMD “THE IDIANE CiLENID BOX OFFICE OPIN NOON TO 9 P.M. DAILY HlfOIMANCCS MID HI ICO DOf MiIIoms it 2 P.M. Tidy f Throuft Nnr Yi Diyl Aten, thru Sit. A X Sumtoyi, 1:00 |.m. AMtlnMt I. 0:30 |.m^ 13.00 U.00 11.00 K rear's MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED Hill THEATRE Madison >1 Blush. Mroit 21. {playing little animation until he j danced the frug with Shirley. I The old order passes. Donna | Reed 'did her last television H show of her series this week. So III .did Vincent Edwards of Ben B,Casey.” Dick Van Dyke reports m he has only 13 more to go. B| William Holden, still recov-ering from his recent illness, Si finished “Alvarez Kelly.” He K; stays on for Christmas with his fi| family, then plans to spend four B months at the Mt. Kenya Safari Hclub he owns with oilman Ray B Ryan. WWW Hj Lighting up the local social B scene is Gloria Swanson, who H never fails to stagger party guests with her ageless beauty.' “No work this trip,” she re-I ports. “I’m just here for Chrlst-I mas with my mother, children land grandchildren.” ; And a Merry Christmas to all. j; French Units I to Stay Abroad | PARIS (AP) — France plans, i to maintain military units in 11966 in niAe^f her former colo-l nies-south of the Sahara, official! i sources said today, The units, the sizes of which were not given, have been kept in the now independent states! under accords made with France. The main units will be based at Dakar, Senegal; Lamy, Chad; and at the Diego Suarez-j Invato complex on Madagascar.! Other units will remain based in! Niger and Gabon and military j airfields will be maintained at Port Bouet, Ivory Coast; Douala.l - Cameroon; Atar, Mauritania;! and Bangui, Central African Republic. I Under accords signed with the countries when they became independent, France aids in their defense, either with units j based in Africa or in France.! Most Gas Stations to Close Tomorrow j DETROIT (AP) - About 90 pel- cent of Michigan's gas stallions will be closed on Saturday, I Christmas Day, the Automobile I Club of Michigan warned today .1 ! “Sufficient gas stations will be open along freeways to present motorists fromi becoming j stranded,” said Jerry E. Fisher, Auto Club touring manager. {“However, long-distance drivers are advised to stop for gas whenever an opportunity pre-[ sents itself after driving be-' tween 100. and 150 miles.” ____crashes bikini \ \ to store? RJi*** *' si M j fad* Tocfgyf ''NaHqwql Championship Draqsirip Races” Plus " Devil's’ Hairpin” iMawwo | A J 1SrirJi mmiac Deadhead ■RcWcokr W/WMNUR MnrnsoiMmimmom THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 TWENTY-FIVE | British Police Find Gunplay Was a Play ^BARNSLEY, England (UPI)i —Police rushed to. a bank here wbqn a citizen reported he had seen men outside with guns. The “gunmen” *provtf to he actors from a local theater posing for pictures in highwaymen’s costumes. cemiERcii ALL COLOR PROGRAM UNION LK. af HAGGERTY RD. EM 3-0661 TONIGHT ft SATURDAY HOLIDAY ENTERTAINMENT FOR FAMILY ENJOYMENT! FREE IN-CAR ELECTRIC HEATERS! ■RjtfyDute mm J as _ "m O np5ww> -ALSO. A (IWCMONCRIAVEN PRODUCTION van run*, to PANAVtSKJff COLOR by DELUXE Memo mw UNITED ARTISTS rSka/tf M « AP Photofix JOIN THE FUN Go Go Gula Plus DANNY ZELLA and the ZELLTONES Wed. thru Sun. 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. Make Tear., ;4 NEW YEAR’S EVE KESERViTION EARLY Ktg oral Antkof 4195 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains ‘COWBOY’ AMBASSADOR — South Viet Nam’s ambassador to the United States, Vu Van Thai, gets a western-style hat from actor John Wayne as he visited cfh the set of “Eldorado” at a Hollywood studio. Vu Van Thai is in California to launch ah airlift to South Viet Nam of $5 million worth of ■ medical supplies. May Call It Quits Ford Raps Draft as Punishment Washington (ap) t House Republican Leader Gerald L.' Ford said yesterday the draft call "should nol; be used for punitive purposes*” t * * Ford’s statement, made public by his office here, gave a bipartisan flavor to protests, raised in Congress and in some legal quarters about the reclassifying of a number of Michigan students as 1A. The students thus put into the prime draftable group had staged sit-ins at a draft board office in Ann Arbor,! Mich., as an antiwar protest. Ford said Selective Service' should be used only to supply the required number of men for the armed forces. Any violation of law, he added, should be punished under regular statutes, not by means of the draft. ★ *' In another development, a group of prominent law professors sent a letter to President Johnson, urging him to say that; “the draft will not and legally! cannot be used as a weapon to! stifle criticism of administration1 policies, or to impose conformi- CLOSED Friday Evening at 9 P.M. Until Tuesday Morning Dacnmbnr 28 forties-banquets Private Dining Room Sooting Up to 70 Porvont CLOSED MONDAYS I 1660 North Parry At Pontiac Rood Phono 329-9429 Tki Handball invites you GALA NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY Call FE 3-9879 for reservations M-59 and ELIZABETH LK. Roads FE 3-9879 Mountaineer Postman Has Hard Haul jty on ii s which vitally affect the American people.” | LETTER SENT In Austin, Tex., Joseph Laitin, assistant White House press HINDMAA, Ky. (AP) - “I’ve gone through these mountains when I had to tu^n my horse over to knock the snow off her and I’ve found snow a foot deep in the saddle many a time. ‘I’ve seen it 90 cold my feet froze In the stirrups and I had to breach down and break Ibose. I was unemployed at the,horseback route. Pratt has beenj^^J jjjj ref erred toThe time Arthritis of the spine hadlits only postman. Bto.» knocked bm out of the mines * * * 'further com-nent on it. 1 and I couldn t do much farming, 1 Pratt now has 21 families on lettei sjgnet| by 103 jjro. either, he recalled. !his route between Pine Top and fessors from many leading law * * * Pippa Passes."Besides deliver-*!^ crjtiCized Lt. Gen. Lewis ^ A. petition signed by moun- ing their mall, I keep ’em post- B Hershey director of the f FORTINO’S aaFJggBE. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year from all the gang at . The 10-Hi Bar Dane* To the music of Larry Lee and The Continentals At Our Big NeW Year's Eve Party ASleighftilof Good Wishes Mdqzella's Lounge 750* And there have been times that my horse or mule would get so covered with ice that I’U bet its toil weighed 75 pounds. (%, Lord, I’ve been through snow, down, to zero temperatures and below zero.” At 62, Irvan Pratt figiires he’s made about 1,560 trips through the surrounding hills on his thrice-a-week horseback mail route. He missed only one tiip "and that was back some years when I had pneumonia.” BEEN A SPELL But now he isn’t so sure he wants to continue. It’s been a while since the Post Office Department raised his salary and, !with pensions, he would live comfortably without ★ ‘ ^ “I asked for a raise and they asked me if they gave me one would I keep on,” he said. “I told ’em I'might. I’m not sure.” Pratt, a tall, thin mountain man, concedes that his age isn’t making the 22-mile daily trip any easier. And he points out that he must furnish his own transportation. * I “It costs around $300 to bujf» horse and it takes an awful good one to lftst four years. A mule |co8ts 6100 to $200 and I’ve found 1 they last a little longer,” he 'said. 10-YEAR VETERAN | Pratt has used up two horses and thrbe mules in his 10 years on the job. I Flora Honeycutt, postmistress at nearby Pine Top where Pratt I picks up his mail, said she doesn’t believe slw could find a I suitable replacement if he quits. * * * “It would be hard to find anybody — and especially somebody who would make the trip and could be depended on,” she said. Pratt, a father of two and grandfather three times, farmed and “did a lot of mining — I guess I put in 20 years jn the mines” before he took over carryin&maiLby horseback. . „ 1 - - , a - , - 1— Hershey taineers, who live in country too ed on what’s going on,” he said. I draft, tor saying that students rugged for any kind of vehicle Counting the distance to andjwh0 ^ part in “unlawful” to visit, ^prompted the Post Of-from the post office, Pratt demonstrations would be reclas-.Jfice Department to start thejfigures he travels about-22 miles! sjfied ^ The letter said there each Tuesday, Thursday and were “serjous doubts” about the I Saturday carrying the mail- I legality of this procedure. Arlene Dahl Wedmny tlmw' _H«ne> J* to Wine Importer EJVSE w-jt In the Caribbean u* tto, n» t* oak*. utn < Pratt made his rounds anyway. cr{*ic ^aft acti®nf: .... j Hershey said any deliberate, NEW YORK (AP) — Actress! ' ,, , illegal obstruction of the admin- Arlene Dahl and wine expert' wh®n the trucks couldnt,8et|istration of the law by a reg-Alexis Lfchtoe were married!through on any particular day; istrant cannot 5* tolerated.” yesterday in Barbados, it was there was always some mail at|I- „ announced here. the post office that had arrived GIVEN CHANCE the day before. So I d just take Hershey added it has always. Make Your New Year’s Eve Reservation Now! Featuring Organ Mutic and Dancing Only !5“ Per Couple which includes a Free Waterford Country Club A spokesman said the. cere-j**18*’ , mony was performed by the He kks the mail about chief magistrate at Queens Fortl6;30 £ 7 a ^ returns to his .home by way of a rutted creekbed that serves as a road House, St. James. ' It was the fourth marriage for Miss Dahl, 37, who now writes a newspaper beauty column and has recently finished a book on beauty. For Lichine, 52, who heads a New York wine import- tor, automobiles if the weather is _ About 200 yards past his home, even the creekbed peters out and from there to Pippa men on foot or horse- ing firm and has written a book back are al, the narrow trail on French wines, it was the sec- wm take dnd. Present at the wedding were hex r children, Carole Christina Holmes, 5, and Lorenzo Lamas, 8, and his children, Alexandra, 8, and Alexis Jr., L Train Cuba Women in Traffic Control TRAIL CHANNELED * “Sometimes In the winter, when the trail is channeled out in ice, you can’t do anything else but follow it. You can’t get out of the trail,” he said. In his 10 years, he’s met hunters who were lost. A horse g< I so sick under him that it died few days later. He has refused on occasion to deliver packages. been my view that, whenever possible, a young man who violates the Selective Service law should be given an opportunity to enter the armed forces rather; than to be prosecuted for hia, violation of the law, and that' prosecution should come only if; he refuses to be inducted. This practice has been followed through the years.” Hershey said to his knowledge no one has been declared delto-| quent or .subjected to a draft speedup “because of participa-' lion in legal demonstrations oricS truck ■* "ctal“w “ MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Traffic |jjre8 j refund k deliver !1A‘ violators will not only have to them,” he said. HIGH RESPECT # ! contend with women traffic cops But perhaps his worst trouble “Despite my high respect for in Havana, but apparently with _ ^ and cold notwithstanding g«i. Hershey, I emphatically well prepared ones a£ that. _ catne iast May. disagree with his point of view,” Ar-raniino tn Havana radio THROWN BY MULE Celler said. “He is demeaning Thursday right, a group of 170 “My mule threw me and my jj6 ^u^as ^toierito • Jinlamuc » hi,no in lha ti mm ” Pratt 11,01 06 USea as an msirumeni 10 women received diplomas as|foot hung in the stirrup,” Pratt traffic cops after six months ofisaid. “He drug me back in th training. \ hills about 100 yards or more * * . before my foot came loose. The*training, according to the! “I lost my glasses along the broadcast monitored here, way, but I went back later and specialized in traffic problems, practice police work, criminology, socialist law, gymnastics, and amy infanlxyJktticsL, found them and they weren’t broken. 'I sure was sore, there for a while,” he said. punish or to compel adherence DINING at its best! RESERVATIONS FOR NEW YEAR'S EVE. NOW BEING ACCEPTED! 16 EAST PIKE STREET «-*** Phone FE 8-9292 JVttto Appearing By Popular Request! MONDAY thru SATURDAY FRANK IIITNI ad FLDYI RAM For an Evening of Fun and Entertainment Go Airway! Airmail Lantd 4825 Highland Rd. (M59) GO AIRWAY! TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 Christmas Caroling Popular bONDON (UPI) ‘ 4-There can’t be any place Jntae world where the singing of Christmas carols is more meaningful or more popular than in England. In the cities and countryside, beginning in early December and continuing til Christmas mom. there is no escaping the carolers, all ages, shapes and sixes. In the cities, tkby come singing to your door and sometimes they’re, not much Older than 4 or S. You answer the ring of the bed and there they stand, singing — rarely singly, usuady In twos and threes, occasionally as many as half a dozen. • ★ a s Grimy they may-her, some of them. Shy they may be. Or, less often, brash. But it is astonishing bow many of these moppets ring like angels. 'A.LITTLE LOLLY’ The cynic can claim they are racketeers, out to take advantage of every man’s Christmas spirit and make a IfMH l ftoi IfSl :A sBS'* JIhI< JMRh aries (Mar. H t Apr. 1*): Kay Mr going ahead now 0 PREPARATION. Meant make plant ... dig behind Mi * ... ,_________ [ scenes % vital cluts. Fact factt at - Apr._!>): Cotnmunl-1 they ex,jJ g, thorough, practical. Ir“- express TAURUS\(Apr. 20 - May 20): Friends Interest In your aspirations. If aggressive ^ ho |nst^mantal In aiding Individual creates dispute, remember las- }ju aspiration^ Coo- TAURUS (Apr. 20 • May a. __________ peace, harmony. Emphasize good will. Realize many have tried to please you with cards, gifts. Heed words of spiritual adviser. Bask In glow of holiday aplrtt. GEMINI (May 21 - June 20): Favorable lunar aspKt spotlights spiritual . Study meanings. Analyze gifts. OecMe which ct a spirits. ______ ugh love, special fetation to children. Be creative, give at yourself. Decide now U|— CHANGES. VIROO (Aug. Z2 - Sept. 22): message. Be Independent—a _ . Work toward fulfillment of goal*, member resolutions concerning health and rest. Means avoid extreme, sensible I LIBRA (Sept. 22 • Oct. 22): hunches tend to b| healthy challenge. Exude osmmlemt GEMINI (May\21 - June 20): No time to believe all you^haar. Tendency la for -----— ^ make wnttotM* clalma, stete- nphasize good will. Ba fair, ..... .... Highlight PRESTIGE. ■ I CANCER (June 21 \ July 22): a wtir""-1' - ARIES message. Pleasant aurpri LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22)\ Utilize your ' wonderful sense of timing. 'Trust hunch. ' Attend to Important defallsX personally. r Observe - and listen. You can .soon turn (hat you team now Into solid profit. VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22): \ eppy day la willingness to make ----------- slons. Be flexible. Fine for relaxing with loved ones. Avoid senseless disputes. Help ana close to you plan tor future. LIBRA (lapt. 21 • Oct. 22): Be wllUng ‘—*■- changes. Study possible revision R ________Jl. Boslc tasks require special attention. Rost from recent holiday activity. Important to CONSERVE ENERGY. SCORPIO (Oct. 22 - 'Nov. 21): Docop-! tlon possible H you tocoMo victim of wishful thinking. Avoid extrevi Chock factt . . . don't lump N •' dlscroet, you may little lolly (Christmas spending money). Bat they Anew their hymns, verse after verse, ud their childish trebles give the words (heir doe. They help make Christmas a happy time for all. For the lone and lonely, they must be special blessing. The doorbeH ringers in the cities or the strolling young singers in the villages are known to all who reside here. VOICES KNOWN But the world also knows these voices, from radio and television, and from records. St. Paul’s Boys’ Choir is internationally known, so is that of Westminister Abbey. One of the most widely appreciated choirs at Christmas' time is that which sings each < Christmas Eve in King’s College Chapel, Cambridge. Each year since 1928, the Brit-h Broadcasting Corporation has broadcast this hymnal service throughout the nation and commonwealth, and to the Americas. “Once in Royal David’s City’ start! the program and nets the tone as the young, white robed choristers move in slow procession under the great roof of the chapel, and millions listen, moved and enthralled. 'George/ 'Jerr/ Get Handshakes for Christmas Face"stape up. 'You moko k SCORPIO (Oct. a - Nov. .... _________I Ml ‘O Court* which It w revisions. ... Minor conception i malor goln'latar. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 • Forces n special understanding. CAPRICORN (Dac. a - Jan. 10): Ob-— fry! .SAGITTARIUS meosage. illday message. PISCES (Fib. 10 - ■ _ , ■ emotional ratarvos. Help thote who took advice. Moy bo necessary -to soothe feelings of----------------— M IP SATURDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY ] GENERAL TSMDCNCIES: Many begin to allow wear, tear of holiday activity. Newt a mixture of good and nof-aa-gaod. ARIES (Mar. _ ... ..............■ can prncaad with plant to promote family Interests. Discuss ambitions, aspirations. Enjoy beauty or family contentment. Highlight harmony. Don't target notes to friends. TAURUS (Apr. 20 - May 20): Study ARIES musage. Fine tor entertaining higher-up. Express appreciation tor past OEMINI (May 21 - June 20): Individual you long hove depended upo ... prove worth once more. You con gain zu-"1.-*..- Utilize ... MR.. Road-base r--------- ... ... d advice. CANCER (Juno 21 - July 22): Dig tor legitimate Information. Don’t be fled with superficial knowledge. Mate or partner needs attention. Discuss glC-money affairs. Ba SYMPATHETIC. LEO (July 23 • Aug. 22): ~ ' Take mgBdtog^ • to END* DISPUTES.’ VIRGfi (Aug. 23 - Sent. 22): Ba dll tomatk In dealing w________ late. Realize many ore -holiday spirit. Oot way early. Find tl.... ■ ____ ________ LIBRA (lopt. 23 • Od. 22): Pino tor; entertaining — being entertained. Oat I oterted early. Be with p for attending theater, re___ to evening. Ba voraotlla. Exhibit i of humor. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 • Nov. 31); compotdonahlp at homo. Bo l___________ .. numerous benefits. Show appreciation tor | gifts, special conaiderattona. Luxury Itam received could require SPECIAL CARE.; SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 • Dac. 21): Oood *— getting aerois Ideas. Obtain aid of loved —- *-*—*- ---y paramount CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - Jan. It}: Evaluate hopes, wishes. Learn worth of possessions. Realize not be added In dt_________ you love It trying harjl to p AQUARIUS'(Jan. 20 - 0 prise gift or e \ : | may appear impractlc charming. Individual w Me to please you. B~ ef dress Cycle high. PISCES (Feb. It-necessary tt organization. .You ere patient, ... a worm, even pooelonots. h GENERAL tSmmnCIES: Cycle high for AQUARIUS, PISCES, ARIES. Special ward to UK): Be -^WaBMtaaMMatoMl Detective Loses Twice KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) -For the second time in less thanfj a week, thieves broke into the' | home of Cedi Stowers. Burglars took gold cuff links, i a radio, an electric guitar and a j hedge trimmer Thursday. The loss was estimated at $131. Earlier this week, items val-[1 ued at $1^00 were reported sto- I len. Both times the thieves; broke the glass on a basement | door to gain entry. Stbwen I* a detective on thei Kansas CMy, Kan., police force.! THE PQNT1AC PRESS, FRIDA V, DECEMBER 24, twenty-seVen Jacoby on Bridge NORTH (D) M 4 AKQ1064 V J2 48 4A1095 WEST EA8T 4762 498 ¥Q6 ¥109852 ♦ A 10 8 4 3 4 0962 ♦ Q72 4K8 SOUTH 4J3 ¥ AK74 4 KJ7 4 J 8 4 3 Neither vulnerable North East . South West 14 Pass 2N.T. Pass 34 Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4 4, I have been played in la mixed pair game where North was the ' female half and was not going to take her ‘partner out of i three no-trump. This time she was fully justified in her de-j cision but Southl has a few anxious before he came out with jscore. j South won the first trick I with his king of diamonds after East played the queen. Then he looked over the dummy with horror. Of course he could run JACOBY 11 tricks available at spades if; West held either club honor and that the great-majority of pairs! would be in four spades. * * ' ★ It was up to him to find a way to make five no-trump if he wanted any sort of score on the hand. Do you see the line of play at his disposal? It would be absurd in rubber bridge but was essential in dup-topilicate. At trick two, South led a heart towards dummy's jack. Should East show up with the queen of hearts it would have been curtains for South, but West held that card and played it.' Now South was able to make 11 tricks at no-trump. By JOCOBY & SON Here is a hand from the Kay, ■ 10 top tricks at no-trump but This play gave him a score Silodor, Karpin book that must he noted that there would be of lift out of a possible 12| -1 match points. Apparently someone else found the same line of! play. Settling for four no-trump j would have given him only one| point. One rash pair had readied a spade slam. WCRRD Se/tieti Q—The bidding has been: West North East Sooth 4 4 Paw 4N.T. Pea* 6 4 Paa* ? You, South, hold: 4*72 ¥KS 4AKQJ7I+AS What do you do? A—Bid six no-trump. This way any heart lead will be up to year kina, and not through K. TODAY'S QUESTION What do you bid aa dealer with: 4AJ876 WAK1M4 4Q2 *3 Answer Tomorrow Parties,Clash at Meeting on Districting I LANSING (AP) - The Legislative Apportionment Commis-j sion got down to what some Republican members consider the brass tacks of legislative districting Thursday. But Democrats refused to be nailed down. The eight-member bipartisan commission, which broke for the Christmas holiday, experienced what might have been its first frankly political confrontation, except that Democrats declined to discuss politics. The commission, which has scheduled three working days next week preceding its New Year’s Eve midnight deadline, received two new plans Thursday and defeated one of them, j COURT ACTION It also ftceived a strong indi-! cation of court action if it ! changes present state districting. A Wayne Cdunty Democratic legislator is challenging the right of the commission to re-] vamp already constitutional districting and the Michigan Supreme Court’s right to review present-digtricts. Said Republican Alfred La-Porte of Standish, “speaking just for A1 LaPorte. I feel that one of the reasons the Supreme Court put the commission back in business is the treatment given Bay City-Saginaw and their surrounding territory.” The same applied, he said, to the Muskegon district, running from Muskegon along the Lake Michigan shore up into Manistee, skirting Newaygo County with its heavy concentration of Republican voters. Both districts resulted in new Democratic victories in the 1964 Senate race. The Bay City-Saginaw district is represented! by Sen. Jerome Hart, D-Sagi-naw. The Muskegon district ig represented by Sen. Jan Van-derPloeg, D-Muskegon. Makes Payment on Commuter Line NEW YORK (AP) - N e v York State has made a down payment of $10 million on the .Long Island Railroad, which it is buying from the Pennsylvania Railroad for $65 million. I DETROIT (AP) — A bandit * ' * * ifled wifi) an estimated $3,000 The rest of the money will, be1 from the Detroit & Northern By BOB BROWN ,enoe Circus.” It is-on sale in paid Jan. 20, completing the Savings and Loan Association PROBLEM: The cloudy tea. bookstores, or may be ordered;purchase of the railroad, thejbranch on McNichols Rd. in NEEDED: Refrigerator, stove from Brown tj,e author,>nation’8 busiest commuter line,{Detroit Thursday. Witnesses de-and tea. care of -rv,e Pontiac Press ’ ,by the Metropolitan Commuter!scribed the gunman as a heavy- DO THIS: Place the tea in - . . _ Science Quiz Holdup Nets $3,000 the refrigerator. You will notice that after a while it will begin to look cloudy. Remove the tea, heat it on the stove and it will become clear again. (This does not change the taste.) HERE’S WHY: This result is probably due to the formation of superoolloidal particles which together produce a cloudy effect; Heating seems to disperse them into invisible true solution-size particles which are invisible. NEXT WEEK: Tricky Weights A collection of the “Science For You” experiments is in book form under the name *‘Sci- Court Denies CMU Appeal; Request Late LANSING (AP'-The Court of Appeals, saying Central Michigan University waited too long to object to a Senate investigation of the school, denied CMU’s request'Thursday for an order to stop the senators. The investigation ia over and the question therefore is moot, the court said. Thus it sidestepped issues of how much independence the university has, how much investigatory power the legislature] has, and how much power the court has over the legislature. . A special Senate committee,! headed by Sen. Edward Robin-1 s!in7^35ei5Bw^ TSH~a "series1 of hearings on faculty-administration relations at CMU. CMU trustees filed a complaint with the court on the last1 day of hearings. They sought an order. blocking the senators from issuing a report on their investigation. The trustees contended the I committee had been delving] into areas which, under the] State Constitution, were exclusively under the trustees^ control. * + * The court replied: “H abuses, of the legislative investigative power have taken place the proper remedy would have been! timely objection and a rightful refusal to»answer where mchl bounds of power have been «x-ceeded or the questions were not pertinent to the matter uniter inquiry ..." It said timely objections were notmade. tions into internal affairs, he | (CspyrlgM IMS, Gtntral FMturti Carp. Transportation Authority. jset man, six feet and about 65. BOARDING HOUSE twenty-eight THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 Bullish Influence Pulls Up Prices in Grain Futures CHICAGO (AP)—Influences in the grain futures market were somewhat more bullish this week and prices of nearly all commodities recovered moderately from the rather broad declines of the previous week. Soybeans finished with net gains of 2 cents a bushel at the Slock Mart Climbs Despite Viet News! The thinking wad if a truce could be arranged on the Christmas holiday, why not a much longer cease-fire? If a longer-term cease-fire were arranged '[in Viet Nam, then the psycho- Presldent The Associated Press Aver- Wieli D* CZnullf* age of 60 stocks also made rec- YISIT Ue ord highs on Thursday and Friday. The AP average advanced! PARIS (UPI) 1.S on the week, closing at its Johnson has sent informal word record otjtl.7. |to French President Charier de Selective ptor by blue chip.;0""* ** **"" *• ■""* accounted for the rise in these *0 me€* with ™m “ oe 0011168 averages. |to Europe next spring, French Of the 1,557 issues traded this i government sources said today. | week, however, losers outnum- No formal invitation has been bered gainers by 814 to 576. isent. out or received and the' NEW YORK (AP)—The stock nuutet was upset this week by , reports of Viet Nam peace fen- { era but it managed .to post rec- [ ord highs in important averages ^ even though more stocks fell j than rose. logical steam would probably The imminence of the year- Lg out of de{e„se issues end as well as a three - day _ Christmas weekend for Wall S«ORT WEEK Street were enough to generate In the four-day trading week, extreme and wheat with well caution among traders. The re-| shortened by the stock exchange over a cent on all deliveries, ports about Viet Nam, capped]holiday for Christmas Eve, voI>i Oats and rye posted fractional by the cease-fire agreement on ume totaled 32,224,961 shares! The five most active issues possibility of such a meeting gains, corn eased. Christmas, produced some compared with 47,744,8b0 for the 'this week on the New Yorkinever has been discussed offi- There were some mildly bull-heavy selling of previously full five-day week preceding. [Stock Exchange were: daily, the sources said. , ish factors in government re- strong defense issues. On Wednesday the Dow'Jones! ★ * * wee ports and in actual or potential The aerospace defense, elec- Industrial Average finally man-1 American Motors, up 1% at But de Gaulle himself was, export business. The bearish in- tronics related to defense pro-[aged to better the historic clos* 9% on 498,000 shares; Sperry,reported to have told U.S. Sen-fluence which government sell-duction and airlines were bigjing high of 961.85 it made onlRand, off 1% at 21%; Ameri-jate Majority Leader Sen. Mike ing had on wheat was fairly losers this week as many hold-Nov. 4. The average advancedlcan Telephone, up 2% at Mansfield, D-Mont., when Mans-well offset by the end of the ers of these stocks decided tojagain on Friday, closing the]62%; Chrysler, up 2% at 55%; field called on him a few weeks week with prices back almost at[take profits while the taking! week at a record peak of 966.36,'and Pan American World Air-'ago, that he would welcome a their highs of-the season. I was. good. ^ 'a net gain of 8.51. ways, off 4 at 50%. meeting with Johnson. Transactions on This Week's Markets 1 (Stonge has.) High Low 86 25'. 24* 593 46"« 45M l.JO (74 15ft ween, in«j Ik's close. Gam Sko 1.20 23 34 G Accept 1.20 Gen Cla 1.20 Net GenDynam l Close Chg. Gen Elec 2.40 ... HH 48%+ 3ft Gen Fds 2.30 291 13ft 24ft- ft .............. 20 Most Active Stocks »% 20 20 nigh »ft 28ft 29ft+ ft . 41ft 54ft STft— ft. «4 114ft 112 llSft-l- 2ft 70ft ft G PubUt 1.40 344 37ft i 485 44ft 40ft 41ft- 2ft GTel El 1.12 437 47ft 4 742 71 45 45ft— 2ft Gen Tire JO' 554 29ft 2 188 75ft 73ft 74 — 1ft GaPadfic lb 210 58 5 1037 13ft 12ft 13ft- ft Gerber Pd 9V 58 37ft 3 So 53% 50 52ft + 2ft GettyOII lOg jfi I < (AP) —Week's twenty N Sperr^Rand .......... Alleg Corp Aiiegh Lud ________.. . ■ H Alleg Pw 1.14 120 28ft 27ft 27ft- ft I 47ft 49ft+ 11 ..... .20a Ml AM 50a Allied Sirs 3 47 82ft 79ft 80 - 2ft Goodrd. AlllsChal .75 549 34ft 32ft 32ft— ft I Goodyr Aium Ltd .90 "graraiirarillOTrillitodiMsmiim Alcoa M0 MW Amerada 2.80 291 73ft 1 »IS IS 8* XX 8 i 12 GuitMo 2 I 2.30 187 87 raft 87 + 2ft qu|« .n , 344 57 lift J 513 4 47ft 4 - lft 28ft 13ft Ampex Cp , 89ft 49 Tex G Sul 21ft 14ft Lone S Cem 453.400 . 407,100 . 404.400 355.300 312.900 . 300,900 300.200 . 275.800 272.900 240.000 247.400 244.100 234.500 Un Tank 2 UnAIrL 1.588 UnltAlrc 1.40 Met Unit Cp .35g Close Chg. HSFry,, .•» Oft + lft UOaaCp 1.70 lift _ift Unit MM 1.20 42ft +2ft USBorax ,80a 55ft +2ft USGypsm 3a 50ft -4 US Indst . 12g 54ft +7ft US Llnet 2b STft +3ft USPlywd 1.40 ai* 2jo ,hds.) High Low Lest Chg. 42 47ft 44 44 —1 544 117ft 104ft 107ft—10ft 1314 09ft 79ft 82ft- 7ft 140 9 Oft 9 1481 31ft 28ft lOftf lft 1 T1'* 1 53ft ■ jUSSmelt 25g I 71ft 70ft 70ft- ft * X3009 42ft 53ft 57ft+ lft 1—2 US Steel 2 2758 54ft 51ft 53ft+ V f ft Unit Whelan 85 4ft Salat AMsfCrMS iff i 313 43ft 42ft 43ft+ ft fk 149 17ft 34ft 34ft- ft 5 U' 84 19ft 10ft 19ft+ ft ! itft 191/t— i HemPap 1, I 45ft 44ft+ ft|H80l»Wn> i 7ft 9ft+ lft'ft*" Mr “ 49 - lft; Hertz 1.20 50ft- ft HewPack 382 54 54ft 55ft + 1 519 34ft 34ft 34ft I 192 40ft 59 60ft-h ft! 1941 12ft 10ft Uft-t- ft 17 39ft 39 39 - ft 723 21ft 20ft 21ft- ft 1224 50 45ft 47ft— 4 14 43ft 42ft 42ft- 1ft 339 59 58 58ft— ft 213 26ft 25 25ft— ft —H— 279 49 ft U|MerCh8p~.40Q 42 25ft 24ft 24ft— 444 41ft 40ft 4ift+ ft {JPAut^ft ............■ S xi2 xs sis ’aia i.» _... m 1.10 J74 48ft 79 11 Blft +4ft 54ft+ I McCall ,40b McDonA .40b IMcKeta 1.70 nat | H____________ Last Chg. I 108 28ft 27ft 28ft- ft 85 48ft 54ft 58ft—lift i 4071 i . - 1ft HoDySug J.__ i 62ft+ 2ft Homestk 1.40 I 39ft + ft Homestk 1.40 31ft- ft i Honeywl .1)0 i 47ft+ lft Hook Ch 1.30 ■M6 - 2ft House F 1.80 124 31ft 3 34 39 3 121 4ft 1 HI 9 33ft- mmivpwpra 474 y 81ft lift- 1ft Howmet .40 ' Monsan 1,6( MU. »I*X an. MontDU 1.4 2,/i+ **!MontPow 1. 7 u MontWard 1 70ft 71%+ ft MorrellCo 1 51 S'ftotoroli ! . t s .BJSiwfc* 19 43ft 43ft -3ft I VascoMet .90 -----——-----------'iVendo Co .50 VaEIPw 1.20 Salat _ Nat —W-X-Y-Z- (IMs.) High Law Las) Chg. 1214 44ft 45 45ft- 1 334 77 73ft 7Sft+ lft —V— 151 29ft 27ft 2814b-— ft ANOTHER GAIN — Advancing for the fourth week in a row, the Associated Press Average of 60 stocks reached Treasury Bond Prices Stronger - Viet Peace Rumor* Are Behind Showing ; NEW YORK (AP) - U. S. Treasury bond prices showed a little strength during the past week on peace rumors out of Viet Nam. Corporate and muni-icipal bond prices were mixed. I The peace rumor developed last weekend. Though quickly squelched by Hanoi, the rumor of possible- offers to negotiate sent bold prices up. ! Later in the week the markets reassessed the peace bid and prices began to decline. How--ever, on balance for the week more issues scored net advances than declines. . , Of the 40 Treasury bond issues 24 advanced in price, 12 declined and the remainder were [unchanged. BOND VOLUME On the New York Stock Exchange bond volume for the week totaled a par value of I $48.87 million. ★ ★ * | Of 452 issues traded, 128 advanced in price, 235 declined 'and the remainder were unchanged. New lows for the year joutscored new highs 80 to 12. The municipal bond markets a new historic high when it closed yesterday at 357.7 from i f relatively S in view 356.2 last week. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials ,u„ ____v,„hhqu 23ft 22V4 22ft+ . .. 37ft 34ft 35 - 2 195 49ft 47ft 49ft-f 2 closed at 966.36, up from 957.85. 240 25ft 24ft 2Sft+ ft 457 04ft 81ft 83ft- lft 47 40ft 40 40ft— ft 45 38ft 37ft 434 34ft 33ft 329 27ft 25 262 149 159ft 140ft— > Reading Co 132 21ft 19ft 21ft+ ft ReichCh .20a 449 14ft 13ft 13ft *■ RoyCCola .40 187 24ft 25ft 24ft+ RoyOut 1.85g 424 42ft 41ft 41ft— RydarSy .70g 144 20ft 19 19ft— WarnPIct JO 140 1 ft 15ft 15ft— ft WamLam .90 237 41ft 40ft 41ft+ ft WnAirLIn .80 , 404 48ft 44ft 45ft-3ft, WnBanc 1.10 ITS 38 34ft 37ft .. WstnMd 1.60a *2 40ft 40 40ft WUnTal 1.40 X359 50ft 49ft 494*+ ft1 WestgEI 1.40 158 44ft 41ft 44ft+ ft Wayerhr 1.40 318 41ft 39ft 41ft+ lft Whirl Cp 1.20 330 38ft 34ft STft- ft WhlteM M0 231 39ft 37ft 3tft+ 1 I Wilson Co 2 141 51ft 80ft 31 + ft WlimblK 1.32 90 34ft 35ft 36ft+ ft Woolworth 1 666 30 28ft 30 + ft Worthlngtn 1 257 40ft 38ft 39ft- i .70 74 21 Deny Tax Hike Plan to Pay Viet Buildup of the approaching holiday weekend. ★ * ★ i One factor overhanging 'all of .the bond markets in the coming 'weeltS will be the Treasury’s need to refund some $20 billion | in maturing debt in the coming months, 83 well as float pew debt of $3.8 billion to help finance the Viet Narft conflict. 1.80 1012 i AnkenCh ,03p 1421 17ft Uft I4ft+ ft HuntFds ,50b ArmcoSt 3 218 71ft 68ft 70ft + 2 Hupp Cp .189 Armour 1.60 318 43ft 42\ 43ft+ lft . ArmsCk 1.10a 200 62 40ft\41ft- ft Ashl Oil 1.40 143 17ft 54 J4 — 14k ■ --- Assd DG 1.20 142 S4ft 55ft 55ft- Atchlson 1.80 394 34ft 33ft 33ft- 1 02ft 82 ' Mftr, Ca1 J IllCenlnd 2.40 ?'lngerRand 2 I Inland Sti 2 *1 insurNeAm 2 lerlkSt 1.60 Avnet Prod 1 —B— BabcakW 1.10 141 43ft 42 iil M Mi — “ tj| Saautut 1.40 _ .... Backmn ,25g 88 97 WA 91ft- 5 , I Beckman wl 42 489) 45ft 44 - 2ft . . „ „ BeechAr .70b 314 33M 29ft 31ft-2 JohnMan 2 Safi How .40 449 raft 39 40ft— 24k JohnsnJ 1.21 Bandlx 2.40 292 74 49ft 49ft- 4ft JonLogan 329 194* 18ft 19ft+ ft M, 42 47ft 66ft 67ft + lft|*|i 155 57 54ft S4ft+ lft In, 335 45 43ft 44ft+ ft N 139 88ft 84ft 86ft- 2ft N 190 40ft 39 39ft |N_. ..... 247 513ft 498 499 + ft NatGyps 4 Db 283 78ft 75ft 77 137 88ft 85ft 85ft-534 34ft 33ft 34ft+ 73ft— SftlftaagP 1.40b 292 ; ui iv, San D Imper 2441 ... ... - Schenley 1.40 258 STft 34ft i Scherlng 1.80 74 5tft 86 38ft 38ft + ' . ITECktB I ,05g x274 Bath Stl 1.50 3002 < lft 39ft 4 lft+ ft J' ___ ___ .. . ■ 45ft + ftlNLead 3.25g 1.20 222 73ft 49ft 49ft-4ft < Nat Steel 2.50 80a 226 93ft 91ft 92ft+ 9* I Nat Tea .80 iri 174 lift 10 10ft Newberry JJ ,20a 1755 lift 28ft 30ft+ lft NEnaEI 1.28 1.35 414 47 45ft 47 + 1 NJ Zinc Jo .50b 85 44ft 43ft 43ft-Sft'R^wU,3.08. \ ..J-* iNorflk W*t ta _ 1V* NA Avia tJO .. 1 NorNGas 2.20 lftlNjJ2.60 3ft MS'?. Pw 1-84 I- lft Joy Mfg 2.50 2.70 - 913 73ft 49ft 72ft+ 3ft JJ BorgWar 2.20 .. „.. lift 43ft+ ft 1134 137ft 124ft 12tft— 9ft' * 49 54ft 55ft 55ft- V* KaHar Al .90 307 40ft 39ft 40%+ % KayserRo .40 134 47ft « 47ft+ ft Kannecott 5 29 42ft 41ft 42ft+ ft KernCLd 2.40 101 99 94 94 — 3 KarrMc 1.30 1524 10 9ft 9ft- ft KlmbClark 2 110 41ft 40ft 41ft+ lft Koppars 2.40 Korvette Kresga 1.40 Kroger 1.30 i 77ft 7 X372 23ft - 2ft —K— 116 125ftx122ft 122ft— Ifti 85 49ft 44ft 47ft- 2ft Occident 701 113 719* »ft 70ft- lft OhloEdis 1.0 283 529* M 52ft+ lftlgllnMath 1.4 563 27ft 25ftCift+ ftloutb mV- *« s Sft s% 103 28ft 28ft 28ft— ft 233 49ft 44ft 48 — lft 341 8) ft 78ft 78ft—1 i 301 26ft 25ft 26ft+ V 124 125 122ft 125. + 2 507 46 60ft 61ft— 4t 92 60 58% 59ft- V 189 59ft 58 599*+ lft 79 35ft 35ft 35ft + | 038 30ft 27ft 27ft— . . 478 142 129 132ft- 9ft ...... 45ft 45ft- " 131 i ShellTra .84g 43 20ft 19ft SharWrn 1.90 104 53ft. 52ft GnMot 5jjk| 1374 103 1019*_______ .. Sinclair 2.20 494 42ft 40ft 429*+ IV* “ igerCo 2.20 1129 42 549* 4194+ 3ft lithK 1.80a 235 80ft 75ft 7894+ 4ft cony 2.80a 423 93ft 90 91ft- 2ft ..PRSyg la 179 179* 17ft 179*— ‘ SouCalE 1.25 316 40ft 39ft 399*— SOUthnCo 1.92 221 4894 679* 48 — SouNGa* 1.20 . 143 309* 30 3094+ SouthPac 1.50 344 47ft 45ft 449* South Ry 2.80 847 59ft 58ft 59ft + .. Sparry Rand 4534 2 129* -9*0419*9*12 ---- 52 82 779* 7890-34* x649 349* 32ft 339*+ 9* 214 29ft 289* 29 + f 258 549* 55ft 54ft+. 122 57ft 549* 549k— i 445 20ft 19ft 20 - 9* OxfdPap 1 Cal Pack .' Calum Hac . ... .. CampRL ,45a x73 1?' - Lear Slag .40 5ft 49* 4ft- ft LahPorCem 1 309* 30ft 309*+ ft Lah Val Ind ‘ Lehman !.9ig LOFGIs 2.80a 142 37ft 36 36ft- 1 LlbbMcN .551 “ — 30ft 30ft— 19* LlggatttiM 5 CaroP LI — Carrier 1J0 CartarW .40a Case JI Cater Tree 1 CelaneseCp 2 Canco Ins .30 Cant SW 1.38 Carro MOb Cert-teed .80 CaisnaA 1.20 ChampSpk 2a 40ft 42 * I _____________ .... ’S..4* ...f14'* 0,4+ Llttonln 2.82 Letton Ind w LlvIngsO .43< 92 499* 459* 489*+ 2ft ___P____ ?L.T J^ PacG El 1.20 x221 369* 34 14ft 149*+ Iftjpac Ltg 1.30 257- 279* 271 42 JJihac Petrol 612 119* 109. „ - iMj. x52x 2'PaCTAT 1.20 270 259* 25ft 259*— ?9?9 ??.. 54VU+- JJ’pah, Am .40 3553 54( 48ft 50ft- 333 719* 471.... SquarD StBrands z.au ltd Kollsman StOII Cal 2-50 StOIIInd 1.70 MUNI St Packaging i 27ft- 91 75ft 739) .... 503 189* 179* 18 -471 24ft 259* 259k-Sn 52 50ft 51 + 9 145 I 494+ * 134 ■ ’JiPanh'EP 1.40 JJtParamPlcl 2 ,/• ParkeDSv la 1J* IPeab Coal l 157 <7’A 67H— 5’i I Pen n D We \6o ... .Ma ...a. iQJ/i-f- H Penney 1.5& 1»1 i. 183 40 i 30%.: vs Theat [S Cem 1 f lft S«Li LuckyStr 1012 679* 259 27ft 2071 189* i 42ft— 4ftip. p.ut 1 ... .... 19* 129*+ 189 459* 44ft 64ft- 1 73 359* 35 35 - 740 449* 41ft 429*+ 259 219* 21 Hj| « raft lft SJ+ *3 Lukani ttrl 75 15ft 14ft 149*— ft 40 45 44ft 4494+ 'i Mack Tr .9? 33., 31ft 31ft- 9ft MacyRH > Mad Fd 1.85g 606 73 651 «9 779* 74 k 75ft 739 36ft 37 — 9* i Phi la I ClavEIIII 1.44 CoaiMa 1.70 ”2 M M 559* 519* i 409* 39 f ?!* MaomaC 2. —M— 2.001 280 47ft HOP l in 81 54ft S4ft 56ft + 73 24 239* 239* 45ft— 2 Pitney Bow 1 67ft+ 2ft w\ /avs /o-/b 749*— 159 ^75 72 73 + . 107 349* 349* 369*- 9*. 149 54\ 52ft 539*- 9* 42 90ft\89ft 8994+ ft 354 57 SS SSfti- ft 183 50ft 341 72 v 71ft ColflnRa —T7 2 Marathn 2.20 ™ JS’-JX ,7* Mar Mid 1.25 2714 27fti’ft M,rqu,r V? iSJ MartlnMar J ■7 MayOStr 1.50 123 54 747 8194 7594 769k- 49* 616 55 539* 55 + Vi| 1-42 31ft 30V* 309*— 9k 270 189* 169* 149*- 19*: 2394 219* 219*— 2ft I Polaroid .20 ProctliG 1.85 Publklnd .349 116 12ft lift lift- 57 7494 7394 74 — 319 25V* 229* 229*- 2 347 7994 78 78 - 443 47ft 45ft 45 eould hn the le a.....-......—. ——.’ation. Special or xtre dividend* or payments not desIg-llMa; ited as regular are Identified In ttiejBHi il lowing footnotes. •—Also extra or extras, b—Annuel rate plus stock dividend, c—Lluldatlng dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1945' ' is stock dlvldtnd. *—Peld last year. Payable In stock during 1945, estimated ------------------5 -r ex-dlstrlbu- year. h—Declared oi dends li i accumulative -In bankruptcy or receivership g reorganized under the Bankruptcy or securities assumed bv such -es. fn—Foreign issue sublect 1 it actualization tax. WHAT THB STOCK MARKET E jtion year—would be even less io to enact them. PARIS (AP) — France is $ \ $ m\ None of the sources would be ready to end its boycott of the imm ’J} f, i 1| Quoted by name, since the ques-European Common Market and £ Successful $ tion is strictly up to the Presi- attend a meeting of the council , ; dent. But at least one of the'of ministers. 1 flit | - _ sources could have an advisory} The French have proposed /nVeSriflCF ^ voice in the decision. I that the foreign ministers of the i" S % c I This source said published!six countries in the European Itew . r * m -reports on the likelihood of a tax!Economic Community - its „ _____ ______ [increase are “definitely prema-Common Market partners - By ROGER E. SPEAR ture.” The White, House itself west Germany, Belgium, Italy, Q) “Could you advise a per- also used the “premature” label}Holland, Luxembourg and son of 45 how to invest $25,- [when similar forecasts were}France, meet in Luxembourg 000 that was left to him re- [made a few weeks ago; a jan. 17-18. cently and for which he has spokesman said no serious! ★ ★ * no need? This person intends [study was being given the pro-! The French proposed Luxem-to retire at 60.” iposal. jbourg as the site to demonstrate J- B- J IMPLICATIONS GRAVE (their disapproval of attempts by A) You should first determine^ Officials said an important;^? community’s executive com- 576 819 592 711 . 814 609 715 506 . 147 145 217 195 .1557 1573 1524 1492 an investment objective — and then stick to it with no slightest deviation. In your position, I suggest that your goal be strong growth stocks, which should en-hence your capital over the [years ahead. Since such issues have generally gained in value for many years at a rate faster objection to a tax increase, even ™,sslon’ wJlloh. ls a temporary one, is the grave Brusssels, Belgium, and other possibility that it Could topple n)em*)ers ^e. c?mmum^ the five-year business expansion 8,ve toe cornmiss,on suprana-into a recession. P°*ers- _ The alternative—if big deficits! The other Common Market doting average! STOCK AVERAGES First High Lew Latf Net Ch. 952.22 9663.6 952.22 944.34 + 0.51 247.30 247.44 244.14 244.14 + 2.71 Utils 149.14 151.93 149.14 151.71 +1.21 45 Stks 334.45 339.90 336.65 339.76 + 0.80 BOND AVERAGES 87.31 82.31 87.14 87.14 — 0.07 ....... 00JI MJI 10.00 M.M - 0.42 2nd RRs 90.45 ........... ““ : RRs M.49 I I 16.21 I 3 + 0.21 12 — 0.47 > 00.59 10.22 00.22 - 0J7 WEEKL Y AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) - Following Is record of selected stocks traded this we the American Stock Exchange, glvl . individual sales for ths week, the Aerolet .50a 176 36% 34V* 34ft- _ I AiaxMageth .10g 30 13% 12ft 13%+ % AmPetrof A J0g 53 ». 7ft 7ft ArkLaGas 1.34 91 44 43% 44ft- Asamera 2343 2ft 2ft 2 7-14 Assd OII8.G 710 5ft 5 5 - Atlas Cp wt $32 1% 1 I Bern*! Eng 029 33 «--2*ft+2ft Brez Tree .40 2347 10 9 ?ft-j- ft Bmper - .H0 ■ m-inT/im3-i4t 5:T8+ % BrownCo .60 1429 l*ft I4ft ,17ft Campb Chib 253 7 3-16 6ft 6 15-14—3-16 c«n so Pet m Cdn Javelin Cinerama Cont Tel .48 CtrywRIty 30d 314 JiPH- ... 2ft— - Creole P 2.40a 206 39ft 37*r 39ft+lft Data Cont 130 10ft 12ft 17ft—ft EquItyCp .05d 400 3ft 3ft 3ft- ft Forgo Oils 224 Tft 2ft 2ft _ PelmtOil .1) FlyTloer 1. Gen Devel Gen Plywd Giant Yel .1 Goldfield 749 31ft . Be* Pet Gulf Am Ld 545 1 ... Pk Mng Pane** Pet R I C Group Scurry Rein Sbd W Air , Signal Oil A 1 Sperry R ^Wt 446 43ft 58ft 59 tive at present and put no more than- $15,000 into 3 such issues and the balance into a savings reserve. I recommend American Hospital Supply, Avon Products and Bristol-Myers — all capable of helping to cushion your retirement. WWW A) “I am under medication at a Veterans’ Administration home, bdt expect to get back outside again. I have $7,000 Series H bonds and $3,000 in savings. I know nothing about stocks. Is it possible for me to pnt some of my assets into stocks to improve my position, and if so what issues?” “ . ---------------J.R7 A) Since your capital seems rather limited, I hesitate to advise a major shift to stocks — which carry the risk of fluctuation, no matter how high their quality. Your Series H bonds are as good as cash and are always redeemable at par month’s notice. I believe you should hold these bonds. With your lack of knowledge of stocks, I suggest that you put part only of your savings into a good food stock a group ijjj Jjlwhich usually carries a mini-2f 28ft-2ft|mum of downside risk. My ' choice for you would be Consolidated Foods, which Offers sound! 2ft+'ft 9%+ ft 2m-r- 5%+ ' 232 12ft 12ft 12ft- % 495 2ft ’ft 2 — “ , 2ft 2% nations have been trying to brihg France back to the conference table since it withdrew from negotiations in Brussels their inflationary consequences are to be avoided—is a deep cutback in civilian spending, including sharp cutbacks in Johnson's own “Great Society” June 3°* programs. ~ w w w French President'Charles de There are many indications i Gaulle claimed at that time that that the President has chosen r^e Common Market’s execute latter course. Reports from tive commission would expand various agencies indicate that toto a sort of superstate if It Johnson is demanding deeper were given control over funds to cuts than evk before in planned jhelp farmers adjust to new out-lays for space, health, wel- .competition, fare and the lower-priority pro- It was not learned if France’s grams of the defense establish- return to the conference table ment. would signal a change in its op- While it is doubtful that such Position to the agricultural fi-savings can come close to nancing plan, matching the prospective multi-l billion dollar increase in spend-[i^1 ing on the Vietnamese war, P some officials believe that price i pressures nevertheless can beli held in reasonable check. MINIMUM INFLATION I • Averages Day Early j Some additional yiti-inflation ^ M “• forces also wilrbe at work. § York The weekly market av- ; erages are being carried -a-day era4y this -week due Jo the doting, of the.New.: and American stock ary These include the money-}! tightening moves of the Federal I Reserve Board, the $5.1 billion r boost in Medicare and Sodal Security pay-roll taxes next} year, and a carefully planned) program of the Treasury De-< partment to arrange its addi-[ tional borrowing with a minimum of inflationary impact. [ Meantime, official hopes re-[ Detroit Edison’s gross reve-main alive that a negotiated jnues were $363,488,717 for the 12 cease-fire or settlement of the) months that ended Nov, 30,1965. Vietnamese fighting can be (Gross revenues for the corre-brought about in time to permit spending period of 1963-64 were a cutback in the planned Ameri- $341,175,761, the company report-can commitment of men andied today. exchanges today. Gross Revenues, Profif-tljraEdison 407 2ft 2ft 2ft— ft 200 lift 17ft 17%— ft (42 14ft 12ft Wft-JVkt 292 31ft 30ft 30%—lft! Year I ......... .............. _P»8.9S 530.183.245 364J34.254 WEEKLY AMERICAN BONO SALES Total for week 82,958,00.. ' • 84,522.000 , 81,329,000 value. Roger Spear’s 41-page la-vestment Guide is available to all readers of this column. Clip this notice and send $1.10 with your name and address to Rhfer E. Spear, care' of The Pontiac Press, Box 1118, Grand Central Station, N.Y.C., N.Y. 10017. (C pvrlght. IMS) money. News in Brief Net earnings of the company for the 12 months through Nov. 30, 1985, were $58,249,732, or $2-02 per share on the 28,820,105 shares outstanding at the aid of the period. For the previous 12 months, which ended Nov. 30, , 1964, net earnings were $51,991,187, or $1.80 per share on 28,807,779 Jerry Johnson, manager of Jerry Rents at 8183 Commerce, « Commerce Township, reported e to the Oakland County Sheriff’s $..„ Department yesterday the theft shares outstanding at the end of « $100 from the Arm s office. ! tha neriod. ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 TWENTY «NTlftE GREETINGS FROM ALL OF US TO ALL OF YOU MERRY - CHRISTMAS John K. Irwin, Realtor STAFF ☆ Season's Greetings! May Health and Good Fortune Follow You Through the Corhing Years! Huntoon Funeral Home MERRY CHRISTMAS All of ut at Waterford Realty with all of you everywhere the happiest ol holidays WATERFORD REALTY ☆ ☆ ☆ A Very Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year ☆ ☆ Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER ☆ ☆ ☆ SEASON'S .GREETINGS) AS CHEERY AS SLEIOMBELLS, AS PRETTY AS SNOW: WE WISH YOU A CHRISTMAS, TO SET YOU AGLOWI CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY •raker 38-4086 2K W. Walton Blvd. CRISSMAN E R CHRISTMAS Y FROM ALL OF US CRISSMAN CHEVROLET A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS A VERY-HAPPY NEW YEAR MERRY Christmas ☆ Happy New Year TO ALL OF YOU FROM ' ALL OR US AT Hiiter Realty Past Present and Future w PATRONS a Merry Christmas and a Happy; New Year ☆ Tel-A-Huron Auto ☆ ☆ ☆ Season's Greetings MILTON WEAVER RON LILLY ROBERT SMITHA FRED WEAVER BRUCE ILER INEZ WILSON TOM SCHMIDT ☆ MERRY CHRISTMAS to Thos« Wt Hove ~ S«ry«Pdnir Those We Hop* to ^erve! We wish Christmas could be j forty-eight hours long to hold double measure of happiness we wish for- you and yours. ☆ HAUPT Pontiac Sales AIN ST., CLARKSTON open Night*'HI t MAple 5-5566 GREETINGS FROM GILES REALTY COMPANY and STAFF ROBERT LYLE WINFIELD WOREL ROSE GREENLEE LILLIAN BROWN LeRUE KELLER WANDA SCHELL SOLON SPEARS THURMAN WITT JOHN OICKIRSON FRANK JACAMINO CATHY STEVBNS 221 Baldwin Ave. FE MERRY CHRISTMAS and HAPPY NEW YEAR! UNIVERSAL ☆ ☆ ☆ It Gives Us Great Pleasure to Be Able to Wish All Our Friends and Customers, Past, Present and Future, at This Joyful Time of the Year a: ☆ ☆ ☆ Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year ☆ ☆ ☆ TIMES REALTY 5890 Dixie Highway (South of Waterford Hill) OR 4-0396 ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ From Our Entire Staff, To AITOur” Friends and Customers, Past, Present, and in the Futuret MERRY CHRISTMAS and HAPPY NEW YEAR ☆ • State Wide Auto Outlet ,/ 3600 Elliebeth Lake Road FE 3-7137 SEASON'S GREETINGS! C. Schuett » Commerce Rd., ' TO ALL OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS WE WISH A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR I Sweet's Radio i MERRY CHRISTMAS HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM AMERICAN BQATS HAPPY HOLIDAYS TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE SEASON'S-GREETINGS! FLUMERFELT FUNERAL HOME OXFORD SEASON'S GREETINGS’ WE THANK YOU OR YOU PAST PATRONAGE AND TAKE THIS TIME We Wish You Chiistmas Joy and Peace and Many Blessings Through the Yearl ☆ ☆ ☆ L. H. BROWN, Realtor and ASSOCIATES 509 Elizabeth Lake Rd. j YULETIDE GREETINGS! to Our Many Friends and Customers NATIONAL WATER CONDITIONING SERVICE ________, FE 4.3620 ___ , GREETINGS AND BESt WISHES FOR A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS AND Joyous New Year FROM EVERYONE AT VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham Ml 6-3900 Sincere BEST WISHES to You and Yours for a • \ Merry Christmas and a Happy and Prosperous New Year From All of Us at LLOYD ☆ ☆ ☆ Our Entire Staff Wishes Everyone a Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year ☆ ☆ ☆ MAY THE COMING YEARS BE FILLED WITH HAPPINESS AND SUCCESS 1 ☆ ☆ ☆ RIVER BANK MOBILE VILLAGE PONTIAC DIVISION OF East Side Mobile Homes Sales 19449 James Couzens Hwy. A HEARTFELT WISH That Your Christmas Be Joyful and Your New Year One of Good ^ Fortune! D0NELS0N-J0HNS FUNERAL HOME SINCEREBEST WISHES FOR A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS I TO ALL OF YOU FROM ALL OF US AT WEBSTER, Real Estate I AY 2-2291 OA 8-2515 1 Merry Christmas We Wish You All A MERRY CHRISTMAS and A HAPPY NEW YEAR TAYLOR AGENCY 7732 Highland Rd. (MS9) A JOYOUS HOLIDAY SEASON! Tucker Realty Merry Christmas HAPPY NEW YEAR Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Birmingham Ml 6-4531 SEASON'S GREETINGS PERKINS SALE SERVICE AUCTIONEERS are grateful tit the -clients, bidder: I SWARTZ CREEK ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY DRIVE-IN MERRY CHRISTMAS and a HAPPY NEW YEAR! "WE WILL CONTINUE TO DO OUR BEST TO GIVE YOU THE ; BEST IN QUALITY USED CARS'" AND. TRUCKS." Jerome Ford Your Rochester Ford Dealer MERRY CHRISTMAS TOWN & COUNTRY RADIO & MUSIC KHG-7811 Season's Most Sincere Wishes to Our Many Friends! ROCHESTER DODGE "Oakland County's Newest Dodge Dealer" Rochester, Michigan LINCOLN, ^ERCURY, COMET ENGLISH FORD ☆ TO ALL OUR FINE PATRONS A VERY MERRY . CHRISTMAS ☆ ☆ ☆ Merry Christmas Happy New Year SEASON'S • GREETINGS TO ALL OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS -From "HOUSE OF WIGS" Wishing You and Yours Our Very Best Wishes for a VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR from- All of Us at Oakland CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH- 724 Oakland Ave. 333-9150 ☆ From All of Us To All of You I Best Wishes for CHRISTMAS I , and the NEW YEAR | H. Delot "Bud" Nicholie j Frank E. Allen Mrs. R. A. Kelcher Dean 6. Peterson Marcia Winger ^ "Bud" Nicholie REALTOR Real Estate and Insurance 49 Mt. Clemens St. FE S-1201 YULETIDE GREETINGS j Sincerely and Cordially Wishing You Christmas ' j Cheer and New Year's Success) TALBOTT LUMBER CO. I 1025 Oakland Avenue Pontiac FE 4*4995 SINCERE GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES FOR HOLIDAY HAPPINESS! SEMINOLE HILLS NURSING: HOME 532 Orchard Lake Ave. The Best of WISHES During This JOYOUS HOLIDAY SEASON PLYMOUTH CHRYSLER RAMBLER JEEP DEALER Bill Spence 4473 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston Season's Greetings FROM UPLAND HILLS FARM ☆ . -May the True Spirit of Christmas Abide With .You Alwaysl JACK. LOVELAND With the Gladness 4^ I of the Pealing Bells— I We Wish OT I You All M the Joys and Blessings | of Christmas Throughout . • JL ! the New Year ... THE PONTIAC PRESS / **£ MERRY / % I CHRISTMAS J& I Hap m w -New Year j HUNTER DODGE «i 1 499 S. Hunter Near 15-Mlla Rd. _ r I BIRMINGHAM __667-0955 | TO YOU- yjfc MERRY CHRISTMAS AND ^ »«£■ A HAPPY NEW YEAR • FROM Ut KIRBY of ROCHESTER ““HOLIDAY^ ik GREETINGS From Oakland County's . . Newest Chrysler-Plymouth Dealer" McComb • V MERRY CHRISTMAS TO YOU AND Y0URSI Stoney's Used Bargain Store SEASON'S £T GREETINGS! ^ To all our friends m S> and Customers • £ G&M Construction & 6 N. Saginaw___FE 2-1211 A]* MERRY CHRISTMAS HAPPY NEW YEAR . from Sylvan Realty } ☆ looking' forward I TOM DOUGLAS JIM DOUGLAS ondi L. C. WILLIAMS GLENN'S 952 W. Huron FI 6-730 Sislock & Kent, Inc. , 1309 Pontiac State Bank BHg 338 9294 33B929S Holiday Greetings and Best Wishes for a Most Prosperous and Peaceful 1966 Houghten & Son QLOMAMBLER^GMC Rochester We Wish You All A Merry Christmas Happy New Year BEATTIE "Yeur FORO DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD £T THE STOPLIGHT MERRY * CHRISTMAS * To Those We Have Served—and Those Whom We Hope to Serve! MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT 13 Orchard Laka Ave. iOtCRRY CHRISTMAS and HAPPY NEW YEAR WALTON RADIO-TV SIS E. Walton WE VAL-U-WAY Realty Wish You One and All a Very • MERRY CHRISTMAS and a Prosperous NEW YEAR! •„ SEASON'S GREETINGS Pontiac Farm & Industrial Tractor Co. 135 S. Woodward ☆ ☆ ☆ Merry Christmas AND Happy iNewZY^rZZ ☆ ☆ ☆ , NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES. ( 2023 Dixie Highway FE 8-9239 \ May Your Holiday Season Be a Joyous One and May * the New Year Bring You ; Full Measure of Success and Happiness! VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME A MERRY CHRISTMAS— ^ A PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR! Wj Joe Reisz-Jack Joll A J. J. Joll Realty 3- ■ : • ’ ■ ' ’■ ’ . ’ . •' % THIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1065 : v GREETINGS FROM ALL OF US TO ALL OF YOU SEASON'S GREETINGS FROM MR. SMITH SMITH MOVING, COAST WIDE VAN LINES - & A WORLD OF THANKS to All Our tY* Customers * 4 ond Friends 1 ☆ TO ONE AND ALL A MERRY CHRISTMAS-HAPPY NEW YEAR! C. E. LEE TO ALL OUR FRIENDS— A SINCERE MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR! BIRMINGHAM Chrysly-Plymouth SEASON'S GREETINGS Von Camp Chevrolet, Inc. FROM YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER IN MILFORD “SEASON'S” GREETINGS From us to you LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Marvel Motors j SEASON'S GREETINGS Qur Whole Busintss Family wishes yours thi happiest kind of Christmas and a wonderful New Year! MERRY CHRISTMAS I HAPPY NEW YEAR I Johnson Radio & TV 15 E, Wilton Blvd._F^ F456» REASONS GREETINGS HOLIDAY GREETINGS JEROME Motor Sales T980 Wide Track Drive FE 3-7021 WE of the Dorris & Son Realtors Wish You One and All a Very MERRY CHRISTMAS and a Prosperous NEW YEAR! . Merry Christina's I We wish you and yours*'a | joyous holiday season. And while at it, we want to t h o n k you sincerely | for ydbr faith and confi- j dence in our business ■ methods, To serve you well is our aim. Happy TNew Year ☆ RUSS JOHNSON ' MOTOR SALES AUTHORIZED RAMBLIR DEALER AUTHORIZED fontiac dealer On MS4 in Lnfcn Orion MERRY CHRISTMAS We Wish You and Yours a, HAPPY HOLIDAY It's Our Sincerest Wish That We May Serve You During 1966 FORDS' falcons! T-BIRDS j Home of A-l USED CARS John McAuliffe FORD SALES 130 OAKLAND AVE. ;' j FE .54101 Just to Say-in the t! Good Old-Fashioned Way- MERRY CHRISTMAS HAPPY NEW YEAR! Miller Realty 670 W. HURON FE 2-0262 " WE WISH ALL OUR FRIENDS and CUSTOMERS Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year TO YOU FROM USi ☆ Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year ☆ Estate Storage Company ☆, 10» S. EAST BLVD. FE 3-7161 ft FROM ALL OF US TO ALL^F-yOU-T WE WISH YOU A Merry Chrisimas ond o Happy New Year JJeorge R. Irwin Chones (Andy) Anderson Clifford 0. Homacher ~ Irene West Pot Couretos Iva Lee Nichols GEORGE R. IRWIN, Realtor ☆ SEASON'S GREETINGS to Our Many Friends in Pontiac ond Throughout Oakland County We are deeply grateful for Atour support of our pro-gram Turing the past yearl ☆ THE SALVATION ARMY MEN'S SOCIAL SERVICE CENTER III WEST LAWRENCE Brigadier Ernest Alder (MANAOSR) • TOM STACHLER AUTO ond MOBILE SALES 3091 W. Huron St. . FE 24928 3 WE WOULD LIKE TO TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO EXTEND TO OUR MANY FRIENDS AND CUS-TOMERS WARMEST WISHES FOR A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS JOYFUL NEW YEAR! ☆ Rose Rambler 8145 Commerce Rd. Best Wishes for o Very Merry Christmas and a Prosperous New Year Dawson's Sales „ Tipsico Lake We Wish All THE People of • PONTIAC o Merry Christmas Happy New Year A Merry and Season's Greetings TO ALL OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS A. & H. SALES MA 5-1101 ☆ ☆ SEASON'S GREETINGS to all our friends and customers. May health and good fortune follow you through the coming years. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year Ivan W. Schram Realtor ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Sincere Holiday Greetings KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS. SMI and Strvlcr Oxford OA 11400 Christmas Happy New Year! THELMA L. ELWOGD 682-2410 We Wish Our Many Friends A MERRY CHRISTMAS WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE WM. B. MITCHELL, SALES MGR. WM. F. GREGORY. SALESMAN ☆ Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from the Entire Staff ft Anderson d Assoc. 1044 joslyn Ave. FE 4-3535 •& . • Sincere Holiday Greetings FROM THE STAFF OF Smith & Wideman 412 W. Huron St. FE 44526 From All of Us to All of You A . MERRY CHRISTMAS ond o HAPPIER HEALTHIER ■NEW YEAR DAVB BRADLY EMERY BUTLER LEO KAMPSEN -----LEE MERE r- RACHEL LBVELV ‘ FRED ROSEVEAR HILDA STEWART JO SUTT AUG IE KAMPSEN -SHIRLEY FRANKS KAMPSEN REALTY 1071 W. Huron FE 4-0921 j MERRY CHRISTMAS to Those We Hove Served—ond Those Whom We Hope to Serve! WATKINS QUALITY PRODUCTS GENE T. POWERS, DISTR. AND YOUR WATKINf DEALERS May Your Holiday Season Be a Joyous One and May the New Year Bring You ! j Full Measure of Success ' and Happiness! JACOBSON TRAILER SALES M90 Williams Lake Rd, OR 3-JW1 [ ☆ • SEASON'S GREETINGS FROM M&M Motor Sales * Buying and Selling Since 1945 Oakland Ave. 338-9261 ☆ r Froliche Weinachten UNO ElN i Glucklishes Neues Jahr FROM YOUR LOCAL vw. DEALER J Autobahn ! Motors, Inc. FE 84531 j 1765 S. Telegroph ☆ Matthews-Hargreaves ( Wish You ond Yours a Very MERRY i I CHRISTMAS ! and " HAPPY NEW YEAR ☆ , I Matthews-Hargreoves "Chevyland" 631 Oakland Ave. FE 54161 FE 44547 ft ft WE WISH YOU A VERY . j MERRY CHRISTMAS ' AND THE MERRY CHRISTMAS AL PAULY, Realty WE WISH YOU AND YOURS A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR CANINE COUNTRY CLUB AVON Calling . . . The greatest Hick tn all. you do MERRY CHRISTMAS '*FE-4-4S0! Drayton Plains. P. O. Sox 534 i we wish Everyone A VERY I MERRY I CHRISTMAS Even's Equipment . <35-1711 Season's GREETINGS TO .! You and Yours FROM THE WHOLE FAMILY AT WRIGHT REAL ESTATE 382 Oakland Ava. ☆ We Wish You All o •Happiest of New Years ☆ HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. Oxford OA $-2528 To Your Home May There Come .More Good Things by THE SCORE for a Merrier Christmas and a More Prosperous New Year THAN EVER BEFORE! CAMERON H. CLARK Realtor 3101 W. Huron St. FE 3-7888 Merry Christmas ond a Happy New Year Is Our WISH ' TO YOU from all of US Paul Newman's SPARTAN Merry Christmas’ n, > and Happy New Year CAPITOL AUTO 312 W. Montcalm FE 84071 ■ft ☆ * . We wish to thank all of our many friends ond customers for making this successful year possible, ond we would like to extend to every one of you wishes for a Very Merry Christmas and a Prosperous New Year, ft RICHMAN BROTHERS SEWING CENTER 85? Oakland Ave. To Our ManK friends and Customers We Wish to Extend - Warmest Yuletide ' . Greetings War ran Stout Chariot* MCVawi Bob Whitlock Stontoy Oapkl. Gordon Hamilton . Ray Mason Larry Happ WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 MERRY CHRISTMAS and HAPPY NEW YEAR TO All of Our Customers and All Future Customers FROM H. E. Sheggrud Frank Rocossi James F. Edwards Jim Edwards AND Employees John McAuliffe, Ford 430 Oakland Ava. FE 54101 MERRY Christmas To All of Our Many Friends and Customers aMar~“ Joyous New Year From All oHJs at HASKINS CHEVROLET Oldsmobile "Your Crossroads to. Greater Savings" 6751 Dixie Hwy. at M-15 / THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 THIRTY-ONE GREETINGS FROM ALL OF US TO ALL OF YOU MAY THE GLOWING LIGHTS V CHRISTMAS * i SHINE UPON YOU Mr ALL THE YEAR LONG WITH JOY and W PROSPERITY! 4 / KING BROS. * PONTIAC RD. at OPDYKE To All Our Many Friends and Customers We Take This Time to Extend to You ☆ ☆ ☆ _ SINCEREST HOLIDAY GREETINGS ☆ ☆ ☆ and We're Looking Forward to Serving You in the Future! ☆ ☆ ☆ GALE McANNALLY'S NATIONWIDE W SEASON'S GREETINGS 0. E. PURSLEY FUNERAL HOME ☆ Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year FROM BILL SMITH'S USED CARS Ml N. Perry St. FE 4-4241 ☆________: To You Good People Who Always Have Been Our Loyal Customers We Take This Way to Say Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to You and Yours FLOYD KENT, Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. To All of Our Customers and Friends . . . Past . . . Present and . . . Future We Wish to Extend Our Heartfelt Wishes * for a Very MERRY CHRISTMAS ☆ ☆ ☆ WE WOULD LIKl to extend OUR SINCEREST WISHES THAT * ONE AND ALL HAVE A VERY Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year ☆ ☆ ☆ Bob Hutchinson Sales 4301 Dixie Highway IAYTON PLAINS OR 3-11 YY ☆ ' A MERRY CHRISTMAS I MANY THANKS! A HAPPY NEW YEAR ☆ Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year CREDIT AUTO SALES 125 Oakland Ave. (At wtd# Track) FE 2-9214 ■ ☆’ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ To All We Have Served in the Past and All We Hope to Serve in the Future- Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year FROM Betterly Music Co.' 240 S. Woodward Ave. IRMINGHAM Mt Ml ☆ ☆ ☆ To Our Many Friends and Customers We Wish to Extend Wishes for a Merry Christmas I £• I- Godhardt Funeral Home and a Happy• New Year \ PROSPEROUS Lv NEW YEAR K SHELTON P0NTIAC-BUICK ROCHESTER $ BATEMAN ALL OF US AT SATIMAN REALTY WOULD LIKE TO WISH A Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year ☆ FISCHER BUICK ☆ MERRY CHRISTMAS w that Christmas time l( hi HAPPY NEW YEARI GALLAGHER'S KEEGO HARBOR 682-0200 ☆ To All of Our v Mony Friends and Customers We Wish to Extend WARMEST SEASON'S GREETINGS ☆ Wilson Cadillac of Birmingham ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ j To All Our Friends and Customers I . . . Past j . . . Present . . . Future I We Thank You For Your j Patronage .1 And Want to Take This Time to Wish You All a Very ☆ ☆ ☆ < MERRY CHRISTMAS i ☆ ☆ ☆ A N j D I YrYr Happy ■ New Year ☆ Yr ☆ HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-7500 ☆ ☆ ☆ SEASON'S GREETINGS GRINNELL'S (Downtown) 27 S. Saginaw SEASON'S GREETINGS MERRY CHRISTMAS HAPPY NEW YEAR WARMEST HOLIDAY GREETINGS ’ Leslie R. Tripp - 75 W. Huron St. FC 4-056* $49-3155 -^Yr=YY- ☆ ☆ Yr To All Our Friends and Customers, We Extend a Big Thanks for Making Our New Waterford Office a Success, and We Wish Everyone a Merry Christmas AND HAPPY NEW YEARI 441 REAL ESTATE 5844 Dixie Highway WATCRFORP OR 4-1 ☆ Greetings i you. A* a buit- and happiness of Christmas » O'NEIL REALTY and ASSOCIATES MERRY CHRISTMAS HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM THE STAFF OF MERLE NORMAN V. HURON FC MERRY CHRISTMAS HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALLI ☆ Joyous Greetings at Christmas and Best Wishes for the New Year . from Frushour & Struble Realty and Associates JACK fRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE LCO BOGERT DALE HAMPSHIRE JIM DaFLORIO SILL EASTHAM , FORD (BUD) SIRO BOS MClNTYRf JO KRAUSf CO HASKINS JIM WILCOX MERRY CHRISTMAS from All of Us at HAGSTROM REAL ESTATE OLIVER BUICK and Staff. Wish You and Yours A Merry Christmas OLIVER BUICK HOME OF THE' BUICK OPEL and DOUBLE M CHECKED USED CARS 210 Orchard Lake YULETIDE GREETINGS May your Holiday season be a |oy- I bring you a full measure Dorothy Snyder Lavender REALTOR 111 W. Huron 331-9134 Season's Greetings ! AND Best ' Wishes from All of Us at WARDEN REALTY | 3434 W. Huron 333-7157 MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR * TO ALL OUR PATRONS! COOK COFFEE CO. ‘ WE WISH \.YOU A Merry Christmas AND MAY THE YEAR 1966 L Y. E N G T H E N YOUR JOYS EACH DAY We give you sincere thanks for your.patronage during the past year. It is our desire to serve you just as courteously, just as efficiently and just as dependably in the coming years. FROM THE EMPLOYEES OP THE ☆ ☆ ☆ ' MERRY CHRIS1MAS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR > to all the wonderful people who have become our friends through the years. ☆ Your Friends ,, ’ of "v HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS ! Pontiac Retail Store YOUR "Goodwill'1' Used Cor Let 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Holiday Greetings! MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. HAPPY YULETIDE GREETINGSI Season's Greetings! to All Our Friends and Customers! MAY we THANK YOU FOR MAKING OURS A JOYFUL HOLIDAY SEASON. HACKETT REALTY 7790 Coolay Laka Road Yuletide Greetings FROM DRAYTON PLYWOOD 4112 W. WALTON SEASON'S V ' BEST -h WISHES ££ J. L. DAILY REALTY *5? MERRY # CHRISTMAS -y AND A , PROSPEROUS p I NEW YEAR W j FROM ALL OF US! ARRO -v- ! realty A > Season's Most Sincere > Wishes to Our Many \ | Friends ‘ Cliff Dreyer's Gun & Sports Center Holly Travel Coach, Inc. i 15210 Holly Rd.. Holly, Mich. Season's M Greetings ^ to aii from I’ LAZENBY | REALTY y 4393 Dixie Hwy. ——^ ☆ Noeli % to You and Yours. V*' I Our Wishes for Fv*> I a Christmas Bright *A* and Merry! And in Wiping You . j- 4 Happy i\| New Year! V- ! We Send Glad ’O I Greetings to Our Many Friends I and Customers with a Very ilr Special I Thank You from \ All of Us at PATTERSON 1 CHEVROLET CO. ’§*7 MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEARI DR. C. F. HOUGH 190 STATE FE U •MERRY CHRISTMAS And HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM KING AUTO SALES 3275 W. Huron St. Corner Elizabeth Lake Rood ☆ Sincere ^ Holiday % Greetings X* TO ALL OUR ^ FRIENDS AND \ •CUSTOMERS & WE HAVE M SERVED IN V THE PAST f J AND HOPE TO SERVICE ^ IN THE FUTURE' & GMC % F actory Branch 675 Oakland of Cass FE 5-9485 % ☆ X THIRTY-TWO n ■7>: THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEkBER 21, 1965 1 MAN IN SPACE — A nervy motorcyclist nearly takes to flight as he tops one of the dirt hills that dot the landscape near Auburii and Opdyke. The informal scramblin’ grounds — a crisscrossing series of trails peppered ftirilac hw PM* with hills and ditches — will in the .near future give way to an osteopathic college. Meantime, a leap like this provides a test of nerves, skill and, of course luck. Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas MRS. PATRICK J. COLTER 'daughter, Mrs. Sue Millinax of tame Society ^ tj» church _ Service for Mrs Patrick j. CtaSa^MSa. I fRiitht Pnifpp 07 nf 1702 r«v • Also surviving are four broth-iand four ^klren,.^r«^Jonn, (Ruth) Colfer 67. of 7« Bev-, ^ ^ Walter andPaul and Karen, all at home. . r!ny: '2fcr?M2flrT*S-S- MRS. ROBERTH. FOSIY Refuge Church with buriul •t.uLJSta' LAKE MUON*- service for Mount Hope Cemetery by Don-i ^ jformer resident Mrs. Robert H. elson-Johns Furt*ral Home. j MRS. THOMAS BANCHER (Elizabeth>Fosiy, 58, of Detroit A rosary will be said at 8 LAKE ORION — Service for-will be 2 p.m. Monday at Allens p.m. Sunday at Donelson-Johns.lMrs. Thomas H. (Tillie A. )| Funeral Home, with Duriat in I Mrs. Colfer died yesterday aft-;Bancher, 70, of 414 Norland willjEastlawn Cemetery . — a prolonged illness. ibe 2 p.m. Monday at the Flum- Surviving besides her i^nana , Surviving besides her husband erfelt Funeral Home, Oxford,1 are a daughter,_Mrs. Robert M.\ Repeating Strategy of 12 Years Ago are a son, James, at hdme; and two daughters, Mrs. Patricia Hunter of Waterford Township and Mrs. Margaret Fons of Elkhart, Ind. I Also surviving are a brother and a sister. j Isabelle Welch of Lake Orion; and a brother. with burial in Mount Vernon Smith of Hazel Park; f°ut sons, Cemetery, Mount Vernon. j Robert of Naples, Fla., Albert, She died yesterday. Reds Hope for D/en in Viet By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent The activities of Ho Chi Minh and his North Vietnamese regime suggest that the Communists, by repeating their strategy and tactics of a dozen years ago, hope to produce a situation which might force the United AP NEWS ANALYSIS ' States to leave South Viet Nam. The Vietminh leadership of that day seized upon public pressure in France for an end to j the fighting which was taking i painful toil of French troops and money. ★ \ ★ * In November 1953, Ho talked with a visiting journalist from Sweden. The Communist leader . expressed admiration for the French people and indicated he might be interested in form of negotiations to end the fighting. He said he had noted that broad sections of French public opinion wanted a negotiated settlement. INVITATION TO BID ON FLEET AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE This Board Is desirous of obtaining bids covering fleet automobile Insurance on 111 County-owned vehicles and other mobile equipment. PERIOD OF COVERAGE January 10, INS to January 10. 1H7 A list of motor vehicles and equipment to be Insured and policy specifications may be obtained *“ In 1965, Ho has made it clear that he read manifestations in the United States to mean weariness with the cost of the Viet Nam war in lives and money. He has hailed demonstrations —I although by every available yardstick these enlisted a small minority of Americans — as an expression of the bulk of the U.S. people, whom he professed to admire, as he had professed to admire the French. . PEACE FEELERS And in 1965, Ho gave interviews to visiting journalists, and others in which vague hints were dropped. These were upon in some quarters as authentic “peace feelers.” Once again, as a dozen years ago, the Russians appear to have an active interest in bringing about negotiations. ★ ★ ‘ * A combination of Soviet and British activity led to a Geneva conference in April 1954. Actually, that was two conferences in one: on Korea and on Indochina. opened and reed eleud. Blddei dlally Invited to attend. This Board reserves the right to accept any bid or to re led any and all bids end to waive any defects In the bidding as It deems proper In the best Int—* of the County at Oakland. OAKLAND COUNTY BOARD OF AUDITORS Oakland County Court House 1206 North Telegraph Road Pontiac, Michigan Telephone 338-4751 " U and 29, IMS in Indochina. U.S. involvement was modest munication, but they had virtually no control elsewhere in the country. fHk Vietminh — like the Viet Cong today — held much of the countryside South Viet-Nam. * * ★ The Communists wore the French out. They had become involved in outright war in November 1946, and it went on 7Vi years. The fall of mainland Chi-1 na to the Communists turned the tide. It permitted direct help Ho’s forces from Peking and transformed what had been a I poorly armed, furtive guerrilla army into a formidable military organization. The United States has been involved for a long time, too. The involvement goes all the way back to President Harry S. Truman’s administration, although the U.S. military buildup has been fairly recent. In May 1950, the United States; decided to give economic aid to what were then the Associated States of Indochina — Laos, Atlantic Treaty Council af-| then. The Americans inherited a firmed support of French poUcyj bigger problem when the French fell and were expelled by foe 1954 conference. That left a vacuum which could be filled by the Communists and, some official U.S. eyes, menace foe rest of Southeast Asia. Neither the United States nor the government of emperor Dai, which then held sway in Saigon, signed the 1954 Geneva agreements. But U.S. involvement remained relatively small until after December 1960. It was then that the Viet Cong’s political arm, the National Liberation Front, proclaimed its right to represent all foe South Vietnamese. 'Hairy' Merry Santa On the day the first full ses-jCambodia and Viet Nam. That sion was convened in Geneva on the question of Indochina, May I,1954, foe besieged French fortress at Dien Bien Phu fell to foe Vietminh. For the weary French, it was just about all over. SIMILARITIES The Americans are in a much stronger military position Viet Nam today than foe French were in 1954, but there are similarities, too. The French held cities, towns and lines of com- LONDON (AP) — A chimpanzee dressed as Santa Claus created Christmas Eve chaos in downtown London today. He was climbing over foe face of a four-story office building, peering in windows and scaring office girls. The chimp belonged to an organ-grinder. Hundreds of revel: ers stopped to look at him and put pennies into foe organ-grinder’s hot. But then the monk started shinnying up some scaffolding on the office block. Girls typing on the upper floors suddenly found the face of Santa Claus peering in at the window — with a difference. [TRAFFIC STOPPED Crowds had spread across |HoIbon, one of London’s busi- J est Christmas shopping streets. I Police tried desperately to clear !a path for tfaffic. “Will you please get that animal down?” said a red-faced Expect Poor Weather P°Uceman^° ^ organ-grinder. December the United States agreed-with France and the Associated States on defense and mutual assistance. The North Perhaps Ho Chi Minh and his Communists suspect that foe Americans, like the French before them, are finding continuation of foe expensive war close to intolerable. Perhaps Hanoi hunch, it might bring about negotiations on virtually its own terms. Warn Drivers Highways Bad: t bolp flight - It is our hope that this holiday will have greater significance for the fine people of this community than ever before. S—- May the New Year ahead be a prosperous and meaningful one for all. We again want to express our appreciation for the confidence that has. been placed'in our organization this oast year. Glenn H. Griffin &tl Over Much of U. S. By The Associated Press Millions of motorists heading for the highways today in foe first part of the extended Christmas weekend were warned of hazardous driving conditions in many areas. Traffic accidents in the early hours of the holiday period killed at least 62 persons, including 12 in a Greyhound bus which went off an icy highway north of Medford, in southern Oregon. * * * The count of traffic deaths started at 6 p.m., local time, Thursday. The National Safety Council estimated that at the end of the 78-hour holiday period at midnight Sunday between 560 and 660 persons may die in traffic accidents. The council terms this Christmas weekend as the most dangerous holiday period of any year, a time of long trips, mini-mum daylight and inclement weather. Stormy, wet weather, with snow, rain. and gusty winds, swept across wide But that wasn’t so easy. The organ-grinder tried tempting the monkey with biscuit. It looked at the bait and swung up to the next floor. Someone held up a bottle of beer.- That was more inviting. The monkey reached down for foe bottle, took two swallows and sent it spinning into foe crowd. HOUR OF FUN After an hour more of fun arid games by the chimp, firemen took up foe hunt and clambered over the scaffolding with nets and ropes. crowd of 2,000, blocking traffic, screamed and yelled as foe chimpanzee dodged his pursuers. * ★ ★ Finally, affter 90 minutes, he was cornered. As foe monk perched on the end of a plank, peering up at the firemen above, a policeman threw a rope around him from behind and so ended London’s most unexpected Christmas frolic. AVON TOWNSHIP — Private [service for Mrs. Ernest (Rosa) navilie will be 1 p.m. Monday wag to ^ ^ a m today at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester, with crema- p.m. Monday at the Manley-Bailey Funeral Home with burial in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Danyo died yesterday after a short illness. Chief electri- tion at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Gerhart died yesterday with foe Air Force at Biloxi, H _ I . iMiss., Richard, with the Marine Mrs. Bancher was a member j Viet Nam, and Jack, of the Baptist Church of Romeo. L 1 ’ Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. |a ^ surviving are two broth. ers. ALFORD j: COMPTON «•««oruu,er- j pbwwut rFRHART Service for Alford J. Comp- WESLEY DANYO ton, 82, 495 Fourth, will be lj BIRMINGHAM — Service for| p.m. Monday at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial at White. Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Compton died yesterday. Surviving besides his wife, Eunice, are a son, Jesse, in Waterford; and tjire$ daughters, Mrs. John Moss and Mrs.' Kenneth Elmquest, both of Waterford, and Mrs. Rolley Bauer of Chicago. Also surviving are three’ H B BB grandchildren. I Surviving are his wife, Stella;) lone son, Neal R. of West Bend, RUFEJ. DAVIS Wis.; .two sisters; and three! Service for Rufe J. Davis, I brothers. 60, of 697 Livingstone will be ns,VNIi« Sunday at People’s Funeral | LEO C. DENNIS j Home in Chatsworth, Ga., with BIRMINGHAM — Service for local arrangements handled by'fome/J'esldJe?t ^ £ ^enn,s-C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home in 59, of Femdale will be 9 a.m. Keego Harbor. j Monday at the William Sullivan n . .1,1 v , * n. * & Son Funeral Home, Royal ■£« SJ" ffrim »*“> in twy to* Cemetery in Chete-k • ameUry U,°rui‘ There will be a service at 9:30 Mr. Davis, a former employe !a m- Monday at foe St. James Church, Ferndale. The Rosary cian at the Sheraton-Cadillac following a long illness. Hotel, he was a life member of) surviving are one daughter, Elks Lodge No. 1196, Knoxville, Qgr(]a 0f Rochester; one grand-Pa., and a member of foe Build-Lon; and one great-granddaugh-ing Superintendents Association1 ter of Detroit. | _______________ of Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday after a three-month illness. Surviving besides his wife, Loma, are two sons, Ralph B. of Pontiac and Leonard K. of Chattanooga? Tenn.; and win be said at 8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home. Mr. Dennis was a salesman at Wyman Furniture Co., Pontiac. He was a member of St. James Church, and the Holy 2 Blasts Rock Santo Domingo Big Explosions Follow Prelate's Yule Appeal Washington Sidelights SANTO DOMINGO (UPI) — Two thunderous explosions rocked Santo Domingo early today shortly after Archbishop Octavio. A. Beras broadcast a Christmas appeal in this city where 34 persons were reported killed this week. ★ ★ ★ J One explosion, destroyed a j hardware store owned by the Diego brothers who are described as among the principal financiers of the Dominican revolution which has plunged Past White House Holidays Recalled factory. By Esther Van Wagoner Tufty WASHINGTON - The Christmas tree ... or rather trees. .. stay up in foe White House House through New Year’s Day and fortunate are the visitors who see the Executive Mansion at its Yuletide glittering best. The magic of Jacqueline Kennedy’s gift for decorating is seen in foe repeated use of tall untrimmed trees in foe front foyer and it wqp this young First Lady who put a beautiful creche in a bower of white flowers in foe East room. The Johnson touch is seen in foe oval Blue Room. Here, stands an old-fashioned Christmas tree . . . almost filling the room ... of the kind so dear to foe hearts of children in every American home. Instead of expensive baubles, there are strings of popcorn and cranberries, gingerbread cookies, and many kinds of shining ornaments and tinsel. ★ , * ■ * This is the time of year when Christmas stories about our former Presidents are retold. White House Curator James Ketcham collects them. AGAINST CHOPPING Conservation - minded “Ted-Idy” Roosevelt was against cut- ting down trees even for Christmas, but his teen-age son, Archie, once sneaked a little one into foe White House and although reprimanded he was allowed to keep it. (It was Archie, you remember, who once put a horse in foe White House elevator). Later President Roosevelt relented' when reforestation plans made planned-cutting of trees desirable. The “other Roosevelt” (as Teddy’s equally naughty daughter, Alice, used to call “FDR”) insisted on reading Dicken’s Christmas Carol each Christmas and sometimes the grandchildren fell asleep because Grandpa would read every word. * ★ , ★ The same grandchildren had trouble also with Grandma Eleanor Roosevelt, who encouraged cleanliness by putting in their stockings toothpaste, combs, nail clippers, and soap. VOWS REPEATED Durng Christmas week, on Dec. 3d, 1877, President Rutherford Hayes and his wife repeated their marriage vows in foe Blue Room on their 25th wedding anniversary. The first Christmas Herbert Hoover spent in foe White Ouhtaniing in 46 Williams St. Pontiac for Servic ! and Facilities FE 8-9288 VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Ferry Street Phone FE 2-8378 muus, awtpi auuoo muc oicao in the western half of the nation 11 today. [yearly figure r Traffic accidents in the - MOUNT, CLEMENS:' (UP!) 110 months "this year killed 39,760 'persons, an average of more than 120 a day and two per cent1 Return of Cot Cheers Family Tha-efforfo-ef- good neighbors, a generous veterinarian and foe Macomb Coimty Humane Society have added up to a merry Christinas for the family of higher foan^foel^monthperiod Air Force Sgt. Gerald Jennings of Bossier City, in 1964. La. The Associated Press, for1 A year ago yesterday, Jennings, his wife and comparative purposes, made a their three sons moved from here to Bossier survey of highway ''fatalities City. Every night they went to foe barn and left food for Charlie no til last Thursday the tom cat followed them home. House was almost tragic for a Both explosions toUched M fire burst out in the West fires which were not brought WIng* j under contrpl until dawn. .Despite President Johnson’s: ★ * * well-publicized demand for turn, The sound of sporadic gunfire ing off the electric lights in the sounded through the night. White House, he makes an ex- ception during the holidays and OUTBREAKS OF SHOOTING foe mansion Is aglow in every| There have beer) outbreaks of window. shooting, machine-gunning a n d ★ ★ ★ the explosion of bombs nightly Across the Sou$ Lawn can be s‘nce Fighting flared last Sunday seen the nation’s Christmas tree *n Santiago. gleaming green and white, \ government announcement which foe President lighted inj said 34 persons have been killed in political disputes within the last five days, 28 of the annual peace ceremony. STANDS TALL The tree stands tall at the end of an avenue of smaller red and white lighted trees with foe entrance marked as “Pageant for Peace." Ag always, Washington has few VIPg staying here during foe holidays because they, too, like to be home for Christmas and that’s someplace else. And this is the only time of foe year when (he modern, international capital seems to revert to being the lazy Southern town it used to be. This irpleas-to foe “real” Washingtonians, yet they resent when the First Family deserts the White House for Christmas. them in the Santiago clash between former rebel leaders and foe Dominican air force. Unofficial reports put the death toll as high as 40. ★ * * Msgr. Beras in his Christmas broadcast asked foe Dominican people to show fraternal peace, forgiveness, pity and love. .He said foe population now is “far from practicing these Christian principles.” The Trumans back in 1945 worried the Secret Service .by. flying back to Independence Missouri in bad weather. The Eisenhowers spent six of their eight White House years in Washington and remembered is foe at-tractive red Christmas e s~s Mamie Eisenhower wore every year. This year, the Johnsons are spending the holidays down on foe LBJ ranch in Texas. during a nonholiday period of the same three-day time' span | as the Christipas weekend— from 6 p.m. Thursday Dric. 9 to midnight Dec. 12. The death toll' was 428. Movers accidentally left a door open and let out Charlie, a 4-year-old tom ’cat the family had raised since it wfc a tiny kit- 9 ten. Efforts to find the cat before the family left were unsuccessful. The Jennings asked their neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hutchinson, Traffic deaths during »»i . .. , . . . P., .. ... year’s foreenlay Christmas holi- wat<* iorA the cat and 40 shiP him south if he day totaled 578. The record for a was found> . . . three-day Christmas period is n..nu ... nriT seen again 609 set in 1955. The highest toll Charlie was not seen again until five weeks ago when some neighborhood children told the day, was 7^fo a four-day yule-1 “^ch*"80115 he was hiding under a barnfoi the tide period, area’ .. ,........ FOUND CAT President Garfield worked on The Hutchins0n^j€nWto foe bam, confirmed a farm as a youngster to help that the cat was Charlie but were unable to support his widowed mother. Helcoax him ou(. .They saw he was very thin And attended school three months a [was quite wild from being left to his own de. year during winters. 'vices for almost a year. • , , Elated by their victory in winning Charlie back to civflizktion, foe Hutchinsons called the Humane Society which contacted the Jennings, in Louisiana to determine whether the family) Some twenty members of Con-still wanted him. They did. igress with names beginning vyith it + ^ l“F” received Christmas cards Next foe Hutchinsons contacted Dr. Erwin ^e. President minus his Bortman, a veterinarian in Utica, who volun-ramous 8*8P**UPe du€ *o some leered to give Charlie a checkup. He - found , . . . t _____________. foe cat to be in good general health despite his I, mdofai the two Fords thinness and some scars from fiifots. ||fom Michigan: Democrat William D. Ford of Detroit and SHIPPING CRATE [Republican House Leader GeV- Jesse W. Bennett Sr. of Shelby Township, a aid R. Ford of Grand Rapids, member of the Macomb County Humane So-j * * * ciety, volunteered to build a shipping crate; At first, Democrat Ford for Charlie and Bob DeWolfe, a Humane So- thought foe President in sending defy law enforcement officer, saw Charlie'two cards was “showing his es-off at Detroit Metropolitan Airport Wednes-iteem for my liberal voting rec-day.. .. lord.” ““- *•* ~ • - Court Says Trailer at Residence Legal An Oakland County Circuit Court ruling handed down yesterday will prevent Bloomfield Township from ticketing a township resident for parking a trail, er on his property. ♦ Judge-Frederick C. Ziem en- " joined foe township fronTen-forcing its antitrailer ordinance against John Aldea of 2915 Cour-vale. ★ * * Aldea had filed an appeal in Circuit Court asking that the ordinance be declared unconstitutional. Aldea said the trailer was used by his family for recreational purposes arid has been' parked at foe rear of his home. Dues Are Forgotten for Lengthy Service NEW HOLLAND, 111. Wl -Twelve hundred meetings and 50 years after she became a mem-I her oi the Order of Eastern Star, Republican Ford was too'Minnie DeHass was honored by Hours later foe Jennings family was reunited polite to voice the idea that the I her chapter, with Charlie. s i g n a t u r.e was intentionally She received a 50-year em- Jennings said yesterday that although he will omitted from the first card. blem and a half-century recos-be transferred to Hawaii after the holidays) Later both received a secondrnitioa card, embossed in sold while his family remains in Louisiana, Charlie’s card with engraved signatures [Miss DeHass, a retired teadier' return has made this foe merriest Christmas|of the President and the First also was excused from navins ever .for the Jennings fairiily. [Lady. dues the rest of her life * THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965. THIRTY -THREE AP PMolll THINGS LOOKING UP — Bonnie Baker, 17, of Van Nuys, Calif., faced a bleak Christmas a year ago. Doctors wanted to amputate his cancerous leg and Roftnie ran away. He came-hade, though, and wearing a wooden leg, Ronnie helped decorate the tree this year. He gets around well and plans to start college soon. Crash in Rainstorm ] 'Go Away Kills 6 in Ontario I Die' FORT ERIE, Ont. (AP) - AI Buffalo, N.Y., family of five and 1 a Long Island, N.Y., woman 1 were killed Thursday night 1 when their automobiles collided i on the Queen Elizabeth Way ! during a rainstorm. ★ * * Police identified the victims I as the Rev. Herman Terry, pas- 8 tor of the First Church of God, | Buffalo; his wife, Shirley, 33; and their three children, Michael 9; Timothy, 7; and Stephen, 2. The Long Island woman was Jessie C. Mitchell, 52, of Malverne, N.Y. MORTSEL, Belgium (UPD —Please, said the letter to townsfolk from municipal authorities, stop dying. Authorities, taking note that the local cemdtery has no more room for fresh graves, addressed a circular letter to its citizens. “Please,” it said. "As far as ’possible do not overtax the local services until a new burial ground is available.” Lost Leg, but Feels Yule Cheer VAN NUYS, Calif. (Apf-Rohnie Baker wasn’t making any plans last Christmas. Tliis year he is. Last December doctors told Ronnie he’d die if they didn’t amputate his cancerous left leg. - Rather than face the operation, Ronnie 16, ran away from home. ★ ★ ★ He got as far as Flagstaff, Ariz., changed his mind, came home, and, last New Year’s Eve, underwent the operation. It was a success. Rpnnie, fitted with a prosthetic leg, can walk, climb stairs, drive a car, and hold a part-time job as a painter. He has .gained 30 pounds since his operation. CANCER GONE Doctors feel sure they eradicated all the cancer when they amputated Ronnie’s leg above the knee, although they say it’ll be years before they’re positive. Ronnie undergoes periodic checks at a clinic. * * ★ As he helped his mother and two half-sisters decorate their Christmas tree Thursday, Ronnie laid plans. “This year, mother,” he told Mrs* Lob Eisenbeiss, 52, “I’m going to go out for New Year’s Eve.” He and some friends from Monroe High School are planning a New Year’s Eve party. At school he’s studying horticulture, and hopes to attend Pierce Junior College in nearby Cano-ga Pari. LOOKING UP “Things look a lot better, now,” said Ronnie,' who turned 17 last Jan. 28. * ★ * “Things are just so much brighter, now,” echoed his mother. “This time we’ll have a real Christmas.” Death Notices BANCHER, DECEMBER 13, INI TIU.II A. <14 ' Norland. Lake Orion; Ma 70; daar matter of Mr*. Isabella Watch; Otar steer of Elmer Atkinson. Funeral service Patrick J. Colfer; dear falter of Mr*. Patricia Hunter, Mrs. Mar-Beret Fen* and Jama* Cottar; dear sister of Mrs. Blanch* Manning and Harry Freaea; alia survived by It grandchildren. Red-teflon af the Rosary will te at I Fun*iefn shaft, on Oakwood Rd., Baldwin LOST: WHITE AND BLACK ON LOST: MALlS BEAGLE, BLACK, i to "Sammla." Re- Losr—GREEN BRIGGS TRACTOR Tuesday night, Ok. IT, between Lea's garage and Brown Rd. Re----- FE 474" LOST: WOMEN'S BLACK ONYX -ring, vicinity Arnold's Drug Store, Woodward Avt. Reward. Call 447- LOST: MALE BRITTANY, LIVER and white. Lake Orton area, re-.........3-5408. top commissions. Crump Electric. CalLFE 43573. ARE YOU SATISFIED WiTH YOUR praaent income? Our sales staff Is among tha highest btcemp group In th* Real Ratal* Indus- . fry. <20,000 ta *25,000 annual In-com* Is not unusual. We expect 1144 to ba a banner year. Two fveW subdivisions ar* under development with new homes priced from SI54S0 to S35JM0, plus hundreds of usad horn* listings. Thto meant I4rge volume sailing and high naming power tor qualified Real Estate tab--------to — ■- coma potential li ar* satisfied »•'" Orville Preksch, Sato* Manager, O'Nall Realty, OR 42112. RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. t appearance, .good character, steady work—no layoff. Could use part-time through Christmas help. Call personnel manager. ACCOUNTANTS WANTEb BY EX- staff openings. Sand return* and salary requirements to Carey A Oifen, 770 1 Adams Read, tlr-m Ingham, Mkh. -Call betwaan 3-7 Monday. 4743231. $200 PER M&NTH BANK BRANCH MANAGER Must be at toast an assistant mgr. now. Immediate opening for aggressive young man as manager of new branch office. Apply Hi person at Blrmingham-Btoomfteld Bank, 1040 E. Mapto Rd. at Adame, Birmingham. (SAP WASHERS. DRYERS, ORIV-art. Pull- and part-tim*. 149 W. Huron. CAifffsRiR FOR YEAR-AROUNO hunting and fishing dub, nr- ran, Mich. Write to « rS3:J LOST: LITTLE SHAGGY WEST ' Highland White Terrier, vicinity Lofus-Macaday-Wll Items lakes -Family grieving. Reward, 1100. OR McClIntock Rd., Pontiac CARPENTERS, ROUGH AND FIN-Ith, apartments — long term, evening* after 6, 473-5470. doNSTRuenON Workers, high school gaduate, must have military service completed, b* In good health, guaranteed 40 hours pay. liberal fringe benefits, paid' vacation, holidays, life Insurance, hospitalization. Apply Consumers Power Company, 24 W. Lawrence, Pon- ALUMINUM SIDING SPECIALISTS. OLD AND NEW WORK. CALL JACK. SAVE THE JACK.. OR 3-9590. NEW HOUSE AND JtEMODELINO l-STOP BUILDING SERVICE, FREE planning, state II----tf EH Pontiac Chamber 2-CAR GARAGE, *899 ADDITIONS Also Atom- windows, doors, tiding. GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimate* UR 41111 All types of remodeling, kitchen cupBoards, additions, attic rooms, recreation rooms, aluminum siding, roofing. Free estimates. No down payment. G & M Construction Co., FE 2-1211. 86 N. Saginaw. HOLIDAY SPECIAL I2'x24‘ basement recreation room, includes praflnlshed paneling, hang- ing celling, and floor tlflon wall Included v , fltrHi 494 i planning, PHA I Carpentry _ 40d bathrooms my sa*clglty..Stet. licensed. Raaa. 4420*4*. INTERIOR FINISH. KITCHENS, paneling, 40 years experlencs — FE 2-1«5. ^ Cement and Block Work Ceramic TiliRg NEW AND REMODELING WORK, III*, slate, marble, Pontiac Tito G Marble, 442-5590.___ DRAYTON FENCE CO. 2116 Addle St. S74SSM PONTIAC FENCE CO. 2912 Dixie Hwy. OR 2-4596 JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. Sanding and finishing. 25 years axpartonca. 332-4975. LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE Old floors mad* Ilk* naw 25 yrs. axpartonca. 627-3 I Collect. Floor TiHwg 4 AND D FLOOR TILE, WORK guaranteed. FE 2-3299 or PE 40365.___________________________ Moving nod Storage SMITH MOVING CO. Nareery-Day Cara ^Piriirtiii|jii^^ A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON_______ FE 4S364 guar (1620 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR nting; fra* estimate —| irantead. Reasonable i aaa Fainting and decorating Interior and axtarlor, tree eat I------ UL 2-3557. interlakis painting and Dec eratlng. Al work. OR 4H0I. ODD JOBS, ^AtxtuiG.TAMD- hE-- palr work. 603-4317. ______ PAlIlTING AND PAPERHANGING, minor repairs. PE 2-2679. PAINTING ANb WALL WASHING, rooting, horn* repair. All work rranteed. Don't cult, call us. D. Price. FE 5-4691,___________ Hem Tuning tMk PIANO eW»' IMMEDIATE and guarantead sarvlc*. FE S4>10S. • W1BOAND PIANO TUNING 30 years in Fontlac, FE 1-4924 ■ Plastering Service PLASTEeiNO AND REFtillji. Reasonable. Georg* Lea. Fi 2-7922 PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. D. Mayers, 263-9595, 6741441. HiEtlng SnppHot PLUMBING, HEATING, SEWER RETAIL PLUMBING AND HEATING SUPPLY Repair Paris and Replacement 39 Oakland Ayg. _________33B4 BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS in Jotlyn Open Sun. PE «ISS CLARKSTON ROOFING INGMttMPANY. NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS, INSURED and gu*ranta*d~C*ll Tony 0SI4303. ROBERT PRICE Rdo^INGrBUILT-up rooting. Prat Eat. PE 41924. ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR Tree Trimming Service EXPERT TREE SERVICd. tRIM-mlng and removal, 3340064. Lakes Tree Co., Trimming Planting* — Removals Fireplace Wood - 625-1414 Tracking LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKINS, rubbish, fill dirt, grading-and orav» el and front-end loading. FE K603. LIGHT HAULING, OARAGES AND basamant* cleaned. 6741342 or FH 5-38114. TRUCK HAULING, LAWN, OA-rage, basement cleaning. UL 3-5663. Track Rental Trucks to Rent U-Ten pickups n»T*n Staka TRUCKS - TRACTORS. AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trsllers Poptiac Farm and Industrial Tractor>.Co. 115 S. WOODWARD FE 40461 FE 41461 Open Daily including Sunday Wall BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Wallk and window*. RaZlilto taction guaranteed. FE >1431. WALL WASHING. CARFETC, MAr chin* cleaned. FE 41977. WINDOWS, WALLS ODD JOB SERV to*, 3346716. THIRTY-SOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 1H—MJMfc 61'maIntc mm* product* I* Mi tor Income Stm Hu* per month, eelery plue ■ Bti CASHIER ■ dining room will > hotoees we periGnce. Night mm. Boy RMtRurMit, 29 S. 6 CARNIVAL By Dick Turner CAMPUS TO CARER EXPERIENCED MAN FOR SEMI- EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE] ■“* *» new and I MLS. Ca Enjoy Work That Will Challenge Your Ability? wHh college experience In qualified to rtert, COOK .iSEiB6, irrf & ESS&P m c" HOSPITAL INSURANCE CLERK ertonced Win Cron or mlsc. tom^EKnVVKSor — «jzi Mew LISTINGS • I Type* o» llgh school grad training or bush I public contact wt. ... Complete training couraa ' Salary range from ISO to p frequent salary Increases. I. You may arrange to talk over I * Interesting work with our empl ment office by calling 541-9928 visit our employtnme oftlcs st EXPERIENCED ONLY Cutter grinders, full or part-time. Production Mill and Drill operators. CRESCENT MACHINE CO. 2501 Williams, off Dixie Hwy.. BxpBrienced TV SERVICE MAN toll or part-time. F6 4-9002. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE CO. Ex| ground. Experienced counts, posting, voud statements and phene contact nark. Typing necessary, able to use adding machine. Excellent fringe benefits. Salanr open. Reply Pontiac Press-Box 57. MUSICIANS: Auditions being held at for rock and roll ai bend. *02-4350. ____________ M M E O I A T E OPENINGS FOR -stand employees. Apply Miracle “"a Drive-ln Theater, 210 S. Tel- give ywi a mdrtctofbfs arte* your proparty. No OiMgOML arrange oil Financing. WO ( buy homes and oqultlee. Buyers SNMM CaB Clark Real Estate, 3101 W. Huron St. FE l-TOto, FE 4-514*. PE 5-3*90 or OR 3-1975. SICk CALL A DOCTOis, “Ing real ostet*,c*ll O'Nell 'No sale, no charge." Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3S» Pontiac Lk. ltd. _____________OR 4-2222 ApartiMHts, Furnished IRUG AND COSAflSTIC CLERK -Hours to suit, will train responsible person. Russ' Country Drugs, -4500 Elisabeth Lake Road. v i wiuJng to learn. Nights. Caii GRILL MEN I daysl appiy King" Auto’__ I Day and evening shifts. Also pari] w. Huron St„ Pontiac, FE 8 4008. !!?? EXPERIENCED COOK - .NIGHTS] waS^M^jlSZ^Ajg hi - i'nMdy ggrmrflnn ---- -etween 2 and 5 p:m. at . JffgLg* Coun,ry ,nnl Boy Drlve-ln, T>i«gr»ph - »• Telegraph. tance Mall .or Tel-Huron, u paid, 2 people, M7.SS to June i. First and last only. See Jim 1057 Myrtle Ave. . VACANCIES COMING UP SOON, 1-J 2-badroom apartments, tor- WOOL PRESSER, EXPERIENCED. Full time, good pay, e--------- working conditions. Bsrg C *25-3521.,____________• ■’ortments, Unfurnished 38 ____ lr Dixie Highway Silver Lake Rd. ___________ HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE, GOOD In math end drifting 4M *010, tor appointment. IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR District Manager To work with Newspaper Boys SALARY, CAR ALLOWANCE AND OTHER BENEFITS STEADY EMPLOYMENT FOR THE RIGHT MAN CONTACT IN PERSON MR. McCULLY, CIRCULATION DEPT. n PONTIAC PRESS MACHINISTS il machine shop work, cn fringe benefits. Apply In | MINI Supply Co., 750 W. 1 MECHANICALLY I N C L I N Machine Shop TOOL LATHE HAND TURRET LATHE HAND OPENING NOW AVAILABLE TO Ml aggressive eatabllshad reel rata office. Member Pontiac Mi pie Dating Service. Inquire War Stout, Realtor, 1450 N. Opdyfce I Puttee. Pi S-ltoT_____________ PdktER PULL TIME, APPLY person Rotunda Country i*»- ■ Pin* Lake Rd„ Orchard Li PORTER 0R BUSB0Y and Silver Ufa Rd. A T U R E MAN RESPONSIBLE with gaa at to 10 p.m. *05 e~w*ek,5<* hours also the seme from 7 a.m.-3 p.m. Apply In person at Thayer's Citgo Service, 1407 E. Maple, Trey. PRODUCTION MACHINE OPERA-tan. experienced, steady work with hinge benefits and overtime. Hoe* Tow end Engineering Co„ Clerkston, Michigan. FREE ROOM AND BOARD FOR I Employmtnf Agencies exchange for staying with children IntBmotionfll Pprconnpl nights while mother works or lob- iiuiioiiui rureonnui .... *- --- I than Service, Inc. FULL TIME ELEVATOR OPERATOR Apply 40* Rlkar Bldg. HAIR STYLIST, FULL guaranteed salary plua c mission, taka over ran llshed. *51-1*47. "SOS' HOUSEKEEPER TO CARE FOR home and children. FE 8-9)74. HOUSEKEEPER — HRS. 2-7, MUST HOUSEKEEPER FOR MOTHER-less homo. Live In. References r changed, call collect. FE 1-9955 FEME* HOUSEKEEPER NEEDED. APPLY MIDDLEASEO LPN WITH EXPBR- midoleaged woman to care ' * smell Chlf— I FE 5-8778. needed Immediately respon- ■gto i wo a receptionist for coiffure Persnnt Beauty Salon. *734)712 ■' *73-3408. SALESLADY WAITRESSES y> 9005 p*7' _____si part-time or toll time, Biffs Coffee Shop, Telegraph at MdpttoMltoB||^^M WAITRESSES Dining Room and Curb Pull or part-time. Paid vacations. Heipttllltatlen. Lunch hour and toed allowance. Apply In parr" BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph A Huron or Dixie Hwy. A Silver Lake Rd WOMAN TO LIVE IN, lIG^Y houatkaapInQ, 2 children. FE 4-9021. WOMAN WANTED FOR BABY-S mutt have transportation, Unf Lake arte. 3*3-55*7 after 5. woman for kitchen. Apply Big Soy Drive In. 2474 Dixie p Wanted M. or F. Wantod Household Goods 29 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED TRAINEE - GRILL I Ste^Ny | reph end 2 Help Wanted Femoto 50 FREt BICYCLES Mothers, would you' Ilka to get ‘ beautiful new Schwinn bicycle tor rr chlldrenT Alt you have dg •ell 41 bottles of vsnllla 45 cans at pepper to your lr end relatives. Cell 332-3053. BABY SITTER - HOUSEKEEPER, live In, weokonds'ott. OR 3-1102 or OR 3-3237:__________________________ IaBy sitYfeR, uvf........IN LlBH* housekeeping, 1 child. Apply person, 713 Kenny Rd. BABY SITTER, HOUSEKEEPER, call before 10 «.m„ 334-92*0. baIy SITTER TO LIVE IN, BROOK-lend Sub. 852-521*. BAAY SITTER - LIVE IN — Phone FE 5-4734 aC COAT CHECK CONCESSION, PART-time hostess-end-waitresses, apply In person Rotunds Country Inn, tot Pine Lake Rd., Orchard CrAnBROOK CARCASE CENTER has opening tor toll lime cashier, eg* desired 35-55. Must be dependable, neat, end eager to learn, experience helpful but not Mejhtmaiit ceil I 7-0700 between 2 Wanted | Man or Woman FOR MOTOR ROUTE IN Birmingham * Area at Once Apply to Mr. Stier PONTIAC PRESS CIRCULATION DEPT. Merry Christmas td You From All of Us MAY YOUR JOYS BE MANY BATEMAN REALTY CO. PONTIAC FES-7161 ROCHESTER 0L-1-8516 Work Wanted Male Work Wanted Female WHEN SI Realty!*' <, CALL A DOCTOR, g reel estate, cell O'Neil O'Neil Reeltor 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, ON Elliabeth Lake, no pots, BM term lessa available. 1100 di Dressmaking A Tailoring 17 CeavabBtunt Iniag If BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING AND STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES ROBERT TOMPKINS EM 31 Expressway MOVING and STORAGE *744)307_________*74-0300 Fainting t Decorating 23 MINTING AND PAPERING. YOU •rt next. Qrvtl Gldcumb, 673-04G6. Transportation IP YOU'RE GOING TO CALIPOR- Roams With Board ,43 nla. deliver a let* model cBr tor MAM Motors, 1150 Oakland Ave. 338-92*1. LOVELY WEST SIDE HOME — shower bath, pvt. entrance. 2 employed men. Good home cooking. FE $-333$. [ Insurance 26 SAVE ON HOMEOWNER POLICY premiums, savings In A-plut companies up to 15 per cent. Dependable and prompt claim service. Just phono FE 442S4 for a quotation. K. G. Hempstead. > Rauf Starts 46 LARGE STORE ON JOSLYN | BREWER REAL ESTATE WM. B. MITCHELL, Seles Mgr. * ROOMS, 2 BATHS, CARPETED. On lake. 0170. Utilities Included. OR 3-37**. ________‘ $83 TO $111 MONTH 1, 2, 3 bedroom townhouses wild up to 1W baths, large living areas GE equipped kitchens, sliding glass doors leading to redwood-screened patio. UBS moves you Ini Bloomfield Townhouse Apartments VMI Woodwi" *“"■* _ ..JHLSSK IIP month. Owner. MY 2-0940. LAKE FRONT HOMES-NEW AND Dally Co., EM *02-2300 DUPLEX 1-BEDROOM, NEW, DE- - “This just could be the happiest time of your life, young man! Old enough to get into trouble, but too young for anyone to do much about it!” Resort Proporty PONTIAC IS MINUTES, PRIVATE T*. no motors allowed. SO’xlSO' , Furnished 39 >al« Houw» Rent Houses, U nf u r nished 40 ’-BEDROOM HOUSE. BASEMENT, ~ ....... ssesslon, 2709 Pbntlsc 5-21*1. FHA Repossessions These homes ere ell newly i conditioned. NORTH POINT REALTY HIITER IMMEDIATE POSSESSION-on I BASEMENT HOUSE ON ORMOND Rd. Rant free to responsible — pie. Call 425-4434. Sunday ujd HOUSES FOR Rtl Sterling Township l-bedroom farmhouse, 34300 Mo Rd., 190 per month. ANCOR-POWELL C0RP. 547-3800 Barkley, Mich. QUICK POSSESSION - MERRY CHRISTMASI Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 7294_______________ 338-9295 Rent Roams DOUBLE OCCU T2 Mixed Neighborhood :REE ROOM AND BOARD FOR school girl or working woman In exchange tor etaying with children hlghts while mother works, or lab-lass woman more far homo than wapas. Call after 3:30. *024)173. MAID SERVICE. COFFEE, CAR. naiad, TV, telephone, 035 a weak. Sagamore Motel. 709 S. Woodward Payments Ilka rant MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS AND SUNDAY WEST0WN REALTY 5*5 Bloomfield Near Luther FE 8-27*3 afternoon*. LI 2-4*77 Eves. SLEEPING ROOMS FOR GENTLE-] man, Pontiac. 852-4959. SLEEPING ROOMS, MEN ONI?Y,l " drinkers, 338-1315. I SEASONS GREETINGS FROM J. C. HAYDEN Realtor & Associates OFFICE CLOSED FRIDAY l. C, Llpperd. FE 5-773 OR 3-5153, ME 7-5193. - t PRICE BEFORE \ ..... jf’buy^- I & B Auction ) Dixie_______________OR 3-2717 Wanted Miscellaneous 30 COPPER, 30C-35C,- BRASS RAPI ----- S3; batteries, 81.25. C. D M 3-5849, DESKS. FILES, OFFICE FURNI tore, portable end office typewriters, adding machines, drafting tables, etc. Forbes, OR 3-97*7. We BUYER -high. Brl ^._»s. Herrlna RATS AND COON Wanted to Rant Wanted Real Estate BUY FARMS AND AC mm i.....mm Hills. FE 22144. t 1 TO 50 Irgently need for Immediate Sale WARREN STOUT, Realtor UN N: Opdyke Rd. FE 541*5 Pontiac Dally *111 5 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES WRIGHT Oakland Ave. ■ BE 2-9141 HERE'S HOW O'NEIL REALTY goes to work for fast action. 742 MANSFIELD Usted M 12-17-&5 1219-45 1791 SHERWOOD 1MA4S teen your h* office ley O'Neil I 0 Pontiac L QUICK CASH FOR YOUR HOME OR EQUITY _ CLARK RiALfsTATI 01 W. HURON FE »700e OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REAL- Im4V435°R 4-03M 0R EVEN,NGS NEED 200 LISTINGS » t Wyatt FE 3-70*1 IEALTY. 424-9575, Mr. Davis. Rent Office Space NEW OFFICE CENTER UNITS FOR rent-least — Clarkston area — “* 5-2*01. OFFICE FOR RENT 49 » DOWN SHED NO TEARS Just your landlord, gather _______ and look at this contemporary ranch all one one floor, Ing In living room, 3 t close to shopping center I Lake. 75x220* site. $11,000 _____ plus tax and Insurance. Hagstrom Realtor, 4900 W;. Huron, OR ' "~ evenings. OR 3*229. WHEN SICK, CALL A DOCTOR, whsn selling reel estate, call O'Neil Really. "No tala, no charge." Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontlic Lk. Rd. _____________OR 4-1222 _________ 2 ACRES At Duck Lake. Includes • — mobile home 50x10 plus an add-on of 34x10, 2-car garage. Can be ' ' on a land contrect at 17,500 2-BEDR00M HOME Nice shaded lot, 100'x125', I garage, lake privileges, good bt $9,550 with 10 per cent down. FLATTLEY REALTY .20 Commerce 3*349011 3-BEDR6&M HOUSE ON FRANK-Rd. $400 down, move in. 330- WEAVER MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR In the Village of Rochester 110 W. University_____________*51-0141 WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE 270 S. Woodward, Birmingham mm^Mriiniiri 5*4-2223 ANNETT 11 Rooms-3 Apts. Indian Village Brick Good homes in this area herd to find. On corner .... carpeted LR, natural fireplace, toll size dining------ handy kitchen, 2 ■“ and tile bath. 2nd _____ . finished. Basement, recreation room end workshop, FA i" mtge. costs. Brick and Stone Colonial y extra large bedrooms jM| kitchen $2,500 ^toceted^J* pin stove end os_______ ______ carpeting end drapes Included. Oversize 2 car brick garage. 02.000 down plus mtg. FE 8-0466 DORRIS 'TWAS THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS Wt'hope you have a house -to please you and your spouse. MERRY CHRISTMAS COUNTRY CHARMER. Eye-appeal plus for this beautiful whlto »r-- bungalow In a setting of _ wood trees and right ecross the street from the lake, well constructed throughout with Ofk floors, plastered walls, separate d1-1— room, beautiful birch kitchen stainless steel sink and attl garage. S1S.950. RETIREMENT OR HONEYMOON this Immaculate 4-room bun ' situated on a spacious lot E LISTING SERVICE Ibcbbw Prif rty IVP, BRICK BUILDING,____________I starts, rent $275 per Mo., Wm. Insured tor HWM 80 per cent wjnt/ P has toll basement end 2-car ge-regt. Reef hot price of 812,300 with low down payment. ted McCullough, jr. BROKER FE S-7550 SI OrieeRd. to Eston Rd.. 5 t north to 8095 Mohawk Drive. -----SYLVAN *25.18*4 _______LAKE PRIVILEGES, clean, pertly furnished, 2-bedroom, hide-e-way In the bills, flrtplaca, large lot, priced at 11.950-41,300 I msr~n If no ens. 33*4222 425-1M4 Bros, OR 3-1295 < Lots-Acreage $450 DOWN 2V$ acres vacant — good bu Alto - 11 miles nbrthof V CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 220 W CANAL LOTS Choice building sites — *0x14 Connected with Sylvan Lakt. JACK LOVELAND 2tio Cess Lake Rd. **>1255________ CLARKSTON, HOLLY, AND ORTOl ville areas - From $2500 07,250 - 10 per cent down. Also • number of Investment properties In'good locations, with or without buildings. Undefwood Real Estate —(*5 Dixie Hwy. Clarkstc *25-2*1$ , if no ens. *25-1* i ere being offered CITY OF PONTIAC - MENOMI-nee Road, fanced lot, SO'xlZO', Ot-tawa Hills, FE 5-7005. JAYNO HEIGHTS lsks and Insida lots, one of Oakland County's most beautiful areas. 4 natural lancet, city water, gas, paving. Only S minutes from Pontiac. Starts at itoatoMiBto Will build to OWNER OFFERS 10 ACRES, 780-ft. frontage on Lake Ai Road. Less than 500 foot ______ Baldwin Rd. Priced tor quick cash KINZLER MACEDAY LAKE its near., delightful with attached garage. Prompt p session as owner has a hoi city. There Is on(y o $15,501 i toft, l-BEOROOM, RANCH, LARGE LOT, $2,500 down, take over payment! $77 a mo., balance, $9,100. OR $9990 Ranchor on your tot. Lovely 3_ rooms, toll basement, otk floors, FULLY INSULATED, Dol-Mar finished cabinets. No money down. Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTBR-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG. 53W W. HURON FE 4-3130 AT ROCHESTER 5-room brick ranch on 4Vi acres. 4 miles north of town. 110,500. Phono OL 1-8588 for details. Fronk Shepard, Realtor BY OWNER, 3-BEDROOM BRICK, fenced, •gersoe, mixed. FE 54*10. 1 FIRST IN VALUtt CUSTOM-BUILT RANCHER Thro* bedrooms, family r Homes feature split-rock exh staled glees windows and screens - marble sills, full thick Insulation, plastered wells, genuine ce-"“111* baths, double wash natural fireplace; first- RENTING $59 Mb. Excluding taxes end Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit* WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAf HEAT LARGE DIKING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARB OKAY,WITH US. OPEN DAILV AND SAT. AND SUI OR COME TO 170 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUER SALTY For Immediate Action Call FE S-3676 626-9575 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty NORTHSHORE SUB. Lower Strait* Lake, 101 K-wide canto, 2 nlqe lots, Early American ranch, carpeted ana draped, living room with fireplace, family room. I bedrooms, attached garage. Mo sprinkler pump, excellent area. Welled ■Lake schools. S1B4W FHA or bank terms. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2513 UNION LAKE ROAD . EM 3-$m 3*3-7111 NEW CUSTOM HOMES "UNDER CONSTRUCTION” Lake Ancjelus Lakeview Estates, A Quiet, Secluded Area With Lake Privileges “LET'S TRADE NOW" „ NEwTaNCH HOMES Rambling end clean exterior lines typifying luxurious comfort in tol* design. Expansive living and dining room, kitchen with bullt-lns, 3 airy bedrooms, Itt baths and toll basament, gat heat. Price, 815,-458 Including lot. 10 per cent down plus costs. Best value anywhere. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5217 Dixie Hwy. 474-223S Across from Packers Store Multiple Listing Service Open 9-8 After ht A 5-1744 NICHOLIE SEASON'S GREETINGS! C. PANGUS, Realty Mtl Ortonvllle Cqll Collect NA 7-2815 WATERFORD HILL MANOR Jutt perfect ter your ' *■horn — new section now open. Lots tram $3750 DON WHITE, INC. 171 Dixit Hwy_____ OR 4-Q4I OWN VOURO^BU»INBSs!*Jl*AKE 81,000 psr mouthing up MflMmj; Omell Investment. Cell Mr. Lezot-to.lM4Wt: ------- PARTRfrtJE "19 THE GIRD TO SEE" “TRADE SPEOALISTS" In 17*5, up to. DSC; 1ST SaleJHewrtBM^^ 9x12 linoleum Rugs . $3-89 the U5A. Cell today end let Selec-tronlcs make a trade tor you. PARTIDOE REAL ESTATE MB W. HURON__________FE 4-3501 SOUTH END BAR A reel going Pontiac bar that can bo bought right. Largo corner W “th*Sh St parking space. Bargain priced to 114,000 down. Reel estate else available at a REALTY TAVERN 333-7157 d equip- CLASS C and SDM r, lust outslds Pontiac, almost 10,000 gross. Liquor only. Well es-ilished. Owner Is retiring. Make an point ment I BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT en 9-5 3*9 s. Telegraph After 5:00 FE 0-7*41 " ’ "Across From tht Mall” o'' ttkLUki GAS STUvI, WO. Sterso snipHfler *4 W Ffc j-7172 ’' AIR CCHJDlTiONER Drastic reduction oneto tor wndwwwors Hi stoat 1 MORE 1JME misifflmF $278 (Good) $2.50 W«ekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 W:ekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-plece (brand mmlllvlnortwn: J'tiwS$,llm'Schmr' co«~ decorator lamps, all-tor 1107. Only *' NEW*BEDROOM raroains ARONZE OR CHROME DINETTE Mia, BRAND NEW. Largo and small size (round, drt»-leaf, rectangular) tables In 3, 5 and 7 pc. S,mts« ”FE%7M1 PEARSON'S FURNITURE ; Sab land Contracts 60 1 TO 50 L4ND CONTRACTS UrOthttyj wanted. See ut before - WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1*50 N. Opdyke -Rd. FE 5-11*5 Open Eves, ‘til $ p.m. B AND J FURNITURE AND AP-| pliance. Used end reconditioned. Gas, elec, ranges; refrigerators; auto washers; dryers; toasters; TV's; radios. A-l condition. 1*0 ■ Baldwin. 338-4465. BUNK BEDS Choice of IS stylet, trundle beds, triple trundle beds and bunk beds complete, $49.50 and up. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Pike. Christmas Specials GE dishwasher, new .'. 1150.00 Cooleritor humidifier t 54.95 Emerson 11" portable TV ... $^89.95 ACTION On your land contract, large or email, call Mr. Hlltor, FE 2-0179. Broker, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Road. WiBted CeutTBcts-Mtg. 60-A RCA 'victor'clock radio . . . * 15.95 GE portable stereo, 2 speakers, with stand/ 45 spindle, records .. $49.80 Dishwasher Imperial $39.50 Ironrlte Ironer . *2*9.00 Zenith AM-FM radio S 31.00 RCA If" portabl* TV, new . 1129.95 THE 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before you deal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor ISO N. Opdyke Rd. FE 541* n— Eves. 'tn r — CASH For your equity or land contracts. Don* lost that homo, smallest Possible discounts. Call *02-1020. IMMEDIATE CASH UPON INSPEC-tton of property and title for any NEED LAND CONTRACTS. sAaLL discounts. Btol Garrtos. EM 3-1511, SEASpNEP. LAND CONTRACTS WFntoO. Got our deal baton **ll-„CAp|T0L SAVINGS B I LOANS TO $1,000 on first visit. Quick, frlend- 0\KLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. ■“ H 7:20 tot. NEED CASH FOR CHRISTMAS EXPENSES AND BILL CONSOLIDATION? BORROW UP TO $1,000 1V 36 monthi to pay credit life Insurance available BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY OrriCES NEAR YOU LOANS TO Sl.uuO To consolidate Milt Into IMRHP ly payment. Quick service with courteous experienced counselors. Credit life Ineur-- - --. rr Sale Business Property 57 furnaces. House to res 111x17* ft. lot. ideal ter . car sates. $42,500, terms Annett Inc. Realtors E. Huron St. FE 0-04** BAX TER & L....... Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Build ' FE 4-1538-9 RY X-SALESMAN f, MO. Contalni 11 s and kitchen tools. Llpperd, 557 N, Perry. HOME FREEZER Full Pamily She Holds 3*1 lbs. All fato'frqeze shelves Bonus storage door 1147 fretTer's warehouse ‘outlVt 1*50 S. Telegraph_____. FE 3-70*1 GOOD WORKING REFRIGERAlbft iv* io to 2o pPmnmp 24 between 4-7 p.m. KIRBY OF ROCHESTER grill $15; oak buffet $15; matching Imported table lamps $18 pair; apartment size electric rang* $15; restyled mirrored piano $75; girl’s NEW 7x12 LINOLEUMS. USED. RUT like new stoves and refrigerators. Evarythlng to meet your needs at Stoney's. 101 N. Cass at Wide -----1 FE 4-1730.___________________ ALSO Igerators MCE GAS RANGE, K 30" electric range, i and dinette sets. Michigan Appli-— fa ”*“ Olxle Hwy. *73-8011. PFAFF AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine, deluxe free-erm portable - 1942 model — take over payments r' "---■ * •r $54 c Il Co., FE Coast-ToCoast TRADES Tom Bateman FE 8-7161 % .Realtor Exchangor 'tailed kitchen, Built-In appliances, basement, ga»_ heat, attached wX ? -^Rl! KAMPSEN ft WEST HURON ST. PE *4721 EAST SIDE Three bedrooms alt on one fl paved street, gas heat, tile b SOUTH SIDE' Just decorated Inside a three-bedroom homo wb SUBURBAN Ranch heme wit carport, paved si decorated. Cell h three bedrooms, CLARK garage. 3 bed mem*. 1. toll I $33,900 terms. CEDAR ISLAND -Leke privileges i. Cell MR. CASTELL FE 2-7273 Fireplace. I t. S&JOOter SKATE NOW — Swim —This 4-mom ranch ......... has lekd^ privileges on Monday CLARK REAL ESTATE______ 1101 W. HURON ST. FE 3-71W ’ FE 5-5144 or FE 5-3*90 Multiple Ltstlng Service TO OUR MANY ■ FRIENDS and ASSOCIATES WE . WISH * YOU A Very Merry Christmas - and a Happy. NeW Year A, J. RHODES & STAFF LIGHT INDUSTRIAL CALL TODAY GIROUX Business Opportunities A 643. TAVERN AND SDM ~ YhfirKr 'Includes reel grogwTj In smell terming town to goo deer end pheasant hunting • coin try. .Only S10,0p0 with M.OOO dowi STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE APPROXIM AT ELY tW ACRES, M MILE PROM OAKLAND UNIVERSITY. CORNER OF SQUIRREL AND SHIMMONS RD. USED AS A DAY CAMP, BUILDINGS, EQUIPMENT AND SWIMMING POOL. POSSIBLE MULTIPLE S I T E. Coast-To-Coost TRADES Toni Bateman FE 8-7161 Realtor* Exchangor MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER. BROKER 1573 S. Telegraph FE 4-1IB LOANS $25 TO .. COMMUNITY LOAN CO. . . — Ft 1-0421 30 E. LAWRENCE [TRADE: 8-FOOT Swaps CRAFTSMAN 2; with table, m FE 2-5573. FOR SALE ... MR pickup cover, FE 5-19*7. REGISTERED BLACK AND TAN, 3-]toaM>W, ^ chain saw or gun. WILL EXCHANGE ELECTRIC typewriter or manual, adding machines, office furniture tor guns, outboard motors, power shop equipment, etc. Forbes Printing — Office Supply, 4500 Dixit ' Drayton Plainr ■ -— Sale Clothing RESALES CLOTHING, • - Ays., FE 4-50*2._________ WEDDING GOWN WITH HOOP, SINGER ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine.. Cabinet i anieed. Universal Co., FE 4-0905 SPECIAL 820 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF . FURNITURE - Cfxislsts Of: 3-plece living room sulto with 2 step tablet, 1 cocktail tablo and Habit lamps. 7-placs bedroom suit* with doubt* dresser, chest, full size bed With Innersprlng mattress and box lamps 10 ma,ch wlttl 2 vmMv 5-piece dinette set, 4 chrome chairs, torndcs top table, 1 bookcase, I yxlO* rug Included. All for *399. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 8 E- ”URON FE 4-47B1 U W. PIKE______________FE 2-2150 SINGER PORTABLE, 819.50. ZIG-zag equipped. OR 4-1101 CURT'S APPLIANCE TV SET, 125, REFRIGERATOR. *35, £u*k*l°y*' S3?' *!??rle *,ov«- $35, Sale HlusehuM Goods 651 USED ^REFRIGERATOR $39.5 Radio 8. Appliance liS! * I) Ifccl* BEIGE 100 PER CENT ^ WYMAN'C --------------“ nylon carnet (brand new) *59.50. WTmAN 3 Also 7X12 carpets, $14.9*, up. Rug .USED BARGAIN STORE "" ai KsrafWymm's ' EASY TERMS FE 2-2150 6$-A r DISCOUNT WMltor, $39, odd beds,' dressers prices. Little Jo^BwwIn^Dept" 14*0 Baldwin to Walton. FE tMt) 1 GROUP BARGAINS BEFORE INVENTORY BRANO NEW FURNITURE (THING DOWN - $2.75 A WEEK 3-ROOM OUTFIT 58 PIECES, $294 UP TO 20 PER < itlqitoS. 10345 Oakhill, Holly S I---' * e- " 0I>I* Hwy. ME 7-5198. Name Brand Bedrooms Hi-fi, tv t Radios aa Regular $499.95 provndal now $359] Regular S3S7.75 4-piece set now $277 21-INCH USED TV Regular $2*9 4-piece set now ti» Welton TV FE 2-22*7 n™. $147 4-pltce set now S 17 _J!1 B. WeltenT «rwr of J0X1V -^ordw^^ufo 000 ° ^RUNNlHo 81" BRAND-Nlvircf^e Ltttle>*j2'«*e fWlvi?y. win to wSL.**^P htL TRANSMITTER WITH HG-'ii and HQ.17A receiver. PE Quality Living Rooms Regular si*$ :...........now Regujer lift ............new Regular $277 .......... now Colonial living Rooms Ragular 1177.77 ..... now $44.... Rejuier $479.75 ..... now $379.95 Regular $199 ........ r * veer warranty on 1 Solid maple leveteal re HG-10 . FE MOTOROLA 23" AND~ PHlI rn *i,» color TV, tor Immedle'- —- -;s*d block and 0»lby TV, FE 4 7,008 aq. ft. af naw furniture,_____ tresses and box epfHtpt. rafr* orators and wishers, «TV's and color TV's far immediate driluerv Everything^to bargain prices. V Litte Joe's BARGAIN HOUSE it Baldwin to Walton FE 2-4442 Flrto Traffic light tooth- Acres at Free Park! *»o needles tor most record pltv-45 E. Walton near Baldwin , excellent con: kind console, $5o. EM 3-1*HMCehUiMliIK .■RTHROOM SET. Ftr Sri* Mlmlh—w aKMtr ANCHO* FENCES wo money down fk %-nn BATHROOM FIXTURES, THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 THIRTY-FIVE gsai.Ww^ OMR Dally 9:3W:M Sun. im JACK HAGAN MUSIC CENTER FE iff,811***"1 «oed^ fender telecaiteh ~ouf END OF THE MONTH CLEARANCE AUCTION SUNDAY DEC 26, 2 P.M. u We alio buy them. OP For Permanent Layout 1 COMPLETE STROMBECKER 1/32 U ROAD RACE SETS, MUST BE TAPED FOR PERMANENT LAYOUT, SIS. OR 3-3992. AFTER 3:M Newea4lhe4C«n10t 1964 CHEVY IMPALA, I DOOR hardtop,'VS, power steering, power brakes ‘and windows, 1 owner, LUCKY AUTO McComb 4 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL OL 14551 1001 N. Mai ROCHESTER_ Mew Uted Gw 116 1904 FORD FAIRLANE WAGON, V4, MODELS AND OTHER TRADE-INS Jack Hagan Music Center fe 2-oMoEllz*b*tt’ Uk* Ro*d TOWN & COUNTRY RADIO AND MUSIC Chrlotmoo special: Electric guitar -----rie, mu HALL'S AUCTION SALES OS W. Clarkston Rd„ Lake Orion I “f 3-1171 AMj 1964 IMPERIAL Crown 4-door, full power, air conditioning, ........Mack top. A real Christ- OAKLAND 1040 FORD COUPE, POOR CONDI-tion, beat offer takes, call after OL 1-0443. OAKLAND l-CYL. ENGINE. 19*5 FORD COUNTRY SE wagon. VI automatic, power Ing, low mileage, almost Oka — $2*95. JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 147)1. lew mi 9mi Cm 11 954 OLDS HARDTOP, tl« FULL price, farms. Opdyke Meters. BN Pontiac Rd~ at Opdyfct. 19*2 OLDSMOBIL^ DYNAMIC W 3- 1964 OLDS “83" a sices. Garage fi Ing. Free aattmetes- , Seise Co., 2300 Cole Wrest, mlnahem. FiSWB er — GERT'S a GAY OIRL for a whirl after dean.... ....... with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer, ITT Hudson's Hardware, 41 E. Walton. :e skates, sporting goods, new and used. We buy, aeH. tMda Barnes-Hargraves Hardware, W. Huron. FE Mill. 1 OWNER HORSE SUITABLE FOR children or ladles, approx. 14 hands, uw am , SPORTING GOODS, 2430- BLACK QUARTER HORSE GELD-Ing, « years old. Mack gakjlng, 7 years old. Mack and white pony, real gentle. Circle C Ranch. *25- iGOING TO FLORIDA? HERE I good trailer for the road am live In. 2T Covered Wagon, If See It at 7000 Cooley Lake I AM. I. Union Lake. 'Oxford Traitor Sales Pretty Ponies 1965 Mustangs 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT . As Low As $79 Down HAROLD TURNER | FORD, INC.- 4*4 S. WOODWARD AVE. -1 BIRMINGHAM____Ml 4-7500 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, 332-9150 condlttang. vinyl roof. 3,000 miles, B^^^^adory official — *—I — IME --- Hka new and priced to sail, year end clearance price— $1695 , BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH , 14 S. Woodward MT~>7-3214 SUBURBAN OLDS"^ HOME OF Quality 0n#-0wnar Birmingham Trades AT LOWEST PRICES er end clearance price— $2095 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROME FORD, Rochester FORD Rellglous-toys-beoks-gaa ranges-pictures and frames CHRISTMAS TREES, S3 CHRISTMAS SPECIAL GUNS Custom-built rifles, new and usad shotguns and hand guns. lurr-SBetl____375 S. Telegraph GOLDEN H. CORRAL Registered quarter horses am panoses tor sale. Well broke, lighted, excellent _____ reatonal. Rd„ 3*3-9*77. ID FILLY. Mi NEW AND USED GAS AND OIL furnaces. 23 years-exp. Immediate ■ -------- Very reasonable. * „ u_ ..... SPOTTED PONY FOR CHILDREN, FE 4-1205 °*k!and County's Largest selection *30, three new pony saddles. $25-~TABLE °f Spor,ln8 »nd Posting equipment. I S35. *93-1*06. ______________ 17 or* MA 5-1501. NEW 3'J i- POOL TABLE, SLIGHT- Repossessed Maple Curtls-Mathis 2 ___________ *299.50 12-Cublc-foot 2-door Gibson, new refrigerator ...............*179.50 Used refrigerators . *29.50 to $79.5* Usad portable TVe 17"-19" 149.50 to1 *79.50. HAMPTON'S ELECTRIC CO. TERMS AVAILABLE 125 W. Huron FE 4-152*! JnE OF THE BEST BASEBOARD '' dealt In town. Hot water baseboard, heat with endoeure and -damper, SI J5 per ft. G. A. Thomp- sen, 7005 M-S9 W. _______| POWERED HUMIDIFIER, SALES Complete line of all; Boats—Motors GLASSTRON. LONE STAR -en MFG boats In stock MERCURY* 3.9 to 100 H.P. Accessories and Sporting Goods Layaways available on ell of our sleek. POLARIS Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 1210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 44771 —Open Deity and Si/ndaya-—BANK FINANCING— id service. Call 002-1297. . 047.951 3-piece bath i Special prices or 459.95.* Laundry tray, trim, *19.95/ gg 4.0/34 shower delie ....... 2-bowl sink, 02.05/ Lavs., &95| tubs. 110 end up. Pipe cut end! threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 141 Baldwin. FE 4-1516. POOL TABLES—BELAIRE r LI 4-0900 - 353-6520 I Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke PRE-INVENTORY SALE! Snowmobiles. Apache Camp . trailers. Pickup Campers, Johnson Motors, Boats and Canoes. BILL COLLER, 1 Contact Farm Crest Farms. I I the famous: -net Wlnn*b»j > have no gimmicks. JirS^tsi ■rs of good merchandising end! 00 satisfied customers. Open 94, closed Sunday lie south of Lake Orton 0 " Y S-0721 HELP!’ MANSFIELD AUTQ SALES- . I Auto Financing •, REPOSSESSION-1941 FORD HARD-j ________top. No Money Down, payments ' 104-A■ week[y. can " 1---- ROME FORD Rochester 1965 PLYMOUTH auto., radio, heater, c rar, *2,195. •1965 OLDS . Air-conditioning, radio, h i., double power. (2,595. 1965 OLDS FE 54101. McAullfte. RM| , 1M1 FORD 2-DOOR uifinuir. 1942 Renault, radio r.~Siiew, MI A5WL ' Im" 19*2 Chavrotat - 11957 Oldsmoblle heater, air conditioning, $2,- 1964 '/2-Ton ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dixie Hwy. MILFORD _ _________MU 4-1025 iFE 5-5900 104 “*ldW'n AV* FE «-M2s'^ C0NPITI0N; Did You Know? | Rebullt tn9lr,M^-VILLAGE RAMBLER I " fe tw I, 0475. Cell FE 5-3145i Parkhursr Trailer Sales | FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING IS to ^ 40 ft. Featuring New Moon -Buddy an- — seated ha Oxford c.....IE .... Country Cousin. MY 2- Cell tor Appraisal. 1942 vtf 4-CYL. ENGINE, / V between Orion end OPEN 7 DAYS-V to 9 SEE THE NEW 196* MODELS now on display a discount special CIDER. DONUTS, AND APPLES, wholesale and retail, open daily till 5 p.m. all whiter, Diehl's Or- on the spot fli._ T -_ chard and Cider Mill. 147* E.iFREE DELIVERY—FR^E SET-UP Ranch Rd. t ml. south of Holly WE GUARANTEE A PARKING lUSt oft Milford Rd. 437-4001. | SPACE, c.uiaaua, “ M .Large selection of 12* farm equipment »< - 19*3 JACOBSON TRACTOR, $575. Evans1 Low overhead - save rdal money ■_____________ MIDLAND TRAILER SALES T Service,' 6507 2257 Dixie Hwy. 3JS4772 Owl* tjShwpy, Clariaten. *25-1711. 1 — |Mj “ GLENN'S Junk Care-trucks INI FORD CLUB SEDAN. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. RADIO AND HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments Of *5.0$. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Perks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml MUST DISPOSE C ..JS MUSTANG j INI PONtlAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP ■ooor naretop, no money down, _ OR 3-20*5_________ 11.07 weekly. Payments of $11.87 steering?1,57 Buick a™ ul Mford economy cars' . !i—l SIX, 1 NINE, 1N2 Ford pas- INE CONDITION, SUN-1 tenger Country Sedans *495 ea„ i, gas heater, MA *-3215i good condition. H. H. Auto Sales w alter * p.m. end Service OR 3-5200. VW. 7,000 MILES, 11942 FORD V-S G/iLAXIE 2 DOOR Call OR 3-3700 S799. No caih needed. No ‘ V*734M7WNER erj-044/ | FE __________... ■ . ID FALCON. AUTOMATIC _ GLENN'S INI PONTIAC CLUB SEDAN DOWN, Assume *—» W ments of S6.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS-'FREE TOWS TOP SIS—CALL FE 5414} '• VI ALLEN «. SONS. INC- 1943 JACOBSON TRACTOR, 1 36" mower, snow bladf, and wheel weights, *575. 1N2 Wheel Horse; snow blade and mower, $325. Evans Equipment Sales A Service, *507 Dixie Highway, Clerkston, *25-1711. THE LARGEST "REAL" FARM service store In Michigan. John Deere and New Idea parts galore. Homelite chain saws, Knitco Heaters, Cort hydraulic drive riding tractors, tractor cycles, and farm toys. Gold Ball Gift Stamps on merchandise In stock. Davis Me-chlnery Co., QrtnovHle. I Rent Trailer Space NEW SPACES V Pontiac Mt Motorcycles K & W CYCLE YAMAHA USED. TRACTORS WHEELHORSE TRACTOR and si blade, WHEELHORSE * h.p., electric st SPORTS CARS & IMPORTS At Winter Prices DEAL NOW AND SAVE Grimaldi LUCKY AUTO r •e to choose from COMPLETE JUNK CARS, PICKED I up- Free tow. H, * Seles A Service. 0? Open Sunday e Used Auto-Truck Parts 102j' New and Used Cars 106| 1962 T-BIRD 'Hardtop with full power, transmission, radio, t whitewall tires, only 1965 CONTINENTAL Factory executive car Air conditioning ? LUCKY AUTO HAROLD TURNER GLENN'S 1959 LINCOLN; 195* RAMBLER! io serve. you. im wagon, as is or for parts. FE and 7*15 Highland *-3491. FORD, INC. < s. woodwar Dave. i BIRMINGHAM__________Ml 4-758* 1941 Special Buick, 9-passenger MUST DISPOSE OF - 1963 NORDi *'**“''• ....... , . 2-door. Nice! No money, down I L. C.. Williams, Salesman Payment* ot W-n Weekly. Call Murphy ~ * “ \, McAulHft. SALE! SALE! SALE) USED MOTORCYCLES 4-7371 .. Terms. Other makes!------ e to choose tr FE 4-1797 1943 T-BIRD CONVERTIBLE, FULL priced. 537-1117. TALBOTT LUMBER Mahogany paneling. $2.99 to S4.5*. Black and Decker tools and Da- 1*25 Oakland Snowmobiles Fox - Ski • Doo - Ski - Daddla I CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton, Open 94, FE. 1-4482U "~w”' Sand—Gravel—Dirt ,r»c,or .•» many others twiNew and Used Tracks 1031 .... ........i, AM-FM radio. 19*2 BUICK SPECIAL CONVERTI-j ^wh^hw'^Si.WS." JEROME stoerlng, broke*, bucket| J0RD Rochester FORD . dealer. I condition. EM 3-/462.1 SEE US FIRST BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 20 S. Woodward Blrmln* MI 6-4538 1959 CONTINENTAL HARDTOP WITH FULL POWER, AUTOMATIC, RADIO AND HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of *4.95. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. brakes. *925. *73-19*7. Mason at 335-4101 MtAullWl AUTOMATIC, electric starter, 1965 Honda Dream ... MMur. tees. 11963 Honda Hawk 1965 T-120 R Triumph, I FE 4-45951GODD _DRJ¥EWAY GRAVEL, --------- yard* tor *10. Del. FE 4451*. i pontiac lake builders sup-I KING BROS. Sand, gravel, fill dirt. OR'pg 44/734 FE 4-1662 Pontiac Rd, - it Opdyke THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST.- , Everything to moat your needs _____________________________ Clothing, Furniture. Appllancos SAND^ GRAVEL, FILL DIRT, TOP j__ VACUUM CLEANER OR TV, *12, soil, black dirt. Bulldosing, exco- ITOVei I rollers diamond ring, Electrolux with cord voting. OR 3-5050. flSfc»a£. er tn* hr dMr | Wood-CeaMoke-FaBl U2*| Travel master, SEASONED FIREPLACE WOOD many extras# inally $4300# now Milford 694-4245, wedding announcements at Pets—Huntina Doas discount orlces. Forbes Printing r®'* „ _________ . A R CAMPER MFG. CO-. 67-A 1 A, AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPS. IMA-111*0 Auburn Rd._______'m---IttJ A | TODDS. 332-7139..______________ MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM igjp |HC, MODEL BC-170, STAKE, ANDERSON SALES A SERVICE fepeed exeL 025x20 10-ply tires, 18' ‘45 S. Telegraph FE 3-7102! hydraulic tilt-b«d with hydraulic SUZUKI 1-year — 12.000-mile warranty 250CC—6-speed ALL MODELS IN STOCK TUK0 SALES, INC. *27 E. AUBURN, ROCHESTER I PICKUP, V4. Only 11,000 miles. Savel JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL M~~ CHRISTMAS TREES From 2 lots, 1065 Telegraph Rd. I,. . ...- eunp *i and Miracle Mile Shopping Center. » North exit and entrance. T a 1 | 44433^_Canarias_a Timbers Nursery, 3324446. or AHA 11-A Iii-week akc white i mote controls. Basketball C TINY TOY POODLE PUPPIES, II colors, will sacrifice, S75 while iev tost. Hold 'til Christmas. 624- : REGISTERED BEAGLES I AKC SHELTIE PUP. FEMALE, Orion Knolls Kennel, 6934705. EC C 70A9 I AKC MINIATURE DACHSHUNDS FE 5-7943____________puppies, shots, and wormed, hold E R SKATES AND! t»l Christmas. OR 34409.__________ ko now. Slit 7. *15. AKC bAtHjltUNO PUPPIES. STUD dogaTESTELHEIMA FE 24009. AKC TOY POODLES, WHITE, MINI Mack. EM 3-3549 or *02-5243. Ak miniature male pup - 6734400.______■ ROL HALICR AFTER SHORT WAVE RADIO, Wabcor A*paed record Changer, In console, 050. 674-3534. LAST MINUTE CHRISTMAS PUI pies, AKC “ poodle*, torn* I*. 625- LADY'S SHOE FIGURE SKATES. TAN, TRIMMED IN BROWN, SIZE 3. IS. FE S-7T4I. sonable 674-3349 COLLIE, AKC REdlSTERED MALE housebrokan, 4 mos. old. 673-3667. - CUTE LITTLE STOCKING STUFF-. ers—puppies 7 weeks eld. Call Hand Tooh-MachiiMry 61 »».r 5 P.m„ m-m.______________________ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUFFY, SIS. 4" CRAFTSMAN JOINTER, 4" DEL-| 10*7-43*9. 1966 CENTURYS, ROBIN HOODS ARE HERE STOP IN AND INSPECT. QUALIT' TOM STACHLER AUTO and MOBILE SALES 3091 W. Huron St._____FE-3-4920 AIRSTKEAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed tor I See them and ^et| - w Huron (plan to loin Byom's exciting coroyons). X4 Hustler. CUSTOM COLOR 3* W. Montcalm FE 445131 ft -350 STAKE. WITH cyi. mew engine) 4-speed tran mission, radio, heater, GLENN'S 1943 Electa 225. full power, 4- PONTIAC-RAMBLER-BUICK CRED-It problems? — Will finance. TIC! Core. Mr. Snow, Ml 6-5500._ HAROLD TURNER KEEGO PONTIAC SALES Si SERVICE 682-3400 mmU je *»5 - CHEVROLET, itss. good ROME''FORD, Rochester FORD r CUSTOM CAMPER I Bicyctos BOOTH CAMPER Aluminum covers end campers ftx any pickup. 4267 LaForest. Water ford. OR 3-5524.___________ Boats-Accessorles GMC New 1966 FORD 1951 CHEVY IMPALA. 341 4 BAR-rel, Hurst 3-spMd 'loor shift, *300. 602-2401- saToP' v CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, NO ist, good top, new brakes and s, OR 3-3S7U. 1959 CHEVY STATION WAGON, Y 3-2779. $1795 CLEARANCE! 1965 Models Now On Display Pontiac Only MERCURY-MERCRUISER dealer CRUISE-OUT, INC. ........ Open »4 • FE 8- Ask lor Truck Dept. FE 5-4101 John McAullfte Ford 277 West Montcalm FE 5-4 ___I One block E. of Oak lend Ave. Pontiac's New and Only Authorized Jeep Dealer I REPOSSESSION—1960 CHEVY titer,, pale, hardtop, no money di I de- payments of $6.07 weekly. Call Fed-1 Meson «t 335-4101. McAullfte. ;MUST DISPOSE OF - I960 CHEVY Impale hardtop, no rust, no money down. Payments of 17.90 WMkly. Call Mr. Murphy at FE 54101, McAulltfe._____________________ I960 CHEVY, CONVERTIBLE. 6 ♦tick, 0250. 6514694.__________ 1940 CHEVY 4-DOOR. V*. Automatic, excellent running, no OH *525. 4744111. II CORVAIR MONZA, I | FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM whitewall tires# only!MUST DISPOSE OF — 1W, MEE* *28, peym«nis| g^a^^^Na^ - Call Mr. Murphy at FE 54101, McAulltfe._________________ , REPOSSESSION - 1961 MERCURY convertible, no money down, payments at S6.07 weekly. Call Mr, Mason at FE 54101. McAulltfe. 1963 MERCURY, 2-DOOR HARDTOP. Breezeway back. Exc. condition, -,105. OR 3-3202. j LUCKT AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track I FE 4-1006 or_FE 3-7154 GLENN'S j 1963 Bonnevlll* 4-door hardtop. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 — ' 1944 FALCON 4-DOOR. 6 Srick, 1964 COMET l-7500-.Callente hardtop with automatic 1943 FORD WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO AND HEATER. WHITEWALL MONEY DDOWN, Assume CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. weakly payments of *6.92. Parks at HAROLD TURNER transmission, i . whitewall liras ana w»r a down, weakly payments el $11.1 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM .... Catalina. Power steering, j brakes, air conditioning. L>u«>« condition. S1675. 4264742. _ GLENN'S 1964 Pontiac Catalina coupe, power steering and brekas, real sharp. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 3 CUSTOM 2-DOOR. USED m 4-ply i hts. Sol to highest bidder by Available on delivery i. Village ot Franklin right to reject — weekly payments 3-5524. COME Tb THE BARGAIN BARN Where we have 3 acres of i , OR CORRECT CRAFT SPEED BOATS 1 Turbocraft Jet Boats Spice Silverline Ski Barge Sylvan Pontoons Sailfish and Porpoise Evlnrude Motors ^cUt^s^witoWrand|IW^CORVA'R, RED. * DOOR. *5^ ■ LUCKY AUTO! * and storage. Hours 9 to 6 .. I 5-20C6.______________ 71,LAST MINUTE CHRISTMAS PuP-AKC poodles, female, 425- JAC0BS0N TRAILER‘SALES & RENTALS 9* Williams Lk. Rd. . OR 3-59MI Close Out Saleh POMERANIAN PUPPIBJ. ------ - ._________Cell FE HU1_______ ! SUS BraeUy reduced pomerawANSJ3RANGE, REGIS- ”morris music 34 S, Telegraph Rd PERSONALIZED GROOMING TOY PilEEJES Collars, Sweaters and Supplies HOUSE OF POODLES S*t* Dixie OR 3492* GALLAGHER'S MOVING SALE Pianos and Organs POODLE PUPPIES: LOVELY H ver toys with toads of personality, AKC. 6514747. poodle clipping and groom- Wg, any style, 462457*. L. Mbrtln. POMERANIANS, ORANGE. REGIS- •n pianos I studios. Beautiful Kurtzmann grand plana. GALLAGHER'S ■ 44566 . . . 1* f-. H»»F Open every night from * to 9 ______Until Christmas____ JUST IN TIME FOR THE NEW YEAR! Complete Drum Set... *349 Ul Brand* of Guitars*. . - 8*5 ut MINCHELLA MUSIC i Auburn tsi-u ________ UTICA EXPERT PIANO MOVING-PIANOS WANTED >'s Van Service! M X PLACE A PRESS WANT AD-SEE THINGS HAPPEN! CLOSE-OUT .SALE 1965 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. I East Walton, dally *4, FE 1-44*2 Eaton and Volvo Drlv Sales—Storage—Servli Boat Hauling - MICHIGAN TURBO CRAFT Phone *73-2442 Superior Rambler papers. Pay kannel WU. UL 2-33*2. -te^poodle YORKSHIRE' TERRIER PUPPIIM, stud aarvtc*. Poodtaa. FE 44793 YORKSHIRE MALE, AKC, Sisb 674411* 1 FREE $100 Gift Certificate MAKE your -y^--CHOICE OP: Streomlines-Kenskills—. Franklins—Fans—CrMS and Monitors —Look Us Over— -Servlca ettar ttv* Sate- Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 1S»* Holly Rd., Holly ME *4771 —Open Dolly end Sundays— THEY ARK QUALITY BUILT HOBO MFD. SALES Roar 1)45 Auburn Rd. Sat, and Sun. neon 'till I p.m. 661-3357 anytime PIONEER CAMPER SALES MM 9# MERRY CHRISTMAS! HAPPY NEW YEAR I Wa will b* open Jan. 1 1966 PINTER'S MARINE 137* Opdyke PE 44924 ft-75 at Oakland University Exit) 155* Oakland Ave. . FE 54421 I USED PICKUPS I FORD W-ton *295 FORD Vj-ton stake S29S 1964 CHEVY, exceptional value. __________________________________—— H ' GMC V4 with camper, make 1962 CHEVY lit 30*, 4-DOOR. FOW-I er brakes, stoerlng, ' miles, almost Hka I onion. FE 2-1206. 1965 CHEVY 4 1940 W. Wide Track 1942 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR WITH AUTOMATIC, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of U.8S. CALL CREDIT MGR- Mr. Perks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-750*. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464..S WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 DON'S SMALL AD-BIG LOT 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 2-doer hardtop.'atoo., (table power, one owner, 2,000 actual ml., new car warranty, 02.S95. 1945 BUICK LeSabre 4-door sedan, auto. VI. power steering, red, white top, new car warranty, *2,495. - 1965 SKYLARK Convertible, auto. VI, double power, blue, white too, blue vinyl Interior, new car warranty, *2,395. 1964 FORD Galexle 500. lastbeck, dark blue, standard transmission, - Vt, vinyl upholstery, tt,795< 677 S. LAPEER RD. Lake Orton MY 2-2041 1964 PONTIAC Catalina Ventura 2-door hardtop, beautlfu burgundy with black Interior, excellent condition throughout, priced to sell, year end clearance price— $1695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH GLENN'S 164 Bonneville, 4-speed, coupe. L C. Williams, Salesman E 4-7371 FE 4-1797 Many more to chocs# from _ _ RADIO ANO H E A T E R. WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO Superior Rambler ie 673-2442 ~ ONDISPLAY OWENS CRUISERS Chris-Craft Speedboats WINTER PRICES Large Selection Of Used Boats mam Rates —Wf Trade WALT MAZURBK Motor & Marine Sales PE 445*7 S. Blvd. it Seglna CLOSEOUT Lawntoym---- EN'S MARIN Overland, Crvana*. Cancer •rs. Merit ft berg Ian truck 3348 W. Huron, FE S-3W9. i.wTaaTI~fi*0 used trailers and campers. H Cvi : Pickup covert. Wo sen and Install _ ■J L'K'I Reese and Oraw-tlte hitches, P M- HOWLAND SALES and RENTALS 3145 Dixie Hwy. OR S-14S • | Open 7 »jn. Ttl 9 Am. VERY FRIDAY vIry sun^a? t — *'• ;WANT«bT6.UY:JK6inpMT BlBAUCTION _______1 traitor^ SatMxxrtalrwd. Mf Dixie Hwy. OR H7II1 vat*. MSdm. W—ttd Cirs-Trocks H EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Chock the net. than got lha ben", at Averill 1966 ECONOLINE PANEL VAN IMPALA, 2-DOOR 1962 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR WITH . AUTOMATIC, RADIO - AMD HEATER^ WMITEWALL— TIRES. ABSOLUTELY un MONEY "DO........ weekly paym --- 'RED CiV- CREDIT. MGR. , $1995 1963 CHEVY BEL AIR wagon, V4, ongmo, tutor wnoJ!0*l!L495?*rjE'ROME' FORcJI Rochester FORD Dealer. OL W11.___________________________ ."ISi TSIlWtt CHEW bEl air v-i vtRv I and left clean. *1,095. door gloss:!Qpdyke Hardware________FE *-66*6 | MUST DISPOSE OF - 19« CHIVY i convertible, no money down, pay-! ments of S9A7 weekly call Mr.l Murphy »t 335-41*1. McAulltfe. REPOSSESSION - 19*3 CHEVY convertible No money down, pty-ments of »9J7 wtokly. Coll Mr. i Meson at 335-4101, McAullfte. CHiVY-FOpD-PLYMOUTM CRlblT , ■ ----- ^.iii HUM nr. BUYING SHARP CARS BUD MANSFlELD USeD CARS L 1501 Baldwin. J blocks N. tf Walton T - FE S-SS4I’ I Auto-Morine InsurancB 104 CANCELED? , REFUSED? < Young Drivers? Ivor IS years experience insurln •neeled and refused -auto.. Local service — Payment plans. Call Today FE 4-3535 Anderson & Associates 1044 Joslyn Ave. ...........Ml 6-5500._______ 4 CHEVY 6. STANDARD, 3-DOOR, new tires. 18,000 miles, exceptionally clean. *1,195. 67371391. Strana- and wtokly payments ot (IM*. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVI. , BIRMINGHAM Ml *>7S0* WATCH AND YOU'LL SEE... -IT-WILL -BE HERE... MONDAY DECEMBER 27th ; THE BLUE RIBBON . , ANNOUNCEMENT tBIRTY-SlX m THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 24, 1965 evm 'B& tochanjjus without noticn TONIGHT iM (I) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “A Christmas Carol’' (In Progress) (9) Dennis the Menace (SO) Soupy Sales (96) Big Picture f:2S (7) Sports 6:11 (2) (4) Network News ... (7) News (9) Marshal Dillon (SO) Superman (56) Science Is Fun 1:45 (7) Network News 12:91 (2) Lassie (4) (Color) Exploring . (7) (Odor) Milton the Monster (9) Country Calehdar (50) Movie: “Yankee Doo-| die Dandy” (1942) James Cagney, Joan Leslie 1:00 (2) (Special. Sounds of|| Christmas (4) (Special) Church Serv- Television Features i Christmas Services, Programs Slated By United Press International | MADRIGAL CHRISTMAS, 7:00 p.m. (4) Music of Christ-(7) (Color) Hoppity Hoop- | mas season by Detroit Madrigal Club choir. (9) Music Hop (56) Christopher Program 1(?) American Bandstand 7:00 (2) (Color) Mr. Magoo (4) (Special) Madrigal Christmas' (7) Car 54 (9) Movie: “Carnival’ (1946) Sally Gray, Michael Wilding (50) Little Rascals (56) History of Negro People 7:29 (50) Sports Desk 7:39 (2) Wild, Wild West (4) (Color) Camp Runa-muck (7) (Color) Flintstones (50) Ski Patrol (56) French Chef y 8:09 (4) (Color) Hank (7) (Color) Tammy (50) College Hockey (56) Continental Comment 8:19(2) (Color) Hogan’s Heroes (4) (Special) Living Christmas Card (7) Addams Family (56) Doctors Only 9199 (2) (Color) Gomer Pyle (7) Honey West (9) Telescope 9:99 (2) Smothers Brothers (4) (Color) Mr. Roberts (7) (Color) Farmer’s Daughter (9) Star Routje (56) (Special) Play of Daniel 19:99 (2) Trials of O’Brieh (4) (Color) Man From U.N.CUS. (7) Jimmy Dean< (9) Tommy Hunter (50) Merv Griffin 19:19 (9) Cheaters 11:69<2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:19 (2) (Color special) Christmas Eve Special (4) (Color special) Heart of Christmas (7) (Special) Handel’s Messiah (9).Movie: "Joseph and His Brethren” (1962) Geoffrey Horne (50) Wells Fargo 12:9)9 (2) Movie: "Come to the Stable” (1949) Loretta Young, Celeste Holm (4) (Special) Church Service 12:99 (7) Movies: L “The Bells of St. Mary’s” (1945) Bing Crosby, Ingrid Bergman. 2. "The Keys of the Kingdom” (1944) Gregory Peck, Thomas Mitchell, Vincent Price 1:99 (4) (Special) Sounds of Christinas 2:99 (2) News, Weather SATURDAY MORNING 6:19 (2) News 6:11 (2) Farm Scene 6:19 (2) (Special) A Star Shall Rise (7) Americans at Work 6:45 (7) Wheelsville, U.S.A. 7:99 (2) Captain Kangarocr’ „ (4) (Color) Country Liv- ing (7) (Special) Can tat e Domine 7:99 (4) (Color) Bozo (7) Junior Sports Club 8:99 (2) Christmas in Happy-land (4) Milky’s Party Time (7) Crusade for Christ 8:99 (7) House of Fashion 9:99 (2) (Color) Heckle and Jeckle - (4) (Color) Jetsons -----(71 Movie: “A Christmas Carol” (1938) Reginald Lockhart, Terry Kilburn 9:39 (2) (Color) Tennessei Tuxedo (4) (Color) Atom Ant 19:99 (2) (Color) Mighty Mouse (4) (Color) Secret Squirrel (7) (Color) Porky Pig (9) (Special) Christfhas Messages 19:11 (9) White Trails 19:99 (2) (Color) Linus (4) (Coin-) Underdog (7) (Color) Beatles (9) Poopdeck Paul’s Sports 11:69 (2) (Color) Quick Draw McGraw (4) Fury (7) (Color) Porky Pig (2) Christmas Playhouse (4) (Color) Davey and Goliath (9) (Special) Christmas Carol. (50) Wrestling 2:99 (2) Flying Fisherman (4) (Special) Joyful Hour (7) Club 1270 3:99 (2) Golf Classic (7) (Color) Movie: “Gul-liver’s Travels” (1939) (9) (Special) Stiver Tree (50) Roller Skating 3:30 (4) (Special) Sounds of Christmas (9) (Special) Three Shepherds 4:99 (2) (Special) Blue-Gray • Game (4) (Color special) Mitch Miller (9) Outlaws (50) (Color) Davey and Goliath 4:99 (7) (Special) North-South Shrine Game (50) Cartoon Carnival 5:90 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (9) Lieutenant 5:55 (4) S.L.A. Marshall EVENING 6:99 (4) News (9) Swinging Time (50) Movie: "The Scarlet Clue” (1945) Sidney Toler, Benson Fong. 6:99 (2) Grand Ole Opry (4) News 7:99 (2) (Color) Death Valley Days (4) Bishop Emrich (9) Movie: "Stars an Stripes Forever” (1952) Clifton Webb, Rober Wagner. 7:99 (2) Jackie Gleason (4) (Color) Flipper (7) Shindig 7:45 (50) Hockey Preview 7:55 (50) Hockey: Red Wings vs. Montreal 8:99 (4) I Dream of Jeannie (7) King Family 8:39 (2) Secret Agent (4) (Color) Get Smart (7) (Color) Lawrence Welk (9) Hockey 9:09 (4) Movie: "Here Comes the Groom” (1951) Bing Crosby, Jane Wyman. J I FLINTSTONES, 7:30 p,m. (7) Fred takes part-time job I in department store, and winds up as store Santa. I LIVING CHRISTMAS CARD, 8:30 p.m. (4) New Christy | Minstrels join Channel 4 staff in Christmas program. | PLAY OF DANIEL, 9:30 p.m. (56) Play dramatizes a episodes from life of Old Testament hero Daniel. j CHRISTMAS EVE SPECIAL, 11:30 p.m. (2) Folk sing-1 ers Judy Collins and Chad Mitchell join actor Ossie Davis 1 in contemporary statement on meaning of Christmas. HEART OF CHRISTMAS, 11:30 p.m. (4) Skitch Hender-1 son hosts program of holiday music. 1 HANDEL’S MESSIAH, 11:30 p.m. (7) Handel’s classic I oratorio is presented by First Baptist Church of Dallas. I ' CHURCH SERVICE, 12 midnight (4) Solemn .High Mass I from Blessed Sacrament Cathedral. I SOUNDS OF CHRISTMAS, 1:30 a.m. (4) Christinas 1 music. SATURDAY | SOUNDS OF CHRISTMAS, 1:00 p.m. (2) University of I Detroit Chorus, Mercy High School choir sing yule tide 1 son8s- GOLF CLASSIC, 3:00 p.m. (2) $166,000 elimination tourney starts with pairing of George Knudsen and Randy Glover vs. Frank Beard and Joe Campbell. SOUNDS OF CHRISTMAS, 3:30 p.m. (4) Christinas music. THREE SHEPHERDS, 3:30 p.m. (9) Dramatization of nativity story. BLUE-GRAY GAME, 4:00 p.m. (?) College football allstars from North, South clash in Montgomery, Ala. MITCH MILLER, 4:00 p.m. (4) Mitch and the gang hold holiday sing-along. NORTH-SOUTH GAME, 4:30 p.m. (7) College football all-stars from North, South clash in Miami. HOLLYWOOD PALACE, 9:30 p.m. (7) Bing Crosby welcomes Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians, Dorothy Collins, plus cast from “Hogan’s Heroes.” SUNDAY ACCENT, 6:40 a.m. (2) Career spotlight is on newspaper business. a.m. (7) "The World of Charles CHURCH SERVICE, 1:00 p.m. (4) Christmas Day service is telecast from Washington, D.C., Episcopal Cathedral. I , CHRISTMAS CAROL, 2:00 p.m. (9) Frederic March, Basil Rathbone and Ray Middleton star in this adaptation of Dickens’ classic. JOYFUL HOUR, 2:30 p.m. (4) Dramatization of the story of the nativity. DISCOVERY ’65, 11:3 Dickens” is explored. NFL PLAYOFF, 2:00 p.m. (2) Green Bay vs. Baltimore for Western Division championship. PROJECTION ’66, 2:00 p.m. (4) NBC correspondents evaluate events of 1965. AFL CHAMPIONSHIP, 4:00 p.m. (7) Buffalo vs. San Diego. YEAR-END REVIEW, 10:15 p.m. (7) ABC correspondents evaluate events of past year. 9:39 (2) Loner (7). (Color) Hollywood Palace 19:99 (2) Gunsmoke 19:15 (9) Juliette (50) Action Scoreboard 19:25 (50) Star of the Night 10:39 (7) (Color) World Adventure (50) Movie: “Genghis Khan” (1953) Manuel Conde 19:45 (9) Sports Unlimited . 11:99(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:10 (9) Christmas Message 11:25 (2) Movies: 1. “Remember the Night” (1940) bara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray. ,2. “Christmas in July” (1940) Dick Powell, Ellen Drew. (7) Mo v ies: 1. (Color) “Love Me or Leave Me” (1955) Doris Day, James Cagney. 2. “When Lovers Meet” (1946) George Brent, Lucille Ball (9) Nightcap 11:45 (4) (Color) Johnny Car-son 12:96 (9) Window on the World 1:15 (4) Beat the Champ 3:39 (7) All-Night Show SUNDAY MORNING 6:39 (7) Seekers 6:49 (2) News 6:45 (2) Accent 7:99 (2) Cross and the Kremlin (7) Rural Newsreel 7:25 (4) News 7:39 (2) Gospel Time (4) Country Living (7) Water Wonderland 8:99 (2) This Is the JLife * (4) Eternal Light aHernoon . 12:69 (2) Lone Ranger (4) (Color) First Look (7) (Color) Bugs Bunny (•) Nature of Things (29) Dickory Doc —Weekend Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXYZQ 270) CKIW(800) WWJ(9S0) WCAR(1130) WPONQ460) WJSK(1 500) WHFI-FM(94.7) FRIDAY EVENING tiM-WJR, Newt Sport, WWJ. Newt, Sportt CKLW, Newt, Music WJBK, The Green Hornet WCAR. Newt, Joe Bacarella WXYZ, Newt WPON, Newt, Sports WHFI, UMlt Jay Show SilO-WJBK, Newt WJR, Business Phone Opinion WJBK, Fulton Lewis Ji 7:00—WXYZ, Ed Moroar WJBK, News, Music, Sports WCAR, Ron Rote WPON, Christmas Mus WWJ, Newt, Emphasis WHFI, Dinner Concert XilS^WXYZ. Lee Alan, WWJ .Phone Opinion SiOe-WJR, Newt, Music WWJ, Newt, Emphasis, (parts WHFI, Jaxx-Brltaln 0:30—WPON, “The Nativity t:0O—whfi, Jack Fuller WPON, The World Today WWJ, Newt, Sport, 0:30—WPON, Villas Choir 10:00—WXYZ, Danny Taylor Unlv. 1:30—WJR, Newt, scope, Meaning < Christmas IliOS WWJ. Newt Final WJR, Newt, Sports IlitO—WCAR, Rx, Health ‘I:1S—WCAR, Ron Rote WIR Mutlc WWJ, Overnight SATURDAY MORNING itKIUNE IL____ ___ t:oe-wwj, Nawo. Monitor WCMtt Newt, Jack Sender WJR, Newt, Music whfi, unfleJif 0:te—cklw. Newt, Joe vas OsW .WXYZ. Steve Lundy,' Mutlc News . WHFI, Blli Boyle ,• WPON, Newt. Ban Johnson 11:00—WJR, Newt, (pone. Farm WWJ, Newt, Mutlc WPON. Newt, Ben J WCAR, Newt, Bill D WHFI, BIN A Ken WJBK, George Toiet CKLW. News. Joe Van WXYZ, News, Music v 1:00—WJR, News WHFI, Jack Fuller CKLW, News, Dave Shafer 3:00—WPON, Newt, R. Knight WXYZ, Dave Prince, Mutlc, CKLW, Newt, Mutlc WXYZ, Newt, Music. Sports WJBK, Bob Edlngton WHFI, Show BIX ■ WPON, Newt. Sports WCAR, Newt, Joe Bacarella 0:10—WJR, Night of Miracle WHFI, Music lor Modern* 7:00—WCAR, Ron Rote WPON, Nev --------- WXYZ, Lee Sports WJR, News, Sports, Music WWJ, Toteenlnl hnny Iron i. Musk, WHFI,______ WWJ, Red Wing Hockey MS-jWHPr. Chuck Spontler WJR, MSU-St. Jo of Pa. Basketball 10:00—WJR, News, Musk “WJR, NeWt. MusIc WXYZ,- -Danny Taylor- Show 10:10—WWJ, Interlochen WJR, Ask the Professor ItiOS-WWJ. News, Mutk WJR, Newt, Mutk ., SUNDAY MORNING t:00—WJR, Farm Review WJBK, Rx for Health CKLW, Album Time, March WXYZ. ■■■____________ CKLW, Christ Truth Crutedo WJBK. Hour of Crucified WCAR, Choir Left WPON Lutheran Hour TilS-WJR. Farm WWJ, Mariner's Church WXYZ, Christian! In Action CKLW. Baughev Tabernacle WJBK, Aye Merle Hour WPON, Sunday Serenade , WCAR,- The Church Today liOO—WJR, News, Reflections WXYZ. MornlngChortle CKLW, Your Worshto Hour WJBK, Revive I Time WCAR, Lift for Living .WPON. St John's Church MO—WXYZ, Moments of CKLW. Revival Hour Wit, Renfro Va I ley .WJBK, Radio Bible Clate News, Music CKLW. Betheede Temple WCAR, Mutk tor Sunday WPON, Protestant Hour WWJ, Church Croaerande CKLW, Heb. Christian WJBK, Newt Credo, WPON. Religion In Newt 0:0S—CKLW, Christian Science 10:00—wwj. Nows, Radio Pul- . CKLW, Rodlo Bible Clate WPON, The Christophers WJBK, Mutlc with Words WXYZ, Merc Avery, Muek. CKLW, Pontiac Baptist WJBK, Nawt, Town Hall WHFI. Mutlc for Sunday WPON, Rallglout Mutk 1:15—WPON,- Central Math diet i:JO—WJR, Salt Lake City Tabernacle Choir ■ CKLW, Nome. Anglican WJBK, Look at Books SUNDAY AFTERNOON lifB—WJR, Nawt, Mutk, ....Sporti .....VJBK, Nawt, Mutk CKLW. Tom Shannon, Nawt 1:30—WJR, Detroit Lions- 3:00—WXYZ, Dave Prince WHFI, Dannie Vogel 3:1S—WWJ, Detroit Symphony WPON, Sunday Serenade tiSB-WXYZ, Man On the G CKLW. Wings of Hooting 7i(B—WXYZ, Musk Sporti CKLW, Church of God WJBK, Mutk WCAR, Nawt, Ron Roto MJ—WJR, Western Songs. fiJB—CKLW, Ebeneezer Boo CKLW, Voict of Prophocy WPON, Chdrch of Week wjbk. Newt, we Believe Stli—CKLW, The Quiet Hour WJBK, Newt, Sports, Mutk WWJ, Rad Wing Hockey . tiSB—CKLW, Gross* Potato I. Johnny In News, Mini 0:30—WXYZ, Wayne State CKLW. Bible Study WJR, Face the Nation IOiOS-CKLW, Billy Grohorn WXYZ, Moving (U. of M. WJR, Nawt, Mutk I till—WJR, Rollgkn In Ac , tton 10:30—WJR, ClMptl Hour CKLW, Amorlcan Lutheran wxyz. Current ' 11:00—WJR, NOWS, Sporti WWJ. Nows, Written word WXYZ. Hour of Decision CKLW. Church of Christ WJBK, Newt, Musk It ill—WWJ, Newa, Good Muek WJBK. What'o the Ittue CKLW, Church of Lord Jesui Christ WXYZ, Issues and Answers WCAR, Jewlilt Community Council MONDAY MORNINO WXYZ, Marc Avery Show CKLW, Bud Davltt, Howe WJBK. N»wt, Bob Loo, WJR, Nawt, Mm SiM-WJR, Howe, 1:10—WJR, Mutk OiOO—WJR, Newt, WCAR, Newt, Senders WJBK, Newt, Bob Loo IlitO—WJR. News, Mutk WWJ. Newt, Ask Neigh! WHFJ, Bill Boyle WXYZ. Brookfeet Chib CKLW. Jao Van MONDAY AFTBRNOON IliOO-WWJ, Newt, Ptorrto CKLW, News, Van WCAR, Newt, Deltell WHFI, BIN toy* wjr. Nam, Firm WPON, Now*, Bon Johnson WXYZ. Mutk, Howe wjbk, Newt, Layno nt*MNJBK,jmw(, Mutk IioT wWj, Howe, Mutk CKLW, Newt, Dove Motor WJR, Nawt WHPr. fMort 1:10—WJR, Guatt 3:00—WPON, Nawt, Rim Knight WWJ, Nawt, Emphasis, Mu- Si% (7) Search 9:15 (9) Sacred Heart 6:39 (2) Temple Baptist Church (4) Church at the Crossroads (7) Understanding Our World (9) Hymn Sing 8:55 (4) Newsworthy 9:19 (2) Mass for Shut-Ins (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Wally, Lippy and Touche (9) Oral Roberts 9:39 (2) With This Ring (7) Voyage to Adventure (9) Cathedral of Tomorrow 9:45 (2) Highlight 19:99 (2) Let’s See (7) Annie Oakley 10:30 (2) Faith for Today (7) Beany and Cecil (9) Herald of Truth 10:45 (4) Davey and Goliath 11:66 (2) Movie: “The Jungle Princess” (1936) Dorothy Lamour, Ray Milland (4) House Detective (7) Bullwinkle (9) Pinocchio 11:36 (7) Discovery ’65 (9) Movie: “Young People” (1940) Shirley Temple, Jack Oakie AFTERNOON 12:99 (4) U. of M. Presents (7) Championship Bowling (50) Profiles 12:39 (2) Face the Nation (4) Lawman (SO) Michigan State Presents 1:99 (2) NFL Countdown (4) (Special) Consecration Ceremony (7) Movie: “Price of Tomatoes” Peter Falk, In-ger Stevens (9) Movie: “Goodbye Mr. Chips” (1939) Robert Do- -----nat, Greer Garson “ (50) Gospel Jubilee 2:99 (2) NFL Playoff: Colts vs. Packers (4) (Special) Projection EVENING 9:09 (9) Route 66 (50) Movie (56) Musicale 6:30 (56) Invitation to Art 7:06 (2) Lassie (7) (Color) Voyage (9) Movie: “Chicken Every Sunday” (1949) Dan Dailey, Celeste Holm, Natalie Wood , (56) (Special) Second Mi's. Tanqueray 7:36 (2) (Color) My Favorite Martian (4) (Color Walt Disney (50) Tales of Wells Fargo 8:99 (2) (Color) Ed Sullivan (7) (Color) FBI (50) College Hockey 2:39 (4) (Color) Branded (56) Play of Daniel 9:66 (2) Perry Mason * (4) (Color) Bonanza (7) (Color) Movie: “Pony Soldier” (1962) Tyrone Power, Cameron Mitchell, Robert Horton (9) Let’s Sing Out 9:36 (9) Pierre Baton 16:61 (2) Candid Camera (4) (Color) Wackiest Ship (9) Documentary (50) Movie: “Red Stallion” (1947) Robert Paige 11:11 (7) (Special) Year-End Review 10:31 (2) What’s My Line? 11:62 (2) (4) (7) (9) Ne Weather, Sports 11:16 (9) Around Town 11:26 (9) Movie: “Joseph and His Brethren” (1962) Geoffrey Horne 11:25 (2) Movie: “The Jackpot” (1950) James Stewart, Barbara Hale, James Gleason (7) (Color) Movie: “Never Say Goodby” (1956) Rock Hudson, George Sanders, Ray Collins 11:36 (4) Beat the Champ 12:36 (4) News, Weather 1:66 (9) Window on the World 1:15 (2) With This Ring 1:25 (7) News MONDAY .MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News 6:25 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:55 (2) Editorial, News 7:00 (4) Today (7) Johnny Giqger 7:05 (2) News 7:30 (2) Happyland 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie: “A Yank at) 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:08 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:38 (2) Dick Van Dyke 9:55 (4) News 10:90^(2) I Love Lucy (4) Fractured Phrases (9) Hawkeye 10:25 (4) News 19:39 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Friendly Giant 19:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:09 (2) Divorce Court <4) Morning Star (7) Supermarket Sweep-stakes (9) Butternut Square 11:29 (9) Across Canada 11:30 (4) Paradise Bay (7) Dating Game 11:59 (9) News AFTERNOON (2) Love of Life (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Razzle Dazzle (50) Dickary Doc 12:25 (2) News 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Father Knows Best (9) Take 30 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Scene 2 • (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: "The Sea Hawk” (’40) Errol Flynn, Donald Crisp (50) Motor City Movies 1:25 (4) News 1:31 (2) As the World-TUrns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News 2:00 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Nurses 2:39 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us 2:55 (7) News 3:99 (2) To Tell the Triith (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:25 (2) News (9) News Eton” (1942) M i c k e y *:3# (2) of Ni8ht Rooney, Ian Hunter I (4) You Don’t Say Entertainment World Sage Out to Get 'In' Society By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — For 1966, along comes Monte Proser, the sage of Broadway and Hollywood and Bucks County, Pa., launch- *;55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac ing “the Quit Corps” or “the Out Group” ... to be made up! 5:99 (4) George Pierrot of people who want to quit worshiping all the “In’’ crowd. “I’d rather be Out if they’re In,” says Monte, who discovered Mary Martin, Eddie Fisher and dozens of other stars. “I want to quit Marcello Mastroianni, with his phony choppers,” says Monte. “I don’t believe he’s the world’s greatest lover. “I want to quit Dali and Picasso, the fakers, and my kids’ kind of music, and the narrow jeans they wear . . . and discotheques and Eu-orpean movies ... and I’d like to say further there’s not a star in a Broadway cafe today who could have hearlined at the old Leon & Eddie’s or the Club 18.” j Proser has launched the “Quit Corps” with his friend Horace j Greeley McNab at New Hope, Pa. Anybody is eligible who says, "I’ve had it.” “Another thing I’d like to quit,” Proser remembered, “is the exchange of Christmas presents. A guy gives me something I don’t want and I give him something he’s already got...” My goodness. This man is dangerous! ★ ★ ★ (7) Spotlight (59) Islands in the Sun 2:39 (7) (Special) Directions •96 (59) American West 3:99 (50) Wanderlust 3:39 (7) ABC Scope (9) Movie: “How to Marry a Millionaire” (1963) Marilyn Monroe, David Wayne v (50) Holiday 4:99 (4) (Special) AFL Championship: Bilb vs. Chargers (7) tSpedal) Lena Horne (50) All-Star Golf . 5:99 (I) Movie: “Holiday Inn” (1942) Bing Ctaby, Fred Astaire (7) Movie: “The Oregon I, (7) Young Marrieds (9) Swingin’ Time ( (50) Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Never Too Young (50) Topper 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (50) Love That 1 (7) M o v i e : “The Sad Horse” (1959) Chill Wills, Rex Reason (50) Lloyd Thaxton 5:39 (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall PlanS. Viet TV Network WASHINGTON (AP) - The ’ United States is planning to help establish a television network in South Viet Nam, a Michigan congressman said today. Rep. Charles E. Chamberlain, R-Mich., said the U.S. Information Agency had advised him Eddie Fisher’s Book, “Laughing On The Outside,” told to, that a transmission station op-Shana Alexander, promises to tell off you know Whew! Eddie’s!crating from an airplane will agents say he’s going to tell Absolutely All about the women in begin broadcasting in the Sai- 3:00—iff CAR. Jot Bacarella his life. Secret Staff: The top U.S. movie doll Is expected to shock off her husband, for another chap, a Hollywood exec, type, during *16. R might have happened before bnO could have hurt her image. - ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . The New Year’s Eve demand for bellydancers greatly exceeds the supply, according to Agent Joe Williams, who says anybody with a belly may apply . .. Never been so much good talk as about Gwea Verdon in “Sweet Charity” at the Palace Jan. 25 ... Happy Birthday to Howard Hughes, jSO this week . . . Sign In the 5th Av. Presbyterian: “Life is fragile. Handle with prayer” (Via Roland Gammon). BBardot’s first night out in Hollywood was a dinner date at La Scala with the Pierre Saliugers . . . Omar Sharif made the rounds — El Morocco and Trude Heller’s . . . Singer Johnny Johnston’s next bride may be Carol Bell, a former New Yorker • •• Fabian’ll be off to entertain GIs in Viet Nam (after his “TjpTLittle Indians” premieres). ★ ★ ★. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The trouble with the publishing business is that too many people who have half a mind to write a book do so.”—Anon. EARL’S PEARLS: New Year’f Eve is just around the corner—and some people who remember last year’s hangovers may vote to keep it there.—L. S. McCandless. in* urucuni Comic Cambridge (who ends his Basin St. E. act Trail” (I960) Fred Mae-r* Ku K,ux Klan robes) notes teen-age boys wear skin-tight Murray Gloria Talbott PP*4®1 "by their hair is so long—they got to keep their (59) Match Game Bowling •c***rets »®*"bere.” That's earl, brother. gon area Jan. 21. The United States will make receiving sets available probably one to a vtt-^laflgfcatifae^gtari. . — - . " # * -I Chamberlain, who helped push the program as a member of the House Armed Services Committee, said that at the end of 1966, it is hoped that enough ground transmitters will be established to reach 80 to 90 per cent of the population. Total cost for the program 4s estamated at $1.4 miUiqn, Chamberlain said, adding: NO BLOODSHED “When we can install the television network, as well as give away the sets, for less than the cost of one load of bombs being dropped daily by oar B52s, I believe we have been failing to use a potent weapon that without bloodshed, will help to defeat the Viet Cong.” * * » * At the outset, Chamberlain said, the Armed Forces Radio Service will operlte the network for approximately one t hour a day from an airplane circling over Saigon. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 THIRTY-SEVEN Boot Trip Amwt to Frarfaua Pimit * Flying----- 12 Momter IS John (Gaelic) 14 Bowfin genus 15 Residues ' 17 Tenting site U------winds 19 Restrains SI Injure 22 Crass S3 Close eyes of hswk 25 More honest 29 Light brown JO Shire in corporation SI Eggs 32 Devotee 33 Despises 34 Marble 39 Marsh 40 Hotel itteridant 43 Desert dwellers 46 Dueling wetpon 47 Scriptural musical drams 80 Erect 51 Lubricant 52 Unbleached 53 Terminals 54 Cleaning device 65 Sailing-- DOWN lClaasify ___ 18KS -SKT*™ jsswaiisisiu^ sssy,,,tor a dU ) 25 Boat' , 40 Father (Fr.) ! y,n* . accommodation 41 Not closed 26 Semicircular 42 Peruse wall opening 44 Hindu (2 worda) . cigarette Wicked 45 Bouillon 28 Show violence. 48 River (Sp.| 7 Concealed ■ Face of building r~ r- r~ r- 6 r- B ifl 11 12 13 I4 1 15 6 17“ IS " 26 i\ i 22 2$ k ■ r 26 w 28 29 J £ ■ 32 . Is r 35 36 r J F 10 41 42 _ r 44 ih 11 48 49 50 51 vr to 64 55 24 United Nations Harried by U.N.C.L.E. Volunteers Pair Charged With Murder Deputy Killed, Second Hurt in Bank Holdup ST. JOSEPH (AP) - TWO Chicago men were arraigned first-degree murder charges Thursday in the fatal shooting of a law officer during a bank holdup. Noti Perez, 41, entered a plea of guilty in Berrien County Circuit Court. Sentencing was set for next week. Roy Bowen, 43, stood mute. He was returned to jail to await trial. No date was set. The men were charged in connection With the death of Elton Stover, 55, a Berrien County sheriff’s deputy. Stover was shot during a Dec. 3 robbery of the suburban Fairplane Plaza branch of the Farmers and Merchants National Bank. He died of his wounds a week later. Another deputy, Gary Mitchell., 27, also was shot but has recovered. The Chicago men also face charges erf armed robbery and bank robbery and possible action by a federal grand jury. CAUGHT QUICK Perez and Bowen were arrested 90 minutes after the holdup by Indiana police at Rolling Prairie, Ind. Mitchell and Stover entered the bank separately, each responding to radio alarms of the holdup. Stover was shot the first time hi the thigh and the second time in the right arm. The second shot pierced his chest and abdomen. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y (AP) — American television viewers are flooding the U. N. with inquiries about U.N.C.L.E. They think it’s the espionage arm of the United Nations, and they want to enlist. In recent months, the U.N.'s General Services Division has been deluged with letters and telephone calls from fans of the popular NBC program “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” ■■■ ★.. ■* ★ “It’s the U.N. in the title that gets them,” said Maurice Liu, director of the division. “And when they hear that bit of hokum that the show would not have been possible without the help of U.N.C.L.E., they are sure we are tied up with it.” ' I Napoleon Solo and Iliya Kuri-akin work for the U.N. Command for Law and Enforcement, but the U.N. stands for United Network, not United Nations. TEEN-AGERS WRITE “Most, of me applications come from teen-agers,” said Liu, “but there are some adults, too, and they are the hardest to convince that we are not running a spy ring. “One guy was so intent on becoming a secret agent that finally suggested that he get in touch with Interpol,” the International Police organization. “I don’t know what they told him.” ★ ★ * The queries comes in from all over the country. One youthful applicant from Siler City, N.C., asked if he could join the spy ranks before he was 21. He wanted to know the location of the U.N.C.L.E. branch nearest his hometown. SEEKS TRAINING A New England listener, claiming an I.Q. of 150 “or thereabouts,” said he did not want to waste time going to college. He asked for the name of a good spy school that would teach him some of the finer points every U.N.CJLE. agent ■ ‘should know* ■ An enterprising youth from Brooklyn, N.Y., wrote directly to U Thant asking whether the secretary-general minded if he started his own U.N.C.L.E. branch. He assured Thant that he was not trying to undercut the organization but would “take orders from the head.” it it it “We get phone calls also," said Miss Alice V. R. Smith, chief of the public inquiries unit. "Most of them sound Uke youngsters, but occasionally a voice comes through that is unmistakably adult.” Liu and Miss Smith, working on the assumption that the applicants are sincere, send courteous reply expressing regret that the United Nations is not acquainted with the activities of U.N.C.L.E. They usually add a discreet suggestion that the inquirer pursue the matter with NBC. ■ , Several days ago the General Services Division got a Christmas card from a female admir- er in St. Louis, Mo. It was ad-sed to the staff of U.N.C.L.E and ended, “With love to Iliya and Napoleon. * * ★ The U.N. staff has not decided whether to send holiday greetings in return1 Partying Firemen Fired for False AiaumSpree NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. (UPI) — Palmer Saracena was fired from his job and Donald Daily and Charles Kobeak were suspended for a year each for turning in false fire alarms. The three, all firemen who also were ordered to pay court fines, were on their way-home from a bachelor party when they got the urge. Wife of Double Agent Said Living in Ireland DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -Eleanor Philby, American-born wife of double agent Harold (Kim) Philby, has left Moscow and for some weeks has been living hi Ireland, informtd sources said yesterday. Mrs. Philby, a native of Seattle, Wash., retained British citizenship after she joined her husband in Moscow. The sources said she is not considered R security risk and is therefore free to live in Ireland like any other British citizen. Chinook is the name given toj a warm, dry wind on the east side of the Rocky Mountains in North America blowing from a westerly direction, primarily in winter. *" i NOW UHF ANTENNA Installed $29.95 carrvT'C mho a afibbi e appliance G & M ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a CONSTRUCTION COMPANY g T 86 N. SAGINAW * KITCHENS See Our Display ’* J v - 8-Foot - Including Sink, $9CHi S { Formica Top, Faucets SPECIAL AvV g ~ • ALUMINUM See Our Display J SI DING-WINDOWS-DOORS i FE 2-1211 FE 2-1212 5 ACTRESS VISITS TROOPS - Carol Baker shakes hands with V.S. soldiers after the first performance of the Bob Hope show at Tan Son Nhut Airport in South AP Plwttfix Viet Nam today. Hope and a troupe of 70 arrived in Saigon from Thailand on a Christmas tour to visit servicemen. Schizophrenics Success in Therapy Announced by British 'Ghosts' Are Freed BARCELONA, Spain (UPI)' Neighbors called the police after they heard screams coming from the Sarria cemetery. Firemen and a locksmith rushed up to free five persons who had been accidently locked in several hours earlier. r-Junior Editors Quiz on- HAIR By Science Service LONDON — Success in rehabilitating mental patients (schizophrenics) so that they can earn their own living has been announced in London. This is believed to be the first report in Britain on the outcome of purely family or environments therapy for schizophrenia, toe most common form of mental disease. Drs. A. Esterson and R. D. Laing of toe Tavistock Initi-tute of Human Relations, London, and Dr. D. G. Cooper of Shenley Hospital, Shenley, Herts, reports the stady In the British Medical Journal. Forty-tyro male and female patients ranging from 15 years to 35 years of age were lected in two mental hospl the Greater London Area. Ail had been diagnosed as schizophrenic by at least two senior psychiatrists not members of the therapeutic team. Members of toe group were ot of low intelligence, and none had been subjected brain surgery of any kind. None jhad any organic problem such as epilepsy or brain injury that could have affected the disturbed state. ELECTRIC SHOCKS None had received more than 50 electric shocks in the year! before the present treatment be-j gan, or 150 electric shocks in all. ^ | As tor the family, at least I one parent was alive and available for Interview. Pa- : tients, however, could be sent to their own “diggings” alone. They could bo with or without brothers or listers, married or singe, with or without Hope Troupe in Saigon for TV Production SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP)—Bob Hope and a troupe of 70 arrived in Saigon this afternoon on his umpteenth Christmas visit to entertain American troops in combat zones. Hope had a dozen singing and| Both suits, filed in Wayne dancing stars with him, Les.County Circuit Court, charged Cemetery Hit by 2 Big Suits DETROIT (AP)—Two totaling $7,8 million were filed against Brookdale Cemetery Thursday by two women who have relatives buried at the ceipetery. QUESTION: How does hair grow? ★ it h ANSWER: Hnir ■* a i»»rfuijiwv*H^Jor-Jnuny animals, keeping them warm’towhiffiar. Ahffialiafe ff&juefitiy equipped with «ma1I skin muscles which can be used to make the hair stand out, so it keeps them warmer still. Even if we humans have so little hair, we do have the same skin muscles. When our skin is cold, they may contract In little lumps—which are often called “goose pimples" or “goose bumps.” At the upper left, we show the important part under the akin which causes a hair to grow. The follicle is a kind of sack inside of which a hair grows. An artery provides nourishment at the bottom and the hair grows by new cells forming at this root. As these die, they form a rod or shaft which is pushed upward by new cells forming underneath. Fat glands supply an oil called “sebum,” which keeps hair soft and in good shape. A human hair may grow about six indies a year. This keeps up from two to six yean, but after that nourishment will stop coming to the root and toe hair will fall out. Then it will be replaced by a new one. As new cells form at the root of a hair, they are given color by the addition of the pigment “melanin.” As a person becomes older, tills' pigment is no longer added and the hair turns gray. * ■ * * .. FOR YOU TO DO: Hester, ih toe picture, is taking care of her hair by giving it a good daily brushing. This removes dirt and adds luster. Her cat has the same idea. Try this out fa* yourself. ' Brown’s band of 15 musicians, and a big crew of production men who will turn out a television show here. the 63-year-old comedian brought his gang in from Thailand, where he tore two ligaments in his left ankle Wednesday when someone inadvertently brushed him off the stage at an air base. ‘Til do anything for a laugh,” said Hope. *ON TOP OF BED’ Reminded at a news conference that a year ago he arrived 10 minutes after the Viet Cong blew up a U.S. officers’ billet in Saigon, Hope was asked if he was not a little nervous. He replied: “Well, that was a very bad thing, but I’m not scared. I may even sleep on top of the bed this time. Actress Carroll Baker, dazzling in a white leather skirt and white leather boots, told the newsmen: “I said I was a little scared, and Bob told me to just follow him because he’s the biggest chicken in the world. " negligency, breach of contract, misrepresentation and fraud. At the same time, Circuit Judge Joseph G. Rashid sched-j uled a hearing for next Thursday to review three bids submitted by prospective buyers of the graveyard. Mrs. Virginia Davis filed a $4.8 million suit on behalf of herself and her six children. ___ said toe body of her husband was buried in Brookdale Nov. 18, 1964, but when the grave where he was believed to have been buried was opened, another body was found. A similar $3 million suit was Exarhos. Cemetery officials told her the grave of her mother, Mrs. Angelina Perdikis, buried in Brookdale Dec. 21, 1964, could not be found, she said. Crash Fatal to Man TRAVERSE CITY (AP)-Mil-ton Zahnow, 44, of Traverse City was killed Thursday when his car left a rural road in Grand Traverse County and struck a tree. IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT "W FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE t E 8-8173 Open Daily and Sun. CALL DAY OR NIGHT * ADDITIONS * FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING—SIDING KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $9C<] COMPLETE £119 7-Ft. Kitchen $9Qfl COMPLETE £99 INCLUDES: Uppei Weekly Records When members of the group were selected, the researchers organized wards so that relationships w o u 1 d be congenial. Each patient was assured of a relationship of at least one other person significant to him. Social therapists were trained^ some of them from the patient group, so that a consistent relationship of trust would be possible. All the group could be sent home within a year, but with the understanding that individuals and families could consult with the researchers in any crisis. 'Honey'Sticks on Platters What young people think are the top records of the week as compiled by Gilbert Youth Research, Inc. 1 A Taste of Honey........Herb Alpert and Tijuana Brass 2 Over and Over .......................-Dave Clark Five S' I Got You ...............................James Brown 4 Let’s Hang On ........................ Four Seasons 5 Sounds of Silence ...«...........Simon and Garfunkel 6 I Hear a Symphony .......................... Supremes 7 I Can Never Go Home Anymore .............. Shangri-las 8 Ebb Tide ............................. Righteous Bros. 9 England Swings ......................... Roger Miller 10 Turn! Turn! Turn ............................... Byrds 11 Fever......................................... McCoys 12 Ddnt Think Twiw...........................Wonder Who 13 I Will...................................Dean Martin 14 Puppet on a String......................Elvis Presley 15 We Can Work It Out.......................... Beatles 16 Hang On, Sloopy ........................Ramsey Lewis 17 The Little Girl I Once Knew ............. Beach Boys 18 Something About You ....................... Four Tops 19 Sunday and Me .... ............... Jay and Americans Make the World Go Away ..................Eddy Arnold New Jersey School Submits First Budget TRENTON, lU (AP) - The New Jersey School of Medicine and Dentistry has submitted a state budget request of 8M75, 000 in its first full year after the college was purchased from Se-ton Hall University. The state bought the school for $4 million last summer and allocated 1700,000 in operating expenses after the take-over. The bulk of the proposed increase would be for salary ad-jutments. MERRY CHRISTMAS Pontioc Plastics & Supply Co. 1014 Baldwin 333-7877 HAPPY HOLIDAYS I Rosamond Williams] I MAICO, Pontiac Branch 29 I. Cornell FE 2-1225 I Services end Sopples for j AU. HEASWQ AIDS | BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION company 739 North Pony' FE 3-7833'- ' I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS—NO CHARGE 15 W. LAWRENCE Pontiac, Mich. WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION CALL FE 8-8173 6 Months Before * First Payment ‘ ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING r- A--:- THE PONtlAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24. 1963 TWO COLORS ^ c*ty yfJjOatw/tr "//d i'/ffodU' Wlille humble shepherds watched their flocks, a. heavenly glory shone upon them, eus herald angels sang of a Holy Child. Far to the Fast a Star shone, guiding the wise men in their search for Him. Across the years the sacred message shines for us today, ever renewing in our hearts all the joy and -wonder, the hope and promise of that Holy Night, so long ago. As we worship in spirit at the blessed manger, we wish for all a truly joyous Christmas, rich 4n meaning. with faith ever deeper ... with inspiration ever greater. r 4 THE PONTIAC PR SSH Tho Weather V*. Wfthtr BvrMU Ptrwt** VOL. 128 NO. 275J ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAV, DECEMBER 24, 1005-88 PAGES in Viet Nam 12 Are Killed as Oregon Bus Skids off Road 30 Injurtd as Vahicle Hits lea and Plunges Down Embankment ROUGE RIVER, Ore. (UPI) — Twelve people were killed and an estimated 30 were hurt early today when a Greyhound bus skidded off icy Interstate Highway 5 and \plunged down an embankment. • Nine were killed outright and three persons died later in hospitalX The Portland to San Francisco , bus was travleing southbound through a cold fain when it left the road between Rouge River and Medford in southern Oregon shortly after midnight. It wound up 50 feet from the road Upside down. When police arrived on the scene, they found nine bodies, including the corpse of one woman pinned beneath the vehicle., Ambulance companies from Grants Pass, Medford and Ashland took the injured to bos-* pita is in surrounding communities. Private cars and taxis helped out. . A spokesman at the Rogue Valley Memorial Hospital reported that “18 to HI* injured had arrived from the erhsh. Th« * Sacred Heart Hospital in Medford and the Josephine General at Grants Pass reported 11 more injured'. rRIVER HURT Among the injured at Sacred Heart whs driver Joseph Bailey of Battleground, Wash. The extent of his injuries were not re-,„_vealed, pending Xrays. Police said the accident was the worst of a chain of mishaps that occurred on the “black ice,” created when rain falls and partially freezes on the highway. State patrol officer Charles Conway said when he . arrived shortly before 1 a.m., “injured were lying in the buis, outride the bus and on the highway. Ambulances were taking them away as fast as they could.” “The dvil defense had set up a spotlight and the beam cut through the rain. This was really a nasty one — the worst traffic accident I ever saw. In fact, it looked more like a plane crash.” mm SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — A Christmas Eve truce declared by both the allied armed forces and the insurgent Communist Viet Cong appeared tonight to have stilled the guns, the terror and the slaughter that has tortured South Viet Nam for years. The American-South Vietnamese decision to stop all offensive action for* 30 hours went into effect at 6 p.m. and the Viet Cong seemed to- have been faithful to their announced promise of a 12-hour truce as of 7 p.m. The cease-fire in the embattled Country turned at least some of it back to the little people. Most noticeable was the reaction in Saigon, , the capital. The streets were a 'tnass of humanity. People who have not been on these streets perhaps for months were out in force with their children. The three million population of Saigon strode out in confidence as though all of them had heard directly about the truce. Jestis Accepted His 'Yoke' to Serve Killed in Viet Combat (EDITOR’S NOTE: Antoine mandate reefed on the child born in Bethlehem, and when the hour came, he shouldered it. The following relies primarily on his own statements about it, made later in his life. This is the last of a five-part Christmas series about the hidden years of Jesus.) WASHIN GTON-0JP&—The Defense Department reported yesterday that, as of late Monday, a total of 1,546 Americans had been killed in combat in the Vietnamese war. In Today's Press Arizona Hundreds forced to flee flooding — PAGE 2. Holiday Plans Nation’s notables plan varied festivities — PAGE 1 Loot List List shows variety, thieves imagination —, PAGE 12. Astrology ..........21 Bridge .............27 ..Mi 28-27 ..rtr High School ...... tl Markets ............21 GMtnrics « Sports ..........22-23 Theaters ...........H« Wilson, Earl...— .9 TV it Radio Programs 31 Women’s Pages....18-18 : Iff! By GEORGE W. CORNELL AP Religion Writer There is no way of determining when he came to know it, Or bow. There is no way of finding out whether the knowledge came to him instantaneously or gradually, or what particular circumstances or event may have disclosed it. But it imbued the young man [of Nafcareth. “...there is an-’another who bears witness to The details of that realization are deeply inaccessible. Bat at some poiat, He recognized It. There came a day* before Jesae reached his fta- “The Father is in me and 1 am in the Father.. .1 came not of my own accord, but He sent was a to confront. CANCELLED SELF “My yoke,” be would call it It was as if He had been made both sovereign and servant at the same time, both everything [ and notiiing. He cancelled out Himself. “I seek not my own wiB, but the will of Him who On Him, had “God the Father sethbaaaL" ^ as be ma- Every youth, tores, posses through the strained turmoil ■ of discovering his own Indivttuality, of peering hard at himself with that new, critical faculty, as if observed from outside himself, judging his own person. The sounder the man, the more be begins to .know what and who he is and where he is going, even if only dimly. Normally, even the best version remains partial. But in one case it was complete — in the complete man. That did not make the going easy, only sure. The prospect, considering the character of men about Him, was plainly excruciating. ‘The Son of Man will suffer at their hands.” In Christian belief, Jesus le considered fully human, sub- Unrest Grips World at Yule By The Associated Press As the Christian world prepared today to observe Christmas, war and once more marred the celebration of the birth of the Prince of Peace. In Viet Nam, both the United States and its allies on one ride and the Communists on the other announced the start of a Christmas trace—30 hours on the American side and 12 on the Communist But the 21 hours before wen as bloody as ever, and U.S. officials expected toe war to resume in hill violence after midnight Christmas. India ahd Pakistan stood ea* treoebed in hostile positions locked in the Kashmir dispute. India aba confronted toe menace el Communist China, bees involved hi roeeat shooting incidents with Indian p* Unrest and fear still the streets of Santo Domingo in the waka of last Apirl’s revolt in the Dominioan Republic. In Africa, black-ruled nations kept demands that Britain 18,508-a year job ln 1986. invade Rhodesia and crush the minority regime. The British, who limited their reaction to economic sanctions, are worried that the tensions may burst into a race war. Postmaster Faces Irregularity Charge Indonesia, though wracked by instability at home, showed no sign of letting up in its “Crush Malaysia”' campaign. Iraa was reported reinforcing its border with Ira* with a squadron of fighter planes after two alleged attacks by Iraqi MIGs. But, as always, there were prayers mid hopes for peace. Pontiac Postmaster William W. Donaldson has been ordered to reply to charges of irregularities in the operation of the post office. The irregularities, described as. of a “procedural” nhture, were reported following inspection by postal officials in April and September this year. Donaldson, 9, of 288 Chippewa, said such irregniaHty reports are nertnal after in- Pope Paul VI in his annual Christmas broadcast appealed for peace negotiations in Viet Nam He wlU submit his reply by Dec. 18, hs said, flnwldsoti, t mayor, had an insurance agen-ey before Ms appointment to the1 “I and toe Father are one. At some point before Jesus took up his predestined vocation, the man who had reared Him as an earthly father died. Old Joseph didn’t live to see the ligbtnnig impact of the life of the young one whom he had guarded so fiercely. Legend says Joseph lived to 111, and describes the deathbed scene at the family’s meager abode in Nazareth. Mary sat at his feet and Jesus at his head. TROOPS VISITED In Viet Nam, Frauds Cardinal Spellman flew by helicopter to bring Ytdetide greetings .to troops of the U.S. Army 1st Di- Throughout South Viet Nun, UA troops planned partita for Ameri- at home had seif vast stares of leys, clothes and Christmas |*udk» for toe tittle iMme Minister Nguyen Cao1 Ky of South Viet Nam issued a (Continued on Page 2, CoL 7) ject to the conditions of finite existence, sharing men’s nature, needs, delights and travail, but die a perfect projection of Gad - the divine functimhlg flawlessly in toe flesh. LAST REQUEST The old crapenter clutched the youth’s hand. “I requested thee, O my beloved son, to be quiet in all things.” He apologized for once pulling Jesus’ ear in shushing him. Jesus wept. Mary stroked her husband’s feet and legs, which grew cold. After washing and ing toe body, they buried him time la toe hOs of Galilee, it Is related. Jesus, who had tailed wMfc Ifea there hi toe lean-to, now Aware of toe pattern of his growing up, Ha later— in talking to toe apostle Bator — cited the curious ebaqgtag outlook of that prafrtotaRt into responsible manhood: Cr owds Pack Saigon Streets Two Flint men were killed last night when their car hurtled out of control on Dixie High- The thousands of, Americans in Saigon were, *on the other until dawn Christmas Day under a curfew imposed Dec.. 18. The curfew will be lifted at 6 a.m. Saturday. RELIEVED ATMOSPHERE The atmosphere was electric, but loaded with a sense of relief. Front toe jungles and the outposts, reparts filtering into Saigon indicated that the cease-fire was just that. From An Kne, where the U.S. 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Division is deployed, Associated Press correspondent Bob Poos reported “All’s quiet." way near Tripp, In Holly Town- Oakland ship, and ripped into a utility pole in front of Mt. "Holly Ski Lodge. Highway Toll in ’65 145 "Dead are U* Yaw Kenneth D. Hodges, 23, to bits 187 From Da Nang on the northern coast where toe .Marines are based in strength, the word was of holiday feasting—turkey or baked Virginia ham after shrimp cocktails and winding up with mince or pumpkin pie. The truce orders went to in-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Santa to Need a Raincoat for Visit to Area Santa raincoat pare! when he arrives In t Pontiac area late tonight. The weatherman will be a day late with precipitation conducive to rapid transit from the Pole, Santa-style. * —-—■ For the second successive year, we’D have rata on Christmas Eve. Showers and high winds are predicted with a low of 35 to 48. Tomorrow will be windy, too, with steady or slowly falling temperatures changing the showers into snow flurries. The high will be from 35 to 40 under overcast skies. Clearing weather is forecast for Sunday with colder temper- Winds this morning were southerly to southwesterly at 20 to 40 miles an hour. Becoming southeasterly to easterly this afternoon, they will be northerly to northeasterly tonight and tomorrow. The low mercury reading this morning was 43. At 1 pm. it was a balmy 48 in downtown Poqtiac. when you erne young, you girded yourself and walked where you mold; but when you CoL 4) No Papor Tomorrow Two Flint Men Killed on Dixie Gar Rips Into Utility Polo in Holly Twp. driver of the car, and Dale R. Huneycutt, 24. Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies said the car skidded arid rolled 435 feet after leaving the road at an estimated M miles an hour. Both men were thrown from the car. Hodges suffered a skull fracture and Huneycutt, internal injuries. They were dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital shortly after 10 p.m. Both worked at the Federal Steel Corp., 9815 Dixie Highway, Springfield Township, and We apparently on their way home, according to deputies. A witness told deputies toe Hodges car had pasW him at a high rate of speed shortly before going out of control. MRS. A. J. ECKHART Woman Wins Driving Award A West Bloomfield Township woman is 825 richer as toto " lvfifg The Pontiac Press will ■at publish temurrew so week’s winner of a safe-drivf award. Mrs. A. J. Eckhart, 3333 Pine, will receive a $25 U.S. savngs bond as her prize in the awards program sponsored jointly by the Pontiac Exchange Club, toe traffic safety committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and the Pontiac Police Department. The bend, one st four befog awarded duriag December, was donated by toe Pontiac Exchange Club. Mrs. Eckhart was cited by raitiac police fer stopping traffic on Perry to permit an elderly couple to cross the street The couple had readied the middle island, but busy traffic prevented them from croeetag until Mrs. Eckhart stopped her The safety program boa Pontiac policemen on the lookout Cor good drive daring toad regular patrol for b^drivers. M U3A0 3WW Christmas Truce Stills Viet Guns frHE PONTIAC PRE89, FRIDAY, DECEMBER ji, 1,966 jn , ~ f*. *T : * „ 'i.T-^, f; (Continued Prom Page One) fantrymen in the Jungles, to Air Force units that had been striking in both North and South Viet Nam and to 7th Fleet carriers plying the South China Sea in support of the ballooning war effort. , The Communist Viet Coag announced three times oa their radio today that they would undertake no offensive action or a c t s of terrorism from Christmas Eve, oae hour after the allied cease-fire started, until 7 a.m. Saturday, 17 hours before the U.8.-8outh Viet- | namese truce period ends, j The Viet Cong had offered their 12-hour trued' in a broadcast Dec. 7. The Americans and the South Vietnamese countered! with^their Longer, cease-fire or*]_ der earlier this week. f * * ♦ It remained to be seen if the RIVER RIPS OUT BRIDGE - The swollen RiHito River left only a piece of railing and a cable where a bridge had stood after sweeping past Tucson yesterday. After several days of rpin and snow, rivers in Ari- zona left roads and farmlands flooded and filled reservoirs to capacity. The residents of several communities were forced to take emergency measures. Arizona “Braces for More Pontiac Press Photo truce will work. But around the world there' pare expressions of hope that it would be extended after Christmas and would pave the way to peace negotiations: ON THE ALERT CHOPPER CHAMP — Pontiac hosted the annual -Forester’s Field Day yesterday at Murphy Park. Involving a three-way competition between the forestry crews of Pontiac, "Ferndale and Birmingham, the team trophy weht to Birmingham after Luther Parker (above) of 740 Southampton, Pontiac Township, broke a tie with Ferndale by chopping a log in half'in 35 seconds, , . PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - As All American and allied units torrents of water roamed down were on the alert and had orders to react sharply in self defense. The American ce was confined only I new offensive actions. s e • fire a pro-any normally dry washes and riverbeds, then receded Thursday night, Arizona braced for possible new flooding today from the Expect Injury, Accident Totals to Set New State Record in '65 Disenglgementa from conflict or defenaa against any obvious Hundreds were forced to flee their homes to higher ground. An entire Indian community of 150 persons was evacuated’ threat were clearly within the discretion of field commanders obliged to protect and preserve their men. EAST LANSING (AP) -Mich-i creased for the fourth straight igan’s 1965 traffic death toUlyear and were It J per cent Won’t set a record, but the 1965,above last year’s 284,446. injury-and accident totals will , * * * hh a new_ high, State, Police records set In 1965— predicted Thursday, - _ ^ blllion miles ^ by QUICK DECISIONS 5 Officials conceded this might i call for some split-second hair All branches of the allied forces were keyed .up, however, to observe what happens at the end of the Viet Cong moratorium while the American truce still was to be in effect for other 17 hours. ■ ^ ”P®rt> ®°l!Michigan motorists, 4,066,826 Eraderk* Davids, Stole PoUa|regi8tered ^ vehicleg and director, said an estimated 46 licensed drivers. .2,100 persons will have died on Michigan highways hi 1965-fourth worst record, in 33 years of record keeping. The number of injuries will reach 157,000 and the number of acciaents 318,000, and the year’s combined , casualties— deaths and injuries—will set a record, Jbavids said. He said there still is a chance that, when all reports are in, deaths will have surpassed last year’s 2,120 total. WORSE YEARS Worst year ever was 1937, with 2,175 deaths, and 1941 had 2,133. Injuries in Michigan rose for the seventh straight year and were 8.8 per cent above last year’s 144,623. Accidents Each marks about a 5 per centj increase over 1964. The death rate of 5.2 per 100 i million vehicle miles was down 5.5 per cent from .the 5.5 rate in 1964. Crime continued to rise in Michigan. The 1964 rate of 1,393.6 major offenses per 100,000 population was up 12 per cent from the 1963 rate of 1,238.7. Of persons^ apprehended for major offenses, 55.7 per cent were under 17 years old and 22 per cent were in the 17-21 group. State Police gained a new director^ during the year — Davids—who replaced Joseph A. Childs after Childs’ retirement. Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report PON1TAC AND VICINITY - Rain today with strong shifting winds and falling temperatures this afternoon. High 48 te II. Windy and colder tonight with showers. Low 35 to 49. Windy and cloudy tomorrow with steady or-slowly falling temperatures, showers chauging to snow flurries. High 35 to II. South to southwest winds 20 to 48 miles this morning, becoming southeasterly to easterly and northerly to northeasterly tonight and tomorrow. Sunday’s outlook: clearing and c«M. Officials said the 24 hours leading up to the truce hour were as bloody as ever. U.S. B52s from Guam dropped their bombloads at dawn today miles south of Saigon, continuing the softening up of suspected Viet Cong hideouts. Lowest temperature preceding > • Wind Velocity IQ m.p.h. in eats Friday at 5:06 p.m m rises Saturday at 1:01 a eon sets Friday at 6:)S p. Don rises Saturday at 10:1 Tkursdey Mi Faatiac Lowest temperature . Mean temperature . Weather: Cloudy,‘rt Teursday't Temperature Chart Houghton 33 25 Kansas City 6 Lansing tt 42 Los Angelas f ..---... 3S n Miami Beach 2 41 30 Milwaukee I 3* 35 New Orleans 2 f Marquette Oat Year Ago in P Wghoit temperature ...... Lowest temperature ... Man temperature ......... Weather: Foggy, drlale rery C. Albuquerque ..TtiSi , 45 3t Omaha . 1 Si 39 Phoenix 5 30 14 Pittsburgh j 45 32 Salt Lake C. 1 55 48 5. Francisco j io 42 s. Marta i 22 o Seattle 2 NATIONAL WEATHER <*• Rain and showers we forecast tonight from the lower and middle Missiarippt Valley W the notd and North Atlantic Coast states. Snow is expected in the Great ^Lahw area , and northern New England, ilia expected in pinrts of the ncflhern Rockies. Rain is Mtow is expei ^•dieted for the Pacific Northwest, i ing of metal against metal on large gravel trucks. . iPEED NOT FACTOR The average speed of trucks WiSrfpproxirnately 38 dalles per The swollen streams, fed by towns of Clifton and Safford be- hour and while the posted speed Hundreds Are Forced to Flee Flooding heavy snows add rain/ raced through- a mining area of eastern Arizona, isolating the town of Kilvin. A new crest of the Gila River, at its higheptv since 1941, was a [mile wide as R flowed from western New Mexico. An earlier crest, more than four feet above the- flood stage, passed by the damage. Io southern Arizona, the rampaging Santa Cruz and Rillito rivers overflowed across wide desert areas; The Rillito cut away two miles of the Tucson sewer sys- Jesus Takes'Yoke7 (Continued From Page One) tine decisions. As of midnight Christmas, however, the UJ. forces will be free to resume “normal eration,” a senior spokesman said. “We shell resume normal operations at 2409 hours Dec. 25 unless we are forced to do so before that,” the officer said. While the Communist# repeated their announcement of a 12-hour truce, neither North Viet Nam’s Hanoi radio nor the Viet Cong radio made any mention of the longer period proclaimed by the other side. EXPECTOBSERVANCE U.S. officials in Washington expected the truce to hold for the first 12iiours. They hoped the Communists would prolong it until Christmas midnight. But they believed the war. would resume in full violence after that. ing to man’s egotistical Impulses. Jesus’ refusal ran contrary to the age-old, self-seeking twist in man. Instead, He chose an alarmingly selfless course, lending not to adulation (the mirage we all pursue), but to a cross. are old, you will stretch out out your hand, and another will gird you and carry you where you do not wish to go.” FULFILLED DUTY After Joseph’s death, Jesus still had to provide for His mother, a duty He fulfilled until His own death, when He turned the task over to an apostle and) When He preached HR first kinsman, John. But He also had i sermon in His home town of Trmy I to set His own course. . jNazareth, His neighbors were Jesus, as be entered man- iWuriftof* hood, spent much time -alone IS ANNOINTED In prayer, apart from the fractions babble. It may have been this, in part, that caused Nazareth neighbors to start good news to the poor looking on this oace-fevereti youth as an odd, disturbing torn, pouring an estimated five million gallons of sewage into this river in 24 hours-Some of the sewage flowed into the Gila River. Health officials, warning it would seep into wells, urged families along the river to boil their drinking water. iroclaim release to the cap-jm to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim Also, in the practicing Jewlshjj^ acceptable year of tradition in' which He waa raised, young men were supposed to marry by about 18. Nol .to .do so was considered pecui--. “Cursed the man who, at was not married,” the saying went. Crash Hospitalizes But He grew older, 24. . . 27. . .- 29 . . .and still did not marry. Although women ultimately proved to be among His most loyal, unflinching''friends in crisis,- He went His solitary way bearing that primordial, prodigious call: “Before Abraham was, I am.’ LONELY PATH It was as if He were totally at home in this world, loving its beauty and feeling its agonies, yet also bearing a universal embrace. It was a lonely path. Pontiac Woman No one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son. . A 57-year-old Pontiac woman is reported in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital with injuries suffered in a three-car, rear-end collision yesterday oh Cooley Lake Road. Mrs. Lloyd G. Acord Of 721 Emerson was a passenger in a car driven by her husband, Lloyd, 52, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. The accident, at the intersec-on of Union Lake Road id Commerce Township, also resulted in minor injuries to five other persons. None were hospitalized, deputies said. Teen Listed 'Fair' After Commerce Auto Accident Richard E, Sharp, 18, of Detroit was hospitalized yesterday after receiving Internal injuries in an accident on Glengary in Commerce Township. “ He is reported in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital. Oakland County sheriffs deputies said Sharp’s car went out of control on a curve one mile east of Wixom Road. Two passengers In t|£ car re- ceived mindr injuries. * ‘The Spirit of the Lord is Upon me,” He said,"“because He has annointed me to preach Lord. They ran Him out of town, > began the public life of the babe of Betbleham — the true man, the “man for others. The Christmas spirit brought relief to some prisoners in several countries including France, South Korea and - Venezuela where sentences were commuted or reduced. Fire officials said none of the more than 40 persons who lived In the three buildings would be able to return home today because of fire,'smoke, or water j damage. . Birmingham Area News Complaints on Trucks Result in Traffic Survey BIRMINGHAM — A survey of traffic on Maple and Southfield has been authorized by tha City Commission with an eye wards an ordinance establishing controls over the vehicles. Area residents have complained for some time that trucks traveling the routes disturb their sleep and that vjbrs; | tions have caused damage to homes in a few Instances. Some data on the problem already has been compiled on the request of the city administration by the Michigan Trucking Association. Sound tests and radar checks on Maple revealed that large oii tankers create the most noise due to their size and the power required in their operation. la another traffic matter, the commission voted to prohibit parking on Southfield from Lincoln and 14 Mile between the hours of 7-9 ajn. and 44p.g). REQUEST DENIED The commission, however, rejected a recommendation from the police department to removeparking on Southfield between Lincoln and Brown. Residents there opposed the proposed parking ban. *jt was also discovered that one of the factors adding to the noise problem was the thump- BLOOMFIELD HILLS - “The Christmas Star" will be the top-of special planetarium demonstrations at Cranbrook Institute of Science next week. The programs have been scheduled for 2:10 p.m. each weekday. Regular demonstrations are held at 4 p.m. Wednesdays and 2:30 and 3:30 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. fore receding. „__________,_____ Heavy sandbag dikes were in|unrM4onable, accordli place at both towns, reducinglltorChief Ralph W. Mo is tf MPH the speeds were not r to Po-lley. Ope Troy tracking firm ap-proached by the city has already directed its drivers to redact their speed te ■ maxi-mam 25 m.p.h. when traveling empty through Birmingham and te bypass Birmingham when returning with foil loads of gravel. According to traffic consultant, John J. Dobelek, the traffic study will be completed within SO days at a cost of $325. SWEPT ACR088 A Papago Indian village was evacuated when water three feet deep swept across the flat-lands between Tucson and PhoehlX. Twci major bridges and several motile homes were washed away wt Tucson. Volunteers worked jo prevent further age in the area where five5 of ground had been swept oft by the muddy water. Record-breaking runoff into the chain of reservoirs serve the Phoenix area brought a threat of flood into Arizona’s most populous areas. After several weeks of moonlit e tain snows and rain at lower [elevations, the runoff rate of 150,000 cubic feet per second broke a 1941 record for Roosevelt Lake. Water threatened to splash over the spillways off several protection dams. Officials released some water to relieve the pressure, sending water across some roads-in the Phoenix area. The flooding inundated thousands of acres of farmland along the Gila, San Palro and Santa Cruz rivers. Many farm animals were carried to safety, but damage was reported generally as fight. World Unrest MarsYuletide Celebration (Continued From Page One) Christmas message expressing 'respect and gratefulness” for the sacrifices of the U.S., Australian, New Zealand and Korean forces that have joined the fight against the Viet Cong. In the . quiet hills of the Holy Land, 15,000 Christians were expected to visit Bethlehem, where Christ was born.' BERLIN WALL In Berlin, thousands of West Berliners passed through the Communist wall to bring Christmas cheer and gifts to relatives in East Berlin. On the island of Cyprus, still smoldering from sporadic violence, Canadian troops of the U.N. peace-keeping force Kyrenia put the final touches on an armed patrol car they have converted into Santa’s sleigh. It will bring Santa, gifts and candy to 31 youngsters at a Red Cross hospital for crippled children. Suspect Arson in Fatal Fire 8 Die in 3 Blazes in Newark, N.J. Section NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - Eight persons died and more than 50 were evacuated from their homes in a series of three predawn fires today in a low-income residential neighborhood. Fire officials termed the fires highly suspicious and the department’s arson squad was conducting a h investigation. Two of the three fires started at the back of the frame buildings. A fourth fire, which also started at the back of a building, broke out on the neighborhood shortly after sunup. The death toll might have been higher among the sleeping residents of the frame apartment houses if passersby had not dashed into the hallways and awakened residents. SIX KILLED The first fire, at 19716th* Ave., reported about 2 a.m., took the lives of six members of one family and killed a woman and her brother in an adjacent third-floor apartment. Fire officials said the fire started in an enclosed stairwell the second floor and then went up to the third floor. All eight bodies were found in the fire-charred third floor. While firemen were still battling the blaze, the second and third fires were reported oh Camden Street, eight blocks away. The second fire, at 304 Camden, started at the rear and burned part of a garage and the back apartments of the three-stay frame building. The third fire three doors down, destroyed (be fourth floor and badly damaged the third floor of a four-story building and damaged, several apartments next door. Yet, no matter how harsh the rejections and blindness, “He who has sent Me is with Me; He hat-not left Me alone.” It was up to Him, as man, to manifest In . natural terms which man understood the supernatural concern they did not understand. 'I will make it known, that the love with which Thou hast loved Me may be in them, and I in them.” That passion glorified, yet effaced Him. “Not my wifi, but Thine.” * Strangely, in receiving “all authority,” He gave up all of Himself “He who believes in me belieVes not in me, but in Him who sent me .. .My teaching is not mine, but His... PRIDE SPURNED More than any descriptive words, however, it was His behavior that' distinguished Him. He spurned pride, the will-to-power. This singular difference was dramatized in His temptations by the Devil before His ministry began. la those subtly ‘revealing passages, Jesns is tempted to turn stone into bread, to make sensational leap to draw hagsnollowiag, ling power— none of those things evil in themselves — yet each appeal Johnsons Holiday Traditional JOHNSON CITY, Tfec. (AP) — President Johnson, still ploughing through accumulated paper work, was ready to open Christmas gifts with his family tonight. Traditionally, the Johnsons srt aside Christmas Eye to open gifts exchanged within the family. None of the gifts was announced in advance., The President, his wife and two daughterg actually got off to a running start on the holiday, driving Thursday night to his renovated boyhood home here, 15 miles east of the LBJ ranrii, to hear Christmas carols sung by the combined choirs of the town’s three churches—First Christian, Methodist and Baptist.' Except for the chief executive, the family did better than listen. Wife Lady Bird sang heartily throughout the occasion she sat beside her husband on a wicker porch swing at the 19th century dwelling—and daughters Lynda, 21, and Luci, 18, joined the choirs before the serenade w4s over. WARMS TO OCCASION Johnson, dressed very, conservatively and looking a bit dour upon arrival, warmed- at the sight of his neighbors—more than 59 strong—assembled to greet Mm with traditional Christina* tunes,. Before the after-dark affair was over, he hoisted in his arms the 11-month-old daughter of the choral director and, though she tweaked his nose — or perhaps because of that, made believe he was going to carry her away ip his waiting sedan. But the 5-year-old sister of the infant didn’t like this Idea and she chased after the President, tugging at his trouser leg. “If that’s the way you feel about it . . . “exclaimed Johnson with mock seriousness, then handed the baby back to the mother, the wife of the Rev.l Carl Taylor, pastor of the First Methodist diurch, MANY GREETERS Nearly one in every six inhabitants of Johnson City—population 611—was on hand for the occasion. When the singers had completed their concert, the Johnsons heard the Rev. Mr. Taylor announce: “Merry Christmas to the presidential family from all of us in Johnson City.” Mrs. Johnson rose from the porch swing aPd, clapping her hands, sad: “Oh, we thank you. That was so lovely.” REFRESHMENTS Within minutes, Mrs. Johnson announced that hot chocolate and cookies would be served to everyone, Luci began pouring the chocolate and the First Lady made her way through the group with cookie trays. Lynda passed a holiday-decorated wicker basket filled candies. f? First Family Serenaded At Johnson's Boyhood tftome I *nv Meanwhile, let those of us who believe so live as to demonstrate in every area and aspect of life the significance of Christmas, for “God was-in Christ reconciling the world unto ldpudlf entrusting to us the message of reconciliation." (II Corinthians 5:19) ★ ★ ★ Thi». || the message which alone offers bop* for the healing of divid- - is being called “freedom.’ ★ ★ ★ Science is presented as our "Savior," the “Messiah" of a new age which reaches for the moon, while here on earth the acquisition of material possession is encouraged as the chief end of man in the annual “Christmas A Go Go.” Add to this the prevalence in large areas of the world of war, famine, disease, and international distrust and the picture is truly a dark one. But thank God this is not the . whole picture. “God is not dead, nor doth He sleep.” God has spoken as the Scriptures reveal: * "When the time had fully come, God sent forth his Son ... to redeem those who were under the law .. Galatians 4:4, 5; “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us .... John 1:14. As a little child the eternal Son of God took upon himself our nature and being and was made in the likeness of men th£t in the midst of darkness there might be light. But even here the story is not Verbal Orchids to- Mr., and Mrs. Roy Shankelton of 20 Blaine; 55th wedding anniversary. Joe Spear of Oxford; 17th birthday. Mrs. Helen Cooper of Union Lake; I5fh birthday. „ Mr. and Mrs. Vernal Lloyd of Slid Willett; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Emery J. Moul of Union Lain; 53rd wedding anniversary. Mrs. Bertha Bates of Waterford Township; 87th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Elliott of Milford; 51st wedding anniversary. Fred T. Dowling of 398 Boyd; 87th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Brooks of 9144 Mandon; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Robot Haslock of Davisburg; 55th wedding anniversary. Roland Kilgore of 84 West End; 86th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Stepleton of 41 S. Geaessee; golden wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Foster Berdan of 52 Poplar; golden wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Niqne of Ortonvilie; 54th wedding anniversary. Dr. and Mrs. Henry H. Savage of Muskegon, formerly of Pontiac; 53rd wedding anniversary. Jacob L. Dean of Birmingham; 88th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Webber of 0 Hazel; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Ziegler of Waterford Township; 53rd wedding anniversary.. Mrs. Margaret Wells of 1200 N. Telegraph; 90th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin H. Owens of Feradale; 53rd wedding amdvwsarjL MARLOW Noisy L Now Sir Echo By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - Hubert H. Humphrey is the busiest vice president in history — unless Lyndon B. Johnson was —but in a very unsensational way, which is the way* President Johnson wants it. This is a switch from those days 16 years ago when Humphrey first arrived in the Senate, a noisy, controversial liberal who talked too much and antagonized the old-timers. He’s still a liberal but over die years he learned how to do business in the Capitol, got along with the old-timers, worked smoothly with Johnson when Johnson was Senate majority leader. And now he is a Sir Echo of all Johnson wants and stands for. His liberalism hasn’t diminished but as he says: “I did not become vice president with President Johnson to cause him trouble.” t A A It’s an impressive sight to go through a newspaper library folder on Humphrey and look at the pile of stories which show how he has been hopping around. GETS AROUND Juitin the early part of this month alone, on one day be spoke in Washington on better.. cities and an the same day in New Hampshire talking on disarmament; on another day be talked in New York about dosing the science gap between nations and on’ the same day in Massachusetts about propaganda. This was after returning from a western speechmaking trip in which he denounced antiwar demonstrators as irresponsible, indecent and unpatriotic. In between speeches this year, he has been mixed up in the Peace Corps, voting rights, school dropouts, antipoverty, talked with mayors, dashed to Paris with Gemini astronauts, preskied at a carnival. ★ A ★ If it seems strange all this activity has not stuck in foe mind, and it hasn't, it’s because Humphrey is carrying out foe role assigned him by Johnson, a busy one but secondary. SAME POSITION Thin is exactly the position Johnson was in when he was vice president. Kennedy and Johnson seemed to have had am idenfo ’ cal view of vice presidents: They should be seen, but not in critical sRoattons; beard, hot la a miner key; and they should always be on deck to ran errands, patch np various kinds of braises, and play handyman on a moment’s notice. Now after Christman, Johnson is sending Humphrey to Japan, (Korea,Formosa, and the Philippines, on a gbodwiU mission, which makes him foe highest U.S. official to visit for Far East since Kennedy i there in 1961. Voice of the People: The Enduring Message Of 'Hope Soviets Turn Realists on Religion “new” morality without standards ed liw. dWded peoples, and divided nations by'bringing men into a living relationship of love and peace with God and neighbor through Him who is “The Prince of Peace." By LEON DENNEN Foreign News Analyst NEW YORK (NEA) — For tl& first time in nearly half a century Russians will celebrate Christmas this year in an atmosphere relatively free from fear. To be sure, foe Marxiat-Len-inist doctrine still sees religion as “opium” invented by capitalism to enslave foe working > class. But foe reality ‘of political 'life finally Is forcing foe Kremlin to seek some sort of accommodation,, however hypocritical, with religion. Since 191.7, Lenin’s successors have been striving to eliminate belief in God from the lives of Russia’s more than 200 million Christians, Jews, Moslems and gion and communism can live together and even cooperate. Of course this idea is not shared by all Communists and even less by all Christians. But it seems possible that this time the Marxist-Leninist strategy born of expediency will have some lasting and significant effects. The Communists’ new peace overtures to religion cannot be taking place in their collectivist, materialist society^ New political and cultural winds are blowing behind the Iron Curtain from which religion is also likely to benefit. The Red r u l,e r s seemingly have come to the belated realization that all forms of pressure, atheist propaganda and violence against believers, have not smothered religion in their world. Veteran Says Is Greatest in My father is a World War I veteran and I ant a veteran gf World War II. I have been reading ojtfittpns and hearing complaints until It makes me sidk, We have the greatest country in the world and the best qualified people running it because we chose them. To those who have never seen the homeless, the hungry, or the blood of a war-torn country, let’s be glad our leaders can keep it over there because if they can’t it will be our homes as well as our sons. ★ A," A I have two sons who will be of draft age all too sooq. I hope by this time the Communists, the civil rights situation, etc. are all. back to God-fearing levels instead of people-fearing. If they aren’t, I will have to tell my boys the same thing my father told me, "Son, I hate to see you go but you must^If you ever go over the hill; don’t come home because this land is worth the price.” To those who can only complain, it’s a wide, wide world and there are ships and planes leaving every day. DISGUSTED This talk of draft dodging and tearing up of draft cards should mnkp some people real proud of their sons. I’m a mother of two Marine sons and I’m very proud of them for being men and Americans who saw their duty. * * * How about you fellows who think it is easier to play on campus than enlist and be Americans, or even support them? Why didn’t you go to Viet Nam and let our sons come home for Christmas? My son hasn’t been home since 1961. He’s helping keep you safe? How honest do you feel? You should be thankful you live in a country where you can sit by and watch others do your share. Some countries don’t allow you to make a choice. If you aren’t physically able to go yourself, at least be men and be of help to foe ones who do go, and keep America on its toes for peace. A MARINE’S MOTHER Bob Considine Says: Space Rendezous Lets Taxpayer Breathe Easier The Viet Cong destroyed a village in South Viet Nam, killing women and children. Another time foe V.C. purposely cut off a small girl’s fingers because she was on a school bus against the Viet Crag’s orders. A A A They have killed and wounded n lot of ear Gif in their attempt to bring communism from foe north. Just maybe one of those GIs was Gl Martin's baddy. I would feel the same way in wanting io hunt foe V.C. Nothing but mad animals would do what foe V.C. have done. A A Millions more Americans are proud of foe step towards assuring the freedom our men in Viet Nam are taking. These demon-/ strators against American policy should all ga live in the vill of South Viet Nam. ALLEN SPARKS HOLLY ‘We’re Lucky to Have Services of The However,’ their pressure on believers fluctuated with the Kremlin’s domestic and interna- gjbie even tional situation. Sch’irra said, INTENSIFIED DRIVE should come as When the Soviet leaders felt a relief to foe strongs they intensified their American taxpayer. Tons of his NEW YORK - Proof positive maximum speed of one mile an * 1 Wfotaraatod in foe letter in foe Voice the rendezvous in space is pos- hour) is supplied by four huge showed The Press gave us news six hours after we r __T......... * . ” ° Aiifoi/ln naimitanAM Tkia ia ton* nn/l T «mn4 4* alii drive against God. They relaxed their athetotic propaganda whenever, faced with a critical domestic hr international situation, they needed foe support of foe people. Before World War II StaQn had practically driven under- money have bsen spent on the premise and foe promise that one of these fine days we’d attend to the 10,001 details and put two as Wally tanklike monsters mounted under each corner of the platform. Each of these crawlers has two separate treads. The crawler-transporter weighs 5.5-miilion pounds, was built to carry a load weighing 12 million pounds. There is a slight grade running up from the assembly building to the*pad from which our lunanauts will take off. outside newspapers. This to true and I want to a The very day that letter was printed/ The Press ran ' fine photo of Gemini 7 off in-space and foe same picture appf red i outside newspapers foe following day. A A • A ■ This area is lucky to have ail the late news « latq pictures brought to us so rapidly by The Proas. j MRS. C. B./ ‘Citizens Not to Blame for ier Shortage’ CONSIDINE If the Conservation Department make irresponsible statements such .* * * says does have to be Shot. Irhunters The mover is equipped with taken, then they .should quit shooting Natives continue to i is no law foal t antlerless deer ’ they will lose any _ ___ . ive had for' their abv- actly how much its platform’s cerity in trying to maintain a reasQpab and healthy deer herd posture must be altered to keep in our State, it level whUe climbing the gen- A if tie hill. If they don’t work, foe Did the department advocate shotting a lot of does and fawns rocket fails over. by issuing thousands of permits, or Just to sell a lot of extra The only commodity that can licenses? I hold the department responsible. They are paid to be classified as a bargain, in know how the herd stands and foe permits they issue should be the space- in line. Let’s not blame foe citizens who shoot legal does or fawns. A SUCCESSFUL BUCK HUNTER ground aU religious organize- manned objects together Out computers that figure out ex- respect the people of Michigan might nftfla in Riuiii Rut oftfov Uif. 4 ° ia. -i-*»----«- 1. * , , _ _________________________________l tions in Russia. But after Hit-ler’s attack, to assure foe wartime loyalty of the people, Project Apollo, the man-to-he was forced to relax antire- the-moon-and-back program, ligious pressure. has advanced too far to stop. - * A * * It has been costing $10 mil- Most religious groups were ]joo a day for several years, -PPBMJP d _ permitted to reorganize with god the price tag on. it will be the space business, such recognized rights as limit- a(xmt $25 billion by'the time, we’ man himself, edautraraoy and still mw-e Urn- pull off that proposed oneway ■*’ , —’ itod Privileges of publishing Bi- gtial visit to the big dead ball bles and payer books. m j,as ^ doing things to FAITHFUL COMMUNIST poets and lovers since man This lasted until Nikita Khru- walked on all fours, shefaev came to power * * * • Yet not until last week, when Schirra, Stafford, Borman and Lovell staged their tet-a-tete, 185 miles up and at speeds Just beyond 17,509 m.p.h*.; could we be absolutely sure that Apollo could be pulled off. It depends Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Khrushchev, who regarded himself as a faithful Marxtot- apparently decided that the task of exterminating religious faith was to be pushed to completion. Upon Completion... * a way as if they had Highway Safety...... AAA Motor News In every session there are a number of bills that have been The Washington (Ia.) Journal labeled “must” and, toe lack of _. „ . . time, these are carried over into ntehwav Safetv has biea ____ ___ Education is somethin# you ^ next Somehow or HIgnway s,atety nas D*® “ He resorted to a violence com- ^tirelT«Tmastery tf TSdez- Obi when your father sends you other ^ country' seems to car- helped again’ ^ tlme by Gtth parable only to foe darkest year Vous technique, under Stalin. The Kremlin’s latest “liberal” HARD TO BELIEVE policy on religion - in the view Apollo’s “hardware” is hard of specialists on communism — to believe, its costs stupefying, to due primarily to foe uncertain The Saturn V rockets which political position of the faceless will be the launching vehicles men who now rule Russia and will be assembled in a building to college. But it isn’t complete "withoutlhem~ and 'orTa eral Motors. The world’s largest until you send your eon there, number of occasions, the inter- auto maker has announced it est has fallen with foe passage will increase the allowance to . . „ ‘J dealers loaning phssenger can We know only too well that . J foe legislation coming before high sctowl sfodents up to Congress continues to increase, W® * vehicle. The Driver Tftain* Say 'No' The Holland Evening Sentinel . Everyday, hundreds of and also becomes more techni- ing Car Dealer Allowance Plan, to foe disarray id foe Red world ttat must be seen to be compre- speeches are made before as- cal and involved. This gives to pioneered by GM in 1955 pro- ttat has resulted from Moscow's bended, and even then it Isn’t sorted groups around foe coun- those dose to the legislation an vides W siurina th* believable. try. But very few get wide aura of authority, and Congress . . _ -4J*iartn® . T* coverage, even though they often bows to this authority. deal" SM manufacturer the may seem profound enotuh. Re- Congress will have to have its ^ of loanin8 vehicles to high cflQtly, Roger Fleming,\ secre- own specialists to aid it in say- schools, tary treasurer of the American ing “no.” . . • A ' ’ * - A , ' Farm Bureau Federation, made u ,|HU that „„ commend GM for its pub. ’ £ lie-spirited effort to help young content, but it said something dile {f doean’t maintain its drivers gain foe experience they independence. This to what need. Certainly foe driver adu-makes Mr. Fleming’s speech cation program, in which Auto so important. It recognizes club has pioneered-for Michi-foat foe deterioration sets in gan, deserves foe utmost sup-when you can’t Say “—“ ■ t conflict with China. ANOTHER ISSUE Religion, in fact, has become another important issue that di-vides Marxtot-Leninisti behind the Iron Curtain and wherever they seek adherents to their cause in non-Communist countries. ' v'^r‘ Shortly before he died a year age, Palmiro Togliatti, Italy’s Communist leader, waned ttat “foe eM atheist _______________________________ __ propaganda to ao longer sf any costing about $100 million, will ase to cemmanism.” make the little journey in up- He draw n dividing Una be- rtfit position — without sup-tween Communists who believe porting .wires i that coexistence with religion to ' * * * . possible and necessary and those This will be done by placing “who still cling to the old atheist tee Saturn aboard e crawler-propaganda.” transporter that looks like a a a . something foe Greenf Giant TogliattiV “liberal” partisans would buy his kids for Christ-k» Europe especially, for some mas. time now, have been attempting It is a pad 131 feet long and to convince Christians that rail- 114 feet wide. Propulsion (at a It is a sophisticated box ttat stands 58 feet 19 inches talL It could hold six football fields. The U. N. Secretariat Building could slide in and out of its doors. It to foe tallest building south of foe Washington Monument The assembled Satums must be moved a few miles from this building to the launching pad. The 35-story-tall rockets, each so basic, it had to be beard. Mr. Fleming told Congress it had to learn to say ‘“no” If it expected to survive. This | to foe very heart of foe probl in oar highest legislative Hundreds of pressure are constantly urging the gross to act on this or that bit of legislation, and threatening dire consequences if the vate isn’t delivered. It takes a strong man to ‘W to font kind of it isn’t done, the port. toaai ! m Good Housekeeping... The Oconomowoc (Wit.) Enterprise Have you heard foe one about the movie queen who was the duties sf foe legislators will perfect housekeeper? E v e r y hare shifted to another branch time the got a dtoorce, she kept of the, government in ns real- the house. ... ' * , - w m * . TIn Associated Prats Is snttttod txdutlvaly to M W ter NS# CMIM m all local iwws printed In this swysptr^is s>all as all AP TIn PontNc Praia Is dsllvsradbv mailed In Ostesnd, Csnttsa, Us- gar-TC^r.tra um U3AQ M THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 21, 1863 iifit ■Hsppg •Ho&feujs Our host wishts for a morry old fashioned Christmas go out to all our customers. May you enjoy all of the happiness that ♦ho season brings. BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE S. Telegraph at Sq. lie. Rd. OPEN EVES. TIL 9 WASHINGTON (API - Sen. Philip A. Hart. D-Mich., Thursday asked Ally. Gen. Nicholas Katxenbach to rule whether the Selective Service may cancel draft deferments of students who demonstrate against die Viet Nam war. In a letter. Hart said he did not agree with the view of student demonstrators. He added: do feel that the rights of dis- Sonto rings his bell to send very best wishes for a HOMES INC* The Builder That Makes A House A Homs! A Christmas Prayer With all the happy poacofulnoss of a child’s prayor, wo great you during this holy season. KLINGELHUT BRICK CO. 4162 W. Walton Drayton Plains Hart Asks Draft; Rights Ruling senters In a democracy have to be very carefully protected. Hart last week disputed the contention of Lt. Gen- Lewis B. National Selective Service director, who classification and spewL duction of what he termed draft delinquents Ware practices followed through the years with M1H Ifi Currwi aIMSII the approval of the Justice Department. The issue arose over, reclassification of 10 University of Michigan student! convicted of treapaaing after they staged a demonstration inside an Aim Arbor Selective Service office. APPARENT DANGER Hart added in his letter: "No court has rated that the Selective Service Act was violated. . .only Gen. Hershey. The danger here is apparent: Should Imm RICH MAN, POOR MAN, FREUD AND FRUIT. By Alexander King. Simon A Schuster. 1.50. The late Alexander King’s ul-tracynical book, addn 'Amorous Ladies,”-is full of practical advice on snaring hapless males, and coincidentally is pretty devastating critique of his own sex. Chapter after chapter he evaluates all the flukes and weaknesses of the various types of males, attached or unattached. King seems to favor artists id bookish men as prizes; or teachers, for less ambitious females. He warns against- alliances with musicians (too self-centered), athletes (improvident soon out of the money), politicians (too conservative mid compromising), publicity men phony) and various gam-!, alcoholics and addicts. sional explorer who combined the talents of sociology and journalism; a man of dash and upsmanship who appreciated the reverse boasting (deprecation) of the natives. There are two selections, "The Eskimo Way of Life” and "Love and Marriage," which no doubt will remain classics in the interpretation of customs and psy- chology. For sheer terror, In the way of grim bravery at the point of death and survival, tew essays can equal Freuchen’s story ofa, rescue expedition which he lea across Melville Bay to bring out some lost whalers. The whole collection is an amazing record of an individual’s exotic combat against nature and man. (too | biers, i This may or may not be a guidebook for the girls; one suspects most of them are far ahead of the author. This is a modern comedy of w war between the sexes — an ancient war. THE UNFINISHED EXPERIMENT, by Joan Bosch (Praeg-$5.95): "Without a democratic revolution in Latin America, there is no way out," lays Bosch, deposed president of the Dominican Republic. The unfinished experiment was the attempt to bring democracy- to his country after the overthrow of the Trujillo tyranny. “The Latin American revolution which is inevitable," continues Bosch, “even if it takes 15, 29 or 25 years, should not be Communist, but the fear of the democratic revolution will make it sooner or inter fall into the pattern of a Communist revolution." The fear of communism was responsible for his own downfall only nine months after hi> election, Bosch admits. Best Sellers (CunpHtS by MOW*"' wwfcly) FICTION THE SOURCE, Michen- er. THOSE WHO LOVE, f Stone. UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE, Kaufman. AIRS ABOVE THE GROUND, Stewart. HOTEL, Hailey. NONFICTION KENNEDY, Sorensen. GAMES PEOPLE PLAY, Berne. THE GIFT OF PROPHECY, Montgomery. YES I CAN, Davis. INTERN, Doctor X. federal official be allowed to decide whan a law is broken and then proceed to punish those !» turn branded as law-breakers?” Last week Hart called on local draft hoards to ignore Heraltey’i policy and refuse to reclassify thf draft hurt demonstrators as delinquents. Such a classification makes them eligible for immediate induction. Will Leaves $55,000 : for Care of Animals BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) -Mias Lillian Knoedler, 77, who died Dee. 2 as she tried to save her pets from a fire, has left a $55,000 estate to animal care institutions. Miss Knoedter’s will provided that the estate be divided up equally between the Baltimore and the Maryland Antiviveaec-tion Societies and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to animals. Prom all of us to all of you, in. gratitude and deep appreciation for your continued friendship. ^ OR 3-0940 5896 DIXIE HWY. WATERFORD With cohsiderable bitterness, Bosch continues: "Anyone who does not demonstrate in a satisfactory manner that he respects and will continue to respect the established order in Latta America, that he will not touch a single hair of the vested interests, and that, on the contrary., he will dedicate himself to defending them with body and soul, day and night, is transmuted into and suspected of being a secret Communist.” THE PETER FREUCHEN READER. Selected by Dagmar Freuchen. Julian Messner. $9.96. This anthology contains some of the most ruggedly heroic adventures of a wild personality. Freuchen was a Dane who many years ago went native among the Eskimos; a OLD-FASHIONED WARM WISHES TO EVERYONE AT CHRISTMAS SAYOIE INSULATION 6561 blXIEHWY. Clarkston <525-2601 (TftiilfiAS I It’s hustle and bustle ’til all if done . .. when it’s finished we enjoy rite fun. Happy Holidays! STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS lisrw. HURON PONTIAC jwrfiitjA Good times, good cheer, good friends... may they oil be yours at this hoppy season! L & V AWNING & WINDOW CO 163W. Montcalm FE 5-2102 Phono 335-1066 lag's Fleer Coming 2685 VypOpWAkP AVE. W • (Jhristnias SIlfiH Vit;* tjupw ««««. ' lutpn uutrfH Join tigrtljtr in laugijtrr anil anng. It’* It}? tint? mtfrn mt rmtnt mar blrMingu anil uljarr our gnnb tnrtunM uffllj frtmto anb Granger*, a-ltkf. In tljr true (ttlprtiitmaa IrabitUm, wtfb lib* In *x-J*nb tu gnu anb gnur*, nur bwt mial?M tar a MUrrgXHtyriatmaa. 210 Orchard Lk. Ave. at Williams FE 2-9101 ft the Yuletidc, we especially rejoice in the opportunity to turn from the routine or everyday business and in real sincerity convey our appreciation to our many valued friends. ’Your favors and good will have made “everyday business*’ a very special > pleasure for us. To all, our wishes for a happy, hearty holiday rich in goodold-f ashioned joys. 3511 Elizabeth Lake Rd. _ FE 4-7775 i! I WPON Radio is happy to offeryou a full Christmas Eve program of traditional Christmas music. Join with us tonight as we bring you and your family a variety of Christmas programming. On the eve of this joyous holiday may all of us at WPON Radio wish you a most Merry Christmas and a prosperous New Yearl 4^. ike jolly old Santa himself, we've a pack of good wishes for a holiday season that will long be remembered for its good cheer, and its enduring ^ happiness. JH THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1965 Announcing A Consulting Service for Industrial aid Gaananial Building Projects Why nod lot 28 years oouitiudlOii taptriwic* ’’podcage'' your bu^iag pnhlauu and insure fowl tho building you want is dollvorod at a price you eon afford? urniamnm ENGINEERING SELECTION SITE SELECTION COST ANALYSIS PROJECT CONSTRUCTION foa $5,000 to $5,000,000 wo offer a complete const ruction service » and you are spared the headaches! BUILDING CONSULTANTS DIVISION 2431 Pontiac Road Pontiac, Michigan 4U0S7 Tolophono: 335-9461 '65 Loot List Shows Variety The first daily weather-bulletin service In. the United States was originated by Charles Henry Hitchcock during NEW YORK (NBA) - There was no kitchen sink stolen in IMS but some of the other purloined items made up for the Thieves in Whittier, Calif., stole a new lawn while neighbors watched, thinking the men were working for the owner. And the entire front parch was stolen from a house in Norfolk, Va. In Auburn, N.Y., an ambitious thief stole a 3,500-pound steamroller. Valued at more than $3,000, the vehicle has a top speed of only five miles per hour. ★ * * Blackouts seem all the rage, for in Ithaca, N.Y., seven 27-foot-long light poles were stolen and an entire section of an English • Scottish railroad was blacked out for a distance of seven miles when thieves stole all the signal and telephone cable. RINGING OUT YULETIDE WASHES It’s a real pleasure to wish all our friends the Merriest Christmas ever! SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC USE PONf AC PRESS WANT ADS. BUY, SELL, TRADE. STEAL ANYTHING Some thieves will steal anything. An OvU, N.Y., fanner had 10 bags of beans weighing many hundreds of pounds stolen and in Beirut, Lebanon, someone stole one-half of the city's telephone booths. They had only tWO. .V';i A tree was stolen in Ballston Spa., N.Y., and was found by police standing in a tab of water In thl turf’s home. And three live oak Wees were etol-ep from a home in Atlanta. Some robbers may have been planning a party in Syracuse, N.Y., for they took 40 cartons of cigarettes, three gallons of ice cream, 12 cans of instant coffee, 10 cartons of soft drinks, 30 packages pf pastry and a transistor radio. * * * Police are looking for a well-fed burglar in SL Joseph, Mo. He made off with 500 pounds of roll sausage, 120T>ounds of meat patties, 72 pounds of bacon, 50 pounds of ribs, 100 pounds of lard and 00 pounds of chill Enough for quite a barbecue. LACK DELICATE TOUCH Some robbers Just don’t seem to have that delicate touch. In San Pablo, Calif., one set off a burglar alarm, another foil off the store roof and another got stuck in a ventilator shaft. And, in Waycross, Ga., police answered cries for help stack hi the chimney. Some just don’t check before lifting. In Trenton, N.J., a thief stole $1 million worth of securities, all of them either cancelled checks or notmegotiable. ★ * ■ ★ Thefts continue to climb, police chief estimates that a million automobiles will be stolen in 1970 if the present rate continues. EVERY 22 MINUTES The FBI reports that a burglary is committed once every 32 minutes, and New Ymf*City police last year received a total of 45,003 burglary reports. Police came in for some hard raps in the larceny field. In Nagpnr, India, a police payroll of $1,179 was stolen from the police station. In Wichita, Kan., a department store security officer, after 9 hard day watching for shoplifters, discovered that all the gas had been siphoned from his car’s tank. The thieves also took the gas cap. ★ ★ ★ Another thief in Klamath Falls, Ore., blamed police for leaving keys in the paddy wag-on. “I took it because you left the keys to it,” he told police when caught. SUSPECT HASKEYS And speaking of keys,, police were really startled tkhen they found a suspect with keys to the front door of the new city hall and police station in Ashtabula, Ohio. The building was so new that even the police didn’t hove keys. Aid to Austin, Tex., burglars tooted several coin-operated vending machines in the police itation. Nothing is safe. In New Orleans, the wig snatch racket is really booming. One thief carried off hair pieces valued at $22,$09. A Kansas City, Mo., thief enatebed the wig off a ^ woman’s ’Tfiiaa while she was Jg dining in a restaurant. "Robbers use all kinds of tools. In Syracuse they used a cannon to. blast a hole in a vault. Another thief left a bank 70 cents more than it had when he left his own money on the counter in Twickenham, England. SWINGING BATS Six masked bandits swinging baseball bats, with only one armed with a gun, held up a bank in South Woodford, England. an 1070-72 winter , expedition on Mt. Washington. Hitchcock was a.geologist from Massachusetts and led this expedition. The only thing that a Schenectady, N.Y., burglar took after breaking into a home was a bath. A home’s burglar alarm was stolen in Los Angeles. A London store lost a bunch of phonograph records. All the recordings were the same selection: ‘Thou Shalt Not Steal,” ★ ★ ★ Some prisoners are honest. In La Spezia; Italy, an inmate found a valuable diamond and turned it over to the warden He got a reward. HOSPITAUZED Another robber broke Into i hospital in Baton Rouge, La. jumped from a window when discovered and was admitted to the hospital as a patient. 'What d’ya want?” a voice ■* two burglars broke into a stdjre in Atlanta. They left in a hurry. The voice be- longed to a mynah bird, pet of the store owner. Sometimes it doesn’t pay lo be too observant. A supermarket manager, after phoning the police to report a forged check, returned to find his waiting customer long siiice departed with the cash register’s contents of $835. The check was for $48.27. ★ ★ * Some victims defend themselves. Accosted on a London street by two thugs, the intended victim jgrabbed the lid off a| garbage c9n and hurled It at die pair. They fled. GRANDMA NAILS HIM A 70-year-old California worn*, a saw a thief stealing hubcaps) from her grandson’s car, She took after him, caught him after a chase of several blocks, madej a citizen’s arrest, and then heldi him until the police.arrived. Two women slammed the lid! on a man’s crime career in Dallas. Spotting a man kneeling in-; side their car trunk, they closed the lid and drove the man to1 police headquarters. ★ * * Thieves also have complaints. A note left in a La Prate, Ind., home read: “You people sure are poor; a good burglar can’t make an honest living.” Wishing You the Peace That Christ Can Provide at Christmas ancf All the Year* "For God so loved the World that He gave His-only begotten Son, that whosoever bellev-eth in Him should not perish; but have ever-iffe.” Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION 185 Elisabeth Lake Road r E 4-8284 Comer Murphy St., < Blocks lost of Pontiac Mall You’ll See The Blue Ribbon Announcement Monday, December 27th Q DM The Nativity”—A Christmas 0| Jj flU drama starring Ann Blyth and Jeff Chandler. 9:05 PM 9:35 PM 10-11 PM “The World Today’’-Special Mutual Network Christmas Eve program. Villanova University Choir in a program of Christmas carols. II UM "Handel’s Messiah’’-Per-lull I m formed by the Independence Messiah Choir of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Frankfyn S. Waddle, Director. 11 10 DM Christmas Eve service broad-11 lx. I IVI direct from St.John Lutheran -Church of Rochester. to conclusion—special broadcast direct from 9t. Vincent Do Paul Church of Pontiac. Season's Greetings from Personals Madeleine Doeren Jeanne Nelson Margaret Brown THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1963 Dr. and Mrs. Clifford T. Ekelund at Ottawa Drive, lire looking forward tp entertaining their family Christmas Day. Mr. and Mrs. Druce H. Smith and children David, Michael and Gregory, will arrive early from Birmingham and daughter Maiy Sue will be here from " Detroit. - ■ Other guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Newton Skill-man Jr. and children, Christopher, Amy, Tony, Stephan and Timmy of Lake Angelus. Coming from Garden City will,be a niece and fam* ■ ily, Mr. and Mrs. William Hoeft with children, William Jr., DeeDee and* a new baby. The Collis Scotts of Cherokee Road are looking forward to the arrival of their daughter and son-in-law, the William Clarks of Port Huron for the Christmas weekend. Seated around the holiday table will also be the A. W. Dickinsons of Lake Angelus* the Osborn A. Campbells of Birmingham, the William * * Home for the holidays from Bennett College, Millbrook, N. Y. ls S u s a n Fitzgerald, daughter of the Join W. Fitzgeralds of Bloomfield Hills. Susan and sister Julie will enjoy ..Christmas dinner at home with their parents. it’ it * The Arthur Seldens of Sylvan ' Lake will greet week-end guests, the David Seldens of Highland Park, 111., on Christmas morning. Son John will he traveling with his parents. ■ ♦*• * ★ Tile Edward Maiers of Illinois Avenue are expecting two of their daughters, and families on Christmas day for a buffet. Those coming include the Michael J. Ashleys with children, Mike, Eddy, Sally, Ann 'and Amy and the William Bonners. The day after Christmas will be bringing the other Maier daughter, Mrs. Henry S. Willard with- her husband and children, Henry, Nancy : and Simon of Wellston, Ohio. / Newlyweds in Chicago After Rite The newlywed. Richard Lee Serwins (Harlynn Mae liner) will honeymoon briefly In Chicago before resuming senior* studies at the University of Michigan and the U. of -M. Medical School, respectively. ;\it it .it A reception hi the Grand BalP room of the Hotel Sheraton-Cad-illac in Detroit followed the candlelight ceremony performed by Rabbi Leon Fram Wednesday in the Crystal Ballroom. * * ' * ” Parents of the couple are Dr.~ and Mrs. Sanford M. Izner of Detroit and the Harry P. Serwins of Oak Park, formerly of , Pontiac. *■ ■ it It + The Bride’s sleeveless Empire gown and chapel train of gardenia silk satin was designed with overdress and front panel of rose point lace. SILK CAP A crownless cap of silk held her lace-appliqued shoulder -length veil. Her bouquet was white gardenias. ★ it it' \ Lauren Izner attended her sis-* ter as honor maid, along witti bridesmaids, Sarajane Serwin, . Maryann Dunitz, Victoria Las-ser and Mrs. Bruce Serwin. With Bruce Serwin. his brother’s best man, fere the usher*, Drfn a I d S. flpser, Michael Nosanchuk, Davifl j. (Men Michael D. Surowitz and Barry N. Tilds. Bradley Serwin cer-, ried the rings. A Christmas Day dinner at the Pattersons’ will include Mrs. Patterson’s mother, Mrs. E. L. Page and her sister end her husband, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Wix-am of Grand Rapids. Mayor and Mrs. William H. Taylor Jr. of Ottawa Drive and two of their daughters, Janet (home from Western Michigan University) and Laurie, will be hosting Christmas Day dimer for several guests. * ★ * Expected are the N. P. War-reners, Mrs. William H. Taylor . Sr., and the Robert Shareys with Lori, Chris and Joan. * % # Then there will be the Joe Carters with Lynn and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Carter Jr. and Mrs. Frank Shorey of Royal Oak. ■ ★ it Coming from Berkley will be the Paid Jollys with son David; Alvin Warrener will al e o be present. On Sunday the Gerald War-reners with their son Gerry will Party to Fete Couple Sunday at Local Club A party at Orchard Lake Country Club’, Sunday, will honor the newlywed John L. McDonalds of Los Angeles, Calif. She is the former Katherine Adams Jerome, daughter of the Arnold K. Jeromes of West Iro-quoisRoad. He is the son of Mrs. A. B. McDonald of Bryn Mawr, Pa. and the late Mr. McDonald. it it # The couple arrived-here recently following their nuptials in St. Jerome’s Catheifral, Los -Aqndes. The fioneymooners .will spend Christmas with her ay*a t s along with Mr. and Mm. Amokl Jerane Jr. who are here from Indianapolis, Ind. Rounding out the family picture on the holiday will be the Jeromes’ other son, Tim. MAS. RICHARD LEE SERWIN P6NT1 ACTRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, Year^nd Splurge Annoys Critics, Audiences There wen lew than 10 mtteaJ jf paved |t»ds to the nation in l|M «pr AH estimated 8,b00 ve- SPECIAL POPULAR PRICES SPECIAL SCHEDULED PERFORMANCES By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - Notes while .waiting for the fat man with the whiskers: I Such madness, this last-minute crush Ipf movie releases to hit the Christmas trade and make the Oscar deadline. Critics are irrH by the onrush of films and can’t give fair evaluations.! 'Academy voters 'are eonfosed. The public is renumbed. tesk, this last- i JB rs THOMAS ‘ As long as we’re grumbling, how about those ads on bill- like Scrooge than Tthy Tipi, let’s taka' on the newsreels. Remember when they used to be packed with news and entertainment? Way gave you everything from summit meetings to water skiing, a must, to Lew Lehr’s nonsense: “Monkeys is de cwariest people1.” What do you get in newsreels * * * | now? Commercials. Most feted Britisher since, Princess Margaret is boards around town thajt proclaim': "Merry Christmas to all except for the finks, and you I know Who you are (signed) Daisy Clover?” How nice of Warner Bros, to help spread the | spirit of Christmas. Seems to me a more orderly release of hopeful blockbusters through the year would be easier on all and make a more sensible Oscar race out of it ^ '- A ’ A A ,. Now that I’m feeling more RECENT REEL 1 caught two In a recent reel: A blatant ad for a luggage concern in which a “packing consultant” supposedly was showing pro footballers how to pack for traveling; also a puff far the MGM president who was feted at a New York banquet. This is news? Another failing of the new news reel is devoting space to jHRnruimi THE FAMILY JEWEU ft JERRY LEWIS PRODUCTION) fPlheWikj/v hilariously happy tefe -ofabfg metroCoior CHRISTMAS DAY °»r 12:45 Cains, the mlld-looking sleuth of i “The Ipcress File.” Universal, which sponsored the film and has him in “Gambit” with Shirley MacLaine, gave him a party at the Other Place, the new private discotheque that offers billiards as well as Watusi. Miss'-MacLaine acted as hostess. TAKEN IN STRIDE Then Paramount, which also the premieres of movies. I saw] has Caine under contract for onfc in a Universal reel about films, tossed an elegant dinner the opening of “War Lord" Detroit. irs WORTH TO DETROIT. A TRIP .TO SEE HP RK ESTON HARRISON mcmwtRx rr *• s iclc and The BOX OPPICI OPEN nuxicriTcxnn noon to-r p»m. daily DIANE ULENIU rt»foaiMiicnwHneg Evtning. Orth. Miff - MM, lira Sal. a Holiday., IiM a.m. IMS U.M SiSL. ass-'- it2 PM. Wldhllday. IiM ».m... SUS ll.M TOdl -*— *“ am I.M 1U Thraort XT &MI « a HaHdayi. tiN p . MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED MUSIC HSU THISTIE MadiMa it Brush, Detroit 26, hhch^»u Dm. 31st i ama' it 7 P.M. | nsmi—1 and N ** I sthiTl_ in’for him at the Beverly WUshire Hotel The mild-mannered Caine took it all in stride, displaying little animation until he danced the frug .with Shirley. The old order passes. Donna Reed did her last television show of her series this week. So did Vincent Edwards of Don Casey." Dick Van Dyke reports he has only 13 more to goTtHfl * * * • William Holden, still recovering from his recent Illness, finished “Alvarez Kelly.” He stays on for Christmas with his family,' then plans to spend four months at the Mt. Kenya Safari chib he owns with oilman Ray Ryan. Lighting up the local social [scene is Gloria Swanson, who never fails to stagger party guests with her ageless beauty. “No work this trip,” she ra-ports. “I’m Just here for Christmas with, my mother, children land grandchildren.” | And' a Merry Christinas to all. French Units to Stay Abroad USE PONTAC PRESS WANT ADS. BUY, SELL, TRADE. MUSIC HALL THEATRE1.1 MADISON AT IRUSH • WO. 14711 PARIS (AP) — France plant! maintain military units in' 1966 In nine of her former colonies south of the Sahara,' official sources said today. I The unite, the sizes of which were not given, have been kept in the now independent states under accords made with France. The main units will be based at Dakar, Senegal; Lamy, Chad; and at the Diego Suarez-Invato complex on Madagascar. Other units will remain based in Niger and Gabon and military airfields will be maintained at 'Port Bouet, Ivory Coast; Douala, I Cameroon; Atar, Mauritania; and Bangui, Central African [Republic. Under accords signed with the {countries when they become independent, France aids in their defense, either with units based in Africa or in France. j^Jaris Todoyf “National Championship Draqstrip Races” Plus'" - DevilV HoirpiiT Most Gas Stations to Close Tomorrow DETROIT (AP) - About 90 per cant of Michigan’s gas stations will be closed on Saturday, Christmw Day, the Automobile Club of Michigan warned today. “Sufficient gas stations will be open along freeways to prevent motorists from becoming stranded,’’.said Jerry E. Fisher, Auto Club touring manager. “However, long-distance driven are advised .-to stop for gas whenever an opportunity presents itself after driving between 100 and ISO mil«E,” ilMIM—HUH i-aifflssifflram LmmCfiiiraMa Deadhead mmw mb 24,-utoa- Bullish rfbflvence Pulls Up;Prfo&> in Grwmfukii^s hew york «orts of Viet Nai the grain futures market were fiflfcut It managed somewhat more bull5r tht+ H#li8hs in ‘‘"P0*"11 *ver*ges week and prlcds of’ ntiiny au though more stocks fell Commodities recovered moderately .from the. rather bread declines of thepreViggs.Veek. Soybeans finished with net gains d(<2 cents a bushel at die extreme and wheat with well ov# a cent on all deliveries. Oats and rye posted fractional gains, .com eased. tfepre were some mildly bullish factors in government reports and in actual or potential fluenoe which government selling had on wheat wss fairly weO offset by the end of the week with prices back almost at their highs of the season. tI than rose. Jhp imminence of the year-end top' well as a three - day Chrlftmas weekend for* Wall Street were enough to*g«nerate caution among traders. The reports about Viet Nam, capped by the cease-fire agreement on Christmas, produced Ashe heavy selling of previously strong defense issues;. The aerospace defense^ elec- .......J& kfa^Jlfr not a longer cease-fire? If a longer-term cease-fire were arranged In Viet Nam, then the psychological steam would probably be^ut of many-defense issues export business. The bearish in- tronics relatwfto; defwisp- pro- duction and airlines were big losers this week as tawny holder^ of these stocks decided to take profits while the taking wa| good. . -/ i t ' In the four-ddy ^radlng iweek shortened by the stock exchange holiday for Christmas Eve, volume tottiad'i 38,224,961shares compared with HF7,744,a0tf for the full five-day' wedk preceding. On Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average finally managed to b?tt«r .d^hlsforiC Closing high of MLn it made on Nov. 4. 'TJie average advanced again on' Frfdhy, closing foe week at arecord peak of 966.36, a net gain of 8.». . ^urtSylrt fS day. "The AP average advanced 1.5 on the week, closing at its record of 357.?. Selective gains by blue-chip* accounted for Ahe rise inkheae verajae.? ‘ Of % 1^557 issues traded this week' however, losers outnumbered gainers by 814 to 576. .The five most active issues this week OR. Hie? New York Stock Exchange were: ★ a American Mbturs, up 1% at 9V4 on 198,000 ,shares: Sperry Rand, off iw at'21 American ' Telephone,r up. 2& at 62%; Chrysler, up 2V4 at 55%; and Pan Anforfean' Wdrld Airways, off { at 50%. i>AitS* fl)Pi) -Johnson has sent informal Word to French President Charles de Gaulle that he would be happy toyneet with Vim If hy comet to Europe next *pipg. lfrench I government sourceseaH today. ” No formal invitation has Men sent out or received and the possibility of such a meeting never has been discussed officially, the sources said. a •. A A But de Gaulle himself was reported to ftoye told U.S. Senate Majority Leader Sen. Mike Mansfield, D-Mdnt.-, when Mansfield called bn him a few weeks ago, that he would welcome a meeting with Jpfoison. 366 357, 3S6‘ 355 354 353 352 J V I New Hittoric HighJ Oaclina L rc. 6 l_ Transactions bn this Week's Markets AC?. Ind 4JM 4JW 44%+' % ! MlnnMM 1... k — Kan Tex .: .... Fac A 5 Mohasco .80 “sen 1.40b ___tOU 1.M MontPow 1.40 MontWard L. MorrellCd rib Motorola t Mtlt TT i 5294+ % i 32%— 4k i 67V4— % BabtakW 1.10 BeeMrfin J5a jiMlw wf ____ Cam l IllCanlnd 2.40 UtoarRand 2 InsurNoAm 1 119 M% 5414 T4%— 2% InterlkSt 1.M 190 40% 39- »% IntBusMch 4 267 313%" 4*7 Wf • litlHarv 1.10 491 66% 44 4M4+ % IntMlner 1.20 82 72%,*% Inf Nick jLNp 226 93% 4«% 92%+ 1 i«*i Packers 174 10%' 1# - '»% 1732 31% 22% 2HM- 11 657 84% 81% 83%— 47 40% 40.. 40%-r. 43 38% SmTf — .. 436 34% 33% 34%+ 46 339 17% 25 S'a- 262 169 159% 1M%-• 91 25% 25 23%- ■ *. 5M 77 72 73%— 2% 257 5394 50% 53%+ “ 224 27% 26% 26%- _____ ,.„a 203 71% 75% 77 NatOairy 1.60 127-11% 25% 154b- »* "ij Slst -33ai34W.:33% 34%+,T% it Fuel +.48 ' 205 33% 321/4 3i • . It Genl .20 331 10% 4% 944+ itGyps 2b 350 35% 34% 35%-ead 3.25a, .,46+ 7^ ■ 6}'^,.7094- 1111.80., w ;w 74% 75%+ % Corp 1 >m 43% -41% 43'li- 5% ola f60 107 2SM 25% 26%+ % .....Jt l.BSg 434 41% 41%-1% RyderSy, M .. U4. 20% 19, ,19.%- 1 194+ % SeprI GD' 1.30 ... Sears Roe t« .533 6344 *3) Seeburg :60 351 24V4 i 19% 1 SS -4394 47W .43% M 97 90% 9T%- 5 49 ■aasa 45% '« -+9S & 'XlrL -r - WM » 1 2.40 29* 086?,. 69%, »%-14% It .05g x27c ”144 1% H%+ Jk SLW Inf TAT US 616 67 ITECktB .Mb “ —J— JohnMan 2.20 379 31% '( JbhnsnJ 1.20a 818% 1< MriLogan .60 M 40% J '. . 2.70 913 »% 4 639+ -63%- 2 wind 1* )iseCa| .4. HS&r tJo JS atiS HHobmwaaaN S I — .4 2194 8%- WiKresge**'1.40 i x % ■+! la 233 49% 4644 43 — 1% l.0ta 341 M% 8% . 844- * 1.10 301 2644 2544 26%+ t 6a 126 125 '18% 125 + 2.00 507 66 M% 61'+- NorNGas 2.20 92 M 5044 59%—B* “ 2.60 119 5994 58 5994+ 1% tej to nu hi* 35%+ % i « ■ '*3546+ 11 _ _ 1)0 61% 1K:41%+I%!k S^Co_60 636 <9% 1/ _ 29 /36% <39%, JMB-r'v44 nme 39 6444 41% 6144- 21 563 2794'29% 16%+ \ s a*W'SM trlhrop l . ion 3044 sit# 45% It 55 Vi j mb 44%+ 2 3494- *4 Occident, .70b i OhloEdls 1.06 ir Sleg I Flnanl \M3# «% 4% 44 LahParCem 1 W pack 90 too 30% 30% 30%+ % Leh Val Ind Calum Hec 1 215V2M4 ,25% 26 + ,44lLehman 1.92g CatML .45a x73*W% 11% 19 4 M4‘l.OFGIs 2.00a CatiWM .90 142 37% 36 34>*-. 1 LlbbMcN .551 Ourmf L 20 32 \M% .30%- 1% | LiggettOiM 3 CdnPac 1.50a x39 62 «0% 62+2 fLIonal Corp CarfOtr 160 91 844 734fk+4%- lWTetton ind wl Carkerw +0a 503 18% 17% V - % LlvIngsO .431 Cas%. J4 .471 26% • 26H. 25W-, 'locKhdAir ~ M Cat* Tree 1 352 52 ■ SOW SV+f % Loews “ CelanasaCp 2<,2».08% M% 1444-9% LoneVt Cenoo Ins JO 204 3744 3044 37 - WoneSGa Cent gw 1.36 322 30 41% 4944+ 1% P®? ■ Cerro 1.60b 7M 64% 41%> 4294+t)+: Cert-teed' M 239 11*4 21 21 %- 44 ' *> 164 30% 4744 4744— 244 62 - 42% 4146 12%+ % 75 15% 1444 14%— % .— 44 £iKAba luttfffl 2 Magna vox 372 23% 22 22 - 14 3M 1640,1494 16%+ 11 114 7% 694 7 — 1 149 33% 32%. 33%+ 4 214 14% .32 54%+ ■ 4..ran „„ , ___rEIIII 1.44 Cocacoia i.7o Coig Pat .91 270 2444 22% 23%- .. „ mm RJKni 319 94 if [449 3494 32% ,8%+.j94 214 '29% 2B_% » + 44 ■HP M 251 56% 55% 5444+ 1% Slav 2 122 5744 56% 5494— | > Mar .80 465 48% 1994 20; - mslll 1.35 119 64 62% 43 — IPap 1.20 92 49% 45% 40%+ 244 , Pf- I ■ v I . - G El til 122V Sfik- 36, Mfch ft Pac Ltg 257 2794 77% 27’+— % |pKTBT,ri!20 270 25% 25% '25= |mr m s| 50* ’«% • .f?^I ParkeDav* la 129? 33% 30% 33 2W m/133% 1.34 -VM paab Coal / dj “ m +57 7294 6714. 6744- 5% PennDIxle Jit 556 1044 10% 10%+ % Penney 1.50a 2 1012 67% 62% 6244— 444 pa PwLt 1.40 Theat 299 2744 24% 27%+ 2% Pa RR 1.60a MM 1 2071 11% 1644 1044+ 2 Pennzoll 1:40 1.12 269 24 844 2444+ 1% PepsiCo I.M » 1 128 8%. 8. . 32%+ % PfherC 1.20a 2.50 103 44% CM 44%+ % Phelp D 3.40a 1 40 30 n 3644,3? — % Phlla El 1.40 3129 59% 45% 54%+ 794 Phil Rdg 1.20 M PhllMor 3.60 .WpUBTn1-.' ^ ‘ ^ ■_£ lljhlll Fat 2.30 Pitney Bow 1 PllPlate *" 'S92 1244 11%'' )2%+ 119 6594 64% «%— 73 3594 35 35 — 316 64% 63% 43%— PR 60S 73 65% 67%+ 2% 602 7794 .74' ||9»+ Ml 75% 7394 7444- 139 75 lit 73.. + ... 107 3494 3644 3644- % 169 36 . 52%.' STV- | 7344 7494*4% fttj lb 80 18% , 14% 144*— ini Ms.) Malt Lew I 1214 '46V4 40 : ,_ . 57-4014 40 .48%+ % 359 3746 36% ..£%- 1% ----------- il HI 940 M. 44 Salewa/St 1 332 31*4: 3044 StJosW,260 . . llS |jLi 48% SanF1 XX? .■ ur «w 43% legP 1.40b 292 36V4 34% |chenleyrT.l4&r 37^ 36M?4 3 w1* '•M j'r & SCM Up :40b '27» '60% M4+ 'Cott Paper > >036 ;38% 37% I 43% WS+1% I vt m m t — ),90 . 406 5344 6244 53%+ 9k lita 1374 |R;, 101% 10294+ “ ______ 2.20 494 ’ 60% 42%+ »#,32 Stt Socony 2.10a 623 93% 90 91%- SoPRSug lp . J7* 1794.'17V4 1744-SoUCalE 1.25 316 40% 39% 39%^- SoathnCo 1.92 221 6044 67% M - SouNGes 1.20 r« J094, 30 844+ SouthPac 1.50 ••346 47% 4544 , 46% ... South Ry 2.M ‘ %47 59% 58% 189%+ % Sperry Rand 458* jk 12*4 ' -4*06144%t2 iji — a Van ad Cp la Vartan As m VascoMet .90 Vanda Co il VaEIPw 1.20 . ira art* e/vi .arre-r le I WarnPIct M 140 1 44 1544 1544- 9k | WarnLam .90 87 41% 40% 41%+ ----n ja, jUj m;»y 30% V 40% “ “ 49V* JMPB8I ___„ 64%+ 9* B##ia ' WlnnDix li* ''90! 3M4' 3g4 36*4+ Wool worth T 666 30 28% 30 *r Worthlndtn 1 257 4044 30*4 J?%- 1%| Xaro* S' .70 IS 81% arwRiRH SCj* Copyrighted by Th* Associated Press 19*5 32,224,961 Total b Two years 4go ... 1963 to djgfa ...... „ semi-annual declaration. Special extra dividends or paymonfs. not. d6 nated as regular are Identified In following footnotes, a—Also extra * ........ ex-dividend or ex-dlstrlbu- lata. g—Declared or paU ad far this tv—Declared «r laid aftor *todk dtol-oT^Tlt UP. K-peclsred or pSld thls , an accumulative i«m» with dtvl-dends In arrears. n-New Issue, p—Paid this year, dividend emitted, daterred or no action taken at last dividend r—Declared df .jPajfl Kl l»4.:|p.«to »tof? 7344 74 -i 32% 22*4- _______ _ estimated cash value ofl ax-dtvUtond J trlbutlon r—Ex DM- StOIIInd 1.70 463 47% 45% 4S%— —.......... 1097 UVk TWt 8044- 142 p . 64% *7 + 194 - 10% 10%- 95 4494 4246 43%+. I 164'59% ; 49% 5044+ 44 436 40 7 3844 3994+ % 136 72W4 71 71 - 1% 302 22% 21% 8% • ' 302 22% 21% 22%+ lltarlDrug .8 StevensJP 2 dlstrlbut____ | ;ld—Called. x-E* , nJt? ^-tfx^rlfcSL^ Sujwtl- ~. rants. ww-nWh warreiis. wd-When distributed.' wtT-When Issued. nd-Next day 1 ' sfercr&e’.r' enUalhatlprr tax. i on-1 ’ —Ti4. , ___JH .a 102 H*a lir . TennGas 1.16 406 23%. 33% 2344 Texaco 2.40a, Sr 01 . 79 «%-1% TexETrfi 1.05 OMt. Wto* «•♦:: B%- % TexGSul .40 2076 89% 0144 80%+ 444 Texaslnstm 1. 579 )94% 169%.169%-2544 ------- -----146’ 2594 *21% 2194 2M 19% 84% 15 -Textron Wl i . 91 44% A2% ;42% ... Thiokol .250 099 »% ,1994 20%- 2% Tidawat Oil T23 53% r49% 5044- 3% Tim RB 160»1: J90 47%: 43% 4744+ 44 Trans W Wrj WO ?044 64% M m Transam wb 246 43*4 42% Transitron' 1 ■ 3*7- 7294 11% ..... . Tri Cont ,33h ‘ 368 27 : 26%' 26%+ % Twin* Can 1b 233 8 “ — ' —u- Un Carbide 2: 516 70%. ; 47% 70 +2% Un Elec 1.1?/ 1*7 27% XT' | unoiical 1.20, . 189 3294 31 Un Fac 1.IT “•* — 218 429b 4t(*f 41'/.- 1 Weekly IrtVfcsting "Companies .... .. 60*4. 7244+ 3% Companies giving .... ... r .1.80 146 57 W SMk+ 'to+ng bid prices for the *7 34% 32% 3394+ Vk week's closing bid price. Cont Can 2.40 18 6244 40*r Cont ,1ns L60 210 7144 69*4 Cont Mot ,.«s 142 15% 14% HOT.' w Cont OH 2 40 4M 69 *64* Mil- 2% Control Data +133 4094 37*4 iMk+‘ % Corn'Pd I .M +69 35% 32% 5494+ National Association _ i, Inc. reflect prices at could TWMt'Mart sold. . -66ai Fund l/» sees 3844 \3« *h*| — • 18 29% .31- 8 - 9s 117. 32% 3144 S - % _____ a 17% 36*4 « II * 17%- jk SXk Fund 8 34% g 3)+9- J* Chennlng Fun. Balance *i?ewto \ ' ____ . iClSwFd Bo. 9.11 isranp n .... 7.49 7.49 7.55 30.27 29+9 ».# 30.57 10J7 10.15 1*8 li41 ■ a 1.00 l Jl IH 7.31 7.31 7.34 4.93 4.W Tja 10.8 10.8 10.75 S.M 5.38 5.52 15.8 15.8 16.8 13.94 IMi 148 6.39 6.35 4J* 6.37 10.50 ■ 10.49 tOW 10.52 16.36 168/ 16.36 148 15.88 118 15.15 13.8 98 ^ Fidelity Cap Fidelity Fund . iffftWc. F.I.F.' - i Growth i. Mut Fd ui (Tt^ Foursquare Fd >anklla Custedl BVillfR 6*8 Air Un EaMOF 3.191 ' RKaaak M0e ' EatonMf 3.30 EdgeOG JOg ElBondS IJ5 9.77 PraHP_________ _____ 11+4 10 06.10.03 10.03 108 Tr 14.79 168 1,1 14.43 148 14.37 148 \16.41 16.56 16+6 .JR ‘ 3.68 1+X 1+7 18 13.94 13.54 13.94 1374 & En+3.64 13.71 13.10 1 tge -*,» VML, »/> O'*4 8 39% .3844 O +. % Commonwealth 1137 10_ 19% 1944 Cap Fd 9 l| 36% » - % Income I 18 21% 20% 70%- 9s I Invastmt 9 2844.24% ,844+ 394] Stock _ ■ .— vaj- 065 l!%,'i04S ft V Hjcommw Tr A & B 1.78 171 472 39*4 1594 38%+ 2% Commw Tr C A O 1.90 1.8 5 SS.« SSt W8SSS S’ -1"-^=/+-—• Ifjo 118 13.IJ wf srus; i’atfssffss Crown wain D2 6+4 6+] 6+4 . 6.64 «« Vegh Mut F4 72.M 73.07 738 73.47 Decatur Incoma 128 1176 12.76 128 mmmmfw. iu 119 15.23 is.*4 Divers Gth ttk 13.71 118 13+1 138 ' *------------ 10.07 108 8® 20.32 20.24 20.24 20.41 8+9 28.51. 20.51 30.03 98 9.73 9.77 5.65 U 5.62 i !i » 1.74 13+7 11M 11.92 rof Am 10.8 9.9? 9.?t 10. imeMI lnv 1+17 13.07^33+113. IhWf; r 1+4+ 7+1 j. Invetr Yp’ - 7,45 7.«- 7+0 0 22.00 2 1JB MS&7" 10.00 10.37 10J7 11.07 on stk 13.8 15.14 15.20---- Admin 10.45 10.43 10.43 _____ induct Gryphon Fd GuanT Mu _ . Ham Fd HOA ■ , Imperial Cap Fd 10.23 ’ jmpartal _Fd s.30 i+T 8.63 i+T NEA Mut Fd New England New Horii RP Noreast Inst ■>. is slsstm - P«-n &n . , 26.45 26.33 2 10.11 10.29 ........ 9.8 197 8.24 1.19 1.19 88 tncoma Fd Bos Ikcora Income !rLSr* 2+3 .2+6 li-64 118 ill 1 ImW Tr Bos 'JH-OO 138. ;to» 14+1 1 Invwton Oroop. FINji: i /* Jr {tiffi*1 " 8^ 228 88 22+0 Vmm Invast Research 17.U -16.12 16.12 17. '— Fund Inc 41.75 41+4 41.64 41, ■PIlBk Inc /1U7 13+1 13+1 Jahnstn Mut Fd 178 17+7 17+7 11 eystone Custodian Fundi: . Invest Bd B-1 23.98 23,97 73.98 23.94 IMC Sd B-2 24+5 24+4 24.63 24.65 m-4: < co ttk XL. Q.____________^________ Pr Bd B-3 178 17.87 178 178 Orth Fd IM! >4.76 18 ■■■ «n UMMdtUr is+0 liji iVii rfS-fljl L 10.73 13.73 10.73 118 (18.118 11.01 fUl 9.66 9.43. 9.41 9+4 7+9 ’ +;44">+.94’ 78 s lnv Trim 16M- 14.17 168 118 8+7 108 ■■ 10+1 118 108 1*8 19.42 19.3? 19+9 19+4 • 5+5 3.94 15.94 r 5.95 5,94 3.9* 3. Mut Invest Fd Mutual Mrs Mutual'Trust Nationwide Se Natl Imaston National Securities Sartaaj Balanced 13.07 12. ■m ............■ 16+2 16+4 .. . NP 2+B 28 2+6 tl 99' 1 I.M 11.93 lto9 20.66/ 20v3) 20.31 M.37 ........... 13.07 13 Jl 48 r-6.63 6.65 . 4.47 W«■.............. tif-a ’ 10.39 IbJnRRPilP • 118 LI.42 lUk 11+9 12 27 «.8 128 12.34 ■ 13.10 138 13.04 1111 00.64 18+5 18.64 11.61 >5396,15.VO> * "*• faiji ■ . 23.34 23.14 8 26 23.29 Puritan Fund Putnam Gab ' Putnam Grth Qtjy D^ >h Rap Ta Researcn spy Revere Fd Scudder Funds: Balanced ' Com Stk •• Inti Itm* r Sec EqUttjpr ' Selected Amer MSnKr Tr iak . Shares Ant Ind Southwstn lnv Soyertlgir lav ■ State Sl im* .. 14.62 ) 43* 14+* 14.71 13+6 13.03 13.05 13.11 118 11.44 11.G 118 218 21.14 <21.14 21.40 -423. 5+0 5.8 5.23 lTO 118 11.29 ““ 17.1* 17.13 T7.13' 12.25 li.Il 12.1 ,68^,4.17 1.17 _______ 5.06 .401 lOS 5.06 *5.56 15.42 15.42 15+7 14.90 14.14 14.34 1 20.4* M.44 20.44 2 lifi 148 158 1 10,7* 10+4. 10+4 1 12.94 12.71 11.75 1 12.60 12.S4 12 54 V Ham Rsa Fund itock > Inti i , . larw —b Gth Can * Fund _ Cant or ft Cant Inc United Fends: Accumulative . ScSspj. d , Vatus Line fin. 'anguard Fd 'arfed Indust Till It Inves Wash watih 41.95 41+4 41+7 88 14.30 14.19. 1630 t4J' 13.93 9S.M 13.90 13.1 •TS8 V.V3 9.M 10.L ll 95 19+7 138 14.04 <^6K!m£ IS 18 ii.72 ia at M V.73 9.73 'V8 AlSp *8 3 60 545 jrOuP/F# Varlabla Pay Intorcantl 'Wisconsin Fd f • MV jBb'irnVui 1 13.06 12+9 13.01 13.05 4*6+4 74^7 148 14.10 775 7+3 7.43 78 14.28 14.23 14.16 148 3»J»d1t.85 1(8 T9r ■Jpl.Wr f+3 18 6.52 lit 7+0 6.91 6.91 ,6.99 0.20 8^5 S.I5 ' 1.25 Law Last Chg. 66 6* - 1 106% 18*4—10% no . 3a 1 * ]5 4s 2b I 71% 70% 70%— t Whelan , 15 . 4% 33% 57V4+ 3% 20% 20%— 1*6 55*4 55%— 1*61 ftrJHt .... 28%— % m#3% 26 -2% J2%_+2%+ % 36% 8—2 . ANOTHER GAIN — Advancing for the fourth week ini a row, the Associated Press Average of 60 stocks reached' a new Mitotic high when it dosed yesterday-at 357.7 from 356.2 last week. The Dow Jones average of 35 industrials closed at 966.36, up from &7.8$. - „ ..J A Deny Tax to Pay Viet top Bond Hpiqnger Vi«t Peoca Rumors Are Behind Showing NEM Y(tftK;OP) - UTS. reasuify bond fncRT showed a Httle strength during tfcfe past week on peace rumors out of Viet Nam. Corporate and municipal Ixmd prices woe mixed, i The peape rumor developed last weekend. Though qMqtty aqueldied by Hanoi, the rumor pf possible offers to negotiate sent boU prices up. ' j, ;;£»] i* * * yijfr-Later lh the week the markets reassessed the peace MiFdtyd prices begm to decline. However, .on balance for the week more issues scored net advances than dedines. - „ . Of the 40 Treasury bond Issues'24 advanced in price, 12 de-elined and the remainder were unchanged! ., , ..• * BOND VOLUME , Q On the New York Stock &-:hange bond volume for me week totaled a par value.of raJH mi^fom A u i Of 452 issues traded, 1|H advanced in price, 235 deilindd and the remainder were un-chariged. New lows for the year outsfcored neW highs 80 to 12* The munldpal brad markets We^ felativdy ihaetive in View of (tie approaching , holiday weekend. ■vq' ft Jk "■ ' / One factor overhanging dll of the bond markets In the coming weeks will. be tlR Treasury’s need to refund some $20 bUl^n in maturing , debt in the cbknihg months; as well as float new debt of $3.8 billion to help .finance the Viet Nam conflict 17,090,2 0 . 16,610,420 . 1,523,106,81 By STERLING F. GREEN WASHiNGtGH (AP) T Despite recurring rumbles of a 1966 tax boost to pay for the Viet Nam buildup,' an authoritative government source said ntf.' 4-L.psfd toot your. WHAT THE STOCK MARKKT DID • Two This Prov. Vuur your week week Ago ago -.167’ 18 117 193 ..... —e* vey'' »£ 1S2 ,42 New yourfy highs 38 84 New yuarly lowe 102 133 i Doc. 8. WEEK IN STOCKS AND BONDS Following givot the renge of “ ‘ doting averages for week tndu STOCK AVIKAOBS Flret High Low Last Nat Ch. 95272 9643+ 9B.22 944.36 + 0.51 1478 247+6 246.84 S46.I4 + 171 «.... 1498 151.93 149.14 151.7* +1.11 63 Stks 336.65 139.91 336+5 339.76 + 08 BOND AVERAOBS ... 17.31 8+1 17.14 67.14 — 08 1st RR* ' 00.M M.66 'M40 80.08 — 08 2nd RR* 9*8 908 Hi I 00+0 . ^ BiB 8.11 16.31 M.ll M.12 + *8 RRi 10.49 N8 80.22 00.22 — 0.47 s 9 8 8.11 92.00 92.06 + 0.14 RRe 00.49 60.59 10.22 *08 — 08 WBBKU Y AMER 1C AN VORK TAP) - Follov* record of selected stocks traded Following It raded this we... ixchange, giving AlaxMageth .100 30 il% 12% AmPetrof A JOg S3t 7% ■ _ ArkLaGas 18 . H 44 43% ** Asamera .3383 2% 2% 2 7-1* Ated OIIBG, .'710 FA %/* I * <•■.. sat vw 1 • 1%- 20%+2% _________ SB 8 Br+i Tree .60 2367 1 9%+ % 5-14+ % wmt Tel .40 . ,194 1 CtrywRIty .30i -314 Creole P 2.60a IN ! Data Cont 130 1 EquItyCp ,05d 600 Fargo Olle 86 FolmtOil .13g FlyTIgar JJT Gen DevaL { I 26% 27%— % 1.241 769 3 ^ Ti !%■ m 92” |4M 12% 10% 11%+1% 186 10% 10% 10%— % tS 7 0% *%+ % 802 31% 2J »%2^J <46 63% 3*H *9 —+JJ Imp Oil icahff- tod’’ 3406 12% Mackry Air McCrory wt MuadJonw .4 MlrtsfuBtr »TT»™ Panoet PM R i C rity programs of the defense establishment. While it is doubtful that such savings can come close to matching the prospective multi-billion dollar increase fo spending on foe Vietnamese war, some officials believe that price presmuFIto nevertheless can be held fo reasonable check. MINIMUM INFLATION Some additional anti-inflating ary forces, also will be at work. These include the money-tightening moves of the Federal Reserve Board, the $5.1 billion bfofot in Medicare and Social Security pay-roll taxes next year, and g carefully planned program of the. Treasury De-partment fo arrange its additional borrowing with a ra‘ * mum of inflationary impact. Meantime, official hopes remain alive/ that a negotiated eepse-fire or jetttement of toe Vietnamese fighting can be A cutback in the planned can commitment of men and money. News in Brief Jerry Johnson, manager of Jerry Rents at 1113 Commerce, Commerce Township, reported to the Oakland County Sheriff s Department yesterday the theft of $190 from the Arm’s office. France to'End Euromart Snub PARIS (APj - France is ready to epd its foiycott of the European Common Market and attend a meeting of the cfomcil of ministers. The French have proposed that *fhe foreign ministers'olfoe six counfries fo the European Economic Community —‘ its Common Market partners — West Germany, Belgium, Italy, Holland, Luxembourg " fold France, meet ’In Luxembourg Jan. 17-18* AAA .-i The French proposed Luxembourg as the site to demonstrate their disapproval of attempts by the community’s executive commission, which i8/ based, in Brussels, Belgium, and dtoer members of the community to give the cbmmission supranational powers.^ The other / Cqmmon Market nations have .been trying to bring France liack to the conference table since it withdrew from negotiations fo Brussels June $0. * - ! ■ A . J$‘r A »• French ffresldeht Charles +le Gaulle claimed at that time foht toe Common Market’s executive . commission would expand into a atiart Of superstate if it were given control over fundft-to help fanners adjust to new competition. V .1* It was not learned if France’s return fo the conference table would signal a change ta ita opposition to the agricultural fi-nanctag plan. - A Averages Day EioHy 'Hie weekly market averages are being carried a day early this week dee to the ctoting ti the New Yerk and Americaa stock exchanges today. Gross Revenues,' Profit Up ^Edbon Detroit Edison’s gross revenues were $363,488,717 for toe 12 months that ended Nov. 30, 1965. Gross revenues for the cbtte- brought about in time to permit xponding period of 1163-64 were ed Ameri- pKHfJw;thfe^cjumpany repott- ed today. Net earnings of the company iaf tiie ll months through Nov. 39, 1965,> were $56,249,7& or $$.02 par share on foe 28,8)0,105 shares outstanding at foe end of ffiepaibd. For the previous 12 months, which ended Nov. 39, 1961, net earnings were $51,991,187, -or $!JjO * pdr ?hare on 28JM.7V shares dutstaiiding at the end'of |toa period.