Im servicing my 6g13. ...
What im a bit stumped by is what seems like factory incorrect resistor values.
Fender documented their amps more/better than nearly any 1950s-1960s guitar amp brand (with the possible exception of Ampeg).
Even so, until the mid-60s or so, Fender seemed to have a lot of minor circuit-changes that didn't get documented on schematics. The guys who heavily collect vintage amps & also pay attention to tech-details are the ones who seem to notice these incremental versions floating around.
The resistor style, solder joints, and position of other parts suggest that the resistors you noted are factory-original. That makes them "Right" no matter what the schematic says.
... how much upward drift can one tolerate in these carbon comps in the non 5% tolerance resistors? I really dont want to change them out. ...
If the amp isn't malfunctioning, then there's no reason to change the resistors.
Take any amp, and you can likely halve/double any individual resistor and barely notice a change occurred. If "double-resistance" is barely-audible, then there's no sonic goodness to be had in tight precision. That's usually a fixation of Novice Techs, because they assume "something must be done" and they're not quite sure what to tinker.
I, too, assumed everything needed to be refreshed & back to factory-original when I first started out. In hindsight, I wish I would have not-changed the cathode bypass caps in that 1967 Princeton Reverb, because the dried-up caps measuring 1µF
sounded better (and less bloated in the low-end) than after the new 25µFs were installed. But I didn't have experience against which I could evaluate that amp & see it needed no tinkering (I got it in the first place because it sounded perfect after playing the first chord).