The Weather ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition YOL. 121 \ NO. 279 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1068—20 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS ONITEO PREM pTflRNATIONAL Chou Softens Chinese Stand on Coexistence Premier Says Peking Doesn't Believe That World War Certain PARIS HP) — Softening Peking’s strident tone, Premier Chou En-lai said last night Chinese Communists believe in peaceful coexistence with capitalism and don’t thinjc another world war is inevitable. In an interview broadcast by the French government television service Chou said the Unit-ed States'and not Red China is putting obstacles in the way of peaceful ooexistence — by its “hostile political policy in regard to China” and particularly its “occupation” of Formosa. “The Chinese people,” Chou said, “have friendly feelings toward the American people, bnt we oppose the policy of aggression and of war of the American government.” He repeated Peking’s perennial demand for withdrawal of American forces from Formosa and me Formosa Strait. ENDED VISIT The' interview was taped in Rabat, where Chou today ended a four-day visit to Morocco. He interrupted his African tour and flew to Albania, Peking’s chief ally in the bitter ideological dispute with the Soviet Union. After visiting there, Chou will return to Africa to tour Tunisia, Ghana, Mali, Guinea and possibly countries in East Africa. Chou also espoused peaceful coexistence In a joint communique with his Moroccan hosts.' ; , ‘ . ft „* * ft In neither the communique nor the interview did Red China’s premier explain how the peaceful coexistence Peking favors differs from the peaceful coexistence advocated by Soviet Premier Khrushchev, for which the Chinese have attacked the Soviet leader unceasingly. DECLINED TO ANSWER In the interview, Chou declined to answer a question about the Peking-Moscow conflict or to explain why Red China refused to sign the limited nuclear test-ban agreement. * ft * He claimed his government is “working toward the realization of peaceful coexistence with all the countries of the world, Including those of the Western camp.” I In Toddy's Press Good Oman West Is pleased about K h r u s h ch e v ’/g,f r i en d ly New Year’s message — PAGE.7. Confident Viet Reds view fifth year of war with assurance—PAGE 4. X-Wdy Patrols Mockle (cancels plan after ruling from attorney general — PAGE t. Area News ......... I Astrology ......... IS Bridge ............. IS Comics ........... IB Editorials ..... ... 6 Markets ...........,.14 Obituaries ..... . . II Sports ............. IS Theaters ........... I TV ft Radio Programs II Wilson, Earl ......II Women’s Pages .....1141 DEBRIS AT SCENE - Probers are shown checking the ruins of the disastrous Roosevelt Hotel fire in Jacksonville, Fla., today. The ballroom of the hotel is a clutter of broken^ furniture and ruined fixtures. The 22nd victim died of burns early this morning as investigators reported they believe they know the cause of the fire but will continue checking before making' the finding definite./' Happy, Rocky Expect Baby Governor Reveals June Arrival Date NEW YORK W—Gov. add Mrs. Nelson A. Rockefeller said today they are expecting the birth of a child in Jtine. The announcement was issued through the office of the governor, a candidate for the Republican nomination for president next year. It sfid simply: “Gov. and Mrs. Rockefeller today announced the expected arrival of a child in early June of 19M." ' fVW • ft .ft ■ The formal statement- came after The New York Post said a baby was expected and that it might be announced at the New Year’s Day open house at the executive mansion in Albany tomorrow. Rockefeller, 55, and his wife, Happy,” the former Mrs’. James Slater Murphy, 36, were married last May 4. The governor was divorced by Mrs. Mary Todhunter Clark Rockefeller last March II. \ l ft His second wife, a member of a socially prominent Phil-, adelphia family, divorced Murphy, a scientist employed by the Rockefeller Foundation, last April % The {governor’s divorce and remarriage created widespread comment on how his political careef and White House prospects might be affected. Rockefeller and his first wife had five children. One, Michael, died In a sea accident in 1961 while he was on an expedition In the South Pacific, shortly after his parents announced their divorce intentions. E. M. Estes Record Ponti The following year-end statement was issued today by E. ML Estes, Pontiac Motor Division general manager, who forecasts that Pontiac, the car, and Pontiac, the city, face a prosperous new year. “The year ahead should set a new record for the automobile industry gen-< erally, with Pontiac Motor Division contributing substantially to this advance. “An enlivened spirit of optimism concerning the general economic outlook has been" apparent in the past few months. “This most recent measure of increased economic activity combined with, continued consumer confidence, provide a sound springboard for a healthy outlook for 1964. “Industrial production, em: ployment, and personal incomes, especially in Pontiac, continue at high levels. This indicates, prosperity in the days ahead as well as public confidence that our. economy will move ahead. Warm Greeting Due New Year, Says Forecast Today’s Temperatures 4M| t, , So Fat, So Soon? Try New Press Diet It used totp* compliment when the mother-in-law whispered to her new dnughter, “My, you’ve certainly put the weight on my tittle boy.” ' ft ★ - ft,. , Now It’s >n indictment. Being overweight Is n health problem many young men are trying unsuccessfully to avoid. Beginning Thursday, The( Press will publish “The Thin Thirties Diet.” Mr 1 it / it 1 Food writer Gaynor Mad- ( dux discusses the following topics! Recent Graduates Face Fat Forties; The Junior Executive Waistline; Marriage Mokes You Fat; Wives Can Save Hearts;, Creeping Overweight, and Overworked and Undcrre-laxed. Watch for this diet series beginning Thursday. New Hompthire Fire Kills Three Children NASHUA, N.H. (AP) - An early morning fire in an apartment block today killed throe children and hospitalized eight persons. Authorities said the victims were the children of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Rlcard. They weren’t Identified furttietjf. Among those hospitalized with injuries were Mr. and Mrs. William Straw, one of their children, and two other unidentified families. THE FONT I AC PR&S9. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 81,1968 TWO BirmltiQHam Area News WJ: $51 Billion for Defense Budget take Makers by Bloomfield Over $1,000 Taken); Gunmen Fire.Shot BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The township yesterday filed suit in Oakland County Circuit Court' against a Farmington contractor and two township property owners who have been in the process of creating a lake lor about three years. Gunmen held up two markets and a drug store in Pontiac last night, escaping with a total of $1,015 and, in one case, firing a shot at two passing youths. Different* men were responsible for each of the three robberies, according to the de- He was convicted of soliciting an 18-year-old Pontiac girl to become a prostitute after she answered an ad for a waitress at his drive-in.. I While kick's license wifi not be renewed under his" name, a city official said that Nick has turned the business over to a sister, and she has already applied for a license to operate the restaurant. John F. GphI, the contractor; Fibranch Corp., owned by William J. Pnlte; and George D. Thomas. Circuit Court judge Frederick C. Ziem granted a temporary restraining order against what the township alleges is a peat mining and sales operation at the site at Winlane and Lahser in Cranbrook Hills. Targets of the bandits were R.-A. thug Store, 442 W. Huron; Poponea Market, 964 Mount Clemens; and Diny’s Food Market, 78 Lull. The three robberies were staged within an faour-and-15-minute period. Mrs. William Kukuk Service for Mrs. William (Agnus) Kukuk, 86, of 130 Hickory Grove, Bloomfield Hills, whs 10 a m. today at St. Hpgo of the Hills Catholic Church, with burial following in Mount Hope Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Kukuk died Saturday after a long illness. She was a member of the League of Catholic Women. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. John Koranda, Mrs. Joseph Hanley and Mrs. Raymond Roy; a son, John; a sister; 11 grandchildren; and 17 greatgrandchildren. Poponea Market suffered the worse toss, $825 to a lone bandit brandishing a small revolv- Ziem also scheduled a show-cause hearing for Monday on whether the restraining order should be made'a preliminary injunction "to last white the suit is pending. NUISANCE CHARGE The suit claims the peat oper-ations are a nuisance, violate die zoning ordinance and constitute a danger, especially to children, with excavations as deep as 40 feet. The project, said by the contractin’ to be a cleaning out of a peat bog for development of a three-acre lake, is in its third year. Township officials question whether a lake is actually planned. Negotiations have failed to resolve the problem, according to attorney Thomas J. Dillon Jr., who filed the suit for the township. An attorney for Peter Nick, owner of the Mars Coffee Shop,' 1393 S. Woodward, Birmingham, withdrew; his client's request to appeal the revocation of his restaurant license last night before dm City. Commission. Nick, 46, of 1404 11 Mile, Berkley, earlier in the day was sentenced Jo lMi to 20 Thomas Poponea, 2$, of 163 Mechanic, told police he-had closed the store at 10 p,m. and was leaving with his wife Julie, 23, and his brother Phillip, 17, when ^a man knocked on the door. the man polled a gun from jbds pocket and ordered him to go to the safe and open it. All three were then forced to the rear of the store. Poponea said he saw an “old and loud car”, drive away fast after the man fled out the door. 11 Omaha it if Atlwna 47 II Phoenix M 34 Btemerck 30 1 Pltteburgh 17 J Boeton If 13 Salt Lake C. 34 33 Chicago li S|. Prenclxo 37 47 cineinnetl It 4 i. 8. Merle 13 J k------ 14 " 71 EKtSAbe j rriciiei MueSigi Houghton 13 Inc he i Pglleton i Tempa 43 30 I Wetblngton 34 li lerquette tl Inchat NATIONAL WEATHER - Snow and snow flurrios are expected New Year’s Evo in the northern and central Plateau, the central Atlantic state* and, the esstern Lakes region. It will be colder In the middle and lower Mliilulppl Valley, the Tennessee Valley, the Gulf region and on the East Coast; warmer In the southern Plateau, too Plains, tha upper Missis-sippl Valley and tha western Lakes region. Son of Noted U.S. General SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Communist ground fire slightly wounded Brig. Gen. Joseph W. Stllwell and both American pilots of a helicopter over the Mekong River delta yesterday. h it ♦ A U.S. spokesman said Stil-wdll, 51, was hit In the neck by flying plastic when the bubble of the helicopter was shattered by guerrilla bullets a few miles south of Saigon. PILOTS HURT The pilots received similar wounds. All three were treated at the Saigon airport dispensary and returned to. duty. * Stillwell commands all U.S. Army support units In Viet Nam. He la the son of the late Gen. Joseph Vinegar Joe Stil-tfall. Stillwell’s helicopter was one of several roaming along a province searching for guerrillas. He said his helicopter flew 9V4 hours of assault missions yesterday and he couldn’t remember on what assault he was hit. Officials Glvti Up Hop# for Lost Spanish Ship MADRID, Spain (AP) r Officials have given up the 16,146-ton Spanish freighter Castillo da Montjulch and> Its craw of 37 forlost.» , The Ministry of Marine said it had abandoned the search for the ship110 days overdue op a trip from Boston with general cargo. But Work's Ahead Congress Goes Home WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress has, ended |to longest peacetime session with fair warning that when It returns to work to eight days It ^faces 'somd of the most difficult decisions which Uils or any congress Is likely, to be required to reach.” 4 ★ W Thus Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield tot his colleagues know U they didn’t at ready, that to* drawn-out 1963 solution of the 88th Congress was 'just a beginning.'' 1 ★ W Sr The battles over civil rights legislation and tax reduction had bean only . postponed and ■till lay ahead. Democratic leaders express confidence both measures will bs enacted. Adjournment Monday came as an anticlimax after the false •tarts, angry words and predawn sesslob during the holiday rush,when toe drive to close up shop waa blocked by the foreign aid appropriation bill. The Senate completed action on the battered $£bllllon measure Monday, including the prevision giving the President discretionary authority to approve government guarantees of credit for private commodity aalea to the Soviet bloc. With this out of the way tha Senate adjourned at 2:11 p.m. and the House made It official at 2:81 p.m. after a one-minute , It then became a time for yaanend stock jtoklng, of bab ending toe debits and credits oV the 1983 Congress which has been described by critics as a “do-nothing” Congress and by Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen as a “stop, look and listen” Congress. Its leaders rank its chief accomplishments—all gained after long struggles—as the ratifica- tion of the limited nuclear teat-ban treaty and enactment of three major education bills. EDUCATION bills Although nothing was dons to toe field of general aid for public grade arid high school caught up to a controversy over aid for parochial schools — Congress passed: 1. A $1.2 - billion college construction aid, bill, 2. A $1.56 . billion omnibus measure Increasing funds for. vocational education and orienb tog the program toward modern Job opportunities, extending impacted areas aid two yaara, and boosting student loan funds as psrt of a one-year extension 61 the national defense education act. 3. A $231 • million medical education bill containing grant funds to Mp build new schools and loan money for medical and Race Starts /fiidnight 1 sl-Baby Prize List Grows Gifts from 18 area business establishments await the Pontiac area’s first arrival of 1984. The First Baby contest Is slated to begin at the stroke of midnight tonight, with the winner to bo officially an-nonneed Friday evening. To be eligible to enter the contest, he or she must be bom after midnight to married parents who1 live to Oakland County north of 14-Mile Road. f 3(7. . ■ WJ 4r J The contestant with the earnest birth wifl win. ENTRY DEADLINE Entries must be submitted through the family doctor to the PjgattML Areg Chamber of (fHiice office in the Riker building by 5 p.m. Friday. They must contain the doctor’s statement listing exact time and date of birth, sex, name and weight .of the baby, together with the parents’ A group of local civic leaders will select the official winner. Last year’s winner checked in just 14 seconds past midnight. However, the average time posted by winners to past years has boon 15 to 39 minutes. Local merchants have donated generously to the bag of prizes awaiting the first baby and his .or her family. Contributors of prizes for baby are Waite’s Department Store, sweater, bonnet and booties; WKC, Inc., sliver baby cup; Consumers Discount Center, a jump'seat;/ The Pontiac Press, n $25 U.g/ Savings’Bond; Stepp’s Juvenile Bootery, pre-walker baby shoes; and K Mart, a baby walker. Mom will get flowers from Pearce Floral Cq, and Jacobsen’s Flowers, and slippers from Todfl’s Shoe Store. ' Dad will win a gift certificate for a free tire from Motor Mart Auto Parts and a free car wash and polish job from Pontiac Retail Store. Other contributors of prizes for the family are Gresham Cleaners, a $5 gift certificate; Blue Sky Drive-In, one month of free passes; Gee Coal and Oil Co., 199 gallons of heating oil; Green Parrot Restaurant, dinner for two; and $6 worth of dry cleaning from Voorheis Cleaners. Also contributing are IGA Food Stores, a case of Pet Milk; and Enggass Jewelry Co., silverware for baby. Before then such a development could vhot be built there because multiple residences were not mentioned to the zoning ordinance. NO SET SECTION While defining the multiple residence zone, the new ordinance does nob assign that designation to any particular section of town. ' apply for rezontog. a request must be ap-the City Planning the City Council. | The council can give its approval only after a public hearing. * » 1 / . ‘ City Manager Gordon B., Hunter said he will refer Smolder’s request to the City Council at its Jan. 7 meeting. The rezontog process, he said, should take Sbout 90 days. UNDER OPmUSl The 13 acres under option to Smokier are on either side of Cass Lake Road north of Cass Lake Front. The entire parcel is zoned residential. The only building on it is at Harbor Beach. Tentative plans call for 17 buildings, probably two-story, and parking for 219 cars. Smokier also proposes to build a private boat marina on Sylvan Lake for the entire development. Red Fire Hits pertor ty those to any other time to-our bistory in peacetime.” ★ ★ ★ The Joint Chiefs of Staff had no chance to speak for themselves. They will have an opportunity later before congressional appropriations committees. Johnson had said the joint Chiefs would have a chance at Monday’s meeting to appeal reductions in the amounts they originally recommended. WASN’T PURPOSE Defense Department sources said this wasn’t the purpose of the meeting at ail. Rather, they said, it was to let them discuss the total defense budget with the President, give their personal appraisals of its various parts, and especially provide an analysis of what the defense establishment would be like after the budget was presented to Congress and passed. These sources said it Was fair to say none of the services got all it wanted in the budget, but that it was fair to say also the Joint Chiefs are satisfied that the program the budget proposes will “adequately and properly defend our nation.” The billion - dollar reduction proposed in the budget for the 1965 fiscal year starting next July 1 is attributed mainly to a continued effort to cdt costs. Another factor is that the heaviest part of the expenditures for tiie nuclear - armed Polaris and Minuteman missile systems is past. Builder Asks for Rezoning Plans Keego Harbor Residence Complex The first multiple residence development proposed for Keego Harbor also would be one of tiie largest in the area. Bert L, Smokier and Co. of Southfield has picked property between Cass and Sylvan Lakes as the site for a 198-unit development. The firm, is the first to apply for rezontog, since Keego Harbor adopted a multiple residence ordinance Nov. 22. Grand Jury in Flint indicts-City Supplier Man Escapes in Crash IONIA Mr—, Richard Fenn, 37, of Hubbardston was thrown from his car here today but apparently escaped serious injury in a collision with a westbound Grand Trunk freight train. SINUS CONGESTION (MuMsiSkB tern TRUMAC TABLETS ielMl KM—«»»■■■ mil Its pm sib4Ism sag law v Cm MjM prspawiaii lilili «tW« mhiV* m 1) mm mminmv Hi 1 amp amir mmn smsto pgatotli. Tr,iag is Sn* W8BBSB -Main Floor JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP)~ President Johnson has decided to spend about $51 billion on defense next year. The big question today was how acceptable is this to the nation’s military commanders who had wanted a $60-biilion budget. * * ★ Johnson had a budget session Monday with the joint Chiefs of Staff, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and Deputy Secretary Roswell L. Gilpatric. McNamara had a chance to talk about it afterward. The top commanders of the armed forces didn’t, although the White House had billed them for a news conference. LOOSE ENDS McNamara told reporters all the loose ends aren’t pulled together yet, but that the new defense budget will be about $51 billion—a billion Iras than th,e spending estimate for the present fiscal year ending June 39. “This $l-biilion savings,” he said, “can be made without to any way reducing the defenses of this nation. As a matter of fact, I believe that the budget that will be submitted to the Congress Will yield defenses su- When ha appeared they produced the gun and then took money from the cash register and safe. ★ ★ ,/, ★ At 16:59 p.m. two men with 4 sawed-off shotgun entered Diny’s Market and ordered to* wife of the owner, Mrs. Marian Tzineff, 42, of 1459 W. Square Lake, Bloomfield Township, her son, Steve, and another employe Macon Fad, 15, of 378 Branch, to rest their heads on the counter. EMPTIED CONTENTS After emptying the contents from the cash register, about $59, and taking a 32-caliber pistol from udder the counter, they herded the three tote the basement. Two youths, David J. McClendon, II, of 72, Lull, and David Jones, II, of 391 Wesson, were outside tiie store when tiie gunmen fled. Just before the gunmen rounded a building at Wesson and Crawford, one of them turned anichjlred a shot at,the teenagers. Both men wore cold-weather hoods over their faces, police w6re told. Antitax Petitions Rejected by State LANSING mBotrd of State Caavassers, acting on the basis of an attorney gonaral’a opinion, today rejected anti-city Income tax petitions submitted by the Vigilance Tpt Committee. On • M vote, tbs board nriodoome 19,919 of tea 24ft,-199 names on tee documents were Invalid became they were collected too early, Disappointed leaders of the commute* Mid tiMty would consider an appeal to tea Stele Supreme Court. Bet they admitted it was tea ■Mat severe blow yet to tfeetr campaign against local, Income taxes. Studebaker Sales Show Rise in U. S. SOUTH BEND (AP) - Studebaker automobile sales have been increasing despite the decision to abandon production to the United States, a company official said Monday. ( 1 ★ ' Gordon E. Grundy, president of Studebaker Coro’s automotive division, said U.S. dealers sold 1,458 new Studebakers to the second 10-day sales period in December. That topped the 1,240 sold during the first 10 days of December, he said, and also was higher than many 10-day sales figures in the last year. A Flint one-man grand jury indicted Samuel Catsman, a supplier for public improvement projects in Flint, and Pontiac, for allegedly obtaining money from the city of Flint "under false pretenses. Genesee County Circuit Court Judge Deni D. Parker,' the grand juror, returned the indictment charging Catsman with obtaining $33,999 from the City under false pretenses in a land deal. His hearing waft set for Jan. 9. Catsman Was released after furnishing $1,000 bond. FOR PUMP STATION The, charge involves land purchased for a pumping station north of Port Huron to Flint’s Lake Huron water supply project. Clande O. Darby Sr., a pitot real estate agent, had formerly faced the same charge until Judge Parker granted him immunity from prosecution several weeks ago. Darby was the city’s special agent appointed to purchaM land for the project by Pontiac City Manager Robert A. Carter white Carter was Flint city manager, a post he held until March 1,1903. The' indictment charges that the 'Alleged fraud was commuted to January 1962. < PROBE GOES ON Carter has been called to testify three times since the grand jury probe; opened Dec, 6. The investigation is continuing with sessions slated to resume Thursday morning. Catsman formerly owned a Pontiac concrete supply firm, which he sold two yean ago. He has been a major jmpplier for several Flint projects including the water supply program. Hte enterprises include Cate-man Realty Co. The probe was ordered to In- See Staeb . Entering Race on Saturday TRICKY CRASH LANDING — Two men escaped Injury yesterday when their stalled plane landed on. the tee of Detroit Rivei* after passing under Ambassador Bridge. The plane was flown by Air Force 2nd Lt. George H- Lyddane, 23, of White Plains, N.Y. Passenger was Joseph Kerwin, 23, of Warren. ! * v"1 \ (Continued From Page Ond) tion of the 5th Air Force’s B57 wing, last of the big bombers still operational in the U.S. Air Force. The 5th Air Force, with headquarters at Fuchu Air Base outside of Tokyo, Is the bulwark of ILS. air strength to Japan. , # > -ir' * The job of the big bombers will be taken over by FlOSa, high - speed fighter - bombers capable of delivering nuclear weapons: Three squadrons of FlOSs were recently assigned to Japan, although no nuclear weapons are believed stationed 'to the country. The reductions also will Include withdrawal of F100 squadrons from Misawa Air Force Base to northern Japan, but these planes will be replaced on a rotation basis by Tactical Air Command fighters from other U,S. bases around the world to avoid a gap to northern Japan’s air defenses. While the 024 squadron is expected back to the United States by next fall, no timetable has been set for the. other reductions. Among the reasons cited for the withdrawal is the disenchantment of top U.S. military men with Japan as a reliable base for U-S. military operations to Asia. This stems from Japanese protests over deployment of Japan-based U.S. forces to Asian trouble spots. * The reduction is also part pf a swing toward relying more on air-lifted mobile groups, whose effectiveness has beenv demonstrated to recent exercises, and on U.S. forces on Okinawa, a U.S. - administered island 350 miles south of Japan. WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Neil Staebler, D-Mlch., is expected to announce Saturday as a candidate for governor of Michigan. ; , Staebler has scheduled a news conference for 9:30 a.m. Saturday at the Sheratoo-Cadll-lac Hotel in Detroit, presumabr ly for the formal unveiling of his candidacy for his party’s nomination to tiie 1964 primary. ★ , ★ #1 " Gov.. George Romney, Michigan’s first GOP governor in 14 years, is expected to be the Republican nominee. Staebler’s path was eased considerably last week when former Gov. John B. Swatoson, Democrat, announced he will not seek the office next year. EASES WAY Staebler, a first term congressman - at - large, jprobably would have made the race anyway. But the withdrawal of Swatoson eased the possibility of a sharp split to the Democratic Party to the state. Staebler, as Michigan’s Democratic national committeeman, has had long experience to state and national political affairs. ★ w ♦ Even before the 1980 Democratic National Convention, Staebler was to the forefront of the Michigan forces backing John F. Kennedy for the presidential nomination, The ballots are for persons who are unable to go to the polls Election Day or who will be out of the city. ★ * ★ "" A proposed charter amendment which would change the method of electing city commissioners at the April municipal election every two years will be put to a vote of the public Jan. 13, VOTE FOR SEVEN The amendment proposes that electors be allowed to vote for seven commission candidates, one from each district, instead of one Candidate from the voter’s own district. # * f.i Candidates would continue to be nominated by district at the March primary as they are now. THE-PONT!AC PRESS, DECEMBER 31, 1968 f Pontiac Welcomes The First Baby Wni; with : To make your arrival a happier. occasion the merchants whose names are listed on this page have a host'of gifts for you, your dad and your mother. May you continue to 1 enjoy the same good fortune that makes you the recipient of all Ki these wonderful gifts, may \\ \ you enjoygood health and a \V\ \ long life of happiness. The Merchants Listed Below Are Giving These Gifts to the First Baby IGA FOOD StORES TODD’S 20 W. HURON Daniel Oreen Slippers for Mom 70 N.tAQINAW Sweater, Bonnet and Booties FEADCE .FLORAL CO. 559 ORCHARD LAKE AVI. Flowers for the Mother, at Hospital GRESHAM GLEANERS 80S OAKLAND $5.00 Gift Certificate WKC 144 N. S40INAW Silver Baby Cop BLUE SKY THEATRE 1154 N. OPDYKE 1 Months Free Passes GREER PARROT 1650 N. PERRY Certificate "Dinner for 2" CONSUMERS DIS00URT OERTER . Ill N. SAQ1NAW ( Casco Jump Seat JACOBSONS FLOWERS 101 N. SAGINAW ST. Flowers for Mother at Home MOTOR MART AUTO PARTS 111 E. MONTCALM , Free Tire Gjlft Certificate $5 Dry Cleanihg for Dad or Mom REE COAL AHD OIL CO. , 41UKIIT. n Mil) 100 Gallons New Mebijlheat Fowl Oil ENGGASS JEWELRY 00. 28 North Saginaw St., Pontleo Baby's First Ring PONTIAC PRESS 125 Savings Bond K-mirt Perry and N. Paddock at Qlanwood Plata Baby Walker THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER'S!, 1968 FOtR Park Designer pit* SAN DIEGO, Calif, (AP) — John C. Ray, ^internationally known designer of exhibitions 'V-iet Reds Confident as 5 Year of War Ends altogether, leaving it as a free bombing zone for the air force. ; The new policy is retrench* ment and consolation. MORE CARE “Diem bit off more than he could chew. We’ve got to do things more carefully,” a Viet* namese officer said. By MALCOLM W. BROWNE SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP)-Aa South Viet Nam aids its fifth exhausting year of war, Communist guerrillas are nailing gaily printed posters to trees almost in the outskirts of the capital, claiming that final Communist victory is near. Sashing Viet Corig attacks against hamlets and outposts have increased several - fold in the part two months. Viet Cong control has pushed relentlessly into Mekong River delta provinces close to Saigon. mountainous central highlands was cut dramatically ahd Viet Cong attacks diminished. But in the Mekong delta, where nearly half the nation’s population lives, the situation got worse. STEP UP AI D American . participation was stepped up. U.S. spending rose ijo more than $600 million annually. The number of American servicemen here , climbed past 17,000. American casualties increased, too. U.S. combat dead in Viet Nam now number 87. have been far less effective than hpped. Hamlets in many predominantly Communist areas are being abandoned as indefensible. - tration of Communist-made weapons and ammunition from outside South Viet Nam has been 'increasing. In recent months, important stocks of Chinese Comunist arms have been turning up in Delta prov- 1 FOR THE FIRST ft* BABY OF 1964 r We Are Giving a CASCO Folding-Convertible Jumper O It’s a Jumper! O It*8 a Recliner! O Folds Flat too! pot Initiative. Military leaders believe fighting morale has improved, and there’ are high hopes things will go better from now on. Many officials believe government forces may prill out of the southernmost tip of Viet Nam If State Meets U. S. Requirements County Could Get $255,000 ADC-U costs in horne t He also noted that relief allot* I U.S. surplus food issuance hasn’t heat dnd elec- ments for food have remained I entirely counterbalanced rising lliams. ’ [unchanged since 1988, and that'food costs since. Pontiac j 1 I ; i i A military coup Nov. 1 ended the Ngo Dinh Diem regime. Since then the Viet Cong has been attacking hamlets and put-posts at the rate of' about 100 a week. Total casualties for this year on both sides probably have been around 50,000—nearly twice as many as in 1962. Yet the Viet Cong is lighting with apparently undiminished strength. LEARN truth : “The most encouraging thing right now,” a high - ranking American officer said,; “is that the top people seem to have stopped sweeping the ugly facts under the rug and are trying to come to grips with realities, "Under the Diem regime an awful lot of cheerful lies were handed out in the form of phony statistics. A lot ( of these lies went straight to ( Washington. I think Washington now is beginning to realize where things “Personally, I don’t think the war is going much worse than ever. It’s Just being reported toon honestly.” Official American estimates of wir progress here have been less optimistic with each year. GU8T BANDITS’ ) In 1958, the commander of the ' U.S. military advisory group here told a congressional committee he regarded the Viet Colpg as merely a scattering of bandits that a few additional terrltarifl, regiments could mop up easily. By 1961, the situation had become so serious the Saigon government was alarmed and I1 called for American help. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, then special * presidential assistant, looked the situation over and concluded that things had reached the critical point. , » !UV, # ' U.S. advisory and supporting troops beg^n pouring in, along with economic and military aid. In December 1961, Jtormer U.S. Ambassador Frederick E. Noltlng said mens was “wind in the sails of America’s aid program.’’ He seemed confident of early victory. WAR WENT ON The year dragged on, the war grew more intense, American helicopters began flying Vietnamese troops into battle, and IS.-000 U.S. servicemen arrived, Twenty • two of them died in combat in 1969.' r As 1962 ended, estimates of b confident bpt more The Saigon government and its American ally began a crash program for building "strategic hamlets,” self - sufficient com-*900011168 capable of protecting themselves against the Viet Cong. Last January the government announced that 39 per cent of the population was living in the hamlets and the .program would be nearly finished by the end of the year. Communist strength In the ine Uiem regime ueccuiie all increasingly oppressive dictatorship as it sought to extend control over -the nation. Official! and army officers were left with decreasing authority. Secret police ruled cities and towns. Former admirers of Diem became bitterly disillusioned. i The insurrection of Buddhist monks that began in May ignited general rebellion. The end came when Diem’s hand-picked generals turned against him and crushed him. : In two months of military rule the fortunes of war for Saigon have not improved: Provincial administration still is badly confused. MORE TIME “I think it will take at least three months more for things to get shaken down,” an American official says as the year ends. The well-advertised strategic hamlet program turns out to Hospital Releases Collision Victim ; Floyd Collins, 56, of 1117 Gid-dings has been released from St Joseph Mercy Hospital after suffering injuries in a head-on crash at Petty and East Boulevard recently. Collins was driving south on Perry when his car and one driven by John Soule, 22, of 2148 E. Woodelm, Rochester, collided. Soulfe’s car was traveling north on Perry and Collin’s auto was turning left to East Boulevard when the accident oo cut-red. A previous article was In' error in details of the crash. State Counties to Get More U. S. Funds for Roads LANSING (AP) - Except for Delta County, rill Michigan counties will get more federal matching funds for secondary road construction next fiscal year than'they are getting in the current year, Highway Commissioner John Mackle said. Michigan will have nearly $8.5 million in federal fundi for secondary roads -: an Increase of about $135,999—ar\d will keep $3.1 million for the state secondary system. The top courity Increase is a $16,000 jump for Wayne County. The other - counties’ increases range down to a few dollars, and Delta County’s allocation will drop abbut $1100, to $60,000 Mackie said. By DICK HANSON Oakland County would receive about $255,000 annually in, federal aid for dependent children of the unemployed (ADC-U) if state legislation is brought into line with federal requirements, next year, County Welfare'Director George Williams said this amount would be paid to some 160 welfare cases now proyided for by the county, which would qualify for ADC-U. y He said the number of cases was based on the present relfef load. Actually, the amount of federal aid would climb rapidly in the event of an economic id the ADC-U bill pa the slate legislature last spring been accepted by the U.S. Department of Health, ““ ucation and Welfare, Oakland County would have received about $150,000 tor between 65 and 70 cases, said Williams. FEDERAL BACKING The federal agency supported State Attorney General Frank Kelley’s opinion that the bill was discriminatory because it would limit ADC-U payments to those families who have been eligible tor unemployment compensation since Jan. l, 1958. The compromise bill resulted when rural districts in the state objected. A major stumbling block was the federal requirement that funds be administered by county or state employes on a merit system. Most of the rural welfare em-j ployes do not come under a merit system b|it are political appointees. SOUGHT BY DETROIT adc-u in M l c h 1 g a n was sought mainly by Detroit, which would receive several million dollars from the federal government for relief. The funds would greatly relieve the financially strapped city, according to its mayor, Jerome Cavanagb. Without federal funds, the local communities must pay 79 per cent of ail welfare relief costs, while the state pays 30 per cent. According to Williams, $255, 000 in ADC-U next year wouldn't, save the county any money. He feels, the .welfare relief budget for 1964 has. been underestimated by approximately that amount. SET BUDGET The County Board of Supervisors set the relief budget at $1.6 million. * An appropriation of $1.9 million had been requested by the welfare department. The difference Will be needed A Pair of Comfy Slipped '. v' TO THE MOTHER of the First Baby of the Year “Shoes for the Entire Family* FE 2-3821 20 ^EST HURON STREET to meet i______., utilities such i t • g a mm of MOBIIHEAT foi Summertime Comfort Mil Winter hip Start Iw Hew Year Omaiiai Da Bit... Whether yeu have a five-room or a five-bedroom home, you’ll appreciate the coxy warmth of cleaner burning New Mobllheat and the DEPENDABLE SERVICE of Gee, Pontiac’s foremost fual distributer for the past 38 yearii The entire personnel (from owner to maintenance crew) at Gee’s Is ma.de up entirely of Pontiac and Oakland County residents, people well acquainted with the changeable climate In this area. Experienced fuel experts who know just how important DEPENDABLE SERVICE Is to the warmth apd comfort of your home. Gee's fleet of new, modem GAAC trucks are meter-equipped for accuracy and radio-dlipatchod to give faster, better service. The modem "degree day" method used In determining |ust theqmount of fuel ail yeu need assures you of never being without sufficient NEW MOBILHEAT FURNACE OIL No Matter Where You Live • •. bitttr quality fual all In yaur • ■ —r ^ mam THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1963 FIVE Candidates File in 4 Area Villages Candidates for office in four of the Oakland (County area’s 20 villages filed nominating petitions by yesterday’s 4 p. m. deadline. As a result of the unofficial filings; primary elections will be held in two communities Feb. 17 and none in. the other two. In Oxford and Romeo the field will be narrowed in the February balloting, while in Lake Orion and Holly, voters will pick their choices in the March 9 general election. if k * Following is a roundup of candidates, their political affiliations and the terms pf office they seek: f Holly Veteran Clerk George Patterson and Trustee Allan Kerton are bowing out of village politics- When the C i t 11 e n s Party candidates filed their nominating petitions yesterday, Patjterson and Kerton were not among them. Mrs. Betty Oliver of 113 Cog-shall, deputy clerk for 1 % years, is seeking the clerk’d post. Filing for the two-year Village Council term was John Ramm of 901E. Maple. ★ * * No primary will be necessary In the village which has seen no other party active for several years.. INCUMBENTS FILING Incumbents filing petitions for the chance to retain their offices are P r e s i d e n't John Oldani, Treasurer Rulda Anderson, Assessor Grant Hulet and Trustees John VanDeusen and Leo Oberheim. Oxford , 1 Eight candidates met yesterday’s petition deadline here including the three council incumbents whose terms are expiring. (President Allen E. Valentine will he after his fifth term ort the council and incumbent trustees Lionel J. Kamm and E. Wayne Converse also will, seek reelection. Vying with them in the Feb. 17 primary, which is necessary because more than two have filed for each office, will be five Others who collected the minimum of 25 signatures. They are F. Ray Forman, 36 Dennison; John C. Flumerfelt, 47 N. Washington; Homer Higfat, 97 Dennison; James Sciiaible, 97 Pontiac; and Mrs. Grace Smith, 71 Pontiac. THREE TERMS UP Up for grabs are a pair of two-year terms on the council and a one-year term in nonpartisan balloting. The two receiving most votes in the March 9 general elec- Milford to Air Thoroughfare Plan Proposal MILFORD — A proposed thoroughfare plan for the village will be aired at a public hearing before the planning commission Thursday night. Prlniary concern of the plan at tills stage of Its development Is With rights-of-way. Slated to be designated as major thoroughfares with 86-foot rights-of-way are Milford, Commerce, General Motors, West Huron and North Milford roads. ) ★ w Sr ■ Serving as “collector” streets with 66-foot rights-of-way would be First, north of Summit; Main, south of Huron; Martin-dale; Oakland to Old Plank; Old Plank; Peters, and Summit. Tonight’s hearing is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the Village .Couhpil chambers. tion will receive the two-year terms, while the third-place winner will serve for one year, Lake Orion { After four consecutive years in. office, Village President Irvine J. Unger has decided to step out of the. political spotlight. .- \( ' - , Also choosing not to ran Is Village Assessor j^frs. Geraldine Storey. Unger said he was leaving the post to have more time to en-joy.his retirement. \ ;>|r ; : Filing petitions to vie for a one-year term as president yesterday were Council Trustee William V.’Shoup, on the village Party ticket, and Citizens Party iheniber James Norton, 403 N. Shore. UNOPPOSED Mrs: Mary Parkinson (C) is' unopposed for hto* 20th year-long term-as clerk as is Mrs. Ger-aldine J. Campbell (C) for the HOLIDAY VILLAGE - Mrs. Edna Scafe of 220 N. Johnson, Pontiac, admires the enchanting village which her daughter constructed of frosting for her. Mrs. Daniel Reardon of 3522 Green Lake, West Bloomfield Township, said the month-long project calls for seven pounds of sugar and a dozen eggs. The Afoot village contains a church, six houses, numerous trees, a child on a sled and skaters. Mrs. Reardon added white tapers to complete the decorative effect. In Royal Oak Township Order Blocks Appointees From Offices ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP -Trustee Aubrey Dunn Was absent last week when three fellow officials took action to fill vacancies ■ on, the * Township Board and hirfe a new housing and urban renewal director. Yesterday, Dunn took some 1 action of his own — in Oakland County Circuit Court. Judge Stanton G. Dondero signed a temporary restraining order preventing the new appointees — Marshall Taylor, James McCree and James Streeter — from taking office. ★ ★ k Dondero also scheduled a show cause hearing for Monday to determine whether the restraining' order should' be made a preliminary injunction to take effect until a final decision is made in Dunn’s suit against the appointments. SPECIAL MEETING Dunn claims . the appointments were Invalid because District Plans Dinner LAPEER — The annual dinner meeting of the Lapeer C o u n t y Soil Conservation District will be held Jan. 16 in the County Center Building. Walled lake Senior Wins DAR Award WAILED LAKE — Sharon I Trail, recently was chosen Cox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. walled Lake High School’s DAR G. Ivan Cox of 483 S. Pontiac I ^ Clt|zen The 16-year-old contest Is for senior girls In public schools. Qualities of good citizenship as defined by the DAR are dependability, service, leadership and patriotism. Sharon is vice president of the Student Council. Her other extracurricular activities Include the Girls’ Adriatic Association, French dub, National Honor Society, Pep Chib and Skltamard, the dramatics dub. ' Z * ★ k /. * % She Also Is a member ,of Wailed Lake Methodist Churqh. BAVERAGE ’ ;, Sharon la enrolled In.a college preparatory course and maintains a B scholastic average. She plans to attend Albion College after graduation. SHARON COX they were made at a “special meeting” attended bly only three members of the Township Board, and the law requires a quorum of four. Supervisor Edward L. Kennedy, Treasurer Frank Miles and Trustee Samuel Woodard appointed Taylor and McCree to the Township Board and named Streeter housing and urban renewal director. All six were named as defendants in Dunn’s suit along with Township Clerk Mrs. Artie Qtay, who,.like Dunn, was absent from the Dec. 24 meeting at which the appointments were made. • ★ ★ . ★ , Taylor jwas toi replace Ernest Wilson, who is awaiting sentence in Circuit Court for extortion. McCree was picked to fill toe post vacated by. the resignation of W. C. Chambliss, who moved to Detroit. FORMERLY HELD The man who formerly held the housing and urban renewal post,'Jeffrey Teamer, was fired two weeks ago over toe dissenting votes .of Dunn and. Mrs. Gray. * * k Kennedy, Miles and Woodard are the targets of a recall move by a group of residents. The temporary restraining order prevents township officials from paying Streeter as will as from administering the oath of office to the three appointees. , VVle&to, Ring In the new, but not before we extend heartfelt greetings and thanks to these It Is our privilege and pleasure to serve. MAY YOU HAVI HAPPINESS, HEALTH AND PROSPERITY DONALDSON LUMBER CO. ‘ 378 K CA«H * ; PONTIAC treasurer’s slot. Mrs. Myrfe Longpre, 234 E. Shadbolt, was the only can-didate to file for' the assessor’s job to r e p I a c e Mrs. Storey. Both are members of toe Citizens Party. Races are promised for the. three two-year terms open on the council. ★ yf ★ Viljage Party incumbents Lewie Rossman and Fred C. Cole are after reelection. Also on their ticket is Robert D. Stokes, 321 Lake, seeking the position Shoup is vacating to run for president. OPPOSING THEM Opposing them for the three .council slots are Citizens Party members David A. Donnelly, 14 N: Broadway; Edward Bretz-laff, 441 N. Shore and Larry Marlin, 460 Bellevue. No primary will be necessary here because only one candidate from each party filed Abminat-ing petitions. Romeo Because two Republican candidates filed for the clerk’s post, a primary electino will be held Feb. 17 in Romeo. Vying for the position being vacated by Mrs. Dorothy Carl will be Norman Engel, 131 Titifon, and Mrs. Phyllis Mellen, 254 E. St. Clair. They were among the 10 candidates who filed nominating pe-titions for local offices by yesterday’s 4 p.m. deadline. ■ 'k ..k' k ■"" Three filed foi1 the three two-year terms open on the council including incumbents Tony Ga-lan and Jack McFadden. T h e third inctimbent1 is Engel who is seeking toe clerk’s post. THIRD CANDIDATE The tirird candidate who filed for a trustee vacancy is Martin Durham, 275 Benjamin. He is the sole Democrat on the otherwise all-Republican slate. Village President Wayne'* N, Black has turned in his petitions for a fourth term and Mrs. Elaine Hosner for, her seventh term as treasurer. Fred Ebeling is running for assessor, the post to which he was appointed after the recent death of Elgin Anger Sr. Library loard members Edgar Priest and Thomas J. Scjiultz also filed for re-election. ft Progress Seen on Troy Sewer System on Schedule, Commission Told ...TROY — County officials last night informed L-the City Commission that work on the proposed city wide sanitary sewer system here is “proceeding as planned,” and right on schedule. -&■ ' The commission was brought up to date on the progress by County Department of Public Works Director R. J. Alexander and dep-, uty Donald W. Ringler, along with the city’s consulting engineers, Pate, Hirn and Bogue Of Detroit. . The county DPW officials, who are heading construction of the |3.3-million systeAi, told commissioners that no major change^ in the schedule have been made, and the Nov. 24 completion date still stands. „ *v ^*■' Presently, 117 of the 216 necessary easements* have been acquired. Other affected property owners will be contacted as the engineers’ plans progress. An additional report will be given to the commission some time next month. k ' k k Last night,1 the City Commission also gave permission to construct a gas station at Rochester Road and Owendale, and scheduled a special meeting for Monday. 1 • , Blaze in Detroit Home Injures 15 Firemen DETROIT (AP) - Fifteen firemen were injured Monday in a home attic* blaze on Detroit’s Northwest Side. Two of the firemen remained hospitalized today for observation. Fire department, officials said most of the men suffered facial bums from blasts of heat when they opened an attic door and were caught in a sudden back draft. DETROIT (AP) - Measured by unemployment statistics, 1963 was Michigan’s best year since 1956, When the Michigan Employment Security Commission began its current series of records. ★ k k The commission said, the monthly unemployment average dipped to 154,000 as the state’s economy, paced by the second straight boom year in auto production, continued to move upward. 1 ... . ★ ★ ★ ..?•*%• The best month was November, w h e n unemployment dropped to an estimated 101,000. December employment reached ‘,742,500—or nearly 117,000 tnore than at the beginning of the year. I-YEAR HIGH Non farm employment this rear averaged 2,666,000, the righest in three years, the MESC said. J:;'jz - -it •: ★ ; Manufacturing cont r i b u te d most to the increasing number of jobs, the ..commission^ said. In that field, employment rose by 24,000—or 2.6 per cent—during, the year. Private nonmanufac-' turing employment Was up 22,-400—or 2.1 per cent—and government employment climbed by 12,400—or 3.6 per cent. ★ ★ # Motor vehicles and equipment led growth industries, with an employment increase of 20,400— Imlay's Muck Day Set 1MLAY CITY - The annual Muck Day program is scheduled for Jan. 14 at the American Legion building here. The all-day event will feature talks on new vegetable varieties, soil management, irrigation a n d farm labor. The University of Michigan was the first in toe United States to offer g summer Institute on toermo-nuclear fusion sponsored by the Atomic Energy sored by, the Atomic Energy Commission, in 1960. 2300 1 TEN MILL Hri: Duly J10, Sun,104 ■63 State Jobless Rate Is Lowest Sin or 6.4 per cent. Services came second, showing a gain of 12£00. The decline of large-scale labor disputes contributed i.to economic growth, the MESC said. Be modern with MOEN BAKER and HANSEN Insuranc# Company INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- HOMEOWNER* PACKAGE POLICY A SPECIALTY Phone FE 4-1668 TH COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLD0. PONTIAC i CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY ROPER CLOSE-OUT SALE YES, WE HAVE "A FEW PRIOR-YEAR. ROPER GAS RANGES LEFT AT BIG SAVINGS. SEE THEM SOON! LOW PRICES Special Trade-la Allowances BUY NOW AN0 SAVE ON A PRIOR-YEAR ROPER GAS RANGE! CALL 933-7812 CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY iillK THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1963 tie* President end John W, Pmotmo Advertising Director U.N. to Force Reds t6 Pay Overdue Bill? On Wednesday, the United Nations again assesses the payment of its more than a hundred members.' The • charter says that anyone that drops two years back can be suspended until the bill is paid. The instrument also stipulates that the U.N. can forgivfe temporary lapses because of unusual hardships or Situations which the parent body deems sufficiently worthy of recognition. One of the culprits is Russia. That may not occasion any great amount of surprise but a current remark of Apui Stevenson's does. He allows as ho^r Russia ought to be booted out if she doesn't pay her share. About 185 million Americans have had that idea from the start, but Adlai was one of the few that preached softness, forgiveness and turning the other cheek. ★ ★ ★ ess that their interest in public affairs has waned.’’ ." ★ : . ' ★' t Objectors assert that the more youthful voters would lack independence of thought, would have too immature a viewpoint toward’important issues of the day and would likely “vote as their fathers vote;” This, say the skeptifs, while increasing the total votes -cast would not materially change the outcome of elections. ★ ★ ★ Lowering the voter -eligibility age has become a recurring issue. It is a many-sided abstract question for which no objection has come forth. About the only concrete postulation that has emerged is that if 1‘8-year-olds are mature , enough to be called in for defense of their country, they’re equally qualified to have a voice in how ft is being run. No Raise Lik Is ft possiblcl' we’re going to compel Ruspia to pay her bills or kick her out? Is it possible pur emissaries are coming to life? The Press refuses lo believe any of these glorious realities will come to pass until they happen. All too often Russia squirms her slippery, slimy way Ground our do-gooders. New Output Records End Year at Pontiac As the year bows out Pontiac Motor Division continues its fast pace by establishing two new records. The entire Pontiac area is fortunate in having this progressive OM plant and the recor^jthey have sit throughout the year are simply stupendous. The 600,000th car Assembled: recently represented the most Pon-tiacs ever produced in a calendar year—and ditto in a model year. Records, however, do not just set themselves. Back of it are unfailingly a gifted and inspirational directing head, an able and dedicated staff, a loyal and efficient work fo^ce —> all combining to create a superior product. ★ ★ ★ The Pontiac iMotor Division can well lay claim to all four prerequisites—starting with Gen. Manager E. M. (Pete) Estes. We have great community pride in this unbeatable composite-rand as tangible evidence of it, 40 per cent of all new car registrations in the City are Pontiacs. Should U.S. Lower Voter Eligibility Age? The most significant recommendation to emerge from the President’s Commission on Registration and Voting Participation, appointed last March by former President Kennedy, is that voter eligibility be dropped from 21 to 18 years in all states. Currently, two states permit 18-year-olds to vote, one has a 19-year-old qualification while In another it is 21 years. This subject has been widely studied by sociologists and students of civics, as pros and cons are debated. ★ ★ ★ Stressing “the lamentably low voter participation of the age group from 21- to SO,r proponents of the lower qualifying age hold that many young people never acquire the voting habit because they fall to start voting right after graduation from high school. , in Congress Pay By J. W. DAVIS WASHINGTON W) — The possibility that Congress might vote itself a pay raise next year seems to be growing weaker. The chance that Congress will require its members to disclose all their financial sources looks even slimmer-ndim to point of no chance in sight. .There has been considerable agitation for a pay raise, from $22,500 a year to $32,500. But congressmen are notoriously nervous about raising their pay during an election year, and that’s what. 1964 is. Also, Con* grass’ job performance this year has been widely criticized. ★ ★ ★ Already there has been a revival, on a sirM scale, of the “Bundles for Congress’-’ campaign that infuriated And alarmed a -g66a tnan^ Df foe senators and representa-tives in the 1940s. PACKAGES OF CLOTHING In that satirical campaign taxpayers sent packages of 'second-hand clothes, to members of Congress who were complaining about how hard up they were and how much they needed a raise. Last month a bundle of old clothes from the “Senior Citizens of Tioga County, Sabinsvllle Pa.,” arrived at the House Post Office and Civil Service Commission, which had approved the pay raise bijl. The donors said thtey hoped the gift “will' help tide you over.” * ★ ★<- ' ★ -A comparative handful of Congress mem-, bers have voluntarily made statements of their Income in addition to salary. GUARD AGAINST CONFLICTS The idea of requiring disclosure of income sources is to discourage conflict of irterest, to guard against official actions jjr private gain. If a senator was known to hold stock in a certain Company, for example, he might hesitate to vote for legislation that would help that company. ■ But most members aren’t eager to bare all. They take the stand that, unless the personal income affairs of every citizen are a matter of public record, there Is no sound reason Congress members should be singled out. Sen. Everett Dirksen of Illinois, the Republican leader, one of those opposing the' requirement of disclosures, said it would mean making Congress members Class B citizens. I ★ ★ ★ Dirksen said the voters, if they are interested, are perfectly free to ask a candidate what stocks he owns. • , PROVIDED STATEMENT 1 Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-MIch., is one of those who has provided a statement of his finances. But, in saying he would back a bill to require similar disclosures *by all members of Congress, Hart pointed to a contradictory situation. “if a man reveals himself to have much Investment wealth, one of two conclusions is possible: he has much personal interest to protect and Is therefore suspect, or he will act objectively because he can be in-dependent of moneyed pressure groups. “If, on the other hand, he reveali that he has little or no wealth; again two contradictory conclusions can be drawn: he will act objectively because he has no personal wealth to protect, or he will be particularly susceptible to moneyed pressure groups.” In the end, Hart said, the decision would -still seem to rest on the public’s oplhion of a man’s’integrity. The adverse result seen Is that by the time youthful citizens reach 21 they are “so far removed frofn the stimulation of the educational proc- Verbal Orchids to ~ Qeorgo Underman of 112H Tasmania;' 92nd birthday. fNESS , In The Stars! 1 David Lawrence Says: School Integration National Issue so‘easy as to about WASHINGTON—It nowadays to get whether one is New York City or Birmingham, Ala., in the controversy over tcrnflani payaala In advanca. Poalaga hat mm paid at fna M claw raw at Pontiac. Michigan. Mrmbor at ABC. , THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, : SEVEN Lacked Boasts or Threats West Sees K-s Talk Good Omen > illl lUl Pit Si | i, IIIII 1 B ^ MJJr Mm If ^ RMi NMMHi ** * By HENRY SHAPIRO MOSCOW (UPI) - Premier Nikita S. Khrusiichev’s New Year’s message to the United States was Viewed by Western diplomats today as a good omen j for 1964 because of its concrete , proposals and lack of boasts or threats. They said Khrushchev not only issued one of the friend? liest messages in years; but indicated the Soviets might accept at least one part of Western disarmament plans. This is a step-by-step approach to disarmament, with adequate controls as each step is achieved. In the past, the Khrushchev line has been to press for sweeping general disarmament at once, with the control systems to come later. LONG SENTENCES - Two California men -were given long prison terms as purveyors of obscene literature by a federal judge in Grand Rapids yesterday. In court awaiting sentence are Wallace de Ortega Maxey, 61 (left), and Sanford E.i Aday, 43. By j^ourt in Grand Rapids Khrushchev, whose New Year’s statement was issued yesterday in response to questions put to him by this corre-1 spondent, said the new year could bring “decisive change for die better in the entire international situation.’’ Prison Terms for GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - Denouncing both, a federal judge Monday sentenced Californians Wallace de Ortega Maxey and Sanford E. Aday to long prison terms and heavy fines on their obscene literature convictions. U. S. District Judge Noel P. Fox sentenced Maxey, 52, to 15 years and a fine of $19,000. He gave Aday, 43, a 25-year sentence and a fine of $25,000. Maxey and Aday, executives of West Coast News, Inc., of Fresno. Calif., were convicted by a jury of distributing an obscene book, a federal violation. The book was called “Sex Life of a COp.” . .. . The court set new bonds of CHARGES ARE... ■our valuable house-old POSSESSIONS dd up to' an amourit reater than you hink . . V Are they ulty Covered? It costs o t h i n g to review our present policy. AUSTIN Coryell INSURANCE AGENCY 70 W. Lawrence St. 332-0241 Tri-Holbrook Market 2366 Auburn id. UL 2-1230 F-A-S-T MIMEOGRAPH SERVICES Churches—School^ * Groups i CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakland Ava. FE 4*9591 PONTIAC MAU. OPTICAL CENTER [j Pm if Minn! HI I 8.30 P.M. 482.11 $75,000 for Aday and $10,000 for Maxey. Maxey, president of die Fresno company, and Aday, secretary, were convicted Dec. 12 on five counts of the 18-count indictment charging transportation of obscene books into Michigan by U. S. mails and common interstate carrier. FILTH PURVEYORS U. S. District Atty. George E. Hill prosecutor in a five-week trial, said the case would stand as a precedent in a government attack o'nr obscenity, He called Maxey and Aday “purveyors of filth.” , Hill said the defendants were “criminals with a history of perversion.” “They are not responsible businessmen. Morally and legal-' ly, they have little or no standings,” Hill said. Judge Fox, in giving Aday the more severe of the sentences, said the latter had a “shocking” past record, including a prison term hi California for pandering. ‘ expert Testimony the defense had called a number of expert witnesses, including people in the Uterary field. Judge Fox, commenting on this, said all 50 states have passed laws against obscenity and “It doesn’t take an expert to tell what the community standards ard.” 11 Children, 5Adults Are Killed in Fires By United Press International Fires claimed the lives of 16 Americahs, including 11 small children, yesterday. Four members of a Wisconsin family died in one blaze and a young sailor's three children in another. Clarence E. Hansen, 27, his wife, Frances, 28, and two of phyxiated when fire swept their spacious home at Pleasant Prairie, WIs. The children were Clarence, 2, and Kenneth, 2 months. Firemen said Mrs. Hansen helped sale two daughters and a baby sitter before succumbing to, smoke inhalation herself. The fire was apparently started by overheated Christmas tree lights, authorities sold. CHILDREN DIE The three children of a sailor burned to death when their house trailer at' San Diego, Calif., burst Into flames while they slept. Hielr mother, Mrs. Cleld-ctta Pike; 22, was awakened by the children’s cries. She suffered serious burns trying /to save them before rushing from the trailer, her hair ablaze, crying for help. The bodies of the children, Robert Eugene, 5, Marvin Lloyd, 3, and Valeria Sue, 5 months, were found in their charred bunks. Three children died at Danville, III., when fire home and a neighbor with a back aliment was unable to drag them from their flaming rooms. Dead were Clifford, 4, Derrick, 2, and Michelle, 1, chU- JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID— We Pick Vp FE 2-0200 ■■■■PHR PONTIAC 1C BAP | dren of Mr. and Mrs. James Kelly. A neighbor, Harvey McCray* tried to revive two of the youngsters but was unable to carry thehn from their house because of a permanent back injury. The children’s mother was' not at home at the time of the fire. Two children died when fire destroyed their frame home at Sandusky, III., but their brother and sister managed to escape. The dead were Lucille Kimble, 2, and Lillian, 3. The children’s mother was visiting a neighbor when the fire started, apparently touched qff by an overheated stove. , In other fires, the bodies of Obie Goeins, 47, and his daughter, Caroline, 7, were found in the flame-charred ruins of their South side Chicago home; Carl Sullivan, 78, an invalid, burned to death when a stove apparently started a fire in his home near NelsonvlUe, Ohio; and Mrs. June de Annabel, 43, died of asphyxiation when fire swept her Steubenville, Ohio, home. Ex-Hospital Chief Dies DETROIT (AP)-Dr. George Hoops, a former chief of staff at Grace Hospital, is dead at 02. He died Sunday at the hospital. Survivors Include a daughter, Mrs. Edward De Neyere, of Mount Clemens, and a Douglas J. Hoops of Bloomfield Hills. sues on which East-West agreement might be possible. They • “Measures aimed at slowing down the arms race and at further alleviating la- • Reductions in armed forces and military spending by both sides. • A nonaggression agreement between the North Atlan- tic Treaty Organization (NATO) nations and the Warsaw Pact members. * • Agreement not to spread nuclear weapons to countries which do not have their own. " • Establishment of nuclear-free Eones. LOWEST PRIORITY, The lowest priority was given Khrushchev warned that “It would be unwise,, and I'would say dangerous, to put this matter off for future years.” Soviet newspapers spread Khrushdiev’s statement over front pages yesterday and today, and Moscow radio broadcasts featured It. to a Berlin settlement, although Waterfordlibrary to Open With 10.000 Volumes BROAD RANGE He listed a broad range of is- Ex-State Man Found Dead California Authorities Suspect Foul Play Waterford Township’s library located in the Community Activities, Inc., building will open Jan. 13 with some 10,000 volumes available to the public. The opening date and temporary operating schedule calling for a 32-hour week were approved last night by the Township Board. Two temporary tibfary-t rained employes will be hired to operate the library; They will be assisted by voluntary workers drawn from the Friends of the Library. (Die Western press also welcomed Khrushdiev’s stand. “Moderate and hopeful,” London’s Daily Mail said. The Guardian of Manchester said the West will agree with many of Khrushchev’s plans, and, said “The vital (Hie is tq. keep nuclear weapons In the hands only of those now possessing them, and if possible, in fewer hands still." LOS ANGELES (AP) - A young man found dead on a highway, the possible Victim of foul play, was identified Monday as a former Michigan resident With a Jong arrest record. Police said1 fingerprints identified him as Phillip Louis Foltz, 22, tiie son of Mrs. Marie Cut-tier of Ann Arbor. A sightseer saw Foltz’ body at turnout near the Pacific Coast scenic highway Sunday. Police said Foltz apparently had been beaten or strangled and thrown from a car. An autopsy Is pend-ing. Each of the temporary librarians will work 20 hours weekly at a pay rate of $2.20 hourly. A permanent librarian will be hired later. 12,000 VOLUMES ' Books for the library are .being furnished by the Nor t h Oakland Library Cooperative. The contract between NOLC and the township calls for a maximum total of 12,000 volumes for the township library. |rhe NOLC contract also allows township residents with library cards to use the Pea-tica library facilities without paying the customary $8 fee charged to outsiders. Library cards are available now at the CAI Building. Ashland Oil Co. was given the contract, ft bid 13.4 cents per gaUon 'on regular gasoline and 15.5 cents on premium. * OTHER BUSINESS The first notices on six proposed zoning changes were read. Action bn the rezoning Is slated for next week." ' All six proposed zoning * changes already have been approved by the Oakland County Coordinating Zoning Committee and by the township’s zoning board. Two requested zoning changes are for apartment developments and another is for a proposed shopping center. T$»e other three tire small parcels. (The London Daily Sketch said, however, that Khrushchev’s “noble sentiments . .. must be set against his actions ;'. . twice since Cuba Nikita Khrushchev has also brought the world closer to war . . .by blockades of roads to Berlin.’’ DOMESTIC REASONS (The Times of London speculated that “domestic reasons also lead him to seek an easing • of the tensions.”) The new year arrives in the Soviet Union at 6 a.m. EST today in the far eastern reaches of the nation. Ten-hours later, at midnight bi Moscow, Khrushchev was to preside at the traditional party around a 60-foot fir tree in the white marble St. George’s Hail of the Kremlin. The new year’s celebration here has the flavor of the Western Christmas, with gift-giving and a Santa Claus-lfte figure named Father Frost. In Soviet homes, champagne and yodka, duck dinners, and other treats are the rule. In the Kremlin, there are toasts, drinking, and dancing around the fir tree. • ■, ' Police said, records showed Foltz was arrested In 1958 at Decatur, 111., oil a charge of interstate transportation of a stolen car. Other arrests included attempted auto theft and drunk and disorderly in Michigan In 1900 and petty theft and robbery investigation in Ohio this year. ASKED FOR AID., Last Dec. 1, Foltz walked Into a Los Angeles juvenile bureau asking aid. Police said he declared he wanted to be put in jail after taking 55 “bennies” (benzedrine tablets) over a weekend. He produced a bottle containing five white tablets and was booked on suspicion of possessing dangerous drugs but was released later. The library will be open 2 to '9 p.m, on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday. Hours are 2 to 0 p.m. on Tuesday and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. oh Saturday. The library will be closed on Friday ; and Sunday. RADIO EQUIPMENT In other business ' at last night’s regular meeting, hoard members authorized an expenditure of $2,500 for radio equipment In township - owned vehicles. Radios will .be Installed In building, water and cemetery department! vehicles to allow constant contact with the respective offices. The board also awarded a contract for some 34,000 gallons of gasollhe earmarked for use during 1964 to the lowest of five bidders. Divorces *n Pradcrlck It. loi Milton Qornor m Robort W. WrlBM n S. stronrf B BMwffL jtMCill The proposed apartment locations are at Cooley Lake Road and Lochaven and at MSS near Nancywood. \ SHOPPING AREA » $ A parcel at M59 and Airport earmarked for a, future shopping area if rezoning from resi- dential to commercial Is approved. The board, in other action, passed a motion officially changing the totyl expenditure in its water system contract with the county from $7.36 million to $6.85 million. A recent federal grant of $500,-000 necessitated a reduction of that amount in the original contract. Setting Date No Prdb TRINCHERA, Colo. (AP) -After their engagement was announced, there was never any question when Elaine Doherty and WilllEun Jackson Jr. would be married. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Doherty, parents of E1 a 1 n e, were married on Dec. 30. So were Jackson’s parents. The youdg people were married Ini the Catholic church here Monday — Dec. 30. ' No 'Fare'for Alligator Pair h.y,T TompKIn. uni Mfi JnP ifMWi.Ai B«m ■ jvt X. from MlcnMl Imilra Buih from. Carl P. Hcrrjmcn WM HtWI K. H8M|8 fiim I. from Lcwrcnec L. Browi nil Q. from .lm» cmfroll rfif Irwn Oenovltv* 0. Bird MMmHm KANSAS CITY, Mo. (Al — The conductor of a St. Louis to Kansas City Missouri Pacific passenger train sent an urgent telegram ahead to the Kansas City Union Station: “Would someone pleate meet the train? Two alligators loose in a passenger car?” Two Incredulous policemen found they were alligators all right, but only babies, about a foot long. I. ★ ★ ★ No one could explain how the alligators got on the train. ADDING MACHINES RENTED! FOR INVEMT0RY • SAVE ERRORS • MVS TIME , l23N*tirSnlniwSt *f«FU4KI WEBB FUEL GO. 361 S. Paddock FE 4-1518 NO RATE INCREASE HO MEMBERSHIP FEES OR DUES All These Coverages WJ8&« At This Low Premium • $28,000 Liability • $1,260 Medical ' • $1,000 Death Benefit • $20,000 Uninsured Motorist • $100 Deductible Collision QH pqntiac • Comprehensive 1004 CATALINA •nodding road servloe oth.rCor. *ts«mo Lew Comparable Rale SEE 08 or PN0RE WITHOUT DELAY BRUMMETT AGENCY, INC. Mirtolo Milo (Next to Bank) FI 4-0688 Somothlng out off placo In Aimrlea f Yob ., . college shortages which have no placo In a country that’s dedicated to progroeel Wo. need top loadori in quantity. Higher education devolopi thorn. But tho, coet of leadtrehlp hat skyrocketed. College* feel the rise. Many lack classrooms, laboratories and oompetent teachers. At a world leader we cannot afford college short* ages. College le America'* beet friend. ’ , HBLP THI COLLEGE OF YOUR CHOICI NOW I V To find out how the college qrlele affects you, write to HIGHER EDUCATION, Box 86, Times Square Station, New York 10030. fi Mrvlo* (A •MipMlIlto m ____ll • public bt| Oounoll end Aw N» THI PONTIAC PRESS mHwShHH EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1963 Adams Sets Court Return LANSING (AP)—A ceremony at Sault Ste. Marie on New Pontiac City Affairs City Sells Urban Renewal Land The City Commission sold 5 , _ ...__. .. ___ some land and agreed to help to »f tomrAtT<>n P.ul I Court. | ■: To satisfy a statutory require- The package deal, , ap-ment, Adam?’ obth of office was proved by a 4-1 vote, is defiled ^with the secretary of signed to clear up all pend-statefo. office last Friday, toe! tog State Supreme Court ap-day he was formally peals of condemnation awards | in by Justice Thfeodore Wednesday’s ceremonial Oath-taking will be administered by Municipal Judg6 James Fenelon of Sdult Ste. Marie, a one-time law partner of Adams.' Adams left toe Supreme Court Jan, 1, 1963, after being defeated in the November, 1962, election by Michael O’Hara, of Menominee. ★ * ★ He then won election in April, 1963, to fill toe vacancy to be created by toe retirement of Chief Justice Leland Carr, who leaves toe court tomorrow after SO years in government service. v Adams, his wife and two daughters, are visiting his family at Sault Ste. Marie. He will return to Lansing Jan. 2 to take on his duties on toe court, which sits Jan. 6. on urban renewal properties handed down by a Circuit Court Jury a year ago. A parcel of city-owned land with 363 feet fronting on the west side of South Saginaw south of Franklin Road was sold to Don R. MacDonald and Joseph Mihalek for $19,400, # ★ ★ MacDonald, who is not involved in urban renewal, bid $80 per front foot for 40 feet of toe land,, a pared he has been leasing from the city for several years. KEY FIGURE Mihalek, a key figure in the R20 condemnation case, bid $50.15 per foot for toe remaining 323 feet. However, Mihalek’s bid nUn carries the assurance toat toe four remaining State Supreme Court appeals of R20 urban renewal condem- nation awards will be dropped. In view of this, toe city accepted toe combined bids, of Mihalek and MacDonald, even though they are; lower than the $21,780 offered by J. J. Levy Development Co. for toe same land. . * ★ City Attorney William A. Ewart had previously estimated that settlement of the condemnation appeals on four properties, one of which is owned State's Top Judge Ends Long Career LANSING (API-Chief Justice Leland Carr is spending his last day in office emptying out the last rolltop desk in the State Capitol quarters of the Supreme Court justices. . ★ ★ ★ A lot of legal issues wore decided on that battered, oak-top desk during his 16 years on the state’s highest court — an estimated 4,800 cases. Carr wrote 600 controlling opinions, plus more than 100 dissents — in addition to handling thousands of Children Missing, Feared Dead in Fire YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (API-Four children in toe Joshua Hall family of Youngstown’s East Side were missing and feared dead in a fire that destroyed their two-story frame house today. Hall, 34, his wife, Mary, 30, and their Children, Gladys, 14, Fred, 8, and Dedrlck, four months, leaped to safety from a burning second • floor bedroom. Gladys held the baby in her arms when she jumped. it it 1 it The father, unable to find his other children after escaping, 1 tried unsuccessfully to enter toe filming, smoke - filled dwelling. Flames drove him back. by Mihalek, would save tod City an estimated $6,000 in legal fees. * . CITY TO PAY Last night’s resolution, which approves the package deal, also calls for to* city to pay half the 1963 city and school taxes and toe full 1964 (currently due) county tax bill on the four properties in condemnation. This amounts to $721.06 in 1963 city and school taxes and $269.71 in county-taxes, for -Junior Editors Quiz on Getaway Car Didn't Go Far TRINIDAD, Colo. (AP)-The trouble was that Benny Urioste picked toe wrong machine for his getaway car. * Benny was SWeepingaout the jail Monday When he quietly slipped outside. it * it A few minutes later Police Chief Pete Connell walked to his car parked three blocks away. Under the dashboard he discovered Benny, trying to work out a wire combination that, would start the Ignition. routine matters; a fellow member of the court estimated. Carr, now 80, will be stepping out of judicial robes after 43 years on the. bench and 50 years in state service. He is prevented irom running again by a 1955 constitutiona amendment forbidding judges over 70 from seeking reelection. He will be succeeded by Paul Adams of Sault Ste. Marie, Democrat, and former state Supreme Court justices and attorney general. P. Carr said he had no definite plans except to take a rest after One of the busiest years ever faced by toe Supreme Court. After tokt, he said, he might go into private law practice or legal consulting work. • * '• * * Born op a farm near Pinckney, Carr first joined state service as an assistant attorney general in 1913. He was appointed to the Ingham County Circuit Court in 1921 and to the Supreme Court in 1945 following tils work as a one-man grand juror investigating legislative graft and brib-bery. • He points out there have been no major scandals in state government since his graft investigation in the early 1940’s that led to the jailing of several legislators and others, MENTALL ALERT Although his, silt-foot, four frame is slightly stooped now, Carr is still as physically active as he is mentally alert. Except in toe worst weather, he has always walked nearly a half mile to and from the State Capitol and his home. His craggy features, slow smile and, in the summer, a skimmer-style straw hat became known to several growing generations in Lansing. ★ h. h ■ At a recent retirement dinner he was described as 'la giant in the profession” and a man "with fabulous knowledge of the law.” a total of $990.77 paid by toe city. 1 Mihalek and toe other property owners will pay last year’s ty tax bill and all.water and sewage charges which came due during the past year in addition to their half of toe city and school tax bills, f f* J t .. Originally, Mihalek had a that the city pay all taxes due on the urban renewal property since Jap. 1, 1963. VOTED AGAINST Commissioner Charles H. Harmon voted against toe sale, while Mayor Robert A- Landry and Commissioners Loy L. Ledford, Dick M. Kirby and Win* ford E. Bottom voted in favor. Commissioners Milton R. Henry and William H. Taylor Jr', were absent and didn’t vote. However, Henry and Taylor had previously indicated to*y favored toe transaction. Ewart’s - recommendation to sen was upheld by Arthur G. Nicholie, a Pontiac rqgltor, who placed toe value of the land at about $19,000. 1st Japanese-Yank Gets General Rank HONOLULU (AP) - The first American of Japanese aticestry to become a general officer In th4 U.S. Army Reserve was officially promoted to brigadier general Monday., Hawaii QOv. John A. Burns pinned the star on the collar of Hawaii Army National Guard Col. Francis Takemoto. Takemoto, 50, commands the 29th Infantry Brigade w)th headquarters in Honolulu. In civilian life, he Is principal of a Honolulu elementary school. It took only four minutes to •«11 Rembrandt's "Aristotle Contemplating the Bust of Homer/1 for $2,900,000, the ilghest price ever paid for a fainting. • QUESTION: How can the DEW Line protect us? ★ ★ ' ★ ANSWER: If you shout in certain places the sound Will echo back, from toe wall of a cliff, for example, and this is the principle back of the modern system Called "radar.”. It sends out radio waves and these bounce back if they strike some object, It is possible to measure toe ., .tone the impulse takes to go out and return. From this, the distance of the object is known. Objects show up on the screen of a radar indicator as little dots Or shapes called “blips.” •An enemy airplane picked up by radar would show as a blip and one could tell how far away it was. The word “DEW” meads Distant Early JVarning. The DEW Line is a chain of 60 or more radar stations which have been constructed across toe northern parts of Alaska and Canada, and which would give us instant warning if any hostile aircraft were sent at us over the Arctic from Russia. To make this defense more complete, two other radar systems are in operation, the Mid Canada Line and toe Pine Tree Line, toe locations of which we show. We also have a string of radar stations around our coast and many ships and blimps, all of which would warn us in case of enemy attack. it it it FOR YOU TO DO: 'Remember how radar wprks when you see a sign on a road: “speed checked by radar.” The impulses are generally sent out from a parked police car. If your cat is driving too fast, the policeman will radio ahead and- your car will be stopped. TO HEAD PROJECT—Maj. Gen. Charles L. Decker, retiring Army judge advocate general, will start tomorrow as director of the Defender Project, which seeks to provide better legal defense for the poor in civilian criminal courts. Anti-Castroites Rap 'Voluntary Savings' An appraisal placing the value . ,Xm - tisn front foot in 1962 Fla- V®P' Moot easement or sever, peso? mmthly trom Cutan pay grade problems on toe land, Ewart said. ALSO SUPPORTING The - move was also backed by Urban Renewal Director James L. Bates. In other business last night, commissioners granted tentative approval by toe same 4-1 vote to a request from Paul L Spadafore for a new SDM license and dance permit. Spadafoire is asking for the license and permit in conjunction with his existing tayern license at 865 Oakland. ★ it' it. Commissioners approved a request to (transfer ownership of a SDM licensed business at 750 Woodward from Peter J, Me* tropoulos to Robert J. Kessel. LEASE TWO LOTS Also approved were agreements granting options to lease two lots at Pontiac Municipal Airport to Robert Fallon. The options will expire in 60 days and six months repectively. Fallon, a Ford Motor Co. executive, plans to bvlild new the lots. checks, toe anti-Castto Revolutionary Workers Federation said today. The exile organization, said pressure is put ,on workers to make ample deposits in toe government savings system. It quoted a recently arrived refugee, Araaldo Machado, as saying there is so much red tape that workers can’t Withdraw deposits. Average deposits by 2 million workers, toe report said, are jtij pesos monthly. A, peso officially pegged at $1. Writer Behan ‘Comfortable but Still Pretty III' DUBLIN, Ireland (AP)-Bren-dan Behan was reported “fairly comfortable but still pretty ill” today. it it 1 The 40-year-old playwright was found unconscious in a Dublin street early Moriday. Police are trying to determine whether he fell or was the victim of a hit-and-run driver. Sr ■ it “He has pneumonia and head injuries,” a hospital spokesman said. “He is consc times verji coherent.” The name /for September comes from toe Latin word septum, meaning seven; .October's name comes from the Latin octo, or eight. Around 2225 B.C. marriageable ^Babylonian maidens were a n n u a.l 1 y auctioned off in Nlnevah and Tyrtii 5 takeover From Ordeal NASSAU, Bahamas ® —- FtyeTesidents of toe Bahama Islands, including a 2-year-old girl, were recovering today from a plane crash and grim 24 hours on a uninhabited island. Frank S. Treco, pilot of toe plane and plant superintendent for Standard Oil Co. here, said he was forced to ditch his light plane Sunday after high winds blew him off course on a 120-mile trip from Nassau to Cay Island. Hie pilot and four passengers, identified as Jarvta Fur-guson, Nassau; Whitney Russell, Cat Island; Mrs.. Nearest Russell, sister-in-law of Furguson, and Mrs. Russell s daughter, Kenrea, took to a small life raft. vVAr; ★ ★ \ Treco said they drifted from 3 p.m\ Sunday to 1 a.m. yesterday when they sighted land at Rum Cay. They spent the night in toe underbrush and spotted a search plane late the next morning. The party was rescued and taken to Nassau. Apartments tor Rent “live in the fabulous9* FONTAINEBLEAU ; 99!> N. CASS LAKE ROAD 1 and 2 Bedroom Deluxe Apartments NOW AVAILABLE Apartment “10299 Open Daily 9 to 9 for Your Inspectionl Phone Today — FE 3-7677.or FE 5-0936 Wishing You a Happy NEW YEARj We want to thank all our. friend* for their 'expression tof good cheer at Chrjstmo* and the confidence and evidence during the po*t year by the busines* they have given u*. “The lord bleu thee and keep thee, The lord make Hie face shine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee, The lord lift up HU countenance updn thee, and give thee peace."—Num. 6:24^6^ Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE Commissioners voted 4-1 to add a law to the clty’l traffic ordinance which will give police the power to ticket or remove cars Improperly parked on city property exclusive of metered parking lots. The move, was recommended by acting Police Chief William K. Hanger. He said the law would enable police to control the parking of cars on vacant city property, where such practice was a nuisance or hazard. Harmon cast to* tone vote against the measure. it’s so easy to\ OWN YOUR OWN HOME ... with our very flexible home loan financing plan. There’* far leu ’’red tape” and your application li acted upon quickly, There’* no future lumpsum payment worried which, under our plan, li conveniently designed to fit your Income and paid for like rent... check todayl You’ll lee why most people prefer our plan over all the other*. 75 West Huron Established 1890 FE 4-0561 , 0UITOMIR PARKINS IN RIAN , Member Federal’’Home Loan Bank Systei t/Qb we anticipate the iuture and its promise of new accomplishments, we also reflect on the past and the feeling of well-ktsing we have enjoyed in our community. It Is with sincerest thanks to our loyal friends and customers that we wish happiness in the New Year to all. FREE lAANITT’* CLOTHES SHOP • 90 N. Saginaw St. , OALUOMIR'S MUII0 IH0P ,171. MurcnSt. MoCANDLESS CARPETS ' .V I N. Parry St, OIMUM’I , MIN’S WEAR SI N. Saginaw It,' Plenty of Free Perking Lots for Your Shopping Oonvsnlsnos Soma howavtr continue to bo operated commercially end In thoio lot* a modoat charge * made for parking, Downtown Park and Shop Inc, Ic atill ( continuing to odor itampi which whan affixed to your parking claim chock pay all or part of thii charge. H » are htippy to do It beeniii# tve nniu you to com# downtown often • . . iintf thank* for coming. Downtown Pontiac You'll Oat. Moral dowNf owH ARKSHOP FRED N. Pauli JIWELIRS , 31W. Huron St, P0NTIA0 ENOOASS . JIWILIRY 00. 38 N,'Saginaw St, THK PONTIAO PRESS 41 W> Huron It, 0L00NAN DRU0 00. 73 N, Saginaw St, WARD'! H0MI OUTFITTING 00. 17-19, t, Saginaw St, u 1 THE VQNTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER SI, 196a, NINE Also ^Questions Romney Freeway Plan Kelley Rules Against Mackie Patrols LANSING (UPI)-Gov. Rom-, ney won the battle but he may have lost the war yesterday in his effort to establish 130 additional state policemen for freeway patrol duty out of state Highway Department funds. Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley ruled yesterday that State Highway Commissioner John Mackie’s plans for a department freeway service patrol was on doubtful legal ground and Mackie canceled the program, which would have cost the state $904,Ml a year. NEW TEAR TO ALL OUR MANY FRIENDS ,, T ; Liftwftj Cocktail >' Lounge 7 Right in the Heart of / '-Pontiac , 85 N. SAGINAW (Sk* ■—a# ssr k'0»H 12 N. Saginaw 6:45 -FS 5-6211 mitM Mints «Jacb|£mnm nNhsoa cjumjjunt Carol IjjnteyDearbJonos Gdic Adams - Imcgene Coco Adults $1,M-0hildran SBo RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYI DAIRY yMtHrlMf Our Koihor Cemod Roof SPIOIAL LUNONIQN IVIHY0AY <15 OnltlwriJ • C$Wv*Oot Inrvlcn However, Kelley hinted in bis ruling for Mackie that Romney’s plan which would cost the state $1,276,000 for 130 state troopers was also on dubious legal ground. » Hr * ★ . Kelley told his Democratic colleague, Mackie, that his doubts in regard to legality hinged “upon the absence of specific language in the ap-propriation act to support such a program.” ADDITIONAL QUESTION But he also added, “As a matter of fact, there is the additional question as to whether such a program is initiated by your agency or another state agency. , ■ “This admonition is, of course, on legal grounds only and is not intended as an expression of my opinion on the value of the program,” Kelley said to Mackie. In backing away from th& program, Mackie seemed'care- Passenger Kills Driver on Subw NEW YORK (AP)-A subway motorman, annoyed by a passenger kicking the door of his compartment, stopped his train Monday night to complain and was stabbed to death, police said. About 300 passengers were aboard the lRT Seventh Avenue express when the slaying occurred at the 23rd Street station in Manhattan. The knife-wielding assailant crawled out a train window and disappeared. ' Hr * 1 The slain motorman was Frank Milano, 38, of the Bronx. Detective Chief Lawrence Me* Kearney said the assailant, described as between 20 and 30 years old, had been kicking the door of the motorman’s cab and shouting Obscenities. Milano opened the door and told, the than tb stop. The map persisted. Milano halted the brain at the 23rd Street station, left his compartment and confronted the man, who plunged a knife into Milano’s abdomen. - If, I) I ★ ★ \Hf * ,|j Some passengers tried to aid the wounded motorman, but were frightened off by the assailant.1 Addition to Will Puts Condition on Dodge Heirs DETROIT (API—A codicil to the will of the late Horace E. Dodge Jr., heir to automobile fortune .millions, requests that his beneficiaries are not to be given specific bequests if he provided them with annuities. ★ ★ ★ The codicil (addition to a will) was filed in Wayne County Probate Court Monday. Mrs. Maxine Clements of Grosse Points Woods is given a bequest of $12,000 in the codicil. Mrs. Clements is a sister of Mrs. Florence Sisman, a beneficiary under the will. Mrs. Sisman was a sister-in-law of Dodge’s second Wife. REST DIVIDED , Fifteen per cent of Dodge’s estate of an estimated $10 million was earmarked for specific bequests. The rest was divided among five of, his children. Thailand Princo Diet LONDON (AP) - Prince Chu-la-Chakrabong.se, 65, a member of Thailand’s royal family who won fame as an author and Journalist, died Monday. The prince whs educated in Britain, ‘where he spent most of his adult life. SPECIAL PHONI881-5168 NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY WITH KARRELL FOX of the Ed SulilVon Show... the Favorite Comedian of the Starsl Nolee Makeri - Hate - Favors Muko Your Roforvatlont Nowt ALPINE INN 8. Highland Road (M-59) at Alpine Valley ful to indicate that the attorney general had raised doubts as to' “die legality of a freeway patrol out of highway funds by any agency.” ★ ★ ,★ He also took time out to criticize Romney for urging Mackie not to seek Kelley’s opinion and .discounting the value of an attorney general’s opinion in the matter. OPINIONS ARE GUIDE “Last week toe governor gratuitously insulted toe torney general by saying that an attorney general’s opinion on this question would not be worth anything,” Mackie said. “'“I think we have to be guided by toe legal opinions of the attorney general whether he rules for or against a particular program.” Romney and Mackie discussed possible freeway patrols at a 2% hour meeting lasjt Week. State Police Commissioner Joseph Childs sat in. Hr .'Hr Hf During the meeting, Romney and Mackie exchanged words over what the governor wanted Mackie to do and what Mackie was willing to do in the line of cooperating with Childs. NO VETO POWER Mackie refused to give Romney veto power over whether the patrol could exist and said he would rely on the attorney general’s opinion. Romney indicated he was not raising the legal question but he felt the key issue was whether the state police and Mackie’s organization would duplicate each other. “The question is how do you organize to render a service as cheaply and efficiently as possible,” ,{tamney said at. the Mackie called his plan* "an attempt to cut through red tape.” He suggested that the funds for a freeway patrol service be provided out of the state general fund “since toe use of motor vehicle funds is questionable from a legal standpoint . . . and the state police figures show the service is needed.” -.>•. JmioAr- ' ,«] Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (hv name of father): WASHINGTON Bernard G. Clark, 7880 Washburn Rav P. Robertson, 5340 25 Mila Road LAKI MMON Carlton P. |daad, 445 S. Broadway Joseph j. Stevens, 15M N. Rochester Lomerson, 1230 Or In>«, Jill Beach qronft'.m-iW---'.--- . Nolen, 284 S. Broadway • jyHSV'nfflSi 34 Sehorn HMI ,, Kielteh, 584 Indian TfSV Donald L. MeCalllste-, — Paw R. Merchberoer, Thomas H. Korn, IWjMmii' David O. Frenatta, 1451 Waco Joel R, Holcomb*/ 2488 8. Ma Billy Sllcox, toil E. ilmsiord Jesse m lair Jr„ Michael Waiter Jr..... Walter Plachalskl, 550 Jamaica AlUn.C tl, 550 Jamal iifuvallia G. Klooe, U. Har-,._.-oncs R. MILFORD Keith L. Camp, 10221 Joanna K James L Beadle, 2350 L Mlltord Road Richard A. Gordon, 021 Panorama Gordon C, Knudson, 853, Sweet (rlar Earnest 1, Kltilnt, 805 Hickory kNur • , Louis N. Fakata, 3281 Ronton Henry C. Banks. 2075 Pnttar MADISON HilOHTS Front SI!*'i?raimer,’"Tii8'Myrtle Douglas Lima, 1704 Moulin . John, m. Gray Jr., 20328 Herbert GayleMyatt, 27853 LOranr Victor Llm Jr., 20104 Mark Blvd. Robert A. Lublanik],. 121. Baaupra Anthony J, Parlsi, 733 Hachl, , S B. Galow Jr., 8017 Loti Harotcf H. Tlpolt, 1138 Orangegrovs Dontjd N, 5[i™«r,j«H (H9KEEGO ap Photalix VIGIL OVER GRAVE—Under a hazy moon, a lone sentry stands in toe cold over the grave of John F. Kennedy in Arlington Cemetery Near Washington, D.C., last night. The eternal light, burns in the foreground, surrounded by floral tributes. Americans to Breathe Properly By DR. WILLIAM BRADY Ask an American to take h deep breath and Most likely he will immediately make like a pouter pigeon. Being ignorant, he doesn’t know how to breathe. The anatomy and physiology of the vital functions were not taught in toe schools he or she attended, if any. Such knowledge was and still is regarded as Indelicate and Improper to import to innocent children. Biology, sociology and psychology, of course, but human embriolo-gy, anatomy and physiology? Ugh! In the 19th Century the costal (rib, chest) typdof breathing was regarded as natural or normal-for women, the diaphragmatic or belly type for men. The difference was ascribed to the difference in dress, that is, females restricted breathing by wearing tight belfr, corsets, girdles and the like, and men did not. \ j w ★ * ★ But various observers found that Indian and Chinese women who always wore loose clothing breathed naturally (diaphragmatic, abdominal, belly breathing). ' T BREATHE. NATURALLY American women today breathe as naturally as they can be expected to breathe, considering their abnormal lack of general ekerclae. After all, It is toe sedentary habit, just sitting around,‘that accounts for shallow breathing, and American men are nearly if not quite as sedentary as women ire.1 Americans probably sit more than any other people. Sit at work. Sit In the car traveling to and from work. Sit in the bar taking make-believe relaxation or refreshment, Sit at the movies, the ball game or the rink while watching professionals play. These amusements give customers considerable excitement but no chance to work it off even vlcarldusly, so the adrenalin released by emotion acts only on the arterioles, raising blood pressure for no good purpose. Playing his or her own game, taking a brisk walk or doing a reasonable stint of hard work would absorb the energy released by such emotion and so protect toe arterioles from damage. CONSCIOUS EFFORT Let no reader imagine he or she can breathe deeply by conscious effort. One can take half a dozen deep breaths by Conscious effort, but more than that is not only inadvisable but practically impossible.- * But most persons can improve their breathing capacity by doing the belly breathing exercise faithfully each night and morning for a year or so. One of toe constant effects of shallow breathing is stagnation of the splanchnic pool—the blood that stagnates to the vast network of veins In the abdomen when one does not get enough general exercise every day to keep this blood In circulation. .■Hr Hr Hr Piles and liver troubles—congested liver, gall bladder, gallstones — are frequent consequences of habitual shallow breathing. It takes maybe five minutes to do the B.B. exercise, and toe investment pays good dividends, of which toe prevention of gall-bladder trouble is just one. For detailed instructions send me 36 cents and a stamped, self-ac dressed envelope, for Little Lesson $1, “How to Breathe." ,And please remember I say it takes a year of B.B., not a week or two, to improve your breathing. _____ and hyglin*. not djutu. dlagno- ili, or triitnwnl, will 0* amw«r«d by Dr.' William Srildy. It a itampad >ai(-addrataad anvalopa li atnt to Tha Pontiac Praia, Pontiac, MtctllQan. (Copyright 1963) TV Star Makes Good in Films Garner's a Financial Maverick THOMAS By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD — No doubt about it, this was James Garner's year of arrival. The question of whether a television star can make it as a movie attraction has been answered. It can be done.' Garner’s record for 1963 discloses three highly successful films, with another apparent winner coming into release. During a break on h i s current f i 1 (n, "The Americanization of Emily,” Garner was asked for an accounting of the year’s releases. 16 MILLION His reply: “They figure ‘The Great Escape1" will draw between 1'4 and 16 million worldwide. ‘The Thlill of It All’ is figured to make 11 million. 'The Wheeler Dealers,’ ( which , I thought was okay but the weakest of the three, will make about half of that.” Another Garner/ film, “Move Over, Darling,” is a holiday attraction. A comedy with Doris Day as costar.,.it seems certain of success. i * ★ Hr' The prosperity of these films is gratifying to the tall Oklahoman, but his interest is not financial. Unlike most top stars nowadays, he does not share in the profits. “I prefer to work for a straight salary,” he said. “Yes, I know that everybody else is taking a cut of the profits or spreading the payments out over a period of years. But I’d rather take a salary, pay my tax and . put toe remainder into a depreciable investment, j ‘TOO MUCH’. • “Taking a spread wouldn’t work for me. Supposing I got $200,000 a picture—that’s a hypothetical figure because I'm not going to toil you how touch I make. If I made three pic-: tures a year, that’s $600,000, part of which I’d spread over the next years. I’m 35 now; if I kept spreading the payments, I’d be making too much money by the time I was 40. ★ H Hr' / “So it’s better to take the dough now and put it into something like the 32-unit apartment house., I bought. The initial investment is not so great, "and the depreciation is excellent'.' Detroiter Is Fined for Dice Smuggling LONDON, Ont; (AP)-William Scherbank, 43, Detroiter accused of smuggling crooked dice into Canada, was fined $500 Monday and his $5,000 car was declared forfeited to the Crown. Police said evidence against Scherbank included 343 pairs of dice—mostly loaded, shaved or otherwise tampered with — and six decks of cards. Hr, if -ft Scherbank said he sold the items in the United States hut did pot intend to sell them when he was arrested in Canada Nov. 21. The charge followed investigation of a ring suspected of preying on stag parties in Ontario, Michigan, Indiana and New York. “Besides, by taking a straight salary — which .1 have not, changed, by the way — producers consider me a better buy than other acton who want a piece of the action.” Hr Hr Hr In today’s market a star as hot as Gamer would be a good buy at $200,000 - if that is In- , deed his neighborhood. Tne former “Maverick” is a versatile performer who can bounce from comedy to adventure. His television training makes his a fast study. Pontiac's POPULAR THIAtSR , EEHU 4 Appropriation Bills Signed by Johnson JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP)— Four appropriations bills, including those for the Agriculture, State, Justice and Commerce departments, w ere signed Monday by President Johnson. The measures also provided funds for the federal judiciary, thr Congress, the District of Columbia and an assortment of other agencies. WHAT? Dancing to Don Roth and his band. WHERE? Avon Bar — Corner of Auburn and Adams. WHEN? New Year’s Eve Party —, Favors, no cover charge, no minimum. WHY? To meet the new owners. Sing along — Thursday, Friday and Saturday, featuring Don Roth at the piano. AVON BAR 3982 Auburn Road — Ph.: 852-2707 On a BEACHHEAD or in a BEACH HOUSE... | these are the ' TAI HUNTKR-FMNKII AVALON SQRTT BIUDY-JIM BACKUS .....JS03D...... "■ gojgo( i"fl seet&et Chinese Legislator Dies TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)-Re-tlred Gen. Chang Cheng, 81, member, of the Chinese National Legislative YuUn, died Sunday after a long Illness. * T r ran. * MROLI TOPAY! , Day* or Evening Clauses 1 J Hcgl.lrr wltllo lltorp hip Mill op«nlnR8. PlimuFE 4*.2882. 11 Mi 8. Saalnuw, i;»*le 1 Tlmitff Kills., Ponllao, Mii'lilsMtt. PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL IS mmnmMwi in - car * m e aters^IS doritt day jamen garner polly hvryvn ^•IWP, marflnf’’ t4c colon SH0CKIN6 STORY Of Wlttl HAPWNiD ■himHUM. SomuLOREM tutuMtMMi MsxMIUANSCHEU mi ims VAuxirR Draw THE POUTIAC KRESS* TUESDAY, DECEMBER 81* im I ............... ■■ <■*»»?», ■-.------------—m-----I----- Opening of Gift Proper for Hostess Fashion, Italian'style, is created by James Ken-rob in hand knit, import mohair, splashed with sparkling squares of color. The white V-neck cardigan, cut hip length and etched fin navy, makes delightful wearing ail through the Winter season. During her recent showing, Galitzine gave dynamic attention to black and white in.a group of sweaters made in a new boucle yam of "Orion” acrylic. A unde band of ribbing gives this after-ski sweater a slightly bloused look. Ward Off Winter With Warm Knitwear mktes combining wool and ko-del polyester and interpreted through the designing skiU of top knitwear stylists as Robert Bruce have found their way to die public’s liking. This is $he time of. year when once again sweaters; hold the fashion spotlight. The combination of exchanging gifts during the festive holiday season and the lure of the rugged outdoors to the hearty sportsman make King‘Sweater the number one item of apparel in stores the land over. The new knit-blend of wodl and kodel which is completely washable, eliminates all problems of care in the soft wool appearance retained in the look. i Other interesting knitwear innovations are available in great abundance. Popular favorites are the colorful orlon “Scandinavians” with authentic designs from Copenhagen patterned turtle and V-neck pullovers along with full-zipper fronts. AH are available in elegant “his 'n her” sets. Brushed blazers are making a happy match-mate combination in broad, bold striped, six - button shaggy cardigan styles. No longer is it unusual to own a complete sweater wardrobe. What with the many colorful and fashionable styles available from .manufacturers, ti»e only problem for the budget-minded seems to rest on wh-a t constitutes “sufficient” to suit the style and occasion. Take the full-zip cardigan: It now successfully supplements the all-time perennial favorites — the pUUover and button cardigan. Dashing Tyrolean match- Festive flowers decorate Dalton’s luxurious cashmere cardigan, designed to take its wearer from holiday parties straight into spring. The scattered bloisoms, genus mohair, light up the pastel, V-neck sweater with a myriad of gay colors, Available locally. A winter bouquet is cultivated by James Ken-rob on the hem of this soft, Italian hand-knit imported mohair sweater. Ttie flowers, (treated in vibrant shades of pine and red, flourish beautifully on the long white cardigan. three-dimensional effect. Alt fashions shown here are mt most newsworthy knit fashions shown in Italian couture and boutique collections. The pairing of black and white was seen repeatedly through-out the showings. J \ ^ A marvelous apres-ski look is achieved by Antonelli in this pullover made of “Orton” acrylic in a brand new and unusual terry-loop Stitch. Utilising narrow block stripes set between the brgad enouPwhite bands, the designer has created a Luncheon Held for Bride-Elect ; A (luncheon and linen shower honored bride - elect Carol Ann , Trapler. Mrs. Clarepce Long opened her Salmer Drive home for the Sunday afternoon affair. ’ Quests included. Mrs.9 M a x Trapler, mother of the bride-elect, and Mrs. George Wright, mother of the bridegroom-elect. Miss Trapler will wed Gary Wright Jarf. 11. Anchor Straps A pi< Q: I am always embarrassed when several friends are invited to dinner and one arrives with a present and the others without. Should I open the present and possibly embarrass those who brought nothing, or put it aside and appear unappreciative to the one who did? Please tell me the polite thing to do in this situation. * * * A: It would be very rude to the one who brought you a gift not . to open and admire it and thank her for it, and as there is no obligation for . anyone to bring a gift to a dinner hostess, those who arrive with nothing should not be embarrassed by this. Q : When a rrtan has a date with a young woman who ' drives her own car, must he ride all the way home with her after their date, or may she drop him off at his house and drive home alone? ", dr • ★ M A: He must ride all the way home with her. The only time it would be excusable for his not doing so, would be if there were no means of transports-, tion for his getting back home after leaving her. The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general are answered in this The Edward • A. Maiers ,,of Illinois Avenue announce the engagement of their daughter Sally Elizabeth to William Nelson Bonner, # -son of the , Frank E. Bonners of Bow Lane ' Drive, are of . of Michigan and Albion College, respectively. The pullover, at its most elegant, appears in white for the cruise sea-• son in the softest of cashmere. Dalton fashions this one . in the “sportive” manner, cut simply with a V-neck, three-quarter sleeves and a turn up hem, .to be worn as a tuck in or overblouse. Available locally. ELIZABETH MAIER Area Greets New Group Mrs. Robert Howell, president of the Detroit Cinderella Club will be guest speaker at the Friday evening meeting of the Pontiac Cinderella Club. The meeting, to be held at the Michigan Bell Telephone Tfftilding, will include a tour of the building, dinner and an introduction of the new Pontiac club. ) . Area ministers, the Detroit club and representatives of Pbntiac’s civic' and social clubs will be present. Mayronnie Oldham is president with Mrs. William White as vice president. SecretaHes are: Mrs. Donald Rhodes, Mrs. Alvis Winston, Mrs. Elizabeth Bard. Other members include: Mrs. Wallace Holland, treasurer; Patricia Rhodes, entertainment chairman; Mrs. Albert Rucks, reporter; and Mrs. William Taylor. Second One's for His Nose DEAR ABBY: What do you think of a girl'who buys her own engagement ring? Her boy....... friend told her* he couldn’t afford to buy her Jj a rlng because he is paying Off his car, So ’ UMi ‘ she went ou't| . and bought*, herself o n egj and paid tor it.] • She says lots ABBY ' of girls do it. Personals New\Year’s Day dinner *guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bowers of Barrington Road will be their son Dr, Charles L. Bowers of Franklin, and their daughters Mrs. Glehn Heathman of Canterbury Drive and Mrs. Walter Witt-kopf, of Drayton Plains and their respective spouses and children. Mrs. Bowers’ sister, Mrs. Dennis Cabey of Bay City has been a house-guest through the holidays. h ★ 1 ★ Following a tradition of many years, the Robert M. Nelsons of Bloomfield Hills will be hosts at a breakfast in their home following the ' New Year’s Eve Ball at 1 Bloomfield HlUa Country Club. Mrs. George S, Dixon of Dakota Circle, Wing Lake, took time out frpm making costumes for the Ridgedale Players’ forthcoming production to entertain four couplea from Pleasant Ridga at dinner on Saturday. Mrs. Dixon is directing “Tho Best Man” which opens Jan. 81. Her boy friend said if it makes her happy, he doesn’t see anything wrong with it. Am I old-fashioned or isn’t this fellow a poor excuse for a man? BYSTANDER ★ h it DEAR BYSTANDER: Apparently the girl is calling the signals. She should have bought TWO rings — one for his nose. DEAR ABBY: I am 13 years old and I guess I should know when I am slfek and when I am hot sick. My mother halls me a “little hypochondriac."* W h en-ever I complain about a headache or a pain in the leg or the arm' she says/ it’s only growing pfelns amy if I didn’t iayw i ind/lf pay so much attention to myself I wouldn’t notice them. I want to see a doctor but every time I mention it, my mother says, “Oh, it’s nothing, you don’t need a doctor.” How can I convince, my motherthat Ido? NO HYPOCHONDRIAC DEAR NO: ft you r e a 11 y think you need to see a doctor, ask your teacher or school nurse to persuade your/mother. Perhaps you have complained too much in the past about minor ailments to be taken seriously now. But don’t , Ignore your pains. Hate to write letters? Send one dollar fo Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, for Abby’s new booklet, “How To Write Letters For All Occasions.” Galitzine has designed for winter ’63 anj exciting group of ski sweaters all in black and white. Working with a new lightweight boucle yam of "Orion” acrylic, she has achieved an unusual knit texture, in this striking cardigan worn over a turtleneck pullover in the same yam. Months of Year Jewel-Studded Clip and save this fashion-ette that never goett out of, style: the blrthstone ryndoWn — December, turquoise and zircon; January, garnet; Feb-t u a r y, amethyst; March, aquamarine o r bloodstone; April, diamond; May, emerald; June, pearl or alexandrite; July, ruby or star ruby; August, peridot or .sardonyx; ' September, sapphire or star sapphire; October,' opal or tourmaline; November, topaz. Birmingham, Hills Enjoy Music, Sports and Travel By SIGNE KARL8TROM Mrs. William L. Kemp of Yarmouth Road opened h e r home Sunday afternoon fqr a recital by her friend, Grace L. Saeifke who is in the graduating school of music at Ann Arbor. Miss Saefka, a niace of Mrs. William Graham in Birmingham, had many friends who were eager to hear her concert'and enjoy visiting with her at the tea following her performance. Mary Kemp who has been visiting with her mother during the holidays returned to Washington, D.C. Monday. * * * After a few days of skiing at Otsego, Jane Leader has left for Florida to ba tha house-guest of Diane Gornlck and her father at the Seagate, Delray Beach. Sue Leader is spending the New Year's holidays in Pittsburgh v i a It 1 n g her friend, Becky Johnson. Many are anjoylng skiing at Pine Knob or at the Alpine Club nearby. Here you find Kris and Pat Hewlett, W i n n and Bert Lyon, Dick and-Bob Emeriek and many others. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Diol with-daughters Kathy and Susan are leaving for their home in Ashland, Wisconsin after spending the holidays With Mrs. Dlot's parent*, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Johnson. Their son, Norman Jr., has also been at home but returns to his studies at Ann Arbor ^immediately following New Year's. ? ' * ' #. > For a. good many years the William H. Breeches have been spending the New Year's holidays at their cabin bn the Au Sable River. Tills year the Henry C. Forsters and Bernard F. Powells will Join them. ■ ★,1 Or ■; ★ Mr. and Mrs, Alfred C. Girard have invited friends to their home for Naw Year's Ev# and at Bloomfield Hills Country Club there MU be.a luge gathering, aa has barn, the cqftotn fan previous years.. Double Ring THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1963 ELEVEN The Donald W. Waltons of South, Winding Drive announce the engagement of their daughter Cheryl Lynne to Conrad J. Code, eon of the Carl E. Codes of Dexter Road. Mali lit. fLOOB COVERINGS • 4 Soil. TVIegraph f» t«U DO YOU HAVE A FROMM? Personal Counseling E.B.Evaas, A Prosperous New Year The Knitting Needle «N tagftmr SMS' ! Oam » AM.-* P M cImm W Carry Om IwPii Quality Training by Lopez Sterling Beauty School Walton Bivd. at Dtsto Hwy. Drayton Plains OB 8-0222 AS., Mr. and Mrs. E. Don Bortles of Oliver Street announce the engagement of (heir daughter Ruth to Ronald. St Amant, son of the Ralph St. Amants of Rkhwood Road.. Her fiance is On Oakland University freshman. New Bride Holds Rose Carnations Rev. Mires Stein, officiated at the recent marriage of Mrs. Gey JoAnn Anderson of May-crest Drive to Dale Lloyd Morale, in the Lutheran Church of the Ascension. It * •* _ Parents of the couple are the G. j. Halvorsons of Elizabeth Lake Road and Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Morse of Grey Road. ★ . ♦ ♦ 1 For the afternoon ceremony,. the bride wore champagne peau satin and carried white orchids and dusty rose carnations, mathing her accessories. ★ ★ ★ 1 Attending the couple were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Pruett of Rochester. ★ h After a inception in t h e bride’s home, the Couple left for Denver, Colo, where they will reside. Mr. and Mrs. Elvin G. Games of North Cass Lake Road have announced the engagement of their daughter Jolene to Robert Lewis Boroff, son of the Henry Boroffs of Le-Baron Street. The bride-elect attends Olivet Nazarene College, Kankakee, 1U. where her fiance is enrolled., The engagement is announced of Blanch Ann Thompson, daughter of Howard E. Thompson of East Mansfield Avenue and the late Mrs. Thompson, to Bill Emerson Adler, son of Mrs. Richard McBride of North Perry Street: A March 28 wedding date is set. The engagement is announced of Beverly Ann Lowe, daughter of Mrs. Samuel Lowe of Fisher Avenue and the late Mr.'Lowe, to Larry Gene Quince, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie Quince of Harvey Avenue. She attends Cleary College, Ypsitanti;and her fiance is a sophomore at Oakland University. , The Homer C. Bishops of Devondale Street announce the engagement of their daughter Jacqueline Sue to Pvt. Stephen Harvey Andrews Jr.; son of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Andrews of Rivard Street. She is a freshman at Eastern Mich-igan University. Her fiance is stationed at Fort Gordon, Ga. Teach Your Child Orde Ry MURIEL LAWRENCE Every day, when bis baby sister gets her 4 o’clock bottle of fruit juke, he has beat getting a bottle of his favorite pop. Yesterday his initiating in-bright While his mother was upstairs recovering his baby sister from her nap, he was suddenly struck by the venturesome notion of serving himself to a bottle of He ran to the refrigerator, opened its door and, reaching up to its freezer shelf, was extracting a frosted, deliciously chilled bottle of pop when he tipped over a carton of cream. NEVER AGAIN He will never be so clumsy again. Do yen know why? Because Ms mother was so un-angry at his clumsiness. When she saw the spilled cream, she didn’t glare or yell or say, “Oh my goodness, when will Groom Wore When Information about a wedding didn’t show up at press time, Bob Grant, publisher of die Illinois Valky News of Grant’s Pass, Oregon, collaborated with the bridegroom’s father to describe the ceremony: “Leland was beautiful in a Mack suit of wool with matching lapels pressed down sharply against toe1 chest. Peering out of the left breast pocket were tour tips of a cleverly folded white linen handkerchief, while on the left lapel, quaintly held by placing the stem through an un- usual buttonhole and securing it( with a small silver hat pin, was a white carantion. “He wore a shirt of white nylon, severely plain, which was held together at the front by Utile buttons of plastic. Around his neck and under the shirt collar was a tie of black jersey, knotted in decorative style, and held to the shirt front with a clamping device of gold-plated brass. The cuffs, of the shirt sleeves were closed with links of the same plated metal... The bride wore the customary white.” you learn to leave tilings alone?” Instead she found two sponges to wipe up the cream with and said, “It’s all right. I knock things down, too. But we can’t knock them down all the time. ■, Ar ★ “So to help you watoh what you’re doing when you want a bottle of pop from the refrigerator, suppose we move all the bottles down here ot the bottom shelf. 'See? Now they’ll be easier to reach.. WITH LOVE He dissolved with love for her. 'So moved was he by her interest in his wishes that though he is only 5, interest in her wishes has become almost as important to him as interest in his bwn. When he wants a bottle of pop, he slows himself down to slow, careful movements that will not upset her organization of the refrigerator. It took his mother exactly 13 minutes to evoke this sense of responsibility from him. ' ’ hr A But mothers who place Neat-ess before Order in the training of children produce disorderly and Irresponsible children. WITH THINGS This is because Neatness is always concerned with keeping Things straight — cream cartons in the refrigerator, books REDUCE EAT and LOSE BP TOS LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! EASIER TO TAKE AND MORE EFFECTIVE THAN THE POWDHU® AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPLEMENT, AND COSTS LESS IN-CLUDINQ CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDk VI DUALLY BY LIC PHYSICIAN, MIX NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH MEDICWAY CAPS. DON'T DIET-JUST EATI AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE YOU CAN LOSS 8, SO Oft 100 LSI AND KEEP IT QFFI MEDIC-WAY 338-920B 7 OFFICES IN OAKLAND AND WAYNE COUNTIES—ONE IN MIRACLE MIU Don’t Throw It Atcay... g REBUILD ITS TODAY! Ow ssperti —_________________________ _ higher goalHy M# your pra»aout»MOi \ ever eatbj an . IT, MR.CAMIB I OSTRICH ESS . H" omelet, mjss < : By CarIGrubert ; DEAR B? DRIFT MARLO i By Dr. I. M. Levitt, Tom Coofce and Phil Evans V*CHKD Sendee Q—The bidding has been: Sooth West North Be 1A 1# Pies Pas* Double Pass 1A Pass Pass 2 V 2 A Pass t ' . You, South, hold: *AQ8 *2 OKQ J7 6 AAQ42 What do you do7 A —. Pan. A bid would be trapping your partner; TODAY’S QUESTION You pass. West bids three hearts and your partner doubles. What do you do now? m tired of having my name associated with booze! I want to change if from John Lush to John Barleycorn !M BOARDING HOUSE r MV WORD, NEW VBABte EVE AGAIN -**-UM EGAD, MV DEAR > WHEN 1 THE MIDNIGHT BELLS AND WHISTLES’ PROCLAIM THE NEW YEAR W& \ will have, tea and tart-s/ i THEN YOU CAN RETIRE AND f WILL PILL UP A PlPEr AND READ A Volume op thacKeraV/ , HAW-**-WHAT HMP OLD POM, WITH HIS OVERCOAX Muffler, plus hat, 6L0VIES AND CANS Hidden in the front 1 HALL CLOSET,BACKOF CARD TABLES /-sm-THB By IYONIY OMARR . . . Ailrology Mints aries (Mar. if to . feeling* may eoncarn you. Intro To o alfloronce emotion. Bo analytic/ In lo Impulsive action*, •TOui .an ir, 20 to May 20) i Can-eoniroie on SPlCIFICI. Don't bog In long-rongo "worrying.1' Ray he< fomliy news • toko »t*p* toward a lie adjustment. Avoid "(borrowing trot GEMINI (May 21 lb Juno 21): lo relax, reflect, pin down .rewlu Take lima 10 be alone. Analyze vow leeiinos. Avoid laniolois bravado. * An£1 Uunt 2* *- '*-*! ora extravagant, yoi wlwly. But It you t $he m HID HtS DUDS^ IN 'Dab store ROOM TRUNK* OUT OUR WAY ify ?i)r if you NOT b# Acting 11 'T.r ,.nd mm a fruitful day. bo moderate, thoughtful. ,LEO (July 22 to Aug. 2lli cycle MBS but longing lor love, romance may per-tilt. Time lo nrfoke afford toward SELF-DISCOVERY - happlne** depend* on mil kind ol Now .Year atari VIRGO (Aug. 22 tp Sapt. 23): Important that you maintain; STRBNQTH. fake time *g Think, perceive and bring forth mognltieent power* ol perception, , Resolve to make New Yoor one which IsepL 23 to „ Del, 33): NSW Year oiler* evening PERSONAL chel- irnr^..i7..b%^,ldsu?,s.;;u.ny^ HLm fa TiS SS,® due II you are diplomatic, wlte, Pay heed to advice offered by member of oipoflta #ev. Eo confidant, but ovoid mptjfx'rtv si.: j Favorable lunar ijtoof nlgnUind lent’1, rang* view*, fravei, opportunity to gam ADDED KNOWLEDGE. Chock dofolli —tkc •*■■--- .. -nil pi«,n with vorvo, 32 to Jan, 20)i Not ffinWS aapaart to Ba ilrongjh may bn deceiving. ‘ what appear* a weak point , . , may m (irons, Mean* day feature* apparent mWkApicTlDNl. ha analytical; ol- town to piWIkf&Nf A^*1'' Rimd met-tag#* of ALb SIGNS.. Wlidom can M garnered tram verfoutoSurcee. important, face Jacl* at ih*Aevi*i. pavarabio IP WEDNESDAY 1l Yota BIRTHDAY MMKi# Bf Y. T Hamlin ...BUT THEM NEVER HAD A CHANCE iwt,w» Ik m u; r. CAPTAIN EAFY wu*av....IIIMHHHHI THE THIEVED \ LU6fiEP A VEXY HEAWBAQ % WERE MWW 5ATURPAV NIGHTt HERB BEHIND i By Leslie Turner THSIX TINY GETAWAY CAR SIGN ON TH1 SIPEI AN OPEN 000R ___ HID AU. BUT T^ FIMAL WORP^.. xmt A FIRM THAT SELLS GLASS EVES! m BULLETIN TO MORTY MEEKLE &/&2VBOO/& GOING. A AROUND TALKING* J r ABOUT VdW < , HAPPINeSS iG. J IvuialKtol- HAPPIN^S ISA WARM PUPPY,'ANDALL that NONeeNeei mu m WBLL, TM 0OIKO TO TELL YOU WHAT MISERY iM^i* By Dick Cavalll X M/BA FOOLING THAT NO GOOD 4 CANCDMBOFTHlSe J By Ernie Bushmiller THEy \ |f= OUGHT ) f| TO BE J | WOW—THESE PANCAKES SURE ARE good; NANCy 0^ # IVE BEEN PRACTICING ALL MORNING By Charles Kuhn DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1963 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. 77c THIRTEEN Naming PeW*RozelIe as Sportsman of the Year is as appripo as canonizing Fidel Castro and naming him Saint of the Century. Sports Illustrated went out of its way not to choose an athlete for the honor for the first time in history and in using such adjectives as “decisive, brilliant, vigorous and strong" to describe Rozelle. , ft Everyone of these lauding words has an antonym which could.be just as applicable and more appropriate for a compromise selection to a position where loyalty to the sport and democratic ideals in its administration have been absent since he took office in 1960. The publication termed his decision in the pro football “gambling expose” as oqe of “wise, severity — demonstrating courage- and integrity.” This is cheaper to say than the cost of boloney in a meat market. He Was also lauded for “refusing to act prematurely and displaying fortitude under extraordinary pressure." ' BAD PUBLICITY ■ ... the mtrflry, collapsed under the pressure of New prior to hiFaimouncement of the suspensions of Karras and Homung and he walked the path with two left shoes,ip the whole mess of b?d publicity. From one side of the cheek Rozelle claimed there was “no evidence that any NFL player has given less than his best. . . that no player has ever bet against his own team . . . nor sold information to gamblers.” The publication also said “he asked the public to believe in the game’s essential honesty... and the public so believed." This Is quite*a tribute to one who had His own honesty questioned by the/late Bert Bell in the recruiting slight of the pen hi the Billy Cannon case. * : ■ ♦ ★ ★ . How naive does Rozelle think the public has been during the NFL smudge of 1963? TWO SIDES * He waived a halo over the teams, and players with one hand and attached satan’s horns with the other. (He was so convinced of the honesty of the people he convicted he even hired a watch dog, James Hamilton, a member of the police intelligence to do special detective, work. Figure this out U you can. It's just Hke pushing a knife through your best friend and showing what a fine friend you are by offering him a bandaid for his wound. There are certainly more parrallels to Rozelle’s slight 6f hand. The publication says he “tightened security in the league; improved gamft officiating . . . established an essential television policy ,.. and moved bis office from Philadelphia into the New York mainstream of news.” In birder: He tightened security — to indicate the distrust he had in NFL players and teams. ★ ★ ★ He established essential TV policies - something that was done long before Rozelle, and one of the reasons why the NFL started growing in the early 50’s. ( He improved game officiating — even though public opinion right now and complaints of the coaches the last two years about officiating has been greater than at any other time in history. He moved his office to New York - quite an accomplishment If it must be. recognized, and certainly a subtle and appeasing manuever for getting support from strong communication media for his weak gavel. it. Pro football has grown and has become the "sporting phen-omenon" as Sports Illustrated indicates, not because of Rozelle, rSBSft-*the B*t,on’8 N°’118i^cta^r 8P°rt whi,e Rozelle was punching a typewriter in 108 A"*®1*8JJLye*r® 1"Jg? and it is a farce that he should be named Sportsman of the Yeijr” even though that popularity nearly succumbed under his Ten years from now Rozelle may roach the stature that the desk of the commissioner of the NFL Warranto and we 11 be the first to admit it when and if he does come about. ★ ★ ★ . The NFL has to be thankful for the strong arms of mqn like George Halas, Preston Marshall; Art Roohey and the other veterans of'pro football wars. 1 \ k / ★ ★ Incidentally, talking about strong men having their' Way -Halas is our nomination for “Psychologist of the Year,” and we can give him some adjectives too - ingenious, shrewd and capitalizing. . Remember who first publicly brought out the gambling mess in 1968 (Halas), which team was Absolved (the Bears), which teams were penalized (toy contenders Packers and Lions) and which team very neatly went on to win the world championship Sunday (the Bears). Ah, the best laid jtlans —! ** ! 1-2 Team Square Tomorrow DALLAS (AP) - Darrel Roy*; al’s eyes flashed when he said it: “We aren't a hit afraid to put it on the line, f He was discussing the question of whether the national championship would be decided when hie Texas football team plays Navy in the Cotton Bowl Wednesday. k k Hr 7, Royal said his Longhorns already had received the trophies calling them national champions on the basis of 10 straight victories and that he * didn’t think once-beaten Navy, rated No. 2, could l cause a return of the mementoes even if it won the Cotton Bowl game. But, one word led to another, and finally Royal said with some heat that he wouldn’t be scared to put his title on the line. “Will you put it on the line?” he whs asked. .Royal then softened up and laughed, “Put what on the itoe?” Navy Coach Wayne Hardin and his players look upon the game as for the national championship although they admit that Texas already has beeh awarded it. NO CAUSE That, however, wouldn’t cause the Middies to think anything else than that they had won the title. They would have beaten the champs. “(Ut* whether or not Navy thinks it ia national champion and Texas doesn't, it has been the' conversation piece as the two teams prepared for their meeting when 75,504 fans jam the big saucer to see the.,great-est attraction the Cotton Bowl has had in its' 28 years. Never before hps tile No. 1. and No. T teams hiet in this game and it has the fans on edge as much as the coaches and players. « Cage Scores Monday', Collaga Basketball SCOT*! / TOURNAMENTS FAR W>*T CLASSIC Dragon state 4S, Brigham Young Jt CanaaUttofi Oam--Oregon 45, Colorado State U Seattle ‘ Ad 72, St. J BIO IIOHT . w t Championehip Kansas State 51, Oklahoma 5 SUGAR BOWL First Reund Kentucky It, New Orlaans Loyola 4 Duka 14, Auburn 47 OTHBR SCORES Arizona State U. 61, Itantord 40 Bradley 67, Arizona 5t Xavier, Onto 43, Tula# 71 Louisville 4ft, Ohio U. 41 Tolado II,1 Penn Slate 45 Bowling preen ** Purdue 101, Dlf...ww... Virginia Tech 13, George Washington Navy 57, Georgia 52 LNW7 41, Radford Union HlWnand Fork 43, Ypillanll 13 Southfield 44, Oroiae Polnle 65 Farn\lnglon 45, Wayne 5t Other MIMS Detroit Catholic Central |1, Detroit Hoop Holiday Ends for Preps Friday While high school basketball’s big night this week la .Friday, two Jnter-Lakes League teams concluded their holiday tournament action with victories Monday. Southfield captured third place In the Northwest Suburban Tournament, 66-65 over Grosse Polnte, on a free throw by Pete McAlplne with 12 seconds left to pley. Farmington took seventh place by declelonlng Wayne, 85* 59. John Olander led the Falcons with 20 points. In the South-field triumph^ Joe Consjdlne had 23 points for the Blue Jayi. The first of two scheduled lntra • city claihei between Pontiac Northern and Pontiac Central ia aet for the latter’s court Friday night. PCH has lost once in five' alerts and appears a strong con- tender In the Saginaw Valley Conferehce race. Northern is unbeaten In four tries and la tied'with Southfield atop the Inter-Lakes standings. TICKET SALES All reserve seats for the con-»t have been sold but unreserved admissions will start at 6:30 p.m- Friday at the gym entrances. Price It $1 for adults and 76 cent^for students. Two important league contests are slated for Friday, alao. In the Eastern Michigan League, undefeated Hazel Park will entertain tall, potent Birmingham Seaholm. The Maples could move info a tie for first place with a victory. Hasel Park has been the surprise of the EML In the early going and will have e big tost agalnet Seaholm. The Wayne-Oakland League lead will be at stake .when Bloomfield Hills takes Its unbeaten mark to similarly unblemished Clarkston. ' j The home team has been Impressive in sweeping through five opponents while HUle generally has played JUst well enough to win under new coach HalHenderson. Ponllic Ctnlrtl Pontiac Northern of Foul Birmingham Grove. 41 firmer Firmlnifor «f Plymouth >”• ■, Willed \«kt if RafNMM Birmingham laaholm at Haiti Park FtriKlito at Royal Oik Kimball II. Agatha al If. MWhatl Birmingham Brolhar Rica Pirnflir M. Jam#! at at. henedlcl WWrmiwi 'Unwanted' W Meets Big 10 Champion PASADENA, Calif— A close battle, probably settled by Illini Jim Plankenhorn’s accurate toe, seems destined in the New Year’s Day Rose Bowl football game between third-ranked Illinois and “unwanted" Washington. , « Illinois is raiW a one-touchdown favorite. Sunny weather is expected’ On the Big Ten side of the fence, at least, the men who should know best — coaching rivals of Illinois’ Pete Eiliott— see the mini*-~-t—:— - BIG 19’S BEST — This is how the Illinois football team is expected to lineup against Washington tomorrow in the Rose Bowl game. Front, left to right: end Mike Summers, tackle Mill Minor, guard Ed Washington, center Dick Butkus, guard Wylie Fox, tackle Archie Sutton, end Bill Pasko. Backs: halfback Jim Warren, quarterback Mike Taliaferro, fullback Jim Grabowski, halfback Sam Price. Auburn, Nebraska Eye Weather Ole Miss' Favored NEW. ORLEANS (AP)-With two coaches Who hate to lose as badly as Johnny Vaught , and Paul Bryant, the 3Qth annual Sugar Bowl football 7 game Wednesday should be a real blood battle. ‘I don’t even like to lose at bridge,” says Vaught, coach of the Mississippi Rebels, who are 7V4-point favorites to .take Bryant’s team, the Alabama Crimson Tide.‘ Bryant doesn’t like the idea of losing any better than Vaught. “I play to win,” he said. He proved he meant thai when he had the Tide go for a two-point conversion in its 7-6 loss to Georgia-Tech in 1962, the only Alabama defeat that year. AERIAL CIRCUS , Ole Miss arrived in New Orleans today. Alabama arrived Monday from Mobile, where H has been practicing since Dec. 26. Both coaches expect to fill the air with footballs. Vaught' says the Rebels will have to pass to move the ball, and Bryant ’iis game strategy calls for ‘lots of passing.” ★ fir ♦ , Bryant’s hopes rest with two quarterbacks who have thrown only 16 passes all season, while Vaught’s two signal callers have thrown more than 10 times that many, a combined total of 185. Bryant’s quarterbacks, Steve Sloan and Jack Hurlburt, completed five of their 16, while Perry Lee Dunn andtfim Weatherly of Ole Miss completed 103. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) ■— Auburn and Nebraska, poised for their Orange Bowl football game Wednesday, watched Miami’s changing weather today and agreed it could affect the outcome of the' game. The Miami Weather' Bureau forecast clearing and a little colder, with temperatures ih the low or middle 60s by the 2 p.m. EST kickoff. But that was based on a low pressure system over the Gulf of. Mexico developing a squall line that would ^end two days of rain. “It depends,” a forecaster explained, “on how fast the system develops and the squall line moves in." COUNTER CLAIMS Rival coaches, Ralph (Shug) Jordan of Auburn and Bob'De-vaney of Nebraska, claimed rain would be to the other fellow’ll advantage. Auburn, No. 8 In the nation, will feature speed and mobility built around 205-pound Jlmiby Sidle, the country’s best running quarterback who gained 1,006 yards In 10 games, averaging 5.4 yards per carry. Sidle also completed 53 of 136 passes for 706 yards and five touchdowns. In kicking, Auburn’s Joe Kilgore averaged 41.3 yards while Woody Woodall booted six field goals and 23 straight conversions this fall. Sixth ranked Nebraska, using a multiple offense, has nine hacks who carried the ball 30 or more times and five/ averaged ‘4.6 yards or more pet: try. the Cornhuskers drove 2,624 in 561 rushing plays for a 4.9 average, Snow Good/ to Ski In N Skiing is reported good to-very good with'all facilities working at almost all area ski resorts. New Year’s Eve festivities will prevail at .several sites with Dryden, Mt, Holly and Pine Knob: planning to ski in the New, Year tonight.- * r - - Summit Ski Club and Grampian Mountain will close late this afternoon, however. Grampian will resume operations at noon tomorrow. NHL Standings w L T+Pti. OF OA Chicago ........ 20 5 7 47 115 74 Montratl ........If 10 6 42 110 89 Toronto ........ 17 10 6 40 93 79 Dotrolf ...... 12 IS 6/30 74 94 New York ...*.... I 30 4( 22 92 116 7 19 *7 Si 05 97 MONDAY'S RESULTS No gomti scheduled. TODAY'S OAMB Toronto 8t Datrolt WEDNESDAY'S GAMES Montreal It Boston Chicago Summit expects to open at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. Other resorts will start skiing at 10 a.m. New Year’s Day. Both Teeple Hill and Pontiac Lake recreation . area will open tomorrow with the cold weather and natural snow making conditions good. No reports were receiyed from Alpine Valley, Mt. Christie or Mt. Brighton, although conditions there are expected to be good and regular operating hours probably in effect. NBA Standings EASTERN DIVISION 4 — pcf Bfh .833 ~ Won I Boston .......... 35 Cincinnati ..... 34 1. Philadelphia ..16 17 .48 New York .... '10 38 .36: WISTINN DIVISION Los Angelas ,,,. 33 13 -63 St. Louis ....... 21 17 .50 San Pranclsdo .17 16 .51 Baltimore .......,11 33 .33 Detroit..........* 8 23 .35 ^ ^TWAV'j^OAMIH outs at/ Los Angeles WEDNESDAY'S GAMES TOKYO-Terub Kosaka, 136# Japan, knocked out Buen Ablentia, 136/ Philip* WANTED USED CARS and TRUCKS In any ihapo or condition FREE PICK-UP BAQLEY AUTO PARTS FE 5-9219 AP Basketball Poll battling for their, life against a Husky squad primed by a master Big Game mentor, Jumbo Jim Owens. The Huskies bring a dull 6-4 won-loss record into their third Rose Bowl appearance in five years. That’s the poorest regular season, record ever sported by a Rose Bowl representative. Oft-printed suggestion here has been that Southern California was the'best Rose Bowl potential by far. - •k ■ k. k But coaches of both the Big Six—which this season had an Alphonse,and Gaston act in its title race —- and . the Big Ten which stubbed its Rose Bowl toe on Washington in 1960 and 1961, admit Owens is the greatest when it comes to getting his Huskies snaHing and snapping for The Big Game. ; EXTRA WEEK Owens had approximately one week more hard-hitting Rose Bowl preparations than did Illinois, which was chased indoors by sub-zero Midwest weather after both teams began drills Dec. 16. The importance of Plankenhorn’s 'field goal artistry •— he booted seven as the Illini bounced from a 2-7 record to the Big Ten title in one surprising year—is Reflected in the comment of two coaching Rose Bowl losers to Washington. k k k 1 At a pre-game luncheon tossed by* the tournament of Roses committee for writers and Big Six and Big Teh representatives, Washington was favored 66 to 57 in a poll that had obvious geographical unbalance. Moreover, Rose Bowl queen Nancy Kneeland and her seven princesses, cast a solid Husky vote, . nf Saturday, Dec. ] Basket by Ferry Gives Pistons Win Bob (Make ‘Em Count) .Ferry has brought the Detroit Pistons their eighth victory in 31 games. ★ k k ■■ Ferry failed to score in the second half and wound up with only six points but he hit the key basket, an eight-foot allot with four seconds remaining in overtime Monday night for the Pistons 114-112 victory over San Francisco. IAN FRANCISCO DBTROIT • FT OFT Mlah'w'r 3 f7 12 Howell 11 4,112B 2 (Ml 4 Scott 4 3-3 II 161544 47 imhoff 9 1-3 1* 0M OOhl 9 3-5 21 2 2-2 6 iutctwr 4 if 16 Ann 3 4-4 10 Duffy 0 0-0 0- nr! .. * m »Form ih i Th'rm'd 7 M 14 M'eland 3 14 7 LOO , CM OJone. 0 2-3 2 Total* 42 2041 til Wall 41M-M114 tan FranclK* ..... 21 27 21 2f it-tts Dafrall ..........27 II n 27 14-»m Personal foull—San Francisco, M*t-chery 4, Hightower 4. Chambarlalfli Phillips 4, Allies 6, Hill 3. Thurmond. Detroit, Howell 3, Scott 4, Imhoff f, Ohl 3, lodgers »hllllps Juit an old fashioned note to help you welcome 1964 and wish you and yours a fine, prosperous New Year I A Ih A U CO CONTRACTING UKAVtO COMPANY Call U* Anytlmu OR 4*1511 Miracle Mile Pure Seniicanter .assi'.K^ IMJWM6WYEM We Cordially Invite You and Your Family to Start tht New Ytar Right With Our Uniformly Freih Brewed C^fftil and Ddleloui Dawn Donuts. Sincere Best Wi*he$ In 1964 Mi DONUTS 804 North P«rry StrMt PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Phon* 334-9041 •> FOURTEEN TftE PONtTAC PRESS. TUESDAY, BECEOTER 31, 1963 m MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers, and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of noon Monday. 5 Produce FEUITS Apples, Delicious, Rad, Du.....*3.75 Apples, Delicious, GoWen, bu...jM9 Apples, Jonathon. Hr .........v *S . II.I.I.,. hi, .....* 3.00 /Apples, McIntosh, VEGETABLES , Beets, topped .. ........ Cobbope, curly, bch...... Cabbage, red, bu. .......... Cabbage, standard, bp. ..... Carrots, Cello pax, 2 doz. ... Carrots, topped ............ Celery, Root b bch. pk. bskt. Parsnips ................. Parsnips, cello pelt, doz. . Potatoes, 25-lb. bag ...... ■ Potatoes, 50-lb. bag ...... Radishes, black ........... Radishes, hothouse ........ Squash, Acorn, bu. •....... Squash, Buttercup, bu. . . . LBtWcIaND SAIAPORBENS Poultry and Eggs ir pound , .... poultry: nee./Type Hens lfffi 0v£ S lbs. 21.241 Broilers snd Prvers 3-4 lbs Whites 11-20) Barred Rock 21-22. DETROIT BOOS ' DETROIT (AP)-tgg price* Pjld per dozen at Detroit by first receivers iw- C Whl&s'Vride.A Jwnboz^T*^ Large 44-4IW) l — iui“' | ***““"" M-39; Small 3—Conte ~"NEW SfORK (API—Following Is a ll»l - - ‘acted stock transactions on the New Stock Exchange with noon prices: r —A— 12 13V. 13*4 1314 - 3 41 40% 40% - 43 39% 50% 59% + 32 21 20% 20% 4 SO 7 32%. 34»4 37% + ,10 34 55% . 55% 4 2 22% 22% 22% 4 23 1014 9% 10*4 4 12 37% Stt ’ ± Aiieg'ltd1? Alleg Pow 2 not enough b» ; BH.«5.f«n2 11.50-14.50 ..... otherwise trade. i*. ■•) Oil. 1 barrows 25c lower than Mon-aarht run sows, these steady 1 *5 r*N0°t75.n^gh to make . market.r Sheep 3«S! Not *ough to Ml up quotations. lbs 13.50-14.25; 250*290 Ibi 13.HM3.Wl ,hCa*ttle sloooi calves 15i.laugh%r4teer. itiady to 50 lower; loed high choice wwb yjnn1 ibs tt.U-ll-lS' Choice W-liWO lbs 22^5-23%;, wmpsrebls jirede lbs. 2t.50-22.S0l oood 9001,200 lbs ».» 21.40) stondord ond low ooodl7.00-M.00) ■ ■ m jmm ■rsl packages moled llOUf*-1 ond chol slaugliw halters ctbiee around 900 WW 050*1.075 Tfi 20.7M2L. uioJV , 11.00-19.101 utility 1 OOW-JOHEI NOON AVBRAORS STOCK) Vm 15 utile ... 45 Macke ... 743.4043.70 171.2741.04 131.4340.13 , 90.1340.08 : If*? Stocks of Local Interest Flgurei after decimal point! ere eighth! 0VV* TNI COUNT1R ITOCKS Substantial Gains Mart Rallies New Year's Eve NEW YORK l (AP)—The stock market made a substantial gain in a New Year’s Eve rally, with trading heavy early this afternoon. 1 Wall Street seemed to have overcome the crosscurrents of year-end transactions as reinvestment for'1964 dominated the scene. , —' .------------- * * * The trend was higher from the start hut the edge was thin at the opening. As ‘'the buying mood spread, the market averages moved upward decisively, Airlines provided early leadership, helped by forecasts of rising traffic next year. Coppers, tobaccos, drugs, office equipments, rails, electrical equipments and selected motors; joined in the advance. The ticker tape ran consistently late, AVERAGE UP The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was, up to a sharp gain of 1.2 at 285.1, with industrials up 1.8, rails up A and utilities up .5. ■ IBM made a new high for the year with a 0-point gain. Brokers ascribed IBM’s strength to an upside chart breakout and rumors of a possible stock split. ’ * . ★ ★ The Street was picking up “oversold” issues, Brunswick and American Machine & Foundry rising fractionally in very heavy trading. Colorado Fuel & Iron, up nearly a point, also was bought heavily. Gains exceeding a point were scored by Northwest Airlines, National Airlines and TWA. Pan American, Eastern and United Air Lines were up about a point. American Airlines eased. k ’ k ■it Prices on the American Stock Exchange wore irregularly higher in fairly active trading. Trading was halted temporarily in Syntex due to an influx of buy orders when the stock was up 3 points. it it it Corporate bonds were mixed in light, trading. U. S. Government bonds were unchanged. The New York Stock Exchange - n-3 IP* + is » .. i 55% 55% - idSk AmCysn 1.80 AEIPW 1.14b AmExport 1g AMet cri.4i AmPhoto .33 AtttMIt 2.80 Am(M .10 AmTAT 3.40 Am Tob 1.50 Am Zinc lo AMP Inc .40 Ampox Cp AmpBorg .80 Wtl ArmcoSt 3 „ Armour 1.40 ArmCk l.eoa .. .... J0'4 30% ,,,... 15 43% 43%' 43% 4 % 14 40 tt% 5974 -% 17 19% 19% 19% - % 211 19% 19% 19% 4 ■' 21 30% »% 31% - 114 18% 18 18 - 10 41% 42 42 80 12% 12% 12% - 5 84 tf% 83% 4 14 11% 11% 18% ... 103 139% 131% 139% 4 11 28% 28 28 — 1 109% 109% 109% 4 % 22 29% 29 29% 4 % 15 2f% 21% 28% - *4 2 , 47 47 47 4 % I 10'54% 34 - 54 - % 41 3% 3% 3% — % 34 11% 13% 13%-% 77 23% 22 22% 4 % -1 8774 87% 17% 4 % ■ 13% 13% 13% 4 % 32^3% 13 I 52 mguet ,04a isrwsll .941 ith s Ming 2 _jrden 1.90 |org Wor 2 Bucy'ltr ,-40» 3 34%. 34% 34% 4 35% 14% 35% 1 29%' 29% 29% 17 71% 73 73% 1 35% 35% .. I 34% 4 12 34% 351 5 44% 44 04 - 7 44% 45% >45% ... 2 7% 7% 7% - % I SI. 57% 58 4 % 115 11% 11% !1% 45 19% 19 19% 4 % 28 13% 13% 13% - % 1 15% 15% 15% 4 % 14 M74, 25% 25% — % 1 23% 23%....... CollahM .1 ComRL .49 gampgp 2.) Calotax Csncolnst .1 CanSW 1.18 Csrro 1.30 17 7% 7% 7% 4 3 5% 5% 8% v 4 11% 13% 11% 4 4 115 114% 1). .. 1 28% 21% 28% - I 34% S3 14% 4 4 40% 40% 40% 32 70% 70 70% 4 || 10% 10% 10% - i 477% 47% 47% - 32 58% tt% 58% 4 I 24'% 24% 24%-I 48% gm 47% - ChampS 1.80 1 37% 37% 37% Chmplln 1.20 8 34% 34% 34% WW Cluck Mot ' 1 18% 18% 11% Xnscei- CMS Oh 4 10 49% 4l’/b ,49 I but I Chl MStP P 29 13% 13% 13% guide to iho ogproki- ChPnsu 1 Hg ** “ - -' **1 stcurltTas. f '*"* BUvSlcMor . fesWU CltTzons Utilities Class A Diamond Crystal ......... Ithyr Corn......./....... frllB-Lay, Inc. • ....... Meredel Products. ....... Mohawk Rubber Co. ....... Michloan laamlasi Tuba Co. PtoBOar Alnanea ......... Oaf ran Printing ........ Vnrnors Ginger A ll.l 12.] M MUTUAL PI Affiliated Fund ........ Chemical Fund . commonwaarth Stock .. Keystone Income K-l .. Keystone Orowlli K 7 . Mass. Investors Growth Mass, investors Trust .. Putnam Growth Television Electronics .. Treasury Position ?hrlsCmCl*44f i IClf'pTn 1.40 I CltlSlSv .2.40 44 C lev Ellll 1.20 &2 CocaCol 2.70 3 « CoigPal 1.20 CoinnRid .40 S! F Col Oss 1,14 ColPgf l.27t Comic re Comiiol ,90b Camld 1.4ob ConEdls 3.30 ConSw^So' Cont Can i Contlm 130 h\ ? Control Dele : T:H Tas Sorn M MO lie »,c?tfo _J4." ' ” . true otr .10, Cur*hT*ubl< Curt Wr I iirf 12 32% 32% 32% 4 % 5 1)4% 114% 114% 4 % ft 41 40% 41 4 % 41 22% 22 ' 22% 487 n% 10% 11 4 % 12 71% 7f% 75% 4 % 4 38 U 38 14 tt% » 29% 4 % 5 22% tt% 22% — % 4 40 29% 39% 34 29% »U 29% 10 83% 83% R- . 100 30% 34% 30% 43% 12 44% 44% 44% - % Hi + % i + % 74 40% 59% I 28 19% 19% 1 10 It 30% ' I 34% 1 31% S 1 t.tt * +1% M 41% B 4 % 22 7% WASHINGTON (API-Th« 1 Of thp treasury compered spending «fe «1 year, tgoi -T4.19SZ 75,1*9.32 ______ W,^r^&&,ri5A13.^00,W1.10 * T#,*J107»,401,200,70 304,500,172,045.17 OoW A^|4a« 713 if |l,m,144,144,10 x . includes MW,714,171,55 debt not sub loot 10 mtuWry, limit' American Stock Exch. 1 .Figures etlgr decimal poinii are eighths NEW YORK (AP> ’f t in !»- is jlii jlit t Ilf Tt ! r si11 NlegM I Norfolk^ NA Avia 2.40 NoNOoa i.fo Nofpm Mm NllaPW 1,34 NorDirp I RA b^U. Norwich 1* OulMar ,50g Ownniilll 2.50 QxfdPep 1,20 Pic OAE I PacPftrfi PocTAf T.SO jeSL'l 1 U% Ik »!’]*%& 1 50% 50% J ir K .f: m ! Ti Iv% PhimpsPet 2 PifnBow .10 PltPlate 2.40 Pit Stee' Polaroid ProctAG Publkln Pullman PureOTI roid .20 k^f Hds.) Hlgb Lew Lest Chg. 3 72% 72% 72% ..... 38 48% 48% 48% 4 % 5 44% 45% 44% 4 % 15 57% 57% 57%-% 5 11% 11% 11 — % 24 149% 148% 149% 41% 18 79, 70% 78% 4 % 15 4% 4% 4% ... . 13 30% 30% 30% + W Reading Co RetSiCh ,1m RepubAv 1 Repub ttl 2 Revlon 1.10b Rexall .50b ReynMet .50 ReyTob 1.80 Rheem Mfg RlchfOII 1.00 I 177% J . IRC »% 4 V I 27% 38% 4 V 31% 4 ,, %. 10 14% 14% 14% — % 5 42% 42% 42% — % 5 24 25% 24 ... . 7 14% 14% 14% - % 12 49% 49% 49% 4 % 22 11% 1]% 11% 4 % 9 12% 13% 12% ..... 4 58% 58% 51% '4 % 33 52 51% 52 4 % 1 4 25% 25 25% 4 % 11 34% 34 34% 4 % so 10% 10% 10% — % (dtic? SCM .421 ScottPap .90 SebbAL 1.40 SeersR 1.46a Shetioil 1.30 34 44% 44% 44% 4 70 75% 74% 74’* ( 49 49 49 4 4 38% 31% 38% 337 4% 4 4% 2 50% 50% 50% front W Air; Tranem .sob Trensltron TrICon* !.57g TwentC l.OTf —U-* 9 130% 120% 120% 4 % 12 25% 24% 24% ... . 7 51% 11% 81% 4 % 11 40% 40 40% 4 % 87 45 44% 45 1 +1 30 43% 42% 4% ... 37 1% 8% 1% - % 44 31% 21 21% 4 % jj, 35% 38% 35% - % 3 47% 47% 47% -j-i % 19 44% 44% 44% 4 % 19 54 88% 84 4 % 130 53 ' 52% 52% 4 % 24 5% 8% 5% 4 % 91 13% 13% 13% 4 % 3 31% 30% 30% - % 1 25 35 25 4 % 33 32 317% 32 4 % 7 30% 30% 30% 4 % 149 33% 33% 33% 4- % —X— XeroxCorp 2 70 438% 424% 428% 49 Xtrox wl 42 05% 55% 85% 4-1% —Y— Yng IhT 5 4 125 125 125 4 % Zenith 1.20s 33 75% 74% 75% 41 lelei figures ore unotflclel, * Unless otherwise noted, relts ol dlvl-orseml-snnyeldecls dends in iM foregoing table ere onnuol disbursement! Mild on (ho foil quarterly or itml-onnuoT dOcleretlon, special or extra dividends or piymoiiti not designated , tl regular or* MtnllflM In 111* tolnwlng, foginoiti, • -Also exlre. or extras, b Annusl rate aittck dividend, c -.Liquidating EM, , d Declared or gold In 1BO plus dividend, a Paid led year, l - Pey-able'In slock during 1943, esilmot''1 u/* velu* on ox-oIvlfMlnf* — dot*, o-^Kler*^ - Seek to Block Transit Strike Walkout Threatened In New York Jon* V NEW YORK (AP)—The Transit Authority is seeking a court injunction against a strike on New York City’s subway and bus lines threatened for 5 a.m. New Year’s Day. As soon as Michael J. Quill, president of the AFlrCIO Transport Workers Union was served with an order calling him to court, he broke off negotiations with the authority—at least until after today’s hearing. The union represents 35,000 subway and bus employes. Its two-year contract with the Transit Authority expires at midnight tonight. THREATENED STRIKE Every two years sipce 1955, Quill has threatened a New Year’s transit strike. There always has been a last'- minute settlement. v Asked by a newsman Monday whether he- would postpone the strike deadline in view of the court action, Quill replied: “Unless they put the whole union membership in jail at one time, there’ll be a stride if there’s no contract.” David L. Cole, chairman -of Mayor Robert F. Wagner’s Special transit mediation board, said the mayor would take part in continued mediation efforts today. After meeting with the mayor and members of the Transit Authority late Monday night, Cole said, his board expected Quill to meet with it and members of the Transit Authority today. NO OFFER Although the Transit Authority has not made an offer to the union, Cole said: “We still think there is a possibility of working this out.”. The Transit Authority has rejected the union’s demand for a four-day, 32-hour week without loss in take-home pay. The work week now is 40 hours in five days. Other union demands Include a, 15 per cent increase in wages, which now average 52.83 an hour. > The New York State AFL-CIO which claims two million members, announced it would support Quill’s Union in its efforts to get “a fair settlement.’* Business Notes Appointment of Otto Much, 4775 Burnley, Bloomfield Township, as manager of Chrysler Corp.’s Plymouth assembly plant in Detroit was announced today by F. L. Bird, Car and Truck Group general parts manager. Much has been the plant’s production manager since 1902. Prior to that, he served In production posts at Chrysler’8 Los Angeles and Newark, Del., plants sipce joining the firm ip 1956. He came to' the United States from Europe in 1920. He was employed 25 years with Stude-baker-Packard, rising from office boy to plant production supervisor. / jyfetf!§*fllii*i Rfep tl it'* 31% 11% 4i r jfa r ,i fc b te f* RE ijob IN ii% u% ii% + % BfbCol* Ml to 44% 48% 31% 85.** ii S3 u 5 4*tf Wi? 3i SiS lSii 1^ 4 % iim«M Kw,lISriW yiir, Tv bscVsfsd or ’m(& ^tl»rf »t*« dlvlosna or spin up. k DhIbhki or polo U.U, ..... ln aetumulillv* (iiuo wlifi orroori. ii P«iu this yesr. ItM, Mrarria or no action t divldano mooting.' r—m-ciarau or paid In 1942 plus Black dlvl-I dona. I — Fold In stock during 1943, *silmsl«d cosh, value, on ex,dividend or »k dlslrlbullon dpi*. ! ij-l*)os in lull. old»e*ll«d. x—Bk dividend, y Ex Dividend and »al«t In lui), x- to help your daughter — is a strong growth issue, preferably to toe consumer field. I suggest that you switch to Sears, Roebuck. * i (Copyright 1988) Reds Sentence 'Spy' to Death SOFIA, Bulgaria (API-Former Bulgarian diplomat Ivan Asen Christof Georgiev was sentenced today to death by a firing squad on charges of spying for the V-S. Central Intelligence Agency. There is no appeal from the sentence, which was given by Bulgaria’s Supreme Court after a six-day trial. Georglev pleaded guilty and indicated he expected the death sentence.- { i Georgiev was found guilty of spying while he was counselor of Bulgaria’s U.N. delegation between 1986 and 1961 and later as an official of variops government agencies until he was arrested last September. " ★ ★ ir Georgiev confessed he had earned 8200,000 for his espionage. He said he spent the money on “several mistresses in Bulgaria and abroad.” ACCESS TO INFO He said as a high-ranking dlplotoat he had access to Important military, economic, and political Informations/ among them state secrets, which he sold to the CIA. / a; * ” ■*,. '/I* ( He was alleged to have relayed i Information to U.S. Intelligence contact! to various secret apartments In New York, but some addresses listed in toe indictment do not exist. Pony Captured on Expressway Motorists had more thin bad drivers to contend with on toe Chrysler Expressway at noon today. k k it 'Giving them and police the trouble was a runaway pony which kept dhanging lines as they tried to corral him, \,k k a After a naif hour and a score of phone calls from humane and irate motorists the animal was captered near South Boulevard and returtied to hli owner, IS I & m Ttn&3t)AV, DECEMBER 81, 1963 wmm(Epf Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MRS. N&ILH. BRIDGE Service for Mrs. Neil H. (Elsie) Bridge, 57, of 1432 Glen-wood, Sylvan Lake, will be 19:30 a.m. Thursday in Sylvan Lake Lutheran Church with burial in Oakland Hills Memjtiriai Gardens Cefnetery. f Her body will be at Hie Don-elson-Johns Funeral Homk at 3 p.m. tomorrow. Mrs. Bridge died yesterday after an illness of two weeks. She was a member of the Sylvan Lake Church. Surviving besides her husband are two sons, Neil H. Jr. of Sagfhaw and Ronald W. of Troy; a daughter, Martha J. at home; two grandchildren; three brothers; and two sisters. FOR HOLIDAY HELP Use Men from Manpower temporarily for packing, shipping, receiving ana warehouse work. One man or a crew. Quick-call service. All employees bonded and insured. m MANPOWER THE VERY BEST IN TEMPORARY HELP 14 $. Cass 332-8386 TO LEASE OfFIGE SPACE In New Building Custom Office Suites Parking, Air Conditioned Leng Uke ltd. el Telegraph Rd. Phone Ml 4-5477 Mr. Peterson Mr. McArthur MRS. CHARLES BROWN Service for Mrs. Charles ' (Jo? hanna) Brown, 82, of Waterford Toymship, was to be 3 p. m. today at Little’s funeral Home, Cass City, with burial following in Elkland Cemetery, Cass City. Mrs. Brown died Sunday after a long illness. She was a member of the Church of the Good Shepherd, Cass City. ' Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Clayton Hubei of Flint and Mrs. Gerald' Marchand of Waterford Township; two sisters; four brothers, and six grandchildreii. MRS. ELMER NELSON Service for Mrs. Elmer (Jessie L.) Nelson, 77, of 218 Lor-berta Lane, Waterford Township, will be 2 p.m. Thursday from Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs, Nelson, a member of First Methodist Church of Royal Oak, died yesterday after a six-month illness. Surviving is a sister. ANCIL G. PARKS Service for Ancil G. Parks, 85, of 104 Pinegrove will be 2 p.m. Thursday at the Ellison Funeral Home in Williamsburg, Ky. His iJody was taken there from the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home this morning. Mr. P a r k s died yesterday after a brief illness. Surviving are sons and daughters, Mrs. Stella Bowling in Indiana, Mrs. Sophie Parker, in Kentucky, Cecil of P o n t i a c, Dorothy of Ferndale, Delores of Hazel Park, Naomi of Tailor, Leslie and Everett, both of Ohio, Garrett, Estle and A. G. Jr., all in Kentucky. MRS. PERRY SCOVILLE Mrs. Perry (Ruth) Seville, 65, of 611 E. Madison died tills morning after a long illness. Her body is at the Voorhees-Slple Funeral Home. Mrs. ScoviUe was a met of the Joslyn Avenue United Presbyterian Church. Surviving are her husband; her mother, Mrs. Clara Kennedy of Bloomington, Ipd.; three sisters; and five brothers. Ohio. Her body is at the Hun-toon Funeral Home. ( Mrs. Ward, a former employe of The Pontiac Press and a member of All Saints Church, died yesterday . Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Mrs, Emerson Rankin of Pontiac; two aims, Fred S. Knapp of Hampton, Va., and Glenn A. Knapp of Odessa, Tex.; and two listers. ~~ MRS. MARVIN A. SPURLOCK Service fbr Mrs. Marvin A. (Virgie) Spurlock, 70, of 92 Home will be at 2 p. m* Thursday in the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Spurlock died this morning after an illness of several days. She was a member of First Baptist Church and the Loyal Philathea Class of her church. Surviving dre a son, Paul of Pontiac; and two daughters, Mrs. Nadine Hargraves of Auburn Heights and Mrs. Evelyn Adams of Pontiac. MRS. EUGENE DALBY GOODRICH - Service for Mrs. Eugene (Ada M.) Dalby, 97, of 8074 Seneca Will be p m. Thursday at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Orton-yille. Burial WU1 foUow in Goodrich Cemetery. Mrs. Dalby died yesterday after a long illness. She Was a member of the Goodrich Baptist Church and the Maccabees and a life member of Goodrich Chapter No. 841, Order of the Eastern Star. Surviving are, three sons, Jessie of Flint and Ralph and Clifford, both of Goodrich; seven grandchildren; 16 greatgrandchildren; and two great-great-grandchildren. Indonesia Hit for Aggression M-WEEK LEADER W Birmingham attorney and repre^. sentative to the State Legislature Henry M. Hogan Jr. has been named chairman - of Michigan Week activities in Oakland County for 1964. He is a resident at 400 Dunston, Bloomfield Hills, 1 Road Money Is Available Oakland .County will be eligible to receive $232,605 in federal matching funds for .construction of secondary roads in the fiscal year to begin July, it was an- MRS. WILLIAM R. WARD Service for Mrs. William R. (Lula W.) Ward, 57, of 380 S. Winding Drive will be at 11 a.m. Thursday in AU Saints Episcopal Church with burial in Spring Grove Cemetery,, Cincinnati, RELAX and Let Your Money Work For YOU Art you putting that Income r dissipating It? Initoad of spending * your divldonds-or putting thorn Fund? The share to pur«;ha«od would' begin to, produce for ,. Immediately - adding ta yaur capital whlla adding to yotir ut help you to put ALL of your invettment money to work — a full-time batlt. Send for our free booklet, "The Modem Way 6* INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS FE 2-9117 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. UNDERSTANDING 1 Making a constant study of the naadi of those who call us is part of our professional life. We try to (serve as we would want to be served. Outstanding in Pontiac fori Service and Facilities 46 Williams Street FE 2-5841 MRS. JAMES W. McKEE SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHlP--Service foir Mrs, James W. (Rosa B.) McKee, 81, of 8851 Bridge Lake will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial Will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. McKee died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are five _________ James E., Birdsey and Lawrence, all of Pontiac, Worde of Lake Orion and Calvin of Auburn Heights; two * daughters, Mrs. Roy Budrow of Clarkston and Mrs. Irene Davis of Lan- Also a brother, 26 grandchildren, 43 great-grandchildren and three great - great - grand children. WALTER B. MILLER TROY - Service for Waiter B. Miller, 60, of 1031 Arthur will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Price Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Cadillac Memorial Gardens, East, Mount Clemens. Mr. Miller died yesterday. He was a plant protection patrolman at the Chrysler Corp.’s Plymouth Division, Detroit. Mr. Miller was also a member of Local No, 114, United Plant Guard Workers. Surviving are his wife, Gladys; two sons, Walter S. of Rochester and David J. of Clawson; a daughter, Mrs. Joseph Charlton of Utica; a sister; a brother; and eight grandchildren. MRS. CLYDE NEWTON LAKE ORION—Service for Mrs. Clyde (Cecil B.) Newton, 69, of 339 Newton will be 2 p.m. Thursday at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will follow in East Lawn Cemetery. Mrs. Newton,, died Sunday after a long Illness. She was a member of the Wofnen’s Relief Corps’ Maccabees Hive 281 and the Senior Citizens Club. Mrs. Newton was also • member of the Lake Orion Methodist Church. Surviving besides her husband hi a son, William Schneider of Evansville, Ind.; three sisters end two grandchildren. MRS. JAMES (TUCKER HOLLY — Service for former resident Mrs. James (Caroline) Tucker, 83, of Mount Clemens will be 11 a.m. Thursday at the Duncan Funeral Home, New Haven. Graveside service and burial wiU follow in Lakeside Cemetery at 2 p.m. Mrs. Tucker, formerly Mrs. Lee Dunlap, died Sunday after a one-week illness. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Mac Tucker of Mount Clemens, Mrs. Thelma Wll-mount of Armada and Mra. Ruth Jones of Missouri; a brother, Claude Selmes of Pontiac; nine grandchildren; end 15 great-grandchildren. , The sum w 111 be part of some $5-3 million that will be available to the state’s 83 counties, ail of which,wiU be eligible for more than last year except Delta County. MUST MATCH MONEY To get the money, the county road commission must match the federal funds on a 50-50 basis. The money is allocated to the counties on the basis of land area, population andfjroad mileage. Other county allotments i n -elude: Macomb, $130,793; Lapeer, $55,628; Livingston, $49,-658; Genesee, $135,840; Washtenaw, $90,588; Wayne, $684,127. Oakland’s figure next to Wayne’s. Trio Charged in Robbery, of Store Owner Two men and a 17-year-old youth were charged yesterday with the unarmed robbery of an Orion Township man. Arraigned before Orion Township Justice Helmar Stanaback were Mark Fultz, 23, of 81 State; Patrick T. D’Amore, 31, of 760 Robin-wood; and Karl R. Page, 17, of 3135% Lapeer, Orion Township. They are accused of beating Willard H. Murphy, 61, and robbing $150 from his store, Bill’s Bait and Tackle, 40 Greenshleld, Saturday night. Murphy is in Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital with head injuries he suffered in the attack. The trio was returned to the Oakland County Jail to await their preliminary examination Jan. 14. Bonds of $5,000 was set for each of the two men while bond of $500 was fixed for Page. STARTED WORK Oakland County sheriff’s deputies were told that Page had started to work for Murphy the morning of the robbery. Page was taken into custody shortly after the assault. He lat-lmplicated D’Amore and Fultz. United Nations Gets Protest by Malaysia Ex-Pontiac Physician Doctor Devotes Life to Lepers KUA^A Lumpur, Malaysia (AP) — Malaysia denounced an attack on a military outpost in North Borneo as Indonesian gression today and cabled a protest to U.N. secretary - general U Thant. The Malaysian government also charged violations of air space and other acts of aggression by Indonesia, which has vowed to destroy the young federation; The Sunday night attack on the remote military outpost in Sabah state was the worst incident reported in the skirmishing between the two countries. Eight Malaysian troops and a civilian were killed and 24 others were wounded in the three-hour battle. Malaysia prepared to send more troops to the tense .area. Several thousand British troops also are stationed in Sabah and neighboring Sarawak, the two Malaysian states in North Borneo. The southern two-thirds of the big island is Indonesian. TOLD NEWSMEN Tun Abdul Kazak, Malaysia’s deputy prime minister and defense minister, told newsmen the note to U Thant protested “an attach orv a camp in our territory,” as well as “violations of air space and other acts of aggression.” Malaysian authorities described the incursion as a well-planned attack by 29 Indonesian terrorists. They said at least two were killed, one wounded and another c a p r toured. News of the attack prompted a last-minute insertion in Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman’s new year broadcast to the ha* tion. The Tunku promised to take Malaysia’s grievances to the United Nations if Indonesia’s ‘aggression starts in a big way.” Britain, sponsor of the federation; has pledged to defend Malaysia militarily. Accountant Group Elects 6 in Counly Directors of the Oakland County Chapter of the National Association of Accountants today announced the names of six area men elected to membership. Joining the chapter are Harry 8. Freeman, 352 Thalia, Avon Township; Donald L. Foehr, 1575 Sodon Lake, Bloomfield Township; John C. Eidt, 28085 Aberdeen, Southfield. Other new members are Kenneth J. Miller, 2087 Beverly, and Albert C. Darras, 1645 Beverly, both of Berkley, and Rog-ef O. Schembs, 26822 Westmeath, Farmington. By JOE MULLEN A former Pontiac physician, determined to do his part to relieve the suffering of mankind, soon will leave for Africa to work among the lepers. To Joseph-W. Christie, M. D., 59, the journey to Northern Rhodesia will fulfill a longstanding dream to help blot out the dread disease. Now commonly called Hanson’s ^Disease, leprosy abounds on the Dark Continent. “There 10.000 known cases of the disease,” Dr. Christie said. The physician will leave Michigan Jan. 25 for Dublin, Ireland, headquarters of the Capuchin foreign missions.' He will spend five years in Africa as a medical missionary. TWO HOSPITALS where he established the Leelanau Memorial Hospital. TRAVERSE CITY AREA He has been chief pf staff at the hospital in the Traverse City area for the past several years. Dr. Christie’s interest in medical missionary work was stimulated when he served a year at this country’s national leprosarium at Carvilie, La. while associated with the. Public Health Service. Since the death of his wife three years ago, he began lay- * ing the groundwork for an extended tour of duty among the afflicted. DR. JOSEPH W. CHRISTIE Dr. Christie' will return to Carvilie next Monday for a week of preparation for his work in Africa. The Catholkrmission organization operates two hospitals in the Livingstone area Of Northern" Rhodesia. Livingstone is situated on., the Zambezi River about 35 biiles from Victoria Falls. > \ Awarded a plaque just last week by the American Cancer Society for his efforts in die cause of cancer control during 1963, Pr. Christie expects to begin his work with the lepers early in February. His -primary goal is to establish a leprosarium for Southern and Eastern Africa. Dr. Christie came to Pontiac in 1929 and practiced medicine here until he entered the Army Medical Corps in 1942 during World War IL During 1941 he was chief - of staff at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. After four years in service, much of it In the South Pacific, Dr. Christie retarded to Pontiac and stayed until he reentered the Army to serve another year during the Korean War. ,While a Pontiac resident, he was instrumental in establishing the First Friday Club for Catholic men and the how. defunct Juvenes, a social organization for teens. After his final tour' of duty with tiie Army, Dr. Christie moved to Northport, Mich. Pope, Orthodox Patriarch to Meet Twice in Holy Land VATICAN CITY (AP) - Unofficial Vatican sources said today that Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople will meet twice in the Holy Land. But the sources could not agree on just when and where the meetings will be held. One source said the meetings would be largely devoted to prayer, first in the Garden of Gethesemane on Saturday night, Jan. 4, and then In Bethlehem Jan. 8. 'Another source said the Pope would receive the patriarch on Sunday night at the Apostolic Delegation in Jerusalem and would return the visit the next day,' going to the Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem. the statement in Istanbul yesterday that the Roman Catholic ruler and the Orthodox spiritual leader would meet on the Mount of Olives, where Christ prayed before his cruel* Axiom A Pope and Orthodox patriarch have not met since the East-West schism of 1472. Today their churches have 700 millloii members — 550 million Catholics and 150 million Orthodox. Athenagoras plans to Ay to the Holy Land Friday. Pope Paul is flying there Saturday. TO VISIT GARDEN CONFIDENCE IN DRUGS He is highly confident in the ability of sulfa and the modern antibiotics to combat Hanson’s Disease. In fact, this belief that modern medicine can adequately stem the tide of leprosy was one of the major factor’s leading to his decision to go to the bush country. After his week <» u., furnlihlng tha following:.. Equipment Requirement! (Group No. Ill) .... 4-Door sedan,; Pontiac Cara — with Trada-ln Five (0) 4-Door Sedan,; Ford or Chav-rolot Car, -- with Trade-In, ,,,, JjUC - (3) ^Ton^ Plckupt^ ^r^^Ctov- 111) 1-Ton Pickup,; Ford, Chav* H (Taj _ with Trado-ln • XU - No Trade-In .... (U (-Ton Pickup; Cab and Chat,I, -Ford, Chevrolet or GMC - No Trado-ln (» »-Man Cant. » 0) tor A-U-B I44t GMC IVk-Ton Chaim l (1) tor A-04 1M1 GMC IVb-Ton ' Chat,I, Pope Paul is scheduled to RKS spend a period of prayer Shtu- SffBJSa “ day night in the Garden of Geth-1 o thalr contonti. semane, where Christ suffered ”Thi Board'r*>*rvt» tha hom to iu A third source said Pope his agony. The garden is at theVSSd ?! «cappTXVf»■<. ... m furnlihlng tha following: 1444 Equipment ^Requirements ^Plya T<5>fiGMC? Model A-4504, 5-Yard ari|f- tractor, Model AW-4505 - with Trado-ln 1 Ont (1) GMC link*' Truck, Modal AHr urn. u,nh Z.*»•» ijflj _ mo Trade-In i-Duty Road Oradara thraa jl) r - with Trada... One (I) Atlwy Balt Loadar — with On!'(II Street Sweeper, Double-Guitar tniun,^ cubic yaijdi — obtained upon requart, da upon Oakland County 0 bidding forma, mist ba plainly markad The Board raiarva, tha right to ra|act any or all proposal, or to wolvo dofoeta and lo accept tha prppmali that In tha opinion ot the Board I, In tha Mat Inter. •tl and to tha advantage of tha Board at County Road Commltilonar, of tha County of Oakland, Michigan and ot thg Counly of Oakland, Michigan. Board of County Road comml,,loner, .1 .ha County ol Jak^OTgan l ROBERT O. PELT FRAZER W. ST AM AN December if, 1443 . Death Notices Frank L. Martin, 37, of 5779 Graves, Waterford Township, will begin duties Thursday as a building Inspector in Waterford. Martin fills a vacancy created by the promotion of,former building Inspector Richard Lawson to supervisor of the building department. Lawson replaces Carl Walton who retires today. A Waterford resident for 20 years, Martin was one of 14 candidates who wrote tests for the $8,200 Job. in idum donr »l»i«r ot Wpdor* W. T|mplt, Mr,. Wittier' ItlNti Me. Poulin* Oruntr, Wnllor «nd Henry Tumpliii «!io lurvlvtd by two urnmlchlldron. Puhtrtl service will Tx>o h*ld^ Thursday, J«nu*ry t. / lulhrr.in * Church, Ini I Oakland Hill, M|tnor|a[ Oardtni. Novi, Mra. Brldga will lie in alatg , at tha Dunohon • Jenna Puntral Home, ^JuoaMijd vIMtlnti lioura I TO1........... UfMV/ OMttkf Sf M Wayna l(j*i aaar ind Roger r ot Mr,. McBurney. Puntral aarvlea Wit. — ± .TTO.jSfeM^ . Hama,j INVESTMENT CO. : 15 W. Lawrence • ; Pontiac,. Mich. GE+ 6u¥ OF DEBT ON A PLAN you can afford, .. SEE ■' MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS' 702 PONTIAC State Bank Bldg. FE 8-04S6 Pontiac's oldest and largest budget Pqy Off Your BiJIS P«ymMt$°iow*as $10 wk. Protect your lob and credit Homo or Office Appolntmoitts City Adjustment Service • 14 W. Huron . FE 5-9211 COATS FUNERAL HOMS DRAYTON * PLAINS OR D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME invalid Car Service HUNTOQN Serving Pontloc to LOST; MIXED BASSETT, MALE, trl-color, has license on choke colter. Lost In the vicinity where » the how 1-75 crosses US-24. Re-• ward. FB 14578, LOST—PEKINGESE, WHITE MALE, ' old. AnswoFsJp Baby Boy. Williams Lake. Answers to Q STRAYED SPRINGER SPANIEL, male, white and black, ans. to name of “Elvis." Please 4254735.. Child's pet. Hslp Wonted Male 2 YOUNG MEN NEEDED TO WORK part or full time assisting manager and outside order deportment. *30 Weekly to start. 334-9718, coll Mr. Brock. ___________ I Auto MECHANICS, WOULD ERE- ptonty^of » i lOsiNESS OF YOUR OWli Prestige sales field. Future unlimited. Requires 875-personal In-vestment for .university, training, must be Jilgh school graduates Blood Donnors oxtpI4, h Rev. Robert Hudgins offtclaf-Cemefery. -I Farks, ANCIL G„ 104 P D0NELS0N-J0HNS FUNERAL HOME ."Designed for Funerals" SPARKS-GRIFFIN funeral home "Thoughtful Service” FE 2-S8411 MILFORD V00RHEES-SIPLE " I — URGENTLY NEEDED S3 RH Positive 89 and $10 RH Negative DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE FE 4-9947 FUNERAL HOME FE 2-8378 , Established Over 40 Years ..DECEMBER 30, >963, ,rse|rtella' Bowling', Mrs. sopnie Parker, Garrett, Cecil, Leslie, Etfle, ^ Everett, Dorothy, Parks. Funeral service will be ____T"B i p.m. at.tha^Sftlson Funsraf'Home, ANY GIRL'OR WOMAN NEEDING^ Williamsburg, Ky. Arrangements a friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 wore by the Sparks-Grlffln FUneral ; before 5 p.m., or If no answer, "Hdm*. ■ . ’ I coll PB 2-8734. Confldontlol. •tiWILLE,' OfCEMBER St, 1945 fXTffTVlMAID SUPPLIES, 739 RUTH, 611 E. Madison; age 65; Menominee. FE 57805. . beloved wife of Perry Scovllle; be- r,arTTVATio loved daughter of Mrs. Clara WE WIVL CONSOLIDATE TO YOUR | Kennedy; dear sister of Mrs. Harry to *“ i “G*" ftMtotr Schack, 1 18 SOUTH CASS AUTO MfcCHAWcn CHEVY EXP. DESIRED ■CONTACT LARRY 684-1025 Help Wonted Malt EXPERIENCED SERVICE tlon attendant, full end part Apply in person. Hunter i Service. 221 N. Hunter Blvd. EXPlRIENCED APPLIANCE • ^jjlMIma. The Good P(PERTeNCED~CABINETMAKER, steady Inside work. GAS 'STATION ATTENDANT, FU , time, Ml >1848. ~ IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Ushers, day men end concession ■ help. Apply In person only, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monognr's office. Pontiac MILKMAN Steady year-round employi____ ... established route. 46039 Van Dyko, Utica. DAN OVER AGE 45 OR RETIRED for bookkeeping and general office work In an automobile repair business, some experience desired. Wife a resume to Pontiac Press, Bex 65;________ AAAN EITHER SEMI-RETIRED OR retired, Involves some .shop — and.some management. jo cated In Pontiac, Sen" your qualifications to tide Press. Job lo-eplys with x 82, Pon- ADVANCED REAL ESTATE Unusual opportunity to enter a most cheHanging and profitable, real estate field. If you ore now npBuiua licensed and seeking a "step up" ,frv|Ce than consider soiling business op- ««<•»« «*„«, hi oortuoities, investment and corn/ ?nce8, - III properties With Michigan's NOTICE! Has your factory closed downT or have you boon laid off? Seo us at once. Our organization, Is made from men, like you, .who have, PONTIAC MECHANIC Dealership experience needed, must have complete set of tools, good tune-up man, paid vacation, guaranteed wage. Blue Cross Insurance, All interviews In person. Russ Johnson Motor Sales, Lak* Orion. Ask for Jim. I , * By Kate Osann on electrical appli- Wonted Mt«celianeoB« 30 j\ CAW FOR PIANOS [ANY TYPE. 338-0108 AFTERNOON USED OFFICE FURNITURE, FILES portable typewriter end other business machines. ORl 3-9767 orT3* 7-2444. - • . . ■ t FAST RENTAL SERVICE' , Credit and references checked.- Call Adams Realty, FE 8-4095. WANTED TO RENT rWO OR THREE BEDROOM HOME in Northwest -or North Pontiac. Prefer Tel-Huron area. Would o" steer option to buy. Call Xi Quinn, fe 2-7291 or contact at Waldo. (Prater furnished, but also would accept unfurnished.) UNFURNISHED 4-, 5-ROOM APTS, Shan Living Quarters 33 LADY, 35, WILL SHARE NEWLY-furnished piece. Olgen, TV, stereo — with- couple or J or 2 girls. WOUU7 LIKE ir 20's to share a. TEfiROOMS, 1W BATHS, FAMILY room, garage, available soon. $110 mo. Ph. 673-2762. Walking distance Our Lady Of Lakes. _• ROOMS AND BATH.'TilTiLiTTES furnished, S75 par mo. Refrigerator, stove. 635, Central Ave., Late Orion, ceil amm. ■ 4- ROOM HOUSE WITH LARGE GA-rage on w” Walton Blvd. Lot 300. *75. month. Floyd Kent, R< ter._FE_MWB.” ROOMS, FULL BASEMENT, GAS hoot, OR 3-M58 after 9 ».m. 5- ROOM HOOsKlimKE ST., S55. month. OR 3-5607. Wanted Real Ifsate . “I take it you’re a dancing school dropout!” Help Wanted Female EDNES-s. Own W. F. Brookshire,' Herbert,'-,R .Ralls, earl and Ray Kan 1 Funeral arranoemOnts are pe at the Voorhees-SIple Funeral I where Mrs. Scovllle will II state. Suggested visiting hoi - one payment — c FE_M385.____ 4 AND AFTER THIS DATE, bE-1 comber 31, 1963, I will not be re-! sponsible'for tny debts contracted 1 by any othor than myself. George Kazarian, 193 South Johnson, Pon- 41 lost and Found ----------- *!*»ory of, our 2Td°Sds00BL! wife irid .mother who passed away four years ago] Her love left a beautiful memory, I ________! Mounting I Reward. FE 4-8122. J'OUND: BLACK'sSO Drayton Plaint, OR ■T3 TRY DIADAX TABLETS (FOR-morly Dox-A-Dlat). Now name, tamo formula, only 8 98c. Simms Bros. Drugs. , -BOX REPLIES— At 10 a. m. today there were replies at { The Press office in the j following boxes: 5, 6, 8, 12, 14, 17, 19, j 24, 58, 60, 66, 70, 71, 72, 76, 85, 95, 98, 100, 102, j 108, 109, 112, 116. LOST; . |..... vicinity of Joslyn one Brown Rd„ answers Jo the name ef Betty. Re-Ward. FE 4-0096; LbsT: ChocolatB broWN MINja- DCAuLC, VILINI I T d Brown Rd. Ana. to me name1 of "Sam." it found cpH FE 8-4313. Reward. . LOSf~^~dRAY MINTTfTJTI poodle, female, eubstantlal reward. Ml 4-2001. LOST; DECEMBER 29. BOSTON BuitRUbg with pink eye, female, Name It Title, children's pet, vicinity of Hatchery, Rd.; Reward. largest and most progressive ganlzatiori. Cell Mr. PortrMge e personal Interview, FE 413 A SALES TRAINEE MALE 25-45 National Co. expanding locally. Real big Income for men who wilt work and loam. Call FB 2-0219 for detail*. . ?• .»■ V ASSISTANT MANAGER "OPPORTUNITY ......................, To help a busy young personnel! Brunswl manager of a large selling' or- Apply ganlzetlon In. Interview work. Neat' Oa oppaarlng ahd able to meet people. 19 to 29 years of age, experience; not absolutely necessary but must1 be able to learn quickly. Right! man could start on a part time! basis. Write. Pontiac Free* . Box, " . 22 stating qualifications and! kjUm—ting salaty. ' _ ________| - operatoTTH nour per week. 1692 Rochester Rd. north of Maple Rd.. TrOy. BS’ivers wanted;~“oWr S. - ■ ■ — Commleslon plus between MQMHQPIHM Electric. 3465 Auburn Rd., Auburn Helghte. an automobile. Opportunities (or advancement, vacation with pOy, and retirement benefits. Apply 84 Auburn Avenue between 9 a.m. and 12 noon. For an appointment, call FB 8-4650. I EXPERIENCED WOMAN, WEDI day ahd Friday, reference*, transportation, thorough cleaning ., and Ironing, FB 5-2213.____________ i.J5 Interviews Good pay and baneflts to qualiT (ltd person. 673-5142, EXPERIENCSA, jmiRSES AIDE. Apply 1220 Auburn Read. call* pit GENERAL HOUSBKl_____________ |RR| of 5-year-old, IIV* In Waterford, JtJMPE iwlte ’ '"T*1 iPER NEEDED FOR automatic machinal. Orchard Lk. Ave.___ PROCTOR 8, GAMBLE DISTRIBUTING COMPANY •Employment. WITH1 A FUTURE- Opportunity to move ahead, Chance for' good income, insurance benefits, rotirt}-ment, profit sharing, ''etc. Call 338-0438 for appoint-ment, interview. ___ _______ r... lh'Sr',r»em*n^! 3354768. FOUND:'REDBONE BEAGLE, Fl- EXPBR"lENCED~CLOTHING SALlfS-mele. Owner can have by Identl- man, full time, steady position. ...........................Mj Barnett's Clothes Shop, ISO N. Sag- - .... -----ance plans. Call 2-0861 or write details to 28 West Adams, Detroit. No. 48226. 00 not apply In pereon. , Trial estatb salesmen REAL ESTATE SALESMAN , Salesmen Wanted Experienced Reel Estate salesmen needed by established rtal estate John K. Irwin & SONS call FE 5-9446, Day Call FE 15*4846. Night ERVICfi ' STAfidN MECHANIC Wanted. Must be neat end re-ifebele, apply 8185 Commerce SHOE SALESMAN, EVENINGS AND Saturdays. Salary plus commission. Becker's Shoes, Pontiac Mall. 682- jlgures. stet* qualifications, age, and starting eatery expected. Must be able to work 816 'days Employment Agencies EVELYN EDWARDS TELEPHONE FE 4-0584 2414 East Huron, Suite 4 1 Ta 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us befo you. (teal. Warren Stout, Realtor .450 N- Opdyke Rd. FE 5.8165 Open Eve*, 'til I p.m MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICt LISri NGS WANTEb ON t typos of reel estate. , CLARENCE RIDGEWAY REALTOR 2»»_W. Waiten FB »705t need ukr rronY" RRWStfty 1 fergO Talm. Buyers watt*— GEOREG IRWIN, REALTOR W, WaHon FE >; AUBURN HEIGHTS homes wanted. Nix Real 2-2121, UL 2-5375. Instructions-Schools HELP! WE NEED USED HOMES. And vacant land. Caah on the line or we will trad* for now 3 or 4 bedroom homes. Call today! f MICHAEL'S REALTY a,if* ,u," 153 c. Reply, to Pontiac Prate, GIRL FOR CHECKING AND t sembllng In dry cleaning plant. 4 ply Mate Cleanart, 4480 Ellzatx Lake Rd. i ' i ■ GTRiril OR OVER • Wa have openings for 3 girls Is work In our office. Mutt have pleasant telephone voice and ■ desire full time employment. Guaranteed salary plut bonus and Incentive. No experience naceasary. 10 W. Huron, corner of Saginaw, Room 319, Pontiac, OElLL COOK, PULL OR PART time. Apply at Qulk-Snak, 999 W. Huron. FB 4fe280. - U S E K E E P E R ANDTaSY-slttar, Mon.-Ffl. 7:3(M Union Lako area. Ft 5-2143, SusIkIEpeR;.....FULL CHAR4E, 673 mm chilclr(n' ,lya In 516 day*. housekbepIR, oCHTraL ----—-U light laundry, live 5-day weak. Ml 8-2113, FE 4-5500. . iEMi DIESEL, TRUCk DRIVER training tchooi. Write TRUCK,: 18833 Llvarools. Detroit. UN 4-8608. Rgnt Hooms, Unfarnlsheii 40 •-BEDROOM, COUPLE PRfi-ferred. References and deposits. In-—lira at 791 Doris. Rd. ^ 3-BEDROOM home, NEWLY DEC-• new. Very, very AL VALUE. 828> M dLO FARM HOUSE, a heater and fireplace, l kitchen, plumbing out-•n, large chicken coop, 5 FRESH AND SPARKLING fallen, snowyearling ranphin', in gleaming I of formica heat,* aium. W.Vnd«n 810,900. $508 now, $72.03 mo. tex and tee. HAGSTROM REALTOR 900 W. Huron .on.4 WWIlhrt call 602-0435 WARDEN REALTY 7 ROOMS AND BATH. $80 PER MbklTh. 6-RCOM t-OWER flat. 754 W. Huron, Call OR 3-5607. yf XLpiHe skI ARinM In kitchen, carpets. Beautiful'view, tioo monthly. Will give t na| lease, or , might conalder < Contract Resident Manager New 3- end 4-Bedroom Homes 297 W. Yale at Stanley RENT OPTION $72.50 MONTH Excluding .. taxes and Insurance. Easament, paved street. Model Dally and Sunday 'YOUR CREDIT IS)GOOD HERE' OUR TRADEI DEALS 1 ' I ~ ARE TERRIFIC. . MICHAEL'S REALTY . ■ . 333-7555 . WE 3-4200 UN 2-2253 LEASE WITH OPTION to BUY, * BUILDER Need* lot* In Pontiac.V---- offer. no commission, Mr. Davis. ,«■„ rS >,«» jg^WSlteal Vaju* Pealij^—__ !newl?“6Sc'6ratE0 J-BEbttOOM, MENOMINEE RO. I IBM TRAINING m IBM, Keypunch or fe.oporetion amt wiring. 4 teas available. Approved by hlgan state Board at Educe-OM| jHH----------' assistance. r SYSTBliiS iNSTiT? 82 E. Nine Mile, Her' ____________547-8388 WARDED: 4, S, AkDT home*, We can get ' ~|alt ___0. Whaf have you? W. H. BASS Work Wanted.Male 11 A-1 CARPENTER, KITCHENS, AD- m, i. 3-badroom brick-front —QC1. ypar.tt^— Apartments-Furnished v 37 1-ROOM EFFICIENCY Alberta Apartments Hi •!.’ Paddock FE 2-2898 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Ushers, day men and concession help, Apply In person only, rt a.m. to 4 p.m. Manager's office. Pontiac and Miracle Mila Drive-in Theaters. F.N. AND" CARPENTRY, CEMENT, PAINT- 1- AND 2 • ROOM IPElCTENCr ing, OR 3-8191 Nelson Bldo. Co apfs. on. Pontloc Lake end Hlgr Rd. A|| utltUhta Included. PL. Mr*, Llfey, 873.1198. 8180 Highland Work Wante# Female 12 3 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHTRG and housecleaning. FE 4^563. A-1 ’IRONING SERVICE MRS. McCoWan. FE 5-1471. bxpiribn4ed ironing ik my home will pick iip and deliver. Call OR 4-8851. experienced Medical aRd -iel|tant, Pontiac area. FT L HOUSECLbANiNO 2-BEDROOM FLAT, DRAYTON. Utilities furnished. $125. OR 3-0879. f-SSOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE, Raeburn St FE 54)494, SI office a 2 Rooms, basement, bach- elor. Private entrance end bath. 865. per month. Call FE 4-1559. 2 LARGE, 1ST FLOOte, UTILltlSi, Aluminum Siding • SUPPLIES - EQUIPMENT! I Heoflng Service B TV. AAA 4-3474. younC mmi: foR grill d Apply ^ Bid Boy Drive .' LADY BETWEEN 25-45 TO ’ KEEP ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS ' house for childless middle-aged repaired by factory trained men. F — 1 child welcome,, Pontiac General Printing * Office Supply ■ ........|.... REALTY. M095. 3 ROOMS IN PONTIAC - PRIVATE CALL SUPERIOR, FB 4-3177 Archery SUPPLIES, SERVICE. INDOOR ANV KIND-JOHN OR LEE ■ range. Free Instruction. Straight 0608 or 682*1345. ( Arrow Archery Center. 78 N. Pad- licensed Builders RICK BUILI Tie. Garage. ^ TERMS. I Architectural Drawing Generators—Regulators—Starters Batteries $5.95 Exchange 1377 W. Hdrori 388 Arburr FE 5-0155_____________FB 5-I9L Building Modernliatlon 2-CAR GARAOE, 1899 Incl. OH Doors, Concrete Floor* Additions, HOUe* -Raisin* PAUL. ORAVBS CONTRACTING PrHlMlmate* OR 4-iSir Aluminum tVAPMs-BroTNo Awnings • Porch • Patio • Rooflm C. WEE DON CO. FE 4-?! homETaaPRSVemInTs Kitchens, —.i-.r. -- hows* rih storms, T jCo. FB 54 Carpentry Ceramic Tile______ NEW AND 'REMODEL WORK, RCSI-denlfel end commercial. _474j)42L DreiimukTiig, Tailoring ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES,, KNIT drt»>ei, leather coats, Off 3*7193, Electrical Contractors ~ Fencing PONTIAC FENCE CO. , 8932 Dixie HwV.______OR 3-6595 Floor Sanding CARL L.:BILLS SR., FLOOR 'SAND-Ihd, FB 2.5789, R. o., SNYDlRT'ftftbf TAViftft, , lending end finishing, pa 5 0.592, Hay and Sleigh Rides through enow covered fleldi, weadi, then to club house for heme cooked spaghetti, trench bread, testy salad, steaming egfie*. Write, cell for irae brochure. Upland Hills Perm, 481 Ltka George Rd., Oxtofd, 828-1811. •A* ivmvvr TALBOTT LUMBER Moving and Storage Painting and Decorating WALL-WASHINO - MINOR RE-pairs. Reasonable prices* FB ^ 5-340} after 5. _____ Television, Radio and Hi-Fi Service REBUILT AND GUARANTEED TV's Help Wanted Female 7 A NEAT CURB GIRL FOR DAY I shift, good pay with frlngo benefits. Pled Piper Restaurant, FE 8-6741. ___ ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES J Get those .Christmas bl"« «<» 1 mind. M taw openings Press Box 73. __• . Co., 17 W. Lawrence Si,_ , - ^ iXDY tO'MANAGT*H60^gWARlS ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICB^Ri-1 end gIR dept. In local shopping pairing and rawifidlng. 218 E. Pika, 3 ROOMS, CLOSE IN, center. Should have tome tales Phone FB 4-3981. v?t*-^tJ'?2!s_?,,et.i. tsisross sLn.rj: , ROOMS AND BATHTPRIVAtI ----- "• “-1320. LADIES Rut Vour spare time 1 Gueranteed salary, ,11.25 i REFER- IC Co. RE S- Drstsmaking i Tailortng l71 attractFve' 3 rooms, utiLiTils and gsreoo. FE 2-7396. D2&AnK.‘N&. FURNlI^fOiTCHBfflftl Qlteretlons. Mrs, BQdgll. FE 4-9053. epartmont, 673-104B, wTghrrhSSf territories: NY^BfnA^orE,lnF00ho^2', tes°CoWwlMC>wt,Nwr,>l>E 21 RfeSE-"m8. W°DI!R^ 1 ^or ln0termattenAwrlte . »*r. 682-3508. COMPLETE NURSING CAREFOR AAlHib' NiloKBORtfOOD, SlvIR ROOM AND BOARD FOR lunches pecked. FE 8-9005. ISOM AND BbARD FOR ONE man — fe M675. ■ , r MODERN STORE, 1,000 SQUARE feet. W. HurQn St. 338-M70. , stoSW-RorTSent nbar fisher Body perking. FE 3-7968. Runt Business Property 47-A Tree Trimming Service P. O. Box 91, Drayten Plains or MATURE HOUilkVnPll ¥o coll FB 4r4i08. . ____• , cere for 2 chlldron, have own I lAiYTOTtpirjWXfyOT PBRI ^n(y*tlwl- c#l1 w«r. T ml, r-v mature~6abY'iiYVIft f6" LIVE r n. Call OO JJUTf FanBT95®- [ General Tree Service Any size lob, PE 5-9994 Ft 5-3 7 M6ntR^SS' TRSe ifihitiil Trot removal-trimming. < 335-7850 Pasty House FOR F R order 2 h place your c m aavance. 605*1496, i/u Vtvnn St.p Highland, ________Piano Tuning F______ AAA PIANO TUNING1 ZIEGAND'S FB 2-49! “aTtuning AW6 repaTSTNiT >icar Schmldf FB 2*52 TfltNO TUNING"" Reconditioning, Key Covering *l| Chuck FB 5-931 Plastering Service PLASTERINO, NEW AND REPAIR. ! •' n Keller___________UL 2-1740 j .ASTER (No! FffEf UTfMATir I Rental Equipment Trucking HAUL INLAND RUBB^H. NAME rsIsrA^nil^' 11111 a Li^t-“AND ^H6AVY“p^iJCiiTC'3, Truck Rental Trucks to Rent '6-Ton pickups ' 116-Ton Stakes TRUCK8 - TRACTORS _ AND EQUiPMlNT Dump Trucks - Seml-Traltere Pontine Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. __ . 82 S. WOODWARD FB 4-0461 . , Ffl 4-1441 Open pally Including Sunday Upholstering VACANCIES FdR an. Pontiac Lek . _______gpgggpn 673-5142. year:old girl, 3:30' to 11:30 p.m. .t^T'_________________________i VACANCY IN NURSES HOME FOR Apply bet. IP *.m.-2 p.m. 317 N. MIDDLEAGed or ELDERLY LADY convalesce! ' Bmw 1* anewer tetephona, do eomo dote FE 5-0371. Moving and trucking 22 than wages. FB 4^4*21# rmmrae BX§viWir*w« transportation. —-----------=— OR 3-3756. RffY- _____m apart* Private enfranc 3-7606. Apartments-Unfurnished 38 PerryJ^^I babysiTtIWo. i CHILD, ichool-ege, own treneportetlon: OR 3-7878, BABYsiTtiiTbAYrbiravrm Call 673-6704. TTS- THOM A* ° _________FEWA5-8°88l ‘ t MEIER a Ol SON UPHOLSTERIN’ Ft 8 2892 Free Bsllmelee FE Mil ’Wall Cleaners BLOOMFljilLD WALL CLEANERS yyells ancfwlndnws. Rees. Tellslei Jjun 9u*rSnteed.jS 2-1631/__ Wanted Household Goods BARGAIN HOUSE FAYS CASH POI I vjQslyn, ____ , Pi 6-6105 1\Ialipuper Steamer isklSntl i-u'.-V' *«,v Y','i!:!i! e4rSJ: I hard Lake Ave, FI MHO, Restaurants DIXIE ; •OY DRlVfl It Iver^Leke-Teiegrepn^ei j-w Roofer ROOFS.- NEW, REPAIR trel Melhlenenc* FE 44 weshrd. free estlmete, 334 6694. Wood Ccko-Coal-Fuel CANNBL COAL THE IDEAL FIRE-weed fuel, Meioned wood teeth for irnoc* or flreplece, OAKLAND UEL 8, PAINT, 45 theme (■ HP 1 PAINT, ipm iMiV m FAST ACTION ' YOUR BUSINESS ' Myyi FE 2-8181 ....______ A/iblebAY mrough Friday, 8.-45 to 5:18 p.m. Uunion Lake, commerce area, call after SiU, EM 33863. Saby sittEr, 4f OR OLblRi live In or own transportatfen, 5 days a week. Rocheetar-Utlce area. 731-5231, call after 8:30 p.m, ffXSY8!TTKRr““DNV^BD COUphO; live In. MA 4-1972. BAR WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED. Apply, EM 3-0611 after II a-ft)-BAKERAND COOK"FOR SCHOOL lunch program.. Reply Ponllac ingham. ijetifidren. cbuWflR oIrl" sTfMbV^JOB, also meall, uniform, tneflfs. Hunter House, ilvd., Birmingham, ib ArrawbtiNbTiR. cleaner.. Experienced EM 1-0611, after COUNTER OIRL FOR DRY CLEAN-Ing plant, Apply Liberty Cleaners. Ask for Mr, Mitchell. Ml 4-0322. [Dki, inimr" oirl, super Chief, Telegraph near Dixie. 'AY BABYSIT 1ER, AUBURN AND Rochester area, reference., own DIETICIAN registered. P pltel. Pontlm j-Ajp|y^Feri Oslemathlc Hospital ter appolntmant 338- DINING ROOM HOSTESS lung woman ovtr It who i 1OIRL FOR 6FFICE Work In Recheiter, prefer resident of, Rochester area. Plaasa give short resume and phona number. Wt are an equal bpporfvnlfy errv PloVtjV. Reply to Ponttac Press, REGISTERED 7 PROFESSIONAL NURSES Pontiac General Hospital staff positions available. Minimum starting salary 8410. Forty heure week, time, end on a half ter overtime, shift dlfterentlal for evenings and nights, Liberal fringe benefits. Apply personnel director, Seminole at it Cnmari cmmEm. Salesgirl, evenings AjtD sat- urdays. Salary plus commission. Becker's Shoes. Pontlec Mall, 612- f A IT Rl I i~wTOili5riRFi«-tenejd - steady lob, apply at M J Restaurant, 4711 Dixie Hwy„ Drayton H WATfRESSir Must be 18 or over. Full or part-time. Meal, furnished. Vacation with pay, life rnsuraneg end hoi-pilnllzntion benefits, Apply at 'Em Boy Drive-In, Teiagrepn and Huron ItrSftl. Also Dixie Hwy. and S»- neetlng ah' k in me fr r„dlnlng rc ■ndly atmosphere m as a neiteu I. Apply in par. TED'S Woodward at Oquaro Lako Rd. ffXFERjlNCBD HAIRDRESSER. i following headed, earnings gov-ned only by ability, guaranteed ilary. Must be good. OR 44501. “BRIBNCEO, HOUSEKEEPER ill; qualifications and ------------- ply between 10 e.m, and 6, p.m. West town Foee Center, 706 W. Huron, No phone calls.] Must apply in ptrson, 'XpMIBNCID NURIRI AiOll that can iollow orders/ all smite. MM- •Rill WANT ADR WAITERS Apply in Per ion 300 LOUNGE Wnmiff TOix YMlJYltilHji Apply Recce's, 1171 Dlkia Drayton Plaint. wAitR iH^^ioHt »nixwr TIME. ball's Inn, 3411 life*befhj.,k. Rd! WANTED EXPERIENCED WAIT-Qj|l kltdten tliip. OL If mipTrof cleaWNiI TH^ceN- vslsicenl home, m phone ealll please. Apply 1120 Autourn Rd. YOUNO WAITRESS, HOWE-BRIOHt-on arts. Gull Station Realaurant. interiKilon ot MW and Ul H. ’ ■■ Hilp Wonttd | ESTABLISHED WATKINS ROUTE, v Bob's Van Service MOVING AND STORAGE REASONABLl RATES Padding — Jl Years Experience VA MOVING SERV|£e, RBASON- , . ,f T . ’ t„ *a able rotes. FB 5-3478, FB 2-2909. 18T( CARlFUC-^OVl|ilO. CSW Fainting & Decorating______23 A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANG-Ing. Thompson., FE 4-8364. A ladyiintIWior decoWator, Psperlng. FB 843b._ A-1 DECORATING --"TPAiNTINO — plastering — papering. Free fit,, dlsceutite ter cash. 6824620. rlAiWffFib,''> aMTA'IUIj, WALL -----------OR 3-7061, fnluviiion-itadia Sorvict 24 HAVE VOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE . YOU SHOP Trained Service Man, Raaaonabt* price*. Fife* Tub* Tailing. Montgemary Ward Pontiac Mall Transportation 25 |.TO¥6eiOWn«ffNT~ . drinkers, adults eniy. 334-2305 ,£E'e-”sa°6 MJ"™ I LARGE “ WARM ROOMS* AND bath, newly decorated, suitable 1 Or 2 people. No drinker*. Apply ISO N. Perry. IaRoe ro6m1 and Bath, heat furnished, upper on State. 682-1042. T > s“T^ Brick tour-badroom home with 1 ’ •. paihs. AMUR# dailgrwd and custom-built ter preient owner, (u-jtrb 60/nrd site. Early occuifancy, IbiIIb R. Tripp, Realtor _ 1 West Huron ItrMt > FB Hill (flVMlMBl fi 441711 i IBM with / THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY/DECEMBER 31, 1963 CLARKSTON SPECIAL, beautiful bedroom, bride, hardwood flooi., full basement, tile floor, large | •*» excellent neighbor LAKE ORION, nice full baaemehtt attached Oarage, (excellent neighborhood, S — cozy, dean year- round I Cat! today for particulars. LAPEER ROAD, excellent 5-room home, 3 nice bedrooms, living room finished ^ large basement, 135' fireplace, ___Wt, zoned fmerdal. This property has fty of possibility, 512,000 ns. CaH today. CRAWFORD AGENCY sell Immediately. HARRISON STREET, 0-room modem, gas heat, $7,750, fha or gi PAUL JONES REALTY PE 4-8550 VACANT Northern High, J-bedroom carpeted, ranch, storms and Kreens, i v$ car garage, tented, full price 511, 700, $350 moves you tn. HILLTOP REALTY 673-5234 CHEAPER THAN ilEftT NORTH ‘pQNTIACy $69 Down NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME $55 Month "Excluding taxes ind Insurance. EveryoneT qualifies: Widows, dl- crsdhDroWwm.'T Permanent hot w CALL ANYTIME DAILY, SAT. / SUNDAY 526-9575 REAL VALUE ) Sol* Houses Mixed Neighborhood . Bargain! / •SEVENTEEN'; i — full basement, gas *— hardwood I - E-Z ie Bldg. C E 4-0785 KAMPSEN Your neighbor traded Why don't you? Elizabeth Lake Estates In beautiful condition Inaldo and "L", streamlined kitchen, utility out, Two-bedroom bungalow, carpeted living room and dining roqm and lW-car garage, 50x MB'.fob (aka privileges. Asking $10,400 with 10 per cent down plus closing costs. Love** kitchen ceramic tile b carpeted*" ftorad .at 515,050, 51,600 « costs. Near Northern Hi Looking for o real nice 5-room homo? Here Is oil you could wish lor. Aluminum sldlnQ, carpeting in living room, hall and ■*■ HM IVhear^ garage, located home" jl ... 1 W. Huron St. J After 8 ceil SGHRAM 49 CARNIVAL By Dick Tomer Orion Township TAYLOR thia modem . located ; In me Drayton plains .area. Includes full basement, alu-\ mlnum storms and Kreens. Large lot, 10x400. Handy to grade school tor Full price**0/°5ll,»00.ln?erms to suit. Cal| Raaltor—TAYLOR—Insurance OR 4-0306 plus furniture, base--■on peat and attached ga-20x25. Horse barn with hay- qnd bath down, plus a bachelor's apartment in basement, full Mth, gas for heat, and garage. Priced at 510,700 PHA TERMS. 1 IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 742 J08LYN, CORNER MANSFIELD open Evenings and Sundays MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE DORRIS 2ACTIVE RANCH f 14,750), Larger than ■poms wfln a beautftu stone fireplace with the gracious living room, rich wall-to-wall carpeting throughout, modem ceramic bath, lovely kitchen, 3 bright cheerful bedrooms, full1 basement With recreation room, 10'xlS' enclosed potto on rear of lot, .sell or trade on home up to 525,000. CALIFORNIA INFLUENCE! Immaculate 8-room brick ranch home consisting of l.‘ comfortable bed-moms, gracious living room, nice family room, bath and half, a£ tacherf garope, professionally landscaped, lot ?0'x125V Immediate possession, —-the Lake, 515400. OFF.-OAKLAND) 57,450) Bungalo 5250 down, 550 o Month inch !ax2. O'NEIL MODEL OPEN 3 to 6 Twin lakes — 758 sti BEACH. One of the most o ing homes ever to come fro:.. .... drawing board of "Beauty-Rite" “That Freddy’s billford not only has a secret compartment. . . he has a secret compartment' for the billfold!” Mixed Neighbprhood No down payment No mortgogo cost First month frso ’ Paymsnli like rant MODELS OPEN AFTERNOONS 15 AND SUNDAY WESTCWN realty THIRD STREET carpet, range, nice utility, c< HILLTOP REALTY HAPPY NEW YEAR WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor 4540 Dixit Hwy. Phono 673-1272 , CLARK EAST SUBURBAN, At edge of Pc tlac. An Ideal suburban hor on lot 50x240 foot, fruit, a shod# trees, full basement, n, reetlon room. Only 57,750, forms. 5450 DOWN. 57,050. Attractive home, I bedrooms, now 0*1 furnect, attached garage*1 2 Iota newly fenced In, Take privileges. CLARK REAL ESTATE ’ *•11 W. HURON , FE MM ...—■----------ir nr-vit4 5400 DOWN - EXCELLENT .... family on S. Marshall. Private entrances, two almost new gas furnacey, oak floors, two lull bants, plastered walls. Vary good condition. Upper will make the pay SELL OR TRADE -- Lara* 4-1 bedroom modern homo on Wash- COMMERCIAL Located at corner of Orchard Lak* Road, Voorhels and Ottawa Drive, ideal location for light commercial retailing or repair. 20'x50' block bunding. Priced at *7,7 ACREAGE if acres on Granger Rood. Fried, John K. Irwin 313 W. Huron - Sine* 1225 NORTH SIDE INCOME This it an Idoal buy tor a retiree couple or swhoont starting . out Duplex, 2-bedroom aparfmants, Same up and down. Savon yeea old. TWO got furnaces. Two. gas NORTH TASMANIA Lovely 3»story family home ... - super condition. Two lots, stucco oom, dining Carpeting II ns. Ol or MAGIC. WASHINGTON STREET 5-room located on Washlngtor First, floor has large’famll nd floor has 3 nice bedri and sleeping porch. Pull hoot ana hot water, In *-■- — partially fin Located’on 75 ^ 140 lot. 51^,900 Picture yourself welcoming your guests In the dramatic fPyer against the backdrop of lush black walnut paneling or admiring the awe Inspiring view which the towering glass dear-wall frames from th* family room, picture yourself In th* center of the brightest *x-hlleratlng, efficient kitchens you will ever experience. You'll revel Ip the luxury of full wall mirrored bams, eight-foot vanity counters. 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 f------------ and best of *“ COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK Fqr Home Ownership Loans It's Easy___ FE 2-3171 Turn I OR 3-20 ity's most beaumil homes, it M-5f to Twin Lakes. t«to modal. Mrs. r~“‘ H0LIDAY BONUS -reel family home, lots ol ...... In and out at a family price, lust 114,900. 3-bedroom, largo." Ing room, built-in kitchen, on ... tra nice walkout basement, let u* ^whiteHnc. 2891 Dixie Hwy. Phone 574-0494 TRADING IS TERRIFIC LOTUS LAKE PRIVILEGES. Beautiful 3-bedroom bl-lev*l In Lotus Lake Subdivision. Upper level completely carpeted. 2-car attached gareoe, lovely landscaped jrard. Lower level, tiled and painted TWIN BEACH SUB. Real sharp 3-bedroom, full basement home with lak* privileges on Middle Straits Lake, recently decorated, has separate dining room) dose to Stsfo Pork and Twin Beach Country Club. Priced of 111,700. ABSOLUTELY PRIME W SIDE LOCATION near Wast ton Jr„ and Tel-Huron. Tha v.... dertui condition of this 7-room brick homo reflects tha core and maintenance It has had. Levis carpeting ^throughout .th*^ living ter bedroom. Sharp basement, plus -•nd 3--'— rage. , ship of the homo. Full prli 500; terms arranged' or v trad*. ESPECIALLY NOTABLE because it has all large, large rooms, idear tor a couple wr-Hg||fcHwr big bedrooms ratlwr onesi Living room 20.. .. __ ___ kitchen Is lovely and again — ''*t, long. Aluminum ox-•asy upkeep. Dandy —-,u out door. 11,900 and TRADE srjie,. 25 foot. basement ....... Plenty of li^htj you choose, ^ g vKr”|S L Let's Took. .f bomb John K. Irwin REALTORS 313 W. Huron - Since 1923 Phone FE 5-9446 OPEN FROM 9 e.m. fo 9f.m. Mixed Neighborhood CITY EAST SIDE, A SUPERB . bedroom brick, built In 1955, wall to woM carpeting, studio Ceilings, tiled oath with shower, built-in range and oven, basement, gas heat, car port, Can be bought on PHA forms with low down pay- ______street. PrlO._, land contract, fiousetraller o car as down payment. 4 and both down, : ' wffTmt i gas (urnace, lor 550 which ouse payments, GI NO MONEY DOWN i (our lakes, nice large win. pump for town watering ling costs down to an ellglbl iron. Just roducod to 311,000. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 252 S. TELEGRAPH OPEN 9 TO FE 3-7103 M.L.8. OL 1-575 NICHOLIE Corpited^ Jiving roorn^ j I oven. Pull bi rooms. Kitchen and dining t “ — ig* and oven. “■n* *■ recreation r ?°ERMS ’ AVAILABLE. CLARKSTON AREA Tnroo-bodroom bungalow. Living and dining or**. Kitchen. Utility room, oil HA hoot. Attached garage.'About 5250 movoe you in. NORTH SIDE Two-bedroom bungalow. Living and dining oroa. Kitchen. Full basement. Oil HA hoot. Vacant. Newly decorated. About 5250 moves . i„ Cell MR. ALTON PI NICHOLIE HAROER C W. Huron SI. PI (ELL OR TRADE — Almost new brick rancher with large two-car attached end healed garage, m bathe, built-in oven, rartoa washer end dryer, larva fireplace, com-pimir carpeted. TEN ACRES OP ■ LAND. ‘ Excellent neighborhood. Good protective restrictions, Price, reduced lo only (24,900 and worth more. Schbol bus at door. Only wey many lelei result that do, not othorwll*. NBW YEARS CALL' oa 5-3331. Multiple Lilting Serv- L. H. BROWN, Realtor 507 Elizabeth Leke Road Ph, PE 4-3554 or PI 2-4510 _ STOUTS Bast’ Buys », Today ith fireplace, leperete < ““ 1VU: Mini, basement, screened porch, big 3 1 517,700 With f room, 1V1 balha, bosemenl, Mil, screened Serege, Only | irmi avallebl*. Inventor* Neal 4 m»m heme In Avon Twp. I full bath, all heal, 1 extra lots for future expansion. Only 53,991 cash, immediate, possession. 40 Acre* ClarkSlon area, Includes 100-year-nld 3-bedroom farm noijlf with I wider'twatt 500 with fieri Will Trad* Owner will neeepl.fiwe end clear 1 lot er late model Died car as , partial payment an (his 5 room lika front. basement, oil heat, I j£^j:e ^shaded lot. only li.lM Warrtn Stout, Realtor 14M N. Ondyke RES Ph, PE Mitt Multiple Listing Rsalhir I Immediate Possession Located In the heart of Elizabeth Lake Estates, this charming 3-‘ ‘ room ranchar hat wall-to-wall petlng and nice recreation roi The best lak*; privileges for .... winter and summer sports. Selling tar 813,500. we have the key. Rancb Home And In thi city with all its conv niences,. 3-bedroom brick Wffh Cl peted living room, beautlful recri tion roam for your entertaining a North End location. Sailing for Si soo. will taka your homo in.tra< Frushour & REALTORS B 8-4025 Struble TRADERS llzabeth Lika Road PE 2-5935 GILES heat, nlce-.and clean through-. vacant (and ready for you. y 51,950 tun price. BATEMAN GETS RESULTS Nfw guaranteed home trade-in plan ' English Colonial 4 BBDROOMS, cusigm-bullt end **!rn nice, Close ie Ponliec General Hospital; Idaal tar young doctor, Formal dining room in* traditional colonial center hail plan, Gas hot water heat, carpeting and drapes included. 515,950 with 51,900 down plus costs. Wards Point Dr. Caw Lak* scsnle arte, beautiful fake front yvilh see wall ami dock, wqndeffu) beach, stately trots and muilfui lawn ' with comply la sprinkling system, Brick rancher, two, fireplaces and lo-fi, ground level family room, wonuerlu , form*. Why Mitt* far Lett? Lak* Front This Is really daluk* *11 Ih* way. Beautiful 1-bedroom rancher with glassed-in petla feeing leu and J'/K-car jiarago.. Loaded .vflfh extras, to (t, of wonderful sand bench, town and landscaping that it braafhtaklng. Only a snowing will convince you, Appointment It a mutt. 521,950 with raasonabla down poymnnl. A showing will Waterford RSAL SHARP ranchar In gxetl-lent location with lima prlvlttgai and close to ail tcmoli. Nlc* racroatton room In baMmant, 113-car garaga, aluminum tiding and PHA mortgaga with roasontiota down payment and no marigaga ■ Cute dnd Cozy Two badroonn, cIoh. to•Penllea** Northern. Built in 19M an nlca earner tot. with' Mar oarage. Aluminum stormj and.sereint ami wVAm'wH 3 Bedroom* iwM'iwi suburban area ofaia to town. Recreation room In lower level and g&sfel aetfs. i UNBELIEVABLE J m m1 re s# •£? 4m Trade The BATEMAN Way MCMB$ft OF INTER-CITY REFERRAL . SERVICE C0AST-T0-C0AST TRADES ■ | 377* S. Telegraph Raaltor FE, 8-7161 Open 9-S Milu 1. Sunday 1-S for appointment. ACREAGE, 525’ frontage o “"“lester Road. 5400 dow res. Hurry on thla. GILES REALTY CO. FE 5-6175 221 Baldwin Av*., Open f a.m. to 7 p.m, MULTIPLE LI5TINO SERVICE ^BUD" West Suburban Iflghly attractive 3-badroom brick Colonial style ranch home, lent suburban location, ana Ing spacious living roam, burning tlraplaca, dining rbo Sliding glass doors, patio, _ baths, largt kitchen with aatlng apace, 19'xir family roam, 2-cer attached garaga. Ottered at 519,900, approximately 1095 down, pluk costs. Low Down Poymeni 3-badroom > brick , terrace, handy North Sid* Ideation, close to bus and school, Includes, separate dining roam, full basement, ges heat end hot water, By appolntmani "Bud" Nicholi*,Realtor 49 ML Clamant SI. FE S-1201 After 6 p.M. FE 4-8773 ANNETT Walled Lake-3 Acres 1 3-bedroom ranch - In excellent condition. Living room, dining room, •largt modern kltchan, enclosed breezeway, screened polio, 2 car attached garage, Pull basement. Iilitoo, farms. West Commercial 5-room, 5-bedroom home ntar Ge»-*ral Hospital. 59-ft. frontage i Bloomfield Schools Brick ranch on largt landscaped corner lot. Slat* floored entry, picture window In living room, Ledge-rock firoplaet, dining "L", family roomi kltchan with rang* and ra-frlgeretor, lady space, 3 bedrooms, 1W baths. Carpeting and drapes. Gas radiant heat, leer attached rragt. 528,500, farms. WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 THEY'RE . LOOKING FOR YOUR WANT AD IN THE Pontiac Press Shorn 332-8181 Sale Houses HHTER~ NEAR CASS LAKE — an excellent bar, breezeway, attached 2-ear rage, blacktop drive, over T aero lot, lake privileges, immediate possession. Call today. TRADE OR SELL— This nerthsldl 3-bedroom, 1,7 baths, baaament, gas heat, will taka smaller 2-bed-room in trade or (5,700, terms. CALL B. C. HIITER, REALTOR. 3050; Elizabeth Lake Rd. PE 24)179, FE 4-3770 or F6 0-9574. ' Sol* Houses WEST SUBURBAN 2-bedroom, full basement, bat ... ter heah 1 wear garage, breeze- Nothing Down 7W SUNDALE. 3-Bedroom, brick, large living , room, modern kitchen, tile bath. Lara* lot. Blacktop street Low Lowl S'k per cent interest'. You'll need about $300 for closing cast. Total price 510,900. 231 W. Cornell — You'll Ilk* this neat 2-bedroom bungalow with full basement, oak floors, til* hath Goad location. Only 510,400 cast, ONLY to move In. A RON O'NEIL. FE 3-7103. .losing : PGR Y LAKE FRONT NOW area. 2-bedroorru panel breezewav 2-car garage. 50 feet on watei good bathing and fishing. Winte priced at 515,900-51,590. down plu closing. HAROLD R. FRANKS REALTY LAKE-LIVING LOTS, PRIVATE sand beach. Swim, boatdocks, fish. 15 minutes to Pontiac, $775. 59 down, 59 month. OR 3-1295. BLOCH BROS.. FE 4-4509. $23,900 Large 3-bedroom ranch with nlc lake-front living. Must be seen t appreciate. House almost new! I. L. Dally Co. EM 3-711 ..........i. OR 3-1275, FE 4-4507, bla ' lute * Acreage 54 and 5 acres, ren7, trade, ALL NEW, HARTI RICK. 100X150' *" yaga lots, 5)775, 520 down, 520 a' month. Pontiac 10 min. Private lake. By 1-75 Expressway. OR 3-1275. — Qloch Bros. - FE 4-4507. BLOOMFIELD Woodward-Squat Oyer 100 largt Mortgage LGons HOME OWNERS CASH UNLIMITED Exclusive plan. Remodel your home. Pay past or currant oWs. Consolidate Into one- low monthly payment. And extra cash If need some. Call anytime. Big Construction Co. PE S-7S33. CASH Loans to $3,000 one payment. No dosing cash. life Insurance included on unpaid balani. at NO EXTRA cost. Repay over a convenient term Phone or fpply in Person Family Acceptance Corp. 17 • National hi*,. 10 W. Huron ! FE 5-4822 QUICK CASH LOANS UJ> TO $3,000 You can gat a monthly payment cash loan of 53,000 or lea* — home even-though not. full usually In two days time. We give you tha full amount In' cash. There Is not a penny to pay for appraisal, survey or abstract. You also now receive a tree credit Ufa insurance policy. Coniolldata y with us withe VOSS AND BUtKNER, INC. 207 NATIONAL building PONTIAC, PH. FE 4-4729 I A V E 1941 HX X 5 House Trailer to i equity In home. Ct NATIONAL ange tor let SKATfS, NEW Ah/o US|6" We buy, sell end trade. Barnes-Jt^rgrayes Hdw-742 W. Huron, TRAOiJ NEW, USlb AND RiSO . I value. 5 5405. Don, Market T Sale Household Goods 65 Sate Household Good* 65 t.’Ss 528 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OP FURNITURE - Consists ail 2-piece living room aunt with 1 a tablet. J cocktaB fi • 7-piece bedroom- till dresser, chest, full Innarsprlng maftr____ springs to match with 3 5-piece dlnatta aet, 6 0*“^" Formica top table, I 9x12 rug Included. AD _____ WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 B. HURON PE 4-4751 16 W, PIKE ,-FB j|iil USED 30-INCH ELECTRIC RANGE, ■less than .1 year old, S3 pa# weak. Used Tv, new picture tube, I-year guarantee, 53 par weak. Used tire* 14" high threads 54.75 WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE AT OURf 15 W. PIKE STOREONLY Apt -Size Gas Stove .........S27.TS 2-Pc. Living Room Suita .....527.75 7-Pfc Dlnnette Set ..........534.75 15" Table Top Gat Stove ....537.75 Apt.-SIze Electric Range ......543.9$ pc. Sectional Sofa ..........547.75 Guaranteed Elec. Refrlgarator 557.75 Guaranteed Electrto Washer : .99.95-Easy Terms PE5-1H5 TEN - YEAR "501" NYl6N —' liS-stalled With rubber ped.__58.75 ^ycL i-l Carpet Sales Year End Repossessed CLEARANCE REGULAR $17.75 GI*** Dned gat TAPPAN BUILT-IN avar and broiler, regular $21.00 now tiat JO. AUTOMATIC CLOTHES DRYER. Regular 5177.75 now 5147.50. e rolling, i m. Most hi , churches. RORABAUGH / Woodward at Square Li Templeton 14-ROOMS Thli.old landmark located at Or-'5f.rd Uaw and Ottawa Or, is doing ^ to be told. Approx. 1-ecr* orielr tubltct to^rKenlng1 teCC|ult purchastr. K. L. Templeton, Realtor Commercial BRICK -- approximately 2,000 sq. ft. Suitable tor office or any tmafl business. Gas heat. Good location In City of Pontiac. Easy forms, with low dawn payment. Humphries FE 2-9236 If no answar, call PE 2-5722 as N. Telegraph Road Multlpla Listing Service High Hill Village A FINE COMMUNITY OF HOME sites to build your own ^ Winding paved streets. Mam tap parcels, 100x160.' Law as LADD'S, INC. 3835 Lapeer Rd. (Perry __________ FE 5-72V1 or OR 3-1231 altar 7:30 Holly_4*7-714l, _ STORE 48x53, ^BEDROOM HOMt . rant, trad* ~ OR 4-1733, TEXACO f ! HAVE A STATION, far lease, H T?fl»nSt^feS>0ls°to-Or— .. ....______ of Lake, Mich. For i_______ call R. E. Blaney, 565-5000 day eves;, and week end at 538-3344. SALES Executives-Organizers 17Va Acres High on a hill with a magnificent view. Small cottag* with electricity. Near US-10 and 1-75. 512,000, terms. 7 Acres and 6'/2 Acres Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor 244 s. Telegraph e 3-7140 , ■ M p FE 3-73(1 Wanted If Lots In the city of Pantlac SPOTLITE bldg. CO. Sajis Farm* 56 00 ACRES-CLARK3TON AREA-3-5J?r9?2n 1VP9 homa wlthi* car attached garaga, barn.. $ miles o 1*79 axprassway. Rolling mnd — idaal for noriai. $$4,000 — $11>000 UNQERW00D REAL ESTATE 1 Road 402-0700 625-2615 BATEMAN COMMERCIAL EXCHANGE OFFERINGS plT or |u»t tha bUBlnasi. You nama Its t'$ up to vou, inloylng a flna butmasi, Unballavable terms, tat u$ know what you Waht. )0I2*P$» LIQUOR BAR Thfs',one lijha^tharasst and* tin ffallon, nProp*r|,y*,andW#al^, |JR beDevaljy priced, Best check thli WHAT DO YOU HAVE? ........................... Hardware! — Party Store* ..................... cocktail Leungta ...................... Bowling Allays ...................... Boat Marlnai ....................... Orocary Sterat ............................ Incomat ........ Commercial PreptrtlM v Others to Choose Prom EXCHANGE SPECIAL MAVEi Pnal Company Vic* President ia« Noble (former Javcea Interviewing In Michigan January. Niw repeat Food exclusive Product r Inventory Whoiesalership. Ability to organlza many spare .time neighborhood distributor, necessary., writ* full Comldex Carp., I BUSINESS7 background . ,, . Nsw Canaan 2, Connecticut. Td BUY OR SELL. 1 CALL NATIONAL Buslnata Brokers 1143 Orchard Lake PE 3-7541 Sal* Land Contract* i 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us ball you deal; Warren Staut, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd, PE 5-0155 ______Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m. ACTION on your land contract, large small. Call Mr. Hiller, PE SOI Broker. 3550 Elisabeth Lake Ito Wantad Contract,-Mtg. 60 CASH. FOR- LAND CONTRACTS new 3- or 4-b*droom hem* or ant land. Call today I < MICHAEL'S REALTY VltE 3-4200 • UN 2-2282 333-7555 , FE 5-7982 SFASoUiB CanB ESnIracts wanted. Oat our deal before you sell. CApiroL savings & loan A88N„ 75 W. Huron 8t. FE 4-0561, 1 TQ5Q , LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. 8ea us betpre you dial. Warren Stout, Realtor (50 N. Opdyke Rd. Pe 5-5165 1 Open Evas, 'til 8 p.m. LOANS TO $1,000. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. _*:3a to 5:30- 8*1. 7:30 to I BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY ' WHERE YOU CAN ( BORROW UP TO $1,000 OFFICES' IN Pontiac—Dreylon Plalnt—Utlca Walled Lake- Birmingham loanT TO $1,000. I) 3: - PIECE BEDROOM SUITE, 527.50, Clean, guaranteed stoves, roflrgaratora ana washers, all sizes 57 to 597. 2-plece living' room, 527. Big picture TVs, 524 up. C” space heaters from 519; N Ice piece dining room set with chin 557. Odd beds, dressers, chest springs and rugs. Everything used furniture at bargain pries New factory second bedrooms, 5 Factory second living room, 577 E-ZJrerms — Buy—Sell-Trade .;E 2-4 —_____Sanderson ___ ______ Oakland to N. Cass 1 ECStYEli STOVfe — end wood haator, 527. Small mahogany dining table end 4 chairs 524. Portable laundry tubs 55. Floor lamps 52.97 Walnut dining sat with china 551 Gas and electric stove* $10 w S-plecs dinett* lie. Rofrlgtraral ,525. up. Large oak dining tabl 57. Odd bads and springs. . BUY-SELL-TRADE-PEAR^ON’S Furniture, 210 e. pik* pe 4-75*1 2-PIECE SECTIONAL, 'fLiettt 1C . chord organ. OR 2, WEEKLY SPECIALS ROOMS, BRAND NEW FURNITURE with nlc* stove and rofrlg-orator. Everything you need tor BRAND NEW LIVING T.. BRAND NEW I PC. DINET • 564 USED . stoves, refrigerators washer*, all sizes, Cleanid _ guaranteed, 510 up. Lots ot bargains In used furniture. Plenty'af factory seconds about Va price, B-Z Terms - Buy • fall - Trad#, 1 LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOU8I 1450 Baldwin *t Walton Open__'tll 7 p.m. dally_FE 0-7875 ROOM8~IP...BRAND NEW FUR- n tore, living room, bedr Plan v\IvTn<|ITON* BAXTER_______ ■ Finance vv, 401 'Pontiac ainio lank Building ' FE 4-1538-9 WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1,000 w*s^Tr«crcr' 100 NR|lR.^sjr „dg. Mortgage leant 1 VINYL LINOLEUM PLASTIC WALL- TILE .......... B5.0 TILE OUTLET, 1075 W. Huron l (F Ffiolf "FHTu!tt“R ffpWTSilRkYDR, 540, Electric stove, 525, both excellent condition. OR 3-2450. TV FE 2-2257. Open ttj >31 E. Wallen. Corner of Joilyn. Aiout^NYfHWo~YBU........WANT FOR THE , H O M E CAN BE FOUND AT L and S SALES. A mile aut of the way but a lot less to pay. Furniture and !'RP,ll£nc*.s..0.! a,( k'nds NSW AND USED, Visit -our trad* dept, tor real bargains. We buy, sell or trad*. Com* out and look around, _2 acres of free, garklnjj. Phono PB 8-7241. . P*n 24 MONTiII'tO^AY1, M 4. miles B. at Pontiac or 1 mil* E Of Auburn Helghis on Auburn, _M57, UL 2-3300. AUTOlWATi^WA^IRrefflAF- ' CLEARANCE SALE 7-plece chroma dlnalte, 557.50; 5: place drop-iaal sets, 544.50. Bunk, end trundle beds — 15 styles, in maple, walnut, bland and wrought Iron, 537.95 up - com-geek with mattresses. 7x12 foam-leum rugs, 54,95; 5-year cribs, terms ol °*Her Items. Easy ... _p|AR80N'S FURNITURE J,° P,K!L PE 4-7581 COLONIAL PURNitURC-LABGB selecilon, everything (or your home, connllv Horn* Furnishings, 2135 „P)xl« Hwy., cor. Talagraph. FRIOIDAiRB ELECTRIC" RANGE, 2 ovens, exc. condlllon. Ptor's Appliance, RM 3-4li4, 8 bxiiiTTT prro cnair, Formica top IC-ture tuba, 850. OR 4D220. spfctiXL 6PP<|”'"---- LIMITED TIME ONLY-FREE With : SGplaca • it ste.es, F.GOODR Perry____ Water lelteiier* Far Sale Miscellaneous 67 1-WEEK ONLY ‘ Exterior Plywood .... ’ Masonite 57.34 Magnetic. Door CaMwt ... j. ,15c . ... _ PONTIAC PLYWOOD 1401 Baldwin PB 2-2543 5-TNCh "‘i ' toingfX- - UL 2-4253. ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN PE 5-7471 AN AUVOAAATIC CABINKV-(tVlE sewing machlnt, 1953 modtl. Buttonholes, hams, fancy stitches, ate. Single or doubi* needle work. 55.05 per month, or toil price of 145.40. Michigan Nacchl-Elna. PI 5-4521. bathroom pixtmEs, oil" and Hardwero, else, suppllts. crock and pip* and flttlMi. • Low* Brothers Paint, Super Kamton* and Rua-, 2585 HEIGHTS SUPPLY Lapeer Rd pg quartoro, Qadyka Mkt. "P« i ,„ Botti* Gas Installation * Two 100-pound cyllndart and equip-mant, 5)2. oreit Plains Oas Co., __F E 8-0872, BRITANIA" YEAR BOOKS, 1945 tg *759. Appleton _Colbg* Dictionary, never uaad. PB £10)3. CACINETS Stack of custom, call us first. Day -or night, 3364327. ’ONTlAC KITCHEN specialties 717 Qrchtra Lakg RdT complBtbTFKk DP pip* And finings — plastic, capper and cast Iron tor draini. Plastic, oaaptr’ and gaiv. tor water. Brack tor daa, Montcalm Supply, 155 W. Mane-calm. PE 5-4712. \ , —#—raomham----------------- VGrove Mag. 4x8 ...... ts.sa Pre finished Mag. 4X1 ■'-Grov# Mag. 4x7 ..... DRAYTON PLYWOOD 51) Dixie Hwy.______OR 3-8712 ijlSTOM CABInBTB. kftCHBNS. tornltura. SIN Tubbs Read. OR Din ,"'PiF PiGbPAtoT, 'love, power, mower, twin bed, breektast eel. PB 5-5071,_ BTTOWnRST- For .better-built custom cabinets, see Our cabinets an display. 1055 W, Hurgn 334-0724. Alter 4 p.m. 363-3343, Dliconllnuid Formic* 25c exTRATiXXt p6r tHiT COLD - 52.75 y^y^wtodewi, siao. Thompsons, FNOAMia*tff"AH6 wtebbiNG Hng4tot.Mu,tf8KHtlca. Call Phil T,^.'S^cT^I«r----------- PIRBQUBTS II1 * £y£ PACKAGE COAL . . ... PINE COMBINATION bobVs* :r1rn COMPLETE WITH SCRlIh ANO STORM _OR34"xM‘'-513.71 l_ bargains. ■"•pWNAwr" uiib, 'uv» • ctill Ml 27164, wa r Eh BA8a bOA'h(SW|{rA.L gat, consumers approved 587.7$ , value $37,75 and 547.75 marred. Michigan Pluoraicanl, 373 Or- fs and~or6?Ir)II nationally aavartisad laving up to 4M. |44([, UI&8KL inj. bullitt; MO. Wilhmjf rtiachiMe, $20. ftinv !rlb._$hd mallrtu, $10. 4-ptffCI rIJ-rToIAAtB*;'”' Hr" iLlcntlB frv.te.rS; *47; stava, 725,; V, Harris, Rebuilt Appliances •«fy Splnneri ............ |M StefntU, J Hqfi'lum'Blora, ......... 148 1 TV n*W pig. tub* ....vt , All Ouerenieed ,000b HOltSBKBtPlHO SHOP ..•.mm* Baby Pood. 24 (or 7?c Cut-Up Frier*, 160 * lb. ' Dag Pood, 12 lor (te Pro* Ham* Delivery Cell for .free ceTeMut- W* reserve the rights Jo limit quantity. Call 447-H77.!, mBdiciNI CAolHiti, lARS¥ IS" mirror, ellghlly marred 5)"75, large selection ot cabinet! with of without * light*, sliding doors. Terrific bOys. Mlchlaan pluena-coni, 373 Orchard Lai*. — 35. ”S4L’puRNftciiiAMifsriiir ohNAMPNTAL IPWWwOTO m ^ 1578 Opdyke T 7 PR 4-DN 37, N^VW^TII1W^ potit lot*? ARirnsFTYTT-. color* retain brllluinar in aareets cleaned with Blue Lustre. Rent electric ihempooer II. McCsndiei* carpel#. > l'‘ujMijiNU L2F.il1 nn Hi# ‘wararagiB Value nLmj j™™®*s™™1 m *Wr NiHTKEN Tltn PONTIAC T^EFjSS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1968 Nr Sab Miscellaneous 67 ftts^i^ngD^ Rent Trailer Space SUMP PUMPS WLD. RENTJD, RE pqlreq Cone's Rental, FE 6-4642. THESALVA3 ION ARMY Uahd OH nai mw hb«<»n used oil space heaters, *5. -■t furnace blowers, all sizes, and up, FE 6-1504. TALBOTT LUMBER Glees Installed ip, doors and HaTtahftiif /live. ' > . Pf 4-4595. TOLEMAN 125,000 BTU. #*■* VAN TY AND HAND BASIN SET up, complete, *59.95. B toilet i *19.94 pas automate water heaters, WAREHOUSE ^LEAR^ct.T^-tables, typewriters, addins me* j *Wt “i 'printingY^RIce CHOW; 1 CHIHUAHUA; 2 TOY Fox, wormed, shots. NA 7-2931., 2~BEAGLES TRAINED FOR RAB-! *•* hunting. UL 2-1032. 2 REGISTERED 10 WEEKS BROWN1 Chihuahuas, tamale. OR 3^0251. j PER CENT OFF, POODLES, parakeets, canaries, fish. Crenels Bird .Hatchery. 2X89 Auburn. Ut 2-2200. Pet supplies. , 7~POODLE M0 UP, NO MONEY down, $1.25 a week. FE 8-3112. oper evenings til 9. “ Kkc DACHSHUND JAHEIMS KENNELS FE 8-2538. AKC BEAGLE, FEMALE, *30 FE 3*7295 ___ BEAGLE / FOX~AND RABBIT DO§. I rabbit dogs, sel 1 196 Baldwin >ad, Orton.______________ BOSTON~BULL- PUPPIES, PURE-bred. FE 2-6012 after 6. IRISH SETTER PUP, $15. WHEELS,- TIRES AND TUBES. Priced to go. 50c and up. Call FE 4-9580._______________ WHEEL HORSE 702 ELECTRIC snow plow, 36" mower, seeder end. lawn sweeper, 1 year old,. *625*. 651-3005.____________________ YEAR END SALE Stoves, ovens, hoods, garbage (disposals, sinks, faucets, formica, cabinets, dishwashers, KITCHEN INTERIORS , 3127 W. Huron ’ 33841813 Hand Tools-Machinery RETIRED TOOL MAKER'S TOOLS ____________FE 2-7894 _____ SNAP ON MECHANIC'S TOOLS and chest. Also snap on alignment. 1 Va-ton floor 64611.______________. Musical Gooii^ _____________71 120 BASS ZOPPI „ ACCORDION. Also Buescher alto saxophone. Call 651-844V. Good condition. HARMONY MONTEREY GUITAR and case. MA 6-3611.. SALE GUITARS 1 ,1 ACCORDjONS \ Loaners and lessons. FE 5-542*._ COIRONBT AND CASE,-*35. -, t ' O R 3-7584 PARAKElt, “ BABY I MALES, *4.95. 305 First, Rochester. OL 1-6372. POODLE CLIPPING, ALSO \0THER breeds. Reasonable. 673-5604. . 1 PUPPIES, NO MONEY DOWN, 12 mos. to pay. Poodles & Dachshund, FE^im*6' mX______Hunt'a Ptt_ Shoo I PUREBRED BOSTON BULL TER- rtor. 34*1 Featherstone.____ SIAMESE KITTENS7 *15 NO PA- pars, L'2-2511. _ TOY~POODLES, AKC, SILVER Fima Its; 8 weeks old, shots, cham-plon stock. 332-6335. WHITE MICE; HAMPSTERS ALL PET SHOP MARMADUKE VJN’T RENT, BUY; 65 X 120, *20 down, *20 month, blbck top . rood. Gas, laka an property. BLOCH BROS. CQRP., OR 3-1295. . *22.95 . *43.95 (46.95 plus Tax and Recappafele -Tire 24 hr. service on recapping 600x16 Thru 1100x20 Firestone Store, 146 H CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN - -Cylinders reboned. Zuck Ma-H j Shop. 23 Hebd, Phon 24563. By Anderson & Leeming New and Used Cars FREE INFORMA EM 34703. ' AUCTIONS WEDNESDAYS 7 P M. Will-O-Wey Country M»rl. 813 W. Long Lake Rd. Ml 7-3469.___ .B if AUCTION SALES v. 6VEWY FRIDAY 7:30 P M. EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P. M. EVERY SUNDAY 2:00 P. M. Sporting Goods—All Typos Door Prizes Every Auction Buy—Soli—Trade, etali 7 Daye Consignments Welcome 5089 Dixie HWy.\ . no ,-rm MUST SELL CLARINET B-FLAT ■ J-->, *75. F" INVENTORY SALE All Pianos end Organs at Special Prices 1) Used Lowery Brentwood Organ was *1,450; NOW *900. uper discounts on ell clarinets and ,rUnSEFbRE YOU BUY-GIVE US A TRY ' WIEGAND MUSIC 469 Elizabeth Lake Road, FE 2* New All-Electronic Organs 2 manuals. 13 pedals; made hi an American manufacturer. \ *550 . with bench 8nd music» MORRIS MUSIC ' 34 S. Telegraph Road (Across from Tel-Huron) FE 2-0567 NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL Several‘ usad Organs greatly ducad. i Prices range from 5150 ... ESTEY, LOWREY and BALDWIN ORGAN?' all must go before 1964. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. OPEN EVERY NIGHT MON,; THRU FRI. TIL 9 P.M. II E. HURON FE 4-01 USED KING TRUMPET, *50. 1 ’ Nevelo. Pontiac. Boats—Accessories BOATS - MOTORS - Scott McCullough - —.essorles SALES ’ FE 8-4402 CLEAR THE DfcLKSl Everything Musf Go! Up to 25% Discount I Lerson-Ohe-Chetek EVINRUDE MOTORS Inside-Outside Storage BOAT REPAIRS AND REFINISHING "Ygur Evlnrude Dealer" Harrington Boat Works 199 S .Telegraph Rd. 1 332-8033 1 CLOSEtOUT ' ' •. >63 Johnson Motors# Star Craft boats and Gator Champ trailers. OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 196 Orchard Lake____1 * FE 2-8020 Autoinsurance AUTO INSURANCE FOR SAFE DRIVERS $23.50 QUARTERLY. COVERS ALL THIS SlO-PGtOCO - liability, *5,000 .proper damage. *1.000 1-1260. 3637 Lakeville Road, Ox- wood,. Aluminum, Flberglai "HARD TO FIND" DAWSON'S SALES . Tlpilco Lake MA 9-21. ■ JET BOATS Jet boats going at nearly cos ndudmg 64 models, A FREE bo irailer goes with ybur purchas; Every boat must . gbl Will tel MICHIGAN ' TURBOCRAFT :527 DIXIE HWY - OR 4-03 NlWRtDlNG STABLE, 13650 NEAL Rd., Devisburg, 634-4961, call for details, Riding Instructions available, Groups welcome* HORSES BOARDED Huy-CrainFeed V AND STRAW DELIVERED B Poultry APPLES, PEARS, SWEET CIDER, McIntosh, Jonathan, CouHland, Spy, Dallclous, Steele red and others. Bargains and utility grades. From SI .50 bushel. Oakland Or-‘ mile east of Milford on E. Rd. s to 6. daily.______________________ RENT A NEW GRINNELL . KANO Mutlc lessons included, ■ | Choose your stylo and finish All payment* apply it > -u buy $2.00 '■ ' PER -WEEK Grinnell's DOWNTOWN STORE FB 3-7)6 PONTIAC MAIL___682;042 HEAR STEREO AT 1+8 hEST A Jl Gallaghers. From *99.50. t I, Gallagher Music Co. II Bait Huron Opan Every Night ‘Til Christmas FOR THE FINEST IN FRESH FARM PRODUCE SEE JBpb & Bill's Produce, Co. Pontiac... , . . ... ,,673*5631 HOWE. Phone HARTLANO If THfe NEW XL12 HOMfllTE chain saw at Davis Machinery Co. Your John Deere, New Idea and Homailla daalar. Ortonvllla. NA , 7-3293,., ..... -----lT,1*000 ____ ____its, *100 ded. collision comprehensive and service. FRANK ANDERSON AGENCY 1044 Jo*lyn Ave. FE 4-3535 FereignCor| _____________TW 1962 KARtOlANN GHIA . CONVERTIBLE. Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1765 TELEGRAPH ftfttj LOOK 16- foot Cavalier custom ski boat, 17- foot Chrls-Craft Super Sport * SEE IT TODAY I AT MAZUREK MARINE SALES i. Blvd. at Saginaw FE 4-9587 PINTER'S BOATLANti _ea-Ray - Thompson ’ Star* Johnson Motors XB| 170 N. Opdyke UVE ' KAR'S Boats and Motors Or - Rentals ■ FE 4-0924 W MERCURYS s the one with tne teeth marks i th'e door handles!” 106 IMs end lyed Caw ,^r«^DLw'tl^U—5'--UA" “I mites.. OR 3etl78. VILLAGE RAMBLER .SPECIAL '51 Ford, runs good, body rough, $165 2 Chevy's 1954 and 1953. 875. 1954 Ford and 1954 Pontiac, both *75. 1957 Chevy, 6 and S, *395. 195* Olds and Pontiac, *495 each; ■ Many other late models. Economy Used Cars, __________2335 Dixie Hwy. 195* THUNDERBfRD, ONE-OWNER, no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES . "Pontiac's Discount Lot" _ 1 193 S. Saftitiaw New anJ Used Cars ,106 1955 CHEVY WAGON. BEAUTIFUL. A Choice of. 35 > New Soprts Cars. Complete Parts and Service on All Imports. Authorized Dealer for: &tar AusfiN®? ^BfAM Sk SUPERIOR RAMBLER * 550 OAKLAND AVE. 1959 VW CONVERTIBLE Autobahn Motors, Inc, 1765 TELEGRAPH FE 8-4531 1962 FIAT SPIDER1 ROADSTER, 4-speed: Radio, hooter, whitewalls. White with blue Interior. Only *1,495. Easy terms, PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. H 4-2735. ST CO.) 10 E., BIRMI VOLKSV 1960 VOLKSWAGEN MICRO-BUS BLUE AND WHITE ECONOMY TRANSPORTATION* MORRIS MUSIC 24 S. Telegraph Road (Across From Tel-Huron) FE 2-0567 Wonted Cars-Trucks OR 50 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS fres tow anytime. FE 2-2666. TO W JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS wanted. OR 3-293*. "1, Oft USED TRACTORS All sizes and makes KING BROS. FE 64)724 FE 4-1662 Pontiac Rd. at Oodyka 88 AIRSTRBAM LIGHTWEIGHT . . TRAVEL TRAILERS since 1932. Guaranteed tor Si* them end get,,* demons,,-. lion at Warner Trailer Sales, 3091 W. Huron (plan to loin' on* of Welly Byama excltlng^careyens). ARE YOU FLORIDA BOUND? Then see 1h* all-new aluminum Avalalr with lifetime ggHHgta Alto, Holly Hi ---- d Tawoe Brave tr W£elCsworth auto and TRAILER SALES 6577 Plxl*, Hwy. MA 5- RENT A Trumpet, Cornet; Trombone, Flute, Clarinet, Violin or Snare Drum Kit $5.00 A MONTH Ren* tor et long t t “ou with, •li moneys epply If you buy. UNLIMITED RENTAL PRIVILEGES Grinnell's. p®rNMAy?!B 1 bfflceiqulpment 72 used OFFICE FURNITURE — \ enalrt, desks, flies, typewriters bookkeenWq ..tnechlnes, *fe. -Generai Printing and Office supply, . 17 w. L*wrdnc«St._____ Store Equipment _____73 2 LARGE WALK-IN PRODUCE coolers compiel#** with eolis com-preteori etc. Can be seen at 63 w Lawrence Phone FE 2-8J88 irom 7 #.m. - 3iM p.m._ fTSk'Tu rUT for complete lewelry; camera and radio depart- 1 menu. Includes show cates, gen doles and tobies, completely lighted. Will sacrifice for quick salt. Suitable for immediate use.* Some less then on* veer old. For date lit, jtiqes* cell 13H11*. . _ Sporting Goods 74 65 HORSE LVCOMINO, MOUNTED for elrboet. MA 5*6611. tftfAD ski'is, 7-FOOT i BOOTS, CUB-co bindings, size f-IOt aluminum poles, Ilk* new. 1100. FE 5*7702 or Ml 4.2650. ~ ICI"tKXTkl, NEW AND Wi buy, sell and trade, Barnes* Hargraves Hdw. 742 W. Huron. WXNYMdr^EER ‘SKI'HONd RAw fur*. Muskrat meats tor sal*. 500 nniltc Trail. Welled Lake, ktf 4*4722. $and-Grav*l-Dlrt GOOD DRIVEWAY beech s*nd( del yered. PTOrtTC'TAKB' fcdiipel ply^ lend, gravel, fill <>rw Wuod-Coal-Coka-FuBl Lifetime guarentee. Cuitom-buiit quality, ell self-contained. SEE THE NEW MUSTANG i • private upstairs I WINTER STORA< TQM STACHLEI $25 MORE c'hTTv ■ ______ . CONVERTIBLE, automatic radio; heater, power steering and brakes, .whitewalls, extra nice” with NO MONEY DOWN; *26,04 per month. PATTERSON ' lftf CHEVROLET 2*DOOR, AUTO-—*lc, v-8,. radio, heater. D,m* new. Pull price only CONVERTIBLE, D°WN ^PATfERSOH- Chrysler-Plymouth ROCHESTER 1801 N. M»ln St. OL 1-8559 1959 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR STA-tion wagon, 6-cyllnder, powergllde, radio, neater, whitewalls. Solid clean finish! Only *995. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET _ _________________, V- .... CHEVY IMPALA, 6, AUTOMA-tic trentmltllon, radio and haater, whitewalls. <800. MY 2-1402. £RiVY MONZA SPORfS COUPE, silver gray. Inside blue. Automatic 'transmission, big engine, |ust tuned, new valves. FE 2-3344. 1959 CHEVY WAGON/irCLEAN, *700. OR 341879. 1960 CHEVROLET PARKWOOD station wagon, V8 engine, power-glide, power steering and brakes, radio, heater,] whitewalls, adobe beige with brown Interior, only *1195. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET-CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. i|L 4-2735. 1958 T-Bird 2-Door Hardtop- With Cruls-O-Maflc transmission, whitewalls, white finish, $1095, > BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD * AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 OLDS, 1962, HOLIDAY SUPER 88, A-l. *1,750. Call 624-4567 —' r”** 1 EM. 3-0394, ....- 1959 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR, AUJO-matic tranmlsslon, radio, Uglfa whitewalls, new car tro MONEY DOWN, *20.04 pel PATTERSON Chrystor-Plymouth ROCHESTER J Ml N, Main SI. RADIO, HEATER, ify. good condition, i. FE 1959 FORD 2-DOOR FAIRLANE with V8 engine, automatic tr* mission, radio; heater, extra cl* *750, JEROME FERGUSON, ft ester FORD Dealar, QL 1-9711. 1959 Ford . Custom 2-Door With 6 cyl. engine, gray, finis radio, heater, fordomatlc, *595. BEATTIE ORD DEALER Since 1930' IE HWY, IN WATERFORD T THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 AUTO- matlc. A-l *550.682-0526. 1960 FORD 2-DOOR, STICK SHIFT, RADIO, HEATBi WHITEWALL TIRES BV/tel i BUT fONDI- TIRBS, 'excellent condition; absolutely no money DOWN. Payments _pf f*05 Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1765 TELEGRAPH FE ‘8-4531 60 MERCEDES BENZ 190 SL riodsler. , 4-spe*d, radio, heater, beige with genuine red leather Interior. One-owner. Extra clean, ' S2195. Bely terms. PATTER- --------u iggg s BIRMING- D MOBILE SALES open tii 6, Mon. (■ Frl. 9-9. Closed Sun. 3091 West Huron St. 332-492S LAROE tlLfiTION 6P NMW AlfD used trellers. Paris and service. Storage spec*. Open *11 winter. JACOBSEN TRAILER SALES, 5690 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5981, rIsHlts of 'summeITtraOTno 15 good used units, 1695 to (995 Ntw Velldwstones end Gems, 16' to 3255 Dixie Hwy. OR J-1456 USEDlMlAlS Great Lakes, 40x8 jNallonel, 36x8 Detroiter, 51x10 Whitley, 01x10 Pontiac, 49x10. NEW SPECIALS - WE WILL STORE 1 FV^f ElEfFLACf ’ WOOD, “s*A 6SS-W2I, * .. AL'S LANOS^APlNG, WO0D 6f ell kinds iree rt«mov*l. FF 4*4221. twifw«prgw^ir^o*k, mepie nickery, F> 2sii04._ .... ‘Wwss'ntar"* a accessories, Bob Hutchinson, lie Mom* Salas, Inc. 4jpi Dlx* la Hwv„ Drayton Plains, OR 3*1202 .....OXFORD TRAILER SALES Navy 60' and S3' • 12' wld*, 3 and (•bedroom Marietta*. On* of the bait buy* in^ mohiie llvtnjb any. modarn, H1' * *?3’ wi^**V*aa8ond daiuxe, For Ihosa who want only 41’ X 16''wld* General, i horn*, I or J 1' units on display i 20 other new >0r wl coaches, *11 prlcti "oxHird trailIIr Ialei , ) MM* south of Lake Orton on M, , MY 3*0721 Parkhiirst Troller Solos FINIIt IN MOBIL! LIVING II T 1 to feel, FMfurtng New; Mow buddy end Nomads Located hall wait pal Averill's LLOYDS BUYING Good Cluan 'Cars ,2023 Dixie Hwy. w* PJ* mor^ecause M & M Motor Sales "Sine* 1945" Wt want sharp late model! „ aft. Mansfield AUTO SALES ARU YOU bUYINO A ' NEW OR.COURTESY XARfWl WILL BUY Your laie model CAR WE PAY MORE. 1104 Baldwin Ave. 335*590Q_ TOP~* FOR CLEAN CARS'fiii (rucks. Economy Cers. 2335 Dixie. "TOP DOLLAR PAID" FOR "CLEAN" USED < ARS GLENN'S 952 West Hjron St., _ .. E 4.7271 FB 4*179 ' WANTED: 1959 • 1943 C A R S Ellswprth Auto sales *77 DIX1* Hwy, MA 9*1400 WANTED; 1934 OR 193T“CH|VY coup*. UL 2-5076 offer 3i30. PRiVAtl PARYY WITE PAY CASH for good usod pick-up truck, FB 4-6108. , ' : ____ ; " "wTUfEfiT cars TOP DOLLAR „ FOR GOOD CARS MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 611 OAKLAND AVB. FB 4 4547 New end Uied Trucks , 103 Mil 4-2735.__ FSTTn'gTTS H FORD ANGELIA, snow tiros, *145. OR 3-0152. 1963 VW SEDAN, RED. Autobafhn Motors, Inc. 785 Tolegreph___FE 8-4531 1962 VW 2-Door' Sedan with artic white finish, radio, heater, 81445. BEATTIE "Your FORD OEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY, IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3*1291 1959 VW SUitR6qF~iLACK Wl+H .whllewelt tires. *750. F E54723. iJon^^Lf.lJEDrNEWtiArNT pood condition, *375. 1,1 blue Interrlor, Only^^^^P--, terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. _ ___ ,1961 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE, 2-door sedan, 4-cyllnder, standard shift, ■ radio, heater, extra, clean. Only $1195. Easy terms. PATTER-BON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4>273f 961 CHEVROLET PARKWOOD station wagon. V-8 engine, mafic, power steering Mb ..... l^..,. t- L 3-1704, 1940 VW CAMPER LET STATION WAGON, RADIO, HfeATER, AUTO. TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY ' DOWN. Payments of' hl™. hi. M»r;, *' I960 CHEVY, t vary nice. SSI gins. Dealer. BEL AIR 2-DOOR, . FE 3- i. Rig- 2-tone turquols f and brakes. JEROME Motor Sales ' 1964 PLYMOUTH BRAND NEW. $1988" No extra eost to you. Heater, defroster, back-up lights, wlndihlaid washer, variable wipers, whf*1 OAKLAND CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH VALIANT 724 Oakland. ! 335-9436 MIVII ^CYIf. Ibw md Used Cart 106 4-DAY MONEY BACK Guarantee Ntw and Used Con This guarantee n s that If tor refund" your money. 1962 ELECTRA convertible •IKYgMPEST 4 door ... LeSABRE 4 door mi ■ , *1495 . *1195 1962 BONNEVILLE hardtop .. 1962 BUICK 2 door ..... 1942'VTEMPEST LeMans ..... 1960 FORD Convertible ..... 1940 BtSCAYNE 4 door ...,• 195* IMPALA convertible ... 1963 BONNEVILLE 4 door .. 1961 LeSABRE 2 door ... 194) BONNEVILLE 4 door .. 1961 VENTURA 4 door ... . *2495 . *2395 , (2195 . *1595 . *1195 • *'12* TEMPEST# • IXCILtENT wSSSlIr amEFIcaN 4-dooh, jtoVheoter, automatic trensmjs-pm jotra from *795. *4S down and $7,70 per wee*v/ VILLAGE RAMBLER ; BIRMINGHAM _ 366 s. WOODWARD - Ml «-3900 Car Won't Start ^7 CALI ft Mansfield Auto Sales FE 5-5900 1104 Baldwin 45 ONE-OWNER tATE MODEL CARS GUARANTEED TO GO! SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 223 N. MAIN OL 1-8133 ROCHESTER, MICH. $16.46 jter month. 100 othi Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ave. .. FE 8-6079 .■ ...... 1958 PLYMOUTH SUBURBAN STA-tlon wagon, low mileage. 1-car owner. <350. 626-3419. 1959 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR STATION wagon, standard .transmission, cylinder engine, hill price, * *5 down, $12.34 per month. Marvel Motors 451 Oakland Ave. ■■■■-- ~ PE,S-4079 ■■■ ■ 1960 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR SEDAN] automatic transmission, radio, heater, power steering, whltewal s, new cer trade, one owner. NO MONEY , DOWN, 840,04 per m°",h' PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth ROCHESTER 1941 PONTIAC 1957 CHEVY BEL A7R jl-BOOl* LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac'* Discount Ut"-■ , . 193 8. Sapinaw PE r??I4 ,1962 TEMPEST LEMA|4S, 4-SPEED ■ trensmIMlon, bucket1 seett, good condition, MA 5-1137. . 1963' PONTIAC CATALINA VEN-htra, sharp. FE 44677. 1960 RAMBLER AMERICAN door end if has radio and he. .. and is In good condition. Full price *497 OiW no money dowr King Auto Sales, 3275 W. Huron St. 1960 Falcon 4-Door Wagon 6-passenger# green finish# red! BEATTIE OR 3-1291 I960 FORD STATIOtl W»Wi^n »■ automatic# lust ll)ca new. No money d°WLUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" . 192 S- Benlnew , ' JfE 4-2214 WSTfBRD,, AUTOMAVlCn-OWNfcR. EM 3-6935 1941 FORD ^PASSENGER WAGON with radio; heater and e v-a engine, automatic transmission, *1,495. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. ______FE 5-4101 1961 Ford Galgxie 2-Door with VO engine, automatic transmission, hooter, ‘"M* Suburban Olds 565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM Ml 44485 1962 RAMBLER CLASSIC ‘•‘DOOR station wagon, radio, hooter, ilk* new. One-owner, Birmingham trad* 'Full price S1S95. VILLAGE RAMBLER ....... __ torms. RAT- TERSON CHEVR&LET CO. TOC S, WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. """* 1962“ CHEVY" wagon, I m or, whltewall8*"’Oniy’' 13,000" actoal miles, while with red interior. Only (1595. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD (iri mnnmmrn . .. NOVA STATION , 4-cyllnder engine, power-----'r steering, radkn 4-2735. Crissman Chevrolet ROCHESTER OL 2-9721 1961 FORD 2-DOOR# RADIO# HEATER, auto, transmission, w H I T E W A L L TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MO N E Y DOWN. Payments of SS.95 per HEATER, DEL U X E TRIM, MIL*EAGB.L^AbsoLtely no money down: Payments of M.7? per week. See Mr. Perks at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500. ft-FORD CONVETtIBLE WITH i badfooms. Those Country Cwnin. MY SHORT 6 MOB it I -----------1 hums' T> noxi to Albiin lO^p'^Nn^'m'lre and hiKhot Initaiied, Comploto lin of putts and jiulfio go*. „ • Wanted biHn trellors 093 FORD '/«-TON PICK-UP m j||p WITH SNOW P 4391 ChaasmaO; Drayton Plains ;_ vjEEP^ Y#ur A olTver *'*r BUICK and JEEP 210 Orchard Lako ___ PB HlOf ,Bettir Used Trucks , GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS, , FB 5*9415 Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1765 TBLBGRAPH_____FB 5-4531 OLIVER RENAJLt Are you looking for a ear that will ai t! you up io 40 milts par gallon, Renault tathe answer. RENAULT DAUPHIN* ..... J 490 RENAULT R5 .... ..... »•*« 5150 Down on above car*, low low payment* OLIVER RENAULT ' SAAB * • $1695 WO-YEAR FACTORY WARRANT' includes sales lax, license an title. New winter cer, 35 mpg ecqr omy, 12 volt battery, electric wl; ere, lectory undercooling, r * a 3?fcHH?LD»8.LBmR,rul ber seals, largest, luggage truni magnificent snow end ice tractioi will go TO mph. • , THE STABLES PB 4-6001' 2112 5. Telegraph ”*■ holTdaV' spbcial" i960 Flit, radio, Jieeter.^^ 1951 Meco, lli miles * gallon. 1955 ZodPacMHL ECONOMY USED CARS, 2335 Dixie Hwy. 040 R E NAULT, E XC iLlENT CON- VILLAGE RAMBLER DON'T BUY THAT USED CAR 'TIL YOU SEE THE SELECTION AT WILSON PONTIAC-,CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward ... *, Ml 4*1930 Birmingham, Michigan_ 1961 MONZA 2-D09R, ]a-L GOOD --- - FB 2-670B. 1942 CORVaTR MONZA 4-DOOR sedan. Poworglldo, radio, hooier, whitewalls, satin silver finish with red Interior. Only (1,595. Easy term*. PATTERSON CHEVROLET C., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4* 1962 MONZA, LOW I New and Ui*d Cart 106 7 BUICK IPBCIAL 4-DOOR, R llo, haalor, auto, It (torti, Iriv* li every day, The price '“PEOPLES AUTO SALES, „„ OAKLAND FE 2-2351 i960 Cadillac ibdaW obvil Clean, on* owner, low mliei.,... All power oqulpmant, 12,200. Own* *r. FB 2-3546. Wt *“frmrri»NWiTiin met; Hat been . given the beet w care and eflTI looks and perform* like a -new one, sparkling sliver finlah with a k—" luxurious black lee Equipped With pi md brakes, power AUTO INIURANCB PROBLEMS e will de eur very beef to help YOU <• BRUMMETT AOINCYV Iratie Mile FB d-ffisOF Nex) to Ponllec Stale Bank \ jo^ and *C|2,«T iLEAOE, 102 __1475. 363-0216, fy6i Corvette# >63 “CHlTvTnT liWA^j-bbaR hardtop. Powergllde# radio# heater, Eei'y^erms!7 P^T?ERSON_CH?'/ ROLBT CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AV,E„ BIRMINGHAM. MM-2735. 9«TMP5m:A iYAflW WAGON, power, beef offer.jOR 4-1933. 763 CORVETTirCOUPB< fSPEB.D, AM PM radio, heater, whltowolls, 7500 oefuel miles. Service records On request. Only 13/495. Easy farm*. PATTBR60N CHEVROLET CO,, 1000 S. WOODWARD AVI., BIRMINGHAM M) 4-2736. mT CHEVROLEt'TMFALA SUPER sporf convertible. V-8 engine, Powergllda, power steering, brakes and windows, -: and block Interior. /Only Easy form*. F A T T B I C HI V20LIT CO., 1... 01 WOODWARD AVB., BIRMING 1*63 ORBBNBRIiS. ICU|““A"WD whlfo. Standard ehlft. Good tonhiy car. 12,095. DON'S- USED CARS, 677 5. LAPEER RD„ ORION. MY 2-2041. J963 “GHiW"'iT‘‘2-OObli, WYl-Inder, Poworglldo, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls, white with blue Interior. Only 31,*95. Qaey forms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO,, 1000 S. WOODWARD * T9*¥torou6h19m5 Any meko^or model^^ (( Vqu eefi or hevo your dealer cell PB 4-0964. li e eeev . COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK Ible. Full power.. Special finish. While leather Interior. Only *2,195. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEV-ROLIT CO„ 1000 WOODWARD AVB,, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1943 DObOB 500, J DOOR HAHDIOP, •ylomafie, OA 5*1102 and OA 5*2924 after I^.m. Mesf^oorwt WV4Y£ trade. Ml money* JOHN 'McAULIFFE FORD . 630 Oakland Av*. ___ FE 5-4101 19«—ALCOirDELUXE, STATION wagon, automofle, radio, h“,*r-whltawallt, luggag* carrier, — blue finish. OnTy.iVM5.Basy farm. PATTBRSON CHBVROLfT CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVB., BIRMINGHAM. JWI 4-2735. _ „„ W4^6r6--T6untry sedan Station VVagon. V-a engine, automatic, Power steering and brokas. Khdlo, heater, whitewalls. Only 81695, Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO, Y42 MERCURY Monterey 2-dr. *1895 1963 CHEVY Bel Air .. **1*9 1961 COMET 2-door . *1175 I960 COMET 4-doo' 1963 MERCURY 2- op , *2295 MERCURV^varfrinew) *1795 DeSOTO 2-door hardtop . S 795 ■Tw.Buick 4-door hardtop • *1795 )957 IMPERIAL hardtop .... * J95 1959 CHEVY Sdeor .... ..... * J4S 1942 FALCON wagon ... ..... *W 1962 CUSTOM RAMBLER wgn. **395 1962 CHEVY Corvotr .. *1495 1962 CHEVY convertible ...... *2145 Lloyd Motors „ 322 S. Saginaw dan. hydram id i brakes, a 1959 OLDS 4-door it tr steering ai car. If* down 1961 PONTIAC STAR CHIBF 7 top. radio; heater, automatic li mission power steering and br beige In color. 199 down. ■MPR. __________________ 6453S 159 MI S TOXY" /yffiNYlRlV. good running condition, stato cor; no ruM. *1— TOP Reason tor sailing: leaving stale. Call 852-3663. 740 “mIRCURV' whflawalls, on* i DOWN, *40.04 , $359 cash. Waving stale. TDOOR AlJfO- , 130.04 i wall t Bat) LR! BIRMINGHAM^ CHRV9LBR PLYMOUTH. INC, , 2 (t, Woodward Ml 7*3214 '43 CADILLAC SB BAN OBVlUl, Alr-condlfioning, 54, log,, Ml 4*1000, 55 CHlW, IBl.‘ AlR *94. If f "n V V/s5, 8881 '1 Marathon, vis Oakland FB 5-9225 PATTERSON Chrytlar-Plymoulh ROCHESTER tool N. Main St. OL I 3551 1943 DODGE DART' CON VE R TI It LI *1992, easy forms, PATTBRSON CHRVROLlfT CO., 1000 S. WOOD-, ward AVB., BIRMINGHAM,* Ml 4.3735, 1954 FORD JDOOR, AUTOMATIC hahsmitsiim, axcallanl »i|4M9.' Call TfW FORD,' NlW" iNGiNI,* MAC* loray Ignition, 153 con, 5225, 852* ifM ford 5, jioANrxrcirpt 840.04 par montn. PATTBRSuN Chrysler-Plymoulh ROCHESTER I N. Main St. OL 1-B559 1 MER CUR Y"~C OM6t7“4-660R, sdlo, whitewalls, 6,200 mllei, par-id condition* FB 4*4373# 249 Nfl-)n 1959 OLDS "98" 2-door hard|up monthly paymanls, , SPARTAN DODGE IT s. Saginaw . Fl_ S-45 HOMES HIGHT PONTIAC BUICK CHBVROLBT XFORt) OA I<23! ^^OR^MOOMN'UliD MR”"" (6** Country udari, Ford n«l agi 'SiT.ic*onbu^,to.ifrv;. taocnavy 2door aadm, .... '47 Tampesl coupa^ raa^^noal JIJ9J ’4,KEEGP0 SALeT 8. SERVICE^ 3060 ORCHARD LAKE ' 682-3400 ,1960 PONTIAC Catalina 2-Door Sedan with hydramatle $995 PONTIAC PETAIL STORE] 65 Mt. Clemens St. ___FE 3-7954 A Choieo ,of 50 Select Used Cars. We Are Overstocked ■ and Must Make Room for New Car Trades, A Large Selection of Beautiful One-Owner Late Model Used Cars. Excellent' Financing Immediate Delivery SUPERIOR RAMBLER t 550 OAKLAND AVE. BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used car offered foi| retail to the public Is a bonafide 1 -owner, low mile-ago, Sharp car. LydarpartS and labor warranty. 1*53 Riviera, Air Conditioning 13591 1mC=I lif&EP 1962 Ponfloe Orand1 PiTh .... J j 1961 fuje|( 4'doo^tartan *' rales on Mloneal a . 1959 CHOW Nomad station wagon, with automatic transmission, radio, hooter power brakes, whitewalls *895 and your old cor down! Houpt Pontiac Oh* Mil* North,of US-10 or 1 Open Monday, Tuesday ar Thursday until 9 p.m. MA 5*5566 Ramblers — Ramblers Under the Flashing SATELLITE We're In Orbit Over The Beautiful Hardtops New '64 Rambler $1629 With factory standard equipment. HASKINS HOLIDAY SPECIALS 1959 METRO HARDTOP, LOTS OF gas mileage, above average condition, Saval steering, solid black 1962 TEMPEST LeMANS HARDTOP, automatic transmission, \rodlo, now showroom condition, Mautlful big* finish. 1963 OLDS M 2-DOOR. HARDTOP, loaded with power and equipment, ilka now, dark blu* finish. 1962 CHEVY BEL AIR 4-DOOR, demonstrator, V-8 engine, Power-gild*, power (tearing, brakes and radio. Showroom condition, aqua HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds 1961 lu ck Special 4 d« 19*1 Old* fl hardtop Thundarblrd 4.w»v r PH iufek Mnvinfbr* I960 (u ok 4.door »*d*n 1959 lulek hardtop ' fl FISCHER BUICK ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN SPOT DELIVERY ’, JUSTMAKE PAYMENTS , CAR ' Full Price Pay Wkly. ] 960 CORVAIR • • • 5597 $4^7 1960 JoRD FALCON • * $597 $4.27 1959 RENAULT [..*.,..,m.v...$297 ( $2.50 1958 «CHEVY ..... $297 * $2.50 1957 FORD..........$197 $1.60 1957 CHEVY $197 $1.60 Application Either In Person or by Phone > . NO CREDIT PROBLEMS « LIQUIDATION LOT 60 S. TQjeQfPPh » 8-9661 Across From Tel-Huron Shopping Center NiyfeTEEK THE PONTIAC PRteSS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1963 Television Features Special New Year Programs By United Press International NEW YEAR'S EVE PROGRAM, 11:30 DETROIT ’63, 7:00 p.m. (2) Year-end p. m. (7) Chuck Berry, Cassius Gay guest at review of 1963 events in city, state. party hosted by- Joel Sebastian, Lee Alan. WHITWELL, Tenn. (AP) -The nine members of the Leo Sanders family may be destitute but they are not''selfish. They gave most of a flood of Christmas presents to their neighbors. ' “They need help as much as we . do,” explained Sanders, whose family received clothes, toys and checks from every section of the nation. Atlanta Bias Protests Headed by Comedian ANDY WILLIAMS, 10:00 p.m, (4) Fred MacMurray joins Andy and hjs family to welcome in new year. NEW YEAR’S DAY NEW YEAR’S DAY PARADES, 11:00 a. m.. (2)-Cotton Bowl parade; 11:30 a.m. (4), 11:45 a. m. (2) Former President Eisenhower leads Tournament of Roses parade, pageant, with Arthur Godfrey, Betty White reporting for NBC, Bess Myerson, Ronald Reagan for CBS; 12:00 noon (7) Philadelphia’s Mummer’s parade. KING ORANGE PARADE, 10:00 p. m. (7) Theme for last parade of year is “Legends of the Ballet.” •1716 gifts were spontaneous reaction to an Associated Press story concerning the plight of the strike - torn southeast Tennessee coalfield. The ’ Sanders 'family was used to illustrate the poverty/ prevailing in Jhe area. , The coming year offers new opportunity for Sanders, Who has been out of work since the coalfield strike began a year ago. With the money, sent by helpful Americans, Sanders hopes to get a house and move his family from their shabby two-roOm converted garage, MONEY PRESENTS Many of the 1,500 letters contained funds, but Sanders said he could not remember the amount. The family also was sent shifts, blankets, dolls, red wagons, cap pistols and other QUEST, 10:30 p.m. (9) Three satirical companies contribute to “A New: Year’s Eve Review.” COLLEGE BOWL GAMES, 1:30 p.m. (7) Orange Bowl: Auburn vs. Nebraska; 1:45 p. m. (2) Cotton Bowl: Navy vs. Texas; (4) Sugar Bowl: Alabama vs. Mississippi; 4:45 p. m. (4) Rose Bowl: Illinois vs.- Wash-ington. GUY LOMBARDO, 11:15 p. m. (2) Password host Allen Ludden joins Dorothy .Collins, Willis Sisters in annual program originating from NY’s Grand Central Station. mmmmmiwm 10:00 (2) Garry Moore (4) (Special)'(Color). Andy TONIGHT As each mail shipment arrived, the Sanders called in the neighbors to “pick out what they could use,” said Mrs. Sanders, 33, who is expecting her eighth child in January. , A $277 check from readers of the Burlington (Iowa) Hawk -Eye . was received Monday by Marcelle Morrison, teacher in the mountain community’s elementary school. She said it will be used to buy shoes and clothes for needy children. A $125 shipment of toys, also frpm the Burlington newspaper, was due to arrive this week, Mrs. Morrison said. The toys will be distributed to'the 87 school children at a belated Santa Claus party. OTHER GIFTS Other gifts were sent to mountain families, including over 200 cases of food which- the Salvation Army sent on request of Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont. The present Sanders seemed most proud of was a big, handsome Bible. “1 sure wish I could read it,” the 35-year-old miner said wistfully. “But I have a friend who reads it to me.” CHURCH SERVICE, 11:30 p.m, (4) Watch night services from St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Detroit. AMATEUR HOCKEY, 8:30 p.m. (9) Canada vs. Sweden. ' -Today's Television Prograhns- Programs furnished by stations'listod in this column ar# subject to changwwithout notice Channel 2-WJBK-TV flionn.l 4-WWJ-TV Channel 7-WXYZ-TV Chonnel 9-CKLW-TV Channel 56-WTUS 6:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “The Rose Bowl Story.” (In Progress) (9) Capt. Jolly and Pop-eye (56) American Economy 6:2$ (7) Weather, News, Sports 6:36 (2) (4) National News (9) Quick Draw McGraw (56) Mental Health 7:00 (2) (Special) Detroit ’63 (4) (Color) Weekend (7) Rifleman (9) Bat Masterson ' (SO) French Through TV 7:30 (2) Twilight Zone r (4) Mr. Novak (7) Combat (9) Movie: “Paris Holiday.” (1958) Bob Hope, Fernandel, Anita Ekberg, Martha Hyer (56) Chief of State 8:00 (2) Red Skeltqn 8:30 (4) Deputy ft) McHale’s Navy 9:00 (2) Petticoat Junction (4) Richar J Boone (7) (Color) Greatest Show on Earth 9:30 (2) Jack Behny (9) Front Page Challenge variety Time J 1 2 3 4 r~ 7 8 9 10 L fT TT" 13^ ITj TT _ rar rr Wq w 20“ w I u ■ Tl w 25 26 ■ 27 p r 58” ■ 29 • ,■ W IT J 32 33 1 34 35" 3T 37 ■ 38 1 ■ w~ vr IT”! 1 1 H vr 43 1 1 w iT 7T Tr 3JT 49 50 sr GT n 53T BT 91 ACROSS 1 Feminine appellation 8 The (heater 11 Legislative bpdy 12 Aimed fleet ' 14 Staler 18 Clog dancer (slang) 1) English versions (ab.)1 17 Wood sorrel of South America 19 Australian bird 20 Ceylonese constable 22 Preposition 23 Hat edge 24 Scoffs 27 Kind of jockey 28 Beam 29 Separate column 80 Before 81 Table bit 82 Goddess of discord 84 Available to the public 37 Alaskan vehicle 88 Ambary 39 Genuine 41 Wolframite 42 British''money of account 44 Israelite high priest, (Bib.) 45 Moorish tabor t 48 Oat*’4 51 Sell In small lots 52 Ratified 83 Leases 64 Compound ether , DOWN 1 Does duty 2 Concordance 3 Perched , - 4 Consumed 5 “Fiddling” emperor 8 Lucifer 7 Musical syllable 8 Ampere (ab.) 9 East Indian broadbills 10 Edematous 11 Pace IS Portland arrowroot 18 Lettuce 21 Sea nymph 23 Grievous 28 Auricles 26 Kind of bread 27 Short barb 29 African worm 32 Click-beetle 83 Narrate , 84 Golf term 85 Sewing tool 86 Greater in stature , 37 Clinker 88 Girlish playthings 40 Prevaricated 48 Church part 48 Prohibit-47 River Islet 42 Roman bronco 80 Dative (abi) ■v" (7) Special) King Orange Parade (9) News Magazine 10:30 (9) Quest 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports (9) News . 11:10 (9) (Special) New Year’s Greetings 11:15 (2) (Special) Guy LOm- t bardo . (9) Weather 11:20 (9) Lucky Score 11:30 (4) (Special) Church Serv- 1 j (7) (Special) New Year’s . ’ Eve Program ,, (9) (Special) Bonne Annee 11:45-(9)/(Special) Welcome in the New Year 12:15 (2) Cathedral of Tomorrow 12:30 (9) Movie: “It Takes a Thief.” (1959) Jayne Mansfield 1:00 (4) Best of Qroucho' NEW YEAR’S DAY 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News , ' 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Funews • 7:00 (2) News (4) Today (7) johnny Ginger 7:10 (2) Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odie 1 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show 8:30 (7) Movie: “Give My Re-g a r d s to Broadway.” ' (1948) Dan Dailey 8:80 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Movie: “Rose Bowl.”. (1936) Tom Brown (4) Living (9) Kiddy Korner Kar-toons 9:30 (9) Jack La Lanne 10:00 (4) Say When (9) Count of Monte Cristo 16:15 (7) News 10:25 (4) News 10:30' (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) (Word for Word (7) Girl Talk (9) Chez Helene 10:45 (9) Nursery School Time 11:00 (2) (Special) Gotten Bowl Parade (4) Concentration (7) Price Is Right (9) RompeT Room 11:80 (4) (Special) (Color) Rose Parade (7) Object Is 11:45 (2) (Special) (Color) Rose Parade 12:00 (7) (Special) (Coin r) Mummer’s Parade (9) Take 30 12:80 (9) People in Conflict 1.00 (9) Movie: “Shine On, Harvest Moon.” (1944) Ann Sheridan, Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson 1:80(7) (Special) Orange Bowl: Auburn vs. Nebraska •1 1:45 (2) Special) Cotton Bowl: Navy vs. Texas , (4) (Specln[j (Color) Sugar Bowl: Alabama vs. Mississippi 3:15 (9) News 3:8(0 (9) (Special) Amateur Hockey: Canada vs. Swed- 4:80 (2) Movie: To Be Announced , (4) Rose Bowl Preview (7) TO Be Announced (9) Hercules 4:41 (4) (Special) (Color) Rose Bowl: Illinois vs. Washington 5:00 (7) Movie: “Manila Calling.” (1942) Lloyd Nolan, . Carole Landis, Cornel Wilde ' '■ (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:50 (56) What’s New 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends 5:55 (2) Weather * (4) Carol DuvrlL SAVED KENNEDY PAPERS-Mrs. Evelyn Lincoln, for 10 years personal secretary to John F. Kennedy, says she has saved every paper-r-“even the doodles” — from Kennedy’s political life as U.S. senator and president. When she gets through sorting the papers, they will go to the planned John F. Kennedy memorial library to be built on the campus of,Harvard University. Would Divert Sea of Galilee Waters Israel, Arabs Simmer Over Negev. Plan By PHIL NEWSOM DPI Foreign News Analyst Running westward and southward from: the rocky shores of flia Casa nf flolilaA a tOflfl mil the Sea of Galilee, a 3200-million complex of canals, tunnels, pipelines and reservoirs is almost ready to start carrying New Year's Eve Thoughts by an Inveterate T By EARL WILSON*1 NEW YORK — Strictly as a public service, I will t6 you how to drink New Year’s Eve so you will fewest people' and .ruin the fewest homes. It is a thing as you shall see....... To attain the maximum benefit, follow these two simple rules: (1) Don’t go out and (2) even if you stay home, don’t drink. That’s clear, is it? (That we’re going to ignore that?) Npw then: 1— Don’t start out the evening drinking doubles. Doubles are drunk by people who will ■ soon be seeing the same way. 2— Don’t drink on an empty stomacb. Old Chinese explession: People who drink on empty stomach have- empty hood, , WILSON 3—Try to figure out your capacity ahead of time and stay within it. It was that great drinker Joq E. Lewis who once said, “I know my capacity, the trouble is, I always pass out before I get to it.” I 4—Seriously, if you’re going to have to do some social drinking, it is a good idea to get some sleep—and I mean before you get to the party . . . like the night before. Be rested (not to be confused with arrested). ★ ★ ★ 5— Eat something before an evening of heavy imbibing—a couple of lean hamburgers and a couple glasses of milk ... or you could swallow a couple of ounces of salad .nil to give your stomach a lining. And keep eating while you’re drinking, remembering that’s how the Russians handle that vodka. 6— Avoid over-sweet drinks and fancy mixtures involving cream. > 7— When you’re, eating, you can mix most ahything, as your stohnach is getting a lining, but before, don’t mix the grape with the grain—that is don’t follow (the grape) wine, champagne, sherry, port or cognac with (the grain) whisky, beer, vodka or gin. Keep them apart. , 8—Learn to sip. The greatest professional drinkers who run saloons and drink all day and night can be observed with a glass from which they take tee most delicate little sips. They never gulp. ★ ★ ★ 9— Develop “the pause.” Break into the drinking routine by smoking a cigarette, taking a Walk out on the terrace, making a phone call or Washing your hands before you get another one. Try to get over the idea that you must drink everything in sight because therd won’t be any left. There will be some left. 10— When you get toi the point where you say to yourself, “I can have just one more, then I’ve got to quit,” QUIT RIGHT THERE because the delayed reaction of tho one you've just hud if going to kayo you In about 15 minutes. You’ve had enough. 11— So that’s it. The most important rule we've left for last: •N’T DRIVE. 12—One further thought. If you see me around New Year’s Eve kindly remind me of these nuggets of wisdom. It’s Just possible teat I will have forgotten. Stereo’s • Ranges j > Refrigerators H TERMS AVAILABLE amplon'i » • II IfiTBlA FE 4-2825 * ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron OOMPANY SONOTONE 29 E. Comall FE 2-1225 Isrvlots and luppliss lor ALL HEARING AIDS fTTOTTY THE POSTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY,- DECEMBER 81. 1968 As 1963 draws to a close oiir thoughts turii to those who have played such a big part in our success . . our friends, our customers.\ Our best way of wishing you a Happy New Year is to assure you of continual high quality work and courteous service in 1964 and the, years to come. HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL! . ' . . f • * ' * *' . ' f 1 ■ ’ ' V . , Chief Pontiac Photo Engraving Co. 103 Wayne Street, Pontiac nans '■/' * ”■* - ! \ f V V-i , 1 \ £/* t*r i' - ' POSTI31C, MICHIGAN, PPT^^B ■ ; • M P \ •. 1 D M I MICR BELL &. The Weather PONTIAC ?QNp4C, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY* DECEMBER^!, 1968 —20 PACES Hits Report Teamster Boss Would Quit to Avoid Trial. TOKYO MB—The U.S. Air Force U going to transfer 3,500 men and 78 planes—including its last opera* tional B57 bombardment wing—from Japan to the United States. This major realignment of U.S. air strength was confirmed today by Lt. Gen. Maurice A. Preston, com* ■ ■■■-■■——inlander of U.S, forces in • Japan, and the' U.S. Em* Reds Sentence r^Neither wou,d give However, an informed source ■ _ / 1 - r\._lL disclosed the United States is lllV TO L/Cnin negotiating additional Air Force •/rl 1 • ^1 1 withdrawals but has assured the Japanese it will honor its pledge Say Ex-Bulgaria Aide under me u.s. - Japan security / . treaty to defend Japan from at- Premier Says Peking Doesn't Believe That World War Certain ST. LOUIS (Jt —- Team*, sters President James R. Hoffa’s chief lieutenant denied a report yesterday that he had tried but failed to get federal authorities to drop charges against the union boss. A spokesman in St. Louis said Harold Gibbons, an international vice pr°f,4°iflt, of the union, “categorically denied” such a deal as reported by Edward F. Woods, a Washington correspondent of the St. Louis POst-Dis-patch. Bureau said the Old Year will fade away, with rising temperatures and fair skiss. Khrushchev’s friendly New Year’s message — PAGE 7. * % confident Viet Reds view fifth year of war with assurance - PAGE 4, X-Way Patrols MaCkie cancels plan after ruling from attorney general — PAGE I. Area News.....I Flashes LANSING (JO - Atty. Gent Frenit Kelley ruled today that end-city income tax petitions gathered by the Vigilance tlx Committee could not be tab* mlttcd to the 1914 legislature New Year** Day ylth skies mostly sunny. The outlook for Thursday Is eloudy and mild with a chance Temperatures throughout the state skidded to subset* end near-zero recordings during the ICE TIME ft Adults may shiver end complain about naar-zero tempera- ' mmm omm mwt*■ tores ana the accompanying discomforts, but pot no the younger sat, Bundled ice at'Murphy Park yesterday. A scarf, ear muffs, jacket hood or het is euffl* up against the cold, these energetic youngsters found tne “whip" great fun on dent protection fpr the Heed of these active akators. TWO THE PONTIAC PRJBS8. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1968 Prayers, Whoa fate to Mark By BERNIE GOULD The new year starts it midnight tonight with world leaders expressing hope that It will be a peaceful one. The celebration will rang? from the solemnity of prayer to the whoopie-making mdses of revelers. ' * ★ * ■ ■ In Italy, they’ll throw junk from windows and doors to symbolize removing old and undesired things to make way for the new. It’s illegal, but it also is tradition. / In New York’s Times Square, a million or more people are expected to brave frigid weather and watch the dropping of a lighted ball down a 70-foot spire of the Allied Chemical Building —formerly the Times Tower—at precisely midnight. The annual event will be televised. LOTS or CHEER Millions of others will crowd into night dubs, hotels and private homes the world over for fun and cheer—bottled and °^' erwise. the main concourse of New York’s Grand Central terminal has been converted into a bal- loon-filled ballroom for a New Year’s Eve charity dance. Japan's PrimeMinister Haya-to Ikeda and Soviet Premier Khrushchev exchanged New Year’s greetings. k H, ♦ “I hope people of the world will make further efforts in 1964 toward realization of world peace and security of mankind, " Ikeda said. DESIRE FOR TIES , Khrusffchev expressed a desire for closer ties between the two nations and for peace in the Far East. West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard told President Johnson in a telegram he hoped the new year “will bring us closer to our mutual goals. -,,• “If we stand together and do our best for the unity of the Atlantic community,” Erhard said, “then we need not worry about peace and freedom,”-Premier Enar Gerhardsen of Norway, in a New Year’s radio address, said President Johnson “wants lessening of tensions and disarmament under international control.” The premier, a Socialist, added: “He also wants a peaceful Race Starts Midnight Ist-Baby Prize List Grows Gifts from 16 area business establishments await the Pontiac area’s first arrival of 1964. TRe First Baby contest Is slated to begin at the stroke of midnight tonight, with top winner to be officially announced Friday evening. To be eligible to enter the contest, he or she must be bom after midnight to married parents who live in Oakland County north of 14-Mile Road. ijt: ♦' Ar The contestant with the earliest birth will win, ENTRY DEADLINE Entries must be submitted throughJhe family doctor to the PUnibc Area Chamber of Commerce office in the Riker / 5 p.m. Friday. They i tor’s statement listing enact time and date of birth, sex, name and weight of the baby, together with A group of local/dvic leaders will select the official win- Laat year’s winner checked in just 14 seconds past midnight However, the average time posted by winners In past years has been 15 to 30 mip-utes. BAG OF PRIZES Local merchants have donated generously to the bag of prius awaiting the first baby and his or her family. of prises for Contributors of baby toe Waite’s Department bonnet and booties; WKC, toe., silver baby cup; Consumers Discount Center, a jump,seat; The Pontine Press, a $25 U S. Savings Bead; Stepp’s Juvenile Beotery, pre-walker baby shoes; aad K Mart, a baby walker. Mom will get flowers from Pearce Floral Co. and Jacobson’s Flowers, and slippers from Todd’s Shoe Store. ■ ♦ ♦ w Dad will win a gift certificate for a free tire from Motor Mart Auto Parts end a free car wash and polish Job from Pontiac Retail Store. Other contributors of prizes for the family are Gresham Cleaners, a $5 gift certificate; Blue Sky Drive-In, one month of free passes; Gee Coal and Oil Co., 100 gallons of heating oil; Green Parrot Restaurant, dinner for two; and 16 worth of dry cleaning from Voorheis Cleaners. world where the resources are used rationally to the benefit of tl^ whole human race.” Gerhardsen also said it was a “good and useful” thing for lOirushchev to visit Norway next June so he could see “our will to freedom and our will to peace.” Friendship associations of Red Chipa and the Soviet Union exchanged New Year’s greetings that emphasized what they-called a strengthening of friendship between the two nations in 1964. Spain’s Gen. Francisco,Franco, in his annual yearend radiotelevision address to his nation, said “The cold war is really a political war,” and suggested that Western powers are ill-equipped to fight it. He urged that the world -lode at his own movement as the best means of fighting communism. WATCH NIGHT In the United States, chur scheduled watch night services to pause for reflection, and re-dedication. Hoopla and hijinks were on tap elMwhere.JRevelers will pay up to |35 pe^person in commercial night spots. The tab includes dinner, favors and dancing, with the average running about |10 with drinks extra. k k tS ’ At the ball in Grand Central Terminal, where tables have been set up for 3,000 persons, participants will pay 625 to 6100' each. The CBS television network will carry a portion of the event. Boston’s Sheraton-Plaza Hotel broke with custom by announcing it was holding no special New Year’s party because of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Other leading dining and entertainment spots in Boston reported a. sell-out for New Year’s Eve reservations. Builder Asks for Rezoning Plans Keogo Harbor Residence Complex The first multiple residence development proposed for Keego Harbor also would be one of the largest in the area. Bert L. Smokier and Co. of Southfield has picked property between Cass and Sylvan Lakes as the site for a 198- The Weather Full UJ. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Fair with a rising temperature trend today, tonight and Wednesday, high today 84, low tonight 16, high Wednesday >3. Light variable winds becoming southwesterly 8 to 15 miles tUMMal 16 to 39 miles Wednesday. TMty III UOWHt temperafurd The firm is the first to apply for rezoning since Keego Harbor adopted a multiple residence ordinance Nov. 23.. Sf k k ★ * Before then such a development could not be built there because multiple residences were not mentioned in the zoning ordinance. NO SET SECTION While defining the multiple residence zone, the new ordinance does not assign that designation to any particular section ** town. However, potential develop- JM I t.m.j Wind vttacl rfCtnn: V«rl«bl, Sun Mb TUMdcy at lili ,,m. iiii ruM WMnMdty at liMj.m. MMM MM WMMIdiy at f: M a.nti Moan rwat Tuaiday at OidO p.m. Manday'i Ttmawatara Chart Ma. ft -II pert warm genus mohair, light up the pastel, V-neck sweater with a myriad of gay colors. Available locally. DEAR ABBY: What do you think of a girl who buys her own engagement ring? ■ Her boy j........ friend told her he couldn’t afford to buy her, a ring because W&’|£p1 he is paying ^ X 1 off his car, so she went o u t and bought, herself, < and paid for H-J . She says lots ABBY of girls do It. Personals New Year's Day dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bowers of Barrington Road will be their son Dr. Charles L. Bowers of Frahklln, and their daughters Mrs. Glenn Heathman of Canterbury Drive and Mrs. Walter Wltt-kopf, of Drayton’Plains and - their respective spouses and children. »' Mrs. Bowers' sister, Mrs, Dennis Cabay of Buy City has been a house-guest through the holidays. k 1 lir ir Following a tradition of many years, the Robert M., Nelsons of Bloomfield Hills will be hosts at a breakfast in their home following the New Year's Eve Ball at Bloomfield Hills Country Club. Mrs, George S. Dixon of Da-. kotu Circle, Wing Lake, took time out from making costumes for the Kidgedale Play-’ era' forthcoming \ production to entertain four couples from Pleasant! Ridge at dinner on Saturday. Mrs. Dixon is directing “The Best Man" which opens Jan. 31. Her boy friend said if it' makes her happy, he doesn’t see anything wrong with it. Am I old-fashioned or isn’t this follow' a poor excuse for4 a man? BYSTANDER ; k * k‘ ■ DEAR BYSTANDER: Ap« , parently the girl is calling the signals. She should have bought TWO rings — one for his nose. DEAR ABBY; l am 13 years old and I guess I should know when I am sick and when I am not sick, My nether calls me a "lit-11 e hypochondriac." When-eqer I complain about a headache or a pain in the leg or . the arm she says It’s only growihg pains and if 1 didn’t pay so much attention to myself I wouldn’t notice them. • I want to see a doctor but, every time I mention it, my 'mother says, “Oh, it’s nothing, you don’t need a doctor." How can I convince my mother that NO HYPOCHONDRIAC DEAR NO: If you r-ea.lly. think you need to see a doc-1 tor, ask your teacher or pchool nurpe to persuade your mother. Perhaps you have com*, plained too much in the past about minor ailments to be' taken seriously now. But don’t ignore your pains. Hate to write letters? Send, one dollar to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, for Abby’s new booklet) “How To Write Letters For All Occasions." Birmingham, Hills Enjoy Music, Sports and Travel By SIGNE KARLSTROM Mrs. William L. Kerry) of Yarmouth Road opened her home Sunday afleffioon for a recital by her friend* Grace L. Saefke who is In the graduating school of music at Ann Arbor. , Mlsg Saefke, a niece of Mrs. William Graham In Birmingham, had many friends who were eager to hear heir concert and enjoy visiting with her at the tea following her performance, Mary Kemp who has been visiting with her mother during the holidayil returned to Washington, D.C. Monday. ' * * --------------------------------------- After a few days of skiing at and Mrs. Nohnan Johnson. Otsego, Jane Leader has left 'for Florida to be the house-guest of Diane Gornick.and her father at the Seagate, Delray Beach. - Sue Leader is spending the , New Year's holidays In Pittsburgh ■visiting her friend, Becky Johnson. Many ane enjoying skiing at Pine Knob or at the Alpine 4lub nearby. Here you find Kris and Pat Hewlett, Winn and Bert Lyon, Dick and Bob Emerlck and many others. , Mr. and Mrs, Peter D|o'l with!daughters Kathy and Susan k are leaving for t h e I r 'home In Ashland, Wisconsin after spending the holidays with Mrs. Diol's parents, Mr. Thejr son, Norman, Jr., has also been at homo but returns to his studies at Ant) Arbor immediately fpllowlni Year’s, ’ k k For a good many years the William H- Breeches have been spending the New Year’s holidays at ,tneir cabin on the Au' Sable River. This year the Henry C. Forsters and Bernard , F. Powells will j o i n them. k k, k lytr. and Mrs. Alfred C, Girard have invited friends* to their home for New Year’s Eve and ajt Bloomfield Hills Country Club there will be a large gathering, as has been the custom in previous years. Galitzine has designed for winter ’63 an/exciting group of ski sweaters all in black and white. Working with a new lightweight boucle yarn of “Orion” acrylic, she has achieved an unusual knit texture in this striking cardigan worn over a turtleneck pullover in the sdme yarn. Months of Year Jewel-Studded Clip and save this fashion-ette that .never goes out of style: tl)e birthstone rundown — December, turquoise and zircon; January, garnet; Feb-r u a r y, amethyst; March, aquamarine o r bloodstone; April, diamond; May, emerald; June, pearl or alexandrite; July, ruby or star ruby; August, peridot or satdbnyx; September, sapphire or star sapphire; October, opal or tourmaline; November, topaz. - •msf A winter bouquet is cultivated by James Ken-rob on tfie hem- of this soft, Italian hand-knit imported mohair sweater. The flowers, created in vibrant shades Of pine and red, flourish beautifully on the, long white cardigan: A marvelous dpres-ski look is achieved by Antouelli id this pull? over madf of "Orion” acrylic in a Irani'new and unusual terry-loop •stitcb.UtilizinQ harrow black stripes set between the broad snow-white bands, the designer has created a . three-dimensional effect. All fash-ions shown here are the most news- > worthy knit fashions shown ip Italian couture and bputiquecollec-, •Stans.' The pairing of, black and • white was seen repeatedly throughout the showings. ... ; TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1903 a HE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. Naming Pete Roselle as Sportsman of the Year Is as appripo as canonizing Fidel Castro and naming him Saint of the Century. Sports Illustrated went out of its way not to ohoose an athlete for the honor for the first time in history and in using such adjectives as “decisive, brilliant, vigorous and strong” to describe ; Rozelle. . Everyone of these lauding words has an antonym which could be just as applicable and more appropriate for a com^ promise selection to a position where loyalty to the sport and democratic ideals in its administration have been absent since he took office in I960. The publication termed his decision in the pro football “gambling expose” as (me of "wise severity r- demonstrating courage — and integrity.” This is cheaper to say than the cost of boloney in a meat market. ]He was also lauded for “refusing to act prematurely and dis-playing fortitude under extraordinary pressure.” BAD PUBLICITY to the contrary, Rozelle collapsed under the pressure of New York Columns just prior to his announcement of the suspensions Of Karras and Hornung and he walked the path with two left shoes in the whole mess of bad publicity. From one side of the cheek Rozelle claimed there was “no evidence that any NFL player has given less than his best..» that po player has ever bet against his own team ... nor sold information to gamblers.” The publication also said “he asked the public to believe in the game’s essential honesty... and the public so believed.” This1 is quite a tribute to one who had his own honesty questioned by the late Bert Bell in the recruiting slight of the pen in the Billy Cannon case. • j- it it ilc How naive does Rozellethink the public has been during the NFL smudge of 1963? TWO SIDES He waived a halo over the teams and players with one hand and attached satan’s horns with the other. He was so convinced of the honesty of the people he convicted he even hired a watch dog, James Hamilton, a member of the police intelligence to do special detective work. i Figure this m3 if you can. It's just like pushing a knife through your best friend and showing what a fine friend you are by offering him a bandaid for his wound. There are certainly more parrailels to Rozelle’s slight of hand. The publication says he “tightened security in the league; improved game officiating . . . established an essential television policy ... and mowed his office from Philadelphia into the. New i York mainstream bl news.” In order: He tightened security — to indicate the distrust he had in NFL players and teams. :v 'i !' ;«! ; ★ "/ He established essential TV policies — something that was done long before Rozelle, add one of the reasons why the NFL started growing in the early 90’s. He improved game officiating — even though public opinion right now and complaints of the coaches life last two ' years about officiating has been greater than at any other time in history. F-f He moved his office to New York — quite an accomplishment if it must be recognized, add certainly a subtle and appeasing manuever for getting support from strong communication media for his weak gavel. , # ★ ★ , - ' ' '' Pro football has grown and has become the “sporting phenomenon” as Sports Illustrated indicates, nut because of Rozelle, but despite him. fit' ‘ The NFL became the nation’s No. 1 spectator sport while 'Rozelle was punching a typewriter in Los Angeles 10 yean ago, and it is a fan* that he should be named “Sportsman of the Year” eyen though that popularity nearly succumbed under his administration. . .. V. '1 'J*. Ten ybars from now Rozelle may reach the stature that the desk of the commissioner of the NFL warrants and we’ll be the first to admit it when and if he does come about. . *! W ’ ★ ★ ' j The NFL has to be thankful for the strong arms of men like George Halas, Preston Marshall, Art Rooney and the other wmarRHi k phi fooibail wars. ■ ★ dr dr Incidentally, talking about strong men having their way a. Halas is our nomination for “Psychologist of the Year,” and we can. give him some adjectives too — ingenious, shrewd and capitalising. Remember who first publicly brought out the gambling mess In 1963 (Halas), which team was absolved (the Bears), which teams were penalized (top contenders Packers and Lions) and which team very neatly went bn to win the world championship Sunday (the Bears). Ah, the best laid plans —I . 1-2 Teams Square Off Tomorrow Associated Press Sports Writer ' DALLAS (AP) — Darrel Royal’s eyes flashed when he Said it: “We aren’t a bit afraid to put it on the line.” He was discussing the ques-'' tion of whether the national championship would he decided when his Texas football team plays Navy in the Cotton Bowl Wednesday. ★ ' dr’' " dr Royal said his Longhorns already,had received the trophies calling them national champions on the basis of 10. straight victories and that he didn’t think once-beaten Navy, rated No. 2, could cause a return of tiie mementoes even if it won the Cotton Bowl game. But one word led to another, and filially Royal said with some heat that he wouldn’t be scared to put his title on the line. “Will you put )t on the line?” he was asked. Royal then softened Up and laughed, “PUt what on the line?” Navy Coach Wayne Hardin and his players look upon the game as for the national championship although they admit that Texas already has been awarded it. NO CAUSE That, however, wouldn’t cause the Middies to think anything else than that they had won the title, they would have (jeaten the champs. whether or not Navy thinks it is national champion and Texas doesn’t, ft has been the conversation piece as the two teams prepared' for their meeting when 75,504 fans jam the big saucer to see the greatest attraction the Cotton, Bowl has had in its 28 years. Never before has the' No, 1 and No. 2 teams met in this game and it has the fans on edge as much as the coaches and players. BIG 10’S BEST — This is how the Illinois football team is expected to lineup against Washington1 tomorrow in the Rose Bowl game. Front, left to right : end Mike Summers, tackle Mill Minor, guard Ed Washington, center Dick Butkus, guard Wylie Fox, tackle Archie Sutton, end Bill Pasko. Backs: halfback Jim Warren, quarterback Mike Taliaferro, fullback Jim Grabowski, halfback Sam Price. Auburn, Nebraska Eye Weather Ole Miss' Favored 'Unwanted' Washington Meets Big 10 Champion PASADENA, Calif. GP) — A close battle!, probably Settled by Mini Jim Plankenhorn’s accurate toe, seems destiqed in the New Year’s Day Rose Bowl' football game between third-ranked Illinois and “unwanted1” Washington* Illinois is rated a one-touchdown favorite Sunny weather is expected On the Rig Ten side of the fence, at least, the men who should know best —- coaching rivals of Illinois' Pete Elliott— see the mini-* battjing for their life against a Husky squad primed by a master Big Gamte mentor, Jumbo Jim Owens. The Huskies bring a dull 6-4 ^won-loss record into their third Rose Bowl appearance in five years. That’s the poorest , regular season record ever sported by a Rose Bowl representative. Oft-printed suggestion here hAs been that Southern California was the best Rose Bowl potential by far. Cage Scores Monday'! Collogo Baikotball Scor.t TOURNAMENTS PAR WIST CLASSIC Oregon Slat*, 40, Brigham Young M Consolation Oamss Oregon as, Colorado SteleU. sa Seattle 33, Louisiana Stale U Iowa 74, Washington Stele 66 QUAKCR CltV Championship St. Pffiaventure SO Chicago Loyola ”7ple 65 ■CAC HOLIDAY flSTIVAL HSR ICORBS Arizona State U. *1, Stanford 60 Bradley 67, Arizona SO Xavier,. Ohio n, Tulsa n Louisville etj Ohio U. II Toledo SI, Penn Slate 65 Bowling Green 67, WHtenberg SS Purdue 101, Dartmouth S3 Virginia Tech S3, Oaorge Washington 76 Now 67, OOOrglt SI Control Michigan M, Albion 73 Perris Stoto SI, Calvlh 7t “ st SuMirhso Tourney Heir 65, R6dtord Ur Perk 63, Ypsilenti S 66, Omie Polnle > s 65, Wayne SS Detroit Catholic Central II, Detroit Hoop Holiday Ends for Preps Friday While high school basketball’s big night thla week is Friday, two Inter-Lakes League teams concluded their holiday tournament action with victories Monday. Southfield captured third place In the Northwest Suburban Tournament, 66-65 over Grosze Polnte, on a free throw by Peto McAlplne with 12 second* left ft) play. Famtlnnon took mmm place Iqr dedsloning Wayne, 65-59. John Olander led the Fal-cons wlth 20 potnta. In the South-field triumph, Joe Camldlnehad 25 point* for the Blue Jays, The (fret of two scheduled i latre • city clashes between l*onllac Northern and Pontiac Central la aat far the latter’s eonrt Friday Bight. PCH has loit oncc In five atari* and appear* a strong con* tender in t|w Saginaw Valley Cohference race. Northern la unbeaten in four tries and la tied with Southfield atop the Inter-Lakes standings. TICKET SALES All reserve seat* for the contest have been sold but, unreserved admissions will start at 6:30 p.m. Friday at the gym entrances. Price Is $1 for adults and 75 cents for students. Two Important league any tests are elated for Friday, also. In the Eastern Michigan League, undefeated Hazel Park pill entertain tall, potent Birmingham Seaholm. The Maplai could move Into a tie for flrat place with a victory. Hazel Perk haz been the aorprto* el the EML In the early going and will have * a big that against Seaholm. The Wayne-Oakland League lead will be at stake whet) Bloomfield Hills takes ftp unbeaten mark to similarly unblemished Clarkaton. The home team has been Impressive In sweeping through five opponents while HlUa generally. has played juat well enough to win under new coach Hal Henderson. Fpntiee Northern at Pontiac Central MIIMH U Norlhvlll* Walled Lake at Kelterlnj) > Hazel Pa Mlmbatl ParnXj»8S*mjanwi%|Rsi! Benedict , BwVhrSrL.k,rvJ!r,si!ii8 r ermlnojon at aSpa Union Hum Park al Ponllal Norlharn new Orleans (AP)-with two coaches who hate to lose as badly as Johnny Vaught and Paul Bryant, the 30th annual Sugar Bowl football game Wednesday should be a real blood battle. “I don’t even like to lose: at bridge,” says Vaught, coach of the Mississippi Rebels, who are 7%-point favorites to take Bryant’s team, the Alebamp Crimson Tide. Bryant doesn’t like the idea of losing‘any better than Vaught. “I play to win,” he-said. He proved he meant that when he had the Tide go lor a two-point conversion in its 7-6 loss to Georgia Tech in 1962, the wily Alabama defeat that year, AERIAL CIRCUS Ole Miss arrived ih flew Orleans today. Alabama arrived Monday from Mobile, where ft been practicing since Dec. 20\ Both coaches expect tp fill toe air with footballs. Vaught says toe Rebels will have to . move the ball* and Bryant says his game strategy calls for “lots of passing.” fr 5 ★ V ★ Bryant’s hopes rest with two quarterbacks who have thrown only 16 passes all season, while Vaught’s two signal callers have thrown more than 10 times that manyt a combined total of 185, Bryant’s quarterbacks, Steve Sfloan and Jack Hurlburt, completed five of their 16, while Perry Lee Dunn and Jim Weatherly of Ole Miss completed 103. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Auburn and Nebraska, poised for their Orange Bowl football game Wednesday, watched Miami’s changing weather today and agreed ft could affect toe outcome of the game. The Miami Weather Bureau forecast clearing and a little colder, with temperatures in the low or middle 60s by the. 2 p.m. EST kickoff. But that was based on a low pressure system over the Gulf of Mexico developing a squall line that Would end two days of rain. “‘It depends,” a forecaster explained, i “on how fast the system develops and the squall line moves ,ln." COUNTER CLAIMS Rival coaches, Ralph (Shug) Jordan Auburn and Bob De-vaney of Nebraska, claimed rain would be to the other fellow’s advantage'. Auburn, No. 5 In the nation, will feature speed and mobility built around 205-pound Jimmy Sidle, toe country’s boat running quarterback who gained 1,006 yards in 10 games, averaging 5.4 yards per carry. Sidle also completed 53 of 136 passes for 706 yards and five touchdowns. In kicking, Auburn’s Joe 101-gore averaged 41.3 yards while Wobdy WoOdall booted six field goals and 23 straight conversions this fall. Sixth ranked Nebraska, using a multiple offense, has nine backs who carried the ball 30 or more times and (five averaged 4.6 yards or more per try. The Cornhuskera drove 2,624 yards in 561 rushing plays for a 4.9 average., Snow Good; Resorts to Ski fn New Year Skiing is reported good to very good with all facilities Working at almost all area ski resorts. New Year’s Eve festivities will prevail at several sites with Dryden, Mt. Holly and Fine Knob planning to ski in the New Year tonight. Summit Ski Club and Grampian Mountain will close late this afternoon, h o waver. Grampian will resume operations at noon tomorrow. NHL Standings ■ W L T+Pts. GFO, -nlcago ...... 30 * 7,67 Ilf, 74 'ontreal ..... 1| 10 6 42 110 St oramo .........if 10 loo n r letrolt .......is 4 30 74 1 TODAY'S OAMR lo at Detroit WBONBSDAY'S GAMES aal at Boaton York at Chicago > Summit expects to open at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. Other resorts Will start skiing at 10 a.m. New Year’s Day. '* *r„*r . Both Teeple Hill and Pontiac Lake recreation area will be open tomorrow with the cold weather and natural snow making conditions good. No reports were received from Alpine Valley, Mt. Christie or Mt. Brighton, although conditions there are expected to be good and r e g u ICS r operating hours probably in effect. AP Basketball Poll NBA Standings EASTERN DIVISION But coaches of both the Six—which this season had N Alphonse and Gaston act in its title race - and (he Big Ten which stubbed its Rose Bowl toe on Washington in 1960 and 1961, atimit Owens is the greatest when it,- comes to getting his Huskies snarling! and snapping for The Big Game. 1 EXTRA WEEK Owqns had approximately one week more hard-hitting Rose Bowl preparations thaq did Illinois, which was chased indoors by sub-zero Midwest weather after both teams began drills Dec. 16. The importance of Planken-horn’s field goal artistry — he booted seven as the Iltlni bounced from a 2-7 record to toe Big Ten title in one surprising year—is reflected'ip the comment of two coaching Rose .Bowl losers to Washington. ' At a pre-game luncheon tossed by the tournament of Roses committee for writers and. Big Six and Big Ten representatives, Washington was favored ' to 57 in a poll that had obvious geographical unbalance. Moreover, Hose Bjowl queen Nancy Kneeland and her seven princesses, cast a solid Husky vote. t Basket by Ferry Gives Pistons Win Bob (Make ’Em Count) Ferry has brought the Detroit Pistons their eighth victory in 31 games. , ★ • * * . Ferry failed to acore in the second half and wourid up with only six points but he hit the key basket, an eight-foot shot with four seconds remaining in overtime Monday night for the Pistons J14-112 victory over San Francisco., SAN FRANCISCO DETROIT ' ' i • FT Hlgh’w'r, 3 4-7 13 Hewull fr5*.Kt,.erV 3'04 * Scott Ch'bTn 14 15-34 47 Imhoff Rodgers o (Ml 0 Ohl P{HIIIP» 3 3-3 4 Butcher mm i 44 is Duffy WH;.■/■■■ (w 1* Ferry 4BPM L 1M if M'eienil toe O 0-0 0 Jones _ . , .Mile*'. . . Tetele 43 3S4311S Totels 4S 34-34 114 fee Freuclece .........U 37 M 311»—Ilf Defrelt ....... .......» IS IS » 14—114 Fewenel • (oul*-San Francisco. Mes-V 4, Hightower 6. Ctumberleln, Fhll-4, Attlee 4. i Mill 3,1 Thurmond. De- ------ . .- ii . . . .. -gnf-J. 4 34 n 58 8 0 0-0 0 3 04 4 3 1-3 7 If! Just an old 'fashioned note to help you welcome 1964 ai)d wish you and yours a fine, prosperous New Year! CM Vt Anytime OR 4t 1J|) RRSM.....14 17 .415 1011 -York .... 10 M .343 )» WRITBRN DIVISION Angele# .... 33 13 m- — < Louis ....|| 17 .553 31% FrenelKo ..17 16 .Ilf 1 4 ..Jlmore ..,,,11 33 .333 10 DOtralt .... i 33 .351 13 MONDAY7! RESULT Detroit 114, Sen Frenclico "* ,r TODAY'S Fffliciseo »t m. ___ ■WrLaWS^^OAM«l TOKYO—Teruo Koseke. inliWPr pines, I. "wanted USED CARS and TRUCKS In any shqpB’er condition FREE PICK-UP 1AQLIY AUTO PAliTS FE 8-9219 MWmWYM TRY OUR 101 VARIETIES We Cordially Invito You and Your family to Start tho Now Yoar Right With Our Uniformly Fresh Brewed Coffee and Delicious Dawn Donuts. Sincere Beiit Withe* In 1964 mit booth's 804 North Perry Street PONTIAC) MICHIGAN , Phone 334-9041 THE -PONTIAC PRRSS. TUESDAY. DECEMBER 81.IB08 MARKETS . | - The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by than in wholesale package lots; Quotations Are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of .noon Monday. . t Produce FRUITS Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. ....t3.7J Apples, Delicious, Golden, bu. ..3.50 ; Apples, jonetbon, bu. .. . ... 3.oo Apples, McIntosh, bu. . .........3.00 '‘Apples, Northern Spy, bu. .....3.50 Apples, c ** . Cabbage, curly, bch. .1# Cabbage, red, bu. ................Jg Cabbage, standard, bu............].£0 Carrots, cello pak; 2 doz.......J-Jg Celery, Root ,.v.................-VS Horseradish, pk. blkt. .........3.oo teaks, bch. . .... . ........... Onions, dry, 80 lbs. ...... Parsley, root, bchr<..... ...... ^Parsnips . .......................J-g Parsnips, cello pak, doz.........2.25 SALAD GRAINS Market Inches Higher Big Year-End Session Expected NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market inched higher on balance V today in what promised to be a turbulent year-end session. Trading was heavy, the ticker tape running at least five minutes late in the first wave of transactions. Airlines provided some group leadership, displaying a string of moderate gains. Eastern Air Lines rose a full point. Coppers, also, were mainly higher. The trend was slightly to the upside among motors, tobaccos, office equipments, chemicals and utilities. NEW HIGH IBM touched a new high of 502 for the year, making a gain exceeding 4 points. The stock had crossed another milestone in " recovery movement toward its historic peak of 607 reached in 1961. Xerojc was up more than 8 at die start then trimmed back the rise to about 5. . w ★ ■ ★ Chrysler added a full point. General Motors added a fraction. Monday, the Associated Press average of 60 stocks dipped ,7 to 283.9. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. Most changes were small. Gainers included Reliance Insurance, Barnes Egnineerlng and Falcon Seaboard Drilling. Among losers were Breeze Corp., National Bellas Hess and Gulton Industries. American Stock Exch. Seek to Block Transit Strike Walkout Threatened in New York Jan. 1 Reasons fpr Variance A Look at Stock Pricing Cal El Paw ... Calui Elec ... Crole P ...... Flying Tiger . Gen Develop .. Hall Lamp ... imp TS CA .. . Squash, Buttercup, bu. ... Squaih, Delicious, bu. Squash. Hubbard Turn ML i UcSPANI The New York Stock Exchange Poultry and Eggs NEW YORK (AP)-FallOWlrig it selected stack transactions on NEW YORK (AP)—The Transit Authority is seeking a .court injunction against a strike on New York City’s subway and bus lines threatened for 5 a.m. New Year’s bay. , ★ ★ ★ As soon as Michael J: Quill, president of the AFL-CIO TVans-port Workers Unionwas served with an order calling him to court, he broke off negotiations with the authority—at least until after today’s hearing. The union represents 35,000 subway and bus employes. Its two-year contract with the Transit Authority expires at midmight tonight. THREATENED STRIKE Every two years since 1955, Quill has threatened a New Year’s transit strike- There always has been a last • ml settlement. Asked by a newsman Monday whether he would postpone the strike deadline in view of. Jthe court action, Quill replied: “Un-. less they put the whole union membership in jail at one time, there’ll be a strike if there’s no contract.” i . ★. * ★ David L. Cole, chairman of Mayor Robert F. Wagner’s special transit mediation board, said the mayor would take part in continued mediation efforts today. After meeting with the mayor and members of the Transit Authority late Monday night, Cole said hjs board expected Quill to meet with it and members of the Transit Authority today- / NO OFFER Although the Transit Aujjtyror-ity has not made an offer to the union, Cole said: “We still think there is a possibility of working this put/’ The Transit Authority has re-' jected the union’s demand for a four-day, 32-hour week without loss in take-home pay. The work week now is 40 hours in five days. , ' *,1 ■ 0,y ■ / . Other union demands include a 15 per cent increase in wages, which now average $2.83 an hour. The New York State AFL-CIO which claims two, million mem-berk, announced it would support Quill’s union in its efforts get “a fair settlement.” / DAWSON By SAM DAWSON AP BasMess News Analyst NEW YORK — The price paid for a "stock on the huge over-the-counter market — OTC can vary in several ways. A dealer may pay a wholesale price for It, while the public pay.# a retail price, which is the wholesale price plus some additions. And these c a n be figured m o r e than one way. If your broker acts.as an agent, he buys the stock for you at tiie best wholesale price be can get at the time by phoning around to other dealers and consulting a wholesale listing he gets every morning. Then he adds on a commission, and this also can vary among brokers. If your broker acts as a principal, he presumably carries active OTC stocks in inventory and sells you one plus a markup as he determines. EYE ON COMMISSIONS The National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.—NASD : up by Congress in 1939 to regulate its more than 4,000 member dealers operating in the OTC, keeps an eye in a general way on both the commissions and the markups charged and also on publishing of OTC retail price ranges for the guidance to the public. Hie OTC is much larger, both in ' number of issues available for trading and in volume of sales, than the nation’s formal stock exchanges where only listed stocks can be bought and sold and where listing is subject to strict rules. But some of the large brokerage ' firms chprge 1 commissions far OTC trading comparable to those prescribed by the nation’s formal stock exchiuiges. Others may charge commissions that range higher than this, especially for the lower-priced stocks, of Auto Boom Ups Income of Railroad British Guard Cyprus Peace The booming auto industry helped push Grand Trunk Western Railroad’s 11-month rov-i to $45.5 million, a 5.7 per icant Increase over 1062, Harry A; Sanders, vice president and general- manager said today. “During the tat yaar, principally to meet SANDERS requests of the automakers fdr special equipment, we ordered 290 new freight cars costing, 85.5 million. ★ * * “Consideration is being given to the purchase of 825, additional cars tor 1804,’’ Sanders revealed. Auto production led to in-ereasea In the rati way’s handling of scrap metal, auto parts, rand Trunk West-i 11-month revr I NICOSIA, Cyprus .(AP)-Brit-ish troops stood guard in neutral buffer zone between the Greek and Turkish Cypriot sectors of Nicosia today, and the capital of Cyprus enjoyed its first 24 hours without shooting after nine days of communal violence. In1 the Greek Cypriot sector, government and business offices and shops reopened. Greek and Turkish Cypriot, representatives continued negotiations for improvement of conditions in the beleaguered Turkish section, particularly for restoration of telephone communications and collection of the dead and wounded. WITHOUT HITCH British forces topifc>over the neutral zone without a hitch, their commander, flon\lfttar Young, announced in a communique Monday night.. The leaders of the two com-munities-Greek Cypriot President Archbishop Makarios and Turkish Cypriot Vlca President Fasti Kutchuk - agreed to the buffer zone Monday. They also agreed that British troops would have free movement throughout the city to enforce the truce., The fighting began Dec. 21 after weeks of mounting tension over Greek Cypriot proposals to amend the constitution. The Turkish Cypriote, who are in the minority, claim; the amendments will abridge their constitutional rights. menu of sand and gravel are up along with mining products and cereal foods. Aoothar bright spot was Urn location of 40 new industries along the Una during the past year, Sander* Stated, Eighteen other on-line firms completed White the railroad carried 10*000 carloads of finished autos in 1009, compared to 4,000 In 0 per cent to 92.1 million for the same period. Which there are an . abundance among the OTC’s some 40,000 issues available, nationally or regionally, for purchase by the public. A Securities & Exchi Commission study group report* ing this year on many phasesof! the securities market noted of the OTC: “Principal markups ordinarily run higher than agency commissions and they are even higher in so called riskless transactions which constitute a substantial proportion of retail transactions,” . Riskless deal A deal is dubbed riskless when a dealer sells as a principal to bis customer — charging the wholesale price plus his particular markiijp--but at the same time tews similar shares in the wholesale market. Thus he avoids toe risk of actually carrying a large inventory, although he appears to be selling from such an inventory' and acting as a principal for profit. Brokers can get wholesale price lists from a private organization, toe National Quotation Bureau. It collects most of toe quotations by telephone as dealers report at what prices they’ll buy or sell specified issues— known as bid mid asked. In New York the bureau’s daily report can run to 230 pages, in Chicago to 32 pages, in ga? Francisco t«v listing issues actively bought and s°ld to those areas. An SEC study of toe bureau’s sheets over 10 months showed 18,000 different Issues of stocks or bonds mentioned at least once. By comparison, there are 1.569 issues listed on the New York Stock Exchange, the nation’s largest formal market. Besides toe 18,000 issues noted, OTC dealers may trade to many others, often stocks of small companies known only regionally. ETHICAL DEALERS The NASD says that taost-of its dealer members are ethical and abide by its standards for a fair markup or commission. It also says it’s only fair to the smaller dealers> that the Wholesale, or insider, bid and asked list be kept prlyate, while the retail price list is made public. The argument: the small dealer couldn't .afford toe lower markup a blgfirmmight charge and such publicity could force toe Smaller ones to the wati. Critics of toe NASD system contend that the public ghould know at what price an isSue actually was traded. The argument, could reach / Congress if H takes up recommendations for new regulations for toe securities markets to general. m ' HHHI Ry ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I’m « and retired due to Alness. My wife and I have |11,NO ta a savings bank and an income of fill per month from pension and^ social security. Mortgage and upkeep of house take |150 a month. Food, medicine, and doctors require about the same, since we are both in poor health. We are withdrawing from our savings to order to live. Should 1 continue to do so, or can I get enough income from common stocks to moot our needs?” B. O. A) There are few, if any, secure common stocks that yield above 5 per cent. If you switched to these, your income would be increased by only |100 or po, which would npt meet your problem. In your difficult position, I believe I would consult a reputable insurance agent. It might well be that he could set up for you joint and survivorship annuity which would provide you both with sufficient income white you lived. ' 1 ' . ★ ★ * ' Q) “My grandmother left *. > vi Mnvetfing; arette field — a position whicff it is trying very, hard to strengthen. Although I believe your dividends are safe here, I am afraid that toe forthcoming U.S. Public Health Service report on cigarette? may be highly unfavorable and may further depress your stock. What you should have — to help your daughter — is a strong growth issue, preferably in the consumer field. I suggest that you switch to Sears, Roebuck. (Copyright INS) I invested in American Tobacco ton years ago. My objective was to further the education of my very young daughter. What should I do — sell the stock and buy anol outlook?” a stronger outlc J.K. A) It to extremely unfortunate that you bought — with one of the finest objectives — a stock, that has been hard hit by adverse medteal criticism of cigarette smoking.7 American Tobacco’s earnings have been on a plateau in recent years, probably because toe company has not had a strong position in the filter clg- Business Notes Appointment of Otto Much, 4779 Burnley, Bloomfield Township, as manager of Chrysler Corp.’a Plymouth aaaembly plant to Detroit was announced today by F. L, Bird, Gar and Truck Group general parte manager, , Much has been the plant's production manager since lttt. Prior to that, he served in production posts at Chrysler’! Los Angeles and Newark, Dal., plants since joining toe firm in He came to the United States from Europe to 1920- He was employed 28 years with Studs-baker-Paokard, rising from office boy to plant production supervisor. ' News in Brief llx pieces of fire - fighting equipment responded yesterday afternoon to an alarm at Pontiac General Hospital ter smoke in an occupational therapy room. Thqre was no damage. John Zeltosko, 53, of 28 8,, Paddock told Pontiac police that he waa robbed of nls wallet containing |8 after he was attacked by several men on Pad-dock between Oamun and Prospect at 9:80 p.m. yesterday. Oscar Blonquist, N, of 8M7 Eddafteld yesterday reported two radios valued at 9110 war* stolen in a break-in at to* Parisian Beauty Shoppe, 7 W. Lawrence. i ' A mailbox was hurled through the 7-by-l0-foot plate glass window of Jim’s Hardware, 1037 Williams Lake Road, Waterford Township, teat night. Damage te estimated at 1119. Ralph W. Rotsel, 71 Franklin, coordinator of cooperative education for Pontiac schools, has returned from a throe-day regional convention of toe North-Conirdl Business Education Association to Cincinnati. Production of Vehicles 2nd to'55 DETROIT (AP) - U.«. auto plants will wind up 1063 this week with greater production of cars ami trucks than hi any calendar year since 1955. i The 1063 output will hit an estimated 9,100,000 units—less than one per cent behind the all-time high of 9,IN,000 Oet in 1055. ★ Or »; Or * Auto makers were confident, until a few weeks ago that they i would surpass that 1965 record. But then a series of local-level work disputes broke out, primarily to General Motors and Ford plants, and thousands of planned units were lost. In addition, Studebaker bowed out of toe U;S. auto assembly field to early December and again some potential, car and truck units were lost to those who had hoped to make 1968 a record - breaking production year. PREDICTED RECORD One statistical agency, Word’s Automotive Reports, said 1963 car sates would ha the best yet. It estimated that 7,9 xhllllon vehicles, including imports, would be sold In 1968. The old lark of 7(400(04*0, includlng/52,-»imports, was set to I960. As in indication of what Ilea ahead for the auto Industry in 1984, Weed’s pointed out that the 2,288,000 cars produced to the: fourth quarter of ION are an all-time high for tew quarter. The old mark waa 2,120,018 turned out In January-Mlarch, 1968. * it it The record breaking fourth quarter production waa expected to supply an impetus to 1904 production and sales. General Motors hat! 19 assembly plants on overtime Saturday to make up unite lost by the Christmas holiday shutdown. Ford had 15 of Its 16, assembly plants on similar operation, the rest of toe Industry workod about a four-day weak because of toe holiday. l*“lii.Mui ’** ft* sjjsnsx. s 8 a it 11 i88