Home Editiori PONTIAC, MICHIGAN/ TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965-28 PAG] rERNATIONAL Research Group Gives '64 Election Report jSjjf| §§|jf|l® # »- ' * “ -/4'V-S-- iy ' LCWDON^AF>^SIr~Wteston Churchill’s doctor said just before noon — 7 a.pj. JEST — today there had been no further deterioration in the former prime minister’s condition. ChifrchHl’s physician, Lord Moran] said he would issue another medical bulletin about 9 p.m. v* 4 p.m. EST. Lord Moran had been called Commenting on the earlier that ^ition h> a reporf to the buUetin, the medical association ^PubUcan Nationa* 0*®* spokesman said: “5: . _ .. „ , ■ ★ ★ * The report said'the effect of “I think one must view with a were * tite good deal of concern that it was b^! . ' ' ... a written message scheduled to WICHITA, Kan. UP)—A parachute was found in one reach the legislature Feb. 2. engine of a KC135 jet tanker plane which crashed He will peg the anticipated here Saturday, the head of the crash investigation *urP,us »* ®* ne*‘ Jnue so in . the broad area around $100 board said today. mUuon. ^ Brig. Gen. Murray A. Bywater checked with experts recommend saving about examining the craft’s engines at the Oklahoma City three-fourths of it to take care —*■*—*—- air materiel area about rising state costs anticipated for 1966-67. report said: /• That Michigan GOP fund raiser Arthur Summerfield diverted so much of Republican funds to Goldwater that Romney was left to “shift for himself.” • That Romney’s victory was “no doubt” due to his “conspicuous disinterest” in the Goldwater - Rep. William Miller presidential ticket. Romney refused to endorse Goldwater. He won support for “standing up to Goldwater,” the report said. • That Michigan Republi- cans might not have lpst three seats in Congress/had the party put up a candidate other than Goldwater for president. / • That Michigan’s < legislative redistricting under the one-man, one-vote principle — ordered In the: (Senate by a “Democratic-controlled State Supreme Court”>— led to loss of Republican majorities in both houses. Spaceship, on Target# Lands Only 25 Miles From Recovery Vessel DISTURBS THE BIRDS — This Gemini two-man spacecraft atop a Titan 2 rocket set several birds in flight as it soared skyward from Cape Kennedy, Fla., today. The space- . \ AP PhtWax craft contained no men, but it was a crucial test leading up to the first two-man flight in April. ' . > v';.-/' By Most of Congress The Rlpon Society, in t h e Michigan section of a 124-page report titled “Election ’64,” also/said Goldwater’s candidacy contributed to Elly Peterson’s defeat by Democratic $*n. Philip A. Hart. f It said, however, that Hart “probably” would have won |he chute and said: The governor said in his State anyway. .. _ “The fact, that this parachute of the State message last Thurs- _ Touching on the Romney and is attached to the jet engine, day that only “the most prudent Goldwater campaign policies in ...... use of this surplus” will enable Michigan, the party researchers it’s their (the experts) pre* ,t t0 lagt thr0lTgh the next two said: Uminary opinion that its con- fiscal years without additional “From the outset it was aft tributing to the cause of this taxes or state debt. parent that Sen. Goldwater had accident Is extremely remote. DEM ESTIMATE S^eT&^had Democrats said last month written off Goldwater. Both the surplus would be at $90 mil- strategies proved sage.”' lion to $100 million by next June. DENOUNCED TACTICS Until preparing his budget ^ Rlpon Mty ln general message, Romney never had denounced Goldwater’s leader- WASHINGTON (f) — Congress has given President Johnson’s $49 billion defense program a generally warm reception. Some Democrats and Republicans, however, expressed misgivings on the lack of plans for gong new manned bombers. Shortly after the message went to Congress yesterday, the Senate Armed Services Committee and the Senate Defense Appropriations subcommittee announced plans to invite Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara to joint hearings, probably in February, to present details not given in the message. cost reduction programs which are starting to bear fruit. The United States, he said, is “stronger militarily than at any , The huge program would cost ®Uier time in its peacetime his-$300 million less thhn the Penta- estimated 49,3 billion spending in the fiscal year ending June 30 and $2.3 billion less than last year. * ★ Or • “Today we can walk the road of peace because we have the strength we need,” the President said. Johnson outlined three major The President attributed this new weapon systems designed to completion of many needed 1° beef up this armed might, changes and increases in the • The Poseidon, a new mis-military force structure, and site system with twice the power of the Polaris A3, whose nu- ll was not known here immediately whether the parachute was a part of the airplane’s equipment. The Oklahoma Journal in Oklahoma City, in a copyright story and photo, raised the Order Curbs Dumping of Metaiat Scrap Yard cited an anticipated end-of-year surplus figure. His latest economic question about whether a para- and indicators bear out Demo-, society has long been critical of chute may have been sucked cratic predictions Into one of the engines. Democrats, with strong ma W * ★ THOMAS F. WIKTHORN New Chairman for GM Group joritles in both houses of the legislature, are expected to The Journal’s photo showed press for more use of the sur-what appeared to be a red plus than Romney desires, to fl-parachute by the . engine that jmnee improved state aid for * j u mi , , education and perhaps programs was inspected by Tinker engine and senlor citiZens’ benefits. specialists. clear warhead can deliver a blast equal to 800,000 tons of TNT. • A series of what Johnson called “remarkable new pay-loads for strategic missiles.” • A new short-range attack missile — SRAM *— which could be fired from B52s or other ..._________________________ A Court order halting the dumping of loose b^MStal M »«,„ largely to blame for the GOP’s scraP> inetal at the Sana Allen & Son scrap yard dur- request more than $300 million figures landslide national defeat. The ing certain hours will go into effect Feb. 15. t0 continue a program of ex- In signing the order yesterday. Judge Frederick C. lKS Ziem said the ban is intended to eliminate late eve- ers. He announced plans to ning and, early morning noise which nearby residents eliminate two squadrons of ear- * of thp firm at 29 /VncmuM ly model B62s which he termed -----t--------^----------- 01 the rirm at ii congress ..lea8t effective” of the eight have complained about, generations of these jet Inter* The ban prohibits the deUv* continental bomber planes. ship and tactics, holding this Goldwater conservatism. One bright spot was noted in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) BUILT-IN COSTS REPORT GRASS FOUND in his State of the State ad-The newspaper said a quan- dress, the governor warned that tlty of Johnson grass also was Thomas F. Wlethorn, of 2640 Bradway, Bloomfield Township, manager of the General Motors Fisher Body Pontiac plant, has been named chairman of the GM Pontiac Plant City Committee for 1965. found In another engine. Johnson grass Is a tall, hardy perennial grass that grows a b u n d a n 11 y In tile southwest. built-in costs of government are increasing $12 million a year faster than revenues. ery of loose scrap clippings between the hours of 10:20 p.m. and 6 a.m. * Ziem said that after Feb. 15 there should be no need for these loose scraps to be delivered to the yard. , Pontiac Motor Division, the source of these clippings, has Informed Allen that it intends Area Residents to Be at Fete The Tinker spokesman said he could not comment when asked what the material pictured in * ?* iJSl «la endin' might be, or whether today by GM President, John * F. Gordon. ' More Snow Is Expected Wlethorn succeeds Calvin J, Werner, general manager of the GMC Track A Conch Division and a vice president of the corporation. As chairman of the committee Wlethorn will be responsible for guiding and coordinating GM’s community relations activities In the area. , Wlethorn has been manager The Pontiac area Is expected to be all decked out In a fresh white mantle of enow tomorrow. The weatherman predicts light this had caused the crash. ★ ★ ★ The four engines of the wrecked plane were brought to Oklahoma City for examination snow late todajf wilt diminish' to because Tinker has a technical flurries wjtli a low of 10 tonight. ***** rir* specific engines. Involved. reaching 15 to 22. Partly cloudy i; /,!v * k with little’ temperature change Thirty person s wefe killed is.the outlook for Thursday, when the jet tanker crashed J2?J5m££2SI L\do.w"’ of tho local Fisher Body plant toto a Wichita residential 01s- was 1 At 2 p.m, the mercury since 1958. v, trlct Sahfday. had edged up to 18. The Presidential Inauguration to have a new baler installed b Washington, D.C., tomorrow by that date and In the future will be attended by at least 27 all scraps-will be compressed Oakland County residents. Into near solid forms. Of those attending the historic Hem said that the order has occasion, five couples are from no bearing on the final outcome “e Pontiac area, of suit filed against Allen by They are Mr. and Mrs. Otis the city of Pontiac and 15 real- Lawrence of 471 Ferry; Mr. In Today's Press dents. They ere seeking the curtailment of the use of a metal crushing machine Which they say is a public nuisance. The trial Is tentatively scheduled for Feb. 24. and Mrs. Wallace Gugler, 1282 Circle Court, Bloomfield Hills; and Mr, and Mrs, Robert Hetlbranu, $21 Arden, Birmingham. .'Others are Mr. and Mrs. What Is It? (Answer on Page t) Yesterday action was taken Quentin Hughes, 27872 WeUing-after a week-long adjournment ton, and Mr. and Mrs. Richard of a show cause hearing. Smith of 28645 Herndon Wood, Tho delay was called by Ziem both of Farmington, in an attempt for both parties An estimated 200 Michigan to reach an agreement over the residents are expected to be curtailment of tho noisy night among those attending the In-operatlons. auguratlon. Inauguration Festivities move into high gear today — PAGE 28. West Legislative probe to begin this week — PAGE 3. School Prayer Classes, In state school divided ’In religious exercise - PAGE 12. Area News .............4 Astrology ......'....18 Bridge ..............II Comics ,,...,r,II Editorials ......... I Markets ...............21 Obituaries ........ 21 Sports ...........If—17 Theaters ..........M TV A Radio Programs 17 Wilson, Eafli........17 Women’s Pagan .....8—18 CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. UPl — A Gemini two-man spacecraft partially controlled by a pair of “black boxes” simulating astronauts made a blazing suborbital test flight today and cleared the way for Virgil I. Grissom and John W. Young to ride a similar capsule into orbit in April. After the punishing 16,609-mile-an-hour flight, the 6,909-pound spacecraft plummeted into the Atlantic Ocean'right on target 2,159 miles southeast of Cape Kennedy. It landed only about 25 miles hum the mam recovery ship, the aircraft carrier Lake Champlain, 19 minutes after the blast-off here at 9:03 a.m. EST. Within minutes a helicopter from tile carrier dropped two Navy swimmers who seemed the spacecraft with an inflatable flotation collar. Then the swimmers waited hi a life raft ’ for tho Lake Champlain. The carrier picked the capsule up around 10:30 a,m. EST. : - V- vj”-* Grissom and Young, who monitored progress of the fitght from tile flight control center here, Were reported extremely happy over the results. % 1« MONTHS BEHIND 11iey have been waiting while the space agency overcame numerous development, technical and weather problems which had put the program 16 months behind its original schedule. Officials reported that preliminary study of data indicated that both the rocket and spacecraft performed flawlessly today. They said that two mechntcal devices called crewmen simulators worked effectively in pen-forming tasks which astronauts will perform on later missions. A Titan 2 rocket hurled the spacecraft to an altitude of 106 miles. WWW Then mechanical black boxes riding the astronauts’ seats automatically sent signals to the control system to flip the capsule around »0 degrees bo that its blunt protective heat shield was in position to absorb the reentry heat as the craft made a firey dash back through the atmosphere. hi it it These electronic crewmen then sent signals to separate alt adapter section at the base of the capsule and’to trigger four braking rockets. .‘‘,1 * TWO rm ■■ v fell ; llll | j | j jj| THgfePQNTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965 Warsaw Red WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Hie rulers of the Soviet Union and six East European satellites opened a summit conference today that may frame new policy on European questions. Western diplomats in Warsaw said major new overtures to the West could result. Hiey said the Communist leaders may agree to expand East-West contacts, reduce pressure on West Berlin and withdraw some Soviet troops from Communist Ea.st Germany. ; ■ The Warsaw Pact’s political advisory committee met in the Polish Council of Ministers building, the former Radziwill Palace. It was attended by the Communist party chiefs, premiers, foreign ministers and defense ministers qf the Soviet Union, Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, • Romania and Bulgaria. ; ■ ★ ★ ★ . ■ It was the* first such full-dress meeting outside tiie Soviet Un- ion for Soviet party chief Leonid 1. Brezhnev and Premier Alexei N. Kosygin since they replaced Nikita S. Khrushchev three months ago. CAMERAS ALLOWED Cameramen were allowed to photograph the leaders shaking, hands and sitting in th^ meeting room at long tables arranged in a large open square. **. . „ After 10 minutes of photography, the meeting started behind closed doors. < The commander of Warsaw Pact forces, Soviet Marshal A. GreChko, arrived with the other .delegates , Monday following meetings to East Berlin 'last week with East German Communist leader Walter Ul-bricht. Grechko’s travels caused Western diplomats to think Moscow has made an important decision about East Germahy and wanted Ulbricht filled in ahead of time. ' v The diplomats speculated that the Soviets might want to reduce titeir estimated 20 to 22 army divisions in East Germany to meet pressure from Red China op the Soviet. "Union's southeastern frontier, * ; The Soviets might also want to respond to Western overtures to reduce tension in Europe, Western military cuts and the disarray in the Atlantic alliance. , Western diplomats speculate that reduction of Soviet strength in Bast Germany might accompany. increased obligations of other Warsaw Pact members, perhaps \ in some collective > form;' This could explain why the Soviet press has hinted that the War saw" meetings are to discuss 'countermoves to the multilateral nuclear force proposed for the* North Atlantic Treaty Organization. ★ ★ ★ Communist China distributed a commentary deriding former \Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrti-ev’s ideas of peaceful Coexistence and implying that his esaors are following this same policies. ; 1 The NeW China News Agency transmittedv long excerp§P«m an editarial published by.the per Akahata tWp months ago. The agency gavexno reason for distributing the editprial at twch a late date. SELMA, Ala, * Sheriff James G. dark jailed more titan 30 Negroes today when they refused to go through an alley entrance into the Dallas County Courthouse to apply for voter registration. SELMA, Ala. (AP) —■ Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., urging nonviolence after he was attacked im toe opening day of a civil rights drive, shifts the focus of Ms campaign today to registering Negro voters. “This is only a beginning,’’ King said Monday after Negroes three downtown Review Appointments Set Tonight Appointment of Board of Review members for 1965 will be among the items facing the ..City Commission at tonight’s weekly meeting. Official action is expected also on> a resolution to set March 18 as the date for the referendum on the city’s proposed income tax. Also, the city’s 1965 budget appropriation ordinance is slated for introduction tonight. pity Commissioners are also slated to receive the annual workable program for community improvement, a study required by the federal government in connection with the city’s two urban renewal projects. ★ ★ ★ Each year the city must submit a progress report on federally-sponsored projects in the city. Federal officials recertify annually programs on the basis of progress shown in the report. restaurants and a hotel ip this west Alabama city where the racial lines had been tightly drawn. “Our attorneys are exploring channels for legal remedies to the Voting situation,” King said, calling for more Negroes tol join the drive. He said court action was anticipated by next week in the effort to get more Negroes on the voter list. Although Negroes outnumber wMte residents in Dallas County by a ratio of six to four, only a small percentage can vote. LEAD NEGROES King said , he would lead Negroes today to another registration attempt. Although nearly 300 went to the courthouse Monday, none was registered. The only violence of the civil rights drive’s initial phase came in the lobby of the Hotel Albert, a picturesque hotel built by Negro slaves 110 years ago. It had been segretated until Monday when King and ll other Negroes registered. ★ ★ ★ <■ A tall, sandy-haired man, identified as Jimmy George Robinson, 26, of Birmingham, and a member of the National States Rights party, approached King, who was standing at the desk in the lobby. Robinson had spoken to King at the courthouse and accepted an invitation to speak at Monday night’s mass meeting in a Negro church. “Are you going to be able to attend foe meeting tonight?” King asked. STRIKES KING ‘ “I’m afraid. not,” Robinson replied. “Would you step over here for just a minute.” Then the white man swung, striking King on the temple and knocking him against the deSk. The Negroes with King grabbed Robinson. Wilson Baker, director of public Safety, waded into the surging crowd, grasped Robinson by the collar and hoisted him off the floor. He took the man outside. Waterford The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and not so cold today with light snow this afternoon, high 20 to 26. Snow dimln-ishihg to flurrios tonight, low 10 to 15. Wednesday partly cloudy and a little colder with a few flurries, high 15 to 22. Southwesterly winds 10 to 20 miles shifting to northwest 20 to 25 miles late tonight. The outlook for Thursday, partly cloudy with little temperature change. Today In Pontiac Lowest temporeture preceding I e.m,; 4 At t e.m.: Wind Velocity I m.p.h. Direction: Southwest Sun sets Tuesday at 5:31 p.m. Sun rises Wednesday at 7:57 e.m. Moon sets Wednesday at 10:15 e.m. Moon rises Tuesday at 0:14 p.m. Downtown Temperatures 6 e.m.......10 11 n.m......is 7 g.m.......13 13 m.........is Oe.m.. :......13 1 p.m.... 14 9 e.m.......13 3 p.m.... II 10 d.tn......14 Monday In Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Highest temperature .............. It Lowest temperature ................ 7 Mean temperature ............... I] Weather: Mostly sunny One .Year Age In Pontiac Highest temperature .............. 43 Lowest temperature .............. 33 Mean temperature ......... 37.5 Weather: Partly cloudy Highest and Lowest Temperatures Tills Date In tl Years 40 In 1107 -1 In 1140 Monday's Temperature Chart Alpena Gr, Rapids Houghton Lansing Marquette Muskegon Pellston Traverse C. Albuquerque Atlanta Bismarck Boston Chicago Cincinnati Denver Detroit Duluth Port Worth S3 35 31 1 Jacksonville J4 31 1 I Kansas City 35 3e II -I Los Angeles 01 54 14 7 Miami Beach 43 47 31 15 Milwaukee It 5 I • I4 New Orleans 43 35 14 10 New York 35 17 57 33 Omaha 31 33 so 30 Phoenix 73 41 30 34 Pittsburgh 30 5 30 t Salt Lake C. 30 37 34 13 S. Francisco 50 50 34 -4 S. S. Marie 5 7 43 >l Seattle 43 35 It t Tampa 54 47 II 4 Washington 33 15 to 'Shop' for * C ■, * ' - A A, Engineering Acting on a suggestion by Trustee Loren Anderson, the Waterford Township Board last night voted to “go shopping for engineering services, -The bpard- voted 4 to 3 to seek fee quotations from at least two engineering firms for inspection services in connection with new construction developments in {he township. Anderson suggested that other firms be contacted after a lengthy discussion by tile board on a. revised fee schedule submitted by Johnson and Anderson, Inc., the township’s consulting engineers. The new J & A fee schedule called for higher minimum rates for inspection work but no change in the percentage charge. ★ ★ ★ For example, the new proposal calls for a minimum fee of $500 for field work on a job ranging from $5,000 to $50,000 in value. Previously the nriini-mum had been $250. GOOD CUSTOMER Anderson said he felt that Waterford, as a good customer of the consulting firm, should be given consideration as such. The trustee added that maybe the proposed upward adjustment in minimum rates was fair but that he didn’t know what to compare it with, Services performed by toe engineers on planned developments are billed by the township which then reimburses the engineering firm. w ★ * The proposed rate adjustment therefore, would reflect no increased cost to the township. In making his motion to seek other fee schedules, Anderson pointed i out that the increase would eventually be passed on to the prospective customer of the developer. PENSIONERS’ FRIEND - Irving DuPree (in suit) of South Lyon discusses politics with his three nonpaying guests: (from left) Alfred Sherer, 78 and penniless, and George Gibson and Gene Gibson, in their 70s and on .$80-a- Hotel Man Cited by LBJ month Social Security pensions. President Johnson lauded DuPree in a talk at the LBJ Ranch for taking in the men rent-free at his South Lyon Hotel. Fights Poverty FORECAST UwwtnjUW] 1 IhMflM ESI Wgww lk*w Uw hmgoHUUMt lxy>U»4 J /-\ V Uudl WoBiwBuy Mqmlqg Vs- * J> *> N»i M !««»<- C,wi.lt Uwl Iwilk NATIONAL WEATHER - Snow and flurries are forecast tor the Lakes area and northern Appalachians tonight with „riin along the north Pacific Coast. It will be colder In toe northern and central Plains while temperatures will rise •lowly front the aouthern Plains to the Ohio Valley. Slow Recovery Seen for GOP (Continued From Page One) the report on Michigan, It said all four seats lost in Congress to the Democrats “could be recaptured in IW6.” This referred to the 2nd, 3rd, 11th and 19th districts. The researchers limited their apparent criticism of Summer-field, former U.S. postmaster general from Flint, to one sentence in a paragraph to itself. “Arthur Summerfield, Chief Republican fund raiser, diverted subtantial funds to the sole use of the Goldwater forces, leaving Romney to shift for himself,” they said. LESSER OFFICES The report’s prediction of a “generation” for Republican recovery was applied to GOP defeats for lesser statewide offices. It said: “Despite Romney’s stunning individual victory, the Republican paTty in Michigan may have suffered a loss which will not be overcome in a generation for it has deprived the Republican governor of the tools necessary to prove the capacity of a Republican administration.” Of Romney’s election pei> formance — he won a second term by a majority of nearly 1.1 million votes over Democrat Nell Staebler — the report commented! “There Is no doubt that Rom* ney’s smashing success was due to hjs conspicuous disinterest In. the Goldwater-Miller ticket. Apparently Romney got a good deal of credit for ‘standing up to Goldwater*, especially because of his fight at the convention on the platform.'* By PAT McCARTY The man from Washington called yesterday with ammunition for Irving DuPree’s personal war on poverty. The owner of toe modest South Lyon Hotel wasn’t at all certain who would be calling or what could be accomplished. All he knew was what newsmen had told him—that he had been cited by President Johnson “as one of the front-line soldiers in the War on Poverty.” DuPree, 61, had been quietly helping three elderly guests at toe men-only hotel by letting therrf stay there rent-free. ** ★ ★ ★ But then he wrote to the President and told him what he was doing. ON PENSIONS Two of the men, George Gib son and Gene Gibson, unrelated are in their 70s and living on $80-a-month Social Security checks. “They’re no problem—I’ll take care, of them,” DuPree said. The third is Alfred Sherer, 78-year-old retired blacksmith with no Social Security. ★ . w ★ The government yesterday intervened in his case. A representative of the O f f i c e of Economic Opportunity called DuPree on the telephone and they discussed the problem. TALK TO OFFICIALS Arrangements were made for Sherer, accompanied by a South Lyon municipal official, to come to Pontiac for a talk with Social Security administrators. DuPree said he had no idea what was to be done for Sherer. Social Security won Id have to decide, he said. DuPree sent his letter to the President two or three weeks ago. * * * “I’ve always been very much a fan of President Johnson,” he said. “I congratulated him on the things he’s accomplished and those he’s trying to accomplish. WHAT I'M DOING “I mentioned what I’m doing here, but it waa more of a congratulatory letter than anything.” President Johnson cited. DuPree In a Sunday news conference. Although he had gotten a call from a government official last week, DuPree was unaware of toe President's comment.' I.*1 ■ w A ;, # “They've got me quite* confused,"he admitted. DuPree has operated the hotel at 201N. Lafayette for 22 years. He generally has about 18 guests, most of them construction workers. Gene Gibson and George Gibson moved In about three years ago. “Originally, when the two men catoe, I reduced toe rent from $8 a week to $1 a day, because they obviously didn’t have much money,” he said. ★ ★ ★ “Then I thought, what the heck, I can get along without their $30 a month and they obviously need it more than I do. So I quit charging them rent. They’re happy about it, and it makes me feel good too,” he said. FEEDING HIM Since Sherer, who moved in about three months ago, has no income, DuPree has been feeding him as well as providing a free room. ★ Sr Sr Of his 70-year-old hotel DuPree said, “it’s not fancy, but it’s warm and comfortable.” 7 Feared Dead in Ship Collision LE HAVRE, France (AP) A collision of an American freighter and a French coastal gasoline tanker set the tanker afire lii the foggy English Channel Monday night and left seven persons dead or missing. An officer and toe wife of a crewman on the tanker, the 2,062-ton Port Manech, died in the inferno that was fed by the cargo of high test gasoline. ■ * ★ Sr Port authorities fear that five missing crewmen were also dead, trapped in the engineroom of the Port Manech The tanker was aground and still burning furiously several miles off Le Havre. It had been erroneously reported at one point that all the crewmen were accounted for. The American freighter, the 6,103-ton Luclle Bloomfield of Galveston, Tex., caught fire after the collision, but the flames were put out. No casualties were reported among Its crew of 44. Sr Sr Sr The Luclle Bloomfield took aboard 22 of the tanker's crew, and, blackened by smoke, put Into port today. Injured tanker Behind the bubble gum and the knit pullover cold-weather, gear !• 15-year-old sheron Wade amushig himself yesterday outside the National Gallery of Art In Washington, D.G, fgmt* on kept me bubble gum coming and going as he watched the arrival of guests attending a reception—one of the prelnaug-oral activities. crewmen were hospitalized. Six were reported in serious condition. The Lucile Bloomfield was en route from New Orleans to Southampton, England, and other ports. Most of her crew were from Houston, New Orleans and Mobile, Ala. Sr Sr Sr Elsewhere along Europe’s western coast, storms breached Belgian dikes and flooded coastal villages. A 60-foot breach was tom in a dike at the seaside resort of Knockke-le-Zoute Monday and the sea broke through along the Scheldt RIVer, flooding part of the village of Baas-rode. Birmingham Area News Village Fair Scheduled \ During Michigan Weefc BIRMINGHAM-A four-day village fair will be held at Shain Park this spring in conjunction with Michigan Week activities. The City Commission gave its approval to toe fair last night following a request of the Bir* Area Crash Puts Woman in Hospital An elderly Lake George woman was hospitalized yesterday following an auto accident at Perry and Opdyke in Pontiac Township. Carolyn Jackson, 74, was reported In satisfactory Condition at Pontiac General Hospital. When the accident occurred she was a passenger In a car driven by William Hollingshead 74, also of Lake George. The Hollingshead car collided with a vehicle driven by James R. Daly, 1840 W. Scripps, Orion Township. The accident occurred at about 1 p.m. Ford Exec Will Speak Horace Sheldon, field manager of civic and governmental affairs for toe Ford Motor Co., will be the guest speaker at toe 8 p.m. meeting today of the Oakland County Young Republican Club In the Birmingham Community House, 8M 8. Bates. Due to Create 1,900 New Jobs This Year Ford Motor Co. expects to create some 1,900 new jobs in Macomb County during the coming year, according to Robert Miller, manager of the Utica tyim plant and chairman of toe firm’s Macomb County Community Relations Committee. ".. .....i77' * In reviewing Ford’s 1964 Macomb County operations today and discussing the outlook for 1965, Miller said: “A growing market for our products naturally will call for a corresponding Increase in the output of our Macomb County lacUlUas.” » - Payrolls at Ford’s four Macomb plants totaled approximately $80 million to 1964, a new record , and up from $68 million to 1963, Miller said. Average employment for the year was 9,700, compared to 8,700 to 1963. UNDER WAY Expansion of the S t e r 11 n g plant, which will add 592,386 square feet, is already under why, with completion set for mid-1965. ★ w ★ Other expansion plans for Ford’s Macomb County facilities Include a 230,080-iquare-foot paint manufacturing plant at Mount Clemens, a 4,000-square-foot addition to the Mount Clemens vinyl plant and an 80,000-square-foot addition to the Utica trim plant. •W - ★ w All are scheduled for completion in 1965 and 1966, Miller said. GOP to Minnesota Party Chief Robert A. Forsythe, state chairman of the Minnesota Republican party, will be toe keynote speaker at the Oakland County Republican Convention on Jan. 28. The county convention will be held at Southfield High School, Lahser and 10 Mile Road, at 8 p. m. According to county chairman Dale A.' Feet, its primary purpose Is to elect delegates and alternates to the Feb. 19-20 state convention. Under the Elsenhower administration, Forsythe served as Assistant Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, Ha also served as administrative assistant to U. S, Senator Edward Iliya of Minnesota,fold chief counsel for toe U, 8, Senate Small Business Committee. &i making toe announcement Feet stated that C. Ray Ballard, of Huntington Woods will serve as chairman of toe Rules and Resolutions Committee for the convention end that Charles Walter of 16940 Dunblalne, Birmingham, Will serve is eonven-tlon arrangements chairman. mmgham-Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce. . ^ : v . - The Chamber js sponsoring the May 20-23 event. Last year the Chamber con-; ducted the fair to the park during toe week jM prior to MtoMgau Week and tiie city’s . centennial celebration. The annual Michigan observance tills year will be "staged from May 16-22. ' I ■ Commissioner Robert W. Page recommended that the chamber be allowed to conduct the fair “to view of theexcel-lent job it did last year.” The decision of the commission was unanimous. u COMMISSIONER CONVERTED Last year, Commissioner' Carl F. Ingraham voted against the fair, but last night said he was “converted” after seeing the way toe operation was handled. According to Knowles B. Smith, executive director of the chamber, the layout of the rides will conform to that of 1964 as will the community service group operated food and game concession tents. The Chamber had asked for early action on the proposal so that advaaced planning and preparation! could be facilitated. Amusement rides will be provided by Happyland Shows of Southfield, the same firm that supplied the equipment for toe fair last year. BEVERLY HILLS-A symposium on discipline will be held Thursday night at Berkshire Junior High School. The discussion is scheduled for 8 p.m. to the gymnasium of the school at 2170714 Mile. Those participating will Include Rev. Robert W. Boley of the First Methodist Church; Dr. Leon Fram, rabbi of Temple Israel In Detroit;, and Brother John F. McGowan of Brother Rice High School in Birmingham. Others are J. J. Farrell, Beverly Hills patrolman; Melvin Mermell, a parent; and Ronald H, Rolph, assistant principal at Berkshire. John W. Dickey, Berkshire principal, will serve as moderator. Family Wiped Out in Vermont Fire MdftRISVILLE, Vt. (AP) -Fire raced through a frame home early today, wiping out a family of six persons. Police identified the victims as Theodore F, Corey, Jr., 25, his wife, Mery, 24, and their four daughters — Anna Merle, 5; Beverly, 3; Mary, 2, and Betty Jean, 1. The fire broke out In frigid co|d, estimated at 16 degrees below zero to this north central Vermont community. Hearing Delayed in Sylvan Lake Electidn Case A show cause hearing challenging the rjgjtt of Sylvan Lake Councilman John D. McKinley to hold office has been postponed in Circuit Court until Jan. 25. The hearing was scheduled for yesterday before Judge Stanton G. Dondero. Dondero granted toe delay upon learning that MoKInlay’a attorney would be out of town. Six Sylvan Lake, residents charge that McKinley did not meet the residency requirement of toe City Charter when he wee elected to the post on Nov. S, 1964. K I smsmm .. v ri*ij*: ■■ .flf r THE INTERNATIONAL WHISKY... the Pontiac press, Tuesday, January u, ms wsmam mm TBKKtt IMMMr Week Fe/y smooth whisky, indeed! BLENDED WHISKY, EIGHTY PROOF, 60% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS, SCHENLEY DISTILLERS CO.. N.Y.C, OBOE HOW.SOOH CAM YOU START BUILDING? That happy day when you can start construction of a home of your own may come cf lot sooner thqn you now think! We have brought "home owning time" closer for many people in the Pontiac area. You can. reborrow up to the original amount of your loan for future repairs, remodeling or other improvements — Without refinancing and our convenient low-cost home loan.plan 1s easily repayed like rent with down payment ,and monthly payments geared to your needs. Opin Daily 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays 8:30 p.m. to 1.2 Noon #r . lJ|j o/*+ West Huron Establithed 1890 FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER MRKINO IN REAR OF BUILDING ***** Member Federal Home Loan Bank System' ..**«.«*«•*,«*«** * v««* rr**« * LANSING (AP) - Five legislators start checking fraud, forgery and misrepresentation charges against IMroit ^Democrat Daniel West this week to determine whether he Should be seated for a second term .in the Housed... ” ’ ' The bipartisan House committee also was to check into legal precedents regarding seating of House members. .... ★ fi( k West, 54, has been indicted on Jury Trial Set tor 'Intruder1 on Romney MASON (AP)—A jury trial will start next Monday at Mason on the appeal of Charles P. English from his commitment as mentally ill after he invaded the office of Gov. George Romney with a gun and a knife. English was seized by a State Police aide. Romney was un-hurt. . ’ •k k At English was carrying a gun in an attache case and a knife on his person. He was committed to the Kalamazoo State Hospital by the Ingham County Probate Court last May after two psy chiatrists found him mentally ill. RUN FOR OFFICE Romney said at the time English claimed he wanted to urge the governor to run on a national ticket with former Vice President Richard M. Nixon. English, formerly of Miami, Fla., and Bogata, Columbia, was an unsuccessful candidate for State Senate in Florida several years ago. ★ v •*•' Ar He has claimed to be connected with the FBI and the CIA but both federal agencies have denied he ever was on their payroll. FREE! f VlONTGOMERY WARD A 1 year's supply of batteries with each hearing aid purchased during the balance # January. It is not possible to hide a hearing loss from one's family and friends, but a hearing aid is quite inconspicuous. Stop in today or call for details. PONTIAC MALL <82-4940 Says Birch Income Is Nearly Double LOS ANGELES (AP) - The John Birch Society in 1964 nearly doubled its )963 gross income, says its national public relations director. John Rousselot said Monday the $3.2 million collected came almost entirely from membership dues and contributions. Rousselot, who said the society does not reveal Its membership total, added that Reed Benson, son of former Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson, probably will register as a lobbyist for the society in Washington, D.C. © NORM ADVERTISING, lu. This Bathroom is No Prize Winner! It doesn't have to stay a loser, however. POOLE LUMBER con turn it into a truly lovely bathroom .... a modern bathroom. We can do the same for, your bathroom. Call us this week for an 'at home' estimate and full details on our 1-Stop Home Improvement Service. M1TKMMS m UIOB TO REMODEL THE AVERAGE BATHROOM FOR AS LITTLE AS 116.63 A MONTH ujMBm ^hardware 151 OAKLAND AYE. - PONTIAC ' Phona FE 4-1594 117 counts of an alleged income tax return swindle. He also faces a charge of forgery in the cashing of a $4.24 Detroit city income, tax refund check and charges of vote fraud. Another House committee, meanwhile, was to lay the groundwork today for a recount that could trim the already s c ant Republican minority from 38 to 37 of the 100 House seats. V .<• ' ' H TO MEET Hie committee, headed by Majority Floor Leader J. Robert Traxler, D-Bay City, was to meet with Rep. Carroll Newton, R-Charlotte, and Democratic candidate! Claude Burton of Bellevue and their attorneys to. work out rules for the recount. Newton beat Burton by a scant sue votes in the Nov. 3 election. ★ ★ 1 !. West, who has served two years in the -House, defeated' Republican Charlotte J e a n Brinkman, 14,914 to 1,861, in the November election after winning a six-man primary with an 874-vqte, margin over his nearest opponent, former Rep; Frank A, Mahoney. The West committee is attempting “to collate the legal questions involved and the information available with that disseminated in his (West’s) campaign,” said freshman Rep. Albert Kramer, D-Oak Park, chairman. CAMPAIGN CLAIMS Checking West’s campaign lieterature will enable the committee to determine > what claims he made for himself before the election, Kramer said. > West has been accused of masquerading as a brilliant New York attorney, now dead, who was a Yale honors graduate with a similar name. * ★ Four attorneys serve on the qpmmitteie. Butr one of them said, “we hope we can make our determination on other grounds, rather thin . the complicated criminal charges.” The attorneys are Kramer; H. James. Starr, D-Lansing; Homer, Arnett, • R-Kalamazoo, and Joseph Swallow, R-Alpena, former Alpena County prosecutor. Also on the committee is Rep. James Bradley, D-De-troit. ■ ... k . k ■ k The- Calhoun County phase of the recount will be followed followed by a recount in Eaton County, Traxler said, “and we would hope to be finished by late Friday.” i Serving as attorney for Newton at tonight’s meeting -will be former GOP State Chairman Lawrence Lindemer. Representing Burton will be Tom Downs, a specialist in recounts. : Factory Rupratuntativu Nero WEDNESDAY—1 to 3 P.M. REMINGTON ^SERVICE -While You Wait Service— : SIMMS SERVICE' — Remington factory \ representative will be In our store every i Wednesday of every week, OAKLAND UNIVERSITY Division of Continuing Education SPRING (MUSES FOB ADULTS Gall for Catalog: 338-7211 Ext. 2171, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT Computers and Data Processing Introduction to Data Processing Introduction to Dlgltol Computers Analog end Hybrid Computers Introduction to Digital Camputar Programming Computer Programming of Enginoering Problems Data Processing lor Management Port and Critical Path Method— Tochniquea and Applications Management and Administration Introduction to Management (Supervision) Management Philosophy, Principles snd Practices (Supervision II) . Middle Management Principles Personnel Development Psychology in Industry . 1 Administrative Management Decision Making tor Supervisors In Industry and Buslnass Organisation Planning— A Basic Process In Managing Lang Range Planning Managamant Principles tor Business Women Communication in Industry end Business Small Business Managamant Englnaarlng Administration Engineering Administration II Bw»in>»» and Financial Business Administration Business Low) Comprehensive Estate Planning Profit Management Managerial Budgeting Salary and Waga Administration Basic Principles ol Federal Income Tax Accounting Accounting I Accounting II Advertising gnd Public Rotations Advertising lor Manigomont A Solos Personnel Introduction to Public Relotlent Marketing and Snips Consumer Marketing Research Applications industrial Marketing Principles of Sslssmsnshlp MATHEMATICS Difftrentlii Calculus Mathematics Refresher II (Calculus) Understanding Modorn Geometry Applied Statistics Boolsan Algebra REAL ESTATE Real Estate Business I Real Estate Lew Reel Estate Appraisal I Reel Estate Finance Reel Estate Seles end Selling Residential Construction Reel Estate Investment PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Playground Supervision LIBERAL ARTS American Archaeology for the Amateur Re-Thlnklng Ethics Lenguegt end People Men In Society Lite and Thought In Ancient Graeco Lives el the Pest which Changed the Present History In the Making . Law and Politics History of Art Operas el the Metropolitan Parent Observation of the Pre-school Child (3 end 4 Year Olds) Working with Teenagers Tsstlng end Counseling ter Women Program Notes FINE AND CREATIVE ARTS Retailing Effective Retell Salesmanship Basic Research ter the Smell Retoller Effective Retell Supervision Modern Approach le Retelling Display Advertising Dtslgn Industrial Operations Purchasing Fundamental, ter Business end industry 1 Basic Quality Central—Sampling Techniques Industrie! Safely Programs Automotive end Product Design Workshop Body Layout Design Automotive Product Planning * Plant Management Production end Inventory Control Packaging and Molorleli Handling Engineering Transportation and Physical Distribution technology of Machining Operations Peed Management Seminar SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING •■sic Astronomy Basic Electronic Engineering II Trenslsfersi Programmed Instruction , Exploring Chemistry ter Parent end Child Introduction to Plastics Basic Metallurgy I Basle Metallurgy in Physics ter the Layman Introduction to College Physics It Introduction le Itgllcc Introduction to Strength el Materiel end Stress Analysis Introduction te Viruses II Fine Arts Oil Nlnllng Drawing II Intorlor Design D.slgn In Interiors I Dtqlgn In Interiors II Music Plane Class ter Beginners • Plsno Class II pakland Chorus Oakland Slngtrs COMMERCIAL ART Pundkmentils of Commercial Art Orephlc Design PHOTOGRAPHY I Basic Photography Workshop Photography as a Creative Art The Artistry at Color Photography Craftsmanship tf Motion Picture Photography JOURNALISM Prea Lanca Writing LANGUAGES French (1st Term) French (ind Term) Prsnch—Conversational Gorman (1st Ttrm) German (lnd Term) Italian (1st Ttrm) Russian (1st Term) Spanish (1st Term) Spanish (lnd Term) Spanish (Srd Term) COMMUNICATION SKILLS BHIclonl Reading ■llecllve Speaking and Leadership I •llecllve Public Speaking II Rllecllve Communication ter Executive! Practical Pqrtlxmtntary Procedure business English and cerratpendence Technical Writing PRE-COLLEGE' Study Skills Werkthep Classes Start Weak of February 8 (Registration Deadline: February, 1) Non-Credit-REGISTER NOW-IO-15 Weeks Compare Prices and Savt Jfore wmK Com para Simms' op-•rydoy. low , prices and you'll too why wo toy you can save more ot Simms. Listed bo* low are soma items that have boon reduced svsn lower than the everyday low prices for tomorrow, Wednesday, only. So,you can savo ovon more tomorrow. Wednesday Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Stove, Table, Appliance Rubber Mats n.98 -f||c Value 16x20" mat protects against grease stains and scratches. Lies flat, can't slip or slide. Wipes clean with damp Cloth. lastic Laundry Basket Unbreakable, rustproof - practically a lifetime product. 22 Vb* long, 15" wide. Ovqf shape with built-in handles. Assorted col- IF 18x30-111* COIL SPRING BOUND Coco DOOR MAT Simms Pried' 1 47 Reversible for' longer wear. Cleans shoes and boots quickly. Saves wear and tear-onfloors qncl carpets. Cuts Easily Any Shape or Size 6-Ft. Rubber Mat 1 Simme 1 59 Price For table and cabinet tops, stairs and landings, shelves, countertops, etc. 24" width. Protects, reduces noises. Assorted colors. SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT 100% Turbo Orion Acrylic Men s Striped Cardigan $6.98 Value Washable, mothproof cardigans are extra warm and soft. Cuffs and waist are knitted elastic. 6-button front. Choose from assorted colors. Size M-L-XL 72x90” Beacon Blankets Washable All Rayon itiHilit.tiiitlli Simms Price 179 ■ 2 for ■ $3.50 Gay satin-bound blankets of 100% rayon c.ome in a variety of Smart colors. All art washable. Slight Irregulars of $3.49 sellers. $9.95 Seller Super luxurious — Miracle Acrylic ■ fibres make this blanket soft as cashmere — yet amazingly sturdy. 72x90 Inch size. ORUG and COSMETIC DISCOUNTS Alberto V0-5 and Shampoo II 40 Vdfuit • you gm it 00 Il» VO-4 heir dreidng plus 40c sire shampoo. Wildroot Hair Dressing ?9c value • tube of non .greasy hair dress* ' Ififl to hold hair pnd keep It neat looking, v Cashmere Bouquet Talo 59c value * with deodorant added. Re* freihlng finishing touch to yqur bath. Right Guard Deodorant $1.49 value • / oumy foiiilly ilie sproy deodorant to keep you dry oil day long. Won't stain. Italian Balm Hand Lotion $1.25 value • Italian lain) hand lotiprt vfitii dispenser. The world's finest hand lotion. SIMMS..™, I I m 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS With Built-In Date Dial Snack Saver Sets $1.69 Value As shown—6 plastic containers with covers. You set the did! at time of storing food. 14-ounce capacity containers. 100% Acrylic Blankets 'Chatham111st Quality C00 ~ nil ( r 'i he?\ W FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965 mm 'w* $ ww ;. ^iltr §gftf® 1 \ , v \i // -' ^ j v » on Barring a significant change' In the makeup of the Avondale Board of Education as a result of the upcoming June school election, Schools Supt. Qeorge E. Shackelford will leave his post no later than June.30,1966. The previous so-called “gentlemen’s agreement” developed into a board resolution last night that had the effect of publicly setting that limit to Shackelford’s service to the district, rv Shackelford was given a one-year extension on his contract, to June 1966, at a Dec. 7 board meeting, with a $1,000 raise to $13,000 per, year; The action represented a compromise between board members who favored a three-year extension and a raise to $14,000 and those who indicated mat they would rather not give the superintendent any extension at aU. , Thomas Galloway, secretary of the board, was the only dissenter in a 6-1 vote for the compromise extension and raise. SERVED NOTICE He served notice at the board’s Jan. .4 meeting that he intended to move that the extension,'be rescinded, but last night withdrew that notice of intent on advice of counsel. Galloway had also stated for the record that the compromise was arrived at by four board members only after they agreed that the extension Should be a final one, and that Shackelford should be informed of this condition. Trustee Ray A. Isanhart informed Shackelford after the Dec. 21 meeting that the extension was granted on the condition that the superintendent resign. * Official notification to this effect was set in motion last night when Herbert Mills moved that board president George Granger be instructed to write a letter to Shackelford covering “two salient points.” ____ BOARD RECOGNITION The first will inform Shackelford that “this board will recognize the contract as offered on Dec. 7 as valid, subject to the tenure provisions of Aug. 7, 1964.” . . This is merely to bring the contract into line with state tenure laws. The second point deals with the resignation aspect of the matter, stating “the contract as offered is intended as a terminal contract and that no contract extension be granted beyond June 30, 1966.” With almost no discussion, the board approved Mills’ motion unanimously. Board member R. Grant Graham, however, qualified his “yes” vote by saying that, although he recognized the second point as a “fact of life,” he was personally opposed to it. Although the resolution represented a complete about- face for some m the hoard members, Mills said there was . no agreement beforehand that the “gentlemen’s agreement” should be made putdic and official. , •He said he informed the other memberVyf his intention to make the motion just prior to tiie meeting, in drder that “the public would know the board’s feelings.”- Shackelford said after the meeting that the action came “as no great surprise” to him. REMAINED SILENT He has remained silent through the numerous, often heated discussions on his con* tract except when asked a specific question. The superintendent said that while he has had difficulties with adults in the performance of his job, “my primary concern is with tile children of those adults, who attend school here. “My job involves helping to provide a good education for the children,” he said, “and I will do my best.” Shackelford, who has been in the position since August, 1962, will be the third consecutive schools superintendent to leave the Avondale School District under pressure of some, sort from either citizens or the board, or both. PREDECESSOR RESIGNED His predecessor, LeRoy R. Watt, resigned when a majority of the board members refused to renew his contract-_ * . *' ★ In 1959, Watt replaced the late Raymond N. Baker, who Was also denied a new contract by the board — a decision which also caused conflict in tile district. 3 Filed for Mayor Primary Is Needed in TROY — With three candidates filing nominating petitions for mayor by yesterday’s 4 p.m. deadline, a Feb. 15 primary election will be necessary in Troy. ★ ★ * ■•■ ■ ■■ To the petition previously submitted by incumbent appointee Vincent J. McAvoy were added those of City Commissioner Clifford F. Sutermeister Jr. and Clarence F. Long, all for the mayor’s spot. COLD BUT HAPPY - Members of the Rochester Jaycees braved near-zero temperatures over the weekend to erect the plywood boards of a village ice hockey rink at Halbach Field. The baseball diamond on the field was leveled by the village to make way for the Pontiac Press Photo rink designed to National Hockey League specifications. It will be open to skaters as soon as arrangements can be made with the village to flood it. The baseball diamond will be reconstructed in the spring. There are already bleachers and lights at the field. Act to Ease School Overcrowding ROCHESTER-The Rochester Board of Education last flight approved changes in school attendance area boundaries designed to relieve overcrowding. Recommended by the administration, the revisions are effective for the 1965-66 and 1966-67 school years. The basic effect of the changes is to reduce the area served by Meadow Brook, North mi and Hamlin elementary schools, while increasing the area served by Baldwin, McGregor and Woodward elementary schools. The new attendance areas affect all buildings with the exception of Avon and Brooklands schools. Behind the changes are several factors, including overcrowding primarily at North Hill and Meadow Brook and new additions to Baldwin, McGregor and Woodward. NO MORE ROOM Brooklands also will have an addition, but its present student body will utilize it with no room for more. About 200 or more school-children will be transferred to other schools as a result of the boundary changes. Parents of students to be transferred are to be notified by letter this week, according to Schools Supt. Dr. William Early. Only those children now being bused will be transferred toother schools. ATTENDANCE The estimated attendance at Fight Lapeer Home Order on Uniforms each school in September as a result of-the boundary changes follows: ft ft ft Baldwin, 379; North Hill, 581; Woodward, 380; McGregor, 604; Meadow Brook, 593; Hamlin, 387; Avon, 136; Brooklands, 483. ★ ★ ★ Stoney Creek School will not be in use during 1965-66. Detroit Man Is Committed A Detroit man, charged with three counts of assault on a Troy woman last summer, has been committed to Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. Sent to the hospital on orders signed yesterday by Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem was Clay Love, 57. Ziem ruled on Love’s mental condition after hearing the testimony of three psychiatrists last Friday. Love was arrested July 19 after allegedly attempting to drag Mrs. Carolyn Kimmel into the brush next to her home at 2021 VanCourtland. He was charged with assault with intent to kidnap, assault with intent to rape, and assault with Intent to do great bodily harm. LANSING (AP) - The Michigan State Employes Union has protested a management order that 170 women employes in the dietary and housekeeping departments of the Lapeer State Home buy new colored uniforms. A negotiating session on the issue is scheduled for next week. "The women say its unfair to require them to have to dip into inadequate pay checks for uniforms,” said union director Robert Grosvenor. Dr. A. A. Abruzzo, medical |..................| H superintendent of the institution, _______________ Walled Lake, will speak at the I the colored uniforms I ment service at the Pontiac of- Thursday night dinner meeting Iwould muke easier to identify j flee of the Michigan Employ-of the Wixom-Walled Lake jworkors an(l their departments meht Security Commission, lie Lions Club. un(J “*lso are good for morale will speak on the topic “Earn Merry’s topic for the 7 p. m. ^ they give the workers the I While You Learn, meeting at Aunt Jemima’s Pan* tooling of belonging to a group." * * * To be held at Sylvan Glen Inn Conference on Human Resources “Developing Human Resources” will be the concern of a group of civic-minded citizens who will meet Thursday with the Oakland County Cooperative Extension staff at the County Courthouse. The 1:15 p.m.f session will deal with, three timely topics: (1) people, jobs and growth; (2) education and training; and (3) matching people and jobs for growth. The material to be discussed is designed as source of information to be channeled into community use for those attending. The invitation to participate has been extended to represent- AREA NEWS Long is a former civil defense director. The names of the three candidates for the top office will be the only ones on the ballot for the primary. ★ * ★ petitions were also submitted for two commission seats,* the municipal judgeship, and the associate judgeship by yesterday’s deadline. - ~ INCUMBENTS Incumbents Wallace B. Hudson, who is also mayor protem, and Kenneth Henning filed petl- in W. Bloomfield Twp. i ■ . ' J - - WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Christian F< Powell was sworn into office last night as justice of the peace for West Bloomfield Township. * * * Powell, 7618 Barnsbury, was appointed by the Township Board to fill the unexpired term of Elmer C. Dieterle, an Orchard Lake resident who resigned when the village was incorporated as a city. Disqualified on the residency requirement, Dieterle vacated the post he had held for over 25 years. He had won reelection to a four-year term in November. Powell, a 33-year-old Repub- I Delta Theta Phi legal fratem-| ity and the Union Lake Opti- j I mist Club. tions for reelection to their commission positions. Henning is a recent appointee to serve out the remainder of McAvoy’s term. Alphonse Bajgier, a member of the” Cjty Planning Commission, building authority and board of appeals, also filed for a commission spot. k : ★ ' ★ And a fourth petition for one of the two seats Came from Richard Halsey, a teacher at the City and Gountry School of Bloomfield Hills. FIRE FIGHTER Halsey is a member of the volunteer fire department and a former member of the Act 78 Civil Service Investigation Board. Incumbent Municipal Judge Charles Losey filed for reelection, as did incumbent Associate Judge Seville Mason. C. of C. New Officers in Rochester atives of all groups concerned,,. ;s’a senior Dartner in the with youth and the changing na- , .. D D r . , , .. . I legal firm Powell, Perez, Carr ture of area educational, em- i . , *««, »* j w. . „ , . . ’ i and Jacques of Waterford Town- ployment and economic oppor-i .. . , ... , ship. He served as a member tu L, ;• ... , . . of the West Bloomfield Town- The meeting will be presented shj planni Gommission froffl by Lyle Abel, county extension L " director; Mary Hardy and Car-old Kurth, county home economics agents; and Ruth Montney, county 4-H agent. USE TECHNIQUES They will use slides, bulletins tiejng here shortly thereafter. 1961 to 1964. ★ ★ ★ A graduate of Ferris State College, Powell earned his legal degree from the Detroit College of Law in 1960 and started prac- ROCHESTER New officers were elected at the noon luncheon meeting of the Rochester Chamber of Commerce yestef-Losey is challenged by Dan' day, to serve during the corit-Monley, an attorney, who also mg year. served on the Civil Service In-1 * * * vestigation Board. J Elected president was Robert * * * j Schuller of the Community Na- Bollinger, also an at- tional Bank. Schuiler is begin- W. D. torney and a recent appointee to the city planning commission, filed a petition for the associate judge spot. Avondale Sets and discussion techniques to illustrate the program theme. Thursday’s session will be a complete unit in itself, but further information will be made available to those who want more help in passing the material on to the groups they represent. Those interested in taking part in the session are asked to telephone the extension office so the planning can be smoothly handled. ★ k ft Besides his legal practice, Powell is vice president and secretary of E. E. Powell Gen: eral Contracting Corp. of Waterford Township. k k k He is a vestryman of the Episcopal Church of the Advent, a director of the Oakland County Chapter of the American Trial Attorneys Association and a member of the Oakland.County and Michigan bar associations, DONALD D. MERRY , Walled Lake Exec to Talk at Meeting WIXOM - Donald D. Merry, product assurance manager for Bryant Computer Products of I Troy Club to Hear MESC Manager TROY - Merlll Walls will be the special speaker at tomorrow's dinner and meeting of the Troy Business and Professional Women’s Club (BPW). Walls is manager of employ- Three Area PTA's Will Meet Thursday cake House will be “Quality Control • and Product Assurance.” , ★ ★ ft Before Joining Bryant In 1963, Merry had supervised quality control at Burroughs' Ann Arbor Laboratories and Bendtx System Division. , He has worked with a wide variety of electronics oriented product lines, Including military computers for Atlas and Sago and satellite and missile pay-loads. WILLING TO WEAR The union said the women will be willing to wear the uniforms If the management will provide them or will wear colored aprons, arm bands, shoulder patches or name pins. The same union, meanwhile, has been picketing the Caro State Hospital for eight days to protest working conditions and pay loads and the Newberry State Hospital for 28 days, claiming unsafe working conditions for women employes. and Goif Club, the dinner is slated for 7 p.m. with the meeting to follow at 8. January is also President Exchange Month for the club, and the guest president will be Columbia Lawrence of the Walled Lake BPW. There were 8,274 persons holding teaching certificates employed by the schools of Oakland County last year. Of this number, 7,493 wore classroom teuchors. AVON TOWNSHIP - Simi larities and differences between schools in the United States and in Thailand will be the subject of the Stiles School PTA meeting Thursday. Vccra Tharanon, American Field Service (AFS1 exchange student from Thailand, will be the guest speaker at the 8 p.m. session. Tharanon, the 10th foreign exchange student attending the school, will illustrate his talk with slides. AUBURN HEIGHTS - An explanation of reading and math-ematlts programs will be given at Thursday’s 8 p.m. meeting of the Auburn Heights Elementary School PTA» Speakerwill be Charles Johnson* assistant superintendent of the Avondale Schools. An exhibition by one of Mrs. Betty Smith’s dancing classes also will be featured. t WALLED LAKE—An evening of fun with a foreign flavor Is planned by the Decker Elementary School PTA. A cooperative world smorgasbord and costumed participants will carry out the theme of the 7:30 p.m. event Thursday. Orion Ropublican Club Will Elect Officers ORION TOWNSHIP—Election of officers will highlight the annual business meeting of the Orion Republican Clum tomorrow at 6 p.m. ■ft ft ft To be held in the Township, Hall, the session also will feature a talk by Bill O’Brien, club treasurer. Special guest will be former pakland County Prose-cufbr Robert Templin. 1965 Crop Loan Levels Announced Price support loan levels for 1965-crop oats, rye and soybeans were announced recently by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. ft ft fr The national average will be 60 cents per bushel for oats, grade No, 3, $1.02 per bushel for rye grade No. 2 and $2.25 per bushel for soybeans. County rates will vary. The support level for oats and rye is being reduced to reflect the reduction in price support loan level! for feed grains. The support price for soy- beans in being continued at the 1964 loan level. This price support rate is expected to encourage production of soybeans at levels high enough to supply domestic and foreign demands. it ★ it Expanded use of soybeans has provided producers with a desirable alternative to feed grains which are being produced in excess fif present needs. ELIGIBILITY Participation in the 1665 feed grain program is necessary to be eligible for price support on corn, barley and grain sorghum. Participation in the feed grain program is not necessary for price-support loans on oats, rye or soybeans. Eligible producers can receive loads or purchase agreements on warehouse or farm-atored commodities.. ft . ★, m Price support will be available through Jan. 91, 1966 at the Oakland County Agriculture Stabilization & Conservation office at 63 Oakland, PontlaC. To Discuss Proposals of 2 Teacher Groups The Avondale Board of Education will hold a special “skull session” Monday to study proposals for the establishment of discussion procedures made by two rival teachers’ organizations. The meeting follows on the heels of a Jan. 11 meeting at which the board discussed the proposals separately with the Avondale Education Association (AEA) and the Avondale Federation of Teachers (AFT). At that time, no action was taken on either proposal, and the study session Monday is intended to inform board members on the proposals, and possibly provide an opportunity for development of a counterproposal. No representatives of either organization will be present for the session, but they will be available for consultation by telephone. ★ ft ■ ’ :W Both proposals Involve “professional negotiation” In discussion of policy matters between the board and the teachers. Although the AEA is much larger and older than the AFT, the board has not indicated a desire to recognize either group as sole bargaining agent for the teachers. ning his second term on the chamber’s board of directors. Nell Hartwfg, also in his second term as a board member, was chosen vice president, and Treasurer Don Foss was reelected to office. He is iri his second term on the board. Mrs. John C. Levick, who has j served five previous terms as secretary, was reelected for a sixth term. ★ ★ ★ Planning is under way for the annual dinner-dance tentatively slated for February, and Schnl-ler is working on initial plqns for the Miss Rochester Pageant which likely will be held in April. Square Dancers Will Stqrt Class for Beginners MILFORD — The Aces and Eights Square Dance Club will start a new class for beginners Thursday night. ★ ★ ★ The first session will be held at 7:30 p.m, at the Lutheran Activity Building, 620 General Motors. ft fr ft Also being planned by tho group is a spaghetti dinner, sleigh ride and square dance. The event is scheduled for 8 to 12 p.m. at Upland Farms on the corner of Drahncr and Lake George roads, Addison Township. ★ ★, * Further information can be obtained from Mrs. Harold Adam, 2476 General Motors, or Jay Wrolen, 3210 General Motors, both In Milford Township. ADDING MACHINES holp . .. with your INCOME TAX MANUAL MAOHINE ELECTRIC ADDING MAOHINE Emm *J09ft" ' with SobfraAiwfc':. ■ MIDWEST TYPEWRITER MART M N. laglnaw St. FE 4-6188 . , , : N««t lo Slmml - Op»n Mon Trl,'Til 9:00 V ■ i Chicago cap) - An out burst of subway beatings and robberies has alarmed Chicago’s commutes, but public transportation officials say “it’s not as bad as it seems-’’ The subway situation leaped into prominence Jan. 7 when Noble W. Lee; a state legislator, was beaten and robbed by three toughs as 20 other 'passengers watched without moving. Lee escaped serious injury. ★ ,★ :■ . Last weekend two more incidents of violence were reported; including the mauling of a Chicago Transit Authority policeman. “As far as we!re concerned, it’s not as bad as it seems,” Andrew Dinnella, assistant superintendent of the 92-man GTA police force, said Monday. 300 BEATINGS * Dinnella said there were 300 beatings and assaults on public HANSEN, METTY & HUNT INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. "SERVES VOU FIRST" ' INSURANCE —ALL FORMS— YOUIL hmtnnu wWJty "■jMb iitptninl MIN! Phone FE 4-1668 1543 Baldwin Are. Pontiac, Michigan Nerve Deafness Can Be Helped! Nerve deafness it the Crincipal cause of earing impairment. There it no treatment or turgical operation that will cure), Nerve Deafnett. People that tay "I can hear but can't understand" usually suffer from, nerve deafness. We have available a brochure telling the inside story of nerve deafness. Write io The Pontiac Press, Box No. 33. transportation vehicles and trains last year, most of them at night. A conductor died as a result of one of ' the attacks. About 200 persons were arrested. ' ' -■ “It’s no more dangerous to ride the subway than it is to walk down the street,” Dinnella said; “We’ve had muggings for years ««i the streets. NOT ALARMING ', " / 1 “I dofft think there’s anything for the public to be alarmed about.” * | But Rep. Lee said there is an ‘.‘inescapable need for an increase in the number of CTA -plainclothes guards.” :i ■ ★' ★ ★ “I believe the trainmen themselves should be deputized — and, possibly even armed With a blackjack or a. clnh,” he Said. “They’ll need it if they try to subdue three or four young toughs. ■ “These things aren’t solo operations. They run in gangs.” NO^IGNIFICANCE A Chicago police official agreed with the CTA’s analysis. “I don’t think there’s any significance to the latest outbreak in comparison With other cities,” said Robert Lynskey, commander of the department’s mobile unit. - “New York City has a greater problem than we do,” Lynskey said. “But we don’t want to get into that kind of a situation and we’re doing everything we can.” ★ ★ ★ - After a wave of subway, violence last summer, New York City authorities beefed up the Transit Authority police to about 1,100. City police were ordered to wear their uniforms to and from work to provide additional deterrents. Lynskey said the police department has a basic subway detail of eight men occasionally augmented by others. He said no expansion of that force is planned. ★ ★ ★ But Virgil Peterson, director of the Chicago Crime Commission, said there have been too many incidents and “if nothing is done to curb them I think more police protection is going to have to be added.” — “The least you should be able to do is ride in safety on the public transportation system,” he said. “It’s not like riding through Indian territory during frontier days.” AMC Executive Cited ANN ARBOR (APHEdward L. Cushman, vice president of American Motors Corp., was cited as "Michigan Churchman of the Year—1964" by the Michigan Council of Churches at its annual ecumenical dinner here Monday. Cushman is a trustee of the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan. THE FUTURE BELONGS TO THE FIT In science or shipping, farming or finance, the future belongs to the fit. The future belongs to those vigorous enough to live It and shape it. Are your schools providing for physical fitness as part of a sound education? You parents can help see that they do. Write: The President's Council on Physical Fitness, Washington, D. C. for information. r PRESIDENT’S COUNCIL ON PHY8ICAL FITNEBB THR PONTIAC PRiSS Published es a public service in oonperetlon with The Advertlslni Council end the Newspaper Advertising Ixeoutlves Assooletlon. Over 250 Bedroom Suites, 300 Sofas Sble Priced For Immediate Delivery. Here Are A Few Examples KW'W. •, t- 1 r. ••* *2 f;* V' Wil'rV Flexsteel Lifetime Construction Nylon Fabrics CLASSIC ITALIAN PROVINCIAL Distressed Fruitwoods in a never outdated nut brown finish with antique brass hardware. Mr. and Mrs. Dresser, sculptured Mirror, arid full-size bed with foot board and wood rails. Extra large Hi-Boy Chest. $70.00 Nylon and Scotchgard Fabrics Lifetime Construction Foam and Dacron, Quilts and Prints Brass Casters WALNUT AND EBONY ROSEWOOD Oil grained walnut with rich accents of Ebony Rosewood inlays on the drawers and drawer pulls,' 72” triple drosser, mirror, king-size 6-foot, 6-inch bed with 2 swing-out frames "or regular full-size bed and a two-drawer nite stand, Chest $70.00. 178 Solid Walnut Base, Lifetime Construction Reversible Seats and Backs m 90 Days to 36 Months to Pay Daily Enjoyment of Quality Costs You Less DlO FURNITURE CARPETING Bloomfield Hills - 2600 Woodward - FE 3-7933 Near Square Like Rood *■ OPEN 10 A.M.-9 P.M. WED., THURS., FRI.V SAT. Minlt TuV' • MRS. BICHARD HAINES WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Just Owners Wotild Pay Garbage Bill* The Greater Waterford Community Council is pushing for i townshipwide garbage and refuse pickup program. Again, I see it’s to be sponsored by the home owners. Why should property owners pay for a service that renters use too? We ^ay for all their schooling nbw. How about the GWCC working on a program to collect from every resident, and not just property owners,. Where does toe equipment come from to run this disposal service— the 1.5 mills? : ' w JUST ABOUT TAXED TO DEATH Just To Top Things Off ‘Negroes Can Improve ■ America .Now* Selma Drive Stirs Mixed Feelings All Negroes in America would welcome the chance to contribute more to a better America. This opportunity is within reach now. By solving their own juvenile delinquent problem, and Insisting every able-bodied father love and support his family, then alL Negro and racial problems will resolve themselves.’ LET US BEGIN By REX THOMAS SELMA. Ala. iffi — Century-old segregation barriers have fallen at Selma in a contrasting atmosphere of joy and sorrow, tranquility and violence. Negroes who dined Monday at downtown restaurants and spent' the night in hotel rooms previ/ ously accessible only to white customers rejoiced at the progress in that phase of their massive new civil rights campaign. They ate undisturbed in three other places downtown and in a hotel dining room on the outskirts of the city. Others who tried without success to' register as Voters renewed their cries of mtimi-dation and harassment by public officials and promised a continuing struggle in the federal courts if need be. White residents were visibly saddened by the crumbling of racial customs which have stood intact for 100 years. Some continued to resist, but for the most part there was peaceful obedience to the civil rights law. There was one outburst of violence — a young segregationist struck Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in the head with his fist in fhe lobby of this historic Hotel Albert and then kicked him. ★ • * ■★ 'W The assailant was quickly hustled off to jail by police who had sworn to arrest all troublemakers regardless of race. day for Selma. She has finally come to grips with her conscience.” ★ ★ ★ He spoke with praise of tHff* vigilance of city police in maintaining order and the prompt action of the public safety director, Wilson Baker, in arresting the attacker. Wants Justice for World War I Veterans SCORNFUL At the shme time he spoke with scorn of sheriff’s deputies on guard at the courthouse where Negroes demanded the right to vote. I don’t understand why the veterans of World War I have to be almost on skid row to get a pension. The government spends more money keeping them from getting a pension than it would take to pay it. These men have only a few years left. Why deny them the freedom they fought for. All veterans’ organizations should join together to see that these World War I vets get justice, B.f? Cheers Change in Teachers* Hearings He accused them, as in the past, of harassment and intimidation. County officials denied any discrimination. NONRESIDENT City officials hastened to point out that the man was a resident of Birmingham, not Selma. TURNED AWAY Negroes were turned away from one lunch counter and found three pthers closed. King, the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize winner who has come to Selma to take charge of toe civil rights movement, told his followers later: Away from the courthouse, the Sheriff’s officers, who until recent months had exercised sole jurisdiction on racial matters and met each civil rights campaign with a massive show of force, stood in the background, ready to help if needed.! But they left it to Baker and his ' men to enforce the law. Three cheers for the man who , is going to bring teachers' hearings from behind closed doors. It isn’t quite enough, but It is a step in the right direction. • MRS. CHARLES R. CALVIN , 64 W. FAIRMOUNT ‘J. Edgar Hoover Realizes We Need God* The recent editorial on J. Edgar Hoover was something the world should really ponder. This man, with all his talent and Wisdom, realizes we need God as our guide to an abundant, orderly lift, *jr. .ji- b 1- >h # ? V ' nr • ^ MRS. ULA OLAFSSON DAVISBURG “This has been a promising Bob Considine Says: Churchill Role as Warrior Is Part of Forgotten Past k k k The Hotel Albert, where King and members of his staff rented rooms for their three-day visit, is symbolic of the cotton-and-crinoline days of the Old South. It was built With slave labor more than a century ago and periodic remodeling with modern fixtures,and air-conditioning has, failed to erase the old plantation atmosphere. ‘Lost Parcel Returned by Honest Person* Too many times we think there are no honest people. I recently left a dress in S cart outside a shopping center and a lady who found the package returned it to the store where I had bought it. MRS. ELVIS McCONNAUGHHAY 485 AMBERWOOD (Editor’s Note: If the writer of a letter signed Harold Smith will send his address for our files, we will be glad to publish the letter). , LONDON - The lives of Win-ston Churchill pale those of the Bengal lancer. In the blinding light generated by his rules in history as a master states-!' man and politician extraordinary, Churchill’s eminence as a warrior has been lost to the generation that knew him only as a doddering old master of the queen'*; English. ★ * ★ moment and he didn’t want to miss it. In Washington: CON8IDINE After that it was action with his regiment along the northwest frontier of India, bent on securing her majesty’s empire. ★ * W . He could fight and he could also write, as was the custom of the day. He divided his time between the two callings, was decorated by his commanding officer, Gen. Sir Bindon Blood, and paid five quid per column in the London Daily Telegraph. Barry Backers Help Oust Burch His father, Lord Randolph Henry Spencer Churchill, who died at 46, was sorely disappointed by the son’s inability or refusal to master the arts and letters of Harrow. OVER OBJECTIONS Then the Sudan, even over the objections of the commander in chief, Lord Kitchener. By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA) - The real story of GOP National Chairman Dean Burch's impending departure from office is remarkable for one chief reason: the change was achieved largely by onetime supporters of Barry Gold-water, his sponsor. It was concluded by the father, and Churchill’s American-born mother, Jennie Jerome, that the army was the only place for him. He was in on the charge of dhe dervishes at Omdurman, something right out of a latter day Hollywood spectacular, with beheading swords swishing over his head and his Mauser barking death at close range. Plainly, he would never be gifted in any field that called for anything short of the rougV and tumble. All he learned at Harrow School, he was to aay later, was “How to write English.” •k Or Or So he was dispatched to Sandhurst and took to It UMs a duck to water. He graduated eighth in a class of 150 and Id 1805, the yenr of his ailing father's death, entered the 4th Hueiara. He hardly dreamed of politicking until he was 20, this man whose life spanned the Incredible gap between Arab dervish and A-bomb. He was a warrior primarily and he brought a warrior's heart Into the arena in which he was to do battle and sometimes dominate but always adorn for 60 of the most momentous years in history. Once the now I well- adver-l Used “midwest- BI08SAT ern group” of national committeemen (heavily sprinkled with conservatives) had held their first Chicago meeting in mid-November, leadership in the drive to oust Burch quickly passed to them. Smiles ENOUGH ACTION H He found all the action he craved almost Immediately, and under somewhat remark-able circum^iaeM. ' » For example, he began playing at war with real live ammunition In Cuba during a leave, of absence. There was a war going on .there at the Notice how seldom minutes are marked on modem clock and watch faces? Today's pace is so fast nobody has a minute foranything. k k ■ The Old Cynic says that the fact that newspapers carry more “Lost” than "Found” ads tolls us something aboat toe, human race, ,Party progressives, whose ' voices were dominant In the antl-Burob efforts at toe early December conclave of Republican governors, hopplly took a back seat. Many continued, of course, to piny important though muted roles In the drive. k k V k Yet even when full, merited, credit |a givatn the decisive mid-westerners, who wrapped up the ball game in their second 12-state meeting In Chicago Jan, 7, the story is not complete. The alignment of those either active or juft Interested in seeing Burch removed included these Other Goldwater supporters: By fair count, a delen or so southern voting member! jt#. Alton MmdljMBJtl . ■tnmrtatnlddinm scattered through eight of the 11 Old South states. • Wayne Hood of Wisconsin, Goldwater’s top field organizer. • Elements of the financing group led by Ralph Cordiner, the 1944 GOP nominee’s key money man for toe campaign. ■*k k k Put together with the ball-carrying mldwestern group, this imposing lineup of people “friendly to Barry” gave the anti-Burch effort an almost Irresistible, acrosB - the • political-spectrum look. Nevertheless,' some ardent Goldwaterites chose to misread the drive as purely a narrowly founded1 .revenge maneuver by GOP progressives. For Instance, as late as Jan. 9, when the Issue was already decided, Goldwater forces in Minnesota sought to ram through the GOP State Central Committee a Resolution reprimanding National Committeeman George Etzell and Commit-teewoman Rhoda Lund for their part In the mldwestern group's anti-Burch labors. 1 litwltmaf ■ ' k ★" , ; v^*!wrf/ The result was a resounding Index to toe hopelessness of Burch’s fight it toil stage. The Minnesota committee, meeting In nil-day session, wound up endorsing thus Ei* sell-Lund activity hy a vote of 187 to 88. > Etzell had worked cleaely with Nebtaikf’s National Committeeman Donald Ross to provide crucial leadership from “Gold* water ceuhiy.” 12 ^ t U,. * i a The whole mldwestern push began almost as a natural off* shoot of the Nov, 4 election postmortems, as Ross, Etzell, and others compared notes on the Goldwater debacles in theif states. They quickly agreed that an inescapable first step on the road back was a national chairman “not tied to any candidate.” k k k On Jan. 8 in Washington, after Goldwater, Burch, Gold-water runnlag mate William Miller and Ray Bliss of Ohio (Burch’s successor) mot la Barry’s apartment, Ross of Nebraska Joined them In a second session. He hardly needed to say that he had the votes to beat Bnrch. Miller, whose urgings had shifted from "stay In” to “get out,” was in hts best role — tough realist. He reportedly counseled the arrangement that produced Burch's resignation. The big point, however, is that it was Ross and his energetic mldwestern associates who gave Miller a great deal to be realistic ^ about. One mldwestomer thinks Burch could have mus* tered no more than 48 of a need* od 67 committee votes at thl moment of decision. . Tj» .AmocWW Cmi u wuHtMl •xcuMlvtw to Hi* um toe rwutolL fWOirjH k>c>i mWi print** In Ojw ««W*Mg*r n won m ill AP MW) dlipotclioi, I J- Mnt*.* WMk) wftor* IK'ift frJSWWto Omm. Uv- "Biton. Mfcomb, LopMr and WatManaw CftSltS* |fTsn,0S # yffil JlOWnSPo •« Michigan and •■'W « wwb Ail mtlT wp KWW» mir Si wtvane*. ffifliot'tolWpJWM *t (GTSS tiSUK IHEJQIJ'riAe ymsss, TPESDAYt JANUARY j», 1865 sEVgy The Netherlands Antilles are 1550 miles apart. The total land two groups of three islands each area is IM square miles and hi the Caribbean Sea. They, are* the population is 19M07. bie—it’s that it makes you feel unpatriotic. Everybody accuses you of letting down yourself, ybur country and the . human race. , * ’ ‘ i I ■ ; ,* By HAL BOYLE ' NEW YORK (AP)-I haven’t broiled the cat yet, but I may anv day.'. She’s looking more appetizing all the time. Every time I stare at her I no, longer see p purring pet. To my famished gaze she has ■ become a ■ bundle of pro* jf Y*® Whenever I '«l . say “Kitty, kit- AA to her, she ■■■■-mt//.backs away I yflf ’ cautiously or ting his finger in' the hole jn the dike. Certainly Jh%-mt$st have §|en a fat little boy with a fat finger, fiihis finger .had been skinny, surely the ragtag waters would have seeped around it, broken the data* and drowned all the Netherlands. Mark Twain' oflr&ggidLhe had no difficulty in givipg up smoking, and added: “IVe done it a ■.thousand, times.'WmSM Once, during a postwar visit to France, my weight soared up to 217 pounds. Looking back, I figure now it'must have been because of ^something { ate. 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Mjmwryhnw ml oomwanv nnpijtf, omit PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE open Monday thru Saturday 9i30 A M. fa 9i00 P.M. Kenneth G HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE # PEriN^^S Jmiracle miu STORE HOURS 9i30 A.M. To 9i00 P.M. (Thank you* for reading tide maseagi from Marathon.) •I v , t m fciGliT T11E PONTIAC 1HESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 196 ■v - -4' Pontiac Proto Photos Shown at left is Mrs. Matthew Gill, Franklin Road, past president of the League pf Catholic Women, turning over the office to newly elected president, Mrs. Floyd Zielinski, ’ Williams Lake Road. Start Early on Thanks for Visit Q: I have oeen invited to a shower that is being givdn for my husband's niece. On the card enclosed with the gift, should I sign my husband’s name along with mine, or do 1 sign my name alone? A: For a shower gift, you sign your name alone. 1 ★ ★ ★ The Emily Post Institute offers readers booklets on a variety of subjects concerning etiquette. , If you would like the booklet entitled, ‘‘The Bride’j Trousseau,” send 10 cents in coin and a self - addressed, stamped envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of this newspaper. if 'it it The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal moil, but all questions of general interest are apswered In this column. Florida Keys Was Subject of Newsman ' By The Emily Post Instiute Q: Is it necessary for a 12-year-old child to write a bread-and-butter letter after ishe has visited relatives or • friends? A: Very definitely she should write a bread-and-butter letter. It is not only proper but vitally important that the obligation' of saying “thank you” be instilled long before the age of 12. Even very little children should try to print letters of thanks as soon .as they are able. Such letters can of 'course be very short and completely imperfect. It is the appreciation behind the thank-you that counts. ★ ★ it Q: Will you please tell me the proper reply to make to an introduction? I have been taught to say, “How do you do.” Several of my girl friends “say, “Pleased to meet you,” or “Happy to make your acquaintance.” A: The correct reply to an introduction is, “How do you do.” “Pleased to meet you,” “Charmed,” or “Happy to make your acquaintance,” are all very bad form. Oh occasion, when you meet someone whom you have heard much about and long wanted to meet, you may of course say, “I am so glad to meet you.” ★ j ★ ★ Warren Home for Newlyweds Organist to Play At the inauguration of L. B. Johnson, as President on Wednesday, Philip Stein-haus, organist at St. John’s Church on Lafayette Square in Washington and the choir there will be seen on TV. He is a former organist at Christ Church Cranbrook. Church Unit Meets Members of the Woman’s Society of Oakland Park Methodist Church will meet at noon Wednesday for luncheon. Guest speaker will be Mrs. Howard Locher of Flint. Fall VOWS are planned by Janet Bea Reed, daughter of the Guy Reeds of Sylvan Lake and Ronald Lde Stanke, son of the Gerald Stank.es of Hammond Lake. Both attend Michigan State University. Seen looking over the duties of their new offices in the League of Catholic Women organization, are recently installed officers. Ffom the left are Mrs. Joseph Spadafore, West Iroquois Road; Mrs. Wilfotd Hine, South Jessie Street and Mrs. Lloyd J. Mountain, North Anderson Street. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABB Y: I work for a fairly large company. Every year each employe isjg Catholic Women Install Officers The Waldron Hotel was the scene of installation for members of the League olCatholic Women. Mrs. Fred Gottschalk, Mrs. George Winters and Mrs. Cler-gue ’ Webster presented, the new officers at the Monday evening meeting. TAKING OVER Mrs. John W- Fitzgerald of Bloomfield .Hills was hostess Monday afternoon to members of the Pontiac branch, Woman’s National Farm and, Garden Association (WNFGA). Jack Van Coevering, outdoor woods’ and waters’ writer, showed pictures of the Florida Keys. He emphasized the beauties of the wild life found there. 1 Some of his pictures showed Sea Grape Lodge on Demere Key, built by Michigander Phil de Graff. Mrs. S. M. Dudley and Mrs. Norman Kuijala were welcomed as new members. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Stuart E. Whitfield, social chairman; Mrs. Milo Cross, . Mrs. Harold Euler, Mrs. W. M. Green, Mrs. Eugene Wellman and Mrs. Arthur Young. At home in Warren are the newlywed Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Streit (Ruth Evelyn Bell) who were wed in a recent family ceremony in Hie Zion United Church of Christ, Mount Clemens. Parents of the couple are the Russel C. Bells of Hudson Avenue and the Robert B. Straits of Mount Clemens. The bride is an alumna of Western Michigan University and her husband holds a degree from Central Michigan University. MRS. G. P. MORGAN Reception After Rites, for Couple A chapel ceremony and reception in the Central Methodist Church marked the recent vows of Diane Lynn Harris and Gerald Paul Morgan. ROCHELLE LACE White Rochelle lace fashioned a bouffant gown and train for the daughter of Mrs. Richard L Cole of Sutherland Street and William L. Harris of- Gannon Court, Pontiac Township. Her imported illusion veil fell from a floral headpiece and a corsage of white roses centered her bouquet of carnations and ivy. During the rite performed by Dr. Milton H. Bank, Mrs. Glen Cido, honor matron, carried carnations matching her floor-length gown of aquamarine satin. h Sr William Harvey was best man for the bridegroom, son of the Benjamin Morgans of Willett Street, Avon Township. Larry and Garry Harris, the bride's twin brothers, and the bridegroom's nephews, Garry and Hoy Morgan, were ushers. A deferred honeymooh in California is planned by tho couple presently residing in Pontiac. Pi Omicron Adds Two New Members Margaret Hutchinson and Eleanor Pearson were, welcomed as new members of Iota Eta chapter of Pi Omicron national sorority at a recent meeting, i Mrs. Leon Skelley was hostess to the group In her Sylvan Lake home. Mrs. Gerald L. Bergin, treasurer. Also elected were: Mrs. Da-" vid T. Mogg and Mrs. Stanley Vitasinsky. Guests at the dinner meet- ing included new board members: Mrs. John Denihan, Mrs. Paul Cany, Mrs. Louis Humphries,Mrs.JohnHiggins, Mrs. Frank Mazza, and Miss Rose Griffin. supposed to get an expound ham. Last year 1 ' m y ha inf looked kind! of small for f eight pounds, but I didn’t say anything about it. This year • my ham also looked small, so I took it home iBBY and weighed it and it was only six pounds,- four ounces., *• I took it back to the department head and told him if the company bragged that “they—gave—their employes-eight-pound hams, the hams should weigh eight pounds., He became very angry with me and told me I ought to be ashamed of myself, and I should have taken the ham and kept quiet. Do you think I did the wrong thing? Or was the department head in the wrong? What do I do now? v GYPPED Refinishing Demonstration Newly- elected are: Mrs. Floyd Zielinski, president; Mrs. Joseph Spadafore, first vice president; Mrs. Lloyd Mountain, second vice president; and Mrs. Wilford Hine, third vice president. ★ -it. ★ Other officers are: Mrs. Floyd Sanchez, recording secretary; Mrs. Joseph Pollina, corresponding secretary; and Practical Nurses Get Diplomas This Week Fifty-two students of the Ann Arbor Practical Nurse Education Center will 1 be graduated Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Ann Arbor High School auditorium. Pontiac area members of the 32nd class of students include Dorothy Beane, Mrs. Hazel Brown, Tommie Gordon, Mrs. Pauline Hillman, Mrs. Shirley Ledsinger, Mrs. Shirley Scruggs, Donna Snyder, Mrs.. Joan Transon and Mrs. Joyce Watkins. ★ ★ ★ According to Mae Edna Doyle, R. N. director of the program, there are now over 900 graduates of the school, working in hospitals and health facilities* in southeastern Michigan. Two classes of students are accepted a year with entering dates Feb. 1, 1965 and Sept. 13, 1965. Hie one-year program offers both classroom and hospital experience. Pontiac General Hospital is among the institutions cooperating with the teaching center to provide hospital experience for the students. Members of the Sylvan Manor branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, attended a deim onstration of refinishing furniture recently. Reports were given on the service project the group does at the Lakeview Convalescent Home. Guests at the meeting were James Burke, Raymond Eddy, Mrs. Fred Kieft, Mrs. Ralph Retzlaff, Mrs. Clarence Beers, Mrs. C. L. Johnson, Mrs. Donald Hpton and Mrs. Parker Rockwell. DEAR GYPPED: If the ham had been labeled “EIGHT POUNDS” by the supplier, then the company was gypped and the department head should have used his and thanked you for revealing it. But if the company “bragged” that they gave eight-pound hams, and didn’t then the deal was something less than kosher,. If I were you, I’d forget it. •k ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: What can be done about a man who has a fantastic imagination? We are in our seventies and have known him all our lives. He will sit {I Cocktail Hour: featuring special low prices ty| , 4 p.nt. Jo 6 p.tn. Mon. lliru Sat. y 9 p.nt. to 10 pim. Mon. thru Tliurs. • BANQUETS • MEETINGS • RECEPTIONS Corner of Pike and Perry Cashmere Sweaters Share your faVorite homemaking ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright, new silver dollar if Polly uses your idea in Polly’s Pointers, FE 5.6167 / Fur Sale CKETS AND STOLES Clear Beauty Shows Through Beauty inside the car comes through true and clear with a new see-through vinyl automobile floor mat line. The crystal clear and tinted transparent floor mats also double as protection for the original floor covering and make the car floor sweeping chore easier. Albert's Back, Say Jewelers fit Untiled Time Way Below Normal CosI Proof that the' man about town is bitbomihg more of a dandy is shown in (he ludden popularity of “The Albert.” This sales surge is reported by Londons Jeweler/ Information Center, which explains that “The Albert” is a heavy gdljii watch chain once worn on Victorian waistcoats. It was named for Prince Albert. Coming back with the chain are fob watches, slimmer however than their Regency counterparts. One Black Chanel Mink Border Black Broadtail, Jacket. Reg. $350 .... $249 Two Shawl Collar with. Double Skin Mjnk Black Broadtail Jacket Reg. $395 . $289 One Continental Style with Double Skin Mink Black Broadtail Jacket Reg. $395 $289 One Tailored Notch Collar Satin Bound Black Broadtail acket Reg $ 95 $299 One Tailored ,-Lullon Black Broadtail Jacket Reg $.,95 . $299 One Tailored Double Breasted Black Broadtail Jacket Reg $.j95 . . $289 One Natural Autumn Haze Mink Stole regular $950 : . . $699 ■One Natural Autumn Haze Mink Extra Size Sidle Rg^j. $995 .... . $749 One Natural Autumn Haze Mink Stole Regular $850 ......................... $649 One Natural Autumn Haze Mink J-Button Jacket Regular $895 . ... $699 t Only dm ttttr tach t monlhi • Uroupi, coilumai nntf pcrtoni ov«r II yMr< itt*hlly addition*! • Minimum A«a: l Month! .ENDALE . * . Photographers 45 W. Huron St. Opposite routine Pros* Phone tor Appointment, FE 5-3260, FE 5-0322 THIS OFFER ENDS IN 30 DAYS Slant Inward Slant the cutting edge of an electric knife blade in toward food for very thin slices. PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE , Since 1896 Prepare for Desirable Office Positions1 NIGHT SCHOOL CLASSES BEGINNING JANUARY 25 ABC SHORTHAND GREGG SHORTHAND THEORY GREGG SHORTHAND REVIEW 60-140 Words Per Minute DICTATION TYPING (Beginning and Advanced) BUSINESS ENGLISH PRINCIPLES OF ACCOUNTING ADVANCEP ACCOUNTING Office Machines and IBM Key Punch DeLiso Debs Caressa . ... Town & Cou Town & Cou WRITE REGISTRAR OR PHONE FEDERAL 3-7028 FREE, PERMANENT PLACEMENT SERVICE ACCREDITED BY THE ACCREDITING COMMISSION FOR BflflJNKRS SCHOOLS, WASHINGTON, D. C. HURON at TELEGRAPH TUESDAY. JANUARY 19, 1965 enroll today Leant a Professional Service CLASSES BEING FORMED 11% S, Saginaw Ph: le 44352 Plan Your Winter Cruise To The W. ABBOTT TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, Keep Both Moving Dust and wax furniture with « cloth in eacJThandTo make^ the job go faster. Better Permanents 110 np Hair CondKtioning* Tipping Frosting and Tinting $7.50 Up FREE PARKING Courthouse Lot Beauty Shop Riker Bldg., 35 W. Huron ' ■ FE 3*-71S6 (eumode jaA 5€AMLESS u ■DEPENDABLES" They wear! Plain or micro with Miracle No-Bind Tops 7 2 pairs $1.50 82 N. Saginaw St. r " —v Quality Training by Lopez Sterling -Beauty School Walton Blvd. at Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 40-A Needlework Kit IVIIAX Jr. High, 7:30 p.m.; Guest speakers are; Donald McMillen, Merrill Wallis, and George Caronis. Student drop-• outs will be discussed, ■ • THURSDAY ‘ Malkim, 2:30 p.m.; Math program to be discussed. Robert Frost, 2:30 pm., multipurpose room. A demonstration by the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. Hawthorne,? ;30p,m,,^peak-er, Robert Wollaeger program director for Oakland -.C hit d Guidance Clinic. S', Owen, 7:30. p.m., multipurpose room. “Eye of the Hurricane.’’Question and answer period. , Kennedy Jr. High, 2:30 p.m.. Program on Braille and hard of hearing. |, Webster, 7:30 p.m., A program on the maximal education of children of all races and creeds in the schools of Michigan. AbbottsSay Vows in Waterford . The Waterford Township Church of Christ -was the setting for the recent carriage of Charlene Chenoweth to David W. Abbott of Kempf Street. Pearl applique accented a floor - length gown of white bridal satin for the daughter of the Vernon J. Chenoweths of Whipple- Shores Drive, Independence Township. BOUFFANT VEIL A bouffant illusion veil with pearl tiara and bouquet of —white—carnations completed the bride’s ensemble. , -Mrs. Albert Jensen attended as honor matron, and Janet Furr as bridesmaid, at the ceremony performed by Rev. Robert M. Cross. The bridegroom, son of Mrs. Lillian Phillips of Dartmouth Road, Independence Township, and Wesley C. Abbott of Pontiac, asked Frank Rondo to be best man. Ushering with James and Raymond Chenoweth was the bridegroom’s cousin Larry Abbott. Call or Writ* For CruisrBVbehuroa SERVICE PONTIAC Huree-FE I-Mil - PontieOMell-Wione 682-1220 MRS. D Try Quilting, Applique WSmMS. ■ Enroll YourtphiM iri^lie Day Nursery mPPH and HMcMry Trained St»«, **»*• Ucenead A Its 2V,to J V 3-00*7 f... id' ^............a— r Meet Frionds for BREAKFAST and LUNCH Always Bond Coffee RIKER FOUNTAIN TEEN-AGERS LEARN TO DRIVE’ gjpt • Doily and Evaning Instructions • Licensed by State >of Michigan SAFEWAY DRIVING SCHOOL FE 2-2253 480 GRANADA PONTIAC Quilting is news in needlework; Women are showing a renewed interest in the ancient needlework. Try your skill with this beautiful applique quilt design (taken from an antique bridal quilt. Like the wise piano teacher who gives her new students -$r.pt:etty little tune to learn ip-? stead of tiresome scales, we Start off, with a lovely, quilt square that, has as much ap-T peal, fdr Die experienced quilt maker as the,beginner. . Tfqp ’ #91 be astly jjMtiqd of;f this when yoif^|it in the last stitch. ' When* vou have finished yoiir block, the old-fashjoqed word for qrie of the souarbs fMP'ta make-dp a auiMap, you cajt,make it intq a top or frame it to hang in yobr bedroom. \ $ < Size will be appp|iipfei|> 16 inches Tbqii1 design is stamped fine, goft cream color cotton and the applique flower and bird motifs are red and yellow with green calico leaves. There arg a few small embroidered accents to give more interest to the completed block. The quilting itself is to be done in a diamond design which is stamped on the square. The applique motifs are also quilted to give a marvelous look of dimension. Complete instructions for appliqueing and quilting are included in kit. * * ★ . . Applique and Quilting Lesson Kit 40A costs $2.00. Each ^includes stamped square and applique, patches for top: cot-ion batt, for inner filling; cotton backing and embroid-tforf floss!' yf fi* Try a pair Oh an Informal sofa or on a bench; or toss one on your bed. Make some for very special gifts. To obtain Needlework Kit 40A fill out coupon below. j, • 7 row b/ l/oS£PH/A/£ loWMAM ilttanc* to: jyfiiii- fa- WeaNKReKgu&wKMm, -eraai n!kr. nrr. '■f.'Wts .. Enclm* l(’ f - , tend ":v ■ Needlework Kill 40A, tho Applique and Quilting Lotton at $2 oafh. (Allow 4 weeks for dollvory. For first cfatt mall please add 20 conts for tach kit ordtred.) Name Stroof city, Zont and State Molls • T A IbT TT A ID V aJbdk* JL^I jEtmbrn JKb Quality Carpel and Draperies Since 1911 THE MOST DRASTIC PRICE REDUCTION SALE IN OUR HISTORY! One week of my Eight-Week Beauty Improvement Plan (BIP for short) has^al-ready passed. Those of you who are following it and began right at the beginning have already* made a good starve * \■»<*>. t »' You have weighed and measured yqurselves. You, are holding your calorie? intake-to;800-1000 a day: and you are doing three exercises a day/one for the abdomen, one for-the hips arid .thighs-and one for the waist. The goal for, most of vpu is a loss of from 15 to 20 pounds jjn eight weeks and streamlined measurements. > The first two, weeks are the hardejsLXori'are^, th*; point -MeW,wherii-wj&. AHPmdM iike-; * ly fo Bq/discouraged. Your muscles may still be sore arid your stomach may be protesting the cut rations, it is receiving. Today I want to give you some suggestions about planning your menus for the next seven weeks, I think it is a n excellent idea to plan for a week at a time. I believe this for several reasons. In the first place yoq need not plan two sets of menus, one for you and one for vour family. Also, your meals will be better balanced, and phycho-locficallv important, vou will not have to think about food as much of the time as you would if you planned the meals separately each dav. WELL BALANCED MEALS stitute fresh or canned fruit for desserts. Remember, too, you' should have smaller servings than usual. If you cook a roast this week you can put what is left of it in the deep-freeze and"! use it two weeks from now. You can do the same with chicken or turkey. Ham lasts for a long time just in the re-' frigerator. YoO- can use the same menus atm build up your family’s calorie intake and please their j palates, by adding desserts, hot bfead and jam; sauces, cream soups, gravy, rich salad dressings, whole milk, and giving them larger servings or seconds. KEEP TO IBM CALORIES ! Hold ypur calorie intake to / not more- than two for the' next twft ',dr three days and • then up to 1200-1400 a day Arthur Godfrey says: "KRETSCHMER WHEAT GERM IS GREAT FOR PEOPLE ON THE GO!” Yoii get 30 nutrients in Kretschmer Wheat Germ that are considered beneficial to good health, stamina and vigor. That's more all-around nutrition than any other natural cereal provides. Kretschmer Wheat Germ also acts as a “spark plug” to help the body use other high-energy fowls more fully. Enjoy Kretschmer Wheat Germ, Plain or Sugar 'N Honey, as a tasty cereal, or added to other cereals. Listen to Arthur Godfrey CBS Radio Network :riC- wheat germ Cnoost Plain, or Sugar N Honey Afttla) Ifear-End Clearance! NEW ’64 MODEL HEARING AIDS Exclusive! (Rontal may ba m SAVINGS This Special Offer ends when the limited supply, of *64 Models are sold! BETTER HEADING SERVHjB'M’ N. Sasinaw — Ph. H! !t-«irl>2 ... ■ ' i.W «W-*» . i ■ DRAPERY-SLIPCOVER FABRICS Bolts and golf! o( fabrics In Solids, Prints and Sheer ENTIRE STOCK nAo/ OVER 20,000 YARDS Z\J /O ,0 o S0 O LO ‘0 600 YARDS $100 1 Yd. Of 5 to 15 Yard Bolls • 300 YARDS ..... 50yd. « ' Of 5 to 15 Yard Bolts *,Yo Berk roam Ordcrx at'Sale Privet BEDSPREADS Entire Stock OVER ifo SPREADS 10 )o 40% OFF DACRON TIERS *s Sizes « With / DECORATOR PILLOWS Sizes 24", 30", 34", 45 With Matching Valance: SHOWER CURTAINS All Remaining Stock! 40%OFF 25%°ff Entire Slock I Many colors, sizes and slyl 50% OFF I OPOV;-^. FABRIC REMNANTS I mj. on.to. 90° ’ I ' <*$!&*****' Three Yards Z. ZEACH " j . OPEN FRIDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS j 1666 South Telegraph rr JUST SOUTH OF ORCHARD LAKE ROAD IL H’-UvDIO 1 Plan well-balanced tq^ils, Let me emphasize again that , yrtu should substitute skim milk for whole milk. You should avoid fried foods, cream, fat meat, gravy and sauces. Cut your intake of butter or margarine and the carbohydrate foods. Use one of the very low caloric" salad dressings and sub- CLEARANCE! Olrls* Dlioontinuad Stytai •( LOAFERS 2111(1 SADDLES Hen- $fl.99 Famous shoos for girts at a spatial low elaaranea price. Most slsas from 12Yh to 3. Coma In and select from several styles. Penny Loafers '4 Brown or black. HU oLeWld Junior Bootery 1060 W. Huron 334-0725 Hutm C*Mra, N*«M« CltltNl CHy wmmmmmmmmmmsmimmmmmmei You need Blended Lenses... BLENDED LENSES eliminate that "tell-tale bifocal dividing line"... make you look years younger! WltH Sears BLENDED LENSES there are no more abrupt jumps in vision, no squinting and ‘ neck-craning I Come in today...ask for BLENDED LENSES, another product of the skilled opticians at Sears. - The Optical Dept, at Sears , ii ■a KNOWLEDGE SKILL Second Floor Satisfaction GUARANTEED or your money back Shop Start Monday, Thurs., Fri. and Set. Tu«. and Wed. Until 5:30 ...in inci EXPERT FITTING :0;' by SKILLED'OPTICIAN Until 9 P.M. I THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUBSjDAY^ JANUARY 19, 1965 ELEVEN \Foreman at Paper Dies i1920 and for 25 ye?rs comP°s>ng i Thefs'tate constitution of North t ,,1 [room foreman at. the Monroe[Carolina, dating back to 1#W, MONROE (AP) — Wellington Evening News, died today of had been amended 134 times up (SweWe) Marx, a printer since1 cancer. He wa^ 03. ./-ito last year. t _J Panorama U.S.A, (EDITOR’S, NOTE—Flabbiness drive ir^Wesi Virginia, marriage mills in Georgia, a hymn-collecting ex-govemOr and a matter of inaugural foils are facets of the varied V.S. scene this toeek.) Mrs. Simester, a grandmother whose husband is a Methodist minister here, got the idea for her jgoir duplicates, from the Smithsonian Institution's collection of original dresses worn by first Indies. , - The ddls have identical ieces, but/their dresses — and hair styles — faithfully reproduce’ fashions of first ladles. ►/ Davis, balladler, song writer, music publisher/and twice governor of Louisiana, was referring. to the seasonal political blaze. He’s watching like any knowledgeable fire buff, though he’s been out of office since May. fronts recently have ' been smashed by vehicles. Last sum* mer there was a fatal accident at the intersections. Is it jinxed? Brack Special V-6 goes easy on gas '■ f%A** 'll Ifl V';V' - ~ • . ■ - - . .r* .' ' Its lowprice goes hard on your resistance# ?\ “Just a fluke as far as I know/’ said Police Lt. Francis Dye, head of, the accident investigation division. “It’s a. normal intersection.”. But Charles Cali, proprietor of a liquor store on the southwest corner, disagreed. CONFUSING LIGHT “The traffic light here is confusing/’ he said. “Cars coming -west • on23rdcan’t-seepedes- He’s /busy now making records — ‘twice as fast as I ever have in my life. They Want five albums now.” Davis has a lifetime contract with Decca Records. The song he wrote and made famous singing,' “You Are My Sun- shine,” was published 25" ATLANTA (AP) - Some states are concerned about quickie divorces. Georgians are ponderirig the problem of their state’s quickie marriages. About 15,000 teen-age couples Set tp*M 400th Year mO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) — Bustling Rio is dressing up in its holiday best for a 400th birthday party on Marcb Hhat promises tb'.be a lavish spectacle. The fun will go on all year, but an faiaugural highlight comes on anniversary day when a birthday cake 15 feet high and weighing 2,640 pounds will be cut before thousands. ★ '• ★ .★ The fourth centennial celebration also will provide a shot in the arm to the famed Rio carnival Feb. 27-March 2. It is being billed as the biggest and most colorful in the city’s history/ Officially, the celebration began New Year’s Eve when Pope Paul VI pushed a button in Vatican City that turned on new lights for the 128-foot statue of Christ the Redeemer atop Cor-covado Mountain. FROM ABROAD But the festivities won’t come alive until thousands of . tourists swarm Into the city from abroad. Some 8,000 of them'will be aboard seven luxury liners moored in the harbor as floating hotels. Rio’s 4.5 million inhabitants are getting ready,for the influx with a massive face-lifting. Co-pacabana Beach is being lighted for night swimming and lush green parks adorn Guanabara Bay. Tall buildings, most of them new hotels, are rising over the city. ★ ★ Officials estimate that an international film festival alone will cost more than $250,000. Other events include art expositions, concerts, sports and conferences. Many nations, including France, Spain, Italy, Japan and Portugal, plan to contribute elaborate paviliops, statues and expositions. Portugal, the nation’s mother country, has promised an impressive statue of King Joao VI, the Portuguese ruler who moved the capital of his empire to Rio de Janeiro after Napoleon invaded Portugal. ' GREAT RIVER Portuguese mariners thought they had found the mouth of a great river when on Jan. 1,1502, they discovered the site now occupied by Rio. The city thus became known as Sao Sebastian do Rio de Janeiro — St. Sebastian of the River of January — but the Sao Sebastiao was dropped through the years although it. still remains part of the official natne. * Launch New Satellite From California Base * VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) - A satellite employing a Thor-Altair booster combination was launched by the Air force Monday from this West Coast missile base. The Air Force did not disclose the nature of the satellite. The Altalr is the solid propulsion fourth stage of the Scout rocket. Be t node rn with M O |F PINKST IN FAUCSTS For New Homes and Old OSCAR PIRRILL * PLUMBING ’•■ttn.w."*" from Alabama, \ Florida ' and Tennessee — unable to marry Without delay in their own states — are married each year in Georgia. Some of the brides have been 15 and under. ★ ★ ★ ; A couple can get a one-stop marriage in the state..A license^, a blood test and a ceremony can be had for a single fee. The cost often is “whatever, §bu think the bride is worth.” Tills often causes the bridegroom to dig down for a few extra dollars, ★ ★ • ★ : ■; y:.~i.§ —fa sue counties- more-than .000 annually is turned oyer in the “marriage mills.’’'/file Atlanta Constitution.-in a recent series reported that most of this money goes to five probate Officials who keep marriage and other records, five blodd-test laboratories, two justices of thC peace and three ministers. URBANA, Ohio (AP) - Mrs. Ralph E. Sijnester doesn’t anticipate any" trouble making Mrs. Lyndon B. "Johnson’s inaugural gown. ★ ★ ★ But she has had some difficulties with the others she’s made, ★ ★ ★ And while President Johnson will be inaugurated Wednesday, Mrs. Simester hasn’t even started on Mrs. Johnson’s dress. ★ ★ ★ . ..The inaugural gown Mrs. Simester will make will dress a doll — and complete her collection of those of the gowns worn by the first- ladies since Martha Washington. . "CHARLESTON, WiVa. (Af) — Each noon, office workers In the West Virginia Department of Health rise from their desks and go through 30 minutes of bristrexercises.——~——-The idea is to help sedentary and sometimes flabby office people to get into shape. t 4;r> •••. .f|w, „ ★ ★ .is, The wOrkouts are devised so participants can wear street clothes without working tip much perspiration. At regular intervals, , the department checks blood, weight, and other Indicators/""' * " ' " * w? w, ★ « ‘ Harold Colley, director of public health information for the . department, says the project was launched 10 months ago to see whethef jt would help reduce he*ff / FIRST PROGRAM “As far fas we can determine, it’s the first program of the kind in the nation, he says. “Results so faf are encouraging.” BATON RQUGE, La. (AP) -Jimmie H. Davis sat in his home across the hike from Louisiana’s towering state oapitol and said, “I can see the fire from here.” * ago. “It’s selling bigger every year,” Davis says. LATEST PROJECT His latest project is favorite hymns, which he is publishing himself. He’s also working on an arrangement of “Ten Good SOngs” as a folio for choirs. ★ ★ ★ Davis, 63, lives in a comfortable bungalow on a lot behind the million-dollar executive man* sion he built in his second term as chief executive. Will he seek a third eventually? Music man Davis |s frequently asked that question but, he says, “I think it’s best always to play it by ear.” / KANSAS. CITY, Mo. (AP) -“I’m afraid to sit here,” said the man in the barber’s chair, “because any minute a car may come crashing in and give me a dose shave.” The barbershop is at 23rd and Prospect, where two store tf|ans crossing Prospect because of the building on; the comer.” James W. Clark, 41, said two children fan in front of his dump truck as hg was going north on Prospect/He swerved to miss the children and his truck caved in the front of an empty store oh the northeast comer. ★ . ★ ★ Five days later Homer Simms, 52, came off 23rd, lost control and his car crashed through the Window of a furniture store on the' southeast corner, missing the proprietor, Max Fleitman, by inebes. Grande C. Abahoja, 22, a postal employe, was killed last August wheh a car came off 23rd and struck his mail ,truck broadside. DAILY ACCIDENT “There ought to be a traffic cop stationed on this comer,” said Cali. “There’s a fenderbending accident here practically every day.”- We put 6 big reasons to buy a Buick Special under the flood. And another small one on the price tag. The six are a set of the liveliest/thriftiesf cylinders that ever zipped you merrily on your way. They’re all arranged in neat, smooth V-fashion. They add up to 225 cubic inches and 155 horsepower, and make other arrangements of 6 cylinders seem primitive. That’s not all. special sports Buick comfort, Buick style and traditional Buick quality. The price tag? We saved the best for last. Manufacturer'* augmented retail price for Special V-6 J-dr. roiipe. Price Includee fiTTAT OO Federal Eicfse Tat "and «u4ge«ted'dealer delivery and handling Charge (tranahortt tlon charges, accessories, other optional equipment, state and local taiee additional). Wouldn’t you really rather go first class? See your local authorized Buick dealer- TUNE IN "LOWELL THOMAS AND THE NEWS"-CBS RADIO than king-size! 2pytra hfimPQ CAIId UulLIGD a NOT CHILLED, PLUS DEPOSIT *4' ■ JMl./ 1 a Other fine ffiioyal Crown Cola Go.: Diet-Rite Cola, Nehl, Upper 10, Par-T-Pak. VERNOR'S INC. 490 S. Telegraph . Rd. Phone FE 4-9575 'TWELVE Is Son of Czar' Ex-CIA Man Says Agency Has Proof NEW YORK (UPI) - A former Central Intelligence Agency official challenged the agency today to disclose evidence that a defector Polish spy is actually the son of the last Russian czar. Herman Kimsey, former chief of analysis and research for the CIA and lately assistant chief of security for the Republican National Committee, said the CIA.has made exhaustive tests to establish the true identity of the mysterious .Pole, Col. Michael Goleniewski. He said he was convinced the tests proved Goleniewski is Grand Duke Alexei, only son of Czar Nicholas II. Goleniewski said he plans to press his claims in American courts and may attempt to force CIA sources to surrender information in their possession if it is not made public' voluntarily by the government agency. ★ ★ ♦ Czarevich Alexei was reported by a White Russian commission to have died with his father, mother and four sisters in a July 18, 1918 massacre by the Bolsheviks on the basis of fragmentary bones found in a pit in Ekaterinburg, Russia, a few weeks later. RUMORS PERSIST But rumors have persisted that the entire imperial family survived and there has been no definitive proof to the contrary. Kimsey broke the veil of official secrecy concerning the background of Goleniewski, a high Polish secret service officer who defected to the West in U88, only 10 days after the defector declared'himself the '#§9' fcaatorcn^dto'. auad; heir to a $400 million fortune deposited by toe czar to Western banks more than SO years ancSy --\i % “On the basis of what I know of the CIA investigation of Goleniewski’s identity, I believe he is the Czarevich Alexei,” Kimsey Said. “I do not know why the CIA has withheld the necessary proof of identity from a person who has done so much for this "country and who only wishes to live under his own, name and claim what is rightfully his.” ASKS REVERSAL Kimsey said Allen Dulles, former CIA head, and John A. McCone, present agency chief, should reverse their policy of silence concerning all inquiries regarding Goleniewsky, who gave weeks of testimony to government security agencies during the past four years regarding involvement of Americans in the Communist spy apparatuses. The defector is expected to testify later this year before appropriate congressional investigating committees. v? -.; ' • ■. - ■ mr wm , THE PONTlAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965 RAYMOND LEAVES RITES - Gene Raymond leaves the Church of the Recessional in Forest Lawn-Memorial Park, Glendale, Calif., yesterday after attending funeral services for his wife, actress Jeanette MacDonald, who died last Thursday in Houston. Women at left are unidentified. Berserk Inmate Stabs 3; 2 Dead RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - A murderer who has spent 12 of his 30 years in the Virginia State Penitentiary ran amok with a knife at the institution Monday and stabbed three prison employes. Two died. The dead were Dr. James Clyde Vanneter, 65, a prison physician; and Hugh L. Johnson, 43, an assistant superintendent qf industry. Carl Vincent Bobrosky, a clerk, was se-riously wounded. M *'« , -ft # ★ The prisoner, Allen Carroll Pruitt of Spartanburg, S. C., is serving life for knifing to death a 70-year-old Norfolk newsstand owner. ^Prison officials said Pruitt slipped away from his job in the penitentiary clothing shop and, in a seven-minute rampage, raced through the three offices in an adjoining building. SURRENDERED He surrendered when confronted by a guard with a gas gun. Dropping the lfcinch knife, made from a file, he said: “Well, that’s it.” ★ ★ ★ Supt. Courtland C. Peyton said no motive had been established: “He just went wild.” WMU to Host Confab KALAMAZOO (AP)—Western Michigan University Thursday will^be host to the ninth annual pulp and paper conference, sponsored by the school’s paper technology department and division df field services. Hear Favorite at Service for Singer JENISON (AP) - Approximately 165 pupils prayed and heard scriptural readings in nine Jenison public junior high school classrooms Monday. Simultaneously. some 65 other pupils did not take part in the religious exercises and gathered in the school library, schootauthorities^said. * it ★ The procedures involving the religious exercises were ordered by U. S. District Court Judge Noel P. Fox to ease a controversy over classroom prayer and Bible reading, until a court, trial decides the matter..-------------—————— Pupils conducted the religious exercises in”upper grades of the school in this small community, a suburb of Grand Rapids in western Lower Michigan: Teachers remained in the classrooms only to maintain* order, as directed by Fox. -PARENT’S WISHES School spokesmen said teachers conducted exercises in the lower grades “according to the wishes of parents given verb-wishes of parents given ally or in writing/’ tion of participants and those not taking part. ★ it to The controversy broke out last spring when a group of parents said their constituional rights were being violated by classroom prayer and Bible-reading in the public school bere. • • —V:-/” Schod officials countered that pupils who did not wish to take part could be excused from the rooms. The parents sought an injunction against the religious practices while the schoolmen* moved for summery dismissal of the matter. DENIED REQUESTS * Judge Fox denied both re- What's After Inaugural? NewAmbiiionJorGrl WASHINGTON (AP) Melissa (Missy) Baron, a positive thinker of 13 who wangled a special inaugural invitation from President Johnson, has been suddenly seized with a new ambition. She wants to be a page girl at the Supreme Court. R makes no difference that there are at present no page girls, only page boys, at the verm high court. A confirmed femin-j ist, she feels certain a lady will Pending outcome of a trial in be appointed justice tomtttjto the matter, Judge Fox ruled 10 " ~ HOLLYWOOD (AP) - “Laborers and kings came under the spell of her magic voice,” went the eulogy for actress Jeanette MacDonald. Her soaring soprano filled Forest Lawn’s Church Of the Recessional Monday at funeral services which drew a capacity crowd of 300 Hollywood celebrities inside and 2,500 fans to toe lawn surrounding the edifice. •1 "♦ ★ to , The recorded voice of the singing star, in the strains. of “Ave Maria" and “Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life,” was piped to the crowd outside. Her husband, actor Gene Raymond, selected the songs. r Miss MacDonald, a top star in movie musicals in the 1930s and 1940s, died in a Houston, Tex., hospital last Thursday of a car-dio-vascular ailment. She was 57, In recent years she had appeared on the concert stage and -:wn "television. A ':'U FILLED WITH TEARS Among the Hollywood notables who filed past her open bronze casket was singer Nelson Eddy, her most famous costar His eves filled with tears Pallbearers included Sen. Barry Goldwgter and Gen. Lauris Norstad, former NATO commander. * ★ ★ Famed entertainers at the funeral included Shirley Jones, Mary Pickford, Buddy Rogers,. Greer Garson, Jane Powell, Buddy Ebsen, Ralph Edwards, Lew Ayres and Lauritz Melchior. Floral pieces, including one from former President and Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, fi’led the church, overflowing to the entrance. Eisenhower and his wife, longtime friends, were unable to attend the service. He and former President Harry S. Truman werg among honorary pallbearers. SERVICE The service was conducted by Dr: Gene Emmett Clark of the Institute of Religious Science in Beverly Hills. Actor Lloyd Nolan, who delivered toe eulogy, said; “Why is hers the voice and face we’U always remember? It was her infinite capacity to love. Love for her devoted husband. Love for her family and friends.. to to to V' “But even more it was her love for the entire world that brought rapture to, Jeanette’s voice —. and rapture to those who sat entranced and silent as her message of love poured forth.” days*" ago that pupils who wished to take part in religious exercises mpst do so at least five minutes before the class day begins or ends. No bell may signify the start or finish of such exercises and the meeting place* must be other than the students’ home room in order to guard against segrega- The U.S, Senate has 17 standing committees and the House I former I representatives 21. All bills1 or are referred to these commit-tees for action. soon, and of course will need a page girl. “I think I’ll get toy application in right away,” she whispered Mondav while attending a session of, the high tribunal. WOULD BE HARD Since before the election, Mis-sv has been corresponding with President Johnson, sort of buttering him up. She wrote that she knew it would be hard for him to arrange an invitation to. the inauguration but “I would rather think positive, not negative. Please try your hardest.” So now blonde Melissa, her mother, Jacqueline and her haberdasher father, Charles, are here from Lakewood, Calif., equipped with tickets for everything from the inauguration to the grand ball. to to to ” ' Also in town for the big doings is another young California letter-writer who was rewarded with a special presidential invitation- He is Craig Hundley, 11, of Sherman Oaks, who admits to haying a rather difficult day Monday, For one thing, he went the wrong way in the Senate subway in an attempt to see Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel, . R-Calif., and when he finally reached his destination, Sen. Kuchel was elsewhere. UNDAUNTED I But Craig’s enthusiasm Te-The production of sissal ranks | mained undaunted. He said “it’s second to coffee as Haiti’s ma- a great town, with all its histor-jor commercial crop. I ic things and so on.” Robin Hood In for Davenport, Not Nottingham EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) - A voice on the telephone told an Evansville police dispatcher, “My name is Robin Hood. Are you looking for me?” “No, But,I believe the Sheriff of Nottingham is,” answered toe officer responding to what he thought was a prank call. ★ to to ‘ Later Monday, Robin E. Hood, 23, Davenport, Iowa, surrendered at headquarters saying he was wanted In his home town for auto theft. Checks with Davenport detectives confirmed Hood’s story and he was jailed to await transfer to Iowa. LOANS *1,000 to *5,000 1st o' 2nd home mortgage hmm hokthu aymi D»’fc A’l NO* ,%iua Cash when needed! Without obligation, s(if anil talk with Mr. Mrrla Vow or Mr.* Iliii-knrr, who litvc hern loaning money to liuiulretU of iteople in Pontiac during ilia punt 40 year*. All horrowera will testify to receiving fair, honest, and courteous treatment. (Do not take a chance dealing with strangers or fly-hy.nighl lenders.) When you deal here, you receive the full amount of your loan In cash at once. No palters to sign until the loan is closed. No charge for inspection, apprlsul or survey. No charge for abstract, title search or title Insurance. borrow from us to consolidate your debts to pay off the balance you owe oil your contract, to pay taxes, to make home repairs or Improvements, or for any oilier good puK pose. 8«e Us today. SPECIAL fie* Parking on county lot comer N. Saginaw and W, Huron Sta. noth time you bring to our offleo a full monthly poymont. froo Parking whenever you apply for an , approved loan or renewal. Bring ua your parking ticket to, be stamped. VOSS and BUCKNER 209 NATIONAL III iII.1)1 INC IK 1-1729 Craig was looking forward to meeting Melissa later on in the week. Meantime, be was struggling with an almost overpowering urge to throw balls made of snow, a substance which he has never before seen. Missy has a similar urge- She wants to throw a snowball at a tall silk hat — “but of course I won’t really do it,” she said. Before donning a royal blue frock Monday for a reception for distinguished ladies, Missy made a tour of such points of intellectual interest as the Supreme Court, the Library of Congress and the National Archives. quests and issued his ruling as an “accommodation” to both skies pending trial of the suit. His ruling indicated 'toe trial would decide whether religious exercise should be held in public schools. ' t iSt ’ The rooms emptied Monday after the religious exercises for a “general commingling of the student body,” also ordered by Judge Fox, as though there had been no meetings prior to regular classes. Mrs. Ruth Dykstra, one parent viewing the proceedings, believed the outcome fctill was “segregation.” She said the plaintiffs had hoped the day would begin with “silent prayer, rather than separating the pupils.” * / f-Y; School officials indicated they plan minor adjustments in toe procedures before. Wednesday, target date for full compliance with the judge’s orders. Detroit Group Backs Sunday Liquor Sales DETROIT (AP)—The Detroit Convention Bureau came out in support Monday of liquor sales on Sundays. The Bureau said this would help bring convention business to Detroit. Sunday sale is coming before the present legislature. AMERICAS most magnificent straight bourbon wkiiky 1 M MOW* tut Mtcooov miiiikM co. phiia (j STRAIGHT wth WATER I he shortest distance between points Is •till a straight line ... which explains why Grand Trunk Western—your friendly, courteous railroad—like its routes straight and with water! There's GTW's year 'round car ferry that runs between Milwaukee and Muskegon, eliminating the long land haul around Lake Michigan. Because of this car ferry, GTW overnight piggyback services ensure next morning deliveries to principal Michigan markets. Incidentally, GTVy piggyback ramps erg now located at Detroit, Battle Creek, Pontile, Milwaukee, and Chicago. Then there's the fast GTW Inter-llne freight servlop to Alaska that slashes costs and speeds deliveries by connecting with Canadian National's Aqua(raln car barge that sails from Prince Rupert, B.C., to the Alaska Railroad's terminal at Whittier, near Anchorage. GTW/CN Aquatraln freight services shorten alternate water routes by 600 mllee, offer substantial savings per carload. Having It straight and with water Is no trick ,.. whan you know howl For complete Information, call your nearest Grand Trunk Western Representative. In Pontiac he's Mr. W.W. Simpson, Agent. telephone FE 8-8131. GRAND TRUNK WESTERN v.* "v mmmi / s r 3L THE PONTIAC PRflSS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965 THIRTEEN ^Misf^d^dboProbl^iri of Forg HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - “I forgot” is an old excuse heard everyday by Everybody, but if an astronaut deep in space says it — weft, he's to trouble. How to remember not to target? 4 ★ ★ Space officials worried about that have awarded Honeywell, Inc., Minneapolis, Minn., a $49,-990 contract to find out why people forget The Manned Spacecraft Center seeks assurance its astronauts iw remember the hundreds of small details needy, ed to keep a spaceship flying and then bring it back to earth. MEMORY DEVICES a Believing the solution more complex than tying a piece of (AdvwtiMnMM) i USED TO CRY FOR NO REASON AT ALL” One of the first change-oMife danger signals No wonder a woman feels like crying! Suffocating hot flashes one.minute; cold, clammy perspiration the next chn set nerves on edge, fill her with fear! Now, proven help! In doctors' tests, Lydia E. Pinkham- Tablets gave remarkable relitf from mid-life hot flashes and nervous tensions to woman after woman! Yes, Pinkham's dramatically, quickly relieved woman's burden of suffering during the “change." Get famous, gentle Lydia E., Pinkham Tablets, today. string around the astronaut’s Anger, the space agency' asked the Minnesota firm to conduct a five-month study and to. list possible memory-helping devices. j the Apace agency says volumes of material have been gathered about instances of forgetfulness, but most experiments have been in verbal re-, tention rather than sight or perceptual reactions. There is also a possibility that repeated rehearsals will not be effective in maintaining a specific skill such,as reentry, especially during long duration flights. The Manned Spacecraft Center suggests foe use of a six-pointed stgr as one device Honeywell 'could use in foe study. It Seven 0, S. Astronauts Study Hawaii Botany VOLCANO, Hawaii (AP) — Extracurricular botanical studies more suitable for tropical survival trailing than for lunar exploration were given seven U.S. astronauts during the first day of a field trip to Hawaii’s volcano fields Monday. The astronauts replaced eight other U.S. spacemen who toured foe area last week. They will tramp foe lava flows of Hawaii Island 100 miles southeast of Honolulu where foe terrain is said to closely resemble that of foe moon. ' ^ w4 CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY APPLIANCE SALES OPEN FRI DAT EVEN ING 'TIL 9 P.M. SPECIAL OFFER FOR A LIMITED TIME TOD CAR GET THIS 50-PIECE SET OF STAINLESS TABLEWARE FREE WITH THE PUROHASE OF A ■ ■ A AAII HAMILTON WASHER and DRYER 14 Pound Capacity • Dual Cycla Tlmar TRULY GREAT WASH ABILITY and TWIN AIR STREAM DRYING FROM HAMILTON •V;' , fat-i ’ffi. Hamilton's recirculation wash principle assures a correct level of water In tub at p|| times—with constantly circulated, constantly*filtered wash and rinse water,' Gives five separate rinses. Only Hamilton gives you Twin Air Stream Drying—two separate air streams—a cradling currant for gentleness, a carrier-current for drying speed. It's the big difference In clothes dryers today, CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY wouldn’t necessarily, mean this wpgldt.be fop answer for the as-tronautin space, however. WORDS,COLORS ;Stimulus words would be as-, sodatyd with a color. For Instance, foe color for foe point at the top of the star would be yellow and the tip would be painted yellow. i Words associated with yellow would be 12 o’clock; because of its position in foe star, December and the adjective “aloof.” 11•: W’Vjfa . ★ V- The stimulus words going clockwise would be reel, 2 o’clock, blue. 4 o’clock, green, 6 o’clock, purple, 8 o’clock and orange, 10 o’clock. Each would correspond with an even month of foe year and an adjective,x picked at random, _ 'One experiment would take 64 persons, divided into four equally matched groups, and have each study foe star once a week for a given period. —— TEST MEMORY X After six weeks without practice, each person would be given a test to see hoW much he re- membered about foe different points op the star and words associated with them. A second experiment would take another four groups of 16 each, butchange foe star to 12 points with each corresponding to a clock hour. , - To add complexity, a color could mean a series response. For instance, red could mean 1 o’clock, 3 o’clock and S o’clock. Also, foe color would ’bp' associated with different combinations of months and adjectives. A third experiment would al- low the subjects long periods to study foe aix-poihted star. > / PRACTICE SESSION ^ - After two weeks Ojf no practice, they would be given a practice session before starting the test A control group would have no such warmup. Space officials hope the study will turn out a device that an astronaut can look at to jog his memory Mto doing foe right thing at the right time. “We still might have to go back to that piece of- string around the finger,” one jbked. NEW! REDUCE lATawlLOM ^ UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEN CAPSULES! Easier to taka and mutt effective than the powdered and liquid food supplement, and colts toot including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie Physician, M.D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON*. DIET —JUST EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5,50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! MEDIC-WAY ME0IG-WAY ^35412115 T OHictt In Oikltnd «m WtyiM Ctnnttes - On* la MlncM - 1 When It's Cold Outside Dflv.nv.pumr §1m u n e ii^ You never need worry about the Weather when the bill-paying chore is done by check . .. It*s the "easy-chair" system that lets you set,your own banking hours, day or night and cancelled checks are proof positive of payment — Mighty handy at Income Tax time too. Open your account today at any office of Community National. National l Bank DowntOWill Pontiac... Wf Huron ... N. Perry ... Koogo Harbor... Walled Lake... Union Lako... Milford... Lake Orton... Waterford ... Woodward ... Cdunty Center... Romeo ... Mall... Roohestor... University and Bloomfield Hill* Member Federal Deposit insurance Corporation V AMP THK PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1905 FOURTEEN 18 Charged in Murders TV BARGAINS Transistor AM/ beaten so severely bones were crushed. The state autopsy re-port was not released. Cullen, La. Jordan lives tit Marietta, an Atlanta sublirb. * •*. The FBI, asked if the two men were under protection, said only that it “certainly has a continuing interest in their security-’* FOURTEEN LAWYERS Fourteen defense lawyers wiQ confer during the week bn their motions. "These will delude pleas for separate trials and challenges of the court’s jurisdiction. The Justice Department says that under federal trial proce- MERIDIAN, Miss. (AP) - A federal judge has set Jan. 27 for arraignment of 1$ men charged with conspiracy in. the .murder of three civil rights workers. U.S. Dist. Judge Harold Cox, whp will preside at the trial,, ordered defense lawyers to get their various motipns on file by next Monday. A hearing on them will be held Jan- 26. The 16 men the F&I accuses sof actually plotting to intercut the men and kill them include Barnette, Jordan and Neshoba County Deputy Sheriff Cecil Price, 26, of Philadelphia. 5 Tut* Radio* Mitce AM/pfcl Trantistor Radio. Action by the judge, a sharp critic of the civil rights drive, came after several conferences in Jackson Monday with John Doar of Washington, chief of the conspiracy in an indictment are tried together, not separately. . . ★ ★. it The 14 lawyers represent the 16 men arrested earlier. Barnette ami Jordan were expected to arrange for their own law-; .jsiS? ■ ^ ■’ ~ The three civil rights workers were killed near Philadelphia last June. 21 in what the FBI calls a Ku Klux Klan plot. They had driven frpm Meridian into Neshoba to investigate the burning of a Negro church. THREE KILLED .They were Michael Schwer-ner, 24, -and Andrew Goodman, 20, both white New Yorkers, and James Chaney, 21, a Meridian Negro. ’ft y&m'"■ ■''‘' V' The New Yorkers were each shot once with a pistol. Chaney scribed as “tenderhearted” by a! was shot three times. A private former schoolmate, now lives in I autopsy report said he was The Oakland County Protective Services Committee has scheduled a countywide confef-ence April 23 at Oakland University. Planners said the conference in expected to attract up to 500 persons. Protective Service, groups are located in 24 communities in the county. The purpose of the citizen-sponsored groups is to combat juvenile delte-quency and parental neglect. The conference will deal with citizen involvement in the prevention of delinquency- ELECTRICCOMPANT HAROLD L. SMITH IHViSTNATORS , 1302 Pontiac Stole Bank Bldg* FE 5-4222 — 24 Hour Number OFFICES IN FLINT—PONTIAC — SAGINAW - J . AP PIWttfM three civil rigits wwkers in Mississippi. Barnette is flanked by his attorney (left) and and FBI agent. • LOUISIANA ARREST - Horace D. Barbette (center) of Cullen, La., wps arrested in Shreveport, La., yesterday on a federal grand •jury indictment stemming fi»m the deaths of Ten separate, workshops have been scheduled for the day. Resource persons from throughout the area are being asked to serve as panelists for the sessions. * , week was $28.2 million and outgo was (31.4' million. The treasury balance at the end of the month was $203.6 million. Bolivia has had 14 constitutions since becoming a republic 1825. The latest was adopted 1961. State Money Report LANSING (AP)—State treasury income during the past •200 OVER 100 TO CHOOSE FROM Complete Set DANISH MODEM 2-Pc. SUITES Cotton or nylon fabrics. Beautiful florals, stripes and solid colors. Including tables and lamps. $300 values from $169.95. Seeing is believing. EARLY AMERICAN 2-PC. SUITES YOUR CHOICE Complete with Tables and Lamps. Many fabrics and colors. 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All shapes and lists. Over 100 to choose from. Many priced of $7.99 a pair. NORGE REFRIGERATORS 1 ECONOMY SMCIAL $10095 eS lH rn 1 WA 1 ^ 1*3 1 tBpil fl S 5Wr?r ill Pps hpm ■7. | BPi 9? I ft . * f Vv i i THE PONTIAC PRESS FIFTEEN 1SDAY, JANUARY 19, 19(i5 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Doctor Prescribes j Change in putting f ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UpJ)---A/ day of conferences is set for Bill Elias today as he moves in to take over as head coach of the U, S. Naval Academy football team. Elias, whose firm guidance of the University of Virginia Cavaliers ended the longest losing streak in their history at 28 games, was appointed to succeed Wayne jHtardin at Navy Monday. / Ralph Wilson Speaks Before PontjacGroup 'Has Never Hurt NFL/ ' ! rf '% /jv *'1 * He Say$; Rozelle Set for GP Lecture % By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Attention Pete Rozelle, NFL eomnuksioner speaking tonight in the Pro Football Lecture series starting tonight at Grasse Pointe Memorial Auditorium!___ Ralph Wilson, Detroit business man who is the owner of the Buffalo Bills, wants you, to know that their rival American Football League does not plan to beg the NFL for inter-league competition, for a championship playoff game or for a mutual agreement in regard to the player drafts. ★ ★ k By FRANK CAREY ~WASHINGTONlS^3Semem-ber that last 20-foot putt -that rimmed .the cup and skipped away? •;f;' ( Well, says an eye specialist, ap upright, between - the- legs putting stance might have made the difference — especially for a golfer with a large, protruding nose. Speaking to the Pontiac Traffic Club at the Waldron Hotel last night Wilson said, “The AFL has never hurt the NFL, in fact it has enhanced pro football popularity in the country, and we should resolve the biggest distress between us, that of drafting and signing players. “There is no reason why the two leagues can’t get together \.in competition on the field, and move away from player competition in favor of mutual understanding in setting up a common player draft between ns.” | w'MSt „ “The recent excessive bonuses tnade to untried college players Ik ridiculous, and if this should continue every pro football team in the country will be operating in the red within the next three years,” he added. A “The colleges want us to start gur player drafts in January, but we can start in April and this would not eliminate the competition for players or giving of excessive bonuses. RALPH WILSON COMMON DRAFT “The only solution right now is a common player draft and it’s up to the NFL to recognize this. I know owners throughout the NFL who are sick of the current situation and they know that a common draft, would eliminate most of the problems. “This is the first time I have ever said this, but the Buffalo Bills could play against any team In either league and the NFL had better recognize the fact that we’ll compete with them for every player if that’s what they want,” Wilson said, “Within three years I’m sure that Detroit and Chicago will be cities which will have AFL teams.” He also pointed to the big TV (Continued on Page 17, Col. 1) NEW YORK (AP) - Bid Russell, a defensive marvel during the Boston Celtics’ 14-game National Basketball Association winning streak, has had an unsung offensive accomplice )n slick Sam Jones. While Russell’s rebounding and shot-blocking have been accepted generally as the key to the defending champions’ current victory binge, Jones has been quietly pacing the attack. Weekly NBA statistics today showed Jones is the league’s No. 4 scorer — behind Wilt Chamberlain, Jerry West and Oscar Robertson. Sam’s 25-point average is five points higher than last season at a similar stage and more than 10 points above his lifetime mark. Russell and Robertson continued to pace the rebounders and playmakers, respectively. Big Bill has averaged 23.1 caroms; Oscar, 11.8 assists, per game. The landing scorers: PO FT Pl». *V0. -1. Chamberlain, Phil. . A3* 208 M80 30.9 2. Wait, L.A. ........ 433 302 1320 30.0 3. Robert ton, Cln. 417 307 1301 30.0 4. S. Jones, Bos... 449 350 1140 33.0 3. Bellamy, Bolt. ... 417 301 1133 33.1 4. Baylor, L.A..... 438 333 1107 37.0 7. Lucas, Clh. ....... 343 193 911 M.9 8. Howell, Balt, ....1-294 393 887 30.2 9. Johnson, Bait. ..... 340 140 880 M.0 10. Dlschlnger, Dot. ... 337 171 807 17.9 Whitewash By The Associated Press The mpn who vote In the Associated Press’ weekly major college basketball poll had good reason to walk with chests expanded today. So do the top ton teams, Including streaking UCLA which has Increased its first-place margin. ' ft Sr ★ A week ago, the Bruins held a 88-polnt lead over Michigan. Wichita was third followed by 8t. Joseph’s, Pa., Indiana, Providence, St. John’s, N.Y., Davidson, San Francisco and Duke. The selections obviously couldn’t be beaten because the i tqn put together a combined 18-0 record with Providence the only hon-vlctorlous team last' week, The Friars, the only unbeaten major team, were Idle. As a result, there were only a couple of minor shuffles in the rankings. St. Joseph's moved into third place, switching positions with Wichita. Davidson, J three-time winner last week, advanced to seventh while St. John's dropped back a notch to •IjAtiti The'regional panel of 41 writ- ers and broadcasters gave UCLA a 90-point edge In the lab est balloting. The Bruins col- lected 84 first place votes and a basis of.10 for a 401 points on first place vote, 0 for second etc. Tlie Bruins beat California and Stanford last week, extending their winning streak to 13 games. Michigan, 10-2, defeated Northwestern 90-88 to hold the runner-up spot. ‘ ★ ★ ,* Indiana lifted Its record to 12-1 and maintained the No. 5 spot On the strength of victories over Iowa and Ohio State,, But the Hooslera slipped against unranked Iowa Monday night, toeing 74-68. Tho top Ttn, with llril plan votat In paranthoiM, won io»i records through PlfWiVi i(< ?n<| nolnis on nm i ■■■■■ 7-444 3* Ml rowlla through tat* .. ... ilgwi a. si. Jjmph'i, p». (3) 4. Wichita I. [pdl»0» (II * ProvMtnci (3) HEnV’ f. lap Prnwlico IP, oukt :v 8Vi Jan The usual putting method, in whichr/duffersand prosalike crouch over the ball with their side toward the hole, is A major Stumbling block to good depth perception on the .greens, said Dr. William W. Vallotton of Charleston, S.C. --lap * * , w ★ Moreover, if the golfer happens to be endowed with “a large nasal bridge” -? big hose to you -7- he actually sees the hole out of only one eye if he putts from the usual stance said Vallotton in a report in the Southern Medical Journal. AIDS DEPTH In contrast, he related, the upright, between - the- legs put ing stance — in which a malletlike putter is used like a croquet club — helps assure the depth perception required to hole those 20-footers. iw i. Driving hard at the conven tional stance, the ophthalmologist followed through with: “All our daily activities that require good depth perception are performed with head erect and the nose does not, obscure the vision of one eye. • “Yet we try a most difficult task such as putting in a most unphysiologic way.” ★. ★ ★ * Declaring that most golfers tilt their heads by as much as 90 degrees — and some by even more — the doc said that once, one’s noggin is tilted mine than 13 degrees, the eye muscles that normally rotate the eye are apt to do some mighty Strange things. For example, “the vertical muscles begin acting as horizontal muscles, and the horizontal muscles as semi-vertical muscles.” ft ft Dr. Vallotton said such deviations can “wreak havoc with the finer fusional components of binocular vision.” In other words, the hole isn’t where you thought it was. Griffith Named lop '64 Boxer NEW YORK UP) - Emile Griffith, the busy welterweight champion, was named Tuesday Ring Magazine’s Fighter of the Year for 1964. The 26-year-old New Yorker, a native of the Virgin Islands, beat out heavyweight champion Cassius Clay for the honor in Ring’s annual poll of its staff ana worldwide coorespondents. 'k ★ k Clay’s dethronement of Sonny Liston was rated the Fight of the Year and light heavyweight contender Jose Torres’ first round knockout of former middleweight champion Bobo Olson was picked as the Round of the Year. y> Griffith defeated Luis Rodriguez of Miami and Brian Chrvis of Wales In title defenses In 1964. The strong 147 - pounder has fought 10 welterweight title fights tat less than four years. He won eight and lost two, beating his conquerors In return bouts. ft ft ft . Clay was Ring’s selection for Fighter of the Year In 1903. Hardin resigned under pressure last/ month, ending what probably was the most successful coaching career in Navy history. notincement, Elias said, “I feel the position at Navy is at the very top of the coaching |ro-fession and I am very delighted to accept thIB offer.” ' ft" ft k Elias brings a top performance as a major college coach intoT the Naval Academy. During his four years at Virginia, he racked up a record of 16-23-1 completing last year’s season with a 5-5 record. He was named Atlantic Conference coach of the year in 1961, his first year at Virginia. FORMER PASSER NEW NAVY COACH - William T. Elias, hall coach at Virginia since 1961, ac-;ed the head coaching job at Navy yester- day. Elias is shown looking at a newspaper headline on Virginia’s upset over Army last season. < /A former Maryland quarterback, Elias, 41, signed a one-year contract at a salary reported to be in the neighborhood of $18,000, the same salary Hardin was paid. Elias was scheduled to begin talking to his assistants, who are carryovers from Hardin’d tenure. They all have been rehired for the 1965 season. He’ll interview them “to make sure they want to stay and he wants them to stay,” Capt. William Busik, Navy’s athletic director said. : ft ft ft TOLEDO, Ohio (0PD —The Philadelphia 76ers hope: they can do it again without their newest player—Wilt “The Stilt” Chamberlain. W ’’V * k k ft S The 76ers trimmed the Pistons, 109-95, in Cleveland Monday night as their newest edition — Chamberlain — takes a week’s rest. PCH Retains Second Place in Poll By The Associated Press Leaders in the lower two classes of,, toe Michigan High ^•Itdor Birsketball poll made it by narrow margins this week, but Benton Harbor and River Rouge pulled away in Class A and B, respectively. k k k Portland took over the Class C lead in this week’s poll by The Associated Press’ statewide 2 Black Hawks Within Range of Scoring Mark MONTREAL (AP) - Most National Hockey League observers seem to agree this is the year that Chicago’s Bobby Hull will break the one-season record of 50 goals. Hull, the NHL’s leading scorer with 59 points, needs just 15 goals in 29 games to do it. k k k League statistics released today, reveal however that Hull isn’t the only member of the Chicago Black Hawks with a chance to break a league scoring record. Runner-up Stan Miklta, who won the scoring title last season, has 34 assists and needs 25 in Chicago’s last 29 games to break - the record shared by Montreal’s Jean Beliveau and Toronto’s Andy Bathgate. I Th# leaders: 1. Hull. Chicago 3. Miklta, f----- 3. Oilman, * s 4. Esposito, Chicago ...... IS 34 33 7. Howe. patron ............13 » 35 (. Pilot*, Chicago 9. Henry, Now Yerk 10. Ollbarl, Haw York panel of sports writers and sportscasters. But its margin was only three points over Mus-, kegon Christian. / ★ ' * ★ ■ • j Barryton retained its lead in Class D, but Negaunee St. Paul is only three1 points back/4 Benton Harbor, the defending Class A champion, lengthened ★ ★dr Tho voting, with io points for a first place vote, 9 tor steam), ate. through 1 point for a 10th place vote: ■ Cion A Team, Record / Poll pis. ■ 1. Benton Harbor (8-0) ........ 179 3. Pontiac Central (8-0) ......... 140 3. (Tie.) Hamtramdf (0-0) ......... 131 Lansing Sexton (7-0) .......... 131 5. Detroit Northwestern (6-0) .... 90 6. Grand Rapids/Sbuth (8-1) ...... 70 L East Detroit /(7-0) ........... 47 I. Perndale (MUf ............... 53 9. Alpena (10-1) 44 10. Dearborn Pgrdson (0-1) ....v. 33 Others, In order: Niles, Saginaw, Grand Rapids Ottawa Hills, Lansing Everett, Kalamazoo Control, Detroit Northeastern, Warren Couslno, Birmingham Seoholm, Allan Park, Holland, Saginaw Arthur Hill, Bloomfield Hlfis. j Class B Team, Retford Poll l>9s, 1, River Rouge (9-1) ............ 144 3. Fenton (Ml ................... 119 3. Tecumseh (0-0) ................. 103 4. Ludlngton (7-0) . .. ....... 91 5. Saginaw A. Hill Tech (9-0) .... 48 4. Lowell (7-0) .................... «7 7. Ithaca (7-0) J2 8. St. Clair (3-1) 33 9. (tie) Allegan (9-1) ............ « ■Rudyard (.8-1) • • ■«i . Others, In order: Tewes Area, Auburn Heights Avondale, Okemos, Detroit- Visitation, Detroit Holy Redeemer, Delion, Whitehall, Marysville. Class C Team, Record Po11 P’*: 1. Portland (8-0) jjf 2. Muskegon Christian (0-2) ... ill 3. Hemtramck St, Florlan (9-0) , 90 I. Prankenmuth: (7-1) ............ 80 5. Marietta (Ml .................... 79 6. Fennvllle (7-1) _ .......... 76 7. Detroit St. Haidwlp (10-1) ..- 30 0. Lake Fenton JI-0 j .............. 45 9. (He) Hancock (9-0) ............ 21 •t,, Ignace'J)-)) 21 Others, In ardor! Perry, Grasse. Pointe It, Ptul, New Haven, Detroit St. ThOroso, Richland, ttdmora, Constantine, Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart, imjoy City, Woke-field, Ypsllantl Roosevelt, Detroit Country Day. Class D Team, Record Poll pis. 1. Barryton (7-43) ,.... ..... <123 2. Negaunee St. Paul (1041) .... 120 3. Saginaw Holy Rotary (9-0) ..... 63 4. Dryden (Ml 40 3. (tlo) Morrlce (8-1) 84 Flint St. Matthew (M) ......... 34 7. Hermansvllle (9-1) ............ 53 8. Covert (M) ,44 9. St. Jose Catholic (4-1) ....... 43 10. Detroit SI. Loo (9-3) ......... 29 Another Bonus for NHL Star MONTREAL * ■t f *» I . j I •V f&m ■, IH SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 10* 19dg Named to Hall of Fame mm Former NFL Stars Honored; CANTON, Ohio (UPI) - The National Board of Selectors today announced the unanimous selection of seven former National football League greats to the pro HaHof Fame. The seven players who carved a niche for* themselves in the million - dollar shrine included Guy Chamberlin, Paddy Driscoll, Dr. Daniel F. Fortmann, Otto Graham, Sid Luckman. Steve Van fiuren and Bob Wa-terfield. . Luckman, Graham and Water-field were all quarterbacks who led their teams to world championships. Luckmaq was one of four former Chicago Bears selected to the Hall of Fame.-He was one of the innovators of the T-for-mation and was an all-league choice from 1939-46. Luckman’s teams won four Western titles and three world championships. Graham, who guided the Cleveland Browns to six consec-■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ij utive Eastern titles and three OnHome Or First Mortgages world championships during the > [4950s, stiH plagues the. NFL by , coaching the College' All-Star; in their annual game with thj champion team. ROOKIE STAR Waterfield led the Cleveland Rams to their first winning season and a world championship in 1945, his rookie year. He Now we can loan you as much as $5,000.00 CASH for you to pay off all of those old bills and installment accounts. Start with a clean slate, have only ONE payment, ONE place to pay, and an easy payment plan to suit your budget. Your loan fully protected by life insurance at no extra cost to you. Loans completed within Y2 hours. No Closing costs. Family Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron Telephone FE 8-4022 ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■« ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a ■» FAULTY TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED I WHITTEN 90-DAY QUARANTEE ON ALL WORK Easy Credit Tsrms—1-Day Service 1956-61 HYDRA- MATID *126 Complete RELIABLE Transmission TS6 N. Perry St. FE 4-0701 Seventeen Pros ClaimBerths in Crosby Golf PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) — Seventeen more professional golfers, shooting 73s or under on an 18-hole course, have qualified for Thursday’s Bing Crosby Golf Tournament. The pros topped a field of 160 during competition Monday for 18 spots left open after previously qualified pros were listed. The 18th and final vacancy was to be selected this, morning. A playoff at 74 strokes was possible, depending upon the outcome of two foursomes completing play today.- Ross Coon and Jim Mooney led thequalifiers with 71s. Also qualifying, at 73, was Phil Wiechman of Holland, Mich. Denver Adds Draftee DENVER (UPI) -The Denver Broncos have signed their sixth draft pick, Syracuse’s Tom Wilhelm, a 6-foot-2, 255-pound tackle. The signing gave the Broncos six of their top 10 draft choices. 11 GOLIE SMITH Salesman LES PICKUP Mgr. LAURA SPENCE Secretary BILL SPENCE President RUSS REGER •twice Mgr. Salesman GEORGE REUTTER Salesman Shop any and everywhere, then buy at Bill Spence Inc. Our Low overhead position ahd competent employees will prove to you that you can always save by doing business with us. J ’65 RAMBLER NEW JEEP American 2 Door, With heater and Radio • Heater, All metal cab. All taxes Taxes and '65 lie. and 65 Lie. Plates. plated delivered. Delivered. *1850°° $18(KT s We Service Regardless of where you bought, whether it Is under warranty or not. All New cars carry a 60,000 mile Warranty. All Used Dari carry a 1 year O.W. Warranty. Chrytler-Plymouth-Rambler-ilDop SOT'S Dixie Hwy., Clarkston Phone 625-2035 was the only unanimous most valuable player in 1945 and a league-leader in passing, punting and place-kicking. ^ Van Buren, who was the lead ieaq? ing rusher four out of five ware, ran the Philadelphia Eagles to three consecutive' Eastern crowns and two world titles in the late ’40s. The other Bears who made team in addition to Luckman -were Fortmann, who could diagnose an opposition play from his guard position as readily as a patient’s ailment; Chamberlin, an old - timer (1919-28) who bounced around on five teams as an end; and Driscoll, a triple-threat and 'drop-kicker for the Chicago Cardinals and Bears., ‘ " The seven are. scheduled tentatively to be inducted here on Aug, 7. CAR A 0AS, . Venezuela, (UPI) — Carlos Morocho Hernandez realized his life’s ambition today but heard only The boos of his hometown fans. Hernandez became the first Venezuelan to win a world boxing title when he outpointed Eddie Perkins of Chicago to 15 rounds Monday night but the majority of the 12,000 fans who attended the bout at the _ bull ring made it clear they thought TRIES TO STEAL — Iowa’s Gary Olson (52) wedges himself between Indiana’s Tom VanArsdale (left) and Steve Redenbaugh as he tries to steal the ball in last night’s game. Iowa beat the Hoosiers, 74-68, at Bloomington, Ind. Visit Michigan Feb. 8 ■ V. L ; Victorious Iowa Tracking UCU Five Co-op Plan for Scouting By The Associated Press It didn’t take Iowa long to catch up with Indiana’s hurrying Hoosiers. Now the Hawk-eyes are looking forwarjj to a Bear hunt. 'Iowa,' beaten on its home court a week ago by the fifth-ranked Hoosiers, tracked them back to Bloomington, Ind., Monday night, scored a 74-68 upset and climbed into second place in the Big Ten Conference basketball race. ' The surprising Hawks, ninth in last season’s Big Ten windup, arc right behind Michigan today with a 4-1 league mark. They visit Ann Arbor Feb. 8. Immediately ahead, however, is a Jan. 29 date in Chicago with UCLA’s No. 1 ranked Bruins. Indiana may make a pitch for a. six-day week. The Hoosiers have been beaten only twice in 14 season starts-^each time on a Monday night. The loss to Iowa dropped them into fourth place in die conference with a 3-2 record. Gary Olson and Chris Purvall divided 40 points for Iowa which blazed to a> 34-20 halftime margin on .536 shooting and was never headed. Steve Redenbaugh and Dick Van Arsdale paced the Hoosiers with 18 points apiece. Indiana starter Jon McGlocklin sat out - the game with a knee Injury. • 1 AMBUSH The evening wasn’t a com- Harney Tops Field in PGA Earnings DUNEDIN, Fla. (UPI)-Paul Harney remained the top money winner on the PGA circuit with $12,000 although he did not compete in the last weekend’s San Diego Open. [ His earning3 to date result from winning the Los Angeles Classic. Bill Casper, who lost a sudden death playoff In the San Diego tournament, was in second place with $7,000 followed by Dan Sikes Jr., with $6,500 and San Diego Open winner Wes Ellis Jr. with $4,850. plete washout for the Hoosier state. Ron Iwema poured in 26 points, leading Butler to an 80-74 ambush of Bradley at Indianapolis. ★ ★ ★ Only a handful of major games were played as the an- IHL All-Stars List 7 Flags; Play Toledo CINCINNATI (AP)-The Port Huron Flags placed seven players on the 15-man International Hockey League All-Star Team which will play the defending IHL champion Toledo Blades next Tuesday at Toledo. The all-star team was announced Monday by IHL Secretary Nowie Newstate. Voting was by the six coaches with no one casting a ballot for his own team or the Blades. ★ ★ ★ Selected were: Port Huron — Norm Jacques, Bob Sneddon, Guy James, Marcel Goyette, Lloyd Maxfleld, Billy LeCelne and Frank St. Marseille. , Fort Wayne — Lionel Rspkt, Bobby RlvsrU,' Johnny Goodwin and Len Thomson, . Das Moines — Shorty Metanchuk and Pat Glnnell. Dayton — Guy Trottlar. Muskegon, ,— Stan Konrad. NBA Standings Sastern division Wan Last Pci Behind Boston 39 7 .tit - Cincinnati .... 30 14 .M2 S Philadelphia .. 22 22 . 500 14 New York IS 30 .333 WESTERN DIVISION Los Angelas . . . 24 20 .543 St. Lou's . . . . 24 20 .545 Baltimore .... 21 23 .477 Detroit ... 10 31 .340 San Francisco 11 35 .230 23V* Monday's Rawit Philadelphia 10*. Detroit tS Today'! Games St. Louis at Cincinnati PhlladeliNila vs. Datmlt at Toledo, Ohio MONDAY'S PIOHTS CARACAS, vanaiuala—Carlos Hernan- dez, \39V4, Venezuela, outpointed Eddie Parkins, 140, Chicago, 13. Hernandez wine lunlor welterweight title. SAN JOSE, Calif. — Manual Ramirez, San Jose, outpointed Oabd Hernandez, 9EI1 jusr, vvipviniwu wan* rn Los Angeles, lightweights) Benny McCor-scomb, San Francisco, 10, mMdnwalghts. PAR IS—-Lull FoUMo, Mi, Spain, uot-pointed Milo Colhoun, 1ST, Jamaica, to. TOKYO - Hiroshi Kobsyasnl, IlSW, Japan, Japan, V Special -5k AT STANBARO ENGINE KNILDERS 6 Cyl..... .*95“ V-8's ..,.'115" This includes . . ; Rings, Rod Bearings, Main Bearing, Grind Valvti, Fit Pint, Deglaze Cylinder Walld, Gaskets, Oil and Labor! ........."-‘ALSO"....... r FACTORY REBUILT ENOlNES 988 AUBURN RD. 119-Nil Ill-Nil i '• i ’ nual semester break cut into the schedule. ATLANTA (UPI) - John Mc-Hale, president and general manager of—the Milwaukee Braves, Monday disclosed a four-team scouting co-op in a search for talent under baseball’s new free agent draft plan. McHale said the Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers and Pittsburgh Pirates will join the Braves in pooling their coast-to-coast scouting resources. . McHale said that under baseball’s new draft system “it is Kentucky landed Auburn its for a f ub to have de- first SEC loss 73-07 at Lexing- j scouting information on ton, Ky., leaving idle Vanderbiltj prospects in the country, atop the league with a 4-0 mark. The fouMlub cooperative scout-Sophomore Louie Dampier and 1^8 system will enable us to inveteran Terry Mobley sparked AEBrbr W 8COU^n8 Coverage Wilrirata with 22 anH 18 fOUr-IOM. , : the Wildcats with 22 and 18 points, respectively, Tennessee, which beat Kentucky last Saturday night, moved into contention by flattening Georgia 76-57. The Vols are 4-1, Auburn 5-1, in league play. ★..... Murray State, winless in three previous Ohio Valley starts, surprised Eastern Kentucky 86-84, dropping the Maroons into a first-place deadlock with Western Kentucky at 4-1. The Hill-toppers ripped Morehead 93-65 and Tennessee Tech edged Austin Peay 85-83 In other OVC games. Nebraska’s full-court press and a couple of dutch baskets by Grant Sirpmons held off Iowa State 88-77 at Lincoln, Neb. NEW PLAN Under the new system, the nation’s prospects, when eligible for signing, will become part of a huge pool from which all 20 major league clubs will make their selections. The four - team coop, McHale said, will pool its information on prospects, then make decisions on which players will be sought in the free agent draft. The first draft will be held in June. YMCA CHURCH BAIKETBALL Mbit's LMBWS W L Lskt Orion Nogt'st ................* 0 Avondale Baptist . , ............ 4 2 Pontiac Business Institute ........4 2 St, Luke's Methodist ..............3 3 1st Church-Brothrsn .............. 1 5 Elizabeth Lske-Chrlst ...... .. . . 0 4 the American should have received the decision. ★ ★ ■ ★ Both Venezuelan judges voted for their countryman Dima Fernandez scoring it 146 *141 and Santos Arismendi tallying it 143-142. The referee was Henry Ann-strong, who once shnnltsee-oulsy were, the featherweight, lightweight sad welterweight crowns; Perkins, who was a 2-1 favorite, forced the fighting througi most of the bout and opened a cut over Hernandez’ right eye in the ninth round. The judges ruled, however, that the wound was caused by a butt from Perkins’ head. The judges also claimed that Perkins fouled continually during the fight and that they deducted points from his total. i — ★ ★ ★ Hernandez weighed 139% to Perkins’ 140 pounds. ' ~ r NHL Standings W t, T Ft*.OF OA Montresl ... 11 11 7 47 122 ft Chicago .. 21 1* 5 47 130 107 Toronto ..... II 14 10 44 Itt 101 Detroit ........_ IS 16 4 42 111 101 New York .... 14 20 0 34 103 t» Boston ...... 10 24 4 24 01 135 Monday's Results No games scheduled. Today's Games No games scheduled. Wednesday's earns* Montreal at Toronto Boston at Chlcagb COUPON! 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Also the muffler and exhaust system are Ceramic-armored for longer rust-free life. “Even on the roughest roads a Rambler gives you a smoother, floating, boaty riae on Deep Coil Springs. And with Rambler's safer Single Unit Construction ana Double Safety brakes you and your family are definitely in a Rambler. “So, if you’re driving less and it’s costing you more come tin and “ ' w; .0M * a . m am w w . BAfl let us change all that for you.” !*“• Bill Farrah’s ; VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ave., Birmingham MI 6*8900 Where Better Service Keeps You Sold _______________________Mil' imm. ISffij THJfl PONtlAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965 y\f t %r v’ W > jfe ' SgVEXTKEM J(ey Triumphs Recorded by Four'Mec Pontiac Press Photo FACE HOLLY - John Wilberg (51) and Dan Fife are expected to see considerable action tonight for Clarkston when the Wolves host Holly for a Wayne • Oakland League garfie. Holly needs a victory to gain a tie for first place with'idle Bloomfield Hills. Samardzija Eliminated Smith Maintains All-Star Lead PHILADELPHIA Wl — Harry Smith of Boston and Jean Winsch of South Bend, Ind., led survivors from a series of elimination rounds into die semifinals of the $100,000 All-Star Bowling Tournament today. Although he tapered off from AFL Owner Hits Pro Grid ling War Signi the torrid scoring pace he had set during the first five days of the tournament, Smith kept his grip on first place Monday with a six-game series oM163. 6 k k k . A 7,777 total for 36 games gave the former champion an 11-pin lead over second place Dick Weber of St. Louis. Pontiac’s Mike Samardzija Jr. failed to make the cot. He rolled 1166 for 7130. Gene Rhoda of Valparaiso, Ind., provided the most dramatic moment of the day when he j shattered the six game record for the tournament with a 259-234-240-236-237 — 1472 series. The men’s semifinals field consists of the 72 high scorers from the 216-man quarter-finals roster.. The low, score to qualify was 7388. Shirley Pointer of Pontiae was eliminated. She rolled 1020 yesterday for a 3065. The best women’s score of the day was a 1231 by Chris Barbre of Dallas. ★ ★ .k The low score to qualifying for the women’s semifinals was 3301. |/Roy White’s Unbeatables and Lloyd Motors earned opening night city men’s recreation basketball victories Monday while Lakeland Pharmacy and Joe’s Bar added key Waterford Township triumphs. - ™ j'Js k k k ' The Unbeatables knocked off defending 'city champion West Bloomfield Heating, 84-76, as five players hit double figures. Former Pontiac Central standouts Harrison Munson (20) and Felix Brooks (21) led the winners. They trailed after one period but moved comfortably ahead in die middle stanzas. Lloyd’s surprised K. D. TV bv pulling away in the final half for an 88-77 triumph. Pete Douglas’ 26 points spearheaded a balanced attack that saw Mel Taylor" add 19, Bob Finley 17 and Larry Douglas 15. Mel De-Walt and Fred Davis hit 18 each for the losers. ’k , • k k j In junior city hoop play, Auburn Heights’ Boys Club’s Buz-; zards nudged bv the club’s Hawk quintet, 60-58, after leading, 30-26, at halftime. The other Class D tilt saw New Hope Baptist hold off the K-Town 5, 52-50. TOWNSHIP In Township play, Lakeland Pharmacy took over first place in the American League by upending Spencer Floor Covering — the defending titlist. Lakeland scored first and led all the way for an 88-81 verdict. Bill Waun poured in 33 for the pharmacists (including 24 in the first half); and Bill Gappy hit 24 for Spencer’s, which lost its first game. Six R’s Construction company won its first in four tries by spilling O’Neil Realty, 60-57. The losers were never closer than three points in the final period. Paul Mandill of the win- ners and O’Neil’s Dave Strubl tied with 18 points each for scoring honors. ' i The National League race saw, Joe’s Bar jump into the top spot j with a 65-39 romp against win- Car Rally Hit by Alpine Snow ^ j;'-.-. ~!'*!_“ ' ./ £ Monte Carlo Field enalty-Ridden BOWLING less Dunstan Floral. The triumph was the third straight for Joe’s which was led by Dave Dodd’s 25 points. Jim Delaugher had 16. Deadline Extended The. deadline for entering this year’s Porttiac Women’s Bowl- j ing Association city tournament has been extended to midnight j Friday. ★ .Sr k _ Any entry postmarked before j then will be accepted, PWBA secretary Peg Bender has announced. The 32nd annual women’s city tourney will begin March 6th atj 300 Bowl. Entry blanks are available at all localbowling establishments and should be mailed to Mrs. Bender at 363 Dover. Additional information can be obtained from her at 682-6075. Cage Results MONTE CARLO. Monaco, fUPD —A raging snowstorm tore through the Alps today and cut the number of chrs in the 1965 Monte.Carlo rally down from 201 to a penalty-ridden lOli The storm hit the cars between the check points of Cham-bery and Uriage and played lavoc with driving conditions^ Snow drifts several feet high blocked the roads and a strong wind blew snow onto the windshields of on-coming cars. k k k As the starters, from Minsk, Warsaw and Stockholm passed Chambery first they benefited from the best conditions, and the best-placed cars at Uriage were the Stockholm trio of last year’s winner Paddy Hopkirk and Henry Lidden in a BMC Cooper, Timo Makinen and Paul Easter of Finland in a BMC Cooper and Pat Moss-Carlsson and Swede Elizabeth Nystrom in a Saab No. 49. 1 One of these cars looked likely to win the rally if It managed to reach Monte Carlo intact this morning. * Among the stars to fall out in the moqntains was Swede Bo Lungfeldt, who placed^Sec-ono last year, and Britain’s Anne Hall, a past winner of the ladies’ cup. x George Argyros’ 258-214H669 bowling paced Gridiron Bar to an eight-point sweep against Huron Cleaners, knocking the latter out of second place in the Huron Bowl Wednesday Night “A’* League last week.——— in the Thursday Ladies Major Classic. Marie "' Knapp scored 1203—576 mid Evelyn Wozniak 1211-566. ■■ k .k ' ★ ■ Auburn Lanes’ Thursday p.m. Trios circuit listed its first 206 Georgia 57 82, Virginia Military 71 UCky 93, Morehaad 65 MONDAY'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL SCORES. East Steubenville 90, S*. Francis, Pa. 78 Albright 60, llpsala 52 South Kentucky 73, Auburn. A7 Tennessee 76, Georgia 57 Georgia Tech Western Kentucky Murray 86, Eastern Kentucky 84 The Citadel 100, Ersklne 62 Tennessee State 123, Americas U. 81 Louisiana Tech 81, Mexico U. 39 MWwest Iowa 74, Indiana* 68 Nebraska 88, Iowa State 77 ButlOr 80, Bradley 74. Ohio U. 106, Florida Southern 71 Bemldll 101, Northland 85 Southwest Houston 108, Texas Chrlatltn 67 Air Force 77, New Mexico State *59 Far west Oregon State 60, Idaho 48 Oklahoma City 88, U. of Hawaii 79 —Servlet Ft. Lee 108, Ft. Belvolr 101 'Y' Swimmers Dunked xifi Match at Flint Pontiac’s YMCA swimmers were swamped at Flint Saturday it) three divisions. Two Pontiac swimmers were double record setters: John Mason set pool marks in the junior division 200-yard free style and 100-yard individual medley and swam a leg on the record-set-ting 200-yard medley relay team; while C. Schridel won the 100-yard IM and 50-yard freestyle in the midget class. Andy’s Service stretched its lead to six points by winning six from Huron Lounge. In junior b o w 1 i n g at Huron, | Carolyn Eaton of Hawthorne School bowled 211—113 pins over her average—for the highest in the league this year. The 10-year-old also has the highest average in the Youth Bowling Association League which also includes McCamiil School students. Lakewood Lancs Sunday night Pjnspillers turned ® 220-216—843 scores for Forest White, 202-203 —605 for George Turner and 234 for Trueman Jewell. Among the women Pat Wagner had 244—564 and Helen Fry had a 139 Tripli^ cate. The Wednesday Independent Women’s , League featured a Eula Vick with 2^2^-537, Helen Fry 531 and Joan Crawford 212. —k/-k—k—i—— The 3jW Bowl Saturday Night Ins .arid Outers Mixed League saw Joe Foster top the men with 217*214—636 and secretary Millie Anderson hit 584 (204). At Air why Lanes the' Wednesday First League was led by Lilah Liskey’s 231—593 and -Bejtzi Waisanen’s 215— 58;. The latter also rolled 210-866 I games last week when Juanita Lee hit 210 (532) and Jean Smith 203 (513). Mary Richardc I picked up the 6-7-10 split. Joyce Mize bowled 205, for Brown’s Five and Ed Klein* schmidt 234 for Reliable in. the Fisher Hill loop at Montcalm Bowling Centre. For the Might of Travel Values! Chevrolet* Pontiacs • Rxrfcks At the Only Showroom in Oaktona County hefe You Can •lee All Three HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. 160 S. Washington St. Oxford (Continued from Page 15) contract between the AFL and NBC, the big jump in AFL attendance and foe building boom of stadia in AFL cities as prime evidence of pro football’s surge and the need for AFL-NFL agreement. .... LIONS’ WILSON Wilson, a close personal friend of Detroit Lions' ex-coach George Wilson, also noted that “He knows of no AFL team trying to sign George.’’ “I talked to George recently but its unfortunate for him that all the top jobs in the AFL and even in the NFL are filled. I’d like to help him, but we’re in good si ape with a head coach.’’ At this point Wilson glanced at Bills’ head coach Lou Saban sitting next to him and commented, "We are lucky to have Lou. We just gave him a two-year contract at a substantial raise.” WANT TIMBERLAKE In reference to Bob Timber-lake, U. of M. quarterback drafted by the league champion Bills and also the New York Giants, Wilson said, "I talked to Bob very recently and we know the Giants are ready to go pretty high, but we’ll give them a good fight for him.” ★ * k In his reference to pro football teams operating In the “red” within a few years, Wilson pointed to toe $400,000 contract to Joe Namath- and $200,-000 to John Huarte given by the New York Jets. “This is bound to cause problems on toe team and I’m glad they won’t be ours. However, I’ve already had one veteran player quote n contract salary that has frightened me. "We can’t keep raising ticket prices. We can’t make our stadiums any bigger and if we get contract demands and give bonuses like toat we’ll be writing everything In red Ink In a few years." Rozelle, appearing tonight In Crosse Pointe Auditorium, Is the first speaker In the four week series which Includes Sid Luck-man, Bill Ford and finally (our members of toe Detroit Lion* each Tuesday night. trtna Goo* on Market HILADELPHIA (UPI)-Pete rell, operator of the Arena oor Sports Stadium, an-mced plans Monday to sell property. yrrell, 69, president and grin-I manager of the PWlladel-« Arena Corp., said he was ring this April. ’65 Pvmouth - ♦ ■' J . . ■ ■ ■ (While the deals are hot) FURY-the biggest, plushest Plymouth overt No need to get cold feet about buying a Plymouth in wintertime. Your Plymouth Dealers are offering the hottest deals ever...real snow shovel specials! They're determined to keep sales running high while the thermometer’s running low. So, you don't have to wait until spring-your present car will never be worth more in trade than right now! So button up and go see your Plymouth Dealer... you’ll get a warm welcome and a red hot deal! HOT DEALS ON GOOD USED CARS, TOOl Plymouth sales are up and that means that Plymouth Dealers are getting more V*MP and more good used cars In trade. So, for the widest selection and the best buys on top-quality used cars, go to Plymouthland. -L—- rtya^OUtM MAIM*! 1 FU RY/ BELVEDERE / VALIANT/ BARRACUDA See your “Dealin' Man” at Plymouthland! OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 724 OAKLAND AVENUE— PONTIAC, MICH. See the Famous “KADETT” STATION WAGON AT OLIVER BUICK Bait grade, high quality lining. 1,000-mil* adjustment free. Al lowa« $1.25 a w**k. ) year — 20,000-mil* guarant**. WHEEL ALIGNMENT e Scientifically measured and correct cotter and camber e Correct toe-in andTetf-out (the chief cause of tire wear) Mott Car* A smoother, safer ride reducing accident potential when ****%?' we Tru-Balance and Tractlonixe Your Tires and more important... adds longer life to yourtires. EIGHTEEN Today in Washington THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY119, 1965 BEN CASE? Congress Reserve Units Put on Standby WASHINGTON (AP) - Three blue-ribbon congressional Reserve units were abolished by the Pentagon Monday. Some 72 onngi-pssmon and cpypral thousand, top government officials were tranrferred from the ready to the standby Restarve. The move was in accord with a recent directive by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara to shift into the standby Reserves those officials, judges and congressmen who would not be available for military service in mobilization because of the importance of their civilian posts. ★ ★ ★ Of the 150,000 federal person-nel in the ready Reserve, it is estimated that about 5,000 fall under McNamara’s order. The congressional units abolished were the 9999th Air Reserve Squadron; which had been headed by former Sen. Barry Gold water of Arizona; the Army Congressional Command and Operations Group; and the Naval and Marine Corps Reserve Composite Company 5-48. Jacoby on Bridge NORTH 19 4*K9 t . ¥J10986 . ♦J9875‘2. 4) None WEST________ EAST A Q 10 8 7 4 2 A J653 ¥3 ¥K5 , ♦ A 4 ♦ K Q 10 6 3 A Q 7 4 2 A J 9 SOUTH (D) ■ AA[j . ¥ AQ742 ♦ None. A AK 108 65 3 Both vulnerable South West North East 1 ¥ 1 A 3 ¥ 3 A 4 ¥ x 4 A Pass Pass 6 ¥ 6 A Dble Pass 7 ¥ Dble Pass Pass Pass , Opening lead—A A By OSWALD JACOBY The American Contract Bridge League conducts three natipnwide Charity games each year, T h“e hands are made up by a computer and played simultaneously a ll pier this conti* nent. Each I game is scored' locally by .JACOBY match-point scoring. The computer dealt out some very interesting hands for the event with board four being a real humdinger. Even though both sides were vulnerable, both s i d e s were usually way up in the bidding. Most North-South pairs managed to buy the hand at six or seven hearts. Those who bid seven took the heart finesse and made the grand slam, quite a few of those who stopped at six refused the finesse and just made their contract. The best East-West score I have heard about arose when South opened with an artificial two-club bid to show a strong hand, but not to indicate any- it forecast ■MS By SYDNEY OMARR g, For Wednesday "Tb# wilt man control! hit doitlny . . . Astrology points tho way/4 “ ARIES (Mar. 21 * Apr. 19): Surprises due. Breakthrough occurs Ip work, friendship areas. You are able to make "contact." Day which sees you gaining reward tor sincere efforts. TAURUS (Apr. 20 • May 20): Nothing halfway today. All the way or nothing. Don't start anything you don't Intend to finish. Creative ability at forefront. Emo* lions are Intense. Express yourselfl GEMINI (May 21 • June 20i: Plenty of changes around home base. If you ex* peel smooth course, you may be dls* appointed. But If you have alternatives ri»ady, you easily succeed. Day to finish rather than start. CANCER (Juna 21 * July MUJt travel you must — be cartful with directions. People change their minds, Associates tend to be careless. Do your own checking! Then you avoid emotional, material 1 waste. LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22): Upsetting financial conditions seem to prevail, Check possessions. Get rid of “dead weight". Stop burdening yourself with otMects you don't regulrel streemilnel Clean house. VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22)i Concentrate on PACINO. Measure words, actions. Know you ate being observed. You receive attention from persons In high positions. Be positive. Express Ideas with confidence. LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22): Secret alliance apt to create problem. Stress mature approach. It you don't believe In protect, drop It- Applies to PERSON* At at, welt as business dMIon*. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 • Nov. 21): Unusual eommunltalions received. Remain alert, ie perceptive. Study various impllca* flons . . . read fine print. You get nothing for nothing. DON'T DEC1IVR YOURSELF. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 • Dec. 21): Professional activity emphasised. Review Cdentlai. Outline program, Superiors (pit concrete results. Make minor con-Billions. Then you pave way tor major pin. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 • Jan. 19)1 Pact Inner conflict!. Valuable solution avail* Sis. Intellect provides valid answers, y Is selt-enelyili. Respect yourself, fieri follow your lead. * ■,, v AQUARIUS (Jon. >0 • Peb. 1l)i Find unusual ways to present views, products, consultation with partner or mate proves helpful, you appear to have extra vital if today* Mam the most of Hi PISCES (Fab. T9 - Mar. MU Seek fnrth m> even if It hurts! Make nhH Effort to obtain enlightenment, hengas duo. You may be Involved In foolish guarral. Remember — you face yourself in the morning. ir TOMOAIKJW if Yot)R BIRTHDAY ,1 you #r« fond of . muilc. ooiimi Crootlv* nblllly »• i you or# t*n.lllv* to MM. of oftiori, UKNINAU TUNOl thing about distribution. West overcalled with two spades and East jumped to four. Since South’s two club bid had been artificial, he had no way of showing both his suits and just jumped to six clubs. West had the good sense to ppss and South had to lose two clubs and a heart for down ttfb. The saddest story of the tournament was that of the West player whose opponent opened the bidding with one heart. Apparently that particular South had some prejudice against the club suit and against opening two bids. The bidding proceeded as shown in the box until eventually West doubled seven hearts. Needless to say South finessed against East’s king and made his grand slam idoubled. VACflRDjOTJfA# Q—The bidding has been: WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department says U.S. assistance to Laos is “entirely justified” in view of .blatant Communist violations df the 1962 GeneVa agreements, “O u r agreements are designed to preserve the Geneva settlement,’* said press officer Robert J. McCtoskey Monday, adding that the United States continues to support the accords — signed by 14 nations — which are designed to guarantee the independence and neutrality of Laos. ★ * ★ The State Department statement appeared to cover last Wednesday’s action by U.S. Air Force fighter-bombers which knocked out a key bridge used by Communist North Viet Nam to supply forces in Laos'.— WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States has ordered a civilian employe of the Polish military attache’s office to leave the country in two weeks as a reprisal for the ouster by Communist Poland of the senior military attache at the U.S, Embassy in Warsaw. Col. George F. Carey Jr. was ordered out by Poland last week on charges he had photographed r a Polish jet fighter base. . k k ■' k On Monday, State Department spokesman Robert J. McClosk-ey announced that. Kazimierz Mizior had been exiled for engaging in activities ‘incompatible with the accepted nhrms of official conduct.” McCloskey refused to say what the allegea activities were. ■k k ■ ★ U.S. ' authorities declined to say if Mizior, neither a military man nor a diplomat, was engaged in secret activities more important than his Official position would indicate. ) V Dems to Hoar Hare KALAMAZOO (AP) - Secretary Of State James Hare is to speak Jan. 27 at the Kalamazoo County Democratic Convention here. BERRY’S WORLD . • - f By''Jim Berry West North Eaet Sonth 1* Dble Pass 24* Pass 2 ¥ PaiM 4 ¥ Pass 94* Pass ? You, South, hold: AKI0S54 ¥AQ64 +65 4*32 What do you do now? A—Bid five hearts only. You have shown your full strength. TODAY’S QUESTION * Again your partner doubles one club. You respond with two clubs and he bids two hearts. Wlfat do you bid holding: AKIMS ¥AQ64 MS 4*AI2 Answer Tomorrow ‘‘Here’s a catchy name for our program ■ for Poverty’!” BOARDING HOUSE ‘The Alliance OUT OUR WAY Myneement effect# nMr fence# (CtpyrlfM INI. dW#rsl ilHCflti Abrupt #n-labor fniTM. PMlur*. Coni.) LOOK. BEN, I DON'T HAVE 700 MUCH CONTACT WITH MEDICAL SCHOOL POUCIESi BUTj DR. LANIER IS CONSIDERED A GOOD MAN AT HIS JOB. ~THE BERRYS BUT WElRE TALK1 /INSABOUT THE PffmiUY WOMEN SEEM IS HAVE IN By Carl wab«rt DRIFT MARLO M. Levitt, Tom Cooke and Phil Evans pTJY tU.Y 4T ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlin ...BUT OL'. PINNY / DIDN'T fT ALL AN' ME'S BEEN START BY YOU PALS FOR YEARS V SALTING HIS YEH, THAIS RIGHT, KDOZUH-TH‘ POOR CRITTER MAAS ABOUT rSTRANGLE IN A THICKET... I CAME ALONG AN' CUT ’IM LOOSE! CAPTAIN EASY 'iPIDNOTl AMY IDIOT CAN 5EE IT HAS AK-.COME 7 N0'8IU0U5-L00KIMS ZOMBIES CAVORT-INi KOONTZSvjNa ABOUT*: THAT'S THE EA5)E5T SET DIDN'T YOU r I EVER WON! LEARN I WAS RIGHT ABOUT YOUR MANS PAiiims-. By Leslie Turner YE5«.TO MtKEB-.BUT ▼ IT NAS IN TH" GALLERY WHY WAS UIKIB SO DURIN8 TH’ R08BERV.. UPSET? tT ISN'T THAT GUARDS SAY NO ST01EW GOOD! NMM-jrf PAINTINGS <3pT PAST 'EM! COULP THEY HAVE WEN W5PEN INSIDE KOONTZ'Si T9 BE RETRIEVED LATER! MORTY MEEKLE QI€ASWZI6F^kmaaB5 TIGHTLY QOOUPED TOOeWBZ ANO FORCIBLY APPU6D • ID ON&SNOSe. j 1 Bv Dick Cavalli NASMWNACFOAN TURNGUTA pesnvaapHc obscbipvcm WEN He PUraH^MWDTD IT. r HI NANCY By Ernie Bushmiller GRANDMA By Charles Kuhn GRANDMA,! THOUGHT YOU WERE GOING TO THE BIG SALES DOWNTOWN TODAY,/ t FIGURE IT'LL KEEP 1 THS CROWDS PROM BEING AS LARGS AS , AND, HECK, FIGMTIN'AT THE BARGAIN TABLES IS HALF JDP THE FUN/ ----y ---^ o DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney 1 Washington 4u*)-«he celebrating for President John* ton’s inaugural hits top speed today, and anyone with enough energy — and enough tickets — can keep partying until late at night. With luncheons, receptions, dinner dances and an inaugural concert by the National Sym-' phony, there isn’t an open mo* ment on the schedule-Almost everything, including the weather, seems set for the whole point of this business: the taking of the presidential oath in front of the Capitol at noon •Wednesday. Only the inaugural address remains unfinished, anil Johnson is expected to keep put- ★ ★ ★ tering with it until a few hours . ; before deUvery^tiiag. 1 ? ' On that most important item, < the weather, Johnson’s hick appears to be holding out. BACKTRACKED - After, hinting that it might snow oh Johnson’s great day, the weatherman backtracked and noW, sticks to the prediction that none is likely to fall. But _ , the bitter cold will remain, making it rough on those who are in,' or who are out watching, the 214-hour parade. - Today’s highlights include » reception for Vice Presidentelect Hubert H>. Humphrey, a-reception for governors that will ★ ★ * , 5- . be so crowded the guests will be herded in in three hourly shifts,v' and a dance and reception for Young Democrats. V An ardent Democrat, eager to fling, could have trouble deciding where to go. A young party member from Indiana, for example, could take in the dance for Young Democrats, or go to" his own state’s inaugural ball, or drop ,by for the National Symphony’s special concert. All three, and a half dozen other events, are running more or less simultaneously tonight. SOLD OUT Nearly everything ’’ to which ■ W MMn • the public is invited, by the way, has been sold out. It isr not known for certain how many events Johnson will attend. C.J k ♦ Monday he jot things off to a - - rousing start by joining' in the fun at the Democratic. gala, f | honoring • * party workers who helped keep Johnson in the White House. The star-packed performance lasted more than two hours and ‘ the Johnsons, appeared to enjoy every minute of it. They applauded loud and long .during the show which was capped by a final chorus of “Hello Lyndon” by the entire cast. Mrs. Johnson had done her bit earlier. She and Mrs, Humphrey had presided at a reception for distinguished ladies. They greeted about 5,000 women ui the fountain courts of the National Gallery of Art—shaking hands and kissing old friends. Humphrey dropped by ami shook hands for half an hour. ' This town has steadily taken on appropriate festive airs. Bunting flaps in the breeze. Last touches are being put on temporary spectator seats that line Pennsylvania Avenue. Hotels are crowded. Enough men stamp about wearing ranch-style hats to populate Waxaha-chie, Tex. . It’s guessed, that some 2,000 Texaife are visiting here, including a White House-full who are guests of the President. But thousands more who, like Lyndon Johnson, have lived here for years, go native on grand occasions like this one. ^ ”f I Those in charge of the parade have helpfully provided ,a description of each float and marching unit. Collectively, these come to the size of a small city phone book-The description of the Navy band had optional beginnings. WARM WEATHER One was labeled, "This open- . WASHINGTON TAP V -“I’m doing fine — if my feet hold up.” These were the words of Muriel Humphrey, wife of Vice President-elect Hubert H. Humphrey, and they, no doubt, were echoed by many over Washington today. ^ $k ★ ★ The Humphreys have been coming and going, shaking hands, dancing and celebrating. They have a big bunch of kinfolk and Minnesota friends in town for the big event. They solved the housing problem differently from President and Mrs. Johnson, who put up extra cots at the White House. MOVED TO HOTEL The Humphreys, with their house guests, moved to a downtown hotel to be closer to things. ★ ★ ★ Lynda, in Merriment r WASHINGTON «l - Partygoing and ddncing, President Johnson’s daughters are joining in the inaugural activities with zest. In their newest formal gowns, they were part of the family group last night in the presidential box enjoying the gala, including some jokes directed at them. Tonight they will star amid their friends from the barbecue campaign trail — at a dance and reception of the Young Democrats. Lynda, 20, is cochairman for the dance, which is so popular it has been stretched to two locations — the Willard and Mayflower hotels, with Lionel Hampton, Count Basie and Lester Lanin providing continuous music for an expected 3,700 dancers. dr k ★ It won’t be surprising if 17-year-old Luci stays late and does the Frug and Watusl, her favorite dances. GAY RASPBERRY A mixture of showman and typical teen-ager, she picked a gay raspberry gown trimmed with velvet bows that give it a quaint and old-fashioned appearance. Luci Is ready for fun and frolic after polishing off the last of her school semester exams - a tough chemistry test yesterday. Her only trouble is the absence — until tomorrow — of her best beau, premedical student Paul Betz, who is still taking his college exams. * */ * Young Paul sent along a stand-in — his brother dim, who escorted Luci to the gala. STEADY DATE Lynda, however, had her steady dote, David LoFeve, a former Marine lieutenant who now has a job In a New York brokerage firm. * k ★ Together, they were making the party rounds, dropping in aftor the gala at the home of Gwen Cafrltz, a prominent Washington party-giver and oft-time pictured as a rival of Perle Mesta, whose penthouse party Lynda and LeFeve attended Sunday night. • r-; * * * They’ll also moke It a date for the Young Democrats’ I Since tonight. Their suburban home is several miles away in Chevy Chase, Md. The four Humphrey children, plus sisters and brothers of the Humphreys, are here. % ■k' : # i The one daughter, Nancy, Mrs. Bruce Solmonson of Minneapolis, who is expecting her third child in March, stood by her mother in a receiving line Monday at a women’s reception. She has two girls, who stayed back home. The one daughter-in-law stood by Humphrey at the same reception and he was proudly introducing her as “our daughter, Nancy Lee.” She is the wife of Hubert III, a university student here. SONS MADE TRIP ,-Son Bob, 20, came in from Mankato, Minn. State College; and son Doug, 16, from Shattuck Military School in Minnesota. Also here are Humphrey’s' sister, Fern Baynes of Minneapolis; his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Humphrey of Huron, S.f).; his sister, Frances Howard of Falls Church, Va.; and Mrs. Humphrey’s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Buck of Cottonwood, Calif. Humphrey’s mother, Mrs. Hubert H. Humphrey Sr., is in a nursing home near Huron, S.D., and unable to participate in the celebrations for her son. The Humphreys have been bouncing from party to party and Sunday night stayed up until 1 a.m. dancing at a staff ball attended by some 1,200 persons. Humphrey beamed as he shook hands with. hundreds of women at Monday’s reception. When one senator’s wife thanked him for coming, he replied: “Every senator will be mad at me — I’ve had all the privileges." ★ ★ ★ State Dems in D.C. for Fete WASHINGTON (UPI) - More than 300 Michigan Democrats have arrived in Washington to help celebrate the Inauguration of President Johnson. The Michigan State Society sponsored a luncheon for the visitors yesterday In the spacious caucus room of the Senate office building. The turnout was so great that some were turned away. Michigan’s colorful entry in the inaugural parade was to be in the fourth division, led by the U.S. Navy band, No. $ among the 12 states in that di-vision. The Michigan entry Is to be headed by Gov. George W. Romney with his military aide, Navy Cdr. R. M. Weidman Jr. Following Will be the 170-member Michigan State University marching band, conducted by Prof. Leonard Falcone, and wearing their new uniforms, green tuxedo suits with white overlay. Next will be the historical color guard, American Legion Post No. 175, Saranac. The 11 members will wear authentic uniforms and bear sldearms used at the time. The $1,600 cost of the trip was raised by public subscription In the town of 1,100. Michigan's float will feature no pretty girls, but Instead will boast of Michigan labor, Industry, agriculture and Its attraction os "Water Wonderland.” A steam calliope is expected to attract special attention to the float.1 ing paragraph for warm er,”and read: “The Navy band is In their colorful parade dress uniforms today with the gold coats, navy blue trousers with gold stripes and blue and gold hats.” ' ★ k ' k f'e The other choice; “Thl8 opening paragraph for cold weather,” and it went : “With today’s cold weather calling for the wearing of overcoats, the band has been forced to cover the colorful gold jackets of their parade dress uni-fonflS.” ■ k k k It’s fairly obvious by now that the cold one will be used. ★ it it On Inaugural Eve LBJ Outlook Is Bright WASHINGTON (UPI)-Presi-dent1 Johnson looks upon his inauguration to a full four-year term as a springboard for bringing all elements of the nation together “to make this a better world for all people.” That was the solemn intention, he-.expressed for “the days to come” as he joined last night| hoopla began, Johnson’s out-in three days* of inaugural look of optimism was summed duce peace for all people. I am proud to be permitted to labor with you out in the sun of this age, doing the work that yvill make us proud—proud to be free, proud to be Americans.” BEFORE. HOOPLA y Even before the inaugural continuing conflict in Southeast Asia but believes this country’s present course is proper. k...’'"kf: He acknowledges that the new nations of Africa are showing the skittishness of youth. But he feels the answer is patience. GALA APPEARANCE - President and Mrs. Johnson and Vice President-elect Hubert H. Humphrey and his wife acknowledge & salute from cheering Democrats last night at the Inaugural Gala. The event, featuring an international cast of stage and screen stars, highlighted the festivities preceding the inauguration tomorrow. & • Dem Gala Has Everything, Including Jitters By SAUL PITT AP Special Correspondent WASHINGTON - The show was late in starting and producer Richard Adler was nervously whispering to an aide: k k k “Remember, protocolwise, Sally Ann Howes has to first shake the President’s hand, then present the flowers to Mrs. Johnson, then just greet the; Humphreys.” * k k A few minutes later a man no one knew and many thought was smashed suddenly announced over the PA system: “George O’Doyle, will you please raise your hand?” Among the 11,000 Democrats present Monday night for the inaugural gala at the National Armory it was difficult to see a hand go up or find out who O’Doyle was. 40 MINUTES LATE . Finally, things got started only 40 minutes tote. The President and his party entered while the photographers crept forward like Baluba tribesmen. Miss Howes, the producer’s wife, presented her late-blooming protocols, and the show began. It had a little bit of everything. k k k Alfred Hitchcock, the movie director turned emcee, referred to Hubert H. Humphrey being at the “awkward age — he’s no longer a senator and not yet a vice president.” dr k k 1 Hitchcock also delivered “a word from our sponsor. Friends of the loyal opposition, do you still suffer from the Nov. 4 morning-after feeling? Do you feel that your group had all the cavities? Are you hurt because no one put you in the driver’s seat? Well, now you can relax and leave the driving to ui” There were .songs by Bobby Darin, including -“Mack the Knifbf” which the emcee said was dedicated by the Army Reserve to Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. There was a monologue) by comic Woody Allen, who asked the President for ‘federal intervention in marriage.’ NEW VERSION Carol Channing of “Hello Dolly” sang a new version of “Hello Lyndon” which said it was “so nice to have you here where you belong . . . you’re still growing, you’re still crowing <*. . and who the heck is Barry what’s-hls-name?” f * , k k Carol Burnett and Julie Andrews sang a rousing medley and there were also loud hands for the “pas de deux” danced by ballet stars Dame Margot ★ ★ ★ Fonteyn and Rudolf Nureyev, the songs of Harry Belafonte and Barbra Streisand and the comedy skit by Mike Nichols and Elaine May. k k k Johnny Carson of television noted “all the tuxedoes with spurs” in Washington and said he envied the boys the Johnson daughters date “Imagine,” he said. “They sit with their dates on the couches while their father arms around turning off the lights.” Carson said that, to make the performers available for the gala, two Broadway shows, one international ballet, two television shows and shooting on four movie sets had to be postponed or closed. The audience seemed to think it was worthil although the mystery of George O’Doyle was never cleared up. ★ ★ ★ Romneys Off to Join Activities LANSING (AP) - Gov. and Mrs. George Romney left Monday night for two full days of inauguration activities in Washington. The governor's formal schedule includes a string of receptions and the inaugural church service, parade and ball. k k'k In between he’s expected to confer with other Republican leaders on the state of the party's rebuilding effort—particularly those aspects initiated by Romney and other Republican governors last December In Denver. The schedule: TODAY 8:16 a.m. — Breakfast with Michigan Congressional delegation honoring House Minority Leader Gerald Ford of Grand Rapids. * 3 p.m.—Governors’ reception, and three receptions including that of Minnesota Gov. Karl Rolvaag for Vice President-elect Hubert Humphrey. Wednesday 8:16 am —Inaugural church service, National City Christian Church. ,11:30 a.m. — Inaugural ceremony. 1:30 p.m.—Inaugural parade, presidential reviewing stand. 9 p.m.—Inaugural Ball. Thursday 10:30 a.m.—Leave Washington for Lansing. festivities leading up to his swearing-in at noon tomorrow. On the even of his inauguration, Johnson publicly and privately displays a relaxed sense of confidence and wellbeing about himself, the nation and the world. But he nevertheless considers this “a period of trial and test” for America—and he earnestly issued a reminder last night to some of the Democratic party’s biggest contributors. * k k k f Before joining almost 11,000 specially invited guests at a star-studded inaugural gala at the National Guard Armory, Johnson spent a few minutes at two of the dinners being held in Washington hotels by the President’s Club. The club’s membership fee is a $1,000 do-nation to the Democratic treasury. FORMAL ATTIRE At one dinner, Johnson looked out at the assemblage of robre than a thousand formally attired diners, seated at tables heavily laden for a feast and quipped: “This Was Supposed to be my first poverty inspection trip in 1965, but somehow it just didn’t work out that way. /The President used the occasion to remind his financial supporters that ' “our generation enjoys p very rich and bountiful life) the richest and most bountiful our people have ever known/’ k k k But he said that to make this “a wonderful generation” Americans must meet tasks before them “in the schoolroom, in the slums, in the countryside, in the world.” DAYS TO COME “In the days to come, we will try to bring employer and employe, farmer and rancher and banker together, all in an attempt to make this a better world for all people,” he declared. Johnson said the tasks he had outlined were “work we must do and shall do together in the days to come.” “The Great Society I've been talking about is not a social affair,” he told the partying Democrats. * * ★ “It is a working organization ... to produce freedom, to pro- up when he told a joint session of Congress 15 days ago: “This, then, is the s tM of the union: free, restless, growing and full of hope.” Privately, Johnson has expressed similar feelings * about world conditions, 14 months after he assumed the presidency in the dark moments following the assassination of John F. Kennedy Nov. 22, 1963. k k k He s e e s improvement in hemispheric relations. He rejects any idea that the Atlantia alliance is in peril. SIGN OF THAW - / He believes therenas been at least a sign oL& thaw in the Cold War. He has deep concern about The first practical typewriter was placed on the market ite 1874. 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J. said Thatcher, Patterson gave her when «he called tar thank us far the proinpt check ihreceived following her automobile accident., THATCHER-PATTERSON. INC. .“SMe* 1889" — Tallorad Policloi, Total Ptolaellon" 711 Comnuljilty National Bank Building, Pontiac, Michigan WOtntwsrd 1468# J linden tertuln c 1.. I’otlholl. ( Cold le ml* \»A\ blood VffHBttf* 1 cut ions stings i |ml rrpl uciioir him! cil’4! KmMw)vHy liiji Mtderel N-M14 ■ERgRERORffO RD HOT DR COLD? WH H IS BEST i.males firsl-uid expert, Ur. Carl, I applications ere belter than lint, selling by constricting the small in rioselilreils on,I minor, r.uts. A|»|»li* hit.' smical i uml nniy delay the of iiijertrd poison. gh body temiierulure associated with prill |ir»elriilion cmlrbe helped by sponging freely with lee wuter. And, imoiediale immersion in ire water of a body purl, with u minor burn ,/rau diniish pain and possibly lessen tissue dumugr. • YOI'R Don't ill CAN I'HO.NK I S when you need a medicine. Pick up yodr prescription if shopping nearby, or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A jtreat many people entrust us with their prescriptions. May we compound yours? /PERRY PHARMACY J PRESCRIPTIONS - momssionaiiy Pima ) HtOUkir MtiCfD R«0RHRy rorhro i.vKNTY THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 19*5 Markets, Business and Finance ♦ ■vs.' ^ ' C' ' ' V * _^ > X w' v”tv ' A V f K>- ■ '> 11 PPfl ' w % s't , „ pi n - 'o'-' 'iiiiHi MARKETS- The following are top prices covering sales of lotah. gr,*s produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce Apples. Golden Delicious, bu. .. .. $3.75 Apples. Red Delicious, bu. 4.00 Apples, Jonathan, bu. 2.5C Apples, McIntosh, bu 3.25 Apples, N. Spy, bu. 3.75 Apples, Cider, 4-gal. case 2.50 VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu. .... $1.75 Cabbage, curly, bu .... 2.00 Cabbage, Red, bu ... 2.50 Cabbage, Std 2.75 Carrots, Cello Pak ... 1.85 Carrots, topped, bu 2.00 Celery, Root, dot 1.50 Horseradish .... 2.25 Leeks, doz. bchs. 1.75 Onions, dry., 50-lb. bag .... 1.50 Parsley Root 1.75 Parsnips, bu. .. 1.75 Parsnips, cello pak . . 2.00 Potatoes, new, 25 lbs .... 1.35 Potatoes, new, 90 lbs ... 2.60 Radishes, bi. 2.00 Squash, Acorn, bu .... 2.00 Squash, Buttercup, bu ... 2.00 Squash, Butternut, bu .... 2.00 Souash, Delicious, bu Squash, Hubbard, bu ... 1.75 .... 1.75 Turnips, topped, bu .... 2.50 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API - Prices paid per pound for No. 1, quality live poultry: heavy type hens 118-19; light type hens 6; roasters over 5 lbs. 23-24; broilers apd fryers 3*4 lbs. Whites 18-20%. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP) - Egg prices paid Gef, dozen by first receivers (including .S.): Whites Grade A extra large 29-33; large 27%*29%; medium 23%-2o; small 19-21; Browns Grade A large 27%-28%; medium 24%-25; small 19. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange — Butter mixed; wholesale buying prices unchanged to ,% lower 93 score AA 57%; 92 A 57%; 90 B 55%; 89 C 55; cars 90 B 54%; 89 C 56, Eggs unsettled; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 70 per cent or better Grade A Whites 25; mixed 25; mediums 23%; standards 24; dirties unquoted; checks Record High Ground Steels Boost Stock Mart Rally : NEW YORK (AP)—Steels rallied as the stock market moved further into record high ground early /this afternoon. Trading wps fairly active. The leading steelmakers advanced from fractions to around a point after a sluggish start. * ★ ★' The market was slightly higher from the start but was hawing trouble staying in plus territory because of profit taking after the long advance. Late in the morning steels began to move ahead. Steel stocks have been recommended by Wall Street advisers and sjtent most of 1964 in the doldrums, pricewise, brokers said. The “rotation of interest” from group to group caught up with thent today and they made good progress.^ • - , ~ SCATTERED GAINS ■ Scattered gains elsewhere in the list al&> helped but the list as a whole presented a pretty spotty appearance. V The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .7 at 334.3 with industrials up .9. rails up .3 and utilities up .6. - V ★ ★ ★ \ The high level of steel opera- tions, due, in part to hedge buy ing as a precaution against a strike, combined with a growing impression that a steel strike may be averted after all, ac companied the advance of steels. " ON AMERICAN Prices on the American Stock Exchange were mixed in moderate trading. ~i—_—if____★___: *_;_ Corporate bonds were mixed U S. Government bonds were mostly unchanged with a few small gains. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK - (API—Following is a of selected stock transactions on the New York Stock Exchange* with noon prices 19. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) — Live poultry: wholesale buying prices changed; roasters’ 23-26; special White Rock fryers 19-19%; few heavy hens 18. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—(USDA) - Cattle' 900; choice steers and heifers active, fully steady; cows active, fully steady; few loads choice steers 24.00-25.00; few choice heifers 22.50-23.50; utility cows 13.00i 13.50; canner and cutter cows 11.00*13.00. Hogs 300; barrows* gilts and sows steady; mixed 1 and 2 190-230 lb. 17.25-17.50; 230-260 lb. 15.50-16.51\i 1* 2 and 3 300-400 lb. sows 13.00*14.25; 2 and 3 400-600 lb. sows. 12.25-13.00; boars 10.75-12.50. Vealers 150; steady; choice to prime 35.00 - 40.00; good 25.00-35.00; standard 19.00- 25.00; cull and utility 10.00-19-00. Sheep 1200; slaughter classes steady; choice and prime wooled lambs 80-105 lb. 23.00- 24.00; good and choice wooled lamDS 22.00- 23.00; choice and prime shorn lambs 80-105 tb. 22.75-23.75; good and choice 21.75-22.75; cull to good slaughter ewes 5.50-9.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) — Hogs 5,500; butchers steady tq.. 25 higher; 1-2 190-225 lb butchers 17.50W 17.75; 2-3 25* 270 lbs 16.00-16.50; 1-3 325-400 lb sows 13.75-14.50; 2-3 500-650 lbs 12.25-13.00, Cattle 3*500; slaughter steers mostly steady; high choice and prime 1,150-1*250 lb slaughter steers 25.00 - 25.50; choice 1,000-1,350 lbs 23.75-24.75; good 21.00-23.00/ three loads high choice and prime 950-1,000 lb slaughter heifers 24.00; choice 800-1*050 jos 23.00-23,75; good 20.00-22.; utility and commercial cows 12.00-13.50; cutter to Commercial bulls 14.00-18.00. Sheep 500; wooled slaughter lambs 25 to 50 higher; choice and prime 85-110 lb slaughter lambs 23.0*23.50; cull to good wooled slaughter ewes 5.5*6.50. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-The cash position of the Treasury compared with corresponding date a year ago. Jan. 14* 196S Jan. 14, 1964 Balance— $ 4,038,585,736.44 S 5,109,041,018.34 Deposits—Fl'cal Ye*r July 1— 56,129,468,023.32 57,262,017,128.14 Withdrawals Fiscal Year------- 68,018,597,248.72 67,418,197,934.67 X—Total Debt- 318, 292,820,862.66 310,648,020,962 61 Gold Assets— M 15,187,766,843.75 15,512,152,973 77 X*—Includes $285,732,335 30 debt not sub* lect to statutory limit. Abbott L .90 ABC Con .70 ACFInd 2.50a Ad Millis .40a Address 1.20 Admiral Air Red 2.50 Alleg Cp .20e Aliegh Lud 2 Alleg Pw 1.06 AiliedCh 1.80 AlliecWrs 3 AlllsChal .50 Alum Ltd .80 Alcod 1.40 Amerada. 2.40 AmAirlln 1.25 A Bosch .50e AmBdcst 1.40 Am Can 2 Am Cyan 2 AmEIPw 1/24 Am Enka 2a Am FPw .75 AHome 1.56a Am Hosp .35 Am MFd .90 AMet Cl 1.60 Am Motors 1 AmNGas 1.70 AmOptlc 1.10 AmPnoto .20 AShielt 1.60a Am Std l Am T8rT 2 Am Tob 1.60 AMP Inc .45 Ampex Cp Amph Borg 1 Anacon 2.50e Anken Ch .20 ArmcoSt 3 Armour 1.60b Armst Ck la Ashl Oil 1.40 Atchison 1.60 AttCLfne 2a AtIRef 2.40 Atlas Cp Auto Cant .40 Avco Corp 1 Avnet .40b AvonProd .80 Sales . Net (hds.) High Low Last Chg. . 9 45 447/8 447/s ....v 13 167/s 18% 187/a ..... 11 80 80 80 ............. ’ 3 13% 13% 13% ..... 26 49% 48% 49% .... 2 17% 17% l/% — % 5 56% 567/e 567/b + % 2 11% 11% 11% + % 27 41 Va 40% 41,%.:+..% 12 29 28% 29 67 54%' 54% 54% + % 13 70% 70 70% + % 28 22 ' 21% 217/e 48-31% 31% 31% + % 79 66 657/a 657/e + % 28 85% 85% 85% — % 27 497/8 49% 49% + % 5 16% 16% 16% .. .. 5**53 527/a 53 *47 '45% 44% -44% — % 19 72% 717/a 72% + % 19. 45% 45 45% + % 32 707/a 68% 697/a +1% 16 18% 18% 18% — % 24 69% 69% 69% + % 16 28% 28% 28% 45 18% 18% 18% + % 49 43% 43% 43%.+ % 36 14% 14% 14% 16 48% 48% 48% + % 40% '40% - % 31 7% 7% 7% 15 527/a 52% 52% 24 22 217/s 22 129 68% 68% 68% + % 50 34% 34% 34% + % 14 30% 30 30% + % 328 18% 18% 18% 3 25% 25% 25% + % 35 57 56% 57 + % 41 12% 11% 12 + % 22 .65% 65% 45% + % 19 47 46% 46% — % 3 61 607/a 607/a + % 53 42% 417/a 42% + % 17 337/8 33% 337/8 + % 7 71% 71% 71% - % 22 61% 61 61% 18 2% 2% 2% 13 18 177/b 177/b 35 23 22% 23 + % 27 14% 14% 14% + % 39 . 54 537/8 54 + % BabcockWII 1 BaldLlma .40 Balt GE 1.32 Bearings .80 Beaunit 1.20 Beckman In Beech Air .60 Bell Ho w.40 Bendix 2.40 Benguet Bestwall .90e Beth Stl 1.50 BigelowS 1.20 Boeing 2 Borden 2.10 BorgWar 2.20 Briggs Mfg BrlggsS 1.40a Brlsf My la Brunswick BucyEr 1.60a Budd Co .60 Bullard .60 Bulova .60b Burl Ind 1.60 Burroughs 1 —B— 26 35% 34% 34% - % 23 15% 14% 15% + % 14 38% 38% 38% — % 7 21% 21% 21% 26 35% 35% 35% - % 9 72% 72% 72% + % x8 21 207/8 21 69 29% ?9% 29% 15 45% 45% 45% + % 25 1% 1% 1% 10 37% 37% 37% 111 37 36% 37 + % 11 28% 28% 28% + % 229 45% 64% 65% -1 19 83% 82% 82% - % 20 51 507% 50% -f 1/4. 5 5% 5% 5% - % 6 37% 37 37 - % 26 69% 48% 49% + % Flltrol 1.80 Flrestne 1.20 FstChrt 1.411 Fllntkote 1 Fla Pow 1.20 Fla PL 1.40 FoodFair .90 FMC Corp 1 Foote M .20e Ford Mot 2 Forem D .40 Freept S 1.20 Frlto Lay .84 FruehCp-1*50 Sales . Net (hds.) tfigh Low Last Chg. ■9 43 42% 43 + % 28 44% 44 44% . 70 23 22% 22% — % 25 24% 24% 24% + % 5 50% 50 50 — % 25 74% 74 74% + % 12 22% 217% 22 + % 21 43 42 42 —1% 12 18% 18 18% + % 92 547% 54% 54% + % 4 ’ 13% 13% 13% .... 11 45 44% 443/4 . 7 40% 40% 40% + % 33 30% , 30% 30% + % Pennzoil >1.20 PepCola 1.40 PfizerCha la PhelpsD 3.40 Phila El 1.32 Phil Rdg 1.20 PhilMor 3.40 \ PhillipsPet 2 N Pltn Bow .90 PltPlate 2.40 Pit Steel Polaroid .40 Proct&G 1.85 Pullman 2a PureOil 1.40 GamSk 1.20b GAccept 1.10 Gen Cig 1.20 Gen Dynam Gen Elec 2.20 Gen Foods 2 GenMIlls 1.40 GenMot 4.45e GenPrec 1.20 GPubSvc .44g G PubUt 1.34 GenTel&EI 1 GenTire .50 GaPacific 1b GettyOII .10e Gillette 1.10a Glen A Id .50a Goodrcb- 2.20 Goodyr "1.15 GraceCo 1.10 GrandU .40b Granites 1.40 GtA&P 1.20a Gt Nor-Ry 3 GW Fin .87t Greyhnd .80 Grumn 1.50 Gulf M&O 2a Gulf Oil 1.80 Gulf SU 1.24 10 39% 387% 39% + % 3 21% 21 ’ 21 10 47% 47% 47% — % . 79 38% 37% 377% — % 34 97% 97 . 97 + % 32 84 85% 86 .+ % 14 52% 517/8 52% + % 234 977/8 97% 97% + % 9 29% 287/a 29% + % 274 4 57% 4 + % 4 38% 38% 38% - % 113 38 37% 377/8 — % 14 20 19% t 197/8 — % 40 58 57% 57% + % 34 27% 27% 277/8 + % 47 ,31 307/b 31 .... 11 127/8 12% 12% .. 29 59% 59% 59%..... 30 477% 47% 477% + % 14 577% 57% 57% + % Halliburt 1.50 HamPap 1.40 Hanna Co la HeclaMng lb Here Pdr 1e Hertz 1.20 Hewlett Pk Hoff Electron Homestk 1.40 Honeywl new Houst LP .84 Howe Sd .40 Hupp Cp .25# 28% 28% 28% + % 8 25% 25% 25% - % 43 44% 44 44 — % 6 58% 58% 58% — % 18 11 107/8 107/8 +. % 24 25 24% 25 + % 47 53% 52% 52% — 7/b 2 52% 52% 52% - % 28 59% 59% 59% * 50W 49% 50Vj + Vk. —H— 24 38% 38% 38% + % 1 38%< 38% 38% 22 38% 38% 38% + % 27 33% 33 33% . 4 44% 44% 44% 23 38% 37%- 38% + % 24 25% 25% 25% 1 4% 4% 4% — % 15 50 49% 49% — % 123 64% 64 64% — % 16 54% 54% 54% + Va 11% 11% 11% + % 2 6% 6% 6% -I- 15 87/8 8% 8% 16 39% 39% 39% - % 12 14. 113% 14 + % 4 23% 23% 23% - % 109 20% 19% 20% + % 9 58% 58% 58% 93 28% 28% <28% + % Cal Finl ,30t CallahM .201 Calum H .60 CampRL ,45a Camp Sp .90 Can Dry 1 CdnPac 1.50a CaroP Lt 1.16 Carrier 1.60 CarterPd .40 Case J.l Cater Tree 1 Celanese 1.80 Cencolnst .50 Cencolnst wl Cerro Cp 1.40 Cert-teed Si 12 5% 5% 5% Stocks of Local Interest CessnaAlrc Figures alter decimal polntnir* eighths mm t OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS The following quotations do not necessarily represent actual transactions but are Intended as a guide to the approximate trading range of the securities. Bid Asked AMT Corp. 7.A fl4 Associated Truck ........... Braun Engineering Citizens Utilities jClass A Diamond Crysfar . Ethyl Corp. Mohawk Rubber Co. Michigan Seamless Tube Co. Pioneer Finance Safran Printing . Vernor's Ginger Ale Vesely Co. Wehr Cprp. Wlnkelman's Wolverine Shoe Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS 15.5 14.5 17.6 18.4 26.7 28.5 13.5 14.5 37.0 39.0 23*5 25 3 24.6 24.6 15.4 16.4 16.7 17.7 15.6 16.4 48.6 51.2 36.0 38.2 Affiliated Fund Chemical Fund Commonwealth Stock Keystone income K-i Keystone Growth K-2 Mass. Investors Growth Mass, Investors Trust Putnam Growth Television Electronics Wellington Fund Windsor Fund Bid Asked 9,07 9.81 14.23 15.55 9.30 10.16 9.97 10.88 5.86 6.41 9.30 10.16 17.43 19.05 9.96 10.89 8 27 9.01 15,73 16.60 15.95 17.34 Tuesday's 1st Dividends Declared Pe- Stk. ot Pay-Rate rlod Record able INCREASED Brach, E J .30 3-5 ' 4-1 REOULAR Continental Stl ,4* o 1.1 1.11 Sunshine Biscuits .5 Cudahy Pk 7 9% 9% 9% + % Nat AIM .80 19 70 09% 69% — % Curtis Pub 14 0% 0% 0% « Nat Bisc 1.70 22 61% 60% 60% + % Cur! Wr 1 76 20% 20 20% % NatCan 40b 23 17% 17% 17% + % 1 79 Soybean Futures Slip on Market CHICAGO AP)—Soybean futures slipped after opening tentatively higher today on Chicago Board of Trade and then hung back in early trading. Other grains were mostly. Jo wer., After ant hour soybeans were % to 1 Cent lower, January $2.09; wheat was % to VM lower,March $1.47%; corn V* lower to Higher, March $iwv; oats V* lower to Vp higher, March 72 cents, and rye was unchanged to % lower, March $1.21tt.' ... .V.,:' 1 , Ches Oh ChlMII StP 1 ChPndu 1.60a ChlRklsPac 1 ChrlsCrft .681 Chrysler lb CIT Fin 1.60 Citadel Ind 1 Cities Sv 7.80 ClevEIIII 1.20 Coca Cola 3 ColaPal 1.20 ColilnRad .40 Colt indust CBS 1.20b Col Gas 1.28 Col Plct .541 ComlCre 1,80 ComSolv 1.20 ComwEd 1.80 Comsat Conffdls 3.30 CohElecInd l CnNGas 2.30 ConsPw 1,70 Container 1 Cont Air .40 Cent Can' 2 Cont Ins 2.40 Cont Mot .40 Cont Oil 2.40 Control Data Corn Pd 1.50 CoxBdcas .40 CrowCol! ,99t C rown Cork Crown Zell 2 Cruc S1I 1.20 ............ 87/8 + % 9 19% 19% 19% + % 11 21 20% 20% - % 3 39% 39% 39% . .. 4 33% 33Va 33Va 21 58% 57% 58% + % 4 44% 44 44% + % 8 61% 61% 61 Va + % 29 20% 20% 20% + % ' 18% 18% 18% - % 40% 41 + % 78 Va 79 + % 58Vi 58% + % 5 .29 Vs 29% 29% 46 34% 36% 36% — % 9 17% 17% 17% + % 4. 32% 32% 32% - % 3 41% 41% 41% 9 74% 74% 74% + Va 15 30% 30Va 307/8 - % 5 37 37 37 + % ..... M 30% 30 41 24 79 It 583 15 15 15 15 Va 115 60% 59% 60 81 34% 34 34 — % 15 29% 29% 29% 14 80Va 80% 80V4 — % 6 397/b 397/, 397/8 + % 10 144 143% 144 +1 xl6 51% 51 Va 51 Va + % 30 27% 27 27 '+ % 4 137/i 13% 13% — % 45 42% 417/s 42 26 327/t 32% 327/a + % 13 24% 24 24% 12 38% 38% 38% + % 7 34% 34% 34% 19 55 54% 55 + % 54 55%' 55% 55% - % 23 W/* 96% 96% + Vs 2 317% 31% 31% 11 77 76% 76% ... 8 57% 57% 57% 47 32% 32% 32% - % 69 23% 23% 23% + % 24 51 50% 50% % 39 627/8 62% 62% + % 2 10% 10% 10% 2 78 777/b 77% + % 79 59 57 57% ~~)Va 90 57% „ , 25% + % 129 28% ?7% 28% + % 10 35% 35% 35% 4* % 16 58% 57% 58% 4* % 23% 23% 23% + % Dan River 1 DaycoCp 40h Day PL 1.16 Deere 1.40a DelHud 1.25* DellaAIr 1.60 DenRIoGW 1 DetEdls 1.30 Del Steel .60 Disney .40b Plst Seng 1 DomeMn ,80a Doug Air i.4it DOW Ch .1.80 •—n— 13 33W 23V, 23W + V, % 4 35V, 33Vi 3SW 13 *7V, 47 4V/i + H I 33V, 33'4 3314 - W 12 MV, 37V, 37(4 _ m 7 2044 30* 20* - 14 10 SOW 33 W 33* + V, 14* 14 14* 1' 43 30 Drttnr (.20 duPont 7,23r Duq LI 1.40 DyntmCp .40 ■•it Ale Un l«»IOP 3.171 (•llKo 2.4M t«lon Mtg 1 EiSondS f 4o || MUlqs M* El AltdC .34, EIPatoNO 1 Bnwwnll t .44 end John Erl«L«ek PR Rvdn«Pd ,13d Bvonhrd ,73 13 31V,. 31* 31* 4i, * 14 33* 38V, 38* — * 43 33* 33* 33* - * 18 78* 78 78* + * 10 33* 35 33* -I- * 23 240 248 248* - * 5 33* 33* 33* 0 8* I* OH + * —E— 88 43 ^ - 48* 41* . * 4 17* 07* 07* ., 23 148 147 147 1) 1883 45* 43* + * 17* 37 37* + * rvuvi miiBi P»n-(*nl Mm P*dd Coro I P*dD3tr 1,50 p*d Moo 1.80 Pwrocofp 1 24 3* }* T 18*. 18* _______ ■ 44 24. 23* 21* 4- * I 41* 41* 41* ~ * 31 11* 11* 11*— * 4 28* 28* 23*' 0 7* 7* 7* + * 71 4** 44* 43* +1* II 24* 24* 24* «. * 4 97% 27% 27% 22 f% 9% 9% - % 4 11% 11% 11% + % 4i w% rtvi 2 43% 43% 43% 2 24% *24% 24% Ideal Cem 1 lllCent Ind 2 IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 Inter IkSt 1.60 IntBusMch 5 IntIHarv 2.80 IntMinerals 1 IntNick 2.50a Inti Packers IntPaper 1.20 Inf T&T 1.20 ITECktBr .60 1 21% 21% 21% + % 1 54% 54% 54% 75 ,42% 42% 42% + % 66 '46% 46 46 — % 7 34% ■ 34% 34% — % 61 440% 437% 438 —2% 73 81% 80 80% +1 80 45% 45 45 + % 8 83% 83% 83% + % 3 11% 11% 11% : 36 34 33% 34 + % 12 61% 61% 61% + 14 41 40% 40% ~ Sales (li% 77% + % 19 92 91% 92 ... 22. 30% 30% 30% - % 3? 37% 37% 37% - % 11 69 69 69 + V# 6 70 70 70 + % 9 39% 39% 39% + % 10 58% 58% 58% + % 57 14% 14% 14% 20 30 29T 13 63% 63V 14 82 12 9% 9% 26 75% 75% 29 437/8 43% 43% 89 90% 90% 90% 12 53 57% 53 63% + % 82 +1% 9% + % 75% + % 7 9% 9% 9% 1 34 . 34 34 28% 28 28% + % 10 40% 40% 40% + % 76 32% 32% 32% + % 4 46Va 46% ’ 46% - % 7% 7% 73/4 + % 26 32% 32% 32% + % 577/8 58 + Va 359 Tenn Gas 1b Texaco 2.20a • TexGSul .40 Texaslnstm 1 TexP Ld .35e Textron 1.60 Thlokol .57t Tldewat Oil TimkenRB 3a Trans W Air Transam .80 Transltron TrICont 1.67e Twent C .60b UCarbid 3.60 Un Elec 1.12 Un Oil Cal 1 Un Pac 1.80 Un Tank 1.80 Un AlrL 1.50 Unit Alrcft 2 Unit Cp 35e Unit Fruit UGasCp 1.70 Unit M8.M la USBorax .80a USGypsm 3a US tndust US Lines 2b USPlywd 1.20 US Rub 2.20 US Smelt 3 US Steel 2 Unit Whelan UnMatch .40 Unlv OllPd 1 Uplohn 1.20 42 25 247/s 247/i - % 64 07Va 87% 87% + % 47 57% 507/8 57 + % 8 90% 95% 957/8 + % 2 18% 18% 18% 3 52% 52% 52% - Vi 21 12% 12% 12% + % 50 36% 35% 35% 2 84% 84% 84% + % 29 51% 51% 51% 10 48 477/i 477/i + '% 7 5% S% 5% + Vi 7 50% 50% 50% 4 26% 26% 26% 28 1297/8 129% 129% Isles Is Jail as Appeal Fails ABILENE, Tex. UP) - Federal authorities put Billie Sol Estes, described by a judge who tried him as “the most gigantic swindler in history,” behind bars last night. Unless further appeals meet with Unexpected success, it apparently means the end of a fight lasting nearly three years to keep the toppled farm tycoon and former lay preacher out of prison. He marked his 40th birthday just nine days ago. The U.S. Supreme Court refused yesterday to hear Estes’ appeal from a 15-year prisoa sentence for m ail fraud. U.S. Dist. Judge R.E. Thomason, who presided for ’ the 1963 trial in El Paso, then revoked the bankrupt promoter’s $100,000 appeal bond. Armed with a bench warrant from Thomason, Deputy U. S. Marshal William C. Black arrested the black-haired, round-faced Estes at his comfortable Abilene home and escorted him to the county jail here. Officers arranged to transfer him to El Paso today. They said Estes might stay there as long as five weeks before being moved to a federal prison. He has 25 days to ask the Supreme Court to reconsider and it could be 10 days longer before the tribunal ruled. Cold Wave Hurts Florida Vegetables 10 100 38% 38% - % 13 44 437/8 44 + % 11 50% 50% 50% + % 35 65% 65 65 - % 18 037/8 63% 03% 32 07/8 8% 87/8 10 18 177/8 18 - % 51 36% 36% 30% + % 1 26% 26% 26% 5 35% 35% 35% 26 83 81% 83 + % 25 12V* 12% 12% 1 40 Va 40 Va 40% % 1 43% 43% 43% - % 29 67% 66% 66% - % 4 107 106% 107 + v. 135 53% 52% 53% + M 4% 4% VnnAIISt 1.60 VanadCp .25a Varlan At VandoC-o .40 VaEIPw 1.12 Walworfb Co WarnPIcf .50 Warnl am .80 WnAIrLIn .80 WnBone 1.10 WUbTfl 1.40 WaatpEI 1.20 Whirlpool 2 WhlteM 1.20 Wilson Co 2 WlnnDIx 1.20 Woolworlh 1 Worthing 1.50 Xarox Cp .50 Yngtt&ht 1.80 31 15% 147/8 147/8 - % 10 42% 42% *42% - % 59 50% 55% 50% + % 1 35% 35% 3$%- + % 1 18% 18% 18% 4* % 327 \4Va 13ft 14% + % 5 22ft 22% 227/. + % 13 50% 50 SO + % —W— 16 6* 6* 6* + * 17 70 17* 19* — * 96 96* 76* 34* 31 37* 37* 07* - * 31 36* 36* 16* 63 34 33* 14 + * 746 44 41* 41* ')• * 79 70* 69* 70* 4- * 17 10 79* 79* - * 9 97* 97* 97* - * 9 39* 39* 39* 703 77* 77 77* - * 17 91* SO* 91 *‘ + * —X— 194 107* 106* 107 41* —Y— 39 46* 49* 46* 4 * 76 69* 94* 64* - * dandi In tha forogolng tab* art annual dltbuntmanli bused on fha |att quarlar or saml-annual daolaratlon. Special or txfra dividends or paymantf .not datlg. naiad aa regular are identified in tha1 following footnotes, a—aim rata glue dividend, d ^ ....... glue stock dividend, e -Paid last yaar isvinDisi. ■ s ... extra or. axtrai. b~ Annual stock dividend, c—Liquidating d Declared or paid In 1969 f—PAVabla In efock during. 1969, estlmajed cash value on •x-dlvlMha or ex-dlstrll flan data, g-mclartd or paid so far Ihle yaar. h—Daclarad or. paid after etock il vidend or •pllt up. k—Declared or jgafii this yaar, an aeeumuj«tfvi tseue with" dividends In arrears, p—Paid this year, di- vidend emitted, deterred or no eeljen taken at last dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1964 plue stock dividend t—Paid In stock during 1964, estimated mb pf---------------- ■ ax-dieirlbu cash value on ex-dlvkkjnd or tion dale, i—lalce In full, .eW—Called, x—Ex dividend. . dend and taiae In lull. x-die—Ex dlstribu . v~Ex d vl- r. snd sales In lull, x dls -ltx dlstribu lion, xr—ix rlghte. xw—Without war. rants, ww—With warrants. wd-Wheri trlbuted. wl-When Issuad. nd-Nexl day delivery. y|—In bankruptcy or receivership , or belnq reorganlted under the Eankruplcy Act, or eecuritree assumed by.luch.eom-pan lee. jn-f orylgn Iseue eublsct lain K By the Associated Press \A severe cold wave hugged th<*, Atlantic Coast today, sending 900I air into normally balmy Florida where part of the vegetable crop was ruined. In an unusual turn-about, Scottsbluff, Neb., established a record fur Jan. 18 yesterday with a mild 62. Portions of Florida shivered in the 50s, bat a gradual warming trend began in central and southern Florida today, alleviating the danger to crops. « \ The Midwest was struck with near-zero weather and officials in Indiana struggled to recover from a 12-inch snowstorm that virtually paralyzed the state over the weekend. Wicked weather in central and southern Florida damaged Uie state’s sugar cane, but 45 per cent of the 229,000 acres had been harvested. Dade County was hardest hit, losing 30 per cent of its tomato crop, 60 pOf cent of the pole bean crop ana, 80 per cent of the squash crop. Citrus fruits escaped with superficial damage, officials said. The cold struck north along the Atlantic Coast, sending temperatures zero and below. . BELOW ZERO The mercury was below zero in Atlantic City and elsewhere' in New Jersey. ssues By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst >NEW YORK - As popular stock price averages strive to climb to higher ground than they reached in settingX records in the middle of November, particular i s au e s again set \tbe pace. Big ad-vancesmy a few can do the trickx even while the majority could be dallying, and some sUpping. ¥WSt)N And last year’s star performer may not be this yeans favorite, while a once drows^, issue may capture the investors attention. This is a truism in brokers’ offices that the pubUc 'often ignores. The trick, even inNa bull market, still is to find the favorite. For 1964 as a whole the popular averages staged good gains. That is, the averages did. Some of their components far outshone the list as a whole. Others even declined in price, 10-YEAR PERIOD The same is true, in percentage of change, for the performance of the averages over a 10-year period. Take just one. The average price of the 30 stocks on the Dow-Jones industrial list rose 14.6 per cent during 1964. But one issue gained 65.5 per .cent, while another lost 10.5 per cent. ★ w , ★ » Compare the same 30 stocks with their prices at the end of 1954, with adjustments for all splits and other capital changes in the 10 years. The best performing issues gained ‘412 per cent in market, value in the decade, while a laggard dropped 3.9 per cent from its 1954 price. Statisticians. at the brokerage firm of Arthur Wiesenberger & Co. put it this way: If you had $10.000 to invest at the start of 1964 and you could have used that to buy equal amounts (X each of ttie 30 stocks, you would have ended' up the year with stocks valued on the market at '311,460.''lir7 ; ..; r FIVE BEST / If you had second sight, and had invested just in the five best performers, your holdings at the end of the year would have been $13,810. But if you were unlucky .and invested only in the five worst performers your $10,000 would have ended up as just $9,-350. ■ , v . . The top five gainers for the year were: United Aircraft, Up 53.2 per cent; Chrysler, 46.5 per cent; Swift, 32.4 per c«it; Sears, Roebuck, 32.1 per cent;: and Du Pont, 26.3 per cent. The unlucky five were: Alcoa, down 10.5 per cunt; General Foods, off 10.3 per cent; Allied Chemical, lower by 5.7 per cent; U.S. Steel, by 4 per cent; and American Telephone & Telegraph by V* per cent. Over the" 10-year run the big gainers and the laggards are quiet different. The top five since the end of 1954 are: Sears, Roebuck, up 412 per cent; Texaco, 354 per cent; Eastman Kodak, 354 per cent;1 General Foods, 323 per cent; and Du Pont, 209 per cent. £*-SMALLEST CHANGE The five showing Uie smallest change are: American Can, which is down 3.9 per cent; Anaconda, up 4.2 per cent; West-inghouse Electric, up 5.6 per cent; Allied Chemical, up 8.8 per cent; and Swift, with a gain of 21.6 per cent. Aid when 1965 is finally tallied, it’s a pretty safe bet that the averages will cover a wide range of performance — and that the winners and losers, if any, may well be quite different from those who did the best or the worst in 1964. \ ■ % ■*. '•»#«*# ■ ucces$f^nve$$mg S" % # H #! mm ER E. SPEAR By R< Q) “I have been saving for the past four\ years and am now in a position to purchase some stocks forWowth only, say over the next five to ten Y Coed at tp Secret Agent Car Makers on Way Month High American Stocks NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) - Pollowlng II e Hit of (elected dock traniecllont on the American Slock exchanga with noon prices: Salee Aerolet .90 AmPetrofA .19 ArkLsGee 1.20 Aiamera Aeed (Uir.C Barnet Eng Bru Tree Brit Pat .30r Brown Co .60 Campb Chib Can So Pet Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creole P 2.60a Data Cont Draper 2 Fnrqo ■ 09r 601 Oen Oivel Olent Yel Goldfield Gt Bat Pel Gulf Am Ld Imp Oil 1.60a (hd*. 7 High taw Last Chi. 24% 24% 74* -1- * 1 0% 6% 6* 10 3 44% 44% 44* + * % 9*16 * +1 16 ,10 7% 7% 7* + * 3 24% 24% 24* - * 181- 5% 5% 9* 9 7% 7* + * 4 13% 13% 13* 204 3*10 4 3*16 4 3-19 e 2 il ia 2 5*16 2 15-1+61 16 13 9% 9% 9* + * S 3% 3% 3* + * 4 40% 40% 46* - * 23 5t* 57* 97* - 1 50% 50% 30% + % ’ 9 3% 3% 3% 3 7 11-16 2 M0 2 1H0-1 16 2 9% ?% #%'•*• % 11 11% 11% 11% 2 4% 4% 4% 31 15% 15% 15% -u % 342 2% 2% 2% ~ % 13 2% 2% 2% + % 4 6% 6% 6% + % 4 94 2* 7* 10* 94 Kaltar Ind Kraltar .BOb Mackey Air X a McCrory wt 14 4 Mead John .49 61 19* Mich Suoar .I0g 2 9* Molybden 47 14* 93* NawPkf I* 94 2* + * 7* .it 19* lltk • 4* i 19* -9* 91* * * I* - * RIC Group 3.79t 9 1* 3* 3* Scurry Rain 6 17* i/w 17* + * Ibd W AIr 17 j* 6* 6* IlpnalOII Ala 37 79* 79* 79* + * Sperry R wt 11 6* 6* 6* + * Syntax cp ,30e In So* xo So nchnieoi ,90 t is* is* IS* 4 W Un cpntrei .70 9 4* 4* 4* — * WobbltKnapp 19t * * 41-16 BONO AVRRAOBI Compiled by ThO Aisocleted Proee equeliiallon tax, __ II 11, , Bell* llhl. Util. Nat change Noon Tuai. 12.1 Pray, Day „tit,7 Waak Ago 55.6 Month Ago ig.4 Yaar Ag 1964 69 nigh 12.9 106469 Low 101,1 101 B 101,4 101.7 101.9 mw ift 00,6 m ir 87.2 By CHARLES C. CAIN AP Bsuincss News Writer DETROIT - U.S. Auto makers appeared well on their way today toward a second successive 800,000-plus production record this month with American Motors the only ’question mark. AMC had the dual problem of a* production cutback effective Jan. 25 and a strike vote taken at its Milwaukee body plant Monday. In the vote, United Auto Workers Local 75 members authorized their executive board to call a strike at the plant.-, The company's daily production quota bf 2,110 cars will be cut to 1,957, company officials said. They said about 2,600 persons from a work force of 24,-600 temporarily would be laid off. \ .- United Auto Workers Local 75 said the strike vote centered about questions of interpretation ori Its new contract with AMC, Any possible strike must await authorization from the UAW international headquarters at Detroit. FIVE DAYS AMC and Chrysler pldnts were on five-day workweeks last week as the industry turned out an estimated 210,876 cars, a drop‘of about 3,000 from1 the previous week. General Motors had 18 qf Its 22 assembly plansts overtime operations Saturday. Ford had similar work underway at 15 of Its 16 assembly units. GM’s output for the week was 38 per cent ahead of the year-ago week figure. Ford was up about 31 per cent. Chrysler was about 37 per, cent ahead of the year ago week. AMC was off ■bout 600 units over the y$ar ago week,, v Despite production problems, American Motors reported its sales of 1965 models through Jari. 10 total 128,168 cars, an increase over the 122,916 cars sold In the comparable sales period of ths 1964 model. GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - A 20-year-old Michigan State University coed majoring In ..police administration served as a secret police agent to help break up an alleged Detroit abortion ring, authorities revealed Monday. ’ The girl, Nancy Parrette of Grand Rapids, testified in the Police Court trial of Conrad Lauth, 62, and his wife, Eihe-line, 64, both of Detroit, and Mrs. Geraldine Kuieck, 33, of Marne. a. * ★ ★ Miss Parrette testified she received a telephone call froth a woman who, she said, identified herself as Mrs. Kuieck. The girl said arrangements were made to meet the Kuieck woman in a Lansing nightclub, where the coed said she handed over $500 in marked bills. Then, she said, the two went to Detroit lo the Lauth home. State police said they raided the home shortly after Miss Parrette entered and arrested the three. MADE CONTACTS Lt. Raymond H. McConnell, commander of the State Police Security Division at Lansing, Earlier testified that Mrs. Kuieck made contacts for abortions which Mrs, Lauth performed in her home. Mrs. Kuick waived a hearing and was ordered to stand trial in Kent County Circuit Court. The Lauths demanded a hearing. ~ years. I have narrowed my selections down to United Fruit, Consolidated Foods, Procter & Gamble, and American Life Insurance. What is your opinion of these companies for my purpose?” D. S. A) United Fruit Company is. a well-managed comapny, but its main occupation is agriculture in one of the most politically difficult areas of ihis hemisphere—Central America. Earnings have been in a general downtrend sinde 1953, and the price has tended Jo work steadily lower also. • \For your objective of growth, I would substitute Merck & Cq., one of the strongest pharmaceu-ticals. American Life Is large l^y owned by Greatamerica Corf). The shares would be satisfactory, butW better marketability I suggest that you substitute Commonwealth Life, of Kentucky. ' \ To order y Mills, Pres. —Adv. rocKi ] J Wi ........ 69 Slockl .... BOND* « Bomii |{ HSaff?.:: BS7.46 f-2, JW.j, 314.61 P m 90.07-0.01 ml Democratic Rep. Robert Slingerlend, newly elected vice chairman of the Mental Health Committee of the House, today began a three-day tour of Michigan’s mental health facilities. Slingerlend, who represents Oakland County’s 63rd District, will join most of the 13 other committee members in visits to nine hospitals in Pontiac, Detroit, Plymouth, Ypsilanti, Jack-son and Kalamazoo. ★ ★ ★ The tour is being conducted during a recess of the legislators. “We are taking the trip mostly to educate ourselves,” said Slingerlend, “and not to stir up trouble. When appropriation matters oh these facilities come before us we will know what they are about.” Business Notes John E. Mead, 23705 Newell Circle, Farm) ington Townk ship, has been elevated to vice president I tj charge of sales for the F. Jot soph Lamb Co., according to an a n nouncement by John K. Rye’, president of the MEAD specialty flrrm Mead has been general sale! manager since 1060. € Arthur L. Kaleta, 300 Booth) Troy, haa been appointed superintendent of the broach division fof Detroit Broach St Machine Company, Rochester, according to Gus A. Gran, vice president and general manager.' • ! Kaleta joined DBjVI eight years ago, and has been due! inspector of the division. MS; THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965 A set of proposed regulations for new subdivision develop* fflents in Waterford Township was introduced last night fof consideration of the Township Board. Hie only major physical requirements included in die regulations call for concrete curb and gutter and sidewalks in future developments. Drafted by die township’s planning consultants in conjunction with die' planning department, the subdivision regulations have been recommended by the plannjng Commission for adoption by the Township Board. . " Vera Wiggins, acting planning director for the township, said the township previously has been guided in subdivision regulations by minimum specifications provided by the comity. ★ Sr ■ * \ ■ Board action on the proposed regulations being adopted as an ordinance is slated, in a few Weeks. | In other business last night A NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Account Number 5193,102-2 Nolle* Is Hereby Given by the under-slgnsdthet ion January 22, 1955 at 10:00 O'clock a.m„ at 92 Baldwin, Pontiac, Michigan public able of a 1959 Mercury 2-Door Hardtop Stoyllnder bearing serial number P9WA 540 575 will be held, for cash to the highest bidder, inspection thereof may be made ' at 92 Baldwin, gontlac, Michigan, the place of storage, undersigned reserves th« right to January 0, 1955 By A. R. LaPLANTE January 19, and 20, 1955 \PUBLIC AUCTION On January 22, 1955 at 9:45 a.m. at Paddock and\Aubum, Pontiac, Michigan, a 1952 Pontiac, Serial No. 052P13105, will be sold at Public Auction for cash to highest bidder. \Car may be inspected uary 19 and 20, 1953 Block, Crushed, Cube ICE 24 HOURS A DAY DETROIT CITY ICE PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER Open Evenings Til 0<30 PM 582-1113 MPnWDRK? CALI. FOR FROM MANPOWER THE VERY BEST IN TEMPORARY HELP A 1338 Wide Track Drive W. 332-8386 the board authorized the hiring of two clerks for the supervisor’s office. •"' , ' v INCREASED LOAD A need for added personnel resulted from the new State Tax Commission regulations which have increased tiie work load. Board members were receptive to a request from a Boy Scout troop for use of township property as a camp site but deferred approval pending a study 6£; liability factors. Troop 67, associated with Four Towns Methodist Church, had asked to use c 32 acre parcel at Cooley Lake Road and Lochaven which has been deeded to the township as a wildlife sanctuary. The board asked that Township Supervisor James E. See-terlin and Township Attorney Paul Mandel explore the legal aspects of granting the scouts’ request and then report their findings. 1 ★ ★ ★ Also last night Seeterlin read a letter from the Oakland County Road Commission stating that a speed limit of 35 miles per hour had been established on North Cass Lake Road and that new sips had been posted. Another letter, this one from Supt. of Schools Don O. Tatroe, invited board members to attend an all-day program in Flint Feb. 3 as pests of the Mott Foundation. A tour of the Flint schools is planned. , Seeterlin proclaimed the Week of Jan. 17-23 as Junior Chamber of Commerce Week in honor of the accomplishments of the Jaycees. © Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MRS.WILLIAMG. burder Service for Mrs. William G. (Add E.) Binder, 61, of 147 S. Tilden will be at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Independence Township. - Mrs. Burder, a member of the Episcopal . Church, died from injuries received in an automobile accident yesterday. Surviving are her husband; her fatb#,r William Thompson of Alma;/ two sons, William ft and John, both of Pontiac; and four pandchildren. Also surviving are four sisters, Mrs, Dorothy Johnson of Lake Charles, La., and Mrs. Irene Whitaker, Mrs. Elizabeth Beach and Nfrs. Winnie Bergen, ail of Pontiac; land three brothers, George, Jack and Robert Thompson, all of Pontiac, WILLIAM H. DAWSON Service for William H. Dawson, 71, of 100 Oak Hill will be at 2:30 p.m. Thursday at Voorhees-Siple Chape 1 with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Dawson, a retired real estate salesman for Floyd Kent Realtors, Inc., died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving besides his wife, Iva, are a soil, Lloyd J. of Prairie Village, Kan.; a daughter, Mrs. Vernon Rains of Davlsburg; four pandchildren; and a brother. Faces Exam in Auto Death Waterford Man Gets Manslaughter Charge A Waterford Township man, charged yesterday with manslaughter in connection with a fatal accident Sunday, faces a preliminary examination on the charge Jan. 27 in Justice Court. Raymond C. Tick, 29, of 5175 Cass-Elizabeth was arraigned yesterday at Pontiac General Hospital where he is recovering from injuries suffered in the accident. He stood mute, and Waterford Justice Patrick K. Daly set bond at 65,006. Tick will be taken to the Oakland County jail when he is released from the hospital. Ada Burder, 61, of 147 S. Tilden was killed when the car in which she was a passenger and Tick’s car collided on M59 southeast of Elizabeth Lake Road. Mrs. Burder’s husband, William G., who was driving the car, suffered facial lacerations and is reported in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General. Beauty Salon Week LANSING (AP)-Gov. George Romney has proclaimed Feb. 14-20 as Beauty Salon Week in Michigan, saluting hairdressers and cosmetologists who “express their talents by helping others stay 'well-groomed.’’ Sincere, Thoughtful Service for 36 Years Outstanding in Pontiac for Service and Facilities 46 Williams St. FE 2r5841 . DANIEL GOROM Service for Daniel Gorom, 85, of 201 Chippewa will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Sparks-Grif-fin Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Gorom, a retired employe of Consumers Power Co., died yesterday after a brief illness. He was a member of Central Methodist Church, Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth; a daughter, Mrs. George Barrow of Marion, Ohio; and a grandson. MRS. WILBUR POWELL Service for Mrs. Wilbur (Ar-dith A.) Powell, 54, of 40 Mariva will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home With burigl in the Cforawell Cemetery, Sanilac County., ' y Mrs. Powell died Sunday after a brief illness. ;„ -Surviving besides her husband are three sons, Harold Da^is of Wichita, Kan., Ronald Davis.of Torrence, Calif., and -Robert Powell of Pontiac; and a daughter; Mrs. William Greweli of Terrence. * Also surviving are a brother, Carl Cronk of Applegate, and three sisters, Mrs. Foster Cutler of Applegate, Mrs. Frank Lynch of Jackson and Mrs. Charles Moore of Pontiac. MRS. JOSEPH J. ROACH Service" for Mrs. Joseph J. (Nellie R.) Roach, 73, of 771 Stirling will be at 1 p.m. Thursday in the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Roach, a member of the Oakland Park Methodist Church died yesterday after a long illness. ..........i---~ —‘:: Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Allen Sowden of Pontiac; a son, William of Pontiac; four, grandchildren; and seven greatgrandchildren. JESUS VALENCIA Requiem Mass will be offered for Jesus Valencia, 69, of 161% S. Saginaw at 10 a.m. Friday in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. Mr. Valencia, a member of St. Vincent de Paul Church, died Thursday. He had been an employe of Grand Trunk Western Railroad. Surviving sure two sisters and two brothers. LAURA D’ONOFRIO TROY — Blessing for Laura D’Onofrio, baby daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adelmo D’Onofrio of 1835 McManus, will be 11 a. m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Union Corners Cemetery. . The baby was born dead on Sunday. *• Surviving besides tier parents are four brothers, Vance, Adam, Anthbny and Phillip) all at home; and" her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Tony Orsini of Detroit and Vance D’Onofrio. of Quindoli, Italy. ' Junior Editors Quiz on* THE GORDIAN KNOT QUESTION: What is meant by “cutting the Gordian , knot?” ANSWER: This saying came from an old legend about Gordius, king of Phrygia in Asia Minor. Some peoples, long ago, believed in oracles, or places where communications from the. gods were supposed to originate. An oracle at Phrygia had advised that the first person who rode to the temple in a cart be selected as king. When the peasant Gordius appeared in his ox cart, he was. acclaimed as ruler. In gratitude, Gordius dedicated his ox cart to the temple. The oracle spoke again, predicting thgt whoever might until the complicated knot connecting the ox yoke to the shaft would become king of all Asia. Then along came bold, ambitious prince Alexander, from Macedonia, one of the Greek city states. In 334 B.C., he.had set out With his armies in an attempt to conquer the world. Hearing about the legend of the Gordian knot, Alexander journeyed to the Phrygian temple. Instead of trying to untie the knot, the young prince drew his sword and sliced it through. Ever Since, cutting the Gordian knot has meant finding an unexpectedly' simple solution to a tangled complicated situation. FOR YOU TO DO: Alexander cut the knot-but did the orde’s words come true? Look up Alexander the Great in an encyclopedia and read the amazing story of his 10-year march of conquest and the empire which resulted from It. Wondering how to invest- Wondaring how to invast — lor bestir Incom* — or to give your inved dollars a chaneg to grow? Learn what Investment Trusts may do (or you. /’/lone or ifrltp Today, 818 Community National Bank Bldg., . Pontiac, Michigan FE 2-9117 WALTER J. DURHAM JR. FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP-Service for Walter J. Durham Jr., 45, of 21507 Oxford will he 2 p.nl. Thursday at the Chapel of the Thayer Funeral Home, Farmington. Burial will follow in Bell Branch Cemetery, Red-ford Township. \ Mr. Durham died yesterday following a heart attack. V ' He owned the W. J. Durham Co. service station in Redford Yowhshipr^ — He was a member of the the present whereabouts of the father ' 'Sr ot saki minor child are unknown and said child: hot. violated a law ot ,th* state and that said child should be placed under the lurlsdlctlon of this Court. In the name of the people of the State of Michigan. You are hereby notified, ■that the hearing on said petition will be held at the Court House, Oakland County Servlcetentar, In the City of Pontiac In said County, on the 20th day of January A.D. 1955, at nine o'clock In th« forenoon, and you are hereby commanded to appear: personally at said hearing. It being impractical to make personal service hereof, this summons ana notice shall be served by publication of a copy one week previous to said hearing In The Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed and circulated In said. County. : Witness, the Honorable Norman R. Barnard, Judge of said Court, In the City of Pontiac in said County, this. 15th day ot Jenuary A.D. 1955. - I * . 4 (Seal) NORMAN R. BARNARD (A true copy) Judge of Probate DELPHA A. BOUGINE Deputy Probate Register Juvenile Division ' . January 19, 1955 Clarenceville Methodist Church and the Clarenceville Optimist Club. Surviving are his wife, Ernestine; a daughter, Cheryl at home; and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Durham Sr., of Farmington, . MRS. ASBERRY GOAD AVON TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs, Asberry (Delcie) Goati, 61, of 2501 Gerald will be 1 p. m, tomorrow at the Auburn Road Church of Nazarene. In-terment will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Goad died Saturday after a long illness. Her body will be at the William" R. Potere Funeral Home. Rochester, until 11 a. m. tomorrow. Surviving, are three sons, James L. of Brownburg, Ind., Lloyd of Rochester and Charles of Pontiac: three daughters. Mrs. JuneU King and Mrs. Helen Brewer, both of Lake Orion, and Mrs. Marjorie Lawrence of Rochester. Also four sisters, Mrs. Juanita Ellis of Florida, Mrs. Ear-leen Bertram of Pontiac, Mrs. Kathleen Simms of Tennessee and Mrs. Delia Stewart of Maryland; her mother, Mrs. Andrew Davidson of Elgin, Tenn.; four brothers; and 13 grandchildren. ’* NELSON JOHNSON ORCHARD LAKE - Service for Nelson Johnson, 88, of 4260 Forbush will be 1:30 p.m, Thursday at Love Funeral Home, Bancroft. Burial will follow in Sanford Cemetery,. Livingston County. , Mr. Johnson died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are a son, Don W. of Flint; three daughters, Mrs. Isabell Bennett of Bancroft and Mrs. Irma Shivlie and Mrs. Wilhelmnina Ver Strate, both of Pontiac; at least 17 grandchildren; 23 great-grandchildren; and 13 • great-great-grandchildren. MRS. JAY LOOMIS OXFORD — Service for Mrs. Jay (Nellie) Loomis, 73, of 42 Park will be 2 p. m. Friday at Flumerfelt Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Oakwood. Mrs. Loomis died today after an illness of one year. She was a past matron of Oxford Chapter No. 266, Order of the Eastern Star, and a member of Pontiac Shrine No. 22, White Shrine of Jerusalem, and the Extension Club, Oxford. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Carroll of Oxford, and a brother. JOSEPH L. PRICE TROY—Service for Joseph L. Price, 44, of 3040 Frankton will he 1:30 p. m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. A design engineer with Excello Corp., Highland Park, Mr. Price died yesterday following a heart attack. * He was a member of Local No. 49; United Auto Workers, Detroit. Surviving are his wife, Ruth; a son, Joseph L, Jr. at home; his mother, Mrs. William Looper of Los Angeles, Calif.; and two brothers. WILLIAM H. STONER LAKE ORION - Service for William H. Stoner, 73, of 339 Atwater will |>e 2 p.m. tomorrow at Allen’s Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. A retired Pontiac Motor Division employe, Mr. Stoner died 'Sunday after a brief illness. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Donald Fuch of St. Petersburg, Flo.; two sons, Everetc C. of St. Petersburg and Our-ward of Royal Oak; three sisters; eight grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren. STAYS OR MICHIGAN—In the Probate Court for the County of Oakland, Juvonlio Division. In the matter of the petition concerning John Wood, Minor. Caul# No. 10505. To Herichei Wood, lather ot teld minor oraa. . Petition having b«*n Iliad In Ihli Court alleging that urn child comet within the provision* ol Chapter 7I2A of the Com. piled Laws ol 1941 at amended, In that I in Kii f i M i ASHER, JANUARY 15, 1955, ANNA E., 3285 Oakrldge, Highland Twp.) age 50; beloved wife ot Gerald Asher; dear mother of lames Asher, Mrs. Raymond Cooper, Mrs. Rosemary Russell and Mrs, Donald Barron; dear sister of Mrs. Mae Ryden and Mrs. Robert Connolly; also survived by IS grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, January 19 at 3 p.m. at the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with Rev. James Whitehead officiating. Interment in Highland Cemetery. _________________ BURDER, JANUARY 18, 1955, ADA E., 147 $. Tilden St.; age 51; beloved wife of William G. Burder; beloved daughter of William Thompson; dear mother of William H. Burder and John (Ted) Burder; dear sister of Mrs, Irene Whit-maker, Mrs. Elizabeth Beach; Mrs. Winnie Bergen, Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, George, Jack and Robert Thompson. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 21 at 1:30 p.m. at the Sparks-Grlffln Funeral Home. Interment In Ottawa Park Cemetery. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to:9 p.rry.) CHESNEY, JANUARY 18, 1955, MARY E., 3057 .Lincolnshire, Auburn Heights; age 57; beloved wife of Albert Chesney; dear moth5r . of Mrs. Ernest Perlso and James Chesney, dear sister of William, John and Henry Fleming; also survived by seven grandchildren. Prayer service will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, followed by another service at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Baptist : Church, Flllon, Michigan. Internment In Port Austin, Michigan. Mrs. Chesney will lie In state at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. ___________' DAVIDSON, JANUARY * 15, 1955, JOSEPH B„ 2980 Buckingham, Berkley; age 51; beloved husband of Tina bavlrlson; beloved son of ‘Mrs. Sarah B. Osklns; dear father of Cheryl Lynn and Karla Rae Davidson; dear brother of Mrs. Bernice Hutchinson ,and George and John Davidson. ' Funeral service will be today at 1 p.m. at the Sawyer Funeral' Home, 2125 12 Mile,. Road, Berkley, with Dr. Arthur Leach officiating. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. DAWSON, JANUARY 18, 1955, WILLIAM H., 100 Oak Hill; , age 71; beloved husband of Iva Jackson Dawson; dear father of Lloyd J. Dawson and' Mrs. Vernon Rains; dear brother of Ora Dawson; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 21 ef^:3ff p.m. at Voorhees-Siple Chapel with Rev. Harold H.. Johnson of Davlsburg Methodist Church officiating. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Dawson will lid In state at tl)e voorhees - Slots Funeral Home. ISuqgested visiting hours 3” to- 5 b.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.) DURHAM, JANUARY 10, 1955, WALTER JAMES JR., 21507 Oxford, Farmington; age 45; beloved hue-band of Ernestine Durham; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter James Durham Sr.; dear father of Cheryl Durham. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 21 at 2 p.m. at the Chapel of Thayer* Funeral Home, 33503 Grand River, Farmington. Interment In Bell Branch Cemetery. Mr.. Durham will lie In state at the Chapel of the Theyer Funeral H6me, (Suggested vlrltlng hours 1 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m.! EDWARDS, JANUARY 15, 1955, OR-. VIL, 3012 Grange Hall Rd., Brandon Township; age 48; beloved husband ot Lois N. Edwards; dear father ot Mrs. Denny H. (Jero-mey) Cole and Robert Edwards; dear brother ot Mrs. Clltord B. LaFaber, Mrs. Edmond Cox, Clabe, Claud and Raymond Edwards; alSb survived by six grandchildren. Funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday, January 20 at the Donelson-Johns Funerat Home.' Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Suggested visiting hours 31 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.__________________________ GOROM, JANUARY 18, 1955, DANIEL, 201 Chippewa Road; age 05; beloved husband of Elizabeth Gorom; dear tether of Mrs. George Barrow; also survived by one grandson. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 20 at 1:30 p.m. at Sparks-Grlffln Funeral Home. Interment In Perry Mount Park Cemetery (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. end 7 to 9 p.m.) HOPKINS, JANUARY 17, 1955, CALVIN, 53053 Pontiac Trail, Wlxom; age 25; beloved foster ton of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Westarvelt; dear grandson of Mrs. Bsulah Pickett; dear brother of Mrs. Marvin Watnltz, Mrs. Carl Scharf, and Barry Westarvelt. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 20, at 1 p.m. at the Wlxom Baptist Church with Rev. Robert Warren officiating. Interment In Wlxom....Cemetery. Mr. Hopkins will lie In state at the Rlchard-soh-BIrd Funeral Home, Walled Lake until i2 noon Wednesday, at which time he will be taken to the church to lie In state until time of service. PIPER, JANUARY 17, 1955, EVA N. (KERR), 7992 Flagstaff, Union Lake; age 83; dear mother of Prank Karr, dear sister of Lucille Henlron; dear grandmother of Frank Kerr Jr. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 20, at 2 p.m. at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union 'Lake. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. POWELL, JANUARY 17, 1955, AR-. DITH A., 40 Mariva St.i age 14; beloved wife ol Wilbur Powell) dear mother of Mrs. William (Marlene) Greweli, Harold, Ronald and Hobart Powell; dear sister of Mrs. Prank (Alzla) Lynch, Mrs. Charles (Apple) Moore, Mrs. Poster (Blanche) Cutler and Carlo Cronk. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 20 at 10 a.m. at the Purslay Funeral Home. Interment In Croswall Cemetery, Sanilac County. Mrs. Powell will lie In state at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home attar 5 p.m. this evening. ROACH, JANUARY ii, 1955, NIC-LIE R„ 771 Stirling St.I age 73; dear mother ol Mrs. Allan Sowden and William Roach; also survived by lour grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. - Funeral vl Olsen, 544-3057. Anderson Tonk & Mfg. Co. 3702 N. ObRT HWY. » FLINT, AAICH. AWilfANT Co6k An6 AMiffAfrY salad lady to work In a cafeteria, excellent pay, vacations, Blue Cross and Christmas bonus. Writs to box 79 and stst* your expert-ante, eg* end phone number, ATTENTION, MENI Needed at once, 3 men fur part time work, ISO a week, fringe benefit*. Cell Mr. BekSr, OR 3 0972 4 e.m. to 5 p.f BOY FOR WORK IN LAUNDRY department. Must be II years of age. No experience necessary. Apply ,fo Mr. Kopak. Pontiac Laun-dry. 548 5. Telegraph. , - - lilBSIWbr Alrt'&NRAWRT ■ LATHE OPERATORS Bxporlenctd men, Over time. Top wages, vecetlon, fully paid Ilf* ana hospital Insuranca. Paid holidays. Clyds Engineering Div„ Tru Tork Inc., 1700 W. Maple Rd.< Troy. 545*8333. Help Wanted Mate role*, Rochester. Bored With Your Job? Men Interested Ifrjt rew fredo can have Aid oppdrfunlty te earn 890 to 8120 per week while learning. Can FE 541T5*ar Interview appointment. ________________ CAB OfrtVBRO - FULL OR P*A+ Hire - FE 2-8205.______________ CAREER OPPORTUNlfY 2 EXPERIENCED MEN FOR AUTO-mobile clean-up shop. FE 5-8767. 2 EXPERIENCED AUTO RE-conditioning men wanted for underhood cleaning, painting, interior cleaning, and wheeling. Year , around steady work. Top wages, benefits. Apply John McAullife Ford, 630 Oakland, Pontiac, Mich. See Tom Norton. AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE SET-UP AND OPERATE. See Mr. Kruoa. 355 S. Blvd. E. XMlifiaUf marriE6“ MAR -fO train as sales and service repre-ftentatlve. Must be neat and of good character. Salary plus commission, paid vacation, company benefits, and company car. Opportunity for promotion. No exparl-ence necessary, we will train. Apply 9 a.m. Singer Co., Pontiac Malt. ARC WELDERS Experienced, needed on first and second shift. $2.68 per hour, top rntft. Contact Joe Davis In plant between 8:30 and 5 p.m. \ OUTSTANDING high Incomes *oF \ aggressive salesmen interested in \ permanent successful selling ca-\ reer In the land field open to rapid advancement. SALES background In home improvement, books, cookware. Insurance or mutual helpful but not necessary. _ .____ COMPANY PROVIDES LEADS, good commissions, finest solos tools, complete training and many fringe benefits. CAR WASHERS,- FULL OR PART time. 149 W. Huron. “chKker DRAFTSMAN TECHNICIAN Hloh school oraduate wHb mechanical inclinations and some experience for development tests of hydraulic and pneumdtic valves. M. C. MFG. CO. 118 Indl-nwoed rd.. Lake Orion An Equal Opportunity Employer CHANGING JOBS! Could this be you? Married, under 58. good work word, not pnoooh p-v. stymied with no future In e*mlngs? I run tench vmi to e*rn *7 ono UP annually. Phone OB 3-8555 tor appointment. CHILDREN'S SUPERVISOR 64,500 - $5,400 M»n needed to supervise the In- stitutional activities of children end ' luVenttes. Require Individual with excellent personal habits. Who possesses the ability to counsel, control, and Instruct children- Applicant must be over 25 veers of age and be able to stand a rigid background Investigation, High school graduation required, plus some experience In supervising lu-venlle activities. Applicants must * be available to work any shift. APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE, OAKLAND COUNTY COURT HOUSE, 1288 N. TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC. ’ CITY OF PONTIAC SEWAGE PLANT OPERATORS—:— Salary $5884 to 87,059 Qualifications: High school or trad* school graduate, experience with heavy duty pumps and other machine operations. Apply, by Toad-day, Jan. 19, 5 p.m. Personnel Office, 450 Wide Track Or. E. CIVIL ENGINEER I CITY OF TROY Graduate civil engineer or several years experience In civil engineering work. Knowledge of Sewer and water design end Inspection. 15,-200 - *7,188. Contact City Managers office, 50 w. Wattles Rd., Troy, Mich. MU 9-1155. cuRB BOYs; Gays, sUPer chief Telegraph end Dixie. DISHWASHER AND BUS BOY FOP night shift. Must be 18 or ovei Apply ot Big Boy Drlve-ln, Tela graph at Huron. DEPENDABLE ^IN JUMPER ON DELIVERY AND STOCK-B6Y, REF‘ erences, over 21 yeer* of oto>' good pay, Sharmen Prescriptions, 547-4908. DRAFTSMAN WITH M EC H A tf I C A L BLUB PRINT READING EXPERIENCE ARTC0 INC. 3020 INDIANWOOD ROAD LAKE ORION MY 2-2531 DRAFTSMAN FOR DETAILING and funlor layout Work on , conveyors end special machines. Must be willing to travel at completion of training program. Call anytime. 582-2534. DRIVER SALESMAN Must live In Pontiac or closo vicinity, married, ages 22-50 to deliver to our regular customer, panajed truck furnished you keep It at home, all expenses paid, GAWEL AT SAVOY MOTEL-128 S. TELEGRAPH-PONTIAC, TUES-PAY JAN. 19. 4-8 p.m. drTvH for Established route, over 21. Collins Cleaners, 550 Woodward Street, Rochester. OL 2-2851. ELECTROLUX Will hire 2 men for' sales department. Apply' 2397 Elizabeth Lake Rd., 9 to li e a.m . ENGINEERING AIDES £ CITY OF TROY High school grads with 2 years experience In surveying or municipal construction Inspection. Must have knowledge of surveying equipment end modern method* of public work* construction »nd maintenance. 52.25-12.78 per hour. Contact City Manager's office, 50 W. Wattle* Rd., Troy, Mfeh., MU EXPERIENCED BRAKE AND wheel alignment mechanic, oxc. salary plus commission, frte Insurance and hospitalisation plans as well as other benefits. Steady year round employment with opportunity for advancement. Call Jack Rehm at FE 2-0)21 lor appointment or apply b. F. Goodrich Co., Ill N. Perry. EXPERIENCED WOOL PRESSER, steady. Apply Walkers Cleaners, Lake Orion. EXPERIENCED 80DYMAN, MUST have own hand tool*. Helper also needed, one willing to work snd learn trade. Apply 575 5. Saginaw. EXPERIENCED MECHANICS Must have own tools, guarantee plus commission. Plenty of work, 3W-day week. Standard Engine Rebuilders 595 Auburn Rd._ Ponllec EXPERIENCED SAW maM FOR large volume meat market. Only top experienced men need apply. Good wages and fringe benefit*. Call John Kozar, FE 2-1108. EXPERIENCED MitHANlt WITH own hand tools, guaranteed steady work, flat rate 15 per hour. Modern facilities to wbrk with. Superior Rambler, 550 Oakland Ave. ExFe~rTencMd MECHANICS WITH own hand tools. Fltt rate of 15.00 per hour plus benefits. Lot* ol work. Superior Rambler, FE 5-9421. fXPfiifKflb...Tru6k..0KtVth and warehouseman, references, 97 N. Cass, Pontiac. ___________ full Tim! rTXl iTTSTi BAlesman. Phone* Fey O'Neil * for Interview. OF 4 0427. (ROfAfIGN "AfflNBAHtTOlT be experienced, steady work, good pay. Sunoco station, Telegraph at Maple Road. 1 HANDY MAN~¥6W~M6f¥C~dEn eral maintenance. Call Ml 5-1841. JOB LOOKING FOR MAN CALL MR. BARBER 646-4873 -9 A.M^to J2 Noon job‘™6pIR Pol WltH lanltorla! experience, age 28*48, 332-1283. LAuMbliV ANb BEV rtlAMmo route man, 13 years of age or older. Married. High School education. Pontiac Laundry Co., 540 I. Telegraphy Management trainee 7 Pontiac Area Train * months to 1 year learning si2,ooo-*i5,ooo e year lob. lam $125-1179 while training, Far per* sonel Intervlaw phone Mr. FreMl, 547-273*. JWH •pSrBWKPWWOCIYi —Apply Mein Cleeneto->44|0 Blue* bethLekf Rd- j. ■ m* Ipi*6* ' IHlPPfMOWbnre: calving department. Make application by letter In your awn handwriting iietlng age, hatoN, end weighf, education, experience, and wages received to Mr. Dsvis, Poet office Box 232, Ponllee, Mleh, . ohm 'Y6 SALESMAN, EXPERIENCED IN kitchen design with local bullden following to sell Nutone "wood carv" cabinets, and related builder Items. Salary,: commission. penses and pension program. Call Mr. Walts, Standard ^Metric Co. FE 2-9241. SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT must have local references, mechanically Inclined and over 25 years old. Apply Dick Griffin Service Station, 5999 Anderaonvlile Rd., Waterford. OR >9951. » SENIOR CITIZEN OR RETIRED man to drive and light maintenance duties, no heavy work, 30 hr. week, tee Orugs, 4390 Dixie Hwy.OR 4-0444. ________ SHORT ORDER COOK; MUST HAVE breakfast experience, epp'y at Big Boy Drive-In, Telegraph and Hur- Shipping * AND Receiving ASSISTANT MANAGER Previous Experience . Ability to Supervise ___........ 1 Excellent Opportunity .. .: .. , Many Company Benefits APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT Wanted, some experience necessary, must be 25 or older, married, high school education, sales minded, good starting salary, company benefits available, contact Bob Cloln by calling Ml 4-97)3._________ SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT. Good pay for the right man. 529 S H I P P I N G AND RECEIVING clerk, experienced, 4129 Highland Road. OR 3-1254. , ■ SALESMEN! TODAY MAY BETHE DAY If you are presently ,lri the sales field arm are bringing home' LESS than $200 per week, you will find what We have to otter will be very attractive to you. NO OVERNIGHT TRAVEL NO CANVASSING NO DELIVERY Just good old fashion sailing and plenty of pay. Contact: MR. JORDAN, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, 9 TO 5 AT 250 S. Telegraph, Pontiac, Mich. Help Wanted Mall WANTED t UPHOLSTERER, CUT-Mr, trimmer. Must be experienced. Call FE 4-0550 tor Interview. WANTED tool And Dir MAKERS . Must Be Journeymen • long Program AH Fringe Benefits Schauer Tool & Die Co, 2099 Cole, BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7459 WANTED UPHOLSTERER. EXPERI-ence necessary, reply Pontiac Press Box *105 WANTED—SALESMAN FOR LUAa-bar counter sailing lumbar and modernization. Apply 7940 Cooley Lake Rd., Union Lake YOUNG MAN) MECHANICALLY MINDEO TO LEARN AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE OPERATION. Sea Mr. Krupa, 344 S. Blvd YOUNG MAN INTERESTED IN making a career in the furniture ■ business. Must be healthy, personable, dean cut, and have a desire to meet the public. Inquire et Family .Home Furnishings, 2135 Dixie Hwy at Telegraph_________________ Help Wanted, Female $40 Guaranteed Salary Work, 4 to 9 p.m., 3 evenings week. Car necessary. Call before 12 noon. FE 5-4715 or OL I-1708- AUTOMOBILE UNDERWRITER, must be experienced and good typist. Salary open. Call FE 8-7157. A BEAUTY OPERATOR, DON-NELL'S, 482-0421. The Mall. AN EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY tor- lady with ganeral Insurance ^ experience. Office on outskirts of Pontiac. Free parking. Reply to ' Pontiac Press Box 100. ATTRACTIVE WOMAN WANTED TO work 30 hours * weak In Interest-ing work In.' local haaftta club. Call 334-0520 between 5-7 p.m. ATTENTION LADIES! SARAH Coventry, part time, full time help needed. Earn $30*140 In your free evenings. No investment. No de* livery. Car necessary. Appointment for Interview call FE 5*8051 between 9-7 p.m. / ________ ' AVON'CALLING Help Wanted Famalo BEAUTY OPERATOR Experienced with some following Fashtonette Beauty Salon 252 S. Telegraph CASHIER - DAVEY'S MARKET — Apply In' person — 1002 N. Main, Rochester. ______ CLERK, EXPERIENCED IN ORUG and cosmetics. Personable. References. Ml 4-4333. CHIJ.D . CARE AND HOUSEWORK, vicinity of Drayton Rd. OR 3-2304. CLERK TYPIST High 'school graduate. Ability type tuhlty advancement and five at leading nationwide con- sumer finance organisation. Prat-erece Will be -given to applicants with previous smalt loan experience: Starting salary com-mencerata with previous experience. Personal Interviews 9 a.m.-11 ,m, or by appointment. Universal C-l-t. GrRdft Carp., SS7 W. Huron. 333-7941. CHILD CAiRE AND LIGHT HOUSE-work. Liv»,ln ,'pr-f*tey 3 nights. Ml 4-3381. 85 T Clerk-typist to assist sec- retaries In Birmingham Law Office, starting aalary $45 tor S day week. Send resume P.O. Box 109, Birmingham. COOK — DOWNSTAIRS. EXPERl- 2 adults, 2 children; Must be able to drive. - Other help employed. Live In. Private robm, bath, TV, 2 days off. 2-waek paid vacation. Reference required. S45 weekly. Ceil Mrs. Jeynes, Ml 7-1212, 9:30-4:30 weekdays. COSMETIC OR DRUG CLERKS, previous experience required, ref., good salary. Lea Drugs, , 4390, Dixie Hwy., OR 4-0444. COUNTER GIRL, MINOR SEWING helpful, but not essential, full time, Will train, quality dry cleaning ■ plant, Douglas - Cleaners, 534 $. Woodward, Birmingham,_____________ COUNTER GIRL FOR SMALL counter and grill, steady evening, apply in person, Lakewood Lanes, 3121 W. Huron. CURB WAITRESS, CASHIER, counter and kitchen help. Super -Chief, Telegraph at Dixie. FE 2-4851. CURB GIRLS — , ---------ANO............... WAITRESSES For d4y and night shift. Top wages, free meals, hospitalization, Ufa In* Surance, paid vacation. Apply In parson at the BIG BOY- DRIVE IN, Telegraph and Huron, or Dlx-le Hwy. and Silver Lake Road. DISHWASHER. PRIVATE CAFETE-ria, Mohdays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, 10-3, Fridays 10-4. Reply Press Box 34. ORUG ANO COSMETIC CLERK, afternoons, full or part time. Russ's Country Orugs, 4500 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Women who went to be successful and earn good money in their spare time. Money-back guarantee Makes AVON Cosmetics very much in demand and easy to sell. For Interview phone FE 4-4500 or write P. O. Box 91. Drayton Plains._____ BAKER-COOK Ted's has immediate opening for a combination baker-cook. Full time. Some experience necessary. Training period. Apply In person Only. TED'S WOODWARD at SQUARE LAKE Rd BABY SITTER. WEEKDAYS. LIGHT * housework. Own transportation. FE 5-5449. ' ____________„ BABY SITTER WANTED WITH references. OR 3*6978 after 5 p.m, S.K.Gv E.E.G. TECHNICIAN trainee to work part time. Applicants must be high school graduates and be able to type 45 wpm. Apply In person. Personnel Office^ Pontiac General Hospital. Help Wanted Female SNACK fAR WAITRESS WANTED, evenings. Apply. 100 S.. Cess Lake Road. . ■ SALESWOMAN * For batter tunlor Shop. Experience desirable, good aalary plus com-' mission- NADON'S 21991 S. Telegraph Pontiac SECRETARY J»ORt LAW OFFICE MUST HAVE OFFICE EXPERIENCE, GOOD SHORT HAND ANDl TYPING SKILLS. „....... UTLEY AND KOHN FE 2-9215 TWO PART TIME MEN NEEDED, must like to meet people. Neat ■ and aggressive. For interview call OR 3-2907. -% WAITRESS WANTED. HULL .TIME. Days or nights. No : experience necessary. Apply. In parson. "Rochester Big Boy, 727 N. Main. WAITRESS, DAYS, APPLY IN PER- son. after 7, Huron Bowl ReateiA rant, 2525 Elizabeth Lake Rd. WAITRESS WITH GRILL EXPERi-ence, no Sundays or HoHdays.-Mlhit Lunch, 9 East Pika. WAITRESS NIGHT SHIFT Application are now being taken for our new coffee shop. Top earnings and benefits. Experience preferred. Must-be 18. Apply in person only. TED'S WOODWARD at SQUARE LAKE R‘7002 4784 ALLINGHAM, WHITE LAKE-3-bedrobm ranch, 2-car garage, ne-tural^fireplace; utillty room, swlnn-ming and boeflhg privileges. Gi only—0 down, $49 per month Call collect. KE 7-4400. Galnar Realty. °R«C1.,,Tew°^.8'20’3' *' Sand*r>,:3434 w: Huron, Pontiac 333-7tS7 1 31 W^ST HOWARD OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS LITTLE ACORNS Dropped. Towering oaks grew providing perfect setting tar this work, 5 days, experience. Pontiac 3 ROOMS, QUIET, BACHELOR. Area. 334-9032 afternoon. Eleanor. ------------- “**“ Business SarvtcB new carpeting, pvt. North and, nice, S3Q par week. 332-4374. 15 3 ROOMS, GARaGc -AND UTILI* ties. No drinkers, quiet. 243 Cham- ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-RE- pairing and rewinding. 218 E. Pike, 3 ROOMS AND BATH. S25 A WEEK, phone FE 4-3931. With deposit, FE 5-7932. $9,950 Oratunakinn A Tailoring 17. nDcccAAiinnir Till APiwr AMn APARTMENT FOR MEN NEAR *>!*.J- Br°«dwat,‘ Ql!”1-DRESSMAKING, TAILORING AND p|sher Bogy, FE 2-2009. 3-bedroom ranch home,, "full basement, aluminum siding, birch cupboards, oak floors. Insulation. Ail good quality and workmanship-Built on your lot. We also- have a selection of lots and plans. martin real estate 493-4223 haveri of peoce and^ .happiness. Elizabeth Lake case orto eniey. Fishing end water sports galore. Retiring or starting out, wu'r» sura to Ilia living Tn this homey home. Full basement has racraa- • tlon room, complete with pot bellied coal stove. S7.995 never bought more security, but you must have cash aplenty- _ A./ HAGSTR0M .REALTOR V 4900 W. Huron .. .... on 4-03SS ______Evenlnge call 4S2-043S_ alterations. Mrs. Bodell. FE 4-9053.. -_____ cRuviMr AMD ai TFPATIONC FEMALE MUST BE 21 OR OVER. SEWING AND ALTERATIONS km> MiiHIo Ant ' Clarkston area. MA 5-2293. Income Tax Service Available on the I5lh. Studio Apt. $50 Deposit. OR 3-7445. 19 FOUR ROOMS ANO BATH, CHILD welcome. $30 per week with $50 S5 LONG FORM PREPARED ANO deposit. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave. typed In my home $5. Your home Cell 338-4054. $9,990 $4. Nohe higher except businesses. KITCHENETTE, SUITABLE FOR 1 George Lyle, FE 0-0252. or 2 adults. 473-1040. --—-- ACCURATE,; F R I E N D L Y TAX BESi5^M~APT. S140 PER Rancher on your tot. Lovely 3-bedroom ranch type horne, full basement, birch cupboards, oak floors/FULLY INSULATED- De-, signed for better living. No money down. service. Your home or 2420 N. Perry, KEYS ANO NACKERMAN FE 0-2297, FE 2-3171, ____ EHLERS' BUSINESS SERVfCES 239 Voorhels, o« street parking iarivileaes. mixed area. FE 5-0494. 332-1498 —~—-- * -----—— ------ month. No children, no pets, please. Fontainebleau. Apts. 995 N- Cass Lake Road. FE 8-0092, SLEEPING ROOMS, ' KITCHEN MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD Mixed Area BLOOMFIELD BLVD. 4 large bedrooms.' itvirig room with natural \ fireplace, ' familyroom, breakfast nook. Full basement, 2-car garega.c-%. Newly decorated. 100x200 lot and only $14,500. \ !-,• COZY AND COMFORTABLE S-bedrooms, Permastona" and aluminum siding, large living room and kitchen. Gas heat, garage. Only $8,800. Terms. FE 5-2244 Experienced in alteration department. Apply Fox Dry Cleaners, 719 W. Huron. WOMAN FOR SURVEY- Work. hours a week. Salary plus bonus. Call 67*1700. i WOMAN for-1 COUNTER* CLERK- INCOME TAX *5 UP H&R BLOCK CO. Nation's Largest Tax Service 20 E. Huron St. FE 4-922S Weekdays 9-9, Sat- Sun. 9-5 THREE ROOMS, UTILITIES FUR-nlshed, S25 a week, $25 deposit. 338-1385_ or 330-2918. ____ . TWO-ROOM, PRIVATE BATH T FE 4-7498: ■ _____ EAST BLVO. AREA, lovely home, / bedrooms, 10x28 master bedroom, carpeted living room, full basement, gas heat, -garage, tf,. No money down. 2- and 3-bedroom 950 with 1350 down plus costs. homes. Payments low as 144.18 por h ojju FE' £^n,orm4,lon ca" Mr- H#"'! Mlli«r Rrolty!To W. Huron ' PRl- WORKING PARE NTS—4-DA Y WEEK LONG FORM ITEMIZED IN YOUR housekeeper. Ml 4-3434. home, $5. Phone FE 4-4704. THREE ROOMS, GROUND, 'vste; adults, 334-1458. ■ UPPER 3 ROOMS AND, o(BATH, couple only, garage. FE 5*8232. 28 Edison. ______________ WE TRADE Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG, 53V5 W. HURON FE 4-3830 BY~OWNER: 3 SlOROOM. RANCH In Bloomfield Twp. 2,000 square teet living area, 2-cer attached -*■ x 150 lot. $28,000. FE MODERN 2-BEDROOM HOME, - 4 building site. H. C. NEWINGHAM REALTOR UL 2-3310 »• - MIXED Aft EA *r??A tucker realty_____ EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPERA-tor, full or part time, OR 3*6761 or EM 3*0783. Help Wanted artist for illustration| Moving and trucking drawing and key line work. Part ' or full time. Ml 4-8220, Ext. 5. 22 BIRMINGHAM! EXPERIENCED SEAMSTRESS AND FITTER BLOOD DONORS | URGENTLY NEEDED RH Posilve $ 6.00 AA MOVING Careful, enclosed vans. Ldw rates, free estimates. UL 2-3999 dr 628-3518. WANTED Single middle aged woman for lovely Immaculate 2-room studio apartment. Second floor, close to JUST F1N(SHED. Four-bedroom co-downtpwn Laundry af0 P^Mno toni4) on LaKe Road. Greet (acuities furnished. No_ children,, ar(a for chlldran. Good value. pets or drinker. FE 2-7007. WANTED RELIABLE BLOCK ANO brick layer to put, foundation, blocks and brick for e new home In the Williams Lake area. Write to: Raymond Bruhm, 4472 McGinnis Rd., Holly. Mich. BABY SITTER, LIVE in or out. EM 3-4747. _________ BAR WAITRESS, PART TIME Fisher Body area. FE 4-4274, BARMAID ANO WAITRESS — At>; y in person to Five Spot, 2585 ixle Highway. beauty operator, lxperi-enced preferred. Union Lake. 3943.a ’ ._....Q« uyillVi* flttiWlRiil Aluminum Siding 1-A ALUMINUM SIDING-STORMS FE 5-9545 Vellely OL 1-4423 KAISER XLCQA ALUMINUM SIDING, AWNINGS, GUTTERS, STORM WINDOWS—DOORS, PAT-' I OS, ROOFING. SUPERIOR FE 4-3177. __________________ SHERRIFF-GOSLIN ROOFING SIDING 54 S. Cass Lake 332-5231 Architaeturnl Drawing NEW HOUSE AND REMODELING plans drawn. 363-6508.__ Basement Waterproofing JOHNSTONE WALL REPAIR 335-9994 ______ 493-2997 Batterios KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. Genarators—Regulators—Starters Batteries $5.95 Exchange FE 5-1914 340 Auburn Block Laying Boats-Accessoriei STOP DREAMING Let Us Help You Save B0AT5-M0T0RS-TRAILERS DOCKS Discount prices now in effect Harrington Boat Works Dresimakijng, Tailoring Eavestrougking M&S GUTTER COMPANY Complete eeveitroughlna service. Galvanized or aluminum. Free estimates. 473-4044. Excavating LAKES, PONDS, BOAT -6LIPS Now Is the time to have your beaches, lake bottom or boot slips dug out. We also (fig small Fencing PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5932 Dixie Hwy. . OR 3-4393 Piano Tuning Plastering Service A-l PLASTERING AND REPAIR. Reasonable. George Lee. FE 1*7922. PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. P. Meyers ■ FE 4-8446 PLASTERING, NEW AND REPAiR, wall removal, ceiling lowered. FE 8-2702. Rental Equipment BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANOERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - OWER SAWS 952 Joslyn Open Sun._FE 4-6109 Floor Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW AND old floor sanding. F E 2-5709. JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING, sanding and finishing. 25 years experience. 332-4975. Wallpaper Steamer Floor sender s, polishers, hand sanders, furnace vacuum cleaners. Oakland Fuel 8. Paint, 436 Or* chard Lj$e Ave. FE S*61Sp. Restaurants •M8.A FLOOR SERVICE, GUARAN-teed, immediate service, FE 5*3855, or 673*2937. . G. SNYtfER7~FlOOR LAYING, sanding and finishing. F FE 5*0592, Floor tile Roofer INSTALLATION, FREE ESTI-mates, work guaranteed. 335*1862. NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS. INSURED and guaranteed. Call Tom, 682-6563. ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR General Maintenance 662-6440 Furnace Repair "YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER" 1099 5. Telegraph 332-0033 Building Modernization 2-CAR GARAGE. 1099 Alum, windows, doors, siding, ADDITIONS GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates OR 4-1511 'CARPENTRY ANO REPAIR WORK * OL 1-0255 Carpentry CARPENTRY, NEW ANO REPAIR. Free animates. 335-9901 (HYiMlAI.F IN 'ITfl,''klfdMHWf, paneling, 40 years experience. ~ FE 2-1235, KlfCf^itJ CABINEfS,nR¥M65Fl ing, recreetlon rooms. Terms. Free estimates. References. Call after __p.m. 693-6482. ___________ Cement Work Home Improvement Home Improvements Porches, additions, steps, general remodeling and c a merit work. Guinn Construction Co, FE 5-9122 Snow Removal ____ _____ ... _____ BE work, fireplace wood. FE |lt20S. Tree trimming Service K. FEISTAMMEL ENGINEERING Co. Roofing, shoal metal. Sanitation OA 8-3155. 92 S. Washington, Ox-lord. WIEDMAN CONSTRUCTION, C&M-plait servlet. Free asllmatas. FE 5-7944, day or night A. E. DALBY TREE SERVICE Tret, stump removal, trim, trans planting. FE 5-3003, FE 5-3025. f'RBE'TRrMMTNG AND REMOVAL - Low rates. 334-0044. Trucking Houie Moving HOUSES FOR SALE TO BE MOVED — Ail modern, delivered to your lot. D'hondt Wrecking Company. 919 Joslyn.___ Janitorial Service Cement Work Licensed cement contractor. FE 5-9122 CBMiNT WOltK, RlASONABLi” Free estimates. OR 3-4440 altar 4. . CoHlflflTi'1i®jpft'i7l0c""'SSuABE II. PK 4-2074, OR 3-9217. kCS<5Hl"AND"MlViwAYS,‘W6#k that cannot be bee*, City And stale llcansad. Bari Commies, pi 1-0243. Lumber TALBOTT LUMBER Glass Installed In doors and windows. Complata building sarvlca. 1025 Oakland Ava. FE 4-4595 HAULING ANO RUBBISH NAME your price. AnV tlma^ 0 J S-0095. LIGHT AND~1hEAVY (RUCRTUg rubbish, fill dirt, grading and tfrav-al and Ironl-and loading. F E 2D403. LIGHT HAULING, OAAAlBf~AKTD basements cleaned. 474-1242, TruckRental Trucks to Rent Chimnoy Cleaning CHIMNBV AND FIREPLACE, cleaning, red-leading and leroamna, All* chimney repair. Raaeontble ratal, 2)5-2348. Moving ana Storage SMITH MOVING Painting and Dacorating LI INTERIOR ANP EXTERIOR painting; tree asllmatas, work jjuaranfeed. Reasonable ratal. 412- ■ tag, 24 yfari axp, ftaai. Erea •*• tlmates. Ph. UL 2-1)91. W-Ton pickups IW-Ton Slake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trellers Pontiac Farm and * 1 Industrial Tractor Co. 025 S. WOODWARO FE 4-0441 . FE. 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday EXPERIENCED GIRL, 25 TO 50, general housework, no laundry, live In, new home, pleasant surroundings, excellent salary. MA 4-9382. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, SPLIT shltl. Apply 125 N. Parry._ EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, AP-. ply Court House Snack Bar. EXECUTIVE'S- HOME FOR Elf. perienced woman. 25-50. Fulltime. Housework and laundry. School-aged children. Sleep In or go. Good salary. FE 2-8393.________ EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPERATOR Full or part time who i$ Interested in earning more than the average wages. All new equipment. In Drayton Plains. Call 673*0712 for interview or 673-6521 after 5:30 p.m. __________________ FREE H O U R OF BEAUTY FOR all )ob applicants. Look your best , for that important step in your life. No obligation. Call tor appointment. Phone,No. FE 2-4010. FULL OR PAAT TIM# TO DEM-onstrate and sell Mary King cosmetic*. FE‘2-3053 8-11 and 3*5. RH Neg. $7.00, $10.00 8. $12 DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE In Pontiac FE 4-9947 1342 Wide Track Dr., W. Mon. thru Frl. 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Wed., 1 p.m.-7 p.m. DUE TO PROMOTION WATKINS Route available $2.50 per hour to start. FE 2-3053, 8*11 and 3-5. Apartments, U.ifurnished 38 in 4 ROOMS AND BATH UPPER, 1 LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING, * //h// week. cheap. Any kind. FE *9393.— _ [ utilities 'furnished. 2332 Fordham, Painting & Decorating 231 Keego Herbor. 402143s.------- HAIR STYLIST, GOOD OPPORTU- ]..ROOMS, WEST SIDE, ADULTS A-l PAINTING AND ' oty- FB Liyi,----------------- PAPER HANGING CLARKSTON - 1-75 AREA THOMPSON FE 4-8344 2-bedroom epertmenls, reedy for lm- hitv Experienced ^Jo^Mers Beeulv i A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR,: medl.te occupancy. No pels, no Studio ^1441 V I PAperlng. FE 8-0343.____________I -----—- Manpower Employees Interior. exlerlS. reesenable I Unfurnished * bedrMm, ground Mey pick up 1944 jntome lex! ! waVter. TroilhSt.' sT pe^wert! FE 2-9142. $38,950. HOUSE for the small family surrounded by larger homes near Forest Lake Country Club and Franklin Road. Paneled recreation room with fireplace in basement, Florida room, fruit trees and maples, ideal country close by. Only — $22,500. 334*0700 MODEL 3 bedrooms and full basement, $12,900 on your lot. Zeller's Real Estate "Custom Bulldori" 2040 S; Rochester Rd. 01 1-0221 WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE 290 S. Woodward, Birmingham 444-4300 PHONES Mixed Neighborhood 544-2323 No down payment No mortgage cost First month tree Payments like rent form W-2 el this office on or PAINTING PAPERING. WALL WASHING, MINOR REPAIRS. - .Da—JK! OCD 1 REASONABLE PR.CES FE 5-2402. ONE BEORpOM APJT $125 PER h;ryr■:jr.rrx-r^TrT~rsap~\7aii Month. No children, no pets, PAINTING AND ^APERING. YOU( please. Fontainebleau Apts. 995 are next. Orvel Gidcumb, 673-0496.1 N Cas$ Lak0 Roa<|. pg $.3092. WALL ~orchAR6 COURT MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL WANTcD—MEDICAL TcCMNULO-. gist, registered or eligible thereto, senior in charge of 2 others, general laboratory work in well-equipped approved 75-bed general hospital, 30 miles from Grand Rap* I ids, serving pleasant cities of 5,000 and . 7,500 population. Up-to-date personnel policies <*.io fringe oen?-fits. Starting income to $/,200 per year.. Contact Adm., United Memorial Hospital, Greenville, Mich. Phone collect PL 4-4©9. days, or PL 4-5887 evenings. PAINTING, PAPERING, washing. Tupper. OR 3*7061. QUALITY WORK ASSURED, PAINT-Ing, oapering, wall washing. 673* 2872 or 682-4181. Telemiqn-Radio Service 24 Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A HAVE YOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP Adults Only FE 84911 BEST BUY This Is why. 87x130* site. Paved street, close to shopping center, 3 bedrooms, ivy baths, built-in vanity. Knotty Pine kitchen, large utility, underfloor oil llred heat- kennel. Fenced rear year, $350 could movt you In. S49.03 month plus taxes end Insurance. HAGSTROM REALTOR, 4900 W. Huron, OR 4-0358, evenings cell MODELS OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-5 ANO SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY 472 Irwin oft East Blvd. FE 8-2743 afternoons, LI 2-4477 Evas. FIRST IN VALUE tfEW 3-BEDROOM, BATH AtID A halt, Wattrford Township. OR 3-7440. 482-0435. (VA SALES BROKER.) WOBTHERN HIGH AREA LAROf Rent Houses, Furnished 39 > 2-BEDROOM MODERN HOME, FE 4-5334. 3345 Squirrel Rd., Au- [ burn Heights. BRENDEL lAKE 3-bedroom, 2 baths, 2 fireplaces, paneled family room garage, 100' lake front, over 1 acre. Immediate possession. HILLTOP REALTY 473-5234 living room separata dining room, iarga kilchan 2-bedrooms and bath down with finished attic tor 2-bedrooms up. Full basement. Automatic stpam heat, 2-car garage. Chain link fenced yard only F SI,300 down plus closing costs. REAGAN FULL OR PART-TIME TELEPHONE sales, must have pleasant voice. -n - Salary and commission. FE 2-4294. j sion with a short trial period on GENERAL HOUSEKEEPER. CARE tti girl 5. By day or live* in. After 6 p.m. Ml 4-6416. HOUSEKEEPER,' LlVE IN, FOND of children, references required, call evenings, 626-3961. HOUSEWIVES-NEED MONEY FOR extras? Turn a few hours e week into full time pay. We train If you qualify. For Interview: FE 5*8325 KELLY GIRL SERVICE Desperate for experienced help in all office skills. We need expert* enced: TYPIST IBM EXCUTIVE TYPIST STENOES KEY PUNCH OPERATORS COMPTOMETER OPERATORS . BOOKKEEPERS (MACHINE AND HAND) CLERK KELLY GIRL 5ERVICE ROOM 10 18 W. HURON 333*7987 LADY WITH” CAR, PART TIME, easy work, good pay, must know Pontiac and area. Apply Apert-' ment 4, 129V> E. Howard. LIBRARIAN »rfctsVra*hfba -mmI™ rMW,nabl* ,cu*toro kltetSn! laka priv- |gierTSitt'~il^S6rTT<& EXPERIENCED OUTSIDE SALES- r^aron^Call Wroll^TR'/laK I man, to sell office supplies, office Insurance 26 iMAU FURNISHEB C0Tf/5E attached ^'garageT*^^buMFhts, tfr" furniture and printing. Weakly j for single men or cpuple, $40 a P|ac#j ioo xl50' wooded lot, full 2jjt N. Opdvka Rd. aC.C°.U"i,15 PER CENT SAVINGS ARE POS- I P,V aluminum siding, large salary. Flhe opportunity in rapidly developing Oakland County. See Mr. Stout, General Printing A Office Supply. 17 W. Lawrence or FE.2*0135. HUSBAND-WIFE TEAM Add $40-$120 a week to your In- week. Call before 12 noon, Fl 5-6715. Serv' Elegance, or OL 1-1708. INSURANCE SALESMAN Minimum 2 years' experience. $50 weekly expense money plus top commissions and bonus. Leads, associations, re-instatements and policy owners furnished. Complete training^available. For confidential interview, phone jAr, O'Connell, 338-0573., J. J. O'Connell aiid Associates ies, who make prompt loss settlements. Just phone FE 4-8284 for a quotation. Kr. G. Hempstead, Real- lot. Waterford Twp. $12,500. 625- »rge; 2956 Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 HOMEOWNERS, $18.55 ANNUALLY. 2-C7425* A9*nCV' **' FE 2-bIdROOM, NEWLY DECORATED Quality Automobile Risk Insurance Budget Terms BRUMMEfT AGENCY 1 Miracle Mile FE 4-0589 Wanted Children to Board 28 ' CITY OF PONTIAC Assistant reference Lib. (Lib. I) in a growing city*end*townshlps library system now serving 177,000. Salary, $5,785 to $6,708 In 4 step increases plus fully paid Blue Cross and other superior fringe benefits. Excellent working condition! in beautiful 1960 Main Library. Requirements, 5th yr. degree accredited library school and good recommendations. Interesting |ob on congenial staff for well qualified phone for appt. FE 4-9921. LIVE IN BABYSITTER, EITPERI* enced woman over 35. Own room. Weekends off. Complete charge of house. 588-9019. LIBRARIAN CITY OF PONTIAC Head reference Lib. (Lib. II), In a growing elty-*nd-townihlpi lib- rary system now aarvlng 177,000. Salary $4,177 to S7.9S2 Jn 4 _»tap increases plus fully paid Blue Cron and othar tuperlor fringe beneflti, Excellent working conditions In beautiful 1940 Main Library. Requirements, 5th yr. dagrea accredited library school and good rec-comendatlons plus at laasl 2 yrs. auccassful reference experience. Apply sending full data and references to Parsonnal, City Hall, 450 Wide Track Dr. E. or phone for appt. to Mist Pop*, FE 4-9921. rcr iR, i 'bwmwfRfraw. Ing light housawork, 4 children, private room end bath, TV. No Upholitering Wall Cleaners BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Walls and windows. Reas. Satisfaction guarantaed, PE 2-1821. Welding DO YOU HAVE FROZEN WATER lines? We hay# the equipment and will thaw mom out. PR i-fOli. ironing or haavy cleaning. Musi have references. 848-2219. manIcur isY WAiifi5T Too per cent commission. 222-9279. MATURe WIDOW PREPERRED TO live In. Light housework, modern facilities, own private room. Home Is In a refined friendly location. , Reply Box 42, Pontiac Press. middle aged woman, caae for 4 children, light housework, 8 days, 8-4, own cor, Cltl anytime, UL 24818. MEAT APPEARING W A ITT« fl, 25-35, for caloterla. Average earnings about 195 par weak. Ml 8-811*. ______________________. WAl tfCTTVi Por bar, REAL ESTATE SALESMEN-FULL time, top commissions, lots of floor time and leads. Call Mr. Warden at 333-7157 for Interview._+ SALESMAN 58-year-old construction firm with 29 branches throughout midwest needs salesman. Pension plan plus othar benefits. Apply In person at 8 a.m. on weekdays. 54 S. Cass Lake Rd„ Pontiac. Empioymairt Agoncies EVELYN EDWARDS PUBLIC RELATIONS age 21 to 38. No typing. —'On White Lake front. Automatic utilities. Boat and dock. Excellent neighborhood. Scenic. 2 or 4 adults. No children. 8180 month. Reference and security deposit. ME 7-7227, Holly. Call before noon end after 8 p.m. _ lOULBVARO HEIGHTS -2-Bedroom Unit-875 Per Month Contact Resident Manager 544 East Blvd. al .Valencia FE 4-7833 CANAL FRONT Located et Cass Lske-beautllul 4 A-l CARE IN LICENSED HOME By day or week. OR 3-4327. Wonted HoutBhoid Goods 29 house"foFrInf,~call after ---- . .. .«a. .... 4, MA 4-2106,____ I PIECE OR HOUSEFUL OF FUR-1 MADISON HEIGHTS nlture, end stoves. Needed nowl 28216 COUZENS More cash—Lltfle Joe's, FE 2-6842. Executive home, 3 bedrooms, frl-AUCTION SATE IVeWY TaTUR-I tovsl, bullf-lns, carpeting, rec-day et Blue Bird Auction. We'll NOTHING DOWN LOVELY 3-BEDROOM HOME-GLE AMINO GOLDEN OAK FLOORS - FULL BASEMENT -AUTOMATIC HEAT—1300 MOVES YOU IN. MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM IN EXCELLENT LOCATIONS. WRIGHT 382 Oakland Ava, FE 2-9141 Eves after 8________OR 2-8455 J, *.5573 NEW fRI-LEVEL,.lAHMENT, 2 —reairtuvmrrr51-—! KWrooms, garage. Ldl 82X181. 443 CRESCENT HILLS Clare St., Pontiac. 892-4822. OFFERS BRICK HOMES l ——r~ ^ew ^Bedroom Colonial Full besemunt, large lot, delux* leetures. Best offer takes If. WE TRADE AND TRADE 3 big bedrooms, oak -floors, lots of clothes dose In IVi Ills bath, gas heat, screened pallo, 2-car attached garage. 821,000, J. J. JOLL, Realty PE 2-3488 882-0282 MODELS OPEN 11 TO 7 P.M $340.00 BUYS All brick ^-bedroom ranch, with full high, dry basement, attached king-sized brick 2-cer garage. Sol real ion room, IV2 baths. Immediate buy .furniture,, .fools end appliances. I Ortro“m,‘ M0# TWO BEDROOMS, LIVING'^OM _ORJ4847 or MEIrose 7-5193, let us sell It for you on consignment. Hall's Auction Salas, ^___a,.,.,,_____________ MY 3-1171 pr MY 3-4141. fWO BIBISSMS. LAKE T=8»Otof CASH FOR FURf^fURE AND" AP- Laf^ Roacf- lnaoIr* 2821 pllancts. 1 place or houseful. Thompsons Aquereme. 1.30 Pearson's. F E 4-7881. I t0 * Pi.to-.__- ........... LET US BUY IV OR AutTltfNlt u . _ ' for you. Auction every Sat. i p.m. Rent Rooms 42 12851 OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION,. , . Id drive, sidewalks, paved strjet. j 75 foot wide lot Included, also central water system at no extra. Silver Lake Const. Co. 673-9531 "r n6fiovfiTWYWlWf gage Cost 904 Rlkar Building TELEPHONE FE 4-0584 FEMALE Executive secretary Accountant Secretaries ......... 8450 $400 . $325 Typist' ............ $320 Tima Distribution $300 MALE (SALARIES OPEN) Product engineer, mechanical engineer's degree, hydraulic experience. Chemist, degree, experience In metal alloy, Deslgneri, axparlence In hydraulic field. Draftsman, experience In detail, layout. Process engineer, experience 3 years process on machined parts and time study. Optical engineer, B.t. or M.S. In Physlct or Optica, 3 years experience. Tim* study engineer, 3 years experience Quality analysis Inspection, techniques quality control and military quality control rtqulrements. Cost estimator, experience 5 ------8 878-2523 OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION CLEAN WARM SLEEPING ROOM, menu. Also buy estates. Audi Saturday el 1 p.m. Still on M-24, now 9 miles north of Oxford. 678-2523. Wanted Misceiianeeui 30 it estimator, experience 5 years. MICHIGAN PERSONNEL SERVICES C0RP. Birmingham Initruttieni-Sclieoli To ...... after 8p.i RY"oRBII“c®SiC, steady work, EM 2-9121. pWaoIcal NtlRiis. ijJWKT. enced, Muit have ra(„ own irani-portatlon. A-l Auburn Nurua Exchange, 255 State.- 222-22*2. ^pinwTnir. sn, beautiful efflHfli vale phy*lctan, beautiful offices excellent selerv, no tVM., wrlti RiuffiLB iA6Y kiniir?6in Toddler, includ** Ighl housekeeping, hrs. 86, or live in, 830 par MillMW Ing, hrs. 8-8, wk. 731-4472. "Rsoitimmnr RluAlLl RSDIIKilFPi T6 IIV8 in, care of children, references. 873/812, IW5IT1)R61R, TtjaiBggHLy-lV. perienced. UL 2-3410, Mr. Elwtll. "WiTAfEl^YOT'WNT" TO DO, USE A PRESS WANT AD TO ^0 ITI ATTENTION! Mechanics needed, enroll now Auto Mechenlcs Auto Body Collision WOLVERINE SCHOOL 1488 W. Ford, Detroit WO 2-0892 A Better CASH PAID FOR YOUR USED furniture and appliance*. FE 4-1184. D*ys only, ask for Mr. Grant, Wyman Furniture. cash' ''f6r "pianos, rUK rlXIsUO) rUXNI I musical Instruments, tools, etc. FE iTAN^fetPPl 15” P E R SON WfSTjOS lllfk used furnllur* and any discards. Call Douelas Roach, MY 2-8553. Wonted te Rent 32 2- OR 3-BEDROOM UNFURNISHED homer suburban area. OK 3-6533. URGENT, HOUSE BIO ENOUGH for seven. Welfare. FB 2-3315. ladles. Close In. 267 N. Saginaw “■* * “•’oe. NICE cCfefTSLE BP ING"” ROOM for men. No drinkers. 255 State. 332-3362. „__ PR I VAT is HOME - MAN~0)siLYf no drinkers. FE 2-6106. 4o6m£ FOR 'feENT. MEN ORCV _No drinkers. 88 Collage. ___ “ ROOW'AWH'Sft bSarB 135W Oakland Ava. FE 4-1854. cantrtl wafer system at no extra, charge. Inspect me furnished ranch -and colonial models. Located on I * Crescent Lake Rd. Jusl Vt mile No Morlgaga i North of M-59. i N« payment me 1st month FE 8^)458 _ 6-8500; BELAIRE HOMEBUILDERS ■I mg_______________t. aLHUCl I fb 1-2783 1:30 fo 5 p.m. • heat. 820 I EXCLUSIVE .EXECUTIVE H&Mfj ________ BVBNINOl LI 2-7327 Waterford schools. Has everything.I NORTH OAKLAND COUNTV Mrs. Flood, Ichuett Realty. OR --------- 3-7950, FE 2-0458._________ Elizabeth Lake Estates Six-room bungalow with two bed' rooms and bath on main floor. Partly finished second floor bedroom, lull basement, oil hoi water heat. LESLIE R. TRIPP, Realtor PE 5-8181 (Evenings FE 4-4278) IxISmvE MINIMUM DOWN EASY TERMS New leke, frgnt house at Chrysler CUSTOM BUILDER Will duplicate a typical 3-bedroom, m bath with 2r MA 5-1883. iJiw'^o’k'iFBunrbTRSi pIDs full bas*m*nt, Fountalneblesu Plaza, 3580 Pontiac Lake Road. O'NEIL RBALTY. DR 4-0427. Salt Houses 49 2-BRDROOM - LAKB PRIVILEGE. — Gas heat, utility room, attached garage. 624-3714. i-iaBNmr mlc stc riji TiailMyrtla, A-1.873-Ktt. /alDROOM RANCH, BUILT-IN oven and rinet, otormi end sereins, landsesped. 811,500. 388 Jordan. Comer Faatherstona. Cell vl 7-4445 tor appointment. -_________ Wait Iroquois, IdoOl for- children, excellent condition, Webstar, Wash-ced lot, Ingtbn schools, 107. toot fancied pine paneled dan, basement rec. reetlon room, targe closets and itoraoo, carpeting, flroptact, 2-car garage. For appelntitwnt - call VI W382 Offer 4:00 pim. 3 BEDROOM RANCH Largo living room with etant fire-place, double gangs, basement pamTeO recreation room end bar, lot I)0'x200 . 814,900 - 10 per coni down. ■ V - FLATTLfeY REALTY X wav, Clarkston area. Large lot, 3 bedrooms, a path, family room, fireplace, attached garagg. Many bullt-lns. Call 343-7028, WB 3-4200, DU 4-0292, 356-9121, or 333-2898. Michael's Realty. GAYLORD OXBOW LAKE DISTRICT Practically new 2-story brick and thlnglt home. 1242 sq. ft. of comfortable living apace, Iarga lot. Sacrifice at $13,500, 82,500 down. Call or sea Wm. B. Mitchell. DRAYTON PLAINS AREA, 2-bedroom ranch home- Lake privileges. Total price, s*.500. Low down payment. open to cash Mr. Call oday. MY 2-2821 or FE MMO. HARD JO FIND tall nice location but wa_ have a vary neat and clean two-bedroom. Blstmtnl. One btock from, St- Mlch»el,|, at • BPPI -•xv-.JP' mioiieere, et a LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD . Bradway St. Lake Orion MY 2-2821 ' FB 1-9892 HIITER NEAR COMMERCE - Large S rooms and bath, basamanl, attached 2-car garage, 3 lots, sail or trade. tlpWO, terms; 1 ACRE? j.T L,r89 5 rooms and bath, fireplace, lull basement with recreation room, attached garage, over 300 ft, road frontage. Call today. B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Sllzebtfh Lake Rd. PE 2-0178 alter 0 p.m, 802-8427. WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE 94 B. Huron FB 4-3111 or 8*2-01*1 .... R'^H'BSfiR'ATfXTr6Mf»“ NIX REALTY UL 2-2121 UL 2*3371 , OAUNDBRS A WYATT REALTY " FB 3-7081 sTminGle hills” if you want * good horn* In a very nice location this horn* has everything you could want, immediate possession. By v,—.—. appoint- ment, Arthur C. Compton, 1W Chlwtwa, OR 2-7814, eves. Fl SMALL lAltAf CLARKSTON AREA 8 room, 3-bad room home plus <* k 24 «. barn with attached shad. Young orchard. Walk-out basamanl. CALL FOR DETAILS, LAKE PRIVILEGES CASS AND ELIBABITH LAKES 3-bedroom home, basement, gas FA haatj M fl, living room, large W. IMOfc T|RM| OR WILL TRADE EC ----- TRAILER, EQUITY FOR HOUSE- HERRINGTON HILLS . 8350 DO j MOdroom ranch, wood floors, newly . 0350 DQWN 3-bedroom ranch, basamanl, hard- —«-------------... itad, land- years wood floors, newly decorati anijmjses-1 RQRABAUGH 9388 COMMERCE FBW$SS«frd ** l*>k* Trl-leval, brick and aluminum, 5-bedroom homo with family room, oven rang*, hood, dlshwasntr; gas h*at, 2 car garage, 123,800. ’ Frank Shepard, Realtor ‘ , 8514101 ifiYTBRINO SCHOOL A R ll A'-l ovely 2-bedroom, possible 3, ranch stylo nemo. Lake privileges, Largo fenced lot, Ctalo to fhopplilfl can, prKtato. Full price 511,800. 8703. * HACKBTT RBALTY 7750 Coolty Lak# Rd, Smith & Wideman REALTORS FE 44526 412 W. HURON IT. OPEN 0 TO 0 K HILL VACW ■w* 872-5334 , ** VILLAGfUOME ON 1 ACRE Ptanty of room for a big family or tor,rontol Income. Air modern ?onvanlanca* In (ho pfioionf vll-»f Ortonvlllo. 812,000. 1800 tag* .down. Jt* PANGUS, Roultor 830 Mi* , Ortonvlllo Call CollHf NA 7-2HI «nrB6N'(Lr'lLIWMB^tAWTI, Clarkston. Brim, ' 4to0.rARISTOCRAT BUILDIRI *17, ill 1)11 IM tHE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 19 ♦wAtwiuauRekN teowiiTtn ^’ Vgmeto'ROOMg? . ; - [lying room with end wall fireplace and paneling.* Two M4t. and on* 110-ft. bedrooms. Two full bathe with, ce- ate; shower off# master' bedroom. if dining, area, extra* amount —- * i cabinets in Kitchen With built-lA range, dean and vent tan. Full V:-. b*34fnem,jas heat. 2-car garage \ on Iwwa lflu'x240' lot. All thh only $22,000; Will trade. 1 w. h.Bass • "Specializing In Trades" REALTOR ..FB 3-7210 T BUILDER EAST OF PONTIAC A fine l-bedroom ranch home with attached llhrcar garage.' Built-In 1954. Gas furnace. Aluminum storms, screens and. awnings. Car-noting. On a ieleasdot 90 ft. lot. 319-MO. Terms. ;,>■■■ ■ AjV.*''&'■ (ASK TO $iE OUR MANY HOMES) MILTON WEAVER.INC., REALTOR IN VILLAGE OF ROCHESTER HI W, UNIVERSITY 051-1141 MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE 5-room 2-bedroom aluminum sided home. Front porch enclosed with awning. Lake and clubhouse- privileges. Full price 17,000 with Sl,500 down. MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD large 7-room, 5-bedroom home. Ideal for largo family. 1V5» baths, full base-\ ment. Priced at SS.500 with $550 down. ‘ t CRESCENT . LAKE PRIVILEGES nice O-room, 2-story home, 3-bedrooms, 2-car garage. Large tot too' x soar, full price u,45o. A. JOHNSON & SONS FE 4-2533 DAILY 6827 BLUEGRASS TOP VALUE — For the "up and coming executive with a bright future. You con trade your present small house for a truly gracious, brand new 4-bedroom, l'/t bath colonial. Finest of construction, featuring a beautiful,' paneled leisure room end a formal dining room os well. Gas heat, first floor laundry room. Complete and Including lot, special at S2S.S50. Drive through the village of Clerkston to the ex- | pressway, left on Bluegrass to Open sign. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor UNION LAKE AREA hni?.*. tot 'Among nice * blooms, lerge^cerpet* „ W living room with flnfeiJri* pMl; S^ien! both, Large utility. Oak -b/ [Mt Atliroldgarage. Only ill. 4j?nS?S **“wn Plus closing costs HAROLD R, FRANKS/Realty LAZENBY ELIZABETH LAKE • ^3 SJdroon’ contemporary with at-UuK*! Large living room Saw |pvoly fireplace, ; Living room has been newly carpeted and dreeadj, Excellent kitchen. Excap. Ttoieityfplce walk . put basement with second - fireplace) recreation K?"].'..*01! * heoetltully wooded S-u.iii* *tone'*thrw,from ™ ga.dR.Megtl end pork on Eliza-SS,k f»N8s Pr,“d at e n I y 114,500 —with 10 per cent down. — DRAYTON PLAINS bedrooms,' large carpeted living Kwhen, with utility f' eched, tiled bath, extra large SSoojiufr»rlce*Termp?*r*®* ™ 4^3 D° i«LHAwZyEN8Y- ReoT;.030, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE BATEMAN ', GUARANTEED trade-in plan Close-In Suburban NEAR PONTIAC MALL end county court house. Nicer then new ell brick rancher with oversize 2*car garage. This Is a custom builder's home and it's really nice all the way. Lots of custom features including ground-level family room 3 bedrooms with a possible fourth available, 2 full baths and many plus-feature extras. Priced at ~ $25,950 with $2,600 down plus costs. Make your appointment now. Extra Nice *WE ARE PROUD to offer this I spacious 3-bedroom orlck rancher; with 2-car attached garage '>7ln Hammond Lake area. Long, low Ond sprawling on large nicely ’• Ujhdscapetf loTT extra Va oath, fire-‘place and ground-level family room and lots of extras. This Is one you must see, a. wonderful nome -in a wonderful areo. Owner has purchased a new home and priced to sell quickly with $2,150 down plus costs. Need 4 Bedrooms? , owner will. Sacrifice this 9- room brick rancher with attached SMITH' PADDOCK STREET Nice 2-bedroom h»me, clote to Me* Connell school Living room, dining room and kitchen Stairway to unfinished second floor which could 1 easily Be made Into third bad-■ room, full basement with hot; air furnace. $7,500. Terms. R0LFE ItSMITH, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph FE 3-7848 , ‘ EVES. FE 3-7302 SELL OR TRADE — NEAR HIGH-land. Nice, .3-bedroom rancher with V> herd of land. Oil AC furnace. Full beth. only 4 years old. ideal for children here. Priced at only |t,500 and tertns. BRICK RANCHER — Excellent condition in artdout. FulibOtemehf. Tiled bath. Now carpeting. Oak floors. Plastered walls. Paved - street, Water softener. Here’ is one >' cheaper then you can build and lust like new. Priced at only $14,500. Will take late model car, housetrailer, cheaper home or land contract tor equity. | LIST WITH US - we accept trades and in this way many sales result that would, not otherwise. Open 9-9. Multiple Listing Service- 27 years of successful real estate experience, l. H. BROWN, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Road Phone FE 4-3544 or FE 2-4010 garage. Family room with brick fireplace wall, step-save, kitchen with all stainless steel bullt-lns In- FIRST IN VALUE Cease RENTING $.59 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS - WIDOWS, DIVORCEES, PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES. For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 ANYTIME SAT. OR SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN - REAL VALUE REALTY COMING 1* Baths Family Planned Bi-Level Over 2,00J) Sq. Ft. Only $225 Down Americana Homes 624-4200 HOME FOR A SUCCESSFUL MAN eluding range and oven pita outside patio with redwood privacy screening. All on two large chain-link fenced lots In wonderful suburban area lust north of Pontiac dose to Our Lady of Lakes church and school. Pull price $19,500 with, $1,950 down plus costs.- First come j first served; so don't be late. Live ih Comfort ‘ IN A FINE INCOME; See this 2-family home with 5 rooms and bath on both sides. This home has many lovely features and tenants pay the utilities. Terms — $3,500 with $1,000 down. Convenient oast side location/ you can walk downtown. \ • Handyman Needed with $500 end ambition to do some decorating and minor repairs -Good north side location for this Comfortable 3-bedroom with basement end new gas furnace. Full price. Just $7,500. YOU CAN TRADE BATEMAN REALTY will guarantee sale of your present home on our GUARANTEED HOME TRADE-IN PLAN. Call for appointment. 377 s. Telegraph Realtor FE l-7tat Open Pally 9-9 M.L.S. Sunday 1-5 Val-U-Way Gov't Representative Off Perry St, This home Is so exceptional words can hardly do II lustico—It has everything you can possibly desire. 3 bedrooms, brlck-tonl, huge living room, modern kitchen, tiled bath, oak floors. Just across the street from schools. We will take your homo in trade. Full price $9,300. $350 down. About 78 per mo. Including taxes and Insurance. This Beats Renting Exceptionally located 5-room bungalow. This homo has an extra big kitchen, ample cupboard space, big double closets, large living room, tiled bath/ 3 generous bedrooms, 3350 down. Call today r Our New Address ts 1-144 Joslyn Ave., Corner Third Lake Neva Front Located in Eakewood subdivision. A community of fine homes. This extra large tri-level, with 2-car garage, has 3 or possibly 4 bedrooms, family room, formal living room, kitchen with bullt-lns, full bath with double vanity, and half bath 6ff the activities area. Nothing but warmness hare. 2 fireplaces, hot water heater, Intercom, ’ patio with alactrlo barbecue unit. Good-Bye G . Large family home off Joslyn, 3-bedroorq and 2-Story, 2-car garage and fenced l«t> terms can ba arranged. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE You'll teal right at home when you first walk In. An attractive foyer wllt-be the first thing you will see, next will come e spa- cious carpeted living room with fireplace and studio calling, 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, attractive family room with fireplace, the lest word In kitchens with ell bullt-lns end e 2-car attached gerege. Laid out In iha popular "L" shape. You'll find this home e must on your llet of fine homes to see. Full price only 121.000. Terms to suit. Ceil Taylor Realty 7732 Highland Road (M»| 28 4-0304 Bvas. BM 3-7544 HAYDEN' NEW LARGER 3 BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL ivy Baths Gas Heal Attained garage . Double closets 19'xtj" Family Room Over 1,300 sq. It. of living area. $12,900 t yyiPBR CENT DOWN Open Mon. through Sal. 9 to 5 J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 1M 3-4404 10751 Highland Rd. (M59I ~ SPOTLITE Walk to Work It foals Ilka homo th« mlnuia you •ntgr this v»ry clean 3-bWroom home, modern kitchen and oath larM living room, utility room, paved etreeT. "S250 Moves You In South Side You'll lovo this truly outstanding 3-bedroom brick-front borne. Just like new. It features a large living room, a new modern kitenen that will please any women, ell the closets art extra large, ell oak floors, full basement. It will be a - pleasure to show you this home priced at 810,500. 3350 down. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Ooklond Open 9-7 After hours: FE 3-4410 or FE 0-1344 LIST YOUR HOME WITH US _ STOUTS Best Buys Today Your Dream Home Wes lust listed and Is located In beautiful Welkins Estates. Custom built 3-bedroom brick and aluminum rancher with carpeted living room and dining area, kitchen with bullt-lns, ceramic bath, basement, oil forced - air heal, attached 2'/>-car garage, blacktop drive. Walking distance to school end shopping area. Only 310,900 with eaty terms. Close in Horse Farm Remodeled farm home which features 4 bedrooms, living room with llreplace, dining room, kitchen, tile bath, part basamant with oil-fired ho) water heat, glassed porch, largo barn, iconic 4-acre corner parcel near Oakland University, only 333,750 with tormi. Like Lake Living? RHODES WEST BLOOMFIELD. Beautiful 9-room home, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, large recreation room, ultra-modern electric kitchen, gas haat, 3-ton air condition unit, 2 fireplaces, attached 2-car garage, underground sprinkling system. Many extras. Must*t>e seen to be appreciated. Cell on this one today! 344.900. 10 ACRES. Suburban, with good 8-room brick home, 4 bedrooms, full basement, oil heat, 3-car garage. Beautiful shady lawn. Ideal location for swimming pool and raising horses. 10 minutes to 1-75. Ideal for Investment. $30,000 — Terms. WATERFORD - Nice 3-bedroom homo, wall to wail carpet In living room. Drapes end shades Included. IV5 baths. Gas heat. Air-condltlon unit. Large lot. Near schools and shopping1. 313,000. S450 down-plus closing costs. 15 ACRES. Blacktop highway. Corner location. Neat Keating development. Ideal for Investment. — 320,000. NICE RESIDENTIAL LOT. North of 1-75 on Joslyn Road. 31,000. 3300 down, 135 a month. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE 6-2304 250 W. Walton FE 5-4712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE KENT Established In 1914 Good 5-room home with full bath. Cabinet alnk ip kitchen, l'A-car garage. West suburban location. ilBJMW with $1,900 down. 4% ACRES —Waterford area, Bilevel Sbedroom homo with 22-ft. carpeted Hying room. Built-In kitchen opulences. Tiled bath. Full baaamant with recreation room. Extra both M basement. Nice condition. Spring tad - pond. 2W-car garage. Clerkston schools. .See This at 119,500. 3 / HOME AND BUSINESS — Large 4-bedrbom home With full basement. Located on Dixie Hwy. and has been usedfor business. 550" deep. Garage. Nino at $15,000 With 52,000 Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 2-0123 or FE 2-7342 SHARP 7-room, 3-bedroom ranch with attached 1V5 car garage In Airport and Williams Lake Road area. This spacious home has 1,057 sq. ft. of living area. You will an-|oy the 24,4x12 family room situated on the first floor. The electric range, refrigerator and bar are included. Owner anxious to sell. Price reduced to $17,900. We Trade! NORTHERN HIGH AREA. Walking distance to Pontiac Motors. Clean two story, two-bedroom home. Large 910-car garage, with extra blacktop area. Pine location. Re-, duced $2,000. Only $10,900. Easy , terms.1 _________ COMPLETE IN EVERY WAY, right u . .. _ down to the last detail; 3 lovely SfliB HOUSES bedrooms plus a 12x20 family room - all on one floor. Oak floors, ceramic bath, plastered walls. Base-' ment Includes a paneled "recreation area." A full kitchen end a second bath. Attached two-car garage. Beautiful beige carpeting, electric stove end built-in TV set ere ell Included at $23,500 and ot course we'll trade I TWENTY- -15 AC«$ S % With new 20x20 tremf.. building and beautiful rich seii, |4,400. $500 down. ' 10 ACRES' K with an extraordinary .view. Vary . cue*, to state property * and Perfect for those who love horses, $4,500. C. PANGIJS, Realtor 56 ACRES In . Independence Two., access to LikeOaktand. $50,000. Terms. Al PAULY, REALTOR ; 4514 DIXIE, .REAR . OR 3-3800 Eves. OR 2-7293 CANAL LOTS Choice building sites — 40x147. Connected with Sylvan Lake. JACK LOVELAND , 2110 Cass Lake Rd. 402-1255 CHOICE 1-ACRE LOTS IN SUB division near Oakland University. Also near 1-75 Interchange. '$1,200 $1,800. Beautiful rolling country tide. BUY NOW-BUILD LATER TRQY REALTY 503-4400 COMMERCE AREA 90'X130', BLACK topped, gas, water system, storm riwer. $1,9,95. $20 dawn, $20 month, loch Brothers. OR 1-1295. Business Opportunities 59 SEALTEST MILK ROUTE -H _ Southfield, 500 pis.. FE 2-3171 , /'SWlMfOCPIAt^ £ IN greund-SS9S ■ and IBS- :; . 5V; Contact. Manufacturer; . . allied pools, . W} Broadway Ft Wayne, Ind _ Phone 744 2108 SHOPPING FOR A BUSINESS? A well known manufacturer Is going to set up an aluminum Improvement cenMr In your area Complete Imp of wpll known all • mmuih products.;. are :'. available Prefab plumbibnt glass end screen enclosures, room additions, prefab convertible garage and patio rooms, carports, pordi enclosures, aluminum fenca* storm windows and dears, siding, garage doors and openers. Iron rolling, kitchen cabinets, prefab .fireplace* and barbecue pits end Many more products. This homo Improvement Center will have protected territory. A small Investment la required, We furnish the complete package including the building. Potential earnings In five figures bracket or more. Far compleie details write Box 14 Werrenvlila, H|.< Amt; Mr Patera. ZONED LIGHT MANUFACTURING, new 24x3$- building, SO* road frontage, fenced with chain link fence; also forgo amount of rental equipment, city North Side. For information, call B. C. MUTER, REALTOR. FE 3-0179, eves, after 1 p.m. 402-4427. - Sale LuihI Contracts 60 "• less W NBL he TMJhf. K& tw. on. “Oh, ijt’s ‘only-green-eye-shadow-with-purple-eye-liner and-midnight-blue-mascara’! I thought you were desperately ill!” taking carpeted living room, 2-wey fireplace, combination kitchen nd family room, 2 full baths, en- closed porch overlooking lake, at inched M-car garage. Terms available. $?50 Down Balance Ilk* rent, clean 5-room home In Auburn Heights, car-poted living room, separate dining room, Besoment, oil forced sir heat, 40x140 fenced lot. Immediate possession, • WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd FB 5-3145 Multiple Lilting Service Dolly Till I "BUD ii Northern Area Room ter the kids To romp, 3 bed-roomi, full be»om«nt,, hardwood (We, like new, Mt month. Herrington Hills ootit, full Msemenl, gas heel, ' fenced yard. Storms LOOK ------------------- 3-bed room, landscaped, . -- end Mrioni, LOpK-e l eer el-teched gerege. Only 111,700. Smiley Realty FE'2-8326 Open Doily 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 3-Bedroom Brick \ . Long, low, lovtly brick ronch homo In doilreblo clerkston oroo near schools end shopping/ tiptop construction, toifurMg at* Inched 2-ear gerege, fireplace, redwood paneled den, lull centime illo bom, additional W both, dSitgnltuI kitchen and break tail room, loads of cupboards, screened roar porch, 2 corner loti. ApproKimolofy II,too down, plUt COlfl, lilt possession. Lake Front Income 2 lemliy summer college , on delightful WOOdhul) Lake/ live (5) ropmi and beth like Iront unit/ six (4) roomi and,both, plot olaiied-ln porch, ofl lake unit. ■ — oi 111,130, Mown1 wny ANNETT Union Lake Area 3-bedroom ranch In section of nice homes. 150x134 ft. lot with several froit trees. FA e«s heat. 38.000. terms. Washington School Area 3-bftdroom brick and frame ^ 2-story homo In excellent condition. Natural fireplace in living room; carpeting and drapes Included, pasement; gas haat. Garage. $1;500 dn. Northern Hi District Newly decorated and reconditioned homt In section ot wall kept residences. 3 lots *>r the garden lovers. Larg~ living room and dining room; 3 bedrooms with new bath fixtures on 2nd floor. Basement; oil heat. Attached garage. $13*000; terms. WE WIU. TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Open Evenings end Sundays 1-4 FE 8-0466 CLARK WILLIAMS LAKE CANAL LOT — 2 nice, level ihedtd lots, 80-feet on canal, 33,500, terms. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - West •uburben. Nice 3-bedroom (anchor with lull basemont end 2-car garage. Kitchen Is 12x12 with loll of cupboards and ample eating space. Living room ond one bedroom carpeted. Nice awnings and large fenced yard, blacktopped street. '$14,700, forms. SCHOOLHOUSE LAKE FRONT --Baautllul 4 • bedroom Bl-Leval, kltchan has complete bullt-lns, family room plus recreation room, .3 lull baths, 2 fireplaces, carpeting throughout, 2-car attached garage, beautiful lot with 90 feat of sandy beach. Must ba seen to ba appreciated, 840,000. , ,, WEBSTER SCHOOL DISTRICT -Neal, large 2-bedroom home, sowing room, tncknod porch, fire-piece, carpeting, lull basement with recreation room, attached garage, lanced lot. Owner leaving slate, $10,500, $500 down plus costs or loss tor seliori equity. Will also trade tor travel trailer. CLARK REAL ESTATE 3101 W. HURON ST, PE 3-7888 Wo Buy, Sell and Trade Multiple Llatlng Service_ DORRIS SOPHISTICATED MODERN - For . ih* fun of ceauel living In this young neighborhood with oil prestige homos. Top quality materials want into thla brick ranch homo with ah roomi larger than average. 12 x 14 kltchan with built-in oven, range, hood and vent Ian. Garbage disposal and master control lor the Intercom set. Luxuriously carpeted living room for a beeulllul vltw ol wooded backyard. Full basemont with extr* oath. STEPS AND MAINTENANCE FREE is Iha boil way to describe this 3* bedroom brick ranch home, Ideal home lor. middle-aged couple not interested In biiameni. oak lloora and plastered walls, ■beautiful well- room, 2 tun piths „ HRMR llreplace In the first floor family room. Attached garage and wail LAKE FRONT. The best time ot the year fit lake front bargains is here. For only $9,500 you get a nice two-bedroom home on the lake. Built In 1954, gas heat, aluminum storms and screens, boat and boat dock, also pump at lake for (awn sprinkling Is Included. ■ You can't afford to let this one get away. Call today. Three - bedroom brick ranch on blacktop street with community water. This is the buy of 1945. Only $12,500. Will sell FHA—Gl or we'll trade. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor TIMES TRI-LEVEL ' Beautiful 3-bedroom home on paved street with large lot-all landscaped. Waterford schools. Gas heat. Only seeing could define this home at $15,900. $1,590 down plus costs. Call us today for an appointment. Be first. RANCH-SPECIAL be desired. Living room with cor* ner fireplace, dining room, Youngs-: town kitchen* 3 bedrooms, m bath and family room. Expensive carpeting and extras. Can't be beat at $18,300. Terms. SMALL FARM In secluded area near Clerkston. An ideal 3-bedroom, family home. On 1 and VX acre. To Include , carpeting and draperies. Garage end chicken house. $13,950. 10 per cent down plus costs. TIMES REALTY 5219 Dixie Hwy. MLS 674-0396 OPEN 9 TO 9 IRWIN a 49; Sale Houses 49 A BLOOMFIELD HILL TOP COLONIAL lot. Magnificent entry foyer. Family room with fireplace. Built-In kitchen with attractive eating area, plus formal dining room. Three largo bedrooms,' master bedroom has own bath. Large Sblarlum makes excellent children's play room. Paneled basement with complete kitchen facilities. Bloomfield schools, bus of the door. Priced at $37,500 with excellent terms. Dream Home on Lake for Retiring Couple Compact, 2-bedroom home on lake. Re-pullt. and newly decorated Inside end out. Terrific kitchen. Delightful living room With large raised hearth fireplace. New carpets and drapes. New hot water 'hooting. Truly a retirement haven with terms to suit. Call Betty Anderson for appointment to see. PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 W. Huron, PE 4-3501 SEND FOR FREE NEW MICHIGAN BUSINESS GUIDE A-l BUYS SIMPLY WONDERFUL You'll have to sea this lovely 3-bedroom home at Williams' Lake with beautiful 14'x30' family room with fireplace — wall-to-wall carpeting* hot water beet, I’/ji-car garage with workshop overhead* sun deck tor leisure summer days. Lake privileges. Only $17*950. Term available. 2- CAR ATTACHED GARAGE Attractive 4-bedroom -brick, ranch. Full basement and in a neighborhood you'll be proud to live in. Large family kit<$ert with bullt-fns* V/7 baths. Immediate possession. Call today. $400 DOWN 3- bedroom home. Large family kitchen* separate dining room* full basement* l’/2-car garage — Northern High and Eastern Jr. school district. Priced at $12,500. See it today. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54145 Open Eves, 'til $ p.m.___ ! GOOD LAND CONTRACTS, 1 balance $5,134, 1 balance $>,703, both 10 .per cent discount. Call K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor, 3*2-0900. ,' Frushour .77G“ Struble NEAR ROCHESTER First time ottered. This 3-bedroom ranch,wl*h carpeted living i ACTION Broker. 3830 Elizabeth Lake Road. Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO SO* LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See u$ before you deal. WARREN STOUT, Reolfor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8135 Open Eves. 'Til; $ p.m. CASH FOR LAND, CONTRACTS— H. J. Van Welt, 4550 Dixie Hwy., OR 3-1355. Waterford Hijl Manor Large estate lots on one of Oakland County's most beautiful subdivisions. Priced from $3*750. : OPEN DAILY tO 8 P.M. DON WHITE, INC. OPEN DAILY TO I P. M. ! 2091 Dixie Hwy.________OR 4-049 ’Sale Farms 56 A COUNTRY PLACE j Home,, barn and 53 acres. A goal j place for hories and quiet fomlly ■ living. Spring on property for possible lake. 43 tillable acres. $13,500, j terms. C. PANGUS, Realtor ; conveyance Is the word that ,*n Ortonvllle describes this location of this cell Collect NA 7-2*15 iY OWNER - SO ACRES, 2 houses, 1 new, at Herrisville, Mich., I has 3 bedrooms and bath, other 2 bedrooms and both. Con rent one, live In other, has oil tools for potato farming plus seed for this year. Had an-Income of approximately $15,000 last year. Priced $27,500. Will take house In trade. A good place for retirement. Phone days OR 3-1203, eves. OR 3-4430. _____________ TELL jVE MORE Is what you'll be saying, after reading this . ad, we have a 3-bedroom all brick home, full basement located In Loraine Manor. Lots of extras Including wall-to-wall carpeting. We'll take your home on trade, selling for - $15,500. ...This lovely ^bedroom home located In Bloomfield Township features 8 rooms Including den and dining area. It also has 2 baths. Carpeting and" 2-car garage. $24,900. BUILT- BY OWNER For an investment, ot $300 plus cost, you can own this new 2-bedroom home with 2-car garage, JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE 3081 Highland Road Realtors FE 8-4025 Of CASH For equity or,land contract. Smallest possible discount. /Mortgages available. Call Tad McCullough at 382-1820. xARPO REALTY • 5143 CASS-ELIZABSTH ROAD I NEED (.AND CONRACTS, REA-sonable discounts, Earl Garrets, Realtor, 3317 Commerce Road. EMpira 3-2511 . -IMpira 3-4083 Income Property 50 BY OWNER, 2-FAMiLY HOME, 3 bedrooms up* 2 bedrooms down* special for Pontiac or Tech Center employes* 1-75 or US 10 to Sashabaw Rd.* 4574 Lakeview Drive* Woodhull Lake# new gas furnace* well and pump* also insulated* price* $14*50(r with $1*000 down* Ll 1-1495. for appointment, INCOME WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor, Van Weil Bldg. WEST SUBURBAN — LAKE PRIVI- <540 Dixie Highway,— OR 3-12» LEGES — One of the sharpest and best kept homes ever on the market. 3 bedrooms, (amity room with Inlaid parquet floors, baautllul kitchen with formica cupboards and built-in oven end range. Marble stohe llreplace in family room. 1VX baths. Full basement with tiled floors and painted wells. 1W-wlth double cement S E AS ONI D LAND CONTRACTS wanted. Get our deal before you sell. CAPITOL SAVINGS 8, LOAN ASSN,, 75 W. Huron, PE 4-0531, Money ta loan 61 ■ (Licensed Money Lender)^^ L0ANS~ TO $1,000 To consolidate bills Into one monthly payment. Quick service with courteous experienced counselors. Credit life Insurance available — Slop in or phone PE 5-8121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 N. Perry St. ■ PE *-812! 9 to S dolly, Set. 9 to 1 car garage with double cement drive. In lovely neighborhood. Lake privileges on Tull Lake. IN KETTERING HIGH AREA — 3-bedroom home with carpeted living room, separate dining room. Has excellent kitchen. Full basement with recreation room, m-car garage. Very good location near schools. OAKWOOO MANOR — Very attractive 4-bedroom ranch type hqme located lust one block from excellent beach. Has city woter, 2Yi baths, 3 fireplaces. Full basement partitioned Into 4 rooms. Master bedroom has private full bath. Located on largo wooded-lot and In Rpnltnr the Pontiac Northern High end"'®”1,1”' Kennedy Jr. High area. 370 W. Huron COMMERCIAL — 213 toot ot frontage on Union Lokt Rood with a large building. Con be used for small business, repair shop or whet have you? Has 2- apartments that could be rented or living quarters. Prlcod right to sell. Can be bought «r - ---- ■ - tike a lookl MILLER LOVELY BRICK HOME lust west of Telegraph. 5 rooms, I floor, full basemont, gas heat. Fenced yard, lovely landscaping. Only $9,-450 with terms. WEST SIDE HOME In excellent repair. Aluminum siding, plastered walls, hardwood floors, 5 rooms on l floor. Full basement, gas heat, 2-car gerege. Just $12,900 on this BUY. NORTH SUBURBAN BRICK RANCH, 3 rooms, V/i- baths. 13x25 carpeted jiving room, 12x13 family kitchen, 3 bedrooms. Sets on I40x 100 lot. Only $12,500. to-w*ii carpeting In th* 29' living lit baths and I ter I BM __________ .180' witn Anchor lanced beck yard. Only room, 2 lull belhi end heataletor W . garagi ■ landscaped yard. Too” x 140* With Priced time. “Bod Nlcholle, Realtor 49 Ml. Clemens St. ' FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M. FE 4-8773 LAMB HOME FOR LAUGH PAM-(Ly, *9,999 on terms, Located full Oil oak lend near schools,, stores amt walking dfoianct to downtown. Ideal tor roomers and GOOD HOME AND COMMERCIAL property, 200' on Baldwin, Tdeat tor numarpui types business, A good invaifmint. Home neei end ■clean end has 24' x tv attached cement block barege. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR 298 W. WeltOn__FE 3-7683 ARRO LAKE PRIVILEGES ON WILLIAMS LAK6-~With this sharp well kept 2-bedroom bungalow. Partly ton-cad yard* aluminum storms and scraans. Full prlca $8100. Tarms. V/7 ACRE LOT lust off M-59 on paved road.; A lovely area and lovaly high lot. See this before you build# FE 2-0262 _ Open 9 to 9 KAMPSEN Your Neighbo Why Don't 100-Acre Farm Grovoland Township, 10 acre lake and four-bedroom modern home, 33x30' horse barn, 3VX miles from 1-75. In Holly Recreation area. Only $400 par acre. Tarms. Lake Privileges With this very attractive home with large-sized rooms. Kitchen has birch cabinets, formica'counter tops and stainless steel sink. A beautiful pine paneled family room comes equipped with a kitchen. fl4*950. $250 Down on low FHA tarms, 4W-room bungalow, Nro bedrooms, 17' living room, /dining room, .plastic tile, gat heat, 50' lot. Northern ond Lincoln school district. CLARKSTON AREA. We have sav- WHY WAiT? You don't have to tall are I spacious lots In highly ro- your present home to buy a striated sub with paved streets.! new one. Kampson Realty will Beiutltul view ol Dtore Lake., guarantee salt of your present Lot u» show you thasal j homo. ^ IMMEDIATE POSSESSION O N <071 W. HURON STREET PE 4-0921 THIS LOVELY 3-bedroom ranch AFTER 8 P.M, CALL PE 4-2998 In good west suburban location. Dll heat, water softener, 2-car garage. Spacious lot with roar I fenced. A steel el $12,950 Terms. PHONE 682-2211 _ OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9....... East Slit A lot ot space In this two-story Colonlol camlitlng ol large (oyer,, of cabinets, one bedroom ond Va both on the flrit floor end throe good bedrooms upstalri with full eth. To complete this home it e basement with new get furnace Mr.s Executive Act nowl Do you know that we , have on# of the finest homes for sole In Indian Woods Subdivision. The arrangement ot rooms, to and location will pleas# all PH pc vJTl LiLjkJ SETTLE ESTATE 7-room home* 4-bedrooms* plastered walls* enclosed front porch* heated. Base-ment. 1W car c schools. Only )6,3 NEAR 1-75 AND SASHABAW 4-room ranch* utility* new enclosed back porch* oak floors, bath* gas heat? storms* Very Clean Home. Price $7*200. 4-BEDROOMS plently of space for large family* excellent 25 ft. kitchen* plastered walls* bath, partial basement. Garage* full price only $8,500. on land contract. .GILES REALTY CO. 221 Baldwin Av*. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE LAPEER COUNTY 140-acre term that has a good remodeled 3-room house and vary excellent bprns. Picturesque location pn a paved road and within 2'/j miles of the entrance of the new x-way which Will go from Port Huron to Flint., To settle estate only $33,080. Terms. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY a REALTOR A 2-family home located near busj^JK*. cppv/Prp^6 lit.e. Downstairs apartment has 2 MULTIPLE .JUSTING SERVICE bedrooms and upstairs has 1 bedroom. Priced at only $.10,500 with $500 down payment to responsible buyer. You can live In one apartment and let the other pay your rent, Shown by appointment only DON WHITE, INC. 2891 Dixie Hw^. ' _ 374-0493 LOANS $25 to $1,080 , insured Payment Plan BAXTER 8, LIVINGSTONE F Inane* Co, 401 Pontiac Slat* Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 OPEN LY TO 8 P.M. WANTED TO BUY: APARTMENT house by private party. 338-4323, lake Property 51 HOME SITES, 80' X 180', SUNNY Beach overlooking beautiful Walters Lake privileges, 2 sandy beaches, docking, $750, $10 down, $16 month. Owner. MY 2-0940. LAKE FRONT-TWIN LAKES 7-ROOM BI-LEVEL BUILT IN 1962. Exterior finished with brick and aluminum siding, wall-to-wall carpotlng, brick llreplace, oak and parquet flooring, modern kltchan with bullt-lns. recreation room, walk-out basamant, 2 full baths, nicely landscaped lot, 2-cor plastered garage, sandy beach. $32,500, terms. Clark Real Estate, 3101 W. Huron, FE 3-7000. LAKE FRONT HOMES - 'NEW and used. O. J.. Oally Co. EM 3-7114. LAki FRONT HOMES - NEW LAKE LIVING, PONT/ACTl'i MIN-utas. Lots, $795, $10 down, $10 mo. Swim, fish, boat docks. FE 4-4509, OR 3-1295, Bloch Bros. Sale Business Property 57 CORNER, 400 ON OPDYKE, 335 on Ml. Clemens. $42,500 OR 4-01 IB . - or - OR 3-9001.__________________ DRIVE-IN LOCATION (OR ANY other business). Strategically located at 5840 Dixie Highway In Waterford. This 133x301 building site has well and septic tank. Aged owner will sail at the in- developments In this area (Including new collage In this township). Parker Realty Co. Porker Bldg. 1028 S. Saginaw corner of 9th Si. Directly Opposite new City Hall In Flint. CE 2-7495. (Ask us (or de-scrlptlon, (older.)_____________ Saginaw St. Store 1- story brick artd basamant, 21 ft. by 14 ft. deep. Attractive front. Good location. $22,000. Downtown Corner 2- story brick bldg. Future developments makes this a strategic location. $35*000, terms. 8400 Sq. Ft. Bldg. On lot 90x200 on one ot Pontiac's main streets. Ideal for any retail purpose. Brick and steal bldg, with largt co ting value at 350,000, terms. LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. ' Q u I < friendly, helpful. Ft 2-9206 Is the number to cell- OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Ponttec stele Bank Bldg. 9:30 to 5:30 - Sat. 9:30-to 1 1 WEEK SPECIALS OS BRAND NEW FURNITURE s-pc. 'Aedroom group with ■5 BEAUTIFUL LAMPS ■ AND PILLOWS, ALL FOR S79. 7-PC- LIVING ROOM GROUP WITH WALNUT END TABLES, COFFEE TABLE AND BEAUTI-' FUL DECORATOR LAMPS, ALL -- FOR Sill, J-PC. FORMICA TOP DINETTES, NOW S37. JYw ALSO BIG FLOOR CLEARANCE ON GIBSON RANGES AND REFRIGERATORS, HAMILTON AUTOMATIC WASHERS AND- DRY-ERS, PREMIER GAS .RANGES AND SYLVANIA STEREOS AND TVS. SAVE PLENTY. BARGAIN BASEMENT PLENTY OF USED FURNITURE AND FACTORY SECONDS Gas end electric stove# and rerfig-erators, $20 up. Lots-of used Beds, dinettes, living rooms end other furniture, »t bargain prlca*. LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN STORE 1431 Baldwin at Walton FE S3*** First traffic light south of 1-75, across from Atlas Sopor Market. 3-R00M OUTFITS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $288 $3.00 WEEKLY NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7- piece (brand new) living .room: davenport end chair, team cushions, 2 step-tables, matching coffee table, 2 decorator lamps. All tor S129. Only $1.50 weekly., NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS 8- plece (brand new) bedrooms: double Crasser, book-case bed and chest, box spring and innersprlng mattress, 2 vanity lamps. All tor $129.1140 weekly. . . visit our trade-in department 210 E. Pike FE 4-7111 Open Mon. end Frl. 'til 9 p. m. __Between Paddock end City Hell 9x12 RUG, REFRIGERATOR, tV) $40 complete, 73$ W. Huron. 33-INCH TAMPAN GAS StOVE, S25. FE 5-7231 1994 MODEL MARTHA WASHING-ton electric range, $100. Contact Eugene Morris, 103 Hamilton SI., Pontiac. 334-3314. _ , AUTOMATIC WASHER, "GAl stove, refrigerator. FE 2-3104. A 1964 making buttonholes, sewing on buttons, blind hems, monograms, etc. Just by setting the dial. $4.00 per month. Still under guarantee. Rich-man Brother Sewing Center*. 335-9283. CASH PRICE $39.10 A BEAUTIFUL NECCHI SEWINd machine, 3 months old, used. With new cabinet. All sawing tasks done by setting a dial zlg-zegger. Makes buttonholes, overcasts, sews on but-. tons, written guarantee. Cash price $53.33 or $4.00 monthly. Domoleo, inc., formerly MIchlgan-Necchl-EI-na. FE 8-4521. ANTIQUE LOVE StgAT, $40. ELEC- 1$ I IWV« LV» *»*«*"* IJ *nw. **t*,e*^»- trie popcorn popper, $3. FE *•3757. AREA RUG, NEW 3 BY 9 FEET. Drapery tor 13' Window. 332-0131, heating plant. An outstanding Other Commercial Buildings Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. FE 8-0433 -----=-------;-------—| Open Evenings end Sunday 1-4 Northern Property 51-A “ used car lot siTE On Montcalm off Oakland. Over AT PBTOSKEY I 220 feet frontage, runs (rom street 439' frontage on U.S. 31. Beautiful! to street, nice corner. City sewer 3-unlt motel plus living quarters.! £n®, ’£*!•/• 9?!)f 009.000. Clark A-l condition. Plenty ol room tor Si-^ expansion. Illness forces m«v« I FF 3-7688. Residence FE 4-4M3. m trada.*ld*r prop"iy 'n ,hl‘ ‘''" Business Opportunities 59 ASW ROOT BEER, PROPERTY in trad*. EL WOOD REALTY__________ STANDISH ARteA, 10 ACRES, »),,95 $18 down, $10 month. 5 minutes to Lake Huron. Bloch Bros. FE 4-3*09. OR 3-1295. Lots-Acreage 54 lemliy. See the lake from the beautiful patio. Relaxation end satisfaction win be yours in Ih* 7 room, Bvb beth hem* with attached 2-car plastered gerege on * well • landscaped let. The low price « 129,900 else Includes Ihirt beautiful carpeting In Inis spacious home. B.Z. terms, Fenmore Street UNICHOLIE CLARKSTON AREA Three-bedroom bunoelow. Living end -dining ere*, Kitchen ena utility room, gas HA heel. Vacant. About 1300 moves you In, HARRINGTON HILLS Three-bedroom brick bungalow. Living end dining room. Kitchen, Full basement, oil HA heel, vacant. FHA terms. rwvm nume wirn i -,-^ar gerege end surrounded by large bast side frees will appeal to you If you —*“ hre looking tec a small but com Throe-bedroom bungalow. Living “and dining ere*. Kitchen, pud basement, Oil HA heal. About Piet* hem*. Walking distance to basement. Oil Crescent Lake, ideal ■ home lor 1310 moves you In. young coup!* lust sterling out. 9,950. Cell lor omer particulars.1 NORTH SIDE John K?i Irwin Phone PI s-9449 ■vonlnga 0*11 PI 549*3 Two-bedroom bunigelow. Living end dining ere*. Kltchan. Puli basement. Oil HA heel, vacant, About 53W moves you In. . Eves, cell MR. ALTON PI 9433* , NICHOLIF HARDER CO. 53M* W. Huron 81. (p| 5I1IJ 3 ACRES. CLARKSTON. 130 FOOT frontage. *00 Scotch Pines near 1-75 and Dixie Highway. 83,500. OR 3-3007. “TaIres Pine KnobJWn—Cfarkston school area. Desirable parcels with 230' Irontaga. Priced at only $3,7H with easy terms. HILLTOP VIEW From this 2Va-acre parcrl In Da* visburg area. Idaal for 2*ievel homo. Prcied at only $1,750 With terms. 3.2 ACRES Ponllpc Twp., convenient to proposed Osteopathic Collage and Community College. A steal at only $3,350 with $500 down. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-0135 3THSh Arib bCfefii^aOTSIfitfh some wooded On Clerkslon-Orloh Rd___15,500. 10 ACRE! QP WELL re.lrlcled perl .weeded end rolling lend — w mil* east ot U. I, 10—3 minutes from expressway. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 6 Acres Beautiful wooded area near Christian Hllli and Oakland university A reel bargain. Owner would consider trade, whet do you have? 39 ACRES Highland are*. Completely mod ' arnlzed home, 4 outbuildings. Pries 139,500. Will tred* lor smeller wait side property. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 337 I, Telegraph Road Open 9-5 Alter 5:00 FB $-9341 PE 2- B BEAUTY SHOP. BEAUTY EQUIP-ment, Walled Lek* area, EM 3-2322, GROCERY STORE. SOM LICENSE. By owner. Gross *1 $40,000 year. $H0 down plui slock. Reese rent. OL 1-1451 or PE 5-3902, MOTELS C. B. CHAPIN, Motel Broker BL 7-0300 Mower and Engine Service Salas and Service business. Well-established In growing erea. Several top franchises Included. MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSeR, BROKER 1573 5. Telegraph FE 4-1582 FE 4-0586 j Evas., 8734443. pSRW'lTfiRi—GS6piN6*bveR $95,000. Boer end wine, no Iresh meats, a man and wile operations. Attractive 3-bedroom living quarters. 310,000 down — Includes vaiuebla reel estate. National Business Brokers IMi 3-7341 PiflPifAiLiT 'MM 6PeeaYT6R reslaurent. Reel hot spot, 11,500 down plus Inventory, (deal lece-tlen tor 24 hour day operation. On mein hlghwoy, lllnoo* force* sole. Coll now esk tor Mrs. AAotley, 3334709. HACKETT REALTY 7750 Coeley Like Rd, "““IBfAufcAMT ” West of Pontiac. Excellent equipment with Flu* even, seen 53. Short houri, good Dullness. Lei's take * look, WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontlpe 333-7157 DO WHAT YOU WANT, WHEN YOU WANT TO, WITH PRESS1 WANT ADSI FINANCIAL WORRIES Let Us ffelp You I BORROW UP TO $1,000 33 months to pay 1 credit life Insurance available BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY ____OFFICES NEAR YOU 'LOANS 325 to 31,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E. Lawrence__ FB 8-0421 WHEN YOU NEED ' $25 TO $1,000 We will be glad to help you, STATE FINANCE CO. 588 Pontlhc Slat* Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 Mortgagolofliii_______62 1st and 2nd MORTGAGES $1,200 OR MORE NO APPLICATION FEES , 382-2300 SYLVAN 325-1833 24 Hour Servlet — 3344222 CASH - CASH FOft Home Owners WIDOWS, PENSIONERS CAN BE ELIGIBLE. CHECK, LOWEST RATES 31,001 $4.25 $2,000 ........ 112.89 $4,080 S25.7I 2nd mortgages slightly higher Borrow for ANY useful purpose Consolidate Bills New Car New Furniture Home repair end modernization FE 8-2657 If you con't call * . . Mall Coupon Loan-by-Phone IS. W. Lawrence St., Pontlec Rush details of your new plan Nam# .............. .... Phone .................. City_____ . mQRtgagb on 6ns acRTTW. With 150-toot frontage. No appraisal tea. B. D. Charles, Equltabl* Farm l oan Service. 332-0704. Swaps 63 5-FAMILY BRICK APARTMENT goad loctlon and Income. Will accept Cash or surburban horn* as down joeyment. Reply Pontiac Press Box 4. *3,o^coilimiIWdfAT6dwN payment on 2-bedroom nous*. Write total prlct, location, and other delalli lo Pontiac Press Box 96. blond tvriRr‘wrm«eT*i« dryer. OR 34473. for wr«rw»"rwauv. sad- die and bridle lor T FB 1-1422. N, Boll*. LAKi-RRlVitlGBlD Ldf FOR homo end gerege remodeling. OR 3-?1l3. - TrAdI 13400 EQUITY lICjfiBD-room hem* on White Lake lor anything of oquol value, 333-0553 after TRADE YOUR 2-BBDROOM jot or house trelwr In on this 3-btdronm bilevel, Excellent location — Larga wooded lot, wall-to wall carpeting, Iw b*th>. get heel, walking ditlenc* to ttoM sandy beach, Cali ARRO REALTY, Mini I. Ask tor Tad McCullough Jr. wl IUyT IIll Alio fftAbl id Matas, Mis, toboggans. Ml boots end guns dtily lTl 9. Bernier, Hargrave Hardware, 742 w. Huron, fe 1-91$). Open Sunday. ^ieC|emii| 64 WEDDING DEEM, 10. HOOP, haodplac*, IIM, 304-0011. ly dolhtt, size 14u. Ext. vary reasonable. UL 2 3524. A $INGER Dial-a-stitch, cabinet modal, wad. Built-In dial tor decorative stltCIMs, hems, etc. No attachment* needod-*5.50 per month wilt handle, *■ year guarantee. Rlchmen Brother* Sewing Canters. 33542*3,. CASH PRICE $58.80 BEDROOM FURNITURE AH6 l{IW> Ihg machine. FE 5.7110. BOX SPRING, ORTHOPEDIC MAT. trass, Hollywood bed. FE 84IH. BRONZE OR CHROME DINKTTg sale,-BRAND NEW. Largo and small size (round drop loot, roc-; (angular)' tablet In 3, 5 and ; pc. sets. *24.95 and up. Pearson’s furniture 210 E. Pike___________FE 4-7MI B~L O N D DINING ROOM SET, chins cabinet includsd, $70, 361* . 7013. BUNK BEDS Choice ol 1* stylos, trundle beds, triple'trundle bed* and bunk bed* complete. 349.J8 and up. Peer-ton's Furniture, 210 E. Pike. COLONIAL FURNITURE, LARbl selection, ovefythlng tor your home Family Home Furnishings, 213* Dixie Hwy., cor, TolegroPh. coppertone Electric stoVE, like new. 343-9*32. DECORATOR FURNITURE PIECES end accessories. UL 2-3039. DINING SET 3-PIBCB BLOND mahogany, modern, like now. Sacrifice *150. Phone 42*4332. DEEP FREEZE - FREEZER 430 lb. capacity, *100. Firestone refrigerator, 145, FE 5-7370. Call before 3 p.m. fIWidaire imperial deluxQ double ovan, electric range, excellent condition. FE 2-9407. GOOD CLEAN Gl AUTOMATlt washer, *40. Dryer 125. Living room tub* *40. FE 24837. HAMILTON CLoYNES DRYER -Good condition, boat offer. OR 3-1147. HOTFOINT AUTOA3ATIC WASHER, tudt-tevtr, A-l, 340. UL 24523. KKLVINATOR" WRINGBR WASHBR. Ilk* now, 1*5. 3254901. KELVINATOR RBPRIGERA-tor. good condition. *52-2490. K|RBy Repossessed, Ilk* now. Save 340. KIRBY OP ROCHESTER, 0*1-0424. KlltBY VACUUM-^ ~»*0> Now portable typewriter . *33.50 Singer consol* auto, zig-zag 359.50 Singer portable ..... no.so Curt's Appllence OR 3-1101 UViNQ ROOM Sit, US FE 5-2393 NOffll AUTOMATIC WXsHil, good condition, 331. 302-1195. NEARLY NIW 19'*4~RO'FRiGERS'-tor. 330-1324.____ »WTrarmtri» machine, deluxe cabinet model, zlg-zegger for dotlgn*, etc. Take over payments ot 13.10 pur month lor SPECIAL $30 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OP FURNITURE — Consists of: 2-pIk* living room suit* with 2 step-tables, I cocktail f*bi* end 2 table lamps. /■piece bedroom suit* with doubt* dresser chest, lull site bed with Innersprlng mettress end box-springs lo match with 2 vanity tempi- 5-plece dinette set, 4 chrome chelr*. Formic* lap table, 1 bookcase, 9x12 rug Included. Ail lor 3399, WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 e. HURON FB 44931 18 W, PIKB FB MIM Special Bargains 1964 Clot* outt—renget, washers, dryers, TV's and iteree't, while they lest. Terms Available. HAMPTON'S ELECTRIC *25 W. Huron PB 4-2521 Open 9 Till 9 P. M. Deity Setudey 9 Tilt 7 P. M, it6inr^{rB'n»ikiraiiosT6if good condiiien, cheep. MA G-1I4M9 after I. fwrN^iiD....NArnmiir*iwi bUX springs. |X100. _______ STROMBERG-CARLSON AM - FM tuner amplifier, 45 watts, $75. OA 0-2778. ________ UHF CONVERTERS AND ANTEN-NA-NOW IN STOCK. -■ JOHNSON RADIO & TV 45 E. Walton FE 8-4549 ZENITH FM TABLE-MODEL RA-dlo, 3 months old, call after 5:30, FE 5-9351. 24-inch Zenith, table model, Including stand. $42.50. OA H-2776, Water Softeners 66-A WATER SOFTENER RENTAL, UN-llmlted gallonage, $3 per month. 473-1277. universal Soft Water. For Sale Miscellaneous 67 14 HORSEPOWER SUMP PUMP, sold. We finance. Also rentals ahd repairs. Cpne's, FE 5-5443._ I WEEK ONLY *4" Birch, good 2 sides . 14" Masonite .............. •Drawer guides ..... ...... Magnetic catches .......... 14" pre-finlshed Walnut .. $12.95 . $ 1.98 75c ea. 24c ea. $ 9.95 PONTIAC PLYWOOD 1488 Baldwin FE 2-2543 For Sole Miscellaneous 67 LAVATORIES, COMPLETE — $24.50 value, $14.95. Alsg bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls, irregulars, terrific values. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake—1. NEW AUTOMATIC WATER SOFT-ener, alio removes Iron. (249.G. . A. Thompson, 7005 M» West. OIL BURNERS, COAL FURNACE. Taylor's 402 Ml. Clemens. PLUMBING BARGAINS. F R E E • Standing toilet, S14.95. 30-gallon heater, $47.95; 3-piece bath sets $50.95. Laundry tray, trim, $19.95; shower stalls w 11 h trim 034.95* 2-bowl sink, $2,95; Lavs., $2.95; tubs, *l6*nd bp. PIpe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO„ $41 Baldwin. FE 4-1514. POOL TABLES—BELAIRE LI 4-0900 ' 1 FEMALE BEAGLE'RABBIT DOG *25, PL 2-3006, Romeo. 3 MALE WHITE TOY >OCSt>LES 6 weeks. *45 each, UL 2-5417. 5-GALLON AQUARIUM, PUMP AND filter sal, *9. 10-gallon setup, 012 Crane's. UL 2-2200. ' < i1 10-GALLON TANK, *12.50 INCLUD mg pump, filter, gravel, fish and food. Jungle Jim Pot Shop, 4720 Woodward, of 14 Mile Rd. ’ 9-3000. AKC CHIHUAHUA WHITE PUP-,plOS. AAA 4-7430. RED TAG SALE 20 per cent discount on any article bought with red tag. New and used typewriters# adding machines, desks and other office pieces CALL FORBES, OR 3-9*67. ’ SPRED-SATIN PAINTS, WARWICK Supply, 2678 Orchard Lake. 682-2820 STAINLESS STEEL.DOUBLE SINKS $29.95. G. A. Thompson, 7005 M59 West. ring r tonholes, monograms, etc. in ma> pie cabinet. Pay off account in 9 months at $5.90 par month or $53 cash balance. Universal Co., FE 4-0905. SINGER Sewing machine In cabinet, used. Has dial zig-zagger for making buttonholes, monograms, overcast- ing and decorative stitching. Will sacrifice. *3.90 par month will handle. Richman Brothers Sewing Centers. 335-9283. $33.33 CASH PRICE THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Clothing, Furniture, and Appliances VARIETY OF GARDEN TOOLS -Reasonable. After 6 p.m. FE 5-7720. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT discount prices. Forbes, 4500 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9767. ________ WATER SOFTENER. BLACK PER- tan fur collar, size 10. Musical Goods 71 REBUILT PLAYER PIANO WITH electric motor and 12 new rolls, $350. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Across from Tel-Huron FE 2-0567 A BEAUTIFUL 44-INCH CONSOLE piano, tuned, delivered and guaranteed. $275. 338-0106. 9'X12’ LINOLEUM RUGS $3.95 EACH Plastic wall tile ■ 1* Celling tile - wall paneling, cheap. B&G Tile, FE 4-9957, 1075 W. Huron 9x12 Linoleum Rugs. $3.89 Celling tile . . .....»... .7We ft. Vinyl Asbestos tile ........7c ea. Inlaid tile 9x9" .... ...■■■ Floor Shop - 2255 Elizabeth Lake “Across From the Moll" 2i-Inch Used tv . ... 129.95 Walton TV FE 2-2257 Open 9-9 515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn ADMINISTRATOR OF ESTATE must sell 19 gas and oil furnaces— make offer. Will finance. MA 5-1501 or FE 2-0385- A 4. H Sales. APARTMENT SIZE GAS RANGES, 3-burner, 869.95 value — $49.95, /scratched. Several full size ranges I in electric and gas at terrific. J«al-ues. One year to pay. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake 18. ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 4-7471 BASEMENT, RUMMAGE AND FUR-nlture sale. 10-B. 670 Third. Bathroom fixtures, oil and gas furnace and boilers, automatic water heelers, hardware and electrical supplies. Crock, soli, copper, black and galvanized pipe and fittings. Sentry and Lowe Brothers paint. Super Kem-Tone end Rusloleum. HEIGHTS SUPPLY 2485 Lapeer Rd. FE >5431 BEEF AND PORK—HALF AND quarters. OpdykeMfct. FE 5-7941 Bottle Gas Installation Two 100-Pound cylinders and equipment, 812. Great Plains Gas Co. FE 5-0872. ___________ CASH AND CARRY 2 colors, 4x7 pre-finlshed mahogany $3.49 Open MON Eves 'till 8 p.m. , DRAYTON PLYWOOD 4112 W. Walton OR 3*912 CHILD'S BATTERY DRIVEN doR vette car. Brand new. Still In crate. Value 8350. Sail 8200. f26-1471. ______________ CLEARANCE OF USED OFFICE furniture and machines. Forbes, 4500 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9767. We also buy. CLOSET COMBINATION WITH code ballcock $19.75 4x/ pre-finlshed mahogany ' plywood * 3.75 4x8 pre-finlshed mahogany plywood ■ $ 4.10 4x1 un finished mahogany plywood $ 2.99 TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland \ COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE AND fillings, plastic, copper and cast Iron for drains. Plastic, copper and galvanized for water. Black lor AT GALLAGHERS - New spinet pianos from $309. Used spinet pianos, many. styles to choose from. Largest selections. Lowest prices, longest terms. Shop Us Before You Buy GALLAGHER'S MUSIC 18 E. HURON FE 4-0544 ROYAL OAK STORE 4224 WOODWARD BETWEEN 13 AND 14 MILE OPEN MON.-FRI. TILL 9 P.M. FREE PARKING AKC REGISTERED MINIATURE poodles, 7 weeks old, black and silver. FE 5-5387. AKC, REGISTERED POODLES, toys and small miniatures. 474-0215 or EM 3-3549. AKC REGISTERED COLLIES, 3A-bles,, Iris, blues. Shots, registered guaranteed. <51-3605._________;______ AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. STUD dogs. ESTELHEIMS, FE 2-0889. BOXER PUP, AKC REGISTERED, 6 months, fawn with white mark-Ings. Call FE 2-8919 after 6 p.m. PERSONALIZED POODLE C L I P-plng. OR 3-8920.___________ Poodle Stud Service BEAUTIFUL WHITE TOY BEAUTIFUL BLACK MINIATURE BOTH PROVEN STUDS FEE OR PUPPY OA 8-3397 OXFORD P006LE PUPPIES, STUD SERV- ice, fish, parakeets, canaries. Pet supplies. CRANE'S, UL 2-2200. Richway Poodle Salon A complete line of pet supplies 621 OAKLAND (next to Zlebarts) Open dally 8-4___________FE 8-0826 Auction Sabs 80 AN AUCTION GETS YOU CASH. • Phone Stan Perkins Swartz Creek 635-9400. EVERY FRIDAY 7:70 P M. EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY 2:00 P.M. Sporting Goods — All Types Door Prizes Every Auction We Buy—SelUTrade, Retail 7- days Consignments Welcome B6.B AUCTION 5089 Dixie Hwy.______OR 3-2717 Housitraiters 89 I Colonial. Mobilhome Sales Special Offer Vagabond: 12* Wide "'Factory cost" . Auburn (M59) at Opdyke (M24) Parkhurst Trailer Sates FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING i5 TO 40 feet. Featuring new Moon-Buddy and .Nomads. | Located halfway between Orion and Oxford on M24, next to Alban Country Cousin, MY 2-4411. __- YOU SAVE $$$ I94S 10' wldes. 2 bedrooms, *395 down, payments of *49 per month, Including. Interest and Insurance, >' Delivered and sat up. Most units hasted tor your shopping convenience — A good selection of used 8' end 10' wide* j ex low es *195 down. Terms to your satisfaction. ■ BOB HUTCHINSON 4301 Dixie Hwy. x OR 3-1202 Drayton Plains Open 9 to 9 dally, — sat. 9 to 6 Sunday 12 to 5 1 Rent Trailer Space 90 NEW SPACES. NATURAL GAS PONTIAC "MOBILE HOME PARK WHY RENT? BUY FOR-LESS PER - month. Mobile home lots, 65'x 120' $2,795, $25 down, $25 month. Black- Bros. FE 4 4509, OR 3-1 Commercial Trailers 90-A HEAVY DUTY TANDEM TRAILER. vacuum brakes. 8300. FE 4-6588. Tires-Auto-Truck 92 CARNIVAL By Di<;k Turner Truck Tire Specials tmiHHU. Re TkH HjH-flk $49.82 847.32 025x20—10 ply, highway 825x20—12 ply, -highway ____ 025x20-10 ply, mud and snow nylon ............... 900x20—10 ply, mud and snow nylon .... 10x22,5—10 ply mud and snow nylon ..... Ask for special leal on sets of four FREE MOUNTING Budget terms available FIRESTONE 144 W. Huron 333-7917 845.78 ‘Oh, I can’t say I think this new steady of yours has EVERYTHING, Janie! But at the rate he’s going it won’t be long!” Aate Service 93 ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth's new bump shop.. No ‘ lob too small or too big to be handled by us. rnsurance Work Free Estimates OAKLAND- Livestock 83 WANTED — ENGLISH RIDING horse, for 4-H showing. Phone FE 4-7238. IF YOUR WANT TO SELL YOUR piano, call Mr. Buyer at Grin nell's, Pontiac Mali. 682-0422. CONN ORGANS Two studio Conn Caprice organs with Leslie speakers, walnut finish, regularly $1,250 .... NOW 10 per cent off. Used Lowrey organ .. $15.75 Mo. PIANOS Used Console Piano ....... Save Upright piano Bargain LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Across from Birmingham Theater Free Parking____________Mi 6-8002 RENTAL RETURN Piano Sale Save Up to $200 Grinnell's (Downtown Only) 27 South Saginaw RECONDITIONEO UPRIGHT plana, new finish, tuned, delivered. 6 months guarantee, 8135. 338-0108. USED ORGANS LARGE SAVINGS. Wurlitzer, 61-note, 25-pedal, Ideal for small church, $395. Estey, 2-keyboard, separate Leslie speaker, now $895. Hammond Spinet, 1 keyboard, $295 Chord organ, $149 No money down, no payments t March- See These Before You Buy GALLAGHER'S MUSIC 18 E. HURON FE 4-0544 ROYAL OAK STORE BETWEEN 13 AND 14 MILE OPEN MON.-FRI. TILL 9 P.M. FREE PARKING __tAontcalm. F E. S-4712,_______________ DINING ROOM SET, BUFFET AND 6 chairs. Small sweeper, porch furniture, several f.arm tools. 682- USED ORGANS Choose from Hammond, Lowary, Wurlitzer, Baldwin, ate. Low easy terms. From $250. GRINNELL'S (Downtown) S. Saginaw FE 3*7168 USED PIANOS: UPRIGHTS FROM $48 — spinets from $288 — consoles from *399 — soma new pianos, floor samples, some music studio used, Inquire at Grinnell's, Pontiac Mall. 482-0422. USED BAND INSTRUMENTS Trade-Ins In good ploylhg condition. Cornet from *30, 0028. D & J CABINET SHOP 924 W. HURON 334*0926 SPECIAL LIMITED TIME ONLY 10' BIRCH PREFINISHED CABINETS WITH FORMICA TOP INSTALLED, $380. ELECTRIC..MOTORS;~ OIL BURN- ers; blowers; pumps. Quonset, 515 N. Saginaw, Holly. ME 7-7081._ ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES, ALl rooms, 1965 designs pulldown, balloons, stars. Bedroom, 1965, $1.19; porch, $1.55. Irregulars, samples. Prices only factory can give. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake. ;^J9. __ Encyclopedias, Ww7~20 volumes, sacrifice $50. 543-3515. _ FREEZER OWNERS NON-FREEZER OWNERS Meats and groceries Free home delivery SAVCUP TO 40 PER CENT All name brands Call tor Free catalog and Information Quantities limited, no dealers ® 647-1577 P&TWsfTCONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple Inexpensive Application "Bolce Builders Supply __ FE 5-8186 GAS F UftNACE, U$E D,TTkE Nfew. FE 2*7164 GAS'PURRacI, LIKE NEW ■ CALL FB 4 526; JIM'S SALVAGE OUTLELTvTRY-thing brand new. Fire salvage. Price* wholesale or lower. Corner Airport at Hatchery. OR 4-0818. JTm'S salvage outlet. T SOY merchandise from truck and train lottai, distress slock, bankruptcies and lira*, Everything brand new. Price* wholetale or lower. A new line ol merchandise every month, Hour* from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m, Mon.-Sat. corner ol Airport and Hatchery. OR 4-0818. ■ KfreMswuNifTBY ' KITCHEN kompact visit our model* on display. Term* Available , Plywood Distributors ol Pontiac 175 N. Can ___FE 2-0419 LADIE8' DARK BROWN WiG, NA-turaT hair. Perfect condition. 335-8234. LUMBER Rocklalh, 82 bundle ........ I 4'x8' plliterboard _____... $1.21 4'x7' v-grooved mahogany, selected $ 2.19 4‘xi‘ V gruoved mahogany, eO- lecled ............. * 3.99 4‘Xf Masonite 4‘xl' Masonite pegboard $ 2.98 1*"X12" whit* colling tile, first aluminum combination door $14.99 Fold-Away stairway ......... 117.98 Front doors, 3.0’x6.S' ..... $14.98 Burmeister's EM 3-4171 Open 4 days a weak* a.m. 10 I b.lVi, . Sunday*, 10 to I clarinets, $50, trombones etc MORRIS MUSIC ' 34 S. Telegraph Across from Tel-Huron- FE 2-0567 Music Lessons 71-A Sporting Goods 74 .22 SEMI - AUTOMATIC WINCHES-ter rifle, pump. FE 2-11 APACHE m I CAMP TRAILER -Clearance, brand new 1964 trail ers at used trailer prices, while they lest. BILL C O L L E R, Apache factory hometown dealer. 1 mile east of Lapeer on M21. GUNS-GUNS-GUNS! We carry one of the most complete lines of new and used guns In the areal Browning 22 rifle ....... $$2.50 Weatherby 22 rifle ..... $84.50 Remington 22 rifle $49.95 We have over 250 guns In stock Colt Pistol, frontier scout 22 cal $49.50 BEAR Archery Equipment FISHING Tackle Surf Board or paddel Board $99.00 MERCURY OUTBOARDS 3.9-100 as low as $198 ' Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sport Center 15210 Holly Rd., Holly MB 4-6771 ___—Open Dally and Sundays— BANKS ARCHERY SALES 24 Michigan Avo. FE 5-4264 OUNS: BUY-86'CCYrAD§ Burr-Sh.ll, ]7J S. Telegraph YOUR NEW APACHE DEALER for Oakland Count It Evans Equipment. 625-1711. Sand—Gravel-Dirt 76 BILL MALE’S PIT. FILL, GRAVEL, doling, back hoe jwork. EM 0-6373. OXt IteMD gravel and 1111, OR 3-8850. froNfiAd lakIbUILDErs "tUP-pl^, 4*«nd. gravel, till dirt. OR fSFibTtr sXM.“oftAtf K7'>TLT. N. Bolzo, FE 8 1422 Weed-Ceul-Cekt-Pibel 11 1A AGED WOOD, *7 UF, ALSO slab, PE 4-1788 Or FE 8-9844. £annIL coal -.......THE IDEAL tide color*. OAKLAND FUEL 6 FAINT. 48 Thom** It. FE 8-6189. MNAW6 UTThY’l - tt*V lUb wood. 810 cord, 2 tor 019 dollvorad. FE 2-1449 or 873-08)4 flAiSNED...ILab” W66D,“ "1# a cord, 118-0291. Nti-Mv.ifing legs 79 Hay—Grain—Fwd 84 Farm Equipment 87 NEW MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS, only *124.98 plu* free chain with the purchase of any new McCulloch chain saw. PARTS AND SERVICE KING BROS. FE 4-0734 FE 4-1442 Pontiac Road at Opdyke___ BOLENS TRACTORS WITH SNOW blade, A-1, $78. Bolens riding trector, 7 h.p. with snow blade. 8185. , Wheel horse Ranger, electric starter 32" mower, 8295. Wheel hor9e tractor, 5W h.p. electric starter with mower and snow blade. 8319. PARTS AND,SERVICE KING BROS. FE 4-0734 FE 4-1442 Pontiac Road at Opdyke NEW AND USEO TRACTORS., Evans Equipment. 625-1711. SEE OUR LINE OF HOMeLITE SEE US FIRST AND SAVE. JOHN DEERE, HARTLAND AREA Hardware. Phone 632-7141. USED FRAZER ROTOTILLERS, PARTS AND SERVICE. L. W. Avis 1570 Opdyke __________FE 4-4380 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE car. Motor rebuilding and valve grinding. Zuck Machine Shop, 23 Hood. Phone FE 2-2563. . Now and llttd Cars 106 1944 BUICK ELECTRA "225" 4-door hardtop. Full power, factory air conditioned. GM executive's car. S3,444. FISCHER BUICK 818 S. Woodward 1944 BUICK SPECIAL SEDAN. Powder blue, low mileage, a nice economical smell car. $2,*45. CALL ED DOWNEY WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC North ol 15 Mile and woodward Birmingham Ml 4-1930 1957 CADILLAC 4-POOR HARDTOP, white finish, jpowor equipped nice car at only—$74S. BOBBORST Birmingham Ltncoln-Mercui 520 S. Woodward Ml 4-4538 1958 CADILLAC, FLEETWOOD, that Is extra sharp, has many extras, full price *497, no monty down, 89.54 weekly payments. •’ Estate Storage Co. 109 S. East Blvd. FE 3-7161 1958 CADILLAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP. Exc; condition. New tires. Toko over payments, OR 3-2109. Wanted Cart-Tracks 101 Auto Insurance 104; MANSFIELD AUTO SALES We're buying .sharp, lete model cars . . . NOWI See us todayl 1104 Baldwin. Ave, FE 5-5900 AUTO INSURANCE Stop in today for no obligation quotation. Anderbon Agency FE, 4-3535 1044 JosLvn Ave Foreign Cnrs .105 PRIVATE PARTY WILL PAY CASH for good used VW sedan. 673-9471. 1958 VW, $375. MA 5-7946. SPECIAL PRICE PAID FOR 1955-1943 CARS VAN'S AUTP SALES 4540 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1&5 I960 TR-3 ROADSTER, NO MONEY down, payments of $4.70 weekly, Credit checked by phone, cell Mr. Johnson, MA 5-2604 Dealer. “TOP DOLLAR PAID" FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS GLENN'S 1960 AUSTIN HEALY. VERY! clean, $1,150. OR 3-0961. 1960 TR-3 HARDTOP AND CON-1 vertibie. This one Is sharp. Only $897. No cash needed. WE FINANCE Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You! 100 Cars to Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LLOYD'S 1250 Oakland Ave. 1954 CHEVY, 2-DOOR, *50. 1962 Chevy Impale, 4-door, *1,450. 1944 Chevy Impels, 4-door, *2,200. 10 Perk St., Oxford. After 8, Monday Friday. 1954 CHEVY COUPE, GOOD TRANS-portatlon. FE 2-4818._____________________ 1954 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, S35. Alter 6 p.m. FE 5*234. ___ 1957 CHEVROLET 4 BEL AIR, hardtop, powergllde, radio, 9225 or best efler. FE 5-1350 a'Hr 5-30 p.m.___________________________ New end Used Cors REPOSSESSION 106 down payment neededl win car to ydur homo, call Mr. John-son, MA 5-2404. Dealer. 1942 CHEVY II, . ________ ■ 2-DOOR, 37,000 milts In top condition. Good rubber. Snow tiros,, heamr, standard 1'JiW o'! 9m _____ . _ first *800 takes It. Write ontlac Press Box 30.________________ iR 1942 CHEVY 2-DOOR BEL AIR, radio, heater, V-l, power steering, automatic, now car condition, *l.- 475, EM 3-4517. C0RVAIRS 25 Months Chevrolet OK Warranty 1943 Atonzo Coupe. Azure aqua with aqua trim. Powergllde, radio, hooter, whitewalls. Spare never been on the ground- Only .\. $1,594 1942 "700" 4qoor sedan, bright red and white finish with fawn trim. Powergllde. radio, heater. Real nice and only ................ 8995 Patterson ChevroleTCo. 1942 CHEVY IMPALA 4-DOOR 8M75 FE 4-2084 , "j ,■■■"4 . REPOSSESSION 1942 MONZA, No down payjnont needed.. Will bring car to your home. Call Mr. Johnson, MA 5-2604. Dealer. .________ 1942 WHITE MONZA, 4-SPEEO Coll after 5 P.m. 482-1044. 1943 IMPALA, [LIKE NEW, *1,750, will flnorye, 482-3492 after 5. 1963 CHEVR0LETS 25 Months Chevy OK Warranty Bel Air 6-passenger station wagon. 2-tone amber red and white finish with red Interior, Powar-gllde. radio, heater, whitewalls. Specially priced at ....... ........... 81,495 Bel Air, 2-door sedor. Mrtumn Gold with matching trim VS engine, stick shift, rodk r,eater, whitewalls. Only . SI,695 impale sport coupe- Ermine whlto with aqua trim. V8 engine, Power-glide, radio, hooter, whitowoils. A sharp one-owner trade and only ....................•/. *1,995 with radio ana heater,. A vary nice cor and only...................... *1,798 Bel Air 2-door sedan. Silver blue with blue trim, V8 engine, Power-glide, radio, heater $1,495 nice, FE 3-7542 H. Riggins, Dealer. I NEED NEW Brake Linings? $9.95 ALL U.S. COMPACTS FORD-CHEVYi-PLYMOUTH $13.9! ALL OTHER U.S. CARS $16.9: "PLUS INSTALLATION BY EXPERTS" ADD $3.00 FOR POWER BRAKES 952 West Huron St. Ffe 4-7371 . FE 4-1797; TOP $ FOR CLEAN CARS OR trucks; Economy Car$»> 2335 Dixie. WANTED: 1959-1963 CARS GOODYEAR STORE 30 8. CASS PONTIAC STARTERS GENERATORS ALTERNATORS MOTOR WORK AND TUNE UPS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 44 E. KenneltSTALLED 334- 4376! JUIlk Cars-Trucks Ellsworth AUTO SALES Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 8-4071 1957 CHE'VY 327, 3-SPEED, DAM-aged side. 673-9033. 1958 CHEVY, NO MONEY DOWN, j payments of 14.40 weekly. Credit son. MA 5-2604, Dealer. 6577 Dixie Hwy. 1961 VW, RADIO, WHITE WALLS blue finish, white Interior, like new. Private' owner. 81,095. FE 8-9845. j WE NEED CARS! TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS Matthews-Hargreoves 431 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 4-4547 1961 VW SEDAN. METALLIC BLUE, radio, heater, whitewalls. Sharp. *1,095 full price. 10O per cent warranty. (95 down with low bank rates on the balance. 1958 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR, HAS t-, cylinder and automatic, radio and healer, full price S197, no money down, S2.80 per week. Estate Storage Co. 108 S. East Blvd. FE 3-7161 CORVETTES 101-Al Motorcycles SALE - SAVE $25 to $35 New 1945 Honda 50, $215 fob $10 down, $4 week ANDERSON SALES 6. SERVICE 23° E. Pike FE 2-8309 Yuko SALES INC. Suzukl-Sales-Servlce-Rentals 872 E. AUBURN UL 2-5363 rROCHEStER Y AMAH AS All New 1965 Models K&W CYCLE 2436 Auburn 731-0290 ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS — FREE TOWS TOP $$ - CALL FE 5-8142 SAM ALLEN 8*, SONS, INC. JUNK CARS HAULED AWAY 673-8503 Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 New and Used Truck* 103 Boats—Accessories 971 Travel Trailers 88 14' COACHMAN - NEW 1965 IN troductlon only $645. See this beauty . today. Brand new 1964 Apache camp trailers at used trailer prices, while they last. BILL COLLER, Apache factory hometown dealer, 1 mile east of Lapeer on M21._________ 1965 MODELS ON DISPLAY For a deal on a quality travel trailer inspect CENTURY- TRAVELMASTER 3 1964 19' Centuries left" TOM STACHLER AUTO and MOBILE SALES 3091 W. Huron St. FE 2-4928 ARE YOU FLORIDA BOUND? Get your travel trailer now. AVALAIRS, CREES, H0LLYS, TAWAS 14W to 28 ft., self-cOntalned Winter storage available. ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 4577 JJIxle Hwy_______MA 5-1400 AIRSTREAM LI GHfwBiGHT - TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed for life, See them and get a demonstration at Warner Trailer Sales, 3098 BOOTH CAMPER Aluminum covers and campers for any pickup, OR 3 5526; PHOENIX TRUCK CSm^KIS' 8-10-10.6 front and side models, Pioneer Camper Sales. FE 2-3989. pJCKJuP CAMper! ’ From $189 uo T&R CAMPER MFG. CO. 5320 Auburndale, Utica 731-1240 PHOENIX FOR '65 PONTIAC'S ONLY AUTHORIZED DEALER Covers, Cambers, Travel Trailers Seles end Rentals AAA CAMPER 8, TRAILER SALES FE 4-C SAVE New *64 models. 16 and 19 ft, Winnebago's. Large discount. Pick* up box covers. * * SALES - RENT P. E. HOWLAND 3255 Dixie _ OR 3*1456 'si! YoU TN'MARtR. Jacobson Trailer Sales 8* Rental 5690 Williams LK, Rd. Drayton Plains TAWAS TRAltfR, '44, SLEEPS 6, $1095, Goodell, 3200 S. Rochester Rd. UL 2-4550._ wolverTnI~Y ft li C K £AMi%RS and sleepers. New end used $395 up. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoplnq bumpers, ladders, racks. LOWRY CAMPER SALES, EM 3*3681. TRAVEL TRAOfPfiT AND* TRUifi? tempers. Pontiac Aulo Brokers, Perry el Wallen. PE 4-9100, Houietralters 89 1962 ALMA, MUST SELL, PRONT kitchen, 2 bedroom 10' by 55'. Best offer. MA 4*2967. ifSHM fiBMfLVYl, unlocked. *600 down. 624-2879. 1963 PONfTA?~(Sfri P 10x50 2-6BB' room, Tike over payments, FE 8-8448 or MY 31174. 1W' HdMlTTI HgCTlITIWLTE bedroom low, T»k* over pay ________ . ajo i lantr uvm ments, K^ooo Harbor Park, Lot 46, 335 AW. LOOK WINTER SALES MARLETTC, GARDNER, YELLOW STONE TRAVEL TRAILER* AND TRUCK CAMPERS. Alio many goad used trailers, OXFORD TRAILER SALES I mile south of L*k* Orion an M24 MY 8-8781 1944 Gillent condition. 83400. 428-1448, tiler 6 p.m. , i I LABRADOR FUF, FEMALE. 1284091. l ob YH| KIIt Akd pups, ilud dogs, jehelms, PE 4 2534. 1 ONLY SACRIFICE 1 19'/2-doot Century, 425 h.p., 60 mph, like new, with tandem trailer. Upholstery white and light blue. Cost $7,500, sell $3,295 cash. 682-2610. 1956 Chevy Stake with the lift gate, engine lust overhauled. Ready tor work. Full price of' only $595. Call Credit Manager -338-9222. 1965 JOHNSON'S ARE HERE CLOSE-OUT ON '64 MODELS Boats Canoes OWENS MARINE SUPPLY 396 Orchard Lake FE 2-80201 ~ ---------- 1958 NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) (Just 'A mile north of Cass Ave.) Lv"er>|Spartan Dodge Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER VV mile north of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph FE 8-4531 1941 SIMCA THAT IS ABSOLUTELY factory clean, a real gas saver. Full price *297, ho money down, *4.75 per week. Estate Storage Co. 189 S. East Blvd. FE 3-7161 25 Months Chevrolet OK Warranty .... matching trim. V8 engine, Powergllde, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls $1,895 Bel Air 9-passenger wagon. Sliver blue with blue trim, V8 engine. Powergllde, power steering and brakes, radio, heater $1,995 Patterson Chevrolet Co, 1184 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM 1959 Corvette convertible, power-glide, radio, heater, whitewalls, red end white exterior, red Interior with black top. Only SI.49S. 1943 Sting Ray convertible. Riverside red with red Interior end white lop. 340 h.p., 4-speed. Posi-trectlan, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only *3,895. Easy terms. Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1184 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM 1959 CHEVROLET 2-OOOR, RADIO, HEATER, VI, STICK. WHITE- 1941 VW CONVERTIBLE. RADIO,, ... ...... whitewalls, maroon finish, white uVALL TlRES. ABSOLUTELY NO ln,,eirlSf'i»j“ ir?or>MSlieYnrustfN MONEY DOWN. Take over pav-rnen L.Ur °ra marts ot *17.95 par month. CALL Inc., Rochester FORD Dealer, OL credit MGR„ Mr. Parks, at v*711’ - * Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500. 1961 VOLKSWAGEN. SOLID RED >neg ~/*upvdol£T STATION WAG* ..,148. 4mAin Irotc-lor Bvtr. nl#>* xnH 195V CMCVKULCI IISIIVR on, 4-door model, radio and heat- , with fawn Interior. Extra nice and runs like new. Only $995. Easy; terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO„ 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1962 KARMANN GHIA, BLACK. RA-1 dio, heater, extra nice' Inside and out. 100 per cent warranty. $1,495 full price, with only $95 down -and low bank rates on the balance. er, full price $397, no money down, $6.58 weekly payment. Estate Storage Co. 109 S. East Blvd. FE 3-7161 1960 CHEVROLETS Engines and Drives for Inboard-Oviaboard i-o FORD 2-TON WRECKER. Good condition. FE 5-1047._____ 1960 DODGE WRECKER T R U C k with Ashland oox. Good condition. 1615 S. Commurco Rd. MA 4-4479. ey down, payments of $5.20 ly, credit checked by phone, call Mr. Johnson, MA 5-2604, Dealer. 194TPORD ECONOLINE VAN. LOW mileage, extra clean, new rubber, (895. Jerome-Ferguson Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. 1942 ECONOLINE ~ PICKUP, l6w mileage, mint condition. OR 3-1134. 1943 FORD’ Vs TON PICKUP, 4 CYL-Inder. 14,888 miles. Milford. 485-1854. $1,388. Not Used commercially. AT REASONABLE COST 18 per cent down—Bank Rales OAKLAND MARINE 391 S. Saginaw FE 8-4101 "HARD TO FIND BUT EASY TO deal with." Rlnker, Sleury, Cherokee boats, Kapot pontoons, Evln-rude motor*. Pamco trailers. Take M59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Road to Demode Road. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE, Phone MAIn 9-2179.______ NEW 28' Chrls-Creft Cavalle- express cruiser, twin 185 hydraulics, hardtop. Specially Priced ON DISPLAY LAKE & SEA MARINA 245 South Blvd. E. FE 4-9587 tSny'S MARINE FOR ____IOHNSON MOTORS WE WILL BEAT ANY DEAL Kar's Boats, Motors, Lake Orion SPECIAL REDUCED PRlCfS On 1964 boats and motors for ...... ........ Christmas or for Christmas alii >6Rd l/i TON, V-8 ENGINlf 1963 Chevy Vi-Ton Pickup, with the Fleetside body, standard transmission, radio, heater, and the Deluxe cab. Only — $1,395. Crissman Chevrolet (On top of Rochester South Hill) ROCHESTER ___________ OL 2*9721 1964 IConolTNI VAN, hEavV duty package, big 6 engine, like new throughout! Save! JEROML: FERGUSON Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711 1964 CHEW fa TON WITH CAMft-er. 6,Q00 miles. Loaded with accessories. $1,850. FE 8-8450 after 1 purchases. Use our Lay-away Plan. No Interest to pay BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Nerth ol 14 Mile el Adams Rd. SPORTS'MINDED? BE SURE TO VISIT OUR NEW SPORTS DISPLAY DEPARTMENT Ice skates, hockey sticks, skis, sleds, toboggans, guns, football, baseball, archary, fishing, hurting equipment. Mergury, Scott McCulloch motors, end novelties. BOATS—MOTORS—TRAILERS CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES 43 E. Walton FB 8-4428 Dally 9 to 9 Sunday 12 to 4 We Need- Room . . , -6ut Thry g«i CLEAN-SWEEP SALE HUNDREDS OF BARGAINS ON BOATS—MOTORS—ACCESS. Use Our Free Lay-Away Plan PINTER'S MARINE 1370 Opdyke FB 4-0924 stick, radio, 4 ply tires, (1,775. JEROME FERGUSON, Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer. OL 1-9711. 1945"CffEV'TVAN, LIKE NEW, PRl- vale owner. FE 8-8704.______ D6DGI LAfi"t959 I-TON PicRUP. 3899 Gregory Rd., Glngellvllle. G.M.C. Factory Branch Mrr„, New and Used Trucks rcury, scoit-mccui* __ ..... ... A . marine accessories Pg 89485____ 47S Oakland JIIR yUTsTTRSAL ______ 473-317J______ NOW Airplanes 99 44 AERONCA CHAMP, NEEDS fabric to rellcense. 8750, May be seen at Aljen Airport. OA 8-2356. BONAMyru^dfiTSt rr~wc6 k 4, Leer ADP. anti, new tlrei Mark 2|>A and Mork 6, Lear ADP Aux. tank, full Pthtl, nr and battery, $5,956. 343-6721 Wanted Cari-Truckt 101 ALWAYS BUYINO AND PAYING MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS ASK FOR BERNIB AT v- BIRMINGHAM CHRY8LBR-PLYMOUTH, INC. 912 I. Woodward ^Ml 7-3214 AVERILL'S • We have orders ter 188 latt models "Check tht rest but pit the best" AVERILL'S FE 2-4674 2020 Dixie FB 4 4494 California Buyers 1965 GMC V»*fon Pickup With the 8' box, heater, defrosters, oil filter., washers. $1810 Houghton 8 Son ROCHESTER OL 1-9741 628 N. Main SI. REPOSSESSION 1960 GMC Pickup Va. ton/ no down payment needed, Will bring truck to your home. Cell Mr. Johnson, MA 5*jl604, dealer. __ T llPosSISsidN 1943 CHEVY Vh ten pickup, no down payment needed, Will bring truck to your home. Call Mr. Johnson, MA 5 2604, dtaltr, • Auto Iniaranci 104 AUTO INSURANCE FOR ANYONE DON NICHOLIE FE 5-4181 for sharp cert, Call , . . M & M MOTOR SALES mr Dixie Hwy OR 4-8M8 T Did You KnowT VILLAGE RAMBLER Cell for Appralsol 444 8. W88dw*rd • Ml 4 3900 MIRACLE MILE NO RATE INCREASE 810,008-820.000 lltblllly, 85,080. P.D. 81,080 medical, 81,000 death benetlt and uninsured motorist coversea tor BOTH, bodily ln|ury and properly demage. $27.05 FOR 6 M0S. NO DUES OR PEE ASK USI BRUMMETT AGENCY FE 4-05*9 Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vi i 1765 S. 1963 VW, FE 8-4531 25 Months Chevrolet OK Warranty Blscayne 2-door sedan. Ermine white with gray trim. 6-cylinder, stick shill, radio, heater . $ 495 Parkwood Station Wagon, 4-passenger. Cascade green with matching trim, V8, Powergllde, power steering, radio, haetar, whitewalls. Only ..................... S 895 BLACK WITH RED leatherelte Interior, radio, heater. _J3a-WI9ehei;4j>.nr>. _ 1943 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE ROA6-sler. Solid red with black top and ........ . . ... ..... black Interior. 4-speed. Low mile-: 1104 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 Patterson Chevrolet Co. l-spei age. Only $1,595. Easy terms. PAT TERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1104 REPOSSESSION 1963 VOLVO 2-door, no payment needed, will bring car to your home, call Mr. Johnson, MA 5-2604 Dealer. REPOSSESSION 1963 VW No Money Down Call Mr. Johnson MA 5-2604 Winter Prices oh All Sports Cars on Hand. Enjoy the Savings I Deal Now and Save I 30 New-Sport Cars on Hand for Immediate Delivery! 1964 Triumph Spitfire 3500 Miles $1695 Easy Financing and Bank Ratea SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland FE 5-9421 New andl Used Cars 106 1581 BALDWIN 2 BLOCKS NORTH OF WALTON Always a good selection ot tine cars and pickups. Easy itrm*. Bob Rapp Phil Dorman 1 Salesman: ____PE 82441________' NoI'fHWMB Aufd'miS mint iiarp'iuiariNvitfx; 2-door hardtop, exc., condition, guaranteed, lew mileage. 4882815, lEPbSSESSION 1962 Buick Special Convertible No Money Down Call1 Mr. Johnson MA 5-2604 Dtalgr cTT/CTk f, l-oOdh,’ Itea, J,Mt milts, PE 81778. '^Wstjick ^ LtStbr# 2-door hardtop, Wildcat engine, automatic, double power. 13,000 miles, 82.495. iLVk •a.'iiiiK.'crt'i VAN CAMP CHEVY WL1 MILFORD m 4-10251 OR 8 BIRMINGHAM IMinORVAIR, 8100 AND TAKE over payments. EM 3-4200. h)840 CHEVY BliWYHi 8D06R, stick 6, heater, whitewalls, good condition, turquoise. DON'S. 677 S. Lapeer Rd., Orion. MY 2-2841._ 1940 cHeVrBlIt 2-d6or, ~aut5-MATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN _ Take over payment* of 826.75 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks, el Harold Turner Ford. _MI 4-7500. l94rCH*Vft6Llf hMFALA 9-FaS-senger wagon. Light turquoise finish with matching Interior. V6 engine, Powergllde, power steering and brakes, air conditioning, radio, heater, new whitewall tires. Only 41,295. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1104 &. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM - Ml 4-2715. 1962 CHEVROLETS 25 Months Chevrolet OK Warranty Bel Air 4-door sedan. Autumn gold . with lawn interior. V8 angina, Powergllde, power steering, radio, heater. Now only ................... .. 81,595 ergllde, power ____ er, whitewalls. This one has extra Tow mileage and only $1,495 REPOSSESSION 1963 Chevy 2-Door Hordtop No Money Down Coll Mr. Johnson MA 5-2604 Dealer 1963 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR, RADIO and heater, whitewall tires, extra clean, can finance 100 per cent, assume car payments of $35.27 per month. Village Rambler, 666 S. Woodward Ave., Ml 6*3900. 1963 CHEVY “6" Station wagon with standard Iran* mission. Not loaded with costly extras but It Is lust about tha nicest one around. The original light turquoise finish and vinyl interior trim look almost naw. Tires end mechanical condition art excellent. A "TOP QUALITY" family car that will be economical to operate and easy on your budget at our low prlca ot only $1495 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 912 S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 New and Used Cars _ 106 ,TportCSLLimTeU5hVK Interior/ «8 engine- Powergllde end power steering, radio, »'e3,*r> whltewa s. Only *2,195. Easy terms/PATTERSON CHfVROLff CO., 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735,___ 1844 CHEVY 8-PAS SEN GBR wagon, V-8, full power, low mlle-age. many extras. _ by Chevrolet supervisor, >2,393/ 447-3848. ■ . "i 1 111 *. is a ioxi IMPALA 4-DOOR HARDTOP-M3 motor, leaded. *2325. Cell alter 5 p.m., OL 1-1585. 1944 CHSVY IMPALA - eW~«i5 h.P„ 82395. MA 4-3397 1944 CHEVELLE H.AROTOPt toe Lncicmu 'I'TT VTJ speed; 1942 CheyV S.S., *Wck. 138 Melrose, before 2:38 p.m,_ 1944 CHEVELLE AAALIBti 2-IwuR hardtop, V-8, automatic, sell ror best offer. 473-9283 between 184 p.m. Credit or Budget* . PROBLEMS? We* Can Finance You! 100 Cars to Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LLOYD'S 1250 Oakland Ave. 1962 IMPERIAL Inal midnight blue factory finish and a most luxurious light blue Interior. An exceptionally I o w mileage car that Is almost tike a new one. Top performance end comfort plus the convenience of power windows and vents. 4-way power seat, power steering end brakes. Auto-pllot, tinted glass, radio with rear speaker and power antenna. Heater with rear Window de-fogger, whitewall tires, end other tine extras. "TdP QUALITY." — Prided to fit your budget at only <2295 - BIRMINGHAM . No $$ Needed! Get a A-1 Used Car Call Mr. Mason —Anytime— FE 5-4101 John McAulifft, Ford 630 Oakland Ave. 1964 CHRYSLER "New Yorker" 4 • door herd-top equipped with automatic transmission, power steering, p o w e brakes, power windows, tinted glass, radio with rear speaker, whitewall tires and many other extras. Light glacier blue exterior and blue vinyl bucket seat Interior are Immaculate. Not lust another Car out a "TOP QUALITY" beauty, that I* almost Ilka new and it has a NEW CAR WARRANTY TO 58,008 MILES. Payments arranged on LOW COST NEW CAR TERMS. Don't miss this one at our low low price of only $2995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 912 S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 1957 DE SOTO SPORTSMAN HARO-top. full Power, good condition. 3275. Ml 4-04*9. I960 DODGE 2-DOOR, REb AND white 84.97 per week, no cash needed. WE FINANCE Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 1960 Dodge 2-Door In glowing fawn tan. Owner certified 30,000 miles, with Chrysler's Famous slant 4 and automatic, perfect let or 2nd car for lust *597. Full price, no S* down need-edl Call Credit Maneger-334-9222. Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. 1963 “CORVAIR MONZA. WHITE. 4-j speed. Must sell. FB 5-6326. 1963 CHEVY 2-Door Hardtop dto, With the V-S engine, radio, heeler, whitewalls, beck up lights, washers, beautiful brown finish, with the matching Interior, you mutt come In end see this beauty today I $1995 Russ Tohnson Pontlec-Rembler On M24 In Lake Orion MY 3-6244 1963 CHEVY iT "NOVA" CONVERT-Ible, automatic transmission, radio and heater, whitewall Spartan Dodge I960 DODGE “V8" Station wagon with automatic transmission, chrome luggage reck, whitewall tires end ether extras. Light green exterior finish with silver and grey Interior trim. A dandy family car that I* In good mechanical condition end handles very nicely. Easy payments can be arranged. No down paymtnt needed es our low full price Is only tires, like naw.’can finance 180 Rambler, 444 S. Woodward Ave Ml 6-3900. _. ________ 1943 imYTla 4-YoOR, HaKiO, Powergllde, brakes and steering. *1,575. Call EM 3-3097. CHEVY II 25 Months Chevrolet OK Warranty 1964 100 series 2-door sedan. Automatic, gold with lawn trim. 6-cyllnder engine, powergllde. radio, hooter, whitewall*. Only 7 000 ec fuel miles. Reel nice ai d only *1,495. Impale convertible. Honduras maroon with lawn trim. V6 engine, Powergllde, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only St,495 Bel Air 2-door sedan. Crocus yellow. wllh tawn Interior. 4-cyllnder engine, Powergllde, power steer id, radio, healer, whitewalls. An . dlo, heater, 6-cyllnder standard transmission, 81,195. Hunter Dodge 499 t. Hunter ifrmlnghim Y Ml 7-0955 1>63 MamfeOFAi This U I A 1 plus automobile with automatic transmission, whitewall tlrai, radio and heeler, coma in end driVJ this on* and see tor yourself, 1)00 down and up to 36 menthalo pay. t t nvrvc; 4-^4 t - -| ■ ' A 1 nil—kJ LINCOLN-MERCURY . NEW LOCATION 1250 OAKLAND AVE. FE 3-7863 New and Used Cars 106 |MARMADUKE 1943; COMET; 4-DOCm,' AUTOMATIC. \ radio, doluxe trim, factory offi cl?i'_WP_ IRlteMpi JE rome-ferguson Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-W11. 1943 MERCURY COLONY PaEK 9. passenger wagon, red finish, power ' equipment, Truly r beltotlfVI car # omweNbmnI BOBBORST ly . Llncoln-Mercury 520 S. Woodward Birmingham 1944 COMET CALlENTE CONVERT , (ble, V0 engine, automatic, power steering, brakes, AM-FM. radio. Ducket seats,. low mileage! S Pec tory official. Must see to appre-Cletel JEROME-FERGUSON Inc. ^ Rochester FORD Dealer. Ot'1W711. OLIVER BUICK 8)295 1962 CHEVY Vk tort pickup 1943 RENAULT Dauphin# 1954 SKYLARK 2-door Hardtop $2595 1962 BONNEVILLE Wagon 1962 RENAULT 4-door, white $ 495 1962 FORD Wagon, red 1960 ELECTRA 2-door Hardtop $1295 1961 PONTIAC Catalina ....... $1295 1940 OPEL, Wagon, 9-pass. . I960 LeSABRE 4-door, silver 1963 LeSABRE 2-door hardtop $2395 1943 OLDS Super 58 ... 1950 BUICK LeSabra Hardtop $1095 1961, FALCON 2-door Deluxe 1959 PONTIAC Catalina Wagon $ 795 1962 VW Black, buckets... $1195 1941 OLDS "88" Hardtop . i ;.. $1295 1942 FORD Fairieno 500 .... 1943 LeSABRE 4-door, power 1943 BONNEVILLE Hardtop . 1944 JEEP CM top, plow ... 1944 PONTIAC Catalina ..... $995 $395 $1095 $1295 $2195 52295 $2395 $2595 OLIVER BUICK 196-210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165 1954 OLOSMOBILE 4-DOOR HARDTOP. Power steering and power brakes. $200. 62,000 actual miles. GOOD BODY 1957 OLDS N 2-DOOR HARDTOP, power steering, brakes and Is $249 full price! $5 down. MARVEL 251 Oakland Ave, 1957 OLDSMOBILE .......... *127 195$ Dodge hardtop ........ *145 1955 Chevrolet, needs repair * 35 Plenty others, Hudson, Packard, _ Nash. ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dixie Hwy. 1957 OLDSMOBILE, FULL POWER, automatic trans. Best offer. FE 2-9249. 1958 OLDSMOBILE 4-DOOR HARDTOP, Full power. $250. FE 5-4470 or 49 Sylvan Ct. 1962 OLDSMOBILE STATION WAG-on. This baby blue wagon Is. In mint condition plus all the optional power features Including air conditioning and full matching carpeting. This low' mileage car is Ilka new. You can stfto into this car -for only $100 down and up to 34 months to pay. *- LLOYD'S LINCOLN-MERCURY NEW LOCATION 1250 OAKLAND AVE. FE 3-7863 1942 OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE WITH FULL POWER, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. CAN FINANCE 100 PER CENT, ASSUME' CAR PAY-* MENTS OF $38.80 PER MONTH. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD AVE., Ml 6 3900. 1962 OLDS FS5 9-PASSENGER Wagon with radio, heater, power steering and brakes, V-I engine, automatic, whitewalls. $1495 Call Mr. Don Rosso at— JOHN McAULIFFE REPOSSESSION 1962 Olds 2-Dopr Hardtop No Money Down Call Mr. Johnson MA 5-2604 Dealer 1962 OLDS “98" A beautiful metallic blue 4-door hardtop equipped with power steering, brakes, windows and seats. Hydramatlc, radio, spotlight, timed gloss, excellent whitewall tires, chrome Wheal covers and seal belts front and rear. A fine per-forming car that Is luxurious In Ovary detail. Yours today for only 11895 BIRMINGHAM Chryelar - Plymouth 912 S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 1962 bLDSMOBILk F-8S CUTLASS convertible. Sliver bide with blue Interior and white top. Automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whltewolls. Only 81,395. E«y terms, PATTERSpN CHEV- lucket seals, console, power win* dowi, 12,300 actual miles. OL HI13. l'94J CU7LA8S7~fAkE OVER PAY ments. OR 3-3780 attar 3:30. 1944 DYNAMIC 88 OLDS SEDAN. 394 cubic Inches, 3 spaed stick on the wheel, 12,400 cash. 333-7526 after 0:30. ____ 1 *"’ VMrPTYM6UfH UL 2-3757. EtYMoiJYH WA6SN,'14B8SC 1939 PLYMOUTH FPasSINoe! station wagon, V-0, automatic, power brakeeand steering. MA 3-5331. f940 VALlA>(T v35o, J-PA*8i[N61h wagon, 1493. Hunter Dodge 499 8. Hunter Birmingham Ml 7-0955 le a real sharpie. Full price 1397, no money down, 84.38 per weak. Estate StoraaB Co. 109 8. Beil Blvd. FE 3*7161____ lftrvXpANTT"iionEt, AOtShWT* le, raato, heeler, clean. 8050. Ml 4*iOM after 4T ■■._’ tNii VAliant.^S66R/ wrrFiTA- DIO AND HEATER, WHITB* WALL TIRE*, REAL NICE, CAN a CM 100 PER CENT, A5 CAR P A Y M IN T 8 OP 820.23- PEN MONTH. VlLLAOB RAMBLER, 855 S. WOODWARD AVE., Ml 5-3900, 1955 PLVMOUtH PUNY 4.666ft, v-8 automatic, power •tearing, brakes, radio, like ntwi Only -82,295. JERpMf FERGUSON, Inc. Noihoator FORD Pooler, OL )*97)i, SHELTON ' PONTIAC-BUICK i ill Rechaatar Eoadt * i- ollaiii By Anderson and Leeming “You'll break his; heart if you don’t buy it!” Now and Used Cars 106 1955 PONTIAC, 4-OOOR, V-8 GOOD .franiportetlon, reasonable. FE 4*3313. ,W - .., -.. 1955 PONTIAC HARDTOP, NO MON-ay down, paytnonts of <2.20 weekly, credit checked by phone, call Mr. Johnson, MA 5-2404. Dealer. 1957 PONTIAC. GOOD CONDITION. FE 5-4334. 1950 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE, has full power, radio and heat-, er, automatic transmission, and full price only 0497. Banker's Outlet . 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 8-7137 1950 PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN, 8-cyllnder with automatic, radio, . heater, lull'Price $97, no money down, $2.00 weekly payments. Estate Storage Co. • 109 S. East Blvd. FE 3-7161 1959 PONTIAC, 4-DOOR SEDAN, original owner, axe, buy . at $425.. 625-2444. .1 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR hardtop. Sparkling white with tur quolse Interior, Hydramatlc,. power steering and brakes, radio, heater whitewalls. Ohly S495. Easy farms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. -1104 S, WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1959 PONTIAC 4-DOOR, HARDTOP red and white, 1-owner new car trade-in. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. SPECIALIZING IN FINANCING. Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 1959 PONTIAC 2-DOOR CATALINA, new tires, excellent condition. — $500. FE 5-7494. ' I95Y PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR hardtop, 8 automatic, power steering and brakes. Full price only $495. COOPERS—427$ DIXIE—DRAYTON 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR hardtop, white with full power, $4.47 per week, no cosh needed. WE FINANCE Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 1959 PONTIAC 2-OOOR, RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES — ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN — Take over payments ot $24.74 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks, at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500. 1959 Pontiac 4-Door This one Is In mint green with automatic and power. $497 full price. No $$ down neededl Call Credit Manager — 338-9222. , NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) (Just mil# north of Cass Ave.) Spartan Dodge 1959 PONtlAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP, this has full Power, full price $497, no money down, *7.79 Per week. Estate Storage Co. 109 S. East Blvd. FE 3-7161 ifao PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-DOOR hardtop, 1-owner sharp, $995. Hunter Dodge 499 S. Huhter Birmingham Ml 7-0955 REPOSSESSION 1960 Pontiac Wagon No Money Down Call- Mr. Johnson MA 5-2604 i96ir "TCWfiAC . Power >1 I...... Catalina kAftS>- 'ower steering, brakes. Extra clean. Take over payments. OA 8-2766 after 5:30.________________ I960 PONTIAC, CLEAN, $79~5~, DEAL- er. 673*1391 or OR 4-131J2._ I960 PONTIAC CATALINA, BEST Piter. MA 5-2172.__ 1940 CATALINA WAGON OR 1963 Catalina convertible. Good shape, trl-power, power brakes and steer-Ing, Will trade tor good pickup OR 4*0131). 1941 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR sedan. This bronze beauty Is one 'of the nicest cars In town, it has power steering and brakts, radio and haalor, automatic transmission and whitewall liras, Coma otrly to sae this one. OnlV $(,493. Including tones end licenses. LLOYD'S LINCOLN-MERCURY NEW LOCATION 1250 OAKLAND AVE. FE 3-7863 1941 TBMbESf“TiOHf BLUE, good condition, call UL 2-2440 alter 5:30 p.m. 1961 TSAirpfST, 4-600R SlTJAff. 4-cyllnaer, stick shift. Good tires and paint, $450. UL 2-3274- after 3:30. Ntw and Used Cars 106 1954 CATALINA VENTURA, 2 DOOR hardtop, trl-power, 4-speed. FE itJ964^qntoc •M Bonnaville Convertible with radio, hdater, power tt< Makes, whitewalls, beoytltol its one la yours tor the tow price *; h led below, your hid car will (hake the down payment ”$2795 J Haupt Pontiac CLARKSTON' M,l>> 1954 GRAND PRIX SILVER BLUE With dark blue nt rior Aluminum ’ Wheels, whitewalls, tinted glass iGluster gauges, hydramatlc, cut-tom steering wheel, radio with reverb, power steering brakes '‘iSMlt##rdXti'ii?Must.: salt. jjS&WwL OR 3^890 after 5. „ . . 194a TEMPEST 4-DOOR, V8 EN-gtna, automatic, power steering, ^brako, radio, only 82X195. JEROME PERGysoN, tm Rochet, tor TORO Dealer, oL 1-971). 1954 PONTIAC, 2’X2' HARDTOP, 'power: steering and brakes, 421 H.O. 4*p«ed, posltraclten, radio, haatoT, whitewall tiros,- aluminum ■San, s Hand. 106 Mow god Ussd Caw ^mYredif nr Budgst j- ^PROBLEMS? Wb Can Finance You! L®.,Calll^^ KM Darrell . j * 338-9222 '.■•/MkNYTlMi- SPAljTAN DODGE INC. in 1967 RAMBLER CLASSIC . 4 DOOR. 1 HAS AUTOMATIC TRANSM1S-SION, R A 0 I O , WHITEWALL ;;' TIRES, CAN FINANCE 100 PER • CFNT ASSUME CAR PAY MENTS OP *24 f9 PER MONTH VILLAGE RAMBLWI,*• WOODWARD AVfc Ml 1952 RAMBLER CONVk.RTH|LK, $3 , ,Wua , 1952 COMET Moor, 5cyl. . 831»S *2173 *2*45 * 939 1953 FALCON Ranchere *1373 1962 RAMBLER Classic 2-door * 800 1944 OLDS Convertible .. . $2795 I960 PONTIAC 4-dObr, pice ■.. . * 675 1962 RAMBLER' Wagon, Classic. * 775 jughten 6c Son Rambler—Olds—GMC -SEE US FIRST BOBBORST-. LINCOLN-MERCURY 520 S. Woodward Birmingham MI 6-4538 1943 RAMBLER CLASSIC STATION WAGON WITH RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION/ CAN FINANCE 100 PER CENT, ASSUME CAR PAYMENTS OF $31.75 PER MONTH. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 47 E. MAPLE RD., TROY, 580-8753 (ACROSS FROM K-MART). HILLTOP with ,Our Pre-Delivery , 100% Guarantee I '57 PONTIAC 2-DOOR . .. * 195 '59 FORD 2-DOOR .. * 295 '59 PONTIAC 2-DOOR . $ 495 '59 CHEVY WAGON .. S 495 '40 CHEVY 4-DOOR ..* 795 ‘60 PONTIAC 4-DOOR * 895 '42 MERCURY HARDTOP ... *1,195 '62 TEMPEST WAGON *1,195 '42 PONTIAC HARDTOP *1,395 '42 OLDS HARDTOP .. $1,595 '43 COUNTRY SEOAN . *1,495 '63 FORD XL ....... $1,995 '43 CHEVY IMPALA .. *1,995 '64 CATALINA HARDTOP ....*2,495 '44 BONNEVILLE ....... *2,795 962 Oakland FE 8-9291 1944 RAMBLER CLASSIC STATION WAGON, V-8 ENGINE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER STEERING, RADIO. ...HEATER. NEW,, CAR WARRANTY, Can finance too per CENT, A S S U M E CAR PAYMENTS OF $45.36 PER MONTH. VILLAGE RAMBLER, \ 446 S. WOODWARD AVE!, Ml 4-3900- Houghten & Sort -now available— 1965 Rambler American 2-Duor Sedan Heater, defroster, oil filter, washers, antl-freeze, deep dip rust proofing.' BRAND NEW UNIT — Only — . $1877*26 /. 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Taka the guesswork out ol buying Used Carsl Credit No Problem I 1961 CADILLAC Fleetwood, Full power, Factory air-condition .................. ..........$2595 1963 OLDS “98“ Coupe, full power, bucket seats, almost like new............................$2995 1961 TEMPEST Coupe, automatic, radio, heater, Whitewalls, One owner......................$ 895 1960 OLDS Super "88" 4-door hardtop, full power, automatic, factory air ...........$1095 1964 OLDS ."98" Coupe, power, bucket seats, 30-day Unconditional Warranty .. . .$2995 1962 OLDS Starfire Coupe, full power, factory Air conditioning, like new .............$2195 1963 OLDS Convertible, Automatic, power steer- 1 ing, brakes .............................. $2195 1963 OLDS "98" 4-door, all Power, real sharp Birmingham trade! Only .....................$2195 1964 OLDS "88" 4-door, Power steering, brakes, "•QO-day Unconditional Warranty ..............$2395 1962 OLDS 9-passenger wagon, power steering, brakes, priced at ....................... $1895 1962 FORD Galaxie Coupe, automatic, radio, whitewalls, priced to sell ........... $1195 2-YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham ' 647-5111 IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE GETTING YOUR CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHED - NOW >Y0U CAN TAP ADVANTAGE OF THE ALL YOU NEED IS A STEADY JOB. A $5.00 DOWN PAYMENT AND A DESIRE TO HELF YOURSELF, CALL MR SIMMS: FE 8-4088 nm Mm mam j INCORPORATED ABSOLUTELY- NO MONEY DOWN SPOT DELIVERY JUST MAKE PAYMENTS I960 FORD $3.44 per Week J957 OLDS 11.55 her Week 1960 CHEVROLET t3.44 per Week $297 $97 $297 1961 FORD FALCON $4.14 per Wt»k 1959 PONTIAC $4.14 par Wook 1959 FORD ' $2.28 per Week $397 $497 $197 WALK IN-DRIVE OUT THERE IS REALLY ONLY ONE WALK IN-'-DRIVE OUT TEL-A-HURON AUTO 60 S. TELEGRAPH ACROU PROM TEL-HURON CENTER FE 8-9661 *ff;«900 1 FE 8-8825 i »: NEW CORVAIR MONZA 4 SPEED, CHEVY IMPALA 2-OOOR HARDTOP; AZURE AQUA. DM WARRANTY. VENTURA SPORTS COUPE, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES, MAROON. BISCAYNE 2-DOOR, WHITE, RED TRIM; V4,' STANDARD SHjFT.’, IMPALA SUPER SPORT *• DOOR HARDTOP, V-8, POWER-GLIDE, JI4AROON, EZ BYE GLASS. T .y,. , -TEMPEST’’wiEOtif,vEZ -EYE, V-8, AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES. CORVAIR MONZA COUPE, RED, POWERGLIDE. -1963 CADILLAC SEDAN doVILLB, FULL POWER, WHITE WITH BLACK TRIM, 13,880 MILES, LIKE NEW. CADILLAC COUPE, BLUB, POWER STEERING, BRAKES AND WINDOWS. OLDS "88" CONVERTIBLE, RED WITH WHITE TRIM, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES, ■ ' OLDS 2-OOOR HARDTOP, WHITE .WITH RBO TRIM. | PONTIAC CATALINA 7-PASSENGER WAGON, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES, TURQUOISE. ■ TEMPEST LEMANS CONVERTIBLE, WHITE," V*, AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING, 17.800 MILES. LEMANS SPORTS COUPE, AUTOMATIC. BLUE. IMPALA 4-OOOR HARDTOP, WHITE WITH BLACK TRftM, V-8. POWERGLIDE. CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, RED, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES. ./ TJjk ^ f. . VENTURA HARDTOP, BLUE, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES. ' NOVA WAGON - LIKE NEW, BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, WHITE, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES.- _ ;VV IMPALA 2-DOOR HARDTOP, V-8, STICK. / ' ' j,™'7’* RAMBLER; CONVERTIBLE, BUCKET SEATS, RED, OVERDRIVE, -—1962 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, RED WITH WHITE TOP, PRICED RIGHT OLOSMOBILE F*83 CONVERTIBLE, BLUE WITH wnire TOP FORD GALAXIE 1 DOOR HARDTOP, .AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING, V-8, 2 TONE BLUE, 1 OWNER, SHARP BONNEVILLE HARDTOP, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES, HYDRAMATIC, Rip. IMPALA 2-DOOR HARDTOP, WHITE WITH RED TRIM, VW, POWER STEERING ANO BRAKES, AUTOMATIC. GRAND PRIX, RED WITH BLACK TRIM, HYDRAMATIC, POWER S T E E R I N G AMD BRAKES. IMPALA 4-OOOP HARDTOP, ONE OWNER, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES, B^UE. BONNEVILLE SAFARI WAOON, FULL POWER, EZ EVE GLASS, LUGGAGE RACK, ALUMINUM WHEELS, LIKE NEW. CATALINA 4-OOOR SEOAN, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES. UXN, rUWEK aiBRKin BRAKES, AUTOMATIC. VENTURA SPORTS COUPE. POWER" STEERING AND BRAKE*. IMPALA SPORTS COUPE, V-0, POWERGLIDE, BLUE. 7 FORD OALAXie, 4000R SEDAN, V-0, AUTOMATIC. STUDIBAKCR DAYTONA HARDTOP, BUCKET SEATS, V-8, AUTOMATIC. 1961 CMBVY BEL AIR WAGON, V-8. POWER STEERING. MONZA 4 SPEED. BLACK. RADIO ANO HEATER, CLEAN CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DOOR - HARDTOP, V-8, AUTOMATIC, SHARP CHEVY BISCAYNE, RED, POWERGLIDE. ONI OWNER, LOW MILEAGE. CORVAIR WAGON. POWER-GLIDE. RADIO. SBVBRAL TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL*. 1840 to 1757 MOOBLS Mansfield Auto Sales 1104 Baldwin FE 5-5900 I - PfggB4. . FE 8-8825 WmZ/A: ( TWLNTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965 rjsa keego TtCHHlCOLpJT- IECHH1SC0PE* iSTOWwmmi MIO lAGnmner Pontiac's POPULAR THEATER W««k Day*: Mngm II «*-ll Ml Sunday: Conlinuout II a.aw-11 p.ra. EAGLE PETER ELKE SELLERS SOMMER a!j3^Tdark ON PONTIAC TVIAJI—SOUTH of MAPLE NO. iR WALLED LAEE -^ ^ S24-JIM JOSEPH E. LEVINE presents flEHIPBWSHS • PARAMOUNT PICTURES relesst TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISIOir PLUS 'Sex is not a forbidden wordI’ tony curtis debbie § reynold# \ pat ^ boone GioooBYe Joanna Barnet I Laura Devon waiter matthau. Starts FRIDAY “The AMERICANIZATION of EMILY” JULIE ANDREWS RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY featuring Our Fumoua Koshor Corntd Btof SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY Breakfast -• Dlnna* Complete Carry-Out Seivlte SIS Oakland Fra* Parkin® FI 9-4061 JUST YOU WAIT, IVAN TGGINS - The Moscow Theater is now presenting a Russian version'of “My Fair Lady” to sellout crowds. The musical is presented to answer criticism that the Russian theater is old-fashioned. “West Side Story” is also in the theater’s future plans as well as Russian-written musicals. Soviet 'My Fair Lady’ Is Revolutionary MOSCOW (AP) - The director of Moscow’s Operetta Theater looked over the eyeglasses on the end of his nose, fiddled with his keys and tried to guess how long the city’s newest musical hit plight run here. “Perhaps 10 or 15 years,” he said. ★ ★ w The estimate sounded reasonable. Since it opened Dec. 28, “My Fair Lady” in Russian has proved a box office smash. Following the normal pattern, of Moscow long runs, ‘My, Fair Lady” is shown only four or five times a month and could easily play for several years. LONG SOLD OUT The theater director, Viktor Yefremov, says it is sold out until March. “We did not stage ‘Maya New Plan Stirs Hope for End to U. N. Crisis UNITED ' NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — U:N. delegates expressed hope today that a new formula proposed by General Assembly President Alex-Quai-son Sackey will avert a showdown over U.N. peace-keeping dues. The United States and the Soviet Union, however, remained deadlocked on the key question of penalties. Quaison-Sackey in effect set next Monday as the deadline for resolving the stalemate, or going ahead with the U.S.-Soviet confrontation that many members fear could wreck the United Nations. ★ ★ w Quaison-Sackey told the 115-nation assembly Monday that he intends to wind up general debate this week and proceed to election of committee chairmen and assembly vice presidents next Monday. This would 'end the no-vote truce under which the assembly has been operating and bring U.S. demands for application of Article 19 of the U.N Charter, which removes voting rights of members two years in arrears on their assessments. 3-POINT PLAN Quaison-Sackey then outlined his three-point plan to head off such a showdown. He said a consensus appeared to exist in the assembly on these points: — All members should make financial donations with the highly developed nations making “substantial contributions.” — The assembly’s business should be conducted along normal lines as soon as possible. — Every effort should be made to avdid a confrontation involving Article 19. ★ ★ ★ Many delegates appeared encouraged by Quaison-Sackey’s proposal, made after Secretary General U Thant warned the assembly that the United Nations’ financial position as a result of peace-keeping debts threatened to end its role as a “dynamic and effective instrument of international peace.” The United States and the So- viet Union were their reaction. guarded in AN INTENTION U.S. Ambassador Adlai E' Stevenson told newsmen he was happy to hear Thant remind members of the gravity of the financial situation. But he said he viewed Quaison-Sackey’s remarks about resuming normal operations as an intention rather than a plan. Stevenson declared the question of “who is eligible to vote” still exists. Soviet Ambassador Semyon K. Tsarapkin said he concurred with what both Thant and Quaison-Sackey said, but that the United States was holding up a solution. ★ ★ ★ “It is up to the United States now,” Tsarapkin declared. “We have made known that we accept the Asian-African plan, but the United States has blocked settlement of the issue.” The Asian-African plan calls for voluntary contributions to a fund to help ease the peacekeeping debt. The United States has accepted this but rejected the second part of the plan which would set aside Article 19 for the remainder of the session. Charge Basis Told in LBJ Threat Case CORPUS CHR1STI, Tex. (AP) — Federal authorities-disclosed the basis Monday for a complaint charging a Minneapolis traveling salesman threatened the life of President Johnson. ★ ★ ★ They said Everett DeHarp-porte, 58, sent a Jan. 12 letter from Corpus Christi to Dr. Jesse Barron of Minneapolis which said in part: “Johnson killed John Fitzgerald Kennedy . . . Have made arrangements to keep my mother away from radio and television because I'm going to kill the dirty skunk." Idaho is the leading lead producing state in the nation. The state also is a large supplier of silver and zinc. Prekranaya Lady’ td make money,” he added quickly. “It was hot based on a materialistic motive.” ★ * ★ He said the musical was staged to introduce a composer new to Moscow audiences, Frederick Loewe. But he added “My Fair Lady” is giving the Moscow theater a new look. Musical circles here have complained recently that Vien-nese-style operettas staged in Moscow are old-fashioned. They called for more modern musi-cials such as those staged in the West. ‘WEST SIDE STORY’ A Soviet version of “West Side Stefy” is in the works. Yefremov said the Bolshoi Theater and other groups of Soviet artists who traveled abroad on cultural exchange tours picked up ideas for modernizing the Soviet theater. ★ ★ ★ One result has been the birth of a crop of purely, Soviet musicals, borrowing from Broadway and other techniques. Yefremov said two Soviet musical comedies, “Chanita’s Kiss” and “Circus Lights” are under production. A third, “The Green Grasshopper,” is being prepared and will deal with modern Russian life. BROADWAY BASE . “My Fair Lady” Moscow version was based on the record of the Broadway show, Yefremo Raid. •k it ★ The Columbia Broadcasting System, which controls foreign rights to the musical, has called the Moscow production unauthorized and illegal. But Yefremov said the theater has received no formal protest from CBS. The Russians do not adhere to international copyright conventions and claim they can stage any production they want without paying foreign royalties. ★ ★ ★ Although the Moscow production was made from a record, Yefremov said his company has no plans so far to cut a disc of its own. He also said there are no plans to turn his company’s performance into a movie. IT’S COMPETITION “Why should we?" he asked. “People would go to the movie and that would run against our interests." Any Broadway producer shooting for a 10-year run could understand. Andy to Return for 6th Season Griffith's TV Show to By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Tefevision Writer HOLLYWOOD-Fans of Andy Griffith’s bucolic humor can relax—he’ll be back on television tor another year, Griffith' announced' today that he plans to return to his regular Monday night spot on CBS for a sixth season. The de-c is ion came, THOMAS after a year of soul searching. He even consulted a psychiatrist about it— but as a friend, not a patient. ★ ★ ★. The North Carolinian was talking about his decision on Stage 1 at the Desilu Cahuenga Studios, where he has spent a large chunk of the past'five years. That’s the place “The Andy Griffith Show” is filmed, and he admitted that sometimes | the surroundings begin to wear on him. Why will he remain? NOT JUST MONEY Not just for the money. Five years of a television show is usually enough to make a star a millionaire, and the sixth is merely frosting on the annuities. « “I’m staying not for the pay,”’ he remarked. “I can work somewhere else and make a living, no doubt about that. ★ ★ ★ “For more than a year I’ve been asking people I work with and friends that I trust whether I should remain on the show for another year. In every case they said yes, and with different reasons. Still, I wasn’t satisfied. “Finally I talked to a friend of mine who is both a psychiatrist and a psychologist and is out of show business. Between the two of us we figured up the reason why I should stay. “It'S simply this: I am a fairly active sort of a man; I am happiest when I am working. Why, we just had a two-week vacation at the end of the year and I was just achin’ to get back to work before the first week was three-fourtfts over, “I’ve got a steady job where I khowTcah work every week. So why shouldn’t I Stay with it?” ★ ★ ★. He gave his decision to CBS and Ms sponsor, General Foods, and it was happily received, Andy having long been a rating-puller on Monday night/ Andy qualified that: “I’ve never been a top scorer in the big-city ratings, but I do pretty good in the over-all ratings that take in the smaller towns. Thank heaven there’s a lot of them, because I don’t think the big-city folks understand me too good.” KNOTTS LEAVING “The Andy Griffith Show”’ will be changed in its sixth year with the loss of Deputy Don Knotts, multiple Emmy winner. Said Andy: “I’ll miss Mm, but I think it was time" for Don to cut out, for Ms own good. After all, he’s been oh weekly television for nine years, four with Steve Allen and five with me. He has a contract with Universal for features, and I think he should do right well.” Wednesday Only Special! ' ’All • French Fries • Coleslaw • Rolls simI Buttor INCOME TAX $5.00 and up Professional Graduate Accountants Yoar-round Business Accounting Capital Business Service 460 W. Huron : FB NW Ex-Detroiter in Crash DETROIT (AP) - One of the victihi’s of Saturday’s plane crash ia Wichita was James Glover, 22, a former Ddtrolter. His mother, Mrs. Maxine Glover of Detroit, said her son spent four years In the Air Force and was discharged last October He had been working at an aircraft plant in Wichita. ~ THEATRE ^ %0WH fd Joined "Bond Ia "Bacfe/ LFty Adwi! RECORD- BREAKING WEEK! Tha Most Talked-About Movie of This Generation! Natures at Ti10-9:20 SEAN CONNERY «»i007’ ‘i. MlflMIKS “60LDFINGER” P.G... Seek Aid for Upper Lakes Areas WASHINGTON (UPI) - Four Democratic senators joined yesterday in asking that northern areas of Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota be included in the Appalachia program now before the Senate Public Works Committee. Sens. Philip A. Hart, Mich., Gaylord Nelson, Wis., and Eugene R. McCarthy and Watler F. Mondale, Minn, proposed creation of an Upper Great Lakhs Regional Development Authority to stimulate business in that depressed region. Hart was delegated to. testily for all four today when committee hearings open on the Appalachia bill. “We believe the committee and the full Senate should have both proposals — Appalachia and Great Lakes — before them during the next few weeks,” Hart said. The three-state area had an over-all unemployment rate 20 per cent greater than that of Appalachia, according to the 1960 census, the senators said in a joint statement. . The proposed authority would have seven members, four appointed by the President, the others by the governors of the three states, each making one appointment. “In the upper lakes, as in Appalachia,’ there has been rapidly declining agriculture and forestry,” the senators said. “Many of the higher grade iron ore mines are exhausted. “But with coordinated federal, state and local attention, there can be a new day for the region. The basis for that hope is ore research, new timber In-duetrlea, a magnificent recreation potential and a people eager to find new Jobs and Bkllls." In a separate statement, Nelson said the people of the area “are ready to act now” and that “there is no reason that, our region should wait” If Appa-‘ lachla aid is to be provided. Included in the program would be authorization of a scenic highway along the lower shore of Lake Superior. \ :: 1-15 Hff^ ^ . 't '$mmW THE PONTIAC PRESS, Kgl Wf, JANUARY 19, im mim §M:i wmm m TWENTY-8E *111 \ '■ii~r~li.i(.i'' mm • • 1 evision ■. ,;j ;•.•■;• M'n\ . A"4 ; ' n''^ ’> I “ograms— ttflf L%2a£A 4w% ftlAIIAA UftttlAII^ |U|A|||a HrawiBtwrivsmin^* wirmwr nwrc*. fmSM chbwiwn a-.wjwc.iv, 4~wwj-Tv, 7-wxrz-iv, y~CKiw.iv> so-wksb-Tv, ft"-wi^ TUESDAY EVENING 6:09(2) (4) News, Weather Sports Ten Gladiators" (to Proj ress) (9) Woody Woodpecker (50) High School Hockey Madison High Vs. Benedictine (50) (Special) America's 4 ^ ^ -1 6:30 (2) (4) National News i (7) (Color) News, Sports (9) Bat Masterson (Re-p6fit) 0:45 (7) National News 7:00 (2) Leave It to Beaver (Repeat) (4) (Color) Weekend Preview of 1965 Autorama (7) Rifleman (Repeat) (9) Detectives (Repeat) (56) Spectrum 7:S0 (2) TV 2 Reports (4) Mr. Novak J) Use of teaching machine brings resentment from both students and teachers; with Martin Landau, Nehemiah Persoff (7) Combat Bitter, sarcastic GI has mysterious hold over young soldier (50) Sports Central (56) Africa Today 8:00 (2) Joey Bishop Rusty is thinking of dropping put of school until he learns that Joey is college man (9) Outlaws (Repeat) - (50) NBA Basketball Detroit Ristons vs. Philadelphia 76ers at Toledo 8:30 (2) Red Skelton Archie Moore and British singer Shanl Wallis we guests (4) (Color) Hullabaloo Paul Anka hosts pianist Peter Nero, singers John-‘ ny Rivers, Liza Minnelli, Dionne Warwick, comic Fred Smoot (7) McHale’s Navy (See TV Features) * (56) Heritage Louis Armstrong discusses childhood in New Orleans 9:00 (?) Tycoon Walter purchases retirement community — then goes incognito to see how it’s working (9) Let’s Sing Out (56) Psychology of Convalescence 9:30 (2) Petticoat Junction Uncle Joe begins corresponding with old flame who left him standing at the altar (4) (Color) That Was the Week That Was (7) Peyton Place Betty and Elliot try to make new lives for themselves (9) Front Page Challenge 10:00 (2) Doctors/Nurses Doctor’s wife needs husband’s help more than his patients do (4) (Color) Bell Telephone Hour (See TV Features) (7) Fugitive Kimble is arrested as a vagrant while passing through a strange town where the local marshal deals harshly with his involuntary guests (9) NeWs Magazine (50) Pro All-Star Golf 10:30 (9) Eye Opener 11(00(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Harness Racing from Pompano 11:15 (7) Les Crane 11:30 (2) Movie: "Double Indemnity" (1944) Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (9) Bingo 12:00 (9) Movie: "Good Time Girl" (1950) Jean Kent, Flora Robson 1:00 (4) Lawman (Repeat) (7) After Hours 1:30 (2) Highway Patrol (Repeat) (4) (7) News, Weather WEDNESDAY MORNING 1:10 (2) On the Farm Front mm mmmm TV Features Johnson Inau By United Press International McHALE’S NAVY, 8:30 p.m. (7) Captain Binghamton inoculates McHale’s men with truth serum and gets evidence for courts-martial for all hands. TELEPHONE HOUR, 10:00 p.m. (4) Performers are Lena Horne, folk singers Peter, Paul and Mary, opera stars Robert Merrill and Regina Resnik, plus Guy Lombardo and orchestra. % WEDNESDAY INAUGURATION PREVIEW, 7:00 a.m. (4) “Today" is expanded to preview of inaugural events, with special reports and interviews by "Today” team. INAUGURATION DAY, 10:00 a.m. (4), ip:30 a.m. (2) (7) Coverage will lead up to President Johnson’s oath-taking at noon, followed by ;a Capitol luncheon and the inaugural parade, which lasts until-4 p.m. 6:15 (2) News 6:20 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:50 (2) News 7:00 (2) Happyland (4) (Special) Inauguration Preview (See TV Features) «V(7) Johnny Ginger ,8:90 (2) Captain Gangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) M o V i e: "Feminine Touch" (1941) Rosalind Russell, Don Amache. 8:45 (56) English V 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Roudd POSSIBLE CHANGE Networks covering the Inauguration are scheduled to begin coverage at 10 and 10:30 a.m. However, If events warrant, coverage will begin earlier, preempting s c h e fluted shows. 9:09 (2) Mike Douglas Guests: tenor Jan Peerce, Comedian Louis Nye, authoress Sylvia Marks. (9) Romper Room 9:10 (56) All Aboard for Reading > x Connor Sworn In in a Ceremony Marked by Fluffs WASHINGTON (UPI) - Former drug company executive John T., Connor was sworn in as secretary of commerce yesterday in a White House ceremony marked by a few fluffs. The ceremony began with a hitch when President Johnson walked into the Cabinet Room, took a look at Chief Justice Earl Warren in his black robes, and suddenly made a beeline back to his office. He returned moments later with aide Jack Valenti who carried a Bible and the Cabinet commission. Warden flubbed the swearing in when he said, "Do you; John T. O’Connor, solemnly swear , . . " But the new secretary corrected the name when he repeated the oath. Royal Oak Woman Is Killed by Train ROYAL OAR (AP) - Mrs. Sarah Phillips, 82, of Madison Heights was struck and killed by a passenger train at a downtown crossing Monday. Police witnesses reported Mrs. il. said Phillips Ignored flashing lights, warning bells and a sidewalk barrier. 9:30 (56) Numbers 9:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:09 (4) (Special) Inauguration (See TV Features) (9) Canada Schools 10:10 (56) Your Hehlth 10:30 (2) (Special) I n a u gura-tion (See TV Features) > (7) (Special) I n a u gura- tion (See TV Features) (9) Across Canada 10:35 (56) French Lesson______ 10:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (9) Friendly Giant 11:05 (56) Interlude 11:15 (9) Chez Helene 11:20 (56) For Doctors Only 11:30 (9) Butternut Square 11:50 (9) News AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) (4) (7) Inauguration (9) Bingo 12:20 (56) Friendly Giant 12:35 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:50 (56) All Aboard for Reading 1:00 (9) Movie: "Virgin Island" (English, 1958) John Cassavetes,, Virginia MaskeO. 1:10 (56) French Lesson 1:25 (56) World History 1:55 (56) Adventures in S c i-ence 2:00 (2) (4) (7) Inauguration \2:25 (56) Numbers 2:50 (56) Interlude 3:00 (Special) Ontario Legislature 3:20 (56)Memo to Teachers 3:30 (50) Jack La Lanne Exercises x POSSIBLE CHANGE Coverage of the Inauguration is scheduled to end about 4 p.m. However, If events warrant, the networks will continue coverage until the conclusion. Club Para- 4:00 (2) Secret Storm , -(4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster ’ (9) Razzle Dazzle ,(50) Sore Saddle Theater 4:25 (4) News . 4:30 (2) (Color) Movie: “Avenger pf Venice" (Italian, 1963) Brett Halsey. (4) Mickey Mouse (Repeat) (9) Adventures in dise (Repeat) , (56) Mathematics 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot Film visit to Switzerland. (7) M 0 v i e: "Teen-Age Caveman" (1958) Robert Vaughn, Darrah Marshall, (50) Little Rascals 5:30 (9) Rocky and Friends (50) Gary Stevens (66) What’s New? 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:55 (2) Sports (4) Carol Duvall — Radio Programs— WJ*(760) WXYZQ 270) CKIW(800) WWJ(950) WCARQ130) WPON(t46Q) WJ»K(1500) WHF1-FM(94,7> VQMliHT -WJR, Nsw* WHfi.'N^'wSIK'Vv Ms: ON, Newi wriRli NOWS. swte-"*•“ 6it*--WJSK, Wffl$f9jR NOWS* Robert Mills (or Modorno 4i30—WWJ, Suilnoi* WJR, SuolMM . CKLW, Terry Knight , WXYt now*. amBT Drgler WnOr Musk *or MoSorne 4i4*~wwj. J-ller Ixtro . WJR, LowonThom**, Sport* 1lOO-WWJ, Nows, Phon*. jMk Orson* Ti assort nts-wxyt toon suttotin WJR, Sport Sport* JilO-WXYZ, LOS Attn Ms WJR, Rooionor, music (lOf—WJRi Nows,. Music sioo—wjk, now*, nwm sho-wwj, Tito Music Scons OltO—WWJ, Nows, imphs.ls, I*, in ijau,| AAualr i WHFl, dKw*, cYw Morris OtSO-WJR, OUOOt «*r ISlOO—WJR. KrtOMOKOM tp Murgfiy, WXYZr Madcap I Muitc 1 . ■ , ItiOO-WWJ, N«WS Final WJR, MUSK . . wwj, Music icons vm WaONSIOAV MORNINO OtOO—WJR, NOWS, Agriculture „ . . Jiie, Nows Sorm, Tyo Oponor wjbk, Nows, More Avory WCAR, NOW*, Sandarl WPON, Now*. Arlnno Western WHPI, Howard AMKonnoy OtW-WJR, MUSK Holt WJBK, Now*. Avory WPON, Nows, Whitman TiOO-WJR, NOW*. MUSIC. aw. Nawa, Bud Davla* SOWS, OUOSt IlSO—WJBK, News, AVOry WJR, Music Hell 1 ' o,co—WJR, Nows, Open . Houia WCAR, News, Tom Kollln* SPi, Nows, McKonnoy tliOO~WWJ, Now* Aik Nalantwi WXY t BroaktOII Ciuk , CKLW, Joe van WJBK, Ntwi, Raid WJR, Nowa, Karl Hess non naei MW WXYZ, MUSIC,-NOWS tlilO—WJR, Inauguration of * I ^FtPSHWH^a olOnmofi WBONBSOAY APTIRNOON tiiOO—WJR. Inugurotton WPON, Nowt, Ron Knight wwj. Nows, Mysje wcaA, nows, pc (iflnll oyno. Nows, Lorry Ilf Morrlo Avory, Music, Nows Newt, Joe Von 1tM~WJN, Nows Art Llnkietter whpi. Nows, Cliff Morris ^ World •IwWcaso Ihefer 1.30—wjr, women's ’ iiSir VJBK, News, LOO WPON, Nows. Job Lowronco WXYZ, Prltico, Music, Nowi sicy-WJR, Nr Nowa. Mu*ic OtW-WPON, Mutual worts Pashm if to Be Returned Judge Says Police Took Them Illegally never bites" a household pet” 8 Proofreader’s saying 12 “Nut brown.-... 13 Shakespearemi stream 14 Shield bearing SAN J4NTONIO, Tex. (AP) - **3*^^“ John W. Stanford Jy., bespectacled San Antonio bookkee{>er, awaited today the retuht of some 2,000 books and pamphlets the Supreme Court says were seized illegally. *- »> Jhe state claims the literature is pro-Communist. ★ ★ ;' Stanford, 40, ordered by the government to register as a Communist, won a year-long court battle Monday when the high court ruled that a search warrant Texas officers used to raid .his home violated his constitutional rights. Justice Department informants' testified at a 1963 hearing, in Washington, D.C., that Stan: ford: was secretary of the Communist party in Texas. ® REFUSED ANSWER * Stanford refused Monday night “to confirm or deny the charge,” He operates a mail order book store called “All Points of View" in his home. and is a bookkeeper at a private firm. ♦. ” ★ it *' < The U.S. Subversive Controls Board Issued an order Dec. 26, 1963, for him to register as required by the Subversive Activities Control Act' of 1950. He is appealing the order. “I reiuse to register on the basis that this Violates the Bill of Rights and endangers the right to belief and associations of all Americans," he told a newsman. POLITICAL VIEW “I said at the time, and I still believe, that the government has no right to tell the citizens what their politics should be. The citizens should tell the government what its politics should be.” State and local officers raided Stanford’s modest home in late afternoon Dec. 27, 1963, and carted the literature off in scores of boxes. ★ ★★ Stanford said they “seized all my material to the left of center and left all thosd to the right of center. I have some ultra-conservative books on hand — they’re for sale.” The officers also took a mailing list and other papers, including Stanford’s auto and homq titles, an insurance policy and some bills. Mexico Toll Skyrockets on Sundays MEXICO CITY (AP) - On flye consecutive Sundays major accidents have occurred in Mexico. Including a bus accident Jan. 1, the toll has reached 159 deaths. The latest mishap occurred in Durango Sunday. A twin-engine plane caught fire and.crashed, killing all 10 persons aboard. ★ ★ it The other tragedies: Dec. 20 — A speeding freight train plowed into an idle passenger train near VUlahermosa^ln southern Mexico, killing 45. Dec. 27 — A bus collided with five cars on a crowded highway, killing 6. Jan. 1 (Friday) — Bus overturned near Jalapa, killing 22. ★ ★ ★ Jan., 3 — Church collapsed near Puebla, killing 57. Jan. 10 — Another bus crash, near Dolores Hidalgo, killing 19. Amendment Proposed on State Districting WASHINGTON (AP)-A Constitutional amendment to authorize the apportionment of one house of a state legislature on factors other than population was proposed Monday by Rep. William L, Harsha, R-Ohlo. < He said he is proposing the step to establish the people’s right to chooso whether they wish to have one, house of their state apportioned on the basis of factors other than population. WMU Doan to Rotlro KALAMAZOO (AP)-Dr. Elizabeth E. Llchty announced plana Monday to retire July 1 as dean of women at Western Michigan University. She has held the Job since 1047, when she left Hope College aa head of the romance .languages depart* ment artd dean of women. me1 16 Unsto; J8 Across, a rose on 11 Hanjy heroine 17 Fugitive (Fr.) 21 “Cast your • 22 Islamic potentate 24 Plant part 26 “Confined to the - 27 Health resort 30 Photographic device bullet" 34 Musical dramas 35 Weirder 36 “Count to ----- 37 Followers 39 Coagulates 40 Individuals. 41 "Prodigal - 42 Paint pigment (var.) 45 Giggle 49 Karakul, for instance 51 Frenchman's “island” 52 Hops’ kiln 53 Masculine appellation 54 “Go, and--------no more’ 55 Fencing weapon 56 "What a . --- 57 Small child DOWN 1 Rebounds 2 Hodgepodge 3 “ Vi- — be seated” old torse 6 Complainer 7 Abstract being 8 Tropic 9 Waste allowance 10 Otherwise 19 Epic poet of Greece 23 Small weights 24 "Go--------free" 25 Video- 26 Thrash 27 Physicist, for instance 28 Pare 29 Arrivals (ab.) 31 “It —------cats and dogs" 33 Jargon 38 Landed property 40 Harangue 41 Fodder vats 42 Musical instrument 43 Gallows (thieves’ slang) 44 Sheath 46 Mental faculties 47 Charles Lamb. 48 Cleave 50 Male cat Answer to Previous Puzzle I SAYINGS (' 2 r 4 5 b 7 ’ 8 6 10 it 12 13 14 ih 16 i7 18 19 H20 L 26 H 27 &8 29 96 31 K NT 35 99 ZM ” 38 35” '■■■ , ' L 42 43 44 | 11 48 50 51 52 53 54 5T 56 67 If Area Business . II Btov in Nearly Every j&KK jgt Pontiac area business in December, showed a steady Increase over previous months in almost every category, espedal- ^Industrial ^payrolls continued to increase and showed a gain of $2.3 million above December a ear ago. * December, with a boost ia parolls and Christmas spending, raised debits to customers’ accounts to $137,841,541--a new high for area banks. Postal receipts/ took their usual seasonal clbhbito a figure of $297,319, slightly higher than a year ago. 3k ★ Building permits amounted to $5,345,388 for a total of 116. Only 16 of these were residen- tial, «D repre^nttog . stogto miiUinljk jlmnlWnm nM 1C iltiltm muuipie aweinng ot u units. m GAS CONSUMPTION Gas coDsunqitbB 906,655,909 cubic feet, last December’s 754,960,806, i well over the previous month. Electrical consumption reported by Consumers and Detroit Edison totaled njStZjnt kilowatt hours, Hgber than the previous December ail ‘ Me-vember 1964. Water consumption also urns ' up. Bus patnm^ was dowtt from a year ago, but nearly 1,-000 over November. ♦ ' ★ ■' # : y Air patron departures www,,. reported at 30 tar the jaonth, compared with 26 the previous month and 43 a year ago. * 0114,799,339 0 17,599,209 0 163,388 0I143M3S* 8 13,174,594 $ 295,364 December 1964 November 1964 December I960 Bank debits to customer*' account* (exclusive of public funds) ...... 8137,841,541 Industrial payrolls ...................* 17,767,621 Postal receipt* :................. * 297,319 Total building permits— i Number ...........................n..- , _116 Amount ....................:......... 0 5,245.410 Now Dwellings— Number .................................... 14 Amoupt ............................. * .BUB Gas consumption (cu. ft.)'............. 906^55,900 Electrical energy, (Consumers and Detroit Edison (KWH) 68,312,073 Water consumption (gait.) 447458,000 Bus patrons .............................. 70,919 Air patrons (outtiound) .............. ' 30 * 00,500 513472.500 t 130,500 754,950400 66,009, •9413 w Author-Historian Dies BRUNSWICK, Maine (AP) -Prof. George D. Bearce of Bow-doin College, award-winning author-historian, died Monday. Bearce, 42, joined the Bowdoin faculty in 1954 after teaching at the college of William & Maty, New Mexico Highlands University and Kalamazoo (Mich.) College. He was born to New York City. NEW NEW NEW Investigate KLEAREX MIRACLE WATER 4 Units in I The Most Advanced Wafer Conditioner on the Market F. ft SMITH SALES 541 N. Perry fE 2-9892 About 80 per cerit of the area of Indiana is devoted to farming. Chief crops are maize, winter wheat, oats, soybeans and popcorn. *1,100 to MBgOO Pay Off Bills REMODEL HOME tanner tew rate AS LOW AS *25 Includes J| Everything Widows and PonsMnsrs Eligible Operator on Duty Day and Night p^FtM141 NOW. Out-of-Town Call Collect er Mnll BANKERS Hackees Panties Clash With Grandeur Plaza REC. ROOMS AND ATTICS Up to 24'x24‘ 095 INCLUDES: Tiled Floors—Paneled Walls—Ceiling By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — This is the tale of some panties . . . * Comedian Buddy Hackett is the villain ... or the victim. He and his wife Sherry and their children weekended at the Hotel Concord to the Catskills with Dr. Harold Shapiro, his wife and their children ... and the children’s clothes got mixed up to the packing for home. Twelve-year-old Robin Shapiro’s panties wound up ut the Heckett’s home to Pull* sades, N.J. “You’re going to see the doctor," Mrs. Hackett apprised Buddy. “Take Robin’s panties to him." X “Sure." Buddy stuffed them to his over-Coat pocket. WILSON But you know husbands . . * Nights later, after doing , his show, “I Had a Ball,” which has become a hit, Buddy pulled some gloves from his pocket at the Hotel Plaza Checkroom. Steve Lawrence, Eydle Gorme and Mrs. Hackett were with him. . , , A pair of panties fell from his pocket onto the exclusive floor of the exclusive Plaza. ★ \ ★ ★ "A girl’s pantiest" shrilled Eydie . . . “They belong to my doctor," spluttered Buddy ... "Your DOCTOR!" Steve Lawrence said . . . "Yeah’, he’s got a little girl,’?. Buddy said. Turqtog to his wife, he cried, "Sherry; you explain it.” “ME!" His wife had decided to rib him. “Where,” she screamed, “DID they come from?" Later, she confirmed her husband’s story ... that’s one way Buddy’s having fun while making his show a success, though the critics rapped IL Buddy, to his popular after-the-show monologue, no longer blasts the crltlcd. ★ ★ ★ t. WEEDON 1032 West Nuron Str««t FE 4-2597 COMPANY hfitmtlmtSUMiWi Ml WORK CIMRANIHD Msmbsr of th* Chambsr it CswlOOiOO Evtryfhlnt tn Modirntulton After Hours onJIwilsni PONTIACt 603-0640 .6 WAlllO LAKtiMA 4-1091 UNION LAKE) IM 3-21*9 : W VATUfORO 673-2E42 KITCHEN CABINETS W00DFIELD FACTORY TO YOU Winlor Price Now in CDCPIAI Eitoci to April i96s orLUIML 5-F1. Kitchen $ COMPLETE tluihl ■niseis 1690# HUtouisi'j 7-Ft. Kitchen $ COMPLETE 60 Months to Piiy sioooo yiiii “Ylto see, I wrote letters to all the critics," Buddy explained. "I gave ’em absolution. I forgave ’em." * “You forgave them for they know not what they do?” I asked v'"Dat’» right,” grinned Buddy. "Duh critics don’t know what the h—1 they’re doto’l" ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Gina Lollobrlgida’ll fly from Paris next month for the premiere of "Strange Bedfellows" —• then fly back the next day ... Tony Bennett gets the Jump on everyone: he’s already recorded "Take the Moment" from the Richard Rodgeri show, "Do I Hear a Waltz?" , . . Zero Mostel, Barbra Streisand and Harry Bela-fonte rubbed elbows rlngside at Basin St. for Miriam Makeba and BIH Cosby. ^ It had to happen: college students picketed the TV station where Soupy Sales was suspended (for klddlngly inviting children to •end in "all the green paper things with George Washington’s picture on it")... Orsen Welles is said to be ill with a serious gall bladder condition. ★ ★ ★ EARL’S PEARLS: "Politics Is the art of saying nothing Impressively." (Dublin Opinion.) Pianist Peter Nero, with an offer to play Romeo, says, "Should 1? Look what happened last time 1 was then, The Whole place burned down" ... That’s earl, brother. (T1SO Noli SVmffUtO, Inc.) INCLUDES Upper arid Lower Cabinet, F< Countor Tops, Sink wilh faucets, Trim MON,, Thurs., Frr,, Sat. till 8:30 W00DFIELD CONSTRUCTION MODERNIZATION CONTRACTORS I WILL COME TO . . . 0Q YOU WITH FREE ES- Tt 4-4100 TIMATE AN0 PLANS . J , . . , NO CHARGE 0,10,1 llnl1 *un' CALL FE 4-4138 Open Daily and Sun. CALL DAY OR NIGHT KITCHENS REMODELED FOUNDATIONS ATTIC ROOMS BATHROOMS WALLS * ADDITIONS* ALUMINUM SIDING > NEC. ROOMS Roormo-siDiNO STONE PORCHES W00DFIELD CONSTRUCTION I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANt-NO PHAR01 WINTER PRICE NOW IN EFPifr TO APRIL IBM ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING !>V / ' m m ■ TWKNTY TliK \i « U^.aa. J. L/J^SiJAY, JANLAKY 19» 19(55 Complete Repair j g fv ■ Service , 1 Ip | i\ ] ' ’ j?, i § j!j i M Mimeograph and Duplicating Machine? New and Reconditioned £ VJ£ Mastetoed -' CHRISTUM LITERATURE SALES 58 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9691 son announced the sale after | Man Killed as Car, -' ^' select items of men’s dothing * v i 7T A t . Not Regular *8t0fe i Frei9ht Trafn Cr0th *‘k J : *-- ♦ • * |**yke*#- ! STOCKBRIDGB (A)?)r-Gfonii Pi fcfnVrkArc I • “You’ll like what you seeat Runciman, 58, of Gregory was V«UOiUi r iaiO Elf our store, but please came | killed Monday whenhis car and during regular lousiness a freight train collided at On . JVTHENS, Ga., (II - An hours,” Gibson said yesterday, ®P®n crossing here. The Ingham Athens dothing store, hit by ' ■ ? County Sheriff’s Department thieves twice within five days,' said the train crew reported has come up with a new twist Nearly 70 per cent of the peo- Runciman apparently did not —an “after burglary” sale, pie of India depend on agricul- see the.train until he had driven Store manager George Gib- ture for a living. onto tee tracks. People in fhe.News Sen. Olfai D. Johnston, D-8.C., is to undergo surgery this week for removal of a blister from tee aorta, the body’s principal artery. Members of tee senator’s family said the operation will be performed Thursday or Friday. Johnston* 68, entered Co- J lumbia Hospital yesterday. ,, V --............ , > General Rejects Post; New '‘Crisis Feared ★ ★ ★ '• , & SAIGON, South Viet Nam .Vaj . (AP). — Premier Tran Van Further Lung Checks fojr Nat Cole Huong’s attempt to strengthen his Cabinet with military members appeared to have misfired today as a key general turned down the post offered hint- s ★ t’ 'gbt Another political crisis may be imminent. A U.S. spokesman had expressed approval'Monday of the Cabinet reshuffle, terming it a “positive and helpful step toward stable government.” One look and you’ll See why these 1 - 2-refrigerator ;valuesvare so Nat (King) Coie has completed cobalt treatment for a long tumor and his doctors are consulting on further treatment, says a spokesman for tee singer. " The spokesman said yesterday teat Cole will remain in St. John’s Hospital, Santa Monica, Calif., which he entered last month. NAT (KING) COLB Sorry Sullivan's Wife Gets Divorce Actor Barry Sullivan was divorced in Los Angeles yesterday by Desiree Sumara, 26, who wept as she testified: “He was cold and unaffectionate. He never hugged and kissed me.” Sullivan, 52, did not contest the suit filed by his wife, an Egyptian actress. She charged extreme, mental cruelty. The swearing in today of Huong’s new Cabinet, to which he named four generals, was canceled after Brig. Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky reportedly declined the new post of minister of youth and sports. . Ky reportedly, wants to retain / Sea them In the "flesh" ... and you’ll understand Why they qre among < 1/^Mg^ters^NkiiBRANDS, TOP. QUAUTY^iOW PRICE AND. "PE convenience features . plus top-riOtcb performante and dependability ., | ^ ,'v. .with NO MONEY DOWN jot Highland’s unchallenged command of the air force, The couple was married Aug. 5, 1962. The marriage was Sullivan’s third and Miss Sumaru’s first. Muggsy Spanier Goes to Hospital i Jazz trumpeter Muggsy Spanier, who has been inactive since he collapsed last summer far Detroit, has entered Ochsner Foundation Hospital in New Orleans. Hospital officials said the 58-year-old musician from Sansalito, Calif., would undergo a regular checkup. which gives him pivotal influence In the maneuvering for power that is continuous among South Viet Nam’s military'' A Cabinet spokesman first said ffrnt tee swearing-in ceremony wasqanceled because the generals were occupied in the field with military units. He admitted later that Ky conferred for 45 minutes this morning with Chief of State Phan Khic Suu and turned down tee ministerial post. Ky was not available for comment. State Flqg Is Stolen off Battleship Alabama MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - A thief, or maybe an overzealqus souvenir seeker, has made off with the state flag from the topmast of the battleship Alabama, now enshrined here as a memo-, rial to war dead. Detectives said someone lowered the flag from its position 100 feet up, unmapped it from the lines and slipped away undetected Monday. LA Unit OKs $25,000 to Settle Comic's Claim LOS ANGELES (AP) - The City Council finance committee has approved $25,000 settlement of a $500,000 claim brought by comedian Mel Blanc against the city. Blanc claimed the city was negligent in failing to eliminate a dangerous curve on Sunset Boulevard where he was seriously injured in a traffic accident Jan. 24, 1961. \ 2-000R FtOSTLISS REFRIGERATOR With Separate “ZERO-DEGREE” FREEZER College Loan OK'd WASHINGTON (AP)—A $600,-000 loan for construction of a new Aquinas College upion building in. Grand Rapids, Mich., was approved Monday by the Community Facilities Administration. Exciting mw convenience features. Over 21 tq. ft. of shelf area in this giant-sized beauty. Glide-out shelves. Bushel-size porcelain twin crizpora. Bookshelf style freezer doer. Freezer holds 109 lbs. frozen food. Very deluxe. || «MmunMNVMSI 5 lowvtra J Specially priced with trade. Free delivery, 6 Louvari 'WivUlpool 14” 2-DOOR F rostless REFRIGERATOR with separate giant-size BOTTOM FREEZER Colorful Aluminum WINDOW AWNINGS FAcroiiv.ro. YOU SAVINOSI Sturdy Aluminum Combination imam Actually 2 full-siza appliances in one. Over 22 tq. ft. shelf area for big family needs. Refrigerator section never needs defrosting. Big bottom freezer holds 167 lbs. frozen food. Super storage door, twin porcelain crispors. Magnetic I doors and other deluxe features. Priced with trade. Free delivery, installation and. service. Reynold's Colorweld Special Hast Deflecting Aluminum Unconditionally Guaranteed Built-in Heavy Duty Gutters In front wd both ends Interchangeable Valence . . . foturini NEW S eynold'i Ala plasm leakproof LOCKSHEETS DOOR *27*o SIDING oiid TRIM ROOFING -GUTTERS DOWNSPOUTS INSULATION Iren RAILINGS 4 CEMENT, STONE in Winter, cooler in Summer u........u ......j e Save* on painting end upkeep * Saves on hilling bills wMBwOfR • « . •Iftnilt* e House stays like new for yeers to come itll tedious painting. flO0%jfAT ISrACTION SUAeANTSSOv OOfnor.T. pfii B WWW I m*pum*c£ PICTURE WINDOW ALUM. AWNING Up to 8 Ft. — Installed ^ £*Oj Reg. $ 124 8 x 12' Screened-in Ijv 1 vl H YT\\e onttol) |Pkon«FE 5-9452] Biijj [■’^ ”:■ :■»» - Downriver 1 Fait Side AV. 5-3595 1 PR 1-8810 26400 W. Eight Mile Birmingham 1 Southfield Royal Oak EL. 7-2700 t: PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1905—28 PAGES in Successful What Is It? (Answer on Page 2) Will Attend Inauguration M Surplus Be Saved The Presidential Inauguration in Washington, D.C., tomorrow will be attended by at least 27 Oakland County residents. Of those attending the historic occasion, five _______ couples are from the Pon- • tiac area. They are Mr. and Mrs. Otis Lawrence of 470 Ferry; Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Gngler, 1292 Circle Court, Bloomfield Hills; and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Heilbrnnn, 921 Arden, Birmingham. Others are Mr. and Mrs. Quentin Hughes, 27872 Wellington, and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith.of 28645 Herndon Wood, both Of Farmington. Court Curbs Dumping of Scrap Metal A Circuit Court order halting the dumping of loose scrap metal at the Sam Allen & Son scrap yard during certain hours will go into effect Feb. 15. In signing the order yesterday, Judge Frederick C. Ziem said the ban is intended to eliminate the late evening and early morning noise which nearby residents of the firm at 22 Congress have complained about. The ban prohibits the delivery of loose scrap clippings between the hours of 10:30 p.m. and 6 a.m. Ziem said that after Feb. 15 there should be no need for these loose scraps to be delivered to the yard. Pontiac Motor Division, the source of these clippings, has informed Allen that it intends to have a new baler installed by that date and in the future all scraps will be compressed into near solid forms. Ziem said that the order has no bearing on the final outcome of suit filed against Allen by the city of Pontiac and 15 residents. They are seeking the curtailment of the use of a metal crushing machine which they say is a public nuisance. The trial is tentatively scheduled for Feb. 24. i Yesterday action was taken after » week-long adjournment of a show cause hearing. The delay was called by Ziem in an attempt for both parties to reach an agreement over the curtailment of the noisy night operations. In Today's Press Inauguration Festivities move into I high gear today — PAGE 1 28. West Legislative probe to be- § gin this week-PAGE 8. m School Prayer Classes in state school divided in religious exercise - PAGE 12. Area News ............4 Astrology .......... 18 Bridge ..............18 1 Comics . ............18 I Editorials ...........6 | Markets .............20 j Obituaries ..........21 I Sports ...........18—17 I Theaters ............26 || TV & Radio Programs 27 Wilson, Earl , 27 | Women's Pages ... 8—10 ti WASHINGTON UP) — The Republican party’s 1964 election losses in Michigan, with former Sen. Barry Goldwater’s presidential candidacy cited as much to blame, may not be overcome for a generation, a GOP organization said today. The Ripon Society of Cambridge, Mass., a private GOP research and jpolicy group, took that position in a report to the Republican National Committee.. The report said the effect of the election losses __________ were of the indicated severity despite. Republican Gov. George Romney’s “stunning individual victory.” In addition, the researchers’ repdrt said: • That Michigan GOP fund raiser Arthur Siunmerfield diverted so much of Republican funds to Goldwater that Romney was left to “shift for himself.” • That Eomney’s victory was “no doubt” due to his “conspicuous disinterest” in the Goldwater-Rep. William Miller presidential ticket. Romney refused to. endorse Goldwater. He won support for “standing up to boldwater,” the report said. • That Michigan Republicans might not have lost three seats in Congress had. the party put up a candidate other than Goldwater for president. • That Michigan’s legislative redistricting under the one-man, one-vote principle — ordered in "the Senate by a “Democratic-controlled Sthte Supreme Court” — led to loss of Republican majorities in both houses. . RECOVERY TRAINING — A Navy frog-'man leaps from a helicopter as another swims to a boilerplate model of the Gemini spacecraft In a recovery training session irt By Most of Congress December. The session was in preparation for the recovery of GT2, the unmanned Gemini Craft which was launched today. THOMAS F. WIETHORN New Chairman for GM Group Thomas F. Wiethorn, of 2640 Bradway, Bloomfield Township, manager of the General Motors Fisher Body Pontiac plant, has been named chairman of the GM Pontiac Plant City Committee for 1965. The appointment was made today by GM President, John F. Gordon.. Wiethorn succeeds Calvin J. Werner, general manager of the GMC Truck & Coach Division and a vice president of the corporation. Wiethorn has been manager of the local Fisher Body plant since 1956. Other members of the Pontiac Plant City Committee are: Fisher Body Division: Alger V. Conner, director of Industrial relations, and Karl F. Davies, resident comptroller. GMC Truck & Coach Division: John A. Castle, director of public relations; Earl A, Maxwell, personnel, director; John D. Mlntllne, divisional comptroller; Werner; and Thomas E. Wilson, manufacturing mhnager, Pontiac Motor Division: Theodore B. Bloom, personnel director; Wright C. Cotton, divisional comptroller; Robert W, Emerlck, director of public relations; E. M, Estes, vice president of GM and general manager of tluMPlvlslon. LANSING m - Gov. Romney Will recommend that Michigan retain about $75 million of its treasury surplus during the coming fiscal year, the Associated Press learned. Romney will make his budget recommendations for 1965-66 in a written message scheduled to reach the legislature Feb. 2. He will peg the anticipated surplus as of next June 30 in the broad area around $100 niUlion. He’ll recommend saving about three-fourths of it to take care of rising state costs anticipated for 1966-67. WWW The governor said in his State of the State message last Thursday that only “the most prudent use of this surplus’’ will enable it to last, through the next two fiscal years without additional taxes or state debt. DEM ESTIMATE Democrats said last month the surplus would be at $90 million to $100 million by next June. Until preparing his budget message, Romney never had cited an anticipated end-of-year surplus figure. His latest economic figures and indicators bear out Democratic predictions. WWW Democrats, with strong majorities in both houses of the legislature, are expected to press for more use of the surplus than Romney desires, to finance improved state aid for education and perhaps programs and senior citizens’ benefits. BUILT-IN COSTS In his State of the State address, the governor warned that built-in costs of government are increasing $12 million a year faster than revenues. These costs are those which Increase because of population growth and related factors even though a program Is not changed. Each new school pupil, for example, costs the state a base of $236.50 annually. WWW In two vears, this growth deficit would be twice what It would be next fiscal year even If no programs are changed. But both Romney and the Democrats are recommending measures certain to cost more money. WASHINGTON W—Congress givings on the lack of plans for has given President Johnson’s new manned bombers. $49 billion defense program a generally warm reception. ’ Some Democrats and Republicans, however, expressed mis- Shortly after the message went to Congress yesterday, the Senate Armed Services Committee and the Senate De- Florida Produce Crop i . Damaged by Arctic Air The Ripon Society, In the Michigan section of a 124-page report titled “Election ’64,” also said Goldwater’s candidacy contributed to Elly Peterson’s defeat by Democratic Sen. Philip A. Hart. It said, however, that Hart “probably” would have won anyway. WWW Touching on the Romney and Goldwater campaign policies in Michigan, the party researchers said: “From the outset it was ap-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) By the Associated Press A severe cold wave hugged the Atlantic Coast today, sending cool air into normally balmy, virtually paralyzed oVer the weekend. Wicked weather in central and southern Florida damaged the fense Appropriations subcommittee announced plans to Invite Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara to joint hearings, probably in February, to present, details not; given in die message. The huge program would cost $300 million less than the Pentagon’s estimated 49.3 billion spending in the fiscal year ending June 30 anil $2-3 billion less than last year. A \ The President attributed this to completion -of many needed changes and increases in the military force structure, and the state COst reduction programs which are starting to bear fruit. STRONG MILITARILY The United States, he said, is Florida where part of the veg- state s sugar cane, but 45 per . militarily than at anv etablc croD was ruined cent of the 229,000 acres had 8ironft-er miuunuy man at any etame crop was rumea. other time in its peacetime his- In an unusual turn-about, been harvested. Dade County torv „ Scottsbluff, Neb., established a was hardest hit, losing 30 per record for Jan. 18 yesterday Cent of its tomato crop, 60 per cent of the pole bean crop and 80 per cent of the squash crop. Citrus fruits escaped with superficial damage, officials said. Johnson outlined three major The cold struck north along new weapon systems designed the Atlantic Coast, sending tern- to beef up this armed might, peratures zero and below. • The Poseidon, a new mis- BELOW ZERO sile system with twice the pow- The mercury was below zero er of the Polaris A3, whose nuclear warhead can deliver a with a mild 62. Portions of Florida shivered in the 50s, but a gradual warming trend began in central and southern Florida today, alleviating the danger to crops. The Midwest was struck with near-zero weather and officials tory.’ “Today we can walk the road of peace because we have the strength we need,” the President said. in Indiana struggled to recover iR Atlantic City and elsewhere from a 12-inch snowstorm that in New Jersey. Churchills Condition Holds steady LONDON (AP) - Sir Winston Churchill’s doctor said just before noon — 7 a.m. EST — today there had been no further deterioration in the former prime minister’s condition. Churchill’s physician, Lord Moran, said he would issue another medical bulletin about 9 p.m. — 4 p.m. EST. Lord Moran had been called to Churchill’s bedside at 2:10 a.m. and spent five hours there. He reported shortly after 7 a.m. that Churchill had spent a very restless night and his condition had deteriorated. At 11:45 a.m., the 82-year-old physician issued this bulletin after another visit to his patient: ★ ★ * * “In the four hours since the last bulletin, there has been no further deterioration." POOR EXPECTATIONS A spokesman for the British Medical Association had said the “least effective” of the eight after the early morning bulletin generations of these Jet inter-that he thought "for the next continental bomber planes, two days things would deterio- HU(JE CARG0 p,ANE blast equal to 800,000 tons of TNT. • A series of what Johnson called “remarkable new pay-loads for strategic missiles.” • A new -short-range attack missile —SRAM — which could be fired from B52s or other bombers. ★ ★ Sr The President said he would request more than $300 million to Continue a program of extending the life and improving the effectiveness of B52 bombers. He announced plans to eliminate two squadrons of early model B52s which he termed Clears Way for April i Orbiting of Astronauts in Similar Capsule CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. Iff) —A Gemini two-man spacecraft partially controlled by a pair of “black boxes” simulating astronauts made a blazing suborbital test flight today and cleared the way for Virgil I. Grissom and John W. Young to ride a sintr ilar capsule into Orbit in April. After the punishing 16,600-mile-an-hour flight, the 6,900-pound spacecraft plummeted into the Atlantic Ocean right on target 2,150 miles southeast of Cape Kennedy. It landed only aboufc 25 miles from the main recovery ship, the aircraft carrier Lake Champlain, 19 minutes after the blast-off here at 9:03 a.m. EST. Within minutes a helicopter from the carrier, dropped two Navy swimmers who secured the spacecraft with an inflatable flotation collar. Then the swimmers waited in a life raft, for the Lake Champlain. The carrier expected to have the capsule aboard by 10:30 a.m. EST. Grissom and Young, who monitored progress of the flight from the flight control center here, were reported extremely happy over the results. 16 MONTHS BEHIND They have been waiting while the space agency overcame numerous development, technical and weather problems which had put' the program 16 months behind its original schedule. Officials reported that preliminary study of data indicated that both the rocket and spacecraft performed flawlessly today. They said that two mechnical devices called crewmen simulators worked effectively in performing tasks which astronauts will perform on later missions. A Titan 2 rocket hurled the. spacecraft to an altitude of 105 miles. More Snow Is Expected The Pontiac area Is expected to be all decked out In a fresh white mantle of snow tomorrow. The weatherman predicts light snow late today will dimlnlih to flurries with a low of 10 tonight. ■k k k Temperatures will be little colder tomorrow, the high reaching 15 to 22. Partly cloudy with littio temperature change Is the outlook for Thursday. Hie low recording In downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 6. At 1 p.m, the mercury had edged up to 20./v , ■ i ' : > ! rate rapidly.’ Moran’s midday bulletin was the 10th issued since the 90-year-old statesman suffered a stroke last Friday. None has reported any Improvement, most have told of a gradual slackening of Sir Winston’s hold on life. Commenting on the earlier a standard fighter, and n new bulletin, the medical association type Navy attack aircraft. V In the field of conventional war preparedness, Johnson said he planned to start development of the C5A cargo transport, capable of carrying 750 men at a time. He also announced plans for large-scale procurement of both the controversial Fill, formerly known as the TFX, as spokesman said: ★ * * "I think one must view with a good deal of concern that it was necessary for Lord Moran to stay during the night. I think there must have been extreme anxiety about his condition. This SJ'bSrtfir* ‘drew "sparks He said construction of four nuclear powered attack submarines and 10 destroyers also would start under the new program. The message’s silence about any plans for modern new Is even worse than wo have had all the time.” DRAWING NEAR With death apparently draw' lng near for the AP Fhatafnx EARLY MORNING REPORT - Lord Moran, Sir Winston Churchill’s 62 year-old physician, reported this morning In London that his patient had|i very restless night. from a number of senators. Sr Sr Sr Sen. John Stennls, D-Mlss., chairman of the Senate great wartime Preparedness subcommittee, leader political leaders began said "I regret that It Is apparent canceling normal activities. that a decision to proceed with Prime Minister Harold Wilson the development of a follow-on postponed a statement to the manned bomber has been fur-House of Commons and a tele- ther delayed. I am convinced cast tonight on the nation's that our future security requires trade situation. He was reported a balanced and flexible force of seeking to put off a visit to West manned bombers and strategic Germany Thursday. / missiles." Estes Goes to Jail as Appeal Fails ABILENE, Tex. UP) - Federal authorities put Billie Sol Estes, described by a ‘judge who tried him as “the most gigantic swindler In history,” behind bars last night. Unless further appeals meet with unexpected success, it apparently means the end of a fight lasting nearly three years to keep the toppled farm tycoon and former lay preacher out of prison. He marked his 40th birthday just nine days ago. The U.S. Supreme Court refused yesterday to hear Estes’ appeal from a 15-year prison sentence for mail fraud. U.S. Dlst. Judge R.E. Thomason, who presided for the 1963 trial in El Paso, then revoked the bankrupt promoter’s $100,000 appeal bond. Armed with a bench warrant from Thomason, Deputy U. S. Marshal William C. Black arrested the black-hatred, round-faced Estes at his comfortable Abilene home and escorted him to the county jail here. Officers arranged to transfer him to El Paso today. They said Estes might stay there as long ns five weeks before being moved to a federal prison, He has 25 days to ask the Supreme Court to reconsider and U could be 10 days longer before th trijgaal ruled. The Weather u.s. Weather Buraaa Faracaat Colder, F«*r Flurries (Mtaiii on run) TWO THE PONTIAC PRKffS. TUESDAt, JANUAHY 19, 1965 ‘ WARSAW, Poland (AP)' -/ The rulers Of the Soviet Union and six East European satellites opened a' summit conference today that may frame new policy .on European questions. Western diplomats in Warsaw said major new overtures to the West could result. They said the Communist leaders may agree to expand East-West contacts, reduce pressure on West Berlin and withdraw some Soviet troops from Communist East Germany. The Warsaw Pact’s political advisory committee met in the Polish Council of Ministers building, the former Radziwill Palace. It was attended by the Communist party chiefs, premiers, foreign ministers and defense ministers of the Soviet Union, Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. W. ★ W It was the first such full-dress meeting outside the Soviet Un- ion for Soviet party chief Leonid . I. Brezhnev and Premier Alexei N. Kosygin since they replaced Nikita ,S. Khrushchev three months ago. . {• *" CAMERAS ALLOWED The commander of Warsaw Pact forces, Soviet Marshal A, A. Grechko, arrived with the Cameramen were allowed to photograph the leaders shaking bands and sitting in the meeting room at long tables arranged in a large open square. After 10 minutes of photography,, the meeting started behind closed doors. other delegates Monday following meetings in East Berlin last week with East German Communist leader Walter Ul-brichtv Grechko’s fravels caused Western diplomats to think Moscow has made an important decision about East Germany and wanted Ulbricht filled in ahead of time. The. diplomats speculated that the Soviets might want to reduce their estimated 20 to 22 army divisions in East Germany to meet pressure from Red China on the Soviet Union’s southeastern frontier. The Soviets might also want to respond to Western overtures to reduce tension in Europe, Western military cuts and the disarray in , the Atlantic alliance. Western diplomats speculate that reductiomofISoviet strength in East Germany might accompany increased' obligations of other Warsaw Pact members, perhaps in some collective form. This could explain why the Soviet press has hinted that ithe Warsaw meetings are to discuss countermoves to the multilateral nuclear force proposed for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. ^ w w w Communist China distributed commentary deriding former Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev’s ideas of peaceful coexistence and implying that his successors are following the same policies. ". * w . - w The New China Nevis Agency transmitted long excerpts from an editorial published by the Japanese Communist newspaper Akahata two months-ago. The agency gave no reason for distributing the editorial at such a late date—_i_1 . 1 King Focuses on Voting SELMA, Ala. (AP) - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., urging nonviolence after he was attacked in the opening day of a civil rights drive, shifts the focus of his campaign today to registering Negro voters. “This is Only a beginning,” King said Monday after Negroes desegregated three downtown restaurants and a hotel in this .. west Alabama city where the racial lines had been tightly drawn. ★ ★ ★ “Our attorneys are exploring channels for legal remedies to the voting situation,’’ King said, Review Unit Appointments Set Tonight Appointment of Board of Review members for 1965 wilTbe among the items facing the City Commission at tonight’s weekly meeting. Official action is expected also on a resolution to set March 18 vBS the date for the referendum on the city’s proposed income tax. Also, the city’s 1965 budget appropriation ordinance is slated for introduction tonight. ' City Commissioners are also slated to receive the annual workable program for community improvement, a study required by the federal government hr"connection with the city’s two urban renewal projects. ★ ★ W Each year the city must submit a progress report on federally-sponsored projects in the city. Federal officials recertify annually programs on the basis of progress shown in the report. calling for more Negroes to join the .drive. He said court action was anticipated by next week in the effort to get more, Negroes on the voter list W W , ’ W ■ Although Negroes outnumber white residents in Dallas County by a ratio of six to four, only a small percentage can vote. LEAD NEGROES King said he would lead Negroes today in another registration attempt. Although nearly 300 went to the courthouse Monday, none was registered. ■' [ w ★ ★ The onljj, violence of the civil rights drive’s initial phase came in the lobby of the Hotel Albert, a picturesque hotel built by Negro slaves flO years ago. It had been segretated until Monday when King and 11 other Negroes registered. ★ .w. w A tall, sandy-haired man, identified as Jimmy George Robinson, 26, of Birmingham, and' a member of the National States Rights party, approached King, who was standing at the desk in the lobby. Robinson had spoken to King at the courthouse and accepted an invitation to speak at Monday night’s mass meeting in a Negro Church. ' “Are you going to be able to attend the meeting tonight?” King asked. STRIKES KING “I’m afraid not,” Robinson replied. “Would you step over here for just a minute.” Then the white man swung, striking King on the temple and knocking him against the desk. The Negroes with King grabbed Robinson. Wilson Baker, director of public safety, waded into the surging crowd, grasped Robinson by the . collar and hoisted him off the floor. He took the man outside. Waterford to'Shop'for Engineering it it ir Robinson was jailed on charges of assault and disturbing the peace. His bond was set at $400. Acting on a suggestion by Trustee Loren Anderson, the Waterford "Township Board last night voted to “go shopping” for engineering services. The board voted 4 to 3 to seek fee quotations from at least two engineering firms for inspection services in connection with new construction developments in the township. Anderson suggested that other firms be contacted after a lengthy discussion by the board on a revised fee schedule submitted by Johnson and’ Anderson, Inc., the township’s consulting engineers. The new J & A fee schedule called for higher minimum rates for inspection work but no change in the percentage charge. ★ if it . For example, the new proposal calls for a minimum fee of $500 for field work on a job ranging from $5,000 to $50,000 in valpe. Previously the minimum had been $250. good Customer Anderson said he felt that Waterford, as a good customer of the consulting firm, should be given consideration &s such. Birmingham Area News Village Fair Scheduled During Michigan Week PENSIONERS’ FRIEND - Irving DuPree (in suit) of South Lyon discusses politics with his three nonpaying guests: (from left) Alfred Sherer, 78 and penniless, arid George Gibson and Gene Gibson, in their 70s and on $80-a- month Social Security pensions. President Johnson lauded DuPree jri a talk at the LBJ Ranch for taking in the men rent-free at his South Lyon Hotel. BIRMINGHAM - A four-day village fair will be held at Shain Park this spring in conjunction with Michigan Week activities. The City Commission gave its approval to the fair last night following a request of the Bir-mingham-Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce. . * ' The Chamber is sponsoring the May 20-23 event. Last year the Chamber conducted the fair in the park during the week just prior to Michigan Week and the city’s centennial celebration. The annual Michigan observance this year will be staged from May 16-22. ★ ★ W" Commissioner Robert W. Page recommended that the chamber be allowed to conduct the fair "in view of the excel- Hotel Man Cited by LBJ The trustee added that maybe the proposed upward adjustment in minimum rates was fair but that he didn’t know what to comare it with. Services performed by the engineers on planned developments are billed by the township which then reimburses the engineering firm' it ir ir The proposed rate adjustment therefore, would reflect no increased cost to the township. In making his motion to seek other fee schedules, Anderson pointed out that the increase would eventually be passed on to the prospective customer of the developer.. Fights Poverty War in S. Lyon The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report i PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and not so cold today with light snow this afternoon, high 20 io/16. Snow diminishing to flurries tonight, low 10 to 15. Wednesday partly cloudy and a little colder with a few flurries, high 15 to 22. Southwesterly winds 10 to 20 miles shifting to northwest 20 to 25 miles late tonight. The outlook for Thursday, partly cloudy with little temperature change. Today In Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m : At I a.m.: Wind Velocity I m.| Direction: Southwest Sun oeti Tuesday at 5:91 p m. Sun rltei Wednesday at 7:57 a.m. Moon oeti Wednesday at 10: It a.m. Moon rim Tuesday at 8:14 p.m. Downtown Temperatures s a.m 7 a.m 8 i.m 10 O.m 14 Monday In Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather: .Mostly sunny One Year Ago In Pontiac Highest temperature . . Lowest temperature.............. Mean temperature . Weather: Partly cloudy Highest and Lowest Temperaftres This Dote in 93 Years 60 in 1907 9 in 1940 Monday's Temperature Chart Atpena Or. Rapids Houghton Lansing Marquette Muskegon Pellston Traverse C. Albuquerque Atlanta Bismarck Boston Chicago Cincinnati Denver Detroit Duluth Port Worth 52 2$ 21 9 Jacksonville 56 31 9 8 Kansas City 35 28 18 -1 Los Angeles 81 56 14 7 Miami Beach 62 47 21 15 Milwaukee 19 5 8-16 New Orleans 62 35 14 10 New York 25 17 57 32 Omaha 31 22 40 20 Phoenix 73 48 30 24 Pittsburgh 20 5 20 9 Salt Lake C. 30 27 26 13 S. Francisco 58 50 24 -6 S. S. Marie 5 -7 63 31 Seattle 42 35 19 9 Tampa 54 47 II 6 Washington 33 15 Slow Recovery Seen for GOP Mali ted P*Mlphidea Star l*di«at*d~ Cemvit Uni Skewers lij m E22J 44 UrnMm f»«»l ® ;j . £ NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow and flurries are forecast 101 the Lakes area and northern Appalachians tonight with rgin along the north Pacific Coast. It will be colder in the 5 and central Plalhs while temperatures will rise from the southernfialni to the phlo Valles (Continued From Page One) parent that Sen. Goldwater had written off, Michigan and that Gov. George W. Romney had written off Goldwater. Both strategies proved sage.” DENOUNCED TACTICS The Ripon Society in general denounced Goldwater’s leadership and tactics, holding this largely to blame for the GOP’s landslide national defeat. The society has long been critical of Goldwater conservatism. One bright spot was noted in the report on Michigan. It said all four seats lost in Congress to the Democrats “could be recaptured in 1966.” This referred to the 2nd, 3rd, 11th and 19th districts. The researchers limited their apparent criticism pf Summer-field, former U.S. postmaster general from Flint, to one sentence in a paragraph to itself. ★ w w “Arthur Summerfieid, Chief Republican fund raiser, diverted substantial funds to the s use of the Goldwater forces, leaving Romney to shift for himself," they said. LESSER OFFICES The report's prediction of .n "generation" for Republican recovery was applied to GOP defeats for lesser statewide offices. It said: "Despite Romney’s stunning individual victory, the Republican party In Michigan may have suffered a loss which will nbt be overcome in a generation for it has deprived the Republican governor of the tools necessary to prove the capacity of • Republican administration." f » By PAT McCARTY The man from Washington called yesterday with ammunition for Irving DuPree’s personal war on poverty. The owner of the modest South Lyon Hotel wasn’t at ail certain who would be calling or what could be accomplished. All he knew was what newsmen had told him—that he had been cited by President Johnson “as one of the front-line soldiers in that. War on Poverty.” DuPree, 61, had been quietly helpings three elderly guests at the men-only hotel by letting them stay there rent-free. ★ W , w But then he wrote to the Presi dent and told him what he was doing: ' ON PENSIONS Two of the men, George Gib son and Gene Gibson, unrelated are in their 70s and living on $80-a-month Social Security checks. “They’re no problem —I’ll take care of them,” DuPree said. DuPree has operated the hotel I their $30 a month and they obvi-at 201 N. Lafayette for 22 years, ously need it more than I do. So He generally has about 18 guests, most of them construe tion workers. Gene Gibson and George Gibson moved in about three years ago. ‘ Originally, when the two men came, I reduced the rent from $8 a week to $1 a day, because they obviously didn’t have much money,” he said. ★ * ★ “Then I thought, what the heck, I can get along without I quit charging them rent. They’re happy about it, apd it makes me feel good too,” he said. GOP to Hear Minnesota Party Chief lent job it did lastyear.” The decision of the commission was unanimous. COMMISSIONER CONVERTED Last year, Commissioner Carl F. Ingraham voted against the fair, but last night said he was “converted” after seeing the. way the operation was handled. According to Knowles B. Smith, executive director of thp chamber, the layout of the rides will conform, to that of 1964 as will. the community service group operated food and game concession tents. The Chamber had asked for early action on the proposal so that advanced planning and preparations could be facilitated. Amusement rides will be provided by Happyland Shows of Southfield, the same firm that supplied the equipment for the fair last year. FEEDING HIM Since Sherer, who moved in about three months ago, has no income, DuPree has been feed-, ing him as well as providing a free room. "k it it Of his 70-year-old hotel DuPree said, “It’s not fancy, but it’s warm and comfortable.” / The third is Alfred Sherer, 78-year-old retired blacksmith with no Social Security. • W ★ ★ The government yesterday intervened in his case. A representative of the Office of Economic Opportunity called DuPree on the telephone and they discussed the problem. TALK TO OFFICIALS Arrangements were made for Sherer, accompanied by a South Lyon municipal official, to come to Pontiac for a talk with Social Security administrators. DuPree said he had no Idea what was to be done for Sherer. Social Security would have to decide, he said. DuPree sent his letter to the President two or three weeks ago. * ' * * "I’ve always been very much a fan of President Johnson,” he said. “I congratulated him on the things he’s accomplished and those he's trying to accomplish. WHAT I’M DOING “I mentioned what I'm doing here, but it was more of a congratulatory letter than anything.” / President Johnson cited DuPree In a Sunday new* conference. 7 Feared Dead in Ship Collision Robert A. Forsythe, state chairman of the Minnesota Republican party, will be keynote speaker at the Oakland County Republican Convention on Jan. 28. The county convention will be held at Southfield High School, Lahser and 10 Mile Road, at 8 p. m. According to county chairman Dale A. Feet, its primary purpose is to elect delegates and alternates to the Feb. 19-20 state convention. Under the Eisenhower administration, Forsythe served as Assistant Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. LE HAVRE, France (AP) -A collision of an American freighter and a French coastal gasoline tanker set the tanker afire in the foggy 1 English Channel Monday night and left seven persons-dead or missing. An officer and the wife of a crewman on the tanker, the 2,062-ton Port Manech, died in the inferno that was fed by the cargo of high test gasoline. ★ it ir Port authorities expressed fear that five missing crewmen were also dead, trapped in the engineroom of the Port Manech. The tanker was aground and Hearing Delayed in Sylvan Lake Election Case Although he had gotten a call from a government official last week, DuPree was unaware of the President’s comment. * w * w , '‘They’ve got me quite confused/' he admitted' A show cause hearing challenging the right of Sylvan Lake Councilman John D. McKlnlay to hold office has been postponed in Circuit Court until Jan. 25. The hearing was scheduled for yesterday before Judge Stanton G. Dondero, Dondero granted the delay upon learning that McKInlay’s attorney would be out of town. Six Sylvan Lake residents charge that McKlnlay did not meet the residency requirement of the, City Charter when he was elected to the post on Nov. 8,1964. still burning furiously several miles off Le Havre. It had been erroneously reported at one point that all the crewmen were accounted for. The American freighter, the 6,103-ton Lucile Bloomfield of Galveston, Tex., caught fire after the collision, but the flames were * put out. No casualties were reported among its crew of 44. The Lucile Bloomfield took aboard 22 of the tanker’s crew, and, blackened by smoke, put Into port today. Injured tanker crewmen were hospitalized. Six were reported in serious condition. . The Lucile Bloomfield was cn route from New Orleans to Southampton, England, and other ports. Most of her crew were from Houston, New Orleans and Mobile, Ala. Elsewhere along Europe’s western coast, storms breached Belgian dikes and flooded coastal villages. A 60-foot breach was? torn In a dike at the seaside resort of Knockke-le-Zoute Monday qpd the sea broke through along the Scheldt River, flooding part of the village of Baas-rode. He also served as administrative assistant to U. S. Senator Edward Thye of Minnesota, and ctilef counsel for the U. S. Senate Small Business Committee. In making the announcement Feet stated that C. Ray Ballard, of Huntington Woods will serve as chairman of the Rules and Resolutions Committee for the convention and that Charles Walter of 16940 Dunblalne, Birmingham, will serve as convention arrangement* chairman. BEVERLY HILLS-A symposium on discipline will be held Thursday night at Berkshire Junior High School. The discussion is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the gymnasium of the school at 2170? 14 Mile. Those participating will include Rev. Robert W. Boley of the First Methodist Church; Dr. Leon Fram, rabbi of Tern- . pie Israel in Detroit; and Brother John F. McGowan of Brother Rice High School in Birmingham. Others are J. J. Farrell, Beverly Hills patrolman; Melvin Mermell, a parent; and Ronald H. Roiph, assistant principal at Berkshire. * ' W ' W h John W. Dickey, Berkshire principal, will serve as moderator. MacombPlans Told by Ford Due to Create 1,900 New Jobs This Year Family Wiped Out in Vermont Fire Ford Exec Wi|l Speak Horace Sheldon, field manager of civic, and governmental affairs for the Ford Motor Co., wilt be the guest speaker at the 8 p.m. meeting today of the Oakland County Young Republican Club in the Birmingham fpmmunfty House, 380 8. Bates. What Is It? (See Picture, Page 1) Behind the bubble gum and the knit pullover cold-weather gear Is 15-year-old Sheron Wade amusing himself yesterday outside the National Gallery of Art In Washington, D.C, Sheron kept the bubble gum coming and going as he watched the arrival of guests attending a reception—one of the prelnang-ural activities. MORRISVILLE, Vt. (AP) Fire raced through a frame home early today, wiping out a family of six persons. Police identified the victims as Theodore F. Corey, Jr., 25 his wife, Mary, 24, and their four daughters — Anna Marie, 5; Beverly, 3; Mary, 2, and Betty Jean, 1. The fire broke out in frigid cold, estimated at 15 degrees below zero in this north central Vermont community. Area Crash Puts Woman in Hospital An elderly Lake George woman was 'hospitalized yesterday following an auto accident at Perry and Opdyke In Pontiac Township: Carolyn Jackson; 74, was reported in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital. When the accident occurred she was a passenger in a car driven by Willlafn Holllngshead 74, also of Lake George. The Holllngshead car collided with a vehicle driven byJames R. Daly, 1840 W, Scrlppn, Orion Township. The aeoidmt occurred at aboufj p.gn. 1 Mi m \t Ford Motor Co. expects to create some 1,900 new jobs in Macomb County during the coming year, according to Robert Miller, manager of the Utica trim plant and chairman of the firm’s Macomb County Community Relations Committee. In reviewing Ford’s 1064 Macomb County operations today and discussing the outlook for 1965, Miller said: "A growing market for our products naturally will call for a corresponding increase in the output of our Macomb County facilities. / Payrolls at Ford's four Macomb plants totaled approximately $80 million in 1064, a new record and up from $68 million in 1963, Miller said. WWW Average employment for the-year was 9,700, compared to 8,700 In 1963. UNDER WAY Expansion of the S t e r 1 i n g plant, which will add 592,886 square feet, is already under way, with completion set for mld-1965. WWW Other expansion plan* for Ford’s Macomb County facilities include a 230,000-squarc-foot paint manufacturing plant at Mount Clemens, a 4,000-square-foot addition to the Mount Clemens vinyl plant and an 80,000-squarc-foot addition to the Utica trim plant. WWW Al| are scheduled for compla-tiojn In IMS and 1966, M|tar i J| FOURTEEN m m f { mi p i ’y ^ T y,7&' " g. i v/ '. 11 y. • t THE I ON A1 AC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965 18 Charged iti Murders STOREWIDE CLEARANCE TV BARGAINS LOUISIANA ARREST - Horace D. Barnette (center) of Cullen, La., was arrested in Shreveport, La., yesterday on a federal grand jury indictment stemming from the deaths of three civil rights workers in Mississippi. Barnette is flanked by his attorney (left) and and FBI agent. : Bolivia has had 14 constitutions since becoming a republic in 1825. The latest was adopted in 1961. State Money Report LANSING (AP)—State treasury income during the past week was $28.2 million and outgo was $31.4 million. The treasury balance at the end of the month was $203.6 million. MERIDIAN, Miss. (AP) - A federal judge has set Jan. 27 for arraignment of 18 men charged with conspiracy in the murder of three civil rights workerl U.S/Dist. Judge Harold Cox, who will preside at the trial, ordered defense lawyers to get their various motions on file by next Monday. A hearing on them will be held Jan- 26. ★ ★ ★ ; , Action by the judge, a sharp lifer drive, came after several conferences in Jackson Monday with John Doar of Washington, chi^f of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. ★ 'Jr ■ ★ . Doar has been in Jackson since he assisted in presenting the case to the 23-member federal grand jury that -h)^r indicted 18 men on the conspiracy charges. , , paf 2 CONFESSIONS *f|| Two of the Men —> both reported to have given confessions to the FBI — were arrest^ and freed on $5,000 bond. Horace D. Barnette/sur-’ rendered to ah hgent in Shreveport, La. James E. Jordan, 38, was picked up in Atlanta, Ga. They are former Meridian residents. <§ $ If ' * * * W j .'i'Y Barnette, a balding man described as “tenderhearted” by a former schoolmate, now lives in Cullen, La. Jordan lites at Marietta, an Atlanta suburb. The FBI, asked jf thie two men were under protection, said only that it “certainly has a continuing interest in their security ” FOURTEEN LAWYERS Fourteen defense lawyers will confer during the week on their motions, these will include pleas for separate trials and challenges of the court’s jurisdiction. The Justice Department says that under federal trial procedure all persons charged in a conspiracy in an indictment are tried together^ pot separately. . ;.■* ' ★ ★ ★ The 14 lawyers represent the 16 men arrested earlier. Barnette and Jordan were expected to arrange for their own lawyers.. , / JV. Thp three ch^l rights workers Were killed near Philadelphia last June'21 in what the FBI calls a Ku Klux Klan plot. They had driven from Meridian into Neshoba County to investigate the burning of a Negro church., THREE KILLED ..They Were Michael Schwer-ner, 24, and Andrew Goodman, 28, both white New Yorkers, and Jpmes Chaney, ’21, a Meridian The New -Yorkers were each shot once with h pistol. Chaney was shot three times. A private autopsy report said he was beaten so severely bones were crushed. The state autopsy report was not released. 3 The 10 men the FBI accuses of actually plotting to intercept the men and kill them include Barnette, Jordan and Neshoba County Deputy Sheriff Cecil Price, 26, of Philadelphia: GE 11" Portable TV with Ear Phones ,. 99 95 13" Admiral TV with UUP 199 95 19" GE Port-UHF RADIO BARGAINS Transistor FM Radies '■ r fP T> AM/- 19“ RCA IF 5 Tube . Radios jffj "W Philco AM/FM . Transistor Radio. . 29s The Oakland County Protective Services Committee - has scheduled a county wide conference April 23 at .Oakland University. Planners said the conference is expected to attract up to 500 persons. Protective Service, groups are located in 24 communities in the county. The purpose of the citizen-sponsored groups is to combat juvenile delin-. quency and parental neglect. • The conference will deal with citizen involvement in the prevention of delinquency-★ ★ ★ Ten separate workshops have been scheduled for the day. Resource persons from throughout the area are being asked to serve as panelists for the sessions. MS AVAILABLE » ELECTRIC CQMPANY FE 4-2525 825 West Huron Street PRIVATE DETECTIVES HAROLD L SMITH IHVESTlDATORS 1302 Pontine State Bank Bldg. FE 5-4222 — 24 Hour Number OFFICES IN FLINT — PONTIAC — SAGINAW •200 OVER 100 TO CHOOSE FROM Complete Set TABLES *19” DANISH MODERN 2-Pc. SDITES MODERN WIDE ARM SOFAS and CHAIRS Cotton or nylon fabric*. Beautiful florals, stripe* and solid colors. Including tables and lamps. $300 values from $169.95. Seeing is believing. Complete with Tables and Lamps. 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Wide •elections. ■** 1 i m THE PONTIAC PRESSffl Jl'I if £ii fB TUESDAY, JANUARY Id, 1965 fTf PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FIFTEEN Speaks Before Doctor Prescribes Change in Putting 'Has Never Hurt NFL/ H# Says; Rozelle Set for GP Lecture p By BRUNO L. KEARNS Shorts Editor, Pontiac Press Attention Pete Rozelle, NFL, commissioner speaking tonight* in the Pro Football Lecture series starting tonight at Grosse Pointe Memorial Auditorium! Ralph Wilson, Detroit business man who is the owner of the Buffalo Bills, wants you to know that their rival American Football League does not plan to beg the NFL for inter-league competition, for a championship playoff game or for a mutual agreement in regard to the player drafts. AAA % Speaking to the Pontiac Traffic Club at the Waldron Hotel [ last night Wilson said, “The AFL has never hurt the NFL, in fact it has enhanced pro foot-toll popularity in the country, and we should resolve the biggest distress between us, that of drafting and signing players. “There is no reason why the . two leagues can’t get together in competition'on the field, and move away from player competition in favor of mutual understanding in setting up a common player draft between By FRANK CAREY WASHINGTON (ff) - Remember that last 20-foot putt that rimmed tne cup and skipped away? Well, says an eye specialist, an- upright, between - the - legs putting stance might have made the difference — especially for a golfer with a large, protruding RALPH WILSON “The recent excessive bonuses made to untried college players is ridiculous, and if this should continue every pro football team in the country will be operating in the red within the next three years,” he added. “The colleges want us to start our player drafts in January, but we can start in April and this would not eliminate the competition for players or giving of excessive bonuses. COMMON DRAFT “The only solution right now is a common player draft and it’s Up to the NFL to recognize this. I know owners throughout the NFL who are sick of the current situation and they know that a common draft would eliminate most of the problems. “This is the first time I have ever said this, but the Buffalo Bills could play against any team in either league and the NFL had better recognize the fact that we’ll compete with them for every player if that’s what they want.” Wilson said, “Within three years I’m sure that Detroit and Chicago will be cities which will have AFL teams.” He also pointed to the big TV (Continued on Page 17, Col. 1) Celtics' Duo Pacing League NEW YORK (AP) - Bill Russell, a defensive marvel during the Boston Celtics’ 14-game National Basketball Association winning streak, has had an unsung offensive accomplice in slick Sam Jones. While Russell’s rebounding and shot-blocking have been accepted generally as the key to the defending champions' current victory binge, Jones has been quietly pacing the attack. Weekly NBA statistics today showed Jones is the league's No. 4 scorer — behind Wilt Chamberlain, Jerry West and Oscar Robertson. Sam’s 25-point average is five points higher than last season at a similar stage and more than 10 points above his lifetime mark. Russell and Robertson continued to pace the rebounders and playmakers, respectively. Big Bill has averaged 23.1 caroms; Oscar, 11.8 assists, per game'. The usual putting method, in which” duffers and pros alike crouch over the ball with their side toward the hole, is a major stumbling block to good depth perception on the greens, Said Dr. William W. Vallotton of Charleston, S.C. " A A A Moreover, if the golfer happens to be endowed with “a large nasal bridge” — big nose, to you — he actually sees the hole out of only one eye if he putts from the usual stance, said Vallotton in a report in the Southern Medical Journal. AIDS DEPTH In contrast, he related, the upright, between - the - legs put-ing stance — in which a malletlike putter is used like a croquet club — helps assure the depth perception required to hole those 20-footers. Driving hard at the conventional stance, the ophthalmologist followed through with: “All our daily activities that require good depth perception are performed with head erect and the nose does not obscure the vision of one eye. “Yet we try a most difficult task such as putting in a most unphysiologic way.” A * * Declaring that most golfers tilt their heads by as much as 90 degrees — and some by even more — the doc said that once one’s noggin is tilted more than 13 degrees, the eye muscles that normally rotate the eye are apt to do some mighty strange things. For example, “the vertical muscles begin acting as horizontal muscles, and the horizontal muscles as semi-vertical muscles.” A A A Dr. Vallotten said such deviations can “wreak havoc with the finer fusional components of binocular vision." In other words, the hole isn't where you thought it was. ms mm——— AP Phatafak NEW NAVY COACH - William T. Elias, day. Elias is shown looking at a newspaper football coach at Virgihia since 1961, ac- headline on Virginia’s upset over Army last cepted the head coaching job at Navy yester- season. d' \ 1 8MMiMJWJ 1 PI|rD jPlf dpfijjjsf Jfjjjj SB PCH Retains Second Place in Poll Griffin Named Top '64 Boxer By The Associated Press Leaders in the lower two classes of the Michigan High School Basketball Poll made it by narrow margins this week, but Benton Harbor and River Rouge pulled away in Class A and B, respectively. * * * Portland took over the Class C lead in this week’s poll by 7be Associated Press’ statewide The feeding icoren: 1. Chamber In In, Phil. 2. Weft, L.A........ 3. Robertson, Cln. . 4. $. Jones, Dot. ... 5. Bellamy, Balt. 6. Baylor, LA. 7. Lucas, Cln. a. Howell, Balt..... 9. Johnson, Balt. 10. Dlschlnger, Det, PO FT Pts. Avg. . 636 208 1480 38.9 433 362 1228 30.0 417 367 1201 30.0 449 230 1148 25.0 417 301 1135 25.8 422 263 1107 27.0 363 192 918 20.9 296 295 887 20.2 360 160 860 20.0 327 171 807 17.9 Rated College Quintets Whitewash Opposition By The Associated Press The men who vote in the Associated Press’ weekly major college basketball poll had good reason to walk with chests expanded today. So do the top ten teams, Including streaking UCLA which has increased its first-place margin. * * * A week ago, the Bruins held a 58-point lead over Michigan. Wichita was third followed by St. Joseph’s, Pa., Indiana, Prov-Idence, St. John’s, N.Y., Davidson, San Francisco and Duke. The selections obviously couldn't be beaten because the ten put together a combined 18-0 record with Providence the only non-vlctorlous team last week. The Friars, the only unbeaten major team, were Idle. Ij As a result, there were only a couple of minor shuffles in the rankings. St. Joseph’s moved Into third, place, switching positions with i Wichita. Davidson, a three-time winner last week, advanced to-seventh while St. John’s dropped back a notch to **^fwwglooal pan# 41 writ- gave ers and broadcasters UCLA a 90-point edge In the latest balloting. The Bruins collected 34 first place votes and 401 points on a basis of 10 for a first place vole, 9 for second etc. The Bruins beat California and Stanford last week, extending their winning streak to 13 games. Michigan, 10-2, defeated Northwestern 90-08 to hold the runner-up spot. AAA Indiana lifted Its record to 12* 1 and maintained the No. 5 spot on the strength of victories over Iowa and (Hilo State. But the Hooslers slipped against unranked Iowa Monday night, losing 74-08. the Top Ton, with flrpt place votai lit pareflthMMg won-lost records through Monday, Jon. II, ond points on IM+M+m-l baolc (Voting bated gamot on rooultl through Saturday, Jin, nil 1. UCLA (34) 131 401 3. Michigan 3. It. Joseph's, Po. (3) 4 providence (3) 7. Davidson f. It. John's, n.y I. Ion Francisco 10, quko * rocolvlni Hi 'll qthtri tally! COfM «r,r nanoo, Vanda,hi vgtoi, listed alphabotl. DfPeuI, Illinois, Kan- Mianoaoto, Now Mart. NR), ft. Inula, tin. NEW YORK (ffl - Emile Griffith, the busy welterweight champion, was named Tuesday Ring Magazine’s Fighter of the Year for 1964. The 26-year-old New Yorker, a native of the Virgin Islands, beat out heavyweight champion Cassius Clay for the honor in Ring’s annual poll of Its staff and worldwide coorespondents. ♦ A A Clay’s dethronement of Sonny Liston was rated the Fight of the Year and light heavyweight contender Jose Torres’ first round knockout of former middleweight champion Bobo Olson was picked as the Round of the Griffith defeated Luis Rodriguez of Miami and Brian Curvis of Wales In title defenses In 1964. The strong 147 - pounder has fought 10 welterweight title fights In less than four years. He won eight and tost two, beating his conquerors In return bouts. AAA Clay was Ring’s selection for Fighter of the Year In 1963. 2 Black Hawks Within Range of Scoring Mark MONTREAL (AP) - Most National Hockey League observers seem to agree this lathe year that Chicago’s Bobby Hull will break the one-season record of 50 goals. Hull, the NHL’s leading scorer with 59 points, needs just 15 goals in 29 games to do it. AAA League statistics released today, reveal however , that Hull isn’t the only member of the Chicago Black Hawks with a chance to break a league scoring record. Runner-up Stan Mlklta, who won the scoring title last season, has 34 assists and needs 25 In Chicago’s last 29 games to break the record shared by Montreal’s Jean Bellveau and Toronto’s Andy Bathgate. 3 The leaders: o A Pt«. I. Hull. Chicago ....... 34 33 If 3. Mlklta, Chicago ...... 13 34 47 3. Ul(m*n, Detroit ..... 31 31 43 4. Provost, Montreal .... 17 31 W 5. Goyatta, N*w York ..... 9 37 34 4. Eipoilto, Chicago .... 19 30 39 7. Howe, Datrolt ........ 13 33 19 (. Pilot*, Chicago ....... 9 v 34 f. Hanry, Haw York .... 1) 14 13 tt. Gilbert, NOW York ... II 14 33 panel of sports writers and sportscasters. But its margin was only three points over . Muskegon Christian. A' A A Barryton retained its lead in Claks D, but Negaunee St. Paul is only three points back. Benton Harbor, the defending Class A champion, lengthened ★ ★ ★ The voting, with to points tor a tint place vote, 4 for second, etc. through 1 point for a 10th place vote Clan A < Team, Record Poll pts. 1. Benton Harbor (1-0) .......... 179 3. Pontiac Central (1-0) ....... 140 3. (Tie) Hamtramck (8-0) ........ 131 Laming Saxton (7-0) ........... )ll 9. Ootrolt Northwaftern (4-0) ...... 90 4. Grand Rapids South (4-1) ...... 70 7. East Detroit (7-0) 47 I. Ferndale (7-0) .................. S3 9. Alpena (10-1) 44 10. Dearborn Fordton (1-1) 29 Others, in order: Niles. Saginaw, Grand Rapldi Ottawa Hills, Lansing Everett, Kalamazoo Central, Detroit Northeastern, Warren Couslno, Birmingham Seaholm, Allen Park, Holland, Saginaw Arthur Hill, Bloomfield H|lli. Class B Team, Record , Poll Pts, 1. River Rouge (9-1) ............ 144 2. Penlott'(3-0) . .......... JOB 1. Tecumseh fa-0) ................. >03 4. Ludlngton (7-0) ?> 5. Saginaw A, Hill Tech (9-0) 44 4. Lowell (7-0) ..... 47 7, Ithaca (7-0) 42 i. St. Clair (4-1) M 9. (tie) Allegan (9-1) .............. » Rudyard (0-1) ......... . Others, In order: Tawas Area, Auburn Haights Avondale, Okemos, Detroit Visitation, Datrolt Holy Redeemer, Dellon, Whitehall, Marysville. Clast C Team, Record Po11 Tff: 1. Portland (4-0) JJf 2. Muskegon Christian (4-2) ... ill 1. Hamtramck St. Pierian (9-0) 90 4. Frankenmuth (7-1) 4. FennvIlTe (7.1) Jjj 7. Detroit St, Hadwlg 00-1) ...... 4# 8. Lake Panton (0-0 ) ............ 49 9. (tie) Hancock (9*0) ............*2] St. ignaca CM) , ..... , C Others, In orderi Parry, Gross*.Pointe St. Paul, New Haven, Datrolt St. Theresa, Richland, Edmora, Constantine, Mount Plassont Sacred Heart, tmlay City, Wakefield, Ypsllantl Roosevelt, Detroit Country Day. Cleat D Team, Record Poll Pts. 1. Borryton (gi) ■ 123 3. Ntgaunta tt. Paul 00-0) 130 3. Saginaw Holy Rotary (9-0) ..... 42 4. Dryden J|Pi9||P DOZ ThU Week'i Added Feature! PECAN ROLLS A Largo ;' V.' Delicious Assortment On the 'way to work or homo from a party, enjoy our specially browed Down Coffee with a deliciously different Dawn Donut. OHM SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY I A.M. Til tt P.Mi FRIDAYS and SATURDAY! 6 A.M. to 12 AMs 1Wlll))tf ltANUTC •MPR"A I '4iRP';RIPiPR.;iiP,,RiFPPr. mm lOfilSL THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965 ■ ■■ MARKETS The following are top prices 'covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. T Produce . FRUITS Apples, Golden Delicious, bu........$3.75 Apples, Red Delicious, bu............4.00 Apples, Jonetben, bu. ........... .. 2.50 Apples, McIntosh, bu.................3.25 Apples, N. Spy, bu. .................3.75 Apples, Cider, Mai. case ........... 2.50 VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu.......— Cabbage, curly, bu.......... Cabbage, Red, bu............ Cabbage, Std................ Carrots, Cello Pak ......... Carrots, topped, bu......... Celery, Root, doz........... Horseradish ................ Leeks, doz. bchs............ Onions, dry, 50-lb. bag Parsley Root ............... Parsnips, bu................ Parsnips, cello pak ........ Potatoes, new, 25 lbs. ..... Potatoes, new, 50 lbs....... Radishes, bl. . ....... Squash, Acorn,'bu. .......... Squash, Buttercup, bu........ Squash, Butternut, bu........ Souash, Delicious, bu........ Squash, Hubbard, bu.......... Turnips, topped, bu.......... Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API - Price* paid per pound for No. 1 quality live poultry: Roasters over 5 lbs. 23-24) Broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. Whites 18-20., DBTROIT EGOS DETROIT (API—Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (including U.S.): Whites Grade A lumbo 31-34; extra large, 28-31 V*i large 24V2-29V*; medium 23t*-24) smell 12; Browns Grade A lumbo 33; large 27V*-22; medium 24V5-25; smell 12t checks 17-12. CHICAGO BUTTER, EOGS CHICAGO (API—Chicago Mercantile Exchange—butter steady;. wholesale buying prices unchanged; 23 score AA 5745; 22 A 5744; 20 B 5544 ) 82 C 55V.; cars 20 B 58V*) 82 C 95V4. , Eggs easy) wholesale buying prices unchanged to 1 lowen 70 per cent or better Grade A whites 25) mixed 25; mediums 2344) standards 24; dirties unquoted; checks 12. At New All-Time Highs Stock Market Fairly Steady NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market; was fairly steady at its new all-time highs early today. Trading was active. Changes of most key stocks were fractional. Du Pont backtracked from its substantial gain of Monday, shedding a point.. Eastman Kodak gained a point. 1' ★ * Kennecott continued weak, losing about a point. Boeing also was under continued selling pressure, sliding well over a point. Rut the leading motors posted a solid string of gains — all of them small. General Motors and Ford gained good fractions. Other auto stocks were barely higher. STEELS UNCHANGED Steels were unchanged to a shade higher. Oils performed similarly. . On balance, however, the industrial average was able to move slightly into new high ground.. Utilities advanced irregularly. Rails," tobaccos, rubbers and mail order - retails were very narrowly mixed. Boston & Maine recovered fractionally from Monday’s fall on reports of a challenge for control of the road. Studebaker rose Mi to 7% on 17,000. shares. Westinghouse Electric rose Vi to 43% on 10,000 shares. Woolworth lost V\ at 27 on 14,000 shares. Ampex gained 14 at 18% on 10,000 shares. . ★ ★ ★ Opening blocks included: GM, tip % at 97% on 8,200 shares; Westinghouse Electric, up % at 43% on 3,500; and Boling, off % at 65% on 3,700. Monday, the > Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose .0 to 333.6, a new high. Prices Were generally higher on the American Stock Exchange. Most changes wi fractional. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API—Following It s list of selected stock transactions on the New York Stock Exchange with 10:30 prices: CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) — UUSDA) — Live poultry: wholesale buying prices unchanged) roasters 23-25; special fed White Rock fryers 19-191*) few heavy hens 18. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (API—(U5DA)—Cattle 2,000. Receipts very light alt classes; slaughter steers, heifers and cows very active) choice steers strong to mostly 25 cents higher) lower grades 50 cents higher) choice, heifers steady to strong;, lower grades 25 cents higher) cows fully 50 cents higher, some 1.00 up) bulls strong,-most choice steers 24.00-25.00; good to low choice steers 21.50-24.00) standard to low good 17.00-21.50; few scattered lots choice heifers 22.50-23.25. Hogs 700. Barrows and gilts under 230 lb. 25-50 cents higher; heavier weights and sows 25 cents higher; few Sales U. 5. 1 200-225 lb. barrows end t gilts 17.55-17.75; mixed 1 and 2 120-230 lb. 17.25-17.50; 2 and 3 120-230 lb. 18.75-17,25) 230-250 lb. 13.50-18.75. vealers 150. Steady, choice to prime 35.00- 40.00) good 25.00-35.00) standard 12.00- 25.00) cull and utility 10.00-12.00. Sheep 1.200. Slaughter lambs fully 1.00 higher; slaughter ewes strong to 50 cents higher; choice .and prime wooled lambs 80-105 lb. 23.0024.00) one load prime 24.30; good and choice wooled - lambs 22.00- 23.00; choice and prime shorn lambs 22.75-23.75. Abbott L .20 ABC Con .70 ACFInd 2.50a Ad Minis .40a Address 1.20 Air Red 2.50 Atleg Cp .20e Allegh Lud 2 A Meg Pw 1.08 AllledCh 1.80 Allied Strs 3 AlllsChal .50 Alum Ltd .80 Alcoa 1.40 Amerada 2.40 AmAIrlin 1.25 A Bosch ,50e AmBdcst 1.40 Am Can 2 Am Cyan 2 AmEIPw 1.24 Am Enka 2a Am' FPw .75 AHome 1.56a Am Hosp .35 Am MFd .20 AMet Cl 1.50 Am Motors 1 AmNGas 1.70 AmOptlc 1.10 AmPhoto .20 ASmelt 1.50a Am Std 1 Am TAT 2 Am Tob 1.80 AMP Inc .45 Ampex Cp Amph Borg 1 Anacon 2.50e Anken Ch .20 ArmcoSt 3 Armour).80b Ashl Oil 1.40 Atchison 1.50 AtICLIne 2a AtIRef 2.40 Atlas Cp Auto Cant .40 Avco Corp 1 Avne! .40b AvonProd .80 Sales Net (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 3 44’* 44V* 44V* .............. 10 1844 1844 1844 — V* 5 80 SO 80 . V 1344 1348 1344 . 11 424* 42 424* + V* 3 55V* 55V* 55V* + 'A 3 1144 1144 1144 + V* . 13 41 41 41 + V4 2 28V* 2844 2844 — '* 31 544* 54V* 54V* — V* 2 704* 704* 704* + Vi 12 21V* 21V* 21V* ... 28 314* 31'/< 31 '/< + V4 55 88 85V* 58 + V4 8 85'* 85Vi 85'/a — V* 17 42Vs 4244 4244 + 'A 1 18V* 18V* 15W ... 2 - 53 52V* 32V* — V* x24 45V* 4444 4444 — Vi * 72V4 72 72V4 — 'A 12 45V4 45 45 — V* 7 82 58V* 58V* + 4* 10 184* 18V4 1814 — 'A 21 524* 524* 524* + Vi 7 284* 284* 284* .......... 28 18V* lii/4 184* .. 22 ' 4344 431/4 43Vi + 'A 17 144* 14V4 14'A .......... 7 48Va 48Vi 48'A + V* 4 40V* 4014 4014 — Vi 23 74* 74* 74* ..... 12 52V* 524* 52V*...... 5 22 22 22 58 584* 88'A 584* + V* 37 344* 34V* 344* + V4 9 30 30 30 188 184* 1814 184* + 'A 2 25(A 2514 2514 + 4* 11 554* 554* 554* ......... 14 12 1144 1144 — V* 854* 854* 854* + V* 2 47 47 47 45 424* 42 4214 -I- 44 10 3344 334* 3344 ... 7 71V* 7114 71V4 — 'A 10 814* 814* 814* 4 24* 24* 24* 11 18 18 18 Bab CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) — Hog* 8,000; butchers mostly 25 higher; 120-225 lb outchers 17.25-17.50) 2-3 250-270 lbs 15.50-15.00) 1-3 350-400 lb sows q3.50-14.00; 2-3 500-500 lbs 12.25-13.00. 25 Cettle 5,500; slaughter steers steady to lower) two loads prime 1,2501,300 slaughter steers SO.oOt high choice and prime 1,150-1,400 lbs 25.00 - 25.7Sl choice 1,100-1,400 lbs 24.00 - 24.75) good 21.00-23,00; high choice and prime 950-1,075 lb slaughter heifers 24.00-24.25; choice 850-1,050 lbs 23.25-24.00. Sheep 200; wooled slaughter lamb* strong to 25 higher) choice and prim* 85-101 lb wooled slaughter lambs 22.50-23.00) cull to gocyl wooled slaughter ewes 5.50-5.50. American Stocks NOON AMKRICAN NEW YORK (AP) - Following It a list of selected stock transact Ions on tha American Stock (Exchange with noon prlcas: Salas Nat (tuts.) High Law Last Chg. Aerolet .50 7 23% 23% 23% - VS ArkLaOas 1.20 17 43% 43% 43% f- Va 7 9*16 MS S 7% 7% 7% + VS 5 25% 25% 25% - % 92 5% 5% 5% - % 21 IMS 7 MS 7 9*1S + % 2 *4% 4% 4% 4- % 23 2 15*16 2 15-16 2 IMS . 7 9% 9% 9% -f % 4 3% 3% 3% *F % 46% 46% 46% - % 59% 59% 59% -F % 3% 31/4 3% . 15 2 13-16 2% Asamera Assd OII&G Barnes Eng Braz Trac Brit Pat ,30r Campb Chib Can So Pal Cdn J aval In Cinerama Creole P 2.60n Data Cont Equity Cp ,05r Fargo Oils Felmt Pat .15a Fly Tiger 1 9% 9% Gan Dave I Gan Plywd Giant Yal .60a Goldfiald Gt Bat Pat Gulf Am Ld Hycon Mfg Isram Corp Kalsar Inn Krattar .80b Meckey Air McCrary wt Maud John ■ 42 11% 11% 2% - 1-16 9% + % 11V4 BaldLlma .40 Balt GE 1.32 Bearings .80 Baaunlt 1.20 Beckman In BeechAtr .60 Ball 'How .40 Bandlx 2.40 Banguat Bastwall .90a Beth Stl 1.50 BigelowS 1.20 Boeing 2 Borden 2.10 BorgWar 2.20 rfirlggs Mfg BrlggsS 1.40a Brief My la Brunswick BucyEr 1.60a Budd Co .60 Bullard .60 Bulova .60b Borl Ind 1.60 Burroughs 1 18 23' 22% 22% 17 14% 14% 14% + % 23 53% 53% 53% + % —B— 24 35% 34% 34% — % 2 14% 14% 14% — % 14 38% 38% 38% — % 1 21% 21% 21% ... 13 35% 35% 35% — % 9 72% 7m 72% + V4 x2 20% 20% 20% — % 23 29% 29% 29% — % 45V4 45% 45% 11 1 Va 1% 1% 37% 37% 37% 48 36% 36 Va 36% -F % 4 28% 28% 28% ... 145 65% 64% 64% —1% 12 83% 82% 82% — % 13 51 51 51 + % 2 5% 5% 5% • % 37% 37 5 69% 69% 69% .... 9 8% 8% 8% + % 2 39% 39% 39% -F % 2 13% 13% 13% .... 3 23% 23% 23% — % 70 20% 19% 20% + % 4 58% 58% 58% — % 42 28% 28% 28% -F %> Frlto Lay .86 FruehCp 1.50 Salas Nat (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 6 40% 40% 40% -F % * 15 30% 30% 30% . GamSk 1.20b Gen Cig 1.20 Gan Dynam Gen Elec 2.20 Gen Foods 2 GenMIlls 1.40 GenMot 4.45e GenPrec 1.20 GPubSyc .44g G PubUt 1.36 GenTel&EI 1 GenTire .50 GaPaciflc lb 'GettyOII .I0e Gillette 1.10a GlenAid .50a Goodrch 2.20 Goodyr 1.15 -GraceCo 1.10 GrandU .60b Granites 1.40 GtA&P 1.20a Gt- Nor Ry 3 GW Fin .87t Greyhnd .80 Grumn 1.50 Gulf M8.0 2a Gulf OH 1.80 Gulf SU 1.24 Halliburt 1.50 HamPap 1.40 Hanna Co la HeclaMng 1b Hertz 1.20 Hewlett Pk Hoff Electron Honaywl new Houst LP .84 Howe Sd .40 Ideal Cam 1 IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InterlkSt 1.60 IntBusMch 5 IntIHarv 2.80 IntMlnerals 1 IntNlck 2.50a Inti Packers IntPapar 1.20 Int TAT 1.20 ITECktBr .60 —G—* 4 39 38% 39 4- % 1 47% 47% 47% -35 38% 37% 37% - 15 97 97 97 + % 13 85% 85% 85% -F % 6 52 51% 52 + % 126 97% 97% 97% + % 7 29 28% 28% . 21 6 5% '5% . 3 38% 38% 38% . 43 38 37% 37% - 6 20 19% 19% - 13 57% 57% 57% -F % 6 27% 27% 27% . 25 31 31 31. 2 12% 12% 12% -F % 8 59% 59% 59% + % 9 47% 47% 47% - IN 8 57%. 57% 57% + % 23 28% 28% 28%.+ % 5 25% 25% 25% . 16 44% 44% 44% . 3 58% 58% 58% . 11 11 10% 11 -F % 12 24% 24% 24% . 43 53% 53, 53 - 2 52% 52% 52% — % 15 59% 59% 59% . 6 50% 49% 50% + % —H— 14 38% 38% 38% . 1 38% 38% 38% . 17 88% 38% 38% + % 10 33% 33% 33% + % 14 38% 37% 38 + % 11 25% 25% 25% . 1 6% 6% 6% — % 107 64% 64 64 - 11 54% 54% 54% + % 6 11% 11% 11% + % 1 21% 21% 21% + % 32 42% ,42% 42% + % 11 46% 46% 46% - II 3 34% 34% 34% . 22 440% 440 440 - 6 80 80 80 -f % 46 45% 45 45% + % 6 83% 83% 83% ... 3 11% 11% 11% ... 14 34 33% 33% ... 5 61% 61% 61% -F % 2 40% 40% 40% + % JohnsManv 2 JonLogan .70 Jones&L 2.50 Joy Mfg 2 Kaiser Al .90 KayserRo .60 Kennecott 4 KernCLd 2.40 Kerr Me 1.20 KlmbClark 2 KirkNat .40 Kopprs 2.40a Korvatte Kresge 1.20 Kroger 1.20 2 53% 53% 53% — % 11 29% 29 Va 29 Va + % 7 71 70% 70% ... 10 48% 48% 48% — % —K— 14 30% 30% 30% -F Va 4 24% 24% 24% + % 25 98 97% 98 — % 2 64% 64% 64% ... 2 45% 45% 45% .. 14 58% 58 58% — % 1 17% 17% 17% + % 1 57% 57% 57% — % 17 41% 41 41 Vd — % 8 55Vd 55Vd 55% -F % x!5 39% 39% 39% + % 4 4% 4% 4% ■ 47 16% 15% 16 414 2% 2% 2% 23 2% 2% 2% + % 23 6% 6% 6% 2 7% 7% 20 2% 2% it t w + v* + V* Mich Sugar ,!0g 7 Molybden «» m 10V* 10** lOVj 6V* 01A 4H 4A + Vi SMW Air 43 SlgnalOIIA la 0 Sparry r syntax Ci 2914 3V 39'A + 'A Syntax Cp .30* 109 74** 77** 70 4 3V* Technlcol .30 14 17'* 14V* 14V* - 'A UnControl .30 10 4V* 4*4 4V* Wabb t Knapp 3 5-14 5-14 S-14 -1-14 30 Indus ..................... 094.744 3.59 30 Rails .................... 311.41-0.50 is Util bonds' Jills ,., racks ,. 313 .4140.34 74+0.7, 40 Bands ............... . 10 Higher gradt rails , 10 Sacond grad* ralli 10 Public ulfiitlei , 10 tnouitrlali ......... 90-04-0.03 04.13-0. OS 93.71—0.07 00.70 40.03 94.53- 0.05 BONO AVBRAOBS Ctmpltad by The ASsaelatd prats *30 if fg I Ralls Ind, Nat Chang* — .1 ~.T Noon Mon. S3.B 101.9 P»v ||T 103.0 II Ufll. Pgn, L. Yd weak Ago . 115 16].! Month Ago 03.4 101 .i Ki 00.7 •0.0 00.3 93.9 fl.# I I S m Sf 99,3 III 00,4 93.1 STOCK AVBRAOBS ComglM by The Aiioclated Press 30 15 IS 40 Ind. Rills Util. Stack* Nat Chang* .......41.4 —3 +.5 4.6 MW ::::::I: m Cal Flnl .301 CallahM .301 Calum H .40 CampRL .45a Camp Sp .90 Can Dry I CdnPac 1.30a CaroP Lt 1.14 Carrier 1.40 CarterPd .40 Case Jl Cater Trac t Celenete 1.00 Cencolnst .50 Cencolnst wl CerroCp 1.40 CerMeed .70 CessnaAlrc t ChampSpk 3 Chet On 4 ChIMII SIP t ChPneu 1.40a ChrliCrtt .401 Chryiler 1b CIT Fin 1.40 Citadel Ind t Cities Sv 3.00 ClevEIIII 1.30 Coca Cola 3 CoIgPal 1.30 -c— ' 5'A 5'A 4 V* OV* 4 V* 3 19** 19V* 19V* 4 V* 7 31 11 31 V* coigPai i ColllnRad Colt Induit CBS 1.30b Col PICt .549 ComICre 1.00 ComSolv 1.30 ComwEd 1.80 Comsat ConEdli 3.30 ConElacInd I CnNOas 3.30 Contalnar I Cont Air .40 cont Can 3 Control Data Com Pd 1.50 CoxBdcao .40 CrowColl .991 Crown Cork Crown Zell 3 Cruc SlT 1.30 Cudahy Pk Curtis Pub Curt Wr 1 40b Dan Rlvar ] DaycoCp .4 Deere 1.40a DefHud l.lie DeltaAIr 1.40 DetEdii 1.30 pet Steel .40 39Vs 39V. 39'A 3 33** 33'A 33** 4 'A 4 57V* 57V*„ 47V* 4 V* 3 44'A .44 44'A 4 'A 3 41'A 41'A 41V. 4 'A 9 20V. 20'A 20'A — 'A 2 16V* 10'A 10’A 15 41 41 41 0 79 70V* 78V* 4 V* 0 50'A 56V* 50'A 4 'A 5 39V* 39'A 29!A. 14 34** 34** 34** 4 17** 17** 17** 4 'A 3' 32V* 32’A 32V. 3 41V* 41V* 41V* 3 74V* '74V* 74V* 4 V* 7 30V* 30V* 30V* 5 37 37 37 4 ** 12 15V* 15'A 15V* 41 40** 40V. 40** 46 34** 34’A 34** 4 'A 4 39** 39** 39** 4 00'A OO'A 00V) - 4 39V* 39V* 39V* 4 'A 4 143*4 143V. 143*4 4 V. X7 51V* 51 Vi 51V* 4 V* 3 22 22 22 4 V* 3 13V* 13V. 11V. — 'A 11 42 42 42 7 24'A 24V* 34V. 4 'A 9 30V. 30'A 30V* 4 V* 1 34** 34** 34** .... 0 55 54*4 54*4 ... 32 55*4 55** 55>A - *h 13 94** 94V. 94V. 4 V. 1 31V* • 31V* 31V* 4 'A 4 77 74*4 77 + V. 11 32'A 33'A 32'A ... 42 33** 23V* 33** 4 V. 4 51 St Jl — 'A 30 42V* 43V* 43V. 4 f* 1 70 70 70 + ** 15 59 SIV* 59 ... 20 54V* 54A 10 70V* 70 78V* + ** 5 35V* 35 35V* + Vi 13 349 240 34 “1 3 30'A 30 Vi 3414 ........ Bait Air Lin ieotKo 2.40a Raton Mfg 3 Assoc .541 iiPasoNO 1 SmersonBI 1 rRid .40 Ind Jon... grloLoek RR BvansPd ,l|d Ivarshrp .75 lift1" ■ihotMl Mot !** iorp IS 45Vi 45Vi 43V* - Vi 17 140 140 140 4t, t 4 43V* 45V. 45'A — Vi 4 100* 104* I*** — VA 24 24 33V* 33V* 4 V* 4 41V* 41V* 410* T V* 44 tt*l ll'A m* + V. 3 25v* aiv* asv* — v* 7 7** 7*» 7*» + VA 1 44** 44** 44** 4- V. 3 mi am am.... —F— 3 37** 17** 27** + Vi m fit m - V* 44 1 3 5 4 V M 15 3, It* ll'A JiVi f ** lift Jift lift + v* A4'A 34VA . ffi* i-.r 24V* i4Vi 24'A 43V* 42V* 42V* + V* 44V* 41 44V*.,. 23 33V. 32*4 24V. 24V* {4VA 1 MV* MV* dpft 19 74’A 74 74VA 7 aiv* aiv* 2 43 1} 4 fiv* 10 30 54V* 04*4 4 13V* 13V* 3 45 44*4 Laar Sleg .50 LehPorCem 1 Leh Val Ind -Lehman 1.310 UOFGIt 2.00a Lib McN ,75t Llggett&M 5 Lionel Corp Llttonln 1.071 LlvIngsO .76t LockAlrc 1,40 Loews Theat LoneS Oas 1 LonglsILt .92 Loral Corp Lorlllard 2,50 LTV .50 LukensSt 1.00 »L 14% 14% 14% -F % 3 H% 17% 17% — %| 3 2% 2% 2% 31% 31% 31% 60% 60% 60% 15% 15% 15% 1 85% 85% 85% -F % ReyTob 1.80 RheimMf .80 RichfOil 1.80 Rghr Corp 1 RoyCCola .48 RoyDut 1.73r Ryder Syst Sites N«t (hds.) High Lew List Ch ■ 22 40 32% 39%........ 5 20% 20% 20% ..,... 85 69% 68% 69 + % 4 19% 19% 19% — % 41 24 24 24 + % 30 46% 46% 46% + % 14 Safewiy St 1 StJos Lead 2 SL SanF 1.40 StRegP 1.40b SanDImp .461 Schenley 1 Scherng 1.60a Schick SCMCorp .88f ScottPap .90 ' Seab AL 1.60 SearIGD 1.10 SaarsR 1.80a Seeburg .60 SerYel Shell Oil 1*50 SherWm 1.70 Sinclair 2 Singer Co 2 14 31% 38% 38%........ 7 46 45% 45% — % 21 33% 33Vd 33% ,-F % 12 32% .32% 32% + % Socony 2.60a ►cony »PRSu< SouCalE 1.20 SouthnCo 1.80 South Ry 2.80* Sperry Rand Spiegel 1.50 SquarD 1.40a StBrands 2.40 StOil Cal 2.20 StOfllnd 1.50a StdOII NJ 3e StdOllOh 1.60 St Packaging StanWar 1.20 StauffCh 1.40 Sterl^rug .70 Stevens 1.50b Studebaker Sunray 1.40 x Swift Co 2 Tenn Gas lb Texaco 2.20a TexGSul .40 Texaslnsfm 1 Textron 1,60 Thiokol .571 Tldewat Oil TimkenRB 3a Trans W Air Transam .80 T ransitron TrICont 1.67e Twent C .60b Uh Elec 1.12 Un Oil Cal 1 Un Pac 1.80 Un AlrL 1.50 Unit Aircft 2 Unit Cp .35e Unit Fruit UGasCp 1.70 Unit M&M la USBorax .80a USGypsm 3a US Indust US Lines 2b 1 3% 3% 3% - 78% 78% 78% - % 1 15 15 15 -F % 15 37% 37% 37% -F % 5 17% 17% 17% 20 27% 27% 27% 6 35 34% 35 + % Mack Trucks Mad Fd 1.40o MagmaC 1.40 Magnavx .90 Marathon 2 Marquar ,25g MartlnMar 1 MayDStr 1.20 McCan .40b Merck la MerCnap .20g MGM 1.50 4 44% 44% 44% .. 9 18% 18% 18% -F % 13 66% 66% 66% +1% —M— 4 37% 37% 37% — % 8 22% 22% 22% - % 3 43% 43% 43% 4- % 8 35% 35% 35% — % 2 66% 66% 66% -F % 5 8% 8% 8% -F % 10 7 18 18 18 Mid SUt 1.24 MlnerChem 1 MlnnMngM 1 Mo Kan Tex Mohasco .60a Monian 1.40b MontDU r.4o MontWard 1 Morrill Co i Motorola 1.50 Nat Alrl .80 Nat Blic 1.70 NatCan .40b NCashR 1.20 NatDalry 2.60 NetDIst 1.20 Nat Fuel 1.40 NitGyps 2b N Lead 3.25# Net Steel 2 Nat Tea .80 N EngEI 1*20 NJ Zinc NYCent 1.30a NA Avia 2.80 NorNatGai 2 NorPac 2.40a Northrop l NwstAIrl .60 Norwch 1.10a Occident ,25d OHnMath 1.40 OtliKlev 1.90 Outb Mer .60 OwenilH 2.50 OxfdPap 1.20 39% 39% 39% - Vd 1 50% 50% 50% ..... 5 * 28% 28% 28% ... 31 60 59% 59% >F % 1 8 8 8 -F % 23 14% 14% 14% + % 20 84% 84% 84% + % 4 40% 40% 40Vd -F % 3 38% 38% 38% 4* % 2 29% 29% 29% ... 2 102% 102% 102% — % —N— 8 70 69'A 69'A - V. 17 61 >4 60V* 61V. f Va JO 17V* 17*4 17*4 + 'A 0 7514 75 7SV4 + 'A 15 09 M** 89 ... 13 37** 27'A 37V* .... 6 331* 33** 33** - 'A 15 41*4 41’A 41V* ~ 'A 11 77 76** 76*4 + "* II 54*4 54*4 J4*4 + ** 4 17V* 17** 17V* ... 11 20*4 28*4 28V. 3 25'A 25V* 25'* - 'A 15 S3** 53** 53** + V4 12 54*4 54*4 54*4 - 'A 17 133*4 132'A 132'A .. 9 52** 52V. 52** ... 5 40'A 60V* 60V* - 'A 10 50V* 50 50'A + V* 1 21*4 21*4 31*4 . .. 17 65V* 66V. 68'A 15 45V* 45V. 45V* -I- 'A -—-O . 20 20*4 20'A 28'A - 'A fl ,44 43V* 44 + V. PacOkK 1.10 Pic Petrol P»cT8,T 1.20 Pan. Am .60 PaHh EP 2.40 PeramPIct 2 ParkeDav la Pann Dixie 1 Penney 1.50* rfiiimy i.inn* P* PWU 1.44 PMhiOll 1.20 PfnCola 1.40 PflinrCha In Ph lRdg t.jo Phi Mor 150 PmlllniPet l Pljn Bow ,90 PitPlele 1,40 Pit Steel Polernld ,40 Pmcii,0 us Pullman 2e PureOli 1.50 RCA ,60a Rayette .45 •M Rail Ropvb Avlat Repuhnieel J Revlon 1.M PexellDr .951 ReynMti ,50a 17 16** 16** 16** 9 105 107V* 100 +1V* 3 53*4 33*4 335* - ** —P— 5 341* 34** 34** - 'A 13 11** 11** !)** + V* 6 30V* 30V. 30'A 57 29** 29V* 39V* - 'A 4 SO'/. 00V. 00'A I 'A 1 51V4 52V. 52V* +' V* 14 33V* 33V* 32V* 4- '* 3 171* 17V* 17V* - V. 12 68V* 68V* 681* + IV* 4 39 38*4 39 + 'A 44 43V* 41V* 43 ~ V* 4 47** 47** 47** ., 9 624* 63V* 63V* - 'A 11 54 54 ,54 .... 4 71** 71'A 714* 10 17 364* 37 + V* 8 37 3644 37 - VI 3 77 77 77 + 44 *5 MM (M4 + V* f 47V* 4}V* 41V* - V4 8 70 70 m ..... 1 16'* 16V* 16V* ..... I 1MV4 189V4 IM'A ,. x7 8144 81** 814* 4- V* 8 42 41 42 ... 14 58 57** 5744 - 44 —R—. 34 314* )14* 11*4 ... * 4044 MM 4044 4- 'A i m m lath A if >5 is ,11 434* 41V* 414* 4 V* 7 461* 464* 464* XlJ 37'* 31V* 11V* 4- 1* it MV4 361* 34V4 + V* US Rub 2.20 US Smelt 3 US Steel 2 Unit Whelan UnMatch .40 Univ onpd i Upjohn 1.20 18 8% 8% 8% -F Va M 26 Va 25% 25% - % 7 63 63 63 + % 5 p/t u/a 7% .. & 19 19 19 48 35*4, 353/4 35% .. 5 46% 44'* 46% + % 4 47*4 67% 67% + % 30 129V* 129'* 129'* — >* 5 25% 25% 25’* .. 3 5% 5** 5% .. 18 59 59 59 9 50% 50 50% -F % 15 58% 57% 57% — »/4 11 81% 803/4 81% -F % 3 77% 77% 773/4 + % 16 91% 91% 91% — % 6 30% 30V? 30% — % 26 37% 37** 37% — Va 7 69 69 49 + Vs 7 39% 39% 393/4 .. 8 58% 58% 58% -F % 41 14% 14% 14% .. 10 30 29% 30 -+ % 7 63% 633/4 43*4 + Vo 7 81% 80% 81'* + Vo 16 75% 75% 75** + % 15 43% 43% 43% -f % 33 90% 90% 52% 90** + Va 6 52’* 52’* + Vs 3 9% 9% 9% . 4 28% 20 28'* + % 5 40% 40% 40% -F % 50 32% 32% 32% + % 1 46% 46% 46% — % 187 7% 7*4 7% + % 19 32% 32% 32% + % 3 57% 57% 57’* + % T— 10 25 24% 25 36 87% 87% 87% . 21 57% 56% 57% + % 3 95% 95% 95% — % 1 57% 52% 52% — Va 7 12% 12% 12% + % 8 36 . 35% 36 + % 1 84% 84% 84% + % 3 51% 51% 51% 7 48 47% 48 + % 6 5% 5% 5% .. 3 50% 50% 50% .. 3 26% 26% 263/4 .. —U— 5 30% 30% 30% + % 42 38% 38% 38% — V? II 44 43% 43’* + % 15 65% 65% 65% -F % 9 63% 63% 63% - % 2 8% 8% 8% .. 3 18 17% 18 - % 28 36% 36% 36% -f % 1 26% 26 Va 26% .. 5 35% 35% 35% .. 6 82% 81% 82% — % 9 12% 12% 12% - Va 1 40V? 40 V? 40% — % 1 43% 43% 43% - /a 8 67% 67 67% — /a 'Train Rate Cut Official Hits Move on Controversial Run VanAIISt 1.60 VanadCp .25e Vartan As VendoCo .40 VaeiPw 1.12 Walworth Co WarnPIct .50 WarnLam .80 WnAIrLIn .80 WnBanc 1.10 WUnTel 1.40 Whirlpool 2 WhlteM 1.20 Wilson Co 2 Woolworth 1 Worthing 1.50 2 106% 106% 106% + % 40 52% 52% 52% 4 4% 4% 4% + % 24 15% 15 15 8 42% 42% 42% — % 9 56% 56% 56% + % —V— 1 35% 35% 35% -F % 1 18% 18% 18% -F % 164 14% 13% 14% -F % \ 22% 22% 22% -F % 7‘ 50% 50% 50% -F % —w— 10 6% 64* 6*6. + <* 5 20 194* 19V* - 1* 13 34 Va 341* 34V* . 9 32*6 324* 324* . 16 364* 36V* 364* . 41 33V* 334* 33*6 + V* 191 44 43*6 44 + 4* * 694* 694* 694*,- LANSING (AP) - ChairtfSin Peter Spivak of the State Puli' lie Service! Commission object' ed Monday .that the Chesa-r peake and Ohio Railroad had put through a fare reduction without any effort to advertise or publicize the saying to passengers,-, The cuts went into effect Mon* day and apply only on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays. ★ ★ ★ The railroad seeks to discontinue two trains daily between Detroit' and Grand Rapis. A preliminary hearing on the railroad suit seeking to- abandon the trains is scheduled for Feb. 11 in Ingham County Circuit Court. , .. "To reduce fates by 30 per cent and tell no ope seems to indicate the railroad is not really interested in new business, but may only be attempting to be able to argue in court that passengers will not ride the trains at any price,” Spivak said. NOTICE GIVEN Notice of-the fare reduction was delivered to wire service offices in Detroit shortly after 5 p.m. Monday, and said the cutback whs "designed to bring back business lost to airplanes and private automobiles.” The reductions, the C. & O. said, are effective throughout its system and apply only to oneway travel but will represent a saving over existing round-trip rates. The railroad said that its affiliate, the Baltimore and Ohio, instituted a similar cut-rate schedule last March and that “the plan was a pronounced success.” The rates will be reduced to $4.50 between Detroit and Grand Rapids on the special days compared to $6.56 the remainder of the week. The. special rate between Lansing'and Detroit is reduced from $3.87 to $2.65. DRIVING £OSTS MORE ’ ’'The new rates average about three cents a mile and are cheaper than driving,” Spivak said. The railroad had proposed discontinuance of the two trains dally effective Jan. 4. The trains leave Grand Rapids at 7:30 a.m. and arrive in Detroit 10:30 a.m. and leave Detroit at 5:20 p.m. and arrive in Grand Rapids at 8:25 p.m. The railroad has argued it is losing money on the runs. The commission has been fighting the proposed discontinuance of train service between the two major cities. ‘ By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK — As popular stock price averages strive to climb to higher ground than they reached in setting records in the middle of November, particular issues again set the ™ pace. Big advances by a few can do the trick even while the majority could bedeUying, and some slipping. DAWSON Aqd last year’s star performer may not be this year’s favorite, while a once drowsy issue may capture the investor’s attention. This is a truism in brokers* offices that the public of-ten ignores. The trick, even in a bull market, still is to find the favorite. > . v For 1964 as a whole the popular averages staged good gains. That is, the averages did. Some of their components far outshone the list as a whole. Others even declined in price. 10-YEAR PERIOD The same is true, in percentage of change, for the performance of the averages over a 10-year period. Take just one, The average price of the 30 stocks on the Dow-Jojjes industrial list rose 14.6 per cent during 1964. But one issue gained 65.5 per cent, while another lost 10.5 per cent. ★ ★ ★ Compare the same 30 stocks with their prices at the end of 1954, with adjustments for all splits and other capital changes in the 10 years. The best performing issues gained 412 per cent in market value in the decade, while a laggard dropped 3.9 per cent from its 1954 price. Statisticians at the brokerage Car Makers on Way to Month High firm df Arthur Wii Co. put it this way $10,000 to invest at 1964 and you. could that to buy. equal amounts each of the 30 stocks have ended up the year/with stocks Valued on the market at $11,460. FIVE BEStr s If you had second sight, and had invested just in the five best performers, your holdings at the end of the year would have been $13,810. But if you were unlucky and invested only in the five worst performers your $10,000 Would have ended up as just $9,-330. The top five gainers for the year were: United Aircraft, up 53.2 per cent; Chrysler, 46.5 per cent; Swift, 32.4 per cent; Sears, Roebuck, 32.1 per cent; aBd Du Pont, 26.3 per cent. ★ ★ -Hr The unlucky five were: Alcoa, down 10.5 per cent; General Foods, off 10.3 per cent; Allied Chemical, lower by 5.7 per cent; U.S. Steel, by 4 per cent; and American Telephone & Telegraph by Va per cent. Over the 10-yeair run the big gainers and the laggards are quiet different. The top five since the end of 1954 arfe: Sears, Roebuck, up 412 per cent; Texaco, 354 per qent; Eastman Kb-dak, 354 per cent; General Foods, 323 per cent; and" Du Pont, 2C9per cent. SMALLEST CHANGE The five showing the smallest change are: American Can, which is down 3.9 per cent; Anaconda, up 4.2 per cent; Westinghouse Electric, up 5.6 per cent; Allied Chemical, up 8.8 per cent; and Swift, with a gain of 21.6 per cent. * ★ * r a. And when 1965 is finally tallied, it’s a pretty safe bet that the averages will cover a wide range of performance — and that the winners and losers, if any, may well be quite different from those who did the best or the worst in 1964. 11111 9 30 30 30 Xerox Cp .50 Zenith 1.20a 52% 52% 52% - % 141 27% 27 27% 4 50% 50% 50% — % —x— 80 107V* 106'A 107V* +14* —Y— 18 46** 46'A 46'A + '<* ——Z—— 9 65V* 65 65 — 'A Sales figures ' are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends In the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the lest quarter or semi-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not daslO' following footnotes. e—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rale plus stock dividend, e—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1965 plus stock dividend, e—Paid last year. (—Payable In slock during 1965, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or ex-distribution date, g Declared or paid SO tar this year, h—Declared or paid after stock dividend or spill up, k-Declared or paid this year, an accumulative Issue with dividends In arrears, p—Paid thla year, dividend omitted, deterred or no action taken al Iasi dividend meeting, r—De-dared or paid In 1964 plus stock dividend, t—Paid In stock during 1964, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or ex-dlstrlbu-tion dele. z—Seles In lull. cld—Called, x—Ex dividend, v—Ex dividend end sales In lull, x-dlt—Ex distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without war-rants, ww—With warrants, wd—When distributed. wl When Issued. nd~Nexl day delivery. v|—In bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such com-penles. In Foreign Issue sublect to In-rarest equalization lex. Treasury Position •ponding date a year ego. Jen. 14, 1951 Jan. 16, 1964 Balance— 5 4,036,515,736.44 I 5,109,041,011.34 Depoilti-Fiscal Year July t— „ Z 56,129,460,023,31 57,362.017,120,14 Withdrawal* j l*ial Year- f 1,7# 47,411,197,934,67 wall f lxi, MiOlliMT,! X-TolafPibl'~ 319,392,128.862 66 310,441,020,941,61 Gold Aiieti— „ . . 111,764.143.75 15,519,152,973.77 X -Includes 1255,732,335.30 debt not sub led to italurary limit. Mnnday'i lot Olvl "•ttn $imr. Industrial Industries Baker Baker Baker Industries Saker Industries earing* Inc ,30 Q 4 30 7 30 10-99 MS 2-26 Ml Ml 11-34 M Union Gives Okay to Strike AMC Plant MILWAUKEE (AP) - Members of United Auto Workers Local 75 gave the executive board authority to call a strike at the Milwaukee Body Plant of American Motors Corp., Local President Joseph Wysockl said Monday night. Wysocki said more than 5,000 of the 8,600 eligible production workers on two shifts participated In the balloting af a downtown ballroom. A two-thirds majority of members voting was necessary to give the executive .board the strike authority. Wysocki said lt appeared that about 80 per cent of the vote supported the proposal. Stocks of Local Interest Figures ellsr decimal points are eighths OVBR THI COUNTER STOCKS The following quotations do not necessarily represent eduel trensadlone but are intended as a guide to the epproxl-male trading range ol the itcurltlee. Bid Atked 7.4 4.4 Braun Engineering Citizens Utilities Cl, Diamond Crystal 15.5 14.5 17.6 15.4 26.7 21.5 .13,8 14.5 37.0 39.0 93.5 35.3 34.4 34.4 . 4.3 9.9 .15.4 14.4 7.0 7.8 11.1 11,1 14.7 17.7 15.4 14.4 40.4 SU 34.0 38.2 Michigan Seamless Tube Co. Pioneer Finance ............ Set,an Printing Vernor's Ginger Ale ...... Vesely Co, •................ Wehr Corp................... Wlnkelman’s ............... Wolverine Shoe ............. Wyamlnlta Chemical......... MUTUAL FUNDS Eld Asked Affiliated Fund ............ 9.07 9.01 Chemical Fund................14.13 15,35 Commonwealth Stock ......... 9.10 10.14 Keyetone Income K>1 ........ 9.97 10.04 Keystone Growth K-2 ........ 5.14 4,41 M#8t. Investors Growth ..... 9.30 10.M Mess. Invasion Trust ........17.43 19,05 Pulnsm Growth ...............9,94 10.09 Television Electronics 8.37 9.01 Wellington Fund .............15.93 14.40 Windsor Fund ............... 18.98 17.34 By CHARLES C. CAIN AP Bsuiness News Writer DETROIT - U.S. Auto makers appeared well on their way today toward a second successive 800,000-plus production records this month with American Motors the only question mark. AMC had the dual problem of a production cutback effective Jan. 25 and a strike vote taken at Its Milwaukee body plant Monday. In the vote, United Auto Workers Local 75 members authorized their executive board to call a strike at the plant. The company’s daily production quota of 2,11(1 cars will be cut to 1,957, company officials said. They said about 2,600'persons from a work force of 24,-600 temporarily would be laid off. United Auto Workers Local 75 said the strike vote centered about questions of interpretation on its new contract with AMC. Any possible strike must await authorization from the UAW international headquarters at Detroit. By ROGER E. SPEAR > Q) “I have been saving for the past four years and am now in a position to purchase some stocks for growth only, say over the next five to ten years. I have narrowed my selections down to United Fruit, Consolidated Foods, Procter & Gamble, and American Life Insurance. What is your opinion of these companies for my purpose?” D. S. A) United Fruit Company is a well-managed comapny, but its main occupation is agriculture in tine of the most politically difficult areas of this hemisphere—Central America. Earnings have been in a general downtrend since 1953, ahd the price has tended to work steadily lower also. For your objective of growth, I would substitute Merck & Co., one of the strongest pharmaceuticals. Coed at MSU Secret Agent Helped to Break Up Alleged Abortion Ring American Life is largely owned by Greatamerica Corp. The shares would be satisfactory, but for better marketability I suggest that you substitute Commonwealth Life of Kentucky. Q) “What is the differenc| between equity and book va| ue? Are they the same?” j| A) Yes, they are exactly ti)e FIVE DAYS AMC and Chrysler plants were on five-day workweeks last week as the industry turned out an estimated 210,876 cars, a drop of about 3,000 from the previous week. General Motors had 18 of its 22 assembly plansts overtime, operations Saturday. Ford had similar work underway at 15 of its 16 assembly units. ★ + ★ GM’s output for the week was 38 per cent ahead of the year-ago week figure. Ford was up about 31 per cent. Chrysler was about 37 per cent ahead of the year ago week. AMC was off about 500 units over the year ago week. Despite production problems, American Motors reported its sales of 1965 models through Jan. 10 total 128,163 cars, an increase over the 122,918 cars sold In the comparable sales period of ths 1004 mbdel. DETROIT (AP)—’Hie Detroit Edison Co. today reported a net profit of $51.7 million for 1064, equal to $1.80 a share, as compared to $46.17, or $1.60 a share, for 1903. The electric utility sold ot gross revenues 7.4 per cent from $320 million In 1963 to $343.6 million 1964. GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - A 20-year-old Michigan State University coed majoring in police administration served as a secret police agent to help break up an alleged Detroit abortion ring, authorities revealed Monday. ■ ★, * * The girl, Nancy Parrette of' Grand Rapids, testified in the Police Court trial of Conrad Lauth, 62, and his wife, Emetine, 64, both of Detroit, and Mrs. Geraldine Kuleck, 33, of Marne. Miss Parrette testified she received a telephone call from a woman who, she said, identified herself as Mrs. Kuieck. ★ ★ ★ The girl said arrangements were made to meet the Kuieck woman in a Lansing nightclub, where the coed said she handed over $500 hi marked bills. Then, she said, the two went to Detroit to the Lauth home. .State police said they raided the home shortly after Miss Parrette .entered and arrested the three. MADE CONTACTS Lt. Raymond H. McConnell, commander of the State Police Security Division at Lansing, earlier testified that Mrs. Kuieck made contacts for abortions which Mrs. Lauth performed in her home. Mrs. Kuiek waived a hearing and was ordered to stand trial in Kent County Circuit Court. The Lauths demanded a hearing. Hr 4r ★ Chief Deputy Prosecutor Joseph White Monday asked that Lauth be freed from a charge of conspiracy to violate Michigan abortion laws on grounds of insufficient evidence. Police Court Judge Roman J. Snow said ho would rule Feb, 17 on the motion to dismiss the charge against Lauth and send the two women to Circuit Court (or trial. Book or equity value reple-sents the number of dollars net assets applicable to edjfih share of common stock, as shown by a company’s balance sheet. This figure is one of the many fundamentals studied $n evaluating a common stock, but almost always it is of far Iqss importance than earning power. I wifi give you tvto examples of how little book vtgue can influence prices. Polaroid Corp. „ has a book value of around $20 and recently sold above $170 a share. Anaconda Company, the second largest copper producer 'in the world, (with a book value of about $95, was recently trading around 52. '< j* <;+ « There are, however, sdfre companies that carry holdings in real estate and investments well below true value, and these sometimes constitute a hidden “kicker” which can lift the price of the shares. Td* order your copy of Roger Spear’s new 48-page Guide Jo Successful Investing, clip this notice and send $1.00 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, care of this newspaper, Box 1818, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10017. (Copyright 1965) Business Notes John E. Mead, 23705 Newell Circle, Farmington Township, has been elevated to vide president i|n charge of sal^s for the F. Joseph Lamb Cd, according to gn a n nouncemebt by John K. Rye. president of the MEAD specialty flrrfi. Mead has been general $al(gs manager since 1960. Arthur L. Kaleta, 390 Booty, Troy, has been appointed superintendent of the broach division for Detroit Broach & Muchirfe Company, Rochester, accordiijg to Gus A. Gran, vice president and general manager. Kaleta joined DBM cigftt years ago, and has been chtyf inspector of the division. Lodge Calendar A special meeting of Pontile Lodge, No, 2t, Building Associp-lion wilt bl called at 7:30 p.m. on January 25, 1965, at 18H tt. Lawrence Street, Pontiac, Michigan, for the purpose of amending the “Articles of Corporation." All members of Pontile Lodge No. 21 F&AM are hcretyy notified. Irwin W. Mills, Pres. ' —Adv.