Tha Waatfiar |tl.B4 Wnikfr I ClmM>. liKht •MW. I ' (StUlh mu F*|« ^ THE. PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition llOtli YEAH - 'A Break in the Quiz f TONTIAC, MICHIGAK, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY* 7. mi—24 PAGES ""‘"“•JggJxroTSKtf'®"**' Strength Equal, Probers Find WITNESS'TABUC TALK - *»W" KmJilb talks with Robert C. Weaver, President Kennedy^"'"ei1olcfr-to be federal housing commissioner, as Weaver sits in the witness chair^ol the. Sen^e Banking Committee today in Wa^ington. Momrats later. Chairman A. Willis Robertson, D-Va., ordered a delay In the public hearing on Weaver's qualifications ^ called the 15-membw committee into executive session. Kennedy Sends Note Vouching for Weaver U.S, and Russia GM Employe's Idea Works —More Warmth I Fair to -partly cloudy tonight with light snow beginning over the i extreme south portion Is the ! weatherman's -forecast. - The low I will be near 16. Study Sees No Missile "Gap, Agrees W Ike's Jon. 12 Message WASHINGTON MWThe United States and the Soviet Union have equal strength, the new top? Pentagon command has' concluded tentatively. Mostly cloudy with light snow spreading SV«r the southern thirds of the state is forecast for Wednesday. . The mercury is expected to rise again into the 3Qs. Skies will be partly cloudy Thursday. The high will be in the low 30s. Morning southeasterly winds at miles, per hour will become I northeasterly at 10 to 14 m .p.h. Wednesday. I Thirteen was the lowest record-downtown PonUac preceding dered by P*resident KeiiiiMy; f] The ronelasioii rolacldes with former President Dwight D. Elsenhower's view. .He said Jan. 12 in his farewell State of the Union message, "Thei 'bomber gap' of several years dgo was always a fiction, and the missile gap' shows every sign of| being the same" Fights Tax Dole to State Schools Rep. O'Brien Would End Mandatory Divvy of Sales Levy Asks Coverage Ifor 4.3 Million More Workers The new civilian chKis"Tl thej Pentagon also are convinced that; LANSING (Ji — A Democratic WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Kennedy told thejtherc is no' destruction gap" fhatll^SislaioL bent on sweeping Senate Banking Committee today he has no doubts would imperii u.s. security in the! sWuiionai 'fvi»*o«. ‘«iay pno-l abouJ^he loyalty ol Bobort C. Weaver, hie nraninee ^ ^ L"?T.„“,r rSS federal housing chief. , . i'.T. Ulocu «s«»idiarici,, Clem Information at band *" SUOGFJS'nON PAYS OFP\^ Pontiac Motor s first maximum suggestion of I%1 was paid yesterday To Oiir6i^T. ^a8Ti^^ a machine repairman for the Maslw'Mechanics department. Making the $5,000 paymeht in U. S. Savings Bonds were B. E. Starr (lefh\ works manager, and J. K. Blamy, manufacturini^^man- ager. Stasiuk, 112 Pioneer St., suggested a major improvement to a cylinder block machining operation. The award marks the sixth $5,000 payment to Pontiac employes since General Motors raised the maximum award to that figure in •Tunc 1959. Division employes took home more than $178,000 for their ideas in 1960. Pay Increase " Would Be Gradual to Soften Wow to Employari Washington President Kennedy todey sent to Congress — with a plea for “prompt consideration — a bill to boost the $1 minimum wage to $1.25 and give 4.$ million more workers the protection of a Kennedy rushed a letter to. committee Chairman A. ^yillis Robertson, D-Va., with the unqualified endorse- Mackie Offers Jobs for 8,000 jment after Robertson re-I fused to start a hearing on jthe Weaver nomination without it. j After receiving the letter, which I he read to a packed hearing, Robertson began hearings on the oon-itroveraial appointment of the New |York Negro. He had held up the Sends His Plan on Statethearings more than one and ,jwie l^e whethM tke« be ." g p i)-Detroit misalle gap" in the futare. These tentative conclusion.s emment’s half-cent share of the emerged from a comprehensive sales levy to a penny. The in-of strategy, defense wcap- crease would be worth more than ons and policy ordered by Ken-$50 million a year to cities and nedy as a prelude to strengthen-! villages, ing U.S. defenses. ORDERED BY JFK Road Work to Kennedy | Kennedy wrote Robertwn that., and Hodges i“As is customary in nominations LANSING Un—State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie today proposed an emergency highway maintenance program that he 4«id wouW put 8.000 jobless workers to work "almost immediately" in the "stale's critical areas of unemployment. of this importance," the FBI con-, ducted an investigation. Antitrust Sentencing Ends Fix Fines HiF$2 Million Kennedy said in a message to House Speaker Sam Ray-bum, D-Tex.,. would be achieved by a series of annual rises, “to which employers can readily adjust.” "Our , nation can ill afford to tolerate the growth of an underprivileged and underpaid class,” the letter said. "Substandard wages lead nec-cessarily to substandard living conditions, hardship and distress. “Since the last increase Jn the : minimum wags both Using coato and prednetivity have Increased to NUch an extent that the proposed bill merely reflects an adjustment to keep pace with these In his State of the Union ige Jan. 30 Kennedy said he had ordered the reappraisal .,xd -mitt, fary strategy to meet a coming “p^od of uncertain risk." In his fourth), debate with former Vice President Richard M. Nixon last Od. 21, Kennedy said of the Soviets and their missile strength cofnpared to that of the United States: It will require a $10-million fed- eral grant, he stated. Mackie submitted his proposal to President Kenmxly. Secretary of Commerce Hodges and Michigan’s congrewiioMi detegsthm. The commissioner, who is campaigning for re-election, said the proposal grew out of a meeting of .state highway officials last night. Some 8,000 of the state's 320,000 unemployed, he haid, could be put ti) work for 90 days, repairing bridges, landscaping hii^ways, trimming trees, painting guaid-rails, repairing drainage facilities and doing other maintenance work. The Hghway Department already has the facilities for administering the program, he said. Mackie said unemployed men with families would rate highest priority in getting temporary jobs. ceming my nomination of Mr. Robert C. Weaver to be administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency. "As is customary in nominations of this imporiance, a report on Mr. Weaver was submitted to me by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and this report was fully reviewed and evaluated. “I am moat confldeiit that If coBfirmed, Mr. Weaver will per- News Flash -J-EDPOLDVILLE. The Congo (UPt) MaJ. Gen. Joseph Mobutu canceM all leavM aad |Wt the <'4Migoleae arm,v on the alert tonight In reply to L'.N. proposals that Congo military forces Mr. Weaver will perform an out- ^ ... standing service to onr country , ‘ as adminislrator of the honsing 1 k and home finance ngency.'' I b*. •"^"'bering ns in mls-„ J . . . . ,1 “ii**- • m “«t as confident as be Kennedy s letter, dated today. | ^ strongest military power in said: •“niis will point up the man.vi areas of the constitution that! need revision and paint u,a. ilie' for .1 new one," he said. Votci-s will decide at the April! 3 election whether to call a eon-j vention to rewrite the stat(‘'s{ ba?ic charter. | “Dear-Sen. Robertson: i |g«s.. "I have your recent letter con- At present, the new Pentagon team appears Ito be convinced the Soviets do not have more nuclear-tipped missiles than the United States. Robertson had announced at the start of the hearings that he had written Kennedy Jan. 30 asking him for assurances of Weaver's toyaltjr. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara is under order to have the military reassessment ready for the White House-byihe end of the month. The odds appear strong McNamara w i" sn^^ ^ rhirago-snhBrb Asked isales totaled $81,829,086. Egbert »» »• St.. Birmingham. said a fourth quarter operating pr, Redl wili speak at 8:30. ac-i isaid she didn’t know, but "even iloas was more than off.sft by favor- cording to Dr. William Westmaas. Tliw Pnilra FiranUkri sleeping in a park will be fine. • ^pivsident of the clinic, He w-ill d-#-Veily I UlIvVf rilt/lllvll ★ ♦ * _ capitaltscribe his investigation and treat-;- i i • \i ^ Mr. and Mrs. Churchill elear^ Rv The AfMiorlaied Prewi st«>d at $S7,346,f?6. including cash’ment of difficult child behavioral Kaaffipn 111 iHP YPH Churchill, a retired Ohio Norvell W iet rain be-»»d marketable recurities totaling problems. DCQIUCU III MIC I C|l contractor, said. ’ It take, a tij. beTS-time staff^ sieged Texas while the Northeast-863, compared with $73.-1 w ♦ ♦ ___ti___rin.i ^ volunteers.” and $62,164,009, at the end_ jjaefort to remarks, the annual;—fContmued From PageUne1-+pr^ge of the ^ ♦ ‘meeting of the Oakland Child ian order, the fire chief has. ■ • ■ • * I Guidance Clinic will be held, and; oxa beards, no long sidebui the public is invited to participate „„ mustaches" Is the edict on in this meeting." Dr. Westmias, nre stofioa bulletin boards. continued. the fire chief fears the chance in the world, I want to tell you." Our official business wall ,pf blazing beards. She said when the American cl^e th^. "*'"*‘'* annual report ^^jy „,a„agcr and I reached p!a.ae first sighted the Santa Ma- HAVANA (UPI) — Premier offleere, he saU ,he decision." he said. ria, every Portugu^ in sight ern- ridel Owtro’s officUl radio uid ‘ Following Or. Redl’s presents »* today gmemmenl setoure of the |tion. the audience will be 'nvit^di|„ever know. Adm. Smith handled; ■'The present picture in this area is not enAura^ng and I frei it would be a very real hardship on Dr. Val H. Wilson, peesldent of Sktdmoi* OdUege In Saratoga Springs. N.Y., wUl be guest s^-er tomtMTOw at 7 pjn. »t a ito-otf dinnor lor the Skldinore Cellege' Development Campaign at Ihe Women’s Qty Oub In Detroit. Michigan chairman for the drive which wUl begin Thursday is George W. McCormick Jr, at M3.^ Quarton Road, Mrs. Harry a Hoyt orm N Glimhiirit Roethfe the local chairman. According to Mrs. Francis C. 3249 Bradway St., president of the Siddmore Ahmmse dub of Greater Detroit, the pur-poee of the drive is to raise funds necessary to enlarge the college library, construct a new science building and build a new dormitory lor 300 women students. 2|NaMliecreb— ^rasii Spr^» "Sir"- Fears Reds May Know Allied Defense Setup LONDON (UPD ; any tMisire-s-s to^-a.ssume the coet i charged at 4fae atari of its most-of paving at this t'.me." sensational espionage trial in a decade today that a five-member spy ring stole key Allied naval Schotd Parent-will meet Thursday at g p m. at the school. 2800 Lahser Road. The featured speaker will be Dr. Leonard Cohen, director of meas- by short wave radio. The disclosure stirred fears that Russia now knows full details of how the United States and NATO to defend themselves t«alnst Sees 'Need' for Colonies ithe Soviet Union’s fleet at 500 sub-I marines. > Atly. Oen- Sir Reginald Man Offire equipment is being loaned by Pontiac industry and business.' ■ Seven desks already have been JJJ PqC-6 era states labored today to erad»-i®®;^ cate the drifts of their multimil- i®” lioa-dotlar weekend storm. Fidel Upbraids U.S. Guantanamo Fears the freedom of this country. You don’t have to have men with guns at the airport. Mrs. Churchill emphasized. "We (Americans) have lots of friends Tltfe snow is spreading toward; the Middle Mississippi and the) Lower Ohio River Valley. Spared from the new snowfall was Texas’ Eturtern Panhandle, buried imder previous amounts up to 12 inches. ! Russia specifically during his I two-hour opening statement in Bow Street Criminal Court, i But he ^id d 5&-yenr-old British . j member of the spy ring was re-DETROIT (H-I^et Experujeruited^ his espiona^ woi* by ^ WmSS-^ Vin Braun said ;« ® Monday night the colonization of officer, and he left no d^ t^t the moon and the near planets jthe may be a necessity within the 15 OTFS. Manr acowttuii, wi novt VH v^ars i • Soci«y ol Manningham-Buller A predawn fog spread across a large aiiep of Southern Michigan today. Motorists drove with caution VisiMlity was reported rut to 40 feet In Mheomb Goonty. There were no plane cancellations from either Detroit Metropolitan (Cfport or Willow Run, however. secretary who has been working with Whitfield on the celebration full-time since December. The centennial commission plans '; to open one other official office be-| nauKurse u. June - a downtown spot forj American he coud^^ centennial materials. | . .—'had served 20 years in the Royal Automotive ^^nginccra-jneettog ixavjvmld^iollce he got into the here that if him hMP« up his L business through'a riise present rates of lengthening life | and reproduction three will be ^ civilian clerk at the naval standing room oidy" on earth station at Portland Nav.y water compan.v suppl.ving the |to stay for light refreshmenU. No U. 8. naval base at Cuantonamo I reservation to attend either por-; For both police was "desigand to regulate rather tion of the meeting is necessary , than Astorb" its operation. br. Westmaas added. ‘orders are orders. and firemen '^“h !Defeat Red Move ana nremen,,^„ ^ ,gjgp promises. Hei But, still, how do they feel about; Uold us we would have to wait." The broadcast descrilwd 1.8. might eat off the base water supply were "hysteripal.” It assailed V. 8. "Jumptiig to eoarluslons' iM^ndrSolons s i! jo^iy’pali^oneit Minimum Wage Bill I And, of course, firemen are for Oon Dlive NEW DELHI (UPI) - -World Health Assembly defeated an attempt by Russia today to ousl Nationalist China from, member-ship and seat Communist China in its place. ^ In 500 years, making expansion into space imperative. The colonization of other pixels will be made possible by man’s ability to create artificial environments. Von Braun said, said .the . ifrst - numned Yard, first agreed to pass on top secret information at the request of someone who identified himse;.' Chidr. Alexander Johnson, U. S. Navy." Manningham-Buller said "Johnson" Jictually was "Gordon Lons- ftieling in space, even with the still hypothetical lowr-sfete C2 Saturn rocket. two women charged 'with passin; the top secret information to the "foreign power." Indians Go on Warpath views known. jsafety. Continued From Page One) i Eugene Hendren wasj EBENSBURG, Pa. and outside interests to make their disappointed. "I think it'd be kind (AP) - A county court has ruled QUITO. Ecuador (API—AbouU powcIl said only brief new hear-5j2JM0 Ecuadorean Indians were on|i„gs are necessary because of long, weekend storm that left snow as the warpath Monday. The herds-hearings - last year, deep as 17.4 inches. The seven inen and agricultural workers j,j|j vi-puld extend the law's states hardest hit by the snowjwere out for more pay from thej^ggp ^nd hour provisions to the reported , more than 55 stormjbig landowners of the Andean enterprises; of nice." he said. "If we were arresting somebody, he wouldn’t feel as badly as now. After all. we’d have our ^beards in com- The Weather I. Any company having one or mope retail or sepvire eslab-IlHhments if Ihe animal Mies volume Is not less than SI mll- Other comments from police: Sgt. Ted Goines; "It’s no whisk- with no right arm and only part of his left arm should be titled to a driver’s license. The license of Joseph Piurkow-sky, 45, of Johnstown, was suspended by Pennsylvania’s secretary of revenue followtng a rul- ers off my beard. I couldn’t grow ^ that all state employes m^ l*ol#A M e\k«Mi/»o1 AvfilTItnillinn nF • saiywayr” *— Patrolman Ra.vmond Dickinson: 'Tm with the chief. On the side of the beardless that is." I Patrolman Freeman Htallons: I "For this. I'd have bad to start I last Jarnary. I didn’t. I won’t- Fnli IT 8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Fair today. Considerable cloudiness light snow tonight and Wednesday. High today 38. Low tonight 16. High Wednesday 35. Winds light variable 6 to 12 miles today and tonight, and northeasterly at 16-14 miles per hour Wednesday. Patrolman Robert W. Beltz: "Taking crime photographs, that’s alt I’d need. I’d be taking pictures of the beard, and. then, too, might get caUght in the cam- take a physical examination a driver's license. Piurkowsky is a bridge foreman for the State Highways Department. Cambria County Court Monday-the (secretary had abused his discretion in suspending the license without investigating the individual problem. Testimony disclosed that, Piurkowsky had driven motor vehicles for 23 years without an accident or traffic violation. He uses no special equipment in the vehicles he drives. , „jHtfhut t^mperxurt reUKit, , ..... ■ M(tke>t Ml L«*nt TMir«r*lsr' Thli p>U (■ 10 Tc»r> ;pairing, and-having annual sal?s I of at least $1 million. I 3. Any local transit business. ; 4. Any establishment engaged in ("ommerce not included in the first three categories if its sale# umo is at least $250,000, or, in thol case of construction, $350,000. Patrolman Fred Stormer: Q Dorffi Facilities it * * neutral. Still neat idea on the; , . A family bu-siness in which allirhief’s part ” ifor Western AAlCnigon iZS^^ouXex^X" %”?. "^rrhan" LANSING ^PT(^ - ■ Any gasoline sercice establish-;.,.d rE CAREFl’I.’ eS-“million, will £ constriJSd . at B(im(rck >s«rkt«r« easrt Iment with annual sales of less thanj comments \\ Mu'SrtoMh ?! ?5:»250,000 would be cxempLJrom u. Robert Sarteih "I d be care-• ««., M jljovertime provisions. jafef m ft . fire. I’d guard ,a prized possession like that." I 14 fho« ( U St .L >S S*«al*«a) Or. luplds mchut taoptntim ...................toHouihtM • —M tcmMntan ...................It KanMiCttr .. — 1 temp^ature ................ .It, Lantlns 3t ] Waahlnifton }t Zl - —-------- iLoiAnttlci U U Tampa |Out-of-$tate Narcotic Prescriptions Nixed node drugs cannot be issued in;beard on fire, but who wants to be Michigan on prescriptions prepared jdifferent?’’ by doctors not licensed to P>f^><^{oHANCE LOST Cb^,. Tb«.: AT P(totoi>* NATIONAL WEATHER — Most of the nation east of the Plains will have wet weather tonight except tor New England and western New York. Snow is ftweeast for the area from Missouri to the mid-Atlantic states with rain and showers elsewhere as well as mimnm ftttmi in the Rocky Mountain area. Weather will remain wbitry ft the Gull with a rise in temperature in the southern LANSING UK - Narcotics or hyp- at Western Michigan University if the State Senate goes along wifii resftution passed Monday night by the House. The House approved a resolution allowing the State Board of Education to let contracU for the dermi-tories and food service facilities „ , „ _ ^ at the Kalamazoo Institution. _____ TV dorms, self-li^atingproj- nre Fighter Carl Wlddls: "I don’t care what they do on beards. MeT 1 think they look dirty." ects. trill house LSOQ students. PANCAKES FOR ALL — "All the pancakes and sausage you can eat” is the theme that will be projected from 5:30 to 7:30 p. m. tomorrow 5W>l.aLA(t-5ehooIcriI4~8choeli--i ^ township by members of the Parent-Teadier’s Association. A /come-as-you-are policy will pre- vail. Shown above are Principal William Bawden -pancakes to James Amami, 3, and,Mrs. Lawrence Murray. She is co-duir-man sdth Mrs. f. W.‘ Miller. The public is invited. The qnestioa was raised by the Stole Board of Pharmacy. Atty. Gen. Paul L. Adams said that prescriptions written by out-of-state doctors tor drugs other than narcotics or hypnotics may be honored by licensed pharmacists. He cited the unifrem narcotic drug act to back up the ban on non-Michigan pretcrii "Tradition demands beards at us despite the'peril." Engi^r FarreQ Ashley: "Alas, the chance of 100 years! Lost, never to be had apiin." Aisistani IM jQifef John Mor-rtsey; "A bear to wash after each fire? Who needs HT It’s hard enough now.” Nome NATO Head ; "Everybody’s beard would gct| ; tangled up sliding down the pdes, PARIS (H — Gen. Pierre Jacquot land they’d miss the trucks," he ' France today was appointed |deciared. NATO commander in centi^ Eu- “And besides, we’ll have plenty rope.' He replaces Gen. Maurice of beard fires to dash to without Challe, who resigned from the worrying apout ourseivet on that French Air Force. 'score." Bewitched Phone Nice but Suspicious NEW YORK (AP)-A cruy, mlxed-up pay telephone in the Criminate Courts Building gives forth with sweet music when you jdok up the ri^lver. It’s better than a juke box—you 4ont have to put in a dbne, and there’s no rock ’n’ roll. The bewitched phene is bemusing to some—embar. rassing to others. Imagine hb embarrasunent when he phone hte of-flee and hte •eerotary-^^earing the street acoomimnl.' molt for tto firit time asked; “Are yon In n 1»rT 1 And it’s bewildering' to phone company technicians. Where is 0» muste osming TromT '' If some one drops in a coin and inakes a call, the conversation has a background of muted trumpets, soft saxophones, delicate violin notes and a gentle piano. ARB YOU IN A BARf A prominent criminal lawyer Is a steady itetener to the mysterious music during court recesses. i T'' f Hm telephone booth is in the Criminals Courts Building press ro®eiiietery. J3iiptt died yestertay in NorthvUle (immunity after nine-month illness. The Rosary will be recited at 8 tonight in the Walbum Funeral Home, Muskegon., Mrs. Andrews, iSS. of 2084 Miner St. Muskegon died there Sunday in Mercy Hospital after a brief illness. The c-ouiM il naid tlie tier of Irjifnc more than oae ner cent irom the l»M total of S7.SI0. The to- PAIX H. FALKK.NBKHti Former Pontiac resident Paul li. Falkenberg of West Hollywood. two sisters. Mrs. Bertha Caufield of Milford and Mrs. Clara O’Ctonner of Cass aty; and three brothers. CllffOTd of Oxbow Lake, Ray of California and Vem of Musk^on. MRS. JAJrcS D. SKINNRR WHITE' LAKE - Services for Mrs. James D. < Evelyn J.) Skinner. 38, of 219 Rustic Circle, will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at United Brethren Church, Albion, MATTRESS-€ALE $M SUMMONS Ihw SimcopMlic Smooth Top Mattress Comfortably Firm—Not Hard A mattress you can rest on -— by a maker^) — from a dealer you c you can rely depend on. Box Spring seme loiw price. Full or Twin sixe. Many other fine mattresses to select from. FURNITURE 144 OAKLAND AVENUE You always get more for your money ot Miller's-MORE STYLE-MORE QUALITY-MORE VALUE-Our lower overhead mokes the difference. Coreful Free Delivery Service Open Monday and Friday Evenings iZdda. ... , . : Sen’ice and buriaJ will be from A slowdown in the number of ,0ie Wadlington Funeral Home in traffic deaths during the dan- !\vest Hollywood gerous wintry months helped es- ' tablish a record for deaths per JOSEPH D. GWI.NN mile driven. D^ember 1960 traf- i Joseph D. Gwinn, six-year-old fic fatalities totaled 3,520. down json of Mr. and Mrs. Bennie R. 5 per cent from the"3.708 per- jGwinn of 603 Valencia SI., died who dled in DecamtaM= traffic accidents. f^pital from injuries received when * * ^ lx* Ipil on ihe iqp near his home. The safety council li.sted an jHe wa.s in the hospital nint hours. I honor roll of states and cities Surviving besides hLs parents are I which, cut their death total dur- lihtw A*- . -..............— *2/arHf'Thdifhas W.. afi of Pontiac; Hnooe'Island, With a .36 iier cent a grandmother. JVLra Lottie reduction in fatalitie.s, whil" '• . Providence lead the cities, with Oiicagu led the nation’s largest cities with the least tigfOc accidents per 10,MW rostered Joseph’s body was taken from the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home to the Nickell Funeral Home in East Rainellc, VV’, Va. for service and burfaT. Among cities with populations above one million, the Chicago ratio was 2.7, followed by Los Angeles with 3 pnd Detroit with 3.2. >n(TlAEL G. KELLV Service and burial Were held this afternoon at the Catholic Church in Midland. Tex., for former Pontiac resident Michael G Kelly. The Rosary was recited 15eledors Mentioned LONDON lyPIi - ’The names' of American^ defectors William Martin and Bernon Mitchell were brought up in testimony today at the trial of three men and two women charged with passing crets of one of Britain’s largest naval bases to a "foreign power.” Hoqiital tie <2reek, Mrs. Beatrice Chanvl berlln and Mrs. Marcella ’Twom-ley, both of Holly; ^1 grandchildren and 16 greal-gijuMichlldren. A lister also survives. Cemetery there. r AffitotlT' to Hold Rally for Him HAVANA (LTU — Premier Fidel Castro’s government called today { for a schoolboy "demonstration of: solidarity" to offset the anti-Castro| student strike that hit private sec-i ondary schools here Monday. I Castrolte students were sum- the Cuban "White House" at ( Mrs. Skinner died .Si^tHiay at Si. -P.n». today. It was not inimedi- heart attack. He had-U^n lll'sev-erar months: .VtaloI^Dmswn .Hospital? Po^U‘Ny,-.-«‘rtnln^ whether Castro - * 9ii 6T Ihw years. Her deliver^ bftU-ony «>peeoh body was taken to Pursley Funeral students wbo turn out Blue-uniformed membeia of the' ’The Bonham 0. Miser Funeral jCastroite "Association • of Young Home in Albion, Ind., is handlinsiRebels.” who often carry arms, ai^gements there. jwere scheduled to lead the demon- Surviving besides her husbandfgtratlon. i aro her mother Mrs. Beecnerj Government sloganeers urged the pipert »nd Jw^ son, Amos Gobble Icounter-revolutionary o b 81 a c I e s slstPTS andll Jr. of Pontiac. ^with your t I held high! ” MRS FLETCHER ARTHI K _ ....... ^ . TROY — spixicc.^fjiic^^MwLr Kiet-nrloort-Airnient Is ratal ^r-tAwitttra) Ai^iir; 78. of 1771 [| will be 2 p.... 'Thursda.v at the Oramer Funeral Home, Oawson. Burial will be in WTiite CThapef Memorial Cemetery. Mi-s. Arihur died yesterday in William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. after a brief illness. for Sylvon Lake Woman She V Mr. Kelly had been employed iin the laboratory of the Phillips •Petroleum Co. A former member of St. Michael’s Catholic Church of Pontiac, he leaves his wife, -Laurel; two and two daughters, Dennis P„ Michael, Patricia L. and Kathleen, at home: his father M. J. Kelly in Florida: his mother Mrs. i^a Butler; and a sister Mrs. Siary Elizabeth Warthen of Drayton Plains. Mr. Kelly, 38, died unexpectedly Simday at his home in Midland Mrs. Mildred Hendrick after an illness of several years. Mrs. Winifred Perrin, .59. of 1756 Beverly St., Sylvan Lake died yesterday of a heart ailment at Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of two years. .. « .1, ^ member of Oakland .Avenue P*^*byterian Church. Mm., sfern slaivxliaptaa-..»7, PoTfe-^ertSSfiTlSSStB-ffi^I® home and belonged to Gold Star Mothers. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Stephen Hubbel of Pontiac; two sons, Donald ot Birmingham and Eugene in New York; and two brothers, GiHetta of Clarkston and Lewis Warden in Florida. Service will be held at 1:30 p.m. Sanlxim, Ind. Sur\’iving are two sons, Chester, with whom she made her- home, and Lea of Oak Park; a daughter. Mrs. Mary Lamon of Miami, Fla.;” two brothers; a sister; six grandchildren and five gfe/ grandchildren. Welch; 86, of .305 Sherman St„ will iXbursday at the Huntn Funeral be at 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Rita I Home with burial in the Lakevlew Catholic Church. Burial will he Cemetery. in Lakeside-Cemeteryv Mr. W’elch died, early today at his home after a long illness. The Rosary will be recited at 7 p.m. tomorrow^ at the Dryer Funeral Home. Surviving are a son, George E. Of Holly; four daughters, Mrs. Hazel Bylsma of Cliarlotte. N. C., Out af Auta Talks WASHINGTON (UPI) - Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg said yesterday President Kennedy "does not want to take over or interfere with" the auto industry labor negotiations which start later this year. mbs. alec MeGR.VERV , Mrs. Alec (Libbie) McGilvery. ;77, of 169 Nelson St., died this morning after a long illness, i She was a member of Oakland ' Park Methodist Church and a re-j tired employe of Fisher Body DI-i vision. ! Surviving are a. daughter, Mrs. [Carnie Loucks of Pontiac; a son, Kenneth of Oxford: two grandchil-idren; five great-grandchildren: and |two sisters, Mrs. EmUy Phillips jand Mrs. Archie Gilchrist-of Po(u' tiac. .Service will be held at > 2 p.m. Thui-sday at the Voorhees-Siple jCliapel with burial in Perry Mount Paik ^emetery. GUY .MEIXSEIX Prayers will be offered at 10 a Wednesday at the Huntoon Funeral; Home for Guy Meixsell, infant son; of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Meixsell j of 3580 Richmond, Waterford Town-1 ship; Burial will follow in Oak Hill! Ometery. I Surviving are the parents: and-grandparents, Mrs. Guy Meixsell j and Mrs. CTiarles Robinson, both of Pontiac. TTie baby was dead at birth; yesterdky at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. I RAZLEV JL/ CASH MARKET 1. 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Wed. Only Super Specials at Baxley's RIB CENTER U TASTY T»ORI^ SSKfNtfSl CHOPS a FRANKS 49i 29 lb. REMUS—2 Lb. Limit m/g BUTTER 59 h. MR.S. HARRY S. POTTER j Mrs. Harry S. (Catherine) Pot-; r, of 115 Briscoe, Waterford' Township died yesterday at her home. She was 82’ I Sur\’iving are a daughter, Mrs.1 Alice Zolman with whom she made' her home; four sons, George of; Temple City, Calif., Leo, Max, and' Ray, all of Qark, S. Dade.; fouri grandchildren; five great-grand-1 children; and two sisters. Following the prayer service at tonight at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains her body will be taken to the Haugland Fu-, neral Home in Clark for 8er\'ice! and burial. ! 5a/d*, Dependable Infant Radiant Heat SUNBEAM HEATERS 22 88 PRIDES REDUOED. EVEN MORE AT < SIMMS , For Thtst Big * Sofa'CaiiM Slock of YARD GOODS Acidol FafoM to 79c PER YARD 25‘ Choice of entire stock—broad* ctotly^ijaas, poJi^>had^ (^^ solids, lawn fabrics, piques. No limit — none fo dealers. Iwthrooni, kltcheo, ror Tab mi^WmA ttaetini ^ DRAININ6 HOSES Rag. S9e RoiiiScribTibs 15-Fool Trouble Fioa Qualitr HTLOM Dust Mop-Mitt SJJ5 V r Deluxe Ironing Set S09.VM •RONINC ^ #PADAr 088 98 NORTH SAGINAW ST. ROY M. ELUOTT dlfferenoe/ This is the lane that leade home—aild he hae driven it more than he nan remember. But thm*a aomething different about it today— for tiiia ia the firat time it has rolled beneath the wbeele of hie new Cadillac car. And here, as he ie now discovering, ia motordom’s ' truest minude in motion. First of all, thne’e the way a 1961 Cadillac smooths out that familiar surface. By the time those bumps and iiregularitus have been absorbed in klmt marveloos new euspenaion syatem ... and curiiioned in those deep Cadillac seats . . . they are ehnoet in^Mseible to detect. Then there ie the car’s extraordinary quiet. Cadillac’s careful craftsmanship and precision eiigineering provide such silenoe of operation that ^ you can apeak in a whisper. « And what poise and balance the car has! It,is wonderfully steady and sure-footed through every ipile... and it has a feeling of sdlidity and substance that comes from no other moior car. Of course, these are but a few of the myriad pleasures of driving the new "car of cars’’—in addition to its great handling ease and ita magnificent interior comfort and luxury. May we suggest that you take a 1961 Cadillac out soon on some challenging stretdi of highway— and see for yoursdf? Your Cadillac dealer will be happy to let the car work its magic for you at any time. VISTT TO xm 10 CAI AUTHORIZED CA DILI A C HEA LER JEROME MOTOR SALES COMPANY f , , 276-280 S. SAGINAW STREET »| PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Factory RoprM^^tivo Hors W60NESDAY—2 to 1:30 F.M. REMINGTON Electric Shaver RECONDITIONED ciiiiiAiEma Eloctric Siwvorv —Moia Floor NOW! "FEBRUARY ONLY” SPECIAL! SAVE 61c ON THIS AGE-OLD BEAUTY SECRET TPIITL.rS ORIGINAL aouDinao compound RRMkMMII ORANOMA’a COMPURXION9 HERTS THE SECRET OF HER LOVELY HANDS AND SOFT. GLOWING SWN. Now you can save 61r on the large economy size Jar, as aii introductory offer. It s the ideal skin conditioner. less powder base and night cream. LAROI RCONOMY JARI __rkoulAr I HOW PRIORI I $1.39---- $2.00 I FLtJo TAX mm COSMETICS -Mato I near- ' 'I ..",1 Tom THE POXTltAC PRESS. TUESt)AY. FEBRUARY 7. mi \i>A No stuffed Shirts. . . JFK and Nikita Routa Laid Out for Fliers in Povrder Puff Derby & SINUS DRAINAjSE arcss MMES J&BLOV AMwcteM rifm N««* AMljirf WASHINGTON (AP) - Hie K'9—PrakteM Kwnedy •nd |Premler Kh antics ac(H«d liia h«^«uards, Reporters who [ and fiv* their bodyjw^ the when he was at the United Na> ons in New YoHl He would aroot away, buttonhole strangers, pop up In shirtsleeves on his hotel balcony in ^ Stitt recall his sittinK down with tiiem. coat^ oO. smoking a dgar, White House physician, the chewing the fat for hours. Onf be wanitenl Jnio the sight of aiQ^ o^cpcd with a gim; ^itd' IfoiHe ol^ of his press G1V8 'EM rm SfSFvSl.'^'TES.^Sr.l 'nsty rf^ blunt, have humor, be-iwitb Kennedy. o««” *"»>**?. *» rj* in action, and show an in-| He gave them fits at the inau- wwe ' ' Ok < witii himkostned his canvaigD with an secretary: - Pierre Salinger, lound woman in history in that job. 4tolid Staihi aat-in the^Kreim in. Khnidichev, a man of action, bootees around the world, ntakes talked with him for 15 minutps. Kennedy has always been In-formal. Even on his inauguration day he did the unexpected a few minutes before going to the Chpi- has tunied Russian foreign policy into new, imaginative, and ll.ST. AB arasW’O- tol. "li^STa'lw'ir'bSrilicve m action, and show an in-i „ — liycBw^ane orjterest in indiviausfe. gural ball by jumping boxes ’ ** *" Khrushchev almost has tumedishake hands with friends. : ^ plaque across the Ipatting babies into a hobby. His; At 2 a.m. he dashed off to a^sti-pet to the home of a woman party .'in a friend's house kjneighbor as a token of thanks for Georgetown. kindness in giving hot coffee a * * jto newsmen who had been stand- Last ^veeki after a snowstorm, htg for ihe left the White Home for a local ineater to see a naovSTwSTch ended at midnight. Kennedy, like Khrushdiev. is a shirtsleeves man. side his house. The day after his election he began ammgetpents. to have his own physician, Janet G. Ttm-ivell, treat a newsman who had Onty T Airline M of M. GefS FUllds onRoufeBefweenlj^jyyjgpP^ljjj^ Miami Havana , ANN ARBOR Uft-The Carnegie MIAMI. Fla. (AP) - Only one cbrp New York Qty. has given major airline-Pan Amencan-is{. $200,000 grant to the University flying the Miami-Havana route ■tlw lUO elUW"^ suspended Monday by .bana-.-.-™-.-.™-..,--....- , government. National Air Lines said it has no plans to resume flights which were suspend- Pan American said it plans to change its present reduced schedule of one round trip a day. Passenger traffic on the once-booming route has shrunk to a few persons per flight because of Cuban and U.S. government re- Arthur Godfrey givisadvkttotlwDMf Ifi bsy Tf Ny! “Do it Iqday” HEMPSTEAD 102 i. Hhim • Ph. FE 4-8284 Michigan for a study of the cutely painful. K«i^ lati later apiwlntcd her The Russian likes bluntneas, he showed when the demolished the 19S0 summit conference and ridiculed Eisenhower. Ketme^l^ls liunt ^ as he said, by preference In repeatedly picturing the American economy Both men debated Nixon when f was vice president. Khrushchev in Moscow. Kennedy on TV in the presidential campaign. SAN DIEGO, Ollf. (UPD-Tbe route tor the 1961 all-women tyn*-, continental Powder Puff Derlw idr race was announced Monday.' Mrs. l^tty Wittes of Rancho San- ta Fe. Calif., race boaid chair-required landing and check polnU. h no signs tton Tgr u private dihheFT^ ' he learped In the Far Bast and which Ik now ready to be disclosed to th^ Western World. For your free copy of- the astonishing prophecies covering these momentous times, as revealed In thto 64-page book, ad- phyalot, 3------------------------ Dept. 830i^i^JUis~Angdes OaUl. send no money. Just your name ____________on a postcard or in an envelope will do. No obligation. Readers are urged to write prompt- free books haft bsen printed. Others involved in the project . are^r Ridiard K. Beardsley, anthropology professor, Robert Ward, professor of pcttitical sci-ftce, and Robert M. guiding Jr., graduate student. Japan was selected for the study, they said, because it offers unique advantages toward understanding of political change and modernization. If you're handicapped by btarinq Joss, follow Arthur Codiroy’s |d-vico. Discovor how amozingly a nVw BoHono may holp you hoar clesriy again. Come in. phone or write for htipful FREE book that tens how. COME IN FOR FREE TEST Taste PALL MALL... so GOOD! GOOD! GOOD! /ow CM light either end I Good-looking, Good-tasting, Good-smoking Pall Mall! PONTIAC COMPANY TS. Siiinsw 11 AT Phetorti HORRini»-Mrs. Victor C. I Andrews of Laguna Beach. Calif., describes the Monday M W mS«sHI. Detr,i«' wo s-eiio Danish freighter Laust Maersk, on which she was a passenger, and the American freighter Alcoa Pioneer, At least four crewmen died. Cupids fevorite HERS TOOl FAMILY ASSORTMENT 1-Pound Box A qMdal Vaknttiie |ift of Sandan Caii^> sum to plaaaa witraa, mothara, awaetheaita or childranl Many deU^tfhl asaortmanta to diaoaa botsL Ramember Sandan Candy—a Symbd of Quality dnoe 1875! Visit the Sanders Department in your nearest National Food Store 685 East Boulovord • 1249 Baldwin noor YpsilantI 2375 Orchard Lak« Rd.7in Sylvan LoImi • 4889 DIxia Hwy., in Drayton Plaini 3415 Elizabeth Lake Rood in Waterford Township 8040 Cooley Lake Rood in Union Lake , and a Sanders Store In the Tel-Horon Shopping Center, Pontiac Qi>.t.Cw Predmitsf iseer suddU eems Enjoy satisfidng flavor,., so friendly ta your taste!^ I 1,1 L, ' . J ■■ '■'i. ^ ■ y- ■ 7 y I I I THE PONTIjAC PRESS, TUgSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,^961 I % I ' / FIVE Unite for Promotion nsurance West Germany Now Aids U S. CHICAOO (UPD-Four organl-utioM repmenting doctors, hos- »* itawPoft for the promotion of vid-onprofit {H«p«yment ■1 The inrlniVis nob rewntativcs of the American Medical Asaociation, the A|nerican Hoa-pital Asaociation, the National Aa-sociation of Blue Shield Plana and the Blue Cross Association. The action was taken in line with a resoiution adopted by the AMA's House of Delegates in Washington, D.C., last December. made ^hc Its H-hiUion program of ei^t points to help relieve the American balance of payments deficit. raESfiRIPTIONS P lESaiPTIONS lOFESSIONAUY Ema PERRYDRUGS Mf L BM 1151 The offer, made last Thuraday. was announced at a press conference by economics ministry official Hans Henkel, who said Bonn has not yet received “any official ’’ from Washington. Uens is^aa afier^ to OAKLAND FUEL Gall FE S-6159 W.aterhtd Board Works on Full-Pension Plans of $787>Miliion Loan to Help Dollor Balance First step adoption of a pension plan covering all townihip employes were taken by the Waterford Township Board(rf~ Jleviewing the request, the board envisioned the possibility o broader pixigram. pay ImmedUtely |S87 millhm of Oermaay’s oatstoading 97S7 mil lioa postwar debt to the United Henkel said the remaining $200 million would be "held in reserve" until the question of Germany's seated assets in the United States is cleared up. Germany received $3 bilUon in postwar aid from the U.S. of $4 billion was a gift. Henkel said that if Waahingtpn accepts the offer, Bonn will alro repay at once Us 67 million pound million) debt to £ngiand and Did Secret Part Cause Polaris Fire? CAPE CANAVERAL (UPII - A top-secret piece of equipment getting its first test may be blamed for a failure whidi turned an advanced model Polaris missile into a 15-ton “roman candle” and damaged its launching pad yesterday. The 31-foot rocket blew aphrt in the middle when its booster stage apparently ignited at both ends simultaneously. The second stage soared low over the Cape before crashing about 300 yards away. The upper section phiaged into a barren area of the testing center's u,M0-acre expanse, and there were no Injuries to per- “AsBodlsMyWitiwss, My Hands Are Clean." — NIKITA KHtUSHCHIV This statement was made by the atheist leader of a Godless nation. The open graves in Communist Slava Gamps all over Eastern Europe cry out, ”Liar!” You can help RADIO FREE EUROPE broadcast the truth oT the Free World to 79 million people behind the Iron Curtain. For many, RADIO FREE EUROPE h the last link with free-doth! “ ~ ^ ^ The failure was the first in four Ttrii«s of ihe advancedTfolaris which carries more powerful fuels in greater quantity than earlier versions already on duty aboard the nuclear submarines U.S.~ George Washington and Patrick Henry. Missile scientists faced a pair of problems today — to find oi)t what caused the mishap and to deteo mine how severely the pad was damaged. The device eyed as the possible cause of the figure was identified only as a “new piece of experj-mental hardware being flown in Broadcasting from 28 trans-- mitters manned by excapaes from communism, RFE reaches over 90 % of these people despite communist jamming. But RFE needs money to do its job, to become more effective. It is privately supported anddepends on individual Americans for its very existence. Will you hdp fight communism and secure the future of your children in a free world? Can you give a dollar ... five dollars... more? time.” It was not carried in the first three updated Polarises, all of which were EVE DEVICE Sources said the new device could have caused the misfire, and that it was “being investigated as 1 possibility.” High-speed movie film which reoerded the Cape drama win be givea close serutiny. Also, pleceo of wreckage retrieved hy bill Fm Eirope Find NswYaifcCMr hs eoeporation with The Advortiting CouncN and ths Nswtpapdr Advortiting ExscuUvss Association; TIm Fofltfoc Pr«s8 The Air Force said the pad “could not be determined immediately.” However, said the launching facility, ^or-tured by nearly five minutes of intense heat generated by the wildly puffing solid fuel first stage engine, “certainly suffered to some degree.” The failure was one of the most spectacular ever seen at the Cape. Will Meet With Insurance Men Elmer Johnson, township supervisor, was asked to determine the coat of a plan tailored to, the townahip'a^needs. Johnson aaid he The move was an outgrowth of request from township flre-I and police for a retirement Arturo Morales-Carrion has been selected by President Kennedy to be deputy assistant secretary of east of Oarkston today as work-began topiding trees and brush where the new Walter P. enced in pension programming, ether boatacM M was aa- -| aouaoed that the towaahip treas-__________ arer's afflee will be opea t ami. loiiy^'ftiiwiy wiTlVtaiit' to noon Soturday to accept payment of IIM township, school and eounly Uxes. After Feb. 14, a 4 per rest penalty wHI be charged. James Seeterlin, toimhip clerk, was asked to study specifications cbntalbedln'bids by two companiea to sell a new, two-way police radio to the ■ The board approved erectioa of a backatop at Drayton Ball Park in Dhiyton Plains at an estimated coat of $800. Following a public hearing on special assessments, the board approved Installation id s t r e e lights on Meigs Street. Work Starting on Interstate J5 WoitBrn Michigan Head to Be Inaugurated in May Bulldozers Ripping Up Trees East of Clarkston for Freeway KALAMAZOO (UPII - Western B^higan University muKHinced to-^ its new president, Dr. Jdmes W. Miller, will be formally inaugurated at ceremonies in the field-house on May 20. Two bulldozers and about 10 laborers moved into a section just north of Waldon and west of Saeha-baw roads in Independence Township to start the work Monday. ac^rding to J. O. Smith, project en^eer A Laaslng road conutnictlon find has beea awaided a $4,-tl2JM contract to build the sov-«a-mlle sectloB of the foar-laae acceoa freeway from The 4.8-mile section from Baldwin Road to Walton Boulevard, hwir'«fll“be hcH in Cinnflt Courf-” A ncehSe was issued to Mary - Vance of Detroit to operate a pool, - hall on the north side of COoley Lake Road near the entrance of the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanatmnum. Swiss Nab 2 Spies North of Pontiac, the new freeway, designated Interstate 75i, closely parallels U.S. 10 (Dixie Highvtoyl. It is the pinion in the countiy of the freeway which wtH-eventually link Detroit with Sauit BERN, Switzeriand (UPI) - The I riate for inter-AmericM affairs. Swiss government aniwun^ today The Khmer peoples, who lived His job. a big one, will be to try to, improve our relations with Latin American countries. Morales was born in Cuba. 2-Men Escape Royal Oak Jail arrest of two Swiss citizens charges of spying on Switzerland foreign powers ” for an organization operating from Communist East Germany. in southeast Asia more than 500 years ago were accomplished hydraulic engineers. Their land abounded in a complex system of canals, basins smd reseriroirs. ^V0\T to put7 TntH£5i^ seflootaej^ Ut them choosa Panny Volantinai, iinlca-your-own Doily Valontinas, ond ftockagoi spacially for boyi, and others for girls ... oil by Hallmark oi Gouge Hole in Wall— California Pair Said to I Have Eaten in Home Ingredients for instant success Royal Oak police are looking fori I’o men who escaped early ain-| day morning from a cell block of| the Royal Oak police station, was revealed today. Francis R. Parmerter, 31. and Robert E. Matteson, 32. both of California, were being held on felony warrants for passing checks. They made their break aome-tiine between midnighi Saturday and ( n.m. Sunday, Royal Oak poHce. Officers said the pair removed a light bulb in the lavatory of the; celFblock, then soHvd through the plaster wall and got through to They made their escape through; side window of the stockroom.; Police received a phone call' om a man last night saying that i the two men called him early Sun-i day morning from Ferndale. They! told him they had just arrived in town and that they had no money. The ttnidentifled receiver of the call look them home and M them brenktnst. Now, you can “have your cake and eat it too”, thanks to the new-size Buick Special. Although its gas savings and easy handling make the compacts sit up and take notice . . thia beauty's all Buick. Its sixxling 135 h.p. aluminum V-8 and * give you more pow per pound than many full-siiy cars (twice as much as most compacts)! You get Buick comfort for heads, hips and legs. Buick ride, too . . . and Buick pride, thanks to its unmistakably Buick Clean Look of Action. Guest-lest the sizzling Buick Special today. Dmat~Pmlk Tm^inr Driw—•frfiWMi/ mt earirm imt. He then took them to Telegraph road where they were going to hiteh a ride. t~ BUICK SPECIAL THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS j The men were extradited from: Tacoma, Wash., and had been-in the Royal Oak Jail since Friday, Police said it is not known where the men lived in Royal Oak last November when the bad checks were passed. SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED QUALITY BUICK DEALER NOW YOUR QUALITY BUICK DEALER IN PONTIAC IS: OLIVER MOTOR SALES, INC-210 Orchard Lake Avc. I I ..... tig mhchoni tig valtftl $m your tuidi Dealer tor tetfr-tvy Uiad Shop MoodbaV, THUB8DAY cHwi Friday NlghhiTUI 9 o'Qock The look of silk . . . ot a budget price! Cupioni Coat Dress JJM The look of fine textured silk at a purse-pampering price! This graceful dress has a flowing gored skirt end is accented by a white-over-navy collar. Button trim, short cuffed sleeves, narrow self belt. Take navy or black, sites i4 to 20 and MVj to lV/%. Phone FE 4-2S11 or Moil Your Order — Woito'f Budget Foihiont . . . Tbitd Floor Vyhol a selecfion of buJkies. at Waite's! Orion Bulky Sweaters $g99 othon to 12.99 Plain and fancy stitching; Bead, embroidered, motif trims . . . come choose from the many styles of bulky orlon acrylic sweaters to be found at Waite's! A rainbow of colors, sizes 34 to 40. Women's Sitae 42-46 .....7.99 to 12.99 Woifa'i Sporlfweor . . . Third Floor Low-mt ''Catastrophe" plan pays up to $5,000 expenses for accidents or sickness Heto’s a new ooncM to h^tal COVERS POUO aitd other drand Insurance, detiened by Contl-nentel CePiialty Compaay to nre-vide peoteetion ageinet RMdor hoe- PLANS for individuelcer famlUae -from agee S mootht to 10 years. The only excluNom are pregnancy, treatment in UR. fovnm- letsas covered by Werkmen'a CMpensation er Occupational Dleeaee laws, »— M laws, war or mfUtaiy a and fiduiaas eominendag licma, phyetotherapy, x-ray attd other miacdlaiMous expanaes, phia up to 7S% af miraM* noa in hoc- ip-irnif. MAH COUPON TODAY FOR OHAIU-NO OtUOATIONt Another nationally advertised brand comes to Waite's! your man with ¥ Cyf(an/iatfyii* mansmooth* shirts 100% cotton, need no ironing Why does. Cupid recomtnond a Mansmooth* Valentine? Because Mansmooth ip trub' wash' 'n wear lOOf* no-iron cotton that stays neat and wrinkle-free thanks to exclusive Reserve Neatness.* You’ll want to iRve him leveni of these fine Manhattan Mansmooth shirts | "Blake" collar, button down or rag«)lar u .. . - L Give Him Mansmooth Bleke’ “■ (on flfure); Short -point, medium spread collar. Win yourman with the ¥ delcot* biake shirt 50% Kodel* polyester, 50% cotton needs no ironing Woito's Moa’t Weor ... Whether your Valentine travels or stays at home...he’ll welcome the convenience of Delcot,* the champion of stay-fresh, wash ’n wear fibers. And Delcot stays neat and wrinkle-free all day, thaidu to exclusive Reserve Neatness.* With hip favorite Blake, short-point medium spread collar, convertible Cuffs to wear buttoned or with links. He’ll love Manhattan Delcot Blake for its no iron quality and fashion and he’ll love yon for t>yinf it ^ him. -L f I I I THE PONTIAC PRESS Bonn Stiares in Volkswagen With a view to encouraging free enterprise, the Weat German gov-emment is denationalizing the giant and profitable Volkswagen Company. The Bonn government will retain 20 per cent of the stock and another 20 per cent will go to the State of Lower Saxony where the plant Is located. The remaining «0 per cent goes on jpuWc sale. In an attempt to give moderate income groups a chance to share in the nation’a pnMperit:|| ,4he sale of stock has been restrided to families with annual incomes of no more than 13,810. An unmar- rfLMo. ★ ★ ★ All buyers are required to be permanent residents but not necessarily citizens. A share costs $83.30 and no individual can purchase more than fite of the 3,600.000 shares to be offered. The minimum number of shareholders would be 720,000 but the demand for fewer than five shares is expected to increase the number to 1.5 million when disposal Is completed in March. Nazis founded the Volkswagen Company before World War II but it wasn’t given much chance of succeeding afterward. However, in 1948 a General Motors trained executive, Heinz Nordoff, took over the management and the company is now the biggest automobile maker in Europe. ★ —-if Bonn (rfficials are cwicemed because only about 500,000 Germans— one per cent of the population—now own stock. In this country seven per cent of Americans are stockholders. Chancellor AsxKAinm is said to feel that the sale of the “people’s car” to the people will ensure a healthy democracy. In hcxT~tairs election the chancellor and his Christian Democrats will be opposed by Berlin’s Mayor Willy Brandt and his Socialists. While Adenauer may not need any help, denationalizing the Volkswagen Company won’t do him any harm either. gllgui««iu a namy a-ssw^ va«/ w have been totally destroyed; ★ ★ ★ Another example, for some of our winter vacationing tourists, might be Daytona Beach, Fla. Had last year’s total auto deaths happened, there the entire resort would be wiped out. Completely obliterating cities is an awesome thougj^t. Let’s all try 'and use greater caution on our streets and highways. Safety Council Releases Traffic Accident Figures The National Safety Council hw just Issued its annual report on traffic fbr 1960 and again the figures they have compiled are shocking. Records show that traffic accidents In 1960 took the TTves of 38,200 per-sons and caused 1,400,000 injui'ies disabling beyond the day of the accident. ★ ★ ★ Thfe Man About Town Record Is Best And It Should Be, If Ojjl rif 1 who, If his wife dresses to please, riie’d do It • lot faster. Contri^ to general belief, the traffic death rate In the United States has dropped to less than one-third’Of what It was 25 years ago. And here In the Pontiac area It has done even better than In the en^re nation. According to the most recent figures of the American Automobile Association It was 15 deaths per 100 million miles In 1935 In the nation, and less than five deaths for the same distance In I960. Actual figures garnered for Pontiac and vicinity show that our death rate in traffic Is even below that of the national average. And there’s a good and reliable explanation for that. Here In the heart of the national auto making secUon. we have quite generally become more accustomed to driving than have people In other localities. It has grown to be an Integral and vastly component part of our Uvea. Heredity here also Is an ImporUnt factor. Most of our present drivers were bom to parents who were among the nation’s pioneer drivers. Driving to them. Is almost an Instinct. The whole Is best summed up In the words of a Pontiac man, who has been driving for over a half century with no major accident. He says, “The best driver ts the one who doesn’t have td take time to think what he should do when an accident Impends. It comes to him by Instinct.” Traffic signs at the approach of a hill or curve on Florida’s main highway simply sayi.__ •Tm Waiting, ” beneath a plcturb of a skull and cross-bones. The prediction of the Old Farmer’s Almanac for this week’s weather says: "Nankeens are out; storm clouds shout.” To settle this argument about just when ..ix the middle of winter In the Pontiac area, _ ■ Francis Itnpic----------------- of Waterford asserts that it Is when his dog gets "scratch” from his new fur trying to push off the old coat. .Voice^f the People; / Gives Favorable Opinion of Press Oi/itdoor Page ture "Red” In the Voice oif the People column last Friday. Tlte regular Thursday outdoor page in The PwJtlac Preas compares favorably with tbat in any midwest newspapo-. Not tidy dooo Iho Ponttao Prom outdoor page cover the general worid of the outdoors but treats OaUaad Conaty outdoor news on it if if Throughout the years The Pontiac Press outdoor writers have led the State of Michigan In following the path of true conservation. In tact, unror the iJBt Punltac Press outdoor writwa has teen credlh^^ the “one-buck” law in the state, A memorial to hllft*wnd ^ fight he led rests on the grounds of the Multi-Lakes Conservation it it ■ it F.aeli week on the outdoor page ol The Press. Interested eonserva Uonists, huatera and flshenhen find outstanding ariicles on their fa-vorHe subjects. Pictures ol outstanding catches and bags are frequent and weH-presentcd. ° By reading the outdoor page of ’The Press, Oakland County resWenls know where fish are biting, what bait to use and how thick the ke is. Surely, this is far more than a lot of papers do. You can't uqiecl The Press outdoor writer to also setup a tip-up tor each and every reader. Keith D.'King. Editor ‘Press Columnist Is Too Critical’ subject of beards, it would be well to remind them that the age of conformity is here. Not content to standardize the curriculum it now * Mr. Uwrence has got the nerve proceeds to fully a ^ . 4 Mr. Lawrence has got the nerve proceeds to miiy auiomaie me np- .... j»:riting.ynivusttr articles about pearance ol its peraonnel with the Johii'T. Kennedy. He^^ssiys John F-, throttling of any vestige .of in-Kennedy is going to be a failure. dividuaBsm Wt in thg.gchools. The If Mr. Lawrence thinks he knows tast *. Unfortunately, the board has thing the president says and does, why didn’t he run tor presklent? H particularly at this proud smart rema^rla about our new kistiwv; or shall time In ttfo city’s history, or shall we gentlemen wait for 100 years WASHINGTON - Appointment of Edward R. Murcow as the direrior onhe United States Information Agency will not of itself solve the public relations problems of this country in the and hates to admit defeat. A It-Year-OM What Is needed is to coardlaate the slightest help given the listener • _____ to understand the American viewpoint except when officials or newsr Teachers Are Not paper .re Wanted ss Sltters’ I’t have to depait president. All of-us know he is a Republican. He reminds me of a ....rf.. a day from an Aniertcaa standpoint so as to take proper measures to Inform the world of the truth. Some important decisions will have to be made, too—as, for in- world, able and experienced as the noted radio and television commentator stance.. whether the U.S. Infor-happens to be. mation Agency is going to be For the new di- permitted to fight fire with fire. Moscow places no limitations on Its broadcasts. NO INTERPRETATION America supposedly sticks to re- tion Agency. ports of news happenings, with not One Way to Nurse^BxMes^ and ThaVs the Natural Way rector of "propaganda” will find that he has little control over I awRinvrr ^WHENCE pressions about the United States created abroad-------------------------------—— by press and radio, and that the only place any real help could be Dj., William Bl’ady SayS: given him is in the Congress. ♦ ★ ★ For many months now th? JLSt Information Agency hasn’t been able to compete with the derogatory statements about the United States ma«te by Demoerwt s of prominence in Congress. One leader actually said In public that the President shonld have lied nbout the Ut InddenI, and he then proceeded to Vnake nn adverse report on the episode which was q^ckly accept^ as anthoritallve and official by newspapers around the world. ”11115 being a free country, there’s no way to curb criticism, however partisan it may be, except by appeal to a sense of self-restraint. There’s really been no substantial change in American "prestige" in recent years except that which breast feed. I re- eoADY has come from the constant de* ceived a lot of " * nundation o< Elsenhower policies— advice from the American women a barrage that was primarily car- who had their babies there. They from the truth. But R does seed to stand up and tight the mis-repre^Uttoa and abuse that Is poured out day and night by the Moscow broadrastem. 'This will never happen till all place, the high officials of our go\ emment and the leaders of both parties in Congress begin to regard seriously the need for the appropriation of mM^ money for the U.S. Informa- These so^:alled “teachers” that ctmsider themselves the “best educated. overworked, underpaid, professional group of baby-sitters” List Main Reasons for Tax Difficulties How much of our present tax difficulty and racial conflict has been caused by unscrupulous political opportunists and adventurers t* tead«;^ in'the first «nd by muddle-brained, irrespon-sible sociologists who are determined to force- thetf own peculiar ^Copyright 1961) Few parents nre sending their cUldiea to schoni to be “cared for.” TTiey want thrir eUldren to get the proper edaeatlotl thnf Is very Important lor this gen-emilon. W”hen teachers think they are nothing but baby-sitters they would be doing us a big favor to look r the help wanted ads and get theeries upon all the rest of us7 ‘No Wonder Nations Are Suspicious’ ^ Is there any wonder that our friends in other countries look at us with a suspicious eye? We arc i job as such. Highestjj^sejte^ gtU, fighting the ClvU War. teaching i ■’In our country, babies are bom usually at home where you feel News Letter. Vol. 1, No. 4, valu- _____ .... ...... _________ ***** suggestions are given for u- » tw«, expectant parents who want to Wife and secum^ We have a boy months o 1 d. bom here in the hospital, where everything is so strange and horrible. Our daughter, 5 years old, was bom at home in——. "In the hospital 1 was the only one that c h o Now if you suspect 1 have aay-thing to do with puhlicatioii of,, these items or wHh aaother very helpful Hem, "The Family Book ot Chikl Chre,” by Nile* Newton, Ph.D., Harper R Brothers, you flatter me. I not baby-sitting. Quite Conceiw-d Two More Favor Centennial Beards Hurray for Monroe M. Osmun and the Rev. J. Allen Parker for in an Increase In taxes, and not their support of letting teachers one of us has even suggested to and students grow beards. A person our-focal, state and federal of-only lives to celebrate one cen- ficials it is time to economize in leiuiial, so why sliuulJ he Dt tfo- the operaBor of our prived of part of the celebration? branches ol government. Many of the leaders of our city, x X * including Mayor Rowston have a If the taxpayer could just see There are thoae who waiH to shoot JFK tor disagreeing with the minister. We have poked fun at JacqneUne’s hats, and wanted to strangle teachers tor asking for n raise. We went to the polls and .voted contributed no more to them mustache, and a mustache and the waste that takes place with than I did to the Declaration of beard are of the same category. our tax doliar, the shot that was Independence or the Bill of Rights. ried on for political purposes. M18SII,E BATTLE For many^months, mor^ver, a political campaign was/^onducted to make It appear tlfoC America’s defenses were weak because of the so<»Ued "missile-gap.” The facta were rarely presented In perspective. though finally the Democrats told me nursing the baby is too much of a bother and you can’t go anyplace when you are nursing a baby. Also your figure is sure be spoiled. •I didn’t take the advice. Just went ahead nursing my baby. He Is 6 months old now, weighs 21 pounds and Is a very healthy. SlfDcd letten, not mor* tb«n sat pifc or 100 words loof pcrUlalDi to pcrsoDkl hoolth oad bytlcnc not dls-t«ss. dlMWMi^, or trssia«it. will k« ■nswerod br Dr. WlUlam Brody, If i sUmpod, tolf-oddrsnod mrslopo it tool to Tbs ^onUsc Prtst. PoaUsc, Utebtfu. (Copyright 1961) (fod gave man the ability to heard around the world would be grow a beard. What kind of a just a whisper to the yell that free country is this if people are would go up. Let’s get together and prohibited from It? serve notice on this fellow that F. A. W. wants more money from us tor — taxes. Now that the board and admin- Patrick IlMiiias Istratora have pontificated on the Auburn Heights Silk'S “I*- to br^d. M every day and heat each bottle Case Records of a Psychologist: Christ Was Greatest Psychologist In his combination office of County Clerk and Register of Deeds. Daniel T. Murphy Jr., is my Idea of our top man to Judge the pr^ress Isetnx madr. Oddly enough, although the **pre«Hge“ of the Ignited Slates In such countries as Britain, Fmnre niid Italy Is considerrd Important here. Congress has been niggardly about supplying fands to the U.S. Information Agency to convey Amerk-n's Alewpolnl to the people of those On the brighter side the Council reported that while the toll was rising one per cent from 1959, Americans in I960 were setting a record low rate of 5.3 deaths for every 100 million miles of motor vehicle travel. The mileage death rate in 1959 was 5.4. A two per cent increase in travel in i960 more than offset the one per cent rte in deaths, they pointed out. Highway travel is definitely on practically surrounded by the limits of the IncreBse as (»n be seen by the other cities, record 715 bUlion mUes In 1960, ds j —141. nnn w.iii.- <>t Koyal Osk points out the only way compared with 700 billion miles in continue its growth is up. in 1959. which he finds a resemblance to New ir if it York city. Back to the debit side of the report ~ and they disclose the costs for traffic Verbal Orchlds tO” accMents in 1960 at the staggering Perhaps our young people should follow the advice given in a letter from “An Anxious Mother," who suggests that they avoid all of our lakes, and skate only on the flooded rinks. Another mother revives a slightly twisted version of that old rhyme: •Mother dear may I go skate?” “Yes, my darling daughter: Hang your skates on a hickory limb. And. don’t go near the water.” In one breath it Is argued that there is no need to publicize our policies in those countries because ____________ ________^ ______ _ they are our allies anyhow, but. in amnion Jn 'faniceeland. anotherv it is charged that "prestige” has fallen to "a new By DR. GEORCE W. CRANE ----- - . - , ^ CASE H-402: Oark J„ aged 24, Jor feeding, and so simple to glye theology student who ssked liim what nature provided for him. j ^ world’s "I await the arrival of your foremost applied baby book, for which I sent you psychologist. 35 cents and a stamped envelope J^us pioneer^ bearing my addiws. to find out many superb in-what solid foods to feed the baby novations that and when to start. We thank you we moderns have thought we (Mrs. D. B.) originated in the The advice the sromen gave Mrs. past generation. D. B. reflects an attitude towards For example, infant feeding that is all too Christ launched the first church picnic when he asked his DB. CRANE From the booklet "The Womanly •T rt memhi™ of ^ Feeding, ” published Certainly members of Con- League, 3020 U Portf. Melrose Park, HI. ($2). I quote the following quotations; tiMWght they had Urn booked on one or the other horns of their clasaloni dilemma, he neatly sidestepped their evil trap. “Master, is it lawful to pay tribute to Caesar?” his enemies asked. If Christ had answered When his critics objected, saying Ids Apoatlen violatod the Sabbath by phicking the ripe heads of wheat on the Snbbnth to ent them, Christ replied: “The Sabbath was made .Jor man; not man tor the Sabbath.” Jesus also used polls ol public then the 5th columnist figured he opinion and consummate psychia-would alienate the Jews, who com- trie techniques, prised'mo«r of hfo audlehce." would have beeti a treasonable utterance that would have caused the Rmnan soldiers to arrest Christ as an Inciter of treason. For furtiiwr etddence, go to your library and read Ch.’ 18 in my gress can’t have It both ways. Then tlwre are the shortwave cow excels not only In number but in quality. For some strange ’ reason, many of these American . broadcasts lack simplicity. They .n ” the eye : Cima So petveiving their evil *”*®"*- tor a coin. Holding men nnt mentton the »«men ^ ^ ^ inqUlWd, "WhOSe image and super^ption are on fills Thars what 1 have called the "reversible why" technique in handling a forum or the questions at children in school. \-oted it down as too radical and flw andIflee Instances la n Eaxlfoh than dees the Voloe ot This ooaM easDy be estimated sum of $6.4 billion. For the month of December alone, the Coun-^ said 3^20 perstms died in traffic accidents. Fifures alone arc meaningless a the maf n i t u d e can be brought hone. Jiwt take, for cx-if the 38,200 motor vehicle . Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tomren of 2« Michigan Ave.; 54th wedding annl7 veraary. Gr«r«ry File of Auburn Heights; 82nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Geerge B. Eltel of Waterford: 52nd wedding anniversary. Blaine Haselton of Walled Lake; 82nd birthday. The biggest single flaw in the whole information program Is the . lack of coordination of news. Days and sometimes weeks will go by wbile a damaging impression-is created and nothing effective is done to offset the harm. ♦ W W[ . ‘ This requires not just the presence of Murrow In National Security Council meetings,'but a havtorml dUHoritfes than twitto fed bnblee.” (Dr. MeyeiO. 3. “Allergies, notably eczema. are aa much as seven.to ten times CTIRIsm PSYCHOLOGY In 1854 it was proposed again and voted down. Same tor 1855. Indeed, it wasn’t till 1856 that a majority of the dnirch board put an O.K. on a church picnic. If they'd read tiwir Bibles more attentively, they’d have seen that Jesus started the first church pk> nic with the tad’s loaves and fishes. **>*• world hat mch a clever been developed for any dilemma. the thtags OMl are OBesaPa bat to Cfod the (M^a that are Gad’s.” Never In file entire history of more common tn srtltidMly ted babies fiian in breast fed babies.” 4. "In a study of 20.W0 babies up to a year old there were twice as many infections in bottle f And Jesus used the same “re- college textbook “Paycfaolagy Applied” or send for the booklet on "Church PsydMlogy,” enclosing a stamped, return envelope, plua 20 cents. Alwsyi vnte tb Or. 0«ert* w. Crsss *“- abhorred petty religious ritual. WWW men put their parishionert to sleep Thus, when his disciples were n it a Pleasure to note that *» the fact (hey fail to follow crifidted for eating with unwashed ' . . _ wliwatOm wkimmrla mw/vIbih lUDCb "No4 fifat which goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that which cometh out ot the mouth.” ixymiir vuumii inccunas, oui ■ u la ■ incasurc uwi I system that makes better use of "The Womanly Art of Breast recipe. Feeding favors both natural chlld-| birth and rooming-in. ^ in the issue of the La Lecbe League’s Tto. luspclaud Pnw W «nUtM racliitl?*lT <• Un SM tw r«puM-MtlM of oil loeol nows prlolrd Ip tiiu Mwop^ •en St oB ar novo dlootti^. flw P^oo Prtn it doHotrod by •si^r for 45 ooBU » wook: Bboro Bitltod In OtkIOBd. OoBOooo, Uoing-•ton. Mormiib, Upoor oad WoS-l^w Cowtln It u SIMS s yoor; olMBbon to MIehiKtB sad on stbor Twelfth Chapter., . Mldifawt^ Itole in the Ovtl War THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY SEVEN State Relief Groups Gather Up Money, Articles for the Soldiers Thl« I. lli. i»i» « - - - - r ' .- -- .............. e llKkrt « U»Ol»U W Bjr PAUL FENTTOOm W«yM State UnivMVltjr Writtoa («r 1%e AT In ftiture yean Detroit end the « Bull »lun boxee end 203 1^1. were .ent trolt wae one of Uh^ first state uielertook activiUes on their own. . ..***‘***“1 B®*****™ Itellef that the U.S. government wna to the front tilled with theM organizations to take up the cause Mis. Laura S. Havlland of Adrian totally unpre^red ‘•for any audden materials. |of the loldier. prganized in n6-was one of these. ^ A 8P1K1TVAL aptOUP jvember 1861. Mrs. Cyril Smith,' The‘‘airiatlan Qtmmlsaion" wasl'I*^® ^ “■'fmiil tn TirlnliT^ Ninth fnfantry Regiment, was Association, the Christian Commia-son, Ladies Soldiers’ Aid Society, a«H' others. ^ “Mchlgiia 8 - - 1 ana laymen who worked tor slx-i ____ _______, visited Ship Island, La., where „ c - ----- ------- —..............“"flier, in the w»hinetnn are. he. without compensa-; Dr, Smith-reported that the .bout 3,000 Union mUltary prio- ov^lw effort, but the atate'a president. At first the only Knan-,, wounded and sick often had only ^ major contribution was In fighting cial aid came from their own • * * u. one blanket and nothing under llhat men and contributions for the sup-1 pockets, but the peopleofL state lcJ*^rri7es IroWd^d rellri.^s interested port of Itt regiments. isoon collected $24,902.24 to take burial ‘®J ......................... B confined for various come home ceremonies and wert instruntpntal in establiahing soldiers’ , h o m t s for the seriously wounded who would need roontta and years to recuperate from their last visit after the war had enM ‘ _ I, D.C., to obtain surplus military clothing for the destitute freed men of Vinrintn and also to secure the release of 300 commissiona to'establish military cemeteries and others to build local monuments to honor the dead. A commlsston was established'In military prisoners at Ship Island Detroit on Aug. 6, 1861, to build id Dry Tortugas. |the Detroit -monument which now Local groups helped in the wel-'stands at Campus Martius. Ifl-later Wars it remained for the jover the financial burdens.' Americgji Red Cross to take over The, association through Judge] Iteued it. operatloa It traas-many of the duties handled during Edmunds was quick to point out! mW*ed to the trustees of Detroit’s ---- ' Harper Hospital more than $1,000 to h« Med by them to THAIHINS ACCOUNTANCY -Ji2 One of the surest routes to a successful business career is the broad avenue of Accounting. As a modern aceountant yog will be an executive in one of the bwt paid fields. You will enjoy interesting work. •Ajwith BMurity and opportunity yours. PBI graduates in acTOunfingare'cwTWTatiohDfficeiw;”^ partners^nd proprietors in every field of business, and fn every type of ^fcsslon. OUR FREE PLACEMENT DEPARTMENT WILL BE AT YOUR SERVICE WHEN YOUjGRADUATE. Pontiac Business Institute 7 W. Lawrence FE 2-3551 •f diaabled MicMgan sqidien. The “Michigan S(d4iers‘ Relief Asaociatlon ’ organized in 1862 in Detroit gathered money and supplies throughout the state sending them to the front. an organizational meeting. assisUng the Army s chaplains. organizational circular point- Some of the 57 who participatedied out that "none but hospital included the Rev. Setli Reed of stores, or such articles as the sanitary commission may think necessary for the ,>revention of sickness, can be isrwarded by us, We are indifferent to the comfort of those who are in health, but to take chargb of all that might be desired tor half a million men or even for Ypsilantf, Rev. L. Slater of Kala-mazou, Rev; £. H. PUslwr of Anp Arbor, Rev. F. R. Ballaher of" Hillsdale, Rev. Daniel Brown of Flint. Rev. H. N. Bissell of Mt. Clemens, iH. B. Denham of Oowagiac, Prof. TVy included everything thought L^'s. L^’Sm^ useful, such as socks, shirts, under-wjear, handkerchiefis, dried and ic a n n e d fruits, pickles, spices, ij^les, newspapers, books, needles, I pirn and thread, sheets, quilts, pillow cases, bed sacks, lint pads And uthei tteTinr-MuivfhKtf 33ff Bulldihigs for HO Trains 32 Vorittias 390.98* TASKER’S 63 W. Huron FI 5-6261 Spec/a/! SWIVEL-TOP VACUUM CLEANER Ifith FuU 1 H.P. Motor DISPOSABLE BAGS md- All CLEANING ACCESSORIES And Priced „ poWN ■ $1 WEEK From ’39 600D H0U5EKEEPIN(} of PONTIAC 51 West Huron St.____]________ ______ Open Mon. and Pri. Evenings ’til f The Ladies' Soldiers' Aid Society of Kalamazoo earned more than $9,500 for their cause by holding a articles requested "state sanitary fair" in Kalamazoo clothes, medical In September 1864. i supplies and hospital clothing to farina, nrrowront and tapioca. GROUP BOUiS FiQjil The fair was held at the Kala-•nuuoo.Eair £^mniKta-Se{ft.vm tajii Sept. 23,1864, with James B. Crip-pen of Coldwater delivering the The society had monthly meetings- for group sewing and to make entsr The income for the group was augment, ed by both donations and collec-opening address. Gov. Austin Blair,lions. was on hand and spoke for almost ' Regiments leaving for action one hour. The major attraction were served refreshments at the and baftle-scaned Michigan regi-]the action of the American Red mental battle flags. Cross in World Wars I and II. The Ladies' Aid Society of De-I Thei^^were many individuals who Uncertainty Worst in Liner Hijacking GAINESVILLE, Fla. |oammerce Committee on how to| Britain. Scandina\to, the piw-penaes without burdening youTattilct European fduitofe to The; taeeo of rraaee aaid e\-on Ihefron family. lUnited Statos are provipg to hei Cartato nattons. Yqu haiuUe the entire trans-:^***^^ readi^ to the British. | Senate hearings are part of aeUon by man with OLD* ___________________——y. IPreoident Kemieih's taiiijialgn"ttf AlIlIRlCXjroTKASSSS^^rrY.i 'reverse the floW of gold from the No iriSUgatlon. No one will calli^ intentional “^e ®^}Unlted Stales. He is dealing with on y^ many^lplul sugges-|^ * 1 s a b I e piece of money on ^ dons. Includmg; "The Americans 'I Write today, simply giving ghould teach t>ell bo>a to Tourist traffic into Brilain_ah»e M shot up in 1959 to of birth. Mall to CMd American instead of swinng them. • Insurance Co.. 4900 Oak. Dept Other tdeim L221A. Kansas City, Mb. ^ This year it is expected to he well above $500,000,000. The British have been working —.Maps should be printed "toiat attracting tourists for so long convince the guileless Europeans|that they hate become experts, ‘that California is Just around the' Everything is geared to make tlw 'comer from New England." visitor comfortable im^ndtRg t ~ ' # r* A,. I —®eps shmild be taken to |»e-' vent the recurrence of an incident i in which an elderly British spinster I was subjected to cross examination | at an American consulate as to > to the i United States for immoral pur- B^ow the surface of these wry suggestions is a fact few Europeans 'l..t Icare to admit' Reports Mt dmrged to the Uattod States and slrucfkms to the p^ce to be polite.{«^ shutdown since 1951 of Itory and slack sales were cHedjiuxurl^ speedboats, still has iby company omctols lor the firstjapproximately 30 salaried persons The-raeM common remark o(| DOWAGIAC hoturiog LIFHIME WAIUNTY * ICONOMY » COMFORT ♦ IFFICIINCY Call in ROW far an a$timafa Hooting ond Sheet Metol Contractor 3S1 N. PaddRck Stmt ft 5-6S72 + w Got for $Boc. ELECTION - Alfredo * Palacios. 80, a Socialist and , Is Now Avoiioble critic of the United States, de-au FOR INFORMATION ! leated Argentine President | Oewogloc STilL FURNACI ‘ l^>ondizl’a candidate I I tlie senate from Buenos Aires i in Saturday's electiwi. THE SILVER SHIELD- Yoiir Guarantee of Heating Comfort! Heating Gotwfnrt — YOUR MOST IMPORTANT DECISION WHEN TOO BUILD. BUT OB BEHODEL THE SILVER SHIELD A heofing system contoins many parts, all brought together in your home . Unless the system is engineered and balanced properly, you and your family -—-Ota docuned to^gO^-yeofs-of"discorrTfort or more. ' Furnace size, design of system, location of registers ond dozens of other detoils must be just right for odequote results. Saving o few dollars by neglecting quality when you build or renrtodel con cost you heovily in discomfort, high fuel bills ond major repairs over the ydbrs. But you sove in guaranteed comfort with Silver Shield By specifying o Silver Shield System instollotiori, you con be certain of the best . with lasting comfort, better health, and savings thot keep odding up for yeors ond years. * E«aa ttniparatur* ia all roomt. SILVER SHIELD lyttcin* art availabla for all raaidaatlal comfort * No her or coM cycioi. aoodi . . . hooting, cooling, or a cambinatian of both. • Worm Hoon. • Comfort oroiywhort Oakland Indoor Comfort Burean.,,Proteotins You STARLET GARWOOD HUTINC 3005 Croon Laka Rd. Orchard Laka, EM 3-20t0 BRYAN F. FRENCH 351 N. Paddock St. PonHac, FE 5-6973 HEIGHTS SUPPLY 26S5 Lagaar Rd. PoMiac, FE 4-5431 WRIGHT SHEET METAL CO. 5904 Diaio Htfbway Watorfnrd, OR 3-1277 WOLVERINE HEATING CO. 1234 loWwin Avo. PonHoc, FE 2-2113 ZILKA HEATING 3261 Min Wall Orchard Laka, FE 5-5461 At ELBURG^ SOUS 73 $ Farfco St.. Pontiac Pk i|.l504 1 MERCER HEATING 6r SHirr METAL WORKS S25 N. PonHac TrMI WaNod LAa. MA 4-1569 KAST HEATING AND COOLING 463 S. Saginaw Pantiac. PE 5-9259 ■ r V r ■ J ; ' . Buy Your Gas Dryer with NO MONEY DOWN FEDERAL DEPT. STORES BIG DISCOUNTS ON ALL FAMOUS GAS DRYERS MWIY 108 N. SAGINAW »; 3 DOWN w W FE ^7114 Ymii to Fayl Buy Your NORGE GAS DRYER - InitalM FREE At WAYNE GABERT 90 Doyt Some D« Coth 121 N. Soginow FI 5-6189 See Our Bargoin Fricet on All 1961 Got Clolhet Dryers Halrie Cl. ) p.m. r Ff 4-2525 r 825 W. Opon ovory nito 'fil 9 p.m. .f I , THa PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY T. The Pontiac European The Tour You’ve Been Waitiug Per May 19 — June 10 Visit London, Cologne, the Block Forest, o trip on the Rhine, Lucerne" Milan, Florence, Venice, Rome and Paris. Travel in Europe by our own specially chartered buses. Price of trip includes all transportation, tips, complete sightseemg progratn, twin bedded room with bath in principal cities, three meals a day except in Rome, London and Paris where breakfast only Is included plus a gala dinner in each of these cities. All arrangements are made so that you may sit back and enjoy the beauty and history that is western Europe. Complete brochure on request. " * . Mail This ^ Coupon Today Total Price ’985 I understand that the sending of this coupon constitutes o definite request for o reservation on The Pontiac Press European tour Moy 19th-June 10th, 1961. I understand further that full payment under Plan A or Plan B must be completed by March 15th, 1961. That no cancellation, except in emergency, may be mode after April 1st, 1961. Plon A: Down paymen^t of not less than $685 per person with coupon. Final payment of balance on or before March 15th. Plan B; Full payment of $985 with coupon reservation. Thera are a limited number of reservations available.. They Will be allocated in order of reservation coupons Reived. E NO.............NUMBER OF R^ERVATIONS Please print names of individual reservations on separate sheet and J attach. - I , I ' TEX ' " ■ '■ ■, V ■■■ ■ , :v ■ THri PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. PfeBRUARY 7. 1961 ■■■ ... < ^ St. Mary's HHMHHiUUfilll Guild Plans Card Party St. Mary’s Guild ot Our Lady of Refufe Parish will prasnN a card party and hair style show Feb. 14. The aKair wUI begin at 8 p.m. in the parish hall on Commerce Road. "Hair Fashions for the Young In Heart" is the party’s theme.. The latest coiffures and trends in spring hair fashions will be shown by West Brothers Hair Stylists. Prizes and refreshments will be featured. Tickels may be purchased Mrs. Frank Guibord of Lattle-tell Avenue or at the dooi' the evening of the party. Ml'S, William Almas is., cap-lain of the -guild and general chairman for events. Co-chairmen for the event are Mrs. Richard Mineweaaer and Mrs. Cppiinittee chairmen are Mrs. Jerome Breen and Mrs. Patrick Kenny, refreshments: Mrs. Harry Brady, door prize; Mrs. Richard O’Leary, table prize: and Mrs. Frank Groase, decorations. Easy Wear, .4 Feb. 14 card party and hair style show is be-ing arranged by members of St. Mary s Cuild of Our pQ*l\/- V-.n T0......11^ l^dy-of-Refuge P-arisk. Admmiss::some.Mi.^^^ are (from left) Mrs. William Almas of Sherwood Drive; and Mrs. Howard Haas and Mrs. Richard McConnell Schoor.<: Parent-7eacher Association will celebrate its 48th year at 2 p.m. Thursday uith a skit Birthday of PTA." Birthday cake and punch uUl be served on stage by players (from left) Mrs. Harry FeFix, Mrs. James Smith, Mrs. James Coward and Mrs. Mark Newman. Mrs. Marshall Rose also will participate. Coins for the group's Founders Day will be collected. I CPU—The margin of comfort In men's clothes will be broadened even fuilher in 1961 with new scienriflcaliy achieved blends of artificial and natural fibers woven in new ways to fit a lot of qjecial needs. There are fabrics that won't wrinkle, fabrics that press themselves and, fabrics woven to adjust thermostatically to sudden temperature changes. Abby Says; Be Correct Tell Pop to Take His Hat Off Before He Talks Through It Just Treat Often as You Can > By Uni EmUy Post Imtituta Question; FViehds of ours PTAs in Action Bridge Is Played By ABIGAIL VAN Bl'REN The Daniel Whitfield School’s Parent.Teacher Asso-ciation will meet at 7:30 Wednesday. Speakers will be Mrs. Janet Gauthier, head librarian of Pontiac elementary schools, and Margaret Scott, consultant on audio-visual aids. A ques-tion-and-a n s w% r session will follow. Home room mothers of s^-ond graders in the classes of Faye Davis. Mrs. Lucille serve refreshments. BAGLEY ttmOOL Parents of Bagley School children have been urged to attend Thursday's PTA meeting at 7:30 Inithe gymnasium. The program will ffwture only students, participating in a panel discussion, "What We side as mUtress of ceremonies. Entertainment will be provided by daughters. ParticipMts will be Jody and Nancy Schmuker. cello and piano: Nancy and Susan Norberg. flute and clarinet; Carol and Nancy Taylor, piano and accordion: and Joyce Skrine. accordion. General chairmen are Mrs. Sam Ritchie and Mrs. Sherrill Grubbs. Others helping are Mrs. Carl Norberg. table setting; Mrs. Steve Couretas, labte“de duties. as Children Think it Takes to Make PTA a Success.” Refreshments will follow. WHITTIER SCHOOL Mrs, Agnes Saxton, r^preseo-tative of the Planned Parenthood ainic, will speak at the Whittier School's 7 p.m. Wednesday PTA meeting. She will show educational films and slides, discuss counseling service available for family problems and conduct a question-and^answrer session. Oakland County's clinic is a member of the Detroit League of Planned Parenthood, Inc. Teachers with the most parents present will receive Valentine hearts of candy from the association. Hosts for February are third graders, their teachers and home room representatives. WEBSTER SCHOOL J. Wilbam Maben, science coordinator lor the P o h t i a t-Board of Education, will speak at Thursday's meeting of the Webster School PTA. Teachers wMl show sciem-e displays Of the students' work speaker, and conduct a tour ortho new science room. Charters will be accepted from Cub Scout Packs No 6 and 9 from their leaders Carl Seiser and William Brace, respectively. Mrs. C.. B. Robinell will arrange tor refreshments. Mrs. Paul Godos^imris chainiuui of the gsoflfp's nominating coimpltti^. assisted by Mrs. Hart^ Ketchum, Mrs. Grove, Mrs. Jack Ne-and Dr. Edith Roach Snyder. The group will discuss con-tinuallon of family nights on Wednesday* and adult education programs Tuesday evenings. sponsored by Pontiac Parks and Recreation Depari-ment in cooperation with the PTA. LONGFELLOW SCHOOL Nominating committee mem-im will be named at a business meeting of Longfellow Sdwol’s PTA at 2 Thursday, Following the city’s centai-Rial film. "The PonUac Story of Progress and Promise." Mrs. William Cheal will pre-mtdical program ar- serving and clean-i Quests will be W Bell and daughter Althea: Mrs. Keith Pawley with Maria and Susan; Mr*. Philip Somer* and Nancy; and Mr*. Laur and-.niece Kindra Whittiivton. CORA BAILEY SCHOOL Family Night will be the theme for Cora Bailey PTA's 7:30 p.m. meeting Thursday in the kindergarten room. Oakland County Sheriff Department Sgt. Donald Kratt will show the safety movie, "Dangerous Strangers.” The scholarship policy will be explained by PTA •cholarship recipient Judy Noren. Refreshments will be served by Mrs. Charles Hobgood and Mrs-TloBm SuRon, Brsf-grade, home room mothers. LrBARON PTA Youth leaders will be recognized at the UBaron PTA’s 7 p.m. ^ting "Thursday in the multipurpow room. Joseph Zabelski, traffic safety education consultant from the Automobile Oub of Michigan, will be guest Election of officers originally scheduled for March, will be conducted during the evening. The March meeting has been canceled. Dads' will serve refreshments. Pierce Junior High School, will not appear. Margaret BeaRie, president of Waterford Township Ovic Music Association which was to sponsor fee group’s appear-ance. said that a date for the concert wfllTie ahnbunceJlS a newspaperman. Is this correct, and what should I tell him? AT ODDS WITH Pop DEAR AT ODDS: News- DEAR ABBY. Just before Christmas our mothn* got a ticket for speeding. It cost her $25, which upset her terribly because It was her first offense in 32 years of driving. It also took a hunk out of her. Christmas-fimd. My brother and I wanted to cheer her up, so wre typed a leRer saying she had been overcharged by the Highway Department and we enclosed $20. We signed the letter “Captain Redraig" (which is our name spelled backwards!. We thought she’d catch on, but she didn't. Now she is showing-^'^he letter all over town" believing It really came from the Highway Depart- humcM-. But no more forgeries, or you will all wind up in the "wogsooh” (which is "hoos> gow" spelled badewards). moved to^orlda last winter. V ba^ invi DEAR ABBY: I rgcenUy returned home from aTB sana-tarium and was told my health was excellent and feat I should lead a normal life. My ^x>blem is how to convince my friends and neighbors. During fee holidays people actually left Ouristmas gifts for fee diildren at our door because they were afraid to come in. TTiis hurt the children tetribly, as they are old enough to understand the situation. I would rather they had not recelyed those gifts ■ at alL They have invited us to spend a week or two with them. My fiusband has 10 days vacation coming to him and we would like very much to accept their invitation. The husband is retired and money is not too plentiful and therefore I hesitate about going. I would feel a lot beRer if we could help with the food bill. Would this be proper and if so, is there ^ Nancy Wheeler, Sherrill Duffy. Julie Thornberry Janet Fields from .Mr*;-'^-ward McKinney’s o w n i e Troop 312 present (lie colors. Refreshments will be served mothers from the rooms oi Maigaret Wilnwd and Amy Carlson: EMEKtMlN SCHOOL The Emerson PTA will stage Its annual founders day meeting and program at 7:30 Wednesday. The evening’s program will feature a skit, “Meet fee PTA," from the Natkmal Par? ent-Teacher Magazine. Participating will be Mrs. Donald Smith. Lewis Sulliv’an, Mrs. Laura Wait, Mrs. Evelyn Woodworth, Louis, CampbeU. Jolw Farrell and Lawrence Curtis. Mrs. L; D. McLauchlln and Mrs. Curtis will op«i the program with a singing commercial. Past presidents of Emersoir’s PTA will be introduced and presented a gift by Mr. Sullivan, principal, and Mr*. Smith. Invitations have been acbepted by quette as everyone else. Elderly people can become as spoiled as children, so handle hirn with fiminp^and affec-Rbn and tell Pop to take his T5St“ oftTfi^err becHOse hr* beginning to talk through it. ' Our problem is whether to let her believe this or to tell her the truth. We don’t want her to find out later and feel foolish. THE GUNDERS DEAR GUNDERS: If you hWrTWfiSb'Srionor. ttfl W ’ —and hope she has a ,sense of Abby, are we living in the 20th century or the stone agej Are people so ignorant they think former Tp..|nRents released from ^>8anatorium will contMifetate them? Please. plpaM print my letter. - educate Just r few, ityKQl save so much heart-” for former TB patients and their families. some tactful way to go about this? Answer: You couldp^' possibly offer them badra without deeply hu^jifg their feelings. Howe^. you can turn the tabijr^ be hosts to them byJ^lAig them out as often as finances will permit, ■^reslauranls or to places amusement while you are there. .4 summer wedding is planned by Joyce Louise Mapley, daughter of the Thomas Mapleys of McNeil Street, and John C.. Hovis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman H. Hovis of Dwight Avenue. Her fiance attends Michigi fersit) Fall vows are planned by Donna Gayle Gravely, daughter of the Allen A Graveiys of Spokane Drive, to Gary Roy Elwell, son of the Basil S. Elwells of Waterford Township. Both attend Centred Michigan Unijf/erfity. Town Hall Wednesday Town Hall will present Maggie Daly, model, author and fashion expert, at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday in Pontiac Northern High.- SebooL- locked on Arlene Avenue at Perry and Madison Streets. A celebrity luncheon at Devon Gables will follow. Question: On occasion, I find it necessary to introduce myself la strangers and usually do so by saying, "I am3lary Brown.’’ (I am married). I have beep told that this is incorrect and that I should introduce myself as Mrs. John Brown. Will you please set me straight on this? Answer: To call yourself Mary Brown would imply that you are Miss and there-fwe when you are married, it is best to say, "I am Mrs. John Brown." The Emily Post Institute is sorry it cannot answer per- For YouTo Read JOYCE LOUISE MAPLEY DONNA GAYLE GRAVELY Wedding Bells in the Future for These Belles appreciation is taufet at fee school. WEVER W-HOOL The * W'ever School’s PTA will hrfel a mofeer-and-daugh-for banquet at 6 ThurKtoy in the aclKMri gymnasium. . ByioW I Mrs. 1 1 Laur will pre- dolph Nelson. Mrs. Owen Armstrong. .Mrs. Gordon Rice. Mrs. Carl {Reynolds and Mrs. Clifford Christenson. Others to be honored are Mrs. Stephen Kivet, Mrs. Vk-toc DeMino, Mrs. McLauchlln, Mrs. Thomas Johnson, Mrs. A May wedding is planned by Sue Ann Braid, daughter of the John H. Braids of West Iroquois Road, and Ronald C. Vliet, son of Mrs. Stanley C. Vliet of Alma and the late Mr. VHet. Shr is a graduate of Michigan State University, ' Among recent visitors at the Sarasota Jungle Gardens on Florida’s lower West Coast were Mr. and Mrs. Francis Banford of Edison Street and the Clare Hartzmans of Monterey Boulevard. Mr. and Mrs, Norbert Capistrant (Cheryl Bruestle) of Warrlngham Drive, Waterford, announce the birth of a son, Brian Jay, Jan. 22 at Pontiac General HospltaL Grandparents are the Emil Bruestles of Dover Road and the Abel Caplstrants of Brooks ^reet. ★ ★ Mrs. Robert Boncher of Walton Boulevard was honored Thursday evening, at a stork shower at the home of Mrs. Nell Bengry of Wal^ JBtoulevard. Mrs. Earl Pruett was cohostess. The guest list Included Mrs. Joseph Boncher, Mrs. Donald Morrissey, Mrs. Jack Crawford, Mrs. Claytcm Cocking, Mrs. Sam Dovonno, Mrs. Clare Bebout, Mrs. Robert Coulton, Mrs. Frank Erznoxnlk, Mrs. Jack Buckhom, Mrs. John Bass, Bailie Anderson and Darlene Bengry. ie -k if Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Peters (Nancy Carson) of East Princeton Avenue announce the birth of a daughter, Nancy CarbUne, Feb. 2 at Dr. Grey’s Hospital, BatesvUle, Ark. Grandparents are the O. W. Carsons of BatesvUle and Mr. and Mrs. Dan Peters of East Pike Street. , - k k k ...... Mr. and Mrs. Morgan E. Slple of North Perry Street were recent visitors at the Jack Tar Hotel in San Fran-cisco, Calif, k k k Mr. and Mrs. Thercm D. CoUlns and their three chU-dren of Geneva Street wUl leave Wednesday to live In Mr. Collins has been appointed Assistant Book and Bible House manager ot the Seventh-Day Adventists. WU-11am Bloom of Ptngree Avenue will succeed Mr. CoUlns here " as asdstant puMishtng deinrtment secretary of the Pon-, tiac-Detrolt area. ■ ★ , Ari ★ ■ and Mrs. Frahk Antrobos of Bloomfield Hills have just returned from Florida where Mr. Antrobns attci^fjed a coQVMklon of general Insurance agents at Boca Raton. They irtslted Miami and conttn^ on to t SUE ANN BRAID I the West Coast where they were breakfast guests of former Pontiac residents, Mr. and Mrs. (Xmrad Church a| VetBce. //■ , : I - - I THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAt. FEBRUARY 7. 1961 the Good Health h Vital ELEVEN NIQHOLIE If T«u Property COMPLETELY INSUBED? If Net, Reed This Mettogel ONE POUCT I PBOTECTION PLAN I w# can assure you complete carefree protectiors in line i with toiday's replacement ( v»lue of your property! You'll j be (rfeasantly surprised to m i how our plan covers many t out-Of>the'>ofdlnary situations S and is easily arrarsged to suit 1 your finartelSl requirements, j — ^‘Byd" NICHOLIE r«r caaialala Carafm rraUtUan 49 M». Clement St. Ft 3-7958. J- Keeping Fit Worth Effort BIO DIFFERENCE Many folks do not realize that there is as much difference be-tweoi truly fine health and a lowered state of health as there is between illness and lack of it. It is ness By dW^iOtNE LOWMAN Mwid^ I quoted from an .article by President John F. Kennedy which appeared recently in the magazine, Sports Illustrated, this he emphasized the Importance of physical fitness to the security of a nathn. Then he said: But ^sical fitness is as vital to the activities of peace as to dige,~6etweareiiJoyfaig wwlc and those of war, especially when our succefts in those activities may well determine the future of freedom in years to come. “Physical flinriM I* nut only one of toe most Important keys to a healthy body; it is the baa|p> of dynamic and creative lateHecihal activity. The relatkHWblp between the swiadness of the body and the acHvittes of the mind is si|p. reception at Oakland Hills Country Club followed the Saturday evening nuptials of Linda Arleen Rakas and Harry B. Cummins of Lansing in Christ Church Cranbrook. The Rev. Lester L. Is-accepted, yet ’uvarnow we liavu Dubyiur read' the candlelight •cere* jtoaped’eHHs IBey oirrli^'wfiOe' nmhfihlv iiicf crvatrskAsI thA ciiiv mnnv ' * probably just scratched the surface of this knowledge. There is no telling what far reaching and I well - disguised influences our thoughts and feelings may have on Oh the other hand, it seems to ^me that the effects of the body on Finer |HARWOOD| i TUXEDO RENTAL PULL DR^ CUTAWAY MReejerR^utr-BOYS TUX B^UE BUSINESS T¥ RANDOLPH ! Harwood Costom Tailors and Clotbiors • M8 W. Huron st Telegraph ; FE 2-2300 I Sh»p Sbaby PHOTO CONTEST THE /WINNER!' EXPERT jJ^outlookV 1^^ not bwn ^ so I well publicized. Self pity, aensitivcncM and discouragement, ran come from a lowered state of health. Chronic fatigue amt boredom may be dtfe to low blood pressure. Screaming nerves can make one^ irritable; and it is very difficult to |be charming, or even reatonable in Deanery Sets Installation Officers for* the North Oakland Deanery, National Qoun-cil of Catholic Women, will be installed at the quarterly deanery meeting W^nesday at 8 p m. in St. Vincent de Paul parish hall. ★ ★ a Mrs. Marshall Sprague, council . piesident, will wdcome Mrs. N. C. Dillon, deanery president, and the 18 NOCW participating units. ★ a a Mrs. Frank J. Schaden, archdiocesan president of the DACeW, will be guest of honor. Daughters of Our Lady of the Lakes Circle 379 of Pontiac, will serve refreshments. dreading it, between laughter and tears, between accomplishment and procraatination and between keen awareness and lack of i^rception. I than to build our physical store of energy, to work for vibrant health. The dividends worth ihe^ort! Cummins-Rakas Nuptials Peiformed in Candlelight Ohio, aixl Mrs. Jerry Helmke o Bloomington, Ind. Dressed alike hi Blanchl con- mony. Parents of the newlyweds arp Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas J. Rakas o( Birmingham and Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Cummins of . Lansing. Fashioned of caadlelightde- aleevea, and scissor d o m e- camellias. Garnet rosebuds accented the onor matron's bouquet and pink rosebuds were added to the honor maid's cascade. Matching hats and shoes were Solo Flutist Gives Varied Program at CentralHigh Rakas, Kempf Hogan, Peter Cummins, Jon Tomion of Port Huron, aifford Galen of Battle Creek and Victor Mix of Stevensville. lAwVtng for toe honeymoon at Palm Beach, the bride was wearing an Italian Import of willow green spagnoll knit and matching accessaries. The couple will live at Aim Arbor. Rakas chose gown of so smartrTTR«y ric, you can whip up all three for practically pennies. Printed Pattern 4915; Misses’ sizes 12. 14. 16. 18, 20. Size 16 top Style 1% yards 35-lhch; middle iy« yards 35-inch; lower 1% yards 35-inch. By A. MICHAEL DEMPSEY William Montgomery appeared in recital last night In the Pontiac Central High School Auditorium. Mr. Montgomery, solo flutist with the United States Marine Band, presented a varied program featuring worka for the flute by Mozart, Handel, DeBussy and other composers. The program opened with the ."Hungarian Fantasy” by Doppler. 'This composition presented many challenges, all of which were ably handled by the recitalist. The next •elortlon on the program was the “Coacerto In G Major” by MbsarT Hils concerto was plas'cd with care and sen-Bltlvlt}. The gay first movement was clean and clear, the lyrical and soulful secwid movement was played with feeling, and the con- aaaihg liS IHe ^ceM After a brief intermission the program continued with the “Sonata in A Minor” by Handel. The balance between flute and piano was especially notable in this so-nata_ and the following ly synropated conclusion to a very' successful program. | It was a pleasure to hear Mr. Montgomery's recital last evening.; The program was tasteful, hisi stage presence unaasuming,''’ and j hla intonation and interpretation were excellent. **Kitchen Fre$h** Ross’ Candy Candy for Gifts or for Yourself FUND RAISINC CONSULTANT ' CaU FE 2-250' or drop in 4642 Elizabeth Uke Rd. YOUR CAREER IN COSMETOLOGY BEGINS AT THE spioed-rum heavy satin with bodii of beaded champagne chiffon pliqued with satin buds. corsage was green cynibidium orchids. The mother of the bridegroom, wearing Dior Uue'^silk belled skirt anchbodice oLCnantilly lace, chose blue flow«*' at the Elks Temple. The (himer dance will haw a Valeottoie motif. It is in honor oi the president. William TTeanor. - Some 350 tickets have already been sold. Music will be provided by Art Quatro's Ordiestra fixMn Detroit. Ask Hospital Committee LANSING ur-Six Democratic lawmakers Monday night called for foi:matiaD ol-a House comraittee to study hospital needs in metro* Gulping Ccfndy Better tor Teeth, Says Dentist CmCAtH) (ITI) - A Baches-ter, N.Y.. dentlrtiy prsleaBer has advised albhters wMh aa hMat-IMe sweet tooth to eat eaady **qaiekly and rH It over with.** * * * Dr. Basis O. Bibby said at the Mih aaaaal Chicago Deatal Society meellag that every «*«•< SMck amouats to a ocparate “attack” so the teeth aad “sae peand of candy lateo with a meal BLOOMFIELD HILLS LOCATED NEAR ILOOMFIELD HILLS COUNTRY CLUB ”nES¥^roct^sfy oncT conveniently in these 2 ond 3 bedroom oportments with one ond one-holf and two ond one-holf baths ond odditionol lovotories. Also included: • Spocioa* Kviny roomi with astiirsl ftiopbcoi • Largo Kroon sd porchot • Hnge bodtooms with dooblo cIsmH • TRod baths with boilt-in vaniliM • Additional garagot for 2-«ar family AparimonI ArailaUt—Aboao SUBURBAN INVESTORS, INC. 291 S. Woodward Avo. Midwatt 4.1000 Pttoskey Girl Is Que«n for Winter Carnival PETOSKEY IB _ Ferris bwU-ite sophomore PhylUs Piam, 19, presides u queen of the 33rd annual Petbskey Winter Carnival ipitll' Feb. 18. * The blonde dai [rs. Ralph was crowned She'll seek title of Miss Michigan Wlnte^^Queen next weekend. American ardieotogists ha-ve found a cave In Iraq's Zagros ' Mountains which has been almoet cffntlTiu»wly inhabited . Jar . 100,- 000 years. ■ ■•‘^on cf a Nkandert^ Mao, who lived «,00p years ap>. In the cave. KNbXMKSNO 1HS SAN - A poiiceman is halting a truck on the Long Island Expressway in Queens. New York, Monday. The mayor’s ban on use of private vehicles was enforced with AP rhaUtu - hundrpds-of summia^s f^ued to nonemergency missions. Tickets also were placed on many caft paTked in traffic lanes previously plowed by snow removal crews. .. his record is his recommendation M E. Daniels, Pontiac, Michigan, is a member of Modern Woodmen's Century Club because of his production'in 1960. Attainment of this ranking marks District Manager Daniels as an exceptionally capable life insurance counsellor. His excellent record of life in-surarKe service in your community it his best recommendation to . both r>ew and bid clients. modern woddmen of amorica • homa offtco • rock island, ill. /iff mnJtf* Lil* H i MnJfrn Wnndmtn Coid January Hikes Heating Bills Gas Soles Sef Record in City CoW last month? You betcha.i Brown nid the Sf boor period |gas during the period, he Said. The Consumers Power Cb. sold more' from » a.m. Jan. M to • a.m. jcompany’s Southeastern Dtviaion. _ natural gas in Pontiac in January | Jan. ts snw the biggest daily embracing Oakland. Wayne and ■ than during any previous month.; sendoot of gas la the company’s 'MactMnb counties, sold K9.WO.OOO ■ The iTcord sales- amounted to] history. , cubic feet then. i 64L012.«1D cubic feel, according lo' murouchout the state the com-i ^ Charles P Brown. Pontiac district; of ““ j"*’ ■ n,anager. mu,k«.ouu ruoic icet 24-25. since the Pontiac office does not keep daily consumption Tec- Home-healing during subiero neatber was the big factor in MQJJ the Inrrease, Brown conrluded. I'^iOL/ OlUUeniS fias-heating homeowaeni ran at-test to this by the size of the January bills. The month’s output topped the I previous high of 519,608,200 cubic feet sold in December, another lii-usually cold nionth. During January 1959. sales amounted to 425.169,200 cubic feet. [Can Your Food Market Match This?! If You Si p® 2 This |fim fhrtt ygg • 10 M. ft. frtsisr pin 11-lbt. ■ sf MM«t par wstk pin ill ytwr frgilt, vsfttaUti |2 kMl Men, siiHtd for g ftmily tf tws sr IfH’N. !■ (UHrftr fwRiBtt psniiitt dlHgrgiit psr day.) ■ U S. Choice Betf 130-lbs. 2 Full Voritty ^ Sleeks, Roosts ■ and Ground Beef. 2 l^orkLoin I2.lbs. ■ Cenlor Cut Chops ond Roosts. 2 F^firafcod Ham^^^ : ■ Center Cut Slicn ond^oosts. 2 Sikod Bocon........ 6-lbs. 1 fork Sousoge....... 6-lbs. 2 Hot Doss 6-tbs. ■ 6 Cut-Up Fryers.....12-lbt. 2 60 Pkss. Vegetobln, 12 Pkgs. 2 Fruit, 24 Cons of Juico, 1 Gel. ■ Ice Croom. [ BEHER HOUSEKEEPING :OR 3-6555 on Exchange Plan With Nigeria 1 the furni-j BAKER and HANSEN lasuaBce Company INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- HOME OWNEBS PACU6E POLICY A SPECIALTY 'IOwWLp,iU,« Phone FE 4<1568 714 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLOG. PONTIAC •TORQUAY, England iUPI) - Aj broehure of the Devon Hotel notes i that "Dogs are welcome but are EAST LANSING (D - Michigan a-sked not to go into dinmgj State University students will get i room and not ti ‘ — **•'’ an opportunity to live and workituie with Africim students this summer, says Homer Higbee, assistant detin of international programs. The university is taking part in "Operation Crossinads Africa,"; Higbcc said. The prograrn^^,^; interracial student pilgrimitgFrini-' tinted and directed by Rev. James j H. Robinson, minister of the Iter- j lem Church of the Master in New| York. ! The program allows American | students to work in Africa with I African students on comnnmity< projects, Higbee said. Ten MSU i students went last year, the first; year MSU took part. * Students this year will be as-i signed to Nigeria, where MSU is | conducting a technical assistance! project. j Food items are suggested. You choose only ■ the foods that y^ wont. Your order will be toilored to suit your family's needs. 5217 Dixie Highwey, Drayton Ploins, Mich. NOTICE TO EMPLOYEES of PONTIAC MOTOR ' FISHER BODY ' GMC TRUCK & COACH NAMED QUEEN-Rita Lister, 18, has been elected this year’s ’’Sweetheart” of Pontiac Chapter, Order of DeMolay. 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Rhubarb Festival, to be held Saturday at Utica Com-I munity High School, is expected to draw thousands ofj area residents, Gordon W. Hoskins, chairman of the event.^ said today. A full day of festivities will begin at 9 a.m. with registration of rhubarb, rhubarb dishes and centerpieces in ^the gymnasium. Registra-1^ I |v i • - ftloiL-i^r. Jiulging later in Delay Decision —^ ^ on Condemning Lake Orion Hotel Gets a Reprieve, but Tenants Must Move Out RKHKARSK FOB SHOW - Two members of the Wayne State University Children's Theater group rehearse a scene from their production of "The Seven League Boots" to be presented at 10:30 a. m. and 1,30 p. m. Friday at Avondale Senior High School, 1433 W. Auburn Road. The event is sponsored by the Avondale Parent-Teacher Association Council in cooperation with local school officials. The performances are ofien to tile public, and preschool children are welcome if accompanied by a parent. Oak Park Man Slays a Bandit Unidentified Youth is Shot by Store Owner in Robbery Attempt Can’t Afford It Yet Filter Plant Out youth was-shot and killed last night when he attempted to hold up the owner of a sports shop heie, * * * William Hariin, 55, of 23ffi1 Re-j' public Road, owner of the Hariin SpoHs Shop at 8236 W. Nine Mile Road, told Oak Park police_J»c was cl^lhg the store and had gone outside to the rear of the building to put a package in his car. .K man who bad been erouch-Ing behind a nibbiKh can stood np. and pointing a ahotgun at Martin, ordered him baeii bite the store. Hariin drew a 32-caliber automatic fttOTi his coat pocket and shot the man in the stomach, second shot struck the bandit the head as he fled. He was dead on arrival at Wil-liam Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. ie it it The bandit carried no Identification. police said. He was believed *to be between 18 and 20 years old. Two one dollar bills and several coins were found in a small bag B.V JIM IX)NG SOUTH LYON - Any possibility that the city might begin construction this year of a water filter plant was squetchod last night at Ithe City CouiKil meeting. An unidentified] Councilpien learned thaUthe total Arter engineering firm of Ayres, Lewis, Norris and May said the in line with on condemnation of the old Lake Orion Hotel will be delity^ until Monday, but all lodget;s wiUyte ordered to me but of the building ; soon as possible. Frank Dunaskis. owner of the hotel, met with village officials before last night's council meeting and agreed to improve the building, according to Oscar Boyca of the Oakland Counly Health Department. Bo.>e« said Dunaskis util Join \illage officials on an inspection tonr of the hotel next Monday In order to learn the requirements for making It comply with Ihe village building code. However. Boyea said the tenants )f the building are mostly elderly people and ^iould vacate the hotel as soon as possible. * it * They already have been given notice to leave by the health inspector. Village attorney RobeH Pareati said he will seek a legal method by which the lodgers can be evicted. day will continue to il a.m. A carousel and carnival theme will hig^igbt this year’s rhubarb smorgasbord to be served from 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the cafeteria. Featured will be all kmds of spe-j cial dishes,-including sundaes, so-1 das, salads, cakes, breeds, pies I and frozen desserts — all made | with rhubarb. Luncheon will be served at i Nponsoring organisations, "visit- ; Ing dlgitltartes" and Kbobarb Qimshi • Carol Kcieler, 17, Ulho High School senior, and her i cant of tile propoac'd plgp. plus cufient debts, would be in’ cxscss of the city's bonding limitation a: provided in its charter. The cost of the filter plant that would remove the heavy iron content from the city water is esti-nisted to he more tljgn This amount and $235,000 already bonded is more than the 10 per cent limitation on the ■ alna- the estimated eapaeity of 2s the one first submitted" Hay-sard said. “Only^ it has been operator of a bar on the main floor, changed to handle an additional j Council President Irvine J. Unger half-million gallons a day." |8aid legal papers riunrid be served immediately While il is unlikely jhat anythingjvillage inspectors have decided Plans for the filter plant were first presented to The c-ouncil in March 1959. At that time the cost estimate was $150,000. ★ ★ ★ Revised plans were firesented the council last night and the total cost of the project, plus addif land for a new well, had Incret $».ooo. Homer J. Hayward of the can be done about the proposed filter plant fn the near future. Mayor Ross Sinclair madedt^tear that a third water well in the city is imperative to meet the growing demaixls. When the filter plan! prtqioMl first WM Hubmitted, ihe City 1 site cspeciall.v suitable well. showed that several las just north of two present [y wells might be the most likely ites. The properties, however, are not owned by the city. * * it Cbuncllmen authorized appraisals of the properties by a pro- 2 Rezoning Hearings Set in Independence INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP-Two hearings will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow by the zoning board dO-acre plots from residential and part commercial to a manufacturing classification, Chie parcel, 500 by 930 feet is on south of White Lake Road. A re,-quest has been made to have it changed from residential and partial commercial to light manufacturing- Rezoning also is sought for another 40-acre , plot on the southeast corner of Waldon and Cllntonville roads from suburban farms and commercial to heavy maunifactur- ^fhe reason for considering the zdnii« changes Imb been to «>-|||^(j0p0nclence Booro courage light inthiMry for Madison Heights Voters to Face Tax Hike Again MADISON ^lElGHTS - S<'hool, di.strict votem here will b*> asked | again for a seven mill tax increase ^ for school maintenance March 20.] The same proposal was defeated! in September. j Also on the ballot will be a proposal to change the Madison Heights School System Irom a tonitii^ elasrt*^ third claaa dla— Iricl. If the proposal is approved iti will give the school board morel authority in purchasing land forj school construction wilhStn ttwn necessity of getting voter approval, Supt. S. Foster Wilkinson said to-day. ^ Wilkinson stated that extra mil-lage is needed right now for operating expenses. He added “I don't know what action the board wtll take if the March 20 request is defeated but something will have to be done to cut expenses. ” that the building "constitutes health and safety hazard." Dunaskis was given a month in which to imptwe his building have it condemned. The hotel ownerTia? iriadeTmprovemchts W the Jan. -20 deadline but stiH had not brought it up to the code specifications, according to Boyea. After meeting with Dunaskis last night. Parent! said the hotel owner is planning to bring the building up to the standards set by the village. I don’t know if we can do anything about the filter plant at this time.” Sinclair said, ‘but we do:moved from their cardboard pack-nePd ahother water .supply” Img cartons. Courting o Cold QUINCY, ni. (UPI) - Offidals seeking to determine why the Quincy courtroom has been so chilly discovered Monday that the room's radiators, heretofore bid-grills, had never been SO YI:AKS ok PTA — One of the aarkston Elementary School's first Parent-Teacher Association officers, Mrs. Keith Leak, shows the present presidetit, Richard Funk a few things about how Sponsors of the annual relebra-j tion are the Michigan Hothouse Rhubarb Growers Association, Utica Rotary Cljib and the Michigan Cooperative Extension Service. * w * The official opening ceremony „ , , 1 . *-,t » and ribbon cutting will take place rOF Scholarship Work at 1:L5 p.m. at the entrance to the----------------------------- gymnasium. KestnlTtt of the afternoon program will be two cooking srhooU to be eondurted at 1:30 and 3 p.m: by Berenice La Krenlerc and Mary Walquist. Macomb County home demonstiation agents. They will be held In Room its of the high school. the original PTA meetings were conducted. The organization will observe its 20th year Thursday beginning at 7:30 p, m. in’the school. founder's Day Set Up MSUO GrouptoBe Marked Forty-five minute tours of area thubart) houses are scheduled for 3 and 4 p.m. to be followed by a teen-age dance party, the "Rhubarb Hop" from 4 to 6 p.m. * A * colonel Joe Koss will auction prize-winning rhubarb in the .gyrti-na^um af 3“ jrm. BROWN WILL CROWN Delegated by Gov. Swainson to act as his official representative at the coronation . ceremony Saturday night is State Treasurer Sanford A. Brown. He will crown queen Carol during the Festival Dance aCabout 8:30 p.m. TTie danoe. which will start at 7:30, also will feature the crowning of a Rhubarb King and awarding"^ prizes To winnerc of the day's coppetition in rhubarb growing and food preparation. Reigning with this year’s queen are her two maids of honor, Julia Hellebuyck, 18, of Macomb Towi ship, and Pat Avereyn, 17, of Washington. A commute of citizens in Macomb County has beep organized to assist in raising scholarship funds for deserving Michigan State University Oakland students. The group, to be called the MSUO Foundation Macomb County Scholarship Committee. ill be headed by Mrs. Philip T. Mulliben of Mount Clemens. many stu- j Planning Program dents who" lacked funds to begin at Clorkston Elementary * I Thursday at 7:30 Varner said. Other members of the Macomb County committee are Mrs. Leroy Howaid of St. Clair Shores, vice chairtnan; Mrs. H. RttiUn j^n of East Detroit, secretary; Mrs. Cieorge Kurz of Mount Clements,^ treasurer: Mrs. Ro^rt TenEyck Clements, publicity MOMS to Sew Pads GINGELLVILLE - Members of MOMS Unit 33 will sew cancer pads tomorrow at the Gingellville Club House. They said they would welcome help from any volunteers in the ^a on their project. The group WUl he seWng from I a.m. to 2 p.m. A potluck lunch-Mi will be served at noo The new organization carry on The-work -of-the, larger fof M 0 U n .MSUO Foundation Scholarship ; chairman, r-ommittcc in Macomb County. ; The next meeting of the group The latter organization was or-j'^” ^ MSUO at which ,ganized during MSUO s first yeari’^f Earner will address com-[Ifter ChanceLr D. B. Varner|"’‘*“'^"'‘^'"‘»‘’'^’ promised high school students that] “ no one in the graduating ‘'las-Sj /jp Yminn would. be. denied the opportunity[^^^H^^'=^ lUUIiy, to^a^tend MSUO because of Jack orGozdon Wofford The MSUO Foundation Scholar-j^j CLARKSTON — Founder's Day will have a special meaning fM-memtore of the Clarksttm Elementary School Parent-Teacher Association this week. It is celebrating 20 years of existence. ★ * * There have been 14 presidents in charge of meetings held during the last two decades, and 12 of these still live in the community. ...... Bi^ginning at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at. the school, PTA officer Mrs. Donald Johnson will present a brief talk on the origin of PTA ship Qemmittee headetL by Mrs. Ralph T. Norvell, 46 Wenonah Dr.. Pontiac already has raised^ $40,000 in scholarship gift money, and has established a scholarship trust fund with an initial endowment of more than $‘22,000. GROUPS CONTRIBITTE Many other organizations, civic and private, as well as private individuals have contributed scholarship funds. TTiese gifts include the four-year Charles Evans Hughes Scholarship, established by Mrs. William T. Gossett of Bloomfield Hills in honor of her late lather, who served as chief, justice of the United States Supreme Court. The scholarKhlp funds have HOLLY - The Holly Baptist Church was the setting recently for the wedding of Rosalie Elaine Young and Gordon M. Wolford. Officiating at the ceremony was the Rev. G. Phillip Nofsinger. The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Young, 165:^ Tucker Road. The pareqfo of the bridegroom are Mr. aM Mrs. Gordon M. Wofford of Detroit. according to Supervistfr Duane Hursfall. V Highland Youth, 20, G«t» 3-Year Probation, Fine Bartolomeo Paladino, a 20-year-old Highland Township youth who admitted the theft of $12 frwn a township drive-in restaurant last month, received probation for three years and was admonished for "resenting parental care and disdpUne” by Circuit Judge (^ark J. Adams. P^adino, of 1810 Williams Laljce Pvoad. was also ordered to pay' $100 in court I costs. He pleaded guUty Jan. 22 To breaking and entering during the plght time. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP —If the plats of 58 parcels of land OB M15 at U.S. 10 have been completed, the Independence Township Board will consider accepting them as supervisor plats at tiie 7:30 p.m. board meeting to- In the past the various parcels have not been properly recorded, and township engineers have been working on the project for some time, according to Supervisor Duane Hursfall. In other business, the township board is erqiected to consider approval of five new liquor Mqenaes, along with two renewals. For her wedding the bride wore a white wool suit and carried a white Bible topp^ with a white orchid corsage. Bridesmaid was Barbara Htrimes of Allen Park. Alphonse__________ Dearborn served as the best man. A buffet luncheon was served to the wedding parly after the ceremony at the home of Mrs. Thomas Seavey Sr. of 1821 Ratalee, Lake RoJid. •ning reception than 100 guests Hall in Detroit. Clarkiilon'M organizattun was founded in 1941 with Mrs. Keith Leak and .Mrs. Wade Dean presiding over the coinmiltees that were formed. Mrs; Leak became president the following year. There was only one small elementary school 20 years ago, and at the present time there are three large modern schools in the system. , ___________ __________ . A panel of teachers from the kindergarten through the fifth grade will discuss teaching teeb-The^Ciarkston school district, A get-acquainted hour will follow the evening’s program, with refreshments served by home room mother^ of first grade pupils, heidi The entire community has been Roma I invited to this (viebration, aceprd-Richard Funk, present PTA Tlie couple is living in Detroit, rpresident. In Alleged Drag Race To Plead Not Guilty A not-guilty plea was to Jje en-j Mercy Hospital where he is In ttrixi J^ay foi- a 17-year-old Avon {satisfactory condition with head tfownship youth charged with Icav-iinjurics. " '' ! mg the scene of an injuiy accident! Police arrested Barr laler at in Bloomfield Hills Saturday, jhis home. W'^itnes.ses to the acri-Bloomfield Hills police captain dent got his license number as he Walter Siuiter Said the attorney for Calvin Barr of 2825 Devondale has requesled that the plea be entered in thgir absence and i March 9 examination date set. Justice of the Peace Alva Rieh-ardson has already agreed to the arrangement, Siuiter said. The accident, police said, was the result of a drag race on Woodward Avenue between Barr and John A. Hope. 17, of 321 Fisher Court. Qawson. Officers stated that the car driv-1 by Hope went out of control and smashed into a tree im the center island aftejf the tyX> vehicles bumped together. Hope was taken to St. Joseph TV Back in Cadillac left the scene, police said. The accident occuntid near Hickory Grove Road shortly after midnight. Southfield Appoints Building Inspector SOUTHFIELD — Gayton 0. Die-bel. 38, of 23431 Majestic Road, was appointed building inspector by City Administrator Donald V. Smith at last night's council meeting here. The appointment had the luiini-mouS aiqrroval of the city oomcil. Diebel presently is chief inspec-,tor of buildings in Oak Park CADILLAC Uh—A test pattern!where he has been employed for SURROUNDED BY DOLLS , David Westlund, fifth grade teacher of the Pine Knlc4> element^ sdrool at aarkston, $akes a look at some of the hundreds of gaily dressed dolls to he used in the "Doll Walk" at the acboors annual Fair from'6 to 10 p. m. Friday. A completely nfw aft of games, a fiA pond, country store, used books and puzzles room' and other fair-fun acthHUes are planned. Westlund is chairman and is being atjsisted by (from left) Mrs. William Cobb, Mrs. Ben Norris and Mre. . Don»l< early today returned television station WWTV, Ch^l 13. CadUIac. to the air for the first time since Jan. 24 when fire ruined studios and equipment with losses placed at $325XK». The station serves 36 the past eight years. He will take up his new duties in Southfield March 1 at a salary of $7,700 per, yeaif plus transportation allowance. The new inspector is married and the father of three children. Id Erk- Northern and Central Michigan!He succeeds B. Frank Ghlley. who "a. 1.1 I resigned because of ill health. I J' FOUUTKEX ThA PONTIAC^PRBSS. TUESDAy^ FEBRUABY 7. 19^l< From the Press Box mr nttTio l. Kioum City Foeg Mee^ Tonight at PCH; Rams, Mikes Out of Town Chiefs, Huskies Renew ~Ba^etba 11 Warir NM«lfa« Dm. M St PYH. Im4(M CTMs* ts\-w«d pmMm. The Hudcies, defendins Inter l4dtes Conference kings, simply do not have the backboard strength to compete on even tamu with 64oot-3 George Fed, 1^ HU. Odft.NWllX Four tiaaca the Pontiac N< rm basketball team has taken the court against croastown rival Pontiac fWi»l miH t«ir Hmea the Huskiea have gone down to defeat High school students and athletes take note. cr2 « The recent mid-term examinahoas which tocdt placed ott PCH floor and. just like an in inost colleges around the country produced a sorry' the previous msetinga between tjQg ■ the t^ intracity foea. thH‘re„ Dozens of fine athletes, badtetball players, swimmers, wrestlers, trackmen, golfers, tennis players and many others received the sad notice from the various deans’ offices that because of their grades they have been^ asked to withdraw fnun school. The 25 point basketball average; the :30 mark in the freestyle, or the 9.6 time in the 100 yard dash | doesn’t mean a thing any more in the Literature, ! Psychtdogy or Political Science classes. | High school athletes better get it through their heads that very few colleges today will take a chance > cal conteri with an overall record of 7-4. Northern’s overall marie la 9-1. TTptrff time it 8 P-m. The PCH-PNH struggle headlines tonight's prep basketball slate in the Oakland County area, but some other contests of great Interest are also sdieduiedr , A fuU card is on the dodeet hi the Elasteni Michigan League, _ « hattlfr iac j^ {dace af Port Huron between die Big Reds and front-running Fern- meets East Detroit, the team that upset the Dales last Friday, in the latter's gym and Mt. Clemens la at Basel Park to compiett the EML program. ne SiriMirbaa Oathella -^officially Usf Friday when St. Frederiok whipped gt. Boa-ediot to ellnch Ita lint ddo la U yegis, officially ends to-Mght The chamidon Rams invade Femdale to play St. James and the city’s other parodiial high 'iSfitdT'St.- Mksbael, also leaves town i(Mr a dogfight at Center Line St. CleinenL Ordiard Lake St. Mary entertains St. Rita and Oak St. Mary viaits St. Avondale finds Itself an underdog tonight at Roseville where tiie Jackets face high-scoring Duane Solne and Company, the current THCounty pacesetters. Caaitaton and winleaa Oxford stage a rematch at Oxford with X3ariaton a heavy favorite and RO Dondero la ^deed to take 7 the measure of visiting Berkley. ♦ ★ ♦ Utka welonnet South Lake tor a Bi-County scrap and South lyon goes to Howell. Other area attractioni Include Hdy Redem-er M RO Shrine, Owocao at Lapeer and Ypsilanti St. Jol^ at Waterford Our Lady of the Ohio State Drubs lndjdnd,100-65 Titans Overtime Losers at Xavier CINCINNATI (UPD—The Univer-'second half and spurred the Muske-sity of Detroit’s sagging basketball teers into an Sl-'H lead. AT rhttmU* sqi’EEZE PL\Y — Detroit's Charlie North is caught in a sqileeze play by Xavier’s Ed Tepe (30) and Jack Thobe (54) during the fet half of the game at Qnclnnati. At left is Leo McDermott (10) of Xavier and at the right is Detroit’s Larry Hughes. The - „ Then McDermott almost be-last night and dropped a 99-96 ^ ^ ^ overtime decision to Xavier. i cmne the goat when he missed The Titans shot into the lead In ®"* **® throws with six the opening moments of the contest I seconds remaining and fouled and stayed in front until the 13:30| Detroit’s Frank Chlckowskl at mark of the second half. | the final busier. OilckowsU Leo McDermott was the Xavier | ndased the first foul shot, but hero in the comeback. McDermott! sank the second to send the game 'apiece. Rated Top 'B' Cage Team in State Holly is the No. 1 Oass B high,feat knocked Sexton into third seboed team in the state accoripig! place this week behind both Sagi-to the latest Associated Press has- ^ Catlxdic Central. | R«bUison. cl ketbaU ratings., I retained ita Qass Cj Heights, rakked ai The Broncos, who have a 1^ leadership but unbeaten Frankfort j scorers hi the record, moved frwn lead after Ludingtoir suffered iU chaUenges. first setback of the season Jast and Shepherd are providing stiff; (Werence for first semester AP Cage Poll h* *»y th« AP pi d bnsdcMteri r« I CLASS A i i. 53ro«"cstholle C«nlr»l : 1. Lunlni Scstoo ' I. Hlihland Psrk TBeTgttFffim stpiad got aiOr ional bad news when -I iporu disclosed that Bob James of n?.* ““*•'<’ t'«’*‘k. who WM ineligible ut rrcordi the first semester, had faib-d lo regain eUgthlltty. er Rouge third. Fenidale dropped from fourth to rifth place In Oans A after lortng Its first game. Pontiac Central tumbled from the top IS and U 15th. C:apac has moved Into 11th place in tli^ C. The llth-ranked Jackson Vikings J; Ktl provided the upset of the week last! J S5I,7ii5r‘“" week by beating defendmg rtate r ____ _ diampion Lansing Sexton. Thej ou»n. m ord»r: Bcatoa RsrbOT. Hsr-i p„. Lansing club, rated second behind | pomim , cenirsi!” Saginaw in last week's Associated j ^ ' class b Press poll, has lost only twice ini j mduuton }o-j 29 games — Tmt, the Jackson d^-j J 52?"or»nd! R«pid> ii-i ,.. '6 Vmmf J1.0 « Elkton-PlKPOn-Bayporl 10 0 ’J Lmkevlew (Tie* HollRDd ChrtailAn, iTle* E'canibR Ni , Eight athletes who become In-M eligible Wednesday are members M of Western's track squad aad g three others are wresUera. (Ed. Note: Read today's Lounge Cagers Near 'A' Title '300' Quintet Conquers* Newman In Overtime to - Take 3-Game Lead e.U I Junior Wings 'Ice' iBorder Cities Title Xavier continued to dominate in the extra session, however, taking a-quldi lead and,jurs^ it. It was the secemd Ion In i and seventh of the season for the fading Titans whose hopes for a bid to a post-season tournament have all but expired. The Titans’ Dave Debusschere and (Thariey North led all scorers with 32 points HOCKEY CHAMPS AGAIN -nMeet the UtUe Mountain View Rangers, unbeaten in two seasons of play in the 13-15 age group and champions of the City Junior Hockey League for the 2nd consecutive year. Kn«itii. fr^ left to right. 1^^ ^Ynit^.iimior Wing« clinched first place- Vie- Sullivan, Tommy McManus, Les Sullivan, *Bc ;in the Border Oties ttockey League —---------------—--------------------------------— DETROIT ( L'Pl) - The Detroit Orof»r Point* St. Pnul Houchtoo Lnkf Tbrf* 0»li. . Ptrry tn^_rd»r. Bi ... W*»t''oiuw«. ... CLASS D DimondRlt “' I Marquetu Fifrc.e UP! Cage Poll 1. SMinaw S O^roit I The 300 Lounge virtually wrapped, up the Clas.s'A City league basket ball title Monday night with a 74-72 overtime conquest of runnerup Newman AME. The hard-fought: victory gave the Lounge cagers a full three-game lead. ■^Lounge^tew * 10-point lead in; the fourth quarter and the score stood 68-88 at the end of regulation time. Individual scoring honors went to Newman’s Jerry Williams, who fired 27 points, and Fred Davis added 22. Dpve D i£iun_ Jjaced Lounge’s well-balanced offense with 17. In another overtime straggle, Perry Park chalked np an 81-76 CUuu B victory over Griirs Grill. . The count wrns 71-71 Alter regula-tkM dla lww^. BW SeknHeh allied ZS polnis for Perry Park and GrUfa Ken Titherage i netted U. I . Bob Yahnke bagged 17 points to BoyS Glub Hocke/ feature aarkston’s 63-55 Class B pipg| $et Thursday win over the Commerce Lakers, i ' ! last night by trouncing the Im 'S L*®*”'****®" Flyers, 13-3. }j1 *r # * ★ 104 u| It was the ninth straight win on i^] 44|home ice ioc the Detnrit club and tfjiU 24th in 29 battles this season, n-a » Jimmy joe Smith sparked the ^IJunlor Wing< with a three-goal 12-1 ,1! "hat trick" and four other players lii 8®*^ apiece. «. Grand Rapid! South 7. Detroit KatUm S. Muikegoo I, Pemdal* 10. Highland Park CLASS B 1. River R«aa* 2. Eaat Grand Rapid! Results . tnrmttiAM ruiaaj#i» taaiiifc—aaai, Zavtor W, Detroit N UlchtfMi SUtc SS, Notre Ddm* 74 Purdue N. Mletalsaa r Richard King, Mike Gerbeck, and BUly Mocock, Standing, from left to right, are; Manager-coach Keith LeDuc, Bob Schaffer, Dave Parker, Paul Graunstadt, Lam* Johnson, Tom Petrie, and loop director ChaRS Jrish. , ^pnnies, Duke and Bradley Follow AP Poll Still Unaiiiiiioiis Tof Bijcks Detroit's troubles this season can 'be greatly attributed to an unrelenting road Jinx. Six of DrtroH’s seven losses have been absorbed away from home. In contrast, the Titans have won 11 12 engage- ments at U-D Memorial where they will CTtertaIn Notre Dame Saturday night. St. Bonaventnre, which never seems to lose at home, won Hs In 18 owfingw firir season 104-87 over a Tennessee AAl squad that stepped out of its Sophomore Fred Crawford tallied 36 points and Tom Stith collected 33 as the Bonnies whisked to ah 18-4 lead and stretched the margin to 54-39 at haHttme. The closest the losers came^ was a sevenix>int deficit at 88-81 with about five minutes remaining. But two baskets by Stith toppled the hopes of le visitors. Fourth-ranked Bradley reeled to Its third straight defeat, a setback that virtually knocked the Braves out of championship contention, as Drake gained an 86-76 Verdict. Gus G u y d 0 n helped snap Bradley’ home court wiiihing streak of 46 in a row with his 35 points. Chet Walker had 30 lor the Braves. it W h Memphis State, first team lelect-ed for the National Invitation Tour-namentr |»«{^ped tor the postseason classic with a 104-73 triumph over Richmond. The victory was the 16th for the Tigers, who have lost only to West Virginia and Dayton. Lowery JKirk paced the winners with 20 points. Kansas moved back Into a first pUoe He with MJe Kansas State in tile Big Eight Oonference by defeafing Ooloiado 88-65. Wayne Hightower scored XS points lor Knnaas while tenmmate BUI Bridges tallied n aad nabbed It By The Associated PrdM Ohio State shut out all c^poai-tion lor the eighth straight Week today in the weekly Associated Press poll to determine the No. 1 major college basketball team in Ibo nation. It was a 360 clean sweep M the sports writers and sportacaat-ers-voting from coast to ooait AU voting was baaed on throng Saturday, Feb. 4. Winner of 16 straight this year and 21 in a row over a two-year qum, Ohio State pediahed oe RAil Bart 1(4 Bolnr Liku 14 4 14 r -'— 4. Bndl*T 044) 5. CtaclDiMU OSS) S. Nerih CEnUoA (144) T. XiuM atsto U44) a awSwB crtSMMs oM> 9. jam OS4) M. LwiitrlU* (lT-1) ~ letllll — A--- WUtoitft Heart last niglit In a drawing at Detroit to decide Sunday’s open-lag,roiuid opponents tor the nn-ttnnl Catholic Leagne prep hoop tonrnament at the University of Detroit court. I The Rams, who clindied their 1st Sabnibaa OathoBc crown in 1* yean recently, piny n final hinenp tonight nt Ferndnle SL James eoneinding loop play. Huy have wm eight straight and abu Crone Skaters Tumble but after that It'was all Detroit Catholic Central as the Cranes lost umrocks, 61, Mondiw at Cranbrooloin an International mp League hodcey game. Tom Brown scorod Cra^rook’s lone goal. Tbs cranes’ record now stands 5-4-2. The RosevBle five Is ________ ■hare of the Macomb Parochial title aad can take the homm outright by beating New Balllmon St. Mary tonight nt Anchor Bay. Sacred Heart has iroa all nine of Revenge Win Easy Sparked by Bjg Three Lucas Tallies-34 Points, Siegfrifid 27, Hovlicek 22 COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ^ Revenge is sweet. And when the Ohio State Buckeyes take revenge for the one basketball defeat they suffered in 36 games, it makes Custer’s battle at the Little Big Horn look like a game of tiddlywinks. Because what happened to Indl-na Monday night ^^was nothing lort of a rout. -The nation's No. 1 crew at Ohio State left no doubt of that as they loosened up their trigger fingers and uncorked their own pre - Valentine's Day massacre. 10965 over the Hoosiers. It was at Bloomington last year that Indiana stopped short a 13-game Ohio State wiitaing streak after the Buckeyes had already clinched the Big Ten crown. The Bucks then went on to win L strait, taking the NCAA championship en route, and Monday night came Indiana’s turn again on the OSU schedule. Well, in the words of their coach, Fred Taylor, the Buckeyes were "mad.” niere were some clainu last year the Big Ten's best team did not represent the conference in the NCAA tourney, that Indiana was the best. And still fresh in TaylorA own memoiy was the Big Ten records score (122-92) run up by coach Branch McCracken’s Hoosiers over Fred’s first Buckeye team here-two years ago. If the halftime score was any indication, the Buckeyes were hot-under-the-collar-fuming. They had doubled the Hoosiers’ point output, 4623. And with 10 minutes left in the game, the Indiana squad was rapidly "bleeding to death” and needing a 40-p(rint transfusion to overcome s 7939 Buckeye lead. Against most foes Taylor vrouW have opened the gates of mercy at that point and removed his regulars. Not so' last night. It wasn’t until John Havlicek’s' short Jump shot made the score 100-63 that Taylm- called his regulars b^ to the bench and let the reserx^ finish out the minute and 33 seconds remaining. All-America Jerry Lucas, the Buckeyes’ 6foot-8 ‘‘hatdietman,” had scored less than 20 points in each of his four previous games, but Tvhen he ambled benchward Monday night he had 34 under his belt. Breathing hard right behind him was Larry Siegfried with 27 and "Hondo” Havlicck with 32. TTie team had. shot field goals at a .591 clip and outrebounded the Hoosiers at' a 5 to 3 ratio. Anderson Preps for Battle by Writing Letter DETROIT IB - Edwin J. Anderson’s latest maneuver in the battle against a rebel bid tor control of the Detroit Football Co. is E letter to stockholders painting a bright financial picture. The Liou general manager, who stepped down recently as president to "eliminate some of the harassment and personal antagonism," is preparing tor a showdown Tvith D. Lyle Fife, tonnet; president, at the annual stockhold^ meeting Feb. a AndeTOon wrote that the club will > show a profit oi about $104,000, exceeding $100,000 for the ninth straight year iUtn he took over as president 11 yean ago. He also poi^ out that the board of di-lectors already has an>roved a dividend of $5 « fiiare. f J i ’ Mjchiirfi^ i^g, LIT Nips Olivet FONtlAC PRESS. TtESDAV. FKBRJJARV 7. ?l»oi FIFTEEN State Upsets Something, at any rate, whipped the'Spartana Into i[n angry mood and laat night they vented their wrath upon an unauapecting Note Dame team. ^ Coach Porddy Anderson's cagers. in their hotteat effort of a dismal m, broke a home-court winning streak that had stretched over three seasons with an 89-74 drubbing of Notre Dame._____ Notre Dame at home, squeezing out a 60-62 triumph on Jan. 6, 19S9. > It was also only the fifth win of the campaign for the Spartans and—snapped their four-game losing string, which included that 79-n ^ambush af Northern Michigan. Sophomore Dick Hall . the Michigan State attack with points and three teammates Joined him in double figures—Dave Pahs with 16. Art Schwarm with 13 and Jack Lamers with 12. ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER " Michigan State, hitting on 23 of 24 free throws, continue to lay it on in the second half apd. at zme.-time was ahead 4>y ia points, 73-54. Anderson's chaiges’ next start is against Ohto State on Saturday. Purdue, In rolling-to what eventually became an easy triumph, endurediB few moments of anxiety when Michigan chopped a 16-point Boilermaker lead to fotir points, 64-60. “ But Purdue quickly recovered and pulled away to a comfortable margin. Pour oL Michigan's five starters fouled oat in the ragged game in which 56 personal fouls Were called. Scoring Story is Unchanged Chamberlain Continues Derby in NBA NEW YORK (AP» - Week to eek the National Basketball As-*3Ciatei*coring story reads the — V^CTatt- • ------- r Big Ten's Ns’ssenfwlablf in< handsonely is step with Spring ’61 Terr>- Disrhliigpr, leading scorer................ ... DISFhliiger sat oiil aliout eight « minutes of the second half when he committed four foujs. sParta.N WIN'S RACE — Michigan State fwward Jack Earners beats John Dearie of Notre Dame to a loose ball. The Spartans . hdbm zmirtWi^hr^^ ....... .s high (or Michigan “ Wren May Take Over Philadelphia's Stilt continues to lead the scoring parade with 2,108 points and a 37.6 point average. He also is the most accurate shooter from the field, with a .491 percentage, and is No. 1 in rebounds, with a 27.7 average, according to league sfaiistlcs released today. Chamberkun's • closest compet-tor in the scmdng race still is Elgin Baylor of Los Angeles, who has scored 1.931 points for a average, while Oscar RtAertson remains the closest to Wiit in all-around performance. | The icorins leaden; . ^_ 0 ro rr Pie. *»», l. Ch’bTalo. PhUa. 46 Rtl MS i.MS 37 S t. Baylor. L,S U 6M U1 1.S31 3S I 3. Robertson. Ctn,. U S31^-t.S*4 - 30T” 4; -ewytmnt, Cln. S2 6J7 343 1.5S7 25 7 5. Pettit, « I. 566 431 1.563 2? 9 6. Sehayes. Syr. . U 429 SW 1.35S 24 7 7. Ho**lL Det. . . S£ 453 439 U45 24.0 ,1. Shoe. Det. 51 479 336 1.314 22.6 9. Naulle. N Y. 57 513 266 1.294 22 7 'l9.Anil«. paua. .56 444 Ml 1.S69 22 7 I MUD AND SNOW TIRE DISCOUNTS Why Bay a Becay? BeaaS New rint Clata IVwa and Caaatry Type Tread 6.70x15 $10.95 7.50x14 $10.95 Plai tas and aid tire aff ear NO MONCY DOWN United Tire Service in a suit by iPoinI Duel Tight as Drum HART SCHAFFNER A MARX Follow his example and choose your spring suit from our just - received H-S&M collection. Choose from 0 range of models, fabrics, colors and pot-terns that's large and vo-' ried. Enjoy the comfort of lighter, midweight worsteds ond blends in figure - flattering natural lines. tner top Sthrer, was hcHd io oiily one point, and fouled out with 141 mimites left. The Wolverine.s winless in the < « Big Ten and locked in Ihe confer- 'Tn,r>njr.. -^ence cellar. wUl4rv to break their , Counjy_prep Jiafcj^^ Ereer iLamphere i -a^vere sur- ’* losing siring at Minnesota Satur-;*“’'^^“ individual scoring lead pri.ses. Winless Olivet almost pylled one!^^ ^ dropped out of the top *0. New of the season's WintPst upsets'. ^ •'Lonesome Center" W^l „„ ^ ^ „eek arrAson last night. to within; j,„, McDonald. Tom Reed, percentage points of Femdale star^ i-tp hna.iin. m The Comets held fabulous John jUrry Tregoning. He could fake; „f Walerfoid * Bradley fo only 19 points and |over with another booming night iMwrenoe Tech was forced lo at HowTell as Tftgonlng and his| come from behind before |mates try to bounce back fromi Duane Seine of Roseville pulled winning, 74-72. Bradley, the na- ;their iniUal loss against strong'®'*'*^ f^m idle Lapeer buddies Mon's leading small college jPort Huron. D>ck Schwerin and Tom Connors scorer went Into the game with ... „„i . . ® 44-point game to boost his, a S2.* average, but was bottled •" i areal-leading average to 25.5. Ju-| up by Olivet's collapsing de- i Armada and East « »" M7 *" M qut. Dettreit star Bill Treeskin are I and Stan Tapp of Ings. The latter has averaged others ranging from 18.2 up. The Comets whose winless streak was after getting a total of 25 points IquV ' extended to 42. 14 of them this In a four-game stretch. Oakland county scobino ■ Ui .’ season. The Blue Devils’ record f is now 165 26pointere are Pcmd.i, " ________________ still very much in the running. K>rn»n. st^ j»me» " Neil Kieman of St. James is 21.1. So'^'Kimi -Leader Wins No 8 Mbrian of HbTfy 21, Sin Chii- MccuiiochVBhtint ton 20.2 and Jerry McCulloch. ortS^viS Shrine, 20. Pyles. RO Donderc Pov^I. ClarkKtOQ of misery " " ‘ ChUton, BO I ■' Culloch, Bhi__ .... incbtrd. ^snbrook Unbeaten Materials won its 8th S decision Monday night in the Pon-; - . ______ tiac YMCA Industrial Basketballj The past week was one of misery League by trouncing Tech Qub.; for several usually reliable scorers. geArfieii’ arovc» . ;ie 363 M.3 II 167 11 14 3» 16.4 10 iK 16.3 16 156 151 79 50 i 7 game behind the league leaders (PGH) 4, Mike Reed (St. FredI w'ith « 24-21 victory over the Kiernan 10, Bob Bliss (ROSMt 3, «»»., ( - - II«wks. In other league games, Brore Btilings and Art 'Tregenza *1 'So Is J . Matenal Control defeated Coach.KHIIIsr 16 combined, Bob Stas tW.’ county abk^ ^mno .38-17. amt the Crazy Eights d.)wned Bloomfield I 5,Tim Burt (Avon) H. 8otn«. Ro$evtiie : r ? 3” 25? the Court Jesters, 24-17. iJ?rry Matteson (Madison) 3, and connor'S J’o ISi - - - - — ------ !Tr«ub, Armada ................340 ll's iTroeskto, K. Detroit . . . . . 9 164 18.3 iPerklna. Imlay City . 13 181 15 GRAND OPENING -- F«bruatpy 7y43-9 HOLLYWOOD RESTALRAMT Cor. Orchard Lake and Telegraph “Drop in and see Pontiac's Newest Restaurant, specializing in fast and finest foods" We Serve Complete Line of Short Orders FE 3-9265 GRAND OPENING COUPON (Good for Feb. 7-8-9) ys gm full size OiSc HAMBURGERS ^ ►- (Good with this coupon only) ^ Curb Service “Open 24 Hours Dally’’ Carry Out Service 18 Schools Participate It city Fitness Meets Being Held I Lockwood! Mllllnston See Our Windows ,1 The* Pontiac Recreation Depart-".jg, I ment is conducting a Physical Fit-' ness District Meet for 5th and 6lh grade boys from 18 elementary schools in Pontiac this week. After 10 weeks of physical fitness programs on an after-school basis at their respective schools. SAGINAW at LAWRENCE 272 W. MAPLE—BIRMINGHAM Open Friday Night Until 9 STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC SylvaftBoosfr THE Joeb FAMILY Norid’s most complete jine of 4-wheel drive vehicles! Lead at Huron Open 7 i.m. to 9 p.m. daily Sunday 6:30 to 5 V KUHN mo WASH the boys will meet at four districts to fake part in six different events. The results are based on endurance. The boys a!re divided Into two classifications. Class A for 11-12; , year olds making up the 6th grade, Huron Bowl Qassic leader Sylvan' and Class B for 9 and 10 year olds Center continued to sail along with making up the 5th grade. a comfortable lead as it won a 4k * j match from fourth place Pfeiffer’s District No. 1 held yesterday Beer. Syiv^’s balanced seeing !Crofoot, had Crofool, Webster, Cen- tral and Bethune schools participating. District No. 2 is being held to^ay at McCarroll with Owen, We-ver, McCarroll, Aicott and Wisner schools. District No. 3 on Wednes- was too much for even a 648 by the loop’s top bowler. Arnie Rcah. Meanwhile, both second - place Auburn Lanes and third-place Calbi Music dropped matches. Montcalm Centre used the Sylvan formula of balanced scoring to take a pair taking part at LeBaron and Dis- (rift tVo. 4 al FrankHn on Ttnirs-, ^ .. , . - . day has Bagtey, Wilson. McConnell | «"« from loser Tom Augclfo. Oakland 'Boom Boom' Boosts Lead MONTREAL (AP)— Montreal’s Bemie (Boom Boomi Geoffrion I returned to National Hockey ;League action with a flourish last week and added to his lead in the for the scoring title. The Canadiens' right winger, who won the point scoring crown in 1954-55 when his teaipmate and rival Rocket Richard had to I on either team hit 600. Fifth-place WestSide Mobil managed two from Mazza's Market, and Pasquate’s Pizzeria took Col-I tier Lanes twice. Mark Bowers 'and Paul Karas were high for Pas-jquale’s with 617 and 605. BiU ifemith [was best for Collier's with _____ r lit the best scoring match of the j night Felice Quality Market won two games from Oakland Coin, Fifteen-year-old Jack Chambers was top scorer for Oakland with 625, followed by bill Bull with a Mike Samardzija Jr. posted 610 for Felice, and Dick Carmi-|chael added ^eFBuiIders scored a clean ep over Stroh's Beer, and Fanrari CMrtrN’iMp* rc-170 ‘Imp’ UtiNty WagM IstwarO Cwrtral‘Jaap’FC-I SO VFHICUS MADt ONLY iY WlUYS A40r0«S These authentic 4-wheel drive vehicles are performance-proved over billions of miles, give extra years of service, command highest resale value. With three power takeoff points, they operate labor-saving equipment like trenchers, snow plows, winches, etc. ‘Jeep’ vehicles have maximum payload capacity, convert waste space into profitable cargo area. AU this, plus lowest initial cost ! OLIVER MOTOR SALES Double Cola bested Sno-Bol twice.{210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 Pontioc, Mich. 6ETTHE WHEELS WITH THE DODGE UN TOP sit out a three-game suspension, had missed six games because of a knee injury. He came back to score three goals and an a three games for a total of 66 points. Geoffrion’s closest rival, Frank Mahovlich of Toronto, collected only three points for a 62.point total. Mahovlich's chances of beating Richard’s record of 50 goals in one season dimmed as the big Toronto player managed IN MAVERICK HONG KONG Sumlay Evenings 7:30 P. M. ^Wednesday Evenings 7:30 P, M. (oorlM lewlen-. n*,*,. 1V«m Ocoffrlm. UaetrMl J: Sirius'^ f. Batiitmlc. New York G A ris. Hove. Detroit Clese’^hil ra 1960 lunins MEicuiTS live Ur to $900 Wilsea Aito Silei, be. TRANS TROUBLES? SAVE MOYEY at Reliable Transmissioii Co. 41 IV. PARKE ST. FE 44)701 POMTIAC THIS WEEFS SPECIAL I TS-'S? rciJ-O-lbtic S' connm 79 1^5 WRITTEN 90-DAY GUARANTEE ON ALL WORK ' f I I V/ J- I 1 A/.',- /.- ' / SIXTKKX THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUKSDAY, t>^KBRUARY 7, 19ffl Crant Kennedy at Crary Junior HijiSoWf iWide Authority Parents and friends OU, AOAM-I REAUZEO FOR 1H6 R«?ST VM£-HOW WRONG IT WAS. IWftS , GOING TO PUT'THEM BACK . By DK'K WIfiST , WASHINGTON (UR) - Ab several hundred thousand social historians already have ob-• served, it’s s chai^mf world we live in. Almost everywhere you look, the status is rapidly unquoing. This U paiUcvularly true in Washington, which has a somewhat rootless population and is more responsive than most citlek to the shifting sands of time. 1 a year ago, for la-stance, I compljeid a piper on status seeking In the U, 8, capital. It told how fed- | eml employea at four levels 4 of the govenunent eouM- be I recpgniiei,by their status sym-' e\’er this list recently and I found that it already is out of date. The advent of the Kennedy administration has introduced a whole new set of status symbols that need to be Identified and catalogued. NEW CATAUHiUE — I have decided that the best way to approach this task is to classify v^ous symbols under generalized headings and then denote which which are "out. ’ — EDIJCATION; Harvard degrees are "in.” Johns Hopkins other aervloe academies are "way out.” NE10HBORHOOD8: George- town Is "In ' In a big way. Spring Valley is "out." The Virginia suburbs are “in" but the Maryland suburbs are "out." ATHLETE’S FOOT ’IN’ MEDICTNE; Male doctors are "out." Women doctors are "in." Back troubles are "in” but heart ailments are "out." Ulcers can be either “in” or "out" ^-pending on what caused^ihera,-Athlete's-tooMr^iir”"^*^ ART: Amateur painting is "out.” Abstracts^ are "in" but landscapes and portraits are FAMILIES: Small families are "put," big families, " children are “out." VACATION8; Palm Beach and Cape Cod are "in." Newport, Denver and Augusta are "out.” Qvil War battlefields,, particularly In Pennsylvania, a?e WEEKEN8—^oiln ■ tains in Marylands are "out." Horse country in Virginia is n^Ttal That State Grow in This Field* Eyes Electronics Industry )Hastings' George Dean, Age 68, Dies in Hospital HASTINGS ur _ Former city attorney George C. Dean died Monday'in Pennock Hospital. He was 68 and had'retired three SWIM.MING; Is "in" it it's EAST LANSING A Michigan manager for the Ford Motor Co. |yoa« ago from a law practice he; done in an indoor pool. Quail- State University professor says that unless Michigan develops an electronics Industry, it will lose Dr. Lawrence J. Giacolefto. MSU electrieal enginectring professor, said the indusbyr^is finding a growing number of uses for semiconductor devices on automobiles. Olaoolette, former electrooirs 3 Applications to Be Considered scienttflc laboratory, explaim«d a jl^ad seived at Hastings since 194.T. i shooting is "out." Kneebends seml4«ndurtor as one of several ' 'l>can practiced in Lansing be-{ "in." Touch football is so far Hinall electronk- devices employ- fore moving to Hastings,__________"in" il'A'aui.!', . tag-the conductive properticu of sUlron, germanium or similar materials to ronirol eurrcnl In ■certain speclflc ways. The. Iran-sistor is a semleonduetor. He estimated that auto manu-j faCturers spent S5.65 million on semi-conductors in 1960 and that the figure will jump te *14.8 mil-' lion in 1961, to $46 miUion in 1962, and to at least $78 million by 1970. He said; “Most of this money is going to ‘ I states on the East and West coasts. Pori RrtrrrW 'Manufacturers developed in those Jt-fi ilCTL. XJUUZU [areas mainly because of ouUtand- ...... ing university research programs At least thrre applicants lor Wa- j electronic^’ terford Township recreation director will be considered at the 7:30! p.m. recreation board meeting. ■ * ♦ * There will be a vacancy for the position March 1. when present Director Thomas Belton leaves foi Austin, Minn., where he will be recreation director. The development of semiconductors could lead to electricity-driven cars, with power generated by gasoline engines, and even ali-electric cars, he said. Optimists to See Film "Hunting in Alaska," a film, be shown at the dinner .meeting of Waterford Township's Lakeland Optimist dub tonight at 7:30 in the Old Mill Tavfern: New. members have been urged * * * ! to attend and be at the club Beltwi will make a recommenda-ings every Tuesday evening, tion that the Fashion Your F Club receive more funds, and the; new constitution for the Civic Chorus group will be presented for ap-j proval. The budget cemmltteo will present a report for lNl-<2. Paid for by tbe township board of education, the budget must firat be approved by Hi recreation department board. Irwin Greer of 5752 Southward! St. will be presented with a Recreation Certificate of Merit fromj the National Recreation Association! for IfToutstanding years of service' [ennox Is Chairman of Democratic Club George E. Lennox, candidate for the 18th Congressional District Democratic nomination last August, has been named chairman of the Royal Oak Democratic Club. Other offic^ra elected for the, coming year were; John E. Kro-nenberg. first vice chairman; Mrs. Jean Priebe. second vice president; Seymour Devereaux, recording sec- ^ retary; Leonard A. Wilcox Jr,,| treasurer; Wesley Meyers, ser-! geant at arms; and Harry A. Me-; Affee, trustee. Q. Our dog howls when be does this Indicate It is good or bad for hhnT Vivian Prtmoiec, WiUowwiek, Ohio. A. A dog’s sense of hearing is more acute and covers a much widet; range of sound than ours. Many high pitched sounds, inaudible to the human ear. can be picked up easily by d dr ♦ i This is the principle behind the so called "sUent" dog whistle. There is no doubt that many musical instruments, which sound beautiful to us, have a ja«rir« effect on _dogs. dr lt/ha.s been proven that cows and pigs, thor^hly enjoy the sound of good music, but dogs aren't known to get any lift out of a sympho^- Although the musical instrument may be won’t hurt your dog. £lGHT££)f THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1961 i Business an Compacts Dig Into Total Sales Grain Market Takes | MARKETS IMarket DrjftS; Shdrp Turn Down Th« Mkm\m are to? pric«i/% •• r rsCorrection Seen Take Record 33.4 Pet. Out of 368,913 Units in January The foUowing are top pricei I cov’ering sales of tooally grown CHICAGO (AP> — Heavy WHh^ I»w1uc# by growers and sold by turned the grain futures market them in wholesale package lots, sharply downward today in early :Q**^tions are furnished by the activity on the board of trade.iDetroit Bureau of Markets, as of' NEW' YORK The stock mar-i 'S'umerous grain contracts w«e oB fYiday. one cent a bushel or more and soybeans slipped well over three Detroit ProduCB cents in spots on old crop months. \ — mrm ^ a»rlt». DcUciottt. ka. Brokers said the pr^re ap-JJgJJ parently was mamb’ profit taking Appi». M»cintoUi. b«............. and was expected in some degree, at least, in \iew of the fairb broad bmu. topped.'! general gains of the presious ses- ^5SlI«, m mt SKMl. Corrot,. loppM. IM Some of the iiquidation in the. LfST'dS*'tSSi soybean pit was linked again with root.*Scta* the trend in ^bean oil and so>-bean meal which opened steadv to aflSt vf*bii’ DETROIT tJV-Compact cars con-Itlmied to take a larger slice of domestic auto salea as total January sales slipped to their lowest jfor the month sm«Ti6f7 Ward's Automotive Reports said. although a number of issues en-' 7*** statistical agency said total countered speculatb-c demand. January numbered some Losses of fractions to around a'^ ”^ ^ 275 in January of 1960 and 340,688 Scouts Mark 5lsf Anniversary TBCKTSBLKS *3 5 Doint amomr kev stocks outweighed *" JWtuaiy oi laou ana 3SU.6W AT Plwtot» »» «ider moves either way were made .■ * * * , Romw Catholic Wshop ,, .. among more speculative issues. recession year of 1958, of Gonaives, Haiti, was ordered : I M The market was down fnmi the ‘****^” cars with! from his diocese by the local 15 start as it continued its correction ““ ««WI»ional selling day. military commander after dem- flf of the six-week advance. Analysts! Compact car. took a record bishopric’s i.n said the list was due for some SS.4 per rent of all sales. Ward'- '^‘“'eliouse. 15; consolidation. At the same time,! 9,688 in Clinton Valley Five million, one hundred thousand strong, American Boy Scouts this week are marking the 51st ail- ment in the United States. Unit celebrations will rule tocally, starting today and running through Feb. 13. . Char- I. BiteS. < . Botaost., . -------- HothouM. I . ,JIuiJiaciL...HaUu . Xu»»h ButUnii Reports that some opposiuon is sovua Hubbsrd.' ? shapii^ up in Congress to rushing ’’’“Cnip*. mppwi. ihi. throt^ any farm legislation also Prt„Ur« was underetood to haw a little cOUltry and tggs teartsh influence In Uk trade. ocTaorr rbiLTar ],gv.>...>vi.uawi.. ni uir Bonn: miKT, Nuo, Up frOOl Sl-i pCf ceOt In ^ . }»the general economic news was December and M per ce«t |n [SEC COTIl DiainS i n'uninspiring. : November, In- ^ Meets. oWs. motora. aircraft Adverse weather In the East wuirA^CtinSt jGSSei f I K missiles, building mnterials and ,blamed for a sharp fall off in sales | , titet, one of four districts In the Ointon Valley Osuncll. Of these 971 aie Cub Scouts. 780 Boy Scouts, and 77 Explorers. Working with the youths are 578 adult volunteers or "scouters. ” SCOrrEBS SUPERVISE They help in supervising the. 21 cub packs. 24 Scout troops, and Explorer units of the district. As 1961 began, there were 52 jScout unjoin the district, two jmore than the previous year, i Active- in CHnten • Valley X6Gh-cil activities (the four districtsi -ttatlonal hiversary of the Sirengthen America actw. Counts..’’ *1^ actual date of the founding t.RR b^ 4^ the Boy Scouta of America was on Fe6: «, MIO. SMuta taking part, and Highlight of the PonUaC District's scouting activities this yetu* will be the annual t spring Scout-0-Rama at Pontiac Northern High School. Many Scouts will be ret^gntaed ir ‘having earned the 50th anniversary achievement award, a permanent patch created especially for scoutlng’s Golden Jubilee Year in I960. , electrical equipments derUned. the final week and a hM^InVeStHlGIlt FUTIl ■ scouters. LOS ANGELES (API-The Se-! Traditional Boy Moul Sabbath Pontiac Boy Dies After Slip on Ice d«r service to others and tak« part In last fall’a Get-Out-the-VDle Stalo Senate Urges Probe of Norge Move Gram Prices , hkv» „i CBICAGO OBAIff ________ v:fSfcr.t. LANSING ig^An'urgent Investigation into the announced transfer of the Norge refrigerator production operation from Muskegon to Fort Smith. Ark., was urged today in the state legislature. A resolution adopted by the Senate cjUs.lQr .* snfeet tix»man com-mfitee with subpoena power to determine what can be done to reverse or ease the effects of the company's decision. I Declaring that the planned re-I location of the Norge operation Iconititutes "economic disaster" for rm MU’. .»>* May . * ijw IM',: t KH P«r---------„ ... . l.n% U> DtlrtUt. laoM ijiMi a«i>. Drugs, airlines, nonferrous !<>I January. Sales in the last 10 metals and fheniicalB pere most- da.vs of the month were calculated ujs (APi—me Se-i c,v»uraiUl Eoniiac hov Joev' ly higher. at 14,499 per day -lowest in curities and Exchange Commis-' Genci'al ElectiK,was o« a T" "if « ^Wlnn of 6(0 Vatencta «fd£d|“"’'^ Vai-d s said new car Inventories hsefnfnts for an investment firm j hunday at ,, c,- j™.nh Htwoltnl ****** L'lW’S, «^ntencing continued in the ^ Srim*^ I from injuries suffeied S « " <» « >1 iSLleT's^' 1,.», 11,h. 000 units, or a^t 69 days' supply IJes-^l promised to “^nd mama' ,,hcn hP slipped on ice and struck ^ economic blow indicates an fit nr«MUbnt cakHinra fntaiK TVa all. A phPrlc PVPrv mnnih ___ __________ __ head. . m 7-Bf, prices psid and Brunswick, the latter involved, *” run’oes about some new acquisi-| wmtinued to advance, both I inventory was set last Aug. 1. 2 Road Projects Being Surveyed M Whlte-arsde « jumoo .<-.i eiers j., wS brwnb^ruu T i*mK' 4“**“““ «-•# a^I^hng about a pomt. 5^ ^rniSSlm M, Certain-Teed took to the wan>ath M ; k* 31 again, spurting more than 2. Trading attention swung to some of the lower-priced issues. Avco, ‘■'',*»tock Electrical & Musical Industries., aOFjROrr. 7 lAPi___CaUI*_ a b .e . taUbie 700 quUuy o( tioufhtcr ^ ^ P ^ Kayser-Roth-were uiisb'ra“VrVd/."irii‘m“M and fractionally higher. ■ Umitetf Ahowicc of good grAdc; Among sharper losses were: . —- vnrmally -k—. .... . Livestock “bout 4. Coming Glass 3, and . Texas Instruments more than 2. sieeb bifj ■ w chuc. i(M4 ib « huge gainer recently AA59 Widening, Xway published news of its new adhe- VA/Arir P--?- In 10A-) •'>1 »utt/rf ?3OS-1,K niortar. dropped more than a work to begin m ' on profit taking. Mackifi Savs jwcljhU o»’»r *00 lb«. Uc blibcr: iwoi MacKie Days ’„i^ ,5®, New York Stocks 11* state Highway DepartHtanti^ has started making land surv-eys w m. isos-^ for two projects in Oakland Coun-jveuer^-8«ubit ‘fo?fu^Vtfbd!^oMiM ty. State Highway Commissibfterl*,^^”^j?oc®3*"- ^ .t*’■ John C. Mackie announced today.'iiTwfiilw * The projects. Mackie said, be built during the highway de- --- partment's 1962-67 highway con- « stniction pr^m. ^ OpClTtOn GlVeil Projects on which survey parties $3-Million Order have started work include; . _ wideotag of M mueo of MM *or Electronics .*» KtiMy Hay 0 Braoecott (uuy : Alcoa ■ Am Alrlln I Am Cvar J?d, Met Cl Motors TelATel ‘ 73 1 Kresge, 86 23« KfMer . . 44 4 LOF OUu K, j-'k? * m Lockta Alrc It 9 Lone a Cam «3 < Lorlllard 9* 3 Lou a Nath The government agency says the perennial master of ceremonies, adapting his famed telephone monologue in the radio commercials, suggested that "Aunt Gus-sle should Invest Uncle Phtl’i life" insurance in the firm he wai advertising. Spot Body and Plane on Great Lakes Ice The boy had undergone surgery >r head Injuries. He fell whik playing in a neighbor’s yard. Joey' was a klndergartner at (THICACX) (A-The wreckage of a missing plane and the body bf the pilot were found on the Lake Michigan ice today about four The SEC named Jessel, Bever- j miles off Navy Pier, ly Hills Security Investments andi ★ ★ w three of its officers as defendants! A Coast Guard plane from six-count civil in junction, Trh verse aty, Mich., spotted the complatat filed in federal court wreck-"Spread all over the ice.” Monday. spokesman said. [ The huge icebreaker Mackinaw' crunched out to the scene to pick^ up the body. | Service and burial will be Thurs- a A ,, day at 1 p.m. in Rainelle, W. Va. The pilot, Peter Dekalaita, 16; .Mark Twain ttchoul. His fatker Is an orthopedic technician at Becker Orthopedic Appliance Co., Birmingham, amt his mother Is a teacher in the Waterford Township Sc^ Dtatrict. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. The boy was one of four of the Gwinns. SATURDAYS Tax Cut Hopes Grow Dismal; Speaker Sam WASHINGTON (IT*I) Speaker Sam Rayburn said today that the outlook Is "dismal” for ■ general tax cot now. After a breakfast meeting with Of suburban Cicero, was the ^n>-v[^0|g|f^Q|^0 TOWPShip person aboard the single-engine plane. Dekalaita was a copilot for Capital Airlines. Home Gutted by Fire OPBM ■ Mick Trk from two to five Imnea from Armaiu^ C< --- . Bocta, Air ■ Miy O atr W'Ullanu Lake Road to Ellia- JACTvSON (JV-A $3-mUlion de^'lUiB beta Lake Road in Waterford contract for electronics worklBoha ------------ TowMhlp. Two survey pnrtlea '^“s been awarded Sparton Corp.,t^,®„ **" are wnrklag on tkJa project, j^obn J. Smith, president of thei|;|'* w*™ which will be placed under con- jcotniMny, announced today. audd co ! I The contract will result in the||S^‘H jhlfing of 150 more employes, at^ bf* M59 proposed freeway ^^ ^'"eement.spokesman said. Grand Trunk Railroad on Pon- . govrhmient order I* Tck. « ^ tine’s east side to Squirrel Road '"r •‘hH-fronIcs equipment. Includ ch« a ob east of Interstate 75 freeway. This, ■ntisulnnarlne equipment and project, to be placed under con- TiSfnimeni landing ly,- ' curk ^mp tract In 1963, is being surveyed icSSf pijiiS , , now because it requires major in-! Sparton's electronics division is cSa“ terefaange were 175 and M69. will .in Jackson. intersect. A survey will be madej TV company announced a total go"t' later for the M59 freeway eastiof J4 million in new contracts. to Utica in Macomb County. |The additional $i million was a ---------------- ^ j commercial order for its Allied Bill Seeks Registration Division in Detroit. 15 T Mats H 13 9 Minn n 16 Appointments liatGMC Truck Marquette to Get 100 New Homes for AF Base ! Fire which apparently burned! j undiscovered for quite a while! I.vmciday guR^^^ ft., Uongdon home at 1524 Di^-den Road in Metamora Township. No one was home at the time le 1 MucUir Br . 73.1 NitBlie 14 3 NitCiihR Nat Dilry , U.I MatLcad 1 HTCiatril . 1 No An Ay .. r Nor Pie I NorauPW encourage businesH to expand. He apparently waa referring to Kennedy’s request to study meth-}i;i ods of altering the tax atruc- Moseiy, Moore, King,, •“ ‘*7^ *® fl* Surrott and 2 Others Get New Posts Rayburn las ask^ if a tax cut was under 'unsidcralTon; "It is by n»e,” the Texas Dem- s rai replied. But he added that aw* •when revenues are down, wis- DETROIT U' —Ben Levinson,. lorn would not snggest a tax iPresidem of Franklin Mortgage ./j-rording to U^er County unless in some areas it would jCorp. of Detroit, said today he busCarter Scramlm, the; arranged financing for a one-mil-!*’'®''*’ *‘“•^*‘‘1 >" lion-doUar hoM«ng development!*^*'^ through the house burningr which wUl provide 100 new homes «dj“cent bed-l in Marquette. Levinson said the project would be aimed primarily at providing housing for civilian employes at the K-I Sawyer Air Force Base near Marquette. .9:15 A.M. TO 12 NOON Stop in Saturday morning or anv w«k day from 9:00 a.m.to 5 p.m. for a friendly talk with a registered representative and learn how we can assist you in your investment goals. Evenings by appointment. • Orders executed on all exchanges and-over-the-counter • Tax-Free Municipal Bonds • Corporate Bonds • Systematic Investment Platts • Mutual Funds • New Securities Issues I. dollars abroad. Watling, Lerchen & Company M2 Ponitac State Bank Bldg., Pontiac, Mich, FE 2-9276 III 2”i. 19 4 Pun A W Air is,* Three Plead Guilty ; Before City Judge Pl^RR Ou 94 7 Phrlpi D S7 PbUeo PweGLMtl* of Mortgages on Autos ^ . r • i i i LANSING »^A bill requiring DGiS IBmi ifl JOCKSOn I CurUi Pub , Deere Det Bdii Dti C Sms , t Republic 8U «i S M4 The appointment ol J. Branch S:i Moseiy as national fleet sales DCIUIC UIV JUUUU > several hundred acres in three •t t manager and Ralph 0. Moore as^ {separate subdivisions near ”'rMCTn‘l^n“rn*?eh ^^ Three men pleaded guUty to re-! b«e. and wUl be available by M j touse, general truck sales manS- ^ ^ g Cas-ICni Tfiflr fra nAtmUn " •* « Rochester; William M |3et 16SIS to Develop I walls. The rest of the six-rt frame was extensively damaged "By smoke and fire, be said. The Metamora and Hadley fire departments brought the blaze u -ij .w i. -1. .. I. 1, control in less than an hour He said the houses will be budt after being summoned by a pass-, lag motorist. j No estimate of loss Is available. Cause of the blaze also is unde-termined. 5:? He also appointed Hugh M. Sur- JJ-| ratt to the newly created post of 47:3'national manager of CMC Truck car mortgages to be registered 1 with the secretary of states office Oil LArCGIlV LhSrflP has been introduced in the StateLUILCIIf VallOiyC Senate. Dou* Aire Dow Chem DuPont ---- Alf L ■LY. 8. J* t 5.- »7 •8? 5:J factory branches. Other < Ei-Cetl-O Bincltlr Socony Sou Sporry Rd . • ager at St. Lonls; Robert A. * Merx, tone manager at Portland, 3. Ore.; and Arthur P. King, administrative assistant to the gen- Butler. 60, and N.:™„ V„K,™,,H 32»Iiock.i5gj.fg| g|gjJ [)g|g(.}Q|. haven St., Auburn Heights, admitted receiving five stolen television sets f(3und in their possession. _ The mea.sure. ,n- ry \v: Greene. R-Grand Rapids, Ford Mot M7, Std Oil Cil . 99 1 amnian .Shirley Davis, a 46-year-old m 3 ltdT™i^"Nj "tTT filed bv Sens Per 'ccy metal finisher from Pontiac,|om filed by Sens. Per- PrUonlgS Oen Muii Motorv - .i) A Ct Otn Tim« . Oen Tlrt . ‘ Prod Std 011 Oh and Haskell Nichols, R-Jack^ !^'!,:''*•{I''*''® •on, rrtjuiros registration within ^ «*»- ® N. a. rented a 1960 automobile from the 747 6»llt k Ct 34 9 Tenp oa> 43 TMSca 3* 4 Tex O 8ul >»l Textron «, Tlmk R Bei Trin W Air Eugene M. MaltroR of 345 Willow Tree Lane, Avon Tbwnship, has become a certified public accountant aRer passing the State Board of Accounting examination. Maltrott, a graduate of Michigan State University, is the non of Mrs. Maynard Maitrott of 312 Linwood St., Rochester, and the ... , ilate Mr. Maitrott. He is employed! • • trucking industry, Mosley brings JutiK* Maurice E. Fimtegan will jnonnudear material, the ^^toraic by.the Ernst and Ernst accounting .33 5! more than 20 years of varied GMC science the trio March 8. energy authority said, but will be ft„n Detroit. Widely known throughout the U**®^*® The TV sets were stolen from retail stores in Pontiac and Battle Creek, police said. Altogether there were "13 TV sets and two stereophonic record players missing in LONDON W - The British government announced today It will soon touch off a number of underground and underwater explosions to develop methods of exposing clandestine rtiiclear weapons tests. The explosions will involve only Eugene Maitrott Passes Exam, Becomes CPA loan, m«l Iban -Bin, Ih, if they had a free anil clear title ! Police said Davis went on a! drinking spree and claimed some-’ Michlone stole the car;— ----- ERTUBMENT rOR BIDe by Firm as 'Salesman' Mlchlnn. ubui I M n u ._____________ Sir. ypbruirr 31. INI. it thi ofllei of thi Boird ol Cducitlon, BlMinllcId HlUi. Mlchlnn. — plici all bldi I Beparm, propouli ' itrThomai of 2652 West Wal-ton Blvd., Pontiac, has been named "salesman of the year” lor The Diversey Corp. East Central Division. according to Bland B. BuRon, vice president in charge of sales. **SS ------ _ Baitovir and Plni Lak< Elemratary Bchooli. Buc Bid C—Elcctiiril work for addl-tloni^to aatOTtr and PUii Lik« Elt- Propoiali Buit bt on (onni turntihed It th» arehltw.t and .bi accoapai----- p» a bid bond or cirutlod chick In anwunt ol fire per eontUOj Ol tht propoial lubnUlted. , Plani ind ipeclflcattoni miy b« ob-tilned on ind ifwr Tueidor. Pebruiiy r INf. It thi otrico of tho irchltect. TirapiU-MicMihon. Auoclitlt, Inc. WMdwird AreniH;. Bloomfield A Divewy representative since i 1948, Thomas shares the honor with the top salesmen selected from each of the company's 10 divisions. > the nraount of 139 90 _ - . jiltled ni n dipoilt for •och Mk of plins nnd ipocUleitloai.i MUM to bo refunded upon return of plini and ipeclficatloni In (ood eon-dIUon within ten ilOt days of the open-iag of bMs. Accepted bidden win be reoulred to fumlih eattifictory per*----------- " ’ ‘ and tabor and material .1 bond, e •5 J sales experience to 34 9 signment. ''. is.,! He has served as Southern and ;; “ j!easfem regional sales manager ! !! 44i|during the past five years. Before : 4oil(hat he managed GMC’s Kansas 111 City and Atlanta zones. nturei iftir Electrk Equlpmnit On.. Baldwin Rubbtr'Co. .. .....1T.3 ij Onil Likea Chemical Co. . 1.9 3 Michloan Swmteee Tubo Co.. 11.1 14. Manufacturinf Co.' Bhitterproot Qlaii Corp. MOORK JOINED IN '56 I Moore joined the division in 1955 —n ». , *** administrative assistant to the WMt* El "* 49!3 general sales manager. His General K!’.'*' Mol __4||ilet6rR .serv ice dates back to 1937. • but he left the corporation for Ml two years to serve In the office of 'JJ Vthe secretary of Defense in Wash-n • ington, D. C. Formw Portland zone manager, SuiriR came~ to^GMc Truck in 1947. He has had wide experience in zone sales activities, serving as manager of the San Antonio zone years ago. Sheldon serv’ed In nnUonnl fleet d'llkad DOW-JONES I P.M. AVBBAOES 39 fndi. Ml 93 off 4.11 30 Ralli 141 .n off 911 mMufacttiTPs chemical cleaning compounds for dairy farms,-dairies, institutions and the foodi processing and metal indmrtries ' Volume to 1 p.m. 1.1M.M9. Philco to Provide Team as Mercury Monitors is: . 117.1 m.T UO.l 1 131 i im 110 4 ] ......... U0.0 a INO-Ol low . PHILADELPHIA (It-The Philco }^ ' Corp. will provide a 16-man task! ---- 99.9 147.1 1010 »9.l . chanical systems in America's Mij^higOfl Construction propoiali aubmtttcd ahall rtmaln jProject Mercuiy. designed to IN/vllnr Vnlumm D*«m • p«rio*^ thirij^iMu^ Mta weniiiBiiy wend Ti-sifflrg-eran^pin tjoiig voiume Rises orbit with an astronaut aboard. tale before gettuig Ma new as-aignmeat. His M-jrear GMC background includes broad tone Held sales experience. Merz joined GMC in 1947 anil has^em fisiid^aied with zone ^es actiyitlea in St. Paul and. Chicago for the past ll years. King has been business management manager for the division since 1954. He is a 25-year veteran of General Motors. a mi atf State Spending Exceeds a ,aa. Income by $60 Million LANSING (fi—State Treasurer .^nford A. Brown repcHlt that the income into the Sate Treasury for the week of Jan. 30 totaled $19.5 ----------------- .mri 0 r«]Kt any or all blda In '"tfinein'"”'"------— BOARD or EDUCATION --------d BUIa The firm announced Monday that the .National Aoronailtics and Space Administration had awarded its Tecfi Rep. Division here h contract to provide the 16 men. DETROIT (ft-Dollar volume of Expenditures for the week VMrtnirfimi r*rbntrfl/»fa Im ! . o ___tile week. construetjon ctmtracti in Michigan last year was 4 per- cent above 1959, F. W. Dodge C proposltton was probably poor in arithmetic In school, - ------- —too . . . A horrified father who S24.6 going for highways, and |18.6|watched his daughter select a *"j^.*w aid. costly wedding gpwn gasped; "I Despite the heavy expenditures, don’t mind giving her in marriage has a balance of H8.9 - but does ghe have to be gift-"" I wrappedT” Earl WUacm. million, Bkuwn said. OLYMPIA PRiaSION PORTABLE TYPEWRITER Exclusive Authorized Dealer FOR INVESTMENT SECUMTItS^ and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL C. J. NEPHLER CO. 4- I lAZELLE AGENCY, he. All Forms JONES TYPEWRITER SALES ond SERVICE 10U W. HURON ST. of Insurance a ' $04 Paslhc suit Bask BMg. a 18 8-8172 Pushes Program THE I’ONTIAC Would Allow Private Pension Funds to invest in VA AAortgoges By Dick Turner Washington (upn-chairman (Min E. Teague, D-Tex., of the Houae Veterans Ounmittee today pushed a new housing plan which he said could pum^ hundreds of millions of dollars from pension funds into homes for ex-service* Teague made the proposal the first order of business tor his committee when it organizes, probably next week. He hoped to shove It through the House promptly. The Teague bill la designed fp/ make II paaslble, for the fliV time, lor pension funds operated by nnioos, management and pub-employe groups to Istveii tvtty In HSihe inortgages. The Veterans Administration would guarantee 100 per cent re-J payment. Interest of 4'i per cen<( would be paid. And, to make the plan more palatable to the pen-aion (^lerators, the Veterans Ad-' _ _ hamite .11 p..|£ye Appointment iM| .,/Jp, * * * ,. of Review Board ■ wulC The agency would pass the mon-; AP Pkstsfsx VlTJia J.S TSROWN Rev. John H. Teeter, vicar Of the Episcopal Church of the (lc»d''Sfi?phertj in and vice president of the NAACP in that community, was forcibly ^ send ^ unemploymenL.. ejected from Corporation Court in Lynchburg Monday for refusing to abide by court-ordered segregation. WASHINGTON (AP)-Presidenl Kennedy's legislative lieutenants driving to put his plan fori extension of unemployment com-i pensation into effect by mid-' March. They were spurred tcxlay by administration estimates that in the next five weeks Ih^ number of unemployed who have exhausted the benefits provided by present will climb far abov'c the pres-500.600, Kenney’s 'propo.sal would revive weekly benefits for such persons, up to a rhaximum of 13 weeks * * 1, The first part of the job is up.tOj the House Ways and Means Committee, whose Democratic leaders I Wanted Fumali^ 7 ! .... .LAUIBt Would you Ilk* to bolp was ttw incom* 00 • port ttm* I Skaui Brcooi* on AVON r*Br»-•tatillf* *nd icrvio* th* «u*> tomcr> with co*m*Uci and Witt-. rlr> (or th* tnUrt (omUy. ntm. today PE 4-MI or wrllt'DroySo Plain* P O apt 11. LMAL aacKatARf: iONfiXc (trm and* eapabi* attnisn. Writ* Pontiac Pfoaa Bet It. ' LAoiis II Oil" ovi(h.-Tffif-‘ Rhone Sur«ay. part ttm* weyS. 4 hour* a day. Monday thr*u|h Friday Salary |i p*r hour. Small o((Jw. Etc. worfclni con. ditloii* Saptrtaac* nccaaaary will train. Por fppotatBMnt U0THIR8 AVIRAOE ~tl.H >lli hour whil* children art la KhM. No car needed Plaaaut work. Phone OR i-0361 after I p.m. MlDDLiAOSD OR ELTUHaV WOM-an (or babyalttlng tad lltht hoaaework. 4 daya a week, n legislation to the House for action within a week after hearings begin Keb. 15. * * it , Only the financing andnge-ment.s are expected to arouse much controversy at the hearings ^Kennedy proposed ^ Mcollyc”^ Voorheea-siRlc Puncrat Homa, MIIX8KLL FEB 4. 1941. BABY ; Ouv, ]5W Richmond; helbvcd^- i (ant tra of Donald^and Margery^ »1*aell; d«r grandcon of Mrr Ouy Metxsell and Mr*, charle* Robinson Funeral aervlce will be held Wednesday. Feb g. at 10 a^^m. (roai the Huntoon Funeral Heme with Rev. -wm»urh SchuUe officiating Interment In Oak Hill Baby Ouy will He In atau at the . -JHUUaSB .tHMMl Jismt.,...,.______ ■ ---- • 19«1, WNIPRED van Uke: age U; Donald and lu- MOTHERS. GOOD_______________ work, very good pay. Ho experience Queltty "SANDRA" _Product*. Ml 4-gMS. ______■ secretary ilUST BE ClSOD typl*i Neat and good peraonallty Will tram right party. Real e*Ute and Insurance off.ce. PE 4-0947 (or Inierrlew.._____ _ ’ ' REPINID LADY WHO NEEDS PfR- dder'ly^ couple!” live” ln,'”4IO*'a _we«k^MA07OO.__ _ WOMEN - TRAIN P»R A'lRUNas Bee Northweat School* ad uilder Claatlflcatlon 10. tnatruetlon* - PERRIN,_________ I7M Beverly. S dear mother c gene Perrtn i .JeanI Hubbel: ---- . ,*,l*B,lj.«IA*iaTJlk»VAf<>tOI ‘Jimmy I.S conscientious, haid working, and a money lavtr, but 1 guess that’s bc'tler than no steady at all!” WAITRESS WANTED. APPLY f Big Boy Drive In. 3400 Dl> Highway ervice will be held T St 5Vg per cent interest, with down Vyment required and re-; y^e three-member BositI of Wment stretc^ over 30 years. the year l%l is ex- .b'-ipected to be re-appoinicd tonight c^mraiss.ipp.. The 1960 rhemS^rT" , F. Spfpce. secretary- cRa^ff^*-aBBB»8ee,:_i£^ -CU> Cc would operate wherever pnvalf'^L GI finaheing was not available the fed- cral government advance funds for the extra jiayments to all i states which choose to participate. Then the has*, of the lax on employers’ payrolls would be in-' RO Attorney Is Asking i^^**®*^ *3,*)oo to sisoo max- . - jimum per employe. The increase. Two Sent to Jackson for Store Break-In _ 1m Woman's Slaying the Pontiac Manufacturers Association; Cecil Mulllnix, a Pon- Equal Jackson Prison sentences of 2 to 15 years were handed out yesterday to two Pontiac area hers of the board, men who admitted they broke into an Auburn Heights hardware store last month. Taken to Lansing * ;P Attorney Is Asking if A I D I* pTE salespeople, r. needed ^dly, will ”^2K Keal Estate Salesmen It pew and ol Assistant Bookkeeper Women aged 30-39. Experienced In ptyroll and Invoicing. Oood (yp-fng Need* own transportation. SET-UP-MAN • Mu*t have experience on Treub single *plnii1e automatic*. Experience on P and J Turret Lethe, desirable. Cloa* tolerance work ' on aluminum and steel. Paid ' holiday*. Insurance and vacation. —M C MFO C« , IIS Indlthwood Rd^. Lalte Orton.________ SlNdLB IdIDbLE AOED MAN ' (or chore* and odd Job*. More for home than wage*. PE 4-4331 EVELYN EDWARDS rVOCATlONAL COUNSEUNQ SERVICE' Phone FEderal 4-05^ SECRETARY - iSSi, rY-IsM: est Bmploymant, 40S Po Bank Bldg. FE t-9MT. 3107 Caroline St., Auburn Heights, and James O. V'anderver, 22, of 820 St. Oalr St. The psir pleaded guilty to - breakiMf sad eBtering Jaa. it. When poikie stopped their car, which they noticed with a faulty taillight, they found 12 gun.s, including eight revolvers. 30 boxes of ammunition, several hunting knive.s, flashlights, a watch, a dictaphone and several cartons ofi cigarettes. sessed valuation'is to'be reported i '®roier boy friend's wife. Mm. VA/nmon in April, in time for the Oty Com-} CrMbhsw, Si, of In i VTaiClIUlU YVUindll mission to set the 1961 municipil ” “ neighbors and erant of Poreli 2704 for their 1 sympathy " I WOMEN WIT Sent to Prison Injured in Crash Police said the pair adriiittud: breaking into the Keego Harbor Hardware Store, 3320 Auburn < Road, and the Avondale Higii School. Royal Oak Township Woman Sentenced to 10-20 Years Renfrew claims Mrs. La'^'rence, now confined to the county jaij.j was insane at the time of the: killing and could not rcas’on. Mrs. Lawrence, faced the muider charge after she! . . was released last December from Ionia -State Hospital where she' ' -> . ;had spent » months following he 4001 Athen.s " St., was forc'-d o/f he roiH bv killing, Mrs. James Cannon of Royal Oak! Township yesterday was sentenced .to the Detroit House of Cot ! for 10 to 20 years for murdering j her husband last September follow-jing an argument. Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams ilnposed the sentence on Mrs. Canon. 39. of 20867 Beihlawn St. She was convicted ,of. second-degree murder Jan. 24 by a Circuit Court jury of 10 women and 2 men, Cannon, a S6-year-old factw'y worker, was shot five times with 25________ ii“en'i*"?'V:TS43r”"' GENTl.EMEX who are Interested In their future. We art hiring 9 men who 49. sharp and Interuted to nak-Inx at lean 9135 a week. If you are not atebltlous and — —• Internted In learning a ~ ■ ' ui. CiB b' and i *- * OPENING POR _____ REPRESENTATIVE IN THIS AREA SHOULD HAVE DIRECT BELLINO EXPERIENCE AND BE ADAPTABLE TO THE EDUCATIONAL field______ earnings unlimtted under ' HIGH COMMISSION SCHEDULE LEADS FURNISHED EXCELLENT 'VORKINO RELATIONS MUST Have late MODEL CAR BE FREE TO TRAVEL. AND BE BONDABLE WE ARE INTERESTED ONLY IN A MAN WHO WANTS A PERMANENT CONNECTION WRITE OIVINO COMPLETE BACKGROUND RraUME, TO SALES MANAGER. NORTH- . Donetsdn-Johns PraMANENT "POSmON - valw-TtepjrrnSeh!-” .rs*‘i--- Voorhees-Siple '* vadatloD*. hospitallia Ing*. II ;V, with It you ln8tructions--Schoois 10 AIRPORT TRAINEES: TO QUALIPY POR PAY AVERAOINO 9390-1379 PER MO TO START PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE NOT REQUIRED HIGH SCHOOL ORAOUATES. AOE 13 TO 35. TRAIN BY NEW PASTER METHOD FOR AIRLINE CA. REER8 PASSENGER AGENTS. RAMP AGENTS. COMMUNICATION I8T8. STEWARDESSES. MANY OTHERS. BASIC HOME TRAININO ON EASY LOW BUCOET PLANNING THROUGH ONE OP NATION’S TOP SCHOOL ORGANIZATIONS ORAOUATES WILL BE FLOWN 'TRANSPORTATION PAIDl TO NEAREST GROUND SCHOOL POR OPTIONAL JOB INSTRUC-■nON MAIL COUPON POR PERSONAL INTERVIEW IN PRl---- — OBLIGATION; AIRLINE DIVISION hwest Dept. A2-.3.S. Box ?? Pontiac Press N^ME------—--------- Cemetery Lots The first of a series of three' lectures on "The Communist! Revolution in China—Its Back«j. ground and Implications" will given by Dr. Sheldon Appleton, assistant professor--of-area st«d-|-„ , . . at Michigan State University Both men were returned to the Oakland, at tomorrow’s noon county .jail, Wilson to atyait sen-|^^ji„j, Retarded Boy Shows Police Body of Girl yesterday sentenced Chester Knickerbocker of Pontiac to 5 to 15 lyears in Jackson Prison for his part in the burglary of Felice's Market, 238 S. Tel^aph Road, ion Jan. 14. j Knickerbocker, 43, of 1000 Myrtle lAve., pleaded guilty Jan. I breaking and entering during the Outddqi Rink at Mir^e Mile Open to Fublic ! Appleton’s other two talks be-[fore the club will be on Feb. 22 land March 8. Cosponsoring the series arc the Center for Study of Liberal Education for Adults of the Ford Foundation and the MSUO Office of Continuing Education. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP)- A boy who attends a school for j„igj,ttiine. A man accused trf being , the mentaUy retarded led police.hj, accomplice stood mute to the! An outdoor ice Stating rink,l . , , early today to the city dump charge in Circuit Court. He js! opened at the soulheriLend of the Retired MethodISlJjshop where the bluflgeoned body of algwaiting trial. _J__________[Miracle Mile Shoppinfr^ter, Ptiiia AHmcL ----- A, a. be available for use by ^ps at neori AHOCK night through arrangement with' — ribyeaiMrtd girt was found. ~ .* * * ' Hie two men were apprehended The vlrtim, Lmda Faye Wor- by Bloomfield Township police ley, stepdaughter of an unem- shortly after the burglary. Officers ployed janitor, had been the ob- *”*^''*1 as %etl'ts 8everaT“c*rtoiif"orcig- the hWle she was reported missing Sunday. •k it it Homicide detectives Pat Rowe and John Stargel Jr. said the youth, identified as Bobby Scales. Stole ^Cor; WreckedJL. After Spree—Sentenced For stealing a 1960 car from his JxHss’ rental agency wrecking tt after a drinking spree during which he consumed 11 bottles ol beer and a hall l^t ol whiskey, Frederick T. Me-Lane, 18, yesterday was placed on probation lor two years. ' ^00 court Circuit Judge Clark J. .^dams also ordered McLane ol 34 BeDe-vue SL, to stop frequenting bars. Search for Diamonds found W bottles of liquor in the c arettes. Knickerbocker was carrying $103 he admitted taking from Cash registers, police said. , LOUISVILLE. Ky (APi - A Gray Graham, business mahager heart attack has proved fatal to of the center, for night lightingV ir-tired Bishop William T Wat-Provided as a ^Uc service 6(i kins, 65, iorm£cilead£iL_Qi more track, the rink ordinarily will be available free for public skating during dayli^t hWs, Graham said. 306,000 Kentucky and West-' Tennessee Methodists, bishop suffered a heart at- ' tackv in hia car Sunday and died} at a '{lospital here Monday night. i A D S FE 2 FUNERAL HOME ..... -EatabUaUed Over 35 Yeart-_ conaumem Power rence 81,. Room 41 part " TIME - eech. Ls*Uni memorial* that are excellent for family plots, PE 4-1340 for raorr —'---- PERRY MT PARK Beautiful (-grave Ic The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8J81 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. F 'you ARE MArkH 4-3411 : (or Mr Honke. 1 NEED "14 WOMEN TO SELL EX-gandln^j^need*. Car necessary. EXPEBIENCTOTPAHT 'TmE"~cdOK I and dishwasher. Apply 577 Au- j About Summit Meetings Truck and Trailer Service l.VSTM.LKI) FREE ulo springs, mufflers, tall ploe generators surter*. shock aS-torbera when bougnt at regular hollerba^ckV Xuto parts FE 3-M77 i NEW S USED EQUIP. g4 HOUR ' 8erv. Jalka Heating. FE 4-3311. Boats FABULon" WATERLOX - BRUCE Furnace Dealers t' - Janitor Service COMPLETE JANITOR SERVICE r and motor lune-up Palnliog, paperhssgtiig, wall ...___ready for fun in 'gf. washing. LI 2-g373___________________ YOUR EVINRUOX DEALER JANITOR SERVICE, RESIDENTIAL 1 l;irrmj,rion Bfiat W orks and commercial. EM 1-4495. 1999 Telegraph Rd FE 2-S033 , . M I.VIK-K .•Ria-S On all boat*, motors, tralleri 1 1*9 Roof Boirds 5c Ua R and marine supplies ' 4030 Dixie Hwy \ iii ZU15T 5.M »00 8 iAO ill 10 i.» • M 1500 As sQdnioiiti ..ctiArttt 61 fiOc will be made for jse of — ; -----"W-V A3-Birch-PIr 3W30 ea. ’ Buiifling Modernization 1‘ONTIAC LUMBER CO. — ------CASH AND CARRY BUILDING AND REMODELING. ' Ml Oakland Ave________FE 4-0113 Eelth O Slegwart. FE 5-0733. : ~ ' Painters * Decorators ' American Truck Rental BY HOUR, DAY, WE. OR LEASE FTirnlture tede, OoUi'et. Llttgele* 200 N. PADDOCK_______PE 9-9530 Trucks to Rent W*Ton Pickups I'.^ Ton BUkei TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks-Sfml-TrftUti-s Ppntiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 139 8 WOODWARD FE 4 0401 FE 4-t«3 . Open Dellv tncludtng Sunday Upholstering THOMAS UPHOLBTERINO 137 NORTH PERRY ST. FE 5-8888 Ponuae Press box number*. COMMERCIAL remodellnk *nd bulldlni lied engineers. RESIDENTIAL i Cleaning t rot free ^ UrUath mr aaa IFm ^)pen^inded—Ruskr O i WASHINGTON _(UPI)-Afler_ two would “fpooly use” normal dipio- be considered in tion to the 1 8 i SAVE ENERGY, USE jWANT ADS! To find a i ]jpb, place to live or a I good u-sed car,, see Classr-; fied NOWI WASHINGTON (UPD-After two weeks of trying. Secretary of State Dean Rusk finally has managed to explain fully his ideas on suininit meetkigB with Russia. He did not open or close the door I a summit conference between Prerident Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. He indicated the door irould be opened closed u conditions warranted. The statemeat was given to n-porters as s policy deeungent that Teas farterpreted as oppeslag Rusk told his first news confer-ence Monday that the question of ^ **** Four days later. Rusk told newsmen he hadn't meant to rule out summitry or any other type of negoUatlon if the national interest warranted it He complained Mon* ;^day be considered in relk^ to the job to be done,” he said. “I don't "Iwlieve that we ought to generalize or philosophize unduly about choices among techniques at this pcrfnt. From time to Jime\ He said he hoped “we would not find ourselves caught up in s policy wiOi respect tp methods, because jthe method Is the handmaiden of LONDON ,DP.1-MN. Wo;, m .Jon. iS'£',5S h“ SflSi ' At It sJta. Today there I I were replies at The Prem { I office to the following t 1 boxeo: | 88, 89, 80, 81, 68, 70, Tt, i I 80, 83. 88, to, 91. it, 94, I | , tW. 119, Hi. j Carpe^leaneri ^ RUG/AND R O R N I T O R E leaner* Por pick-up — ■7lir Plastering Service PLASTERING FREE EsflMATES D_Me> ers ________EM 3-010 PLASTraiNO ^ WORK OUARAN-teed. 343 N. Saginaw FE 3JOH. Ml Coolty Lake Road, EM Dressmaking, Tailoring ~Siw and Mower Service It Dreaaea, OB 3-7113. , SAW S LAWN M07 CR SERYl . Mlilord I Djry Wail^ TAJ i. J. Aqttire Ooor Sanding Television, Radio and Ser^e VETS TV ANTENNA SERVICE InstaUation and repair, lowest ..................... _____Washer Service j AUTOSIATIC WASHER 8XRVICB. TV and radio. R<» Salta * Barv* ic€. A. J, Roy, 31 Kemp §t. A!Ya(^ Softener S«yvtei Water Softener Service Prompt Sarvlea on All Makaa. Ichlck a MY 3*37’.l or FE 4^830 Wrecking Service This space reserved for your Business and Semce Directory Ad gium and Holland were today to search all ships and planes arriving from Britain fqr a 1^,060 shipment of industrial stolen overrth|! langled” straighten 1*. ou(. Three days after he took office. Rusk Isaoed, a stateisisat sayti^t the Keaaedy admtolstratiogi had been right down the i middle. "Could we nn»->Schools TO F4IWT »^onroL' l^andscaphiK I Act TIWC BtRl. STOMf RtllOVAL 21 X ^’■ntod to R«(it 32 Rent Apt*. Fufniiiiod 37 .;WE HANDLE > By Kito Oaonn »^/rrw;iwro«t *w! " rentals . »—.......— ....___ TIW er nfl-inl lOEOROt R IRWIR MAITOR >'», ROOMS AJID BATH, UT1UTIE8 • WM-, Moving and TriKklng 22.»».« walton .................“ ___■ oj ~ oviNO stRvici: : wouLb'TntE LAbT'tbTiiiirtAH ---------------- " Vie f Ji»4" . V. A ~ „ * VERT ATTRACTIVE R^OOMS Al! <1#* n^VT^R ^ I A1 UOVINO SERVICE ' LIvlHJ. QUBMCrS JJ »nd ulUlUr* FE MLSIG CEMLK re moi I ---- ' T rooms first fooor. « Mr »»» tarMlltBU tAwwyll .T! * . Vr,w~ rfr.TVm ‘ TO ,BHAR« UVIHO «»!« niir*nw. |wK»U .....H WM kl WW ANV KIAIk fkF t^mVr' MAOUNO i ai.a .aa..' a. kAl kl ' Aanla.a MT ... . taaa „ .1 FIRST CLASS MbViCAIX m SM.IL AIQSXsa CO, Fit 4-W • HALLINO AND RUBBISH. M fTsnl J Su. linr FC « ROOMS,'MAW FM^: FTTltH. ------—-J,-TaiiT ____ lADT TO SHARI HOMt tranrr snd WUi. All utiUtln. RIIU,' TUTOR LAT^EIrt^R. BAULIN AND ROBBISM NAME) ____OR J-ISSS __,, „ Alter S p.«i FI »•»«*_ ■ ' I. NEAR BOB 8TA- AiyiiMFttr. r^dllH. FE A4m_Aaj^mr.'FE S OOM. > wOREINO OIRL TO SHARE'VoE a'WaRM' Work Winled Male ll| O DIUa; C\RTA6^ ....................--.-.-y-- ............. ' ■ ' df - - ■ Bf^E A-1 WALL WASmNq, CARFETl PhooV AM Sphol . Macs dtAiiad ^iught AND HEAVY TRUdaMO A-r WALL WASRTO vrmcmm; .ad lr*»t »ad MaSi FE M.I H« FI SSOt. Ho AW.____ I foMt ___________ A^ CARFINTIR. SMALL JOBS A RIDl'CID RATES NO% OORIMl ApeclAlty. FE S.JI41 or nt t-MlI. an sratsa., sa aiortBC, daUrer- ^ ,1— r=TL-.i:_' --ttarat*. For lalornAtioe. I Ortppai't Mortal ______________, , *w**-'' **• ** ^ td. ContrBCls, Mtgs. 35 ii'rooms ahd batm. uTitjTiES. ---— . . -- - - --1/ imuiro SI partilii _ HOOMS and BATH. ____— - .E t-ion. CARPimEK. ALTttRATidNs! ad rrpatm. I---- ~ E Bikiird apartatral tH Mai4_aft»r 6 p at NN td. Contracts, ANNETT OMS AND BATH. LAEE ileiOA. LaAo Orton. MY LJTll. #1 nuo~^noooB iroATvn At’V. ; I ROOMS OFFER. HEATED , uiimtoA. Call AlUr « p.m.. r CARFEHTHT. FINISH TRIStj J LIOHT TRbCEWO ^iiS! OR3-3SM l**«n*«nK & Decorating 23 LASS PAIKTWb. DECORAT- BL'YS —SELLS TR.ADKS MANAGE." auia Roomaablr CaL ..... . .. .--------------.s.-.-.li.- p m FI l-»U» ____ _i_naniing ThoaipsoB FE 4-SJd4 ■LKTRIC^' HIE06 W O R E |1ST Cl ASS PAlNTlNO AOT DEC-Frr* twUmAtOA OR 3-«WS_ _ driimt Ca»1i or irrAi* ULJ_ HAVE~THDCE DO UOHT HAUL- A-l PAINTWO PLASTERWO. CE- I-DAT mOHWO SERVICE EXP. rrl Mt> MrOowa FE V4«l experienced' TYPIST WANTS l REAL ESTATE CONTR.ACTS EQUITIES f ' AN.\1:TT INC.. Realtors ................8U!f SoodA^'.'ri «»1NTIn6 AND DECXIRAT ABSOLUT’ELT - --•« ti'Ai. ripriirncr Rraioa- . ur IaimI conirACI Can Err, rtn-Ato. PPea. UL bujrr. ------ .tNTINO. WINTER PRICES » St OAlr _ BACHELOR APARTMENT. NEW turniturr. N epd. TV. art. rhootr. balta. nttraneTpS *-«»«. _ CLEAN J ROOM. QPSTAIRS. PRI-vat« bath, utinttri. R»poniibl« _ eoapl»_CloAr in. IM Norton CLEAN NEWLY DECORATED. 3 room.t. bath /.prat., and laupdry lAclIlUM MI 4-lAM CL0!» in. 3 LAROB ROOMS. LIV-Int noom. brdrOoia and tttciwn Wfirarr Irnanu with 1 child wel- ..COmr- No drl^ini. PE 3-Illt FASTEST AC- CORNMI BLIEABETH AND ONION ,.w. 1 3-bodrm APArt- Srhartdrr MA 4-IMl ■ . EE «•«« Ut yUAllTY DETORAfdRS ,,■ * i?iM'ail'vL'jyietj^ * e:iv ivTFkrOR. decorator *“1. AftfX JtpnJ .. CASH •duit^ ^irWirtr^Ja^ preferred' GROUND^PIXXJR. 3 ROOMBT PRI- HouseB 491/ , J|^.S*te lioiiK* - 49 ---- fo lETTLE estate. T ROOM ham*, sad two car lartt*. FE * »»*»“. "?“3 ! paar'aj 4-»lU^_ .. /i- , i-BEDRM. cuaroii futOrlucb- wood coMtmporarr. Caimrt. SU>- Bent CeBeat dHe*. T years Price ------- UTICA-OWNER l-bedrai. brick. iiUUUrA. 3l"'All', _ _ » Bwd cradlt. Immedtata poueatloD. Will thow anytlOM. heat. I*.M* ____ Joslyn Area r^r‘.va5ra;?a"fiT Si% \VTLLIS M. BREWER AOBEFH P REISZ. SALES MOR S4-*d E Huroa St FE 4 ‘'*' FE S-SSr * ” FE>4?jt 'HURON OARDENS-----Vacant ** down. gI.*M. Ideal for young co pie or retired couple. Clote 1 City bui and Shopplag Centi Modern 3-bedroam bungalow, i heal. 3-pe. bath, nice lot wl I garden apoi. 3-BEDROOM RANCH gll.*TI ft 1 »rT00 lor Sellers equity Nor ! eMaelghberbood. ctooe — Fori WEST SIDE BRICE ^ Foui bedroom home, doubla gs> rage, two lota. RecraaUoo room, .. twa nreplacoa. full attic ator- age. gdS^rM gtaam haa*. Tat-rin* aereanad rear pdfch. Sea-lag'lt balltvlog. EgeaUaal. Call f^a^^mert pleaaa. Ask Mr LOW DOWN PAYMENT Yotir aboica - M RMUmtaa Road - Cata iTke R*« - !*?Br lurUier'dauiu” WATERFORD AREA An egeellenl 3 tadrvom frama homa. fuU baaamant. dlalng room a thret and a hall car * garaga, la'gf Mt, fruit traea. Yog abould Uka II. Would Ilka good tlaad down paymaat. Priced right By appotatmaal MOVE IN - IN TWO WEEKS . Ha.,4Uwa jwyment, jiul money lor taxes and takoranca oaly. Quite a lew Of rctalat. liany many locaUoot. To quaUfy aft you need U a Job ood good credit. Hove them la Footlac, Mllfard. Waterford area. Independence Township (Clark^ areal tart others. Call for fnr-Uier doMUa Nicholie & Hargcr Co. W. Hurtll FH FE - Eves. CaU FE 4-3411 or FE 4-SM4 STOUTS Best Buys Today SF»t*aOeth Road isiun Service CREsr IV 1 HOUR 8IRVJCE DAT jry .SERVW ______________ BuikHng Serv ice 13 km ^ lpholstowoT” A-l ALTERATIONS AKD MODERN- ■ FTE J-1206 '_snd’iTtre AsYlor Ken'Tampfeton K, I-. TcfHpIetoii. Reaitor I pholstcring 25 133g Orheard Lake Road FE 4-4M3 ' ' CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS DIMm KITCHEN CHAIRS RE- H J. Van Welt 434S Dine Hwy. ------------ ------^ OR 3-I3M Wanted Real Estate 36 . » w-w 1 uei LAROI NICE 3 AND BA ■t* _Fri**'* . ^ ______ airport. adulU. OR 3-lbia * r®u \«n jjOWER FRONT PRIVATE ENT" n 4-Uit 41M CIU Lk ^™.,***®**.... roR~CX)lDnEn''3-R6oM AP^T; DTIL1T1E8 FUR- ORCIIAKI) COURT ■ Rent Now Oreally Reduced” - Kent Houses L'nfurn. 40 l-ROOM HOUSE ON DIX3 HWT . Ctarkatoa. near M-13. Inquire 33 Auburn. C-ROOIf bUPLIX. PI 40tU 8 ROOMS AND BATH FOR RJIOT ■y Oetui) B»ke a aubstantlal down payment' 1-ACRE RANCH. Waterford To^ j on a 3-badroom home that Is ship, near High icbool. 13^ -„,.h .h. n.™.. ,,ther than down. Ill *0* or trade for CUy i paying la- 4 honae. S-room modern home, nice-: I home avail- Iv decorated and In good coad^ ' non. large barn, garden apot Evenings after *. call Mr Thoe. FE 3-7Mg~OFEN • to • k)s • - oil bedrooms' Located n BUYERS WAfTlNO WE NEED Lost and Found 26 t-Mi LAULNOER REALTY ADULTS ONLY FK 8-J918 ______ ROOMS AND BATH ON t MANAOHH t* SALMER BT APT • BEAUTIFUL"HOME «e A. li--- ---- Dully B $un XO a.io. to 8 p.m, 2 btths Druyr ' SILVER LAKE APARTMENTS * .» *»* ! Now avaUatale. Very nice condl- 7J2 Siosi expellent location Adults • Rgrcrencea. Bee Mr. Chap-Apt 3 3330 Dtkie Hwy • \h APTS. FOR RENT - n7i. Wa'lter';"LakV ' 'atlOBi. Spokane-LIb- oR 3-g3ri wfitfWd’st^s-lmd- CLEAN "g;ROOM~MODERjU~yt';^ LIST WITH U8-8KLL OH TRADE New address 3101 W Huron St Multiple Llkttng SerV'-- ITl cXRFVrin ANb CABWET work, work guaranteed. Prices _ rMsooable. OR 3-ST4* A-l BRICK BUILDER NFLDS 1 OR MORi: With fireplace and bar Adutts UUliiies paid _OR 3-1333 LAKEFRONT 3 ROOMS AND bath Newly decorated. MY 3^^* NEED AN APARTMENT? Slaters Apt., FURNISHED AND UNFURISHED S3 . PARKE ST FE 4-3S4S AFTER 5 AND SUNDAYS. _______ PK_*-tl33. DRY WAli. dUAHAfTTElD WORK ‘'biac ,Frj^ esumates FE g-»73I.__ i t CEldlNT WORK 'all 'K I K D_8 j.O»s Special whiter price. OH :,3-«tT3 'n ■ coMfOR^dus^-"" EIECTRld" HEAT .• BRlfTANY SFANlitS _J COMMKR- _________ » MY 3-33*1 lost -'ANUARY 33RD, FO* TER-IRSULATION H'i v-nii' w«h larie red snots Elecirl;. EM Rf» 3-4334 or^Uj4^^_ ____ _ EXCAVATtild AND TREHCmNO LOST MAl* __BBAaLE. CHAIN for spetic tanks drain, I‘-'-footings and Ught dokiag. FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR- ing wU! finance R B M-------- _ IlectlH Co.. lg*l_W. Rnroo HOUBE RAIBINO. HOUSE li mg. licensed fully equipped ^Imates RusMil Marion I OR 3-S3U Notices and Personals 27 \ .M.K.Vn.NF CARDS Ur sg: 3* lor 3»c Counter B .rfl Hallmark 13 lor d»c s RK TABLE DECORATIONS iiikik uapklaa eu|». talllra ‘sihlUETT, F^l-owl SPECIALIZED REALTY SERVICE LouU Jlorat. R*»lMir PE *-3*43, Rent Apts. Furnished 37 1ST nX»^-PREl OARAOI Attractive, modern 3-room and teth apt Coi^^Iy n Flams Needs i BEDROOM MObsE GILES ., WABBJNOTCHi PARK - 3-^roqm I brick fronc math home -4* Sted street location. Larg* filed lemeat with rac area. talU-ln seta, gat heat, lovely carpeted living and dintng room. lUut bedrooms. well landscape lat with 3-car garage. Priced to sail with only |1.3*e down, FHA tertnt. THE PRICE IS RIQHT — On thla room. lul-alia dinmg room, gas tarnace. .teaced back yard and ‘ t^ooU and'sRodplhf"onl»*M.'»K ; with tl.tM down. I NO STAIRS — To t MA^4-I3S3 OMSA 4-3SM,_ WEST SIDE LOWER, * ROOMS d and bath, garage. 135, relerenc. ” required, adalts only. ImRltri TI Mark. FE 3-00*4, ______ Butterfield PE 3-541* oi _ I*. » M i Mon Uirough Rent Houses Furnished 39 po« rent or sai* small 1 BEDROOM COZY. CLEAN. BUS bedroom home In Highland Township, EM 3-*443 __ ________ liOUSS FOR RENT OR SALI. BY r attached garage. fuD bsmt.. oU heat. gl3 a week FE , ,r.i» «... numrsK:. •,r« v-«u -BEDROOM HOME. LARGE LIV-' after A q£ 1-1054 houbes at judah Uke. ton- 'i?* “J,; uac l k Eltkabeth Lake. Drayton o utiUttea furnlabed. MY moatit. N 3.-37S1.____ __________________ J-ROOM. CLEAN. MODERN MX UTIUTIES Sat a and Suo- I. _ _ AUTO. d MSUO a lerma Pt 4-g»0» HOC BE MO VINO, equipped. FI 4-0460 L. «. su.u.1 , Lew, prigbs expert ««rk by cnlt^ea. FlrepUct& ■' A Sun. 10 a m. to t p m After 3 p m an 'rgtnia'Tnd ‘’pe'c-smS*”''' *■“ PRlVA|t 4 ROOMS AND BATHL day*. 3*3 Proap ,-2 R^M yiTcWiE. PRiv/fi^ !ir;;j^3’^‘"ubrn*A‘v'? N*a«lv'‘'decQr\tiY“‘nlar’’"to^^ SmZl 3-Ho6m' APARTMENT plua utilities. EM 3-437a Hm^UI WMklM dlitaicr down ’^*1 ^ 4 ROOM, ADULTS. town small child welcome FE “'•* ..... FE 4-5*54______ 3-*33* / FE 3-*343 ^ SMALL HOUSE — *55 I i'rOOM KITUhENETTE arnii.Hl/west SIDE. 3 ROOMS AND BATH olf Dixie Hwy 'a ml N ' y3** iT^!S?F«W " 9R 3-13*1 _________ I TBEOROOM. KITCHEN. BA^A ™ ^ rJncfs“^qJf™ t'TN S”’'~UUdS6om'"pahtly Rent Apts. Unfurnished 38 Ypsiiami at. after 4 p _____________ SirS .VkefrJm a^a OR 3.»I0» FURNI8ITO MODEKN HODW^S -i.,-.. fin..t 'strsrw—T -BWTMiu PVT BATH KITCH- I AND 3-BEDROOM PARTLY "'’•l-aas heat, garage, bamt. near -I..M tiO^K STGre T pts lully furo, near furn lakefront ipts OR 3-»195 LONG LAKE. SUITABLE FOR 3. General HoapltaL PI 4-*3#i •• ■ MSUO. Perfect for bachelor Itu- IST-FLOOR. CLOSE IK i RMS. ™5, •i''' ^ . WEST SIDE COZY' S-ROOM BUK-. ' ■ “ • — ”” ‘.....................................— •- -------------------- ..galow—OH heat lirge giaased m W Rnapg. l^lty^FE 3-3134'. $9,500 ^USS McNAB ART MEYM A BIO FAMILY. A HOUSE OR AN INCOME Can be youra on tbit property. The house exterior needa painting, but wait ttU you aee the tasldr Attractive aimcloua 3 bedrooms, -----------y Xltchen. luU walk- . Income Thla I-untt property h aratc entrances, ball tumacesi It will pay North Side Sell or trade. 5-room bu low. glatted In front pc basement Also 1 car ga- West Side A real home at a price you can pay. g-rocm tmly 3 blocks from school tn A t condition. Oil r--- • Priced at only I northern HIOH . ra large UvUtg and >m. full hath, handy t ge utility room, tellh c RENT BEATER—Be your pwn land- Oriiyton trbd«. or ILWOOD REALTY PE ni 3-5453____________ PE «-l2#3 - ASSOCIATE BROKERS - _______ -- __________ Jivealmenl Co. Inc . PE *A6S3 modern 3-bedroom home, bewty • AUjORCHAW-LAKE AVENUE U*- BKAUTIPUL T-RObM RANCH - _______________________house In Rochester KnoU Subdl-;SLLI- MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOUSE vision lf40 Antal Dr. i - - month FE 5-g3W________ BEAUtlPUL HOME 3 BEDROOMS *nd 2 bbtha, Dravtoo 11.800 Muu GILES RE.AI.TY CO. FE 5-4X35 331 BALDWIN AVE OPEN ( A M A PM MULTIPLE U8T1NO SERVICE MOOER 3*ia'nth”fri . Will, I Will 3-bedroom ranch ' OPTION TO BUT — ----h with carport, Waterford High sw^aUl' cleanT^bI^room^" BUY TR.ADE milLer^ 180G Sq. Ft. or living^ apace ^li rataed hearth ling room, one of the . _.-jhena we hav* ever paneled family room, tbre* ARE DEBTS U ( ikRYlXL 1 ATTRACTIVE 3 BOOM APART-meni hn Cass Lk Clean wall arpetlng Adults FE quire 340 N Saginaw 2^ HiOHeighls Road. MY3-l3g4 - AND ' 3 ROOM AP'aRTIMENT MODERN FURNISHED DUPLEX, Frlgldalre -------- smt. stoker. 3 garage.' * ioathly. FI 4-IN3 • BIG. T" New iwf« .— r-..Alger . hedrooma: iToaeu paoeled famllv r CITY WEST BIDE 5 bedrooms. I'l b included. A g0(^ OPEN Mieiu lures i'closeti tile 1' SILVER CREST 3 bedroom I home altuated on good corn - ■* poMbr^ali bas_em«t bedrooms and 3 Decorated to pe fert“ii^ti5n™f*hlgh rade homes \VI ^Ve’“tH1 inf'^CAlL FOB 8HOWINO A SPECTACULAR VALUE AT *34.0*01 ; Lake Home i dcltgluful setting — tloplng awn to the lake — l«0al*3-ft lal^ two years miu Star Modermattion L" OR 4-133* __ _ _ plabteriko. new and repair yem KeUer UL 3-1TW______ ROOF REP.AIRS EAVISntODOMIKO FE 4-«444 -H O SNYDER FLOOR LAYWO aandlog and flmahlag Pbont FE *-***l_^ _ BIPtiC LINKS STEAblEO PE 1-4553 Btiadaya 5-5S»3___ \\.\TERPROOFING Work tuaranteed Free estimates. __________FEJf-*3in___; _ Busincts Service 15 _ YOU? f :'phone for free booklet .ll'i.\X,UKEDIT ir.N.sEEEORS 3-ROOM APARTMENTS. tater. heat, at furnished. e^^ar^e Off of Williams Lk. NEWLY DECORATED 3'BOO-MS. I Donelaon schools. I STUDIO ROOM FOR WORKING ft 5-glM girl, everything furn. glO a week. 77 Douelat St FE 4-J313 ____ ■ LARGE ROOM ADULTS ** with fuU ,^7°r™wl'Sn . * f7 N Saginaw it, William Miller ReJtor ^ ■.EE2-i §»lh. ! ^srte?' a kitchen and _.j searching for a average lakefront estfable iocation, I PRICED BtOHT! ab,e FE 2-533* 3 rooms''and BATH^ UPF*ER ■ utilities and furniture, clean, ptl- ..... o. . FE 4-5032 ’ TO » ROOMS BATH ADULTS t* 2>AMiLY. 5>ROOM UPPIR AlfD ---- ... 4.... - FI 2-87W f'AKiL.Y runp»ion*aU, 2 besu* „. tGE ____ 5-7333. CLEAN BLEEPWO ROOMS. ROOMS. KITCHENETTE AN! shower F't entrance victnlty n Auburn HeigbU UL 3-3110 3 ROOMS PRIVATE BATH WILLIAMS LAKEPBONT, WILL rent year around m"a 5-3406. Renl Houses Unfurn. 40 .BYl OWNER, Of RESALE, T BED- ' Toont, OB SecseHt, near schools, pay equity and take over balatice at 4 per cent with low monthly payments FE 5-li03 ^____ TOR HEOT OR SALE payment. 3-3410 '_______ _ GENTLEMAN - PRIVATE 'EN- ______________________________ trance. FE 4-131*, 4100 Ella. Lk. FOR COLORED 3 AND DORRIS CENTENNIAL SPECIALS FOUR BEDROOMS - Wicf-slde - Ideal family home ...... . ...... . ***f*l^'®- J-BKOBOOM SUBURBAN. OPTIOH HOUBEKKEPtNO. PRIVATS. COM- ‘ ______ . ° __*£5 .72.7- “"“l* w buy h»e fern. Fa. *-4381 tortable, pear town. FE 1-7503. HOUSE FOR SALS IN OfDIAN VIL-j ' 3-B£DROOIif. TIlE BATH. SE*LY IDEAL BACHI^R’S QUimTERB. !_lMaj_EM,3-30»»._____________________________' 1. fenced back jard. — Bummar pool, 850 mo. FI 8-8722. i If bot a r a • and fo«r tll.SOS ____________d- jatUc linlah *3* , Avon Btudte, 4X>s Main St Rochester OL 1-1*41 -------: 7S.-. 3 NICE BOOMS. PRIVATE BATH: Boat priT. FK *-<3*4 gnO eatraoce. furn. or unfurn . i L OR WOMAN HEKDINO a AND 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE IN- workin* couple. utlUtlei furn . ponOac Mrtor and — ....------a.™. WW U(,l_ iniludad. near alrpwt OR 3-4374._________ j MidT^n. FE 3-M23 _ 1* C‘"k_»pp'r __________ 3 ROOMS. FIRST PLOOK PRI-1 iVp I'VpnrtPV i 3 AND 3 ROOMS FURNISHED vale bath and entrance, heal 2-B KUKfJU.Al lJU rLK.A . BOOM - ----- and unlurnlshed Uttitues paid and hot water Oakhtll St ULj Automatic Heat _ Full F ---------------------- DMNT'I MAII^ «UPm» --- 73* j|4 E Powrd^___________ J ”'* i ____ Tour Job flatkhed by eipert craltsmcn We epeeUUie la pUi- --- II Ft 3-*734. Conflden- DRV W.XLl. NICE ROOM FOR REFINED RE- I , ; sponsible person. No Mber room- i . ... mr. a.s34S. __ J___________J J QUIET HOMl drinkertr 130 8 d bath each. BaacacD Wallace 10-arge or amatf i FE 3-lg31 ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RF- t Pike Phone Pt 4-3*11 HEATING rUH.NACIi CLEANED \RI YOU WmHKIEH over .-i'EBTS? HOLLYWOOD APTS 3 ROOMS AND BATH. WARM AND comforuble. utilities furnished FES-3707. • 3 aND J BOOM APARTMENTS. N saimaw St near iichool St. ROOMS BATH -----1. PE 3;i34» -RCOM MODERN PRIVATE EN- S/.'i PER MONTH , IH^ 4-7^3.? ^ r. V13W: 3 BF.DROOM. MODERN. OARAOE f. CLOSE while. No children. Crescent Leke . Rooms with Board 43 -AT GOOD HOME: BOARD AND) cere for 1 or 3 children. Room kltcheneUc for mother. Lf 5-14t* Ll 5-«»73 fumecea. Income -momo *10.5**. *3.«l* down PONTIAC REALTY 737 Beldwtn FE 5-S375 LOW COST ROUSINQ i Small 3-bedroom houa* In weaj : aluminum FHA* ' INCOME-Two femlly north tide of town, upper rente for *<*. three room* end beth up. flve rooms end bath down, hm batement. comer lot *10.450 PONTIAC NORTHERN - 5-I7U Nelsot 1 OIVL VOU ro PAY ."Ek\ ICE , DON r MEYERS PUMPS AND REPAIRS KELl.V HARDWARE 3»S4 AUBURN RD OPEN SUN IA2 UL 3-344(1 SAWSNBHARPENED ' LAWN MOWERS REPAIRED , . Air Cooled tnilaes Repaired Incorporated Crafts i iiL.j n -----^Ofy-OmoD Street ' -HOMFX SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.' ^ _ _ _FE 4-4343 _ ; HofPblNf, WHIRLPOOL 3 ROOM fUCELY ter 5 3* am ' LY FU^ISHEI but price B lor this Lo ance *55 p VERY CLEAN PLACE. FE -BEDROOM BASEMENT NEAR 14 Matthews Street » w*ek7 "imin me n e s i ‘ : Keego Harbor buslnes* district oENTLEMAN OOOD FOOD AND ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE FE 3-153* ^____ dean, ntodem home. FE 3-031*. ' NORTHWEST SIDE LOCATION ind garage Fm rouple only. Call j CNPURNISHEO SPACIOUS aND BOARD WITH OR 3-bedroom home. In ean^nt fiat ---- .... -- . .. Jtlpre g p m. t04 Hendereon heated 3-benroom apartments aiihout 1361. Oakland Av* PE - dtrioh. 1ocat»tfTmtf^blocKS*lrom mother work. 161 8 Paddock j AND BATH^AT, HOT Front gSO. beck. *8* *»; Wood-........ XiuM ' - the new AlcoU School, full btse- 3 ROOMS AND BATH. GROUND water, refrigerator tnd stove fur- ward Street. Rochester, Mlchlgsn ---- - ---- ... - o,odcrn newly decorated fSS^^vt entrahie, ^feclll^^^^^ nlshed^^ N^r^ Fisher Body. gOO _TO S-74M__ ConvalcsCcnt HomCS 44 i^rutl’^ueeT oh'the*pmperr'^m’ ' toSe in linTlac*?* 5-^4°^*'*: , ”lKaT ROOMS AND VACANCy'iN PRIVATE NURSING i Sk'*7Kri^do^FSn!?t' 3 BOOMS AND BATH UTfLITtES bsth , We.i side, utimies furn. home In lake area for aged or PE 4 0123 51 Pine street MA 0-0304 T'V/ril U \ L>r T D tnflrmed peopl*. EM 3-4023^ _ TVV 3-ROOM GROUND FLOOR. PRI- 3 RCXDM APARTMENT. UTIUTIES -MV. IIUI. 11 - - I I.AMli'.K P-nt 46 vale Ideal for ■ elderly Isdv No lurnl.hed Stove and refrigerator L I,' sfilQl ' KCni aiores W drinkers or pets PE 3-3004 Couple preferred 133 Mi Clemens * * ' • °itvi J cleAn"wXrm ROOMS, elder. FE iaiiM- — -i-wrowDW 3.4I32 ■ ' 31* N. Saginaw FE 3 ROOMS TILE BATH DOWN- MSUO I“0Ulre at 7*1 Doris Rd. of parkln^g, PE^ town, refrigerator, stove ind heat g-REDROOkL FIRST.FLOOR. g*0. I IDEAL WITH LlVWq QUARTERS. ROOMS AND BATH. CLEAN AND fumiebed Mt floor, prt emranie William, and Huron St 3 bed-; g*P®*'\k wm ? 1, Murphy bed no drinker. 4-54M- rooms. gOO. Williams and Clinton ; parking. Will alter. FE —u'.—a, rj 4~rooms AND BATH UPPER 104 < bedrooms, fenced yard, SIS' 6-013|. ..... ................ Forest PE 3-7632 Ellaabeth Lake Hd FE 4-7341. _ rtoRE WITH PARKIHO Ml W. ROOMS AND bath: ALL MOD r ROOMS AND BATH IN'DRAY-1 J BEDROOMS. BASEMENT DOT-. Huron.J1IJ-«l»^^--------------------------- 'nirance. utilities. ton. he_at_ hot. wate_r_Iurn__g5* a bl;^Jiara*e, near, airport, EM Rent Office S|MK« 47 bungalow, with full d^Vi^^ObOBWer ALTYRAT10N8 Mrt J ______ FT 4*4< ALTERATIONST EXCEL LEF ,,sfyaa. . -1., s.ww.w. work Pnci»& rfff FE_4.5233 A Diet i#b!eU • W cenu at ____TAUfORlMO-iaTlE^TioSS Simm* -EPk^wa^I^'"^/-i^*»-«3I 'V'td. Children to Board 28 CARL IN MY HOME DREMMAKINO, TAILORINO, AL- w/ik'!!r • Ponhec Subdfvr teratlona. Mrs. BodeU. PE 4-«*t3 sh” OR 3^3* Income Tax Service _ _ _ . ^ garage, _________ mr OB 3-5354 or OR 3-1032 ^ 3 052*^_____ ____________________ ROOMS PRIVATE : 4~ ROOMS UtiUTY 'AND 'BATH ! 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. C«-entranre and balh, FK 5-5103. , grouno floor, children welcome.' petlng and drapes. rrirlgrtatOT AND 3-hoOM. MODERN. WARM. NEAR .jmpets FFg-3«2* h?**!?«”'y*ard^**LaK' prt'vUegM " eased hnipital_U N Jobnwm _.............. israyton Wain, area Available , »* ne, can hi Loaded With Extras 3(f) S. MARSHALI. IN THE CITY OP PONTIAC Extra large colonial. 3 extra large bedrooms, full basement, new forced elr furnace, beautiful rec. | INVESTOR LIQUIDAT 1 N < - Says sell. Three bedroon rancher with brick front. cupboards tll.35«. LAROE FIVE ROOM home •*,*50. Easy terms, vacant end locaUd In the newer ■' n bousing dietrlel^as Humphries FE'4-4526 WEST SUBURBAN 3-bedroom ranch, plus large family room situated on beautiful corner lot. , PRICED TO SELL. Uec Country Club. Carpeted ttvlng and dining roomg 3-car garage, rccye-etlon roohL 3 nice lota. FULL PRICE—110.««0. ' COLORED—OI 7 room*. bedrooms,- -base-; SMITH-. WIDEMAN 412 W. HURON j __ FE 4-4526 Val^U-Way retJ*^ car gen lutiful W' DORRIS h SON REALTORS WE TRADE I 53 W. Huron St. FE 4-1557 MULTIPLE LI8TIMO SERVICE i ................... FE' *-3«2«_ N Johnaon "private lOTHANCi 4-Room - 1 i. Ill N. Telegraph and mfrigei 'BATH' DtlUTreft AND mn. ntraoce. 303 Auburn 3‘ NICE ROOMS.' PRIVATE BATH ROOidS. PRIVATE BATH AND rnl PE 5-044*. 1*4 Mt aeraen. LAROI ROOMS >k BATH PVT 19 FULL TIME OB DAY CARE^-. ACCUBATE EKFERIENCEdI BOLIN TAX SERVICE „ „s.„w ?o fAyM^;e_^Y*«J^» HoOSChold <*»«<*• 29 UPPER. ^5773 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL W'TP 1 «tow THH U' Qu.c. '«M. lot lurnltu e appTi-13 ROOM UPPER PIKE STREET ■Tia"s*rv'ic* OR'_i“‘ S > House FE* «*43 ; “ ... APPUANCEj FURNITURE AND J --------- _ ------------ — ‘ -- noutefisl. private eatranci 1(50 1 Partridge A * CORNER PIKE A h furn I3g ^ UTILITIIS _ _ ^ _ MONTHLY. WEST HURON i beet, Move February. *55 OR 3-446S - Street location, parking Suitable j - ‘WOO 3-BEDm3^:8TQ^AM eer Heat month OA *-335* ____J '^OFFICE BP^ JH THE UILLKR Iter - 1100 2 kEDROOMS. PIRBPLACK. OAS i - *"***^-..._----- - I block gent.^ leke^prlvUege*. Reaeoneble. j MisCctonSOUS 48 elates * 6ARAOE IN PONTIAC FOR FE 4-3501 ' welcome. In- j jnori^m, OH 1-1336 _ _ _ . ---- quire iw « rerrj | OARAOE IN 006d COHDlTlbN. * ' huiiable -------- ANNETT 3 BEDROOM DUPLEX. DRAYTON Mernhell. rg 5-WD44 ...... _Pl*lns^^|55 Children OR 3-560*.; 3M'~S'.ld^rn 'imiulre *371 Rald- ROOMf AND BATH. NEWI.Y j-bidROOM HOME, I¥ PONTIAC. i wth' Avenue. Phone TK^I-TSST OetorelMi uWiHles fumtiihrd PE oil heat Igl 4-»37*. ....... ~ --- ---- -M MODVIHN HOME'PULL AND BATH AND OARAOE. basement, oil heat. Williams Lk FE 5-13*1 clean, north-end. FE 3-7533 eroa. EM 3-3477 ROOMS. NEWLY DECORATED. 5-ROOM APARTMENT WEST BIDE. 3 BEDROOM 3 ROOM HOME --- --i garage. FE g-t*»g. stoker hret. bsm'l Baldwin^ - Wallpaper Steamer Floor sandere, polisher*, hand eanders. furnam* vacuum cleaners Oakland Fuel APstat, 43* Orchard Lake Avf. FI g4llS. cpgie ua. Priendly. m Ike at your home or wars nTs-i age rate—63 - 65. Key* A Necker jnan. FE A33t7 3*3* N Perry oi FE 3-3171 3M F|ourt^8t____ BOOKEJttPlNb. ALL TAXES. EMplre 3-34Ig^____ “b HAWLEY ___ __-leC F^-2602^_____________ IROOME AX SERVKbC NOTAR'Y public, your home o“ — * - * CpTl OUbert MY 3-7i03. 1 It C d M E s TAX. 8K)dKKE£Plitd And NoUry. 83 nod 85 Ayertfc. 591 Second 1*E 5-3876 LET US BUY -VOO^—0X1____ AUCTION OA m*l. Wantetl Miscellaneous 30 TANTED AXEL HITCH FOB tauseiratler. FK 4-7*3*___ Money Wanted 31 nit mterevi Reply Poatlec Wanted to Rent 32 ROOMS AND BATil PRIVATE .enlraace, U ‘ ^ - tumtshed. I clean LAROE ItOOMS, 1ST j floor fro-....... “ ^ 1*3 I^elrgi I drinkers. FEl FOF Ssk HouSCS room Arick ranch, It* bath*, pn-tla parch off dining room, loatfe of clesau. Tartefully dm----------- and epotle«a. Priced to Ciood PLACE A -LOST'; AD * , C»H Fi^ 2-8181 for an adj aM^,.l»sDWFE UIckiVALUKT 12-8181 for an ad wrtter. Realtor FE 4-3531 Y \ j Mv OAELAND AVENUE ' IrtMSfi a a aim ii.s 6 ROOMS Down. 2 bedrooms : Mike Indian Vlllege Pontlec OL 1 JUnOl------- " y----l: bedroom ranch, toearlY Nicely located 3 rooms ead beth I new. Judah Lake Estates. Only --'I'- __ apartmeot Children spermltied. I *75 a month. CelljOR 4-03*t ROOM PURN18HED APART j *4* per month. Cloge^to eif^te. i jVbbdrOOM HOME. DRYER AKD lent, prieale eatrance. 4(* N. fchurehei *nd downtown Warm i,ove auto washer PI 4-50** ..in.. *«,, 5 wi 1 la the wmter. cool la ^ after « except Bet. and Bun. ImMtead Keit Hurtm ft ' 3 BEDROOM RANCH HOME, I'S 4-Mjff AfSer “till FEL.743? ; bath, bulll-lns utility room, cm-, TrOOMS and BAtiS'iABY'WED ; Ci^RED WO 5 ROOM AMR^i ^ ’ *• * ' J__. _come^325 Plot^nc.________ | 5," ; PE 4-ETO " "^Tr-BOOM'MODERlTdik HEAY : ROOMS AND BATH. AUTOMATIC' r.f/;,, 71,-7-.^^^^ ! week OB 3-650*.____________ neat, dlepoeal, for couple only : CHILDREN \\ ULVOilE J 4 room HOUSE UNFSiKnibHED^ n 5-4633 ; Modern 5 room apartment,: FE 4-4377. 3-ROOM APARTMENT, QUIET: eUtve and refrigerator lurnlshed. 4-BKD'ROOM"BBICK ' aAS'"HEAT couple, pvt bath, no drinkers, no; *6* monthly. Apply at 103 Bloom- nraxe near Pontiac Central chlld.eB!_*43 Chamberlein I _tleld Terr*,-, o- phone FE 5-3321 Jugh »»0 mo ronwac venv . , LAKE VIST.VAPTS. „ _4J RQQMS-^ BATH BABY MIL,. * , . ^ __ eraU>r and 8il utUUkci furnUhed. fj??* i ------ —~ -- ---- --— 3..«00MS.*NP BATH. Sl«c.£iJr.iD'iSlvoTi NBWLY DSCORATCD, L AROK erviM amd iiatm rooniA d.0VD 4 rooms UD^ Only' i'll'“W*"^Leu“'FSi? f^'SSoii ilth^for^htldr*! KeSS^j D4^. Vk of Urm* aSatlabl.^ hen %in-mblthtub tilers?? »«'«•• baiwmenl, oil be^: 7 Call broker OR 1-4M* Urik dlnetUi at» Makabto kluh- i Scott Lake. , FE j-STORY PRAMS HOUStn^ Wl n CM he*tied buUdlna. Juat 1-' 4-4*>J-_ j, _____!__ Oakland. Muet be com^Ulg re- •lory walk-upi^AulomalTc gat hot 11 IldOMS AND BATH?mX EASE- movrf p»m,£r®PSrty^S*nd_offer ----- ------Bight. Tllml hall-1 meat, IMi-car garage -.......- - - ---- 1 AVAILASLI ist-noor — strleiiy modem 3 rooms and bath a|H. Completely furatshed. New garage. Prlv, on Can and KlUafaath Ukes.SM weekly FE 4-63*3. BeDrPM house 77 EASf „ i f Br^lyn after « :»• f I ~ 2fs FAMfl.Y IXCOATE Move tn aad lot rent make the' —A lerma. For informailon, call SLAVTK REALTY JO 6-9834 . jw Estates ^ corner lot 100x14*. 3- We will build 3-bedroom Harter home wHh full haaement oa your lot. Your plan* or oura. JOHN J. VERMETT Real Estate and tnauranc* _________EM J-d^__________ LOVELY I-BKDROOM BRICK ranch, bemt., carpeting, storms, screens, near scMoli. Me. lot, -~lBgt~Brlv. *U,*M, *t,*N down. OR3-»747.____ __________ OWNER, WEST mOQUOIS, (ll.N*. Easy term*. 3-bedrm. FE *-1373. bWNER-^3-BBDRM . ^OAS HEAT" ! Perry Park Bl^term*. CM. l-6*li OWNER'S SAcmfircE bedrm home, newly remi eled kitchen. Pull baeemt - y get furnace. * SYLVAN LAKE Bam Warwick has blWk trf-level. 1117 Sherwood Road. 3- bed-rooms, 3SV ballts, recreotlon room, 3-car garage, MB,SOS. FE 4-(0*t Suburbui Living At its Best Tour futur* bom* la the (CONVERTIBLE 24) 3*4 badrooma. Itb bothr W. W. ROSS HOMES OK 3-ISII ______ TOTAL PRICE •d.lMI THIB Oarage. *-utr Oood. loeattms, MAytale 3 ROOMS. EVERYTHINO PRl^ vete, cou|M anly._ra ^7611 3 ATtHACtiVE'HOOMS. PRIVATE balh. private •ntrence, edulu | only. F< g.|473. ___ : i ROW BASBMiarr. private j bduns.^irjA .■***?•' grade refrIg Vl g». liw B R. r. Corawell. OTWRR | TRI-LEVEL STARtER ' No MONEY DOtPN On your lot. Trt-L*y*l or Ranch. Tour plant or cure. Have model O Plattley. NuUder. EM- 3d4g*. To^sthTdR ncLL ku CLIaRKSTON REAL ESTATE, INC- ifltb'''scliooV'also'eraid* rtorc anVre'fr'lg vicinity of Oaloa W Lsfayauc. Detroit 3*. Mlcld-1 HI* 8. Mata St 1^"! jirsie.’fcsJSf.** ««' i^assr“‘•*•■ 11 cgwo'j^*k.'«i*.rd ®^M*AS.’=*Sf^ ‘Vf * I' e (slum, elding I. Uvlng sno dining area carpeted: compact kitchen. 1 bedrms. 3 bedrms. and bath. Bkse-ment completely finished wUh bultt in bar. 0(1 heat ” garage. (3.s.» I ... -natehlni labrlc i Bros. Jilted Uotle I from. Interior Mortgage Loans I ELECT Easy 1 Ken .,mod.l-»; FOR COLORED 371 8 BLTD -i Weet«mn'^-R»riiy l-yHf ; "According to the car pool rules, yotf have i I get your affairs in order . . , ' Barry I ¥i“ OrVer \ ! I Im JS ' "“oAKLAND FUEL - FAINT .. ..>lrlRerator .......t3B.85 j Ayt. PM rump I'lectrie, Inc. tuburnFK 4-3473 4b UL 3.3D00 } bS4lSiii,^sU?i%em. KKEBZERS — UPKIOHI FAMOUS i iwrch, *144. Irrcgulsri, tamplai. cfstched.. Terrtnc I Price only factory can give — while they last. I Michigan Fluorescent, »3..J3b—• - please. Mich- j chard Laka„Aos, — tt:------- ^ JJ erweIOHT PORTABLE NO OTHER COSTS $600 TO $2,000 6n Oakland Countv li Voss it Buckner. Inc. >a National Bldg.____4-4723 i •'I Sioney Available Now!! "."'uL NOW IS THE TIME TO PIE UP' I**." f- 3*3- brahwif'f YOUR JttdlilE..AND.. OBT- ¥eeR= ---------- —--------I .r..,,* ssv uii not water ■B3a,F''ofiTOP DEBT WE WILL,: OAS STOVE 424: REFRIOERA- heater 310. oil Unk $4, Uble. o.v n,ttr sir r,.. vrtiln mi.LS I tor, 134; 31' TV, good condition. I , 4^halrg as Cot tl. EM 3-4*33. ........ ................. «8H SHANTY ANTfpE CHKSTI REALTOR sKn”' 'Waik May Mans Laidi;oi,iU- -.r.:. - "-HbBdillWMlf ■ Brick Csrpcicd living i room With fireplac-Attached............. ■droom. basement. ( I plumbing garage, i Attached garage. Nicely decorat-; ed. Will consider trade 75 West Huron Street Templeton MULTIPLE USTtHtrSERVICE IRWIN Sylvan Lake 3-bedroom' ranch home N._. ranged. Extra large living natural fireplace, ceramic baUi, full basement. lorceC heat. Attached garage. 3tb Priced lor quick sale. Only :ely a: KENT ' NO MO.N'EV DOWN Sharp 3 bedrm home. lull base-. ment, sulomuttc beat, plastered walls, paved streets, chose to schools snd bus line. Phone FE 3.-3«(4. $50 DOWN West Chicago,^ j^- J-bedrm Tor Nafc'Lakc Property m ] Bumess Opportunity .5Q MfinwisM -r H B f g. BrnofyiM I ESTABLISHED „ _ . panehn. Basement, oil lirnace. i 3*ISlY °,'!oni.*.'=’‘L Z fit?. HAW)\VAKF pr*5it fw B D af?rle*. Ihf c South 8ti • fireplace, raised hearth, picture i ..... windows. IW-car garage, nice | i lawm ahruba and treea. ail In ex-{ 413 SOO down"* ** « ^O^R PENSION-5 HAGSTROM 19M PBN-nAC FOR CHEVROLET : f ‘ .?L 9M.C pickup _r- - ■— CASH FOR USED 7 phonos J I recordera. FE | 1 large Cyclone fenced, - ----1 street $2,100^ cent mortgage, . THIS HOME It -loeated I Lake Estates. Lsrge carpet!' NORTHERN HIGH I consider trade NEAR EASTERN JR HIGH . School Only 99W down for this ' Trtm home itTUr i'a bsths Could i be used as rooming houiie ouiric poisesBloo Total price Id.B LARGE FAMILY RANCH home TriTctor Soulhwest of Pontiac. R^mhlma , brick 4 bedrm. home WEBSTER LAK£ ORION — OXFORD "" Bouih of Lake 0 LAKE ANGELUS i ilmost new bl-ievel brick and l tone trimmed borne overlooking Installation or. service for any-I thing, of real value or lowest | ! price iter. Call A A B HcaUng. > MA s-3ir* —--------------- . OVER 40 USED TV SETS FROI up. TW anvennaa. g*.»4. VVALTON TV iU E. Walion '»0~fL i: ’-So'i ^ Antoma^ *wasl cultivator, ail hydraulic. Row t —" take privllegex; All for I loveljr 3-bedroom bungalow has dining room, full baiement, automatic beat, oak floors and plas-lered walls. Extra Insulation, 2- fl lol. 3 ear gi------------ places. 3 taths Extra Uva tory In baaement. Ready P move Into today. We havi oS»*‘*iil,Njo'.* Terms. "SS FE AM3. landscnp^. ^Lftke priv right at »27.MK). T^rmn EAST SIDE - Eastern condUion Tiled bath La mlc Uled : sdo. 13,900'_ ".0^10 ' C. A. WEUbTER, Realtor , sii ^i«iy Partridg.e I for_ any^ . ... .... ___________ _________________________ 5-3103 right now_____' red FIREPLACT RUO. 3x4: FlREi ' EQUITY - 3-BEDBOOM. NEAR pHce lixtures. eomplott f»t "»• Mxdispn Jr Hlch.^ Colder \M M khi***L 3-4332 J99’**’ I OOOD INCOME“PR6PBRtr'T«B I ra ...................... BTANDINO TOiLln lU SJi •"“• link .... 35.SI ....... 17q . — coppor 30-ln. lengths ....... Tie It. ,y la southerly K _______A Kentucky o wrlw Pontiac Press “REraiOKRATOR" WITH ' O'NEIL FE 4r3Ml Sale Resort Property^S2' ^ LAKE LOTS, mb. $10 ON. _m<^30 min. to Pont FB 4-4 For Sale Lots I etntipment. $9:WJ on 11' table ^ KKBUILT WASHERS ''^’^'"{■'ROM^'tM'w”*** fcPINNERS, EASY 'bite or colored 1, 3U.70I ak^ Imprnvi sited dining! oVch overJook-; beacb. Owner: •d at^y 413,-; Moyd Kent inc.. Realtor 3300 Dixie Hwy. xt Telegraph' FE 3-0133 - Open Eves. ..... ..Fief. Parklpg . Full basement. Health re lor telllna Only 04.000 daw . R. HAG.STROM REALTOR ) Highland Road iM40- Beer BUM** PUMPS TRaLED, SOLD AND itinesi repaired Dirt conveyors and air rsnri,' liammers lor rent. PI 1-0043. ‘TOAbE SET OP CHINA WORTH OOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 'BUD' ss. I at kitchen remodeled All this BATEMAN REALTY rl5ily°'( PONTIAC FE 4-7004 AFTER 4 "LET’S TAl.K ' BUSINESS s MY 3-370L vfi-LAOI OF SYLVAN Tl lt |thejirei oftcilnx on il bedroom Cape Cod. s Your Children AVm Love Tfcih- iwrcncr w Gaylord 13«J W Huron 8f F1-: GIs Li-ke AO Tinker ? Income. Too Only 31.000 down on this 3-Iiy Income Jutt off Dixie I..... . way la Drayton nafot: close to bus and stores, six i"-and bath ' separate No Money Down FB 4-4400. LI 3-7711. IH-IIH.I. \ ii.i'.\(ii'; , "For those wlio care ' A planned suburban community of kr^. t^uttfuIj'oIHng homssim , a Exc 31 3-7403.________ r- f • r-i si.-.. srs REBUIL'T VACUUMS"01J.»3 UP For Sale Clothing 64 W. Huron Barnet 4b Hargraves -----------------, REFRIGERATORS lOOO MODEIS I PINK NET STRAPLESS FOR- perfect, new guaranteed for 5 matr sise -14-10. f towered bodice . years. Cent Httle more than s and acetate underlining Prtc- used machine. No down payment, llcally, new end In very good MlcMgan _^Pluoresceni.^ 303 Ot- GaRIEN“ NYLON STRAPLESS 1 BERRY DOOR SALES Open from I to 3 Noon on Saturday 3718 Paddock_______^PB 3-0203 OAS-dlL FURKACIS, NtW-UBEOl Best buys! AAH Sties. MA 4-1^001. HOT WATER HEATER. 30-aAlI gas. Consumers approved. 300.40 v^ue. 330 04 and 3W.M. matgad. electric, oU ai........ Ilchlgan f'hiorcecent. 303 HOUSE COLDl 1 apartment IllO.OC e It-IO down payment. , Trailer Park 120x160 LOW AS 3200 DOWN i..\i)irs. iN(. FE 5-0201 After _7_ p m , C See {or Vuurself CHFROKFK HILLS! You'll like Its wooded, rollliig li - . controlled to prole MICHIGAN BUSINPiSS “Bud” Nicholie, Realtor 30 Mt Clement St. FE 5-1201 After 6 p.m. FE 5-8004 HOYT RAY O’NEIL. Realtor 343 a Tel^raph Road (.EN'L HOSPITAI........... close b». Very comforltble in excellent condition wiUi 'nstural fireplace I's baths, steamUral snd double garage Excellent /ondlUon. close ^ h|gh^ school. ne ares PrteV at'ois'loOO only 374 per monlh BAST SIDE - Lovely kept stores and bi LET'S trade LAKEFRONT..”. Hoiiv area, close to m Chrysler Expi gas fired lurnaoe. garage, paved drive. Can be bought on EZ-FHA terms. Ah ex- 'uVo/rR'i^ Elisabeth Lake Road to Scott Lake Road, turn right 3 blocks to Lacota. Car.1 \V. Bird. Realtor 503 Community Nat l Bank BWg FK 4-4211____^EVES . FE 4-13*2 Waterford liills Estate A few choice lots left. Average 100s2$0. Oood drainage. Ideal lo- \LKS tOKFOR.-ATlON „ JOHN A LANDMESStR. BROKER WS”' OR 3-1231 1373 TELEGRAPH ROAD FI 4-1532 .. Open til 3. Eves AKE 31.000 PER MONTH AND up New product requires little MAH-I selling. Simply show It to your 12-1* Irlcnos . everyone can use It! U imestment ol 31.400 requi Write Pontiac Press Box 17. ' ' -- address and with Acetate underlining and a matching iseket. The«c arc very aUracllve loo yST'^urther information call FE WEDDIliu GOWN, SIZE SPECIAL 4X12 RUOB. $34.36. McLeod Carpet. Woodward at Square Lk Just below_Te^s. 2-T701. SEWING MACillNES, ’WHOLESALE to »4L New: used and repoaaessed. " With liuulatloD backer I SAVE DP TO H ON HEA'HMO I low winter prtc ----‘LUlf, I ------D AT I SIDINO J Appliances. WINDOWS SOLD AT 1 WITH SIDINO JOB Pay nothing 'till Sprint *'• VALLELV NOW L I-B*33 Tioo, 'Trade gas range for elec- __________ 20*v. ■ me rangf 'B; 'B:."*(tnrr5 TOcmc KE 8-3no Co. 1000 W Huron. ___ _ JADE LADY S" PUR COAT. TAKE O V E R PAYMENTS, ON 14. 32'<. OR 3-1741 Singer rig sag In beautllul console coat:; gke'-nbw i,*^y»^,„?J*”%u‘l"on^"^ii‘‘*uh"! out attachment. 34.10 per monlh : or 303 20 rath. MI 7-1028 CspI- [ ' - Center __ Spring NEvrnjR'COAT. INSULATIO.V Ail Types. CaU— . - M. A. BENSON Pontiac, in 4-3421 iufCKEN CABINETS. S I N KB, alched, 43" model, 383 value. 150 whUc they last Terrtfie. and 36" modaU. Michigan e wUl a TVs chard Lake 4 t Radio 1 Partridge Huron FE ^-1 >■: C' ' , Jlivcnport d Appl., 423 V . LAVATORIES. COMPLETE, |34 40- .. .11 I I idA VAi Vrti&s. ^ o 05' ’h‘i'l'’;r*Vtifl's.*feeVul.-rVG^^^^^ ri..i. . *i*M ’ yalues. Michigan Fluorecont, 3*3 1 ELECTRIC WATER HiATER. 4-Pc. Breakfast I h extras. Trees and beautiful ! Id beach. Only |2*.*40 which easily 34.000 under the mar- ■ SEEING IB BELIEVING! | now living In I NOW'! CITY FOLKS! t U. DavF, ____ _ FE 4-4311 , CLARKSfON AREA. i jjtrbcrt 1 RItr. Plumbing and IJcaling Sujyplieb cheap ^'1 spnnga. and cablneU. eva thing In used furniture at bi bJdrm®”'*dln tUB bunkli I ;,neiiv 6 vpK nM ^ Over 1300 tQUure feet EiX OR TRADE—Only 4 yre. old minulBlU Uvinw in thl Two-bedroom bungalow on paved room brick ranch^ ^ ''W.ll“Uu“{ime‘'““gas**"^?^ i ' eI" utw. yyi been lived In « co..tfac^«;,jgS^B^enL^^ realty or 4-041 stlonery and suppllof In I »'• office and business . GId esIaSSsGd firm, ntwly orated, attractive store with storage. tS.OOO plus atoek Factory seconds. About tb price. nmn TRADE-IN DEPT B-Z terms. The Bargain House. I U^ DEPT. BUY, SELL. TRADE 103 N. Casa i 0>“7 »'«' ...... as I*, I _*t lafayette. PE 3-0S43:__ _ tee-|l SPIECE DINING ROOM SET. ! jlp' iecttonarMfa13M 05 " ! fSS' chrome toette chro^dtnrtte ...... 32935 343.3J A TERRIFIC VALUE This home was built In 1*53. has plastered walls, oak flo4U«. 8 ACRES High and dry, excellent site lor country home. — only 4 miles north of Pontli ..“P cylj aud electric ■ ROOF LEAKS Call your advlior tor a fraa aa-“mate. Bavt 4k ol Uit coat, rm VINYL UNOLEUM, yd. 4*c "BUYLO" TILE. 103 8 BAQINAW COP- ST Partridge Hi-Fi. TV and Radio 66 YOU CAN LETS TRADE 0 down Monthly | 3 BEDROOM RANCH For you. looking ........... . .. large lot — 3 and two-third acrci all Cyclone fenced. Lane Itvtn room and dining room Full bast metiL aaposed ow h««k. Oak-j 354 8. TELEORAPH FE 3-3040 FE 3-0004 MULTIPLE LIBTINO SERVICE MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ARRO CANAL FRONT — New 3 bedroom >, beautiful klteh> aoont; gaa heat, ifaoa f room with large--pletare^ oaaiiooktoi water. Only 313.500. 3 BBORlXMl BUNOALOWj- Pa^ atoaa^______^ ^ _____ _____ tali basement, heat, large lot. 313.500. Terms, INCX3UE - 3-famlly, oak floort, f aemenLgas beat, inntiura rent-X lor VH per month. 3Hsar ga-niM, eloaa to boa Only 311.H0. LaiOK LOT.- WHb ibedr^” LAROK______ ___ - ranch, oak floori. plenty boards In handy kitchen, full- ment. oil heat, only 30.500 — TKD*McCOl1oDOH REALTOR JF& S-i;^ FE 4-3844 ......... __________large lot M ft. wide, good beach, dock. Priced at only 313.300 and very eaey terms Call Mrs. kicCarthy. EM 3-0433. ELL OR TRADE - Located on near west side of Birmingham. Lovely brick rancher with full basement and attached gar. Ex------------------------------- good SELL OB TRADE — 10 ACl gitnast Bew ^^rarwtm rancher snd attached ____Large 70x at only 333.400. iper^ morrow." Aa PUlii-in appliance^ fireplace, two nice planicra, wen arranged floor plan. CaU for de-UUs. Will trade lor cheyer home LIST WITH W — We need^ goM modern homes and we trade. 30 yrs. serving Pontiac and vicinity. MULTIPLE LI8T1HO SERVICE Open 0-3. OPEN 3-3:30; SUNDAY 1 INDIAN VILLAGE Five room ku _ kltehea, carpeUng.----. ngge, ameellant condUlaa. Priced - gbowa by gp- NOKTH SIDE. PHA; IILMMJM wMb M Convenient to telux ahopplng. This thi raimber has a large 4-34M_or_FE 3-4il0 ^ _ COLORED wsTctig neat and clean FuUy Insulated d. Tcrrai, monthly DOWN. 335 MONTH, leaa than u are paying lor root. 3 rooms - garagt. You m U-------- buy today. Call Mrs. Howard, FE 3-S413 — wm. Miller Realty. 070 W. Huron. WHrriKMCyE STHEET:__________ -----Lgaely family home to excellent eonrililon Large living roor No Upkeep JOHN-K. IRWIN * SONS RaaltMrs " SS}.?5T^ • ■ ET*. F» Itndseaped lot. surrounded by trees and close to tjie Igbe. lam unrig room, dtnlng---------- kitchen with oodi" " colored bullt-lnx of cupboards, mx and snack bar, , __________ with large cloaetO and room for fourth bedroom If needed. Spacious family Toon^SM iqisdt of storage i other extras to t-tin. Kl'LM.TOk Fi-: 4-0528 3T7^S_T^TORAPH-0FEN ^E6 NOW OPENING THE ALL NEW’ Corvette ; R \5’ 0’NF1I>. Realtor 303 8 Telegraph Road Open 0-0 p.m. Income Property . -iMILY PLAT E. Beverly nea AOE ON SMALL LAKE. TERMS APPROX 3 ACRES CITY. ZONED MNPQ. 2. TEB3I8 J C. HAYDEN. Realtor .... PE i-0441 ACRE 1040 W Huron PE 4 ST AT ION S'Ft^kEAS E POTBNigMtL Please call be- ’ ___D I am. and 4 pm PE 3-0101 or after 4 p.m. Pt 3-1440. Pearson's Furmture. C 4-7X81 y n-INCH' ZIENITH TABLE I used TV. 335 Peer's, 3141 SA ** ® _'^»Uon _ _ AUBURN HEIGHTS -' building sight on pe -FAMILY PLAT-4 AND 4 ROOMS ------------- Fisher Body. 8) PURI PK'COMPA&Y Sale Laml Contracts PIECE OR HOUSEFUL WTD Quick rash for furniture sppll-ancrs_Bsrgatn^ouse_PE 3-4443 . 2. 3, RIGHT NOW CALL MA 4-3143 about any beating proMem guaranteed used lelevisl! OBEI. TV 1930 Elisabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-4945 WANTED: PRESTO"OR REKOKUT ----------- Disc recorder, any CMdltton or staLL ' SBOWERS, COMPLETE P.*r' with fauens sod curtalok. id*.50 For Sale Miscellaneous 67 ....... 421 40 rm INCH I’lA'WOOD MIchlgar rtuorcscebt. 303 Or- Lake 4 !. - 37. $11,660 S H. , tor... 'rg A’$m LAND COHTRACT8 TO BUY OR k done. A A: B RfWtlnc w m 3-SmM. ^ 2 SLEEPEF lOWOK^ I Auburn ' , ’ 7. _ : PL 2-33ifl /Tioney to Loan 61 3 piece dearborn maple FomUc. $ roomi each, For Sale Lake Property SI 1 Money Lcnoerai I Borrow With Omfidcncc ONTO PATIO ----ATTACHED GARAGE. INDIVIDUAL ROOM OAS HEAT. ALUMINUM STORM 4430 MOVES YOU Jl ______ INCLUDES BVERY- THING DRIVE NORTH ON J08-LYN PAST WALTON. 4 MUJB8, POIiOW THB Candlewick Woods Sign 4-13etlrooni Lakefront Only $2„Sa) Dn.. $<40 Mo. Saif land beacli.- - • ■ - famHy. BeautUul ___________ ______ rm with huge cutstone fircpiaci Clarence C. Ridgeway - ____ BROKER for-4atgc FE 5-7051 3»tJg-~'* • GET $25 TO $.K)0 Houbeliold Finance CorporaUon of Pontiac 31.0 8. Saginaw " — - •' 10A^MA_4-I^M7._________________ ROOMS COMMJiTE. WO. 03, Bed davenport, 014: Gas stove. $15: Sectional like new. End tables, «; Hollywood bed headbosrd. 43: Rollswsy bed. 315: Studio couch. 315; Chest. 35. 21 Uberty natural BIRCH ........ 31335 ROTARY MAHOGANY .. 314 35 PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO 434 Baldwin ^re convinced that this is really and truly the Uma to have It done. A A 8 Heating. i^iNorSbiL PIPE in... 34.19 l-lnch Soil Pipe ..... 33.73 lump Pumps ........... 33*33 SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY SNOW PLOWS SNOW BLOWERS OR’i'Kl ~JENNT~t.iliP_ drapes, oil furnace. 3 car att Full price 314.400 HAROLD AUTOMATIC DRYER 1 4 W. Lawrence Bt. 340. Electric or gaa range, 340. Schick's, MY 3-3711. ________ ABOUT ANYTHING YOU WANT ..STATEWIDE LOANS ____ THB HOME CAN FOUND aT L A 8 BALBB. A little out of .the way but a lot lest to pay. FUriilture and appli-incet of all kinds. NEW A USED Visit our trada dept, for real Real Estate service ol PdnUtc Day or Night UN 4-OM DRIVE-IN One of toe hottest spots In -------- 6^ le ________Tge grots. Good teaie. Steal this for tl.OOO cash or 33.M with 33.000 dowa. Where can y make over 3100 a week on auch tma|l Inpestmanty | Petersqn Real Ebtate MY 3rt68l " 350 TO 31*0— 321 - 3500 COMMUNITY LOAN CO 30 E LAWRENCE FE 0-0431 TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAllt ROCHESTER ROMEO UIANB U5 TO 3300 AUTOe , LIVESTOCK HOUBEHOU3 GOODS _ Ot 3:rt..I % TBEBYICE" 34 MONTHS TO PAY 1 mllet E. of PonUac or 1 J oi Auburn Reittats on Aul ftUUreftM* froai Mlywopd bed •aSSoomOmnu . 34 34 34 34 BATHOOM PIXTCRBS. OIL AND furnecet Hot v»Ur an equipment. Wa buy and aalL Forbes PrtnUng A Oftlea Bnpplyj MI *-301*. OH 3-0737. - ifilEb ^ FIGOR FORHAZa Used linmat water soPfEW- —------- FB 3-1134. T'K) Bunuirs-iiD-atea wtodw ajto 3?T»I. * J t Cauief^ Eifttip., Smw. BIB^ -roP^ WMUIUB^ S ■*" 1^4. altor •.ar PB Agli THE POXTIAC PRKSS. TlTikDA V. FKBKl’AHV 7, 1»«1 Sale Mvtkal CkhmIs Far Sale Pets ‘ 79 For Sate tUs MARMADUKE B)r AiHterson te Leamins caaD aaat und» T"**" Ptl-#** , <■« Cl^loArn rvborrd XwL U» ' (.ULBRAKSEN W a ho«-. phh. r* TRANSISTOR ORGAN ^ ' ,sArirrv~sPE<5AL“rto~HT~E!»b bKludInc THE FABULOUS THEATER ORGAN ncy.r, rDKnfo-, H WmiAini PS t-MU I. BnkM rrUMd I AVeigard Munk Center UniACCF MIIE BAZAAR AREA RRrnAVT Ph«w' FE N4T!4 T*''**”'!_ Dogs T rained. Boarded 80 McRART 8 » ______ ___________ bd*rAU>( ■mjam*. umimiiit- BrttUiny and l^odl* »*m« OL 1-04M 81 ttJNTT TEArHETfT ORGAN MANDAL6-» PEDDLES H :i 1 EB BITTERLY MUSIC CO ttw BETTOTi^usiC CO Hay. (irain and Feed 8» GUTTAR ' AMPUPiaR HraHIW llrm* I»nfu»iir Bwthoirn m-OR ]-Z3t«____________ eBINNELL’'cONSOl,E PIANO For Sale Bkycles BUY USED BIKES NOW Mer* wlw«»*n. lo«»r prlcr, BcAfteU s BtU ABd HpOtw teep ,A* E I,Awrmc». _nj-TM___ Boats and Accessories 97 BOAT INSURANCE I PER CENT u( vAlur HAHun A«eiuv FE 3-»i3 HXi'ANSlOX SAI F Bi( RrducIMO QQ A»d iu«d Boai> Motor*. TTAllor* !M1 Modd* now On dtspinr Sctxi Motor? A WhUrhouio boAU r-tn-riMfi CRCISEOCT BOAT SALES ^ W»l»oo , BA EE S-44W A11.IU ci«v«. com OA j-iai evinrudk motors- ood tIuiB . nocitikf Boat*, ki--'^HARD TO FIND BUT Far Sale Cat* 106 JIM DOOOE I POOR. RADIO AND • HEATER. ADTOUATIC TRAR8- MumoN. ASaoLUTctr no money DOWN A»umc IWI-menu ol la M per no OfU Ct»d-u Mgr * Ur. Parlia at Ml 4-1UB Harwd Ttirncr Pwd._^ ‘M DMOTO ~>-DOOR ttARCTOr all potter. V-l aalomatlc ttaiu< ■nlaalon. radio aod hooter. po«l-Uvely BO nut and like new Ib aad out. ObIt as do«h aad EH a Mr monin. Uoyd Min . UbocIb-bercurvkCantt. Ml B. BBtlBaw. ri __ IIM enolSh lK)Rb For Sate Cara “at eonpo^ut PUI M tuB pi Ukretde Moton, il4» PLYMOUTH RTAttON WAO- Nth Uka Rde Pit on. radio and heatar. Neada aoma ( mwlon ■ftd^iaa^^ . i -Pall price III Wo monay, " F»f OR I-M» ^ iaia"^T ~ «* <•"*« «•“ '^•1. **«ri Ji'- O'- ' liM POimKC BTAR CMlBP. KX KEdlJ!W-’».‘”iS8: Sl-JSl.'SSJ.'a’SiS, Only gSM BAijri_WARD. 106 For Sate Cars •a: '•Slffi7’2/^ir"£S;a or BM I-Jll* ij^PONTMl^ Slock .1 Ily Til* "’EaV i - -- -___________ NbRTH'cHEVROLirr COL, I»7 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE t ..... \WOODWARD AYE. BIR-1 Dr With Rgdto And Heater Solid: JjMlf.81 call. pleAae_oBII Aga UINOHAM Ml 4-llU. _ I *««' ''“‘‘lii * riM WNTIAC'INDOOR HARDY - - ^ ---I Sharp! ggg» JOHN J smith star cmel. N##d aomtolM ts U paynenta. ilA g>0a«. FORD RANCH WAGON. ECON- ,*5!? ^T 'i aadiNAW ___i ony g cyllader. aiaadard ahllt. > *“ * SAQIHAW OR. only gl.Jgg. I -*T_ A?®** NO |gg| PooUbc. g paatehfC^ilarrA I fggl'PORD iXWYERTMLa. POWER ‘ titering and brakaa. tllU iaather tnienor. tpcclal tnglne. PttU price. ; M90. ggs dor- ---------- Pord, IB| deirn. only g: TOM BOHR. IM J| MalB^MtUord_ ’ Btccrloc and Poarer Brakaa. BIO BARGAIN ■ COLE, IN’C. ij^cK a: - efSR* I c"^.w”ribi «2ik N0**ig« ^yment^ of WM p«r^ Ll'oy'd M ^ADIO AHO HKAT- j I. er BtiMrIor Auto &M OftklABd ! MATIC. RADIO AMD HKATER. rr. «i|pvri«r auhi, «kw wsmamiu onu/ro ■TrVRINn ARAOLUTE- ! dUTELY NOli TnS t MI 4-ISM Harold A SPEAEER-JS WATTS L' iDmiDK to look at the house today. Could ,ou keep HIM out of sight?? WADE An£T guaranteed - ™„,r . orinneil f Beautiful maple or oak ' .-■-njBtr-piinoTffTsrB^^ .. • ing only ASM P?ee le... r> in- WEI I For Sale l.itcstock 83 CHOlCr flFEF QUARTER pEW WALNUT PLATER PIANO F^r- Sale Poultry 3 MARINE EXCHANGE tai 5 natinaw PE A4ipi JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS WANTED FULLY BQUtPPA) SPUD For Sale Cars I0( ......CFH\N....... Hirmiii}>ham 1 ratlt ' WILSON z.c,M)ii.i..vt: For Sale Cart 106 heater. Solid No. IA» Onlv ASM. Eaay Tertnt. NORTH CHEV-ROLICT CO. lAOO S WOODWARD Moe paymeou Comet, in B. aafinaw. ra i-iui. ^ _.SVE.BIRMINGHAM^ Ml 4-3^5. ■ Mar . Mr 'bBrMn'gt MI f JMl! BmMDIOHAM-RAMaLBR. Ml 8 WOODWARD. ! ,|^ ^hd RANCH WAOOK I M PORD. V^, BTANbARO SHIFT. DIO AND HEATER. WjUl _ . gin PBI-MM_______ . , WALLS. ABSOLUTELY NQ MON- lAM FORD J DOOR. RADIO AND i EYJK)WN Ai HEATER. FORDOMATIC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. A>- tume paymenti^of U4 M per mo inrner rom_______ Call Credit Mgr Mr. Parka at nt’VMXT/" MI 4-TaM Haiuld Turner Ford RLtlNCi mi PORD "victoria hardtop " ___Or ' Beauniul condition. AU ylnyl in- 8EU.INO_..... ........... ElIiaMUi Lake hd FE>4^ ._4 Jj healer ot'l-gTAl ‘ full price Laketlde Melon. lAJT PORD STATION WAOON. V-A ”, , _ TTOtroi'^aBriTOP ‘ beatmfotTUnnmg ^dltlon. W4^ . eosme. ttAndard thifl. radio, heal- »»?^NTOLN ITWOR^A^ Huron al tlUabeth Lake Rd FE er. whlleaatU. Buciakln belfe ftn- Auto 8a?f» M3 sSJlh' • sTilna* F^ 4-J»I4 1AM PONTIAC 4-DOOR. PULL .. CHEVRG . nrlce IMS No money down, at- irOOpWA-IP AO AMS mme Jwymenn_ of W/tV'; »nk 4-7W^Marold Turner Pord___ "TAYLOR'S Ok used c.tKs CHEVROLET OLD8MOBILB m—u Eyanina* walled I BIRMINGHAM-E ^ Ltncoln-MenMjr-^ContlQgnul Bob Frost. Inc. _ __ Mg s. Huntir aied.__ 'BRAND T4EW-:, L.4RK STATION WON.- A Cyl Standard Trini Heater trhite tnlla Other accaaaortea. ALIM Dellrered. AlAA Down and ggf per auntti. MAZUREK IIOTOR SALBE Waion. radio and hMuCi room condition glAO down. a» tame payroenu of AI.M per week BLBt. AM 8. WOODWARD. _ 1AM RAMBLER HTATION WAOON. --- doWB ataume paymeou of ler week-. CaU Credit Mer. -----' . MI A-IAAO. BIRM- Mr ?Brl term* NORTH I A-MOO. BUIMINOHAM-RAMBLER AM B VVOODWAKD list PONTIAC 4-DOOR STATION wli.nn Kii orlgmal omsFr E»cel- »4tk- R vhti«it«a BlAUTirVL l«my eondlHoo I rMunaed. 3 mu» ma «!Q jSpmft miboctny 13 pt4%i teard orgmn %\b9 ‘ (i.M,I..\GHi:R S 11 E Huron , _ „ FE 4-A.1A4 FIANO TUNINCJ — OSCAR .Bchnudi, F» IdWlJ.__ _ fuNOERLANb DRUM A-1 CONDI- • tion. FE MAAS ___________ ! WUDENTS' SPECIALS DRUMS Complete »et IM M CLARINETS Prom A3A M CORNETS-TRUMPETB Prom A3A M TROMI---”-------------- *“•“ Jtste Farm Produt-e 8o Traiuportal’n Offered 100 Open*^ eyer? *^Ap^- * ENGINE AIHUNER _LQ8^ AN flM-erf^SkTd |po^ haBdtrra'i*r _J . ,~°FrWCY Tb"SOL-rHEAisT Sale Farm F.quipmcnt 87 ^ W A NTED "R IDE Rii ' LE A VI NO "for Lot AneeJe!.. California. Wednes-- . ... day Feb Ath FE 4-H7A belween l’..\KC, \IN> «Jnd 7_pm __ ............ USED CHAIN SAWS CABS TO NEW YORK F\rti BONNlE-8 DRIVEAWAV FE 3TA3A ed ;ie;trlr‘ motor. In A-1 ^ f 3 HP & >4 HP CHEAP , .V M.wk Wanted Used Cars 101 1350 N. Woodward birmtnuham VOL .''HOUr.D SF.F. BIT F .\LT() S.VFF.S TODAY TONIOHT-ANVTIME 'tefs Facs -i sawkomi-k.;;-- WE NEED i let ua help you atUu.l to a le.s Dixie Hwy . ne > # eapenalve car nM MERC UR Money Wno‘;^-e7do-.n:U-ke-.^^^^^^^^ 177 M}4 ^ Lake Orion ; Motor«. Huron at Bllaabeth . Manning WE MUST list FORfj 4-DR RANCHWAOON. LUTELY NG MONEY DOWN As- (.'i^RV■IF.S - ’56 ^trirrifir-ca ci”*Cmm“'Mfr“‘Mr"prrk,“M^ FORDS.'bUICKS, PlVmoUTHS OUCI nice co.^Ulon. iuAS. miglnAl owner. 4-7iOO Hamid Turner Ford_; ’ ‘ " -VO CREDIT" i-BEtk!.-. r7 FORD VS 3DOOR iS PONTIAC U PXYMOUTH >4 MERCURY HARDTOP A BUICK --'TJFim® ford faiSlane'sW only' , 1400 milet. Will awepl JAM cpr 3RD. RADIO AND HEATER - , and while fm- If'A^rar 1AM PORD. VS owner todny Paywt LUCKY -NUTO S.M-I-S Renul - Layaway - PaymeBt Plan «DWA»D8____ t. UNtNO AND REPAIRING, 94-. hour aeryue. aU work gunraB-leed by factory trained men. CALBI MUSIC CO HA N BAGiNAW • FE S-AEM 2, U,er week Call sell MYi-3TAl ______________PxrW--n-Tn TJ500 credit Mgr . Mr GBrlan et MI SELL OH TRADE EQUITY Kut Harold Turner Ford / 6-3900 BIRMINQHAM-RAMBLER iA57 FORD 3-DOOR SEDAN. 'V A. i oasi “ * standard tranemlsslon Pull price A095. AA.5 down, assume pay-1955 CHEVY DEL KAY 3-BOOR V-8 menu of 57 35 per week Call aulomaMc: very clean. Terms. OR Credit Mgr . Mr O BrIan at MI 3-6594. C SiannIng 6-3AO0 BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLIR duion no money down full 53 CHEVY NEEDS SOME WORK 666 S WOODWARD price 1135. assume payments of Make me an olfer MA 4-346S 57 PORD FAIRLANl -»00 ' 95 3. ocr month CALL MR ‘ REPAIRS ON 4-DQOH. V8 Auto. Trans.. Radio. WHIT® CREDIT MANAOER .\I.L \I.\K1‘.S OP' C.^K.S Extra Sharp^W and While Klnif^utn'^Ssles______115 S. Saginaw ItU.NHMNG. P.\JNTlN(i L.ARRV'HuROMK j*^a”^wI^wary°A^^^ "oUM; "STARFIRE, t DOOR, PONTIAC STAR CRISP 4-DOOR. .......- power steering" ind ! *-»^*®---- brake? Cora, white finlah. Stock 1A57 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF ‘ No 1650. Only 69A5. Easy terms door, hi "' - --------- ' glidr Radio aid healer I7A5 ?xc^lKm IA57 Pontiac 3-Dr. CaUllna. Hydra- S:S; JSl06"| OR : Radio a 666 S WOODWARD ■57 OLDS FIESTA WAOON Excellent condition FE 5-0A43_ 1A55" old'smobile; super -61 ■, ii& U KAMBl.KK SiiperMarket HOMER RIGHT MOTORS MARATHON PRODUCTS BRAID CASS AT PIKE_ FE 2-IMA6 ■S3 CHEVROLET BIBCAYNE VI with overdrive, radio and heater. Solid black, exc. condKion! ROCHgSTKR FORb DIALER and HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payment of 323 06 per Turner Ford. standard * CHEVROLET C WARD 6— “ ‘60 CHEVROLET ad Wagon engine, power .ateerl '67A5 Eltf terms NORTH 4 3T» J______________________ brakes, ________ ______ ______ 1357 CHEVROI ET 3 DOOR RADIO transmission, radio, heater, a AND HEATER. POWERGLIDE u'rei. Onyi black ar-* ‘----------'‘■ ABSOLUTELY NO M O N E Y DOWN Assume puymenU of 833 15 per mo Call Credit Mgr Mr Parks si Ml 4-7500 Harold Tu^cr Ford. _ . . 1960 CHEVROLET WOOKWOOD station wagon. Raflo. heater. whllewaU tire*. Acylinder. - SPECIAL- I960 FORD PALCON wait'urea!'deluaV group. ............... $1495 61005. Superior Auto, 550 Ouk- land Ave^ _________ 4-’75bb". Harold i|5| OLDe flUPER U HARDTOpT We believe It la the nicest one In town!! No money down, assume payments of 30 pOr week. Call Credit Mgr , Mr. OBrIan at MI 6-3A00. BIRMINORAM-RAUnilB. AA^S. WOODWARD^_______ lti» OLDiSMOBILE 66 3 DOOR hardtop VX engine. HydramaUc. power steering, power brake*, radio. heater 34one beige. Stock No 1477, Onlv 61795 Easy terms, NORTH CHEVROLET OO 1000 ~ WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINO-■- MI X37J6 tA BEACH^^ SAND. SPHEAD ON ■**Aga. loading EM 3X373 JPT'TOP SOIL -CHUSHED STONE " ..... Lyle Conklin 3AS^i3 * NO *aiMMIC®8'’'’ WE*USt "The OFFICIAL MOBILE HOME MAR- (ru, KEI REPORT BfXjK AND OUR »gi PRICES ARE REDUCED FROM ... „ ....................... , WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-3735 1A54 CHEVROLET 3 DOOR. RADIO ion OR 3XA35 1. STEEL BOX S' Matthews-“ Hargreaves PONTIAC f|#3 RETAIL STORE WHITEWALIeB FE 4-4547 65 Mt. Clemens AND___________ Corner Cass and Pike eWHsHEC STONE SAND. GRAV - . Far I Hiia ard EM 3X531 eB6A MANURE BAND AND ORAV elL FE 4-3371 WklTE BEACH SAND. LOADED OR -Xel Lake dredamj, FE 4-8:i9'i .■~S\ ood, Coal and t ucl 77 c ^L’S I..ANDSc.\F'lNri • SAasbord wood, flreulace furiseie -mot! kin 'ling 775 Scott Lake Rd , e-S® 4-423A or OR 3X165 rURNACE'anD FIREPLACE WOOD, :•*« a cord delivered. FI 2-AA70 PfillPLACE AND FURNACE WOOD CHEVROLET TON PANEL 53 P-ir» lfuu'irm."Lin WnbiW H [| N Iff Pontisc/ Open 7 Dts> laf iiliMHi rr-aitcr Salc^ and Rentals NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1600 S WOODWARD AVE BIRMINCl HAM MI 4-3735 1302 '53 CHEVY PICK-UP GOOD TIRES run? good. 4234 FI 5-33A7 lA4g CHEVROLET 'y-tON PICK-UP, ,,-box 4A5 FEA-A533 _ 1A50 FORD SCHOOUBUS. HAS CHEVY 3-DOOR STICK VERY 1A64 CHEVROLET BTAflON Wio; , FE 2-3505 on radio and heater excellent condUion nr money down, full , U*^ jfr ‘m^h. ■)j)eaal white credit manager. 115 8 Sxglnaw j IT'S SM.\RT TO LEASE COMPACTS TO CADILLACS FROM 150 MONTH TOM SULUVAN AUTHORIZED DEALER T«ton_Mlchlgan MAln A-3355 VSED CARS A» MONEY DOW” SALES. 171 S. _ ___ _ 1057 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR. PULL price. A5A5. No money down, assume payments of I7.B0 p« week. ---CalF Credit Atgr-mr. O-Brtan gt MI 4-:t70. BIRMINGHAM-RAM-BLER, 686 8 WOODWARD 19.t9 PLYMOUTH ■ > Belvedere. V-A. 4-door herdtop Eieceutlve grgy. gutomatlc trans- Tliis \\ eck’>. , ,----- ------------- - Kt ^*A ^0^1 Spsr'Snl^ Volii^ 'a^mu'Btlayne : 1AM OT^OLET^^^^^ COUre _Aak. turtiuolee interior ooweiwllH# nower Llo. httter fend whitewnU tl 5MS X i Lakf Rond. Drny- *COAl‘'^ OCtOD DRY SLAB ..fbfepiacf and fun M2 re, verecl PE - yiReplace cannel choose from SMtUng tl I3AA HORTH CHEVRO! CT CO. 1600 8 WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM MI 43735 1956 PORD VI PICKUP erglldi n. EM 3-WAl. Stuart Conaay ; CHEVROLET DEMON8TRAT- I * Tux''^o''b^ck I 61795 Easy ----- — ..... ...gergllde. ____ erlng. power brakes, white with ) trim Stock No. 1974 Only ^ .15. Easy terms. NORTH CHEV- i ROLET CO looe 8 WOODWARD ; ---------—^-OHAM - ----- NORTH „„lv 617A5 E. . .......-..... CHEVROLET CO 1000 8 WOOD .............. = —...-------------------------- WARD AVE BIRMINGHAM MI IR\1I-I-.R> ..... .......- «■'>» ___________ - ________ i.Sawe’ 1961 Impala 1 lardtop 1350 MY 3-14A6 2Xoor big saving* MA 4-3A50 AM 4X6A FORD + TON STAKE REAR -1956 OTEVROLET 3-DOOH SEQAN ............ diul wherU 4-ftpeerl transmit- 6 cylmdrr rnginc, <^undbrd Rhift. TYT- CARRY A COMPLETE LINE Mon new 8take bed Good rubber hfater. Fawn beige flnUh Stock rjl* -iSrse -OF JiEW..4i-.USED. .TRAILERS ----------- - -------------------------------------- ---------- Ilf'llv Mariiu- i..>ac1i_ 1957 CHRYSLER HARDTOP. RA- I DIO AND HEATER. WHITEWALL ; ■nRES. AUTOMATIC TRAN8MI8- . SION POWER STEERING AND Light blue finish. Assume My- .. ments of $13.43 per month, uoyd Mtrs., Llncojn-Mercury-Comet. 233 8. SagiDsw. PI 3-9131 SA PQRD" WILlTRADI VIC. IM 3X0A1. Sluajl^ConwjT __ ^ WE HAVE ' 7 l'»60 CHLVV DF.MOS AND LEFTOVERS ALL GOINC, THIS MONTH ,\T YOUR PRICE cessorles. Low mileage. Look this Oarkston Motor Sales CHBY8LIR-PLYMOUTH DIALIR J2 8._Maln._Clarkston_54A_5-514l OLIVER” Motor Soles WANTS YOUR DEAL! We need trade-lni from lfS9 thru tMO whether you are bupififf a hew or used car we are prepared to offer Too UoDer for vDur trade FE i-eni C RATES Ihop “boADs" WORK benches. \ AG ABO .ND, ZI.MMER, ^■ood, son Waldoo Road OR ^ (.RfAT LAKES. IrIES RIMOVED and WILL CUT ■*T* flreplare letiglh Call Wilson' ■-•■Iwood. EM 3-A6il XroC CAN DEPEND ON OUR’ «7WyWc! FE_AX174 / For SbIc Pets 79 I.XEAR OLD V^IMER^ER FE ENERAL. STUART AND VEI.l OWSTONK .See tau *tory and Espando k Many good Led eight or Gn ft side. Priced to sQI. Terms to suit you 4A to pick from. Buy --- Speirtkl during Feb only ■ CO—la 5rgan free with Electric Chord (ixford Trailer Said . * * “>*>v *> o' f-wke Orion ■on M! --i®oHA!rT'®mLiriri^^ —t “v ^ house-broken Gentle^ MI 7-3AA5 VACATION TRAILERS AKC DACHSHUNDS. $10 DO^WN Pixie trailer Sales abd Renii Stud dogs. Jaroorsi FI A-353A 1045 North Lspeer Rd Oxlor, . ixiCklB PUPPIES. NOT PAPIKID.._9®-i:’‘!?-^- ,«7iri..„ra„T»a xn,.„ Rent Trailer Spstc 9 $20 FOR 6 MONTHS tor mMt cars, including 52.5 000 llabltily 11.000 medical Al 000 death benefit 120.000 uninsured moiorlsl* PHONi: EE 4-.U\9i franK*'"a VnDER(5)n''aOEN( Y 1044 Jo-slyn FF. 4-353A Eves FE 3-4353 or FE A AI3A j^'oreign and Spt. Cart 105 57 CORVETTI MUBT SlI-L FI 3-7345 1A57 BMW ISETT4 '3(W MODEI 0 AVE^BiRMINO^ Ml A3735 _ _ ____ “Today's Buy ' ■55 DODGE ROYAL 3 DR. HARD-top. VA automatic, t beauty and no rust. SHAIIPI Aesume payments of $35.44 per month, no i money down, Lloyd Mtrs,. Un-coln-MercttiY-Comel. 333 B. Bag- ' inaw. Ft 8-AI31,_______________ 8HOF OUR LOT TODAY •59 PONTIAC? Catalina Hardtop NORTH CHEVROLET. $1795 BEATTIE ‘58 FORD 2-Door r mileage « > beautltul l r. 2247 Kingston TRd , Thu COLLIE PUP. 3 MONTHS)' TRI-(foSor._ AKC registered MI A 4l30tt ^ For Sale Tires 92 ■ |i A30 TIRES AND TUBES FOR sale EM 3-OA4A 679 .716 790 AOo' '"$30 62 UP AOA 8 WOODWARD AVE Birmingham Ml 4-AlAO JO 4-A434 MUST SELlIaAS BillCE SPECIAL Ne* brtkes. s’—------------* menl* of $3313 per n Bob Sums. FE 3-2S3A JAM BUICK, 4-DOOR HARDTOP good tires. 1315 Harris. FE S-27A6 walls, ^vlor green s|^th white t lASA**PONTl'Ac'’(^tIA'LlflA 4 I Uvrlrum*.tiA* Rmp. Automatic transmission, pow-1 r steering. Power brakes, radio, I euGr BeuUUful blue fintah. one-' ACROas FROM BHOWROOMu $1495 ^SO.-OEEi Automatically $50 oft on any car on our used ,car lot that won't start. That's how sure ^ we are of Shelton's used-ears. Come over ' and see if you can catch us napping. 1957 CHEVY ...$1195 t*door staJloft wagon withjmwer steering, power brakes. Power- 1954 CHEVY ...$395 Bel Air 4Xoor sedin. Powpr-gllde. radio and beater. Orty finish with blue trim. 1959 BUICK .... $1695 3-door eedan. Dynaflow. radio, heater. Ousrantced 14,0« miles. Tbls Is next to X new on*. 1956 PONTIAC $ 795 star Chief convertible. Power steering, power brakes. Hydra-—whitewall "— 1959 BUICK ... .$1995 LeSabfe convertible. Light blue finish, power itcoilnt and brakes, Dynaflow. 1957 BUICK .... $1095 1957 HILLMAN $ 595 A sUUon wagon that Is reaUy •cooomlcx]. Ideal for a flrti or . $1595 1959 FORD , VX*englne"mSo, heater, white-walls. Oceen and Ivory 1959 T-BIKD .. $2495 Power steering and brakes. Pordomatic. VX engine. Like new Inside and out. Spare never been used. See It now I 1957 PONTIAC $ 995 ^ydr^mlc, radio uml^ 1959 FORD .... $1795 tialaxle 2-door hardtop Powi steering, rur”' ” ■ Ford-O-Matle. TODAYS SPEOAL 1957 BUICK CENTURY HARDTOP ...$1195 2-door hardtop with power steering power broker, tKnanoW. radio, heater and whltewalle. 37.N0 actual miles. ’’You arc 1959 PONTIAC $1595 3-door sedan with Hydrnmatlc radio, heater, whitewalls. Solid white finish wl(h blue trim. 1956 BltorTTT7j895 Century 4-door hardtop. 1958 FORD .... $ 895 4-door sedan. VX engine. Pord-GMatlc radio, heater. Specially priced for a real bargain. Bettor burry! 1959 PONTIAC $ 995 uLtop' kODdiuon. 1957 FORD ■i-Ton pickup. ..-^p,p_____ work tor 1952 BUICK .... $ 145 Here la wc^erful tranapi^a-tlon at a bargain price. TlUa one resvUy starte every nuimlng. 1960 PONTIAC er ateerlng. brokea. $2695 FE 2-8181 HASKINS; OLIVER ! CHEVROLET ' Motor Safes sf> mile Dortb of U 8. 1 pen Bvei Unll • MApM 5-kdM 210 Orchard L«ke Ave °S5w*u& 1957 PONTIAC $1195 f 3-door hardtop with ■■‘ng and bmke^ dh) and beatei trim. Eaux 1960 CHEVY ...$2395 g^'Vr^laTm. hW.' r955"'FORD': .$ 495 iteering and brakee, radio, ta SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK Across from New Car Sales • OPEN TIL 9 P.M. OR LATER Closed Wednesday ahd Saturday at 6 p.in. 1-8133 ' 'I THE ^ONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1961 TWENTY-THREE. ’ * , , -4- - - - - - - -Today's Television Programs- - Programa tanlahed by atetioiM Uated In tMs o I am nbjected to change wUhoot nottoe Umaaei »-WJCKTV Chaiiacl 4—WWI TV Ohuuiai 7—WXYZ TV Chanael t-CXLWTT One Big Deal Predicts Hoffa TONIGHT’S TV HIOHUGHTS (2) Movie (cont.) (4) ’Trackdown DJlewi. Weather (4) News (7) Mr. and Mra. North (9) Newa ' U:U (2) Weather (9) I •:4S (56) Biology •:10 (7) Sporto gill (7) Newa t;ZS (2) News Analysis (4) Weather •:N (2) Newa (4) News (7) Rescue 8 (9) Quick Draw McGraw. t:M (2) Sports (4) l^rts (2) News (4) News (56) Topic 7:(M (2) Divorce Court (4) Lock Up (7) Exciting Years (9) Tugboat Annie * (56) (Constitution in Action 7:M (2) Divorce CourV (cont.) (4) (C»lor2 Hall of Fame ■ (77 fings Bunny ■ (9) Movie: “Brother Raf (1938). The hectic and romantic adventures of three cadeu during their last weeks at school. Priscilla Lane, Wayne Morris, Johnny Davis, Eddie Albeif, S:( (56) Years with Fitzpatrick I (2) Father Khows Best (4) Hall of Fame (cont.i ................. (9) Movie (cent.) (56) Beginnings 8:M (2) Dobie GiUu (4) Hall of Fame (coot.) (7) %yatt Barp "" (9) Movie (cont.) 9:00 (2) Tom Ewell (4) Thriller (7) Stagecoach West (9) Front Page Challenge 9:30 (2) Red Skelton (4) Thriller (cont.) (7) Stagecoach (cont.) (9) GM Presents 10:90 (2) Garry Moore (4) (Color) Story of Love (7) One SteV Beyond (9) GM Presents (cont.) 10:30 (2) Moore (cont.) (4) Story of Love (cont.) (7) Mike Hammer (9) News 10:4$ (9) Golf Tip 10:50 (9) Sports 11:00 (2) News (4i (9) Telescope UAW 11:90 (2) Sports (4) Sports 11:25 (2) Movie: "Eyewitness" (English, 1956). A young woman witnesses a murder. Donald Sinden, Muriel Pav-low, Belinda Lee. (9) Weather 11:30 (4) (Odor) Jack Paar (7) Movie: "Model Wife’ (1941). A young couple marry but dare not reveal the fact. Dick Powell,. Joan BlondelL (Charlie Ruajles, Lm ^w-man. (9) Movie: "Cash on Delivery" (English, 1956). A nightclub singer , learns she can Inherit a fortune if her former husband does not have a male offspring before _ pirticular date. SheBey Winters, John Gregson, Peggy Cummins, Wilfrid Hyde-White. WEDNESDAY MORNING 0:00 (4) Continental Gassroom 0:35 (2) Meditations 0:40 (2) On the Farm Front— (4) Truth or (Consequences (7) Camouflage (9) Susie U:80' (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) It C:ould Be You (7) Number Please. (9) Myrt and Doris U:tt (2) Guiding Light 13:50 (9) News U:55 (4) News ----- 1:00 (2) My Utile Margie (4) News (7) About Faces (9) Movie :05 (4) Bold Journey ;S0 (2) As the World Turns (7) Life of Riley 2:00 (2) Medic'" (4)-(€ol6ry Jan Murray (7) Day in Court 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Road to Reality (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen lor a Day (9) Canadian School Show (2) Verdict Is Yonrak (4) From These Roots (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Movie (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand 0:45 (2) TV College (4) Dave Garroway ' (7) Funews^ (7) Johnny Ginger 8:15 (2)Captain Kangaroo 8:30 (7) Movie 9:00 (2) Movie (4) I Married Joan 9:90 (4) Ed Allen 19:50 (7) News |9:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth 10:00 (4) Say When I (7) Jack I.,a Lanne 110:25 (9) Billboard 110:30 (4) Play Your Hunch ! (7) Divorce Hearing (9) Chez Helene 10:45 (9) Nursery Scluxd Time 11:00 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Morning Court (9) Romper Room 11:30 (2) Gear Horizon (4) Concentration (7) Lqve That Bob! (56) Plays and Players. WEONE.SDAY AITERNOON MIAMI BEACH (UPI) - Teamsters Union Prerident James R. Hoffa has predicted that all union truck drivers will be under nationwide contract within three years, but he promised there would never be a nationwide truck drivers' strike. "It (a nationwide strike) is just not good business for the union, Hoffa said Monday at the winter meeting of the Teamsters executive board. 4:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here's Hollywood 5:00 (2) Movie (7) Johnny (9) Looney 'Tunes and Jingles 5:15 (56) Sing Hi—Sing Lo 5:30 (7) Lone Ranger (65) Americans at Work. 5:45 (56) News Magazine 5:50 (9) News TV Features Teamster Head Tells Contract Plan but Says No Nationwide Strike Within the last 14 weeks, Hof-fa said, standard regional contracts have been signed between the teamsters and 7.000 employers representing most of- the nation’s big haulers, laying the gtwiwdwoit tor a nattoiiwMe pact. Negotiation of similar contracts for the West Coast, the Carolinas, TV News and Reviews X15 Inside Story Provides Breathtaking Moments AT rkaUtss RABE RAI8ING - Eight-month-old Andrea Whalen of Water-town, Mass., holds her mysterious little toy rabbit that causes the Irievlslbn sellierdre her id change it. 'The set has a remote eontrd device which is evidently triggered by the squeak. By FRED DANZUG NEW YORK tUPI) - Before Buck Rogers, there’s got to be a Scott (htwsfleld. Crossfield is the 39-year-old chief test pilot for North American Aviation who recently completed rugged series of tests in the X15, _ tempermental, toothpick-slick, multimillion dollar experimental-rocket ship. The pland hitches a wing of • glut and U carried to a height of 38,900 feet, where It Is sprang loose ud ftown, under Its own rocket power, tkroiigh some breathtaking tests gt 2,000 m.p.h. and then aettles* dowa for a tricky deadstick landing. More sketchier than H should have been Btid let a munber of questions— , unrelated to security, 1 think—Un- j answered. Crosslleld, who probably wasn’t u calm and cool u he appeared to be, played his role in the true Sieve canyon style. Lou^of eagy assurance and humble humor. As he completed his dangerous ftlghf. he was heard to say, "1 hope Kennedy’s right about thoee unemployment benefits. We’re out of business now." 'There was one comment that jarred me. A ground control chief, talking about the X-15’i next flight, suddenly stopped himself and said. ". . . let somebody else worry about It.” Is that the old gung-ho spirit? This little exercise in guts and engineering fenius was wrapped up in a tidy half-hour documen-1 («iy: "x-imijt."-mwn-m on ABC-TV’s "Gose-Up" series. Virginia and Pittsburg will place the entire country on standard re-irifoo Rpcpnt Examnle glonal contracu, all set to IVCLCIU EiAdllipiC TRUCKLOAD TV SALE Negotiations for one nationwide contract wilhopen 60 days before .-Ithat date..Jtheauiicffl ' Produced under the supervision of Robert Drew, the documentary showed preparations (or the .test flight bglore".tte--J(d5„ Hoffa and the union executives said they conferred at length about piggy back, birdie back and tishy back" hauling of trailers on trains, planes and boats. Such practices,^ they said, were "dislocating manyi' of our drivers." Hotia Claims l^ews World 'dntroHed by Big Business WASHINGTON (UPI) The T^msters’ magazine said today America's “free press" is not at alii * * * I The International Teamster, The union said earnings of 15,0001 monthly magazine published by to 20,000 union truck drivers had i the Union heAled by James R; been diminished by the moving of Hoffa, told its 27,000 trailers a month by rail money: hence the publishers of America’s, dfUly newspapers and weekly magazines are wont scratch their advertisers’ backs. from the Midwest into the East. ip.m. (4). A Broadway successi. Dann Asks •. 7: ^.Chrysler I three seasons ago, Jean Anouilh's! for Delay so-called ‘free press’ clings rlglitftally to Its treedoiB-yel It Isn’t free. It is a ‘controlled’ press—controlled by spednl Interest groups which edit or omit news dispntdies to salt their purposes. “Their chief purpose is to make "TWa means: play down news offensive to big business; play up news delightful to big tosiness (such as news knocking labor taidtng to weaken the labor movement.)” 12:00 (2) Love of Life Actress~^eveals Talent As Baggy Pants Clown By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Tallulah Bankhead should be pleased thal such a gifted comedian as Bert Wheeler said at Sardi’s that she’s revealed a new talent ... "as a clown—a baggy pants clown.” ‘"nie belly laughs she got should make nil onmpfitnng hnte her,’’ exclaimed 'Wheeler who’d seen her in "Midgle Purvis. As for the show Itself: Well, I asked Tallulah, mhybe 10 years ago. why she took a part In a certain flop play. “Look,” she said, “the greatest actresses are lucky if they get two great shows in their entire careers. But you’re an actress, you have to act to live. You take what yon can get to keep working.” It almost makes you wonder whether you want to be an owner, actor or actress! ! J-'UK PAAR, 11:30 p.m. But If Bert Wheeler’s right, of course Tallulah should wind Toiiight's ^eits are Renee Taylor up working for John Rlngling North. ★ ★ ★ Arthur Godfrey’s doctors found him In excellent health-but prescribed a secret every-48-hour treatment which Arthur hints is delightful . . . Milton Berle and his bowling show will part . . . Faye Emerson, on canes, wouldn’t walk down El comedy is offered on the|' Hall of Fame" series with Dame Edith Evans, making her U, S. television debut, Christopher Janet Munro, Barry WILSON Jones and Paul Hartman. RIFLEMAN, 8 p.m. (7). Part I ; "Wyoming Story.” When the hoof-and-mouth disease ravages North Fork, Lucas McCain (Chuck Connors) prepares to become a dirt farmer. DOBIE GILLS, 8:30 p.m. Maynard (Bob Denver) (wants Dobie (Dwayne Hickman) to forget him and thereby insure success in life. Dobie refuses to end the friendship. RED SKELTON, 9:30 p.i The comedy team of Wayne and Shuster appears with Ed Sullivan place of Skelton, who is recovering from an operation. STORY OF IXiVE, 10 p.m. (4). ’. Somerset Maugham’i "A String ! Beads” is the first one4»uf special in this new se valuable pearl necklace jlivered by mistake to a secretary (Jane Fonda) and the girl fuses (0 return it to its rightful ,h« arp . h., g Valentine Dance postponement of the auto firm’s,! schedule April 18 stockholders' meeting. | The Pontiac Knights of (^lumbua ♦ * * jwill sponsor a Valentine dance for Dann, leader of ? The Teanttter magazine said mg to oust Chrysler s current man-Ctedar Room of the K. of C. Hall a^ment. ^ the firm’s boart at 295 S. Saginav^St. <£• of directors Monday asking thel * A * months from the date he receives! Music will be provided by the *»skiess eomiption— He said that he could not hope to wage a proxy tight tor control of Girysler without a list of the 90,000 shareholders. Dsmi has tiled action in Superior Court In W’llmlngton, Del., to obtain such a list. The decision Is still pend-Ing, If and when such a list is made available, a second group, headed by millionaire industrialist James ■ Robbins. 1061 Vlnetta Road.i, '(.1 Royal Oak, has indicated it too win wage a proxy fight for control of the glMt auto firm. and Alan Dale. Auto industry oboervert said Dann’s chances of delaying the date of tiw meeting were slim. Parading Around Btgini at Mardi Grai Carnival NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Hie Morocco’s "Btareway,’’ she §gjd,„‘:jmtU my ankles-match’.’-----------ifirst-flight panute-xit At JMIBlviri Thgrid Bergman got macle up to look 70 for her CBS TV show. I season rolls tonight, mark^to Husband Lars Schmidt said, "Now I know what she’ll look likeistart of d^ mte^ ment until the climax next Tuea- at three score and ten” ... i Jackie Kennedy rejected offers tb-wrlte an “Inside White' permitting, there House” column . . . Somerset Maugham, pleased that Marilyn, parades each night with Monroe’ll do “Rain,” wrote Ann Marlowe, "She’d be perfect for eral daytime exhibitions the part” ... weekend. Betsy Drake gave ex-husband Cary Grant one of her original paintings . . . Opera star pesar Siepi may niake his Broadway debut In Ihe musical, "The Crime of Giovanni Venturi” . . . ★ ★ ★ EARL’S PEARLS: It’s hard to keep the wolf from the door wl;en the stork keeps making visits. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Barbara Heller tells of the teenager who was a perfect 36: "Her measurements were 12-12-12.' WISH I’D SAID THAT: An early settler. Is someone wht has already paid his Income tax . . . That’s earl, brother. ___ (Copyright, 1961) -Today's Radio Programs >^sd K. of C. to Sponsor ofl ^ turned over to its owner, the U.S. j Air Force, and the flight itself. 1 r.'iBy''' 'ctoweHtTaffBg m Cross- { field’s coinings and goings, his j commentn—"Fm no actor. I’m a pilot’’—«nd the attitudes of his associates the program gave to experience: The film was candid. That is, it was filmed in a "catch-him-aa-best - you - can - boys - because he’s-too-fast-for-us" fashion. In this case, when shoulders blocked our harm was done. It all served to bring us into the cock-so to speak. WATCH for Our TV Ad F«b. 9 Oir trseklmS TV mIs, ■sMteSy SrtefS In tbii tm-Say taia, kaj Easy T«mis The Team But I thought the script failed 0 keep up with events. It was ELECTRIC COMPRHT Oses Bath NIfhi ’W t F. K. 125 W. HufM n 4-2525 was why the press “gladly cooperated” with the Senate Investigation headed by Sen. John I„ McClellan. D-Arfc., "to distort the notion of labor racketeering out of all proportion." McCellan’s investigations subcommittee recently conducted series of public hearings into alleged corruption involving Teamsters Union. Hoffa was a key witness. list of the stockholders. La Duce Quintet from 9;30‘p.rii. « more widespread . . . ’ to 1:30 a.m. Tickets can be pur-' It cited as a major example chased at the door. i the story about many of the Dance chairmen gre John Ryani country’a major electrical equip-and Earl Chenowith. . ment manufacturers who ptoad- ed guilty to charges of price Stands Mute in Court dollars W'ortb of heavy elec- on Bdd Chock Count i ‘ w»s buned’ in most VII vuv VMVVIX VVM ' y they carried it at all," the Teamster publication Mortgages Filed in County Drop This January check, Joseph E. Hodges, 30, of 523 BeUeville St., Lake Orion, stood! "Newsweek and U.S. News, n,yte. which delight in kicking labor. Judge Gark J. Adams entered a didn’t mention it. Yet it is ti« plea of Innocent for him and or-ibif*est corruption story of the dered him remanded to the cus-} year. If the Teamsters or other tody of the sheriff unless he could [labor unions had been involved, make a reduced J2,50O bond. It would have made screaming ibanner headlines.” Following a plea from his attorney, Ivan Si.^F The number of mortgages filed lut month in the register of deed! office dropped slightly from « year I ago, (!!DUnty Gerk-R^ster Daniel T. Murphy Jr. reports. Forbes, the judge cut the original 85,000 in half, although Chief Asst. Prosecutor Robert D- Long said Hodges has a — crlmlnaf "recort.' ^ .... There' were 925 r^lar home mortgages and 4,801 chattel mortgages filed in January compared fo 963 and '51045 iMt year. This Januaiy saw 10,471 papers tiled in the office, repreeentliig 9K,062 la reoeipto. For Januaty 1960 It was 10,844 papers and 115,868 to receipts._____________ The number of deeds went from 2,146 in January 1960 to 2,156 last month. The deeds last mwith were the biggest single contributor of receipts, bringing in $3,682. Birmingham police arrested' Hodges last month. He is accused of cashing one of the IT pa^ll checks stolen from an Oxford Township gravel company office | (i Jan. 8. Hodges might stand trial next month, Long said. lanting Man Maintains Innocence Before Judge We Givb Holden Red SUmpi -Ws Ssrvles Ati MsKei of TV—Radios—Phonographs— Hi-Fi—Storoo All Work Guorroalood Expert Service RADIO DISPATCHED TRUCKS Op*n M«n. thr> Sat. S A.M.-S P.M. LYNN'S Rodio-TV Service Bit ORMVN FE l-Mtt New Location SPECIALS! n Wa now havt a new showroom and warahouso, all in ono location. To advaitiao location, wo havs aonio vory nics Jac Crampton, a 32-year«ld RCA COLOR TV Sates ond Service cartons of cigarettes and saw from a Troy market on Jan. I 14, yesterday pleaded Innocent I when arraigned before Circuit | Court Judge dark J. Adams. He ^ Iwis released on a $2J)Q0 bond. His trial may be during thel iMarch jury term of Circuit Court. |f Sweet’s Radio TV S0NOTONE House of Hearing vanoAN AOToa Free Hearing Tests BuijdinK '“Qpoa Evoi. hr AppolnfmsaT’ 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 PONTIAC, Mica BUY NOW AND SAVE Full r ALUMINUM Storm Door 95 SEASONAL REDUCTION NOW ON THE FOLLOWING: Aluminum Siding (Complete Coverage) Muriol Stone Sliding Door Units (Prime ond Storm) Porch Enclosures Iron and Aluminum Rollings ond Columns Custom Work Our Speciolty All Moteriols and Work Guaranteed FHA—NO MONEY DOWN up tQ 5 yem to pay — 90-Diy Win n Csth_ Free ettimAte at your homo or at our / Ivaninos by appointioent Leo Bogert—Owner LwNIIIG sad STOBM WINDOW SALES 919 Orchord Lake Are., 1 Block Eoat of Telegraph FE 3-7809 FE 3-7800 INCOME TAX SERVICE 9 20 Years Experience in Pontiac Area • Efficient ond Complete Aneiytit of All Returns BENJAMIN R. BACKUS IBW.HiroiSI. (Birfftt SwTiM, toe.) FE 44901 Rmbi15 I I I- »'I TWKXTY^-roUR I ■ I' ( ' ■ t ' THE POXTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 7. 1961 iHe Shouldered Burden Eight Years A|go }For the 1st Time in . . . Cabbie Gets Help in Aiding 300 Children MEXICO OTV »UP!> A tauri- |d>b driver who than 300 children is now in the ! process of being "adopted” him-Wif. The American Society of Mexico has extended its welfare program to lend a hand to Portirio (PoppiiJ ‘Guerrero with the humanitarian publication. The Bulletin, heard Woriung with affUiated gnMipa, - the Koctety has formed "Pro-Pap-i pi's Kid-s OonuniMee” to help Poppi Gaerrrro floanoe a bntM , Ing where he ran rarry on the j task he assumed. j The San Francisco Cultural iCenter which Poppi has kept goingj about Poppi and his brood. He wrote an article,' with the result that the society's social service committee began making and sending hundreds of shirts, dresses and other articles of clothing to the children. That was a big boost tswua Tiiling the daily needs which Poppi had been trying to provide by nds own eaniings and by soUrit-Ing from others. The center is registered with, education authorities as a day school lor children from kindergarten to second grade. .Theoretically the Tl'RTUE 'N' TtlM.kTO — This unusual sight IS Timmy the turtle nibbling at a tomato. Timmy, unlike most tyrilev w jl eat anything set before Am but prefers tmnatoes. The amphibious reptile i.s the pet of six-.vear-old Billy Coughanour of Pittsburgh, Pa. Cartridge Pens Take ' Ham Radio Keeps E. P. Reavey Jr , marketing director of W. A, Sheaffer Pen Co. One-Quarter of Market ;sainrytne j^piuai^_________ _ account for b^er than we- f *!T P? PENSACOLA. Fla. lAPi-Lairy Itc . ^ 1*0 Pcrkins. 17-year-qW patient at the quarter of the entire U.S. foun- *,m an estimated $12 million vol-Crippled arildren t Home here.. tain pen market in dollar vnilumr, ume predicted lor 1961. Usn t a bH lonesome. The youngster, an amateur ra-|dio operator, has sending and receiving equipment in his hospital jroom. He chats almost every day ;with relatives and friends in hisj .iKHnetown of Blouosiown. 123 milesi jto the east. ! Larry broke h's neck at football' ■ practice. aniT' niit*s~'K1k^ be came To 'Be knowyi as Poppi to the kids. Learn to Skate . Bloomfield Hills Skating Studio ArconUag to In 1952. the priest died, and iti looked as if the center were! P*'' *' three of both men and women I That', when Guerrero started 'T thinking about buUding the center' j a * a i "A better return on savings” Jose Maj1inp« CerriUq, editw (rf-wa* cited by orth i« four of both the American Society’s monthly male and female shareholders. I Feed Tree Intravenously ' ^ Rink ovoiloble for privofe parties Ml 6 0406 805 W. Long loke Rd., Bloomfield Hills 1 BEDFORD, Mass. (UPlf-i^' ! standing Iwre is a 360-year^ld tree iknown as "The Great Oak^ j Recently tree experts drilled I thousands of holes and used about | a ton of fei^ilizer to nourish it. 'The tree has a limb spread of 127 • feet. Yfou eEtn prevent gas-lirfe freeze in your ear if you go steady witli Standard Gasolines! OPEN WIDE AND You'Ll SAY ..the real thing... A-A-H-H-H-H THAT BIG FALCON CARGO AREA! A-A-H-H-H-H -? J I-. is yours, at no extra cost, in both. Falcon wagons never get their fill! With loadspace over seven feet long—the longest in the (ieM-Falcon wtgonr make room fqr anything from t load of do-it-yourself lumber to a month's vacation gar; What's more there's room for six adults. And aHseats are foam-padded for soft. soft, sitting... at no extra coatl - Just hke the big luxury wagonsrFalcan's rear window rolls right down into the tailgate. You can load right through the window without even opening the tailgate. Or swing down the tailgate for extra loadspace and a handy loading platform. What a joy compared to other compact wagons that actually make you hft up or awmg'out the^whole rear end. Once you^ipcn a Falcon wagon . . ." you'll want to cIok the deal! Standard Gasolines, ^K>u get worry-free winter driving... A-A-H-H-H-H THAT LOW, LOW FALCON PRICE! fast st8irting» too. i___For all their big-wagon room, comfort and conyenienc^ Falcon wagons are priced as much as $508* las than other compact wagons. And Falcon wagoi» are Falcons to the last penny: up to 30 miles on a gallon. 4.000 miles between oil changes, no more waxing ever. See and try the new Falcon wagons for yourself. See what makes Falcon America's beat-telling compact car—^ far! Good reasons to Go Steady with Standeird!’ Aif od/ice, sir... qd ddeloerl' SEE YOI R UtCAL AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER \ • / The Weather THE PONTIAC 119th YEAH ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONliAC., MICHIGAN, TI ESDAY, FEBRCAHV 7. in(il--24 PAG^S niflTSD PRESS INTERNATIONAL ------------------IE8S AWOCIATED PR] GM Employe's Idea Works U.S,, Russ Equal—Pentagon Find No Missile Gap !Troy Firm to Pay $10,000 Ike Viewpoint Upheld in Study $145,000 Ordered by JFK in Price Probe Group Is Sure No Threat to Security Will Be Posed Soon 8UG0K8TI0N PA VS OFF - Pontiac Motor's first maximum'suggestion award of 1961 was paid yesterday to Qifford J. Slasiuk, (center!, a machine repairman for the Master Mechanics department. M^ing the $5,000 payment in U. S. Savings Bonds B. E. Stafr (lefti works manager, and J. F>Blamy, ipanufacturing man- ager. Stasiuk, 112 Pioneer St., suggested i improvement to a cylinder block machining operation. The award marks the sixth $3,000 payment to Pontiac employes since General Motors raised the maximum award to that figure m June 1959. Division employes t«x)k home more than $178,000 for their ideas in 1960. I W ASHINGTON (APi-The Unit-, led Slates a^ the Soviet Union| major ihave equal strength, the I Pentagon command has concluded tentatively. This finding—that there is no '■"missile gap" lavoiing the Soviet Union at present—is based on a swift but earefiil investigation or-| dered by President Ken|ied\-, I Solon Fights Sales-Tax Diversion Raps Schools* Tax Bite The eonclusion eoineliles with former President l)»ighl l>. FI-s«‘nhower’s view. JFK Preparing Fixing Ten Messages 1 for Congress Fir$t Will Spell Out Position on Medical Core for Aged PHILADELPHIA i/P—Judge J. Cullen Ganey began | the second day of sentencing antitrust law violators today by imposing fines totaling $145,000 on seven of; the nation’s biggest electrical manufacturing firms. The Kuhlmann Electric Co., 2565 E. Maple Road. Troy. Mich., was among those fined. Ganey. ch^ef judge of U.S. District Court here, imposed $93,500 in fines Monday as he condemned the Kennedy told his violations as a blot on American business. He also gave leaders today 30-day jail terms Monday to seven executives, effective! j^g ^ould send '10 special next Monday. messages to Congress in the The first sentencing today came for collusive sales jg^ weeks including f " pj^g 7hursday on medical care for the aged/ WASHINGTON (UPI) — of distribution transformers. General Electric and! _ Westinghouse, the nation s jQjq LANSING — A Democratic legislator, bent on sweeping constitutional revision, today proposed to end required divereion of half of the four-cent sales fax to local school districts. , Rep. E. D. O'Brien. D-Detroil. also profw.scd boosting local government's half-cent share of the sales levy to a penny. The increase would be worth more than $30 million a year to cities and villag(?s O'Brien, who has more bills and constitutional amendments this year than any other legislator, filed a bill to enable local governments to levy an Income tax. Before the legislature adjourns this spring, he sdid, he will pro-po.se about 30 amendments to the .53-year-old copstWulion. He said Jan. 12 in his farewell State of the Union message, "The bomber gap' of siVeral years ;igo I was always a fiction, and the 'missile gap' shows every sign of being the same.' -HTMiF (i.WKV biggest electrical firm were, fined $30,000 each. Kuhlmann Electric of Troy was fined $10,000. The firm's vice piosi-(lent, Joel Watkins of 1011 Puritan ♦SI., Birmingham, was fined $1,500,1 CANAVERAL (UPI Part Cause Polaris Fire? Senator Blocks He also informed them that he would send a message next Tuesday on the administration’s program of federal aid to education. Kennedy and the Democratic A chieftains met at the White House - Uthors fines wore AIlLs-Chalmors.! lop-secret piece of equipment get-as the President prepared to West Ali-s VVis,, pO.OOO; McGraw-|ting its first test may be blamed I Congress details of his propos EdiS(#n. r.l^in 111 S'AS nflO' im-'nf.vrl on dA_ I ________ '..t_ . . "Kve Another O’Brien proposal \ would abolish the primary school: K-kIs ature has had to ■merest fund, financed chiefly by! rcse- taxes on rail.x>ads and utilities. '7"' ! pay out lh«- school aid forniu--Sales tax and primary school la," he said. “The two rents Interest revenues, now ear- ; from the sales lax has not bewi marked for s«-hools. would be enough." channeled into the slate'n The new civilian ehii iPentagon also are convirieed that jthere is no "destruction gap " that would imperil U..S, seCtiril^ months ahead. ■Weaver Hearing"! Edis(,n, Elgin, III . $25,000; Mal-{for a failure which turned an ad-jincrease the $l-an-hour^ m^^um iiey Eleetrie Co . St. Louis, $15,000,1vaheed model Polaris missile,. intoL age to $1.25. ■ind WagniT Electric Co., .St. Louis, |a 15-ton "roman candle" and dam- ★ ★ * aged its launching pad ye-sterday. defendants are ehurgerl ^he .31-foot rocket blew apart in Will! prie<- fixing and bid rigging |‘he middle when its booster stage ill the sale of equipment that | apparently ignited " both I Stale Cpnlroller Ira Policy was _. ... . i scheduled to tell senators today •This would give the legisla-Inhere Michigan's money goes, ture more control of the money, the stale spends," O'Brien said.! Apfiarentl.v. there is not suffi eient information at hand to conclude whether there would be “missile gap" in the future. These tentative ronclusions emerged from a comprehensive, review of strategy, defense weap- Speaker .Sam Kayliurn told re-IKirters that they had discussed “a wide range of matters” that Kennedy Intended to present to C-ongresM In the near future. A I ICl/ 1 nl equipmi'ni inai i-i-t™-' Asks JrK to Pledge in generates, transmits and dislrtb is'^uhaneously. The .second stagS ^ Writino That Housino yvrmng mat nousmg Icrashing about ."lOO yards away. i Referring to House Democratic Pick Can Be Trusted rSfLiS* ............................ w. McCumrack „ I his "writer down, Rayburn asked I McCormack to list these subjects. ■ ThtS will |K)int up the many areas of the constitution that need revision and point up the need for a new one.” he said. Voters will decide at the April 3 election whether to call a con- Sen. Elmer R. Porter, R-Bliss-, field, chairman of the appropria- It would help avoid situations | committee, called a meel-hke those in 1959 when there was j„g g^id Policy would be on money in the tre^ury but most hand to "tell us what’s in the of It was earmarked for special budget and explain why ifsi' purposes, preventing the statcjfhere." In bis State of the Union mes-'vouehes for the New 5'ork Negro' from meeting more pressing oh-' * w a Jan. .30 Kennedy said he hadilo.valty. ligations,'' r h bordered the reappraisal of mili-| Rubertsi •OUTMVFI, USEFULNESS' ’! for M62? milL ^ The Detroit Democrat as.scrted spending this year, frfus bomlmgfJ**’' - ’ SOFTENS UKMANDS- a barren area of the (esllng cen- j ler’s |.5,omi-ari re expanse, and: there were ni 11 injuries to |>er- sonnet. The failure v las the first in four the sales - tax diversion I authority for i Beard Police, Firemen Ganey imposed suspended jail I ■rnis Mowiay on 19 other exeeu-; The upper section plunged into I lives. a hai ASHINtiTON lUPIi — Chaii>; the 19, however, he imposed: ..........'hp;five yeai-s probation "where al— ......................................................................................... .McCormack then reported there ons and policy ordered by Ken-7'’"'*!^ Banking ( ommittee, re-watchful eye can be kept on their! would be a message Thursday deal- nedy as a prelude to strengthen-, 7**^ today to start hearings onjjjctivitics." The failure was the first in four! ng with medical care for the aged, ing U.S. defenses defendants. It com- ‘he advanced Marisjnur«ing homes and medical schol- ORDERED BV JFK tor ‘‘'e Individuals were ^hich carries moie powerful fuelsjarships and another next Tuesday until la-esioent Kennedy quantity than earlierUn federal aid for education. for leiiiencv [versions already on duty aboard _ . . . . the nuclear submarines U.S.S.I K'-nnedy favors fe^ralidd for a Virginia Democrat: All had previously entered pleas|f;p„r_p Washington and Patricki permit help for ..........' .......' ........... neni^ ' teachers' salaries ss well as ' i, i, school constnirtion, but Rayburn :ps.sion >•- i j r' wants the hill limited to con- (iancy rejected defense pleas Mis.sile scientists fared a pair of; ■against imposing jail sentences. P™hlems today — to find out what^ aiuiounccd that he would jBut he did .soften the govern-‘hP mishap and to deter-i McCormack said other messages orth'e*“^vi^s and ‘thei'r'mi^iie' •"‘“hh* to start the hearing Lent's demands for even harsher|'n'»'P how .severely the pad wasito <-ome. with no definite dates '.strength compared to that of the' ""h”** “e should rerelvc a letter jpcnalties while labeling the case damafiPd '^“h wa‘P>' construction. | his lourth debate with ‘ for-,and cle ' imer Vice President Richard M Nixon last Oct. 21, Kennedy said! •ed the room. I United States: on Ice ; from Kennedy giving . of Weaver's loyalty. Robertson said "A repn lentative! will be outnumbering us in mis ‘he President provided him! pared and prosecuted under the Slip A 6-year-old Pontiac boy, Joey Gwinn, son of Mr. .and Mrs. Bennie R. Gwinn of 603 Valencia St., died Monday at St. Joseph Hospital from injuries suffered Sun ‘ when he slipped on ice and struck his head. The boy had undergone surgery for head injuries. He fell while playing in a neighbor's yard. Joey was a kindergartner at Mark Twain School. His father Is an ortbopedie technician at Becker Orthopedic Appliance Co., Birmingham, and his mother Is a teacher In the Waterford Town-' ship S<-hool Distrirl. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. The boy was one of four son.s' of the Gwinns. By MAX E. SIMON Pontiac’s police and firemen, used to close shaves in slles. I'm not as confident s (Nixon) is that we will be the ' strongest military power in I9«;!." I Koren. Nor in fire fighting,' ith information .Saturday that lhe| adininisiratioii of former Presl-Federal Bureau of Investigation dent Dwight U. Hseiihower and had given the White Hou.se tint lhe[ Justice Department reeommen-Virginian .said that he could not! dalions for sentencing were de-u.se it unless the information actu-i livered to Gainey before the Ken-^ —-i At present, llu' new Pcnlagon,3||y came direcllv from Kennedv’ nedy administration look office, ineir dally duties, have had the law spelled out on thelr **’®'^ appears to be convinced the! * * * ' duty during the city’s centennial festivities. I^viets do not have more niirlea^l weaver came to the hearing | p "^'enneX e-k J ^ tipped missiles than the United fianWed hv \w Vm-wv tkin h,. ' ixenneuy. Orders for both grou^ are to continue talcing closeisi.ies ]al K ™ ,S‘ .7e^ rtltves. Not against crim- • • * ""t H. Keatlne. llr Ih.. inals, ’ hastily explained r i .u U Secretai-y of Defense Robert S.isitling at the witness table withL..„n more severe senienees ihnn Acting Police Chief Joseph he^^d^ed'^^ * ^ ‘’^rSrtZrref For both police and firemen, [ready for the White House by jhe; Keating said later that he also' ,, , ... .. . added orders. end of the month. had re<*eived "scurrilous mail" P . Fire Chief James R. White. ; But. still, how do they feel about The odds appear strong that Weaver’s loyalty. But he vear'^were'^ dispo.-^* of beards about whirh the two MeNamani will reeonvmend |S(*'d that he had thrown it away I- - “ ■ "Frankly, I think my men will ! «changes, particularly In ------------ lie secretly rclieveil," said the imisele to Ameriean ability Nome NATO Hcocl poliee chief. •" wage limited wars in far off ' 3 areas. PARIS (fft — Gen hierre Jacquot study also appears to (urunees ; •;) shocking indictment of a vast I 'R«* d<’vire eyed as the )xjs.sible'resources, agriculture, budget and Lction of our economy.” 'cause of the failure was identified [fiscal policy, budget figure recom- ’ ionly as a "new piece of expert-jmendations, taxation, housing, for- The antilnisl eases were pre hardware being flown inieign aid and defense, [the booster stage (or the first a ★ * It was not carried in the[ Asked why two budget messages three updated Polarises, all [were propo.sed Rayburn said he •hich were full successes. supposed that Kennedy wanted to lear up some matters that were eft a little in a fog. spoke. They've trimmed any ideas police or firemen might have had about growing whiskers/ I can’t stand to look at myself the anirror," said the police chi^. . ,‘‘Beards? The things are a lire hazard," w^zs the word from the fire chief. Service and burial will be Thursday at 1 p.m, in Rainelle, W. Va. Thief of Bridge Given Span-in lailhouse SUNDERLAND, England fUPI)—Some thieves are content to steal small items, like watches, jewelry and pprses. But not James William Teasdale. He stole half a steel footbridge spanning an abandoned (luarry railroad line. Proaecutor R. A. Percy Mid there are ‘‘certain difficulties" In stealing a bridge, namely that they are generaBy “heavy, long a;rd attached to stone-' "One could steal a cat or a dog, or a pearl necklace, and quite easily carry them away.” said Percy. “But Teasdple was cheeky enough to'think that if he d^ molished the bridge openly and blatantly he would get away with it. So he used an acetylene torch to cut the girders off the bridge.” And. of course, firemen are (or| **However another Eisen- Police Sgt. Eugene Hcndren was (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) ihower view — that the .Soviets ihave not launehed a crash pro-Igram to manufacture mi.s.siles. The 'it firms, including Ameri-eu's two blggesl—(ienenil Elee-Irie Co. and WeNlinghoiise Elec-of France today was appoinu-d •''''! » hital of NATO commander in central Eu-[ rope. He replaces Gen. Maurice j The 36 Clialle. who re.signed fi:om the j jailed. French Air Force. Itotaling $109,(XX). EVE DF^T( E Sources said (he new device could have eku.sed the misfire, and that it was "being investigated as ^ a possibility. " lligh-sp<“ed movie film which re<-orded the t:a|ie drama will lie given close. wnitiny. Also, ' pleres of wreckage retrieved by missilemen working late Into the night yesterday were inspected for clues. The Air Ic^ee said damage .,hog( possible tax rccom- thc pad "could not be ‘‘‘'“'rtnined Rayburn said that the immediately. ' However, sourees,^ said the launching facility. tor-| g^oul reducing lured by nearly five minutes of .. intense heat generated by the wild-! ,, ___________________ ly puffing solid fuel first stage | ulives. including ,hose>ngine."certainly suffered to some ordered to |iay fines! Without referring directly to for' mer President Eisenhower's balanced budget estimates for the current and next fiscal years, the speaker said "some former budgets found money that didn’t exist.” He added that it was doubtful that the Treasury would collect the rev-" anticipated by some people." The failure v ■ spectacular ever s [• of the ni [| the Cape. ■ News Flash We're a semimilitary organization," added the police chief. 0 are we,” added the fire chief. “Beards funny? Not to anyone [being ticketed or arrested," Koren said. TOUGH PKOBI.EM He thought awhile. "Maybe if we could all grow luxurious long ones, it'd be okay. We’d all look alike and be semi-military . . " He waved aside the idea. I-know I can’t, and that’s that," the p operated the Stevenson and Soviet Ambassador Eima plant, near Bukhvu in the Valenan A. Zonn have been hold a ing - quiet diplomatic" consuUa- «««'»'’ *8® *« R“<»nda after har-ttons in kn effort to end strife m by Congtde*> soldiers and the new African nation. marauding bands. Kivu Province is dominated bv forces loval to StevenMa said Monday the Lwnumba. United States has been eondact- _________________ ' worid in an effort to fiad Asian and African nations, hopeful of support from the United States, pressed their campaign in the Security Council today for release from prison of deposed Congo Premier Patrice Lumumba. :S-P'60 Profit 9Cts.aShare Ceylon, the United Arab Republic and Liberia were preparing a resolution demanding release of Lumumba, disarming of the Congo army led by Maj. Gen. Joseph Mobutu and reconvening ' ‘ ~ Partiamenf. In 1959 Earnings Came to $4.36; Promotion Promised for 1961 SHE HAS MINK - President ant} Mre. Ken-neiiy arrive for dinner Monday night at the home of Rowland Evans Jr., a Washington reporter for the New York Herald Tribune. No guest list was sr rtotofu announced. Having worn a cloth coat on inauguration day. the First Ladywore a full-length mink coat this time. NEW YORK — Studebaker-p Congo making a 1960 profit of S708.S50 on Sale.s b the Coago, Mobutu moved S323.226.663. troops to the borders of Orleatal Provtore to ntonat a arw offra- ; Sierwood H Egbert, the firm she agaiast Lainamba support- jnew president, said Monday that era. 'earnings amounted to 9 cents for More than 600 men left Leopold-,T117.410 co vine during the night aboard'*^"* outstanding. barges for the town of Bumba, After giving full effeels to eon Dr Fritr Redl professor of be- 3ia mile^ northeast of Cocquilhat- versloa of the S5 eoavertible pre- havioral sciences at the Wa.vne- State University college of educa-' ‘'•lAMI. Fla. (AP>—Thirty-eightjer know," said Mrs Chester A. tion, will be featured speaker SantajChurchill. Lima. Ohio and Ashe- i ucu HIT I. isui. me esrninrs were rouai ...ui-i. j j_-j ^ .... f Lumumba troops. __________________ _____ viuiumnt- v,iiim ir-ai totted Nations and Cong^se of-; studebaker-Packard eamincs in Tue^ay'!^' Feb."''lT'home by plane today. calmSut flew them here from Brazil. Maria Passengers =Here Feb. 14 Glad to Be Back Home Stuart E. Whitfield, general chaii^ --------------- — -------- HI uif «ayne n of the Centennial, tipped their vdle in Equatorial Prov ince. : ferred stock to 6.S mllllou addi State University college of educa-' MIAMI, Fla. (AP>—Thirty-eight jer know, " said Mrs. Chester A. hats to City Hall and to Phyllis Mobutu won a victory at Bumhaj thmal eommon shares after Jan. tion, will be featured speaker Santa|Churchill. Lima. Ohio and Ashe- Pope, city librarian, for the rent- ' tw» weeks ago and cleared the; i. imi. the earnings were espial an open meeting of the Oakland modern-day vUle, N. C., as she walked fromjfree office space. i to ft cents a share, he said. ’ iCounty Child Guidance Qinie ^'^ved the Real Air Lines plane which They pointed out its advantages 1,.,,^- K„ _i— -iim*but Offices Opened for Centennial Whitfield, Norvell and Manager Spaeth Happy for Library Space The Pontiac centennial is off to comfy beginning. Centennial headquarters opened yesterday in the spacious basement meetirk room of the new Pontiac Public Library building on East Pike Street in the Ovic Cen- BIRMINQHAM - Two proposed alley ImprasremenU were tabM in-deflnitdy last night after City commissioners heard a number of objections to a portion of the project. The total $85,700 improvement program included paving and necessary drainage work on the alley on the west side of Woodward Ave- ter. For/Leo S^eth, veteran manager of many s centennial observance and historic celebration, it was a welcome move. "Most towns are hard put to find tore than an old store for a headquarters, or some office space nobody else wanto," said Sp be slid behind his new desk. "This Is the newest cm headquarters I' and one of the most conveninut." A field manager for the John B. Rogers Producing Co., Pontiac’s centennial conroltants, ^>aeth will be on the job nil! time through the official centennial celebration, June 17-24, coordinating increasingly cennplex planning. His services are included in the contract the centennial commission has with the Fostoria, Ohio, suiting firm. WE THANK YOU Ralph T. Norvell, chairman of the headquarters committee and irt E. fictes met in the Kivu Province town of Kindu Monday in an effort to prevent further clashes be-teen U.N. and Congolese troops. At Shangugu. Ruandif. the breiUt- Southwest Befogged in Snow, Rain 1939 were $28,544,338 on sales of * * * $387,372^5. equal to $4..36 each on| Tlie meeting had previously been shares then outstanding. reported scheduled for tonight., Egbert pledged aggiWsive dealer, '• take place a week development and promotion pro-i*”>”t tonight. Plus. ront'nued efforts to The meeting, tb'begin at 7:45 : grateful. ' "There were tears—you'll -municipal parking for the public diversify in 1961. Is open to the general * * * public. It will be held at the , In the fourth quarter of 1960. i Community House Auditorium, isales totaled $81,829,066 Egbert 380 N. Bate* St.. Birmingham, said a fourth quarter operating' loss was mote than offset by favor- "" |of nice I able year-end adjustments. Westmaas. acrcffis the street: proximity to City On their arrival here today, the Hall and the offices of the Pontiac passengers were treated to break-/Area Chamber of Commerce injthe 'fast at the Miami InternationaLWaldron Hotel; historical material City Police, Firemen jthey were processed through cus-l 'toms. Bearded in the Yen ers has Spare f< to 7(/ person I for VOl^ijMHI and maljthg o| The headquarters has ' meetings of up to GLAD TO BE HOME plus work areas for I One of the first passengers to: mimeographing and (Continued From Page One) customs was Lucille Gray,! eratlons during the coming .. .............. Chicago, who told new’smen “You! months. Dr. Redl will .speak at 8:30, itd be kind don’t know how glad I am to be office eauioment is beine loaned the Day in Birmingham Two Alley Improvements Fall to. Hail of Objections His toillc will be'“Standardized Taats, What Good Are They?" New officen of the PTA will be elected at the meeting. . mie, ft Woodward from Ruff-ner to gteffield. Oppoattloa to the project at this time came only frm the merchants on the wmt side of Woodward. The coat of this part of,the program would Jbe $47,700, and would be asaesded against bttslnemes benellHiig from the The commission’s decision was based primarily on the request of Harry D. Wesch, owner *of Wesch Cleaners, 1456 S. Woodward Ave., who summed up the feeling of the protestors in a letter to the city Wesch wrote that he has been in favor of the improvement anc| still considers it a good Idea, 'However, I feel this is not the time to consider such a move.’ "In the past^two yuara our city and county taxes have risen, ns have MESC, SocUl Security and other taxes, as well as labor and supplies, making it Increasingly difficult to defray additional ex-pensea," added Wesch. ‘The present picture in this area is not encouraging and 1 feel it would be a very real hardship on any business to assume the coat of paving at this time.” The riickory Grove Elementary Leonard Cohen, director of meas-uremeat.and gvidanoe toriUie Mk-iand County Boiuxl of Education. Dr. Val H. Wilson, president of Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, N.'Y.. will be guest spesje-er tcMnonrow at 7 p.m. at a kickoff dinner tor the addmore College Development Campaign at the Women’s City qub ip Detndt. Michigan chairman for the drive which will begin Thursday ia Mrs George W. McCormick Jr. of 1633 Quarton Road, Mrs. Harry 0. Hoyt of 781 N. Glenhurst Road is the local chairman. According to Mrs. Francis C. McMath of 3249 Bradway St, president of, the Skidmore Alumnae aiib of Greater Detroit, the purpose of the drive is to raise hinds necessary to enlarge the college library, construct a new science ind build a new dormittMT for 300 women students. British Convene Trial of Spies Claim Suburban House Held Transmitter for Naval Secrets LONDON (AP) - The British government charged in court today that a siilall house in a quiet Londrni suburb housed a high-tiow- Schdol Parent-Teacher Associationjprpji radio station ttan»mltting will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. British naval secrets to Moscow. the school, 2800 Lahser Road. , j . All r. I Atty. Gen; Sir Reginald Man-The featured speaker will be Pr |ninaham-RuUer opening the pros By The Asaortoted Press Sees 'Need' for Colonies in Space cate the drifts»^of their multimil-Ikm-doUar weekend storm. One to two Inches of ne an area from North ’■ I where she v Ueatral Texas through Eastern | Fidel Upbraids U.S. Oklahoma and Into Eastrn Kan- Guantanamo Fears The snow is spreading toward the .Middle Mississippi and the Lower Ohio River Valley. Spared trom the new snowfall was Texas’ Eastern Panhandle, buried under proxious amounts up to 12 inches. A predawn fc^ spread across a large area of Southern Michl-/ gan today. "Our official business iclude the clinic's annual report , ‘and election of officers," he saiJ. *** “ar>, "Following Dr. Redl’s presenfa- audience will be .invitedj Patrolman Rc’x'rt waier romnsnv sunniATn^ th!! PPfreshmeiltS. No“Taking crime photogiaphS. that’s; .M'S:"-™ going to stay, she; know, but "evenj First perstm to join Spaeth’s staff park will be fine.’’is Mrs. Marie Schwach, 39H-Covert * * _ '■ Road, Waterford Townrtilp, centen- nd Mrs. Churchill cleared jnial secretary who has been work--u—uni „ with Whitfield tj^^e celebra- , jlike this to make^ou , realize the: The centennial-cotroSo^ plansU 't.iorestige of toe United State# andifo one other official office be-|* „ ^ the freed^ of this county. You;fore June - a downtown spot fori "" “ the moon and the near planets may be a necessity within the next 500 years. Von Braun told a Society of Automotive Engineers meeting here that If man keeps up his present rates of lengthening life than dlNturb" tls operation. , . ,ers off my beard. I couldn’t Erowi "j 'u "j-j . meelmg of the Oakland Child Lne anwav’’ ‘ «™"|said she didn’ Guidance Clinic will be held, .indi „ a r, i |sleeping in ,h. pub,,..Mr oJ't'T*! of the beardless that is." ng^t. ChurchUl Patrolman Freeman Staliuns: Icomractor. said. "It takes a trlpitlM full-time ...... I’d have had to start |l‘ke this to make^ou realize the didn’t. ‘ ............ jden t haCto have men with Runs fo^ g^le of centennial matorials.l expansion at the airport. i into space imperative. rim. Churchill emphasized, "We' ' The colonization of other plan- (Americans) have lots of friends Defeat Red Move possible by in the world, I want to tell you."; man’s ability to create artificial said when the .^nericanj NEW DELHI (UPD — TheJ environments. Von Braun said. ecution of five persons charged with stealing top subrnkrine secrets from a naval research station, said government agents made tests in the hquse and heard signals coming from the Moscow headquarters of a spy ring. The five defendants, who appeared today for a preliminary hearing, are Qor^n A. Lonsdale. 37. a-^company director; Peter J. Kroger, 50, a bookseller; Kroger’s wife, Helen. 47; Harry F. Hough-twi, 55, and Ethel E. Gee, 47. Houghton and Miss Gee were employes of the top secret naval research station at Portland. The Krogers and Lonsdale carried ^a-naSkui passports and spepJe in North American accents. But Ca-nadim' authhfities said after examining their fingerprints they not Canadian citizens. ve with rautlon VisiMlity was reported cut to 4t feet to Macomb County. There were no plane cancellations from either Detroit Metro-poUtan Airport or Willow Run, The broadcast dcM-ribed U. S. fears that UMlroiie authorities might cut off the ba>>e water supply were "h.vsierteal.” It assailed U. 8. newspapers for Qear skies brought relief to the Northeasteni states, victims of the weekend storm that left snow as deep as 17.4 inches. The seven stotes hardest hit by the snow reported more than 55 storm deaths. ■ the aetton. Work Starting on Interstate 75 I Patrolman Fred Stor.ner j neutral. Still neat idea on the'.I, I chief’s part.” I Hot arguments on beaids flare 'up at the fire halls. Indians Go on Warpath Trees East of Clarkston for Freeway plane fiist .sighted the Santa Ma-;ria. every Portuguese in sight em-’nrreed ;'n American he could ’There were tears. You’ll jnever know. Adm. Smith handled everyone with perfect confidence. !H'> gave us no false promises. He jtold us we would have to wait.’’ World Health Assembly defeated an attempt by Russia today to oust Nationalist China from membership and seat Communist China in its place. He said the first manned lunar landings may require refueling in space, even with the still hypothetical four-state C2 Saturn rocket. Manninghajn-Buller said Miss Gee, Houghton and Lonsdale were arrested after she handed Lonsdale a parcel coatainiug laaval se-;i^s. The attorney general said subsequently detectives found a radir transmitter buried in rubble under the Krogers’ home. QUITO. Ecuador (APi-About 2,000 Ecuadorean Indians were on the warpath Monday. The herds-j agricultural workers ............. were out for more pay from the cast"of c’ia^.stOTTodry as work-big landowmere of the Andean | men began toppling trees and {brush where the new Waiter P. Chrysler freeway will be built. There were cries of "timber" i’I’D BE CAREFl'L’ ! Some comments. Lt. Robert Sartell; "I’d-be care- ---------------- ;i\7o Right Aim, Hre Fighter Carl Wlddls: "I 'On/v Poit of LgH don’t care what they do on ruil UZ LiKSll, beards. Me? I think they look DliVe Province of Chimborazo tennials. I don't wanna set my beard on fire, but who wants to be different? ” The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report \ PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Fair today. Considerable cloudiness tonight and Wednesday. High today 38. |,ow tonight 16. High Wednesday 35. Winds light variable 6 to 12 miles today and tonight, and northeasterly at 10-14 miles per hour Wednesday. : Two bulldozers and about 10 la-! borers moved into a section just I north of Waldon and west of Saaha-jbaw roads in Independence Town-'.ship to start the work Monday, j according to J. O. Smith, project jcngineer with the State Highway Department. , RlfliFAt tcmp«rii Losut IcraptratL.. Wind Tclocitr I m.p.h.iXesn Umptrature . Weathtr-tCBiudy , Hl(he»t SI 1. Tfcli '93 la I(U 34' Baltimort 31: Bltmsrck A Ijuislng road construrtion firm has been awaried a $4,-012,801 contract to build the seven-mile section of the four-lane ’ limited access freeway from ' Baldwin road to the Oakland-3S.s^ Genesee County line. It is expected to he done to late 1002. Th« 4.8-mile section from Bald-“ *'^’|win Road to Walton Boulex'ard. jg igli®"* northeast of Pontiac, has been 33 70 sidetracked by a-law-suit. A henr- 3? 1! inn u-ill Kn KniA in Cnin|i ' Lot Antelet 05 53 Tamps ; North of Pontiac, the new freeway. designated Interstate 73, closely parallels U.S. 10 (Dixie t^Highwayi. It is the portion in the county of the freeway which will eventually link Detroit with Sault Ste. Marie. Out-of-StateNafcotic Pfoscfiptions Nixed LANSING — Narcotics or hypnotic drugs cannot be issCied in Michigan on prescriptions prepared by doctors not licensed to pr^ice in the state, the Attorney Gmeral’s Office has ruled. sr rkstoiti NAHONAL WEATHER — Most of the nation east of the Plains will have wet weather tonight except tor-New England and western New York. Snow is forecast ter ^ area from Missouri to the mid-Atlantic states with rato sixl showers elsewhere as well as some snow to the Rocky MounUin area. Weathjri- will remain wintry in the Gidf 'with a rise ill temperature in the southern ^ knateau. ' ,, ’ ' y ■ ■ ' ' I r '■ . '■ .. '! The quesUon was raised by the State Board of Pliarniacy. AMy. Gen. Paul L. Adams said that prescriptions written' by out-of-state doctors for drugs other than narcotics or hypnotics may be honored 1>y licensed pharmacists. He cited the unU6m ngri cotic drug act to b$ck up the ban non-Michigan pp»criptloi|s. Engineer Don Thorpe: "They let j EBENSBURG, Pa. (AP) — A firemen wear beards at other cen- county court has ruled that tietting in the last w-ord was Ernest MacManus, Fire Department radio dispatcher. "Everybody’s beard would get tangled up sliding down the poles, and they'd miss the trucks," he declared. And besides, we’ll have plenty of beard fires to dash to without worrying about ourselves on that score." he predicted. ap Phatolu ORDERED OUT—Msgr. Paul Robert, Roman Catholic bishop of Gonatves, Haiti, was qrdered from his dioc^ by the local military commander after demonstrators looted the bishoprip’s warehouse. man with no right arm and only part of his left arm should be entitled to a driver’s license. The licen.se of Joseph Piurkow-sky, 45, of Johnstown, was suspended by Pennsylvania’s secretary of revenue following a ruling that all state employes must take a physical examination for a driver’s license. Piurkowsky is a bridge foreman for the State Highways Department. Cambria County Court said Monday the secretary had abused his discretion in suspending the license without investigating the individual problem. Testimony disclosed that Piurkowsky haii driven motor vehicles (or 23 years without an accident or traffic violation. He uses no special equipment in the vehicles he drives. Out of Auto Talks WASHINGTON (UPD - Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg said yesterday President Kennedy 'does not want to take over or interfere with" the auto industry labor negotiations which staft later this year. PANCAKES FOR ALL - “All the pancakes and s ejected from 5:30 to 7:30 p. m. tomorrow night at the Schoolcraft School, in Waterford Township by ifiembers of the Parent-Teacher’s Association. A come-as-you-are policy will pre- vail. Shown above are Principal William Bawden practicing serving pancakes to James Amann, 3, and Mrs. Lawrence Murray. She is ctvehair-man with Mrs. T. W. Miller. The^blic is in-vifed. Bewitched Phone Nice but Suspicious NEW YORK (AP)—A crazy, mlxed-up pay telephone in the Criminals Courts Building gives forth with swe«t music when you 'pick up the receivto. ’ It’s better than a fuke box—you don’t have to put in a dime, and there’s no rock *n’ roll. Imagine his embarrassment /when he phope his office and his secretary-hearing the sweet accompaniment for the first time—asked: “Are you in a’bar? r hear mtisic." The bewitched phone is bemusing to some—embar-rasslng to others. And it’s bewildering to phone company technicians. Where U the music cojntlng from? If ione one drops In a coin and makes a call, the conversation has a background of muted triimpets, soft saxophones, delicate violin notes and a gentle piano. |' ARE YOU IN A.BAR? ; A prominent criminal lawyer Is a steady listener to the mysterious musk: during court recesses. The telephone booth Is in the Criminals Courts Build, ing press room, and It’s making it hafd for reporters to get off ttie hook wh^ they phone their offices. it it it When their editors hear "dtay as Sweet as You Are" coming over the wire, they get a bit suspicious. A telephone compat^ sttokeauian said he did not know the source of the music. "Through some Induction beneath the cable,” he said, “the phone may be picking up some radio mpslc coming from a bar and grill or piped muglc being sergicad to a restaurant." | ' / I ^ 1 ' T^E PONTIAC PRESS. TUKSDAV. FEHRl AKY 7, llHil Elephant tuiks i_______, 55 pounds, but there have b stances ol tusks u heavy as 3 pounds. WtDNI»AV~2 to iiSO PM. REMINGTON lluctrk SiMver REGONMTIOIIED BecWe Sheveis -4(ate Ht Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby MAKE flVEB ?m MBA. ORAMJBS ANDREWR Service for. Mrs. Charles (Hden) ndrewB, mother of John Andrews, coach at Eastern Junior High Schott, wiU be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in Muskegon with burial there in the St. Mary’s Cemetery. The Rosary wiU be recited at I tonight in the Walbum Funeral Ifanne, Muskegon. Mrs. Andrews, 69, of 30M Abler St Muskegon dM there Sunday in Mercy Hospital after a brief ill- GITY MEDUEU. Prayers will be offered at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Ifuntoon Funeral Hobie for Guy Meixsell, infant son er service at 7 tonight at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains her body WiU be taken to the Haugland Fu- Is Best Yet MRS. JAMES D. SKINNER WHITE LAKE - Services for irs. James 6. (Evelyn J.) Skinner, 38, of 219 Rustic Circle, will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at United Brethren Church Albion, Ind. Burial wUl be in the Albion Cemetery there. Mrs. Skinner died .Stmday at St. JosepK Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, after an illness of three yfars. Her body was taken fo Pursley Funeral Home, Pontiac. The Bonham O. Miser Funeral Home in Albion, Ind., is handling arrangements there. Surviving besides her husband sre her motljer Mrs. Beecner Diperi and tw’o brothers, sisters and a son, Amos Gobble Jr. of Pontiac. Heart Ailment Is Fatal JOSEPH D. GWDfN Joseph D. Gwinn, sbc-year-old son of Mr. and Mra. B«inle R. Gwinn of 603 Valencia St., yesterday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital from injuries received when he fell on the tee near his home. He w'as in the hospital nine hours. Surviving besides his parents are three brothers, Robert B., Kenneth J. and Thomas W., sU of Pontiac: Mrs. Winifred Perrin, 59, of 1756 grandmother. Mrs. L^e ^Beverly St.. Sylvan Uke died Gwinn and a grandfather. Leonard yesterday of a heart ailment at Nwinan. . , ^ IPontlac General Hospital after an I i illness ol two years, ithe Voorhecs-Siple Funeral Homei . „ t.i ■ » to the Nlckell Funeral Hterian (CJch Mra*i"'‘> ^ service|„ . __. ______,_______i' neral Home in Oark for service cher (Arminta) Arthur. 78, of 1771 and burial. iW e s t w o o d St., will be 2 p.m. ! Thursday at the Gramer Funeral I Home, Clawson. Burial wiU be in iWhite Chapel Memorial Cemeterj’ for Sylvan Lake Woman Arthur died yesterday in {William Beaumont Hospital, Roy- al Oak, after a brief illness. a member of the Order of the Eastern Star, chapter 497, Sanboi-n, Ind. Surviving are two sous, Chester, •ith whom she made her home. ClHiCAGO (UPI> — The nation’s motorists drove a record 715 billion miles in 19«) and set a record low for the number of traffic deaths per miles driven, according to the National Safely Council. / Although the 1960 traffic toll of 38,200 deaths was the highest since 1957. the council said Monday, ihe ratio of 5.3 traffic fataUties per 100 million mUes of motor vehicle travel was an all time low. The 1959 ratio was WASHINGTON (LTD-The length of the average factoiy work’ week fell to a postwar low of 38.51 houra in January. 5.4. the IS.'M total of S7.910. The total number of disabling injuries caused by traffic acel-denlM in |M» was 1.4 million. 50th stale, ig nearly twice a$ large'combined. Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg said Monday that this! represented an "abnormal decline"’ of 18 minutes from the December! figure of 38.8 hours and indicated I the "grtivity" of the business; slump. The work week is corisideied a key indicator of the health of the; economy. It fell to 38.7 hours dur-| Ing the 1958 recession,' the lowest ^ivvious level since tlie end of! World War II. J Finest Facilities A figure Ih'Iow -10 reflects wide-i spread cutbacks in overtime andj shorter hours for millions of w'orkers. ’ A slowdown in Ihe number of traffic deaths during the dan-, gerous wintry months helped establish a record for deaths per mile driven. December 1960 traffic iatalities totaled 3,520, down 5 per cent from the 3,708 persons who died in December 1959 traffic accidents. Honoring St. Paul Year ■jQQQQI^BHDDOEil {East Ralnelle, W. Va. for s land burial. A ■csvvic’iiiui w. . ... . "'IPerrin gave piano lessoas in Mao' Lamon of Miami, - ■ 'Fla.; two brothers; a sister; six jhome and belonged to Gold Star MICHAEL G. KELLY Mothers. Service and burial were heldj Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Sofa Fnlwa Slock of YARD GOODS Actual Valuat to T$e PER YAI^D 25' this afternoon at the Catholic Church in Midland, Tbx., for former Pontiac resident Michael G. Kelly. The Rosary was recited Monday night. f Mr. Kelly had Veen employed in the labmtory of the IMIips ! Petroleum Go. A former member of St. Mldi-jael’s Catholic Church of Pontiac, Ihe leaves his wife. Laurel; two I sons and two daughters, Dennis P.,* {Michael, Patricia L. and Kathleen, (all at home; his father M. J. Kelly in Florida; his mother Mrs. Anna Butler; and a sister Mrs. {Mary Elizabeth Warthen of Dray-iton Plains. Stephen Hubbel of Pontiac; t'^ sons, Donald of Birmingham and Eugene in New York; and two brothers, GUlette Warden of Clarkston and Lewis Warden in Florida. Service will be held at 1:30 p.m. ’Thursday at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in the Lakeview Cemetery. Choice of entire stock—broadcloths, percales, polished cottons, solids, lawn fabrics, piquas. No limit — nona to dealtrs. I Mr. Kelly. 38, died unexpectedly Sunday at his home in Midland l^er an illness of several years. i ROY M. ELUOTT WIXOM—Service for Roy M. EUiott, 63. of 47801 Pontiac Trail, will be at 2 p.m. Thursday at Rlchardson-Bird P^me^al Home, Walled Lake. Burial will be in Wixom Cemetery. Mr. Elliott died yesterday Tlie safety council li.sled honor roll of states and cities jRonie. which cut their death total during 1960. Heading the list was Rhode Island, with a 36 per cent reduction in fatalities, while Providence lead the cities with a dramatic 63 per cent drop in traffic deaths. VATICAN city (,UP1i - The; Roman Catholic Church has begun ^ its celebration of the arrival in Rome 1,900 jears ago of the apo.S^ tie St. Paul. The anniversary yearj ' was opened Sunday by a pontifical mass in St. Paul s Basilica in 3530 Auburn Rosd Auburn Heights UL 2-181 Chicago led the nation's largest rilies with the least traffic accidents per 10,000 registered vehirJes. Among cities with populations above one million, the Chiedgo ratio was 2.7, followed by Los Angeles with 3 and Detroit with JOHN WEUTI HOLLY-Service for John J. Welch, 86. of 305 Sherman St., will be at 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Rita Catholic Church. Burial will l^e 1 I-akeside Cemetery. r^ x * Mr. Welch died early today at, DeteCtO|’S Mentioned his home after a long illness. ' The Rosary will be recited at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Dryer Funeral Home. Surviving are LONDON (UPIi — The names jof American defectors William! I Martin and Bernon Mitchell were George E “P testimony today at " ithe trial of three men and two of Holly: four daughters, Mrs.i . , Hazel Bylsma of Charlotte, N. with passing se- Mrs. Mildred Hendrick of Britains larges tie Creek. Mra. Beatrice Cham-!"^^^* ^ berlin and Mrs. Marcella Twom-| ley, both of Holly: 11 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren. • A sister also survives. MATTRESS SALE See SIMMONS New Simcopedic Smooth Top Mattress Comfortably Firm—Not Hard maker$«Q50| dealer you can I - by a A mattress you can rest o you can rely on — from Box Spring same low price. Full or Twin size. Many other fine Vnaftresses to select from. FURNITURE 144 OAKLAND AVENUE You always get more for your money ot Miller's-MORE STYLE-MORE QUAL- ! ITY-MORE VALUE-Our lower over- . head mokes the difference. Careful Free Delivery Service Open Monday and Friday Evenings 2nd FLOOR BARGAINS RUBBER SOAP DISH MRS. ALEC McGILVERY . Mrs. Alec (Ubbie) McGilverv, r. of 169 Nelson St., died this morning after a long illness. She was a member of Oakland Park Methodist Chureh and a retired employe of Fisher Body Division. Surviving are a daughter. Mrs. Carnie Loucks ol Pontiac; a son. Kenneth of Oxford; two grandchildren; five great-grandchildren; and two sisters, Mrs. Emily Phillips and Mra. Archie GUchrist ot Pon- tiac. For Tub ami Vosk Naekiaa DRAIWNC HOSES Service will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Vooriiees-Siple Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. HAVANA (UPI) - Premier Fldd Castro’s government called today 1 schodboy ’’demonstration of] sdidarity’’ to Mfoet the anti-Castro RtiiiSeribTibt 77 M dlppto salTSB-wd dlf mttol wltb turdv M« hi ---fdl,Ion esp rima Oselily tniOH Dust Mop-MitP S3M |M D«lux« Ironing Sot ...... IRONINC #PAD^ ^88 Fidel Tells Students to Hold Rally for Him RAZLEV J—/ CASH MAUKtT 1 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Wod. Only Supor Spaciols of Bozley'i RIB CENTER PORK CHOPS TASTY SKINLESS FRANKS 49 REMUS—2 Lb. Umir pg BUTTER 59 FlUPmoS THINK -4-36 Osstralto 1 iiMMd to a mast toe Oabaa «Whl p.m. today. It « Blue-uniformed members of the Castrolte ’’Aseociation ot Young! Rebels,” who often cany arms,, were scheduled to lead the demonstration. i Government sloganeers urged the students-to "march against counter-revolutionary obstacles with your books held high!” { Safe, Dependable Instant Radiant Heat SUNBEAM ^ElECTRIC^ HEATERS 98 NORTH UOINAW ST. NOW! "FEBRUARY ONLY" SPECIAL! SAVE 61c ON THIS AGE^LD BEAUTY SECRET TRITLB'S OmOIMAU •OUDIPIBD COMPOUND HHtoWWHHn •NANDMA’H eOMM.n(iONT HERE’S THE SECRET OF HER LOVELY HANDS AND SOFT. GLOWING SKIN. Nim you can save 61/ on the large economy siie Jar, as sn introductory offer. It> the idesl skin conditioMr. ____,_____sunburn. Perfect grease- Mss Rowder base and night cream. M-oo NOW $139 ffkUHTAX 'yoad... a difference/ This is the lane that leada home—and he has driven it more times than he can remember. But there’s something different about it today— for this is the first time it has rolled beneath the wheels of his new Cadillac car. And here, aa he ia now discovering, is motordom’s truest miracle in motion. First of, all, there’s the way a 1961 Cadillac smootha out that familiar surface. By the time those bum^ and irregularities have been absorbed in that marveloua new suspension system . . . and cushioned in those deep Cadillac seats . . . they are almost impossible to detect. Then there is the car’s extraordinary quiet. Cadillac’s careful craftsmanship and precision engineering provide such silence of operation that you can speak in a whisper. And what poise and balanc8<-the car has! It is wonderfully steady and sure-footed through every nule... and it has a feeling of solidity and substance that comes from no other motor car. Of course, these are but a few of the myriad pleasures of driving the new "car of cars”-in addition to its great handling ease and its magnificent interior comfort and luxury. May we suggest that you take a 1961 Cadillac out soon on some challenging stretch of highway— and see for yourself? Your Cadillac dealer will be happy to let tbs oar work its magic for you at any time. VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER JEROME MOTOR SALES COMPANY ' 27^-280 S. SAGINAW 5TREET , • PONTIAC, MICHIGAN > THE rOXTIAr TRESS, TrESDAY. EEimi .WV. 7. 1001 «(AKE OVER PACES FIVE ^ Unite tor Promotion of Health Insurance CHICAGO ilT’D—Four organizations rppres9«*nting doctors, hos-inUls and medical insurance hax-ei announced creation of a joint c«tn-mission for the pronvolion of vo1-l untarj- nonprofit prepaj ni«it health pians. The commission includes rep-rcsentati\-e» of the American ,Mrd-• ical Association, the .American Has-T*tal AssociatHHj, the National Association of Blue Shield Plans and fhc Blue Oiks Assoi'iation. The actionVas taken in line with! a resolution adopted by the AMA’s House of Delegates in Washington, D.C., last December. PRESCRIPTIONS Western Michigan Head . to ^ Inaugurated in M^y KALAMAZOO (UPI) r- Western Mie|)igan University announced today its new president, pt James W. Miller, will be formallj inaugurated at ceremonies in the field-houae on-~May 30. Miller took over as president ofi the st'hiool last Jan. 1. i ar rk»Mi*i st:MI UKTAt JIKD — A Uactor-trailer rammed into a Bal-. lanes of traffic were closed. The driwr, James D. Wiser, 26, of tinioro o\rrpass Monday, splitting the frailer in half and dumping Huntingdon, Pa., was charged with reckless driving, but escaped a portion of its cargo of insulating material into the street. Both uninjured. Ready to Write It Off as Effective Deterrent Filipinos Believe SEATO Is Dead By JI.M BfX'KKK .brcauijc it has not drive KULA LUMPUR, Malaya (APijthe Communists there. - The Philippine government BRIT.%L\. Ftt.\N(TS thinks SEATO has collapsed and; is ready to write it off as ai fective anti - Communist force in' Asia. backianti-Comniunist nations of South- ers of the new Kennedy adminis-|ea.sf Asia to replace SEATO with tration. »- separate defense treaties with the| It is understood these views arei Si’rrano's government thinks,United States, thereby bypassing shared by South Korea. South iBritain and France have par-,Britain and France, /V'iet Nam and Nationalist China, alyzed the organiration and feari aw* and possibly Thailand, which is h. nr .................. ; Serrano may even fly to Wash-one of the three Asian members Asia Treatv Organization‘ ---"■ ‘he SEATO meetingjof SEATO along with the Philip- 1 1 1 1. • Philippine officials also fearito put these views before the lead-lpines and Pakistan, not survive its March meet-;some sort of ■■sellouf” to the'Cbm ' r MOM^yJ I v/^r to put* v^ieCiNea TntHE^ School Let them choose Penny Valentines, make-your-own Doily Valentines, and packages specially for boys, and others for girls . . . oil by Hallmark at munists in Asia on the issues of " " * Laos, the Nationalist Chine.se off-! This wa.s learned as Foreign shore islands of Quemoy and Mat-! Secretary Felixbcrto Serrano and su and the [wssible admission of jofher Philippine officials arrived,Red China to, the United Nations! to prepare for a state visit,may be brewing in exchange for' iWednesday by President Carlos,a settlement with the Reds in' ;P Garvia to this rnighbor .South-‘Europe .east Asia nation. Serrano, it is understood, is It was learned .Scirano bluntly planning to go to Bangkok next I told the U. S., British and French month for the SEATO foreign! ambassadors in Manila that hisjministers meeting preiiared "to government feels SEATO has call a spade a spade." tailed to meet the Laotian rnsis' He reportedly Ingredients for instant success urge the "AsGodlsMyWitness, Uy Hands Are Clean." — NIKITA KHKUSHCHfV This statement was made by the atheist leader of a Godless nation. The open graves in Communist Slave Camps all over Fastern Europe cry ouL “Liar!" You can help RADIO FREE I L ROPE broadcast the truth of Uic F ree World to 79 million people behind the Iron Curuin. I or many. RADIO FREE EUROPE is The last link with freedom. Broadcasting from 28 transmitters manned by escapees from communism. REE reaches over 90 ” , of these people despite communist jamming. But REE needs money to do iu job. to.become moreeffective, Itisprivatelysup-poned and depends on individual Americans for its very existence. Will you help tight communism and secorc the future of your children in a free world? Can you give a dollar . . . live dollars ... more? No Increase on Truck License Fees Persons Past Sixty Will Get Acquainted lANSLNG lUPli - The secretary of state's office .said .Momiay trucks do not face a higher lici'iising lee under bills intnxiuci'd this year in the legislature. Another "drop in—get acquaint-1 cd" meeting for pei^c past 6o| .will be held from 1 to 4 pm. I iWednesday at thi' Waterford Town-, ' ship Community Center. Dr. Arthur Sticker will present I a short talk on heart diseases.' jCaid playing and shuffleboaid will Instead, fees ' vv ill be juggled to simplify procedures but the actual cost to Iniikers will remain the same, the office said. follow. The bills, introduced by Si*n. Haskell L. Niehols, R..lackson, would also ebange the lee (or n'Kisleiing a passenger ear by pulling all licenses under one of three eategories. ET-ee i-elreshmeitts will be, sei'vt'd. Township area residents wishing furthi'r information can! [call the Community Center on Wil-i [lianis Lake’Road Mull 2 Dorm Facilities for Western Michigan The look of silk ... at a budget price! Cupiorti Coat Dress $399 The look of fine textured silk af a purse-pampering price! This graceful dress has a flowing gored skirt and is accented by a white-over-navy collar. Button trim, short cuffed sleeves, narrow self belt. Take navy or black, sizes 14 to 20 and 14'2 to 22'2. REane FE or Mail Your Order — Waite's Budget Fathiont . . . Third Floor What a selection of bulkies at Waite's! Orion Bulky Sweaters ' cenIribviiMS—(OenT ' The cost of registering a car under XnOO pounds would be SIO. for i-Hi’s weighing from 3,000 to 4.000 pounds it would be $13. and (or cars over 4.000 pounds it would be $16. Radio Free Europe Fund Publiihed as e public (eryice In cooperation with Tha A'dvartlsing Council and tha Newspapar .Advertising Executives Association. The Pontiac Press Olticials said the total im-ome to the stale from registrations , would remain about the same. ' The bills, requested by Sec-i retary of State 'James M. Hare. ' would cut down on the administrative work in connection w ith registration and would re-flut* the cost to the .state, offi-I cials said. ^ LAN.SING (UPI I - Two dormi-[ tory facilities, caslii\g an estimal-| ed $2.15 mlUion, will be conijjrucled [ at Western Mirhigan University if the .State ..Senate goes along with a resolution passed Monday night by the' Hou.se. you can “have your rake and rat it loo", thanks to the new-«ize Buirk .Special. Although its gas savings and easy handling make the rom-parls sit up and take notice . . . this beauty's all Buick. Its sizzling ]3.i h.p. alumimmi V-A and aluminum tr^smission* give you more pow per |H)und than many full-size cars {treice as much as most compacts)! You get Buick comfort for heads, hips and legs. Buick ride, too . . . and Buick pride, thanks to its unmistakably Buick Clean Ixiok of Action. Guest-test ihd sizzling Buick Special today. * 4/uminam Dunl-Patk TufhiM Orw—opte^nat«/ erirm eoW. $399 orhera to 12.99 BUIGK SPECIAL THE BpST OF BOTH WORLDS 1 The House upproved a resolution allowing the State Board of Elduca-! ilion to lot contracts tor the dorini-| 'lories apd food service facilities I [at the Kalamazoo in.stitulion. j I The tlorm.s, self-liquidating projects., will house 1,500 students. SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED QUALITY BUICK DEALER NOW YOUR QUALITY BUICK DEALER IN PONTIAC 18: OLIVER MOTOR SALES, INC-210 Orchard Lake Ave.i Plain and fancy stitching; Bead, embroidered, motif trims . . . come choose from the many styles of bulky orlon acrylic sweaters to be found at Waite's! A rainbow of colors, sizes 34 to 40. Women's Sizes 42-46 .....7.99 to 12.99 Jig selection/ lig vofuei/ See your >u|cli Doolor for Belter-Bvy Used Corsl_ Waite's Sportswear . . , Third Floor % Low-cost "Catastrophe" plan , pays up to $5,000 expenses for accidents or sickness Heees a new concept in hospital insurance, desifned by Conti-Company to piUl ^ witS! everyone s budget. This plan supplements ordinary hospital coverage; lets you use prWryo'utel'^t hosnul expenses . . . thus costs far !•« t^ you'd expect-as lit-JF* as $115 a month for tl — deducUble" plan. PAYS UP TO fSMO FOR hoepiUl room and board, surgical' dressings, (fangs, blood transfu- COVERS POLIO and other dread *500 P^NS for individuals or families —from Bgn 3 months to 70 years. The only exclusions %re pregnancy, treatment in U.S. government hospiUls, mental disorders, losses covered by Workmen's Compensation or Occupational Disew laws, war or milaUry service and sickness commencing prior to 30 days after effective dale of policy Thii rejerr to policies AF-tl9IU and AP-ailSU. ' MAIL COUPON TODAY FOR 'SRAIU-NO OBUGATIONI CUp aaS Mail M: Gea. B. Barry ('ONTDiENTAL CASUAI.TT OO. 3M W. ^huwa at.. PMttae—PE i-aais Fltois land datoilt ei Another nationally advertised brand comes to Waite's! your man with- CyMan/mifyi/i’ mansmooth* shirts 100?o^cotton, need no ironing Why does (-'upid revomnieiid a Mansmooth* Valentine? Becau.se Mansniuoth i.s truly wafh ’ll wear 100''# no-iron cotton that stays neat and wrinkle-free thniiHs to exclusive Reserve Neatness. You'll want to give him several of these line Matj.hattan Mansmooth shirts "Blake" collar, button down or regular Give Hiin Mansmooth ©lake’ "' (on^gure): Short point, ihedium spread collar. your man with the ¥ delcot* blake shirt 50% Kodel* polyester, 50% cotton needs no ironing Wear . . . Streaf Floor Whether your Valentine travels or stays ‘ St home...he’ll welcome the com(enience of Qplcot,* the champion of stay-fre'lh, ^wssh ’n wear fibers. And Delcot stays seat and wrinkle-free all day, thanks to exclusive Reserve Neatness.* With his favorite ^lake, short-point medium spread collar, convertible cuffs to wear buttoned or with links. He’ll lova Man* hattan Delcot Blake for its no iron quality and fashion and hs’ll love you for,giving it to him. . I - / I 'f THE 1H)XT1AC’ PRESS; TI KSDi^V. FKBIU ARY St. Mary's Womens Section Card Party SI. Mary’s GiMld of Our Lady of Refuge Parish will present a card party and hair style show Feb. 14. The affair will begin at 8 p.m. in the parish hiill on Cofhinerce Road. •Hair Fashioas for the f Young in Heart" is the par-ly:s theme. The latest coif-fur >s and trends in spring hair fashions will be shown by West Brothers Hair Stylists. Prues and refreshments will be featured. ■nckets may be purchased by contacting ticket chairman Mrs. Frank Guibord of Little-tell Avenue or at th ■ door the evening of the i»arty. Mrs. William Aimes is cap-lain of the guild and general chairman for events, Co-chair-mtn for the event are Mrs. Richaid MLineweascr and Mrs. Howard Haas. Committee chairmen are Mrs. Jerome Breen and Mrs. Patrick Kenny, refreshmcni.s; Mrs Harry Brady, door prize: Mrs. Rich.ard O'Leary table rri/r; imd Mrs. Frank Grossr. lie orations. Easy Weor, Easy Care A Feb. 14 card party and hair slylp show is he-ini> arranp,ed by members of St. Mary's Quild of Our Lady of Refuse Parish. Admiring some of the prizes are (from left) Mrs. William Almas of Shertvood Drive; and Mrs. Howard Haas and Mrs. Richard Mineweaser, both of St. Joseph Street. McConnell School's Parent-Teacher .4ssociation will celebrate its 48th year at 2 p.m. Thursday with a skit "Birthday of PT.4." Birthday dake and punch will be served on stage by players (from left) Mrs. Harry Felix, Mrs. James Smith. Mr.s. James Coward and .Mrs. Mark Newman. Mrs. Marshall Ro.se also will participate. Coins for the group's Founders Day will be collected. a'Pii-r.i‘‘ m "1 .: com-farl in m'^n's cloilte;: v. H be broadened even fu’lher in 1961 wiih new scidn'ifically octiieved blends of ar'jrcial and natt^iral fibers woven in new ways to fb a lot of special needs There are fabrics that won't wrinkle, fabrics that pn'ss themselves and fabrit's woven to adjust thermostatically to sudden te,mperaturc changes. Abby Says; Be Correct Just Treat Tell Pop to Take His Hat Off Before He Talks Through It By The Emily'vast Imtitute Question: Fr -'nds of ours PTAs in Action Bridge Is Played By .4RKi.UI. V.W Bl KL\ 'The Pontiac Bonneville Duplicate Bridge Club met Saturday evening in • the Hotel Waldron with five tables in The Daniel Whitfield School's Parent-Teacher Asso-ciation will meet at 7:30 Wednesday. Speakers will be Mrs, Janet Gauthier, head librarian of Pontia'c elementary .schools, and Margaret Scott, consultant, on audio-visual aids. A ques-tioh-and-a n s w e r session will follow. Home room mothers of second gradei s in the classes of Faye D a v f s, Mrs. Lucille Young and f)olores Riddle will sene refreshments. R.YGLEY SCHOOL Parents of B a g I e y School children have b«'en urged to attend Tbursduy'.s PTA meeting at t|;30 in the gymnasium. ■hie program will feature only students, participatingJn a panel discu.ssion, ‘ What We as Children Think it Takes to Make PTA a Success. " Refreshments will follow. WHITTIER SCH(M)I. Mrs. Agnes Saxton, representative of the Planned Parenthood Clinic, will speak at the Wltittirr School's 7 p.m. Wednesday PTA meeting. She will show educational films and slides, discuss counseling .service available for family problems and conduct a question-and-answer session. Oakland County's clinic is a member of the Detroit- League of Planned Par<»nthood. Inc. Teachers with the most parents present w ill receive Valentint' hearts of candy from the aasociation. Hosts for February are tliird graders, their teachers and home room representatives. WEBSTER SCTKIOL J. William Maben, st:hmce coordinator for the P o n t i a c Board of Education, will speak at Thursday's meeting of the Webster School PTA. Teachers will show science displays of the students' work and conduct a tour of the now-science room. Charters will be accepted from Cub Scout Packs No. 6 and 9 from their leaders Carl Seiser and William Brace, respectively. Mrs. C. B. Robinett will arrange for refreshments, Mrs, Paul Godoshian is chairman of the group’s nominating Committee, assisted by Mrs. Herbert Ketchunl, Mrs. Marion Grove, Mrs. Jack Ne-goshian and Dr. Edith Roach Snyder. The group will discuss continuation of family nights on Wednesdays and adult education programs Tuesday evenings, sponsored by Pontiac Parks and Recreation Depar,-ment in cooperation with the PTA. LONGFELLOW STHtKIL Nominating committee members will be named at a business meeting of Longfellow School’s PTA at 2 Thursday. Following the city’s cemen-nial film. '‘The Pontiac Story of Progress anl Promise,” Mrs. William Cheal wiU present a musical program arranged to demonstrate how' , music appreciation is taught at the school. WEVER SCHOOL I The Wever School’s PTA will hold a mother-and-daugh-ter bariijuet at 6 Thursday in the Htthool gymnasium. Mrs. Bjdord Laur wili pre- side as mistre.ss of ceremonies. Entertainment will be previded by daughters. Participants will be Jody and Nancy Schmuker. cello and piano; Nancy and .Susan Norberg, flute and clail-net; Carol and Nancy Taylor, piano and ac-cordion: and Joyce Skrine, accordion. General chairmen are Mrs. Sam Ritchie and Mrs. Sherrill Grubbs, Others helping are Mrs. Carl Norberg, table selling; .Mrs. Steve Couretas. table decorations; Mrs. Franklin Williams, food preparation; and Mrs. Clarence Miller, ticket chairmap. Mrs. yernis Whitehead is in charge of prizes, and Af*hur Bell, of th- program. Fathers Club members will handle serving and clean-up duties. Guests will be Mrs. Arthur Bell and daughter Althea; Mrs. Keith Pawley with Maria and Susan; Mrs. Philip Somers and Nancy; and Mrs. Laur and niece Kindra Whittington. COR.\ BAILEY S< HOOL Family Night will la* the theme for Cora Bailey PTA's 7:30 p.m. meeting Thursday in the kinde^arten room. Oakland County Sheriff Department Sgt. Donald Kratt will show the safety movie, "Diutgerous Strangers.” ’The scholarship policy will be e.xplained by PTA scholarship recipient Judy Noren. Refreshments will be served by Mrs. Charles Hobgood and Mrs. Robert Sutton, first-grade home room mothers. LeBARON PTA Youth leaders will be recognized at the LeBaron PTA's 7 p.m. meeting ’Thursday in the multipurpose room. Mrs. Joseph Zabelski, traffic sajjety 'education consultant frtlm the Automobile Club of Michigan, w- i 11 be guest sneaker. Nancy Wheeler. Sherrhi Duffy. Julie Thornberey and Janet Fields from Mrs. Edward McKinney’s B-r o w n i e Troop 512 will present the colors....... Refreshmenl's 'will be served by mothers from the rooms of Margaret Wilmot and Amy Carlson, EMER.SON SCHtKIL The Emerson PTA will Anton Koenig, Mrs. Thomas McKeever and Mrs. Curtis. Refreshments will be served by mothers from the classes of Mrs. Christenson, Mrs. Alexander Kirkpatrick and Marilyn Kevit. play. Winners were Melvin Smail and Richard Coddington; Mr ' and Mrs. Arnold Richards; the Frank Kennedys; and Dr. and Mrs. Maurice Willis. DEAR ABBY: M.v_ father i.s my problem. Pop Is 7.'5 and insists on wearing his hat In the house, restaurants and everywhere else he goes. 1 say he should take his hat off when he's indixirs. - He says ail newspapermen wear their hats indoors and he used to be MeCARROLL SCHOOL The McCarroll School's PTA will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday for Dad's Night. Robert Everett, father vice president, will lead atlivlties. Mary Patricia Sweeney, policewoman, will be guest speaker. Election of officers originally scheduled for March, will be conducted during the evening. The March meeting has bc*en canceled. Dads will serve refreshments. NY Snow Delays i Trio's Trip Here Because of the crippling snowfall in New York t h c Nieuw Amsterdam Trio, wheti-uled to present a concert at 8:15 this evening in John D. Pierce Junior High School, will not appear. Margaret Beattie, president of Waterfoi-d Township Civic Music Association whidi w.-is to sponsor the grouo's a-*pe.'ii -ance, .said that ;i d.itc for the concert w-ill be announced la- a newsmiper-man. Is this con-ect. and Jd should 1 V tell him? ^ at odds WITH POP DEAR AT ODDS:, News-I>aperm<-n go by the same rules of etiquette .-IS e\er>'one else. El-dcrl.N pi'ople can become as sfxiilefi'lis children, so handle him with firmness and affection and tell Pop to take his hat off indoors because he’s beginning to talk through it. AUBV DEAR ABBY. Just before Christmas our mother got a ticket for speeding. It cost ht'r $25. which upset her terribly because it was her first offense in 32 years of driving, it :ilso took a hunk out of her Christmas fund. My brother and 1 wanted to cheer her up, so we typed a letter saying she had been overcharged by the Highway Department and we enclosed $'20. We signed the letter "Captain Rednug" . (which is our name spelled backw-ards). We thought she'd catch on, but she didn't. Now she is showing the letter all over town iH'lieving it really came from the Highway Department. Our problem is whether to let her believe this or to tell her the truth. We don’t want her to find out later and feel foolish. THE GUNDERS j DEAR GUNDERS: If you have a sense of honor, tell her —and hope she has a sense of humor. But no more forgeries, or you will all wind up in the "wogsooh” (which is "hoos-gow" spelled backwards). DEAR ABBY: I recently returned home from a TB sana-tarium and was told my health was excellent and that 1 should lead a normal life. My problem is how to convince my friends and neighbors. During the holidays people actually left Christmas gifts for the children at our door because they were afraid to come in. This hurt the children terribly, as they are old enough to understand the situation. I would rather they had not received those gifts at all. Abby, are we living in thf 20th century or the stone age? Are people so ignotfeaL that they think former TB^Oents released from a sanatorium will contaminate them? Please, please print my lettei-. If you can educate just a few , it will save so much heart-brake for former TB patients and their families. moved to Flc'da last winter. They have li-vited us to spend a week or two with them. My husband h »s 10 days vacation coming to him and we would like very much to accept their invitatk". The husband Is retired money is not too plentilul and therefore I hesitate ibout going. I would feel a lo' better if we could help wit', the food bill. Would this be, proper and if so, is there ST me tactful way to go about Town Hall Wednesday this? Town Hall will present Maggie Daly, model, author and fashion expert, at 10:30 a.m. Wedne.sday in Pontiac Northern High School, located on Arlene Avenue at Perry and Madison Streets. A celebrity luncheon at Devon Gables will follow. For You to Read JOYCE LOUISE MAPLE) DONNA GAYLE GRAVELY Wedding Bells in the Future for These Belles meeting and program Wednesday. The evening’s program will feature a skit, "Meet the PTA," from the National Parent-Teacher Magazine. Participating will be Mi-s. Donald Smith, Lewis Sullivan, Mrs. Laura Wait, Mrs. Evelyn Woodworth, Louis Campbell, John Farrell and Lawrence Curtis. Mrs. L. D. McLauchlin and Mr.i. Curtis will open the program wi’h q sinking commercial. Pa.'i.’ fr 's’deiPs of Emerson’s PTA will be introduced and presented a gilt by Mr. Sullivan, principal, and Mrs. Smith. Invitations have been iweepted by. past presidents Mrs. Thomas Smith. Mrs. Randolph Nelson, Mrs. Owen Armstrong. Mrs. Gordon R^, h*lr8. Carl Reynolds and Mrs. Clifford Christenson. Others to be honored are Mrs. Stephen Kives, Mrs. 'Victor De5Ano, Mrs. McLadchlin, Mrs. Thomas Johhson, Mrs. April vows are planned by Jacqueline Dutcher, daughter of the Harold 0. Dutchers of Lansing and James F. Russell, son of the Waylaml Russells of Orchard Lake. She is a graduate of Mercy Central School of Nursing in Grand Rapids. I It Answer: You couldn’t possibly offer' them board without deeply hurting their feelings. However, you can turn the tables and be hosts to them by taking them out as often as your finances will permit, to restaurants or to places of amusement while you are there. Question: On occasion. 1 find it necessary to imroduce myself to strangers and usually do so by saying, "I am Mary Brown.” (I am mar-iled). I have been told that this is incorrect and that I should introduce myself as Mrs. John Brown. Will you plea.se set me straight on Answer: To call yourself Mary Brown would imply that you are .Miss and therefore when you are married, it is best to say, ”I am Mrs. John Brown.” The Emily Post Institute is soiry it cannot answer personal mail. Among recent visitors at the Sarasota Jungle Gardens on Florida’s lower West Coast were Mr. and Mrs. Francis Banford of Edison Street and the Clare Hartzmans of Monterey Boulevard. Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Captstrant (Cheryl Bruestle) of Warringham Drive, Waterford, announce the birth of a son, Brian Jay. Jan. 22 at Pontiac General Hospital. Grandparents are the Emil Bruestles of Dover Road and the Abel Caplstrants of Brooks Street. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Robert Boncher of Walton Boulevard was honored Thursday evening at a stork shower at the home of Mrs. Nell Bengry of Walton Boulevard. Mira. Earl Pruett was cohostess. ’The guest list included Mrs. Joseph Boncher, Mrs. Donald Morrissey, Mrs. Jack Crawford. Mrs. Clayton Cocking, Mrs. Sam Dovonno, Mrs. Clare Bebout, Mrs. Robert Coulton, Mrs. Frank Erznoznlk, Mrs. Jack Buckhom, Mrs. John Bass, SaUle Anderson and Darlene Bengry. ir ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Peters (Nancy Carson) of East Princeton Avenue announce the birth of a daughter, Nancy Caroline, Feb. 2 at Dr. Grey’s Hospital, Batesvllle. Afk. Grandparents are the O. W. Carsons of Batesvllle and Mr. and Mrs. Dan Peters of East Pike Street. ■k it it Mr. and Mrs. Morgan E. Slple of North Perry Street were recent visitors at the Jack 'Tar Hotel In San Fran-cisco, Calif. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Theron D. Collins and their three children of Geneva Street will leave Wednesday to live In Lansing. Mr. Collins has been appointed Assistant Book and Bible House manager of the Seventh-Day Adyentlsts, William Bloom of Plngree Avenue will succeed Mr. Collins here as assistant publishing department secretary of the Foo-tiac-Detrolt area. ,ik it it Mr. and Mrs. Frank Antrobus of Bloomfield Hills twee just returned from' Florida where Mr. Antrobus attemted a convention of general Insurance agenU at Boca Raton. They visited Miami and continued on to the West Coast where they wer^ breakfast guests of former Fa residents, Mr. ahd Mrs. Conrad Church at Venlee. :/ I t.. I usiriess and France Compacts Dig Into Total Sales Grain Prices CHICAGO P*k MARKETS IStock Market i Still in Decline Take Record 33.4 Pet. Out of 368,913 Units in January ***o»’*>’« »re top ^icMj covcriiv **1« ot loctJly / grown produce by growers and told them in wholesale pacMse lots, liiw Qutrtations are furnished by the I Detroit Bureau of Ma^ts, as of NEW YORK ing what is portant to come to the Congress." ne<*«««ry ‘n the foreign assistance portant to come to the Congress. But be said he was not prepared to estimate now how effective the recommendations would be. program. Two Democrats who said more stepa may be needed were Sens. A. Willis Robertson of Virginia and Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota. Robertson, ekairmaaeftbe banking committee — one of three Senate groups to study the ealled Rennedy’n Gouge Hole in Wall— California Pair Said to Have Eaten in Home But he said they must be supplemented by curbs on foreign and other spending. He said foreign aid could be cut by J1 billion, "without hamstringing it." Humprhey. the assistant Senate Democratic leader, commended the message, but said it should have hit harder on the outflow of U.S. dollars in investments in pros-! dent’s message has demonstrated a full comprehension of our balance payments problem,' and the steps necessary to meet It. It would have been unrealistic to have expected him to offer any new. and magic solutions,’’ Bush added. "With fdw exceptions, he hat proposed to continue and expand the necessary corrective actions initiated by President Eisenhower.” Chairman Warren G. Magnuaon, D-Wash., of the Senate Commerce Committee, said the President’s message gave the urgent gold proUem "the attention it deserves." FOREIGN VISITORS! I believe the program for es- SATURMYS tablishing travel offices abroad and the new advertising campaign to entice foreign visitors here — once they get into full swing — can ease the current payments In balance lecture by at least a half billion dollars annually.” Magnu- 9:15 A.M. TO 12 NOON Humphrey said the administration will be well ndvtaed to take a good, hard look at why Amerlean capital Is going Into | eountrles and “a I Stop in Saturday morning or anv week day from 9:00 a.m.to 5 p.m. for a friendly talk with a registered representative and l^n how we can assist you in ydur investment goals. Evciungs by appointment. 6 Appointments at GMC Truck Livestock Air Reduction picked up a point or so. United Air Lines was fractionally higher. DETHOTT. Pfb ( _j, »VLo^s of around a point were Mosel/, Moore, King, Ibol Surratt and 2 Others^ Get New Posts JJ's, S xu»my ■Bd (ood frtdn | Uraued tbawinr I h*lfrri*ii—sa'iai manager and Ralph 0. Moore *s! J'“**J;„“** eastern regional sales manager forirw-rio ib ba r.MC Truck A CMch Division was] JS*??* announced today by R. C. Wood-;}’”:}*?? house, general truck sales mana-iNo. i. i and ; If.M. 9 and j «9v*vgv id tows V»al»rt — Salabt* \t» Fully. •taady;;Air. ... prloi* 40N-43M food and choic* real-! Anaconda er> 3IM-44 N: ilandard 37 M-3I.N: cull Arroco StI and ullUty II.M-37.M, j Armour A- Cc Shcep-aalable I.OM. SUufhUr Iambi ' • fully tteady: moat mixed choice andlg-- • prime vooled lamk> llOO-ltM: •mall.?’' I lot prime aooled lamba 34 13 I»l Crt M Johda -------- M.3 Jones a L Kelacy Hay He also appointed Hugh M. ffor-] ratt to the newly created post of natiortal manager of GMC Truck factory branches. Other They made their break some-August Klouse, 40 of 114 S. Cas- »>*’*ween midnlglil Saturday fell St,. Rochester; William M. »"*> * *“"*>*y- •<*«>«««g to ’iishihs Butler, 60. 509 Jessie St.; and P®“«>’ 3, , Norman Van Kuren. 34, 3280 Rock- Officers said the pair removed « j;huven St.. Auburn Heights, admit- a light bulb in the lavatory of the jijited receiving five stolen television cell block, then scored through the JJisets found in their possession. ;plaster wall and got through to ^ J * * * the stockroom next door. J4 7; The T\’ sets were stolen from a a a “retail stores in Pontiac and Battle ... liicreek nolicP said Alton«.h«r .h„re a side window of the stockroom, la i „i . . Police received a phone call 3 • pl^ic record players missing m ^ ^jg^t saying that !i a a a called him early “ * , . „ dav morning from Femdale. TTiey Judge Maurice L. Finnegan wiU .^ly had just arrived in George W. Sheldon to : ager at St- Lotth; Robert A. Men, tone manager at Portland, Ore.; nnd Arthur P. King, nd- e gen town I’nd that they h The unidenttfled receiver of the rail took Ihrm home and fed them breakfast. eral antes manager. Widely known throughout the Sparton Given trucking industfy, Mosley Mngs _ , more than 20 years of varied GMC Jj-iVaiJilOIl UTCieT sales experience to his new as- . “gnment. /or ElectTomcs He has served as Southern and] eastern regional sales manager jaCKSON (.F^A J3-million de-l^“»«S' during the past five years. Before (ense contract for electronics wort that he managed G.MC's Kansas has been awarded Sparton Corp. City and AUanta rones. johp J. Smith, president of thejg^ g'j’ MOORE JOlNfa) IN ’S» jeompany. announced today. icont — Moore joined the divisKin in 1955!. as «iministrative assistant to theih"^* »» ? employes, a general sales manager. His General spokesman said. : gy. fedi.^^ Motors semce dates back to 1937. The big go\ernnient order la but he left the corporation for for elerlronlra equIpmeBl, Includ-two years to serve in the office of ing antiaubmarine equipment and the secretary of Defense in \Vash- | airborne InalrumenI landing sya-ington. D. C. Former Portland zone sparton , electronics division is f?J?p“sui Surratt came to GMC Truck in jackson iFrueh Tra 1947. He has had wide experience company announced a total in rone sales activities serving as^.onfracts.lo" ?d'.‘ manager of the San Antonio rone,T,j,p additional $1 million was ajgS uiu,,. years ago. t-ommercial order for its Allied Sheldon nerved in national fleet Steel Division in Detroit. !oen Tir, . . lOfrasr Frod -----„i__ ai- ... ---------------- Olllellx i He then took them to Telegraph road where they were going to I hitch a ride. perous Western European coun- ‘®®k at the tax laws of these ] tries. I conntrles which make such eon- , Sen. Kenneth B. Keating. R N.Y . I *^kma to American Invest- I said “the positive .tone” of thei *"**••” message was encouraging but I Sen. Prescott Bush. R-Conn., said ®*led: f"i am gratified that the Presi- o Orders executed on all exchanges and over-the-counter • Tax-Free Muna^l Bonds • Corporate Bonds • Systematic Investment Plans • Mutual Funds • Sew Securities Issues Watiing, Lerchen Will Meet With Insurance Men Waterford Board Works on Full-Pension Plans First steps towards possible adoption of a pension plan covering all township employes were taken by toe Waterford Township Board of Triistees last night. The move was an outgrowth of toe request from township firemen and police for a retirement plan. Reviewing the request, the board envisioned the pos^bility of a broader program. EHmer Johnson, township super- visor, was asked to determine cost of a plan tailored township's needs. Johnson would meet with actuaries experienced in pension programming. In other business it was announced that the township treasurer’s office will be open •• to noon Saturday to accept payment of ItM township, school and county taxes. After Feb. 14, a 4 per cent penalty will be charg^. Metamora Township Home Gutted by Fire I The |icn were extradited from iTacoma, Wash., and had been In jthe Royal Oak Jail since Friday. Police said it is not known where the men lived in Royal Oak last November when toe bad checks were passed. Fire which apparently burned undiscovered for qujte, a while yesterday gutted the Virgil R. Congdon home at 1524 Dryden Road in Metamora Township. No one was home at the time. James Seeterlin, township clerk, was asked to study specifications: contained in bids by two companies to sell a new, two-way police radio] to the township. ' | The board approved erection ofj backstop at Drayton Ball Park] in Drayton Plains at an estimated coat of $800. Following a public hearing on special assessments, the board approved installation of « t r e e t lighU on Meigs Street. Business Notes Allen L. Franco of 1919 Hayes Birmingham, has been appointed director of publicity and community affairs for WXYZ ra-He fcHinerly was with station IWCAR. According to Lapeer County Undersheriff Carter Saamlln. toe blaze started in the kitchen and spread through the house burning toe kitchen wall and adjacent bedroom wails. Lodge Calendar Gets Term in Jackson Ic Kignment. His l(-year G.MC background incindea broad tone Held Mies eiqieriencr. Merz joined GMC in 1947 and All [arrOnV f haFflP has been associated with zone sales'''' LUItCliy V^IlQiyC activities in St. Paul and Chi- „ , ’ „ ... cago for the past 11 vears. Shirley Davis, a 46-year-old fac- Ktng has boeu business man-i“>0' metal linisher from Pontiac, agement manager for the division Isentenced to Jack^ Wron since 1934 He is a 23-year veteran ;foi' '» 5 Sfars he pleaded of General Motors K“'"y J®" 23 to larceny by con- 74 7 BwUt a Co 34.3 Tenn Oai . <3 Ttxace ....... 3( 4 Tax O Sul re J VtSrn Brar •3.« Tranxamrr'V 17 Tvent Can ..., 34 1 Underwood . 35 .3 On Fac J Unit Air Un Annual Meeting, Quadrant Low 13 Club. Feb. 8. at 8:00 pm. at Roosevelt Temple. Bute Street. Annual report of officers and election of officers for the c«nlng year. Leroy Segnlts, Pres. . 33.3 UnOasCp 33 3 US steal 133 ua Tob Si " Inland atl Intpir Cop Interlak Ir Int Bui 3