the Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast Cloudy, gbU (Details Page M THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edison VODv 121 , NQ. 2715 ★ ★ MJt PQNTIAC, MICHIGAN", MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1903 —30 PACES Khrushchev . More Agreements by U.S., > 19 Die m SmokeInhalation L MOSCOW MB—Soviet Premier Khrushchev said today there are reasonable prospects for agreements between the.United States and the Soviet Union in 1964 on “a broad range of measures aimed at slowing down the arms race and further.alleviating international Replying to questions submitted by Henry Shapiro of United Press International, Khrushchev said such measures include: Reductions in _ the a jr m e d_ forces of states, cuts in military spending, the signing of a nonaggression pact between the North Atlantic Alliance and the Communist Warsaw Pact, nations, agreement not to disseminate nuclear weapons, and establishment of zones free Irqm nuclear weapons. > • He also called for reduction of foreign forces on foreign territories. Board Eyes Patient Unit Community Clinic for the Mentally III Oakland County's Community Mental Health Board will explore Me possibility of establishing the county’s first outpatient clinic at Pontiac State Hospital. The first community clinic could be set up at (he hospital either temporarily, unlil other facilities are' available, or an a permanent basis, according Paul N. Averili, board The proposal to enlarge existing facilities at the State hospital was made by a board committee headed by Dr. Harry Khrushchev’s replies to Shapiro’s questions were published by Tass, the Soviet news agency. The premier said the Soviet people are entering 1964 with grandiose plans of peaceful construction, and “the American people, we believe, do not want war either.” he continued: “The, stated intention of the new President of the United Stated, Lyndon Johnson, to continue in foreign affairs the. policy of peaceful settlement of in* Arnkoff. He is a resident in-j ternatlonal problems, of improv-psychiatry at the hospital. ing relations with the Soviet Uh* ★ * .*, ion and (Jailing a halt to the , The state hospital presently is cold war, has been met with equipped for long-term commit-1 gratification in thi^ country. We, ments of the mentally ill. it too, are in favor of this.” also is providing some outpa- j BETTER RELATIONS tlent care for former inmates. «In^e coming year » Khru,h. CUT COMMITMENTS chev declared, “We want to see The community mental health! development of relations of Worst Disaster in Jacksonville Injures 66 ; 4 * Efficient Rescuers ; •Lessen Tragedy After Gator Bowl Game JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (if) r-r With a macabre touch, smoke without flames billowed through the 300-room Roosevelt Hotel yesterday in the heart Of the city, Killing 21 persons. It was Jacksonville’s worst disaster. Sixty-six others were in-jnred. Flames were confined to a ballroom area off the main lobby, bat heavy smoke which raced up air shafts asphyxiated II guests. The other two dead were a woman who fell from a makeshift bedsheel rope and an assistant fire, chief who apparently had a heart attack as he helped evacuate most of the 5po guests and employes. ff House Blaze | Takes Lives of 3 in Family Clawson Mother Fails in Rescue Try; She, 2 Children Suffocate PMtMc Prtit Photo NEW CLERK — David R. Calhoun (left) was sworn in this morning as Oakland County’s new clerkregister by Circuit Court Judge Stanton G. Dondero. Calhoun will begin his duties tomorrow. Daniel T. Murphy resigned as clerk-register Nov. 6 to become chairman of the county’s board of auditors. Calhoun, 51, has been mayor of Huntington Woods since 1950. clinics are intended to greatly reduce the number of commitments by beating mentally ill persons berate their cases become too advanced and require lengthy hospitalization. Averili said that while set-, ting up outpatient clinks at general hospitals might be \ better received by the public, it would be a mistake not to make immediate use of services which can be provided at the state hospital. Eventually, he said, several clinics probably will be needed in different parts of the county- Arnkoff said a shortage of psychiatrists would prevent more clinics just now. “Later wo may be able to develop a program whereby medical doctors would be trained to provide early psychiatric treatment of less severe cases,” he added. |75,0M A YEAR He estimated that the ^proposed clinic at Pontiac State Hospital, Including additional staff, would cost 075,000 annually- Under the new state act whteh makes community men-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) peaceful cooperation, good neighborliness and friendship, between the peoples of the United States and the Soviet Union. AIDS IN RESCUE — A helicopter hovers over the burning Roosevelt Hotel in Jacksonville, Fla., yesterday, aiding in rescue of persons trapped by a fire which claimed 21 lives, Only the cool efficiency of, firemen, end dramatic rescues ! by Navy helicopter^ of urliA flo/l tn tho mnf" (il/r LBJ Gives Chance to “If the efforts of our two countries and Of ether states are united in the interests of peace, theo the coming year of 1004 can undoubtedly become a year of decisive change for the better In the entire international situation. 'To ensure peace means to strengthen peaceful coexistence of states with different social- B. ' Senators Irked by Recall, but Agree to Vote on Aid political systems. “The Soviet Union is prepared to consider any proposals that might promote the development of good neighbor relations between the Soviet Union and the United States.” RESTRICT ARMS Khrushchev also suggested an effort be made to restrict the arms race “step by step." He said this would footer a favora-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) WASHINGTON (£) — The Senate passed and sent to the White House a compromise $9 billion foreign aid money bill giving the President authority to guarantee credit for private commodity sales to communist nations. WASHINGTON MB —- The Senate, after wrangling for an hour over the interruption of Its Christmas holiday recess, agreed today to vote by late afternoon on final passage of the $3 billion foreign aid money hill. Sen. Mike Mansfipld, D-Moht., the majority leader, won unanimous In Today's Press Pope Asked for Meeting of All Romney I Governor plans to exert I influence on Republican I platform.— PAGE 2, 'Captain Eddie' Flying ace Eddie Rick-I enbacker retires — PAGE I $ ' U. S. Contracts Adm. Rickover charges excessive profits on defense contracts,— PAGE 19- Area News ......,,,,4 I Astrology . ..... 12 Bridge ........... II Comics ........... 12 Editorials ........ 9 Markets ...........24 I ! Obituaries ....... 25 | i Sports....J.....21-23 ..If I TV St Radio Programs 21 i Wilson, Earl .......... 13-15 £& VATICAN CITY W* - Patriarch Athenagoras I, spiritual leader of world Orthodoxy, has urged Pope Paul VI to call a meeting of all Christian faiths to ! make common cause against atheism and tyranny. The announcement by the. , Vatican press office today 1 came as the patriarch’s see la Istanbul reported that Patriarch Athenagoras and the Pope will hold their meeting in the Holy Land next month on tho Mount of Olives. It will be the first meeting in five centuries between the leaders of the two religions, the eastern patriarch’s proposal for a “pan-Christian conference" made no mention of a data, After Pope Paul announced Dec. 4 that he would make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, Patriarch Athenagoras proposed all Christian leaders meet with the pontiff. > 'the proposal for a "pan-Christian” conference of Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant and Anglican loaders was relayed to the Pope Saturday by Metropolitan Athenagoras of Thlatlron, an official emissary of the patriarch. agree-1 ment to limit debate, on the controversial measure to not more than four hours. Republican protests were voiced after Mansfield said that to put off action until Congress starts a new session next week ^ would have flown ip the face of the President’s wishes In a nonpartisan .matter of foreign policy." Mansfield told the Senate that “la view of the President’s request, It was most urgent that it reconvene In the , present session to dispose of jhis measure." But Sen. Roman L. Hruska, R-Neb., said there was some resentment at acceding to President Johnson’s insistence that actipn on the measure be completed before the new session opening Jan. 7. Joined by Sens. Gordon Al-lott, R-Colo., Jack Millar, R-lowa, and otheysr Hruska protested that nothing would be lost by delaying Senate; action until next week. News Flash PHOENIX, Aril.. (API -Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Arl*., will announce Friday whether he 4vlll seek the Ra- tion In 1104. Goldwater, t considered hie plan known today in telegrams to numerous snppOrt-fra throughout the country, Short Day Set Tomorrow in Area Business Most government offices and many Pontiac area business establishments will close earlier tomorrow afternoon for New Year’s Eve, preparatory to the legal holiday Wednesday. Ml City of Pontiac offices will close at noon, whjle Oakland County agencies, aside from the clerk’i office aiid a few essential services, will close their doore at 2:10 Miss Axum, smiling prettily from a hospital bed, said all she took with her when she fled In pajamas, slippers and a beaver coat were "two pocketbooks and my crown." ' EXECUTIVES DEAD Business i executives Tmdng the dead included * James Jack-son Swick,‘ 50, owner-president of Copeland Sausage Co. His wife, Lorena Baker (Rena) Swick, 47, also was killed. '< The Swlcks, of Alachua, Fla,, had stayed in town after attending the Gator Bowl $9 billion from their proposed spending, liar who fled to the rooffaverted a | : . , , ,. worse tragedy. * JOHNSON GITY;Tex. OP)—President Johnson held WAS packed a new series of budget talks today and gave top nftli f The fashionable hotel on1 tara4l»mman4«WW*h«tw* to protest hia plan tohep Adams Street neap Main was ............ Scked with guests, many i for Gator Bowl Week festlv-’ Ities which ended Saturday 1 night. | Most of the deaths occurred I above the eighth floor, agsulz-i ingly out of reach of the city’s I two 100-foot aerial ladder I trucks, j Among those rescued was , Miss America o( 1964, Donna I Axum of El Dorado, Ark. The j 21-year-old beauty and her chap-jerone, Lucile Previti, were hos-! pltaliied overnight. They suf-1 fered smoke inhalation. Johnson’s first conference was with Walter Heller, chairman of the council of Economic Advisers, and Budget Director Kermit Gordon. The two officials were overnight guests at the President’s ranch home and talked with' him until* after midnight about the budget. The discussions were resumed after breakfast. Gen. Maxwell Taylor, chairman of (he Joint Chiefs of Staff; offered only a , one-word comment when he arrived 'for the military planning session: “Bud-get.” ■' / . The Joint Chief*, represent-' ing individual service* that to appeal for reconsideration of Johnson’s tentative decision to hold the total to about |51 billion. Base in Austin, where their planes landed, before going on by helicopter to the LBJ Ranch 65 miles away. BUDGET MATTERS Budget matters claimed Johnson’s attention within a few hours after the departure yesterday of West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, a weekend guest at the LBJ Ranch. Heller and Gordon conferred with the President last night about the budget and the State of the Union;message the President will send to Congress on Jan. 8. CLAWSON A young mother died with two of her five children yesterday in an apparent attempt to rescue them from the predawn fire that destroyed their split-level, brick bungalow home. Her husband made ,a deeper-ate, bdt vain, attempt at getting the thrOe out of the house, firemen said, j . , . Almost all the family’i possessions, including Christmas presents, were lost In the flames. Killed were Mrs. Irma Morris, 32; a son, Steven, 5; and a daughter, Donna, 20 months. All suffocated. When firemen of this .Detroit suburb arrived, they found the father, Glendon Mbrrls, 37, an auto factory foreman, desperately trying to put a ladder to an upper window. He whs shoeless and Ip his underclothing in 12-degree cold. RAN FOR HELP A daughter, Busan, ll, ran to a next door neighbor's home tor help. The flames drove hack would-be reacuers, hewever. tallied for shock, could net tell how be and Susan escaped with the other children, Debbie, 7, and Glen, S. The mother apparently had given one of the children to Susan to be taken outside and then returned to inner rooms in a vain effort to save Steven and Donna, firemen said. Donna was found dead In her crib. Hie bodies of Mrs. Morris and Steven lay nearby. Firemen said the blaze apparently began In the kitchen area but that the cause was not known. Johnson Has said he expected to present Congress with a de-| fense budget that will be several1 hundred' million dollars below | the current-year total «of $51.2 billion, Shivering New Year Offices of Community National Bank add Pontiac State Bank will observe a 8 p.m. dosing time tomorrow. First Federal Savings St Loan Association of Oakland will remain open until 4 p.m. Another'executive among the dead was Wade Hlldlnger of Buffalo, N.Y., vice president for sales' of National Gypsum Co. Mayo? Haydon Burns, commissioner of the police and fire departments, said city fire marshals inspected the hotel within the past 10 days and found It complied with all fire, safety rulSs. NO NEGLIGENCE ’There Is no negligence In- volved in this fire in any way,” i..1 L vail. the mayor said, “Wo know tho origin was In the celling of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Four planes brought the Pentagon leaders to Ifexas. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara flew In one plane from Colorado Springs, Colo. OTHERS ATTENDING Three other craft brought the rest: Deputy Secretary Roswell L, Gilpatric, Taylor, and the four uniformed service cjilefs: Gen. Curtis E. LaMay of the Air Force — at the controls of bis own four-jet transport — (ton. Earle G. Wheeler of the Army, Adm. David L, McDonald of the Navy and retiring Gen. David L. Shoup of the Marines. 63 to End on Cold Note S a.m 0 U a.m... 1 H’ jl a.m. .. 2 1 p.m.. ........IT 10 a.m 6 2 p m. . 18 A memorable year will leave the Pontiac ar ea shivering. The group held a private conference at Bergstrom Air Force Temperatures will be about eight degrees below the normal high of 33 and low of 21 for the next five days. The temperature turning point occurred yesterday. The high was only 11. That, plus the eighth inch of snow which fell, was a chilling reminder of the year’s end. Tomorrow's high is supposed to creep six degrees beyond today’s originally predicted high of 18, but the “heat wave" will be only momentary. 1 it , it it The1 lowest temperature before 8 n.tn. this morning was zero at 5 a.m. By l p.m., the downtown temperature had rieen to 18. SPECTACULAR SHOW ^ The esrly-moming risers throughout UM dark onO" by astronomers. Fact of i total edipe vliible to 'between tho sun end the moon. This sequence of photoo was made by AP staff ty. It was labeled an "unusually photogripharBlll Ingraham and spanniid a time from 4:M to 6:87 aim, The day. It waola n disappeared ■a the earth, moved mm li I exposure itarts at left and continues through from lilt to ■BIT?- I two THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 Romney Will Press GOP on Issues By JAMES S. BROOKS BLOOMFIELD HILLS (UPI) -r Gov. George Romney admitted today that, '‘others” have put him Into the 1964 presidential race and said he will try to exert his influence on the direction the national party, takes in 1964. Romney said, "I think the Republican party has a tremendous opportunity in 1964 as a result of developments, particularly as a result of recent developments, to establish a new sense of direction for the country in a period that involves new' circumstances, new problems, new means.” The first-term Michigan governor said he would do all he could to see to it issues rather 'than personalities were stressed in the 1964 presidential battle. • ★ ★ ‘‘I’ve been pointing out for some time that we haven’t really had a national campaign that dealt with the nation’s basic problems and the issues. I think more important than candidates is a meeting of the problems and the issues and doing it on a basis that would give the country a sense of direction and purpose,” Romney said in an interview. ★ ★ , The governor, who ended 14 years of Democratic domination of Michigan’s gubernatorial office in 1962 when he outpoUed incumbent John B. Swainson, has already decided what he personally will do about seeking public office nexjt year. NOT READY But Romney is not ready to reveal his decision. “I’ll announce what I intend to do in 1964 in the early part of 1964. It’s too early to indicate my 1964 plans St this time. I know what I’m going to do — importantly, I know full well what my basic objectives are going to be, and I know what my specific activty will be,” Romney said. Every indication Is that Romney will at least seek re-election as governor and may also stand ready to accept a call to try for the presidency if tile GOP extends it. About his own personal standing in the present complex candidate picture, Romney said, “Other people have put me in this position.” * ★ ★ He said he would not deny he has to be considered a potential candidate. “I consider myself as an individual in public-Ufe that has been discussed in national terms by others, but who is in that ,(position as a result of what others have.said and not as a result of anything I’ve said.” • . ■- ' > ■ “Again, my present position is one where I have good reason to be concerned about what h a p p e n s nationally. Whatever happens nationally is going to affect Michigan. I’ve never indicated that t. shouldn’t exert such influence as I can on the direction that the Republican Party may take in 1964. “After all, I’m a part Of that party and what that party does Will be an important part of the national picture/’ Romney said. Since being elected, Gov. Romney has always brushed aside talk of his being presidential timber by saying he would not seekj the nomination. Now Romney is minimizing the importance of the nomination itself. PARTY PLATFORM '“I .consider the question .of who the nominee is as less important, a great deal, than the party takes in 1964, particularly whether or not the party meets the needs of the nation at this time. “I think the nation needs a setose of direction. I think the nation needs lo deal forthrightly with issues we have been denied the opportunity to eonsider adequately, because sible for previous campaigns have been more concerned with winning than in dealing with the issues. “When candidates avoid the issues and make winning the No. 1 objective the people have no way to judge the relative Greek, Turk Cypriots Okay Peace Zone, British Patrol NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -Greek' and Turkish Cypriot leaders agreed today to a proposal by British Commonwealth Secretairy Duncan Sandys to set up a neutral zone between their fighting forces in Nicosia. The factions also agreed to allow British troops to patrol all areas of the capital of Cyprus at the discretion of the British commander. Sandys told newsmen the agreement accepting his proposals was signed!, by Archbishop Makarios, the island’s Health Center Fire Quickly Put Out A fire at the Oakland County Health Center was quickly extinguished by Pontiac firemen after a large Christmas tree caught fire this morning. The fire in the lobby of the office building at UN N. Telegraph was put under control within M minutes after being discovered by a custodian at 7:46 a.m. Defective lights on the tree may have been responsible for starting the fire, according to firemen. Damage cost to the building was not immediately determined. Greek Cypriot president, and the Turkish Cypriot vice president, Dr. Fa01 Kutchuk. it ' -it ■' it > Sandys said leaders of both sides would meet daily under British chairmanship in an effort to resolve differences that pushed the Eastern Mediterranean island to the- brink of civi) war and heightened international tension last week. PARTITION NECESSARY , Meanwhile, Kutchuk indicated he believes peace can be assured on Cyprus only if it'is partitioned between the Greek Cypriot majority and the Turkish Cypriot minority. Kutchuk said there Is “no possibility” that the two communities can * live together after the past week of violence, * “Each country must be master of its own house,” he said. The Turkish Cypriots demanded partition of Cyjprus during the Greek Cypriot underground campaign that culminated hi independence from Britain in 1960. The Greek Cypriots adjected the idea of partitiqggr ★ a a Kutchuk, unshaven anti without a necktie, told foreign niews-men at his office in the barricaded Turkish sector of Nicosia] he had no final ajunt of the Turkish dead and wounded in the gun battles last, week. But he said the count had reached IN killed and 400 wounded, 70 of them seriously. Full 11,8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy and quite cold with chance of a snow flurry today. High 18. Fair and very cold again tonight. Low near zero. Tuesday mostly sunny and not as cold. High 24. Winds west to northweti 8 to IS miles. Lowtit temperature preceding V 0. ' At I wind velocity# I m.[ Direction: Wtit, _ Sun pm Monday at 5: to p.m, Sun rim Tuesday at 0:00 dt.m. Lowest temperature ........ 19 Mean temperature ..........17.J Weather: Saturday, sunny: Su cold, sunny. , , i One Year Age In Csettee Highest temperature ..... Lowest temperature ,.. v......... Mean temperature ................ Weather I tunny. Trey, city* Ypsllantl Atlanta Bismarck Boston nuftelo Chicago Cincinnati Port Worth 4 Honolulu f! Indianapolis 9 Jacksonville S Kansas City » Las Vegas 4 Los Angeles I! Louisville X Memphis ^ 4 Milwaukee Mpls. It. Paul i New Orleans Si New York »3; Omaha n Phoenix 7 Pittsburgh t it. louls I ». Francisco Si {settle 4‘ De« Moines 19 -I Washington 97 wiAtNiaeuMAU ®o shew*,. Bum 00 leaf E23 •40 Nunlas juQ —Mi >Hhk 0p11 NATIONAL WEATHER w Cold weather will continue tonight from tho Mississippi Volley oast and in portion# of the aouthorn plains white it will b« warmer in tho northern end oenteal plains. Snow flurries are expected in the lakei area, in me western Dakotas end In Idaho, ■ii / AP Phototax HERO’S KISS - William Fielden, 19, Miami, Fla., gives Miss America, Donna Axum of El Dorado, Ark., a peck on the cheek during'a news conference in Jacksonville, Fla., yesterday. Fielding crashed through the door to Miss Axum’s room and rushed she and her chaperon to safety during the Roosevelt Hotel fire which claimed at least 26 Jives. Florida Fire (Continued from Page One) ’ the ballroom but the clause has ndt y*t been determined." v William H. Johnston, who bought the Roosevelt in 1960 from the Meyer Hotel chain and spent $1 million renovating tee 87-year-old structure, said, “The hotel was as fireproof as yon can get a building. It Is a sad thing that those people did not stay in their rooms. “The smoke lust built up and people panicked,” Johnston said. . * it It A woman: who plunged to death ;whejn an improvised rope of sheets and blankets broke was Identified as Marian F. Curry, 43, of Santiago, Chile, and formerly of Greensboro, N.C. A medical examiner said Press Group to Award 5 Scholarships The Inter-American Press Association (IAPA) Scholarship Fund next March will award at least 1 five scholarships to United States and Canadian college graduates for a year of study in Latin America, and to Latin .American students and newspapermen for a year of study in the United States or Canada. President of the fund Harold A. Fitzgerald, publisher of The Pontiac Press, set Feb. 1,1884 as deadline for applications. The Scholarship Awards Committee will meet In February , to examine applications and make recommendatlopi. Candidates may request information ana application forms from Carlos A..Jimenez, secretory, Iapa Scholarship Fund, 867 Madlion Avenue, Suite 704, New York 21, New York. it. ★ . it . • Applicants must have a college degree as well as a working knowledge of the language of , the-country in which th iv with to study. Preference will be given. to applicants with journalistic experience. ( *' - * *' The board of directors of the fund will fheef again In October 1964 in Mexico City to consider further applications, Mrs. Curry died of multiple fractures. MOST OF DEATHS Chief Fire Marshal E. C. Mo Demon said asphyxiation caused most of the deaths. He said evidence indicated the blaze began in or near the Emerald Room, a few steps up from the main lobby. Flames were confined below the third floor. Most of the dead were on upper floors where smoke accumulated after rising through the building. Many of the 479 transient and 20 permanent guhtis were in night clothing or only partly dressed when the flrr was first reported at 7:45 a.m. Hotel doorman Alton Joseph1 Crowdeh said he was m the lobby when “suddenly smoke poured out from ev«vwriere.” He - called the jire department. TRAPPEDiGUESTS Trapped guests leaned from windows to escape the smoke and plead for' rescue. Some fell back or across window sills, unconscious. Most of the guests had been evacuated by the time ths firs was under), control at 9:30 a.m. FOUND UNCONSCIOUS -Irish playwright Brendan' Behan, 40, underwent an emergency operation this mornlhg after being found unconscious with head Injuries In a Dublin street. Police believe he was the victim pi a hit-and-run driver. He was Reported in fair condition. merits of an issue a# a result of intelligent, relative public ■ “I think we need a sound program, a sound sense of direction and I think we need campaign where the basic issues will be discussed,” Romney said- The governor said he stated this belief in 1960 and “I wired both Kennedy and Nixon mid complained about the /allure to deal with basic issues at that time. They didn’t reallyfdiscuss basic issues in that they avoided them." ■ w ★ * Romney wouM not disclose how. he fotends to make his influence felt — whether by the issuance of policy statements, public appearance, direct inter- brief agenda, City Attorney WD- vention in the presidential campaign or whatever — but he made it clear he will go all out in 1964 to center the presidential campaign “on our basic American principles.” It's No to Robber of City Market “This is to stick up,” the young man with , a revolver* said as he entered a Pontiac grocery Saturday afternoon. of the often heard phrase had worn off and one of the customers in Dickie’s Market, 326 East Boulevard, laughed pat load. The bandit, already nervous, pulled the trigger of his gun. Nothing happened. '•".' ■'it jte*i •># | Cautiously he cocked It I again and' pointed it at I an employe, Robert Coll ward, 15, of 299 S. Mar-I shall and ordered him to I empty the cash register I and put the money in a I paper sack the bandit had | brought with him. | ♦ ★ ★ H 1 Before the gunman fled, I Tie forced* the KalC jldtihi ‘i persons in the store to 1 go to the rear of the 1 building. He escaped with i about $300. Robert Dickie, 42, owner | of tee market, told Pon- | tiac police that the man | had been in the store a 1 short time before the rob- 1 bery to buy a pack of I cigarettes. Deal at Airport 2 Parcels Wanted for Hangar Construction ConuMssioners will be asked to grant lease options on two parcels at Pontiac Municipal Airport at tonight’s City Commission meeting. The options wohld go to Robert Fallon, who plans to build hew hangars on the tote. Signing of final lease agreements will be contingent on Fallon getting financing for the project and submitting construction plans to city officiate. Br ★ ★ In other business on tonight’s liam A. Ewart will report on a proposal to sell some city owned land pn South Saginaw to Joseph Mihalek and Don R. MacDonald. TAXREQUEST Mihalek had asked that ( the city pay 1963 taxes on his urban renewal property as part of the sale agreement last week.' Ewart said at that time that It would be illegal under stele law for the city to pay taxes mi property in condemnation. Action was then deferred a week to clear np the matter. Ewart will also report on a proposed swap of land with [Paul Kern, a1 Pontiac realtor, to protein right-of-way for, the planned extension of Lafayette ast to Perry. Or ( ★ ★ Also slated is the second rpad-ing and adoption of a proposed amendment to the city’s traffic ordinance. The amendment would allow police to ticket, or remove cars parked illegally on city property. LICENSE TRANSFER Commissioners will also .be asked to okay the transfer of ownership of a beer and wine license business at 750 Woodward from Peter J. Metropoulos to Robert J. Kessel. ★ it it This whek’s meeting is being' held on Monday because tomorrow, the usual meeting night, Year’s Eve. Jackie Attends Mass at 4aalm Beactv Retreat PALM BEACH, Fla. W—Mrs. John F. Kennedy attended a’ .private mass yesterday at the Palm Beach home of her father-in-law, Joseph P. Kennedy. Richard Cardinal Cushing, Roman Catholic archbishop of Bos-' ton, said tee Mass. He flew from Boston to Phlm Beach with a message from Pope Paul VI for the family of the late President Kennedy. Birmingham Area New& Term in Jackson Prison Given to Drive-In Owner , BIRMINGHAM-Drive-in owner Peter Nick was sentenced today to 1% to 20* years in the state prison at Jackson on his conviction of pandering. . Nick, 49, Of 1404 II Mile, Berkley, was sentenced by Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer, who found him guilty Dec. 17 after a lengthy non-Jury trial. Nick was accused of soliciting an 18-year-old Pontiac girl to becoipe a prostitute after she answered an ad for waitresses at his Mars Drive-In in Birmingham and Bel Mar restaurant in Royal Oak. . ■ ■■ ' ★ j ' rn .« On his'way to prison today, Nick apparently would if&t be able, to attend a hearing scheduled tonight before Birmingham city commissioners on his appeal of the city’s refusing jo renew his drive-in license. The Christmas gift requests Mental'Board Eyes Clinic for OutrPatient Use (Continued From Page One) tal health programs possible, the state is expected to contribute between 41 and N per cent of local costa Board member william Wagner noted that Oakland County this year is spending about $814,900 for mental care under existing programs. ★ it* * The total figure includes approximately $431,500 for patients in state institutions, $194,ON for emergency treatment of patients at private clinics because state hospitals are filled to capacity, $124,600 for youngsters committed here by juvenile court and a $65,400 - contribution to Oakland child guidance clinics. BOARD OBJECTION . Friday the mental health board objected to a state-pro-i posed citizens advisory committee. for long-range planning of a community mental health program. Board members generally agreed that the establishment of such a committee at this time might hinder the new board. They agreed to set up an advisory committee later, after some of the initial spadework has been done by the board. Ron Sage of the Michigan Department of Mental Health said the committees will be required in order for the state to qualify for a $137,500 federal grant. Personal Diplomacy Johnson-Erhard Meeting a Success JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP)-President Johnson’s'first venture into the deep frater of personal diplomacy was a success, according to both German and American informants who had a part in hls two-day meeting w)th West German Chancellor- Ludwig Erhard. ft nothing else, the two new leaders In the West's struggle with the East got to know each other and reached “lull agreement and understanding.” 4 4 4 The phrase te a stock one in the copy hook of diplomats. But this time, said Erhard, ‘tit is not a diplomatic statement. It Is just the truth.” A communique issued Sunday declared that Johnson and Erhard were agreed “that it is highly Important to continue to explore all opportunities for the Improvement of East-West relatione, the easing of tensions, and enlargement of thf prospects of a peace teat can be ■table because it Is just,” QUALIFICATION This was qualified, though, with a declaration teat there "should be no arrangement” that would perpetuate a divided Germany. Erhard, holding a news conference at Austin’s Bergstrom Air Force Base just before his jet transport left for Bonn, emphasized • willingness to explore ‘(new alleys” that might lead to agreements with the soviet Union. 4 4 ' 4 : j The rotund, chancellor described - his meeting- of-mlnds with Johnson on thla subject as. a hlep forward In view of the readiness to take new initiatives and to open discussions on possibilities that might exist.” Some question about Erhard’s enthusiasm toward East-West talks had been raised Saturday night after his press secretary, Karl-Gunther von Hase, said the German leader found Soviet responses to conciliatory Western moves “not very encouraging.” It was said later, however, that Erhard had the Berlin and German problems uppermost in hte mind in making the assessment. The central issues at the con* '■it ★ ★ ference were trade and related economic questions, rather than East-West proble|ins> informants said. ■ it h is v, Other major /points In the communique: , ' , Sargent Shriver, U.S. Peace Corps director. Is going to Bonn to help Germany set up its own peace corps. The United States will “maintain the present six-division level of combat forces in Germany, as long as they are needed."' tJt, W. German Ideas Sought BONN, Germany (AP)—Chancellor Ludwig Erhard returned home today and said president Johnson is expecting West Germany to come up with new suggestions for easing tensions with the Soviet Union, ■ h it h This, he explained, is because Germany lies nearer Russia geographically. He did not lay whether President Johnson hid specified whit kind of proposals these proposals should be, nor did he offer any. Erhard and Johnson agreed In Texas that efforts should be pressed fo ease tenslqpij h ’ h ; h Erhard said the United States does not went the West Germans to do anything to complicate the Berlin situation. The main problem In Berlin now te what should, be done to prolong the holiday arrangement under which the Communists havp al- lowed West Berliners to mike brief visits to East Berlin. One way that the situation could be complicated, Erhard said, was In letting the West Berlin government take too much responsibility: The four occupying powers and the Wait German government in addition to the West Berlin government ell had responsibility In this, he explained. The Americana welcome the holiday visits for humanitarian reasons, Erhard said. t “But they, too, can see the camel’s nose of the three Germany! theory coming under the tent,” he told a news confer* nee.'1 ' Th«i “three Germanys” theory la a favorite one of the Communists. it would recognise the West Get man Federal Republic, the Communist “German Democratic Republic” and Wait Berlin as separate itetee. of Birmingham youngsters this year ranged from a real, live ’ baby sister to wash rags far grandmother, with many toys, candy and surprises In between. During* foe week before Christmas about 910 children from > the area called Santa Clans at the North Pole to list their desires personally. Most of tile calls were from youngsters four to six.years of age. ★ it h—■ One child called Santa a second time to warn him that the chimney at his house was narrow and had pipes in It. The Santa calling service is sponsored each year by .the Recreation Board with the cooperation of the Birmingham Sailor Men’s Club and the Community House. Charles R. Baker Service, for Charles R. Baker, 77, of 635 W. Frank will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfield. . A A retired printer, Mr. Baker died yesterday after a long 111-ness. He was a member of the First Methodist Church of Birmingham, and WeZtlawn Lodge No. 545, F&AM, and a former member of Northwest Kiwante Club, Detroit. Surviving are his wife, Jes-tie; a daughter, Mrs. John Bellamy of Grand Rapids; two broteers; and three granddaughters. , Mrs. Richard Sj Brown Service for former resident Mrs. Richard S. (M. Louise) Brown, 77, of Lansing was yesterday afternoon ■ at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be tomorrow in Cherokee, Iowa. Mrs. Brown died Friday after a long illness. She was a member of tiie First Presbyterian Church of Birmingham. Surviving is her daughter, Mrs. Donald F. Lomas of Flint. R. Ray Cook Service for M. Ray Cook, 70, of 1626 Taunton will be 1 p.m. Thursday at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will follow In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Cook died last night after a brief Illness. Former owner of Beck Cleaners. in Birmingham, he retired in 1952. Mr. Cook was a past commander of Charles Edward American Legion Post, No. 14, past president of the Birmingham Rotary Club and a member of Birmingham Lodge No. 44, F&AM, Birmingham Gun Club and Elks Lodge i No. 802 of Warsaw, Ind. ■' Surviving are four nieces. Mrs. Walter M. Holmes Service for Mrs. Walter M. (Jean) Holmes, 98, of 192 Grae-fleld will be II a.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funqral, Home. Cremation will follow In White Chapel Memorial Crematorium,, Troy. Mrs. Holmes died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving besides her husband are her_parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Taylor of Tbronto, Ont.; her daughter, Mrs. Richard J./, Frost of Omaha, Neb.; and v sister. Further Tfiaws in the Cold War Seen by Nikita (Continued From Page One) ble atmosphere for general ang complete disarmament. without going into detail, he called again for conclusion of a peace treaty with Germany. Among argent problems that ■honld bo aolved fo 1964, first Is “the elimination of the remnants of World War II In Europe,” ho said. “It would be unwise,” said Khrushchev, “and, I would say, dangerous to put tela matter off until future years.” ★ h h Citing the reduction of aome $600 million In th« Soviet military budget for 1004, he called on other nations to take similar action. SOME REDUCTIONS / ' Wo are contemplating the possibility of certain further reductions In the strength of our country’s armed forces,’’ Khrushchev said, adding tbi t while such steps could be taken unilaterally, the ending ti the irms race depend! oh action by both tides. 1 TH# ^&NTl A^TO&SS, MONBAYrl^BMBll^ 30, 1963 ~ mm THH mfi THE "WELCOME MAT" IS ALWAYS OUT •Member Federal Deposit Insurance Carp. MEMBER F. D. I. C. m Dr. Way n* G. Brandstadt Says: Strong Chemicals Cause Detergent Hands By W. G. BRANDSTADT Q I have had “detergent hands” for over a year. They itch a lot, then they blister and crack. h a v e to have them in water a lot and rubber gloves seem to make1 ! t h e m worse. : What can I do?, | A — This coiir i dition has been BRANDSTADT getting a lot of attention lately. It is usually a chemical irritation and not an allergy. When you wear ordinary rubber gloves, your hands become soaked in their own sweat. This is the reason the gloves can make things worse. However,, rubber gloves that are lined with botton are available. * You should use these whenever your hands would other-| wise come in contact with the strong detergents used for Washing clothes, dishes, walls or floors. NO CHEMICALS Above all, do not use these strong chemicals to wash your hands. able. Alkaline soaps retpove the protective oils in your skin and cause excessive drying. This, leads ,to itching and cracking. Avoid washing your hands frequently and dry> them by patting them* with soft disposable tissue When yon mast expose your hands to strong detergents, you may prefer to rub a thin layer of petroleum Jelly on them rather than wear gloves. To wash your hands use one of the nonalkaline 9x24" . rubb'sr stair' tr*ad j . In . |' .block or h'own colors. HA UP Protects slops, roducos fiU 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS Murder Usually Very Intimate, Says Sociologist tablets. Can they cause my heart to skip a beat? Is this serious? • i . . J A — The tablets are hot the cause of your skipped beats. The skipped beats are harmless. You should first learn to accept them as a minor annoyance, then to ignore them. CLEVELAND, Ohio VAP)-Murder is largely a family affair, a New York sociologist said today . At least, declared Dr. Gerhard Falk of the State University College at Buffalo, murder is a “very intimate matter, which takes place between relatives and friends and rarely between strangers.” Describing a study of various aspects of homicide, he told the American Association for vthe Advancement Of Science that among 121 murders committed in Buffalo in the years 1948-1955, only 12 per cent of the victims were stranger^ to the killers. A — Persons with leaky heart valves, congenital or resulting from rheumatic ' There are 776 pieces of*park property in Washington, D.C. ly reach the point where much of die blood which should be forced into the aorta slips backward with each beat. “ This damming back of blood is called decompensation. When it occurs, it chiefly af-fects die most dependent parts; of die body. This would cause edemtf or Waterlogging of the ankles in a person who is standing or sitting in a chair but in a person who is lying hi bed the edema would be most noticeable around the hips. It might also involve the internal organs. Approrpiate doses of digitalis strengthen the heart beat and give partial relief. There's no timo like the present to discuss money matters 1 PONTIAC STATE BANK •hall deem it a pleasure to offer any financial advice or atslitanco possible to make 1964 a better, more prosperous year for you! FREE Extra Pad . Floor Waxer RUBBERMAID SOfti-Grip Bathtub Mats PONTIAC STATE BANK COLORFAST-SAtylTARY-PLASTIC Laundry Basket 57* so, hVony. ,u>gs around tho It laundry, toys, boots, piqn Sturdy (tarrying handlwt. Limit, 2. , 3-Sholves — Electric Outlet All Metal Utility Table $3.W value - 20x15* 30 Inch, table with elec* trleal outlet — rolling casters, enatrml finish Is t«0sy to clean. PADDED and COVEREQ Sleeve Iron Board As shewn p sleeve beerd which laid, sempectly lor ttorogo end carrying Paddad and illlsene seyered 7i( -2nd Fleer Values ■CONTINENTAL' and 'SKIN' Stytn MEN’S and TOUNO MEN’S SAVE ON ALL YOUR FAMILY HEEDS at SIMMS TOHITE and TUESDAY SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Corduroy Slacks Special purchase — just arrived. Pina pin-wale corduroys In smart 'Continental' or Skin styling for men pud young men. Color selection includes; Qlive, Black, Taupe, and Blue in sizes 26 to 38. Waohabl* WOOL & NYLON Blond ATT 'PONCHO’ Shirts American made Poncho shirts in smart pullover ' style, 2-button front with ' popular tapered tails. All sizes for boys. Men's size Small only. Floooo Lined For Warmth Men’s Sweat Shirts American Made Crew neck1 -style, some with raglan sleeves. White In sizes S-M-L-XL. Ir-regulars of $1.98 sellers._____________, Save On ICE SKATES at SIMMS Children's SINGLE RUNNER Beginners ICE SKATES Perfect blades, slight finishing tglnnart sizes 10 to 2, girls' single runner;, sizes 13-3 and a few double-run-•Her styles in broken size ranges,- Sovpt on wanted 'ARC,O' skates here at Simmi. , Boyst’ and Girls’ ICE SKATES L <99 Irregulars of $5.98 Volute ' n SIMMS * Q — What causes swelling, of the legs in people %ith heart 0 PEN TONITE ’til 10 m TUESDAY STORE HOURS 9A.M.tU0 P.M.- CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS Have More Fun On NEW YEARS With These Items GENERAL ELECTRIC end SYLYANIA FLASHBULBS gii.es* #5 FLASHBULBS 12.. 89- KODAK KODACOLOR Regular $1.25 roll • brilliant color snaps a yours with Kodacolor. I Choice bf 520-120-127 | sizes. Limit 10 rolls. Capture Your New Year’s Party Instantly In Color nr Block and Whito With Now oolSrmok CAMERA POLAROID Simms Price See your New Year's party instantly with Polaroid — Color snaps in.50 seconds or black qnd white prlntt In TO seconds ... this Is the worlds most advanced era, bads In 7 seconds, no adjustments, takes pictures automatically and Instantly. ••#••••• etreee i Portable 4-TRANSISTOR Tape Recordei Compare to $19.9S‘SeUen Complete, ready to use. With microphone, earphones, batteries, tape and Beauty Treatment Special SAVE * Vitamin Moisture Balancer for dry or oily skin Give* all day moisturizing protection under make-up. M 250 Reg. 3.50 Reg. 5.00 Vitamin A-D Complex Cream A luxurloui rich gmolllont ..the Ideal rilght croam. m 250 Rag. 3,50 Reg. 5.00 Pamper your complexion againit the drying effect! of wind and weather«.»pamper your complexion to beauty with theie fine Coty conditioner*, 98 A SAGINAW ST.-Downtown COSMETIC DEPT.-Maln Floor. m. FOUR wmm t THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1»88 Says MSU Economist State Farm Incomes to Drop “A Happy New Year” — but ‘not for Michigan farmers. They are expected to goffer through 1964 as the first 6»-\ cliue in gross farm income daring the past four years kits their pocketbooks. “Both cash r e c e i p t s from farm marketings and government payments will be down,” according to Dr. John Perris, agricultural economist with the Michigan Cooperative “ 1 Service. “One of the major factors the projected decline is the prospect of lower prices on the 1964 wheat crop.” “There are people who believe that the defeat of the 1963 wheat referendum marked a turning point in farm legislation,” according to Art Macuh, another MSU agricultural economist. “But Oils remains to be seen, although there are indications of important changes.” > Mauch says that he. believes an increasingly urban Css-gress will not forever tolerate high level supports on unlimited production. ____________ “If farmers refuse controls, the only way to reduce budget expenditures is by lower supports,” he says. “'Hie administration has not abandoned the idea of control, although the emphasis will be toward voluntary control programs and rural area development.” . New wheat legislation maintaining prices near the $1.80 per bushel mark would put a stop to. any gross farm income decline. ODDS AGAINST Mauch points out that new legislation could be enacted to apply to the 1964 crop tty Congress in tiie new session about Normal weather conditions should also bring an increase in the amount of receipts from 1964 Michigan fruit crops which were hard hit by weather last year. - Hg t ft . -if ■ ■ Farm production expenses will continu ehtrupwradnreditu will continue their upward trend utting a further during 1964, putting a further squeeze on Michigan farmers, says Ferris. The result will be less net farm income for Michigan farmers than during the previous two year. $8-MILLION DIP Gross farm income fn Mich-.0Sn during the upcoming year is expected to be about $918. million compared with $929 million last year. i ■■ ably drop from $307' million in Realized net income will prob-1963 to about $285 million this year. COMING HOME — What happier way to greet the new year than in a home (til your own? And for the new mother the prospect js a warm and joyous one too. Mine Gladys Lindsay of Battle Creek poses with Renee, a Korean orphan she adopted, after they stepped from a plane yesterday at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport. ' Troy and County Officials to Discuss S TROY - Officials of the county Department pf Public Works will he pn hand tonight to bring the City Commission up to date on' the proposed city wide sanitary sewer system. DPW Dlrector-R. J. Alexander and Deputy Donald W. Ringler will brief the commission on the current status of the system as well as answer questions. This fall, the Oakland County Board of Supervisors approved plans and cost estimates for construction of a $3.3-million system, which would serve all but two sections of the city. A * ft A portion of northwest Troy is already handled by the Evergreen Sanitary Sewer and a small area along the southern boundary is to be served by the Await State Rulirig Tax Foes Ready Attack BERKLEY $* The Mayors’ Vigilance Tax Committee leader today revealed the group’s plans should the State Board of Canvassers refuse petitions calling for a vote on the nonresident city Income tax. Berkley Mayor, George Kuhn said at 10 a.ih. tomorrow the state board is scheduled to give a decision on whether 33,009 of the 240,000 signatures collected by the group are valid. , “if we get a negative decision, we nave a three-pronged attack ready,” Kuhn said. “We'll fight this through a Supremo Court appeal, the legislative approach and further collecting of signatures If neces- HARE RULING The dispute items from Secretary of State James M. Hare’s ruling that more than one-fifth of the signatures were invalid because they were collected before the Nov. 1961 general election. “The right of petition la tils state Is on trim right now,” The mayor said, his amunlt-tee spent 00 days working with state officials before commenc- ing collection of the signatures, andthey ware told nothing or I the technicality later brought to light by Hare. “If they weren’t aware of it, they certainly did a lot of skullduggery to, find this point,” Kuhm said. An emergency meeting of the committee is planned If t|he State Board of Canvassers thrpws out the petitions tomorrow. Twelve-Town Drain, some time this summer. OPERATION DATE Sewage facilities are expected to be operational on a city wide basis by Nov. 24, 1964, according to tiia present timetable. The county DPW will do the work. Next step to be accomplished'is condemnation of several easements by Feb. 17. Then construction bids will be requested. They are expected to be received by. March 16. The sale of bonds, another significant phase of the project, is to be completed by April 13. Construction contracts, from three to five of them, are to be awarded by May 25. Consulting engineers Pate, Hlrn and Bogun of Detroit are working with Troy and the county on the proposed sewage system. In other business scheduled for tonight, the commission will act upon a request to'build a gas station at Rochester Road and Owendale, near the 1-75 expressway. to get under way, but the odds are against it. ’ ! Wheat prices, according to Ferris, will make the big difference as receipts from other field crops and live* Stock or livestock products hold about the same as in 1963. The high school Sunday school .lass, under the direction of Mrs, Herbert Parker, will perform stunts and skits from 9 10 p.m. They also have planned group games. A 10-11 p.m. food and fellowship time with pot-luck refresh-ts is under the supervision of the Women’s Missionary Guild. The culmination of the evening will be a meditation and communion service at 11 p.m. led by the pastor, Rev. Jack A.McCurry. Jewish Leader Charges Bias State Utility Firms Deny Accusations DETROIT (AP) - The president of the American Jewish Committee accused two Michigan utility companies of discrimination in choosing executives, and the two firms quickly denied the charges Saturday. A spokesman for one of the firms, Consumer’s Power Co. of Jackson, called the charges “ridiculous.” | The other firm, Detroit Edisdn Co., said it “has always maintained a fair employment policy, with no discrimination, and our records will prove it.” , SO FIRMS The Jewish cqmmfytoe president, A. M. Sopnabend, accused 50 utility firms across the country of showing jbias against Jews and' other minority groups in picking executive personnel. The Consumer’s Power spokesman said, “We never ask a person’s religious affiliation. Once we hire a person, he is promoted strictly on the basis of hist performance and, accomplishments,” B*com* ,d«bt (r«s th« sensible way. Arrange for a schedule of payments tailored to fit your Income. MICHIGAN Credit Counsellors lit Poetise State Reek RMr. Church to Hold Dayitburg 1st Baptist Schedules Service DAVISBURG — The changing of the years will be observed at the First Baptist Church of Da-visburg with the annual Watch Night service. The traditional service will begin at 7:39 p.m: in Arvin Hall at the church. A 1%-hour recreation period will include group and individual games like ping pong, box hockey, aggravation and password. V COMMERCE TOWNSHIP «r: Wade B. Dick recently took Penelope Harper of Kokomo, Inti., as his bride in an afternoon ceremony at the Main Street Methodist Church of Kokomo. The bride’s gown of white brocade featured a modified scoop neckline and. long tapered sleeves. The skirt was caught up in a double bustle. NANCY L. WALKER Mr. and Mrs. John Walker of 9385 Ridge, Goodrich, announce the engagement of their daughter Nahcy Linda to Robert Edmond Brown. The prospective bridegroom is the son. of Mr. and Mrs. William Brown of Grosse Points Park. A June wedding is planned-... Dick-Harper Vows Spoken in Kokomo Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Everette E. Harper of Kokomo, The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Thelma Thomas, 9204 Commerce, and the late Wade Dick. A double Dior bow of matching satin and pearls held her elbow-length veil formed of two, tiers of French pure silk illusion. Her flowers were white sweetheart roses and Stephan-otis atop a white Bible. BRIDE ATTENDANTS MRS. WADE B. DICK Attending as maid of honor whs Barbara J. Ward of Car- mel, Ind., cousin of the bride. were L. Yvonne Veal of Saginaw, - Mrs. Jack Kelbtrom of Royal Oak, Suzanne Perrine of Mt. Pleasant, Mrs. Richard O. Burr of Detroit and Judith K. Harper of Kokomo, cousin of the bride.. On tiie esquire side were Glenn P. Smith of Flint ns best man and ushers James Volz of Minden City, Michael J. Ross of Muskegon, Norman C. Lumsden of Union Lake, Richard O. Burr of Detroit and Gary ,L. Kemper of Robert E. Dick, brother of the bridegroom, lit tiie candles before the ceremony. A wedding trip through the Southern states followed the nuptials and church The University of Michigan was the first institution of hitler education in the U.S. to provide a course in marine design, inl889v' : Avon Players Plan Auditions Singers, Dancers Can Try for 'Oklahoma!' ROCHESTER - Attention, area singers and dancers! "Are you interested in taking part in the Avon Players' forthcoming production of the popular muscial, “Oklaho- If you are, you’re invited to tryouts from 7 to 10 p.m. Jan. 5 and 6 at Avon Park Pavilion. Dancers are especially needed, - according to Jarvis Lamb, who will dire# the spring vehicle. „ v DIRECTORS Musical directors will be Mr. and Mrs. Walter Moser, with Mrs. Edward Ramsey acting as producer. Five performances of the perennial Rodgers and Hammer-stein hit are planned — March 13,14,10,20 and 21., Lapeer Youth Hurt in Crash Hospitalized After Collision in Oxford OXFORD - An 18-year-old Lapeer youth was hospitalized early yesterday softer his car crossed the center line on' South Washington and crashed head-on into another vehicle. Oxford police said Johnie. L. Romine, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Romine, 2939 Clark, was southbound when he apparent-ly fell asleep and drove into ’ a crash with a car8driven by 33-year-old Kenneth Ward of 1488 Ora, Oxford Township. Ward told police he thought the youth was going to turn left onto Crawford, but continued toward his car. Police said there were no skid marks. Romine was taken to Pontiac General Hospital where'he is reported in good condition today with face cuts. Ward was treated at the hospital and released. i The accident happened shortly before 2 a.m. Police are continuing their Investigation. Baby B in Almont ALMONT Loot — and lots of it — is In store fair the first baby bora In 1964 at the Community Hospital. The infant's parents also trill share in the gifts to hie given by some IS area merchants in tite a n n u a 1 New Year’s Baby Derby. Traditionally, t h e hospital also foregoes the delivery charge as Its contribution to the special event. Complete MOTOR CLUB Benefits m GROWING FAMILIES MORE ROOM YOU CAN ENLARGE REPAIR...MODERNIZE NOW! WE HAVE A SPECIAL PACKAGE HOME LOAN SERVICE To moot your hoods NO DOWN PAYMENT • NO LEGAL FEES Oakland County*$ Largest Mortgage Lending Institution 761W* HURON - PONTIAC 4 16 K. Lawronoo Gt.-Ponilah III)M */||||lftr !ViW^-uEo!«* 6799 OrUwrillo ltd. Cor H-15-CtarluUm ‘■Wi* m aiiiiiSiiiffi THE PONTIAC PRESSv MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 196£ ■. FIVE Drinking Bout Wm, 19 Man U Charged for Furnishing Liquor CROSWELL UP) - Authorities charged a 21-year-old Croswell man Sunday with supplyui^U^e" liquor, believed to have induced a Heart attack that killed one of five youths in a drinking episode. ' Benny Hinojosa, arrested Sun-; day night, was held for arraign* • ment today. - > The victim, lS-year-old Pat-ride Ramie of Croswell, died from a heart attack that Sanilac County Sheriff Quincy Hoffman said was induced by excessive drinking. An autopsy Sunday de* termined Rennie died of a heart attack, and Hoffman said t h e youth had consumed a fifth of * liqueur Saturday night. BROUGHT TO DOCTOR - Three youths brought Rennie and a 19-year-old Companion, Frederick Bowers, to a local doctor Saturday night. The doctor pronounced Rennie dead. Officers said Bowers was incoherent- The three boys, whom officers did nqt name but said were 17 years old, first told of finding' Rennie and Bowers lying alongside M90 at the outskirts of Croswell. Later, the three admitted they Were with Rennie while he drank the fifth of liquor, deputies said. The youths named Hinojosa as the man who furnished them > with the alcoholic beverage, deputies said. NEW YORK (AP) m Eddie Rickenbacker, who blazed a trail of glory as a daredevil auto racing driver and World War 1 flying jee; is leaving his airlines chieftainship and will expand his campaign against left-wing, causes. f Rickenbacker, ion outspoken antt-Communist, announced his retirement from the helm of Eastern Air Lines Sunday. In a .letter to the board of directors he made plain he does“not plan to be idle—not in the face of toe current challenge to civilization.'* ' u' ★ ★ b MI am going to expand my crusade to save the American way of life for futpre generations, as I want our children, Thant to Visit Franco1 - UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)—Sources report Secretary-General U Thant has accepted an invitation from President Charles de Gaulle to be a guest of France on his April 28-30 U. N. business visit to Paris. Hard of Hearing? If 'you hear, but DO NOT Understand WE CAN HELP YOU! You've Seen the Reft! New TRY THE BIST! pm* S FREE HEARING TEST Consultation In Your* ~ Home or Our Office Can FE 8-2733 CADILLAC HEARING AID CO. * OF PONTIAC ' ® 11- We^t Lawtence Street 4 Cords, Batteries Promptly* Filled Tq Reds, Work on Book Americas Flyirig Ace Retires staff driver for Gen. John J. Pershing. . T , - He was transferred to the famed 94th Aero “Hat-in-the-Ring” Squadron and was its first commanding officer. The squadron was the first Ameri-air unit on the Western front ringing up 69 victories. Retiring at war’s end with the rank of captain; Rickenback- er wrote-bid first book, “Fighting the Flying Circus,” in 1910. , During World War H he wrote another book, “Seven Came Through.” It told of the 24 days that he and six others spent in a life raft after their bomber crashed in the Pacific in 1942 while Rickenbacker was on a mission for the secretary of war. ■ ’ EDDIE RICKENBACKER our grandchildren, and those who: follow them to enjoy the American opportunities which h*ve been mine, for 73 years,” Rickenbacker said. Additionally, “I want to get at the long-neglected organization and editing of my biographical notes I have been accumulating for nearly half a century,'1 he said. RACING DRIVER Those notes trace the career of ah 'adventurer turned executive— one of the nation’s foremost racing drivers at age 21 America’s ace of aces who shot down 21 enemy planes and 5 balloons in World War I and earned the Medal of Honor and finally, board chairman, a director and general manager of Eastern, the three positions he is resigning. .★ ★ ★ Rickenbacker said Eastemv is “in good hands” With the election two weeks ago of Floyd D. Hall as president and chief executive* officer. He had been settlor vice president. Edward Vernon Rickenbacker, a son of Swiss immigrants, was bom in Columbus, Ohio, Qct. 8,1890. He Went to work at age 12 when hiSn father, William died. , STAFF DRIVER Rickenbacker took jobs as auto- mechanic and engineer, and woni auto championships at national and international meets. 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Charge all youi* purchases! / SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 5:30 Ortltrz* No Dolivorloo FASHION ACCESSORIES—Street Floor | NOTIONS, STATIONERY—Street Floor Womens House Slippers, Were to 7.99,)Vow...... 3,88 Womens Sof-Sole Casuals, 2 -Colors, Were 8.99, Now 4.44 aO VInyl Handbags, Were 3.00, Now........... • • • • 1.50 25 Orion Bulky Sweaters, Were 3.99, Now.. <.J. • • <., 2.00 46 Ladies lnitlnl Hankies, Were 3/1.00, Now. •... .6/1.00 80 Mens CottonHankies, Were 1.00, Now....... >50 Selection of Costume Jewelry, Was 1.00-5.00 .. 50-2.J»0 'i f Van RaaltdWoolBlend Gloves, Were 1.59,Now... ,79, Selection of Cotton, Leather and Orion Gloves, Were 84-86......................... 7.77 Famous Make Seamless Hose, Were 1.00, Now, . - <1; >50 Fitted and Unfitted Sewing Baskets, Were 2.00-8.95, Now........................... %-OFF Metis S-PiCce Hanger Set, Were 6.50, Not*- • • * •• • « h-OFP Plastic Playing Card Caddies, Were 2.75-3.00, Now 14-OFF MEN'S WEAR—Street Floo 7 Rohe ami Pajama Sets, Were 12.98, Now........'/i-OFF Tartan Plaid Hi# ft Her Sport Shirts, Were 3,99 . « Vi-OFF 8 Long SleeVe Orion Knit Shirts, Slight Irr., 6.95 .... 2.11 Mens BetterNeckwdar, Were 1.50-2.50, Now ....... .75 His And Hers Pajamas, Were 6.95, Now ..., . 3.49 Ea. CHILDREN'S VALUES—-Second Floor I FOUNDATIONS, LINGERIE—Second Floor Famous Make Bra, broken Shies, Were 1.50-2.00, Now. ..77 Famous Make Girdles, Broken Sixes, Were 7.95-8.95 44-OFF . Famous Make Panty Girdles ft Girdles, 12.95-18.50,44-OFF Nylon Slips,Broken Sixes, Were 3.00-3.99, NoW...44>OFF Flannel Sleepwear, Broken Siaes, Were 2.99, Now... 1.50 42 Boys Shoe'ShlneKits, Were 1.88,Now.*.,..«... .50 26 Boys Wallets, Were 2.00, Now.................. 1.00 15 Boys Cotton Slacks, Broken Sixes, Were 4.99, Now 2.44 15 Boys Clovea, Assorted Styles, Were 2.98,(Now.. 1.50 12 BoysCloves, Assorted Styles,Were 1.99, Now..... 1.00 5 Girls AH Weather Coats, Broken Siaes, Were 9.98... 4.99 SO Girls Blouses, white, prints, broken sixes, Were 3.99 2.00 IB Girl* Skirts, Wool Plaids or Rayon, Were 5.98 . .*/j OFF 11 Girls Sweaters, Broken Sixes, Ode'll..... '/j OFF 25 .Little Girls Dresses. ........ ......44 OFF Girls Dresses, Slyes 7-14.........440FF 10 Infants Terry Sleep/Play Suits, Were 3.98, Now.,. 2.00 6 Infants Sweaters, Were 3.98, Noy........• • <•>• «• 2*00 4 Infant Dresses, Were 5.99, Now.......... 3.00 i Crib Blanket, 100% Acriisn, Were 8.98, Now...... 4.49 40F-venfloBottles,Were40c.Now..20 FABRICS, LINENS, DRAPES—Fourth Floor It Yds. Print Corduroy, Were 1.69, Now.*..... .8 .84 109 Yds. CottoU Plaids, Were 89c, Now......... *«'. * *44 128 Yds, Tarpoon Plaids, Were 1.99, Now...........97 148 Yds* Polished Cotton Prints* Were 1.79, Now..... .77 500 Yd*« Cotton Prints and Solids, Were 59e, Now...,. .27 7$ Yds. Wide Wale Corduroy, Were 1.69, Now...... .84 38 Yds. Cotton Suede, Were 1,99, Now.'..••••'....97 74 Yds. Silk Shantung, Were 3.99, Now........... ,1.97. 75 Yde. Wool Double Knits, Were 7.99, Now....,3,97 49 Yds. Wool and Blends) Were 2,99, Now....... *f. 1.47 92 Yds. Wool and Blends, Were 5.99, Now...... 1.97 54 Yds. Wool and Blends, Were 4.99, Now ......... 2.47 57 Yd*. Woof and Blends, Were 5.99, Now..... 2.97 42 Yds. Wool Dress Crepe) Were 3.29, Now......... 1.64 124 Yds. Nubby Boucle Suiting, Were 1.99, Now...... .97 64 Yds. Friose Jacquard Dress Material, Were 2.99 .^1.47. 15 Yds, Nubby Stilting, WerA 1.49, Now.......... . v ,74(i 16 Yds. Sparkle ChifTon Material, Were 2.49, Now.. 1,24 200 Yds* Acetate Prints, Were 1.49, Now ..■..(••mu ,74 80 Yds. MelloMeshArnel Jersey*Were 2.24k,Now.... 1.14 54 Yds. Acetate Prints, Were 1.69, Now..........84 45 Yds. Abbey Flannel, Were 1.99, Now......... .97 240 Yd«. Acetate Prints, Were 1*99, Now...........97 34 Yds/Check Fabric, Were 1.69, Now............. .84 2 70” Round Damask Sets, Were 10.99, NoW|..... 5,47 22 Spun Rayon Tableclo|hi, 60x90”, Were 3.98, Now 1.97 51 Solid Color Vinyl Cloth, 60x88”, Were 6.99, Now 5.47 14 Everlon Tableoovers, 52x52”, Were 3,99, Now, 1.97 14 Everlon Tablecoveys, 52x70”, Were 4.99, Now... 2.47 28 Everlon Tableoovers, 60x88”, Were 6.99* Now«•»3.47 12 Everlon Tableoovers, 60” Round* Were 3.99, Now 2.97 4 Flocked Tableelotlis, 52x52”, Were 2:99, Now.. 1.47, 7 Flocked Tablecloths, 60” Round,Were 6.99, Now 3.47 8 Flocked, Tablecloths, 60x90”, Were 7.99, Now... 8.97 12 Christmas Cloth Noel, 45x45”, Were 1.99, Now • • .99 12 Christmas doth Noel, 54x54”, Were 2.99, Now... 1.47 ' 12 Christmas Cloth Noel, 54x72", Were 8.99, Now... 1.97 ‘5 CeU-O-Crest Tablecloths, 52x52”,Were 3.99, Now 1.97 25 Square Cheek Place Mats, Were 69e, Now..... • .34 10 Robnd Place Mats, Were 89c, Now............. .44 6 Party Sols, Were 1.99, Now....... ...........97 48 Coaster Sets, 8 Patterns, Werq 1.99, Now.....97 27'PlaeeMats,Were89c,Now................i...... .44 110 Place Mats, Wore‘1.00, Now .......47 30 L|nen Guest Towels, Were 1.00, Now,...........47 5 Delay Fan(tafy Hand Towels, Were 1.219, Now ..,••• .64 45 Daisy Fantasy Wash Cloths, Were 59c, Now...... .27 4 Spring Flower Hand Towels, Were 1.29, Now.. • •« .64 3 Magic Flower Bath Towels, Were 1.99, Now.....97 10 Magie Flower llaml Towels, Were 1.29, Now...... .64 23 Magie Flower Wash Cloths, Were 55e, Now .27 8 Hand towels. Were 50c, Now...................2 4 7 First Romance HandTowgls, Were If89,Now• •.• ,94 A 12 First Romance Wash Clolhs* Were 59c, Now.. • • * .27 . 8 Arcadia Stripe Hand Towels, Were 69c, Now...... .84 286 Arcadia Stripe^Wath Cloths, Were 35e, Now...... .17 ‘ 6 Clare De Lune Rugs, 24” Round, Were 4*95, Now2.47f 8 Clare llqLuno Rugs, 24x36”, Were 7.95, Now.... 8.97 7 Clare Do Lune Ruga, 27x48", Were 10.95, Now. . 5.47 18 Clare De Luhe Lid Covers* Were 1.99, Now ••••.« .97 8 Colton H..g«, 21x86”, Were 4.98, Now.......2.47 5 Cotton Lid Coverx, Worn 1.99, Now, ....... • .97 20 Assorted GUe'st Soaps, Were 1.00 to 3.50, Now.. Mi OFF 2 .Chalam Purgy Blankets, Were 10.99, Now....8.47 •4 Wool tttankels. Were 11,99, Now........ 5.97 5 Sophistication Spreads, Were 14.99, Now7.50 12 Moonbeam SprBada* Wara 9.98, Now........ • • • 4.97 ,14 Croehatte Spreads, Were 9.99, No*...... I.... > 4.97 18 Cobblestone Spraadtt Were 12.99, Now..... 6.47 *4 Trellsa Spreads, 1|fare 6.99, Now............ 8.47 2 Regiment Spreads,T^ore 6.99, Now......... 8.47 9 tldrloom Spreads* Wero 10.99, Now. .... •. 8.47 4 Silhouette Spreads, War* 12.95, Now'... .,6.47 \ 15 Melody Spreads, Wart 14.98, Now.......,,.*.7.47 4 Quilled Top Spreads* Were, 6.97, Now.......... 5.47 ABORTED CHRISTMAS I /O Al?!? DECORATIONS & TOYS X/dd V/I JL DRESSES, SPORTSWEAR—Third Floor Dretaea, Misaes and Womens, were 6.99, Now.,..5.49‘ Dresses, Misses and Womens, Welti 8.99, Now....... 4.W Dresses, Juniors, Misses* Womens) Were 10.99, Now. .5.50 Dresses* Juniors, Misses fk Womens, Were 11.99, Now, 5.99 Dresses, Juniors, Misses ft WomeUs, Were 12..99, Now.. 6.49 Dresses, Junjors, Misses ft Womens, Were 14.99, Now.. 7.49 grease*, Juniors,Misses & Womens, Were 17.99, Now •. 8.49 Dresses, Juilors, Misses ft Womens, Were 24.99. 12.49 Dresses, Jnuiors, Misses ft Womens, Weye 29.99.... 14,99 Dresses* Juniors, Misses ft Wontena, Were 35A)0. • • • 17.49 Dresses, Juniors, Misses ft Women*, Were 89.99.,.. 19.99 ' Girls end Womens Sweaters, Sites 84-40, Were 5.99... 2.99 Girls end Womens Sweaters, Sixes 54-40* Were 6.99... 3.49 Girls and Womens Sweaters, Siaes 34-40, Were7,99... 3.99 Girli end Womens Sweaters* Sixes 34-40, Were! 8.99... 4.49 Girls and Womens Sweaters, Sises 34-40, Were 9.99. • • 4.99 9, Were 10.99,. 5.49 Girls and Womens Swenters,J|l«es 34-40, Were 12.99.. 6.49 Famous Maker Blouses, Siaes 30*18, Were 4.99, Now. • 2.49 Famous Maker Blouses, Siaes 30-38, Were 5.99, Now • .2.99 Famous Maker Blouses, Sloes 30-38, Were 6.50, Now.. 3.25 Fantont Maker Blouses, Sises 30*38, Were 7.99, Now • • 5.99 Womens Slacks, Sixes 8-1W, Were 17.99, Now........ 8.99 Womens Slacks, Sloes,8-16, Were 7.99, Now........3.90 Flannel Culottes, Siaes 5-18, Wet* 7.99, Now........ 3.99 .Velvet Skirts, Were 11.98,Now............ 5,99 Velvet Tops, Were 8.99, Now .................. . 4.49 Velvet Jumpers, Were 17.99, Now'. ............ 8.99 Fur Blend Cenngans, Were 12.99, Now........ 6.49 Dyed To Match Skirts. Work 11.99. Now,.. ■ CURTAINS, DRAPERIES, ETC.- 2 Eagle Coverlet*,. Wero 19.99, Now,.. • 2 Stripe Spreads, Werfe W).99j)Now •.,, < 1 Eyelet Spread, Wero 20.99,"Now t. ’.V?,.,....... l0.4f 1 Dacron Ninon Spread, Were 39.99, Now. ■ • * j. »'• 19.97 7 Rayon ChalUa, Wero 14.99, Now........ .......7.47 7 Quilted Top Sprepda, Were 9.97, Now...,....... 4.97 ,’S ChrOmespnn Spread*, Were 17.99,Now...........8.97 . 10 Chromespun Spread*, Were 15.99, Now......... 7,97 10 Floral Dust Muffles, Were 8.99, Now...... v..... 4.47 6 Cotton Curtains, 36«ln., Were 8.99, Now. *. • • •'•*■ 1.97 2 CottonCnrtalns,36-in.,Were5.99,Now.........8.97■ 4 Antique Satin Dr*pes,|)48x90”, Were 7.99, Now. . . • 5.97 4 Antique Pattern Cafes, 36”, Were2.99,NoW. . . .11.. 1.47 . 4, Antique Pattern Cafe*, 48", Were 3.99, Now...... 1.97 13 Chromespun.Cafe*., 86”, Were 4.99, Now .......2.47 5 Chromespun Cafes, 45”, Were 5.99, Now 2.97 11 Valances, Wore 1.99,Now........................97 2 Cotton Curtains, 36”, Were 2.99, Now.........1.47 , 3 Print Chfoa. 86”, Were 8.99, Now ........ 1.97f 3 Print Drapes, 48*90”, Were 8.99, Now .........3.97 4 Print Spreads, Were 14.99, Now................7.47 2 Antique Satlp Drapes, 48x90”, Were'14.88, Now,. .7.44 9 Print Fiberglass Drapes, 48x90”, Were 10.89 ... 5.47 12 Print Fiberglass Drapes, 72x90”, Were 17.99* Now 8.97 2 Print Fiberglass Drapes, 48x90”, Were 13.99, Now 6,97 8 Fiberglass Drsp«s)J48x90", Were 9.99, Now4.97 16 MullUTrim-Cliallls, 80x86”, Were 2.99, Now..... 1.4T 8 Multi-Trim Chillis, 48”, Were 5.99, Now.......2.97 8 Fiberglass Drapes, 150x84”, Were 19.99) Now... 9.97 6 Fiberglass Drapes, 75x84”, Were 9.99, Now. .•»•» * 4.97 , 2 Fiberglass Drapes, 30x84”, Were 5.99, Now ...,. 2.97 26 Nubby Drapes, 48x63”, Were 6.99, Now....... i .L(T 8 Nubby Drapes, 48x90”, Were 8.99, Now......... *4,47 9 Nubby Drapes, 9hx63”, Were 16.99, Now........ 8.47 f <7 Nubby Drapds, 144x90”, Were 28.99, Now......13.97 10 Dacron Fluted Curtains, 78x80”, Were 2,99, NoW 1.47 5 Dacron Fluted Curtains, 78x86" Were 8.49, Now 1,74 9 Dacron Fluted Curtains, 78x45*’, Wera 8.99, Now 1,97 17 Dacron Fluted Curtain, Valance, Were 1.99, Now •» .97 1 7 Dacron Fluted Curtains, 98x81”, Were 7.99, Now 3.97 6 Dacron Fluted Curtains, 184x81”, Wero 14.99,.. .7.47 5 Print Fiberglass Curtains, 48x45”, Were 6.99, Now 8.47 , 6 Print Fiberglass Curtalni, 48x68”, Wera 10.99 .. 8,47 9 Provincial Print Drapes, 48x86", Were 8.49, Now 2.47 j 7 Provincial Print Drapes, 72x86”, Were 9.99, Now 4.97 j 11 Provincial Print Drapes, 48x68”, Were 6.59, Now 8.27 , 5 Provincial Print Drapes, 72x68”, Were 11.99 ... 5,97 ,18 Heavy Antique Matin Drapes, 48x90”, Wero, 12.99 6i4T ' HOUSEWARES, LAMPS, ETC.—Lower Level RUGS, TOYS, ETC.—Fifth Floor 1 27x48” Tweed Rug, Were fl,98, Then 2.22, Now. i. 1,11 7 27x48” ttoiion Washablo Rugs, Were 3,98, Now,... 1.97 2 24x86” Cotton Washable Rugs, Were 2)98, Now... 1.44 7 36x60" Cotton Washable Rugs, Were 6.98, Now.'.. 3.44 ‘8 86x60” Cotton Washablo Rugs, Ware 9.98, Now. *•.:.*<»•<'>.*•», 2 Electric Kitchen Clocks, Were 2.98, Now... 8Eight Piece Snack Sets, Were 3.98,Now.. 14 Perarn Artificial Flowers* Wero 2.69, Now. 4. Instant Coffee and Tea flats, Wero 8.98* Now *. *. 8 Jam and Jtlly Sew* Were 5.98, Now • f„*••••*• »* ( 22 Giant Mlse Fahspray* Were 4.99, Now. •«•.•••*• 1 8 Clean Tint Cleaner, Were 1.98,Now •V.... 14 My Wold Dishwashers, Were 9.95, Now,... ..... 19 GreasO-A-Way Compound,Were 44c, Now 1 • • 15 Kleen Overt cleaner, Were 1.89,NoW. I I ] -Quart SlOo Floor Cleaner, Wcre 64o, Now •*•••• 8 Pint Slae Floor Cleaner* Were 38c, Now;. 1 • • 1 ••• 2 45-Plcce White DlnperwOre Mels, Were 12.99 *. < 8 55 Piece Fine Handera ft Ironstone Ubmerware* ' Were 29.98, Now...... 6 14x48” Door Mirrors, Were 2.98, Now........, , 1 All Wood Sewing Baskets, Wars 18.00, Now • ,t. 1 1 INilelotmp, Ceramle Globes, Waft * .16 .4.24 .7.88 .8.44 .1.44 .1.88 . 1.80 ;ss .2.44 .. .88 ,.4.97. .. .22 .. .64 .. .32 ...19 .6.49 14.81 I*;k4ir,' iiSL lU¥i **I lg:. THE PONTIAC PRESS ‘Did Thief Use Madonna for Christmas Gift?’ s Pontiac, Michigan MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1903 HAROLD A. KTZOERAtD President e little likelihood the Warren commission can come up with an unbiased, verdict. And the commission's actions indicate that it1 won't come up H with any verdict at all for a year. paa of their first moves eould wall be an all-out attack on Chief Justice Earl Warroa's commission to to- ll Is a certainty that the FRI Is far better qualified than anybody on the Warren commission with the possible exception of Allen Dalles. Yet thd Warren crowd has now pat word around that It Intends to take Its own good time about filing Its venUet and about releasing the FBI report. This detoy, plus the Warren commtuloa’i arrogant attitude Is giving proles- So It looks to ns as if tha, Republicans to CoagrSIS would be wise to start agitating for a fait dismissal of the whole Warren commission and tin setting op of a Joint Congressional Investigation. We believe publ Worn pup The Dothan Eagle j a drive to persuade Congress to give Warren gad Co. tile heave oa this matter and SOt Up a full-dress Investigation by a Joint Congres- The dilapidated old oar wheeted up to the foil gate. "Seventy cents," said the attendant, "Sold," answered the driver wearily f The Warren appointment carte — surely by coincidence -t shortly after tho Communist publication The Worker urged formation* of, such a commission with Warren da chairman. Tbs appotatmant, further, was , cheered by virtually All the pro* fasilmial “liberals" and anti- by members ofthe John Birth Society and other right-wing extremists. In visw of tile Earl Warren Supreme Court's long-standing tenderness toward Communists, Ths CsMIm RntM ti estlvsrM by mmIm Hr m smK • wetto where any report this commission may I.........Hi MIL inertSy' Meeofntp tSSw' fits wiimmaSam jt.to | at long last g|vt birth l be open to suspicion of pro-Communilt And anti-conservative bias. SEVElf; iHE PONTIAC PRESS, MOyDAYy DECEMBER 80, 1963 Critic of Newspapers for New Yorker' Dies NEW YORK (AP) — k* J, Liebiing, 59, a writer for the New Yorker magazine best known for his criticisms of “The Wayward Press," died Saturday of pneumonia. Liebiing, author of more than a dozen books, had worked on several newspapers before he joined the New Yorker staff in* 1935. He was bom in New York. ■ ^fishermen Saved I on Lake Michigan PortyguoM Governor Shuts Angola Rec Club LISBON, Portugal (AP)-The governor general of Portogal’s African territory of Angola has SOUTH HAVEN (AP)—Four commercial fishermen were rescued from threatening ice on Lake Michigan Saturday by the Coast Guard cutter Woodbine. The four had gone out Friday night in a 48-foot boat to retrieve fishing nets valued at $4,000. ★ ★ ★ Windrow ice trapped them and threatened the hull of their boat. The cutter battered to its side and rescued the four. The group included A. J. Anthony, Floyd Bard and two brothers, Walter and James Me Cash. END-OF-MONTH CLEARANCE * Refrigerators *Ranges •Washers •Dryers •TVs Stereos LISBON, Portugal (AP) -The burned-out shell of the Greek cruise liner Lakonia sank in 13,200 feet of Atlantic water a $64,000 safe robbery at Colorado Springs, Colo. The pair, William J. Lockhart Jr., 83, of Kalamazoo, and William H. Allen, 36, of Hamilton, Ohio, will be examined in Municipal Court Friday on charges ofpossessing stolen property. Sunday as she was beinff towed toward Gibraltar. ; ★ . ★ ★ Capt. Trygve Gaasoe of the Norwegian tug Herkules, who was directing the attempt to salvage the hulk, said the ship’s starboard- list increased Saturday night. Six men from one of two Portuguese tugs with the Herkules were put aboard the wreck Sunday morning to close all starboard portholes. The growing list forced them off after fpur hours. WENT DOWN Gaasoe said the Lakonia sank about 260 miles southwest of Today approximately 80 per cent of this country’s turkey output is marketed frozen. The examination wiH. determine whether they will be bound over on the charges. The two were arrested here on a tip Friday. Police declined to .say whether anyone else might be involved. Police said $80,000, mostly in American Express , Co. money Orders, was found in- the men’s hotel room. The FBI and American Express are. taking part in an investigation. , , Fireworks Are Seized in Italian Police Raid ROME (AP)—Fireworks are very big in Italy for New Year’s although they are illegal. To take the bang out of many an Italian' celebration, police have seized 37,000 fireworks tor-pedoes in raids around the coun- ggj try, 15,000 from one clandestine factory near Naples. j own Sleep like Log SALVAGE LINE - A British Royal Air FofcC plane took this picture of a tug ;(tQp) trying to get a salvage line to the burnt-out wreck of the Greek cruise ship Lakonia In the Atlantic Friday, the Lakonia sank yesterday while being towed to Gibraltar, a Norwegian salvage company spokesman said. Gibraltar. King-Size Joke: Baby Elephant Sent CO. D. Fire broke out on the Lakonia on the night of Dec. 22 as she was sailing from Britain to the Madeira and Canary islands. Of the 1,041 persons aboard, 91 are known dead and 64 are missing. lSCo.n.2DooiPhik0 Refrigerator (Sent li)HH01f( •CASH • LAYAWAY ■ •filingIf 3 • CHARGE * TIME PAYMENT ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY m most-wanted room-size rugs going at special prices 1 M&m FORT WORTH, Tex. UR —State Senator Don Ken-nard of Fort Worth found himself the owner Saturday of a 635-pound baby elephant. There wan a $1,400 shipping charge. The San FYandsco customs agent assured him it was no joke and, in addition to the shipping fee, the elephant must remain hi quarantine for 10 days at $38.00 per day. 1 r * ★ ★ - The gift is from Bill Newbold, a former local television cameraman* now an information officer for the State Department In Cambodia, "How anyone could convince the people in Cambodia to send such a thing to me like that C.0.D, is beyond me,” Kennard Did Stdtue^of Rudolph Go for Party Drinks? ST. CLAIR SHORES (AP) -Maybe whoever stole two 400-pound statues of Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer from in front of a catering establishment plans to use them in drinks for a holiday party. Thefive-foot-blgh statues were carved from blocks of rice. They were Christmas decorations at the Gourmet House. Coldi TV, *64 Nodel. walnut, includes service and delivery Pole, Czech End Talks VIENNA, Austria (AP) - Radio Prague reported Sunday that Polish Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki has ended two days of talks with his Czechoslovakian counterpart, David Vhclav, on "further easing of world tensions and a reduction of the armaments race.’’ Tefms Available The Pontiac Press December 30,196S Match word clues with thalr corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for ^ach correct answer. i (a) proof found that l»*"» they dliwovered 6..... , v. America' JtL, PART I-NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL 1 The major news story In 1963 was the death of ' John F. Kennedy, the...American President to be assassinated, a-second , b> third c-fourth 2 Now that Lyndon B. Johnson has become President, is next in lliw for the presidency. a-Secretary of'State Dean Ruak b-Speaker of the House John McCormack ^ o-Senate President Pro Tempore Carl Hayden 3 The United States hoped that the overthrow of President Diem’s government in...» would help ilia the war against communist rebels there. 4 Thq nuclear test ban treaty, signed in August, did not Include explosions a-underwater / b-underground . / jo-in space 8 Two of the most controversial domestio Issue* in Congress in 1963 were..... a-consCrvation and unemployment b-injletlon and subversion toCWU rights and tax reductions famous DuPont 501 :rc. rugs all nylon pile.. foam rubber cushioned! look for this Johol dupomi jMM* Id) Supreme Court VIKINGS ruling raisedoon- (h) overthrown governments here and elsewhere worried thoU.S. (1) Thresher lose was MALAYSIA (J) will it travel “Rooky" »edT PART III - NAMES IN TNI NEWS Take 6 point* for names that you can correctly match with the due*. Gordon Cooper a-new West German These are the ruge everybody want*... luxurious, sculptured cut and loop pile ., .jdisep springy texture that stands up to hard wear, resists pilling and fussing, stays beautiful with such easy care! These rugs wear the DuPont 601 N label your assurance that they meet or exceed DuPont carpet label requirements I You'd think them a good buy at much more, they’re sensational at Penney’s special low prices! NOW DO YOU RATI? (4mn* 6m* 3MmJ CM> SspmtaV) 91 to 100 peMl-TOP 3COM! 11 to >0 petals* busline. 71 to Ip *etots - OmA Alto TOpsIsH-Pilr. , SOsfUbdwftt-H'itod Mrtef tbs MuesNesal NpsMwMATMijNetopapsr) stools to this em to lltaulate hilsNM to NsHenal tffotn as ee ill to Pevalsphi Oa*d CIHmnmIM*, 3.....Also Douglas- o-honorary U.S. olUsen * ' Home i™ - yj,1 iJljHHKl d-new Canadian Prim* j Minister 4....Ludwig Erhard 1 •, . ' e-new British Prime ) Minister 0....Winston Churohlll • veC, Inc., Madison 1, Wl» *1- ”"■ Save This PrsoHee ixemtnatton! PE|X1NEY’S-MIRACLE MgJE I PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS j Take 4 points for each word that you con match wlth lte correct meaning. 1.. ...segregat* 2.. ...succession a-a fighter not port of a regular army b-to make a publlo show of feeling* 3.....demon«trate c-keepseparate d-soltmn parade 4 cortege e-order in which per- sons follow one after 6.....guerrilla another PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER Opm Ending* W 800 PAL Ste-IH3 (Adv.rllwm.nt) 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1063 nty fife irrevocably, feircum-scribing and limiting it. Yet I am om totheImfey people among automobile accident victims, for I have lost nothing but my underpinnings. Many have bean injured much worse, more permanently! more painfully, mm have bad to make more sefious readjustments to daily routine and philosophical outlook. ' | Yen years after that accident #dch forced me to learn to walk op stilts, I think as little as po& sible about the activity, the adventures and the casual, encounters which have been idet out of iliy life. I do think often,' however, of how - many accidents Uke^nine could be prevented jf all of us would get over that delusive feeling of security in a car. thousand^ tittfera for artificial ’ legs, trying to find the best ■ combination of prostheses for ; maximum comfort, agility and efficiency. . Fortunately, I have been able tp continue my work as a newspaper editor; Sometimes'I boast ■ that 1 am the only editor in the country who can prove a claim to have more'Wood in the feet than in the head. ARE LIMITATIONS 1 hope I am as good as before at my desk work, but I know that there are limitations on the persoiial explorations I should Uk£ to do as part of my job. This is one of the frustrations tint cannot be avoided, even in the most successful attempt of an accident victim to overcome the effects to such injuries. Although there have been compensations in. new friends and new insights, for the handicaps and the expense that followed my automobile accident, I Often think, with rueful irony, liow easy it might have beep to prevent that collision. ' (Editor’s Note; The new gear is a time or rsevdtuatfoni a of hope for better things .Buttrogedy also cdtnai on this few year. In the following article, Rebecca F*. Gross, a newspaper* editor, tells of her ordeal following a New Year’s Day accident, and what changes it brought to her life.) Yale Doctor Sets Tests for Ruby law Profession Is Worst integrated' By REBECCA F. GROSS. Editor ^ The Lock Haven Express^1 LOS ANGELES ^AP) -JLS. SecretaryjOf LabferWiltord Wirtz says the few profession is “fee Worst integrated ang,worst segregated grpup in otto society.” Wirtz told fed convention Of the Association of>Atherican Law Schools Sunday night that a recent survey showed that only 35 major few firms in fee nation are integrated. * w ft He said the Negro attorney’s chance of getting into a good few firm “exceed only that of 'female and pooiiy groomed applicants.” ; LOCK HAVEN, Pa,-' Ten yehrs ago this New Year’s' Day, I woke up in a hospital, >. with that grogginess that follows an anesthetic, to be told that the afternoon before, an automobile accident had damaged my legs, so badly both had'been amjpu-•tated. In that moment, I had to rearrange plans for my life. • •».’ YoOL may be qualified tor $1,000 life insurance . . . so you win not btirden ypur loved rates with funeral and other expense*. This NEW policy is especially helpful to those between. 40 and 90. , No medical examination OLDXnfe LEGAL RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE. . . . No agent will call on you. Free mtorrnatiqn, no obligation. Tear. out this ad right now. j g . . . Send your name, address and year Of birth fo: Central Security Life Insurance Co., Dept. • V-139, 1418 West Rosedale,' Fort Worth 4, Texas. I DALLAS UH * ~ - A Yale University psychologist planned to spend most of today giving mental tests to Jack Ruby, charged witii killing Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of Presl-'dent Kennedy. Dr. Roy Schafer, 41, director of the psychiatric center for students at Yale, spent about an hour with the short, balding Ruby yesterday la Ms county jail ceR. Schafer is the third defense psychiatrist to visit Ruby in jaU. Within the last week, Ruby was interviewed by Dr. Walter Bronberg, clinical director of Pinewood Psychiatric Hospital in New York, and Dr. Manford Guttmacher, chief medical officer for a Baltimore court, %||i my opinion, every car needs seat baits, strong locks that will not spring open in the impact of a collision, interior design that prevents shocks and v , , ; ? In campaigns for highway I . safety, the emphasis is placed HpRRKi^H'' I on the large number of £atali-\ ■ ties. This toll is large enough, Van<* tragic enough, but it'does 'not tell the whole story. People HAND-OPERATED CAR -- Rebecca F. Gross site in her like me represent a tremendous hand-operated car in Lock Haveh.Pa., ten years after an auto- ,additional army of the maimed, mobile accident cost her both her legs. Miss Gross has had to the handicapped and the per-drastically change her life because of the New,. Veto’s Day rnanently marked. tragedy. _________AP Phrtof,x The cost of their recovery, the Negotiations Canceled an Broadcasting jSale ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) —Major stockholder A. R. Heb-jenstreit to the New Mexico Broadcasting Co. says negotiations have been canceled'relative to a sale to radio and television properties to Gilmore ; When, I ate finally able to drive ’ past the intersection where I was hurt, without remembering ' what happened there, .1 shall consider myself pychologically recovered. It has not happened yet. When I see the mailbox and the utility pole against which I Was thrown as tits door of my car flew open, I think to myself, “How different things would be now if I had put seat belts in my car in 1953.’’ I remember, too, that I had been a little impatient at that sfreet corner, that afternoon to Dec. 31, 1953, and didn’t wait as long as I might have to be sure all traffic had passed. There is a signal light at the intersection now—but I still remind myself that ft’s not enough for a driver to take 50 pe|r cent to fee re* into a readjustment to life, and the changes they must face, makes a story that is seldom 70 NORTH SAGINAW STREET SPECIAL TUESDAY ONLY! NOT A STEP Since New Year’s morning 1954, I have not walked a step without canes. Most of the time I use. two; sometimes I can walk* short distances wife one, I have had to give up ray favorite relaxations, horseback riding and golf. i * I have tried to continue my favorite vacation activity, travel. Blit there are more difficulties connected /with going •places wife canes, a wheel chair and a limited capacity for getting over the ground than I knew m ■ * ■ . “/fee in the fabulous” * - FONTAIIVEBLEAU 995 N.. CASS LAKE ROA& 1 and 2 Bedroom Deluxe Apartments NOW AVAILABLE Apartment “102” Open Daily 9 to 9 fbr Yowl Inspection! & . Phone Today -4 FE 3-7677 or FE 5-6936 | When I planned vacations it spinning. ALTERED LIFE That spinning moment altered 1 ‘500,000 INVENTORY MUST BE REDUCED 50% THIS WEEK ^Starting tomorrow morning at 10:00 A>M. at My NawTontkie Warehouse outlet I’m offering my |entire stock of appliances, TV’s, Color TV's/Sterwai; both floor models and new in cicfto merchandise, at pricertnat in many cases pip lower than daalar cost. Before January T st wo will aeeapt any roasonaUf offer In ardurJo cut our inventory to % fee present sixe. Remember at trotter's you get 5 IbFof coffee FREl^f I can't bpM;yopr best price and service. All Workmanship 1 1 Oewnipteed ■ Any Way You Figure It. 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TUESDAY, DEC. 31st CLOSED ALL DAY WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, JAN. 1st and 2nd! >revenf dry, chafed skin OPEN FRIDAY, JAN. 3rd. - at 10:00 AM1, 939 Woodward Av«. APPLIANCE BUYERS: OLUE FRETTER SAYS lOt PADDOCK tl PC ANSWERS TO TODAY'S NEWS QUIJ Tf FRETTER’S Sale New; : ENTIRE INVmnilY INCLUDED la Progress PONTIAC WHSE. OUTLET Talugroph 14 Mi. South pt Orchard loU U. . K’tOlOf IV MB! •''Sterne . springer Weshers i-'Auto. Dryara j t^ReMgweten t-'Dlshwashars «*mwtv : s^Aute. Washer* t'Oes A llee. RtMiges leVreemn wine THE PONTIAC PHBSS. MONDAY. DECEMBER 80, 1988 iasaiWMl mM ofwiujf? 13 to 15 Potilnd Whole Hems "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY SHRIMP dg Ml CAP’N JOHN'S—STANDARDS 'jluW *4 Fresh Oysters pt. i a» hpr. 69c all dUPi ^A1' Young Geese FRESH FRYERS WHOLE FRYERS KINO OF ROASTS—STANDING Beef Rib Roast ■MilHi **S0PEK- BONELESS COOKED Amounts YUKON CLUB READY TO SERVE AST BRAND—OUR FINEST QUALITY INi&Dced Bacon 2 ™ ©9 uSUPIR4tlOHT” POINT CUT PJfc# Corned Beef ...* 59 "SUPSR-RIONr All MEAT P J0lt# Skinless Franks 2& 89 »1m> .... - 89* „ K55* * Chuck Roost. 11 if 65* 9C "SUPIR-RIOHT" ROSTON STYLE BllfT gfc JM# 1 Ron Roast I.. p SIT 9C toum«Y.itYii AA( ■i Spare Ribs . . “■ 39 Or wmoii iio m 0±e Leg 0' Lamb ... **• 69 |9C “EUPBR-RIOHT" WHOLE OR END PIECE u Slab Bacon ... t 39 |QC "SUPBR-RIOMT" SLICED ,pAfc« — Boiled Ham ... «? 59 POR tBASONINO A Jkr Salt Pork ,... M 39 UM, RUMP OR EUNLOIN jr Veal Roast . . . » 69 Veal Chops ... * 79 Roasting Chkkens “ 49* Ducks |||.;. 11 * 49 U Shrimp .. - 79* AMERICAN OR PIMENTO CHEESE Mel-O-Blt Slices 2*49 VICTORY BRAND Cream Cheese Price* Effective thru Tuesday, Dec* list In nil Instern Michigan AAR Stores j4£a£fcS>. WE OBIAT ATLANTIC l PMflK tIA COMPANY,* INC. 29c Sandwich Bread AsP SAVES YOU MORE ON MANY, MANY LOW MEAT PRICES Not Just a Few Specials! Super Markets Tft^ l^NTIAC rt&ife. M6?TOAY, DECEMBER go, 1W8 Brown Sees Nod toScraiifon, Nixon !Junior Editors Quiz on- , 'M SOUND At HOMMN YOMR sparetime AS LOW AS C#00 ^ SEND FOR TWV''* 4,L; FREE BOOKLET ' MOf SACRAMENTO, CALIF. ffl- * r I.. " ■ i California’s Democratic Gov, Edmund G. Brown predicted Sunday that the 1964 Republican preskteatial nominee probably be either Gov. William Scranton of Pennsylvania or former Vids President Richard M, Nixon.. PHNOM PENH, Cambodia n.. ' (AP)-Tbe Cambodian govern- CLEVELAD, Ohio (AP) -ment expelled seven foreign Exercise lovers should not apply jairnaiwtB today. for posts in the crew of the first They were Antoine Yared of manned spaceship to the moon, The Associated Press, Robert nr. Harold C. Urey, a Nobel sd““’saM Pan Asia News Agency, and a*7> ^ .. a four-man French television Urey, told the 130th meeting team of the American Association for police headquarters and ordered the Advancement of Science: The seven were summoned to * * * -v\ j-!|S to leave the country on the first “The (lunar) astronaut should available plane. be averse to taking physical ex- Prince Norodom Sihanouk’s ercise. He Will live ,in very government announced on Dec, cramped quarters and it will be 10 it would no longer admit difficult to secure physical ex-Westem newsmen generally to ercise. Great physical strength writers of hostility in articles is not important.” Cambodia. It accused Western * * * about the deteriorating relafibns Urey, of the University of between Sihanouk and the Unit*: California at La Jolla, also said ed States and the prince’s ln% lunar astronauts should have 1 HEAR £-rr/l But whoever the GOP choice is, the governor said in a year-1 end statement, he will lose to President Johnson. Brown, who said he thought the Republicans would choose a moderate, as their candidate, ' has been mentioned as a possible Democratic vice presiden-dial candidate* GREGORY, MAYER & THOM Woodward Ml 6-4.180 BIRi South African Girl .Bitten by a Shark :! DURBAN,. South Africa (AP) -Sharks struck for the third time In dine days at a holiday area on the north coast near Durban Sunday, biting off the right foot of a 21-year-old girl. The girl, Barbara Strauss, a medical student, was waist, deep in the water when attacked. She was taken to a hospital. Ph D degrees, be trained in “hard rock geology and geo-, physics” and have skill in the operation of delicate mechanical devices such as jet airplanes. QUESTION: Why do I hear file roar of the- sea in a conch s^iell? dr " " dr . ★ , ANSWER: It may sould like the sea roaring, but there is no actual' connection between the sound you heiur inside the conch and the sea, unless it is that the conch is a marine animal. / •’ j . The cMKh shell at upper right Is shown as if cut open , so you can see the openings inside which are all connected, Heat Wave in Decemb Threw Volcanoes Erupt Off Coast of Iceland . REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP)— Three new underwater volcanos began erupting Sunday on Iceland’s south coast, sending ash and pumice 300 feet into, the air. • The eruptions occurred about one mile from a still extremely active new volcanic island formed Nov. 14; and each of which has a .certain aataral aoto or “pitch,” according to length. i-i ■■ ■ h,/4i A musical trumpet magnifies the small vibrations made by the .player’s, lips so you hear them as a loud sound. The conch shell can magnify small sounds too, if they happen to be of the same note or pitch as it is. m When you hold theshell over your ear, many small sounds of the rigit pitch, which you wouldn’t ordinarily hear, are amplified enough inside the shell , so that you hear them LOS ANGELES W - Chilly out your way? It was 84 degrees here yesterday. In San Diego, 136 miles to the south, the i temperature hit 88, a December recop}. Thousands of Southern Calif&rnians swam and sun-' bathed at the beaches. faintly. f * , The jumbling of such small sounds together gives a ' distant rumble, sounding ver much like ocean Wives ■ beating up on a beach. On Southern plantations, people have long been accustomed ' to break'the tops Off conch shells and blow a blast with the shell, to summon the workers in for dinner. FREE LESSONS 4m ROADS LEAD TO DQWNTOWN PONTIAC SPECIAL THIS WEEKI FRENCH CRULLERS | «^3Se H H. Saginaw , Gallagher Music Co. Yet, any magnavox is a bargain FOR YOU TO DO: Scratch the back of one hand, with the forefinger of another away from your ear and you will hear very little or no sound. 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The full-transformer powered ehdssls Is mete depend-able-Silver Seal Warranty guarantees service for 90 days, dll parts and tubas for one year Also Includes: Optical Picture Filter, powerful Stereo Amplifiers and four High Fidelity Speakers. Model MV 179 TELEPHONE OPERATORS HELP BOY STRANDED 3000 MILES FROM HOME Bad weather had forced a transatlantic plane to land at Boston Instead of New York. Aboard the plane, Peter Hansen, a 14-year-old Danish student, was on his way to St. Joseph, Michigan, to visit Mr^ and Mrs. Chester J. Byrnt. The airline called Mr. Byrne to tall him the plane had bean grounded In Boston; Its passengers would be sent by bus to midtown Ney/ York. The Byrne realized, however, that Petar would be stranded in a foreign land-alone at night In America's largest city.1 I Mr. Byms tried to locate Peter's exact whereabouts and gat Someone to look after him, but without success, Explaining his problem to the Long Distance operator In Benton Hprbor, Mr. Byms suddenly found, as he wrote ua later, "Michigan Ball had taken over the mission." Throughout the night and early morning, Mrs. Joyce DaDaii,!Mlchloan Bell Service Assistant, and Mrs. Glannlna Lounsburry, SeniorjOperator, made repeated calls to New York, City ,1 end,.Boston, They persisted until they knevy a Danish-speaklng airline employe© had met Peter* At 3 a.m. they had the airline, employee and Peter on the telephone from New .York, assuring the Byms that all would >FREE SERfKX •FREE DELIVERY ^REE FACTORY WARRANTY In hla latter Mr. Byms said;"... Your company has a great big heart..,, The operators who were working on the problem could not have shown more concern If he were their own son." ' ' , ’ i, While this j story Is |ru8, It's not unusual. You see, wlttiiMIchJgen Bell, friendly service Is a way of IlfS. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY EXCITING to SEE and to HEAR Magnavox. STEREO THEATRE ELfcT®fi THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1963 With This Coupon and The Pur* chase of $5.00 or Mora Excluding Beer, Wine or Tobacco. Coupon Expires Tuesday, December 31, 1963. Limit Ode Coupon Bor Customer. HOURS! Lean, Hickory Smoked, Sugar Cdre| 5 to 7-lb. Average Shank Portion Practically PoimIcm, E.Z. to Carve, Whole i t ■■ semi-boneless hams 59‘ Always Lean,Always Fresh U.S.D.A. Choice Tomatoes Get the Equivalent of a Full Cote of 7-UP OR SQUIRT Plus Deposit Ronqoot «r Morton ChllluM# loot, Turkoy get finer gifts faster with gold bell gift stamp TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1963 Conformity NoMho Object Schools Turn Creativity By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed. D. Creativeness is golden, yet it is often charged that schools suppress Ingenuity and inven-tiveness, and that conforming ' students get the best grades. That schools should encourage creativeness is agreed by all, but I contend there is no necessity to choose between creativity and conformity. Ahy Student can cultivate skill in creative thinking while carrying out such required tasks ks reviewing for examinations, writing essay-type tens or "themes. Authorities on creatlv; ity say that it demands the ability to direct-mental processes toward an-end. • Hie creativity of a scientist is clos&yTrekted to his work of observing, listening, question-' tag, reading, collecting data, comparing and analyzing. p JOT DOWN IDEAS Students can proceed in a similar manner. They can defer organization and critical analysis of ideas until quite a number are assembled. They can make the arrangement of ideas, together with their organization and development, a conscious For. example, in answering an essay-type examination question, the procedure is simply this: NORTH M AJ109 V«f4 ■ ♦ AJ1095 ♦ S3 C WEST EAST AQSSfr- QA74 V 105 VQJ962 ♦ •eg, OKI 4QJ97 *10*8 SOOTH (D) ; 4KI2 WAK8 -/ WQ8S ■■ ' *A/42 8mrth West North But 1N.T. Pui S N.T. Pass Pus Bus.' Opening lead—»Q By OSWALD JACOBY The year 1963 was pretty good for me bridge-wise. I won' the M&Kenney trophy for the fourth time in five* years and man*' * aged to break the record for master points won in one year at the same time. JACOBY say, I had lots of good hands, but I also had some mighty bad ones. This bad bid occurred In a men’s pair game. 1 reached a normal three po-trump don-tract. The hand might, easily* make five odd if everything , worked and even with everything wrong there was no good reason why I should not have made my contract after the dob opening. All I had to do to make the contract. would have been win the first club in my,own hand and take the diamond finesse. That would lose and a clujy return would be won by dujn- Hiv>ni Astrological . Forecast my’s king. I would run out the diamonds, lead a spade and rise with the kind if JEast played low. Not only did I fail to find this line, but I- managed to go down, also. I ducked the club in both hands and had to. win the second club in dnmmy. Then I came to my hand with a heart and lost the diamond finesse. East led a third club' and I ducked. West won and led m heart. At Oils point I could hfiye taken my ace of clubs and four diamond tricks for down one, but I was obstinate. I did not -cash my ace of clubs and nevefa did make it. 7 V*CHRD Sense** Q—The bidding has been: oath West North But IN" Pass ■ Pass Pass ,1N.T. Pass You, South, hold: A A Q 8 V2 OK Q XI8 +AQ 4 2 Whet do yhu do? A—Bid two elubs, Tau io not like the idea of a no-tramp contract. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of pesslng the one heart overcall, your partner bids one spade. What do, you dh? L .• 3 Answer Monday "THS who m»n contrail hit dHtlhy . . . Atmtagy minis tho Woy." ARIES (Ms? 31 to Apr. l»[i Loot day of year finds you tlllod with hop#,. on-thuslosm. Boy to sxprsss OHlros, iov«, potential. Tim coro In Iroftlt. Don’t .Calm hurry To os. somo pises "dlftoront," Flurry of activity surrounds you. Koop y^OEM?ftf1 (M»v 21 to Juno 3l)i Straw chirm, originality. Avoid sxcsisfvs. ipond- EmKt VS aiert. Romombor promlsos modi to younoor JnaiyWuol. cancer (Juno 33 to July 2l)t Cyclo continual nloh, Sting «t puce with your contclonco is Of utmolt Impprlonco. Prohr'dtop. Moho mioluiloni which old you In Mind Iruo lo yoursolf. > . LIO {July. 33 to Aug. 31) t ..Orgy chancs tor Important gontscta Indleotod. |S outgoing. — jfrtsi chosr, approclotlon. Don't DO afraid to eompllmont frlondt. in so Sing, you wiiriihnineo your own ^ROO’(Aug. 23 to topt. 83)1 Xty.ls fnPeorrying on*dlK^iion'lonIoht.,PlA«ani ■MG£M££ duo — so Is romonco. Pina timo inai-eotod tonight. So with hormonloui pot •ons. "walk owny'1 tram thaw sooklni •n arpumant. Toko spodol ear# I drico%pio (Oct. 23 to Nov. 11)1 Soor* kiino convorsotlon tonight eon opon door traS? jHBh WvM considerate, ehorming. Roly on SCOR-IHlh 22 to Dot. Jill i Loalcal approach odvltad, Think twko * p court#v°i» rAytTii Rom your praund. Avoid Komrlng lorcos. Pint 8tt roll the lace between your fingers and dip the end| ini clear fingernail polish. his wife. (You know the kflnd!) ' ' . What she reads is her business and I really don’t hold it against her, but 1 tain my children to visit her often, and I don’t want my 10- and 12-year-old daughters getting interested in trash like that. Lately when we go to Grandma’s the girls head right for the magazine pile. They adore their Grand* mother and I wouldn’t have it otherwise, but what can I do? ' IN BETWEEN m ★ * % v DEAR IN BETWEEN; Tell Grandma that you would rather not expose your daughters to such “sophisticated” literature at their impressionable ages, and ask her kindly to ditch her collection when you visit. DEAR ABBY: There’s a very cute girl in my room, but I am sorta shy. Should \ At an open house Sunday in their Ottawa Drive home, Mr. and Mrs. H. Vere Hodges announced the engagement of their daughter Ann. Marie to Richard N. Brown, son of the Norman Browns of Packer Lane. - The bride-elect is a g r a d u a t e of MoriUcello College. Her fiance attended General Motors Institute and is completing his studies at Wayne State University School of En-gineering. ■ ■' 1A September wedding is planned. I wait for her to drop a book or something before I give her any encouragement? D. D. DEAR D. D.: Wait until she drops a LOOK. She could be “aorta” shy, too. i DEAR ABBY: It grieves me to see a wonderful woman like my stepmother treated the way she is. Abby, she has done things for my father that my real mother never did. He was a drunk when she married him (my mother divorced him) and he hasn’t had a drink in over two yean. She has worked by his side fixing up his little ranch. All his insurance is still made out to my mother, however. And althoufpi She is my real mother, she- treated Dad like a dog because of his drinking problem, and finally threw him out. " My stepmother made a man - of him, and If anything happens to him, she won’t get a thing. What can I do? NO NAME PLEASE ★ ★ . ■ ★ DEAR NO NAME: Quietly remind your father dt his debt to Ids second wife — your stepmother. Bid, remember, he may have regrettable ob-' ligations to your mother. So proceed cautiously. CONFIDENTIAL TO WARREN: We all stumble and fall occasionally in this life. But In Central Methodist Noon Rites for Couple - Mrs. W. Henry Sink, a longtime resident of Pontiac, was married Sunday noon to Rev. Dr. H. Paul Guhse of Wantagh, Long Island, N.Y. ★ * * Following the regular morning service at Central Methodist Church where Mrs. Sink has been organist for over tyree decades, the wedding ceremony was performed by Dr. Milton H. Bank. She was given in marriage by William ' Mrs. Eleanor Ross, Indian-Spoils, a sister of Mrs. Sink, was matron of honor. Dr. Guhse was attended by his brother, William Kemnits of Ann Arbor. The reception in Fellowship hall was given by the church ior the couple. \ After a wedding trip to Florida* Dr. and Mrs. Guhsa will live In Wantagh, Long Island where Dr. Guhse is pastor of the Wantagh Community Church. Coffee Starts Meeting Day Coffee at 10 a.m. in the Royal Oak Woman’s Club will start tha Friday meeting for the Oakland County Federation of Women’s Clubs. At the 10:80 a.m. business meeting Robert Janes, head of Oakland County Family Service, will speak an “Family Unity-MVhat Is It?” Following a 12:80 luncheon; ____r Mrs. WalUs Dolan from the lihe daughter of Oakland County League tor 1 m. nZi Mr* Peace and Freedom will be Mr, and Mrs. fiituridJ5^ Reservations can ba made by contacting Mrs. Jack Porter and Mra, Frank Duca of Royal Oak. Susan Ade- laide Tindall became the bride of Joseph WUkerson of Gregory in a Saturday afternoon ceremony The bride a Wesley i Tindall Of Wist fValton Boulevard, is a graduate of Central Michigan University. MRS. JOSEPH WUKERSON Foil Dividti Case Use sheets of aluminum foil as dividers when packing a suitoass.Than use them again, when needed, to wrap wet or Comfort of Lady Rules Manners By The Emily fost Institute Q: I'have three questions concerning bus etiquette that I would like to have answered: (1) When a man enters a bus With a woman companion, who should be seated next to the aisle and who next to the window? (2) On the rule of giving up his seat to a woman, does this apply to all women or just the middle-aged and older ones? .(8) On Cur buses, the rear door, which is used for exit, opens by hand. Should a man go out of the door first and then’ hold the door open for the woman, or should he reach from behind her to open the door and wait for her. to ' go out first? A: When there are two vacant seats together, the woman naturally enters the seats first and takes her place next to the window and the man takes the seat next to the aisle. (2) In the present day, a man is not expected to give up his seat to a young woman unless she is Carrying a child or is crippled. . (8) He goes out the door first end helps her alight. nrh« •Beauty Lane *Jem of Parle plus special reductions on Breok, Zotostoot REG *10°° NOW COMPLETE ALL Permanents Selected styles from our regular sjock. Sz£ SQ95 and Set %3 Now . , with new lanolin neutrellsinpL Give your hair new life, strength, end brilliance With Jhe permanent that adds precious lanolin while it creates a soft long lasting wive. REG. *12*° NOW COMPLETE! REG. *15°® NOW COMPLETE HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOP MORRIS MUSIC SLTSUI5.L,a,*APM M 2-0547 BEAUTY SALON THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY* DECEMBER fiio, 1963 FIFTEEN Check With Lawyer on House Ownership By-MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management Dear Maty Feeley: Before I was married I owned a lot and three years ago we built our b home, it's both our name I worked ’til eighth mo when I was pecting my child, then er we h twins. Wien they school I again took a part-time job. All through their high school days I worked three full days a week and I am still employed. ••" HARD OF HEARING This EEEOaa is Valuable it will'bring you , FREE INFORMATION about the omazing n*w CONSUL Behind the Ear Aid UrihM ^ SwmnU Mrtwol M«Ml dntty ADDRESS............................i.................. cmr........................STATE...............it..... Maieo Detroit Co., Mateo Medical Village I 522 David Whitn.y Bldg. 31815 Soothfi.ld Rd. i Datrait 26, Mich. Sinnlnaham, Mkh. WO 1-2691 644-217S PLUGS” IN YOUR FOOD? A car needs spark plugs (^convert fuel to energy. Now, vitamins are not spark plugs, but vitamins do help "spark** Mia food you eat into energy you need for work and play. You may not be getting enough vitamins in ydur diet. Help make sure you get them with Vioran* Squibb MultK Vitamins. Ask us about Viqsan#—the multi-vitamin that,, help* line a "apark plug." Reg. "Li 4*127 Coata lass then 3 cents a day oo ' * ...bottle of 100 ....... I l»t "W#5JEr « 3-7192 Baldwin ilPwif I FE 3-7097 Now my husband claii has full authority to give' the home to any one child/he prefers, and that I haveXbsolutely nothing to say about it. He claims that in thl$ state, the man of the hime has the legal right to do ,4s he sees fit. I feel ttiat after all the years I’ve worked aftd helped to pay cash for the home, I’m certainly entitled to something. Reader in Illinois! ■ ★ ★ ’■ Dear Reader: You’re worrying unnecessarily; In your state when property is held jointly by husband and wife, it belongs to both of them. At the death of either,-it automatically belongs — all of J/ — to die survivor. A will cannot change this, no matter what the will may say.. Rather than let this misunderstanding continue, why don’t both of you go together to a lawyer and let your husband hear the fact from what he Will have to acknowledge , is an authoritative source. It’s unfortunate that many times people will softer real emotional anguish for years, when toe problem'can be disposed of once and forever simply by paying the modest feer it costs i to sbek legal advice. Dear Miss Feeley: ■ I find it almost impossible to live within my income. It seems at the end of two weeks it is al-ways the same problem — insufficient funds. I am allotted $90 twice month- •Wm . An April 11th wedding is planned by Marilyn Sue Rossman and Jerry Felts whose engagement was announ-ced Recently by her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Edwin Rossman of ha-peer Road. Her fiance’s parentMr. and Mrsr Hardy Felts, live on Walnut Road. BOBETTE SHOP Semi-Annual Sale Famous Brand BRAS and GIRDLES During the Entire Month of January > WARNER’S , “DELILAH” LYCRA GIRDLE Long Leg Pantie Leg Reg. 8.95 4L99 NOW U Girdle Reg. 7.95 £99 NOW . O “VENUS” girdles aind Corselette 25% Off DURING THIS SALE “CONTESSA de ROMA’* Long Line Brassiere * Reg. 8.95 599 SAVE $2 ON THIS FABULOUS SLIP SALE! i nylon tricot slip with lacy side slit! Reg. $6.00 For two weeks only . . . you can buy as many Seamprufe slips as you like and save $2 on each one I White on|y, Sizes 8$ to 40, ‘v “FORMFIT” Girdles and Pantie GIRDLES la new miracle fabric #889 Pantie * #989 Reg. Girdle 6" Igh waist bond Zipper Girdle Reg. 16.50 1295 “CORDE de PARIE” Give and take Coraelette Black • White 2 length* Reg. $20 15" “CORDE de PARIE” Give and take Brassieres Reg. 5.98 3" Regi 6.98 4<" BOBETTE SHOP 18 N. Saginaw Street CHARGE IT! \ PARE FREE! ly to cover the following: food (I have three children); milk; medical expenses; cleaning bills; church; gifts, newspapers; school expenses. I’m desperate. A.M.K., Nazareth, Pa. Dear Mrs. K.: If something has to give, be sure it’s net your sanity. Look the facts in toe face, do what you can, ’and Stop torturing yourself about what has to go by the board, If you’re .not in a financial condition .to make presents toYaihily and friends, for instance, just don’t do it. Help the children learn to make the gifts they want to give. Sometimes it can be done With materials you have on hand. Cut cleaning bills to the bone -— you 1 and the children wear washables the year-round. Try to keep your medical bills under control by stay-big healthy. Since good health has so much to do with diet, choose the foods you NEED; rather than those you’d merely like to have. Faithful home dental care, too, can save many a bill. Don’t dismiss as Idle chatter the statement that ft sensible mode of life can benefit yon financially. Food including milk Is, of course, your costliest item, and can well be expected to take $70 cacti payday. By combining one quart of whole mitt: with one quart of dry powdered milk you can cut down on this dollar with-put cutting nutrients. Even with careful managing this leaves you $20 for other expenses. Allow $5 towards medical costs, with the remaining $15 divided betwen the other items you mention. „ ; ★ t * * Naturally this won’t be a luxurious scale of living. You’ll just have to settle for this absolutely necessary and try to remember that some people have to get along on even less. The children can help, even though they may be quite young. Be firm about having them take the best possible care of their clothes — hanging their school clothes up properly when they come home each day, and taking good care of their school, supplies. Replacements are usually quite an expense where children’s belongings are concerned. Teaching them to be orderly can actually save a dollar here and another there. (You can write to Mary Fee-ley in care of this newspaper. Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope for personal reply.) Mr. and Mrs Gerald Wi Freeman off Sylvester Drive announce the engagement of t he if daughter1 Kathleen Moo to Ralph Theodore Smith, Airman l.C. Airman Smith, son of Mrs, Virginia Smith and, Earl Smith of North Hollywood, Calif., is stationed, at Gannon Airforce Base, N.M. Game1 Tables for New Year Game tables are.due for a welcome come-back in 1964 as an important furniture item, and the do-it-yourself fan can design such a table easily. ★ Ur' Ur By hinging -flip-tops to a regular table and covering all surface sections with laminate, yoq can create an extendable table that is both pretty and practical. A fancy free pattern in coral, white or lemon yellow is especially suitable to this all-purpose accessory for use jn a recreation room or den for games, parties and informal sit-down dining. V* ★ Ur ' Ur You also can attach, a laminate-covered drop leaf to the front of a storage cabinet for small-apartment entertaining. Exercise Your Feet at Start of Day CHICAGO, (UPD - A foot specialist advises morning exercises to tone and strengthen foot and deg muscles. Walk about the room on tiptoes. then on the outer edges of your feet, says Dr. William M. Scholl. While battling, scrub feet viborously and dry them carefully between toes and back of heels. Mr. and Mrs. William Crane, Fort Wayne, Ind., announce the en-gage ment of their daughter Marilyn to Walter J. Schrodi Jr, of Fort Wayn e, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Schrodi of North Sanford Street-. Miss Crane attended Ball State Teachers College in Muncie, Ind. and Auburn University, Auburn, Ala. Her fiance, a graduate of the Detroit College of Law, is* a member of the Michigan Bar Association. Winter Newst Table Talk1 “Table take” highlights home furnishings news this winter, .and the cube table takes the spotlight, exhibiting on all sides a series of fine wood surfaces. 1 w Ur ' A This is not an item to dent your budget if you construct it with overlay panels of one of the many laminate authentic wood grains. Try Ceylon teak to give a decorative and ultra-fashionable Oriental accent. The versatile cube table can serve as a living room occs* sional table to contrast excitingly with contemporary furniture, or as a base for Oriental sculpture, or as a show-off stand for a lovely Japanese floral arrangement. White PapCrHelps If you have trouble threading your sewing machine need* le, place a piece of white material or paper under the foot of tiie machine and it will help you see the needle eye. REDUCE EAT and LOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES1 EASIER TO TAKE AND MORE EFFECTIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPLEMENT, AND COSTS LESS INCLUDING CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDIVIDUALLY BY UC PHYSICIAN, M.D. NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH MEDIC-WAY CAPS. DON'T DIET-JUST EATl AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN LOSE 5,50 OR 100 LBS. AND KEEP IT OFFI MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 OFFICES IN OAKLAND AND WAYNE ° COUNTIES-ONE IN MIRACLE RULE Wut Bam. Hair Stylists Handy Watt, Mgr. Our New Permanent Location 2269 Orchard Lake Rd. Kango Harbor di 682-9869 > ii—Tg/ngm West High THE BAR OF THE YEAR- ( For New Year's Eva With Electric Refrigerator! |n handsome cherry and maple with maple burl — the plastic top looks just like slate — .easy moving casters and lock. Refrigerator has 2 cubic feet capacity with 3 Ice cube troys. Price complete with refrigerator, $395 Without refrigerator, $235 FURNITURE I.IMINAW If. AI'OKHAIO IAKI AVI. SIS-IIH; PONTIAC The Voyager by Brittany travels first class. 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When you receive your policy, read it carefully. Only after you agree it does everything we claim,i send in your quarter. This doesn't even cover our cost, but we'll gamble that you will,continue ;art~the regular rate of only $5.00 a month ~i— just as thousands of others have done. Remember for, each day you are in the hospital, you get 833.33. How can this policy be offered at such a low cost? The answer is simple. You are buying directly from the company through the mail and the savings are passed on to you. No agent or salesman will call or bother you. Compare this with others. KWe welcome comparison bepause this policy pays from the first day, we can't pay any sooner; it pays forever, we can't pay any longer. Remember, the cost is only $5.00 each month, or, if paid in , advance, $55.00 a year,and the benefits are $1,000.00 a month. Policy issued ages 1 through 80 if you qualify, : , Don't wait until it's too late. Fill out the application and mail it today. There are no strings attached; you are under no obligation. NOW,. from our Aooident Division you get: $1,000 cash % month even for the rest of your life while hospital iked from any accident. No, this is not a misprint. If you qualify, you get an iron^-clad guarantee which pays you at the rate of $1,000.00 CASH a month beginning the first day you are in a hospital (other than a sanitarium, rest home or government hospital) from any accident. Even if you * re so confined only one day, you still get $33.33; . / " There are no gimmicks. Your policy will have No Exceptions, No Exclusions, No Limitations, no waiting periods, no ifs, ands or buts. And what's more — r This plan is NON-tCANCELLABLE and GUARANTEED RENTABLE for Life. 1. Use your policy as often as you need to—you own it, it can never be taken ' away as long as you pay your premium on time. Your premium can never be raised; your benefits can never be reduced. You are1 paid the full amount even though you have other insurant^ or compensa^ tion. You get GASH . . use it for any purpose: pay bills, bny groceries, pay rent, etc. -When you are hospitalized your everyday living expenses still go on* Help meet' them Vith the TAX FREE cash this policy provides. THIS PLAN PAYS CASH WHILE YOU ARE HOSPITALIZED FOR ANY ACdlDENT, ANYWHERE, ANYTIME. You DON'T have to be hurt in any particular kind of accident such as: Auto, Pedestrian, Bus,‘Traffic, Train, etc. ALL Accidents are covered—at home, at work, a.t play—24 hours a day. \ THE PONTIAC PRESS Monday, December 30, m3 1 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN- SEVENTEEN 1963 Was Year of Violence in Pontiac Area Snipers, Stabbing*, Beatings tecapped in Review of Stories Violence cast a long shadow toter 1963 in the Pontiac area. jFew will forget the snipers, % stabbing and the bludgeoning that painted black headlines across , the first quarter of the year. Also memorable for Pontiac residents were the WKC fore and the firing of City Manager Robert A. Stierer, followed by the hiring of Flint’s a former manager Robert A. Garter to replace Stierer. Pontiac Motor Division, it will be remembered, experienced a great sales year. Here’s a roundup of the major , local newsmakers in 1963: Jan. 1—First baby of the year * hi Pontiac is born to Mrs. Nancy McGlory of 440 Whittemore 14 seconds after midnight at Pontiac General Hospital. S-HOUR BLAZE Jan. 2—Four Waterford Townr ship fireman are injured fitting a five-hour blaze that gutted the D & J Cabinet Shop, M59 and Williams Lake Road. Jan. 3 — General Motors Corp. revealed that it had spent $243 million In Pontiac hi 1942, a 53-million increase over INI. g > Jan. 8 — Fire investigators search through the charred ruins of WKC, 108 N. Saj 1 to learn the cause of the blaze that destroyed the 35-year-old hoiAe outfitting and jewelry store last night. Jaa. 24 — The temperature dropped to 15 degrees below zero at 4 a.m., shattering a seven below record for foe date set la 1897. Jan. 28 — Police lire without a clue in the fatal shooting of Mrs. Mary Godfrey, billed by a sniper’s bullet while standing in the kitchen of her Bloomfield Township home. Record budget Jan. 29 — The Pontiac City Commission adopts a record budget of 88,788,103 for 1963, (347,000 higher than in 1962. Jaa. 31 — A sniper’s ballet narrowly misses Mrs. Gertrude Race, 30, while playing with her son in a bedroom of her home at 28000 Dixon, Novi. Jan. 31 — State trooper Lawrence E. Miller of the Pontiac post is named Outstanding Young Man of the Year by the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce. * ★ * Feb. 1 — Rive businesses gutted in fire at 2600 Union Lake Road. Damage is estimated at (190,000. 1 BOY CONFESSES Feb. 6 — Douglas Godfrey, 15, confesses ina statement to Prosecutor George Taylor that he shot hiii mother, Mrs. Mary Godfrey Jan. 25 because she criticized him for going out too often. , Feb. 7 r A Southfield man, Gary S. Gopdram, 22, turns himself ever to Novi police and admits he was. the one who shot at Mrs. Gertrude Race because he wanted to (MSUO) is changed to Oakland University to clearly establish its identity, individual character and educational program, according to Chancellor D. B. Varner. March 8 — Fifteen-year-dd Douglas Godfrey, who had admitted the January sniper slaying of his 38-year-old mother, was committed to Pontiac State Hospital for treatment as mentally ill. 1 March 14—Aubrey Posey, 34, was found dead of stab ! wounds in his home at 571 Crescent Lake Road, Waterford Township, and poliee began a search for his slayer. March 17—The brutal murder of a young Kroger store comanager, called by police one of the most vicious in memory, was discovered when the body of Robert Greene, 22, was found with 42 stab wounds in a back room of the supermarket at Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake roads. March 18—Two men the same age As their Victim, AdOise White, a stockboy at the Kroger stare, and his nephew, Charles Hodges, admitted the slaying of Kroger store comanager Robert Greene. The crime was committed during a March 16 safe robbery. i CONFESSES STABBING March 18 —A self-employed odd-jobs worker, Brady P. Boley, 46, of 164 W. Pike, confessed the fata] stabbing of Aubrey Posey in the victim’s Waterford, home. March 27 — Sixteen-year-old Leonard Reed was found sav-, agely beaten to death and his 14-year-old sister near death from a similar beating on a road near their home in White Lake Township. March 38—In New Mexico where he had fled, l9-year-old Carl L. Case of Hartland, who had befriended slain Leonard Reed, 16, when he lived behind the Reed home in White Lake Township, surrendered to authorities and admitted the fatal beating of Leonard and near-fatal attack on Leonard’s sister, Naomi, 44. April 2—Democrat James E. Seeterlin was elected Water-ford Township supervisor. Democrats also won other top administrative posts and three of four seats on foe township board, increasing their control of foe board from 44 to 6*1. April 3 — NameS' of the first four prominent Oakland County citizens selected to participate in a unique new program of direct community * to - community foreign aid to.be started in Cali, Colombia, were announced by U.S. Rep. William Broom-field, R-Oakland County, in Washington. i The four, Who were to visit Cali, were Delos Hamlin, chairman of tiie county board of supervisors; Oakland University Chancellor p. B. Varner; Coun^ ty Planning Director George Skrubb; and George Catlin, area development director for Detroit Edison Co. April 6 — A 24-year-eld Oxford parolee, Frederick F. Hannah, , taken to foe Oxford police station on a reckless driving arrest, pulled a gun, forced foe village’s entire night police force—two patrolmen and a woman radio operator—into a car and drove them to Detroit, where he left them bound la a motel after relieving foe policemen of their money. April 9 — The Oakland County Board of Supervisors re-’ elected Delos Hamlin to an unprecedented eighth consecutive one-year term as its chairman. April 9 — The Pontiac! Board of Tax Review yesterday set the city's 1963 assessed valuation at (306,459,500, some (27 million more than the 4982 tax base. UNITER FUND «... April 9-B, M. Estes, Pontiac I SWyr MOWER “‘.f Motor Division general mana* T**r • old Doug*** tjomjoy* g«r, Was named chairman of foi liter committed to Pontiac IW pontlac Area United Fund State Hospital, admitted Feb. 6 foe sniper slaying of his mother, Mrs, Mary Godfrey, III foe|r Bloomfield Township home. A 18 6i , II WKC BLAZE - A thin sheet of ice and slush covered Saginaw after h- three-hour battle by the Pontiac fire department to extinguish a fire Jan. 8 at WKC, Inc., at 106 N. Saginaw, a 35-year-old home outfitting and jewelry store. Damage was estimated. at (230,000 from the blaze. The store was completely remodeled and reopened later. of its personal property la Pontiac to foe State Tax Commission, asking a cut of (32 million from foe (122-million figure set by foe city. April 15 — A record budget of (17,145,998 for 1904, some (1.6 million higher than the final 1963 budget, was tentatively approved by county supervisors. ■ ★ * ★' .■ April 16 The body of a 12-year old' mentally retarded Bloomfield Township boy, Robert Grinnan, who had been missing since March 22, was found floating te a small lake not far from his home. CHURCH DESTROYED April 17 rr The First Baptist Church of Oxford, a landmark for more than 100 years, Was destroyed by an early morning fire. Feb. 11 — The name of Michigan State University Oakland April 18 — Thousands of dollars damage was ennsed by hailstones as big as golf balls. blown by a high wind through store windows and convertible tops during a storm that also thrqW lightning and two inches of rahp at foe Pontiac area. April 22 — Oakland, University graduated 146 at its first commencement the previous Saturday. ✓ • ■ April 23 — A few days more than two months after his retirement as an Oakland County Circuit judge, H. Russel Holland died at his home at the age of 65. He had served the county is a judge for 27 years. April 26 — Frederick F.., H a n n a h, 24, returned from Florida where he had fled and turned himself in to police, admitting foe. April 6 kidnaping of two Oxford village policeman and a woman police radio operator. ’ 60,666 CARS , Pontiac Motor ' Division announces that more than 60,000) cars mere built in a single month for the first time. In division history. The acttial' figure for April was 60,209 units, 375 more than the previous month’s record in March 1955. f t; * vyA 1,, May 9 — Pontiac area swelters In record 85-degree heat wave. Pontiac Teamster official Floyd B. Harmon Is convicted Campaign. April It - It was learned that General Motors had appealed, foe assessed vateatioa MURDER VICTIM- Leonard Raad, 16, was found March 27 hasten to /tenth and his 14-year-old sister badly beaten on a road near their horjie in White Lake Town- in Detroit federal court on 24 v counts of embezzlement and falsifying union records. May 11 — Body of a knifing victim found or. 12-Mile Road in Novi is 'identified as Walter Flory, 45, of Farmington. ; ★ * ★ May 13 — A Farmington mother of two, Mrs. Virginia Martin, 37, is charged with murdering Flory, pleads self-defense. i 1 CALL STUDY Four-man Oakland County] delegation emplanes for Call, Colombia, to study Alliance for Progress possibilities fo South American region. May 14 Carl Case, 19, pleads guilty to foe murder of Leonard Reed, 16, of White Lake Township. May 1#,— Pontiac parking lot owner Sam Stolorow wins six-month' lease of old county courthouse site at Huron and Saginaw for a pay parking lot. *• * * May 20 — Pontiac rolls out red carpet for Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagn here on Mayor Exchange Day. PERIMETER ROAD May 22 — Ground-breaking ceremonies launch 3.3-million perimeter road construction in Pontiac. May 22 — City Commission introduces resolution to raise this year’s taxes (235,000 tp earry dty over six-month interim between budgets. May 25—Williams JLake residents caught trying to trench, water from neighboring Mace-day Lake into their own depleted lake; police squelch ensuing neighborhood clash. TRANSFER TRIAL May 27 — Attorney Milton Henry asks Circuit Court Judge WllUam J. Beer to transfer Pontiac Mall murder trial to another county. June 4—County public works board authorizes construction of a (2.13-milllQn pipeline to bring Detroit water into Bloomfield Township by next spring. i •* ’ • June 6 — Congressional re* districting of Oakland County passed by House and bill sent to Gov. Romney for his, signs* ture. . TO SPUR GROWTH Greater Pontiac Industrial De-yelbpment Corporation formed to attract new Industries and spur;expansion of area's existing industries. 'inae 10—Violent wind and rate, storm loaves county littered with foiled trees, power lines and other debris; three homes suffer minor damage by lightning, hundreds of cars abandoned In flooded irons. June 11 — Proposed Oakland County Community College Is defeated when voters turn down millage request; narrow margin in Waterford district approves 6 mills for local school building program and Increased teacher’s salaries. 1 W * ★ . June 13—Lake residents and county officials express concern of dropping water levels, while Drain Commissioner Daniel Barry looks for future relief by damming som%of surplus flow down Clinton River next spring. June 17—Production of 1963 Pontlaot and Tempests hits 500,- 000, the earliest date in any year that this mark has been reached. .. June 20—Michigan State University Board of Trustees grants Oakland University a record (2-million budget for next year, up (120,895 from current budget. June 22 — Waterford School Superintendent Dr. Donald O. Tatroe announces (6.25-million school building program to start in fall, including six new schools and additions to eight others. =' June 26 — The Pontiac Press breaks ground for a new wing to house, seven new. color presses by February. June 27 — Macomb County lawsuit threatens Clinton River improvement project in Pontiac by challenging a section of the Michigan Drain Code, with the result that bonding houses refuse to bid on financing projects while a legal cloud exists; HOTTEST DAY Pontiac records its hottest day, in seven years as mercury sizzles up to 96 degrees; six beat victims hospitalized in City. V ' June 28 — Gov. Romney announces his intention to appoint attorneys Phillip Pratt of .Pontiac and James S. Thorburn of Royal Oak as Oakland County’s two new Circuit Court judges effective Sept. 6. Pontiac school board adopts a record (10-milllon operating budget for 1903-64, better than a half-million more than current budget: officials credit larger enrollment and teacher salary hikes for cost climb. July 1 — The hottest July l on j record (99 degrees) causes one 6f Pontiac’s major water tanks to go dry. INJURES WORKERS July 11 — An explosion and fire in a Keego Harbor automobile dealership injuries two road construction workers who were removing gasoline from an underground storage tank. July 12 — Pontiac Motor .Division surpasses (he all-time high auto production year of 1915 with 554,091 cars to 1963. July 17 -r Despite protests from a near-capacity audience, the Pontiac City Commission STABBED - A young Kroger store mahager, Robert Greene, 32, was found March 17 with 42 stab wounds ’in a back room of the supermarket at Telegraph and Elisabeth Lake roads. approves two liquor ordinances, changing the hours for Sunday sales of beer And wine and to .allow dancing in taverns and bars with Class C licenses. ' BODY FOUND . July 18 — A body, later identified as that of Connie Cross-fond, 14, of Corunna is found lying face down in Paint Creek near the intersection of Clark-ston and Kern Roads in Orion ,,Township. July 19 — Oakland County sheriff’s officers sweep foe state for foe killer of Connie Crossland. July 25 — Four-hour mail) pickup and delivery is .inaugurated in flowntown Pontiac by the U.S. Post Office with special. ceremonies in front ot the main Pontiac post office. Aug. 1 — Pontiac’s Greater Industrial Development Corp. tops (108,600, enabling development of a 25-acre industrial park in Pontiac. OVER RECORD Aug. 2 — Pontiac Motor Division ends 1963 auto production With 590,071 cars—35,tel over the previous record high in 1055. Aug. 6 — The Pontiac City Commission suspends Manager Robert A. Stierer on six counts of incompetence, Insubordination and Irresponsibility in dealing with municipal affairs. Aug. 7 — City Manager Robert A. Stierer defends his action in not firing Police Chief Joseph Koren and denies charges made by the City Commission in suspending him. 1 . ★ 'it ■% / Aug. 8 — A (1.5 -million federal grant to finance a (3-million expansion program at Pontiac St. Joseph Mercy Hospital is approved by the U.S., Department of Health, Education and Welfare. DETROIT WATER Atlg. 9 — Pontiac changes over to Detroit water at the stroke of midnight. Aug. 13 — The Pontiac A,rea United Fund announces a record goal of $776,700 for 1963. " t ★ ' * j Aug. 14 — Adoise White and Charles E. Hodges arc found guilty in Kalamazoo of first-degree Murder mid second-degree murder, respectively, in the slaying of Robert A. Greene, Kroger store comanager. GRANTS REDUCTION Aug. 15 — The State Tax Commission grants General Motors Corp. a (27.9-million reduction in the assessed value of its personal and real property in Pon-'tiac. Aug. II - The Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce launches a petition drive to amend the City Charter so font city commissioners can be elected by a general vote of foe public, but still retain Individual district representation. Aug. 24—Adoise White is sentenced to fife In prison at hard labor and solitary confinement, while Charles E. Hodges gets life in prison for the slaying of a supermarket employe. ♦ W Sr Aug. 26—A 1963 city tax rate of (16.10 per (1,000 of assessed property (value Is proposed by the City Commission. OPENING SESSION Aug. 27 — Taxes and city finances dominate the opening session of a hearing Into charges of Incompetence, irresponsibility and Insubordination against suspended City Manager Robert A. Stierer, Aug. 20—E. M. Estes, general manager of Pontiac Motor1 Division, reveals plans for n 146,540-square-foot expansion program and a 213,-174-iquare-foot modernization project, Aug. 30 — Financing of thej Clinton River Drain holds the spotlight in testimony in the second session of a hearing Info oharges against suspended City Manager Robert A, Stierer. e it Aug. 31 — Alleged Inefficiency In the police department is discussed at the thif*d session In a hearing on the suspension of City Manager Robert A. Stierer. Sept. 5—Pontiac Police Chief Joseph Korea testifies for three hours at foe hearing on foe suspended city manager who refused to fire him. Sept. 7—Phillip Pratt and James’S, Thorburn are sworn to by Clerk-Register Daniel T. Mur* phy as the 6th and 7th Circuit Court judges to Oakland County. PETITIONS FILED ' Sept. 10—Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce officials file charter amendment petitions containing 11,543 signatures, 4,-000 above their goal. Sept. 13 —* The marathon hearing into ouster charges against suspended City Manager Robert A. Stierer ends with city officials and their election expenses getting the spotlight. ^ Sept., 14—A federal district court jury convicts Pontiac Teamster Local 614 .President Leaun Harrelson on two charges of embezzlement and two counts or making false entries in union records. |j ♦ "■+ Sept. 16—The Oakland Coitoty Board of Supervisors adopts a (16-million budget^(498,124 Higher than this year’s budget. MANAGER FIRED 'Sept. 18-The City Commission fires City Manager Robert A. Stierer by a vote of 5 to 2. Sept. 19—The City of Pontiac’s most graceful and distinctive beauty—foe Pontiac automobile—makes its debut. Oct. 2 — The City Commission approves a (4,477,184 tax levy to finance a total budget of $6,768,886 for 1913. Oct. 4 — A 15-year-old Orion Township youth, charged with shooting his father in foe chest with a 22-caliber rifle and then fleeing is apprehended by Pontiac police; SUSPENDS CHIEF Oct. 11 — In a sudden move Asst. City Manager John F. Relneck temporarily suspends Police Chief Joseph Koren and appoints Lt. William K. Itenger, acting chief. * f LAUNCHES PROGRAM Oct. 29 — The Downtown Pontiac Businessv Association development program aimU at converting the Central business district into a vast shopping mall Withift five years. Oct. If — Huron Is agate a ’’through” street as barricades, that detoured traffic since Sept. 19 to allow perimeter rend construction, came down. Nov. 5 — Pontiac is stunned by the first disclosure that the Baldwin Rubber Division plant would be shut down, affecting the jobs of some 700 employes. VOTES NO Nov. 8 — Vote tallies in yesterday’s Waterford Township election shown city incorporation buried under 7,691 no votes, against only 2,124 in favor. Nov. 7 — A 16-year-old Walled Lake youth, Charles R. Morris, is apprehended in the fatal shooting of a construction worker hear his home yesterday. Nov. 8 — Pontiac Area United Fund campaigners , jubilantly report $822,581 raised in the annual fund drive, well over the ’(778,700 goal. Nov. 13 — Robert A. Carter, 47-year-old former Flint city manager, was hired by the City Commission last night to fill the' post of former Pontiac City Manager Robert A. Stierer. it * it Nov. 16 — Sen. Edward (Ted) Kennedy as the guest speaker for the Oakland County Democratic Congesslonal Dinner test night blasted Senator , Barry Goldwatet and praised Democratic^ programs. YOUTHfHELD Nov. 19 — Ernest Hansen, 15-year • old Highland Township youth, is held in the stabbing and abductibn of a 71-year-old widow. Nov. 22 — News ef President Kennedy's assassination stuns area residents, from foi man-la-foe-street to community leaders. A period of national mourning begins, Nov. 25 - All schofl)ls shut, and stores and factories close for a'three-hour period during President Kennedy's funeral. Rifle volleys foroughput the day are part of city services at tile Civil War Monument. Nov. 27 - GMC Truck It Coach Division announces creation of 725 new jobs with the establishment of assembly operations to produce a light Van* type truck. SALES INCREASE Nov. 30 — Cash register sales FIRED — Robert A'. Stierer was suspended Aug. 6 from his post as Pontiac city manager and fired by a 5 to 2 vote of the City Commission1 after a series of dramatic hearings. NEW MANAGER - Robert A, Carter, 47-year-ofo former Flint city manager, was hired Nov. 18 by foe City Commission to •< succeed Robert A. Stierer as Pontiac city manager. in area stores ore up to 80 per cent better than a year ago as shoppers were out In record numbers for the first post-Thanksgiving weekend. Dec. 2 — City Manager Robert A. Carter submits a proposed budget of (6,948,234 for 1964, (179,348 over foe current budget, for City Commission adoption by Feb. 1. Dec. 3 —■ Part of the five-lane perimeter road opens without fanfare on the section between Mount Clemens to Huron. * h Dec. 6 — City Manager Robert A. Carter is subpoenaed to appear before a Flint grand jury investigating possible fraud in land deals and the crime situation in Genesee County. Dec. 11 — C11 y Manager Robert A. Carter names aclr lag police chief Wjlltam K. Hanger a police Inspector, and gives suspended chief Joseph Koren foe rank of assistant j servings. ' To decorate punch' bowl with I frosted grapes: dip small bundles of grapes in egg white diluted with water, then in sugar. Allow to dry. 8 slices bacon, diced Vi cup chopped green onions 4 eggs, beaten K 1 teaspoon onion salt “Deviled Doubles” 14%-ounce.can deviled ham ^spread, room temperature;. 1 8-ounce: package cream, cheese.room tejSiperaturp 2 tablespoons catsup , * ( 2 tablespoons prepared mustard 2 dashes Tabasco Sauce 24 double saltine crackers Pimiento , Stuffed olives Pitted ripe blives Pidde chips Blend' ham, cheese, catsup, mustard jand Tabasco sauce well. Spread on double crackers. Garnish tops with pimiento cutouts, sliced o%es and pickle Perhaps you are tired of dips and chips and the ordinary party snacks. Then the following recipes are for you. Cheese pastry with cranberry filling and little tarts with n bacon-cheese filling will be a welcome change. If you don’t have a bell cookie cutter, use s round jjije. Cranberry Pastry Belli 2 dips sifted enriched flour* / - 1 teaspoon salt ’ % cup shortening % cup grated Romano cheese 5 to 7 tablespoons raid water trmge relish 1 cup crapberry-oi (10-ounce package, frozen) Sift together flour and salt. Cut or rub In shortening until mixture is crumbly. Blend In fheese. Sprinkle 'with water, mixing lightly until dough begins to stick together. Turn out on lightly floured board or pastry doth and press dough together. Roll out to 18-inch square, about 1/,18-lnch thick/ Spread half of dough with cranberry-orange relish. Fold plain half over cranberry half, and press together' gently. Cut with floured l%x2 - inch bell-shaped cutter. Place mi ungreased baking sheet. 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Itopsy. , Hodges Sees Record'64 'Economy to Expand;/ Prices to Be Stable' WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. economy probably will expand 5 per cent to another record in 1964 and, prices will remain faiTly stable,, says Secretary of .Commerce Luther H. Hodges. In his annual review and outlook on the state of the nation’s■ economy, Hodges said that per-! sonal income has bounded upward $300 per person in three years, and may rise 6100 more j in 1964. Personal income now averages $2,500 a year for every man, woman and child. The category includes wages, salaries, rents, dividends, farm and small, business profits, and other forms of individual income, Hie total .of such payments was estimated at 6463 billion for 1963, an increase of $21 billicii over the previous year. NATIONAL PRODUCT The gross national product (GNP)—the total of all goods and services, both private and public^was $584 billion for 1963, ancf by the end of the year was running at a rate of about 6600 billion. “If toe tax cut is enacted soon the GNP for 1964 could easily exceed 6620 billion,” Hodges said in his.statement Sunday. This would represent att increase of 5 per cent after allowing for a slight increase in prices. ★ ★ Aijgj If Congress does not enact a tax cut, Hodges said, “prospects tor continuous expansion through all of 1964 and into 1965 would be seriously imjpaired.” He said economic activity “was. still rising at yearend, business investment Was an expansionary force, plant and equipment expenditures were scheduled to advance moderately In the first half of 1964. With profits rising throughout toe year (1963), investor confidence as reflected in financial markets appeared strong.” UNEMPLOYMENT Hodges tempered his forecast by noting the continuing high rate of unemployment, unused plant capacity and the persistent flow of dollars to foreign countries. The dollar outflow— the deficit in the U.S. balance of international payments—was $2.6 billion for the first nine months of the year even though it declined sharply at midyear. former House Speaker Joe Martin of Massachusetts is recovering from a “touch of virus” that sent him to the hospital by am* bulance. , Dr. George W. Calyer said that Martin, 79, had, lost his fever and was doing so well that "I wouldn’t be surprised to see him on the floor of the House” for today’s token session of ~ Dr. Calver said Martin went to the hospital Sunday as a precautionary measure — the congressman Jives alone in a* hotel room. With or without prescription In a wide choice of framo stylus and colors. 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The winning Bears will get 60 per cent of (he remainder and the Giants will get 40 per cent. Wings Win in Juggling Act PNH Swim Vanity Dunks Alumni Team Get away from the rigors high school competitive fitness, and the athlete tends to get alumni-itis. Pontiac Northern alumni got. together in the PNH pool over the weekend but lost an 85-64 swim meet to the Huakle varsity. The PNH sophomores also In the meet scored 57. 4r ★ |W Rick Gould, Fred Kern and Ernie Humphreys of last year'6 squad, now all attending U. of M„ along with Lou Cascaddan and Dave Mayer were among, the returnees competing. PNH gets the new year started In a road meet at Livonia Franklin, Jan, 9. Sawchuk's Turn in Triumph By JERE CRAIG DETROIT The success of coach Sid Abel’s goalie juggling kept the Detroit Red Wings moving ahead last, night with a 2-1 triumph over the Bos t'o n Bruins. . Less than five minutes mained in the National Hockey League game when center Eddie Joyal skated untouched up the ice and slapped the winning goal past Ed Johnston in the Bruins' net. Joyal blasted the puck from just inside the blue line and the shot overpowered the net-minder. It marked the eighth time in 10 games the Wings have won points (win or tie) Since Abel started using Roger Crosier and TJerry Sawchuk on an alternate basis. \ The coach had the veteran Sawchuk in goal Sunday following his great .effort in, the 1-1 tie Saturday night at Montreal. For the Bruins It was their fifth straight loss. EYES MARK Sawchuk lost his bid for a' record 95th career shutout In the final three minutes Saturday, and was unscored upon last night until 40 seconds remained in the second period. While Sawchuk was just'too good for the Canadians the preceding night, he had Lady Luck on his side Sunday before 11,180 at Olympia Stadium. The Boston visitors hit the goal post several times on shots that appeared to have him beaten. Leo Botvin skated In on Sawchuk unmolested in the first period. The netmlnder came up with his best play, however, by smothering the puck before Belvin could shoot. The Bruin captain gained his revenge, though, by defleotlng a Murray Oliver pass over Saw-chuk’s skate for the equaliser in the second period. Tom Williams also assisted on the power play goal. "Gordie Howe's 660th career NHL goal (48 In playoffs) had put the Red Wings In front at 18(61 of the opening jies-■Ion. Parker MacDonald led Howe with a pass through two Bruin defenders and the big right, winger guided It into the net while off balance. Prior to the game, Sport Mag-(Contlnued on Page 81, Cel. 7) AFL Title Game Next for Patriots BUFFALO,. N Y. (AP)-The Boston Patriots, convincing an icy-field or in a well-heated conference room, have wrapped up the American Football League’s Eastern Division title and the question of Ron Burton’s status for the championship game at San Diego next'Sunday. * ★ ★ The Patriots’ ability to contend with the slippery conditions on the snow-covered turf of War Memorial Stadium were one of the major factors in their 26-8 victory over the Buffalo Bills Saturday for the Eastern title in the first playoff in the history of the AFL. And the Patriots’ ability to contend with the legalistic lap- Classic Lead Goes to Indiana Entrant CHICAGO (AP) - Rartsom Freeman of Gary, IndM took over fourth place in the Petersen Bowling Classic Sunday night with an eight-game score of 1,574. Glen Wagner of Peoria, 111;, holds first place in the $430,000 tournament which started Dec. M and continues to duly 12. Wagner rolled 1,593 Inf his eight games Saturday night. First prise is $30,100. 'Jerry Saino of Milwaukee Is In second place with 1,583 and Douglas Burris, Aurora, 111., is third with 1,578. Freeman replaced Frank K'odik of Austin, Miss.; who had posted 1,545. guage in the league’s constitution and by-laws may be one of the major factors in their showdown struggle with the Western Division ' champion. San Diego Chargers for the AFL championship. STAR CAN PLAY The Pats’ dissected, the AFL’s laws for the secoijd time irt a week Sunday — and again received the news .they anticipated; Burton can play. Commissioner Jqe Foss overruled a Buffalo protest on the reactivation of Burton for the playoff game, and Sunday night Assistant Commissioner Milt Woodard said, “There may have been some question about Burton’s status for the playoff, but our rules definitely clear him for the championship.” For a player who participated in only 11 plays, Burton created quite a controversy before the Patriots-BiHs playoff. He also created quite a stir with those 11 plays', gaining kPy yardage and proving an effective decoy at othdr time's. Burton had been sidelined since last August because of a* slipped disc that required surgery. When Boston moved to reactivate him, Buffalo President Ralph Wilson protested that the move was in violation of the AFL, constitution. Foss said it wasn’t. Foss won. So did Boston, with Babe Parilli connecting with Larry Garron for touchdown passes of 59 and 17 yards and Gino Cap-pelletti kicking four field goals, and both extra points. Buffalo’s only touchdown came on a 93-yard pass play from Daryle Lamonica to Elbert Dubenion late in the third quarter. Garrdn, meanwhile, grabbed individual honors in rushing and pass receiving. He gained 44 yards in 19 carries—by contrast Buffalo’s highly regarded Cookie Gilchrist managed only seven yards in eight carries on the icy field—and grabbed four passes for 120 yards and the two TDs. Bears’ title victory over Washington in 1940. Spry and cagey, Halas sidestepped questions hurled at him about the possibility of' his retiring from the league he* helped originate more than 40' years ago. Pro bowl As coach of the Western Division champions, Halas will lead his division against an all-star Eastern Division team in the Pro Bowl in Los Angeles next month. “We have to think about the Pro Bowl game now,” said Halas in another attempt to get him to state whether or not he would retire. “There la not much danger of my retiring at the present. Let it go at that/' What Halas meant about the present was anybody’s guess. Today, tomorrow, next week or never. Morris, who rambled 61 yards with an interception staging the Bears’ first touchdown, was by far the* club’s .most valuable player. Not only for hla interception but for his harassing charges at Tittle and hla deadly tackling of Giant runners. * * * I was trying to go all the way with that interception,” said Morris. “I’m no halfback but I was afraid of being hit.” O’Bradovich, one of the Bear young bipods, was beside himself. “Wasn't it a great catch. I grabbed it with .one hand. All I wanted to do was go, g6, go. Reminded me of the passes I used to catch when I was at Illinois.” The Giants refused to alibi for their third title loss in as many years despite an obvious injury to Tittle. Tittle \yas hit from the side in the second quarter and had to leave the game. He came back and played the entire second half on a wobbly left knee. PRAISE FOR Y. X. Allie Sherman, the youthful Giant coach who has guided his team to three Eastern Division titles, had nothing but praise for his 38-year-old quarterback. “All this talk about not being able to win the big ones is a lot pf bunk,” said Sherman. “Tittle has played In more big ones in the last few years than anybody around and he has won more than his share. Most men would not have gone out there in the second half but he did. “The Bears played a good game, they deserved to win, said German. Pass Thefts Bring Chicago 14-10 Victory Windy City Eleven Steals Five Passes “ in Harassing Tittle Sunshine Play Set MIAMI BEACH, Fla,' (AP)-Tennis players from 30 nations begin play tqday in the annual Sunshine Cup team matches with South Africa's pair of Robert Maud and Graydon Garner seeded first. LA Hits Season Peak in Thumping Detroit 5 By The Associated Press The Los Angeles Lakers have prodeed their highest score of the season and boosted their* lead to 2% games in the Western Division of the National Basketball Association. Jerry West scored 39 points, Elgin Baylor scored 32 and the Lakers scored 140 to 128 over Detroit Sunday night and lengthened their lead over second-place St. Louis. it it if In the only other game, Cincinnati held oh for a 105-99 vie- CLOSING THE DOOR - Goalie Terry Sawchuk of the Detroit Red Wlngi drops to the Ice and kicks out • shot by Boston'! Leo Bakin (10) ae Jerry Toppauini (right) of the Bruins la kept from the rebound by Marcel' Pronovoit. Gordie Howe of the Wings, who scored hla 600th career goal !i behind Botvin. The Red Wlngi w8fflk2-l. tory over New York after almost losing a 23-point lead. In Saturday action, Eastern Division leading Boston defeated St. Louis 107-100, Philadelphia whipped Loa Angeles 114-100 and San Francisco edged Baltimore 108-104. The Platons moved to within two points of the Lakers three times In the third quarter, before West, Baylor and Rudy La-Russo started a surge that gave Los Angeles a commanding 109-99 lead at the end of three quarters. Bailey Howell was Detroit’s high scorer with 25 points. BIG LEAD The Royals built a 23-point lead and then setft In the subs. The Knicks battled back and with, 16 seconds left had closed to 103-99, on John Rudometkln’s basket. But two foul shots by Larry Staverman clinched. It for Cincinnati. Oscar Robertson led the Royals with 29 points, including 18 consecutive free throws, Johnny Green was high for Now York with 17. CHICAGO (AP) - The cheer-evoking bandits of the Chicago Bears have made their biggest haul. They made the main contribution in tbe Chicago Bears 14-10 victory over the New York 61-ants Sunday for the National Football League championship. ★ 46 ' ' * ’ It was the Bears eighth, but the first for Papa Bear George Halas since 1946, when the Giants again were beaten. In a daring, daylight caper before 45,801 fans in the deep freeze of Wrigley Field, and many others watching television, the Bears’ Jesse James boys robbed big money man Y. A. Tittle blind.' Five times they stole passes from jihis bald, 38-year-old phe-nom, who crippled a knee kt the second quarter but courageously returned after halftime treatment to play tbe rest of the game. ■, TURNED TIDE Two of the interceptions set up Bear touchdowns, in the first and third periods. Two others were filched in the end zone as Tittle, the NFL’s top passer this season, desperately tried to hurl long scoring bombs in the fading minutes of a tense last quarter. Putting Hie final clamp on the Giants hopes Were the deep interceptions by Bennie McRae as Tittle opened a siege from the Giant 36 and by Rich Petitbon as the master quarterback unleashed a shot from the Bears' 37. ft. ★ Wi: 1 But the best frisking Tittle and the Giants got was by right linebacker Larry Morris, a 230-pounder, and mountainous right end Ed O’Bradovich. Morris, voted the game's moat valuable player, helsted a Tittle flip In the first period and galloped 61 yards before run- , ning out of gas on the Giant five. ’ With eight seconds left before the first quarter ended, BUI Wade went over from the two on a quarterback sfteak. ft ■ ft jj ft Bob JenCks added the extra* point and the gamp was tied 7-7. The Giants had scored the first time they got the ball. Walde, who played the entire game, was shaken from the ball when Dick Lynch and Sam Huff hit him. Erich Barnes recovered it for the Giants on the Bear 41. In seven plays, New York scored on a 14-yard pitch from Tittle to Frank Gifford. Don Chandler converted.. Early in the second period, Tittle’s arm zeroed In on another goalward thrust. The Giants moved 59 yards as the Bald Eagle brought up the blood pressure of 68-year-old Halas with a 36-yard aerial to Aaron Thomas. But the Bears’ defense, the best in the league matched against the No. 1 offense in thla , showdown, held. ft • it ft Chandler eventually booted a 13-yard field goal and the Giants clung to a 10-7, edge. With eight minutes remaining, Tittle slipped going back to pass and was hit by the charging Morris, He limped from the field and Glynn Grifflhg replaced him. > The Gianta, quelled Wade's passing attack and held the 10-7 lead at halftime. ★ * ★ Tittle returned at the start of the second half. The Gianta * seemed to be on the move again, as Hugh McElhenney ran back the kickoff 47 yardl. DRIVE STOPPED But Davey Whitiell picked off -(Continued on Page 23, Col, 9) ★ * ★ CHICAGO (AP) $tntl>tlc« Of r«jlno Iinfw r«»i Intoroplod by fumbloi loot Yordi poMllMd Now York OOO O M UMt TO a* fta&gc WM 1® icon fejnttpff Sfesa XmOSM) MM. ' TWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY; DECEMBER 30,1968 County Enjoyed Good Sports Aug. 17—Largest turnout of 103 golfers competes in qualifying for' Pontiac city medal tournament. Tom Bullet and Steve Condon fire 70’s as medalists. Aug. 20-Huron-Airway wins qlass A city baseball cham-pionship with 7-3 Win over Local 904. Aug. 20—State class F baseball crown won. by city entry, Auburn Heights Boys Club. Aug. 20—Bob Theifels takes Michigan State Sheet Hunting championship overall honors. Aug. 25—Lou Mitzelfeld is new Pontiac dty medal champ with 142 total at Municipal . Rex Cawley picked for U.S; team in meet with Russia in July. - June 23—Paul Bada and Bob Hausman regain City best ball title 63 at city course. June 23—Dave Keaggy, Jr., IS, named on AJ.S. archery team in world meet at .Helsinki in July. . ? June 25—Hayes Jones sera Werner wins 4th women’s state amateur title at West-1 dm GC, defeating Patti Shook, 2-1. July 14—Cal Cooke and Ray Palmer win Forest Lake Invitational defeating Bob Babbish and Al Connors, M AUGUST Mr?.. Sally Sharp Aug. 1-Scott Harrity of Pon- tiac wins National Juvenile “C” .boy• 'tpeed roller fkate championship at Poland, Ore. Aug. 2—Dave Keaggy, Jr., wins National Archery, championship in men’s di-vision at Los Angeles. Aug. 4—Lions’ Offense defeats defense 24-18 before 7.261) at Wisner Stadium intra-squad scrimmage. Canadian high hurdles record i$ l&7 at Toronto. June 30—Robert Egans rides Mr. Deliberate to Detroit HorseShow title. ’v i | JULY , July 10—Death claims local bowler Bob Kuklinski while vacationing in Glen Falis, 'lO™ Si July 12 Aug. 4 — Pontiac Roliadium takes National Roller Skat-, tag title at Portland, Ore. Aug. 6-Arnold Palmer and Aug. 12-Hayes Jones runs hurdles in 13.9 in meet with Norway. .. , SEPTEMBER Sept. 2—Rob Power takes boys < division in ski tournament at Piqua Ohio. Sept. 3-Frank Dennis wins Press fish derby contest in bluegill division while Otto MiUdebrandt is rata-bow whiner, Carl Bets pike winner and Bill McKinney bass winner. Sept. 3—Bartley brother s Lloyd and Floyd win county horseshoe title. Sept. 3—Pontiac city recreation team wins state MRA title at Grand Rapids. Mitzelfeld, Bade, Daniels, Hammitt and Balance on ‘'.v.jjX ./lO>11 £2 15f5 County Sports Stars of '63 JANUARY Jan. 4—Birmingham Groves eager Russ Bitzer scorn 50 points in 74-65 win over Oak Park. Jan. 9—Earl Hill of Detroit takes ski jumping honors at Grampian.' Jaa. 21 — Shirley Pointer, first Pontiac woman to hit 706 series in city his-" • tory. She rolls 702 at Huron Bowl. Jan,. 20—Pekingese dog, Ch Kentucky Colonel, wins Pontiac Kennel Dog Show. Jan. 27—Rx-PCH eager Rudy Ransom hits 29 as Ferris defeats Soo Tech and prepares for Michigan small college game of year against Michigan Tech. FEBRUARY ' Feb. 5 —Frenchman Adrian Duviliard wins .first pro ski meet at Pine Knob before 4,000 fans. Feb. 17—Hayes Jones wins 41st straight indoor hur-dules victory at Louisville Mason-Dixon games. Feb. 17—Bloomfield Hills high ski team wins Southeast Michigan meet 'at Mt. Holly. BIARCH i, Mar. 3 — Jones wins 43rd straight Indoor hurdles victory in Cleveland. Mar. 4—Capac No. 1- team in final Class C AP cage poll. Mar: 8 — Hayes Jones wins 44th straight in Chicago Relays in 7.2 for 60 yard highs. t Mar. 10—PCH wrestler Pete Beevers wins 133-pound state high school wrestling championship at Ann Arbor. Mar. 10—PNH defeats PCH cagers for dilstrict A title, . 38-42,i to move into regional play.1' Mar. 15—PNH advances to state quarter-finals .With 48-47 win ov er Livonia. Bentley. Mar. 17—Birmingham Sea-holm rolls up 98 points by scoring in ail 11 events to win the state swimming title at East Lansing. Mar. jNu.PNH whipped by Detroit Northwestern, 67-49 in state quarter-finals at U. el D. Mar. 22—Dick Hall, f»NH coach, voted basketball < coach-of-the-year in Oakland County; Mar. 23—Ferndale wins state Class A basketball title defeating Adrian, 76-58. Mar. 23—June Paddy wins Pontiac WBA title with 715 total. APRIL , Apr. 3—Monroe Moore and George Chlcovsky of Pontiac take third place in ABC classic doubles with 1,340. Apr. 23—Waterford names Robert Taylor as head Apr. 26—Bloomfield Hills’ golf streak of 41 straight 111 Wayne-Oakland League ends as Milford wins, 161-164. MAT May 2—Fqrmer PCH trackman Ivan LaCore set Central Michigan U. hurdles record In 14.3 for hlgha. May 6 — Announcement is made that Oakland Hills will be site of World Open golf tournament In August of 1964. May 14 - Appointment of Robert Dlngman as new head football coach at PNH is made by board of 1. Shirley Pointer, first Pontiac woman to hit 700 bowl-• ing series. 2. Hayes Jones sweeps a|l indoor hurdles meets. 3. Dick Hall of PNH named County-Cage-Coach-of-the- (Vi ' | W w-flK. - 4. Bob Taylor named' head cage coach at Waterford. 5. Ivan LaCore sets hurdles mark at Central Michigan U. 6. Mike Samardzija wins Actual^ championship of Bow- lerama. , ?, ' V. 7. Tony Ledesema, Bowiefama handicap champion. * 8. Lou Mitzelfeld, Pontiac city medal golf champion. 9. Ron Ranieri Oustanding Football player in county. 10. Art yen Ryzin resigns as head PCH cage coach. 11. Al Fracassa, county Football Coadi-of-the-Year. 12. Bob Lambert witih six state riding hornors. 13. Mrs. dSally Sharp Werner women’s state amateur champ. 14. Dave Keaggy, Jr., national archery champion. 15. Monroe Moore top local pro on PBA tour. 16. Rudy Ransom, ex-PCH eager shines at Ferris. 17. Rob Powers, state and regional water, ski champ. 13. Pete Beevers, 133 pound state wrestling champ. 19. Dick Scrlpter, county men’s tennis champion. A? 20. Bob Dlngman ifofr ^NH coach. 21. Robert Egan, horse show riding champ at Bloomfield Open Hunt. 22. June Paddy, Pontiac Women’s Bowling Assoication May 23—Art Van Ryzin steps down after 17 years as head basketball coach at Pontiac Central. Fred Zlt-tei named successor. May 27 — Walled Lake wins Press Prep Golf Tourney at Pontiac CC with team total of 407. Mark Eason of Oak Park, medalist with 75, JUNE June I—Royal Oak Kimball wine Oakland County Invitational baseball title defeating PNH, 4-0. Y June 7—PCH, Waterford retain All-Sports trophies in total points race with PNH and Kettering. Lou Conroy win Pine Lake Invitational with 4 and I trlnmph over Karl Gierok and Al Connors. June 23—Hays! Jonee and By HARRY GALLATIN St. Louis Hawks Coach A dribble exchange between the guards XI and X2 is /extremely effective for the St. Louis Hawks under half court pressure. Forwards X4 and X3 and center X5 are in position at the foul line to clear the area under the basket. X4 starts the play by dribbling inside and handing off to X2, who exchange!* position with XI X2 takes one or two dribbles toward X4 and passes to him. The* pass from X2 to X4 should coincide with a screen set by X3 on XI, the defensive Man. XI outside rolls around the screen set by X3 and looks for a pass fitom X4 under the basket. This Is the first option. ★ ★ ★ Due to a loosening up of X3 for the cut by XI, X5 cuts directly at him to seal or screen him for the second scoring opportunity. GALLATIN X3 cuts by the screen set by X5 for a shot it the foul line or all the way, to the basket, according to the defensive adjusting! ★ ♦ Sr X8 con roll to thd basket after the ecreen on XS's defensive man, if the defensive adjustment allows. In the last option, X4 must pass to XI underneath if open or to X3 as second alternative or X5 on a lob as the last option. • ★ ★ * A tight man-to-man defense is especially susceptible to this play. Speed and proper sealing or screening on defensive men and rollouts after screens make this play difficult to stop. It possibilities are made limitless by exchanging guards and forwards, by hitting X5 or direct pass and running the play with the forwards outside at the guards’ positions. Texan Stands Tall in Tennis Tourney NEW ORLEANS (AP)-It was like any other Sunday for Ham Richardson and Cliff Richey with one minor exception, i They weren’t practicing tennis, they were competing for the .Sugar Bowl Invitational singles crown. As usual, the 31-year-oid Richardson—one of the notion's top stars a few years back—came out on top. Rioharason, neatly twice old as the tMnaged Richey, V8-6, 5-7, 36, 6-4, took the titled 6-1. Both live In Balias, Tax. :lnnaf I j, ■dRlphlt i.rW YRrfc ; ], ^ waiTMM | Lo« Ana* it UuTi .... (•n Franclieo . ••Itlmor* ....... Dwelt _____ 1 Tu SATURDAY'! RRIULTi (oiton 10/, It. I odI* 100 rmlMriiinM li4. Lot AnotlM ii ten print(ico 104, Baltimor# 10 lUffOAV'l ARIULTt Clnrlnn*tl 10S. Now Yor» Of ion tlKO if Now York ll Lit Ansilii 4 Bowls on Tap Wednesday Texas-Navy Set Tilt By The Associated Press With Texas and Navy ready to battle for college football’s unofficial championship, the bustling bowl season reaches its peak this week as fans get the chance to put aside their annual hangovers temporarily In favor of the big four post-season clashes. ... * ★ * The Cotton Bowl has by far the biggest and moat interesting attraction for New Year’s Day, but it still must share the spotlight with the Rose, Orange and Sugar contests. Four other bowls help conclude the college season this week. Another quartet of games had their fling last Saturday. North Carolina walloped Air Force 35-0 In the Gator Bowl, the East and the West fought to a 66 tie, the Gray took the Blue 21-14 and Western Kentucky had an easy time with Otto Graham's Coast Guard in the Tangerine Bowl, winning 276. COTTON BOWL < ■* Roger Staubach andlhlisec- Pros Priming for,LA Open LOS ANGELES (AP)—Qualifying' bwgan today for the 553,* 000 Loi Angeles Open Golf Tour-nement with 104 proa seeking the 35 positions, / , , There ere1189 amafouri after nine pjaces In the tourney that opens Thursday at Rahcho Park, U.S. Open champion Julius Boros was due to shoot his first practice jround at Rancho toft The 38th annual event will draw 44 of the nation's/top 66 money ond-ranked Middle mates Invade the lair of the Texas Longhorns, the country’s Nor 1 team in the regular season, for the Cottar! Bowl at Dallas. Unbeaten Texas will have to fend off the East’? best to remain first In the minds of the nation's faW Illinois faces a relatively weak West Coast representative, Washington, in the Rose Bowl. Big Eight champion Nebraska meets Auburn in the Grange and Mississippi battles Alabama in a neighborhood get together in the Sugar Bowl. In a prelude to the big day, Southern Methodist, lorie conqueror of Navy, plays Oregon in the Sun Bowl on Tuesday. Finally, three all-star* contests—the Senior, the Hula and the South- East-West Plans Varied SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Should coaches in an all-star football game juggle their quarterbacks? ' Jim Sutherland, head coach of tha Wait team in Saturday's Shrliie game, didn't. East mentor Jack Mollenkopf from Purdue did. Neither one turned out to be right. The significant juggling of tha quarterbacks was/roughly and sffictently, handled by two outstanding defensive teams who ruined predictions of an aerial circus and dominated the 6-6 tie game. w ★ ★ Don Trull of Baybri holder of three national collegiate passing records, played nearly the entire game for the Wait despite four Interceptioni, a flock of other bad throws and baing dumped five times by the charging East line. Ron DiGrav|e from Purdue and Penn State’s Pete Llske •hared the East quarterbacking and completed only one-third of their peases end hid five intercepted. Trull did manage to hit Player of the Game WIHIe Brown of arn California on a third-25-yard touchdown play after an East fumble, And Uike directed i 98-yard fourth-quarter scoring drive after aurviving a safety claim by tha Weat. Kaycee Owner Refuses Offer to Stay Put KANSAS CITY (AP)-Charles O. Finley, the Kansas City Athletics owner, has rejected a city offer for rent-free use of office •pace at Municipal Stadium until Jan, 10. Ha regards tha offer, he told the Kansas City Star Sunday, aa an ultimatum. Finlay and tha City fathers cannot egret on a new lease of tha atadTum baseball field and offices next season. Tha old lease expires Dec. ii. : : a, ★ * Mayor Ilus W. Davis and City Menaler CarletCn Sharpe had assured Finley his team’s offices end equipment could stay at the stadium until Jan. 10 without being bound by a new contract. Finley, who lives In Chicago, refused, accusing the city of treating'hlm unfairly. west Challenge bowls—round out the schedule Saturday. North Carolina supplied the biggest surprise last Saturday while the Shrine game in San Francisco provided a picture of utter frustration. * * Sr ★ .The Tar Heels, considered just a slight favorite, easily trampled Air Force at Jacksonville, Fla. Powerful halfback Ken Willard and quarterbacks Junior Edge and Gary Black sparked the North Carolina offense while the defense stymied Falcon quarterback Tarry Isaacson. At Montgomety, Ala., Georgia quarterback Larry Rakestraw poured it on the Blue with touchdown tosses of 44 and 10 yards to Mellon Fairdoth of Tennessee, fyi all Rakestraw hit on 14 of 22 aerial* for 177 yards. '4, * *! 'll, And Western Kentucky, an undefeated team Itself, spoiled Coast Guard’s perfect season at Orlando, Fla. Sharon MUler completed only two of six pisses, but both' went for touch- Strike Throat Averted at Santa Anita Track ARCADIA, Calif. (API-Tentative agreement on'a three-year labor oontrapt apparently has ended the strike threat it Santa Anita race track. Hie Federation of California Racing Associations and tha Building Service Employes Union reached agreement Saturday. ■ ★ f| j » Part-mutual marks, guards and usher* had threatened to daisy tha Deo, M opening In a dispute over wage* and automation. Oct. 20—Peg Carter and Mike' Samardzija Jr. qualify for All-Star Bowling Nationals in Dallas. NOVEMBER Nov. 7—Oakland Hills officials reveal $200,000 prize fond for World Open,. largest tourney prize list. Nov. 7—Pontiac roller skaters Cecelia Darimont and Gerry McNieve place second in free dance division of World Oiampionships at Las Vegas. Nov. 15-Bill Kirkland turns in 300 game at 300 Bowl, the first perfect game of the season. Nov. 15—PNH Whitewashes PCH, 21-0, for its first gridiron victory over the Chiefs. 1 Nov. 17—Monroe Moore and Mike Samardzija Jr., finish 15th and 17th, respectively, in tha PBA Nationalist Garden City, N. J. Nov. 10—Ralph Wingate of Emmanuel Christian Ik named to a backfield position on'the AP Class D * All-State football team. Nov. 20—Dwight Lee of New Haven holds down a halfback slot on the Michigan Class C All-State gridiron * team. Nov. 21—Ron Ranieri of Royal Oak Shrine gets the nod at center on the Michigan All-State Class B football squad. Nov. 22—On the Class ’A’ All-State gridiron second team are John Thomas of Walled Lake, Bruce Rod-, wan of Ferndale, Don Baler of Royal Oak Kimball, Al Harpan of Fitzgerald and Brodle Burton of Clawson. Nov. 23—Coach Al Francassa of RO Shrine la Oakland’s football ’Coach of the Year.’ Nov. 28—Ron Ranieri tops balloting as county's top prop grldder. Nov. 28—Hayes Jones is' named candidate for the James E.' Sullivan Award. Dec. 4—Donald Popour’s 215-pound buck earns top prlza (6180) In Pontiac Press dear contest. Dec, 5—Jim Ray of .Holly ( moves from Orioles to Colt .4St farm system In baseball draft. Dec. 8—Tony Ledesma wins Press Bowlerama with pin total of 600. Samardslja Actuals champ. Dec. 15—MonroeMoore grabs 11th spot in PBA’i 125,000 Jacksonville Open, Dec. 20-Joe j Foster rolla a 300 game sjl Huron Bowl. Dec. 23-Robert M, Lambert Jr., Bloomfield Open Hunt 1 Club, receives six state riding honors for his ’38 performances. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1963 TWENTY College Cage Standings •fowl CONFERENCE . BgpWllIM All Qarna. ;Er».'pis. OP Alehlgan 0 0 .000 e 1 .889 768 MS Minnesota 0 0 .000 7 2 .778 666 576 Alell; Stats 0.0 .000 6 .3 .667, 841 770 lllnob 0 0 .000 5 S .625 648 U owa 0 0 .000 4 3 J7I St HllO Stitt if 91 4 .556 653 0 4 .556 IN rid tana 0 0 .000 4 4 .500 661 I. Western 0 0 .000 I 5 .286 516 ■uadua 7 0 0 .000 2 5 JM 504 BIO SIX CONFERENCE Contsrsnes - ‘. All Oamsa w l jFct. or Ljpct. pts. ICLA ! OO .000 8 0 MOO 820 — uSMmm n 0 .000 6 0 1.000 41* 337 '.444 632 632 :! .000 3 4.43» 441 433 0 .000 2 7 .312 547 617 MtUTHMN CONFERENCE Canfsrsnoa ■ AOOMM WL Pet. WLPet. Pt*. OP /Idson 1 0 1.000 7 01.000 662 488 glnla T. 1 O 1.000 4 1 .800 383 340 Virginia 41 .800 6 5.545 7*8 401 II 3 1 .750 .3 '4 .420 450 486 & Mary 2 1 .667 5 3 .625 , m Oj[M|I_Li (M * 7 .300 733 810 .250 541 607 Southern < CalpiM 1 3 .250 i 03 j 3.667 576 i WL Pci. W L Pet. Pla. OP I 00 .000 8 2 .800 726 607 00 .000 7 3 .700 7*7 704 0 O .000 5 3 .625 618 *f* 0 0 .000 5 5 i» 617 631 WESt COAST ATHLETIC CONFERENCE 3 .700 5*8 554 4 .600 770 681 4 .556 >708 . 720 Sun Tilt May Be Cold Bowl Tfamt Slow Tonoup as Morcury Dips EL PASO, Tex. (AP)-Oreg Tulane’s Bill Shapiro ran away from a crack field in the 400-meter. He bolted to the lead on the last turn and hold off former schoolboy wonder > Ted Nelson of Texas A&M. Shapiro, 20, a junior.from Spartansburg, S.C., breezed home to 47.0. HURDLES UPSET Still another upset came* when Roger Morgan of Northeast Louisiana, a Naval Academy transfer, showed his heels to Southeastern Conference chgmp Charlie Moseley of Alabama to the 110-meter high hurdles. Morgan’s tl4.5 clocking .also whipped ace h u r d 1 e r Blaine Lindgren and former SEC hurl-ers king Billy Hardin of Louisiana State. Red-haired Tom O’Hara came off the final turn like a whirlwind to post a lQ-yard victory at 1500 meters over unknown James McLatchle of La Tech to 3:49.9-about the equivalent of a 4:06 mile. NCAA mile tltlist Morgan Groth, looking out of shape, was a badly beaten sixth add last. Gulf State Conference champion Bob Planning of Southeastern Louisiana streaked to a 100-meter dash victory to :10.5, then anchored his school’s' triumph In the 400-meter relay in :41.6. NAfiONAL LEASUE Torooni i, loiton 6 .... . SUNDAY'* RRIULTI Montreal «, n*w York i Chicago 2, Toronto 0 IftjjjPi CAMS! 6* gemot ichadulad. TURIdAY'l CAME Toronto if Dotrolt (Halos Nominated as 'Loyal Owner toy By OSCAR FRALEY i MIAMI (UPI) You have to give George Halas of toe CM-cago Bears more than “coach of the year” honors today. You must make him the coach of the year, of course, yet top at that you also are forced to concede that he to the most loyai owner of toe year. : ★ . ★ > ★ -f ' ■ In a greedy era. where the pro football merchants start col-leoting their bruise money in August and don’t let up until'; the frost to long past the pump-, kin, he stayed with the folks who support him. They tried, for toe almighty dollar, to pash him into vast Soldiers Field, where toe gate could have been more than, . doubled. He wouldn’t budge. Like the post office, neither sleet, nor hail nor dark of night to case of a triple overtime would sway him. The fault is not with Halas. It’s with a dollar grubbing system which has pervaded sports from end to end. Name your sport, whether it'be a pro golf tour that runs too many weeks, the boxing racket which has killed off too many youngsters for a 94,000 a’ show television spot,'or what will you. -it' it ; Money to toe root, toe trunk and the bough of all evil. Maybe they should stmt earlier, cutting short their training and exhibition schedule, in pro football. But there waa no sense to the Bears and the Giants playing in 10-degree weather. From here there to no ques- Cage Scores Nimam rviavw * Croiw 91, Western Michigan $3 l. Battle Creek JC 7 Spring Arbor Tftwmmwt ‘ Champtanthip 6 (Ohio) 8*. Olivet 55 *6> tion hut what the climatic conditions cost the New York Giants the championship; and I’m not a “house’’ man for the bruisers who play their games to the Bronx. I frankly couldn’t care less whether the Giants won or toe honors went to the Bears. NO CHANCE But as a completely impartial observer I’d have to think that if Y.A. Tittle could have truly put hto Jimmy Valentine touch on the football it would have been no contest. Yet, to a frigid atmosphere in which a Paul Bunyan couldn't have folded hto fingers into a fist, the bald eagle never had a chance. I watched on the big bulb while sitting in a pair of bathing Shorts to 78-degree weather, rubbing on sun tan oil every once In a while. The announcer said It was 15 degrees in Chicago and probably sinking to 10 degrees in the late stages of the game; “Why,” asked a neighbor, “if they have to play this tote in the year.'dcn’t they bring toe playoff to Florida or take it to Sontoern California or some place where it’s warm?” Esthetically that would be the answer. . Yet it seems that pro football has to wring out every single dollar until it’s so cold that the Washington on the dollar bill wears an overcoat and ear muffs. • But Halas to a rugged gent. He had good years and lean years, whether you figure on % the dollar or the won-loss cpl- * umn, and coming up to this game he hadn’t won a title in 17 long years. it it • * ' So he stayed, sunshine or sorrow, with the folks who supported him until you know what froze over. The freeze won it for him, numbing the artistry to Tittle’s magic fingers. But, in the process, Halas froze the dollar. The total answer is that baseball should set itself back; football should set itself ,, back, and everybody should get in season. But they won’t, sports having become merely big business. GAME ON ICE — Defensive back Ritchie Petitbon of the Chicago Bears stands in the end zone ready to gather to a New York pass with seconds left in the NFL rh»mpinnghip game. J. C. Caroline, another Chicago defensive back, also moves in on the ball. The Interception killed the Giants’ last bid. In Sugar Bowl Tourney Kentucky 5 Eyes Top By The Associated Press Coach Adolph Rupp’s Kentucky Wildcats, gjmntog for the No. 1 spot in the nation, take that quest, an unbeaten record and the favorites’ role Into the Sugar BojiTloumament tonight ,aa the vast run of holiday college basketball tourneys contin-es. The Wildcats are matched with New Orleans Loyola while No. 8 Duke plays Auburn in the first round of toe New Orleans tourhey. Davidson, Nd. 7, plays Penn to the first round of the Vanderbilt and No. 9 Oregon State got through the week unbeaten. Davidson and Duke did not i>lay. Cincinnati opened Missouri Valley Conference ^>lay with a 54-52 edge over Tulsa after trimming Kansas State 72-70. Vanderbilt beat Memphis State 85-79 and*South Carolina 15-78, stretching its winning string to 14 and taking the title to Its own invitational. Oregon State, which plays Brigham Young to the finals of ! the Far West Classic Charlotte, N.C. Holiday, also scored two tourney victories, opening up. In addition, finals are scheduled in four other major tourneys, the Far West Classic at Portland, Ore., the ECAC Holiday Festival in New York’s Madison Square Garden, the Big Eight at Kansas City the Quaker City in Philadelphia and the Sun Carnival in El Pasov Tex. Detroit Tech Lawrtncc Tech 81, mich hioh school eke ToueifRYi to Chicago Loyola in lssf^week’s poll and is prime' candidate to, taking Louisiana State 87-57 and Colorado State 53-51. BYU reached the finals on the strength of an 80-70 decision over Oregon, v Other major finals pit Villa-nova and Minnesota in the Now York Festival, Oklahoma State and Kansas State to the Big Eight, LaSalle, and St, Bona-venture in the Quaker City and Denver and Texas Western in Kentucky was ranked second the Sun Carnival. Villanova made it to with an 82-75 edge o#er previously unbeaten Utah while Minnesota outlasted St, Joseph’s, Pa., 89-63. In the Quaker City semis, LaSalle bombed Georgetown, D.C., 80-69 and St. Bonaventure edged Drake, 64-62.. Oklahoma State beat Kansas 65-56 and Kansas State Iromped over Missouri 84-67 to the Big T semifinals. OTHER CROWNS In addition to UCLA and Vanderbilt, others gaining major titles Saturday included Wichita, Wisconsin, Arizona, DePaul, Penn State, Syracuse, Tennessee, San Jose State and The Citadel. Wichita blasted Oklahoma City 80-47 to the All-College at Oklahoma City, unbeaten De-Paul Whipped Xayler of Ohio SOSO In the Queen City at Buffalo, N.Y., Wisconsin routed Georgia Tech 104-64 to the Milwaukee Classic, Syracuse outlasted Miami, Fla. 86-85 to overtime in the Hurricane Classic at Miami, Rlvtr Rouge 74, Lincoln Park 4*, C«n**l*tlon *I*W 75, Llvonl* Franklin 37 hQmnhI Park ^,n* mrnlngton 56. Ahem, W® Told You Boars by 4 Points Pontiac Press sport editor Bruno L. Kearns and Press Swaml champion Don Vogel hot only claim too prognostication title from, AP, UPI, NEA, and Major Hoople, bat they did It to real swaml Both Press writers picked too Boars to win and to do It ny four points. The final 14-10. Kearns said too 4-potot oproad would he 20-10, Vogel said 24- ts: The wire services all picked tooGtonto. succeed the Ramblers in the weekly balloting now being conducted. j The Wildcats played only once last week, romping over Notre Dame 101-81 Saturday while Chicago Loyola was the victim of the season’s biggest upset. Third-ranked Michigan and No. 10‘ New York University also took their lickings in the Los Angeles Classic. Loyota, the defending national champion, was stunned by unheralded Georgetown 69-58 to the first round of the Quaker City Tournament at Philadelphia. The Ramblers bounced back for an 88-62 decision over Northwestern, but the loss probably will ha reflected in the weekly standings. UCLA, No. 4, took the Los Angeles tourney title with an 83-79 triumph over Illinois, ■ pulling away to the last three minutes for its eighth straight victory. STILL UNBEATEN Fifth-ranked Cincinnati, No. 8 Penn State takes Crown State Quintets Flop in Motor City Classic DETROIT (AP)-Both Michigan entrants In the ISth annual Motor City basketball tournament warn defeated Saturday night aa Penn Stete became toe first Eastern club ever to capture the tourney championship. ★ * * Penn State overcame a 10-point Detroit lead and nipped the Titans 8843 to the title contest after Holy Cross scored a 91-82 victory over Waetom Michigan In the consolation game. Detroit, looking fot Its seventh tourney crown, grabbed the lead midway to the first Ha!fr after It had changed hands 14 Umn. Detroit upped Its lead to 63-43 with tore* minutes gone In the id half, but the Nlttany Lions battled back and took a 75-75 lead with five minutes remaining. The lead Ma-aawed four more times before the visitors want ahead to slay, 88-79, with a Wile moro than three minutes left. , MOST VALUABLE Bob Weiss, who later waa named the tournament's most valuable player, scored toe basket that put the Nlttany Lions ahead. Wales scored 38 points to lead the victors, while Dslk took, game ecorliig honors with SB. a a a In the first game, Holy Cron umed aside Western Michigan's second-half challenge and' on to hand tin pre-tourney favorites their second straight act-beck. The Broncos led briefly in the early moments, but were never ahead again after tying the ■core at 20-all with nine minutes remaining to the first half. Holy Cron was ahead 48-88 at halftimb, and enjoyed an 11-point lead early to toe second half. But Western, behind the hot shooting of Manny Newsome, who set a tourney record with 26 field goats In two games, closed to within two points at the eight-minute mark. Nawsoma finished with 38 potote, while team mate Bill Street added 30. Wendelken'topped toe Crundars with 94. As was the case to the tournament's opening night of action, guards again dominated play Saturday night. High point men on three of the four teams were guards. ALL-TOURNEY Weiss. Newsome. Wendelken and Dslk, along with U-D cantor Doris Murray, ware an unanimous choices for toe all-tournament team, Weiss was named at the other forward spot along with Dslk. 1 Two other tournament records were also set, both tor Detroit on the first night of action. The Titans acorqd 41 field goals and hit on 614 per cent of their attempts from toe field In down-inn Holy Croes. Saturday’s crowd of 6,316 brought toe two day total to 11,106, fourth bast lfrhistory and highest since 1(69. Titans Next for W 5 Before Big 10 Start By The Associated Press Tested In Christmas holiday play, the Michigan and Michigan State basketball teams set their sights today on Saturday’s start of the Big Ten campaign. Highly promising i Michigan, with Its 8-1 record one of the nation’s best, takes on U of D Tuesday and Northwestern at Ann Arbor Saturday afternoon. ★ ■ Sr ★ State’s Sparjans, 6-8 after a rough western rbad trip, open agaTnst Illinois .at Champaign IU., Saturday night. The crack Wolverines, who, crushed Pittsbur|h 95-80 to take third place in tne Los Angeles Basketball Classic Saturday night, finish their preliminary season at home Tuesday night against the University of Detroit. Michigan swept to its triumph over Pittsburgh with Bill Buntin scoring 20 points and Cazzle Russell 18. The Wolverines’ all-around skill brought them In the winners In toe face of 30 points by Pittsburgh’s brilliant Brian Gcneralovfoh. ROAD WIN After three deficits in four starts on the road, Michigan State came back in beating Butler at Indianapolis 76-85 Satur- day night, ~MSUi i . shooting 40.8 per cent from the field, was led by Pete Gent’s 29 points, Gent hit on It of 22 field goals attempts and sank seven free throws. Various tournaments concluded for Michigan teams on toe weekend. ! * *' * # ;/ Muskegon GC lost to Broome Tech 72-70 in toe Tech Christmas Classic finals and Flint JC bowed to Bluffton 37-83 In toe Flint Invitational final*. A 66-60 win over Steven! Tech Sunday gave Detroit tech fifth place in the tourney, while Lawrence Tech cinched third place with an 81-64 win over Pratt, w # Vincennes of Indiana won the Benton Harbor Tournament, defeating Joliet of Illinois In the finals 108-78. Steubenville of Ohio captured the Spring Arbor Tournament by, overpowering Olivet 89-55. Wings Win 2-1 Verdict From Bruins (Continued from Page 21) azlne presented Howe with a plaque as its Performer of the Year in ice hockey. LOST GOALS Later in the game, Johnston beat Howe and Floyd Smith both of ‘wmom were alone jn front of the net. Norm Ullman beat the goalie while killing off the game's other penalty (both on the Wings) but was called for offsides. DefensOman Bill Gadaby of the Wings pushed the puck past Sawohuk by mistake in toe third period; but the veterans were saved much embarrassment when the Bruins were called for, icing the puck on toe play. * * it Other NHL action last night saw Chicago blank Toronto, 94), and Montreal climb into undisputed possession of second Rlace with a 8-9 drubbing of law Yon. . The Rad Wings next start wUI be tomorrow night against the third-place Toronto Maple Leafs at Olympia in toa annual Nate Years Eva clash. if» Bears Steal NFL Grown Intorcwptioni Turned Into Chicago TDs (Continued from Page 21) Tittle’s pass near the Bear 26 and from there the Bears drove 59 yards. , * ★ Eating up S3 of the yards were two tosses from Wade to Joe Marconi, then Wade’a touch-doWir werlal attempts, failed three times from the 21 and Roger LeClerc’s field goal try' from the 28 was wide. With 2:12 left lit toe quarter, Tittle’s screen pass was hugged to by the 266-pound O’Brsdo-vlch, who rqmmed 10 yards to the Giatit ' li. Wade ipeima Mike Dltka for 12 yards and eventually sneaked Inches for the decisive TD. Jencks again added toe point. W W it The Bears appeared reedy to score again early in the fourth quarter after Petitbon recovered Joe Morrison’s fumble on (he Bear 49. But the Hears could penetrate only to the 25 and LeClerc’a field goal fry from the 34 again waa wide. It waa then that Tittle twice herded toe Giants on frantic drives that ended with interceptions by McRae and Petitbon. Th -sow flit HU HSt 55 ... 25 21'A 204k grade llumsMi standards 35, ffiSrlff IAmExport 1g AmPP .54 ■■■■■■■■I Attorn 1.44a poultry: Wholesale buying prices 3f“ *“ “"***” changed to Vk higher, roasters 25 -special tod whlto Rook fryors w-i*. Livestock Mackie (Suits Road Patrol Legality Questioned by Attorney General LANSING (AP) - Highway Commissioner John Mackie today abandoned hjs plan for a statewide freeway service patrol after its legality was questioned by the attorney general. Atty! Gen. Frank Kelley said 7% the legality of such a program gSl • m being administered by the State wtrfmw Department or any Kdiser Indusno'otba* state agency. ^tvS^Air “The need stm exists and 1 fiiJ’fiL11: hope a way can be found to w ••*••••• ojvj meet It,” Mackie said. “The, ——motorist stranded on a freeway is In need of help.” jg Mackie had planned to start the program of assistance to motorists with stalled cars today, but agreed at a conference with Gov. George Romney last hw ! week to postpone it until MV? Mv? jffJn ! Wednesday, ft ft ft $ I; SERIOUS DOUBT in a letter to the Mgiway commissioner, Kelley said “There is serious doubt concerning toe authority of toe highway department to initiate this program. “The doubt is based upon the absence of specific language in toe appropriation act,” Kelley said. Kelley stressed hfs “admonition” was on legal grounds.only and is not intended as an expression of my opinion on toe value of foe program. Romney last week a. .„ Mackie to give up foe idea in favor of having the State Police handle toe job in connection with, their law enforcement mission. HiftMM? 1______* Grain Prices Easier in Early Trading IMPORT RETURN - Bulck Motor Division has announced that a selected number of its dealers will offer toe Opel Kadett, scheduled to go on display Jan. 17. The car, built in Wept Germany and redesigned from earlier versions, now offers four-ppeed floor- mounted gearshift in sedan and sports coupe, besides this Station wagon model. Area Buick dealers handling toe Opel Kadett include Oliver Motor Sales, 310 Orchard Lake Bivd., and Fischer Buick, 515 S'. Woodward, Bir- Ford, Buick Add Models to Boost Sales DETROIT (AP)—In moves to boost sales, Ford plans to bring out a hew racing model this year and Buick has announced it will import economy cars from West Germany. Ford’s development of a GT (grand touring) racing car is foe latest in a series of moves by which Ford has sought to make its products more attractive because of their perform-, ance ih competition. The hew, low, sleek two-seat- er, to be powered by the Ford Indianapolis racing engine, is intended to challenge foreign car supremacy at leading road racing courses in this country and abroad. The new ear will have speeds up to 200 mites an hour, said Frank E. Zimmerman Jr., Ford division special vehicles manager. It will he 40,5 inches high with an over-all length of ISO CHICAGO (AP) - Prices of grain futures turned generally slightly easier today in early transactions J>n the board of trade. * , ■ , r| ii£ »£ a QM wybwms were under 5 io" ft Jr* ~ most pressure and declined well 8 ft lik 74% over a cent in spots during toe 3 >Svk ft aivj + vS' Tirst several minutes on selling, .i ft I IS1 ***<* brokers described as mm! My? Sjk . {mainly liquidation. The grains held mostly witoin small fractions of Friday’s + ^! closes in slow and mixed transactions. 4151k +254 •4 uw w 1244 + 55 1 11145 11545 12555 + 55 ■‘■■TLy I 17 ifik 7SV4 7514 -V4 n Sfswn ifOfLrllM .... ^ty&mWlwwtatlun* mi Treasury Position .WAININOTON (Afl-Thf ¥ m WSwry IMmns gglffn ' I 7.745.152J4454 I 7,502,1 D*#*'H* «W«I»fA24r 50 5M5W ^■^AWoQl^ijry JHilPMHMeFPF*/# + 'A MonlOU . _ <£ MontWard x u Morrtll 4 „ ^ Motoroio l ... ■*•■*** Till ESP* th NntCan ,40b » 1414 1444 1444 , ■ ...... _ »' ornVrwix*' naiad,' ratal of dlvh •annualdacla sac «u an _ u i or utml-annuof duolarallon. IpMOl of ! II1" I*11!IP 1111; 11 Mgr 4 1H5 3545 -3545 - 44 T“P*f!5f51!- —d— !tj*[ T 2 NlMlil i.il + N°j*5W ..wo Jl,™; mm box of cigars were reported stolen early today In a break-in at Ealmora Lunch, 021 W. Huron,' Waterford Township. ‘ About $100 la change was stolen from vending machines .In a break-in at Alta’s Lqg Cabin, S77 Auburn, it was reported to Pontiac police this morning by Kay Frank. Harold Hjoss, 804 Kenllirorto, reported to Pontiac police yesterday that 140 In change was stolen in a break-in at Julie'e Grill, 080 Mount Clemens; For an excltlnk New Year'e Day, bring toe whole family to Upland Hills Fatal for an old-1 fashioned sleigh ride. $1 ea. gives 40 min, sleigh ride; hot | chocolate, coffee end cookies. All afternoon. For 10 or more call 020-1011. 401 Lake George Rd., Oxford. By ROGERS. SPEAR Q) “I have seme money in stocks aud also have a $4,000 mortgage oa my heme. I would like to sell my stocks and use toe money to pay eH toe mortgage. Later, as I save morfe money, I could boy stocks again. Do yon think this is a good idea? My list consists of American Telephone, Champlin Oil, Detroit Steel, General Mills, Pacific Lighting, told Upjohn.” FA A) There is realty nothing wrong with a moderate debt for e man in your position. Tne chances are that it will be paid off some years later with a dollar lower fat purchasing power than at present. For the most part, you have a fine fast oj;letpckp which I would hesitate to see you close out. i I would, however, sell Detroit Steel, which is cyclical, apd Pacific Lighting, which is mainly an income situation. I would hold toe balance, which have fine potentials for appreciation. . * * * Q) “I am interested la Ar-nsv Industries stock. I see It Is over-the-counter and quoted m bid - 11% asked. What does this mean? Can yon tell me how to purchase toe stock and what yon think of it? What is the smallest amount I can buy?” M.H. A) Over-the-counter quotations usually mean nothing more than the general range at which Stocks can be bought and sold. Tlie asking forlce, as printed, tells you roughly what you would pay for the shares; and toe bid price is approximately stoat you would receive if you sold. 1 All OTC transactions are a matter of private negotiation, and any security dealer can trade for you. At present, your Arnav is quoted 9% — VM$, and you can buy whatever amount is available — from one share up. In general, I am strongly opposed to toe purchase of this or any other low-priced stock, unless you have adequate information. Mr. Spear cannot answer all mail personally but Trill answer all questions possible in his column. Write General Features Corp., 250 Park Ave., New York 17, N.V. inches and a wheelbase of 95 /indies^/'" • „ OPEL KADETT Buick’s new Une will be too Opel Kadett, made in West Germany. / About 400 of Butek’s 51,000 dealers will handle the new Import at toe beginning and toe number probably will Increase during toe year, said El D. , Robert, Buick’s general maa- The Kadetts 55111 be offered under the same t550-year or 24,000-mtle warranty that prevails on 1904 Buicks, and the price will be under VMttO, Robert said. The car is produced as a station wagon, 2-door sedan and t-door sports coupe. It has a 91-inch wheelbase, an overall length of 154 indies, height of 54 Indies and width of 57.8 inches, The sports coupe is powered by a four-cylinder 64 horsepower engine, whbe toe other two models have 46 horsepower Beaten, Robbed While Leaving Bar A Pontiac man was beaten and robbed of 960 by. four men and a woman as he-teft'a bar Saturday night ' *'<> ■ Carmel Crawford, 38, of 26 Midland, told Pontiac police he had just walked out the door of the Auburn Bar, 378 Auburn at ll!30 p.m. when a passing car stopped and the quintet jumped out. Crawford said one of toe men was a Negro wearing a Marine Corp uniform that had the Istripes at a corporal. Over-Counter Stiles May Need a Change aced In the New Id there be a 8 i $ 4S=|; 18 » E If I PP Mi Jill lsk«fT it l«i|^ djlvIdjHv^ oiin E.n 4 m r n t«ISl-Sii« T.jin ik ik i- w By SAM DAWSON AP Business Neiw Analyst NEW YORK —"a troublesome question to be faced In the New Year is; Should there ‘be change in the present system of listing prices of stocks on the largest market of them all? This ’ is th ovhr•t h e counter market OTC with dealers all over the DAWSON country and with 40,000 or more issues available for trading, many times the number of those listed on the nation's formal stock exchanges. and asked prices of too most active and best known of these unlisted issues are available to newspapers through the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (NSA). But they are “retail” prices for the public, as distinguished from “wholesale” prices which dealers themselves get and use when buying and selling. i The bid price quoted Is toe one at which the stock could have been sold. Asked la toe price quoted aa that at which H could have been purchased. THE DIFFERENCE And there's where toe difference Ues between the retail, or public, quotation and the wholesale, or insider, quotation. The retail asked price is the wholesale one to which the NA8D has added daeten' commissioners or markups. So toe range between the bM and asked jprioes given tbe public by NASD Is usually much larger, than that on the insider [ standards for companies to be list. For example, the retail J put on lists, available to the press. And toe NASD keeps an eye on commissions |ts member firing charge. These run roughly from two to five per cent, the larger figure for stocks selling under $25 a share, with the commission progressively scaled downward to two per cent for expenalva stocks, usually those well above 8100 a share. WORK ON PHONES Brokers do most of their OTC work .on toe phones. They corn tact each other until they can. find a, buyer gnd a seller for a particular Issue and a price spread on an expensive stock may be as much as six points while the wholesale range is only two points. ★ 4r ★ Also, It’s sometimes possible for a buyer to get a better price from a particular broker than the asked price made available to the public. In the Case of the formal stock exchanges, prices quoted In the newspapers are the actual ones at which the stocks changed hands. But In a sense they are wholesale rather than retail since the buyer of the stock also had to pay his broker a com- .g^ble to both. Tbe OTC thus mission — not quoted, In the j js a negotiation market, 5rito PreM “.and. H1* .".PL*;buyers and sellers seeking each commhMton deducted from toi ler to negotiate the moot fa-price he Is quoted as getting. vorablr prices they can. < FIXED COMMISSIONS Formal stock, exchanges, how- Such Commissions are fixed by «ver, are auction markets. List-rules of the Securities and Ex- «d Issues ara offered for a stat-change Commission, and tin ex- *d price at a trading post on changes themselves and brokers thi floor of toe exchange. Brok-must charge the precise sum er*> representing customers or unless acting for themselves as trading on their own account, floor traders or acting for otheiwcrowd around and make a stock exchange members. I market by openly quoting bids The NASD was created by *nd offers, Sates result from Congress In 1138 as a self-regula-1 this auction, tory agency, to act fat coopera-1 * F Hon with tot SEC In eoma mat-1 The greater scope of too 0|C ten, for the huge OTC market, market, the ebeence of many of That market Involves soms 4,700 the. rules which restrict listing dealers with about 94,000 sales-. of stocks ait exchanges -- such i. And Jt« .business grew as requiring more information liiiiF ■ MM' from I mlion In 1949 to IM.9 about the companies — and the billion In 1901 when 3,1 billion present methods of reporting shares were traded. The public’s bid and asked prices to the gen-shyness In iiivestlng In much of oral punk all have federal reg-ty63 probably his*cut trading ulatory- bodies recommending stricter policing. And the problem could reach Congress , m requests for wider federal super-vision of tills biggest socuntlos market. ^ below that figure, a . • w. w ■ Tbe NASD has the responsibility of trying to prevent listing of ulse pricee. It also sets THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30,1968 TWENTY#PI VR Relieved Showdown Called Off Dems Mixed Over Swainson ByJlMDYQBIIT Oakland County Democrats had mixed feelings of regret and relief today over former Gov. John B. Swainson’s announcement Saturday that he would not run for governor in 1964. 7 * They regretted that a phys- a man they have always respected. * J Swainson said Saturday his doctors advised against a strenuous campaign without hew artificial legs, which will not be ready for some time. He lost his legs in Wprid War II combat. But county Democrats, including officers of the party or- ganization, were relieved Swainson chose not to take another crack at the man who beat him in 1962, Republican George Romney. ' NO COMMENT Although they declined Ite comment directly on SwainsonjS decision, they indicated they felt that one result was to decrease greatly the likelihood of an in- Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MRS. CHARLES CAPPELL Service for Mrs. Charles (Arlene J.) Cappell, 42, of 2840 Kenford, Waterford. Township, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Vincent de Paul Church. Burial will follow In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Cappell died yesterday following a one-year illness. Rosary wiU be recited 8 p.m. tonight at Melvin/A. Schutt Funeral Home. Surviving besides bar husband are a sister and three brothers. VERNON S.HAHUS Service for Vernon S. Haire, 59, of 46 N. Sanford wffl be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. .Haire, a steamfitter at GMC Truck & Coach, died yesterday after an illness of several months. He was a member of Central Methodist Church, Brotherhood Masonic Lodge 561 and Chapter 228, Order of Eastern Star. Surviving are his ftife, Anna: two daughters, Mrs. Burtqn Bonham of Pontiac and Mrs. Donald Wilson of Ortonville; and 11 grandchildren. HARRY ft. LAMSON Service for Harry E. Lamson, 63, of 160 Erie will be 1:36 p.m. tomorrow at Davis Memorial Chapel, Springfield, Vt. Burial will follow In Oakland Cemetery, Springfield. ' Mr. Lamson died Saturday. / He was a retired machinist and was a member of Oddfellows. He is survived by a sister . EDEN A. QUAYLE Graveside service for Eden A. Quayle, infant daugiter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Quayle, SOM Dwight, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. The child died at birth Saturday. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Surviving besides the parents are grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Randall of Waterford Township, Mrs. UUian Quayle of Pontiac, and Briica Quayle of Columbus, Ohio. EDWIN M. COMBS MILFORD-Service for Edwin M. Combs, 61, of 124 E. Lafayette will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Richnrdson-Bird Funeral Home. Burial wiU follow in Milford Memorial Cemetery. Mir. Combs, superintendent of the Milford branch of Detroit Edison Co., died Saturday after a two-week Illness. He was b member of the BojUhfltld Baptist Church, Farmington Lodge No. 161, FA AM; the Oakland County Kennel Club; end the Shrine Chapter, Detroit. He wee also past president of the Detroit Edison Camera Club and the Detroit Cocker Spaniel Club. * ■ ■ ' - Surviving are his wife, Grace; two sons, Robert of St. Charles, 111., and Gerald in the ILS. Air Force; a daughter, Mrs. Barbara BonifekT of Southfield, a brother; and four grandchildren. ' Vk MRS. EUGENE GUETTLER COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Eugene (Blitye R. ) Guettler, 1450 Welch, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at St. Matthew’s LutheranChWch in wailed Lake. Burial will follow in Glen Eden Cemetery, Warren, Mrs. Guettler died Saturday after a month-long illness. Lutheran prayer service will be 8 tonight at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home in Walled Lake. Mrs. Guettler Was a member of St. Matthew Ladies Guild. Surviving besides her husband are two sons, Paul and David, and a daughter, Ann, all at home; her mother, Mrs. Curtis Evans of Anquilla, Miss.; and a brother and a sister. Memorial contributions can be made to St. Matthew’s Church Pew Fund. MRS. ROSAMOND LEIGHTON NOVI TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs, Rosamond Iut a bipartisan plan for distributing foe new power the county will get in foe State House of Representatives under ^apportionment. A meeting set for last Saturday was postponed alien some of foe Joint committee's members were unable to attend. County Democratic Chairman Sander M. Levin, said today be expected “a series of meetings in the next two weeks” as the two parties seek rapport on a plan for shaping 10 House districts in foe county. A A A Ten is foe number the county expects to get in place of Its present six under reapportionment. • A, A A Agreement earlier was . e a c h e d on a plan for three state senate districts, which the county will get In place of its single current district as a result of the 1980 census. $700 Is Stolen From Safe at Huron Theater A total of $700 In cash and checks was stolen early yesterday from the safe at the Huron Theater, 041 W. Huron, Waterford Township. AAA Police said foe door of foe safe In foe office of the building was blown off with dynamite. Hie break-in occurred between midnight and 8:16 a.m. yesterday. Entry to the building was Sained by prying open the front oor. The exit was made through a rear door. Douglai-Homt Btllovot Coaxiitance Improve* GLASGOW, Scotland W-SIr Alec Douglas-Home, prime min-tetor of Britain, says, “I do ha-Uave we are getting nearer to genuine coexistence with the Soviet Union and that Is w«fi on tha road to peace.’’ In a television Interview at Glasgow, where ho is vacation-lull Douglas-Home added that "nuclear war has now become not only morally Imposalble but physically Impossible." x 3 BeatfRob Man in Orion Twp. Store A 61-year-old Orion Township man Is in fair condition at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital after being beaten and robbed in his store Saturday night. Three men are being held as inspects by foe Oakland County Sheriff Department. The victim, Willard H. Murphy, told police three men en-. tered his store, Bill’s Bait and Tackle, 40 W. Greenshleld, shortly before 10 p.m. After beating and kicking him, they escaped to a car with about *150, he said. v Murphy suffered head injuries in foe attack. The trio being held by police was picked up within three hours of foe assault. $1,950 Fire in Home May Be Due to Wiring A fire in the two-story brick home of Lewis Gillette, 558 East Boulevard, caused an estimated $1,950 damage early this morn-fog. Pontiac firemen said foe 1:50 a.m. blaze may have started from faulty wirtag in the basement. Death of Area Woman Ik Ruled a Suicide . Mrs. Paul J. Corbe|lle, 41, of 5131 Dumham, Waterford. Township, was found gcad it 2:41 p.m. yesterday in the garage. Dr. L. G. Rowley, assistant Oakland County coroner, ruled the death a suicide. The body is at the C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home. E stsbilshTng *Nor rna'l' H e igh’l 'and Level ■SrainJiftlK PARTICULARLY. "■ & Upper Straits Lake or who ore Inierastod In Iwvlno fixed end maintained lha normal height and level of Mid lake pursuant to the provisions of Act ISt B andi 17 of Watt Bloomfield Township, lakland County, Michigan; You Are Hereby Notified that the Oakland County Board M Supervisors has caused to to filed In ml*. Court on Amended Complaint praying tor me establishment by this Court Of me normal height and tavsf of Upper Straits l ake, wig Lake being located In lections is. to end 17, of Wait Bloomfield Township, fSthMSOWk thet hoar-Inn on the matter win be new In the Circuit Court tor the County of Oakland at the Oakland County Court Home Tower, uoo North Telegraph Rood, Pontiac, si *iurt (hot day at i:JO p.m. or. as soon I “ aA. i Plaintiff j. Si ^ toot above sea laval, you should than md there appear and anew cause, If "YaFViw'normal'1 height end teyel of etMuid not bo established; flecHwl Ihe^ formal icir»ggataw«.ia proper shouip not be gremitf to the Petitioner. * oaoRoa p; taylor. Prosecuting Attorney tytKpwW t&llN - J^lltoa. Wimwl HAYWARD WHli--.... CHARLII J, LONO , , _ toSPIE! The Planning Cgmntleelon of Independ-nce Townshlip. OaklerW County, Wlchl-gen, will.hold a regular moating .Ml' HOWARD ALTMAN 2 Clerk W, ISS3 Death Notices APPRLL. DECEMBER », 1*03. , idf. u; deer sister If /^ IhlfIST Vep- ^eVMelv!n a! Ssmftf Anerap Home! Punerel service will be hold Tues-.... * jT tr a.m. at Death Notices msaii be held Tuesday, December 31, at 1:33 p.m. at the Davis Memorial WKstt! IIiGHTOH;.DECEMBER'», ltS3, ROSAMOND, loot W. Lake Road, Novi; age 73; dear mother. PAY OFF YOUR BILLS • AND REMODEL YOUR HOME 'Any homo owner, widow, retiree or even thoeo win credit dmlcui. -ties, can be eligible providing their home is hssif or maro paid BXAMPLB BILLS ,uf,,S3,ooo MODERNIZATION .... $2,000 HOUSE UL......... $2,000 ' Total Owed •• t7M0 MAIL COUPON OR CALL PROM ANY PLACE IN MICHIGAN FE 8-2657 IMPROVEMENT 8. INVESTMENT CO. IS W. Lawrence usuw pontloc, Michigan PayOttYourBlii*.... - without o toon -Payments fow as $10 wKJ Profect your (ob ond credit Homo or oftieo Appototntonto City Adfustmeht Service 7)< W. Huron PB »#2»1 fkY blAlDAX TABLJSTS (FOR-morly Oex-A-Dlet). Now noma, soma formula, oniy «8c. Simms eras. Drugs, 1 WhAT? ‘ w Dancing to Don Roth and his Bond.’ x - WHERE? W;‘ Avon Bob-Cornor of Auburn and Adams, WHEN? Now Yogr> ,ave .Peiiy.» Favors, no covsr charge, no minimum. . WHY? To moot the now owners, ptlt»BWi> . ’ : j Aiwa Mremrs 7.* D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOMa - - InvolM Car Service F| 4-1211 . COATS DRAYT0NFUPNS?IAN,|H0M,QR S.77S7 "HUNTOON . FUNERAL HOME serving Pontiac tor NTYMri to Oakland Avt, FM sells crrpB roBfiwBAi pro Koodo Heritor. Pti. So£moo 6'oMS6n-JvhN1 FUNERAL HOMl . "Potlenod tor Funorols" FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Sorvlot" FI S-M4I — FUNERAL HOMl* FB M37S Btlobllshod OUr 40 Years ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NBRDlNO s friendly advisor, phone Ft 3-3133 before S p.m., orTT tig on-swer, cell FB $<734. ConHdonilel. ON ANO“AFTBR'THIS"BXYin5fC. jo, IMS, ‘ oHis’llnen mysatl kins, SOU Opdyke, OTTmtrwNidc bill,-, one peymeni •»-- - Cell FB tea R THIS DATB, DEC. yaolf. Norman T< Aw yhejtonlioc, Mich. .........1 ELK'S TOOTH, OQLD MOUNTINO with I diamonds, B.P.O.B. No. lit and InitlgN.A. 0. engraved on fern.%jr * ^ ’*• impimriuo tKrvtOjnrt L^trsi^ofr'sFANiic-tw. «r and white, fwnalo, vicinity M WIlHyni J^sks. Answers to Quean- I YOUNG MBN NBBDIO TO WORK port or Nil ilm# asflttlM man- trn xgTOUNVAlyBli™i'fiat'M'i3rri6'f' 7ou*|ii(pd to pm»jm >orm JM Must ft okpsrtenood to otl tmap Help Wanted Mate fljff A BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN. Prestige sales - field. Futura un- ' limited. Regulret STi jHnenol in-, vestment tor university trolnlnp/' must be. high school.-.gradual*. minimum ago 24. Send resume. Box it, Pontloc Press. ARC WELDERS, ' EXPERIENCED, Paragon Bridge and Stool Co. 44000 Grand River, NOVI;-Midi. Blood Donnors URGENTLY NEEDED 1 CASS AUTO MECHANIC MILFORD 684-102S ADVANCED REAL ESTATE Unusual opportunity to enter a most challenging and profitdblo real estate field. If you ore now licensed and sesklng a "stop up" than consider selling MUNfot a*- , portunltles. Investment and com- / merclal properties with. Michigan's/, : largest and most progressive or# gomiattan. Call Mr. Partridge tor . a personal InMrvtoW. FE 4-33SI. BOYS WANTED Employment twiTHA FUTURE..-, Opportunity to move ahead. Cnanca for good income, insurance benefits, retirement, profit sharing; ate. Call 338-0438 for appointment, interview. EXPERIENCED CLOTHiNO SALtS- IMMEDIATE OPENINGS ' Ushers, day mm and concession help. Apply In parson only, 11 a.m. 1 to 4 p.m. ManMOrs otNto._AiMMip md Miracle Mlto BrtvtomlliiipiiS ... MAN FOR DRY CLBaNiNO ROutf. Apply Main CMnorn, 4410 anw> bslh Lake Rd _ 7 ImiKMAN Steady year-round otnploymenl on established routs. 44030 Von Dyke, Ullce _ •».,■■■.■ :.;?v..■ ~ mm vi - Has your factory closed down? or -------C— 96 ply 'Um| NSW lor. Ap- . iHtobMh PONTIAC MECHANIC : guaranteed wage. Skis Cmn I turence. All Intorvlews In p ij I Russ Johnson Motor I-1" Orton. Ask tor Jim. OISfRIBUflNl ^ Hto a teles opening for an bv teiugent young man soiling to Moil grocery trade. Soma colisp* trotn-ing and Held telling experience desirable. Monthly talent, expenses paid, car provided, opportunity to dpMa'to jSrofff and- Ufa Insuronoo pleiw. Coll WO M041 or writ* dOtAlls to to West Adorns, Detroit. No. mi Do not REAL ESTATE SALESMAN gissr* RbutF MAN Phono OR 34444. Salesmen Wantsd «nfiC 11 established rsiT estate John K. Irwin . . A SONS/ Coll FI S-S4S4, Ony Cfll Fi S-4S44. Nleh twqei'~"iwrp5w wanted. Mutt bo lloboto, opply It nuour union SHDi lALlIMIN, lyiMlNAl ANb >M Idilt, “STEAdYTSKT-TIWIIOI “ A personal IntorvlOW will to given to e man who could ilka to maw OS to IN porMImo. For ntoftna-iton coil Mr. Frick, IM 3-MW, 4 , „ mSPS 'mwWMftp PikldHWV!. ,■■■■■ Help W«Rtsd Ftssote t A NIAT CURB OIRL FOR DAY ff-xr 0-4/41, XmNYIBITHBUnWtVir.. Ool those Christmas Mill off your mind, A tow jPOrifegl now ovoih obis In nalsIllMWiil.litnMiito-Wo train you > toTsltot.,JBlWl -Cosmetfcs. For JnNrmMMi, wrtto F, O. Box tl, Drayton Flolne or coll FB flsdl, iAiVnamn'‘'StSmS. rat dove. «ito to sito. Fi ■ ml® iMyTIW, T-JMl^llM6' m{( own Irsnsportoilm. OR WSts. TWENTY-SIX THE PONTI AC PR15S8., MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1063 Haip Wonted! COUNTER GIRL, STEADY JOB, excellent pay, also masts, uniforms - Hunter House, ■m Ingham. COlINtER GIRL. BOB'S CONEY IS- ‘ DAY BABYSITTER, AUBURN AND Rochester area, transp. UL 2-3179 registered. Fl-_________________.... pttal. Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital —Apply Personnel Dept, itSO1 a.rrt. to 5 pan. or *•* DINING ROOM - HOSTESS Young woman over IS who toys meeting and greeting peo^ _ to work in wo friendly atmosphere In our dining room as a hot*— on the night shift. Apply In i son only. TED'S • Woodward at Square Lake Rd. .■ 6rUO "CLERK 4181 .IWatrW.lncTH.lln It’s O.K. with me if she wants to have a New Year’s Eve party here, but I don’t think this old house can . take It.** ROOMS TERRACE 3 BEDROOMS, full basement and gas boat. Slaters Apts., 92 E.: Huron St. FE 4-3546. i, onfranco. LARGE COMFORTABLE ROOM for gentleman. Cldse In. FE 2-9514. ROOM AND OR BOARD. »PI Oakland Avn. FE 4-1654, ' SLEEPING ROOM. 1» lain. PE 447S3,. CHAMBER- SLEEPING ROOM, 1 Norton. FE 24771. MAN, 84 Rooms With Board 41 1 NICE ROOM WITH good^ wholesome food. BOARD, 98 Summit. ROOM AND BOARD FOR MEN, lunch** packed. FE 1-9005. ROOM AND BOARD man — FE 5-4475. FOR ONE Rent Stores 46 MODERN STORE, 1,tM SC 338-8870. Rent Business Property 47-A Store Building north FE 5-1201 AFTER 6 P.M. FE 2-3370 ALUMINUM SIDING - ROOFING IWWAUtP,. CASH AND CARRY , i CALL iUPERIDR, FE 4-3177 range. Free mstructlon. Arrow Arclwry Center. 71 N. Pad- VtOLmiOK* ■ ..L .1, a-■- A,aTr;m work °uar' , KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. ; Onnemtem—Ragutotora—Starters Batteries $5.95 Exchange 1177 W. Hdron 341 Arburt. ___________FE 5-1*14 MAR OARAGE, $899 Incl. OH Doors, Concrete Floors Adottkim, Howto Rolilno PAUL GRAVES CONTRACTiNO Pro* Witlmalo* OR 4-1511 ALOMikuM storms—iloiNG Awnings • Porch • Patio • Roofing C. WiEPON CO. 1 FE 4-2lf» Kitchens, baths, mcmafwn, attlct, house raising, aluminum siding and ■MM jjnm. O' — cq.fI ifin. Urpoittry "' PressoMiHi^ ALTERATIONS au. types, knit ImMtii laainor coat*, or 3-7193. EketricalCgittractors FREE ESTIMATES C PONTIAC FENCE CO. t Dixit HWV. OR 3-6W5 ™ 'We#r iandtni CARL L. BILLS SR., FLOOR SAND-ing, FE l-STtf, Bt*v*NYbW.'~yi'a»iiiTAVik<8. EXCITING FUN IN FRESH, CLEAN Bring your group, «n|«y fbrliu.if hereMrewn itelgh rmt ': WBUf ENPt fpteterin «•“* ““ me tenwb boutn ter h spaghttll, fmneh bread, steaming coffee. Write, i____... emchura. Upland Hills Farm, ... LnM Gforgn Rd., Oxford. 42S-14I1. NEIDRICK BUILDING SBRVICf -Home, Garage, Cabinets, AddTlionr FHA TiRMirFi 4^989. TALBOTT LUMBER st installed In doom and i it.' Compwte building torvlct atklandAvn. >14- Moving and Storage COAST WIDE VAN LINES ITH MOVING ______FE 4-4 Prinltof eimI PocETEtlng WALL-WASHING - MINOR Repairs. Reasonable prices. FE 5-2482 after s. Petty Hjsese 1 ISH HOT FAITHS, ES your order 2 hours i. Ml-1496. 170 Canlir PkntE TenlBf A PIANO TUNING TUNlVd I Reconditioning, Kay Cnvtl Chuck Ft ZTW8 Plastering Service PLASTERING, NEW AND REPAIR. Vern Keller UL 2-1740 FLAifiiifrarintifTmMA'fes. D. Meyers CM 3-0163 FLAtflHiNd, Nlw A'Hb RiT pair*, No lob too large or too small. F0 2-7465. Rontol Iquipmont BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR IANDERI • POLISHERS WALL PAPER, 0TIAMRRS DRILLS - POWRR SAWS m Joilyn < _ Fi 4.4)05 Wallpaper Stoamor Floor tondort, polishers, hand aahdan,* fumoeo vacuum claantri. Oakiand Fuel A Fafnl, 436 Or-chard leko Ave. FE MISA______ K 'Blyd. N. _ _ move In and share expanses. 673-1694 Wonted Real Etsote 36 Television, Radio and HW Saralca 1 TO 5P LAND CONTRACTS REBUILT AND GUARANTEED TV'* Sit.95 up. Ob*l TV and Radio. 3400 Ellzabalh Lak* FE 44945 Urganthj wanted. San us before Warren Stotit, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyk* Rd. FE 5-8145 CMn Evas. 'Ill 1 p.m. MULTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICE Tree Trimming Service ACE TRIE • STUMP REMOVAL tramming. Oat wr bid. 6l2-2tl0. _ removal. Vary low coil; Fl >2406. LlIrlHok wANtio bH aLII typss of real asiata. . CLARENCE RIDGEWAY REALTOR 998 Walton i PE S-7651 iiEKb' LAkd '^AfOHV DAttMAYV on largai lakes. Buyers walling. 1 GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR 29* W. Walton FE >7*83 General Tree Service Any sit* lob. FE 5-9994 FE 5-3023 MONTROSt T*»lrii£ can get cash ter you. PAUL JONEI REALTY PR 44558 Aportments-Furnlshtd 37 lounge, modern kitchen,1 pr •judjo t or FE ......... snirdnee. rtftmnctt mqulrtdj- eluding utllltlM. FE s-wBsr _______ ..ALi-UflOniIT0'R- nliwil. FE 5-88*9. ipts. on Poniiec Lake end High-land Rd, All Fh, Mrs. Lmv, 4/31190. aiit Highland AND f tiMMi, aLl HyVAYl near diMIteih. Inquire 2335 DMW l roOMI, BAiiMWNt, SX5FT- emr. private entrance and Mth. *65. ppr month, Call P| 4-1589. 'TrfiCSnFMt'RtB' NHWI5Wl«6b •II ulllltles lum.. Hit III Or-chard Lika Ava, FE b*>*2,..... 4-46JJ altar 4 p,m,_i “*•—ITKR5MA, INC COON aiwMa 1 Today'i Mit luyi , Art Found In THE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AO PAGES FE 2-87)0. __ FIRSTFLOOR, 1 ROOMS'___________ bath, private. 19 Ellzabalh Lk. 'Rq. MIXES NEIGHBORHOOD —------— bath — Close to sown — near team. *16.00 a -Heal furnished. CALL F ■,2-9142. MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD 5 ROOMS and bath, haated, newly eacoeebid 52'>'/3 s. Saginaw, call FE 2-7284 iTter 1 p- Open daily APARTMENT I HR I* furnished forv your Inspection. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. Rfnf 1125 to MM THE F0NTAINBLEAU 995 N. csss l,nk* Road O'NEIL____________PE 3-7677 ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERY OgfAll. dulH Only________1 PE M918 HrIE-ROOM URPBR APART-man! within wnlklng distance of miftf a.1 4 - ROOM FURNISHED, ADULTli INBCfmwn Lake. RE 5-tt05. FURNISHED 3-BRpRDOM OliRjLEX on Woedhull 39077. 2-BEDROOM, tetrad. Ratei. quire a)1 791 OOrll .... 2 BEDROOM ON‘HAffdNlfR«*T, ■ Pniwl«i.UL24752. V'¥ISA6«M "Wreif 'TIXKACI, Inquire 129 $. Edith. FE 44178. HSfterRNWtY okc-orated, aimotl new. vary, rearanabla. 1 B A L VALUE, 3'WW6?056?5ti,''T%“B I Our Lady oT Lakes. ROOMS AND BATH, UTILITIES fumlsnad, *71, par mo. Rafrlgara-tor, Stova. ajf central Ava., Lakt Orion. Call 47MM8.; Bstoia? ?a* rage on W. Walton BJvd, Lot lOOx 300. uy month. Floyd Kent, Rnsii-ter. FE 54185. •r6om house. aafTilirifTIsJ. month. OR . I-ROOM HOUSE. Rif IRlHCBS ISO UFayafta j -i R6om| flat. 7S4 w. Huron, can oif 3-M07, ’ itAlHI ski ‘AM* This lovely iww I bidreoth. Buiii-ln kitchen, carpels. Beautiful view, SIM monthly. Wlii give a year's lease, or might eanawar npffgn to buy. Alad lovely modarn fur-nlshad lakt front hema. 887-5417 “'lOULIVAlD'HIlSHTI-------- - Mltdraom-Unll -87l FsirMenfh Contact Rnldtnl Manager 544 Baal Jlw. at Valencia Ft ATMS Haw L .'and 4-itarpom Home 297 W, Vale at Hanley . RENT OPTION $72.50 MONTH Excluding taxes and Iniurancs eesamanv paved tfraai. Mode Dally and Sunday "YOUR CREDIT IS f|Sb HERE' OUR TRAOIL DIALS > ARE TIRRIPTc, £ Michael’s Malty 1)3-7181 WE 3-4150 UN t-XESL .|A|«l^“hl»Tl0ODWYr> badrewh watt ihm name Tn.haad of radaceratlng. Ipatfai Mnslaara- NBWLY DECORATBO 3-BEDROOM; living mom, dining rdgm, bam, wflNtv, no chlidran, 43M 19 Mile Rd., near Mound Rd, PONTiACrwr EJL •AM WARWICK N Lake, 1-btdrpom b wiirifie eiir *s>__ Rent Reems , m rmvxg 4-BEDROOM BRICK Brick ranch home, (area ----, separate dining n ^.... iUMIlty mom. gaa conking, m baths, ns tadian 2-car garage wl... above. Large wall landscaped tot, WHh surfaced driveway. Prlv. park —“ beach an nice tarn, located hi Silent am* near Walled Lake, price 817AM FHA -----------^ PRANKS, REALTY VBHHHiNnUka Road EM 3-3208 EM s-bi6R66wu J _ ACkE.jTj owner. P> 4-4976. ____■ _ 6-ROOAA*'RANCH BRICK, MAR AT-lachsd garage, paved drive, V* r In Awn ' tend or your old ,' of condlfton, tor . room. Batamant, large m, ppto street. Immediate occupancy. Open ^j^haWrealty , WE S4S00 UN ! 333-7555 $500 DOWN 3-bad room brick, ' “ paved street, earl mat, earamK" ipRPMnE cost. 8K>mL credit necessary. prle* ‘Wjlmbs-bartram 4392 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains OR 3-1950 ““ *-*• $9,390 . ,our Tot, full bbti- cupbya^j1 'nST'mSnEY** bWN. YOUNG-BILT HOMES rooms, itS^tmTjvlilfemn.’Lnj? ilful cahintfs and alnlM jraSi Jw baths, 23-foof master bedroom, full bassimanf, gaa heat, 2-car at-teched garage, paved street In well Az new fatten shew - yearling rancher. 100XI42- site, 1 bedrooms, gpSMM, of fprmKa topped haaf/ alum, storms ana 81G900. 8M0 now, 87111 HAGSTROM REALTOR Event enlngs call ICKETT Rl wr. " HIITER TO 4 ACRES - with -this 5-room home, attached 2-cat garage, fruit tree*, lake privileges. Only 51V MILL I AMS LAKE — 7-room ranch home, flora* living room with fireplace, hot . wqler host, attached garage, site Rite today. 68 FT. LAKlPRONT moms me: f™' — porches, ■ tile rS* yard. CAI CALL B. 2-0179 HOLIDAY BONUS tai family home;' lots of room and out at ar family price, st 514,900 3-bedroom, large llv-g room, built-in kitchen, an ex-a nice walkout basement. Iff I shew you today. WHITE, INC. . 2891 Dixie Hwy. Wtem wWwsT ' ' HUNT00N LAKE only 510.000. WARDEN REALTY 333-7*17 Immediate Possession Perfect ter a handyman — This S* bedroom buninteUGL. Comer Good garage. Nice Kaas# tod Excellent privileges Sylvan I Only $5,250 Small down payr 540 monthly includes taxes to KEEGO HARBOR INCOME, 2 PAM-ily horn* ties* to acteou*, shopping. 8-ear garage. Call u* for LISA tUlt-PJINDlZ MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD BARGAIN Lovaly'S Sparkllni g oak (tears — n WRIGHT Ml Oakland Ay*. Sale Heases VACANT Ugh. 3-bedroom carpeted and screens, 1W fenced, full prtei 811, Templeton 4-Bedroom Ranch Modern brick, TO baths, located :on large landscaped, fenced lot.: Near Sylvan Shopping Center — Priced at $13,900. Lei us shaw VC" today I . K. L Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Road 682-0900 i good’ location and Auburn Heights let. In i right, payments, call for a now. W* have fha xei cant. Mr. Graham. West Side Only 5100 dawn plus costs ter qualified Veteran. Others SOSO antt frame home, huq garden snaen, VA appri • 350. Monthly payments j. than hpnt. Mr. Graham. RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 261 S. TELEGRAPH , PE 54619 pproved at Sir Substantial.. oak ftoors. Double ga Beautiful sattMg wHh , on ELIZABETH LAKE, able down payment for buyer. IMMEDIATE ^DSSES- 3 Bedrooms __„ lwatery low, 3 tots, m-car garage. _ ■- Kggga, CaF xn with N* _..J. Gaa t DOWN Will b Rite horn*, If your credit k goc CALL 'FOR DETAILS. - / Humphries ARRO hood. Wall-to-wall carpeting ft Ing reofr wMtaM|te-------— Plenty g NEARLY NEW Move Now-E-Z Terms Faymante Ilk* n Leslie Bldg. Co _____FE 40985 NEW AHO . READY Mi mom Bu i n Dlorah I MW • Ft NO DOWN PAYMINT NO MORTGAOI COST NO PAYMINT FIRST MONTH Houses located In til parte of Pontiac are* with or without £— Pull basement, 3 bedrooms, 20* kitchen and family room, brick tram, model si rn Kinney nna-Blalnf^ Open IMS dally W* BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS PI 1-27*2 AFTERNOON___ EVENINGS AFTER 7, LI I-73S7 ND MONEY D.QWN rt-laval or ranch sfSMbf home* n your Ini. Modal apaq 184. g. flattleyTbldr. -6981 Evaa. EM 84681 “OWNER GOING SOGtH ays sail this 4-b4droom her ill basement and I beautiful an nly $16480. NEWINGHAM REALTOR____________UL342I0 ' SAUNDERS i WVAtT -REALTY n™.™ .74 AUEURN RE 3-70*1 *99*- OK 342»ii»gQIC aw. Rxciiiem TvrnNt W. H. BASS Associate NO MONEY DOWN Mixed Neighborhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA I Pr«{M.”OKBM.4**3 Wymtn Lewi* , M«nn» 3-bodroom All brisk cotonlsl ranch. Cfrarfiip bath, cllnlrvo room, fill-iehad baiamanl, raeraatipn. All brick machad garaga and braata- -was- In. PuTl bnaamanis, ons haw. a bedroomi, w* contKtor tradaa. Between Orion A Oxford Town-ahkw. yiiHI. ~ _ . Ill your fM small Mm*. 1 bedroom, gas heated ranch. Jurt 4 room .X l».^, 'nffl tf* Jnastat6M'10MIS Quality built - Priced right -Deal glracf with guilder. Corrigan Consul jgjjWPWIbaM iwuiR balh^^modern, ter sal* rail ErokmOTOEBniRr i on* ham. 8 —I JmMtr trad*, raan Orton A Oxford Town-i, 628-1565. SYLVAN LAKI I acre, all i *11,980-*714834 NEW HOMES Full Baiementi $00 DOWN *$68 per mo- ■xciuding tax** and Insurana* Visit our modal at 9*0 ArteMilf, (seres* from Northern High) OPEN 10*8 DAILY IPOTLIftfT 8^30, CO. AfK about our trmte-ln pin HAYDEN' 3 Bedroom Tri Level $9,995 $1,000 DOWN IWH1 MTxktl OPEN WILL oWLI^A^fj^i^Up LOT J. C. HAYDEN, Reoltor Roth. OL 1-1949'EM 34*04 18791 Highland Rd. (AAE9) .. .......... brick. Ex- re, new carpeting, bultf-n nw onu range, iv, bijbs wit-------- ramie tp* and bullt-te yanhy. farad stalls, parquet fleers, of storage space, gat parr ham, wall wnSifiapad let. NEAT, CLEAN 2-BEDROOM BUN-■pite Went living rawin and dir Ing romp. Oak titers, all he« . storms and screens, luvear g rag*. Lak* privileges. 89498, PHONE 682-2211 L 5243 Case-Ellzebeth Rend, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OWNER OUt OF TOWN a moms, gas hail, corner let, near Central High, *5,990, Easy tewfls. 4 rooms, plastered walls- *“<“■ gas Iwnt, bear garage, Mixed Neighborhood Bargain! NORTH PONTIAC $69 Down $55 Month SSTWar....... FEATURING oas ham Permanent ho* water Furniture finlshad cabinets CALL ANYTIi^|n^A(^Y, SAT. AND . ■ ,,a264»7S ■ RIAL VALUE - A-I BUYS NEAR WATERFORD HIGH - Over an acre with, 5 ream, 1« story home. Knotty pine breezeway, at-tached 2 car garage, needs some finishing to make It a dandy 2 bedroom^ hn"te- *M90 with 5308 CLARKSTQN SCHOOLS - A dandy 3 bedroom ranch with Ita ear attached garage, gas heat, lots of dosels, well fendsceped ltd 107 -. X 150 ft. S10400 with 5300 down. . This won't last long. dost TO DOWNTOWN - Extra and garage. In good residential district. $10,500 with easy terms. * WATERFORD REALTY >. Bryson-Reeltor 2891 Dixie Hwy. |all 673-1173 or FE 2-1812 after five NICHOLIE WEST SUBURBAN . ^ - —iroom brick with tell buy I, auto heat, carpffed llvlnfl 'po^?lIwKivedrst?ret! Item locatwn. Center an ap- LAKE PRIVILEGES 3-bedroom ranch home, tile bath, gas heat, carport, large lol paved street., Recently decorated. About JKnterlMM MR TsS^nio* jbwm Price reduced. About S85 par month payments Including taxes and Insurance,'It's vacant. , payments less' than rent and 5250 moves you In.' SMpSP E0MlM GILES 3 BEDROOMS, BASEMENT, anchor tenesd yard and all city conveniences. Near ..schools and stores, yet north of Walton. Easy farms 0l> FHA financing. ST. MIKE’S, 3 unit or tern* family ham*. Us* If as a family home new and ah Income whan fha families non*. 10 rooms and ,8 baths. All priyafa entrances, new ml n I. Tile fl I THIS f d walls. prle*." GILES REALTY CO. PE 84171 111 Baldwin Avn. Opens a.m. to9pirn. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE CITY-Wof , webster School area . - 5-room wngatoite I 3 , bedrooms, > large living rosm, MS hast, SU50 DOWN, S65 PER A80NTH. _____ pa haat, l-car garaga, paved drive. Corner lot. ,120x94 . teet^THIS IS A GOOD BUY AT Smith , Wideman KENT sa.500 with 0958 down. Onto S69 mo. InchidlnB tax** and interest. 8 FAMILY - ovnr up par month plus war own living quarter*. Ideal Investment. 2 bettis, tell Mnw. Comer tocatton on PonHnc's west side, la* this at 19,7(8. term* CLARKSTON - Downtown are*. 9 baonn. nfcter hom*. Bath, Part bamf. Shad* traas. in.iio. Floyd Ktnt Inc., Realtor 29*8 Dixie Hwy. et Telegraph "SMITH" DRAYTON PLAINS AREA On a 'pared read cenvanlant to •hopping ante. Large 87 fl. jtolbg room. FulMInlny room and kllch- up, tell baiamanl with new pa* furnace. *11200. By appointment. ' WEST SUBURBAN Brick mud frame ranch hom* an paved street, 3 bedrooms, living mom with dining l, kitchen, utility room, t tell fll* bathrooms, Rolf* H. Smith, Realtor 246 8. Tslegrsph i PE 3-7848 | P* J-7382 BATEMAN' GETS RESULTS NEW GUARANTEED HOME TRADE-IN PLAN Bloomfield Rancher Allt ERICK — Batamant and 8-car garaga, Most convanlanl to- room wjm firopnot# ryjwBm; In the Country Mfabl«Mma with acreaga furtnar Small Town Living Do you prater the pace of a small iownf Botlor Invottlgala this real 4-Bedroom Ranch •MUflfUlly Isndicapsd, otota (8 Our Lady of tha Lakes Church and School, us baths, csrptflng, M jMVnnrSf} InRasnTof 'vHtog* . of Leonard. Pretnly dacoraisd In-•Id* png null avan brand ntw PA max dishwasher and larga UxiMi. chiidran-i playroom. Wonderful •offing with baautllul yard ten cad with white ranch, tlyl* tend*. iprload to tall fait at only lion with tl,8M down plus ootli. Prestige Area pMullfully landKMpd, Interior Real Cozy MftlfiHS na rnorfgaba coils, 1-bad room bungalow, wli baiamanl and real Jofc'^l^nF" PIU'UK BUILDER'S CLOSEOUT y-wgftfm. -i^TOJ^cvxr'ii.’iiii.n^ Trad© The BATEMAN Way MEMBER Of INTER-CITY REFERRAL SERVICE C0AST-T0-C0AST TRADES 377 S. Tdltgraph Realtor FEB-7161 Open 9-9 M.L.S. Sunday 1-5 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1963 twenty-sevek: Sal* Houses , Mixed Neighborhood No mortGbjge cost Flret month free MODELS OPEN AFTERNOONS 14 AND SUNDAY WESTGWN REALTY _ 484 Irwin off East Blvd. Pl'I-m iWffiOOns. LI 2-4677 B\ 5, properly fenced, nice beech garage, property/ fenced i landscaped. An Ideal homo your family. Call today for CRAWFORD AGENCY ittke hour* * t_____ M W. Walton PE 8-2304 STOUTS Best Buys Todoy Room for Al(, In Baldwln-Wal. i decorated In* iw gat furnace, Drayton Araa Neat $ room bungalow, floors, plastered want " iXm heat. Walking dlatani i and shopping, On Washington Park Vacant for knmt—, slon, 3 bedroom ranch wHh j basement, gas ft yard..' fenced^ ba Warren Stout, Realtor DORRIS IRICK RANCH - BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS *23,750. An executive .neighborhood of fin* prestige homes between Birmingham with, tun betem* id gatage, 24x24. A Ml tomb shelter i BARGAIN FAMILY HOME, *7,*50. Out state owner ordered soldi C exawrpwty tibjjja Celt Pi i. 01 or.FHA term*. WEST SlDe, **,*50. Home located lust off West Huron. ........ Isrg* and cemfortabla with excellent baseme..., ... torcad air heat, garage, Ideal for schools,n mapping and chu uORR i$ fc *SON, REALTORS *534 Dixie Hwy. OR MW "multiple LI8TINOSERVICE Val-U-Way LINCOLN JR. HIGH AREA I bedroom brick front homo. Nice large living room, kitchen end dining area, tile bath. Full price OFF EAST WALTON •ar. M.S.U.O. Lovely^ decor/ Mr month Including taxes and EAST. BLVD. NORTH Jtvaly 4 bedroom homo, corpalet tying andTahjIng ■ room. (*8*52 dtcnan with DIshMaHar, full MM nant. Near sdiaeL bua and shop riant. Just til A. FHA terms. R. | (Dick) VALUET ALT0R ( FE 4-3331 i Oakland Ava. Open ,*-7 ANNETT 150 Down-Canal Front HWoot water front, ocean to i lakes, I mine MS trio Houses ITT N. Tasmania Six-room, 2 bath*, besemept. two lots., two-car garage. Price 112,400. Ot, no down payment; ' 261 Orchard Lake Large, clein home. Ten rooms, 3 \317 W. Huron StJ Beautiful brick home, nine rooms, 1V5 baths. Zoned personal service. Near high school and hospital. Price, ItfdPQ. Terms. John K. Irwin E 5-9444 OPEN * a MILLER AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA _ A delightful cedar shake ranch-type home oh an extra deep lot: 2 nice bedrooms, step-saver modem kitchen, huge double-duty utility room, glasaad-in aluminum patio, alumk num storms and screens, i'— num awnings, carport. Ont « r. $11,150, w full bath and tlrpelacs, pays • eluding all furniture up bring* in 010410 par weak. Nearly 12 par earn return, sio,*50. Terms evsii- r garage, S Ms, net II this ter only (7,150 William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 MlXjfr NEIGHBORHOOD — NICE baeement. Gas . Two-car garage. Only Sit LAKE FRONT— Erick a Easy farms. INCOMC SPECIAL - Two-family on $oOfh Marshall. Two make the easy FHA' payments: Only (4po down. TEN' ACRES — WRh almost new Phone FE 4-3544,or FE 2-4010 KAMPSEN far entrance hall and large living room, dining room and kitchen with eating area. Family room with fireplaces basement, hot water heat, two-car geragt, Immediate possession. TRADE, Out Joslyn SCHRAM Orion Township 10 aertg of used s-room qpmo Sj a piui leaf i 1 Plus a chicken coop, a ,000 with terms. Income and bam down, plus a bechetor'i apartment In beiemem, full bam. gas tar heat, and garage. Priced it 013.700 FHA TERMS, * ” ‘ IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 CORNER MANBFIBLC IIhW CARNIVAL COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK For Home Ownership Loans t ,,IPs Easy . • FE2-41 TRI-LEVEL — NEAR OUR 1 ! only 8 months DRAYTON AREA i -brick home, has 'Ito. place, nice porch and gas Only SSOOdown plus cc^- TWENTY^ ACRES - new ranch home wk P car garage $5,000 down or small . haute or house trai kj Times Realty JOHN KINZLER, REALTOR 521* DIXIE HWY. MLS _ <74-0*4 EVE, FE 84W - OR 3-4802 TAYLOR I, 80x400. Handy to grade school . _ Vi mile 1o shopping ei tar. Full price ot *11,*00. Tan to suit. Call •. Evas. EM >7544 ■TRADE Immediate Possession home with 3 bedrooms, carpet, living room, ceramic bath,, I u I basement and tl^-car garage, you have *500 down and are able t qualify tar FHA It’s yours. Sallln Clarkston First offering on this 5-room brick ranch home With 3 bedrooms, TMs bams, gaa heat and Tear garage. Thera Is a partly finished family room and spacious lot. Selling for Lets • Acreage Frushour Struble DIXIE LAKE FRONT, 15 MINUTES to Pontiac near 1-75, *2,4*5, *300 down, 025 month. OR 3-12*5 -BLOCH BROS., FE 4-450*. " IRWIN G0OO LAKEFRONTS from. North of PMtlic In a beautiful setting overlooking most “ Dear Cake and near 1-75 la location at this lovely (bar brick ranch home featuring family room with fireplace room with bar In basement; 3VS baths. Nice, carpeting ahd drapes throughout.j 2j&. gar garage — MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR 1 W. Wotten ..... FE 3-7M3 LAKE - LIVING. LOTS, FRlVATE 15 minutes to Pontiac, S7*S. t* down, Sf month. OR 1-12*5, ELOCH BROS., PE 4450*. uiks LiViMb Ldt2 -r i5 toffL to Pontiac, *2,4(5, low down payment, S25 a month. OR 3-12*5. tdMl BLOCH BROS. CORF. $5000 . L. DAILY REALTY EM 3-7114 NartiiBrn PrEftrty 51-A NORTHERN MICHIGAh Reeurt Property TRAILER SITES, DON'T RENT -r buy i <5x120, blacktop, gas, OM —A- *** —nth. OR J-lfas ^ PE 4-450*. 54 BLOCH B______ Lots - Acreage 24 ACRES at only t Knob M(l i I ACRES — Level parcel « , ft. frontage, r*,,r,“ grade school, Pontiac. Only I walking dl . good i ' w~5 \ Warren Stout, Realtor 50 N, Opdyke Rd. Ph. PE MIPS BLOOMFIELD I, *Wood*d lots ’have all Im-1 s, churches, RORABAUGH Rosd Raaltoi Woodward PC 2-5051 clarkIton "XliX, . .. acres* wrra ICfBi 1110 down, $ month. Near 1-75. OR 3*1298 BLOCH BROS'.# FE 4-4809. CITVt . * „ MMMffW'lg", space, beSfend ull^ty raom. iv, car garage. Vacant. Full price, *0,500. >rth Side-Vacant lull basement, r“™‘ * ivroisre minole Hills dltlon. Large livlnajtom, dining-room, porlor end nwd-PUll basemonl, , automatic ftfe iuii “*r*B*' v*“n ’ jewood Golf Club „ Lake-front brick Capa Cod ham* with 4 bedrooms, I BsAMmaaaaaM* AM lqf floor, 2 |KI 5*® 2nd floor, 2 full bi RUTO* i« WILL TRADE 28 E. Huron St 'E 8-0466 CLARK 1 lUeURIAN. 3 bedroom Full baasminl, automml* ^ ice, oak lloori, plaslarad walls, ramie Ilia bam, modern kitch-i, vasilbula antranea and , 011,MO. Terms., UNION UKI OBCTION. Desirable 2-bedroom ranoh tome, nawlyl g'g,ri«wrif2,jr: l.k—* finished ratraallon itomMN furnace, olh- ng. call OR 3-1*7* #r fl 1 M*1 Muifipia Llillrf BATEMAN COMMERCIAL EXCHANGE OFFERINGS HOW PROPERTY EXCHANGE CAN BENEFIT Y0UI Property that na longer suits your needs should bt converted tor roaioni ot tax dttormom or. *ultt otlan as additional Income. Exchange property In meal casai Is mor* desirable than an outright sale. eXCHANQIS are a specially with tna Commercial DeperTment at ■atomon Realty. > YES IT IS POSSIBLE! lataman Raaity Company closely artlllaied with members of to*_ MtMnal Traifarj ciyp and War-City Real istata. Rafarral lervica you IxcHANOl. ywr^mOroTili At your canvonltnoo, make an apt >partl#s.V ml, lnv«afm«nt or buiman •ppolntmtnf to olicuti your SHOT AND A BEER 1 Mrrltle day and night builnti SHOPPING AROUND . ,ou finally r EXCHANGE SPECIAL / HAVE Ii47l OR, ft.-masOnry bldg. N*t on* atom but two. 1044-CF. WANTS Anything of vilu* *v*n * hourid deg If h*'i worth 1100. EXCHANGE With BATEMAN \ COAST TO COAST TRADES 367 S. T*legr#h Realtor 0p*n 9-8 EXCHAN00R FE 6-9641 Sun.’ 1*5 By Dick Turner ‘If you think that Russian nerve-testing on the autobahn is dangerous, you ought to see what they're doing here on Route 73!” _____Sf 5, - FE 4-450*. High Hill Village , fine community of Home sites to build your .own, home. WMlt)# pB streets. Many hilltop parcels, 100g#40.' LOW Ml St,*50 Wanted!! Commercial ^ocatad at corner gt Orchard_Lake _____ VOorhels and Ottawa Drive. ideal location forTighrcommercial ic» w%f bk’clt Acreage 1* acre-at $500 acres on Granger Road. Price Lots two 50'x2W lota, scott Lake frontage. Priced, at *2.000' each. John K. Irwin REALTOR* 312 weat Huron Since 1*25 Phone FE 5-9444 Open * .a.m, to * g.m. Sale Farms 1(5 ACRES — ______. <6 EARLY AMERICAN ■e — complete and adegui of buUdlngt — has bean « is one of the best dairy far Oakland County — tor'the rr i wants an .oparaUonal„,fa - iatato -ta llva on *59.500 — 25 par cent UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 445 Dixie Highway Clarkston IRWIN r imlay City with g lenqas y mod- ~FE 3-7«fa Sak BusIwESs Property 57, 15 ACHES ON M59 II* w*4t of Pontiac city II a good 5-room Iwma ....... ____mint, 150* ot commercial front- agd an M-J* plus 15 acre* in baci This property haa many uin, an Can' be purchased tor *20,0*0. Ca tor more Information today. HAROLD ’ll, F RANKS, RBALT Y 2503 Union Lake Raid EM 3-320* 240 FOOT FRONtAGE CORNER. LOCATION, near Pontiac Airport. Priced at only 275 par WHITE, INC. ‘ 22*1 Dixie Hwy. , T»hone 474-04*1 .. ■ BusImis Propirjy CLOSE TO PINtt KNOB SKI AREA, ---------buolnooo let 200'xMO' on GOOD BIO CORNBE. C h Walton Blvd., cl . 75x300'. *7,*50, BrawElr Rial Estate FE 4-5181 fbMitCIAr Located oi I 414' JB8*fldn\..___________ Will Mil all or IOC parcels. BLAIR REAL ESTATE > Opportunltloi 59 PACKAGE LIQUOR ITORI, RON I lac bargain. Call Ryan, 045-4525 and wlto optrtflon will net owners 11,000 por month. Only 17,000 down. REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" JJ0 W, Hurdn__ FI 4-35*1 'mimmimm Telegraph Rd, and ally limits Of PonlTac, showing md. Mlvrn with yomr*ot#|ji In. pyim, xong term Annett inc., Realtor I (. HuttPl • 8-0444 Open BylBHMIO ltd lundiv 1-4 LIQUOR BaR straight Bar. No Mod, Cio«* to praaiiad. n*W'■****■ ffaok. Caiih in now* On'to'r* ill%% Ms sfl* n#W' WARDEN rIalTY°W" 1454 W. HDlWl _____ 333-7157 rnmMf 1'AFMV* Business OpportunitiEl 59 STORE 48x53, 3-BEDROOM HOME and 5 acres, rent, trade, Or all or .pari. OR 4-1*35. VE HAVE A STATION, tor lease, which Is now pumping 35,000 gallons par month. This station la located at 2280 Orchard Lak4 Rd., at the earner of Inverness, Sylvan Lam, Mich. For more Imormatlon, MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANOMESSER, BROKER 1573 Telegraph FE 4-15*2 '"'to BUY OR StLL A rtltStW 1843 Orchard L SbIe Lam) Contracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Warren Stout, Realtor SO N. Opdvka Rd. FE 5-8145 Open Eve*, ‘ill HmR. Broker. 3040 Elliabeth L WBBtojl CEntrEcts-Mtf. 60-A I land. Cdtl MICHAEL'S REALTY Hta UN 2-2252 WE 3-4200 HR 333-7B5______________ film SEASONED land cGntracts il before \ IOS *. LO, 1 TO/50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgent'y you deaf. Warrtn Stout, Realtor Monty to Loan i >-yo. LOANS TO $1,000. uigatt^wi first visit. Quick, frl« v' ■ FE 2-9026 la than number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. *;30 to 5:38—Sat. 1 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $1,000 OFFICES IN Pontiac—Drayton Plains—Utica Walled Lakt-BIrmingham LOANS .I.’ TO $1,000. ; To consolidate bill* Into on* r ly payment.' Quick service, ... is experienced counsellors, life Insurance — rry It. PI Ml , „ 5 Pally, »at. * to 1 Teague fiHAMcC CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER ROMEO 214 E. ST. CLAIR LOANS 825 TO 21.888 AUTOS - 4-7011 QL !•* . 2-3518 PL 24 "Friendly 2*rvl8*" TmNS Insured Payment Plin _ BAXTER 8, UV4NOSTONB . Finance ce. i Pontiac State bank lulldli FE 4-1538-9 WHEN YOU NEEO $25 to $1,000 5 Will be glad Ig help you. STATE FINANCE CO. Mortgut lEiiw ^ ~6l cashbunumi?eo Exclusive plan. Remodel youi Consolidate Info apt lew monthly payment. And extra cash I? r— need eome. Call anytlm*. ilg I Construction Co, F»3-W1, / CASH Loans to $3,000 Phone ar Apply in Perton ^Family Acceptance Cor^. QUICK CASH LOANS IIP TO $3,000 > monthly payment , survey -or abstract. SPECIAL , M A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE— Consists oft 2-plece living mom suite with 2 stab —'1». l cocktail table ahd( 2 table 7-pitee bedroom liilte with double VOSS AND BUCKNER, INC. 20* NATIONAL BUILOING. PONTIAC, PH. FE 4-472* rings to match with 2 vanity 5-dTece ‘dlnttte s*t, 4 chrome chairs,' Formica top table, 1 bookcase, 1 fxli rug Includtd. All tor 83*9. WYMAN ‘ i FURNITURE CO. • m HURON FE 4-4*81 PIKE FE 2-2158 FOR SALE OR TRADE C Sale Clothing Saks Household Goods 65 (1) 3 PIECE BEDROOM SUITE, “T, guaranteed stovea, and washers, all sizes .. .. ____ 2-plece living room, 12*. Bid picture TV*, *24 up. (Oil space heaters from *1*.: Nice 7- *(*. Odd bads, dressers, cheats, springs and rugs. Everything In Weed furniture at bargain prices. New factory second bedrooms, 347 Factory second living room, *77 ’ E-Z Terms — Buy—sell—Trade Open 'til * AAon. and Frl. BARGAIN HOUSE 183 N. Cass at Lafayette FE 2-4842 t-way traffic, use Sanderson Johnson or Oakland to N. Cass APARTMEfiT'ELe'CTRTC-ST<5vE ble and,,.. laundry tabs $5. rioor ramm w.ra. Walnut dining sat with china 85*. Gas and electric itovei *18 up. “llpFi^ 2 WEEKLY SPECIALS 3 _ROOMS'. BRANO. new .furni- ture with nice stove 0 AND NEW BBOROOMS • $47 iMMpRypwy L)V|NQ R00M . , BRAND NEW ( PC. DINET - » USED .stoves, refrigerators m E-Z Torma-Buy - sail - Trade, LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1448 Baldwin at Walton •— —'FE 8-f8*8 11 SUITE, miac. 57 8. Falrmount. ROOMS OF BRAND NEW FUR-nlture, living room, bedroom and dinette - ail tor $2*5. *3.08 weekly. Patraon Furniture, 210 East Pika. FE 4-7881._______■ 5x12 LINEdLUM RUGS TllE, CJMENT, TRIM P BATHTUB, AREA ... kSPHALT TILE THE FLOOR SHOP 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE RO ' WALTON Walton. Cbmar -___... klgUT BnY+hing toy want p®P . the home can POUND AT L and 2 SALES. A little put of the way lot Iasi to pay. Furnlmi. .... appliances of all klpds NEW AND o pay. at if mmmm ___ .lilt our frada dept. real bargains, t We buy, tell or trade. Coma and look around, J acres of parking. Ptatte FE 5-*241. Open Mon. fo ‘ ‘ * ■ " ' * ,24 MONTHS TO PAY 4 miles E. of Pontli itlac or Ignis oi Veiling tile Plastic wan Tile Vinyl ” ' .... . ....Ing .... 49c id. yd. BEG Tile PE 4-**57 1075 W. Huron £l£ARAN(!E SALE 59.50) 5-T*, 144.58. Bunk I - 15 styles. wrought li plete with __________ back rugs, $14,*5) • PEARSON'S FURNITURE colgniaL PuireiYOffErTXif&E selection, everything for your home. Family Home Furnishings, 3135 blxle Hwy., cor. Teiegreph, FRiGIDAiRE ELECTRIC RANGE, - ovens, exc. condition, Pee r'i n o 466M HotAGiNt R1PR1GIRATGK iJ CU, it with top freezer ., I4*.*5 V's ............*1*.*5 end up iWEET'l RADIO * APPLIANCE 12 W. Huron I). _______334-5477 "TiViNtDhY SALE Used TV'I end Appliances , at reduced erica*, untfl Jan,, Hi. MICH iB AW APPLIANCE CO., 3212 DIXIE HWY, OR 3-3011,■ Last of tha Month —CLOSEOUTS— Anything \ Stoc': MUSt G0I Come and Sie Give Ui a Bid > HOUSEKEEPING (HOP OF FQNTIAC luron It, FI 4-1511 ixn..mbil 'YiHMinrwi wmYifTOirwTB^ie'Ti'a- lag . tawing, machlni. Dial selling Mr button hoiai, ovarcaaT, are, — Blond ciblnat. F«y off acbwnl In' » months af 17 ntr month ar *M easily halanca, Universal Company. ffipirnii'iiMBlB mmm? lovely wood e*btnm. No M-imanli needed lo do datlgnt, i nam». wriinMWi. mw . ip! «n*, ate. All toalurei built lim china. Aifjimt paymenla of fio; Still under gyaraniee. Mien* a Necchl-linii Fl Hnl, ATIBTIilbCAINtTMirWR i, Malty XiBOried braids lo gia from. Alio taviral roll and rtmnanto lalael from our slock frafiWilfw ^ RncRaiier, pail John R. *52 BIFfiiSilfJkYIJR, ‘ fllll ""KINIflS room labia, chair* and, builaii. ISO, Washing macnlndi Ini Baby crib and mattraM, (10. jt-plaea (actional, ISO. Coll after n p.m, JM 3*3832. _ RWKTMRATBn-ANb RRICriR* 1»4( n»d*ii, PViaei, naw guar. W»ra IMh a uiito'mach^e No Sale Household Goods 65 REFRIOERATOR, $25, ELECTRIC $3$; jh" TY(.*w w*M>*r, refrigerator with top freezer, ^^a> stove, $25. y. Harris, warehouse Clearance, .OF- machlne. Forbes Pr Supply, 4501 Dixie * or ant 7-3444. Open .... , *fCai^ARliEfS' iWti' THE SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG balance $44.50. no attachme<>i> led. Curt's Appliance. OR 4-IlQl WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE AT OUR 18 W. PIKE STORE ONLY Apt.-Slze Gas Stove ' ..... $2t.*S 2-Pc. Living Room Suita ..... *2*.»5 7-Pc. Dlnnette Set $34.** 34" Table Top Gas Stove ...*3t.f3 mats, dishwashers. KITCHEN INTERIORS 3127 W. Huron . 33SB813 71 _____Sectional Sofa . $4*.*5 Guaranteed Elec. Refrigerator SJ9.95 Guaranteed Electric Washer $5*1*5 Easy Terms , ,, .FE 4-1244 Year End Repossessod ; CLEARANCE REGULAR tat.45 Glass lined ' gas TAPPAN1 BUILT-IN over and broil-r, regular $21.00 now SlOt.50. AUTOMATIC CLOTHES DRYER. - Phillips Petroleum Co. 2425 Orchard Lake Rd„ 4IM880 SHARP, CLEAN, TlRRlFlC“VAL-, —•* *■— Furnishings. 15 Dixie Hwy., cor, of_ USED 38-INCH ELECTRIC RANGE, less than l-year-oid, $2. Per weak. Used tires 14" High treads $4.*J GOODYEAR STORE 30 S- CAJS FE 5-4123 WE' -TAkE Home Furnishings, 2135 Dixie Antique* 65-A COMBINATION ANTIQUE BOOK-casa and china cabinet. 852-53)4. 4p|,Cufr-WD 4GING LAMPS, C ssad gless, chests of ....... skins choirs. Y-Knet Antiques, 15 Oakhlll, Htlly. ME 7-51*8. Hi-Fi, TV A Radios INSOLE, WORKS Ttorry! PE J-7253. MOTOROLA 21"" 'fw''WIW~PTC-b«, »»• OR 4-8220. SPECIAL 6f¥B|" it of Meimae d 1rB, U GOo6riCH STORE * . Parry if Fr 2-8121 For Sale MIkgIIemovi 67 ■Il furnace 42" hid* ANCHOR FENCES , 3 MONEY DOWN FE (747) I AUTOMATIC CABINET-STYLE tewing machine, 1*43 mod*l. But- sewing r tonholH,_______ ____ ... Single or doUbto needle v per month or full price ■ -------- Midflow Naadij-Eina. fe MSS) BATHROOM FIXTURE*, _____________ Twarf, — —•■■■ a ami tings. Lowe ■ Kemfone I beep an6 Aork - iIalf And quarters. Opdyke Mkt. FE 5-7*41. Bottle Gos Installation Two IMHWund cylinders and equip mant, *12. Graal Plains Oaa Co. FE (8172. BhitARiA Year IB66kS7 1*5*. Apphrton Cold FE (1813. Dictionary, ISdIRITS Stock or cyttom. Call ui first. Day or night. 33(432*, PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES *17 Orchard Lake Rd. — 1 ca|h Mb CARRY V Grove Mag. 4x8 ........... *3.3* S3.V5 DRAYTON PLYWOOD Dixie Hwy. _____OR M*1* toMPLitl ITOCK OF hlFl Awp service. MpntCSlfn Supply, 114 TY. Montcalm. FE (4712. diiltoM cAIwet», kltofilhi "furniture. 5118 Tubb* Read. OR 0 & J CABINET shop 343-3343. DlscOhfinusd Formica 254 IxTRa hIaT toll THAT~^6Lb room - gas tired baseboard (Its LU8iHR|iTjp - 35. recreation M.*9. Cell eh.«.n RlilBLACi TOUT FIRBQUETS 15 LB. BAG - 45c PACKAGE COAL 4 PKC. f BI. 10 FINE COMBINATION DOORS COMPLETE WITH ICRIEN AND ITORM 38"X28" OR 34"Xl9" - 111,*5 WOOD (TORM IAIH NEW |3.*3 BLAYLOCK COAL It lUPFLY CO. II Orchard taka Ava. _PE 3*718 oAi 8ftACif~hBatBri. ALriiZVl "r Thompson's, 7795 AM* _ar,._ GaI toRUAcB, Ullb, ntw, call Ft (7144, RWwAltoiAsiBOARblPlCllL “UR» All nalionaTly adv*rtiltd Soap, sugar, cotter, ilour, vegelablai, fruit lulcai. Baby Food, 94 tor **c Cut-Up Frlari, 14c a Lb. Dog Food, 12 tor 5*e a Homi ballvary quaniiiy. Call m7-. MPmlCIRf''eAlINITfriCTOT. mirrdr, sllgmly large i«lection t. ■ without Ughts^ ...JmJ—- Oil FURNACE, 84,000 ofU, I7l. ___hi FI 1-3741 _ .im rljhnfli.,eam|.nd po.k 1570 Opdyke ““ FacI GAft6lfrfllWt6Rrj(.L' L mriru: jiff* • Itandlnq lollil, iil.tli »ganpn |ilW »jtrtJ® * ii.il rwwir cfnrrWaitoii pR Piji, furnaea In1 goaf, .jaftlwdii JBfc fm S: Far Sab MiscelbmEV* 67 125.000 BTU. A8.H Seles, or MA (207. ■ , VAfl Yy„ A(fb HANb BASIN (ET up, cempi *f».*4 gas .._ „„„ ehatts. filaL'droning tables, typewriters, adding ma- T!TtSS& Dixie Hwy., OR .M747 3-13*1. 11 mi PARAK^T,_i|BV cleaning. Rani electric $1, Maandtoss caiyati, . ... WHEEL*, TIRES AND TUBES. I MR ...XBiriW* _______ Rochester. OL_l-*372. fOOOLE"CUPPING,”j5LSO OTHER breads. Rtasonable. OTWBeT ” Pl3APlBs;,rNO AAONBY bOWN, W Priced to go. 38c and up. ( YEAR END SALE i t&S&S PUREBRED BOSTON BULL TElt- ' rior, 3481 Featharstone. TOY poooles, akc, iilvsA ¥6- » BAS* ZOPPI ACCORDION. Also Buescher alto saxaphone. Call 651-8441. Good condition. ESTEY ELECTRIC FttYER 10-year guarantee. 12 relit 1 ..... .iBBUdid,- .. ______________ down payment. Balance 34 months. Caibi Music, il* n. Saginaw. HaRAAONV MONTfeREY GUITAR SALlE GUITARS . V . ACCORDIONS ' -art and lessons. FE 5-5428. i -TRUMPET, GOOD CONDI-, *40. OR 3.1304. 5-7 P.m. CLARINET I I, FE M INVENTORY SALE All Planoi and Organs at ' , Special Pricks i) Used. Lowary Brentwood Organ was 81,458. NOW **88. iupar discounts on all clarinets and \ trumpets. ‘ - BEFORE YOUbUy^- ■ GIVE US A TRY WIEGAND MUSIC 44* Elizabeth Lake Road FE 2-4*94 KLENTNER RIDING ACADEMY _ )St Instruction EM (*171 NEW RlblliO STABLE, 13458 NEAL New AII-Elsctronic Organs 2 manuals. 13 pedals; made by an American manufacturer, y Hny-6fEiB-FBE<‘ ' HAY ANE STRAW DELIVERED BY MORRIS MUSIC 34 s. Telegraph Road « (Across from Tal-Huron) FE 2-0567 NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL Several usixt Organs .greatly 7 ...... mgC ^AUrom tin y uintu. rtlcas range from fli.. „. esteY, lowrey and Baldwin ORGANS, ail must gq before 1*44. HAMMbNO CHORD Walnut finish.. In axcalM lion. *458. Terms. *15. d ance 34 months. Caibi At N. Saginaw. FB 5-4222. RENT A NEW GRINNELL PIANO $2.00 PER WEEK Grinnell's rmrtit-_________________ HEAR.SYBRI6 At IW IfIT AT: 'allaghers. From $**.50. .Gallagher Music Co. , 14 East Huron nan Every Nlght^'TII Christmas FE 44)566 SED GRIN -*3*5. . CONSOLE PIANO RENT A Trumpet, Cornet, Trombone, Flute, Clarinet, Violin or Snare Drum.Kit' $5.00 GrinneH's OWN TOWN STORE FB 3*714* jNTIAC MALL 4*2-0422 Office iqulpment 72 bookkeeping . ml General Printing 17 W. Lewrence Si, Store Equipment “T3 Eresiors ate, can be m awrence Phone FI Sporting Goode i al 43 W. •3117mm jnmrn;'Niw'ii^|ir< we buy. Mil and trade, Barnaa Haroravii Hdw. 742 W. Huron, J /aKITED: DIFr SkiNs ANt5 YiAW tors. Muskrat meets tor self Pontiac frail, Welled Lake, Sand-Graveiblrt OOOD drivBw, Biwn iinBi1 dillvwllWaP___ 8«hd7 gravel, fill dirt. OR 76 QRAVIL* F14* Wood Coal Coke-Fuel A SEASONED HARDWOOD; DB-flverML/eaion«ble, OR (1741, •AT'Wifwc* 'iBwrnnx. —Jilivimd, |lj* 1I-“ A«B' 7WNCH ‘CW.EftRV,‘“Wit* kory, oak* Attar 47 OR 3-WI1 A-t DRY r I R V f I.ACE VWO0f7, While Birch end oak. Dgllvcrcd. gapF, W88|r will fak M&HGAN TURBOCRAFT 2527 DIXIE HWY. OR ABM LOOK NOW ON DISPLAY THE NEW AND BEAUTIFUL 1964 SEE IT TODAYI - AT ■' MAZUREK MARiNE SALES S. Blvd. atSagftia* “ ' “ PINTER'S BOATLAND - Sea-Ray Thompson Starcraft Johnson Motors Trailers Winter skis — Sales — Rentals — ~l- Opdyho . 9 to 4 fe I Motors Orion. Wanted! Cars-Trucks K CARS AND TRUCKS i to 10 junk6aA4 an6 ™UCks; wanted. OR WtoS. 1, 2, Ok 100 J U N k CAR* AND 125 MORE Foe that high grade used ubr before you sell. H. we t. 4540 Dixie Hlghwa OR Slltt ALWAYS BUYING I I JUNK CARS - FREE TOE IS TOP SS CALL FE S-8142 SAM ALLEN 8. SON INC. Pdf that 'top d6lL*R* i SHARP LATE MODEL CARS. Averill's LLOYDS BUYING Good Clean Cart, 2023 Dixie Hwy. M 6c M Motor Sales "Since 1945" wa want iharp late models Highest prices paid 2527 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-03 Mansfield AUTO $ALES ARE YOU BUYING A NEW O^CpyRTflY CAR? WE WILL BUY YOUR late MODEL CAR. WE PAY MORE. 1104 Baldwin Ave. 335-5900 RrivatI party will paY CAsh tor good clean Ford or Chevrolet. 'ysjolfSiMYJMSOS. fOP $ f6r CLEAN CARS OR truck*. Economy Cars, 232$ Dixie. uT0P DOLLAR PAID" FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS GLENISTS ■ WANTiDl 1959-1*43 CARS Ellsworth AUTO SALES tin Dixie Hwy.' - * MA 5-1400 WE NtiD CARS TOP DOLLAR j FOR GOOD CARS MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES Ml OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-4547 .WAklVRb: 1614 OR '1*34 CffiSVY coup*. UL 2*50/4 after 3:20. Private RaRTV wIll Ray cash for^ good used pick-up truck. PE Hew and IlMdl Track! 103 1*4$ p6kb vvt6N pick-OR and 1M1 Chavy panel, new rubber, 1100 each. SAVE AUTO. FE 5-3278. i»N-mw7impr^Ams“Ti5»> and 4-wh**l drive. 34IF2024. ftM CHiVROLBT VIhTON. l6N6 box with 4-cyllndar angina, itand-ard transmission, heater, priced to Mill JEROME FERGUSON, Roch-talar FORD Polar, OL 1-9711, letter Used Trucks GMC 1 BRUMMETT AGENCY Iraclg Mila . FE 441 Next to Pontiac State Bank OTTOOTTOTCE i, FOR SAFE DRIVERS $23.50 QUARTERLY —i. Si,IMt medical, 11,000 anttlls, 8100 dtd; cotillion Wte. NO RATE £ , INCREASE -■ 1 No mamborihio looi $11 QUARTERLY 029.000 liability, 11,250 m s d I c a U0,000 uninsured motorist cover 1 I (Ml SIT Law rata* far tplilen end comprs ^rKTNntmStktoCV" r I* V-- A Choice of 35 New Soprts Cars. Complete Parts and Service on All Imports, Authorized Dealer far: JAGUAR MG SUNBEAM TRIUMPH AUSTIN HEALEY MORGAN HILL/"" SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND AVE. Autobahn Motors, Inc. I TELEGRAPH FE 8-4531 1044 FIAT .SPIDER RbADStfcR, I speed. Radio, heater, whitewalls. . Whit* with blue interior. Onl *1,495. Easy terms. PATTERSOI. CHEVROLET CD. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. 4.2735, 1942 VW 2-DOOR SEDAN. BLACK. Autobahn Motors, Inc. 17*5 TELEGRAPH fe 8-4531 1940 MERCEDES BENZ 199 raodster. 4-speed, beige with genulm terror. One-owner I _ ____ only *2195. Easy terms. PATTER, SON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMING-HAM. Ml 4-2735. 1940 VW CAMPER Renault j "Authorized Dealer" OLIVER BUICK and JEEP Corner of Pike and Cass O VW SEDAN, RED. OLIVER RENAULT ' Arc you looking tor a car that . ah'* vou up to 40 miles per gallon, . Renault ■* the answer. RENAULT DAUPHINS ....... *1490 RENAULT Jt$ ................1 $150 Down on above cart, low low payments OLIVER RENAULT ' ' 40 E. Plki PS 4-1502 1943 VW DELUXE STATION WAO-ON, SPLIT FRONT SEAT, RA-DiO, SEAT BELTS, TURQUOISE AND WHIJE., Autobahn Motors, Inc. 17*5 Telegraph FE 0-4531 SAAB $1695 TWO-YEAR FACTORY WARRANTY includes safes tax, license and tltl*. New winter car, 35 mpg aeon-> omy, 12 volt battery, electric wipers, factory undorcoatlng, r a - -opening windows, _ HOr HEATER DBFROSTBRI i Electric dock, contoured foam r„ ber seats, largest luggage trunk, magnificent snow and led traction. the Stables FE 4-4000 2112 S. Telegraph \ Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1745 TELEGRAPH FE 8-4531 n HOLIDAY SPlCIAL 1940 Flat, radio, heater. 1959 Triumph, radio, heater. 194* Maco, 74 mllM a gallon. 1942 Peugeot, Ilk* now. 195* Zodiac, *195. ECONOMY USED CARS, 2335 Olxl* Hwy. VILLAGE RAMBLER ' BIRMINGHAM 44 S. WOODWARD Ml 4-4900 » Vw cOnv'SKYislE Nbw and Ustd Cars >106 1957 BUICK SPECIAL 4-DOOR, RA-dlo, heater, auto, It starts, I drive It avary day. Th* price Is “peoples AUTO SALES 4* OAKLAND FE 2-2351 1940 CADILLAC SEDAN DCWLLE. Clean, one ownar, low mlloag*. All power equipment. $2,300. Owner* FE 2 5546, Hi { a b IL L A £ MNVUfTliCK that has basn glvsn th* b ‘‘ M car* and' stljl looks and p* like a new on*. Sparkling gray metallic finish with t HEIR top and luxurious black leather Interior. Equipped with power steering and brakes, power windows and Mat, radio, neater, and new white wall tires. A traman-doug bargain at eur low prlc* of only 13295. Easy payments can b* arranged on (OW new C(r BIRMINGHAM, CHRYSLBR-PLYMOUTHi INC. 912 8. Woodward Ml 7-3214 SEOAOiviLt* Alr-condlt toning, >4,100, Ml 4-1000. lvsrtHfvY, ttiarronsL1! 51—— 125 Oakland, FE 1-9225 tV y cgNVIkTIKf, steering DOWN. nice >26.04 par month. PATTERSON Chryilar-Plymouth ROCHESTER flBT'P6E,6"^rciGUI*;‘ 6666 CoKT- ditlon, 3* Moroland. 1957 CHIVttOLfT 2-D66R, AUTO-matte, V-S, radio, heater, Runt Auto InsEraRCE 11)4 wrokly payments ol 11,7$, SURPLUS M0TGRS 171 S. Saginaw If 5-0436 1957 cflivY IIL AIM t-666K sE-dan, V-(, Powargllde, power (tearing and brakai, radio and heater, AUTO INSURANCB PROBLEMS private owner. $350. 441-455$. 1*57-Chevrolet i»L‘ ATITil-515511 hardtop, VI (ngln*, aulomailc -Vary clean, naw liras, 1595 full REUi AC imm. Mi.Ri nar month. Marvel Motors > til OaklandAvt. fnrnmfvv, mnvirthit: automatic radio, healer,, power steering and brakea, wnttewalls, axtra nice one owner. NO MONEY DOWN $36,04 pet month. PATTERSON Chfysler-Plymoulh ROCHESTER 1001 N. Mein it. . OL 1-*551 imTwrermsrm 1942 Tampesl coupe, reel neat (1295 1941 Tempest, 4-door sedan . .. ( 895 1942 Ford 900 XL, convorl, .. 11495 1941 Ford Convorl, • * all power ..........(1395 1940 Chevv ( door sedan . I 7f I9|5 jjhevy Impale hardtop ( KIEG0 SALES & SERVICE 3080 ORCHARD LAKE 68R-3400 ‘ New and Used Cart 106 1*3* CHEVROLET BEL-AIR STA-ttan wagon, 4*y1lnd*r, powergllde, radio, heite£Z:,Whitewalls. Solid dpi, flnHh. Only *995. Easy term*. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1(00 S. WOODWARD *B BIRMINGHAM. Ml--------------- 9 CHEVY IMPALA, 6, AUTOMA- tlc transmission, r >. MY >1402. beige With brown Interior. Only *1195. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. IMS' CHEVROLET STATION n as G O N, RAD 10, HEATER, AUTO. TRANHKISSION, WHITE-WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY ■* MONEY DOWN. Payments *7.95 per weak. Sea Mr, Porks at ■HanttwsTurner Ford. Ml 4-7500. 19*0 CORVAIR 4-OOOR *495 FULL price. No money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES • "Ppntlacfs Discount Lot" 19S S. Saginaw fe 4-2214 1941 ‘Chevrolet bel-air 4) CHEVROLET 4-DOOR IMPALA Ish, axtra sharpl JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-ffU. ■ . 1961 CHCVllDLET BISCAYNB .'a- Only Slin. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-2735. Standard Shift, 2*3. $1445. DON'S iW^VMMPRPWraVR station wagah. V-l angl . matic. power (tearing and brakes. 2-tone turquols and white finish. Only $1,495. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIR-MINOHAM. MI 4-2731. 1942 MONZA 2-DOOR COUPE, WITH lo, heater, and 4 on the floor, irs for only $14(5. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 19*2 CHEVY II NOVA STATION wagon, 4«yllndar angina, f glide, power steering, radio, i—. er, whitewalls. Only 13,000 actual miles, white with ' rad Interior. Only SI495. PArrERSON -CHEV- DON'T BUY THAT USED CAR 'TIL YOU SEE THE SiELECTION AT WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward - Ml 4-1931 Birmingham, Michigan IM1 MONZA 2-DOOR, A-l. GOOD tires, auto, FB 2-470$. 1962 CORVAIR MONZA 4-bOOR Powergllde, radio, heater, -alls. Sistln i sliver, finish .... rod Interior. Only I1,49S. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET C., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. || ' 2734. IM1 CorvaAa, 1943 IMPALA STATION WAObN, power, best otter, OR 4-1933. 1M3 monZa, Silver gray auto- —-----------BB 2-3344. im CbliveffrcSt/PE, 4-SPEED, on roqutst, Only S3S95. Easy term*. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2734. 1963 Impola Sport Coupe Power steering; 250 angina, V-t automatic. Sharpl S2A9S Van Camp Chevrolet Milford . MU 4-1025 1943 CHEVROLET IMpALa SUPiR (port oonv*rt|bl*. V-l *nglna, Powargllde, power steering, brakes and windows, 6,00B actual mlita. I finish with black top c Interior. OnlyT*2,495. •ms. PATTERSON AVE., 8IRMINO- and black I Easy terms....... CHEVROLET CO., i 1963 CHEVY IMPALA WAGON With V* angina, powargllde transmission, power steering, power brake*, power windows, power seats, luggage rack, radio, neater, and whitewalls, *3994. Crissman Chevrolet ROCHESTER__________ OL 2-9721 1943 CHkVY 11 2-DOOR, B6VL-Indar, Powergllt' * radio,, heater, ..... ___ .......jr. Only ( Easy term*. PATTERSON C,...-ROLET CO., 10M S. WOODWARD Ml 4-2735. 1964a THdtiOUOH 1959s Any mak* or modal You pick it — We'll flnanc* It You call or have your daalar call PE 4-0944. It's easy COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK 761 IROWN IMPERIAL CONVERT-Ibl*. Pull power. Special finish. Whit* laathar Interior, Only $2,195. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO„ ION WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. I960 bOOGB 4-66or Wlfli'4-6YL-Indar angina, whitewalls, naw car trad*. NO MONEY DOWN, 130.04 PATTERSON , Chrysler.plymoulh ROCHESTER . tain it. OL 1-1559 1943*b6ooi_DAlif CflNVlRTTiLl. *-cylinder angina, auotmatlc, radio, heater, whitewalls, lurduolN finish, s.ooo actual mliai. Only *1995. Easy term*. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO» 1000 S. WOOD ward AVI,, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2734.1______ 1954 FdK6~£WOTir~rofi5iWfTC ‘•"inamf|8lon, excellent inepe. Call 2-2021 ifii pobb V4 PAiRlanb IPdan, HASKINS HbLIDAY • SPECIALS PS* METRO HARDTOF, LOTI OF j)AI m^anoe, above average condl- t40 CHEVY BEL AIR 4-DOOR WA-gon, g«* saving* 4-cyllnd*r angina, standard transmission, ilka naw. 'IP4I TEMPIIT LtMANI HARDTOF, “UMimtw Iranim mhmii radio, ew showroom cundltlon, btaullful lu* finish, I OLDS 9* 2-DOOR HARDTOP, isdod with power and equipment, k* imw, dark blue flnllh, 1(62 CHEVY ill.' >IR ' 4-DOOR, •‘Tmohilralor, V-* anoint, Powtr- Idt, pn^ar xlaarlng, jiraka, and HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds MARMADUKE By Andereon A Leeming New end Used Cars 106 New end “He’s improving! Not one complaint from the neighbors until after lunch!" New bnd Used Cars Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1744 Telegraph FE 8-4531 1954 'FORD, LOW MILEAGE. FE 5-9887. 957 FORb, NEW ENGINE, MAL-lorey ignition, 145 COM, $225. (52- 1957 FORD V-l FAIRLANE 500. 2-door hardtop, radio, hoatar, Fort* O-Matic, power steering an brakes. *4 down. VILLAGE RAMBLER BIRMlNOH 44 S. WOODWARD _______ rough. $145. and 1953. $75. 19H Pontiac, bath *75. SPECIAL ivje r-orq, good " ” 2 Chevy's 1934 1954 Ford and wW________ 1957 Chevy, 6 and 8, *395. 194* Oldt and Pontiac, *494 each. Many other lat* models, BcOnoihy Used Cars, 2335 blxl* Hwy. ■ 195* EOSEL, $325 CASH OR TAKE over payments of *30.34 ~ — FB 446*9. FORD 2-DOOR FAIRLANE 500 with VI ongin*, —-—*■- -— mission, radio, MJPSEHWPWIWP $750. JEROME FERGUSON, RoctV ester FORD Doalor, OL 1-9711. IMP FQRb 4, ra6io, heater, —4-door, good in. 0450. FB 4-1411 i9 FORD STATION WAGON, JUST Ika now. No mondy down. LUCKY AUTO SALES >40 FORD 2-DOOR, StlCK SHIFT, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWAI I tires; excellent ci 940 FALCON 4-OOOR, 4-CYLINDER . engine. Standard trammlMlah, redid, heater, low mileage, extra clean. (450. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Daalar, OL 1-P711. SION, WH4TS ABSOLUTELY nu n DOWN- Payments of I P61 FORD COUNTRYSEDAN, STA-tlon wagon with VO angina, Crule-O-Matlc transmission, radio, haoi-er, extra iharp. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochaste/ FORD Daalar, RADIO, 9*1 FALCOh U_________, _______ HEATER, DELUXE TRIM, WHITEWALL TIRES, LOW MILEAGE. Abaolutely no nr---- ---s ■ of 09.75 , Parky It Harold luggage carrier, l.w... —........Only *1395. Imw terms rATTlRIQN CHEVROLET fli 1000 S. WOODWARD AVI., I MINOHAM, Ml 4-2733. 1963 FORb COUNTRY SEDAN Station Wtgon. v-8 engine, auto-dM'" “---------— and brpkas. 1962 FORD QALAXlE 2-DOOR WITH radio, hoatar, whitewalls, a"" • rad'finish, Only 11494. JOHN McAULIFFE / FORD 430 NEW YEAR'S SPECIALS 1963 TEMPEST 3-DOOR, AUTOMATIC, rafflo, heeler, ear Is |yst Ilka brand naw throughduti Old 1963 OLDSMOBILB Cutlass with Automatic transmission, VI angina, |ust^ilke naw throughout. — Only 1*5* OLDS 4-door sedan, hydramatlc, —#r steering and orakas, axtra 1961 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF Hard- top, radio, h* ...... . * mission, pows beige In color, 1941 PONTIAC TEMPEST 4do dan, wrampflg, whiiawails. A rc„ „„„ rotes on Mlpnetl 1(49 CHEVY Nomad station wagon, -1*1- automatic transmission, radio, er. power brakes, whitewalls. in Mondsy, Tutsday an Thursday until ( p.m. MA 4-4544 New and Used Can 106 JOHN MCAULIFFE -FORD 430 Oakland Ave. HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. A CORVETTE. Rag top. sharp, ight blue flnllh. Yours ter only Soma have factory air conditioning New Car Warranty BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury ■ 420 S. Woodward Av*. I960 MERCURY . $40.04 per month. f PATTERSUN Chr/sler-Plymouth radio, nearer, one owner ana is extra sharpl $1,795. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. MERCURY COMET, 4-bo61F, 1952 OLDS, SHARP. 175. AL'S 1*58 OLDS 58, BLUE, 5 DUAL , tiro*. 2 enow (Ira* and rims. 45,0 miles. OR 3-41701 1959 ' OLDS "98" 2-door hardtop This car Is lust Ilk* n*w with I,,,, 1100 er your old car down. Small monthly payments. SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. Saginaw FB 0-4541 194$ OLDS as holi6ay sebAN. Hydramatlc, full powar, radio, (water. *2,4*0. JEROME Motor Sales 280 S. SAGINAW FE 8-0488 Ramblers— Ramblers Under the Flashing SATELLITE W*‘r* In Ottll Over The Beautiful‘44 Hardteps ROSE RAMBLER •145 Comnwrea, Union Lak EM 34155 LLOYD'S YOU PAY NOTHING FOR PARTS OR LABOR If th* "Crest" Sign Is op ths Windshield 19S9D*SOTO 2-Door Hardtop . S 791 194? PLYMOUTH WagOD ...... ( 291 1949 LINCOLN PramKr Coup* $1095 1940 MERCURY H>*U. Wagon $ 095 ’962 FALCON WMM ....77. | 2*1 1962 MERCURY Custem 2-Door $ 495 '“TtflAJ. Hardtop 1 “ I9y H9L ...... (595 1(4) CHIVY liLllr ... Tfl 1942 PAMBLlluttimn Wagon ( 395 1940 CHIVY Wagon ...... rT. 2 T*| [942 Cfinbj.DooF Hardtop ... $1494 4 FORDV.V.V'MM I 095, •rdtop .. $1395 Lloyd Motors BUICK Hardtop 4-d MERCURY wagon IH CHEVY B*l Air lM? IMPERIAl, Nidi ...... i960 impala Moqr hordtop .1959 CHEVY 2-Door ....... 232 I. Saginaw Pontiac! FE 2-9131 ... DON'T BUY A NEW CAR Until You Get Our Deal ON THE NEW TOTAL PERFORMANCE 1964 FORD FAIRLANE OR FALCON SOME TIMES THE BEST PRICE IS NOT TrfE BEST DEAL WE WILL BE HERB TOMORROW TO SERVICE WHAT WE SELL TODAY SO DRIVE OUT TO WHERE CUSTOMERS SEND THEIR FRIENDS Beattie Motor Sales,. Inc. "Your Ford Dealer Since 1930" . —The Home of Ssbvlco After the Solo-5806 Dlxje Hwy,, Waterford, OR 3-1291 - 0AKLAN0 CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH VALIANT 724 Oak land 335-943 A Choice of 50 Select Used tars. We Are Overstocked and Must Make Roam for N«w Car Trades. A Large Selection of Beautiful One-Owner Late Model Used. Cars. Excellent Financing Immediate Delivery . SUPERIOR RAMBLER 1 550 OAKLAND AVE. ( MLwHPUTH 4-DOOR SEDAN, ‘—Mrttc transmission, radio, r, power itearlng, car trad*, on* own* IB Y DOWN, $40.04 PATTERSON ChryiWp-Piymouth ROCHESTER -SPECIAL- 1960 COMET 4-Door Sedan Ha$ standard transmission, r. dio ana heater, whitewall tiro* and It a real nice automobile $795 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt'. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used car offered for retail to the public is a bonafide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor warranty,' 1943 Riviera, Air Conditioning S3695 1963 Bulck Convertible .... Demo 1943 Bulck Wildcat . (3995 1942 Pontiac Grand Prlx .... 1942 Stectra Convertible 19*2 Bulck Special Moor 1 1941 Bulck 4-door sedan .... 1941 Bulck Special 4 ipiwm'p I960 Bulck oonvtrtlbl* FISCHER BUICK 166 1957 PONTIAC CATALINA .600QR, automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls, extra nice With NQ MONEY DOWN $22.04 par month. PATTERSON 1 ' Chryater-Plymouth ROCHESTER 1001 N. Main,St. . OL 1-3559 1957 PONTIAC HARDTOP. VERY Clean. EM mwi; Conway dwter. 1958 PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP, with whitewall tiros, radio, power brakes, heater, power steering and automatic transmission, full authorized liquidation price $397. ESTATE STORAGE GQM-PANY, 109 1. Soulh Blvd. ‘ Auburn, pg 3-7141. 1940 PONTIAC VENTURA 2-DOOR hardtop, power brakes, power steering. No money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES OLIVER BUICK 1942 Falcon 2-door . .. *1295 1940 PONtlAC 4-door air .... *1595 19S7 BUICK 4-door hardtop ... 1942 Renault Sordini .. S119S 1941 LeSabro 4-door hardtop . *1795 1943 IMPALA Mter hardtop 1961 Catalina hardtop . $1(95 1942 LaSabn Adoor .. *2095 OLIVER BUICK 1961 TEMPEST STATION WAGON, $995 full price, tig money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES t'Pdntlac'a Discount Lot" 1*3 8. Saginaw TB 1962 TEMPEST LEMANS, 4-SPEED m wm ******* •brake*, ; steering "JHM 1*42 RAMBLER CLASSIC 4DOOR station wagon, radio, heater. Ilk* new. One-owner, Birmingham trade Full price *1395. VILLAGE RAMBLER $2,700; OR.30233; 940 -.’RAMBLER -AMERICAN 4 door and It has radio and heatei and Is: In good condition.: Full price "Uin and no money down. King Auto Sales 327S W. Huron St. FE $-4088 wap^ FE 43420. Buy Your New Rambler or Olds JHoughten & Son I N. Main, Rochester OL icrt 106 1943 TiMPEST, .EXCELLENT shape, $1,750. 444«7S betWOWI 9 1962 RAMBLER AMERICAN 4POUK, radio, Heater, aufomatlc transmission Also 19*1 s/from *795. *45 down and *7.70 per waok. VILLAGE RAMBLER 1959 RAMBLER CUSTOM WAGON, ( PATTERSON Chrysler-PljMgMilh 1001 N. Mete St- Pi- BRAND NEW 1964 RAMBLER $1632.30 Standard Factory Equipment VILLAGE RAMBLER 1957 STUDEBAKER HARO TOP, ’ rlnpt FULL PRICE, $2.00 - A WEEK. CRiolT NO PROB-LEM. NICE EXTRA CAR. 150 $. SAGINAW. FB 44071. Liqulda- COME VISIT RUSS JOHNSON'S UsecjaCdr Strip! 1*42 CORVAIR Monza Coup# . *‘“ 1958 CHEVY 4Door Sedan ... 1942 CORVETTE Convertlbl# . 1959 CHEVY 40e6r Sedan .... 1942 CHEVY Impala Coupe ... 1940 2-Deor Sedan .. 1961 TEMPEST 4Door Sedan . 1942 RAMBLER Sedan . mi Mercury ..... 1959 PONTIAC 2-Door Hardtop. 19*0 VOLKSWAGEN BUS « m RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac:Rombler Dealer M 24 at the^ttopHjht Lak* Orion Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM Ml 44485 YOUR FRANCHISED DEALER FOR RAMBLER JEEP' CHRYSLER' PLYMOUTH VALIANT See Them Today! BILL SPENCE "Auto Ranch" START THE .NEW YEAR RIGHT NEW OR IN A LIKE NEW USED CAR • FROM ’ John McAuliffe Ford BRAND NEW 1964 Falcon 2rDoor $1785 Bal. with $200 hr Trade BRAND NEW 1963 XL Convertible Champagne Finish with Power (tearing and Crulie-O-Matio . J* „ Was $3,892 NOW $2895 3 Demo 1963 Fords .Convertibles AM h$Vt Powar. steering, Crull4 o-Metic ana ill me oxtru From $2645 2 Demos 1963 Ford, HURRY HURRY 1963 Ford ,, 1 2-Door Hardtop jjalijyla ."5pr _yilHi _a_Ch$ihjut $2295 1963 Monza 2-Door- Coup# Radio, Heater, 4$paad, White-wan*. Black w th.Jwif.Trmj. Was 81*95, now ON$.Y r $1845 1963 Foid 9-Passongor “ $2295 - 1961 Ford Country Stdans MW#“ $1295. John McAuliffe Ford . 630 OAKLAND Ave.. , FE 5-4101 4 ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN SPOTOELIVERY JUST MAKE PAYMENTS CAR Full Pries Pay Wkly. 1960 CORVAIR $597 $4.27 1960 FORD FALCON $597 $4.27 1959 RENAULT ....$297 $2.50 1958 CHIVY ....$297 $2.50 1957 FORD .....;.v..$197 $1.60 1957 CHEVY - ...; $197 $1.60 Application Either in Person or by Phone NO CREDIT PROBLEMS LIQUIDATION LOT 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 Across From Tel-Huron Shopping Center NEW YEAR'S SPECIALS/ AT SHELTON'S 196$ BUICK SLBCTRA "225‘ Convertible. All power, Dynatlow radio, heater, whitewall*. Let t 9 tint data ter only ..........*239 jurats » wail*. jK000 guaranlaad actual mTwa with a naw car warranty. MM .fln ih with matching ftlBI. First In fm* and Ira youra. $1895 ____JH§ & 1*41 TBMPB$T Wagon. Cuatom trim, radio, heater. One owner, iow’ mil**, treded in on 1944 Tempeit end locally owned. Ye», 1959 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE. Hardtop. 'Powar (tearing and Hydramatlc. radio, hear-“aEa“ vmto finish* r trade-in. Drives out II I960 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE hardtop. Power (leering end 1—tHT —1— wnl Iwa brokes. Hydramatlc, radio, heater, whitewalls. Y*8, sir, ahrl naw Inikw and out, There’* nolh------------r - tlret claaa . SlStS wall*. Full decor group. Noctyrit blue. flnllh. We guarantee the mile*, with a naw car warryylj^ 1961 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Hardtop. Power itearlng ana r bain1 weS r*ar* uS 1*62 TEMPEST LaMAtis. Automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. Blu* with tn* matching laather bucket Mat*. This I* th* top it th* Tampan line ............$1595 1*60 PORO GALAX IE Convartlbla. Power itearlng, automatXl v-a. Ivory fmlah with aqua laathar trim. 21,1100 guaranteed tCNMl 1(60 CHEVROLET BISCAYNB 4-door aadan. Automatic, radio, boater, white wwMOSWmpt bronze flnllh and matching trim. Actual miles and a naw car trade-in. Why pay more? . .*1194 vvniuiVi Muiumaiic irensmissiuiit V-l. radio, haaiar, whltewalli. White flnllh with rod Interior. Ye* folks, thira'i not many nice ones Ilka toll around. Soelng la oaflavlng ............... .st9i 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop, power, steering and brakes, wlndowi, automatic, radio and Mater, whltewalli. Ye*, raika, let'* go flrit clan, wo hovo 2 more Ilk* Ihli beauty to Chooi# from, you can iava a berndte 1961 BUICK lelABRE 2-Door Hardtop,.Power itearlng and brakes, Dynatlow, radio, Motor, whltewalli. solid white with rod trim, There ll nothing ilk# that 1*41 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-Door Hardtop, Powar itearlng Guaranlaad actual mllM, . .1199$ 19*1 PONTIAC VENTURA Adeer hardtop, powar itoaring and braMMi Hygramatte, radio, heater, whltewalli, white flnllh, «mn blue leatMr trim. Naw car trade- in. ......................$1895 1914 PONTIAC 4-Door Hardtop. Automatic, radio, Motor, whitewalls. Nice red and wnm fmlah ready tor Winter. fl*ul0,mjrlllfrhlro',^l!1 mateSIng tongT------------- just Aek for Any of T Jim Bemow#ky~Pet Jarvla—John Donioy-Ou* Oofrilna—Joe Oalardl Wayp# Isbell POUR-DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE THIS OUARANTSI MEANI THAT IP FOR ANY RSAION (EXCEPT POR ABUSE OR ACCIDENT) YOU ARE NOT PLBAIED WITH YOUR PURCHASE, WE'LL REFUND YOUR MONEY, ( Get More — Pay! Less SHELTON v FONTlAG, BUICK Rochester 1 OL 1-8133 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1963 TWENTY-NINE Casfrds Cuba Regime Ends 5thYear Mess By WHJLIA ML. RYAN AP Special Correspondent Fidel Castro’s regime is five years old New Year’s Day. His Communist dictatorship in Cuba seems messier than ever. Judging from die regime’s own accounts, it combines the worst features of a 1948-style Communist satellite with a superabundance of confusion. It has food shortages, ration- ing, high pricCSr low wages, economic chaos — and something looking like the beginning of a .forced labor system. Castro remains a menace to -Today's Television Programs- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice Channel 2-ftM-Vv ^konn«l '4-WWJ-fv Channel 7-WXY2-TV Channel V-CKLW-TV Cbanri.l 56-WTUS TONIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, (7) Movie: “World for Ransom.” (to Progress). (9) Capt. Jolly and Pep-eye (56) New. Biology 6:25 (7) Weather, News, Sports 1:89 (2) (4) National News (9) 87th Precinct ( * (56) Japanese Brush Painting 7:00 (2) Highway Patrol (4) Town Meeting (7) (Color) Adventures (56) Chief of State 7:26 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Movie: (Color) “Kiss Me Kate.” (1953) Kathryn Grayson, Howard Keel (7) Outer Limits (9) Movie: “Ghost Town.” (1955) Kent Taylor, John Smith 8:01 (2) I’ve Ght a Secret 8:89 (2) Lucy Show (7) (Color) Wagon Train 9:09 (2) Danny Thomas (9) Playdate 9:89 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Hollywood and the Stars 10:09 (2) East Side/West Side • (4) Sing Along with Mitch (7) Breaking Point (9) Inquiry 19:89 (9) To Be Announced 10:45 (9) Mary Morgan 11:99(2) (4) (7) (9) News Weather,. Sports 11:29 (9) Lucky Score 11:89 (2) Steve Allen / (4) (Color) Johnny Carson * (7) Movie: “Too Late for Tears.” (1949) Lizabeth Scott, Dan Duryea (9) Movie: “Kisses for Breakfast.” (1941) Dennis Morgan, Jane Wyatt 1:09 (2) Peter Gunn -(4) Best of Groncho 1:89 (7) After Hours TUESDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:29 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:89 (2) Sunrise Semester TV Features Hollywoodr USA. By United Press International OUTER LIMITS, 7:30 p.m. (7) Rulers of Zanti are incapable of executing their criminals. Instead they exile them — to earth. ' WAGON TRAIN, 8:$0 p.m. (7) Jack Kelly stars as wagon master accused of leaving his passengers to die of thirst. , / HOLLYWOOD AND THE STARS, 9:30 p.m. (4) “Hollywood, U.S.A.” is on display as cameras capture atmosphere of movie capital from Hollywood Boulevard to Beverly Hills. BREAKING POINT, 10:00 p.iH. (7) Sheree North stars in story of rehabilitation experiment that brings together homeless handicapped children, inmates of women’s prison fqrm. " 1 ■ ' OLD ROUTINE military parade, a mass demonstration and a tong Castro speech will ..celebrate events of New Year’s Eve of 1958, when dictator Fulgencio Batista fled the island, leaving it to Castro’s 26th of July guerrillas. Cubans were exultantly joyous on New Year’s Day 1959. Before long they learned they had exchanged one dictatorship for another and saw their economy ruined to the bargain. So chaotic is the economy that a recently promulgated law of compulsory military service seemed an economic rather than a military measure. « ,<4) (7) Funews , 1 / 7:99 (2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Gliiger 7:85 (2) Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show * 8:89 (7) MovieiT “The Fuller Brush Girl.”(1950) Lucille Ball, Eddie Albert 8:59 0) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go Round 9:09 (2) Movie: “The Biscuit Eater.” (1940) Billy Lee (4) Living (9) Kiddy Korner Kar-toons 9:39 (9) Jack La Lanne 19:09 (4) Say When (9) Count of Monte Cristo 19:15 (7) News 19:25 (4) News 19:89 (2) I Love Lucy * (4) (Color) Word for Word r 7“ r r 0 f 8 r IT rr 17“ to 14, 16 0 \V 19 r 20 If SO sb pi 33 30 41 47 lo 49 50 53 64 bo I bb 67 69 60 ACROSS 1 Witches’ bet, black —• 4 Witchcraft is a black —! 7 Witch of—- 12 Yellow bugle plant 13 Confederate general 14 immerse 15 Blood-sucking ghost 17 Insert 18 New Guinea airfield 19 Swallow 21 Girl’s name 23 Roman bronze 24 Personal pronoun 26 Declamations 28 Always 80 Male 31 Tenet 82 Newspapers 33 Zeal 35 Debt acknowledgement (ab.) 87 Not (Soft.) 88 Passably 89 Strenuous 41 Steamship (ab.) 42 Flee (slang) 44 Unequal conditions 48 Gratuity giver 47 Oil-yielding tree 49 Greek letter 81 Flood < 84 Fisherman 88 Philippine tree 86 Turmeric 87 Live 88 Compasp point 89 Gypsy horse DOWN 1104 (Roman) 2 Grandpafental 3 Tropical fruit! 4 Mr. Baba 5 Peruses again 6 Adolescent one 7 Roman official 8 Non-employer 9 Dirt 10 Chemical suffix 1 11 Soak-flax 16 Nobleman 20 Aeriform fuel 22 Dravldlan of India . 24 Tablelands 25 Gaelic 26 Edible rootstocks 27 Arab chief 29 Legendary enchanted cave SO Black 88 (Witches’ worship) 82 Estonian pound 84 Rocks of cemented s m a 11 (drains 86 Smelly 89 Electrlc^nit (ab.) 40 German river 43 Separated 48 Low cpste Hindu 46 Diminutive suffix 48 Heavy blow 49 Golf accessory /80 Witches’ charm 82 Scottish sailyard 83 Oriental porgy (7) Girl Talk (9) Chez Helene 10:45 (9) Nursery School Time 11:99 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Price Is Right (9) Romper Room 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Missing Links (7) Object Is TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:09 (2) Love of Life / (4) (Color) "Your First Im- pression (7) Seven Keys (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best (9) People in Conflict 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Conversation Piece (7) Ernie Ford (9) Movie: “Deep Valley.” (1947) Ida Lupino, • Dane Clark 1:89 (2) As the World Turns (4) Make Room for Daddy , (7) Hollywood Theater 2:09 (2) Passpwd (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal 2:26 (4) News 2:89 (2) Hermesey (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:56 (7) News 8:69 (2) To Tell The Truth (4) Loretta Young (7) General Hospital 8:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News' 3:89 (2) Edge of Night 4 (4) (Color) You Don’t Say!. (7) Queen for a Day (9) Misterogers 4:00 (2) SOcret Storm (4) Match Game / (7) Trallmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:89 (2) Mdvle: “Young and Dangerous.” (1987) Lili Gentle, Mark Damon (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Hercules 5:99 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: ‘'The Rose Bowl Story.” (1962) Marshall Thompson, Natalie Wood (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (86) Friendly Giant ' 5:89 (86) What’s New? . 6:45 (9) Rocky and his Friends 5:65 (2) Weather (4) Carol Duvall the eyes of mdst of this Americas. He is a source of satisfaction for the Red Chinese, a necessary nuisance for toe Russians and a heavy burden for Cuba. /to give them arms,” said Raul. “. . .we are going to do away with them by ... rehabilitating toem itfthqiecial work.” Havana’s press in August disclosed the beginning of a “round up of loafers who are taken to peoples’ farms and sugar plantations to engage in production work, which Will be their ocupa-tion for some time to come.” MORE COMING Castro warned of more roundups to come. Then came enactment of toe compulsory military service law.. Raul Castro, Fidel’s brother and head of the armed forces, said it would be applied “against... toe lazy and all those elements . . even if they claim many related dependents.” “Of course we are not going The draft, he said, would ‘help train cadres for production, for toe economy.” MARRY IN HASTE Raul noted many young men were marrying in haste in hopes of escaping the draft and warned ’perhaps those who have done this will have to spend three e little girl.” years away from toe little girt. Offices werp opened this month to register 1)4 million men between 16 and 45. Women will be registered later. The implication is that many will be thrown into production work in farms, plantations and factories in an, attempt to counter disastrous failures. Floods in early summer and Hurricane Flora later on left the economy in an even more bewildering tangle than communism had produced by itself. There are shortages Of every- thing: meat, eggs, fish—which abound in Cuban waters — vegetables, Shoes, clothing, gasoline, transport, spare parts.t Sugar production, traditionally toe backbone of Cuba’s economy, failed so badly that most of toe production must be. exported — sugar is on Cuba’s ration list. Cubans must carry “control booklets” and “sales control cardS” to be checked by Communist functionaries against what they are permitted to buy. Commerce is almost totally in toe hands of the Communist bloc! Farm technicians from World News 8 French Freighter Crewmen Drown COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) Eight crewmen of the French freighter Capitaine Louis Malbert were reported drowned or missing early today after tho ship collided in a 'thick fog with a Danish tanker and sank. The Danish naval command reported Danish, Swedish and Soviet vessels had picked up 19 survivors from the 4,261-ton freighter. The ship’s owners said the ship carried a crew of 27. The tanker, the 12,410-ton Ros-borg, escaped with minor damage, and sent out two boats to help in the rescue effort Both boats disappeared in toe Cblls Music Trend Like Critic's Last Movie By EARL WILSON HOLLYWOOD -t Connie Francis at toe ripe young age of 25 has become not only a movie star but a blunt-talkin’ babe who doesn’t mind telling you her last picture smelled reel bad and that'what’s happening now to pop music is “ani-criminal.’ malistic and I have known Connie since she was a teenager and am impressed at how eloquent and forthright she’s become. I was lunching with bar at toe MGM executives’ dining room. Joe Pasternak, producer of Conffle’rtffeW one, “Looking for Love,” was surprised that she took time for “Usually instead of having lunch; she records an album;” Joe said, cried Connie. “Unfortunately, the songs are getting worse and worse. I think the F.C.C. should bar some of these barbaric things. Like ’Louis, Louie,’ and ‘The Bird.’ Nobody can understand a word of 'Louis, Louie.’ One d.j. ottered 2100 if any listener could give Urn the words. All trace of sensitivity, sentimentality and sincerity are gone, Some of these songs are just animalistic grunts.” , ' ★ it A Connie declared she was going to release a song from toe picture, “Whoever You Are, I Love You,” regardless of toe sale 'I don’t care if it sells three copies.” I offered the usual argument—that some songs of merit break through toe Wallers’ Wall. “But hot as much as the public thinks!” Connie exclaimed. “‘I Left My Heart in San Francisco, and ‘What Kind of Fool Am I?’ only went to 290,009-about 16th in the charts. They should have done greater than that!” “The recording business hasn’t developed singers as It’s supposed to do, because the singers make one of these songs and they’re through. Paul Anka, Bobby Darin and I were lucky. We were able to become big money-earners. Bat today’s new singers don’t have a chance because of that animalistic approach.” ★ ★ ★ >■ THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Buster Keatoh revealed in an interview here that he had a broken neck for 15 years without knowing it. He found out about it when he got a checkup and a doctor asked, “How long have you had a broken neck?” He remembered having a “bad headache” after taking a fall on a railroad track in a movie years before and decided that was when it happened i.. Richard Tire-gaskis Is propd of a note from Pierre Salinger saying that President Kennedy read his book, “Viet Nam Diary,” the test weekend of his life, and "I know that he much admired your work.” TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Roseland claims to have had a call n a man asking New Year’s eve prices and saying, “I won’t need any noisemakers—I’m bringing my missus.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Almost anything can be preserved in alcohol—except a secret.” (Anonymous). EARL’S PEARLS: Angela Martin revives the “Prankish Preposition” game old-timer:. “My father had a great trick. He Would walk down the street and turn into a saloon. ... That’s (TIM HM lyMICrtfc Inc.) -Today's Radio Programs- WJ 6(760) WXY2(1270) CKIWtfOO) WWJffgQ) WCAR(1180) WPONQ 400) WJBK(ISOO) WHPI-FM(94.7) PI HMfA tiM-WJR, Music Hill mNMN, Robert! i J , lyc Opanar, Oovld wpon. Newt, Dole Trio IlN-WJR, NtWfl, Guoit (Mo of too Jtroot JmMEh IIiM-WJR, NOW, Perm WWJ, Newt, Pron Horrli cklw, Nowb Orom . WHFI, NOW!, Burdick lllW~WJR,Ysud Ou.it CKLW,, Jol Von. Utkin tee van. nod—wjr, Nowit Art Link. nMi iito wjR, now. 0!lT Device life—wjr, Mwle Hen fl.Wr-CXtW, Newt, Devlet WWJ, Newt, Bumper Club fog but the Danish sailors later were reported safe. MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Uhion has promised to help Algeria attain an independent economy. :l The Soviet news agency TasS, announcing this Sunday night, did not specify any new Soviet loans to the North African nation. The Russians granted the Algerian government a $100-million loan test September. 4r .ft A 50-member Algerian delegation returned to Algiers from Moscow Sunday. It said the Soviet Union and Algeria would continue to fight colonialism and imperialism, work toward general nuclear disarmament and cooperate in economic affairs. #" TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)—The Nationalist Chinese commander on Quemoy Island has proclaimed a 3-day cease-fire Dec. 31-Jan. 2. The purpose, he said, is to enable the Chinese Communist forces “to celebrate the new year, as servicemen in the Republic of (Nationalist) China Cease-fires on special occasions are usual between the Nationalists on Quemoy and toe Communists who shell them sporadically froth the mainland. Sometimes , the Nationalists take toe initiative; sometimes the Communists act first. BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)-Interior Undersecretary Phuang Suwanrat said today special army, police and home guard troops have been sept to Thailand’s northeastern provinces to press a roundup of suspected Communists. , About 100 suspects have been rounded up by government troops in the areas across the Mlkong River from Laos, the official said. They were arrested with weapons they had stolen from Laotian troops, and evidence seized from them indicat-, ed they were trained in Peking and Hanoi, the official said. / final Weekend of '63 MichiganTrafficToll at 13 By The Associated Press At least 13 persftnsfltedwi Michigan’s streets and highways during the final weekend of 1963. Eleven of the Victims died in multiple-vehicle accidents. The Associated Press weekend death count began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight Sunday. The dead included: Edward Vandervine, 79, of Cascade, was kilted Saturday night when he was struck hy a car while attempting to turn his one-man snowplow around in 'Wreckage' Found to Be Only a Rock NEW GLASGOW, OnL (AP)-An object first believed to have been toe wreckage of a light plane in which three Detroit bridge experts were lost was a rock formation, a fishing tug captain said during the weekend. James Hartford of Erleau, Ont., captain of the s o n a r-equipped tug Sandra E, said a diver found the rock formation after soundings indicated an object resembling the missing aircraft. The three men, en route to a bridge tournament at Buffalo, N.Y., had been missing with the Piper Comanche since Nov. 2. Hartford’s vessel was one of vo tugs commissioned to search for the fotene. He said because thick ice has hampered the search It probably will not eb resumed until spring. The body of William Nastaro, 31, was washed ashore Nov, 22, eight miles east of New Glasgow. Naizaro had been accompanied on the flight by William Fiashenberg, 52, and William Mouser, also 52. Dutch Peace Corps Gets Carnegie Grant THE HAGUE (AP)-Twenty-one young Dutch men and women have been granted 89,000 by the Carnegie Foundation to use In their agrarian work in Cameroon as part of a Dutch Poaca Corps. The group “mint to Africa earlier this month. Cascade Road on the outskirts of Grand Kh$fiteVu<'' -* ,l"* Otto Brechteisbauer, 46; his son, Marie, 14, and Angelo Rodriguez, 34, all of Saginaw, were killed Saturday night in a head-on auto collision on Holland Road just1 3 east of Saginaw. 2-CAR CRASH Arlene Janssen, 19, of No-komte, 111., was killed Saturday in a two-car collision on M 44 in Plainfield Township north of Grand Rapids. Mrs. Margaret Gilvert, 39, of Detroit, was killed Sturday in a head-on auto crash in Detroit. Mrs. Thelma McGrath, 58, of Detroit, was killed Saturday in a by a car Friday night in Detroit. Frank Albany, 60, of Detroit, was killed Friday night when he was struck by a car in Detroit, Anna Peterson of Marquette and Mrs. Meryl Berg, 57, of Wauwatosa, Wis., were killed Saturday in a head-on car collision on U.S. 2 just west of Escanaba in the Upper Peninsula. Judith Lauzon, 23, of Pinconning, was killed Friday night in a two-car collision on U.S. 23 near Pinconning. Mrs. Agnes Paph, 51, of Manistee, and her daughter, Sally, 11, were killed in a two-car crash Friday (night mi U.S. 31 near Manistee. Russia and Bulgaria, factory experts from Hungary and East Germany, scientists from Czechoslovakia. SOVIET MACHINES Soviet bloc equipment runs the economy, bloc freighters and tankers supply it. Prices are high, wages taxes eat up 20 par cent of taxes eat up 20 per cent op* even toe lowest wages. There are constant campaigns ains t stealing,embezzle- ment and similar crimes, but even death sentences fall to stem them. By official admission, farmers resist collectivization. The official Ctfba Socialsta Iu May admitted “toe state sector is inferior to the private.” Castro leans toward the Red Chinese idea of violent revolution regardless of possible consequences, as Opposed to the. Moscow idea of avoiding risk of international conflict. CLIMAX REACHED Castro said recently that toe Soviet - Chinese dispute had reached a climax which meant it had to be discussed even by the Cuban party. But Castro has little choice ' but to remain quiet to the dis-pnte/His Moscow ties are all that bolsters his regime. He is to no position to give overt support to toe Red Chinese. Castroism’s involvement in attempts to spark revolution in Venezuela and toe export of Cuban textbooks on guerrilla warfare testified to Castro’s, impatience to provoke violence else1 where. The assassination of President Kennedy, blamed on a man4 boasting Castrolst links, serined to alarm Castro, •>. WAS BAD NEWS The bearded prime minister called it “serious and, bad news.” He devoted much of two long speeches to analyzing the murder and trying to absolve his regime -of any connection with Lee Harvey Oswald. In Venezuela, terror fatted to keep, toe people away from the polls. Despite Red threat!, the election was held. . It was a heavy defeat;for Castoists. Castro seems to be facing toe future worried and possibly even a frightened man. SAVE $ $ 9 Have Your FURNACE CLEANED Before Winter! OET OUR SPECIAL PRICE MICHIGAN HEATING SI Newberry PI 2-2254 1 COLOR TV SERVIC E j)77 ANTENNAS INSTALLED AND rREPAIRED SWEET'S RADIO | 42? W Huron 334-3 RCA COLOR TV Ironp $395.00 l>I’M P*rt» Warranty Condon's Radio & TV MUNTZ TV SERVICE C&VTVInc. CTHDI WORRYING ABOUT Olvr! BILLS! BILLS! BILLS! LOANS TO ANY HOMEOWNER OR HOME BUYER life 2nd A 3rd Mortgage! NO DELAY ONE DAY SERVICE Amount of Loan Yre. 15 Yre. 20 Yre. >1000 1 10.87 8.19 6.99 92000 90.74 16.28 18.98 98000 81.11 24.83 20.98 APPRAISED VALUATM # Pay All Yew 1 Pey Aj| Aeeomt* >' PiyAII Yevr JUmumI i e Pay Ail Year Repairs e I'ay Taxr» , £ e Plui Extra Cedi lexen B&L MORTGAGE 8IRVICI CO., INC. SUITI 732 LAFAYETTE BLDG. 144 W. Ufayatta SM.. Datrolt 24, Mleh. Write or PHONE: Malt 962-3530 OUT OF TOMB, CALL COLLECT-OPERATORS ON,DUTY 24 HRS. Aik Per Our Mortgage. Consultant ! ( iii 'JL m s Want To Lose Weil f ' THEN THIS IHFORMTIOM IS FOB YOU! Ilie critical battle agairtst'overweight I* being fought by young adults. More than any other • proup in America’* affluent society they worry about increased girth. Are you one of them? ■‘I eat what I always did in college. Why am I getting fat?” Gaynor Maddox has gone to nutrition and medical authorities to answer this plaintive ques-tion. The Pontiac Press in our Editorial Columns will give you his findings. Six articles which smack in the breadbasket of over "Get thfn by your thirties not fat by your forties. •weiglit and what to do about it • , says Maddox in illustrated reports: • Recent Graduate!* Face Fat, Forties • The Junior Execulive Waistline • Marriage Makes You Fat • Wives Can Save Hearts • ‘'Creeping” Overweight • Oyerworked^and Under-reluxcd ' { : Starting Thursday, Jan. 4. 4M III The Pontiac Idi THE BOOTIAC fpyTi^p, mom Ay, tMceIibbr rm-m pages Khrushchev More Agreements by U.S., Russians House Blaze Takes Lives of 3 in Family , Clawson Mother Fails in Rescue Try; She, 2 Children Suffocate I MOSCOW (if)—Soviet Premier Khrushchev said to* day there'are reasonable prospects for agreements between the United States and the Soviet Union in .1964 on “a broad range of measures aimed at slowing down tiie arms race and further alleviating international tensions.” 1 Replying to questions submitted by Henry Shapiro *•....."",;1 i'"i. "♦of United Press Interna* tional, Khrushchev s aid Roarrl EllOC such measures indqde: DUdlU EYv3 Reductions in the afrmed * forces of stties, cuts in military TV i» i I I », spending, the signing of a non- rRilAnl I Inil aggression pact between the - | UIIV/III Ullll North Atlantic Alliance and ;foe r: i Communist Warsaw Pact na- ^ tions, agreement not to dissemi- $ community tunic ^ nudear weapons,and es- t. for Mentally III He also called for reduc-| Oakland County's Community tion of foreign forces on for-Mental HCalth Board will ex- eign territories. Khrushchev’s replies to Sha- rintiniS Hinir* at ^Pnnfinc «a»p P'r0’s Questions were published jaO^cHnlc at Pontiac State Jy ^ sovjtet | Ha first community clinic The premier said the Soviet ,jgopK| be. sCt up at the hospital people are entering 1964 with either temporarily, until other grandiose plans of peaceful Con-facilities mc available, or an structlon, and "the American 0 permanent basis, according people, we believe, do not want to Paul N. Averin, board war either." he continued: timfcttsn- “The stated intention of the The nroDosal to enlarse ex- new President of the United htjiM. fpr.njti°ej Mu statg Kns. States, Lyndon Johnson, to con-l.kTw, tlnue in foreign affairs the poll-2SLTIS2 ^ cy.of peaceful settlement of in- > is a rcsldeht to tSZ' psychiartry at the hoepital. ^ a haU to ^ , * * * cold- war, has been met with The state hospital presently is gratification in this country. We, equipped for long-term commit- too, are in favor of this." Sti? BETTER RELATIONS also la fawiding some outpa- **; T7; * „ ■ , dent care forformer Inmates. ■ in the coming year, Khrush* nrr rnuunwim: chev declared, ,“we want to see CD* COMMITMENTS fl,e 0f relations of Ttws awnmunity mental health peaceful cooperation, good dink* aiU Intended to greatly neighborllness and friendship be* reduce the number oi commit- tw the peoples of the United manti by treating mentally ill states and the Soviet Union,.. Efficient Rescuers Lessen Tragedy of Jacksonville Disaster JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (B'.-r- With a macabre touch, smoke wi t h o u t flames billowed through the 300-room Roosevelt Hotel yesterday in the heart of the city, killing 21 persons. It was Jackson* ville’s worst disaster. Sixty-«tx others were injured. Flames were confined to a -;t ballroom area off Hie main lobby, bat heavy smoke which meed up air shafts' asphyxiated IS guests. The ether two-dead were a woman who fell from a makeshift bedsheet rope and an assistant fire chief'who apparently had a heart attack as he CLAWSON (ffUAyoqttg mother died with two her five children yestsif* day in an apparent attempt to rescue them from fbe predawn fire that destroyed their split-level, bride bungalow home. : Her husband made a desperate, but vain, attempt at getting the three out of the house, firemen said. Almost all the family’s pea- new clerk — David R. Calhoun (left) was sworn in this morning as Oakland County-* new clerk-register by Circuit Court Judge Stanton Q. Dondero. Calhoun will begin his duties tomorrow. Daniel T. Murphy resigned as clerk-register Nov. 6 to become chairman of the county's hoard of auditors. flames. , Killed were Mrs. Irma Morris, 33; a son, Steven, hi, and $ daughter, Doima, 20 months. All suffocated.- mm 1 i •. ir .jg. ■■ ♦ Uj yH'-'Uf When firemen of this Detroit suburb arrived, they found the father, Glendon Morris, 37, an auto factory totoman.deiperirte-ly trying fo put a, ladder to an upper window. He was Shoeless and in his underclothing Jn 12-degree cold.,: Vi i;T: 'T' RAN FOR HELP ; * | A daughter, Sunn, 11, ran to m ntt(t door neighbor's home for help. The flames drove bank Military to LBJs Plan for Cuts helped avacuate most of the 800 guests and employes. ■ -V ;* Only the cool efficiency of firemen, and dramatic rescues by Navy helicopters of guests who fled to the roof, averted a worse tragedy ' * WAS PACKED The fashionable hotel on 'Adams Street near Main was packed' with guests, many here for Gator Bowl Week festivities* which ended Saturday night, ^ ‘ 1 j , ", y f Most of the deaths occurred above the eighth floor, agonizingly out, of reach of the city’s two 100-foot aerial ladder tracks.' * ' , u •. j , , , ' Among those rescued Was The Senate was expected to i miss America of 1964, Donna approval to the $3-billiOn1 Axum of El Dorado, Ark. The Fall tnHav 21-year-old beauty and her chap- [auioqay. erone, Lucile Prevlti, were hos- proved the compromise pro- pitallzed overhlglit. They suf-tiding by to join the Senate fered smoke inhalation. A helicopter hovers over the burn- ' ' AIDS IN RESCUE . ing Roosevelt Hotel in Jacksonville, Fla., yesterday, aiding in rescue of persons trapped by a fire,which claimed 21 lives. JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (JP> — The naUon’s 'top military commanders had an; appointment with President Johnson today to protest against his plan to cut $9 billion from their budget requests. The Joint Chiefs of Staff, representing individual services that geek a total {defense budget of about $60 billion, sought the session at Johnsoh’s ranch home in order to appeal for re*f consideration of his tentative decision hold the total to about $51 billion. In the current year, defense outlays are expected to exceed by several hundred million dollars the amount Johnson will1 propose for the 1965 fiscal year that begins next July 1. . Secretary of Defeinse Robert S. McNamara was flying in to, join the President and the military commanders for a ranch lunch and conference. Health Center Fire Quickly Put Out tdibsw bkSMilifPf with the chWrtn, Debbie, 7, and (Ren, l.t3l;--;,'‘;; ‘ Tbe mother apparently had given one of the efukrakfo Su- the bettor In Uw entire International sitaaitlen. “To ensure peace means to strengthen peaceful coexistence of states with different social-political systems. - ■ it' * f m ■ , \ “The Soviet Union is prepared to consider any proposals that might promote the development of good neighbor relations between the "Soviet Union and the United States.” RESTRICT ARMS Khrushchev also suggested an effort be made to restrict the arms race “stop by step." He said this would foster a favora-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) san to be foken otft>lde Inddfon returned to Inner rooms in a vain effort to save Steven and Donna, firemen said. ,r"' Donna was found dead In .bar crib. The bodies of Mrs. Morris and Steven lay nearby: j Firemen said the blaze apparently began in the kitchen area but that the cause was not known. . in adjourning the longlxm-' Miss Axum, smiling prettily from a hospital bed, saidlill she took with, her when she fled in pajamas, slippers and a beaver coat were “two pocketbooks and my crown." , EXECUTIVES DEAD Business executives among the dead included James Jack-son Swick, 59, owner-president of Copeland Sausage Co.' His wife,, Loreria Baker (Rena) Swick, 47, also was killed. Thb SWloks, of Alachua, Fla.; had stayed In town after attending the Gator Bowl game. Another executive among the dead was Wade Hildlnger of Buffalo, N.Y., vice president for sales of National Gypsum Co. gressional, session once the foreign aid bill was passed. Both Democratic and Republican Senate leaderships indicated they expected the necessiary quorum of 51 members to be on hfnd for today's session. Senate approval of the hotly Short Day Set Tomorrow in Area Business Arnkoff said a shortage of psychiatrists would prevent more clinks just now. Later we ynay be able to develop a pro- The joint chiefs arranged a private meeting in advance of this session. I > ' BUDGET MATTERS Budget matters claimed Johnson’s attention within a few hours after the departure yesterday of West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, a' weekend guest at the LBJ Ranch. Waldejr Heller, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors. and Budget Director Hermit Gordon conferred with tne President last night about the budget amji the State of the Union message the President will send to Congress on Jan. I. Theodore C. Sorensen, White House special counsel nnd a Johnson speech writer,. took part in the session. 11 1 ' ** *'; * Johnson plans to depart from customary practice and disclose in the Jan. 8 message the broad outline,s of the budget that will bo submitted later. 1 Teen Killed In Crash REMUS (AP)-Connie Bauman, 17, of Grepnville, waa killed today in a two-car, head-on collision on M66 three miles north of this Mecosta County community. , . would be trained to prdVide early psychiatric treatment of lasa jayare cases.” he added. |7S,6M A YEAR ; He estimated that toe p r o-posed clink at Pontiac State Hospital, including additional Ifoff, would, coat »75,ooo annual- at least a partial vktory In many Pontiac area business es-kh Itrit |HM wltt Cowr... „bluhnHmU wU1 ctoM ,arller tt« becoming w» bimomw Ml^noon lor New Year’s Eve, preparatory to toe One of program’s most wai holiday Wednesday, outspoken opponents — (fra* 8 y } gon’s Democratic Sen. Wayne All City of Pontiac of-Morse-conceded passage was Ikes will close at noon, While Uke|y by tote afterrtoort. Oakland County agencies, The 13-billion final total, for the clerk’s office aid represented 4 61.5 bUUon and • ,#w essential services, slash from the 64 5 bUllon orlg* W«1 close toelr doors at 2:86 inally^ asked tost spring by the P-m-tote ifresident Johh F. Kennedy Offices of Community Na-to cover aid spending for the tional Bank and Pontiac State year that started July . Bank WlU observe a 3 p.m. clos-The total was well below the ing time tomorrow. First Fed-63.6-btllion level that Johnson 'eral Savings & Loan Association said two weeks ago would re- of Oakland will remain open fleet "a dangerous reduction in until 4 p.m. our security:" :■■■'# But Johnson could claim one local retail stores and major plus—elimination of a markets will observe a 8 House-originated ban on ektend- p m dosing ing credit to Communist nations * * _ . _ : for grain purchases or ot|wr iankb trade. f The Retail Gasollno Dealers Pope Asked for Meeting of All Faiths Shivering New Year Mayor Haydon Burns, commissioner of the police and fire departments, said city fire marshals inspected the hotel within the past l6 days and found jt oomplicd with all fire safety rules. NO NEGLIGENCE "There Is no negligence involved In this fire in any way," toe mayor said. “We know that the origin was in toe celling of ! the ballroom but the cause has ; not yet been determined." William II. Johnston, who bought too Roosevelt In 1980 from toe Moyer Hotel chain and spent 61 million renovating too 37-year-old structure, ■eld, “The hotel was as fire-'1 I (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) VATICAN CITY ID - Patriarch Athenagoras 1, spiritual loader of world Orthodoxy, has urged Pope Paul VI to call a meeting of all Christian faiths to niake common cause against atheism and tyranny. The announcement by the Vatican press office today A memorable year will leave tile Pontiac area shivering. Temperatures will be about eight degrees below the noyiqal high of 33 and low of 21 for the next five days. 1 The temperature turning point occurred yesterday. The high was only II. That, plus the eighth Inch of snow whkh Romney Governor plans to exert .Influence on Republican platform — PAGE 2. 'Captain Eddie' Flying, ace Eddie Rick* enbacker retires — PAGE The chief executive had one other announced appointment today — to fly by helicopter to Austin, 65 miles from toe ranch, to help dedicate the new synagogue of Congregation Agudas Achlm at a festive evening dinner. Tomorrow’s high Is supposed to creep six degrees beyond today’s originally predicted high of 18, but the “heat wave" will be only momentary. ■ft ' i( . fr r';L The lowest temperature before 8 a m. this morning was aero at 6 a m. By 1 p.m.' the downtown temperature had risen to 1*.. U. S. Contracts Adffl. Kickover charges excessive profits on defense contracts — PAGE 16. of the two religions. The eastern patriarch’s proposal tor a “part-Chrlstlsn conference" made no mention of a ! date: After Pope Paul announced i Dec. 4 that he would make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, Patriarch Athenagoras pro-, posed til Christian leaders meat with the pontiff. The proposal for a "pan-Christian" conference of Catho-lie, Orthodox, Protestant and Anglican loaders wee relayed to the Pope Saturday by Metropolis Urt Athenagoras of thlatiron, an official emissary of the patriarch. V •’ - ' Jf astronomers. Face of the moon disappeared ae toe earth moved between1 the sun and toe moon, This sequence photos wm/i made by AP staff photogrlfpher Bill Ingraham 1 Pw mh ► THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. DECEMBER 80, 1968 ■ Romney Will Press GOP Issues By JAMES S. BROOKS BLOOMFIELD HILLS (UPI) —’Gov. George Romney admitted today that “others” have put him ipto the 1964 presidential race and said he will try to exert his influence on the direction the national party takes in 1964. . Romney said, “I think the Republican party has a tremendous opportunity in 1964 as a result of developments, particularly as a result of recent developments, to establish a new sense of direction for, die country in a period that involves hew circumstances, new problems, new means.” 'The first-term Michigan governor said he would do sill he could to see to it issues rather than personalities were stressed in the 1964 presidential battle. “I’ve been pointing out for some time that we haven’t really had a national campaign that dealt with the nation’s basic problems and the issues. I think more important than candidates is a meeting of the problems and die issues and doing it on a basis that would give the country a sense of direction and purpose,” Romney said in an interview. The governor, who ended 14 years of Democratic domination df Michigan’s gubernatorial office in 1962 when he outpolled incumbent John B. Swainson, has already decided what he personally will do about seeking public office next year. NOT READY But Romney is not ready to reveal his decision. I’ll announce what I intend to do in 1964 in the early part 1964. It’s too early to indicate my 1964 plans at this time. I know what I’m going to do — importantly, I know fjull well what my basic objectives are going to be, and I know what my specific activty will be,” Romney said. Every indication is that Romney will at least seek re-election as governor and may also stand ready to accept a call to try for the presidency If tile GOP extends it. About his own personal standing in the present complex candidate picture, Romney said, “Other people have put me in this position.” v ' * ';. ★ it"' ■■ He said he would pot deny he has to be considered a potential candidate. “I consider myself as an individual in public life that has-been discussed in national terms by others, but who is in that position as a, result of what others have said and1 not as a result of anything I’ve said.” “Again, my present position is one where I have good reason to be concerned about what happens nationally. Whatever happens nationally is going to affect Michigan. I’ve never indicated that I shouldn’t exert such influence as I can on the direction that the Republican Party may take in 1964. “After all, Pm a part of that party and what that party does Will be an Important part of the picture,” Romney said. Slope being elected, Gov. Romney has always brushed aside talk of his being presidential timber by saying he would hot seek the nomination. Now Romney is minimizing the importance of the nomination itself. PARTY PLATFORM ■‘ “I consider the question iof who the nomirtee is as less important, a great deal, than the party takes in 1964, particularly whether or not the party meets the needs of the nation at this time. “I think the nation needs a sense of direction. I think the ' nation needs to deal forthrightly. with issues we have been denied the opportunity to consider adequately, because those Vho have been responsible for previous campaigns have been more concerned with winning than in dealing 1 with the issues. “When candidates avoid the Issues and make winning the No. 1 objective the people have no way to judge the relative Greek, Turk Cypriots Okay Peace Zone, British Patrol NICOSIA, Cyprus: (AP) -Greek and Turkish Cypriot leaders agreed today to a proposal by British Commonwealth Secretary Duncan Sandys to set up a neutral zone between their fighting forces in Nicosia. The factions also agreed to allow British troops to patrol all areas of the capital of Cyprus at the discretion of the British commander, Sandys told newsmen the agreement accepting his proposals was signed by Archbishop Makarios, the island’s Greek Cypriot president, and the Turkish Cypriot vice president, Dr. Fazil Kutchuk. ★ ★ ★ : Sandys said leaders of both sides would meet daily under British chairmanship in ap effort to resolve differences that pushed the *eastern Mediter- national tension last week. PARTITION NECESSARY Meanwhile, Kutchuk indicated he believes peace can be assured on Cyprus only if it is partitioned between the Greek Cypriot majority and the Turkish Cypriot minority. Kutchuk said there is “no possibility” that the two communities can , live together after the past week of vior lencc. “Each country must be master of its own house,” he said. 1 The Turkish Cypriots demanded partition of Cyprus during (he Greek Cypriot underground campaign that culminated in independence from Britain in 1960. The Greek Cypriots rejected the idea of partition. !'it ★ ★ Kutchuk, unshaven and without a necktie, told foreign newsmen at his office in the bar-, ricaded Turkish sector of Ni-i he had .no final count of the Turkish dead and wounded in the gun battles last week. he said the count had reached 100 killed and 400 wounded, 70 of them seriously. SHOOTING SUBSIDES The shooting that began Dec. 21 subsided over the weekend. In the only incident yesterday, there was a half-hour exchange of gunfire in the northeast Nico-sian suburb of Pallouriotissa.. No casualties were reported. Each side claimed the other fired first. presenf WuWl stems from fears among the 105,000 Turkish Cypriots of losing minority rights if colnstitntional Changes proposed by the Greek Cypriot President Archbishop Makarios, are adopted. Makarios claims the present system, which gives the Turks a separate legislative! chamber to run Turkish community affairs, hampers the government, w ★ ★ The constitution was drafted before Britain granted independence to Cyprus in 1960. The Turks are outnumbered 4 to 1 by1 the island’s 445,000 Greek Cypriots. Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy and quite cold with chance of a snow flurry today. High 18. Fair apd very cold again tonight. Low near zero. Tuesday mostly sunny and not as cold. High 24. Winds west to northwest 8' to 15 miles. temperature precedtnj t> e°’(| im.t Wind verity, 5 m.| Irectlon: Wwt. ’ .. Sun. sets Monday at 5:10 p.m. sun rises Tuesday at 0:02 a.m. Moon rlaat Monday at 1:33 p Highest temperature One Year Ago in Highest temperature Lowest temperature ..... « In l Alpena ......... fay City * H -4 Duluth Saginaw , 14 4 .El Paso J Detroit 17 4 Fort Worth 4 Escanaba 1 -5 Honolulu 1 Flint ■ 15-4 Indianapolis 3 Or. Rapid! 17 -1 Jacksonville ( i. 3. Ai Milwaukee ter" 2 ,J-{8S?Sr* Bismarck It 4 Omaha 1 Boston 31 14 Phoenix i Buttalo 70 4 Pittsburgh ! Chicago 70 } $1. Louis ' Cincinnati 70 0 S. Francisco I Cleveland 70 4 Seattle . Denver Dei Molnei NATIONAL WEATHER - Cold woathcr wilj continue'tonight fr6m the Mississippi Valley east and In portions of the southern plains while It Will be warmer In the northern and central plains. Snow flurries are expected In the lakes area, in the wemrn Dakotas and‘In Idaho. 1 . HERO’S KISS — William Fielden, 19, Miami, Fla., gives Miss America, Donna Axum Of El Dorado, Ark., a peck on the cheek during, a news conference, in Jacksonville, Fla., yesterday. Fielding crashed through the door to Miss Axum’s room and rushed she and her chaperon to safety during the ~ " Hotel fire which claimed at least 20 lives.. . Florida Fire 21 (Continued From Page One) proof as you can get a building. It is a sad thing that those people did not stay tin their rooms. “The smoke just built up and people panicked,” Johnston said. . 'j A -woman who plunged no death^phert ap improvised rope of sheets and blankets broke was identified as Marian F. fcurry, 43, of Santiago, Chile, and formerly of Greensboro, N.C. A medical examiner * said Mrs.'- Curry died of multiple fractures. MOST OF DEATHS Chief Fire Marshal E. C. Me-Dermon said asphyxiation caused most of the deaths. He said evidence indicated the blaze began ip or near the Emerald Room, a few steps up from the main lobby. Flames were confined be- Press Group to Award 5 Scholarships The Inter-American Press Association (IAPA) Scholarship Fund next, March will award at toast five scholarships to United States and Canadian allege graduates for a year of study In Latin America, and to Latin American students and newspapermen for a year of study in the United States or Canada. President of the fund Harold A. Fitzgerald, publisher of The Pontiac Press, set Feb, 1,1964 us deadline for applications. The Scholarship Awards Committee will meet In February to examine applications ^nd make recommendations. Candidate! may request information and application forms from Carlos A.. Jimenez, secretary, IAPA Scholarship Fund, 667 Madison Avenue, Suite 764, New York 21, New York.' Applicants must jhttve a college degree as well as a working knowledge of the language of the country In which tiny wish to study- Preference Will be given to applicants With journalistic experience. The board of directors of the fund will meet again In October 1964 in Mexico City to consider fprther application!. low the third floor. Most of the dead were on upper floors where smoke accumulated after rising through the building. Many of the 479 transient and 16 permanent guests were in night clothing or only "partly dressed when the fire was first reported At 7:45 a.m, Hotel doorman' Alton Joseph Crowden said he was in'the lotfby when “suddenly smoke poured out from everywhere." He called the fire department. TRAPPED GUESTS Trapped guests leaneg from windows to escape thAsittoke and plead for rescue. Borne fell back or across windoW sills, unconscious. Police bellowed Instructions from the street via megaphone for the trapped i to remain cMI think we need a sound program, a sound sense of direction and I .think we need a campaign where the basic issues will be discussed,” Romney said. ' . * ’VWW; jP" The governor said he stated lis belief in 1960 and “I wired both Kennedy and Nixon and complained about the failure to deal with basic issues at that time. They didn’t really discuss basic issues in that campaign; they avoided them.” „ * ft '* (%■ Romney would not disclose how he intends to make his influence felt — whether by the issuance of policy statements, public appearance, direct intervention in the 'presidential cam-, paign or whatever —• but he made it dear he will Wo all out in 1864 to center the presidential campaign “on our baslc\ American principles,” r It's No to Robber of I City Ma “This is a stick up," the young man with || revolver said as he entered a Pontiac grocery Saturday afternoon. Apparently the danger of the often heart phrase bad worn off and one of the customers in Dickie’s Market, 326 .East Boulevard, laughed out hmd. The bandit, already nervous, pulled the trigger of his gun. Nothing happened. t | # ★ ... ... Cautiously he cocked it . j again and pointed it at I an employe, Robert Co- J wart, IS, of 299 S. Mac- | shall and ordered him to I empty the cash register 1 and put the money in a 8 paper sack the bandit had 8 brought with him. INSTORE Robert Dickie, 42, owner of the market, told Pontiac police that the man had been in the store a short time before the robbery to buy a pack of cigarettes. W ★, ★ ■ Before the gunman fled, he forced, the half dozen persons in the store to go jo the rear of the building. He escaped with about $300. City Considers Deal at Airport 2 Parcel* Wanted for Hanger Construction Commissioners will be asked to grant lease options on" two parcels at1 Pontiac Municipal Airport at tonight’s City Commission meeting. The options . would g6 to Robert Fallon, who plans to build new hangers on the lots. Signing of final lease agreements will be contingent op Fallon getting financing for the project and submitting construction plans to city officials. * ★ ★ In other business on tonight’s brief agenda, City Attorney William A. Evfort will report on a proposal to sell some city owned Joseph Mihalek and Don R. MacDonald. TAX REQUEST Mihalek had asked that the dty pay 1963 taxes on his urban renewal property as part of the sale agreement last week. Ewart said at that time that it would he illegal under state law for the city to pqy taxes on property in condemnation. Action w** then deferred a week to clear np the matter. Ewart will also report on a proposed swap of land with Paul Kern, a Pontiac realtor, to obtain right-of-way for the planned extension of Lafayette east to Perry. ’ 'W im * ty'Jj' Also slated IS the second reading and adoption of a proposed amendment to the city’s traffic ordinance, The amend men t would allow police to ticket or remove bars parked illegeUy on city property. t " LICENSE TRANSFER Commissioners will also be asked to okay the transfer of ownership of a beer and wine license business at 750 Woodward from Peter J. Metropoulos to Robert J. Kessel. ' * • ft it it This week’s meeting is being held on Monday because tomorrow, the usual'meeting night, is New Year’s Eve. BIRMINGHAM , 240 Yd*. Acetate Prints, Were 1.99,Now...... .97 54 Yds. Cheek Fabric, Were 1.69, Now........... .84 2 70” Round Damask Sets, Were 10.99, Now •<•••, 5.47 22 Spun Rayon Tabteelothz, 60x90”, Were 3.98, Now 1.97 31 Solid Color Vinyl Cloth, 60x88”, Were 6.99, Now 3.47 14 Everion Tablecovers, 52x52”, Wete 3.99, Now. •. 1.97 1 1.4 Everion Tableeoverz, 52x70”, Were 4.99, Now.. .2.47 22 Everion Tableeoverz, 63x88”, Were 6.99, Now... 3.47 12 EVerlAn Tableeoverz, 60” Round, Were 5.99, Now 2.97 4 Flocked'Tablecloths, 52x52”, Were 2.99, Now,. 1.47 7 Flocked Tablecloth*, 60” Round, Were 6.99, Now 3.47 , 8 Flocked Tablecloths, 60x90”, Were 7.99, Now... 3.97 12 Christmas /Cloth Noel, 45x45”, Were 1.99, Now.. .99' 12 Christmas Cloth Noel, 54x54”, Were 2.99, Now».. 1.47 12 Christmas Cloth Noel, 34x72”, Were 3.99, Now... 1.97 5 Cell-O-Crest Tablecloths, 52x52”, Were 3.99, Now 1.97 25 Square Cheek Place Mats, Were 69c, Now....... .34 10. Round Place Mats, Were 89c, Now ........... .44 ' 6 Party Sets, Were 1.99, Now........... .v........ .97 48 Coaster Sets, 3 Patterns, Wens 1.99, Now......97 , 27 Place Mats, Were 89c, Now................. .44 Jl 10 Place Mats,Were'l.OO,Now....................47 *80 Linen. Guest Towels, WeFel.OO, Now... .... .47 •i .3 Daisy Fantasy Hand Towels, Were 1.29, Now... .■• • .64 45, Daisy Fantasy Wash Cloths, Were 59c, Now... .27 1 4 Spring Flower Hand Towels, Were 1.29, iNow.. .64 3 Magic Flower Bath Toiwcls, Werii 1.99, Now...... .97, 10 Magic Flower Hand Towels, Were 1.29, Now.....64, 23 Magic Flower Wash Cloths, Were S5o, Now....... ,27 8 Rand Towels, Were 80c, Now..........*........24 7 First Romance Hand Towels, Were 1.89, Now, •. • .94 12 Firsi Romance Wash Cloths, Were 59e, Now..... .27 k 8 Aboadla Stripe Hand Towels, Were 69c, Now...... .34 286 Areadisi Stripe Wash Cloths, Were 35c, Now...... .17 ' 6 Clara be Lime Rugs, 24” Round, Were 4.95, Now 2.47 8 Clare D«,Lune Rugs, 24x86”, Were 7J98, Now.... 3.97 7 Clare De Lune Rugs, 27x48”, Were 10.98, Now., 5.47 - 13 Clare De Luhe Lid Covers, Were 1.99, Now...... .97 8 Cotton Rugs^ 21»86”, Were 4.98, Now.........2.47 5 Colton Lid Covers, Veye 1.99, NoW.............97 20 Assorted Guest Sofp*. Were 1.00 to 3.50, Ntkw., Ml OFF i Pvpy Blankets, Were 10.9$, Now 5.47 CURTAINS, DRAPERIES, ETC.—Fourth FI 2 Eagle Coverlets, Were 19.99, Now..... 2 Stripe Spreads, Were 20.99, Ntow.................10.47 1 Eyelet Spread, Were 20.99, Now . 10.47 1 Dacron Ninon Spread, Were S'9.99, NoW...... ■. 19.97 7 Rayon Challls, Were 14.99, Now............. 7.47 7 Quilled Top Spreads, Were>9.97, Now...4.971 3 Chromcspun Spreads, Were 17-09, Now, .. 8.97 10 Chromcspun Spreads, Were 15.99, Now ••••••,,« 7.97 10 Floral Dust Ruffles, Were 8.99, Now............. 4.47 6 Cotton Curtains, 36-in>, Were 3.99, Now... • 1 >97 2 Cotton Curtains, 36-In., Were 5.99. Now 2.97 4 Antique Satiif Drapes, 48x90”, Were 7.99, Now... . 3.97 4 Antique Pattern Cafes, 36”, Were 2.99, Now...... 1.47 4 Antique Pattern Cafes, 45”, Were 3.99, Now...... 1.97 13 Chromcspun Cafes, 36”, Were 4.99, Now....... .2.47 > 8 Chtomespun Calks, 45”, Were 5.99, Now........ 2.97 _ 11 Valances, Were 1.09, Now.................... .97 2 Cotton Curtains, 36”, Were 2.99, Now..•, 3 Print Cafes. 36”, Were 3.99, Now..... 3 Print Drapes, 48x90”, Were 8.99, Now.... 4 Print Spreads, Were 14.99, NoW.......... 2 Antique Satin Drapes, 48x90”, Were 1 ji.ll, Now.1., 7.44 9 Print Fiberglass Drapes, 48x90”, Were 10.89 ... 5.47 12 Pript Fiberglass Drapes, 72x90”, Were 17.99, Now 8.97 2 Print Fiberglass Drapes, 48x90”, Were 13.99, Now 6.97 8 Fiberglass Drapes, 48x90”, Were 9.99, Now.... < 4.97 16 Multl-Trim-Challis, 30x36”, Were 2.99, Now.1.47 3 Multi-Trim Challis, 45”, Were 5.99, Now........ 2.97 8 Fiberglass Drapfs, 150x84”, Were 19.99, Now... 9.97 6 Fiberglass Drapes, 75x84”, Were 9.99, Now.*. 4.97 2'Flberglass Drapes, 50x84”, Were 8.99, Now..2.97' 26 Nubby Drapes, 48x63”, Were 6.99, Now.......3.47 , 8 Nubby Drape*, 48x90”, Were8.99,Now......4.47 9 Nubby Drgpes, 96x63”, Were 16.99%Now........ 8.47 7 Nubby Drapes, 144x90”, Were 28.99, Now.... 13,97 lO'Dioran Fluted Curtains,'78x30”, Were 2.99, Now 1.47 ......1.47 .....1.97 .....3.97 .....7.47 3 D'ieron Fluted Curtains, 78x86” Were 3.49, Now 1,74 9 Dacr« n Fluted Curtains, 78x45”, Were 3.99, Now 1.97 17 Dileron Fluted Curtain, Valance,Were 1.99,Now.• .97 « 7 Dacron Fluted Curtains, 98x81”, Were 7.99, Now 3.97 , Jl 6 Dacron Fluted Curtains, 184x81' 5 Print Fiberglass Curtains, 48x45”, Wei 6 Print Fiberglass Curtains, 48x63”, W< 9 Provincial Print Drapes, 48x36”, Wer 7 Provincial Print Drapes, 72x36”, Wer 'rlnt Drapes, 48x63”,'We .5.97 ... 7.30 ... 4.97 ...4.97 ...6.47 .•<8.47 ... 8.47 ««>S<4T ... 6.47 i.,,7.47 ...3.47 I Print Drapes, 72x63”, Were 11.99 ... 8.97 .13 Heavy Antique Halln Drapes, 48x90”, Were. 12.99 6.47 20 Antique Kalin Valances. Were 3.89.Now.............1.94 HOUSEWARES, LAMPS, ETC.—Lower 1 27x48',’ Tweed Rug, Were 4.98, That|>2.22, Now... 1.11 7 27x48” tdlton Washable Rugs, Were 8.98, Now1... 1.97 ' 2 24x36” Cotton Washable Rugs, Wejra 2.98, Now... 1.44 7 36*60” Cotton Washable Rugs, Were 6.98, NoW .*. . 8.44 *8 86x60” Cotton Washable Rugs, Were 9^98, Now. c, 4.97 1 llooVer.PoMalde Vacuum Wweeper; Was 89.93 • • .14.88 Larfaralaetlon Hi-Fi, Hterap records, 1.98-4.98 78% (jiff 28 Caddy Aluminum Cleaner, Were 38e, Now< 3 Gold Corner Shelve*, Were 8>49, Nnw........ 2 12 Cup Electric Percolators, Were 18.88,Now, 3 Coffee Carafe, Were 6.95, Now...... ••>,,< 2 F.leetrie Kltelicn Clocks, Were 2.98, Now * • •, • • 8 Eight Pitjee Snack Sets, Were 3.98, Now .Aim J.6 Perma Artlflolzl Flowers,Ware2.69,'Now 4 Instant Coffee end Tea Sets, Were 8.98, Now,. 3 Jam and Jelly Sets, Waif 8.98, Now 22 Giant 8lae Fabspray, Were 4.99, Now......si 5 Clean Tint Cleaner, Were 1.98, Now|. < 14 My Mild Dishwashers, WereY.95, Now.... .. .^ -19 Gr*as»A-Way Compound, Were 44c, Now t •.,. 18 Kloen QvenCleaqer, Wero 1.89, Now .,...... • < It IpQwanfllaji Fluor Cleaner, Were 64a, Now.... 8 Pint Size Floor Cleaner, Were S8e, Now,... • • > 2 48-Plooe White Dlnperwara Sets, Were 12.99. 8 -58-Pleee Fine Handcraft Ironstone Dlnnerwere, Were 29.98, Now.................. U. i.. ■ 6 14x48” Door Mirrors, ^ore 2,98, Now....... 1 All Wood SeWtnp Baskets,Were 13.00, Now.,,, .16 ..788 ...3.44 ,..1.44 ,,<1.88 .,1.80 •. $.M ...2.88 .. .,2.44 i Dresses, Misses and,Womens, Were 6.99, Now........ 3.49' Dresses, Misses and Womens, Were 8.99, Now 4.49 Dresses, Juniors,Misses AWomens,Were 10.99, Now ; • 5.50 Dresses, Juniors, Misses & Womens, Were 11.99, Now, 5.99 , Dresses, Juniors, Misses & Womens, Were 12.99, Now,. 6.49 brasses, Juniors, Misses ft Womens, Were 14.99, Now.. 7.49 Dresses, Juniors,Misses & Womens, Were 17.94*Now .. 8.49' Dresses, Juniors, Misses ft Womens, Were 24.99... 12.49-Dresses, Juniors, Misses ft Womens, Were 29-99.... 14.99 Dresses, Junior*, Mi.ses ft Womens, Were 35.00.... 17.49 Dresses, Juniors, Misses' ft Womens, Were 39.99.... 19.99 Girls and Womens Sweaters, Sizes 34*40, Were 5.99... 2.99 Girls and Womens Sweaters, Sizes 54-40, Were 6.99... 3.49 G|riSand Womens Sweaters,Siaes 34-40, Were 7.99...3.99 i Girls and Womens Sweaters, Siaes 34-40, Were 8.99... 4.49 ■Glris'and Womens Sweaters, Siaes 34-40, Were.9.99... 4.99 Girl*, and Womens Sweaters, Siaes 34-40, Were 10.99 .^|g49 Giris and Womens Sweaters, Siaes 34-40, Were 12.99.. 6.49 , FamousMaker Blouses, Slses 30-38, Were 4.99, Now.. 2.49 Famous Nakst Blouses, Siaes 30-38, Were 5.99, Now •. 2.99 Famous Maker Blouse*, Siaes 30-88, Were 6,50, Now., 3.25 Fanious Maker Blouses, S|ses 30-3$, Were 7.99, Now •. 3.99 Womens Slaeks, Siaes 8-16, Were 17.99, NoW «••<••• .8.99 Womens Slacks, Siaes 8-16, Were 7.99,Now, 3-99 FlaUnel Culottes, Sise. 5-13, Were 7.99, Now....3.99 Velvet'Skirts, Were 11.99, Now ..............5.99 Velvet Tops, Were 8.99, Now..........,...........4.49 Velvet Jumpers, Were 17.99, Now..... 8.99 Fur Blend Cardigans, WeM 12.99, Now ,«Jv.1»Wi C8.99^' Dyed To Match Skirts, Wera 11.99, Now............ 5.99 14.99... 7.47 e 6.99, Now 3.47’ re 10.991.^47 i 3.49, Now 2.47 19.99, Now 4.97 i,6^19, Now 3.27 .6.49 .14.88 ..1.49 ..7.44 ..14.88 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1963 Bad for Children Speak Up on ‘Literature’ DEAR D. D.: Wait until she drops a LOOK. She could be “sorta” shy, too. ’* DEAR ABBY: It grieves me to see a wonderful woman likemy stepmother treat-ed the way she is. Abby, she has done things for my father that jtny retd mother never did. He ms a Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, for Ab-by’s new booklet, “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.'’ Happy ' holiday greetings sparkled throughout the Junior Chamber Of Commerce ddnee Saturday evening, Arriving at the Edgewood Country Club are Mr. and Mrs, Richard Fitzpatrick of Waldo Avenue. At the right greeting the group’s president and his wife are Mr. and Mrs. William Hampton of Birmingham. Mr. Hampton um chairman for the dance. and he hasn’t had a drihk in .over two years. She hat VAJIf 11 Ull v/T worked by ids side fixing up . . m Lady Rules msde out to my mother, now- l a ever. And although she Is my /VinririerS real mother, she treated Dad 0 like a dog because of his „ — „ „ « drinking problem, and finally B* ^ Emily Post Institute threw him out. V Q: I have three questions My stepmother made a man concerning bus etiquette dial of him, and if anything hap- I would like tohave answered: p4u to Wm, she won’t get (1) ^ a ^ enterM athlng.^tmlbed. This is HIS moment. ★ ★ ★ Think for a minute how glad you are that he’s come back to you. Since you last saw him bh’s been through traffic hazards, work problems, a dozen small and large anxieties. And now he’s home. Tell Min how glad you are. He’ll never get tired of hearing it. • Plan a little while just to be together before the demands of family living engulf you both. Let the children know that this is YOUR time, /and that equal time is coming for them in due course. Try to be quiet about the day you’ve had for a few minutes so that your husband can tell you, uniat’s on Ms mind. Too often we chatty females deprive our men of our valuable services as a listener. Do you know that just telling us how they feel about things helps them let off steam? • Encourage Mm to change (2) In the'present day, a man is not expected to give up his seat to a young woman unless she is carrying a child or is crippled. (3) 1 He goes out the door first and helps her alight. Donald Shows for Virginia Trip Louisiana Trip Taken After Vows | The Donald Howard Shaws (Jo Ann Morris) left for a honeymoon at Williamsburg, Va. following their marriage and reception Saturday in AH Saints Episcdpal Church. * n ★ Rev. „C. Gedrge Widdifield performed the candlelight ceremony. ★ ★ it ' Mr. and Mrs. Hart D. Morris of Billingstate Court, Fbx* croft, formerly of Ottawa Drive, are the bride’s parents. Her husband is the son of Mrs. Howard I. Shaw pf Delaware Drive and the late Mr. Shaw. IjlHM iiuuy, mn cuicuigvu in a semi-cascade bouquet. With Marilyn Morris, her sister’s maid of honor, were (he bridesmaids Mrs. Carl Code Jr. and Mrs. Paul Jolly of Femdale. Pale pink rosette headpieces and bouquets of matching carnations and holly complemented their gowns of cranberry velvet. Garnet roses were added to the honor attendant’s bouquet. On the esquire side, Were best man, Warren May of Granville, OMO, and the bridegroom’s brothers, Kenneth and Roger Shaw, who ushered. The bride attended Michigan State /University and the bridegroom holds, a degree from Tri-State College, .Angola, Ind. They will live in Flint. After a wedding-trip to New Orleans, the couple wIlLteslde in Highland Park. Tbe new Mrs. Bucholtz is a graduate of Eastern Michigan University and her husband of Ququesne University. Make Sectional More Practical The two attendants carried white roses and Mamie Elsenhower carnations against their red velveteen sheaths. The made of honor was Joan Spencer White of Bay City. Also assisting was Mrs. Wesley Tindall Jr. of Pontiac. Richard A. Wilde of Stock- New Hoir Coloring Can't Go Wrong You Just shampoo on a new type of heir coloring. The manufacturer geld it’s impossible to go wrong with the new prOduot.’ln effect tt shuts itself off after 90 minutes, guaranteeing that the color you bought et the store Is the color you get in youf hair. The 12 colors range from fatreet blond to blatot. i / unite in a comar area, separata then with if pmaU triangular work surface, topped In lamlnato to serve as a handy desk area, The “desk” can bo attached to the shelf units, or be made free standing by metal rods at each comer of the triangle. Foil Divides Case Use eheete of aluminum foil as dividers when packing a suitcase. Then use,thorn again, when needed, to wrap wet or MRSiDONALD SHAW MRS. JOSEPH W1LKERSON JANE ALLEN WILSON At an open house Sunday in > their Bloomfield Hills home, Mr. and, Mrs. Thomas E. Wilson announced the engagement of their daughter Jane Allen Wilson to David J. Collon, son of Dr. and Mrs. David J. Collon*of Romeo. The couple, planning a June wadding, both at-tended the -OjF- bride-elect is a member of^Tan Beta and Kappa Kappa Gamma, 17. of M. chapter. Her fiance is affiliated with Sigma Chi Fraternity. , -» They previously attended Kingswood and Cran-brook Schools, respectively^ (Pi tv arty Clothes Enhanced Flower Accessories What’Adhe prettiest tMng a lady can 'gear to parties during the hot)|ay8? Fresh flow- ers. This season, wear fresh flowers in exiting, new ways that will add » top the tables in contrasting colors such as mocha tor one, and a shade for the other to match a room's color scheme — perhaps blue or pink. Stiffen Shoe Laces Glowing red velvet set off white beauty for the Saturday afternoon wedding of Susan Adelaide Tindall to Joseph Wllkerson of Gregory. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Wesley Tindall of West Walton Boulevard wore • floor-length white brocade gown with chapel traih. Her fingertip bouffant Veil was sacured by an orange blossom tiara. Rosebuds, Stophanotis, and a white orchid covered a bridal Bible. If tips of shoelaces get lost, roll, the lace between your Angers and dip the ends in dear fingernail polish. DEAR ABBY: My mother-in-law, who is otherwise a very decent and moral person, reads trashy liters- ] tore. She gets all the con-1 fession - typo magazines, il- j lustrated ! ,with pictures 1| of passionate 11m kissing, or a j drunken man j ripping the ABBY nightgown off .r his wife. (You know tbe jcind!) v What she reads is her business and I really don’t hold it against her, but I take my children to visit her often, and 1 don’t want my 10- and 12-year-old daughters getting interested in trash like that. lately when we go to Grandma’s the girls h e Ad right for the magazine idle. They adore their Grant Mother and I wouldn’t have it otherwise, but what can Ido? IN BETWEEN DEAR IN BETWEEN:. TeU. Grandma that you would rather not expose your daughters to such “sophisticated” literature at their impressionable ages, and ask bar kindly to ditch her collection when you visit. , DEAR ABBY: There’s a very cute girl in my room, but I am sorta shy. Should To help in accommodating open house crowds, whatever the season, plan a compact, piggy-back coffee table. It needs only two rectangular coffee tables, one to fit under the other. Surface both with laminate, for durability and to resist stains and scratches, effectively. If your furniture features darker wood tones, the laminate can be chosen in maple or walnut or off-whites which will especially dramatize rich veneers. At an open house Sunday in their Ottawa Drive home, Mr. and Mrs. H. Vere Hodges announced1 the engagement of their daughter Ann Marie to Richard N, Brown, son of the Norman Browns of Packer Lade. The bride-elect Is a graduated Monticello College. Her fiance attended General Motors Institute and is completing his studies at Wayne State University School of Engineering. ' '■‘ A September wedding is planned. In Central Methodist Noon Rites for Couple Mrs. W. Henry Sink, a longtime resident of Pontiac, was married Sunday noon to Rev. Dr, H. Paul Guhse of Wan-tagh, Long Island, N.Y. was matron of honor. Dr. Guhse was attended by his brother, Wtiliam Kemhitz of Ann Arbor. 1 , Following the regular morning service at Central Methodist Church where Mrs. Sink has been organist for over three decades, the wedding Ceremony was performed by Dr. Milton H. Bank. She was given in Marriage by William Bank. Mrs. Eleanor Ross, Indianapolis, a sister of Mrs. Sink, The reception in Fellowship hall was given by the church for the couple. ' After a wedding trip, to Florida, Dr. and Mrs. Guhse will'live in Wantagh, Long Island where Dr. Guhse is pastor of the Wantagh Community Church. Coffee Meeting Day r , i YWwL m HPi an THE PONTIAC PRB$S. MONDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1963 Check With Lawyer on Ownership By MARY FEENEY Consultant in Money Management Dear Mary Feeley: -Before I was married I own a lot and three years ago i lie# we h a; twins. Whi they _T ______________ , school I again MARY took a part-time FEELEY job. All through their, high school days I worked three full days a, week and I ana still employed. - I I ' This HARD OF HEARING HaaBBlis Valuable it will*bring you FREE INFORMATION about the amazing now CONSUL Behind the Ear Aid fit SMI mMS t—nAcMty Now my husband claims he has full authority to give the home to any one child he prefers, and that I have absolutely nothing to, say about it He |laims that in this state, the pan of the house has the legal ItehUb do as he sees fit. f feeMnat after all die years IW worked and helped to pay cash for the home, I’m certainly entitled to something, Reader in Illinois Dear Reader: , You’re worrying unnecessarily^ Ih your state when property is held jointly by husband and wife, it belongs to both of them. At the death of either, it automatically belongs -- ALL bf it — to the survivor. A will.cannot change this, nd matter what the will may say. , Rather than let this misunderstanding continue, Why don’t both of, you go together f to a lawyer and let ybur hup-, band hear me fact from what he will have to acknowledge is an authoritative source. It’s unfortunate that many times people trill suffer real IK MUGS” III YOUR FOOD? A cor needs spark plugs to convert fusl to energy- Now, vitamins are not spark plugs, but vitamins do help '‘spark** the food you eot into energy you need for work and play. , You may not begettingenough vitamins In your dlat Help make aura you got them with VwsanO Squibb Multi-Vitamins. Ask us about Viorah*—the multi-vitamin that helps Ilka a "spark plug.’* 2.98 PERRY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS 619 E. Blvd. •I Perry PE 3-7152 1251 Ballwin PE 3-7057 when die problem can he disposed of once and ferevdraim-ply by paying the modest fee it costs tq seek legal advice. Qear Miss Feeley: . I find it tdmost impbssttilrto' live within my income. It seems at the end of two weeks it is always the same problem Insufficient funds. I am allotted $90 twice month* "MARILYN SUE’ . An April lith wed-dingis,.planned by Marilyn Sue Rossman and Jerry Felts whose engagement was announced recently by hir parents; Mr. and Mrs: Edwin Rossman of Lapeer Road.' Her fiance’s parents, Mr. and -Mrs. Hardy Fel'tb, live on Walnut Road. ly to cover the following: food (I have three children); milk; medical expenses; cleaning bills; church; gifts, ntpfcpa-pers; school expenses, I'M desk perate. f %% A.M.K., Nazareth, Pa. a if . Deal Mrs. K.: . jt - M If something hfl" tb ,b# sure it’s not your sanity. Lode the facts in .die face, do what you can, and stop torturing yourself about What lias to go by the board. If you’re not in a financial condition to make presents to family apd friends, for instance, just don’t do it. Helpthe children learn to make the 'lifts they want to give. Sometimes it can be done with: materials you have on hand. Cat cleaning bills’ te, the bone - you and the children wear washable* the year-round. Try to keep your medi-. cal bills under control by staying healthy, Since good health has so much to do with diet, choose the foods you NEED rather than those you’d merely like to have. Faithful home dental care, too, can save many a bill. Don’t dismiss as • idleubatterAbe statement that i1 a sensible mode of life can benefit you financially.' .Food including milk is, of course, your costliest item, and can weu be expected'M fo& F?0 each payday. By combining one quart of whole milk with one quart of dry powdered milk you can cut down on this dollar without cutting nutrients. Even with careful mahagfog this leaves ybd $20 for other expenses. Ak low $$ towards medical costs, with the remaining $15 divided betwen the other items yob MAKE 0VERPM£S Naturally this wmiU be a luxurious scale of living. You’ll just have to settle for the absolutely neceamry and try to remember that some people have to get along on even less. The children can help, even though they may be quite youtg. Be firm about having them take the best possible care of their clothes — hanging their school clothes up properly when they come home each day, and taking good Care of their school supplies. Replacements are usually quite an expense where children’s be* longings are concerned. Teaching them to hi* orderly can actually save a dollar here and another there. , (Yop can write to Mary Fee-ley. Irt care of this newspaper. Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope for personal reply.) REDUCE EAT md LOSE BP TO 6 LBS. i WEEK CAPSULESl EASIER TO TAKE AND MORE EFFECTIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPLEMENT, AND COSTS LESS INCLUDING CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDIVIDUALLY BY LIC. PHYSICIAN, MD. NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH MEDICWAY CAPS. DON'T DIET-JUST EATI AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN LOSE 5,50 OR 100 LBS. AND KEEP IT OFFI MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 OFFICES IN OAKLAND AND WAYNE COUNTIES—ONE IN MIRACLE MILE "KATHLEEN MAE’ Mr. and Mrs. Gerald W 1Freeman of Sgivei-ter Drive announce the engagement of their daughter Kathleen Mae to. ■ Ralph The or dore Smith, Airman l.C. e Airman Smith, son of Mrs. Virginia Smith and Earl Smith of- North Hollywood, Calif., is sta-timed,' at Cannon Airforce Rase, N.M. Game Tables for New Year Game tables are due for a welcome come-back in 1964 as an * important furniture item, and . the do-it-yourself fan can design such a table easily. By hinging flip-tops to a regular table and covering all surface sections With laminate, you can create an extendable table that is both pretty and practical. A fancy free pattern in,coral, white or lemon yellow is especially suitable to this all-pUrpose accessory for use in a recreation rodm .dr den for games, parties and informal sit-down mlWf $ 'f?1 You also can attach a laminate-covered drdp leaf to the front of a storage cabinet for small-apartment entertaining. Exercisd Your Feet at Start of Day ROBETTE SHOP Semi-Annual Sale Famous'Brand BRAS and GIRDLES During the Entire Month of January WARNER’S “DELILAH” ? LYCRA GIRDLE Long Leg Pantie Reg. 10.95 099 leg. 10.91 NOW Leg • & V ,6* ’j Girdle H 5" •f “VENUS" GIRDLES * . and | Corgelette 25% Off DURING THIS SALE “CONTESSA ; de ROMA” i Long Line 'BraiiMHF: Reg. 8.96 5" SAVE $2 ON THIS FABULOUS % SUP SALE! nylon tricot Blip with lacy side slit I Reg. $6.00 $Q99 •00 ijl For two weeks only . . . you can buy aa many Seamprufe stipe as you lilce and aaye $2 ion each one I White only. Sides 32 to 40. “FORMFIT” Girdles and Pantie GPDLES in new miracle fabric * #989 Reg. Girdle, Re^8.95 6” #1890 Itigh waist band 1 • Zipper Girdle Reg. 16.50 1295 “CORINE del PARIE” Give and take Comelette Black • White 2 lengths 15" “CORDE de PARIE” : . Give and take Brassieres ; Reg. 5.98 3" 4" BOBETTE SHOP 16 ft. Saginaw Straat CHARGE IT! PARK FREE! CHICAGO m - A foot specialist advises morning exercises to tone and strengthen foot and leg muscles. Walk about the room,on-tiptoes, than on the outer edges of your feet, says Dr. William M. SchOU. While bathing, scrub feet Vlborously and dry them carefully between foes and back of heels. Mr. and Mrs. William Crane, Fort Wdy-rie, Ind., announce the engagement of their daughter Marilyn to Walter J. $chrodi Jr. of Fort Wayne, son of. Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Schrodi of North Sanford Street. Miss Crane, a graduate, of Elmhurst High School, attended Ball State Teophkrs College in Muncie, Ind. and Auburn, Ala. Her fiance, a graduate of the Detroit College of Law; is a ntember of the Michigan Bar Association. Winter News? Table Talk' “Table talk” highlights home furnishings news this winter, and the cube table takes the spotlight, exhibiting on all sides a series of fine wood surfaces. This is not an item to dent your budget if you construct It, with overlay panels of one of the many lamfoate authentic wood grains. Try Ceylon teak fo give d decorative and ultra-foshionabie Orient al accent. rThe versatile cube table can serve as a living room occasional table to contrast excitingly with contemporary furniture, or as a base tor Oriental sculpture, or as a show-off stand for a lovely Japanese floral arrangement. White Roper Helps If you have trouble treading your sewing machine needle, place a piece of white material or paper under the foot of the machine and It will help you see' the needle eye. WMtBuki. Hair Stylists Handy Weit, Mgr. J Our New Permanent Location 2269 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor 682*9668 THE BAR OF THE YEAR- For New Year's Eye With. Electric Refrigerator! In handsome cherry and maple with "maple burl — the plastic top looks |ust like slate — easy moving casters and lock. Refrigerator has 2 Cubic feet capacity with 3 ice cube trays. Prito complete With refrigerator, $395 Without refrigerator, $235 FURNITURE t.MSINAW tf.M0tCHA«0 UK! AVI. fONTIAC ; Our Lowest Prices This Year!!! ; Everything Possible ■ ! SSSiitl Must Go Tonight ana Tomorrow! The Voyager by Brit-) tony travels first class. Silhouetted in take it easy lines, it turns to buttoned down back belting and an inverted back pleat for top flight styling, keeps ar notched collar and double breasted buttons in the fort. A standout in exclusive imported and domestic plaids, , * ,, , 'Meumode J pair$ 81. Plain wcava, MicroAveeve 82 N. Saginaw & TVs - Refrigerators - Freezers - Ranges Washers ■ DryersDishwashers Small Appliances - Radios - Record Players Stereo, Hi-Fi All Famous Brand Name Merchandise.,. Display Modiejs • Demonstrators Some Marred In Shipment Mostly One-Of-A-Kind Models You Can’t Blame Us for Wanting To Save on TAXES, so BUY NOW and SAVE!!! Free Delivery — Free Service 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH f All Merchandise Fully Guaranteed GOOD HOUSEKEEPIN of PONTIAC t 51 West Huron FE 4-1555 THE PQN'iWAC PRKSS, MONDAY,- DECEMBER 30, 1963 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and add by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets ps of noon Friday. Produce Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY . DETROIT (AP) - Prlcn paid > pound «t Detroit tor I poultry; wy# Broilers and Fryers 3-4 lbs. Whiles II-SO; farted Roek 21-0' 4*-“ DETROIT Stock Mart Edges to Upside NEW YORK (APMfte stock market edged to the upside in fairly active trading early to* day. Most changes among key issues were fractional. IBM gained about 3 points to lead the wide movers. ★ * ★ Most major sections, including motors, utilities, steels and oils, were, a shade better. . The outlook for the final two trading sessions of 1963 was confusing. Some analysts thought it was likely that crosscurrents brought about by yearend portfolio adjustments would dominate and there would be no appreciable price movement in any direction. In the final trading sessions of the year customarily there Is f up % at 8% on 5,000 and General better than average volume but Telephone off % at 3114 on 3,806. in most years prices don’t move very far. ★ ★ ★ Among the major steelmakers Republic fell a little but the others Were up minor fractions. In the auto section GM, Ford and Studebaker moved upward while Chrysler and American Motors held unchanged from. Friday’s close,, ' * ★ ■ i*' Xerox picked up nearly 3 points at one time. U.S. Smelting was ahead less than 1. Opening blocks included American Machine and Foundry up Vt at 19 on 5,000 shares and i 2,000; Fairbanks Whitney Friday the Associated Press 60-stock average added A at 304.6, \ T% ★ 4k f1 , Prices on the American Stock Exchange also were irregular. American Stock Exch. Figures effer decimal paint* are eighths NEW YORK (AP) - i Cant Av A Eng Crate P '. ■Sk: West Berlin Hoping to Keep Wall Open BERLIN MB — West Benin’s deputy mayor restated today the city government’s readiness to negotiate with the Communists on keeping the Berlin Wall open past the Jan. 5 deadline. A Word of caution csime from a fa ca..................MW The New York Stock Exchange High Law Last Chg. 24V* 24 24V* | StRegP 1.40b _ 4V. 84V* 14V* 4 va iannimp ,s» 12 wi MV* fib 4 * Schenley 1 2 31V* 3»V* MV* + V* Sctwrg 1.40a 0 M 77H 78V* 4 V* : Schick 21 30V4 30 30 - V) |CMw.r* ....... rfoottPai 7 fe SfeJEl 8S l* 24 21V* 244* MV* + V* sinq*r 1,70 ?f 22., is 51S-+ j* SIX AO 1 — ™ Soeany 2.40a ... SoPRt 2.IM 20 104* 10V* 4 1*4* 184* 10 4344 43'/* 0 44V* 44V* 44V* 4 V* ■ T 4 V4 7 71V* 714* *714*- 1 714* *714* 714* - V* 1 114* 114* 114* — V* 17 <0 mi 5*4* — V* 10 444* 44V* 44V, 52 754* 7$ 7IV4.4 4* IS 114* UV* 114* 4 W 2 37% 274* 374* 4 4* 2 24V, ill* 24 V, + V* ■* 275* »V* -j- V* The Red regime in toe East stepped up its campaign tor further negotiations after a record somber of West Berliners visited loved ones In toe east yesterday on special one-day holiday permits. But West German Chancellor '.. . .. . V.. . . . 174* Ludwig Erhard, returned to Bonn from with President Johnson, cautioned against letting the West Berlin government assume too much responsibility. Bonn fears the Berlin talks may play into Communist hands and force recognition of East Germany. NO OFFICIAL MOVES Henrich Alberto, West Berlin’s deputy mayor, stressed at a news conference toe city gov-ns J. $ ernment’s desire to extend the j{}j-w visiting period. But he said * 3»v* w 3*v* + 4* there have been ntt .official 4 S3?* av* + % moves to reopen talks with the t? llv* 354* Sw +v* East German regime mi the * *** ™ -jj matter. “ 9 Alberto insisted that any extension of the visiting period would serve only to "pot this small bit of humanity” under some kind of ground rules. 44 4v 4v* 4>/, + v* speaking hi humanitarian. 3* _32M 32v* 32v* - v*; rather than political terms, Al-[hertz attempted to refUteCom-j» 2ov* + v* munist declarations that the wvf 5v* + w agreement on wall passes signed by Western city officials con-„ „ + H stitutes political recognition and Mg - bolsters the Red theory of three tDR tw* Germanys — West Berlin, West ““ 2v* 4 v* Germany and East Germany. « IMPORT RETURN -r Buick Motor Division has announced that a'Selected number of its dealers will offer the Qpel Kadett, scheduled to go on display Jan,47. The car, built in West Germany and redesigned from earlier versions, now offers four-speed floor- mounted gearshift in sedan and sports coupe, besides this station Wagon model. Area Buick dealers handling the Opel Kadett include Oliver Motor Sales, 210 Orchard Lake Blvd., and Fischer Buick, 515 S. Woodward, Birmingham.- - ' Ford, Buick Add Models to Boost Sales DETROIT (AP)-In moves to boost sales, Ford plans to bring out a new racing model this year and Buick has announced it will import economy tcars from West Germany. Ford’s development of a GT (grand touring) racing car is toe latest in a series of moves by which Ford has sought to make its products more attractive because of their performance in competition. The neW, low, sleek two-seat- er, to be powered by the Ford Indianapolis racing engine, intended to challenge foreign car supremacy at leading road racing courses in this country and The new car wiU have speeds up to 206 miles an hour, said Frank E. Zimmerman Jr., Ford division special vehicles manager. It will be 40.5 inches high with an Over-all length of 150 U. S . Aid Denies Tie to Red Spy VIENNA (AP) - An American diplomat denied today hajf-hearted Go Grain Prices ns- C-.'. X$r ' fkV «&• Jui .. M*r , W.: I 72vl News in Brief BS! Cruc ill1 . Prom $40 to $50 In cash, a kTKk package of frozen shrimp and arurl Wr 1 box of cigars were reported stol-1 nM Rlv il# en early today in a break-in at B«yq»' Eatmore Lunch, 921 W. Huron, pS” wi Waterford Township. I KnHuRow5fli MtEdll 1.20 About $199 In change was Stolen from vending machines Jj) in a break-in at Alta's Log Cab- g«j«j|r In, 577 Auburn, it was reported mfSnf Iru to Pontiac police this morning, Am\« by Kay Frank. I K«et AlrL Raymond Steele, 4935 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township, told 1 police yesterday that dtisens band radio equipment valued at $124 was stolen from his house. Harold Ross, M4 Kenilworth, reported to Pontiac police yea-i1**3"* torday that $40 in change was' m stolen to a break-in at Julia's gjifoni.iog Grill, 930 Mount Clemen*. I Par an exciting New Year's Day, bring the whole family toifcfffifei M* End Hull Farm for an old- ■% toned sleigh ride. $1 aa. £«** JJ ]% > 45 m|n sleigh ride, hot c—" * chocolate, coffee and cookies. Alt afternoon. For 10 or more call M-llll. 401 Lake George Rd., (Word. ^-ai$v. * Mad Sq flar .. ~ .8 Maratnon 2b 13V* mi jJV* MavDSt 2.20 321* 321* til* 4 % McDooAIr lb ? It «>ia. M | ifl 224* 224* 224* Mi* at? jusaajs p 1» L11 mi w i«iis as *.» i r r l jin j |» +» wsSfe ]1 m*» IP S I? Jr ’’ ““ ®± a " r 2I'(* 211* 251* 3* Bit 0 Wk Sim Sm ii ill 5544 55V* 5SV4-1 [144 Utf U« „ 5844 Ml* 58V* - W 10* 10044 105 ‘ 24 2544 H MV* 5*4* 5*44 — vi 20 1*44 20 + 4* N] 3144 31V* 31V* - V* N ■■ a j Nit Alrl Hi +f fjl'ng Jroo i Jit SHjSma II i»v* io 10 - V* MdrfPm.) 3 171* 17V* IQ* A V* 1 $ SIM I j 1 f k 4 241* 24 24 - 1* 1 OTW' 4fl* 411* , 2 111 ill ill 4 it iiN BU« » SU-", ,i 3. 3 l^ii+siK'K 18* a f II? Us HS - m owonnii a.Jo i is'/* ii is am am im it"* k",' . ,«;r —- 'flvi - i* Hkis#nrT Ml* 4 1* Wliac ,80a *1 Mi)1 'MW MV* 4 1* WMf ,80a 1,20a 311.11111^ a ii § i» i1, ina i'ffl t ii iS iiS * * BS&*3 W |ff=»iS? a 'i ,iit Jo** iii ffl* - » 4*H 4*4* Salar ,Qpo 75V* 751* 751* - 1* aX*?Wrai. to—Arwual rala BMJa»tS di»; b-esc'iffi? tfJW year. b^Daclarad or Raid attar itock Slvldand or ipllt UP, R-BktSrjo Of P«g famvr itlmatad calh vr * distribution dal eld—cVli*3. »4|k dlvldand, V-Ix ONJ; fwjB1 SSg£5 SB ■ a^dlvlAnd < yU n bankruptcy or NNUllVirBlim or mm rtorttWlfft ondor Jho Bankruptcy Stocks of Local Interest pigurat after dfotmil point* oro olphttia OVPR THE COUNTER STOCKS jfi'tsamrv 1 (ayfob 1 ‘ WhL ‘ PfSU' hwMt9 i Sydar iytf WT. IPHr! , & i 1 BthVl Corp, . . .tl ! MmlMa Tub* Co. Rsiijf 1 1 MUTUAL FUND* _ ^ iEES'jBfe'1*'5 linking him with a self-confessed Bulgarian spy on trial for selling secrets to the West, Bulgarian radio yesterday accused Thomas R. Black-shear, second secretary of the i U.S. legation,in Sofla. of meeting with toe admitted spy, Ivan-Asen Georgiev. The Mr leged rendezvons with < t h e former member of the Bulgarian U.N. delegation o k place to 1012. ( The, broadcast admitted there was no proof Blackshear participated In' an espionage plot, It conceded that the two' men appeared not to recognize, each other. w ,* * ★ Reached by phone to Sofia, Blackshear denied any meeting and added, “I pass the spot they indicated almost every day. It’s on my way home. It’s right on main street.” EXPULSION UNLIKELY It appeared unlikely that Blackshear would be expelled from Bulgaria. Georgiev, 50, has pleadfcd guilty to charges of spring for the U.S, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Rla trial Is oantinuing to Sofia with further questioning of witnesses. Radio Sofia brought B.l a c k-shear, a 34-year-old native of Arkansas, into urn picture to an Interview with security police Col. Ochrldskl. j 1 , If * ■* I J Ochrldaki clalmbd police intercepted coded messages to October 1902 between Georgiev and a “station of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency” In Athens, Greece. By ROGER E, SPEAR Q) “I have seme money in stocks and also haye a $4,090 mortgage on my home. 1 would Mm to sell my stocks and use the money to pay off tiie mortgage. Later, as I save mor$ money, I could buy stocks again. Do yon think this is a- good idea? My list consists of American Telephone, Champlin OU, Detroit Steel, General Mills, Pacific Lighting, and Upjohn.” F.H, A) There is really nothing wrong with a moderate debt for a man to your position. The chances are that it will be paid off some years later with a dollar lower in purchasing power than at present. For the most part. you have a fine list of stocks which I, would hesitate to see yod dlpse out.' , I would, however, sell Detroit Steel, which is cyclical, and Pacific Lighting, which is hiatoly an income situation. I would hold the balance, which have fine potentials for appreciation. 1 ,, e s* p Q) “I am interested in Ar-nav Industries stock. I 'see it is over-the-counter and quoted UV# bid — 11H asked. What does this mean? Can you tell me how to purchase the stock and what you think of R? What is the smallest amount I can buy?” M.H. A) OVer - the - counter quotations usually mean nothing more than the general-range at which stocks cap be bought {and sold. The asking price, as printed, tolls you roughly what you would pay for the shares; and tiie bid, price is approximately what you would receive if you sold. All OTC transactions are a matter of private negotiation, and' any security dealer can trade for you. , At present, your Aroav is . quoted 9% — 10W, and you can buy whatever amount is available — from one share up, In general, I am strongly opposed to the purchase of this or any other low-priced stock, unless you have adequate information., Mr. Spear cannot answer all mail personally but will answer all questions possible in his column. Write General Features Corp., 250 Park Aye., New York 17,' N.Y. inches and a wheelbase of 05 indies. OPEL KADETT Buick’s new line will be the Opel Kadett, made in We^t Germany. About 400 of Buick’s 31,000 dealers will handle the new import at the beginning and the number probably will increase during the year, said E. D, RoUert, Buick’s general maa-ger. , , :4r * ★ - », v The Kadetts win be offered under the same two-year or 24,006-mile warranty mat prevails on 1064 Btdcka, and the price will be under $2,000, Robert said. The car is produced as a station wagon, 2-door sedan and 2-door sports coupe. It has a 91-inch wheelbase, an overaU length of 154 inches, height of ' 54 inches and width of 57,8 inches. The sports coupe is (towered by a four-cylinder 54 boraO-power engine, while the other two mottols have 46 horsepower engines.' ' Treasury Position .WAM41NOTOM (API-Tt* CMt< po»ltlon ^^^^•-^24.1*42 Dv^n*52,*o"»*|Tm*.M JU«1,955,380,343.40 58,138,400.241. M«U41.*t4.f} 305,500,245.27 STOCK AVIRAOW CwnplM by TIM AooocloEMI fTMO 4.4 J «5.7 ISM 140.* I 1.7 140.5 j Prtv, Day Month ^go W43r Highly" Wgh 1*42 LOW , at hi 140.6 i m ip SH 341.1 12L1 134.* 2 ii'iiSsi Over-Counter Sales May Need a Change ctmsHM ay vtw ammMM Simi fJall* ImL UHL *?Ji. L.'W mm IS 11 By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - A troublesome question to be faced in the New Yepr is: Should there be a change in the present system of listing prices of stocks on the largest market of them all? This is the over-the-counter market OTC with dealers all over the ' DAWSON country and with 40,000 pr more issues available for trading, many times the number of those listed on the nation’s formal stock, exchanges. Bid and asked prices of the most active and best known of these unlisted Issues are available to newspapers through toe National Association Of Securities Dealers, Inc. (NSA). But they are “retail” prices for the public, as distinguished from “wholesale” prices which dealers themselves git and use whim buying and selllhg. Hie bid price quoted is toe one at which the stock could Iwvi been sold, Asked is the price quoted as that at whloh It could have bten purchased. HOB DIFFERENCE ' And there's where the difference lies between toe retail, or public, quotation and the wholesale, or Insider, quotation. The retail asked price is too wholesale one to which toe, NASD has added dealers’ commissioners or markups. , So , toe range between toe bid and asked prices given the public by NASD Is usually much larger than tbat on the Insider list. For example, the retail spread on an expensive stock may be as much as six points While the wholesale range IS only two points. / ' if / f ,t k -! ' Jjfc'.j Also, it’s sometimes possible for a buyer to get a better price from a particular broker than the asked price made available to the public. In the case of the formal stock exchanges, prices quoted in the newspapers ari the actual ones at which toe stocks dunged hands, But In a sense they are wholesale rather than retail sihee the buyer of the stock also had to pay his broker a commission -rTj not quoted in the proto — end the seller hid a commission deducted: from the price he is quoted as getting. nXfffl COMMISSIONS I Such commissions ire fixed by rules of the Securities, and Exchange Commission, and toe Ax-changes themselves and brokers must charge the precise ^sum unless acting for themselves as Door traders or acting for other stock exchange members. 7 The NASD was created by Congress in 1089 ,es a self-regulatory agency, to act in cooperation with the SEC in stone matter*, for too huge OTC hiaritet. Thjat market involves some 4,700 dealero with about 04,000 sates* men,, And Its business grew frton $4 J billion in 1040 to $31.0 billion In 1961 when 2.5 billion sharps were traded, the public’s shyness id investing In much qf 1963 probably hia cut trading below that Hgurs. . p w ik1"' : The NASD has toe responsibility of trying to prevent listing of false prices. It also sets standards for companies to be put on lists available to the press. i And the NASD keeps an eye [ on commissions its member firtna charge. These run roughly from two to five per cent, the ' larger figure for stocks Selllhg ! under $25 a share, with the commission progressively pealed downward to two per cent for expensive stocks, usually those well above $100 a share. WORK ON PHONES Brokers do most of their OTC work on the phones. They contact, each other until they can find a buyer and a seller for a particular issue and a price agreeable to both. The OTC thus is a negotiation market, with buyers and sellers seeking each other to negotiate the most favorable prices they can. - Formal stock exchanges, however, pro auction markets. Listed Issues are offered for a stated price at a trading post on the floor of toe exchange. Brokers, representing customers or trading on their own account, crowd around ahd make a [market by openly quoting bids and offers. Sales result from toils auction. ★ ★ ★ The greater scope to the OTC market, the absence to many to the rules which restrict listing of stocks on exchanges -A such as requiring more information about the compaotes — and toe present methods to reporting bid and asked prloes to to* general public all mfva federal rig-ulatory bodies recommending stricter policing. And the prob-lem could repch Congress In re-(taaste for Wider federal supervision of tops biggest securities |||W ™ S