The Weather « * WMHwr lurMW PI Light Snow (Math Pm |) '■'r THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition VOL. 122 NO. 277 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964—88 PAGES Holiday Car Mishaps Claim 8 Lives in County Wind Poses New Threat in Rain-Ravaged West SAN FRANCISCO W)—A predicted wind storm posed a new threat to Portland, Ore., today as the flood*swollen Willamette River lapped near the top of dikes. The harbor patrol said the forecast of winds up to 45 miles an hour “could raise havoc” in the harbor. ;. ■ - The river subsided Huge Tolly in Wake of India Storm slightly during the night, emergency dikes held. Rain lessened or stopped in water-logged Northern California. Clouds lifted to 3,IN feet and civil defense officials in hard-hit Humboldt County sent helicopters on rescue missions. Clean-up operations increased as the weather outlook bright- NEW DELHI, India (AP) - *1 ' . .. . _ . . ' Thousands are homeless and at n?ore least 750 persons are dead on tfa,n °?e Far ** fiv«-Ceylon and the nearby island of ?*a‘Ln°od More than Rameswaram, ravaged by a Persons were homeless cyclone and 15-foot tidal wave, and,Prope*y da“a*e "****“-according to reports reaching mated m millions of dollars, here today. * 4 The disaster area, off India’s After cresting yesterday at 29.8 southeastern tip, is still virtual- feet- almost 12 feet above flood ly isolated and communication *1*8*. the murky Willamette is patchy. Villages have beat began to recede. Officials said without food or water since Wv a three-foot concrete para-Wednesday morning. P*t held back the water. Officials said about 258 per- Among the debris the river sons were known dead on carried was a broken raft of Ceylon and another 5M on Rameswaram, a 18-mile long island between Ceylon and the Indian mainland. Unofficial estimates ta newspapers at Colombo, the capital of Ceylon, said the death toll would reach 2,000. Freeway Crash Leaves 5 Dead Death traveled Oakland County highways during the past 48 hours, claiming at least eight lives in four separate single-car traffic accidents. Early this morning five persons, including a mother and her three sons, died in an accident on 1-75 in Independence Township. _ Dead are: Mrs. Glen Miller, 27, her three sons, Deland, 8; Glen Jr., 6, and John, 4, and Michael Carter; 20, all of Flint. Five Persons Were Killed in this Car Early Today Several County Vacancies New Prosecutor Filling Staff logs, which passed under Portland’s 10 bridges without doing any damage. When Oakland County Prose- Bronson are John I. Bain, 33, of Forecasters predicted the Wil- cuter-elect S. Jerome Bronson 26393 Springfield,_ Farmington lamette’s fall would be slow. *“* ***“ **“ * ft *" Buddhists Vow More Trouble Others killed were Mrs. Bryce J. Stevens, 34, of 981 Carlisle; William Wa-sageshik, 37, of 1470 Ladd, Commerce Township, and Rosemary Pittman, 20, of 315 Romeo, Rochester. The accident which killed Mrs. Miller, her sons and Carter took place at 1:46 a.m. The driver of the car, Mrs. Miller’s husband, Glen, 27, is in serious condition at Pontiac General Hospital. State Police Mid the six were apparently returning from a holiday visit in Detroit. Officers' said Oregon Gov. Mark Hatfield Hid, “We’re over the hump in * * * the state as whole, but the situa- Ceylon, air force planes tion remains critical in Port-dropped food to 14 Ceylonese* land.” vUtogw isoUted by high water faMHJES EVACUATED and washed out roads. .. , * More than 1,200 families were PROPERTY DAMAGE evacuated in the North Portland Property damage is estimated area as the Columbia River Supply Exchange. From 1954 to 1958 he was city manager takes office Jaq. 1, he will bring Township; James R. Stelt, 39, of of Otsego, at least five new assistant pros- 365 Ascot; Walter D Schnuer, steU ls , lfl47 graduate of ^ ecutors to fill vacancies. 56jrf 8577 Hendrie Huntington University of Michigan, major- * * * Woods; William R. VanderKloot, w in nsvcholocv arvi eneinwr- iapi Bronson, the first Democrat 27. of 80015 Cheviot Hill, Frank- in„ a nr th* TWmit 1 . the vehicle was traveling at a high' rate df speed when it left the northbound lane of the wet and fog- Threaten to Tumble IT''*’ ,r"~ Oakland Highway Toll in 64 New' Viet Regime' SAIGON, South Viet Nam More trouble brewed in way.. The car struck a guard rail, then straddled the rail until it hit a pillar of the Holcomb Road overpass; officers said. CAR DEMOLISHED Bad Weather Ups Traffic Toll Millions of Motorists Jamming Highways By The Associated Press Traffic deaths for the extended Christmas weekend took a sharp upward turn yesterday, running far above the nation’s daily average toll, as millions of motorists jammed highways on the holiday. In Michigan, the weekend count stands at 26, including eight in the county. "Around the nation, rain, ice and snow-slicked highways, along with fog in some state areas, made driving conditions hazardous. The count of deaths on high-ways since the start of the 48-. _ ______ u hour holiday period stood at elected to the office since the ]“• Pai**- 27. of £5ie£e of^w^h? ifto be a2 J8'80" today for Premiar The 1967 model car was de- Nattoa^Safety CoSThas^ 1930s, and his newly appointed Beverly, Sylvan Lake. mitt*d to the Oakland County Van Huon*8 government. The moiished. Police Mid the vehi- timated the ftealcoS wffi b» LOST ELECTION Bar Association Monday after- Buddhist hierarchy announced it c(e left the road 243 feet south of between 550 and 650. will resume its campaign to top- thq point of impact and they said * at 8150 million. U. S. Ambassador Cecil B. Lyon asked Ceylonese Premier Mrs. Sirimave Bandara-naike what help was most urgently (Seeded. Britain, West Germany and Cuba also offered assistance. threatened’ to inundate the tion. Army engineers the evacuation was precautionary, but they declined to guarantee dikes along the river. More th^n 7,000 persons were homeless in Oregon. Flood waters were receding in some California areas. Cold- staff members will take the office Monday. They, and John D. Murphy, the county’s first Democratic clerk, wifi be sworn in at an ceremony in the Currently an attorney with the noon' . Sun Oil Co., Bain, a graduate of the Detroit College of Law, Admitted to the bar in 1934 was an unsuccessful candidate Schmier has served as a felony in the Nov. 3 election for state Wal lawyer in the Wayne Coun- insisted Supervisors Auditorium at the representative. He lost to Re- ty Prosecutor’s Office; and as the ft H| publican incumbent Raymond civilian legal counsel for the Ma- Baker. ||-------I ‘------ cued about 200 persons. No planes were able to'land on the island because of washed out runways. The island’s rail link for today, promising more discomfort for about 7,000 flood refugees. The dropping mercury was a courthouse. Circuit Judge William J. Beer will preside-Bronson Mid that his staff is not yet complete and that he is still interviewing candidates for specialized fields, particularly in Appellate.Court work. Those already named by Stelt, former personnel director and assistant to the city manager in Pontiac in 1951-54, is presently the ejfccu-tive director of the Pontiac Lumber, Ftfcl and Builder terial Command of the A r n Air Force.' VIRGINIA GRADUATE pie him. ★1 * * Bpddhist spokesman Thich Nahnt Thien said Huong’s regime “is still allowing newspapers to attack and slander us, is still arresting Buddhist students and followers, and just last there was no evidence of skid state traffic victims include: marks on the shoulder. Arthur L. Sewaid, 16, and Police believe Mr. and Mrs. James E. Dempsey, 14, both of Miller and Carter were in the Bitely, killed last night when front seat and the three boys fhe car in which they were rid-1 were in the rear of the car, “W left a Newaygo County when the crash occurred. road and struck a tree near # $|. . / Fremont. STRUCK TREE Joe Daws, 71, of Quincy, killed Mrs, Stevens died at 7:15 a.m. Fqr> two years following his night organized a group of hood- yesteriiay morning is the result . | _________ 1961 graduation from the Uni- lums to set fire to our headquar- of injuries she received in an ac- yesterday when his pickup truck versity of Virginia Law School, terg .. - . ddent which took place about ran off a Branch County road * ■“ - * —— and struck a tree. with the Indian mainland was mixed blessing. Mountain areas, washed away. especially the Sierra mi' the Ne- Railway officials said 115 per- vada-CaUfomia border refroze, sons aboard a passenger train reducing flood threats from hit by the 15-foot tidal wave that melting snow, swept across the eastern end of * * * Washington State weather Tornado Rips Across Dixie; Two Are Killed in Georgia VanderKloot was a special agent for the Intelligence Corp of the U.S. Army, and is now associated with the Detroit law firm of Hill, Lewis, Andrews, Adams, Goodrich and Power. ® MACON, Ga. (UPI)—Slashing viciously through R^eswaram were believed drowned. forecasters called for snow to- A spokesman said the „ight ,n the northwest and iast-v^tern end of the island°shor£ ^ PorUons 01 their state and central Georgia, a roaring tornado hopped and skipped, ly before midnight Tuesday and rain el“where' a deadly course early today that left two meh dead and was pulling into a station at the PREDICT CREST more than a dozen persons injured, easternmost city of Dhanushko- Predictions are that the Spo- Wnarin aimpri di several hours later when the kane River will crest and may tpmaao aunea its disaster struck. ..... . 5:30 a.m. in Pontiac. As he spoke, the government ordered a battalion of para- * * * troopers into Saigon and ex- Police said the car she was tended martial law for another driving was traveling west on month. Montcalm at a high rate of Ostensibly, the move was to 8*>ee‘J. w*,en ^ m^aP oc* head off further trouble in the curred- • wake of the Christmas Eve LOST CONTROL ■■I____________|________M _____ bombing of a hotel housing U.S. Officers said the woman ap- DiUon in Sylvan Lake. He was officers. But the paratroopers parentty lost control of the car, employed with General Mo- would be handy to handle fresh it crossed the street, went over tors Truck and Coach Division Buddhist demonstrations. a curb and onto the lawn in in sales promotion while study- ^ _ *' i front of the Pontiac Board of tag for Ms degree. B/cnson, an attorney for 10 %£££ ..^havToMy^e" »• car conttaoed across the years with‘offices in Madison weapon one is to ^^ifice lawn, hit a second curb and (Continued on Page 2; Col. 1) ourselves.’’ (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Paige, who received his degree from the Detroit College of Law in January, is w 11 h the law office* of Bond and In Today's cause some damage. ' fuU force at a community In Idaho, the Portnenf Rivef hear her« where WW dropped to a flood level of 8H two men in hpuse trailers feet as the weatherman pre- and severely injured mem* atmma i— «— - b€rs of their families., dieted lessening rainfall for 24-hour period. , , Then it knifed 59 mile^ north-Flota conditions in Reno had eastward to Milledgeville where *r*hnpn hv miHaftomnnn voctor. .. . .. >. . - • Warn . . 17th Vote it shattered plate glass windows as it roared down the town’s Press . I declined by midafternoon yesterday as the Truckee River 1 d^aST1 street and lifted the roof Tflhr ■ir.in f.ii. tn .1. , I Oow- EarUer it had washed into fpftni , 5 Italy agam fails to elect 1 streets-in Vista, east of Reno. ; president — PAGE A-2. I________ „ j - I WILL GO ON ■| Election Challenge § I •' Losing N-V-' Republican 1 I says opponent overspent 8 Ion campaign—PAGE A-7. 8 Reunion 1 Lithuanian woman joins I family, in UlS. after 23 | years — PAGE A-3. Astrology ......... B-3 Bridge . . . . ... B-3 Church News . A-18—A-12 Comics . .......... B-3 Editorials ........ A4. Home Section ... C-l—C-2 Markets ......... C-18 Obituaries ....... C-1I Sports ........ C-8—C-l Theaters ....C-J2—C-U TV, Radio Programs C-17 Women’s Pages A-13-A-15 Rescue operations in California by 48 helicopters scattered over the northern coast will .go on today, officials said. Dense fog and rain kept the aircraft on the ground most of yesterday, I although a few got through. late to the day. . ★ . ★ .* , Many of the helicopters were from a department store and leveled an ice company. -Police at Milledgeville Hid they were conducting a block-by-block search for injured persons. Five, persons were treated at a Milledgeville hospital and released before dawn. » The twister first nosed toward the ground in the of Macon when from the carrier Bennington, roore than twist tree'tops, but which arrived at the flood res- B*®0 E skipped five miles north-cue center of Eureka, Calif, on- esstwgrd and touched down at a mercy mission. a small community on High”*”” . * * .*»■•■ i29. - Seven physicians in the Eure- was there the tornado ka area worked 12-hour shifts in *Ts first victims. Bill helicopters taking injured vie- Edwards, 43, and James H. Pitt tims and bodies from the strie- man> were killed in the ken 70-tyiile square district, wreckage of their house trailers Receding floodweters left mud end members of their families and assorted debris laying thick were rushed by ambulance to a in houses. Macon hospital. , swept across middle Georgia house north of McDonough. Terry Bentley, 17, of Benton Harbor, killed today when the car in which he was riding ran off the road and stench a parked truck in Benton Township, Berrien County. Q Eddy Yee, M, of Detroit, fatally injured Thursday night when struck by a car in Detroit > ■ ★ . ★ * uvui ui uie ruiiuac ouara oi Jesse Pahoer, 74, of Farwell, The government continues to ScaUcmMMatate,n^eDGaroge! !“Ued Jhursd?'y wh*" atruck W oppress us," Thien told a news _ __ 8,1 au^° 88 he walked across - - t».» ------,1.. u.S. 10 in Farwell. HIT TREE Harvey M. Crawford, 65, of Coleman, killed Thursday when his car Mt a tree near Mount Pleasant., Edwin Godin, 38, Detroit killed Thursday when struck by a car in Detroit Robert Enochs, 30, of Ed-. wardsburg, killed Thursday (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Mercury to Dip Now That Santa Made His Trip , Temperatures will start dipping today, Mys the weatherman. A low of 20 to 27 is expected tonight, to be followed by a high of 24 to 30 tomorrow. Skies will be partly cloudy through Monday. h +, * Today Jn Pontiac, winds are easterly to northeasterly at eight to 15 miles an hour. They will become northwesterly at the Mine speed tonight and tomorrow. ★ e * The mercury dropped from its early morning readMg of 38 today to 34 by 2 p.m. AV MMSli storms, which uprooted trees, bantf. \ '' A—8 THE PQNTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY-, DECEMBER 2H, 19»4 y ‘Pnj! hV-'I ^ Vi, .v Abstentions Prevent Majority 17th Vote Fails to Elect Italian Leader ROME (AP) — Parliament | tion government, got 346 votes failed today In its 17th vote to today, three less than in the last elect a new president of Italy. I round of voting by the dead-Abstentions by Christian Parliament. Democrats kept veteran Social- j STRONGEST CONTENDERS 1st Pietro Nenni from getting a | _ Foreign Minister Giuseppe majority. The Christian Democrats had held a postmidnight party meet- Minister Saragat, a Democrat Socialist, and Nenni are the strongest remaining contenders. Saragat got no votes in the latest ballots, however, with his followers Segni, who resigned the presl- Socialist party ‘ of Proletarian Unity, 33. Other ballots wejre scattered. D * w An I8th ballot was scheduled tonight. Nenni led the 16th ballot Friday night with 349 votes. A simple majority of 482 is needed to elect a successor to Antonio ing to hopes of closing ranks ^e 372 who abstained I dency because of ill health. MhinH 1 nneno nanriinatp hiit 1 . ^ .. 1 . * * behind a single candidate, but they failed. * * ' * Augusto de Marsanich, Italian Nenni, 73, a deputy premier in Social Movement (Fascist) got the Aldo Moro crater-left coali- 40 votes and Alcide Malagugini, Five Killed . in Crash on 1-75 Freeway (Continued From Page One) -flipped over on its top, officers said. Two passengers in the car were not injured. Wasageshik was killed Thursday at about 6:10 p.m. hi Walled Lake. LEFT ROAD Police said he was alone in a car traveling west on West Walled Lake Drive when he apparently lost control of the car. It left the road and struck a tree. Miss Pittman was killed in a single-car mishap at 4:26 a.m. today. The driver of the car, James E. Rowan, 2880 Alexander, Avon Township, is in critical condi-, tion at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. CHARLES M. TUCKER County NAACP Elects Officers Charles M. Tucker Jr., 161 Sheriff’s deputies said thej Earlmoor, has been elected Rowan vehicle, which was trav- president of the Oakland County eling west Ion Crooks, failed to (Pontiac) Chapter of the Nation-stop as the road ended at Ad- al Association for the Advance-•ms. J ment of Colored People. The car. hit a large sign and struck a 25-foot embankment. Crossbow Too Much for Actress Jill St. John NHA TRANG, Viet Nam 1*1-Actress Jill St. John, appearing in; Viet Nam with the Bob Hope Tucker, who will hold office for a two-year term, is president of die Tucker Realty Co. and Mark Mortgage. He is also regional director of the Michigan state NAACP chapters. A A * Other officers elected include troupe, received a minor injury Mrs. Otis B. Ferguson, first vice from a weapon today, but it president; William F. Davis, was all an accident. 'it. "-it i Miss St. John was presented a tribal .crossbow after an appearance at Pleiku, a remote town in the mountains 240 miles north of Saigon. She dropped the heavy weapon and it hit her instep. easurer; and Augustine I Wright, recording secretary. * * * Elected as members at-large of the board of directors were Mrs. Orelis Ballard, Allen D. Noble, Harold Allen, Mrs. Lucille Northcross and Mrs. Marilyn Henry. The Weather Fall U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Cloudy with occasional light rain or drizxle intermittently mixed with light snow this morning, changing to light snow by this afternoon and then ending late this afternoon or e*ly tonight. Less than one inch new snow accumulation expected. Turning colder today. Highs 33 to 46. Partly cloudy and colder tonight and tomorrow. Lows tonight 26 to 27; Highs tomorrow 24 to'30. Winds east to northeast eight to 15 miles an hour, becoming northwest-eriy. eight to 15 miles an hour tonight and tomorrow. Monday’s outlook: partly cloudy with little temperature change. The poatmidnight meeting of almost 400 Christian Democrat lawmakers was the most important party gathering. They were trying to decide whom to back after their official candidate, former Prethier Giovanni Leone, withdrew Christmas eve. There were reports the divided Christian Democrats might turn to Saragat. INTRAPARTY RIVALRIES Political sources saw such a move as a way for the Christian Democrats to get around their own intraparty rivalries and mend cracks in Premier Aldo Moro’s coalition, seriously weakened by the, presidential election. A Saragat candidacy backed by the Christian Democrats probably would be strong enough to break the deadlock, providing Nenni’s Socialists return to the ranks of Saragat supporters. * ★ ★ ★ Moro, a Christian Democrat, heads a coalition of his own party, the Saragat Democratic Socialists, the Nenni Socialists and the Republicans. The four partners failed to agre$ on a single candidate when the presidential election opened Dec.* 16. ★ w ★ The Christian Democrats backed Leone; the other three coalition parties rejected Leone and supported Saragat. Birmingham Area News Two Projects to Begin in School System's Plan of the first team teaching schools in the country. BIRMINGHAM - Next week I will mark the beginning of two projects developed under the . prior to serving as superinschool system’s Birmingham tendent |n \ Greenwich, Smith Ftan. ’ | was instrumental in the organic _ * * * ^ .. ration and operation of the na- The first Team Teaching yon>s fjrst team teaching school, Training Institute will be held ta Lexington, Mass. Tuesday and Wednesday at. * * * Berkshire Junior High School. . ^ tw0 teaching insti-Scheduled for Monday at the lutes will be held from 8:45 school is a workshop for the development of a program for the academically able in the elementary schools. ,m. to 3:15 p.m. KEYNOTE SPEAKER Dr. Elizabeth Drews, Michigan State University authority THEY’RE EVEN NOW - Identical twins Theresa (left) and Lesa Frawley of Flint weren’t so identical for a while last week. Theresa still had one'front tooth, while Lesa had only open spaces. Then the inevitable AC Photofix happened, the “extra” tooth dropped out, and now they're both alike again. They are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Frawley Jr. The team teaching sessions m education for the academi-will be attended by 44 teachers cally able, will be the keynote who .volunteered to work on the speaker and consultant for the new program. _ other workshop. (' * * * About 12 teachers will at- Directed by Supt, Dr. John tend the sessions under the B. Smith, the workshop’s format chairmanship of John Moiloy, will include objectives, back- diagnostician for the school ground and exploration of team I system. 66 Tremors Shake Japan Island Chain To Eye Water System Law O r d i n a n c e Would Govern Operation Waterford Township Board members Monday night will consider adoption of an ordinance pertaining to the operation of the£entral water system. Besides providing for management procedures, the ordinance also specifies rates and establishes rules and regulations governing the system. The Township Board reviewed language of the ordinance at a special meeting three weeks a„o. TOKYO (AP) — Sixty-six tremors, ranging from slight to. strong, today jolted the tiny island of Oshima, about 100 miles south of Tokyo, Japan’s Central Meteorological Agency said. No I M0ST suitable damage was reported. Funds for the pension plan were set up in the 1965 budget approved last (October by the board. Cambodia Charges Viet, Thai Violations teaching plans. I PARTICIPANTS Other participants will Participating in a panel discussion will be four elementary be principals, Grant Barber of Donald Protheroe, currently Pierce. James Liddle of Bloomworking on his doctorate at field Village, Fritz Plnis of Ad-j Wayne State University, and ! ams and Marjorie Tate of Quar-Mrs. Gertrude Green, principal ton. ! of Franklin Elementary School. Protheroe and Mrs. Green were on tbe staff of Dundee School, Greenwich, Conn., one PHNOM PENH, Cambodia 1 territorial waters off Koh Pro-(UPI) — Tiny Cambodia com- vlnce 'in the Gulf of Siam and plained today of border troubles seized a small boat carrying with two of its neighbors, South four men, forcing if to follow Viet Nam and Thailand. to Thai territory. ’ * * * I DEMAND RELEASE The Cambodians Charged that j The foreign ministry demand-their borders had been violated' ed that the four men be re-three times in three days - j leased immediately. * once by the Srath Vietnamese,] A source' charged once by toe TJais and once that free c^bodi* raiderg at. from Thailand by the “F r e e tacked the village of TWcem refugee organiza-1 Corneas Wednesday night, killing two soldiers and a provin- Heights* .noted that when he as-This country had carried on | cial guard, wounding three oth-1 sumes his duties he will elimi-a running dispute for more iers, and carrying away seven nate the title of senior assistant than a year with South Viet prisoners. {prosecutor. Nam over alleged border ★ ★ .*. * * * The Cambodians charge that Five of the J3 assistants held the refugee radio, which broad-j the senior position, casts antigovernment state-1 HOLDING TITLE merits, operates from South Viet Nam with U.S. backing. Cambodia' tion. Staff Readied by Prosecutor (Continued From Page One) The workshop will be held from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The Birmingham Plan is a five-year project geared toward improvement of the district's educational program. Operating funds for the plan were provided by a seven-tenths mill levy approved by district voters in June. raids by Vietnamese and American troops fighting Communist guerrillas. There also have been off-again on-again troubles with Thailand. Boy Listed as Fair After Shooting In other business Monday, the | board will discuss a proposed pension plan for employes other than police and firemen who already are covered by a pension program. The border troubles apparently are related to Cambodia’s political shift from pro-American neutralism to a pro-Com-munist attitude. This change-. over began more than a year ! ago, coinciding with a turn for tu — .. .. I, , 1 Different pension programs I the worse in the American-1 Jhe agency said the island haVe ^ studjed by the board backed Vietnamese govern-1 with a population 0 12,000 and the t . in an effort t0 jnent’s anticommunist guernl-j Pontiac ^ are investigat- B Tl y Isl,nd Chain; find the type most suitable for la war- ing the early morning shooting I announced lus resigns- haye been h!t by a series of | township personnel. ' CHARGE STRAFINGS of Thomas Francis, 35. tion t^ayjeffective Thursday, earthquakes since Dec. 9. Some | _ * >, . ... . ... ™ . .... . . He will become a partner in of the tremors were felt in To- ^ board also.will open bids The Cambodians charged^ to- ★ * * . | the Bloomfield Hills MW firm of kyo and vicinity. on tw0 new cars for the build- day that four Vietnamese heu- Francis, who refused to give Merideth and Nichols. j ing department. copters,, and an observation | police his address, is under ob-: * ■ ★ * ’ \ pl|ne machine-gunned several;servation at Pontiac Generali v.™ ^ «k ; dwellmgs Thursday m the Cam- with a bullet wound in I B#rry Jf1 with-the pros‘ Police Probe City Shooting A 7-year-old Novi boy is In fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital after being acci-Those with the title were Wil- j dentally shot in the head Thurs-liam E. Lang, Jerome K. Barry, j day afternoon with a 22-caliber Robert L. Templin, Edward I r‘f*e Shigley and James E. Roberts, j __ James Higgins, son of Mr. and Templin, defeated by Bronson in last month’s election, yesterday announced his resignation, effective Dec. 31. He will return to private practice and be associated with Bruce O. Wilson in the firm of Wilson & Templin, Birmingham. The agency said two of the 66 quakes today registered four bn the Japanese scale of seven, strong enough to send cups, saucers and dishes tumbling from the shelves. Residents of Oshima, known for its active volcano, Mt. Miha- ra, fear the series may lead to a BERLIN (UPI) - Thousands major eruption. . Butseismolo- of West Berliners, laden with gists in Tokyo dispelled the fears | ChristmaS gifts, began lining up the tremors even- before dawn today to visit relatives in the divided city’s So- W. Berliners Allowed Visits b&ian border village of Scatum 100 miles east of here. the left side. Police said he was shot by Tony Stoiloff, 72, of 411 Franklin as he attempted to push his way in the Stoiloff’s hqme. >.m.: wind velocity s r — Cmi 1 Saturday at 5:07 p.m. n Sunday at 1:01 a.m. rt» Saturday at 1:11 p.m. .. , »••• !■ « Yaara 55 in IlM , -4 In ltU Thunday-t Tamparaturt Chart Alpena » J( Fort Worth Jt » Grand ttapida 34 30 Jackaonville 79 4] Houghton II 14 Kanaas City M 15 “ 35 32 Los Angelea 70 S3 M 70 Miami loach 71 73 — Foggy, drizzle Downtown Temperatures City i Pellaton Traverse .... Albuquerque Bismarck 351 Chicago J 3t New York at 50 30 Omahe ie»-3 a Phoenix 47 45 ■23 Pittsburgh 42 42 47 SaN Lake City 44 34 24 Ian Francisco 57 54 tually will subside. OTHER QUAKES Quakes also have been felt in Miyake with a population of 6,-000, Niijima, 4,000, and Toshi-ma, 350, tiny volcanic island of the Izu chain in the Pacific about 180* miles south of Tokyo. The agency said a series of earthquakes jolted Oshima in 19§6, 1957, 1959 and 1961 but no serious damage resulted. Hong Kong Firemen Rescue Trapped 14 HONG KONG UP)-Fourteen people trapped for more than three hours on the upper floor of a blazing plastics factory building were rescued early today by fireman wearing 7i 47 breathing apparatus. n •] Cause of the fire, which destroyed the factory, was not immediately known. Property ddmage was estimated at 810,- They charged that the helicopters landed about 50 men, including one American, and carried off some belongings of the villagers after surrounding the town and firing on it for an hour. o J lin address was an after-hours The government charged that j drinking establishment, the Americans and South Viet- ecutor’s office since 1956. Mrs. Alvin Higgins, 45945 Pontiac Trail, was accidentally shot by his 11-year-old brother, Alvin Jr., while the pair played with the weapon behind their home, accordingto sheriff’s deputies. The single-shot rifle was a Christmas present to the boys from Allan Lively of 103 W. Woodward Heights, Hazel Park, officers said. Lively gave the boys the rifle about 5 p.m. and took them outside to fire it, according to deputies. After a short time Lively went I back into the house to get some- viet sector.' The Communists opened six narrow passages through their Berlin wall, its cold stone outline softened by light snow, to let an expected hegde of West Berliners into usually forbidden East Berlin. An estimated 85,000 persons surged into East' Berlin yesterday. As many or more were expected today, with another crowd anticipated on New Year’s Day. The Christmas; pass agreement wis the result of prolonged negotiations between East German and West Berlin officials. ^ The present pass period be-gan Dec, 19 tand will end Jan. 3f Another two-week pass period is scheduled for Easter. West Berliners must return from Soviet Berlin every night by midnight—except New Year’s Eve, when all-night visits will be permitted. ntwo other assistants,!^ to eat) while £ youths ?an,p*C- Devu,e Charles continued to play wi|h the weap-J. Porter, announced t h dy on officers said^ would join Richard P. Condit in ! ’ private practice when his ap-1 THREW TIN CAN Two men with Francis said j P°‘nted term a$ prosecutor ends 1 Deputies said James threw a he had told them that the Frank- ^ec- j tin can into the air for Alvin * *. + to shoot. The 11-year-old fol- Among those remaining will j can> w‘th the rifle, „ | „ be Robert D. Long who will con-1u 11 ,e“- namese had engaged in “delib-1 The pair, Robert Brown, 23, of ^ in J* .8ame ca,Pacity of i ^ erate aggression aggravated by [ 404 Virginia, Royal Oak, a^, Bro^o^ prosecutor ^ j S h.!?,* his brother, Paul D. Brown, 25 | ’ acts of banditry.” The second Cambodian charge said a Thai police boat violated of Detroit, were in their car' when the shooting took place,; police said. Ap FNWeji NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers and occasional rain frill fall tonight along part of Pacific coast, parts of Plateau, eastern Gulf Coast and parts of south Atlantic Coast ind from Ohio Valley and lower Lakes eastward to Atlantic qoast. Snow and flurries will fall over Rockies and from mid-Mississippi Valley to upper Lakes. It will continue mild along Atlantic H Run Away in Sheriff's Car Trusted Him a Bit Too Far CAMBRIDGE, Md, UP) — A told to return it by Sheriff Cal-prisoner at the Dorchester vert Creighton over the police County jail has lost his trusty’s radio, privileges after a Christmas Today Luke was in a security spree that began when he took j cell. ! the sheriff’s new oar. * * * { The prisoner, Tommy Luke, OriginaHy sentenced for driv-i 24, slipped out of the jail kitchen ing on a; revoked license, he ' Christinas Eve and took the was charged with : breaking out brand new police car to nearby I of jail; unauthorized Use of the Hiirlock Md., to see a girlfriend. I police car; and breaking the' He brought the car back early jaw of the girlfriend, with whom I Christmas morning after being j he said he had settled a score. KILLED IN VIET NAM-Mrs. Joy Hagen of Oklahoma City, Okla., looks at a photograph of. her husband, Lt. Col; James Hagen, killed in the Christmas Eve bombing of a Saigon servicemen’s hotel. Mrs. Hagen was notified of the death Christmas day. She said her husband gave up a successful dental practjcerfor an Army career. “We never had any regrets . . ! lintil now,” she said.« Vinson Closes Capitol Career WASHINGTON (UPI) - After more than 50 year$ in Congress, Carl. Vinson has formally closed his government career by slipping out of; the nation’s capital on Christmas Day while no one was looking. h Sr ★ Vinson, dean of the House of Representatives and probably its most powerful and respected single member, boarded a train at the nearly deserted Union Station yesterday for the trip back to Milledgeville, Ga., and his 600-acre farm. No one except a couple of newsmen wer' on hand for the final leave-taking. The 81-year-old Vinson refused help with his two suitcases and wouldn’t even let anyone get a redcap. He clearly did not want any tear-filled farewells and had let word pass around on Capitol Hill that he planned to stay until the opening of the 88th Con-gross Jpn 4. ★ ■ Sr * But there wasn’t going to be anything much doing next week, so I decided I might as well get ion back to the farm,” Uude Carl explained. ^ head, grazing his skull, deputies said. They said the boy’s I left arm was paralyzed after the : shooting. Traffic Toll in Sharp Rise (Continued From Page One) when his car ran off U.S. 12 east of Edwardsburg and hit a tree. EH Neveau, 41, of Bay City and John Brustmaster, 38, of Akron, killed Thursday in a two-car collision on M25 near Bay City, * CAR OVERTURNED Jim Joe Lopez, 25, of Case-ville, killed Thursday when his car overturned on a Huron County road near Caseville. Douglas- Anderson, 51,. of Ferndale, killed In a two-car collision in Detroit Thursday night. Robert Seters, 23, of Warren, died yesterday of Injuries sustained Thursday when his car hit a utility pole in Macomb County.' Lester Thorp, Jr. 33, of Lansing, killed in Eaton Rapids yesterday when his car hit a utility pole. * John Theis, 67, and tiis wife, Rose, 65, of Detroit, killed yesterday afternoon when their car Went out of control on the Edsel Ford freeway and hit a utility pole. Richard Hauck, 24, of Flint, killed yesterday in a two-car collision on Saginaw Road, near M57> .i V, THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 A—8 Back From World of Silence Hearing Son Speak Best Gift of All. BEATRICE, Neb. (AP) -There will never be another Christmas for Mrs. John Stewart like that of 1964. That was the day her 14-year-old son came bade from a world of silence. “It was the only Christmas present I ever prayed for and I got it!'’ she exclaimed after son Douglas said to her: “Merry Christmas!’’ * ★ h “It’s out of this world. I can’t believe it. This is the best Christmas ever In my life,'’ Mrs. Stewart said as she stood by her son’s bed at the Beatrice State Home. Since last spring, Mrs. Stewart had lived with a knowledge that her son might never speak again. RESULT OF INJURY She was told this could be one of the results of injuries suffered in March when Douglas was thrown from a tractor and dragged under the wheels. There was brain damage and when no Improvement was shown after several weeks, Douglas was believed to be a hopeless paralytic case. In June he was sent to the Beatrice State Home. Clinical Director Dr. KM. Hepperlin said, "We were told there was no hope of recovery." # ★. * i Douglas remains bedridden and has only partial use of his arms. Yet recovery there was, although, said Dr. Hepperlin, “there was nothing special that we did medically." Why then? BECAME MOTIVATED "I’m sure the main thing was tender, loving care and having other youngsters around. The entire staff took a special interest in this boy. Somehow he became inspired and motivated,” Dr. Hepperlin said. A nurses aide, Hazel Gaines, said: “Every day I’d go info his room and talk to him. It must have been about three months before there was any indication This We Believe . •, Because our contacts with the clergymen of our community are frequent and varied, we must admit that we have sometimes been gniity of tauing their selfless devotion for granted. May we then at this time express our appreciation for the many gracious services they render without complaint and often with little or no reward- C. Byron Gilbert, Director 2>. FUNERAL HOME 131 Orchard Lake Ave.. he even noticed me. Then I no-tied he followed me with his eyes. * ★ ★ "Later he responded with little whinelike sounds. "I told him, ‘Douglas, if you can make those sounds, we can make words instead.’ KEPT SECRET "We just kept working and slowly he did.’’ For about a month the fact Douglas could speak was kept a secret from Mrs. Stewart — in preparation for Christmas. For Mrs. Stewart - it was a hard-starting day — first a snow storm delayed her departure from home, in Lynch, Neb., then car trouble on the way caused more delay. ★ • w w At the end, though, there was "the only Christmas present I ever prayed for." Train Derails; No One Hurt IRON MOUNTAIN (AP) -The Milwaukee Read’s Copper Country Limited, carrying 50 passengers, derailed near this MicMgan-Wlsconsin border city last night. No one was injured. * w * Michigan State Police said the second of two diesel engines pulling the six-car train hit a split rail, tearing up 700 feet of track. Railroad officers said the train remained upright. They made arrangements for passengers to continue the trip by bus. * * * The train wds southbound from Calumet, in*' Michigan’s copper country, to Milwaukee. It had completed 120 miles of the 250-mile trip when the accident occurred. Mishap Proves Fatal DETROIT (AP) - Bennie Sanders, 50, of Detroit died Friday of injuries suffered Wednesday when he was struck by a car as he crossed a Detroit street. Shots Fired at House in Dixie Town RIPLEY, Miss. UB-The Council of Federated Organizations reported early today shots were fired into a house where two white Oberlin College students were staying while working with other volunteers to rebuild a burned-out Negro church. Law enforcement agencies in the Ripley area could not be contacted about the report. ★ ♦ w COFO said that one student, Dick Cooper, tried to follow the car from which the shots were fired. Cooper later was arrested for running a stop sign, a COFO spokesman said. The other student, Jerry Van Korss, attempted to follow the assailants in another car. He said several shots were fired at his auto and he returned to the Negro home where he had been staying. TO RESUME WORK Itoe band of white volunteers — mostly students from Oberlin — planned to resume their work of rebuilding the Antioch Baptist Church today following Christmas worship services Friday. The church was destroyed by fire last Oct. 50 following a civil rights rally. * * * 'The need to build comes out of evil, but the desire to rebuild comes out of love,’’ Dave Jewell, an associate professor of Christian education at Oberlin, fold the overflow crowd at the Christmas services. Left-Wing Spain Poet Facing Military Court MADRID (AP) — Left-wing Spanish poet Carlos Alvarez Cruz, who was tried and freed last October after he wrote a poem defending executed Span-Communist leader Julian Grimau Garcia, was before another pourt today. He was summoned before a provincial military court to answer charges of illegal activities. Officials said these grew out of testimony at this October hearing before the National Civil Court of Public Order. Normally military courts try political crimes only when they involve violence. Up To Vi OFF During Thomas1 Scratch £ Dent STARTS MONDAY AT 9 AM. • Sofas • Lamps • Carpet • Mattresses • Chairs • Tables • Dinettes Once again, a rial opportunity for you to refurnish* your home at a fraction of the usual eost. Whether you brant Just a chair or a complete bedroom suite... this is your onca-e-ytar chaneo to save on quality home furnishings. Coma in early while the selections are greatest. e Pictures e Bedroom Fum. • Dining Room Film, e Mirrors e Desks • Hide-A-Beds e Decorator Fflfowa LIMITED QUANTITIES! CONVENIENT TERMS! MANY ONE-OF-A-KIND! FREE DELIVERY! 'Tkowuik FURNITURE PONTIAC DRAYTON 361 S. Saginaw 4945 Dixie Hwy. BOTH STORES OPEN MONDAY TILL | BIRTHDAY PRESENT - Mrs. Stefanija Rukas of Kaunas, Lithuania, is reunited with her husband, Konstantinas, 59, of Hartford, Conn., and their daughter, Nijole, 26, at New York’s Kennedy Airport yesterday after 23 years of separation. Mrs. Rukas, who celebrated her 58th birthday yesterday, was separated from them by Soviet secret police 23 years ago and spent 15 years in Siberian labor camos. Labor Camp Victim Joins Family in U. S. NEW YORK (UPI) - Mrs. Stefanija Rukas, who was kidnaped from her Lithuanian home by the Soviet police in 1941 and interned in a Siberian labor camp for 15 years, was reunited yesterday with her husband and daughter she had not seen in 23 years. With Christinas joy expressed in tears, Mrs. Rukas was greeted by her husband, Konstantinas, and their now-grown daughter Nijole. She was whisked to her new home in Connecticut and a sumptuous holiday dinner. On June 13,1941, as a precaution against a mounting wave of Stalinist terror against Lithuanian intellectuals, Rukas, schoolteacher, took 3-year-old Nijole away from their home in Kaunas. They found refuge at the nearby farm home of Rukas’ mother. * * * Mrs. Rukas, then 34, remain at home. The secret police came that midnight and sent her off to Siberia. EMOTIONAL REUNION Not until yesterday,' in an. emotion-fraught reunion at Kennedy International Airport here, did Mrs. Rukas again set eyes on her husband and daughter. With tearful hugs and kisses, the Rjfltas family was reunited on Christmas. It also 3 IItmtW mowers ?!,".! 4-DAY SALE! Mon.-Tues.-Wed.-Thurs. OPEN DAILY IO o.m. I 5 p.m. Sale! Steel Cabinets Our Biggest Selection Ever - Seconds But All Are in Almost Perfect Condition Large Wardrobes All-metal construction — styles with sliding, doors, double..doors, some with shelves, etc. Beige finish. _____ m Utility Cabinets Moet useful cabinets in assorted styles to choose from. 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Whttee for girls, block for boys. 1 Figure Ice Skates was Mrs. Rukas’ 58th birthday. Nijole, a pretty 26-year-old brunette graduate- student, cried unabashedly and said of her mother: “She looks wonderful.” *" '* h , Mrs. Rukas, her dark hair now flecked with gray, also was in tears. “I am so happy but I am also very tired," she said. Her long separation from her family climaxed by 29 days of traveling. Rukas, 59, now a Hartford, Conn., machine operator, and Nijole told the story of their troubled years while waiting for Mrs. Rukas’ flight to arrive from Montreal, where it had been diverted Thursday because of the fog and rain that made New York airports inoperable. Forcibly taken from her home at midnight, Mrs. Rukas was banished to a labor camp at Bakchar in Siberia. 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Not so, says Gov. Robert EL Smylie of Idaho. One of the leaders of the Burcb-must-go forces in the GOP, Smylie says die why things are now the national chairman is neither “a mere figurehead, nor a housekeeper.” DOESN’T KNOW “Smylie doesn’t know anything about the national chair- Miller, who was Barry Gold-water’s running mate and Burch’s predecessor as party chairman. Generally, the job of chairman is to keep the party machinery died and humming between elections, to see to it that money is raised, to cool off party feuds and to rally the troops during campaigns. * * * Many chairmen have been little more than front men who have tuxedo, will travel. Most have been noted political figures working part time at it Burch, protege of Goldwater, is a fulltime chairman with a 630,000-a-year salary. One thing to keep in mind in trying to define the duties of a chairman is that time,' events, the pressure cooker of politics and the man himself all have a hand in molding the job. For instance, the chairman of a party out of power, such as Burch, must function differently from the chairman of a party in power, such as the Democrats' John M. Bailey. Bailey must labor in the shadow and under the orders of the unquestioned supreme commander of the Democratic party, President Johnson. Flint Teen Is Shot by Pursuing Police FLWT UR — A 16-year-old boy was snot and critically wounded by a Flint police officer Friday night as he fled from a parked car which police said he was attempting to burglarize. Richard Scott of Flint was taken to Hurley Hospital as a police prisoner. He suffered a head wound. Flint police said Patrolman Gilbert Darby shot the youth. Darby and fellow officer Darwin Storms said they surprised the boy attempting to break into a parked auto. The two officers/ said they fired three warning shots during the chase. The first petroleum well was drilled near Titusville, Pft., in 1859, with driller Edwin Drake striking ofl at a depth of 0014 feet Chicken Dish Had Its Start Years Ago NEW YORK IB - Some decades ago a polo player named Foxhall Keane suggested serving creamed chicken to the chef of Delmonico’s restaurant here. * n /+ The dish was nalmed “chicken a la Keane,”/fiut through the years the “Keane” has been corrupted to “King.” And this is a key to the present GOP battle cracklinf around Burch. With no president to answer to, will he step into a vacuum of leadership, tighten Ms control of party machinery and reinforce, a conservative image that GOP liberals and moderates feel Will destroy the party? WOULD NOT USE “As the months Wear on," Smylie said of Burch at the recent GOP governors meeting in Denver, Colo., “the present chairman wdl tend ever more strongly jtb create and solidify the inpfie of a party that the people would not use.” A president provides most of the image for the party in power. He has that magnificent forum of the White House, under the concentrated glare of International publicity. Who provides the image for the party out of power, in this case the Republicans? The national chairman certainly contributes to it, for his finger is on the party’s propaganda button. The mimeograph machines grind at his command. Newsmen rush to him when they want the GOP position on this or that. He can be on camera and inthe news daily. By his control of the propaganda organs it is possible for him to help one politician, hurt another, boost himself. HEART OF BATTLE Thus “Who will be the voice of the GOP?” is at file heart of foe Republican battle over the chairmanship. Those who want Burch ousted argue that he would create too conservative an image of the Republicans, that he would be a constant reminder of Gold-water’s campaign and crushing defeat. But others argue that the party image will be made on Capitol Hill, not in file offices of the national committee. Burch and Goldwater say the GOP leadership — and thus most of the image-making — will lie securely in the hands of the Republican leaders in Congress, as practically always is the case for the party out of power. ADMINISTRATOR A spokesman described Burch as feeling that his role as chairman would be an administrator — more of a creative administrator than a housekeeper, however. Burch thinks the bask: function of the national committee, says the spokesman, is to provide “organizational and financial assistance” to local and state party organizations. And be believes his main contribution as chairman, says the gpnk»sm«n, would be in making the committee “a continuing organization, functioning day in and day out, and not just leaping into action once every four years.” Whatever the varying views on the national chairmanship it apparently is important enough to fight over — and be the central issue of a GOP summit conference of Goldwater, former President Dwight D. Elsen- hower and former Vice President Richard M.-Nixon. After their meeting Wednesday, Dec. 10, in New York it was . even more obvious that Burch was on the spot. In essence, the three men who have carried the GOP presidential banner in the last three elections agreed that Burch must have widespread support in order to pull the party together from its shattering defeat. A simple majority of votes on the Republican National Committee would not be enough, they indicated. The national committee is scheduled to meet Jan. 22-23 in Chicago to consider the problem of its leadership. As the situation stacks up now, the vote would be extremely close. PONTIAC OSTEOPATHIC COLLEGE Deserves Your SUPPORT Contact: PoitUc Aim of foi Details 1 ■* *hWlhe j Jpj J HERE’S WHY YOU SAVE AT ROBERT HALL • No show windows ... no oxponsivo displays ... you saws! • No fancy fixtures ... Robert Hall cuts costs • •. you savol • No high rants .noarby highway locations J • • you savol • Pay casH# pay loss . •. no crodit lassos, no costly bookkeeping! PLUS... Our guarantee of satisfaction - with ovary purchase! PONTIAC: 200 Nsftk Saginaw St CLABKSTON-WATEBFOID: en Dixie Hoy. Jut North ef Waterford Bill Cladutsi Store "Open Sundays 12 Noon 'til 6 P. M.' USE TOW emwajENT SECUWHM* CHARGE PUR irWHffBHBSSffTIffln^XlIBnfHlIiniroREBJTYTlRFfHHrtHnBrtEoirPSRoBfoRiiBE ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAY TIL 7 P.M. UBHieTHHIUI LEFT-OVERS PRICES SLASHED 8 pc. 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To assure that you will-have money throughout the year, put some on your doorstep last thing at night on New Year’s If the first person to come into your house on New Year’s Day is a woman or fair-com-plexioned man, it’s bad luck. People used to take this so seriously that the community hired a man with a reputation for being lucky to go around and he the first in every house after midnight on New Year’s Eve. (Copyright, 1964) ‘Socialist Program, Better Life for All’ We Socialists don’t grieve for DeLeon, we honor him as a great social scientist. I can’t remember a time when capitalism was not in trouble. There were recessions, depressions, wars, strikes'and racial strife, and now chronic unemployment due to automation. % , jk . h ★ The Socialist Labor Party is the bearer of the principles and a program to eliminate the uncertainties and to bring about a better life for all. WORTH EASTMAN » 12 PINE GROVE On Peace-Keeping Assessments Soviets to Force U.N. Showdown? By MAX HARRISON UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — Recent developments have led some U.N. diplomats to conclude that the Soviet Union has decided to force, a U.S.-Soviet showdown on the controversial issue of peace-keeping assessments. The Russians are still going through the motions of meeting with negotiators, but there is a widespread belief at U.N. headquarters that chances for a compromise settlement are becoming more and more remote. The current speculation is thit the Soviet Union has become convinced that It can win in a U.N. General Assembly confrontation and would like to embarrass the United States by forcing a test •f strength. Those who hold this view reason that the Russians may have interpreted U.S. willingness to bargain as a sign of weakness. Until Tuesday night it had been taken for granted that both the United States and the Soviet Union wanted to avoid a. confrontation in the assembly and that a formula would be found. Then the situation suddenly changed. Just as the negotiators were predicting agreement, the Russians announced they had re- ceived instructions to inject a series of conditions wMch obviously were unacceptable to the United States. At the heart of the controversy is Article 19 of the U.N. Charter which says that any country loses its assembly vote when it is two years in arrears in paying its assessments. The Russians and six. other Communist countries are in this position. TTiey contend the assessments for the peace-keeping operations in the Congo and the Middle East are illegal. The United States was prepared to settle the issue if the delinquent governments would make voluntary contribu- -tions into a fund to stabilize U.N. finances in sufficient amount to put them in good standing. It was "spelled out, however, that no voting w;>uld take place in the assembly until pledges actually had been made. ★ ★ ★ The Russians now are insisting that voting take place im? mediately after the plan for the fund is approved and that there be no deadline for contributions. U.S. officials say this is like “buying a pig in a poke.” NO-VOTE TRUCE Since the assembly o session Dec. 1, it has b ating under, a no-vote \ This permitted the' i proceed with its general debate, . but it was unable to take any decisions unless they could be taken on a no-objection basis. Many countries are becoming impatient with this arrangement, and some year-end decisions now become urgent. One of these is the election of nonpermanent members of the Security Council to fiH seats becoming vacant Jan. 1. When the Russians agreed to the no-vote truce, they apparently wanted to avoid a confrontation over Article 19. The United States had claimed enough votes to suspend the Soviet voting rights, and the Russians apparently had enough doubts so that they were not anxious for a test; * ★ ★ Since then the United States has been under heavy attack from African countiles on the Congo problem, and there has been increasing talk around U.N. headquarters about a possible U.S. defeat if a showdown comes on Article 19. Hi :lft THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 A-7 Says Winner Overspent for Campaign Losing N.Y. GOP Candidate Challenges House Seat WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican Rep. Robert R. Barry has challenged the November victory el Democrat Richard L. Ottinger in a suburban Nets York cc Agrees ional race, charge ing that Ottinger violated • state law by spending $193,009 on his campaign. New York state law limits a candidate to spending $8,000 on his campaign. Barry’s cans' paign manager,’ James R, Frankinberry, says a federal law requires compliance with the state law. V-' * ★ a Frankipberry says Ottinger set up 22 different committees, each of whig) received $0,009 in contributions from his mother, Louise Ottinger of New York.; •nd his sister, Patricia Heath of Wilton, Mass. The federal Corrupt Practices Act limits contributions by individuals to $3,000 but permits one person to giva that amount to any number of different committees. Frankinberry says Ot> tinger’s committees were loopholes through which his family funneled funds into his campaign. FIRST WINNER Ottinger, one of the founders of the Peace Corps, became the prat Democrat ever elected ii the 25th District when he defeated Barry by 17,000 votes Nov. 3. The district includes part of Westchester County and all-of Putnam County. The House Administration Committee will decide who Should get the disputed seat but the ultimate decision is up to the House, which is granted authority by the Constitution to decide contested elections of Its members. Besides serving the Administration Committee with notice of his complaint, Frankinberry has threatened to take the matter to a federal court. The House Administration Committee said it had received a copy of a letter sent by Barry’s forces to Ottinger giving the Democratic representative-elect formal notice of the dispute. COPY FORWARDED A committee aide said a copy was forwarded to Chairman Omar Burleson, D-Tex., for his information. A letter was also sent to a special House campaign investigating committee but it can do virtually nothing now since its authority to operate expires m Jan. 3. The House Administration Committee listed this procedure for ^settling disputed electioea: 1. After formal notification of a dispute, the charged-party his 30 days to answer the complaint. ^ . GATHER EVIDENCE 2. Another 90 days is permitted to gather evidence — 40 days for each side and 10 days total for gathering rebuttal evidence. 3. The file is then/turned over to the House clerk and from him to the Administration Committee which confld create a subcommittee to study the evidence and schedule hearings if it saw fit. Station Wagon Plunges Into Lake Seven Killed in Two Georgia Families FINALLY GETTING OUT - The Lorenzo family of Ferndale, Calif., leaves the city yesterday after being cut off. for days by the flooding Eel River. Hundreds of families were stranded in the area 15 miles south of Eureka by the floodwaters, now diminishing. We’re hatching a surprise (Have you received word yet?) - , | If There’s big news afoot. We can’t say what it is — yet. But we just sent word out to thousands of friends about it. If, somehow, you were missed in the deluge of holiday mailings ... do this. • Give, us a call. Or better yet, come into Osmurfs today- or tomorrow. We’ll see to it that you get all the mouth watering details. This one is just too good* to miss. Hint: It will pay you to check with us early. Otherwise you’re liable to be disappointed. Arid end up clucking sadly to yourself. a part of Pontiac since 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN A YOUNG MEN ■ Downtown Pontiac ■ Tel-Huron Center in Pqntiac ■ Tech-Plaza Center in Warren FREE PARKING at ALL STORES CUMMING, Ga.fAP) - The Rodgers and the Brown families left a hen cooking on a stove Chase Down Top Criminal Just for Kicks PAINESVILLE, Ohio (AP) -Running down one of the FBI’s “10 most wanted" criminals was as dangerous a game of cops and robbers as has eyer been jplayed by a bunch of boys. One of the dozen boys who pursued Alfred Oponowicz, a fugitive from arrests for counterfeiting ahd bank robbery, said they dig it because, "It was a dead night anyway. We didn’t have anything else to do." * * * That was Arthur Bryant, 18. He and other neighborhood youths had left a dance at a public recreation center Wednesday night and were headed home. One of them. John Peacock, spotted Oponowicz, who had been shot twice the night before during a gun battle when he tried to escape from law officers. He was captured and escaped again, this time from a hospital. The fugitive had-sworn he would never be taken alive. DULL NIGHT Peacock saw part of the stranger’s pistol and ran, yelk ing to his scattering friends. The boys thought it was a joke, at first. But, as they explained, ; it was a dull night, and if Peacock wanted to play television games they “might as well go along with a gag." Then Bryant ‘fend part of the gang saw Oponowicz standing atop a railroad overpass a few blocks from the boys’ homes. • * * * “We knew who he was,” Bryant recalled. “We recognized him right off. Somebody yelled, ‘Let’s get him’!" Oponowjcz ran, the boys following from different angles. Oponowicz finally was arrested .when a neighbor called police, and the boys led them to their, man. He surrendered meekly. Would the boys do it again? “I guess so,” said Bryant. “If there wasn't anything good on television." and set out for an orchard*to get some apples to complete their Christmas dinner. The hen was never eaten. * * Sr Seven members of the two families died Christmas Day. Their station wagon, with John E. Brown, 24, at the wheel, smashed through a guard rail, crashed down a 30-foot embankment and plunged into Lake Lanier. *T knew we were going too fast,” said Billy Rodgers, 20. “If I recall, I asked bfan to slow down. A tire gave way and went spinning around. We hit the guard rail and went over. LAST MEMORY “That’s the last I remember until I came to the top of the water. My wife was struggling, and I started pulling her out; she can’t swim.", Mrs. Rodgers, 21, said her daughter, .Amanda Lee, 3, was playing with a doll she had been given for Christmas just before she died. * * * State Trooper H. G. Pope said Brown had been drinking. He and his wife, 24, were drowned. Also killed were three of their children, Thomas, 6; Brenda Sue, 4; and Joyce Ann, 1; and Billy Bradford Rodgers, 2. ALL DROWNED Coroner Crafton Brooks said all the victims had drowned. Officers said an unidentified couple apparently had pulled two children—Carroll Christine- Rodgers, 3 months, and Linda Brown, 3—from the water. They were hospitalized in serious condition. * * . * The Rodgers were treated and released. * ★ ★ Officers said the 1959-model auto had run off Brown’s Bridge Road at Two-mile Creek about nine miles northeast of Com-ming. • ★ * * Divers from Buford and Gainesville recovered tife bodies from 10-foot deep water, and a wrecker pulled the station wagon from the lake. RECOVERED BODY Jim A. Bennett, who operates a nearby fishing camp, said he had pulled out one body after a passing motorist had told him of the tragedy. Dependents Allowed to Stay at Cuba Base WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Navy has lifted a nearly year-old order barring dependents from accompanying civilian and military personnel assigned to the sprawling Guantanamo Naval Base in Cuba. *1 * ; ★ Adm. David L. McDonald, chief of naval operations, announced the end of the ban yesterday in a statement. He said that dependents would be able to begin traveling to the base again “effective immediately.’' FORMULA 76 HELPS RELIEVE • ATHLETE'S FOOT • PERSPIRING FECf • FOOT ODORS THE GOLFER'S BEST FRIEND $1.50 a Bottle -Monty Back Cuaronltt- FAIRLANE DRUGS 26704 RYANj WARREN SHERMAN PRESCRIPTIONS Roehtttor Rd. Cor. 11-Mil* HOW SOON CAN YOU N That happy day when you can staff construction H of a home of your own may come a lot sooner than! It you now think! We have brought "home owning time" It closer for many people in the Pontiac area. You can reborrow up to the original amount of ybur loan for future repairs, remodeling or other improvements — without refinancing and our convenient low-cost home loart plan is easily repayed like‘rent with'down payment and monthly payments geared to your needs. 75 West Huron Established 1890 FE 4-0561 CLOSED SATURDAY, JANUARY 2ND OptuPaily 9 ».m. to 4>.m. Saturday* 8:30 Mm. to 12 Noo* Member Federal Home Loan Bank System mM % '' - / T 'X ■ ; vnT1 ?Mr t> ■, /: . .'-y ■', THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY. DECEMBER 26, XB44 UHECDLOB I MON. and TUES. ONLY | ill cube STEAKS Tender—Delicious 10 lb. Limit Please Hoffman’s Famous Good ’n’ Tender “butcher boy” STEAKS Freeh lean PORK ROAST We Resene Right to Limit QuentUlsi PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS 026 N. Perry FI 2-1100 PRICES QOOO tO THURS., DEC. 31 it. TRUCKLOAD PAUMdQN ,S||) IBt"1 til DuPont LUCITE CLOSED NEW TIM'S DAY Open Daily impja. Friday YU «PM. . sw^t-s Ml Orchard Lake Ave. FE1-2424 TOM’S HARDWARE NEW ROCKWELL Portsr-Cabh NewCVCOlAC hew FINISHIN6 SANDER MODEL 63 Perfect to. oM Dm sanding jobs from finishing wooei •• smoothing plostor. Orbital KEEGO HOWE. NO. 1 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-2660 SPECIAL! 501 NYLON *611 12 Beautiful Colors to Choose From SPENCER Floor Covering v 3511 Elisabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-7775 fix CLOSE-OUT on all 1864 STEREOS and TVS BARGAIN PRICES for Those Who Didn’t Get Their Big Christmas Present! ELECTRIC COMPANY ampbtCi\ FE 4-2525 825 W. Huron St. Open • A.M. to • P.M. - Except Sunday 111 11111111JL1 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Home Outfitting Co* LUHRD5 17-19 S. Saginaw Watch Monday’s PONTIAC PRESS, Dec. 28tli FOR OUR BIG YEAR-END CLEARANCE SALE Honest Values of Quality Hem* furnishings throughout tho ontiro store AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES! SPECIALS | MONDAY -TUESDAY -WEDNESDAY ONLY! | Front-End NMENT ALIG e Repack front whoot* • Balanco Front Whools e Check and Adjust Brakes e Set caster! camber, toe-in all for only B. F. GOODRICH 111 North Perry, Pontiac FE 2-0111 * until 111 I If) $HOPPCn §fOPP®5? iMiiisiimi K wi END of YEAR INVENTORY ' CLOSE-OUT OF ALL SAFETY 800 ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT Bleeiisliod Tire* - Limited Quantitiss Mast Silts in Steak! EXAMPLE 8:00X14 to***. *16?? CRESCENT U S. ROYAL 621 S. SAGINAW, PONTIAC - 333-7031 U. S. ROYAL TIRES Super KEM-TONE 41 EAST WALTON JUST EAST OF BALDWIN AVE. FE 4-0242 Opan Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. All Otto Weekday* 9 A M to 6 P.M. - Sun 10 A M to 3 P Mj ^SPECIAL! Extra Plush Pile ACRILAN* *ft95 ”.Sq. Yd. 'AeriMe Fibre by Chrimtrand SPENCER Floor Covering 3511 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-7775 5 Beautiful Colors to Choose From TAILOR MADE-SARAN PLASTIC SEAT COVERS Regularly $25.95 $14*8 COMPLETE | CoawtiMeTops ffSam MOST CARS SEAT COVER 7SS OAKLAND AVE. OORNIR KINNEY' OPEN DAILY 9 AM. to 9 P.M.-Sat. 9 to 5 TELEPHONE FE 2-6335 SHOP IN YOUR OAR AT DIXIE DAIRY TWO LOCATIONS TO BETTER SERVE YOU HOLIDAY SPECIAL OLD FASHIONED A ^ EGG HOG RQC Our Own Blend - at - Quart Second Quert.....48c EGG NOG IDE CREAM Vi Dal. PONTIAC'S SKATE TRADER ( NEW & USED up to $10for your old SKATES! LADIES’ and MEN’S OELlin FULL SIZE All Sizes 4 through 13 *K'$088 b We Buy - Sell Trade - Sharpen Skates BARNES HARGRAVE HARDWARE Open Doily TUI 9 p. m. Sun. Till 6 b. m. 742 W. Huron St. FI5-9101 YEAR END HOOVER SALEI in 79' WHIPPING CREAM PINT The New HOOVER PORTABLE COMPACT 5**49** _ _ • Com •tow on and • Powerful •action tor all ciaaning • Attachments • Guaranteed VACUUM OLEANERS SERVICED Free Pick Up and Delivery Same DUy Service — Gmermntee Parts and Sorvica an all brand swpapats e lap • Hoses e Belts e Cerda e Brushes a Switches Open Sun. fe 2 p.m. BARNES A HARGRAVE Hardware 742 W. Huron St. FE 5-9101 OL-tif) 'itOpens... E^AirrOUATJC «ABA^’fl|msM OMR OPENER IjJW You nwvwr Iwove ywwr cor tw open, ' 3611 Dixie HwyX OVERHEAD DOOR CO. THE PONTIAC PHESF SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 ONE COLOR A--9 From the Boy at McNab Tot All of Our Friends Many Thanks for Your Patronaga This Past Yaar “Thrifty Savings" firnriy Bmlmmm Hardwmrt Q 1? SNOWED-IN UNDER A BUZZARD OF BILLS? Get a low cost Credit Union Loan! Quick - Convenient! ih PONTIAC CO-OP FEKUL CREDIT UNION 1M W. Huron - FE 3-7838 MocM Road Racing Accessory Sale! - STROMBECKER - Corvid and Straight Trask.... Rag. 1.50 $141 Lana Ohanging Track....Rag. S.N SS.1I Qrandatand Kit.........Reg. 1.85 SS.1I CarKNs.................Reg.3.95 SS.1I L REVELL - Straight and Ovrvad Trask.... Reg. 1.51 $1.39 Alaa Path and Aeaesseries tar Aurora, Tyco, Aflat SCARLETT'S BICYCLE and HOBBY SHOP 20 E. Lawrance St. - FE 3-7843 PARK FREE BEHIND STORE SMI DAILY !• te IS tIMAY M la f Am art LUMBER DEPARTMENT GLENWOOD PLAZA North Parry5traat at Gionwood HARDBOARD PANELS OF 1,001 USES 4 Ft. x 4 Ft. . .W Thick Good For Inside or Outsido Uso SPECIAL NOTICE! DlipMY’C NEW MODERNIZATION DEPARTMENT You Can Now Deal Diroet with Burmy on All Your Lumbar and Labor Noods SPECIAL LOW PRICES ON: • ATTICS • GARAGES • PORCH ENCLOSURES • RECREATION ROOMS • BASEMENTS • CEILINGS • ROOFING • INSULATING CONSTRUCTION CO. 7940 COOLEY LAKE RD. UHF Adaptor Antenna! Especially Designed by ANDI ter Maximum Performance an Channels 20 - 50 - 561 Special $2000 asjMo anr MMtrf VHP Antunno. A UHF-VHf cavainr k-*1---,*•*«< WNlwrfy •"f •>"• •« supplied with this kwewt unit. Adapter may olea hn need aeannntnnnal Prompt Installation Sarviaa for The NEW Channel 51 Breadcasting for first time January_2nd at 8:00 P.M. 'mm FE 4-1515 ~fE*2-3781' 'mm ft Corner of Oakland andClark! M ■ iiiimiin STANDARD ENGINE REBUILDERS 6Cyl... s950# »-8’s...*1150# This includes ... Rings, Rod Baa rings, Main Bearing, Grind Valves, Fit Pins, Daalaza Cylinder Walls, Gaskets, Oil ana Labor! ALSO FACTORY REBUILT ENGINES 695 AUBURN RD. 338-9671 338-9672 EXCELLENT FOR BUILDING FISHING SHANTIES We Carry A Complete Selection of PANELING, DOORS, CEILING TILE AND LUMBER AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES! CHARGE IT! HOBBY BOARD Best roadbed for model trains and racing car speedways. Deadens sound—Holds nails securely. Grass green color—Won’t scratch floors. OHAROE IT! 4x8 Shoot 39s 'N SAVE! SHOPPE" OTOPPBBS 111 THAW K0M-0-D8Y cleaners nUIilPil AND SHIRT LAUNDEHEfl 944 WEST HURON ST. W Block West of Telegraph Bead on Weet Huron Street VI Ju.t Oppo.it. the Huran Theetef end ASS Store Have Your Clothe* Spotleatly LSS/U Cleaned for The New Year Now! “A HEAP OF CLEANING FOR A WEE BIT ’0 MONEY” VALUABLE COUPON , .................................1 rMONDAY-TUESDAY-WEDNESDAYONLY s I COUPON i _ COUPON I 1 * 0*DSWtATI« SKI*T$ 1 MIN’S OR LADIES’ SUITS I I • MEN'S PANTS I » LHHTWIIBMT SUM COATS | ■ rrWeiiimHy I Pwt.uleneDy OUgU- I 1 tsr 50 ! *usr 90 ' 2 MechimFMUied W Mechi*. FM.lied tfw J ■ COUPON (With this epupon Mon., Tugs., Wed.) ! SHIRTS LAUNDERED | S Individually Ceilephone ■ Packed with Drycleaning Order of $1.50 or Mere. t or FKtith Mora a i (Sad Catty 0n|y •' BIO. I PON Ml... I M MORE lanaaaagaaaaaaaaaaaaaJ Opsn Daily and Saturday • A.M. to • P.M. 19i SPECIAL! PLUSH NYLON 13 Beautiful Colors to Choose From * PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE DuPONT 50). NYLON YARN Carpeting From One of America’s Leading Mills! A TWEEDS 99% NOW ^6s^Yd. Bigelow Approved*Acrylic Carpeting An Outstanding Value for Only.. $095 --- Z79q. Yd. . McCANDLESS 11 N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 *495 TP-Sq. Yd. Save $3.00 A Sq. Yd. SPENCER Floor Covering 3511 Elisabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-7775 iiiiiiiim ROLL ENDS DRASTICALLY REDUCED! SAVE i? 50% WOOLS-NYLONS ACRILONS Many Color* to Choose From! Carpeting styled for superior beauty and design* color and texture, add are loomed from the finest yarns by Master Craftsman. NOW for Tha First Tim* © OPEN TO THE PUBLIC! UNITED BEAUTY 0 BARBER SUPPLY Sew Seen In Sur Hew Lecetien-tl W. km St. Special! c NORDIC SHAMPOO SI.7&I. NOW ^25 Thick, Sudsy will not atrip colorl TANEY BRUSH ROLLERS 89c*Do.: HOW NOW OPEN WEDNESDAY’S TIL liSS P.M. ROASTS ^HCanfar Cut ■ J CHUCK 45° • Lean Moaty Pot Roast 33' *• Arm or English Cut Roast.. g/49eib. McCANDLESS 11 N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 CLEARANCE ALL WOOL EARLY AMERICAN Reg. CARPETING *9 55 MWM ALL WOOL FLORAL CARPETING Reg. $9.95 NOW! McCANDLESS 11 N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 uu Our Vary Bast • Round • Sirloin None Higher 4 • TENDER, JUICY 7-Bones 79ft. Farm Flash v REMUS BUTTER 5& DRAYTON PLAINS STONE ONLY ssaiaasr T fUHtlUk I BAZLEY JSr M MM m&M m A mJLMaL tflAiaalWkidaiiMf THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 Missionary at First Baptist McMillans Return From the Congo Mrs. Hector McMillan, who I the uprising and revolt in the! Mrs. McMillan, the forrme* With sons Kenneth, Paul, whowas arrived in Pontiac from the Congo at the 7 p. m. service to- ] lone Reed, is a missionary from David, Stephen, John and Tim- British m Congo this week, win speak of | morrow in First Baptist Church. | First Baptist. othy, she is staying with Mr. a week. <• \ ; , . ? and Mrs. Edwin Johnson of 3977 “For i a Lakewood, Watkins Lake, were ab Waterford Township. family. Mrs. McMillan’s husband wa* killed Nov. 24 in the at 6 a. ri Congo by the rebels. In her ^ own words she told The Pen- ug in a | tiac Press what happened: Carrying “While many people see only they ord< the acts that took place, there back yar will be some who through it all “Then i can see the ways of the Lord, from us, “And we as a family are try- back int ing to look at it as a reasonable women ai thing planned of God, for the in the liv fulfillment of His will. i 8. “In July we left Bongondza j FIRES 0 station in our two-ton truck to i meet our sons who had finished fou their school year. We collected 10f the gn the five younger boys at Rethy j and remi Academy and b r o u g h t them j went ou safely down from the mountains ^ to Stanleyville. | W0Unded. “We had to wait several days | for the older boy, Ken, to come J up^n T TRUCK CONFISCATED | SanUy! ’ “Hector, my husband, decided i to go to meet him as it was only j “We g one day's journey. He took the' jured bo ■ next son, Paul, and drove the to sit bes truck. This is the last we saw and a h. of the truck as it was confis- j permitta cated shortly after, along with assured 14 other mission vehicles. friendly “The other four boys were after dai with me at Kilometer 8 when I “Merci the rebels took Stanleyville dur-, the Ame ing the week of Aug. 4. We were had beer not mistreated but were very our reset restricted. able to t DECORATE CHRISTMAS TREE - Trimming the Christmas tree for Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Johnson of 3977 Lakewood, Waterford Township are (from left), Kenneth and David from the Congo this week are guests of the Edwin Johnsons of Watkins Lake, Waterford Township.' WATCH SQUIRRELS - Having a good time watching a red squirrel as he leaps from tree to tree are (from top), Steve, John and Timothy McMillan. The boys who arrived McMillan. The boys, sons of Mrs. Hector McMillan and the late Rev. Mr. McMillan, are spending Christmas with the Johnsons. “Hector and the other two j “A bullet was removed from boys were held in the same his hip and a piece of bullet was form of house arrest at Boyulu taken from Pauli cheek, for one month. , “In September, by special per-, . *1"”* out “ mi- mission of the rebel govern- tU»ukt ^ we wtrt ment, Hector and the twVboys1 w “''I*’ were brought to Kilometer 8. “ not “r ,Me where we remained together as wou,d ** e,,y‘ a family, along with four other- Hebrews Chapter II is full of missionary families in similar desperate experiences that the circumstances. early missionaries endured. We * * * believe that all of this is a part “In October, when feeling was ®f the great struggle for the very strong against Americans, 8011 * of Africa, the five missionary fathers were * * * * sept rated from us and placed in “Therefore, we ‘think it not . a hotel room in the center of strange' and go on to a future Stanleyville. . we believe is planned by God “The three Americans were . and a part of a great work' kept there until the day of liber-' which we trust will be done in ation, Nov. 24, but my husbani? Africa." News of Area Churches BEAUTIFUL SAVIOR , brief service of singing carols, t TRINITY METHODIST New Year’s eve will be and the reading of the Christ- WATERFORD marked with a celebration of mas •toey by six young people. An all church New Year's Holy Communion beginning at | These include Jo Ann Reid, I Eve Party is sponsored by 7:45 in Beautiful Savior Luther-' Tom Siver, Barbara Flqok, Methodist Men of Trinity an Church, 5631 N. Adams, j Kathy Buchner, Donna How- Methodist Church, Waterford. Bloomfield Township. | ard and Chris Brieden. Roger Holm is chairman. a“P*M Refreshments under the direc- “On ^ward the Goal’’is the choirs will participate with an-]tioB of Mrs Robert Mcintyre theme of Sunday’s sermon, then“- and Mrs. Darrel Kelley will fol- FIRST PRESBYTERIAN ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL low in Parish Hall. The Junior Choir directed by Holy Communion' will be cele- ' * • * ★ Margaret Barths will sing brated at 7 a m. Monday and at .nmmi parish dinner will “Sleep of the Child Jesus," “The 10 a.m. on New Year’s Day in be cooperative at 4 p.m. on Friendly Beasts’’ and “Merrily All Saints Episcopal Church, jan. 10. The annual meeting We Sing’’ at First Presbyterian Williams at West Pike. and election of vestrymen will Church tomorrow. The annual parish dinner and follow. i * * * . meeting are set for Jan. 14. CHURCH 0F ATONEMENT i The Chancel Choir will be Four vestrymen will be elected. ..Making ^ New Year Hap. I heard ta “jesu, Joy of Man’s ST. ANDREW j py« will be the theme of Rev. I Desiring" by J. S. Bach. John WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Crea M. Clark’s sermon -at 10:451 Ward will present “Blest Christ-A Christmas Party is planned a.m. tomorrow in the Church of I mastide” by Root as an offer- far 5 p.m, tomorrow in St. An- Atonement, 3535 CllntonviUe, I fory *°to- - drew Episcopal Church, 5301 Waterford Township. ’ Rev. Richard J. Reynolds, as* Hatchery, Waterford Township. Bible School for all ages is sistant pastor .of First PVesby- TA mIII 1. ...UU . .1 ft.OA a m UwIbm mill nt.An' CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 11 AAA First Christian Church DISCIPLES of CHRIST W Jock H. C. Clerk, Pallor - > sen w Hum st Currently under construction are a student union, a dormitory and a married student-faculty apartment building. In the near future, construction will start on a new classroom building, a gymnasium and a chapel. School of Missions at Oakland Park The annual School of Missions , of the Oakland Park Methodist Church will be held Jan. 3 through Feb. 7 on five consecutive Sunday evenings. Sessions will begin at 5 p.m. * “The Church’s Mission Among New Nations” will be the theme. Leaders for the school include Ruth Ridley, primary age children; 'Mrs. Clayton Gillies, children of junior age; Troy Bell, youth; and Glen Kaminsky, adults. . * * * Classes will be held for two hours each night with a time of fellowship and refreshments at the close of each session. The school is for the entire family, Caroline Waldron, chairman, said. A FRIENDLY WELCOME AWAITS YOU AT THE GOOD -SHEPHERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1092 Scott Lake Rd. 2 Block* N. of Ponliac Ik. Rd. Waterford Township Sunday School....10,00 A.M. Morning Worship ... 11:00 A.M. Eva. Evongoi. Sarv. ...: 7:30 P.M. Paotor Ronald Coopor EM 3-0705 Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 .Sunday School 10:30 7 Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Miniate Both the present building pro- -gram, and the buildings And j equipment damaged in the, earthquake, are benefiting financially from the special Alas-j ka Earthquake Appeal offering received in Methodist churches. * * • * Of the total of $1.590,Q00, the ' university has been allocated $650,000 for rebuilding, repairs, tuition assistance to students I and other needs. *' * dr Alaska Methodist University Is a project of the National Di-vision of the Methodist Board of Missions. It came into being in 1957 largely through the contributions of thousands of Methodist churches through Advance Special (missionary) gifts. the First if i i Church of God |! : Moved to a New Location MADISON JR. | j HIGH SCHOOL f on N. Perry St. > Sunday School 9:30 A.M. ;j;j :• Morning Worship 10:30 AM. 7: ij Evoning Servico 7 PM 1$ :• For Transportation Call .334-1782 j;j; Rev. Ottis L. Burgher, Poster :4;- Subject for Sunday; $; CHRISTIAN SCIENCE i Suriday Services and Sunday School ..<11:00 A.M. : Wednesday Evening Service ....... 8:00 P.M. j? Reading Room — 14 Huron Open Daily 11:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. : _ „ . Monday thru Saturday FIRST CHURCH OF I CHRIST, SQENTIST of Lawrence and Williams St. — Pontiac SUNDAY 9:45 A.M. Radio Station CKLW 800kc £ All the scholastic scaffolding j falls', as a ruined edifice, before one single word — Faith.—Napoleon Bonaparte.1 ‘WILLIAMS LAKE • CHURCH OF ' THE NAZARENE 2840 'Airport Road Paul Coleman Minister 10 A.M. — SUNDAY. SCHOOL 11 A.M!-WORSHIP HOUR i 7 PM - WORSHIP HOUR FAITH Baptist Church 3411 Airport Rd. Independent — Fundamental Bible Believing Sunday School.... 10 AM. Church Hour_______11 AM. Evening Service .., 7:00 P.M. • DEAF CLASSES 10 A M. ADULTS - Ken and Vie YOUTH CLASSES* all taught orally by Mbs Delph CIUACI SUNDAY - 7:00 p.m. BIBLE SCHOOL 9:30 am. J MEMORIAL SERVICE MORNING WORSHIP 10:45 a.m, jj Rev. Hectdr McMillan RADIO BROADCAST Message by Mrs. McMillan Station CKLW ‘ 11:00 am. ANNUAL WATCHNIGHT SERVICE YOUTH FELLOWSHIP * 5:45 p.m. * December 3 V EVENING SERVICE 7:00 p.m. | 8:30 through midnight MID-WEEK SERVICE ' , . FEATURING* Helen McAlerney Barth Wednesday* 7:00 p.m. ^ , . Contralto Soloiilt RADIO BROADCAST Radio Personality — Recording Artist WBFG-FM (98.7) SATURDAY 6=15 PM OAKLAND S SAGINAW ; Rev. Robert Shelton •Pwtor Heldint forth the «Did of Life sines 1121 • Hchitni's FIRST Baptist chord A A—12 the Pontiac press, Saturday, December 26, m* LUTHERAN CHURCHES 1 MISSOURI SYNOD j Cross of Christ S » 3§ Cmrcti School ol 9:45 A.M. g; •S Serviced Worship ot ll-AM >£ I* Rn. D. H. Pauling, Potior X £ Fhone 644-6832 \ g: I Sk Stephen :• Church Services 8:00 AM&: :: Sunday School 9:15 AJA Church Services 10:30 AM « | St. Trinity | Auburn ol Jessie | ^ (East Side) Ralph C. Clams, Pallor $ Sunday School ./..MAMS :• hirst Service... /..... 8.30 AM % i Second Service/..... IIMAMjg | St. Paul | > joslyn at Third & / (North Side) & Rev. Maurice Shacktll jv £ Sunday School ... 9.-0$ AM y Services 10:4$ AM ® PEACE »: High School. Highland Heed it G»# # cew lake toad. » £•: Sunday School 9.00 AM. # ® Worship Service 10:30 AM £• S Richard H.Fruckt, Pallor & | Grace I Corner Genes see and Glendale v!; :* (Wed Side) •$ Rickard C. Slackmryor, Pallor# % Church Service . . 9.00 AM S Sunday School . ... 9:00 AM # •:•: Church Service .... 11:00 AM X; X: Sunday School--11.00 AM# 'The Lutheran Hour” over. # 8 CAW 13.30 PM Every Sunday WxWftSW## With six days of hard labor we (buy one day of happiness. But whoever does not know the six will never have the seventh. —Auguste Rodin. Christ's Church of Light NON-DENOMINATIONAl Lotus Lake School, Waterford Cor. Percy King and Harper St. Sunday Schopl 9:45 A.M. Worship . . .! 11:00 A.M. Rev. Eleanor M. O'Dell. OR 3-4710 Rev. Gerald R. Monroe OR 3-7650 BIRMINGHAM UNITARIAN CHURCH Woodward at Lone Pine Rd., Bloomfield Hills, Ml 7-2380 Robert Marshall, Minister "THE PROBLEM OF GOOD" Services: 9:00 and 10.30, with nursery. Church School 10:30 APOSTOLIC FAITH TABERNACLE 93 Parkdale Sunday School....10 AM. Sun. Worship.... 11.15 A.M. Eva Worship.....7:30 PM. Tubs. Bible Study... 7t30 PM. Thun. Young People 7t30 PM Elder EmeoWordeR, Pastor . FE 4-4695 SPIRITUALIST CHURCH of the GOOD SAMARITAN 4780 Hillcrest Dr. Waterford, Mich Sunday Service — 7 P.M d, FE 2-9824 OR 3-2974 "Sene the Lord With Gladness," Psalm I00t2 PONTIAC UNITY CHURCH 8 N. Genesee (Comer W. Huron) 335-2773 SUNDAY WORSHIP METAPHYSICAL SUNDAY SCHOOL BIBLE STUDY CLASS 11:30 AM WEDNESDAYS 8.00 PM EVERETT A DELL, Minister FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 North East Blvd. FE 4-1811 Pastor, WM 1C BURGESS SUNDAY SCHOOL..........10AM WORSHIP ........... IT A.M. EVENING WORSHIP .....7:00 P.M. Everyone Welcome David I. Dm, PaOor FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 54 S. Main St., Clarkslon Sunday School...... ....... 9:45 a.in. Morning Worship............... 11 a.m. Evening worship................. 7:00 p.m. Wed. Prayer and Bible Study .... 7:00 p.itr. MISSIONARY ALLIANCE CHURCH N. Com lake Rd. otM-59 The Rev. G. J. Bene he and Rev. R. D. Porter. Sunday School 9:45 AM. ~ "Worship 11 A.M. "THE PRICE OF DOUBT AND DISOBEDIENCE" Rev. Berseho, preaching "THE REVIVAL,OF FAITH AND OBEDIENCE" Rev. Bersche Speaking ■ CENTRAL METHODIST _ m 3882 Highland Rd. MILTON H. BANK, Pastor M P MORNING WORSHIP 9 AM and 10:45 AM. Dr. Bonk, Preaching Broadcast WFON 1460-11:15 AM. ss| . Church School 9 AM. and 10:45 AM. 5 PM — Youth Fellowships FIRST METHODIST CARL G. ADAMS, Minister ^ South Saginaw at Judson | MORNING SERVICES 8:30 AM. and 11:00 AM | "The Importance of Ideals" 7 | Rev. Adam, preaching 9:45 AM - CHURCH SCHOOL | Methodi* Youth Fellowship 6.15 PM . Wed. 7:30 PM — Bible Study and Prayer Study J mmmmmmmmmmmrnmm ST. PAUL METHODIST 165 E. Square Lake Rd.—Bloomfield Hills Morning Worship 10:00 AM and 1 lt!5 AM. | Church SchoOl 10:00 AM Junior High and Senior Youth Groups, 6>00 PM • ■: g — Rev. Janet-A McClung, Minder—Supervtaed Nursery • ELMWOOD METHODIST 8. ALDERSGATE ‘ fg GRANT ST. AT AURURN AVE. if METHODIST CHURCH g* Erie G. Wehrli, Potior X; 1536 BALDWIN AVE. , ?S Sunday School........ 10 AM.8 Horae# Merry, Pauor #H ~ 11:15 AM#CJwrch Service..... 9:45 AM. ! Evening Worship.....7 P.M. X; Church School ........ .1100 A.M. ?X- t flayer Wed....... 7>M# Wed. Prayer............7:30 P.M. GOING TO CHURCH-Wending their way across the spacious lawn of Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian are families attending festival Christmas services. Pastor Edward D. Auchard stands in the entrance to welcome parishioners. The Orchard Lake Church was built in 1874. Pioneer Girls at College - Students to Participate in Services Methodist Student Day will be observed in Sunday services tomorrow at First Methodist Church, South Saginaw at Judson. It is the day set aside in Methodist churches to honor college students. ★ *. ★ ★ College youth participating in morning services include Marjorie Seaman, Leon Mellen, Larry Beale, Joyce Livingstone, Robert Lorenz Jr., and Barbara Alton. Ushers will be Addison Humphrey, Kelly Gerlinger, Tim Murphy, Frank Hawkins, Tom Griesen, Dennis Cox and David Cox. The Booster Class will meet 6 p.m. Wednesday. Class members will remain for the Bible study and prayer service at 7:30. CHRIST CHURCH CRANBROOK College students of Christ Church Cranbrook are invited to the Christmas Brunch from 10 a.m. to boon Monday at the home of Rev. Gerald O’Grady, 415 Church, Bloomfield Hills. ★ * * If any families who have just come to Christ Church have young people in college, Rev. Mr. O’Grady said he would like their names and addresses so they might be invited. The church will be open New Year’s Eve uhtil 12:30 a.m. for anyone wishing for a period of quiet meditation and prayer. CENTRAL METHODIST College students and service men and women are invited to a breakfast in their honor at 8 in Central Methodist Church Sunday. The breakfast will be in Fellowship Hall. Students will lead the congregation in services of worship tomorrow. CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH Airport and Williams Lake Rds. Sunday School A. 9:20. AM. ,/k, • for all agei WORSHIP SERVICE J1 AM. The purpose of the day to to show toe relationship between toe church and toe academic community, and then to strengthen toe ties, Dr. Milton H. Bank, minister at Central, said. FIRST CHRISTIAN The last Sunday in toe calendar year is traditionally given over to the observance of student recognition at First Christian Church. This year to* college students will lead in morning worship with the theme, "Seeking God’s Word for Our Dny.” Doris Underwood will act as worship leader. Lanny Thompson will give morning prayer and Lesta Stanley will lead responsive reading. Tom Webster will give the Communion meditation and Charlotte DeRousse will read the Scripture. Lloyd Utter back will pronounce toe benediction. At toe conclusion of the service a receiving line for toe young people will be formed at the front of toe sanctuary so members of toe church family may have an opportunity of greeting them... . CHURCH OF GOD Rev. C. E. French, missionary evangelist of the denomination will preach at the revival at the Church of God, East Pike at Anderson starting Thursday evening. The Watch Night service will begin at 9 p.m. The Sacrament of Holy Communion land feet washing will be observed. All other services will begin at 7 p.m. Rev. Mr. French has served as missionary to India, the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Peru, South America. He has done, deputational work in 38 states and Canada. He is presently official representative of missions in the state of North'Carolina. BLOOMFIELD HILLS The traditional Watch Night service will be held at Bloomfield Hills Baptist Church, 3600 Telegraph, Bloomfield Tdwnship from 9 until midnight New Year’s Eve. 1 APOSTOLIC CHURCH of CHRIST 1 REVIVAL g •SUN., | Dec. 27th thru » SUN., | Jan. lQfh 8 7:30 | Nightly | All Are Cordially xx . Invited 8 I with Rev. & Mrs. Billy’McCool § & Mark Anthony | 458 CENTRAL Saturday Young, People ..... 7:30 PM Sunday School and Worthlp 10:00 AM, Services .... 7:30 PM 7.30 PM I Sunday Evening I Toe*. and Thurs. Services Church Phone FE 5-8361 Pastor's Phone 852-2382 % mm There Will be a service of song; testimonies of God’s healing in toe past year; the Moody science film, “Time and Eternity,” and refreshments in Fellowship Hall. The closing moments of toe old year will be sprat in prayer. The conun unity is invited to this service held annually, Pastor Harold W. Gie-seke said. The pastor has chosen for his subject at 11 a.m. tomorrow “Today’s Wise Men.” For the vesper service which includes the rite of Baptism he will speak on “Ready for 1965?” '* * * The choir under the direction of Rick Hartsoe will sing w i t h Mrs. David Warriner of Royal Oak at the organ. The Marimont Baptist Church is sending Linda Van Horn, Janice Dunnam and Sharley Ashley to Pioneer Girls Week at the Grand Rapids Bible College and Seminary next week. ' ★ * * These high school girls wjll spend the week in training at the college studying the Bible, and in seminars learning more about toe work of Pioneer Girls, and how to be more useful in their home church. the Willing Workers Class to underwriting the expense of toe gbto. Officers and sponsors of various youth groups of the church will meet for a planning session at .1:30 p. m. Wednesday. At 5 p.m. they will go to Uncle John's Pancake House for supper. The annual Watch Night service will start at 9 p. m. Thursday. The Gingellville Baptist [ Church will join the Marimont Church for toe affair. The evening will begin with the showing of the “Martin Luther” film. Communion will be celebrated at midnight. ^ The senior high and Teens & Twenties young people of the church will spend Friday at the home of Rev. and Mrs. Robert I Gavette. The program for toe day will i include tobogganing, Ice skaL { tog, ping pong and other ! games. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crichton, and Mr. and Mrs. Philip W. Somers Jr. will help with toe! all day party. The junior department of the | Sunday School will have a party next Saturday afternoon. They will go tobogganing, ice skating | and return to the church for refreshments. Guest From Saginaw Rev. Otis J. Steele of Saginaw will be guest speaker at toe 11 a. m. service tomprrow to Liberty Missionary Baptist Church. The mission program to slated for 3:30 p.m. and young people’s Christmas program at 7:80 p. m. There’s one thing you can justify. You can justify begging God^for guidance. — Gov. Frank G. Clement. REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST of Loiter Day Solid! 19 front St. 11 AM. High Priest Claud* Cook 7 fM Elder Henry Knight Guy Kramer, pastor 852-2574 CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 12 Warren SI. -Speaker 7:30 PM. , Horace' John Drake Silver Tea, Wednesday 7:30 PM HEAR THE FAMOUS GOLDEN KEYS QUARTET New Year's Eve, Dec 31st • Also "Little Aaron" & Family • The Monjar Singers • Marlene Shermon, Soloist e Rev. Clifford Farris, Speaker Watch Nile 8 p.m. to 12 Golden Keys Quartet (Near The Mall) Come-Bring a Friend EVANGELICAL MISSIONARY CHURCH • RADIO 80 CKLW, Sun., 7:30 AM. A. J. Baughey. Pastor CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 347 N- Saginaw, Merrill H. Bolter, Min. B>ble School 945 AM Morning Service 11 AM Evangelistic Service 7 PM. Youth Service 6 P M Wed Bible SKidy 7.30 P M_______ FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN 46 ROSELAWN N. of EAST PIKE $. S. 10:00 A M , Richard Dumbaugh, Supt 1.1:00 AM Worship, Sub. "Where Ar* We*? t Richard Greene Will Speak 332-2412 Evening Worship 7:Cft) EM. Loymc y. Blackwell, Potior * Candlelight at Service The annual Watch Night service at Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church will be from 11:45 p.m. until midnight. This will be a candlelight service of Holy Communion with Ronald Huth, a missionary intern, the speaker. “As the Year Dawns, I Resolve” will be the subject of Rev. Theodore R. Allebach’s sermon at 10 a.m. tomorrow. New members will be received and’The sacrament of Baptism observed. Youth groups will meet at 5:45 p.m. At 7 p.m. Rev. William McKee, missionary to toe Philippines under Overseas Crusade, will speak. Mrs. Charles Brad-sher will tell the children’s story. Special music will include a mixed quartet consisting of Linda Schultz, Jeanne Shafer, Jim Webb and Dennis, Mott. Mrs. Gary Bowes, Kathy O’Brien and Mrs. Thomas Simpson will present a trio Pilgrim Pioneer Girls under the leadership of Mrs. Noble Meredith will present a missionary play at toe quarterly meeting of the -Women’s Association at 7:30 p.m. Monday. Those participating in thp visitation program are to meet at the church at 7 p.m. Monday, the pastor said. The area United Presbyterians .churches will hold the monthly skating party at the University Skating Center from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday. MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68 W. Walton FE 2-7239 Morning Services 8:30 and 11 A.M. aa/Li "the Veneration of immanuel" Sunday School for All Ages — 9:45 AM. Youth Services — 6:30 PM. Evening Services — 7:30 PM. PMd "THE VISION OF INIQUITY" Pastor Somers speaking at both services Skating Party Planned for Deanery The Catholic Youth Organization, North-South Oakland Deanery has made plans for the first deanery activity, a roller skating party at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Rolladium, 4475 W. Huron, Waterford Township. Au members are to present their membership cards and a small fee, with two adult advisers representing toe club, J. M. Corella said. Mr. and Mrs. Corella of St. Williams Catholic Church, Walled Lake are co-chairmen for the deanery. 'Fourteen Teen Clubs comi prising the deanery, will meet in January at Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Parish in Waterford. Recently elected chairman was Jim Miller of St. Williams Teen Club, Walled Lake. Lorrene Hei-pel of Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Teen Club, Birmingham, was named secretary. CHURCH of GOD . East Pike at Anderson PARSONAGE PHONE FE 2-8609 S.S. ....10 AM Worship 11 AM. Evening .. 7 P.M. Young People 7 PM. Wednesday EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH 212 Baldwin Ave. Phone 332-0728 SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:00 A.M - MORNING WORSHIP 11:00 AM SUNDAY SCHOOL PROGRAM 5:30 P.M. . FELLOWSHIP how following the program. Family Communion Service Christmas Eve: 4:00 — 8:00 PM' Reverend Dwight Reibling, Minister COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave. — FE 5-9960 Sunday School..... 9 45 AM Morning Worship...II :00 A.M. Training Union ....... 6:00 PM. Evening Worship....... 7:00 P.M. Midweek Service (Wed.).. 7:45 P.M. Carroll Hubbs, Music Director NORTH EAST COMMUNITY CHURCH Evangelical United Brethren, 620 ML Clemens at f datheratone 9:45 A.M. Church School — 11 AM. Morning Service "GOD’S CALL TO SERVICE" - Installation of Church. Church School and Women's Society of World Service Officers No Evening Service — No Mid Week Service L S. SfhoHolo, Minister '_________________________338-1744 All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike St. THE REV. C GEORGE WIDDIFIELD Rector 8:00 AM. — Holy Communion ft15 Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rev Charles E. Strum Church School 11i15 AM. — Morning Prayer Holy Baptism and Sermon by toe Rev. Charles E. Strum Church School FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin FE 4-7631 Sunday School.'.. 10:00 AM. Sunday Worship. 11,00 AM. Sunday ......... 7-.30 P.M, Wed. Prayer..‘.... 7:30 PM. Saturday Service 7:30 PM. Rev. Loy Barger1, ,P6stor te 4-6994 K EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH ’ 645 S. Telegraph Rd. (Near Orchard Lake Rd.) A Fundamental, Independent, Bible Believing Baptist Church THE BIBLEHOUR... 10 A.M.; Departmentalized. Sunday School for All Ages... | with NO literature but the Biblew DEAF CLASS HEAR Dfe. MALONE teach the word of God verse by verse In the iroadcast on „ ... ,„_B by ' large Auditorium Bible Classy bi WPON 10:15-10:45 A.M. Rev. Leland Lloyd Sunday School Supb TWO GREAT SERVICES In toe 1,200 seat auditorium, ' Baptism every Sunday night. Nursery at all services. -----BUS TRANSPORTATION CALL'FE 2-8328 --------- Dr. Tom Malone, Pastor WPON 10*15-10:45 AM Special Music at All Services i Sunday School Attendance Under The Direction of Joyce Malone ■ Last Sunday 1409 FAULTS SHOE CLEARANCE CONTINUED STYLES ularty 10.99 to 16.98 or 9099 y O •10 i99 i the Jim* to tow on Amor* favonto footwnrl Drasiy, il. tailored stylet. Every fnh-ile heel height All colort All rials. AH shos. but not in PAULI'S SHOE STORE, 35 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1064 A—18 Parents Announce Engagements SUSAN DEAN DUNLAP August vows are planned by Nancy Jeanne Thalacker, daughter of the Arbie 0. Thalackers of Bloomfield Hills, and Ralph D. Whitehead, son of the George E. Whiteheads of Bisbee, Am. Both attend University of Arizona. August vows are planned by Oakland University senior, Susan Dean Dunlap, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Gregg L* Dunlap, Sylvan Lake, and David Lawrence Yuille, son of Glenn Yuitte of Newberry Street and Mrs. Doris Yuille of Lake Angelus. Forest Lake Chosen for Reception A luncheon-reception in Forest Lake Country Club followed the marriage of Rosemary Patricia Reedy to Robert Marvin Brinkman, today, at St. Hugo in the Hills Church, Bloomfield Hills. ★ + w ■ . The Rev. Robert Walsh of Alexandria, Va. performed the ceremony for his niece, daughter of the John Reedys of (Hub Drive. ' MINK COLLAR White mink collared the bride’s Empire princess gown of white satin shantung and fashioned a petite circlet for her imported illusion veil. She carried butterfly orchids. ★ ★ ★ With Maureen Reedy, her sister’s maid or honor, were the bridesmaids, Mrs. Robert Reedy, Marie Brinkman and Nancy Ferdinand. They wore floor - length gowns of emerald satin and velveteen, and carried white muffs. # # it The bridegroom, son of the Marvin Brinkmans of Grosse Pointe, had William Fitzgerald tor best man. Guests were seated by A1 Rutledge, Frank Carta, William Hodgeman and Robert Reedy. The couple will honeymoon in Florida. Wed today at St. Hugo the Hills, were Rosemary. Patricia Reedy, daughter of the John Reedys of Club Drive, and Robert Marvin Brinkman, son of the Marvin Brinkmans of Grosse Pointe. To Grandmother's House MRS. ROBERT M. BRINKMAN Fabulous Ornaments Center of Attraction NANCY JEANNE THALACKER Class of 1959 PCHSWill Hold Reunion The January class of 1959, Pontiac Central High School is having ‘ its first reunion Feb. 13, at-Airway Lanes. *** Former class vice president, Mrs. Robert Spencer (Jeanette Chanesian) is chairman for the event. Fellow classmates attending a planning meeting were Donald Mann, former class president who will act as program chairman, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Christensen, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Nyberg, and Mrs. Robert Harroun. * * * Others were Mrs. Thoipas Sherwood, Mrs. Lynn Nelson and Mrs. Russell Garletz. Class members may contact any of the above for tickets and further information. By SIGNE KARLSTROM Friends are admiring the Robert F. Lytles’ Christmas tree and callers are stopping in to view the artistic work of Mrs. Lytle. ★ ★ * With painstaking hands and hours and hours of work, Mrs. Lytle has made dozens of ornaments — hand blown eggs which she has covered with bright velvet ribbons, rick-rack and sequins. WWW. Some even have a window cut out to show a Christmas scene pasted inside with a * figure in the foreground. After having dinner at the Village Woman’s Club with ' the Lytles the other evening, Mr. and Mrs. George Cutter, Dr. and Mrs. Luther Leader and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Woolfenden marched directly to the Lytle home to study Ane beautiful intricate Christmas ornaments. HOME FROM COLLEGE Home from the University of New Mexico is daughter Jane Lytle and Bob Jr. from Alma College. iririr Gathering at the Don Ahrens’ home on Christmas Day were daughter, Jane, daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Byrnes Jr., and their five children. They All Came Home By MADELEINE DOEREN Some 29 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren gathered for Christmas supper, Friday, in the home of Mrs. Harvey Wheeler on West Cornell Avenue. * * ★ “This is the 54th year I have held open house from five un- At the L. E. Sheppard home were Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Sheppard and their children Karen and David. Mrs. Sheppard’s parents, the Lester Colmans, are spending the holidays in their Arizona home. PARTY TODAY Today, Mrs. Sheppard has scheduled a large cocktail party in honor of her husband’s birthday at Bloomfield Open Hunt Club. Mr. and Mrs. Richard O’Reilly entertained friends for dinner in their home on Dec. 18 and have scheduled another large.dinner party to tonight. y'St ■ W W The Lawrence R. Nelsons are giving .a large cocktail party in their home tonight. Mrs. M. M. Burgess is also entertaining tonight. Hie Wil-lys P. Wagners are giving a dinner party in their home on Sunday. Mrs. Harvey Kresge says they have happily welcomed son Richard home from Texarkana College. * ★ ★ Mrs. Kresge’s sister, Mrs. Henry Dorsey and her daughter who attends SMU arrived from Dallas, Tex. to spend the holidays with them. Mrs. Dewey Speaker for Local Group Mrs. Arthur Dewey was speaker at the recent meeting of the Pontiac Women's dub. She chose as her topic, “Christmas Is Everything." The organization voted to give (200 to the YWCA fund for the purchase of the Leo Beaudette home. ★ ■ * k . I ■ Events scheduled' for 1965 were announced. Mrs.. William Dorris reported on the Southeastern District Federation of Women’s clubs convention held at Adrian. > * ★ Feb. 15 is -the date set for a “Luncheon Is Served’’ party at First Federal Savings of Oakland. At the close of the meeting a silver tea was held for the purpose of adding to the club’s nursing scholarship fund. Mrs. I. M. Lewis and ' Mrs. Maurice Baldwin pre- sided at the tea table. * Sr * Mrs. Alex Christie, Mrs. Dale Moats and Mrs. LeRoy Hecox were chairmen of the day. ' * • * ★ Assisting them were Mrs. E. Oscar Teng, Mrs. W. H. Eustice, Mrs. Harry D. Chapman, Mrs. M. E. Baldwin. Others were Mrs. Henry M. Simpson, Mrs. William Wright and Mrs. Oro D. ' Brown. ★ it . ♦ Guests induded Mrs. Anton Bego, Mrs. Leon Cobb and Mrs. Welley J. McCulloch. til midnight. With their parents, there’ll be 75, which is how many years old I am,” explained Mrs. Wheeler. . ★ . ★ * We thought ‘how many years young'I FAMILY HELPS “My daughters bring salads, rolls and desserts and ‘take over’ the children. The men carve a big ham (it was baking when The Press photographer and I were there on Thursday) and make about 100 sandwiches right on-the-spot. * * ★ “Just think," she added, “My first Christmas tree cut and hauled from die woods near Standish by a young lad cost twenty-five cents.” This was no time, however, to even think about inflation! * « * ★ ' High point of the celebration this year was the arrival from Madrid, Spain, of Staff Sgt. and Mrs. Harold Tunney. Mrs. Tunney 4s' Mrs. Wheeler's granddaughter. * * * “This is the first time the entire family has been together in five years,” said Mrs. Ralph Bowers a daughter who lives across the street “Harold has been with the Afar Force in Spain for over three years.” ★ ★ .* The Wheeler sons are Keith, of West Beverly Avenue and Kennoff of Waverly Street, Drayton Woods. ★ ★ * Daughters include Mrs. Walter Millage of West Brooklyn Avenue, Mrs. Keith Morgan of Famer Street, Mrs. Bowers, Mrs. C. B. Chamber-lain of Sashabaw Road and Mrs. J. R. Stump of Mary Sue Drive, Independence Township. ★ * * Ann Bowers, 6, is the youngest grandchild and three-month-old Elise Keeler, the youngest great-grandchild. THREE DECADES Mrs. Wheeler, bom in Grayling, was married in Standish and has lived in Pontiac for 36 years. ★ ★ ★ She always enjoys lighting the holly centerpiece which has been in the family some 30 years. It rests on a lattice-work base (an inverted bowl) of English china that belonged to her mother-in-law. Other Guests Mrs. Pearl- Peterson and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Keenan and their son Sheldon of Chicago, were among the guests Christmas Day in the Bloomfield Hills home of Gov. and Mrs. George W. Romney. MARY JO THOMPSON One Photograph Is Worth Thousands of Complaints Mrs. Harvey Wheeler lights the candles as 75 members of her family gather for the traditional Christmas supper-party in her horde on West Cornell Avenue. A J une wedding is planned by Mary Jo. Thompson, daughter of the David S. *hompsons of lluffton, Ihd., and Don Frederick Carlson, son of the Glen A. Carlsons yf Bloomfield Hills. Both are seniors at Indiana University. Mr. and Mn William L. Harris of Lancaster Road announce ih engagement of their ( daughter, Kathleen An to Michael ■E. Thornton son of Mr. and Mrs. Norbert F. Leszczynski of Detroit. She is a Marygrove College senior. KATHLEEN ANN HARRIS our age there is nothing wrong with it. If we were teenagers, it would be different. Of course, I flatly refused. He said if all I wanted out of him was an escort, I could count him out. I enjoy his company. Should I go out with him again if he asks me? He has money and could get plenty of other women. *>, TROUBLED V* * ★ . DEAR TROUBLED: I say let one of the other women have him. She can also have the .pleasure, of moving in (to find out if they are compatible) and perhaps wind up being a housekeeper with sleep-in privileges. Respectable couples (at any age) stitt1 get mdrried before they live together. DEAR ABBY: Please tell me if I have a right to be resentful. Apparently my husband’s mother doesn’t know I’m alive. She writes letters to. him and they all begin, “My dear son, Bertram.” She never mentions my name, but she does inquire about our children. Her letters are always 10 or Yule Party for TBI Unit TBI Women’s club held its annual Christmas dinner party in the Waldron Hotel. Following a program of entertainment, plans were discussed for the coming year. I' ★ ★ Members and friends brought gifts for the Oakland founty Youth Home, which is an annual project for the club. 12 pages long. If she would * send a small “regards” to me in her letters it would mean a lot to me. I never did anything to hurt her. I am a good wife to her son, and a good mother to her grandchildren. She lives a long way frpm here and we don’t see her very often, but she remembers the children with gifts, and my husband, too. I wonder if she knows her son’s wife is living? I asked my- husband once, and he said, “Mother is a little peculiar.” Should I write and introduce myself to her? IGNORED ★ * ★ DEAR IGNORED: No, Perhaps your husband was being kind. By “peculiar" he might have been trying to tell you that his mother’s mental horizon is pretty narrow. Don’t demand that your husband account for his mother’s actions. He’s probably as uneasy about his mother’s attitude as you are — and equally helpless. DEAR ABBY: I just found out that my girlfriend kept a diary of our dates and she wrote a bunch of stuff in it that never happened. It was all out of her imagination. Her mother read it and now she refuses to lot me date her. Abby, we never dkl anything wrong. What can I do? NOT GUILTY * * ★ DEAR NOT GUILTY: Proclaim your innocence and hope her mother believes you. And next time you become toter-■ ested in a girl who goes in for creative writing, suggest she use an outlet other than. her diary for her talents. DEAR ABBY: I recently came across a picture in the paper of three women as they stood Jto wTves of^B Ohio’s , sens- ABBY tors) and. Mrs. Anthony Cele-brezze, the wife of our Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare. . They were all beautifully dressed and bedecked with orchids. Both Mrs. Lausche and Mrs. Young were standing to their stocking feet! Now if this doesn’t convince the shoe industry that their shoes are killing our feet, I don’t know what it will take. I would appreciate your opinion. RUTH CHASE * * ★ DEAR RUTH: Amen! The Senators’ wives should have urged Mrs. Celebrezze to get the message to her husband in the Department of H<h, Education, and Welfare. Stylish, but uncomfortable shoes, are certainly affecting our health and Welfare, And. the answer could be “educa-tloo.”! DEAR ABBY: I would like a few opinions on a problem I’ve been having. I was going with a man of 60. I am 47. I was very fond of him and he led'me to believe that the feeling was mutual. Three weeks ago he asked me to move into his house and live common-law with him until we found out if we were compatible. He says ft mm--/ A—14 Waldron Hotel PIKE AMD PERRY ■taOE OF TOE FAMOUS WALDRON BUFFET SERVED S TIMES DAILY . Buffet or Table Service Style £uh4a*i Plantation Sreak^aM M-ltYtt H mtttMw II Ym cm t«t I1.4S MENU Pratt Jake. Breakfast Fruit, Swwi ■•Hi. Prance TomI, Frlid Patotoav Creamad Drtad let, CMcfcaa LMr, ScramMad Eggs, H*t Cakaa, Bacon, Iwmi, Mam. Hal CaMaa, CaM Milk and Caraal. Make ReeerVaoona for oar Gala New Year's Eve Celebration. Dancing, Snacks, Fun. X* j A . 9 9#» All Ym Cm !af $un. to 399.95. Now from «« Living Room Suites MK Colonial—Modern Tra ditional — Ass't colors — pick them up yourself. Those sold for up to $399.95. QQIMQ FROM CHAIRS—CHAIRS OUT Swivel rockers Lounge-Rodinors TH_Y Ass't covers and stylos Priced originally to 149.95. FW0M 8*8 THIS IS ONLY A SAMPLE OF WHAT WE NAVE LEFT-DONT MISS THIS ONCE IN A 'LIFETIME SAVINGS. HURRY OUT NOW. WE MUST VACATE! N8 MONEY DOWN! 0PEN-10:00 A.M. to 9 P.M. SUNDAY - 12:00’til 6:00 Ellen’s parents can’t subsidize than and her . boyfriend’s parents are also unable to do so. Ellen would thus rein her boyfriend’s economic future just to, indulge her selfish desires Tor erotic thrills now! So—if they marry—they’ll probably be forced to live with their in-laws. With a squalling baby in the bouse within a year, and with another older woman in control, Ellen will grow resentful, frustrated and soon WELL BE RESENTFUL Her husband, too, will feel hamstrung as he watches his fofmOr classmates advancing toward their law degree. And in 10 years more, those law students will be in active practice with homes in at-tractive residential suburbs and driving new can. But Ellen’s husband, if he isn’t divorced by that time, will be living in a shack or still sponging off the in-laws for house rent. Ellen will be bedraggled and fault-finding, with 4 or 5 kiddies hanging to her skirts. The divorce rate among these young couples is terrific and you can see why. For happy marriage is a big job even when you don’t start out with one or two strikes against you. > “Love flies out the window,” runs , an old' adage, “when poverty walks in the door,” is still a truism. Jesus said the poor would be with us always, and that is true for a lot of people are feeble-minded outright and others, like Ellen, park their brains when they want to marry! (Always write to Dr. Crana In car* of The Pontiac Press, enclosing a Mr. and Mrs. Rufus B. Hicks, New York Avenue, announce the engagement of their daughter, Wilma Jean to Dale Eugene Bessey, son of Mrs. Harry Haight Jr. and William. Bessey, both of East Tawas. A June wedding is planned. Keep Parts Clean The drip pan in your cooking range should be removed once in a 'while for washing in hot sudsy water. Between washings, wipe it clean with a well-lathered cloth or sponge. You'll Want to Care Well for Christmas Plants Flowering .plants make ideal Christmas gifts. Their color and beauty remain bright long after the last Christmas tree decoration has been tucked away. The Society of American Florists says the giving of flowering plants is growing more and more popular. A wide variety of holiday season plants is available at neighborhood florist shops. Of all the beautiful flowering plants available during the yuletide season, probably the one that carols “Merry Christmas!” the clearest is the poinsettia. While its crimson blossoms are moat closely allied with the holidays, poinsettias also are available in a delicate shade of off-ivory. A hybrid plant haa been produced, too, that has a dainty pink bloom. HATE DRAFTS Poinsettias should be kept in a warm room, away from drafts. They will keep their blooms longer if they are given plenty of light and sufficient water at room temperature. Jerusalem Cherry, a merry little tree, does not haVe blossoms. However, its tiny round fruit are as bright as Christmas baubles. Another plant of the same sort is the Christ- mas Pepper. Its fruit, when ripe, is a bright, bright red; and the contrast of wholly and partially ripe peppers is especially appropriate to the yuletide season. Both of these plants prefer a cool evening temperature of approximately 55 degrees F., though they will tolerate temperatures as high as 61 degrees F. with no ill effect. Keep them in a sunny window because they love light. CYCLAMENS Cyclamens, always popular, are handsome even when not in bloom. The flowers are breathtakingly beautiful, looking like a cloud of butterflies, hovering over the plant. Cyclamens, available in a wide range of colors, should be kept moist by immersing the pot in water. The crown of the plant should be kept dry to discourage rot. The cyclamen should be treated to cool evenings. The same temperatures as those suitable for the Jerusalem Cherry are right for it. Q. My husband reads the mail and also reads your column, so please answer my question in the column without any name. I am 5 feet tall and weigh 110 my hips 38 inches. I am 50 years old. Do. you think my waist is out of tine? A. You are a very few pounds overweight. You would have STAPP'S Cfieafcame, FROM OUR STOCK OF FAMOUS MAKE Children's-Boys'-Girfs' Shoes SoSkr pAic&ll Sale Starts Monday 'of 9:30 A.M. ODDS and ENDS TABLE Includes slippers, dress shoes and boots for boys and girls and an assortment for teens, 1°9 GIRLS' SCHOOL SHOES -A wonderful—value group! Oxfords, loafers, straps, pumps. Variety of styles and colors. Childrens' sizes 6-3. Growing girls' sizes 5-8. DRESSY PARTY SHOES Black patents. Nylon velvets. Straps and pumps for girls and young misses. Sizes , 6-3 and some for larger girls 5-8. ;Q99 STRIDE-RITE Discontinued Styles Beginning aM Values . . . bargains . . . buys in boys' and girls' styles; straps, loafers, oxfords. Reds, browns, beige and natural elk. Sizes 816-3 and growing girls' sizes 5-8. Beginning at i A99 \eJ pr. Boys' and Men's-Here Are Bargains At The Huron Store Only Oxfords, loafers. Blacks, browns. Smart footwear for all uses. Famous makes and at sale prices. Boys' sizes 316-6, .Men's sized 6V2 up. = A99 S,/ pr- STAPP'S JUNIOR SHOES (Open. Frj. to 9:00) JUVENILE BOOTERiE 28 E. Lawrence St., Downtown Open Mon. to 8.30 and Frl.to.9 awl JUNlbR SHOES '928 W. Huron at Tala graph ■ Open Fri. to 9:00 and. Sot. to 830 pounds. My bust measures 37 better figure with a couple ininches, my Waist 29 inches and ches less in your waist measure- — ' ..... ~ ment. Take waist slimming ex- I ercises and watch your diet for of about five pounds. ■inventory value-pocked.. Q. Some time ago you pub- lished exercises for sacroiliac I sufferers. Will you please publish them again? I know several arthritis sufferers who were helped by these mild exercises. | HELPFUL EXERCISES A. I will be glad to give you a few of them. .1. Lie on the floor on yonr back. Bend tbe knees nnd place the feet on the floor. Separate the knees. Bring them together. Continue separating nnd bringing together. 2. Make circles with your left knee. Keep it bent. Circle outward. Do the same thing with your right knee. 3. Stand tall. Walk in place, lifting your knees up high in front of you. o Storewide SALE Starts Saturday Both Stores V3 to V2 off COATS & CAR COATS I Entire stock! Includes Fur Trims, Meltons, Chesterfields. Sizes 3-15. ^ \0 IMPORTED Sfcl SWEATERS Naw *19.99 Reg. $30 end $35. Famous name, ell wool, big variety. MINK TRIMMED SUEDE COATS Now *69.99 L DRESSES AND JUMPERS (• 70% off Every dross in stock included! All stylet end colors in qroup. HOLIDAY BLOUSES SAVE! \» \ ft Reg. $110! Antelope, taupe, blue, brown. 6 to 14. Entire collection of crepes. Prints end solid colors. \ ^ o\ SKIRTS & SLACKS SWEATERS SAVEI Mohair Cardigans o\ Holiday paoteli, plaids, end . basics. Wool* end mixture*. Now $8.99 Reg. $12.98 Save! ... Fur Blendti Bulkiei, Dyed-to-matcb.^D sizes, colors. The Ferris Walkers of Davisburg Road, Rose Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Ann to C. Douglas Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Williams of Hillsboro Road, Springfield Totonshiv. Breakfast for Couple After Vows A breakfast in Bedell’s followed the vows of Norine Helen Blake and Dennis Robert Alien today in the Sacred Heart Church, Auburn Heights. *r - * W The couple will begin their northern honeymoon after an evening reception in the Ledbury Efrive home of her parents, the Francis P. Blakes. HAND-BEADED Hand-beaded Alencon lace detailed the bride’s princess gown of white silk bombazine, worn with illusion veil and jeweled tiara. She carried white carnations. Attending their sister were honor matron, Mrs. Robert Croaadell, and the Blake twins Louise and Marilyn, as bridesmaids. j ★ * . Pink satin cummerbunds accented their gowns of white satin with cranberry velvet bodices. Their bouquets were pink-tipped white-carnations. Sarah Skillman of Birmingham was flower-girl. * Robert Croasdell was best man for the son of the Glenn R. Allens of Henrydale Street, Avon Township. Ushers were Chief Quartermaster USN David Blake, Norfolk, Va., John Chamberlain, James Allen and Raymond Blake. Mark Blake carried the rings. Custom built horn*. An unusual on* floor plan on landscaped lot with sc i on# of our best lakes iust o few minutes from Ponjiae A circular I rtooks the lake.'iarge livingNsnd dining area With raised hearth I tire place/Step down family room 17x24, master bedroom 12x19, plenty of I closet space, 2Vs ceramic baths, modern kitchen and nook, paneled den or I gas’ FA heat, att 2 Room HnaidiHer *29" GE Portable Dishwasher $}(j7" 3-Way Combo—23” TV *288" • “ Phono-FM/AM «0® 16-lick Portable TV *88" 14^ Automatic Washer *186" GE Refrigerator Freezer *157" Everything Must Go A—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 ONE COLOR VOLUNTARY DISPOSAL L PUBLIC Clearance FAMILY HOME FURNISHINGS 2135 DIXIE HWY. Cor. TELEGRAPH WE NEED CASH EVERYTHIN IN THE STORE THE EASIEST TERMS OFF NO MONEY DOWN THIS IS A MUST SALE FAMOUS NAME ORANDS TO HE DISCOUNTED AMERICAN FURNITURE MFG. CO. THE ARTISTIC FURNITURE CO. C. B. ATKINS ATHENS BED AUTHEBTIS FURNITURE CO. ARTCRAFT AARON BROS. ASHLEY FURNITURE CO. ARNOLD MFG. CO. A A W MFG. CO. A A LAWN CC. BRIGGS UPHOLSTERY CO. B. BRODY SEATING CO. BASSETT BASIC WITZ CARPETS INTERNATIONAL CARVER CHAIR COLEMAN BEDROOM COMFY-COOK MFG. CO. CRAFT ASSOC. CASA DEL MUNDO CAPITOL BEDDING CHICAGO TABLE CO. DIVIO M. LEA CO. DETROIT MFG. CO. EDDYSTONE MAN EI B CARPETS FREIDMAN INC. FUGQITI STUDIOS GLUCK BROS. CATHY CO. DAKIN CHAIR DEAN IND. THE DAVIS CO. FONTAINE FORTUNE LAMPS FRISCO MANN CO. JALAX CHAIR HAUSSKE HARLAN HOOVER CHAIR HOUSE OF PICTURES IMPERIAL CARPET JEM FURNITURE L.B. JONES JOHNSON-TOMLIGBEE KEMP FURNITURE CO. KENLEN CRAFTS KINCAID FURNITURE LAINE UPHOLSTERY CO. LAWRIN LAMP LUSTRA LAMP MARL DINETTES MAOISON . MODELINE LAMPS LUMBERTON MARTINSVILLE MILLBROOK MORSE IND. INC. MONARCH RALPH MORRIS NATIONAL POTTERY NATIONAL MATTRESS OLYMPIC PIONEER FURNITURE CO. PULASKI PEAKLINE PHILIP REINISCH RESTONAIRE RICHARDS BEDDING SAN HYMENE SCHWEIGER IND. STANLEY FURNITURE STYLELINE SOFA SUPERIOR FURNTIURE CO. STANDARD CHAIR SCHOR PARCRAFT . SUGGS UPHOLSTERY CO. TASSELL IND. INC. VAUQHAN BASSETT FURNITURE WARREN WELLS FAMILY HOME FURNISHING CO. WILL OFFER ALL $130,000 OF IT'S INVENTORY TO THE PUBLIC YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD LIVING ROOM Newest 2-Pe. SUITES $1(88 *139 VALUE SALE PRICES START AT . . *198 2-Pc. SUITES - *117 *248 2-Pc. SUITES-*178 *299 2-Pc. SUITES-*188 *398 2-Pc. SUITES -*228 *449 2-Pc. SUITES- *268 WE WILL NOT KNOWINGLY BE UNDERSOLD TRY US CLEAN’SWEEP YOU SAVE UP TO ns DURING THESE DAYS! A SNAU. ttPOSJT HOLDS YOUR DEAL BEDROOM SUITES MODERN/ALL NEW $1T9 VALUE PRICES START AT.. *st BEDRM. SUITES IS’:!1".... *99 BEDRM. SUITES r:™ *117 BEDRM. SUITES *166 BEDRM. SUITES ^^ *280 BEDRM. SUITES £!~*368 SECTIONALS 2- and 3-Pe. SOFAS SOME WITH THE SENSATIONAL NEW CURVE ’154 $229 Value — 3-pc. Sectional Choioe of decorator colors... $291 Value - 4-pc. ’‘Curved” Sectional, $1 Q E Choice o! decorator colors.............. Iww $339 Value - 3-pc. “Curved’* Sectional, $1OQ high grade modem covers................. IUU MAPLE GROUPING Many Different Styles to Choose • 2-cushioned wing sofa Ref. $419.85 50 ►1 solid maple coffee table • ? solid maple step tables • 1 wing back club chair • 2 table lamps 299! CHRISTMAS LEFT-OVERS COLONIAL ACCESSORIES FAMOUS-NAME ROCKERS (Rscliners) Were $119.95.......................$58 Swivel Rockers Were $89.95 ..... $47 Recliner Chairs............. from $24.95 Trivets..... .............................. 97e Double Sconces........................... $1.95 Triple Soortees............................$3.49 Lge. Pepper Mills .*.. .................. $3.49 IOC’s of Other Items0... Save 50% or More FAMILY HOME FURNISHINGS 2135 DIXIE HWY., Cor. TELEGRAPH Open Sunday Noon 'til ? Open Monday 10 'til 10 INNER SPRING MATTRESS.. DOX SPRINGS VALUE BUY OF THE CENTURY, BOTH FOR •34“ NAME BRANDS NOT PERMITTED TO ADV. n7i QUEEN SIZE $11)0 $199.95 Value, Par Sat, Now ... ■ U U IS Year Ouarantaa ■ Croup $69.50 Innerspring Mattress 0 ■■ MM No 2 5*9.50 Matching Box Spring *||K n99 * . lOYeUrGuoront.. ,0r ifO Group $59.50 Innerspring Mattress . .. 0 M ft Na 4 SBS.BB Matching Box Sorine NO. 3 559.50 Matching Box Spring Quilted, l 0 Year Guarant.. Croup S4I.6C Innerspring Mattress . .h C Mat A SA9.50 Matchine Box S urine W No. 4 541.50 Matching Box Spring ** 01 5-Y.ar Guarant.. WWVrl "Worry-Free” Payment Plan ...Three Years to Pay fm THREE COLORS ; , v ' „ • . ^ /1^ Roast Beef is Star of New Year s Day By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor 'By the time you’re ready to plan your dinner for New Year’s Day you’ll be tired of poultry in any form—maybe also of ham. This is the time to consider a roast of beef as the main attraction of the meal. It may be one of the few times during the year when you splurge on such a cut of meat. If you are buying a standing rib roast, allow 44 pound per serving; Vi'pound per serving will bfc enough in a boneless, rolled roast. There’s never any problem with leftover roast beef.' Roasting of this kind of beef is always done in a 325-degree oven. The okl-fashioned cook “seared in” the juices a high temperature first—or so she thought. What she was actually doing was driving out the delicious meat juices into the pan, leaving the meat dry and shrunken. Place the roast, fat side up, on a rack in an open, low-sided pan. Do'not add water. Do not cover. Insert a roast meat therometer. Approximate roasting tjmes are given below; Standing ribs 9 Internal Approximate Temperature Time* Rare 140 degrees 22-26 min. per lb. Medium 160 degrees 26-30 min. per lb. Well done 170 degrees 33-35 min. per lb, Rolled rib roast Internal temperatures are the same, but add 5 to 10 min. per lb. to above times. The smaller number of minutes per pound is for larger roasts. (6-6 pounds.) Time your cooking so that the roast can sit for about 15 minutes on a heated platter after it it done. This makes for better flavor and makes carving easier. Lower temperatures throughout the cooking Canned Barlett pears make attractive period produce a handsome looking roast that garnishes for any roast. Take your choice from is plump and juicy. the recipes below. Is Creamy, Frozen RIB ROAST ELEGANCE-Start 1965 right garnished with pears rose. The rest of the wittered brussels sprouts and a plate for dessert. YORKSHIRE PUDDING 2 tablespoons roast beef drippings * 2 eggs 1 6up milk 1 teaspoon salt 1 cop flour , Pour drippings into .10-iiKdi'!mainlng ingredients and beat pie plate or shallow baking dish, tilt to coat surface. Combine re- with rotary beater to make a smooth batter. Pour into prepared baking dish. Bake in 425-degree oven for 25 minutes or until golden brown. Serve immediately, tyfokes 6 servings. BARTLETT PEARS ROSE l can (1 lb. 13 ox.) Bartlett pear halves 44 cup rose wine Red food coloring Drain pear syrup into saucepan. Add wine and a drop or i.two of red food coloring to tint a pale pink. Add pear halves and bring to simmer. Chill in syrup 9'vernight. Drain and serve with roast beef, garnishing with sprigs of parsley. Party Food for New Year's Eve Always Festive New Year's Eve parties are j too. This is a time to make up | An old Scandinavian traditionj in their New Year's Eve buffet, j add it to potato salad, usually informal, carefree oc-I^P8 a™! spreads for snacking. an(j one that some Italians ob- S*™*5 it pickled, right from Other hostesses plan for oys- rasians It’s the time vou invite IIn addltion to the cract i serve too is eatina herring on ““ jar; serve u on dark pum' ters ta some form- U y°u have a casioM.lt site time you invite I ^ a ^ o{ raw vege- j ~° “ “Ug pernickel bread as a sandwich chafing dish, prepare oyster your friends for .an evening of tables, maybe even some Melba I ^ew Years Day. Some bos- topped egg, marinated stew or creamed oysters to 1 toast for weight watchers. 1 tesses always include herring j onions and^a pinch of dill. Or | spoon over rice. Plain Pudding Is Glamourized CURRANT GLAZED PEARS 1 can (1 lb. 13 oz.) Bartlett pear halves' 1 cup red currant jelly 1 tablespoon lemon juice Drain pear halves, measuring 44 cup pear syrup into saucepan. Add jelly and lemon juice. Heat until blended. J Add pear halves and bring to simmer. Chill in syrup several hours. Drain and serve on roast beef platter with a twist of lemon in center of each pear half. Note: Any bright red jelly like red cherry, strawberry or mixed fruit may be used in place of currant jelly. casual conversation, maybe some dancing and, finally, a toast to the new year at midnight. The food you serve is informal Tobasco Sauce Adds Zest to Snack Foods Stuffed Eggs Hold Surprffi** of Herring Herring has long been the mainstay of the canape tray. Now Schmaltz herring is used imaginatively in creamy stuffed eggs combined with sour cream. Herring Staffed Eggs 8 hard cooked eggs 44 cup minced herring '44 cup sour cream 1 tablespoon chopped celery 1 tablespoon chopped capers Salt and paprika Iff small strips of herring Parsley sprigs • ’ Shell eggs and cut into halva* lengthwise. Scopp'(Mt ypwfc carefully, reserving egg whites for refilling. Mash or sieve egg yoke cm make-"the fanciest rancor gjMfeSift £ - ^r^, gll^dfo btff ami blend in herring, sear cream, celery and capers. Add salt and paprika to taste. Restaff egg whites, heaping the filling high. » Garnish each eg§ half with a strip of herring and a tiny sprig of parsley. Chop onions in jar of herring and sprinkle over the top of the herring strips. Chill until ready to serve. Makes 16 stuffed egg halves.' With a little imagination, some of the simplest foodstuffs lions, as witness the HBSticthrt little open sandwiches. The secret is in the seasoning of the spreads and Tabasco liquid red pepper sauce adds zesty sparkle to varimis spreads. * * -T* Using ijj6 or pumpernickel bread, spread with any of the mixtures and garnish with the appropriate topping: hard-cooked egg, smoked salmon, sliced shrimp, olives, parsley and dill. Twin tree Molds, to serve with crackers, are made by packing a mixture of cream and Cheddar cheeses, mayon- csiHun and Tabasco into cone- , shaped Stem glasses sprinkled with parsley. The molded mix-ture is removed after chilling- Those who love mushrooms will love mushrooms vinaigrette, made by marinating the partially cooked vegetable in vinegar, oil, Tabasco and garlic. Twin Tree Molds Butter or margarine Parsley, minced 44 pound riiarp Cheddar 1 cheese, grated 1' package (8 ounces) cream cheese 1 teaspoon Tabasco teaspoon minced onion Grease 2 cone - lisped stem glasses (approxhnately 13 ounced btich) with bbfter. Generously sprbrid*-cacInMBs with parity. Blend CheeSbs, mayonnaise. Tabasco and onkw. Fold in whipped cream. 1 Cartfully spoon mixture into! Ham Spread: molds. Chill about 2 hours. Un- j cans (214 ounces each mold. Serve with crackers. Yield: 2 molds. A 3-cup mold or 4 6-ounce custard cups may be used. Mushrooms Vinaigrette 14 teaspoon Tabasco 6 slices rye or pumpernickel Cream or Iriifo spreadable; add milk, if desired. Blend in Tabasco. Spirited off bread. Garnish with slice of Igpoked salmon or one of the suggested garnishes. Yield: 12 open sandwiches. deviled ham 2 tablespoons mayonnaise 1 tablespoon butter • 1 teaspoon minced onion 44 teaspoon Tabasco 1 pound muphrooms, quartered j 3 riiCM fyW 'Sr pumpernickel 1 tablespoon salt 14 cup wine.vfoegar 6 tablespoons olive oil 44 teaspoon Tabasco l garlic clove v ** 3 tablespoons chopped g r ecn pepper, optional Cook mushrooms in small amount of water until barely tender. CoOi. Place in bowl; sprinkle with salt. AzfiJ vinegar, oil, Tabasco, and garlic clove; toss gently. Chill stirring oc-r casionally. Sprinkle with chopped green ^pepper, if desired. Yield: Approriinately 8 snack - type servings. OPEN SANDWICHES Cream Cheese: 1 package (8 ounces) cream cheese 2 tablespoons milk, optional (iibbp fresh ftfte : i'cup fir* bread, sliced in half Combine all Ingredients. Spread on bread.- Garnish. Yield: 6 open sandwiches. Date Pudding Is Steamed an Hour Served Warm A butter-cream sauce adds a fine touch to a not-too-rich pudding made with fresh dates. Steamed Date Pudding fitehdates Scup firmly packed brown r ; ' sugar tablespoons butter, melted i&4 cups rifted flour 1 .teaspoon each! baking pow-l^der and baking soda T teaspoon salt ;44 teaspoon cinnamon V* teaspoon nutmeg ' 1-3 cup coffee beverage Pit and slice dates. Beat egg slightly; gradually beat in the -beat in butter to bak- Serve Punch With Base of j Pineapple Drink a toast to (tip1 New Year with this popular pineapple punch. Canned pineapple juice is the perfect base for the reblend. It’s enhanced with citrus juices, papaya nectar, rum, brandy and sparkling champagne. Its bouquet is as fragrant as that of tropical! flowers. *, * * I Another great pineapple punch favorite is a tangy sherbet punch that’s fizzy and frothy. Plan this one for the tots and teenagers. Golden Holiday Punch -2- (46-ounce) cans pineapple juice I pint orange juice 1 (12-ounce) can papaya nectar Vi cup lemon- juice 1 pint dark turn Vi pint brandy 1 large- bottle champagne - (about J6 ounces) Combine AH ingredients except champagne. Cover and re-frigerate 24 hours to lhellow flavors. Pour over ice in punch bowl. Add chilled champagne |ttst' before serving. Makes about 1 gallon. Pineapple 'Sherbet Punch 1 (48-ounce) can pineapple juice 1 pint orange juice 44 cup lemon juice 1 quart ginger ale 1 quart pineapple sherbet Chill ingredients. Blend juices; add ginger ale and sherbet, stirring until sherbet is softened and partially dissolved. Garnish punen bowl with ice ring. Makes about 2 quarts (20 servings). Convenience foods make “Almond Fantasy” a breeze to pre-pare. Moreover, you whip up thi$ dessert well ahead of serving-time to give it time to be chilled properly. It would be hard to picture a handler convenience food than i roasted diced almonds. Pack-1 aged in attractive tins, these almond morsels are always 'ready ter immediate use inrecipes.' 1 Almond Fantasy 1 package (414 oz.) instant chocolate pudding mix 2 teaspoons instant coffee powder 44 teaspoon rum extract 2 cups miniature marshmallows 1 tablespoon chopped crystallized ginger 1 cup whipping cream 1 cup roasted diced almonds 1 ban (844 oz.) fruit cocktail, drained * Prepare pudding as package directs. Stir in coffee powder, rum extract, marshmallows and ginger. Whip Cream. Fold into pudding mixture along with almonds and fruit cocktail. Spoon into individual dessert dishes. Chill until ready fo serve. Fruit in Sandwich For an unusually tasty sandwich, mix well drained canned fruit cocktail with cottage cheese ; spread between slices of 1 buttered toasted rye or cracked wheat bread. SPICED CINNAMON PEARS 1 can (1 lb. 13 qz.) Bartlett pear halves V« cup. red cinnamon candies, 1 tablespoon lemon juice Drain pear halves. Heat pear syrup with cinnamon candies and lemon juice until candies dissolve. Add pear halves and bring to simmer. Chill several hours. Drain and serve with roast beef. Yourshtre pudding is to roast beef what ham is to eggs. In the olden days when meat was roasted over an open fire, the pudding was placed under the roast for the last few minutes of cooking to that it might absorb the rich drippings frdm the .beef itself. Serve it, cut into squares, with gravy. Anchovy Sauce Drain and mince anchovies; add them to hot olive oil or melted butter. Use this sauce for hpt cooked •tj r a i n e d spaghetti. Frost Sausage Mold Scrumptious appetizers which can be made ahead of time are I a real boon to a busy hostess. Frosted liver sausage mold is certain to be a favorjlto. The j spicy sausage mold can be made a. day ahead, stored in the refrigerafor and q u i c k 1 y frosted with cream cheese and sprinkled with chopped nuts at the very last minute. Served with crackers or party rye, it makes an appetizer with that “I’ll have another” flavor. Frosted Liver Sausage Mold 1 pound liver sausage i envelope (1 tablespoon) plain gelatin 1 cup tomato juice - 2 tablespoons grated onion y« teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons Worcestershire Sauce 4 drops Tabasco sauce 2 packages (3 ounce each) I cream cheese, room temperature Chopped nuts and/or i minced parsley | Soft gelatin in tomato juice. Place over low heat; stir until gelatin is dissolved. Combine liver sausage, onion, salt, Worcestershire and Tabasco sauce; beat until smooth. Add tomato mixture; blend well. Pour into tightly oiled 3-cup . bowl. Chill until firm. Unmold on serving plate. Stir, cheese until smooth. Frost liver sausage with cream cheese. Sprinkle with chopped nuts or minced parsley. Yield: About 2 cups. Ring Around the Fruit Prepare 1 box (644 ounces) fluffy white frosting mix as directed on package. Whip 1 heavy cream until stiff and each vanilla and into ,144 with until . ♦.,, ready to -serve, dip of warin water serving {date. 1 package of partially thawed, dies, strawberries Makes 6 serv- i is the pase of whichever one I 1 I i B—2 ♦ J8885 4Q2 VQ10I7S VKJ85 ♦ Non* N ♦ J 7 6 ♦ 875 4QJ82 SOUTH (D) ♦ AK4 ft: 4 AQ10854 ♦ K64 Both vulnerable Swath Wert Nsrth East 1* Pass 3 4 Pass 3* Pass 3N.T. Pass 44 Ppm 4f, Pass «♦ Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—V 7. By OSWALD JACOBY Now for one of the interesting hands of the year, a brilliant falsecard by ' He ratted a heart'at trick two, drew trumps with three leads, noting that West discarded hearts. Then he ruffed dummy’s last heart. At this point he could have made the hand by cashing the top spades and clubs and leading a third club. Reese in the East seat would have to win and lead either a club or a heart to give South a ruff and discard. Terence saw all this com; ing and proceeded to give South a problem by dropping the gueen of spades on the first lead of that suit. South solved the problem the wrong way. He decided that the queen had been a singleton, and, therefore, South played out ace, king -and a third club before cashing his second 'high spade. Reese was in with the club and set the hand with the deuce of spades lead. Fish Strayed From Water .CALHOUN, Ky. IX) - Gordon McLaughlin doesn’t need a lot of Taney equipment when he goes fishing. He foupd a live five-ajid-three-quarter inch catfish in his rain-soaked orchard, a mile from the nearest pond or stream. j He still hasn’t decided how it got there. IHK PONTIAC PRKSS. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 BEN CASE? JACOBY world. The Swiss players bid a trifle too much with the North-South cards, but strangely enough the unsound slam could have been made if South had known just where the East-West cards were located and Started out with the winning line of play. Q—The bidding has been: West North East South !♦ Dble. Pass 14 Pass 2 V Pass t You, South, hold: *7848 V6 5 4 4QJ 1*8 *3 2 What do you do? A—Pass. If your partner aaa make sum, yen will at least be showing a profit with your pleea of eheeae. TODAY’S QUESTION Again your partner doubles one club. This time you hold: *7148 VAS4 4QJ108 *38 What dq you do now? Retiring Mail Carrier | Covered Lots of Mil®* RULETON, Kan. (PI — Travel has speeded up since Seth Duell, 70 - year - old retiring rural mail carrier, started his route 51 years ago. The 41-mile route which used to take him up tb two days to cover now takes approximately an hour and a half. ♦ * ★ In more than half a century bf delivering the mail, Duell has traveled by horseback, buggy, sled, motorcycle and 22 different automobiles. MERRY’S WORLD Prefly Boy Scares Would-Be Burglar AMARILLO, Tex. (XI — B. G. Sain doubts if he could find a . better watchdog any where than his parakeet — Pretty Boy. When a nighttime prouder entered the house and stealthily tiptoed past the parakeet’s cage Pretty Boy greeted him with his customary “Hello Boy.” The westd-be burglar’s flight was not noiseless. In his haste he knocked over the parakeet’s cage, roused the Sains and banged the door. Amidst ruffled feathers, spilled water dish and birdseed, Pretty Boy was still able to say “Hello Boy” when the folks got the light on. Slide Rule Worth More Because of Experience WICHITA, Kan. (X) - Does use enhance the value of mechanical gadgets? A sign on a bulletin board at Wichita State University advertises: “For sale: experienced slide rule.” By Jim Berry 0|. LANIER, IP YtXJ*LL TOLERATt My RIGHT TO AN OPINION, I’UU Mtmm VOURTHBOR *OV6R-FRICNDtlNESS' BETWEEN TEACHER AND STUDENT... THE BERRYS By Carl Gruber t I’M SORRY, DEAR...BUT I CAN ONLY DO ONE THIN' [ AT A TIME..- DRIFT MARLO £ r Dr. I. M.-Levitt, Tern Cooke tad Phil Evana By V. T. Hamlin Astrological Forecast By IVPH1V OMAKR If ARIES Partner n ShOW you or* generous — anu aim wi ETAURUS (Apr. 10 - May 50): Be Ionian!. Permit charitable Instincts to come forth. Show that you can lee beauty In the midst of flaws. Day could prove a "testing period." Others are careful ob- "SKiar (May 2t-June *»: serves you due to make surprise w-pearance. Day to handle responsibility With aplomb. Bo tolerant - end mature. Attend to basic necessities in personal manner- Means — be available . . . and INTJERtiTSO. „ . < ' .... CANCER puna It-July 55):. Finish ♦avorna grojaS. flyMM iSifstanti... no straight » the top. Make this* day Elr^t*SELTcONHM^«.,0M^ - to be gained. _ LEO (JuN n of drama and shpwmansnip mine. m.nr appreciate your abilities, PerwnHI'y. B* a gracious hoot. Knt fubatHuto. Wtrava-pence tor sincerity. 4a simple, forth. vmqo (Aug. S3-Sept. SSlt. Actlve day. Firm for co««tryctlvt talk* with neighbors. Sfftlf Build of assets, possessions. Don't permit otn-ara to undermine you. No need lore*' _&O^PIOK|!“: sF'ta.y ’id In ma)or prolett. Don t dwoll on I move Into Hrtvn. You have nu B-Ow »'] T^Ndy' nlwSSw, h^O^ mannings; ,KCAPRlCORNG*Dec. 22-Jen. W>: Kay Is COW* E RAT IV E ATTITUDE Wljeoma suggestions by friends. Stress harmony. Sru^s*: ewl^rmey require explenellon regarding "nances. Be frank. CWrHy matters. Adhaiw lo principles at OaMan Buie. Don't battle about Inslgn meant details. HJgiBgJt HARMONY. TAURUS (Apr. SIIIUTY I ' you. Be prepared nt close la you — You may ‘ CANCER (June Sl-July HI: Express opinions. Highlight Indapandanca c* thought, action, fie original. Load rethi than follow Romance In spotlight . . alio ADVENTUBE! You con tmprei thorough. Loam protect. lob-fr tomT tip. be SPECIFIC Cl ^V*BOO (Aug. M-Sapt. tt) :/Hlahllght versatility. It V** • »•* laaa. Sanaa ad humor gains much. Stmt FLEXIBILITY. | *-*“■ 7 “*k'“ BE SAFE BATHER THAN sonar. / SCORPIO (Oct. M-Nov ID: PISCES (Fab. lt-Mar. 20): Finish prbj- Pulflll ambitions. Taka St ht direction . . *, make, long-rei _ Good to study your papor. Analyst. , MONDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY . . . you have original spark, you art dynamic—willing to fight tor what you GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle h . jr SCORPIO. SAGITTARIUS. CAPRICORN. Special word to CANCER: Expose Vue toolings. Thon your attitude ca~ M regarded - at "healthy." (Copyright 1H4, General Features Cerp.) BUT l SUPPOSE THAT* WHAT EVERYBODY’S ALL TH1 TiMe SAY1N1 ABOUT L0TSA GOOD-LOOKIN' BRIGHT YOUNG CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner “Pity—De Gaulle wants to be a ‘THIRD force’ but 1 ■ becoming more of a ‘FIFTH wheel’ln BOARDING HOUSE JM-M—-ITS SUCH A CLEAR, CRISPDAY; MARTHA,MY LOVE, THAT I'M GOING OUT FOR A BIT OP THE INVIGORATING AlR, HAK-KAFF/-*- REGULAR exercise keeps me mentally ALERT-•-'TOO MANY MEN THESE DAYS PERMIT THEMSELVES.TO SET t6 LU66I6H.' IF YOU'RE AT YOUR PEAK,IDHATEJ TO SEE WHAT YOU'D BE LI KE AFTER BEING SNOWBOUND A Week'/ but as long as you’re) GOING OUT, YOU CAN PICK y , UP MY ORDER AT THE: GROCER’G/AND DON'T " forget x need the/ things for dinner ' ) OaONGt WALK _ OFTEN V/ MEANG v 'xx . SHORT ■rMEMORY* m im m,x MORTY MEEKLE \ (® WHAT 00 YOU M64N, . YOU KNOW r wcuujnthitsciu? V ^ illy. c A -- THAT6WHATI 6AIP.ILNOWYCU wouu>frHrr ANYBODY WriH-’ OUT HAVING A GOODB&GON. By Dick Cavalli CAWNBIGNCGBOH. ICU6HT TO cone UPWtJh A PBET7Y GOOD RBK60N BY 7H0N. By Ernie Bushmiller / OUT OUR WAY ^uSnHCOUN (Dec. P-Jan AQUARIUS (Jen. Then you can By Charlea Kuhn AND MV NSRVSS \ JUST AREN'T UP I TO HEARING J ANY KID... I ...WHO REPU4EC TO ADMIT HE'S \ HIT THE BOTTOM OP THU 4LAC4 WITH HIS SODA J STRAW/ ] s DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney I the Pontiac press, Saturday, December 26. rm SITTER A cot /over's brood wait* whllo Itraol chop* some llvor far tholr dinner. Two dogs exorcise thoir tarotakor with a romp In Control Park. WHO SITS WITH THE PET sitter's pets while the pet sitter is busy sitting with other people's pets? This is the dilemma of Leonard Israel, a professional pet. sitter in New York City who is so busy jie must ask friends to stop in to see his dog. Israel got into the pet sitting business after 19 years as a police reporter on a now defunct newspaper. When the daily folded, he began casting about for job possibilities. A movie he saw inspired him to start Animal Sitters Un-Limited. “No one thought I was serious," reflects Israel on the early days of hi.s new enterprise. “Even the girls at the telephone company giggled when I placed the listing in the directory." Israel's service was the first "Sitters—Animal" in the Bronx Yellow Pages. He still gets double-takes when he walks along the street with his charges. But he isn’t certain whether the stares are for the anirfials or for his bright red uniform which has the name of his firm lettered in white on the back of the jacket, o In the year he has been in business, he has acquired 40 regular clients and a number of “sometime" callers for his services. Israel has also widened his scope from just dog-walking to special services suc|j as feeding goldfish, watering the flowers, caring for parakeets or changing a monkey’s diapers. On a recent job, he sat with a German shepherd so the owners could go to a movie “because when the dog’s Alone, he howls." . Israel enjoys his new venture and is thinking of expanding it to include birthday parties for pets complete with catering—"I’ll even supply the guests if they want." larool In uniform arrlvot to tako ehargo of baby monkoy. A spatial service alto Includot loading orphanod kitton with a modlelno droppor. Thro* A fghans pairs* whllo Israel catchos his breath after a run In tho park. This Week's PICTURE SHQW by AP Staff Photographer Rubin Goldberg. Monkoy’* diet got* special attention from sitter and illenf* pot. I CUP THIS VALUABLE COUPON I am enclosing.______roll(s) of film for proc- easing, together with t . . to cover the cost of processing. This entitles me to e .fresh rail of Kodak film to replace each roll enclosed and a free Regent-Sheffield Steak Knife for each roll enclosed, absolutely free. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 mr mHmh black a white, kodacolor or kodachrome All popular sizes including new KODAK INSTAMA TIC 126 SPECIAL BONUS OFFER! STEAK KNIVES FREE with each roll of film you let us develop... That’s right! Rapid Photo willsend you, absolutely free, one handsome, Regent-Sheffield Steak Knife with mahogany colored handle and fine serrated blade of English stainless steel for every roll of film you send Ini Also, can be used as paring knife or all purpose knife. Send 3 rolls for processing, get 3 steak knives; send 6 rolls, get 6 knives. There’s no limit to the number of free knives you can get! ^ rapid-photo jJ mail company lUiur*l AHItm ■ Rnv 1013 • flavtnn Ohio Jtm A General Offices • Box 1043 • Dayton, Ohio XV Postage Fori Roll 5* For Each Additional Roll RUSH TO l^kotoMail Co: BOX 102 N. D. STATION DAYTON, OHIO 45404 12^ . BSE IIIS EHEL0PE MU SEVER MY FUJI MAII! THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, C—I Pontiac Pr,sj Photos by Edward I, NaMo Prance Creates Natural Beauty Spot For Wildlife In JLpw Lying Area Of Home Site Desk, Bar With Pass-Through To Kitchen And Gun Case Hidden Behind Doors In Den Sliding Glass Panels Separate Lakeside Family Room From Kitchen Dining Area Brick Home Of A. W. Prances, Bloomfield Hills, Has Redwood Trim Select Lake Retirement Site By JODY HEADLEE . Home Editor, Pontiac Press The A. W. Prances of Kirkway Drive, Bloomfield Hills, took into account their love of nature and the outdoors when they selected their retirement home site on Lower Long Lake. * * * Every fall, flocks of Canada honkers and mallarda enjoy the hospitality of the Prances and other area residents before winging their way to points unknown. Some stay on as long as the lake doesn’t freeze solid. A former director pf design and research at Chrysler Corporation, Prance designed the contemporary home, combining spaciousness and the convenience of built-ins to top advantage. Beams, a cornice overhang, which conceals indirect lighting fixtures and the divider planter, separating the living room from the bedroom hall, are constructed # of selected figured birch. * * * “This might be called our United Nations grouping," said Mrs. Prance, pointing out the chair arrangement before the ledgerock fireplace. “The chairs came from the United States mainland and the brass cigarette tables from Hong Kong. ROYAL BLUE CHAIRS “Qp the fireplace, the spider came from Italy and the dragonflies and crickets from Hawaii." the chairs are covered in a royal-blue fabric and framed in walnut. Removable white leather seats are used on the polished-walnut window table. Completing the table grouping is a tall,'iridescent vase filled with shimmering lunaria. Modern tile pictures above the chartreuse sectional repeat the room’s accent shades of green and blue. Lighting the corner is a hanging white globe with brass overlay. Square, gold a f o o 1 s with brass legs fit under the inlaid prayer table of bleached walnut. A massive gold leaf lamp with matching silk shade is accentuated by the turquoise pair of small statues On amethyst bases. Carpeted in sand beige, the nearby den has walls of tangerine. The long couch under the blue and silver marlin has a walnut base with a. built-in travertine marble end table. Cushions and back of the couch are covered in a tangerine and black tweed. A brass and black pole lamp-table serves the two black Mr. and Mrs. contour chairs.' Near the wall of built-ins in the den, a doorway leads to the kitchen and lakeside family room. The plastic laminate of the kitchen counters repeats the pale yellow of the room’s walls. In the informal eating area, a white rectangular .table, banded in black, is surrounded by four black and white vinyl chairs. ★ ★ '* The adjoining family room features turquoise walls to blend with the turquoise tile flooring the two areas. Its ceiling is a pale yellow. A wall-to-wall modern sectional, upholstered in pumpkin and black tweed, has a polished black base. Displayed on the built-in shelves are mementos of the Prances’ many tripe. The room opens onto a broad deck for summer sunning and dining. The master bedroom continues the contemporary vein .of decoration. Bleached mahogany furniture in tones of gray prove an interesting complement to the turquoise walls and carpeting of the room. ★ ★ Silk taffeta draperies in a butterfly and leaf pattern repeat the wall turquoise and the antique-white of the king-size bedspread. Antique-White Accents Used Against Turquoise Setting In Master Bedroom Chartreuse Sectional Highlights Sand-Beige Background Of Formal Living Room Living Room Window Wall Reveals- Seenic Beauty Of'Lower Long Lake C-^-2 TlljS PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 H-G3 STATISTICS Design H-63 has a living room, dining area, kitchen, two bedrooms, a spacious bath and a porch fanning the width of (he house. There are 864 square feet of living area, not including the porch. Over-all dimensions, which do include the porch are 34’ by 36’. The plans call for a partial basement under (hie living room to handle the heating uhit and provide extra storage space. ^Pontiac’s Greatest HOUSING VALUE! Pontiac Townhouse Apartments S Douglas SI. New Custom Built HOMES! Trade and Build FINISHED HOMES TO SHOW KAMPSEN REALTY COMPANY 1070 W. Huron FE 4-0921 PLEASANT LAKE SHORES (All Haw Subdivision) • 1,100' Private Beach • Many Canal Late „ • Paved Street • Public Water MODELS OPEN 2 to 9 PJM. [Every Day Cut ThurtiUy $18,990 to $24,990 flOnOIEKB Ml 6 2360 CNiaken Lake M. . . Between Airpert ltd. end Williams Lake ltd. . . at Pleasant Lake. Medtf Phone MI-441* Personalized Service! 0. PANG US, MC. for ACREAGE mi FARMS C. Pangus, lac., Bealter EARL H. KLINE —Barren rami— OR 3-1026 4520. DIXIG. HIGHWAY After Hours: OR 3-1162 SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PRINTS . 71 W. Huron St. THE PONTIAC MALL AVON TROY CARPET SALES 1650 E. Auburn Rd. Rochester ’ 852-2444 OPTICAL ILLUSION: While the over-all dimensions of this two-bedroom house plmost form a square, the low-pitched /roofline,full porch and brick planter combine to give a desirable appearance of width. Economy House Has Smart Styling ,16 Million Walked on Oak Hardwood Flooring experts cite the several thousand square feet of oak floors at Chicago’s famed Museum of Science and Industry as testimonial to hardwood’s ease ALUMINUM SIDING FREE ESTIMATES! SAVOIE INSULATION CO. 6541 DIXII HWY. MA 5-2601 OR 3-3619 FLOOR PLAN FLOOR PLANS: Every bit of floor space is utilized in Design H-63, with a total of 864 square feet of habitable area, not including the long front porch. How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order also, for SI, a booklet called YOUR HOME—How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in it are small reproductions of 16 of the most popular House of. the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan 48056 r................................................. I Enclosed is M cents for baby blueprint on I | H-63 p| | Enclosed Is $1 for YOUR HOME booklet Q j ■ City Gas Pool Heaters Designed to Last Would you like to use the family swimming pool six months each year instead of the usual three? Modern gas-fired pool heaters are designed to last for the life of your pool. They operate automatically without constant care or mainte- War on Rats Can Be Won People living in crowded areas of the city can do their part in waging war against mice and rats by storing all garbage in covered galvanized steel cans. Rodents are unable to penetrate th$ae containers in search' of food. Without this source of food, they die of starvation. A composite quote of what some recent letter writers have been telling us Might sound something like this: “Give us a house in which economy of construction is the dominant feature. It should have at least two bedrooms and. a sizable living room — the kind of house that could be used as a regular home for some persons, a lakeside or mountain retreat for others. But don’t wait until the spring or summer to show it to us. We want to see the plans during the winter so we can get going on it several months ahead of time.” ' And then the almost unanimous comment: “Just because it's a small house that isn’t expensive, don’t overlook appearance. We want a house that looks nice as well as costs less.” We asked architect William G. Chirgotis what he could do about these requests: In Design H-63, he has given the answer — an attractive five-room house, with contemporary styling, maximum use of floor space and tidy overall dimensions of 36’ by 34’, with 864 square feet of living area, w w w ■ The friendly exterior of this latest House of the Week features a low-pitched roofline which continues over a porch and a decorative brick planter that extends beyond the comer of the structure to give an added appearance of width. PLEASING COMBINATION Although other materials could be substituted, the outside is a pleasing combination of brick veneer and either redwood or cedar vertical siding capable of taking stain for a minimum of future upkeep. A white gravel asphalt rolled roof is specified for economy of material as well as for Us reflective insulating value. The covered porch provides a welcome introduction to the house and also serves as an outdoor living area with full-length sliding glass doors which extend almost the visual length of the L-shaped combined dining-living room. 1 These large floor-to-ceiling glass doors are. framed in aluminum runways to insure ease of operation. A beam cathedral ceiling over the living-dining area is exploited for its natural attractiveness. This technique adds height to the rooms as well as setting an informal note for interior decoration. The stone-faced fireplace at the end of the 23-foot length of the living room is flanked by bookcases, with plenty of other wall space for desired furniture arrangements. * * w A folding partition separates the kitchen from the dining area. There, is a full complement of appliances, arranged for saving j steps, with an exit to the rear. TWO BEDROOMS The two bedrooms are separated by a spacious bathroom. Both of these rooms have crossventilation. Incidentally, architect Chirgotis recommends year-round air conditioning, automatically fired by oil or gas, depending on the economy of gas in the locality where the house will be built. A partial basement for the heating unit and storage is located under the living room. If electric heat is economically expedient, the partial basement may be omitted unless needed for extra storage. Sr * * While this house' is a simple rectangle, with no costly-jogs dr breaks in the foundation or roof, we think you’ll agree that a boxy appearance has been avoided by smart exterior designing. GRAND OPENING of Nerthgate Howes MODEL In Bellamin* Hilli Vi Mil* W. Of Ad»m» Rd. on Walton Blvd. Acres* from Oakland Univanity GAS CONVERSIONS REPLACEMENTS Gas Conversions • I** $160oo P and Af1 HEATING 1121 Orchard Ik. Rd. Phone 335-1045 ' j | of upkeep and its resistance to wear. Installed in *1953, the floors rfcnain beautiful foday ^er having borne the trafn^ of some 14 million persons. < JK Live in Beautiful r MSI - Crescent Lake Road 673-9926 Live In Beautiful Waterland “CLARKSTON GARDENS” j EXCELLENT SCHOOLS - CHURCHES and SHOPPING THE WESTERNER HILLTOP REALTY Now and Used Homes 673-5234 Foyer Flooring Subjected to Wear Of all the materials that go into a new or remodeled home, none is subjected to rougher wear than the flooring, particularly in the entrance and foyer. ★ w ★ An attractive yet durable material such as quarry tile should be used in these areas. It’s waterproof, so wet overshoes and clothing won’t damage it. WWW It’s also s 11 p p r o o f which leans added safety, particularly when there are youngsters in the house. And cebamic tile can be scratched or dented. EVERYTHING Taka Orchard Lake Road ta Pontiac Trail. Right an Pontiac Trail to Deck-•r Road. Right to South Commorco. Right to Glongary then loft to models. Americana Homes dlorah building. Co. 628 Los Arbolos PHONE: S24-42I0 1350 Sq. Ft. of LIVING AREA ★ ‘18,540 INCLUDING LOT ★ MINIMUM DOWN PAYMENT $740 TO $1740 • 4 HOUSES READY FOR OCCUPANCY First commercial Bessemer production of steel in the U.S. began at Wyandotte in September, 1964. Tlie year’s steel production was 10,000 tons, almost entirely by the crucible method. I k t--------------within 60 days— ....——— \.Your Choice of Colors—-Counter Top—Floors and Tile DIRECTIONS FROM PONTIAC: Dixit Hwy. (U.S. 10) to MIS turn right 1 mils to Wat-don Rd., right 1 mile to models or 1-75 thru Clarkston. left at Waldon Rd. off Main StriOt. WALDON ROAD AT ALMOND LANE. v Built and Sold by: ARISTOCRAT BLDG. CO. PHONE 625-2882 OPEN DAILY 12-7 SUNDAY FROM 11 A.M. I O’NEIL REALTY . COMPANY i . CnH pc 3 7103 v.yf I iutttUUS fp' Wtedol tewNoo qjggggj Qst sH ths bonsfits of proper humidity with sn /^/xft! I a i fid HUMIDIFIER Thl* Christmas, moke It e gift of comfort end Invigorating Indoor living—ell winter, every winter. The Aprllelra Humidifier adds the necssssry humidity—automatically, constantly, efficiently. It’* controlled by an accurate humidletat; BIG capacity; minimum maintenance; eliminates “whit*, duet” problem*. Give your fairiily the b*»t—an Aprilairo Humidifier. • $5?1 Per Mo. No Monty Down Pleat* Sand Me Proa Booklet “Pacts About Humidification" NAME . . ADDRESS CITY .... CHANDLER HEATING CO. 5410 Highland Road — Vi Milo EmT of Airport OR 3-4492 OR 3-5632 LOT OWNERS/Custom Built FINISHED i 3IEDR00M HOMEa*&*M*42**MONTH H KITCHIN CABIMiTS * MAHOGANY RUIN DOOM . GAS rUONACI • ALUMINUM SIDING • com* nuMiiNG • * rokMCA sink counts* • 100 am* suefne sstvtcs • nntGLAss insulation Ttt-iivii real • oakaob oftiohal Moosi moms own or [2600 S. TELEGRAPH RO. SOUTH OF SQUARE LAKE ROAD. Now Ultra Luxury Apartment* New' Renting in Bloomfield Hills Near Long Lake Road • Extra spacious 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartments • 1,500 square feet of gracious living • Central Air Conditioning • Private Basement • Formal Dining Room • Dressing Room • Balcony *> Covered Carport • Swimming Pool • Walk-In Closets 1 All-Electric kitchen with deluxe GE appliances From $250, Includes Heat ™ CHARFOOS & TOPPER 334-6236—UN 4-6666 Deal Direct With Builderl • AHICS a ADDITIONS a ROOFING a ALUMINUM SIDING a OARAGES a ALUMINUM WINDOWS I DOORS a CEMENT WORK a HOUSE RAISING a RECREATION ROOMS ►NEWLY REMODELED KITCHENS SPECIAL FINANCE PUN Coniolidat* All Prsient Bill* Through Our 20-Yr. Mortgage Plan Up to S Foots to Poy FHA-NO DOWN PAYMENT , I tmr | 3 G&M CONSTRUCTION CO.] 2756 Dixie Highway FE 2-1211J ■ ■■■-■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a m: THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1064 C-4 From Vie/ Nam to Reno Many Joined in Spreading J Christmas A rabbi doing the Job for the police chief. A couple married 70 years. Louis (Satchmo) Ar-monstrong’g Christmas tree in Tokyo. A baby named Noel. Two colonels with big hearts in South Viet Nam - all of them played, a part in spreading the Joy and happiness of Christmas. The Rabbi. Philip H. Weinberg. filled in as police <$ief of Reno, Nev., permitting the regular chief, Elmer Briscoe, to spend Christmas with his family. * * * Rabbi Weinberg enjoyed the work, saying it seemed fitting to do it “because of the new ecumenical spirit." He hoped his goodwill gesture would serve as an example to other rabbis. He had one regret: ‘The only thing that really broke my heart was seeing all those men who bad to work on their holiday." h6spital relief In Hartford, Conn., 80 Jewish volunteers took over menial tasks at five hospitals, giving the day off to Christian employes. “We felt this was an act of neighborliness for the Christians whose holy day it is," said Samuel Warren, cochairman of the project. He said it was time to begin thinking about doing It again for Easter. The couple celebrating their 70th wedding anniversary on the day after Christmas are James W. Thompson, 91, and his wife. Delie, 9$, of Louisville, Ky. The children brought presents for a party. , v The Thompsons are 5 a.m. risers, usually retiring by 7 p.m., but not tonight. , '* /★ >. * “Our daughter is coming by to help us eat our wedding cake,” said Mrs. Thompson. “Maybe our grandchild and great-grandchild will be there, too." • At the other end of the scale Mr. and Mrs. Michael Noel’s first child was born Christmas Day in Long Beach, Calif. They named the baby girl, weighing 9 pounds, 10 ounces, Christy Carole. EXTRA SMILE Louis (Satchmo) Armstrong, the American Negro trumpeter who always seems to be smiling, got an extra Christmas lift from his wife, Lucile, in Tokyo. It happens every yule season. Returning to . his hotel suite after a week playing in outlying Japanese cities, Armstrong said to his wife: “I see you got the Christmas going." * Sr ★ His eyes lit up at a Christmas tree in the front room. No mat- ter where he is, his wife brings the tree, a custom she started 22 years ago. That was four months after they were married. Two Air Force colonels in South Viet Nam who subbed for two junior officers are Allison Brooks, deputy commander of toe Air Force’s 2nd Division, and David T. Fleming, commanding officer of the 315th Troop Carrier Group, known as the "Air Commandos." They volunteered for a captain and a lieutenant who normally would have been pilot and copilot on a combat mission running through Christmas Eva and Christmas Day. The two flew a C123 assault cargo plane nicknamed “Linda" and ran into hot action when the Viet Cong attacked an outpost 75 miles southwest of Saigon in the Mekong delta. For 45 minutes the airmen launched flares as Vietnamese Air Force fighter planes roared over to bomb and strafe the attackers. BIBLE REBINDING CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ava. FE 4-9591 AIR FORCE BRASS — Gen. John .Paul McConnell (left) gets together at the Pentagon with retiring Gen. Curtis LeMay, the man he succeeds next month as Air Force chief of staff. McConnell, now vice chief, is a 56-year-old Arkansas native. Industrial Payrolls in Area at New High in November November industrial payrolls Pontiac area. - ★ * + At the same time bank debits dropped more than $13 mi______ during the month, compared to figures for the month before. Indastrial payroll! steed at $17,599,299 better than a half million ahead of the previous five - year record Ugh of May 1994. Electrical energy and water consumption both snapped back ahead of previous months after a low in October, indicating an accelerated industrial production. * * * Water consumption took a huge drop from 329,302,000 gallons in November a year ago to 299,294,500 gallons this October. Then November this year it skyrocketed to 438,839£60, gallons, and it wasn’t used for Watering lawns. BIG INCREASE Electrical consumption, which also dropped for October, Jumped to 00,009,013 kilowatt hours, an increase over the previous month of better than 41,000,009 KWH. Postal receipts were down far the month, but this is normal for November, according to postal officials, total buili idential permits represented only $00,500 of the total. Bus patrons were reported at 05,077, up from the previous month, blit below a year ago. 7Profiles' Part tor Lawford NEW YORK , . By BOB VOCES Associated Press Writer LANSING - There will be a new look at the State Capitol pfetyear. More than half of the membership of the Senate and House is;changing and new officers also are moving into a number of other top state jobs. ★ h dr.' But, meanwhile, a face-lifting new look at the Lansing Capitol ia surprising even okl-timers. i)tems: *«r- A cleaning of the grimy old Capitol building, the first since construction was started in 1872. MODERNIZE CHAMBERS ■*- A modernization of the House and Senate chambers, hopefully expected to be spic and span and ready for business at the start of the 1965 legislative session. The start of an ambitious new complex of state office buildings. * * * Even those who spend most of their working hours there didn’t realize how dirty the Capitol was until a cleaning and washing job was started. The dome is a shiny white — this could be painted because the dome structure is mostly made of sheet metal and cast iron. (WO SANDSTONE But the Ohio sandstone of the main building, which seems to soak in and ahsorb dirt, couldn’t be painted. “Part of the front was sandblasted and they nearly ruined it,” said Gus Langius, director of the State Building Division. ★ 1r ■ h Researchers from Michigan State University cooperated in trying to find the best method of cleaning the Capitol face. The beat method, it was agreed, was to spray first with a nonorganic chemical and then wash it off with water and steafn under pressure. . LIKE DETERGENT Langius described the chemical as similar to the detergent that a housewife uses to wash bar dishes. This process turns the original grey color of the sandstone into swarm yellow tone. school kids were there,” shuddered John Gafner, head of the State Property Management Division. * A , ★ \ For, the sake of safety, the elaborate glass panels on the ceiling of the House are being taken out and plastic panels will be substituted. A h ★ One of the 126 plate glass panels cracked and a sliver of glass came down — while, fortunately, no one was there — and penetrated like a dagger into a desk. POOR LIGHTING House members long have complained about poor lighting in the chamber so 100 watt bulbs are replacing the previous 60-watters in the chandeliers and stronger lights will be placed above the new plastic panels. The desks in both the House and Senate-are being refinished at the woodworking shop of the Ionia State Prison. ♦ ★ w A new wooden floor is being laid in the Senate. Both houses will get new wall-to-wall carpeting to replace the tattered rugs scuffed by die feet of so many legislators. The new carpeting is being specially woven>nd will feature the state seal plus an outline map of the state. HUGE HOLE Legislators, looking out their windows to a four-block area directly west and behind the Capitol, will see a huge hole in the ground with the start of construction on four new state projects. Gbv. Romney, when he dug in a spade for the first shovelful of dirt, warned that people must be patient and it will take a long time before the dream of a complete Capitol complex is realized. Under construction now is a two-level underground parking area, to accommodate 2,000 cars. The footings, foundations and substructures also are being built for a four-story highway department building, a four-story building to house the treasurer, secretary of state and revenue departments and a seven-story building to house other departments of state government. year—tyro on New Year’s rad one on Christmas. Mrs. Robert Conklin gave birth to twin girls on Jan. L She presented her husband with a boy Christmas day.____________ In nine, years a* a bead football coach, Paul Dietzel’s teams show * a 59-31 record. Three games have been ties. This Is his third season at West Point. He had seven years at UU. Visit the New Morn of . May MemtfUl Chepel ctmsMsifjgtSmm m^SSXStSm •;*Ol „ CLEANING UP THE CAPITOL-A combination of a detergent-like chemical, steam, and water is being used to clean the dirty face of the State Capitol at Lansing. It’s the first general washup the grimy structure has had since it was built. R was hoped that the entire front of the building could be cleaned in time for the inauguration on Jan. 1 of Gov. George Romney and other state officials. But winter weather caught up with the cleaners just as they were approaching the south side of the front of the building. The water and steam couldn’t be used in below freezing temperatures because it would freeze info the stone and injure it LOOK A MESS The House and Senate chambers right now look like a mess. Both are being modernized but it Is promised they will be ready when the legislature convenes. The old wooden floor of the House was torn out and concrete was poured. a A newwiring system is being I installedtlhat is promised as both safe and versatile. Housekeeping officials at the | Capitol are becoming very safety-conscious. During the renova-1 tion work, supporting cables were loosened and a 500-pound chandelier crashed to the floor below, just outside the secretary of state’s office. NARROWLY MISSED The chandelier narrow-ly missed a secretary reporting early for work. *Just imagine if it had gone down when a bunch of visiting Former Agent Dies BALTIMORE, Md. UR -Elizabeth C. Ingersoll, 59, a literary agent for more than 25 years, died Friday. Mrs. Ingersoll, former wife of pubisber Ralph M. Ingersoll, and Mad-eline Brennan had operated a literary agency office in New York until 1961 when they moved to Baltimore. She was bom fat Dallas, Toe. The first chaplain of the House of Representatives was the Rev. William Lynn. A Presbyterian, •he served from March 4,1789, to Jan. 4, 1790. Dies of Crash Injuries WYANDOTTE (AP) - Mrs. Mary D’Annunzio, 77, of Wyandotte died Friday night of injuries suffered Dec. 20 when the car in which she was riding struck a tree in fids Detroit suburb. IF YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT s DOESN'T FIT THE BILL . . . or John or George you gave it to-—and it came from HHS—just bundle it up and bring it back. We'll be happy to exchange it for something more suitable. But remember: ail Christmas gifts must be exchanged by January 4. Speedwiitina !“■ *mO ■MOWTNAWO • *** Want to quickly step Into a glamorous, well-paid secretarial position? Learn Speed writing — the natural, easy shorthand that uses the familiar abe’s. Day or evening classes. Nationwide FREE lifetime Placement Service, melt, Phone or Write— PONTIAC \ BUSINESS I INSTITUTE I FE 8-7028 OPEN 11188 9 TO 9 SHOP-AT-HOME Cheese your carpeting in the actual room it will be installed. Avoid molting a "color-match" error! Call: 335-5000 ATTENTION: BARGAIN HUNTERSI 111 SHOP TODAY AND TOMORROW! We would rather make friends than pay faxes! If the carpeting is on YOUR floor instead of in our showroom—we can reduce our personal property tax bill by thov$andc*Wa prefer to pass these savings on to you by slashing prices NOW! But you must buy before Dec. 31 st to get these EXTRA tovingtl SPACE-DYED NYLON An exciting multi-toned affect Ml If U that leaks Ilka |QD twood. FIRST QUALITY! H HEAVY PLUSH ACRILAN This will give any ^E Ml fl mem that 'look* fl f U el luxury - at a #M f S budget price. An EB'fr^ 1.95 value, if ref. yj DELUXE NYLON K. HI-LO k This ultra-smart fl fl fl I hMo affect will fl fl El I never shew foot- 8m H W f prints. Many col- Mfl ■ Of ore. A 7.95 value, So. slightly irregular. 1 Yd. NYLON! PLAIN OR TWEED Tough, long wear- 880 A ing nylon pile in a ■HflH rainbow of cylor Kflfl choices. FIRST ■■ jq QUALITY! JP yd.’ "SOFT AS DOWN" PLUSH Ooergoous nylon A A A that's soft » linn whipped cream — JIM end just as thick! fl 22 colors. FIRST U Sq. QUALITY! . W Yd. SCULPTURED WOOL Classic pattern _ that proves you fl fl 1 can hove the most JJ f J luxurious • looking gM 1 1 carpet on any HI 1 budget. A 9.95 Sq. value, if mg. ■ Yd. 100% NYLON CANDY-STRIPE | This gay design Aflfl 1 willaddachaor- flinil 1 ful note to any ~M fl DM 1 room. Makas a H flfl beautiful amarug. II Sq. Slightly irrog. fl Yd. RANDOM SHEARED WOOL You'll love its ■■■ “nubby" texture T j and iti thick, deep flA'Bvl pile. Many colors. . 0 M 1 Slightly irregular, Sq. NO MONEY DOWN! 3 YEARS TO PAY! Tl 3127 W. HURON Nr. Elisabeth Lt fiT PLYMOUTH I 13011 E. 8 MILE 13676 EUREKA I 21170 W. 8 MILE EE 04060 PR Mill JTr, 282-2265 Ymf Evmrgrmmn 357-4035 % THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 , C—8 *■ Mew Bumper Plating Machine Is Now in Operation at Pontiac Pontiac Motor Division has put into operation a revolutionary new bumper plating machine which may be the answer to one of the oldest questions in the plating business. * * *• The machine, an industry innovation, allows Pontiac to apply a uniform thickness of finish to any design of bumper specified by the styling engineers, thus solving a problem which has, up until now, haunted bumper platen. Call the contour plating machine, it was designed for Pontiac by the General Motors Section at the GM Technical Center. According to Pontiac’s Plating Superintendent Thomas J. Doyle, the new plating machine also gives more adequate corrosion Air Patronage Is Less Than One Per Day North Central Airlines (NCA) patronage at Pontiac Municipal Airport fell short of the one-passenger - per • day mark on outbound NCA flights during I November. * * * There were 26 passengers on outbound flights compared to 25 in the month before and 26 in October last year, according to NCA officials. Inbound flights carried II passengers during November, as compared to 26 in October. Outbound flights carried less air express in November over October, decreasing from 760 pounds to 649 pounds, a * * At the same time, outbound flights carried more air freight in November than in October, jumping from 853 pounds in Oc-| tober to 1,389 pounds last month. AIR MAIL DEOPS for November, air mail on outbound flights dropped to 679 pounds from 856 pounds in October. Inbound NCA flights carried nine pounds of air express, 3,863 pounds air freight and 1,115 pounds of air mail in This compared to 65 pounds air express, 3,353 p 0 u n d s air freight and 725 pounds air mail in October. a a a November figures brought the total 'NCA patronage to 283 out-1 bound and 284 inbound passengers for the year. 1 protection, eliminates the waste of costly scrap nickel and, since at no time is the part submerged in any solution, makes for neater and safer working conditions. ★ a a ' “Accelerated tests are now in progress which show the results of this new process to be superior in providing corrosion resistance on our bumpers to any other method we have had in the past," Doyle said. BUMPER8 BOLTED The machine works from the principle of plating bumpers as they are stamped — using a male, and female die. Bumpers are bolted onto a male die, travel into a cell where the female die, designed to conform to the shape of the bumper, descends to enclose the bumper. Then electrolyte is pumped through, the current is turned on and the plating begins. The machine itself consists of a series of cells, each of which performs one step in the finishing process. Beneath each cell is a supply of the solution required — cleaning solution, rinse water, plating solution, etc. * * Die solutions are pumped through the dies and around the bumper in the plating and electrocleaning cells. ' COPPER STRIKE Basically the work stations in 7 the contour plating machine include cleaning the bumpers, a cyanide copper strike, triple-j nickel plating, nickel strike, bright nickel and conventional chromium. Before the bumpers are fed into the machine they have already been through n cyanide copper strike end bright acid copper plating and have been buffed bright. The entire machine operates on a 15-second cycle with the total time required for processing plus transfer placed at 30 seconds. Thus the line turns out a finished bumper every 30 seconds. ★ * * It takes about 20 minutes fqr a pallet to move through the entire process. ★ * * Upon completion of the cycle, the pallet moves to an unload station, is picked up by a conveyor, inspected and sent to a spray painting machine which paints the backs of the bumpers. Philadelphia is known as the “Mother Mint of the Country," since it was established by Act of Congress in 1792 and the first coins were struck the same year. The present building was built in 1838, and remodeled in 1893. A new one will be started in 1965. WAREHOUSE APPLIANCES NORGE REFRIGERATOR Economy Special Single door 13Cu. Ft. Lg*. Freocer with Door *139M ELECTRIC RANGE Columbus Gas Range WASHER e Full tim# lint filtor e Front ond torvteo design $|gg88 NORGE A fUpP*47 FAMILY SIZE Hi ^^^COMPLETE 36 Mo. TG PAY OPEN 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. riAMT discount V?IAN I FURNITURE GIANT LOCATED ON THE NEW WIDE TRACK DRIVE W. AS YOU ARE DRIVING SOUTH IN THE OLD LLOYD MOTOR BUILDING. LOOK FOR THE SIGN OF THE GIANT. 1910 WIDE TRACK DRIVE W. DISCOUNT n. FURNITURE"”1” THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 C-6 Pwitiac Pr«u Phatos Pontiac's Jim HoWenstine1 Sizes Up Stub Kick Test Tells Much To 'Lumberjack' 'I'll Put 'er Right.. . About« . . Here' Sawdust Flies As Tree Is Felled Birmingham 'Banyans' Win Again The undefeated “1 urn b e r-jacks” of Birmingham’s forestry and parks department have gained permanent possession of the coveted chromed handsaw. In beating out competition at the fifth annual Inter-City Forestry and Parts Field Day, Thursday, they won the trophy which will go with theii chromed ax. The ax is a keepsake from their three years of victory over Oak Part. The champs faced a new opponent this year — Pontiac sent a team to Join that of Femdale in trying to topple the record holders. ★ ★ ★ However, the trials at Taft Part in Femdale ended with Birmingham taking five of the eight'events — rope throwing, knot tying, topping, operating a crosscut saw and felling. TOOK HONORS Femdale took honors in the spur climb and tractor drive. Pontiac proved to have the best power sawers. Darrel C. Middle wood, superintendent of the Birmingham department, is anticipating a tougher time next year. This -year’s competition, he said, “was closer than the score indicates.’* A new event this year was felling, in which tree stubs were sawed down in predetermined directions. The “feller” coming closest to a wooden stake is the winner. Birmingham scored a victory here by one-half inch. Although many of the skills involved are used by the men almost daily, Middlewood admitted his team had had “a little extra practice." Next year the “kings of the hill” will be defending their .title in Pontiac, in a yet-un-determined forest! PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER | APPLE CIDER NtatH APPLKS $1.«* tv. APPLELAND NOTICE Announcing the open- I ing of my offices, 5648 I Highland Road, naar | Pontiac Airport. Dr." I. D. VanDeosen Foot Specialist Coif OR 3-1335 . Cfea/mce/ THIS SALE IS FOR MONDAY ONLY I UOY VANITY HAIR DRYER .«___________________________________________________________ Multi-speed, newly styled cap concentrates air flaw for bettor, more oven dry- 1i M RU TV I ing. Quiet operation...........,.i.......... ..................... ■ m BEH GENERAL ELECTRIC HAIR IRYER _______________________________________________________seas Multi-heat positions for faster drying. Newly styled, quiet,.comfortable and ^0,00 | LANDERS BALLERINA HAIR DRYER m .null 088 Removable from convenient white zipper model case. 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XjULuSMHI X5$\ &&&ZU PARK FREE deer sf Stars E9SBE9 .•*»*^?* f. 1 si 1 , ? ‘ x . 1 (Y • 1 •- r , , THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964“ 0-7 CAI R CTADTC CAT1IDAAY OIIR PRICES ARE SO LOW WE CANNOT »AII OEAKIO SAIUKPAT GUARANTEE HOW LONG QUANTITIES WILL LAST! r SAVE NOW! 1 LADIES' DUSTERS • Lace Trimmed • Cotton Print* and Solid* Special! | NOW) I*4 LADIES' HANDBAGS • Pouche* • Tote* e Frame Style*. »w)99c LADIES' SHIRTS i# Popular Rollup Sleeve Style* 1-68 NOW )j18 LADIES' SLACKS • 2.49 • Worm Figure Flattering Cotton Volvotoens NOW ) 188 LADIES' SWEATERS 0 Attractive Color* e Many Style* now) 2m BOYS' 2 PC. 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SHOP SPARTAN9:30A.M.TOIQp.m.DAILY...SUNDAY 12noonto7p.m. 5 GREAT STORES Dixie and Telegraph PONTIAC ' \ V • . . 2615 DIR Avenue LINCOLN PARK Warren and'Conner* DETROIT 24411 Michigan Avenue t DEARBORN 1 Gratiot and Fraxho 1 ROSEVILLE THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 Cleveland Great Appears Primed for Championship Showing * ★ * ★ ★ ★ Baltimore's Passer Not Afraid to Block Irish's Huarte Most Valuable in*North Win Notre Dome Leader Passes to Pet End for Winning Score MIAMI, Fla. (AP> - John Huarte won the battle of the quarterbacks handily, but tils North team had to go through a hair-raising fight before it Anally conquered the South in the most exciting game of the Shrine Christmas football series, 37-30. Only five seconds were left when Huarte, Notre Dame’s Heisman Trophy winning quarterback, whipped a five-yard dutch pass to his teammate, Jack Snow, to break a 30-30 deadlock the South had forged with a gallant comeback just two minutes earlier. it it This and a magnificent game-long performance won Huarte the vote as the outstanding North player. And he dearly outshone the two South quarterbacks, Navy’s Roger Staubach and Tulsa’s aerial record-breaker, Jerry Rhome. In the winning drive, the Huarte-Snow combination, so effective for Notre Dame all season, clicked three times. The North had the ball on the South five when Snow grabbed the last one for the TD. * * * but Wings The South had rallied from a 30-6 deficit to tie the score at 30-30. They were helped by the special rule for the game which permits the trailing team to have the option of receiving or kicking after a touchdown. TOP PASSER Huarte, who emerged from obscurity to lead Notre Dame back to the football heights this season, completed 16 of 36 passes for 206 yards and two touchdowns, topping the combined throwing yardage of Staubach and Rhome. On the South side, Bob Hayes, Florida A&M’s Olympic sprinter, stole the show from the quarterback to be voted the outstanding player on his team. Hayes operated as a split end. .„•* # * - After • mild first half that ended with the North in front 7-6, the Yankees exploded for 23 points in the third period on a 25-yard sprint by Penn State’s Tom Urbanik, a 20-yard pass from Huarte to Army’s Carl Stichweh and a 44-yard runback by Rudy Kuechenberg of Indiana with a pass stolen from Rhome. It looked utterly hopeless when the South trailed 30-6, but the Rebels picked themselves up o^f the rain-swept field and launched a 24-points bombardment of their own to even the count. SOUTH RISES It was Staubach, the 1963 Heisman winner, who brought the South alive with a great running exhibition in a 62-yard scoring surge. Staubach rope-danced 34 yards to the one to set up a touchdown by Auburn's Tucker Frederickson, the man the South depended on all day for its clutch yardage. Then Hayes, pushing slower blockers1 put of his way, biased 39 yards for a touchdown on a reverse. Finally, Staubach shot across from the one with 2:06 left and passed to Baylor's Ken Hodge for two points that squared it up. It was the North’s first victory since 1960. The South leads 10-6 and one fie. MONTREAL OA—With Gordie Howe back on the scoring beam the Detroit Red Wings moved into Montreal for another shot at the National Hockey League leading Canadiens tonight.' Howe scored two goals — the second at 4:06 of the final period — as the Wings salvaged a 2-2 tie with Montreal Friday night. ★ ★ * Howe’s, tying goal came on a rebound after goalie-- Charlie Hodge stopped feds first shot. The Canadiens disputed the tally, arguing Howe was off- Howe on Beam, Tie sides. When the debate was over defenseman Jacques Laperriere drew a 10-minute misconduct penalty and a $25. fine for his determined stand. TIED FOR SECOND Howe’s goals were his eighth and ninth of the season. The tie kept the Wings deadlocked with Chicago in second place, four points behind Montreal. Claude Provost and Claude Larose tallied for Montreal. Provost’s goal was his first in two weeks. Montreal held a 2-1 lead going into the third period, but the Canadiens,' who have beaten Detroit only once in six games this year, could not hold the lead. Hodge made 25 saves to $1 for the Whigs’ Roger Crosier. Camille Henry, whose slight frame belies, one of the NHL’s deftest goal-scoring touches, put two shots past Boston netminder Ed Johnston as the New York Rangers snapped a seven-game winless string with a 3-0 victory. TIE GAME Chicago still shares the runner-up spot with the Red Wings Directed Beavers to 8-2 Mark Sophomore Q6 Leads Oregon State 11 LOS ANGELES 0JPD - The 1964 season was billed as the “yeaf of the quarterback” in Pacific Coast football, but the region’s Rose Bowl representative—Oregon State—is a team with a sophomore at the controls. While most of the publicity went to such stars as Craig Morton pf California, Bob Berry of California, Crai£ Fertig of Southern California and Larry Zeno of UCLA, a tough 180-pounder named Paul Brothers led the Beavers to an 6-2 record ★ ★. ★ and a Jan. 1 date against Michigan at Pasadena. All of the Saturday afternoon’s weren’t good ones for Brothers, bat he took the job away from veteran Gordon Queen and held it for 16 games. ‘‘He’s a great sophomore,” proclaimed Northwestern Coach Alex Agase after the first game of the season, despite the fact that Brothers spent most of the 7-3 loss staring at the sky from underneath Wildcat linemen. ★ it it1 Wolverines' Timberlake Aims at School Record Ex-Bruin Back on Ice MONTREAL (API — The Verdun Pirates of Quebec’s Provincial Senior Hockey League announoed Friday they have signed center Cliff Pennington; 24-year-old former member of the Boston Bruins organization. PASADENA, Calif. W-Mich-igan quarterback Bob Timber-lake will ket one mere chance to break tic school total offense record for one season when the Wolverines meet Oregon State oh New Year’s Day. Timberlake needs just 15 yards running or passing to break the-record of 1.395 yards set by Bob Chappuis in 1947. Chappuis’ record included yards gained in file 1946 Rose Bowl contest. The 6-foot-4, 210-pound Him berlake has gained 807 yards passing on 63 completions in 127 attempts. He added 574 rushing, an average of 3.9 yards a try. Timberlake actually gained 746 yards rushing, but losses while attempting to pass bring the figure to the 574 mentioned above. • BIG 16 LEADER Not only' was Timberlake- q, fine runner and passer, .but he scored 2o .points to rank as one of the top point producers in the country. He was the top scorer in the Big Ten and finished fourth in the voting for the Heisman Trophy. He also was named to the AU-America squad. - The impressive statistics compiled by Timberlake leaves little doubt why Oregon State Coach Tommy Prothre feels stopping the Michigan quarterback is the key to a possible victory in the Slst annual Rose Bowl classic. NHL Standings Agase’s prediction came true the next weekend when Brothers completed four of eight passes and rap for 61 yards in an easy 14-7 win over Colorado. -SIX STRAIGHT “I think Brothers became a quarterback this afternoon,” coach Tom Prothro said then and no one disputed him as Oregon State won its next six in a row before stumbliog against Stanford, 16-7. The win that clinched the, Rose Bowl was a 7-6 squeaker over Oregon when the Beavers scored with 54 seconds to play and kicking specialist Steve Clark booted the winning conversion. Brothers finished the season with 75 pass completions in 144 attempts for 1,636 yards and 7 touchdowns. He had only four intercepted. The sophomore also ended the season as his team's No. 1 rusher with a net of 451 yards in 151 carries. it it it Hie Beavers aren’t that short of running backs; they have three good ones in Cliff Watkins, Booker Washington and Charlie Shaw, but at least one of then! was injured nearly very game. Watkins gained 340 yards, Washington 302 and Shaw 268 in sharing the two riming back, positions in Prothro’s. I-forma- Wingback Olivin Moreland, who caught 35 .passes is the w l t wa. oa o* fourth backfiekl starter. ’ The Beaver defense is the real pride and joy of the Corvallis campus, however. A rugged unit built around linebackers Dick Ruhl and Jack (Mad Dog) O’Billovich held 10 opponents to just 90 points. No team scored more than two touchdowns against them, and only Syrhcuse, Indiana and Stanford got that many. . after Eric Nesterenko’s late goal produced a 3-3 tie with Toronto. * .* * . • Henry, a 145-pound left wing who is at his best in close, beat Johnstn twice with Red Gilbert assisting both times as the Rangers handed the Bruins their sixth loss in the last seven starts The goals were Henry’s 13th and 14th of the season. ★ ★ * Goalie Jacques Plante turned away 32 Boston shots recording his 62nd career shutout and second this season. Lou Angotti scored the third Ranger goal, with Gilbert again assisting. Nesterenko, out killing a penalty, grabbed a Bobby Kill pass and sailed in on Toronto goalie Terry Sawchuk for Chicago’s tying goal with just over four minutes to play. ' * * * ' Nesterenko’s goal and one by Stan Mikita brought the Hawks back from a 3-1 deficit in the third period. Ron Ellis, Frank Mahovlich and Ron Stewart had hit for Toronto after Chicago’s Bill Hay opened the scoring. It was Chicago’s eighth straight game without a loss. 38^raft Enter Race SYDNEY, Australia (AP) — Thirty eight yachts sailed out of Sydney harbor this morning on the 21st annual Sydney to Hobart 680-mile ocean race. Play Montreal Again Tonight CLEVELAND (81 - Lenny Moore goes in for the touchdown and a key block was thrown by Johnny Unites. Don’t think you’re hearing things if the announcer at the National Football League championship game Sunday says it. Bills Favored in AFL Game League Championship at Stake Today BUFFALO, N.Y., (UPI)-Tbe Buffalo Bills and San Diego Chargers, picked by the preseason pollsters to win their respective division titles, meet today for the 1964 American Football League championship. Buffalo rolled up a 12-2 record but had to pull out-its first eastern division title by clubbing the Boston Patriots on the final day of the regular campaign. San Diego’s defending league champions, despite an 6-5-1 marie, breezed to their fourth western crown in" five years. The Bills are favored by a field goal to win the first professional football championship in Buffalo’s sports history. A national television audience and an overflow crowd of more than 42,000 will watch the playoff battle in war memorial stadium. After a week of rain and unseasonably warm-temperatures, the Buffalo meteorlogist predicted more precipitation— possibly snow flurries and frees-1 ing weather. The playing surface is soggy i but in relatively good shape. ' For the ubiqultious Unites has thrown a few blocks this season for the Baltimore Colts. It’s one of the things which prompts Coach Don fibula to say Unites “doesn’t really have to complete many passes to be effective, he helps in so many other ways.” ! *r * * The casual quarterback is surprised when his blocking is men-t i o n e d. He doesn’t think there’s anything unusual about it. NATURAL THING “It’s just a situation that arises during a game and it seems like the natural thing to do,” he says. ♦ , 4r * “After a handoff I take off in the direction of the play and if someone’s there I try to get in his way. If I was afraid of being hurt while blocking or anything else, I wouldn’t be playing this game.” There have been rumors that a sore arm this season had caused Unites to throw less this year than any season since 1958. But that year the Colts also won the NFL championship. * * * The quarterback’s passing arm has been bumped and bruised as might be expected. But as for affecting his throwing, it’s a laugh to him and anyone watching Mm throw this week in practice; * * * Besides an occasional block, Urt’M doesn’t hesitate' to run with the ball when his receivers are covered and W has used a quarterback draw play to gobd advantage. * * + “You call it only when you know none of those big guys are going to'be there,” he jokes. He took the same kidding attitude when a sports writer asked how he figured to beat the Cleveland Browns Sunday. “Outscore them,” replied Unites .with a big grin. READY TO FIRE—Quarterback John Unites practices a pass play as teammates break around him during a workout by the Baltimore Colts. Unites is expected to do some blocking and running' before the conclusion -of Sunday’s National Football League championship game with the Cleveland Browns. A CORRECTED MISTAKE —Navy quarterback Roger Staubach of the South All-Stars has his fumble recovered by teammate Jim McCarthy (66) from Duke in first period of Shrine game yesterday at Miami’s Bowl. Play lost six yards. South also lost football game, 37-30, when North squad scored in final five seconds of play. Jimmy Brown May Complete Strong Finish Colts Keying Defense to Contain Fullback in NFL Title Scrap CLEVELAND (AP) - Jim Brown, the Cleveland Browns’ fabulous fullback, never has seemed more primed for a top effort than he is for Sunday's championship game against the Baltimore Colts. The 228-pound line-wrecker, who won the National Football League nulling title this season for file seventh time, went over the 106-yard mark rushing in four of his last seven games. And he piled up 99 yards in the finale against the New York Giants. ♦ * * “I’m pleased that I was able to finish strongly this year,” said the eight-year veteran who finished with 1,446 yards, third best in /his career. “As far as ground 1 gaining and statistics go, I’ve had better seasons. We won this year and that’s the only thing that really counts.” w ★ ♦ Brown, plagued part of the season with an injured toe and hand, scored nine touchdowns for a career total of 106, tying Mm with Green Bay’s Don Hutson for the all-time NFL record. In all, he went over the 106-yard mark six times this year, his best effort coming in Dallas • where he gained 188 yards. EXTRA INCENTIVE Brown’s late season brilliance, plus the fact he never has been on a championship team, figure to make him extra dangerous against the Colts. * * * in his only championship ap-j pearance, Brown was a rookie when the Detroit Lions humbled the Browns, 56-14, in 1957. Baltimore Coach Don Shula knows what a problem he has in trying to stop Brown. ♦ i ★ “He’s probably the best offensive player in pro football and can bust a game wide open,” said Shula. “We can’t leave it up to one-man coverage because he’ll break away from one tackier.” Says Colt linebacker Don Shinnick: “We’ve got to surround him.’’ . The Browns scheduled a half-hour workout today but the. Colts, who arrived Friday night, planned to skip any workout today. They were to look over Municipal Stadium’s field and possibly hold strategy sessions. ★ ★ * Blanton Collier, the Browns’ coach, and Shula both had news conferences scheduled following lunch. I ‘ 1 * Ir~ Record Run Near; but Swell Appears PERTH, Australia (AP) - — Donald Campbell came dose to breaking the world water speed record at Lake Dufflbleyung today. He was thwarted, only by a sudden four - inch swell as he was making a run-up to the starting point of the course. Bluebird readied 275 mike per hour on the second run East. This was 14.65 m.pJi. faster than the existing record of 260.35 wMch Campbell set at L a k a Coniston in 1966. Bluebhti’s average for the Eastern run today was 243 m.p.h. Campbell refueled and w a s waiting for the wash to subside when the swell developed. Said Campbell: “That was close. If the swell had come in half a mile further west we might have been in business.” NBA Standings lASTatN DIVISION BiL'vf. 1 $ j* '_5wreal division3 'm Los Angelas IB 11 ,(0« - St. Louis ... W 15 Jfj 3 SoWmere ...... IS j? M - Oalrolt. :, . 13 13 Francisco If jl .311 , » Friday's Results ft Today's a ernes Cincinnati at PMIadeiptila New York at Baltimore Boston at tt. Louis San Franc loco at Loo Angeles - Sunday's Oamet St. Leuls at New York Cincinnati at Baltimore . Boston w. Patroff atFort Worst ; Detroit Va^ Nauf 9ark^SSston laa Angeles a Boston San Francisco at Cincinnati tHB POWl At PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1894 C—f Hayward Northe Against/Pontiac Central Panfla* Prass Photos LEAD HUSKIES — Roger Hayward (right) and John Bailey are veteran players who have been the mainstays of Pontiac Northern’s basketball team this season. Coach Didc Hall calls Hayward “the best player in the state.” Bailey can play either guard or forward. Team Event to Conclude 8th Bowlerama Sunday The eighth annual Pontiac i last weekend’s finals and have Bowlerama 'will conclude tomor-1 not received their prize check in row with the team handicap fi-1 the mail should identify them-nals at 300 Bowl featuring 13 selves to the Bowlerama touma-teams competing for the four | ment manager during the finals money places phis trophies. | Sunday. "WWW. j WWW Seven teams will take to the' 'The Prize list was publishedj lanes at 6 p.m. and six more will 1° Monday’s Press, go at 8:30 p.m. * .* * j. Last Sunday the handicap sin- j e i ___< gles championship, handicap} rCSTIVQI Up6DS J doubles title and actuals singles invitational crown were awarded following the afternoon finals. Qualifiers for tomorrow’s | team event are requested to | check in at the main desk one-half hour prior to the designat- | ed squad time. 3y DON VOGEL Pontiac Northern basketball coach Dick Hall turned drum-beater for a few minutes yesterday. The veteran mentor wasn't hoveling over traps and snares. He was praising the play of PNH star Roger Hayward. “He’s the best in the state, lauded the coach. “There’s no doubt about that in my mind. All other coaches who have seen him play this season agree. “Roger’s a great one.” Why is the 8-4 senior highly regarded ? “He brings'the ball doujfi for us,” explained Hall, good playmaker." But more important ward’s contribution in y ing and reboundi merits. In the Hu games, he has aye ► points and 17rebo Hayward, who & in his'third season as a regular, moves inside on defense where his height and 200 pounds are put to effective use under the boards. Most successful teams have a star, but At takes four other players to win games. Podtiac/Northern has two wins against competition that will do /well this season. The victories were over Roseville and Mount Clemens. Highland Park / and Flint Southwestern won /close tilts from the Huskies/ » Hay-t scor-depart-four at / Northern /Dec. 29 — games with Ann Arbor. Detroit Catholic Central and powerful East- The Huskies are expected to have things their own way in the Inter-Lakes. Northern’s front line averts over 8-4. Larry Frye and ive Sudbury are both 84%. Frye has come on strong in le scoring department with 19, 17 and 18 points in his last three games. “He is a tremendous re bounder," Hall stated. “And he’s only a junior. Larry should get better.” Sudbury, a senior, hasvplayed key roles in two games. John Bailey, a 5-10 senior guard, is an exceptional shot and Hall occasionally moves him to forward. Hie coach considers guard Larry Cnshist as the best playmaker on the team. The 5-19 junior has impressed with his driving layup shots. “Cushist is gaining confidence with each game,” said Hall. “This was his big problem when the season started.” Hall is taking a close look at junior guard Bob Harris, 5-9. He! indicated that Harris may break j into the starting lineup against PCH. ■dr * * “Harris did a very good defensive job.for us in the Roseville game,” according to the Dennis Ralston Ranked No. 1 on Ui. Net List coach, “and his shooting during practice this week has been very impressive.” Dan Fisher, up from the junior varsity, and Ted Rabaja, a member of the varsity last season, join Harris as the top replacements. WWW'. The Huskies, defending I-L champions, open league play Jan. 8, against Walled Lake. Princeton Ace to Reject NBA j Bill Bradley Picks Oxford, Courtroom ! NEW YORK (AP) - Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield, Calif., has replaced Chuck McKinley at the head of the United States Lawn Tennis Association men’s rankings. McKinley, from St. Ann, Mo., and San Antonio, Tex., dropped ^ | to second in (he ratings released NEXT Friday, Ralston and McKinley, (pcoming are two tilts with members of the U.S. team that intiac Central — the first one I lost the Davis Cup to Australia Monday U-M Quintet Plays Manhattan Alto, 1 J. Calif. 1. >. 3, Arthur I. Dennis Ralston, Baker Chuck McKinley. St. Anm ____________ M| 'os Angelos. 4, Frank Freeltling il Gables, Fla, 5. Gene Scott, st. N.Y. 4, Ron Holmberg, Baytown, Ham Richardson, Dallas. 8, Allen to Angeles. », Clark Graebner. : • . i j—»■ Heights, Ohio. ID, Martin R lessen, I the Quaker City Tournament at [ action Saturday at San Jose, Ev*n,,on- n,„ Calif. ■ / L«. CRYSTAL CITY, Mo. UP -All-America Bill Bradley has forsaken the court for the court | room, much to the dismay of the National Basketball Association. The 8-foot-5 Princeton senior has chosen to enter law school last September, were ranked'after completing two years at . No. 1 In men’s doubles. [Oxford University in England1 The women’s division also had 0,1 8 Rhod? “holarship. a new leader, Nancy Richey of I „. . . , ■ She renlaced Darlene . ^s.dfcis,0l1 *us‘ ¥«• AP Pbotofax GOAL DENTEp —, the puck sails oyer the stick of Boston defenseman Ted Green (left) and by,the blade of Goalie Ed Johnston for a New York. Rangers goal by Camille Henry In last night’s National League game. Henry scored two goals as the Rangers won, 88. Police Nab Miss Richey, a loser in the semi-!? aty he h*d finals of the national champion- b"n hol!day8' ships at Forest Hills, N.Y, was . .... . third this past year. ^ UjigMgr b • i crushing blow to the New York, RANKED SECOND j Knickerbockers of the NBA,! Ranked second was Billie I who were expected to snatch Jean Moffitt of Long Beach, j Bradlev os a territorial choice Calif., who also was listed first ' in the 1985 draft. . with Mrs/ Karen Hantze Sus-, ' w w w man of San Antonio in women’s' Instead, American basketball ■doubles. , fans probablv Will be seeing, the last of Bradley on the basket-ball court when he ends his collegiate career in the spring. The Dons are 8-0 thus far on the season and should get relatively little competition from any of their conference He had led Princeton to Ivy League titles in his sophomore and junior years, and* the Tigers -wir. _ are eying a third straight, /With chuck McKwicy’^nd'oennis Ralston. Bradley averaging more then 27 WHHamTlond, *.* oSIm? rVl 1 P°'ntS * **“*>*• slon.- 4, Clark Graebner and Martin Rica- „ sen. 5. Arthur Ashe and William Bond. 4, OLYMPIC STAR bwhhoits7nd*nEdMVd*Ne^an.'Ron-1 Bradley, who helped the Unit-&2W1JS? BBjTtt 1 «d States win the Olympic ’’'Sei^'skwiiM D‘ **“'■ I Netball title this fall, follows in From Our News Wires The University of Michigan's j ihe Penn Pale ra. basketball team starts a/bid ton other highly-touted teams All bowlers will have to pay a j laurels Monday at 7:30 p.m. participating in this tourna-82 expense fee before their team! when the Wolverines play Man- ment include Illinois, 8t. will be able to compete. Any j hattan in the Holiday Fesivtal Joseph’s Pennsylvania and lineup adjustments should also i" New York’s Madiabn Square ! villanova. _________ be arranged and verified well I Garden. / „ .. I m. ..__.____. .________,1 A_Nancy a’ichty, bajias.'", biih» j«on 1 the footsteps of two other for- . . .? , . ... . * . L Kansas City. Mo„ is the site The final major tournament, Momn, Long Beach, cam. 3, Mr*, car- ,__. ___________ . before the scheduled starting * .* r L, hoainnino ca*„rriau fe far c»w^ir GraJS*r, shaker Height*, mer American sports greats — time. The Jaspers won' their first eight- tournament | beginning ^turday _rs ^ie 4V/^r^.KcltSi 522£.^P Bvron (Whizzer) White and Pete * ★ *• six games before/bowing to ^ abo ^ SaturdBy, j West classic at Portland. Ore. ^ ^ Dawkins. Those bowlers who cashed in Army earlier this week. Michi- and «W « fivc teams ,s S £?¥ 5*™* l&W&KISSt Fioyr*' ers who cashed current] „ the No capable of winning this one. slight edge as the favorite but (BBS'S * ,a M*y ab?SW ★ ★ ★ 1 team in the nation. | BEST PLAYER' ]*%??«** Port'and U- ------------- * * * ™, . ! could be the surprise finahsts. j fontiac bowlerama finals r»t™ laamc in Paaiit/ai c',0*ce w“* between j Seventeen 1 holiday touma- Hills Rec Schedule .T*am P.irMg*, Other teams to the Festival Kansas KanSasa St., Nebraska, ments are scheduled to begin . .1 ^ Syracuge qfedn.iafi, Tern-1 Oklahoma St., and Missouri. IS * 8 - Lomnr; iMmw - sh^nSk - Mtfttt P*e< Princeton, I St. John and J Nebraska is the only team to j _________ - _ -6ron»4---| LaSalle. / !defeat number-one ranked Mich-1 DE IVER (^-Sonny’s Liston’s arrest and release Friday afternoon for alleged drunk driving was punctuated throughout by vocal outbursts and forceful resistance on the part of the ex-champion. The trouble started when three Denver policemen pulled Liston and a companion over to the curb and ordered the pair out of their car. ★ . •* * Liston at first refused. After a brief argument, he was led from the car by the arm. "Then,” said patrolman Edward E. Nelson, “he refused to show us his driver’s license and said we would ’have to take it off him to get it’;” “We kept asking him not to make us fight him,” Nelson said. “We told him we weren’t pros and tried to reason with him to get him to cooperate with us.” Liston’s response at this point was to shove both officers away from him and refuse to get into the patrol car. “That’s when we called for help,” Nelson said. Eight policemen answered the call for assistance. WWW After a shoving match — in which, police said, no blows were struck — the ex-champion finally agreed to surrender his driver’s license and be taken in a police van to headquarters. tater, at the jail, several deputies had to wrestle Liston into a cell after a struggle to fingerprint him. Jail guards said that Liston “went to sleep” shortly afterwards. Carpenter — McCatK drew* — Stuart — segert — miner — Higginbotham; William* — Puerta* -Crake — Robert* — Golemblewski; Event - Vile* - Piter - Moore - George; Rut* — Cole — Lemton — Nicholai — V*"*' 1:3# PM. Elliott — Tobia* — Schubeck — Mc- ohnson — keeley ; Angott — Vile* George; Mason — | Wichita headlines a field of. t .igan this season, Hit Kansas eight teams at .Philadelphia in | has probably the best player in j the tourney in 8-11 Walt Wesley and will be tough to beat if | the big man is up to par. Boston Posts 5th Win Over Pistons Injured Olympian Gets Job Offers Close Battle Expected Today in Grid Game I NEW YORK on - San Jones, I and Bill Russel spearheaded the 1 Boston Celtics to a 118-106 | National Basketball Association | victory over the Detroit Pistons Friday night. ! The Pistons have -lost all five j starts against Boston this sea- MONTGOMERY, Ala.' (UPD-College. football standouts from the North and South square off today in the 27th game of the coloiju] Blue and Gray classic. The teams appear' evenly matched with plenty of offensive punch to provide a close, high-scoring battle. WWW The Southerners will be seeking a second .consecutive victory, The Grays hold a 15-10 edge in the series which began in I?!*. w w w Quarterback Tom 'Myers of Northwestern will lead the Yankees. Myegs threw 281 completions for 3,836 yards and 21 touchdowns during the past three years. .W W ' ■ w Directing the South will be Bob Schweickert of Virginia Tech,, who tossed 55 completions during the past season for nearly 1,000 ybrds. • flying L**»on* • Air Rims • R«ntal*-Chort»r* • "V Hanger* Jones scored 34 points and Russell added 21, plus 31 rebounds as the Eastern Division leaders swept to their 27th victory in 34 games. Detroit, in fourth place in the Western Division, has won 13 and lost 22. Red Thorn led Detroit with 20 points. Joe Caldwell added 18 and Eddie Miles had 16. Havli-cek had 27 for Boston. The Pistons are idle today but meet the Celtics again Sunday night at Fort Wayne, Ind. BOSTON DETROIT OFT OFT Count* 0 04) 0 Butcher 3 3-3 4 H*vllc‘k 11 5-4 37 CaMwoll f 3-7 .11 il ‘tout*—Boston 24, C San Francisco is a heavy PHILADELPHIA (UPD—Olym-favorite to,capture the Western pic heavyweight bexing Cham-Collegiate Athletic Conference pion Joe Frazier, who has been Tournament which swings into^nable to work because of a - --------rr--:—r-‘“---------broken thumb suffered in To- - I kyo, had a number of job offers to consider today. | Frazier’s only pay since the [ Olympics was a $100 Christmas gift from his employer two weeks ago and Christmas | looked bleak for his family, his __ .4_v • wife and three children. ■J52SR | After Frazier’s plight became ' known, Mayor James N.J. Tate ” ’ Mr | called to offer him a job with j the city's Department of Recreation. The Bloomfield Hills recreation department has set its holi-j day vacation schedule as follows: DEC. 3*—Swimming—Oakland University, L 1:00-4:00 p.m, tor high school and I* college student*. > 'EC. 29—Bowling Tourney — Orchard Lanas. For iunlor high and high school students with league averages. 1:00-5:00 p.m. Register at the doer. ■ EC. a, 34, a, 29. 30 and 31—Skiing— student rates, 3:00S:00 p.m. of ML Holly tor junior high, high school and gojHjo students. USSR Sextet Rallies for Tie first-period lead but had to settle for a 3-3 tie with the Russian National hockey team in St. Paul Friday night. Tbe Russians are undefeated on their American tour but suffered their second straight tie. Tbey tied Rochester, who, like the Steers, are members of the U.S, Hockey League, 1-1 Tuesday night. The Steers ran up three goals in the first 14 minutes. £ut the Russians had tied it by 17:11 of the seeond period. Attendance was 2,356. Other job offers followed, as did gifts, including food, baskets of fruit, toys and Cash contributions totaling more than 8800. * White starred in football for the University of Colorado, went on to Oxford and now is a U.S. Supreme Court Justice. Dawkins, former Army football great who went on to Oxford and won high praise as a rugby player, now is serving overseas in the Army. I. 39. 30-*nd 31—BHHS gym—1:1 •» p.m., Btskplbtll play 'tor lunlm high, high school and college students, EC. 28, 1944 . thru Jan. 3, 1945-Id skating—Booth, high school and East-over. Natural rinks, weather permit-ring. All age group*. Halliciafters Citizens Band "IP 2-Way Radioi Town 8 Country Mobile Radio 471* Walton Blvd. Drayton Plains 4744191 K HO-toll IN ANY SHAPE or CONDITION ^ Free Pick Up! ____S__ , „ OPENnkijf Parts for most makes of Cart ... pUN — New - Rebuilt and Uted! BAGLEY AUTO PARTS f 170 BAGLEY ST. - PONTIAC • fE 5-9219 Not Out of Stadium NEW YORK (UPI)-No baseball player ever has hit a fair ball out of Yankee Stadium. Lettna Salet Service BARBERS Pontiac Airport 674-8116 ADI OFFERS YOU 1. The most complete flight training facilities in the area. 2., Wet instrument ratings. 3. Executive flight plans. 4.. Ladies' Day program. 5. New taking applications for ground, school. Private, commercial, instrument. AERODYNAMICS, INC. PontiaC Municipal Airport OR 4-0441 BEACH Fuel &; Supply 5738 M-)5 CLARKSTON MA 5-7421 ...The BIST for your CAR for LESS ...by far! -#•ywith (onfidtme.... whn automotive k our kutmm ... not a tUo lorn . . . and bat boon for mom tkm 45 yoant BRAKES .For 4 WHEELS Installed 4 SHOCKS INSTALLED ALL 0**22" 25,000 Miles Or# Frfe# hr e# of dm* ton-Suick—Chnvrolnt—Ford— Com.t—Marcury—Corvair-Najh—Oldsmobila—Pontiac— Ramblsr—Falcon—Slud.baksr —oil modal*—al ysars. • Bott BONDED Quality Broke Lmiagi Modal e Include! Repacking the Front Wheat Beormpi • A Complete Normal Brake kotoloHoo B Adjuthnent 25,000 Mi • BRAKES For 4 WHEELS •st quality BONDED Irak.! i install—this spatial low prica ■i the exchange of your old shoasl Save SSS's Now I Similar Savings— For All Other Cart For 4*WHEELS—wM Old Brake Shoes. W CHFVROLIT-FOKD-PLYMOUTH-OLDSMOBILE-BUICK—PONTIAC—DODGE— MER CUR Y and other card for Cars Nat listad Akava... $9.99 I •/ *J«R US N. SAGINAW Open Mon. end Fri. Evenings 'tH 9 P. M. v'y. : ■onw.-? MONEY DOWN Forks Ulda At THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 Transactions on This Weeks Markets WEEKLY NY STOCKS NEW YORK 1KR)—KtRwHnt r »NW record of fho slocks lira ssoak on S* Mow York ' ' Ell ■ WEEKLY AMERICAN NEW. YORK (AP) - Following li icord of oolocltd ftodu trasM this wet-\ the American Stock lachaftoo, giving A Individual saloa for the walk, the high, low and last prices and the 12.14 111! 11.12 12.15 23 & Xtt Nuc| ChmAEIac 12 47 12.42 ll . **“ —jl 14.10 US lift 14, 11.10 1SJS 10.27 It... win ifjg 11.57 If .47 8.40 AM 0.40 |3t 12.71 ILK It* 12.70 12j) 111 1*3 12.40 7.71 7.07/ 7.72 7.71 y riv«| Oppenhalm Fd Penn Sq Phlw Fd Mwjkflao Pioneer Fund Price TR Orth Provident Fd Pwrttan Fund Putnam Oeo Putnam Orth No' Sign of Year-End Rally Market Puts on Dull Show NEW YORK UP)—The stock market this week put on a dull and inconclusive performance In pre-Christmas trading. Traders who looked for the “traditional year-end v rally” found no signs of It during the ;four day trading week, cut short by .the Christmas holiday When exchanges were closed. Although , there were minor losses in popular stock market _ _ averages, the list remained blocks Jnbig portfolios fairly well balanced. The recovery of the previous week— which had stopped a sharp, three-week decline — continued/ uncertainly on Monday but had i obviously run out of gas. I The market declinedfrom noon on Tuesday /through, Wednesday and recovered very' slightly on Thursday, Christmas Eve. This Was the last day to sell and take profits tor 1M4 income tax returns on the "regular way” basis — that is, witn stock delivery four' business days liter. •• The week was muddled by typical year-end / transactions, the evenlng-up of profits against losses In investment accounts and the switching of slxeable While the general background of cefporate news and economic forecasts was quite favorable, Wall street displayed -gn unusual degree of caution regarding the Immediate prospects far the stock market. A good deal of this was linked with economic uncertainties in Britain and fear that further developments there might upset the money market here as the new year gets under way. WMMNMt Fd Wisconsin Pd Mixed Trends | m Bond Mart | Trading. Said Almost Entirely Professional | NEW YORK (AP) - Bond on mi” i4 ?71 price trends were mixed last '*« li. | week in light pre-Christmas ■ »n 7jj trading. | U.S. TTepaury bond prices edged downward. Trading was j I described bv dealers as almost, entirely professional. Institutional investors for the most ' part have closed their books on 1964 trading. jja (m AP AVERAGE OF 60 STOCKS JapMaMMa* IT Hay June E 3 H Kf T1 U J M w te _M L / m 1 1 \\ J L BuMier Hogs Hit $18.35 at End of Week AP INDEX OF 35 WHOLESALE COMMODITIES Though the absence of inves-! CHICAGO (AP) - Hog prices tOT.dkeman? had some jmPact | reached 118.85 for one batch of on the Prk* changes, dealers, No. 1-2 butchers at the close of a short week’s trade in the Chicago stockyards during which 23,400 animals were received. The four-day holiday week showed no unusual supply situation, with a total of 235,800 offerings at the 12 principal markets, less Urn last week’s total and more than a year ago. Barrows and gilts were gener-■ wi ■ I ally 50-75 higher at the close of 28.47 20.57 2o!m 2o!a7 the week, and sows up 25 to 50 ii:» is* isii 17.201 cftt,e Prices ranged 25 to 75 cents a hundredweight higher with the week’s top $26.50 on Wednesday for prime steers, but most load lots brought $24.75-25.75 in Chicago at the week’s end. The small sheep market brought 2,400 offerings during the week, compared with 4)000 last week and 900 a year ago, and best wooled lambs made top price of $21.75 Tuesday and Wednesday in Chicago. Thursday’s lot was too small and assorted to make a market. There ’were 38,200 sheep at the 12 markets this week compared with 49,800 last week and 34,800 a year ago. See Rail Profit Rising in 64 reported that the mood of the market is one of concern about the British economic situation. Because of the close linkage of U.S. and British currencies any shake-up of the pound sterling in the upcoming months would cause an immediate reaction in U.S. money markets. DEPRESS PRICES The lack of specific information-cither good or bad—tends to depress prices since investors do not care to make commitments in the absence of facts. Of the 39 treasury -issues traded during the four-day holiday week, 22 declined in price, eight advanced and nine were unchanged. ★ * * On the New York stock ex-, change bond trading - during four days totaled a par value of $29,289 million, compared to $47,132 million m the previous regular trading week. Of 458 issues traded, 194 advanced, 150 declined , md 114 were unchanged. New highs for the year were set by 11 and new lows were set by eight. Egggr™ Jw-clJuly AvtA«pi|Oct. bovjOcc -{ESQ r i _L J I 1 ;x 1 / n i m m u rh Mo"doy | Tvetday W«dn«ida Thursday 9,Hmv STOCKS DOWN, COMMODITIES UP - The Associated Press average of 60 stocks declined this week to 322.8 from 323.6 of last week. The commodity index, led by livestock, advanced for the fifth straight week, closing at 166.8 from 166.3 of last week. Soybeans Only Gainer in Grains World News Union has decided to extend its experiments with the capitalist-style profit motive to heavy industry and mining. The government newspaper Isvestia reported Friday that four enterprises in the Ukrainian city of Lvov will begin such an experiment on Jan. 1. Three are plants producing coal-loading machines, television sets and textiles and one is a coal mine. Two textile plants in Moscow and-Gorky were given such a tryout earlier this year. Later the system went into effect in about a third of . the light in-CHICAGO (AP) — Most grain j dustrial plants producing con- More Soviet 'Capitalism' MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet pear in one year, he told a year- ..... WASHINGTON (UPI)-Amer- “ ican railroads expect a 7 per -i2'7.16 cent inerdase in earnings this it* vus year, but say they are looking .. . - . at the rise against a backdrop contracts slipped slightly during | sumer goods, of still-to-be-paid labor costs. jthe short pre-Christmas week of That assessment was given future trading at Chicago, al-yesterday by American Associa-1 though soybeans showed fraction of Railroads (AAR) Presi-1 tional improvement to as. much dent Daniel P. Lonmin in a | as one cent e bushel. The week started on the basis of government crop estimates released after close of business Friday Dec. 18,1 making final computations on this year’s production. year-end estimate. He described the "year as a good one for traffic bat only moderate for earnings. AAR figures estimated net railroad earnings at $865 million for the year, i 7 per cent boost. But, said Loonds, the report “must be viewed in perspective against the background of retro-' active wage settlements and unresolved wage cases.” The association reported the lines spent $1.4 billion this year for equipment and facilities modernization, lids eras a record and 39 per cent above the sum spent last year. “Continued national prosperity should bring equal or even ’LU ”7* Hie HSj! greater railroad modernization .«-!I m *771 spending in 1965,” the AAR said. “ ........ Freight traffic continued on the rise, 7 per amt ever 1963 to 665 billkm ton milos. Bat ’ passenger traffic, except for commnter service, declined for Urn 14th ceasecHtive year. The total number of passenger! Increased, however, due to gains in commuter travel, the AAR said. lids revision on the basis of Dec. 1 showed that drought cut the corn and oats significantly, corn to 13 per cent lest than last year and pats by 10 per cent. Wheat production was 13 per cent higher, but with t shift cutting red wheat tonnage and raising durum 28 per cent. Wheat contracts took the most significant lowering, with the March contract closing 2% cents lower than it did a week earlier. The week’s trade saw several reports of export approvals for January shipment, Yugoslavia taking more than a million bushels of red wheat. MORE BEARISH The wheat supply picture became more bearish with government estimate that the winter wheat crop will produce 1.042 billion bushels — 2 per cent larger than this year and . WM* MONUMENTS ■E®**®* *150- PONTIAC GRANITE Cm. C. Stonaker 4 Son* 269 Oakland Ave. Sporks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Senko** Phone FK 2-5841 *3 Hofidflij finefltingi May we take this opportunity to thank you one and all for letting ut serve you, and to send you our warm wishes for your Happy Holidayil 13551 GOODBODY A CO. Year-End Fabric Riot | Reg. 76e a yard! j •• I 38- Hi-Fi - Stereo Record Sale 33% R.P.M.$® Albums M dm for 'M 99 c MAJOR H LABEL Si ALBUMS 3 yd.1! PAN-0-RAMA Prints...... Wide selection of print and solid yard goods. Wash-and-wear cotton, sateen, chimb ray, g*: taffeta and Arnel® triacetate. P . RCA, MERCURY, CAMDEN, I WING 33Vi RPM ALBUMS ® A magnificent collection of popular, classic, country and woetren, and |an record albums by favorite artists. GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY STREET CORNER GLENWOOD i,. - V; t-rVi \t. *; f pll II I ' 1 * ® ‘ pP^ 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS; SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 Fine to Dine With Frankenstein By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD-Lunching with Fred Gwynne during his workday is no easy matter. * * * It’s not that Fred isn’t a good conversationalist. He is. He’s a neat eater, too. It’s just that '«**•; well, you have to look at him. There’s something about his appearance that] is appetite-robbing. Maybe it’sf the high, cleft forehead or the' ape-like brow or THOMAS perhaps the screws at each side of the neck. Fortunately Fredas talk makes you almost overlook his makeup as Herman, the gentle father of CBS’ “The Munsters." He’s such a fright and Accomplished fellow — former advertising copy writer, Shake- . spearean actor, author and illustrator of Jwoks — that you wonder why he’s doubling for Frankenstein’s monster in the television series. ♦ h * “I’m enjoying it,’’ said Fred. He’s also doing a good job of supporting his wife and children. “The Munkers” has been nudging into the top 10 in au- AIRWAY LOUNGE At Airway Lanes * tMAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW for New Year's Eve! We Have The Finest Entertainment! Phone 674-0424 - 674-6426 Ai/uiiay Lowm y 4825 W. HURON (M-59) . / (SUNDAY SPECIAL! 1 Dinner Served 12 Noon to 11 f.M. faue*P*Wl*tJ SWISS STEAK $-|50 dience ratings and looks set tor a long ride. - ' I had expected Fred to be chafing- under his monster makeup, which drove Boris Karloff to distraction. TOOK 5 HOURS “But the makeup took five hours to put, on in those days,” Fred said. “Now it’s down to two hours. Before, they built up the brow with layer after layer of tissue and spirit, gum. The entire upper head is, now a single unit that fits on njg. “Sure, I can’t wait to get the stuff off. every night. And it redly bugs me when the same makeup man doesn’t, do the job. That happened once, and I was as fidgety as an old maid. % * * * “On the other hand, this role is like haying my own private gymnasium. I’ve never been in such good physical shape. My back feels great. The reason is the way I move. “Something seemed wrong to me when I saw the first few" rushes. Finally I figured'out what it was: WheneyerT bent or turned my neqk, l became a human betpg'In a monster suit. I realized I had to move as though I had a spinal fusion, the back, neck and head moving as one untt.1’ NO IDENTIFICATION Fred, who enjoys his privacy, cited another good aspect of the role: He is not identifiable in public. This wasn't the case when he was playing Officer Muldoon in “Car 54, Where Are You?’* He told of going to a recent basketball game with fellow cast member A1 Lewis. Fans came up to A1 and said, “Say, don’t you play that Dracula character on ‘The Munsters?’ ” Then they would take a. sweeping glance up at Fred, take a second look and move on., ww* The memory of it brought a I monsterish smile from Fred. . —Weekend Radio Programs— wiw760) WXYZG 270) CKIW(IOO) WWJ(950) WCAhfl 130) WPONO 460) WJDKfl 500) WHFM=M(94.7) TONIOHT 4:13—WJR, N«W», Sp WWJ. News CKLW, NfM, Hull wwj, Toscanini WHFi, Music for Modems WJR, Points and Trends siss—cklw, Mich. raihoHc wxyz, r— 7:10—cklw. Ron Knowles . WWJ, Mews, Music WCAR, Ron Rose WJBKj Jack the Bellboy WPON, News, Bob DMane WXYZ, Lee Alan, Music wjr. News, AwaHh 7:10—WJR, |n New, York, lilO-WJR, Karl Haas 7*00—WJR, World News WHFI, News, CUM Morris * »f Broadway WXYZ, Madcap Murphy, 10:10—WJR, Ask Professor SUNDAY MORNING 0:00—wjr, perm Review CKLW, Album Time WXYZ, Messaee of Israel WWJ, Music *flf Dawn CKLW, Christ Truth Crusade WJIk, Hour, of Crucified WCAR, Choir Lon. WPON, Sunday Serenade 7110—WJR, Farm WXYZ, Christian in Action CklW, BamMy Tabernacle WJBK, Ave Marla Hour WPON. luHwran Hour WCAR, The Church Today OiOO-WJR, Changing Times WXYi, Morning Chorale CKLW, Your Worship Hour wjbk. Music with Words WCAR, Lift for Living WPON. St. John's Church WHFI, News. Sunday Best I:i0-WXYZ, Conversation WCAR, Back to God Hour WJR. Renfro Valley 9:00—WJR, News, Changing CKLW, Bethesda Temple WCAR, Musk tor Sunday WPON, Protestant ..... WWJ, Church * WXYZ, MUMC WJBK, voice of Church WHFi, News. Sunday Be.. 9:30—WJR, Ski Report, Scl- CKLW. I MS—CKLW, Chretien ISilS—WPON, Emmanuel Bap Will Wift,' Moscow Scene, • Music, Ski Report CKLW,NOra? Roberts WJBK, Voice of Prophecy WHPI, McLeodsvllle. USA fl-00—WJR, News, Musk WWJ, St, Paul's Cathedral CKLW, Pontiac Baptist ISrWFON, Central ItiiS-WJR, Salt Lake City , Tabernacle Choir jLKLW, News, Anglican IWJBK. From the People CKLW, Windsor I, ws, Sunday Best CKLW, Lutheran Hour IfOO-WJR, News, Sports, Mu-CKLW, Terry Knight, News 3:00—WPON, Oakland In Transition 3:10—WJR, Sundoy Fan Poro 3:00—WWJ, Nows, Oatrolt WPON, <___„ WJR, The Messiah . 3:30—WPON, Tlw Shadow 4:00—WPON, Famous Jury ' Trials WJR. Scores, MuAc^ 4:30—WPON, Sunday WPON, Sunday Serenade Wings of Hal Melody Paradi WWJ, Red W|ng Hockey WXYZ, Musk, Sports CKLW, Church ot God CKLW, Ebeneewr Baptist 0:00—WJR, Nows, New York Philharmonic CKLW, Voice of Prophecy WPON, Church ot Week WJBK, Young America WWJ, Rod Wing Hockey 0:30—CKLW," The Quiet Naur WJBK, Name to Her 9:00—CKLW? Grosse Baptist WPON. Antioch Baptist 9:30—WWJ, Meet the Press WJBK, Science, Adolescent: WXYZ, Wayne State CKLW —— ----------- WWJ, News, Catholic Hour CKLW, Billy Graham WXYZ, Titan Topics WJBK, Nows, Concert 10:30—WJR, Chapel Hour WWJ, Eternal Light Council MONDAY MORNINO 4:00—WJR, Agriculture WWJ, Farm, Nom WXYZ, Fred WoH. Musk. CKLwTj?arm s. Senders WHFI, Howard McKanney t!30—WJR, Music Hell WWJ, Roberts "“Ws&r"' wpon. Nows, Jerry Whit-7:10—WHPI, Lorry Payne, WWJ, Nows, Mckenney *’ WJR. Nows, Musk SiOB-WJR, News, Sunnysldo S:30—WJR, Musk Hall 9:00—WJR, News, Har.-to WCAR, Tom Kolllns 9:J0-WJR, LOR Murray 10:00—WJR, News, Music WWJ, Nows. Ask Neighbor WXYZ. Brookfast Club CKLW, Joe Van WJBK, News, Clark Reid WPON, Nows. Ren Knight lllIB—WXYZ, Marc Avery MONDAY APTRRNOON 13:00—WWJ, Nows, Marshall CKLW, News, MM WCAR, News, Deliell 13:30—WJBK, Nows, Raid WWJ Music WJR, Guest 1:00-wjr. Nows, Link letter WWJ, Nows, Musk CKLW, News, MuSk CKLW, Dave Shafer WCAR, Joe Becarer* Come and Enjoy LEN GRIFFIN at the organ FOR YOUR DANCING AND LISTENING PLEASURE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS 9 ’TIL 1 *30 Oxford Tavern 19 S. Washington, Oxford, Mich. NEW YEAR'S EVE 9 9til 3:30 EEmga America’* first $ woman President ...and look who’s the new “First Lady”! OPEN NIGHTLY MS F.M. SATURDAY-SUN. 1:00 P.M. Er®d MacMunwy __ Polly Bogen ma Kisses for ay Ptesldcat ECO, DM DEE mutSOIIIET snrWILLIAMS I "IdRather Be Rich:' PARTIES • BANQUETS „ Private Dining Room | Sootint Ur Ts 70 Parsons CALL FOR INFORMATION J1650 North Perry at Pontiac Road m FE 5-99411- 0PEN DAILY • A.M. r- i i • i i i i i i I 5896 Dixie Hwy. k ........ JBJjSft. COLONIAL MOUSE I *dining at its finestV* I I Pontiac Theaters EAGLE Sat.-Mon.: “Robin and the 7, Hoods,’’ Frank Sinatra, Dean; Martin, color; “Gunfight at Comanche Creek,’’ Audie Mur-' phy, color. Tue'.-Thur.t “Never Put It in j Writing,’’ Pat Boone, “Ensign Pulver,’’ Robert Walker, Burl lyes, color. Starts Fri.: “The Horror of it All,” Pat Boone, "Witchcraft,” Lon Chaney. HURON Sat.-Thur.: “Kisses for My President,” Fred MacMurray, Polly1 Bergen, nights only, Sat.-Thur.: “Island of the Blue Dolphins,” Celia Kaye, color; “McLlntock," John I Wayne, Maureen O’Hara, color, matinee only. Starts Fri.: “Send Me No Flowers,” Rock Hudson, Doris I Day, color. Official to Go !• to Conference! David R. Ewalt, director ot the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department, will participate in the 19th annual Great Lakes Park Training Institute Feb. 22-26 at Pokagon ■ State Park, Angola, Ind. Ewalt is chairman of a session on “Santiary Land-Fill for Recreation Use.” The five-day institute will attract over 400 recreation administrators, technicians and educators. Designer to Create NY Concert Shell Christopher Jaffe, designer of the acoustical shell for the Bald- j win Pavilion af Oakland University, has been assigned a similar task in New York City. ■ i A trailerized stage and concert shell, complete with full sound reinforcement system, will be designed by Jaffe and will be used by the New York Philharmonic for a series of free concerts in four New York City parks next summer, i The stage-shell will be port- able, making it possible to move the whole unit, including dress-1 ing»roems, generators, and oth-1 er necessary! equipment, by j trailers from one site to another I over night. ★ ★ ’ A . Jaffe maintains his own consultation service, in musical acoustics and theater design heads a staff in these fields at Stagecraft Corp., Norwalk, Conn. Make Your Reservations Now! !2sr Per Couple Price Includes: Drinks, Food, Hats, Favors, and Noisomakors. 9 P.M., Dee. 31st WATERFORD HILL COUNTRY CLUB Clarkston___MA 5-2IBS Special KIDDIE Matinees Sat.-Sun.-MoR.-Tuai.-Wad.-Thurs. at 1:05 and 4:55 & I0*, • MIXING BUSINESS AND GIRLS! Exelusive \ Hr j? 1st run SBi SEAN CONNERY,:, oor~ 60LDFII6ER” < IM FLEMING’S** ACTION! Fochmt Tonight at 7:10 A 9:20 Footuroe Sunday at 3:04-5.05-7:1 o-9:20 MIXINO DANOKR AND OIRLSI GEBTFROBE HONOR BLACKMAN §*37 eatok technicolm' ----SKNWNIM»l»*mKir-^IJIlbttUaH^ 4 • AOOEOENTIRTAINEMINT • "LITTLE STAjl BETHLEHEM" AMPLE FREE PARKING The Wildest Showdown The West Ever Saw 1 JOHN iNNGEK mk+vShL HbumcKi OS RflesRQOLFDLgSRWB TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* MmM Mmn IINITCt ARTISTS T H 1 ATM m and at 3:12 only A HEART-WARMING TRUE-LIFE ADVENTURE BURSTING WITH EXCITEMENT! The inspiring story of a young girl abandoned on a lost island with no weapon but her * courage! CELIA KAYE- LARRY DOMASIN Children under 12 r 35* NOW!! thru TNURS. Kisses for MM ■wj PunmCIN f She's the . . . Commander in Chief! ’Imagine chaperoned bythe Secret „ Service— He is America s newTirstiadyr.. fie is the husband I of the President oF | the United States... | He is the first ^ f male'first Lddy [ in history... J He was once a , business tycoon- -a captain of industry.. He is now the little mother "and hostess of the White House... He -feels funny about It Hejsflmny; And so is this wonderfully ■fanny picture that everyone ought to see. SPECIAL KIDDIE MATINEES SAT.-SUN.-MON. Tue.-Wed.-Thur. at 1:3314:55 WIYHE OHARAl "McIIHIOCK!" TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION' AND AT 3:12 ONLY Island JiWue Dolphins i»m~CQLO$! 5&v « and Also Starring MENE DAHL aK ELI WALLACH THK PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, W C—18 THIS AND THAT Now Appearing for Your Dancing and Listening Pleasure! DEX MAYWORM and His QUINTET GALA NEW YEAR’S EYE PARTY RESERVATIONS STILL AVAILABLE! $C......PER COUPLE J (Tax Ind.) Breakfast Included This Week's __ _ • — e J W PIZZA S$| 10 CHEESE and HAM w. huron st. store only: WE WISH YOU A HAPPY NEW YEAR IJ.ywiiyOT.-mwA FE 8-4631 3118 W. Huron St. 1268 N. Perry St./ TZ r- r l r r 7“ 6 IT 11 12 IS U 15 12 17 11 r 20 21 22 24 26 26 j 27 30 a 22 26 r 26 41 42 44 46 ♦7 W 6o 51 52 63 64 56 66 6s 59 60 61 28 across 1 Civil wrong S Gelatinous precipitates 9 Dolores Del---- 12 Agalloch 13 Iroquian Indian 14 Terminal part 15 At no time hereafter 17 Area for sailors 18 New Hampshire summer resort 19 Lowers in grade 21 Provider of shade 23 Pouch 24 Dance step 27 Gaelic 29 Discordant 32 Epiphany 34 Looked obliquely 36 Spanish community 37 Verily 38 Widemouthed pitcher NOW! thru MONDAY HH aw ms* ■U| aooT*- and thu wild idea of doing the Robin Hood logond in • . Chicago's wildest ora . . . AND 2nd ACTION HIT! [r.OLQIlwAPNW IIUDIE HIIBPHY 41 Foreign agent 42 Mariner’s direction 44 Curtain, for instance 46 Let go 49 Place of oblivion 53 Feminine appellation 54 Estate groundsmen 56 Slight bow 57 Within (comb, form) 58 Frenchman’ 59 Algerian governor 60 Plant part 61 Masculine appellation DOWN 1 Military vehicle 2 Curved molding 3 Rant 4 English stream 5 Jewel 6 Eats away 7 Italian coins 8 Appears 9 Medical treatments 10 Arrow poison 11 Harem rooms 16 Peruse anew 20 Provided with paddles 22 Mistake 4 Top of head 25 Avouch 26 Feminine store worker 28 Flower 30 Profound 31 Whirlpool 33 Pithy 35 Prepare as silage 40 Carry too far 43 Avid 45 Dialect 46 Tear asunder 47 Cry of bacchanals 48 Watery exudation (comb, form) ■*' . ON MNTItt TRAIL-SOUTH of MAKI RD. in WALLED LAKE-S24-3III LAST TIMES TONIGHT Sandra Do* in “I’D RATHER. IE RICH’’ Tab Hontor in O ■ “GOLDEN ARROW" SUNDAY Cont. Open 1 p.m. ELVIS ORES LEY ANN MARGRET “VIVA LAS VERAS" TONY RANDALL in “I FADES Of DR. LAO" tn Color 50 Pith of the matter 51 Dry, as champayne 52 Norwegian capital 55 Period Answer to Previous Puzzle Gifts Bring Joy to 7 Orphans , Sisters Lost Mother, Father Back in 1961 LEVITTOWN, Pa. (AP) -“They were tiptoeing around at about 6 a. m., and started opening presents in the playroom at about 7," Liz Schaefer, 25, said Friday of her seven orphaned nieces. Christmas has been a joyous time for the seven Schaefer sisters, because of the efforts of Aunt Liz and the children’s grandmother, Kate Schaefer, 67. The mother of the girls died giving birth to Georgette, in March 1961. Their father died in an auto accident three months later. It was a hectic day,’’ a tired Aunt Liz said in an interview Friday night. “But I think it’s wonderful to be able to do things for the children. They were all so thrilled with the presents.” NEW TOYS The Schaefer girls range in age from Eleanor, 12, to Georgette, 3. There are also Linda, 11, Barbara, 10, Marie, 8, Janice, 7, and Pamela, 5. “The girls played with their new toys all day,” Miss Schaefer said'. “Last night they went to visit< Georgette (who lives with ah aunt and uncle in Philadelphia) but today everyone was together here.” The happy children had asked for—and received—the sort of presents that all little girls want: dolls and toy dishes, games and toy animals, and clothes for the older girls. Asked about her plans for the children for 1965, Miss Schaefer replied: “I haven’t had a chance to even ihitui about the new year yet. I’vebeen too busy thinking about Christmas.’? 35 Lose Licenses Ordered Off Road by Department of State Thirty-five area motorists recently had their drivers’ licenses suspended or revoked by the Michigan Department of State. Ordered to show proof of financial responsibility duo to convictions of drunken driving were: William R. Miller, 130 lessen; Ray Miracle, 1844 Ellwood; Ed R. Modock, 208 Dell wood; Legree Thomas, 551S. Paddock; James O. Troup, 413 Maxwell; and Paul K. Sumner, 5765 Aylesbury, Waterford Township. Others were: Robert Appel, 1310 Bates, Birmingham; Hobert Caudill, 133 Osborne, Commerce Township; Donald Hamm, 2550 N. Milford, Milford Township; and Leonard Lichwala, 21251 Cass, Farmington Township. Also, Clayton E. Marsh Jr., 2300 Shimmons, Pontiac Township;1 Albert O’Bryan, 204 End-well, Novi; and Loraine Ostrow-ski, 2312 Maddy, Keego Harbor. Unsatisfactory driving records caused the following to be ordered off the road: Ronald Brown, 230 S. Marshall; Stephen Konop, 488 N. East Robert Osborne, 454. Auburn; Jerry Glascock, 1101 Dover; and Thomas McCall, 5075 Durnham, all of Waterford Township. Also, Kenneth McClellan, 6580 Pontiac Lake; John Payne, 4220 Famer; Donald. Ruchgy, 7125 Elizabeth Lake; and Hugh Stevenson, 3534 Frankman, all of Waterford Township. Others were: David Cooper, 73 E. Long Lake, Troy; Thomas Dertinger, 210 Oak Island, Wolverine Lake; Edward Jarembo, 149175 Pontiac Trail, Wixom; and Roy Lee, 2300 Shimmons, Pontiac Township. Also Douglas Peters, 19215 Riverside, Beverly Hills; and Jerry Smith, 3133 Andre, Keego Harbor. Ordered to show proof of fi-j nancial responsibility due to unsatisfied judgements against them were: Felix Brooks, 612 Linda Vista; Michael Albertson, 1404 Flamingo, Wixom; Wayne Boyer, 2909 Woodelm, Avon Township; and Paul Roberts, 34j0 Curwood, Waterford Town-ship. Ordered off the road for driving with a suspended license were: Benton Goff, 18 Clark; Herbert Strickland, 99 Park-hurst; and Norman Morefield, 410 N. Rochester, Addison Township. Ex-Ambassador Dies VENICE, Italy (JB-Hughes Le Gallais, 68, Luxembourg’s ambassador to the United States from 1940 to 1958, died Wednesday after an illness of several weeks. dnlrM may H ______________ , Township office. Bids art to at l:0t p.m. on Monday, Jar_____ ____ 1944, at the Township Hall. Th aboard reserves the right to reject 'Greta V. Block-clerk December 2 d 26. II ' Injuries Fatal to Girl GRANT (AP) — Penelope ! Kay, 13, died today of injuries suffered Thursday when she was struck by a car after stepping off/ a school bus in Grant. NOTICE vOF PUBLIC SALE Notice Is hereby given by the i signed that an 21 December, 1944, at 10 o'clock a.m. at 31475 Stephenson, Madison Heights. Oakland County, Michigan, public sola of • a 1057 Pontiac S/w bearing serial number P757HI9234, will be held for cash to the highest bidder. Inspection thereof may be made at above address, Madison Heights, Oakland County, Michigan, the place of storage. Femdale, _______ By B. KEITH Doc. 14- and 26, 1M SATURDAY—LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Occount Number 5176,113-Notice Is Hereby Given by me unde signed that on December 20, 1064 i 10:00 o'clock a.m., at 77 E. Huron, Po Hoc, Michigan public tala of a 10 Comat 4-Door bearing aerial numb 1H12SJ21 173 will be held, for cash may be made at 77 E. Huron St., Pontiac, Michigan, the place of stor— The undersigned I reserves the t December 36 end-2t, 1064 The New Olympia SM-9 Deluxe The Letter-Perfect Portable For Christines Giving The Olympia Portables Type bast because they're Built beet Jones Typewriter 'SALES a SERVICE 1058 W; Huron FE 2-2201 Death Notices ■ FN, DECEMBER IS. 1064, BURTICE A., 623 1. Walton Blvd.; age 63; beloved husband of Elizabeth Walls Brown; dear father of Mrs. Rosalia Marcum. Mrs. HIMa M. Phelps, Mr*. Batty L. McMahon, Mrs. Wilms M. McMahon, Edward L. and Lester M. Brown; deer brother of Mrs. Lo-rana Hays, Mrs. Carthell McGhee. Vomica, Wayman, Arthur, Carlos and Ankfolo Brown; also survived By IS grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren. Funeral servlet will be held Sunday December 37 at 3:00 P.M. the Church of God with Rev. Cheaile N. Collins officiating, interment In Hickory Hill Cemetery, ML VernanTIll. Brown l... __ ______ Voorhees-Slple Funeral Homs the Meyers Funeral Home, Vernon, ill. far aarvleaa i burial. Suggested visiting hou to 5 p.mand 7 to ™p.m HELIKER, DECEMBER 25, CURRIE. 0150 EMora St., U mr^St Ji •tap survived by two grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Monday, December 24 at 1:10 P.M. at the Rfchardtpn-Blrd Funeral Homa, Waited Ta k a. Graveside Military Service will be held. Informant In CaminprM Cemetery. Mr. Hellkor will Uo In state at the Funeral Home, ODOM, DECEMBER 22, 1964, VIRGINIA, 163 Elm Street; ag« 36, beloved wile of Gilbert Odom; beloved daughter of J. T. Spay; dear mother of Virgil and Robert •any, Myrtla Dlana. David Law-•not, and Levin Odom; dear sister of John Willis, Ernest L* John Thomas and Robert Seay. Funeral Trinity Baptist Church. I it In Oak Hill Cemotry. Earl D. L Bloomfield TMNMI^IPWP -r-" *t Mrs. Ford (Agnes) r step-father of Mr. ; dear Father-In-law srt (Florence) Rad-iora ; aiso survived bv ten gr««30 a.m. and 9 p.m. Montgomery Ward - .PONTIAC MALL____ BODY MAN First class only. No drinkers or drifters. All new facilities, prom sharing, other fringe banaffts. Ask for Carl. Shelton Pontlac-Bulek — OL 14135. CLERICAL OFFICE JOS WITH pood future. Willing to train. Must have soma knowledge of typing and running adding machine calculator and be willing to taka Inventories. But not essential. Good starting salary. Parson hired would be getting In on the ground floor of an expanding business. Call Mr. Griffin for an Interview appointment. 625-2625. Prater young man between 20-30. CHILDREN'S SUPERVISOR $4,400-$5,200 Man needed te supervise the Institutional activities of children and luvenltes. Require Individual with excellent personal habits. Who possesses the ability to counsel, con-‘ trol, and Instruct children. Applicant must be over 25 years of age- and be able to stand a rigid background Investigation. High school graduation required, plus soma experience In supervising |u-vanila activities. Applicants must be available la work any_ ShttJ, APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICER OAKLAND COUNTY COURT HOUSE, 1200 N. TELEGRAPH, FONTlAC. DESIGNER Experienced In conveyors, polishing machines, material handling, steel fabrication or related equip-MURRAY-WAY CORPORATION If Mild Rd. . (tvv mile east et Woodward) Jordan ■ 4-6690 Troy, Mich. bRUG,' "TOBACCO OR STOCK clerk. Experience preferredl or Will train. Comp lata fringe benefits. Top salary. Apply Perry Pharmacy, 665 Josiyn between 94 EXPERIENCED MECHANIC FOR night ahltt. CaM FE 54142. EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATION service man. Huff Refrigeration Co., Highland. 664-5665 for appoint- mawt. • 1 • __g. EXPERIENCED DIESEL DRIVER. Call FE 54142. FULL TIME REAL E S T A T E salesman. Phone, .Ray O'Nell for Interview. OR 4-0427.__ MAN TO DELIVER COAL, FULL or part time. OR 3-1229. OWNER OPERATORS WANtcb, need late model twin aerew tractors, sliding 5th wheal tor steady employ mint In the Rontfoe aroe. Phone Area Coda 3ISN44I10. Leave name and phone nunSber. OUR FIRM ' Has SI years at growth. Excellent increase over last year, means more taka home pay for our man. Average left month 6598, Investi-—this ' opportunity. **•'* *» —-----*— “ ------------- minded. Call TIME FOR A CHANGE • PLANT SUPERVISORS y PERSONNEL MANAGERS HIGH CALIBER MEN ACCUSTOMED TO DEALING WITH PEOPLE IF YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED IN LASTING ANP PERMANENT ■MFLOYMEWr THIS MAY WELL BE YOUR OPPORTUNITY OF A LIFETIME. SEVERAL POSITIONS OPEN IN $15,000 to S30.000 RANGE LET US PROVE IT TCI YOU MUST ABLE TO START WITH-IN 2 TO 3 WEEKS ’ . FOR PERSONAL AND CONFIDENTIAL DISCUSSION OF TNIS POSITION, PHONt MR. SMITH AT FE 6-04311 FOR INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT. FART TIME MEN It TO 4S YIARS OLD Wa would Ilka man to work wtth us wha can own SSI weakly working part time for 4 or 5 aMMs a weak. For Informetliw call oR, 34921 4 p.m. to 4 p.m. Ask for Mr. Dale. SYSTEMS SALES ENGINEER. SAL-Field Salat EngMaar, Industrial or plastic _________ Jr. Copywriter, 1 yr. axparlenct non-retall. Salary 55,200. Accountants-6400 and up, experience with Public Accounting. Industrial Salts Men, Salary open. Tima Study man, industrial Engl, nearing experience. 67,000. Electrical engineer, 5 to II yro. practical experience. Salary span. MICHIGAN, PERSONNEL SERVICES C0RP. 770 S. < 6326, Smllay Real Batata. SHORT ORDER COOK, MUST HAVE breakfast experience, apply at Big Boy Drlve-ln, Telegraph and Hur- THE SUN OIL COMPANY Hat business opportunities available In the dynamic Pontiac area, it you are mat special type of man, a man with a goal capable of developing and operating a business of your own, Sunoco would Ilka to discuss with you • future In the service station business. A moderate Investment Is required but a financially sound future la only a matter of drive and desire. SUNOCO OFFERS: 1— An excellent 7 weeks paid training program. 2— An exclusive and growing Custom Blending System. 3— Financial assistance is available If nueilfted. For further Information call Jama* L. Nowka st Ml 66674 days, or LO 5-7460 evenings. , WANTED FOR DAY SHI St, COUN. tar help. Apply Rad Barn Drlvt-ln, 441 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 24141, WANTlD 3 local man for tales and service department of Electrolux Corporation. Office, 2297 Eliza bath Lake Rd., Pontiac. H. Hicks, manager. WANTED: EXPERIENCED BODY man and mechanics with own hand tools, guaranteed wage and steady work, plus sates Incentive. SUPERIOR RAMBLER. 550 ONtjand^Ave. Complete flaw fa- WANTED—HEATING AND PLUMB-Ing bide on large houses and apartmanta. CaH l*4634, 933-4201 or 353-2090. Michael's. Realty. WANTED—SALESMAN FOR LUM-ber counter selling lumbar and modernization. Apply 7940 Cooley Lake Rd., UnlonLaks.______' WANTED - CAB DRIVERS, steady and part time, days and. nights, lot W. Huron. YdUNG MAN T TO LEARN TRADE 4#%WALTQN DRAYTON PLAINS Help Wanted Fgmals 7 AN EXPERIENCED BEAUTY Operator. Donnell's, FE (4079. BABY SITTER. LIGHT HOUStr work. Prefer to llvt In. FE 54658. BABY SITTER. URGENTLY NEEb-ed, steady. Own transpertatlfc.' Experienced. Call after 4 p.m. OS-29 57. BOOKKEEPER ■ light typing ...... . $350 Legal Secretary ...'.....SBR, Secretaries (1 needed) . SMS Typing, shorthand soma bookkeeping S4S0 MICHIGAN PERSONNEL SERVICES C0RP. 770 S. Adams Rd. Birmingham. CASHIER Tad's at the Pontiac Mall hat an Immediate opening for a cashier. No Sunday work, top tamings, paid vacation. Insurance benefili. Apply In parson only. TED'S PONTIAC MALL COUNTER GIRL Experienced—Apply Liberty Cleaners. Ask for Mr. Mitchell. Ml 4- . 0222. COUNTER GIRL FOR DRY CLEAtF Ing plant. Will train. Apply Plaah Cleaners, 339 W. Huron. CURB GIRLS AND WAITRESSES For day and nlglrt shift. Top wages, free math, hospitalization, Ufa Insurance. nald vacation. Apply In ■■ iff tov TOivS . and Huron, or Dlx-Silver Lake Road. Dining Room WAITRESS Tad's of the Pontiac Malt hat an Immediate opening tor a dining room waitress. No Sunday warit, top earnings, paid vacation. Insurance benefits. Apply In parson only. TED'S ' PONTIAC MALL DRUG CLURltf. FULL OR FART-time: Will train rotpanalbte parson. Russ's Country Drugs. 4500 Elizabeth Lake Rd. drug; tobacco oi iTSeR clerk. Experience preferred or wilt •rain. Complete fringe bsntflti. Top salary. Apply Parrv Pharmacy, 665 Josiyn batwaqn.94 dally. EXPERIENCED NURSES AIDE, II p.nf. 'to 7 a.m. Amply In parson 1225 W. Sttvortatl Rd. ____ EXPERIENCED Key Punch Operators for 4 months esslgnmtnt evenings In the Plymouth grot. Kelly Girl Service, Inc. is w. Huron Roam io , 2334907______ FAMILY • Oft ' COUPLl tfl LlVt In. Help Polio pattern. MA 4-1971 HOUSEKEEPER. LIVI NL _________M4M_______________ HOUSEKEEPER, TO LIVE iK. Care for Invalid. FE S444S. LEGAL SECRETARY FOR BIRM-tngham law firm, sand resume of experience and reforancat to Pon-tlac Prats Box 103. LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSE tor medical physicians' office In Pontiac. State aba, experience, salary. Reply to Pontiac Press Bex MIDOLEAGED LADY CARE FOR 4 children, .and light housework. 4 days a -week, from 4-4. CaM dhy-time ul 3-3611. PART TIME, 4 HOURS DAILY, S days a week, general office stark, typing required. Addrits all replies to Janas Transfer ee* 411 E. Wilson, Pontiac. REUAULU LADY FOR HOUSE- sKrETARY WANTED PART-TIME high school education, 19-30, attractive, apply particulars to Bax 6. The Pontiac Frost. TEMPORARY WORK FOR -EXPERIENCED Typists, Slant and Business Interviews. Ml Tuesday-Friday Manpower Inc. u s. cass - •- WAITRESSES, EXPERIENCE NOT roquirod. An exoeltent Sppertunlty to earn good pay, exoeltent tips. paM lunen, relief periods, hospital banatlts, paid vacatlsna rtesianl counter, no caakim dishwashing or partertig. Afternoons only. Biff's Grill, *535 Totegraph Rd* Sir- Pontiac, Mich, giving ago. ads a , tion, family status, jsi and gay experience. 7 r . 1 C—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1904 ifr W—Nd Hmk 1 WAITRESS FULL TIME EVENING BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED ScUs HeIp, Male-Female t-A YOUNG MAN Htah school graduate to Mil retail an our salasiloor. On tha lob training program. Wa are looking organisation. Vacation, group ii auranca, retirement plan and llbei al bonus Incentive. Apply In parso only. Firestone Store, lat w. Hi ran St. An equal opportunity employer I Agencies MICHIGAN PERSONNEL Services Corp. 770 S. ADAMS RD. BIRMINGHAM 6474660 Instructions-Schools _10 A Better Income by Learning IBM Machines. LEARN IBM KEY PUNCH, MACHINE OPERATION AND WIRING. COMPUTER PROGRAM MING. 4-WEEK COURSES, FREE -PLACEMENT SERVICE. NO MONEY DOWN. GENERAL INSTITUTE 22925 Woodward Ferndalt CALL COLLECT 543-9737 FE 44509 Wert Wanted Male PAINTING AND ODD JOGS. 402-4317. TRUCK, LIGHT HAULING AND odd lobs. **54414. \ Business Service / • ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-1 pairing and rewinding. Ill B. P Phono FE 4-3981. Dressmaking A Tailoring 17 DRESSMAKING, tailoring and alteratkm Mrs. Bodoll. FE 4 0111 SEW ING AND ALTERATIORI Clarktten area. MA 3-2283 Convalescent-Nursing Moving and TrEchleg 22 7-3999 or 678-1518. 1-A MOVING SERVICE, REASON-able rates. FE 5-3458, FE 3-2909. LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING, Painting A Decorating 23 A-1 PAINTING AND >APVR HANGING THOMPSON ___________FE 44344 A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, Papering. FE S-0343. ERNIE'S SERVICE . decorating end remodeling. 482-4132 PAINTING AND CAUUCING PAINTING PAPERING, WALL WASHING, MINM REPAIRS. -REASONABLE PRICES. FE 3-7407 QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-Ing, papering, wall waahlng. 673-3872 Or 483-4111.________________ Television-Radio Service 24 HAVE YOUR plus mutual companies. These are excellent dependable cempanles, who make prompt loss settlements. Just phone FE 4-1284 for a auo-tation. K. G. HIGHWAY ENGINEERING EXBCU-five i assigned la Pontiac district desires to rant I a ri bedroom homo In Clarkston or adlacont area. I 10-year-old deuhter. Will consider furnished, partially furnished or unfurnished. Call E. Notl. 333-TSOI or 425-1733 on Or 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE, PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP-ERTIES AND UNO CONTRACTS Urgently need for immediate sale) WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 59165 ALL CASH FHA and Gl EQUITY Ml _____ No Noting, r rod tape, no delay*. Cash In mod lately. DETROIT. BR 24X40. JQUITIES WRIGHT 3S2 OAKLAND MB CLIENT I don In g PAY UP TO 325,000 GET RESULTS WE NEED listings. Call vdlu£ It lt'"re*r and top market DON WHITE, INC. 2891 Dixie Hwy. Phone 4744)494 Homes-Farms—Acreage CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY Realtor * W. Widen 338-406 Multiple Listing Sorvlco , Pool J< s Realty - FE 4-8550. W.H.BASS REALTOR FE 3-7218 BUILDER Aula Mochenici Auto Body Colllssion WOLVERINE SCHOOL 1400 W. Ford. Detroit WO 34483 I FINISH HIGH SCHOOL AT HOME, . School of Homo Study, 27741 Mount Rood, Dipt. PP, Warren, Michigan. Phone SL 7 1420._____________,. Quality Automobile Risk insurance NOTICE' we acreage parcels^ tor the buyers, call h,v* Clarkston Real Estate lit S. Main ________MA 5-3021 VACANT LOTS WANTED In- Pontiac. Wa pay more, immediate doling. RIAL VALUE REALTY. 4344575. Mr. Davis. | Apartments, Famished 37 j - S ROOMS, COMPACT, CHILD. NEAT 443 LOUNSBURY . APARTMENT MA MSN' NEAR Fisher Body. FE 1-2009. BACHELOR 3-R60M, CAR I private, nlcs. 312-4374.______ BEAUTIFUL ELIZABETH LAKE front. 3 rooms, completely and exceptionally well furnished, TV light, warm, clean, utilities Included. Exclusive location. SIM monthly or weakly rata. Mri. Elweod, 682-2410. □ficfe FRONT—2-BEDROOM WITH utilities, adults. 482-4751. privileges, mixed area. FE 3-0494, WINTER RATES WEEKLY RATES REDUCED PHONE AN6 TELEVISION INCLUDED SHERWOOD MOTEL 40 Dixie Hwy. ______333-9417 Apartments, Untarnished 31 1 BEDROOM HEAT PUBLISHED, ROOMS. BATH, MATURE WORK-Ing couple only, an Elizabeth Lake. 482-4103. _________ CLARKSTON LAKE \ ment: 1 bedroom, m balcony facing lake, Ing, heat Included si UN 4-7223. Gplf View Apartments For information cjsll FE 2-4055. 4784 ALLINGHAM, WHITE LAKE — 3-bedroom ranch. Scar garage, natural fireplace, utility room, swimming and boating privileges. Gl only—o down, $70 per month. Call collect. KE 7-4400. Gainer Realty. Rent Housbs, Furnished 39 2-BEDROOM HOUSE, HEAT hot water tumlshad, adults. —. month. Woedhull Lake. OR 3-2805 n Utilities. OR 3-6022 be-T BEDROOM, Keypunch, I wiring, I Work Wonted Mnle 11 EXPERIENCED" PAINTING, EX- LIOHT HAULING 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL OF FUR-nlture. and stoves. Needed. now I FE 2-6S42. AUCTION SALE EVERY SATUR day at Blue Bird Auction. MOOU buy furniture, tools and aooli OR 3-4847 or MEIread J CASH FOR FURNITURE AND A r— • 'Mil Wanted MlscBlianeeai 30 HAND WEAVING LOOM 48" fabric or wider. OL 1-8222. OFFICE ‘5#iKS,^ FILES, ^URNI-turt, typewriters, adding machine, | folding machine — Forbes - OR ! 34747: posit. Inquire 273 I 3 ROOMS NICELY FURNISHED, private entrance, baby welcome. 483-4144. 1______' „ it Orion. MY 3-4031, Rgnt Houses, unfurnished 40 2-BEDROOM, NEW HOME, I weak and utilities. FE 4-3144. 2-BEDROOM, FIltST AND LAST months* rent, near stores end bus. Adults. FE 2-1634. 2-BEDROOM HOME, OIL HEAT, pertly furnished/ 172 W. Princeton. 4 ROOMS, WEST SlbE. 2 BATHS, family room in basement, carpat- ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE, 5 ROOMS AND BATH, 1ST FLOOR Pontiac Press B i. References, t 141. BOULEVARD HEIGHTS ROOMS NICELY FURNISHED, Iso I will care for child If mother forks. 141 S. “ ' LAKE FRONT HOME. NEWLY RE-and decorated, 2 bed-miles tram Pontiac, par-, ir appointment. • ' ■ • frruyiAr tkibChTADV Architectural Drawing Basamant Waterproofing JOHNSTONE WALL REPAIR KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. Daheratora-RMulatart—Stbrters Batteries $5.95 Exchange Fg 5-1814_____________ 348 Auburi Block Laying TURN A KEY PUSH A BUTTON AND GO! Hours of endless en|oyment Larson or Hydrodine Boat Powered by e I84S EVINRUDE MOTOR 1865 HOMELITC MOTOR Harrington Boat Works 1188 >. Telegraph Rd. 332-8033 Excavating LAKES, PONDS, BOAT SLIPS Now is the time to t— — beaches, lake bottom or SOUTH LYONS EXECUTIVE HOUSE 181 University. Beautiful '---- M1—1 Built-ins, gas rapes, finished I _____ Children okay. month. 373-7404. 41 BEDROOMS CONNECTED BY living room, dose In. 334-4307. Clean sleeping room, ii e a r General Hospital. References. FE MAN OR WOMAN, to PARKHURST. 336-3773 PROFESSIONAL GENTLEMEN, privet*, quiet, no drinkers. FE S-1S37 or FE S-2442. ROOM AND UR BOARD I33to Oakland Aye, F6 4-1464. man, Pontiac. 462-4958.____ Kooms With Board 43 LOVELY .HOME. PRIVILEGES, PLASTERING, NEW AND REPAiR, | Kent OttlCO SpUCO if pilings. GHARRY - Fencing Private Investigators Rental Equipment l-ROOM OFFICE FOR RENT n.ew building. 845 per month eluding heat end lights. Cell Tom FOR FICE Fleer Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR.. FLOOR SAND-Ing. FE 2-3789. JOHN TAYLOR, FLOCX LAYING, sending and finishing. 23 ygars-expenence. 332-4875. R. G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING, sanding and finishing. F] FB 3*491. Woodward al S BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS , RUG CLEANER - OWER SAWS 1 r-— 832 Jeslyn Opan Sun. FE 4-4109 MODERN, CONVENIENT Wallpaper Steamer 1 3133s. Floor senders, polishers, hai sandars, furnace vacuum cleaner Oakland Fuel B Paint, 414 0 chard Lake Ave. FE 5-41S0. SPACE dentist. On By Kate Osann “After I graduate from high school, I want to go tDa girl’s college near lots of men’s colleges!” Sale Houses 205 HARRISON -----oom, gas heat, garage, drapes, and dryer. Nothing BY OWNER Bloomfield arid j street. Title Is a sharp 7-room ranch with IVb baths, tireplaoa, attached garage, large —" itTboast xx) buy i SIAM CHRISTMAS PRESENT 4500 DOWN For brick 3-btUroom ranch Including 75-ft. wide let sidewalks, paving, water - system, attached king-sized brick 2-car garage. Solid cement, drive. It's far the entire family for many Christmases. See models. Open il to I dally, on Crescent Lake Rd. to min north of MM. C. SCHUETT Ml 6-8500 PHONE 4734824 EXTRA SPECIAL M8R. Carpeting session. WE TRADE. FOUR-BED-wlth full base-l nice recrea- SYLVAN LAKE 2376 RENFREW Sam Warwick Ir ( * --------nt house ,^w.f ____ plaster, ______________ RM city services. Lake privileges. S27.800. Terms. Opah Sunday, I to 4. 482-2620. 'SMITH" WEST BLOOMFIELD nterior of house par-naiiy nnisnad, large living room with fireplace, full dining room, kitchen with built-in oyen end range. Gas hoi water Iteat. Attached garage. Privileges on Cass Lake. $19,800. Terms. R0LFE H. SMITH, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph FE 3-7844_________ Eves. FE 3-7302 TRI-LEVEL, BASEMENT, 3 8ED- Sqlo Houses 4! NO DOWN PAYMINT No MortmeiCgw ■ No paytnont the lit month NEW MODEL BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS FE 1-2743 liM *j> * »■« EVENINOS LI 2-7327 lOOK! Ranch NW2,375 Bi-Level x - $12,875 0nly$125 Down LARGE LOT*. LAKE PRIVILEGES, PAVE6 STREETS, CEN TRAL WATER BYBTIM. OCCUPY JANUARY Coming About Jan. 1$th Niw 1 Vt Bath Bi-Level Buy Before Prices Increase Open I to o. dosed Thursday Take Commerce Rd. South Commerc* * ' gary turn right 1 miles to Glen- Americano Homes 624-420C 49 Sale Houses IRWIN SMALL PARM - 3 large brick ranch with lull kitchen, separate dining . «n«rk her. Oak floors ■ garage, at ratling ANNETT Close to City Hail ---** MS I schools OAKWOOD MANOR - Lpvety I S.fll lent beach. Has city baths, 3 fireplaces, (■ basamant and private , b master bedroom. Lart i with walMo-wall i to 51 West Side Brick lv Seminole Hills .ndltlen, COMMERCIAL — 114 feet of ft ear garage. Nice-d lot, alio extra , ..._____Priced tar ba- w reproduction cett. Terms. 1' WE WILL TRAOS | Realtors 28 E. Huron St. ‘ n Evenings gr1 * ‘ I “ ■ at laaal'mwHh living quarters l. Downstairs Is a large area I could be used as a garage (tract to responsible FIRST IN VALUE Caaaa RENTING $59 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME aASHiAT LARGE DINING AREA nttaFE 8-0466 Frushour Struble Office Open Sunday 1 to 6 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR Itg w. watton ________FI 3-7143 Sylvan Lake — Avondale | Trade In Your Homo _ Three-bedroom brick ranch home ( Walking distance* St. Benedict's, Ilka new. Nice living room, MM paled; femlh^kltchen, large u I S14.7S0 with 11,473 down plus dosing a This subslanllalbungelew Is fully carpeted, neat and clean throush-out. Gas heat and reasonable priced at S4.8M. Shawn by ep- The Price Has Been Slashed; North Suburban I This lovely trl-level home with Dandy 3-roem lto-story •JWJJJJ™ privileges on Leon Lake will sp- hill dining roam«nd basamam. peal to buyers with discriminating Lets of ye'V. spec* In thl» Mr | tastes. Upper level offers 3 large deep lot. Sailing tor $8,930. LOTS Ilk* new, nice kitchen with bullt-Iris, finished family room, gas heat, I to baths, attached garage on a large lot among comparable I homes. Price, $11,300. I HAROLD R. FRANKS, REALTY 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD em sail -— VACANT - MOVE RlDHT IN. Tubbs Rd., OH l 3M sq. ft., IUILDERS. _____C EES. PEOPLE IS . . .. CREDIT PROBLEMS ANO RETIREES. For Immediate Action Call I FE 5-3676 626-9575 ANYTIME SAT. OR BUN. ' OR COME TO 280 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY j HAYDEN NEW HOMES * 3 BEDROOMS I TRl-LEVfcLS RANCHES Ito-Car Garage S3' Lot Inouded ! Family Room Get H*a8 FROM $10,500 10 PER CENT DOWN WILL B'JILD ON YOUR LOT • putio. Kitchen with beautiful me-~‘i cupboards* Formica lops and ilt-lns. Lower level has paneled e basement* IVi-cer gersge. J Must bi Elizabeth Lake Estates Custom-built 3-bedroom whits mlnum Cap* Cod home — 2' j-car garage. Lake privileges on Elizabeth L*k*. Vacant. Immadlata possession. Price reduced to $21,-1 John K. Irwin ITi mediate possession. S1X800 ■ price. ! JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE i REALTORS Ft 8-4823 _________ KE WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE . naraoe Nice S. Woodward, Birmingham Ifls Sr' only *“-630d PHONES 646-2323 farms. Immediate pot- , _■ * l W00DSEY Nestled amid mature oaks you'll find this pink and pretty aluminum or**old°as I am yoi?re sura to en|oy living in Hits quiet neighborhood close by Elizabeth Lake, full basement, finished recreation room, double carport, look and be pleasantly surprised at what 57,885 will buy. HAGSTROM REALTOR I AC fumact. I SHOW HOUSE BUILDER'S MODEL For Sale" Occupy January 15th Bi-Level O'NEIL log houit has two l< t living. Three bed roc large living room A-1 BUYS HUNT00N LAKE All brick ranch — 3 ^ lull basement, attached rage, fireplace, kitchen GOT $300 LEFT? WEAVER newly decorated ram site. 3 bedrooms, knotty pine cabinet; tile bath, carport, lake rights Maceday en|oyment of. Ji on 107x149' utility room, i In kitchen, ]■ paved street, I Lake. $10,950, * teat, 2 family room; formal dining room. rooms, Ready tor or________ priced at only $30,900, term! PHPaMPggPBR tax i MILTON WEAVER INC.. REALTOR Insurance. HAGSTROM REAL-1 _ ^ dS* “ --““ , 4800 W. Huron, OR 4-0368,1 Rochestei lings call 612-0433. f. University OL HT42 i, basement, hard- I. Excellent location. Restaurants Hay and Sleigh Rides BIG BOY ’DRIVE Silver Leke-Telegi ___ EXCITING FUN iN FRESH. CLEAN! b6B'S RESTAURANT, 1011 JOSLYN outdoors. . Bring your grqup, entoy thrill of horse-drswn sleigh rides ■fwgMfe MiBnMHjB then to < ■port. Reasonable. OR Rent Business Property 47-/ FE 3-8111 spaghetti, trench bread, tasty salad, steaming coftaa. Write, call tor Ml brochure. Upland 411 Lake George Rd., ADDITIONS CRAVES CONTRACTING Fret Eatlmataa “- '' CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WORK INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS. ^eTi%s * ***** *xp*ri*nc*' Cement Work_______ • Cement Work Licensed cement contractor. FE S-9122 CEMENT WORK, REASONABLE-Free estimates. OR 34440 attar 6. CONCRETE FLOORS. 40c SQUARE T FE 4-1874, OR 3Y217. Home Improvements Porches, additions, steps, gem remodeling and cement wi Guinn Construction Co. FE 5-9122 (. FEIST AMMEL ENGINEERING Co. Rooting, sheet metal. Sanitation OA 8-3155. 92 $. Washington, Ox- WIEDMAN CONSTRUCTION. COM-plete service. Free estimates. FE 5-7944, day or night.______ ROOFS: NEW. REPAIR Trn Trimming Service A. E. DALBY TUBE SERVICE Tree, stump nsmoval, trim, tr*» anting. FE 5-3005, FE 5-3023. Tessner Tree Service All types at tree work. Fra* estimates. Topping, cabling, cavity work, fertilizing. 437-2722. TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL Magf Jamil, Trucking HAULING' AND RUBBISH. NAME HOUSES FOR SALE TO BE MOVED — All modem, delivered to your lot. D’hondt Wracking Company. 20,000 SQUARE FEET Industrial or Warehouse Kant, Realtor, FE 5-610$. STORE FOR LEASE On Huron St. near downtown I plus 123x125 foot parking, lease for S years at S2S0 a me REALTOR PARTRIDGE 2-BEDROOM. $500 DOWN. IN PON. JJac OA' 8-2013. A. Sanders. Rap. FE 8-0885. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING rubbish, fill dirt, grading and grav-_el and front-end loading. FE 2-0603. L.IGHT HAULING, GARAGES AND W COMMERCE 2-ST0RY FRAME bedrooms, large living rot nblned dining era* and kltch baths. Built in 1964. Lot 81 i'. $14,900 - $2,400 down an It ’ Tlattley realty Chimney Cleaning TALBOTT LUMBER ’Glass installed In doors and daws. Cany late bt ' DnesmtUag, Tailoring ALTEHATIONS ALL TYPES* KNIT - . I^^v^^fl^glli^g MAS GUTTER COMPANY Trucks to Rent I to-Ton pickups Ito-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS . AND 6QUIPMENT | ' Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailers Pontiac Fanii and Industrial Tractor Co. ' MS S. WOODWARD F E 4-0441 PE 4-1442 Open. Dally Including Sunday Uphoktgring ________| MEIER B OLSON UPHOLSTERING * l:“_5?TER'0? I FE 5-2882-Free Estimates FE 8-1854 iMsrx."g| AAA PAINTING AND DECORAT- BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS . i *— “ "4“ Frse as- Walls and wtndews. Reas. Satis- I faction guaranteed. FE 2-1431. 1025 Oaktekf Aug. FE 4-4585 CHIMNEY AND ’ FIREPLACE Mavlaa and SterNM j cleaning Also*chlmney repair. Res-1_- _ aanabli rates. 33S-238B. _____ SMITH MOVINtf I Decorating 8 ROOMS Combine your city and vacation homes into Iclose-ln year a—J drapes Included at S38.900. GORDON WILLIAMSON GALLERY OF HOMES 4044 W. Maple 444-2434 __ - , Birmingham ' '■ $500 DOWN, TWO BEDROOMS, GA-rege, ^ vacant,' west suburb, $9,990 HURON GARDENS BRAND NEW 3-bad room ranch home, conveniently designed kllch-■en with birch cupboards, tuH basement, oak floors, * PULLY '" SUL AT ED ham*. Only SII.BUa. RORABAUGHl KAMPSEN Your Neighbor Traded—, Why Don't You— YOU AND YOURS ___ JOYS OF. THIS HAPPY SEASON! 071 W. HURON ST. MLS FE 441821 large, kitchen, finished basement. storms and screens, fenced yuru, garage, $14,750, Immadlata possession. HILLTOP REALTY 473-SH4 ____ MIXED AREA . . Tucker realty 334-0700 MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY H M RE AG 2SS1 N ment, $1X800 on your lot. OPEN 2 TO 5 P.M. DAILY Zelltr's Real Estate NEW 3-BEDROOM BRICK HOME. tear garage, bath and to, and separata dining area. WATTS REALTY NA 7-2840 1944 M14 at Bald Eaota Lakh MUST SELL BY OWNER. A FEW houses. Incomes and commercial properties. $1,774 up. Economy Cars, 2335 Dixie Hwy._____ Near Whitfield School Specious modem 5-room home, paled living room, dining re kitchdn. 2 bedrooms, bam, b meijt, gas heel, garage. A m j.Tj^u’realty FE 2-3418 ■“ New 4-Bedroom Colonial Full basamant, large let, deluxe features. Best offer W»t It. WE TRADE ANO TRADE Silver Lake Const. Co. 673-9531 * NORTHERN HIGH AREA 3-bedroom, wood floors, large utility ' raont Immadlata pasisuloty Si 0,900-$900 dawn. HILLTOP REALTY _ _ 473-5234 pikkY Park, i rDoms plus nr gas furnace. ■ FE 0--- - RANCH HOUif XM6 \ ACkl. M minute* la Mad. $1*440. 41.400 plus cast dawn. Mrs. Flood -rap, C. Schuptt. OR 3-7040. / ikltHEITER AREA HOMES ; *" UL M1|1 „ ut w|y$ SAUNOERS^ WYATT REALTY WEST SUBURBAN PRIVILEGES ON ,BEAUTIFUL WATKINS LAKE — 2-BEDROOM BRICK RANCHER — FULL BASEMENT — BREEZEWAY WITH ATTACHED GARAGE. MANY OTHER FETURES TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION — $1,500 DOWN TO NEW MORTGAGE. - WRKiHl 312 Oakland At FE 2-9141 OR 2-403 SPOTLITE Walk td Work 1 teals Ilka homo the minutes you ntar this vary clean 3-bedroom ome, ihodem kitchen and irge living room. Utility r #V$250*Moves You In ' - Herrington Hills )-h*drnom. full basement* gas has ad yard. Stormi^_ -Smiley Realty FE 2-8326 Open Doily 9 a.m. to 9 p m. HIITER garage, 3 lots. Owner will lor larger ham*. sn,500, I CALL 17 C. HIITER', RSAl 9 ROOMS. LARGE 3-STORY HOUSE — Union Lake area. CMy J Land contract. $1,500 down 36701. . V HIGHLAND AREA 4. Low ' 414,818. Terms arranged. 343-7780. OXBOW LAKE-FRONT HOME - $4,400. Easy terms. Land contract. 343-7700. PROFITABLE 2-MAN OPERATION RESTAURANT - Root hot spall 11450 down plus Inventory. Ideal location ter lTBBPrBdav Operation — On main ItMtwey. Illness *. sale. Call new - EM 36703. 1 BEDROOMS - Lake $4400. Low down port EM 3-7700. - Full basement - Custom Wall * - Carpeted Thr.||MM ^ Paneled Family Room - Full landscaped $700 Moves You In Only $122 Per Month Open I to I, closed Thursday Take Commerce Rd., turn left at South Commerce, 2 miles to Glen-gary turn right to models. D'LORAH Americana Homes 624-42001 custom-built h 400, will. 1**00. w* invito your Inspect ion. BEAUTIFUL LAKE FRONTAGE In , the village at Lake Angelas. Over l acre, nicely landscaped with maffy tall stately aaks. Rein-thread sea wall, boathouse and tha O'NEIL SAVE YEAR-END MODEL CLOSE-OUT Choose From 4 New Custom- -Quality BEAUTY RITE HOMES fireplace. Formal d *—10 screened por I ir features. S45, or trade«4.*fs look MACEDAY LAKE PRIVILEGES. 3-BEDROOM RANCH * BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Full walkout basamant, large I00'x250' lot. Lake privileges an Square Lake. Only 41,300 dawn. So* It today! $350 DOWN 2-famlly income. Pontiac North Side. 3 bedrooms, living room and dining room down — 3-room apartment up that is rented. 1 Mock to Wisner School ahdidlstrlet stares. Can today I WATERF0R0 REALTY 3. Bryson Realtor Van Walt Bldg. 1448 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1271 MILLER ll.lto ACRES, PONTIAC LAKE PRIV-> ILEGES with this cut* 5 reams ■ ] and bath. Gas heat. 2-car garage. The fridge and rang* so with 1 deal. Lovely garden that, will lead you all year. Only 511408. SQUARE LAKE PRIVILEGES, brick home. Large car|——----- with fireplace, i art lust s tew See It today! MALL h 8----» I______^ carpal, large dot-sement, gat hast, ga-much more. $13,480. from thl* it : i Realtor FE 2-0262 Post^ Office, him 4808 Bluegrass . . . You art Invited to Inspect our lovely Beauty Rita ranch with a walk-out basement and all the daluxa features found only in finer homes. 4827 Bluegrass . . . If you Ilka Colonials, wa cbn shew you styling •t its bast In the 4-bedroom BEAUTY RITE. - Featuring a spacious family ream with fireplace, separata dining roam, marble window sills, 2to-c*r attached garage and many, many extras. Several of 3144 Angelus Drive' . . . bedroom ranch on tha gol Modem bullt-ln .kitchen, li Highway to Silver Lake Ro* Right to Walton Blvi.. left I Angelus Drive, right to model. OPEN. 2 to 5 Mon. Thru Fri. 1 to 5 Sat. and Sun. LET'S TALK TRADE RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 3420 FONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 94 — •■0427 MLS EM 3-2475 RAY O'NEIL^REALTOR 3520 PONTIAC LK. RD. SUN., 1 to 4 Sat. Ev«s. attar A* call OL_1-6741_MLS.__OR 4-0427 RHODES | STATELY SUBURBAN 8 room brick home, beautiful shady lawn, 10 ■ |fi||t “*1% land. An Ideal ! ter the large tarn-! DORRIS ALMOST AN ACRE with this Ilka Priced^taTsal! 'now^G^ «h*aV*of the spring rush and make ytur appointment this weekend. Beautiful kitchen 9kl7to' with abundance of cupboards and sliding thermopan* \ door-wall to spacious back basement, o 7ROOM MODERN I j garage. $1X380. I 4-6EDROOM FAMILY HOME, I %VrJ QUAD-LEVEL'"i Mixed Neighborhood Payments Ilka rent MOOELS OPEN AFTERNOONS l-S AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REAITY 471 Irwin oH East Btvd. FE S-2743 afternoons. U 2-4477 Eva*. FIRST IN VALUE NICHOLIE NORTH.BIDE About 4350 HARRINGTO bungalow. Living Mu, Kitchen. Full “* heat, vacant. SIDE Three bedroom bungalow. Living and .dtnfng area. Kitchen. Full •• — vacMt. Eves. CaU MR. ALTON. I Extra nice .......... to tchbois and gino, 9 rooms * — baths, master bath, llvitw room with wall-to-wall carpef. Drapes, natural fireplace, dining ell, glass ' sliding doors, recreation room with large natural fireplace. Idpal all electric kltdwn, gas heat plus 3 ton air-condIHon unit. 2-car attaahad garage. $44,800. Terms. iOOD 5-ROOM HOME, aluminum sMIng, 3 bedrooms, full basamant, oil heat, 2 baths, 2to-car attached garage. 2 acres of land. Northwest Of Clarkston. 5 minutes to 1-75. Only $14,400. TERFORD. NIc* comfortable 4-•—— |171-------------1, 2to baths. furnace. Air-dot lot. Ex-tady section, f SI3,000, $450 ".j >iaSiTrsho» Prectlcaily Immadlata possasslenl cellent location. 1IM Lake privileges. Only ALBERT J. RHODES, BROKER | FE 0-2306, 240 W. Walton, FE 54712 ' MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE , STOUTS Best Buys ! Today Lakefront — Desirable 3-bedmom family heme on Lake Orion, features 24 II. living room, separate dining robm, basamant, gas hast, storms and screens, new cement s-i—i— *10,500 with Just oft Oakland. pealing brick 3-bedroom hums. A living room and dining roam combination 13 X 24'. A cheerful center far dally family living and relax Ing. A family roam with massive fireplace Where youngsters play wtilla you entertain. a wsndarfti r— - - —- DORRIS X SON; REALTORS 2534 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0324 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE * READY FOR YOU IN BLOOMFIELD HILLS You can celebrate tha Now Year In your new horn*. Ready to move Into, this hilltop Colonial with stunning entry foyer and decorated In tasteful elegance,. answers’ ovary daslra you've wanted In your next horn*. The living ream, family room with fireplaea, bullt-ln kitchen with exceptional breakfast area, dining room, 3 bedrooms. In fact, the house throughout hat that look of expansive tastes that a family at Importance requires. You'll find ft hard to believe that all this charm, elegance and beauty can b* yours lor lust 137,504. Wa ara REALTOR PARTRIDGE Neat and Clean — large lot. ptVod fn 47,950 with easy terrr Move Right In — Warren Stout Realtor 1440 N. Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE 5414 Open Evankigs fill 0 p.m. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Val-U-Way Gov't Representative We are closed so that our employees can enjoy thd holidays. If you qre -out driving, go by thoso homos and call to. sop on Monday. 704 PARKWOOD 1140 ECKMAN 400 MAXWELL Bptl' 7M STANLEY I N. ROSELAWN R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 304, Oakland . Opan 57 Aflbr hours, F« 06410 or FEB-1344 JLIST YOUR HOME WITH OS THE-PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1904 C—W WIST SIDE j-room horn* In excellent cond •ion. Noiato dacqrxi* -rww gi •omoco. Extra .era* kitchen on living room. On Tltoon north ( Voorheli Rood. $4,400. Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor fr Mt01 (Evening* FE 4401) CLARK A K E ESTATES - ............booomont — igotlooo cleon — MW privilege, — nice lot - Price ItMOO - opproxl-mote ly 11.300 down. I20.N0 — 10 por cent CITV WEST — 3W - room - jvs- ?k — Lear M - price 118.501 1 CLARK REAL ESTATE .... N. HURON FC SUM HERO LISTINGS — ALL-------- BRICK COLONIAL SEMINOLE HILLS } bedrooms, large living room raoe. I TERMS 10 ACRES CLARKSTON AREA S-room house with 1 bedrooms. 20 living room with fireplace; Wolkeu basement. Also )9'x24' barn wltl sheep shod attached. Young or chard, too. FULL PRICE. S1S.M0. Smith & Wideman OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 6 CLARKSTON 6122 CRAMLANE - $15,990 6040 CRAMLANE - $15,990 H—eee WATERFORD AREA Terms to suit. NOTHING DOWN *• end 3-bedroom homes, city in "Axrrbm. Peyments |* - J JAMES A. TAYLOR, Rgoltor ■ , Tm Highland Rd. (MS*. OR 40304 , 4 tvenlMS RM 3-7344 Announcing "Clarkston Hunt Club Estates" OPEN SUNDAY 2*5 FOR HORSE LOVERS AND OTHERS HERE IS A NEW IDEAL IN SUBURBAN LIVING. THE MODEL IS A "NEW ENGLAND farm RANCH COLONIAL" ON 3V> ACRES — COMPLETE WITH 24'x32' RED BARN AND CORRAL AND OVER ONE MILE OF BRIDLE PATH. HOME HAS 3 BED ROOMS, lte BATHS, FARM KITCHEN WITH BUILT -INS, FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, FULL BASEMENT AND 2-CAR GARAGE. PRICED TO SELL. OVER 25 ACREAGE PARCELS — SELECT YOURS NOW AND BUILD LATER. MANY PLANS AVAILABLE AND WE CAN ARRANGE NECESSARY FINANCING. DIRECTIONS—DRIVE 2 MILES NORTH OP CLARKSTON OR 1-75 X-WAY ON MTS. THEN TURN LEFT ON OAKHllL ROAD 1 MILE. WATCH FORr O PEN SIGNS. NORTH SUBURBIA COMMERCIAL CORNER W. Walton need Dixie Hwy. 77Wx-100 developing section. P0NTIAC REALTY CO. F» W7I 717 EelBwtn Ave. KENT in HIS # 4 Vi ACRES WEST SUBURBAN location I Prime Acreage West suburban a .. MR Property contains lake fronted ter lake front heme* ae seen a leke^ privilege thome sites. Show Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor MAY WE EXTEND TO EVERYONE OUR SINCEREST HOPE FOR A VERY HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR. Our office will be closed *«(' Jen. 2. C. PANGUS, REALTY *30 MIS Ortonvllle Cell Collect NA 7-2115 kb L—d C—tracts » ACTION on your lend contract, larae c small Cell Mr. HIHarTwOlffl Broker. 2100 Ellieoeth Lena Reed. Wonted CeBrtracte-Mtg. M4 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgmth| wanted. See us 'warren STOUT, Realtor 1430 N. Opdyke Rd. PE Hid Open Bvet. Ttl I p.m. ■ cAsh ARRO REALTY L 1143 CASS-ELIZABETH ROAD CASH FOR LANO CONTRACTS— H. J. Van Welt, 4330 Dixie Hwy., on s-iaB. _________ i HKed land Contracts. reA- aenabte discounts. Earl Garrets, Realtor, 4417 Commerce Reed. EMptre 3-1311_______EMpIre 3-4004 IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOUR lend contracts or any good lend centred upon satisfactory approls- K. L, Templeton, Realtor 2319 Orchard Lake Road 4S2-8980 QUICK CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS Clark Real Estate, FE 3-7NS. res. FE 44113, Mr. Clertt. SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS wanted. Get our deal before you ■oil, CAPITOL SAVINGS A LOAN ASSN. 75 W. Huron. PE 44541. It Money te Loan 61 (Licensed Money Lender) 3-car I kxiial appearance. Daad-and strati with plenty of privacy. This home Is now vacant. If you ad now your new year may start M this home. SI2.300. Last than 52,000 down. First offering. Don't bo late, cell ■ STATEWIDE - LAKe'oRION 330-0000 AtteT S, OA 0-1411 4VS ACRES - 2-BEDROOM * s finished - 200-acre dairy term. H. C. NEWINGHAM REALTOR ne. Nice ba ga beautiful J 5S*pJ brick exterior - Ut barns, paneled family room, 2-cei attached garage, full basement 100'xlSO' lot with scenic view Paved -streets. city water, gat heat. See for yourself this terrlfii OPEN Pane can get away from It ell. Don't miss seeing this rare farm buy. 13 minutes from Pontiac and priced right. Cell now, won't ye? TIMES REALTY 5219 Dixit Hwy MLS 074*0394 ___ OPEN SUNDAY 2-S _ GILES) DRAYTON PLAINS — 2-bedroom | i lands for Investmtnt I Acreage for Building Farms With Buildings | UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 0443 Dixie, Clarkston I *23-1413_________Eves. 425-1433 LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first vt*M friendly, helpful. Ft 2-9 2-9206 OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank BMg. »:30 to SiSO -let. t:30 hi SUNDAY 2 to 6 3603 LOREN A DRIVE room, flrepMct. I kitchen, •w living fist S20400. GILES REALTY CO. brick ranch by Ross, [pg 54175 \ .221 Baldwin Ave. r that makes a house a MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Income Prepgrty SO i Is comp let* and ready ' - -A, v......... occupy — Including sod, LOTS IN INDIANWOOO SHORES No. 3 now available. CRAWFORD AGENCY [Y 3*1143 ______MY 3*4571 Waterford Hill Manor Large estate lots on one of Oak-I land County's moat beautiful sub-j divisions. Priced from $3,750. 1 • DON WHITE, INC. „ OPEN DAILY TO I P.M. 1 2991 Dixie Hwy. OR 444941 -----.----------------- ; Salt Business Property 57 ! "BUD771 Drayton Plains Store Building FINANCIAL WORRIES? Let Us Help You! I BORROW UP TO $1,000 34 months to pay credit life insurance available BUCKNER “Trouble with'Mom is that she blasts off without a count-down!” Solo Household Goods 65 3-ROOM OUTFITS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $288 $3.00 WEEKLY NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-plece (brand new) living room: 2 slop-tablot, matching coffee nw*, 2 decorator, lamps. All for Silt. Only SI JO weakly. NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS l-piece (brand new) bedrooms: double dresser, book-case bed and chest, box spring and Innersprlng mattress, 2 vanity lompt. All for SI19.11.50 weakly. Visit our trade-in department for more bargains. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 10 E. Pike PE 4-7MI Open Mon. and Frl. 'til 9. p.m. Between Paddock end City Hall LOANS LOANS, to $1,000 Zoned R 3 basement, 2-car attached garage -Want Rosa custom builder wi . bund to suit. Your let or our: _ ____ _____ Drive out dhd see this lovely home ptr Square toof Term directions: Dixie Highway to Annett Inc. Realtors Watkins Lake Read, j Mock to Lo-ig E. Huron St. FE 144*4 rena Drive. Open Evenings and Sundays 1-4 \ WATERFORD REALTY I kto Prap«cly.......................SI Year 'Round Home OR 3-1272 LAZENBY VS milt frontage on gravel r< also 4-room livable house large hip-roof basement bam. “.BUD" Nicholie, Realtor FE 5*1201. AFTER 6 P.M. FE 2*3370 ELIZABETH LAKE 3-bedroom cent*— tached garage. I h Lake. Priced el 2-bad room, large living dining Ml. lull basome nice kitchen. Close to sh schools In , Drayton Pie wooded tot (214'xlM') sell at S7.9S0 with - 10 beach and the home Is In a l lent ^ condition. Fireplace, t m siManTprio^t 5^3400. * S jjj Prudential! * Real Estate 0gi999 S. Mein Lapeer i 664-8484 • thiopen 4 'til 9 ‘Sunday Vtil 4 HOME SITES. K7 X lOO*. SUNNY ™ Beach overlooking beautiful wal-'V ters. Lake, privileges. 2 sandy beaches, docking. 5730, 510 down, "* SIO month. Owner, MY 2-0940. ! 1 I LAKE FRONT HOMES, NEW AND j ' | Business Opportunities59 CORNER, 400 ON OPOYKE, 333 sailors. Credit life Insurance available. Stop In or phono FE 34121. HOME 8. AUTO LOAN CO. 1 N. Perry St. FE 3-8121 ____ 9 to 3 Dally. Sat. 9 to 1_ WHEN YOUNFED $25 TO $1,000’ Wt Will b« glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. 300 Pontiac Stata Bank BMg. FE 4*1574 complete. S49J0 1 __«, BRAND NEW. Large________ small site (round drop toot, rectangular) tabtao In 3, 3 and 7 PC. sate. 524.45 and up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE :oast wide van lines. 371 e.< Pike Street. FE 4-4044. Furniture to sell. Wt will buy your .furniture. COLONIAL FURNITURE. LARGE selection, everything for your home Family Home Furnishings, till Dixie Hwy-, cor. Telegraph. DAVENPORT. DRESSING TABLE Sale Household Goods 65 WASHER. S2S, ELECTRIC STOVE, U5. Dryer, SIS. Refrigerator with lop freezer, 549. Gas stove. US. 21-Inch TV S2S. Refrigerator SIS. ___ _____ balance. versai Co. PE 4-0905. STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE VlfITH faucets end curtains 549.50 value 434JO. Lavatories complete with faucets, SI4.45, toilets S1I.9S. Michigan Fluorescent, 391 Orchard Lake ... —r It W. Pike Stare Only Table and floor lamps from . S 2.9S Elec. Ironers from __________ $29.95 Apt. site gas stove ..........$39.95 4-pc. dining room suite ...... $39.95 2-pc. living room suite ..... 549.95 Apt. size elec, range ....... 549.93 Guar. elec. washer $49.95 Guar. elec, refrigerator . $49.95 EASY TERMS ___FE 41*66 WE TAKE TRADE-INS. FAMILY. Home Furnishings, 2I3S Dixie Hwy. Antiques 5130^ Will atoll separately. OR SPECIAL DISCOUNTS ON MANY items until Dec. 31. Y-Knot Antiques; 10343 Oakhill, Holly. ME Hi-Fi, TV l Bodies 66 $5 BOTTLE OF COLOGNE FREE with any color TV, storoo, portable 'til Christmas. Philco-Zenith Dealer — Dolby TV — FE 4-9402 — East Lehigh *---------- " BLOND RCA. 24'' GE. bRANO II'' GE with doors, $49.95. Bill Petruska & Sons, Tel-Huron Shop- Mortgo|e Loons 62 1st and 2nd MORTGAGESo St.SOt OR MORE NO APPLICATION FEES DINETTE SET, LIVING ROOM . furniture, upright piano, electric i sewing machine, wringer washing I machine, electric Westlnghouse ■ • roaster. OL I-37SQ after t. - | FREIGHT DAMAGED STEREOS RECONDITIONED AND GUARAN-teed TVs. SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM. JOHNSON'S RADIO 8. TV 43 E. WALTON (_______FE 5-4349 RCA 21-INCH CABINET TV. ALL ' s and picture tube. OR I AND RECORD CABI-—‘ II SS0. FE 2-3344. i TWO SI-INCH TVs. 2 CAR RADIOS FI 4-4919__________________________ I Water Softeners - 66-A WATER SOFTENER RENTAL, UN-limited gallon age, S3 per month. 473-1277. Universal Soft W TALBOTT LUMBER ilnt closeout S enamel and I 13.30 gallon. 13 Oakland Av .... SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE y til W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to mat: vour r Clothing. Fi ... PAIRS OF BI-FOLD MAHOG-eny doors to lit IlnitlMd opening 3111" wide by S'*" high or units can be used-together In finished 74 BANKS ARCHIRY SALES ____itchlgan Avt. FE 30144 GON CABINET - 1 LEFT — MAple 5-1H2. MOBILES — FOR WINTER go Skl-Doo. AM models an i. Up to 41 mail, an bar* 1 Sr mew. Only weighs 230 ___te In and fake a ride. BILL COLLER Boats Mid Motors, 1 mile east at Lapeer on TrewITwItri ■ ,W PHOENIX FOR 1*4* Travel Traitors, Truck Campars display. J WELL /MADE FISH SHANTY. ________74 FILL, GRAVEL, CHOICO RICH BLACK DIRT, SIX yards tor HO, dtllvorod. FE 443SS. LAKE DREDGING, BEACH SAND, gravM and till. OR 2-3SS0._____________ SALES - RENT F. E. HOWLAND 3255 Dixie___________ OR 3-1*34 TERRIFIC SALES UP UNTIL JAN. lOih when wa win dose tor our vacation until March 1st. Thank you tor your patronage. Jacobson TRAILER SALES AND RENTAL, imt William* Laka Rd., Qrsy-ten Plains. OR S-S9B1. TRAvHL TRAILERS AND TRUCK campers. Pontiac Auto Brokers, TOP SOIL, SAND. ( PONTIAC LAKE 'BUILDERS SUP-ply, sand, gravel, fill dirt. OR »tS34 , T ,________ Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel II- AND 14-INCH OAK FIREPLACE weed, alio slab wood. 33S-029)._ 1-A AGED WOOD, $7 UP, SLSO Hoosgtraiigrs ____ Coloniai CANNEL COAL - THE IDEAL fireplace fuel, fireplace wood* fire* tide colon. OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT. 45 Thomai It. FE 3-01S9. FE 244* or 073*1530 FIREPLACE WOOD One-year seasoned, oak. maple, beach. 110 par cord. Artistic Landscaping, 3710 Elizabeth Laka Road 334*1557. iVELL - SEASONED FIREWOOD Special Offer Vagabond: W Wide "Factory Cost" Auburn (MS9) at Opdyke (MM) MARLETTE, VAGABOND, GARD-ner, - Skyline, General, toll and 0 wide. 40 (nor plane. t Gem, Marietta. 3pen dally 94:30 - Ctoesd Sunday Oxford trailer Sales 1 OF THE REST AKC DACHSHUND s-gallon aquAEIIim, Eump and filter set, 19. HHtillon setup, *'* Crane's. UL 2-2200. AKC OACHSUNO PUPPIES -------J - shMl. OR 44240. A-l POODLE TRIMMING AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. STUD dogs. ESTELHEIMS, FE 2-0089. CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES. REOIS-tered, Chihuahua and Toy F ' Terrier stud service. FE 2-1497. UNCLAIMED REPAIR Singer sewing machine,'' cab model. Equipped to zig-ug, tonholes, and appliques. Pay pair bill of tot. Payments of S a month. Domelco, Inc. "Forn ly Michigan Necchi-Etne." 22571 Telegraph, Miracle Mile Shopping Center. FE S-4S2I. ' kCi kLc. _. irnaces, $20.1 OACHSHUNO PUPPIES, AKC REG-Istered, OL 1-432S. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUP, FE male, ARC registered, $75, EM WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS A) discount prices. Forbes, 4500 Dixie ■Mwy, OR 34747. Hand Tools-Machintry 68 itoiity. Bleckk, black FE 34321, POODLE PUPPIES, STUD SERV-ice, flah, parakeets, canaries. Pet supplies. CRANE'S, UL 2-2200. PERSONALIZED POODLE C L I P-ping. OR 34920. YOU SAVE $$$ 1943 10' wldes. 2 bedrooms, S393 down, peymants ol 049 per month. Including Interest and Insyroncd. Delivered and set up. Most unM* heated for your shopping convenience—A good selection of used S' ■ and in' wldes as tow a* 0195 down. Terms to your satisfaction. BOB HUTCHINSON 4301 Dixie Highway OR 3-1201 Drayton Plains Open 9 to 9 dally Sat. 9 to • SUNDAY, 11 to S_______________ Parkhurst Trailer Sales FINEST IN MOBILE LIVNO IS TO 40 feet. Featuring New Moon-Buddy and Nomad*. Located halfway between Orion and Oxford on M24, next to Alban Country Cousin. MY S-4411. Rent Trailer Space 90 NEW SPACES, NATURAL GAS / PONTIAC MOBILE HOME PARK / IHY RENT: BUY POR LESi month. Mobile home tots, SS'xlM* $2,795, S2S down. 525 per month. Blacktooped. gas, beech, fish. eioch Bros. FE 4-4509, OR 3-1295. Tires*Auto-Truck ~ 92 Truck Tire Specials 023x20-10 ply, highway ... S42J0 025x20-12 ply, highway ... *38.20 023x20-10 ply, mud —1 POODLES — AKC MINI-TOY 412-5715 POODLE, BROWN PUPPY, months. Good pot tor childre “A 0*2201. Will fcrlflct* AT GALLAGHER'S We feature Chickering, Fischer Kimball pianos. Lowroy and Gul best — Our prices the lowest. Ou D PIANOS FROM St Richway Poojlle Salon All breed professional grooming A complete line of pet supplle 821 OAKLAND (next to Zlebartsl Open dally 0-4_________FE >0824 SINGER CANARIES. ALL PET ! Shop, 55 Williams. FE 4-4433. I TOP-QUALITY AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. HOLD FOR CHRISTMAS. FE 2 0009 AFTER 4 P.M. CASH - CASH FOR Home Owners Par Salt HUf lliiaai 67 14- AND &1 j-HORSE POWE R SUMP pumps, new, used and exchanged, bronze bases, guaranteed, your mo- HOLIDAY SPECIALS INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY WIDOWS. PENSIONERS* CAN B ELIGIBLE. CHECK, LQWfcST RATES I GOODYEAR STORE | 30 S. CASS ______PONTIAC’ LONG-WALNUT STUDIO COUCH. 27 Oak Hill St. 3344348._ " ROY LAZENBY, REALTOR | UMd- J ._____ 191 Oixto Hwy. OR 4-0301 LAKE LIVING. PONTIAC IS A MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE utes. lots $795. S10 down, ------- I '7'9nAh- Ji,hi Our New Address Is a. EM 3-7114. l-l-l-l Joslyn Ave., corner Third DUPLEX Northern Property 51 -A month. 4(7x30' wooded hi ~‘~Th Brothers. OR 3-1295. HARTWlCK (PINES ARE|'^ down, n*20 a month. Blo^'Bros” OR 3-1295, FE "omiJg *r«.m.' V'xu®! Resort Property •aparato baiemtidtl — Kar garage. And, I AT MORGAN within walking distance to d town. St MOO. Terms can be ranged. OFF JOSLYN 3 bedrooms, carpeted living'r large dining room, kitchen built-in' oven and range. Gi . with . extra storage space, p— for outdoor living. I blocks te Northern High. Price reduced to OISJOO. Terms ,can be arranged. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ARRO SHARP 3-BCOROOM RANCH ... -. good weal suburban location. Oil nddt, water softener, 2-car garage. Spacious tot with roar fenced. A stoat at Si2.950. Terms. 402-2211 or 402-4054 slfl Cass-Elizabeth Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE - OPBNSUN^ 14 JOHNSON RENTERS -Hag to find a noma TO nave several homes w payments as tow as *200 psymenta toss than rant contract. CaH us today. PHA TERMS — Lovet JOHNSON 8. SON ' FE 4*2522 ________BALDWIN ____. 75 X-way. 10(7x150', swimJ fish, boating, 10 minutes from Pontiac. $1,995, $20 down, $20 a month. Bloch Bros.. OR 31295. FREE VACATION Thunder Bey Village. 18-room CM house. Alpena for two, three days 2 nights, 9 mails, ne abHgatlon* Inspect northern Mlchigan's newes . . .— ------5 ^ Thundei t}^ing7 toingr goit, oS*W ---. trailer sites, camping sites. S495. ■A acre, *5 month. Write Thunder Bay Village. Dept. H, Alpena, Michigan. Phone 354-2409 or write Block Brothers, Box 445. Water-* - Mlclitgen. MICHIGAN TAX LAND Water frontage, sites, 015 up. Ser Lots-Acreayg 10 ACRE PARCELS *3430 UP White Lake it Ormond Rd. Terms AL PAULY, REALTOR 4510 DIXIE, REAR ------ EVES. FE 3*7444 LAUNDROMAT 32 washers. Radford area. MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 1573 S. Telegraph FE 4-1302 MdtEii C. B. CHAPIN, Motel Broker ________EL 74401 FE 8-2657 f you can't cal) . .., Mali Coupon Loan-by-Phons IS W. Lawrence St., Pontiac KIRBY VACUUM CLEANER ltd Kirby. *30, good condition. Ci al fee. B. D. Charles, Farm Loan Service. 482-0704, Swaps "_________ ^^^HACKETT REALTY 7730 Cooley Laka R SACRIFICE SALE! 1. BUILDING SUITABLE FOR FISH AND PQULTQr MARKET, BEAU-TY OR BARBER SHOP, ETC. 2. TEA ROOM LOCATED, IN PONTIAC. DINING ROOM SEATS 110 PERSONS. IDEAL FOR NIGHT CLUB OR AFTER-HOURS SPOT. WILL LEASE, OR WILL SELL ON LEASE-OPTION. 3. LARGE 13R00M HOME, ZONED COMMERCIAL.' 90 FT. FRONTAGE ON ORCHARD LAKE AVE. SMITH-WIDEMAN REALTY 412 W. HURON_______FE 44324 Located St 424 Orchard Laka and Herdon, Pontiac. Per further Information call Mr. Kaolin days, 444-5744, evening* 733-97M. CANAL LOTS Choice building sites - *0x147. Connected with Sylvan Lake. JACK LOVELAND 2110 Cass Lake Rd. 482-1255 CHOICE l-ACRE LOtS IN' Sub division naar Oakland University Also near 1-73 interchange. St,200 $1,800. Beautiful rolling country HI-H4LL VILLAGE A Planned Community FINANCING AVAILABLE TO BUILD YOUR OWN HOME Choice estate-size parcels on paved roads. Many excellent homesltes with goad dralhiga. LOW AS 82,230 WITH $250 DOWN LADD'S, INC. HIGHLAND-MILPORO AREA, Vh —1 horse fartO. to,995, $30 down, month.. 10 minutes to Pontiac. TEXACO, INC, Modem station for todse Dixie Hwy., near MIS, Clarkston, hych. Station has ' ---- WANTED Any type of good going business. Buyers with cash waiting. List with us tor fast action In the sale or trade of your business. WARDEN REALTY 434 w. Huron. Pontiac 333-7117 . What Do You Have? , We Have: f. Commercial 1 BATEMAN IL DEPAI kTa»r Sole Und Ceortmte ~r6C ^ TT050 LAND CONTRACTS urgently wantofl. See us, baton WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1430 N. Opdyke Rd, PE S41M Ops* Eva*. Til 8 p.m. 10-INCH CRAFTSMAN TABLE SAW 1 h.p. motor end estras, cost $235 sell *130. 1M0 4CV Renault 4-DOOR, S17S, trad* tor car, pick-up or? EM 3-7047,________ | Last Minute Christmas SUGGESTIONS 6E Hair Dryars 4-speed Record Player with wlrejM* tt^E^Vetoviston with h^.J i GE 4-speed Show-N-Tell Player *29 ?5 1 144 Bass trade-in Accordion mod- • Humidifiers . . . $48.95 dlto *39.95 • Roberts 400 Stereo Tape Recorder . $795. Repossessed .model *350 I TERMS AVAILABLE I HAMPTON'S ELECTRIC * 11125 W. HURON _ F* *-*523 OPEN 1 ANTIQUE CHIMING 8-DAY ____ks and 1 conaeto TV tar ?. 1)30 Vlnewood. _ More Floor Models SOLD "AS IS" ANY MODELS ON FLOOR BUT REGULAR WARRANTY AND OUR SERVICE 1 WEEK ONLY r, by 14 Sapell paneling, 1 7' pre-ffnished nr-'-- | 9'X12' LINOLEUM RUGS S3.95 EACH Plastic wall tile 1c ee. Celling tile — wall paneling, cheep. BAG Tile, FE.4*957, 1073 W. Huron GALLAGHER'S MUSIC 10 E. HURON FE 4--- Royal Oak Store 4224 Woodward Between 13 and 14 Milt Rds. Open daily *:20 to 0 p.m. OPEN SUNDAY FROM 1 TO 5 P.M. FREE PARKING ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN ' PE i-7471 ALL SLATE POOL TAfLE, IWX9, Bottle Gas Installation Two lOApound cylinders and equipment, S12. Groat Plains Gas Co, n cabinets, formica AT GALLAGHER'S Brand now spinet pianos from $399 New Lowrey organs from S499 Shop us before you buy. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC 10 E. HURON FE 4 Royal Oak Store 4224 . Woods Between t3 and 14 Mill OPEN SUNDAY PROM 1 TO 5 I FREE PARKING 443441 Auction Sales AN AUCTIOU GETS YOU CASH. Phone Aten Perkins Swartz 4 *■ 435-9400._______________ TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, p.m. at the oromises of I Chain 1 900x20-10 gy, mud and toiM ply mud and "Ilk lor spdciai deal on sat* of tour FREE MOUNTING Budget terms avaltoblt FIRESTONE Huron 231-7917 Auto Service ___________91 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE carl Motor rebuilding and vslvo grinding. Zuck Machine Shop, 23 Hood. Phone FE 1-23*3.__ Motorcycles - 9S Clearance Sale BETTERLY'S BARGAINS Used Organs No Down Payment CONN Spinet .......$13.50 mo. CONN 25 pedal walnut ... $15.75 mo. HAMMOND Spinet ...... S15.7J mo. BALDWIN Spinet ... S24.7S mo. LOWREY Spinet S1S.7S mo. Used console piano, also upright, real good buys. ALL ORGANS AND LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Across from Birmingham Theater :rea Perking *“ I “ CONN MINUET WITH LESLIE Cabinets, i Sustain and percussion, demonstrators. trical supplies. Crock, per, black and galvai.-------r JP and fittings. Sentry and Lowe Brothers paint. Super Kem-Tone end Rustoleum. 'HEIGHTS SUPPLY 4300 Dixie WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE iCE skates, skis, toboggans, ski boots and guns daily 'til 9. Barnas-Hargrave Hardware, 742 W. Huron,' FE 54101. Open Sunday. SeIb CluHiinf ; 64 BRIDAL GOWN. FULL LENGTH, size 12; taupe cocktail dross, size IS-14, excellent condition. FE 14292._______________________j 1 Maytag wringer* ......... ws.w GE iff refrigerator .. S15S.00 GE JO" range ......... $ 40 00 STiTH* .........£m rZoO HOUSEKEEPUtO^SHOP^ St w. Huron St. FE 4-ISS5 PLASTIC WALL TILE , BAG Tile Outlet, 1075 W. Huron Sale Housohold Goods 65 1 BIG SAVINGS FOR CHRISTMAS 1 ton automatic dryers and washers. 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE BRAND'NEW $317 $3.50 WK. Includes 3-piece bedroom suite with box spring and mattress and 2 boudoir lamps. Nice ffelze living room with end tables and beautiful lamps, Formica topped di-nette With 4 choirs and nice range and refrigerator. BARGAIN BASEMENT Used stoves, refrigerators and washers. All sizes. Clean, ouaran- MICHIGAN'S GREATEST BUYS E-Z TERMS OR LAYAWAY BUY—SELL—TRADE Man. thru Frl. 'til 9, Sat. 'til * LITTLE JOE'S BARGAINS 14*1 Baldwin at Walton PE 24*42 First traffic tight south ol (-75 Across from Atlas Sugar Market * by tatting a < cat buttonholes, o a Shopping Center. FE 24521. lor, wishes to thank all many friends end cus-r making this successful s prosperous New rs Sewing Center. Universe! Co., FE COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE AND fittings—plastic, copper, .and cast iron tor drains. Plastic, copper and galvanized tor water. Black tor gas. Montcalm supply, 156 W. Montcalm. FE 54712. ' CASH AND CARRY • 2 colors, 4x7 prt-finishod mahogant 4" pre-finished mahogany, "pen MON. and FR Evas —---------------------- f,,4xt 'Si *3.49 Opan MON. < Evas **118 S DRAYTON PLYWOOD large 24" lights, 15, scratched. Michi-V 35. 393 Orchan FREEZER OWNERS NON-FREEZER OWNERS Meets and groceries Free home delivery SAVE UP TO 40 PER CENT DM DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple Inexpensive Application sics Br'*''— *—** KART, LARGE PICTURE sen, child's, wardrobe, girl's flg-t skates, size S-4. Regs. 332- USED FRIGIDAlRE MATCHED | GAS FURNACE, USED, LIKE NEW. washer and dryer, good working ________ FE 2-71*4 order, SI2S. Call alter 4 pm. OR- x;--- SPKIAl $28 A MONTH BUYS 1 ROOMS OP FURNITURE - Consists oIl Sptoc* living room suite with 2 stop 5-piece dinette sat. 4 chroma chairs, Formica top teoto, 1 bookcase, 8xtt rug Included. All tar 8S99. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 1? E. HURON FE 44981 18 W, PIKE PE 2-2138 DAS FURNACE, WATER HEATER, like new, single garage door. FE 44189._________________ REFRIGERATOR , 819.95 Sweat's Radio t Appliance WINTER CLEARANCE 1 28" Frlgidelre range, 1*44 model, l Frtgideiro freezer, upright. ‘ Frigldeire Dishwasher. ALL SPECIALLY PRICED. CRUMP ELECTRIC 1443 AUburil AVd. - RE 4-3573 I metal folding tags ----- 112.23 Hsggtrty Lumber . MA 44551 HEAT FOR l#(JU WITH GAS. 1-day service A A H. ASA 5-1501 or AAA >2537. , JIM'S SALVAGE OUTLET, EVERY thing brand new. Fire salvage. Price* wholesale or tower. Corner Airport at Hatchary. OR 4-8S1I. Mon. thru Set- 9-9, 'til Christmas KINGSLEY IaARRiNTINO AAACMiRE complete with type, Forbas. OR ’MW. KITCHEN UNITS BY KITCHEN KOMPACT Visit our models on display. TermTAVeHebta Plywood Distritmtors 375 N. CaSS y PI 2^4 LAVATORIES COMPLETE *24.95 *0$ *14,95. also bathtub*, tolltts. hower stalls. Irrogutors. terrific ralues. Michigan Fhtoreecent,' 391 GRINNELLS YEAR END Piano Clearance I Baldwin Piano Reconditioned and restyled $275 Used Grands $165 Used Uprights $59 Floor Sample Pianos “STs* LOW EASY TERMS USED PIANOS!: UPRIGHTS FROM $48 - spinets from 9288 — consoles from 8199 — some new pianos, floor samples, some music studio used. Inquire at Grlnnall's, , USED PIANOS Uprights from *49 Grands from *105 Rebuilt uprights from *199 And naw pianos from *311 LOW EASY TERMS * GRIN NELL'S (Downtown)* Sporting Goods Browning 22 rifle ......... $82.50 Weatherby 22 rlfla ........ 584.50 Remington 22 rifle ........ 849.95 •Ve have ever 258 guns In stack Colt Pistol, Tronfler scoot Scopes mounted free tor Christmas BEAR Archery Equipment FISHING Tackle Sort Board or peddel Beard ........ hwy. MS4. 14 miles________ of Pontiac or t mile south of Oxford. Going out of business. Corn- fast sets; grill; steam table; vent hood; 4-ft. showcase; Corey automatic coftee maker; deep freeze; Ice cream storage freezers; refrlg- . Prop-. Dee Bowen Sam Proulx, Tuesday i p.m. 674-2523. EVERY SUNDAY 2:80 PJA. Sporting Goods — All Types Door Prizes Every Auction We Buy-Sell-Trad*. Retell 7 days Consignments Welcome BAB AUCTION 50*9 Dixie Hwy. ' OR 3-27)7 HALL'S AUCTION SALES Will be closed until Januaty 4. First auction January 9, 705 W. Clarkston Rd.,. Lake Orton. Itoms Uveslech 13 5-YEAR OLD QUARTER HORSE. Firm Equipment ______________Equipment. 425-1711. SEE OUR LINE OF HOMEL-ITE chain saws. Davis Machintry c-Ortonvilto, NA 7-2292. Sptclallsf SEE US FIRST AND SAVE. JOHN DEERE, HARTLAND AREA Hardware. Phone 632-7141. USED FRAZER AOTOTlLLERS, PARTS AND SERVICE. L. W, Avis 1378 Opdyk* RE USED IHC CUB L0-B0Y TRACTOR WITH SNOW BLADE A-1 SHAPE, 81.295. KING BROS. 4-8734 PE 4-1642 Pontiac Read at Opdyk* „ * For l traitor inspaci CENTURY-TRAVELMASTER 3 1944 19-foot Centuries toft TOM STACHLER AUTO and MOBILE SALES 991 W, Huron St.___PE 1492 I ARE YOU FLORIDA BOUND? Get your travel traitor now. AVALAIRS, CREES, H0LLYS, TAWAS 14W to 2S ft., sett-centalhsd winter storage avertable ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 6577 Dixie HWY. , MA 5-148S AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAIUHtfe Sine* lm. Guaranteed for See them end get t <------ lion st Warner fraltoc I W. Huron (plan to lain an* m Wally Byatn's exciting caravans), BOOTH CAMPER Aluminum covers and campers tor pickup, OR 3-5524. PHOENIX TRUCK CAMPERS (-IBIO.*, front and side model* Ptonssr Camper Sato*. FE H9W. WHATEVER YOU WANT TO DO, USE A . PRESS WANT' AD to DU ITr PICK- UP CAMPERS telescoping ■4. LOWRY *49.S2 S47.32 165.7* BSA 458, ,ww, Yamaha, 1945 Honda ISO, .....lends m tends Scrambler Humph SOD, ______lists!* ITS, 1944 Simplex Mini-bike, Low down payment, easy te ANDERSON SALES 8, SERV YAMAHAS It New 1948 Models K A W CYCLE . Boats — Accessories OAKLAND MARINE 91 S. Saginaw FE 14101 HARD TO FlHD Hut EASY to deal with." Rinker, Stauryt Cherokee boats, Kapot pontoons, Evhv rude motors. Pamco traitors. Take -M59 to W. Highland. Right qn Hickory Rldg* Road to Oerhodt Road. Lett and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO • -----MAInf-"** 1945 JOHNSON'S ARE HERE CLOSE-OUT ON '44 MODELS ats Canoes Trailers OWENS MARINE SUPPLY_______ . - FE 1-8028 SPECIALS 1945 Johnson Motor, S h.p. 8227.88 PINTER'S MARINE 1370 Opdyk* Open HI 8 p.m. SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES On 1944 boats and motors for Christmas or tor Christmas gift interest to pay. Plan. BIRMINGHAM BOAf center ‘ 14 Mil* tf - Special Deal >» Rd. n.p. ivs-i reduction >,.todddd. Fro* ship to ______RM jnd depth sounder. WE TRADE BANK FINANCE WALT MAZUREK LAKE A SEA MARINA Your local Owens dealer S. Blvd. E.______________FE 4-9817 electric starting Mercury, trailer, cover, skis and tow-bar. MUST SELL - MAKE OFFER - SACRI-FICE - MA 4-2314. ___________ “SPORTS MINDED" BE SURE TO VISIT OUR NEW SPORTS DISPLAY DEPARTMENT skates, hockey, sticks, skis, , toboggans, guns, football, tall, arensry, fishing, hunting i. Mercury, Seott-McCultorti novelties. BOATS-MOrDPe—TRAILER ... CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES ' J E. Walton ' FE *4*0 Dally 9 to 9_____Sunday 12 to * E WILL Bl s Boqta- M Wanted C«r%-TnKks 101 ASK FOR BRRNIE AT- BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC 911, S. Woodward , Ml 7-3214 AVERILL'S V* have orders to 180 late modal* ■Check the rest but get the best" AVERILL’S PE US ft sms Dtoto California Buyers Did You Know? - ' VILLAGE RAMBLER C—16 tAE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 HOT FINISH For the Year at / ' o. " McAuliffe's 1963 T-Bird Landau ™is beeuty^h*brI5JI°*rUwtlv Itows. Only— $2791 1960 Falcon 2-Dear Sedan $696 1963 Falcon 4-Door Wagon tedlo, heater, automatic trans-nission, whitewalls. Only— $1595 1962 Chevy Impala Hardtop 3-Door with radio, heater, automatic transmission, power steering, whitewalls. Ready to go "$1797 1963 Ford Convertible , th radio, heater, automatic. iTum'bTuTlinliS.'o’nly— ~ $2091 1963 Mercury « 4-Door Seddn ils one has radio, heater, auto-atic and whitewalls. Only— $1999 1962 Ford Goloxie 500 Hardtop Door with radio, heater, auto-latic, power steering, white-oils. Only— $1696' 1963 VW ; Convertible . $1593 1964 Ford Goloxie 500 Hardtop 3-Door with 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION, radio, neater, whitewalls, beautiful burgundy finish! Only— $2191 / 1962 Ford Goloxie, 500 Hardtop 3-Door with radio, heater, auto matlc, power steering, white walls, red and smite finish Only- $1504 1963/Falcon Future Sprint ONivertiUo with rMife heater, ie-SPEEl TRANSMISSION, whit ewe I It Mild whltt with red interior Only-/ /$1696 1965 Mustang power steering Wfock-off hubs. $2987 JOHN McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland -FE 5-4101 Wwtod CwtrTnwks 101 SPECIAL PRICE RAID FOR 1055-1*43 CARS - VAN'S AUTO SALES 4540 Plxte Hwy.______OR 3-1355 New «nI Used Cart 1M T6f S EAR CLEAN C "TOP DOLLAR PAID" FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS GLENN'S 1959 eUlCK 4-DOOR HARI with power brelces and | steering, radio and healer _ the anginal finish. Full price an. Estate Storage Co. |89 S. East Blvd. FE 3-7161 ChRvROLKt, 1*54, 3-bOOR, EX- WANTED: 1*59-1543 CARS Ellsworth , AUTO SALES 1955 CHEVY, RUNS $40. SAVE to. FE 5-3371. 1956 CHEVY 4-DOOR, 4-CYLINDER, MANSFIELD AUTO SALES - buying sharp, lata hr .. NOW I Sea us lodayl" 1104 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-5900 WE NEED CARS! TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS Motthews-Hargreaves 431 OAKLAND AVENUE * FE *4547 1957 CHEVY BEL AIR 4-OOOR, STA-lion wagon, with automatic transmission, V-S engine, very sharp condition I Runs almost like new I No money down, only S4.25 weekly! Call Mr. Brown, Doalorl MARVEL Junk Care—Trucks OR 10 J ALWAYS BUYING ssjunk Zars-free towss TOP SS CALL PE 5-8142 SAM ALLEN A SONS. INC. JUNK okki HAULED AWAY 673-8503 Used Auto-Truck Ports 102 Nbw and Used Tracks 103 1955 CHEVY PICKUP, S-FT. BOX, 4-cyllndtr engine, 4ply tires, runs end drives perfect! Save. JEROME FERGUSON Inc Rochester FORD Peeler, OL 1-9711. > 140 FORD PICKUP Vh-tON, LONG box, VS angina, now rubber, rnB IEROME FERGUSON ..... Rochester FORD Peeler. OL 1-9711. CHEVY VIKING 70, 5-SPEED Transmission, 2-speed rear end, 341 V-g engine, cabin chesis. 685-2189. ... ford pickup, awhIel drive, 4-cyllnder engine, mud and snow tires, 39,000 miles, oxtre cleant $1,395. JEROME FERGUSON, Inc., Rochester FORD Deal-er, OL 1-0711, ___ _____ finish, exctl- lent condition .Inside and out. Reddy to go to work. Only $895 easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. UM t. WOODWARD AVE-, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 6-3735. 1962 FLEETSIDI ton pickup, bltck and white, filmier, standard transmit-1— VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFORD _ .......engInL stick. Mile, 4 ply Wfl, $1,775. JEROMa.FtROO*PR» 1964 FORD V y\ J 4-1335 INGINE. ir FORD Peeler. OL 1-9711. 1964 GMC Delivery van* Jlke^new, through- Homer Hight 'OA 1-2528 _______________Only 0495. Easy tormsTpATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735^ G.M.C. Factory Branch New and Used Trucks FE 5-9485 JEEP "Your Authorised Dealer" OLIVER BUICK and JEEP 310 ^reherdflL«ke Auto Insurance________ AUTO INSURANCE FOR ANYONE DON NICHOLIE FE 54183 Anderson Agency FE 4-3535 1044 Joslyn Ave. Foreign Care New and Used Care 106 SI3S. FE 8-1311. CHEVROLET BEL-AIR, I-wr^good condition. Stick shJN. 1941 CHEVROLET 9-PASSBNOER ---- ion, oulo. 4 '• cylinder, erlng, radio, *ntj*99V white. DON'S. Of S. Lapeer no., Orton. MY 2-2841. FbR A BETTER CHEVROLET PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. N S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM. MICHIGAN 1941 CHEVY WAGOk, blfccAVkl , Rochester FORD Dealer, OL Hilltop Auto Soles, Inc. 4 DAY CHRISTMAS SALE MONDAY-THURSDAY ONLY WAS NOV ’59 Plymouth S 295 S II '51 Pontiac 1 395 SII '59 *tord 8 395 II 60 Ford S 595 3 41 '60 Plymouth $ 695 $ 51 159 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR 2-DOOR. GOOD CONDITION. S59S. MA 4-4377. _________________ 1960 CHEVR0LETS 25 Months Chevy OK Warranty Biscayne 2-door sedan, trmine white finish with blue trim. 4 cylinder, stick shift. A real beauty and. only. ............,. .1795 Park wood Station Wagon, 6-passen-senger. Cascade green with matching trim, V4, Fowergllde, sower steering, radio, her'— “*■' Only .......... ‘60 Ford ‘62 Oldsmobile '63 Chevy Chrysler 300 Ford *60 Chevy Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1960 Chevy Biscayne 2-Door with let black finish, radio, heater, whitewalls and Is yours for only— $895 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Home of SERVICE after the sale" OR 3-1291 “I960 CHIVY" A Bel Air Sedan, that you i proud to drlvo anywhere. A Inder powerglide with power Ing, finished In spotless tei JK -------, - NOW OPEN Additional Location BS5 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showrpom) .. jst 16 iMle north of Cass Ave. Spartqn Dodge DEAL, • >R YON UNTER/Dodge HUNTER DODGE MARMADUKE •1495 *2195 9p2 Oakland FE 8-9291 1963 CHEVY BEL-AIR 4-DOOR, V-t engine, automatic, radio, hr— 30,000 miles, and real sharpl I JEROME FERGUSON Inc. I ester FORD Peeler. OL 1-9711. CLEAN 1962 CHEVROLET IMPALA, - deer, power steering end brakes. ergfidG'1-nwner. OR 3463* Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? Wfe Can Finance Youl 100 Cars to Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 37863 LLOYD'S 1250 Oakland Ave. CORVETTES 25 Months Chevy OK Warranty errlor with Meek top. Only 11,795. Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1104 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance Youl Call Mr. Darrell FE 8-4528 By Anderson & Learning New and Used Cars 1964 CHEVY IMPALA 2-DOOR hardtop, VI englnt, automatic, radio, power steering, brakes, 15,000 miles, extra sham — almost Ilk# new I 82^50. JEROME FERGUSON NEW POLICY LUCKY AUTO SALES FINANCES ALL THEIR OtkN CARS. $5 DOWN DELIVERS ANY CAR ON OUR LOT. COME IN And BROWSE AROUND. 100 CAM TO CHOOSE FROM. 2 LOTS TO SERVE YOU BETTER. Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 (Access open to late while street under ggggn HAUPT PONTIAC 1962 TEMPEST LeMANS CONVERT- 1964 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door sedan, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, whitewalls. Your old car 1 downI 1964 PONTIAC Tempest Sports coupe „ with synchronized transmission. power steering, gold with gold trim *'57 or '55 or 'W will make down payment I 36 months on balanct. 1963 TEMPEST CUSTOM WAGON, this Is a real family car. Yours for enly $149 down! 1963 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE, rod 1954 CHRYSLER 4-DOOR, WINDSOR deluxe, •----- -------------- premium WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC \ 350 N. Wbodward Ml 4-1998 ___Birmingham, Michigan 105 1961 AUSTIN HEALY ROADSTER, RADIO, HEATER, RUNS LIKE A NEW ONE. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Taka over payments of $31.19 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Perks, at Harold Tumor Ford. Ml 4-7500. DAZZELING BLACK 1961 TR-3. Beautiful rad leather Interior, new Parelll Century Ante Tires. Low mileage, you can’t afford to MISSiHIS ONE. Only $1,245. . Autobahn Motors, Inc. Authorized vw dealer V, mile north of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph FE 1-4531 1961 VW CONVERTIBLE, EXCEL-tent^conditlon, white, $556, EM 1963 AUSTIN HEALEY SPRITE, 1963 PIAT ~ ROAOSTER. IMMACU-i»t» throughout, must be seen to trecleted, this Is a quality - SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland __________FE 5-9421 VW. 1963, Rio, FULL EQUIPMENT, like new, $1,295, 651-0437. 1064 RENAULT DAUPHINE, RADIO HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES NEW CAR WARRANTY. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take over payments of $38.49 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr Porks, at Harold Tumor Ford. -Ml 4-7500. 1064 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE. 1400 AC- Nbw and Ustd Cars 106 1057 CADILLAC. SEDAN OeViLLE. like now, 4-door'hardtop, power brakes, power steering, radio, heater, clean. Full price 0307. Banker's Outlet 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 8-7137 OVER 100 CARS to choose tram. Priced from 1510 to 81.975. We finance. Economy Cere, 2335 Olxio Hwy. Tel-A-Huron Motor Sales Stilt care.with NO MONEY DOWN, 36 MONTHS TQ PAY, CREDIT NO PROBLEM. W* trade UP or DOWN. All trades ACCEPTED. We sell ell makes from 1955 to 1962. All nrieed from 139 to $1,000. FE 8r9661 1957 BUICK HARDTOP COUPE, A GOOD ONE. A TOWNER. PRICED TO SELL TODAY. PEOPLES AUTO SALES It OAKLAtfP FE 3-335) 1964 LeSABRE. 4-DOOR H A R D-top, double power. This car Is worth shouting about. Only S2.4M. FISCHER ’ I, BUICK SIS S. ‘ Woodward - Ml 44)00 REPOSSESSION lukfc wildcat, candy apple rad. or hardtop, can Mr. Johnson, S-38M,ipnpi*r. -y \ \ 25 Months Chevy OK Warranty 1044 Monza convertible. Lagoi aqua with white top and eqi trim. Powerglide, radio, heata whitewalls. Only ......... $l,9t 1063 Monza Coupe. Azure aqua w! aqua trim. Powerglide, radio, hat er, whitewalls. Spare never been-on the ground. Only .1.......** “J 1062 "700" 44oor sedan, brlgt and white finish with fawn 062 Monza coupe. Palomar ylth black trim, 4-speed, ri__ •afar, whitewall tires. Only 01,105. Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1104 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM 1959 CHEVR0LETS Parkwood 4-passenger station wi on. Sparkling while, VS engine, i dto, healer, whitewalls. Only 561 BIRMINGHAM . 1962 Chevrolets 25 Months Chevrolet OK Warranty pel* convertible. Bright red fin ylth matching trim and white t 1-0 engine. Powerglide, pov Bel Air 6 passenger wagon, dures maroon with town trim, engine. Powerglide, power s Impala Super Sport coupe. 1 , black with red trim. ,V-B> I—I glide, power steering,- power Brakes, whitewalls ..... $l~' Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1104 S. Woodward Ava. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM i960 chevroLeY y - Cl 1961 Chevrolets 25 Months Chevy OK Warronty 4-passenger Sparkling turquoise finish. Ml cylinders, *"■— IX Parkwood 9-passenger wagon. Fawn beige finish with, fawn to*—■" v-8 engine, Powerglide, steering, whitewalls. Real ________. and only ................ $1,095 Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1104 S. woodward Aye. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM Shop Sunday Buy Monday OLIVER 1963 CHEVROLETS 25 Months Chevy OK Warranty Impale convertible. Azure aqua with black top, V0 angina. Power-glide, power steering, radio, 1—' Bel Air 4-passenger wagon. Azure •quo, Vo engine, Powerglide, power steering, radio, heater, white-walls. Only ............... $1,095 Im. V0 engine, steering, radio, ....... $1J|» r 9-passenger wagon. trim, VI onglne. BIRMINGHAM CLEAN UP SPECIAL Over too cart and trucks; $19 900. Economy Cars, 2315 Pixie 1943 CHEVY SUPER SPORT CON-vertlble, satin silver with Mtotok CORVETTE STING R slon with 350 engine. Excellen condition. For the person who en Joys ^drlvlng^ $2,095 full price wltl Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vt mile north of Miracle Mile -1765 S. Telegraph ri FE 0-5310 1906 MONZA CONVERTIBLE, *■ 01.775. 602-0555. HEVY CHEVELLE, 300 ■■ _____ Only JUNTTbSWe FERGUSON, Inc Rochester " FORO Dealer, OL 1-9711. 1964 CHEVROLETS 25 Months Chevrolet' OK Warranty Impale Sport Coupe Lagoon at. with aqua trim. VI engine. Power-glide, power steering. Very nice. Only ..... $2,395. $2,295. Impala convertible. Palomar *-*—*-- —• Meek top. ... steering $2,495. black Interior a VI engine, ] Powerglide, power steering a windows end^p- Impel* Sport Coup*. . Ember red wMf black trim. VI engine. Power-glide.. power stoering. Only S2J95. i- trim, 4-cylinder, Biscayne 2-dpor sedan. M____ green with all vinyl Interior. 4-cyllnder engine Powerglide, power steering.'power brakes, radio heeler, whitewalls. Like new and only . ....... ........ $1,895. Patterson Chevrolet Co. [lIM S. Woodward Ave. I Ml 44735 BIRMINGHAM for only 51,495. HAUPT PONTIAC On« Mile North of U.S. 10 an I WE ARE A VOLUME DEALER '65 Chryslers —TODAY— —Wo Can Deliver— '65 Plymouths —TODAY— - We Can* Deliver - '65 Ramblers BILL SPENCE CHRYSLER*PLYMOUTH-VALIANt 5-2435 25 Months Chevy OK Warranty 144 100 series 2-door sedan. / tumn gold with fawn trim. 6-c Inder, stick shift, radio, heati whitewalls. Only 7,000 actual mil. Real nice end only ........ 51695 962 300 series 2-door sedan. Light turquoise with turquoise Interior. Economical 4-cyllnder engine. SHELTON P0NTIAC-BUICK 055 Rochester Road ______OL 1-5135 _________, ______ Interior. V-0 gine, automatic radio, hea... whitewall tires. Priced at only $1,295 and carries our 25 months Chevrolet OK Warranty. PATTBR- 1962 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN, 9-passenger wagon, V-8, Cruise-O-Matlc. radio, neater, steering and brakes. Ilk* new throughout! Save $$. JEROME FERGUSON Inc. -Rochester FORD Dealer, OL ‘ -3u 6-passenger, country ■ immaculate inside wagon, v-g, standard, ra 30.000 miles. Original e OL 1-7II7. Delivered New 1965 Plymouth Valiant $1,739 Heater, defroster, electric win shield wipers, dual sunvlsors, i rectlonal signals, front arm rest 101 horsepower 6north'ofTn> Ov* ) Spartan Dodge 1962 TEMPEST LeMANS COUPE. ~~~3d transmission, radio, heal M miles, extra sharp through-11195, JEROME FERGUSON , Rochester FORO Dealer. OL 1963 Ford 2-Door Sedan This on* hat * 6-cyllnder engine, light blue finish, radio, heater and whitewalls. Only— $1377* McAULIFFE . FORO 630 Oakland Ave. ~E 5-4101 1501 BALDWIN 2 BLOCKS NORTH OF WALTON Always a good selection of fin* cars and pickups. Easy terms, lob Rapp Phil Dorman Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Con Finance Youl 100 „ars to Select From 1 Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LLOYD'S 1250 Oakland Ave. I. Ppw- MtmH BIRMINGHAM KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Seles end Service $1400. Owner. EE 1960 FALC1JN 2-Door Sedan 4-cyllnder, automatic transmission, hotter, radio, whitewalls, color beautiful black- ONLY $795. Crissmon Chevrolet , (On Top of South Hill) ROCHESTER_____________OL 2-9721 _________ ..ARDTOP, RADIO, HEADER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NCLMONEY DOWN Take over payments of $24.75 per1 month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks, at Herald' Turner F r - - 1940 T-BIRD, VERY CLEAN, MUST sell. OR 3-6574. ■ 1960 FORD 3275 V WAGON, RADIO, __________ ... WHITEWALL TIRES, 8 CYLINDER ENGINE. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take over payments of $21.75 por month. CALL CREDIT4MGR., Mr. Parks, at Har-old Turner Ford. Ml 4-7508. rulso-matic, power steering, paw-brant, radio, heater, whhe- AVE. BIRMINGHAM. 8 Repossession 1961 FALCON Wagon, rad beauty. ■ i-- —— MA 5-2604. Deal MONEY DOWN. Take manta at, 83fl9 par tm CREDIT MGR., Mr. Herald Turner Ford; Ml traP* ■ Sove $1,000 1964 Ford XL 2-Door Hardtop this one hot the 352 V8 engine, Cruise-O-Metlc transmission, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, whitewalls. Only — $2695 BEATTIE Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Home of SERVICE otter --- OR 3-1291 964 f6rd fairlane 2-dOor hardtop, standard transmission,'re dlo, like new throughout!/tl.895. JEROME FERGUSON, InwL Roch. ester FORD Dealer. OL 1957 MERCURY HARDTOP CHRIST-mas special. S17S. 424-2619. 1960 OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE. This week's special at $995. ■ SUPERIOR RAMBLER 0 Oakland PE 5-9421 ■_____I ■ eDOOR, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, EXCELLENT CONDITION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take over payments of $31.19 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Porks,' at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500. ^ SEE US FIRST BOBBORST UNCOLN-MERCURY 0 S. Woodward Birminghai . MI 6-4538 Oldsmobiles 1959-1964s —Many Models on Display— Birmingham Trades Suburban 0!ds USED CARS 565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM JEROME OLDS and CADILLAC New Car Savings — Today CAU FE 3-7021 1962 OLOMOBlie DYNAMIC -Holiday Odanr hardtop, Glacier blue with Wu* Interior. Hydramat-to, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls. Extra sharp. Only $1,795. Easy terms. PATTERSON .CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE*. BIRMINGHAM;_____________ ,________; 1919 RlVMOUTH 4-DOOR, tSTAND, ard mm, O-cyllnder, radio, heater, original, — “ tap. OK MY 3-30 y 106 New Uwd Cm BUY YOUR NEXT OLDS OR RAMBLER FROM HOUGHTEN &us°N "****** OL 1-9761 We're whHliiW and dealing the all-new 1965 Ramblers. See them nowl Used cars are being sold.at wholesale to make room for the new car trades. ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commtrco, Union Lake EM 3-4)55 Brand New \ Shipment of /1964 Ambassadors FULLY LOADED: RADIO, POWER STEERING, POWER BRAKES, TURN. INDICATORS, OIL. DOUBLE ACTION BRAKES vRTiilTty group; light GROUP. iNOnwwM. .RECLINING SEATS, WHITE-W A L L TIRES, FULL WHEEL COVERS. $1,977.77 199 down, 34 month* on balance VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 1962 PONTIAC r wagon. S, automotlc v r steering. Like new Ini . Dealer, Repossession Credit or Budget Problems? We Can Finance- Youl 100 Cars to Select *roml Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LLOYD'S ' 1250 Oakland Ave. 1964 Rambler “770" 2-Door Hardtop comes with slim bucket seeti with consol, power steering, brakes, end the 287 cu. In. engine, white-walls. washers, radio I $800 DISCOUNT Russ Johnson RAMBLER-PONTIAC On M24 In Lake Orion LAKE ORION____MY 3-6366 50 "SELECT" USED CARS Mostly 1 -owner new - car trades. Easy financing, bank rate*. No fair otter, deal or tredo refund. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland FE 5-9$21 1964 CATALINA SPORTS COUPE, bucket seats, padded dash, tinted Interior, posi- CHRISTMAS SPECIAL, RED Pontiac Starch let, power stee 1 owner, 92,350, MY 2-0501. W 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Sport Coiipe this one automatic, rklo, heerei power steering, brakes, back u lights, beautiful alema beige towei —1 -----upper/ —"‘■1" Russ Johnson / RAMBLER-PONTIAC On M24 In Lake Orion LAKE ORION ----- 1964 TEMPEST 4-DOOR, V8 gine. automatic, power steering, brakes, radio,' only SUM. JEROME FERGUSON. Inc, Roches-ter FORD Pooler, OL 1-9711. G.T.O. 4-SPEED Do you have some place to g especially? ■ This machine will solve your prat P.S.I We can finance you) PATTERSON 1081 N. Main St. 1964 tlMPEST 4-DOOR, RADlS, heater, whitewalls; 1X808 miles end 17 months warranty remaining, Si,-SSO. Ff 5-WO. _________________________ 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Hardtop ' 4-door, this beauty has brown Interior, loaded with every accessory, including air conditioning! Mr. pus-sell, M. Johnson, personal carl $1500 Russ Johnson ./ RAMBLER-PONTIAC YEAR- END Specials. 1961 Pontiac/ Bonneville Convertible Full* Price / $1207 196pPontiac Catalina 4-Door iterdlop with power / Full Price 7 $897 . 1964 Dodge Polara "500" Full Price $2297 1963 Valiant 2-Door Sedan Radio, hooter Full Price $997 1963 Dodge 4-Door V 8 automatic, with power Full Pnce $1297 1962 Ford 2-Door V8 automatic tranamisiion Full Price $1097 . > These cars xan be purchased with no $ down and free 1965 Plates I SPARTAN DOD’GE 855. Oakland Ave. Additional Location (Outdoor S 677 S. Lfibttr Rd, d outl This Is ei 'Ith obwh/tely no moflm 86. 48 brakes, a tion Insldi of-ftste a . NOW OPEN Additional location 855 Oakland Ave, ' (Just 16 mil* north ef Coes AM.) Spqrton Dodge Hope You Had A MERRY CHRISTMAS For Your Convenience We Are iOPEN *5*chevy (t«inc (tone: 2-Door Sedan . .. tplUO Convertible .... spOtJp •6* FALCON diylQC ‘54 CHEVY 2-Ooor (N4Q Almost like new . sedan. Stick ...... ... COOPER MOTORS 4278 Dixie, Drayton . 0$ 3-1283 Birmingham Chrysler ear End Clearance Sale '63 Chrysler power steering end Tbrek Torqueflite, radio, end on ”i?^r>dE^^m^Wburgyr vinyl Interior. One of the tin wagon* money can buy. $2488 '63 Plymouth fJSSry *finSh "end terlor. Economical 6" englr excellent tlree, automatic trer mission^and olher^extrai^ ^ your budget. Only— • $1488 '62 T-Bird A spotless all whit* hard! witti power steer Ing, brake* * windows. Cnaee-O^Matte, rad performance. Do' first class. $2088 '63 Chrysler j Newport 2-Door Hardtop. Hi power steering, red to, torqy Nile end new first lln* whit well tires. Alaskan whit* te tory finish with a luxurkx burgundy Interior. Perforti and handles very nicely. On $2088 '61 Olds "88" 4-Door Hardtop with ork nal beige finish and metehli interior trim. An excellent O equipped wMv' ItypremaHG.f dlo, power steering and brake whitewall liras end other extra Sal* prlcdjref only— il288 aosED Dec. 25, 26, 27 "BUT" '63 Chevy Station Wagon with an aconom T angina and standard tram mission. Light tvrquoisa factory finish and a matching vinyl. Interior that Is immaculate. Very low mileage and exceptionally nice in every way. Only $1588 '62 Plymouth 9-P*ss*ng*r Wagon with Torquo-flite, radio, heater, power steering, light beige exterior brown end beige tu-tone rior. Plenty of room tor whole family at ,a price Dad can afford. $1288 '60 Chrysler Windsor 4-Door Hardtop t $988 '61 Plyikiouth 4-Door Hardtop, Torque-power steering, brake! rtndows, plus many oft” Silver exterior w silver Interior. A fl --------- W$- $988 '62 Imperial w^iutt^^pyRKir! eluding auto-pilot. Dark bis. with a light b|ue interior. A-luxurious tow mileage car that is sure to' please you. Only— 1 $2388 '63 Dodge Polar* 2-Ooor Hardtop—'Torqw filte, radio, hooter, power stow mg and power windows, Sol white exterior with an nil vim Interior. This smooth pertornr tog car Is sure to put net pleasure to your motorln $1888 '•63 Chrysler ; Hardtop ',w uefllte, power steerl first line whitewall tlr yolse finish with all «l et seal Interior. New i ante* to SUOO miles. O $2388 Birmingham j Chrysler 912 Sj, WOODWARD Ml 7-3214 tHE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1964 C—17 ijf|? Channel f-CKLW-tV Program»fumi*hed by Ration* listed in this column 1 n \ki. ^>%x> mm i grams ?* EEigg changes without notice * 7^ ; - "' 7r;* 1 Kygf lannel 2-WJBK-TV iiiif: iaiip: Channel 56-WTVIj SATURDAY EVENING 9.99 (2) Movie: ‘‘Battle Heir (In Progress) (4) (Special) Sun Bowl (In Progress) (7) Wide World of. Sports (In Progress) (9) Poopdeck and Popeye 6:30 (2) Littlest Hobo (7) Gallant Men I Rosamond Williams! 129 E. Cornell FI 2.1225 j ! Services and Supplies for { J ALL HEARING AIDS J Necchi Soper Automatic $50.50 Let* Than Brand "k” $79.00 Leu Than Brand "I" $79.00 Lou Than Brand "C" Pontiac's ONLY Authorized deccM Dealer RICHMAN BROS, ffl Across From Pontiac Mali 465 Elisabeth Lake ltd. Phone; 315-9213 When Yanks liberate . town. D’Angelo finds uncle living high off the hog despite past' Nazi occupation. 7:91 (2) (Color) Death Valley Days Senate candidate files suit against man who shot boy’s dog. (9) Movie: “The Snow Creature’’ (1954) Paul Langton 7:15 (4) News 7:14 (2) Jackie Gleason Jackie talks about boyhood Christmases. (4) (Color) Flipper Sullen, bearded skipper is object of suspicion when , boats turn up missing. (7) Outer Limits Crew for simulated flight to another planet is six people—and extraordinary blob of light. 8:99 (4) (Color) Mr. Magoo Magoo’s version of “Cyrano de Bergerac’’ 8:39 (2) Gilligan’s Island EuJTTt^Ei SPECIAL FINANCE FUN 1 pa, bill) and da 1 ana bili.^Up to 30 jpaa. CALL FE 4-4138 Optn Daily and Sun. 6 Month* Bofor* KITCHENS REMODELED FOUNDATIONS ATTIC ROOMS BATHROOMS WALLS I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS-NO CHARGE ★ ADDITIONS ★ ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING—SIDING STONE PORCHES WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION WINTEn price NOW IN EFFECT to April 1965 ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING Authorised RCA-ZEMTH * COLOR TV SALE WE SERVICEWH£TWE SELL! ■ . . . YOUR UHP CON l*r NEW CHANNEL M an ■ Do-11-Yourwlf Kill . . . Factory Authorized Open Mon. Thru Frl. RCA and Zonith Service: Evu. to 9 P. M. ucmTSta.1l}* [MMMUUBi lit Wert Huron - FE 4-t136 / ANNOUNCING An ALL NEW... UHF CONVERTER /FOR THE NEW CHANNEL 50 By ADMIRAL Gilligan’s golf bet starts at a quarter but winds up with a mlilion-dollar payoff. ' (4) Kentucky Jones Ike doesn’t like his part' in play because it palls for some kissing. (7) Lawrence Wtik (9) Hockey: Toronto vs. Chicago 9:99 (2) Mr. Broadway Wealthy man whose life is being threatened wants Mike to write his obituary in advance; with David Wayne, John Ireland. (4) Movie: “Adams Rib” (1949) Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, Judy Holiday, Tom Ewell 9:39 (7) Hollywood Palace (See TV Features) 19:99 (2) Gunsmoke Festus gets involved in bet over race horses. 14:1$ (9) Juliette 19:39 (7) Car 54 (Repeat) 14:45 (9) Sports Unlimited 11:99 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather) Sports 11:29 (9) Movie: “The Tartar Invasion” (1960) Yoko Tani, Akim Tgmiroff , 11:21(2) Movies: 1 (Color) “An ' A f f a i r to Remember” (1967) Cary Grant, Deboah Kerf. 2 “The Mad Doctor'/! 1941) Basil Rath-bone, /Ellen Drew, John Homud (71/M o v i e s 1 (Color) /Take the High Ground” *“ Richard Widmark Malden. 2 “Ivy” Joan Fontaine, PatricXKnowles 11:39 (4) S atu r d a y Sports Special 1:99 (4) News, feather 2:39 ^2) News, father 3:99 (7) Ail-Night'Show (Re-' peats) SUNDAY MORNING 9:39 (7) Changing Earth 7:99 (7) Rural Newsreel 7:19 (2) News 7:15 (2) Accent 7:25 (4) News 7:39 (2) Gospel Time (4) Country Living ' • (7) (Color) Water Wonderland 8:99 (2) Electricity (4) Industry (7) Starlit Stairway 8:15 (2) Bible Puppets ft (4) (Color) Davey and Goliath (9) Sacred Heart 8:30 (2) Mass for Shut-Ins (4) Eternal Light (7) Michigan Unlimited (9) Temple Baptist' 9:99 (2) With This Ring 4 (4) Church at the Crossroads (7) Lippy, Wally, Touche (9) Oral Roberts 9:15 (2) To Dwell Together 9:39 (2) Let’s See (4) (Color) Bozo the Clown (7) Showplace Homes (9) Christopher Program 10:00 (2) This Is the Life ' (7) (Color) World Adventure — Views of Rome; Naples, Pompeii. ' / ' (9) Cathedral of Tomorrow. 19:39 (2) Faith for Today (7) Beany and Cecil 11:99 (2) Deputy Dawg (4) House Detective (7) Bull winkle (9) Herald of Truth 11:30 (2) Movie: “Hold That Hypnotist” (1967) Bowery Bdys. (7) .Discovery ’64 (9) Movie: “Little Princess” (1939) Shirley Temple, Richard Greene. SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:99 (4) Understanding Our World (7) Championship Bowling 12:15 (2) Changing Times j , 12:39 (2) Voice of the (4) Mr. Wizard/ " 12:45 (2) Pro PrestfBox 1:99 (2) (Special) .Countdown to Championahip Announcement of NFL All-Star team and Jim Thorpe Award winner. (4) (Special) Big ’ Little Show (See TV Features) (7) Directions (9) Movie: “Obsession” «„ (1954) Michele Morgan, Raf Vallone. 1:39 (2) (Special) NFL Championship (ijjee. TV Features) (4) (Color) Heckle and Jeckle (7) Issues and Answers 2:99 (4) International Zone (7) Dialogue 2:39 (4) Sports Special Look at coming football bowl games. (7) Club 1270 3:99 (4) Profiles in Courage (See TV Features) 3:39 (7) (Color) Movie: “Alakazam the Great” (1961) . (9) Movie: "Above Us the Waves” (1955) John Mills, , John Gregson. 4:91 (2) (Special) NFL Champions (See TV Features) (4) (Special) Year End Review (See TV Features) 4:39 (2) To Be Announced 5:99 (2) Movie: “Crimson Pirate” (1952) Burt Lancaster, Eva Bartok. (4) (Color) Wild Kingdom ' (7) (Color Special) Opera in Focus (See TV Features) 5:30 (4) (Color) College Bowj (7) (Special) World Shakespeare (See TV tures) (9) Rocky and Friei .SUNDAY EVENING 6:00 (4) (Color) ileet the Press (See/TV Features) (7) (Color/MoVie: “Kim” (1950) fefrpl Flynn, Dean Stockmfll. (9) Pdpeye (56)/Musicale 6:39 (4/News 1,56) Topic •:45/(4) Weather $;I9 (4) Sports 7(99 (2) Lassie 7 (4) Survival Story of the. 1961 Bel-Air fine in California. (9) Movie: “Calamity Jane” (1963) Doris Day, Howard Keel. (56) (Special) Messiah 7:39 (2) My Favorite Martian (4) (Color) Walt Disney's World (7) (Special) Wonderland on Ice (See TV Features) 8:09 (2) Ed Sullivan Guests: singer Leslie Ug-gams, impressionist Frank Gorshin, Serendipity Singers 8:39 (4) Bill Dana Detective Click studies karate. (7) Broadside Waves challenge Marines on obstacle course. 9:00 (2) (Color Special) Royal Ballet (See TV Features) (4) (Color) Bonanza Only friend old Indian has is Ben Cartwright and a. little girl. (7) Movie: “The Ride Back” (1967) Anthony Quinn* Lita Milan. (9) Mary Morgan 9:39 (9) Flashback 10:99 (2) Candid Camera (4) Hogues Elsa Martinelli plays part in sequence about lost fortune of the czars. (9) Seven Days 19:15 (7) (Special) Year Out, Year In (See TV Features) 19:39 (2) What's My Line? 11:09 (2) (4) (9) News, Weather. Sports (7) (Color) Movie: “Horse Soldiers” (1959) John Wayne, William Holden. 11:29 (9) Movie: “Manhandled” (1949) Dorothy ^Lamour, .Sterling Hayden. 11125 (2) (Color) Movie “Heaven Knows, M) Allison” (1957) Rol Mitchum, Deborah Kj 11:30 (4) Surfside 6 12:39 (4) Lawman 1:11 (2). With MONDAY MOANING 9:19 (2) On thyFarm Front 9:15 (2) New) 9:21 (2) Suprise Semester 9:39 (4) 9!assroom 'unews 9:59 (2f News 7:99 ft) Happyland (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 00 (2) Captain Kangaroo Big Theater 8:39 (7) Movie: “Great Expectations” (1934) Henry Hull, Jane Wyatt. 8:55, (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Movie: “Flame and the Arrow” (1950) Burt Lancaster, Virginia Mayo. (4) Living -(9) Romper Room 10:00 (4) Make Room for Daddy (9) Ivanhoe 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (Repeat) (4) (Color) What’s This Song? (9) Across Canada 10:55 (4) News 11:09 (2) Andy Griffith (Repeat) (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Friendly Giant 11:15 (9) Chez Helene 11:39 (2) McCoys (Repeat) . (4) (Color) Jeopardy Television Features NFL Championship Game 0NE FULL YEAR WARRANTY ON MATERIAL AND WORKMANSHIP COLOR-Harmonizing btige/brown- with gold knob*. HIGH STYLED LOW SILHOUETTE-pla*tic-metal cabinet. EASY HOOK-UP-U.* only a scrawdrivor to connoct to antonna load, and 300 ohm antonna load to TV sat. FREQUENCY RANGE-Channolt 14 through 83. Why Not. Arrange Your Installation Today! CALL ONE OF THESE TESA MEMBERS: Blok* Radi* • TV fE 457*1 Uitimaf Radio-TV OR3-?6S2 3.U9 W Huron, fontioc 3530 5ml?obaw, Drayign Plairii **ii*)ht 4-15)5 ObalTV ■ 3480 Elizobclli Lake Rd., Pontiac Peer Appliance EM3-41 If 15? Oakland. Pontiac n Radiy TV » 4-9/35 ~ 730 W. Huron. KoWioc Radio *'TV* fE 4-9802 ' 348 Utugk. Pontiac TV * Radio • Ol M7M 14 W. University, Rockester i‘i Radio-TV. 6J3-JI66 0 Clark ston load. Clotkstok Rodlo-TV « 5-611* Orchard leke Aue-, Pontiac a Radia-TV fE''8-456* 45 C. Wdnon, Pontiac / Inc., Sorvico 6/4-1118 • ' —*S7*,D«»Jf«r 1 Lokelond lloctric . 7249 Highland Read, AIRaodigoTV v *MY2-1124 1/00 W. Ciark-ton Rd, lake Orion. • Stefannki Radia-TV K 2-6967* 115/W. Huron, fcnlioc Sweat RodiotTV fE 4-56/7 422 W. Huron, PetOioc Troy TV * Radio ' T* *-0060 5*65 Livernoif, Tray Walton Radia-TV . fE 2-2J37 • 518 f. Walton. Pontiac Cola'* TV Saiyijc* - Ul 2 3800 228/ By United Press International HOLLYWOOD PALACE, 9:30 p.m. (7) | Jackie Mason makes first TV appearance j since controversial Ed Sullivan Show; host j Van Johnson also Introduces Betty Grable,. I Sergio Franchi. SUNDAY • j BIG UTTLE SHOW, 1:00 p.m. (4) Robert i Taylor hosts March of Dimes variety show, | with guests Bob Hope, Lena Horne, David i Janssen, Abby Dalton, Tony Martin, Cyd I Charisse. NFL CHAMPIONSHIP, 1:30 p.m. (2) ! Baltimore Colts vs. Cleveland Browns in Ofiio | city's Municipal Stadium. INTERNATIONAL ZONE, 2:00 p.m. (4) UNESCO-worker'returns to Ghana to observe, effects of her work to combat illiteracy in “How You’ve Changed.’" PROFILES IN COURAGE, 3:00 p.m. (4) Despite the UL will it might, create, John Adams agrees to represent British soldiers who fired info threatening Boston crowd. NFL CHAMPfoNS, 4:00 p.m. (2) Interview’s with players, coaches of 1964 NFL champions, plus taped highlights of game. (7) Price Is Right (9) Butternut Square ' 11:59 (O') News MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:19 (2) LoVe of Life . (4)- (Color) Say When (7) Donna Reed (9) Bingo 12:25 (2) News 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:99 (2) Jack Benny (4) News (7) Ernie Ford (9) Movie “Etnbraceable You” (1948) Dane Clark, Geraldine Brooks 1:19 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 1:IS (4) Topics for Today 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal - (7) Bachelor Father (Repeat) 1:55 (4) News 2:9$ (2) Password (4) Loretta Young peat) (7) Flame in the (See TV Featui 2:39 (2) Playhouse (4) Doctors (7) Day in 2:55 (7) News 3:00 42) To T^U the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 1:15 3:25 (2l News i-.nfti) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say i Young Marrieds M Take 30 4:99 42) Secret Storm (4) Match Game ■ 1 (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News ■ 4:39 (2) Movie: “ThelQuarter-1 back” (1940) w/yne Mor- j ris, Virginia Dale, Lillian j Cornell, Edgar Kennedy. ' (4) Mickey Mouse Club (Repeat) (9) Popeye and Pals . 5:09 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Prisoners “of the Casbah” (1953) Gloria Grahame, Turhan Bey. 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant i 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny y 5:30 (9) Rocky and Friends 5:55 (2) Sports (56) What’s New? \ | (V), Carol Diiyall SW|.NOY OWIN-CORN1NO PfllRGLAS 1-ST0RY FRAME mSVMyUigkm EiTiMtm No Money Down AM >1101 IASSAD0R 54405 110 Dixio Highway • Operator on Duty 24 How $$ CASH FOR YOU Begin enjoying the things you need! Pay all your rurrent bills and have money left over! Consolidate! Make one easy loan! Make only one convenient monthly payment by mail! No obligation, red tape or unnecessary fuss! Homeowners can borrow up to 100% of the value of your home! First and second mortgages. * Original Houoe Cod • Preaent Balance . You Can Borrow 9 7.500.00 8 5.800.00 91.700.00 9,000.00 6,500.00 2,500.00 11,000.00 8,200.00 2,800.00 14,000.00 10,000.00 4,000.00 PHONE FE 8-3030 or LIncciln 5-4331 Southeastern Michigan Mortgage Company WTON RADIO PRESENTS YEAR-END REVIEW, 4:00 p.m. Frank j McGee is anchor man for NBC’s annual re- | cap of past year. OPERA IN FOCUS, 5:00 p.m. (7) First act of “La BoTfeme” - is performed by puppets, using new techniques in puppetry. WORLD OF SHAKESPEARE, 5:30 p.m. (T) Dramatized re-creation of Elizabethan Age. MEET THE PRESS, 6:00 p.m. (4) Dr. James B. Conant, noted authority on educa- | tion, is interviewed. WONDERLAND ON ICE, 7:30 p.m. (7) I p.m. Gordon and Sheila MacRae host this | revue on ice. ROYAL BALLET, 9:00 p.m. (2) Perform- I a nee by England’s Royal Ballet. i YEAR OUT-YEAR IN, 10:15 p.m. (7) I Howard K. Smith heads team of ABC news- | men reviewing events of past year. MONDAY FLAME IN THE WIND, 2:00 (7) New | serial revolves around repercussions pro- ■ duced when young widow writes novel about own home town. “OAKLAND IN TRANSITION99 WPON News LOOKS at OAKLAND COUNTY: Now And In The Year to Come! WPON Radio News takes a hard look at Oakland County, past, present and future, in an in-depth, HOUft-LOifG report, "Oakland in Transition.,, WPON hewsmen interview government officials, educators .and businessmen, to find out where Oakland County is going in the critical years ahead. "Oakland in Transition” is presented TWICE! Don’t miss this vital program! “OAKLAND IN TRANSITION.” Sunday, December 27, EsOO P.M. Friday, January 1, 2:00 P.M. C—18 rA Junior Editors Quit About- MUSIC QUESTION: How was music started? ANSWER: We can not tell exactly, but it is quite possible that it started as an expression of pleasure in rhythmical bodily movement. When we walk, we push our bodies off balance, but we throw a foot forward and are back to balance again. This sense of coming back to balance seems pleasant, like coming back home after a walk. Primitive people possibly enjoyed swaying back and forth, off-balance, back to balance, nnd then accented this by clapping hands or beating a hollow log, a kind of dram. Singing to this rhythm would be a natural development, and the beauties of music, through finer singutg and better instruments, would follow. Music had a great importance to ancient peoples. \ They felt its beauty and associated it with theforce* which they thought governed life—as, for example, the Chinese, who believed Oat music was a reflection of universal order and had magic powers. The Greeks were especially interested in music; they thought that the stars and planets sang in harmony together.\ FOR YOU TO 00: Clap hands like this: clap, clap, clap, pause, clap, clap, cvlap. Now try clap, clapclap, clap clap-pause, clap, dap, clap. Now try clap, clapclap, clap clap-clap. Try a little song chant to go with these rhythms. Do you see where music started? THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 88, 1964 Robert Kennedy Pays Visit to JFK's Grave " WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen.-elect Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., brother of the late President John F. Kennedy, paid a Christinas Day ,visit yesterday to the Kennedy grave in Arlington National Cemetery. Military authorities said Kennedy arrived at the hillside gravesite early in the morning and stayed for a few moments. The authorities said other visitors to the grave were few in number during the day. Read/ to take INVENTORY? you'll need these supplies: Inventory Forms. Save time with our readymade, professionally designed inventory forms. Cost less than making your own. from 1>36 per pod Clipboards. Variety of styles to hold papers in order, save time. from 70c ea. Marking Devices Felt tip pens, crayons, col-lored pencils, robber stamps and pads. Tags and Labels . Wide assortment to identify boxes, parts or merchandise. A must for initial counting, rough drafts. Many aisea. from 75c per pad Your Headquarters for inventory supplies. Ready for FILING? Don't wait until transfer time to chock your filing needs. Have these on hand, roady for quick transfer. , NEW FILE CABINETS TRANSFER CASES TRANSFER FILES FOLDERS and GUIDES •re treat new filing system Your Filing Supply Headquarters General Printing I Office Supply II WEST* LAWRERCE STREET, PONTIAC RS% |M«K •PCM FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL I P.M AdlitfO SATURDAY TIL 1 P.M. Free Perking With Validated Ticket You Can Count on Uw...Quality Costs No More at Sears Sitin' Ilnurs: in girls* sizes 7 to 14 ,. • stretch pants Trt&i 22? Charge It The latest akiotyle streteh pant* with brushed textured back. Nylon Wretches for a perfect, neat fit . . . designed for freedom; lets her stretch, bend, walk with ease. Choose from a wide array of colon in aiaet 7 to 14. Be early, door* open at 9 a.m. CirW 7-14 Dept., Second Floor MONDAY ONLY! tots’ stretch pants ,stisi 2 U Charge It Sturdy streteh nylon with elattie waiit and stirrup* for trim fit. Black, red, blue In aisea 2 to 6x. Hurry in Monday, Save! 11.39 Knit Blouse*.. ea. 97c Infant** Dept., Main Floor MONDAY ONLY MONDAY ONLY save up to 50% girls9 sweaters 099 SU each were $4.98 and $5.98 Charge It Shape-holding, *oft Orion Sayelle* acrylic bulkie* in sparkling white, red, light blue, navy, teal bine, camel and berry.Popular pullover and cardigan styles in aisea 7 to 14. Save up to $2.99 Monday! \ ‘DuPont Hag Tm. Girl*' 7-14 Dept., Second Floor SHOP UNTIL 9 MONDAY NITE! MONDAY ONLY choose Mohair & Orion* blended yarn Tit UU Skein -m Charge It Knit all your favorite worsted drew or sweater pattern* in this new, luxarioprsoftnes*. Mellow Mist yarn in brilliant deep or gentle pastel tones. 1 1-oz. balls. Save Monday ||l* ‘DuPont Rag. TM. a# Notion*, Main Floor Monday! Remnants of Decorator Fabrics Discontinued and. short places from our Reg.$2 to $4 Decorator Pool Shop. Ittchtdas textured rayons and acetate*, antique satins, cotton* in florals, modern and solids. 44a Drapery Dept., Main Floor up to 5 yd. lengths MONDAY ONLY Sale! 10W-20W-30 All-Weather MOTOR OIL 10-Qnart Clan 2s® Charge It Lees Than 30c Per Quart Three oils in one, Special additives fight nut, acid, corrosion. Double detergents keeps engine elosn when hot or cold. Meets and exceeds car makers maximum severity tests. MONDAY 3NLY! save 18c yd. on famous name ... checked gingham s 51^ Charge It Creasocssistant combed cotton gingham in colorful checks. Machine washable • . • needs little, if sny ironing 36 iuehes wide. Ideal for curtain*, leiiure wear, quilt*. • Yard Good*, Main Floor MONDAY ONLY! men's insulated innerwear outfits $4.99 Coat 9(6 or Pants pe, $1.37* 6" Thick, 16x484m. Fiberglas® Batu . . .Reg. $&f».4.67‘ ♦TAKE-WITH Bailsling Matertids, Perry Basement “Triple Coil” Comfort Mattresses or Springs Regdhndy at $1^951 .* Q 088 Ea. Twin or FuU Unit O JS each NO MONEY DOWN on Sean Easy Payment Plan Not 2, bat 3 layen of coils for extra firm nsversag support. Poly-foam padded on top to eliminate hardness. Preboilt border. 936 •ceils in fnfl sleep set Designed for the “rett* of your life. Save $20.07on each one Monday. Furniture Department, Second Floor ■ 5M sears Douiilown Pontiac Plioiu* I I. 11 71 • • /: V m Th» W.ofh«r THE PONTIAC VOL. 122 NO. 277 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SATURDAY, DECEMBER Hv, Youth -^88 PAGES, Oregon River Subsides; Rain Plagues California SAN FRANCISCO (AP>—Oregon’s swollen Wil-lamette River subsided last night handing downtown Portland a Christmas reprieve from a massive flood threat. In Water logged Northern California, rain was expected to hamper rescue and cleanup operations in scores of devastated communities. The death toll stood at Huge in Wake of more than 40 in the Far West five-state floor plague. More than. 14,000 persons were homeless and property damage was estimated in the millions of dollars. IrtfJifm Cfnrm After cre,tin8 ye*terday at 28.8 l» lUlU wlUf. Ill' feet, almost 12 feet above flood stage, the murky Willamette NEW DELHI, India (AP) — began to recede. Officials said Thousands are homeless and at only, a three-foot concrete para-least 750 persons are dead on pet held back the water. Ceylon and the nearby island of 3 Others Die on Area Roads Death traveled Oakland County highways during the past 48 hours, claiming at least eight lives in four separate single-car traffic accidents. . Early this morning five persons, including a mother and her three, sdns, died in an accident on 1-75 in Independene Township. Dead are*: Mrs. Glen Miller, 27, her three sons, Deland, 8; Glen Jr., 6, and John, 4, and Michael Carter; 20, all of Fiint: Rameswaram, ravaged by cyclone and 15-foot tidal wave, according to reports reaching here today. » The disaster area, off India’s southeastern tip, Is still, virtual- | ______ !y ™ ^T“JC£Sl! Uunette’* W1 would be slow.' is patchy. Villages have been without food" or water since * * * Wednesday morning. Officials said about 250 per- Among the debris the river carried was a broken raft of * logs, which passed under Portland's If bridges without doing any damages. Forecasters predicted the Wil- PLENTY OF WORK FOR SANTA—The Fischer children in Aberdeen, S. D?, bad their stockings hung by the chimney with care yesterday-all 11 of them. Among the chUdren!,are the Fischer quintuplets born Sept. 14, 1963, and now almost IK years old. The father, Andrew, holds Mary Ann; Julie has Cathy; and Evelyn cuddles Maggie. Then comes Dannie and his' sister, Denise, who holds 2-months-old Cynthia. The quint Margaret is held by Charlotte, and Mrs. Fischer holds the lone boy quint, Jimmie. fCopyright 1964, Curtis Publishing Co.) Others killed were Mrs. Bryce J. Stevens, 34, of 981 Carlisle; William Wa-sageshik, 37, of 1470 Ladd, ’ Commerce Township, and Rosemary Pittman, $Q, of 315 Romeo, Rochester. The accident which killed Mrs. Miller, her sons and Carter took place at 1:46 a.m. The driver of the car,. Mrs. Miller’s husband, Glen, 27, is in serious condition at Pontiac General Hospital. State Police sabf the six were apparently returning from a holiday visit in Detroit. Ceyloa and another 566 Rameswaram, a 16-mile long island between Ceylon and the Oregon Gov/ Marie Hatfield said,. “We’re over the hump in the state as whole, blit the situation -remains critical in Portland.!’ FAMILIES EVACUATED Unofficial estimates in new, 2 papers at Colombo, the capital evacuated in the North Portland of Ceylon, said the death toll "area as the Columbia River would reach 2,000. threatened to inumtai^ the sec- * ____lion. Armlr engineers insisted villages isolated by high water VT. butlhey declined to guaran-and washed out roads. tee dikes along the river. More PROPERTY DAMAGE than 7,000 persons were home- Property damage is estimated l*88 hi Oregon. Several County Vacancies Move Troops Now/Prosecutor Filling Staff Into Saigon at 6150 million. U. S. Ambassador Cedi B. Lyon asked Ceylonese Premier Mrs. Sirimave Bandara-naike what help was most ■ urgently needed. Britain, West Germany and Cuba also offered assistance. Flood waters were .receding in some California areas. Cold- for today, promising more discomfort for about 7,000 flood The dropping mercury was a mixed blessing. Mountain areas, Two - Indian navy vessels especially the Sierra on the Ne-reached Rameswaram and res- vada-Califomia border refroze, cued about 200 persons. No reducing' flood threats''from planes were able to land on the melting snow, island because of washed out * * * % runways. The island’s rail link Washington State weather •with the Indian mainland was forecasters called for snow to-washed away, night in the northwest and east- Railway officials said 115 per- ern portkm8 ^ ^ir state and sons aboard a passenger train rajn elsewhere ••'.** .• '•* * hit by the 15-foot tidal wave that ____ swept across the eastern end of PREDICT CREST Rameswaram were believed Predictions are that the Spo-drowned. ' kane River will qrest and may A spokesman said pie six- cause some damage, coach tram^eftPamtoonthe Iff Idabo> ^ por|neuf Wver western end of the island shortly before midnight Tuesday and' was pulling into a station at the easternmost city of Dhanushko-di several hours later when th'e 7 When Oakland County Prosecutor-elect s/jerome Bronson takes office/an. 1, b&will bring at least flVe tiew assistant prosecutors. tarfUl vacancies. a + .. i* Bronson, the . first Democrat elected to the office since the 1930s, and Ms nuwly appointed staff members will take the office Monday. They, and John D. Murphy, the county’s first Democratic clerk, will be sworn in' nt an 11. a.m. ceremony in the Supervisors Auditorium at the courthouse. Circuit Judge Wil-liam J. Beer will preside. Bronson said that )iis staff is not yet complete and that he is still interviewing candidates for . Officers said the vehicle was traveling ' at 'a high rate of speed when it left the northbound lane of the wet and fog-shrouded freeway. Oakland Highway Top in ’64 173 specialized fields, particularly in Appellate Court work. Those already named by Bronson arb^ohn I. Bain, 33, of 26393 Springfield, Farmington Township; James R. Stelt, 39, of 365'Ascot; Walter D. Schmier, 56, of 8577 Hendrie, Huntington Woods; William R. VanderKIoot, 27, .of 30015 Cheviot Hilf, Franklin; and-Bernard Paige, 27. of 1921 Beverly, Sylvan Lake. LOST ELECTION Currently an attorney with the Sun Oil Co., Bain, a graduate of the Detroit College of Law, was an unsuccessful candidate in the Nov. 3 electkhr for state representative. He lost to Se-publican incumbent Raymond Baker. Stelt, former personnel director and assistant to the city manager in Pontiac in 1951-14, is presently the executive director of the Pontiac Lumber, Fuel,.and.Builder Supply Exchange. From 1954 .to 1156 he was city manager of Otsego. Stelt is a 1947 graduate of the University of Michigan, ‘majoring in psychology and engineering. A graduate of the Detroit College of Law, he is to be admitted- tq the Oakland County Bar Association Monday after- disaster struck. In Today's Press 17th Vote Italy again fails to elect president — PAGE A-t. Election Challenge Losing N.Y. Republican says opponent overspent . oft campaign—PAGE A-7. • Reunion Lithuanian woman joins family in U.S. after 23-years — PAGE A-!. , Astrology ........ B-3 Bridge ....... ... B-3 Church Ne>s . A-10-A-12 Comics ....... B-3' Editorials .........A4 Home Section .., C-l—C-2 Markets ........ C-10 Obituaries ..... ©>11 Sports ...... CS-C4 Theaters . ... C-12-C-13 TV, Radio Programs C-17 Women’s Pages A-lS-A-li dropped to a flood level of 6ft feet as the weatherman predicted lessening rainfall for a 24-hour period. The Weather Bureau in Boise reported the gradual reduction of south Idaho streams and that the Snake River -on the Idaho-Oregon border had * crested slightly beloW flood stage. ■'+ ■ it * Flood conditions in Reno had declined by midafternoon yesterday as the Truckee River marked a steady, decreased flow. Earlier it had washed into streets in Vista, east of Reno. WILL GO ON Rescue operations in California by 48 helicopters scattered over the northern coast will go on today, officials - said. Dense fog arid rain kept the aircraft on the ground most of yesterday, although .a few got through late .in the day. • * * *" Many of the helicopters were from the carrier Bennington, which arrived at the flood rescue center of Eureka, Calif, on a mercy minion. ♦ ★. A. Seven physicians in the Eureka area, worked 12-hour shifts in helicopters taking injured vie-:tims. and bodies from the stricken 70-square mile district. Recdeing floodwaters left mud apd assorted debris laying thick Latest Dixie Tornadoes ill 2 Persons in Georgia MACON, Ga. ftJPD—Slashing viciously through central Georgia, a roaring tornado hopped and skipped a deadly course early today that left two men dead and more than a dozen persons injured. The tornado aimed its full force at a community near here where it lulled two men in house trailers and severely injured members of thpir families. Then it knifed 39 miles northeastward to-Milledgeville where it shattered plate glass windows as it roared d6wn the town’s main street and lifted the robf from a department store and leveled an ice company. ■„ Police at Milledgeville said they were conducting a block-by-block search, for injured persons. -Five persons were > treated at a Milledgeville hospital and released before dawn. The twister first nosed toward the ground in the Glynco section of Macon where it did little more than twist tree tops, but then it skipped five miles northeastward and touched down at a small community on Highway . iM. > It was there the tornado claimed its first victims. Bill Edwards, 43, and James fl. Pittman,; 45, were killed in the .wreckage of their house trailers' and* members of their families were rushed by ambulahce to a Macon hospital. - ' K - Admitted to the bar in 1934 Schmier has served as a felony trial lawyer in the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office and as the civilian legal counsel for the. Material Command of the Army. 'Air Force. VIRGINIA GRADUATE For two years following his 1961 graduation from the Unit, versity of Virginia Law School, VanderKIoot was a special agen for the Intelligence Corp of the U.S. Army, arid is now asspei-ated with -the Detroit law firm of Hill, Lewis, Andrews, Aaams, Goodrich and Power. Paige, who received his degree from the Detroit College ^(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Extend Martial L a w After Hotel Bombing SAIGON, South Viet Nam ,(AP) .--.The Vietnamese government ordered a battalion of paratroopers.; into Saigon today and extended martial Jaw for another month to head Off further trouble in the wake of the Christmas Eve bombing * of a^ U.S. officers'hotel. . * *. * All armed forces in the capital were placed on maximum alert. U. S. authorities put stringent new security measures into effect. Bomb squads opened all Christmas gift packages for patients at the UJMbvy Hospital. '-Special demolition teams' roamed all 67 U.S. installations in Saigon in search Of terrorist bombs as a precaution agairist a repetition of the Brink Hotel ^bombing that killed two Americans, and injured 68 others. Less than a dozen . of the Injured Americans were" still hospi- Some UB. sources charged that a general laxity of security preceded the blast, presumably the work of the Comfnunist Viet Cong., The car struck a guard rail, then straddled the rail until it hit a pillar of the Holcomb Road overpass, officers said., CAR DEMOLISHED The 1967 model car was demolished. Police said the vehicle left the road 243 feet south of the point of impact and they said (here was no evidence of skid marks on the shoulder. ” Police believe Mr. and Mrs. Miller and Carter were in the front seat and the three boys were in the rear of the car, when the crash occurred. ★ * * * Mrs. Stevens died at 7:15 a.m. yesterday morning as the result of injuries she received in an accident which took place about 5:30 a.m. in Pontiac. * • * *' - " ■« Police said the car she was driving was traveling west on Montcalm at a high rate of speed when the mishap occurr ■ LOST CONTROL Officers said the woman apparently ldst control of the car, it crossed'the street, went over a curb and onto the, lawn in front of the Pontiqp Board of Education Maintenance Garage. The car continued across the lawn, hit a second curb and (Continued on' Page 2, Col. If Bad Weather Ups Traffic Toll • Millions, of Motorists Jamming Highways By The Associated Press Traffic deaths for the extended Christmas weekend took a sharp upward' turn yesterday, running far above the nation's' daily average toll, as millions of motorists jammed highways on the holiday. In Michigan, the weekend count stands at 26, including eight in the county. Around the nation, rain, ice and ' snow-slicked highways, along with fog in some state areas, made driving conditions The count of deaths on highways since the start of the 46-hour holiday period was nearing 300 late this morning. Tho National Safety Council has estimated the final count will be between 550 and 650. State traffic victims include: Arthur L. Seward,-16, and James E. Dempsey, 14, both of Bltely, killed last night when . the car in which they were riding left a Newaygo Ceuniy road and struck a tree near Fremont. STRUCK TREE Joe Daws, 71, of Quincy, killed yesterday when his pickup truck ran off a Branch County road and struck a tree. Terry Bentley, 17,. of Ben- '* ton Harbor, killed Saturday when the car in which he was > riding ran off the road and struck a parked track in Benton Township, Berrien County. Eddy Yee, 64, of Detroit, fatally injured Thursday ojght when struck by a car In Detroit. * ♦: * Jesse Palmer, 74, of Farwell, * killed Thursday when struck by an auto /as he walked across U.S. 10 in Farwell. HIT TREE Harvey M. Crawford, 65, of Coleman, killed Thursday when his car hit a tree near Mount Pleasant. Edwin Godin, 36, Detroit, killed Thursday when struck by a car in Detroit/ Robert Enochs, 30, of Ed-wardsburg, killed Thursday (Continued, on Page 2, Coll 7) DIXIE TORNADO—One of .the random tornadoes which swept across middle Georgia last night shattered this frame . house ndrth of McDbnough. The area in Henry County was the worst hit by the violent stops, which uprooted t smashed houses and flattened barns.. . Mercury to Dip Now That Santa Made His Trip Temperatures will start dipping today, says the weatherman. A low of 20 to 27 is ex? pec ted tonight, to be followed by a high of 27 to M tomorrow. Skies will be partly cloudy through Monday. A * 'A. Today in Pontiac, winds are easterly to northeasterly ‘ at1 eight to 15 miles an hour. They will become northwesterly at tho saipe speed tonight and tomorrow. * ■ ■■ 'A * *• The mercury dropped from its early morninf reading of 35 today to 21 by lp.m. | ^ ■ i i . • ■ 1 ' -__■' Abstentions Prevent Majority HOME (API — Parliament Tailed today in its 17th vote to elett a*ew president of Ithly. ' Abstentions by Christian Democrats kept veteran Socialist Pietro Nenni from getting a majority. f * * a The Christian Democrats'had held f postmidnight party meet-ing in hopes of closing ranks behind a single candidate, but they failed. 4t w *' Nenni. 73, a deputy premier in the Aldo Moro center-left coali- Piye Killed in Crash on 1-75 Freeway (Continued From Page One) ♦flipped over on its top, officers said. ' Two, passengers in the' car were not injiired. ★ * * Wasageshik was killed Thursday at about 6:10 p.m. in Walled Lake.' LEFT ROAD \ Police said he was alone in a car traveling west on West Walled Lake Drive when he apparently lost control of the car. It hrft the road and struck a •tree^ Miss Pittman was killed in a single-car mishap at 4:26 a.m. today. The driver of the car, James E. Rowan, 2880 Alexander, Avon Township, is in critical condi-tion at St. Joseph Mercy Hos-! pital. * \ * Sheriff's deputies said the Rowan’vehicle, which was traveling west on Crooks, failed, to stop as the road ended at Adams. The car hit" a large sign and struck a 25-foot embankment. tion government, got 346 votes todpy, three less than in the last round of voting by the deadlocked Parliament. STRONGEST CONTENDERS Foreign Minister Giuseppe Saragat, a Democrat Socialist, and Nenni are the strongest remaining contenders. * Saragat got no votes in the ,latest ballots, however, * with his followers among the 372 Who abstained from voting. Augusto de Marsanich, Italian Social Movement (Fascist) got 40 votes and Alcide Malagugini, Crossbow Too Much for Actress Jill St. John I NHA TRANG, Viet Ram lift-Actress Jill St. John, appearing in Viet Nam with the Bob Hope troupe, received a minor injury from a weapon today, but it . was all an accident. h Jk' h Miss St. John was presented a tribal crossbow after an appearance at Pfeikii, a remote town in the mountains 240 miles north of Saigon. She dropped the heavy weapon and it hit her instep. CHARLES Ml TUCKER County NAACP Elects Officers Charles M. Tucker Jr., >161 Earlmoor, has -been elected president of the Oakland County (Pontiac) Chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. * ★ * Tucker, who will hold office for a two-year term, is president of the Tucker Realty Qo. and Mark Mortgage. He is' also regional director of the Michigan state NAACP chapters: * * . * Other officers elected include Mrs. Otis B. Ferguson, first vice president; William *F. Davis, treasurer ; and Augustine Wright, recording secretary. * ★ * Elected as members at-large of the board of directors were Mrs. Orelis Ballard, Allen D. Noble, Harold Allen, Mrs.- Lucille Northcross and Mrs. Marilyn Henry. Socialist' party of Proletarian Unity, 33. Other ballots were scattered. V'.’’ > *■ a * -■ An 18th ballot was scheduled tonight. Nenni led the 16th ballot. Friday night with 349 votes.-A, simple majority of 482 is needed to elect a successor to* Antonio Segni, who resigned* the presidency because of ill health. * * * , The postmidnight meeting of almost 400 Christian. Democrat lawmakers was the most important party gathering. They were .trying to decide whom to back after their official candidate, former Premier Giovanni Leone, withdrew Christmas eve. There were reports the divided Christian Democrats might turn to Saragat. INTRAPARTY RIVALRIES . Political sources saw such a move as a way for the Christian Democrats to get around their own intraparty rivalries and mend cracks in Premier Aldo Moro’s coalition, seriously weakened by the presidential election. A Saragat candidacy backed by the Christian Democrats probably would . be strong enough to break the deadlock, providing Nenni’s Socialists' return *to the ranks of Saragat supporters. * ,★" Moro, a Christian Defnqprat, heads a coalition of his owii par-, ty, the Saragat Democratic Socialists, the Nenni Socialists and the Republicans. The four partners failed to agree on a single candidate when the presidential election opened Dec. 16. - * - * . 4 The Christian -Democrats backed Leone; the other three coalition parties rejected Leone and supported Saragat. THEY’RE EVEN NOW - Identical twins Theresa (left) and Lesa Frawley of 'Flint weren’t so Identical for g while last week. Theresa still had one front tooth; while Lesa had only open spaces. > -Then the inevitable happened, the “extra” tooth'dropped out, and now they’re both alike again. They are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs; Donald J. Frawley Jr. To Eye Water j Cambodia Charges System Law Viei/Thai 66 Tremors Shake Japan Island Chain The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Cloudy with occasional tight rain .or drizzle intermittently mixed with light snow this morn-' v big, changing to lighpsnow by this afternoon and then ending tale this afternoon or e#ly tonight. Less than one inch new snow accumulation expected. Turning colder today. ■ Highs 33 to 40. Partly cloudy and colder tonight and tomorrow. - Lows tonight 20 to 27. Highs tomorrow 27 to 34. Winds east hortheast eight to IS miles an hour, becoming northwesterly, eight to IS miles an hour tonight and tomorrow. Monday’s outlook: partly cloudy with tittle temperature change. TOKYO (AP) -i Sixty-six! tremors, ranging from slight to strong, today jolted the tiny island of Oshima, about 100 miles south of Tokyo, Japan’s Central Meteorological Agency said. No damage was reported. The agency said the island with a population of 12,009 and the nearby Izu Island chain, have beeTT hit by a series of earthquakes since Dec. 9. Some j of the tremors were felt in Tokyo and vicinity:. ’ ■ ! The Agency said two of the 66 j quakes today registered four on I Hie Japanese scale of seven, strong enough to send cups, sau- ] cers and dishes tumbling from the shelves. Residents of Oshima, known for its active volcano, Mt. Miha-ra, fear the series- may lead to a major eruption. But seismologists in Tokyo dispelled the fears and predicted the tremors eventually will subside. OTHER QUAKES Quakes also have been felt in Miyake with a population of 6,-000, Niijima, 4,000, and Toshi-ma, 350, tiny volcanic island of the Izu chain in the. pacific about 180 miles south of Tokyo. .The agency said a„ series of earthquakes jolted Oshima in 1956, 1957, 1959 and 1961 but no serious damage resulted. * Ordinance Would Govern Operation Waterford Township) Board-members Monday night will consider adoption of.- an ordinance pertaining to the operation of the central water.system. .Besides' providing for management procedures, the ordinance also specifies rates, and establishes rules and tegular tions governing the system. The Township Board re-I viewed language of the ordi-I nance at a special meeting three weeks ajo. • In other business Monday, the board will discuss a'proposed pension plan for employes other than police and firemen who already are covered by a pension program. * * a Funds for the pension plan wdre set up in the 1965 budget approved last October by’ the hoard, - ’ MOST SUITABLE ‘ • ’ . Different pension programs j have been studied by the board in4he pajt y»r* in an effort to find the type most suitable for township personnel. The board also will open bids i on two new cars for the building department. W. Berliners j Allowed Visits PHNOM PENH, Cambodia i territorial waters off Koh Pro-(UPI) Tiny Opmbodia com- vince in the Gulf of Siam end plained today of birder troubles h with two of its neighbors, South j I Viet Nam and Thaildad, Thursday'! Ttmparatur* Chart | Alpena 33 22 Fort Worth i Grand Rapids 34 30 Jacksonville Houghton ll 16 Kansas City . 1 -23 Pittsburgh 61 60' a; Saif Tike City u 31 24 San FrancJaca Si 52 46 SawH S. Marie If 53 11 Seattle 31 42 36 Tampa 71 12 -10 Washington 71 Hong Kong Firemen Rescue Trapped 14 HONG KONG - Fourteen people trapped for more than three hours or the upper-floor of a blazing plastics factory building were rescued early today by firempn we.hring breathing apparatus.- - Cause of the tire, which destroyed the factory, was not immediately known. Property damage was estimated at $10,-000. —------ BERLIN (UPI) Thousands of West Berliners, laden with Christmas gifts, began lining up before dawn today to visit relatives in tile divided city’s ^Soviet sector- The Communists opened six narrow, passages through their Berlin wall, its cold stone out-1 line softened by light snow, to let an expected horde- of -West | Berliners into usually forbidden East Berlin. • An estimated 85,000 persons surged into East Berlin yes- i terday. As many.or more were \ expected today, with another crowd anticipated on New | Year’s Day. The Christmas . pass agree- j ment was the result of- prolonged negotiations between East German and West Berlin Officiate. The present pass period be- ' gap Dec. 19 and will end Jan. 3. Another twe^week pass period is scheduled for Easter. West Berliners must return from Soviet Berlin every night ■%. midnight — except New Year, Eve, when all-night visits will be permitted. The Cambodians charged that their borders .had been. Violated three times in three days once by the South Vietnamese, once by the Thais and oace from Thailand.by the “Free Cambodia’’ refugee organization. ' , ‘ ‘ This country had carried on a running dispute for more than a year with South Viet Nam over alleged border raids by Vietnamese and American troops fighting Communist guerrillas.^ ' There also have been off-again on-again troubles with' Thailand. it * ' * * - The border troubles apparent-j ly are related to Cambodia’S political shift from pro-American neutralism to*a' pro-Com-munist attitude. This changeover began more than a year ago, coinciding with a turn for the worse in. th§ American-1 backed^ Vietnamese government’s antinCommunist guerrilla war. CHARGE STRAFINGS The Cambodians charged today that four Vietnamese helicopters and an. observation plane machine-gunned several dwellings Thursday in the Cambodian -border village of Scatum 109 miles east of here. They Charged that the helicopters landed about 59 men, including one American, and carried off some belongings of the villagers after surrounding' the. town and firing on it .for an hour. The government charged that the Americans and South Vietnamese had engaged in “deliberate aggression aggravated by acts of banditry.” ★. ♦ : * The second Cambodian charge said ^ Thai police boat violated seized a small boat carrying ! four men, forcing it to follow : to Thai territory1. DEMAND RELEASE The foreign ministry demanded that the four, men be re- j leased immediately. it 'w • * - A military source charged | that' free Cambodia raiders at? ! tacked the village of Thkem 1 Romeas Wednesday night, kill-ling two soldiers and'a provincial ’guard,, wounding three others, and carrying away seven j prisoners. Sr Sr ' j The Cambodians charge that the refugee radio,, which broad-1 casts antigovemment state-; I Viet Nam wtth U.S. backing. Police Probe City Shooting - \ Pontiac police are investigate' mg the early morning shooting j Of Thomas Francis, 35. . j \ . # 4 # . Francis, who refused to give j police his address, is under observation at Pontiac General r Hospital with a bullet wound in the leftside. Police said he was shot by Tony Stoiloff, 72, of 491 Franklin as he attempted to push his [ way in the Stoiloff’s home. Two men with Francis saidj he had told them that the Frank-; lin address- was an after-hour^ drinking establishment. ■ •♦•'"W * ' The pair, Robert Brown, 23, of 1 404 Virginia,'Royal Oak, aixi! his brother,-Paul d. Brown, 25, j of Detroit, were in their car! when the shooting ’took place, police said. . Run, Away in Sheriff's Car Trusted Him a Bit Too;Far NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers and occasional rain will fall tonight akHig part of Pacific coast, parts of Plateau, eastern Gulf Coiutandparts-o^ south Atlantic'Coast and from Ohio’Valley and lower Lakes eastward to Atlantic . coast Snow and flurries will , fall over Rockies and from mid-Mississippi Valley40 upper Lakes. It will continue mild along Atlantic "seaboard. . * '•vr'/ t Q \ r •■*... , :[ H CAMBRIDGE, Md. ur - A J prisoner at the Dorchester County jail has lost his trusty’s privileges after a Christinas! j spree that began when .he took I the sheriff’s new,car. # j The prisoner, Tommy Luke,! 24‘, slipped out of the jail kltbhen Christmas ’Eve and took the { brand new police car Jo nearby ] Hurlock Md., to see a, girlfriend. ! He brought the car 'back early I Christmas morning dfter being told to return it by Sheriff Cal-j vert Creighton over the police} rqdio. Today Luke was in a security cell. • - - | ... Originally sentenced for drtv-j ing on a revoked license, he was charged With: breaking oiit of jail; unauthorised use or the) police car; and breaking the jaw of the girlfriend, with whom j pe said he had settled a score. ‘ ! ; ; •; U'.t , KILLED IN VIET NAM—Mrs. Joy Hagen of Oklahoma City, Okta„ looks at a photograph of her husband, Lt. Col. James Hagen, killed in the Christinas -Eve bombing of • Saigon servicemen’s hotel.- Mrs. Hagen was notified of the death, Christmas day. She said heir husband gaVe up a successful dental practice’for’an Army career.. "We never had any regrets . ) . until now,” she said. v Birmingham Area New$ • Two Projects in School System's Plan . BIRMINGHAM - Next week will mark the beginning of two projects developed under the school system-a Birmingham Plan. *' w. ■ * The first Team Teaching Training Institute will be held Tuesday and Wednesday at Berkshire Junior High School. Scheduled for Monday at the school Ik a workshop for the' development of a program for the academically able ta the elementary schools. . The team teaching sessions will be attended by-44 teachers who volunteered io work on the new program. # > *. Directed ,by Supt. Dr. John B. smith, the workshop’s format will include objectives, b, a c k-ground and exploration of team teaching plans. PARTICIPANTS Other participants - will be Donald Protheroe, * currently working, on his doctorate at Wayne State- University, . and Mrs. Gertrude Green, principal of Franklin Elementary School. Protheroe and Mrs. Green were on the gaff of *Dqndee School, Greenwich,- Conn., one Staff Readied by Prosecutor (Continued From Page One) > of Law in January, is with the taw office of Bond and Dillon in Sylvan Lake. He- was employed' with General Motors Track and Conch Division in sales promotion while study mg for his degree. Bronson, an attorney for 10 years with offices in Madison Heights, noted that when he assumes his duties he will eliminate the title of senior assistant prosecutor. * * Five of the 13 assistants held the senior position. HOLDING TITLE Those with the title were William E. Lang, Jerome K. Barry, Robert L. Tempi in, Edward Shigley and James E. Roberts. Temptib, defeated by Bronson in last month's election, yesterday announced his resignation, effective Dec. 31. He will return to private practice and be associated with Brace O. Wilson in the firm of Wilson & Templin, Birmingham. Baity announced his resignation today, effective Thursday. He will become a partner in the Bloomfield Hills law firm of Merideth and Nichols. * * * * -Barry had been with the prosecutor’s office since 1956. * Earlier, twp other assistants, Daniel C. Devine, and. Charles J. Porter, announced they would join Richard P. Condit in private practice when his appointed term as prosecutor ends Dec. 3L '7. Among those remaining will*, bq, Robert D. Long who will con-! tinue in the same capacity of! chief assistant prosecutor under [ Bronson. of the test team teaching schools ta the counfry. Prior to serving as superintendent in Greenwich," Smith was instrumental in the organization' and operation of the nation’s first team teaching school fit Lexington, Mass.. The two team teaching-institutes will be held from 8:45 •a.m. to 3:15 p.m. KEYNOTE SPEAKER Pr. Elizabeth Drews, Michigan State University authority in education for the academically able, will be the keynote speaker and consultant for the' other workshop. About 12 teaehers will attend the sessions under the chairmanship of John Molloy, diagnostician for the school system. Participating in a -panel discussion will he four elementary principals, Graift Barber of Pierce, James Uddle of Bloomfield Village, Fritz Plnis of Adams and Marjorie Tate of Quar-ton. * * * The workshop will be held from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. : The Birmingham Plan is a five-year project geared toward | improvement of the district’s I educational program, j Operating funds for the plan | were provided by a seven-tenths 1 mill levy approved by district voters in June. Boy Listed j as Fair After J Shooting i A 7-year-old Novi boy is in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital after being accidentally shot in the head Thursday aftenioon with a 22-caliber rifle. -. ! James Higgins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Higgins, 45945 Pon-! tiac Trail, was accidentally shot : by his 11-year-old brother, Alvin ! Jr., while the pair/ played with | the weapon, behind their Home, | according to sheriff’s deputies. I The single-sbot rifle was a Christmas present to the beys from Allan Lively .of 163 W. -’ Woodward /Heights, Hazel ! Park, officers said. Lively gave the hoys the rifle | about 5 p.m. and took them out-| side to fire it, according to deputies. ■ / V After a short time Lively went , back into the house to get something to eat, while the youths continued to play with the weapon, officers said. I THREW TIN CAN I Deputies said James threw a 1 tin can into the air fdr Alvin j to /‘shoot The 11 -year-old fol-I lowed the can, with the rifle, | as it fell. j The weapon- discharged and the bullet struck James in the head, grazing his skull, deputies said. They said . thiie hoy’s . left arm was paralyzed after the shboting. Vinson Closes Capitol Career WASHINGTON -(UPfi - After more than 50 years ni Congress,. Carl Vinson has formally-closed his government career by slipping out of the nation’s capital on Christmas Day while no one was looking. + it. Vinson, dean of the House of Representatives and probably its most powerful and respected single member, bparded a train at the nearly ’deserted Union Station yesterday for - the trip back to Milledfeeville, Ga., and his 600-acre farm. No one except a couple of newsmen wen on hand for the final leave-taking. The 81-year-oM Vinson refused help with his two suitcases and wouldn’t, even let anyone get a redcap. He clearly did, not want any tear-filled farewells and had let word -pass around on Capitol Hill that.he planned to stay until the-opening of the 88th Congress Jan 4.. ' ..( " l • >'■■■' traffic Toll in Sharp Rise (Continued From Page One) when his car ran off U S. 12 east of Edwardsburg and hit a tree. * - ETi.Neveau, 41, of Bay City and John Brustmaster, 38, of Akron, killed Thursday in a two-car collision on M25 near Bay City. CAR OVERTURNED Jim Joe'Lopez, 25, of Case-vilie, killed Thursday whdn his car overturned oh a Huron County road near Caseville. Douglas AodersOn, 51, of Ferodale, killed in a two-car collision in Detroit Thursday night. Robert Seters, 23, of Warren, died yesterday, of injuries sustained Thursday when his car hit a utility pole in Macomb County. t Lester Thorp, Jr. 33, of Lansing, killed in* Eaton Rapids yesterday when his car hit a-utility pole. . John Thels, 67, and his wife, Rose, 85, of Detroit, killed yes- * ’terday afternoon when their car went out of control on the Edsel Ford freeway and Mt a utility pole. Richard Hauck, 24, jof Flint/ killed yesterday inf a two-car collision on Saginaw Road, near ^ V /•■• Pontiac's Jim Howenstine Sizes Up Stub iirmingham Bunyam //in Ag 'Sorry, Jim, You Missed Your Mark* The undefeated “1 li m be r-cks” of Birmingham’s fores-f and nArks department have lined permanent possession of e coveted chromed handsaw. In beating out competition at e fifth annual Inter-City For-try and Parks Field Day, turaday, they won the trophy lich will go with their romed. ax. The ax is a keepsake from heir three years of victory ver Oak Park. The champs faced a new op-ment this year — Pontiac sent team to join that of Femdale trying to topple the record ilders. ■ ★ w. # However, the trials at Taft irk in Femdale ended with, rmingham taking Jive of the {ht events — rope throwing, ot tying, topping, operating a osScut saw and felling. X)K HONORS Femdale took honors in the ur climb and tractor drive, mtiac proved to have the best wersawfers. Darrel C. Middlewood, sup-rintendent of the Birming-am department, is anticipat-ig a tougher time next year. This year’s competition, he id, “was dosei' than the score dicatea.” A new event this year was lling, in which free stubs were wed down in predetermined rectibns. "' _ The “feller”' coming closest a wooden stake is the winner, rmingham scored a. ‘victory nere by oAe-half inch. Although many of the skills involyed are used by the men almost daily, Middlewood admitted his team had had “a little extra practice.” Next , year the “kings of the hill” will be defending their title in Pontiac, in a yet-un-determined forest. • PONTIAC MAIL OPTICAL CEffTER Open Evenings has been on a championship team; figure to make him extra dangerous ag&inst the Crits. A A A In his only championship appearance, Brown..was a rookie when the Detroit I^ons humbled the Browns, 56-14, in 1967. Baltimore Coach Don Shula knows what a problem he.has to frying to stop Brown. A A A “He’s probably the best often* live player in pro football and can bust a game wide open,” said Shula. “We can’t leave It up to one-man coverage because he’ll break away from one tackier.” Says’ Colt linebacker Don Shinnick: “We'ye got to sup round him.” ® The Browns scheduled a half-hour workout today but the Colts, who arrived Friday night, planned to skip any workout today. They were to look over Municipal Stadium’s field and possibly hold strategy sessions. ■ A Ai A- Blanton Collier, the Browns’ coach, and Shula both had news conferences scheduled foDowmg lunch. Record Run Near; but Swell Appears PERTH, Australia (AP) -Donald Campbell came close to breaking the world Vater speed record at Lake Dumbleyung to- * day. He was thwarted only by .a sudden four • inch swell as he was making a run-up to t h e starting print of the course. Bluebird readied 275 miles . per hour on the secohd run East. This was 14.65 m.p.h. faster than the existing record of 260.35 which Campbell set at Lakh Coniston in 1956. Bluebird’s av-. erage for the Eastern run today was 243 m.p.h. > Campbell refiieled and was waiting for the wash to subside when the swell developed. Said * Campbell: “That was close. If the Swell had come to half a* mile further west we might have been in business.” / RIGHT SIZE — Frances Wiston, Southern Methodist coed, present* Larry Kramer (left), Nebraska University’s All-America tackle withYa hat as teammate Richard Cup watches. The Nebraska team moved into Dalles yesterday to begin final preparations for the New Year’s Day Cotton Bowl game against unbeaten Arkansas. NBA Standings ■ASTIRN DIVISION «oo ....T V » ■?"* iclnnatl ..... ij IT. I utw ”i s. a ,k . . ■ —wmw omwoT -,m irJX1".:: s S « 1 - a***’ * : BBSS®** •***•: Baltimore 114 New York 1M , - CfctcktnoH Now York ot Battlmor* , if ] Boston it St. Louis San Pranchca at Lot Anastas* „ wb otS&WST4* , ■L_______a. Datrolt at Fort Wot Maaiay* Santas Dotrolt vs. Nsw York at Bosto Las Angritt a Boston . San FranetsCo at Cincinnati • THE PONTJAC PftgSS, -SATURDAY. DECEMBER 26, 1964 Plant Employes in Yule Spirit Fisher; Body plant salaried employes contributed almost $1,080 for charitable purposes during the Christmas holidays, according to Alger V. Conner, director of industrial relations. Corner said the contributions were made in lieu of an In-plant exchange of Christmas cuds upon the recommendation (d a majority of salaried em- “Most of the salaried e**■' pioyes felt this project to he very worthwhile and in keeping with the true spirit of Christmas", Comer said. , “The donations were given to the Children’s Village Donation Fund, (Tribute Fund end the Christian Children’s Fund after a study by a committee of four employes." Injuries Arefatal to 1 Twinliit by Car Before' Yule NEWAGO (UP!) - Penelope Sue Kay, one of two U-year-oM twin girls struck by a car the day before, Christmaa, died early today in Grant Hospital. Her sister, Patrician, why ■eriouNy injured. The two girls, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Kay of rand Newaygo, had Just stepped from a school boa near thdr heme shortly after noon Thursday when they were straek by a car driven by George Albert Baess, It, of Newaygo, police said. The accident occurred on M37 at the 104th Street intersection, about three miles south of Newaygo. * * * Newaygo state police said the accident is under investigation Red Foley, Wife Are Injured in Fire NASHVILLE, Tern. (UP!) -Country music singer Red Foley and his wife were injured today when fire swept their luxury apartment. Fire, Chief Paul Hinds said Foley received a “badly burned hand., His wife was overcome by smoke. Full extent of their injuries was not immediately known. Or w ' * ' Hinds said toe fire apparently started on a sofa, set, drapes aflame and burned a door and rugs in the apartment. “We don’t know just how it started yet. There were temps lighted near the sofat and could have been a short in the wiring,” Hinds said. Man Is Hospitalized' After Car Accident Herbert R. Rhodes, .24, of 8225 Hell, Utica, was admitted to St. Joseph Hospital,' Mt. Clemens, ; aftep demolishing his car yesterday in an accident in which Ms car left Van Dyke j Road, between 21 and 22 Mile-roads. Rhodes was alone at the time. He is reported in satisfactory condition* at the hospital. Deaths in Pontiac Area MRS. GILBERT ODOM , Service for Mts. Gilbert (Virginia) Odom, 16, ef 163 Elm was to be at Trinity Baptist Church this afternoon with hup. iai in Oak Hill Cemetery. Her body is at toe William F. Davis Funeral Home. Mrs. Odom, a member of Messiah Baptist Church, died Tuesday after a six-day illness. Surviving are bar husband; her father, J. T. Seay; mid five children, Virgil Seay with the U J. Army and Robert Sea, Myrtle, David and Kevin Odom, all ef Pontiac. Also surviving are four brothers, John W., Ernest, John T. and Robert Seajr, afof Pontiac. MRS. BRYCE J. STEVENS Sendee for Mrs. Bryce J. (Velma) Stevens, 84, of 981 Carlisle udO be at 1:90 p.m. Monday, in the Dooelson-Johns Home. Burial will be lb the Providence Cemetery in Moulton, Ala. Mrs. Stevens died after an automobile accident this morning. Surviving are her husband and seven children, Samuel, Leslie, Jennifer and Deborah Kelley, and Randy, Pamela and Jerry Steveqa, all at home. Abo surviving are five brothers, Will Bradford of Pontiac, Jack, Herman, Edgar and R.M. Bradford, all of Alabama, and four sisters. MRS. JOHN E. VALLANCE Service for Mrs. John E. (Mary Thompson) Vallince, 56, of Wayne, a former Pontiac resident, will be f p.m. Tuesday in the Ubt Memorial Horn e, Wayne, with burial there in the Glenwood Cemetery. Mrs. Vallance, a forma: teacher in the Pontiac Public School dfyitem, died early this morning after a long Alness. She was a graduate of ^toton College and a member, of the Order otEasterh Star. Surviving besides her husband is her mother, Mrs. Rqy Thompson of Pontiac. BURTICE A. BROWN Service, for Burtice Brown, S3, of 623 E. Walton will be S p.m. Sunday at the Church of dod. Following the Service, Mr. Brown win be taken from the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home to the Meyers Funeral Hofoe, Mount Vernon, UL, for burial in the Hickory Hill Cemetery, Mount Vernqto. A member of the Church of God, Mr. Brorfa was employed by the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanitarium. . Surviving arc his wife, Elisabeth; (wo sons, Edward L. Brown of Shelter, III, and Lester M.of Laura, Dl.; and four daughters, Mrs. Rosella Marcum and Mrs. Hilda M. Phelps, both of Mount Vernori, 111., Mrs. Betty L McMahon, Edelstein, in., and Mrs. Wilma M. McMahon, Belleview, Dl. Also surviving are five brothers, Vemice of Portland, Ore., Wayman of Waltonville, IU., Arthur Max of Lincoln, Neb., and Carlos and Alfidale of Pontiac; two sisters, Mrs. Lorene Hays of Auburn Heights, Mrs. Car-thell McGhee of Mount Vernon, 111,, 15 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. CURRIE HELIKER COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Currie Heliker, 47, of 8158 Eldorado, Commerce Township, wUl be 1 p.m. Monday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake, with burial in Commerce Cemetery. There will be a graveside military service. Mr. Heliker died yesterday. DR.‘ WILLiAni W. JORDAN Ex-City Man Gets Top Hospital Post Formerly of Pontiac, Dr. WilMn W. Jordan of Fowter-vUle has been named chief of staff of the Carson City Osteopathic Hospital by the 28 doctors on the staff. Dr. Jordan, son of Mr. and Mr G. Marshall Jordan, 8747 Lakevtew, Independence Township, graduated, from St. Frederick’s High School. After service with toe DA, Marines in Korea, Dr. Jordan attended Wayne State UplveiS sity. . ' He completed his medical studies at Kirksville College of Osteopathy In Kirksville, Mo. ■ Spurks-Griffin m FUNERAL HOME £§ k “Thoughtful Service” 46 William St. Fhon. FE 2-S841 1 r k .:“4' § k ' He was employed by the Ford Motor Co. at Wixom. Surviving are bis wife, Viola; his parents, Mr. and lb*. James Heliker; a son, James; a daughter, Violet; text two grandchildren, alt of Union Lake. • * Also surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Louis Gillette®! Pontiac and Mrs. Clifford genir of Orchard Lake.. ROBERT W. RADFORD BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Robert W. Bradford, 91, of 1829. Wellington was to bw held this afternoon in the 0. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor/ with 'burial in Maple Grove Cemetery, Elk Rapids. Mr. Radford died Thursday. He was a retired painter and decorator, and a member of Truth Lutheran Church, Detroit. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Ford Grastick of Fowter-vflte; a stepson, Earl D. Lydy of Bloomfield Township; 10 grandchildren; 19 great-grandchildren; and- three great—great —grandchildren. MRS. HENRY E. RUFF INDEPENDENCE T 0 WN-SHIP—Service for Mrs. Henry (Florence M.) Ruff, 64. of 5134 Heath will be at 1 p.M. Monday at the Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township, with burial in OrtonvUte Cemetery. She* was a member of Christ Lutheriui Church ahd Auxiliary Spirit No. 62, Metro. Surviving besides her bus-band, Henry E., are three sons, John W. Schmidt, Frederick R. and Raymond C. Haynes, all of Waterford Township'; two daughters Mrs. William Gibbons of Lake Orion, Kathryn L. Haynes Of Oxford, and eight grandchildren. WILLIAM F. WASAGESHIK COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service'for William F. Wasage-shik, 37, of 1470 Ladd will be at 10 a m. Monday at the Rfehard-son-Bird Funeral Home, Waited Lake, with burial in Holy Sep-, ulchre Cemetery. Hiere will be a Rosary at-8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home. Mr. Wasageshik died automobile accident. He was a hand laths operation. He was a member of St. WUliams Church,*. Waited Lake. A military graveside service under auspices of the Lawrence A. Sims VFW post will be held. Surviving are his wife, Lc-onere, two sons, William F. and Leo; two daughters, Susan and Shirley; and his mother, Agnes Wasageshik. Also surviving are a brother and four sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan, Mrs. Eva Shambau and Mrs. Edna Bastin, all of California, and Mrs- Mabel Archer of Farmington/ Holiday Spirit in Appalachia WHITESBURG, Ky. (AP) -A full meal,.some warm clothes, a new toy, pieces of candy—ail gifts from strangers—made iMs Christmas stand out for families in Appalachia’* poverty pockets. Food and clothing were still being distributed today by volunteers through eastern Kentucky. Rain pelted those who worked Christmas Day in jLeteherUoun-vftr- * “We Were drenched but these chfidren • couldn't 'have been happier , if it had been Santa ClaawmriMf/’ said Fire Chief | Remious Day. Tags, food and clothing were collected ty. Ashebore, N.C., college students. Hams and turkeys from Bloomington, DL A truckload of gooda arrived from Garden Citj^Mich. Cincinnati sent 2,000 new toys. Santa'Comet In Loud and Clear at Two Hospitals M A group of area amateur radio operators helped brighten the holiday for some 50 children hospital patients Christmas Eve by arranging for the youngsters to talk directly to Santa at toe North Pole. Headed by Richard Dengate, 9669 Hadley, Independence Township, and Brother John Bauef, S.J., of Colombiere College,' the operators visited both St. Joseph Mercy and Pontiac Osteopathic hospitals.’ Using handy talkies as. speaker* units, the children were able to get, through to Santai loud and clear at his remote outpost. Damage Put at $3,500 in Waterford Blaze A Christmas night fire at the home of Lynn Hogg, 3475 Over-ton,. Waterford Township, caused estimated damage of 12,000 to the house and $1,500 to the contents, according to the Waterford Township Fire De- Cause of toe fire had not been determined.. Breaks Record !i for Long Flight NEW YORK (UPI)—Arizona’s | “flying grandfather” today broke his own record for longdistance flights in aircraft up to! 6,614 lbs. . Max Conrad, 61, took off from Cape Town, South Africa, at midnight Wednesday and landed j at St. Petersburg, Fla., about 4. a.m. today. He bftlft toe record by j about ISO mites. Conrad had intended to fly his piper Comanche from Cape Town to New Orleans, but the Piper Co. believes he was forced to land earlier because fuel was running low. • A company spokesman said advene winds mgy have altered bis plans. • t News in Brief Pontfoc police are investigat- j ing the theft of $110 in cash from Ellis Trucking Co/, Inc., at 120 Franklin. Raw furs bought — Vreeland i Fur Co., EM 3-0242. _adv. TERRIFIC REDUCTIONS I • Gift wrap and ribbon • Trees, ornaments, trims • Lights, decorations • Candles, wreaths, gqrlands Plus many other decorative items in limited quantities. Hurry in for best selection, first come - first Served while quantities last! “Charge jt" at K-mart! Remember Your iovad On*s With a MARKER or MONUMENT MARKERS *4§.» BlL, rnmiY *150- After Christmas V2 Price Sale CHRISTMAS CARDS AT PRICE* “Charge it” at K-mart! , 2r97( Regular $1 each value! Assorted and solid packs of Chnstmas cards at real , savings. Buy now and save at K^nart! Charge' it! PONTIAC GRANITE 1 MARBLE CO. Cm. E. Slonaker A Son* Our .12ml Year 2S9 Oakland Ave. FE 2-4800 w M -Hofabuj Gtiedkgr • * May we taka this opportunity to .thank you on# and all for letting .us serve you, and to sand you ouF warm wishes for your Happy Holidays! GOO DBODY CO. Year-End Fabric Riot Reg. 76c a yard! 38 1 *41 PAN-O-RAMA tr Prints................. O yds. Wide selection of print end solidyard goods/ Wash-and-wear cotton, sateen, chamb'ray, taffeta and Amel® triacetate. •CthMtT.K mm Sill i ,—A ajajjjlr H§ Hi-Fi - Stereo j | Record Sale | 33% R.P.M. 8 Albums .V i 1 4m for ■ 8 * i n 1 i A ACMAJOR-.i ^m ub|l i jgf ALBUMS & 1 RCA, MERCURY, CAMDEN, | § WING 33V4 RPM ALBUAAS 1 A magnificent collection of popular, clastic, .' ^ ^ country and ryeetem, and jaxx record albums by sj5 i:i;| favorite artists. » . • - ' isss ipii mmmmmmmmmm4^ GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY STREET CORNER GLENWOOD