■ v 7 •' vrywf rjjrrjTTr?--1...f'f/y|»^ ' li 7,;. r{ 7 * > * -.^.7 -f -’.:..V The Weather U.I. WiMmi Iiimw Fnuil Frigid tonight; fair, warmer tomorrow (DMaHt Past l) •• w "« ■ -I ' ’■' / ,if; '.A ' V:V.» - / ■''i*; r ' V ;:ft' ;[, d VOL. 121 NO. 288 ★ ★ ★ ★ * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY -io, 1964 —40 PAGES sens mental alertness, affects growth of young people, influences taste and appetite, and is an expensive habit..... strained. A wide smile swept the face of one administrator as he puffed life into his pipe. A board member lit a cigarette, grinding self-consciously. The discussion was only 10 minutes old. fwaaaaoMwwrw Report Is Expected to Label Cigarettes a Hazard to Health WASHINGTON UD — The government ffeport on smoking and health to be made public tomorrow is expected to point an accusing finger at cigarettes as a health hazard. But, unlike a 1959 report which dealt only with smoking and lung cancer, the new report prepared by a special committee of 10 nongovernment scientists will deal with all. the e£-+v~. . ■ —•——— fects of smoking on hu- man health—on the lungs, heart, and circulatory system. The conclusions will be based fer no serious impairments of health or shortening of life. The Tobacco Institute, Inc., representing manufacturers of cigarettes, pipe tobacco, chew- Fighting Adds * D - ,, , n. , Casualties to Barry Calls for Probe Previous Toll1 Miss Reliability 3 GIs Among Dead; Relations Suspended by Latin Government on scientific findings which ini J"* to*>acco1 Inu® “*1 to- the main have been publicised 15*°®“ . . nrevimiftlv demned by some as being in ^ I jurious to health. Scientists know that viruses use always has been con- Surgeon General Luther L. Terry will hold a news conference to state the Public Health Service’s position on the report, in the works 14 months. SECOND PHASE Terry, who appointed the committee members, also is expected to outline plans for a second phase of the studjk-to he concerned with recommendations for action. cause cancer, the report said. U.S. CONSUMPTION The consumption of ciga- When the 1650 report was issued, LeRoy E. Burney, then the surgeon general, said to a statement: ' “Unless the use of tobacco can be made safe, the individual person’s ria| of hing cancer can best be reduced .by the elimination of amoldng.” Further, Burney said the weight of evidence implicated smoking — particularly cigarette —""tegriill tt** fr>f<*i-pal causative factor in toe in-created incidence Of long cancer. 1 { ■ NOT PROVED? The tobacco industry claims, however, that a causative con- rettes has continued to climb since 1959. The total estimated U.S. consumption for 1963 was 523 billion cigarettes, the seventh »»»** * j" consecutive vear a record was ™ income tax withholding rate consecutive year a record was set, and 3 per cent more than in 1962. ■■ -.■■■ - Consumption of cigars and cigarillos totaled about 12 billion last year, the highest total in 40 years. It's (Puff) Bad (Puff) Habit (Puff) CAR BURNED — This car was overturned and set afire on President Kennedy Avenue in the Panama Canal Zone as Paiv AP Pl>»l«t«x amanian demonstrators rioted against the United States. At least 10 were killed. Less Tax Out of Your Pay LBJ's 1-Step Withholding Cut Likely WASHINGTON (AP) — President Johnson’s plea for enact By L GARY THORNE One board member glanced at “d j the Another stared at impaired health has not been proved. la a detailed report' released yesterday at Greens-hero, N. C., the nation's tobacco companies claimed the vast majority of smokers suf- Absentee Deadline Is 2 P.M. Tomorrow The City Clerk’s office will be open tomorrow untiLl pjn., the deadline for getting absentee ballots for Monday’s special election. WWW Anyone who will be out of town or otherwise unable to go to the polls Monday, may use an absentee ballot. However, they must get one before 2 p.m. Saturday. The clerk’s office is on the main I his hands. A third one fondled a half-filled pipe. Still another Pontiac school board member smiled. The discussion last night was about smoking. And board members were strangely... self-conscious. Almost by prearrangement, no one in the board room happened to be smoking when the strategic point in the agenda was reached. ... .. BATTLE FOR OXYGEN Ujually, gray-white puffs of smoke blanket the board meeting, almost winning the battle tor oxygen. Pipe-omoker William J. lacy, his unlit “puffer’’ resting hi an ashtray, had been asked to explain what students are taught about alcohol and tobacco. Beginning seriously enough, the assistant superintendent noted that harmful effects of each are emphasized in science and biology classes. Students learn that tobacco contains a poisonous substance —nicotine. Smoke is irritating to the throat and air passages, added. SMOKING EFFECTS Smoking shortens breath, les-affects appears likely to win congressional approval. Sen. George A. Smothers, D-Fla., a senior member of the finance committee now considering the $ll-billion tax cut bin, told a reporter he thought the request would easily command .the needed votes. And Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., of the House Ways and Means Committee, who will head his branch’s conferees on the measure, indicated in a separate interview that he was willing to support It. V..; w w ' As the bill passed the House and now stands, it provides for a cut in the present 18 per cent withholding rate to 15 per cent this year, with a new permanent level of 14 per cent to start in 1965. ONE-STEP DROP Johnson wants a one-step drop to 14 per cent. The administration has advanced two major arguments: An immediate, 4 percent age point cut would pump into the economy an additional $800 million of purchasing power a month, while a reduction to 15 per cent for the rest of this year would produce only fWO million. Since the drop in withholding probably cannot take effect before April, an 18 per cent rate for the first months of the year, coupled with a 14 per cent rate for toe rest of the year, would balance out to about 15 per cent for 1964—the House’s original plan. If Johnson's argument car- ries, a married man with wages of $120 a week who claims exemptions for himself, his wife and two children would get take-home pay increase of $2.80 a week. REDUCTION While $12.80 is now withheld for income tax, the figure would be reduced to $10 under a 14 per cent. withholding rate. The Senate committee continues its work on the bill today, with administration supporters hoping the fast pace of the last two days can be. maintained. Voters Offered Rides for Monday Election PANAMA UD — Five Panamanians were reported killed and 96 wounded in new gun fighting today with U.S. troops on the border of the U.S. Canal Zone. This brought the death toll in the violence which erupted last night to 15, including three U.S. soldiers. WASHINGTON (fl)—Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., called today for a Senate investigation of the reliability of U.S. intercontinental missiles. Goldwater, a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, asked the inquiry in a statement defending his assertion in a New Hampshire campaign news conference yesterday4"------- PANAMA MPt — New fighting broke out today between U.S. troops and Panamanians on the border of the U.S. Canal Zone, adding more casualties to a toll of 10 dead and more than 209 wounded. that such missiles are undependable. Goldwater's questioning of the reliability of the missiles drew a swift retort from Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara who said the Senator’s assertion was “completely misleading, politically irresponsible and damaging to the national security/’ la today’s statement, Geld? water said he wants the Sen-ate Preparedness subcommittee, headed by Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., to hold hearings on the issue. Goldwater is a member of the subcommittee. “If I am proven wrong,’’ Goldwater said, “I will be very pleased and happy to admit it, Bnt the innate humor of the be re- was only 10 “It’s the television ads,’’ complained a smoking board member. “Why, I bet half the ads are about cigarettes.” Catching the good-humored spirit, norther quipped: “Ya, take the cigarettes and deodorants off, and what have you “Dirty, smelly people,” dead-inned an administrator, ending the discussion in laughter. Warmer Tomorrow With High of 27 The Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce today announced it will offer transportation service during Monday’s special election for voters who are not otherwise able to get to the polls. “Our campaign office is in Room 509A of the Community National Bank Building,” said Richard C. Fitzpatrick, Jaycee president. “The phone number is FE 4-7121.” day’s special election should call the office. Calls will be taken up to the last minute Monday night. OFFICE HOURS The office opened today. Hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. today, tomorrow and Sunday. The office will remain open until 8 p.m. Monday. Pontiac will vote Monday on a proposed charter amendment to change the method of electing city commissioners. Candidates would still be nom- B r r r ! It’s cold outside! And the weatherman said frigid temperatures will stay put in the Pontiac area again tonight, with the low near 12. Tomorrow’s forecast is fair and wanner, with a 27. (Temperatures will Fitzpatrick said that anyone; inated by district but elected at-who is not able to transport large, with each district repre-thenjpelves to the polls in Mon-! sented on the commission. - Among the dead were three U.S. soldiers. Thirty-four U.S. soldiers were wounded in the first fighting last night. There were 190 Panamanian casualties, including seven dead. Panama suspended relations with the United States and accused it of aggression. The fighting broke out last night when Panamanian students tried to plant their nation’s flag in the U.S.-controlled Canal Zone. They acted after U.S. students raised the American flag in defiance of American officials. In Washington, the Organization of American States called an emergency meeting of its council. ACCUSED U.S. Panama was also carrying its case to the United Nations. Stopping off ia Miami en route to New York, Aquilino Boyd, Panama’s ambassador to the United Nations, accused the U. S. Army of1 opening fire on defenseless Panamanians. Jobless Rate Down Again Drop Is Registered During December - 'but if -there is a lack of de- pendability I do not believe the American people should be lulled into a false feeling of security by numbers and statistics, or by the fact that by intimate and constant detailed attention and under ideal conditions we can place rockets into orbit. “When 1 speak of a dependability gap, I do not refer to situations in which crews of thousands, waiting for a cloudless day, are able to launch orbital vehicles with fine precision. WASHINGTON (AP)-Unem-ployment, which had climbed to a 5.9 per cent rate in November, dropped back in December to the October level of 5.5 per cent, the Department of Labor reported today. Total employment dropped seasonally by 700,010 to 18.0 million, but still was 1.1 million higher than December The gunfire began to crackle again at 9 a. m. on the Pacific side of the canal. There were casualties among Panamanians, but no figure was available. Panamanians armed with guns gathered at the presidential palace in Panama City, less .(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) FATE OF PEACE “I am talking about the life-or-death dependability of the missiles upon which the fate of peace itself and of every man, woman and child in this nation may hinge as we face the threats and aggressions of communism.” Goldwater said he was questioning the dependability of missile systems that might have to be launched “in the middle of the night, during a storm, and upon an. instant’s notice.” The United States now has a The Bureau of Labor Statis-tics said ail of the December decline in employment was in farm employment, reducing the farm total to 4 million, the same as December of last year. Total unemployment was down 100,000 to 3.8 million during December, the bureau said. Normally it increases by about 100,000. EXPECTED JOBLESS However, the nqmber of jobless adult men was in line with seasonal expectations aa bad weather cut outdoor work. Unemployment among adult men went up by 250,000. Unemployment for both teenagers and women dropped during December. All of this reduction in unemployment was among those looking for part time work. The bureau said the survey was taken in mid-December when most of those who wanted part time work over the holir days either had found jobs, or had dropped their searchX The count by the bufeau includes only th^se actively searching for jobs. WAKMINIC3 XJLOSOOH about the same Sunday with skies dumping some snow on the area. Northwesterly winds at 15 to 30 miles per hour will diminish slowly tonight and tomorrow. Temperatures dropped from a high of 37 yesterday to 11 9:30 this morning in the downtown area. At 2 p.m., the recording was 18. 2 Freights Sideswipe on Indiana Overpast SOUTH BEND, tnd (AP) -Two freight trains sideswiped on a huge overpass near the South Bend Union Station tor day, derailing 11 cars and blocking five of the six sets of tracks on the bridge. it it ★ No injuries were reported in the crackup on the near Southwest side of the city* Seek West Credit .‘ —T~ ;■■■•» ; 7 to Avoid Arms Letup—CIA ' DOUBLE VISION? — No, not really. They are not twins looking in a mirror, but Oakland County’s Rosebush quads, Kristine and Keith (left) and Kenny and Krystal. They celebrate their 13th birthday today. Though the boys continue to look very much Pwliac P(M Mat* alike, the girls are fast becoming individualists, wearing different clothes and hair styles. They are the children jot Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Rosebush, 3043 Baldwin, Oak-wood, northwest of Oxford. trying to persuade its Allies, so far unsuccessfully, to bar long Red purchases. But a CIA spokesman denied trying to influence policy by airing the agency’s views publicly. He said CIA’s aim was to public information gathered by Us experts on a subject where the customary secrecy label could be removed without harm, and that CIA may give out further data later. R was understood President Johnson approved the action. According to CIA’s analysis, total of more than 550 ICBMs in g^ME LEVEL firing poaitioh. ^ SA^per cent, the December BULK OF ARSENAL unemployment rate was at These include 234 liquid-fuel pbdut the same level as the sea-Atlas and Titan rockets and 32ttj sonally adjusted rate for most solid-fuel Minutemen, advanced of 1963. weapons which will make up The bureau said that there the great bulk of thjscountry's had been no significant change eventual arsenal of about 1,200 in employment in the past six long range, larxfbased “birds:”' months. WASHINGTON (if) — The Central Intelligence Agency says the Kremlin wants to buy large amounts of Western chemical machinery on long-term credit so as not to hamper Soviet arms production. CIA’s conclusions about the Soviet Union’s economic woes were issued yesterday in CIA’s first general press briefing since the4~"'~~ secret agency w^s set up L* soviet economy has run in after World War II. to such deep trouble that Pre- The United States has beenj^J^™"^08" his chemical industry expansion goals only by paring other programs or through long term, credits from the West. Soviet import requirements for Western chemical machinery and equipment, mainly to produce fertUizert, were estimated at $2 billion over the next few years. Credits from the industrial West totaled $600 million in 1962-OS. ★ ★ it' Khrushchev's seven-year chemical induatry expansion plan calls for a $46-billion investment overall. TWO 7 11 n § 11 w •' «r w *> 1 IH? v THE PONTIAC PRESS. /: Jr fht v JANUARY 10, 1064 lAi- ill fP| r -v; *?/ Kidnap-SJaying Climaxes as Man Kills Wife, Himself LUDOWICI, Ga. (AP) — A bizarre Florida kidnap-slaying case — involving three former Michigan residents—reached a frantic climax Thursday in a Georgia swamp as a man shot his wife and himself to death while officers closed in on them. ★ ★ ★ Sheriff W. M. Jones said he and two other officers were only Test of Rocket a Major Step Firing Today Loads to Manned Exploration CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The United States takes a major step in its men-in-space program today with the test firing of a rocket that in two months will hurl an unmanned Gemini spaceship into orbit. If the five-hour countdown goes as planned, the mighty Titan-7 space rocket will undergo a 60-second ground test (19 a.m. Pontiac time) that will include everything but actual flight. Both stages of the gleaming white rocket were anchored side by side for the test. * * * The first stage engine, which delivers 490,000 pounds of thrust, was to fire for 90 seconds. The second stage waste ignite as if it were streaking toward space, KEY TO SUCCESS The 90-foot Titan-2 is the key to the success of the Gemini program designed to place two men in orbit for up to two weeks and provide data., valuable for man’s next step in space exploration — the Apollo lunar expeditions to come before 1970. The racket in today’s test is expected to place a dummy Gemiai capsule into orbit in March. At least two more unmanned shots are plaaaed before the first manned flight early aext year. The Titan - 2. nearly 50 per cent'more powenul than the Atlas rockets used in the successful Mercury manned space flights, was fueled early today with highly toxic propellants that bum on contact without the need of an ignition' system. * ★ ★ -It arrived at the spaceport in October and underwent preliminary checks for three months by Air Force and federal space agency scientists before being readied for the static firing. a short distance away when he heard three shots. Moments later, he said, they found the bodies of Storm Hel-minen, 22, and his wife, Christine, is, both of El Cajon, Calif. PAIR ESCAPED The sheriff said Mrs. Patricia Smith, 24, and her 4-year-old son, Mark, escaped from the Helminens several hours earlier. « The couple had been sought in the slaying of Mrs. Smith’s husband, Ferrand Joe, 22, of Warren, Mich. ★ ★ ★ Smith’s body riddled with five .38 caliber pistol bullets, was found Tuesday morning outside a St. Augustine, Fla., hotel where the Smiths and the Helminens had registered Dec. 28. In 1959 Helminen was arrested in Royal Oak, Mich., after he and his wife, the former Carol Ann Aukee, eloped. She was 15 at the time. The couple was found living in Royal Oak. WAS ABDUCTED Deputy Sheriff Paul Williamson quoted Mrs. Smith—who is pregnant—as saying she was abducted because she could identify the couple in connection with the death of her husband. Describing her escape, Mrs. Smith said: “I walked and trotted as fast as I could with Mark, maybe three or three and one-half miles. It was wonderful to find help. They’d held me at gunpoint and I was petrified.” * * ★ Mrs. Smith and her son reached a hunting lodge about five miles north of Ludowici. The sheriff and other officers went to the lodge. “About that time,” Sheriff Jones said, “Storm Helminen and his wife came walking along the road toward the hunting lodge. They saw the cars and ran into a section of woods and swamp. They never said a word.” AFTER THEM The officers went after them. Then they heard the shots. The sheriff said Helminen shot his wife and then killed himself. “The coroner ruled it murder and suicide after visiting fits siene,1” Jones said* ★ ★ Mrs. Smith said she and her husband met the Helminens in California. “In December, we decided to drive to Florida to find work,” she said. Deputy Williamson quoted Mrs. Smith as saying her husband was shot after an argument with Helminen. Then she said the Helminens decided to drive her and her son back to California. ■ , Ex-Engineer Dies in N. Y. Bloomfield Hills Man Worked at Chrysler FIREMEN’S DAY - Seven Pontiac firemen, with 250 years of service among them, were honored by fellow department members last night. They were (front, from left) Assistant Chief Victor Bodamer, engineer Peter Woodworth, dispatcher Ernest McManus, PMllM PfMt PMi (rear, from left) Capt. Joseph Beech, engineer Roy Hamm, engineer Charles Kolsch, and fire fighter Rudy Larson. McManus has already retired while the others will leave the force by July. Cites 'Costly Misadventure' Bond Expert Urges Yes Vote Louis H. Schimmel, director | needs is qualified and imagina-of the Michigan Municipal Ad-1 five leadership at City Hall. viaory Council, today cited the * ★ * last 18 months of municipal gov- “It is the hub and core of our emment in Pontiac as “a costly problem,” he asserted. misadventure.’ Schimmel of 509 W. Iroquois who formerly served seme 25 yean on the Pontiac Board of Education as both member and president, ia one of the outstanding bond consultants in the United States. The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy windy and much colder with snow flurries today, high 23. Partly cloudy, quite cold tonight, tow 12. Saturday fair and a little, warmer, high 27. Westerly winds 15 to 29 miles diminishing slowly tonight nnd Saturday. -7 Today hi NOIk Lowest temperature preceding I a.m., 14. At I a.m.: Wind velocity, gusts at 15-30 m.p.h. Direction: Northwest. Sun aati Friday at 1:21 p.m. Sun rites Saturday at S:Ot a.m. Moon aata Friday at l:tf p.m. Moon rises Saturday at 0:13 a.m. Dewatewa Temperatures 0 a.m..........14 It a.m.... 7 a.m..........14 12 m....... | a-m...........14 i p.m______ t a.m____....... 12 2 p.m..... 10 a.m..........12 Thursday la Paatlac (as rscsrdad downtown) Highest temperature ..............37 Lowest temperature ...............24 Mean temperature ................ 30.5 Weather: Misty rain day; snow flurries night. Highest aad Lowest Temperatures This Data la 92 Years 59 In ltJO -IS In 1075 Thursday's Temperature Chart Alpena 34 12 Fort Worth 47 25 Escanabe 33 4 Jacksonville 74 45 Or. Rapids 34 14 Kansas City 33 14 Houghton 7 4 Lot Angolas 44 45 Marquette 32 0 Miami teach 71 70 Muskegon 35 13 Milwaukee 33 4 Pellston 33 IS New Orleans 49 39 Tr4v. City 33 11 New York 50 40 Albuquerque 31 12 Omaha Atlanta Bismarck Boston Chicago Cincinnati Denver Detroit Duluth Phoenix 55 24 14 3 Pittsburgh 55 21 40 37 S. Lake City 32 17 30 10 S. Francisco 54 44 51 15 S. S. Marie 33 27 42 14 Seattle 40' 34 40 14 Tampa 70 54 20 -10 Washington 51 34 ' OM Year Age la Pantiac Highest temperature Alpena Snew Depth* 9 Marquette . .... * Lowest temperature . N Escanaba . 5 Mu»kegon . .... 8 Mean temperature Gr. Rapids . 14 Weather: Cloudy. Houghton . ....11 NATIONAL WEATHER - Most of the eastern half of the country should have clear skies tonight, except for snow flurries continuing from the northern Appalachians into northern Ityew England, Snow or snow flurries are expected also from the northern Plains1 through the Rockies. The southern sections of the western half should have fair skies. Temperatures should turn colder ovej the Northwest and over the eastern third with a wanning trend indicated for the middle section. m In his statement today, Schimmel pointed to the proposed city charter amendment on Monday’s special election ballot as “an opportunity to correct the mistake? we made in April 1962.” He urged citizens to vote “yes” for the amendment. “Two years, ago Robert Stier-er was appointed successor to retiring City Manager Walter Willman,” Schimmel noted. Two of our major problems — a new sewage disposal plant and the new water supply from Detroit had been solved and were under contract. Credit’for those improvements does not belong to this commission. “Mr. Stierer’s experience as assistant manager and Ms intimate knowledge of tela city’s problems was reason to be hopeful in January 1992 that Pontiac would move forward to the early solution of other major problems.” Schimmel listed those problems as “the perimeter road, the relocation of the Clinton River and synchronizing the budget and tax year to eliminate the money stringency that exists in the first half of each year.” ★ ★ ★ He pointed to “growing confidence that the continuation of capable leadership at the City ; Hall would successfully cope\ with the difficult problems of urban renewal and the rebuilding of-the city. DOWNTOWN DREAM . “We had the feeling that the dream of a new downtown with new stores and ample parking would begin to take the shape of reality. “Then came April 1962,’ Schimmel said. “A new City Commission was elected and we soon learned that the Commission-Manager form of government in Pontiac was only a name.’ The Manager was not allowed to manage and seven commissioners ran their separate districts with little regard for the major problems of the city as a whole. “What has happened in Pontiac since April 1982 has made more headlines than many shows on Broadway. We have foundered in indecision and fumbled our opportunities. h ★ 4r The Pontiac Press,” Schimmel noted, “has correctly summarized the events of the past 20 months in its editorial statement that ‘Pontiac has had more than its share of notoriety from the misadventures of political misfits’. COSTLY IN MONEY “It has been a costly misadventure. Costly in money, time, reputation and confidence. Coordinated effort and leadership has been lost. “We have the spectacle of the many wbo run in different directions to different pieces With different ideas. Confusion abounds ia downtown Pontiac. Schimmel ~ concluded that “what this city desperately “Until qualified and responsible local government is established it is unlikely that any will sizeable business venture risk locating in this city. “Through the efforts of the Junior Chamber of Commerce the citizens of this community have an opportunity next Monday to correct the mistakes we made in April 1962.” Education Plan at Fund Limit County school board members learned yesterday that their special education program has reached the financial limit Of the half-mill tax levy. Supt. william j. Emerson said there would be no expansion of the county-operated program this year. He said that for two years (1962 and 1963) the state aid formula did not pay what it was committed to. - tn#.. I This cost Oakland Schools $100,000 last year and will cost an estimated $125,000 this year, he said. . * NOT ENOUGH FUNDS The shortages resulted when the state aid formula was set at one figure, which was used for budget-making purposes, but the legislature appropriated only enough funds for a lesser payment, he explained. Emerson added that this money is gone. The county program can not recoup aay of these funds. School officials hesitated to predict what future county property valuations might be, but thought the child growth, and the need (or more programs, would exceed any larger revenue from the half-mill levy. Emerson said lack of the expected state support and growth of the special education program in the last 10 years has put the program in its present plight. RECALLS PROGRAM The county superintendent recalled that the special education program started hi 1964 with 56V4 classes and has grown to 373 to date. “Thert just isn’t enough tax to subsidize aay more programs,” he told board mem-ben. What are the alternatives? The county educators, in- cluding the board members, were reluctant to tackle the topic. Emerson admitted be -was leery of any talk about miilage this spring. He suggested the board wait and see what happens with the state aid formula. • He noted ttat Gov. Georgy Romney his wed that '•‘par- Thomas M. Ball, a former engineer for the Chrysler Corp., died unexpectedly of a heart attack in Elmira, N.Y., Wednesday evening. He had suffered a heart attack 12 yean ago. A private service will be held. The family suggests any memorials be made to the Mayo Association of Mayo Ginic, Rochester, Minn. ★ ★ ★ Surviving are his wife, Cath-ryn C.; a daughter, Mn. Pamela B. Nagle of Chicago, III.; three sona, Jeremy T. of Bir-mingham, Peter C- of Pompano Beach, Fla. and David I. of Syracuse, N.Y. OTHERS Also surviving are seven grandchildren and two brothers, Jonathan M. and Lawrence M., both of .Birmingham. Mr. Ball of 1099 Orchard Ridge, Bloomfield Hills, had been associated with the automotive industry for 44 year*. Since 1935, he was an engineer with Chrysler Corp. nntU he retired in September. Last summer he received an honorary citation as a patent engineer from the Michigan Patent Attorney’s Association. ★ ★ ★ Bom in Plainfield, N. J., Sept. 12, 1896, Mr. Ball was graduated from Cornell University; Following service as a lieutenant in field artillery during World War I, he came to Detroit, where he joined Pen-berthy Injector Co. WITH FATHER Later he was associated with Birmingham Area News Library Director Chosen 7 in Bloomfield Township BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-The township library board has chosen a director to organize and take charge of work on the new unit. ROSE VAINSTEIN Hie appointment of Rom Vainstein, now on the school of librarian-ship faculty at the University of British Columbia, was announced b y Board Chairman John Rum- «ey.; Miss Vainstein will begin her duties here M§y 1. Her appointment ends a six-month search, according to Rumsey. Now using the services of Birmingham’s Baldwin Public Library, Bloomfield Tohmship property owners voted a one-mill levy for a library Inst spring. The tax win be available in April. Miss Vainstein’s list sf previous assignments includes four yean as public library specialist for the U.S. office of education; library consult-aat for the California State Library;. aad a Fulbright award to study library development to England. A graduate of Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, Mias Vainstein received a bachelor of library science degree from Western Reserve University fog ordinance and map have been picked up by residents, leaving some 375 copies still available, according to City Clerk Robert Stadler. The documents are being distributed at the municipal build-fog fo preparation for next week’s public hearing an the ordinance, scheduled for $ p.m. Wednesday fo the Cranbrook gymnasium. Dems in 18th Pick Chairman Woman Unopposed In District Balloting - Democrats Of the new and smaller 18th Congressional District last night elected Mrs. Harriet Philips of Huntington Woods as their district chair- man. Mrs. Phillips, a housewife who jumped into politics and became a leader ia the “Mb-era! labor” wing af the Democratic party, wm aasppesed for the poet la Ike balloting among $4 precinct delegates at a Royal Oak meeting. A former vice chairman of . j______ , u the state party organisation, f™ * **>Mrs. Phillips srill serve along with other officers elected on in brary science from the University of Illinois. * -..* A “In light of the acute shortage of librarians, the library board feels that the township is very fortunate to have been interim basis until: a district convention after the Aug. 4 primary. . ♦ w ♦- Before the State Legislature --------— .........— — . . revised congressional districts his father fo forming the Ball a . *° secure °* last swing, the 18th District ---------- auch an ^tstandfog Ubrarian b(wn^cotodded ^ q^. with a nationally-known reputation,” Rumsey said. Miss Vainstein spent some time in the township in December and will return next month to assess the steps necessary to opening a library here, Rumsey noted. & Ball Carburetor Co., Detroit. Mr. Ball was a descendant from the early pioneer family of Elisha Curtis, who came to Michigan from the Genesee River area ia Upper New York State fo 1832. The Curtis family lived fo the vicinity of Flint and were responsible for naming the towns of Genesee and Grand Blanc. ★ ★ ★ ticular attention should be given to the level of state support for special education programs.” .Mr. Ball was a msqibpr of meDetroit Engineering Society, Society of Automotive Engineers and the Orchard Lake Country Club. U. 5., Panama Battle (Continued From Page One) Deputy Supt. Kenneth Brown said Oakland Schools faced deficit spending for the first time since the half-mill was voted fo 1954. The deputy superintendent said the rough sledding for special education had been expected. He said this was well known by the county’s local superintendents. than 50 yards from the border with the Canal Zone city of Balboa. ★ *■ ★ This was the place where most of the fatalities occurred last night. FLAG DISPLAY The violence grew out of a quarrel between U. S. residents of the Canal Zone and Panamanians over the display of U. S. and Panama flags. Under U. S.-Panama agreements, details had been worked out for joint display of the banners at selected sites. Students at UJ3. high schools fo the Zone bad defied orders from Zone offi-cils not to display the U.S. flag outside school buildings. Panamanian students crossed over to the Balboa High School grounds yesterday afternoon ★ ★ Panama Chief Talks to LBJ Slippery City Slope Tests Drivers'Skill For r couple of hours this morning, the incline on West Huron just east of the Grand Trunk Western Railroadetracks tested skill and fortitude of Pontiac motorists. Until s salt truck appeared on the scene at 10 a.m., trucks and cars acted like rudderless ships on the snow-slicked street. One huge truck spent nearly 20 minutes climbing the hill. WASHINGTON (!) - President Johnson conferred by telephone today with President Roberto Chiari of Panama, fo an effort to settle peaceably the crisis in Panama. ?Johnson initiated the 15-minute telephone conference. Pierre Salinger, White House press secretary, declined to give details of foe conversation, except to sty: “The two presidents agreed there had to be a stop to the violence fo the Canal Zone.” Almost simultaneously, Johnsoe sent e group of US. officials to the Canal Zone by jet traaspert The leader'of the delegation is Thomas C. Mann, the new assistant' secretary of state for inter-American affairs. and planted a Panama flag outside the building alongside the US. banner. ★ 4 ★ Then fo the evening, Panamanians crossed back into the the Zone. Canal police were unable to control the Panamanians, who set fire to buildings and overturned and burned US. cars and caused extensive'property damage to US. installations. ARMY RULE U. S. troops were cialled fo, and Army rule proclaimed throughout the Zone. Panama City was virtually closed down under a state of mourning proclaimed by the government. Labor organizations called protest strikes. Ia bitter words, Ambassador Boyd told newsmen at Miami: “Panama has been the victim of unjustified oppression for 59 years.” He accused U.S. soldiers of causing unnecessary bloodshed. GUESTHOUSE The US. Army said its casualties occurred fo the vicinity of the Tivoli guest house in the Canal Zone, a target of persistent sniper fire from Panamanians. When the U.S. casualties mounted to four wounded, an Army statement said, the order was given to return foe sniper fire. The Army selected trained marksmen. Six U.S. soldiers were wounded before the sniper fire ceased. Army officials stressed the point that noneof its forces entered Panama territory during three to four hours of severe exchange of gunfire. ATTACKED BUILDINGS Rioting Panamanians attacked U.S. buildings fo Panama City and Colon. They hurled stones and set fires. Damage ran into the thousands of dollars. A speech seminar featuring a series of five lectures, discussions and demonstrations- on sttitoMK problems has been scHWMed at Derby Junior High School fo Birmingham. The seminar, designed especially for parents in foe. Birmingham Public School District, will begin at I p. m. Jan. 15. Purpose of the meetings is to develop n bettor understanding of the causes and factors related to stuttering. Methods of helping the children at home will be illustrated. Sr * Sr Sponsored by the special services department, the seminar will be conducted by members of the speedi correction staff under foe direction of Roger Lindrdfo....... About two dozen copiei of Bloomfield Hills* proposed zon- 'd’ ★ Set to Head Birmingham Centennial Mrs. G. Howard Willett Jr. has been named to head Birmingham’s centennial committee. Mayor William H. Burgum made the appofotmeat along with that of Carl O. Barton, as finance chairman of foe committee. Mrs. Willett will announce other members of the organization at a later data. A ★ Sr The celebration is,expected to be scheduled during Michigan Week, the third week in May. EX-MAYOR Mrs. Willett, who served eight years on the city commission and three as Birmingham’s first woman mayor, also has beat active fo past Michigan Week celebrations. Barton is a local commercial property developer. Although foe city will celebrate its 100th anniversary this year, there is some question about when Birmingham was incorporated. Minutes of meetings are available for 1804, but county records for 1884 rater to Birmingham. land County lines. The county chairman also was district chairman. WAS REDUCED Under the new districting, foe 18fo was reduced fo the smith-east 144 square miles of the county. The rest of the county was coupled with nil of Livingston Comity to form foe new 19fo District Michigan gained £a a^eguR jrf^the 1900 qpnaus. Robert Jackson af Pantiac was elected Democratic chairman af the 19th District earlier this week. The Aug. 4 pripmry will be the first voting under the new districts. A •>•* * Other officers of foe 18th District Democratic organization elected last night were Gene Kuthy of Royal Oak, vice chairman; Mrs. Bette Stephenson of Hazel Park, secretary; and Howard Coleman of Southfield, treasurer. ON COMMITTEE Also selected were members of a 15-member district committee. The IS, along with foe four officers, will serve on the executive committee of the county party organization. ♦ ♦ ★ ■ — Both the 18th and the 19th were organized under a plan designed to limit their responsibility and authority to congressional elections and to keep party power and funds concentrated at tiie county level. Although state law appears to make district organizations the official base unit hi counties with more than one district, interpretations of this law differ Record Win by Debaters From Central Setting a new conference,nc- the Pon- ord of 56 'points, tine Central High School debate team won the Saginaw Valley Conference championship Inst night at Flint. d .« ■ H The 12-member team oat-pointed Flint Nerthern Is win its fourth conference debate tournament. Coach is Walter Smith. The teams debated whether or not the federal government ttiould provide medical cars for all dtisens. : , w ★ ★-1 Members of the debate teem include Card Godoshian, Dick Taylor, Jim Embree, Bob Sullivan, Carolyn Morris, Lenore Schoonover, Dave Janris, Helmut Schick, Robnrta Wine, Vri-erta Bunct, BIB Chafete and Cheryl Hight. •• < r % w H [11 d :ir tt " If v. . * f1 ; .y • .mir- / .• ■ ■*' ' I' <* ’?,i. ;'*y f THbJ PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JAfXL?A1lY)J0. ityO* The total investment in Agriculture in this country exceeds $200 billion, an average of $21,300 for each farm worker. m Three knocks* on the door . . . Hie eye in' the peep hole . , . “who sent chi?” Profit Made by Auto Execs SEC Report Shows Habits in 3 Firms ., . You don't need an invitation .. . Oome on in. Enjoy succulent steaks and chops and seafoods from the 1 seven-seas in an atmosphere reminiscent ef Chicago’s prohibition days when the “word" at the doOr was fit and proper. Dinner finished . . . Don’t leave. Lillian Russell is the headline entertainer. Until she appears, relax with “Hots” Michael at the piano bar. Luncheon 11-4 pm Dinner 4-10 pm Late supper 10-2 am Near “Cleopatra” and all theatres. BIAliOND JIM’S RESTAURANT 188 North Dearborn off Randolph Street Telephone STate 2-4963 Downtown CHICAGO WASHINGTON (AP)-Securi-ties and Exchange Commission records showed Thursday that most General Motors and Ford executives—unlike a majority of their Chrysler brethren— have not cashed in their profits on various company stock option plans. The second straight auto industry boom year aided rapid advancement of Big Three auto shares, and company executives eligible for the stock., option plans were in a position to make handsome profits. ★ * One Chrysler executive , made about $750,000 on the stock he bought under such a plan. Most other Chrysler officers and directors'who bought stock last spring under the plan sold it after six months. The plan allows key employes the right to buy certain amounts of stock at a specific price, usually lower than the market price at the time the option is issued. Measure Asks r--,‘ '•-/VV 'H#.' Tighter Rules on Lobbyists FORD STOCK For example, Ford executives purchased stock under option plans from about $24 to $34 a share in 1963, while the price of Ford share; on the open market ranged from $42 to $59 during the year. The GM option plan allowed purchase at from $35 to $45, and some as high as $56. The open market price of GM stock was about $58 to $91. * * * —ALcurrent prices, any officer who bought GM at $45 a share could make a profit of almost $35 a share, while Ford officials who purchased at about $33 could reap profit of nearly $20 a share. For most favorable tax treatment, the shares must be held at least six months after purchase. Marketing experts report there are more than 20,000 brand names of items. T0NITE and SATURDAY At SIMMS! I JANUARY SHOE CLEARANCE! Repeat of A Bast Seller Ladies’ Shoes $2.98 Value Sturdy convos uppers on .durable non-skid rubber soles. TSrry cloth lined. Attractive designs in on assortment of colors including white. Sizes 4 to 9. Endicott-Johnson 1st Quality Ladies’ Penny Loafers Simms Cut-Price 2" Ladies' smart penny loafers with durable all leather uppers and sturdy composition soles. Black loafers in sizes 4 to 10. First Quality ENDICOTT-JOHNSON Men’s Oxfords and Loafers Simms Cut-Price W Choice of oxfords in black or brown leather uppers and black loafers. Alt with durable composition soles. Closeout styles in sizes 6'/t to 12. First Qualify ENDICOTTJOHNSON Boys’ Engineer Boots Simms Cut-Price S99 Regular $6 value — oil leather uppers In black color, split solse. , Sizes 3Vi to 6 for boys. All first quality at cut price. LANSING (AP) - A bill to apply stricter regulations to the activities of' lobbyists has been introduced again jn the. legislature. df'1 ★ ★ The bill, sponsored by Rep. Joseph Giliis, D - Detroit, would require financial records of lobbyists to be filed annually with the secretary of state, The law at present requires the records to he maintained for a six-year period, but not to be filed with the state. The records to be filed would include ail money or other contributions to lobbyists for the purposes of “promoting, advocating or opposing legislation." Albuquerque, N. M. led the U. S. in territory annexation in the year 1960. Support Lower Age for Voting in State LANSING (AP) - Two Republican lawmakers said Thursday they will sponsor legislation aimed at amending the new constitution to lower the legal voting age from 21 to 18. The theory of the move, said Rep. Harry DeMaso, R-Battle Creek, is that the three - year gap betwwen high school graduation and foe first vote causes young people to lose interest in government. Joining DeMaso in sponsoring the proposal is Rep. Paul Chandler, R-Livonia. The world’s longest mountain range is a submarine ridge called the Mid-Atlantic Cordillera. Covered by water averaging a mile in depth, foe range stretches 10,000 miles and separates the Atlantic Ocean into eastern and western baisns. . • • • • oa iyn• • • • • • • • • • QUALITY COSTS LESS at SIMMS SHOP T0NITE and SATURDAY 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS ALEMITE CD-2 CONCENTRATE MAGNETIC FILM PYR0IL - A CONCENTRATE 3-OZ. Give your car on on- # the • road tune-up. J Cleons ond quiets motors, guards g against sludge, odd and corrosion, • frees ''sticking valves, reduces trie- J ♦ion, etc l5*oz. size. g Reduces friction and wear, restores pep and power, dissolves gum and Varnish, rustproofs engine, etc, • \ . Deluxe ‘Black ’n White’ BUBBER WHITEWALLS SET of 4 for £a»y to inim — Kiws IJ: and 14 inch tires. Protect tires from curb bruises. Easy to clean tocr, 9S7 ‘Regal’ 4 to 10 Cups Automatic Percolator Simms Low Price Is Only Brews perfect coffee every time and keeps it warm at the table. Anodized golden finish. With cord. 697 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ‘GENERAL ELECTRIC’ STEAM I DRY Iron Use this iron to press ail fabrics. • Thumb control diol for steam pr dry ironing. $1 ^olds in free layaway. 999 GENUINE‘FURY’ ELECTRIC 7” Power Saw Simms Price It” .8 amps — industrial rated saw with 5000 rpms. Mirror finished with 3-wira cord. Perfect for the handyman. SUNBEAM 3 AMP Power ’/a” Electric Drill IF $18.95 Value As shown cool running motor with geared chuck, 2000 rpms, conductor cord, included. Sunbeam factory guarantee. 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS REVERE Whistling Tea Kettle The 6/• .L ;* / ■ ■ V Blacksmiths Are Needed NEW YORK®-Wanted: 15 blacksmiths, salary >7,700 tor 250 days of work. Apply New York City Department of Personnel. The art of Macksmlthing, thought to have died with (he passing of the horse as the chief mode of transportation, is still alive in New York. The city government says it has 108 blacksmith jobs and has 15 such vacancies in the fire, sanitation, public works and highway departments. OUR SALES DRIVE IS ON! THAT MEANS BIGGER VALUES THAN EVER. AND WITH SPECIAL TRADE-lft ALLOWANCES YOU GET THE LOWEST POSSIBLE NET PRICE ... AT WAYNE GABERT’S! ' FRIGID AIRE 13 Cu. Ft. 2-Door a Quality Refrigerator at a Price! FRIGIDAIRE MARE IT! • Automatic defrosting refrigerator section. • Twin fruit and vegetable Hydrators, and lots more! FRIGIDAIRE *- The World’s Only Pill ’N dean Orel—Cleans Without Stooping! *—“n WE PRICED IT! IT’S A BUY! I • Huge 100-lb. zero zone freezer. • World** only Pull *N Clean oven pulls out like a drawer—clean from the top while standing up. • New, recessed, one-piece flowing top, keeps spills on top for easy wiping. • Cook-Master automatie oven control mind* oven eooking for you. 5 • Speed-Heat surface unit gives you instant heat when seconds count TRADE NOW! BUY NOW! 8 RCDC-39-64 wm SPECIAL OFFER FRIGIDAIRE hint Wall Spatter-hee trailer (rill | Included at No Extra Cott! With Trade A LIMITED NUMBER of 1963 FRIGIDAIRE CLOSE-OUT BUY NOW SPECIALS ... of ODDS and ENDS 1 - 2 - 3 OF A KIND.. . . HURRY FOR BEST SELECTION! REFRIGERATORS 3—Only WASHERS 2—Only DRYERS 3-Only FLAIR RANGES 3—Only A-uuun: t IhpN^'l - H • ISM?'® 1 By | j DELUXE FRIGIDAIRE » Hint 1 DELUXE W FRIGIDAIRE dryer With Automatic Soak Cycle Dries Breeze-Fresh! • Soaks automatically, washes automatically • Spins clothes extra light, extra dry. • No lint traps to clean-automatic lint removaL With TVade With ALL-FABRIC DIAL • Flowing Heat dries breese-fresh, safer >than sunshine. Tumbles clothes gently on a cushion of air. • Easy-reach, no stoop lint screen on door. " ./ . • Won’t snsg delicate fabrics! Porcelain Enameled drum is smooth as glass. SPECIAL FEATURE . . , At No Additional Coat! I Only Automatie Rinse Conditioner for fabric softeners and water conditioners either powders or liquids. iWAW.V.V.V.V.V.VWW/WwWXwMw the luxury beer at a popular price Gives ysa'lUa exclusive benefits ea S a budget prised :jx model at — <*e» cost! BUY NOW! ASK US ABOUT OUR.. SPECIAL PLUG-IN PUCE INCLUDING 230-VOLT TIRING PER DETROIT EDISON PROGRAM! asm mAs ms ■*. 2 YEARS TO PAY OR 90 DAYS SAME AS M! LOWEST INTEREST RATES IN TOWN! “Your Appliance Specialist” 121N. SAGINAW-FE 5-6189 Open Mon. and FrL Eves. ’til 9 P.M. ml aJ mm:I \ ... * /M n f -II m m rrn i r-7 f • T ip / '' r r I i !i 7' > I TiIe PONTIAC PttKSS. FRIDAY, JANUARY 110, 1964 l f ' V f tjj rm MM Scout Official to Aid Program A national Boy Scout ex-acutivo will be in Pontiac Monday to discuss methods of strengthening the Explorer Program in the Clinton Valley , Council which serves the Oak-land-Macomb county area. Arthar N. Lindgren, assistant director of exploring, will meet with Arthur J. Brooks, council president, Edward H. Leland, Council executive, and other scoot leaders. Hie 7:30 meeting will be held at the Community Services Building, 132 Franklin Blvd., ★ w Lindgren joined the national staff of the Boy Shouts in July 1964. He helped develop the new explorer program launched in 1969. / gives experience ; The explorer program is for boys of high school age and provides them with experience in developing social skills, exploring vocational opportunities, promoting personal fitness, giving service to the community and understanding the role of citizen. / First Haircut: She's 97 / SCOTIA, N.Y. (AP)-Her relatives protested, but Emily Fahey this week bad her first haircut—at 97. “The hair/which I could sit on, was getting ragged at the enda,” she said. "So I made up my mind to take part of it right off.” Mrs. Fahey also had her hair set ip short locks with curled-under bangs in front. / Carrier Is Victim of Atlantic Storms Kennedy Bond Is Considered NEW YORK (AP) -The aircraft carrier Essex limped into New York harbor Thursday showing the scars of battle with two North Atlantic storms. '# ★ ★ Gaping holes were torn in her 23-ton, 60-foot main mast, containing electronic equipment, crashed to the deck during the storms. ♦ ★ ★ “In all my years at sea,” said Capt. J. M. West, “I never saw a storm as bad as that one.” The waves were 85 feet high, he said. No one was hurt. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Treasury probably will issue a new $75 savings bond in honor of the late John F. Kennedy. A Treasury spokesman said Thursday no details of the proposed new Series E bond have been determined. WWW Series E bonds, the type used in the government's payroll savings plan, are the most popular of all bonds. The new bonds would carry a picture of the late president and presumably would be similar in design to other denominations which carry pictures of Washington, Lincoln, Jefferson, Wil«f son and both Roosevelts. At the present rate it would cost $56.25 and would pay $75 at maturity. Actress Arlene Dahl Asks End to Marriage LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actress Arlene Dahl Thursday sued for divorce from Christian R. Holmes, heir to the Fleisch-man yeast fortune, She charged extreme mental cruelty. seamlnss stockings save up to $1.05 on every box walking sheer, reg. 1.35. ..$1.15. .. 3 pr. $3.30 reg. 1.50. ..$1.25. ..3 pr. $3.60 reg. 1.50., ..$1.35. .. 3 pr. $3.60 reg. 1.65., ..$1.35.. .. 3 pr. $3.90 reg. 1.65.. $1.35.. ■ • 3 pr. $3.90 short, medium and long colors: south pacific, bali rose and shell one week only Jan. 11—Jan. 18 —Hosiery Bar..... Main Floor OPEN TONITE AND SAT. KITE FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE SI lversmiths j§ smi i iss fr&MMkU r *4 ■ A iti -p * - t' , i • - i WIPI hi ffM LASTING ROSE TAPER CHATEAU FAMOUS ONEIDA STAINLESS 6-Piece Place Selling.. . 3 Patterns Your Choice Regwlorfy 5.40 Set ps EACH SITTING INCLUDES e 2 teeepeem el dinner fork i,m 1 soup spoon e I wU fork » e 1 hoRow handle dinner knife Fine stainless at a tiny price. Oneida's lustrous stainless needs no polishing, stays bright, won't tarnish orNtqk At this price you can buy several for ymk^own service and tuck away some for deluxe gifts. Aw# Houeenaret Dept. * ,. Lower Level Sorry, No Moil or Phono Orders, No Loymys or Dolhorioo RE-MVBIWY • Hundreds and Hundreds of Bargains Throughout the store Reduced for this Clearance. • You Don't need Cash to Save at Waite's—Charge It • Shop Tonight For The Best Selection. • Limited Quantities Open 9:30-9 Odd Lot Drapery SALE Reg, 4.99 lo 1.91 Reg. 9J9 to 12.99 $097 $K97 ig. 11.11 to 11.99 Reg. 21.99 to 29.99 $797 $7 097 End of the year clearance on odd lot drapes. Enhance the beauty of your home with draperies of fiberglass or blends. Choice of single or multiple widths. Open tonite 'til 9. Draperies •.. Fourth Floor OVAL BRAID PLACE MATS 77* Reg. 1.49 Colorfast, hand or machine washoble, stain resistant and heat cesistant. 100% Viscose rayon. Many colors. DomoMc Dept.... Fourth Floor FORMAL FABRICS 47* Reg. 98c yd. Here is a selection of formal fabric to make many a beautiful dress. Buy how and save over Vi. Yard Good* ... Fourth Floor COTTON BEDSPREADS Regularly 9.99 to 12.99 «5«7 Here ?s a special selection of cotton bedspreads in yofar choice of twin or full sizes. Assorted colors and styles. Spread$... Fourth Floor 16x56” DOOR MIRROR ♦K44 Reg. 6.99 Charge It Large 16x56-inch size, for your bedroom or hallway. Fully guaranteed and easy to install. Shop tonite 'til 9. Mirrori... Lower Level 45-PC. SERVICE F0R 8 DINNERWARE Rea. 19.95 Charge It Staffordshire line Earthenware. Made in England. Dishes that are ideal for any occasion. Save over $7. China A Glaunare... Lower Level SUNBEAM VACUUM GLEANER $2488 Reg. 39.95 Powerful and lightweight. Cleans rugs and floors. Disposable bags. Stores flat on wall. Vacuum Cleaner. •. Fifth Floor ACETATE PRINT FABRIC Reg, 1.49 to 1.99 67* Beautiful silk look acetate prints for blouses and dresses. 45-in. wide. Hand washable. Hurry in tonite. Yard Good* ... Fourth Floor CIULUS I FLANNELETTE PRINT FABRIC Ragujar 39c to 59c yd. 4 £ $i 00 Sew and save for the whole family. Cotton Challis and flannelette fabric for those pajamas, gowns or robes. Yard Good* ... Fourth Floor QUILTED BEDSPREADS 1R97 Reg. 15.99 Enhance the beauty of your bedroom with a new bedspread. Twin siza quilted to the floor in an array of colors. Spread*... Fourth Floor DINETTE CHAIRS Reg.* 6.95 ton Charge It Resilient, foam -cushions. Bronze tone legs. Odd lot colors. Shop tonite for the best selection. BinusiMMi... Loner Level 45-PC. BROOKPARK DINNERWARE R«fl- 29.95 82966 Charge It Assorted patterns to choose from. 2 year guarantee. Complete service for eight. Open tonite 'til 9 China and Glaunare... Loner Level t REGULATION PING PONG TABLE 19.97 1|444 Regulation 5x9' table folds compactly for storage. Non-warping top. Use as serving table ... seats 16. Ter Dept* • • • Fifth Floor OPEN A WAITE'S CONVENIENT CHARGE ACCOUNT OPEN MOIL, THUR, FRI. I SAT. KITES TILL 9 P.M. Rag. 1.99 SOFA PILLOWS 67* Choose from round, square or oblong. Kapok filled for durability and resilience. Buy several for your -home. Pillont.... Fourth Floor Rag. 3.99 RUB RIMERS 2-t5M Your choice of 24x60" or 30x50* cotton rug runners. Hurry in tonite for the best selection of colors. Linen*... Fourth Floor VINYL TABLECLOTHS Rag. 6.99 *3« Charge It No washing no ironing, fust wipe with a damp cloth. Flannel backed for long wear. 60 by 88-inch; Hurry in tonite. Linen*... Fourth Floor FOAM DINETTE REPLACEMENT CUSHIONS Rag. 12.95 8788 Assorted colors to choose from. Sizes to 111 most dinette chairs. Sale ends Saturday. Shop tonite till 9. Houtrnare*... Loner Level ASST. DECORATOR CANDLES Reg. 3.50 $188 s!oo *288 $388 Large assortment of colors and sizes to choose from. Houtenaret... Loner Level DUPONT 501 NYLON BELLEAIR CARPETING Reg. 7.95 yd. m Choke of 3 patterns in 18 breath-taking colon. Crush resistant and non-fuzzing. Shop tonite til 9. . Floor Covering... Fifth Floor HOUSEWARES, CHINA, ETC.—Lower Level Reg. 4.66 Hen basket cookie jar....... 3.22 Reg. 12.9945-pc.WhiteDfonorwara............... ......... 6.88 Reg. 29.95 45-pc. Patterned Dinnorware......................19.88 Reg. 68.00 101-pc Dkinorwora Set............................56.00 Reg. 1.00 King Size Tray Table Brass....,......................66 Reg. 4.99 4-Shelf metal space saver... ..................... 3.88 Reg. 89.95 7-pe. Dinette Set..................... ..........50.00 Reg. 88.00 5ec. Dinette Set.............................*..>.42.00 Reg. 39.95 All Steel Toy House .............................26.88 Reg. 1,19 Ceramic Coffee Mug ........................ .44 Reg. 4.98 Ceramic Water Pilcher........................... 2.44 Reg. 6.98 Ceramic Casserole With Warmer. .................. .. 2.98 Asserted Christmas Flower Center Pieces..................75% Off .L ^ ■ > FABRICS, LINENS, DRAPES—Fourth Floor Reg. 1.69 Print Cordutoy....... 77c yd. Reg. 09c 'Cotton Ploids......... 37c yd. Reg. 1.79 Polielied Cotton Print* .. 67c Reg. 3.99 Silk Shantung......1.27 yd. Reg. to 3.99 Wool end Blends.... 1.27 yd. Reg. te 9.99 Wool end Mend*.... 2-77 yd. Rag. 59c Cotton Prints and Solids.. 4/1 -00 Reg. 2.97 Met Tablecloth 52x70 ...1.97 Reg. 1.77 Cettoe Rug 24x36....... 1.00 Reg. 4.95 Pile Rug 24* round ..... 2.97 Reg. 7.95 POe Reg 24x36”....... 3.97 Reg. 10.95 Pile Reg 27x43”...... 4.97 Reg. 4.90 Cotton Rug 21x36”.....2.97 Reg. 1.99 Cotton Lid Cover....... .97 Reg. 6.99 Flecked Tablecloth....2.97 Reg. 0.99 Flocked Tablecloth ... .. 3.97 ' Reg. 3.90 Spun Reyen Tablecloth ,. 1.97 Reg. 3.99 MutW-Pugnuo Tobiedoth ..1.97 Reg. 6.99 Multi-Purpoto Tobiedoth.. 3.97 Reg. 5.99 NkihhPutpese Tablecloth. .2.97 Reg. 75c to X00 Drapery Remnant*.. ,27 Reg. 2.99 te 3.99 Creep ofCuriain*. .1.97 'w:,:^*< W. 11 T THE PONTIAC PRESS 1 41 West Huron Street j. Pootiac, Michigan FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1964 Bowai R. Pitiouau n Executive Vie* President end Business Manager John A. Hut ' Secretary end Advertlilac Director Hteer J. Rm Reneging Editor HD Thomwiok Clrculetlon Meneger >. Mahuau Joabah Local Adrertlslng Meneger Jaycees Have Provided Opportunity for Voters The Junior Chamber of Commerce has performed a vital and important service to the City of Pontiac. It has brought into the open the weakness which has plagued our city commission for the past two years. Following the often dticized hearing of the then Cjty Man* ager Robert Stierer, the JavceeS were the catalyst. Sure, they stuck their necks out. They did what many other residents were thinking of, but were either unwilling or incapable of. They did something, about it. The Jaycees probed for the heart of the problem, and then sought ways of destroying this unwise provision on the body politic. The Jaycees saw that much of the City was aroused, but no one was leading the faltering steps and hesitant discussion of recall. ★ ★ ★ Rather than sighting in on the personalities involved, the Jaycees came up with the treatment to prevent the disease, rather than trying to cut out the offending units. They chose a sound method. !k if if Under the proposed amendment, city commission candidates would still be nominated by district. Instead of having just the district voters deciding on their qualifications, however, all the registered voters of the City would get to ballot on them. if if if It’s up to the voters of Pontiac now to exercise the same kind of wisdom the Jaycees showed. Vote for the charter amendment on Monday. Americans Welcome President’s Message A veil of conservatism, along with a more subtle approach to the many problems, is the method Johnson outlined in delivering his speech. There is no doubt that the talk was designed to capture the American voters in this election year. He appealed to the low-income groups with his emphasis on doing something for our poverty class. He went so far as to say this was a national problem, which perhaps is not altogether true. ★ ★ ★ The fact that he cut the budget some $500 million under the most recent estimate of the JFK 'spending program was welcome news. If he can hold to this plan, and still give all the benefits in the areas he mentioned, all taxpayers will be happy. Tills offering of more for less is a great trick, providing it can be carried out. He appealed to our home-front problems first, which to us seems like a bright, new approach. It is almost'the first time since World .War II that our own people rank ahead of foreign policy. ★ ★ " He sidestepped any great pro- 1 nouncement about doing anything for the unemployed. His push for the , $11-billion tax reduction over two years and the incentive for, new investment that would follow was his only reference toward solving the unemployment situation. At a time when our* nation has suffered a great shock, Johnson’s message gives most Americans a feeling of security. Certainly, there was not a lot of pie-in-the-sky talk. He stuck to the progressive viewpoints of the Administration he followed, but added his own efficiency and frugality. We wish him well. Many have felt sorry for the giraffe with sore throat, but did anybody ever sympathize with the mole suffering from claustrophobia? •r • | • a -JLM i * Voice of the People: Citizen Concern Mounts on Amendment Election I heard .Tuesday’s commission meeting and those sanctimonious commissioners can be appalled all /they want at The Press’ reference Monday to a single7 commissioner. Where were their objections when meeting after meeting that same commissioner berated, beyond all reason, The Press and its publisher? I say The Press used almost superhuman restraint. j, - And I’m sick of hearing “character assassina-tion” and “yellow journalism’1 every time The Press disagrees with one or more commissioners. The mayor implies The Press is overstepping its , bounds by writing editorials on city politics and says it endangers our democratic rights “if allowed to continue.” it jit ★ As in other areas, Mr. .Landry’s comprehension fails to grasp that such “interference” insures our democracy. Newspapers have no obligation to agree with anyone, but they do have a moral obligation to keep abreast of and comment on all public issues, in any way they see fit. Vote “Yes” Monday / It’s Still A Neat Trick Feelings Change on Welfare State David Lawrence Says: Profit Quest Hurts U.S. Policy By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — Times have changed. ____In this single week, Democratic President Johnson and two Republican governors —Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York and George Romney of Michigan-all proposed welfare programs; Johnson did it for the nation, the two governors for their states. This identity of purpose won’t eliminate the bombast the two parties throw at each other in this year's political campaigns. But it does narrow the range a bit. The Constitution mentioned die general welfare vaguely. Ike government did take responsibility for the welfare of the economy but not of needy people. The first Congress passed a tariff act to protect American business from imports. ★ it it But as late as the last half of the 19th Century American presidents — specifically Pierce and Cleveland—were denying in very strong terms that this government had responsibility for the general welfare. President Johnson’s first State of the Unioq message was designed to receive equal praise from all segments of America. Analysis seems to Indicate that he scored well. It seems to us that It pretty much boils down to following the programs that had been outlined JOHNSON by former President John F. Kennedy. NEARLY SAME VIEW j The Supreme Court had-pretty much the same view. Hie idea began to grow, but still in baby steps, until the depression days of the 1930s when President Roosevelt’s New Deal assumed responsibility in desperation to save the country. WASHINGTON - Hie quest for profit, irrespective of consequences, has made a sham-foles of one of the strongest instruments of foreign policy that the free nations « possess — namely, the power of an economic boycott. or embargo- Plainly, thel mistakes made! by the State] Depar tment here — under LAWRENCE the preceding as well as the present administration —. emphasize that, unless there is unity among the Western allies, the chances of thwarting the Communists, either in Europe or even in Cuba, will steadily diminish. WWW America decided, for instance, not only to sell wheat to the Russians but to allow government credit to be used for the transaction. It is believed probable now that other commodities will be sold to Cuba. Russia presumably will lend moteend more money to Castro and help him" finance the purchase-of needed goods. able to get help from Russia and from Great Britain this will be publicized widely inside Cuba and will discourage revolutionary efforts. Being an interested citizen and a small businessman in the service industry, I urge everyone to vote.“yes" on the charter amendment. * ★ *. It will give ns a mere equitable method of selecting •or city rommhtiofn aad this in tarn will benefit Pontiac as fellows: qualified aad competent men will be attracted; these commissioners will aaswer to all cHbeas of Pontiac, not pressure groups; enr public image will be improved; it will improve morale with our city employes; the rebnOdiag both physically aad mentally af ear city will be encouraged. it h ★ I have lived here for many yean. Pontiac has been good to me and I am proud, but each year as I travel out of the city, it is more difficult to defend myself. Vote “yes.” ...... J.W.H. Improving economic conditions inside Cuba is very important in maintaining internal pence. If they worsen, the discontent of the people will increase. Now that Castro has been Fof all practical purposes, therefore, Communist Cuba now has been propped up, and the efforts of the United States to bring about the disintegration of Cuba by an economic boycott have been seriously impaired. (CapyrtaM, ISM, Ntw YM A pat on the bade to the Jayceei for the fine Job done on the proposed charter amendment I hope each conscientious voter pill vote so as to be represented and counted in the final outcome so Pontiac may move on to better things J.T. H*r*M Tribun* SyadtcaM, Inc.) U.S. in Curious Position Relating to Red Chinese Pontiac has the potential to become a city that people wflT ‘ be proud to ay they’re from. The Pontiac Jaycees have' advanced a proposal that they fed would result in a more representative form of government Aa a taxpayer aad reddeat of the city I am far the proposal, bat beUeve Oat the hade Issne is being doaded by a squabble between The Press and the City CemmissiM. The issue is — Should the residents of Pontiac vote for or against the proposed charter amendment? I hope Pontiac residents will not be swayed by the clouding of the basic issue, but will see through the haze and get out and vote on Monday. J. G. Pospichsl 23 Boston This historic callousness to the welfare of the poor, the old, the unemployed, the handicapped, the ill is hardly sarprlsiag when it is remembered human slavery existed from antiquity, didn’t start to get abolished in Europe until the 19th Century and in this country had to be abolished by a war. Companies in Great Britain now have decided to eel I buses to Castro in Cuba, making available to him transportation for his troops and, even more important, indicating to the whole world that Communist Cuba can receive aid from the closest Mends of the United States in the Western alliance. .*■ By JOHN RODERICK Associated trefk Writer TOKYO — Reaction from Peking indicates the United States did little more than rustle the curtains of U. S.-China relations with its “open door” declaration late last yeirrTlie atmosphere — stagnant for 14 year* — remains unchanged. On Dec. 13, Asst. Secretary of State Roger Hilsman said lively trade with host nations fftthe noo-Consmuaist bloc. I drink a toast to the Jaycees and instead of saying “Bottoms up” I say “Bottoms down.” * Farmer Bottom Supporter NCNA noted that despite Hils-man’s claim to American flexibility, “be indicated that his government was not contemplating easing ‘in any way the diplomatic and economic boycott against the Red Chinese.’ ” Hie United States thus finds itself in a curious position. It refuses to engage in trade of any kind with the mainland. Hie only other major country pursuing this course is Soviet Russia. The letter in the VOP from Billings, Chong aad Newby was moot interesting. It occurred to am that very possibly they forgot to mention Rep. Adam Chyteu Powell. Factually Interested As a matter of information we would like to correct the “do nothing for Negro” charge by Milton Henry against the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce. The Junior Chamber has always sponsored activities that result in contributions to both Negroes and whites alike. Our 1963 activities Included: Christmas shopping, which resulted in many children being given and money to buy gifts for their families; Easter egg bunt, a traditional outing (Continued on Page 7, Col. 1) Even now, there are probably still areas where slavery is a way of life, in its direct form in some places, and in peonage in ojhers, since peonage is just a nice-nellyism for the real things it . ★ >.... h Still the United States was tardy with its concern for people’s welfare. By the mid-1930s, when it finally got around to Social Security and compulsory unemployment insurance, it was already a quarter of a century behind Britain. This is a severe blow td American prestige in Europe as well as in Latin America. For it disrupts the unity the Western world seemingly possessed and notifies Moscow that it now can trade freely with all the Western countries because of the precedent set by both American and British commercialism. * ♦ ■ * American policy toward China will be'to keep the door open while maintaining firmness. ★ h it Hie Chinese Communist press has reproduced much of this Speech and the clarifying interviews Hilsman gave Dec. 29-30. It also printed Secretary of State Kutk’i Jan. 3 news conference look-ahead into 1964. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Problems? The Houston Post HAD RESPONSIBILITY And it wasn’t until 1946—when Congress passed an employment act but refused to call it “full employment”—that the men on Capitol Hill for the first time declared the government did have responsibility for the general welfare. No war will be won or lost by the sale of wheat or buses, but the principle of an embargo is vital as a weapon of diplomacy. Bnt tills was delayed recognition for what had already become aa accepted fact of American life with its start in the social legislation of the New Deal. TRIED BEFORE It has, of course, been tried in vain before, but there has always‘been hope that an enlightened opinion in the free countries of the world would see the possibility of preventing war by using economic force: The tenor of the Chinese reaction to both Hilsman and Rusk was hostile^ ‘ANTAGONISTIC^ POLICY’ “Continued occupation of Taiwan (Formosa), blockading and besieging the Chinese mainland and unabated antagonism remain the basis of the U. S. policy in relation to Cliina,” the official New China News Agency (NCNA) said in reporting on Hilsman. Problem Solution Associates, a concern hi Albuquerque, N. M., that was organized 19 months ago to help businessmen with their problems, hat* filed for bankruptcy. ‘Brave Talk? The New York News Presidents Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy all accepted it and went on from there, as they would have anyway without the 1946 declaration. Their election-conscious parties) didn't urge any return to pre-welfare days. it it it The disputes between* the parties, as parties, was no longer whether to do something tor the needy but only how much. WOULD GO BACK So long as commercialism supersedes all other considerations, an ecoaomic embargo will be difficult to apply. It has been urged that the United Nations should,, in some way, bring about effective embargoes as a means of preventing waf. Continued NCNA: “He made it dear that his phrase ‘open door’ was nsed to press for a change hi China’s basic position and policies, and with / such a change as its premise.’’ Nevertheless, there is still probably a part of'the population which would like to go back to the attitude of the 19th Century. But, judging from the election returns of the past 30 years, it is in a big minority. But when distinctions are made between strategic and nonstrategic goods, the door gradually is opened to the sale of a variety of supplies which a prospective aggressor would like to acquire.' *■ ★ ★ * Referring to Rusk’s more general comments on U. S. policies, NCNA said he “made it dear that his government would carry on its counterrevolutionary double-faced tactics in 1964.” ★ * * China’s main grievance against the United States seems to be the fact that the U. S. 7th Fleet prevents it from seizing the island of Formosa. Verbal Orchids to - Mrs. Charles H. Newton of 124 State; 93rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Louie E. Turner of SI S. Paddock; S3rd wedding anniversary. Faced as the world might be with “limited” wars that could grow into nuejear war, it has been the contention of the advocates of the embargo formula that' world opinion would sooner or later have to accept the restraints that an embargo agreement would impose. EVENTUAL SOLUTION . / Some students of Chinese affairs believe other areas might lead to an eventual solution of the Formosa issue. One of. these is in the realm of trade. Cut tit from exchangee with Soviet Russia, the Chinese have turned toward tbs West and are engaged to ■ * Broad hints of bold, uncompromising action by the Johnson Administration are being dropped by Harlan Cleveland, Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs (and why can’t some of these bureaucrats have shorter titles). : W ★ . Cleveland is discussing she countries now willfully two years in arrears on payments due to the United Nations, All of the deadbeats are Red: Bulgaria (owing 171,999). C z e c h o s lavakia ($800,000), Hungary ($400,000), Poland ($1 million), Romania ($400,000), Russia ($16 millioa). ~ * it -it Because they don’t approve the U.N.’s Gcza Strip and Congo peace operations, these countries have been refusing to pay their assessments for these enterprises. Article 19 of the U.N. Charter provides for suspension of the General Assembly voting rights of a nation two years in arrears—though the Assembly may relax this rule if it decides that the member is not an intentional deadbeat. • w ★ ♦' y Russia and its above-listed Captive Nations have inten- tionally welched. Cleveland ■ays there are going, to be earnest couraltatteai aad reviews aa this matter, aad Intimates that the Halted -States will fight to have those vettag rights saspeaded unless those deadbeats pay up. That’s bravo talk. It wO be most interesting to see whether IhhC White Hoape-State Depart* meat bravery lasts from aow till the Geaeral Assembly's next regular seutea in September, or. till any special session called before then. Not Accidental The Holland Sentinel There is growing evidence that wrong mental attitudes are one of the major causes of automobile accidents. This is made more significant by the fact that, for the moat part, driver’s license tests make no attempt to find out whether a man or woman is psychologically a good driving bet. crashes may be a veiled suicidal intent. Dr. Litia spoke af psychopathic drivers who lack cosutid-eration for others aad drive accordingly. He told sf the if-gresofve driver who sees other drivers as opponents aad ases driving to assert himself; he noted that a driver who is a v e r 1 y caatteus may nawit-tingly goad others Into death-risking bekavisr. it it it The extent to which such ah titudes cause highway smash-up 3 is not known. An educated guess is as close as we can come to it now. But there is good reason to think that psychological tests may some day pipy a significant role in cutting down tiie accident rate: Such teste cannot be developed in a harry. Were they available now, the use of them would raise important questions. But this appears to bo a promising approach to a major problem in our society 00 wheels. b most eases, ttcease examinations teat three things — the prospective driver’s eyesight, his texflueh knowledge el traffic signs aad regalatteas aad hb ability Te Mow the refutetious when driving. This leaves out questions of attitude aad temperament which may be even more Important. it it * A Mayo Clink psychiatrist, Dr. Edward Litin, told the Minnesota Automobile Association about how such factors are in-. volved in accidents. It was even* suggested that “accident” is sometimes not the right word — that the real causa of numerous Mean Business The Eloy (Arte.) Enterprise Even though women often wear tennis outfits when they can’t play, and ski suits when they can’t ski, they sure mean business when they put on 4 wedding dress. V» AnodiM Prau la WHIM v*t* w te* ___ i cation at *lt local dm printed In *KCkitlv**| mm lor rapubU- mh iWMOlr w*H aa all AT Tlw Pontiac Prau I* delivered bp carriar ter M cart* a waak; whar* malted In Oakland. Ganaaaa, Livingston. Mactmte LaMar and WaaManaw Counltea It to tll.M • v**r; ateaMter* hi MIcMgia and Ml olhar places In M United MOM* WJf l Mr. All mall aub-w|lhM payable in bd»n«o Patent* hM bM* paid M jM bnd Mambar ad AtC. 1! im Ik '•Ir-tulik. i •I. I I • f THE PQNTIAC FHESS. ptlDAY, JANUARY W,iyi4 V SEVEN. Voice of the People (Continued from Page 6) for all youngsters; Oakland University scholarship, a donation of money toward scholarships, available to any student regardless of race, creed or color; Junior golf and midget football, competitive sports events for all young people; mystery treat, a Halloween program for /the'whole city; Jaycees parks, contributions by the Junior Chamber to buy recreational equipment for all to use; Junior Miss, a local pageant, open to all. Hm recent Pontiac pageant included a talented Negro high school senior. Membership in the Junior Chamber is open to all young men regardless of race. In the 40-year history of the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce its membership has been made up of many races and creeds — including Negro representation. We know that many Negroes are aware of our numerous projects because they have participated. We now hope that Mr. Milton Henry is also aware of our many equal opportunity projects. Roger P. Rummel, Director Louis H. Schimmel Jr., Vice President Pontiac has made many changes in the last 20 years, most of them progressive. We are a far better. community today because of the forward steps taken at the right time. The charter amendment proposed by the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce is another forward step at the right time and will make Pontiac an even better community. Clyle Haskill I.am not a resident of Pontiac, therefore, ineligible to vote on the proposed charter amendment/but I have been employed in downtown Pontiac all my working life and call Pontiac my home. ★ w ht I’m sure all other nonresidents _who work in Pontiac fcelfj the .same — that the amendment to the City Charter as proposed can only advance the image of Pontiac. I urge residents to vote “yes” for better city government. R. H. Lockhart Too often the will of the people is silenced by the voice of indifference. Let Pontiac speak for that which it needs by voting for the charter amendment. Fired Shadrick Oakland University Everyone should vote “yes” for the new charter amendment. It will give citizens a voice for all of the city, not just a small portion. * We should realize that we live in the city, not just a segment, and, therefore, should be able to voice our opinion for all of Pontiac. , Kenneth Fox IS S. Johnson (Editor's Note: Letters on%l^phM’,diaFter • j Hr- THE PONTIAC :;PRES$, FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, .1964 fit i H- FT! j I: Sp//f Revealed Between Oswalds Wife and Mother FOJtT WORTH, Tex. l^-The question of whether Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald believes her husband killed President John F. Kennedy revived raw feelings that split the Oswald family four days after the assassination. After Oswald was fatally wounded by Jack Ruby on Nov. 24. Secret Service agents took the accused assassin’s widow, mother and brother to an Arlington jpotel. There a heretofore-undis-dosed drama was played out, involving the family, Secret Service agents and a few of Oswald's friends. ★ ★ ★ The mother and daughter-in-law parted in separate directions This week, their differences were bared again. Marina, the pretty Russian- born widow, said she was con* vinced of her husband’s guilt. Oswald’s mother said Marina must be confused since “I can’t believe she would say something like this which will hurt her and her family.” Last November at the inn, the conflict concerned who would take care of Marina and her two daughters, June Lee, who will be 2 in Febru- ary, a»d Rachael, then 1 month old. Oswald’s mother contended Marina and the babies should move to her three-room duplex in Fort.Worth. She argued “The. family should stick together.* ■* , 1t it it Mrs. Oswald said they could live off the 1863 collected from her insurance policy on her son and on donations. Oswald’s brother, Robert, thought jMarina and the babies should find a place of their own —or, at least, not. move in with his mother. The mother said one or two of the Secret Service agents guarding them Joined the argument. She also said a man who taught Russian at the Fort Worth library sided with Robert. “I didn’t even know what had been decided for Mafina and the babies. They planned it all' without eveii asking me. I asked them what the big idea was." it h ' h Mrs. Oswald said Marina was confused, barely knew English and was unduly influenced by those who urged her to live separately. MADE DIGS The mother also said one Secret Service agent kept mak- ing, digs at her and her dead son. She said the television set was showing events in the wake of the assassination and President Kennedy’s funeral and that she disagreed with remarks about her son’s guilt. The Secret Service agent, she said, .would repeat: “We know he <|id do it” ★ ★ ‘ * She said someone told her the , \ ’ v - .. < . man seemed so bitter because Jf he had guarded Mrs. Kennedy the last two years and felt deeply about Kennedy’s death. LEFT MOTEL Oswald’s mother announced she was leaving the motel, regardless of n$at^ the agents wanted.' -J She didn’t see her daughter-in-law or grandchildren again. PONTIAC MAIL OPTICAL CSNTBa Furniture# Pontiac and Drayton up to 40% and More! Simmons WHILE THEY LAST! World famous Mattressss and Box Springs! WE B0U6NT A VERY LARGE QUANTITY OF FAMOUS HAKE BEDDING, INCLUDING SIMMONS, SEALY, SPRING-AIR, IN ORDER TO BRING YOU THESE TREMENDOUS SAYINGS! Once again- Oakland County homemakers are rushing to the Thomas Furniture Stores . . . and for good reason tab! Here is without a doubt the most terrific sale of bedding in our entire history. Imagine ... a warehouse full of bedding and all at terrific reductions from our normal low prices. Just wait ’til you. see the tremendous selection of beautiful coversl Heavy woven Stripes, imported damask fabrics, prints and nylons ... we've got them all. Because these are discontinued covers, the Thomas Stores bought the entire lot at a terrific reduction — which we are now passing on to you ..,. BUT DOMT WAIT! You'll be wise to hurry to either of the Thomas Furniture Stores at once for the best selection. ECONOMY furniture PONTIAC AMPLE FREE PARKING! EASY CREDIT TERMS! fiamitux© DRAYTON* PONTIAC STORE OPEN Monday end Friday 'til 9, DRAYTON PLAINS STORE OPEN Monday, Thursday, Friday 'til 9 Sex 8. SAGINAW • PR 3-7901 484B DIXXB KWY. • OH 4-OSBX ■l ■'' J II ’ 1 ■1 1 Vij :r :r| ..r •tt '' r*-)' 'r\'vsr ■ .J11 ry,7 • VV J 1 • 1 n V ] ‘ t ' i • * , , ( 1!' ' V / * /A” f F i /THE PONTlAC PEElSS. FRIDAY. .TAXtCAllV' 10, jfoaf - fj L Hjk ^ >■ ..,;3w ..tin musical instrument of your choice! t ry before you buy—find out ---------ini r which CONN Instrument lo boot for you. Wo will help with a simple, proven selection method developed by the lergeet band uutrumeinmanufacturer lo the world. COOT to AS LOW AS >5°° m MONTH RENTAL APPLIES TO PURCHASC IF YOU BUY OPEN MONDAY mS FRIDAY EVENINGS CALBI MUSIC COMPANY 119 N. Saginaw FE 5-8222 Park Free Rear of Store . -p.* I ■* Beneath Berlin Wall Girls Flee to West in Tunnel BERLIN (UPI) — Three girls escaped under the Berlin Wadi through a tunnel completed while the Communists were permitting West Berliners to make Christnjas-time visits, Western police disclosed yesterday. The West Berlin builders of the tunnel were able to warn other would-be escapees in time'to prevent their arrests when the Communists found tbedumiel. It was the first news of a tunnel this year. Western police revealed its existence only after tne Communists discovered its mouth, flooded it with tear gas, and blasted it shut with dyna* mite to prevent further escapes. RED INFORMERS Hie girls fled the Communist sector on Tuesday. Officials said a large group of East Berliners had planned to follow them, but some coal yard workers in East Berlin stumbled across the opening and informed Communist authorities. The innnel itself was described as elaborate, running 480 feet from the coal yard and about 25 feet beneath a blocked-up border street into the cellar of a bakery in West Berlin. Officials said the West Berliners who built it burrowed under the ground for weeks. TUNNEL DESTROYED When the Communists found the tunnel, they lobbed in tear gas grenades to flush out any refugees who might have been in it. Then they caved in the mouth with explosives. At the other, end of the tunnel, tear gas and then dynamite fumes seeped into the bakery cellar. The builders quickly ripped out a telephone line they had installed for communications with the escape passage. WWW. Then, with only hours to spare before the other East Berliners were scheduled to make their flight, they managed to contact the other refugees in time to warn them away. EVERYONE WARNED Had any more East Berliners gone to the mouth of the tunnel, they would have been arrested by the Communists. But Officials believed everybody was warned in time. The tunnel crossed under Bernauerstrasse, a grim street bordering the French sector with houses in East Berlin and sidewplks in West Berlin. The Communists have tried to make the street escape proof by forcing all its residents to move and bricking up every window and door facing the sidewalk. WWW This has turned Bernauerstrasse into a “ghost street.” Beyond it to the east, the Communists have established a 300 yard-wide “death zone” where anybody who enters may be shot on sight. If CAPTURED Another tunnel under Bernauerstrasse was discovered last fall and the Communists captured 19 persons'.' They were sentenced tp long prison terms last month. W W W" ’ Another previous escape under Bernauerstrasse, by 29 East Berliners, was filmed by an American television company. Man Guilty of Murder BFNTON HARBOR (AP) -Lee Woods, 55, was convicted here Wednesday by a Circuit Court Jury of second - degree murder in the Oct. 28 shotgun death of Mrs. Minnie Elizabeth Denton, 68. He was remanded to jail to await presentence investigation, Police said Mrs. Denton was slain when she tried to intervene in a gambling dispute. OPEN SUN. m2 P.M. MVS HARDWARE STORE 905 Orchard Lake Are. FE 6-2424 k lennet/t ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ™ now...your Mid-Winter Bargain ■ ^ • w 'mMMm catalog is mPm hmt Hero's what you'll find! Toko a look... f Eiii VALUE is the theme of aur exciting Mid-Winter Bargain catalog. More than just a word, valve to vs is quality merchandise, low-as-possibie prices and total service ail combined to result in complete customer satisfaction. From cover to cover this book | woe merchandised, planned, assembled with this in mind: To give you total value throughout. 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(2-5) v 1 These tizat only on ial«: 1 I6"x20"x 1" 16*'x25"x I" 20" x 20" x 1" M St.ne.iV 1- F(N.n Cxc.pl Kxttil 49e Each or 3 FOR 5| 39 WE CARRY A COMPLETE RANGE OF SIZESI SNOW SHOVELS - Complete Stock Complete Stock • Thawing Salt (For Ice) • Gates V-Belts • Water Softener Salt ii - ZlUMM ' ' ‘ i'1 • ■ - <* ■. 1. ft'; TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 10. 1861 Huge Complex in Troy MoreCenter Plans Unveiled TROY — Additional plans for a regional shopping center here —costing from $1$ and more than twice the Pontiac. Mall — were revealed yesterday by developers. Incorporating as a nucleus the largest suburban Sears-Roebuck store in the UJ5., the complex would include more than 70 other retail units and parking space for upward of 7,500 cars. Codevelopers of the project, located at 14 Mile and John R, are Jay M. Kogan and Allied Holding Co., both of Detroit. Jason L. Honigman, president of the Allied Holding Co. sub- sidiary, announced yesterday that a Wrigley’s supermarket would be a part of the center. OTHERSTORES Other retail stores to locate at the all-enclosed center were announced by Jerry Schostak, of leasing agents Schostak Brothers Co., Detroit. “The best merchants of women’s apparel will be there,” he said, naming Win- GUESTS OF HONOR - Rev. Lewis Sutton, new pastor at Pint Methodist Church of Clarkston, and his family will be welcomed to the community at a reception Sun- day afternoon at the church. With the new pastor and Mrs. Sutton are their children, Jayne Ann, 21 months, and Stephen Michael, 4. -4------- 1 ■ ----:----- Reception Clarkston CLARKSTON — A reception for Rev. Lewis C. Sutton and his family will be held Sunday from 3 to 5 p.ra.. at First Mithodin Church. Rev. Mr. Sutton began duties as pastor of the Church Jan. 1, replacing Rev. William Richards who became poster et St James Church hi Detroit Raised in Pontiac, Rev. Mr. Sutton la a graduate of Pontiac High School. He spent oyer four yean in the Army with most of the service in overseas zones. * .* . * After returning from service, be attended Albion College where he received a BA degree. RECEIVED SCHOOLING He later attended Garrett Theological Seminary, Northwestern University and niff School of to Greet Minister Theology where he obtained a master of theology degree. Rev. Mr. Satton is married to the former Orn L SeaHae of Webster City, lews. They have a sob, Stephen Michael, 4, and a daughter, Jayne Ann, 21 mouths. The family has moved into the church parsonage. * *' ★ Prior to his Clarkston assignment, Pastor Sutton served at Calvary Methodist Church, Holly, from 1953 to 1958 and at First Methodist Church of Flushing from 1958 until the end of 1963. Show at Lake Orion About Life of Pony LAKE ORION—Three movies on the Shetland pony will be shown to interested area residents Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. in the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland building here. Showing the films will be Patricia Burton, who raises prise ponies on ter farm near Oxford. The Lake Orion Saddle Club is sponsoring the event which will feature the movies, “The Registered American Shetland Pony,” “Diamond In the Rough” and “Every Child's Dream.” kleman’s, Albert's, L e r a e r Shops, and Baker’s Shoe Store. Other stores coming into the center include S. S. Kresge Co., Cunhingham’s Drug Stores and Fred Sanders. ★ ★ * Arnold Agree, speaking for the architectual firm of Charles N. Agree, Inc., said the center would be unique as three major stores would offer their wares in the weather-conditioned com plex. 39 ACRES \ Sears has purchased 30 acres of the 128-acre parcel for a 350,-000-square-foot store. Plans call for two other major department stores, as yet unidentified, to establish units at the center. Construction of the project is scheduled to begin late this rammer, according to the developers, and die official opening is set for the fall of III*...-:-:.,- ... Kogan said he expected more than 5,000 persons to be employed at the center. * ★ ★ The developer added that the proximity of the new 1-75 expressway would provide ready access to the complex, which is tentatively named “Troyland.” INITIAL PHASE - The initial phase of the development will be constructed 82 acres and consist of more See Photo, Page 31 than • million square feet of retail stores and services. *— la addition to the Sears retail unit, the company will build ■ separate “customer convenience center” for repair and service of all Sears products. The second phase of development, on some 40 acres adjacent to the center, will Incorporate office buildings, an auditorium, theater, bowling alley, restaurant and community service and recreational facilities. * it ★ Developers said the center would cater to a trading area of some 130,000 families. The site was chosen after consideration of the Detroit area’s population swing toward the north and east. ADDED FEATURE An additional feature of the weather - proof center is that customers will be able to reach all retail stores surrounding the mall area without stepping outside. In addition to the Sears service center, a branch of the Troy National Bank and • savings and loan institution are planned on the fringe of the center, both fronting on John R. MILFORD — Paul A. Plotzer doesn’t like the way the city’s setting up. a special assessment district for a $224,000 street improvement program, so he’s deckled to do something about it The former village president is circulating I petition to place on the March 9 ballot a charter amendment to change ite pmtdT.-------- The amendment would call for special assessment districts to be approved by the majority of property owners involved. Pythians Seat New Officers OXFORD — New officers of Lodge No. 106, Knights of Pythias, and Temple No. 60, Pythian Sisters, were installed in a special joint ceremony last night. Serving as chancellor commander of the local Knights of Pythias this year will be Charles Mabee. He will be insisted by Gordon J. McKenzie, vice chancellor; Edmund Unger, prelate; Preston Yost, secretary; Milton Miller, financial secretary; and Kenneth Everett, treasurer, t 4 4 Heading Temple No. 60 of the Pythian Sisters in 1964 will be Mrs. Joann Miller, most excellent chief. OTHER OFFICERS She will be assisted by Mrs. Venus Clack, past chief; Mrs. Mildred Forman, excellent senior; and Mrs. Margaret Smith, excellent junior. Other new officers of the Pythian Sisters, include Mrs. Blanch Roost, manager;' Mrs. Nova Spencer, secretary; and lfrs. Ethel Smith, treasurer. Holy Hour Scheduled | WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -A family holy hour is scheduled fay 4 p.m. Sunday at St. Pat-ride’s Catholic Church to celebrate the Feast of the Holy Name. JANUARY SALE MARK DOWNS ON * Living Room * Dining Room ^Bedroom * Furnishings * Pictures * Mirrors and Lamps 4 •. T”. .• • TT— *—.— J . . , ,% „ Open Friday and Msaduy Nights 'til 9 ' *. ■ .'ft..'.. . 144 Oakland Avo. ) months terms without carrying charge Free Parking Just Around the Corner Along Clark Street FETE ARTS PRESIDENT — The Troy Arts Festival Association honored, Oakland County Probate Court Judge Norman A. Barnard, retiring association president, with a surprise * reception after Installation of new officers last night. Here, Judge Barnard (seated) admires a painting by Troy artist Douglas Parrish, whom the association has commissioned to do a gift portrait of the judge. Looking on are the new vice -president, Vincent J. McAvoy (left) and the new president, Rot Barrett. Milford Levy Method Protested Village coundlmen are now given the authority to make such a decision under a home rate charter.-— ASSIGN EXPENSE After determining the need for a local or public Improvement, they can assign the whole or any part of the expense to the benefited property owners. Village officials recently estimated that cost of the pro-pooed street project to rest-den tial property owners will be about $5.59 per Iteeal foot Wool Pay Deadline Set Oakland County wool producers have until Jan. >1 to apply for Incentive wool payments. Application should be filed at the Oakland County Agricultural StabiUxattou and Conservation office, U Oakland, Pontiac. The Department of Agriculture last April shortened the wool marketing year by three months to make It .correspond to the calendar year. Therefore, the 1963 wool marketing year extended from April 1 through Dec. 3L A wool producer must have owned ml sold wool or unshorn lambs during this period in order to apply for the incentive payment. The owners are to pay 100 per cent of the street surfacing, curb and gutter costs. The vfi-at large will finance the '.'including excavation, replacement of .the base and underground drainage. For the improvement of jor streets, abutting owners are scheduled to pay 40 per cent of the surfacing and 100 per cent of the curb rad gutter costs. SPECIAL Total to be raised through special assessment is $109,706. Plotzer labels Ibis method of raising lands “unfair.” “In the past, they have done this work without special sessments, he said. “It has been done with money from the general fund.” Plotzer needs the signatures of 02 persons who voted the last time a village president was elected. He said he has collected 00 siace Monday. Table Request on Boundary n Awaits Consideration The county supervisors’ boundaries committee yesterday tabled a citizens’ request for an election on whether to incorporate Royal Oak Township as a home rule city. The committee also recommended an election April 6 in Wolverine Lake on the proposed annexation of $1 acres 1$ Commerce Township-The recommendation will be presented to the board of supervisors Jan. 17 for its decision. ■ it it- it The Royal Oak Township request was tabled because of errors in the proposed boundaries description and other technical errors in the petition, Committee Chairman Thomas C. Tiley said. DIFFERENT DEFINITION The petition, bearing 190 signatures, referred to a-horns rule, manager form of government” as being sought, where statutes call for a “heme rule city” definition. The petition also neglected to say what the name of the proposed city would be. The committee suggested that new, corrected petitions be circulated and resubmitted by the citizens’ group. 7“---—— The group is seeking to incorporate both separate areas of the split township into a single- city. The sections are divided by the city of Oak Park. 2$ ACRES The annexation of 20 acres to Wolverine Lake Is sought by Phillip Kopmra, developer of Penny Lake Estates. Except far the prafirty in qterttoa, Kopmaa’s subdivi-skm lies entirely within vflbgs. limits ra the south side of the lake. The 20 acres would square off the subdivision’s boundaries. it h e ■ Streets in the subdivision have been btecktopped, but it is still vacant of any bouses. BOLENS ART1C 40 How much do you get in an economical snow caster? Plenty, if it’s a 4-hp Bolens Artie 40! • Unique, straight-action design eliminates freeze-up. Digs 1 ton per minute, casts over 25 feet in any direction • Clears a full 21-ihch path at speeds up to 80 feet per minute • Winterized, 4-hp Briggs & Stratton engine with Easy Spin starting • Controls conveniently located on handle for safe, easy operation * Engine and drive mechanism shielded from snow. Measure any snow^caster against Bolens 4-hp Artie 40. Compare for value! See the Artie 40 . . . end complete . line of Boiene enow casters, today, at Priced $1 O A as Low as Only I ilT KING BROS, i Pontiac Road at Opdyke FE 4-1662 FE 4-0734 PARTS end SERVICE YANKEE’S BEST BUYS GUNE IfATHER MEN’S FLEECE REG. 13.97 MEN’S INSULATED MIRACLE MILE • PERRY AT MONTCALM ,, j. 'I* V hfp^iyRjnW BP’%1 f' £I i f ■ -t 'F<* '♦ 'riu j TH* PONtlAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1064 p^4 1 fttj > *•.■» ■ > ' ‘i /'M- ELEVEN , lone was damaged bey6nd repair in a collision with a whale. Whale of fa Collision KEYvWEST, Fla. (AP)-The 1,400-ton destroyer escort USS Peterson has had to be fitted with a new propeller. The old Need a Room? Don’t Wait! BUY NOW AND SAVE ON LABOR AND MATERIALS BEFORE SPRING! ONLY THE LOOK IS EXPENSIVE a, 1 * / -i —-----------------1 Add Living Space _ nr^ .aw to Your Home ii 'Smmmi f\Tt \ for as little as Artificial dentures were believe^ first made by 4he Egyptians and Estrucans. NOTICE Waterford Lumbar Co. Inc. It now under now monegement and Jim Moquin and Paul Adamt invitetheir many friond t and form or cdttomort te Hep in fer FAST FRIENDLY SERVICII Cash ’n Cany Speoials UTILITY . *0 PMttax west of Buenos Aires-. Police said 28 of 31 persons aboard were killed, including four Americans. Hie accident is under investigation. ARGENTINA PLANE CRASH — Wreckage of a twin-engine Argentine passenger plane that crashed in flames yesterday is inspected by rescuers, about 55 miles north- No Payments "til April CALL NOW Ike Treated for 'Golf Elbow' Escanaba Publisher Reveals Resignation ESCANABA (AP) — James G. Ward Jr., associate publisher of The Escanaba Daily Press, has announced his resignation, effective Jan. 13. Ward, who has held that post for the past five years, has been with the Frank J. Russell publications since 1937. He started with The Marquette Mining Journal and came to the Press as a member of the editorial staff. • Free Planning • Free Estimates Priced to Make It Worth Your While INDIO, Calif. UR—Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower is undergoing physiotherapy treatments for a painful elbow that’s hampering his golf swing. Dr. Peter J. Borak, radiologist at Casita Hospital in Indio, said Eisenhower began receiving treatments tat Saturday for the ailment. ★ ★ ★ It’s a form of bursitis commonly known as “tennis elbow," an inflammation of the tendons or bone prominences. “But I guess in this case you might say it was a 'golf elbow,’ ” said Borak. Eisenhower and his wife are spending the winter at Palm Deal direct with the builder and get quality work. Your manoy soot into your |eb, not your overhead. Waterford LUMBER I 3875 AIRPORT ROAD at Railroad Tracks OR 3-7702 ORCHARD FURNITURE'S CLEARANCE OF FAMOUS KSSI MATTRESSES ANO ROX SPRINGS CLEARANCE OF OVERSTOCKED, NATIONALLY KNOWN BROYHILL COLONIAL SOFAS a distinctly charming-finely crafted group of Early American sofas you may choose AND OTHER NATIONALLY KNOWN BRANDS SAVI NOW! FAMOUS MAKE, GUARANTEED MATTRESSES . AND BOX SPRINGS! HANDSOME TEXTURED TWEEDS ELEGANT TAPESTRIES AUTHENTIC DOCUMENTARY PRINTS A ityl# for fifty taste.. .11 firmnni for ewy weed • o. .• pf'ce for fifty budget! In lull, twin, ond a. 3 4 sue to lit ell beds. Choose the one thot % tight for you in fifty way . . . choose your payment plon too1 SCOTCHGARD - NYLON FOAM RUBIER CUSHION! HAND TIED COIL SPRINOS HARDWOOD FRAME CONSTRUCTION FOAM-FILLED BACK! ' HAND CARVED EXPOSED WOOD SELF DECKED PLATFORMS MATCHINO ARM COVERS ZIPPERED SEAT CUSHIONS CUSTOM TAILORING IN BRILLIANT COLOR HOTEL STYLE TUFTED SET Nationally . Known^ TUFTED FIRM SET 10-PIECE BEDROOM GROUP • Double Dresser and Minor • Matching Chest • Bookcase Bed • Inner*pring Mattress and Box Spring • 2 Boudoir Lamps • 2 Bod Pillows SIRTA Quality furniture at special low sale prices. See your furniture all made don't pick from a small material swatch. Im-i mediate delivery of these fin# sofas. 9-PC. LIVING ROOM • Sofa and Chair-Nylon • Cover and Foam Cushions • 2 Step Tables—Coffee Table • 2 Table Lamps • 2 Trow Pillows SERTA CHOOSE FROM OVER 125 SOFAS 72” 84” 96” L0UH6E CHAIRS • SWIVELS Formioa Top MICHIGAN'S LARGEST STOCK OF FINE BROYHILL . EARLY AMERICAN EXTRA FIRM QUILTED SET • NO MONEY DOWN • 90 DAYS CASH • 24 MONTHS TO PAY • FREE PARKING • FREE DELIVERY SERTA Oompteto 1. Living Hoorn e Winged Seta • Matching Chair a 3 Maple Tablet a 2 Table Lamp* 2. Colonial Maple Bedroom with Innerspring Mattress and . Box Spring SERTA 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE • PONTIAC 3 Clocks West of South Saginaw OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. Phone Ft 58114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY THE rONfrlAC PRESS FRIDAY, JANUARY ;I0, 1964 DUPONT no poht cmnwamow maw* »pr carpst* with Ml NTUM HU MtfTWW DU PONT QUALITY STANDARDS. The Fabulous Fiber That's Behind many "For Sale” signs there is a sad story: A family borrowed more than they could afford to pay for a home or payments and interest rates were too high: the home had to be sold ... often at a loss. This tragedy could often be avoided if the families would seek help from a home loan specialist . . • such as our Association. We work with you tb arrange for a loan that's as easy to handle as monthly rent. I-WOKLD i EASY CLEANING LONG WEARING RESILIENT - MODERATELY PRICED terms of relationships between dimensions rather than the true dimensions. Certain lines appear to be long or short because of the other geometry of the picture. The ruler “sees” only one line at a time, and is not fooled by relationships between dimensions and shapes. By BOB BROWN PROBLEM: Optical illusions. NEEDED: A ruler. DO THIS: Answer the questions, then check your answers with the ruler. 1. Is the hat taller than it is wide? 2. Do lines B and C make a bulge in the center of the drawing? 3. Which lines in this drawing are parallel? 4. Which line is longer, A or West Huron Established 1890 ir A LOANj ★ ASSOCIATE * ★ Fatten** ***** A collection of these scientific puzzles is in book form under the name “Science Circus.” It is in bookstores and libraries. EXPLANATION: We see in lasHfactattbcaptr nan Ift sstpri* mi«R« a frUMtabap* OLLIE FRETTER On* of Mirhignm't Origimml Dittoonterx TcmM facia Ifckorptf * Alfa* WHmit Mnh| tt lotare a ■Re It's smszfar liogh... Cannot hin-ansot scuff And it's still ■ irtislic *fichl‘ Tbe oevirtgo event that happens only once a year. Everything gees floor samples, new 1964 models in original factory car-tens, same Memo crate maned, repossessions, reconditioned models, in fact yew name it, it's hero and marked way down to a price lower than you'd expect to pay. Everything is warehouse priced, ranges, reefers, washers, dryers, TV’s Color TV's, Stereos, everything in every one of my 8 stores has been slashed for this once a year so|p. Remember at flatter's yew get 5 lbs. of Coffee free If I cant beat year best price and service.* SALE MW IN PROGRESS •t my Pontiac Warehouse Telegraph R4. Vfc mUo S. of Orchard Lake M. Seme Herns one of a kind, not all Hems at oil stores, all merchandise subject to prior sale. Hurry den? miss this ealei Westkifhewae 12 Cw. FAMILY-SIZE REFRIGERATOR- FREEZER Alio hat: big "zero-degree" freezer • Refrigerator lection that never needi defrosting e Butter keeper e 12.3 cu. 't. of refrigerated apace • Come tea it today! • S Water Temperatures • 2 Water Level Selections 'Dial Normal action for regulars . , . select Oentle for delicate fabrics. It's lost that easy with this RCA Whirlpool. And clothns are washed so gently, so throughly clean. IIXIIIA Soi RYIM 3 ROOMS INSTALLED WALL TO WALL Trad* SALE PRICE A Single Sotting of n Single Control and Dishes aro Bonn! * Roll your »CA WHIRLPOOL portable dtakwoohor to tfw table for loading jfl dtaksi to Hi* oink for walking. Just Jr^ taro on# knob and dithae aro waukod automatically! Stroamt of Hot do- \ mTOi# tosgont solution scrub dlskot cloon in \ two s*porato waokoo. You con waek a \ roV sfakfol at one*, star* ditkot, dirty \ or doaii, out of tight. Aad your \ bonds nov*r touch dishwator. \ You get your choice of colors. In 12' or 15' widths cut from full perfect quality rolls. You get deluxe tockless installation over heavy rubberized mothproof waffle padding. Includes all labor, door metal, no extras. (JUkurfpoot APPLIANCE PURCHASED HEREI You can count on prompt, conclusive service by RCA's own technicians, from the nearby branch of RCA Service Company, a division of Radio Corporation of America. -fraSuct-st Whirlpool Corporation, MrtkoriroV Is on tCA trademark. 30 YARDS INSTALLED . * OVER RUBBERIZED PAD SAlll Just imagine... 30 Yards of * iBln this 100% Dupont Nylon jn P your hom* for $14.75 p*r on*y $14.75 per month month. v ^ e e COLORS a ■ Dream Turquoise Oriental Plum Rosewood Honey Gold Platinum Beige Manhattan Bki* Surf Green Rio Cocoa-Cherrywine Wild Money Avooado Aztec Gold Bronze Straw Beige TELEGRAPH RD. Vs ML SO. ORCHARD LAKE RD 1 MU* North of Miracle MUo OPEN SUNDAY - FE 3-7051 OPEN DAILY 10-9 SUN. 10-7 NO MOMEY DOWN - OP TO 3S MONTHS TO MY ARTISTRY iCARPET OR 3-2100 M , OR 3-3311 4528 Dixie Highway \ FERNDALE STORE - 201 W. 9 MILE-LI 7-4409 Member Federal Home Loan Bank System APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS ONE YEAR WARRANTY SERVICE at no extra cost V FRETTER’S y|| Iggp Bg rImMI Incredibly atieng J •ndjnwent YARDS CASH PRICE Monthly Pay. 35 $488 $17.22 40 $558 $19.69 45 $628 $22.18 50 $698 $24.12 55 $768 $26.48 60 $836 $28.52 \NX\\ i T * r L fl 4„ rjw \ ■W'r ' - -T f. ■f'S. ’ Jh7 if " > ft/.» i Wtrr'yM THE PONTfAc phtiSS. FhtPAV, MAyCAffrY lti, 10q4> ^ \,v i-'i ,«sera <* ' V THIRTEEN ! of b ?f. By FRED 5. HOFFMAN „ AP Military Writer WASHINGTON - C r 111 c s of "overkill" believe they have gone a long way toward winning over the Johnson administration to the^r view that the ‘United States owns too mud) nuclear weapon power and ought to slash it drastically. They may be a little too op- timistic, although President Johnson gave them encourage ment Wednesday by decreeing Hi- Happy Over N-Weapons'Cutback a major reduction in the output of materials that go into mak- ing atomic and hydrogen weapons. r i - it ,* ...V . There is ho sign that Johnson or Secretary of Defense Robert 8/ McNamara are ready to halt SATURDAY SPECIAL Youths’- Boys’ 4 Buckle Arctics Sixes 12 to 2 and 3 to 6 WOMEN’S MOUSE SLIPPERS Regular 3.00 and 4.00 Valuai 188 Several Styles ' Children’s HOUSE SLIPPERS Regular 2.00 Valua* 100 Several Styles OPEN Monday and Prfday Night Till I P.M. H-H SHOE 73 NORTH SAQINAW STREET LOW PRICES! tkI OUR 1 TRADE-IN | DEPT. ; Real | Value I Living Room Suites Dining Room Suitot Bedroom Suitos Qas and Eloetrie Ranges Qinettes Washers-1 roners Rofrigtratora Occasional Chairs Office Furniture and Many Othor Items FURNITURE SALES 1 MUe Emit of Auburn H rightt 3345 Auburn Rd. (M-59) I "Ton Alwajrt fur lor loti at L and S'-»•* MON. Mm SAT. SRI. *NI » Ul ))M0 FI 5-9241 further production of nuclear weapons. NO MOVE And top U.S. officials have ■made ho move to dismantle any missile bases or retrench from goals which contemplate a force of more than 1,200 intercontinental ballistic missiles and 656 submarine - launched Polaris missiles within the next few years. The new military budget will reflect a leveling off because the administration has topped the rise of an expensive three-year campaign to build U.S. nuclear missile strength. ★ * * Even with that, the next budget is expected to provide for 50 more Minuteman ICBMs. What Johnson’s action recognizes is that the United States —while perhaps not yet at the “overkill” level—has accelerated its rate of weapons production to such a degree iri recent years that an excessive arsenal may bis in sight. / FOCUS ATTENTION The President’s move serves to focus attention on the “overkill” argument which has been going on for some time in the relative privacy of circles interested in arms policy and strategy-______ Critics of heavy atomic armaments use the term “overkill” to dramatize their view that the United States has built enough such weapons to pulverize an enemy many times over. , + v v *■, This, they contend, does not ensure national safety but actually makes the danger of war greater. The United States, they insist, could make a sharp cut in its nuclear weaponry and still deter attack-while saving up to (15 billion a year, the amount now applied to piling up more atomic weapons. ARE CHALLENGED These critics—scientists, theorists and a few members of Congress — are challenged by military leaders such as Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, Air Force chief of staff, and Gen Maxwell D. Taylor, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. With only a limited number of atomic weapons—too few to demolish his missile bases and airfields — the “nucs” would have to be aimed at cities to achieve an enemy’s destruction these strategists say. What this would do, the military men claim, is deny a president a choice of military courses short of atomic war — but under the protective umbrella of poised nuclear strength feared and respected by an enemy. Thus, Tayl.br has said, a president would be sentenced to “this one dreadful alternative” of massive hydrogen attack on cities — arid in such an exchange, U.S. cities likely would be blasted, too. From a practical standpoint, the foes of “counterforce”—the polite name for overkill—overlook or deliberately ignore a number of considerations which dictate a large atomic force, military men contend. Among these factors are the number of nuclear warheads needed to knock out an underground missile base br other target—several would be required on dach; possible losses before launch due to an enemy’s first strike against U.S. bases, and weapons that malfunction due to mechanical or human er- ror and thus do not reach target. Lined up with the military men, for different reasons, are industry and labor elements who are concerned that a reduction in armaments would lead to wholesale unemployment Mist Sell Is fiDiig Oit of tie Geieral JEWELRY BUSINESS Stock WATCHES-DIAMONDS-RMS ■fSBSS*s prices Slashed from to. $97.49 at MYinj nrices f°r everyone-si*** *od S- You Save Up To Everythin* *« off guaranteed of P your regular Account- Onora* Wallets, UP*?’ labySlkw^®^® 6K ui. __74 N. SAGINAW ST. PARK FREE DOWNTOWN mm ftlM f* II Sill IT WE ARE MUIC OUT OF THE GENERAL HEFT. STORE B0S1NESS . . . WE WILL REMAIN AT THE SAME LOCATION SPECIALIZING ONLY IN HIGH FASHION SPECIALTY SHOPS .-. . WE WILL REMOIEL TO CHANGE THE INTERIOR OF THE STORE . WE WILL NEED ROOM FOR THE WORKMEN! Silt IIP TO SIS 111 HOIK! T Buy Nationally Advertised Quality at Big Discounts! MORE BIG PRICE CUTS FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MONDAY... CHARGE IT, TOO! 39.9! SBC 3S It 41 1 MISTS SLITS TO ‘3 BETTER URLS’ IRESSES Complete Slock, Mei’i JARMAN Sloes SAVE! TO 4.99 LADIES’ SKIRTS 7.99 MISS, HALE SEE LAMES’ PRESSES & 4.99 CASUAL HEIR’S PASTS T# *29 SHE 3 to 9 URLS’ CUTSK WOMEN’S IRESS SH9ES HURRY! VALUES to r LABIRSMKS *25 ZIP-LINED COATS SAVE! WTO 19.91 ■ MES’SJACKETS * «' ' ■ ‘3 GIRLS’ SKIRTS SWEATERS - SUCKS REG. TO S.99 1.99 SIZES 32 to 38 LAMES’BLOUSES T015 LADIES u«< 3.99 WHITE or SPORT HEN’S SHIRTS 2P BOVS - GIRLS’ BETRR,SOCKS Complete Stock, Hea’s WORK OXFORDS 1 CLEARANCE! to 3.99 LAMES’PURSES TO *99 LADIES’ FUR-TRIN COATS Mi *9? Den’s Entt-Leea T-SHIRTS tt BRIEFS 1.59 BOYS’ JEANS BOYS’ SHIRTS FEATURE! TO 8.99 r LADIES’ SLIPOVER CARDIGAN SWEATERS 129 MINK TRIM UflES’ CIATS I * i * v. 88c 29.99 ALL WOOL MEN’S SPORT COATS TO W WARM 3-16 T ROYS’ JACKETS 49.99 All wool 36-44 Men’s Topcoats f REG. TO» RAYON UMES’ PANTIES 149 LUXURIOUS FUR STOLES TLEARANUE! to 8.99 M’S SWEATERS '8 BOVS’ - GIRLS’ SNOW SUITS 3.99 FULL ANI HALF LAMBS’SUPS 3.99 Flannel Pajamas or LADIES' GOWNS 15 LADIES’I to 4* FINE DRESSES m rage VALUES TO 1.00 MEN’S B.V.D. SOX 3.99 GENUINE BOVS' LEVIS 48- 24.99 HANDSOME BOVS’SUITS SAVE! VALUES to 3.M PERMA LIFT BRAS TO *31. LADIES’ FORMALS or DRESSES MlHMUiiRNl • -“A ia 2.99 QUALITY 29t27 BIRDSEYE DIAPERS 14.99 SAMSONITE DVERNITE CASE CLOSEOUT! to 8.99 FLA1TEX GIRDLES TO ‘3 BETTER LAMES’ HATS GEORGE'S DEPT. STORE 74 N. Soginow, Downtown Pontiqc—Frf Pocking Behind Stora Jv., HM : i*. Mi fell m* Msg \ E3*d THE PONTIAC PRESS, FKIDAt, JANUARY H), 16^4 wedding date hasn’t been set, friends say. Miss Wood was (fivorced in 1962 Jrom actor Robert Wagner. Loew recently wait, divorced from Debbie Power Loew. Has Engagement Ring HOLLYWOOD * — Actress Natalie Wood is wearing an engagement ring from movie scion Arthur Loew Jr., but a Ohio Accident Rate accident. Thi a survey pu COLUMBUS, Ohio HM)ne of Farm and Ho every seven Ohip farm families ; -----r had an accident in 1962, and a India c o r fifth of these had more than one | square miles. Continue Investigation W® robbery of a drive-in of Drivo-ln Bonk Theft ^ ** Police booked a man on sus- GRAND RAPIDS u can £• sure ... if Wt WeStinghOUSe gj Sylvan Stereo ft TV Sales Open Monday and Friday evening! ’til 9 p.m. 23SI Orchard Lk. fid. (Sylvan Center) Phone SS2-01H experiences with “Communist infiltration” in this country, the New York governor told of what occurred in San Francisco fa) 1945 at the conference where the United Nations was founded. Rockefeller, attending the conference as an assistant secretary for the UJL State Department, said it was his Job to meet every morning with the FBI, which was responsible for security. "They came in one morning and said, ’We have the goods on Alger Hiss.’ He was then secretary general of the conference. This wss in 1945, mind you, long before anything else broke,’’ Rockefeller said. ■ . *-Rockefeller also linked White to a $7,500 check from Amtorg, the Russian trading mission in the United States at that time. But his statement, as tape-recorded, did not specify what this link was. OTHER EVIDENCE Hie FBI, Rockefeller said, claimed it had evidence also on Harry White, who was assistant secretary of the treasury under (Henry A.) Morgenthau, who received a $7,500 check from Amtorg. "But there was a real ques- NOW thru January 11th OPEN 9:30 to 9 P.M. DAILY 3 Electric Powered The Pontiac Mall in cooperation with tho Now Car Dealers of Pdnftoc have planned an outstanding New Car Show that will excite everyone- in your family. You will see all tho now 1964 automobiles on display |Slus many unusual and intorosting displays from automobila manufacturers ... All in Michigan's most comfortable, most beautiful shopping cantor.. . tho enclosed, hoatod Pontiac Mall. KIDDIE CORVETTES BE GIVEN AWAY DURING THE Drawings Jan 4th-8th-l 1th REGISTER EARLY PARKINS FOR OVER 4,500 CARS TELEGRAPH AT ELIZABETH LK. Rd Get Your Registration Blank at Any /Wall Store 4x8 PREFINISHED MAHOGANY PANELING 4x7 PREFINISHED MAHOGANY PANEUNG OUR BIGGEST SELLER been there to the \ y metal gmIggI opes- ' hearth fireplace . . Ideal for eeetomporary dee if • . provides oomforuble radiaet beet. Available la a variety of modele ead e choice of colon. The FtreNood nomce nompleK with etecfc. screen end grate WALNUT and CHERRY PRINTS PREFINISNED PANELING OUR POPULAR ECONOMY LINE IN Cherrytone Suntan and Bona White Priced As Low As . . . COMPLETE STOCK OF HARDWOOD MOLDINGS To Compliment Your Paneling BIRCH • MAHOGANY • OAK UNIQUE, NEW CEILINGS FROM (Armstrong ORIGINAL PRICE TAG ON ON EVKRY COAT...CHOOSE YOURS, THIN DfDUCT 2S% ...SKI WHAT YOU SAVKI mloees’ 8-1S petite 5-11 These unique, now Armstrong Ceilings feature delicate decorative effects created by dimensional plastic designs. They're something different in modem ceilings. Ait exclusive new process puts delicate raised white-on-white plastic designs right on the ceiling surface. And these attractive ceilings are unusually washable, too. They don’t crack, chip, or peel, either! Something else: it’s easy to install an Armstrong CushiontoneO Ceiling yourself.. Available in two genuine acoustical Cuehiontone designs, Berkshire and Fairfax. This decorative finish is also available in two nonacoustical Bermuda TemlokO Ceilings accented with subtle color chips and metallic flecks. -ryv1 ijmee ANELAIRE haioioa.d eeiuiwogx Beautiful, realistic fur pretenders, fashioned in Malden’s rich, heavenly warm modacrylic pile... in sand beige, glossy black or deep chocolate brown... fully rayon satin hoed. Choice tf convenient sins. Framiai and other sccssssrisi Clavar fANELAIdf fri(l«worlc ha. hundred, of dicar at Iva UHC that mok. k potiibl. for yM to -giv. your horn, thot imarf "curlom" look, quickly and in«xpon,ivoly! HERE'S WHY YOU SAVE AT ROBERT HALL » ' ♦ Wg nil for cult only I * Th.r# nrg tig ctadlt chargatl • W. havg no cradlt loMMt • You uvt hgcgygg wa aavgt Cwapliti S* I S' Sms SMfcr. Cimylet. IS" i W" Sanaa tad. AMERICA'S LA AO E ST FAMILY CLOTHINO CHAIN UPSON FISH HOUSE for hobby and 'commercial ice fishing fo fun in tho winter keep snug! All Material Including $1 Hardware for ft’xD’ Shanty r| ., ) Plenty of Free Parking "CLARKSTON STORE OPEN SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M” --- IN PONTIAC, 200 North Saginaw Si. —— IN CLARKSTON-WATERFORD an Dixit Hwy. N. of Waterford Hill M1 NH 4495 Dixie Hwy. HOURS-------OR 3-1211— OPEN WEEKDAYS MONDAY Mini FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 8:M P.M. | JATUROAY* from I A.M. te 4 P.M. Yard Prices Dusted THE CONICAL FIREPLACE DO-1 T YOURSELF GRILLEWORK he shouldn't be seen in public with another vomSB yet Meanwhile, Jane and he are getting thicker and thicker and they are talking marriage. He is a gentleman, and is well able to support Jane, and gentleman should respect a lady with whom he would like to spend the rest of his life, he will let HER be until he has the right to talk marriage. The Michigan dinner meeting Waldron Jan. ■t A, 1 ri /' ,* 1 «* f1 -‘ft the poktiAc yREss, Friday,JrAxtiArtY lo, io64 FIFTEEN! For 33 years these Kingswood teachers have guided teen-age girls. From the left are# Luella .Houser, head of the physical education department; Grace A. Fry, assistant head mistress; and Josephine Waldo, senior class adviser. They trill be honored Tuesday at a luncheon given by the Kingswood alumnae board. Elizabeth Bennett and Mrs. Lillian Holm have a conference about yam. Miss Bennett, head of the English department, and Mrs. Holm, teacher of weaving, are to be honored guests of the Kingswood alumnae board at Tuesday’s luncheon. But Observation Correct Grammar Ain’t So Good By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My English teacher said we had to write a friendly letter to some person who Urea in another city as' a homework assignment, so this is what I wrote': Dear Abby: You are solving my problem without even mrfng it because I have to write a letter for my English assignment and I chon you those answers because you no what happens when you stick your nose in other people’s business. “Very truly yours, “ ‘FINENGLISH" colum is prit- DEAR ABBY: Our 19-year-old daughter (idiom I’ll call Jane) is serious about a 24-year-old married man who is in the process of being divorced. They were married only five months. My problem is be spends every evening here with Jane because his'lawyer* told him be seen in public woman yet. it’s right for them to be planning marriage until he is free to marry, do you? My husband says he is a lot better than most of the characters Jane has gone with and we should let them be. What do you think? JANE’S MOTHER WWW lota Eta Unit Gives Charity a Class Table Tipacon Hears Talk on Coronary Heart Disease DEAR MOTHER: No matter how you phrase it, he is a married man until he is divorced—and he may NEVER get a divorce. Your daughter should not be spending every evening with him. If tie respects her, -as *-should respect a shorn he would like A classroom table was presented to the Oakland County Society for Crippled Children and Adults, Inc. at the Thurs- Dr. Edgar J. Giest Jr. was guest speaker at the Wednesday dinner meeting of the Tipacon Chapter, American Business Women’s Association. like him, but I don’t think m Are You Stage Struck? layouts for the Lakeland Players’ first mti-sicale production, "Guys and Dolls" will be held Sunday at the CAI Building from 2-5 p.m. A large cast of men and women is needed for the March performances to be directed by Patti Hott. Anyone interested in singing, dancing or dramatic parts will be welcome to try out. CONFIDENTIAL TO “HAROLD WHO TRAVELS": Don’t Worry. i If a woman really loves a.maiifrqq other man can get within 100 feet of her. Get it off your chestTbsT a personal, unpublished reply, write to ABBY, care of The Pontiac Press. Enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. For Abby’s booklet, "How To Have A Lovely Wedding," send 80 cents to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. day evening meeting of the Iota Eta chapter of Pi Omi-cron national aorority- ______ V ; w ★ a “• Mrs. Robert Dunham of Midrow Street opened her home for the gathering. * * * State Chapter at the Hotel Jan. 19 was announced. Plans for the state convention to be held at Kalamazoo in May will be completed at that meeting. Next month’s meeting will be a cooperative supper. Vice president of the new Crittenton Hospital in Rochester, his topic was coronary artery disease. Since the United States has the highest vascular disease rate in the world, Dr. Geist discussed factors predisposing to coronary artery diease. WCTU to Meet CHECKLIST Each person was given the opportunity to check a “Personal Score Card", indicating possibility of their experiencing some type of a heart at- decorate your bedroom NOW during NETTLE CREEK'S 20% OFF ANNUAL SALE! I for the month of |jnu .try, over 7S*/« of the exquisite ensembles in the Nettle Creek Deluxe fortfolio will he offered *! a tremendous saving of 30%. This Hie It an annual event and comet but once a year. Nettle Creek bedroom ensembles include beautifully color coordinated solids and prints, quilted and unquilted, and custom made for you into ledtpreadi • Draperies and Shade* • Headboards • loudoir Chairs e Screen*, Table Covert e Accessories BEDSPREAD PRICES FROM S54.9S TO $200 ALL LESS 20*/. UNTIL THE END OF JANUARY. Interior Designers for Home or Office Open Friday Until 9 P.M. Bi inNinh )REE Starts tomorrow... for one week only Jan, 11th - Jan. 18th seamless stockings save up to *J,05 on every box walking sheer---------------------(rep.$i.35j $1.75, 3prs. 93.30 reinforced sheer--------lreg.fi.50i 9].25, 3pn. *3.60 micro-mesh--------------{reg.fuoi 91.25, 3pn. *3.60 run guard sheer-——(rea.ji.65j *7.35, 3pn. *3.90 stretch sheer—--------trea ties) *7.35, 3pn. *3.90 sheer heel demi-toe—treg.fi.65) *7.35, 3p«. *3.90 runless sheerloc*------(reg.tus) 91.45, 3pn. *4.20 all sheer sandalfoot—treg. JI.95J 91.65,3pn. *4.80 short, medium and long * ^ colors: south pacific, bali rose and shell PEGGY’S MIRACLE MIL School Alumnae Honor Quintet of Instructors Kingswood alumnae of three decades will honor five teachers on Tuesday. The board is giving a luncheon at the Village Woman's Club for Elizabeth Bennett, Grace A. Fry, Mrs. Lillian Holm, Luella Houser and Josephine Waldo! This is. the first occasion of its "kind and all Kingswood alumnae have been invited to honor the t c a c h e r s whose combined years of service add up to over 150 years. Miss Bennett, came to Kingswood in 1936. Mrs. Holm" Who designed and set up the looms for the original carpets at Kingswood came from Sweden in 1930. First at the Cranbrook Academy of Art, she began teaching weaving at Kingswood in 1933. Miss Houser, Miss Waldo Miss Fry have been at Kingswood since its founding in the fall of 1930. Miss Fry teaches mathe- matics and Miss Waldo is in the English department. General chairman fbr the event is Mrs. Joasph Irwin. Reservations are being handled by Mrs. John Dixon. Local Unit Discusses New Plans Future projects were contemplated at the Kappa Chi Alpha sorority meeting. Mrs. Richard Jones opened her Briggs street home for members Tuesday evening. Plans were discussed for a hair • do demonstration for members and guests at the House of Style Jan. 29. Mrs. - Richard Jones and Mrs. Thomas Tagoso will be models. * * * Personals tack. A question and answer period followed. Some 67 members and six guests were present at the Airway Lanes to hear the talk. Annual reports were given. * * * Guests included ' Shirley Plake, Lee Doran, Inez Dimas,..Catherine McDonald, Barbara Hessler and Mrs. BU-ly H. Vaughn. Traveling to their cabin outside Curran, Mich, for the weekend will be Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Alien of Cooley Lake Road. Guests of the Allens for the weekend will be Mr. Allen’s mother, Mrs. Ralph E. Allen of Durnham Drive, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Andress of Ormsby Street. WWW Work on scrapbooks using old Christmas cards was begun at the meeting. When completed, the scrapbooks will be given to the Carolyn Carr Children’s Leukemia chapter for hospitalized patients. At the February meeting the members will have a white elephant sale. Proceeds will be for the club charity/ Sorority Holds New Workshop The Dora B. Whitney Union of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union will meet Tuesday at. 1 p.m. at the Bethany Baptist Church on Mark Street. Mrs. Lynn Allen of Argyle Avenue is motoring to Florida with three friends. On Wednesday the? will sail from Florida on a ten-day Caribbean cruise. Upon returning to Florida they will visit with friends before returning to Pontiac. Accompanying Mrs. Allen are Mrs Mack Goodwin of Cherokee Road, Mrs. Ray Kingsbury of Silver Circle and Mrs. Fred Sytx of Mark Street. ★ ★ ★ - Dr. Lynn Allen Jr. will be in Harrisburg, Pa. for the week of Jan. 22 to attend an educational conference on con-. tact lenses. A workshop on writing highlighted the Wednesday meeting of Xi Gamma Alpha chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority in the home of Mrs. Richard Paschke on Union Lake Road. * * * Mrs. Russell Perkins collaborated with. the hostess in presenting the program titled "The Written Word.” i k k’ k Chapter members will attend the citywide Beta Sigma Phi tea, Jan. 19, in the First Federal Savings of Oakland dub rooms. OPEN TONIGHT CLEARANCE Tremendous savings on winter fashions you'll wont to wear right now . . . and for many weeks to come! REVERSIBLE PARKAS Falun lo $25 STRETCH PANTS l ii/un lo $15.99- FLANNEL P.J.’S end NITE SHIRTS Hoir. S3 *2.88 Superior Quality. MOHAIR SWEATERS Falwi lo SI 9.99 $r and*!!88 ★ BETTER DRESSES drastically reduced! Falun la $25 99 Tina Bloomquist •8“ aid *12“ Junior*, Mines, Half Sites DT ED-TO-MATCH PASTEL SKIRTS and SWEATERS . drastically reduced! We ‘ are pleased to announce the appointment of Mrs. Tina Bloomquist as manager of Burton’s. Formerly of Eaton’s Mrs. Bloomquist ivwell known in die' Pontiae area. BURTON’S jjQjJsiouX- tU- Ud. LtoXt 75 North Saginaw !\P r SIXTEEN /r‘// /CT.V THE PONTIAC PRESS. r If/ m l FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, ft w c* rV V 1964 /}»/ v, £*» MM Lloti STORE MIRACLE MILE Religion Shouldn't Be Forced on Children OPEN TOMORROW Qta9 1$ Rtf IS: i I tfx i (discontinued styles) .Vi coats/suits/skirts/pants/robes,/cardigans/blouses Repeat performance for the Pendleton value bonanza that’s a sellout every year! Replenish your weary wardrobe now with beloved Country Clothes by Pendleton—first-quality casual wear for country, town and travel—and save untold dollars! Season-spanning 1009; virgin wool every last one. Yes, even famou* Pendlemate® Accessory cotton blouses are price-cut to prove that fashion and bargains can be compatible. Sizes 8-20, sweaters 36-40; Not all sizes and colors in every style, but hundreds of beauties and hundreds of buys! Just be early for top selection. No phone or mail orders, please. 1 Use A Lion Charge Plan with option terms By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE Dear Mrs. Lawrence: Our two grandchildren, 5 and 9, are re-celving 'no religious training. Though we gave our son a godly home, he and his wife do not attend church. A ‘ * * They sleep late on Sunday and give this bad example to the children. Our minister says we should not interfere in the Lord’s work of returning our son to His ways but do you think it would be children to Sunday School ourselves v . . . % . ANSWER: Yes, I think that you may have already taken toe much responsibility for the Lord. When we do this, children are only too apt to confuse us with Him. Whatever rebellious or critical feelings they have for us then get transferred to God, the chifrch we attend and the religious rituals to which we subscribe. "By undertaking to speak for interfering to offer to take the | the will of God, we have made Complete Repair on all Luggage and Leather goods, hand bags Zippers repaired or replaced. Jackets repaired. New Location 152 N. Woodward near Maple Ml 6-8088 BIRMINGHAM 0* ClHHidOfV LUGGAGE * LEATHER GOODS OPCN TMURS FRI TIU t P M Jimt STORE MIRACLE MILE Shoe Sale Saturday 9a.m. to 9 p.m. iiiSfi Puppies * Men’s Slip-Ons and Oxfords Discontinuod stylus in sizes 6% to 11 S,N,M,W, widths. Reg. to $9.95. Ladies’ Slip-Ons and Oxfords Discontinued stylos in sizes 4 to 11, S, N, M, widths. Rog. to $9.95. Selected Group High or Mid Heel Risque Shoes rogular to 13.99 Discontinuod styles $C90 Selected Group Children’s Shoes Broken Sizes &tf regular to 6.99 $090 Selected Group Men’s Shoes fj regular to 12.95 His will our will. For the child, they may never become two different things. .ir— this is what, I suspect, your minister was saying. Let me quota these words from psychologist RoHo May's book, ’’Man's Search for Himself:” Bride-^lect Honored by 4 Showers Bride-elect Mary Lynn Mu-ma was honored at a personal shower Thursday evening in the Rouge Circle home of Marilyn Embury. Jane Ann Russell of Ann Arbor was cohostess. Miss Muma is the daughter of the Robert K. Russells of Bloomfield Village. Her fiance, Airman l.C. C. Wallace McCrindle, stationed at Tyndall AFB, Panama City, FTa., is the son of the Wallace Mc-Crindles of Rapid City, Midi, FihBDLY PARTY Mrs. Donald'* Smith and Mrs. .Frank E. Petty both of Clarkstan and Mrs. Walter Andrews of Holly will honor their niece at a family shower and luncheon, Saturday, in Mrs. Smith’s home. Hostess at a ’round-the-clock shower Jan. 16 will be Mrs. Charles Coffin of Roland Drive. ~ w* * ★ Mrs. Donald Newman of Watkins Lake and Mrs. Arnold Thingstad will share hostess honors, Jan. IT, at a linen shower and luncheon in the Newman borne. The First Methodist Church, Birmingham, will be the setting for the Jan. 25 wedding. Msn’s Fmiow Brand Dress Shirts Whites and fancies regular to 5.00 / 3 far $10.00 I Men’s 2-Pant Suits regular 79.95 •66 Men’s Topcoats regular to 59.95 8 m w m “In totters which patients to therapy often receive from parents, the parents quote such Biblical pesmges as ’Honor they father and matter’ ratter than the lator attic of Jesas which dadoes, man’s foes shall ha Am if his own household.’ ** Wa can become the foe of a child we say we love H we confuse oursevles with God fa) his mind. What is just as sari, we become enemies of ourselves, condemning ourselves because our spiritual light has proved insufficient to enlighten Mm as we think he should.be enlightened. ★ * * Like you, we lose all gladness in our own light to a gloomy, darkened sense of failure with the child who refuses to Justify our religious training of him. In this gloomy, secretly resentful state of mind. It is almost impossible to provide children with an enviable example of religious benefit. Noting how dismal we are made by our love of God, be is bound to say to himself, “Goodness, if such grimness is the result of religious devotion, I .certainly , want no part of it. W 4' *' “Late sleep on Sunday mornings and a pleasant, unhurried breakfast with iry family are certainly preferable to what church-going seems to do to my parents.” (Uewmeper lnHfvrhe Aim.) Society Probes Role of Church The role of the church was iBwimwi at the Wednesday evening meeting of the Woman’s Society of Christian Service of Oakland Park Methodist Church. * * * Mrs. FSy Magner, secretary of Christian social relations, led the discussion dealing with the church in relation to political and social as well as spiritual issues. a a a •* Mrs. B. H. Ogden tod the devotions and the Rebecca ditto was hostess for the group. Ringgit? 3nn Superb facilities for WEDDINGS Engagement Parties Bachelor Dinners | Incomparable, tf atmosphere for I BIRTHDAY PARTIES | Wadding Anniversaries Family Celebrations mmmsmi Ideal surroundings for BANQUETS Dinner Meetings Business Get-togethers Ml 4-1400 JO 4-5916 I i si ii ifys v-.m I: ‘ THE PONTIAC, PRESS, FRIDAY/ JANUARY Id, IQ64 SEVENTEEN , PhWm Prm nut* Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Thacker of Auburn Avenue recently celebrated 50 years of marriage at a family gathering. Their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Drewie Williamson of Vine-wood Road, were hosts ' for the occasion. The Thackers have 10 children, 25 grandchildren, and 6 great-grandchildren. row Old? £ There is no perfect time to begin self-improvement. There will always be some excuse we can use if we wish to put off beginning. The only perfect time is NOW! As most of my readers kaow, I am bringing yon my Eight-Week Beauty Improvement Plan (BIP) this week to help yon become yoar best looking self in that length of time. During the past few days, I hive told • you how to determine your ideal weight and bow to measure yourself. Now, let’s get on with the business of counting calories. COUNT CALORIES No mdtter what kind of food you eat, you will lose weight if you count calories and eat little enough of v it. However, it is essential that you have a well-balanced diet which gives you all of the foods vital to good nutrition. ' This b even more important when yon are reducing because your food intake b cat and you are less likely to get all die essentials unless you plan your menus carefully. Plan your meals with lean meat, fish, seafood, fowl, eggs, some whole grain products, fruits and vegetables, citrus or tomato juice, cottage cheese, and salad greens. it it At Substitute skim milk for whole milk, fresh fruit or canned waterpacked fruit for dessert; avoid fried foods, gravy, rich sauces and salad dressings. You need some carbohydrate foods and fab, but cut down on them. SMALLER PORTIONS Take smaller portions of everything and no seconds of between meal snacks. If you wish to do so, you can save a few calories to eat in between meals, but count them b as a part of your allowable daily in$pke. Remember that the way you prepare food makes a great difference in its calorie count. Boil, broil or bake leaving off the trimmings. The average woman will lose successfully if she holds her calorie intake at 1,200 a day. individuals differ in this matter because of-differences in metabolism and physical activity. A Enroll NOW! Under the Supervision of Our New Director MR. PHILLIPS • Special Lew Rates e Day or Eve. Classes e Modem Techniques Call Min Wilton for Information PONTIAC • Beauty College lift EASf HURON Enrol Today Mil It 4-1854 Btklmd Knut’i, .. Ind Floor very active person will require more food than an inactive one, even when reducing. Honeymooning in England Airman 3.C. Harry H. Bighorn and his bride, the former Glenys Joan Grayling, are honeymooning in England following their recent marriage at Ipswich, Suffolk, England. The bride b the daughter of Mrs. Evelyn McCluskey of Chantry Estate, Ipswich, and her husband’s parents ere Mrs. Lloyd L. Bigham of Olds- Wash Both Sides Rain boots and rubbers need occasional washings on the outside to keep them looking nice and on the inside to keep them from soiling shoes and hose. For a quick wash-up Clean them with a sponge and sudsy water. mobile Drive and the late Mr. Bigham. Airman l.C. Micheal McWilliams attended the bridegroom as best man at the ceremony performed in the register office at Ipswich. Return to Elegance . In Dining JieAOms 35* 4jftcuiids 3m VINTAGE WINES-COCKTAILS Woodward al Long Lake Rd. MIDWEST 4-4800 Mans State Tomorrow 9 to 9 Kuppenheimer and Madison regular *65 to -$135 $53.4119 Topcoats ) regular $79.95 to *125 $69’°$93 Sport Coats regular *45 to *79.95 $34472 ■ IHiA&AJM *!• flfoi MS Shoe Sale Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Deliso Debs HIGH and MID HEELS regular 19.95 Discontinued styles Sizes 5 to 10 AAAA to B widths MID or STACK HEELS regular 15.95 Discontinued styles Sizes 416 to 10 AAAA to B widths $in°° Gob Snow Boots regular to 24.95 \ 20% off regular price OPEN -TOMORROW 9 AM. TO 9 Pendleton (discontinued styles) coats/suits/skirts/pants/ robes/ cardigans/ blouses Repeat performance for the Pendleton value bonanza that's a sellout every yearl Replenish your weary wardrobe now with beloved Country Clothes by Pendleton — first quality casual wear for country, town and travel—and save untold dollattl Season-spanning 100% virgin wool every last one. Yes, even famous Pendlemate® Accessory cotton blouses are. price-cut to prove that fashion and bargains can be compatible. Sizes 8-20, sweaters 36-40. Not all sizes and colors in every style, but hundreds of beauties and hundreds of buysl Jusi be early for top selection. No phone or mail orders, please. HURON at TELEGRAPH ’ * " ' ST J . ,/5 ' f EIGHTEEN mif • " n • • , r PONTIAC PRESS, FRlbix JANUARY 10, 1964 11 —A- RANDALL’S SHOPPE NEW BEAUTY FOR 1964 MANICURE • HAIR CONDITIONER PERMANENT WAVE • STYLING 88 Wayne Street , FE 2-1424 Only the Best Is Good Enough .. The diamond which is a token of your love should be beautiful and flawless. Size is not of the greatest importance . . . quality is all-important. Nothing but the best (a flawless diamond) is good enough for her.. The Stare Where Quality Counts Giant pink . peonies converge on a white silk ground for ' this short evening costume designed by Scaasi for his Spring 1964 Boutique Collection. The bell-sleeved coat is lined with turquoise. Prints Make F ashion By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK - Prints make a big splash in the spring fashion picture. Prints come in abstracts copied right from modern art galleries. Prints come in florals, most of the splashes of posies exaggerated far beyond the size of the original. tit Prints in almost every collection include polka dots sized from pennies to pancakes. And there are the jungle prints, splashy designs . repeating the leaf and flower theme of the tropics. Prints for both day and evening dresses showed through the spring collections unveiled this week for the nation’s visiting fashion reporters. „ The nation has approximately 2.7 million men and women in the armed forces, an increase of 200,000 over 1960. Custom Dra paries » far Year Homs or Office! ARDEN'S • DrafMrtof • Cwftatn, • euomO PONTIAC MALL Unit Studies Etiquette Good manners was the subject for the Thursday evening meeting of the Child Culture Club of Pontiac. Mrs. Earl Steinhart, Mrs. Owen Rindbusz and Mrs. Dale Swanson lead the discussion held ,in the La Fay Street home of Mrs. William Thiede. Gold Star Meets Chapter nine of the American Gold Star Mothers, Inc. met for a cooperative luncheon Tuesday at the Sher-bourne Road home of Mrs. Lola Erb. Some ISO cancer pads were completed by members. CLEAR COLORS Designer Mollie Parnis did jungle prints in clear blue, red and green combination in daytime costumes of silk surah. Jo Copeland of Patullojo Copeland reached into the posy patch to pick floral prints. ★ ★ ♦ Designer Ferdinando Sarmi did a whole group of chiffons and warp silks in a French impressionist palette of florals. Oleg Cassini showed paisley printed blouses matched to the Paisley linings of suit jackets. Jane Derby liked black and white print combinations. t ^ Hand-painted chiffon prints were Anthony Blotta’s triumph. Glotta dared with a combination of black, orange, pink, red and purple in a cocktail dress. POLKA DOTS Through most New York collections polka dots were used. Sedate in size for suit blouses and jacket linings, they ranged on up to three ra. 501 EMBOSSED .... by Monticello Includes Tackless Installation over Sponge Rubber Pad. Big "N" Quality. DuPont's nylon yam woar guaranteed. A lovely omboMod carpet with a carved wMton look. Regularly telli for $6.96 for the carpet alone. You get carpet, $1.50 Ripplo Rubber Pad and $1.50 tackles* installation all for... i *6 98 Sq-Vd-i! sjmJSOI textured twist „ ... ILft#-MreMei.IMn.nl Kflfor carpet i» 8S.50 Yea pet cerpef, 81.50 Upple Rubber Ped InSlRlIBu ’ and $l.-'>0 tackleee installation •f yd. v!v 501 THICK LOOP Big “FT* DuPont yarn. Magnificent bemkonw loop dealer* order com for carpet U 86.56. You (ret carpet, 81*56 InStflllBQ 98 Ripple Rubber Pad end 81.50 tacki— installation. •q* *>:• yd 501 LUXURY TWIST Ovr beat teller, big "IP quality DuPont yam Excellent color line. Our 87.96 seller. Yeu pH carpet 81.56 Ripple Rubber Pad and $ 1.50 tackle*)* installation. Completely $ Installed 8 98 501 SUPERB TEXTURE Big **V quality DuPont nylon yam. Rear guaranteed. Our best tU-'W seller. You get carpel. Ripple Rubber Pad and 81.50 tecklcae installation. Gorgeous color line. Completely $ | Installed , 1981 *q- yd- CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON Good quality, 8 refer*, long wearing. An everyday seller for the eerpet alone. Yen gat eerpet, 8IA0 Ripple Rubber Ped end $1.50 tackle* inataMellon „ * Completely $ R 9 8 ■ S3 Installed 3 jjj FREE HOME SERVICE FOR CARPET AND CUSTOM DRAPERIES AND FINE QUALITY VINYL TAKE UP TO 3 YEARS TO PAY .NEW STORE HOURS. MONDAY and FRIDAY 10 A. M. to 9 P. M. TUES., WED and THURS. 10 A. M. to 6 P. M. SATURDAY 9 AM. to 6 P. M. Drayton Store Only Becfewitk-&ons SERVING NORTH OAKLAND COUNTY PINK FLOOR COVERINGS 4990 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains I ■ OR 4-0433 Selections Are Good Oil .JANUARY SHE IS IN FULL SWING Everything Reduced No Money Down Easy Tferms ILL BRAND NEW! Some models “One of a kind’ Some Scratched — marred — Display Models ............. But All Folly Guaranteed I Refrigerators-Televisions Ranges-rStereos—Ironers Frepzers—Radios—Washers Dryers—Cleaners lON’T MIS!! TV DOLLAR SAVINGS! The (001 HOUSEKEEPING Stop of PONTIAC 51 W. Huron FE 4-1555 Open Mon. & Fri. Tilf 9:00 3t inch diameters in some late day and evening clothes. Using polka dots the least was Norman Norell, holder of numerous fashion awards and always the individualist.1 Norell did new silk print blouses with the fabric repeated in the linings or sometimes lining and blouse mismatched but still blending. For NoTell, it’s the boyish look for the girls. His models’ coiffures store copies of the Paris bus boy cut—parted far over on one side and brushed across the forehead. Ears showed, but there were sideburns, plastered down. it it ★ Coats took on a military look with padded shoulders. Brass buttons added a military touch. Suits had the little boy look to them. Some of the suits came with knife-pleated skirts. Some were not suits at all but what the designer said a woman would wear on a suit occasion — skirt, shirt and scarf. The Ms liiiif bon and Garden tout Cafeteria TED'S RESTAURANT A Valentine Day wedding is planned by Penelope Ann Cullen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Case of Jerose Avenue and Dennis Alan Pills-bury, son oj Otis Pills-bury of Keego Harbor and Mrs. Dorothy Boyd of Lake Orion. Smh- Say It With FLOWERS by Jacobsen’s Jacobsen’s FLOWERS for 42 Terri Downtown Store 101 N. Saginaw Si. Pontine Phone FE 3-7165 Greenhouie, Garden Store and Nnraary Lake Orion Phone MY 2-26S1 Pendleton of discontinued styles . An event worth waiting for! Perfect Pendletons—wanted Pendletons— price-cut to save you countless dollars. Choose from scores of coats, suits, skirts, pants, robes and mohair sweaters. 100% virgin wool, naturally. And to complement them, 2 STORES IN THIS AREA even famous PendlemateD Accessory cotton blouses in solids and prints are reduced. But hurry for top selection! Sizes 8-20, sweaters 36-40; not all sizes and colon in each style. And please, no phone or mail orders. 32750 NORTHWESTERN at 14 Mile Road 2265 UNION LAKE ROAD Union Lake Village ' i •>; X ■ , a: rxr m ^ ry/«r-v "/ !/,v ///^<, 1 / ■;■•; mw. wrw? j4 in ml mmozm ■ |R ft ** w fSI THK PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1»66 W‘ 'I'i't-V*' Tl!?/ fV' ' ;/ 1 W, ■ •■ I '/)fir NINETEEN Altar Society Has Election of Officers Election of officers highlighted the annual meeting of the St. Michael Altar Society. Returning for a second term as president is Mrs. Gayle Coidaon. ★ ★ ★. Alao returning for second terms are Mrs. Joseph Cassation, first vice president; Mrs. Michael Harbert, recording secretary; hire. Roy Wie-gandt, corresponding secretary; and Miss Rose Griffin, treasurer. Beginning her first term is Mrs. John Myer, second vice president. Rev. James L. Hayes, pastor of St. Michael Catholic Church, is spiritual director for the group. PAST AND FUTURE Father Hayes spoke to the group of the progress made in St. Michael’s parish during the past year and outlined improvement plans for 1964. \ Plans were completed for the annual membership drive. ..Jk_ ★ * _____ Guest speaker was Jean-marie Elkins of the women’s department of The Pontiac Press. Next Altar Society meeting will be Feb. 4 in the basement of the parish hall. April vows are being planned by Dorothy M. Marvin, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. A. C. Marvin of East Longfellow Avenue, and William H. Mines, son of Mr. and Mrs. Geprge Mines of Orchdrd Lake. She attended St. Paul Bible College, St. Paul, Minn. Philia Theta Sees Film on Heart Massage Sgt. Donald Kratt, of the Oakland County Sheriffs dedepartment, presented a film and lecture on “Closed Heart Massage” to members of the Philia Theta Club and their guests. Hans for the annual Valentine dinner-dance to be held in February were completed it the Wednesday evening meeting in the public meeting room of Airway Lanes. Mrs. Henry Grace is chairman of the affair. WWW The February meeting will be held at .the home of Mrs. Maynard Carrlgan on Kingfisher Lane in Clarkston. Comfort Cushion for Tiny Jots For toddlers only: A new car seat upholstered in soft vinyl foam. The sleeky styled bucket-seah weighs five pounds and combs with a padded adjustable -retaining bar to secure baby comfortably for short Journeys and extended trips. JNeumode "TIP-TOE" SHEER SEAMLESS 55*; Tuesday Mu to Hear Local Pianist DAVID WILSON Newcomers See Flower Groups Mrs. A. W. Bickley gave a demonstration on flower arranging at the Wednesday night meeting of the Pontiac Newcomers Club. Mrs. James G r a y b 1 e 1 opened her Oneida Road home for the gathering which included Mrs. Boss EUiott as a guest. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Edward Mallonen anjj Mrs. J. W. Burch. Foot History Stretched Point Long and Wide When pointed toes grew out of fashion (and they stretched to a foot long in the late 1400's), they went to die opposite extreme. By the dawn of the Renaissance (1500), all shoes displayed round toes. The farmer exaggeration in lengths now veered to an exaggeration in width. No one was considered fashionable unless his shoe measured a foot across the toe! Moreover, these broad toes were stuffed with moss which turned them into veritable rolls. The'law finally had to regulate the width of shoes. David Wilson, pianist, will be guest artist at the Tuesday meeting of the Pontiac Tuesday Musicale at 1:90 p.m. In the Fellowship Hall of Grace Lutheran Church. a a a Mr. Wilson has studied piano with Bertha Roth of Pontiac, Margaret Manneback of the Detroit Institute of Musical Arts and Marian Owen of the University of Michigan. He has also studied organ and accompanying. At present Mr. Wilson is working on his Master of Music degree at the university and is the organist of Central Christian Church, Pontiac. PROGRAM His program Tuesday will include Op. lip, First Movement (A. Major) by Beethoven; Second Images, Et La Lune Descend Sur Le Temple Que Fut (The moon descends on the temple that was) by Debussy; and First Sonata, First Movement, by Ives. it it it Also appearing on the program will be 1963 Tuesday Musicale Scholarship winners Donna Rofe, flutist; Ann Peterson, pianist; and Beverly Patton, violinist. MEET to EAT RIKER FOUNTAIN in the lobby of the Hiker Building 95 W. Huron St. KINNEY'S SHOES PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE Regal Wild Bird Mixture SmufUtmr teed, Millet, Milo Maine, Wheat and Buckwheat 25 lbs. 2.39 10 lbs. 1.00 5 lbs. 59c I MIXED GRAIN-Wild bird size... "... 25 lbs, 1.45 & CRACKED CORN ............... 25 lbs. 1.30 £ SUNFLOWER SEED-19c lb. ..... . 5 lbs. 90c. :| ROCK SALT FOR THAWING, . 100 lbs. $1.90 REGAL, FEED and LAWN SUPPLY CO. Pontiac Store 2690 Woodward, FE 5-3802 82 N. SAGINAW ST. ON ALL mm /amo«* Pefpytrell n ■■■■■■Mil ■■ v ^ Now, far a limited time only at these prides you am fill in oar stiaAywx ^prvice^toveted ifi gay es a beautiful sunny day in tMffomft, You will love the exciting Hiiblors interesting shajjajlf Hand-crafted and decorated peima-j D^DtJy finder glaze— oven and detergent proof—durable. k DIXIE POTTERY 5281 DIXIE HWY. A OR 3-1894 .fl HIM Department Stare SALE discontinued styles Pendleton coats/suits/skirts/pants/robes! cardigans / blouses Repeat performance for the Pendleton value bonanza that’e a sellout every year! Replenieh your weary wardrobe now with beloved Country Clothes by Pendleton—first-quality eaimahraar for country, town end travel—and save untold dollars 1 Season-spanning 100% virgin wool every list one. Yes, even famous Pendlemate® Accessory cotton blouses are price-cut to prove that fashion and bargains can be compatible. Sizes 8-20, sweaters 36-40. Not all sizes and colors in every style, but hundreds of beauties and hundreds of buys! Just be early for top selection. No phone or mail orders, please. SALE STARTS SAT. MORNING 10 A.M. 911 Items on Sale Will Be Tagged for Your Convenieiiee Storo-Wido SALE All Our FAMOUS NAME BRANDS 5 50% off R&M DEPARTMENT STORE 1555 UNION LAKE ROAD “Shop RAM the Casual Way” Store Hours Weekdays 10 AM. to 8 P.M. * Fri. and Sat 10 AM. to 9 P.M. UNION LAKE VILLAGE EM 3-3912 1 l I DINING ROOM LIVING ROOM I I Rtf. $255.51 COLONIAL LOVE SEAT ROCKER in »olkj maple — your choice of Color*. $219.95 Rtf. $239.06 FRENCH PROVENCAL SOFA lii. elegant tapestry. Deep hand tufted back, foam cushions, zipper coven, fruitwood trim, 2 only, avocado & suntan from Hickory Hill mfg. $149.95 « Rtf. $349.tS MODERN WIDE ARM 0 SOFA A CHAIR) Hal brown or turquoiif nylon cover for long wear,* spring front, pincore foam rybber cushions, zippered £090 QC covers. While 2 last. Rtf. $357.50 CHESTERFIELD SOFA BY K0DAW00D OF MIAMI, FLORIDA! In beautiful pastel designer color. Solid foam cushions, wrapped completely cto 3 sides in -.w.i.rv: $279.95 Choir available in Bittersweet.. $96.00 g Reg. $269.95 COLONIAL SOFA BY Memphis in - gorgeous nylon white & brown & melon print fabric. Maple wood trim, just right for comfort, beoityA quality. $199.95 Rtf. $189.95 MODERN THIN ARM HIDEBED With innerspring mattress in durable nylon cover and foam seat cushions, 1 only. $154.95 7 Rtf. $199.9$ THIN ARM $0FA BED grid matching chair with removable foam cushions ond zipper covers. 2 ohty. $119.95 Rtf. $279.99 DANISH LOOSE CUSHION • Bock sofas. 2 only. Self decked, foam cushions, heavy durable covers, 84-inch length, brown & forest ivy colors. Hurry for these. $198.00 Ntf. $299.95 TWO PIECE WIDE ARM SOFA A CHAIR SETS-turquoise -Beige, Brown-Rose, Beige-Spring Front, deep tufted bock, nylon for both couch arm covers and choir-fooih cushions $184.50 J0 Rtf. $239.16 COLONIAL Si” INCH SOFA-WING BACK-Pillow Styling fodm,cushions-■■j zipper covers-arm covers-durable tobric in char. brown while one lasts. $134.50 11 Rea $145.55 MOOENN 2 PC. WIDE - AIM SWTES-Ourabl. fabric-foam cushions- lippercovers-self decked-while they last. $79.95 12 17 21 22 Ntf. $449.95 PULASKI BEDROOM SUITE Includes triple dresser-plate glass mirror, huge chest of drawers, and beautiful panel bed with wicker* inlay, seupfured front design, dust proof drawers, center quided, & dovetailed. $294.50 J3 Rtf. $256.00 OAK, OX YOKE RED 4 drawer chest, triple dresser ond large fronted $169.00 14 Rtf. $327.M WHITE FRENCH PRONDERAM BEDROOM SUITE with tester bed, and canopy, large chest, double dresser’ with large framed mirror. $218.00 J5 Rtf. $399.95 SPANISH (PECAN) SUITE With large 4 drawer chest, triple dresser with extra large mirror and heavy panel bed. $242.00 Htf. $44544 BEAUTIFUL SOLID, EARLY AMERICAN BEDROOM SUITE with Cannonball panel bed, large 5 drawer chest and heavy double dresser with large framed mirrpr. $269.70 Rtg. $457.00 SOLID MAPLE ELEGANCE IN A BEDROOM OUTFIT) Bookcom bed with sliding front panel, double dresser with large mirror and extra large 5 drawer chest. - $325.00 18 Rtf. $454.55 SOLID MAPLE ELEGANCE IN A BEDROOM OUTFIT Panel bed wMh double dresser with large mirror ond extra large 5 drawer cfietf. $299.00 19 S412.M BEAUTIFUL (OLIO, EARLY AMERICAN BEDROOM SUITE with Cannonball spindle bud, large 5 drawer chest and heavy double dresser with large framed mirror. $279.50 9Q Rtf. S4SMS 5OU0 DANISH MODERN BEDROOM In walnut finish. Big bookcase headboard 10" defp, triple dresser with large frame mirror 4 matching bachelors chest. * $269.50 Rtf. $323.55 DANISH MODERN BEQROOM SUITE IN WALNUT including large 4 drawer chest, triple dresser and extra large mirror, night stand and full sizejpanel bed. . $210.95 Rtf. SSSSJS DANISH MODERN BEDROOM SUITE IN WAMMT including large 4 drawer chest, triple dresser pad extra large ifiirror, nl hi Hand and twin panel beds- $239.10 SECTIONALS Tremwndous in a wide variety of colors and fa foam cushions zippered from For the lady of the House. Small Swivel Rockers • Burnt Oiong# • Black • Gold 4 Brown • Tan t Turquoist Beautiful Swivel Rocker in naugahydt or nylon covtr*. Your Choica.... $7450 Pillow-Back Recliners sggts in htavy super - toft naugahydt. Many colors to choost. 23 Rtg. $17541 COLONIAL DIMM ROOM w SET. 42" round plastic top with one 12*' leaf. 2 captains choirs and 2 side chairs with upholstered seats. $120.00 24 Rtf. $25445 COLONIAL DININS ROOM SET ^ Plastic top table and 4 maple winston chairs. BE Rtf. $55545 DUALITY COLONIAL OtNINN 40 bqSi-------- ROOM SET with large high pressure plastic 4ep ond 4 Dukesbury chairs. $199.90 PLEASE NOTE THE LISTINGS WITH NUMBERS CORRESPOND WITH THE NUMBERS TAGGED ON THE ITEMS IN OUR STORE. MANY ONE OF A KINO SO BE HERE EARLY Plenty of Free Parking Froo Delivery Anywhere it Ltwtr Michigan HlME T6INI8IIN68 m OPEN IS t» I WEEKDAYS—12 to S SUNDAYS FURNITURE - CARPETING • APPLIANCES 2135 Dixit Hwy., Pontiac-FE 5-8124 THE FAMILY STORE THAT CATERS TO YOU!!! TWENTY THE I'ONTIAC PRESS. F1UDA\ (V'ilNtol kHV lb, 19641 f ICCChief Says Railroads Will Never Be Obsolete WASHINGTON (AP) - The new chairman of. the Interstate Commerce Commission took a look at the nation’s railroad in- dustry today and declared the patient healthy and sound. “They’ll never be obsolete-no, sir,” declared Abe McGreg- Car Production Up for Week DETROIT (AP)—U.S. domestic passenger car production will total an estimated 175,180 units this week, Automotive News said Thursday. The production figure compares with 160,752 units produced last week’and with 150,582 units turned out in the like week of 1963. W h it U.S. truck production will total an estimated 31,425 units this week compared with 21,820 last week and 28,406 units in the corresponding week of 1963. Canadian passenger car production will total an estimated, 14,008 units compared with 10,042 last week and 11,537 in the like week of 1963. Canadian truck production this week was estimated at 2,142 units compared with 1,651 units last week and 1,838 units in the like week of 1963. or Goff, 64, an Idaho Republican who assumed the chair of the 11-man commission Jan. 1. ★ ★ ★ “The railroads have had a tremendous increase in long-haul traffic,” Goff said in an interview. “I won’t make any specific predictions about the future, but all of our railroads are in much healthier shape than they were last year at this time.” Why, then, if the industry is so healthy, have so many mergers been consummated or proposed? IT’S SIMPLE “Why, that's simple,” Goff said. “Seventy-five years ago, when all the railroads were laid out, they didn’t lay them out in a pattern designed for modem condition^. They had no way of t there have to be some adjustknowing what this country] menta made.” would look like today. So now! Goff had a ready answer Gov. Connally to Run Again AUSTIN, Tex. (IWtov. John Connally of Texas, still recovering from bullet wounds inflicted by the assassin of President Kennedy, will run for a second two-year term in November.' When a newsman asked Connally yesterday when he would announce for reelectkm, the 41-year-old Democrat grinned and replied: “What's wrong with right new?” 'Connelly is a close friend and former political aide of President Johnson. He was secretary of the Navy In Kennedy’s administration when he resigned to run for governor in 1962. • ★ * * Connally was riding with Kennedy in Dallas Nov. 22 when a sniper killed the President. Con-lially was hit in the shoulder and wrist, j f * when asked whether he has a philosophy about railroad mergers. ....A- ★ Ar “Of course I do,” he said. “If they’re in the public interest, I favor than. If they’re bad, I’m against them.” . One of' the biggest merger cases the ICX? has considered in a long time is the proposal to mage the Pennsylvania and New York Central railroads. SIFT EVIDENCE Hearings on that proposal ended last kimmer after a year of arguments. Two IOC examiners are sifting through more than 20,000 pages of testimony and evidence,, Goff refused to predict when the final commission decision will be handed down. “That’s too hard to say safely,” he said./“But I’ll be aur-prised if the examiners have a recommendation before Labor day.” y ’Nickel silver, a copper base alloy containing nickel and sine is used as a base for silver plated flatware. /MBVaaTMMBNT) LAKE LIVING M LAMM M mtotow to lto»r-», MW mw CHryttor Hwy. (MR) MM pnri ttortow—tom, w**t Stownttoto, CwnmarCN, Cam; MlltocN, Kmthto-ton, CtorttNtoH. PMttoc, HMy «»». Yur RmM twnmHw. Dittorn NltoN. mtblto nHm. PavM tlimtt, tcftMta. church**, iRMfliR. bftlBf. tttot-f. beach. mrimmW RtoWH at yaar tuf tw *»**. It Sawn, to inanth. BLOCH BROS, tom Mr. thalL li a-rm—or nm. mm dixm Hwy. France has received more than $9 billion, in foreign aid from the United States since 1946. ; SANDERS FOR RENT TRAVIS HARDWARE l OrehiH Uk5 All. FI A-07S4 (AlviriliouoRt) Tense Nerves Block Bowels Yonr sotoa ba* ww tel control regularity. When you an ten»e or nervous, normal bowd impuliet may ba blocked—and yon become oMtti-Dated. Maw Cotomm tablet* relieva this mitety with • new principle--* unique colonic oerva stimulant plus tnedal bulking actioa u recommended by many doctors. Remit? Colon aid put* your coloa bock to work—sently relieve* constipation overnight. You feel great! Gat clinically-proved Colowaip today. labiMrtary doe IIt FAMILY HOME FURNISHINB6 WtEKEND TONIGHT SATURDAY & SUNDAY CLEAN UP ■ SWEEP UP tidyUpF UP TO 50% off our jugular prices!!! Most items are one of a kind, oo hurry down, Our loss is your savings all floor models nicked, slightly scratched, moderately soiled,- left over and year end cleanup gives you fantastic savings at Family Home Furnishings!!! * Help ns avoid excessive taxes I well help you avoid excessive furniture priees!!! 2135 DIXIE HWY. - PONTIAC - CORNER OF TELEGRAPH RD. u .. I J 4/ # *r:i py l '■■I Y'UiJt 'H,4. THE PONTIAC FRIDAY, JANUARY 10,1064 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. '• TWE^TY-O^E Modern TouchSparks PNH Auto Class NteWttUMNM By Bloomfield Schools Recreation Courses Planned By TERI SEIBERT Additional recreational activities which will begin the last week of January were announced recently by the Bloomfield Hills school system recreation department. Courses in deg obedience, fencing, gym aa sties, conversational German, knitting, modern dance, trampoline, and tennis will be available far BIcamfieM Hills High School students and Ughwcbeei *te~ .--Preparations for this event dents of the Bloomfield area. The courses will be offered at the high school for 8 to 12 weeks. ■ ■ A A * The senior class will sponsor a combination hootenanny and fun night tomorrow from 7 to 11 p.m. in the gym. In addition to the hootenanny, the evening’s activities will--include basketball, volleyball, and other sports. MAKES PREPARATIONS ' Roger Mikolas is making the Art instructor Donald Dei* Guest Speaker Addresses St. Michael High Seniors By MICHAEL (MANS This week, St. Michael High School students returned to school and activity intensified once more. A gnest speaker, Lana Music Program at Walled Ltike by Uruguayans By SUE GERVAIS The music and Spanish classes at Walled Lake High School were recently entertained by a group of Uruguayan musicians. The group, visiting under the Michigan Council of Churches Youth for Under-otending program, h headed by Erie Simon, national director of music education in Uruguay. Dressed in native peasant wear, The Castro Brothers — Michael, Rubin and Oscar — sang and played folk music while Maria, Rubin’s wife, danced. The quartet visited the high school not only to perform but also to observe the music classes. Because of limited finances, their schools are unable to have an extensive musical program. ■ - —„ —.:r. - ■ O’Dea, spoke) to the senior class Wednesday, Thursday and Friday on the “Morality of Marriage.’' O’Dea is a Catholic soda) worker for Catholic Charities of Oakland County. He also spoke on the same subject to seniors at Northern and Central. A A A St. Michael High School will play host to mpre than 108 Sisters of Saint Joocpfa, who will be here tomorrow. The sisters, high school principals and educational coordinators will discuss various aspects of education. PLAN PROJECTS Chibs around St. Michael held meetings to plan projects for the year. The Sodality is making preparations to attend the Training School of Sodality Action in Detrcit Jan. 28. This year’s theme is “Sodality in Society.” - Members of the freshman class were given a tuberculosis test to determine if any persons are carriers of the tuberculosis germ. . Today, the student body turned out for a pep rally, tor tonight the Mikemen play their cross-town rivals, St. Frederick. Tomorrow night, the varsity dub will sponsor a dance in the parish hpll from I to 11 p.m. Dress is casual. nls, who traveled in Earope and the Orient for six months in IMS, presented movies and commentaries of his trip to students daring class assemblies Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. AAA Dennis presented movies of his visits to India, the Middle East, Egypt, Nepal, Southeast Asia, Japan, Formosa and Hong Kong. He and his wife, Margaret, will present discussions of their trip for adult/ Wednesday.evening at the high school in connection wi th/the recreation department piftgram. A y * l • Senior members of the future teachers club' visited Wayne State University yesterday to observe teaching techniques. Deanna Maher, sponsor of the group, accompanied the 12 students to the University. TO ADDRESS CLUB « ... Later this month, Mrs. Kathleen Flint, assistant superintendent of instruction of the Bloomfield Hills school system, .will address the club concerning elementary school teaching. ' -A11 A idL.—...... '.M, St. Hears Landry Reviews Progress of Pontiac Daring 1963 r /By KATHY CARRY Many new events are taking place at St. Frederick High School as the new year gets into full swing. This week’s assembly featured Pontiac’s mayor, Robert Landry aq guest speaker. Landry reviewed accomplishments of the city in 1963 and briefly outlined plans for 1964. A A A The parents chib has begun a program to point-the. clasa-rooms throughout the school. Chairmen for the project have been selected and committees set lip. START THIS MONTH Work will get under way toward the end of this month. When finished, ^he brightened Jean Bard and his wife, Mme. Iris Avichay, world-renowned French actors, performed for the French club and French students from four local schools. Without the use of props or costumes, the couple offered a variety of interpretive readings, selections from plays/ and poetry. , A A A M. Bard attended L’Academie Francaise. He worked in the French theater before he and his wife began making appearances in Canada and the United States. rooms will set off the halls which were painted last spring. High school placement tests were given Tuesday to students who will enter as freshmen next year. , A v A , A Tonight, St. Freds meet St. Mikes in Pontiac Central’s gym for the second seasonal basketball game between the crosstown rivals. A proposal that Illinois law be changed to require school attendance until the age of 17 was presented to the state legislature by Gov. Kerner. Use Special Equipment By SUSAN KILLEN Added for the first time to the various curricula at Pontiac Northern High School this year was an automotive class. As new addition plans were .being carried out, a special room was built on the. end of the school’s shop wing. proud, is the dynamometer, built into the floor. Appropriated by the school board, this special machine la present in very few schools in our state. DIAGNOSE TROUBLE The set of instruments is designed to simulate road conditions, and engine trouble can be The room was equipped with diagnosed without running the a cement floor, a hoist, such as | automobile on the' street, found in garages, and many other special features, including garage doors for entrance of automobiles. A A * A , . One special feature, of which instructor William Taylor is WKHS Holds S Pantile Pratt Phot# AUTOMOTIVE CLASS—New this year at Pontiac Northern High School is an automotive class. Working on a car are (from left) Leo Dowdy of 141 West Rutgers and Jim Stechon of 2221 Opdyke. ' Ski Trip Is Planned at Pontiac Central Other School News Throughopt Week By DIANE OLSEN | port, secretary-treasurer. Mem-The Pontiac Central High! here are selected after out-School ski club Is attending its I stonding contributions to the first retreat of the winter sea-|yeartook or scho°1 new#W®r-son this weekend. The group I The Wo*®gy club will be left after school today and will £*‘‘0 *, spe*k,er ®" Mrco‘-v ics Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Tumbling Routines Highlight Program return Sunday evening. Sponsor John Zimmerle, basinets education, has made arrangements for the dab to board at the Thnnderbird Sports Lodge in the Caberfae ski area. Another club,' the Dolphins, are busy preparing for their annual water show. Chosen to J perform the solo swimming number is senior Marge Swan. AAA At Emmanuel Christian . ... . _. .. i r^ie duet will be by seniors Two buses will transport the | Marilyn Paholic and N a n c y Students Planning Career Day By CAROL ARMBRUSTER The student officers of Emmanuel Christian High School are putting last minute touches to plans made for Career Day, to be held Wednesday, la charge of this event is PmMm Prast Pinto CAREER DAY—Emmanuel Christian High School student body officers (from left) Glenn Holman of 5318 John R, Troy, Tim Mayer of 1957 Ansal Rochester, and Cherryl Jackson of 1279 General make final plans for career day, scheduled tor Wednesday. Ralph Wingate, president, and Thh Mayer, vice president. Secretary is Cherryl Jackson, treasurer is Kathy White, and Glenn Holman is the sergeant-at-arms. A A A This special program, which is held annually, has speakers from many different fields to inform students about the requirements, advantages and disadvantages of their particular careers. AMONG SPEAKERS Among the speakers will be representatives in the fields of education, engineering, 1 a w, medicine, music and photography. There will be speakers from the General Motors Institute, International Business Machines, Murray Beauty Academy, the Pontine Business Institute, und the Pontiac Psychological Services. Concluding the list will be an accountant, a former missionary, a social worker, and also representatives from the United States Air Force and Marines. AAA The career day activities will begin at noon and continue until the close of the school day. There will be two to three speakers an hour, and students will divide into groups,, according to their own personal interests. approximately 75 students and 13 faculty members to the out<\ ing near Cadillac. A A A Faculty members attending Lee. Performing in the trio are seniors Joyce Livingstone, Barbara Coram and Kay Kendrick, drick. ... . , _ , | A New York State Supreme are Michael Bell, social stud- Court justice has upheld the I ies; Donald McMillen, assist-1right of a board of education! ant principal; Dorothy Warth-ft®-revoke. aieacher’.s license he- man, physical education; Mary McKim, physical education; Tom Osier, business education; Gretchen Hubacker, English land French; William Graham, counseling; Mrs. William Graham and Robert Setterlind, vocal music; and Mrs. Robert cause he refused to participate in civil defense shelter drills. A A * A substitute teacher in the New York City schools was dismissed after being accused of refusing to lead his pupils in a drill. “He said he could not coop- Setterlind and Ralph Gardner, crate because the drills were vocational. I “a direct gesture supporting our nation’s willingness to use or TOBOGGAN PARTY The American Field Service, advised by James Maywhoor, social studies, is planning a toboggan party Jan. 23. The club will spend the evening at Murphy Park and meet afterward at the home of president Denise Patton. Jan. 22, the adult chapter of the AFS is sponsoring an open house for the parents of members of the club. Applications for foreign exchange students are being sent out by the AFS. Anyone wishing to provide a home, next year for an exchange student should contact the school or Denise Patton. A. A A An honorary literary society at Central, the Quill and Scroll, has elected officers for the semester. threaten to use nuclear weap-ons.” The decision, will be appealed to a higher state court. By JOY McREyNOLDS Staging a physical fitness program for their fathers, members of the Girls Athletic Association letter club organized the third Pop’s Night at Waterford Kettering High School Monday. Father and daughter events of the evening Included volleyball and various relays. Highlighting the program, several club members staged a tumbling demonstration. Participants included Sandra George and Kathy Coleman, with a double routine; Janet Shipman on the balance beam; and Ellen Oakes performing a basic tumbling routine. Sandra George was chairman of the event. Wednesday morning the Waterford Kettering student body viewed the symphonic assembly “Music and the Band.’’ SHOWED POSITION Under the direction of George Fetter, the band strove to display the position of the symphonic band in the musical arena. Objective of the performance was to demonstrate the ingredients of music, rhythm, and form,- and explain their relationship to the band.._ Among the selections included in the assembly were “Montmartre March,” “Promenade,” and “On the Trail.” Today marked the beginning of. the 17th Annual Delegates Congress of the Cooperative Education club of Michigan at St. Mary’s Lake, Battle Creek. Representing Waterford Kettering are Connie GrieSbach, Sue Rinkenberger, Deanna i Pontiac Motor Division of General Motors Corp. has supplied a 1964 Tempest Isf the students to operate on the dynamometer. This Tempest is slightly different than those sold on the market today. AAA It has been specially cut down so that .the boys working on it have-no trouble gaining access to any part. Left hand side of the body has been eliminated and the roof, unnecessary for work in the classroom, is removed. INDUSTRIAL PROGRAM The class Taylor conducts la a three-hour trade and industrial program. The students in the class work with the dynamemeter, several engines which have been given to the class. Rani automobiles are alas brought in for minor repairs. Anthony Chiarilli, drama coach at Pontiac Northern, has announced that the next play .Northern Players produce will be a melodrama thriller. It la entitled, “Tito Desperate Hours."' A A A The play will go oh stage May 1 and 2. Tryouts will take place during the latter half of January. STUDENT TEACHERS '’ Four seniors from Michigan State University have been added to the faculty of PNH aa student teachers. These students will be present at Northern for a period of ten weeks. During this period, they wfll work with classes related to the subject which they hope to teach after graduation. Their supervisors will then grade them for this period of study and teaching. AAA Working with Madeline McConnell, the physical education instructor, will be Lucy Fomenko. Judy Harvey will be under supervision of A. J. Wilson and David Schmidt, both of the social studies department. AAA N. W. Gray, head of the language department, will supervise the teaching of Deena Drymis, a Spanish major. Kay Plumber will teach bookkeeping, typing and business Oesch, and Cheryl Wilborne Also attending is coop club spon-1 mathematics under eyes of Jo-sor Ronald Koski. seph Corbiel. Events, Activities at Other Area Schools ROCHESTER W. BLOOMFIELD By SUE GOTSHALL The West Bloomfield High School ski club members' left after school today for Walloon Hills and will return Sunday evening. They are being accom- pai Wi NEW PRESIDENT Carol Godoshian is the new president, Cheryl Wilton, vice president; and Carole Rapa- alter Poe, structor. history in- Another ski club activity was the weekly excursion of club members to Mount Holly Tuesday afternoon. AAA Other club activities include chess club, debate, cheerleaders and student council. A. chess club meeting was held Wednesday after school. West Bloomfield debaters met Northville High School Wednesday afternoon at Bloomfield Hills High School. Debate topic was Medicare. The cheerleaders held a short pep session Tuesday afternoon for the game with Holly that night. An unusual basketball game will be held at Rochester High School as the faculty plays the key club tomorrow night at 8 p.m. • A A A • Players’ hands, the baskets, the basketball and the floor markings viB be treated with a special fluorescent paint, and the game will be partially Student council members met I played in the dark. Craig Allen Wednesday to discuss the up- is captain of the key club, coming talent show tryouts. | Plans are under way for the The first meeting of the newly organized pep club will be held Wednesday. varsity band concert to be held Jan. 39 under the direction of Richard Goldsworth. ffS teachers to ^Study Flint City-School ons ■ By MARY BARNINGHAM Twelve Watetford Township High School faculty members will travel to Flint Monday to observe the community-echool relationship as it exists in the City of Hint. Teachers and citizens from aB Waterford TeWafhlp schools W0 observe the FHnt public aaltoob aa al pads levels, from elementary to adett education. Twotour semester exams will be given Jan. 21 and 22. On Tuesday, exams will be given in first-, second- and sixth-hour classes. On Wednesday, exams will be givsn hi third-, fourth- pnd fifth-hour classes. This scheduling ef earns aBqm seniors who have Jobs to leave school In time to go to work. Students will not attend classes Jan. 23 and 24. Eleven WTHS students earned all A’s during the sec-ad marking period.. Six seniors who made the all-A honor roll are Norbert Donnelly, Larry Griffin, Leamw Poffenberger, Ronald Potter, Margaret Wilson and Sherry Zannoth. AAA Helen Garrick was the only Junior ip the all-A category; Sophomores Sandra Elliott, Janet Paacoe, Mary sue Trerice and Carol Warden also ranked among the all-A students. Earl Freeman’s Biology II classes will visit the University of Michigan Medical Center in Ann Arbor Monday. They will tour the medical cater and observe dissection ef a deg. The trip wfll be made by bus at cost of $1M per student. Four student teachers from Michigan State University will complete their practice teaching requirements this term at WTHS. In the art department, under direction of John Banick, is Carol Shepherd. Gilbert Bergs-rud will supervise Richard Joan in the speech department. A -A A Sara Barningham will do her student teaching in the biology department under supervision of Earl Freeman. Jerry Davis may be found in the history deportment under direction of James A me 11. Two cooperative education students traveled to St. Mary Lake in Battle Creek this weekend for a delegate’s congress at which state officers are .to be elected. Those attending the convention are Larry Carlson and Daniel Coulter. * 7 ■ r: Ji ■’' . .y.:■' --JM J’jfc ( * t A ■ . /' m. a I I Jill’ y'rm ft jif / ff 111 nil Co., 00 City, Pa., died Wednesday after a brief illness. Cuba Harvest of Sugar One of Smallest Oil Firm Exec Expires PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Robert W. Grunert 60, executive' vice president of the Penn- BATTLE CREEK (AP)-OHv-er Electrical Manufacturing Co. will set up a plant at Vicksburg, Miss., to be completed in 1965 and eventually employ 500 persons. Officials of the Arm, which manufactures Insulators, parts lor generators and other electrical equipment, said fall operations will continue at Battle Creek, which will remaip the company's headquarters. “In view of the continued growth of shipments to the South we decided on a southern location,” said George C. Price, company president. Price said the press of orders has forced the Ann to a three-shift, seven-day schedule at times in Battle Creek, where about 100 persons are employed. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Cuba, once the world’s greatest sugar bowl, will harvest her smallest crop in 21 years this year, exiled planter^ estimated today. The harvest, Just begun, was estimated at 3 million metric tons on the basis of a survey by the Sugar Planters Association of Cuba’in Exile. A metric ton Is 2,300 pounds. * ♦ The estimate compares with 3,600,000 tons produced in 1963 and a 0-million-ton average during the years before Prime Minister Fidel Castro’s Communist-dominated government attained power. ★ ★ ★ Pedro Martinez, spokesman for the exile growers association, said such factors as low yields, damaged by Hurricane Flora and possible sabotage figured in production calculations. A Perfect Diamond FOP THE ONE YOU LOVE BIG VALUE Furniture Discounters MONTHLY BOYD $175.00 Also to $1800 Wedding Ring $62.50 Press Group toHearTalk by Johnson Noted Curator Dias GREENCASTLE, Ind. (AP)-Dr. Truman G. Yuncker, 72, curator of DePauw University’s herbarium, died Wednesday. 24 NORTH SAGINAW ST. Downtown Pontiac OHLSEN $225.00 Also $225 to 1650 Wedding Ring $75.00 SWIVEL CHAIR $|086 NEW YORK (AP)—President Johnson will speak at die annual Associated Press meeting April 20. Paul Miller, president of the AP, said Thursday he had received confirmation from the White House of Johnson’s appearance. The invitation had been extended some time ago for the President to address the annual luncheon gathering of the cooperative newsgathering association. SCREEN • Hand Wired comply* OF BUNK I The last president to appear at pw meeting was Dwight D. Eisenhower. The AP meeting at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel usually draws more than 1AM -American newspaper publishers and their wives. REPRESENTATIVES Radio and television representatives and presidents of the networks attend the meeting. A number of foreign publishers and executives of foreign news services also are planning to at- j tend the 1964 meetings. The AP luncheon is an open-j ing attraction of New York's an-, mud newspaper week each spring. It is followed by the convention of the American Newspaper Publishers Association. On All Parts At No Extra Cost! ttos.l’W® * found-**0"* GwdWl-u* Walnut or Seamist - DOUBLE DRESSER, OUST IND BOOKCASE BED-MIRROR COLOR PERFECT Curtis Mathes COLOR TV In wood cabinet—1-year guarantee on all parts for ♦399” at The Westchester ‘169% 2 Stap Tablos 1 Coffea Table 2 Tablo Lamps OPEN MON. and FRI. ’TIL 9:00 P.M. PARK FREE BEHIND STORE PmHu’i Amthmriwd CmrtU Maths i Salst ami Ssrvicsl Ex-Irish Envoy Dead FLORENCE, Italy (AP) -William J. Bl Macaulay, Ut former Irish ambassador to the Vatican, died Tuesday. 158 OAKLAND AVE. 100% NYLON COVER INSPIRED MODERN STYLING REVERSIBLE ZIPPERED CUSHIONS < QUALITY CMSTRUCTIM-IIO MONEY DOWN PAINT-BUILDING SUPPLIES-COAL FE 4-2621 UPENItoO SAT. • to 12 W« Invito Too To LMon Te "WORLD NEWS" Dolly of 10 A.M.-l t A.M.-9 P.M. W.H.F.1.94.7 FM 540 N. Saginaw SHEET ROCK Don '{ Live wiih the DRIP family, they’ll cost you plenty! 4x8-% 4x8-Vi MttnigSSES, BOX SPRlHO* XeerOhelee On Your Firi Igjey Sms si.. 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SERVICE ■DBBBpI " ; 'MICHIGAN S LARGEST JElNEURS LIVING ROOM BARGAIN BOMBSHELL APPLIANCES 1 PAY I WEEKLY [ vW \ \ // I • PAY j f: -J \nr%l »i *, 4 f >mi THB PfrNTIACn PRESS FRIDAY, JANUARY ID. 1864 Tit f 1 ti ' ''»■* TWENTY-THREE Get Weekend 0$ to Ponder Romney Proposals LANSING (AP) *- Legislators today began a long weekend off, with a record 1624 million state budget figure and Gov. George Romney's 1964 legislative program on their minds. Romney and nearly half the lawmakers were on a visit to NEW RCA VICTOR “LIVING COLOR TV” ... for as little at ^388wltii Iwith trad* — One Year Warranty Included — Now enjoy your favorite TV programs even morel See them in breathtaking natural color—Or sparkling black-and-white— With RCA Victor's superb new "Living Color" TV. It's the finest TV ever made—in a complete line of Cabinet designs and finishes styled to bring beauty to every home. GET OUR PRICES REFORE YOU BUY WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS 1157 W. Huron FE 2-6567 Cadillac and Manistee for first-hand look at the growing role winter sports Is playing jn Michigan’s economy. ■' ★ Nature accommodated the host, Rep. John Toepp, R-Cadil lac by providing six Inches of new snow to show the Caberfae and Big M ski areas off at their best. Romney was to address the lawmaker-tourists at a luncheon today and return early Saturday for an appearance at a Republican leadership seminar in Lansing. ADJOURNMENT The legislature Thursday set a May 22 target date for final adjournment of the regular session which started Wednesday. The bulk of its work will be done by April 18, under the timetable. Sessions resume Tuesday night, but both houses are expected to be in low gear until Romney presents his line-item budget proposal Jan. 22. The 6624 million figure in his “State (ARvartlaamawl) doFALSE TEETH Rock, Slid* or Slip? VASTKirra. u improved powder to pe eprtnued oa upper at lower pie tee. bold* teiee teeth more (Irmly In piece, uo not eude. tup or roek. No summv. jonev, aeety Uete or IMUnt. r ASTKBYH ta alkaline i nun-ectd). Duet not rour Check, odor breeth". Get PAUTXVm el drug counter* everywhere. ■;.•) When you see a Continental, take a second look. Notice the kind of person who enjoys it. Then experience the Continental yourself. Discover its increased spaciousness, its ride, its luxury. You will know why more than half the people \yho buy in our price range . choose the Continental, the modern American classic. of the State" speech Thursday was not broken down by agencies. Meanwhile, absenteeism will be high due in part to the excused absences of the 10-man Senate Appropriations Committee and the 12-member House Wayne and Means Committee. The committees will spend the week touring state institutions such as hospitals and colleges, on whose budgets they pass Judgment. Another three-day visit to Southern Michigan Prison, is planned by a corrections committee. The legislative schedule sets deadlines of Feb. 19 for introduc-tion of bills, March 11 for passage of bills in their house of origin, April 15 for passage in the other house, and reserves April 16-17 for conference committee work to try to resolve differences between the two houses on specific bills. In the house Thursday, a resolution was introduced to renew the Joint Interim Committee on which drafted legislation in the last special session of 1963. ★ a ★ Another resolution' was < tered to name an interim com-i the question of whether employ-mittee to study the state’s auto es in branch offices of the Secre-license plate sale procedures, tary pf State should be placed Included in its work would be I under civil service. (Atwrtlumrol) Sleep Like Log StMStmael 6m b I Martas bee* It drat i l«t Take tall-ent bot watar at bad thM. wi bad until ayaa abut. ltd-ana tabltta ralltvt atowach iaa dot to metal ataandi acM. th tortiiiw pan. tone ttmtta SdlltilL Oraniabuii, N. Y, for llbtral trot titplt ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Cost Not Set iauds Mental Health Plan LANSING (AP)—Charles F. Wagg, director of the state’s Mental Health Department, said the mental health expansion program recommended Thursday-by Gov-George Romney “was worked out by our department at his request." “I’m pleased he’s making these recommendations,” Wagg added. Romney set no cost figures Cong Cooling Toward China? Report Falling-Out Over Red Ideology LONDON (UPI) — Differences were reported arising today between Communist China and North Viet Nam, its key ally in Southeast Asia. -^-Lincoln Continental V LINCOLN MCRCU.T DIVISION MOtON COMMNV LLOYD MOTORS UNCOLN — MERCURY—COMET 232 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET FE 2-9131 CALL MOLE’S it FEderal 4-1594 i lUCttTUMNMtk •A for a new BATHROOM Add-A-Bathroom or Update Your Present One! *20” A New Bathroom Can Be Yours for as little as../. .. i....... Per Month Call Poolet for a Fraa At-Home Estimate on Any Homo Improvement! 66 Years of Continuous, Reliable Service to the Community! LUMBER & HARDWARE i PAINT and wallpaper £g < 3 ^ fSf OAKLAND AVE.. PONTIACFH4-IS941 F0Y-J0HNST0N Mirada Mb Mapping Cantor Communist reports said Ho CM Mink, North Viet Nam’s president and one of communism’s elder statesmen in Asia, had cooled toward Peking’s political and ideological strategy and had fallen out of favor with Red China’s “hard Une” lenders. The reports'said the Chinese | regime of Communist leader j Mao Tze-tung is seeking to isolate Ho in an apparent effort to keep its hold on the rest of the North Vietnamese party hierarchy. ★ ★ ★ North Viet Nam has been a trusted ally, of Peking to its dispute with the Soviet Union and in its efforts to penetrate Southeast Asia. SUBSTANTIAL AID Hie Vietnamese Communists have received extensive Red Chinese assistance for activities against the pro-Western South Vietnamese government. Ho enjoys strong influence among Asia’s non • Chinese Communists, and Communist affairs experts here said a rift with Peking could have far-reaching effects on die P e -king • Moscow quarrel and on Chiba’s status in the region. The experts said diplomatic information reaching London indicated control of North Viet Nam apparently still is in the hands of the government faction which backs Peking’s mi-itant policies. ★. f. ★ Communist China rejects Moscow’s policy of coexistence with Western capitalists and does not exclude nuclear war as a means of spreading communism. MEDIATION Two possible causes of a rift between Ho and Mao, the experts said, could be Ho’s efforts to mediate the Peking-Moscow dispute and reports that he favored some sort of peace arrangement with South Viet Nam. ★ ★ * Ho is known to have made two formal attempts to mediate between Mao * and Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, but failed both times. Subsequently little news about him was heard in the West in making his expansion proposals to the legislature, and Wagg said he did not know what the total program would cost. “This 'is being worked out now,", Wagg. said, “and will be included in the budget document.” BUDGET, Romney is scheduled to submit his 1964-65 fiscal year budget Jan. 22. The governor termed a waiting list of 1,800 mentally retarded children “unconscionable” end said “funds should be appropriated for complete plans and a construction start on a new 800 to 1,000 bed facility in west central Michigan.” ewe In addition, Romney said “I will recommend funds to open 500 new beds at Plymouth, 200 at Mount Pleasant and 40 at Gaylord, plus 320 temporary beds at Fort Custer.” Turning to the mentally ill, the governor said “care for the mentally ill presents a correspondingly severe challenge,” and asserted: ★ h it “More funds are needed for training, research, in-patient care of children, out-patient care of both children and adults, and emphasis on the county referral programs. The co mmunity clinic program should be expanded.” Coming Soon... to Pontiac! a new John Deere Dealer The John Deere Co. will announce a new John Deere Lqwn and Garden Tractor Dealer for the Pontiac Area in the near future. You can be assured that the new dealer will meet all the rigid requirements of the 127 years reputation established by the John Deere Company in Lawn and Garden Equipment sales and service. WATCH FOR THE ANNOUNCEMENT Foreign aid purchases in the United States helps provide jobs for more than 550,000 workers, according to a recent joint statement by Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., and Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y. The Spotlite Home • Three Bedrooms • Full Basement • Oak Floors • Furniture Cabinets Built-In Vanity • All City Convenienees NO MONEY DOWN As Low As *62 Per Month Includes Principle and Interest HOUSES! HOUSES! V HOUSES! \ HOUSES! (Without Taxes and Insurance) HOUSES! HOUSES! HOUSES! Homes Are Located In Every Section Of The City! SNiun TWO MODEL LOCATIONS OPEN 11:00 A.M. TILL 8 P.M. EVERY DAY 960 Arlene FE 44965 40 E. Brooklyn V BUILDERS FE 4-0985 FE 4-666S & p | r m Z m >a u Hi Vfc X* 55 r s Vs. MADISON CD NCW Baldwin 7UNIOC? HIGH FcHboL E. BROOKLYN ra^TN^Biy ' % WALTON BLVD. wm Wt m ' - /• i 1 •' ;fev*. 1 .|JV Iviil'cv, tk' i. . ' I, ,J ( nil . -u ii. v'J • r'M A % mm Iw ■ tyi* a twenty-four ,. ‘fit ■.ip fi ,7 7"" (0 ; f| m;. > if - -*3 THK PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1984 t„ Tu#»., Wed., Fri., Sot. and Sun. DANNY ZELLA and HlrZEL-TONES For Your Datyting and, Listening Pleasure The royal : JOKERS : Fabulous FLOOR SHOW EVERY SATURDAY fuhmlou* tinging comody group Tony Mono Comedy M.C. COLOR TV MICHIGAN'S LARGEST NEW DANCE FLOOR Comer #1 Elizabeth ■ Lak* and Cat* lake ■ Road* _ i Short Block West ■ R Call For Reservation* FE 2-2981 of Huron ■■IIII■■■■■II■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■80l| i Dell’s Inn TOY iOMSTNINO DIPPanONTI (OARRY-OUT-FI I NN) MEXICAN FOODS II TUULES Ml COFFEE....13*'* Man. thru Than. 10 s.m. - 10 p.m. VARIETY OF «25 MEXICAN DINNER.. . I Friday & Saturday: 10 A.M. - 4 A.M. Carmen>s RESTAURANT 846 JoilyW Aetna tram raatlac ■■slanrtas ✓ NOW SERVING DELICIOUS PIZZA (13) VARIETIES In addition to our regular complete dinnart aad sandwich selections. TRY RAIL'S CURD or COM-< FORT ABIE DININO ROOM 4 SERVICE. INSIDE SERVICE , ALL WINTER. RHONE OR 3-7173. DRIVE-IN RAELS 6225 HIGHLAND RD. Acre* Fw* Nntlec Abuwt Open Tuet. thru Sun.' 10 AAA. to 12 Midnight GOOD for 25® Or AH Nrotew Of ANY SIZE delicious *aaA •k II— Tins COUPON Entitles 50 You to C on Any Large PIZZA omra expires iaiyuart it <;ii\o RESTAURANT 714 Woodward — Ph. 338-1338 ^ Comer of Woodward sad Sooth Bird. fawns FOUR SEASONS INN Full Course Diimors . * . . • * OPEN S DATS A WEEK — CLOSED MONDAYS FOUR SEASONS INN 10197 Dials Hwy. Vi Mil# S. of Holly Rd. Phono 625-1021 Chuck Chandler, Res. Mgr- EAGLE Pontiac's POPULAR THEATER Wssk Saya OmHnuon 11 imhllta. IssSsyi CohNumm It aa. la It |a. TOO YOUNG TO KNOW-T00 WILD TO CANE-TOO EAGER TO SAY^OTll|“ »neefMON pnooucnoe -A fiimgaoup p*»runtation ■ ikV . r ^ U P P ■ii ■hm\ U i.W' HE/I it?. X; i . 1/10 \ Smell at Camp Horrified Nazi But Not Rosponsiblo for Auschwitz Doaths FRANKFURT, Germany (UPI) — A former top official at die Nazis’ Auschwitz extermination camp today denied any responsibility for killings at the camp and pid he was “horrified'* at the smell of the burning bodies. Karl Hoecker, 52, ■ former assistant commandant at Ansckwitz, told a German coart he did only “paper work** aad merely followed orders. Hoecker is one of 22 men on trial for their rotes in the killing of 2.5 to 4 million Jews, Poles and other prisoners at Auschwitz in German-occupied Poland during World War II. * ★ The trial is Germany’s biggest for war crimes in the postwar period. ASKED OF SMELL When asked by‘Chief Judge Hans Hofmeyer about the smell from the huge crematoriums next to the mammoth gas chambers at Auschwitz, Hoecker wiped his sweating brow and replied: “We were horrified. We didn’t think something like this was possible.** Like other defendants in the five-day-old trial, Hoecker put the blame on Adolf Hitler and his other Superiors. He said he did nothing without orders from above. AUTHORITY TO BEAT “We even had to write to Berlin for authority to beat prisoners,” he said. Hofmeyer asked Hoecker what he had to do with killing inmates. The defeadaat answered “nothing,’’ bat then added that he did process foar or five mass execatloa orders. He is accused specifically of being responsible for operation of the £as chambers. * .it * “But to the best of my knowledge these orders were legal,” he said, “because they had been passed on to me by my superiors.” . f -‘SOMETHING SPECIAL’ /Hoecker, a heavy man with a pale feee, said former Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Hoess told him on arrival at the camp that “Auschwitz is something special and does not compare with mere concentration camps.’’ The defendant said that after smelling the odors from the many murder operations, “then I knew what Hoess meant when he told me Auschwitz was something special.” / SERIOUS TALK — Dean Martin and Ursula Andress seem* engrossed in conversation in “4 for Texas,” color coxnedy-Westem starting at Miracle Mile Drive-In Wednesday. Other stars who show how to lose the West are Frank Sinatra, Anita Ekberg, Charles Bronson, Eva Six, Victor Buono, Arthur Godfrey and the Three Stooges. Whim of Iron Yvette Mimieux Cracks Down By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - Don’t let Yvette Mimieux’ wispy manner fool you. Behind thou limpid eyes lies a whim of iron. Her agents found that out this week when she fired them. Hor studio wifi soon be discovering it as she I asks for a new! deal. U. S. Aide Will Confer With Far East Chief WELLINGTON, Ndw Zealand (B—Roger Hilsman, UR. assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern Affairs, will confer this month with New Zealand’s prime minister, Keith J. Holy-oake, on Pacific and Asian affairs. Holyoake announced today that Hilsman will arrive in Wellington Jan. 30. SQUARE and ROUND DANCING Kmwi Sou Cm* Is Cm* o, D*f*Hi Hm* I# Ssmi* ■M ha* DiweIiu ... Am* OnUiM — Cam Stag ar Garden Center Ballroom »57 Wee*w«* D*re» Daaalao Eaaay Tfcm, Sat, S*t CAMPUS BALLROOM FawlaS m* Ihwaaala Daaclag Evary Ttfa«., Fri., SaF. FINIST ORCHESTRAS TSOTH . Interviewers THOMAS inevitably encounter it when they ask her about personal matters, rr- ‘ x ★ t # Yvette is now shopping for agents, and the new team will have the assignment of adjusting her contract with MGM. It has only two more years to run, but the winsome blonde yearns to be free earlier from the studio’s exclusive control. “Last year MGM presented me with six different scripts and all of them were fantastic,” she commented. “I couldn’t possibly do them, and I told the studio so. As far as I can see there is nothing out there for me in the future. So why shouldn’t I be free to take some of the attractive possibilities that come along on the outside.” EYE ON FUTURE With an eye to her future freedom, she is incorporating herself and plans to buy story properties which she could play. She had despaired of getting MGM to do the same. She discovered the novel “Lilith” and sent copies to all the studio bigwigs. Nothing happened. Robert Ros-sen snapped it up and made it for Columbia. Yvette’s last two films have been for other companies—“Diamond Head” and “Toys in The Attic.” But she did return to the parent lot for—surprise—a television show. It’s a surprise because the girl has long held out against television on principle, Yvette is in a special “Dr. Kildare,” being a two-parter Good Samaritan Killed YPSILANTI (AP) - Wetsel Crowder, 32, Yale, Okla., was killed oh 1-94 near here Thursday when he stepped out of his car to aid a stalled motorist. Police said Crowder was struck by another car. P-A-N-C-l-N-fi NOW APPEARING FRIDAY SATURDAY DON PABLO ond ORCHESTRA SUNOAY George ALFANO and ORCHESTRA STARTS JAR. SIM ERNIE CRAIQ and ORCHESTRA SPECIAL—SUNDAY DINNERS ?r t.*2'° mmioued Sr “TS-’Ti SPARERIBS Bread Betlrel. ('.omplrt* Plarrer- Selection • Bi-Level Bor •Beautiful Cocktail Lounge •Banquet Room Scats Up T# 200 t/'kk Vk i. lAifcfiK’Llt&L. called “Tyger-Tyger.” She plays a surfing enthusiast who refuses to give up her board even though a mild epilepsy attack makes It appear the sport would be dangerous for her. GETS ACQUAINTED During the filming, she became better acquainted with the young doctor, Richard Chamber-lain. They have since gone on dates to the opera and elsewhere. Yvette also showed up at a movie premiere with George Hamilton. This would indicate that her marriage to psychologist Evan Engber, which she has never ad* mitted, is (m the rocks, e ★★ This being a new year, it was time for my annual inquiry about her marital status. ,■ The reply was in her usual style: an enigmatic smile and a faraway lode. Start Talks on Ways to Open Wall BERLIN (ft-West Berlin and East German officials met today for preliminary talks that may set up negotiations to reopen the Red wall, to West Berliners. ........ adst - - It was the first West Bar* Un-East German qieetlng since the wall was dosed tost Sunday after West Berliners were pllowed for IS days to visit relatives hi the Soviet sector of the city. Informants said Horst Kor-ber, the administrative official representing West Berlin, probably handed back without reply a tetter from acting East German Premier Willy Stoph to West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt. Stoph had demanded that Brandt play a direct role in new negotiations by meeting with East German Deputy Premier Alexander Abusch before new talks could begin. MAJOR CONCESSION Such a meeting would be a major political concession to the Communists since it would lift negottotkx. l out of the realm of “technical talks” and give them the character of negotia-ations between sovereign states. Both the Western allies who still occupy West Berlin and West German Chancellor Uid-wig Erhard said this was out of the question. Brandt told the City Parliament yesterday his government would take no steps which have not been approved by the Bonn government and by the United States, Britain and France. CBM MMIRiEN WffK+ekARA "Mclimtocki’ 0® G3D®KTOtM§[SKfi?8 TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION' 0 gkW BNlTtO AATlSTO THE FILM THAT BRINGS BACK THE BELLY LAUGHI / CHARLIE CHAPLIN IIUSTEI KEATON! LAUREL 6 NANOYI HARRY UN800NI CHILDREN 25c ADULTS 75c r KM INKMMAIION Mi l *00 WONDERFUL FOOD Dalightful SuneuFidingal «E Seehew-FI 5-33*1 Opea • AM.-* MA-Oamd W Carry Q* SgrWri -Junior Editors Q BIRI utz on .I. os et-tt-sc——a QUESTION: Why do most birds have eyes on the sides of tbeir heads? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Most animals belong either to those who hunt, or to those which are hunted. The hunters must catch prey in order to live, and their eyes are usually in the front, so they can focus together and see clearly the prey the hunter is-to catch. With hunted animals the great thing is to avoid being caught, their food problems are usually solved by eating plants. So most birds, have eyes on each side (1) so they can be alert for danger coming from either side. Birds which hunt insects such as (2) can cock their heads to one side and focus one eye on the prey. Owls are an exception to the rule that birds have eyes on the side. Hunting, at night (3) they need to gather in every ray of light and to focus both 'eyes on such active prey as mice. So, their large.eyes are set to front. The kingfisher Is unusual to having both side aad front views. As we see in (4) he can get a wide view as he flies looking for fish. But when he spots one, he can look straight ahead and his eyes will focus together, enabling him to see a fish so. sharply he can plunge down and seize it in his beak. At 4 At FOR YOU TO DO: You may think it impossible to see two things at once as a bird does. But fix your eyes on a point straight ahead and check how tor you can see on both sides. Luncheon and Maser FAVORITES ' Deliciout U.S. Choice JGRIDDLEBURGER West Coast SANDWICHES -SALADS STEAKS Hu> Bf VeHoHou' of WORLD FAMOUS PANCAKES Hoars San. thru Thors. 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. Fri. and Sot. 7 a.m. ’*• 2 a.m. WOODWARD AVE. and 1Mila • BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-2727 ENROLL TODAY! Register while there are still opening*. PhoncFE 4--.23S2. 1114 S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bldg., Pontiac, Michigan. PARAMOUNT BEAUTY tCHOOL « Fob ONE WEEK ONLY) ----------------------- TONIGHT SNORTS AT - 7:11 - OiSO FEATURE AT 7:29 - MS ALSO SELEOTEO SNORT “THE FAINTUtS** o. THEATRE +T0g% f%** I NO ONE SEATED AFTER FEATURE STARTS! iiR-Esgtetw-Fimii ample cmr parking ‘ l * u u . | § mf M k \ L -p fc/fe MSHi k \ if,UUAVi: . 1 pjv% V ■ EVERY WED. THRU SUN. TO FRENCHY and the CHESS MEN J'rul tiring BENNY BABER on Hammond Organ JAM SESSION Sun. Afternoon 3 P M. te 6 P.M. TELEGRAPH 00. AT MU ARC LAKE RD. I MILE WOT aOOQaARO AV6. "Village • of tha Damned"! TH*0MKT NEW DRAYTON INN Rataurant and Cocktail Lot 11 M*» OR 3-9398 I.. h'W-'M ... i 1' 1 ' ■ ■ pi 'it * f / til "*,]!!.■'„ iuii,j': THE PONTIAC I' f*f ,■ I ■) Press. FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 11)64 PISl • ft, ! rtf, 9, r r M..' TWENTY-^ Li Bound Over in Kilting BENTON HARBOR •.. 00% v ,??'T v/ H* .4'!f ■ **:■ ‘ .< V :'-V - J •. ■gf ’i •’/> K1-? V;Vr.,(i*: rr '■ > '-j. ’i •’/jBf-’/i>i ' *"■* ■., *v#*i•-•y-if* ii'i-t* f THE PQNtlAC PRESS FRIDAY, JANUARY 10. 1904 Fightin' 5's O uf maneuver 6 Policemen LOS ANGELES UF) -Six officers aren’t enough when basketball players begin brawling says Los Angeles Lakers General Manager Lou Mohs. ♦ it A Mohs ordered extra security guards Thursday for the Laker-New York f f" Vt TWffrXTV+SKMKX 'ill. Knicks game in San Diego Saturday. Mohs said the six guards weren’t sufficient when a wild brawl interrupted play during a National Basketball Association game between Los Angeles and New York Wednesday night. it" h ★ One of the officers stood in the middle of the court,' blowing his whistle but doing nothing to stop the fight. When Mohs asked him why, the officer replied: “I'm not going to step in there with those big guys.” The Lakers won the., game, 19S-118. mz mm.» Biggest NHL Deal of Season Brewing? TORONTO UD - The Toronto Star said Thursday the biggest National Hockey League trade of the season is in the works, with the Toronto Maple Leafs offering two or three of their regulars for Andy Bathgate, New York Rangers rightwinger. The paper said the deal .could.be completed if the Leafs can meet the demands of New York Manager Muzz Patrick. Donnell said Toronto has offered Dick Doff and Bob Nevin —■ and poiiibily spare defenseman Kent Douglas— in exchange for the Rangers’ high-scoring veteran. Another rumor circulating Thursday said a fourth Leaf, veteran forward Ron Stewart, also mig^t be in a New York uniformbylhe time'the Rangers play here next Wednesday night. Grants' Gifford in Pro Bowl Flanker Joins Eastern Squad for 7th Time Lineups Set; Teams Meet In Cdliseum at LA Sunday LOS ANGELES (AP)-Frank Gifford of the New York Giants returns to familiar ground when he plays in his seventh Pro Bowl football game Sunday at the Coliseum. ★ Wk A The ex-Southern California star was named to the East squad Thursday after flanker back Buddy Dial of the Dallas Cowboys suffered a badly sprained knee and had to withdraw from the game. ----* * Gifford played in the All-Star game of the National Football Leqgue from 1854 to 1957, in 1959 and 1180. He was voted Player of the Game in 1959 when he sparked the East to a 28-21 victory. RETURNED Gifford retired after the 1960 season when he suffered a deep concussion in a game against the Philadelphia Eagles. The 32-year-old veteran of 11 NFL seasons came back in 1962. Said A Hie Sherman, East coach, “Frank was a real clutch player for us this season and came through in the pinch in the games we had to win.” - Sherman has chosen., Charley Johnson to start aTquarterback rather than Washington Redskins’ Norman Snead. The re3t of the backfield will be the Cleveland Brown’s Jim Brown at fullback, Tim Brown of the Eagles at halfback, and Washington’s Bobby Mitchell at flanker back. ★ - * * Chicago’s George Halas, coach of the West, will start Baltimore’s Johnny Unitas at quarterback, the Packers’ Jim Taylor at fullback, Vikings’ Tommy Mason at left half and Terry Barr of the Detroit Lions at flanker. ir ir ir Toronto Manager -Coach Punch Imlach was unavailable for comment. A spokesman for the club said Imlach was out of town but declined to say where. In New York, Patrick said “We haven't got Bathgate on the block at all.” "I. can’t deny that we’ve talked to other clubs about Bathgate," Patrick said, “but there’s nothing going on now.” Patrick said there were no “untouchables” on the Ranger club, and talks had been held from time to time involving every player. INTERESTED Stafford Smythe, president of Maple Leaf Gardens, admitted the Leafs have been interested in Bathgate for many years. Dunnell said the Rangers would be willing to give up Bathgate in exchange for muscle on their forward lines, which Nevin, Duff and Stewart could provide. * * * Jeffrey Leads 5-3 Victory Over Hawks. Detroit Skaters Hit Five Goals for 2nd Straight Game Bathgate is fifth in scoring in the league this year with 11 goals and 27 assists. Duff and Nevin have been a disappointment to Imlach this year, each of them having only six goals so far. Stewart, who has been riding the bench for the last two weeks, has only three. AFL Players Splif Shares AP PMfln JIBBER, JABBER — Even in workouts Cassius Clay can't keep from talking. He uses his fist as well as his mouth in hitting the bag in preparation for his February fight with heavyweight champion Sonny Liston. Howell Sets Record as Pistons Triumph The West ds a six point favorite. NBA Standings ■ASTSRN DIVISION WM Loti Pet. MM Boston .......... 26 S .7** — Cincinnati .......29 14 .674 IV* Phlladelpnia 14 20 .417 9to Now York 12 32 .267 )9V* WESTERN DIVISION Loo Angeles _____ 26 IS .667 — ' St. LOUIS ... 24 It .S» 4 son Francisco ..20 . It .576 5W Baltimore ....... IS 27 .225 13V* Detroit 9 26 .757 U THURSDAY'S RESULTS Philadelphia 112. St. Louis IIS Detroit 125, Baltimore IIS Son Francisco 112. Now York 97 , TODAY'S DAMES 4 Cincinnati at Boston Lot Angolas at San Francisco SATURDAY'S DAMES Batten at Philadelphia SL Louis at Detroit Now York vs. Lae Angeles at San Diego SUNDAY'S DAMES' Philadelphia at E eaten, afternoon Detroit at Cincinnati Btiltliott at SL Louis, afternoon -NOW York vs. Sin Francisco at Oakland CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -Baily Howell’s record 20-point third-quarter led the Detroit Piston* to a 125-115 National Basketball Association victory over the Baltimore Bullets at Cleveland Thursday night. In other NBA games Thursday, Philadelphia defeated St. Louis, 122-115, and San Francisco beat New York, 112-97 .... The PisbSis’Tfl^ph in Ohio was their first in five games gainst the Bullets this season. * Howell set an individual Piston one-quarter, scoring mark when he counted 20 of his 35 points in the third stanza. VETERAN Howell, a four-year-pro veter- PGA Changes Site of Four Toumevs DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP)-The winter tournament program of the Professional Golfers’ Association. of America, originally scheduled for Palm Beach Gardens, will be held at Port St. Lucia instead. * * ★ Announcement of the change, which affects four PGA tournaments, was made late Thursday by Warren Cantrell, PGA president from San Angelo, Tex/ ' Cantrell said the new 36-hole PGA National Golf Club would not be ready in time for the tournaments scheduled from Jan. 15 "through Feb. 23. * * ★ They include the PGA National Gold Club match-play championship, the National Golf Club Championship, the Golf Pride Senior-Junior Best Ball and the PGA Seniors. Teacher Trophy. an from Mississippi State, made 13 field goals and nine straight foul shots to lead all scorers. Teammate Ray Scott added 27 points. But it was the play of Howell which broke the game open for Detroit. With about two minutes to go, and the Pistons holding a slim two-point lead, he charged down court to grab a free ball. ——— * * a” ■ With Bullet Terry Dischinger only a step behind, Howell made a sensational over-the-shoulder shot into the basket before going out of bounds. Three more quick goals wrapped the game up for Detroit. Walt Bellamy— still smarting from $400 in fines for not hustling—turned in a fine performance for Baltimore, scoring 35 points and pulling down 33 rebounds. | * ' * ★ John Kerr scored 24 of his 34 points in the second half to help Philadelphia past StYxHiis. The 76ers trailed 82-68 late in the third quarter when Kerr sparked the rally that cut the margin to 94-87. A pair of free throws by Chet Walker, sent Philadelphia ahead to stay with 1:58 left. Bob Pettit led St. Louis with 29 points. it it * Wilt Chamberlain’s 43 points and 22 more by Wayne Hightower powered the Warriors past the Knicks. NEW YORK (AP) - Each member of the San Diego Chargers who was voted a full share in the player pool of last Sunday’s American Football League championship game will receive $2,498.99, Commissioner Joe Foss announced today. A A A The losing Boston Patriots will receive $1,596.52 each per regular. Both figures are records for the AFL. With special awards, the Chargers split the winners’ pool into 41 7-12 shares DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Red Wings are starting to support Manager-Coach Sid Abel’s claim that the team is better than its fourth place standing in the National Hockey League would indicae. The Red Wings scored five goals for the second consecutive game Thursday night and bounced the league-leading Chicago Black HaWks 5-3. Detroit, fifth in goal scoring in4h» NHL, opened the sea-1 ■son with a 5-3 victory over Chi-j cago, then mustered that many goals in only one other game before blanking Boston 5-0 last j Tuesday. RETAIN MARGIN The triumph enabled the Red Wings to retain their five-point bulge over New York, 5-3 winners over Boston in the only other game played. “I think this club is capable of finishing higher than it is now— if everything goes all right,” Abel said. WWW AF Photofax WING TALLY — Larry Jeffrey (14) of the Detroit Red Wings got an unexpected leg assist from Chicago Elmer Vasko (4) on a bouncing puck and he pushed the disk into the net past Hawk goalie Glenn Hall. Pierre Pilote is No. 3 for the Hawks. Hie Red Wings defeated the Black Hawks, 5-3, last night at the Olympia. At Figure Skating Championships Hills' Youth In Singles Lead The coach was particularly happy with the play of Larry Jeffrey, who paced Thursday’s victory with a pair of goals, and Norm Ulbnan, who scored his third in as many contests. Jeffrey, who had been sidelined with a leg injury suffered Dec. 8, was playing in his fourth game since returning to full time action. His first marker came with five minutes gone in the game. He scored his second in the third period a little more than a minute after Bobby Hull got his 24th of the season to pull the Black Hawks within a goal of a tie. ★ ★ ★ Andre Pronovost scored his first goal in 12 games three minutes after Jeffrey’s first goal to give the Red Wings a brief 2-0 lead. CLEVELAND (AP) - Tim Wood, a 15-year-old doctor’s son from Bloomfield Hills, Mich, Mich., took the lead in the initial round of the junior men’s singles of the National Figure Skating Championships Thursday at the Cleveland Skating Club. He took first place in compulsory figures competition with seven ordinals and 70.91 points, edging Duane Maki, 16, a fellow Detroit Skating Club member, who scored 10 ordinals and 69.41 points. Richard Callaghan, 18, of Rochester, N.Y., was third with 18 and 68.55.. FINAL SATURDAY All three are expert free skaters and could win enough points in the final free skating event Saturday to take the junior title In the silver dance competition preliminary event Thursday night, Dale Lynne, 16, and Chicago Paces All-Star Team TIE SCORE Chicago came right back and MONTREAL (AP) — Bobby Hall, the National Hockey League’s goal-scoring leader, led an array of four members of the first-place Chicago Black Hawks named to the circuit’s official Ail-Star team for the opening half of the 1963-64 season. Hull, who, has 23 goals, was a unanimous choice in the voting by hockey writers and broadcasters in each of the six NHL knotted the score in the fast- cjtjes He received the maxiskating period oh goals by Ken Wharram and Ron- Murphy. Wharram’s was his 23rd of the season. ir A A j; Ullman beat goalie Glenn Hall after breaking in on the Chicago goalie all alone early in the second period, and Alex Delvecchio put Detroit two goals up again Giant Agrees -Or Does He? The Patriots voted 411-6 shares. whfin he jammed Gordie The total receceipts for the game at San Diego, including television and radio income, reached a record $275,277.60. Last year’s championship game at Houston brought in $254,206.-85. Howe’s pass from the corner past Hall. Howe and Eddie Joyal each had clear shots at Hall in the middle session but failed to cash in. Hovye shot wide, while Hall SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Or-lando Cepeda, reported to be in virtual agreement with the San Francisco Giants on contract terms for 1964, said Thursday he hasn’t heard any terms yet. A A ■A Cepeda, the last Giant to sign Buffalo Bills Add QB tipped the ptick enough on Joy-, in jgn told the San Francisco al’s effort to deflect it off the j chrorticle by telephone from pipe. San Juan, Puerto Rico, “the RANGERS SCORE Giants have been very nice to BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)-The Buffalo Bills of the American Football League said today they have signed quarterback Mailon Kent of Auburn. Kent, Auburn’s second-string quarterback, .was not drafted by an American League club. The National Football League’s Minnesota Vikings picked him 20th as a future in 1962. . At Boston, the Rangers jumped to a 3-0 lead on goals by Rod Gilbert, Camille Henry and A1 Langlois and went on.to score an easy victory ova' the Bruins. 'Vjc Hadfield and Jim Neilson added goals for New York in the final period, while Tom Johnson, Bobby Leiter and Den Prentice tallied for Boston in the same stanza- me and I don’t expect any trouble—anyway, I hope not.” But be quickly added: “I haven’t heard from the Giants yet.” < ir ir ir mum 90 points for the left wing position. OTHER HAWKS Goalie Glenn Hall,' defense-man Pierre Pilote and right winger Kenny Wharram of Chi cago, center Jean Beliveau of Horton of Toronto also were chosen for the first team. Hall and Pilote each polled 88 points. Beliveau had 82, Horton 80 and Wharram 76. Named to the second team were right winger Gordie Howe of Detroit, last year’s Most Valuable Player, center Stan Mikita and defenseman Elmer Vasko of Chicago, goalie Johnny Bower and defenseman Bobby Baun of Toronto and left wingers Frank Mahovlich of Toronto and Dave Baton, Montreal. Mahovlich and Baton finished to a second-place deadlock for the left wing spot with 25 points each. Players selected for the first team will each receive $500. Those on the second team will get $250 each. The results of the balloting were announced Thursday by Clarence Campbell, league president. Cepeda hit .316, rapped 34 home runs and drove in 97 runs last year and is hitting* well over .300 in the Puerto Rican Winter League this year. 3 Cagers Dismissed w DETROIT BALTIMORE DDT O F T 4 2-5 10 Johnson . 3 0-1 I J M !!Th#f" '* w » •J M » Loughory 7 >3 17 • ME Bell'y It ill 33 4 M 17 Disch'gtr f 5-7 t3 II H 37 Herdnett I M I J 3-1 II Groan 1 o-O 1 3 W 4 ID-1* M 36-36 Ilf Total! 41 tMI III r-L’.— ............ *7 It X 36-136 ..... X I* » SB-Ill FaratMl IXteDili all. Rutehar 4, De-kutschare t Duffy, Ferry A Howell 4 IMmH, OM 4 Scott 3. Baltimore, BaF M A Cabla t Dlschingar 4 Johnson 4 Kalla, Loughory 3, Them 4 Attendance 41S4 D'bus'en Ferry WtmfTi Ihott Ohl feoff Butcher Duffy Jonas Total* More Woes at WMU KALAMAZOO (UPI)—This is a year that the athletic department at Western Michigan University would rather forget. The latest bombshell came yesterday when basketball coach Don Boven kicked three players off the team for their “troublemaking and individualistic attitudes.” Earlier this week, Boven himself was hanged In effigy by the disgruntled stodentj after an 88-77 loss to Miami of Ohio. About three weeks' ago, head football coach Merle Schlosser was fired after both the football players and the students demanded his dis- ’ missal. The dismissal of senior forward Bill Street and reserve centers Don Petroff and Dennis Griffin came after weeks of rumors of dissension on the Bronco squad. SECOND SCORER Street waa the aecond leading scorer on the squad with a -17.7 average. Both Petroff and Griffin saw infrequent action although Petroff from East Detroit .was averaging eight points a game. Manny Newsome, the nation’s No. 2 scorer with a 32.88-A—.3 average, is leading the Bronco squad and getting most of the publicity. Western denied that jealousy of the fanfare over Newsome’s scoring feats led to the action by Boven. ★ ★ ★ “The players cut were individual and malcontents rather than team players," a Western spokesman said, “Coach Boven got rid of them for the good of the team.” ir it it ’ / Western owns a disappointing 4-7 record this season. . - a. Ojy! JL- l Balance Pays in Cage Play * Balanced scoring proved more effective than high individual point totals in the Waterford recreation basketball league last night. Spencer’s Floor had three players in double figures to defeat Five R’s Construction, 89-74, despite the 42 points by John Keller for the losers. Bill Gapczynski had 29, John Herrington 28 and Joe Duby 17 for the winners. In three games, Keller has been averaging 34 points per game. Spencers’s now leads the league with a 5-0 mark to class A play. In class B action, O’Neil Realty whipped Wardrobe Geaners 64-42 led by Rodger Asbury’s 12 points. AU li players scored for the winners. These are the league standings: Russell Bowenn, 22, of New Haven, Conn., took the lead with 11 ordinals three better than Kristin Fortune and Claude Sweet of the Los Angeles Figure Skating Club. Sandra Schwomeyer and James Pennington of the Indianapolis Women’s Club took third place and Dolly Roden-bnugh and Thomas Lee inski of the Pittsburgh Skating Club finished fourth. TOP FOUR The top four couples qualify for the finals in this event for junior skaters. Gail Newberry 13-year-okl daughter of a Niagara Falls, N.Y., policeman,. and Robert Black, 14, of MelnJse, Mass., son of an electrical contractor, just about wrapped up novice singles crowns at the opening session of the championships. it ir it Gail easily topped a field of nine to the compulsory figures which counts for 60 per cent of the novice championship, and Robert took nearly as decisive an edge over eight other com-, petitors in the novice men’s compulsory figures, which counts for 60 per cent of the novice championship, and Robert took nearly as decisive an edge over eight other competitors in the novice men’s compulsory figures. ■ ir A- A The pair will carry virtually insurmountable leads into tonight’s free skating, which counts for the other 40 per cent of the scoring. Lights Out in Cage Tilt at Rochester CLASS A W L S 0. Five R't 3 t O'Nall Zllka Wardrobe CLASS B w l 2 I Fruthour I I Btll't I 3 W l 1 3 • 1 Members 6f the Key Glub of Rochester High School have come, up with a new wrinkle for playing the old game of basketball — play it in darkness. ' AAA So when they call Tights out’ at Rochester High School Saturday evening, it won’t be the end of, the day but the start of a basketball game with the RHS faculty dueling the Key Gub quintet. But the darkness will not be total, Jim Girardot, a senior and Key Club member, explained. All players will smear a,bit of phosphorescent paint on their hands and feet, and the paint will be applied to the bail, baskets, backboards and floor markings. The game is scheduled for 8 p. m. Tickets may be obtained from members of the Key Gub, members of the Kiwanis Gub or purchased at the door. Admission is $1 at the gate. Thursday's Callage iaManall Scare* ■AST Penn Stale 67, Lima, Peru 61 Rhode Island SO. Holy Cross Tf Boston Univ. 55. Connecticut 53 SOUTH Virginia Tech 75, Furman 65 West Georgia 72, Belmont Abbey 60 West Virginia 7S. VMI 73 Florida 114 Miami, Fla. 91 Wake Forest 00, North Carolina 71 Loyola, New Orleans 90. Memphis Stele 64 SOUTHWEST Texas Tech S3. Bay lor 62 Hsrdln-Slmmon* T3. Eastern New Me* ka 67 Tulsa 91, North Texes 72 MIDWEST Otterbeln 72. Ml. Union 55 . Baldwin Wallace 92. Wifcas SI i Ig|«T '1 p> 1 Hi ”’if )'f ijt,Tff ' 1 fti p 1 *| p"\ ft p •» . tWE^Y-ElGHTf 1 t i ’ i iff t ft TJIK PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY ,10, 1964 > " A //, fl! i f, - i> ■ V 7 I f Two Dttroft Skippers In Miami Yacht Race MIAMI (Af) - Two Detroit skippers are competing today in JUST *6 DOWN BUYS YOU A CAN AT Kmc AUTO SALES Comer W. Huron ond Sill. Lk. Rd. Open Till I Mon. Itiru Frl. Set. Till 4 race. Don Sucher, skipper of the 45-foot sloop Tigress, and Toots Gmeiner, skipper of the 45-foot sloop Apache, are among 29 entries in the race which opens the southern ocean racing conference season. * A A The Tigress won the Miami to Nassau race in 1911, and the Apache has been a leading contender in the Great Lakes area for years. ENJOY SAILING? TRY THE EXCITING MANEUVERABLE SCAMP lice BOAT| A omoll highly manouvorablo on* doiign ico boot that (on bo toil.d on small froion ponds or larger bodies of ice. Scamp is balanced so a child can sail it easily, yet designed to carry an adult ol ever 200 lbs. at speeds in excess of 50 miles per hour: 00 SPECIAL irry fi complete line of ninler *kiinn equipment J'or C.liildren ami .4dull*. SEE OUR WINTER SPORTS DISPLAY Ice Skates Sleds Toboggans Hockey Sticks Tip ups and Spears Pucks and other ice fishing equipment. NOW IS THE TIME TO IIIV YOUR BOATING OUTFIT LAYAWAY NOW FOR SPRING, LOW WINTER PRICES. CRUISE OUT BOAT SALES 63 E. 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Sou Ontario portroyod by o 25-yoor rooidont of our neighbor to fbo north e e . o profossionol photogropbor ond o notional pistol-shooting chomp. tbo wilderness roochos of our ooifhbor-log Canada to tho extent occomplishod In Ibli fothor-son quost for nduonturo with rod, conoo and Comoro. Galdod by on Oflbwa Indian, comping whom night overtook thorn, living off tho load, tasting odvontoro at ovary turn dorlag 400 niloi of tmkking by water-way, catching trout at big os your orm and pika largo os your log • . , roof odvontoro, don't mist It. PONTIAC NORTHERN HIGH Sun., Jan. 12,2:30 p.m. WALLED LAKE HIGH Tomorrow Only Jan. 11,1p.m. Adults led. Tex, $1.50 — Students Under 16, $1.00 ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILAILE AT A REDUCED PRICE At KBBGO HARDWARE NO. $ Auburn Hglghtt RRIOOI SPORTING GOODS KMgG Harbor C ROOKHS SPORTINO OOODS Pontiac LAKISIDC PACKING CO. WaNod Lake WILSON MARDWARI DICK'S BAIT 4 TACKLB Commerce SLBNTZ MOBIL SBBVICB TOM'S 8LBCTBIC Welled Loko Wallod Loko Avoid standing in IMe# come tarty ond got e copy of Mr. Tabor's fastest Alaskan Htway book# profusely illustrated and full of hunting ond fishing along tho Atcan Hiwoy Also, see Tabor's African Safari Annual ond bit other best-selling, profusely illustrated bodks on"tiwnttn# end fishing in Africa. Bkh It personalty autographed end ell tell at SI.25 oech, 3 for 13.00. SPONSORS) BY MULTI-LAKES C0NSENVATHM ASSN. jpa NseMe Rose ' km s-fiss km sesn Famous Irish Unit Light hut Rugged NEW YORK (AP)—Probably the most legendary and most famous of all college football teams never started a game and was just a little smaller than most good, present-day high school teams. Jim Crowley and his surviving teammates of the famed Four Horsemen and Seven Mules Notre Dame team of the early 1920s had one of their rare get-togethers Thursday night when Crowley was presented with the Touchdown Award lor service to football. “The backfield gets together about four, five times a year at a banquet or something," said Crowley, halfback on the fabulous Four Horsemen, “but this is the first time since 1948 that the whole team has been together. The last time was at Notre Dame at our 25th class -reunkmru—~ BACKFIELD The Four Horsemen were half* backs Crowley and Don Miller, fullback Elmer Layden and quarterback Harry Stuhldreher. The Seven Mules, linemen of the unbeaten Notre Dame team Busy Slate for Michigan Cage Squads By The Associated Press Michigan’s busiest college basketball weekend of the season gets underway tonight with four games. A total of 17 games will be played Saturday afternoon and night, with all but four in the state. Wayne State plays host. to Case Tech, Detroit Tech is at Alpena C. C., Bemidji at Michi-j gan Tech and John Carroll at Eastern Michigan in tonight's contests. * ★ - ★ . Wayne State has not played in five weeks and will be looking for its first victory in three games. V**-*' Topping off Saturday's cage action are two Big Ten games, with fourth-ranked Michigan playing'at Purdue and Indiana 1st Michigan State. Bowling Green is at Western Michigan in a Mid-American conference game, while Albion is at Alma, Adrian at Calvin and Olivet at Hope in the MIAA. The other MIAA school, Kalamazoo, is at Elmhurst, Ohio. ★ ★ ★ John Carroll is at Wayne State, Detroit Tech at Soo Tech, Case Tech at Eastern Michigan, Ohio Northern at Lawrence Tech, Cleary at Northwood, Bemidji at Northern Michigan, Findlay at Ferris and Western Ontario at Detroit in the otoer games in the state. Other games out of state take Hillsdale to Baldwin- Wallace and Central Michigan to Illinois State. of 1924, were center Joe guards Nobel Kizer and Weibel, tackles Adam Walsh and Rip Miller, and ends Chuck Collins and Ed Huntsinger. WWW All except Weibel, Kizer and Hunsinger are still alive. “Miller, Layden and I all weighed about the same," Crowley recalled, “about 161 or 162. Stuhldruher was about 158. The guards were about 175 each, Bach was about 190 and so were the tackles. The ends were about 178 or 180.” 6 _ ■ k it The backfield was tagged the Four Horsemen by sportswriter Grantland Rice in Notre Dame’s 1924 game with Army. The four played together as a unit from late in their sophomore season in 1922 through 1924. LOSE TWO — In that time, the fabulous Fighting Irish under Coach Knute Rockne lost only two games, to Nebraska in 1922 and 1923 They were unbeaten in 1924 and capped the season with a victory in the Rose .Bowl, Notre Dame’s only bowl appearance in history. ★ * ★ ‘ We didn’t start a game in 1924,” Crowley recalled. “Rockne would start what we called the shock troops, the second team, and we’d usually come in at the start of the second quarter, depending on the score and so on. “You see, in those days, if you were taken out in a half, you couldn’t go back in. So we wouldn’t come in until the second period and take it the rest of the way.” Big 10's Top Scorers; Meet Saturday CHICAGO (UPI) - The two top scorers in Big Ten basketball will match shots Saturday when Ohio State, one of the preseason favorites, and darkhorse Minnesota meet with a share of first place at stake. Leading the Gophers will be sophomore Lou Hudson, who dropped 36 points in his only previous outing for first place in scoring, while Ohio State will depend on Gary Bradds, last year’s scoring champion who netted 32 points in his only start for the runner-up position. Bradds has the best per game scoring average in the league, 21.1 points for U games, while Hudson for the entire season of 11 games has averaged 18.8. Another game also involves a Mat Card Features Russian Roulette A six-man Russian roulette bout, along with a midget scrap, will highlight, the professional mat card Saturday night at the National Guard Armory. * * * Following the roulette bout, the six grapplers will pair off in two-man matches. Ricki ‘Crusher’ Cortez is slated to meet Man Mountain Cannon, better known as -'Cry Baby’ McCarthy, Ivan Kalmin-koff will battle Paul DeMarco and The Great Mephisto duels Chief White Eagle. ""Hie PEL bout wIM gat under way at 8:30 p. m. By JACK McMAHON Coach, Cincinnati Royals I still believe good plays off the high post are the most difficult to defend against. In this play we are attempting to get a good jump shot for guard X2. Our center X3, breaks up to his high post position — it is important that he receive the ball from guard XI at the moment he gets tc the foul line: it it it Guard XI runs to the high post man’s right, setting a double screen for guard X2, who has taken his man down past the foul line and then breaks back to run his man off guard XI. The potential shooter, guard X2, then takes the pass from center X3 and attempts the shot behind the double screen. McMAHON • Full Six* Shoe • Deluxe Grade • Canadian Steal Blades. I(E SKATE Sale! TERRIFIC SELECTION MEN’S - UDIES’ FIGURE SKATES MEN’S HOCKEY SKATES $088 uxe- V IpdI WE BUY - SELL - TRADE ICE SKATES Up to $10 for Your Used Skates. Over SN Pair of Used Skates to ehooee from! PONTIAC’S VACUUM CLEANER SERVICE HEADQUARTERS PARTS BAGS BELTS INSPECTION ' * SERVICE ALL MAKES Free Pick Up in Oakland County OPEN SUNDAY 9r30 fo 2 P.M. BARNES A HARGRAVE Hardware 742 W. HURON ST. FE 5*9101 PLAYS There are, naturally, various options of the play. If the de- fense overloads the play, we can send forward X4 on a “Bear out” and allow guard X2 to go into the left corner and attempt the open shot there. End Goes Hunting; Training Gets Buck FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. W—Jim John, University of Arkansas football end, put his gridiron knowhow to work while he was deer hunting recently. John wounded a buck but ran out of shells before he could taring it down. So he tackled the deer and sat on it until it died. Featherweight Champ May Desert Division LOS ANGELES (AP)-Feath-erwiight champion Sugar Ramos may desert his division if he beats lightweight Vicente Derado in a non-title 10-round nationally televised fight tonight. The 21-year-old undefeated champion is having weight problems and believes he can whip lightweight king Carlos Ortiz. share of the league lead, the televised contest between Illinois and Iowa, each boasting a 1-0 record. CO-CHAMPS • .The mini, co-champions of the Olympic 5 Will Test 36 for: 72 Spots NEW YORK (AP)-Thirty-eix college players will 44t a shot at the 12-man Olympic basketball team the United States sends to Tokyo next October. The National Collegiate Athletic Association Council, in one of its last items of convention business Thursday, approved a complicated plan for college representation in the Olympic basketball trials at St. John’s University here April 2-4. THREE TEAMS The colleges will send three 12-man teams to the tournament, including one having as its nucleus six players from the National collegiate champion team to be decided at Kansas City March 29-21. This is the program: After the NCAA championship at Kansas Cite, the six chosen players of the winning team will assemble at their own campus for a week’s training. k k k Thirty other players from both large and small college ranks will hi assembled at another . college yet Jo be designated. The players will be trained in Olympic style of play, which differs from that in the United States. By March 26, the (flayers will be separated into three different teams—designated as red, white and blue. Each will play two exhibition games, one being the second annual Coaches’ All-Star game at Legingtoo, Ky. March 28. The other exhibitions will be held March 28. Service Tilt Takes 'Oddity1 of Year Award By The Associated Press For more than three quarters, Navy’s football team, flaunting Drive for Five on its jerseys to emphasize its desire for a fifth straight victory over Army, dominated the climactic game of the 1963 college football season. ★ * ★ Roger Staubach, Pat Donnelly & Co. looked virtually unbeatable as they carried a 21-7 lead into the final period. Then Army, with Rollie Stichweh at the helm, began a comeback drive that put the Cadets within reach of victory before it faded out in confusion as the final seconds ticked off. ★ * * This exciting and frustrating finish of ,a game seen by more than 100,000 spectators in Philadelphia Stadium and by count-, less television watchers, was picked today as the oddity of the year by sports writers and broadcasters participating in The Associated Press year-end poll. , ★ ★ ★« With football still fresh in their minds, the voters put the Army-Navy game ending just ahead of the outcome of the 1963 World Series on their list. Twenty of 71 listed the football mixup first; 17 showed the most amazement that the unbeatable New York Yankees could lose four straight World Series games to the Los Angeles Dodgers—or that Los Angeles could win four in a row. with II gait# of Odd! Car Wash..... 89 with 10 cals, of Das! Car Wash....... 1®® with 6 fait, of Baa! AUTO WASH “A Clean Oar RMas Better Letts Lengtr*’ 149 W. Huron Across from Flrestonot . ig circuit last year with Ohio State, could be handicapped by the injury of canter Skip Tboran, although he has played at partial efficiency in five games since he was hurt in a fall. A k -it Thoren has averaged 29.5 points for the Illlni in 19 games for seventh place in the scoring standings, barely a point per game more than Iowa’s leader, Dave .Roach, who has a 19.3 mark for nine games. EASIER GAME The fifth team unbeaten in Big Ten (flay, Michigan, a title favorite, was expected to have an easier test in its bid to retain a share of the conference lead, meeting Purdue, a loser to Minnesota in its only league start.. Both teams boast oae of toe league scoring leaders, in each case a sophomore. Pardee’s Dave Schellhase netted 28 points in his only game for a third place tie, whOo Michigan’s Canie Russell, rated one of the nation’s outstanding rookies, dropped 23 against Northwestern for sixth place. For the season Russell has averaged 22.7 in 11 games and Schellhase 19.6 in 10. ★ k - Indiana, one of the two double losers in the league, faces the highest scoring team in the conference, Michigan State, on the Spartan floor while Wisconsin, also with an 9-2 conference mark, faces Northwestern on the Wildcat court. i"l "V * A i. -V * -V WANTED 4ISED CARS and TRUCKS’ IN ANY SHAPE *v"1" Dr CONDITION FrtinoIVpl 1 Ports for most mokes of Care., I New - Rebuilt and Usedl BAGLEY AUTO PARTS' ”2 p ’ I 170 BAGLEY ST. •„ PONTIAC • FI 5-9219 mumas pm SHOCKS SEAT-BELTS GUARANTEES MUFFLERS c[gainst rust, corrosion blow-out, wear^out lor as long as you own your car. Replaced, if necessary for a service charge only. 435 SOUTH SAGINAW - FE 2-1010 *** Avoid Hard-Rusty Waterf i * 10-YEAR WARRANTY * Now Sptcially Pricadl You can Hava the con-vanianca of Soft ONLY A FEW CENTS PER DAY ; Have a whiter wash setter clothes, lovelier complexion and even save up to 50% on soap. WHY RENT A WATER SOFTENER? as little *1 25 P" ★ NO MONEY OOWN ★ Coma In Today or Phono FE 4-3573 Srss SkWtal.1 Hr lipiO Ofatar OiaOUlMlas leUpwaat Marathon Quality Heating Oil gives you top comfort and economy all season long-hacked by on the job service: Oakland Fuel & Paint Co, 4SC Orchard Lake Ava. FE 6-61 If ram vi1 • l .i ,s..4' v-.v .7 v t H i.i* m ,1 «" f .'I {■ f / r, % Sl rj-t- THE PQffTIAC PRESS., FRIDAY, JARY 10, 1964 TWENTY -jflKE u Key Road PNH, PCH Rabbits and squirrals classed as rodents. ■re Chiefs' Rating at Stake With Psatlac Press pm PACK MUSCLE *• Birmingham Groves is not a tall basketball team but what height ft does have is concentrated in Bill Stephenson (50), Dennis Rafferty (41) and Bill For- rester. Stephenson is the tallest at 6-2. The Northwest Suburban League entry will tangle with its tallestieague foe tonight when North Farmington’s Raiders are the opposition. PACING BARONS - One of BlodtnRdd MBs’ top* outside shooting threats is junior Andy Anderson, a 60 forward, who is averaging 14.8 points ■ game for six contests. An-derson will be in the lineup tonight when , the Barons play host to Holly’s Broncos. Inter-Lakes Wrestlers Battle to 3-Way Tie Pontiac Northern, Walled Lake and Waterford moved into a tie for first place in the Inter-Lakes League wrestling race with 10 records ’ after picking up mat wins Thursday. Northern turned tack Farmington, 33-11; Walled Lake dumped Southfield, 27-14, and Waterford came from behind to nip Berkley, 21-20. In other matches, Kettering dropped Davison, 31-11, Fitzgerald downed Port Heron, 2624, and North Farmington halted Birmingham Grbves, 440. The Huskies ran their record to 60 with the win over Farmington. Northern won nine of 12 events in handing the Falcons their fifth setback. EIGHT EVENTS sky provided the margin of victory by pinning the Bears’ Carl Short with 20 seconds remaining in the match for the vital •five points-.-._________ The loss was the first for Berkley while the win evened the Skippers’ record at 2-2. Joe Allen (95 pounds) and Don Gray (127 pounds) remain undefeated as Kettering knocked off Davison. The Captains won nine of the 12 matches. LITTLE TROUBLE North Farmington had little trouble handing Groves its third loss of the season. Groves won two of the 12 matches. Fitzgerald got a five-point performance from heavyweight Carl Weathers hi the final match to edge Port Confound Walled Lake captured eight Hur00' events against the winless Southfield squad to run its record to 3-1. Waterford’s Skippers trailed Berkley, 20-16, going into the final match, and Gerry Gebrow- The Spartans trailed, 2144, but Weathers pinned Dave Herring for five points and a Fitzgerald victory, the team’s fourth against one loss. PONTIAC NORTHBRN-FAAMINOTON 95 pounds—Wo*M*r (P) plnntd Dura; 101 pound!—Oswalt (PNH) doc. Martinson, in pound*—Bate* (PNH) ptnnod Angttoll*; 120 pound!—Stephen! (PNH) doc. Evangtllsta; 127 pound! Couol (F) doc. Cobb; ltt pound) dec. Bugnl; ill dec. Sprague; doc. Bugnl; 111 pound!—Mcllroy (PNH) 145 pound*—Wayer (PNH) plnnad Levy; 154 pound*—Johnston (F) dec. Jack ion; 1*5 pounds—Nichols (PNH) doc. Burton; 110 pounds—Wall*! (PNH) dec. Rytn; heavyweight—Raynor (PNH) pinned Kuffel. WATRRPORD-BRRKLIV fS pounds—Huntoon (W) dec Narrower; 10) pounds—Boundy (B) dec. Davis; lit pflbbd* JtoWe (B) dad. Rhodes; 120 pounds—Potter (W) dec. Radpath; 127 pounds—Grant (W) default Monahan; in pounds—White (B) dec. Carpenter; 111 pounds—Kentro (B) dec. Alsup; 145 pounds—Baruzilln (B) dec. McDowell; 154 pounds—Watson (B) dec. Mike Jones; 1*5 pounds-Murphy (W) draw Elnlck (B); 180 pounds—Dale Jones (W) dec. Copeland; heavyweight—Gebrowsky (W) pinned Short. FI TIG E R A LD-POR T HURON 95 pounds—Ravin (PH) dec. Sisson; 101 pounds—Kanle (PH) pinned Schovon; 112 pounds—Bunker (FHS) dec Foot; 120 pounds—Odzlana (FHS) pinned McMillan; 127 pounds-Swanaon (PH) pinned Bona-corsi; in pounds—Kozaha (FHS) pinned Baltlnisr; in poundi Stanley (PH) dec. Collie; 145 poimds—Wallgore (FHS) dec. Pagan; 154 pounds—Drescher (PH) adc. Miner; 1*5 pounds—Bard (FHS) pinned Schlae; 110 pounds—Touna (PH) default Antonczak; heavyweight—Weathers (FHS) plnnad Herring. WALLED LAKE-SOUTHFIELD 95 pounds—Burnett (WL) forfeit; 101 pounds—McCormick (WL) dec. PoleHd; 112 pounds—Undstrsm (WL) dec Eahel-man; 120 pounds—WrigM (WL) dec. Spragee; 127 pound*—Lagasae (WL) draw Oerter (S); in pounds—Lawton (WL) dec. Gentry; 111 pounds—PHkln (WL) dec Eahelma;n 14S pounds—Perlno (S) dec Headley; 154 pounds—Crawford (S) dec Berkey; 1*5 pounds—Kuffner (S) dec Comls/ 110 pounds Budman (S) Huskies Make Visit to Farmington; WTH Home to Berkley Pontiac Northern will be looking for its third victory in Inter-Lakes League play tonight at Farmington,- while Pontiac Central will be trying for win No. 4 in the Saginaw Valley Conference in a tilt at Flint Northern. The Huskies are tied with Southfield for the I-L lead with 2-0 records. Southfield will play host to a strong Walled Lake squad, and Waterford entertains Berkley in uther I-L bouts.—__________ In the Wayne - Oakland, league - leading Clarkston has a road engagement at Clar-encville and the Wolves will be looking for their seventh victory of the season. Other games on the W-0 slate have West Bloomfield at Milford, Holly at Bloomfield Hills and Brighton at Northville. Kettering’s undefeated Captains will try to hang onto their Tri-County lead with a game at L’Anse Creuse in another league tilt. DEADLOCK The deadlock in the Oakland League will be dissolved tonight when Troy moves into F i t z-gerald. Both team* sport. 4-9 loop marks. Lake Orion plays host to Warren Cousino, Madison travels to Avondale and Rochester moves to Clawson in other 0-A games. On the parochial scene, St. Michael will battle St. Frederick at Pontiac Central High School, Waterford OLL journeys to Farmington OLS, Detroit Salesian v i s i t s Birmingham Brother Rice, Emmanuel Christian travels to Webberville, Country Day visits Maumee, Royal Oak Shrine journeys to Benedictine and Fordson i n -vades Royal Oak Dondero. Psnllsc Prsss PONs TANK TRIO — Birmingham Seaholm and Royal Oak Kimball, the top two swim teams in Oakland County will make a big splash in the Seaholm pool tonight. Seaholm will be out to defend its No. 1 status in the County, League and state and these three swimmers (left to right) Tom Coupe, Linn Smith and Pete Adams will compete against Kimball’s strong distance swimmers. Hazel Park’s. Cinderella Vikings, a preseason pick to go nowhere in the Eastern Michigan League, have confounded the basketball pollsters by racking up four loop wins in succession. They will be looking for No. 5 at East Detroit tonight. ★ ♦ ★ While the Vikings are battling to stay atop the heap, second place Royal Oak Kimball (3-1) will try to stay within shooting distance at Port Huron. Other games on the EML slate have Mt. Clemens at Ferndale in a scrap for a piece of third place, and Birmingham Seaholm will have the same pooitkm in mind when Roseville comes to town. In the Northwest Suburban League, North Farmington, leading the loop with a 2-0 record, will try to keep the slate clean at Birmingham Groves. Detroit Thurston will play host to winless Livonia Franklin and Oak Park will entertain Cranbrook in a non-conference game. VETERAN SQUAD Hazel Park’s quintet has thrived on balance in rolling up a 60 mark. Jim Boreland (60), John Michalski (64) and Vem Hill (5-10) are averaging more than 10 points a game. it a * Other Mat Results KETTERINO-DAVISON 95 bounds—Alton (K) dec. Mbito; 101 pounds—Btllrsy (D) pinned Ytngling; 112 pounds—Fournier (D) dec. Schemel; 120 pounds DeBeeuclelr (K) dec. Tucker; 127 pounds—Gray (K) dee. Dortmen; 133 pounds—M. James (K) dec. New-tame; 138 pounds—Hertmen (D) dec. Dorman; 145 pounds-Oobdman (K) dec. Martin; heavyweight—Johnson te 6-019169 MU, UNITED TIRE SERVICE "WHIR! PRICES AMI DISCOUNTED—NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MS# 1R $11 SUNOCO HEATING OIL DEPENDABLE DELIVERY SERVICE SAKHA Dependable ' VfT/ffj* Quality Always! if Ceiling Tile-Paneling-Pfywood Gold Decorator Acoustical dgc 4zl Pro-Finished V-Qroovo $C89 Ceiling TNe (12x12 Tie) .i • I w Weed Grain Nardboard.. If 12x12 White dAg 4x9xtt Interior $060 Painted Coiling THe.......... 14 -FirPlywood...... A 4xlxV« PrefMshod $495 ' 4xSx% Interior $C42 Mahogany! V-Groove, (each)... “ FirQ.2.8..U 4x7x1/* Prefinished $435 4x»xtt $427 Mahogany!V-groove (a aeh)... ^ • PlyaeorePGTS.. .... “ , 4x6 Unfinished $400 4*,x% $11$$ Mahogany V-Qroevt.. 1*1 lirohG2.S................. II Prompt Delivery Service if you uithl I” FOR THE MONTH! J If yw wish to lecoiv# "Our Monthly PHc* U*t* fill In | coupon and mail to Church's, 107 Squirrel Rd., Auburn j Heights. KAMI_________________________>--- 1 ADDRISS__________________________ 1 errv____________- STATf. SALE LASTS ONE WEEK ONLY! : -ff. t 11 ...$34 95 $19.95 39.95 24.95 CONVERTIBLE > REAR WINDOWS .... 29.95 1 9.95 Original Upholstering Replaced At Similiar Low King Price*. BILL KELLEY'S BEAT COVER 919 MYRTLE STREET Just off Telegraph Rd. JUST OPPOSITE TEl-HURON SHOPPING CENTER '. ' OPEN MON. THRU SAT. S A.M. TO • P.M. TELEPHONE FE 2-5335 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M. SUNDAY t - ->*• ■ - ■ - - . ■ • h 4' 4.*fWp» " " * ” " • * r ♦ • / •: ■ •# 0 v7 ;'/ m THE PONTIAC 1‘ltKSS. FRIDAY. JANUARY 10. 1»8* ______«£_ PBA Pro-Am Starts Trials By JERE CRAIG Margaret (Peg) Carter, the only Pontiac woman to qualify for the Bowling Proprietors Association of America National All Star tournament, is leaving / \ town. She departs this weekend for Dallas, Tex. and the 1964 BPAA extravaganfca* with her chief instructor (jer advisesr that the deadline for and booster, husband Curt.! entries to this year’s women’s She qualified as one of sixcity tournament has been ex-Michigan female representa- tended until next Saturday. tives through the state efanina- Th1e,3.ls^ “S’1*. t^™ment (ions this fall in Grand Rapids. 1S slated for North Hill .“*nes Mrs. Carter joins Mike Sam- beginning the weekend of Mar ardzija Jr. of the Huron Bowl 17th. Team events will be rolled as Pontiac competitors at Dal- Saturdays, and double and sin- FIRST ENTRY — William F. McQueen (left) of 114 Putnam was the first entry this week tor Sunday’s qualifying at 300 Bowl for jh^ Pro-Am Tournament prior to the Mar. 24-28 Professional Bowlers’ Association North American Open in Pontiac. Tourney official Dan Genereaux welcomed McQueen. Bowlers expecting to participate in Sunday's pro-am qualifying for the March Professional Bowlers’ Association North American Open at 300 Bowl must pre-register by 8 p. m. today. Six county bowling establishments will have their first qualifying squads Sunday: Howe’s Lanes, Thunderbird Lanes, North Hill Lanes, Collier Lanes, Auburn Lanes and 300 Bowl. TEN PER CENT Every week 10 per cent of the bowlers at each site will qualify to bowl with one of the 118 professionals who will participate gles competition Sundays. Entry blanks are avialable at all local boiding estabiishemnts and from women's league secretaries. They should be mailed to Mrs. Bender at 363 Dover in Pontiac by midnight of the 18th. las. Samardzija is making his second straight trip to the BPAA National All Star. Representlag the 300 Bowl, Mrs. Carter will begin her first competition in a national bowling tournament Wednesday night. She presently is carrying 176 and 174 averages in two local leagues. Recently hampered by a thumb injury, the slender bowling mother reports it is completely healed and she expects to be at peak form for the jsmmamant BEGINNING She did not start bowling until 1968 when her husband interested her in the sport She credits him with teaching her most of what she knows about bowling, and encouraging her to * pursue it seriously. ■ Billy Geiembiewtki and Joe Joseph aloe have helped her. The latter detected a flaw in her approach and BUty*4©" helped her master the ten-pin spore. Mrs. Carter admits being just a league bowler. She does not teach the sport except within the family. The Carters have a three-year-old son Alan; and his game can expect a lot of attention from both mother and father. There will be an ironical twist to this year’s AH Star. Ujuis P. Petersen of Chicago will be honored posthumously with the fourth BPAA All-Star Award of Merit. Petersen was an organiser of the association and a founder of the tournament He also originated the Petersen point system for scoring. The system, ironically, was dropped from the National All Star this year. OTY WOMEN Pontiac Women’s Bowling As-sociation secretary Peggy Ben- f D«roit at ewcag» Travelling) Loop Leaders Home 300 Bowl will depend on the familiarity of home to keep It rolling in the Travelling Classic League Sunday after overtaking defending champion Airway Lanes last week. League action will begin at noon on the “300” lanes with only West Side Lanes not slated for duty. ★ A A The‘ top two teams, Airway and 300 Bowl, clashed last Sunday with the latter grabbing a 13-6 victory and a half-game lead over its victim. SET PACE Joe Foster with 614 and George Chicovsky with 223 both took three points for the winners. Other scores saw West Side Lanes romp past Huron Bowl, 12-4, Wonderland Lanes bomb Cooley Lanes, 21-5, Montcalm Bowling Centre trim Sylvan Lanes, 23-13, and Primrose Lanes top Howe’s Lanes, 18-8. Tom Mayes of Montcalm made the top individual showing with 10 points on 234-255 (663) scores. Chuck Messer had eight for Primrose with 234-230 (634) efforts. The best balanced attack was Wonderland’s with Dick Sher- PEG CARTER NHL Standings * W L T Pit. OF OA Chicago ....... II II 7 47 135 *0 Toronto ....... 20 11 4 40 107 07 Montreal ....... If II 0 44 122 102 Detroit .......... 14 17 7 35 73 110 New York ....... 12 20 4 30 110 125 Boston 7 23 I 22 75 120 THURSDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 5, Chicago 3 New- York i Boston 3 ' ---TODAY'S OAMM No games scheduled SATURDAY'S GAMES Boston at Toronto Colonial Keglers Sob Fob Slip Away Again Just when Colonial Lounge had the 300 Bowl team where It could overtake it and grab the lead in the West Side Lanes Classic, the pace setters slipped away again. A A A Colonial had crept within three points of first place last week but “300” took eight points Monday night and now the mar gin is eight. There were 13 series in the 600 category Monday night led by Walt Ruebelman’s 656 on 212-233-211. Sony Santa Cruz had the top game with 245 in his 633 series. wood getting six (252), Paul Horie (608) and Bin Shaver (626) five apiece. TRAVBLUN* CLASSIC STANDINGS W L Wt 300 BowL _ 7 1 Huron Bo'S! 4 4 Airway Lancs V T NIShT H Wonderland 7 3 Wort Sido 4 in the Pro-Am preceding the March 24-28 PBA tournament. There Is a 14*888 purse for the Pro-Am which is divided only among the amateurs. First prise is 81*888. Sunday’s qualifying will begin 10 a.m. at “300,” and 11 a.m. at Thunderbird, and will include noon and 2 p. m. squads at “300,’’ Howe’s and Auburn. A A A In addition, there will be squads at 1 p.m. (Thunderbird), at 2 p. m. and 4 p. m. (Collier), and 5 p. m. (North Hill). The entry fee is (7 of which 85 Is prize fund monies. A 100 per, cent handicap is used In the qualifying. Entries are available at all qualifying sites. The competition is not limited to Oakland County since establishments in Lapeer, Saginaw Bay City, Detroit, Ann Arbor. Inkster and Flint will also have qualifying. Montcalm BC 7 Coo lay Lama 1 Sylvan Lana, 5 4 Pal Kt SUB irgroundt 2 I 4 Howt'i Lana* 2 7 BOWLING Marzich in Strong Bid for St. Louis PBA Title Sultan, your Ford Dealer Arl Used Core are ready L ST. LOUIS (AP)—Making a strong bid for a second successive championship in the $25,-000 St. Louis Open, Andy Marzich of Long Beach, Calif., finished far ahead of the qualifying field with a 24-game total of 5,332 Thursday night in the Professional Bowler’s Association Tournament at suburban Crest-wood Bowl. Marzich will take a lead of 183 pins into Friday’s round robin of match play in which 16 bowlers will compete. In second place is 21-year-old Harry O’Neale of Charleston, S.C., with 5,149. MATCH PLAY In the match play, the previous-pin totals are carried over A 50-pin bonus is given for each game won. The four men with the highest totals will go into Saturday’s nationally televised final. Pontiac bowlers Mike Samard-zija and Monroe Moore took 36th and 42nd places respectively. Samardzija rolled a 1261 in the third block and 1228 in the 4th block for a 4878 total, while Moore had totals of 1278 and 1126-4840. Samardzlja’s best game was the opener of the third block with 246, and Moore matched this with the same score in the same game, The 16 qualifiers in order: Andy Murid), Long Beach, CaUf., 5,332; Harry O’Neale, Charleston, S.C., 5,149; John Nkkell, Dayton, Ohio, 5,112; DaryleeCox, Bellingham, Wash. 5,109; Ray Bluth, St. Louis, 5,081. Dick Hoover, Akron, Ohio, 5,-077; Pat Patterson, St Louis, 5,068; Jerry McCoy, Fort Worth, Tex., 5,058; Roy Rosland, Chicago, 5,058; Dick Weber, fit Louis, 5,052. Rcy Orf, St. Louis, 5,049; Fred Lening, Fairless HUIs, Pa., 5,-04$; BUI Miller, Compton, Calif. 5,041; Don Carter, St. Louis, 5,-038; Harry Smith, Baltimore, 5, 027 and Charlie Wilkinson, Sa lina, Calif., 5,025. City Champions Upset Victims in Cage League The first big surprise of the young basketball race In the city American League came last night when West Bloomfield Heating upset defending city champion Southwest Community Club, 8666. In the other AL contest, White Lake Pharmacy rallied in the second half to defeat 300 Bowl, 58-53. West Bloomfield nsed its height to overcome the speed and jumping ability of SWCC, and outscored the losers hi every period. At halftime the score was 42-36 for the winners. White Lake trailed 300 Bowl, 34-27 at intermission, but out scored the keg team, 22-11, in the third period to turn the tide of battle. Bob Troesch and Mike Foster dumped in 15 points and Chuck Schroder had 14 far the winners. Bill Rausch came off the bench to score 13 for 300 Bowl and Dale Yarger added 10. The women did all right for themselves In the Grand Trunk Mixed League at Airway Lanes Sunday. Doris Sundquist had a 241 game In 553 series; while Mary McGee produced a 602 series with games of 210-222. In Wednesday’s Airway Angels League, Dorothy Dyker had a 234. She teak the season high haadkap game hours with a 265 total. Ylula Boise rolled a 210 actual Wednesday, too. Jean Snyder recorded a 561 aeries. Pauline Tinson was one pin better with a 562, including a 206, in the Tuesday Airway Rockettes loop. Peg Carter rolled 209-552 scores. TEAM EFFORT The Godhardt Funeral Home team had a big game Wednesday night In the Lakeland Ladies league. It posted the high team game of the season with 910 on the Sylvan Lanes boards. Mary Kinfiald led the team effort with a 208 game. —A • A -A--In the Superior Merchants League Monday night Dick Sutliff hit 279-633 totals for the' G. W. Trunk squad. Huron Bowl's Tuesday Railing Pin League recorded a 216 by Gay Larkin, and a 113 hy Shirley Jacobson. Hnron Theatre balds a 2% point load. The scorers have remained good at Howe’s Lanes recently. Included among the better ones were Lorraine Cloutier’s 212-224—635 in the Clarkston Women’s League as Aluma-Vue took over first place. Will Margin Grow in Huron Classic? High team series In the Monday Night Doubles,now is held by Jo Gobi and Marvel Ssot with a 1129 total split almost evenly between than. The Howe’s Men’s Donbles had a 226-411 by Chris Nicholas and a 285—811 fat the Friday Night Honse League. The Thursday Morning League reported a 224-214—843 for Larry Mattson. The Bucks and Does League continues to have its tight race with the Buckshots leading the Spike-horns by a half .game. ‘ A A A Harley McLeod had a 239 in the Howe’s Friday night House League; Bob Rica’s 232 and Lee Ballard’s 284 lad the men and women la the Sunday Night Foursomes bowling. NEW LEADER Ferrell Heatihg end Plumbing is the new leader in the Howe’a Senior Classic which recently recorded a 222-245-477 by Pud Bamum. Dave Thompson with 233 and 818, and John Bennett with 225 have stood out la the Junior Classic. a**—- Actien this week attfce 86 Bowl hsdadod a 28-486 dao by BID Summer and a 28 by Wayne Aaabel la Dm Pontiac Mater Brier-Office League Wednesday. Dally Johnson that night in the Ladies Classic League hit 200. The Hep Cats loop recorded a 122 triplicate for Flora Bills, a 28-58 for Jeannette Wisch-man and a 81 (18 image) for Marilyn Boumaim. There was a 28 performance by John Warner end 212 effort by John Nicholas Sr. hi the Wednesday Night House loop. AAA Stemmer’s Catering retained its lead by one game in the Hilltop Rebels League at Hilltop Bowl Tuesday. Miami Signs Managar MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The Miami Marlins announced Thursday they will have Bobby Morgan, veteran major league in-fielder, as manager of their Florida State League team this season. Make a big splash in your own harem—get intxfa Ford Dealer A-l Used Car. Your choice of makes, models, prices. They’re inspected. They’re reconditioned when necessary. They’re road-tested by expert Ford Dealer mechanics. What’s more, the priCes are right. See your Ford Dealer. ; raw. 1963 FORD 1963 MONZA 1963 FORD 2-Door Hardtop Gplpxie "500" wrNft • Chertnut ftnith Automatic transmission and radio •"OnV , ' , $2,295 2-Door Coupe Radio, heater. 4-speed, whitewalls. Mack with rod trim. WAS 11,775, Now Only $1,845 9-Passenger Colintry Sedan with radios heater, whitewalls, V-0 engine. Solid white and it a beauty. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP 9 acres lowed for eMwte «r convaleecewt homo. Sower and water available. _ t Bisbep, lac. IW S. Wiriwem Ml H* $2,295 OHN McAULIFFE FORD, INC. — 630 Oakland Avenue, Pontiac, Mich. a BOWLING a SNACK BAR ■ a BLUE LOUNGE NEW BILLIARD RDOM Mow Open In Frosty Golf Open Rosburg s Lead in Doubt The 38 Bowl team will be looking to extend its lead in the Huron Bowl Classic as action picks up tonight. The pace setters used a strong consistent performance.to add four games to its lead last week with an eight-point sweep of Harvey’s Colonial House. A * A A Second pLace Calbi Musk could not keep in tune with the 1074-1044-198 — 3151 tempo the “38” team hit last week. The musk men settled for a 4-4 break with Mazza Mobil Service. Individually, Marcus Bowers had 238-236-495 and BID Smith 267-645. Buck McDonald had a 259, game and Paul George bowled 257. Lee Luenbergr hit 259-68. OFFICE SPACE Pontiac Mall Offica Building Up I* UN tpuaro Trot, fully Mr condttlened. will piiUHm Ip ywr specifications. Ground tr eocond floor, uni United Tree porting. Proettge location. For Information coH Pontiac Mall magging Cantor Kebert WHfbeld 682-0123 BOWLING FUN / COLLIER LANES 879 8., Lapeer Rd., Oxford SAN DIEGO, Calif. UR-Golfer Bob Rosburg led the way into the second round of the 88,000 San Diego Open Friday—or did he? Rosburg completed the first round with a four-under par 68, one stroke in front of National Open champion Julius Boros, Tony i4»tnn and a newcomer to professional tournament attention, Charles Coody of Fort Worth, Tex. DARKNESS \ But—8 golfers, stranded by darkness on the Rancho Bernardo Country Club course Thursday were set to complete their initial rouui early today. Included were at least three threats who could match or even outscore Rosburg. Ik A A They are Jerry Barber of Los Angeles, Frank Beard, Louisville, Ky.. each with nine hok scores of 8, and Dow Finster-wald, Colorado Springs, with a 34. This trio, plus the others, faced the problem of a further delay since the weather has a habit at this time of the year of freezing the greens in the early morning hours. They froze Thursday morning, causing an hour delay in the start, and the same was expected today, which could cause even more confusion. There was no problem later in the day. The skies were bright, the temperature warm. NOT EASY The Rancho Bernardo course, under fire for the first time in San Diego annals, apparently is none too easy. Only 8 players bettered par. A year ago, at an- other course and in cold, wet weather, 47 broke par. Arnold Palmer, who is a pretournament selection in almost any event he enters, hoped to rebound from an opening 73. I Bob RMburS ................ 73-33—44 Julius boro* ............... 3H4--47 tiny Lima ........... 33 34 47 Chart** Coody :............. ***3-47 Tommy Bolt ......,<.......33-34—44 George Knudson ......... .... 34 34 4> Peter butler ............... ■ 3433—44 Gene Littler 343S-37 xBNI Broth .......... .......3*-»—*7 BIN Porker ................. 34-33-47 Dudley Wywng Jr, ............ 33-34-4* Dick Hendrlckton ........... 37-31—4* Don Fairfield ........... ,.*M7-d» Al Gelberger ........../...J.. 3<3*-*» John Cook ...../•.....34M-R Jot Campbell ............... • 35-34—4* I For More Fun... Better Bowling. See U» about team* individual and league opening! for next year. Day and night Free certified instruction. Snack Bar. . Cocktail Lounge. LAKEWOOD LANES 3121 W. Huron St. ..Ft 4-7943 HbuieiLoitM C9R-RA11N,T otxia hwy Dtp-Oil I I CLARKSTON OPEN BOWLING DAY OR NIGHT NORTH HIU LAMER I tNck Wert ei Twlrt DrM la kuhimr** Horn Nad RESERVATIONS 6514544 II 300 HOWL PRESENTS PONTIAC'S mm mir EVERY SUNDAY AT 1:46 ON WP0N YOU MAY BE OUR NEXT SPAREMASTER HERE’S ALL YOU HAVE TO DO • Contestant* drgwn from open Bowling • Bowl 3 gamoi anytime between 9 A.M. Til 6 P.M. Motw.tttni Fri. or Sunday 10 A.AA. 'til 1 P.M. • 3 Game* of Open Bowling make* you Eligible • Evgry weak 4 New Contestant* are drawn • Cash and Marchandisa prize* awarded weekly The 300 BOWL 18 8. Cass Lk. Rd. ■ fV V v M t ■WV-, ® ,''M' '7 v ,, } , t ( - , „ ■ '■ 1 r! ™ : ; t - " " ■ / ' ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY W, 1004 l i- »f M» V ; THIRTY-ONE - MARKETS The following are top pricea covering aalee of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce Fauns Apptot, MMcm. R#d, bu. ...........13.50 Appiw. Dnlldout, Gokton, bu. ......3.50 MMb Jonathon, bu. 3.00 AqfIA Mclntoih. bu. 3.00 A»l>fc Mortnorn Spy, bu. .......... 3.50 Afpcldor, cam ............. 2.50 VMBTASLBS L..ui,,............v... ijs curly, bob. ............ jJ) rod, bu, ............... 1.35 Cahbago, standard, bu. ...........1.75 Carralt. caHo oak, 2 dos. .........1J0 Carrots, finds.....................2.00 Calory, M ....................... 1:50 HortoradWi, pk. bokl. ...... Looks, bch. ...............! Onions, dry, .10 lbs. ..... Parsloy, root bob. ............... Mi ■potoMpo ........... ....... Parma*. etllo pok, do*. .... Potatoes, 25-lb. bos ........ Pal*****. 50-lb. bap...... Radhhao, block ...'........ Romms, hotbooso ........... squash, Acorn, bu. .......... Squash, atatoreup, bu........... , Squash, Suttsrdub bu. .......... 1.15 SquoaN Dallelsus. bu. ............ Mi soupib mm...................+......' » Tumps, Toppod ...............LOO LPTTVCP AND SALAD ORPINS Calory, cabbsps ...........%....... MO Trade Irregular Market Hovers at 7-Day High 1.7S !£ Poultry and Eggs MTROIT POULTRY DSTROIT (AP)—Prlcos paid par Mmtf at Ostrok tar No. 1 qualify Ityo poultry I lbs. »Mi Mg braiisrs and L H lbs., oOibSS, It-20; Barrsd Rock IT-22; ducklings 25. DSTROIT BMP DSTROIT (APK-SPO prlcos paid per doasn at Detroit by first (mdudlnp U.S.)— Whltaa Orads A I umbo 4+47; extra lams 41W4S; largo 4B41; medium 34-41 Ik; small am , Promts Grade A extra large 41; large 3tW40; medium 37-30; chocks 32-31Vk. CHICAGO BUTTBR, BUM CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago MsrcanNIo Exchange Putter steady; whotoaato buy. tag arlcas unchanged; *3 score AA'TO; n a 571*; ft § m*i m c ms; cars »• B (fit s» c : Epps Steady; wholesale buying prices • isd; to par cant or bettor Oradt unchsnpod; whites It; mlpsd 30; medium* |7M; standards *4M; dirties 32V,; checks *1M livestock '■4ft' ■■ CHICAOO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (APT-4 110-270 lbs. I3.71-14.2S; M0-WP lbs. 13JM4JL Cattle 74M; calves none; slaught) steers steak to 50 lower; lour bads mostly prime 1,220-1425 lb. slaughter steers 24.15! mixed high choice prims MfiMM tas. MJSAA 23.5042.75. Sheep sot; wooltd slaughter lambs and ewes about steady with hardly onouW* ottered tor an adequate price trend; tow lot* choice and prims MJk Stocks of Local Inforosf Figure* altar decimal potato are eighth* OVER TUB COUMTBB STOCKS The following gustations do not necse-eerily represent actual transactions but art Mended a* a guide la the approximate trading range of the sscarRtas._ . BIO ASKDD AMT Can. .„.;„,..„.,.,...T 11.4 1M 13.4 Associated Truck MndMcaStr .............. Braun Engineering ..... Charles of the Rita .... Cltisen* utilities Claes A Diamond Crystal ........ Ethyl Carp. ............... 40.4 Frito-Lay, Inc. ..........__17.4 Mendel Products .............7 Mohawk Rubber Co. .......... 25.5 Michigan iasmlost Tubs Co. 1L5 Pioneer Flnenco rrrnr.Tvrm 0.4 Safin Frtattag ..............1$J Vemor't Ginger Ale .........4.3 Wtabstmaa'i ............... 11.4 Wolverine Shoe ............10 . Wyandotte Chemical ..... . 55 11.7 ffj 20.4 M II u 12.4 . Atflllatad Fund .............0J0 Chemical Fund ......... 12.73 ‘Commonwealth Stock ........17.03 Keystone income K-1 ........ tl) Keystone Growth K4..........5.43 Mole Investors Growth ......L30 Moot. Investors Trait .....15.55 Ntaom Growth ..............'.. t oo Totaviolon Electronics ...... 7.74 Wellington Fund ............14.42 Windier Fund ...............14.44 •—Nominal quotations. S.2S 14.14 1(41 10.14 Ltl tjt i4.tr tJ4 Friday' 1st DIVIDENDS DRCLARRO Fo- Ukal Fay. Rots rtod Record obis REOULAR Carlltto Cp .... . .125 Q 1-31 5-14 Kregv Co . .275 Q 1-24 3-1 Kroger p( A ... .5375 Q 2 28 4-1 Niagara Share . -a j .30 2-25 9-10 NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market moved irregularly early this afternoon close to the level it reached after seven straight daily advances. Trading was heavy. Prices worked lower in the morning but it was a reluctant retreat. Even as the averages declined, several leading stocks were making new highs. w ★ ★ w As selling pressure failed to develop, prices firmed Mid began to recover some of the lost ground. Gains and losses were fairly even by mid session. The diplomatic trouble with Panama was causing some concern in Wall Street but apparently not enough to prompt nervous selling. Meanwhile, news came of a gain in retail •ales and a decline in unemployment for mid December. DRUGS STRONG Selected drugs were strong and despite a generally lower trend among steels, motors and chemicals enough blue chipff throughout the list advanced to keep the averages close to an even keel. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .1 at 289.5 with industrials off .3, rails up .6 and utilities up .1. ★ * ★ IBM, which was spurred by spreading hopes of a stock split, went to another new yearly high even during the morning decline. It held a 3-point gain. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. Trading was moderately active. Syntex advanced more than 9 points in active trading. Data-Control Systems and Skyline Homes “A” gained about 2 each. Up a point or so were such stocks as National Video “A”, Alan Wood Steel, Astrodata, Coleman Co. and International Stretch* Down about a point were Rayette, Cahaveral biter-national and Dennison Manufacturing “A”. Universal Controls, Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke, Cinerama and Gulton Industries lost fractions. Corporate bonds were steady to a shade higher. U. S. Government bonds were mixed* Rules Okayed UAW, Management Agree on Procedure NIW YORK (AF)—Following Is a list at selected stock transactions on the New York Stock Ekchange with neon prices: —A— Abbottl 2.40 ASCVen .50* ACF Ind 1.40 Addretsqg 1 ACF Ind 1.40 Admiral Aim. Fred 1 AMtodCh M0 (Me.) Nigh Law Met Chg. 4 120V* 121 121 —Vk AH* 14 to*1* 11 441b 441b 441b — Vk 17 224b 584* »V* — ■* 11 441b 441* 441b— 4b 4 21H 214* 214b — 1* 5 23’* 23W 231* + V* 20 Bib B Bib — 4b en ,50b AkxnLtd 40 AUlaClMl 20 Air Red 2.50 ASM Sir ) AltogCp .110 12 AffleradaF 2 AmAIrlln 1 A Bo set, JOg Am Srk 2.40 Am Can 2 AmbdPer 1b Am MO 1.40 Mere la Am Horn .30 Am MM .20 AMetCI 1.40 ACIPw 1.14b AmFP .44 AmCyan M0 Almelt 2.8O AmPhoto 23 AmOptktl 2b AmStd .80 AmTLT 3.40 Am Tob 120 Am Zinc 1b AMP Inc At Ampex Cp Amphorg ' Aiwcon 1 AnkenCh Armcblt 2 Armour 1.40 ARMCk 1.00b A8bl Oil 1.20 Asad DO 1.40 Atchta 1.20t AtUtet 2.40 Alto* Cp rg M lute ai 20 GamSk 1.20* 0 Accapt 1 Obi Cft 1.20 O Dynam Gbnliic 220 Gan Food* 2 G Mill* 1.20 Avce c*ra AVCCorp I Avnet .40b J 14—1* (2 271b 271* 17M ..... 20 17Vb 17 171b...... 2t J2Vk 5(44 59V* — 1* 2 54 554* 54 2 101* 104* 101* + 1* 7 mb 724* 724* + 4* x22 73'* 721* 721* + to 34 34'* 34 341b — 1b 0 Ml* MM MM + W 3 501b 501* 501b — M 25 444* 44M 44M + 4* 21 M* 224b 29Vb - 1* x!3 42M 424* 424* + M 57 MM B IS — 4* 0 21M <1 21 ..... 33 19V* 124* 124* . 14 39H 22M 224b + M 14 414% 40V* 4(44 — Vb 4 10 M. M, ..... 14 41 4444 404* — 14 21 44M 44M 444* + M 11 STM 071* WM — M 20 114* 1IM 114* — 4b 1 TIM n TIM + M 21 . 1SH 1(4* 1(14 — 4* 114 1411* 1404* 1404* — 4b 311 m 211* 30M — 1* 2 254* 254* Bib + 1* 7 27 344b 341b — 4b 45 144b 14H 144* 2 21M 111* 211* — 1* 51 474* 47V* 474* —1 10 101b 1IM 14 V, — >* 4 4S4b 4| 45-4* 42 414* 44 44M + 4* 2 urn* no** mm , 4 22M 22M 224b — M 1 R I I -------- 30 22’* 22 W •* 4b 7 54M 54M 54M— M Hercl 11 34* (M 3M . . Marti 1.20 147 154* 15'b ISM -F M Hewlett Fk 32 27V* B 22 — M Mott Bled 47 aria mm Bm — m Hamad 1.40 4 131* 134* 134* — 4* 17 174* 174* 17M 3 44' 454* 45ta + M 8 324* 32Vb 32V* ..... 27 374* 374b 174* + M 7 30M 20 2(4* + M 31 151* |4M 25 — 1* 8 75M 751* 75V* — '* 10 21M 211b 214* -f '* 25 5244 Slto 524* + 4* * 124*. 124* 124* + 1* 157 51M SI. SV — M 13 104b 10M 104*....... 1 25M 25Vb 2SV» + 4* S3 34V* 334* 3444 — 4* 120 224* 204* 22M +1 OPrecn 111 GPubSv .38* GPubUt Ml Gun SJfl 1.20 GTeMfl J( GbttyOII 10g Ga Pac 1b GwiTIre .50 Olltott* 1.10* Goodrch 2.20 Oocdybor 1 GlenAld .Mb Grace Ce lb oranau .80b GranCS 1.40 GtAAP 1.20* Greyhd MOb GrutiM MO Gulf MLO 3 oWON M0 Gutt SU 1.12 HaHtaur 140 HamPap ijg Hanna Ce la avag .lag arcFdr.75i —B— 5 55 5444 144* - M 11 114* 134* 12M — V* 4 154* Mb 154* f M I fib | 304* + V* 11 704* 421* 424* —1 21 14 1IM 154* — M If 84b Si* 234* — 4* 12 51 MM 501b — M 1M 11* 1M Hggs rlstMs 4 371* STM 371* + M 9} 34M 3}to 34 — M 12 141* 34 24 — M 11 17M 171* 17M ) R MM H — 4* 9 47M 4*4* 47 —4* MbJLII-'' ■ m* -ft4H* 114b 1t4b——--------- 3fi4 351b 3544 + M JohnaManv 2 Jsn Logm .7* JonasAL 2.50 Joy Mfg 1 HookCh 1.10b Hum F 1.50 HouetLP .72 Hewa Sd At Hupp Cl JM Ideal Cam 1 IMCeeet Ind Bang . :*nt Ind' 2 Ing Rand la liitondbtl Ml tntertok 1.80 IntBueMch 5 IntIHarv 2.40 InMtaar 1.10a IntNIck 2.20a tat Cock 4 IntPap 1.05b tat TLT 1 1TE Ckt .15g !« H > 1 104b 1(4b 184b + M 4 924b 39 Vb |?4brt- ** M 24 234b 334b — M 33 STM 054b MM — 4b 9 094b 004* 8?'» + Vb 14 P4b 22 324b + 1* 244 794* 72M 7244 — V* 4 30 10 20 ...... 5 54b 54* 5M... 10 324b 32Vb 32'/* - M 1 fib 22Vb 22V* — M 117 32 214b *14*..... 75 294b 2t4* 224* + 4b 10 534b 53M Mb ..... 22 224b 224b »b — M 57 334b 324b 1IM + M 4 fib 521b fib — 44 22 421* fib 4214 -f M ■4 124b fib MM *- M „ 40 501* 424* fib + 4* MbwySt 1.00 11 12M 10 it - v* taJoe Laad 2 10 26H 25M 264b + 1* StLSanF la 52 224* 304b 32'b — '* '-t* 5 554b 504* Mb -I- 4b Smyrna .S2t 84 17V* 104* 1444 — M 23 40M 454* fib + M -21 40 221* 321*—1 4 45M 454* 454* — 4* 115 40M 474* MM + M 13 304* 104* 304* + M —H— • 554* 55V* S5H -F 1* 2 32bb 314* 334* — V* 2 |74b 174* fib — M 42 32V* 3(4* 121* + 44 tt 414* 41M 411* — M 13 41 41V* 41M — M 12 17M 174* 17M — M T A 0 4 — M 17 41M 42V* 424* — V* 5 fib 374* 374* — M 1 HV* MM 5*'* D 44 414* 4Mb — M 5 11M 11M 11M — M 20 ^(V* (4* (M — M 8 234* 234* 234b — 4b 4 MVb 504b Mb + 14 20 (0 79Vb 794* — 4* 51 444* 444* 444* 2 254* 254* 254* — M (3 534 528'b 533V* +5 7 92 504* 584* — 44 12 01M 01 014* — 4k 01 714b 704* 71V* -F 4* -Jff-ISt-JlML 154* - v* 21 324* fib 3244 -F1* 20 By* $5M 5014 + 1* 0 .W* M 1IV* + 4* Salat (bds.) High Law Last Chq 9 324b 324* 324* — <4 47 204* 204* 204* + V* 0 504* 50'/* 50V* . . 20 51V* 504* 51V* + 44 13 64V* 034* 034* —1 4 34'* 34 34'* + '* 04 334* 324* 334* + '* 41 751* 744* 75 ..... 22 Ml* 42 42'* ... 10 (7 4044 444*-----1b 15 504* fib MV* — '* 10 134* 134* 134* — >* 30 1(14* 172'* 1(01* —1 22 724b 704b 784b — 4b 1 04b OVb 01b . * 304b 3C* 304* + 'b 15 411b 41'* 41V* + •* —R— 120 105^ 104H 1047« — '■ 91 33Vd 33'2 -+■ V4 10 20 10 ,20 — V% 3 11 Ve 11 11 13 11H im jm^.a... 24 13H 13'4 13H ... 31 43W 42'/h 42*4 — V4 7 379b 374% 37%% —- %% 14 40 39 40 + %% 59 3494 34%% 34%% .. j 331 429% 42%% 42%% 30 111% II 24 42%& 42%% 42%4 *% Successful *lnve&t®m r"''% m i wm 32. OH IV US Rub 3.20 US Smalt 2 US Stoal 2 Unit Whaton UnMatch .40 Un 01IF4 M Uplohn 1 m am am kh + m J 114V* 114 IMi* - u 18 898* 848* 49 - 1* 13 ntk 51H SIM + 1* S B* *m mm — v* 7 fib 2SM 35V* — M 14 fib 30H 208* .... ( 77V* 74M fit +1 1 Mb ISM ISM + M Ohio Id 1.20 Oita Mato 1 OttoEtov Ml Out Mar JOg Owenilll OxfdPtp l.M S 42V* 421* 42M + H 11 fib fi* 478+- M tf 448* 441* 84V* + 8* tf fit ISM ISM....... if 5284 NM- 2084 . I MM II MM + M VanAII 1.40b VanadCp .tog Vartan A* VandoCo .40 VaBPw 1J4 WomFle ,50 WarLam .70 WnAIrL 1.40 Wn Bon wn Banco 1 WUnTel 1.80 WstgAB 1.80 Wjstafl 1.20 Whlrlfcp 1.40 Wltan CO WM WtanDIx l.M (Mato 2.00 Worth In 1.50 Yng ShT S 20 41 2084 208* — V* 12 358k 35H 358* + 1* 4 19M 19 19V* ... 2 308* 308k 30H — H 2 MVk MV* *41* — V* 9 9M 9'* 2H + '* 5 558k 0584 058k + 8* 10 4S8k 4584 458k — 1* 24 02Vk 02 89'* +1Vk 91 54V* 555k 5584 — >/> 1 584 584 (84 ..... 17 14V* 14V* 148k — M 7 -308* 308k 308* + H 10 54M 54M 58V* + Vk —V— 1 31M 31H 31H + M 1 12M 12'* 12'k — V8 S 158* 15H 158k . 35 118k KM 108b + 23 44M 40 888* + —w— 10 188* 141* 14H — 24 24 358* 24 + 9 79M 7084 TTM + to 21 41H 41 41VS + H 70 *4H 34 38 5 308k 308* 308k . 124 33'* 328* 328k — H 5 52'* 59'/* 59V* — V* 9 29’* 29 22 — V* 11 37V* 368k 348k — M X20 30Vk 30 30 ■ — Vk 6 758* 758* 758* .... 2 37M 37M 37M + Vi —X— 328 03 42'* I2M + 84 —Y— 11 ItTVk 1201k lMVk — H CHICAGO (AP)—Grain-future, prices showed a further tendency toward weakness today during the first several minutes of slow transactions on the Board of Trade. Declines ran to more than a cent a bushel in soybeans but held generally to minor fractions in the grains. Brokers said the market appeared to lack any inducements for speculators to do business and that commercial buying was light. trade at the end of the first hour was very quiet with wheat V» to % cent a bushel lower, March $2.21Tb; Soybeans % to 2 cents lower, January $2.76tt; corn unchanged to V* lower, March $1.20%; oats unchanged to % higher, March 72% cents; rye y* to % lower, March $1.52. Zanito 1.20a *23 768k 761* 761* — V* Sato* figures art unofficial. Untot* otherwise noted, rates of dlvF deads in to* fortgoing tab)* are annual disbursements based on tot tost quarterly or tsml-annu*l declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular nr* Identified In the toUosnng footnotes. a—A toe extra gr extras, b—Annual rata plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Obclarad or paid In 1943 ptot stock dividend, e—Declared nr paM to for tola year, f—Paid In stock durir 1943, ntllmafod cash value ,on stock during ax-dividend or split up. k—Doctored or paid tola year, on accumulative issue with dlvl- P*C GAB I Pec Petrol Pectir l.M 33M 32 IM JJM MM MM ParamFIct 2 PetaCopl' .70 Penney 1.20a fit* levy Mb' li'* — H IHImBm- m MM MM 381* - M at tost dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid ta 1044 ptot stock dividend, t—Payable In stock during 1204, estimated cash value on fx-dividend or fx-distrfbution date. I—tales In full. » eld—Called, x—Bx dividend, y—Bx DlvF dand and satoa to toil, x-dla—Ex distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—without warrant*. ww—With warranto, sag Whan distributed. wl -Whan Issued, nd—Next day daitvoty. i . • v|—In bankruptcy gr racntydlWlto or being raorgantail under tog BnnhrupICY Act, gr aecwrtttoa atsumad by audi com-powA >> Fpratan laaua aublect I* proposed Interest aguolBtatan tax. T • Grain Prices Cost of the program, which will get under way March 7, is estimated at $6,690, to handle 840 youngsters. About 1,900 children are eligible for the swimming instruc-| tion. Plans call for the program to run for 30 Saturdays during next year. ★ ★ ★ Only one 10-week session is scheduled so far this school year. NOT SURE Each pupil may be charged a $7.96 fee, but school officials are not yet sure how the fee will be charged. Board members questioned the leveling of the fee, stating it might place a hardship on families with a number of children. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “An acquaintance of mine whose heart was failing had it restored to nearly normal functioning by having a tiny self-contained electronic timing center ‘bniit’ right into his body. This device appears to have exciting investment opportunities for those companies who make them. Could yon name one or twb such companies and comment on their stocks?” H. B. A) Westlnghouse is one mak-er, but its volume from the heart device is entirely insignificant in terms of total revenues. I do not recommend Westing-house, because the company has shown no growth for the past decade and actually paid a higher dividend in 1954 than the. current one. Medtronic, Inc., is a small firm which makes the Pace-maker, another implantable heart unit. The company has shown a good gain in earnings in the fiscal six months ended Oct. 30. The shares sell around 6, but they should be bought only where considerable risk can be assumed. Q) “I am interested ia getting income and growth. I have 200 shares Canadian Pacific which I am thinking of switching into Central Soya yielding 6 per cent. Would you suggest something else? I also own $19,000 Series E bonds. Should I convert these into stock or keep them?” . - L.G. told police yesterday that $150 in cash, was stolen from his house. Two youths were apprehended later for questioning. CHICAGO (API— Wheat Mar .......... ............ 2.22M May ..........................; 2.1(1* JUl ................. ......... 1.74s*-8* S*P .............v— Corn Mar ............/... May .......... Jul In ether business, the school board issued a policy statement on continuing a federal • supported practical nurses training program. The school district has directed the training of practical nurses under the Manpower Development Act. ENLISTED BACKING An advisory committee for I the nurses program enlisted o»m Today | schooi board backing for con-|emois, Avon Township, told tinuing the program after it ex-1 sheriff’s deputies yesterday that pires in June. I miscellaneous items valued at Board members agreed the were ^en in * break-in at program should be continued, but emphasized it could not be financed with school tax A) I am very much interested to see that you come up with a yield of 6 per cent from Central Soya by adding the value of the usual 2 per cent annual stock dividend to the. cash payout. I„ believe^ you are right in Richard Beck, 2 S. Roselawn, thinking of switching your Ca- News in Brief Two microphones valued at $50 were reported stolen yesterday from the New Bethel Baptist Church, 175 Branch. Fred Archambeault, 3271 Liv- 1.74-78 V; 1.20M-M 1.228k 1.248*-8i 1.231k 1.1984-84 Mar May 721* 71 Vk 471k Mar ................................. 1.521k May ............................... 1.5484 Jul ............................... !.4(tk DOW-JONES NOON AVURAOSI STOCKS 30 Indua ................... 774.29—2.26 20 Ralls ................... 120.15+0.47 15 Utils .................. 140.40+0.00 45 Stock* ................... 271.43—0.24 BONDS 40 Bonds ............... I*.40—0.01 10 Higher grad* rail* ....... (2.47+0.07 1* Second grad*.relit .......1 9052+0.01 10 Public UtlHHSS ............ 17.45..... 10 tnduitrlato ...... 93.71-0.02 Business Noies Kampsen Realty & Building Co., 1071 W. Huron, has announced appointment of Dave Bradley, 152 Illinois, as a sales representative. Bradley formerly was a lab technician at Baldwin Rubber Division, where he wa% em- his house. Michigan State Trooper Michael J. Anderson of Sparta has been assigned to the Pontiac post following his graduation Wednesday from recruit school In a similar action, the board offered moral support for the Youth Assistance Department, | in East Lansing, a joint project of the schools, the county juvenile court and the city. . ♦ ♦ w The City Commission has proposed eliminating the program from its 1964 budget. DIRECTED LETTER George P. Caron is, program coordinator, directed a letter to the board pointing up the possible elimination of the youth program. Expressing the board’s sentiments, Monroe M. Osmun stated that the program had doae-a lot of good and he did not tike to see It “go by the wayside.” Public Sale: Private owner, mostly antique furniture, after 6 p.m. on Thurs., Fri., and all day Sat. 3089 Royal. Union Lake 363-5412. -adv Shore Market Delicacies. Potato sausage 39c. John Steak 89c. Stuffed chops 69c. FE 4-2233. —adv.. nadian Pacific. Central Soya is a good income stock, especially if figured on your basis, but it is not a growth issue. If you want growth with somewhat less income, I suggest Standard Oil of New Jersey. I would not switch E bonds into stock at this time. You would be subject to Federal income tax on total accruals, and you may be in a period of their maximum return.. j Mr. Spear cannot answer all mail personally but will answer, all questions possible in his column. Write General Features Carp.; 250 Park Ave., New York 17, N. Y. (Copyright 1964) Reach Agreement at Sterling Plant DETROIT UR — Agreement on a contract covering 135 employes at the Michigan Army Missile Plant in nearby Sterling Township was announced yesterday by LTV-Michigan division of Ling-Temcb-Vought, Inc., and ..Lodge Calendar “Attention: Quadrant Low’ 12 [the United Auto Workers union. Club. Annual meeting Will be | Spokesmen said the Igree-held Wednesday, Feb. J2, at 8 merit, ratified by members of p.m. at Pontiac Lodge No. 21 j UAW Local 809, provides for Temple, 18% East Lawrence St. wages ranging from $2.45 u Proposed By-Laws change and hour to $3.71, depending on job However, he mentioned that election of officers." —adv.1 classification. ft mt. Mr » fi lj§ ( ' rv THIRTY-TWO V‘,'> f c jf. • \ ITf' 8T .f '• '(. 7",*, - T ' ‘ I M r V Pi- fflJW I n -1-' : A r~ ‘ !l L m II'M. | I ' ' #». THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY IQ, 1964 Mr" yryip mWM k 'fit;. 1:I7‘ Brings Satisfqction School Guidance Work Expanding Field EDy By I F-S1.TR j. NASON, Dear Dr. Nason: My parents prefer that I work toward a Doctor of Philosophy degree. I want to go on to work-in guidance and school administration on either the secondary or college level. Although I liluf science I do not feel that I/have enough interest to go on in any of them for a Ph.D/Perhaps you can give me some advice. j. H. J., Campbell, 0. r* h ★ Answer: The requirements of a doctorate in education allow for concentration in psychology, philosophy and other behavioral sciences necessary in the guid- ance work. My experience in this field has brought me much satisfaction. I| is an expanding field and the need for well trained personnel is great. Stick to your goal. Answer: Learning to live with people is part of a college education. Dear Dr. Nason: I am a freshman in college. Students here are nice but tend to be “cliqueish” and I seem not to belong. I am a joiner and would like very much to get into things here but hesitate to push myself. I am bashful, I suppose. Can you give me some pointers? Leonora, Battle Creek, Mich. To be successful, you must put forth ef-fort. Remember, you will be accepted by dividuals, n ° t DR NAS0N groups. Get acquainted and be friendly with students in a group you would like to join. Develop a friendly smile. Give the new technique a chance. Don’t try to hurry it. ment they should have! But first plans — then encouragement. * We are agreed that a success, ful teen-ager has plans. Plans for his immediate schooling, plans for his ultimate career — and they must be his own. However, teen-agers have a responsibility to consult their parents regarding their plans. Some teen-agers make no constructive plans unless parents insist,. Parents must give them help in learning to plan before the encouragement you advocate could be of any value. it ■AST *9432 ¥7653 ♦ AQJ ♦ 72 NOITH (D) ♦ AK ¥QJt ♦ K9864 ____ ♦AQJ WEST * 10 8 7 S ¥109*4 *532 ♦ 04 SOOTH ♦ Q JO ¥ AK ♦ 10 T ♦K1006S3 Both vulnerable Kwft Bart Sooth Weat 1* Past 2N.T. Past 6 N.T. Double Paw Pus Fu Opening lBad—4 3 - I At this point East would have done well to settle for a 200 j point profit but East became hoggish. He wanted 500 points so he led back a spade whereupon South claimed the rest of the tricks. South had a real break because if he had made his proper response of two clubs to the diamond opening the chances are that North would have wound up playing the no-trump slam and there would have been no way to beat North. Dear Dr. Nason: I beg to differ with an opinion expressed in your column. Being 16, I’m closer to the problem. * It is my opinion that tfye teenager does not need someone to do his planning, but someone to help him carry out his own plans. What-the teen-ager needs most is a truly interested adult to teach him, help him and praise him. Miss L. M.. Indianapolis Answer: Agreed! Encourage- (You can write Dr. Nason in care of The Pontiac Press. He will answer questions of widest interest in future columns.) New Jersey Town Cool on New Name SOUTH HACKENSACK, N.J. (AP)—The Township Committee voted unanimously Hiurp-, day night against a suggestion that this industrial community change its name to Jacqueline in honor of the widow of President John F. Kennedy. OUR ANCESTORS By Quincy VACnRDJVvHcAe Q—The bidding has been: By OSWALD JACOBY As they say in Wall Street, “The Bull gets a little, the Bear gets a little, but the Hog goes broke.” East liked his double of the no-trump slam. He was certain that North would not have jumped right to I six no-trump without a high1 card in his suit and he knew that his double would produce a diamond lead from his partner. . East and West were paying the conventiMi originally invented by Teddy Lightner of New York in which the doable of a slam calls for an annual lead. South Weat North Baat 14 1 ¥ 1 N.T. Pass 3* t Pan 1¥ Pass You, South, hold: ♦AQ8 ¥2 4KQ J7 0 *AQ4 2 What do you do? A—Bid throe spade* Tour partner is showing tha am of hearts so there are no heart lee era. Ho aloe la expressing slam interest. TODAY’S QUESTION Your partner continues with a jump to live dubs.-What do you do now? JACOBY “Monique Duval? 21 rue de Berri, Paris? I came here to forget her, too!” BOARDING HOUSE In this instance the only suit bid by North and South had been diamonds. Hence, a diamond opening had to be the one unusual lead at West’s disposal. West dutifully opened a diamond. The four was played from the dummy and East won with the jack. Mfel * 1 SI JF By SYDNEY OMARS Per Saturday "The wise, mao central* his deetuiy . . Astreiepy palais me way.'' ARIES (March ty to April It): Good nows Indicated from afar. Important eat houat In ordar. Raach daclsion based on combination of maturity, diplomacy. Consult with family mambar. ■ TAURUS (April 20 to Moy 20): Merely wishing Is not enough Apply yourself wishing it no? wougn. Apply youri¥ii today tor concrete results. Go over protect, review details. Money situation due to improve. Good evening for enjoyment. GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): Whatever you undertake — be enthusiastic. Optimism proves ' ■ catching/* Gloom defeats your purpose. Legal or business question will require additional study. CANCER (June 22 to July 21): Examine statements by one who assures you "ell is eesy." Be observant. Pick out flaws. Be safe, informed rather then sorry later. Don't rely on one side of nib (July 22 to Aug. 21): Sheke'oM groundless rear, doubts. Good lunar aspect corresponds to chance for romance, creative accomplishment. Take Initiative. Hf----- nee, showmanship. at. 22): Your SOIFICATION. TAURUS message. Ob|active attitude essential. Permit reason to rule over emotions. LIBRA (Sept. 22 to Oct. 22): If you try to expand too quickly, disappointment follows. Instead, finish one tosk at o time. Get' in on ground floor. Loam the rules. Then apply yourself. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21): Avoid self-deception. Applies especially where money affairs ere concerned. Sources of Income will require added attention. Extra effort today will pay oft In near future. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21): Cycle high, Personal appeafance favored. Moans get out and be seen end hoard. But take care In dealing with those In authority. Treed lightly I CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jen. Delve deep to obtain facts. Means don't satisfied with euperftcial statements. FIGURE, WMACTDOYOU TME MEW BOARDER I Will be like^i Ht*\ AS1WE MILDEWED KIND THAT COMPLAINS OP A DRAFT WHEN SOU TURN THE PAGES, OF A MEWSPAPER' *1 HOPE H£S NOT A CHOW HALL TIGER LIKE THAT ^RETIRED BANK CLERK, RUSSELL GREEM,WE HAD LAST WINTER/, HE ONLY WEIGHED 105 ftXWOS, »gUt 1 GOT StK STITCHES iMjj MY WKlGT WHEN X TRIED TO J/ THAN A BEAT HIM YUTHTH' FORK >flM0TH IMA TO TH' LAST PORK CHOP/J f NYLOM FACTORY/ HERE H£ COMES-AMD HE LOOKS * MORE OUT1 OF PLACE JL \u - •% SNEAK PREVIEW OF THE MEW MAN* OUT OUR WAY HALF TH'SHOP HAVE THEIR HANDSUP— HE SHOULD FIRE’EM ALL/ A BOSS WATCHER IS WORSE THAN A CLOCK WATCHER/; knowledge. You could uncover valuable secret—If 1 you are persistent. Go to it! AQUARIUS (Jan. 2) to Fob. 1*): Visits, entertaining, being entertained — very much favored today. But don't per- ■asN llwMaru In "turn wMir haul " KMB ______ _ "turn your hood/* Koop loaf on gpound. Rood SCORPIO PISCES (Feb. 20 to March 20): Associates may have reacted In unusual manner. Stick to beliefs. Do lob as you know It must bo done. Evening favors quiet relaxation. Avoid one who wants "hurry. * * * IF SATUBOAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY , i you are intuitive, would make a wonderful teacher — your eumpethy ex*, tends to underdog, and you will fight ter tho rights of others. * * * GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high r SAGITTARIUS, C A P R I C O R N, UARIUS. Special word la CANCER: Mr to ah Is of paramount Im- buing Py^TPtml jump to ponctustens. _ (CagyngM i?m, ooHini ruiupi • rn.wwAi-.TaiSwes.f-. on. A 'MARKEt? MAN JXyiUJW» HP * f BEN CASEY ^soop HUNTMO^HPJr>4L Krp nn/, DocroRjjB'^^-iA Hil III ^Hn / /(,'J iwl • !M« ky MCA, lao. \l(j THE BERRYS By Carl GruNn WHAT iVl DONE? VDU CANlT ^STAY YOUNG FOREVER/j- WELL.YOU CAN SEE WHAT BABIES, COCKING, WASHING AND HOUSEWORK WILL DO/. SWEETIE TOME YOU SHU. ARE THE. MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRL INTHE WORLD/jgiaO( THANKS, pAL/r DRIFT MARLO ITfe THE WAY6HE WANTED IT, CLAIRE. SHE KNOWS WHEN THREE'S A CRCWD' By Dr. I. to. LetHL Toon Cook# and PhH Evana TELL ME { ALLEY OOP By V. T Hamlin maoes pont.rp 'ROUND BEATIN UP PEOPLE...EVEN IF THEY PONT MIND THEIR OWN Buaoirag/ CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner PUH-H-HOW / •O4O0«aa*NOanOP8O6TON.1O , MUCH PURDER. ( QUBUCi ANP ANELX RIGHT POX COO MORE 15 00040 RAY/ V-TKSN 5T0P AND A0K ABOUT TNI BEST LABRADOR,PALI g FOOT 7RM.A0R THE 1AET 200 MRE*l Ml CANT FIND IT .OH NO MAP*'. MSQMl NOWONPERI OWWMNT MCCULPMTFMP J NUTTM M OUR it, son! par ausr sa /COWRAQC about PLUMS OPPTI ALL yUSIMLKKaOCt PA MAP*! V MILE* UP NEAR. EMI*#**- FIT MORTY MEEKLE . ei-s-in i-anruEE By Lick Cavalli JOIMTOB, Ftimmp CLUB ovx FRIENDSHIP GU&1 BAH/WHATIS FeiBND6HIP^ A NEUaOTIC'CBMNR R3R AFFECTION. oa£ cNMjU 4 f • la*.\l/\j withe j THAPfe ALL RIGHT THB LCM0Z FORMS OF UFE.UtCEOOGS.BUr n*5 BBNEfiXHTHB DIONnY OF A HLHAAN. ski iuMUSUi rM Norduae,butt think i\e JUST BEEN INSOLTHDu • ItSIhrNfS. he. TM Sw us ht oe. NANCY By Ernte Bush miller THIS TOWN IS CHANGING — IT’S GETTING TOO MODERN J ~K U»qg' . ir-*v-..| 11* GRANDMA BUT, GRANDMA, YHI€ J RADIO OOCON-r , WORK/IT ONLY MAKES A IWRIYAYINt NOtCC/ / Wishing well i By Charles Kahn WHIN I'M BY MYSELF AND GET LONESOME-.. .IT'LL REMIND MR OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD; KIDS / lUMPAPPUANail ert of the northeast 'A of Section 1T1N, III, Waterford Toaaiakla, -Oakland. Cajjtlly. .Michigan. eccatdlni to me plat thereof reeproad In Liber «l of Plata, page 4», Oakland County Records, with owners of record at said 1st being Charles R. Sow las .and Naomi Joan sowlos. Me wife, of" 4121 Bagla .Court, Drayton Plains, Michigan; and a'ao PARCEL NO. 1 Lot SI Mountain View Park, Alexander A Wendell's Subdivision of a portion of the Mutfissst M of Section Ljt 1 N, R f E. Oakland County, Michigan, according la the plat thereof as recorded In Lmr 4 of Plata, page SA Oakland County Records, with owners of record of said lot being Henry T. Dahlquist and Agnes M. Dahf qulst, hit wife, of MS Henrietta Street, Btrmtogham, Michigan, and Bradford L. Springer and Dorothy f. Springer, his wHO, v Bos 14, Birmingham, Michigan; PARCEL 140. I That part af,. W*. M South of the lino between Lots , St extended to Bast line of Section 4 and lying North ot tha line between Lots 11 and IS extended lit Bast line sf Section t of Mountain Viper. Park. AISMShtSf A Warden's Subdivision of a portion of tha Soirtheest to of Section A T S N, R SB, Oakland Caunty. Michigan, according to the Mat thereof PS recorded In Liber 4 of Plait, page JO, Oakland County Records, with owners of record of said parcel being John H. Rouo and Beryl M. Rosso, hit wftet of 444 Fierce Street, Birmingham, Michigan; PARCIL IvD* 4 Tha northwesterly W ef Lot 14. and oil Of Lot SJ Supervisors Plot Ms. 22.* replot of Drayton Plains, Llnebury's Addition le Drayton Plains, and part of Section Nk TS N. R SB, WMer+ord Township, Oakland County, Michigan, £t bAsfrS rear of the southwest ouer Quarter pf Section 10, T 3 N, R It dition to Crary Junior High School will cost $435,425. A new elementary school in Holiday Farms will'cost $315,-215.50 and contracts for another new elementary school in Silver Lakes Estates amounted to $278,377.50. SEPTEMBER OPEN Supt. of Schools Dr. Don 0. Tatroe said he was happy the board acted on the contracts now. “Hopefully, all four facilities will be ready for occupancy in September,” he said. To date the board has let contracts for nine school projects earmarked for completion by next Septembers All are n part of the $1.25 million boilding program approved by the voters last June. Several cost - cutting adjustments were made by the board before approving the contracts last night. Bids were substantially higher than budgeted figures established last summer. ..The school system is $78,000 over its budget so far after contracting for the purchase of four school sites and the nine construction projeds. This deficit Will be made up by the funds returned to the county for special education room use and from interest on investment of construction monies, according to Dr. Tatroe. la other business last night, the board heard a report oa the expansion of the school system’s student teacher program. Beginning next term student teachers from Wayne State University and Oakland University will be added to the staff which presently employs Central Michigan University and Michigan State University people. Approximately 60 student Autopsy Set diaries O’Connell, 61, of 336 Woodside, Royal Oak, was dead on arrival at William Beaumont Hospital following an auto accident yesterday at Southfield and 12 Mile, Southfield. Southfield police said O’Connell may have suffered a heart-attack pince he suffered no apparent injuries. An autopsy is scheduled. O’Connell was a passenger la a car driven by Ronald E. Gregg, 53, of 3711 Shallow-brook, Bloomfield Hills, which collided with a car driven by Mrs. Belle Weleh, 50, of 28517 Aberdeen, Southfield. Police said Mrs. Welch’s car went oyt of control as she was trying to stop. The accident occurred at 9:03 a. m. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Welch was uninjured. Gregg suffered- facial injuries. Oakland Highway Toll in ’64 Law Ytar l# Data 2 Lone Thief Robs Clark Oil Station Charles Beaudoin, an attendant at the Clark Oil service station, 382 Orchard Lake, told police he was robbed at 3:28 a.m. today of $42. Beaudoin said a man came to the itation on foot and demanded “all your money.” Beaudion said he handed over the $42 and the man fled across Orchard Lake Avenue. ★ ★ ★ The robber didn’t reveal a weapon, but kept his hand in teachers will assist in the school! his coat pocket, according to Rocor*; thence 30 teat eoutti to a point on Seshebaw Reed; jtm--------- to e point » toot duo south t teuftamrt corner el Lot 13 Sroporty (Lot 33 Supervisors Ret No. I); thence northeast 31 feet to • po nt; thence eset 117.37 feet to a eotofi tfsncs south to the south line of Lot ll of Monrto Subdivision; thence east along the asrthlto* rtLrt 13 Mon/oe Subdivision to ff» point Of BagtantoB, and being wore tolly 4nd correctly described 00 toMPU: Beginning at • point ktfJhaWtort of sashabaw Road (M Net wrta) as laid out Si luperyteors Flit No. 32, sold point BMW distent South 07* W Wool 30 foot front fhe norttwart Corner of Let 33. sold northeast comer of Lot 33 being the southeast comer of Lot 13 of Monroe Subdivision running thonco south V* ST west ft .S3 foot iwig tbs west lino of Seihsbow Rood too point; thonco south 45* 47* 10" Wost/CTLW foot to a point In tho northeasterly I Me of Lot 35 of Supervleors Flat No. 32; theme north S^Vweet 110.25Jbjj alone the northeasterly line of Lot 34 of said subdivision to tho southeasterly comer of northerly lAof seldLol 34; thence South 44* wasfTTJOMet to a poGt In the northerly line of.DW# Highway (US-10); tiwnce north 4* 33* West 220.25 teat along the northerly line of Dixie HIMrwSr to e point; thence North 44 01 B" I* feel to e point In the southerly line sf the Michigan Bell TeJpKM^nrjonr pmpsrty > thence «*3r eeHV3 Met along • lino pnrjjBel to the northerly line of DlxW_H W>wey lo e point; thonco south 11* 43* But 120 *•*# akwo s Ikw 30 fast south of and parallel to tho south lino of Lot 13 ¥ Monros Sub-dfrttSn to point of bagtontoj^ with owners of record of^ sold parcel || - • - ‘^ 5 a , ‘ ^ W • t | 1 ».* m l )eaf fis in Pontiac Area MRS. BENNIE DAHL Mrs. Bennie (Mary B.) Dahl, 66, of 770 Williams Lake, Water-font Township, died this morn-ing after anlllnesrof five years. Her body is at the D. E. Purs-ley Funeral Rome. Surviving besides her husband are several brothers and sisters. MRS. JOSEPH RULE "Prayer service for Mrs. Joseph (Emma) Rule, 81, of 33 N. Anderson will be 8 pin. today In Sparks-Griffin Chapel. Funeral service will be Monday at the Erickson Funeral Home In Calumet. Mrs. Rule, a member of die Ahmeek Methodist Church, died yesterday after an illness of several months. She was a member I day after a brief illness. Her body is at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. . PUBLIC AUCTION query 15, 1544 Pf 5:45 frtw. t> end Auburn, Pontiac, Michigan, •ontlac, lerlal number JttPSJW, «Md «t **Uc Aurtfcn Mr ceeh it bidder. Car may be bwpecMg 1 *“r’Tienuery 11 end 11, 1*44 PUBLIC AUCTION,, . On January 15# HM at fs4l a*M* at SIMI/RS'llvd-* Lata .Orion,.Mlefj^n, a 15W CheyfoMt, NrM number •flU-*27340, will.If *8, 4» pKsc Auefim for cash le hMeet bidder. Car may bo kwpoetid at obove PUBLIC SALE i January 1A m4^i»r»:l«>m. Pt lock and Auburn, Pontiac Mkhlgen. 757 Cadillac, Serial NP. 574*05*57, M told at pMwc auction for cooh Ighott bidder. Cor may be imported bove odd rail ___ ____ January 7 end 10, 1744 On January IA W44, of 1:15 p.m. al Paddock and Auburn, PonHpc, Mkhlpon, o 1757 POfd, serial No. A7FM350I7, Will bo aoM at pubic auction Mr cooh to • ---------■ Oar may bo kwoortod at January » and ML 1*44 - - MRS. FLtYD W. JACKSON vAVON TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. Floyd W. (Gladys M.) Jackson, 60, Of 3465 Harrison will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Dequiodre Community Churdi. Burail will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Jackson died Wednes- Death Notices CHAMBSRLAtN. JANUARY * 1744, CASS, 41 Hovey, Oxford; age 00; bolovod husband of Nine Chamberlain;' deer father of Mr*. Suo Loo, Mr*. Mtren Fuller, and Mr». Bonnie Holmoe; aim survived by II grandchildren and one great-gnhddgughtgr. Funeral * • r v I c a will bo hold Saturday, January 11 u 3 p.m. * tho Boaaardet Funor-01 Homo, Oxford with Rov. /Anthony fltloon officiating, informant In Lakavlllo Comotory, Lako-villa, Mich. 6Ahu januahV io* mi mary BROOKE, 770 Wiliams Lako Roada aurvivad by aaveral brothari and siller*. Funeral errangaments ora ponding from tha D. E. Pursley Funeral Hama whara Mr*. Dahl will lia In atata after 7 p.m. thla evening. CULS, JANI/aRY 7, 1744 EMMA. 33 North Andenon straet; age II; deer mother of Mr*. Viol* Morgan. Clayton and ChotMr Rule; •In survived by Nvo grandchildren and 13 great-grand children. Prayer Semico aril bo hold thi* evening at I p.m. pt the Sparks-GrHfin Funeral Home. Funeral aorvico twill be held Monday, January u el tha Erickson Funeral Home, Calumet. Mich. Interment alio In Calumet, Mich. SMITH, JANUARY *, 1944, GEORGE W„ 477 Beat Pike; eg* 77; beloved husband of Edllh A. Smith;, deer father" of J. E. Smith; dear brother o( Mrs. Annabell* 3a is ley, Mrs. hemic# sharp, Mrs. Florence Beers and Earl Smith; also survived by one grandchild. Fumrol service YTltttit Tisld tohinlSYi |gn. very 11, at 1:30 p.m. at the Hun-toon Funeral Homo with Rov. Jamas McClung officiating. Interment In Parry Mount Park Cemetery.____________• ■ wIllE JANUARY 7. IMS ERNEST L., 443 Northway Drlvo; ago IS; bolovod husband of Molly Walls; door fither of Molvln and F. D. Walls; aim survived by fwe brothers and two sisters. Funeral sorvlco will bo hold Monday, January 13 at 3 p.m. at tho Price Funeral Homo, Lewisburg Kentucky. Interment In Lewisburg Cemetery, Logon County Kentucky. Arrangements by D. B. Pursley Funeral Hem*. IN LOVINO MEMORY OF SARAtl E. Green who passed sway January 10th, 17*2. I TREASURED thoughts of one M ' .door,' > J Often bring a silent tear; Thought* return to scones long pest, Tim* rods on, but memories lest. —Sadly misted by husband John Green, daughter Mery Vititbiskl and family, ton Wlteon W. Green end family. - 1 . AaMMMMMtB 1 3 "AVON CALLI NO"—FOR SERVICE In your heme. FB 4-45B1 ARE DEBTS W0MYINS YOU? 'Oat aid of doBt on • plan you con afford: Bmp layer not contoclpd. —Stretches your dollar. —No charge for budget anelyels. Write or phono for free booklet. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 703 Pontiac Stete Bank Bldg. . 7 FB 1-0454 - Pontiac's oldest end largest budget assistance compiny Member: Mlrtilgpn Aemrlofton at Credit Counselor* —American Asaociotlen of Credit COunMlers Announcgmenfs Pay Off Your Bills — without a loan — * Payments WW M 110 wk. Protect your |ob and credit Home or Office Appointments City Adjustmsnt Service 714 W. Hump ________FB STJ31 PAY OFF YOUR BILLS AND REMODEL YOUR HOME Any homeowner, widow, retire* or ovan those with credit difficulties, can be eligible providing tholr homo I* half or more paid lor. EXAMPLE BILL* ............... **>25 MODERNIZATION ...... 52,000 HOUSE BAL........... *7,000 „Total Owed ........ 07,000 MAIL COUPON OR CALL FROM ANY PLACE IN MICHIGAN FE 8-2657 B0NAFIDE IMPROVEMENT & INVESTMENT CO. IS W. Lawrence - Pontiac Michigan NAME .................... ADDRESS ................. Home phone or Nearest phono ............. TRY DIADAV TABLETS (FOR-merly Dex-A-Dlet). NSW nams, soma formula, only 370c. Simms Bros. Drug*. _________ VOTE FOR CHARTER AMENDMENT JANr 13 Pontiac Area Jr. Chamber of Commerce —BOX REPLIES— At 18 a. m. today there were replies «t The Press office in the following boxes: 13, 20, 26, 28, 44, $3, 73, 85, M, 93, $6, 98, 195, 199, 199, 119, 111. FbimhiI Directors COATS FUNERAL HdMd DRAYTON PLAINS OB 3-7757 C.J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOMB Koogo Harbor. Ph. 44MH00 D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalid Car Sorvlco ______•- FB 4-1311 DONELS0N-3OHNS FUNERAL HOME "Designed for Funerals" HUNTOON FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 50 years • 77 Oak lend Ave._FE 1-0117 SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL home_ "Thoughtful Sorvlco" F* *-***1 V00RHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME — FB MWB Estebllshod Over 40 Year* Cgmotory Lets 4-A LOT* IN WHITE CHAPEL CEME-ftry, try owner. UL 2-1173 attar 4. Pgrsonolt <3 ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly advlaer, phone FE 3-5122 galore 5 p.m., of ,tf no answer, -------! sen*. C CPU FE ‘ . Confidential. DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES, Menominee. FB 5-7105. 737 ON. AND AFTER THIS DATE JAN-it/tfc won writ BOM* responsible for any debts contracted by any other then myMlf. Richard E. Booth. 71VI west End, Pontiac, Mlchlstn. ’ , ON ANO AFTER THIS DATE JAN-uary 10, 1744 I will not bo reuon-slbie for any debts contracted by any other than myeelf. Richard O. Welch, 5700 Boot* Lake Road, Union Lake. Michigan. _______ VOTE FOR CHARTER _ AMENDMENT JAN. 13 Pontiac Area Jr. Chamber of Commerce Last and Fmd________________5 FOUND: REDDISH BROWN DOG with some while. 4734374. LOiT - BLACK AND BROWN Male Alrdale puppy, whit* spot on chart. Daughter'. Christmas present. Reward. FB 2-4300 or 71 Nor-WB. * ------ LOST; WHITE MALE DOG. LA** Oakland Heights, black •go'J black loft eye. BOword, OR- 37004, otter 5:30 p m. ____ BRITTANY JPANIELFOUND IN Drayton Plains area. Coll OR 4.1471 after 4 pirn. ________ Help Waiilfd Mole 6 A-l WORKING COLLISION MAN TO toko full Charge of Oump shop. State wages or working conditions desired also background. Local area, plenty of work. Reply Pon' tlec Press Box 7f._______ .. AFTER 6 F.M. r Must hove 3 men to work 3 hours In the evening. Earnings ot sso L week. Must be, met eppoer; ing end good wpfWf. «Wfl jR mediately. For mformotlon coll Ambitious Man A Marshft11 FleW Ftmlly. owned enterprise bit locif ambitious men ot unguestionabl* character. Age 27-50. College education preferred. Accuslomedto earning above average JWiJJ; Must be ready to accept pb»'tlon hy January 10. For local Intor-write fully to Mr. WNllam Branham, 202 Northland Towers# Southfield, Mlchlflan. State ope# education, experience# ond phone number. A Salaried Salesman Needed In our expansion program continuous training proi ~ 2-0217, FE 2-2117 tor drtol FE ATTENT|0N« START IMMEDIATELY MECHANICALLY-INCLINED MAN No solos experience necessary as wo will train you. Mutt be »bk to pet along on MOO per month to start. Job Is permanent. — Coll OR 3-0922, S p.m.-7 p.m. tonight may. Blood Donnors URGENTLY NEEDED Of RM Positlva 17 and B10 RH Negative DETROIT BLOOD llRVICB 14 SOUTH CASS PI 4-7747 ________7 a.m.-4 pjn. AUTO MECHANIC CHEVY EXP. DESIRED CONTACT LARRY MILFORD 684-1025 ’ required. Fortkw's Sleek House, II N. Case, Pontiac. -------------------f666 W CALL T. i 3344430 CIVL ENGINEER I Wanted ky the City *f Trey. Population 10,000. Graduate civil engineer with some experience. Salary *4,100 Jo 57,000. Send return* to David B. Firestone. City Manager, 40 W. wattles Rd.. Troy, Michigan. --------------------FRlslfli CLEANER, Holp Wanted Molt Children's Supervisor 54,400 - 15,100 Men needed to supervise, the Institutional actlvltlee of children and luvenlles. Require IndlvWuel with excellent personal habits who possesses the ability to counsel, control ond Instruct chlldrtn. Applicant must be over 25 years of ago and bo able to stand e rigid background Investigation. High school graduation required plus some experience In supervising luvenlle activities. Applicants must be available to work any shift. APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE, OAKLAND COUNTY COURT HOUSE, 1200 NORTH TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC, MICH. DESIGNER component,. PEGASUS LABORATORIES INC. 3500 W. 11 Mil* Rd. Berkley, Mich. DESIRt RESPONSIBLE AEMlffT-tlrsd or handicapped gentleman who requires additional Income while staying home. Prefer* on* with previous seles experience, mutt have good garage, excellent potential. Send resume to Box 20, Inkster, Michigan. CIVIL ENGINEER II Wanttd by tha City of Troy. Population 20#000. Gradual# civil on-gineer with minimum of 3 ypars axpar lance In watar# aawar and street programs. Salary $7,100 to $8#S00# depending upon ability. Sand resume to David E. Flra-stone, City Manager# $0 W. Wattles Rd.# Troy# Michigan._______ Die Makers JOURNEYMEN ONLY 50 HOUR WEEK OAYS AND NIGHTS ALL BENEFITS STEADY JOBS OPEN WALKED LAKE AREA LIBERTY TOOL - AND ENGINEERING CORP. 3350 W. MAPLE RD. WALLBD LK. DIESEL MECHANIC, Efchllltl-enced, mutt hovt own tools. Full or port time. FE 54143.__ DUOO THE TREMENDOUS BUSI-ness increase w* would 10* * qualified new or used car talesmen. Excellent potential. Superior Rambler, SSO Oakland Avt. EXPERIENCED RADIO BENCH repair men must know changers and tape recorders. Stssdy employment. SVj day week. Cell Ml 44350._______ .___________ EXPERIENCED WITH HORSE S, 0300 monthly. EM 3-7171^ EXPERIENCED CAR WASHER. AP-ply 147 W. Huron. Experienced appliances sKhv-Ice men. Apply In person. Kootey Electric 4620 Dixie Hwy.t Drayton ElBlno.________________ _• EXPERIENCED MECHANIC. _»P-ply In person at Al Hanouta Chov-rolet Bulck, Lake Orion. See service menegor. EXPERIENCED grill man, n£ht shift Sing* .benefits. Appht In parson. Ellas Bros. Big Bey, Totogreph 4 Huron._________ EXPERIENCED SPECIAL MACHIH-ory builders with scraping, hy-draullc and assembly bMkgrorttd. Prefer ability In broaching machines or lathes. An equal opportunity employer. Detroit Broach and Machine Cfc Rochester OL 14311 ’ ” IT YOU ere married, between 31 ond 50 years of ago ond 150 o weak court help you present Income c*H 473-7032, be-tween 4 and 7 p.m. only. EXPERT BUMP MAN. APPLY IN person. Crissfnan Chevrolet. Ro- cheater. See Roy.________ GROCERY PRODtiCE MANAGER, must run grocery and produce Dopt., of • medium sized market. Have to know pricing buying and displaying. Mgsl hove o prto*-ant personality end be able to moot the public. Sterling wag* 3135 plus overtime. It Interested piece* writ* to Occupant — lot* W. Long Lako Rd., Bloomfield Hill*, dating name, eg*,..*ddra**, phone, experience end rateience*. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Ushers, day men end concession help. Apply In person only, H a.m. to 4 p.m. Manager's office. Pontiac end Mired* Mil* Orly*-ln Theaters LIFETIME CAREER ,v OPPORTUNITY DETROIT METROPOLITAN AREA Far men to work locally tor International Fraternal Order. Duties consist of Interviewing applicants, for membership end taking cere of member's needs through our many benefits. Must on|oy dealing with the public and hovo a sales aptitude or background In business or sales. Intangible or specialty sales experience valuable, Must b* self starter a» pay ll on commission basis. Fold weekly advance voucher H desired. First year earnings should bo for obove average with automatic Increases tor tho next It years. You will be given * lifetime contract, trebling, pension plqn and have ample opportunity for advancement Into management. Work on an appointment basis, no canvassing. Prosports have -prior knowledge oT* contact. If married, ever V years of ago, and have let* model car,- cell Mr. Lewis at 5444172 Mon. and Tuts, tor appointment between 10 a.m. end . , 4 p.m. MAN TO WORK IN AUTd PART* stare, must be experienced as *n •uto parts clerk. Hoirtrbeck's Auto Ports, 373 Baldwin. Ft 333-4*54. MAN FOR GRILL WORK, EXPEA-ienced In kitchen management, fringe benefits. Good opportunity tor assistant manager In Drive-In restaurant. Reply to Pontiac Prase Box lit stating quellflcetlont end salary expected. MANICURIST FULL TIM8._ AN-thony's 30* Mein St. Rochester Help WgirtgJ Mtlg over. Veerhela abaw, Drayton Plains. 4514557. MANAGEMENT TRAINEE National flneidal organization has a planned management training program Into which It will accept on* man, eg* 2450. It you era seeking rapid edvancemom into an administrative position through Intense trebling end or* at toast a high school graduate, and have a ear, yog may qualify for this program. Those selected will be assured excellent salary opportunities, and outstanding employ** benefit*. Apply In person betwoen 7:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. to Liberty Loon Corporation, 710 W. Huron. MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Notional concern will b* trebling young nun# bftwttij IF»» w management of Pontiac office. Some experience In working with the public helpful, but not necessary. Must have dependable car end be willing to work tong hours. Salary. Call FE 42100.____ MARRlfeP MANTpHYSICAP-Y AC-tlve, able to drive. Interesting position for mechanically Inclined. Good clean lob. Income opportunity from MOO to BIBO per week. Coll FE 54115 tor Interview.___. MODEL MAKER FULL or fart time. 3 yrs. experienced. Kernahen # engineering. Romeo. PL 42154 Canted Ed Krupor. National Corporation Need man age 31 to 35 $500 MONTH 3 departments open . Man accepted will be trained on the |ob at Co. expense. Must be hlQpi ethool grad, and have neat nr exp. necessary. Must be able to start Immediately. • Call Personnel manager 7 to 3, 3334330 and 4 to 7. 50-7744. NEED $130 UP WEEKLY? I neve room tor 2 more married man under 4i with let* model car end home phone. Complete tratnfng given with »130 guaranteed during training wsek. Work from 7 to 4:30. Also 1 p6rt4lm* opan- b»gs at S3 hourly. care tor 3 children, light house- work. FE 5-1740. __ OUTSTANDING OPPORTUNITY woman with some experience as receptionist, teacher, saleswoman. 7 to I, 332-2334. 4 to 7, 543-7744. PART-TIME Needed at one*, 2 mature ladles over 21 with automobile for part-time ulas work. Call Mr. Pace, OR 3-0722. 5 to 7 p.m. RELIABLE BABY SITTfcR ANO light housekeeper. 7 to 3:30, Au-burn Haights aru. 525 weak. 5 days. 852-3417 attar 4 p.m. SALESWOMEN TO CALL ON LO-cal business establishments. Must ba nut and attractive, with pleasant personality. Age 30-15. Car necessary. Frl. 7 to S Sal. II to 3 tor Interview 314-2213. STENOGRAPHER — TO WORK IN hospital public relations. Must have a minimum at 2 yurs work experience, have ability to type 45 w.p.m. and taka dictation at 100 w.p.m. Apply In parson. Personnel Office, Pontiac General Hos- V pttQl. WAITRESS WANTED. SOME EX-perience. Bob's Restaurant. Keago Harber. 4*2-7*57.______________4 WAITRESSES Experienced. Apply to parsen attar 4 p.m. Llffl* Dutch Treat, 3275 Orchard Lake Rd., Kaego Harbor. WAITRESS, AFTERNOONS, SUN-days off. Apply Baldwin Bar, 077 Baldwin Avs. acres* Flahar Body. WAITRESSES CURB GIRLS Must ba ll or over. Full or part-tlma. Meals furnished. Vacation with pay, lift Insurance and hospitalization benefits. Apply at Big Bay Drlvt-ln, Telegraph and Huron Streets. Alto Dixie Hwy. and Silver Lake Rd., 7 till noon or 2 to 5 p.m.________________________ Work Wonted Mole 11 WAITRESS Nut and experienced only need apply. 555 Oakland Avt. WOMAN TO LIVE IN. BOY AND gentlemen. FE 44477 after 5. WOMAN FOR ALTERATIONS AND repairing, mutt be experienced, steady employment — Apply Fox Cleaners — 717 W. Huron. WAITRESS NIGHTS, PART TIM8, no experience needed, apply In person offer 4. Dalle Inn. 2441 Elizabeth Lk. Rd._______________ WAITRESS, FULL TIME EVENING work. Apply Rocco’s, 5171 Dixie - Hwy., Drayton Plaint. WOMAN FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK, 1 day a weak. Occasional Baby-sitting. Ref. Own transp. FE 5-2751. WOMAN TO LIVE IN FOR bABV-tltUng and light housekeeping. MA 4-2037 attar 4 p.m. WOMAN FOR CHECKING AND Ai-tanibly. Apply Barg Cleaners, 4700 Dixie HWV-. Clarksten._______ WOOL PRES5ER. EXPERIENCEb or will train. Apply in parson M S M Cleaners, 2727 Orchard Lak* Rd., Katgo Harbor. V GIRLS 21 OR OVER Wa have openings tor Bjritto work to our office. Musl hav* pleasant telephone vale* and da-tlra full tlma employment. Guaranteed 'ulary plus bonus and Incan-tlva. Ha experience necessary. Handicap no barrier. 10 W. Huron, camtr at Saginaw, Room 117;* Pontiac. Appty lO a.m. - 5 p.m. ** GIRL FOR OQHERAL OFFICE WHO kdskkeqptog. Need net ba experienced In bookkeeping at we'will train you. Must Be very accurate with flguret. State quantitations, age, and starting ulery expected. Mutt be able to work IW days Mr week. Reply to Pentlec Press, Bop 73. HOUSEKEEPER R51 MAtHIA-lets home. PC 544S) after 5. AIHIRAL (40USIWORK, CHILD tart, 5 day*, 1 nights, own transportation, rat. Ml 447w slier 3 ML YOUNG WOMAN EXPERIENCED In cashiering end general office work. Some typing necessary. Modem alr-conditloned down town, office. Writ* Pontiac Press Box 105, giving short resume of pravl-oui experience. ___________ Help Wonted EXPERIENCED TELEPHONE Solicitors, full or part tlma, your own home or. office, Mlary and commission, FE 54451, 10-5.p.m. EXPERIENCED PRESSER FE 3-7770 _______ ESTABLISHED WATKINS ROUTE, taming above average. FE 2-3053. NlED A GOOD SALES PERSON Interested , In making the - music business a career. Plenty ot opportunity for livewire. Must havt car. Draw against commission. Call R. E. Steffens, FE >7140.___ ORGANIST, MAN OR WOMAN, must play requests, cocktail lounge and dining room, Friday and Saturday nights. MY 3-1717. SALES MANAGER-ASSISTANT To broker, VERY SPECIAL deal to qualified active real astat* par-son. FE 8-0458 for personal Intsr-view-.-------• •' Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A NEED EXPERIENCED MANAGER for iewelry on homo party plen. Car necessary# full'time# salary fo start. Cell Flint# Mich, collect. 715-7566.____________ ' Employment Aggnclet 9 Careers by Kay Ml 6-3663 280 W. Maple, Suit* 321 Birmlnohem# Michigan FORMERLY PRESTON WALKER SMITH - EVELYN TOWARDS "VOCATIONAL > COUNSELING SERVICE'' Telephona FE 4-0584 East Huron Suite 4 10 Work Wonted Mob A-l CARPENTER, KITCHENS. AD-dltlons# recreation rooms. AH modeling. FE 5-6010 or OR 0. CARPENTRY. CEMENT, PAIllT-Ing, OR 34171. Nalsen Eldg. Co. MAN OVER 30 NEEDS PULL 69 pert-time work. FB 4-27t1* MAN WANTS STEADY WORK 61# • »ny Mnd. OR 2-245*. M>.A. PAINTINO, TEACHING AND writing experience. OR 3-1705. PAINTING MORNINGS — ttltdll; . lent work—FE 2-5504. PAINTING, WALL WASHING, "XNt> generel housecleanlna. Reasonable retts. 336-2731 or FE 24147,_ PAINTING, ODD JOBS, BASEMENT cleaning. FE 4»I647. TILING, CABINET, PANELllfO done. FE 2-5778._______________ Work Wanted Fontob 12 1 DAY IRONING SERVICE, REF-erences# Mrs. McCowen FE 5-1471, 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WAlt4ltfQ end house cleaning, FE 3-7511. BAB Y 5 I T T I N G AND IISH-ing wanted. Wash. Perk Arte. FE __ 4£HL— ■ ____ GENERAL housework, c a L* l after 6 p.m. 334-2491. “51- N LADY WANTS 1 DAYS WORK, RE-ferences. FE 2-2140._ ~_______ NEW BABY7 VACATION? CAPA-ble, mature# experienced women will cere for your children in your homo. EM 30580# Ml 4-6345, PRACTICAL NURSE AVAILABLE. FB 2-6771. SENIOR ACCOUNTANT, MArEIED, age 44, availabl* about Jan. 31rt. Dlvarslllad axpar lane* to Corporative, Partnership or todhriduai accounting. Compatant With Initiative to progress. Pontiac Prats Bex 17. WOMAN DESIRES DAY WbRK-FE S-4S26 WASHING, ironing: MENOING tree of chores. FE 5-1187.____ Building Senfitg-Supplbs 13 7 INDUSTRIAL TYPE GAIL l" Iruttas, with 2,500 llnul It. of 10 In. channel purllngt. Will cover clur span building 200x54; also many comp left packages of bar loltt roofs. I-Btam and wood pearling* to fit any building naad. 5S8-782S. Business Servicg 15 ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE—RE-palring and rewindlq*. 210 E. Pika, Phone FE 4-1701. FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL Wl4-Ing, will finance. R. B. Munro Electric Ce. FE 54431. ____ Dressmaking t Tailoring 17 Income Tax Service 19 ts. None higher, long form prepared and typed In your homo. 55. None higher. George Lyle FE 0-0252. ACCURATE - DEPENDABLE Your home or ours. KEYS A NACKERAAAN FE 2-3171 FE 0-2177 EHLBRS' BUSINESS itRVICB " 219 Voorhals, Off-Sfrart Parking 13 Years Experience FE 5-2144 INCOME TAX SS UF H & R BLOCK CO. Nation's Largest Tax Service 20 E. Huron St. FE 4-7225 ___Weekday! 7-7 lot., Sun. 74 B. A. MELTON TAX SERVICE. * OR 2-3322: 1424 Alhl, Pontiac. LONG FORM ITEMIZED IN Y6uk hem* >5. Phona FE 44708. Convalescent-Nursing 21 WILL CARE FOR ELDERLY patient. 2330 Hummer Lake Rood or colt NA 7-3693. ________ Moving end Trucking ._ft Bob's Van Service ' MOVING AND STORAOl REASONABLE RATES .. ... Padding — 10 Yurt Exparitnca ROBERT TOMPKINS OR 4-1512 1-A MOVING SERVICE, REASON-ablt rates. FE 5-2450, FB M707. 1ST CAREFUL MOl/INfr. L59 rates. UL H777, 420-2510. MOVE FOR LESS. AFTERN6(MS FE S4417.’_________________ Painting t OocefEting 23 A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANG-Ing. Thomptofi. FE 4-1364. A LADY INTERIOR DECORAY69, Papering, FE 84343._________ 1 A-T DECORATING - PAINTING — plastering — papering. Free ott.# discount* for cash. 6624MB._ INTERIOR PAINTING. VERY RtA-tonabla prices. 673-7217. PAINTING. PAPERING, WALL washing. Tupper, OR 2-7041. PA INTI NG AND DECORATING. MO Kee end Son Enterprises, F E M32t. PAPER HANGING AND PAINTING Mark Nelson, FE 1-1196._____ WALLPAPER REMOVED BY stum, painting and dacaratlng. 3344755._______ _ Ir-l"vision Radio Service 24 HAVE YOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP Trained Sarvlc* Man, Rutonabl* prices. Free Tube Testing. Montgomery Ward Pontiac Molt Transportation 25 Instructions-Schools FACTORY TRAINING AVAILABLE U a DIESEL MECHANIC. I.T.S., 4144 Watt 4 Mila, Detroit.. UN . 447*0. . . . .... IBM TRAINING Lum IBM, Keypunch or machine operation and wiring. 4 weak court** availabl*. Approved by Michigan Sts Is Board of Education. Fru placement assistance. Fra* parking, financing arranged. SYSTEMS INSTITUTE *2 E. Nina Mila, Haul Park 5474301 LEARN TO OPERATE Dozers, graders,.cranes, etc." Key. 6330 W. 4 Mile, Detroit, Dl 1-7321 SlMi OlilBL TRUCK DRIVER . training school. Writ* TRUCK, 11033 Uvamoli, Detroit. UN 444*4. H 6-FOOT HUSKIE, WANTS WORK OF any kind, have car and tools tor mart lobs. SI JO par hr. UL 3-33S4. HEALTHY MTN stork, Mtrt* or art, hat chauffeur license and awn car. Can 132-7757, batsman 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. or 7 a.m. to 7 4JIL CALIFORNIA DRIVE-AWAY Planning to go west? Drive one of our sharp late model cars. We will share expenses. & M MOTOR SALES 2527 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0308 RIDERS TO PHOENIX ARIZONA. / Leaving January H. 452-5252. insurance HOMEOWNERS 518.55 ANNUALLY Scalu Agency, FE 2-5011, 4-3403. INSURANCE Fir* and wind storm Insurance at 20 per cant savings. Other Insurance to 15 par cant to A-Plut companies. K. G. Hampstead, Realtor, 348 W. Huron, FE 44284.______ Wanted Children te Board 28 A RELIABLE LICENSED HOME by day or hour. FE 5-6340.__ LICENSED. CHRISTIAN HOME HAS opening for 1 child# $3 per day. will give reference. FE 4-7370. Wanted Household Goods 29 ALL OR 1 PIECE OF FURNITURE or appliances wenfed quickly. Little Joe's Bargain House# FE t-9191. AUCTION SALE EVERY SAfUft* day at Blue Bird Auction. We'll buy furniture; tools end eppllancet. OR 3-6147 or MEIrose 7-51S9. , CASH- FOR FURNITURE AND A^-pi lances i piece or houseful. Pearson's. FE 4-7881._ LET US BUY OR SELL IT FOR YOU. OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION. OA 1-2611* RUTH'S AUCTION HOUSE WILL buy. new or used furniture. FE 2-3701. USED CARPETING OR RUGS FOR recreation room. FE 2-0663. Wanted MiicelbnoMS 30 PIANO WANTED. ANY 338-0108 attar noon. KIND. portable typewriter end other butl-ness machines. OR 3-9767 or Ml y.jjii VOTE F6R CHARTER AMENDMENT JAN. 13 Pontiac Aru Jr. Chtmbar of Cemmarcd Wanttd ta Rant 14.VEAR<>LD wants steady FAIT RENTAL SERVICE C rad It and itNrancw chackad. Call Adam* Ratify. PI 04V4. RESPONSIBLE AbOlft (NitH TO rant or laaag, 1 or I bedroom, lakafront, year around ham*. PK 8*34717. A. m I >w l % >'• J7f *fv/f r m y/l j MW r-FOUR J, ita< Stan Uvif Qqartars 33 MAN WISHES TO SHARE 4-ROOM furnished apartment witty aama. 930 par month, Including h*at, •Mara attier utmtiaa. SSTvf EHia-bath Lakp Rd., near Pontiac Malt, Ft awTor 4934W,____________ voOMo woman to share home WwMIWIh|rti 36 ALL CASH 61 OR FHA HOMES Wt buy $11 hornet# anywhere, even If behind In payments. No listings, no red tope# no delays. Cash Immediately. CALL any- All CASH In payments. Call dally and Sun-day f a.r ““ “■ * p.m. pi 1-3700. ~rT(r5(r~ LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us before ygu deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5.1165 Opeh Ives, 'til I p.m. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OESIRES WANTED: 4# 5# AND 6 - ROOM hemes. We can get cash for you. PAUL JONES REALTY FE 4-9885 CASH FOR PROPERTIES We. can get you cash for vour home or equity, t- 3- end 4-bedroom homes urgently n'eeded for the Immediate market. What have you to sell? Clerk .Real Estate# FE 1-7(91. Residence PE 4 4*13. HELP! WE NEED USED HOM|S= Cash on the line or we will trade new 3 or 4 bedroom home for vacant land. Call today! MICHAEL'S REALTY WE 3-4200 UN 2-2252 333-7155 FE S*76$2 INVESTOR WILL BUY „Your._.banw gc equity even it betilmt In baymahfi. xtr~- cash. Prompt action. 144-3)01. CASH BUYER Will pay up to 43,000 tor house. No equity, Elwood Realty 412-2410 BUILDER Noeda lots In Pontiac. Immediate offer# no commission# Mr. Davis. 626-0575 Reel Value Realty. WANTED .. Listings on houses,- farms, acreage. we buy and salt land contracts. PONTIAC REALTY 737 Baldwin FE 54275 WE HAVE A BRISK DEMAND FOR 3 and 4-bedroom homes in all areas. For test service, c«U us Mw. No cost to you until the sale Is made. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron 333-7157 GET RESULTS WE NEED listings. Call us today tor quick sale and top market value. If ITs real aetata, wa can sail Itl WHITE, INC. 1171 Dixie Hwy. ' Fhana 474-04*4 - DORRIS We have more substantial buyers In our files than ever before, in the market for homes, small farms, incomes. Call us for an appraisal on your real estate, do not feel obligated. DORRIS It SON, REALTORS 3S34 Dixie' Hwy. OR 4-0324 Wanted Real Etsatt 34 CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTSHOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT 3*3 Oakland Aye___FE 2-9)41 Apartmcnts-Furniihed 37 1- AND 2 • ROOM EFFICIENCY apts. on Pontiac Lake and High-, land Rd. AM utilities included. Ph. Mrs. Li ley, 673.1170. 0160 Highland Rd. _____________ 1-ROOM EFFICIENCY Alberto Apartments 300 N, Paddock FE 3 2091 2 - BEDROOM, CHILDREN WEL-come. $70 month plus utilities. OR 3-0567. 2 ROOMS, ADULTS, PRIVATE—AT 24 Florence » to 2 P.M.___ 1 ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCl, Raeburn (IFE S-04S4. _ I R OO M’ S AND BATH, N ICE, clean, upper, edult, eest side. Call FE 2-343*. FE 1-3352 after S p.m. 3-ROOM. BATH, ALL PRIVATE. Utilities Included. 141 Ml. Clemens FE 5-85*9. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, ADULTS, NO drinkers. FE 2-132*. _________ 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH AND entrance# near Ganeral Hospital# Couple, 115 Stout. ?" ,“t-—rr Aportments Unfurnished 31 Rent IteoMt, Unfurnished 40 S-ROOMS-AND-BATH UPPER. SEP-arste basement and furnacd. 1 block from Wlanor School. S4i per month. Inquire *2 Wlonor, 5 ROOMS ANO BATH. 1* LULL ST MY Mitt 3 ROOMS. UPPER, IN OXFMb. OA *-11*0. Alberto Apartments 1-ROOM EFFICIENCY 370 N. Paddock_________FI 1-2071 BLOOMFIELD. NEW 1 Afcib 2 BBp-rooms. Range, refrigerator, air conditioning# large room# plenty of closets. Ample parking. From $150 per month, 335-5721.______^ DELUXE KITCHENETTE APART* ment# utilities furnished. FE 4-4266 —FE 5-2261. LAlfcGE 2-BEDROOM UPPER UTIL-ities furn. Pvt, entrance MHOh. MlXEb NEIGHBORHOOD 5 R(MaS and bath, heated# newly decorated ST’Vi S. Saginaw. Call FE 2-7214 attar 3 p.m, MODERN 4-AND-BATH. STOVE AND refrigerator# heat furnished# Drayton Plains# OR- 3-0143. After 6. ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL Adults Only ____________________FE 6-6711 ROOMS, CLEAN, QUIET WORK-ing couple# private,. 2740 Judah Rd., out Baldwin Rd. 3-ROOMS AND BATH# CHILD WEL-come. $22.50 per wk. with $50 deposit. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave. Phone 336-4054. 3 ROOMS FOR GENTLEMAN# 'IN Pontiac# share bath, OA 6-2076. 3-ROOMS# NEAR DOWNTOWN AND 3-rooms near Pontiac Motor, int quire 2335 Dixie Hwy. Economy Cars.______■ _______________ 3 ROOMS# HOT WATEft HEAT# private bath and entrance# Oxford location. FE 2-0156 or OR 3-6405. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. 287 Oakland. 3 ROOMS, PRIVATF BATH.' NfCE-» FE 3 ROOMS IN PONTIAC - PRIVATE bath# entrance. 673-3776.______ 4 ROOMS# PRIVATE WITH PARK- Ing. 334-1658. _________ ADULTS ONLY 4-ROOM FUR-nished, utilities. FE 5-6106, FE 5-6050. Eves. APARTMENT TO RENT AT 173 __Mill St. to_a couple, 3 rooms# bath. SEVERAL 2 ROOMS WITH BATHS. Mixed neighborhood. Utilities. FE 3-7606. AportmentsUnfurnished____38 1- BEDROOM APARTMENT - NO drinkers# adults only. 334-2305 dr FE 6-2316'_ __ 2- BEDROOM PRIVATE ENTRANCE 3780 Bald Mt. Rd. FE 6-0336. READY TO'OCCUPY IN BLOOMFIELDI CONCORD PLACE APARTMENTS - ” " tyjiPy ' V- ■!(,/ f THE POftTlACPKESS. FRIDAjY, JANUARY 10, TIZZY ,Hf' l . By Kate Osann SoU Hoos*s ./PI' f n 1064 4 ROOMS AND BATH, SCOTT LAKE «rqq, FE 4-423* or FE 44MB. 4-B>bROOM AND 2 ■ llbUttOW house. Inquire 2333 Dixie Hwy. Economy Cart. MIDROOM HOME. LIVING, DIN-■ Ing and kitchen. 1159 per month. 3134 Devonbrook. FE 3-7477. 7-ROOM HOUSI, QA( HlAT. Pi 4-7470. BOULEVARD HEIGHTS — 2 Be16,000. By appointment only. Rolf* H. Smith, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph PE 3-7*41 FE 3-73*2 * ROOM LARGE HOME ON PAVEMENT IN DAVISBURG. borders trout. »tre*m, *4,950 — *750 dgwn. J-- OTHER low priced properties to choose from. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE *455 Dlxli Hwy.. Clarkitan 425-14)5 Evat. 425-1241 SaltHouses _______49 CUSTOM HOMES Qualify built — Priced right — Deal direct with Bulldar. Carrigan Cons't Holly 434-9241 Roch. OL 1-1749 Rooms WHh Board 43 NICELY FURNISHED ROOM, IN lovely westskfe home# good young working men only# food optioner. 762 W. Huron. ..' ' ‘ ~ .. ROOM AND BOARD FOR MEN* lunches packed. FE 6-7005. ■ar one Bant Starts ,46 BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE A PRESTIGE LOCATION One at Michigan's busiest and. fastest advancing shopping centers. Now leasing stores or 7J0 sq. ft. at 3ISC par mo. and 2,000 aq. ft. at S45C par ms. Tula desirable location Is th* right spot for your business to succeed. For inspection contact Realtor Partridge, 1050 w. Huron St., FE 4-3311. LEASE 24 FOOT X 40 FOOT, REA-soneble rent# In Auburn Heights* UL 2-6466. ________ STORE FOR RENT NEAR FISHER Body perking. FE 3-7666._____________ Rent Basinets Property 47-A // BUD /// Boater Television, Radio and Hi-Fi Service REBUILT AND GUARANTEED TV'S $19.95 up. Ob*l TV and Radio. 3410 Elizabeth Lak* _ FE 4-4945 Store Building 4.000 square teat block building with brick front, busy north side corner location, 1,500 iquar* foot basement, air conditioning, owned parking aid* and roar. Available now. Store or Office Tip-top location on Eliza both Lake Road across from Pontlap Mall* soma parking* Immodiata possession. "Bud" Nicholie, Realtor. 49 Mt. Clamant St. FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M. FE 2-3370 Tree Trimming Service ACE TREE • STUMP REMOVAL Trimming. Gat our bid. 402-2610. BILL'S TREE TRIMMING AND ramoval. Vary tow coat. Ft *-2404 General Tree Service Any size |ob. FE 5-9994 FE 5-3025 romoval—trimming. Trucking HAULiNG AND RUBBI6H. NAME your price. Any time, FE *-0095. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING rubbish, tilt dirt, grading and grav-el and front and loading. FE 2-0603 WAREHOUSE SPACE AVAILABLE wlm } fruck deer*. Near dawn-town. Call 33S-9414. Sale Houses 49 2-BEDROOM HOME. UNION LAKE, pavad straats* laka privilege*. $5*606 with 6266 down. $66 par mo.* EM 3-6743. 2 BEDROOM BY OWNER* SAAALL down paymant* taka ovar mortgage. FE 5-5388. ______________ 2-BATH BARGAIN Farmington Twp. — Clalrvlew at Northwestern near 14 Mil* Rd., 15 mins, to Pontiac, tall on land contract *500 down or toll to 614) down. 3-bedroom Includes aluminum dorm* and screens. Used as modal. Immediate possession. BELAIRE Home Builders Track Rental Trucks to Rent WTon pickups IVfc-Ton Stakes TRUCKS — TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailer* Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. *2 S. WOODWARD FE 44)441 FE 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday 3 BEDROOMS. WATERFORD AREA good condition, T week possession. *4,95*. $450 down. FE 2 2800 3-BEDROOM HOMES FOR- EVERY price range, full basement, large wooded kit, lak* privileges. Flexible down paymant arrangement. Taka Elizabeth- Laka Rd.,. to North Pino Grove, turn right to Modal. Nelson Bldg., Co. - OR 3-6191. 3- BEDROOMS, WILLIAMS LAKE area. *12.500, low down payment. FE 2-2951._________ ■ 4- BEDROOM CAPE COD. NEW -1,450 square toot. 2 baths, large kitchen area, full basamant, lot Included. *14,950. Neleon Bldg-, Co. OR S-4191 Upholstering EAKLES CUSTOM' UPHOLSTERING 2426 Burleigh* Union Laka. EM 3-2641. THOMAS UPHOLSTERING 4466 W. WALTON BLVD. T FE 5-8888 Plane Tania* A-l TUNING AND REPAIRING Oscar Schmidt FE 2-S2I7 Plastering Saryica PLASTERING. NEW AND REPAIR. Yarn Keller UL1-1740 PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMAtES. P., Meytrt_____ EM 3-0163 Rental Eqaipmant BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL, PAPER STEAMERS DRILLS • POWER SAWS 952 Joslyn________FE 4-61BS Wallpaper Steamer Floor Bandar*# polisher*, hand santfer*. fumaca vacuum claanars. Oakland Fuel $ .Paint* 436 Orchard Laka Avt. FE $4150. Wall Cleaners BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls and windows. Reas. SMUtfacr ♦Ion puarantaad. FE 2-1631. Wanted Household Goods Window Service DAVID HART WINDOW CLEANING, Windows, floon* walls. Fully Insured. 234-6062. Wood-Ccke-Coal-Fuel CANNEL COAL-THE IDEAL FIRE wood fuel, seasoned wood both tor furnace or firaplaca. OAKLAND FUEL * PAINT. 45 Thomas St 3 FAMILY FURNISHED - OWNER-344 W. Huron FE 4-9*97. S-BEDROOM. 1 ACRE. A. SAND-ert. OA >2013 Rap. H. Wlleon. AN EXTRAORDINARY HOl/it bargain. Preferable to colored or Mexican family. 7 room*, built •olid, full be lament with 2 extra room* with «h4w*r. toilet 8, »lnk. 4 bedroom*, bath and large kitchen on main floor. New roof. Lot 54171) NOTHING DOWN. 3 BEOROOM homo*. VA. repossessed. Pontiac ether areas. Call Mis* Bahrands, (36-9745. Jama* Realty, DR 4-54*4, ONLY $200 CASH And you can own your own hom* Paymant* lass than rant on large let 10x125'. MMQ, 3 bedrooms, 140 Mo. 99,000, 3 Bedrooms, (43 Mo. *10,200, 3 bedrooms, garage, (71 Mo. — Turh left at KhooL Bulling Company, FF2-9122. ROCHESTER Country living. Sot thle charming hom# featuring spacious rooms. NIX UL 2-2121—UL 2-5375 SAM WARWICK HAS IN SYLVAN Lak*—3-bedroom brick, carport, *14AX). Will 11*0 rant. 482-2820. M2-1714. Mixed Neighborhood No down payment No mortgage cost First month fra* Payments Ilk* rant MODELS OPEN AFTERNOONS 14 AND SUNDAY WEST0WN REALTY 484 Irwin off East Blvd. FE (-3743 afternoon*. LI 2-4477 Evat. New 3-, 4-Bedroom Homes Basement, pavad street, large lots. Northern High and Hawthorn* school districts. MOVE IN NOW FROM $69.50 MONTHLY Excluding Taxes and Insurances ZERO DOWN OR TRADE Land Contract — FHAVA "You can qualify even with a credit problem." Model Open' Daily, Sunday 297 W. Yale at'Stanley 2 Blocks West of Baldwin MICHAEL'S REALTY AUBURN 2 bedroom*, living room, room, kltchon, full basement, 2-2310. BY OWNER. LAKE OAKLAND Heights, 3-bedroom brick ranch, full basamant, lak* privileges, OR 3-30*. _____________ by owner — brand n I w ranch 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, large kltchan, family room, 1W baths, 2-car garage, S acres, full basement. FE 44748. CARLISLE BUILOING New homes. 4 models. $450 moves In. Full basements. Gas heat. 3 bedrooms. We consider trades. Between Orion 4 Oxford Town ships. 42S-1545. • City of Birmingham Brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, full basamant, Scar garage. In parochial school area, immediate poaaqaaton. FHA terms. available. Call Ml 44444 or OR 3-29*4. G. W. SMITH REALTY Franklin, Mich. JO *4114 ARRO LOOKING FOR INVESTMENT? S summer cottages. A good Income Investment. Privileges on lEllzabath Lake. 4 cottage* completely furnished. Can be bought separately or In package deal. Detroit owner lay* "SELL " Gl TERMS on this 2-bad room aluminum tided ranch. Family ream, l(xl( foot, oil haat, aluminum storms and screens. Large lot partly fenced, lak* privileges. Sailing for SILMS, FHA TERMS. Naat clean 4 bedroom ranch, wired for washer and dryer, aluminum storms and screens, IV5 car garage. Fancad roar yard. Good north suburban location. LOW DOWN PAYMENT. 3 bod-room suburban hom* with laka privilege*. Hardwood floor, lull bath. Lot 90 x 110 ft. .Total price 14,950. PHONE 682-2211 Val-U-Way Northern High Area- Only *7,400 for this modem bedroom ranch type hom*. Gat bait. Large living room. Movt In tor (500 and (44 par month. Off Joslyn 3-bedroom home with carport. Get fired hot wafer haat. Verge kitchen with eating area, plenty of countar spec*. Only (400 down. 173 par month. North Suburban 3 bedroom ranch home, full basement, ell furnace, garaga, large lot, aluminum tiding. Full arte* (16,990 .with (1,400 roqulrad move In. R. J. (Dick) VAIUET REALTOR Ft 4-3531 345 Oakland Av*. Open 9-7 SAUNDERS & WYATT REALTY 74 AUBURN FE 3-704) SFOTLITE BUILDING Now home. 4 models. *450 moves In. Full basamants. Gas haat. 3 bedrooms. Wt consider trad*. Between Orion * Oxford Town-jWf f10-1545. SYLVAN LAKE FRONT Large 3-bedroom brick, ranch style, custom built, gas hqat, fireplace, Scar attached garage, 100 ft. .of nice .sandy beach, sewer and water. West Bloomfled Township. Owner leaving town. (27,500. FHA or Gl farms. PAUL JONES REALTY FE 4-1550 Templeton WALTERS LAKE Brick 2-bedroom with nlc* dan. Face* lake. Dll hot water heat, unfinished attic, 2-car attached garage, 4 tots. Only (13,950. Terms can b* arranged. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lak* Road 4(24)900 $n$ Hem*? 49 BY OWNER Elizabeth Lak* Estates. 3-bedroom tram*, ivy story, full basamant, recreation, with got log firaplaca, ivy-car garage, gas hast, lake prlv-llagas. axfras. *13,000. FI F637& SCHRAM Brand New 3-bedroom ranch with 14x15 living room 10x15 kltcMn-dlngtto, full basamant, gas haat with 13x34 recreation area. Priced at *11,400 and $1,200 will movt you In. Will duplicate on your lot or ours. Big T 3-bedroom trl • level with brick front, recreation area, sliding patio deer-wall and gat haat, priced at (12,990. Completed and ready to move into, will duplicate on your tot or our*. Off Joslyn 3-bad room ranch with 11x13 carpeted living room, 10x10 kltchan, naw gat forced air fumaca on 90’xisr lot. -Only 99,450 on FHA TERMS. Wear Fisher Body Large 10-room homo with 7 bedrooms, ivy baths. (II hot water heat, tuitabl* for Income or rooming house, priced at only *9,500. T*rm* can b* arranged I IVAN W. SCHRAM Realtor FE 5-9471 *42 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE . Sale Mease* 49 IT'S COLD OUTSIDE But cozy warmth Of lb* flroplac* will keep you thl* SSdroem ronah, utility, port, knotty pint cablnoL uixtor-floor gal heat, file bath^ jorgt 1100x197' lot. Paved , *tr*at. SllraOO, nothing down, 96lil month plus tax and Inauranc*. HAGSTROM REALTOR „„ 4900 W. Huron , OR *0159 Evening* call OB MW 3 Family.../ Condition !« At. J nicely furnlsh*d apartments, private bkfh and franc* tor. each. New double 9J-rege, large lot. Excellent rmfal location. 12,500 down will hondlol CALL FOR DETAILS- Security .. A comfortable yaar round. 2-bed-room modern ounaolow for mj owner. Cerpeted Hvtafl room# ••• furnace. Fronte$e on me lene# furnace, rrwiigg* w* fording Bcciu to throe ottier !•«•$. * modem rental cabin* *n■ livhST room and haft, ceramic bath up, b*1h with shower In walk-out basement, attached 2-car garaga. Only *22,500 with easy terms. ' $1,350 Down No mortgage costs on Ihls 5-year-old 3-bedroom west side hom*. Carpeted living and dining *1, til* bath, basamant with roc spec*, gas haat, toncad back yard, paved strati. Move right in. Seminole Hills Immediate possession on toll solid 4-bedroom brick west side home. Cartaatad living room, flroplac*. formal dining room, ivy batos, basement, naw gat furnacd, screened summer perch, Fear garage. 117,9(0 wtth easy farm*. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE 5-11*5 Op*n Eve* Till I p.m. Multiple LMkig Reelfor INI YO •hi. ____ payments ptosl Humphries FE 2-9236 If no answer, call FE 2-5923 13 N. Talagraph Road Muttlpto/Llitlnfl Sarvlc* kampsen / Your neighbor traded / Why don't you? SYLVAN VILLAGE Plush 3-bedroom brick ranch kimt natural llmasfen* fireplace, ceramic til* hath, large utility room, attached gareoe, toncad yard, lak* privileges. Offered at (15,930 with HAM down plus costs, or TRADE. ORION AREA Aftroctlv* wall landscaped ham* and th* price It also attractive. Six rooms, breakaway, family room, fireplace, TW-car garage, lot size 90x720. all this tor M,1M you can't go wrong. ATTENTION Gl Nothing down to anyone, lust good credit. On Whfttemore St.. spotlessly clean. 4-room modem with 3 bedroom*. Mg Ihrtog room basamant, haat, carpeting and drapes. Pavad street. Only (9.3M —Lai us show you. 1071 W. Huron SL MLS FE 44921 Attar I call__ PE $3457 GILES NORTH SIDE, This 4-room name Ideal for to* working man. Full basement, hardwood floors. Scar garaga. Hot wator heating system. Immediate possession. Low down paymant. Partly furnished. You have to hurry. COMMERCIAL, 7-room horn*, newly improved outside, new gas furnace, good Iocs It. Ideal tor beauty shop or trading post. Easy farms, full prlct only *7,150. NEW BALDWIN HIGH SCHOOL AREA, Ranch type built to 1957, full basamant, 3 spacious bad-rooms, gas Isoet, well to wall car-paling in living room. Plenty ef closet space too many other facilities to mention. Call today. GILES REALTY CO. FE 5-4175 111 Baldwin Av*. Open 9 e.m. to 9 p.m. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE HIITER WILLIAMS LAKE — 7-room ranch horn*. Large living room wtth fireplace. Hot wator haat. Attached garaga. Channel frontage. Sat this today! PRICE REDUCED — On this 14T lak* front. Large S rooms and bath. TIM basement. 3-car garaga. Fancad yard. SIMO. Tarim. CITY OF PONTIAC — Neat and clean. I rooms and bath. Gat hast. Aluminum storms and screens. Naw ivy-car garaga. S4.3M Terms. Call B. C. HIITER, REAL- * TOR. 3*40 Elizabeth Laka Rd. FE 24179 Ur FE 4-39*4 ar FE 4-7539. Open Sunday ltot___________________ DOENGES EDGEW00D COUNTRY CLUB New England Rad Ranch on woodland salting. Three bedrooms, one-and-o-half bath*, family room, attached garage. 10 per cant down. (23.99a HILL 'N' DALE SUB. New four-bedroom colonial. Farm kltchon with flrepldce. Formal dining roam, -full basamant, attached garaga. On, Dawn Ridge ant of Decker and north of Foo-tlac Trail. Open Sun., 2-5 p.m. (24AM. WEST BLOOMFIELD We have two colonial ranch homes. Each with thro* bedrooms, two baths, form kitchen*, basements and twe4229. WEST HAYDEN 3 BEDROOM HOMES 1964 MODELS NOW UNDER CONSTRUCTION TRMEVttS BI-LEVELS RANCH , PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD ' FROM JlC,500 tr Lett Gas Haat J. t HAYDEN, Realtor Open Men. thru Sat. 9 to S EM 3-4404 10751 Highland Rd. (M-59) WATERFORD TOWNSHIP. 3-BED-room ranch, solid oak Hoars, full basement, ceramic tl|a bam, large lot. OR 3-30(2. TAYLOR CLARKSTON AREA — 9290 (novas you to. 3-bedroom rancher, h ndy to echoo's Large tot. Paymant* last than rant. Only (9.7M. WATERFORD AREA - 9290 moves you In. Ideal tor children, 3 bedroom rancher, brick and frame; than rant. Only 91Q.5M. WE HAVE AN EXCELLENT SELECTION ef naarly-naw hornet to all areas wtth small down payments and lew monthly payments. Call usl Realtor — TAYLOR — Insurance 7711 Highland Road (M99) OR 44304 Evq*. EM >7944 BATEMAN GETS RESULTS NEW GUARANTEED HOME TRADE-IN PLAN DONELSON PARK A REAL NICE plac* to live; large specious tots, large roomy welMcept homes, lak* privileges and cote to everything. Gracious 2-story, 3-bad room colonial wtth T*-tt. master bedroom. Lot* of eating space, formal dining room, plus breakfast room and large screened-In rear porch. Large 2-car garaga and big beautiful landscaped tot make* this vary desirable at $19,950 with (2,000 down. GOOD CITY AREA' IDEAL starter home, clean, comfortable 5-room bungalow wtth gas haat. Newly decorated, completely fenced yard and extra large 2-car garaga. IT'S NICE and only $0,700 with (MO down plus costs. Call today and don't bo sorry. A JEWEL OF A BUY In this brick tri-level In a Qarkston prestige area. BaautiM wooded lot, family room wtth fireptooa, 1 bedrooms, IVk baths and ovarslze garage. Lots of extras, rati nice and only- 2 years old. Nicely landscaped and black fop street. At 924500 it won't last tong- (1500 down plus costs win handle, so call today. LAKE SftERWOOD LAKE FRONT In exclusive, well-restricted community of all new homes. Almost naw brick rancher, family room, 2 flraptacos and many, many deluxe fqgturas phis Fear attached garage. Laka front living *t its finest. Yours tor S24A00 wtth *2,500 down plus costs. REAL COZY And a price you can afford with payments of only S49 par month, tow 4Vk*4 interest mortgage and no mortgage costs. 2-bedroom bungalow, full basamant and real nlc* recreation room. Evan gas stove Included as special bonus. Approximately (950 down plus fax proratlons will handle. GENERAL HOSPITAL CLOSE BY this charming 3-bedroom, 3-story with extra larga Scar garage. Wonderful condition, fenced roar yard and cloae to everyth tag. This la family living that ygu can afford. Only *10,500 wtth $390 down plus costs. DON'T WAIT: LAKEFRONT WINTER PRICED and immediate possession. Furnished recreation room pan#lad In knotty pin*, bullion snack bar and air conditioned. Lots of extras Including carpeting. 2-car garage end fenced yard. Sand beach, wonderful scenic view and tots of nice trots. Th* location It fop* and the price It right. Yours for lift! SIS,500 wtth S2JI00 down plus costs. CALL NOW. EQUITY IS MONEY-TRADE YOURS TRADE THE BATMAN WAY MEMBER OF INTER-CITY REFERRAL SERVICE C0AST-T0-C0AST TRADES 377 S. Telegraph Realtor FE 8-7161 Opon 9-9 M.L.S. Sunday 1-1 TRADE Sharp—Sharp This suburban ranch has all family sized room* wtth wall to wall carpeting, extra nice kltchan, N* tot and It only takas MM down. Sell-bn for 99JM and wa will take your present hom* or equity to trad*. Are You looking for a 3-bedroom ranch home with aluminum siding, nice garage and to a modest price rang*? W* have on* to tot Wator-ford area tor S14J0Q and you can trad* la your present home. Frushour Struble REALTORS MLS 1938 Elizabeth Lak* Read FE (-4025 492-5493 IRWIN ROCHESTER AREA — 4-bedroom term home wtth large horse bam and situated on 2 acre* ef land. Hat oil steam haat, llfc baths and hattmnt. Good farm hom* for larga family. NORTH SANFORD STREET — 2 bedrooms with Ml besement. Large kltchan and dining room combination. Ceramic til* bath. I-car garage. Fancad M. Can b* bought on FHA farms. NORTH END—Shad room bungalow wtthv full basamant. Back yard fancad. Ctnnbtagftah storms and serein*. Everything to A-l condition. Gl mortgage with payments ef (70 per month Including tax** and Inauranc*. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEOROE IRWIN, REALTOr 391 W. Walton___________FE 3-79(3 CLARK WALTON BOULEVARD. Good sized lot with fruit, shade trees and garden spot, lVbcar fa rag*, basement finished recreation room. (10009. terms. TRADE OR SELL. 4-BEDROOM BRICK. Only S11JM. terms. S rooms and bath down, 2 bedrooms up, full basement, automatic fumaca. Scar garage, extra tot, needs decorating. SaM down on FHA term*, plus costs. INCOME BUY. 4 units Of 4 rooms and bath each, separata basements, furnaces and utilities. Walking distance to Pontiac Motor and Fisher Body plant*.— Only (21,000, S3,000 down will handle. CLARK REAL ESTATE TO BUY, SELL AND TRADE 3101 W. HURON FE 3-7IN Evenings call OR 3-1975 ar FE 5-349* Multlpla Listing Sarvlc* BIG FAMILY HOME With lak* privilege*. 10 ft. living room with flroplac*. dining room, modem kltchan with toad* of cabinets, 4 bedrooms and Ilk both*. 2 lots with nlc* shad*. Fear garage. Land contract or aesy FHA (arms. NEW BRICK RANCH Many naw and different innovations In this naw 1*44 brick ranch home, with Ml basamant and 7 car garaga. Priced 015,99a Also * 3-bedroom wtth family room at SI7.7M. Will duplicate. Sat modal or plans at our office. Times Realty JOHN KINZLER, realtor 9119 DIXIE HWY. MU 474419* OFF JOSLYN floors, birch cupboards, FULLY INSULATEO. Th* batter built home 1* a mutt qn your list. So* It toddy. Will duplicate on your tot. TRI-LEVEL MODEL — OH Joslyn featuring large sliding gluts doors, spacious closet*, birch cupboards. FULLY INSULATED. A big T on your lot or our*. • Y0UNG-BIIT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BUILT RUSSELL YOUNG, SSVk W. HURON FCI44M 1: f X I //:• m, TH^ PONTIA(t PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, fm 7 C n i 7 THIRTYFIVB Sab Kbuim 49 ANNETT Canal Frontagt Accra to t lakes, 4-room and bath bungslow, plus utility room. IW-cer oaraga. tot 100 xl44. Only tojoo with to par cant down. West Sidt—4 Bedrooms Attractive homo In too Webster, Washington Jr. HI area. Pull sice dining room and extra largo living ream with fireplace. SH7M, $2,000 down and Immediate possession. Waterford Tri-Laval Practically new 3-bed room homo convenient to schools end shopping. Finished family room and wall to wall carpeting. Owner tranaloffed and willing to sacrifice. Vacant. lit*A, EZ terms. Bloomfiald Schools •rick ranch an large landscaped comar lot. Slate floored entry, picture window to living room, ladgirock fireplace, dining "L", family room, kitchen with range and refrigerator, laundry space, 1 bedrooms, 1» baths. Carpeting and drapes. Gas radiant ■•"••• W> WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 KENT established In ItU LAKE PROMT — DeolraWaNvest suburban family home. 4 Bedrms., M ft. carpeted llv. rm. with fireplace. Large sun rm., kitchen with breakfast nook. Pull bsm't. zvs car garage. Patio by lake. Shads trees, good -sand-, beach. Now at nUN. Terms, DAVISBURO AREA — S Bodrm. ranch home. St ft. llv. rm. with fireplace. Nice rec. rm. Pull bsm't. Brseteway to S car garage. High scenic location. Largo lot. SIMM. LINCOLN SCHOOL AREA - Nice frame 2 bodrm. home with modem kitchen. Dining nook. Oas heat, moo with t»M down. Only (4f mo. Including tarns and tots rest. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2m Dixie Hwy. of Telegraph FE 2-0123 or PE 2-7342 A-l BUYS East Side Hi story, 3 - bedroom________ carpeted living room and had, extra high full basement, well landscaped fenced lot 75 x 1 IS to city limits but like living In the country. RJN Terms. Near Pontiac Motors S room house, t bedrooms and bato, newly decorated, fell basement, 210.000, 2300 down $70 per month. SOLD OUT Wo hove buyers but nothing to > soil. Lot us List your Property. V WATERFORD REALTY 0. Bryson Realtor 4340 Dixie Hwy. Call 473-1273. After 5 p.m. Call OL 1-1217 Sob 49 HACKBTT REALTY R M 2470a A SAVINS* Tl 6 YOU home I Wa'II build a new heme tor you "“ •how you, how to ovoid too '•PFtof Price rals*s." Look, ehly Ili.Mo tor 1300 tq. ft, 4 bedrooms wWh 2-car oaraga. Top dollar for your preaanf homo. W. H. BASS ReAltT,S* ■ !‘*-_2-r*ll) BUILDER "Specializing In Trades" O'NEIL MODEL OPEN DAILY 10 to 6 TWIN LAKES - 750 SUNNY BEACH. One of too most appeal tofl homos over to come from too drawing board of "Beauty-Rite" Homos, Inc. This Is toe house that dastonetod Beauty-Rlto as the toemr In toe building Industry. Picture yourself welcoming your gupats In the dramatic foyer against toe backdrop of lush black walnut paneling, or viewing toe awe Inspiring sconary which too towering glass door-wall frames from too family room. Picture yourself In toe center of too brightest, meat efficient kitchen ever. You'll ravel In toe luxury of Mil wall, mirrored baths, eight toot vanity counters. 3 spacious . bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, and bast of all, you'll glow with pride os each time you drive up to your house knowing beyond question that hero la one of Oakland County's most beautiful hornet. Drive out MfS to Twin Lakes. — TRADING IS TERRIFIC NEVER BEFORE LIVED IN. Brand spanking new. Only 82^00 down plus closing cost. Our Lady of toe Lakes location. 3-bad room all brick ranch. Pull tiled basement, family room, natural fireplace, colored both fixtures and bultt-to't. Bear attached garage plus many other lovely features VACANT, SI,700 down, plus doting cost. Immediate possession. COLONIAL HILLS. Between Pontiac and Birmingham. Cantor hall entrance. Huge living room and dln-Ing room. Natural fireplace, 1 bedrooms, fuir paneled basement. Vfc acre wooded lot, patio and Bear attached garage. 822,500. WILL TRADE. 210.500. EAST SIDE, 4 bedrooms. A veteran doesn't need t down payment to purchase toll excellent remodeled brick homo. 1 largo bedrooms up, t down. 30* living room, 2 baths, spacious kitchen. 2-car ga-r«0o, paved drive, full baaomont. Coll now. 61 HANDY MAN SPECIAL — S30.00 total closing cool tor 0.1. or MM down on land contract. Broom farm house, west of Pontiac. Presently o 2 family Income with Iota. Immediate possession. RAY O'NEIL, Raoltor 242 S. TELEGRAPH OPEN 7 to 7 PE S-7I0» M.L.S. EM 34531 Sab Houses 49 BARGAIN S40 pgr thonto, 4 rooms and full both/Only 2400 down. HURRY ON THIS O^E. WRIGHT 302 Oakland Ava. PE Bf 141-2 Open Evas. Evas, after 7 Bargain $4,500 Cash To settle estate. 4-room year-round. Oak floors, plastered walls, enclosed porch, ell furnace. Nloo corner lot across street from Middle Straits Lake, sol Id-built homo. HAROLD R. PRANKS, REALTY 23*3 Union Lake Read -EM BINE EM B71I1 CHEAPER THAN RENT IN NORTH PONTIAC ■/ $69 Down NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME $55 Month "Excluding taxes and Insurance. Everyone qualities: vyidows, divorcees, even parsons with a credit problem." FEATURING Wall-to-wall carpeting All wood doors Oes heat Permanent hot water Fumiforo finished cabinets CALL ANYTIME DAILY, SATl AND SUNDAY 4264375 REAL VALUE Ircbsnb Property 50 BPAMILY INCOME, REASONABLE by owner. FE 2-1041. INCOME, SOUTH SANFORD, 2-family, tenant occupied. Good location. Total price 24,500. Call for dotolls. Al Pauly, Rtaltop 4314 Dixie, Roar OR 3-3S00 Eves. FE 3-7444 law Prtporty 51 LAKE AREA PONTIAC LAKEFRONT' $8,500 Full prlct for yaar around 5-room homo wilt) W lakefront. $1,500 moves In. . J. L. DAILY REALTY EM 3-7114 LAKE-LIVING.1 EXCELLENT LOTS, Privet* sand baoch. Swim, boat-docks, fish. 15 minute* to Pontiac, 277S. BS down, to mo. OR BtlSS. BLOCH BROS., FE 4-4501. FOR SPECIAL SERVICE AND INFORMATION ON ALL LAKE PROPERTY CALL OUR OFFICE. C. 0. BALES-- REALTOR NEW COLONIAL HOME. fifTs**)0 Commerce Rd. EM 3-410* CRAWFORD NICE COMFORTABLE 1 BEDROOM HOME, Clean and cozy, got heat, plenty of shrubs and flowers, lot lanced. Mack topped street, A root buy SUM term*. See ft today. HERE IS A LARGE EARLY AMERICAN I ROOM HOME, with Mg living room, dining room and kitchen, 4 bedrooms, full basement, plus borage, large 2Mx 3W lot. Mack topped street, near Oxford, call tor details today. K. LOTS AND ACREAGE: 40 acres 814,000. 2 lots Lake Orton, S1400. Lot an Dixie Hwy- 22000, t acres Scott Loko Rd., $12,000. And many others to choose from. CRAWFORD AGENCY SM W. Walton PE 1-2304 4SS I. Flint MV BI141 MILLER NEW LISTING First time offered. A beauty with Crescent Lake privileges, ■ 2 bedroom ranch built In ISM has Aluminum siding (good tor a IHo fttnaj. WoN to wall carpal log, tiled bato. Sparkling kitchen has dining space, basement Roc. room of a dozen uses, broszawoy, - garage. Large let. A home you can an|oy with a groat deal of pride. SI3.S30. Reasonable forms. « ROYAL OAK, Near t] MIN Road, nearly now brick ranch style heme complete In every detail. 4 lovely roams, 3 bedrooms, tVk baths, wall to wall carpeting, beautiful Ledgerock fireplace, sparkling kitchen with bullt-lns, full basement, Alum, storms end screens, 2 car "garage. A superb homo In o carefully zoned area for the protection of your Investment. SMAM — Mtg. farms. Can bo aeon anytime. WEST OP CITY Near Pontiac Mall. A 1 bedroom home oH on one floor, as neat and clean as tttoy coma. Now modem kitchen baa dining opaca, new got 'furnace, extra deep lot. A good kat priced homo. SZ.ooo — Terms. William Miibr Realtor . FE 2-0263 . 470 w. Huron Open » to t CRESCENT HILLS MODEL OPEN SEE THE PACE BRICK AND STONE MODEL With 2-car go-rag*, baaamont, country kitchen, S9M down. Drive weal an MM north to mile, ritfft an Crescent ■ Road. FE 8-0458 C. SCHUETT OPEN SAT. and SUN. 2 to 5 2523 Sashabaw Rd. Inunadtato passe eaten. New 3-bed-room brick homo with attached garage. Exposed basement. FrvB-wood Ikitchen with butlt-tna. lto baths. Twin vanities to toll bath. M0x4M wooded lot. SI7,300. Terms. DlrocHont: S mile* north of I-7S on laahabaw Rd. between Seymour Lake Rd- and Ramsay Rd. LAWRENCE W,.GAYLORD MY B4B1 or PE BOMS » W. Flint ft._______Loko Orion GAYLORD WILLIAMS LAKE RD. Five room homo. Excellent kitchen, vary largo lot. Utility room. SIA7M total price. Call FE POSTS or MY B2I21. INCOME HOME — that can bo used ae large family home. Two baths. SB x 1M R. tot. Fenced yard. Good value Mr SI0.500. village of Lake Orion. Call FE BMOT or MY MM. Lawrsncf W. Gaylord PE B4m or MY BM21 t w. pitot st. Lalw Orton lovely home has tour largo bed-1 YEAR ROUND HOME, CEDAR IS-rooms, a formal dining room with land Loko Canal, 3-bedroom brick, a picture window view of too sue- walk out basement. 117,000. 10030 rounding country side. It also too- Cedor Shores Or.. Open Sunday tores a paneled family room with! 2 to i. Call 343-4M1 or GA 2-7340. o brick fireplace and a private en- ■ a______________ ca franca. Tht TWO baths art dec- LPla - fletwyu ................... . ~ orated with the moot unusual and ' beautiful ceramic tile toot youl ACRE OF LAND NEAR OAK- — ‘--- land Lake. Running water on prop- erty. Price S400. OR BBI51. have ever aeon. The living room Is large and has a winding stairway to bedrooms. Full basement, gas hoot, 2-car garage, largo I o t. Priced for below any comparable homo on too market today. S23,-000 with only 02AM down or trade In your present homo. WEST SUBURBAN. Three bedroom brick ranch with a toll basement, attached garage, located In Chore-kae Hills, Waterford Township's most sought after areas. Very tastefully decorated and land-scaped. sis,600, forms con bo pr- NORTH SIDE. An exceptionally nice POUR BEDROOM bungalow with full baaomont, garage, aluminum siding, gas hoof, located In one of Pontiac's finest areas. S11.700 with 10 par cant down. BRAND NEW TRI-LEVEL. Three bedroom brick and frame. Large family room attached garage. The best of workmanship and materials. 215,000. LAKE FRONT. Beautiful brick ranch located on OXBOW LAKE. This has a toll wolk-out basement. Lake-side patio. Owner hot moved and must sail. Price 221,000. 1744 is. going to be a boom according to too economic Indicators. If you have boon' thinking about changing homos Ibis Is too time to do ft.: Your pruont homo wilt never be worth more. LIST your home tor SALE or TRADE today. Wo have hoi 27 years experience tolling and TRADING homes In Pontiac. L H. BROWN, Realtor 507 Elizabeth Lake Rood FE 4-3544 or FE 1-4*1$ Open t bjb. to t p.m. OVER 20 ACRES OF LAND with tries and stream. Off of M-15. $3M per aero. 5 ROLLING ACRES *1750, SIM down. Ideal tor homo site — near Ortonville. C. PANGUS, Realtor 422 Mill St. NA 7-M15 ST. MICHAEL'S AREA Alto walking distance to Pontiac Motors. Neat 5-room bungalow. Family dining room. Tito bath. Basement. Gas hoot. Garage. 210,-750. TERMS. G< TERMS 7-ROOM HOME 5 Iprgo bedrooms, family size dining room, full bato, ample closet space, gas PA hoot, .1 car garage, paved drive. Corner I o t. 128x74 feet. THIS 15 A GOOD BUY AT 81,450. Smith Wideman 412 WEST ItUKON ST.‘ OPEN EVES. FE 44526 WILL SACRIFICE FOfc IMMEDI-' ATE SALE atyto.TSO cosh to an existing very low Interest mortgage, payMte at S57 per month Including taxes and Insurance. Ytxi will naod 22,700 but you'll hove 4 (good sized) bedrooms and an extra Vk-bato. Plenty of Insulation, economical gas heal I Conveniently located in Waterford Township; a block from too Grade School. Immediate possession. Mrs. Bette. OR 3-2S2S. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor Ml S. TELEGRAPH OPEN * to t FE 3-7103 M.L.S. OR 3-202* « ACRES ON 17 CLARKSTON Rood, bet. Adorns and Orion Rd. MY Bant._________________ 100x116 IN HI-HILL VILAGE Ideal site on paved rood sloping oft tor exposed basement. Some shade trots. Si,850 with 2200 down. LADDS, INC. 3235 speer Rd. (Perry M24) FE 5-7271 or OR 3-1231 Otter 7:30 _____Open Sunday It to 4 Wanted 11 Lots In the City of Pontiac SPOTLIGHT BLOO. CO. FE 4-07*5 BLOOMFIELD Woodward-Square Lake to choose from. Most hove alt Improvements, s c h o o.l s, churches, Mores, etc. Priced Tram S77o up. Easy terms RORABAUGH POR SALE BY OWNER — 1-to-l 5-acre lots In Oakland County, Hol-ly Township. 1 mile oast of Fenton, vacant M acres between Holly 2nd Grand Blanc. Good barn, new tenets. S2M an aero. Terms. Vacant on South Holly Rd. 1 mile south of Holly, 77 acres, $11700, Small down payment. Consider trade Clarks Ford Tractors. MAIn 7-7374, Fonton." WATTS REAL ESTATE NA 7-2710 1714 MIS at Bold Eagle Like, Soh Farms 56 140 ACRES OF THE BEST OF land and good buildings. 4-bedroom homo with oak floors, plastered walls and full basement. Located In good forming area near Durand. Land it tltod and drained. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR 2M W. Walton FE 3-7SS3 : PRICE REDUCED Owner wants "Quick Action" on this 5-ecre form with next to now 3-bedroom rancher, aluminum siding, attached tVj-cer garage, custom kitchen with built-in oven and range, formica counters, natural finish cupboards, bato with vanity, laundry room, hot water baseboard heat. Now only 214,500 easy terms. Warren Stout Realtor, 14M N. Opdyke Rd-. F~ 54145. Open Sunday 1 to 4 p.m. CARNIVAL By Dick Turner B ism h wt*. he. tjc lx til, Nr. on. “Notice how it’s reinforced where the wear is greatest ... around the billfold pocket!” Salt Farms 56 FARMS—80 ACRES 3-bed room all modern (arm. Rolling land, born and outbuildings In exes tent condition. Near Ortonville. 44 miles of rood frontage 4411. par- acre -totoL-price 484,1100 terms. C. PANGUS, Realtor FARMS - LAND BETWEEN Clarkston and Flint, good selection —small or large parcels. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE M65 Dixit Hwy. Clarkston 625-2615 Evtt. 625-1241 Sato SubIubsii Property 57 2 STORE BUILDINGS AND LARGE house, corner lot across from First Federal In Lake Orion on M-24. $19,500, easy forms. Humphries Realty. Oxford. OA 0-2417. 2 STORES IN EXCELLENT LOCA-tlon with apartments. Only 24,000 down payment. Interested parties coll FE 2-5102 from 12 noon to 4 P.M. 1ST X 337' WITH M" X 40' BUILD-Ing, zoned mtg., high traffic count area, 10 miles from Pontiac. 23,000 down. UNIVERSAL REALTORS 334-3251 Eve., 440-2327 240 FOOT FRONTAGE CORNER LOCATION, neor Pontiac Airport Priced at only $75 per foot. WHITE, INC, 2*71 Dixie Hwy. Phone 474-0474 BY dwkEk. COMMERCIAL iN-come building — FE 5-7034. MT. CLEMENS STREET CORNER Kenilworth. 200 ft. frontage. 550 per ft. Terms. KE 1-7044 or TE 1-4144 Evas. Coll Collect.___ FOR iALE: BRICK VENEER building 30x40 toot, door span except office, lavatory. Gas heat, wrier, heavy wiring. Plenty room tor expansion. 10 years old. On some lot (one acre) S-room house, double garage, gas heat, storms, ate In Village of Linden, adlacent to expressways, suburban to Flint, M mlios to Pontiac. Lots of lakes, country club, good skilled labor market. "Property zoned commercial, light industry. $30,000 — will noi divide. Box 004, The Linden Leader, Linden, Mich., 40451. Phone: P Resident 4-5551, coda 313. MODERN BUILDING. 5,000 SQ. FT. God Pontiac location with parking. 330-M70 or 40B2145. Business Opportunities 59 A SUPERETTE, S27S.OOO GROSS. A very naat, dean easy to operate IGA grocery. No boor — Just a terrific grocery business showing good not Very good lease and low overhead. 217,000. 24,000 down plus stock. . REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" 10M W. Huron FE 4-3521 ATTENTIONI * Pure Oil Company has 1 modern 2 Bey Service Station on too busiest corner In Pontiac. Direct lead on to to* 1-75 Expressway. Now doing good golkmage. Paid dealer training If desired. Please coll Jock Anderson 402-3144. BEAUTY SHOP Established business. Call after 6 P. AA.* FE 24963. BEAUTY .SHOP IN W. BLOOM-field area. 2 station, possible 3. Excellent clientele. Reply Box 25 Pontiac Press. Businti* Opportunities 59 BARBER SHOP Woll established In local shopping cantor. (L000 full prlco. ~ -MICHIGAN- Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 1573 Telegraph FE 4-1582 PONTIAC BEER STORE - SALES over 210.000 par month, parking two walk In boxes. Soma owner many years, must Mil. Pay only stock down, EZ Dal. Ryan, 845-4525. Monty tt Loan » til ____(Licensed MonOy L^ndOr) ' LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick friendly, helpful. FE 2-9026 Is to* number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg 9:30 to 5:30 - Sat. 9:30 to 1 tOANS TO $1,000 To xoniolldaM bills Info' on* monthly poymont. Quick Service, with courteous experienced counsellors. Credit N(e Insurance available. Stop In or phono FE 5-S121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 N. Parry St. FE 5-S121 7 to 5 Dally. Sot. 7 to 1 TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER ROMEO 214 E. St CLAIR LOANS *25 TO 51.000 . AUTOS '• LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 4-7011 OL 17/71 PL .2-3510 PL 2-3510 "Friendly Service" ToaNs S25 to 51000 Insured Poymont Flan BAXTER B LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. Pontiac Slat* Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1,000 Wt will bo -glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. 501 Pontiac Slot* Bonk Bldg. FE 41574 MARATHON IS SEEKING AN IN-dlvldual with sorvlc* station experience for an ultra-modern facility, located on Opdyko (M-24) and Hempstead. 14 mil* NE of GM's S. Blvd. plant, on entrance to Bloomfield Orchard's subdivision. Paid training and financial assistance. Dial operator for En-torprlo* 7701, Detroit, ext. 345. OPPORTUNITY You bo to* |udgt. Man and wHe loam can toko over this potent medicine and package liquor business. Neat gas heaftd building In excellent neighborhood. All nice equipment and good lease. Requires about 214.000 cash to hen- SHORT ORDER RESTAURANT. NO Sundays, holidays or nights, low rent. Automatic equipment, air conditioned, priced to Mil. Sid's Grill, 67 W. Huron. Ask tor Sid Sacks. to Buy or sell a eusiNkss CALL * NATIONAL BuabtoM Brokers I*43 Orchard Lake FE 3-7S41 OPPORTUNITY Beautiful lake front convalescent home, reasonable down poymont, will toko homo or land contract as part payment. EL WOOD REALTY___________4*2-2410 RECREATION AREAS .There are so few In Oakland County that the federal govern ers to convert their lands Into recreational purposes by paying part of tht coot, OPPORTUNITY Yes. of a lifetime. We are offering - about 2VS acres with 75 par cant frontage on * beautiful tom In Oakland County that ha* picnic park with shelter and 10 tables, boat livery with 21 boats, gas pump at docks, bolt store, restaurant with drlv*-ln windows, 4-unlt motel, old 5-room bouse, L.P. gas franchise. This Includes all equipment, furniture and furnishings except owner's home. No poymont until May 1744. Owner retiring. 410,000 down. May take trod*. CLARENCE RIDGEWAY REALTOR 270 W. Walton FE 5-7051 WEST SIDE SU°ER MARKET Ideal location for tola "HOT SPOT" super market, which Includes SOM and SDD license. Fine lease available on this approximate 45' xtOO' brick. and block building. Fully equipped with the latest. Adequate parking, first time offered end lust the right operation for the party looking for * live wire business. CHECK THIS QNEI>" Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. OpdykO Rd. FE 5-0145 OPEN EVES TILL « RESTAUkANT-DRIVE-tN Telegraph Road and city llfhlts of Pontiac, showing good return with much greater potential possible. Owner will accept trade or land contract as down pymt. Long term lease available. CLASS C No. 2045. In nice town near Mid* land. 5 per cent food and dance 28 permit. Only bar in town and only Class C In twp, $13*000 down* Includes real astata. State Wide—Lake Orion 1175 LAFEER RD. OA 8-1400 OL 1-3403 AFTER S OR 3-7000 FOR LEASE IN A CHOICE LOCA-tlon this modern fully equipped restaurant. Coll Mr. Reagan, Tom Reagan Raal Estate. FE 2-0154 or OR 3-640S. . •, LIQUOR BAR This Is lust e plain straight bar overlooking • large lake. All it does It make It's owner lots of monev. If Interested in this kind of a setup contact us tor details. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron * 333-7157 SALE OR LEASE MODERN BRICK building, oir-conditlonod, suitable tor any type of office, private parking, excellent location. FE 4-4133. DORRIS TRI-LEVEL. Moderatety priced tor the young executive typo. Laid out with family convenience Int mind, 3 bedrooms, cozy living room with oak floors, comfort*-hi* family room with fireplace, full both, spec loo i xltchen with glra door loading to beck-yard patio. 2-car attached garage and landscaped yard. TORS IN DESIGN It to* boot an to describe this 2-bedroom brick ranch homo. Beautiful sparkling kitchen IT'xlZ' with bullt-Wt, cer-j peted living room, oak fleers, plastered walls, 2 fireplaces, 2 toll baths, finished baaomont rood root Ion room with garage, S1V 750. MAKE AN OFFER Oh.tot* 3-bod-room bungalow fn Crescent Lake Estates, several outstanding features to this prim rang* of homo. Natural fireplaces, mar gas furnace, oak floors throughout and 1VVcar garage. Needs • some finish but worthy at remodeling, *7,750. HURRY. HURRY. FHA. Will go to p hurryl Located I block from Pontiac Northern Is tots Sharp 1-bedroom bungalow, now car-pottog to living room and hall over oak floors, got hoot, concrete drive, ivy-oer garage — lerosned summer perch! DORRIS B SON. REALTORS 2534 Dixie Hwy- OR 44324 MULTIPLE LISTING SKRVICI BATEMAN COMMERCIAL EXCHANGE OFFERINGS - OFFICE SUPPLIES AND EQUIPMENT A combination of etveral lines. Greeting. Canto, Soaks, Office Supplies and equipment, cm Be exclusive to your desires. Prime duwntown location do tog an ox-cel lent business for year*. Cm Do purchased Tor only SUM for *11 equipment plus reasonable down poymont on Mock. Call now tor appdtotfttiftt to to* this on*. ICS7-GB. TRADING I* Our Butin***. * What do you have? call to* Commercial Department tor on* of our profession*! i sproeemottvw with no obligation to you. We ore hero to hMp you with your real estate and business problems. CUSS C BAR North of Pontiac doing a tremendous day and night business. *40,000 gross. S20JNO will handle or will trad*. 1S4S-B. PARTY STORE SIMM Grots par month. Bast of all no leased or commission equipment, you own ft it. Unbelievable prim of $17,500. 1017-P.S. . EXCHANGE With BATEMAN COAST-TO-COAST TRADES Open 9-9 EXCHANG0R Sunday 1-5 367 S. Telegraph Realtor FE 8-9641 Annett Inc. Realtors E. Huron FE $-0466 Open Evenings tnd Sunday 1-4 60 Mortgage Loans 62 * * HOME OWNERS ^ CASH UNLIMITED Exclusive plan. Remodel your home. Pay past or current bills. ConMlIdole Info one low monthly payment. And extra Cash If you n*4d tome. Cell anytime, Big Bear Construction Co. FE 3-7833. » QUICK CASH LOANS UP TO $3,000 You con get a monthly payment cosh loan of *3,000 or less on your home even though not tolly modern usually to two days time. |W* give you to* toll amount to cosh. Thor* It not o penny to pay tor opprtlMl, survey or abetract. You also now receive • free credit Ilf* Insurance policy. Consolidate your debts, pay taxes, make home Improvements with our money, see and talk n over with us without obligation, yoss AND BUCKNER, INC. 207 NATIONAL BUILDING PONTIAC, PH. FE 4-4727 MORTGAGE ON ONE ACRE UP. With tSO-foot Mental*. Ho appraisal lee. B. O. Charles, Equitable Form Loan Service. |>17 S. Telegraph, FE 4-0521.__ CASH* Loans to $3,000 Consolidate your bills with only one payment. No closing costs and life Insurance Included on unpaid balance at NO EXTRA cost. Repay over a convenient term Phono or Apply to Person Family Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bldg. to W. Huron • Telephone FE i-4022 Sal# Household Goads 63 7-PIECE MAHOGANY DINING room BUlto* 2 extra leaves, pads* chairs refinished end reuphol- »ter ad. $125. Ml 6-7094._ 9x11 UNEOLUM RUGS $3.89 PLASTIC TILE 2 POR lc TILE* CEMENT, TRIM POR BATHTUB AREA ............ $9.95 ASPHALT TILE - 4c ea. THE FLOOR SHOP 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD ___________PE 4-5216 11 - CUBIC • FOOT c6l6sp6t Rf frlgerafor* excellent condition* $55. 338-0352, $09 Monticello. 12x15 fcRAND NEW 100 f*ER CENT nylon carpet* (beige). S59.5CL Also 12x12* $49.50.' Pear son's Furniture* 210 E. Pike. 16 CUBIC FObT CHEST' TYPE freezer. Like new. 852*4306. 21-INCH RCA TV LOWBOY, maple cabinet. FE 4-6815. 17 SQUARE YAROS OF^O'P Grade Nylon Carpeting, beige* reasonable. 682-6284. 40 INCH ELECTRIC RANGE* LIKE new. FE 2J987._____ *___ 40 INCH ELECTRIC RANGE, GOOD condition. >20. 338-8887. __ 40 INCH ELECTRlt STOVE, $40. QR 1-2243 after 3:30 p.m. 40-INCH ELECTRIC RANGE WITH storage. Peer's Appliances. EM 3- 4114. ________;__ 70 SQUARE YARDS CARPETING and pad, 850. FE 2-7449.__ 94 INCH SOFA CUSTOM MADE See-may* floral print* 7 mo., old. | 888-4873. _____ A BEAUTIFUL SINGER S W l N G needle sewing machine for 866.90 balance, In wood cabinet* built-in features. Makes button holes* blind hems* etc. Payments of 86.69 per month. Michigan Necchi-Elne* FE 8-4521. AUTOMATIC WASHER S25* DEEP Freezer 850, apt. size electric stove 849. 21" TV. $25. V. Harris. FE 5-2766. ,_________________ ABOUT ANYTHING Y$0 WANT FOR THE HOME CAN BE FOUND AT L and S SALES. A little out of the way but a lot less to pay. Furniture and appliances of all kinds NEW AND USED. Visit our trade dept, for reel bargains. We buy* sell or trade. Come out and look around* 2 acres of free perking. Phone FE 5-9241. Open Mon. to Sat. 9*6; Fri. 9-9 24 MONTHS TO PAY 4 miles E. of Pontiac oc.Jl itUBUr-,ra|L* of Auburn Heights on Auburn* M59, UL 2-3300. BLOND 4-PIECE BEDROOM SET. Vanity with bench* chest* night stand. FE 5-2474 after 6. ___ CtlLING TILE ....... ... 6c FT. UP Plastic wall Tile ..... lc Ea. Vinyl Flooring ....... 49c Sq. Yd. BAG Tile FE 4-9957 1075’W. Huron CHROME KITCHEN TAB l1L~ 4 chairs. High chair. Clean. OR 3-2306.________________________ CLEARANCE SALE Brand new living room lultos. $47.50; bedroom tultot, *47.50 5-piece chroma dinette, *33.50; large 7-piece chrome dinette, 259.50; 5-plece drop-leaf Mtt, 244.50. Bunk and trundle Mds — IS etylei. In maple, walnut, blond and wrought iron, 237.75 up — complete with matt rerat. 7x12 foam-beck rugt, 214.75; alto 7x12 linoleum rugs, 24.7J; 6-year crlbt, S14.7S. Load* of other itemi. Eoty term*. PEARSON'SPFURNltUliE 210 E. PIKE FE 4-7881 Family Home Fumlihlngt, 2135 Dixie Hwy., cor. Telegraph. DAVENPORT. CHAIR, TABLE AND lamp*. 330-2747 otter 4 P.M. Sale Household Goods__________65 WYMAN'S' M~ED- BARGAIN STORE AT OUR 18 W STORE ONLY Apt.rSize Gas Stove 829.95 2-Pc. Living Room Suite $29.95 7-Pc. Dinnefte Set 834.95 36" Table Top Gas Stove __ $39.95 Apt.-Size Electric Range . 849.95 2-Pc. Sectional Sofa 849.95 Guaranteed Elec. Refrigerator 859.95 Guaranteed Electric Washer 859.95 Easy Terms a 1 FE 4-1866 Antiques 65-A THE SISTERS GRIM ANTIQUES* 1490 Lochaven Rd.* South of Cooley Lake Rd. Open Fri., Sat.* Sun. 12 to 5. Decorating Service availably, . HHFIy TV <» M SPECIAL OFFER LIMITED TIME ONLY-FREE with every TV purchased, one 2epiece set of Melmac tflnnerware. Pricks start at 899.95. B. F. GOODRICH STORE 111 N. Perry FE 2-0121 For Sale Miscellaneous 47 WAREHOOSE clearance; of-flee desks* chairs, files, drafting tables* typewriters* adding machines* check writers* mimeograph machine". Forbes Printing A Office Supply* 4500 Dixie Hwy., OR 3-9767 or Ml 7-2444. Open till 9 p.m. WHE£ls7 TlfcES AND TUilS. Priced to go. 50c and up. Call FE " 4*9580.________ : " ; YEAR END SALE Stoves* ovens* hoods* garbage disposals, sinks* faucets* formica* cabinets* dishwashers. KITCHEN INTERIORS I 2122 W. Huron 33S-4SI3 Hand Toolt-MachiMry 6B AIR COMPRESSOR FOR SALE. FE ft 12-4443 or FE 3-4754 after 4:30. | WANTED ARC WILDER, GAS driven, metal lathe* other tools* UL 2-4614. Musical Goods 71 Water Softenars 66-A Swaps 63 1755 FORD CONVERTIBLE, RE-bullt engine, good top. S100 or whet hove you. 334-3342 otter 4 - LiJ,W"- ________ TH AVI 17*1 10' X *7 NATIONAL House Trailer to exchange for equity In homo. Coll Al Komp- ten, FE 4-0*31. 1740, 3-TON STAKE TRUCK FOR MW or trade for good uted car. 333-7034. ICE SKATES, NEW AND USED Wo buy, tell and trade. Bamoe-Hargrovot Hdw. 742 W. Huron. TRADE: NEW, USED AND RECAP tlrei for anything of uieful value. Don, Market Tiro CO., FE 2-0435. WILL TAKE TRAVEL OR HOUSE-trelWr or good boat, on down payment on homo. 1-75 at US-10. AAA 5-5811. 1751 FORD TRACTOR WITH PLOW and grader blade. Sell or trado for a good pickup. MA 4-3400._ Sale Clothing_________________ 64 44 RED WINTER COAT PILE lining. 1H4. Cheep. FE 4-1000. GIRL'S COAT SET, SIZE 4, GIRL'S coat* 11 mos., boots* siza 7. FE 5-0550. SALEl SALE! St. James Opportunity Shop reopened January Tto. Big sale begins January 14ta. Reduced prices on all winter clothing. 355 W. Maple, Birmingham. Sal* land Contracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. Sea us before you deal. Warren Stout, Realtor ." 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-SISS Open JEves. 'Ill 8 p.m. 0-YEAR-OLD CONTRACT PAYING 255 PER MONTH AT * PER CENT. *1773. BAL. 10 PER CENT DISCOUNT. CALL CRAMER PARTRIDGE, FE 4-3581.______ ACTION Broker. 3*40 Elizabeth Lake Rood. Cash For your land contract or equity. Smell mortgagee available. Call Tod McCullough, Sr, 603-1830. ARRO REALTY 5143 Case Elizabeth Rood Wonted Centrects Mtg. 60-A CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS -H. J. Van -Welt, 4540 Dixie Hwy., OR 3-2355. ■ 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us before you deaL Warren Stout, Realtor 3450 N. Opdyko Rd. FE 5-8165 Open Evos. *tlt S p.m. HELPI WE NEED USED HOMES-Cesh en toe line or we will trade new * or 4 bedroom home for vacant land. Call todoyl MICHAEL'S REALTY WE 3-4100 UN 3-3352 333-755* FI 5-77*2 ASOftiD LAND: CONTRACTS CAPITOL SAVINGS B LOAN ASSN-, 75 W- Huron St. FE 4-0541. Monty to loon 61 (Ltasmod Money Lender) r r r- BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE you Can BORROW UP TO $1,000 OFFICES IN Pontiac—Drayton Pie toe—Utica Wotted Lake -Birmingham LOANS S2S TO SMS* COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 3t E. LAWRENCE FE *401 MONEY TO LOAN Sale Household Goods 65 1 SOFA, SIS) MAHOGANY DROP Wat table and 4 chairs, $37. Refrigerators, *17 up. 30" ges range, *37. Walnut dining set with china coblnjrt, *57. 21-Inch TV, $35. Gas and electric stoves, BIO up. Bed springs, S3. BUY — SELL — TRADF PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pike_____________ FE 4-7101 1 HAMILTON GAS DRYER .... 237 Apt. elec, range ................235 Bedroom Sulto S27 Living room .................. $20 Baby Crib S10 Oil hooter ................. $17 Nice 30" gas range ..............$47 I pc. dining room sot ...........$27 CWon guar, stoves, ref, washers ............... *10 - $100 Everything In used furniture ot bar- Rain orices. lew factory sacond bedrms......$47 Factory second tlv. rms........177 EZ TERMS • Buy - Sell - Trado Open Til 7 Aeon, and Fn. b BARGAIN HOUSE in ft. Cess art Lafayette FE 1-4442 1-way traffic, use Sanderson Johnson or Oakland to N. Casa 1 GAS 10-INCH STOVE; CHEST; blonde TV. FE 2-4370. 2 Week Clearance Sale .107 S37 2 ROOMS NEW FURNITURE 3 pc. Bedroom, box springs and mattress, nylon living room suite with tables end lamps, and kitchen furniture ell for $307. Used stove, refrigerator and washers/ all sizes S7 • 177. Guaranteed. Bargains on all used furniture LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1440 Baldwin at Walton Open »tti 7 p-m, dolly FE MOT# 2 WASHERS. CHROME TABLE. MltC. Gvkk 8010. FE 5-7103. -1-PIECE SECTIONAL, BED MAt-tresa, spring, kitchen and dining room set. Lamps, tables, odds and end*. Ml 4-B422. 3-PIECE BEDROOM SUITE, MA-hosany, kidney desk, wedding ring eet, complete eat of chine dlnnerwere. FE S-3404. i *66ms oF brand new puF- nlture, living room, bedroom and dinette - all for *275. *3.00 weekly. Pearson Furniture, 210 East Pike. FC 4-78S1. 4-YEAR-OLO CRIB, LIKE NEW. FE 2-4770 7 IEDRGAm SEtS. I WITH CANO-,py bed, new. Cash or terms, otto lafriMretori and freezers. UL 2-37nT 7 ROOMS OF PURNIT0R6. FI 4-1132 e 7 PIECE (tUftCAM FHVFI DIN- B •■M in m i WATER SOFTENER 2 used rental softeners* 135 each, j 1 Royal semiautomatic* 849. COOLEY SOFT WATER CO. nu. FE 4-4404__________ For Salt Miscellaneous 67 2 OIL TANKS AND 85,000 BTU Coleman oil furnace complete, also 5-room oil floor furnace with con* trols. Will Install. 682*3112. . 2-BEDROOM HOME AND 1962~BON neville convertible* by owner, 88200 673*1879 before 2 F.M. 2 BROWNING AUIOMATICS* 12 gauge with Polychoke. 8110. Sweet 16 with Polychoke, 895. 23 Mallard decoys and duck boat, 860. ) chrome tables, 6 chairs, 840. 8mm camera with light bar and leather cast, 875. 674-0598 83.75 A MONTH FOfe SINGER ZIG zag equipped. Monograms* blind hems, buttonholes, beautiful cabinet model. $32.66 cash price. Michigan Nacchi-Elna. FE 8-4521. 275'GALLON OIL TANK AND A space heater. 334-6026.___ “AL'S TILE SHOP Solid vinyl tile* salvage, . 2c ea. WaII tlJe* whIte- gold Hacked* lc ea. Linoleum inlaid* sq. yd. . 96c Asphalt tile* random . 3Jac ea. 4322 N. Woodward* 4 blks. S 14 Mi. Across from MavaHck Drive-In. ANCHOR FENCES NO MON E Y. DOWN________F E^ 5-7471 AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG SEWING MA-ch^ne.."Fashion Dial" for designs* button holes* Etc. Cabinet model. Take over payments of 86 per month for 7 months or 842 cash balance. Universal Company. FE 4-0905.__________________. , BEAUTY SHOP SIGN ELECTRIC* 2x6*, reasonable. OA 8-2098. BATHROOM FIXTURES* OIL AND &as furnaces. Hot water and steam oiler. Automatic wattr heater. Hardware* elec, supplies* crock and pipe and fittings. Lowe Brothers Paint* Super Kemtone and Rustoieum. HEIGHTS SUPPLY 2685 Lapttr Rd. FE 4-5431 SALE GUITARS . . . ACCORD'ONS Loaners and lessons. FE 5-5428. GOOD PLAYER PIANO, 600 ROLLS 8325. 421 N. Perry. FE 4-7253. JANUARY BIG BONUS SALE! During our January Clearance, you will be surprised at the extra bonus you will get with the purchase of each* piano or organ . . . We have the famous THOMAS Organ, the hit of the Rose Bowl Tirade. See it now! USED LOWERY, was 21425, NOW 2700 USED GRINNELL, Piano . . 2250 BEFORE YOU BUY GIVE US A TRY WIEGAND MUSIC 447 Elizabeth Lake Rd.1 ___FE 2-4824 _________ HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN — walnut, 2 manual, good-Condition, one owner. R. E. Steffens, "P6 3-7IM-_- ■ _____ GRINNELL SCHOOL TYFE Uto" rights in excelleht condition. Also modern apartment size, can bo used for teaching. Cell R, E. Steffens, FE 1-7160. -______ GAS STOVE, REFRIGERATOR, sewing machine. FE 4-4074 after *0. or Sunday._____________ GOOD MAYTAG, AUTOMATIC washer. 312-4247. HOTPOINT REFRIGERATOR 13 CU. tt with top freezer . 2*7.75 TV's ......... . 819.95 and up SWEET'S RADIO B APPLIANCE 433 W. Huron St.- 334-5077 KENMORE ELECTRIC CLOTHES dryer. 530. OR 1-7431. KIRBY VACUUM, LATE MODEL 857.50 817.50 211.50 230.50 257.50 *44.50 Singer portable .......... Now portable fypewrlttr .. Necchi console ............. Singer console auto, zig-zag Console chord organ ...... Curt's Appliance Or e-noi LARGE COAL HEATER, .OIL burners, dll tanks. Taylors, *03 Mt. Clemons Street. _____________ LEAVING STATE, HOUSEHOLD furniture. Including TV, Porch Furniture, China, gloss wo re, mirrors, garden tools, etc. FE 5-3461 344 Eileen Drive. MUST SELL, EXCELLENT CONDl-tion, 24-In. console TV; den furniture' living room pieces, bed-, room sulto. MA 4-6724 Evos. and Sat. ana Sun. MAPLE DINING ROOM TABLE, chairs, buffet, chine drat. 45 W. Strathmore. FE 5-3711. AAAYTAG ALUMINUM TUB WASH-er 1 year old. S100. Must soil. FE 5-7417. ■ MAPLE BED COMPLETE, ROCK-ers, coffee tobies, choirs. Pair chest, Misc. Furniture OR 1-7444. NEW AND USED CARPETING FOR sale. Many assorted braids to choose tram Also several roll and remnants. Select from our stock. We also specialize In carpet and furniture cleaning. Avon Troy Carpet Seles, 1450 E. Auburn Rd., Ro-chaster, post John R. 052-2444. REBUILT APPLIANCES Easy Spinners* like new . Maytag wringers ........... Speed Queen wringers . . RCA Whirlpool automatics Frlgidaire automatic Refrigerators .............. GE automatic washer Electric range ............. $78.00 864.00 858.00 888.00 $98.00 848.00 898.00 848.00 THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC 51 W. Huron Street_____FE 4-1$55 REFRIGERATOR* GOOD CONDI-tlon* 835. FE 5-3317. REFRIGERATOR* $25.; ELECTRIC stove* 835* 21" TV, 825; washer, $25; refrigerator with top freezer, 849; gas stova* $25. V.. Harris, FE 5-2766.__________ SINGER SLANT NEEDLE DELUXE Sewing Machine* zlg zagger* in modern Walnut Cabinet. Pay off account in 9 months at 17.75 par month or $66 cash balance. Universal Company. l=E__4-0905._ SPECIAL 820 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNiTURE - Consists of: 2*plece livinq room suite with 2 step tables I cocktail table and 2 table lamps 7-olace bedroom suite with double dresser - chest, full size bed with Innarspnng mattress and box gprlngs to match with 2 vanity lamps. 5-place dinette sat. 4 chroma chairs, Forrqic* top table* 1 bookcase* 1 9x12 rug Included. All for $399. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. Bottle Gas Installation Two 100-pound cylinders and equipment, S12. Great Plains Gas 54*72. CABINETS Stock or custom. Call us first. Pay or night. 334-6329. PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES 917 Orchard Lake Rd. CASH AND CARRY V-Grove Mag. 4x8 ........ 83.95 Pra-flnished Mag. 4x8 ...... 83.95 V-Grove Mag. 4x7 82.95 DRAYTON PLYWOOD 2611 Dixit Hwy.__________OR 3-8912 CIRCLE FLUORESCENT LIGHTS* newest lights for kitchens* $12.95 value, 86.95* factory marred Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake-7-13._____ COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE AND fittings. Custom threading. Immediate service. Montcalm Supply* 156 W. Montcalm. FE 5-4712. COMPLETE HOSPITAL BED, OOU-bit bed and misc. items. 840. FE 5-3279. __________ CRAFTSMAN WOOD LATHfc* UP to 9 Inches diameter, 36 Inch length* complete with stand* mo-tor* 4 speeds* 840. Ml 6-4754.___ Custom cabinets, 'kitchens. furniture. 5880 Tubbs Road. OR 3-9860. D & J CABINET SHOP Por better-built ctistom cabinets, sea our cabinets on display. 1055 W. Huron 334-0926. After 6 p.m. 363-3343. Discontinued Formica 25c sq. H.________________________ DRYERS* ELECTRIC, FAMOUS brand, marred, fully guaranteed. 8V19.95. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake. EXTRA HEAT FOR THAT COLD room — gas fired baseboard fits under windows, $120. Thompsons, 7005 M-59 west. GAS SPACE HEATERS, ALL SIZES at bargains. Thompson's, 7705 M-59. west. -_____________ HUMIDIFIER, APRILAIRE MODEL 112/ complete with humidistaf and all controls, almost new. $95. 3139 W. Huron. FE 8-0427 or FE 5-4743. HOT WATER HEATER* 30 GALLON gas* consumers approved 889.95 value $39.95 and $49.95 marred. Michigan Fluorescent* 393 Or- chard Lake-—!6._______________ HOT WATER BASEBOARD SPE-cial $1.39 per ft. Thompson* 7005 M-59 West._______________________ KITCHEN CABINET SINK, $10, Piston type pump and tank $25. Fiberglas boat, 175. 363-7668. MEATS AND GROCERIES All nationally advertised brands, saving up to 40*o. Soap, sugar, coffee, flour, butter, cake mix, cereal, soup, vegetables, fruit juices. Baby Food, 24 for 99c RENT A NEW GRJNNELL PIANO MuilC lessons Included Choose your style end finish All payments apply If you tx/y $2.00 PER WEEK Grinnell's L0WREY ORGAN SEMI-ANNUAL SALE Factory authorized, special savings on demonstrators* rentals, floor models and used organs. Fret horn# trial — easy terms. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. • OPEN EVERY MON. and PRI. NIGHT 'TIL 7 p.m: IS E. HURON_________FE 4-0544 USED GRINNELL CONSOLE PIANO — $375. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Road (Across from Tel Huron) FE 2-0567_______ SEVERAL ORGANS INCLUDING Gultx-anson, Conn, Baldwin, Lowry / and Hammond. Spinet typo, tremendous layings. Grlnnells down Town store. New All-Electric Organs 2 manuals. 13 pedals; made by an American manufacturer. 8550 with bench and music MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Road (Across from Tel-Huron) FE 2-0567 RENT A Trumpet, Comet, Trombone, Flute, Clarinet, Violin or Sijdre Drum Kit $5.00 A MONTH Rent for as Iona as you wish* all moneys apply If you buy. UNLIMITED RENTAL PRIVILEGES Grinnell's 16C Lb. TWIN YOUNGSTOWN $ FOOT SINK comb, yellow and blue never used $200 or trade L. R. Maple, FE 5-3672, 1-3 p.m. - TWO BLOND STEP tABLES AND cocktail table* Ilka new. 830. AAA 5-1561. , _____________ WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC WASH-er* Deluxe model,. Reasonable. 682- USEO 30-INCH ELECTRIC RANGE, less than l year old, 22 per week. Used TV* new picture tube* 1-year guarantee* 82 per week. Used tires 14" high threads 84.95 and up. GOODYEAR STORE 30 S. CASS FE 54113 M TEN - YEAR "SOI" NYLON — IN-stalled with rubber pad* 88.95 yd. A-1 Carpet Sales_________FI 4-7110 Year End Clearance REP0SSESED REGULAR 2S7.7S Glass lined gas water heater, 837.50. NEW .BURNER TAPPAN built-in cook top, regular 11(1.50 now . J47JB. .. , TAPPIN BUILT-IN oven and broiler, regular $212.00 now 2)07.50. AUTOMATIC GAS CLOTHES DRY-or. - Regular S1T7.7S now $147.50. Phillips PetroHum Co. 1222 Orchard Lake Rd., 402-3000 WE TAKE YRAOE-Itti FAMILY Itomo Furelehtogs. 1115 Dlxto Hwy. SHARP, CL|AN, TERRIFIC VAL-uos. Family Homo Furnishings, 2135 Dixie Hwy.. car, of Telegraph. USED AUTOMATIC WASHERS 237.50. Installed and guaranteed. PE 2-4007 Coll before I p.m. ■Mv Cut-Up Friers, Dog Food, 12 for 59c Free Home Delivery Call for free catalogue. We reserve the rights to limit * quantity. Call 647-1577. MEDICINE CABINETS, LARGE 20" mirror* slightly marred* $3-95, large selection of cabinets with or without lights, sliding doors. Terrific buys. Michigan Fluorescent,. 393 Orchard Laker-36. OIL SPACE HEATER. TANK AND j 75 gal. oil; 3 Traverse rods; 2 cornice boards; 1 Electrolux rug cleaner, new; curtains and throw | rugs. OR 4-0672 between 10 a.m. -4 p.m, ORNAMENTAL IRON 0ORCH AND step railings, corners and posts. AVIS CABINETS 1570 Opdyke ___________ FE 4-4380 ONE" WEEK ONLY! Aromatic Cedar Shavings ' 75c Bov Vinyl Folding Doors .. $3.95 (Any color or siza left) r 4 x 8 Ft. Plyscord . 84.21 PONTIAC PLYWOOD 1488 Baldwin FE 2-2543 PLYWOOD DISTRIBUTORS 375 N. Cass Ave. FE 2-0437 GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. OPEN EVERY MON. end FRI. NIGHT 'TIL 7 P.M. 12 E. HURON _____ FE 4-0544 Office Equipment 72 USED OFFICE FURNITURE >-chairs, desks, files* typewriters bookkeeping machines* etc. — General Printing and Offica Supply* 17 W. Lawrence St.___________ 73 Stora Equipment Sporting Goods 74 PLUMBING BARGAINS FREE. Standing toilet* 118.95; 30-gallon heater, 849.95; 3-plece bath sets, $59.95. Laundry tray, trim* $19.95* shower stills with trim* 832,95. 2*bowl sink, 82.95; Levs.* $2.95; tubs* $10 and up. Pipe cut and _ threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO . fm S. Saginaw. FE 5-2100. POWER MOWER, NEW 'DINETTE. AKC poodle. 335-4457. SALON tYPE WEIGHT REDUC-Ing belt 825. Coin box Included* FE 5-5007, _ ______ iPACE HEATERS, PROPANE AND oil for rant and sale. Snow Blower, used. New XL12 Homellte chain saw. FE 8-6642. _________________ STROLLER; HIAh CHAIR;’ POT-tey chair; car seat; tricycle. FE 5-0550. THE PROVEN CARPET CLEANER Blue Lgstre Is easy on the budget. Restores forgotten colors. Rent tlebrlc Shampoer. $1. McC end lets Carpets. __________________________ THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs. Clothing* Furniture* Appliances. 2 PAIR SKI BOOTS, 1-8’4 FOR 87, 1*9Vi for $12, and bowling ball for 87. ceil OR 3-0215.___________.__ APACHE TRAILERS- New and used, all 1964 models on display in heated showroom. — Apache Hometown dealer* BILL ,COLLER, Lapeer, Michigan. GUNS — BUY - SELL —' TRADE r- Repair. Burr-Shell* Telegraph Rd. at Edna Ave. FE 2-4708. ___ Ice skates, new and used n We buy* sell end trades. Bames-Hargraves Hdw.* 742 W. Huron. 1743 W.fLSON~STAftf: WOODS, ’M3, like new, 845. OR 3-1371._______ Sand-Gravel-Dirt 76 PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply, send* gravel* fill dirt. OR 3-1534. Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel 77 1-A AGED WOOD. ALSO SLAB, 57 up, pick-up or del.* FE 8-8755. 18- AND 24-1 N C N* CHERRY* hickory end oek* after 6. OR 3-9082. AL'S LANDSCAPING* WOOD OF all kinds* tree removal. FE 4-4228. DRY MAPLE FURNACE OR FIRE-pleca wood — 88. a cord. Call 138-3845. ' SEASONED FIREPLACE W660* Pets-Hunting Dogs 79 TALBOTT LUMBER Glass Installed In doers and windows, 1025 Oakland Ave., FE 4-4595 USED COLEMAN GAS FURNACE. 125,000 BTU. ASH Seles, MA 5-1501 Of MA S-2S37. VANITY AND HAND bASIN SET up. complete, 259 95. B toilets $17.75 gas automatic water heaters, 245. Thompson's 700S M-S7 west. ... . . .. J..... ilAP. OIL 5-MONTH MALE POODLE. OR 3-SQ31. * '' 4 CHIHUAHUAS. I TO 4 YEARS, (overstocked). $30 - 215. NA 7-2731. 10 PER CENT OFF, POODLEl parakeets, canaries, fish. Crane's Bird Hatchery. 2407 Auburn. UL 2-2200. Pet supplies. AKC GERMAN I K tPHIKD, 7 months. Show quality. EM >3371. AKC MINIATURE DACHSHUND call after S p.m. OL 1-OI7S. AKC' DACHSHUND "PUPPIES/ dags, at stud. Terms. FE 2-0007. 7 rv - m v | IFW? mm TjHTRTY»S1>X sr Pets-HuRting Dogs 86 791 Farm Product ________ __________ AKC DACMiHUND PUPS «I0 DOWN. EXTRA LARGE EGGS. 3 DOZEN JAHEIMS KENNELS FE 1-2531. | 11.50. Smith Bros. Form, *493 An- «C■ K I N 0 i S I PUPPIES R«r«o»»vHI* Rd., Cterkelen. *25-2(49 very reasonable, call tor appoint- FOR THE FINEST mont. FE (-0450. | IN FRESH FAl|^ AKC SPRINGER SPANIELS FOR „ . /l?ffVCIL.tr,Ef,r. r. sale. MA 4-3011. , | BOD & Bill S PrOdUCE LO. AKC MINIATURE POODLES, 6 Pontiac weeks, reasonable. 335-4403. after <' mile Wesl of Alrwirt Rd.) 4 p m, . !________>405 Highland Rd Boats-AccROsarios n riOSE-OUT 1043 Johnaon Motors, Star Croft boats and Gftor Champ trailers. OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES ! 304 Orchard Lake FE 2-0020 evinKude motor akc toy poodle puppies, i Form Equipment 17 brown mala, I brown female, 1 - M*d, uliy I S-SSSS- FARM-ALL, B-, SNOW PLOW, AND ALL BREED CLIPPING. POODLES 3 other attachments — c*ll after ■ our specialty. Reas. 423-5404. t.- | 4 p m. OR 4-0254 BOSTON BULL PUPPIES, PURE- SEE THE NEW 3020 POWER SHIFT brad. FE 2*812 after A tractor. Also good used traders BRITTANY SPANIEL PUPPIES. 4 on display. You get top allowance weeks old. OR 3-5352. I on trade-in. Your John Deere deal or. Hartland Area Hdwe. Hart-land 2511.______________________ oPPp piippv rn nn rn norm Sib -THE NEW XL12 HOMELITE F? “ T0 00 T0 G0YD chain saw at Davis Machinery Co. i - name. jze-wrx. _____ ____:---Your John Deere, New Idea and I n ei.mhln esorets GERMAN SHEPHERD, MACE j Homelite dealer. Ortonvllle, NA ", jVlff express Boats and Accessories Wood, Aluminum, Flberglss ‘'HARO TO-FINP'' DAWSON'S SALES TIpilco Laks - AAA t-2120 JET BOATS Jet boats going at nearly cost! . Including 64 models. A FREE boat 1 frailer goat with your pufcheifl Every boat must go I Will taka trades. MICHIGAN TURBOCRAFT 2522 DIXIE HWY. *• DR 4-03M COLLIE PUPS. SIS AND S20. lorry, no papers. 4021245. LOOK 7-32t2. with papers. Excellent watch dog German shIphIrd puppies I USED TRACTORS ; M, Chrll Cratt tklff< l00 hp< in. , AKC, reasonable. OR 3-2414. All Sires and Makes i t>oar(j _ outboard QR QOMING ALL BREEDS, (j KING BROS. | I?4 Chris Craft Corsair 'outboard years experience, poodles fe 4^07^ ' F® 4-U621 <;rw,l#r- at 66.S0. 662-4204 altar 4 p.m.! Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Pick up and doll very $1.00.____ KITT*N$ AND lUPPUES. ALL!Tf«Vtl trailers Pet Shops 55 Williams. FE 4-6433 is Evinruda Outboards — 3 to 10 h p TRADE PARAKEET, BABY MALES, u.95. 301 First, Rochester. _OL 1-6372. ~>A*T POODLE PUPPIES $5. ____________MA 5-2450 pome Rian pvips> akc. *2 males. orange and blonde. 673-8063 IkUPRlES. NO MONEY DOWN, 12 months to pay. Poodles and Dachshund, Pekingese 'mixed breeds FE 1-3112 Hunt's Pet Shop AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed for life. See them and get a demonstration at Warner frailer Sales, 3098 W. MAZUREK MARINE SALES W4-l^ori_! s. Blvd.at Saginaw . FE 4-»5(2 ” Nfttr ‘ ~wl~ WILL BEAT ANY DEAL Kar’t Boat» ■ Motors, Laka Orion boaTland" SIAMESE CATS Exceptionally fine. 2-yeardld male, altered (25. 5-year-old female, spayed. (15. Both gentle with children. FE 4-4903 SIAMESE KITTENS. $15 NO PA-per», UL 2-2511. ' TOY POODLE. 423-0214 Toy poooles7 akc, silver fe- malei. 9 weeks old. 332-4335._ WIREHAIR TERRIER PUPS. 8 weeks. Ml 4-5302. Aodioo Sites so AUCTIONEER, FREE INFORMA- Wally Byam's exciting caravans) ARE YOU FLORIDA BOUND? Then see the all-new aluminum Avalair with lifetima guarantee. Also Holly and Tawas Brave travel trailers, 16 to 27 feet. Also pickup campers. ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 4522 Dixie Hwy. ___ MA 5-1400 -OPEN ALL WEEK- Com# on out and Sea The 1964 FANS 1964 TRANKLING 1964 CREE Truck Campart « and 1964 Monitor Seo Our New 31' STREAMLINE “The Aristocrat of the Highway" Models are on Display at ---Holly Travel Coach 15130 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4221 — Open Daily and Sundays — MARMADUKE THjig jPONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY^ JANUARY 10. ,1966 amW ' -J'", ifl .m r#-< By Anderson & Leemlng New and Used Cbm ' 111 “Marmaduke and I are collecting for a little girl and-a dog who want to buy ice cream sodas!” 104 Sea-Ray — Thompson - Itarcraft Auto Insurance Johnson motors — 3 to 90 h.p. I . PINTER'S MARINE j GOOD NEWS "WHERE SERVICE COUNTS" " For those who have bean M Canceled or Refused Wonted Cars-Trucks 101 Wt can provlda first-line coverage /VWN^w^^WwwkA^vN.v«.., and protection plus yearly pro-... ..... I mium reduction based an im >25 MORE | proved driving rtgulf. For that high grade used car, see CALL'.NOW us, before you sell. H. J. Van .. . ococ Welt, 4540 Dixie Highway. Phone rt 4-oDJD T - Ok‘ 3-1355. ’ • Frank A. Anderson Agency f Tb io JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS 1044 Jgsiyn_____________Pontiac wanted. OR 3-2939. 105 ---™ ...., ... ...--- — I ALWAYS BUYING tun. B. N. HaCkatt. EM 3-4203. STORE THAT I I JUNK CARS — FREE TOE tt AUCTIO^wyONESDAYS. J' f( T*.yg, Trailer for you l Any .i.a ---------- Will-O-Way Country Mart, 113 W., or length, for as low as $25 far Lang Lake Rd. Ml 7-3469._____ the winter. Holly Travel Coach AUCTION AT BLUCBIRb AUCTION! Center, 15210 Holly Rd., Holly. Saturday night, Jen. 11. The first j ME 44771. Open Sundays.__ one In *64. We ere loaded with. IQAA iftT f| FARANfF furniture, appliances and mlscel-' ItON LUI UCAnAliLC laneouv Sale darti (t 8 p m. We WE NEED ROOM FOR A NEW are located lust halfway btfweeff SHIPMENT Flint end Pontiac on Dixit Hwy Stop in and choost your model. Bill Knowlton end Stan Bates. Auc-l 23' Century, self-contained, twin free tow anytime. PE 2-2666 Lt .Wt'r W JWK ^CARS AND|)M2 F|AT 5pioeb ROADSTER, 4-speed. Radio, heater, whitewalls. White wTRf blue interior. Only "trucks wanted. OR 3-8659. LLOYDS BUYING 91,495. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. Foreign Cart 105 1963 VW DELUXE STATION WAGON. SPLIT FRONT SEAT, RADIO, SEAT BELTS, TURQUOISE AND WHITE. 1661 CHEVROLET BISCAYNK, 2-door, 6-cylinder stick, 1995* 332-3730 after s p.m. 1941 tHfcVY 3-DOOR, WITH (-4YL. engine, (trilght tltck, solid white flniih, low mtleoge and l( Ilk* newl (1395. JEROME FERGUSON Rochaitar FORD D(d(r, OL147I1 New and Umd Can 19(7 FORD CONVERTIBLE, CLEAN. >191 iRVd Aim. FE 5^32$. BiAUTIFUL 1952 * 4-1X30R HAkb- 106 NawaadUMd Cars ^ 106 $97 DOWN •xodlont good It Ion. 1941 CORVAIR MONZA. MUST SAC riflcc, will toll to' first offer of (1,100, excellent condition 4-5299. . . FARKWdOD 19(1 CHEVROLET station wagon. V-l engine, automatic power steering and brakes. 2-tone turquois and white fbMgh. Only (1,(95. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S, WOODWARD AVE. BIR MINGHAM. Ml 4-3231 1942 CORVAIR MONZA, RED WITH rod Interior 2-door, bucket seats, 4-ipmd. Real sharp. 11,3(5. 335-0218 attar 3:30. ■ _____________ 1942 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE, rad with a black top. VI Maine. . Powergllde. radio, heater, white-wells, $2,095. LLOYD Llncoln-Mercury 4420 Dixie Hwy. CLARKSTON MA 5-3433 19(2 CHEVY NOVA STATION wagon, 4-cylinder engine, power-gride, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only -13,000 actual miles, white with red Interior. Only (1(95. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE.. BlRMINGHAM. Ml 4-1735. 1942 CHEVY fl, 2-DOOR HARDTOP, red Interior,. bucket seats, radio, heater, whitewalls, automatic, top shape. Call OR 4-1492 after 0 p.m. 1942 MONZA BLACK, 4-SPEED, *1,-595, radio, heator. If you want a real good one pay $144 down, payments of 149.19 per month LLOYD Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1765 TELEGRAPH FE 1-4531 1961 FIAT ROADSTER Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1765 Telegraph________FE 1-4531 1955 VOLKSWAGEN 2-DOOR, H^AT-er. Completely refinished and runs like new. Only S595. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVEy' BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. N«w and Usad Cars 106 tioneers. M. Bellow, Prop. MEIrose* 7-5195. AUCTION SALE Now < beds and extension table. $2,795. 23* Century, self-contained, dou- j Me bunks, auto. heat, pump and { Good Cleon Cars 2023 Dixit Hwy. battery system, over. 0(00 in ex-tras, sleeps 4, now $3,391 19* Century, self-contained with front dinette, now $2,495. < 17' Cmtury, self-contained, front kitchen, side dinette, sleeps 1 (1,925. We will resume- holding bUr regular Friday night auction solos. January 10th, 1944 at 7:39 p.m. L- E. Smart Solo Form 330 TienkM Rd;, Rochester___ . ^ B B B AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY 2:30 P.M. BvIry SATURDAY . 2:30 P.M. - - iviliV" J03R*B3C==L"=^*!(B -PM. Sporting Goods—All Types Door Prizes Every Auction Wo Buy—Soil—Trade, Retail 2 Days Consignments Welcome 5019 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-3212 FARM AUCTION - SATURDAY Jen. Ilfh — 10:30 o.m. Located Vt milt. South Hadley to 3(42 S. Hadley Rtf. 31 heed Holsteins con tistlng of 2 rag. Holstein cows, 15 high grade cows with many near fresh. 9 Holstein Heifers 3 to 10 mos. old. Holstein Bull 3 yrs. old. Dairy equipment, im bales mixed hay; 5 tons of corn silage; 4 Boer I er j p fa. , CAPA. Gtnesoe Merchants Bonk, dork. CKrk's Ford Troctors. Fen ton. SPECIAL SUNDAY 3 P.M. | Hall's Auction Solo Sunday, Jan- i uory 12th. 7-5 West Clerkston Rd., .Lake Orion. Clean-out sole. Over-I loaded with stock. Jock W. Hall ] and Bob Dobson, Auctioneers. Con signments accepted daily. MY New 50x40 ,................... 3-1071 or MV 3-0141. _________J New 54x10 ................. Bob Hutchinson MOBILE HOMES USED SPECIALS Mobilt Cruiser, 30x6 Gr««t Lakes, 40x6 National, 36x6 Detroihtr, 51x10 Whitley, $1x10 Pontiac, 45x10 NEW SPECIALS PRIOR'S ANTIQUES AUCTION, Sunday* January 19, 1 p.m. (weather permittlno). OA $-1260.; no - 3637 Lakavllla Road, Oxford. < D lx la Highway OR 3-1202 ARE YOU BUYING A NEW OR COURTESY CAR? WE WILL BUY YOUR LATE MODEL CAR WE PAY MORE. 1104 Baldwin Ave. 335-5900 I 1943 VW SUNROOF, WITH RA-dio, heater, one-owner naw car trade! Extra nlc6, solid whit# fln-{ ish, $150 down, $31.22 par month. PATTERSON Chrysiar-Plymouth ROCHESTER 1001 N. Main St, OL 1-1559 1961 ANGLIA. EXCELl ENT CON-d it Ion. FE $>l)il orTJA IIIM4 attar 4 p.m. DRAGSTER CHASSIS. ALUMINUM body. Rots steering, blast ah laid. Torsion front. Light tpindlas, spoke 1 wheals complete. Sell all or part. ! Jim Wohlfeil. FE 2-4907 between j 8 and 5. 1961 BUICK LeSABRE 2-DOOR Automatic transmission, power steer* Ing and brakes* exc. condition. MT 6-1529._____________, ‘ 1961 BUICK SPECIAL STATION wagon, 11,495, V8 _ angina, a radio, heater* power steering and brakas, like newl SI54 down, Payments of 845.92 for 30 months. LLOYD Llncoln-Mercury 232 S. Saginaw FE >-*131 1943 CAOILLAC SEOAN OeVILLE, fully equipped including air conditioning. Eldorado paint. S900 dawn. JEROME Motor Sales ' 280 S. SAGINAW Ft 8-0488 **— i» Llncoln-Mercury 232 S. Seginew St. FE 2-9131 150 A-i used Cars 1942 Chevrolet Impale sport coupe, (1299. Full factory equipped, Including VI engine, power steer 1951 FORD STATION WAGON, BET tar than average cendttton. Call attar S p.m. (3957 OL 1-1444.________ 19(9 FORD STATION WAGON, RA-DIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY down, payments at alas per weak. See Mr. Parka at Her-old Turttar Ford. Ml 47(80. 19(9 FORD 9-PASSENGER WAGON, with stick shift, radio, hooter, whitewalls, extra nice throughout! Nothing down, (34.42 gar month. PATTERSON Chrysler - Plymouth ROCHESTER 1(01 N, Mein St,____OL 1-65J9 1959 THUNDfeRBlrib HARDTOP, send beige, 29,000 actual miles, very good condition. OL 14B5I. 19(9 FORD 4, 4-DOOR, RADIO, heater, stick, whitewalls, very clean, good condition, S495. PEOPLES AUTO SALES 41 OAKLAND PE 3-21(1 FORD 1959-ONE OWNER. 4-CVL-Indtr standard shift. Body end motor good. $590. 4(2-«354. 19(0 FORD 4 DOOR, FAIRLANE 500 with V( engine, automatic transmission, radio, heater, 14,000 miles, and Is Ilka newl (lltS. JEROME FERGUS O K Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. ....... .... 19(0 FALCON WIPE'S CAR MUST 1940 T-giRD HARDTOP, WITH standard factory equipment, solid white with red Interior, like new condition. Don't miss this car, 11295. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Peeler, Ql 1-9711. 1940 FORD. 4. S(M - FE 30(55 otter ( p.tq... ■ . 1946 FALCON 4-DOOR WITH standard transmission, radio and heater, full price, (597, weakly payments (4.20, no money down naaded. King Auto Salts 3275 W. Huron St. FE S-40M ing, spotless In and out, (S9 down imo FORD 2-DOOR, V-0 ENGIN6, or old car. Bank financing. | A U T O M ATIC TRANSMISSION, J I RADIO. HEATER, WHITEWALL 1941 Chevrolet Impale 4-door hard- TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MON-top, (13(9 full factory equipment EY DOWN. Payments of $4.95 per week. See /Mr. Parks at includes power steering and brakas i cleane solid* original* 25 months guarantee. $69 or old car down.1 Bank financing. Harold Tumor Ford. Ml 4-7500. STARK HICKEY FORD -CLAWS0N- 14 Mile Rd. — E. of Woodward I "Clawson Canter" 586-6010 1962 CHEVY II 3-OOOR, LIKE NlW $1,150, Alex Motors, 424-3192. I960 FORD VO^ AUTOMATlC, 5TA-loney down, lion wagon; 4-door. No mb LUCKY AUTO SALcS /"Pontiac's Discount Lot" 193 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 I960 T-BIRD CONVillTlBLE. Jit black* excellent condition. $1*625* FE 4-7412. 1961 FORD GALAXIE. AUTOMATIC shift* $1290. 1-owner,, excellent condition. 651-$499. ___________ 1962 CHEVY Corvoir ...................^ 4-door with hoattr beautiful 1961 FALCON SSf! economy or second car for only $1*999. Crissmar Chevrolet Co. Rochester ^ OL 1-9711 I Open Friday Nights till 9 mileage, A-1 condition. OR 3A344, 1941 FALCON WAGON, AUTOA4A-Ttc TRANSMISSION. RADIO. HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES, DELUXE TRIM, VERY LOW MILEAGE. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments at (0.7S B$f weak. Sea Mr. Parks, at Herald Turner Ford. Ml 47500. 19(2 CORVAIR MONZA AOOORi-—- la. JAeOg—ig sedan. Powerglkte, radio, heater, 1941 FORD. BLACK 4DOOR SE whitewalls; Satin silver finish with red Interior. Only (1,595. \ Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET C„ 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM. > Ml 4 2235. dan, (cylinder angina, standard transmission, radio, heater, epare never down, show-room condition, (1,1*5. OLIVER RENAULT 1952 CHEVY. GOOD TRANSPORTA-tlon. (55. OR 3-21B4. 1953 CHEVROLET. EXCELLENT transportation. FE S-0280._. 1955 CHEVY WAGON, POWER Glide, reasonable. OL I-U02. Averill's | Are you looking for • cor that will give you up to 40 mHos per gallon, I Renault is the answer. 'RENAULT DAUPHINE ... $1490 RENAULT R0 ............$1640 $150 Down on above .cars, low low payments f OLIVER 1950 CHEVY 4DOOR-WITH BLACK finish, very clean, motor completely overhauled. (395 full prlca. (5 down, (14.40 par month, 10( others to choose from. Marvel Motors 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA SUPER Sport convertible. V-S engine, Pewerglide, power steering, brakes LLOYD Llncoln-Mercury NL* _______ _____ _______________ 232 S. Saginaw____________FE 2-9131 and windows. 6.000 actual mTiei.1T909 FALXOH DELUXE (TATION Roma red finish with black lop! wagon, autettwitter radio, heater, and black interior. Only S2.S95.; whitewalls, luggagt carrier, llaKr Easy terms. PATTERSON! blue finish. Only S1395. Easy terms CHEVROLET CO., ION S.l PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGI ION S. WOODWARD AVE., BIR- _ HAM. Ml 43235. __________. MINGHAM, Ml 43231 ___ 1(03 MONZA COUPE, 4 - SPEED, 1943 FORD GALAXiE 500. EXCEL everything but air - conditioning) lent condttion. Must sell NA 7-9$04. $1775., 692-0555. LLOYD RENAULT 2020 Dixie Hwy. 40 E. Pike FE 2 9(70____ FE 44(94 | FE 41502 TOP ( FOR CLEAN CARS OR 19*3 TR-4 (SO AnITTaKE OVER 1950 4DOOR CHEVY BISCYANE, 3N CentraL PE (-4059. 1950 CHEVROLET. STANDARD J ______________ _ , transmission. 0 cylinder engine. 19(3 CORVETTE COUPE. 4SPEED, Gold Crest Warranty Remember you pay absolutely Nothing for ports and labor. 232 S. Saginaw FE 2‘-9131 19(2 FORb COUNTRY SEDAN Station Wagon. V-S engine, automatic, Power steering and brakas. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Only S10P5. Easy terms. PATTERSON 1940 COMET Station Wagon, automatic transmission, sharp one-owner Only IMJ. iUBURBAN OLDS. ■ 545 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham. Ml 44^5. 1941 COMET DELUXE 2-DOdl, with radio, hsatar. white with • rad tap- New car trade, (M2 dawn, payments el 140.04 par month. LLOYD LlncobhMakcury 332 S. Saginaw PE 2-9131 1943 COMET 4-doer Sedan with automatic transmission, full prlca (1,391, BOB BORST 19(2 NASH RAMBLER. 4DOOR. station wagon, 14.0N mites, must sell 11,250. call MA 42035 attar ( p.m. CLEAN 1((S OLDS, PROM THE west coast, highest offer* FE $4640. 1*54 OLDS HARDTOP, EXCELLENT condition. FE 5-3552. 1(52 SUPER M 4DOOR OLDSMO-bite, axe. condition. Owner. OR ._______________________■ . 1959 OLOS N 2-DOOR HARDTOP, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, real tlean, *995. LLOYD L Incoln-Mercury 4470 Dixie tt«v. ClatKston 625-2433 1943 OLDS F45 CUTLASS Convertible, power windows, steering, brakes, GM executive, lew mlle-aga, $25*5. 424*114. 1*03 OLbS N, f SKAT WAGOti, economy engine, uses regular get, power brakes and steering, radio, heater and other accessories. 1 owner management car. Wholes#la price. Call OL 1-0776 anytime Set. or Sun. $97 DOWN 1(43 OLDS 81 4-door, the KING at the read, one-owner trade, $2,497. 'This week's Spaclall SUBURBAN OLDS 545 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham. Ml 444(5. 19W' VALIANT DELUXE 4bOOR, automatic transmission, radio, heat* er* whitewalls, «ne-owner new car trade! No money down* 141419 per month. PATTERSON Chrysiar-Plymouth ROCHESTER INT N. Main St. OL 14559 N*w aod Utod Cars 186 19(9 PLYMOUTH BEGAN, I. POW, or steering, auto., original, no rutt. (3». Call 3347N1. MARDIW, 19(4 PONTIAC B-POOR 'SB motor, car In vary good shape, snow tlrwo. PE 44B11. PONTIAC BTAR CHIEF DELUXE sedan, 195*. power steerlnfl. brakes, tinted glass, claaa tnslde and out, no rust, good white wall tires, net* battary. compHHy win-terizad. S395. tor Immediate sale. PE 344*4. . BEFORE YOU DICIui - K THIS SELECTION OF DEPENDABLE CARS. 1(43 Mercury 4door, P*aqr Nearing, power brakes, beautiful beige, finish, *1,795. 1943 Chavrolat Bel Air 2-door, slick 4, beautiful sllvar-blub finish. |1>-N5. rov **•»»(BPUWI m agwati standard thin, t cyL, chroma luggage rack, Haht green, (84S. 1959 Chavrolat Impale convertible, power storing, power brakes, rad srlth white top. I(,l*(, INI Pontiac Ventura Bdoor hardtop, power steering, power brakes, white with black top, 31,2*5, • 1N1 Impale *-door hardtop, standard shift, I eyl„ gold flnlth. H-***- 1*40 Ford *-pastanger wagon, door, auto, (, black. (MRS- ltd Metropolitan, groan with white tap. BMK .-------- 19*3 Pontiac 2-door, auto., double power, black. 12,545. 3- 19*3 Corvalr 2M tartes. 4-door, opeed, standard, green. $1,745. CHECK' THIS SELECTION AND THERE ARE MANY MORE. DON'S USED CARS • 677 S. Lapeer ltd.. Orton. MY 3-3041 January Special 1964 RAMBLER 2-door seden, equipped! $1799 Plug tax and license tea 1954 PLYMOUTH I WAGON. GOOD body, recent overhaul, (IN. 4(2-3395. RUSS JOHNSON Pentlac-Rambtor L AKg ORION-------4—MY HAUPT SPECIALS 19$9 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR* AUTO-mafic tranmiMkm* radio, heater, whitewalls, new car trade* NO MONEY DOWN* $20.04 per month. PATTERSON Chryster-Plymoum ■->—— ROCHESTER INI N. Mein St. OL 1-155* 19*3 TEMPEST 3-OOOR. AUTOMATIC, radio, heater, car It lust Ilka brand new throughout! Old car down. 19(9 PLYMOUTH * - PASSENGER station,, wagon. Ha* (-cylinder with automatic transmission, full price 1497. weekly payments (3.93 — no money down. King Auto Sales 3275 W. Huron'St. FE (-40N Din YOU KNOW? (1495. Easy term. Patterson CHEVROLET CO. ION S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4011 i.‘ __________ DID YOU KNOW? Iruck», Economy Cera, 2335 Dixie. "TOP DOLLAR PAID" FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS payments of (42 month. OR 34431. I960 TR-3 ROADSTER. ONLY SN5. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVvi Radio, heater. Full price only S395. SURPLUS MOTORS | 171 S. Saginaw________FE 1-4036 1962 FORD FAIRLANE 90$, 2-DOOR 6, excellent condition, $1300. FE | 2-6223. GLENN'S ROLET CO.', ION $. WOODWARD V,_STICK' CAR AND AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 43735. j tires good. 626-9664._____ 1943 VOLKSWAGEN 2-DOOR, Ha- I WE CHEVV. BEL AIR IB, WANTED: 19(9-1*43 CARS Ellsworth AUTO SAKS 4527 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-14N Used Aata-Trvck Parts 102 die. heater, whitewalls. 10,000 ac- '*5* P°nl**T iTtoor, S60. fuel- miles. Only (1545. Easy terms >*» *21 o.ki»nd ff 4S225 PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., Al’s Marathan, 13S Oakland FE Mas I0M S. WOODWARD AVE., BIR- 1951 CHEVY 4 - DOOR. POWER MINGHAM. Ml 4-2231 | steering and brakes, very good. ---------------------------------U5C. 4234222. term. PATTERSON CHEVROLE CO., ISN S. WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM. Ml 42735. 1*63 CHEVY 11 4DOOR. TAKE over payments. OR 34(33. 1959 RENAULT WITH SUNROOF, S15B or best otter, call after 3:30. : i*n CHEVROLET S - CYLINDER OR 44224. ---- -------------------- --- 1963 Super Sports Impala WHITE WITH RED TRIM $2359 VAN CAMP CHEVY 1963 EC0N0LINE BUS with 2nd and 3rd row seats, to-tana paint, extra clean throughout!! — ONLY $1 ,$95. JEROME-FERGUSON ROCHESTER FORD DEALER OL 14211 1*43 FORD FUTURA FALCON hardtop, 9,540 mites, must sell. Cell before 3 p.m. 343-7494. 1944 VW CAMPER Autobahn Motors, inc. 17*5 TELEGRAPH FE (-4531 . . _ .... cn.n .... , 1943 FALCONk SPRINT, SHARP. Standard transmission station MILFORD __________mu 4iuz5 3jju474 or 334-3230 alt. 4 p.m. wagon, full price, (3*7, Weekly 1CHEVY II NOVA TWO-DOOR —=------— ------:----—~—■— payments, (3.14, no money down ne-dtep. Pewerglide, radte. heater.i549 , Autobahn Motors, Inc. 195(42 RAMBLER ENGINE ' 1765 TELEGRAPH FE (-4531 Suitable for rebuilding—cheap. Phone $52-4666_ NEW 326 CUrftC INCH PONTIAC | . T Engine complete. All chrome EM j My |j needed. King Auto Sales * 3275 W. Huron St. FE S-40SS 1940 LeSABRE 4-DOOR HARDTOP, radio, heater, power steering end brakes, must see to appreciate! S15S down, payments of 447.72 for 30 months. whitewalls. Ivy green finish. S1,7(5 Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2235._ 1*42 CHRYSLER "300 CONVERti-bte" that will setisfy the most parttcul er buyer. The original owner has driven this car with the finest of care and It Is like new Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1745 Telegraph FE >4511 | LINCOLN PREMIER, RED and white, powered end beautiful, $345. Save Auto. FE 5-327$. LLOYD tSST m appMrence .rid iSfrim >« J-'JJ«>L»L «OOR- JJ? ance. Alaskan white body With a' black top end contrasting Oriental (TILL ON M24, JUST NORTH OF 0™ 9 toD**,DaHyPla,n’ Oxford. Oxford Community Auc- * $un. 13.5 Nke J^te »Hri« ’JiorlT tuU^il ’M^LAUUB.TMdbt. AFTER 4 attractive small showcase. Dining p.m., MApa *•*»«<_ room* kttchen and bedroom.lurnk^i960 REGO MOBILE HOME. TAKE ture end appliances. Small lot ofi over contract, low balance $259 nice new merchandise plus • quan down. 693-4651. B 2- °°?? miic l,,ms ,r?nL EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAIR I Mew. ..J It..4 1Q3 Estate close-out, rugs, lamps, service, free estimates. Also ports ul** ,™***_m*,M dishes, utensils end tools. Also and accessories. Bob Hutchinson, I " — —__ some antiques. Auctioneer S am Mobile Heme Seles. Inc. 4301 Dix-fittt CHEVY It TON PICKUP, 1*63 VOLKSWAGEN, NEW CAR a ie Hwv., Drayton Plains, OR 3-1202 1 good engines and tires. OR 3-3070. Scede, like new ....— . (15*5 OXFORD TRAILER | _ ^onToieap |RgsSt’tSlSrP. ! \\m SALES 3-2319. Llncoln-Mercury Llncoln-Mercury 232 Sv Saginew_ FI 2^131 1959-CHEVROLET 4-DOOR HARD-top, power brakes* steering, VI engine, auto. Whitewalls, seat belts clean. EM 3-21I7. 1959_CHEVrOLET STATION WAG-on, Bel Air 6-cylinder. Powerolkk transmission, radio, heater, $695. red leather interior trim. Equipped with power controlled bucket seats, power windows* power steering, power brakes* automatic transmission* tintod glass* radio* heater end excellent whitewall tires. Wa guai rntliu prica $495. No money down, -no credit problems* 1 one owner trade. ie-1 *32 S. Saginaw LLOYD Llncoln-Mercury'' FE 2-*131 antes it for a full year In writing. J1943 LINCOLN "CONTINENTAL" 4- VILLAGE RAMBLER DID YOU KN0W4L WE HAVE ONE OF THE FINEST SELECTIONS OF NEW AND USED CARS IN THE COUNTJtY. DID YOU KNOW? t**2 OLDSMOBtLE Cutteaa with automatic transmission. VI engine, just Itka new throughout — Only 11,2*1 INI PONTIAC TEMPEST *dsor sedan, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. A real beauty, bank rates on balance! 1*5* CHBVY Nomad station wagon, with automatic transmission, radio, heater, power brakes, whitewslls. tat! and your old ter dawn l STOP IN LET'S STOP TODAY Haupt Pontiac Mite North of US-11 Or M-15 Open MONDAY. THURSDAY Odd PtttOAVl IULt.p.M. MA 5-5(84 . / Lloyds THE ONE AND ONLY •' Continental THE GREATEST MASTERPIECE Of styling and stability In building one of the greatest automobiles on earth. You now have the opportunity of owning one of these five automobiles that have been treded In an a 1*44 Model. We have a good selection at models and caters listed below: One* a Continental owner, you will never change I 1*5* PREMIER Coupe with Air 1*42 SEOAN, Chestnut, with Air INI SEDAN, AN White 1*42 CONVERTIBLE, Whit* 1*0 SEDAN, Rad with Air 1943 SEDAN, Pink Frost with Air 19(3 SEDAN. Black Cherry LLOYDS Lincoln-Mtrcury 232 S. Saginaw Pontloc_______________FE 3*131 OUR ATTITUDE TOWARD CUSTOMERS l$- TOTAL VALUE TOTAL SAVINGS TOTAL SERVICE TOTAL SATISFACTION WHEELIN' LLOYD Proulx, Oxford Community Auction on M24 |utt N. of Oxford. (On Fob. 1 wo will opon our now Auction Bam on M24 lust 9 ml. N. of our proaont location). Livestock 13 FARM-FRESH MEATS Frosh hams ........ Boot ' roasts ........ Pork roasts Pork Chops cantor cut Pork Sausogo, 3 bs Bacon, slab ....... . Hot Dogs Sirloin stoaks....... Pork Livor OPDYKE MARKET Comor Walton ond Opdyko FES-7941 NEW RIDING STABLE, 13650 NEAL Rd., Davlsburg, 634-4961, call tor dotalls. Riding Instruction available. Groups welcome. HORSES BOARDED Box Stalls, 100’ Acres to Ride 1952 DODGE *4-TON, CHEAP ■■■ iv. 11964 Triumph sedan, now cor $1495 I VANDETTE 1954 CAMPRRORDE ]f60 F,a| 2100 special ........ $ 195 Now 60' arid 53' • 12' wido, 2 and Hvory, coll off r 4 p.m., 334-2972. 1960 Morris Minor, 3-bodroom Morlottos: Ono of 1^® 1963 CHEVY ’VTON PICKUP WITH cloon 1 ownor ........ $ 595. bost buys In mobilo living ony-1 tong pox, 6-cyi. engine, low milo-ags, oxtro doom $1595. JEROME FERGUSON Roxhoster Ford Doalor. OL 1-9711. JAGUAR TRIUMPH -------:------------------“IMG > AUSTIN HEALEY SUNBEAM MORGAN FIAT HILLMAN where today. See the latest in ultra modem, 50' ** 12' wide Vagabond deluxe. For those who want only the bost. 4 r x 16' wide General, a cofnplete homo, 2 or 3 bedrooms. Those dhits on display, right now. Authorized Dealer for: 49c Lb 39c Lb! pm pj pmpppi_________ [-J- 20 other nowTd' widos plus 20 used coochos, all prices. Priced to suit the buyer, terms reasoned*. OXFORD TRAILER SALES 1 Mile South of Lake Orion on M-24 MY 24721 65C Lb. $1.00 39c Lb. 39c Lb. 79c Lb. 29c Lb. SHORTS MOBILE HOMES Good Used Home-Type Trailers 10 PER CENT DOWN. Cars wired bind hitches installed. Complete line of. ports and bottle gaV Wanted Clean Trailers tt 4-9743 3172 W. Huron CHEVROLET 5-YARD DUMP TRUCK, EXCELLENT MOTOR TWO-SPEED REAR AXLE RUNS GOOD — $495 CASH BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY CO. fll ORCHARD LAKEJkVE., PONTIAC i 1955 CHEVROLET Vj-TON PICK-UP, j cheap. *4-ton Ford. LEE, 197 S. j Johnson. ________________________1 j 1956 FdRD PANEL. GOOD1 BObY $125. 332-4267. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND AVE. 1*42 JEEP PICKUP. II2J>00-MILES, ----------------—J-------------------T w*5,*rn ,now plow i 1959 KARMANN GHIA COUPE. RED AND WHITE. FE 5-39*4. Parkhurst Trailer Soles 1963 CHEVROLET PICK-UP. LOW mileage, like new. (1,558. 332-5474. FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 TO „j, f0RD '/k TON PICKUP, GOOD 60 feet. Featuring New Moon-Buddy and Nomads REGISTERED HOLSTEIN HERD, 21 cows, 12 brad heifers, due Feb. apd and March. DHIA record. Monty Located hell way between Orion and , ,0,.^r-rmr>i im pi^uiie eir cm Seebrook, 2305 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Oxford on M-24, next to Alban 1 ._OLINE^PICKUP^BJG^EN- Orion. FE 5-2S3S. Country Cousin. MY 2-4411 Autobahn Motors, Inc. » rvnv v* ivn riLAwr, ww .*« l>lMr«nh FE 1-4531 condition, $300. Call Sat. or Sun, i17” iQiagrapn —__ pr a-awi MA 4-3040. | 1960 KARMAN-GHIA i>ne* radio* heater tu-fone paint COMVERT-ible* radio, hotter, low mileage, excellent condition. $1,050. FE 5-$$70. THE KLENTNER RIDING ACADE- Bgnf Trailer SdOCO MY by popular demand tor thei 9 9 ■■■■mi apwtv first time in Michigan, is offering. "The Hughes and Klentner Horse | DON'T RENT, BUY. 65 x 120, $20 /Mastership" course. From stable1 down, $20 month, black fop road, management to instructor training, j Gas, lake on property. BLOCH EM M1T1. BROS. CORP., OR >1295. 9Q! $1750 JEROME FERGUSON, I 1960 - 4 CV RENAULT* NEWLY Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. overhauled. FE 4-2643 H«y Onto f bb4 ii NEW TRAILER SPACES. PONTIAC Mobile Home Park. Better Used Trucks GMC [1942 VW 2-DOOR SEDAN. BLACK. SPACE AVAILABLE IN TRAILER PARK HAY AND STRAW DELIVERED BY the lead. MY 2-8444.______ HAY 75c, STRAW 40c. FREE Delivery on 30 bales or more. Lapeer 444-2310._________ SECOND CUTTING ALFALFA . . _ . hay- com, 40c tor 35 ibs. oa Tires-Auto-Truck (-2231. Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS FE 5-9485 Autobahn Motors, Tnc. 1765 TELEGRAPH FE 4-4531 Lincom-Mercury 4420 Dixie Hwy. CLARKSTON MA 5-2433 Don't .mite this tremendous value i at our low- price Pf only (2,195.‘ Easy terms arranged to eult your: budget. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 12 S. Woodward Ml 7-2H4j DeSOTO door sedan that i* one moat beautiful cars In this ansa. I Sparkling dark burgendy finish with a harmonizing interior that most luxurious. Completely | VILLAGE RAMBLER DEALIN' - SEE THESE BEAUTIFUL CARS . FOR DEALS OF THE YEAR! Ml 6-3900 1941 BONNEVILLE Convertible 1*43 BONNEVILLE *doer hardtop 1*43 STAR CHIEF 4-door hardtop 1(43 TEMPEST Sped Coupe equipped with everything Including factory Installed AIR CONDjTlON- 1*39 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR STA-tlon wagon, (-cylinder, powergllde. radio, heater, whitewalls. Solid dean finish. Only (995. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. 'WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2231 1959 DeSOTO COUPE, RADIO, heater, power steering and brakes, ( 1295. 19(9 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 4-doqr, 6-cylinder. Stick shift, radio, heater,'lull price, (495. LLOYD Llncoln-Mercury 4470 DIXIE HWY. . CLARKSTON ___________MA 5-2433 1939 CHEVY PARKWOOD WAGON, 1 power glide, OR 3-8740. TM*~CHEV*r~I -JJOOR STATION wagon, while, very dean. Full price (4(5. $5 down. (38.(1 per month. 100 others to choose from. LLOYD Lincoln Mircury *. ' 6670 Dixit Hwy. CLARKSTON MA >2633 912 ING. If you art leaking ter an outstanding prestiege car that is Ilka naw don't miss this ona at our low prlca of only $4,250. Financing arranged on bw now car terms. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymeuth 3. Woodward Ml 7-3214 444 3. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM HOME OF THE TOTAL VALUE DEAL INI CORVETTE 2 TOPS. 3 SPEED, j Must sell. Take ever payments. 333*377. 1*42 FORD Convertible M0 XL hill power 1*40 MERCURY 4-DOOR AUTO-mafic transmission, radio* heater, • whitewalls* ona owner. NO MONEY DOWN, $40.04 par month. PATTERSuN I960 DODGE 4-DOOR WITH (CYL-inder angina, whitewalls* naw cat trade. NO MONEY DOWN* $30.04 i par month. .....PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth —1959 MERCURY, REAL SHARP, (5*5 1944 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR SEOAN, automatic transmission, radio, heater, power steering, whitewalls, new car trade, one owner. - NO MONEY DOWN, (40.04 per month. PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth ROCHESTER lost N. Melnt St. OL 1-45(9 1*42 FORD Gelexle ,500 full power 1*42 TEMPEST (port Coupe COME OUT AND SEE US FOR GIANT SAVINGS KEEG0 SALES & SERVICE 3080 ORCHARD LAKE 682-3400 Chrysler-Plymouth ROCHESTER 1001 Main St. OL 1-4558 1001 N. Main SI ROCHESTER ...FULL PRICE, Jj|UIPATION LOT, 1*61 CROWN IMPERIAL CONVERT-Jble. Rull power. Special finish. White leather Interior. Only S1**5. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 WOOOWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. **l 4-2235. OL 1-05(9 ISO S. Saginaw. •U Mnrvpl Motors! dodge "lancer w *■ 1VXLA1 VC1 iViL-ilWl O door sedan that it tops both In 1840 CHEVY IMPALA CONVER-tlble 340 engine, dick, FE 4-2608 I860 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR STA-TION WAGON, RADIO, HEATER, A U T O M ATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. EXCELLENT MECHANICALLY. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of 47.95 per week. See • Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4.75W. 682,917! | 92 MANSFIELD Paqltry 95 WHITE LEGHORN HENS. SOME] 4.20x15 laying. 4ac each. Must sell. Mil-1 7.B0x1( lord 4(5-1171.-----1~—L------- 7.50x20 (.25x20 NEW FIRESTONE NYLON TRUCK TIRES •1> 6.00x14 ...:................ (14.95 *.soxi6 ....................*i*.*5 7.00x16 ... *22.95 | 1Mg CHEVY Vk-TON FLEET (IDE 1942 CHEVY '4-TON, FLEET SIDE new 6-ply tires, (1544. (1095. 86 APPLES — PEARS - SWEET Cl DER. McIntosh, Jonathan, Cortland, Spy. Delicious, Steele Red -and others. Bargains in utility grades from $1.50 bu. Oakland Or-: chords, I mite east ot Milford on East Commerce Rd. t to 4 dally ECG BY THE CASE FE 5-2(3*. SUPER SPECIAL! Thro* Vt gala, milk ....... *7c With each purchase of milk we - ''wltl give you FREE one loaf at Wander bread. FOR THE. FINEST IN FRESH FARM PRODUCE SEE Bob & Bill’s Product Co. Pontiac 673-3(31 (1 milt Wait of Airport Rd.) , 7 7606 Highland Rd. 1-------r-T-'i Plus Tax and Rtcappable Tire 24-Hr. Service on Racapplng 6.00x16 Thru 11,00x20 CALL Dick Curran Store Horn# 333-7917 682 1061 Firestone«Stare, 146 Huron $17.95 1 $22.95 I !? | 1858 CHEVY Vk-TON, *' BOX, 1775. Aatt Sgrvict 93 MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Boldwin 335-5900 ' CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE dor. Cylinders rebored. Zuck Machine Shop, 23 Hood. Phone FE 2 2563. A«t# ImurancB 104 _________ AUTO INSURANCE PROBLEMS BOATS - MOTORS Call on Ut, Wt will do our very bed to help CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES 43 E. Walton 9-to « FE (-4402 UP -TO 40 Pis CENT DISCOUNT I Miracle M|le FE 405(9 pt Tony's Maritte. 4(2-3460. Next to Pontiac State Bank / YOU BRUMMETT AGENCY Renault "Authorized Dealer" OLIVER BUICK and JEEP Comer of Pike end Cess FE 4-1581 Ford Consul . . .$495 NEW AUTHORIZED SAAB DEALER THE STABLES FE 4-44(8 2182 Telegraph 14(3 VW, EXCELLENT CONDITION. Call OR 3-4412 after a p.m. 19*0 VOLKSWAGEN 2-DOOR SF-dan, whitewall tires, radio, 2 heat art, low mileage. OL 1-4731. 19*3 RENAULT GORDINt. TAKE over payments or soil for $995. MA 5-1116 after 7 P.M. 1962 SI MCA, SNOW TIRES PLUS 2 extra tires. New tune up parts. Excellent condition. SI,000. 221 Preston. I960 CHEVROLET Impala 4-door hardtop. Automatic transmission* power steering, power brakes* rad{o* heater, whitewalls. 1-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY You'll Be Proud of This One $1,495 OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Ph. 335*434 appearaAce and performance. Smart gradiour Hbo flniih with e dark blue custom Interior trim. Equipped with automatic tranemle-siatf, radio, healer end excellent whitewall tire*. Went economy? went seating tor *? Want a lot for a little? don't mite this one at our low price of only (MS. NO DOWN PAYMENTI EASY MONTHLY NOTES! BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth S. Woodward Ml 94114 1961 912 DODGE 4-DOOR. RADIO. _hooter. Auto. $1060.,OL 2-9421. 1961 DODGE 4-DOOR* AUTOMATIC transmission, radio, hooter* white-walls. one-owner new cor trade* nothing down, $46.37 per month. PATTERSON QUALITY AND QUANTITY 18*3 RAMBLER AMBASSADOR Wagon, Ilk* new ....... (2395 19(2 Rambler custom, bucket •eats, automatic ...... 31395 19*3 Ford Gelexle 584 Vt, automatic, full power, Ilka naw (1*95 19*2 Pontiac hardtop, sharp ... (2195 19(3 Corvalr, one owner ... (1395 19(1 Cadillac convertible, sharp (2(95 (Ml Ford Galaxle 2-door h'top (1295 19*3 Rambler wagon, new car ,. trade ................. $11(5 19(1 Chevy (door, atuomatic nice ....................*10* No Fair Offer Refused I SUPERIOR RAMBLER Chrysler-Plymouth ROCHESTER 1081 N. Main St OL 1-4559 I960 CHEVY ADOQR, BISCAYNE, power glide, radio, top condition. Cell OR 3*t4(. IN* CHEVROLET IMPALA. LIKE new. Lew mileage. FE 1-49(0. 19M CHEVY «, VERY NICE. FE i-»43 H. Riggins, dealer. HO 1959 SIMCA 4-DOOR SEDAN WITH radio end heater and In reel nice condition, full price (297, weekly payment* (2.35. No money down needed. King Auto Soles 327S W. Huron St. - FE I-40M 19*3 VOLKSWAGEN, RADIO, HEaT- er, white wdlt. exc. 625-3307. CHEVROLET BEL-AIR door sedan, V-S engine, Power-glide, radio, heater. .White with blue interrior. Only (1,395. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE.. Birmingham. Ml 4-7735. ______ 1*41 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 3-door sedan, (-cylinder, ttandard shift, radio, heater, extra clean. Only (1195. Eaty terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., IMt S. BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-3735. INI CHEVY IMPALA CONVERT-ibto, rad and white, sharp, auto. must b* seen. Call after 5, 270 ini m 6 n i k. one - Owner, (freight stick. No money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac'* Discount Lot" 183 3. Sagalnaw FE 4-2214 1963 DODGE P e I a r a 4-door hardtop. Fully equipped, power steering, power brakes. This car It rad with matching vinyl Interter. Just like new end carries the balance ot the Chryttar Corporation 5-year or 50.000 milt warranty- Save $1200 SPARTAN DODGE 111 S. Saginaw PE MS41 1943 DODGE DART CONVERTIBLE. 6-cylinder engine, avofmattc, radio, heater, whitewall*, turquois* Hnieh, (.000 adutl mites. Only (19(5. Easy term*. PATTERSON (1995. eaty term*. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., ISM S. WOOD-ward AVE., t BIRMINGHAM. 4-3731 1930 FORD, CHEVY ENGINE. #0 FE 5-7415 im l 1957 FORD 4-DOOR SEDAN, HAl radio and heater and automatic transmission, full prln only (10 — Weakly payments only IIA3 and no money down needed. King Auto Soles 1275 W. Huron SO. PE MM 550 OAKLAND AVE. 1999 MERCURY MONTEREY door* mechdetcally sound - new tiret. $7$-6134, ______ 19(9 MERCURY MONTEREY door sedan, radio, heater, automatic trensmistlen, (85 down. Payments at (25.32 per month. LLOYD Linen In Mercury _ >3> S. tea New pi >*m HSt MERCURY BDOOR SEDAN ha* radlt and Mater, automatic transmission, tell pfte*, (597 — weekly payments (4.70, no money down. * King Auto Sales 301 W. Huron St. FE MM 1N3 MERCURY (-DOO* HARDTOP, S33 with bucket setts, vt engine, automatic, radio, Meter, power steering end brakes, tinted glee*, factory attic id's car, like new, (2,295. JEROME FERGUSON -Rochester FORD Peeler, OL 1-011, 1964s THROUGH I9J4S Any make or model You pick * “ Kto'll finance It Yea call *r have your dMter COMMUNITY NATIONAL IN* COMET 2 DOOR. RADIO. heater. WIN seer Vice ter quidi Mle. $750. Cell MA **714. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN ■ SPOT DELIVERY JUST MAKE PAYMENTS CAR Full Price Pay Wkly. 1960 FORD $597 $4.27 1960 FORD FALCON $597 $4.27 1959 RENAULT $297 $2.50 1958 CHEVY $297 $2.50 1957 FORD .. $197 $1.60 1957 CHEVY ......$197 $1.60 Application Either in Person or by Phono NO CREDIT PROBLEMS LIQUIDATION LOT 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 Across From ToMfuron Shopping Center J/ Tar [Yi\i a A/ wwKa W, I ■ tT ;§§ i v'- .. 1M V THIS PONTiAC^frTlfesS. PRlfcAY, JANUARY 16,>1^4 THIRW-SEVAN 'fl Now «iid llwj Canl/IOSi )»56 PONTIAC J DOOR HARDTOP. Really a sharp car, Pull price weakly only $97, wgakfy payments, $1.25. Na money down needed. King Auto Solos 3275 W. Huron St. Ff $-40M ,s Now and Usod Coro 106 1917 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, Automatic, radio, haanr, whitewalls, beautiful rad finish, no money down. 110.27 per month. PATTERSON ChryelerPlymouth ROCHESTER 1001 N. Main It. OL 1-5559 -IN STOCK- NEW-1964 FAIRLANE "500" 2-DOOR HARDTOP 289 V8 4 On The Floor RANGOON RED-RED INTERIOR WHITEWAllS Immediate Delivery Beattie Motor Sales, Inc. “Your Ford Dealer Since 1930" —The Home of Service After the Sale-5806 Dixie Hwy., Waterford, OR 3-1291 New end Used Cart r 106 New and Uted Cart i 106 New and Uaed Can HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. IMl PONTIAC Catalina Convertlttle with radio, heater, automatic, power a tearing and brakes. 10,000 actual miles, now spare. $2595. 1999 PONTIAC BONNEVILLI CON-vertible, power steering,, brakes, radio, heater, one owner trade, (144 down, payments at $53.22 par month. LLOYD LlncobhMarcury Saginaw PE 2-9131 19M PONTIAC WAOON, AUTO.. MM Call, FR 2-0312. DOOR. VERY 1951 PONTIAC 1 good shape. FE 2-ioea. 1999 B622RKVILLH lYAtl6N WAG-on, A-l. powered. 3324941. 1999 POiiflAC 4-OOOR HARDTOP. ■ $500. UL 2-1704. 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA, 1 OWN-or, excellent condition. )FE «-270$. AUTOBAHN MOTORS, INC. In Order to Serve You Better Has Established NEW SELLING HOURS —Monday and Friday— 8:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. —Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday— 8:30 aim. to 6:00 p.m. AUTOBAHN MOTORS,'INC. 1765 Telegraph FE 8-4531 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-OOOR - hardtop- RMlS/neater, auto, transmission, power / steering end brakes. Full price $$93. Sink rotes. VILLAGE RAMBLER LLOYDS- FROM $50 to $i,000 No Money Down I No Credit Problems! SPOT CHECK Car for Need We Hove in Deed 1955 OLDS Coupe ........ $ 50 1955 FORD Sedan ........ $ 50 195$ CHEVROLET 2-door .. $ 75 1954 PLYMOUTH ....-.... $ 75 1956 FORD Victoria ..... $ $5 1957 MERCURY ........... » 95 195$ FORD 4-door ...... $100 1950 MERCURY 2-door ... $125 1951 RAMBLER .......... *195 1959 RAMBLER .......... *345 1959 FORD ............. *395 1959 MERCURY .......... *475 1959 CHEVY ............. Ml* 1960 FORD 4-door . *645 1961 FORD 2-Door Stick .... $795 I960 SIMCA 2-Door ..... *495 1959 HILLMAN 2-Door ... $395 ffew end Used Care 106 I960 PONTIAC VENTURA HARO-tope radio, heater, power steering, brakes, whitewalls, .like new, $1,- LLOYD Llncoln-Mercury 6670 01x19 Hwy. CLARKSTON . ,[. MA 5-2633 Factory Official -Gars'- 1963 RAMBLERS AMBASSADORS, CLASSICS, AMERICANS, WAGONS, SEDANS, CONVERTIBLES. Wt have (us! purchased 67 factory official 1963 Ramblers. All models to choose from. Low Low prices. Visit Birmingham's newest Rambler dealer for highest prices on your trade-in end the biggest savings of the year. VILLAGE RAMBLER many more to CHOOSE FROMI Ask for Stu 2023 Oakland (Near Talagraph) FE 8-4055 FE 8-4056 HOME OF THE TOTAL VALUE DEAL BIRMINGHAM 666 S. WOODWARD Ml 6-3900 1960 PONTIAC dATALINA 4-DOOR sedan, radio, hooter, automatic, power steering end brakes, 81,095 full price. LLOYD BIRMINGHAM ‘ TRADES O O Q These Franchised New Car Dealers in this general area, as listed below, will maintain new evening hours for their New Car Showrooms and Used Car areas, effective at • ' —* • * • . . .. once, as follows... OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL P.M. (Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday Until 6 P.M.) PONTIAC CITY AREA-------- JOHN McAULIFFE FORD OLIVER BUICK | SUPERIOR RAMBLER OAKLAND CHRYSLER & PLYMOUTH MATTHEWS-HARGKEAVE9 PONTIAC RETAIL LLOYD MOTORS 630 Oakland Ave. 196-210 Orchard Lake 550 Oakland Ave. 724 Oakland FE 54101 FE 2-9165—FE 2-9101 FE 5-9421 335-9436 SPARTAN DODGE JEROME MOTOR SALES 631 Oakland at Cass 65 Mt. Clemens 232 S. Saginaw 2023 Oakland 211 S. Saginaw 280 S. Saginaw FE 44547—FE 54161 FE 3-7954 FE 2-9131 FE 84055-FE 84541 FE 3-7021 Ford Buick, Jeep, Renault, Opel Rambler and Foreign Makes Chrysler, Plymouth, ~~7~~ » Valiant, Imperial Chevrolet. Pontiac • * Lincoln, Mercury, Comet, English Ford Dodge, Dodge Dart Oldsmobile, Cadillac ROCHESTER AREA SHELTON P0NTIAC-BUICK ’ 223. N. Main 0L 1-6133 Pontiac, Buick PATTERSON MOTORS, INC. 1001 N. Main 0L 1-8559 Chrysler, Plymouth, Valiant, Imperial 440UGHTEN & SON 528 N. Main 01. 1-9761 Rambler, Oldsmobile CRISSMAN CHEVROLErCtt 755 S. Rochester Rd. 01 2-9721 Chevrolet CLARKSTON-WATERFORD AREA HAUPT PONTIAC HASKINS CHEVY-OLDS BEATTIE FORD on M-15 1 Mile N. of U.S.-10 U.S.-10 at M-15 On Dixie Hwy. in Waterford MA 5-5566 Pontiac MA 5-5071 OR 3-1291 Chevrolet, Oldsmobile Fcrd BIRMINGHAM AREA VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 5. Woodward Ave. Ml 6-3900 Rambler * YOU CAN ALWAYS BE SURE.,. WHEN YOU DO BUSINESS WITH A FRANCHISED NEW CAR DEALER. KB Every used car offered for retail to the public is a bonafide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor warranty. 1963 Riviera* Air Conditioning 1963 Buick Convertible 1963 Bukk Wildcat ............ 1963 Buick Hardtop ........... 1963 Buick 4-door sedan .,. 1963 Bukk Skylark T"r^.r: rr 1963 Bukk 4-door sedan _______ 1963 Pontiac Grand Prlx ______ 1963 Electra Convertible — 1963 Bukk Special 3-dobr 1961 Buick 4-door sedan — 1961 Bukk Special 4-door .. 1961 Olds 98 hardtop . 1960 Thunderbird 4-way power 1960 Buick convertible _______ I960 Bukk 4-door sedan — 1999 Buick hardtop ........... 83695 Demo $3995 $2695 $2595 $2495 $2095 $2295 S2195 $1595 81695 $1395 81795 $1595 -SI 295 81295 I 995 FISCHER BUICK 519 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 4-9100 »C0ME VISIT RUSS 'JOHNSON'S" T 1 ’ ■ v , - c 1962 C0RVAIR MONZA HEVROLE1 1962 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE rs — 1962 CHEVY IMP ALA. COUPE: Coupe with W~6ucSet">eatV 4-speed transmission, radio, haater and whltawalls. Beautiful white finish. $1895 Block boouly with rod lntorlor> Sharp) $3195 1959 CHEVY 4-DCOR SEDAN With 6-cyllndor angina and oil blut llnlih. Rail inarp! $839 With v-f angina, stick shift, ovac drlva transmission, power stoar-Ing. One owner, Sharp, coma too H today. $1995 1958 CHEVY 4-DOOR SEDAN With V-l, automatic, A-l angina, only— 3695 1960 CHEVY 2-D00R SEDAN With 6-cyllnder angina, stick shift# sharp throughout! Only— $1195 1963 Pontiac Hardtop Coupe Noctum blue with venture trim, power steering and brakes, one owner# low mileage. $2895 PONTIACS 1962 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan All whlto boouly with power iteerlng and broktt and EZ eye gloss. Sharp. $1895 ' 1959 Pontiac ’ 2-Door Hardtop With automatic transmission, radio. haotor. A real buy at $895 1963 Pontiac Catalina Convertible With power steering and brakes, automatic# radio, heater. A bargain at $2995 1961 Tempest 4-Duor Sedan Custom trim# automatic transmission# radio# heater. A bargain et $1295 1959 Pontiac Catalina Convertible All whlta with power steering end brakes. Prketf to sell at $995 m r-* *■ • - ] 1962 Rombler Station Wagon Ail black beauty, with 6-cyllnder engine, stick shift. $1395 RAMBLERS 1961 Rambler Station Wagon Bronze beauty, 6-cyllnder engine, overdrive gas saver. $1195 i I960 Rambler Station Wagon All while. 6-cyllnder with ovtr-drivs. W* sold this ono-ownar now! $_. $795 1962 Rambler 4-Door Sedan All red with 6-cyllnder. engine# gas saving baauty. $1295 1960 Rombler 4-Door Sedan Groan and whlto. 6-cyllndor angina. stick shin, ovornoulod angina. roady to go at $695 1959 Rambler Station Wagon With V-6 anglns, Rebel with power steering and brakes. A bargain on Ihit at C695 RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAGRAMBLER DEALER Lake Orion M-24 at tha Stoplight MY 3-6266 LIQUIDATION SALE 50 AUTOMOBILES RELEASED' FOR PUBLIC SALE AS OF - JANUARY 10, 1964 ;:t— We Have Been Authorized to Dispose of These Automobiles For a Detroit Firm at Fantastically Low Prices. PUBLIC ONLY NO DEALERS 1958 FORD Convertible $197 weekCY PAYMENTS *2.M 1957 OLDS 2-Door Hardtop $197 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $2.80 1957 DeSoto 4-Door'Hardtop $297 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $3.80 1957 MERCURY 2-Door $97 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $1.10 1957 BUICK 4-Door Hardtop $297 WEEKLY PAYMENTS S3.80 1958 OLDS 4-Door 98 $397 WEEKLY PAYMENTS *4*0 1959 FORD - 4-Door with*V8 $397 WEEKLY PAYMENTS S4.M 1956 CHEVY 2-Door $97 WEEKLY PAYMENTS (I SO SPOT DELIVERY 0 5 MINUTES 'CREDIT Nd PROBLEM PAYMENTS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET! CREDIT MAN ON DUTY FROM 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. 1958 CHEVY Nomad Wagon $397 WEEKLY PAYMENTS I4.M 1957 CHRYSLER Imperial $397 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $4.M 1958 DODGE 4-Door $297 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $3.(0 1961 FIAT Multiple Wagon > $397 . WEEKLY PAYMENTS S4.M 1958 PONTIAC 4-Door Hardtop $297‘C WEEKLY PAYMENTS $3 $0 1956 CADILLAC Coupe with Full Power $497 WEEKLY PAYMENTS SS.S0 1958 FORD Country Sedan, Wagon $297 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $3.M 1958 FORD Retractable $497 WEEKLY PAYMENTS S1.S0 ESTATE STORAGE CO. 109 S. EAST BOULEVARD AT AUBURN FE5-7161 , ■ FE3-7162 THIRTY-EIGHT , jr* ' V r, OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 1 NIGHTS TILL 9 P.M.' INS tUICJC fLBCTR* "223" Convertible. All pow«r, Dynefiow, radio, heater, whitewalls. Lafsoa tint claw for only INS TEWPSST 2-Door IW i c rrcdi i ww lutomatlc radio, haatar, rails. 10,000 guaranteed llles with • now car wl --... • J IICW Ml WWIIWMiyr Aqua finwh with matching trim. First In line and It's yours. S17W5 1N0 BUICK LaSABRE 4-Door Sedan. Power steering and brakes, Dynefiow, radio, haatar white- IryiiBiiVWi i EURl« nvotvi wiitiw walls, white with blue him. I* owner new car trade-in. Birmingham locale. Yea folks. It's nice. ................................ $1415 INI TEMPEST Wagon. Custom trim, radio, heater. One owner, low miles, traded In . on 1N4 Tempest and locally owned. Yes, .folks, it's a sharpie .. S11*5 1*5* PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Hardtop. Power steering and broket. Hydramatlc. radio, heater, ‘ whitewalls. Beautiful white finish with saddle trim. 1-ewner new car trado-tn. Drives out Ilka now. ....... .... ........513*5 IN* PONTIAC BONNEVILLE hardtop. Power steering and brakes. Hydramatlc, radio, heater, whitewalls. Yes, Sir, she's BTi wnnvwBiii. (Eli oir, bin a nww Inside and out. There's nothing like going first class . 51595 1N4 CHEVROLET Cafry-All. Big 4 cylinder engine, 4-speed transmission. t wheat drive,- radio, haatar. Ml guaranteed actual miles. Yos folks. It's new. New car warranty Is transfarrable. Save a bundle ..................529*5 INS PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, Hydramatlc, radio, heat-er, whitewalls. Beautiful red finish with matching trim. Yea, the color la right and tha spare has never bean used 522*5 radio* hogtor, whitewalls. Beau tmil merlin Muo with matching trim. Igarg never bean down. It HIS, .........522*5 1*40 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 4-door sedan. Automatic, radio, heater, white wells. Beautiful bronze finish end matching trim. Actual miles and a new car trade-in. Why pay more? . 511*5 1962 FORD WAGON. Standard transmission, 6 cylinder angina. Most economical. Nice blue finish, rides and drives Ilka a new one. Price Is right ........ ......514*5 1*43 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop, power steering and brakes, windows, automatic, radio and heater, whitewalls. Yes, ONI ana nvnivr/ wthiewbiii. •«»» folks, let's go first class, we have 2 more like this beauty to choose from, you can save a bundle 521*5 INI BUICK. LaSABRE 2-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, Dynaflow, radio, haatar, whitewalls. Solid white with red trim. There is nothing like that Bulck ride ....................517*5 INI PONTIAC BONNEVILLE.A, Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes. Hydremetlc, radio. and brakes, nyoromeric, roaio, hogter, whitewalls. Sunflre red finish with matching doth trim. Guaranteed actual miles. . $1**5 INI PONTIAC VENTURA 4-door hardtop, power steering end brakes, Hydramatlc radio, hooter, whitewalls, white finish, with blue leather trim. New car trade-in. ......................... 517*5 1*55 PONTIAC 4-Door Hardtop. Automatic radio, hoe tor, whitewalls. Nice red and white finish and dean Inside. Just been tuned-up end reedy tar Winter. An Ideal first or second cor. Ont ES Just Ask lor Any at Those Courteous Salesmen— Jim Oamowsky—Pet Jarvis—John Donley—Gus Gorsllne—Joe Golordl Wayne Isbell—Tom Tracy FOUR-DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE THIS GUARANTEE MEANS THAT IF FOR ANY REASON (EXCEPT FOR ABUSE OR ACCIDENT) YOU ARE NOT PLEASEO WITH YOUR PURCHASE, WE'LL REFUND YOUR MONEY. Get More - Pay Less SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK Rochester . OL 1-8133 Hm ntf Ibid Cars 10* RAMBLERS-RAMBLERS Under the Flashing SATELLITE Used core at wholesale prices Special This Weekt (MIGHTY MOUSE) '58 Metropolitan 30 M.P.G. ROSE RAMBLER 1145 Commerce, Union . Lake EM 3-4155 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE 19*0 Catalina* white with green Interior. Excellent condition. Powtr steering and brtkss* guaranteed for one full year. TIIfisPQNTI^C TRASS. FRIDAY, JANUARY^ 1904 i/1 i V, "l #. l fell . 11 r Now an* Used Can 10* INS PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-door hardtop. 11.395, radio, haatar, power steering, brake*, factory air conditioning, r a a I sharp! 11*4 down, payments of $17.54 par month. LLOYD SPECIALS $1395 cash terms or trade WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward ' Ml 4-1930 Birmingham, Michigan rough, $1*5. 2 Chevys, 1954 and 1953, $75 each. 1954 Ford, 1954 Pontiac, $75 each. 1957 Chevy * and VI, $395 each. 1951 Olds and Pontiac, $495 •ach. Many othar1 lata modals Economy Cart $335 Dixit Hwy. I960 PONTIAC "CONVERTIBLE" aqulppad with automatic transmission, powar steering and brakas, radio, haatar and txctlltnt white-wall tiros. Sharp let black original finish with a black top and harmonizing Interior trim. An easy handling fine performing car that Is guaranteed In writing for a full yearr Sava plenty on this one at >g tor this 912 our pre-spring price of only 11,995. Easy terms arranged to suit your budget. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 1964 BUICK TRADE-INS 1961 MERCURY Monterey Wagon, Blue .............$1395 1961 PONTIAC 2-Door, Black ...................$1595 1962 MERCURY Monterey 4-Door, Power'. .. .$1795 1961 LeSABRE 4-Door, Power^....................$1695 1963 BUICK 4-Door Sedan, Power............. $2495 1960 CADILLAC 4-Door DeVille, White ..........$2095 1961 BUICK 2-Door Sedan, Power —..............$1595 1963 IMPALA 2-Door Hardtop* Power..............$2295 1960 STARCHIEF, Air-Conditioning •........,.. $1395 1962 FALCON 2-Door, Sharp, Beige .............$1195 1962 BUICK Special 2-Door, Fawn ...._,.........$1595 1962 BUICK Special Convertible, Blue .........$1595 1959 BUICK Station Wagon .....................$1095 1963 SPECIAL Wagon, Demo., Blue ............ .$2295 1960 BUICK LeSabre 4-Door Hardtop, Power ...$1495 OLIVER BUICK 196-210 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2-9165 Don't Forget BILL SPENCE IS THE AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR RAMBLERS—JEEPS—CHRYSLERS PLYMOUTHS—VALIANTS 1961 RAMBLER Wogon with radio; hooter, powor steering, real stall $1295 1961 RAMBLER Wagon with radio, hooter, automatic transmission. power steering and brakes,-whitewalls yours tar $130 down and a tall price of $1595 1960 FORD Foirlane "500" with Acyllndor angina, standard transmission, radio and hooter. $895 1960 RAMBLER 4-Door that will make a perfect second car for the family. Extra clean!. $685 1953 JEEP Universal with a top; extra n(£e throughout! - $895 1959 RAMBLER Wagon Rebel with radio* heater, automatic transmission, full prico only— ■ $295 1962 JEEP Wagon » with only 7.000 actual miles, Warren hubs, and oxtra clean inside and out! $2350- 1962 RAMBLER Wogon This on* would make o perfect second cor or could be used In business perfectly, Yours for only $1295 1958 PLYMOUTH 4-Door This cor has tall. powar, and Is only— $395 1964 RAMBLER 770 4-Door with V-i engine, automatic transmission, radio* heater and whitewalls. DEMO tool Sava over $500 1961 CHEVROLET 4-Door Biscayne with radio, heater, automatic transmission and Is real nlcsl $1295 I960 STUDEBAKER With V-I engine, stick shift, absolutely no rust anyplace, a real nice cor. Full prico is $495 1963 VW, Clean Low mllttgt* and hat radio* heater, whitewalls and loft of gas mllat left to gal This one It as sharp at they com*— $1585 1954 MERCURY Hardtop 2-Door with new tires, "213" Chevy engine, and many other goodies. Full pries only $345 1955 and 1956 FORD Pickups to choose from, you may tsk* your choice tor Only $395 1964 PLYMOUTH Fury Sports Fury with the "436" engine, post-traction, 4-speed Hurst transmission, heavy duty suspension, Tack, fastest super sport built In U.S.A. Save. ^ : $500 ..NO PAYMENTS FOR 45 DAYS WE WILL ACCEPT ALMOST ANYTHING MOVABLE IN TRADE . BILL SPENCE - "AUTO RANCH" , 6673 DIXIE HWY. at M-15 CLARKSTON MA 5-5861 1 /* New oa4 Used Con* 10* New end Used Corf 1,3* PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, tall power, A-l, SI230.'FB A2202. Buy Your New Rambler or Olds PROM Houghten & Son S2S N. Main, Itocheeter OL 14741 PONTIAC CONVlRTIBLB 1*41 powar steering, powar brakes, one-owner. NOW cor tribe In. Na money down. . ). LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" >3 S. Saginaw PB 4-2214 $97 DOWN 19*2 PONTIAC Catalina 2-door with only 14.000 actual milts* new spare, like new throughout! $1»9?5. Suburban Old*, 5*5 S. Woodward Avt. Birmingham. Ml 4-4413._____ 1*40 PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARDT6P, S*S0. UL 2-1704. 1M1' TEMPEST 4-DOOR, AUTO-mafic, low mileage, cltan. $1,1t5. FE 2-4727. PASSE N- 1*44 CUSTOM CLASSIC gor station wagon. Radio, hooter, auto, transmission. Lika new. t*1 down. VILLAGE RAMBLER 644 S. 1*42 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-DOOR station wagon, St„ extras, sharp, low mileage, radio, now whitewall tires, pricsd to sail. Coll 685-2123 — Office, MA 44G1t. _______ 1*63 TEMPEST 4-DOOR SEDAN, radio, heater, whitewalls, auto., low rrjileage. SI.800. FE 4-5605 2174 Parkinson. 1*63 PONTIAC CATALINA, POWER brakes, pater steering, municipal car, $11*5 full price, no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" 1<93 S. Saginaw_______FE 4-2214 19*2 PONTIAC pONNEVILLE 4-door hardtop,, radio, haatar, power brakes, steering, aluminum wheels, $2,100. FE 4-26B1. 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA. 4-DOOR, power brakes and .steering. FE 2-4*88 1*62 RAMBLEtT 4-DOOR SEDAN. Radio, heater, auto, transmission. A-l owner trade. tl.ttS, Bank rates VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. WOODWARD -Special-1961 Pontiac Station Wagon Catalina with power steering, brakes, and hydramatlc transmission. fists PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemons St. FE 3-7954 BUY THIS 1*43 Cadillac Coupe. 11,000 actual mites; 13,000 loft on factory warranty. White with Mock and white Interior. Seat baits and soft ray glass $4195 MUST SELL 1*42 PONTIAC ORANB Prlx, *2,1*5. FE S-1077.__ 7 1*1* RAMBLER CUStOM WAOON, automatic transmission# radio, boater, whitewalls, oxtra clean, NO MONEY DOWN, SJ4.04 par month. , PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth j ROCHESTER 1001 N. Main St.. 'OL 1-655* WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 BALDWIN 335-5900 WE SPECIALIZE IN SHARP Low Mileage Late Model Cars I 1*43 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE convertible, power. . 1*42 OLDS STARFIRE hardtop, blue and real sharp. 1*42 PONTIAC CATALINA station wagon, powar, rad and white. 1*42 PONTIAC TEMPEST LoMons, 2-door hardtop white with rod buckets. 1*6* PONTIAC LsMANS, 2 - door, hardtop, beautiful rad, powar. 1*62 BUICK 4-door hardtop InVicta, powar with deluxe trim. 1*42 PONTIAC CATALINA. 4-door, powar rod gild white. f 1*41 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, 2-door hardtop, power, mahogany with leather interior. 1*60 PONTIAC CATALINA, Ventura trim, 2-door hardtop, power, now snow tires. 1940 CHEVY IMPALA, Adoor, hardtop, power, red with red and white Interior. 1*44 COMET. 4-door, 24.000, blue, radio and heater, whitewalls, very clean. 1*40 BUICK CONVERTIBLE INVIC-ta, tall powar, buckets, Florida title. 1*40 FORD *-passenger wagon, nice family car. 1*5* CHEVY VS automatic, 6-passenger wagon. • 1*50 CHEVY 4, station wagon, nice. 1*57 BUICK, 4-door, special. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin (Jail 335-5900 m 1*60 RAMBLER 4-DOOR SEDAN. IT only $3*7, weekly payments only S3.14. no money down, j King Auto Sales 3245 W. Huron St. FE S-4040 _________ 1*41 AMBASSADOR A DOOR SEDAN radio, heater, aiuto. transmission, power s t • a r I n g and brokos. A sharp Birmingham cor and only S1.0*5. Bonk rates. VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 S. WOODWARD Ml A3*00 4-DOOR 1*42 RAMBLER A DOOR SEDAN, RADIO, HEATER, ECONOMY ENGINE. WHITEWALL TIRES, EXCELLENT CONDITION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of **.45 per week. Sea Mr. Parks of Harold Turner Ford. Ml A75Q0. , 1*43 RAMBLER A DOOR CLASSIC, good condition. 47A15SI. CADILLAC 1960 SEDAN DEVILLE Away soot, powar windows and power accessories, rose pink and pink Interior. A dam nice family car, low mileage, no tpongy to be spent on this one. 1-year Wilson warranty. $2295 WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Ml A1*30 Birmingham, Michigan HASKINS Used Car Clearance saving Acyllnder engine, stof transmission, radio, beautiful rad and white flnlah. 1*41 CORVAIR Monza coupe. Row-erglkte, radio,. Ilka now. Dark green finish. 1*41 CHEVY Impala convertible with VS angina, Powerglkto, powar - ‘ -----------nub. steering, radio, solid Mack finis 1*01 CHEVY Brook wood 4-door wagon. Acyllnder, standard transmission, radio. Solid white finish. SavgUi INI BUICK Electro 225 Adoor hardtop. Loaded with power and equipment. Solid tail finish. 1N2 RAMBLER Adoor. gas-saving acyllndor engine, automatic transmission, radio, groan and white finish. 1*42 CHEVY BM Air Adoor with VI engine. Powerglkto, rpdlo — Like now. Aqua finish. 1*42 OLDS Start!re hardtop. Hydramatlc power steering and brakes, radio and many other accessories. Lika now. Dark Muo finish. INS CHEVY Adoor with gas-saving Actrllndor angina, standard transmission, radios hotter, show room now. Bodge finish. HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds "Your Crossroads to Savings" uJTm and Mil MA 1-5071 OPEN'FRIDAYS THURSDAY - MONDAYS ' TILL 9 P.M. - -TO BETTER SERVE YOU- - ** *1963 T-Birid 1962 Tempest ' 1960 Ford Hardtop 4-Door Sedan Starliner 2-Door With rod finish, whits top, V-g Automatic transmission* deluxs With radio, hooter, powor stoor- power -steering, power brakes, power windows and whitewalls. $3395 $1395 $995 1963 Ford 1961 Ford 9-Passenger Wagon 1962 Ford Galaxie 2-Door Galaxie 500 angina, automatic ' transmission. WIN) radio, ..hooter, whitewalls; tr, V-i angina, automatic transmission, whitewalls. Only— $2295 $1495 $1495 1963 Ford 1963 Ford 2-Door Sedan 1962 Falcon Foirlane 2-Door With Acyllndor engine Ford-O-Matlc transmission, radio, heater, ' 2-Door, Nicel with automatic transmission. transmission* 4*000 actual mi las* new car warranty! walls tool - $1195- - $1895 $1995 1959 Ford 1961 Ford 1959 Ford . , Galaxie 4-Door Country Squire With radio, hooter, automatic Galaxie 2-Door walls. $795 . $1495 transmission, whitewalls. Only .$795 , 1963 Corvair 1962 Ford Station Wagon 196p©]d/ With roots, hotter, automatic, powor steering and broke*, white-welts. / Monza 2-Door With radio, hooter, 4 on Ih* floor, beautiful Mack finish. Clean. Country Sedan with V-g engine, automatic transmission, radio, hooter, and real nice! $1795 $1695 - . ; ■ . ■ -#. $1495 John McAuliffe Ford 630 OAKLAND AVE, FE 54101 / NEW HOURS -OPEN- Mon.-Thurs.-Fri. EVENINGS 1)1 9 P.M. j NEW HOURS - CLOSED-- Tues.-Wed.-Sat. EVENINGS AT 6 P.M. 1963 TEMPEST Lef.’.ons TITLED IN GENERAL MOTOR* NAME and It has bucket toots, radio, hooter, power brakes, powar steering, Hydramatlc easy aye glass. V-g ENGINE, ivory and grodn Is the color. $2285 1962 PONTIAC Bonneville Convertible Has power brakes and steering, and Is real nice. Radio and heater, Acyllnder and tha color Is white with a white top and really nice $2188 1963 BUICK Special Convertible TITLED IN GENERAL MOtORS NAME, Atpood transmission, radio, haatar, bucket seats, power steering, power seats, Posltrac-tion. Color Is gold and beige. $2295 1963 CHEVY Impala Super Sport Convertible Hot o V-0 engine with automatic transmission, radio and heater, the color Is a real nice maroon and oat off by a Mack top. $2495 1963 PONTIAC Catalina Sport Sedan TITLED IN GENERAL MOTORS NAME. Power windows, pswor brakes, power steering, radio, hooter, easy eye glass, and It has a solid Oliver Muo finish. $2585 1962 CHEVY II 9-Passenger Wagon It has a O-cyllndor engine, radio, hooter, easy aye glass, power brakes, and tha color la a beautiful harbor blue. $1595 1961 FALCON Station Wagon This one has O thrifty standard transmission and o fresh air heater for much comfort in long trips with the family. It also nos a beautiful red finish. $785 I960 PLYMOUTH Belvedere Sport Coupe And It has o thrifty Acyllndor angina with automatic transmit-sion, radio, heater, and tha color 1$ • darling- blue end nice. $795 1963 CHEVY Impala Sport Coupe TITLED IN GENERAL MOTORS NAME. V-f angina, Powerglkto. power steering, power brakes, radio, haatar, thitod flan, sparkling hi tone baiga and gold finish. $2289 1963 BUICK LeSobre Sport Coupe TITLED IN GENERAL MOTORS NAME and It has power steering and brokos, radio and hooter, and the finish Is beautiful, s sparkling Persian paari. $2585 1961 CHEVY * Biscayne Station Wagon This one has a Acyllndor angina and standard transmission, radio and haatar and It Is a 4-door, tha color la 0 solid turquoise. $1378 1962 CHEVY Biscayne 2-Door beautiful red Interior. $1389--* 1962 FORD Country Squirt STATION WAOON that has V-f engine, automatic transmission, roan, hooter, and power steering. Nice baby Muo finish. $1489 1962 PONTIAC Catalina Club Coupe Has poster steering, powor brakes, radio and hooter, cloor plastic •eat covers, and It Is o solid Muo In color. $1785 1963 CHEVY Sports Sedan, Impala Has AIR CONDITIONING, and It Is TITLED IN OKNeKALMOi TORS NAME. Has powor brakas and steering, radio, hooter, to nice Imporial Ivory with a saddle brown Interior. $2585 1962 CHEVY II 300 4-Door Sedan And R two o Acyllndor ongbw with standard transmission. This car Is In tiptop condition. It la a solid si Ivor blue and only $1595 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES • '631 OAKLAND AT CASS FE 5-4161 FE. 4-4547* /> ' S5S8££B2*ftft&£&g3!ttSgtttttftSBBSSQsg >-r*iy**WW ■■f..*',; ’, . . .. JfT •, ’* iff. . ' J IS? v ■j -ri., fr-t, " \ ’ml '1 /7JL*A% It" Wftl fa | /•' AfV’ * - l ' 4 ' if*. . '' j jfy ■ V 1 f '* 'n'jj/j il I'J' .11 v ! I’HE PliNTlAC PRESS. FjtlDWY, JANUARY 10, 1W , . .. , r /'».' . ; *; K *T- ...■: 5*& ■ ‘ |. “■‘Lir f I, Ui. THIRTY- if -television Programs Programs furnished by etatlone listed In this column cm eub|ect to chango without notice. 'chnonot 2—WJiK-TV Chunsl 4-WWJ-TV Cht.nnoi 7-WXYZ-TV Channol 9-CKLW-TV Channel 56-WtUS TONIGHT •i« (1) Newt, Editorial, Weather, Sports (4) News, Feature, Weather, 8ports (7) Movie: “Miasfla to tha Moon.’’. (In Progress) *. (•) Captain Jolly and Popeye (56) New Biology | , |:B (7) Weather, Newt, Sports •:N (2) (4) National News (9) Stoney Bate (56) Science Reporter 7:11 (2) Ripcord / (4) At the Zoo f (7) Bachelor Father (56)/8ir KenMth Clark 7:10 (2) Great Adventure (4) International 8h0w time / (7) 77 Sunset Strip (9) Mo vie: “Cavalry Scout” (1961) Rod Cameron 1:99 (66) Lyrics and Legends 6:39 (2) Route 66 / (4) (Color) Bob Hope / (7) Burke's Law (66) For Doctors Only *9:69 (9) Red River Jamboree ~ (96) For Doctors and Yon 9:39 (2) Lawbreaker (4) That Was The Week That Was. (7) Price Is Right (9) Telescope (66) Luboschutxand Memenoff 19:99 (2) Alfred HHdsock (4) (Color) Jade Paar (7) Boxing: Sugar Ramos vs. Vicente Derado (9) Country Hoedown 19:69 (9) Dr. Christian 19:46 (7) Make That Spare 11:19(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:26 (9) Lucky Score ' 11:39 (2) Movie: '!The Wasp Woman." (1969) Susan Cabot (4) (Ctdor) Johnny Carson (7) Movies: L "The Last Angry Man." (1969) Paul Muni, David Wayne, Betsy Palmer. 1 “The Mummy’s Hand.” (1919) Dick „ Foran. (9) Movies: 1. “Phantom of the Rue Morgue” (1964) Karl Malden, Patricia Medina, Steve Forrest 2. i" r "Born for Trouble” (1942) Van Johnson, Faye Emer-V son (4) Best of Groucbo TV Peqtures ’ , .r « . v U. S. Satire Debuts I By (Halted Press International BdB HOPE, 6:30 p. m. (4) When folk singer fails to 1 show up for performance, girlfriend (Joey Heatherton) asks I dub owner (Hugh O’Brian) to^lock up beau’s 'expensive | guitar. Abo stars Keenan Wynn. THAT WAS THE WEEK THAT WAS, 9:90 p. m. (4) Debut of satire on American institutions, with Henry Morgan, Nancy Ames tentatively scheduled. In trial run program aroused more talk, drew more letters than any program since Jack Paar’s first adieu. PREMIERE THEATER, 11:30 p. m. (7) Paul Muni, David Wayne, Betsy Palmer star in “The Last Angry Man,” adaptation of best-selling novel. SATURDAY CHALLENGE GOLF, 2*90 p.m. (7) Arnold Palmer, Gary Player team up against America’s top golfers in 13-week film series. First challengers are Jade Nicklaus. Mike Souchak. SATURDAY MORNING 6:29 (2) On the Farm Front 6:26 (2) News 6:39 (2) Sunrise Semester 7:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo 7:16 (7) Americans at Work 7:26 (4) News 7:30 (4) Country Living (7) Gift of Life 6:00 (2) Fun Parade (4) (Color) Boxo the Clown (7) CTusade for Christ 6:30 (7) Junior Sports Club 6:46 (2) Learn totiraw 9:00 (2) Alvin (7) House of Fashioni 9:30 (2) Tennessee Tuxedo (4) (Color) Ruff and Reddy #t» (9) Warm-Up 19:00 (2) Quick Draw McGraw (4) (Cider) Hector Heath-cote (7) Michigan Outdoors (9) Auto Buy Showcase 19:39 (2) Mighty Mouse (4) Fireball XL-5 (7) Jetsons (9) Home Fair 11:09 (2) Rin Tin Tin \ (4) Dennis the Menace (7) Casper . -(9) Robin Hood 11:39 (2) Roy Rogers (4) Fury SLICING r r r r r“ r“ r r t W rr 12“ it 14 IF“ it - 17 It p St IT H !Si sir ar V 92 it 94 61 39 St u 12 it ;: (I It St fci 52 3“ U 55 it II Bt 10 ACROSS 1 Slice, as wife ax blow 4 Shape artistically t Cleave 12 Fermented beverage 13 Bay window 14 Royal title (ah.) By way of One drop Chemical suffix Paid notices Asylums Been Possessive ^pronoun Poverty-stricken Obliquely . *. Downwind Cut, as hay Insertion Agglomerates Condition a razor Drug source Over Type of wheat Hindu title of respect Follower Argue Varnish ingredient Snowiboe Texas fort Greek letter Brasilian macaw Wanderer Move swiftly Existed British machine guns (slang) Fix in position DOIN'. 1 Cuban dty 2 Cuts, as words 3 Ermine 4 Chain cutters and binders 8 Short melody 6 Bread crusts 7 Curtain 0 Famous violinist 9 Wood-cutting instruments 10 Vase 11 Article 20 Ignobler 24 English river 25 Still 27 Astatic wSd sheep 30 Chemical acidity symbol 31 Teeth adapted for gnawing 32 Weighing devices (ah.) 33 Slice off, as a tree Hmh 34 Spiritual torpors 36 Rowers 39 Lubricators 40 Human likeness cut in stone 41 Line cutter (geom.) 43 Rulers 44 Urbane 47 Blood coagulate 49 T^pe of woodcutter 50 Indian ape Answer 9» Previous Puxzle (7) Beany and Cecil (9) Film Feature SATURDAY AFTERNOON 16:09 (2) Sky King (4) Sergeant Preston (7) Bugs Bunny (9) Ccrntry Calendar 12:39 (2) Do You Know? (4) (Color) Bull winkle (7) American Bandstand (9) En France 1:06 (2) My Little Margie (4) (Color) Exploring (9) Wrestling 1:39 (2) Movie: “Tea for Two” (1960) Doris Day, Gordon MacRae, Gene Nelson, i^EveArden (7) Wrestling 2:09 (4) Mr. Wizard (9) Championship Golf 2:39 (4) Quiz ’Em (7) (Color) Challenge Golf 3:99 (4) Deputy (9) Curling 3:30 (2) Golf Classic' (4) Milky’s Party Time (7) Pro Bonders ‘Tour 4:09 (9) Wrestling 4:39 (2) Big Ten Basketball: Illinois vs. Iowa 6:99 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Wide World of Sports (9) En France 6:39 (9) R o c k y and His Friends. ■. NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -A former New Orleans mayor who speaks French when campaigning in the Cajun country and a onetime lieutenant in the fabled Lohg political dynasty go before Louisiana voters Satur- Committee Discussing- Redistricting LANSING (AP) - The state’s Legislative Apportionment Commission today was to continue discussing new boundaries for House and Senate districts. The commission has set Jan. 31 as a deadline for completing its work—remapping legblative seats in time for the November election. V W ★ The commissioners — four Republicans and four Democrats picked by their respective party organizations — have already submitted several plans for re-districting according to formulas set by the new constitution. COURT DECIDES Under the constitution, if a majority of the commissioners cannot agree on a plan, each may make a proposal to the State Supreme Court. The court may then determine which plan comes closest to constitutional requirements and direct the commission to adopt it. ’ A fully equipped operating theater, autopsy room and X-ray department are features of an animal hospital just opened in the Pretoria Zoo, in Capetown, South Africa. It could be used for humans. ) Tnr CROSBYS At FUNERAL - Singer Bing Crosby and his wife, Kathy, leave St. Paul The Apostle Catholic Church in Los Angeles yesterday, following a Requiem Mass for Mrs. „ ' . AP PMMlx Catherine Helen Crosby, mother of Bing. Hie died on Tuesday, a month before her 92nd birthday. Winner Is Good as Governor Louisiana Dems’ Primary Tomorrow day for the Democratic nomination for governor. The winner will meet the Republican nominee in a general election in March. But in this Deep South state the nomination has amounted to election since WILSON A Woman torPresiden Wouldn't Get Gals' Votes By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — I’ve got bad news for Sen. Margaret Chase Smith ... no woman’ll be elected President soon, because no women can get the women’s vote. Women think it’s nice to have a wmn around the bouse *- and the White House, too. It’s long been said that the greatest women-haters are women. My Galloping Poll (“Could you vote for a woman for President?”) without reference to Sen. Smith, brought a landslide of "no” votes. Lucille Ball (a woman president herself, of Desilu): “Nol It’s a bad idea. The boss should be a man!” (Aside from her husband, Gary Morton: “Is that right?”) Van Johnson: “What! a woman President! You’re teasing.” Mrs. Eli Wallach (Anne Jackson): “I could have voted for Fl»«nnr Roosevelt but I’m old-fashioned enough to 9ay I’d prefer a man.” Joe E. Lewis: “I cast my vote for Sophie Tucker for President of the Confederacy.” ___—— Audrey Hepburn (a British citizen with no U.S. vote): “I feel American men would look up more to a man. So would women, who want somebody like their father.” Milton Berle and Jack Warner said they’d O.K. women (candidates). Arlene Francis: “I’m against it, because I don’t think a woman should be Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. The country’s not ready for it. Men are more fascinating. That’s why women don’t want to watch women on daytime TV. Another thing, I prefer men for husbands if you’re conducting any polls on that.” ★ it it The new smart set gag is phoning a friend in NYC collect ... from NYC. (Person-to-person, it’s 25c in Manhattan.) Don’t tell the telephone company I told you. They’re still mad from the last gag ... Tab Hunter, sad about closing of “Milk Train,” is taking his horse that be had stabled in -Connecticut, and going home to Hollywood ... President Johnson phoned from Washington to “I’ve Got a Secret” to talk to Daniel Garcia whose secret was that LBJ, when a 19-year-old school teacher, spanked him for misbehaving in class. Playwright-scenarist Harry Kumits was explaining to Florence Henderson, star of his and Noel Coward’s show, “The Girl Who Came Tb Supper,” about the trappings of success. “I have a 634,000 Bentley,” he said, “and it’s second-hand.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Johnnie Ray goes bade to work this month after a long recuperation , . . “Cleopatra” is playing in four theaters in Osaka, Japan. Shirley MacLaine’i in India with her husband, at a movie festival . . . Singer Jimmy Rodgers and his wife are back from Japan, where she was hospitalized after a fall . . . WISH ID SAID THAT: Don't take yourself too seriously Remember, to a mosquito you’re just another filling station. REMEMBER QUOTE: “It’s a sign of advancing age when you wake up feeling like the morning after the night before— and you haven’t been anywhere.” EARL’S PEARLS: Love is that form of insanity that prompts • girl to marry her boss, so she can work for him for nothing. “I’m living in Beverly Hills, where the stars live,” writes a starlet, “and I have a beautiful swimming pool, a lovely tennis court. And some day I gotta build a house.” That’i earl, brother. (The Hall Syndicate, Inc.) —l—WXYZ, La* Alan CKLW, Fulton Lewis Ml—CKLW. Tom City WJR, Pimontlon 7i*0—WJR, Choral iiib—WJR, world Tonight BilS—WJR, Sue. Concert S:SO—WWJ, Music, NOW* tiM-WJR, Mod. Mood* filt-WJR, Government Show t:SB-WJR, Adcroft ' 1*1*0—WJR, Ski Now* Mill—WJR, KaHMotcop* 1NSB-WWJ, World Newt Midi—WWJ, Music Scam lltOd-WCAR, New*. Sparta MIL Now*. Sport* WWJ, Now* Final It :1S—WCAR, Public Sarvka 11:15—WCAR, Carandar HiM WWJ, Music >111 Dawn CKLW, World Tomorrow WJR, Music SATURDAY MORN I NO tiM-WJR, Agriculture WWJ, Now*. Form CKLW, tan* of Soddlo WXYZ, pava Prince, Now* WJBK, A vary WCAR, Now*. Shorldon 0:S0—WJR, Music Had WWJ, Njm, Robert* CKLW, dead Morning .WPON, Jotty. Otaon mMsr bJJtT' WHFI, Now*, Burdick WXYZ, Nows, Winter Slid—WWJ, Now*, Monitor Olid—CKLW, Morgen, David ItitB-rCKLW, News, Jo* Van WJBK, Now*. C. Raid WPON, Newt, Dal* Tlno HiM—CKLW, Morgan, Van SATURDAY APTBRNOON 11:00—WJR, Now*. Form WWJ, NOWS, Nowhouto WXYZ, Harvey, Sooaotlon WCAR, Nows, Puri* 11:10—WJR, Mood* for Modem* 1:00—WJR, Sot. Pan Par* 1:00—WPON, Nows, Johnson WJR, Metro Opora Si IS—WXYZ, Nows, Prlnc* WWJ, NOW*, Monitor SrSt-CKLW, Now*, DavMo WCAR. Shorldon reconstruction days, and there’s little reason to expect anything different this year. ♦ ★ ♦ The runoff candidates for the Democratic nomination: DeLesseps Morrison, 51-, a four-time mayor of New Orleans making his third bidvfor governor, JMorrison whs the late President John F. Kennedy’s ambassador to the Organization of American States. He led the field of 10 in the first' primaiy last month. LONG WORKER John McKeithen, 45, a state public service commissioner and onetime legislative flow leader for the late Gov. Earl Long. McKeithen campaigned as an old-line ally of the faction founded by Huey Long. The runoff campaign has had its share of weird quirks, true to Louisiana’s peppery political tradition. ★ ★ For example, does Morrison wear a toupee? McKeithen says jie thinks he might. Morrison says absolutely not. In a more serious vein, did Morrison make a deal with Negro leaders: about one-tenth of Louisiana’s one million voters are Negroes. DEAL "CITED McKeithen says “all the circumstances” point to a deal. He cites a New Orleans visit by Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, a few days before the first primary. * Pinned down on a television interview, McKeithen said he couldn’t prove his charge. ★ ★ ★ Morrison, appearing on the same television program, stoutly denied it. He said he never saw Wilkins in his life. Both candidates describe themselves as fogregationists. Most of the staunch segregationist element appears lined up behind McKeithen. CATHOLIC Most of Morrison's strength is in South Louisiana — predominantly Catholic with a strong strain of French heritage. Morrison is fluent in French and is a Catholic. ★ ★ ★ McKeithen counts most of his strength in the north—less populous but usually better united. The polls open at 6 a.m. (Central Standard Time) and start closing at 8 p.m. Yank Plane Crash Kills 2 in Viet Nam SAIGON, Viet Nam W —• A U. S. Army plane crashed in the city of Ca Mau today killing two Vietnamese civilians and injuring seven, an American spokesman reported. ★ ★ ★ Both American pilots and a Vietnamese observer bailed out of the aircraft after Communist guerrilla bullets severed its fuel, line as it was returning to Ca Mau airstrip, 150 miles southwest of Saigon. Tjw crew was reported safe. Bobby Vinton Has Top Song What young people think are the top records of the week as compiled by the Gilbert Youth Research! Institute. 1 There! I’ve Said It Again ........... Bobby Vinton 2 Louis, Louie .......... ......... ....... Kingsmen 3 Dominique .............Singing Nun 4 Since I Fell For You ........... .....Lenny Welch 5 Popsicles and Icicles ................. Mermaids 6 Forget Him .......... ...........T... Bobby Rydell 7 Talk Back, Trembling Lips ....... Johnny Tillotson 8 Midnight Mary ................... Joey Powers 9 Nitty Gritty ........................ Shirley *ElUs 10 As Usual ........ . ....................Brenda Lee 11 Surfing Bird ............................ Trashmen 12 ' Wives and Lovers............. ..........Jack Jones 13 Quicksand ........... ....... Martha and Vandellas 14 Drag City ..................... ......Jan and Dean 15 Somewhere .................................. Tymes 16 Pretty Paper ....................... Roy Orbison 17 Drip Drop ......................... Dion DiMuci 18 That Lucky Old Sun ....................Ray Charles 19 Whispering .................. Tempo and Stevens 20 Turn Around.......... .......... Dick and Dee Dee COLOR TV SERVIC E 1 ANTENNAS INSTALLED AND REPAIRED SWEET'S RADIO 1 432 W. Huron 9X4-9477 1 for Malaysia Only if Federation filot British Influenced MANILA, Philippines W — Indonesian Foreign Minister Su-bandrio said today his government is ready to accept “an Asian-manufactured Malaysia, not a British-manufactured Malaysia.” Subandrlo told a news conference Britain was utanfUag la the way of a peaceful solution to his country's dispute with Malaysia. Subandrlo came to the Philippines with President Sukarno for talks with President Diosda-do Macapagal and other Philippine officials. The conference ended today, and a communique is to be issued toirforrow. ★ • m it The Indonesian foreign minister said the core of the problem between Malaysia and Indonesia is that Malaysia should first sit down with Indonesia and the Philippines to discuss the issue of recognition of the new federation. NEW SURVEY He called for a new survey in North Borneo to determine the wishes of the people toward joining Malaysia. Indonesia and the Philip, pines agreed last summer to accept the findings of a UJ4. mission that surveyed popular sentiment in British North Borneo — now the Malaysian ■tate of Sabah — and Sarawak. But when the U.N. mission reported the people wanted to federate with Malaya and Singapore, Sukarno rejected their report WWW Subandrlo said Sukarno’s “Crush Malaysia” slogan should not be taken literally. TV-RADIO Service OpOR Friday Nights 770 ORCHARD LAKE AYt FI 5-6112 MteMgen T.gJJL Lie. No. 110 CLOSE-OUTS ON 1963 • STEREOS • TV's * CONSOLES * PORTABLES TiRMS AVAIL AOLt 825 W. Huron FE4-2525 ampfortiI ELECTRIC COMPANY SAVE $ 88 Have Your flTINACE CLEANED NOW I HT Otit SPECIAL PMCi MICHIGAN HEATING 98 Nowbony FI 2-2254 NEW self-cleaning, self-regulating! I Sm/MIDAiRM home humidifier Eff(clout, dependable, malntananca-fro* homo _______humiddlcalIon all winter long! Automatically humidiflai th* air your furnace dries out... protect* furnishing*, clothing, family haaltn and comfort! • GUARDS AGAINST COLDS—AIDS BREATHINQI • SELF-CLEANING ACTION I • SELF-REGULATING ACTIONI • ALL PARTS RUST-PROOF I + • LOW-COST OPERATION, CUTS HEATING BILLSI • MORE MOISTURE CAPACITY I Aek year doctor! Ha’ll tall you how vital proper humidification i* to your family's health and comfort. Call FE 6-9259 HAST HEATING and COOLING 00. 463 South Saginaw Portable TV’s 99' STARTING $QQ95 AT l EVERYTHING- IN THE STORE AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES Open Etery Evening ’til 9 P.M. JOHNSON RADIO I TELEVISION 41 Bast Waltoa Vfe lloek last at Baldwin . FI Mill i t m c W* nwww Hj 'MJm FORTY mm i*\r Vnr f , , I .,. f i*. w j j *| / THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY ,10, 1964 fj lV M m fir ’Ti Some Doctors Cheat Insurers, Soys Journal rtEW YORK (AP) - A few doctors are cheating Blue Cross of thousands of dollars a year, says the New York State Journal of Medicine. “There is no question that this E. Lansing fo Tax Fraternity Houses EAST LANSING (AP)-East Lansing will bill fraternities, sororities, student apartments ami cooperatives for personal property taxes this year, the —-------- " 1 — ] first such billing in city tax The U. S. ranks first, Chile history, second in borax production. I City Assessor Frank Warden is being done,” the Journal said In an editorial. “The only question lies in determining what to do about it—how to stop 1L” # ' ★ ★ The abuses were described as failure to perform services charged to Blue Croes—a hospitalization insurance plan—and the performance of services patients do not need. said some 100 statements are In the mall asking owners of and) establishments catering to Michigan State University students to list the value of furnishings, fixtures and equipment. This will be in addition t* the real estate tax. k it h East Lansing previously limited its personal property billings to commercial and retail establishments and professional offices. Give1 Up Hunt II for AF Plane / Down in Pacific HONOLULU (AP)— Disheartened searchers finally have given up the hunt for nine men aboard an Air Force plane that has been added to the list of air- craft that have vanished In the Pacific. * One of the men was M. Sgt. Herbert M. O’Malley, the father of 14 children, who didn’t have to make the flight. But his unit at Hfll Air Force Base, Utah, home of the plane, was short of men, so he put off his retirement and went, along. The 024 Globemaster cargo plane was on a flight from Wake Island to Honolulu when it disappeared last Thursday. Robert Frost7* Library GivontoNY University -NEW YORK (AP)—The 3,008-volume personal library of the late poet Robert Frost has been given to New York University by his daughter, Lesley Frost Pntianttnr ^ She was Ytving the collection to NYU, Mrs. Ballantine said Thursday, “because I think it's more important to let the world see it than to keep it for myself." p------, , * About one truck oat of seven jvoduood in toe II. S. Is faf export markets,________________ Thatcher, Patterson . and Weraaf insurance IHHiK TODAY m NOON ’til 9l NO PHONE ORDERS-C.O.IVs WHILE QUANTITIES LAST! FLOOR SAMPLES. I. 2. Ji and 4-OF-A-KIND. ©Dll LOTS DEMONSTRATORS . . . ALL AT LOW* LOW SALE POK ES. ALL ARE MECHANICALLY PERFECT. Visi-Matic Wringer in with 20 lb*. of ^ !E toapetUc. 10-lb. f I I U icity; lint filter. J.A1P Wringer Washer.., *98 Save on thia Kenmora winjfr, during our ware-house aale! NO MONEY DOWN on Sean Easy Payment Plan Just dial your fabric, act water temperature and walk away from washday work! Waaher has built-in lint filter, 6-vane agitator; 12-lb. capacity. Get thia 2-speed, 3-cycle automatic at whae. savings. 8269.95 Kenmore Automatic, now....... 209.88 8279.95 Automatic Waaher, Juat........ 199.88 Matching 2-cycle Dryer, now only........ 97.00 •159.95 Electric Dryer, #3860 “as-Ia” . 119.88 MANY OTHER KENMORE SPECIALS NOT LISTED! No Trade-in Required NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan 5-Piece Sectional, Was $219.95 ■B ff7 Dramatic! A fall 164oot around wall. Ravaniblc Serofoam cushions. 1 Makes ■any interesting groups. Save! 2-Pc. Bedroom Set, Was $128 Hli Inela. SO" dbl. dresser with ■irror, PLUS -.Ml bad. Duatproaf drawer*. Walnut. 4-Drawer Cheat, was Mil ........144 Sale! Divan Bed *138 N*. 1140 Dinette Chairs 4.88 - -Tatw-Wak” Chrome ar bronse finish — padded seat and back. Dresser 19.88 %4r. vnfiniftHod. Knotty pin* it Bed Set Baby Crib QMVt wtrlB8* “T**-wkh“ mW Mismatched Qiao aids. Nairn- aiilinm, al finish. Hard- i.ring.. Msod- wwd. Savsl ba.1d.U9s. Twin Bed Ontlit Wss SIOS.SS! Mm isr Fall Sbe ,... 69.88 Coldspot Refrigerators! Left Hand Door Opening. *219 U14ES1M Refrigerator, lee Maker, now......... 249.00 f349.95 Refrigerator, U16ES-SC »..«.........289.88 8349.95 Refrigerator W/Bottom Freeaer...... 289.88 U12DA Refrigerator, Regular 8219.95 .........199.00 8349.95 Refrigerator, tJl4F, “Aa-Ia”.........229.88 U14DS Model, Regnlariynt $259.95.............187.00 T14G Model, Reg. 8349.95, “na-Ia”............ 259.88 MANY OTHER COLDSPOT SPECIALS NOT LISTED*, Sale! (loldspot Freezers! Was $289,951 17 Co. Ft. Upright' 8249.95 Coldspot Cheat Freeaer, #21317 .... .199.88 8289.95 Upright, 15 Cu. Ft. (#42215)........199.88 8219.95 Cheat,l5Cu.*Ftr<#41215).. .. ..179:88 •199.95 Chest, 13 Cu. Ft. (#21313)............2148 8219.95 Freeaer, (#52515) “As-I»”........179.88 8299.95 Coldspot; 21 Cn. Ft., “Asrb”........269.88 • 89.95 Dehamidifler,#3418,now.............869 SORRY, NO PHONE ORDERS or C.O.D.’sr #724C Kenmore Gas Range Rg. 8149.95! S colors ... *118 #936C Electric Range, Reg. 8219.95!........159.88 #912C Elec. Claasie, Reg. 8299.95!....... 239.88 #9&D Elee. Range, Regnlar 8199.95!....... 149.88 36” Cos Range, #736D, Reg. 8149.93!........ 129.88 #8400 Kenmore Rail Heater, Reg. 812.95!. 8.88 #585570 Cos Heater, Regular 8189.95!...... 149.88 MANY MORE ITEMS NOT LISTED! IN-THE-STORE ONLY! SALE! All-Wool Broadloom Luxurious all-wool pila in beige, candy-stripe, gold, aandahvood. Mothproof, non-allergwtle. 9 and 12* widths. Priced to save yon more! •a-yd. No Mimiy Down SALE! Nylon Axminster Resilient nylon pile in six Harmony M mrmr House colon. Cnoice of 9 and 12’ • • widths. Stain-cesiaUHt, Save! *on Sears Eaay Payment Plan Floor Coverings, Second Floor—Store Whse. Hours—Noon ’Til 9 P.M. WAREHOUSE SPECIALS! Regular $199.95 Dishwasher, now.. .169.88 “Better” Garbage Disposer, just.49.88 Kenmore Garbage Disposers, Whae. price.29.88 42-In. Cabinet Sink, Idas faucets, now.36.88 54-In. Cabinet Sink, faneets extra.....57.88 66-In. Cabinet Sink, less trim, just. .. -77.88 Assortment of “AS-IS” Wall and Base Cabinets, Portable Dishwasher* and Ditposen HOMART ATuminnm Doors 1 30x80”, 32x80”, 56x80” SALE - ASPHALT FLOOR TILE Mark., Terraaao Blk., 4Vbe. Beige and Gray, 6H* Marbleiaed White W/Blaek( Red W/White...... .7V6e Ivory CEILING TILE, 64 aq. ft.............-«*■- 7.47 HOMART FOLDING DOORS 32x80” Siae, Reg. 17.99! Whae. price.............. 4. .6.99 fVefiqished Plywood, 4x7* now.......• • • * * • • • • Jack Poets'.;........ .’6.59 Door Hood .......... 4.77 KENMORE SPECIALS! Kenmore Console Zig-Zag Machine,' mow ..■>•♦ • • .89.88 Conaoie Straight Stitch Sewing Machine .'......... 857. Portable Straight Stiteh Machine;... A»..;J W< KENMORE VACUUM CLEANERS Portable-Tvpe Vacunm, now only.,...•'.* *•■* Kenmore Power-Mite Vacuum, Just........... 49.88 Sears Quality Upright Vacunm. ......... - • Kenmore Floor Polishers, Whae. Price - MANY “AS-IS” PIECES NOT LISTED! ONLY 1 and 2 OF A KIND Reg. 1149.95 Aluminum Boat, 12-foot.... •.. 119.88 Rog. 827.99SkiBoots; 10,11 and 12.../f. 7. 7.97 606ft. Boat Trailer 89.88 10004b. . . .. . 139.88 12’ Jon Boat ......74.88 2-H.P. Motor... 84.88 Reg. 221.99 Adult Skis, less bindings........ . .6.97 Sears Pool Tables, From .... .. 79.88 to 8299 Assorted Game Tables, From ......... 7.88 to 29.88 HUGE REDUCTIONS ON LAST YEAR’S BIKES ON SALE AT SEARS WAREHOUSE-481 N. SAGINAW ST., TODAY ... NQON UNTIL 9 P.M.! M mm* m; •‘'ill Th* Wkather 04. WMimr Buruu Flrtcill Frigid tonight; fair, warmer tomorrow (ttoteilt t| VOL. 121 v NO* 288 (;9 B; ;jbm\, ■ 'ipaP^Fs'*A-*' Mlp ** Expected Label Cigarettes Health Hazard WASHINGTON -r The government report on smoking and health to be made public tomorrow is expected to point an accusing tfpger at eighties as a health hazard. h^^ialle'S 1MI report which dealt only with smok-ing and long cancer, the new report prepared by .a special committee of It aoagevera* meat scientists will deal with all the effects of smoking oa hamaa health—ea the logs, heart, and circulatory system. y The conclusions will be baaed on scientific findings which in the main have been publicized previously. _i-‘ • V ★ it ★ Surgeon General Luther L. Terry will hold a nows conference to state the Public Health Service's position on the report, in the works 14 months. SECOND PHASE Terry, who appointed the committee members, also is expected to outline plans for a It's (PM Bed (PM Habit (PM By L. GARY THORNE One board member glanced at the ceiling. Another stared at hfc hands. A -thta| me fondled .gjalf-filtad Hie din instil fill night was a bout: smoking. And hoard members were strangely self-conscious. 7 ., WWW' Almost by pfoorrangement, no one in the board room hap-pened to be smoking when the strategic point In the agenda was reached-BATTLE BOB OXYGEN Usually, gray-wbite puffs of smoke blanket the bond meeting, almost winning the battle for oxygen. Pipe■motor William 1. Lacy, hie unfit “puffer” net-fag is aa ashtray, had been asked te expiafa what students are taaght about alcshoi and tobacco. Beginning seriously enough, die assistant superintendent noted that harmful effects of each an emphasised in sdence and biology classes. Students learn that tobacco contains a poisonous substance —nicotine. Smoke is irritating to the throat and air passages, he added. SMOKING EFFECTS Smoking shortens breath, les-(Continued on Pago 2, Col. S) second phase of the study—to be concerned vyth recommendations for action. When the IMS report was isiaed LeRoy E. Barney, then the surgeon general, said in a statement: “Unless the use of tobacco can be made safe, the individual person’s risk of lung cancer can best be reduced by the elimination of smoking.’’ Further, Burney said the weight of evidence implicated smoking — particularly cigarette smoking — as the principal causative factor in the increased incidence of lung cancer. NOT PROVED? The tobacco industry claims, however, that a causative connection between smoking and impaired health has not been proved. In a detailed report released yesterday at Greeas-boro, N. C., the aatioa’s tobacco companies claimed the vast majority of smokers sailer no serious impairments of health or shortening of life. The Tobacco Institute, Inc., representing manufacturers of cigarettes, pipe tobacco, chewing tobacco and snuff said tobacco use always has been condemned by some as being injurious to health. w w w Scientists know that viruses cause cancer, the report said. UB. CONSUMPTION The consumption of cigarettes has continued to climb since 1999. WWW The total estimated' U.S. consumption for 1963 was 523 billion cigarettes, the seventh consecutive year a record was set, and 3 per cent more than in 1962. w w w Consumption of cigars and cigarillos totaled about 7.2 billion last year, the highest total m 40 years. AF Officers Back Planes, but Not Barry's Criticism By FRED S. HOFFMAN WASHINGTON Uft — Most Air Force officers express more confidence in the piloted bomber than they do in missiles. But probably few would go as far as Sen. Barry Goldwater and challenge the dependability of this country’s growing and im-«— -;—~n ' ',. proving force of intercon- _j ... f Chilly Weather Due to Diminish by Tomorrow tinental ballistic missiles. Goldwater, campaigning for the Republican presidential nomination in New Hampshire yesterday, called the ICBMs undependable and drew a blast from Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. The Arisons senator returned here last eight and refused te reply te MeNamara’s strong charge that Gold-water’s stetemeat was completely misleading, politically irrtspsnaihli and damaging to aatlsnal security. This was as harsh a statement as McNamara ever' has made about anybody publicly since becoming secretary of defense three years ago. w w w The United States bow has a total of more than 560 ICBMs in firing position. BULK OF ARSENAL These include 234 liquid-fuel Atlas and Titan rockets and 320 solid-fuel Minutemen; advanced weapons which will make up the peat bulk of this country’s eventual arsenal of about 1,200 long range, land-based “birds.” The earliest model Atlases took hoars to load with fuel. They had Ms of cmpln “plumbing” that was saseept-ible Is breakdown, aad the fnel could not be left ia the missile tanks because k was kigkly corrosive. As the U.S. missile builders learned, the weapons were improved. The engineers developed a liquid fuel that could be stored indefinitely in the tanks of advanced Titans. These missiles can be laQnched within a minute, tite Air Force claims. The Minutemen are considered even more reliable, with their simplified solid fuel, and they an said to be able to fin in about half a minute. MILITARY 8BCRET Specifics on missile performance an a closely held military secret. But 4t is known that the Air Force has aimed at a goal of more than 90 per cent nU-abflity for the Minutemen, somewhat less for the liquid fbel rockets. One available todex of perform naei Is the record of IIJ. aMsstie firings h teat, space experlaweti aad trathing (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Jaycees Rides for City • Anyone Who Needs : Transportation Can Call Special Office The Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce today announced it will offer transportation service during Monday’s special election for voters who are not otherwise able to to the polls. “Our Campaign office is in Room S09A of the Community National Bank Building,” said Richard C. Fitzpatrick, Jaycee president. “The phene number is FE 4-71*1.” Fitzpatrick said that anyone who is not able to transport themselves to the polls in Monday’s special election should call the office. ♦ ★ * Calls will be taken up to the last minute Monday night. OFFICE HOURS The office opened today. Hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. today, tomorrow and Sunday. The office will remain open until 8 p.m. Monday, v a a ★ Pontiac will vote Monday on a proposed charter amendment to change the method of electing city commissioners. ♦ a w ; Candidates would Mill be nominated by district but elected at-large, with each district represented on the commission. B rrr ! It's cold outsid&i And the weatherman said frigid temperatures will stay put in the Pontiac area again tonight, with the low near 12. Tomorrow’s forecast is fair aad warmer, with a high near 27. {Temperatures will average about the same Sunday with skies dumping some snow on the area. Northwesterly winds at 15 to 30 miles per hour will diminish slowly tonight and tomorrow. Temperatures dropped from a high of 37 yesterday to 11 at 9:30 this morning in the downtown area. At 1 p.m., the recording was IS. Absentee Deadline Is 2 P.M. Tomorrow The City Clerk’s office will be open tomorrow until 2 p.m., the deadline for getting absentee ballots for Monday’s special election. * ★ * Anyone who will be out of town or otherwise unable to go to the polls Monday, may use an absentee ballot. * ★, •' However, they must get one before 2 p.m. Saturday. The clerk’s office is on the main floor at City Hall. Move Follows Riols Marked by 10 Deaths 3 GIs Among Dead; at Least 224 Hurt in Night of Violence PANAMA (iP)—Fighting between U.S. troops and Panamanians broke out again today on the border between Panama and the U.S. canal tone. Additional casualties were suffered on the Panama side. RIOT VIOLENCE — This car on President Kennedy Avenue in the Panama Canal Zone was turned over and burned last night AS WsWl« as Panamanian students rioted during demonstrations. LBJ Plea on Withholding Rate One-Step Tax Reduction Likely WASHINGTON (AP) — President Johnson's plea for enactment of a one-step reduction in the income tax withholding rate appears likely to win congressional approval. Sea. George A. Smathers, EV-Fla.. a senior member of the finance committee now 0—old Bring the fJl-billJoo tax cut bill, told a reporter be thought the request would easily command the needed votes. And Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., of the House Ways and Means Committee, who will head his branch’s conferees on the measure, indicated in a separate interview that he was willing to support it. : * * * As the bill passed the House and now stands, it provides for a cut in the present 18 per cent withholding rate to 15 per cent this year, with a new permanent level of 14 per cent to start in 1965. ONE-STEP DROP Johnson wants a one-step drop to 14 per cent. The administration has advanced two major arguments: An immediate, 4 percentage point cut would hump into the economy an-Additional $899 million of purchasing power a month, while a reduction to 15 per cent for the rest of this year would produce only $609 million. Since the drop in withholding probably cannot take effect before April, an It per ednt rate for the first months of the year, coupled with a 14 per cent rate for the rest of the year, would balance out to about 16 per cent for 1964—the House’s original plan. * * ★ If Johnson’s argument car- ries, a married man with wages of $120 a week who claims exemptions for himself, his wife and two children would get take-home pay increase of $2.80 a week. REDUCTION While $12.80 is now withheld for income tax, the figure would be reduced to $10 under a 14 per cent* withholding rate. The Senate committee continues its work on the bill today, with administration supporters hoping the fast pace of the last two days can be maintained. PANAMA UP)— Panama suspended relations today with the United States after a night of gun battles between U. S. armed forces and rioting Pana--fmanians that left at least 10 dead. Three U.S. soldiers and seven Panamanians died in the violence—the worst in the history of U.S.-Panama differences in the Canal Zone. Rioters heavily damaged U.S. property. Panama officials said they counted as least 19$ injured, while the toll of wounded nmong the U. S. soldiers was 34. Russ Seek West Credit fo Avoid Arms Letup—Cl A WASHINGTON (A — The Central Intelligence Agency says the Kremlin wants to buy large amounts of Western chemical machinery on long-term credit so as not to hamper Soviet arms production. CIA’s conclusions about the Soviet Union’s economic woes were issued yesterday in CIA’s first general ----------------'—♦press briefing since the . . secret agency was set/*lp Navy Plans to Eliminate Gooney Birds after World War II. ' The United States has been | trying to persuade its Allies, so far unsuccessfully, to bar long term credit on Red purchases. But a CIA spokesman denied trying to influence policy by airing the agency’s views publicly. He said CIA’s aim was to make public information gath-conceived and con-\ ered by its experts on a subject program for ehminat-1 where the customary secrecy label could be removed without HONOLULU (AP) - The U.S. Navy finally has lost patience with Midway Island’s notorious “gooney birds”; The Navy announced a “scientifically trolled” ing some of the pesky birds. Which is- an official way of | harm, and teat CIA may give saying part of Midway’s popu-lout further data later lation of the huge, white birds —of the albatross family — will be killed off. The birds have continued to return to Midway despire a number of attempts to force them to move. ★ ★ ★ The Navy has produced statistics showing that one of (every seven planes to land or leave Midway was struck by a gooney. The birds, with 12-foot wing-spreads, have damaged engines, wings, stabilizers, landing gear, radar domes and cockpit windshields. MARKED FOR DEATH DOUBLE VISION? - No, not really. They are not twins looking in a mirror, but Oakland County’s Rosebush quads, Krjstine and KaHh (left) and Kenny and Krystal. They celebrate their 13th birthday today. Though the boys continue to look very much pmNsc Mm Msm alike, the girls are fast becoming individualists, wearing different clothes and hair styles. They are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Rosebush, 3043 Baldwin, Oak-wood, northwest of Oxford. These are the ones which are to die, the Navy said, ♦ # ★ Young birds raised next to runways create a hazard, the Navy said. Some of the older Birds — returning to find their nesting spots buried beneath as-phalt — get pretty sore about being kicked off the runways. It was understood President Johnson approved the action. IN TROUBLE According to CIA’s analysis, the Soviet economy has run in to such deep trouble that Premier Khrushchev can achieve his chemical industry expansion goals only by paring other programs or through long term credits from the West. Soviet import requirements for Western chemical machinery and equipment, mainly to produce fertilisers, were estimated at $2 billion over the next few. years. Credits from the industrial West totaled $600 million in 1962-63. Khrushchev’s seven-year chemical industry expansion pBun1 calls for a $46-billion investment overall. Panama’s government accused the United States of aggression and sent its case to international forums after rioting broke out when Panamanian demonstrators tried to plant their national flag in the Canal Zone. * ★ ★ ★ The Panamanian students moved in after U.S. students in the Zone raised the American flag in defiance of orders from U.S. Zone officials. EN ROUTE Panama’s ambassador to tee United Nations, Aquilino Boyd, was en route to U.N. headquarters to file the charges of aggression with the U.N. Security Council. In bitter words he told newsmen at Miami: “Panama has (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) LBJ Briefed on Flare-Up No Immediate Plans to Reinforce Troops WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson got a series of briefings today on the Panama crisis, and the White House was expected to issue a statement on the subject later in the day. A comprehensive report on the rioting and other developments in Panama was given Johnson by McGeorge Bundy, his special assistant for na-tie n a 1 security affairs, and Bill Boyers, another aide. Bundy and Moyers went to the President’s bedroom to make their report. This followed an initial bedroom briefing at 7:30 a.m. NO REINFORCEMENTS At the Pentagon, a Defense Department spokesman said there are no plans to send troop reinforcements into the Canal Zone. About 10,666 Army troops, plus a small number of Afar Force, Navy and Marine personnel, are stationed there customarily. The spokesman said the canal zone was quiet this morning, with schools closed and civilian residents instructed to stay in their homes. * * * The Army forces there are mainly organized hi the 193rd Infantfy Brigade, a mechanized infantry airborne team. .a t::: rf - fp,: f'ft iv |gW< % '' :'f :' i If I "i A '* PP 5PJ '«®N I f r ,/ . .•• * • "'. ' ' • •- • R* •>"/.' . :'ri/ U « . •. r v P V f \■-•■' •■’ \ ’•y\ /' l n -ft- ' ,'• . f -.'v*,. I f ■■• .■!! .; yggjgg^* ,>... THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1004 iV' f ■ • ^■v.. ?••■ I I 1 , *' 71 f /". • yrj r, A ; ' 1 * ' " ‘Can City Afford to Lose Youth Office?* ‘New Library Hours Unfair to Students* A recent article told of the Pontiac City Library dosing at I p. m. Monday and Tuesday and t p. m. on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. It’s almost Impossible to get our library work done by 0 p. m. The library opens at noon. Why cant it be opened later and dose at 9 p.m. every week night? Students are tbe main patrons and this new schedule isn’t fair to them. L.F. The cost for institutionalizing a Juvenile delinquent is 13,100 par year. -The cost of welfare aid tor tbe family of a Jackson Prison inmate is 04,100 yearly. One maximum security prison cell is erected at die cost of (90,000. Ike cost tq maintain Ike youth assistance office is ROJH yearly, $4,901 ef this teraagh schools and $«,SN throogh •4 Juvenile coart. Fifty-six per seat ef ear yaath offenders ef Ike law are repeaters. Twelve to ahetera per cent ef toe youth offenders who are hrasgkt to the attention ef the yoato assistance office are repeaters. Can the City of Pontiac honestly afford to eliminate this service from toe budget? Wfll the Jad. 2i public hearing answer (his question? ' Disturbed t* ■'K ’iv ‘tKi L/’,jr'. j. i* ’ i '1 | ':'c 1 ■ { 7/ A ’V ' ////' ' ' Tv7 , f n f IJI '3 v ■/- | ■)') fit’ ■ . ii • ! ii)!- 1 ''••• 11' . V ■ L . '■■■''"Vi’ i-i Voice of the People (Continued from Page 6) for all youngsters; Oakland University scholarship, s donation of money toward scholarships, available to any student regardless of race, creed or color; Junior golf and midget football, ccsnpetitJve sports events for all young people; mystery treat, kqfalloween program for the whole city; Jaycees parks, contributions by the Junior Chamber to buy recreational equipment for all to use; Junior Miss, a local pageant, open to all. The recent Pontiac pageant included a talented Negro high school senior. Membership to toe Junior Chamber is open to an yopng men regardless at race, b the 40-year history of the Pontiac Ana Jaaier ■ of Commerce our membership has been made up ef maay races aad creeds —« including Negro representation. •. We know that many Negroes are aware of our numerous projects because they have participated. We now hope that Mr. Milton Henry is also aware of our many equal Opportunity projects. Roger P. Hummel, Director Louis H. Schimmel Jr., Vice President Pontiac has made many changes in the last 20 years, most of them progressive. We are a far better community today because of the forward steps taken at the right time. The charter amendment proposed by the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce is another forward step at the right time and will make Pontiac an even better community. Clyle Haskill THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, jjLNU I am not a resident of Pontiac, therefore, ineligible to vote on the proposed charter amendment, but I have been employed in downtown Pontiac all my working life and call Pontiac my home. ... ,. - >. ,<■ ★ ★ At I'm,sure all other nonresidents who work in Pontiac feel the seme — that the amendment to the City Charter as proposed can only advance the image of Pontiac. I urge residents to vote “yes” for better city government. R. H. Lockhart 5 Are Killed in Car Crashes ESC AN ABA — Two Upper Peninsula auto crashes have taken five lives and resulted in serious injury to two persons. Two motorists were killed Wednesday In a head-on auto crash of MSS, about three miles south of Escanaba. Police identified the victims as Karl Lawatach, 48, of Menominee and Russell Wilson, 56, of Bark River. A two-car crash about 12 miles south of Ontonagon killed three persons and seriously injured two others. Dead were Mrs. George Pantti, 32, of Rockland; her-daughter, Kelly, eight months; and Mat Taeger, of Paynesville. Deputies said Taeger’s brother, Wilbart, 47, also of Paynesville, and Joseph Anderson, 31, of Rockland, the drivers of the cars involved, were admitted to Ontonagon Memorial Hespltaj. Deputies said Anderson’s condition was ‘‘very serious,” Taeger’s condition was reported critical. One of the cars apparently skidded out of control on ice and snow-covered U.S. 45. ’U , I M Nehru Is Making Steady Progress; Relaxes, Reads BHUBANESWAR, India (AP) Prime Minister Nehru is making steady progress and had a restful night, a medical bulletin said today, His daughter, Indira Gandhi, said Nehru is relaxing and reading. He was confined to bed fuesday because of high blood pressure and weakness, but was allowed up to have tea on the veranda of his quarters Thursday. Informed sources said Nehru probably will fly back io New Delhi Saturday. British Labor Leader Wants China in Talks KILBURN, England MB— Harold Wilson, leader of Britain’s labor party, says Communist China should be invited to join the 17-nation disarmament talks when they resume in Geneva. In a speech to a party dinner at Kilburn, England, Wilson also said Britain should enter into serious discussions with the Soviet Union on the Russian proposal for an East-West nonaggression pact. BIG SCREEN TV THAT'S EASY TO CARRY ANYWHERE WHILE THE \ | *; f ’’ '»($#•' f* tfi’")'' •*'1./t/fU If; :fi rr4^MJ0Mw'«7 •»• *W^W*5»k# • pp ,THE PQNTIjAC PJIKSS, FRIDAY,t JANUAR1M0, I9>64 For 33 years these Kingswood teachers have guided teen-age girls. From the left are Luella Houser, head of the physical education department; Grace A. Fry, assistant head mistress; and Josephine Waldo, senior class adviser. They will be honored Tuesday at a luncheon given by the Kingswood alumnae board. School Alumnae Honor Quintet of Instructors Elizabeth Bennett'apd Mrs. Lillian Holm have a conference about yam. Miss Bennett, head of the English department, and Mrs. Holm, teacher of weaving, are to be honored guests of the Kingswood alumnae board at Tuesday’s luncheon- < But Observation Correct Grammar Ain’t so Good By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My English teacher said we had to write a friendly letter to some person who lives in another city as a homework assignment, so this is what I wrote: “Dear Abby: You are solving my problem without even noing it because I have to write a letter for my English assignment and I choze you to write to. “I think your cohim is prit- those answers because you no what happens when you stick your nose in other people’s business. “Very truly yours, “ ‘F’ IN ENGLISH” agree with your answers but then body is fek. “I sure to givt DEAR ABBY: Our 19-year-old daughter (whom I’ll call Jane) is serious about a 24-year-old married man who is in the process of being divorced. They were married only five months. My problem is he spends every evening here with Jane because his lawyer told him he shouldn’t be seen in public with another' w o m a n yet. Meanwhile, Jane and he are getting thicker and thicker and they are talking marriage. He is a gentleman and Is well able to support Jane, and we like him, but I don’t think it’s right for them to be planning marriage until he is free to marry, do you? My husband says he is a lot better than most of the characters Jane has- gone with and we should let them be. What do you think? JANE’S MOTHER Kingswood alumnae of three decades wlH honor five teachers on Tuesday. Hie alumnae board is giving a luncheon at the Village Woman’s Club for Elizabeth Bennett, Grace A. Fry, Mrs. Lillian Holm, Luella Houser and Josephine Waldo. This is the first occasion of its kind and all Kingswood alumnae have been invited to jbonor the t £a c h e r s whose combined years of service add up to over 190 years. Miss Bennett, came to Kingswood in 1996. Mrs. Holm,’who designed and set up the looms for the original carpets at Kingswood came from Sweden in 1990. kirst at the Gpmbrook Academy of Art, She began teaching' weaving at Kingswood in 1939. Mist Houser, Miss Waldo Miss Fry have been at Kingswood since its founding in the fall of 1930. . Miss Fry teaches mathe- matics and lias Waldo is to the English department. General chairman for t h e event is Mrs. Joseph Irwin. ' Reservations are being handled by Mrs. John Dixon. Figure projects were com templated at the Kappa Chi Alphas sorority meeting. Mrs. Richard Jones opened her Briggs street home for members Tuesday evening. Plans were discussed for a ' hair • do demonstration for members and guests at the House of Style Jan. 39. Mrs. Richard Jones and Mrs. Thomas Tagoso will b«F models. Personals lota Eta Unit Gives Charity a Class Table Tipacon Hears Talk on Coronary Heart Disease it it it DEAR MOTHER: No matter how yeu phrase it, he is a married man until he is divorced—and he may NEVER get a divorce. Your daughter should not be spending every evening with him. A classroom table was presented to the Oakland County Society for Crippled Children and Adults, Inc. at the Thursday evening meeting of the Iota Eta chapter of Pi Omi-cron national sorority. ★ * ★ If he respects her, as a gentleman should respect a lady with whom he would like to spend the rest of his life, he will let HER be until he has the right to talk marriage. Are You Stage Struck? Tryouts for the Lakeland Players’ first mu-sicale production, “Guys and DoHs” will be held Sundajuwt^the CAI Building from 2-5 p.m. A large cast .of men and women is needed for the March performances to be directed by Patti Hott. Anyone interested in singing, dancing or dramatic parts will be welcome to try out. CONFIDENTIAL TO “HAROLD WHO TRAVELS”: Don’t worry.. If a, woman really loves a man, no other man can get within 100 feet of her. ' .fvr7 Get H off your chest. For a personal, unpublished reply, write to ABBY, care of The Pontiac Press. Enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. For Abby's booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding,” send 50 cents to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. Mrs. Robert Dunham of Midrow Street opened her home for the gathering. * * * , The Michigan State Chapter dinner meeting at the Hotel Waldron Jan. 19 was announced. Plans for the state convention to be held at Kalamazoo in' May will be completed at that meeting. Next month's meeting will be a cooperative supper. Dr. Edgar J. Giest Jr. was guest speaker at. the Wednesday dinner meeting of the Up-aeon Chapter, American Business Women’s Association. Vice president of the new Crittenton Hospital in Rochester, his topic was coronary artery disease. ★ * ★ Since the United States has the highest vascular rate in the world, Dr. Geist discussed factors predisposing to coronary artery diease. tack. A question and answer period followed. Some 67 members and six guests were present at the Airway Lanes to hear the talk. Annual reports were given. ★ ♦ it ■ Traveling to their cabin outside Curran, Mich, for the weekend will be Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Allen of Cooley Lake Road. .Guests of the Allens for the weekend win be Mr. Allen’s mother, Mrs. Ralph E. Allen of Durnham Drive, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Andress of Ormsby Street. ★ * it Work on scrapbooks using old Christmas cards was begun at the meeting. When completed, the scrapbooks will be given to the Carolyn Can-Children's Leukemia chapter for hospitalized patients. At foe February meeting the members will have a white elephant sale. Proceeds will be for the dub charity. Sorority Holds New Workshop Guests included Shirley Plake, Lee Doran, Inez Dimas, Catherine McDonald, Barbara Hessle^ and Mrs. Billy H. Vaughn. CHECKLIST Each person was given the opportunity to check a “Personal Score Card”, indicating possibility of their experiencing some type of a heart at- WCTU t<£ Meet Hie Dora B. Whitney Union of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union will meet Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Bethany Baptist Church on Mark Street ' Mrs. Lynn Allen of Argyle Avenue is motoring to Florida with three friends. On Wednesday they will sail from Florida on a ten-day Caribbean cruise. Upon returning to Florida they will visit with friends before returning to Pontiac. Accompanying Mrs, Allen are Mrs Mack Good win of Cherokee Rond, Mrs. Ray Kingsbury of Silver Circle and Mrs. Fred Sytz of Mark Street. ■ ★ ★ ★ Dr. Lynn Allen Jr. will be in Harrisburg, Pa. for the week of Jan. 22 to attend an educational conference on contact lenses. A workshop on writing highlighted the Wednesday meeting of IQ Gamma "Alpha chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority in the home of Mrs. Richard Paschke on Union 'Lake Road. * * * '> * Mrs. Russell Perkins collaborated with the hostess in presenting the program titled “The Written Word.” it .f * Chapter members will attend the city wide Beta Sigma Phi tea, Jan. If, in the First Federal Savings of Oakland club rooms. ucivruMr your pea room mu W during NETTLE CREEK’S. 20% OFF ANNUAL SALE! for the month of lartuaiy. Over 75% of the exquisite ensembles in the Nettle Creek Deluxe Portfolio will he ottered at a tremendous savins of 2U%. This sale is an annual event and comes but once a year Nettle Creek bedroom ensembles mtl3de beautifully color coordinated solid, and prints, quilted and unquiJIcd, and custom inatlt* for you into Bedspreads • Draperies and Shades • Headboards • Boudoir Chain • Screens, Table Coven • Accessories BEDSPREAD PRICES EROM $54.95 TO $200 All LESS 20% UNTIL THE END OF JANUARY. Interior besigners for Home or Office Open Friday Until 9 P.M. FURNITURE &SASINAW ST. AT OICNAIO LAKE AVI. Vi $-1174 PONTIAC Starts tomorrow. .. for one week only Jan. 11th-Jan. 18th seamless stockings save up to *1.05 on every box walking sheer—------------freg.ji.35j *1.15, 3pr*. *3.30 reinforced sheer-----------(reg.ji.soj *1.25, 3pn. *3.60 micro-mesh-----------------freg.li.5Qj *1.25, 3pn. *3.60 run guard sheer-----------------freg.ji.65j *1.35, 3pn. *3.90 stretch sheer-------------------freo.Ji.65) *1.35, 3pn. *3.90 sheer heel demi-toe—freg. JI.65J *1.35, 3pn. *3.90 runless sheerloc9-----freg.jujj *1.45, 3pn. *4.20 all sheer sandalfoot—ing. JI.95J *1.65,3pn. *4.80 short, medium and long colors: south pacific, bali rose and shell PEGGY’S MIRACLE MILL OPEN TONIGHT CLEARANCE Tremendous savings on fashions you'll want now . . . and REVERSIBLE PARKAS Pakm t* tU *14.88 STRETCH PANTS Value* »• SIS.99 *18.88 * I FLANNEL PJ.$ assd NITE SHIRTS a»*#i ■ Superior Quality >’ MOHAIR SWEATERS Faina* la 119.99 BETTER DRESSES dradically reduced! Value, to tSS.99 Tins Meemquist T ai *12" Junior*, MImw, Half Rise* DYED-TO-MATCH PASTEL SKIRTS aad SWEATERS drastically reduced! We ara pleased to an-noonce the appointment of Mrs. Tina Bloomquiat at aiana|ter of Burton’*. Formerly af Eaton**, Mn. Bloomquiat is wall known in the Pontiac area. BURTON’S fjtmuuut. IjoaIumo- jjok, tin. uouko. ml Unfit 75 North Saginaw j r A illA. • " It 1 i ’ 1' r V) f * •ill' i4 . ’ . ) r ';' «.. if 1 ' ■ ■ ■ t ■ f j i ■" f1 j/’ t r jri ■* ^ '1 I ' V . '! l! f 'if ! Tiff PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, |f)( 14 - ,rFT\—r- i [!l I.1:....—ir—h4—-• . r- ■P f f '14- Prints Make Fashion Splash Only the Best Is Good Enough ... The nation has approximately 2.7 million men and women in the armed forces, an increase of 200,000 over 1960. The diamond which is a token of your love should be beautiful and flawless. Sise is not of the greatest importance ... quality is all-important Nothing but mbsusym«hmisu.iusuppi*r^wm Installed r mil f "-— --......... ? ■' f <■ Oil JANUARY SALE 1 IS IN FULL SWING F.vcrvtliin^ Reduced No Money Down Easy Terms I Selections Are Good j ALL BRAND NEW! 501 THICK LOOP m Completely! Some models “One of a kind” I I Some Scratched — marred — Display Models Bl. “tr P^.1 SOT. Miuilf1r.nl 1^. Srdm* . „ . rut arte Mat for ruqwt U $6.50. Yu. CM Wfili II JO Installed ■ i|i|il< B.hSw fte .tetl Sltllllu tMlWuritn 501 LUXURY TWIST 0« bw wite. M* *W willy Drfw HxteUriil «*w liar. Oar $7.98 utllur. You pM carprt $|J$ linlr Suttur Pte uud $1 JO iwiJw IMiHuIi. Completely $1 Installed | 501 SUPERB TEXTURE Bid **N** quality OiPsM nylon yarn. Wear guaranteed. Our beat SMB idler. Yon pert carpet. Ripple Rubber Pad and SI.SO lacklau inuUlleUon. Garpeeaa color line. Completely $ | Installed 198 But All Fully Guaranteed Refrigerators—T elevisions CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON M. |Good quality, 8 eel or*. lamp wearing. An everyday BY. I seller for the carpel alone. You pH earprt, BUB Ri|>|>lr | Rubber Pod and II.SB larklemi Imdnllelian. w Completely $C98: 2 Installed Q JJ; Ranges-Stereos—Ironers ¥t FREE HOME SERVICE FOR CARPET AND CUSTOM DRAPERIES AND FINE QUALITY VINYL TAKE UP TO 3 YEARS TO PAY Freezers—Radios—W asliers Dryers-Cleaners .NEW STORE HOURS. MONDAY and FRIDAY 10 A. M. to 9 P. M. TUES.,. WI:D and THURS. 10 A. M. to 6 P. M. SATURDAY 9 AM. to 6 P. M. Drayton Store Only DON’T MISS THESE MLLAK SAVINGS! The ■BBcfewitk-Evans good housekeeping shop ----r \ H v_.* of PONTIAC SERVING NORTH OAKLAND COUNTY PINK FLOOR COVERINGS 4990 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains ' OR 4-0433 51W. Htoron Open Mon. & Fri. Till 9:00 FE 1-1555 Yu am h .14 A Valentine Day wedding is planned by Pene-' lope Ann Cullen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Case of Jerose Avenue and Dennis Alan Pills-bury, son of Otis Pilts-bury of Keego Harbor and Mrs. Dorothy Boyd i of Lake Orion. “ Say It With FLOWERS by Jacobsen’s Jacobsen’s FLOWERS Wj Downtown Store 101 N. Saginaw St. Pontine Phone PE 8-7165 for 42 Years fib l.rrrnhouir, Garden 111 i Store and Nursery Lake Orion Phone MY 5-16BI Pendleton Sportswear Annual sale of discontinued styles An event worth waiting for! Perfect Pendletons—wanted Pendletons— price-cut to save you countless dollars. Choose from scores of coats, suits, skirts, pants, robes and mohair sweaters. 100% virgin wool, naturally. And to complement them, 2 STORES IN THIS AREA even famous Pendlemate® Accessory cotton blouses in solids and prints are reduced. But hurry for top selection! Sizes 8-20, sweaters 36-40; not all sizes and colors in each style. And please, no phone or mail orders. 32750 NORTHWESTERN .at 14 Mile Road 2265 UNION LAKE ROAD . Union Lake Village ________— ii r Jii i ■ ,^._^_^-----------»■ , . 4i_,i^K..^_j..._^',i ■■._ .|{L- ■’* ■ * ' ■ :■' >[ if.(j wpm ■^vh f •'“' v,!4 V’1 | '■ , ‘ 1 : '" ••!»• ••• 'V If ivfe-^>' ’ f THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1964 *>* » n it :;{ft W? ') f 1.1 1 Two Detroit Skippers in Miami Yacht Race MIAMI (AP) - Two Detroit drippers are competing today in JUST *6 DOWN •UYS YOU A CAR AT KING AUTO SALES Comer W. Huron and Bill. Lk. Rd. * Own TNI ♦ Mon. thru Frl. lot. Till 1 the Miami to Cat Cay yacht race.' '' Don Sucher, skipper of the 46-foot sloop Tigress, and Toots Gmeiner, skipper of the 49-foot sloop Apachf, are among 29 entries in the rape which opens the southern ocean racing conference season. W * * The Tigress won the Miami to Nassau race in 1961. and the Apache has been a leading contender in the Great Lakes area for years. ENJOY SAILING? TRY THE EXCITING MANEUVERABLE SCAMP I ICE BOITl A smalt highly manouvorablo eno dosign ica boat that can bo tailed on small froxen pends or larger bodies of ice. Scamp is balanced so a child can tail it easily, yet designed to 'carry an adult of over 200 lbs. at speeds in excess of 50 miles par hour. M r rrirr.v a rrrrrip/rlr line of ir inter ttkiiuR rr/iif/rmrnr for Children unit Iflulln. SEE OUR WINTER SPORTS DISPLAY Ice Skates Sleds Toboggans Hockey Sticks Tip ups and Spears Pucks and other ice fishing equipment. 00 SPECIAL NOW II THE TIME TO IIIY YOUR MATING OUTFIT LAYAWAY NOW FOR SPRIN0, LOW WINTER PRICES. CRUISE OUT BUAT SALES 63 E. Walton Open Daily 9 to 6 FE 8-4402 convenience: BERRY AUTOMATIC Opens, clotet garage door from intide your ear Steprsavtng family grffl Touch the button bn porta bis transmitter one Nifty Automatic opont, close* door, light* up gorogo. Oivo* nighttime, bod wotthor protaction. Electronic component* guaranteed one year — operator five yeert. Buy now. PRICE $12400 RICKIE LUMBER 2496 Orchard Lake Rd. Phone 192*1600 HOURS! 7:30 AM. to I P.M.- Saturday YiN A.M. to 2 F.M. A GREAT NEW WAllY TABER SAFARI SHOW FROM CANADA Jjk FROM ONTARIO m* person Denny Haver JU HIS ALL-NEW CANADIAN ALL-COLOR HUMS ■“CANOl COUNTRY' . Movdr before ho* i comero peeitrefid ♦he wilderness reoches of evr neighboring Co nod a te the eitoqf accomplished In this fother-ton quest for odventure with red. conee end cemere. Gelded by Ih Ojibwo Indian, camping where night overlook them, living off the la«d, totting adventure ot every turn during 400 miles of trekking by water* way, catching treat os big as your arm and pike large as year leg • . reel edvqetere, don't miss It. -“ONTARIO SAFARI"' Mush after the deg teem in the deed of on Ontario winter, fellow the free* tine, of on Ofibwe Indian, heat for moo so, beer, deer end bog year gome lately with e pistol. Heft if adventvrp yee con net eely enjoy vicariously, you can go there tn year ewe family ear. See Ontario portrayed by a 21* year resident of ewr neighbor, to the north • • • e professional photographer end e notional pistol-sheeting chomp. PONTIAC NORTHERN HIGH Su.. Jan. 12.2:30 p.m. WELLED LAKE HIGH TemoirowOnly las. 11.8 p.m. Adults Incl. Tex, $1.50 —- Students Under 16, $1.00 ADVANCi TICKETS AVAILABLE AT A REDUCED PRICE AT xaeeo hardware no. s Auburn Hilfbt. sutees SPORTINO eooos K*Sf* HsrtRT s. c. ROOMS SPORTINO MODS PWMSC lakbsim RACKING CO. w«a«s Los* WILSON HARDWARR DICK'S SAIT « TACK LI Cemmwcg SLCNTZ MOBIL SERVICE Ns«l WBLOON SPORTINO MOOS PSRflSC TOM'S BLBCTBIC WbNsi L«ka WAINS Lsks ' Avoid standing In Dnt. com* sarly anS get . copy of Mr. Taber's Innfesl** Alaskan Hlway book, profusely Hlustrated and full ol hunting and fishing aims the Alcan Hlway. AIM, Me Tabor's African Safari Annual and hit olfwr bast filing, profusely Illustrated books on hunting and fishing in Africa. Each to parMnally autographed and all Mil at SI.2S each, 3 for 13.00. SPONSORED IT MULTI-LAKES CONSERVATION ASSN. si BM sews k EM s- Famous Irish Unit Light but Rugged NEW YORK (AP)—Probably the most legendary and most famous of all college football team* never started a game and was just a little smaller than most good, present-day high school teams. Jim Crowley and his surviving teammates of the famed Four Horsemen and Seven Mulei Notre Dame team of the early 1920s had one of their rare get-togethers Thursday night when Crowley was presented with the Touchdown Award for service to football. “The backfield gets together about four, five times a year at a banquet or something," said Crowley, halfback on the fabulous Four Horsemen, “but this is the first time since 1948 that the whole team has been together. The last time was at Notre Dame at our 25th class reunion.” BACKFIELD The Four Horsemen were halfbacks Crowley and Don Miller, fullback Elmer Layden and quarterback Harry Stuhldreher. The Seven Mules, linepren of the unbeaten Notre Dame team Busy Slate hr Michigan Cage Squads By The Associated Press Michigan’s busiest college basketball weekend of the season gets underway tonight with four games. A total of 17 games will be played Saturday afternoon and night, with all but four in the state. Wayne State plays host to Case Tech, Detroit Tech is at Alpena C. C., Bemidjl at Michigan Tech and John Carroll at Eastern Michigan in tonight’s contests. WWW Wayne State has not played in five Weeks and will be looking for its first victory in three games.. Topping off Saturday’s cage action are tiro Big Ten games, with fourth-ranked Michigan playing at Purdue and Indiana at Michigan State. Bowling (keen is at Western Michigan in a Mid-American conference game, while Albion Is at Alma, Adrian at Calvin and Olivet at Hope in the MIAA. The other MIAA school, Kalamazoo, is at Elmhurst, Ohio. * * * | John Carroll is at Wayne State, Detroit Tech at Soo Tech, Case Tech at Eastern Michigan, Ohio Northern at Lawrence Tech, Cleary at North wood, Bemidjl at Northern' Michigan, Findlay at Ferris and Western Ontario at Detroit in the other games in the state. Other games out of state take Hillsdale to Baldwin- Wallace and Central Michigan to Illinois State. of 1924, were center Joe Bach, guards Nobel Kizer and John Weibel, tackles Adam Walsh and Rip Miller, and ends Chuck Collins and Ed Huntsinger. it * it All except Weibel, Kizer and Hunsinger are still alive. “Miller, Layden and I ail weighed about the same," Crowley recalled, “about 181 or 162. Stuhldruher was about 158. The guards were about 175 each, Bach was about 190 and so were the tackles. The ends were about 178 or 180." it * it The backfield was tagged the Four Horsemen by sportswriter Grantland Rice in Notre Dame’s 1924 game with Army. The four played together as a unit from late in their sophomore season in 1922 through 1924. LOSE TWO In that time, the fabulous Fighting Irish under Coach Knute Rockne lost only taro games, to Nebraska in 1922 and 1923- They were unbeaten in 1924 and capped the season with a victory in the Rose Bowl, Notre Dame’s only bowl appearance ih history* w w w “We didn’t start a game‘In 1924," Crowley recalled. “Rockne would start what we called the shock troops, the second team, and we’d usually come in at the start of the second quarter, depending on the score and so on. “You see, in those days,. if you were taken out in a half, you couldn’t go back in. So we wouldn’t come in until the second period and take it the rest of the way." Big 10 s Top Scorers CHICAGO (UPI) - The two top scorers in Big Ten basketball will match shots Saturday when Ohio State, one of the preseason favorites, and darkhorae Minnesota meet with a share of first place at stake. Leading the Gophers will be sophomore Lou Hudson, wbo dropped 38 points in his only previous outing for first place in scoring, while Ohio State will depend on Gary Bradds, last year’s scoring champion who netted 32 points in his only start for the runner-up position. Bradds has the best per game scoring average .in the league, 28.1 points for 11 games, while Hudson for the entire season of 11 games has averaged 18.8. Another game also involves a Mat Card Features Russian Roulette A six-man Russian roulette bout, along with a midget scrap, will highlight the professional mat card Saturday night at the National Guard-Armory. WWW Following the roulette bout, the six grapplers will pair off in two-man matches. Ricki ’Crusher’ Cortez is slated to meet Man Mountain Cannon, better known as ‘Cry Baby’ McCarthy, Ivan Kalxnin-koff will battle Paul DeMarco and The Great Mephisto duels Chief White Eagle. The first bout will get under way at 8:30 p. m. PLAYS By JACK McMAHON Coach, Cincinnati Royals I still believe good plays off the high post are the most difficult to defend against. In this play we are attempting to get .a good jump shot for guard X2. Our center X3, breaks up to his high post position—|t is important that he receive the ball from guard XI at the moment he gets to the foul line. WWW Guard XI runs to the high post man’s right, setting a double screen for guard X2, who has taken his man down past the foul line and then breaks back to run his man off guard XL The potential shooter, guard X2, then takes the pass from center X3 and attempts the shot behind the double screen. McMAHON There are, naturally, various options of the play. If the de- share of the league lead, the televised contest between Illinois and lows, each boasting • 1-0 record. CO-CHAMPS The Ullnl, co-champions of the Olympic '5‘ Will Test 36 for 12 Spots NEW YORK (AP)—Thirty-six college players will get a shot at the 12-man Olympic basketball team the linked States sends to Tokyo next October. The National Collegiate Athletic Association Council, in one of its last Hems of convention business Thursday, approved a complicated plan for college representation in the Olympic basketball trials at St. John’s University bore April 24. THREE TEAMS The colleges will send three 12-man teams to the tournament, including one having as its nucleus six players from the National collegiate champion team to be decided at Kansas City March 20-21. * This is the program: After the NCAA championship at Kansas City, the six chosen players of the winning team will assemble at their own campus for a week’s training. WWW Thirty other players from both large and small college ranks will be assembled at another college yet to be designated. The players will be trained in Olympic style of ploy, which differs from that to the United State*. By March X, the players will be separated into tone different teams—designated as rad, white and blue. Each will play two exhibition games, one being the second annual Coaches’ All-Star game at Lexington, Ky. March 28. The other exhibitions will be held March 21. circuit last year with Ohio State, could be handicapped by Die injury of center Skip Thoren, although he has played at partial efficiency to five games since be was hurt to a fall. WWW Thoren has averaged 20.8 points tor the llltol to 19 games for seventh place to the scoring standings, barely a point per game more than Iowa’s leader, Dave Roach, who has a 19.3 mark for nine games. EASDSfc GAME The fifth team unbeaten in Big Ten play, Michigan, a title favorite, was expected to have an easier test to its bid to retain a share of the conference lead, meeting Purdue, a loser to Minnesota in its only league start. fense overloads the play, we can send forward X4 on a “dear out” and allow guard X2 to. go into the left corner and attempt the open shot there. ICE SKATE Sale! TERRIFIC SELECTION MEN’S • UDIES’ FIGURE SKATES MEN’S HOCKEY SKATES • Full Size Shoe * Deluxe Grade • Canadian Steal $988 uxa M laal Blades. WE BUY • SELL r TRADE ICE SKATES Up to $10 for Your Used Skatoa. Over SOO Pair of Used Skates to ohooao from! PONTIAC'S VACUUM CLEANER SERVICE HEADQUARTERS PARTS BAGS BELTS INSPECTION SERVICE ALL MAKES Free Pick Up in Oakland Coonly OPEN SUNDAY 9:30 to 2 PM. % „________________________ BARNES I HARGRAVE Hardware 742 W. HURON ST. FE 5-9>101 End Goes Hunting; Training Gets Buck FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. UV-Jim John, University of Arkansas football end, put his gridiron knowhow to work while he waa deer hunting recently. John wounded a buck but ran out of shells before he could bring it down. So be tackled the deer and sat on it until it died. Featherweight Champ May Desert Division LOS ANGELES (API-Featherweight champion Sugar R» mos may desert his division if he beats lightweight Vicente Derado in a non-title 10-round nationally televised fight tonight. The 21-year-old undefeated champion is having weight problems and believes he can whip lightweight king Carlos Ortiz. Service Tilt Takee^^kUH/ of Year Award By The Associated Press For more than three quarters, Navy’s football team, flaunting Drive for Five on its jeraeys to emphasize its desire for a fifth straight victory over Army, dominated the climactic game of the 1963 college football season. ■WWW Roger Staubach, Pat Donnelly & Co. looked virtually unbeatable as they carried a 21-7 lead into the final period. Then Army, with Rollie Stichweh at the helm, began a comeback drive that put the Cadets within readt of victory before it faded out in confusion as the final seconds ticked off. WWW This exciting and frustrating finish of a game seen by more than 100,000 spectators to Phils delphia Stadium and by count less television watchers, was picked today as the oddity of the year by sports writers and broadcasters participating to The Associated Press year-end poll. WWW With football still fresh to their minds, the voters put the Army-Navy game ending just ahead of the outcome of the 1963 World Series on their list. Twenty of 71 listed the football mlxup first; 17 showed toe most amassment that the unbeatable New York Yankees could lose four straight World Series games to the Los Angeles Dodgers—or that Los Angeles could win four to a row. Both foams heart eat of the league seoriag leaden, to each case a sophomore. Purdue’s Dave 8cbeUhase netted 29 potato to his only game for a third place tie, while Michigan's Castle Rowell, rated eae of the nation’s outstanding rookies, dropped It agatart Northwestern for sixth puce. For the season Russell has averaged 22.7 to 11 games and ScheUhase 19.0 in 10. WWW Indiana, one of the two double losers to the league, faces the highest scoring team in the conference, Michigan State, on the Spartan floor while Wisconsin, also with an 94 conference mark, faces Northwestern on the Wildcat court. fimtl I ■v« m ■V''’ w ' *r: ■* £& aM 7 ■ 'j Mm 1 m EteSll Car Was 49 with 15 talt.of Gas! Oar Wash..... 89° with II gals, af Qas! CarWash...... 1®* with ItalSsofflas! NM H ii WANTED r USED CARS and TRUCKS IN ANY SNARE er CONDITION Fret Pick Up! ' Parts for most makes of Cars. Now - Rebuilt and Usedl BAGLEY AIITO PARTS®**! 170 BAGLEY ST.-PONTIAC • FE 5-9219 GUARANTEES MUFFLERS against rust, corrosion blow-out, wear-out mmm ms SHOCKS SEAT-ARTS lor os long as you own your cor. Roptocod, If necessary (or o service chores only, 435 SOUTH SAGINAW FE 2-1010 SEMI-AUTOMATIC WATER SOFTENER * 10-YEAR WARRANTY *'/'I Now Specially Priced! You can have the convenience o$ Soft Water w ONLY A FEW CENTS PER 0AY Have a whiter wash softer clofbes, lovelier complexion and even save up la 50% on soap. WHY RENTA WATER SOFTENER? as litrta as $1» week ★ NO MONEY DOWN ★ Come In Today or Phone FI 4-3573 eras OiaMbuler isr SsyoeMs Wsisr OsoeNsalsf ladpawal IMP Electric incorparatad 8496 Auburn Rd. 0L 2-3900 Ft 44113 - Marathon Quality Heating Oil gives you < top comfort and economy aU season long— backed by on the job service: Oakland Fuel A Paint Co. \ S .. it Ash t .. ; .../ ** 438 Orchard Lake Ava. FE HIM fp* Ait Be srLi: -M. ||||i Am fffgf / f - if ?*tt '# i V'» > "'i'' »r * • ,r\l , f> 1 •*, „v i 1 ' ' ’ ') > i • ■ r ' ) /• i ' ■ f gpff ■ .-'*>1., >■1 k.r>, r# ' i*■. , ,i ’1%.'/:,!V.n i*v • .V’-./ ! c<’> j?^'#M i , "••. , .■' f * '* ' • * ** V ■ .’ * , r- /• * 1 #* THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1064 V »’ ty.i' ■ V^ ![[ LWfJSlL iL life” THII^TY^PNjE r—.......t-r I® ® 'i MARKETS The foOowtaf «"* top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations an furnished by tbs Detroit Bureau at Markets as of Wednesday. , *• Produce nuns Aputat, MlctaUO, (tad. bu. • , MidMHk mr~~ -~ i JmmKmw AMk MMi bn. .... aSS£ SSEV''^ VSMBTASl.il CaS*E*> «nrt». ON* ...... SBC If* .SB, v;.. can mh **..... Carrot*. calk oak. * dot. .. Cmsip......... SP?^1E;:r:aj oniana,err. 3* lb*. .. 1-2 NmVi rad, Mb. ....ffi 53 itiS^SSS RsWWSA fiWfiMW .... li»l*S* MWK OIL i... tqurah, mmnm* hi. Hoop* nBpf ......... Turnip*. raw** .... Catory. Poultry and Egg* BSTOOIT POMLTKV DETROIT CAm-ertra* ms rar poraE it DMraW tor No. I quality [Ira poultry: lock IMS. DSTRorr sees jrrusr&urzjiz's CWh3UUiL* A Jumbo 43-67: JWr* torso 41-44* torso Mi moWora 37-41: CNICAOO SWTTSa. 800S .aaf°->va i m m MH , 9 Acarat 1 r®’ ibc i us 13 MVi »V* MV* + to 1 23V* 731* 2314 +-Vk 40 i! 8ft Sft Sftift QanSlac UO Gan Food* 3 0 Mill* 1.30 owf MW 4s fPrwi us OPiibSv .360 1 1Mb 1 3Mb 4 Mb IS 07 131 S 30 1 8w r £>■$ w wto sm nj*-w 3 3*1* 3Mb Ml* . 2 1*1* 141* 1M* + W H3MW »W- J* f 4M* 441* 441* - 1* 7 41 44*6 01 ..... 1 4Mb 4Mb 4Mb — 1* « 3 Ml* GPubUt U OTMASI JO G*aTk* JO M Fac lb Wi:« GtonAH JO* fib _ Mb f 1* in* tm nib + w Grace C* lb OrSjy to GranCt Ml Omoky s GW Fin JP GreyM I Mb Grama Ml OuH MAO t 3 33H 42 33 7 221b I 539b I S f »b > IMb 14 421* s 3 » 1Mb Mb ml AnkanCh _ Armnor mi ArmCk 1.30* AdilOM U0 AradOO 14* Atahto 1JW MWM LS S#.m BnP j M M M........ i « * « +W 19 Tito ”lb mb- ib 4 88ttJ8=8 1 }11b nib mb-M ?2 479* 471* 479b —9b 4 19** Ml* 10M — 9* 4 461* 46 461* + V* - w»B ■has... » Wlb Mb gib - M 1» Bm 8lb Mb —W 4 HU MM 141* J “ # Mi Ml M9b 119b + to Mb Mb ..... 239* 339* — ji MM 069* — M r r: 791* 791b — 9* » 30 ... 5Vb 'fib-lb 32** 32** 319* m*.... im mm...... 53** MM —M 369* IMb — 1* 321* 32**.. UM Mb...... 421* 42V*.. 49M SO + 1* M Wb....... Mbit + M — 1* RkMOII MS toyOut 1.73s 1*7*1 McB Ryder lyd (bd*.) MSI Law Lad 1 42** 42** 17 511* SI 1b i im tm 14 111b UM ffc 511* + M Ulb ..... UM — 1* 1 S ■ SatowySt 1.W StJos Load 3 StLSanF 1* MRmP MOL SanDlmp .331 (chontoy I Schoro ' Schick MW 13 M 33** f H 11 9 •tr SdM„. 5cottP*p SaabAL 1.60 taorak 1.40a Sanral ShallOII 1.30 iinWolr 1 (tosir 1.70 jmwi AO 1 imIHiK l.20a Mlo _ MM 3 419k 4Mb 5 1Mb Mb t 3M* 301* 11 Si* w 34 MM* 9VM I M H I 7 on..... 15 — v* 33** - W 11 + M 30 -M* 4596-1* IM* - V* 301* ..... Mb Mb — 1* 479* 3 + lb Mb M* + M Socony iopRtus m SouCalB 1JS SouthnC 1.7* SaiiNalO 3.20 IwPac 1.40 439* 43** 90V* Mb 3*1* 301* (Mb Ml* HoMf J*t HarcPdr ,73s Nora ijo Nawtott Pk Had f tod s Hamod iJS HomtLP .77 HiS* JS .40 hnsr c* m —H— 3^ Sparry Rand - S.’A 8» B»-» aSfT* ItaOIIInd lb iiOIINJ 3.75a Knd_Pm itauNOl Tjo StorlDrus 41 ShKtobaker Sun Oil tb lunruy 1.40 twin MS 3ft 309k 35M + 9b Si* 4IM ... 41 Vb — M 17M- U A A — * 421b 42*6 — 1b 43*4-43** —1* 111* 111* Mb Mb fi* +'ib IMb -1* ISCant MS t no Rand 3* nlandStl MS ffiLI bSIHarv MS M* (fib + M 779* 779* — M 441* Mb —lb 3SM 35*b — ** ■tm +i 5M* WM-M TannGao JS* tS$W.w Twsaw ji Tex Indrum TaxPLS JJs 2 171b 371* 10 32** 33Vb 3 SSM 559* 1 In* mt 4 36*4 36** * fl WM 47 n *0M I 2*9* pM 3 741* 74V* 1 UM 11M 20 42i/i 42V* 3 64V* 44 27 Ulb 749k 2 llM 11M 11 39M STM M Bk 10 46 7 69* 3 5Mb 50Vb 7 a** B* I 441* Si* —T— 4 SOM JMb V 70** 70 7 171* 57 If UM 339* 1 64** B J 341* >4 77*6-1* 6** - V* 4*** - 1* 419* f 9* 90V* + lb »!* + '* 40V* - lb Wib - M 391b + 1* 32Vb — Vb SSM .... 51M + 1* MM .... 41 + V* 20*b — 1* 309* + H 741* + 1* in* + \* 429* . a -i* 771b —V* 11M + to 3T9h 341b -Hlb Mb -. .. Si* — n 441* + i* iraniM . ujmiOi oorawra raw ewtora nJAV v**tora 35. mm rawiwi w mnrbW. - ■web b Has* n barradt an* fib* 15 raw* •Sri raw* WooSy. nW raoush to «W CNICAOO UVmtOCK c5S#*T UJ0-14JA uraotod oloiWnr owoo Stocks of Local Interest ovek TMS COWNTSR STOCKS IN taMrartno. RUQtatton* do nd naora TSswSrjw m traWns «n«i W Nw T Cora. .......••••?* Klatod Truck .......11 DicWir_ .........* w Unsbwraino i"ffiS?Saai a“)!v.'m and Cryotai rcora* ..............a" lira* Tuba'is*.' I ubw in# ............*■* delta Chemical . viiiiki gimrara noma, raw* or orvr-dend« In the tarawlns tabto ora annual dfaburramanta barad on the leaf quartarly ar. rarqj qnnufl daclaretton. Special or msm Tj extra dividend! or payment* not dotle- ESS** 2B«r *• tsontmos m m* to i lowing TvOTnOTwS, a—Alra sWra MUTUAL PUNM bfOASKBO Puns ......... Fund ...... Stock w*..........fl __ ______¥5..........fl maOrawlb K4 .......J.W iwntofk wf -••M Inveetori TfiNi TbWbSoy** iw OtaldiaW OoctoraS .w. SsT&Ss'tti RSOULAR ASirpnsira.inj .075 j, McKraran kabbbw J75 Q JSWSS&rr 8s. |8w 1WL Business Notes tonpm Realty A Building m W. Huron, has aa-mced appotatmeot of Dm adley, 181 IDtooil, la a sties iroecnttflrr tradlsy formerly was a lab toidan at Bddwto Rubber dtooo, where he was cm- *-Ato* wtos or wrfra*. b—Annual imjta NrabStvtoond. c—Llquldatlnq d vidd^. d-^Sdarai iw paid In IMS piui dock dMiind. o OacGraS ar paM to tarlhto jraar. MMkf In ataek durbw 1763, Mtlmafed cadi value on MHllyidmd or raw up. b Domras ar pws mil year, an MoamWanw Jraup wib divi-danSo to yrarao^a—Paid mto year, jni- S ml* year, Wvl- a,,,™ --------------- j no action wwi W tow dhrtdond moatlna. r—Doclerod or MlSbi 1754 pluo Hack dividend, t—n able In dock Swbw 1744. awimntad crah yawn on omiMsiM or ax-dlatrWlon a—Sato* In bst. dd—Called, x—lx dividend, y—Cx DM-1 (WM In Tull, x-diii—Ex dldribu- rand and gralnuiL ^i^<7d6wK-Iray XT—ix rlshto. xw—1Without war-rqnta. wra- Wim urarranto. wd—Whon dle-^d. wt—Whan Issued, nd Nad Soy m ns . Vi—m bankruptcy or racetverahlp or b*MS raarsanUad under Itw Bankruptcy {RMriffoaitS pooad bitaraW oquaHoatton lax. imm 3 40M 4S14 411* + i I Mb MM »*-' n Bm Bra 8m IKK mif i f w sm ■ +1 if I Hi ,fk ».3w -Wh ifa fc\Jr 81 li aHTfe w m ■rl 1743-64 Lrar 8. 7 88«T5l Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AF)—The crah petltton W bw traraury canipiras —--- prawns raw a mm ass.. 24 NO 104*6 104M - 4 8* S'* P + ft ! !§ is 1st* i 11 j:-;i It <79* 419b WM - lb 1 MM U M >b . _J.frWM5M7S.tt • A349.MATH71 Oapoalto Ftocol Yrar JWy I— 55,759440411.41 WJMJI1J1L41 wato PtoeW — 1,140.11 0L744.M1.1I6J4 64,136431 X .ratal Debt— 31L740.I07J06.67 ,306j*4,raun il Total AiMft- immtrr iMW.m4M.si MiiWM 3364,745,762 06 Sfi I op___________„ fubioct to WaMory limit. Rules Okayed in UAWy Management Agree on Procedure FLINT (AP)—Labor and management representatives agreed Thursday on ground rules for the two-day-old strike that has idled 19,000 workers in the Buick division of the General Motors Carp. Jack Wagner, president of United Auto Woricers Local 599, said that to a three-hour meeting company and union representatives agreed on procedure to be followed to paying the strikers for last week’s work and on the issuance of passes into the plant. dr Ur W Management reportedly assured the union that supervisory personnel would not do production work. The UAW then dropped its demand to inspect the plant during the strike. A series of meetings were to be held today to the various plants in which production standards disputes exist, Wayne sidd. The strike, which started Wednesday over production rates, affected 15,000 men at the Buick plant. Another 4,000 nonstriking workers were Idled at a Flint Fisher body plant because of a lade of supplies from Buick. Local 599 charged a “speedup” on the assembly line. Management denied the charge. ★ ★ ★ Meanwhile, United Auto Workers Vice President Leonard Woodcock claimed that the Michigan Employment Security Commission has told workers laid off in other GM plants that they are not eligible fpr unemployment benefits. Woodcock asked Gov. George Romney to carry out a pledge that the so-called Ford-Canton amendment would not penalize workers idled by a strike in which they had no interest The amendment, signed by Romney last year, prevents such workers from collecting jobless pay if they benefit from the strike at another plant owned by the same company. Woodcock said workers have been laid off at GM plants in Livonia and elsewhere because of the Flint strike. NEW TROY CENTER — Construction of a major regional shopping center, similar to the architect’s model above, will begin this summer at 14 Mile and John R, Troy. Offering more than 70 retail units and parking for some 7,500 cars, the complex will have the largest suburban Seara-Roebuck store in the country as its main drawing card. It is estimated to cost from $18- to $20-million, and scheduled to open to fall 1965. Pontiac School Affairs Board OKs Plans for Twain Addition First Airplane in U.S. Airlift Lands in Bonn FRANKFURT, Germany (*-The first plane in a new airlift exercise from toe United States arrived to Frankfort today from Turner Air Force Base to Georgia. The eperatku, called Leng Thrust IX, la part of a aeries ef exercises to improve America! ability to move troops by rapid air transport It is the first since tost fall’s “Big Lift” operation. A C135 jet transport brbught the first contingent of an infantry battalion for a tour of duty in Germany. The unit Is the 2nd Battalion (mechanized), 9th Infantry of the 2nd Infantry Division, previously stationed at Ft. Benning, Go. It replaces a unit flown back to the United States in October. Long Thrust IX will bring 900 troops in 12 flights at toe rate of about four a day. Big lift involved 235 flights and carried 15,278 troops and 493.3 tons of equipment from toe United States to Europe to less than three days. Grain Pricus CNICAOO (AP)— orm Tody WlMSt Mar ................. 1,22V*-** May...................tW-ilM J*l ............... ..... UM . 1ST.................. 1JJ 1.10 1JM19* IJO UM* May jut . 72V*-** 719* 679*46 09 1.53 1.34K-1* MM 1.471* SOW—JONES NOON AVMAMS ITOCK5 S Indy* B Ratti 16 Vtita lest « SmUt W Hlyhor________ 1* MOM lrojo roll* to PuWk *9M«ta ... I* iMMtriOH ....... ralli Preliminary plans for a five-classroom addition to Twain Elementary School were approved last night by the Pontiac school hoard. The board okayed the plans as presented by Harry M. Denyes Jr. Associates, lac., <18 Cammaatty National Bank Building. Estimated cost of the, addition is $139,696. * * * he understood the city was not against the program, but just didn’t have the funds to continue it. ★ * A School Supt. Dana P. Whit-mer said the school administration had the same view. He added that he did not want it to appear that anyone was attempting to influence the commission. The school 729 Linda Vista, will receive five new classrooms. Also, new toilet areas will Be constructed and the office area remodeled. TO BE LET Bids on the project are slated to be let April 7 with construction to begin at about the same time. The addttiea will be cea pleted by SepL 1. “Operation Waterproof,” a program to teach fourth-grade pupils to swim, was also approved last night. The swimming program will be set up on Saturday mornings at the two high school pools. INSTRUCTION PERIODS Fourth-grade youngsters will be offered eight one-hour instruction periods within ten weeks. Cost of toe program, which will get ander way March 7, it estimated at $6,C99, to handle 844 youngsters. About 1,900 children are eligible for toe swimming instruction. Plans call for the program to run for 30 Saturdays during next year. ★ ★ ★ Only one 10-week session is scheduled so far this school year. NOT SURE Each pupil may be charged a $7.96 fee, but school officials are not yet sure how the fee will be charged. Beard members questioned the leveling of the fee, stating ft might place a hardship an families with a number of children. In other business, the school board issued a policy statement on continuing a federal • supported practical nurses training program. The school district has directed the training of practical nurses under toe Manpower Development Act ENLISTED BACKING An advisory committee for the nurses program enlisted school board backing for continuing the program after it expires to June. Beard members agreed the program should be continued, bat emphasised It coaid not be flaaacM with school tax' revenues. In a similar action, the board offered moral support for the Youth Assistance' Department,; a joint project of tbe schools, the county juvenile oourt and the city. ★ * ★ The City Commission has proposed RUmtonting the program from its 1164 budget. DIRECTED LETTER George P. Caronto, program coordinator, directed a letter to the board pointing up tbe possible elimination of the youth program. Expressing the beard’s sea-’timeati, Monroe M. Osman stated that the program had deae a lot of good and bewdid net itoe to see it “go by the wayside.” However, Ip mentioned that shop will be under the auspices of a state university, and regular college graduate credit will be given the teachers that attend. OKAYED WORKSHOP The school board okayed a half-day workshop for all kindergarten teachers Jan. 22, giving their afternoon pupils the time off. The teachers will participate to a workshop on toe reading readiness phase of a new reading program for kindergarten pqdls. Plans for a community resources workshop in Pontiac were also supported by the school board tost night. The four-week summer work- BROADEN KNOWLEDGE Object of the workshop is to broaden the knowledge of teachers about their community and its resources, with emphasis on the industry and business resource. Whitmer said local industrial leaders had been contacted and seemed interested in the program. He said arrangements would coatiaae for the workshop. In other business, school board meeting dates for February were changed. The board will meet Feb. 6, instead of Feb. 13, because members will be at a national convention on the totter date. it It It The regular meeting on Feb. 27 was not changed. % • IMMIM By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “An acquaintance ef mine whose heart was failing had it restored to nearly normal functioning by having a tiny self-contained electronic timing center ‘built’ right into his body. This device appears to have exciting investment opportunitites for those companies who make them. Could you name one or two such companies and comment on their stocks?” H. B. A) Westinghouse is one maker, but its volume from tbe heart device is entirely insignificant in terms of total revenues. I do not recommend Westing-house, because toe company has shown no growth for the past decade and actually paid a higher dividend in 1954 than the current one. News in Brief Medtronic, Inc., is a s m a 11 firm which makes the Pace-maker, another implantable heart unit. The company has shown a good gain in earnings in the fiscal six months ended Oct. 30. The shares sell around 6, but they should be bought only where considerable risk can be assumed. ★ ★ ★ Q) “I am interested to getting income and growth. I have 200 shares Canadian Pacific which I am thinking ef switching into Central Soya yielding 6 per cent. Would yon suggest something else? I also own $19,090 Series E bonds. Should I convert these into stock or keep them?” L.G. Richard Beck, 2 S. Roselawn, told police yesterday that $150 in cash was stolen from his house. Two youths were apprehended later for questioning. Two microphone* valued at $50 were reported stolen yesterday from the New Bethel Baptist Church, 175 Branch. FTOd Archambeault, 3271 Llv-emois, Avon Township, told sheriff’s deputies yesterday that miscellaneous items valued at $200 were taken in a break-in at his house. Michigan State Trooper Michael J.. Anderson of Sparta has been assigned to the Pontiac post following his graduation Wednesday from recruit school in East Lansing. Public Sale: Private owner, mostly antique furniture, after < p.m. on TTiura., Fri., and all day Sat. 3089 Royal. Union Lake 363-8413. -adv. Shore Market Delicacies. Potato sausage 39c. John Steak 39c. Stuffed chops 69c. FE 4-2233. —adv. Lodge Calendar “Attention: Quadrant Low 12 Club. Annual meeting will be held Wednesday, Feb. 12, at 3 p.m. at Pontiac Lodge No. 21 Temple, lift East Lawrence 8t. Proposed By-Laws change and election of officers.” —adv. A) I am very much interested to see that you come up with a yield of 6 per cent from Central Soya by adding the value of toe usual 2 per cent annual stock dividend ip the cash payout. 1 believe you are right fy) thinking of switching your Canadian Pacific. Central Soya is a good income stock, especially if figured on your basis, but it is not a growth issue. If you want growth with somewhat less income, I suggest Standard Oil of New Jersey. * I would not switch E bonds into stock at this time. You would be subject to Federal income tax on total accruals, and you may be in a period of their maximum return. Mr. Spear cannot answer all mail personally but will answer all questions possible in his column. Write General Features Carp., 250 Park Ave., New York 17, N. Y. (Copyright 1984) Reach Agreement at Sterling Plant DETROIT IB — Agreement on a contract covering 138 employes at the Michigan Army Missile Plant to nearby Starling Township was announced yesterday by LTV-MIchigan division of Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc., and the United Auto Workers union. Spokesmen said the agreement, ratified by members of UAW Local 801, provides for wages ranging from $3.46 aa hour to H.71, depending on job classification. r, t 1 k! _ ___A •_____ ft lieItol