- :■ 7 *\ -,y ■ Th« Weather - J ’ ®i> VMitv Ihmi hnmi r*,wm*m* n THE PONTIAC PRESS 118th Y$AR mm Home Edition PONTIAfc, MtcfflG?X, TUESDAY, DECEMBER l^loeo —82 PAGES He’s in Capital W or below at drive their automobiles to! ------------------- other sgriculture prospects Ralph dm front wandering out on thin *0** Bradley, president of the Illinois ice and to stay off it themselves. Base* were hampered by Farmera Utoan wh». waa confer- # wo drifts, run to ptowud atfeMdf rinr With Kennedy fhen Cooley! ,.TW(l u # crUlrI|, (illH, „{ ,bf. road, and overload* pf par-year, when m can expect a taah *m- sf drowntogsr la the area unless ( a bright sun shone to most of people stay off the gratowlly ithe hardest hit area, tram Virgin-Hdrhsnkag lce.” be said. ito to Canada, but snow was Recent/ weather conditions havv|P£** st*“ d™rh^f!lo serve ** honorar> chairman of area keeps on growing as iheathed area ponds with ice. andj*™^.'* Baq cnc” 1 .the American Golf Classic to be it has. the tap will run dry —j ■n- ortv.rvs,r« MW iw!H to itartlng to farm along the,-0 held in Akron, Ohio Aug. 21-2T j there won't be enot«h underground1 «*• But It is still SNOW STEAI-S CAR * * * water to go too treacherous to venture out. j The depth of the snow and drifts' a delegation from Akron gave WWW Irons noted was reflected by the plight of a, the President tickets for himself! Consider, too. bow much indus- Cooley aatd there was s psato- j w w * woman in Edison, N.J. She re- and Mrs. Eisenhower Proceeds try and business demands of that btMty he was advocating but de- < ,.^0 |,w ^ hereabouts iXMlwl her small foreign car-from the tournament will go to No. 1 commodity which flows un- “ " --- - . Mr dW can be considered sale for skating's’b,e1^ Polire found it—just where!Akron charities. derfoot use* more than half of the dty’s[that Willman must have the city! “The storm belt extended from water - oo whether it wUl buy!commtoston s approval. IPort Austin at the tip of the Thumb Detroit water from Pontiac or con-1 M| want to know one way or thejto Algonac on the St. Clair River, ttaue to provide its own from sep-iother. ' Willman said. He said in-. , ___ •«■»«* [dostty's answer is long in com- ZfS W W - V~ I ‘kjlll irkli ; ware upew today but buses (to This is the major concern for] fi. A. Baldwin, director of the by ILa W.mi'A L.ni.J dk-ament vou'd be to tf It (kiesn't? This is the major concern lor] H. A. Baldwin, director of the; af Ike, Mamie Invited Pontiac City Manager Walter K. Willman before he can say yew tolpower section of General Motors Three toot drifts piled up along ____ V . T. .a _ ftamria Ttoa wlWau a! mumwa i. i rnntiniuwl AM Dana 0 Ail ’ll tHw. Ijlbl HllPMI thfllWlirWl Jh« th#* Renips. The other, of course, is| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) the, Lake Huron shoreline as the f was whipped by 35- jferenecs and communications on WASHINGTON (API — Presi- this possible disaster. f fWit.rin !<*eM Bwbawr today was invitod) His conclusion: If the Pontiac! ’ . (ri CZWSI DC liAxwvrars akalmwaw jwt w_ —- -------1 a f«.t n0 crats, were defeated ,in bids for office this year. Committee Formed to Seek Industry lor Waterford mtle-an-hour winds. | Many schools in the Huroo-San-ilac-St. Clair County area closed jeariy so children could be transported home before roads became impassable. lanring sad Detroit chalked up record low temperature*. The (8- . time Dee. if low for’L The Waterford Township Board list night pledged! ■» i «Nv» «*"»• 'ad Detroit .. . . * -- » ■ Ih. 'Ito. am - --J SmHr ■ay be thtohs the “heat qualified yri.” irons warned. He advtord ** hadP“r^ed “T" h" jit was buried under a snowdrift Snowdrifts.. which reached {parents to tell their youngsters t There have been reports Cooley *tay oft the ice until local rec-j. " . , . K. .____________ _________ would like to ree thetorm job go.reTtion director, pronounce it^1 «* » *« New Journal, to Rep. W R. Poage of Texas. Isafe. I (Continued on Page 2. Col. 8! with a reading of 4 above. Consultant, tell wuinum that tbi.m«ncourage industry to settle In the township. tfmper-un> namiMd Tibbals. executive'ground supply can run dry within. The area industrial development program will be; at 4 above through the night and sports editor of the Akron Beacon five years at the present role °*’headed by its originator, James Sayers, an engineer; |,he Au*° Club reported switch- bo hemiro the deleg.- growth. The level ha. been ^ ]^T-T^**** *vre flooded by calls from ■ported Elsenhower, the na-.dovm about five feet a year. Mrs. Caroline SchfOCk, Oakland County director for ttle;stranded n^jtorists. Simple or Expensive and Different No. i goffer, expressed in-' * * * Michigan State Home Extension Swrice, and township ( The exchange at tbe dub esd- tournament, but Ttus thought provoking revelation pnrviftor Elwjer w Johncciti {mated 10,000 Detroit area residents —'* ---------.« ' ______ , __ ; were unable to start their cars this Sayers, public r*UtiOM)moBling bec-ause of the cold. i commitment. Gifts Can Fit Any Pocketbook t just come to Willman's tendon overnight He's known it for] time. He's been working 'Bourgeois’ Words Rate hud to be prepared should thej Sneer in Red Dictionary weIU nui ^ director of the Professional! NEXT TO SEWAGE PROBLEM j , BUDAPEST. (APt — Hungarian; -Next to sewage, for which the! V- . wWh "bourgeois cohnec-jc^ has juto ordered us to **- By JANET ODELL jftandles. For pure deroratlon give,Buy a handsome world globe tions" are being labeled BSoc 'ipa*! olir facilities, water is our| ' Gifts for the home and familyja miniature artificial orange or’mounted in a cherry frame. .gCEMBKR/l&, I860 JL/.S. Is Spying, Reds Charge at U.N. Halting Pictures \ Zorin Also Soys Bombs Pfom Amorica Used to Kid Rebels Pontiac, Ferndale Arrange Meeting on State Finances Financial legislation in Lansihg next year will be the subject of a joint meeting Wednesday at Devon Gables Inn, arranged by the Michigan State Chamber of. Commerce From Our News Wires j for members of the Pontiac Area .. ,, ..... .. " Chamber of Commerce and the At the United Nations the So- _____ .... . . . " rerndale Board of Commerce, viet Union charged today that | U.S. U2 reconnaissance planes a re I More than IN persons are exbeing used to photograph the po- peeled to attend a panel discus-el tions of Algerian rebel forces ! »*aa period beginning at I p.m., ! Hid U.S.-made bombs are being •*ohn Hlrilngtw. manager of used to kill them. the Pontiac Area Chamber of ’ The charge was made by Soviet Commerce. ••Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian| Panelists wifi include at least 3L Zorin before the General Ak- | four Mjfhigan businessmen recruit-sembly's 99-nation political com- ed for the program by the state mittee. chamber of commerce. . * The committee ta considering * * * ' Asian African demands for , The state s financial petition and UJ*. rote In settling the Mure | business tax structure will be an-of the strife-tom North African I*1*"*1 with an eye to possible territory, changes in the legislature next ses- ■ . _____ lion. * »• wb™ accused France of whole- Reservations being accepted at y slaughter and said President the chamber offices cover dinner ,Claries de Gaulle had the backing following the discussion priod-« “the new tangled holy alliance ■ • Van ACCUSATIONS Find Body ,V-S- bombs, helicopters and / PNf • T\S - ^ j ouier equipment and weapons are Of OIC1T1 LsllrGTl being used by the French forces' I 1» Algeria, Zorin said. He did tot|.'n 7T ro-> T a Iro say whether U.S. or French pUotsiill /lit?Cl LiClKt? manned the U2 planes. Tells of King Judge and Wife Ex-Convict Confesses to Pay for '55 Florida Dual Drowning The bay in Birmingham Commission Sidesteps Detroit City Hell Iflassle ENDS HER DUTY - Mrs. Ralph T. Norvell (right!, past chairman of the MSUO Scholarship committee is turning her duties over to Mrs. Maxwell Matthews for the ensuing year. Ac- cording to the report Monday evening. 'Mrs. Norvell’s committee-raised $45,000 for boys and girla at MSUO during the past year. A host of area citizens and organizations participated’. ••• But he asserted that NATO ^a» .. Mb North Africa, manned by U.S. L Skin divers located the body of — ------ . __ .... , P *' 27-year-old James Gark of Fraser ***. *** U8Cd *y * St the bottom of Green Uke in French in their campaign again the rebels. Sarto recalled the recent visit to Moscow of Algerian ntional-M lender Ferhnt Abbas and said th# ties between the Soviet gov-' 4 the Algerian rebels la Algeria rioting broke out today in Oran despite warnings tt*t De Gaulle was‘determined W •'smash” riot ‘leaders who turned his peace mission into Jtourinsurrection. H.Two thousand European youths] —. the Arab quarter L •* ltort of Oran in the fifth ? ■newfivn day of Algerian riot-yf; They were driven back by puttee armed with tear gas and “toae grenades and aided by cooler ••ads among older settlers. Al-Bp, scene of earlier rioting, was Ttta Oran yootiw had beard an wi^eena report that Moslems Cuban them had farmed a *rsmauadi” brigade with the totMtoo of raiding the Baropeaa P"* at the oily. They dispersed whoa police stopped in and more ■Mton settlers told them the mptots were wrong. r Da Gaulle, reported livid with rage at the battling between right-whig French settlers and Moslem nationalists that killed scores and wounded 2,000 others, was returning to Paris today. Paris reports ■aki he would order drastic pun-ishment of the ringleaders. «French sources said that autop-siN on 58 4>f the dead showed only 29 had been killed by bullets. They said 7 others had slit throats. U had been stabbed and 4 died 'from broken skulls. “COT* TOUR The situation jn Oran improved Wjt today when the settlers’ *nnch Algeria front (FAF) called J§t the general strike which has immobilized the city since Friday when De Gaulle arrived for what was to have been a six-day tour. He cut one day off the tour because of the developing crisis. [West Bloomfield Township at m. today. a * * However, the drowning victim’ body had not yet been recovered from the frigid waters at press time. A line attached to it slipped oft as it was being pulled to the surface by sheriff's deputies, and the body slid back into the depths. Near-aero temperatures hindered divers probing under the surface of the weed-choked south side of Green Lake. more than a fear of suffering the same fate as Gark, who drowned Sunday afternoon while skin diving. They finally located Gaik's body approximately 125 yards from the at the bottom of the lake, about 25 feet further out than the ice edge. * it It Rescue efforts launched within minutes after he failed to surface discontinued that night. Skin divers returned yesterday to search for the body to no avail. They went back into the lake early this morning while temperatures hovered around the zero mark. Sheriffs deputies believe the victim’s air was cut off when bis equipment froze under the ice. His companion, Edward Long, 22, of Melvindale, told deputies he and Gark became trapped under icq along the southeast shore when they attempted to swim across the lake underwater. I early this after-Man, seeking toe loyally of kls soldiers for toe coming weeks of crisis, before setttag oat oa toe return flight to. Paris. “ In Paris, informed sources said De Gaulle had decided to order drastic punishment of the r i p t “leaders. They said he “exploded with anger” at the violence Sunday and vowed that “all those who are responsible for this -j I’ll smash them.” County to Get Water Data (Continued From Page One) Corp., said he didn't know when he'd answer the city manager. “Of all toe tblags that we considered urgent, this didn’t seem to have the priority the other things did,’’ Baldwin said. The three GMC plants in the city used 134 million gallons of city water last year. In contrast, Pontiac Motor and GMC Truck & Coach Divisions pulled 161 million gallons from their own wells. This could be the incentive for industry to stay on its own, something Willman would rather not see. He knows the minimum cost to' Pontiac would be considerably lower should industry answer m the affirmative. “We have the plant capacity to supply Pontiac now,” Remus said. He said the city has funds on hand to build a 54-inch water main to Dequindre and 17-Mile roads, east of Pontiac, and nearly at Pontiac’ doorstep. Remus made the following proposition to Willman in- a Dec. 6 letter: “Could we sign a contract with you now so that we may include the financing in our presen schedule and continue our detailed design, thereby making water available to Pontiac after approximately two years jot water main construction?” Detroit’s booming water business with the suburbs is centered around new intake near Port Hqrdn to provide water from Lake Huron. This is expected around 1966. At present it comes from the mouth of the Detroit River. All the expansion of the depart, ment has been done, Remus said, and will be accomplished in the future without cost ‘to the taxpayers. Hie department is nonprofit, he added, and is sustained completely from water revenues. BOND8 REQUIRED Willman said a revenue boni Issue of upwards to $3% million would be required to revamp the County Dems Back Four for US, Patronage Jobs WEST PALM, BEACH, Fla. —Floyd A. Holzapfel, 36-year-old ex-convict, ins pleaded guility to the drowning of Circuit judge Curtis E. Chillingworth and 'his wife Marjorie five years ago. Jqdge Russell O. Morrow took the unusual ac tion of hearing | *. * # Holzapfel’* ease without, a jury The commissioner* skid It was Monday, and said he will hear none of their business what hap-additional, test'mony in Circuit pened to the |gM building and the BIRMINGHAM - City sioners last night decided not to become involved In the dispute over the rasing of Detroit’s Old City Hall. 1 authority, have not yet taken ac-tion on dissolving the agreement A letter from J. W. O'Meara, president of the Save Gty. Hall Committee in Detroit, had asked for some expression from the local unit in a letter. Court on Feb. ,20. The judge warned the former college debater that he could be sentenced to death in the e trie chair, to which Holzapfel plied: Tin willing to stand up here and plead guilty and take my medicine." Hotaapfei confessed last month that 'he and a Negro, George Lincoln, kidnaped toe veteran Judge Chillingworth, M. and Ms wife Mm L, KuUer Service for John ,L. Fuller, 78, of 5940 Crabtree Road, Township, will b« 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Burial will be In Gtoveravilie, N.Y. Fuller died today at his home after a long illness. The pwner of too 'Jaha L. Fuller Co., he wa* formerly with the Detroit lubricator Oo. and the Hart sad Crouse Boiler Oo. nffictel*. of Utica. Sr it " it j He ants a member of the f^Ales- The only action taken by the tb* Lodge. FfcAM, American go-commission was a directive to sendpety of Heating and VgitUating O'Meara a letter Informing* him oflEn*lnem “M ■"** Gyro Gub. its general feqlings. - j * * 7 . Surviving are a sob, Andrew of and drowned them on the night of Jane It. 1*55. * The former Oklahoma Gty man, who has a record of arrest* fur bookmaking, armed robbery and attempted rape, said Lincoln were paid 82.000 for the killings by Joseph A. Peel jr., 36, who feared Chillingworth would have him disbarred. Peel, a former city judge, was charged as an accessory before O'Meara had suggested that the building be turned into a metropolitan hall of state that could be used by neighboring communities tor assemblies and ' public func- [ | tions. i hearing Thurs- Four local Democrats, two of them unsuccessful candidates the Nov. 8 election, received the backing last night of the Oakl|nd Long said he lost sight of Gark'County Democratic Committee for in the water, and barely escaped federal patronage jobs in die dis-from under the ice himself. trict attorney's office in Detroit. __ . „ . ____ . i Birmingham attorney George J. Divers from the sheriffs de- Fulkerson, who led the ticket In his part ment, stale police and Waterford Township Police Department were sided in toe search efforts by volunteers from area skin diving dabs, Clark is survived by two young children and his wile, who is expecting a third. He was employed by General. Motors Corp.'s Tern-Division in Detroit. The Weather r«u U.S. Wsathsr Sami Rrporl “PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair • Ml spilt sr c*M May sag laalpl Psb tatar ». 1st Wfti IS. WaSai hi iSb Idr sad ta— “->■ | . Wm to aortharast wla Tahl to PrathM Direction Northanat -HS: ilodty 10 fti p h ! | Sai hi Pi eaM So wr—Windy, cold Oa< Tur Aft la PMUm 5 Directors Are Elected by C.Of C. Fdur new directors have been Iriected to the board of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and a fifth was re-elected. Balloting by mail ended today :With 585 ballots cast, reported John | Hirlinger, chamber manager. It * * ; * I Elected for three-year terms Jwere John F. Blamy, Pontiac Mo-tor Division manufacturing manager; Horace Lodge, vice president of Community National Bank; Howard M. Nelson, Pontjac manager of Sears'Roebuck It Go.; and Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem. Raymond H. Storm, district ... 20 manager for Michigan Bell Tel-phone Co., was re-elected for a | three-jrpar term. In another election, L. Gare Utile?, president of Cutting Totes & I Supplies, Iiic., was picked to fUl - *-* as unexpired term ending, next December. M The chamber annually elects five » new directors to its 15-member "“■* board. H ‘j The 1961 board ig expected to (elect 1961 officers within bid for county prosecutor, will be recommended to staf&party officials for the $17,500 job as U.S. district attorney. It;is now held by George E-. Woods, Huntington Woods Republican. h ’ * S. Jerome Bronson, an Oak Park attorney wjio bid for the-county’s State Senate seat last month, won the blessing of the committee for hief assistant under Fulkerson, should he receive the job. Many federal jobs In the state, Mniiy'i Tmporataro C I* -4 Minimi Bench ?« 45 i ieoWMrAle M « Mtlin-a^Ua U 1 Makes USO of Snowfall Buffalo- IS * — a “ Quotes 24 tttenr S Duluth I ■ fir j Pittsburgh „ . 1 M B Ml 25 li I PelUton ---OrE-ans „ S 10 NEW YORK lUPD—Advartlsiog J 'JJ man Edward Petpr arrived at the B -{ Stork Oub Monday night accom- . 5 pirucisco if J*[ponied by Mr. and Mrs. Howard B B -JlSmiley of Sacramento, Calif., in a & Itco“ ^ as? j tratios b)r Republicans, Opened up with the election of President Elect John F. Kennedy. Some Democrat* At last night's quarterly precinct delegate meeting of tee committee were skeptical that any Oakland County Democrats would receive much Consideration. Kennedy fell 26,-«tate chairman. Democratic Sens. Patrick V. McNamara fold Philip A. Hart must make • the recommendations t( Kennedy, McNamara has already backed Rosenthal, a former Ute Dla-triet Democrat, la a conversation with Ginn, the chairman aald. Only former county chairman Willis M. Brewer raised any question as to the- number of focal Democrats bidding for the federal jobs. “You’ve got a real fight on your hands,” he told fellow Demo-What are they going to say about trying to land so many?’ Ginn said there wUl be other jobs available. He said the .committee moved on the four because Staebler said these appointments might be made next week. Gbm agreed somewhat with Brpwer. “We’re fighting great Adda when we go out and get these jobs,” he said. “We should spread ourselves out.” Oakland Democrats also voted » oppose tee appointment Bloomfield Township - Supervisor Arno L. Hulet, a Republican, t< Detroit Metropolitan Regional Planning Commission. They said they would ask Democrats of supervisors to vote against the appointment.-Hulet is vice chairman of the board. They decided to recommend to Staebler that Fred L. Yockey, Huntington Woods city manager, be retained on the State Municipal Employes' Retirement Board. Crack the Cold Front With Visions of July Are you cold, snow-swept, windblown? Then why not think of the Fourth of July? The Northside Community Club city’s main and pumping staffon system to handle Detroit water. He said Detroit has cited a price of from $1.40 to Sl.M a i.ooo cubic feet tor the dty, somewhat higher than what water users pay now. He said eventually costs would even out as Detroit would provide soft, potable water, thus eliminating softening coats. Willman fayors having the city buy Detroit water independent of any so-called middleman handlers. Back in September of 1959 Will-mqn declared the Southeastern Michigan Water Authority a “dead duck.” His opinion hasn't changed. He just recently finished serving on a three-member steering committee of the authority—formed iq 1956 in the hope of bringing Lake Huron water to Oakland and Macomb counties-which sought a precontract agreement. No such agreement developed and it’s unlikely any ever will. Willman served along with R.J. Alexander, director of the Oakland County Department of Public I Works, quid Quinton J. Buss, [chairman of the SMWA. Buss said dealings between his group and Remus' department were “temporarily sidelined.” Others involved with water dealings were more definite. * .♦ * "The authority idea is ridicul-.—s,” said Fred L. Yockey, chairman of the Board of Supervisors' Special Water Committee. MH members will hear Remus’ report tomorrow also. Yockey pauses now to ponder the future of his committee, created by former Royal Oak Mayor Howard K. Kelley, the authority’s founder and first chairman. Helping spell defeat for negotiations by the committee with Detroit was a disagreement ever costs between Alexander and Remus. Alexander Insisted that the Detroit water be sold at one rate anywhere along the trahe-mlssion line, regardless of tpe shipping distance from Detroit. Remus has his ideas. In a letter to Alexander he said: “Many-years of operation have shown that tee board’s (board of water commissioners) rates have been reasonable in relation to the cost incurred.” 'It is our feeling that if this position is weakened it will weaken the board’s financing base, cost us more 'interest on our ey, and-will only result in higher costs to everyone.” ■>' Alexander denies talk that he’s trying to build - a waiter, dynasty by putting his DPW as the middleman setter of Detroit water to Oakland communities. Many communities south of Pontiac are currently purchasing the < w a t e r the Southeastern Oakland County Water Authority, without any apparent friction over middleman participation. “I don’t care If we ever cell A nickel’s worth of water la Oakland County,” he said. “AH I want Vi the best deni far the county, and Dot one where the individual community must dick- Peel will have day. Bodies of the Chillingworth* were never recovered. d be left to I) Birmingham, and two granddaughters. Birmingham Gty Commissioners and Bloomfield Township trustees last night in separate actions dissolved their authority in the North Evergreen Sewage Disposal agreement. Eastern Blizzard Toll Stands at 180 Dead (Continued From Page One) formed again behind snow plows [bucking their way down main | roads. In many cases side streets >. which were left untouched be-The action came because the Hir-' ^ playgrounda for children mingham treatment plant which and their •sleds was used by the North Evergreen| * * * Authority is no longer in operation | j„ thf New york m, , the killings and pleaded innocent: with the opening of the Evergreen | m|^|r>>nq schools remained closed, Disposal system. [railroads operated with aubstan- * * * jtial delays, and buses crawled Two other cities. Bloomfield Hills along snowy streets on curtailed rnd Troy, both belonging to theL-hefiuteg. Airports struggled to dear runways and maintain them against the ever-drifting anew and drastically ent the number of flights planned. ISSUES WARNING The great majority o' motorists', who prudently left their cars at home during the storm, faced the job of shoveling their autos free of mountainous drifts. With scows already dead of | heart attack* suffered while World's Jews Begin Chanukah Holiday All around thjf worid, Jews Willi congregation Will be at 11 a.m. Celebrate Chanukah, the eight-day Sunday. At this time children of; winter holiday beginning at sun- the religious school will exchange down today. ! gifts dnd participate in the special * * * [candelabrum lighting service. Also known as the Festival of * * A Lights, the Feast of Dedication, Giildren of the Hebrew School and the Feast of Religious Free- will participate in the candlelight-1 dom, the holiday marks history's teg family service At 830 p.m. j * * * first struggle of the Jews against [Friday in Temple Beth Jacob. The extreme cold preserved ev- the Syrian monarch Antiochus, who * , * * ;erY Ml. of the record snow Besought to impose paganism upon The annual noon brunch on Sun- cumulation for a prewinter storm, them near the end of the First day will be preceded by a special Only the blizzards of 1888 and warning: Taka H easy. Century. by the Maccabeaas, the Judeans fought the overwhelm-ingty superior forces of the world's mightiest nafioa for five and ultimately were victorious. Their success, insuring the survival of Judaism, also is ! credited with paving the way for [ the emergence of (Mrtefiaaity. With victory, the first act of the] children’s program. [Waterford Forms Industrial Group | (Continued From Page One) cations (or this type of business,’ he said. 1947, wh|ch occurred during the 1 official winter period, produced a greater snowfall. i Some sunshine was expected during the day, with diminishing (winds and slightly moderating j temperatures. No real relief was [in sight until Wednesday, when the mcrciiry was expected to Iciimb into the 30| in the afternoon. bringing some thawing and (help to the shovelers. The club picked today to ask the eHy for permission to shoot off fireworks next July 4. “We like to pian ahead,” explained John H. Ridgway, president. T»to Gty Commission is expect- “SjLT ed to give speedy approval toStU^’ •P^* — to the annual festival the. club sponsors at Oakland Park. S3Sl.tr “ A typical Chanukah sentiment A spokesman for the subcoramit-i is contained in a passage from tee said, "It is to the advantage] the Chanukah ritual which is read of both groups to work closely in during the festival: the promotion of our area for in- "With the loyalty and zeal pf| dust rial expansion.’’ the Maccabees, may we overcome .' - x I Concr Group light of liberty, brotherhood and ’ DETROIT W - Dr. Ross* Herter Represents Ike to Laud King1 Baudouin j BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — U. S. Secretary of State Christian A. Herter flew into Brussels today to represent President Eisenhower at the pre-wedding ceremonies of King Baudouin. The king, 30, weds Dona Fahiottt de Moray Aragon of Spain Thursday. Some feel Detroit holds the trump card as the seller who call the price. Remus,’ who said one-third of the city’s water business is with the enrty as 1928 the city felt that the most reliable water gystem, with an average load cost to everybody, [ought to be built as a metropolitan (area system. , This idea w EVERYTHING included . . . | pre-wired and pre-assambfed , . . . 70 feet of wtrai mast 1, mounting-brackats and stand-| offs ... 12 position tfec- > tronic switch-beam antenna ! controls booms Gordon Tiffany, staff director of SIMMS for LOWEST PUCES 11-fa TOOL KIT i" $150 Value As shown — quick, easy changing — sip, tools It In — twist, tool it locked. Herd steel blades, topi steel hammer. 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Cell with rooted ____________ Jointed ormo, logo end neck. Drinks, vote tad ortoo real lean. WIT - soom -2nd floor If BB M. Saginaw —Sod Floor Smart Attortad Sly fee Pocket Knives 6? Regular 98c Values Choice of 6 different sizes— 4 blades scouts, 2 blade iack knife, black stag handles, simu-peprt, etc. iso rted tyies In Gift SHEARS Compare V Bfl* yy Dressmakers, T* bent trim’s. r sewers. 6" wnhrnlltary, sewing, 4" embroidery. 4%-toenail nipper, etc included la gift selection. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS WASHABLE—FULL 2-YEAR GUARANTEE Electric Blankets $1995 Value Single control electric blanket rayon'— cotton — nylon blend. Unapproved. Doubt# bed size. Ideal. CHRISTMAS GIFT for the Home 3-Pc. Fireplace Sets i3t (My 15 sots left — Ideal for grit giving or buy one for yourself. Set has 38“ screen and hanging tools. As.pictured. Durable Poly Plastic 36-Qi. Wastebaskets U7 $1.75 Seller Can't rust, chip or peel. Sturdy carrying handles. Ideal for bath, dsn, kitchen etc. Stands 17-inches tali. gw JBBt- THE PONTIAQ/ PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER. 13, IMP / Wrf* Red China's Cannon-Fodder 'Jack No Radical ' Policy Mokes West Publishers Say ^ nr^Dy« If mauiLiiwJ vn inmii if Ten yean ago amid razor-sharp peaks that stand out Uht atuel rtchh«i against the Korean eky. this correspondent watched Red CMnaee troops advancing down a valley eoiithenit at Seoul. I M probably wig he the laat saeh war ever taught The neat me will he nuclear. The Red Chinese government said Its fighters in Korea were rs.” They ware volunteers only in the sense that their nape at power, It la Inevitable la the preamt Bourse at events that Red China mat also possess the atomic bomb. By accident or design, Red delegates to Moscow’s recently concluded Communist summi up as cannon fodder In the Communists’ limitless ambition to rule. 1 They advanced blindly, like sol-■ dier ants in obedience to .some higher command into everything the United Nations Eighth Army Weekend reports tram Washing-i ebuld throw at them, mortars, 105s, ton said the administration waslby Red China’i rbachinegun fire. concerned by reports that Red human life. This was the human wave attack.(China soon might become a nuclear CALLED A COWARD |Qoebel Makes Profit [After Losing^ in 1959 DETROIT (APj) - The Goebel Brewing Co. says that in the nine-th period ended Sept. 30, it nude a-net profit at $54,180, compared with a loan at $538,300 for the same period last year. * *r* Sales lor the period totaled |0, 253.789, compared with $12,321,496 in 1850. OOP's Knowiond Is Among Those Who Are Optimistic - DETROIT (AP) — Former Senate Republican Leader William f. Knowland says that President-Elect John F. Kennedy "is not [in any sense of the word a radi- • The Korean oonflM wan a war power- Nught with conventional wrap- At In September IMS when ma. Thu sewamt thing fas R was Ruaaia exploded Ita Oral atomic the jet fighter. Wa are Said that | bomb aad apaet the world bal ence returned home and allowed to leak concern similar to that expressed in Washington. Knowland, editor and assistant They were, they said, shocked publisher of the Oakland (Calif.) e s a r d f()r Tribune, was queried here Monday * on: "What is the outlook under President-Elect John F. Kennedy?" Knowland and several other pub-1 i ! ! ! 1 RAZ 1J—/ CASH VI lev IARKXT 1. I 78 NorHi Saginaw Street Wednesday Only Super Specials at Baxley's FRESH, LEAN TENDER BEEF GROUND RIB BEEF STEAKS 3* & Shoulder Cuts L«g of VEAL 0( I VEAL STEAKS w ' ROASTS 'cowardice' pressing his co-existence theme. Thera were re port a that Khrushchev had decided to lend Red Clriua so farther help la Ms These Communist reports could be of a new propaganda scheme designed to frighten the Want Into a hasty disarmament or [nuclear test ban agreement without proper safeguards, aa Khrushchev has to repeatedly demanded. * * a. But propaganda or not, the West has reason to know of Red China's aggressive intent by Red China's own announcements. And It gives pressing weight to the argument that neither disarmament nor the test ban talks They said the Red ,Chinese dele- lishers-wgr^ in Detroit to attend gate had accused Premier Nikita ® meeting of the Bureau of Advertising. ' The former Kepublicaa aena- ] tor said both Kennedy and Vice President-Elect Lyndon Johnson win seek to earry oat the De moors tie platform because "both men pledged heir wholehearted sdpport to the platform and they both are men of their word.” Russ Stewart, chairman of the Bureau of Advertising board and executive vice president of the Chicago Sun-Times and Chicago Daily News, said he didn't Kennedy would be as "far. to the left as many people expected.” Kennedy is. getting a well-balanced cabinet team. He's not going to any extremes;" said William ~ Burgess, publisher of the La Crosse (Wig.) Tribune. Don U. Bridge, general manager of the Rochester (N.Y.) Times-Union and Democrat A Chronicle, said Kennedy was ‘‘not nearly as liberal as many people thought.” President-Elect John F. Kennedy, [during his campaign and on the Senate floor called for continued |eftorta toward a nuclear test and suggested Red China could be included in the Geneva talks. As Prime Minister Nehru, told the United Nations l. Time is runout Primitive Guajiro Indians [Venesuela are nomads who hunt boW and arrow. They live | on goat, sheep and pig. Small game, wild/ seeds and pulp and I fruit of thorny plants supplement their diet. Indian Police Arrest 100 Sikh Demonstrators NEW DELHI, India (AP) — Police Monday rounded up nearly 100 slogan-shouting Sikh demonstrators demanding autonomy for Punjab State, where their six million compatriots are in the majority. Later,'other Sikhs hurled stones, brickbats and clubs at the police from balconies of a temple, which police are not permitted to enter. ■ tables ore constructed with taps and shelves ol 13/16* Solid Core Ash)ita Melamine plastic. Rounded and shaped edges ore in Ireetoan style. Choice of two fmishes: Natural figured walnut or mellow tone white with poid and block May design. Matching wood ports. Tapered legs with NO* MONEY DOWN « »711«—Art For Mr. Wood I °°W" OPEN. EVERY NITE TIL 9 J corn choice n white wW, Mo, □ walnut WAVs 108 NORTH SAGINAW □ FREEFORM STB1 Q SNACK SET Q SURFBOARD COCKTAIL □ LAMP TABLE □ STEP TARE □ FREEFORM COCKTAIL 1 NAME.________!____________________ I PHONE— L Q Add to mf Account Q Now Account Q Full Amount Enclosed I Three flags waved over Ml*-airi within 34 hours on Mardi 9-M. 1104; when Spein, made and the United Stated claimed the 1 territory at various thr~~ while the Lousttna Territory v being transferred. Age se experienee ae haarile Ajrtr ' KEND ALE’S Id J. SAGINAW SHOP EVERY HKflT TILL 9! EMBASSY INITIAL BOXED SET *5 His own personal initial in elegent script against a rich, satin silvered background. Cuff links and tie dip set. CHEVALIER MEN'S JEWEL CASE JF Imported from Sweden, this Useful case* j teehires etched metal emblem, detailed w goto tooling on cover. Choice of several ■ » colors. Very nice! "WAGS" DRESSER VALET BELL BANK *3* Holds Jewelry, watch, glasses, wallet, etc. Dogs tail is a removable shoe horn. Colorful ceramic. *3" The famous Swiss boll ringer inspired this decorative bank. Padlock, keys. •iso SRUSH *4" A naval men's clothes brush set In an unbreakable stand. Fine bristle brush. Wafle’i Men's Wear . .. Sheet Fleer BUTTON-DOWN TIES ♦1.50 ARROW WASH 'n WEAR 100% Cotton DRESS SHIRTS "Whip" or "Hitt" T Wonderful -Arrow shirts that wash and iron themselves —- whether you wash them by bond, or Vfosh and dry them by machine. Sanforized cotton, "Mitoga" tailored fit. Pormonent stay or non-wi It collars. An op-preciated gift! Jfea'e Warn ... Strom Floor FlVfe yONTtAC PRESS, TUESDAY./DECEMBRR ia, 1960 Name Adminlrtrcrt^ vdtMent home in Deerbom, Heig^fe,,, MicWaCHt Gtfe I' succeeds Emil'. Hansen,* who w - , , , ” m j «tMM«d Dec. l. 'National Soionco Grant Tourist Unit Approves a Budget of $119,000 ZlRAND RAPIDS (ill —. A budget df $118,938 (or the coming year, Including $67,363 lor advertising Cotton Quitted Armor Was Hit With Knights * NEW YORK (UP!) — Cotton quilted armor Was tto rage back In the dhys «t old whan MgM* were bald, according to the Hfr tional Cotton. Council.. of Owosso Hospital OWOSSO m — Lee F. Nichols, «, Monday was named administrator c( Memorial poapital, hete. Nichols, a native of Battle Creek, has Seen administrator of a con- YPSILANTI (UP!) - The Na- “ tional Science Foundation has {made a 160.800 granrto Eastern eiui Michigan University to operate a els. Wind, as well as sun, causes! earth to dry. Therefore, it is advisable to water a lawn, after a windy spell. The Loire is the longest flyer in France. , Majestic Coordinates Glow in Festive Colors Shining leaf 1Qribroideries, on willowy gowns if Pink Glow if File Porcelain Hun if NtfechfcGreen * Gay, festive color on holiday (and otter) coordinates by Majestic. Soft doeskin flannels, heavenly ploids and checks in skirts with matching shirts and sweater* Sixes 10 to IB. Beautiful gifts? \f|pA Sadi toft glimmerings on the YL^/ pretty bodices above molded —1midriffs and drifting skirts... v - you couldn’t ask for more flattery 1 Blisa-to-lsunder nylon tricot in tender pastels and cosmetic bribes, at pleasant dream prices... The Dress Length Gown, 32 to 40, B5.95. Lang Gown, 32 to 42,36.95 coty Perfume Purser in g»y holiday drees 2®^ What a Doll! She'* the loveliest ever A Coty perfume purser charmingly costumed to make a'perfect Chrrit-mat gift. Snip, in today and choove a Coty perfume purser in LAMANT • EMSRAUDX L'ORIGAN • PARIS .lovely lingerie . .. Second fleer Gift-wrapped in authentic reproductions of great t French art! Measured Mist /tfiSRT*. SyCCTTY Hiai a beautiful way to uy “I lore you" ... aa . exciting new gilt in a magnificently etched golden metal cane. More than 1000 measured spray*. Sure luxury for legs - MINT * IHBUVH • large collection sf Coty fragrance Gift Coamefica T /fIVV'M//LSTOCKINGS in a VELVET TOUCH gift wrap There's holiday fashion afoot with Tha little luxuries that mean a lot to every woman on your list -beautiful stockings in bar favorite costume colors. So thought fill a gift ao luxuriously wraftpad for you to give Full fashioned or Seamiest Unlimited in new Colors of the'M's make you a Santa worth remembering. makes it a holiday from care in washable nylon jersey *12.98 Whether you giv« It or woar it, tho Stroller is a wonder for corefree living. Simpfe to stop into, it has a Taldn xipper front. No motfer how busy your day, It rttvtr shows a tract of o wrinkle . < . nor nttds fht touch’ of an iron. There art two sidt pockets In. the graceful swirl of a skirt. Blue with orchid, Grttn with gold, Bose with fuchsia, Grey with beige. 10 to £0, 12 Vi to 22 Vi,, HOLIDAY SPARKLE ... Black peau-de-soie be-decked with rhinestones . . . befitting for your most tin-gant hohdaycostume. Reed-slim high heel pf medium heel. 1X99 T TV « THE PONTIAC PRESS % 43 West Huron Blrcri 'ft!- ■ /jjl WBE&iSPr<■ ■*■''".?■ ■ - . / w* , TUESDAY. DECEMBER 13. i960 ■>KOU> I. FTT*0*«At,D hmUn MU Editor Top Cabinet Positions Demand Much Thought President-Elect Kennedy has been k . taking his time In selecting the top positions in his cabinet. This is no reflection on Kennedy’s cabinet thus far chosen. The truth of the matter is, they were the easier choices. The fact that he has deliberately taken his time in the selections for more critical posts is good. He is oat to get the best possible man. ★ ★ ★ Some people have been Impatient with Kennedy for having moved so slowly in these areas. Admittedly, there is some urgency. The transition from one regime to another Is- difficult at best. The longer a man haa to acquaint himself with a Job, the better for the country. ★ ★ ★ Kennedy made what perhaps will be widely accepted as a valid point when he said in explanation: “Whoever is selected for those Jobs, their Judgment will affect the lives of ail Americana and they - wig be in those positions, I would hope, for four years. Therefore, I . aim trying to render the best and most responsible judgment I can. When I feel I have dona that, then I am going to name them.” The president - elect understands as do most Americans, that the men who are chosen to guide us in diplomacy; in defense and in finance, must do more than exhibit high competence. 1 , ! ★ * ★ They must also inspire tremendous confidence, not only among Americans, but among our actual and our potential allies abroad. To find men who provide the delicate vital combination plainly is not dimple. We would like to see Kennedy get Robert 8. McNamara, president of Ford Motor Company to join bin team. Our Defense Department will be in good hands jf he will take the post. it it ★ The old saying that it Is better to move wisely rather than quickly — even though times be urgent is apropos. Larger Nigerian Market Open to ILS. Business Nigeria is one nation in Africa which seems to have weathered the transition from colony to Independence with grace and prudence. There is every good reason therefore fdr the United States to be seeking to expand Its 930 million a year to exports to that country. In line with this the Commerce Department has Just completed a study to find out why American goods aren't getting a bigger share of Nigeria’s 9639 million imports. ★ ★ ★ While American products are thought of as generally reliable and of good quality, the trouble seems to be that we haven’t been analyzing the market to find out what would appeal to Nigerians. Also, . American firms haven’t gone out for a larger Chare of the market perhaps because the average Nigerian has a low income compared with that of Europe and sales would be limited.' I fleam classes of Nigerians do have money. But American refrigerators, for instance, are not a sBliig well bat ap Israeli refrigerator ia. The reason for this is that the Israelis pat locks on theirs. The Nigerians like that and we hadn't taken the trouble to study that need. The Commerce Department study revealed that Nigerians like liquids in bottles insteah of cans because they can use v the bottle for many things after It's been emptied. Nigerians generally choosy a package with an eye to its after use. Color also" plays a Mg part hi sake but not for aesthetic reasons. Some tribes are partial to one colojj; and to Moslems certain colors are offensive. So it all boils down to tkeae two tried and true rules of buaineaa— find out what the customer wants and advertise the product. Overheard, bobby-soxer speaking: “I love music, and I’m Just crazy about Elvis Presley!” The poor girl has a serious case of split personality. “Ir given his choice of food, a child will select food best for him,” says a medical columnist who knows nothing about one or both of these things: A child; what food is best for a child. Surely the poet didn’t write the poem during Indian Summer in which he refered to autumn as “the melancholy days.” The Man About Town Still They Come Worked on 1st Automobiles That Were Made in Pontiac Christmas wrappings: The best * •f which Is a family all wrapped > up, in Itself. (MAT note: The following information came to me in a letter written by Mr. Dunham Saturday. He died suddenly Sunday). Another man who pioneered In the making of automobiles In Pontiac was George Dunham of 314 Linden Road. He was a (bolder for the Beaudette Company, and pfobably handled all of the parte for the first bodies made by them for the Ford Motor Company. His recollection was that this order for 290 bodies was the first of the kind to come to Pontiac The Beaudette plant Jud previously been making horse drawn vehicles. Their first bodies, according to- Mr. Dunham, were modeled on the old Concord type of horse drawn carriages. It was a semi-luxury model of what the Conestoga wagon had meant for the Overland Trail, and somewhat elongated and heavier than the usual type for horses. A letter comes from Hubbard Olney of Detroit, who says that he worked on the flret autos made In Pontiac nearly 60 year* ago, and Hhat there was some complaint because Saginaw street was used as a testing brash. That chronicler of historical facts, ■ Prod Maseear of Wjrierford, sends word that It was 20 years ago today that a Bavarian paper-hanger, Adolph Hitler, told his armlss: "Well conquer the entire world." Although we’ve had a few days , of eeM weather, the ice eu none ef the iahee in the Pontine area is yet safe for seating. This eel-umn will tell you when. Wouldn’t It be gnat If we could ge (breach the entire winter without a skat-, lag fatality? Seen alsb in Flint and Detroit, one of the rare Arctic snow owls was observed Saturday by Elmer Mayan of Keego Harbor, perched for a short time In a tree near his home. It made a swoop to the ground in an attempt to grab a chicken, but failed. ' An appeal to be a Christmas Goodfel-low, written by Ward T. Hart, the Pontiac letter carrier-poet, Is nicely put in thyme in a copy of The Pontiac Daily Press 20 years ago. When they have heavier snow and a worse bustard In El Paso, Texas, as they did the past week, than we’ve had la Michigan In several years, that good sport, «' Bertram Lemlsh of Birmingham, phones that this column should regard Texas as a serious competitor for Michigan as a winter sports area, ^ut they haven’t the natural advantages, Bert, i Voice pf the People: ' W* Agrees With Press Column oft Communist I read the artMri”Glv» U. S. Full Story of Infiltration” by David/ Lawrence and agree that the San Francisco demonstrations and the S' em of Americans by Communist the open. Wie in America must wake vp and understand the fad* of the cold war before fi is too late. Thank you very much tor this article. I enjoyed Wvwy much and hope there will' be more like It la your paper. f’ J An Intereste d TO an Agee Various Comments on True Sabbath Day As Chrikt said in Mptt. 13:39, "you do err not knowing the scriptures nor the power of God." Christ always eume’ to the synagogue on the sabbath. After Ms death you will not find It written In the Bible that he ‘kept, the sabbath. Christ was the law giver and we were married to the law and bound to keep if until His death. a * * The following scripture* will We. have service en sneday Instead of Saturday: Lake tin.* IS-14; John fo:M6: Arts *0:6-7; Rev. mail. licit is a time of year for us to heaven and (hank God Heine wee born. His birth the way they should, this would be a much better world. George I. Belts Clarkston . i » (Editor's Note: Many letters on the sabbath quote the same Blbli -’ dal passages over and over. They nut to such length, we. are compelled to reduce them drastically. Please do not Writs unless you bsv# s new thought) The Almanac By lisIM Prase International Today is Tuesday, Dec. 13, the 3«th day of the year with 13 mors In. I960 l The moon 1s approaching Its new r"5K morning star is Mars. The evening stars are Jupiter, Mars, Saturn and Venus. On this day In history: In 1797, German poet Heinrich David Lawrence Says: Rusk Against Holding Summits WASHINGTON-De*n Rusk, who has been selected to be secretary of state, doesn't believe in summit conferences for the president of the United States. He doesn’t think the chief execu-11 ve should, spend his time in personal negotiation abroad or anywhere else. Rusk In a lecture early this year, which was published in Foreign Affairs, LAWRENCE' said: "If he (Khrushchev) insists upon having a foreign minister to whom he does-not wish to give his confidence. Is he to" Impose the same ignominious status upon the secretary of state of the United States? Can we not insist that It Is up to each nation to determine for Itself who its. highest ranking negotiator is, to. be? “Or cannot Khrushchev find even one high-ranking colleague whom he can trust to represent him loyally and effectively?” Rusk says, moreover, that a president cannot really (she the peace. The- fallacy was that the device realty helped build up the prestige of Nikita Khrushchev, and . didn’t help to bring peace. Repeatedly It was asserted la government circles here that This was the viewpoint of the late John Foster Dulles, but the critics s ho u t e d him down and forced the present administration to attend summit conferences even when there was no proof in advance that anything would be agreed upon at such meetings. PROBABLY ACCEPTABLE The writings of Dean Rusk may or may not represent the views of Kennedy, but there is reason to believe they are acceptable in the main and that the president-elect, too, would rather not undertake personal negotiation. Dr. William Brady Says: Bundling Up Too Much Harmful to Your Health Hilly’s calico, cat is as fond of keeping nice and warm as I am. Instinctively she selects the warm- eat, most comfortable place, for k a nap. 1 Although I like T* 1 B to keep good and ry f warm I cannot L .• • „ lose sight of the a summit conference and that "the experienced diplomat will usually counsel against the direct . confrontation of those with final authority.” He adds: “Negotiation ad referendum (by referring matters as they arise to a superior officer) offers greater opportunity for feeling out the situation, exploring opposing points of view, trying out alternative approaches without commitment, tasting general propositions by meticulous attention to detail. “The process needs time, patience and precision, three resources which are not found in abundance at the highest political level. ‘EXTRA TENSION' "The direct confrontation of the chiefs of government of the great powers Involves an extra tension because the court of last* resort Is in session. The costs of error or misunderstanding are multiplied by the seriousness of the Issues and the power of those present." The feregsteg views were set . forth before the breakep of the summit conference at Paris last May. The Ideas arc not new. They were expressed in these dlspntches again and again since 1963, when the first summit con-terence nt Geneva was being played up as the best way to deal with the Communist regime la Moscow. But the arguments in opposition were lost in a wave of comments from the leading Democrats on Capitol Hill, as 'well as some Republicans. * * * Eisenhower followed the trend of public opinion as be said repeatedly that he Would go anywhere in the world to advance the cause of The Country Parson teaching of Leonard Hill, noted British physiologist and authority o n ventilation,' DB. BRADY SSurt^'^Dr Hill, "to put on an overcoat when going out for a walk. It is good to go out and be braced by feeling cold and so be Impelled to take vigorous exercise.” sr the Savoy Hotel in London, having just returned from a month la South Africa and Egypt where It was pretty warm. I wore a topcoat, but still the raw cold seemed to chill me to the bone. 1 met hundreds of people who were on their wsy to work. Most of them wore no overcoat and many wore their jackets unbuttoned as they marched along vigorously and with evident enjoyment. Those English, 1 thought, could give the white collar work- * ers in America a good lesson in hygiene. #•'((- ♦ While I do like to be nice and warm when I take a nap or go to bed at night, still it is my belief that keeping home, shop or office heated even a little higher than is necessary tor comfort impairs health, lowers functional efficiency and lessens one's chance of attaining longevity. I believe wearing even a little more clothing of any description than ia necessary for comfort impairs health, lowers functional efficiency and shorten Osier's great 'personal prestige gave his obsession so much weight < that' even now, years after his death, doctors and folks continue to deceive themselves and each other about these common ailments aipl therefore effective prophylaxis and treatment are not applied. * * . * Doctors and folks who ascribe all sorts of Indispositions and illnesses to cold and damp brush aside the fact that no scientific! evidence supports that notion — indeed, scientific evidence nullifies the notion. JHsnsS jjuei the greatest gift that hat ever given at any time. Maybe Christmas Is the wrong date of His birth, but it is good to give thanks and to be thankftai for him. Does it matter what day we do this? To really appreciate Him we should live holy every day. Hamer MeOsriey 33 Lake St. It was'during Moons' time when the law of the sabbath was handed down. Read Exodus 2D: and then turn to the New Testament, Matt. 22:36-40. and you will find the Commandments are changed in position and that nowhere after Christ arose did He observe the sabbath. He had fulfilled the oM law as He said He would ia Matt. 5:17-18 and from then on He always met with His disciples on the first day of the week. Acts* 20:7 sad 1 Cor. 16:2. Rev. 1:10. Mrs. Glean Walters 1348 Woodstock Christ never triced us to keep Sunday as the Lard’s day. Christ kept the tame sabbath as the Jews. Luke ttS and He taught bis disdpfoe’hotr t# heap this day properly. Matt. 13:12 Christ claimed Ip be Lend of the sabbath day. Matt. 13i| He said this sabbath w at marie for man hut Ha never said anything about Sunday, Mark 2:ffJ8. If we would tniiy honor the. Christ we would keep the sabbath He claimed as His In 1927 violinist Yehudi Menuhin maria his New York City debut In CameRle Hall at the age ot 19. la Hri, George Gemhwta’a Naw York Philharmonic ttym- In 190, the Jspaneas Issued an ultimatum to British (areas to eur- rsnder the' crown colony of Hong Kenf. In 1941. James C. Petrillo'e Us- ings by members of Ms i Federation of Musicians ended. Thought tor today: German poet Adventist ChBreh If people cannot remember Christ on his birthday, maybe he shouldn't have died tor us. Christ should be remembered at Christmas time, as It la Mb day and not the downtown merchants. Everyone says. "Let's put Christ back to Christmas and worship him on His day and forget this Sunday shopping." All some people do is think, cum and have a good time. If everyone celebrated Portraits By JOHN C. MElCALnC My levari one km on 1, . A fragile Mttte string . . . And I shall just pretend to her ... I do not know a thing ... I must tot her grids me along . . . In such a tender way'. . . That aha will not ewphtoM. be . . . Ol my dceigfriul play ... 1 hags she will net anxious grew . . . Ry puling It too bard ... Anri as I riwl against the chance ... Of sudden breakage guard ... 1 atod trust it wfil net be . . A string with so much alack . .. That 1 get tangled up somewhere ... And ttmn cannot get buck . .vie I obeli tot her slyly, snap . . . About my heart a noose . . . For I have tiot the learn desire ... Of mr dipping loose to) Smiles Asking a Mead "Haw are yon?" often toads la baaitog all of the fellow's trsaMeo. * * • The average American home used the toltphmi more than 300 times lari year. How the teenagers will tab! Case Records of a Psychologist: ‘Chemical Smorgasbord’ in Ocean Me. In ihe home, shop, office, school, chureh sr theater so in dividual should decide arbliari-l.v what the Mnperatnra shall frank Kromm to bringing me a unique gift. It to a liquid “mine" containing all 44 chemicals the Wood needs. By taking a spoonful of concentrated ocean water per day. Grandpa ■ Miller gave hie glande a "chemical emorgaebord.” This chemical supplement to our diet is the latest word in therapeutic medicine. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case G-490: Frank Kromm is the general manager of the newspaper syndicate that handle* this column. "I'm heading for Florida tor a vacation," she began, "ao what do you want me to bring back as a souvenir?" "Well,” 1 replied, “when you are out fishing, fill a gallon jug with sea water. a the fact Ms arthritic right hip. Infill tor 19 yean, i Verbal Orchids to- • William 8. Posthumus of 199 Ogemaw Road; 84th birthday Mrs. Agnes Fulcrum of Aubufn Heights; 63rd birthday. Alanaen Pellett of Keego Harbor: 13rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs.11 William Perrigo of Holly; golden wedding. at net higher than 71 sr ast lower than to degrees K. and left there for the rest of the winter. Please don’t Infer that I approve or condone cold morning showers or plunge baths in any circtimatanoe. WHY DID HE DO IT? On the other hand I'll never be able to understand why the lata great Dr. Wm. Osier, avowedly the. world's top medical teacher, believed and taught that pneumonia. rheumatism (the .trick specialists hadn't trumped up "arthritis” in Osier's time) bronchitis and other diseases were directly or ikxfirectly caused by "exposure” to cold, dampness, sudden change of weather, insufficient clothing, wet feet, drafts or chilling. "'For It con-DR. CRANE tayis ail the chemicals the body uses end to thus an ideal source of riw -materials for our glandi.” CHEMICAL SMORGA9BOBD Ocean water has all the chemical elements on this planet Barth which are soluble in water. use only ( can bfood to emeu-sa our bodtoe can » chemicals la the Therefore, the 44 chemicals in ocean water must be the basis for physical health. If we thus take a few teaspoons of ocean water every day. we can offer our glands a “chemical smorgasbord." *. * • * In effect, our liver and spleen and pancreas and thyroid, sex glands and bone marrow can march around this smorgasbord to pick out the^raiw materials from which they will manufacture bile ”Yai, Dr, Craao,” yea ntey reply, “hot can't wa get thaaa vital chemicals from the foal we eat?" We can if the sol) in Which our vegetable! grow still contains ample amounts of such chemicals. s ■ * „ * ' * ' 1 ‘rm- But every time a farmer plows, his fields and the rain descends to dissolve those chemicals, they begin to wash down the riven into the sea. A survey in 1959 showed thAt 20 of these 44 chemicals were practically “extinct" from our soil. The remaining 34 of the 44 may be reduced to 29 per cent or even 5 per Cent of what they were when the continents first rose up out ef the oceans. DEFICIENCY AILMENTS Many deficiency ailments are attributed fo lack of i tiny trace Of some chemical Instead of to germ or ,n virus. For example, iodized salt stops almost all goiter. Fluorine eliminates about to per cent of dental cavities. Mori researchers attribute cancer to a chemical deficiency. Gray hair and baldness aha an apparently net dae to germs but to some chemical lack. So, too, We regard many other ailments such as multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, Parkinson's disease, perhaps leukemia, etc. •. * * ri > When Mrs. Crane’s father (then 97) was dying in March 3998, ! started giving him one teaspoon of concentrated sea. water (equal to Id spoons of whole, ocean water). He dida't die as wg had ax-peeted so Mrs, Crake sad I kept aa with the ocean water, la two month* he wa# (airly alert, walking around Ike house and perked ap mentally. But the greatest surprise to me hto right ankle over Mo left knee to remove Me ihoe and sack, w J) * He hadn't dona thh tor 15 yean! Remember, he had been bedfast Now he to ap aad around. The only change to Me Input has heea the sea water fluti offor* hto glaads that chemical knew he to grittog arena water to eat due la If you have friendi on the tea shore, have them ship you a gaiw»» as a unique type of gift. Just boil it 10 minutes to purify it. Always y—- *- — - i »t.tlcd ’ rswuMt- a SwsUU* i ■write fiflhs .....■____ a •« *11 locsl **«• nrtntsd t» B “ "■ * " J BmI UMid. < --*» SB* MM* a —» sad all ottoor _ ..me sutci us ** * *t li* aad elsH * tsnsw ciuau* it li itSM . tat ilwwhsfs ninmfli ~ Mask Mm nw ira&ruL THE BOOT!AC PlfesS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18,1960 Accident Death Kate Drops for Over 65 ’ th*"V*cado. • | ____ . r - — wy * * # < VPSILANTI OH A. The Nstlol NEW YORK' (UPI> — The ac-| Fails an •till the ltnitihg eaueeSci,nce Foundation has award cident death me at age. « a*jof acchhnui death. In this ago J“£" JS&J&SL ^ M#tor VBhlc*e «*‘^lSinerg!Stttute for Junior hti llW.OOO in ill aactaat With Area and burns I school general science teachers. We will arrange your rent-like loan payments to fit your monthly income. HOME LOANS TO BUY, BUILD or REFINANCE Ghr« « Gif»~ Ccrtificoto Use your Charge W, air, Ho,Mob'S I Established 1890 75 W. Huron St. Pontiac FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR OS BUILDING CTEVENiON IN THE FICIVBE - Adlai y. N. ambassador. Commenting on the appoint- Stevenson poors with a picture of Dean Rusk. meitt of Rusk, the ex-governor of Illinois said It secretary of Hate designate, and President-Elect “will give our state department and our foreign Kennedy, at his office in Chicago Monday. Ste- policy new firm and vigorous leadership toward venson accepted Kennedy's appointment as peace and sanity in the world." - Active Adlai Stevenson Looks Toward the U.N. Ilai Ewing Stevenson, vice presi- Since chikfltood. Stevenson hat dent of the United States duhugL«mled extensively. In 1965 and the second term of President Gro-1907 he traveled In Africa, follow i ver Cleveland. ling a length journey around the 1 Stevenson whs now make* his I world in 1963. In'the summer of ' home a( Liberiyvtlle, HI.. A j 193* he travelled to Europe and sAarh t-t-*-*- Chicago, attended Scandinavia and visited the Sovie * pubilr sehaal at nis'smlagtTrr {Union for the first time in 30 1 n. He was gradaated from Hia Russian visit took hint to Siberia and Central Asia. liiiiijl I.-- - • * 7: ; .;V. ;V;; \v > * kZ mjs Both Plead Guilty to Creating a Disturbance; 300 Protested Arrest NO MONEY DOWN Ice «U Breach Knot a a dreafe Stevenson loot the election, butj j and disorderly charge. He had in 1956 his party again nominated been Involved In a domestic guar- him. on the first ballot, to chal-j **L * llenge President Eisenhower again Ha resisted arrMt, police Said.) Mr the presidency, land a crowd of 300 gathered at the] Stevenson, the lather of three. l«MBe. _ eago with the firm of Stevenson,] j Officers said rocks and bottlesjfUfklnd and Wirt*; Stevenson also were thrown at police care by aomei maintains another office In Newj of the onlookers. Additional officer* Yorit City and Washington, D.C. Hu's Got the Right Idea RICHMOND. Vs. (API - The meetings of two Virginia advisory legislative committee subcommittees studying railway traffic were called off Monday because of the now . Only one man showed up— and ho came by train. ganlaattaaa. In addition ho holds honorary' degrees from several collegea and universities, including. Oxford, Princeton, Columbia end] {Northwestern. SPECIAL BUY! MEN'S COTTON FLANNEL SHIRT Office Training Leads to Good Jobs for MATURE WOMEN Surprise him with Tenney’s smart ombre plaid cotton flannels. Quality extras? You bet! Get a topstitched collar, one matched pocket, adjust- standiii*. You will soon hare the annum end confidence you need for an office position. Thousands of mature woman hare entered office work recently. You. too, can do It, with our traptng and ttw If . you are aoeh a woman, help of our Urn can loam business skill*— lce or brush up former skills— , Phono our With a quick course here. feet*, we * Hit eost is km. Instructors discuss your are experienced and under- office work. Pontiac Business Institute 7 «W.' LswftitM FE 2 50* Weekly Learn to Skate ^ at the Bloomfield Hills Ice Skating Studio * "---. Rink available for privote parties Ml 6-0406 805 W. Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield Hills 108 NORTH SAGINAW able cuffs. Similar to illustration. \ m m i0 a ■ (J V i THE PONTIACPBE8S, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18. IMP m '.--■ml Now is the hour... ^ to become a world traveler JOIN THE PONTIAC PRESS EUROPEAN TOUR See the art, the relics, the beauty that has made western Europe the mecca for travelers seeking,to enjoy and absorb some of the treasures of history May 19th-June 10th, 1961 Here Are lust a Few of the Places You Will Visit St. Pours Cathedral and Buckingham Palace in London, Stratford on Avon, ancient castles on the Rhine River, Heidelburg and the Black Forest, mountains of Switzerland, the canals of Venice, the palace of the Doges and the Square of St. Marks, ancient Florence i and the Medici Chapels, Eternal Rome with Vatican City and the grandeur of ancient civilization and at last to Paris, the lovely lady of the Seine. I understand that the sending of this coupon j constitutes a definite request for a reservation { on The Pontiac Press European tour May J9th- J June 10th, 1961. I understand further that/full i f payment under Plon A or Plan B must oe i* completed by March 15th, 1961. That no { cancellation, except in emergency, may be . J, made after April 1st, 1*961. Plan A: Down payment of not less than $85 per J person with coupon. Balance of payments to be i not less than $300 on or before Jah. 15th, not | less than $300 on or before Feb. 15th and final I payment of balance on or before March 15th. | Plan B: Full payment of $985 with coupon t reservation. There are a limited number of reservation! available. They wilt be allocated in order of reservation coupons received. | NAME (Priat) ................................ . | ADDRESS ....................................... | „ PHONE NO.............NUMBER OR RESERVATIONS*-.. J Please print names, of individual reservations on saparata sheet and attach. J • i . | 1 Climb aboard a Pan American Jot Clipper for the trip of your lifetime. Included In the cost is all transportation and lodging,, sightseeing tours and entrance fees, tips, meals while en route, breakfast in London, Rome and Peris plus a special dinner party in each of these three cities. Double rooms with bath are provided with single rooms available at a small charge, All this will happen beginning May 19th and wind up on June 10th. Total Cost 1 / ' t&Wl ■ •■■■ ■■ .V -■■’ ■ ’ the Pontiac press. Tuesday, decembeh ia,/i9co NINE DETROIT (APjf ■+• CurPSteltoto, FRI president, Mid Monday the (our top officers of ford Local «0 out next spring to make way for [a Negro in a top spot within the ihetorchy of the tJAW> biggest lo- Stellato Indicated In a carefully | worded statement, without saying [ so directly, he would step out. Ford Local president since 1950, he intakes 113,300 a year. and often foaght over DAW Mtey. If Stellate steps out, the presi-dency likely would be sought by John Orr, vice president; Janies 'O’Rourke, recording secretary, or ;w. G. Grant, financial secretary. BUMPS A DAISY — Tony Moynlhan (left), who claims to be a fifth cousin of Qumo Eliza-Leth. and A1 Ricketts are shown in action uurins their "bumps a daisy” duel in Tokyo, Japan. Moynlhan had challenged Ricketts, a columnist tor the Pacific Stars and Stripes, to a duel with' swords or guns for saying his wile, a Malayan belly dancer, gave a "routine dance act” in a Tokyo night dub. This "bumps a delay" was the nearest thing to a duel Ricketts would settle for. Moynihan's honor was satisfied as he defeated Ricketts. In the background are geisha girls who are specialists in this game. uals consult doctors before making' specific changes in the fat coo-J tent of their diets. • 1 Cut on 'Saturated' Fats, Says Heart Association Three Children Die in Row House Blaze PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Throe children were killed Monday in a fire that wrecked their row; house borne. Their mother had left them briefly to go to a near-i by store. The dead were Ellen! Sherocsld. 4. George. 3, and WU-j liam. 1, children of Mr. and Mrs.) Edward Sherocski, whose three; other children were unharmed. jClaims He Invented Jet—Sues Lockheed NEW YORK i — American the association's hi Heart Association experts todayjand scientific body, recommended that Americana eat | less fats as a possible means of »* essnmiWfie .reducing the risk of heart attacks "• |MM* P®* ____. ___ dirt habits. nartirul Holiday I.to 44 rLCATED DRE88 . Other factors are involved In | heart attacks, including age. hered-, tty, sex and high blood pressure. But it said "evidence from many . countries suggests a relationship . betwen the amount and type of fat consumed, the amount of cho-. lesterol in the Mood, and the re-. ported incidence of coronary ar- The engineer contended in his | complaint, filed in Superior Court Monday, that Lockheed instituted , la plan under which its employes , I receive a share in royalties ac-jj jlcruing from the inventions of the! I! firm's engineers. I His suit skid such royalties are computed when inventions arej1 I Saturated fats are those which !twn solid at room temperature. iMany dairy and meat fats are i higher to saturated than unaatu-: rated fata. The association's board of dl-rectors authorized release of the I recommendations to a report issued by the central committee for | medical and community programs. Price maintains that licensing! I agreements were made by Lock- ! heed with manufacturers in Ger-j {many. Japan, Canada, Belgium! and the Netherlands. Ladies' 1-44 WOOL CAECOAT ■Hjf Give Her Ejctra 1mi¥ Sheer Holiday 7 NYLONS Wby MOJUD $100 America's No. 1 Suburban Coat: Tweedchester by M'GREGOR . Wham you slip on tb« McGregor Tweedchester. youMl know why It’a America's favorite. Every stitch, every detail, every Inch adds up ta perfection, ^arm, bdd nubby wool tweed with baat-roUinfhg, quilted nylon insulation. Bnhnacaan collar, leather buttons, ndw hacking pockets, action aid# vents. The Valiant! Looks and drives like twite the price Look all you like. Nobody can top Valiant for value. For one thing, Valiant is the only compact car starting at under $2000 that gives you Torsion-Aire Ride at no edtra cost. Then there's Valiant’s low price. 1961 Valiant prices begin $100 lower than last year. Low price... high quality. That’s value, brother! Head for your Plymouth-Valiant dealer now. He’s got the value you’re looking for.. .Valiant 1 LAY-AWAY NOW FOB CHRISTMAS SEE YQUR LOCAL PLYMOUTH-VALIANT DEALER! SAMSONITE LUGGAGE wn Pontiac Tol-Hnron Cantor Pali Store* Open Every Ivaatof 'I# * Mf. " JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING! GET FREE GIFTS WITH . . ; DOUBLE STAMPS GET MORE STAMPS FOR MORE GIFTS-PRICES NEVER LOWER! JOST SAY “CHARGE IT"... PAY NO MONEY DOWN! Quality Up... Bigges Value in the town. A* ” A SSP^L A Wins Gift O OQ ACRYLIC BLANKET i m :f,A rw THE PQNTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DBCEMBfeR 18, I960 1 714 Community Nat’l Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWitt ■m. n »m* Donald E. Hansen Km. fi. l-llll , Homeowners’ Policies Accident Insurance Fir* Insurance Antomobil* Insurance Life Insurance Liability Insurance Plat* Glass Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types Tenant’s Policies • I f»o oi other countries the more ip own. —Anna Louise Do Stael, 1807 ' Hag the Background for New Port m Scholarly Rusk Is Kennedy's Man MeetingJoday WASHINGTON (AP) - Pew men followed a scholar's way- to I such peaks at suqpesa as Desui Rusk, who was tapped Monday by President-Elect John F. Kennedy as the next secretary of stkte. From Ms origin in Cherokee County, Georgia, Rusk’s Ufa has followed a smooth upward curve through a Rhodes Scholarship, ac- Ft 24341 1610 So. TaUgrnph, Bloomfield at rwMu YOUNG RUSK — David Rusk, 20, son of Dean Rusk who. was named secretary of state Monday, is a student at the University of California in Berkeley. Burma, end assistant stats far Fir Eastern affairs. He took his present poeitien, the presidency of v the Rockefeller Foundation, when lie. left government service bine yean ago. New, at It, be moves beck te the State Department as Hie heed men, and Into the Kennedy pd-ministration as the top cabinet offleer. Rusk first entered the state department immediately after World War II, He left it for a year to serve as an assistant to Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson. Then hq, was appointed director of the office of United Nations af-lain back in the State Department In 1949 President Harry S. Truman promoted Rusk to assistant secretary of state. * * In the swift-moving events of the following years, which saw the eruption of the Korean War, Rusk became known as the architect of this country's Far Eastern policy. He worked under another Dean as secretary — Dean Acheson. And he worked closely with John Foster Dulles, himself destined for arduous years as President Eisenhower’s secretary of state. At that time Dulles was a special assistant to Truman, with the rank of Ambassador, with the job of negotiating a peace treaty with Japan. Rusk Is a big man physically. He tops • feet and weighs In the neighborhood of MB pounds. Tennis and golf an his sports. He was reared in Atlanta and educated in its public schools and at Davidson College in North Carolina. Rusk is a Presbyterian and Davidson is supported by that church. At Davidson, Rusk won Phi Beta Kappa honors and a B. A. degree, a start in his chosen career as political scientist. STUDIES ABROAD The Rhodes Scholarship followed and he took another B.A. and a masters degree at Oxford University in England. He studied further at the University of Berlin. ■ * * ★ In 1934 Rusk became an associate professor of government and dean of faculty—at the ripe age of 25 — at Mills College, Oakland. Calif. He stayed there six years, also studying at the University of California law school. Wilt Work on Ways to Build Up. Jobs In '61, Promote Legislation DETROIT Wt—The International executive board of the United Auto Workers Union was to meet here today to plan ways to ease uiiem-! ployment in 1961. President Walter P. Reuther met, Monday with’ Secretary-TVeaaurer! Emil Maxey and the union's four vice presidents—Norman Matthews,! Richard T. Gower, Leonard Wood-' cock and Pat Greathouse. * No indication came from the session on what goals and priorities the six top officers would submit to the 24-member board today, j tion has been relatively quiet, removed as it is from turbulence and controversy. The foundation, set up in 1913, has assets second only to the Carnegie and Ford foundations. In Its time it has disbursed more than half a billion dollars Havana Rocked by Three Bombs UA17AMA /ADI_Thmn knmka nanuwtm>lt« Dmfnlntinnar*«. Fmnt As the t I war gathered, Rusk joined the | Infantry reserve MLS captain on Dec. 15, IMS. After two campaigns in the Bur-na theater and service on the War Department’s general -staff operations division, Rusk emerged from the conflict as a colonel. He was awarded a Legion of Merit citation with oak leaf cluster. * * ★ His rapid rise in -the State Department in the postwar years brought him to a role as chief developer in the department of political policy during the Korean War. He stood squarely behind Truman in the president’s quarrel with Gen. Douglas MacArthur that ended in MacArtkfr’s dismissal as U.S. commander i* the Far East. Rusk argued that expansion of the Korean War as advocated by MacArthur would “lead to disaster.” By the time at Us resignation In December INI, mask’s mala area of duty had shifted te mark- Japanese peace treaty. His tenure since then as president of thf~ Rockefeller Founds- only 2.00 Be an angel.. .give her HEAVEN SENT MIST by HELENA RUBINSTEIN Delight her Christmas morning with the heavenly fragrance that lingers on, Relent Rubinstein’s beloved Heaven Sent* Mist. Newly presented la a sparkling “eryataF bottle, it it all dressed up and ready to glow. (The shimmering wrap k a gib te yea from Helena Rubiaatein.) A delicate medley of flowers and spice, amadngly long-lasting Heaven Seat Mist is an inspired holiday gift. A touch of het finger and Qiristmas is in the air... all around her. A simply heavenly gift idea. Only the price it down to earth. IK os.' 240,' « *<*• 340. Also in White Magnolia * Command Performance* at 245 and 3.25. - STORES ALL OVER TOWN - KENNEDY PICKS RUSK — Dean Rusk, President-Elect Kennedy's choice to fill trie poet of secretary of state, is shown as he answered questions from reporters at Kennedy’s home In Palm Beach, Fla. Kennedy (left) made the announcement on the patio of his home Monday. in such fields as medicine, agriculture, social scieneces and the humanities. ★ W * Rusk was married in 1937'to the former Virginia Folsie. They have three children. HAVANA (AP)—Three bombs exploded in the Cuban capital Monday night, injuring seven persons and giving Prime Minister Fidel Castro stark proof of growing opposition to his regime. a ft. a One bomb shattered the rest room of a crowded downtown cafe at midnight. Another blasted lighting fixtures in the busy Vedado district tunnel under the Almen-dares River and disrupted traffic for a half hour. The third bomb merely caused ft Opposition to the - bearded, dictator among labor groups was evident as the Giant Cuban Labor Confederation summoned leaders of member unions to boot out the bosses of the rebellious Electrical Workers Union—the first workers group to stand up openly in defiance of Castro. CUBA SI, BUMA NO Amauiy Fraginato, boss of the electricians, led his union in march on the Presidential Palace Friday evening, shouting "Cuba si, Russia no.” Fraginals sought a conference with President Os-valdo Dorticos. Democratic Revolutionary Front and urged all Cubans to join "the Invisible army” opposing Castro. Enter Innocent Plea to Negligently££^Jg?£*“| Homicide Charge « *J . „ . .__. final demands to be presented to A 23-yeaMld Royal Oaktrock U, aut0 companies, driver who's truck was inrofeed ^ advocated a in a fatal crash Nov. 14 In T^. L«..iied ^.d-the-work p, stood mute yesterday before Or- , 30-hour work week with cult Judge H. Russel Holland whenjj,, pay arraigned on a charge of negli*j_-!— -.' gent homicide. UAWBoard palKn at the local union level. A spokesman said, however, that discussion would center on grow-j ing unemployment in the auto industry. The U.S. Labor Department last!' week added nine more industrial! centers to its list of 42 major Areas where unemployment totals at least 6 per cent of the work force. | In a report prepared for the! UAW executive board, research, director Woodrow Glnsburg said the job situation is considerably I worse now than in November 1967. At their meeting, UAW heard j members will dUcaas the union's ! participation In aa AFL-CIO drive to push wage aad welfare ! legislation through Congrroa next year. The UAW board also will plan for the union's special convention opening here next April, two months before bargaining begins Ion new contracts with General Motors, Ford and Chrysler. Current three-year contracts] Buy Your LIONEL TRAIN and Acc«*sories from a Merchant who STOCKS and ii SERVICES thorn year 'round - and KNOWS WHAT MAKES THEM TICK! Authorised Factory Service TASKER’S For the Kids! GO-CARTS For Christmas ANDERSON SALTS t SLAVIC! 210 I. Plk# St. F( 2-410* PRESCRIPTIONS P INSCRIPTIONS ROFESSIONAllY ERFECT ROPHtlY MOD PERRY DRUGS M9 L BM. 1251 A plea of innocent was entered by the judge for Charles L. Zuellig, I j 932 E. 11-Mile Road. He wu released on bopd pending his trial, || probably to come next month before a Circuit Court jury. Killed when hk ear was Ml by ZuNltg'i track wm Wayne T. Hrifrtch, 55. af UN Nat Drive, Commerce Township. * * * Zuellig told police the air brakes on his truck failed -as he wax approaching the intersection of 14-Mile Road and Stephenson Highway On an amber traffic signal. Dr. Stanley W. Black Optometrist 3513 Elisabeth Lake Rd. Corner of C*M Left* Rd. . Evenings by Appointment Phono FE 2-2362 Closed W*d. er, have been termed traitors byl,^ . w ... i_.„l the Labor Confederation. Contribute St. Joseph ft ft- ft Scale Model to GR Hie government-controlled con-_________,__ ' ■ ederation now appears ready to GRAND RAPIDS «* strip both men of authority. * ♦ ,1 ft In another development, official sources confirmed that an airplane, identified as a B25, dropped thousands ’of leaflets on three djties in Lu Villas Province Sunday night. Havana wm showered with leaffets early Monday. k ft k The leaflets were signed by the town HUsinessmen {utve contributed a 53,800-scale model of their area to show how it looks now and how it may appear after scheduled redevelopment. k k k The model, produced by a St. Joseph firm, 1s being delivered to the city planning department. It covers an area of 51x90 Inches on a scale of one inch to each 100 feet 141 N. Saginaw St.' Keren Street Near Sears CfTMr Telegraph 48*5 Mil* Hwy. ARE YOUR DEBTS GETTING TOO NG? ■Hi ALAI ROW YOU CAR PAY OFF YOUR PRESENT BILLS ARD HAVE YOUR HOME IMPROVEMERT TOO! FOR AS LITTLE AS L Monthly Payment WILL PAY OFF IN FULL ALL OF YOUR PRESENT BILLS CALL NOW FOR FULL INFORMATION! lie IEU CONSTRUCTION CO. FE 3-7833 92 W. HURON STe« PONTIAC ENJOY YOURSELF... GET THE NEWS... n 0 TELLTHE NEWS... JUST VISIT... Wmiderful LONG DISTANCE I There’o nothing like Long Diftance for keeping in touch with Wed one*, for keeping friendships •live. “TVeat yourself to Long Distance colls often l m enjoy e 3 «to / 1 V , You can enjoy a 3-minute convene tion . Dee Moines for....$1.00 ' From Pontiac to l Washington, D.C. for .90 Kansas City ter 1.10 Thus rates, which to sat include federal tax, are far station-to Oottsm tolls after 6 pjn. weekdays and oil day Sunday. MICHIGAN IILL TELEPHONE COMPANY It's taslor, morn fun, to dial direct Instruct Clerks to Be Available I Must Take Candidates' ; Nominating Petitions on : Holiday Deadline $5,000 Reward Offered ior Slayer of Girl ) A $5,000 reward way offered by the Detroit New* today in the ■eareh tor the khife flayer of Marilyn Donohue. 23-year-old Royal Oak stenographer. Miaa Donohue of 807 N. Wilson St. was stabbed fatally last Wednesday by an intruder at the office when she worked. Defan she died she told police* he had complained to her of beintf unable ‘ find a Job. The News offered He rea to the arrest and conviction at the aiayer. The News said It would provide safeguard* to protect the Identity of the informant • Township and village elates in Oakland County have been ptructed that they Wuat be available Jan. 3 to receive candidates' nominating petitions despite the deadline falling on a legal day. '-ZSsmh. ■' ■ ■ • County Oatk-Reglster Daniel T. Murphy Jr. said clerks or their peputtos must either keep offices open qr.poet a notice on the door t>f the office where they can be reached to receive the- petitions.! From Miss Donohue's state- ____ - k. —______- jments, police described the man ™ ~ “ * *** 35 ywre di. P7T. ^ gJJJ 2? • trtm mu*toche, between 9 ^^asTmSSlrtowLdTal. ***** •nd M «n4 weighing be- tET-TT'ri |— »■*'»>* to primary. ; He urged all candidates to call]1 (heir, respective clerks to find out the provMona to be made far • If possible, Murphy said. ctorkaj^Cf 0Wfl Ufllt should suggest that thaaa p*tttkn.rW' Wff II Ullll be submitted early Dec. 90 or 31 if the office is to. be open thatl iiSenior Citizens day. Retirees to Organize First Chapter of U.S. Association in State Jam I la the absolute last day,** Murphy stressed. He said some candidates and clerks believed that since the Jan. L*”* ____[ _______ 2 deadline tell on a holiday the deadline would be extended tojft t^Comtoimity Service Build- Some 40 senior citizens in the Jan. 3- Penny Boost in Sales Tax Becomes Law ‘ LANMNG (OTI) — Oev. O. tag. 133 Franklin Blvd., to farm an ! organization unique to Pontiac and the state: At approximately 1:30 p.m. they wtfi officially become the first chapter 4f the American Association of Retired Persons in Michi- /, THE pfaNTJAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18.J960 Lost Children Found in Woods Searchers Locate Cold Kids Huddled All Night in Bitter Weather jHaffa'l Teamsters Buy 500-Room Miami Hotel MIAMI, FLA. (ft—Miami’s 500-room Everglades Hotel has been sold to James Hoffa’s Teamsters Union for S2£ million. U.S. District Judge Emett Choate confirmed the sale Mondhy. ELEVEN , Michigan and Northwastaru and Valparaiso (M.) universities wfi| share moat of an estimated |750 -000 to SI million left by Werner Schroeder, 68, ' Chicago Transit Authority vice chairma/i, who died | Sept. 2. ROTJCCT ACTION — This tiny train provides a pretty panorama as it puffs across a viaduct ever the Tamar River at Cslstock. Cornwall, MBS. MARTIN TANfl Former Pahtiac resident Mrs. Martin (Cora E.) Tang. 80. died unexpectedly Chelsea. She was a member of Central Methodist Church and the Woman's Society for Christian Serv- Surviving are a son. CLAfTQN, N.C (API missing children who spent the in woods during subfreeztag weather were found cold and shivering but unharmed today, huddled together under a big tree. ■J The State Highway Patrol*' said Jwo searchers .came upon the chil-j dren about' 8:30 a m. They were reported -in goqd . condition but' were brought here for medical examination. j An estimated 1,506 persons; allied by lights from helicopters, trooped through 80 square miles of woods most of the night. . Two seerchtrs. Kenneth John->n and Jack Raines, said the children were beneath a big tree ta a thick patch of briars which [apparently helped protect them from the bitter cold which [dropped as low as 15 degrees. “It’S ail a well-clothed man can! "*~]do to survive out here tonight,”| Deputy Sheriff E. W. Creech ofi Johnston County had remarked' during the hunt. The site is a 600-acre woodland; 17 miles southeast of Raleigh. ;. J The search began late Monday: FEED e. STEPHENS .ft., Richard E.. and John O.. all night after the three gtris and two LAPEER - Service tor Fred E. «* Orton; Mrs. Neil Keoppen, |boys failed to return on s_schoolj Will Benefits Schools CHICAGO (It—The University of [Boy Diet of Injuries GARDEN CJTY (UPD—Thomas , Homanoskl, 12, Gardan'Oty, died Monday night of injuries suffered In a traffic accident Oct. 35. England. The train makes daily trips to and from Bere Alston ta Devon and CsOtagton ta Oornwall It operates on a single track. Deaths in Pontiac and'Nearby Areas Stephens, 78, of 164 Lincoln St., will be ft 2 p m. Thursday ta the First Presbyterian Church. Burial he in Union Cemetery, Davi- WHILE WE ARE EXPANDING We ore new in the process of on extensive remodeling and expanding program. When com; pleted, it will endble us to offer our fine community the largest and finost facilities in this Area. The present construction does not impair our operation. Wo ore still able to provide those who coll us with our normal “Thoughtful Service." The exterior is undergoing construction but the interior is ready to serve ybu. ^WtksG/uffn/ VfQQQQQQ^Q^2S9i The tax hike i bring to ME* the Mri *4 the current year, ant June ns. WUMaass rate* the tax to crease "an important step toward ftaral •taMllly" ta the •Me. ' "By the November tax referendum the people mandated the mactm—I and atgwatare at a liar eeat aaleu and aae tax,". WtitauH aaU. The gevsruer aaM the atele of Pontiac: two daughters._______ Upland Martin and Mrs. Ralph G. The Pontiac AARP (Rapter wtt he the seventh to tb*\s Li? £ST’ ttou. aecardtog to Dr. Ethel P. - - Taylor who is now living ta Chel- Stephens died of a. heart — attack yastontty ta Lapeer Coun-L . ty General HoajMtal. His body tejSWOinSOn DISCUSS** AMn m. •* toe Baud Funeral Home. .Executive Changes He was a member of the Mkhl-j Ran Farm Bureau and the Mkhl- Gov.-Elect John gan State Grange- h two sons, Rex and retenm . . . and a >reader tax bam to aappeet the ttad M gev- The AARP currently boostsj Service' will be held Thursday Mne 300.000 members. It is s morning St the Chelsea Hone, onprofit organization which offers members a low cost mail order MABBY A. 8El,MB drug service, group medkal-hoa- i WIXOM — Service for Harry A. pital-surgkal insurance, and ajSeuhr, 74, of 30025 Wixnm Road, aeries of low cost group tours of will be at 9:30 a.m. toutarrow at Europe. the Rkhardsoo-Btrd Funeral * * * ‘Home, Milford. Burial will be. ta j Member* must be 55 years old [Ottawa, 111. ' or older. The majority of mem-] Mr. Seuhr. a member of St. Wil-bers are either retired or planning liam Catholic Church, Waited, [for retirement. Lake, died yesterday after an 01- The Rosary will he recited at Permanent officers will be ta-jnew of one month at Pontiac]Tp-». tomorrow at AUens Funeral, istalled at Wednesday’s meeting. iOsteopathk Hospital. [Home. Mr. Stone died today atj ------------------- Survhrtag bsshtes Ms wife Emily Ws residence liter an fflness of j Uruguay expects record beef are a daughter, Mrs. William New- three months. » .exports in I860 owing to high cal- bound of MUford, and one grand-' Surviving besides bis wife Dora |tle slaughter because of drought. (chOd. . 'are tour sons. Leo F. Jr„ Arthur! Mrs. Rex Fumey and Sharon!*** to the Knights of Pythias Stone, all of Lake Orion. Home for children of broken Also surviving are 33 grander>1- homes. The home is About three-l fourths of a mile from Clayton where the children attended school. The children, who came to the** William* St. home recently, are Shirley Pear- J 3530 Auburn Road *6n, 13, and James R. Pearson, 11,v wards of the Davidson County [• Swairlann Welfare Department; and Tula!* _______, , Fay Tester, 13, Nina C. Walker,'# win meet in Detroit today with U ’W(llte. u wanh* M„t____ both of Lapeer; three P* Governor’s Advisory COnunit-|of the Caldwell County Welfare|e daughters, Mrs. Frank Bek of Meat Executive reorganization. (Department, t J Maryland. Mrs. Joseph Harvey of committee, which is headed The Walker children and the • Davison and Mrs. Robert Everett r? Oakland County Circuit Judge {Tester girl are brothers and sis- £ of Midland: .two brothers; a sister Olark Adams, was established by tors. Their mother, Mrs. Manila'* 14 grandchildren; and six great-t*ov Williams to provide a con- Walker, froze to death at Boone * randchildren. Uoutag study of government re- last Feb. 18 during a heavy • organization. lamuim, •!. LEO W. STONE LAKE ORION - Service tor Leo PmO M. Sewn Established in 1898 Farmer-Snover FUNERAL HOME 160 W. Huron St. „ FE 2-9171 PARKING ON PREMISES Stone, 61. of 46 W. Shadbolt' „ will be at 11:38 a.m. Thursday St. Joseph Catholic Church, j Burial will be in Evergreen Cemetery. Man Pleads Guilty , to $660 Robbery Sentence wfll .be paused Ilec. 27 on Wilbur J. McCaulley. -who! pleaded guilty yesterday*to eto btag the manager of a downtown] department store of 5660 at gun-j point Nov. H Mrt aultry. SS, *4 SS Sammtt j Aw., admitted the armed rah- ; harry when arraigned ea the war- j rant before (lmN Chart Jadge The unemployed Pontiac man told the Judge he used a 38-caliber revolver to hold up Edward! Dudzinski. 49. of Royal Oak. when he was about to cloae the store, j Police arrested McCaulley after Dudziaaki identified him from po-j lice file photographs. WO AMERICA Hfilt WHO WILL LISTEN? To be t world influence culturally, spiritually and scientifically required that our future citizens bo wail educated. Yet even now many of our eollefoo are overcrowded. And in ten years applications ore expected to doubto because of our growing population. Many top-notch college teachers are leaving the campus for higher paying jobs in industry sod burin aaa You eon help correct this situation. Give generously to the. col-legs of your choke. Uom won abend our current ml-teg* trWf. Writ# far your wee booklet, "OWN WIOC TNI COLLEGE D0OK," Box 35, Tlmei Square Station, New York 36, KY. PxbhtM si s. jgyit.ynVu to reepeMttee talk Tks AJwrtwies Coeeefl emt the 'Nruupepf A* Nmii'itf Krwtaiw* Assssisns*. (THE PONTIAC PRESS o f graew imli|s| trim. Set Otw Ilf Display of Laa^ps - Al Sizes — All Sale Prkod — 95 Styles to Salact From ■W . ™ F U RN I TURK CllilkM 144 OAKLAND AVENUE ** ' MILLER'S GIFTS FOR THE HOME • Bactaa RednrtBatli Rogular and ChiWron's Sixes a NUfle Beekcast • Blond Bookcos# T. • Mahogany Bacholor's Chest e Knethele Desks • Maple Student's Desk a OHTaUes a Mhg. Hi-Fi and Record Cabinet a Pole Lamps rTree Lamps • Upholstered Hassocks on Leys a Storage Hassocks • Smoking Stands • Pictures a Mirrors-ANSizes 10 Year Guarantee • Mhg. Well Console Sot o Bedroom Chain • Living Room TsMas 9 NHo Standi in Mqdo, Walnut or Moliogny BOSTON BOOKER fne Euy Ptrkixf Completely Automatic For Everyone, • Polaroid Land Camera Complete with Electric Eye Shutter Takes Pictures in 10 Seconds No Adjustment Needed SSafiW • J RolU of Film_ Cewytoa c#w . . This marvelous NEW Polaroid Land Camera complete with Electric Eye Shutter, produces beautiful finished pictures in fust IQ seconds ... Unusually sharp and clear prints that don't fade. So easy to operate that junior can take as good a picture as Mom or Dad. Excellent pictures are obtainable under any lighting pffeet. Here is a gift that keeps on giving ... No Money Dowr Pay Next Year Rtmtmbor... Shows are Opon Tonight and Every Night Until Christmas ‘MICHIGAN'S LARGES JEWELERS' 24 North Stgiiaw Street Pontiac State Bank Building (WtJu>ebd4t»u»3- JEWELRY^unutr- Oil CREDIT /, - THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, IMP Committee to Help on Site for College GRAND RAPIDS on — A nMy appointed 34-member committee has been charged with helping choose the site w me proposed college ot the Grand Valley in West Michigan. Grand Rapt* Mayor Stanley Plan $1.3 Million Home for the Elderly DR. HENRY A. MILLJER Optometrist 7 North Saginbw Street ’ Phone FE 4-6842 HI chairmen of Brotherhood Week, Feb. IMS, by the National Conference of Christians and Jews. . GRAND RAPIDS » — A start is expected about June 1. on aj $13 million residence at Grand Rapids for elderly members ot the Congregational-Christian churches in West Michigan. Arthur if. ~ German, executive secretary of Pilgrim Manor, Inc., sa$s 25 churches now hold stock in the .venture which incorporated in November 1955 Ptaaa call far four residential I units lo accommodate ,1211 per-j sons, a su ited Infirmary. a Berthing Beauty Parade to Grace Petoskey Fete PETOSKEY tr - A bathing beauty parade is new oil the pro-gram 6f the month-long Petoskey Winter Carnival storting Jan. 29. Michigan's open speed skating ‘Better Things in Sight’ Contact Lenses New Zealand has four large cities — Auckland, with a good harbor; Wellington, the seat of government; Christchurch, with its (furious cathedral;. and . Dunedin, with the country’s oldest university. Open Friday Evenings — Closed Wed. Afternoons . Q. Oar dog frith*' ■ ; cons - m the Idtchea whenv lamb chops are being gawked. Isn’t this rath er a psychotic reaction? Mrs. Thelma Dann, Houston, Tex. A. Let's don't forget that dogs are iadividuals, and as such, can be SS discriminating in their, likes and dislikes as we are. Generally, j most dogs like the smell of any; kneat, but If your pet finds lambj odious. It still Isn't (air to brand him "psychotic.” The pet Industry has capitalized on ids pet’s repugnance to certain | pdon by manufacturing scents that! will keep him away from trees, furniture, etc. A lot of PEOPLE don’t partic-i ulariy relish the smell or taste Of lamb, and if your pet has developed an aversion to this meat odor, he may be Just a little more individual than most of his four-1 legged friends. '59 Agriculture Census Reveals Drop in Period Extending to 1954 WASHINGTON (UP!) - The U. S. Department of Commerce' said Monday its I960 census of agriculture in Michigan showed the state loat some 27,000 farms from 1*54 to I960. The census reported U1.U7 farms In Michigan in 1969 compared with 138,922 farms in the PpteiniSM. The average size of a farm Ja ' 2*69 was 132.2 acres compared I with 118.5 acres in 1954. And the I average value of a farm last year was $25,100 or up nearly $10,000j' value of $15,495. NO DOWN PAYMENT PAY $1C PER ORLY ID MONTH • Or $4 WMkly^^f Monaco, the Independent principality on the French Riviera, has!' no income tax, getting its state ! revenues from the Monte Carlo H gambling casino. All these deluxe features . . . selective water level control, lit eliut-off switch, unbalance switch, swirlaway draining, famous Maytag Lint f liter Tub. Tha Perfect Gift for a Lifetime of Munioal i Pleasure! LOWREYorgans MODUS FROM SSM Cmm In and E LESTER IETST ROSS STINE" and RDD1U SUNOS MUSIC COMPANY 1| I. Huron FE 4-0566 Open Every Q New slimline look styling with all deluxe features. Full-width freexer cheat stores up to 10 pounds of froxen foods at sub-freexlng temperatures. Handy door shelves. me s 108 NORTH SAGINAW WKC £ 108 NORTH SAGINAW A. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Set ift $753,000 He's Donald E.. Smith, Formor City Manager of Madison Heights DAVISBUTtG - Officers .of the Austin Lodge 48, F&AM. will be installed at 7:30 p.m. amemonifcs here Saturday. To fee installed are William D. Open House to Mark 55th Anniversary HOLLY-Mr. and Mrs William Perigo of 1233 Gage Road will observe their Soth wedding amhrer-j sary Sunday wi^h an open house from t to 5 p.m. at the home of their son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Perigo of 1213 Gage Road. I Lifelong residents of Oakland■ Coqnty the couple was married in Holly Dec. ft, 1903. they have four grandchildren and two great grandchildren. KATHLEEN Mc.MlLLAN Mr. and Mrs. A. E. McMillan of 98 Mechanic St., Oxford, announce the engagement of their daughter Kathleen Elizabeth to fi«vid William Schultz, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Schultz of, 127 N<* Broadway St., Lake Orion. -No wadding date has THIRTEEN TUESDAY, DECEftRER 18, I860, THE PONTIAC PRESS 3 Reject School Tax Hike by 28 Votes in Hazel Park Smith, 34, currently is assistant to the mayor In the down ' of Trenton. He begin Ms administrative duties in SouthfMd Jsn. 9. i one-year, 812.080 contract eeeds Robert J. MrNstt who r The balance of the budget is received hunt other sources, such M_______„ as forsook rentals and shop in- "** **■ ^ **•*• **• struction tees. Smith s appointment * * * proved fey a 4-member bloc of the Barber said that' next year atjT-mamber council. Two mem-this time projected enrollment fig .ben of the emmett abstained from urea show that classrooms in the voting on the ap district will have reached 110 peri the other voted no. •f this happens, he saM, the ■shea! heard is ssttnlpathg » ||Mta|ra • t The tworosm brick building Is by the In another action, the hoard ap- The lour men i RPI tag Smith were John J. Hollywood. Thomas Costello. O. David Edwards and C. Hugh Dahany, presi-Tha lour have been edt-spoken critics of McNutt and the city administration. i ntagned as manager of ysprly eys and ear test Madison Hsfcbto in A*mt 1857 program carried on by the Oakland afisr being on the job for II County Health Department at a ~ cost ef absnt 8300 ansually, super- PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Backed .by information recently received from the State Board of Cosmetology, the Township Board will start issuing violation notices to operators of home beauty shops ext week. The Township Board learned last night that beauty shops private homes must he approved by Vocal sorting authorities before being licensed by the Cosmetology Ward. The Township Board, which Is “RANTA, l*VE BEEN GOOD" — Six-year-old Richard Parker wMapert in Saida's ear white schoolmate Joy Lynn Juriah, 6. waits her turn to tell what die wants for Christmas. Ike youngster* had a preview visit with OM Saint Mck at Stiles Elementary School, Avon Township, yesterday. He stopped in to check final arrangements for Ms appearance at the'' Parent-Teacher Association's "Christmas Junction" fair set far g to 9 p. m. there Friday. A candy store, bate step and boot-and-skate exchange will be fear lures of the fair. Vote* Against Purchase of 102 Acres Pontiac Twp«to Ticket Beauty Shops in Homes matter arose at the November meeting when Mrs. J. Will Smith of 262 Grey Road asked permission to operate i shop in her tame. Her request was denied. SHOTS PROTEST A group of professional beauticians who maintain beauty s' ta store buildings protested the location of shops ta homes at the forctag officer, Clayton Love- learned that Lovelace was schsd-uled to make tax appraisals next But that idea was discarded and Lovelace wag ordered to issue the nottoss because board members said he was mote familiar with e township's zoning require-ients. Township attorney Herbert W. The licensing information was contained in a letter from Moneca Btsrmeister. executive tary of the State Board of Can-metotogy1. * * * She listed the requirements of beauty shops as defined in the cosmetology taw after conferring with the slate attorney general. I at the Nov. 81 f the letter from gr board. It was suggested that constables be given authority to violation notices against the tame beauty shop operators when it was In other action, the board appointed Roy Hardy of 1525 Opdyke Road to work with township engineer* in a study of sewer and water problems in the community. * * * The board also dismissed Louis i Schimmel of Pontiac as the township's bonding consultant and decided to consult with another firm about financing sewers here. beauty steps being operated In nsna of them had received local saatag approval. The controversy over thi« HAZEL PARK - A proposed school tax thike that would have permitted full-day class was defeated in a special eiectioa here yesterday by 28 votes. Turned down by property owners was a 5-mill tax increase peo-1 for school operation. The infllage was rejected 2.489 to 2,471. a request for operating funds has been turned down by voters In Hasel Park. The latest simitar proposal was five months ago. At that time It was defeated by SI votes. ley, Ukt, ML Osmans and OeigKfl members who nptaiefil ef tbs i,iM slaftats gtvaa |**w> Madison " * defeated later in (heir bid for ro ' ftMMia. w Smith, who to married Romeo Approves Raises lor 3 Officials ROM EX)—Three village officer*.. The parcel was formerly s parti aatetag a plan that would solve the treasurer, clerk and aaaea-jof the Pontiac Nursery proprtty the village’s sewer problem, aor. last night were granted 8250- and ta tost south of the preoent ^ method of pay hikes hy the villageisewage treatment plant. _Jhandltag the situation that was Berkley Pushing School Tax Vote Group Asks 7-Mill Levy Recently Defeated Be Given 2nd Chance BERKLEY - Over SO residents [THIRD TIME IN YEAR attended last night’s board of edu- The min»g» defeat yesterday cation meeting here and urged I marked the third time this year proposal tar a ~ The proposed hike, which would have terminated ta five yean, would have meant an additional tax of $8.90 for each $1,000 tag ta the school dtatriet pa* tMsaed that too school hoard agata try ta gat addMtaaal toads. Another group, however, urged residents, through the use of leaflets, to defeat the miltage proposil * r several reasons. * to. * . The leaflets, signed by the "Hazel Park Parents, Taxpayers I n." claimed that passage of the proposal would mean a 810 tax increase and provide i surplus ta the budget. operation tax be put before votersj r a second time. Voters here turned down M proposed operational miltage taxi a school election Dec. 6. Junior High Kids Get Extra Vacation ___ __ Elaine ■ ______, fhlary wtH ha raised from fUrt®**** to 11 230. dark Dorothy ■ from 14.000 to IU» and that Elgin Anger Sr. Dem Fund Raiser Wins $100 for Inauguration Trip |» other action the Council! Council members then entered Uim Woodward. addltiora were financed through ' .. ■ EStr’* ~ vacation today because of furnace, . _ , „ ______■ ___,__J Friar foal Ray OaaiHta saM throngs to watch President-Elect that ispslnom wsiksd tor lato John P. Kennedy's tasuguratton in «h# sight toying to estooet the Washington Jhn. : s tack aa Ms | But Donovan G. Gillmore. of 483 Opdyke Road, doesn't think ■ » from the HOI I of die J better fund rater* during the re-.cent "Dollars lor Dams" drive in Z Oakland County. He added that school should be M ff* ick in aemloo tomorrow. |twli rtestet tar belngo As if by prearrangement, furnace trouble points up the forthcoming 8100,000 bond issue in the Romeo district which includes The vote comes i Lodge Plant Installation .. ^ 5 "TM* is s Mg surprise, Gill- OftTONVfLLE — Installation of more said, "but 1 doubt whsth* officers ta Orahvifle Lodge 3»,!»he 1100 will take roe far in Waan-i F&AM, will be heft at 7:30 p.m.ltagton." Friday at the Ortonvllle Masonic h1 Ike village was ordered wer,——^ yam aga to expand Its MftrdMs __________watmww tactitttea fey the Stately ^ ^ (romfCUntoa River as yet it has met _____ fey m "nU man!*' W toe Rtatelqi ^ rnuac.H. HP*cmu*ei Pla^s fo Construct a new one-] miy/SM rest home on Fair-grove at Haber streets was presented to the council hy Mrs, Ul- The eevm mills, ash# offtaUU, ai w Mm taishsra. I aa« pay tar matab Christmas Music „ Programs Slated “We recently had to borrow >1700,000 to pay operating potto-' Only two of our schools are on a full-time basis,” he explained. _ . , ■ . _______ The dsfsat of toe proposal will w— Qulstmas musie programs wtilg,^ ^ j « he presented at two meetings next u.ha- the Latevllle-Ltonard l»r-j . T?-Association by the pu Construction of the classroom Ijb-Uto* »a L~*n, & Present Gifts to 27 Girls at approved | {seasonal children at the LeonardL- . rr B present their concert of|COUHiy 001126 song* Monday at the 8) , * . Ike property, sward fey I {operational mill age r chaage af local ad- j Mrs. Woodward, wk* already 'proved. p ro. meeting of the association at UNION LAKE — Twenty-seven [the school. I girls at the Oakland County Youth LaferviUe Home were feted at a Christmas i ways to rot mb before pro- Two-Car Collision in Troy Hurts Lake Orion Woman TROY—A 17-ysar-old Late Orion oman was reported to satistac lory condition today at ft. Joseph Mtecy Hospital. Pontiac, following a two-car coOtatoa tare ye star- T Ceraita Drtie. petition atsaed by oeveral Cll_4 D AlvW Sc^°°1 ndll perform before the as- pg^y lut night by the Union Late ii.inr nearbv. wa> 1 Scho®1, ^ .***»"’ P . Ander .soctatlon in the school at 7:30 P-m. Buto-. Professional Wtxn- iviag nearby, was advised to get stg—tares from m per rent of the wnMsata Rv-tar within ass feet of too property aad then rosstarif ter ro-qw*t to the eoaneR. In other bustaem, council members adopted an ordinance to control nbxtous weeds effective Jan. 2 and auttarteed the purchase of said the board of education believes that cutbacks in Berkley's school program will be necessary H another miltage vote is not taken. compartments tar the fire depart- The slate plumbing code also was adopted tad a directive to- parking unlicensed vehicles ta the auto at South Boulevard driven vftage parking jot. hy Mrs. Joseph Stepka of 45294 Becker Drive, Utica. - . . „ Mrs. Stepka. traveliag east on 'AgtR# TO N#W Contract South Boulevard, said d at the. intersection aad pro-1 CLEVELAND (AP) - Grey _______________Crooks Road Eastern Division and she thought n was free of traffic. ** M® driv^- l ____. 'a • ^ > ItartmiRhl nmnlnvnc in MirniffAn and Mrs. Want all wero rofeased'** Northeastern United State school at 7:30 P-m. Business and Professional Wtkn-Dec- en's Chib. Each of the girls ro- ^ [cetved a Christmas gift. Both groups will be conducted by j . . . Mr\At^K«oce. music direc- ^ ^ of the Oxford Area Community), " "*• acta Monday hy toe hoard. Anderson, who said he also received a resolution favoring ote from a group which was for better schools, said the earliest possible date another special election could be held would be February. The seven-mill request for operation'was beaten by a 95-vote margin a week ago. Most of those who attended last) night's meeting were patent* who! have children ta the Berkley; School system. Hall, South ami Mill streets. j J«"V* M. Ginn, county mothW *"d ^ *°* Mrs. Stepka. her four children terminal enqdoyea ^ MWtigan and A dimer w»Lbe held proceeding man. said Donovan's name w.^s M1,1‘,ren —— ........ (he installation at «:3»; p.m. The drawn *as the recipient in Oak-ceremony It open to the public. I land's 18th Congressional District. after treatment at the hospital. »“ve agreed to a two-year cm> Is a ear drivea hy Mm. Rrouwth The Stepka eMIdren are Janet. 9; Wta*. * company spokesman saM. ----------------David, 7: Tarty. 4; aad Darian. 3. 'IV employes are nrprowenied by »*«r Amalgamated Street. Electric jtway and Motor Coach Em-tyre Union. WINTER ARTISTRY - The first haavy snow- < fall of the whiter torms k beautiful setting tor the Capitol BMlbw. b«t the beauty ls decelvlng. the Improvement Prizes Offered ior Orion Area i ORION TOWNSHIP - The Lake Orton Junior Chamber of ‘ Com-1 merer will award monthly prizes to residents who come up with the best ideas for community improvement. Frederick Beckwith, the Jay-eeeV publicity chairman, aald those whs eater the f latest may sagged any Improvement which would be beneficial te the Lake The members of tha focal dub 411 meet again Jan. 9 to complete plans lor their pari. In the dtatriet meeting of the organization Jan. 22 at Roaemond Hills Mr. and .Mrs. Robert E. Hancock oL170 Fosbury Rood. Hlgtl-Township. announce of Inelr daughter I Rochester PolicR Probe Theft of fray of Rings ROCHESTER—Local police today are continuing their investigation at the theft of a tray of engagement and wedding rings, valurd at about $1,500. from Late 1 Jewelers, 300 Main St.. Saturday, dr * * I Lloyd Lake Jr., store owner,, I said he discovered the tray 'missing after the Christmas Parade but was unable to determine exactly when it was taken, ft was {between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m,, however, he told police. The theft is covered by insur* ance. , v\ • ’ Contest blanks may be obtained at toe Lake Orion post office, 148 S. Broadway St.; GtageUville Market, Baldwin and Gregory roads; or Hck-TUck Market, 3890 Josiyn oad. The first community improvement contest is being conducted (Ms month. Lou,sc to Gary e. i R'f estimated the average truck of Mrs- William Titus making a round trip between De-rt 87 Myrick St.. White Lake [trott and St. Juaeph wiU save H« tip, and Jack E. Kelly of in foel consumption, brake and tire itrott Btyd., West Bloom- {wear and operating and mainte-xnship. A June wedding nance costs than If it tntd the old Irehd. Wixom PTA Will Htar Oakland Casaworktr WIXOM — George Caronis, se ior caseworker for the Oaktai County Juvenile Court, wiU speak oa juvenile protection at today' 8 p.m. meeting of the Wixom Eh men tary School Parent-Teacher Association. Following Caronis' talk. Christ-.! iss music will be presented by the r school chorus tad hand. Hie meet-' fog will be held ilk the multipurpose room of the school. FREE PARKING for Christmas Shoppers to DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Austin lodge, F&AM, ' to Install Officers '< THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, I960 FOURTEEN Is Featured by Local Shops By MARJORIE IICHER Women*! Editor, The Pontiac Press' The easiest person to shop for on one's Christmas list Is that wonderful individual with a consuming hobby or sports Interest. And the most popular Christinas gifts are In the realm of fashion, according to figures. Whatever the figure, young or old, male or female, this year's gift shopper has broader selection than ever before-in sU wear. With skiing Increasing in popularity and the number of slopes in the Pontiac area growing each season, local merchants with a keen eye to "which way the snow files" have added handsomely to their ski wear. Novice, Intermediate or expert will be excited over this year’s Nordic look. Knits have never been bulkier nor more varied in design. The bigger and more colorful, the better. Purple 1k THE color with blues and golds running high in the color race. Stretch pants—last year’s novelty and this year's In-dispensible — are handsomely tailored,' functional and come In a gamut of colors that fairly sing on the store’s racks. Parkas, borrowing from the Olympics no doubt, are featherweight. So cleverly designed and executed in the exciting new fabrics which Americans take so for granted, they are both warm and weightless. Colorful, too. The slopes will bloom with vivid chrome yellows, electric blties, bottle greens and felt red. The warm social life that is such an Integral part of the skier's pleasure has given rise to a new facet of fashion design. It’s Apres-skl wear for that end of the trail toe toasting. Dramatic, daring but above all, comfortable after-eU wear is a must for even the youngest skier. The line that separates these clothes from lounge wear Is haxy. Par this reason, some of the smartest items are found in fashion shops that cany a large selection of lounge wear. ' PERSONAL TOUCH Proper fitting ski boots, bindings, skis And poles are all wonderful gifts. Best to earmark the gift certificate or check for these, though, for fit and personal taste are so Important. Local stores, however, have a fine selection of quality equipment. Accessories and small gift Items are inn to find for the skier. We saw conversation-provoking big fur hats, sophisticated wine sacks and colorful muk-luks (warm soft Eskimo boots). For the toe of the stocking there are Identification name plates for skis. And the unfortunate skier who has a broken leg may be gifted with a pin of silver crutches for his lapel. Personalise this by engraving the date of the accident on the pint Plxie-llke stocking caps or dashing Tyrolean felt bats have appeal for the skier and nonskier alike. There are snug knit bands to warm the ears and a broad assortment of mitts. Speaking of mitts, bear In mind that knit mitts and cloth mitts are never seen on the slopes. It takes leather to ride the tow ropes. Clever compromise are the leather palmed knits one shop offers. If you haven’t a skier to gift shop for, why not be that wonderful person whose gift triggers the Impulse to XU. It’s closer to flying than sailing. Remember though, shop at a sports store for your action clothes and don’t overlook the fashion shops for accessories and after-ski wear. and gold figured pure silk reversible parka. Bob*s stretch pants are Austrian imports, too. His parka like hers is by Profile and is nylon ,taffeta with tipper neck closing. Sharon Wiand of Detroit has an assist with her Henke boots from Pontiac Central High School ski club member Bob Ligett of Hillcrest Street. Sharon wears imported Austrian stretch pants topped by a vivid orange, yellow Smartly garbed for the slopes, these skiers have a pony friend to kibitz on snow conditions. James Broxet (left) of State Street is wearing bright blue ski pants and a blue quilted jacket over his Nordic blue bulky knit sweater. Diane Muehl o f South Hammond Lake Drive wears a gold bulky knit sweeter and head scarf and leather-palmed gold knit mitts. Her stretch pants are a jacquard pattern in green, beige and turkey red. Carol Pantel of Detroit tops her black ski pants with a white parka delicately embroidered with blue pine trees. Womens Section Honeymoon in the South Wed in Drayton Plains The Rev. Arvid E. Anderson officiated at the marriage of Rosalie PoUina of Detroit to Richard L. Flnkbetner Saturday evening in Christ Lutheran Church, Drayton Plains. Daughter id Mrs. Vito PoUina of Detroit and the late Mr. PoUina, the bride was given in marriage by her uncle, Nash Mendoia of Detroit The Iceland Flnkbetner* of Lakeside Drive, Waterford Township are parents of the bridegroom. The floor-length bridal gown was styled with bodice of white chiffon velvet, long tapered sleeves and floor-length skirt of tulle and net over satin. Sequins were appliqued along the scalloped Sabrina heckline. French illusion veiling held by a crown of crystals, fell to waist length. White roses, stephanotls and baby chrysanthemums comprised the bridal bouquet Elaine Finkbeiner, sister of the bridegroom, was honor maid. Mary Ann Mendoia of Detroit attended her cousin as bridesmaid, with Sally Hickman of Waterford. They wore ballerina-length royal blue silk organza over taffeta, styled with hoop skirts and carried blue-tipped white baby chrysanthemums. Seating some 250 guests were Larry Brown and Elbert Harrell, both of Waterford Township and Bruce Gerhart of Pontiac. Duane Hooper of Waterford Township was best Leaving for a-southern honeymoon following the reception in, the Community Activities Building, thq, couple will live at Lotus Lake, Waterford. Mrs. PoUina ebbae ice-blue silk brocade with matching hat and three-quarter length jacket for her daughter’s wedding. Winter white and jade accessories accented Mrs. Fink-beiner’s sheath dress of jade green lace over taffeta, Both mothers wore white cymbid-ium orchids. 3SKfVl v m Student Janice Pietrsak of Mann Road (left) joins her instructor, Henrietta HermeUne of WMO-Wafs teenage modeling clou, in modeling afterski wear. Janice wears a beige bulky mohair sweater over paisley pants in tones of blue, brown and beige. Her shoes are taffy colored Capexios. Miss HermeUne*s velvet pants are glamorous with rose applique which is coordinated on her white broadcloth shirt. She wears soft metallic gold ballet slippers. All clothmg and equipment in these pictures is available locally. The girls all are students in the teenage model class. Abby Okays Evening With the Boys Auxiliary Holds Yule Festivities Let Husband Enjoy Night Out By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: What do you think of the custom of a hue-bend having a “night out" With tile boys? My husband R and I haven’t been married very long and The Ladies Auxiliary of World War I, Oakland County Barracks No. 49, elected officers for 1960 following the annual Christmas dinner Sunday at the Veterans of Foreign Wart Hall on East Pike Street. Mrs. Harry Sisson of Clawson is the incoming president; Mrs. Leo Mineweaser, first vice president; Mrs. Loren Beach, second vice president; Mrs. Lucille Gcees of Milford,» treasurer; Mrs. George Ault of Milford, secretary; Mrs. b It all right lor ma to drop • hint that they should ell get together and buy one practical gift ter Dad and me such as a porch chair or tulip bulbs? PRACTICAL GRANDMA Fourteen-year-old Carol Jo Howland of Dixie Highway joins 11-year-old Ted, Stewart pf Green lake to toast at the fire. Corots bulky-knit Iceland import cardigan is patterned in gold, block and blue and sports handsome silver buttons. Her mitts are natural deerskin and she's wearing Profile stretch pants. Her hooded parka is quilted and insulated and is black and white with drawstring hood. Ted loves his colorful mukluk boots. His] bright blue stretch pants are topped by a continental styled grey wool cardigan. The Mocking cap is bright red knit. To SppnsorTeo The Birmingham chapter of B^arygtuve College Alumnae will sponsor a Christmas Tea Thursday* from 2 to 5:90 p.m. at the home of Mre, Judge W. Bearden on Tottenham Read, Birmingham. MRS. NEWLYWED DEAR MRS.': There's nothing dangerous abbut . it as long as the boys era boys. 1 i MM I Ordert Five Evenh^g Gewng TH» PONTIAC PRESS, T17E6DAY, DECEMBER 13, 1900 Jackie Plans Wardrobe as She Vacations PALM BeASH Fla. ID—Jacqueline Kennedy settled down to a secluded recuperation m£ with her two chfldren today,, with tibia to think about her forth-coming rale as first lady. Her husband, Presfdent-Elaet John r. Kennedy, was hack at wo*k la Wadringtbn, D. C. . M , * * Mrs. Kennedy, enjoying first days out of the hospital stoas the birth ot her son, stayed PTAs in Action AT DANIEL WHITFIELD Fourth, fifth and sixth will present a "Christmas Time" program at Daniel Whitfield School's annual yule meeting at 7:11 p.m. Wednesday. Mrs. William Cheat and Rosamond Haeberie will fflrect the vocal presentation to which ay parents of the school have hm at McConnell McConnell School PTA members vM serve a Christmas luncheon at 11:30 Wednesday, ftans room representatives, PTA officers and the teaching staff will attend. ATMALKM "The Night Before Christmas,” a play enacting Dickens' “Chrtaf-mas Carol," MSI be presented by fourth, fifth and sixth graders at MAlMm School Thursday. The program stilt begin at 7 p.m. in the multi-purpoee room. Teachers directing are Mayme Myatt and Mrr Edward Booth, fourth grade; Mrs. Ronald Gilmore and Mrs. t'obert Green, fifth grade; Lucille Amsden and Mrs. Charles Robison, sixth grsauds of His He—aft I Hor new ton, John Jr., is pro-weiL -Her daughter Car- , 3, enjoyed a swtra in th: with her father Monday Mark Twain School’s Parent-Teacher Association will open its Thursday meeting with songs by the school glee club and the.play "Amahl and the Night Visitors,'* presetted by tbe combined sixth grades, Betty Walsh will direct tjhe glee dub. Guest speaker Mrs. Roger Cuneo <4 the Women’s League for Peace «od Freedom wlU talk on "Rearing Childrun to Meet the Challenge ot Change.” Fourth grade mothers 'will serve refreshments. AT UBAIOH The LeBaron School Drama Chib will present an adaptation of the story “Why the Chimes Rang," by Raymond McDonald Alden, at a PTA meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. ii| the multi-purpoee room. The adaptation was written by Margaret Hartha who will direct. - Following several selections by the school choir, directed by Rosamond Haeberie, refreshments will be served by mothers from the home moms of Mrs. Clinton George and Maude Kbk, AT MfCARROLL A Christmas program at T:30| Mrs. Royal Exline will direct! p.m. Wednesday will replace the vocal music. Fifth and sixth McCarroU School’s regular PTA graders will sing "Happy HoU-meeting. * days," “Let It 8now," "Christmas! An original play, written by ■*** "Winter Wonderland." Marietta Spring, principal, will I®*™* members will perform under! highlight the meeting. The cast,he direction of Earl Somerville, includes Doris Loscy. Curtis Olson,1116 P™ "* sell candy and pop Dwight Williams, Dewayne 8tev !corn following the program, ens, Susan Eldridge, Cindy Quick) ■ J J Neqlect of Skin I^Shows Up Early (hie of the most important fac-j ton in having a lovely akin is regular nightly care. This means a thorough creaming every night after your bath or shower. If you atari dripping a night or two, your skin will show the effects if you’re] careless about removing old make. before you apply fresh Or il [you get insufficient rest. give their skin the essential announcement was male t Mrs. ,Kennedy has chosen her gowns for the Inaugural festivities. ■ / * ** / Famous American designer Oleg/Cassini, of New Yofk Jo de signing the gown -she will woui Jan. It to the inaugural gahe/a1 evening of entortntoment preceding the inauguration of her hus-"ind. - /Jr.y/wm For the inaugund t Kennedy will wear a gown created for her by Bergdorf Goodman, Ngw York specialty shop. No details of any of the gowns were given Mt here. Bergdorf Goodman spokea-in New Yartt also declined to teacribe the inauguration gown, adding: “We jed ant should come/front Mrs. The moment she authorizes release drialb, we dial to, but hot untfi then.” But Cassini, reached to his New York offices, said he had “an okay for five evening dresses for , the new first late-” He wee sarprised and to lighted pha wae going to wear one ri-'tlw inaugural gala and Hsid the gowns he will make tor Mn. Kennedy Include a new straw lace aad gras de Landraa la pink and white, a brocaded organza In mandarin orange, a white satto—"nhnaat a sheath dree*’’—end a blaek velvet. Designing (or Mrs. Kennedy is an opportunity “to design for the critical - eye of the world, and the greatest thing .that happened in my career," commented iCasaini. fyfoiteWiA This care need take only two rinutee a day but H must be undertaken each day without tail. And when you cream your face, don't neglect your neck. You may not be as aware of It as others. But it needs the same careful1 creaming that your face does. VK LOTION Then apply a generous amount! of hand Jotton to both hands and! ribows before you go to bed. In] the morning, apply cold (not icy) water to yuur face and neck. Dry yourseli briskly with a soft terry] towel and your akin is ready for| make-up. Knit Your Own Easy-crochet pineapples w i t h shell stitches — a design you'll enjoy always, never tire ofl Fsn-of-pinoappies square — just *3 for sca^f, 4 for centerpiece. Pattern 508: crochet directions for 8H-inch square, edging in No. 30 cotton; larger in string. Send thirty-five cents '(coins) for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for Ut-dam mailing. Send to The Pontiac Press/ 134 Ncedlccraft Dept.. P. O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11. N.Y. Print plainly Pattern Number. Name, Address and Zone. JUST OFT THE PRESS! Send now for. our exciting, new 1961 Necdlfcraft Catalog. Over 125 de-j signs to crochet, knit, sew, embroider, quilt,, weave — fashions, hometurtiishings, toys, gifts, bazaar hits. Pius FREE — instructions for six smart veil caps. Hurry. send 25 cents now! When stockings ate hung by the chimney with care, make sure that every one is a personalised stocking In a gay red and green Christmas ball design, hand-knit by you for each family - member! # 4 4 It s not a difficult knitting job, for all materials come packed handily in a tot — complete with easy-to-follow instructions. Them decora t i v q stockings are waahabie and mothproof so they can, he brought out Christmas after Christmas. ■> ,“ It's Everywhere NEa—Fringe is everywhere on fashions. ft goes around coitrs and lapels and shows up oh belts and cuffs, too. When You Are Not Adequately Insured ALL YOU CAH LOSS IS “EVERvnmir We can arrange all the coverage you, aa- a homeowner, naed . . . In' on# full-protection package . . . .with just one premium. Compare the protection we offer! We will suit all your Individual naods — Oil us todeyj "BUD" jFmtok«s^ NICHOLIE INSURANCE | ft** KAREN RAE METZ Spring voter ore planned by Karen Rae Mete, daughter of Mr. and Mu. Charles E. Metz of Wagner Street, mid Gary Boe, son of Mrs. Doris Boe of I James K | Boulevard and[ Leo F. Boe of j Waterford, j The bride itm hitoh laundry MIMADCAUY, IN IRE PLACE...HI IRORIRGII DO AT ROME! FREE DEMONSTRATIONS y ear Must demonstrator wfll skew pan Raw to Iran nwyttiim tw ysar wash la a matter sf mtmitas. C0M>MWrlMtRdMQllt^MMItiP.Mtf4IIYtllUBdSfMg ECON-O-WASH 1105 Joelyn Ave. • Pontiac, Mich.’ QUALITY DRY CLEANING LOW PRICES EVERY DAY • MEN'S SUITS • 2 PLAIN SKIRTS • 2 PANTS • 2 SWEATERS FE 3-7251 Fra* City Wide Pickup and Delivery 97 CITY CLEANERS 358 OAKLAND AVI. — 8 S. SANFORD 7881 HIGHLAND RD. — 358 W. HURON ST. PERMANENTS Complete with Haircut and Set So Appointment Necessary FE S-MOO LOUIS '4 Mon. through Fri. 10 West Hares — tad Floor Neat to Buckner Finance Exchange Gifts buf No Cash. By BMILY PORT Question: A friend of mine gave a shower for me recently and I received several presents that were of absolutely no use to me. I brought them back to the stores in which they were bought and got a cash refund so that later on I could buy something I really needed with the money. 1 have been severely criticized for this and was told that it was most improper to "collect” the money tor these gifts, Will you please tell me if this wafi wrong? Answer: I doubt that anyone would have criticized your exchanging gifts you could not use for things you needed, but you should not have turned • them ip for cash. * * * Question: My husband and I are expecting a baby very soon and as it is so near Christmas, we were wondering if it would be proper to announce this on our Christinas cards. If so, will you please tell me how this is done? Answer: If the baby arrives by the time you send your Christmas cards, if will be entirely proper to announce Its arrival in this way: You simply sign the cards, John, Mary and Baby William or Baby Alice. * dr * Question: I’ve been going with a boy for about six months .and haven't met any of ftis family. His sister has invited me to her wedding. That is, she told him he could bring me. Since she's a stranger and, I didn't get a personal invitation, would I have to send her a gift? Answer: On no account will you be expected to send a present. As a matter of fact, I think ft is In very questionable taste for you to go to the wedding with no invitation other than being brought along by the boy. if he really wants you to go, he should ask his mother to send you a proper invitation. Even if he does this, it is not necessary that you lend a , Question: I have two solitaire diamonds — one given me by my tether as a graduation gift, the other my engagement ring. ' * * I wish to give one of them to the young man to whom my gfoMdaughter will soon became engaged, to be used no her engagement ring. They are willing to accept the ring because of the sentiment attached. However, my son and his wife are of the opinion 125 Attend as Nancy Sue Lewis Weds Celebrating a traditional Scandinavian holiday Saturday were these members of Vasa Lodge. They gathered with children and friends at the Knights of Pythias Hall on Voorheis Road to Herald today's observance of Santa Lucia Day. Garbed as Santa Lucia is 13-year old Sue Wennsten (center) of La Salle Avenue. With her is her brother Donald who coordinated the program and lodge chairman John England of Motorway Drive, Against a background of Christ-1 and northern Mew York State. MS greens and white feathered the couple will be at home on hrysanthemums in chapel baskets, I East Longfellow Avonss. Nancy Sue Lewis became the bride of James R. Abney Jr. of Davisburg, Saturday evening in Central Methodist Church. -Dr. Milton Bank performed the ceremony in the presence of some 125 guests. . Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Lewis, of Charest Street were hosts at their daughter’s reception in the church parlors. The senior James R. Abneys of Davisburg are parents of the bridegroom. with Empire bodice and long sleeves of Chantilly-type lace. Scallop* of the lace formed the 8abrtaa neckline. ( A tiara of seed pearls afid crystals caught fingertip veiling of pure silk illusion. The bride held cascade of white roses, feathered chrysanthemums and stephanotis. ♦ * A Matron of honor, Mrs. Gerald Stone of Royal Oak, wearing pale gold net over matching taffeta, styled with bouffant sleeves, carried a so mi-cascade of green feath- Robert Snyder of Waterford was' best man. Donald Langdon of Milford and Richard Whitmer of Pon- MR8. JAMES R. ABNEY JR. Brown cymbidium orchids cented Mrs. Lewis' moss green! dress worn with brown accessories. Attired in blue wool. Mrs: Abney chose beige cymbidium orchids. Mrs. Ernest C. Hart came from Henderson, Ky. for her granddaughter's wedding. Ready Baskets for the Needy The Fellowship Class of Baldwin Avenue Evangelical United/ Brethren Church celebrated its annual Christmas party Saturday/evening in the Hotel Waldron. / Entertainment arranged by Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lovse followed Ray Ritter's devotions. /Mrs. Myron Everett and Mrs. Omar Johnson sang a duet. / Mrs. George. Hollis, president, announced that three baskets are being prepared for needy area families. Members brought toys for distribution to needy ehfldien at Christmas: Officers Elected at | Meeting Officers for the July-August group at the First Presbyterian Church were elected at a luncheon meeting Thursday at the Cherokee Road home of jdta. Howard 0. Powers. Mrs. Louis B. West will serve W chairman, Mrs. D. B. Eames, vice chairman, Mrs. Hugh A. Little, secretary and Mrs. H. A. Miller, treasurer. * * * Mrs. -Paul Kern gave the story “The Birth of Christ.’’ , The 25 members who attend ed the meeting exchanged white elephant gifts. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Leon Belknap and Mrs. Jack Huthwaite. Ethel and Vera Bassett of Cherokee Road will be hostesses for the Jan. 13 meeting A pastry recipe based on 2 cups of flour win make 2 crusts for 8-inch pie dish; use 2% cups of flour for a 9-inch pie plate. To Save Ma Talk Over Problems By RUTH M1M.ETT A New Jersey Supreme Court Committee on preserving marriages is trying to figure out a way to see that ailing marriages get help BEFORE they Ore sick enough to reach the divorce courts. Tits committee was formed after the court found that offering marriage counseling to couples after had filed for divorce was a little like locking the barn after the horse had been stolen. New what the esmmlttoe wants Is it get eooasellag to couples before they reach the divorce court If It can pat Its plan Into effect It may save some marriages. But . even more marriages would be caved it husbands and wives would work out their problems as they- go along, instead of waiting until grievances accumulate, inita-ons pile up and bitterness seta in. The habit of "talking things over," settling issues when they arise, and working out compromises would do more for most martteges than, any' amount of counteUng by an outsider — however'well-trained he might be. But this is a habit that needs to Be established early in a marriage ... before any major problems arise. The couple who can talk about small problems, small irritations and minor differences of opinion will, when the need arises, somehow be able to talk about the big problems and find the wisdom and understanding to work them out. d> A W We tend today to depend too much on the experts, to count too much on having answers given us—Instead of relying on our w judgment and accepting our own responsibilities. The most important person for any husband or wife to consult wtth about a marriage problem is his marriage partner. Marriage counseling wouldn't be, needed so often if husbands and wives would discuss their problems wtth each other. For a happier life and a happier marriage, send for a copy of Ruth Millett’s new brooklet, “How to Have a Happy Husband.” Mail 25 cents for each copy to Ruth MfUett Reader Service, care of The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station. New York 19, N. Y." A GIFT FOR THE GOLFER For more bin on Hie links Qjistsgr ELECTRIC GOLFER ( Many sew, improved Baums give you tbs ultimate is com- ' fort, perferaaaes, vsluo sad •njoymmL Try Iks Cushman Electric Oolfsr tss if you dent enjoy it more, sad play better golf ANDERSON SALES AND SIRVICI 290 l ran ST. Ff 2-0109 VITALITY RID m M. toil el Inks Moot Ton Fritidi for Coffot RKER FOUNTAIN Opens Her Home to Church Group Mrs. Clarence J. Nephler opened! her home on Cherokee Road Friday for the Christmas program for the September-October Group of the First Presbyterian Church.' The president, Mrs. Chartas Allen presided at the tea table. Arkansas termers received $690 million for sale of their in 1959, an all-time high. Angora Yarn in white and postgls The Knitting Needle #52 W. Huron Ft 5-I3JO lc VITAMIN SALE HHK9 - bn IMS u YOUR CAREER IN COSMETOLOGY BEGINS AT THE r» - ■■ ■ " • » * mwmm ACADEMY “Benutv Culture Offers Steady Employment” FE 4-0991 Owned and Operated by Louella Murray Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 105 N. Saginaw St. & I'tfA K FE 24341 1690 So. TeUqrsph, Bloomfield COMPLETE STEAMSHIP PUNNING - INFORMATION - RESERVATIONS Right hero. In your Pontiac Auto Club office, w« have the finest talent and teeillths to assist you in arranging and booking steamship passage or erulsss an the world s most, noted steamship Unas. With lass expense and bother, ws offer* you big City service plus a home town interest in searing you better. Call or visit us now to plan for — 1960-61 WINTER CRUISES WORLD-WIDE CRUISES 1961 EUROPEAN SAILINGS CONVENIENTLY LOCATED EQUIPPED AND STAFFED TO SERVE YOU FOR LAND, SEA AND AIR TRAVEL FE 5-4151 u PONTIAC THE PONTIAC, PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, }W SEVENTEEN Have You Tried This? Bfows Frame Those Eyes Oven Pot Roast Ideal Choice for Sunday Open Every Nigffcf 'til Christmas * If any woman would know hoW to get Sunday dinner in the oven before church, it is a minister's wile. Pot roast is a logical choice for such a meal. We’re telling you the way Mrs. Duncan D. McCoU Celery Imvm !W cup* liquid Sail sad pepper Brown meat in a little fat. Place In roasting pan and lay vegetables around It. Cut up celery .leaves. Pour over desired liquid which may be water, tomato Juice, canned tomatoes or catsup. Cover and bake 3% to 4 hours in a 275-300 degree oven. It will be Just right when you return from church. Did you know tbu brows are now being shaped permanently by electrolysis? I already /have reported to you that electrolysis also is being used to change an unattractive hairline. Four of the 5 McCall children are grown and away from home. Mrs. McCoU Here's an Idea NEW YORK (UPt) - Shopping for an unusual Christmas gift for the person who has everything? (hie home decorating Institute recommends a new dppr lock. One particularly appropriate tor this time of year is Astra, a sfarry-creation that sparklet .like Jewelry. Curl in Cologne (NEA) — A quick way to set your hair for. a spur-of-the-moment date is to rub your entire scalp with cotton soaked In cologne, then pid it up in curlers or pincurls. It will dry quickly and hold the set for the evening. The'natural brow it widest at the end near the note and then gradually thins toward the outer end, A brow should have a smooth flow and a gradual slim• ming from the inner end to the outer end. « By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN shaping or what a wonderful a Eyebrows play a' truly import- this can be in minimising defec ant part in beauty because' they <* enhanctog assets, play up and frame the ayes. Prae-j „ , ticaily every woman is Swart oh raeainue la orow *apes feat this and shapes and grooms her "T b'rLTtariy . Howevw. many women do not „ (b, ^ tbm Cocktail dresses in sheath and full skirt styles. Dressy blocks and wonderful pastels. A perfect compliment for the party season. Outlook Is Dark (UPD — Darker cravats and colored shirts will be in vogue for fashionable gentlemen next year. This is n European trend heading for American shorn. What’s seen, tlraB Floral arrangements to give your h o m e t h e cheery spirit of hospitality. are mostly solid Blades. But -^jgm%ha«e Snail neat patterns. materials. Sadi were seen at a recent Washington exhibition of Italian fabrics. Imaginative design and bold color seme are the marks most often seen among tbe collection from ftal ian fabric artists. WHAT LOOM BERT I Women sometimes produce SAVE WED. or THURS. FOR THE BISSSLL ELECTRI "Clean Sweep" PARTY f We will dye your pumps to perfectly match any outfit. Six hour service ir desired. Available in high or mid heels. ANGELS and CANDLES All Items Gift Wrapped Free as* (A# Bisssll Home Economist to show yOu TNI BI8SELL ELECTRIC SCRUB MASTER , Svdses, Scrubs and J Vacuum dries year Hears B —leaves them cleaner, Jt mare sparkling than Zs I ever before. Saa the <<7hl demonstration. For the Holiday Season! Present him with a foi impeccably tailored . moderate spread collar bosom pleated. and ham how you can have both...and save CHEERY DOOR SWAG Assorted Christmas greens form the background for the perky white bird-cage which holds brightly colored balls. Scrub Hester and the Sweep Mister with |uet i ene Intercheaaeeble Other Shirts to $12.95 gjjf Give Him on Alvin's Gift Certificote 599, Orchard Lake Aye. Phone PE 2-0127 OF PONTIAC HURON at TELEGRAPH Open Every Night UnNl Christmas OPEN SUNDAYS UNTIL CHRISTMAS EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PltiBSS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1060 Gabor Picks Up , Walks OH Pa.ai Show NEW YORK (UPU — Actress Jesse] to March: “Can you get Zaa Zsa Gabor vowed she would the sound away from her?" “never, never again" appear with Miss Gabor: "Georgle, I'm sur-. comedian George Jessel on the prised at you. On this program, Jack Paar or any other television we all lioake jokes , . show. • * * * Miss Gabor was hurt and miffed! ,0 to»re hen but at Jessel because on Monda yjwggwted that someone give her a night's Paar show, he kept inter- <* ,be «° *° rupting her interruptions, and vice t0,drln.. t „ . . versa ! That's when Miss Gabor Thf two frequent — and etjuSlly we^ uP' garrulous—Paar guests carried on a running word battle during the course of the program, /presided over in Poor's absence by Hal! March. / After nearly aa Mir and 0 half of MjuabblinK. Mn Gabor gath- | ered ap her fashionable skirt along with Hr dignity and walked' off 'the show, lighting 1 back tears. It looked for-a time as though Miss Gabor had done a( female version of Paar’s much-publicized long walkout of last year. But before the show was over, she was back in front of the cameras and no mention was made earlier unpleasantness. City to Consider in Rochester Commission to Discuss Warren Traffic Signal on Saginaw • A proposal to restore the traffic light at the coiner of Saginaw and Warren streets in downtown Pontiac will be aired before the City Commission tonight. The signal was taken down last j vear on recommendation of the State Highway Department in aj move to smooth the (low of traffic on Saginaw (U.S. 10)., j The move eliminated pedestrian crossings in the long, two-block stretch between Lafayette and Mt. Clemens Streets. Pickets Missing at Frantz School D«monitrotori Fait to| [ffJTSXS'J* SL Appear for First Time Highway Department has now Since Integration I **r*ed 40 rm,‘or,Uon Accused of stealing a car from Hearn. 21, ot 3M0 Dutton Hoad, Avon Township, yesterday pleaded Innocent to burglary when arraigned before Clrcuk Judge H. Ruaeel Holland. The proooeuter’e office sold trial of Hears will probably ha agxt month. He was hefd en n *1.000 bond. He to a parolee from Jackson WASHINGTON ID - The new •Scntaiy of state for the Ken-Dean Rusk. Hearn, sentenced for breaking and entering, to charged with breaking into Houghten A Sons, ■ St. He was nabbed In Groaae Pointe Woods later when he fled a gas station without ing for gas. Miss Gabor* said later Jessel1 behavior had left her "deeply hurt" but “I cant bring myself to hate Georgie.” Nevertheless, Hie made it dear she had no intention nine children to the school in auto-of sharing the spotlight with Jessel j mobiles. Policemen clustered on future shows. NEW ORLEANS (fi-Near-freez-ing temperatures—the thermometer showed 34 degrees—greeted eight white children and one Negro at the William Frantz School today, and for the first time since the school was integrated Npv. 14, demonstrators appeared. * A to Federal marshals escorted all The pair began exchanging barbed remarks. from the start •I the riMw, and finally, when March and Jessel wen dhenaa-Ing modem art, Mlaa Gabor Interrupted with aomething iinln Later, when Jeasel was telling a Joke, Mias Gabor interrupted with the remark "I have a very good ■lory I would like to ten." HOT DOGS HOME-MADE CHIU tors conn island #1 I fill TELEGRAPH RD. corners around the school and newsmen braved the biting wind. But unlike days before, no women appeared to wave signs, or boo, or Jeer. At McDonogh No. 19, where three Negro girls attend the first grade, a handful of spectators huddled across the street from the building. The Negro* girls and the federal marshals accompanying them were a bit later than usual, prompting one Woman to yell at a marshal: “Did you feed them breakfast?’ to- to * ■' The four-week-old school hassle seemed no closer to s solution, despite the U.S. Supreme Court’ ruling smashing the state's legal barriers to integration. light, If the city agrees to certain parking restriction* In connection wtth It, The' highway department con trols the traffic signals becausi Saginaw is- a state highway. On the subject of urban re-, newal, the commission will asked to approve contracts for the services of a special attorney and two real estate agents. Their pay will come out of federal funds. The mayor will be asked to sign papers in connection with a J70.000 planning advance from the federal government for the city's second Urban venture in the downtown area. Two proposed zoning changes are scheduled tor a vote after public hearings. The first would see, fgME. lots oh East Boulevard at Midway Avenge rezoned from residential to commercial for new union hall for Yellow Cab Local 594. UAW. The. second, rezoning northwest corner of Orchard Lake Avenue and Palmer Street from residential to commercial, been opposed by" the Planning Commission. A laundromat planned there. There, will be hearings on plans to grade, and gravel Howard Me- Rotarians Plan Children's Party Waterford-Drayton Unit to Entertain Crippled Youngfters Wednesday Falls are the leading cause of N*lU .***.’. CMm* to Warner. and the alley west of Baldwin Avenue in the block between Park-dale and Merrimac. CAR WASH WUh IS Ye Gallons •f TEXACO CaifiliM IS Gab. 49c 12 Gab. 69c 10 Gab, 89c 5 Gab. $1.09 -No Gas $1.50 PALACE'S AUTO WASH 92 BaMwia Are. FE 3-9027 Law Enforcers' to Hail 25 Years of Cooperation ALLEGAN (It —A quarter-century of cooperation among city, county and state police agencies is hailed tonight at the 35th annual Southwestern Michigan Law Enforcement banquet at Allegan. SheeM Walter Runkel and Sgt. Lewis Brandt, commander of the WayiaRd state police post, The tradition was started in 1935 by the late Sheriff Fred Miller ~ cantos on with his brother Lon ‘still providing the moose meat. to expected to oppose the rush to summit conference advocated by Soviet Premier Khrushchev and favored by British Phme Minister Harold Macmillan. Rusk, 51, a self-made diplomat, favors more traditional and ca-tious forms of negotiation. His views on the subject were spelled out earlier this year in a lecture delivered at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. He made dear there that he thinks the president’s personal diplomacy should be reserved for very rare and special uses. to to to Rusk was named by President-Elect John F. Kennedy Monday to take over the State Department and the day-to-day direction U. S. foreign policy in the administration starting Jan. 20. Kennedy also announced that Rep. Bowles was his choice for undersecretary of state and Adlai E. Stevenson had acci the post of United States an Plan for the annual crippled children's Christmas party at 2 p.m, tonk>rrow at thfc Elks Temple nave been set . by the host, file Waterford-Drayton Rotary Club, according to Richard Hills, chairman. - to to to He has asked volunteers with irs to be on hand to help carry the children from the automobiles :o their seats at the party. More than 7S children from the Waterford Township Thomas Cooley Elementary Reboot presented a program of Christmas songs at today's noon luncheon at the Community Center. Following the musical selections. Rev. Arvtd Anderson presented Awards were presented to nine meit in the club who have had more than 10 years perfect tendance, with Robert Beattie having the best record, 19 yean, to to to Arthur Johnson, Kenneth Oakes and Herbert Van Welt have 16 years to their credit, with Edward Fuller, Hills and Carlos Richardson having 14. Mark Stewart and Frank Williamson have 12 years of perfect attend-' once in the Rotary club. j The group has scheduled its annual Christmas party for Tuesday Dec, 20 M the Community Center. Picked Wrong Car WETHERSFIELD,'Conn.' -Isaac Foot, 10, former president of Britain’! Liberal party, died at hie home early today. Foot eat the House of Commons 1922-24 and 1929-35. Two of his Dingle and Michael, are present members of the House, •on, Sir Hugh Foot, was d commander to chief of Cyprus Until the colony achieved independence. Happy Anniversary EL CAMPO, Tex. (UPI) — The Svoboda, a Czech-language supplement to the El Camps Leader News, ig celebrating its 15th anniversary this year. The supplement, whose name means “Lite arty.” advertises itself as the "dd- Short Subjects THB PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, I960 NINETEEN King Cgto^Bfotf Laos 'Rebels Set With. Red Arms VIENTIANE, Laos (AP)r-Klng Sevang Vatthan* today stepped into the civil war torturing his Jungle kingdom and ordered Qui-nim Pholsena to diaaolve his infant pro-Communist regime Sa- NO EARLY EFFECT Quinim, who charged that Americana ana tupoag Western troops awaiting to storm tide capital, heeled Op hit defenses with airlifted anna supplied by the Soviet OMmeS Vientiane in effect was under military control of the proOato- available here that Phoumi’a forces are supported by any foreign forces or that they are, about to attack. Soviet arms — Including'how-ltaara and mortars — flown in from Hanoi ue being rushed te the city's perimeter. Troops pet up. mortars at the airport, poet office, power station a ‘ strategic points. Quinim threatened to shell Thai territory acroes the Mekong River watched with interest in capitals throughout the world. In Washington, the United States France and Britain called level talk on what ie widely regarded .there as Soviet military intervention in Laos. At Red Chin called for immediate world action to haft what they called "United States intervention and I_____ __ Developments in the strategic munist' Pathet Lao and'~kftto|aoutiwe^ Asian Kingdom ware paratroep Capt. Kong Le. The king ordered. government powers turned over to an anticommunist regime’ headed by Prince Bom Oum and Oen. Phou-mi Nosavan in Savannakhet, the broadcast said. Boun Own was named premier and Pboumi minister of defense, deputy premier and minister of peace, the bread rest said, i, ft ,ft . * •The announcement was expected to have litjle immediate effect anQuinm's regime in the. besieged administrative capital. Quinim. who Mtc those of the Pathet Lao yefeardag. has indicated he Win ignore any decisions taken by the Ui« "under duw*s. * * * Quinim* government and his military leaden charged that rebel forces bached by four western powers were about to atom Vientiane. They appealed to the Western diplomatic corps and the U.N. commissioner hem to prevent bloodshed. WWW They elao threatened Russia-W. German Talks End Abruptly BONN * * * ’ ’ Kong Le issued a fiery statement claiming American. Thai. South Vietnamese and Nationalist Chinese troops have Joined Phoo-'Ml No independent evidence is Detroit Police Hunt | Robber-Murderer DETROIT * - The neighbor* of a man who was shot in Ws West Side home and robbed of 12.2®} were beteg checked by Police to-1 (fey in an effort, to And die killer, j T * > * Walter A. Peter*. «. the operator of a beer end patens medlttae store, was killed Monday in the kitchen of Ms home, He was! robbed of money which he was counting before going oo\a bust-; ness trip to Dayton, Ohio, ft* ft* Mrs. Peters. SB, saw the kfij flat out the front door aad I two shots at tom fapt i Officers said that they hoped toj find someone who might have seen the Uttar. For GOOD DRIVERS important news! New, juet completed studiee made by ue indicate that starting mow, we can offer an even more liberal low-cbet auto inaurance policy ex* dueively to thooe we ctenhfy as good driven. Our long experience to the auto Insurance field has taught ue that there are many types of driven—good, bad and in-botween. If you ha vo not had aa auto acridont or insurance claim to the pest two yean, we urge that you phone us and discover how you may make substantial savings with 'this new policy of oum. 73 «. NUION ST. • KOllAl 2-0141 Michigan Mutual Liability Company WE FOUND IT! 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These tangy, refreshing combinations are unbeatable! DOWNTOWN PONTIAC — TIL-HURON — ROCHESTER DRAYTON PLAINS «— MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER FR 4-1510 351 S. Paddock 3ESS4S3&SE63& s. S. KRESGE COMPANY FURNACE TENDING FOREVER! GAS HEAT BUY DIRECT FROM FACTORY AND SAVE GAS FURNACES - BOILERS - CONVERSIONS Crrunch THE SILVER SHIELD IT WAS COLD, TOO-Temperatures dropped through the East end Midwest, hovering near the zero mark. Fred Schindler. 15, of Toledo found a space helmet was Just the thing as he zoomed around on his motorbike (above). Below, an ambulance with ah elderly patient was stalled in Boston. However, the patient was 17 inches, c! snow that piled up everywhere in. , stalling, etc, (bottom). THE SILVER SHIELD - AT ehiuui MI'S. OJ .Hit or (ill — Mailman Bob Wilkins ploughs knee-deep .through snowdrifts in Bristol, Pa„ because, as we all -know, the mall must go through. And the way Christmas cards are pouring into post offices these days, it has to keep going through or It will bury many postal clerks up to their necks. Arranged Marriage Ends in Death of Young Bride TAIPEI. Formosa (AP) - An! "* old-style Chinese marriage Inj which the bride did not see her| husband until the wedding ar-j ranged by her parents ended in tragedy. Hsieh Yueh-kui, 2l, who was married yin south Formosaj Saturday to a fisherman, was found dead the next day. Police suspected suicide. Six photographs! of a man other than her husband were found among her belongings. The distance between the. earth and the sun varies as much as; three million miles. Norway's First Socialist Premier Dies at 101. OSLO, Norway (AP)—Norway’s! first Socialist premier, Christo-i pher Homsrud, 101, died today. Homsrud headed the shortest] government in Norwegian history, from Jan. 28 to Feb. 15 in 1928. One of hfo first acts as premier! was to tree the present premier, follow Socialist Einar Gerhardsen, who was in Jail for trying to fct-1 ADjpmA cite Norway’s conscript army turn pacifist. ! ' * C H. C. (Csslisssst Hast Ckceiefiea) Appliances are perennial favorite, gift Items for engagements, weddings and particularly Christmas. Since appljaiice dealers traditionally fely on newspaper advertising —they put 70-79 per cent of their advertising budgets Into newspa-persx yualf easily he able to find gift ideas, add “where to tpy’’ news in the advertising columns of Heating and Sheet Metal Can* meter 35! N. Paddock Street R 5-1173 Gas for Spaca Heating Is Oaklaid Indoor Contort Bireaa...Protoetiig Yob STANLEY GAB WOOD MUTING' 3805 Croon Late ltd. Orchard Laka, BM 3-2080 BRYAN F. FRENCH 111 N. Paddock St. HmMae, FK 5-6973 HEIGHTS SUPPLY 2685 Lapeer ltd. PenHac, VB 4-5431 WRIGHT SHEET METAL COa WOLVERINE HEATING CO. 1234. BaMwie Arc. PeaNee, f« 2-2113 ZILKA HEATING 32fl MM A. 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Don’t delay. Phone Bud-man. FK 6-MM. today! FE 5-9500 If no answer, ENterprise 6767 'til 9 p.m. daily and 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Call ___ LA 7-3600 collect after these hours, 24 • hour service. A Budman man wlH call at your homo daily until 9 p.m., Saturday and Sunday until 6,p.m. for free horn# demonstration with no obligation. Oir Factory Is Located la Considers Power Territory DO DUSINESS WITH A RELIABLE COMFANY 239 Voorheis Rd., Pontiac, Michigan Your Guarantee of Heating Comfort! Heating Comfort... YOUR MOST IMPORTANT DECISION WHEN YOU BUILD, BUY OR REMODEL r sky Frank! Pedro Ramos of- Washingtonj •ong young shared the lead in innings pitched' American and. along with Jim Perry ofi champion-j Cleveland, also was tied in starts. I run aver-j Boston’s Mike Fornieles • set a league mark in games, working in ' '70, all in relief. The cheerful1 > pitching Cuban right-hander came up with ;ed today,'a 2.64 ERA average but didn't; erases an- have enough innings to qualify j the season, i for the uhetaptanship. ed the dur-t Ramos, with MO, and Early ann in anjWyim of Chicago, \with 158. tol-j oston. Bau- lowed Banning in, strikeouts, while 10 pounds, | the Yankees' Bob Turley's N, .750 nge of en-jmark was the second best as far! rt perform-'as percentage is concerned. j Steve Barber pt sued the moot base* league in strikeouts, willing 201 In 252 innings. He and Baumann were the only pitchers qualifying for the leadership (pitching ISO innings or more) who had an earned run mark below $.00. New York's Jim Coates, a right-handed sophomore, got off to a 94 mark by mid-season and finished with a 13-3 record and kn .813 per rentage, tops in the league. His earned run mark was 4.39, There were no 20-game winners. CORONET [ I HOC wcif nw j Chuck Estrada of Baltimore and Jim Perry of Cleveland won the (most. IS each. | Workhorse Frarik I my of Detroit—the Tigers’ Yankee kilter. f who heats the Yankees more often The University of Alabkma is one-poigt favorite to beat-the Upt-versify of Texas in the 2nd anrioal Bluebonnet Bowl football game Saturday at Huston, Texas. The game starts at 2 p.m. First, there is the possibility the Lions could win the National Foot-{ball League championship. But to in the last half to down Alabama:do ^ hive to whip the Bears here Sunday white the 1 Cent 83-641 Big Ten conference chase, were led by as many as 22 points. Dave (fending SW champions. ________ looking up today after important BeBusschere of Detroit was ham-(Brigham Young downed Texas victories. pared by a groin injury but sawed Christian .7445, and Tuiane \ 7741, Duke remained unbeaten Tn four starts by trouncing South Carolina 107-79 in an Atlantic Coast Conference game, and Florida State defeated Clemson 74-57. Kansas State defeated New Mexico 81441 and Washington won over Hawaii o less than teammate j^to overtime to defeat Rice 84-83.: 73-46. Providence, on tour, beat Wtllte Motcani, world pocket billiard champion, and challenger; Onofrio Lauri of Brooklyn had their title match delayed by the scheduled Monday In New York, was postponed until next Monday due to o snowstorm which strand-' ed Moaconf In Chicago. runiue oe-ien uy ™ 7"" VUlcmure who eaita a 20-iTexas Tech saved the night by Sant* Clara 6549. State before overpowering Ball *«*fr beat Indiana Saturday beating New Orleans Loyola 78-74 | l State, towered the boom on pro- to Cok>n,do ran •ts-stotag to 54 viously unbeaten Detroit, 044.1 **** ^"^jbe detesting toweringiKSta KUl.iffl Indiana rallied from a 35-32 def-j1*0". eaugK ftee and wW> and Duque.ne-winncr of its first;"* left at halftime to defeat Missouri. ,B th . four games. Was stopped in over- 'apt ■ baCK HI Ki Baulina iZrmmn Hhin i WtlH Angeles Rams knock off the Green Bay Packers at - II DMrsar • i orttn t S McOtnley i it Bdswis • « Mitchell A.L Teams to Get Players Wednesday! Boston Session Is Delayed One DaybyStorms Los Angel**, Senators Plan to Pay $75,000 for Each Player BOSTON (AP) - Weather permitting. the Loe Angeles and Washington chibs will pick their flayers for their new Amertesn League baseball teams Wednesday. * * * The history-making draw was scheduled tor today, but a raging btlxxard dosed all air traffic In and out of Boston, and Loe Angeles officials couldn't make it to die meeting. Shortly altar the meeting was postponed, a league spokesman _l The unbeaten Bradlav Bravesj won their 37th straight home vic-j torv by belting Northern Michigan 105-77 to, mrf.ee It 44 and certify! _ No, 2 pod rating behind Ohio! State, which to kite until a major (test against Wichita on Saturday. (Northern Michigan made ai ■crap of ft to the fleet half after i Iwinring four to a row, but Brad-, ley was too tough. Bradley 's Chet (Walker scored 28 points, Tim Rob-; jinson had 25, and A! Saunders 23. J * , Sr a 1 Georgia Tech, winner of three (straight, finally was beaten as the (University of Louisville opened; ! the Bluegrass invitational touma-Intent with a 7445 victory. Louis-' ville ran up a 41-22 halftime advantage and won its sixth straight without/ a ion as Bud Olsen! scored 23 Toints and John Turner; got 21. Roger-Kaiser, high rcor-ing Tech guard, never got a field1; (goal until die second half and j wound un with 18 points. ( Louisville meets Western Ken-i ,tucky, 86-72 winner, over. jUtahl (State, in the Bluegrass finals to-] J night. Louisville is. rated .No. 9 toj the 'first AP poll. Western Ken-] hicky made it 54 with Bobby Ras-; |coe scoring 22 points. Charles Os-(borne 20. and Bobby Jackson 19.; i Cornell Green tallied 30 for Utah 'state. . t I- i St. Boh^venture, the nation's No.. ,6 team, made it 50 by smashing i Xavier of Ohio 85-75. after leading at halftinte 46-29. Sophomore I Fred Crawford got 26 polnta forth. Bonnies with teammate Tom Stith scoring 25. Before fouling out would give coach George Wilson’s (ego a boost. Wilson formerly o r ti played with the Bears, and has J' } ‘’ never beaten his old. tutor. Bear ii • 31 icoach George Hallaa. ! } }} The Lions haven't beaten the l l j Bears since 1957, which was WH-it u nison's rookie year as coach. Halas Ididn't coach the Bears that season. »—— j In their Nov. 20 game at Chicago, a wild free-for-all broke out, resulting in bumps, bruises and fines (for several players on both teams, quarterback Jim NteowsM hud day of too season agaiuto the dumped for Iff yards trying to pass. But NinowSki may not get the chance to even the score. Wilson has todicated he might sjart Earl Morrell, the Lions’ guiding light In thidr last tiro victories, as quarterback. However, the Lion coach refused to make the big decision until later to the week, The Rams are badly hobbled for their final game of the season Saturday against the Packers. Four regulars wU be out of action. Frank Ryan, starting quarterback, to to St. Joooph Rea-Burbank, suffering from • lari Sunday In Ike Ik* Ram win out with tog Injuries AT tririii REBOUND BATTLE — Indiana and Missouri cagers fight for a rebound in last night's game at Bloomington. Ind. Reaching for the ball are Charlie Henke (56) and Ron Cox (40) of Missouri and Indiana's Tom Bolyard (45). Indiana won, 66-55. mission from Oommtostonsr Ford rvtckwnd the National League to extend the tater-teague trading deadline to midnight Friday. The original deadline was " The new teams will select 21 players each IWm a pool made avaOebto by the existing right teams. Until they make thorn ae- Knorr Suffers Severe Burns After Falling Earned Run Title Won by Baumann With 2.68 The Rams will go all out In an effort to upset the Packers and pteveot them hum winning Hie dear cut championship of the Western Conference. They upset the Packers. 33-31, to Milwaukee, mainly because of Packer errors. If the Packers win Saturday In the Coliseum, they wifi meet the Philadelphia Eagles for the NFL championship* If the Rams win. a post-season playoff will be neces-aary Green Bay, Detroit and either San Ftaacbco or Baltimore could be 7-5 lor the regular season. team will know exactly what players ft has to work with, obviously handicapping any trading. * W dr It was for that reason, a league spokesman said, that- the loop aton'd tor (he trading deadltoreX-J tension. The . list of 128 major Hague players available for draft by the two new teams has not been an-j bounced officially. The players selected for the tom teahv* will not be enounced until the draw to| complete. Each team must select 21 ploy-; THE BAAtr INGREDIENTS — General manager.Fred Haney (seeded right) of the Loe Angeles Angels holds up ■ ball and bat at a news conference to which lUU Rigney (seated left) was Did Press Attacks Hurt? • field manager for the new team. In the rear are Angels’ president Bob Reynolds (left) and chairman of the board Gene Autry. FORT LAUDERDALE. Fla. i* — Fred Knorr, 47, part owner of; 'the Detroit Tigers, was reported In; BOSTON (AP) — Husky Frank! Pedro Ramos critical condition at Broward Gen-'Baumann, Chicago's f-'-----**“ '—1 * oral Hospital last night from sec- lefthander, won tto ond and third degree bums re- League's i960 pitchini reived when he fell into a bathtub ship with a 2.68 V~fM of scalding water. k jage. Hie wife Nellie said the accident Huskio Molraon Open ri Rayal Oak Bandera. Wafted Lake to at tow against Fits-gerald. Nortbvtlle goes Is Flat Prep Basketball Slate U.S. Davis Cuppers Review loss! “What hap[ Although it was [pestuous. i team of tern-. Still, almost from the day ofi.. happened at a hotel Friday night.! The official leagt “He Slipped and hit his head;; averages were relei it knocked him out." idle said. j confirming unofficial i A friend discovered him lying unhluounced st the close a. ...-------— conscious in hot water in the bath-j The White Sox acquired the dur-| I ib. able - 27-year-old Baumann In anjWj Mrs. Knorr came to Fort Lauder- (off-season trade with Boston. Bau-11 date Saturday. She said her hus-jraann. 6-foot-l, and 210 pounds. j( band had been to the city on bust-(responded to the change of c.. .—. ness since Thursday. She did not vironmeht with the best perform-'as explain the nature of the business Hnce of his major league career. j Mrs. Knorr said her husband has; in five years' with Boston—only t a fjftj _______> up with mm '*■— -“taft ’been, very uncomfortable but he's (one of them "a full season—he hadg S75 000> relay events but the Huskies just L>« ***■»«>»* CTy* orm$ iWf didn't have enough to fodl out a ***• ** ■* vW«ry- JF i.'BS Iffitf HR: * The key event turned out to 100 fr««.t*i* Bud Odor (PCH). Fr*4 ' »e *vtag com petition. Bad |K m J^*9af^?SBa iff awaan asned eat Laa Nsshatg *J« «•». Me U»t* ffOAi HWU Sf Nortbera by one petal, 1SS1M. MS taf Mthrim KornB the St. Louis ttawlu 662. Willie f*” , fwh,>* happenfd? A ^ Hawks 662. Willie Natflls of the New York Knicks 587 and Paul Arizin of Philadelphia 964. , h A ★ Bill Sharman of Boston is the top with a .647 per-ersions in 95 St-rmaker of the pace-setter in field a .478 marie, in rebounds Robertson has the assists, 246. Itw icoiint iMtftrr o rorrru. An. Chkm’ltln. roll. M CIS 143 Ms IT.J Bailor. L A. 27 314 303 Ml 33 2 sss: year-old former Illinois football and* baseball player named Bob Goalby came out of strictly nc where to take first money. sell these-kids short,' warns Raynor. “They’re trained athletes. Seven of the first 10 on the money winning list don' •moke. The majority of then wouldn’t even look at a drink. Si you wonder why they can come out of nowhere on the last round? The reasop is that they are just fresh when they finish as when they start. It's the winning difference." Hogan gained a great reputation as a man who practiced Interminably. Onv occasions he worked on Us game until dark. These kid* do It every day. There Just say word! the Come to Beneficrel'e Open House for HOLIDAY MONEy Get holiday expenses wrapped up /art—get Holiday Money at Beneficial’s Open House. Just phono—get cash for any good reason—shopping, paying bills, you-name-it “You’re the boss” at Beneficial! Leans 826 to SIN an ilghaturo, Furnttura *r Cor 7 WEST LAWRENCE STREET, PONTIAC 2nd Floor, Lawrence Bldg. • Phone i FEdoral 2-9249 OftN IVtNINOS IT ASfOINTMINT —SHONt ros IVININO HOU»* . Uua mW » mMari * «S wwnAB WIST ' Now Mexico 34 Bradley University romped_______ [Northern Michigan. 106-77, on the courts at Peoria, Illinois..—^ ' * ♦ * Chet Walker paced the Braves, second-ranked hi the nation, to their fourth straight fictory with a 28-point scoring spree. Last week Walker set a Bradley (Wdhouae record of 50 points t. Oaodrlaa. Montreal 1 BoUaana. MaMraat l-fiSRuSNOL • Oilman. Detroit . 1 Balbgau. Maw Tart ‘ 7. It tabard. 33 ant rani tExs- w. Dalracchta. DatraM Meldhouse record of 50 poinU •» Dnrlr he lod^thr Braves to O 10046 win 1/01210^6(3 rQTK May Cost Tulsa Baseball Team Spartan Tankers'Win The Fitzgerald High swimming team posted Its second victory in three starts Maturing two records sot by freootyler Keith Brockton in downing Dearborn Edasl Ford 50-50 last night. The summary: •nr Ttcoift)^ It* ^buttartir [ ID) ilskL art (Di 1: from 8AS0W o UCIVIEn ICE SKATES HOCKEY STICKS SLEDS TOBOGGANS BB GUNS JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS 26% OFF ON ALL WOOL SHIRTS and JACKETS GASOVrS SPORT CENTER 1275 Cm* Ukn Rd. FI 2-5802 . OFIN DAILY 6 A M. TO 9 P.M. ' Ex-Bonus Baby Sold LOS ANGELES (API—The Lot Angeles Dodgers announced today that they have sold ootfieider-thlrd baseman Earl Robinson, former bonus baby from the University of California, to the Baltimore Orioles. General Manager Buzlie Bavasi said it was a straight cash fSSiv < *•- OM . and Eddie Jordan. |«Vb. Bn TULSA. Okla (AP) - Texas League baseball may ho on the sray out in TUisa. The reason it a bill park allegad to need repairs from rot, splitting and termites. Thf appraiaa 1 cams hi a report by engineers who surveyed the Fairgrounds Ball Park. The engineers called it unsafe. "Wo want to hoop the Oilers in Tulsa where they belong," said Tulsa OUer President Grpyle Hewlett. “But this latest development could veil mean it will bo impoo-ibie to do 00." Howlstt said the Texas League wUl meet Wednesday and will want to know whether the league franchise will operate in Thlaa or be mowed to Albuquerque, N. II. Albuquerque has been bidding ' for the franchise. No Dodtlpn Reached NEW YORK (API—Gale Kerwin of Ottawa, Out., and Eddie Jordan of Brooklyn battled to a 16-round draw Monday night In the feature bout at flt. Nicholas Arena. JIB T m 7—y THE PONTIAC PRKS& TUB8PA\^ DECKMB3SR 18, 1960 BS / TWENTY-THREE V, West Bloomfield«Invades Northern Tonight ■- ■ < •’._• ' ,■ ^j| j^f1* Senate Boxing Probers km Falcons . JTV * ~ . Travel to Troy Schedule Palermo Today Orton, Avondale Have Oakland B the Road WASHINGTON y round o. U» 4th Annua PonU« -m- Stas and Gary Render. Bowlerama. I Subcommittee Chairman Erie* i president of Jamea D. -Norrto* Ite - ■■ _ Mike FedynU. Bruce Norton, j There is Certain to be plenty Of wacticing there dur-Ketauver, D-Tenn., suggested that Items tional Boxing Club. ju. c jr* Marty Ever ^ ^ nort days as the day of decision for such " different combinations but had little success la beatings by HoUyj and MUford. He has five latter-,, TtipisU M Sew # OMMUMun I Gary Acker netted I* paints Willie Lindsay was almost a one-man show for the kieer* with 21 paints. Lean Prentice came, *• • 4*4* vtelary over Perry j next with 12 and Amo* Bailey F«* in tea other -B" matrot. xhted U- _______ I The 199961 Gas* D CWy League! .........' ....... """•"" irace got under way last night with 'two games at Lincola Junior High. I ______... . srtuht Jtowpsss t rawni MMn JO riteM S. iwtoit ik vwioei it Mmuitolastn M. Trojom U - ■ «a uaou a ■tow » Ooritos » EMU at sums nmaon mob “ ' '■ ewon* « mtsio in a«wu ti ion , Neldretts defeated the Knights. ,33-21. with Paul Wilson of the! 'victor* and Bill Olmsted of the >losen notching 11 points apiece, i fun aa asm a. ■sis m. Asesto " Vlklnf. MMI the Huskte». Ben. wtw worked big prites as $500 and $250 grows near. ««■ at omea on retwuwto.- and , An ^tuai invitational battle will follow Immediately! rr^rr^r —^ ^ h^r honor.*—- Waterford and Rochrster wlll be Kfe settled to niake tor ft froot mooing Fireball-1 had 173*. i unoug several local teams pteyingibig day Of bowling. a Na Moore no longer an Instruct- ; away, tonight. Avondale. La k ej ^ will be 91 qualifier, shoot- or at Burau Bawl. Mil has hopes ) Orion, Borneo are some of the inj{ for the top tournament honors, af competing la pea league , Ihers 'They won their way to the finals! uMeh starts next season.. It has been 11 days betw een with top performances at Howe s j Hat Shota paring Meety Mixer* , .antes for the Skippers who areiLanes. Sylvan Lanes and Mont- |«ogue at Howe's. D. fheyuo } M ae-gurst of Dearborn Fordson. calm Centre. The total in the ae-| rofed 31^401. b. Weed has t« Rochester M at Troy hoping tojtual event will be “* will be J2TTU ST WASHINGTON JVNIOa HIGH s Dirk Cock and Crones ^njoy 21-1 Romp | Brsm Sk WsSk. M-lMn < W«rrh>r» I* Rntlt • amts ». aosrun. S OQIsoraiktoi M. tour'i Sso GlobrtroucT. SO. F»kan» 1 1 The Oakland B wNI be the only former ■ area league In operation. Avon ' Jo* Myers. Both frilled to make win he guest of Madison while the title round In two tries, ft : the Dragous are at FtUgrrald. may have bee* Cask’s laot Buwt- » ereme Mure he expects to move Romeo wiU be out ^ H®*1 ,, Mynl-* * r*. ««* luhwe. J. ICUlikin hat high season! handicap scores of 261-663 in Pontiac Motor Tuesday Morning League,.. Bill Devine, only 19. doing welt at Land-O-Lakes ... Ex-Bowlernma women bowlers Pat Donner and Gerry Hintz going good. . Cruribrook's hockey team went __________^ on a scoring rampage yesterday! BSm*ITUw las the Crane sksteta walloped De-| itrott Annunciation. 21-1. Daw ; Schultz scored five goals for the Crane* and Trim Cooper taHted 'three to feature the runaway con-, teat Vive other players made twoj goals apiece Crunbroofc' record now stand* 2-1-1. „____HUii_,_______„ Shsr* > nr* as, rin«M ta Whu KMs 11 VonUM ritU Csu Vlktnst n. Jsrissah yssiprr* t) '—-->• IS. rtettt ft, mamoox demon won Artiiw a spoil Utica's debut on the Chieftain: •court. Southfield wiU piay at Hharlj Lee Howe, who proved an tafpark, Femdate should romp again cellent how to the tourney » « « w at Berkley, Lapeer is host Flint spacious new establishment along Farmington Major Classic had iKrarsiey and OrtMjWtUe vs. Flint with wile Barb and hustling Al|„ jg KainM ail4 a wries of 600‘s it PtL o'- aLZ „ ^ better recently with Printers, 11 | Also. Birmingham Groves was.tt* was officially admitted la the! __ v* _ f •at Country Day this afternoon 750 Club as an associate member. Lrtho totaling Hu. Pres* tourney, idawaon wiU invade Lamphere, > w * finalist Joe Pueriaa wag among jGrome Potnte meets East Detroit of proprietors, two of the big boys with (72. Ralph West- and L Anee Creuae goes against fhp npn^iiijrrs are new inUfm) had 290-704. Verle Witek 259-; Fraser. St. Louis Outlasts Lakers by 114-103 the ranks this season. Don|x74K, John Motiar 2594T1. Jack Stone bought out Lou Tenuta andiTmlor 667 Ed Wright 279663. has joined ailing Sam Pema at1 Mike Zettraino 062. Joe Bush 253-Weststde Recreation Joe MSceH.||S6. BUI Bahnuut 257-645, George whose son Frank has made the Foucher 643. Morrie Quinlan 365-finals. is now head man at Fraser g^ _, Secretary of Lansing loop Lancs. igol 94 pins when she dropped .St. Louis AKIPHNO ABOt ND , {** haU of a rtibhorn ooe and the — part standing. - LOS ANGELES (API built up a strong lead over Im jo* Faster continued in his an>| Angeles and held on for a 116-168inaal hard luck-role is the BowI-| victory Monday night before 3,475. jerama. Each time he ha* bowled! j The Hawks led by 21 Points missed the cutoff— early ki the fourth quarter bt »he this time ay one pin . . . Bill iLakem, although cold earlier, sud- r^h au several good young bowl-jdenly found the range. Los An- • ^ under' his wing as an instructor $373 Hide to be tsstsd in your favorite drink KESSLER GIN ! in two minutes and got it down a ! low as'seven, with dhly three min-' ! .lies to play. Here, Bob Pettit and i Bkareu Mauney hit til arid K. Len WUkins each hit a bucket and Williams 4** la Women’s Oak-the Hawka were out of trouble GOLD CREST I'LAYINO UtNKX jeuft. where it aeema the lanes By Pat McBride constantly changing Should you 1 Th > single characteristic that fail to find your line in a hurry, {makes a bowleg a pro is his or|you'U be left at the starting poft. [her ability to adjust to. or play.j d d * different lanea-and adjust quick- .On slow lanes where yMr norm l|y jal ball will have a wide break, Aa-m-know some lanes arc move to the left on the approach slicker and smoother-faster Inland roll the ball s ttffle harder, bowling parlance - than other*, On fast lanes, move to the right te depending on how much dreaatngjglve the bill more ingle. Roll tt Is wed. This condition to mpsctolly mmewhit slower to allow its hook-prevalent on the tournament cte-|tog action *| TRANS TROUBLES? SAVE MONEY AT Reliable Transmission 41 N. PARKE ST. Co. FE 4-0701 PONTIAC THIS WEEK** SPECIAL! is-'iT roiD o wmc C0MFLCTE f * WRITTEN 90-DAY GUARANTEE ON AU WORK toy Credit Turn* — I Bay tovtat a m m im.mm mmn m. ummom *1 • Santo Says . Let HURON BOWL PRO SHOP Help You like Your Bowler Rifted BOWLER Bowling Balls, Custom Fittad and Drilfad ... S2495«p Bags ............................................. 3P*w Shoes, Smart Casuals and Sturdy Pro Stylos 6W *r Bowling Glovas .......................... 3s® »p Thumb Guards ... .................. ....... 1®S«p *Thf Secret1 of Bowling Strikes'4 the book with the enswer! by Dawson Toylor . ............... ............. AN 8Hh Packaged aad Gift Wrapped FREE! A Wide aad Woaderfal Ckeiea af 9lfh far EVERYONE! SIFT CERTIFICATES FOR EVERY PURPOSE! • Certificates In 111 Bowiiaf Efiipmeit • Certiiicites fer Any NwVei ti Lines oi orb Bornme laqotoe akard aae Caepaa book, redaamakto tot 25 Item •* apea • Certiiicites fer hoheiieaal Bowiiaf Iastractioas ftem tkam QeaWlad faltoattara. Mary Mama* aad Shirley Printer - OPEN BOWLING - Drily t to t —SA. Sm. I AIL to 1 A.I. Bawling |s Fun Anytime at the Naut# of Total Completeness HURON BOWL 2S25 Elizabeth Laka Hoad FE 5-2S29 I: br, M ll^P 7 y / tVVKXTV-Twi m£'m THE PONtlAC PHESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, I960 Santa and the Boy fish by lucre* Hudgins Beal« («! CHAPTER KIGHT ) ■ Costenbricker'* p a r a % o I was enormous. It was made of red silk with purple polka dots. It had a low handle with two crooks on the (W. "Usually," said Costenbricker,: "I travel sitting in one of the! crooks but all this excitement has tired me and I expect we better i make ourselves comfortable." Haying this, he turned the uni ■ brella upside down. Michael was ! astonished to see little yellow is lying on the bottom . fat green quilt tnrked j 'around the handle and bunches j t of bananas hanging from the j .ribs. »'"How do all those things fit In j Jhe parasol when it's closed?” he exclaimed. { "Who said all those things are1 In there when it's closed." retort*: ed Costenbricker mysteriously. ], jTrft in now .and away we ll go." • Michael turned to Santa. ' Aren't you going?" Lightning (lashed and wind whipped the parasol. remember the tight incantation., < He muttered on and on. i ( Suddenly the polka dot parasol! nicked back and forth and slowly | from the floor. i comforter, fi . fell asleep. He < wakened by loud I THE GIRLS By Franklin Foiger fives." Idear. I forgot that.” * * * I * ★ * < "Don't Worry," said Costen- There was nothing for them to pricker cheerfully. "We’ll be back d0 but crawl out of the parasol, in no time at all! fold it up and carry it outdoors i He climbed into the parasol and and open it up again, ftfichael, tucking his precious mask grotTND THE WORDS }md lung and flippers down among ' the pillows, scrambled In beside Jiim. ' Costenbricker shoved his trt-pi (‘strength spectacle* to the ♦ lap of Us forehead, put Ms hand , over Ms eyes and muttered unintelligibly to himself. Nothing Perspiration broke out on the old man's bald head as ly* clenched his hands and sought to Endorses State .■ . Court Building Gov. Williams Backs' Move to Start Work on Structure in '61 I This time, Costenbricker got the right words the very first time and the parasol rose instantly Into the air. A moment later, when Michael peeped over the side Santa and Mrs. Santa were only tiny specks waving from far below. "Have a banana,” said Css-tenbrtrker," and make yourself j ut heme. It's a long trip and I. am going to nap for I am over a thousand years old and need a let of rest," Michael gazed in wonder at the I shriveled up face. "Are you really a thousand years old?” he whls-1 pered. Costenbricker shut hie. eyes. | “I'm as old as Time." he mur-1 mured. "And I feel every second I of it.” With that he fell asleep The parasol sailed peacefully on. Michael fell beck on the pil* j tows and rover P? N "Here it is, Henryk, right in front of your eyes, on the top shelf, i I hiihself with the I the potato chip can, behind the mixing bqwl!' BOARDING HOUSE Lansing i* - Gov. wuiiams Monday “heartily endorsed” a move to get started next year on construction of a State Supreme Court building. The neat step, he'said, IX to I persuade the legislature to build j itself an office building and th< governor an official residence. Hen. Elmer R. Porter, R-BIIks-fleld. chairman of the Senate ap- week that ha araeld Introduce a MR aext month to appropriate faads for a Supreme Court building a block west of the capitol. Plana were drawn up several years ago* but because of the State's money shortage, the legis-Mture declined to allocate funds | for construction. * * * j ‘‘Porter’s move was “the first! sit ep toward providing adequate! appropriate facilities" for f ‘Supreme Court, the governor said.] •The high court now occupies shab- j *jy, ill-lighted chambers . on third floor of foe capitol ]• A new building, t# Inc I mb . law library-, would dear space , • for legislative committee rooms I ‘Sad offlees. -, The legislature,, however, needs) • building of its own containing! to private of fife for each of the] *)44 lawmakers; the governor said, More secretaries also are need-' jsdr he said. Misplaced Papers Delay Decoration for 10 Years X SAN ANTONIO. TYx. .APt-On March 26. 1930, Charles M- Saunders, then a sergeant first class in an Army medical company, siif-l, fered frostbitten hands and feet; as he descended a steep mountain I fitope in Colorado to rescue a per-I* pen injured in an auto crash, | * * * • Now an Air Force captain.! Saunders was presented the Army] Commendation ribbon Monday ini Ceremonies atf Brooks Air Force] Rase here iru recognition for the! Colorado rescue. fkSftte Army apparently planned foe decoration, in 1960 but misplaced its. papers for 10 years, j ADAM Aldm I comforter disappeared Bananas flew away Into space. Costenbricker landed on top of Michael. * 1 * * * ‘ "What is it?" cried Michael in terror, struggling to his kneet and clutching the parasol handle. ] . , "A storm cloud!” shouted Cos- 1 tenbrieker. He clang to Mlclf-| set's legs with all Ms strength | but It seemed, that at any minute they both would be torn loose and hurled from the soni-] ersaultlag parasol. I Streaks of lightning tore through j ■the black* rain. Thunder deafened 'hem. The wind whipped the para-j sol over; and over and around in circles. They plunged toward the j earth. They were sucked back In-I to the sky. * ' it a ■ I Michael shut his eyes and hung ; on. He wished, for a moment that he had never left home, that hp was safe back in his own little Then, as suddenly as they went ] into the storm they were out of it and the parasol was sailing while, he *?reneiy through a pink blue sky. ] | Costenbricker sighed with relief I but Michael's eyes filled with hor- THE BERRYS By Ctrl Grubert DIXIE DUGAN By McEvoy. and Striabcl “My mask and flippen and *. Santa shook his head. "It's best * * * crash. The parasol lurched craz-|lung!" he cried. "They’re gone!” I for me to stay here and do what. -Hooray!” cried Costenbricker Iily' Tho ptn?!f Ml out *nd "1PI (Ne*t: Hack Into the Storm) I Jvork I can though it will all bei triumphantly, useless unless you find the pearl! "Walt!” cried Santa. "It'l *nd Costenbricker remembers the '< er go through the door!" Jnagic words that will waken the] Costenbricker blinked. LOOK ? . GONNA BE i FAMILY WHO ---------- /YES, BUT I A OOQCft/ YOUR \CONTTWNK \OF MEDICINE, (GREAT-GRAND] I CAN GO \ HIS HA WAS \ FATHER.THAT) HACK ANY ( fMMUft. V VLAS? 1----------to P HIS WAS Bv V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner MURKMR.My the late P. B. Metcalf, an] •rtbMect - . i 7 By Dick Cavalii guess what r found WHICH X WA* CHANGINO MV AHOM... WELL, YA SEE, BETWEEN TH KIM HBLI*INtT* WAMH EM... f-....... By Charles Kuhn DONALD DUCK By Wait Disney f THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUB DECEMBER, 18, I960 ~ 'rr 7' IWEXXY-FIVE m NEW YORK (*—The stock marked dipped moderately in slow trading early this afternoon In a mixed and active opening the ticker tape lagged briefly, then dealings slowed. MARKETS f?rain Futttres W The toOseing are top prtoee 111 SCdtt6f6(l SbIIIHQ covering aales ot locally imam Produce by growers and sold by CHICAGO tl^-The grain futures them fa) Wholesale package lots, market wnerallV lost a Quotations are furnStedby the ' Detroit Bureau ot Markets, ai of *round tod^ 00 •c*t,ered Wednesday. in moderate early dealings on board of trade. Detroit Produce s- AppUt. NorttMrn^Sp^. fed The market was encountering technical resistance on the upaHe after its surprising advance of last week, capped by Monday's rise. Inspiration lor a further advance I Smu. tomd. bu. ... was lacking, however. The rise ^ in unemployment and the co».ISiK8«.;i«o..‘b»- ' tinued lag in steel production wero eSn&ims&ta. dampening factors. [nimrasS af The average waa dragged 'onion., a°r» Site. . dewa by a generally lower Kffi; 2? M trf?. “T1 -aterrw iggj&tffc «• metal*. rail* and seierted laaess Mub«.puk. it ha. la vaneaa other group*, oil* aa*l jaaasiti More. *u....... utilities were aleedy an balance. <*»•“£• aotwroup. bu Cbenlcala end flee trice! eqelp- e*Suh' DoUciou*' bu mrot. were mined. S^.'SnSL* *" „ , .. ______ thriR sfaeeff1 be............... Polaroid dropped more than 5 points. Broken attributed the drop! oars** to rumors of new financing, lower cJlm* c*b“o«» no«........ earnings and fresh competitive ** developments. iwSiwe.* **. Old crop wheat was the loser with losses ranging from! major fractions to a cent a bushel. December and March ’deliveries apparently yielded to profit hf- ijflfl * 5 either domestic .or foreign. Grain Pricm !2S ill" Public to Decide in Waterford Retirement Plan Vote l The' question of a retirement 'proposition on the April 3 ballot for plan for Waterford Town-lthe purchase of two building sites nployee will be placed be- for future fire itatkxia. The fore the electorate, the township I money for the property would be board decided lakt night. I taken from the township's gen- * * * • eral fund. It is legal for a township board ‘ * * * • establish a retirement plan 'for Pender was authorized to make firemen and policemen. However, | recommendations and spectftet-voters of a community must deter- tions for purchase of three police , whether all township em- cars. Two of the older model* may be included, the board would then be used In other de-was. told by township attorney jpartments. Paul Mandel. %. dl * The board decided to place , W“; ton were approved as regular ... volunteer firemen. proved. The towashlp board im Sr . m TU . iff: SR HOUR IN ONE ^ A curve in Golf Drive alongside the Pontiac Municipal Golf Course caused Virginia Giant, 36, of 4438 W. Walton Road, Drayton Plains, to lose control of her car last night. The vehicle careened across the road and crashed through the golf course fence on the left side. Miss Glane and her three passengers escaped unhurt. Poultry and Egas International Business Machine* wa. •" Hwtot K»er - profits! Mmn rocit.v were taken on its recent strength, obtboit. d»< tl iapi—ertc« **r| W we - ssadWtan* IMnK Ssr Ho I mwj Vendo. up 3, and Texas Instru- s>!nllint boa* tt-n., it|t>< irwl menta. ahead more than a PoM-itT^1 teS&'Si nE^VT*.*! found favor among traders. Mean- *hMm is-ss, «*r*m. »»• * while. Radio Corp. (ex dividend'. dstxoit boos ■b~» ■.**«■ .«■»«>-•! jy^w“nj?j«krr,i and Sperry Rand lost fractions, umtot* Dotrett. mm u n rea PbtlUpa Pforsla— was ap a fwtiSKoSi ** haw sj4«: rew*! traetton and l aloa ON at laUf *>& toteT1? M ifix*p 47 lup u-47. medium »•» IM 15 Rescue Three ;iin Detroit River Business Notes PontidC Sales Charges Shifts Personnel Ar^Voting Appointment of Charles P. of Bloom-Township as of sales; Dodge ptoye*. t I Supervisor Either R. Johnson said that by the first of the year he hopes to have a report for the board's approval on how to ached-lule retirement benefits from | Travelers Insurance Co. * * * | Police Chief Millard J. Pender, waa present, requesting that either] a police trial board or civil service be established for the security of 'Police Department employes. After roaalderable discussion. Saved by Dredge From Ice Wafers Boat Capsized ! DETROIT # — "Thank ifor competition." said I old James Cobby, one of Hogan, Stadler, Parker Charges of "fraud" slid the P^tod _ . . and Cole Promoted in ^button of scurmou* cam- by taw). A,, a________•___ paign literature" were filed today1 _ _ GM Organization with State Atty. Gen Paul Adams Clerk Jamea E. Seeterlin wa in connection With yesterday * l^appointed secretory to the town-J Four changes in Pontiac Motor school election in Hazel Park. j'*WP electrical board, effective Division's aales organization have The charges Were brought by p*" V Donald Beauchant to tlr*Ut_°;.been announced by Frank V. Donald S. Locke, who wa* chair-'*” •PPOinted - ----- motive sales and Bridge, general sales manager. Dodge manager.] Noonan PmmgiPmPI______________ that newly or*] „_______ _______ man of the Citizens Committee for]ganized board. PriJJi C; B. Hogan Jr. formerly Buf-!Financi?e.E^ucatio" which backed [fees RAISED his present appointment, he was li*> ™ manaB^- move* *° «*!fB ** The to*"shiP board railed eiec-j Livestock Canadians fished out of the mar-ldlRctor of sateTdevelopmcnt for!Pontiac home office as national m the •cho°l d,strict'( 'trical contractors' license feex| freezing waters of the towwjChrysler Corp in the east w nianager The proposition lost out by 2* from $35 to $30 and electrical Detroit River Monday • { * W * H. J. Sfadler is promoted from vatoa to yroterday * eieetton. It journeymen' Cobby, of Wheatley. Ont. hit] ]Jj brother Fred, 34. of Harrow, agdi ■ Den Munro. 30. of Amherst berg. 'Z were pulled out of the SMgrN assistant zone manager Noonan lives at 1780 Ccdarhill York to succeed Hogan. Drtoe. ■ license fees from $1 Boftlnwro A Ohio was O 2-potnt “ JKR*is*lttuf —«re lofr cm word oI |w»mmaH pUm ***** ftffr*-- “[V watw by r tug from a rival ume, wa- to liiwfl(l|Bto Mds of otter car- {}{£ «uBir mi ltJMitB ” dmlge firm after tteftr JWoqtjiuW hens to control BAO. Chesapeake .???!?■ ^JJJ work boat capsized when struck h” been A Ohro'toae more than a point m*ur n i m i*. iim at»a a*iby an ire floe. shies manager - - --------- I1S-IIII HWl ___________ __________________________ iCto. ln I John areiBg 0—»««*■*.■ eakii. uttiiir'ut iu*i»r« 'itaan1* by too fiber tog. Dortor* trral- itlaai iwmiu u* tiatHtw ------—i*t* r.« uk. imn I U (*eui J. O'Neil) of 4011 Ledge-j N«w York Stocko ~ by too fiber tog. Dortor* trrat-tog them to Windsor. Oat., tor “extreme etpaaaie" satd they < roaldaT hove aarvtved another five mtootr* to the itver. The . aurtaee temperatore srao 18 si fcs?sAcS.» si ~—1—---------- , S:‘C || Ann Arbor Approves i^Glass Sale of Liquor T»! ” Cobby said. "We aura were; ANN ARBOR oi«*. cm ifi »! wtoT *W*y *!”—**•.. . . channel markers for the S29. two**. J Ann Arbor votero atohorl^ byLBwntfBeBf au wore life S* the glass sales in the Nov. 8 elec-$ J tion. the first time such sales had il ls Subdivision Again the to $5. .bringing them more in l»**e ha* been defeated. .with thorn of surrounding munici- L Locke said he is charging pos- Pala,ie*-sible fraud involving one of the; _ ’ * * . * , , . voting machines used in the elec-l koaid authorized ptoidng a| tion. lfo said discrepancies also ‘‘six or seven (fiber NEW BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY International Company with 200 oiiicos that furnish temporary ofiico, industrial technical workers desires representation in Pontiac. We offer an Associate ' program, that must be operated in conjunction with an established business. . We bear all costs with the exception of, office space personnel and local tolelphone. This Is not a ’ Get-Rich-Quick" scheme but a long range program. Your local promotional efforts are backed up by national advertising, direct mail, ealee lead* from Home Office and Other'offices. We supply complete know-how, comprehensive Homo Office training and continual 'monthly direction. Local visitations made by our field personnel. Your growth is based on repeat business. We will expect the same complete investigation to be made, foot we will make of you. Personal . inspection any of our offices will bo ranged. Writ* giving ct plefe details of your present business tot R. 6. Krauthoafer via* nem*i • *»■»■■(«■ mANvowsn. me. News in Brief Locke, a manufacturer s agent ^ Mto batteries worth IM. a I and father of eight children in flashl^h|. eight cans 0f dry gaa! ltazel Park, satd the total of and gn unicnown wnount of change ',yes,' and. "no vot*J ca** *B *** from a cigarette machine were , election did not tally with thejstolon during a break-in at the toMtoM voter? who Used the Gulf Service Station, 515 S.j Saginaw St., co-owner Charles] Hubtourd reported to Pontiac police!. ■acting yegterdaj H. Cole previously assistant The citizens committee ■one manager in Newark, succeeds m*n *!*> s*kl that "mislei Stadlec. material gar distributed two or binding for Ifikj _ . PaHrM. lrom three days before the election by] a thief sawed down a rove* USrr,to‘g££l; SL**” —l—" b'“*™ - ? zone to succeed Cole. V. Shurly Jr. Lane Pine Court.; Bloomfield .Hills, has been appointed a director of Namm • Loeser’si owner of clothing stores across the nation, with head offices New York. j Ann i made | by the firm's president, Bernard I Parent - Taxpayers Association of Myers of 5743 Cboley Lake Rood.] Hazel Park. Waterford Township, and hauled] Locke said verbal complaints it off from in front of his house ] had been reported to the attorney Myers. Who valued the tree at jgeaeraTs office today. A formal ijioo, reported his loss to the! j statement will be drawn up w1ienigher4ff.s deportment yesterday | 'Locke meets with his attorney. WhfiB to Itll soourltloo [ for Inooino tax savings Whathar you hold securitiM through December 30,196Q, or pall before year end, can bear importantly on the income tax you will pay. Now ifi the time to review your portfolio for inooiM tax purposes. ► StndforWcdling, Ltrtherit fad-pocked 6ooUd;“1960 Security Trantactiont" Jet Black Locks | Help to Check on the Weather James R. Owvahy. W. Ml W. I Howard St., pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of reckless] i driving yesterday before Municipal ] Judge Cedi McCallum and was] ftoed $100—or 10 days in the Oakland County Jail. S Lwent into effect in 1919 ffll ______________________ •iff ■ ,2 J Pennsy Railroad, Union m* Agree to Up Back Pay as PHILADE1.PHIA in - A new I'ving in the Lake Oakland Heights j^troi, Boart’Jfi Commerce S! contract providing for a f»ve-c-nt- Subdh-islon again will he without «>an-hmir w*wmrk “* 1957 development of two water systems.;their five children homeless Mon-! Parker, a General Motor* Insti-Adverae weather coydttiona halted day. :e graduate, joined the New York '^**- shart touppiv. eagtarore la the to- were stolen yfsterday from hia! Strument divtotou »t the Beadix unlocked garage. Avtottoa Prop, aero toroed, to Catar yykroi Ltohts. Ideal tor ■eaieh for otoer roppty aourreu. Christmas trees. Indoors and out-; They discovered that Jet black doors. Michigan Fluorescent. Korean hair works in their weather Orchard Lake Avenue. -h instruments, leaving the blonde: strands for the more precise de-’ 114.at 7:30 pm. in the Town work on the wdh will Residents living In the 383 homes Fettle Bigger, the father, waa ]«*» “ 1950 He alro has h^kl£«• «n irviiw to -Jtfone of reaponaibility m tiw home •V* • tha. iarU ^ -Adv. In the subdivision have been asked men said, when he tried to thaw to have at least nine hours' watet tfroxen water pipes with an oil-on hand. Squires mid. (soaked rag torch. the Boston and Pontiac zones. He] has been-service and parts man-] jager for the Pontiac zone since] Never Know When You'll Meet One InuMit Sale of CtoUdag aad] i toys. Tues. 8 to 8 and Wed., 8 to I B&B Auction. 5008 Dixie Hwy i —Adv. OLYNHA PtCOSlON PORTABLE TYPEWRITER Exclusive Authorized ' , ■ Dealer JONES TYPEWRITER SALES t SERVICE 1058 W. HURON ST. Detectives Probe ]S3,572 Burglary LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPD — tl Arkaiwas state policeman Bohii Barrett said he and his wife were i leaving a downtown parking lot | when a man drove up in a new'l Cadillac and yelled ’ to an attend- | ant: "Come here boy. I want youj| to park this car aad I don't want:I a stogie scratch on ft." The attendant said seriously as;! Pontiac police detectives today; investigating the $3,572 ^ _____ burglary from a safe in the Yankee ^ puo the car. "Yea. Department Store at 51 S. Sag- ] ^ j jUSt how you feel. I've Shreet over the weekend. !«* one Just like It." loss was discovered Mon- ■ "rf ^[FidgChildren According to investigating ofB- Calmed Down this indicates either^ by U se ot Pills been left open or the] .______ knew ^combination. DETROIT (UPH - If teacher had been gained hy tear- rompUins your child can't seem a portion of a temporary'to J# to class, s p»U might wall in a hole at the. tolp- FOR INVESTMENT SECURITIfS and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL | C. J. NEPHLER CO. FE 2-9117 P,. 818 Community NatiorK)l Bank Bldg. OUR PACtUTUB JWT«a - MUTUAL rUND* raou COAST TO COAST the store where It was) Physicians at the Children's On- sum .BOAT TO CHINA — getting sail en Rpund Pound at London's Kensington Gardens,, this detailed model Junk ie pushed oft by ihf building enthusiast. Junk's construction. ___. . . —pm,, ter of Metropolitan Detroit' found ^maged a* the r^Ittrf arecrifi ot'S^Udren between the Jke^at the Oakland Theater ^ «,d ll who had buen f almost hopelessly unruly calmed ■ 1 1 ~ . {down when given dextro-ampheta- Mt troubles fifth mine. is that its recipe) Scientist* called their fidget* as thit for a; "hyperkinetic Impulse disorder.” . ... Christmas]' "There is evidence that up to] enters throi«h theij per cent ot the school agej leaves through a hotel population from 5 to 11 present! . Confidence is]this problem." said‘Dr. Hunter H. ] you'know)Comly, director of the Children's] Wilson- ' 'Center. ' ' - ., UZQ1E JUSEHCT. Inc. All Forms of Insurance S04 PntUc SUIt Bok Bli«. • FE 5-1172 * gWKNTY-Slfc ^ i u Ag Organizfaig lg Opposed by Bureau Farmers Rap Unionism DENVER. Colo. (AP) - The American Farm Bureau Federation convention struck today at what it called monopolistic practices of organized labor and criticised moves of some unions to organize tanners. Federation President Charles B. other economic group, would result in drastic antitrust action." Several membera of the Resolutions Committee predicted the day will come—and perhaps soon — when organized agriculture's biggest battle will be to head off unionization efforts in the farm Ueid. Shuman told the annual farm'1 meeting that much o( the tmem-i . . payment in the country’s steCl in- ™ durtTcould be attributed to un-j authorized for justified wage increases that *p|,Ufi **|*®*£ helped to price steel out of iU ketlng and pricing of farm prod-markets. hTSd. «**" ,He ""***" Resolutions to be submitted to | AIMS TO EQUALIZE tbs convention later this week hit compulsory bargaining by labor at necent efforts on West Coast unjong in industry, they said, is and in pome sections of the North-1 designed to equalize the bargain-east to unionize farmers and farm !jng power of workers and employ-laborer*. ' era/ ■ • i, * •* * ’* * “The concentration of economic "Farmers are far hore vulner-power in labor unions permits re-L;We t0 work interruptions Qian sort," the resolutions stated, 't0 0jhCr employers because their measures which, if used by any|crop|t mu8t be harvested when ■ ***“ dividend notics “ ’ ready. Not only a year’s income, mux P^*t ito*toi» u5ndre*tiur|but a substantial investment ip SEXiZi d“id.nd at ja._r._u of bringing crops to harvest stage, uta Md *“h-d*1d«d ‘sPavaunhi; I may be lost in a relatively abort to tht custom*i* on I Sn'SwViir. VuiX twikd1 u*iboM | “Compulsory collective bargain-nMinos c«h 5a^£gdcLARKBON ling by .unions for farm workers Executive vie. Preiid.ni I would not result in equalization of md fcenu^ u i«M I bargaining power but rather the subaltern of farmers to labor union leader*.’’ - As to farm policy, the resolutions stuck pretty closely to I' adopted a year ago. They call for a minimum of government intervention in agriculture—or a rejection of farm programs advanced by Preaidant-elect John F. Kennedy. 1r ’ ♦ * The1 Kennedy, program — which Shuman predicted Congress will reject—would Impose rigid production and supply controls on farm product^ and raise price supports major devices for eliminating troubtewme farm surpluses' and raising farm Income, he said. The Farm Bureau would accomplish these same goals by reducing price supports to discourage unneeded production and would set up a land retirement program for wheat, corn and other livestock feed grains, soybeans and flaxseed. Farmers wou' ' to idle a specified part United States i sufficient to pa terest of .11 si cum so much M*a M shall I ■■■■ principal ot said _ Interest the principal and : Notes and acre.* ' th* proceeds ot a— "Iffimnt to pay the W of naay’at'wiitoh lor the benefit thereof. Under r.i ment, at maturity. N the principal are iateraat on said Njotet. Th* validity of tho Preliminary Loan . Notei and at said reaulslllon agree ment’ will he approved by Messrs. Die) Inein Wright. McKaan and Cudllp. k Pint National Building. Detroit * Michigan, dhd such attorney's opinio win be furnished to the successful put chaser without charge ' All propoeal* for th* purchase t. •aid Note* shah be submitted In n form MMM by the Loral Public Ager— ind shall bo enclosed In a sealed t Agency, which should be marked a outside "Proposal for Preliminary Notes." Copies of such form of Dotal guy ho obtained from the Public Agency nt th* sddrtoO thorn. Propoesla may bo subml Ject to completion pursuant IF graphic tastrnotloas which must b celved by Urn Local Public Agent or baton the time above specific; the opening of prone—1*- *" *** certain statutory sod pollcji d Five-Eighths per- Pjwmh i among proposals speelfy-lowest Interest rate, award UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) -The future of the U, N. Congo command hung in the balance today as two more nations served notice they are quitting the peace force. ★ * A Announcement by Guinea and Morocco that they are pulling their troops brought to four the nations withdrawing from the Congo operation and cut its manpower by almost a third. The United Nations has nearly 20,000 men in the Congo, but fewer than 17,000 are actual troop contingents. The move by Morocco, whose 1,100 soldiers constitute the biggest single unit in the Congo, prnd Guinea which had 749 men in the field brings the withdrawals to more than 5,300. Hie United Arab Republic announced earlier it was pulling out 519 men, and Indonesia said it was withdrawing 1,150. it h it The pull-out was seen as a serious blow to the *U. N. command which has been under bitter attack from the Soviet and Asian-African blocs during the preseht Congo debate in the Security Council. Both Guinea and Morocco coup-id their announcements with charges that Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold's Congo operation had not given protection to Patrice Lumumba, deposed Con- go premier arrested by the forces of Army Col. Joseph Mobutu. Both nations accused the United Nations of failing to carry out the mission with which it has been entrusted in the chaotic African state. ★ -\ ★ k Ceylon made takt-minute ef to win East-West support for a compromise Congo peace plan before the'council attempts to wind up the question tonight. An appeal Jiy Ceylon’s Claude Corea won a stay of action after Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin, council president for December, tried to push through to a windup Monday night. Corea said he was putting the final touches to a resolution which would have the council give Ham-marskjold additional power to restore order in the Congo. it h .♦ The resolution,' also supported by Tunsia, would call for the disarming ot illegal armies, withdrawal of all Belgians, freedom for all imprisoned Congo political leaders and a new session of the I Congo Parliament. Efforts have been going on since the weekend to soften the tone of the proposal to make it acceptable to both the Soviet Union and the Western power*. Farm Leader Rejects Kennedy's Program DENVER UR — A major farm organization leader today urged the new Congress to turn thumbs flown on the farm program President-elect John F. Kennedy promising a new era of government regulation of agriculture. President Charles B. Shuman of the American Farm Bureau Federation declared farmer* rejected Kennedy proposals at the recent presidential election. Moot Midwestern farm states voted for Vice President Richard M. Nixon, Keuedy’o Republican "This election should end for all time the fiction that tamers want more government regulation and price determination in this business,’’ Shuman said. The farm leader expressed this opinion in a speech prepared for the opening session of the federation’s four-day national convention and at a news conference. Ia appealing directly to Con- but which Congress refused to extend beyond this year. Under this plan, tamers were not required to retire land to get price supports. Shuman told the convention that a favorable economic climate that contributed to a high level of employment was one of agriculture's greatest needs. it it it In the light of the recent elec-i results, Congress should quickly discard such discredited ideas as the multiple price certificate plan for wheat, compensatory income payments, comprehensive supply control and other schemes calling for increased government interference in the farming business," he said. The Farm Bureau convention is being held in the headquarters city of one of its major rivals— the Notional Farmers Union. The latter supported the Kennedy program during the campaign and ita leaden are expected to carry much weight with the new administration. that many Democrats ia Con-greaa term states will ahy away from the presMeat-etect’a pro- ____ ■ “They must look to 1962 for re- nsekc^" ?ld Agency reselves the right to award want to VOte for programs fam-sor Udder all or any part ottel^m es which inch bidder oners to ] a* In hi* proposal. such propoeal; provl • ISliSM principal U ha rennet of tl re* oppose." lat* tf'Tees MORE THAN IKE ider. such! Shuman himself is a registered ! Democrat. He spoke against the proposed award If only _ - — mawai'g adoa. It 1ST, offered In such proposal -a-u he oraratod, and said Nous will I ttosd ia MmlMtHM la the order the loweot dmomiootlons —l"-/ ■The lowest denomination* specified Ip such propooal: prodded that aa* Hot* Mf h losuad In S nualler de-aogUnatton than I* otherwlae specified The further right Is r*o*r»aS to rsjecl eey or aB propoeal*. Bertloo MS If) of th* Mooting Act ol IMS. *< set ended iS UB.C 1452-jig e Idol ** folio an "QktlaaWkns. la- dudlng interest thereon. Issued by legal public agencies for projects aaslsted ijpamnt to tM* title, ond income oe-rtvad by euch a gene lee from such proj-seta, shall be lUSSSWt from afl taxation soaOlp 9Mla that prior to campaign. The Kennedy pr^osala called nr more rigid production and marketing control* and for higher f^rra: income guarantees than espoused by the Eisenhower administration and favored in the past by die Farm Bureau. The Farm Bureau hopes come up with proposals that might help sidetrack the Democratic rveetrad by prlva ■ -therefor the income ;*sr? errr or rotmao Platform drafters worked on a land retire meat program that would require farms to Idle a part of the laud used to grow aurpioo rropa if they wanted price support aid. Such a plan would be m ud broader than a soil bank plan set up by the present administration, Pen-Size Guard Against Radiation Is Developed OAK RIDGE, Tenn. (AP) — De-cejopment of a new type radiation protection Instrument called the personal radiation monitor | has been announced. The device, about the size of a fountain pen and weighing only 3H ounces, emits a warning tone and flashes a small light in the presence of a gamma radiation field. Scientists here Monday said its greatest value would be the immediate warning it would give in a radiation accident. The device was developed by R, H. Dilworth and ,C. J. Boricow-ski of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory's instrumentation and controls division. The greatest wagon road this world has ever seen—the Oregon Trail—passed through Nebraska. The ruts of the road 'can still be found in many places across Ne- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. DECEMBER 18,-1960 Heip Winfred F enuls 7 w A N T R E S U L T S ? TRY W A N T \ A D S FE 2 8 1 8 Death Notices CURTn, d________________ ____, R. Ill Fovrth at.; •«* 3j loved sop if kfr*. LUfUa ] and Carl Curtis: drar brotl. MarUyn sod' Oory Curtis Christopher Bolley. Recltatlk___ . th#^ Rosary^ will to held Tuesdsjr Rome*mpttDtrtS'*servlc* will be held Wednesday. Dec. 14, it it ta, |[nm « lSIchlal Asttogl Church. Am tlo“of Cemetery, , ----- SvnhaiCdW ft i960. oioftdS A.. 314 Unden; Mt T4; beloved - husband of Alio* Dunham; dear father of Arlla* Lowery and Robert S. Dunham; dear brother of Mrs. Orsce Mobey: also survived by Six grondehfldren Funeral • service wTU be held —"— I Fsrmer-anover elating. Interment I cumiftry. itr.i_pu£haa_ lhineraS* iSiuM EL WELL, DEC. 11,. IMS, LSLAND Bruce, H I. IIMliiad; age 10; beloved hunbsnd of aojai* B El- Church of Christ with Rev. Wit-r llsm Parent officiating. Inter-. ment In Perry Mt. Park. Mr. Bl-wall will lie In state at,the Pun-ley Funeral Home ottkr MMM whlel'Soie *ho ” the church to time of service. KINO. DEC. 10 Hat* until ALFRED Funeral Home, Lake brioa, with Rev. Walter C. Baliagh officiating. Interment In Oleawood Cem- 2SJ’ Kfe randchlld. Pu- Hoar officiating. PoUowlng si IN LOVING MEMORY OP FRANCIS Lloyd Hnrmes who passed away 3 year* ago Dec. 13. TU^memorjj fades and Ufd departs, —Sadly missed by Dad and Mother IN Lovmo MEMORY- OF BILLY T. Peterson, who passed away Daesmber 13, ISM. Gone la th* face wa lovad so dear, Mlent Is th* volet we loved to hear; Too far away (or eight or epoech, But not too far for thought to COATS ______funeral home DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-1131 _ SPARE8-03IPFIN CHAPEL Thoughtful Service _FE 2-1 Donelson-Johns Voohees-Siple FUNERAL HOME —Established Ove Cemetery Lots. a LOTS, WHITE CHAPEL. WILL sacrifice, or 3-4W4 BOX RUTLIBI At 16 a. were repii office in boxes: _ . • «1»h Dial* MW___ n. Today there 5XFEalNcEb biHOLE Man on * at The Press H fl| ““ Hta Ponda* PreM FOR WANT ADS7 DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 ajn. to 5 p.m. SSSflo . t which b Mae pWlb... ... adjustments will ba given Ul}* for advertlse- X’J ADVERTIHERS ■he deadline Mr cancella-> of transient Wont Ads nubile) InserUi CASH WANT AD RATES Lines 1-Dny 3-Day* 6-Days 1 *18 18 18 3.1. 4.60 WM 1104 4.60 (.16 13.S’! 6.66 6.00 13.60 Itlonal charge of • mod* tor us* of \ 8 J6«n will be n Help Wayited Mile ^ $90 WK. GUARANTEED SALARY Phone Mr. OnldveU. PS 4 0904 betwten 9 i m and I p.m. ] MEN OYER 31 ilteDED mediately. For Information call Mr. Teaptoe. MA 4-3411 to 6 p.m. dally. Commerce-Union Lake area Excellent opportunity vnneement with u Natl________ mobile Finance Co. Prefer a man arouod 26 yrs ot age Must b* a high school griauate. Oood starting aalary with ear allowancefurnished. A liberal plan of Company baneflts. Call Mr. Pasehh* at FE 3-6314._________ LAROB EASTERN MANUFAC-turlnp Company r— — •— t Mil week. OR ipani (ring . __iranc rail remen men with reliable tabllshed wholesale No traveling, all _________ . benefits Including group laout ond profit sharing ntlra-Mtnlmum average income, per week. If you nr* mtoroel n permanent poeltlon, with avenge Income, 36 to 66 yti age and ready, to etort lm ately. phone >■ 6-6436 toi polntment. D SPENDABLE WOMAN TO CAM tor >-y*at-old Bay to our hom*. I mornings a weak. Oxbow Lake araa7isf»T*naa*. NM 3-SBM. , DENTAL HYOliMUrf. THU F06I-tloo offers allhoknl surroundings, sssoelatss nod good s*L Paid vaotltaa. Call flST; EXPERIENCED WAITRESS FOR {ri',«luburh Av* *”d 8Un' Appl)r dren. lit wssk. PE k-414t after o!rL FOR BABYarriTNO. WHITE Uw iTwTiw. . OIRL OR WOMAN Poll CHECH - ^‘SraSira.« phone orders and writ* up eharges. Good memory too friendly perstfnallty ___.____ MA 6-U64. OIRL FOR GENERAL IN8URAN(5i agency. Must be experienced in •«t^ws ol Insurance. Call LI Bte.’bib. AND BAT. 6 A M. TO i bnbyalttl Own IfEbi^AL ABalSTANT, PART “— Monday Tuesday. Wednet-■ Friday 1 to 4 p.m. and i, training Bafurday I ___ commensurate with . and experience./To WMMi January Ith and 14th, 1641. Call for mtorvlew/R. C. Jacobi, M. D„ Okford. OAkiand 6-1161.______ MIDDLE-A^CD WOMAN TO >TAKE charge of household. Must be reliable, and permanent. Children to CchpOl. Parents working Rm. and baud, wages. FE 2-7007 or 36 ml Hams St REFINED WOMAN. LIVE Of. CAM of 3 children 6 and 1 rears old. General housework. Walnut Lake MAylnlr 4-1036 after 6 p m. SOCIAL WORKER Al 106.40 weekly to etort. Roc- ffifri«.tiMS5nutJS raeanclos to local area. Ex-romotjonnl oppor- _____s' benefits' klust have two year* of collegs preferably with some courses yexri°Cof recent**!ulW I m * paid eiperlenco in social Obtain application lor examination by writing Michigan Civil Service, Lansing, 13. iunltles. , n few it p o. Box II, Drayton Plains WHITE - MOTHER* HELPER live In Responsible with Capable^ w|th ^ general^ 5-0063.' Work Wanted MfW if EXPERIENCED MEAT CUTTER a*ad* work, 3 year* *Ep0ti«as*, FE 4-3416. /SjgL'.: saaSsigJaig- '* MAN OO.^DMmBB WORE. Mill MT MB OF work, loaf rtMntMki m-totmr polatlag. FB 6-0461. “tt^as.,^221 f?^!2S&„c!SSa5«S PADfTINO INl'BRfOk' '4gP JK- tertor. By lob or hour. P* 1-6403. work*!,, wlpdow and w*U washing. painting, odd Job* and light MaBagrPlfyteB ' ALL WaaHINO NT- MACNm ra$i, upbol. cleaned- FR 1-9439. YOUNO MARRIED MAN IMMIRIB Work Wtetcd Ffmah tS l-DAY IRONING 6BRVICE, axp., __references, |3 bu. FE k-6473. ] i-DAY iiftMqn BMVIOl. W/ refsrencea, 63 A nn. Fa 6-1411. I WOMEN WANT WALL WABH-and housecleanlni. PI CHILD _ CAM, OR_ FART Tlte DR '8 ASSISTANT, EXPERIENCED " yrs. < Can also do EKO's and a.R.'s PWone. PE 444H GENERAL CLEANING BY DAY. Own transportation. FI 6-4363. MlMEOORAMtifO TYPING 6EC-retarlal service. EM 3-2442 PRACTICAL NUMB AVAILABLE tens wart otflce or private ____slag. F> 6-413* WASHING AND IRONINGS. Picked up AM delivered. CALL FI 9-0724. WAAHINOa AND mOM^faBTFlCk^ up and dattvorad OR 4-0110. ■ [ BuBding ScrvicB ^ U[j •1 BRICK BLOCK AND CEMENT work. Ala* fireplace* OR 2-0400 | • LFRESIDENTIAL. OOllMERCTAL JLoat and Fom><$ 36 BEtOE' CHANOE PURSE, LOST to th* vlelalty of MeNsdl Nursery. or lUttor Morket aa UM*. Rs-ward. OR 3 1666. LOST.- T initial lit oN ( oood i,T. s P. Markot. FE 4-5765. L 6 8 T: CHIHUAHUA. FEMALE, fawn color, mmior I. Birmingham vtolalty of Flora* Street. Reward. Call coUeet. OAklaod LOST: gPRlNJER BFAkTEL, head. kaoB aara. tePO kyarp to , ieft err Raward . FE 3-7593 LOST- BLACK AND tAN PUFFY with eeSar. Vicinity cpa~«— *-* Edith. Children's uf. Lf«7rBOT'B lilBI ^VIclnltjTof PIN LOSf, DIAMOND About Itfc laches dlometor, 3 large and I small dMtmoado. fiu-tret setting, gold and platinum. Llboral reward. Robert S. Motion. FB “ gad 9 p.m FE 1-6644 between t a m. Notk— and Potmomil» JO ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? CONSOLIDATE ALL TOUR BILLS AND LET US OtVB YOU ONE PLACE TO FAT BUDGET SERVICE” II W. HURON FI 3-6666 ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEED1NO • friendly advisor. Phono FB I-6IS6 after I p.m., or If no answer, FB 2-6134. Confidential. I *«Nkr*NhiETtaMMHPQi^„ _ , modeling John W. Copies. MY 3-1186. RICK. BLOCK AND CEMENT work, new or repotr, chimneys _a specialty. UL 6-1666. __ I CHRISTMAS SPECIAL r 6316. | Your I WANTED: BEAUTY OPERATOR, part time or lull, guaranteed wage. Marie's Beauty Salon, M3 N. Pontiac Trail. Waited Lake. ney down. Licensed g. ra HUt CUSTOM BUILDING". RESIDEN-tmi aad commercial. Remodeling __and designing FE 4-6364.___ CEMENT AND B L OCX WORE. Keith Q. Slegwart. FB 6-6161. F.i.ECTRICAt. SFKV FREE EOT PARTNEY Eiecuic. F 9-9436. ixCAVATINO AND TRENCHING looting* and light dooms. UL electric Neat, insolation and wiring Raglin Electric, KM 3-4334 or M3 4-5233 _____ denomtnee. Mrs. Wall***. In DEBT IF SO LET US Give You 1 Place to Pay Ease Your Mind WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS RM. IM. PONTIAC STATK BANK , BLDa FE 1-0454 Amsrteso Assoc. Credit Counselors Michigan Assoc Credit Counselors HAYRIDE PARTIES FE 4-400 — ik He^B Wanted 8 .?f ATTENTION -le SALE, dPENINO B- , tor 6 or 3 ladlos or gentlemen. * Full or port time. Bell Walklns ............— i . ... . i, — Products, especially vitamins. 166 A DIRECT SALESMAN | jay •“Pfjf. « w MHM| "" 9 iu|pl|Mlor 55 is. 166 N. Ferry. valuable an accordingly. Imagination HOMK. OARAOE. CABINET!. AD dlttoeu Licensed builder. FMA Terms, FE UNO _ HOUSE M OV iWS. FULLY eg topped. FE 4-6466, L. A Young. loyalty to hla at aad fytura . „ _ Jordan 4-4*51__ __ tanufae- I EXPERIENCED COOK 1 “* *“ ' wanted, Oaves Prill. I EXPERIENCED HAIR salary aad coos ml 6-4434. Call from a customers REAL ESTATE SALES. 1 — -- —- mtssion. Pace, OR 4-0 UAL I8TATB M A3 Please rail Pace. OR JP COM- ie____ AOIR. Thousands ' PONTIAC PRESS , WANT . ADS (And they’re interested folks, too!) to place YOUR ad DIAL FE 2-8181 Employment Agencies 9 Auto Parts ! RENT A___________■ 1 st—mer, tools. FE 2-3116. : ! ROOF REPAIRS i EAVE8TROUOH1NO FE . 4-0444 | > R. O. SNYDER“ FLd6S"j,AYiNO i : sanding aad finishing Phone FE [ WATERPROOFING ! < Work gwnMHd. Fret MtlBftUi ; n 4-tm WILL CLEAN VACANT HOUgES completely ond malntenancr re-pair. Call FE 2-0067. __ Business Sendee IS BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. windows. Reasonable, j r„ i°5ru.i LIOHT^ CARPRNTHY^ tMSpNRT 85 FART TIME . Bookkeeper Fart time evenings. L n r g *; manufacturer with Fmtlae office, especially busy with Christmas season needs men nowl Local r**l-eon needs men now! Local resident* please. Must have ear. Agee 25-35 Phone FE 4-0002 Woman aged 30-40 with typing and bookkeeping. Xxporlencs on posting machine Oood starting salary. Midwest Bmployment. 400 Footlsc Slat* Bank Bldg. FI PART TIME Secretary appearing aad have a car, yo may be able to qualify for port UmO lOb that would enabl ___________ ______ __________ you to earn 656 per week and salary Midwest Employment, stin retain your regular jon?sFor Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Information call Mr. Taylor, . 6-6361. OR 3-0032, 16 ooo -o » ■» hIhBB PART TIME WALLED AKE I If 6 FART TIMB. BROULb lUtt CHX. Must boil or over. Neat, college atudeats earn extra Chrlstmae money. Apply 107 W. Boron. RIAL BereTfl4TEnf*M ^ Ambitious. willing to make money, nperlenc* preferred but H R. HAGSTROM REALTOR 4000 Highland Road (MOtl PE 9-0304 after 0 BILL NOOSE Refrigeration and Heating MA 4-4483 Service rl MUI Sealed Unit repair-Our Specialty ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE-pa.rlot and rewinding. 210 E. Pike phone FE 4-3001 HEAITNO. FURNACES CLEANED and eervletd. C. L. Nelson. FE 0-11S0. HOfFoIW WHIRLPOOL AND Ken more wither repair ter* ice. FK 1401. ________ SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED » FE 4-4343 SAWS MACHINE SHARPENED j MANLEY LEACH. 10 BAOLET ST. Bookkeeping 4 Taxis 16 HOLIDAf tofiter ** 500 N. Forry A BETTER WAY TO Pay Your Bills HOMEX SERVICES 300 Nation*; Bank Bldg.. Roehoster OLlv* 1-01M aad OUv* 1-0109 LORE WEIOIfT 0 A F E L t AND sconoaueally with newly released Dek-A-Diet tablets. IS eenta aS Simms. MAGAZINE* CHRIATMAS OIPTS. new aad mew si FE 3-0619. Arby _O'D0* NOTARTPiiniLic Wttl tilU£ Your plan or mine. Business self. Verne C. Hemberg, Oil* Ronnie Briar Bohd. Foattoa, SBSr_ ON AND AFtim Uni date bK-—*— ■* f wlu not to rospon any debts contracted awn mysetf Dwlia MOO Gregory Kd, V Uch’ut--------- Poatlse Michigan. PERSONALIZED Ismail deposit required) Backenstose Book Store 10 BAST LAWRENCE PM 3-1414 WUL Children to Beard 28 DAT CAlkl U- EVELYN EDWARDS ■'Vocation*! Counseling Service" COMP. OPERATORS. AOB 35-36 IMk Kart Huron «tote < FE 4-0564 _______FE HR Instructions 10 SOCIAL WORKER Al 168.40 weekly to start. Basilar salary mersases. To Ul Imniodlot* aad future servlet benefit* kfust roar* M etot '“ r with goat wore Car hoeegiary. Obtain application for exsm- — KtaRlteP paid oxptrtonea < I license. Michigan Business pales Corporation. 1673 Telegraph. ■ WANTED ATONCe WANTED man with high tch or bottor to learn r aad a real desire YOUNO MAN—II TO IS Service aad maintenance man .aotdad at eoe* to Mara repairing of electric appliances IN oat ebon aad general upkefep of oai building. Present servlet man ■tout leave for Army Jan. 4. FB 5-9243. 9 a.m. to S p.m. Hdp Wistsd Fwiils 1 BEAUTY OPERATORS WITH good^ following^^Salary aad torn- ~ fTmrsr -____ -jamr iiqito toll pick up and deliver. L 1-0030. BABYBITTER WANTED. I DAT weak. FE 9-7.716 after 0 p.m. Curb Wctitresses TED'S NOTICE: Airlines Need TRAINED PERSONNEL OrMsmaklngt Tailoring 17 ALTERATIONS ON ALL TYPES OF garments including knitted dresses and cults Expert ywk. manxlUp. Phone OR 3-7ir ALTERATIONS [ Mrs. J Manning FE 4-4614 TAILORING—ALTERATIONS I Dress Making—Fur Repair* BONA WjJWm ri nUl DRESSMAKINO TAILORING. Ale Urstlons. Mrs..Bedell, FE 4-6663. Landscaping 21 AL'S LANDSCAPING — TREE RE- Wtd. M ouAcholti Goods 29 11 CALL WILL SELL ALL TOO I have — furniture, appliance*. TV’S mlsc. Hlghet- dollar quick sort- le*. Alieo * FK *3361 ____ ' HOUSE FULL OR ' 1 graduate trainees then flown (transportation paid) to aoarast ground school W practleal orientation. Com munlcatlonists. Passenger Reservation clerks, MSm lap Ik. Stewardesses, many other*. Sincere ambitious high school grad- tudgel plan new booklet. k} toe tor to* wtU*k*^nmi5d personal Interviews, rill tn Box 13 s/t FoaUa* Press OU^NEED^A Work Wntod Msk II •1 CARPENTER WORK. NEW and raptor FE 6-7340. -1 CARPillTRT FINI8H TlllM. Custom ooMaato. FE I-MU, CABINET MAdte 'aM : bARFEN- ter Xltcben* a speelslty. FE CHAUFFEtta WA3fTS_ WORK, 36 voarg gjmartewa. FK 6-1764. PKMM1 AED CAB. 1 making WqM, Riiugh and « to*. Fhea* CARfNNT'lBBi|iaW|-,'OFi '*££. kind*. Fra* astlmata. FE 3-7314. CARPENTER #ORK OP A iff kind. Reaaoaabl*. Call attor 4 CATHOLIC WOMAN FOR UOHT p.m.' FBJWW. DINETTE. JUTCMBH CHAIRS RS-eovered. Vinyl or nnainhyd*. Fra* Call I housework aad ear* of ehlldroa. 7 a m. to 1 P.m. FE 0-0714. parlsa^taooMktog and medical work^n l-*kdl. •stimata^ Pickup and SeUvtry. _ APPtANCKS FURNITURE .AND ! TV's bv Ik* pita* or houseful lamedMM service. Dong'*- FE EIt'US Epf Tt rt^ guaranteed. FE 66351 oi INTERIOR AND EKTZRIOR FAUmno. wad washing. Fret ' oJhnteSIHrldEftl. FAINTING FAFhRlNdT REMOV-*1 Washlni. FE 6-3313 FafENjIanoBoo! pa!ntina! ^Isstar^rrpslr. StaphOi Navarre, Television Service 24 Upholstering OFFICE FUnNITURE A Equipment ForbO* 'Printing B Olflee sunpry. Ml 6-3010. Diyts. TOP PRICES FOR RAW FURS 111 Highland AvC_, Brllrvlew Maid, Lake Orton. MT j-0761. Monty Wanted il WANTED: 65AM. HIOH INTEREST good security, reply F o it le e Frets. Itoa ill. FIRST MORTOAOE OF M.W DE sired *a I k i drum older homo. For modernisation Writ* Foot ill Press Box 66. Wtd Contracts, MtgB. $8 ABILITY To |44 fast Saab for your toad contract, equity or mortgage at lewMt possible discount Most-gages available Call Tvd McCullough. FE^4-3*44. ARRO REALTY 3143 Caoe-Ellmbeth Rood ABSOLUTELY THE FaItEsT a5 BUYERS FOR CONTRACTS CLARK REAL ESTATE 5*4 W. HURON FE 3-WI6 FE »46U CASH FOR OOOD . LAND CON-traots. Private. FB 2-5001.' 1 cash for land contracts. H J. Vao Wel^Mto Dixie Hwy. On any goon toad eaatraets. Raw or seasoned. Your cash upon satisfactory inspection of property aad into. Ask tori** TampMon. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 7336 Orchard Lake Road FK 4-40*3 LANDLORDS , let Teaanto EwHBd for houoqg and apartments la or put ot tow* flood references No shorn If w* do not rank your property. R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 Sat it to o t6 but of Is. EM 3-3511 Wsnted Real BstHta 36 ATTENTION, OWNERS We aood listings on kouoos. farms,. £ssa.-T^rs,.*8- MU ^ TONTIAC REALTY W Baldwin .. FB MIW the PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1960 TWENTY *8EVKN ~B«Si4NEfe I. Rfrt A$k» FfMmd 87 Km Apia. UmfMrHbhmd M Ret Atm. UBfwrnUhed 38 CARNIVAL y^VHilW^™ ^ ^ rr ■' lr"riFr ^ ~ i------ i«^lnrar^n$ BEDRM., By Dkk Turner raw- 's3&. private bath, >*fc -......bSwb. raViii: • mom, private bath"ahd rK^^tSwr l now and bath, clean, gU JM refrigerator, nM t IMW furnished. Inquire 734 Bunn., ’ - > Rooks AND bat#. lUttwia wat and iWi f»n». pb bam tog facilities Deposit required b»th. On Mi ROOltt AND BATM~S¥?iS; —yfc ».T»0, : SHT and bath, net, ■ Inquire 100 f 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE heat. uUiratf. etove and rafrig., W 3ft N. Andtrtoo. qfter MM WARM A lib >CXASABT‘ FOR 1 m » nwl». f* %*im S jtliit HoiiittFwrtiiih+d# I BEDROOM, OQlt, CLEAR, tUS line, utilities furn. f» MW, T-fUxM. a-BEDROOM MODBRR Bb—. CaU gfj-MJi _ s-miuc. moo. cHZLbiiN wff emc, white, m Idlth. Fl Mite. ________ • • BEDROOM HOUSE. 560 PER month, 3356 VmW Commerce Road, 1 milt vm( of Oman Like rl BMTi 3-boom igktib. r0j0iS6neroR —Jar-------------* nlng.' MA ft-gUft. ft-ROOM UPPER ___________.________ > Room and bath. upper utility andfurniture tom., clato •ad prt. entrance. After ft, ove-nlnitn. 335 Voortlelt._____ t efficiency apartments. arLWaraaigr- 1-room | (ffijjIHg; 3 ROOlfo, PRIVATE BATWrOA-fill, eteftlr ternueod, no drink. F LAROB - ROOM*. PVT. ' BN-Ironco and Ub MB, Iftoo Byl- v«n BhorOA. i rooBST "clean; clou to Bonin. PE ft-tlte FLAROB BOOMS NEAR DOWN (ova. A Mo J wool upper noar I Paotlae Miter, all pvt/Taqulre B i UPPER, rrOVB^AND RE-4-ROOM dWBB '' KkAT AjrO ftOT water. adage, rafnrauftftg. “ ft ROOM rtAT, AUTOMATIC OA8 153 W'VZSt b.K'7! ft ROOM* AND BAra upper! hcattorteahad! 1M Forest ft ROOkB b6W^WfL0CAT10W. Art motile boot, l child wolcom*. PI ft-lftiT____• ft ROOMS AND BATH. HBAT. hoT valor, ra I riot rotor and turn. In Drayton Plain*. IB AgfiL______________ ’ Parson*. |UL torn., main bay., tfSi. '"~k “d APARTMENTBFURNISBKD. ctflL-drtn velcomo. oR*3-tt»l. SXir wfrk' PAfifeirn clean,' vnna. 3 room apt Prltala both tad entrance, tlft Orchard Lake i RobMi. gff Mnmwrffac Itet, ^rlean. 1 adult, lift weekly I'AKP^I-fcy^M ^ARTMBNT RiA-1 1 RMS, 18T-FLOOR' aduItb. Pvt.. near OMC. PB 3-M3«_ » rooms KrfcHBNrrri tit! JjJprth Porrjr. PB 3-ftlTI ! i roomb, NkmrTwBNtdHin; rtowntowa low ilia. For tlderlr lad». fi ft-tWl. 3-ROOM @R«iaHtD-ON OAKLAND AVB ADULTS ONLY -PRKPBRABLT OLDER MODEST ”mo"- I NOOMS^ALL UTttmES fORN COUPLE AND BABY, PRITATB I hath aadtatraaoe. W ft-Mftl. CITY COTTAOS. I ROOMS AND bath vara and dean, child welcome, PB ft-2107. ICOTTAOES, ALL UTIUTIKS. Waekljr 113 up Yni Ruattc Cab Ina ftW * Broadwaj. Lake Orion I By mm , "fg ft-BMa. I nice laboe j boom apt ptt I bath bad ML AIM 1 room prt bate tad oat. in Norton. PE 1 «mi. ■ , I « itoka, 141% Aito oa- i orPE MUR*** *** PAntKIlt Yvrn I ROOMS and BATH. NEAR ST. Mlehaw'a Church. Oaa boat fur-atebod. PImm PC MW Mote ■Ti5_____________________ I ROOM APT UNPURN EXTRA nice, ftftft per month III *. Bird I CUBAN BOOMS MAIM VlOOR. I RMS. NEAR TEL Huron, fat hobt. Adulta only. PI MSH. , . BEDROOMS. CHILDREN WEL-coma, oil floor faraaat. MS mo. ■ OR ywils. . ; -BEDROOM HOUBl^ ON^JLAKl, a month, ftftti S-1IIT or R ft-MMafter rMk._ W ROOMS AHD lUTH. WlU-Uaa furnChodr LltlS. BEDROOM.' VERY MODERN, til June lft. | children welcome, ftftft a month. UtUltlea furnlahed. pc ft-issft. BUSINESS AND RES. Ekdoliont location 'or insurance Office, real eatota. electrical or ntoiMni contractor, l room brier office apace IB the bate-menu 3 car farafO- Located Ml Oakland AVft,. Phone FE MW. ■ BEAUTIFUL 3 BED- For Sale Houses A VERT POOP BUT ON THIS 4-ROOM BUNGALOW — jpcrsns down — sis PER MONTH—rou, PRICE l tftjfto — RA| PLtX BABE- . MBNT — AUTOMATIC OIL RSAT—LOCATED IN CITY OP PONTIAC. JIM WRIGHT. Realtor j 3ft Oakland ^Are.^Open 'til ft 30 1 8PEWAL - COMPLETELY PUR-nlahed borne near fOabov Lake. Very clean and hi A-l condition . Pb. Ifn Mc- PorSdoHlBSSC 49 COLORED 3-BEDROOM HOMES $10 DOWJ^ PRICED PROM $8,900 — $54 MONTH pMUteMiar'^------ webtown realty Modal - an 8. Bird.—L 1 to I _______riiTms “When your father told ydu to have a good time, Janie, I took it for granted you had your allowance! “ i an Pcnttee Lake. Oaraie —— -------— ___boat hotiaa. Taylor. OR fttOM. koDCRN i-fcooM, partlt~>Ubn j Rent Houses Unfurn. 401 lSeDROOM. CHILDREN welcome. MS mo. OH Auburn PE HBT. ATTRACtlVS •tore, refrt _u For Sale Houses __ ODSRN I ROOMS. PONTIAC MODERN l-BDRM. HOUSE. CAB Labor OR S-SI1S.______■ tnet*. oU hooter. |OOd (arden AeeJ rsehlnw" WALLED LAKE - 3-ROOM COT- j ' MODERN ft ROOM. SEML-I AfARTkCNTB. ,J~| Rent Houses UnfMrn. 40’ school bue January. Ntwly decorated 3-h ORCHARD COURT IM Proepoct Street PS t Nov ___________lOfttCP - - 1 AND 3 BEDROOM -Modem m Erery Detail - ADULTS ONLY — FE 8-6918 _____ MANAOER U SALMER ST . APT ftj* WIROOMB. ■■_______ . BOOM APT OOOO AREA. PC ms Wf I-ROOSl APT. SUBORAN RochodWr, 1 or 1 employed par- t-aoii i LAROB ROOMS.' W EAftOKT role entrance nicely furmehed lt« B Andenon. PR S-tete _ ATH. N - ______ Rear. L _ --- 3 ROOMS, APT UTILITIES PVR. , pet. bath and entrance, OR Mate i rooms. Mffooii. csbLdmm 1 vtteaaw. tl Wtohaiitan______I 3 ROOKS. ttf^PLOoA NEAR General Haepltal For I or a tm- > ployed peogle. FE ft-SIlft. I BATH. COR ELtt- I THREE NOOkS PLUS KITCHEN sad bate All here one separated SLATER APTS. u N PARKE ST. Open Dally A Sun. IS ate- • !>•» BRICK tKRRACE. I ROOMS A“ bath, fall basement, (as bant. 3-iftte. after a am., T ” Efficiency Apartment! Urlna mam. kitchen, baterat ate N Paddock FK a-3SSS. FOR COLORED. CLEAN ft ROOI $9,50.0 earthy, EM 3-lftS|. SELL OR TRADE I Practically new brick ranch with a bedrooms, tMi bathe, fireplace, full baeement, tH ear attached fiarare and tern lot with prlvi-eges on Biindie Lake Will trade for Royal Oak property or North-weet Detroit or aott for taa.ftM - term*. CaU J. A. Taylor. Real-tor. OR ft-MM, . ' . Suburban Living At Its Best . Your future hmat la the (CONVERTIBLE 24) 3 A ft bedrooms. 1V4 bathe W. W. ROSS HOMES SYLVAN VtLLAOB 3 -------HP full bamt- get heat. »E s-2730. TRI-LEVEL STARTER I NO MONEY DOWN Build u home to be proud of. Tour lot or oars. Here model. ! J o Puttier, Builder, em ifttn ,!tO SETTLE ESTATE 'ft-ROOM I house, both, lake privileges,, go- | I rage. PS i-jllTot BM 3-gini TO BUY OR SELL SEE I' ' CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE. INC. MS* 8 MAln St. ■ J Open Dally I to 8; Sunday U to ft __________MAple S-ftgai _____ STOUTS BEST BUYS TODAY beautiful, high, i In ea^y walking Rom* eoaUlne>>( rooms a bathe. It t la eroellant co For Sele Hum 4f Ddnm 6i H< i ED ROOM RANCHJrn^.^' isr.--- uau ; ggwp-em, am bra teg. /’reaaonabte bum in fea- re^T* en, gat' heat, glaaaed-ln parch. •lS.IOO Wllh excellent terms. I-BKDROOM BRICK — Basy access to MSUO and Auburn Helgiite. studio celling Using room, large dining area. Island kitchen, full r—— mftener* M,-bfi Wy^wud.^ LIKE CHRISTMAS CANDY — This home Is a dandy Excellent neigh- | borhood. convenient location. , handy to but Mm. ft rooms and ‘ bath, plastered walla, newly dec- -orated, oak floors and full bese-i meht Landscaped yard. Mb-cer rate ceramic Utb ear attached ■* rage, ouutandln* basement with fireplace, and mahogany paneled i»wsmj scaped te WPteal , of tela fine nelghborSeed. awning*, icreened LOON LAKE PBIYILKWBS RANCH ROME itMMJpaw dy 3 bedroom brick -bungalow with attached garage. BRICK WEST SIDE TEE-RACE. Fire exceptionally Largo and vary. Usable rooms, a beautiful r--^— . COUNTRY HOME I1MN * BELL OR TRADE — Eye SJrtf 7.Tbn!rY sa ranch style ‘ basement, birch cup- RU88~ McNAB ~ ART MEYER | ASSOCIATE BROKERS I OR 3-ISM. I NOOlM Ali^ATM SMALL SA-by wileemi IM Dreidea 3 ROOMS PtT BATH AND IN- 3 itOOftgf AUBURN ' HEIGHTS area PE HW after ft a.m 5 ROOMS EVERYTHING FUR-mehed Mechanic St UL UJftft "ft Nfct ROOMS ON ONOCND floor. Private entrance and bath. West tide. PE S-SIftl. if no Saw aver ft ftwft. , _“z:r:_Lfg.ss? 3 ROOMS. WF ISdWBkN. NEW- VEST SIDE - MEAT. EOT Water, stove and refrigerator furnished Rear - it. Eteedfrt and Deaclua ecboole ahasMtef and bus sendee CaU PB MSH or i PS 4-4S3S ; Rut A^pU. UshflhM M I LARGE ROOM APT. HEPRIO 2-BEDROOM. GROUND PtB PVT wi. nh stove Walton and Opdyae At pe «■•«» 1 in' Sliver '®F LAKE VIStXTPTS. |i lUIABirkJJMJJUY atatarjwd aU MUttea furnished PB e-ISM ____J- UAROE 3-BOOM APARTMENT, move and ref rigs rater fumubrd Ut per veek. Adults only. R. J. Valuet, PE SUM. MODERN ft-ROOM APARTMENT aad refrigerator furnished “ — — S-3331 Imm I BEDROOM HOUSE" 3113 IW1I NEW 3 BEDRM HOUAI JOHN R. gr;ri rKbUl°UTl*>I>lU *** * Auburn areo gte. RE HHI M—iSJMrtfm I ORTONVILLE - miWfnSSrCb2riml?2:!"J rage. labr^prtvUrjos. Call baton 2-BEDkGoM BRiCK . HRI ...... - spies. tuU basement, gat beat. dlUoaad. Bot tear g hi family. nea*. partly fur decorated *46 per month 1 SI CnhrorL W mo Pj «-MB> I notekbnehond PE NICHOLIE-HARGER 1 north end, « room upper, by owner, i bedroom, mbbl L'p t 9181 . gas heat. Sorry no children under In'S*, blivh cupboard, water r L J-OtOJ 1 ^MjaeTmepf*. rc g.ftlM,_ I softener, aluminum “ ‘ I iw'b'fc a>'6"iOH's'wr'M ■—iim—msejumimem s-jsst White Lake Township | i rooms on ft urea. 3 bedrooms, i kitchen end dining room, nice Uvtnc room. Min parlor, basement. |*a boot. 514,000 Groveiand Township IS rooms on 3 urn. Sun pnrlor. large Hvtnc room with fireplace, nice kitchen with breakfast nook, bams excellent for horau*^ 800. CRAWFORD AGENCY M W Walton FE' S-UM E. Flint________MY 3-IU3 WILL DECORATE $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 s*4 Earn Bind N. at Valencia BEDROOMS ft 18 NEVADA 12ft weekly PB t-ftftM. before ft pm. BEDRM RANCH HOME, dren welcome, clean. FI or FE VMM______- 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX 1 sam warhick' SID ft BEDROOMS? — All th* 11 king-Sited. Th* living and dining ’! room* art carpeted! tern a a workshop, and a big ba«merit . ! with gas furnace (iarage too. | ISftO down, payment* a* low as 1 r-L I WHIT* LAK* TWF. — Excellent i ' location, and Ink* prlvtlegae too. ft room* aad both, basement aluminum aiding, aad awntng* 1 lot* IT AM with low down I Warren Stout, Realtor n N. Santee* St- Ft ft-»l«S imam to S:M PM. Val-U-Wayl FOR GOOD BUYS AND TRADES ft‘BEDROOMS .. :ui‘ .____ Only 12.000 down for tel* largo I room bungalow Full basement, gas heat, natural ftreptac*. tte bate*. Located on.* woU 1" scaped iota with > car gar TrtJy an excellent bay-[ NORTHERN HIOH HOYT bedroom brick you have boon wlehtet .pocloug, carpeted 11 v t di room and dining room. Fireplace Largo kitchen with breakfast nook Full basement. Attached I car gang*. Lovely landscaped and wooded lot ltexlte Tou mute so* tela on* — call now- gM.OOO. ume to get the boat deal on tele 3 bedroom brick ranch in wonderful area. New carpeting. Family kitchen. Full basement vUh rfp STSstS WE KAYE SEVERAL OI homos — teat can be put chased with no money down. Those an very nice home*, and should be investigated Cull fpt details. HOYT REALTY * JSft B. TELEGRAPH pm fdwl' _____ _J3L£3F MULTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICE Ate. also suaablt kitenen .Ann/vue* nti"_w*ar em E wd building Just 1-oftory » _!L ae. —----------------------- J-ROOM MOUSE WITH STOVE and refrigerator Adulta only. *30 ___________________a rttrte. IsTWaK ift. _____________ ROOM APART--) BEDRM BRICE NEW LAKE-' nee ' Carpeted, gang*, tern*. gUS. EM 3-ldftg __________ 3 ROOMS BATH OTOVE > frtgerater Town, ittgl lSedroom' modern immed- le.se' FE ASSM. ! i* BATH. OAS ——---- _ . . ■ n~ -xr.I Big Family Troubles? wSg-taar 1 NEW HOME -• ft bodrotunaj UNION LAKE sen* Ey>WHAB^B ” l»i .CRESCENT ['__ "Msi*!S*m^uuI' non UK I meats ftlM per' month OR i-ttil.' __itNeu I IDgnhad Estetea T_ ffikmlialT FE ft-S707. j BY OWNER WELL-CARED FOR! 1 rasrg-1 home in Labe Orton. 3 large bod- erpeted living aod dialog lichen. Hied hath, utility Ivllegai " i, si___________________ ______ Corner llgg Lakevtew and WI1X1AMS LAKE 9-ROOM tern. Ml mo FE ftJSftl, e< ft-t3ii' WEST SIDE BRICK. See heat garage eneral HOepItel. I__________ WEST SIDE g ROOMS, t BATHS. ... _t io bppreclate thte tergnte. Call W. W. Rote Holme*. rt OR ft-SMl lor datetl*._, WEBSTER Panrtdf * it Nvtlld|t 4 r»uV>ni *um'_________ For Rent Rssot . 1 '0-car garage. Close t is and church*. IMAM wit 1 ftawn. OaB MY S-UM COLORED SACRIFICfe lor ISAM. C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor OA SAW ________MT MSI 1 • BRICK RANCH US stOPFiNO'XflDbOR. LOE. Iron! attractive rm Fk 8-1333 ! LEAN ROOM FOR MEN ST A »*«k ______ can rOR RENT suoTino ROOMS, f 3-STORY HOME - HAS - us a ER - full dining room, family IROOM — j kitchen, largo living room, has*-— BAB meat, gas Mot. Two cm nft- : FURNISHED ROOM PRIVATE full basement garo of Rochester, S100 a---- be men after 3 30 ft ft-***-3-BEDRM MODERN RANCH eeU**Small down paym'i. Schick" *“ *k R*i«r'*hc«*. BM MT iAWI ___________■ ........ 4 ROOMS AND BATH OABAOE. ' ®i' •tf MMCf intfr Electric hot vi* j mm. >vy. nt wh^ Tw». 1 • RENT lty h»84»d FE 54177 8MALL APARTMENT IVSRTTRXNO fvntiM I ana, 535 moath VS • • 1 Rooms with Booed 431 FULL PRICB run er.eiS. . j JIM WRIGHT. Realtor ] ftftft Oakland ^Ave^Open TU I 30 ! TowreeTIargain SOUTHEAST SIDE_- 3 BEDROOM - KITCHEN uched gang*- Thru y i SlS.SOO Terms. WEST SUBURBAN : Four bedroom ri 5S3C V | FOR COLORED: kitchen, three t R. J. (Dick) VALUET Reshor FE 4-3531 341 OAKLAND AVENUE OPEN ft TO ft SUNDAY It TO * MULTIPLE LISTING MRVICS j ARRO REAL SACRIFICE — On this ft- j room brick ranch, bvltt-te oven J and mage, toll basement, oil heat. 2-car garage, nude imt finishing, large lot. Only M.2*o. PRICB RSDUCKD — gl.ggSoa this spotless 1-room home. KxcoUcnt kitchen. f*U basement. BOV (U furnace, aluminum storms and tcreens. m-car attached garage Only H.ftOft IN CO MS — 1-lamUy located on I Kvod street Separate both*, full lement. new gas furnaoa, upstairs nov rooted tor gift nor month. ft-Oar garage. Only SO.- j tid McCullough, rialtor ! IMS Cau-EHxabeth Road FE 5-1284 FE 4-3844 OmftA-M.,* MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE LITE IN TEE CITY Yfta. ”— n brand nev 3 bod-_ ,anch Imm* with ail y conveniences Larat nv- ' 1 room, sJI family tee ----------w»Ta£ ud icrttM. recrrftUoa la 1 WcbftUr bath. • ^Ihi mto ^th ; oarruiMAM. ooob "tood amp m adulu b*ri i -+SLJBSSBL jBW.--«LAga after ryg. j IF, YOU'RE TGOKING FOR .A In^co'St l-llll' OA8 I r55mT ANDV%ojtRO , _______ _ _ _ m kHd^lft-SAUNi; ‘ TtSS* ” COWRED^INCOME "rSrinwvwffv i ROOM AND BOARb WITB FARM HOOftM. BATH. COUPLE with .1 , familv m willed Lake area. Men -aSU sTi® ____ DOWN PAYMENT - gift 1 PER MONTH. JIM WRIGHT. Realtor Jte Oakland Are. Open 'til g:3ft PE 5-SSftt______ PE ft-lftftl I 313 Wmdiorna St rev Phone FE^ SSftftl EYE, FE 3-gft03 BROWN lift* DOWN - Tarn bedroate bungalow and large M. Lab* prtrt-legee. Alum. alanBK Basement oa fun. CWIered bote. Prised at towjjrtce el duly gft.teft. Meade HAYDEN --- - ’ !---- I bungalow wBh two b-«a* U now. FE >MI«. BATH CHILDREN ' Convalescent homes 44 By stJMHHMMH ---^------------------- I KgjjiCflVliE. 'ms&n&wmil .d^tpayment _ Rent Stored ____ceramic tile bate and a kitchen' that tea lady <3 tee houae would be delighted te work te. 1*4 car garage Eugte*^.-Private beuh lor the children on Elisabeth Lake. LOCATED ON CANAL With direct entrance Into tew natural hunter ~ ' large kitchen^ Sh! 1 $600 do monthly HUNTOON LAKE FBIYI-LEOEH go with this 3 Mdr room brick rancher Charming living room with brink fireplace. Mate* d > ■ < “ I spue, and cosy kitchen, ften la a lit cor at-teched garxg* Th* yirt b pretty M a pteture and the tyC*ppWti4*n> only. 2^2n^ra| privllegee. . u“rUSu:‘”. ltd price I KSLTp Mo DOWN FATftgENT W# tervftte te Foe I gi.MO cast with tow. ; PEHBY-OLSNWOOD AREA ■PT.MB-FT j ALL REPAIRS PINANCSD NO FIREPLACE AND. 8S% ^MOYOHJI* Uuote-Mer- FURNACE WOOD1 |1 cury-Comet, 331 S. Saginaw .Tft-lS" wood Mlfteordi Sin W MS - iftAji Ftrtu^ ‘ ~ COLD? CALL RERAN ’_________ COMPLETE MOTOR SERVICE WE START TOUR CAR BUMPIWO AND PAINTtNO ROCKER PANELS Sll M HEAVY OR LtOHT TOW1NO was*% INSTALtfeJ) FREE Aute sjulnge. jni Send, Orsvel and Dirt BULLDOUNO - PILL DIRT *NB|-^ top eoil. OR 3-tegg PE MISS. '* * Saw §md Mower Service t 8TORF FOR RENT *1 ttt Baldwin. »« a i tBBlSni 51 sn Bald« In FT 5-1051. , - g J 6*L f HA NSW STORES J m* t ft iB H _______g Rent Office Space ) omen FOR BENT. 4H$ Dixie Bwv_ W 3-135S. MS nTW IN HANDSOME NEW office bonding on Joalyn Are Parking. Will divide. FE 3AM -FE 1-1 lglaher 131_________ NEwoppidn A-l FLOOR SANDIHQ—WITT , 1; , THE FLOOR SANDER - PB S-Jin jtekSteA. ] PASULQN - WATERLOK ■ BRUCE | Furnace Dcslcrs ■°! furnaces, all kinds seat j , I buys Ah* Stlu MA ft-utl | Sporting Goods Rat Storwgw * RsnUls "gy * INSIDE WINTER^STONAOE^PCTt j H«atlng ; MY'ft-ltef Laky Orion. • I OIL BURNER SERVICE. CALL OR ..OlPra 'TOR tin PAMILY1 | 3A1S1 after j>m.-----i. pun^yssRy^u. | [ ••sjSdfiaSiBSeTObe" janitor sertkb. oommer- TOUR ETDIRtnw' DEALER \ rial hriMdItelal. LI AMIS or Harrington Boat Works 1 — -— MSS 8 Tte«|*«is>i Ed P* MW3 I AND LONE STAB BOATS AND OPEN BUN | AUBURN ROAD _ M to- buy. PE 11 rooms! oaraoe RKpERiwci: i 1 Crvecent Lake FE MTH ■ r-ROdSf AND BAlnC~bOWN; •wire flat, near Pontiac llator. PE MIB -. I ■ROOM ROUSE. ON commsmcb; , laktfroel. mteMt 'til June 1, MSS a mo. MAjMteS. • ALL MODERN 1-BEDROOM AU-burn Hetghu vicinity Inquiry Hi Dbrta'Riid. BIRMINOHAM. UNPURN. 3 BED* rm.. lib baths, bamt., gas beat, lmmcd. occupancy, ftlto Ml 1408 ' BRICK I-BBORObhL PULL BASS-ment. I children welcome. 170 a 1 I nuwth. FK ft-dML 1 CLEAN AND IN OOOD" COMfo- J-BEDRM MOD. RANCH OM S-““ —“■ *“■ * ---------------- Large ------------- -------- Wall Paper Steamer —“-"terg, ?— Paint, iSe. For Sik Houses 49 CUSTOM EUMPUW ^ PAWTINO — FRKKEMHMATES — DEDUCTIBLES FINANCE Lloyd Motors [y ■ reject* ee U N Body and Fandar Rap* &&&%& 3x« Douglas Fir . im. is, ec M rltede 3»J lad Doug Fir Boordt per M Rock Wool Insulation Bee Me trr H” tiHtwra. *n. ii*.«« PONTIAC LUMBER CO. Building ModemliNtkm Machine Shop Service _ ophnjime,.^ teal. Date CoBh Construction co. iBhE - MaI -jwijk cfcta* JIG borers "S^Woomote - New/jCve •ling Mde Neleoo Bldg. OR 34111 DANIELS MFO MTf Orchard Lake RA PE tftBl Painters * Docorsters _Jeiurpnte wmmwmK iNlle fW. Ueuw. i •Urttr •!••• TtrtfUc MVd|i «*• •n 011114. rm 5®wo. I w»v Tskvialou, Radio and HleFI Sarvka REST TV. I HOUR SERVICE Day night and Sundays. PE MS1S. JOHNSON RADIO & tV 4 E. Wahu fB MftdS Truck Rantai Trucks to Rent ^-TSW-mitWau*"- , AND EQUIPMENT _ Dams Trucks—Seml-Trntlers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. HA 8. WOODWARD , ft-oftgt - ya .«-u» Opto bally Including Sunday __Tucker, Aaeoclate' Brokers.1 PS HW! e DUPLEX g ROOMS AVAILABLE ' IB HWt FOR'' RENT ' EOdtaU M' ' CADM," i tee, W a mo. Childiho wtl-como. Cuh PE SjHS. .1 FOR MBIT OR BALB 1-j FOR RENT HOUSE. Mg ChlMren welcome. Cali F LAKE ok>f}g Upkolstartog ! FE5-MM iTABL OPBOLKTBBnftO^^ I13S Margaret.^Anbnrn Belghte KAKLtT'CUtTOM UFBOL8TER-Ing. im Cooley Lakb Rood lit 3-ISftl. jArage, Small | i.rfe gang*. MB *” COLORED JACK LOVELAND | 21N Cass Lake Rd.__ F* 3-«S7» | FOR RENT TO RELIABLE __________ __.ki_ I _eeter. Mich Phone OL GI. NOTHING DOWN Large M. PHI basement garage. New furnace. Large en WO »*> month Including and Insurance JOHNJ. VERMETT ItMi Estate and Insurancn EM 5HW OET tET FOR THE HEW TEAR I fcTfAYDEN, Realtor .ssment Only ill.UA »7» te * Walton PB S-Sftftl ____LAUINOER REALTY. 1831! Open Eve* ’till 1:08. Sun. IS te 3 WlMaas Lk Rd. OB ftAftftl 1 ---- — 1 LAKBVtLLE NBAR 03CF0RD SMS! down! new 1-bvdroomon 2 acre? tlLPIS. THRKK-BEDRM. RANCH Lake prlvUegea. Interior almost Northern High district, excellent finished. wtB supply for finish. condition, built 1 MY 2-379L i -------- COMPLETELY FURNISHED Large ) bedroom ranch bor- ' nntv tS US and you CSB h*1 Enclosed Owner MA 4-3334. Waited Lake. LARON FRAME. 3-FAMILY LO-3 BEDROOM CARFETTNO. OOOD j J»ted on Beater OeurL Keego house, lot. neighborhood In Norte Must be moved Sacrifice for FootiAc.gg.1te r>M down Oerter I quite removal «8 Community OE 3-MOft National Bank Bldg.__________ 3-BEDRM ~ Low, Lo\v Down Paym’t full h e tu* both, hnrdwc To. right | 3-Bedroom. West Side NOTHING DOWN IS IDLES FROM ft B*W. alt modern 3 large bedrooms “ suit 3 acre lot itr.'bjtUof^E 373ft* or Sehuett Reuter. M^Sfi^domK. 3 Booms and bath, utility room. *ft« month. OH space heating- PE ft-tbftA * lull basement. ftlftS month: Vlcln-ity ef Baeheetar. “ PONfr olil t-bedrm , cary hate, stove hii.’kmi'tilft wISt^SIDE LOCATION— I tlfmi upatalrs with l(*. tegS end 1 bedrm. downsUJrs 91 adjoining Vv hath. Lge. liv-Ing rm with flrtitec*. dining rm -and ftitra large kitchen. PlTlMA MA 4.5431 OK3-4MI ^BEDROOM. OL on Garden at RW* jirrUeT iOMBHUS! ----H and month. OIL M •3.70ft t full bet ftftft 8. A__ $59 A MONTH WEST SUBURBAN A cosy Utile 3-bedroom lob. Just right for 3 or 3 potato. M00 will m*v* you te. Lusted on Wot-Has fall BaaA Call W. W. t OR MM tor Brick 1 bedroom, attached ge- ItR ;v.f'b^*L-.JhT,«c» porches Good suburban nr0b. Priced right, quick sale. W. H BASS. Realtor ■under , ' __________FE 3-1310 LAKi ori6n—ONLY itwlmri this 3-bedroom homo. Family ■.......I 'W^T------------ iclirJ-J __________ Road. OR ft-Oftftl MUST SACRIFICE. . _ brick, ft.yonra old. Uv eq. n. Plot 3 ear garag*„Mhny extras. tltftOft tl.ogo dowjv gltej monte Information. US DOWN, FA1______P________ tft. Treat Beverly. Large i 1 DOEYJ'ARTLTFURN^ED Only kftft pvr month Story' brick. Watkins Lake area. Urge corner tot. attached 3 car garage. Ptaturw* hut* Using room with -fireplace, ill | dtntne room, 1 bedroom*, sleep* Ing porch, big closets full bose-. mote, toll bath mote. Offered at glg.ftftft Just j right tor tee large tomUy. «*» ‘’Bud” Nicholie, Realtor 48 lit. Clemens M. FE 5-1201 After ^6 p.m. FE 2-3370 |TE 4-4526 ! WEST SUBURBAN 3-bodranm ranch, plus largo family room, situated on botewtoUy ehodod corner lot PRIOCO TO SELL TWENTY-EIGHT HE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1960 /A Sale Household (bo* 68| Salt HowhoM Ooo* —' quarters. Opdyke Mfct.F» MNl. bot b chiCaoo roiaeb sXates: ■lack. *1m •, used only 1 times. Lit* MV coanMIia. M and a winter of entertainment la jrtWa. calm i-om layer piano! ___________cl i-ism _ iMtsa WKcmm. wholesale to an. Maw, ttat and npasaiaaed. 5»^ wKSWml.** Choose from g|ja. a asrsL menu oTB** *<*1*,■ °“Mr' ai co. r» 4ASM. IOER tIO ZAOSEWINO MA-:hin® In eqpxole. Dost decorative. iliia^ bund .Mam*, aawa on Duttons. aU^WItodUi control, no attachmenta needed. WIU call fgr Capitol Sowing Cantor. u. mtb.«o*kit*mt“usFmHa SIEGLKR I SnSSaanViuoroMavt, In Orchard 2?fSr!« I ■^Rt’stmXs gifts Trad# now. No uidoqy iewn. | Y.rd.tar kid’a oar, |MJ$, now WWJ^Sl «mtSoK5C£“mm I 8j^mVT3eK^ Including I year narU Warranty, Free service policy. Mahogany. Walnut or Blond Conaota. Two yean to pey^ _____ „_ ** w/tmbTambl/...- HI w. BAOIMAW PE HIM I 6MT7 Dixie Highway TRADE OAS RANGE FOR ELEC- j MA HfiiL-I----2#- For Stle MticiHiMiw|y baseboard radiator at ^^ntTKSggg lounge; aereral chairs, aieetrto watte im.' deep m,«r BATHROOM nXTURlBS. OIL AMD aaa furnaeea. Mot water said •team boiler. Automatic water . healer. HurdWUI*. elm. supplies, croak and pipe and futlnes. Lews Brother! Paint Super Kemtone aodMiutoUum RElOHTS SUPPLY MM Lancer Hd. PH HOI ridlng^nsow ne.ae, now aw. foro anOWMOw-r $168.68, now jtU. Riding trac-ir and enow blade MM Oora-inatton grill loaf burner and Used Trade-In Dept. $9,990 i excellent condition \ .ji tomorrow. Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681 hie garage. Excellent tlon. cloee to high •torte and bus One ftneet to the area, mm at III.M0 aad c«dy IIS per *2 . 2 Family Lrrs TRADE $375 MOVES YOU IN $900. * $76 PER MONTH I «•« entrance! Oak floore, plastered wall!. Auto, gas beat and hot water. Sturdy brick and itucco construction. In excellent rental location CALL TOR SHOWING Look—only $1,000 down! _______________3-1231 See Fer Yourself i CHEROKEE HILI.S! I . You'll like tte wooded, rolling 100 I ' ft. cites — controlled to protect better homes — and Ha close-in I country location — D Elisabeth Lake Road Lake Road, turn right ( Carl W. Bird, Realtor M3 Community Nat'l Bank Bldg. -•*«“ —> - UM II Scott f DLORAH BUILDINO CO. BUY SELL TRADE to aorta and of city. Con-venlent to Fisher Body and Pondoe Motors. Pull basement, automatic heat aad lt^-ear jgn^t Full price Fairmont ■MILLER gILYERCREST BOB. — Attractive 3 bedroom staglo story home new-1 hr (Mated and attracuvsly priced ! study hardwood floore, carpeted, living room, full bases* out. fnm-! tty room, screened porch, atom ! storms and serseas, garage, lake . Mir. gad many additional features far family comfort. P.H.A. LETS TRADE ROME AND INCOME - JUMP ---* "in hatha, separate ___gas furnace and r heater. Good rental porch, and forage. Comfort plus ..lag Wrge fnmilyrprieod at 11(60 William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 aw IT* West Huron Street - Qaas s to » | .SCHRAM n PUtv Santa Claus »'thought of h|Mam| ^ ers.'s LETS TRADE REALTOR FE 4-05281 377 g, TELEORAPE—OPEN EVES I JOHNSON S3 YEARS OF SERVICE SYLVAN LAEEFRONT Businessman, her _ . you hurt been looking fi room brisk ranch —-garage. Largo living r fireplace, largo family n “ I-*" DOOR BARBECUE. Monthly ni meats only *61. including tsi... , add Insurance. UST WITH ! Humphries] 13 H. Telegraph Open Eves ! FE 2-9236 j NOTHING DOWN—Sfk EVES. PE 5-1311 For Sale Acreage 2 ACRE BUILDINO BITE IN burn Heights, on paved street. | hT National Bldg. FE 4-4T3 Grt Out of the Rut ! " Consolidate your debts. Let n J«y Off your ezlatlng morigan >• land contract, personal debt GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of Pontiac >1 W. HURON PE 4-1155 Deluxe 3-Room Outfit Complete bedroom. Boa, springs suite. Table and lamps. Dinette $41.6$ down. Terms. I1I M per WIU ti JOSEPH g» »• 4atxH Wyiei ffy-ff I 16x49 33-fl. Iwn mmi . - -. • »» 415*6 til Plasterboard ...|t.3t jlzm——JL52H5! Burmeister HiFi, TV and Rmdlog 66 t.UMBER COMPANY 1141 Cooley Lake Nd BM jMIU Open 0 am to 0 pm dally tape recorder. Uke , Sunder 10 a.m. to jp.m__ - - - -M4- . I AIR COMniBgiOR. SINOLK AND CHRISTMAS SPECIALS | _ 3-phaae, Hip Ol IWM. RADJOB_ 5-tube $3«.*5 DOW $14 $5 CEMENT 8TEPS.- READY' M ADE. M all tlaea. Splash block. Soar sllia. i chimney caps. Pontiac Pre-Caw •to^ A . ¥ W. Sheffield. FE FTOI»"^?AWAy!^Sr 'tz CHAIN i$AW Ito McCOliOC* ■ FLAY PLAN. !--------MJMP*-,... o^^us^i^p^tfM^rv Disposal Sai© ' one a bargain^ q ' ) Everything must so including GRINNELL’S !t . r. u oTIr? mo m 2t g Saginaw______PE HIM | All length* la slock now hi nTiM TV $25 OTRKRA ! Oft them while they last peers AopUance, *Ml Commerce ! Pto# *U* M Rd at Union take Rd * r *“ ,r ‘“w* ‘ in a RADlOg ANDT __ _______________ jSm Built-In features Which will i bar days a Job Thera are < . lately bedrms. ret. rm.,3 places with Oeorglan marble, a tear garage all on an at.___ tlvely landscaped lot and the price is only $l6.$oo. Immediate Possession Rang sw key eo^ your Cbrtstmar Evenings after g call Mr. Ham-mer, MA 4-3157. A. JOHNSON & SONS I REALTORS FE 4-2533 1104 ». TEUBOBAPB _____ _____i delightful bay window to dining nren. Also, roomy living room and 2 bedrooms. Pull bassmtnt with high celling, well lighted. Title is the hone you have been looking fon- PHA JIM WILLIAMS REAL ■STATE, 1483 BALDWIN rg 4-0547 After 0, Pi 4-6240 MULTIPLE LISTING SIR VICE IRWIN " r.‘ f" wicMSbham I 7188 W Maple MAylalr M250 51 ACRES. CORNER FARM. 2- I bedroom home, barn garage, i chicken coop, small orchard. $10,650. oath. C. PANGUS, Realtor ORTON VILLB 68 South Street HA 7-201* Sale BusineiB Property 571 CITY LOCATION Open Swaps » Clarkston. Trade loi Furniture Company 79 Bomb ' ; COME IN ANlOIC THK LATEST I in Phllco tot Mil. If tncto por- — | Redwood paneling MUNTZ? BEAUTIFUL MAHOO ! P'SleSS^blL. , ui assr*wtth do°"on,T ® 4m«m stmm **_w*R_i----------—------Pre finished ptyi- Nearly complen TOO CAN ALWAYS PIED ____ .election _ „ ______ guaranteed need televisions OBF-L TV 3130 mixabeth Lake Rd FE 4-6*45 BLACKETT* BLDO. (UPPU3U CLARKSTON Ml Dixie Hwy MA $4*11 Partridge lue, MT 3-1313. _______ wblng1 ND STAND. j}j|jr Wat« Softeners 66A ; do too have a paint < IS the ••BIRD ' TO 8EE SUPER RESTAURANT __3-67*5.______________ CASH POR USED T phonos, and tape r Fenced-in lot end a 3-car garage Autumn 1-eaves Depart For Christmas Sentiments We mean buslneis when we-ofterj this fully Insulated 3-bed room bun. fuU°beoemtnt.* oil heat! In*a vood neighborhood Close to schools and I •• stores, (or only 110.360 IVAN W. SCHRAM 1 REALTOR FE 5-9471 GLES Only $10,900 bath, ^irst-ctoss condition, automatic gas heat, also ga- WEST WDE Beautiful 3 B.R. brick ranch built to 1IN. iTill basement, ga* heat. *h ear garage, fenced rear yard, large landscaped lot. sewer and water, cloee to grade and Jr. High schools This home Is la excellent c gasmen aad priced at only Slt lid with reasonable down payment. Balance on PHA mort- FE MW FE 5-4*41 KENNEDY LAKE PRIVILEGED. BRICK,, 3 bedrooms on large well scaped lot. This one lx on i ton street. Baa lull bam alee kitchen and e< - ■ STseWv a? and LOW LOW i VlRFRTONE STORE I 146 N. Saginaw FE 8-2626 DAVENPORT AND CHAIR. OL ----- — - —Rochester Was! *n.nZ ™^ «At» *** per and MY* 2-3561 °a” | HnwM 838. 31 - — —- bund?" Ptoe E,?UITY INSIDE Federal 3 bedroom sml I'^ear garage'hi Um Waterford Ttrp. ones Realty. FE ; R. J. (Dick) V'ALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 34$ OAKLAND AVENUE . OPEN I TO I SUNDAY U TO 4 l DOUBLE BUILDINO — PARKING e have the | eluding older r JUST RIGHT! Yes. these r* M j%t.r'2fh,l OFF ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 3-bedroom brick ranch-sl home. Max large tot. toll bx i. Refrtgt springx ,616: xofa X3». bed spring! I new gray bedroom •M: c.as and elect, bed. all priced for quick We buy. sell aad trade Tn Department, Pearson' tod matching fabric selection Berrv Brae. Jelled Magic ao-drtp patos. OAKU. ^_________, MH 1436 Orchard Lake Ave PE Mill i B-rmnr 1.1 a H t Fixturea LIONS ANNUAL RUMAOS SALK - aad Prl. I ajn. to 6 p.m “* * * “ ‘ft.® __ i Lake Avi , ELECTRIC OVKN WITH CAW^ttR. I $30: gun cabinet. Ml: dressing tabie and stool. $1, ulephone stand. »: andMps - __ Me n | - fully Insulated. Can be handled Partridge It THE "BIRD'' TO MBS Bloomfield Hills Address and schools • but relatively low taxes Foar years ahl. well planned. 3 bedrooms. 1 baths. ; ranch, luxurious Florida room. ] breakfast apace and dining room j Carpeting and many other a*tn> Corner Tot with weedless GEORGE R. IRWIN. REALTOR | ! 2M _W _Walton FE 3-7*63 For Sale Lake Property 511 Templeton r Montcalm Street ^Ni %Ku Partridge AND ASSOCIATES BUSINESSES THRUOUT MICH ON W. HURON_FE t-3541 GIROUX SAOINAW ST. BUY ____ THING AND BVKRYTHI1___ AT THE SAMS TIME YOU BENEFIT THIS WORTHY m GROUP. FOR FURTHER __INFORMATION, OR 1-MI3 NEW GAS RANGE AND RKPRIO erator and household furnishings_ Trade for good used car p* I FOR _ 3-6028. | ver OUTSTANDING COLLECT IOH~6> ELEC CAN OPENER. rxa * er! For Sale Miscellaneous 671 Oakland pukl - paint r.or «36 Orchard Lake Ave PE $4i A-l cm-PONK II HKTOL COM- TOtCTRIC L f.Ojl TfPlKT rieto wMt menu, anunaa. I».) ^tar*0S‘l0oiT.li!?^*n»v.nii: —----------------------r~.--- 61 66 parch. Si 5S Irregular* Christmas Gift with samples. Fric»s - » t PULL IN. TRICK I'MNAftf ~BLSW£iM WITH M6- ‘rSTSTS ^ Cash h Carry Installed Price *31.65 ^ Federal Modernization j- cmonvi uv i-ite after i36 Dixie Hwy. PR 3-7B33 i FORMICA. PLUMBIMO. I usio TIMKEN OIL FURNACE {*»«. wiring Open 7 dai and blower TIM BTU. Bargain. H7>>- Montcalm Supply. 1 73 8. Parke_____ i ileataajto. . ~ LOCH INVAR WATER rKE* *T*ND1NQ TOILETS 15ALI I BORROUOH5 1 30-gal gas ! DeuMe bowl *tob ......lit jAAiAf usd . *»-in hard copper "NEVER I TR ti-M73. "" -____________j, Mto jengtba I7e ft. pm. Foul space heaters, c pow- , *i£J ilawS, f *»,'r ELECTRIC STOVE. PtNETTE * A- ] er planer OR 3-3*66______________ Jtl copper ' f 3 8TRINOR BRASS SLEIOH BELLS 66 fl I different laagbto. Call anytime- - 3-pc. l : 1634* OakbUl. Hotly Ph. MKlrose _Whli .j w5m.___________________ . •***“ j 4 ROOM OIL SPACE HEATER 1 lank Elec ‘ FURNITURE FOR 8ALE i I FE 2-1776. _____ H ! FREEZERS UPRIOHT FAMOUS . I Will s Close to Union Lak# , Older home to exe. neighborhood i Kent, L ie Bus. Prop. 57A Needs some dee. 3 bedrms., sen. -----——-----------------— I dtn. rm . closed porch, full bath. | tall heart., ett heat. 3 ear gar and'he^Jdnly VftWgl W •tur meat aad automatic oil l furnace Newly redecorated Inside and out. backyard ail fenced and Is wan toad- Auburn Heights ltrgt 17xli living room' cxrpet and drape* lnclnded In TttQ print of ootj $1,450 carport, patio. Variwqot, wood fencing to back aad gfhar eatras. Call for ap- Crescent Lake Partridge > AflflOCIATBS KAMPSEN REALTY ! {Pontiac-Watkins Sub. ! 3 bedroom brick ranch, tiled j bath, targe living room carpeted .Kitchen and dining area : GILES REALTY CO. I {£}&*, “m T n Mill 331 BALDWIN AV* wlth fi^B-O grill: - m/03^\SMi t£ortea • ****** T*m*'. -*■ - Price $22,500 . !$325 Down Veto tote 7 room modern brick , 2 bedroom, basemen ! ranch home. West Bloomfield Twp j nice lot. Oas space Has 3 way fireplace to, living j $4.47*. *$« per mo. ream aad family ream. Full baste- . menu 2 ceramic' tile baths, base-12411 Elisabeth Lk_ Rd. imilia 3-3266. • COOLEY LAKE Lbedroom^bungalow ^Meo^tot*. faim* kitchen Fuff bksemieot. oil furnace. Must aell, leaving state — 16.500; $$0C dawn OXBOW LAKE 2 bedrooms, new basement, siding nod tormtee. Near Dublin 8chooL $6,560 ISM down. Paul M. Jones, Real hst, 132 WEgT HURON 8T. FE 64656 . FE H27* LAKE FRONTAGE Three Bedroom Home, built In 1(61 Natural Fireplace la Uv- ' proslmately 3 acres.. of land. Swim and fish from your own btek yard Eight miles from Rochester. 831.600. Howard T. Keating Co. OL 1-8159 WHAT DO YOU NEED? Open •til ~t. Sunday Sale L»nd Contracts I% DISCOUNT. 13.174.1$ ! snef at 1*7 interest. C. Psi (0 8. Street, Ortoavllle. 7-2018. ) CONTRACTS TO BUT ( STORE FOR RENT. 20x00. WOULD | be good for hardware, restaurant. , $125 a month. FE 3-7888, 1 4 STORE OR OFFICE BUILDINO. !. 20x80 Built $ years ago. plenty ' of parking On one of the busiest { street* In town — block and J half west of -Telegraph on Huron , Street Call Lakewood Lanes Bowl-' 3 tog Alley FE 4-7043. _____j USED CAR. LOT WITH OFFICE 100 ft. on Baldwin. Located at 485 1 -Baldwin- Phone FE t-iMl_.___j1 WILL BUILD 8TORES FOR LEASE ; to shopping center. Dixie Hwy. at I -M15. UM 2-6405 Business Opportunity 59 ARE YOU LOOKING TEAGUE FINANCE CO. I ptoi AbS.5.x.OT2rAi.rx;-1202 s. main you this up-to-dste ' office supply I 214 E'. ST. CLAIR | iM ROCHESTER ROMEO' | LOAMS *25 TO $566 SELL OR TRADE | 1 AKC Beagle, male. IU ,yrs. I Good on birds gad rabbits I Hinlas 16-ga, pump, vent, rib I aad choke, like new. Trade for table saw or De Walt radial arm OENERAL REAL ESTATE _ saw aad pay differnce. OR 3-015S. ‘ S!*!# on,yfin sell or tram ... . ----.___ bungalow vm alum: storms, gas torn., oak floors aiM 601 Paved street Nice lawn. Italy 4 — — j yrs. old. Well constructed. Priced ... at only $8,250. Immediate poues-A"‘ ?ion. Will accept late model ear. *wa Und contract or housetralier as l,A down payment. Call FE 2-4(10 * -'■ for. Mr,' Brown. Eves, call 61 OA 8-2616. TRADE *6 PONTIAC TOR FUR- ! nlshing for 4-room houso. OR ! I 3-5696. | Partr TlW ML WE BUT-8KLL-TRADB skotok. Barnes a Hararav w. Huron. PR $-6101. Opes lINCBjCTLVTOTOTOTOTOOT range Tory cheap FE 2-4675 inch a5TPipe *0210 imp Pumps $26 (6 SAVE PLUMBING SUPPLY '2 8 Baglnaw FE_*-2IM r good "tuba *PST fi° Pn“n« oroora ptoase. Micmgan . « INCH SOIL "PfPK. 13.88. COP gooo luua. rgj riUOrescent. 313 Orchard Lake | Mr pipe at HsM totot, Tint. I GOOD WHITE SEWINO MACHINE | q A iSoaim. MM MM Wool? ____' W ----'8 TVs. AS 18. 850, ONE 21" PmL- OOOD I X 12 PLUM COLORED co. 23$ Two it" picture tithes rug. also $14 a 8‘V green rug, l radio, push-button table model, reasonable FE 04506. I Nautilus 41” range hood. I HOT POINT FREEZER, LIKE NEW. feonoh doors. FE 4-W16.______ holds 600 lbs., $200. Encyclopedia I X 10 UNOLKUM 62.05 set, like now, $35. OR 3-2637. RANDOM TILE ea. Ito IRONRITE IRONKR, PROI^E Tp JjWftWn* yourself that Ironing time can BUYLO TILE 103 g- gAOINAW 1 k- --* half w«h ease and 1 24rTV. tas I" Craftsman taw. $65 Rent an Iranrlto for pen- Pi 4-Q03I _ PE 4-3373. Crump | 52-OAL. ELEC. HEATER.' (Mi*' 38-— --- — heater 666.**. Ewt SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY I1».g. gagUtoW __ FE $-210 OUN RACKB *16; N O C K I N ( iARAGKDOORS s on gerage r BERRY IKX)R !>ALES open from (tot Noon on Saturday 271 » Paddock PE 24202 4to ! hot" WATER HEATERS. 3$ UAL. 1 riooaumcrw approved. MMi* *38 $0 and 6*6 56. marred. I YEAR’S BEST BUY ; LIQUOR HOTEL, with liquor and , beer carryout. 50 miles North ol Pontine. Grossing over $6,506 a | STATEWIDE : 1 Real Estate Servlet of Puttlac I B. D. CHARLES, REALTOR HIT 8. Thlograph ■ FE 44631 I BE IN BUSINESS FOR YOURSELF j car- attached forage Will coti-{ alder lease with option to btqr. Crooks Road. Area Owner leering state, will aril with 1 tow down payment their 7 ream ranch bungalow with breeaeway and attached garage. Monthly | pay menu including taxes and to-1 gursnee M3. N. Saginaw Income A completely furnished 3 family SuTTaantiL rearanalrtlTriee ani ■(WEBs mL brewer JOSEPH r Mil. SALMI MOR • Whatever It it, youll ________°*ai j have more success, in finding it in The Pontiac COLORED ; Pre*» Went Ads. j Roosevelt ’ Hotel!" Cail" Hot* ^AGSTROM NEW LISTING - $750 DOWN -located on Cedardale. heat. Needs .decorating at to move to at ance. SMALL FAMILY HOM3C__-^_On S' tor tofetmattoS please can Mrs I Howard, FE 24412. WUitam Killer Realty. 676 West Hhren Street 1 A MONEY MAKER FOR YOU - Drlve-to within 5 miles of Po- Plenty of parking. Building equipment all |MHR| AUTOS Need $25 to $500? See " Seaboard Phone FE 4-7017. 1185 N. Perry St. PARKING NOa PROBLEM Seaboard Finance Co. WHEN YOU NEED .$25 TO $500 We will be glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. *502 Pontiac state Beak Bids. FE 4-1574 For Sale Clothing BARGAIN BOX 46$ S. WOODWARD MI 4-4*31 Inner spring Mattress Box Spring Only $14.95 Head boards, *415 , Adjustabla bed frames, $4.6$ 1 - “ I Odd chests. 214.(5 ICE Bedroom Outfitting 06, 4762 Dixie I. 742 j.Drxytdn Pletna OR.3-6734 I House, 103 N. CJms. PE fits1 1 maple bdrW surrs. $$$; KLBC. To Place a Ad- * S3 BUCKNER FINANCEXOMPANY// S!> ooop °99P. tfOCATfe.N 1 where you can *c | Si "" " " "" re"tauranunRentBSt2$ mo.Ulncludes BORROW UP TO $560 ' “ heat. Seats 30. Stain leas steel OPPICES IN* J equipment. Trial price $8,650 in- Pontiac — Drayton Plains - Utica Cludts business, -fixtures and | walled Lk.. Slrmlngham1 Plymouth. wupm ' BOTrowWlthConfidroce Hj R. HAGSTROM [ ^ET $25 TO $500 -u, bdrms. chests aad dresser’ erythlng ln used furniture - PONTIAC HishSmtoiSui im-mi j Household Finance . 1 - Cerperatien of *—**—■ 8. Saginaw St. PE 6-1(06 atter 6 PE 4-t$3B bargain price#. Alee asw iivtog rms.„ bdrms, dtoetteaf. bunk-beds, roll-a-awdys. rugs and mattresses, factory secaods, about to once. K-Z terms. The Bargain muse. Buy-SelNTrsde 103 H. Cass at Lafayette PI 3-064$. TTnfSiq room suiff~3 tables, 3 table tamp*. YOU OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION. OA g-3661; LA ROE ClUi AND MATTRtM brand new. 118.6$. Psarson'a Pur-nlture, 63 Orchard LAfce' Ave. LIONS ANNUAL RUMMAOB SALB Thurs. and Prl. t a.m. to $ p.m. Bat. • a Ji. to 8 p.m. LOCATION: THE GIFT SHOP, CORNER PIKE AND 27*Y5-i - - — “^ANYTHING ____________TOU BENEFIT THIS WORTHY GROUP- FOR FURTHER nWMtMWi. 0R I4M3 MAHOO ANY DROP LEAP XXTCN-slon table. tori like aew. MS. PM 2-4053 after 6. MODERN COUCH AND CHAIR, black with metallic thread. $05. EM.3-6266 atter 3:1$ all day wask- . WALTON TV » 615 E. Walton • .’P* BMM^ OIL SPACE NBA TER AND TANK? (40; Refrigarator. 63$: 38" electric stove. Ml: watitor. $»: davenport and ehatr, 118: Oat stove. $3$; M*Jgtx neat get with tth*.iESBi couch uMLehair, (3t; Compute hod. $3$. Virgil Harris, P*$-5m boxed Christmas cards Reduced prices on Inventory clearance on item* Por be* Printing $ Office m open evenings until Christmas. 100 PgR CENT AUTOMATIC ILBC-trie water softener. Softens water. removes Iron and fitters Barings up to 60 per eon* on sattrtMI. O. A. Thompson. 7006 M-88 West is both. Phone Rochester. I. ■ ____— cabinet Sinks? scratched 43" model. SM value, 144.10 While they tost. Terrific value* on $4" and 06" models. Michigan Fluorescent, 213 Onhard Lk. LIONS ““ ANNUAL RUMMAOB SALB Thurs. and Pris $ a.m. to $ p.m. ANT OIL OR OAS HEATD40 New or guar, mod, by n Btsnsid 38-yeer expert. Offerina nothing cheap, but minimum operating tapeneea permits me to gtya a bettor deal an tales, installation, testing and servicing. Cell FE APT. I. OAS »W. MY sbut, tunnsn risks mu SaGINAW ST. BUT ANT-TRINQ AND EVBRTTH1NO AT THE SAME TIME YOU BENEFIT THIS WORTHY GROUP POR FURTHER tNTOjtMAnOB, Qgl-Md MIMEOGRAPH. $N. TYPEWRIT- MARBLE TOlP COFFEE TABIE. MEDICINE CABlNim. LAROE $0" Mirror, slightly marred. 23 •$. Lee selection ot cabinets With or without lights, sliding doors. Terrific buys, Michigan Fluorescent. 363 S*M6 1 M$W.________________ ANCHOR FEJiCliS Orchitrd U.'Tts1 ' PR^MfaiBRKP1* MTA147i t BARGAINS fi 4a6Vs fa. V-graeved mah . S4 et 1 operation PE 6-6MI. jto&l^rJSSrtl? topprg 45c ra j ^S5f •W.toS0WD«“r I 30 f*l- hot water heater. $47.50. . 3 year warranty Free set toilet IM.il wKh trade. -Open Bun. 10. * T WOLVERINE LUMBER 326 8. Paddock FE 24714. BUILDINO SUPPLIES. PAINTS" _ tosulaUon. Chloride, Rock Belt BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY COl 61 Orchard Lake Ave. FK 4-71M train. QB 3-3343. OIL FLOOR 'PUkRi^rTAittONO ott. 266T Peed eendT OR 3-4425 PORTABUt STBRBO RECORD playtr land radio enmlfiinan. PBKyts 176. OnKtat board, large. - finkmit f For Sale Miscellaneous 67 Chrlatmaa Olftg 67B| ' Jb .._SiS kdxjF LEAKS ~ >‘OL*1>0IrEL aSS, c^|glM' aeYaEvu 0?chlr^Lk*A“e VSp*** *& BA,:?0 wm GUT-Oood buy* in radios; Emerson, Ji®;. It: Tele-Tone, new! •MlScilth eloek radio. ner one to?M Rune/ wlre°et 1 Jfc. H,ef*r cable 31 ' «JJ»; aJk- tbompeon, 7*08 M-4* »l«; Jrewstor. M. a cpoaktrs. *4 _ 69. Fl jtefj. POURMD iso CAMERA Bit? sjlcture. Can after Sita^7&e**£*tofmet^,of °M .■‘gS^tgaaiS® Wol TABLE. 5«30;. COMPLETE dark room equipment. PE 3-7402. PROFESSIONAL SLOND 'CUT*. ' Wny Gibson gutter, dual pfaft-ups. 5* watt nmpiWer with « Jack* * tremolo, dual speakers, 5380, also, Solnr enlarger, en-taTji** UP M It k 30'. *35. n 8lNOS» Ei#ii»0 MACHINE IN THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, i960 REVERB, | M X , MAO. Solo OfHco Equipment 7% [ ADDING MACHINES F It 6 M II* The National Cull Beglater On. pi W. Huron. PonUu. VtMMI. 'to S.^Oratlot. ML Clemena. HOw- -Jg bau6 artocm chlnct, TypeWrltera IU.M nddlpg machines HEM up: Mu. mmm PM* «P! duplicator!. IM.M up; photocopy machines. {W.M up; dtetotlng machines. i»» up. OrntruTritutiBu tad Office Supply, n Wait Lawrence m., PoaUac rt ram PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS Priced lor a quick aaU _ VALLEY BUSINESS MACHIMUI ^ For Solo Livestock 83 DAY SHIFT By Frank Adams j -'For Sal^ Cote ^ For Solo Cars WO or MHM monthly pay. SUtfP PUMPS. BOLD AND RS- P**f*d. _alao concrete breektes._________ • FB k-dddi. ■ " _______ 8TR0MBUR0 CARLSON AM___________ Ml uJ£2TO JSSJ M'.Aa 3- Wet.VrS: “g"&'«s&r *!S?AE%tZ ln>. »C«e MrMenre. Pg 3-2100.1 WO. FE 3-7488 After | rang^A-bargain. Call FB 2-3005, TABLE TENNIS tSSulBS-fra~bheteFIind Complete puts pong uhle topl^!“u,n*0,“. with metaling!. P U81D BICYCLES. BOYS' **"' gagt^oooy,.. TALBOT LUMBER hardware eleetrtcal. plumbing. , rir.%7*s?r Jar* gn im Oakland Are. FE 4-45*9 ■painted. IS Lr ah- atulled VOICE MOOC. Hi-Fi. MAHOGANY ‘ 2-7-.-Z' "_L_ * 3-HOO. WORLD SCOPS BICYCLOPSDuT > 80% OPT d toys, hud_______ »ls. 348 B. Beverly Machinery Sale Sporting Go4mIs 74 30-04 RfcMINOTON AUTOMATIC deer rifle Remington automatic "3j BULMAN HARDWARE OUARANTCSO TALK1NO PARAKEET AMO CAOE gWSSi 0c W lb l ITi PET IS bsxu o TWIN AUTOMATIC THREE Ue gas coflee urn Jackson _____________ *1*bewetVr1*tenltt*T*tge deep *AV« HN on THIS BlAUTirUL EUSTBR ■ gSfeAL CAMPtNO organ with chime, I SSTdrffiE®. ‘£&r?"& ------. . 9 * mAu ; I 10-year-guarantee usan iwrtlmM. «iu _ SWEEPERS REPAIRED C.allacrhrr Music Co Barnm «■ Bugrarte. TE 5»iat I UBitsgncr aimic 743 W. Jteren- open sun i IS t. Burnt TB 4- OTh?£.?UiiHASS ll*m wrn' Attention ii W ■*•**# ; ££ J&SSi, i Bah. Mtunows, Etc. 78 1 OClTg - BUY. SiLL. TRADE. Manley Leach. It Baglay WANTED: SAW PURS, DEER skins Market prices paid Vree- ! land Pur Co. M0 Pontine Trail, i Walled Luke. Phone MArket 1061 twenty-nine Fo* 4do Cam ■ .10 LLOYDS Used Car plaza-. m gSurngg, CUI __ credit Mtr at Ml g-wao J MINOHAM-RAMBLER, ms woodward. MM CHEYRdLET NOMAD 8TA-uon wagon V-g engine, power-glide, power steering. I to ebaoae from Coral^ and white and eflver WBKFBF 59 EDSEL ■ Chevrolet co 1000 s. wood- 2-Door H'top with auto ,WARDTft mrmiboham. m. radi^ htkttT end CHEVROLET IMPAU M V i mo: whitewalls. One owner! tor.'USA cond. MI 4-1487. _ •55 OIEVY V8*4-DR7 $1095 1,2 S. SAGINAW,. ------ auto" sales 1* E 2-9131 ee Oakland , .. n 3-3381 ___________1 | . ,L _ HARM^ltSpS^wmge mnn. Make Payments -----throughout! Dark b ue '54 FORD. 3-DR.i 1138 ________ white top. B»S. MB Par only II me- m» Ann. 18th V9FH. _____________Rite Auto, Ml M CHBV., V-8.' WHITE 8IDI- _ISUEMLfiU walls, rmdk MA 5-3343.:___________ Just Make Payments ,4 CHEV : — **“' •. Bel 1 FE 6-4539 > SALES. 580 OAKLAHI ITIBLB, V-l EUPERIOS 3AKLAND7 Dae Jan. ISt.. , PE. Mill 1 Lloyd .. PB 1 1884 FORD STATION WAOON. I DIO A HEATER PORDOMATIC, fU*.7»Sd,l II 104 Bast Blvd at AuburU_ MM CHEVROLET IMPALA CON- i ABSOLCTElV" rertlble V-8 engine, powergllde. , down Aaeui radio, heater, whitewall tlroa. I gig.44 per mo. _ _ Tinted glass White with red trim. Mr Parka at Ml a.7ioo Harold Stock No 1131 Only 8V.8M. Buy Turner Pool. terms. NORTH CHEVROLET CO.. —1—.................. 1000 s. WOODWARD AVK. BIR- 1884 8-PA8SBNOBR FORD COUN-MINOHAm. Ml 4-3735. I try Squire. ’ —- — ’56 CHEVROLET —~- Station Wagon, 4-Door . 1371. BM teerlng an B 4-8431. h chain eawsl KING BROS. 7f . . .714 __ PI 4-1113 PONTIAC RD. AT OPDVKS__ | HEAVY DUTY SNOW BLADI8 TRACTOR (WAINS TRACTOR CABS RIPLACBMBNT PARTS FOR ALL POitOS ■ OLIVERS PSHOUSOM TRACTORS For Sale Motorcycles 95 TRIUMPH BALES * SERVICE Ueed Trade-In Dept. i 30J W. Montcalm . »»» Carpet eamples 10 t 1 Derenpon and chau’“ 3 Piece bedroom set Reclining chair 11* RCUk Muhug. TV THOMAS ECONOMY 101 S. Saginaw __FE I 8141 VERY SPECIAL Knotty pine paneling All 118 B. Saginaw’______F ACCORbtON SALE. ALL AcCordWU loaned Iran I S aj AM SEU.INO AN OUTSTApDINO collection at epectal arraugwmenu penned lor a fnmoae Detroit area begin- Sand. Gravel and Dirt 76 TOP SOIL, CRUSHED STONE ! md, gravel. HU Lyle Conklin ! Is u euthrolle an you can get. All in original folders Asking MM They'ra Worth, much wort | PB 5-0788. ■ ■ . BALDWIN OROAN I PULL MAN- ; uah. .1 ptuUl board, sell-coo- -[ Mined speakers .with gwrcatsioa. | ward EM yoHL Wood, Cob! sad Fms4 77 lg Ul. SLAB AND FIREPLACE _wood PB irtm alter > p.m, 1 COKD WOOD AND CORD aPAx wend. OR 181M or MA 5-87SI FURNACE OR FIREPLACE COAL Kentucky Lump. Poea. Brtqueu Olga and Benmcy Maber Coals BLAYLOCK COAL QO PB 3-1101 ■ run sals seasoned FT* e 1 MUSIC CO ■ ’ lie ft tAOntAW “ CONN TENOR SAXOPHONE. LIKE FIREPLACE CANNEL s. 1140 OR 3-8817 ; * ™*C*' ‘ ' ' * irLOWREros: . SURPLUS LUMBER & ... _ «L . 8148 HunuSlRd ^klM* OR 1 7W3 RUNDY CLARINET C8EH 7 tut^n^/tiTp 2La*sBiur"* «*■ «•iM44 WhLANLLl iOUK band instrument repair. Pood MU 33M par year factory expert Delicious meats rag—staples I CALM I (tattered to your (tyeear or ----------1 Blue Rlbboa'pwx! TastttuU Credit uadi call FB «-4«ao Christmas Trm 67A BEAUTIFUL hDOTOJ^PtN* TREES. MltoTgl CMr1s7^aT“TREE»7'^OT'your' ' gels Many tones to choose free own gl and 03 Rice Pam. 833 N j Mf ekclustrely at Gallagher Coals Rd Osford OA a>844 | 8M8 to mihogan* with Wncl COME o6t AND SKI OUR PULL; ° ” • «,n “•««*•*• ,or <*"• line ol Christina* evergreens; ,. i iruruv Choice Christmas Ireaa. oearsreeet' uAULAuMl’K .7 P riiWiai.' vv aitii ------- raping. Christmas wreathe, grave r Huron M PE 44M I umher m i.s rr. s-eij!__— ........ "Si bu AL^E-SOLXD ELECTRIC and rw-j }’u‘»r Twin I* «fu Lake Road Ft 4-OH or OR irdepiaad.' • “°. f*11 iaertflee PB •-»>« )41M «HS» W —---------!g^i~L5AP8. WORK tatNCHM Lombard . (Quality Chainsaws) Ae low as 1129.50 M” 4-hp. II Ibe Financing with as little as 118* per month see one of Uto following dealers. Sportsmans Hdg Leas Orion, Prouli Oliver ha lea. Oxford, Ted Samuels, Dartoburg, Howland Lumber-Peed. Ctarketon and Michigan Chainsaw Diet., Lake OHou. Tractor*. Titters, Mowers MA 8-7178 OR 3-7834 Auction Sides 88 For Sale Bicycles 96 . BOYS SCHWINN—#'. BBC. COND Fully equipped 1 speed. HI 4X30 ^ litdile leil UA 83813. Vi USED BICYCLE. M A Ul*. NEW | bikes, $34,83 and up Over US to choose from. Scarlett's Bike and 1 Hobby Shop. M B. Lawrence. FE j Boats and Accessories 97 900x22.510-Plv Tires ' All the' Way Around 15,000 Milea $2495 Matching Interior. IWi m *« a WOODWARD. . — Ilk AND Iig~ I LINCOLNS AND CONTINENTALS 1 1960 CHEVROLET Race slong the open highway carefree and' gay with this IMPALA HARDTOP 4-door of course. This glistening cold 'topper inside nnd out. Company Car line everything necessary for your every comfort and convenience. Power steering and brakes Powerful 330 H. P. engine with TurbogUde transmission and many outer eltras. Only E000. ***> 0$LY 92595 Crissman ROCHESTER OPEN EVES. TIL 8 OL 3-9731 ! 1*«0 CHEVROLET IMPALA 3-DR. ni 18-FT MOLDED ______________ ' boat. 40-hp, motor and trailer. PB 4-3148 between 1-8 pun. 30 Per Cent Discount Ob iU Atwood BirtM hArdw«ro. OWKN 8 MARINS SURPLUS 996 Orchard Lake Ave. A Perfect Family Gift j ORION AUCTION OPEN FOR CON-slgnment deity. MT >1831. ; WATCH OUR AD ON THURSDAY lMl 1 CRUISE-OUT 1 f SALES na woob 'F5S _ -red PS 8-4833 POOD ORYi ~ IILSWtvered 814^8# * mixed' hardwood m cord db- llvrred OR l-»fI7 or OR »-e*l0 *t AH W O O D OR FIREPLACE ] Top Dollar Paid tor yonr I Furniture tad Apallancei OPER DAILY * to 8 --- RKTAIL SALES _ j B AUCTION MW Dime Kwy , Drag too M and Sen. SB SCOTTY FOR A SCOTT Now’s the Ume to trade Up to a SCOTT by McCulloch. The motor that sets the pace. 3 HP to 18-HP. Make your deal FOR RET AIL OAKLAND Maries’kxchanos -81 8 Saginaw ” FE g-eio. Sale House Trailers 89 IlzpU nssraan ROCHESTER •PEN EYES. 'TIL 8 OL 8-8731 See Us FOR YOUR | Truck Needs I Sales & Service GMC 1 Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS FE .5-9485 Free Driving Trial To Qualified Prospects Your trade or small cash down payment wlU beadle. BIRMINGHAM'S ’ from. TPhlte black, hlu opper finish All hart V . powergllde, power eteai nd some have a lot aori 13.385 Easy term -----------------■ CO 1M I CHEVROLET 1 END OF YEAR SALE '88 Chevrolet ae tow aa 83*8 '84 Ford—'88 Studebaker Coupe M Plymouth Wacon — Nash Ambassador 811 makes and models — Be rare to get in on this , once-a-yeat Frankie ft Johnny s Mtr. Sales Assume payments of 813.4S per month CALL MR WHITE, _ CREDIT MANAOER. King Auto Sales 115 8 Baglnaw St FORD 3-DOOR WITH SKY , blue finish. Radio nnd hunter, w/walls. Black Ho. 1*71 8788. EASY TERMS NORTH CHEVROLET CO., MM fl. WOODWARD AVI, lg 4-3738, Make Your Own Deal 4 Cbevys, 'SJ-'51-'M 848 up 4 Pontiac, 86- 83- S3- N 8*5 np 1 Ford* M to '81 M* up j Packards. WH-U 3 Pickups l»-Ns and 1 ton. 4 Cadillacs 'S7-'IA'Sa.M Sta Wagons 84 Fcrd 84 Stud*. Financing arranged 1M other late models and treat, specials. ECONOMY CARS 33 AUBURN 1(40 FORD 4-DOOR FAIR LAlta. VI angina, standard shill, radto Sad beater Immaculate Stock No. | Clarkston Motor Sales ICHRY8LER-PLYMOUTH DEALER 33 (. Main, Cltrketon MA g-gi4i USED CARt 8*a TO «6aa sen MONEY DOWN QUEEN AUTO Ly™. w* m«bS™ 'M CHEVROLET PAJtBWtXHJ grTA- SSL. T&JVLfV&S; fjwM^Noifnt cinL«5jr£ i.Mi°!!agw'MW<-. NOHT____________ ________ 8 WOOWARD AVE. BXRBCNG-HAM Ml 4-2735. 1959 CHSVROLKT S POOR, V-8, Bel Aire. 9625 full price. No money down. Assume payments or 112.50 per mo. Call Mr. O Brian credit Mgr. at MI 6-3960, BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, 969 S. WOODWARD. 1858 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORT coupe Pawn betoe with copper trim. Stock No TO5. Only 81487. Easy terms. NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1000 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-373*. 1956 CHRYSLER 3-DOOR KARD-wnil tire* power steering and ; V™ brakea. beautiful^ tone BIR^NOHAM-RaMRLIR. Baev terms. T 00~ 1600 .. BIRM1NO- NORTH CHEVROLET ( 8 WOODWARD AYS.. ■ HAM. IB 4-3736. 1053 FORD. 3-DR.. ikDlO AND heater, overdrive, good shape. 1133 Meadowlawn. Fg 8-3433. 1184 FORD 3 DOUR, RUNS OOOD. ^MMtomtaM|^CaU Mr. Auto Insurance PL. PD AND MKDICA bought of • STOKAMOUTB^ITrt^ 3-BBD-SS TRiTa#~ UGBTWBlOif :OME TO SANTA S BOAT HOUSE fun sale t IALK CHRIOTMAg TREKS. I jeato to>aealeta.^M* W wai-j NOLlDAT EVKSOREEn ROPINll ! COUPLET EL T OVERHAULED Wholeaale to deaiefe and retoil.I - - . House of Evergreens. 444 Merton i si Acreva from Burna howt. PE I M3M _____* lawn dSconatTons 1 pe wrn_____ xmas aifTs gvi Live Christmas Trees | Balled and burlaped Murat** spruce. 3 t* * feet teU. MeltoirV Nursery. 1174 Out# Highway Phone MApla 8-33M 1 NUK8IRT OROWN SCOTCH PINt ** tTwi 8 Mvd ■ fig 5-0477 or **' _n 8-83*4 ♦ ; w i^K routree^on the; gp, greens Bring me kid, IM youe ig camera 13 ml. N oI Poniwc j Cedar Lane Evergreen Perm 1*7* ,l( Ptnie Rwy lUS fto MA 8 1033 SPRUCE^ BALSAM AND SCOTCH Plan K»S MM at ‘but* r ,M" ** For Sale Pets 79 iNdlc PE KINO ERE PUPS, black OR 4-0IM 1!-MONTH-OLD 5t*lK O EH MAN ................Warner Trailer Seles. 300* W Huron. iPIan to Boating'- Gifts for -the fi loin one el WnUy Byim’i eneRtag —■- — ----to| AIRSTflKAM. 1888 #~ nUBLLENT Rd (|U»1. Penktna.______________ Jacobson's Trailer Sales and Rentals GUl.BRANSFN TRANSISTOR ORGAN AKC- WBIMARAMEK. With M MOTE True Chin With Pint shad Backs 8XC REGISTERED POODLE PUP> Ka*j term* 834 Auburn Ave *KC MINIATURE MALE BLACK j A EC DACHSHUNDS FOK CHR18T-mas—Terms haW> R MUI BOSTON tfPb CH STOCK. CUE- ; Specially priced and Johnson motors at big gav Qpnt IYENINOS TIL * P M MON -BAT Until Christmas PAULA. YOUNG INC 030 DUDE HWY OR 4-MI ______iON LOOK LAKE1 ’ TREAT YOUR FAMILY’ to’ boauna ^ruo w^th t uuauy Ion s salIm at™ tipsi- CO LAKE is miles souib of Peatom. 196i boat, and Evtnrude motors now on uluru- Foflgu and Spt, Csw 105 Christmas convertible. Greater snvSga vril* be voure Spotless Inside and out. SoUd white finish with white top and contrasting red Interior. Das-Jtto* to the word! Powerful 340 horsepower VI engine with euto- S^'toS^00 I ONLY $2495 1961 ■hrysk $2681 TAYLOR'S IK USED C KVROUfT-OLOeb Open Kvastiogs 1 4-48*1 Walls CLEAN CARS GLENN'S 1*44 RENAULT GOOD CONDITION price 54*6. Call PE *-740t ; EVl tR' 7 ROAD6TER WITH WIRE wheel* tad overdrive. 13*6 Easy term- NORTH CHEVROLET CO.. OPEN EVES 'TIL WO* 8 WOODWARD AYE.. BIR-MINOHAM MI. 4-3738. TRIUMPH I*M ROADSTER. VERT rissma ROCHESTER FHEE LUBklCATlON FOR 38.88* )''» Plus Free Bonus OL > •4 OPEL OLIMPIA 3 DOOR BUILD YOUR OWN TRAll Ft Atom Shell Insulated Ice Boa. Oaa Stove. Sink *OOOOELL TRAILER SALUB SLISH^LiHL»n* -MBWUAM MI 4 3G. 3388 S Roe beater Rd UL3-4I BUYSitS WAfnNO aV suable by pbone. WE NEED TRATLERB. WE CAN *-1171 Open Tl SELL TOUR MOBILE ROME OR Wednesday TRAVELER TRAILER. 'ANY —--------=-’------ -------------------- jro.w^oLLY Transport at'3 Offered 100 CHEVROLET 3 DOOR. RADIO ABSOLurtir ho MONEY DOWN Assume pay-mtnta of 314 27 per mo Coll lag “ h.rmsI COACH SALES 15219 . HOLLY RD . MOLLIf. ME Mttl. CLOSE-OuT 0ft All NEW AND USED THaYf’ AN- liarpl No Fg 3-7542. Horry IS91 CHE mail*, | mile* tM3 n mo“ Ca^*>MrBta< Mgr at an *-39 HAM-RAMBLER. I CLEAN, j DODOE-CHRYSLER TRUCKS ■to CHRYSLER C ONTKH TIILE. FULLY EQUIPPED AND SOLID BLACK j '59 Chevrolet Wagon SMM | Power Ottde. v-g. Real Sharpl M CHEVROLET B ISC AVNE gUM '4* CHEVROLET « STICK . * Mg *4S Rambler American * *M 57 Ford 4-Door Nice ....• (N Prbruaiy £sfjg**' PIANO TUNING -ORGAN REPAIR CHIHUAHUA PUPS / | wtU hold till Cl Weijjanrl Music Center 8-1178 ______ fRii LOT - UP FHONTAGEj On buer S. Saginaw St. j Oxford Trmiler Sales r j Yrry gervhe Inc OR 3 13>4 DRIVE A CADILLAC TO' CAU- Ml'Y’ckjl'ljIl ' McKM' F5int- KIOtWS LAia ANGELES. ~SHARE #URB EXPENSE TO SOUTHEAST "„rfir Ju.st Make Pajrment: t-Mto Ed^'Stoele itotd Pay uFmi. , D- CaU PE MIM _ Chriitma* (Jifts 67B l pair ana s chicaoo roller !, NUN, MM 4. 91 CHRlHtMAH POODLES 1 imwrr. 4 Slet t ▼ a*rd: Leivlr TrUUy FI ^lOLYO. RADIO. HEATER. Beautiful whlU flnlah >ck 1907 Only 99M j>«TH CHEVROt El Sports Cars % SJMI USED ON RENTAL BASIS —— j. prion or “ —“*^-cSs ins&gs *-Vw * aid pups. I• week* at Chrtotmne. 813. UL 3-1*38. _ ■OR BALE L BLACK RINO-TAtt#) player nnd after 8.___ I COMPLETE MARX OOAUOE nartw 838*wTlbTSi *** *fC>* I R1CYCLXS EXC TO PAIR COND' ts*»" USED ORGAN SALE CONN Onmn slightly dead, gut ecrepteu rE HAMMOND Spinet nnd •HT’ieaUTREW. LOWREY 8pto« Ors«». PI 4-0038 . | All orgaat guarnnterd R“«W« B«AirtT ^HrgMUt to? WWj" BPr ooi_______- ■graph Hey wood Wake nno corner bookcase. Hoover up-:< right cleaner. OK 3 0**7._ AMERICAN PLYER TRAIN. BM ALL, ffjrv77,tsa“Ki"5 TABLE or LAWN SWING from Moon Valter Buttle Furniture Co . - #464 DUIe Highway Phone MA 8-7*31 or OR I-8TI3 Delivered now or nest spring Also knotty ' . P« *’44*1. ;_ «»b- hamsitehs. imrm mice all new.' **** ** HUUaih*. FE 4-6433 j free | 1 ’oodles for Christmas 1 HUR?»WPBT,**aoym*l>tPU ..4»IU I POODLE 8TUD PUPMBB LEW EETTKRLY MUEIC CO , •#. “< “»•' OR OPEN 'jreM tUUBTMAB ; fo^DtE-CT.IPPiD AND BATH j Ml »-»#> i *7,8*. MT 3-MS3. ■ . _. ew /st’t\ /Tin i fARAEEETS OUAR TO TAUK, SOHMER ! lajtsa^aag u Vi Li»AtoU I ! PEK1NOBWL PUPPIES, AKC REO- PIANOS . Wg* *>• mad eervtoe PE 1 PARAKKKTd. OUARANTKED TO , -I S-Ifc Canaries, cape nnd sup-1 Crane’s Bird Hatchery. 34*8 1 Ynsgnbond. i t aOINt, ’ !ORnr~PARf , S rlUier wiy FE V-WiSt_ WBWMU"! _ ^ EOKN^S iyV^WWATYFKRIC3-7t3«. ! "J*”* <*»' DETROltER ^ PONTIAC CHIEF II TO M'. I’ ft 1*' WIDE TOP BUCK—JUNE CAR, TRUCK. 10 per rent dawn, terms, up to 1 PONTIAC* WASTE FE 3-030# years. All MoMte Home# are HIGH * FOR LATE MODCt *Ig~ Elsforth h .BeaWe kU gloat _ eoToeSr nrir " Avtoil pS--------~ . TWt Franchised Import Dealer an veur ores- AVhKILL 5 i 838 N. Main. Rochester OL l-*7i High dollar tor sharp .earn. PE ; VOLKSWAGEN 1887. GOLD *’** - J I lux*, leatherette «*af- Bob Hutchinson H| “ Mobile Home Sates DtoJan. 15th I 188 Knot Blvd (I Auburn 1»»* CHE.yROtET BISCAY1NE—? Dr Radio and_bealer FE $ 7*15 '** A® ■«*»"HARD- *■“*— ^taawaUa, c '' .9*8 CHEVROLET STATION-WAO^ 1 gg.NI on* rsgio and heater <>*<»«limn* , IUN r-6. Ford-O-Matic. Power Steer- I 91499 At The 8topUght in . . . Waterford » niXTfc HWY. OR 3-I3S1 5 DODO E 3-DOOR HARDTOP gvsted and Trade-In all furalture. Brtep aifti 4 MWWB. IIUJ >NNITi OpUVEAWAT FK l-TUt | --• * "* b* par mo CAuT iSr'“wSSr*1 Houqhten i*r' »«faltht shift, 548*. Me poaey dwwn, $27 a month. SD-ngUOR AUTO SAIgRi. IM OAK- lfc* CHEVROLET 3~DOOR "nc ■°«wy down. |T week Lucky R & Son V JUNK CARS __ OR 2-2929 _ MY lot ii EMPTY* I NEED 50 LEW BETTI HIT MUSIC CO UgEfi PIANO SALE Qirlatmes Specials t&at MJNUTUkE ARC POODLE Term*. OB 4-1*73. pool! HHoulatioh. ltA4-17bo"1 Christmas present (sOODLit. SLacI OR WIftS wu 115 Maple baby bed. *1,. ■ Ant the Walnut ig*reiiIiwfor^riiiaes:iwu'™' * , •sad tor demonstraUon OL i CHICKERINO GRAND — Re««p- j sa^aW tin. fuWFaHrWONbiRPUL BREED tor pets and huattag. *5 and IM OP >531’. ...._______ Drayton Plains Ml. N of Pontiac OR 3-1301 _____Open 1 Pay* a Week __ Parkhurst Trailer Sales — FINEST IN MOBILE UV1NO L Featuring Hew Moon Venture - Buddy Q> Clean Used Cars TOP DOLLAR PAID” IBRINO TITLE) * Glenn’s Motor Sales a W, Huron St. PE 4-7373 {tomplete^Snw'af'pnru4nodMtototo i ^ ®“ lu*r *0<1*1 Safeeg*” *rtr*d “4 ““*** i See MA M Motor Sales rtMW . >173 W Huron |m|to|WM Vacation trailers ; M > ^-r c.^ /"! TP CATIONS M FT. Tra'I-Blesrr. , We W|R Pav —rt auars i -top dollar- • For Sale Cars Due 'December Sale i SHEP'S _i’Oxford ■"{fNHt’.H SHORT'S MOSnjE HOMES SALES AND SERVICE SPECIAL low mlleeite r Bell, FE rim ■ I .H Egggi,« Wjf- ’ *1 Mvd. at Auburn *L£U*YBOUer Bel air. 4 di 4-DOOR LaSABRX. j *** PONTIAC. 4 dr. RT ^lo and heater, S« CHEVROLET Bel Air 4 dr ItllH*----—- I '»* CADILLAC C> ' " “ CHEVROLET Clb. Cpe Shep’s Motor Sales “ ELY t sub At-: • SUPER 3-DOOR B-1 I EAET BLVD 1*54 BUICK, E^KE^a^Tim^ ' LOOK! BUY! B4Q1KAW. Itl4l*f. 1 Quality (QK) Korners ’56 CHEVROLET. ..$495 *56 VOLKSWAGEN $595 3-door, sunroof, tuna good ’57 CHEVROLET.. .$695 3tb 3-door. E automatic Quality (QK) Korners DIXIE USED CARS Dials Bwy. near Sasha bow Stry. . OR 3-18*3 ! P| i /'“> *1-3 •*Ju? ANDA %uJl8P^ : Prices out i GLENN'S Motor Sato* 83 W Huron at._FE 4-73TI LLOYD'S Used Cur PLAZA 58 MERCURY 4-Door with auto, trans., radio, heater, whitewalls, One owner! $895 232 S. SAGINAW , FE 2-9131 . 5* Buick . FOR EXTRA CL1 •rsa- OR 3-3813. m ruu, ruuiMi. .j color IMnnl > Irikt, MY 3-1954 WILLI* CAR i€il | 8 3783. WGrm. r Motor Sales i' Rd oxford! *4* ORCHARD LAKE PE 31 tot skates, tohaggaas, ■ *3 K Walton ^ kiutE VomT Hueical Biaii1 _5L*lsHtoiraiB,.oi. i-s*ss^ ciarti Xtag» Trataeti. Boarded 80 Rent Trailer Spcce 90 OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR that* who want the beat, 4b k«r tots. 11x40- cement pattoe. ate. One mile east of Oxford on Lake- JUNK CARS ___ PE 5-140* ™ AtwATa top S60l£r’ hrtJW 4848 Dixie Bwy. Pb OR I •56 BUICK WON., NEW , A-l, I-OWNEX ..... • ,N sHARP CARR j M PMWaC^DR.. HARDTOP ‘88 4-DR., CUSTOM •55 RAMBLER WON . 4 • DR..'~A 1 >n SCS •»^AT«kRDroP co^Sf H!& 4-dr hardtop Ule 4-dr hnidtoi Eectra 4-dr. convertible i ii-_______i MEM bd*. nwM if! ^*!ck Mr. eedan r rS ?? 5“** J® hardtop -Pa l*. J?"1 “W* aSrSto yj Jf£he»y ImptU hardtop fiT JJ wrt Oaten* hardtop » PonUac g-Chlrf Hr. -92296 63995 91895 93595 •1695 : -ourwnt AND NICE . '7 MM SKw*air UANY-^TCCB^EFROM 3 Sdt lted Trucks 103! ‘t-TON CHKVROIET PICK- *tr. fK 1*M T ® 1S^Ei^iaaF °*QiS . ifoCKKtar’^LM.: KS’kS |he TeXrSn «-HO^XD tmajM STOmpra torses, etc. TT9 B. Walton shopping Ctptcf nC 8i ilDDlXS' UONEL LAY-OUT. COMPLETE with board#. 1 automaUe swftchet 4 engines, Uft^rtdge. Bl»J transformers, 3*0' of track. SM0. After 8NW. Colgate. sS^SOEew ilwsggcr Keaneit. boarding, tain*, trimming. BrttUny ana odls stud service. OL l-—4. Hunting Dogs St PUNO tUNOio-aECAB SCHMIDT „ D*'^MU0NOrii 118 8. 8AOINAW , PB M» USED HAMMOND OROAN, 3 MAN- WJ" GRININ ELL’S ■ ARC BEAGLE PUP. MALE I* weok*. gM. EM 3-MSl. FOR gALE; 3 YEAlCoLD BEAGLE - Main — IE PE MUf. Hay, Orain and Feed S? 1ST AND IND CUTT3NO BAY, will dchver MApte 8-1*41. CtjjRNJPED BEEF FOR BALE. Out ____________■■ “‘a *"r*GR INN ELL’S a-IOrt, . „ In s. Saginaw __ _« 3-71M PB 4-43M at OR 3-0188.__, . HEW OO-CART W1TB6U8’ MOTOR. #roT~TR0t#I6NE FOR HOT 3 ALL TYPE® OE 1ST h IND CUT-Musi bt seen to be apprtclatedi old. Reply Pontiac Press, ttag bay. will deliver. OA *-317* Ul. M3M . —rt. Bail. , . ■ :-----—JL FIRST AND SECOND cSWStO IfiiJSi r**K,iKSrS ____ . Wffl •bSSULSSFfhsJiVSSym: Bargain. Bchlcke, FB 4 353* _______________ 8-0333. For Sail Tlras — - --------- ----------— - up OA * 3031 A-l USED TIRES. $18* UP. WE 1*51 DODOE 70* TRACTOR, PULI Y buy. sell Aleo whltcwnlle — STATE TIRE SALES *01 » Sigtnaw St PE 4-RlMr TRllAD”TftjiM, *7lst*.' 8* IMS CHEYf llfOH^AN^lOOr Mta ug nine tax and rocapable Ur*. wtogc B5ak* with lift gate- IM*. — GOOD USED TIRES L**Lj*ry*tor * done ttoan.^wod *300 complete. H "r. Smith Priced .from $150 Houahten 12* maue Radio Heater White- * **8 walls 57*4 *1488 * jfJS 1881 Chevrolet Impala sport coupe, aims Tri-can Power steering and pow- atS ** brake*. Poettraction rear 1*57 DODGE 700 TRACTOR, FULLY EQUIPPED FOR ROAD. AIR BRAKES 41} SCOTT WOOD PEDSaL 8-4467. &Son ’SHELTON ^ PnMTtAr.nmrv Powergllde sidewalls 8 PONTIAC - BUICK ROCHESTER OL 1-8133 Across from new car sales ] Open Til * pan. or Inter KUHN AUTO SERVICE I W. Huron FE 3-1315 IED TIRES *3 AND UP. 786 Red and white 1*68 Ed set Villager station M Automatic transmlssibi 1K4 Chevrolet Mr. sedan 1*81 Ford 3-dr Straight stick HASKINS PRE CHRISTMAS USED CAR SALE Need Extra Money for Christmas? 185* OPEL 1-DOOR SEDAN LIKE tlful fight gray finish* 1*67 CHEVROLET “MT' 1-DOOR sedan 6-cyUndcr engine, standard transmission, radio, haatar. Sharp dark blue finish. A PRESENT FOR SON OR DAUGHTER 'Hfl*8 1M BUICK CONVERTIBLE. V-8 STANDARD BRaKd NEW TIRE8 Trade la on Ooaarnl Safety Tiro*. U&to to par cent aft. Black ct l5d* WILLIAMS *81 S. Saginaw at Raeburn; tOOil 180x14 BLACK TIRES. ALL Sait*1***?1* Bsu^naV Flc't-lSiV Og pE OtotsIT________ Auto Survkc . 91 CRANKSHAFT ORIRDINO IN THE cer. Cylinder* rebored Zuck Me-chine (hop. M Haas. Phone PE . MM*. INDEPENiMElTf YW SERVICE . Andy Cslkl Garage 713 Baldwin PE 4-MSt. * j m cSRy. m ton7|tekl pojT new tires, ton. cond. 'M Int 1 ton duel, wheels, to Ford, to tan ECONOMY CAES g AUBURN I TOR MACK M YARD DUSP boa, ’EM 3-487*. . _.__J ' PACTORB'' BRANCH '•WORUO FAMOUS" TgUCK-TRAlLERS Sale* k Service | Mew and Used COMMERCIAL TRAILERS BODYS OP ALL TYPES 1 FRUEHAUF TEAIUBt COMPANY 4*04 W. Purr ' TA 8-780S Call Collect DETROIT WATCH OUR AO SATURDAYS I WHAT TO DO WITH TWO? Dial The PontUc Press,. - Want Ads/ FE 2-8181 . LLOYD'S Used Car PLAZA *57 MERCURY 2-Door with auto, trans., radio, beater, whitewalls. Sharp auto!' $795 232 S. SAGINAW * FE* 2-9131 1*47 OLD8MOBXL1 “98" COH-! veruble. hydramatlc. power steering. power brake#, radio, boater. **-——-——---------------—ukc saw. MM Pontiac elation wagon. Hydramatic. Radto and. heater 1748 MM Stock Century 3-door hardtop. Power steering Power brake# ..him MM Buick Mr. hardtop . 8388 HOMER HIGHT motors v-8 angina. •MMMa w fire engine red Ilnlth. A USED CAR FOR EVERY STOCKING HASKINS. CHEVROLET —f?. ■ ‘—Vv ■'WTTT'i'Pn Iras For Sal* Cara Far Sale Cara hk*6 146 • __ |mW tt pord, full power sacri-i , oo too msn6 i BfUMPING - PAINTING ’^jg^aFgB t urni NORTH, ’ bSH ha, Btubrt ami. paiWpooiiBi sy Under MW full pin I V^JSS. AT.£i' *h8*t*octm ONE OAT SERVICE JOHN r. SMITH * • Booo*. i»c. ■. B, BAOUUW ' F» 3-1*88 1*0880. t-FABBBNOBR.' RADIO nut. Perdomatlc. Country : 1 — condition, ra t-ilM. For Sale Cart 1061 / THE PONTIAC TRESS, *lfuESJDAY, DECEMBER 18. 19oi? ONE COLOR w By Anderson ft Learning appreciated. FB Mil . 8NO CASH DEEDED I ash1 Bure-Ptro Cold Weather Starters jpD» Ml M fiord Fairlane _____ lasso . 60 T-BIRD :« Sjg* W£™-?S!l't.59*-|1S Chev. 4.DoorP $3.60 week CREDIT NO FROLEM LEA VINO STATE. BEST FE Wll 846 LINCOLN, RADIO A HBAtf*. ABSOLUTELY NO MOfit DOWN! Assume payments of •8.81 jwr mo. Call CreditMir. Mr. Patat el Ml 4-1600. Herald “---T .Ford 3»_V OONVERTTBL* WITH FULL POT-La! SX"0' ER. IMS THAN 10.000 MILES ** ch*' $3395 BIRMINGHAM'S LINCOLN-CONTINENTAL DEALER I Bob Froat, be. 280 Hunter BlVd. • Ml fBB { IT’S SMART TO LEASE ! FALCONS TO THUNDFflBIROS ,] JEROME •'BRIGHT SFOT , , CASS AT ORCHARD C.K FE MSI f4BwAo. coatoMtzED 'T? j t Cbottf •nftnt, gift Mjk* offer un inns , TfUHkfrofcTATldN“CL«AllANCi; L Port. Mr . M ltM Ford 1054 Packard 1M7" FORD CLUB COUPS. GOOD Coftd-JVL7* •-**»• ‘ ' , M FORD BEAUTIFUL 4-DOOR Very lew mileage, excellent For Sal* Cara 146 ___^URXE MOTOR------ SOUTH BLVD. AT SAQINA1 LLOYD'S Only *m Ea*y i " CHEVROLET C 8. irdODWAltD AVE . BIRMINGHAM MI 44TB ! 58 FORD 3-DR. 8288 Ps^ orilj^ BlI^ute.^Dua Jgxt.frMth DECEMBER MP East Blvd. at Auburn litas For d convertible. SPECIALS ! Auto Bates, 182 South snglnsw ! FE 4-2214 r CLSAN 58 FORD' STANDARD Buy the Family shift. Fairlane. Must sell. FK 4 9368 8415. REPOSSESBION Christmas Gift ISM Ford, > door station wagon * 1959 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD #0 SPECIAL, B< Ural metallic green with ell • In Interior This oar la tmmi . late throughout. Full power, i aemfjlle Ttae^of ^ lector^* V.' Sh la truly a — |S 3 Snly $?W5 °f _____ _____ First payment January 34ih. Lucky Ante ». 103 South Saginaw. FE •poked wheels, $1800. FE whluira'i. tew mltea. ■ fe I960 PONTIAC IOBR STATION WAOONS. iteortag. Pdwer —— tlrei, nt MW after 5 ’57 MERCURY Station Wagon with aut< trails., whitewalls: - Extri nice throughout! .$895 232 S. SAGlNA\y FE 2-9131 LLOYD'S 'Used Car PLAZA •54 PONTIAC 4- Door with radio, heater. Extra nice throughout I . $395 J. 232 S. SAGINAW FE. 2-9131 n«llghty repel! etnas dc eei. hi of appreciated Ferfact for the ion of yours for transportation toiehool or eel- For Sal# Cara 106 ltda RAMBLER. NO MONEY DN —-—tnls of $38.80 par r./ O'Brien credit — - - riaaa, birmino- ...RAMBLER. CM * WOOD- WARD. SPECIAL r -S' enre. Radio, lee turn tlfnale. el full ones. «1M' SUM. MS. IS p R&C RAMBLER Super Market ml miss 1888 RENAULT. HEATER. ABSO-LUTILT NO MONET DOWN. Ae-*utn« peymente of 8M.10 per *i-CaU Credit Mgr.. Mr. BaSa — 4-1500, Ear-*- * email Srtoa. Cell fe 4-isoo Weekends after 1 weekdays S1~vauxnalC m.oo$ Ictual Miles 35-28 meg. White walla, radio, heater, llso equity take veer easy payment.. OR ’ 3-3102 r NOT TRY SUB , _________________ •31 MERCURY TURNPIKE CRU1S-er full power, etock No 1590. * Only 5555 Esay term*. -NORTH CHEVROLET CO., 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE, BIRMINO- s HAM Ml 4-3135. I "Haven't you heard of the Marquis of Queehsbury rides?" P UR^lANIJLDs!’m’2 Y Woodward. Birmingham, MI 4-4485. PONTIAC *58. CATALINA HARD-top. 3 epeed tri-power. ReSaon-able. MU 4-2304. ■ For Sale Cara JUKI Sh power, one-owner. 81.255.1B5 Couahlan Dr., Auburn Helfhti. '81 PLYMOUTH MSI FONTIAC. STAR CHIEF. ' 11 hardtop In excellent cosd ■ hydra maun nower ntsfe ..jr hardtep,------------------- rella. automatic tranemleeioq — Iharnl 8485; BILL SMITH USED MRS, •“ - - ^ CHRISTMAS BARGAIN BPtCiAL. 'Aft Marrurv 2-door 2-tone, AUiO- BlfttlC Shift, $350 CftSl ra ____________________ 1853 MERCURY 4 DOOR, RADIO 1IM OLDSMOBILE, RADIO AND - HRE —b, 1 beater, automatic tnaamlaaton, SAGINAW, FE I White wall Urea, excellent condl-II prloa 8185. Assume pay-af IT pr-------------------------- 1 Un |S,SN ' BRAID Motor Bales WHITE CREDIT . CALL ; ass at Pike Bt. 4 DOOR, i etu auiuuni « uwa. nauw A HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume pay-aeota ef ll.24 paramo Cell Credit j JOHNSON!'! Offers ’60 CHEVROLET WON. ...........$18951 8-CYUNDER. SHARPI IS s. Saginaw MONEY DOWN. 'UWMOB1LE IMS M 4-DOOR sX^mSs “at' fiViSS' I Holiday. Fower brake, and Steer-1 karot) TnJ^er Fofd | ^abl5d?rVn.l‘.WrUradto and*aS5: 1«1 ^fMOUTH I DOOR COM- ! aria differential tor jeInter drlvlnf Btetafy. rssSRWjMMd. new paint. S1.88B. Can EM 3-4M8 Very .clean. FuU price 8585. Pay- MBTROFOLITAN HARDTOP j jgg QUNMOBILR 111 8-DOOR8 Ca*U^M?* OBrlf! 'radH Kr “ and 1 hardtop to cbooae from Ml 8-3800. BIRMINOHAMOtAM- 1 TaMM are I owner Birmingham BLER. $6$ 8. WOODWARD. W"S?BUr^ credit ttr"% % 8-8800. BIRMINOHAM-R A M- | VMoro 1. _... M_________I BIRMINO- HAM-RAMBLIR. 058 8. WOODWARD_______________ 1961 VALIANT $1698 FULL PRICE feck Coley Inc. MM W. Maple. U l- LLOYD'S Usad Car PLAZA ictuil milts, i I PONTIAC R AMD H ’57 VOLKSWAGEN 2-Door with radio, heater, Whitewalls. Extra nice throughout! * $895 232 S. SAGINA4V FE 2-9131 . tat b. wood- j I line apprsBtetcd. Only $2,485. 1957 CADILLACS COBPBS. COUPI DeVILLBS AND nBMMB. We now tan s f— -**— food, eharp cl - —*• ’he Cadll Come la and pita the 'of your choice. Price. only 8LI88 -1959 CHEVROLET I, 11 Nwt— . i.liurry*for HARDTOP, ai, van OR 3-1115 power steerlne^an^ brakes, 5 good '58 METROPOLITAN, sharp l Oqod deal. Ci •5« MERCURY' . 323. California. | _ .. WOODWARD MM OLOSSidaiLE 82^WEEK money down. Lucky Auto Be tasiaaw, —• - au You Want, Bargains ’59 RAMBLER WGN. ......... LOW MILEAOC. SHARP!! ’58 BUICK......... HARDTOP. FOWER UM OLDfkSRILX RADIO AMD “sttorS^rtS^?' eJu0M? » - *■ - — HEATER. ABSOLUTELY N O Sf.“ Mr ° MONEY DOWN Assume par- IriSoHA& n^unYin*',,^L B,1 menu of 218 S3 per mo. Call! *** 8 Credit Mgr. Mr. Fatal FONTIAC FB3-481 ______- __3-481L_____ PONTIAC. UEB NEW ALSO 33 Chryster. f.--r ------ $1595 $1395j WARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM MI Just Make Paynic *88 FLY. 2 DR. I d. 228. OR 3-TT0S MM CHEVROLRT 4-DR. STATION wagon, radio and heater. A Utile gem . . . tM down. 1881 PONTIAC CLUB COUPE 2-tono. hydramalie, radio, heater, whitewalls Low down payment %-rl?57 CHEVROLET maaLlNUta BUrer with mate! Rib Starter. Automatic traaamlsct._ ateil-stiin trade with only 22.808 mmtettea. special 11 Perfect t WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC Woodward 1350 N. WAGON. CUSTOM. SHARP! , .$795 OUT OF BUSINESS ■t only 888 mo. Dus It:. Mth | U PONT r ■ RIM Auto. Mr ECU. FE 8-4538 Pay,.only 88 mo. Due Jan 188 East Bird, at Auburn I Rite Auto. Mr. Bell. FE 1-4538 fGf\RK3K iuBtp ANb I---------188 Ea»t Bird et Auburu H “* ,COndltlon. _No | ,|U PONIAC STATION WAGON. 5-0453 PPI... Money Dofru, FuU Price 8188. Assume payments ot 810 per month. CALL MR. WHITE. CRED-: rr manager, fe b-osoi. King Ante Sales 115 8. Saginaw excellent condition. FE 4-8188. - Special - ’« FONTIAC 3-DR. CHIEF. AUTO. Trane., radio and heater, white sidewalls a tone blue, exe. coad 8318 Original owner. 20 4-IU8 1800 FONTIAC STAR CHIEF, NY-— —‘-‘tewall ______________ UMed mllesi 1841 PONTIAC 4-DR. HARDTOP. 2-time^hvdrs matlc^radjo heater. ‘dramatic. whitewall mar. f------ nlleage. 81.100. 3-4101. 1851 PLYMOUTO CUSTOM staUon wagon. Auto; trans power steer-teg Power brakes. Radio. Heater. Russ Johnson Motor Sales i 1_AKE ORION ,|MY 2-2871 MY 2-2381 Must Liquidate Remaining Stock v All Cars Will Be Sok) AT COST LLOYD'S Used Car PLAZA • I960 PONTIAC 18 passenger station wagon, t and htater, hydramauc. w Pat or Bob at the Used Car ’Lot’ FORMERLY Schutz Motors, Inc, DeSOTQ-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT •11 8. Woodward Ave. Ml 6-5300 ’58 PLYMOUTH 2-Door V-8, auto, trans., whitewalls. One Owner! I $795 $2695 PONTIAC ~ RETAIL STORE VMH 310 Fourth Street! JK S p.«. > •88 CATAUNA. 8-DOOR HARMSf, i ■si Rambler. i < OimmM 7—WXYZ-TV ■ Channel »—CKLW TV Red Jape Snarls Planned Trip to 71 •:N (0 (2) Movie (coot.) (7) New* and Weather. (9) Popeye. (90 General Chemistry, til* (7) Sports. SIS (7) Newe. u (3) New* Analysis. (4) Weather, ft 99 CD News. (4) New*. (7) Rescue 9. to Quick Draw McGraw. tta (X) flporta. (4) Sports. «:« (2) News. (4) News. (56) Philosophy of Man. 7:99 (2) Divorce Chart. (4) Lock Up. <0 Ijw m 7:99 (4) (2) Divorce Court (coot.) (7) Bag* Bonny. CD Movie. "Larosay, Inc. (1M» A gang of crooks buy % Sixth Avenue luggage shop. Edward G. Robinson. Jane Wyman, Broderick Crawford. t(99) Introductory Psychology 7:49 0) Lions Rear. St 99' (3) Father Knows Best (4) Laramie leant.) (7) Rifleman. (I) Movie (cant.) Northern China. Alice Faya, Warner Baxter, Charire Win-ninger, Arthur Treacher. U>99 (4) (color) Jack Paar. (!) Movie., "Gilda." (1949) 9t99 (2) «iow of the Month. (4) Alfred Hitchcock. (7) Wyatt Carp. (9) Movie (eant.) (99) American History. 9:99 (4) Thriller. (9) Show of Month (cent.) (7) Magamarh West. (9) Front Page Challenge. 9:99 (9) Q.M. Theater. (3) now of Month (coot) (4) Thriller leant.) (7) Dt.) (7) i (9) C M. Theater (cont.) 19:99 (7) Mike Hammer. (3) Moore (eont.) (4) Medicine (eonti (9) Near*. 19:49 (9) apart*. 19(99 r U: 99 (3)! to work In a gambling casino fo 8outh America. Rita Hay-wgrth, Glenn Ford, George Macready. WEDNESDAY MORNING (4) Continental daasroom. Rtf (3) Meditation*. 9:49 (3) On the Tim Front 9*41 (3) TV College. 7:99 (4) Today. (!) Vtanew* 7:99 (3) Felix the Cut 9:99 (!) Johnny Ginger 9:19 Q) Captain Kumaroo 9:99 (7) Stag* 3 9*99 (4) I Married Joan. (3) Mori*. 9*99 (4) Exercise. •*•9 (4) Fays Elisabeth. 19:99 (4) Dough Re ML (!) Exercise. Mi99 (9) Billboard. (4) (Odor) Play Yon Hunch. (9) Chex Helene (7) Divorce Hearing. 19:49 (9) Nursery School (J) I Love Lncy. (4) (color) Prim b Right. (!) Morning Court (9) Romper Room U:M (3) doer Horizon. (7) Love That Bob. (4) “ 4:19 (3) Stent Storm. (9) Adventure time (4) HereT-----id| (2)Edge 4:« (9) Santa 9:09 (4) (color) Georg* Pierrot 4:99 (4) Here’s HoQjnrood. of F*gk (3) Morie. (!) Johnny Ginger. (9) Jingles. 9:99 (7) Lone Raider. 9:4# (4) Christmas Around Worjd. 9:99 (9) Jac LeGotf. TV ; Features By United Press laternatlsml expedition:, 7 p.m. uroe-snatrhing victim who Is asked to Identify the thief from oiice mag shots. SNOW OF THE MONTH, '9:30 .m. (39. Rebroadcast of "Har--the Mary Chase Pulitzer I - - ' a gen- friend named Harvey. Starring Art Carney, special guest star Marlon Lome, with Loring Smith, Larry Blyden, Charlotte Rae and Elisabeth Montgomery. MEDICINE M9R 19 p m. (4). Surgeon performs a Blalock operation. which is designed to eaabia •blue babies” to lead normal lives. GABBY MOORE, 10 p.m. (3). Singers Patti Pags, Alan Dale, and magician-comedian Boh Leads, Join Garry, Marion Larne, Carol Bun-nett and Durward Kirby. "That Wonderful Year” to 1929; JACK PAAR. 11:30 p.m. Jack to back. Hto guests art lens Francis. CMf Arquette and singer Jack HmkalL (Color) Kennedy named him to the Slate Department post Dec. 1 * him to go to Africa, “I got the feeling that he would have Hkad.me to leave the day if possible,” Williams « Searchers Locate Vessel in Distress NEW YORK (AP) - A 99-foot schooner reported in distress In Atlantic was spotted by Coast Guard search plane 110 miles southwest of Bermuda today. The vessel apparently wo hi The governor started to immediately. But, on inquiry, he was toid that he’d have to "dear things with Clark CUtlqrd” before making arrangements lor the trip. * save the snahead for Williams to consult with State Department officials. He dU. They worked out a tentative itinerary but discouraged him from planning travel on commercial afrtinea, which they mid wsrid have trouble getting or eight countries in the allotad time. A government plane coidd the Mm to 13 «r more, they said. ♦ ■ * Hr* Williams agreed gmrriUy, then asked lor aome official status os a Stats Department representative, gain, he wo referred to Clifford. Because Eisenhower still ho ton than flv* weeks to go o this apparently is a mat-MMjMr and Kennedy Williams cannot bo eomfdsgad a repreosu tattoo of the GOP administration. “0# o *f tea Clifford’s baby. How about expenses? Williams this to n’t I lya he’ll da V, but sayi whatever to customary How about pay? That presumably win start when Kennedy the appointment to the “ ate for confirmation. Meanwhile, the governor hopes xneone will pave the way for him to make that trip to Africa. earlier report that it * and taking water badly” in heavy gas. The ship wo manned by a inexperienced crew of lour. A Coast Guard cutter wo an route to the stricken craft. The ship to the research vessel Grace, operated by the Lament Geological Ohara tary, a part of Colombia University. Pontiac Brothers Await Trial on Bad-Check Count Trial probably wffl be held In January for two Pontiac brothers arraigned before Circuit Judge H. lam checks in local supermarkets. Judge Holland attend pleo at Innocent for Herbert L. Bailey, 40. and Robert Bailey. 37, both of 133 Auburn Ave. Both were rale on 9500 bondi pending triaL They ware apprehended Nov. 4 hen an atari afore mam warned of a had check pm_______ wave in the city, stopped the pair when they triad to cash a There are 130 interchanges on Interstate 94 between Detroit and Joseph and 110 other grade laeparatkma and bridges over rtv- /TV New* and Reviews 7—i—r-t- Some of Bob Hope's Shop Actually Was Funny GO SOUTH of the border tor an unusual Christmas setting. Dm three kings are Mexican, the lace cloth Persian blue over gold, goblets red and whits, din-gold on white. Durante's Girl Talked Divorce \li No Marriage NEW YORK (AP)—The way comedian Jimmy Durante’s girl friend of 16 year* put it Monday at the license bureau: “It was a tough struggle.” Durante. 67, and Margaret Alice Little, 40, former sinf showgirl, wiD be married Wednesday. It will be her first. Durante i a widower of many years. ♦. # ♦ The comic, in obvious good spirits, signed autographs and wisecracked to the photographers’ delight. He said they were being married here to avoid rowds in California. . * * * The Rev. Thomas De Luca of Troy, N. Y., win perform the ceremony in 8t. Malaehy’s Roman Catholic Church, known M| 'Actor’s Chapel.” When asked by newsmen what prompted them to .get married, to got in tha first word: I would get a divorce from him if he didn't marry It was a tough struggle tor 16 yean.” Any advice from Jimmy? Traffic volume on Interstate 94 freeway is expected to more than double in most areas during the next 15 years and will increase as much as six times in some Males Forget Former Reservations r r r r r n r 1“ “ IT r : IT nr 1 iT d IT IT 1 IT a IT J IT w IT b W E ■ E r—.c 3 !? 1 H H □ w IT ST e r rf ■TO m an w " n sr IT □ 1 m “ it __ h w w IT w al 1 w ■ |r W 1 n IT r ir ¥ ST IT 5T n W IT ■ IT IT WT ■“ r RT Z n r iT J : By RAM DAWSON AF Ram— News Aarfyst NEW YORK (AP)—The human aula to preening himself as never before. He's poorly literally mil-Uons of Italian Into what be pte-ters to call good grooming—shav-ig lotions, colognes, powders, air tonic, hair pieces and hair yes. This goes on tha year around as M Mim Intel to DmN iirtu •I SSLmT Mk, pal It Comfort n iwtNorn u ItVirtritni It Onruffte, at Brin, M Holditroo* It JU*^* OWN M Roouiro M WWOkt I °ETSLm n StSSk to ProoaiUy M Baxter ■hruk * to** » ComMn. tkuSritef^ Sm '.SF?, sg--— l! BruLh^rtew* U Om riM to M • sss . to Warn et.Uew *n Millions of Dollars Go for Grooming marketing exports have it. jdoctors say, has been helped fay Manufacturers of after-shave to- the widespread knowledge that tioos say, this year's sales should movie, atajp and TV stars do it top the IMP record of 959.1 mil-1 unabashed. Bon. This total was a 126.3 per * * A cent Jump tone* 1916. In that Male hair dying to even ____________ period woman’s perfumes and)hush-hub—at toast as far as sta-toilet waters Increased in aatosjttotics go. Often tha managed hto volume by tolf pur cent ‘ ‘ ‘ --p Men rarely hay Items I perfume for thanarives. But are salons that specialize in keeping the organizational man looking young enough to be worthy [of a promotion. Packaging to designed to peal to men as well as woi n’s esthetic srnsIbiHttea, By FRED DANZIG NEW YORK (VPD - Bob Hope ame tap with a Mg sue day night. That to, Ms special succeeded in running laughs past hto opening monologue ‘ ' do tha comedy sketches, ding together with aki-snoot Hope oh the NBC-TV hour were Jimmy Durante and Polly Bergen and the combination wonted out nicely. • Hope’s monologue rattled gags eff MMh celebrities «« President -Bleat THE CHANNgL SWIM: Bud Collyer has been named host of fatally, Richard Nixon, Deal Marita, Mr. aad Mrs. Eddie Fisher, Jayne Maasfleid aad a earned Harry Had, who that replaces hto current vehicle, Beat the dock,” on ABC-TV beginning Monday, Jan. 90. Another ABC-TV game show, ‘‘Camouflage,” will have Don Morrow as ■ host when it bows on Jan. 9. A A A Jane Fonda makes her dramatic debut on TV Tuesday, Jan. 3, when she costars with George Grfonrd and Glenda Farrell in NBC-TVi "Story of Love” special, “A String of Beads.” U you missed the show, here are some of the lines that Hope opened with: On the dose election — “Wouldn’t it be something if Kennedy served four years and Nixon won?" On Lis Taylor’s libel suit against some ton — 'if Hie hadn’t been going to dentists, she’d never have read On the gold crisis — Rockefeller got sore about the election and took it all back.” ■ A A . A The sketches, usually the most plodding portions of Hope specials, managed to cut loose a little last fright. At least two of tbs three did, anyhow. One lampooned assembly-line production of TV Shows — Uk- aalnwoiir here, had a number at Stagers to throw tola TV aad toey dM it to flna style. The rinsing sketch Mddad “Lady Chatteriey’s Lover,” with Durante at hto best as the great lover, Mias Bergen as "Lady ToUlwogger," end Hope at the cuckold fogy, Lord ToUlwogger. A A A Miss Bergen, incidentally, continues to breeze along nicely as a comedienne. She also had aome contributions to make. Durante did "September Song,” but the mood was missed. DUUNO AMD FILING: A wild line in the closing credits on last night's "Bringing Up Ruddy,'' which involved a stuffed bird. It read — "Eagle by HobbeB Robin- Pershing Missile Scores Success CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) —Tbs Army has scored a second straight launch success with a two-stage model of its Pershing tactical missile. AAA The 34-foot solid-fuel rochet roared away from this test center Monday and propelled a simulated warhead about 140 miles down range. Brig. Gen. Richard M. Horst, commander of the Army BaDtotk; Missile Agency, termed the flight a complete sue- The Army and the Martin Gore developing the missile as a mobile Add weapon with a nuclear range of 90 to 700 miles. Scheduled to become operational in 1962, it will be deployed initially in Western Europe as a replacement for the SOOmfle liquid-fuel Redstone rocket. Haile Selassie Flying lor Visit to Brazil LOME, Togo (AP) - Emperor Haile gelaasie at Ethiopia, accompanied by hto granddaughter, Princess Aida d’Esta. left Monday by plane for an official vfcit to Brazil. RCA COLOR TV Soles and Service Sweet's Radio TV Tsflgato, I think R*a called — that sms featured tovWhto tote Ms hi Ho TV commercials? They switched iis—By to taste-toto an The guy fades from sight Just as hto gtoi to about to kiss him. Well, I*m not with it yet I keep waiting for the invisible man to come back and crash into that to-l SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hearing Tests Pros FarUngat Rea* at "Opso frss. Ay Appoiabaoar 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 PONTIAC, MICH. year log 9 I million a luxury trog- Thls fragrance buying is over Christmas the women lion meat an man’s toaving prep-ito the picture. They buy aratkms—after-shave lotions and » Hum of man’s gift creams, sisetrte praahave and or- Barber Will Describe Haircuts on Radio rtantiy at tide season. $69.95 million annually for * . * A tonic. This dimbs at a rate of Companies bent on making the at toast 5 per cent a year, sen look better or smell sweeter _______ -or he odor free altogether— .___ . , , „.... ..lushroom on aD sides Often they nationwide industry that are divisions of larger chemical, **” to men who have lost or are soap or drug companies. Some- ‘“‘•M » ****** « baldness also r u . .. nine int«% tka *n(lHmia • uwnr mal. By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Some columnists discover stars, but I discovered J*ek Kennedy’s banter, Louie Bocchetto. One night last July after the Democratic convention, 1 met Kennedy**, N.Y. Publicist Ray O’Connell, who told me Kennedy ms wearing a NT. haircut “Jack asked me the ether day where to gut a haircut and I seggiatad ha try Lewis, who has a two-chair shop at the Farit Lane.” O’Connell told me. “Jack said * Te he guedr aad I said, ’Wafl, he trims times they are names ‘ the Odd of H cosmetics. LORE RESISTANCE stetanre to clng or at least to buying openly-producti for the male sex. The I a Mg help In this. Onto assured the item to for men tody, they’re more inclined to buy—at , that’s how the motivational runs into the mil Hons a year category, with exact figures lacking. But there’s e smart sale of hair pieces of afl buy wigs,” say the dressers of men’s crantums. They come in crew cuts and flowing locks aflks. They or all of the toad. Acceptance of this phast of grooqring. the hair --Today's Radio Programs-- •eu ansi wrox nm *m tws) siso-wju, new* wwj, uses. « CELW. V. Raws . - wpon. *m to«* * IfW-WJII. Otoaar D*M * WWJ, Bus *«»• WPON. oumuBh* iito-wra. guMt wwj, ra. wxrk, K . CXLW. JM Utofos TfdMt wvilboy WOAI, D. Cont%4 T-ss-wm. »•» u wpof any OMa - • :M—WJ1L WorM Xtwi . cxlw, a. T&r»iw st*»--WJR. wash. Rsswt W^S-WJh. Ciaiwt _ WWJ, MsMOitaa*' WXTSi JtoSSUto WPON^ Jtrry OUM Uito—WJR. Sm ' wwj. to— cxLW, a Stto-wjn, m*v •AstPertr. WWJ. Men. Bobtru WXTX. WMt CXLW. P»rm, *n Op«n«r WJUL ram, Spot wean. s«n satnisa wpon, Sturt SiSS—'WJit, Kiutc Hall CXLW. Bpt OpMMT WJBtL Urlnw. SUU . WPON. M Lark Tlto-WJX. *•••. Mute WWJ. Newe, Marta wxrk. n«*«, jRS warn. Newt, tarlwar . CXLW. Neve. MfOtfM WPON. s*rlr Mri itsa—wjr, Mwta na wxrx, Nen Wan CXLW, Nm, DteM WJBK. Trame-topUr wca*, Newt, SSarMaa wwj, new*, iwsvn* wxrk. Newt, Writ CXLW. F~ & cxlw, Nm, it*s Darts aoa—WJB. Hava. Murray WWJT Min. Mart—i wxrx, New*, Writ cxlw. jtroa parts , ia:ta—wjr. sari hum WWJ, NUWt, Merten, WXTX, Biaakrnt Club tntt.i ta» am an&ti HeulUt. Coot. wwa mrt MSN CXLW, Jaa Vaa wjix, Man arts wgaa. mmm, iTlurtya WPON. Cbuek UwU wxtx, Mritwks UtON—WJX, "8________ WWJ, Nuwu, Maria WXT1. MeNeeley CXLW, Joe Van , wcax. nun Parte liaa-wjx, toaoana CXLW. jaa,vaa 1JO-WWJ, oaaS Maria liaa-wjx, compotiu CXLW, Jaa ni WJSX. Lee . WPON. Bob Lait Toy-Pistol Holdup Gets Man 3 to IS Occult Court Judge H. Russel Hoiland yesterday sentenced Robert C Cottee of Southfirid to 3 to sen in Jackson Prison for tig a Royal Oak motel etock of $90, using a toy pistol. WPON, Jerry OtMa l:aa—WJR. Canporite WWJ. Ain. Mario WXTX, Pei utatw CXLW. Durteu^ WJBK, Newt, tea WCAX Ban reirtlaa Stto—WJL Maria Man Rfe.'TaWB WE 55 WCAX, Mowu. StoTtSaa (:aO—WWJ—L jraker CXLW. Neau, Dartaa wjbx, nm Maria Newt, Mari, wfe SEP OK,lm 1 : ( - CStteo, 99. af 1 Raad, pleaded guilty Nov. 14 to the armed rohhaay of Mrs. Hal-ga Bochlnek, dark at the gar. rente Motel, 24SS N. tea. He used a silk stocking pulled over hto head during the Nov. 5 robbery, police said. He was picked up the next day when police apot-4 hto car. He told police he robbed Mrs. ochinck because of mounting bills and concent over hia wilt’s health. Ex-S«abM Loader Dies PRINCETON, N. J.’ (AP)—Vice dm. William Mack Angas, retired. 68, commander of Settee operations for the 7th fleet In World War H, died Monday. He had been serving as chairman of the Princeton University Department of Ovfi---- Corioa’s RCA Color TV Smrhf A Color TV Servicing Dealer SAVE! —IT IS CHEAFKR — SAVE! • NO SRVICI INSURANCt CHARGES • • NO INKTALLATION CHARGB O • ran ONI YIAR WARRANTY ON AIL FARTS • • ran INSTALLATION AND DMJVIY O [COM M AND » IV SiORM F—0T SHOW 019 RCA Color TV Daily at S P. ».M, j , CONDOR'S TV SALES ft SERVICE said, That’s good enough!' Louie got r lot of publicity after that drlg-l! Inal story. Ia fact, Kennedy can hardly get an 3 WILSON appointment now. And now CBS Radio la engaging Louis to help deacribe the ■ haircuts and other things that men wear at tb# Inaugural BatiL S TU take my tools aloof to Washington In case fra Beads ap haircut,” toys Louie the oelebrlty. Audrey Mae dew was it B Mereeeo with four or five people bat not six (Bob Six, get HI). However, she's get Six-appeal.. . President-Elect Kennedy was por-trayed on stage at the off-B’way improvised comedy, “Hie Premise.” An actor pretending to be Kennedy came on stage with a baby in hie anna and announced. “You’ve all been wondering about the new Secretary of State----- TOO LATE!! INSTALL ST0IH I WINDOWS NOW! AUDREY THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Lucky Lnctano’s local pal* have already received his Christmas cards from Italy. Linda Darnell’s brother Cal to Vivien Leigh’s new personal secretary, in London ... Cary Grant took two blondes to Leone’s, mixed their salad tor ’em ... Teresa Brewer tamed down a $35,000 Christmas week. booking, to stay home with tbs family .. .-Dene DuaneW daughter Mary will make her film debut in “Bask Street” ... Ted Wt lectures hto companions on the evils of smoking (and snuffs out tbetr cigar*ta if they put ’em down) ...” , | *. it if TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Hal Holbrook described a business-like executive? "If be wanted to kill himself he’d call tn his Secretary and dictate a suicidd note.” *■' ,, WISH I’D SAID THAT: There's a local weather forecaster so inaccurate he couldn’t predict ^bat time 1YU be an hour from now. v. That’s a(|irl, brother. (Copyright, 1$M) f ■ See our new 1961 lino of prime and storm window*, jj designed for frost.and moisture barrier, no transfer of 'to to outside cold into home. Most Complete Lino el Wiadews aad Deem | • Sliding Doors - Prim* • Sliding Doors - Storm ■ i • Storm Osoa • Storm Wlidowt • Awming j ■ Willows • PictRro Windows • Priao • Pictiro ■ S WlRdotrs • Storm • Eaclosvoi - Glass aid Screen a ■ • Stone will Siding • Awnings - Psrmaaeit ov ■ S loll Up • AlamiRRm Siding — Cnstom Work » ■ • Irtto tailings and Colon FtCI IritartN of T«n fast or ri oar Shorn Soon All Awning and Stem Window Sales rE$-7IOI FE 3-7800 3418 W. Buron Sfrwet CALL NOW! GUARANTEED INSTALLATION THIRTY-tWo THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, Worries Nixon Over Dilklit Bid WASHBOSTON (AP) -/ Vice President Richard M. Nixon Caen President-Elect John F. Kennedy ia robbing Republicans of some of their thunder by veering to the middle of the political road. Nixon bases this view on appointments to the Cabinet and other posts his successful presidential rival already has announced— and some that still are in the speculative stage. NOP ORLEANS (AP) - Tbeidown the state's antl-lntegn New Orleans school Integration legal arsenal and refused to hamlk' seemed oh closer to sohl- pend integration - iwtpjhji, des-‘~- " ° “•---------1 " Court ac t ipi Republicans blamed Bowles primarily (or what most of them described as the radical Democratic .platform. But there isn’t much pohtical pay-off in attacking an undersecretary. Particularly if bis boss seems to' be doing a good CMut-ac t ion la smashing the Although the court ruling was status legal' harriers to integra- not directly on the three-judge tton.- court’s actions, It in effect if- The State Legislature in Baton firmed them. Rougl plowed ahead in Its fourth Specifically, the Judges blasted attempt to remove the Orleans interposition, a theory under] Parish School Board for accepting which the date claimed to place MMp court orders for token [itself between the federal court school- integration. land the people of Louisiana to rjF.‘ ♦ W * prevent school integration. Legislators called the high court W * d ruling asinine and ridirulous. | In a four-paragraph unsigned, Thft, white boycott held firm atlopinlon, the judges agreed with! Frantz and McDonogh No 19, the the lower court that Interposition! two schools integrated Nov. 14.1 is unconstitutional and, ' 'If taken | School officials said they doubted \ seriously, it is An illegal defiance Every SUNDAY It dm 'til • PM Uatil Christinas The same son of political tea-1 soning holds for Williams. Republicans say that.-by appointing some of the outstanding Democratic liberals in this manner to loss than top level Jobs, Kennedy is trying to pre-empt the middle of the road. It is no secret that Nixon feela if Kennedy names Douglas,pilon, now undersecretary of state, as secretary of the treasury and Dillon accepts, the action will make it more difficult to build Republican opposition to the new Democratic administration. I'Nfl.E HAM NEEDS MET i— The parents of 18-month-old Daniel Levy of Albany, N.Y., found a selective service card with his name on it lit the mail box. Dan is more than willing to go into the service, as lie packs his training pants, skates and tennis racket. Fortunately for his parents, however. the government says he’ll ' he allowed .to stay home for a few more years. They hope Dillon won't crowd It further, by joining the Kennedy' band. They already have the word of Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gates Jr. that he won't go over to the opposition if he is asked to remain at the Pentagon. This would put a Republican of moderate views at the helm of a department concerned with management of the nation's fiscal affairs. Dillon would be in a position to put a brake on the kind of big spending Nixon forecast in the campaign would be the hallmark of a Kennedy administration. Adenauer Is Expected to Return From Illness BONN, Germany enter- * * * aa president for the next year,|,aini,,g- . ' . "Michigan's population is boom- Riecke pledged to follow the mod- „ * * . ._. big," he said, "and the number of Prate pSuckTof his predecessor. I **> «"**"**»*“ ^ auto, and tracks Is Incftuing. We Lkwd JRittiner 1 ** t0 *•» «*- still have a formidable Job ahead." cessor at the philanthropic foun- *• * * RIXE t'NANIMOrsi.Y jdation. He• said a highway needs study In Washington, the nine Su-j ........... [due to be corhpleted in 1961 will preme Court judges ruled unani- The Isle of Man, holiday resort help map planning for the next 20 mously against Louisiana's appeal in the Irish Sea, was occupied by I years, the way a 1955 survey tar a stay at a three-court federal the Vikings about the end of the helped set up the present highway MUrt decision Nw. 30 that struck I sixth century. 'program. His choice of Dean Rusk as secretary of state has given the Republicans little to-complain about. At the same time, Kennedy moved out of the direct line of] PUgHH ompany—in any land—there is one word most rigid standards and restrictions ever placed stantly recognized and understood, ♦ over the assembly of a motor car. 'ord is "Cadillac”—and the meaning, of More than fourteen hundred -separate inspections • "quality”. now guard tha quality and goodneaa of every is understandable, we think, that Cadillac Cadillac—and the results of this crusade for perfec- ve become a part of the universal vocabulary. tiqn can ha aeen , . and felt... and sensed, i devotion to excellence has been of such a Here is Superb craftsmanship in every body line and of such a tenure—that the car has ... skillful tailoring and magnificent workmanship tha world-wide Symbol of everything good in every interior . . . and wonderful solidity and able in a manufactured product.. quietness in every mile of ride, truth has never been more beautifully Don’t you owe yourself a personal appraisal of I than it is in the current Cadillac. this 1961 "car of cars"? ag to look at . . . thrilling to drive ... ' Your Cadillac dealer will provide the car and tha g to own—it ia truly the master achieve- keys for a demonstration at any time, motordom’s master builders. We know you’ll agree that it aaya "quality” with «*Hw has imposed on its construction tha an eloquence all its own. VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER Open 9 'til 9 Daily anr. Sheriff Frank Irons today warned county residents to keep thftr children from wandering out on thin Ice and to stay off it themselves. "Thto |a a uMhol Mast* at the year, whew we caw expect a raab 4 a.m.......2 IQ a.m. ... 7 « a.m. ... 2 Noon ...J7j 8 a.m.......M p.m. .. .211 The temperature dropped} Re$t Stat# R#cor* to 1 degree above zero ^°nY All-Timo low to Pontiac today as the! Temperatures severest cold spell of the season gripped the area. I united Press toteraatfonai The bitter cold reached! ^ Huron &rca Tmi~ its worst at 8 a.m. " jdCnt* tmlay dlUf iml It was zero or below at spots out- j® fresh snow ZtOfin that side the city. The. 1-degree reading tied the 57-yearold record for the coldest Dec. 13 in this area. The Assodat-ed Press said it was 1 degree oa Dec. 13, 1909. the (rigid wave to relax a Mb. 'll was supposed to warm up to 39 to 25 this afternoon and tonight’! low was not expected to drop below 13. 1r ' it A the high is expected to reach 30 tomorrow. Considerable cloudiness is predicted. dumped up to 16 Inches of snow within a 25-mile radius of the city. . The storm struck Mon-day in advance of tbe coldest temperatures of the year in Michigan and was caused by frigid northeast winds plowing across warmer Lake Huron. ahifttd during the night but the The busiest garages said waiting periods for service were • tow of 2 below at Poet Hum at g a.m. the thermometer had inched its way back to 4 above at 9 a.m. * • ft * * Poet Huron didn’t come dose to bring the "lee box’’ of the state. The teweat reading *f the night (■HOST TOWN - New York City peered out at a furious blizzard Monday morning, then rolled over and went back to sleep under a blanket Of IT inches of nnw falhu snow. Normally bustling thoroughfares looked like snail town A couple Pontiac school buses wouldn’t start and bad to be lowed to get the engines going. In Romeo. 5S9 pupils of Romeo sr HMu junior High School hud their seaside streets. This is a view of Times Squire and day oft in a row. The achoal shortly before noon waiting for the traffic crush furnace Is on the blink, that couldn't get through the thousands of traffic Morning west to aarthwir jams leading into the city. , winds at M miles per hoar --------1 to M-li miles tonight . .*“* r*** '*• Plan Board to Hear Report From Detroit neignt of 19 feet n i«f» ......... ■■...— . , -. w---------------—---- Recent wether conriUom have sheathed area pends with lew, and it ia starting to form aka* the shores at the lakes. ’’But K h still too treacherous to venture out,” Irons noted. "Until we have at least a wwek of constant hearing temperatures, heads the Ice cannot be considered safe.” Jri* k • . Berik snwrri the tiwashtp No lake or pond hereabouts! h,Mni ud the three new ay-can be considered safe tor skating yet.” Irons warned. He parents to tell their youngsters to stay off the Ice until local recreation directors prom safe. Last December, two brothers aged 6 and 4 drowned In n pond near their home wh wandered onto thin k*. A third brother. 8, barely waa saved from the same fate. The drowning* oe> cured 13 days before Christmas. Pontiac's Drunk Drivers Will Get fail Terms Anyone arrested and convicted of drunk driving tat Pontiac from today through’ the holidays will spend the time in the Oakland Comity Jail.---- z '" -------’------- Thkt wag the wanting Issued thii morning by Municipal Cour Judge's Cecil MeCailum, am Maurice E. Finnegan, who said that jail sentences would be ‘'automatic" for drunk drivers. There «dZ bene exceptions, the Judge. Mid. In a joist statement, they arid: "We want people to stay alive during the holidays. tt people insist on getting.drunk, they will endanger not only their lives, but the lives of innocent bystanders. They will face' a stiff penalty for their actions."«£ ■ Both, judges said that all persons convicted of drunk driving would also bd^assdised the maximum fine of MOO Ship Noddy Repaired SAULT STE. MARIE, Ortt. — The 250-foot Canadian grain freighter Starbellc, damaged in a Like Superior storm last week, has alntort completed temporary repairs here. Reds Off for Havana By JANET ODELL Gifts for the home and family are many and varied this year. They may be as simple as a guest book for The extreme cold pawned ev-!*»1«one hi a new home or as expensive as a two-way Moscow CAP) — a Soviet tradejery bit of the record snow ac-j radio station. The latter is portable and may be used delegation left for Havana today!cumulation for a prewinter storm, anywhere to iron out plans for trade with Only the blizzards at 1888 end „. ■■ , . . . _ Cuba in iml the Soviet new a rnr. which occurred during the! F°r * recreation room you might conaraJHie or a agency Tam reported. I tContinued on Page 2, Got. 7> i pair Of lamps With rooster bases. Some fnmigglt like a light swp^f pla^ with a thermom County to Get Water Data By GBOBOE T. TMXMU JR lap can’t nan dry with the city's Most at us take water for grant- W*- tinc-SL Clair Cbunty area early so children could be Detroit’s temperature renutinad at 4 above through the sight and the Auto .Chib reported switch-boards were flooded by calls from /Bourgtois/ Words Rate Sneer in Red Dictionary BUDAPEST (AP> - Hweartoa words with "bourgeois comwi are betog kbried B Soc (before socialism) to a new dictionary now under preparation. The words include count, baron, brokerage, stock market, playboy, company both an interesting decoration and a fascinating toy. Willman isn’t aa able to put tiac'a name on the dotted Une as Remus is anxious to have [The manager is waiting ward from jPoattac'f auto todtoafoy uhtoh A counting frame or abacus la «*» «*» than half of the city’s water - on whether it will buy Detroit water from Pontiac or time to provide its own from separate wells. The modern family tree has berate popular. W« usual one- In the center ot a mat framed in silver is a Around it are This is the major concern for Willman before he can any yes to Remus. The other, of course, to that Wiltanan must have the eftyj commission's approval. The exchange at Me dub rod-mated 10.000 Detrot a monting because of the cold. Hoods Cancer Group DETROIT tB — Dr. Router L. of pathology at Wayne State University college at medicine, has been named preridtof at the Michigan Oncer Foundation. Kennedy and Meany in TalkFestToday {pictures ot the family, includingjMusr KNOW SOON the pet dog if you like. J "I want to know one way or the tt * (other," Willman said. He said in- f How about a colored flberglaa}****'* to bmg to planter, with or without the plant?!“*• x x ^ (if you prefer wood. H. A. Baldwin, director of the power section of General Motors (Continued oa Page 8, Col. 31 WASHINGTON (API — President-Elect John F. Kennedy began busy round of conference* on possible Cabinet appointments today by aeetog George Meany, president of tor AFL-CJO. The labor leader, whose presence on the Kennedy appointment list had not been previously an nounced, showed up at Kenaedy'i Georgetown home at 9:10 a.m and went directly inside without a word to newsmen clustered outside in 11-degree weather. Free A formal announcement by Kennedy of McNasaara'a toed shortly, tt raid. McNamara was elected president of Ford only five weeks ago. The Free Preen said that McNamara's resignation probably. [Continued on Age 2, Cbi. 2> THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DRCBMB&R 18, fate Fresh Algerian Rioting Oran {^ Warnings i*°ntioc' ^qtel ” 9 • Arrange Meeting on State Finances French President Vow* to 'Smash' Leaders of Violence; Cuts Tour ALGIERS, Algeria (UPIi-Riot-■ Ing broke out anew today In Oran Charles de (Mile was determined to "smash” riot leaders who] Jbmed Ms peace mission into a] financial ta#Matlail ht next year will be the subject of joint meeting Wednesday at Devon Gables Inn. arranged by die Michigan State Chamber of Commerce lor members of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and the Femdale Board of Commerce. Mere than tea person* ace an-peeled tg. attend a panel discus •Ian period hug toning at 4 p.m.. said Mm HMtager. manager of the Pontine Area Chamber of Wtha Port of Oran in „the fifth Bascnttve day of Algerian riot-Igg They were driven back hy police armed with tear gas and nohn grenade* and aided by cooler heads among older settler*. Algiers, scene of earlier rioting, was _Oa Gaulle, reported livid with fig* at the battling between right-wing french settlers and Moslem 1 killed soon* and ~te| to Paris toteo'. Paris report* ,)W he would order drastic punishment of the ringleaders. French sources said that ‘Urn an a of the dead showed only 29 had been killed by bullets. They said 7 others had slit throats. It bid been dabbed and 4 died from broken skulls. OUT* TOUR The taxation in Oran improved lam today when the settlers’ French Algeria front (FAD called air the general strike which has ftppmMiisM the etty since Friday when De GattBe arrived tor what •mgt to have been a six-day « JB cut ana day off the tour ssnase of the developing crisis. Panelists will include at least tour Michigan businessmen recruited for the program by the state chamber of commerce. The state's financial position and business tax structure will be analysed with an eye to possible changes in the legislature next aes- dm __. '' j nssrn rtlons being accepted at gi+rimmlwr diets cover dinner following the dtocueeton priod. Kennedy and Meany in Confab Today (Continued From Page One) would result in Henry Ford H again assuming the dual responsibility of chairman of the board }ontiac Firm OKs 614 Pact Si—I Company Prop*-Lawsuit and Ay— to Teamster Contract ENDS me* DUTY — Mrs. Ralph T. Norvell (right), past chairman of the M8UO Scholarship committee is turning her duties over to Mrs. Maxwell Matthews for the ensuing year. Ac- cording to the report Monday evening, Mrs. Norvell'a committee raised 145,000 tor boys and girls at MSUO during the past year.. A boat of area ettisena and organisations participated. County to Get Water Data Ford has served as chairman and chief executive officer stac* the board of directors named McNamara president on Nov. 9. PAT CHECK LEM If McNamara does accept the it would mean ewapptag an annual .paycheck of about 1400.000 lor the 125,000 aum that Cabinet members receive. Kennedy scheduled separate meetings at his Georgetown home with Ralph Bradley, president of the Illinois Farmers Union, and Rep. Harold Cooley, DJf.C, chair-man of the House Agriculture Committee. On tap was Bcuudon of who will head the Agriculture Department in the new admtoto- could be one of the most difficult of the Kennedy regime. wgpmu flight to Puds. -in Paris, Iptosmed sources said De Gaulle had decided In order drastic punishment at the rl* leaders. They said he “exploded fti The 70-yearrid French president was reported ptoqni with Ms cdhhMt as xiUe after setting 1 i (da (Continued From Pag* One) Corp.r said ha didn't know whe he’d answer the city manager. •Of el the thtags that we eae There we* tkm whether the prssldent-eiect was ctorn tf a deciaion oa the Agriculture post. There has bean speculation the job may go to lUp. Georg* *. McGovern. D4LD., or Fred V. Heinkel, president of the Missouri Am early in the vote counting on election night. •ti * * Only Illinois, Massachusetts and Rhode island have not yet reported official vote counts, they stand now, the popular vote totals are Kennedy MJVJH and Nixon 34,105.985. Kennedy still is credited with 300 electoral votes, 31 more than the 269 l needed to win. votes, u. S. Dlst. Court Judge Ben C Qmnally ruled that his court had no Jurisdiction to rule an the Republican challenge of the election result He also said there was no proof that anyone’s rights had been violated when thousands of Texas ballots were voided for technical reasons. ♦ 'it. Within two hours after the ruling the State Board of Canvassers mat in Austin and formally certified the election of 34 Democratic electors pledged to Kennedy. This move appeared to preclude any further legal action by Texas Republicans under state tew. * * * Kennedy won Texas by a mar-_ln of 46,233 votes. The Republicans changed that more than MO,-000 ballots had not been counted and asked the court to order a recount of all .paper ballots cast in Texas. VME Dixie BOLT In another - development, pledged electors tram Mississippi and Alabama met in Jackson, Miss., and said they would vote for Son. Harry F. Byrd. P-Va.. lor president. They urged other Southern states to Join their cause, hoping to throw the election into the House of Representatives. It is considered very unlikely that this will happen. Thera was no immediate c ment from Byrd, who supported neither presidential candidate in the campaign. The eight unpledged electors from Mtetissippi and the six tram Alabama have. not been counted either way in determining Kennedy'* electoral vote total of 300. * * * In Texas, which has 34 electoral HOT DOGS HOME-MADE CHIU lers coin nun #1 16SI THJMAPM RD. In Illinois, with 37 electoral votes, State Circuit Judge fltem-as E. Klucsynski dismissed two suits by Republicans against the Democratic-dominated Cook County and Chicago Election Boards. They demanded that official canvass results be altered in favor of Nixon. WILL APPEAL Kennedy's margin in till note was 8,848 votes. His big. plurality in Chicago Just edged Nixon's bulge fa) GOP downstate anas. Georges Dapples, attorney for the Nixon recount committee that filed the suits, said he would appeal KhicxyndH's rulings to higher state courts. Bpt time i* running out. The National Electoral College will go through its traditional ceremony of electing the president on Dec. 19, less than a week from now. Once that occurs, Kennedy's election will be official. Inevitability of Death Kept From Dying Bride LONDON (AP)-Like all br Patricia Allen, 38, was happy and excited on her wedding day. But for her young husband it was hud to be gay. * ★ ★ For Brian Bruton, 24, knew that within weeks his lovely wife would be dead with cancer. * ★ * He shared Ms tragic secret with the chaplain and guests who crowded round Patricia's hospital bad for the special marriage core- Now, altar only 2D days of marriage, Patrida is dead. "The great thing. Is that the de-eption worked,"' said Bruton. 'Pat never realised for a moment that deaffa was near. "We even talked about the family ^ha should have when she left the hospital ... "I shall never forget how happy aha-feoked. But no one knows how hud it was for us to look happy .too.* Smiling, she whispered the wedding responses as she lay dutch-tag a bouquet of red carnations wed- WED M DAYS Brian gently slipped tl ding ring on her finger. Then Patricia helped him cut the first slice of wedding cake. PALACE'S AUTO WASH *2 Baldwin An. Ft 3-9027 Red Skelton Resting After 3-Hour Surgery HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Doctors say comedian Red Skelton, 47, is resting comfortably after a three-hour operation Monday to correct a ruptured diaphragm. He was reported in good condition at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. * * The diaphragm te a. thin membrane separating the stomach from the uppet1 chest. Doctors said Skelton may have ruptured his diaphragm as a result of hia many pratfalls during perform- Eleanor Powell Mending HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actress-dancer Eleanor Powell is reported in satisfactory condition after minor surgery St Cedars of Lebanon Hospital Jataxlay. ■t Germany produced 30.8 per cent more cars and trucks the lint three months of 1960 Winn In the same period the previous year. Two MSU Men Sentenced Over Business Venture LANSING UP»—A pair of Michigan State University students has been fined 183 plus costs and sentenced to 10 days in the Ingham County JaU for failure to register an assumed business name tho county clerk. Jeremiah L. Lynch, St Grasse Pointe Farms, and Arthur 19, of Lansing, have pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor, resulting from a food-selling enterprise Lynch formed Untcommerce, Inc., and worked with Harger in •lling "Panic/Klts”—packages of food for long study sessions dur ing final examinations. They mailed 20.000 letters to parents of freshmen student* at M8U, Ohle State, Northwestern, the University ef Cklca ; i and other schools, offering the kits. When the packages arrived MSU students started complaining the packages did not contain the quantity or quality of food their parents paid for. 'rtse pair said they are turning /er large'quantities of the St. Vincent Home for in Lansing. School authorities said some of the brownies, cookies, candy and crackers will be forwarded to tic hoods as protection against the frost Magdeburg, East Germany. Rusk Expected to Oppose Rush to Summit Conclave WASHINGTON (81 — The new secretary of state for the Kennedy administration, Dean Rusk, is expected to oppose the rush to summit conference advocated by Soviet Premier Khrushchev and favored by British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. RUSk, 51, a self-made diplomat, favors More traditional and *• tious forms of negotiation. His views on the subject were spelled out earlier this year in a lecture delivered at the Council on For- eign Relations in New York. He| 'made clear there that he thinks the president's personal diplomacy should be reserved for very rare and special uses. * * *■ Rusk was named by President-Elect John F. Kennedy Monday to take over the State Department and the day-to-day direction of U. S. foreign policy in the administration starting Jan. 20. Blame Fanatic for School Blast •a Bundle of Dynamite dipt ' Atlanta Negro Institution,*. No Injuries ATLANTA, Ga. (APl-A fanatic was blamed tkky for an explosion which blasted the side of a large Negro elementary school and damaged a dozen homes in Atlanta’s northwest section. “8 was the work of a fanatic, of that we are sure," said PoUee Capt. R. E. Little, head at a special subversive section in the Detective Bureau. ft ft it' Ail available men in the PoUee Department were taking' part in the intensive investigation. FBI agents and a demolition team from the tad Army entered the case on a cooperative basis. Investigators ware atm trying to learn file type at. explosive used. Particles picked up at the scene were being tested in.FBI laboratories and af the tad Army' | near Ft. McPherson. First reports said a bundle of dynamite, containing from 3 tp 20 sticks, was hurled at the side entrance of the 1,600-pupi] English Avenue Elementary School at 2:40 a. m. Monday. No one was in-jjured by the blast. Investigators said later there was a possibility a liquid-type explosive, such as nitroglycerin, had been used The blast damaged the school auditorium and two classrooms and showered neighboring Negro homes and parked cars with flying stone and debris. Dr. John Letson. city school superintendent, estimated It would, cost he-| tween $1,000 and $1,500 to rpeair Ford of England Advised to Sell Kennedy also announced that R*pf Bowles was his choice for ^ Khool expkmion took place| undersecretary of state and that the dny ^ massive Negro .Adlai E. Stevenson had acceptedmeetings and a down-1 the post of United States ambas* town march protesting segregated! sador to the United Nations. {lunch counters in the down * * A area.. Rusk is an old hand at the State j Department operation, having served as assistant secretary dur- ATI Plrt HlcCOIlter |ing the Truman administration. AlL'LlU l/llM/WUI Rusk made his big impression Strand Overs Opsw Pally st 10:4$ A.M. NOW Tfcfi: FRIDAY! 2 EXCLUSIVE t 1ST RUN FUTURES , ■■■HEMPKE! | LESIONS | OF THE Ctauseort I NDLEJiy s Peatwes 11:25-2:10-5:40-8:45 STARTS SUNDAY! *7111 WIZARD OF BAGDAD" "YOUNG JISSI JAMES" Court authorities said Harger Lynch have indicated they will appeal their ease. Stockholders Told U.S.j^JI^S X^ OppOSeS COR-COII Offer of $20.37 Fair, in charge of U. S. political poll- p. | , Icies at the time of the Korean LANSING (AP) — Despite ate Deal 19000 War outbreak in I960 , and in the (tenement of a constitutional con- | months following. vention by the Michigan AFLCIO.j LONDON 181 - British directorsL-svnKm iisrrni war a mwnber unk)n “ *oing to stick have advised stockholders to ac-*', by it* guns in opposing a conven-j shares' oMts decisive action by the Unit-*° W Ml ^ ^arcs °‘ iU ed States such as President Tru-British subsidiary. $ I man ordered to meet the Com- munist attack on South Korea. He Distemper, greatest disease kilter of dogs, may he hotter controlled by a new vaccine Immunizing dogs against the disease. The vaccine also contain* modified live virus of infectious hepatitis, giving file dog protection against both diseases with on jectian. The offer was mads Monday in!,' a letter to the holders of 17.? million ovdinafcy shores, most of them British; Tfiteling about $380 million.' it Is the largest bid ever made for the shares of a British company. ft i . Sir Patrick Hennessy, chairman of the British Ford Co., said the offer is fair and reaaonabie. Ford Is asking to bay the out-'bhrea—the eady own* a controlling interest of 8L8 per cent-for 145'/, ahilitags («*.«). The shares closed ea the Loadea stock exchaage at 111 shilling* 7 Vi peace (tU-SS). When. the offer was first announced a month ago, objections were voiced by British socialists and the U.S. Treasury. Rritons feared local Jobs might be endangered and the treasury [warned that such a large dollar payment to foreigners would gravate the strain on the gold reserves. ,★ 4 Hennessy fold the stockholders in a letter: . Assurances have been given by Ford UJM. that If the offer is accepted. Ford England win remain a British company, continuing to make a substantial contribution to the British economy and without change in Ms employment pohey” He explained Ford prospects would be brighter undo1 all American The Michigan State Employes Union said Monday it would ask! AFL-CIO to recopsidcr the action taken by its executive board! Dec. 3, approving .a convention, j At the same time. Die MM) the nuclear age to establish the! reaffirmed It* sppsstttea to the practice of fighting tor a precise convention method ef revising and limited purpoar, in that case,) foe CS-year-etd state reastttotiao. favored keeping the strictly limited and once told < aociates that it' might be vital in misses ... hardly anybody Christmas Club payments CHOOSE YOUR 1961 CHRISTMAS CLUB . they know that a November Christmas Club check means o biU-free holiday. You, too, con save the easy way, and have cosh for Christmas shopping in 1961. Start your Christmas Club today at ony Pontiac State Bonk office. DEPOSIT EACH WEEK 1 RECEIVE IN NOVEMBER,* 1961 $ -25 ' $ 12.50 .50 1 25.00 i.oo ! 50.00 2.00 100.00 3.00 150.00 . 500 250.00 10.00 500.00 "WMh the mere lateaoe competition la world markets, particularly ia Europe, the Ford group will have to pay even more ettea-ttoa la the future to qaeetisaa at competitive coat profitability. "Other things being equal, greater support is Ukdy to be given to the expansion and development of I companies in the Ford group which are wholly owned rather than to of companies in which minority Interests are held outside the group.” ft 4) . w No British counteroffer has been made and there seems little opposition now among stockholders to the deal. If Ford acquires 90 per cent of the shares it will b* entitled by to purchase the remaining shares compulsorily. PONTIAC BANK 4 CONVMMNT OMC8I Main Qftice: StoinsW at Lswrtncs ‘ „ % to S Service,.'; 4 E. Law ranee CLOSES T0MHT ©PEN FBI.-SAT.-SUN. to repel the aggression. Rusk also felt that the policies of President Truman and Secretary of State Dean AcheSon had to prevail over the war-expansion policies of the U. S, commander the Far East, Gen. Douglas c Arthur. Truman fired Mac-Arthur in early 1951 for arguing publicly against his directives. * ft #- Rusk te expected to get off to good start with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee when he goes before it for examination. He has a reservdlr of good will among committee members of both parties. FAR EAST VIEWS HAZ V But if he faces any difficulty on.Capitol;Hill, it almost certainly wifi turn on questions of Ms lews on theN Far East. Rusk's detailed views on Far Eastern issues remain to be developed pubtidy. It 1s understood that he shares the Kennedy criticism of the Eisenhower administration’s handling of Red China, not favoring U. 8. recognition but considering a more flexible policy necessary. it ft f ' Within a .few hours at. Rusk’s appointment Monday, Secretary of State Christian A. Harter saged "warmest regards.” told Rusk he would be in Europe week but that top State Department official^ "will be glad facilitate your contacts with the department. " Word of Kennedy’s three appointments was well received at the United Nations. The saion took at Ms rsaveattsa la October prior [ to a statewide vote Is the laaor ! Nov. 8. Voters approved a plan setting! up a vote on calling a convention in the April 3 election and liberal-! izing the voting requirement for] calling it. They alto agreed to a change in the method of selecting delegates. Prior to the November election, the AFL-CIO also opposed a convention. Reversing itself, the executive board Joined ranks with supporters in what it said was a move to make the legislature more representative of the voting popu-J Bethlehem Steel Shuts Still Another Furnace BUFFALO, N. Y. (AP)—Bethlehem Steel Co. shut down another open hearth furnace Monday, sending area steel production down to 34.5 per cent of capacity. A union spokesman said 4,310 of the 15.400 wericera at the couiv Oy’sTHth largest steel.plant have been laid off. The over-all total of area steelworkers idle is estimated at more than 6,000. Short Subjects I 7:00 and 9:45 HURON Feature 17120 and 10:00 Plan to Opan Segment of Lcmsing-Flint Freeway j LANSING CAP) - The State Highway Department has an-nouncet) it will open a Sve-mOel stretch of the Lansing-Flint freeway Thursday morning. te Highway Commissioned ____ J Margie will -eut Ifae ribbon officially opening the $$.5 hill-lion project north of Durand, between M7i and M13 in Shiawassee County...... ...."y- ;j The department has also aa-■Muaced the remptettsa af a j IWMI4 mattoralsattoe prajret' on M48, east af kagtaaw. The highway has been widened from two to four lanes for one and one-third miles, and entrance andl exit ramps to Interstate175 (U.S.2S) have been completed, the depart-] ment said. snrhJOIES EAGLE NOW SHOWING •mRICMMO CARLSON-M1KSM8 ---STARTS- FRIDAY EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWUVG SONG WBHCXJL ENpi ** AT IBB MIRACLE MILE Oltft-lm THEATER THE POyTlAC PftBSS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, I960 Hit Career a Viried One Easy-Care Cottonf in Plctfd, [Print, Embroidered Designs Choose long-sleeve, stand-up collar styles —they’re washable, wrinkle-free, need little ironing. Men will cherish these combed cotton plaids, sateen prints and embroidered solid-color chailis shirts, MacGregor Toiletries-Make Splendid Gifts These "must" items, for men ate a __ ■ superb buy —choose handsome sets *lQQ of cologne, shaving kxions, creams, • s,t bowls, mugs in neat red-striped boxes. yfa* *•* Box of Two w*p*ntu- Tha name "Wadgafiald” U your guarantaa i at quality. I important newst Sturdy Cotton Argyles In Washfast Colors We’ve a huge array of quality Wedge- 2 pairs field soda tor the men on your Christ- anew** mas list. Pick several pair for lasting *129 comfort and wear in heather or light color argyle patterns. Whools Squeal on 5 Youthful Soft Stealers NEW YORK (UPn Patrol man Howard Wolfe was surprised to hear the squeal at rusty wheels' an an otherwise quiet downtown ! street. Men’s lpO% Wool ^Driving Gloves Give Him New Slippers For Fireside Comfort Here's a handsome opera style for comfy lei- .. sure. Vinyl moc vamp, cushion crepe soles * and heels, full plaid lining ** Ffill UMdRO keel, sot^hproT trim 51.79 Michigan Mutual Liability Company Our wool knit driving gloves keep hands warm... leather-grip palms permit firm wheeling control For practical gifts, choose turned down or straight op cuff style* in natural or dark colors and save! 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Cuff links, Tie Clasps; Sfone or Initial Sets Your dmiceaf a variety of stone! or _ mother-of-pearl sets. These striking *|QQ cuff links and tie clasps come in a. ■ mt metal hinged gift box. ■,*»«»« DOWNTOWN POP DRAYTON PLAINS Give Him Refreshing Toiletries • *. Shaving Lotion, . Cologne Sets Our "Seafonh" good grooming numbers are attractively booted for . ^ extra special Christmas gifts! Choose popular shave lotion with *FjOO cologne in 4-oa. white jogs or Heather Minute Shave in a handy fizjfilr' M| PjWij |V| THB PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, D&CFMPflR 13, IMT Thirst for Learning rnEw'tiA^,. Cnnn.'(iKP) » The snow canceled many a meeting here Monday night, put[\!l25 Yale students {ought their way to one that was too good in pan up. They, sat politely ■astbe lec- Crrunch Scrrape AT rMlIU IT WAS COLD, TOO—Temperatures dropped through the East and Midwest, hovering near the sera mark. Fred Schindler, 15, of Toledo found a space helmet was Just the thing as he aoomed around on his motorbike (above). Below, an ambulance with an elderly patient was stalled in Boston. However, foe- patient was not In immediate danger. Get Immediate New York (top). But tor the few brave souls who ventured out onto the roads there awaited many fhistrating add barrowing hours of creeping, pushing, stalling, etc. (bottom). ; I ft for Your OIL BURNERS, l|| STOKER, KNUR !y or FURNACE! rofrrf/osi of ago or condition! 6AS00 Coivorsioa Bireor THE SILVER SHIELD Your Guarantee of Heating Comfort! Heating Comfort.. YOUR most IMPORTANT > 'iBSr DECISION WHEN TOtT BUILD, BUT OB BENODEL THE SILViR SHIELD A hooting system contains many ports, all brqught together in your home. Unless the system is engineered and balanced property, you and your family ore doomed %o 20 years of discomfort or more. Furnace size, design of system, location of, registers and dozens of other details must be just right for adequate results. Saving a few dollars by neglecting quality when you .build or remodel con cost you heavily in discomfort, high fuel bills and major repairs over the years. But you save in guaranteed comfort, with Silver Shield. By specifying a Silver Shield System InetalfaNon, you con be certain of the best . : with lasting comfort, betted health,, and savings that keep adding up for years and years. ap ruMn MIST OO TWROUGB — Mailman Bob Wilkin* ploughs knee-deep through snowdrift! in Bristol, Pa., because, as we all know, the mail must go through. Ahd the way Christmas cards are pouring into poet offices these days, it has to keep going through or it will bury many postal clerics up to their necks. Arranged Marriage in .Death of Young Bride time million miles. . TAIPEI, Formosa (A3P) — An|| old-style Chinese marriage^ t-in which the bride did not see her husband until the wedding aft- ranged by fntr parents ended in MMHj tragedy. TwWni, 21, who wag married in south Formosa Saturday to a fisherman, was ^ found dead the nett day. Police OV e-ftCCv suspected suicide. Six photographs! /i||l|U at a man other than her husband IIW fl\p( were found among her belongings.; L llj “ If no dnswor, ENterprise 6767 / H’kt, ^ / 'til 9 p.m. daily mf 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunddy. Call HOB /1 OnT*n youdkyl LA 7-3600 collect oftar these bouts, 24 hour service. A Budman man will coll at /^lYas,!^!/'**»7/ your homo doily until 9 p.m., Soturday L*111111*^! I and Sunday until 6 p.m. for free homo / demonstration with no obligation. . ^ Our Faetery b Located in CoRsanerc-Power Territory DO BUSINESS WITH A MU ABLE COMPANY Norway's First Socialist ' Premier Dies at 1Q1 OSLO, Norway (AP)—Norway's] first Socialist premier, Christo-, pber Hornsrud, 101, died today. * *. ;* Hornsrud headed the shortest government in Norwegian history, I from Jan. 28 to Feb. 15 in 1528. One ol k% first gets as preaderj was to bee the present premier, fellow Einar Gerhardsen, who Mg in Jail for trying to iw cite Norway's conscript army to ,;turn pacifist t give yaw family Haetbn end Shaat Metel Cautractor 3S1 N. Paddock Street R 54973 Goa for Spec# Meeting l» 239 Voorheis Rd., Pontiac, Michigan OIL AND COAL USERS: SWITCH TO 6AS HEAT NOW! SAVE UP TO Vz AND END FURNACE TENDING FOREVER! 10 ACRES OF FREE PARKING BUY DIRECT FROM FACTORY AND SAVE GAS FURNACES - BOILERS - CONVERSIONS HOURS; SUNDAY 10 to 6 Daily & Sat. 9 to 9 STANLEY 6A1W00D BRYAN F. FRENCH HEIGHTS SUFFLY HIATINC I$05 Cmea Lake Rd. 351 N. Paddock It. 2885 lagoor Rd. Orchard Lake, IM 3-20*0 Pontiac, FI f>«*71 Pontiac, Ft 4-5431 WRIGHT SHEET WOLVERINE ZILKA HEATING METAL CO. HEATING CO. •281 MM Wall 5*04 Dixie Highway 1214 Mdwia Awe. Waterford, Oft 1-1277 Pontiac, FI 2.211ft Qiefcaid taka, FI Se548l A. ELBLING and SONS MERCER HEATING KAST HEATING ,tf S. Parka St, Pontiac ' » SHUT M8TAL WORKS •25 N. Pontiac Trail AND COOUNO 483 1. laelnaw Pontiac, FI 5-9259 FI 4.150* Wafcd Lake, ML 4-158* THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, I960 Bears Can Bid Any Title Bid by Detroit It Purdue Hits 50 Per Cent To Defeat Titans, 83-64 DETROIT (It -r- Victory over the Chicago Bean Sunday would be mighty sweet tor tb*Detroit Lions. lint, there la thg possibility the Lions could win the National Football League championship. But to do that, they have to vk i p^ the Bears here Sunday while the Loo Angela Rama knock off the Green Bay Packen at Loo Angeles. Then. Detroit would be thrown The IMvenity of Alabama io ve ratty of Texas In the tad annual Bluebonnet Bow! football game Saturday at Huston, Texts. The game starts at 3 p.m. fT art1 be. defeating towerin^Dlinois 90-81, 853T* i i s S and Duouesne ■ winner of Its flrrt **■"! J J >> g four games, was stopped in .over- Kssm imS time by Bowling Green of Ohio, " ! * » I 88-85. Vanderbilt made it tour fs>5» will! straight without loos by rallying SSSsweTST’ * viously unbeaten Detroit. DM. Indiana rallied from a 35-32 deficit at halftime to defeat Missouri) contention, la one Uve minute stretch Indiana outscored Missouri tt-1. Wait Bellamy scored 8 points for Indiana, and had 2) rebounds TWUtV mil- Purdue's Terry Ditchinger fires a jump shot against the University of Detroit in last night's basketball game at Lafayette, lad. Defending for Detroit are All-America Dshe DeBusachere (23) and'John Morgan (13>. Also shown it Purdue's Tim McGinlsy (It). Dtaddngrr scored 31 points*ap Purdue handed the Titans their Drat tan, 6344. 105-77 to nufce It 44 and certify n No. 2 poll rating behind Ohio State, which iHiffie until a major test against Wichita on Saturday Northern Mlchigait made a scrap of R in die first half after winning tour in a rdw, test Brad-ley was too taugh- Bradley's Chet Walker scored » points. Tim Robinson had 35. and A! Saunders S3. Georgia Tack, winner of three straight, finally was beaten as the 'University of Louisville opened | the Bluegrass invitational tournament with a 74-65 victory. Louis-' vtlle ran up a 41-22 halftime ad-' its sixth etraigh* vantage scored 13 points add John Turner got 21. Roger Kaiser, high scoring Tbch guard, never got a field goal until the second half and wound up with 18 points. Louisville meets Western Kentucky. WP72 winner over Utsfc Los Angtlej, Senators Plan to Pay $75,000 for Eoch Player . BOSTON ' (AP* — Weather perj ■kitting, the Ins tngoles and! Huskie Matmen Open Knorr Suiters Severe Burns Aiter Falling FORT LAUDERDALE, Fin. « <— Find Knorr, 47, part owner of the Detroit Tigers, was reported in Frick and the' National. League lo extend the inter-league trading deadline to midnight Frtday. The drlginal deadline was midnight Thursday. The new teams will select1 8 players ante) Bam a pool made available by the existing eight Prop Boskotfaalj Slot* ’SSSSfSSg? west aw—sum *t rMpiintia wesprtsss s* twiMIpais PMSBaleafptatel' V.'*’»vj's* Orem Setets St Sut Detroit BOSTON (API - Husky Frank Baumann, Chicago's strong young left-hander, won the American League's i960 pitching champkm- ! Did Press Attacks Hurt? nounced officially. The piaym selected for the two teams will not he a nounced until the draw la complete. Each team must select 8 play-era from the pool at % price of 175.000 per player, if they want, they also may draft one ' unprotected'’ minor league player from each of the eight existing teams. These are players who were eligible for the regular Nov. 8 draft who were hot chosen at that times The price on theee will range from $12,500 to $8,000 a player, depending on the classification of the league in which he played. SYDNEY (AP) — "What hap-' Although it was a team of tern-. Still,'almost from the day ofL^ P«tai»" pestuous, impulsive young meti[their arrival the Americans were That was the «p*s^ asked there was no dimension on the L^, b criticism. Even now. over and over again by etahimd squad, ft was one of the happiest *77 ' n American Davis Cuppers today in groups ever sent to Australia. 8 th* smallest displays on court! reviewing their 3-2 kas to Italy trained and worked hard Nolwere ballooned into temperament- and failure to get into the Chr* * ■■——-* |m|reMj|ta|reta| jjgij---------------*——* —■ tenge Round for the tint time •••n ••••••••••••• (IMISISSSSSSlttSI •**■*•• ■ aSSMrinr Vs- the -.v i; before and V after dinner J ies were evident. - 1 sportsmanship n ., r, , T. * * * . k k k Pontiac Stars in lie Yankees Deny Wrecking Chemps Room Atter Net Loss utes of play prevented the Ponti •’ Stan from upsetting defendi SYDNEY (AP) — Member! of "This la such a wiki story with-'champion Blarney Stone Chi the United States Davjs Cup team out any foundation of truth that it Hast night nt State Fatrgroun ’ "I think It's just fate, nothing but fate," mid Barry MacKay. qf Dayton, Ohio, the United States’ top act, who wa« beaten in straight acts by Ortand flnii in the tilth and deciding match. • Each of the eight existing teams made 1$ players from their 40-man rosters available for the pool. The ground rules are! such, however, that no team can1 lose more than ■even players now on its roster, plus two minor tonne players. ' Tlte meeting rel be behind cloned doors In the office of Amor-ican League President Joe Cronin. Washington will he represented by owner Gen. Etwood (Pate) Que-sada. General Manager Eddie Do- Dave Freed. Salt Lata CM? businessman who succeeded Perry Janes this year as captain, was distraught over the failure to reach the Challenge Round bat said he did not know where, mistakes, it any, were made. “I bare no idea what I would do differently','? he'said. The American squad was criticized widely In Australia tor tan-peramentai outburst! on the court and one Sydney paper. The Sun, said "they scrapped more often among themselves than with their The Los Angeles group wftl include President Bobby Reynold^ Chairman of the Board Gena Autry. General Manager Fred Happy and Bill Rigney, who signed as manager Monday. K*A HUW - Frank Baumann. Chicago White Sun lefthander. won t h e American League’s 1960 earned run average pitching champieeahip with a The two teams must pick 10 pitchers, two cet($eri, six infield-ers and four outridden. The other six 'players can be tor any portion. , THE PONTIAC PRESS/ TUESDAY, DECEMBER. 13,1930 ama entries was 190 or better. Those who turned in actual series of 630 or better in qualifying are The Actual’* Champion will ro. Last year’s ceive a |30 bond and a trophy. Bob Gornymg If he is a BosHersma qualifier his average n be has also assured himself of an imitation. Among Actual Entries idiana 81-79 in double overtime on Tom Villeinure's 20-foot comer shot in the final second Saturday night. Indiana still polled enough votes for the No. 4 position. By .The HmMsH Cross Ohio 8tate, the defending NCAA basket bail champion, today leads the field in the first weekly poll bp The Associated Press' panel of sports writers and aportacast-en. Of the .4 votes east. Ohio State received & The only other first place ballot went to Detroit. North Carolina is ranked fifth and St. Bonaventure with four straight was sixth. Then came St. John's, Duke, Louisville and North Carolina State in that order. The voting was baaed on the results of games playM through Sat-urday, Dee. 10. Points were given on the basis of 10 for first place nine for second and so on down to one for 10th. On the basis of points, Ohio State led Bradley 350-272. All-America Jerry Lucas and Qa. from Ohio State ran over Army 103-54 Saturday for Ha . third straight victory after fairiy easy triumphs over Ohio University and St. Lpuis. Bradley which also rolled to its third straight Saturday by beating Butler 71-40 in the final four minutes was voted to the No. 2 spot in the poll. Dales Expected to End MIAA Affiliation Soon to Join Another Loop HILLSDALE (UPI)-A new intercollegiate athletic association may be in the making In Michigan. the Hillsdale College New Los Angeles < AL Team Signs Bill Rigney LOS ANGELES CAP)-San Frandaco didn’t want him, but Lea Angeles hqs signed volatile Bill Rigney to manage ita American League baseball team in 198L Rlgney, deposed by the Giants midway in the 1980 season, signed a one-year contract with the Angels Monday. He and General | The predicted withdrawal Jol-t lowed unofficial polls of the faculty , and student body of the school. I The vote was unanimous In favor l ot leaving the MIAA, the sour ret CORAL GABLES, Fla. (UPI) — The young Yanks without the Frank Mohovikh Is God Leader* Both Have ChancM of Records [Aquinas Gains Sixth Win i at Hillsdale's Expense NEW YORK (API—Wilt Chamberlain, Elgin Baylor and Oscar Robertson, each a former college All-America, are running 1-94 in the National Basketball Associa- MIID AND SNOW TIRE DISCOUNTS Wfcr Bar a Imp’ BraaS Ntw nm CUa T«w »»< Caaaln 730x14 $10.95 rtu tat ms >»«»»» m« tin NO MONIY DOWN Unitod Tin Servlet Just a week ago, old Slammin’ gammy Snead was leading by throe atrokes going into the last round Of the West Palm Beach Ope* go what happened? A 26-year-old former Louisiana State star named Johnny Pott came out of strictly Open. So what happened? A 25-year-old former Illinois football and baseball player named Bob Goalby chme out of strictly nowhere to take tint money. "Don't sell these kids abort," warns Raynor. "They're trained athletes. Seven of the first 10 on the money winning list don't smoke. The majority of them wouldn’t even look at a drink. So you wonder why they can come out of nowhere on the last round? The reason la that they are Just Naulls of the New York KriCka 587 and Paid Arlski. of Philadelphia 584. * * ♦ Bill Sharman of Boston is the top Intercollegiate—and even high school—competition has expanded Bradley University romped over Northern Michigan, 105-77, on the courts gt. Peoria, Illinois. tempts. Dick Carmaker of the Kntaks is tile pace-setter In field goal' accuracy with a .478 mark. Chamberlain lends in rebounds with 727 while Robertson has the most assists, 246. Damaged Park he lad the Braves to a 102-85 win over the Davis branch of the University of California. Spartan Tankers Win The Fitxgerak) High' swimming team posted its amend victory to them starts featorag two neorda set by trssatytsr Keith Brockton in downing Dearborn Edael Ford 5550 last right. Junior Wingi Triumph DETROIT (UPI) — Goalie Pat Rupp turned in his second shutout of the season last night as the Detroit Junior Wings trounced Dresden, Ont., 7-0, In a Border Cities League hockey dash. Jack Hancock paced the Whig attack with two goals,. The Wings with a 10-4 record May Cost Tulsa Baseball Team TULSA, (1M. (API - t the sfora! Come to Bonoffcial’t Open House for HOLIDAY MONEY In 6M Whiskey from RASOW’S SPORT OERTER ICE SKATES HOCKIY STICKS SLEDS TOBOGGANS BOGUNS JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS FLEISCHMANN’S it tin BIB Mil 90 PROOF is why! ON AIL WOOL SHIRTS and JACKETS No Decision Readied NEW YORK (APMMa Kerwfe of Ottawa, ON, and S44h Jordan of Brooklyn battled to a 15-round draw .Monday right in the feature bout Wt St. Nkbriaa Arts* BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. ttNCriciAi. fSmncc co. * Di—Dtti WMI8KKV • M SHtOOP • OS* O*AIK NCUTWAL SNHMT* TH« niltaMUAMN OtSTILUNa COanONATipN, N*W VOBK CITY AMERICA S LARGEST BRAKE SPECIALISTS! GOLDvCHEST ce*oU Results THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. DECEMBER 18, ll Senate Boxing Probers Schedule Palermo Today Travel to Troy Orion, Avondale Have Oakland B Games on the Road cadaro. Bob Stau and Gary Render. AH five are senior*. Four stand 5-10 while Lucadam towers MM4. PNH ia alee email. M r0ad* ^ to Ukew«,od ten* this •* the men in jim Lucadam. Charley Huron Street keg establishment makes plans to host the Cbriatenaan. Jack Newton. Bob championship round of the 4th Annual Pontiac Press Slaa and Gary Render. iBowlerama. naT^iiir^rTiJritaMifruT There certain to be plenty of practicing there dur- Parks and Recreation Junior Cage Results You carftdrown the flavor of * Kessler Gin! St. Louis Outlasts lakers by 114-103 Midi to be tested in your favorite drink KESSLER GIN Lanes. LOS ANGELES (API-tt. Louis SKIPPING ABOUND built up a Itraas lead over Lea] Jqe r<*ttr continue Angeles and held on tor a 114U8 Wl>| ^ | mufflers SSM3S3S BOOT HOUSE (•LAVING LANES cult, where it seem the lanes are ■jr Pal NeBrtde constantly diaagins. Should you The eiivde characteriatic that tail to find your line ia a tony, make* a bowler a pro i* hl« or you'd be left at the starting post, her ability to adjust to. «r play. * * '* dittrrent lanes and adjust quick- On stow lanes where your norm-ly. ai bafi wfil have a wide break, Bowling Bolls, Custom Fitted and Drillod . Bogs '.... ...................... Shoes, Smart Casuals and Sturdy Fro Stylos Bowling Gleyos ......................... Thumb Guards ...... ................ Our Wonderful "World* of li Christmas Gifts WATER SPORTS BOATING EQUIPMENT ACCESSORIES Vfmter GkO WHewdt n >----»--a— *»■*•* Mil w Sin VVWI O MiMMin SaiSMardi O 5H Mh • Marine Herne TRANS TROUBLES? SAVE MONEY AT Reliable Transmission Co. 41 N. PARKE ST. FE 4-0701 PONTU CUSTOM COATED GOLD CREST m ^totYFOtJR /• POyTT^C PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1060 M Santa and the Boy Fish by Lucrtco Hudgins Beals synopsis cram***" j “m“.K wm »»"«*•£: irSTra'^*JlS which iWl'M » •*> •«•. j CMAPTBB EltiBT Ortenbrukers parasol was I enormous. It waa made of red silk >irith purple polka dots. It had a long handle with two -crooks j oti the end. •‘Usually,?’ said Costenbricker, *t travel hitting in one of the . crooks but all this excitement has j tired me , and I expect we better j make ourselves comfortable." j Haying this, be tamed the am- | liretta upside dow n. Mlrhsrt wa* i astaolahed to see IMtle yellow j % cushion* lying on the bottom i •; and a tat green quilt tucked amend the handle end hunches • of bananas hanging from the • riba, 1 "How do all those things fit ini ^the parasol when it's closed?" he I exclaimed. "\Vho said all those things arc fin there when it’s closed,” retort-1 ,!ed Costenbricker mysteriously. M»*Get in now and away we’ll go." t Michael turned to Santa. C'Aien’t you going?" It A A Santa shook his head. "It’s best for me to stay here and do what work I can though it will all be useless unless you find the pearl ^mufr Cbatenbricker remembers the | -magic words that will waken the elves." ★ * * *■ "Don’t worry," said Costen- • bricker cheerfully. ‘‘We’ll be back in no time at all! He climbed into the parasol and , Michael, tucking his precious mask and lung and flippers down among tha pillows, scrambled In beside ; ■ him. „, Caatcnbricher shaved Ms trt-|>fo-*l length spectacles ta the tap of Ms forehead, put Ms hand l seer Ms eyes aad muttered us-- Intelligibly Is himself. Nothing ADAM AMES By Lou Pine WtftT lightning flashed and wind whipped the parasol. i comforter* disappeared. Bananas flew away iptp, space. Costen-I bricker landed on top of Michael. A * A "What Is It?*’ cried Michael In terror, struggling to his knees and clutching the parasol handle. "A storm cloud!" shouted Cos-tenbrlckcr. He clung to Michael’s legs with all his strength but it seemed that at any minute they both would be lorn loose and hurled from the somersaulting ’ parasol. Streaks of lightning tore through the black rain. Thunder deafened them. The wind whipped the parasol over and over and around in circles. They plunged toward the earth. They were sucked back into the sky. Michael shut his eyes and hung on. He wished, for a moment, that he had never left home, that he was safe back in his own little Then, as suddenly as they I into the storm they were out of! I it - and - the parasol was sailing hilc ho serenely through a- pink blue sky. | Costenbricker sighed with relief ! but Michael’s eyes filled with hor- THE BERRYS By Carl Grubart ' DO YOU ^ PETER. DID YOU GET MY CHRlSfMAS PRESENT YETj KNOW WHAT I’D REALLY J T LIKE ? nope; (U 7^ -ra •} pi fc&sr ||| remember the fight incantation., soft comforter. Afte He muttered on and on. too. fell asleep. Suddenly the polka dot parasol a + rocked back and forth and slowly | " " Jror- . . rose from the floor. j He was awakened by a loud | "My mask and flippers and . *T‘ . crash. The parasol lurched craz-1 lung!" he cried. "They’re gone!" .... . , _ . ., . l ily. The pillows’felt out and the I (NexlsBack Into the Storm) Hooray! cried Costenbricker ■ " Perspiration broke out on the old man’s bald “head as clenched his hands and sought to Endorses Sfate Court Building Gov. Williams Backs Move to Start Work on Structure in *61 LANSING tfl — Gov. Williams Monday "heartily tndpraed" move to get started next year on construction of a State Supreme Court building. The new step, he said, is to persuade tbe legislature to buUd itself an office building and the governor an officfel residence. Bern. Elmer R. Porter. R BIIkv field. chairman sf the Senate appropriation* Committee, aaM lart week that he would Introduce a MB next month to appropriate tend* for a Supreme Court bunding n block went at the capital. Plans were drawn up several years ago but because of state’s money shortage, the legislature declined to allocate funds fqr construction. A r dr "■ * f ; )VPorter’s move was “the -flirt) st ep toward providing adequate! and appropriate facilities" for the | ' Supreme Court, the governor said. 'IThe high court now occupies shab-| by. ill-ligbted chambers" on the] , third floor of the eipitol. A new bonding, to taetade a • tow library, would clear apace tar legislative committee rooms /fhe legislature, however, needs s a*, building of its own containing! ! a private office for each of the] -144lawmakers, the governor said.] More secretaries also are need-i cd. he sakL Misplaced Papers Delay i Decoration for VO Years «AN ANTONIO, Tex. (API-On! Much 26, I960. Charles M. Saunders, then a sergeant first class in j an Army medical company, suffered -frostbitten hands and feel as he descended a steep mountain] slope in Colorado to rescue a per-1 son Injured in an auto crash. ! pv": * * ’ Now an Air Force captain, i Saimdera was presented the Army.) » commendation ribbon Monday in ceremonies at Brooks Air Force! R*t here in recognition for the] Colorado rescue. me Army apparently planned I tha Bay outfits more than 1,000 ama-j ! tear shows throughout the nation estli year. The firm furnishes j t-artumes. props and * music for! > teut- production. A * A , i The business was founded at the] turn of the* century as .a hobby] ' by Umi late P. B. Mctcglf, an ardifect* f ; ! By Walt Disney § THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, lfl«o TWENTY-FIVE iBusinesg an^ Finance Laos, Rebels With Red Arms Stocks Show | MARKETS I li I l\ |< The following an top prie MlYP/1 KJllTAm coverin» *Ue* of locally gro» IIIAGU I Ullvlll produce bygrowers and aold I VIENTIANE* Laos (APD-Kingi Saving Vat than* today rtepp*d into the civil war torturing his Jungle kingdom and ordered • Quinim Phoisena to dissolve Me in* taut pro-Communist regime, Sa-Vannakhet Radio reported. NO EARLY BTFECT Quinim, who charged that Arjier-iedns are among Western troops awaiting to storm this capital, heeled- up his defenses with air-lifted arms supplied by the* Soviet Union. i Southeast Asian V kingdom were watched with interest in capitals throughout the world. In Washington, the United States France and Britain called a tope level talk on what is widely regarded there as Soviet military I intervention in Laos. Savod by Drudge Firm From Ice Waters After Boat Capsized NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market was mixed in quiet trading eag|y today. Gains and losses pf key stocks went from fractions to about a point. Detroit Produce In Red China newspapers called lor immediate world action to halt what they called "United States intervention and agression" in Laos. DETROIT iAi — "Thank heaven for competition,” said SRyear-old James (bobby, one of these Canadians fished out of the near* freezing waters of the lower After a spurt of activity at the tidier tape, dealings slowed and prices moved unevenly. -After tost week's advance Vientiane in effect was under1 military control..pi the pro-Com-' munist Pathet Lao and leftist para troop Capt. Kong Le x-f | Hie king ordered government powers turned over to an anti-; Communist. regime headed by Prince Boun Own and Gen. Phou-! mi Nosavan in Savannakhet, the I broadcast said. Boun Oum was named premier i and Phoumi minister of defense, ! deputy premier and minister of {peace, the broadcast said. j Detroit River Monday. I Cobby, of Wheatley, Oat., his Ijbrothsr Fred, 14, -of Harrow, and | Don Munro. 30, of Amherst berg, [{were pulled out of the 33-degree [ water by a tug from international Company with over 200 offices that fumtah temporary office, industrial and technical workers desires representation in Pontiac. We oiler an "Associate" program, that must be operated in con-t unci ion with air established" business. We bear all costa with the exception of office space, personnel and local telelphone This is not a 'Get-Rich-Quick" scheme but a long range program. Your local promotional efforts are booked up by, national advertising, direct mail, sates leads from Home Office and other offices. We Supply complete know-how. comprehensive Home Office training and continual monthly direction. Local visitations made by our held personnel. Your growth is based on repeat business, we’will expect the same complete investigation to be made, that we will make of you. Personal inspection of any of our offices will be arranged. Write gTviAg com-* piste details of your- press fit business to; „ ijwator by a tug from a rival [{dredge -firm after their SR-tooti | work boat capsized when struck, i by an ice floe. | Ike trie fleeted downriver to- I i ward Lake Etb for seme- li WUC IN ONE — A curve in Golf Drive alongside the Pontiac Municipal Golf. Course caused Virginia Gianc. 26, of 4428 W, Walton Road, Drayton Plains, to lose 'control of her car last night. The vehicle careened afcross the road and crashed through the golf course fence on the left side. Miss Glane and her throe passengers escaped unhurt. A few eeiected issues ittoved OSKES&siu more widely than the general rum gffffi; SSStim Polaroid slipped about 3 points.!jsessa. Vondo spurted around 2. jBSs ffi! W \dr- * i I Turnip*, do*. bch _■ -___7 \ ■ L , Turnips, topped. The trend was mostly lower among steels, rails and robbers. ......... * Autos had a slight edge to the SS^daSi,,. upside on batoww. Nbnferroue metals were irregularly lower. Mtuum. **. j The announcement was -expected to have little immediate effect the besieged. Business Notes Tourists Leave but Will Return on Quin in's regime in 1 administrative capital. 'Quinim, who integrated his I forces with those of the Pathet jLao yesterday, has indicated he will ignore any decisions taken by! {the king “under duress.” of Charles P. • Noonan of Btoora-[field Township as-[director of salesj Nor Dodge cars; [p r# motion! land trucks has [% e r a announced! by Byron 'J, |.Nlchob, Dodge; general manager.! Noonan has! |-bpen to the automotive sales and; advertising field1 1 a- - . ~ ~ ... ~ ... j....--a-.- 8 *to« 1887, prior, j me three men were picking up,to his present appointment, he was -channel markers tor the Canadian I director of sales development for* [gmnnwwl AM wore ids JadcaU-jOwysler Corp in the east. Quinim's government and his j military leaders charged that rob-j el forces backed by four western-! powers were about to storm Vien-I tiane They appealed to the West-em diplomatic corps and the. U.N. commissioner hero to prevent j bloodshed. Fractional gains were toads by Radio Carp, (ex dividendK Ray-'i*-ii. theqn. American Tflspbank Air;“:JS; Redaction, American Can and US! Rubber. Mission Development roar Drl a point to 34 on 30,900 shares. jgjw “Jim kept our spirits up by bis humor, however,” Fred Cobby! said.'“One time he reported that! his shockproof, waterproof watch! had stopped despite its guaran-j I toe." Republic steel (ell more thanaiv* point. Off fractionally were Sperry!wr Rand. Phelps Dodge, Internationalijf; Nickel. Union Carbide, General '**■ Electric tex divtdentt, National- \ Ltoen Service and Baltimore A* Ohio ] They also threatened to turn their guns on foreign troops who. they claimed, had joined Pboumi's [forces outside Vientiane. j There has been a tremendous {amount of road improvement, but! roads are nowhere near good by any stretch of the imagination. I Any high speed driving, even on a[ straight and empty road, can lead-to a broken axle or Subdivision Again to Be Without Water Noonan lives at 1780 CedarhUl! Drive. whtn to ooil securities for Inoomo tax savings . ______________ __ _ blown tire. j There are huge, deep pot-holes to the middle of the roads that noj attempt has been made to fill. j Hogan, Stadler, Parker and Cole Promoted in GM Organization r.SftaS•« iia iiM canarrt «m «etwr* is so- Thursday. according to Township!^0- *n Detroit, by S«“fcjl j Department Superintendent Bwkhardt, nil.—< •gto^trgs.*• «N ht«avr. Kenneth Squires. Ipretode«t. 1, 57 £ mi * * * i OTteUl formerly J* 1 The more thro 1.0W residents,"** » diviatorolj Si uS: mm M*. t u5t toials bring to the subdiviston were with-***** director for ‘SVTai TSZmm "•** Mrodsy beraure of re «* 0™. -1 « ffauii * * millMU to «>*» development of two water systems. Producrs ff J Ttrori hWk Jto iN eartf itiSi! Adverse weather conditions halted !‘*t*lc**> * ***** ~ ***** tro n> rer» h»> »-ork ro the wells Monday. Thu! kits Mi S ; jL* ' rTV "■ work will resume Thursday dtatry. Ml Ufluir in Drinf I R*todent‘s living in the 362 homes m IVJflj III Dllol [to (to subdiviston hare been asked, Burt R. ;S’| !to have at leoat nine hours' Watet IS. 4mm R. Owenby. 4B. in «.!«> band Squires aaid. £ J Itoword 8t„ pleaded guilty to aj '■' '' *""""r lylBffwi *ji^v«e^“^«SS|ShiPPi''? Seoson Ends f J 2 j Judge Ccni McQdiom and was at Lokehead Wednesday m PVI jl {fined JlCtt-or 10 days tn the; I. , JL J im* Oakland County Aail. V -PORT ARTHUR, Ont. tAPt Alao. there simply are not enough {i plane flights in and out of the]; country. And during the height ofi the tourist season it is necesaary to book weeks to advance if youj [{want to be1 sure to leave on your] {appointed day. Doi-tag the past tern yeala the ■ Costa Brava Has become very j popular — particularly tor Eure- i j! pea ns. It is that stretch of coast i betwetn Barcelona a a d the French border on the northwest- ; ' ere edge of Spain. . Although ptices have gone up s.eadily, they still are a ptesaat; [surprise to the tourist. ' This holds generally true ofj .prices throughout Spain. Of all the {Western European nations, Spain; -st til offers the best for the money! j— particularly outside the large ! Whether you bold aacarHiro through Docombre 30,1980, or sail before year rod, can bear importantly on thu income tax you will pay. Now ie the time to review your portfolio for income tax purporoa. I Four chancre t Pmaac Motori .Division s sales organization have! been denounced by, Frank V. {Bridge, general sides manager. G, R. Hogan Jr., formerly Buf-i »Io rone manager, moves to the! 'ckv’.oc home office as national i Shuriy Jr. of 316 ^ Lane P.nr Court. Bloomf cld Hills. K has been appoint-B ed a director of ■ Namm - Loescr's K Inc., owner of vtothmg stores F aerdes th? nat.on. with heal off cos M|N«w York ■ to New York. ] ■ ment was made i Detectives Probe $3,752 Burglary ► SendforWatling, Lmktn’t fact-packed booklet:‘‘I960 Security Tronaactiont" maw Street over the weekend, j The toes was discovered Mon-j iday by store manager Elihui Brooks of Oak Park, i According to investigating offi-j ; cers the safe had not been tampered with, this indicates either Watting, Lerchen k Co. I burglar knew the combination. | Entry had been gained by tear-temporary ] M. H. Cole, previously assistant! otH- manager to Newark, succeeds Stadler. - ing out a portion of !] plywood wall -in a l rear of the Mote where it was; [damaged as the result of a recent! ’fire at the Oakland Theater next! Hoff a and Bridges Hit! at 'Attempts to Plague Organized Labor' and parts manager to the ftoatiar zone to succeed Ode. OLYMPIA PRECISION PORTABLE TYPEWRITER I OAKLAND. Calif. tAPt - Two j powerful independent labor lead-; tere—James Haifa of the Team-! Istero and Harry Bridges of the! tflest Coast Longshoremen — de-j j dared war Monday night on whati they called government attempts' jto plague organized labor. j i They trained their verbal gunsj on the Landrum-Griffin labor law] land the IT. S. Senate Labor-Man-} lagement Committee at a joint He's a Dead Duck [ MOBILE. Ala, {Dale Hudson, 18, was Exclusive Authorised’ Dealer _____ _________, driving! !home about 3 &.m. when she heard] a crash, felt glass hitting her* land looked to find a duck-sized] ihole to her windshield and one] •duck tdeceased) in the back seati of her Car. JONES TYPEWRITER SALES & SERVICE 1051 W. HURON ST. FOR INVESTMENT SECURITIES and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL C. J. NEPHLER CO . re 2-9117----f~ 8)8 Community National Bank Bldg. LISTED AND UNLISTED StCURITTSS — MUTUAL FXJNDI OUR FACtLmXS KXTSND XoU COAST TO COAST Flturis Alwr decimal point* arc eiihth.; ■KfAikel I Allen Iiecirt* Ukvtpment Co. 1.1 IT BkldvUI MhN O* . -........... It • 51J Oroot Lake* Ctftmlcal Co. ... M 1.1 Mlehtzoa atootieo* Tube Co . 1»,5 11J Prophet Co. ‘...f- .......... «t S3 Roar Manutactorttii Co . I p Shatterproof Oitn Corp. * . ui It Toledo Edison Co. ___114 if Vernora Qlnger Ale, Inc. ... . 4 41 Law Enforcflrs to Hail 25 Years of Cooperation ALLEGAN ID —A quarter-century of cooperation among city, county and state police agencies is hailed tonight at the 35th annual Southwestern Michigan Law Enforcement banquet at Allegan, Sheriff Walter Rukel and 8gt. LAZELLE AGENCY. Inc. All Forms Grain Pricms cwcAOo grain | Happy Anniversary •"“j EL CAMPO. Tex. (LTD - The -J&jSvQboda, a Czech-lah^uage sup-! ■«»s piement to the El Campo Leader ,ooa. News, is celebrating Its 75th an» j^fcjniversary this year. The supple-1 il* [njwnt. whose name means "Lib-! !„ jeirty," advertises itself as the "Okt-j >g est Czech Newspaper in the Insurance ike tradition was started to 1935 by the late Sheriff Fred Miller and carries on with his brother Lon itiU providing the moose meat, ‘ ■ „ builder, 17-year-oM Paul Algar. A model-boat building enthusiast, Paul spent six months bn the junk's construction. Mtfeathc State luk IMf. • RM1TZ THE PONTlAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1060 4# Onrtrtiriny Ig Opposed by Bureau Farmers Rap Unionism DENVER Goto. (AP) — Tbelotlur economic group, would re-American Farm 'Bureau Fettors-jsult in drastic antitrust action." tlM coftvcnHon struck today at Several members at the Resolu-wtwt it monopolistic prac- tions Committee predicted the day tices of organized labor and crit- will oome—and perhaps roon-idaad moves of some unions to or- when organized agriculture’s big-ganpe turners. r* w® ** ,to J>ead, Federation President Charles B. unionization efforts in the farm Shuman told the annual farm[“eW meeting that much/of the unemployment in the country's steel Industry could be attributed to un------------ ... . ■ juried wage Stresses that have workable when applied to the rrmr-helped to pri4 steel out of its ketlng and pricing of farm prod-markets, h/aaid. M8- the nesolutions said. fkmmrintMm to be submitted to AIMS TO EQUALIZE the conymitlon later this week hit Compulsory bargaining by labor at recent efforts on West Coast unions in industry, they said, is aad hi some sections of the North- designed to equalize the bargain-i tod ll unionize farmers and tarin jng power of workers and employ- The methods and procedures I authorized for labor unions are urn submission of farmers to labor union leaders." j ' As to farm policy, the rololu-tions stuck pretty closely' foThose adopted a year ago. They Call for a minimum of government Intervention in agriculture—or a rejection of farm programs advanced by President-elect John K. Kennedy. / "The concentration of economic power in labor unions permits resort," the resolutions stated, “*°|0ther employers, because pleasures which, 8 used by any crops must be harvested when dividend notice . . ready. Not only a year’s income, The Kennedy program -7- which Shuman predicted Congress will reject—wotild Impose rigid production and supply controls on farm products and raise price supports as major devices for eliminating troublesome farm surpluses and raising farm income, he said. ‘"The Farm Bureau would complish these'same goals by reducing price supports to discourage unneeded production and Farmers are far hore vulner-| would set up a land retirement able to work interruptions than program for wheat, com and ,oth-livestock feed grains, soybeans Pontiac Federal Saving* « Association hat declared It* semi annual dividend * £25 but a substantial investment in « m - oi I bringing crops to harvest stage, diVkkid ^?Sua« may be lost in a relatively short - ‘~ date and win time " round and It n"W- * JAMBS CLARKSON, Executive Vice Prenldc and Secretanr 'Compulsory collective bargaining by unions for farm .workers would not result in equalization of bargaining power but rather the Future in Jeopardy Dec. u and 1) 1960 ft Umlnary Loan Notes of City of Pontiac. ‘Sft to received J IlirtSv'-lSStitled local pubUcOody corporate .hereinafter calledI he Local ,IB» ikreyyr> »*. «g.J-i fsf Two More Nations to Quit Congo Force irehaat of 43,043 004 « miner? loai Urban Renewal Pi ect NO. Mich. R- fttoT1 eftto Housii MEir “ id to aid in financing Its Protect, designated Prol-R-Sr rtwUnitod States i« .> emended the LomH ____ ___I latter in undertake.-- ect. If authority .. — -~ agree me at of the Lo conJltlonelfy “cured oo “'the payment Of both principal and Interest to the United Sates of Aawrtea la the manner to dated January 14. 1M1. vnu be payable to bearer on July 34. 1641. wlU SHUT latereet from date to their matarlty at the re rate* per annum fixed ta the prc,_ denominations* and toth principal and JMe5n£OT8?WJLS Koch Bank or Trust Company mu*t “t [E raK- p*ncr proposals submitted by tfic purchaser; provided: however. to>» unimpaired capital and surplus not exeeog OtoMlHtoo pofiar. Notes Win peevlde that they are fans until after such Baak ■ ar . Company hat signed the agree, appearing on each Note, te.net as Ing ageat. The -Notes will .HJ55 mftted to such Bank or Trust Company raf'iiBiirr to the purchaser upon rs-eSntand dtebaraemon t w each Bank or Truut Company of the purabsa* price thereof In aecordaaoy with to-( stnictlon* from the Local Public After taking delivery of the Notes.. -U purchaser shall obtain foo signal 5f open 1Bank or .Trw^.€toajaa/_a tne Notes ak aforesaid. An feet charge*. If any. of aaah Bank ar TllOt Company ahaU to podd to auoh pur- and flaxseed. Fanners would have idle a specified part of their land to get price supports for these crops. The farm organization would leave untouched present control programs for cotton, tobacco, and rice. It would extend both the wool incentive payment and the sugar control programs. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) ■The future of the U. N. Congo command hung, in the balance today as two more nations served notice they are quitting the peace force. it it it Announcement by Guinea and Morocco that they are pulling out their troops brought to four the nations withdrawing from the Congo operation and cut its manpower by almost a third. The United Nations has nearly 20,000 men in the Congo, but fearer than 17,000 are actual troop contingent*. The move by Morocco, whose 1,100 soldiers constitute the biggest single unit in the Congo, and Guinea which had 749 men in the field brings the withdrawals to more than 5,5w). The United Arab Republic announced earlier it was pulling out 519 men, and Indonesia said it was withdrawing 1,150. A ★ ★ The pull-out was seen as a serious bfow to the U. N. command which has been under bitter attack from the Soviet and Asian-African blocs during the present Congo debate in the Security Council. Both Guinea and Morocco coup-xl their announcements with Jjarges that Secretary-General [tog Hammarskjold’s Congo operation had not given protection to Patrice Lumumba, deposed Con- go premier arrested by the forces of Army Col. Joseph Mobutu. Both nations accused the United Nations of toiling to carry out the mission with which it has been entrusted in the chaotic African state. h ♦ ’ ♦ • Ceylon made last-minute efforts to win- East-West support for a compromise Congo peace plan before the'Council attempts to wind up the question tonight. An appeal by Ceylon's Sir Claude Corea won a stay of action after Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin, council president for Decemher» trled to push through to a windup Monday night. Corea said he was putting the final touches to a resolution which would have the council give Hain-marskjold .additional pewer te restore order in the Congo. ■it h it .-The resolution, also supported by Turaia, would call for the disarming of illegal armies, withdrawal of all Belgians, freedom __ all imprisoned Congo political leaders and a new session of the Congo Parliament. Efforts have been going on since the weekend to rotten the tone of the proposal to make, it acceptable to both the Soviet Union and the Western powers. w A IsT T R. E S U L T $ 7 TRY Death Notices CURTIS, DSC. tl.-isp*, RODOSB I R., ale Fourth St.; in 11; ta-1 M m at Mr*. uUton halter and Carl Curtis: (tear krottor of ' Marilyn Mia Oary Curtla and ChrteMpMr^BajiM Imitation ot 1. at th# Huutpop Puaeral reMM wrytoi toll to MtaMday, ttecTTI. M II -- ", Mlchaal OatoaB* hrtd*\ Church. Cfinetd^. BmikAk, fUBTH.' BWT A., in Ltadtoi «e* wiHwiitoa huikaud of Alice Dunham; tip. father at ArUm Lowery and Rob-art a. Dunham: dear brother ot Mr*. Oraco Motor: aka rantood by IK grandchildren. Funtral Storm wTil b* held Wednaaday, pat. 14, at llN o.m. from the Farmer-Snover Funaral Horn* with Roe. Edmond Watklna otfl-dating. Interment In Oak..MUl - Cemetery. . Mr.. Dunham will lit ■ w «tate" at the Farmer-Snoe*r Funeral Home. ILWtLL."DEC 11, 1M0, LBLAND Bruce, It 8. Midland: an fd; beloved huaband of Ooldte B. El-well: dear father of Mra. William l Delore* i Parent, Mrs. William iPhyUi*) Harmon, Darlene, Law-erence and Virgil ElweU, dear brother of Forest El well and Mra. M. B. Holme*; alao survived by tlx grandchildren. Funeral aSh lea toll be held Wednesday. Dae. Said Rated win to enaotai obligation, of the Local Public Agency ar- -H" M eecurtd by a fMkraa a«r between the Local FyhUc Agency and the United States of Amartca Under the term* at which agreement the Uadted Btatea of dmerira aanoo ta tend the Local Public Agency prior ta the mlpurHy af eaM Natea an amount aitfttctent to pay the prtaeipal and In-SSgt"ti all aald Rated and ,a|f«t to cauaaa ao asurh at tto proooade ot aUch tans aa shall |m aurftrtant to pay the prtoeteal at and Interest upon any at ■alii Nam ta to deposited at tha rcepto-tlve Bank ar True* OsmPony at whlch ■aid Bates an payable tor Um b of the hoUM' ae hcUeri thereto. Farm Leader Rejects Kennedy's Program DENVER (It — A major farmlbut which Cokgress refuaea^fo ex-orgafiization leader today urged tend beyond this year. Underyus the new Congress to turn thumbs | plan, farmers were notrequireq ‘fki TtoMRy et the Prehnilnary Lees Notea and af aaM regaterttaa aana-S5t VfflTto approved by ttastn. flick-lnaon. Wright, McKean and Cudllp, Mf tint National B^MlnmJW»6_M| Michigan, and aueh attornay * opinion wUi to turhMbsd ta tto successful purchaser without charge. AH prspetote foe the purchase of aald Notea ahaU towMUttedln a farm . approved by the Local Public Agency , and abaU be enctosed in a aoated «n-velope, addressed, ta Use Laeaj hrtBi Agency, which should be marked on the outside ’ftopaiai.lar Frayrntnary Uaa oopiea af auet---- - peaai may to ebtatnad ...-fciMhi Aciocy it tin UUirtif IndicaUd Sect W completion l apeclfled for certata'aUtatory "and policy limitations, •o award at the Notea tolf hi ~ an internal rate per annum down on the farm program of President-elect John F. Kennedy promising a new era of government regulation of agriculture. President Charles B. Shuman of the American Farm Bureau Federation declared farmers rejected the Kennedy ptjposafo at “ cent presidential election. l will to ngutred J separate pro- well toll lie m ley Funeral Hi today until I a which ttme he the ehunh to 1, DEC. 10, llN. ALFRfi in, 7143 Elisabeth take Road, meriy ot Lnkt Orion: nga 71: ,r father at Cdwnrd A. Balk well fy. Mnt. Mr. Klng^^wUl^toJ is Orion. _________ 8EUHRj> DIC. 12. I960. HARRY A, »03t Wlxom Rd., Wlxom. age 74: beloved husband et Emily Seuhr: dear father of Mra. William Nowbound; also, survived by t sister and 1 grandchild. Funeral service Will be held Wednesday. Dae. 14 tt l:M a.m. from the Rlchardton-Bird Funeral Home, Milford with Rev. Hoar officiating. Following aorv- IN LOVINO MEMORY OP FRANCIS Lloyd Hnrmea who pasted away 3 years ago Dec. ll TU memory fades and Ufe departs. December 11, lilt, Gone la tht face we loveo so mar, Silent Is the votes we lov*d to hgar: Too tar away for sight or (patch. But not ton far lor thought to roach. * I Sadly mlaaad by wife Era, Funtraf Directors 4 COATS FUNERAL HOMS ORATTQII PLAINS OR 1-77M [ dUPARU-OjUFFIN CHAPEL Tha Fwntinc Fraan FOI? WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From I ajn. i» I pjm., ^•TSUtsaTy.SK dered *aluelea*“throuxh/Se error, whea caneeuatlone sjfissrsf ^b# cioiin* Bata for advertlao-raent* containing tvoa M iiEei illWu Tha doadUna lor canealla-tlon of transient Want AM la now l a.m. the dny. of puMtehtten after the flrat I Insertion. CAM WANT AD RATES Lines l-Day 3-Days WHn 1 i !S S:3 ll > ll •« af >! ti iis Help WBnf4 Ftmale 7 DENTAL HYOIEMIST, THIS Fo«l-Uon offers pteeeaM surroundlnii. mendly aseoetetee and jmsaenl-a^Fald^vacaUoo. CaU MI «-l«M. EXPERIENCED COON WAMTBD. Apply 171 lildwi*3w, EXPERIENCED WAITRESS FOR PfilL - • ^ . • STirl for babysittinq. White' Llve hL FB 3-M43._ ____ . 3ntL Oft ffOMAll FOB CHflcf-^ in atwjtty areaerv. aioom- M work. Ubeial m MA 1-1314. OWL For oenbral insurance a^agr. Must ae npertanaa^ in p-..—___J^ouaeT ilu_-, I wnahing. mw washing,____________ laundry, tome babyalttlng Own —j. Monday Tuatday. W*dne*. day and Friday t ta 4 p.m. and Saturday I a.m. la t p m. Fay and aapertea**. To start between BXFEROINqaD MEAT CUTTER needs work, ) years dtoWMBM, FE 4-Mll -JSIRBS WORK7 ___________WMa, : Man 3). 'btflinis AKY WiSb OF work, fame experience In tn- terlor painting. FE E-MW. MAN . DWIRjW _ WORE OF ANY JOBBEk, COUMTERMAlf *a tee man, experienced. UL Htt » my JOiTTiWciAii worker, WlndSW, and wail waah- va£l waminA tr bjk.. ruga, uphol, oteanad. FB M43I. rOUNG MARRIED MAN DB8IRBE wart. Fi 4-ltH. Work Wanted Female 12 l-DAY IRONING SERVICE. EXP.. f wtaratwie. ta bu,' FE_l>j3FO- -DAY UtONtNG 8IRV1CE, joBr. reference*. 13 a bu. WT S-1471. I WOMEN WANT WALL WAEH- J“?M1 ........... 1 14th, 1 . Call for Interview R. C. Jacobi. M. Oxford, OAklaOd Hill._____ MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN TO TJ--------- of household. Must to M-— permanent. Children ‘~ -—- —-TBnt. Rm. g_ 1-7007 or 14 WU- liable ol_ _________ tchooi. Parents w llama St Hdp Waatej 6 2 Sharp Young Men to autal manager in advertising promotional department. Promo-ttonajavallaBle. Transportation Mr- IMWK. GUARANTEED SALARY Phone Mr." Caldwell, FB 4-KM “*■“ • * *nd 1 n.m. NEEDED IM- fmaaSa call i p.m. . nommerce.union Lai'-- DUZ TO RECENT PROMOTIONS within our eompnay.MMIkffoi ter vie wing for 3 ftddl men witn reliable ai tablished wholesale food coropi voted for Vice Freoideat Richard M. Nixon, Kennedy’s Republican awarded to the lowest Interest rates offered in the gpopamb. without reference to premium; pvovlded. how-ewer that, as aimn^^wo*aU^»pec«r l2Sl t* made M*the baste of the highesl premium par dollar prlnefpal amount at Noteev specified la aucb proposals Mo bid for te*a than WfJBl JMNteBNg .HiBirl of said Notes ar for less than par and accrued Interest (jrtpeh interest -wrtll to -----------c-—cr- So Agency reaervei the right to any Mddar an or any part af 1-rHote* -whleh ench-bidder offers to -J Chase in his proposal, upon the « of such proposal: provided, that If Sum |50,000 principal amount at Ml Is to to awarded to any Miltter. i------- bidder will bo relieved of tto .obligation to purchase such Notes upon written mattes ta the Local Public Agency w In two days after notification of i nropiKg award if only a port of -fMeoMd for in a Proposal an owai by Uw Loral Public Agency, ihe te mlitro, if any, offend to such proposal shall be prorated, and said Notes Will fotesaed In denomination*. In theorder '0t - ihf* lowest tifrJKtminatlonfi.ipviuln In such proposal: provided that one Mote map be issued In:.a;«matler denomination than la otherwlao specified. Thu further right to reserved ta reject -------Ml proposal*. • i in rgi of tto "TUs'election should end for ail time the fiction that tanners want more government regulation and price determination in this ness,’’ Shuman said. The form leader expressed this opinion in a speech prepared for the opening session of the federation’s four-day national convention end at a’ news conference. U appealing directly to On-(mm, Shuman expreaaed a belief that many Democrats In Congress farm atatoa will ahy away ‘ t*s pro- "They muat look to 1962 forte-Jection," he sakj. "They will not {want to vote for programs farmers oppose." _______________ MORE THAN IKE Shuman himself is a registered Democrat He spoke against the Democratic farm program during the campaign. to retire land to get price supports, * Shuman tokf the convention that favorable economic climate that contributed to a high level of employment was one of agriculture'! greatest needs. ~ it- it it 'In the light of the recent elec- __l results, Congress should quickly discard such discredited ideas as the multiple price certifi-cate -plan for wheat, compensatory income payments, comprehensive supply control and other schemes calling for increased government interference in file faming bu*i-ess,” he said. The Farm Bureau convention is being held in the headquarters city of one of its major rival*— the National Farmers Union. The latter supported the Kennedy program during the campaign and Its leaden are expected to carry much weight with the new adi istration. Pen-Size Guard Against Radiation Is Developed sea**-! 9 a*rti ffaP _______ _1 U4.C. 1 i follows: "OblVgoUon*. nuoui, n.„ml thereon.. Issue* by ---- -publk a«tei(te» ter projoct* «a*teu« pofpwnt te thte )fo # Iwcoav de-SvoSkw nth onoctea map such proi-Aa atoll to vnteto te«‘>«; w or iK-rcsflcr Imposed by the United *' ‘* *1 tto event that prior t- **■-( biiv if the Note* U bidder therefor the It r jrtvtov hetAer* from Srufter Ts.“ri. OAK RHXJE. Tenm CAP)—De-cclopment of a new type radiation protection instrument called the personal radiation monitor has been announced. The device, about the rise of _ . -______, „ . a fountain pen and weighing only The Kennedy propoaato to,t Voohees-Siple FUNERAL HOME BOX REPLIES At M a m. Today there were replies at The Pres* office to the following 'boxes: account adjuster Excellent opportunity tor vaoooaatto with.* HsUoesi Ai mobile Ptaanc* Co. Prefer * I around 34 m ot Me. Must • high »chool graduate. O starting salary with car all ance nirnlsbed. A liberal | of Company beneHta. Call Faeehke at FE 34H4. tartnjTCooipany^i in Footiae ana. time phone, start St 4U7 1 normal fringe roup hum----- ......______ig rvtlrvr--- Minimum arerag* Income, taw —ir Week. If you art < **• permanent poeltloa. benefits lncluil^^|roup te* Trill. Wl GUARANTEED footing, gaion, 444 1 34440. . ........... lied Lake ELECTRIC HEAT. INSULATION ----rrtca* Asst.. ------------------- fieltlo I Mlchlgao Assoc Credit .Counselors losfhg. UL HAYRIDE PARTIEa. FE 44M — — ■' 774 Scott L—~ 1 and wlrtaa RagUo. Electric. I MU* Or M'J MKO. HOLIDAY SPECIAL! void won 44.14 Dorothy' 44* NT FOITT FE YOUNG WOMEN." 14 TO 46 TO I ___________ fork part Um*. t hr*, dally, tto FREE EgrtMATEl ON lu wsss-1 l to 5, and 4 to 6 Men., Frl. ,ng. win haao**. R. B Monro « Salary. Short training period. For Electric Co 1441 W. Boron. ; A IIFTTPR W X V Tfl totervlew. FE TSH_____________IgagTaatoT mriSa movTI A Ubl 1 tK 1U Htlp WBRted ! ATTENTION - lc BALE. OPKNINO l if6ME70A"RAOE CAB1NKT8. AO rS, for 3 or 3 ladles or aenUemeo. dltloM Ltetnaed builder FMA for IP- a._Rafl taaltloa te.n. MB a .aa* Pay Your Bills AD1RECT SALESMAN Creates his own niarketi Ho te valuable and his pay U governed ImMtoaSon. determination and' sincere loyalty to Bte customer* both put and futurs af* neces- Ym' have tto advantage of a complete organisation, manufacturing, soles Md service. W* ora one of tto lnrgect of our kind. , our product le both d«ir*bte and practical. With the additional H -ill WaUtea Product*, eepectelly vitamin*. 144 day eupply. M l*. Oct l«o day MHb for le. nesrly 7-month mjs COOK - HOUAEKOCPER - CARE TflEZ - OCOUPLE. Full ttme for both, permanent, referapeec. for Information call Mrs, Kelly-JOtaan- 4-8487:____________ experienced oooe rdit poza Wdawa. awite Orth, 874 Boktote, EXPERIENCED HAIR DRESSER, •alary and eommtesioa. MI 4-4434. Call from 4 a.m. to 6 dvsrtlwaseot, nr im& AUTO BOOT REPAIR MAN. ABLE ' ntlmsts, rsfsrsaees usotfst —i Dixie Hwy, 1 ,______„ KXPERiliCED SINGLE MAN ON term by moral. Cirt Dob At. aw D mow Roid Hocb»«Ur. ■OUR MEN OR WOKEN WITH can to till vooohoioa. Fob or .port time. Opportunity to mra good income. U* H. Forty. 4:34 to 11:34 a.nf. ; pOHT CARPENTRY, MASONS? 1 repair. Pree oetlmatee. UL 8-3173. ^~FART TIME Port time evenings Lari manufacturer with Pontiac offlc . especially buoy with Chrtetmae Thousands 1 S«« Your PONTIAC PRESS WANT_ ADS (And they’re interested . folks, tqo!) to place YOUR ad DIAL FE 2-8181 _______ Taylor. 3-0433, 16 *.W-4| P.r PART TIME WALLED AREA. Needed l — presently employee. JHMU a ear and- willing to Work. CALL Mr. Fockott. MA 4-Mll. ' PART TIM*. MOULD RAVE &X. , HOMEX SERVICES HOUSE MOVING, FULLY 1 3*4 Noltooai Bank Bldg. Rochester oompped, FE 4-44*4 L A Young, j .40*4 OUw 14W PLAB17CR1NO *AND - REPAIRS - j £5fit WPkHB SAFELY AND Roto. Pat Lee FB 4-7484/ •• economically with newly released RENT A ploOr iander. FAFRli :....P*a-*-U»*t t- ltnUU Got, FI 3-3118 . ____ EroployaroHt AgaiRiaa 9 Auto Parts WATERPROOFING "•Sn'tS. ___-Stout NOTARY WrtE ORAL R^-IMi ll WILL"" CLEA^ ?A^NT' HOUSES I “S,* '‘completely and maintenance le- £;KS5.ihi« lor anv debt* «m- Frtr- cobfe soBT^ £, %Lw tSSSi roSp. I f- * • Jfember^ Ortc Business Servka ___Verne C. .amnio__Briar mUNJMFIELD WALL CLEANERS ] ON ANti~Af?i^^ — —tasdnable. resaber 13, 1 wtli not be ree _______I able tor any debts contri | to ahy other tea myeelf. I ratine B. Schumacher, 3388 Gregory FE 8-6836 I Pontlar ---- dealership. iSceUent stottln* I jetted Un» repair Our specialty j PERSONALIZED & arss^ i oe^SsvSr* ---------------:-----I BteVm PE 4-3441 ..._ ! Forateo Languag* card. Vd M4 windows. -Ri ■ 1 ^mriiooiar Refrigeration and ■ 4-44*5 ; Service HPtaWP —*" -------- -Our Specialty dB- Bookkeeper I lemon aged 30-04 srlth typing , jj~reSiwT —mTtoSSf wwtoij^ra . _____ "'gtewteta item Midwest imployment. 404 Pontiac Stole Bank Bldg. PB Secretary Vary mteraattag poalUou ovall-able Set girl age* 30-31 with mod typing itei - ifeintoaHL pteaaaat congenial office, i-day —■- -“k- —L-"—* starting nent. 444 salary. M Pontiac I COMP. OPERATORS. AOE 18-34 344b East Huron »«tol money. Apply 1 ' , REAL BtTAl -- AmMttes^^ Wttel>« not eaimtlol. H. R. HAGSTROM REALTOR *440 Highland Rood (Mil) ilary increa ___nadlate aad vaesnete. In losal area. Excellent promotional oppor-tunlUet. All Michigan Civil service benefits Must hav# two yoan of oouotO pret-crably with some course* In social science or two i«*n of raoout fuimm* paid omriMM. to ease Work Car i Obtain appBmtteh I •nation by writing — civil Service, Lansing, iness Mas Corporation. 1173 So Telegraph. _ . ‘ . WANTED AT ONCE Center. John J. Vermett. FE 3-3863 or EM 3-4444. IRT'^hopping matt. Realtor. WANTED man with high tch or hotter to loom Sew aad xanei building IriMWI. i a m. te Help WaRted Fenvsie 7 BEAUTY ORRATOI gobd following. Salary Mktlaa f| 4-3149. ft Find. •errice. Q( —- EW BP 'housework. Fg 8 T Curb Waitresses and night ektft. Apply In poraoh I TED'S Woodword ot aouor* Lk. Bd., NOTICE: Airlines Nee^i TRAINED PERSONNEL home. Successful grsauste trainees lb OB flown itraasportatteo mid) to nsanst ground gmool tor praimml orientation. CommuniiioilosliWL,, jW|I*i» . ger Reservation Clerks, Ramp Mata, Btewardoasn. many others, fluesra ambitious high iitool gr*d- Information, saay tew - —w TaakiiL AU rnquiriei wiri’b* graafid * personal thterttew*. FIU IS Bra 33 e/o Pontiac Pres* ________iWHlRLFflOL ZH6I Kenmore , pasber repair sorvtee. FE 44433, SiFiriC TANfol CLEANED ismall *Aapositnreeateeoii> Backenstose Hook Store IP EAST LAWRENCE FR 4-MI4 Wtc Children to EtMfd 28 omood^jm*, F^ Min. Bookkeeping ft Taxes 16 Wtd. HoutchoM Ciootls 29 CALL Will sell all you mv* — furniture. appliances, TV’s Mm. nighes- debar. Quick' mrv-Icr Allen's FE 4 3381 , HOUSE FULL OR l-PC. WTD More 4414 far furnitare and ap-jUteace*. Bargain Roue*. FB afFunces ' FSiSnURE AND Dressmaking, Tailoring 17. ALTWATIOHB ON AU, TYFBS mart wai 3-7143. alterations___ i, J MianUj HI MfT4 \ TAItdSSlNO—ALTERATlbltS Bm lyroi* Making--Fur Repairs RDHA wAftNiR • FE 4-4434 DRESSMAKING TUMllW, .AL> terotliru. M»s. iodoljl. FB 44441 Landscaping 21 Immediate servtee. Doug s. . mu, *'; IjctL* iWiT OR SELL ri Ing aaS complete------- Free estimates. FB 04221 or ( 34404. .' A-l 'ace "tree SERVICE STUMP REMOVAL Treo removal, trimming. Get ■ hid, FB 2-7184 or FE 8-4735. Moving isd Trucking 22 1-A Reduced Rate* Local or long distance moving SMITH MOVING CO. FE 4-4884 1 A-l' MO?iN6 SERVICE "r Reoaonahle Rats* FE 6-3444 GENERAL TRUCKING DAT OR night. Reds- rates. FE 4-1780, HAULING J I RUBB«H_ NAM* Wanted Miscellaneous JO CASH NOW FOR AFT. Bias Ft-I ano. Call MA VIM a»*r I p.m-HELFINO HAND BAND- ON TEH - Church of Ood WIB accept aaT S I donation* of clothing Or ruraK 1 ture tor a fsmlly that tost their — pcseoeilosis In > fire. FB 4-4444. OFFtCE FURNlTUilH h equip: w meat Forbc- PrlnUng a Antes 1 supply Ml 6-3014, Days. OP PRICES>OR RAW FURS. 1.-,3 Highland Are. Bcllevlow Island. Lake Orion. M? 4-4741. Money Wartod 21 WANTED: 48,000) HtOtt INTEBEBT food iwcuriu. rtply hm mill. y’iltST’MORTlIAtlE OF 84.400“bf- tiw^oldorai O’DELL CARTAGE Local and longdistance moving. ■ ISatoFE MWi UOHT AND HEAVY TRUCKINO. ruvssu: Painting Jfc Decorating 23 1ST CLASS FA1BTIHO AND DEC-orating Caeh or terms. UL 3-3440. ut 'class DEcoRATwa Fautt: am And wall papering. FB J-0M5. IST-CLaS-S FAlNtlNO AND FL jsr haroglng Mason Thompom. IST^CLASS FJUktfoO AND oration. Winter ---- —-ii^L 1-WgT Work Wantod Mah A-i bARFnrrn- work new and repair. FE 44344. A-t • agw^nw>iiP~CM- Custom cabinets. FI 8-4433. ■A FAINTING WINTER PRICES, 38 pat cent disc.; free est. A1I Wfltm ynf bdflMifv •' 1-1 FAWTINO' AND DECORAT1NO Paper removiidfsFWOdtar _ • FMlfflXO AND DECORAT- Fainung. paper reotovaL^walL washing. Free aft, UL MIR a LADY Interior decorator Pattering FE 4QM3. 'a kXF. FAINTING. INTERIOR. WIN- tik' g«te*. ^— ................ folittlipR AND ENTER 1 O-FAINTrtNO, wall washing. Free al. iteshteaT Wl-tMStl.__ 'nmimSSiNfo >*i*?iNd; DAY OR NIOHT, TY SERVICE. M P. STRAKAr FE-S-1348, - DINETTE, K ITCH IN CHAIRS RE-t covered. Tnsyl ar naugahyde. Fra* oettetotee- rlckap aid 4teT~ MAS-1878. contraoL < lowest — s,______ discount.; _ available CaU Ted I [lough. FE 4-3844. _ ARBO REALTY ______8143 Ca«s-Ellr.abi-U> Rond ABSOLUTELY 'THE FAfe'ISHTAg 444 W. HURONFE 3-7W4FH 04813 Stax F«r~atXKL land com-. , tract*. Private. FE 3-8881, CSpriTHt LAlrte afigTRACTg; J. Van W*|L.440aDlllteStay. _________OB LI384 IMMEDIATE ACTIOfi On nny goaq land contract!. How or - eeaeoned. Your mah upon aaW . ((factory loapectlon ot ptamrty ano 1411*. AST tor Ee* Tomptoton. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 1334 Orchard Lrite Road FE 4-4583 LANDLORDS take advantage at our rental aorv-too, Teoants WMtteg tor hcuait Good referencr*. Mo chart* tt WO do not rent year property. R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 Qthd cOnTracts to auV wa Wanted Real Batata 26 attention, owners W* need Ustbiga on too***, farm*, uormgtk wo nuy sad toll toad contracts CaU U*. , _ PONTIAC REALTY 737 Baldwin, FE HITS SPtfoALfiUtD REALTY siificC ClQ Loul* Bom. RtUir. FB Hilt