mm The Wealhef H,' ■ U.S. ffnlkir Mmi Forfeit ■_ Mostly clondy'Tuesday (DeUIU.Pao S) THE PONTIAC m Edition jpL’ 120 NO, 250 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY. DECEMBER 8, 1»02 -52 PAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Mr. Shnoo loved animals more than anything. Confined to Apdi Despite Better I VATICAN CITY (AP) «* Pope Johfl gM eppem wea-tm-hl* -way back to reaming hla normal duties after a/week of battling a stomach disorder and serious a Most Fanldbulous Zoo . , By. LUCRECE BEALE ... CHAPTER ONE * Once upon a time there was a man named Shftelling-ham Shnoo who loved animals more than anything in the world. When he was a small boy he collected tropical fish and turtles and hamsters. As he grew older his collection grew te iaebide .. The Pope’s personal physician has returned to his home in Bologna, expressing confidence. coons and monkeys and snakes. By the time its was a young mart m was collecting tigers and zebras and emit giraffes! Finally, Mr. 8hnoo bought I zoo. It was an old run-down place owned by a man named Crook- This man did not love animals. He kept them in cages so small they hardly had room to tarn around. He gave them very little food did not heat their houses and he never spoke kindly to them. Crookshank was glad to sell the zoo because he loved money as much as Mr. Shnoo loved animals. Mr. Shnoo was so apxtiNs to help the animals thatne agreed to pay much more than the zoo was worth. JKwas going (o take him IQ years to pay for it. 1.9N GOLD PIECES It was arranged that he would pay 1,000 gold pieces each, year. If In any year he could not pay it he would lose both the zoo and all the gold he had already paid. Furthermore, Crookshank insisted that until the zoo was entirely paid tar, he himself would continue to Uve there. WASHINGTON «1— President Kennedy directed the^Justlce Department today fo seek an Injunction to prevent renewal of a strike, by the machinists union against the Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Kennedy sent a letter to his brother, Atty. Gen, Rofrert F. Kennedy, telling him to seek an 80-day ‘‘cooling off” Taft-Hartley injunction. Kennedy said the strike against Lockheed, “If permitted to recur or continue, will imperil the national safety.” The President acted after receiving the report of a three-member board of inquiry he named last Wednesday to look into the dispute. ' These were very hard terms -but Mr. Shnoo was so happy to havo the yo he did .mot mind too mucp. He Immediately set about improving things for the animals. Hie board said the union security issue “poses the stumbling block obstrQcting a negotiated settlement of this dispute.” He built an aquarium and filled (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) In Today's Press Clomp Down Administration stingy with Information to press. —PAGE D5. Expect Dispute Clash expected between U.S. and Soviets over cost' of U.N. force*.—PAGE B2. Door Nlkl Secret pen pals, K and K, exchange ‘‘worried” notes.—PAGE B7. Aren n«ws ....... .'. .Bt Astrology ....... Bridge........... Comics .........Li Editorials .... .....Af Markets... ........ Dll Obituaries .......vr'.w.BO Sports ...........D1-D4 Theaters ...........DO TV* and radio programs..........Dll Wllsea, Esrl ......Dll Women’s pages . Blt-Bll VT There are indications that the pontiff may take part in the ceremonies closing tiie first session of the Second Vatican’ Council next weekend. The supreme ruler of the Ro-ian Catholic (lurch made Kennedy Acts to-BteekMe He stood for four minutes at the open window of his apart-•’led from coldgu ‘* sweeping St. Peter’s Square, give his usual Sunday blessing to the c Seeks Order fo Stop Walkout at Lockheed The machinists struck various Lockheed plants f r two da^klast week. Then sent its members back to work pending the report Of the fact-finding board of inquiry. 80-DAY PERIOD A Taft-Hartley injunction would prevent resumption of the strike for 80 days, during which 4he board of inquiry would continue with efforts to negotiate a settlement of the dispute, the report‘was one of two, from Taft-llartley emergency boards the President was to receive today. In another development related to a major labor controversy chiefs of the five operating unions on the nation’s railroads gathered here for a huddle to determine their next legal step In fighting worker layoffs threatened by the carriers. ' Of the three disputes « renews* strike by the 08,008 dock workers appears to ha the most The worker!! ended an earlier strike after tilth administration on Oct. 0 obtained an 80-day injunction under the Taft-Hartley emergency provisions. The emergency board studying this case is expected to report to the White House that there still Is a tight deadlock between the AFL-CIO International Longshoreman’s Association, and ship-ng and atavadoro firms. 2 Birmingham Teens Die in Crash 3rd Youngster to Usual Duties Despite the dmprovenuK.: la hi' condition, resumed. An audience for LL Gen. Pedro Arambnrn, former Argentine provisional president, in a News Flash long beach, cam. m,~ The Navy aircraft carrier Kear-sage collided with the passenger liner Oriana in the fog late Mta The NmT said ports of casualties. The Oriana carried 1,244 passengers. Critically Hurt All Were Too Young for Driver's License JOHN C. KRAUSS PAUL H. DROEjGE Red Armfes Smaller Haven't Gone-Nehru 88 LatSYosr To DotoIlT NEW DELHI, India Wl—-Prime Minister Nehru tdid Parliament today the Chinese Communists...mav have thinned out the advance units of their invasion armies, -but they have not withdrawn them. The 'Chinese reported their troops had pulled back in at least’one sector in partial fulfillment of Peking* one-sided cease-fire procla>---—------- matton.. Indian sources re. ported apparent withdrawal in another sector,\ Nehru, however, told Parliament there Watfe “signs of withdrawal in the rear—in the front positions they might have been thinhad out, bqt they have not withdrawn. He added that “the position Is rather confused and therefore ltd* not easy to make $ precise Two members of Nehru’s Cabinet vowed an eventual resumption of the battle , rather than acceptance of Peking's terms. India’s frontline commanders tyok a gin- 1590 Drive. Their companion, Dean Gebo, 14, of 1474 Pierce St., Birmingham, was still, reported in critical condition today. at William Beau-mont- Hospital, Royal Gak - He suffered fractures of' the neck, skull, jaw, arm and leg. None of the boys, all students at Birmingham’s Baranmi Junior High School, was old enough to have a driver’s II- gerfy approach to the delicate situation. In other developments; 1. The Indian Communist party endorsed Nehru’s positio n for settlement of the undeclared wan 2. U.S. Ambassador John Kem neth Galbraith flew to the headquarters city of Tezpur for a look at the situation and inspection of American weapons flown to the Indian army. LETTER TO PAKISTANI 2. Nehru was disclosed to have assured Pakistani President Mohammed Ayub Khan in a letter Nov. 12 that Western Weapons received by the Indian army would (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) The car, which belonged to John’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.* Edward H. Krauss, was taken without the family's permission, according to Bloomfield Township police. t> aNHMUMMMMM**' i** | Dieting* Days Ahead The car hit the free in a field just east of East Lincoln Road, where it dead-ends at East Bradford Street. Police believe the Krauss boy was driving, Tire t r nek s indicated he bit the brakes about 78 feet from the end of the road. Tie c a r skidded to the end of the street, jumped a curb end plowed through the field for 90 feet before crashing into the free. Residents of a n e a r b y subdivision heard the car traveling down the road at high speed and then heard a crash. There were n6 witnesses. Drop That Pizza, Behold: Hero is one of America’s biggest But look now. Things are going to change. This is our own Bill DeBats, foreman qf The Press’ composing,room. He stands alongside Janet Swenson, the editor’s secretary. If Bill put on one more pound, he’d weigh exactly THREE TIMES as much as Jahet. She tips the beam at*a cozy 110. Bin checks to with a lofty and .impressive 329. ‘ Bill’ll going on a diet. Yep, that’s correct. “I think,” said he casually, “I*U knock off pbout 75 pounds between now and the first of August. That’ll put me down to a reasonable 284 which isn’t very heayy when you stop to think about it.” . The big man sighed and pondered. “Dr. Ekelund told me I should level out around 200 and take a year or more. After August, I’ll lose a paltry 34 pounds more so I can greet Christmas in 1963 at about 228.' (And what a turkey dinner I’ll put away when THAT happens!) I’d only weigh twice as much as Janet. Imagine, losing enough weight to construct a whole Janet. “Then, starting the first of January, 1984, my plan is to ease back to -210 or even a skinny, emaciated 200. People won’t, know me. I’ll be confused with Janet. Well hero goes. Take back that triple piece of apple pie.a la mode.* ★ ★ “I can see it now. I’ll be Known as ‘Slats’ DeBats. “Whoopee!” :■%: Two Birmingham .teen-agers were killed and h young friend was critically injured when, their speeding convertible crashed into a tree in Bloomfield Township Saturday nighi. ' . Dead whenlthey were piffled from tiie twisted wreckage of the car were John C. Krauss, 15,-or 1800 W. Lincoln qqd Paul H. Droege, 14, of Irfax Toll In ’62 LANSING (UPD-— Gov.-Elect George Romney said today his plans for setting up his new. administration are 'developing rapidly, but he has made no definite decisions on Appointments. AH such designations will he In elaborating, Romney said, in the process of taking a look (at possible appointed) I expect to weigh fully the competence, character and capacity of present But, said Romney, who will become Michigan’s first Republican governor In 14 years when he is inaugurated Jan. 1, “I will not exclude the partisan consideration. ‘Partisan identification is net minus sign, it’s not a controling sign. But other things being equal, It’s certainly a consideration.” Romney told a news conference, the first he has held since returning from a two-week postelection vacation, one of the first appointments he will make Is that of state controlled. Police said the auto/Apparently was traveling 60 miles per hour or more in the 25-mile an hour zone. The boys met at the Krauss home while John’s parents went out for dinner. The mishap occurred only a few blocks from the home. J o h n’s father told police he had no idea the boys would take the car. J “T didn’t even know he c 6 u 1 d drive,” the stunned father told police. The dead boys’ bodies are at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Balmy Days May Fizzle With Drizzle As the skying goes, jpll good things must come to an end," -»-*so it is with . the weather. Mostly loudy skies with a chance of a little drizzle is tomorrow's prediction with a high of 54 expected, following a low of 36 tonight. Precipitation will total .4 of an inch or less Irt a few showers tomorrow and again near the end of the week, when temperatures will turn cooler. Today's winds are light and variable; they will become southerly at 5 to 15 miles an hobr tonight. Forty-one was the lowest temperature recording preceding 1 a.m. today. At 2 p m. the ther-mometer read a mild 57. ^ Romney Undecided on Aides W A S HINGtON.iB —The Russians?have begun taking their IL28 bombers •out of Cuba, the Defense / Department announced to/ Assistant Secretary of Defense- Arthur Sylyester announced that theYirst of a reported SO or more twin-jet bombers “ajn jp the process of Wing withdrawn.” / • Photographs7 taken by U.S. patrol planqk indicate that the Russian ship Okhotsk was.,moving off the northero coast of Cub* on Saturday with three bomber fuselages visible on its deck, Sylvester told a news confer- based on competence, character n/F ’*rfft not expect to make a He said four men are under con-slderktion for the post, but neither Walter de Vries nor L. William Seidman, members of his interim cabinet, who had been considered front runners for the poet in first speculation', are among the candidates. T, I contemplate acting on that appointment during December and obviously it is one of the most important from .a time standpoint,’* tie said. Romney expressed concern during the hour-long news conferences over the^ fact "budget processes are not as far advanced now as they were a year . ago. The principal reason,” he said, ‘Is that this was > an election year.” Photos Show iFuselageson Soviet Vessel Hstof30 or Mor« Jet* Described byPanfageft Information Chief > “Pictures show the fuselages i be IL28 aircraft,” he said. The Pentagon’s Information chief alio said thet analysis eltoforaistii^ipparently gaflF ed by UA , end planes, Indicates thit as el test Friday ILttt were belii dismantled at the San Jullaa airfield on the westera tip of Cuba. t Pictures of the Okhotsk at kea were to be made available Inter today. A defense spokesman 'said he was unable to say how many airfields have been used.by the He said they have ap* ; wared and reappeared in dtf-erent places. v REPORT ON PLANES, The kit official figure v on the number of those nuclear-capable bombers sent by the Russians Into Cuba Was more than 20. Reliable reports since have indicated the number la about 30. On Nov. 21,, It was announced that U.S. Navy P2V patrol planes would check outward- to see whether they were carrying ILIOs back to Russia. At the times, a spokesman said it probably would take about 30 days to complete the operation. - • • * At the United Nations, U,S. and Soviet negotiators resumed their discussion on Cuba, but there was no word that either side had changed its position'on unresolved Issues. John J. MeCloy, chairman of President Kennedy's Cuban Coordinating Committee, and Am-bassador Charles W. Yost rep-resentated the United Stater in the absence of Chief U.N. delegate Adlal E. Steyenson who was In Washington. Marshals on Scene S. Dakota Town Riled Up ABERDEEN, S.D. (JP>—Federal Marshals meet here tonight! map strategy for their invasion of Mound City,, a village wtwr zealous town folk and farmers threaten “another Mississippi” to keep from turning over government records they have locked in a barricaded bqllding. The county Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service office was moved this year from Mound City, the county seat with a population of less than 200, to Herreid, population 633, eight miles north. Half of the record were moved to the new AS( in Herreid, bul Mound City area folks the rest They locked the ASCS office and sandbagged t threatened to fight if. anyone comes for the r | ' ★ ★ it ; For years Mound City has been wary of any tl _ the county seat. Mound City fears that if the ASCS record* go t Herreid, the courthouse may be the next to fb. ■ ’ ■ CRITICAL SITUATION . / If they call the U.S. marshals out, someone might get his blown off,” one Mound City businessman said. A farmer said City will neve!* give up its fight to keep the ASCS office.’ < ★ ★’ ★ ^ Ta; . jn “The government is trying to scare us,” he said. "We’ve been igh too much to get scared.” people In Mound City have a financial Interested In the (Oonitaued on Page 2, Col. I) front. Ther it of moving THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBEE 3,19fl8 Wm ►form ^ 5f«7/ Churning Off East Coast »« i; arm . A, severe uic uu*, week has churned Ip every direction off the South Atlantic Ceari Una Saturday, but the only ones aboard, the crew of three, got eafoly.. 380 fitt' east of Charleston, S. C,, tqdmr, packing pie winds Of up to 65- miles an hour near Its center* | It has cut away largachunks of beachfront in North Carolina, where sees were repottW as high as 14 feet off Frying. Pan Shoals early today. The seven-day-old storm has floundered and churned far every direction. The center has remained hi a circle with a radius of less than 250 miles, a has been Injured, i aground hi North Caro- The storm was a "loner,” cut off from the generahcirculation of the atmosphere. The Weather Bureau said that yyhile cutoff low pressure systems are .not hew, one so strong as this was unusual for the area, since it has retoained so long in sttch. arelatively small area,.'' ,L No ( / 7-..: Draft Call Includes 30 Rom County Michigan’s draft call lor January will affact SO registrants in Osktewd County and a total of 378 in the state, Michigan Selective Sendee Director Col. Arthur A. Holmes said today Holmes said the 13 n 1883 saw 88,833 Michigan men registered by local boards. All men are required to be registered ea their Utt birthday. The January, draft call will In-, Minin only registrants of at least 22 years of age, except for volunteers who ora accepted between the ogee of 17 and 38. Probe Blaze/ Death Linked .to Suffocation The MNtlac fire marshal’s office today woo probing morning house fire in wHich a to year-old JPontlac man died apparently of suffocation. The fire at m Franklin Read. Firemen found the Body of James Brdwn, owner of the home, a bathroom two rooms away from in which the fire had apparently started. Brown was pronounced arrival at Pontiac Generi pital, after falling to inhalatar threatment. The fire gutted the bat but firemen kept ft from i. ing to the net of the house, age was. estimated at 8UBd, dead on ral Hos- And there were, no outside air currentsof sufficient strength to immediate sight to «auto tb Storm to move away. Winds of from 38 to 48 m.ph. extended outward 380 miles from the storm center. stone to remain nparly s ary today, with UWe ch« keep track af the «frm,.. Gale warnings wore displayed from Myrtle Beach, 8. C»rto the Virginia Capet-Small craft warnings were to effect from Myrtl Bfdi to Cape Canaveral,. Fla and from the Virginia capes * Cape Mw, NJ**■ * t Won't Issue Warrant for Campaigner I Flans to against Madison Heights^ erst Lee Walker torfr file a statement of penses for the1 Aug. 7 election, we" *“— slty Oakland to bear a talk by guest I speaker Mrs. Philip Gentile, (antfu United Nations observer for the A^ult Education Association, which is supported by the Ford Foundation. arrived at the County However,, the he returned to Walker ft fas net notarised, Assistant Prosecutor Robert Templin qaid last! would issue a warrant. statement had not been tiled by today. An unsuccessful candidate for tgi Democratic nomination tor representative from the 8th 1*l»MM, .**■>■*. arts irz SS rom the county dork's office and the prosecutor's office, according to Templin. If the statement b not notarised and returned to the eennty within a reasonable lime, Tern-said today, he will renew plans to bene the warrant. The expense statement was due jo toe county clerk’s office 10 days after the primary, according to state; law. The Weather reaps, weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND. VICINITY—Partly cloudy aad mild today and tonight”High today M. Low tonight ». Tuesday mostly cloudy wltt chance of a little drizzle; high M. Winds light s*! variable today, becoming southerly ft flve to 18 miles per hour Mwf NlKu At | ».m.: Winds ciim. x, MMH Mta MonJuy St U:3t t».m. X so in aeai (as msrdsd tfswntown 8s MbImW tsmpsrslurs ........ <1 Letts! tsmpsraturs ....... It Ussb Mmpsrsturs ......... 41 Wtathor: Bunny t>otn days. • ••■day’s Inymlin Ckarl tpaila IS If fort Worth 04 #0 ■canafea SO 41 laeiIMm«IU« 11 41 r 3$E i? i JHjtN»Vsa«h « » Iftto IS 41 Milwaukee U If uorqua 13 il Omaha M M ;a -<00 40 Phoenl* , 04 41 n 40 13 S, Lake City it 47 ....-,-10 oi to a. mnoitoo if si Cincinnati if 31 0. B. Maris 10 41 Daarar is 11 §Mttl« 41 38 I.... H 8 Wston 8 « tusAil __nalnu Manuftts Realty Official Dies Suddenly ltack,"FaAo J. Howlett Birmingham Area News NJ Elementary Curriculum Hefcrt Attack, to Frank U$rsUp|»ORTERS Among the sponsors of Die new Rochester Aren Chapter of. the American Association for the United Nations are (from left) Mrs. Walter P. Reuther, Prof. Charles 0. thicker of Michigan State University Oakland, Mrs, Lawrence S, Shepard and Mrs. Wood Mr Geist, Mrs. Shepard and Mrs. Geist are temporary cochairmen of the group, which held an open house and signed up M members at MSUO yesterday. 52 Residents Sign Charter form Rochester Unit, for Uvhh A total of 52 Rochester area rest-dents yesterday signed up as charter members of a new chapter of the American Association for the United Nations- (AAUN) open house held by an organizing committee. Some 80 persons attended the meeting at Michigan State Univer- Mrs. Wood M. Gebt, 83388 De-y. quiudre Read, Washington ft Township, said the turnout was "very heartening”' and termed the meeting successful. Mrs. Geist and Mrs. Lawrence S. Shepard, 229 Rochdale St., Avon Township, are temporary cochairmen of the group, f An organizational mre tablish foe chapter’s stru elect officers to scheduled for Jan. 22 at MSUO. / Purpose of the grodp is to build an educational program to support the United Nations. Chairman of yesterday’s program, Mrs. Walter P. Reuther, said the new chapter was being formed, because "each one of us is interiitod in doing what he can to bring peace in our time.” - Mrs. Gentile urged partloipa- To be known as the Rochester Area Chapter of the AAUN, the group will draw its members from the Poittisc, Utica and Romeo areas, as well as from Rochester. GUESTS PRESENT Guest; at the meeting included Robert W. Peden, president of the of the AAUNr Dr. Robert Frehae, Vice president of toe Detroit chapter and director of the Detroit Round TBbte of Christians and Jews*; and Mrs. Warren Cooksey, president of toe Detroit foreign bun aad speaking, later read and instruction in the Birmingham School District, already offered to junior and senior high introduced to the- elementary school curriculum iiextltoU. to a report to the Beard ef Education, Mrs. Lealse Contone, coordinator of the elementary mpnt Hospital, Royal^^ oak. His body is “ ' M Students b e g 1 n by listening Nehru&ysReds Not Withdrawn (Continued From Page One) be used only to resist Chinese ag- The New China News Agency reported a withdrawal of Cbm-munist Chinese troops id Walong area at the extreme eastern end of the 1,560-mile borderline. write this language. An "to-eervlc£ workshop,” third to be held this year, will take place* this winter among 30 ip-struciow who teach languages to. the district. ' Hugh W. McIntyre Service for Hugh W. McIntyre, 4», of 15548 Kirkshire, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the First Pres-byteriai ‘ton Church of Birmingham. Burial will be,in Acacia Part; Cemetpry. ^ .. . v- Mir, McIntyre died unexpectedly yesterday at William Beau- y is at the Manley Bailey Fu- He was a member of the American Society of Metols and president of the Men’s dub'at the | First Presbyterian Church and a member of Pi Kappa Phi frater-nity of Purdue University. - Survivtog.besides his wife Pauline are his daughter Gloria and Richard H., both at home, his mother Mrs. Thomas Mcbtyre and a brother. Walong', 15 miles west ef the Burma border, fell to the Chinese in an offensive that subsequently carried them 81 miles down the Luhit River valley toward the ptolna ef Assam. Hntnnw to v^tog. ww* military iwurces ^ were quoted ^as saying Chinese troops still held positions in the Luhit valley, #' •' * ,# A dispatch fropa a Chinese correspondent to Wilong said scores peasants gave the withdrawing Chinese newly harveriaasweet potatoes and bananas smt'called down blessings on them” The Chinese broadcast said nothing^about withdrawals etoe- Heisman Winner Is Rwn Pick to Open NFL Draft. CHICAGO (ft-The Los Angeles Rams opened the National Football League draft session today picking quarterback Terry Baker, the Heisman award winner from Oregon State. The 14 NFL teams opened their imual draft session at 11 a.m. The NFL will select 280 players to 20 rounds with the sessions expected to run past midnight. The Philadelphia Eagles, with the fourth pick, named Ed Budde, tackle of Michigan State, who was selected by Dallas of the NFL. ■ . ...,^~- sources at Tapir said toe Chinese seem to have withdrawn 81 miles on the northMSton front, apparently the Bomfadili ana. The area to some 300 miles west of Walong and is the scene of the greatest Chinese penetration toward the tortile populous Assam plains. There was no word from either side on the situation to Ladakh, key areA in the five-year old border contest. In rejecting, important sections of Peking’s peace terms, Nehru has said China’s provisions would leave It to possession of 2,000 square miles of DETROIT (UFO —ThA Detroit Lions today signed afl-Big Ten halfback Larry Ferguson of Iowa i a pro football contract. Ferguson, captain of the 1962 Hawkeyd squad, was Detroit’s I fourth draft choice a year age. Waiter Kadell Service tor Waiter Kadell, 85, of 1264 LenhUl Court, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be to Greenwood Cemeterj Mr. Kadell died unexpectedly Saturday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. He was a meinber Of Charles Edward Post, American Legion; the Senior Men’s Club of Birmingham; and the McDowell Chorus of Pontine. He was a retired sales representative. Surviving besides his wife Lorraine are a daughter Mrs. Edward Wright of Indianapolis, Ind., a son, Walter R. of Nankin Township; and peven grandchildren. The area, bleak and uninhabited, to important to China for the strategic road it has built Unking itri Singiang Province With captive Tibet. Poor Hunters' Special: New England Cow Sale Pm! H; Droege Service for Paiil H. Droege,. 14, of 1500 Fairway Drive, was to be held at 3 p.m. today at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton-Co. with cremation to follow to White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. He died Saturday night in an a)ito accident to Bloomfield Town-sblp- Surviving besides his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Droege, are sister Susan, at home; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hughes of Vero Beach, Fla. John C. Kranss Service for John C. Krauss, 18, of 1800 W. Lincoln Road, will bo p.m. tomorrow at Christ Church Cranbrook. Cremation will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. He died Saturday night in an auto accident to Bloomfield Township. His body to at the Bell Chapel of the william R. Hamilton Co. Surviving besides his parents, Mr. and Mia. Edward H. Krauss, are a toother; and grandparents, Mrs. Marion Wlkfo of Yuolapa, Calif, and Hasan Purdy of Dade City, Fla. Town Riled in S. Dakota WESTMORELAND, N.H. (UPD - The deer season has opened to s o u t h e r n New Hampshire and fanner Ted Dtokle erected a sign rtth this suggestion to hunters: ("Why gd horn# empty handed? Take home a cow. Special prices between Dec. 1 and 31." (Continued From Page One)' outcome of the battle. They are shareholders to'the new -building that houses the local post office and the former ASCS office. Oaring the ASCS office has affected business to Mound City. Alton Herman, owner of the town’s only cafe, Mid reopening of the Office would provide a lot of business. ass!*sawr The ASCS program Is hurttog . too. With half the records to each town, ASCS officials have been handicapped. The agency admin-soil banl ‘ teters soil bank loans and handles otlnr Agriculture Department functions. Travis Lewto of Sioux Fails, assistant UJ. district attorney, ..met with mere than 281 Mound City farmers and their wives Saturday night. He said marshals will be sent unless the Lewto told .the group, gathered In the grade schoql gymnasium, "If we can’t voluntarily gel the records we will, have to send mirahab to. . "If sempone attempts to stop the marshalsand you knew what happened in Mississippi — the marshal will be required to take stops to protect them* SANDBAI City, S.D. WAGGED ~ ' Ht a small farming community, have Residents of Mound .......... front of the Agriouitural Stabilization and Conservation Service office prevent federal officials from moytog rote a new ASCS office eat (ip to another He advised fhe Mound City people, "If you want to fight, fight it legally.” * • . ' ' ■ ■ The Justice Department’s position, h0 said, is unconditional surrender of the records, lie said the government will use whatever foCM to necessary and ’ I i THE PONTIAC PfoESS, M0M>AY, DBCflMBgR 8, lAtt Like 'Slick' Americon LONDON (AP) 1 Minister of Wofta Geoffrey. Rlppon told a Conservative party rally hrwouM like to aee some slick American salesmanship in British industry. "What this country needf,” he said, "is someone like the Ameri-caiisalesman whOTOtatwomilk-ing machines to a farmer with only one* cow—and took the cow ’ as down payment” "jUcEjriT Cj«rrt»eewwoee»w#we**v »Rwy** Ho«(c«y 1 lol • ii^ WwItMf • Hirin’Figure 11 to 5 Famous Endlcott-Johnson leather shoe* with reinforced arch, padded tongues. Chrome blades. ne(.ISMfV v (^f WATOHII-new..... I Newest model* oi America'* flneet 9 brand wotchM. Doubt. GUARAht- j •I TfED by maker* and Slmm*. Pby 5 ft cask poyktss—use free leyowoy- *j K . AH price* Federal to*. I |RM AA AAlJUITL 1 i WATCH DIPT.-Moln Floor ■; Women Get Equal , police, Jtow.»e lower house of Parliament has approved and sent to tiie Senate a^bill opening all civil service Jobs-to women on equal fobtiini With men, Ski SIMM| for These SIFT Ideas! SonlorixVd 100% COTTON fUNNRETTf Udes’2-Pc. PWAIUS | $2.00 ValM-lst Qnlity Pedal pusher length bt with long sloevo tops. Deco- , rotor pattern on white. All1 sizes for every woman. fids' mut-unr Sweaters IAN 87 bnu-ovEitw $2.89 Value—Now i Luxurious 'Ban-Ion' sweaters In size 3 .to 8. Choice of aqua colors. I axfifc Battery Powered ROTARY ELECTRIC Toothbrush —Made in Switzerland Kflg A 9 5 now . ONLY- • 2 EXTRA BRUSHES « Dentists approve this mhthoc( j for most/sclentiflc dental hygiene. Uses Inexpensive battery. BATTERY INCLUDED. • mum CHOICE 7 Half ounce flacons of Intoxication. Divine and |L# Dandy 1 fragrances specially giftpackagqjd for daring women yho' *. like to tiynew fragrances. Here*# your chanceto'try some of the World’* most famous agents at a real savings. Send for several. They make intriguing gifts. Just 2.0Q phi* tax. Shop SIMMS Tonite and Tuesday For Thsts 5—SUPER DISCOUNTS In Oi PHOTO DEPT. UflLUES Ideal Gift for the Youngsters T-Pc. Flash Camera Set Tokw Full Celcr or Black and $4.95 Valua At shown—flash enmnra wBh I rail film, 2 fladibultio and 2 |haM*rion Tak* 12 ■■drug dipt. uSSSSSSSimmmm Hen's tk. Perfect Gill i.1 Ik. Home . . . BEDSPREADS in Choici of 4 Styles Values to $9.95 $1 Holds la Uyawty MEN’S and LADIES’ loe Skates 29 7 Why t Pvy $9.95 Deluxs quality, ladle*' and, mto's flflurw styles or man's hockey slyto/ftustproof steel soles. LodleT 5 to 10, moll's AlO 12. *0*rblH*l»oMni|f FIOURE SKATES... <0|ok Button" (MIN’S/ FIGURE SKATES . ..r . tnsulotod Shoo / 097 tlWRI SKATE* .».*■ , 9B N. Saginaw—r-----— Selection Includes: woven cotton reversible heirloom, type spread, first quilted rayons In solid colors In twin or full six*, and twin six* coverlet in fln»*l nollshed cotton* or heavy heirloom typeS# ythlte or beige colors. Yoiir choice ebone low price. Many I it* quality, tome* Irregulars. tONITE and TUESDAY OMLYI 25 SOUTH SAGINAW ST DISCOUNT STORE TIMELY SPECIAL for Boris and Gift Buytrt! Metal BOOK RACK la Laynmy OUTFIT INCLUDES: IDI8 •BATTERY • CAS** EARPHONE 'REAoTONP -TRANSISTOR Pocket Radio Compare to $29.95 Selltrs | New 1963 model 'Rooltone' Aria-tocrof full 8-translslqr radio for powerful pickup of stcitlOM, simple dktl tuning, plenty of vokimq. $1.00 holdt in free loyowoy. Newest Model — Push-Button Ease! K Tape Recorder • CompletnV EARPHONE - 9 Finest ton*, record up to on* hour on low cost^ape. Completely portable—no plug Is needed, take R anywhere you wont 2* motor drte* for rellobl* operation. seee*eeeeee*e*e*e*e*e**ee*ee*e*eeeee*eeee As Pictured-11x1 IV^xl-lnoh Two shetvos, angle Style holds book* better. WtougliHran finish. Limit-2 tl» o customer. Si SOUTH STOM HOURB-IO a.m, te 9 p m. I . ▼Guarante* 'NOHEK SS 28 SOUTH Ssginsw PAF^FR«Ifl|n City Lot* 6-Tube, Bi‘FI TONE -Famous AURON* AM-FM Table Radios I Regular $34.98 Value-at Simms : High power 6-tubs with 2 diodes fof extra i pick-qg,. . . dear, teal Hi-Fi tone from this , compact ! 6x6x6to-lnch table radio. Goon antoed by Simms and get last service If ever ! needed. $1 holds In free layaway. DAY or I ^ |n Any Cfty V ____________________PARKING LOT SIMMS OPEN TOHIfiTT Sftnms It open 19 boon o day-plenty of flaw *,da JiMT iPirisfniterihOffpktfl. ?. byyburieif eftwfih Hm AntoRftawffww am park absolutely fra* In any cfly parking lot white mill Famous TOYS at BIG DISCOUNTS Famous ‘LIONEL’ Sriene* ‘LIONEL’ Weather Station Sots 188 ‘HER* ! ELECTRIC Soldering Gnn 199 Genuine .SUNBEAM1 M” Electric Bril $5.93 Valuo J991 |367 100-watt Instant heating • Geared chuck, 2000 rpms, 1 1 soldering gun with built^n * multiple^rall thrust on spindle i | light. Ideal gift for the home J bearings. Buy ono for Dad— ! [ hondympn. ■ , \o gift he can us# all year. SUNBEAM Automatic TOASTER THE EONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY.DECEMBER g, 1962 Too Many Sincere Nincompoops ican women tend to think of nbl-itics as “dirty," and therefore this loosely chosen adjeetlvq yas their best defense against voting for, a man sallied by the soot of I m ' aimaIta I111a#I ' MAAM By PHYLLIS BATTELLE HEW YORK — Shortly before theelections in I960, a nationwide Boys' and Girls' Bicycles and Velodpedes-Large Selection 'at Sensational Low PrtcetlAII Extremely Fine QuaEtyl STAitiiiNa:sttiiiL__^L-„ This Is pretty startUbg. stUff to us depression adolescents ‘ who remember the era when all boys seemed to be painfully sincere. In those days, every family in tile neighborhood hwl > sincere kids (or so it seems l&recoDec-tion). . • Boys sincerely tried feldst Approximately SO per cent of these damsels ‘mentioned, first end most important, that ever-lovin’ loosism, “sincere.” They are quoted makin^such whimsical statements as, ‘to the a good date "is going out with a fellow who’s sincere." Or “I like a sincere man . . . what I can’t stand is a phony." . Of all'thlngs! I was appalled: But maybe that’s beoause I’ve met so mpny sincere nincom-poops In my time. There are also a good many sincere murderers, vandals and playboys. It seems here that sincerity is a dandy trait — certainly a ' step above dimples, or dancing ability - but totally meaningless by Itself. Sincerity Is n6thihg unless the sinceree has something sincerely Worthy of being' sincere about miSCSlilETY1 ^ > Politics looks soiled to the adult set, and lovers look grimy to the girls sincerely slapped .them. After that, they went together for six months and then the boys tried to kiss the girls again, sincerely, and the girls kissed back with equal sincerity. • ft ♦ ' ‘ In those days they didn’t take surveys. Well, maybe they did, but nobody ever balled on the damsels of Dayton, Ohio.. If they had, I’ll bet the girls It’s a sorry situation. j And dll we can recommend is that today's young ladies wait for marriage until the day when they are mature and wise, enough to take sincerity for granted and look far deeper assets in the men they date. tfiat’s a mdsi sincere bit of advice,. but probably wasted . . . FLEETWING BOYS' AND GIRLS' DELUXE BICYCLES an,* $0088 **£S“ iirrsKS For a colorful Christinas party ifrink, try this recipe far spruce root punch. Since root beer is a favorite with young people, they will especially enjoy this holiday treat Chill, and combine at the last ritual promptly on Dec. 36, while others like to wait until early In the New Year. But whatever your particular preference, be sure to. set aside enough time to do the job prop- FLEETWING 20* TRAINER BICYCLE-BOYS' BIKE CONVERTS TO GIRLS' $9A88 .. •fis- JLITfldeoway* YOUR CHOICE Of TO,12* 16* STURDY VELOCIPEDES fa the case of decorations with delicate surfaces or brightly colored trimmings, play safe by merely wiping them with a well-lathered sponge and then a damp rinse doth. Colorful tree aprons and stockings should be laundered'separ- "QM Bodfbid* 2-Pound tin RUMhBUTTER FRUIT CAKE Rail Complalners Told How to 1)0 It Yourself LONDON (UPI) — British Railways today published a 43-page booklet titled, "Went to Run a Railway?" Aa its reply to taces- vidually In tissue paper and pack It carefully In sturdy boxes, with heavy boxea at tbs bottom of each stack. T Phone orders on 5 or morel (PI 44811) Order by No. Molly more available In oddMon to these! LARGE/ft-Ft. ALUMINUM CHRISTMAS TREE NOTICE OF TAXIS CITY OF TONTIAC The 1962 County taxes In thexClty of Pontiac will be due" and payable at the office of the Pontiac City Treasurer, December 10, 1962 through January 21, 1963, without fees. On January 22, 1963, a collection fee of 4% will be added to qli County faxes paid through February 28, 1963. On March 1, 1963, all up-paid County and 1962 City and School taxes will be returned to the Oakland County Treasurer's office ond must be paid them with additional fees. Payments made by mail mijst be postmarked not later than J a nil a ry 24, 1963 to avoid penalties. ' This large 7Ml-ft Christmas tree b easy to assemble, has many long, thick branches and a wooden trunk. It comes complete with metal Wand. Deluxe 7%-Ft. Aluminum Tree or Deluxe 714-Ft. Green Vinyl Tree *19” fS-Wmfl BnAVl THE KOTIA€ FRteSS, koMM iA'Y, DECEMBER S, I«8 Cites Evidence Leaders Talk Under Tranquilizers SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (UPt) . -^Author Eugene Burdick daitiidd yesterday “there was abundant evidence” the na tion’s leaders have been paralysing their emotions with tranquilizers while debating thc vital Mue of war or peace. < “the higher you go in the pyra* mid of power," he said, “the surer is the indication of finding balanced people at the topv” Burdick, co-author of “Fail Safe” and “Hie Ugly American,” charged that there is “an abnormally high” nonaumptiOBof tranquilizers in Washington and “ho one can say that these drugs help in achieving wisdom in the vital decisions made there.”; the best-selling author addressed the final session of a three-day symposium Oh the prospects for democracy, sponsored by the Center farther J of Democratic Institutions. Burdick did not elaborate on the use of tranquilizers but protested the growing complexity that ingiy necessitates their ;r for the Study- collapse placed upon them, ■’ .he said, urging instead a return to- a principle of simplicity in which “Mr. Ken-nedy and Mr. Khrushchev,would simply say, 'let’s turn off the arms race."'' -1 & 'Those meiunow in power in our government rnmder^e w e i g h t of scientific knowledge Because of similarities between the United Staten end Pakistan, a study is being made of their na-tive plants which could bepseful in this country. Teacher Finds Lesson a Loss , SPRINGFIELD, N.H. (AP)-Penacook High School’s hunting safety instructor was recovering today from a shoulder wound suffered in a hunting accident. Warren Miller, 19, teaches the hunting safety course i High, where he Is a Saturday Miller was shot in the right shoulder by a Juvenile hunting companion. About $385 million, or more than twice as much money • is paid annually for operas, concert . and opera' tickets and recording* in. America than for shorts events. *f Big F«How,J5maH V«nt Add Up to EsccpoPuzxia> t GARDENA, Calif. (UP!) - Pof lice have a particular question they want answered by .R o g e r •; R ho den, 29, of Redondo Beach, Calif. They would like to know how thq suspect managed tQ ' -inch by 11-h through a 6-inch by 11-inch § I f vent to escape from Jail. Boys' and Gilts' 2-6X SNOW SUITS Rag. 12.99 no Warm 2-pc. hooded w01* sups. with quilt lined lockets. Wosb- 3-6X Flannel Lined SLACK SETS s.2% $3 Flannel lined boxer slack wllh Boys' and Gifts' 3-6X # LINED SLACKS Men's 100% Cotton *[ Childrenrear, Seoandfloer Bays' long Sleeve -Famous Brand „ SPORT SHIRTS GIRDLES $190 1.50 1 Rag. 2.98 $100 to 5.00 1 Wash and wear Sanforized cot- . Girdle or parity style In white too sforts le stripes, plaids.* prints Sizes 6-18. Sizes SML Save to over halfl Boys' Wear. . Second floor foundations. ■ ■ Second floor Boys' Hooded Woman's Sizes 5-8 WARM JACKETS BRIEFS 7 ' R*o $Q 11.99:. ’ 9 Detachable hood fackels WM* Cotton, nylon or-acetate briefs extra heavy zipper. Quid lined In sizes 5 to 8 While end 0-I& colon Boys' Wear Second Floor Listgerio ... Second Floor Bays' Kontfield Women's lounging • KNIT BRIEFS PAJAMAS % 2 v $t »2>-*7 Sturdy cotton kn9 brief* in size* 6 to 20. White. Quilted locket with embroidered trim, matching solid color pants. 12-18. BeysT Wear... Second Floor Lingerie ■.. Seeond floor Gins' 7*14 Hooded French Purses and CARCOATS WOMEN'S WALLETS Reg. $0 10.99 O as 2 $i HIe lined hood; treated to repel 52-wlndow. strelch-tob dosing soil and itibk Washable Size* wallets, also French purses. Several colors GirW Warn... Saoond floor Bandbrnp ... Street floor OW NommI Uead Women's lecrthor Palm ' SUCKS DRIVING GLOVES *|®» Special $*1' Purchase ; Corduroy or heavy cotton Wool and rayon blend knit plaids.' Flannel lined for extra backs, horsehlde palm. Black, warmth. 7-M. ' - hMMH,t«lge ’ ‘ GbV Wear... Sooond floor fllwri.. .Sfoof floor Girls'Pleated Run-Resist PLAID SKIRTS MILUY HOSE $9 3.99 Rag. $100 1.35 | Wash and wear pleated all Seamless nylons mat almost around plaid eklrts in sizes 7 to never run. Country Beige, sizes ■ it. '?;,»■"> V BVhfoll Girls' Wear... Second floor Hosiery. .\$*es» fleer Girl** 4-14 Wanp Men's 100% Colton . PAJAMAS HANDKERCHIEFS Reg. 9 For IQ 2.29 L V $1 Warm flannntette pajamas In 100% fine cotton handkerchiefs dainty pastel prints Size* 4 to £ 14’ f ■: with wide hem. While GUIs'Wear . . . Second floor Hankies Strsto Floor Gins'2-14 Millay Woman's Chanel Style COTTON BRIEFS ORLON SWEATERS * » 2<- ‘1 R«g. $A 4.99 •§ Colton knit briefs In while bhd Orion ocryllc ehanef type toss- some colors. Sixes 2 to 14. on sweaters In blue or green. Size* S/AJ_ Girts Woor Second floor . ' ■' ' £ ■ L.v dooomerUc., ■ Bees* fleer - Man's BonadTae and NECKTIE SETS Rag. 1.00 wviie acia--- Necktie and tie toe SSl trl smort new patterns. Boxed, ready to wrap and give Men’* IFear... Strata Floor ' TONIGHT TILL BAND TUESDAY ONLY Shop Tomorrow OilN A.M. till 9 P.M. Sony, No Mail or Phone Orders, No Dellverlos. Use Yovr Waite's Charge Account. Regular contour or illghtfy padded styles In sizes 32 to 40. A-B-C While Foundations .. Saoond Floor SMART WALKING CASUALS with Zip-Front, Nylon Shall INSULATED . UNDERWEAR Special Putchato 9.99 Value Ht COMPLETE SUIT Men*'* the woy to beat the coldl Then will are warmly filled wN* acrylic and elec, filter* and realty hold out die cold. Men'* IFear .. fines* Wear Sandod, Ready to Stain, Paint dr Vamlthl BIG, READY TO FINISH 9-DRAWER CHESTS S3 100% WOOL SHETLAND SWEATERS Rng. 3.99 s 5 Rne 100% wool hnportod foil fashioned chatland cardigan* wHh ribbon-faced button hole*. A nice Inexpnmtve gift at a laving* tomorrow only! Size* 34 to |0 SporUumar . .. Third Floor Nylon Tricot or Cotton iBIcndt GIFT SLIPS and PETTISLIPS 199 to 5.99 Values *2 ntlpe In naty-carn nylon, or cotton blends Some are a very (amour brand with Hny Im perfection!. Choone wfdK black or paueli In dice 32 to 41 Lingerie . . . Second floor Voty NIc# Afsortmant of Typo* and Colors I Wool and Wool Blend ; - ‘ FABRICS Regular TOMORROW ON^Y 199 yd.......... 3.99 yd....,.....*& 4.99yd.......... $4 3.99 yd...... *5 6.99 yd....... . *8 7.99 yd. i.......*7 \ Fabric* . . . Fourth floor \ '. ‘ j ; j": ■ W ;i‘V" Roll Sleeve Cotton Imported Fine Linen MISSES'BLOUSES KITCHEN TOWELS w $5T 3.98 £s Colorful cheeks and^plolde Rne linen kitchen towels In «*> Choose Bermuda or convert- tractive colored (tripos. Sev- ible codam 32-38 . v eral colors Blooms. . Third floor fynm.. Femrth Floor Bones Notes and High-Low Design STATIONERY ^ SCATTER RUGS Vol3 te ,1 Fine quaflly paper In many Reg, 199 A 3.99 Rig. 4.99 *2 *4 \smoll printo, designs ond cofori HigMow loop pile dsdgn rennet With envelopM. 8to*ommy... Strom Floor Linens ... fourth floor Zippered Vinyl • Fluffy, Imported SHOE TOTE BAGS GOOSEDOWN- Rag. ^|sr$i GOOSEFEATHER 99c 0 V 1 Shoe, toto bogs In semral colors and prtofsd paitama. Fulh^dppnr. BED PILLOWS ‘ \ 10% dM *0% fMrtii«n Notions... Strom floor \ rf» Hoover Xonetellaflon* 50% down, 50% leathern VAC. SWEEPER Formerly $00 49.95 OO k2fe'$t1 Fambus Hoover tank style sweeper complete with tools, i-yr wonanty. 100% Soft Goosedown e»2\$I4 Smoopon... Ffflh floor Domtoodm... femds floor * 8* Copper Bottom FRY PAN Print and Solid Color DRAPERIES \ Reg. $9 3.99 O Reg. 3^9 $4 to 3.99 Deluxe 6“ copper bottom fry pan wllh Uoinleai stool Inside Reg. 4.39 $4 to 4,99 O pr. Rag. 5.39 $4 Oouemoanw • • • Lohw £ggg| to,6.99 ■§ ptC Draperies... Fourth floor large. Clear, Tooted* Lovely, Versatile CAKE PLATE - MATTE JERSEY $4 f00 v V Reg. 1.99 ej Solid $1 Colors I Raised Unm crystal-clear coke lovely amf versattfo matte |er- plate really shows off cakes, ley mdke* exceptional drenes. daserts. blouses. Ciftworo... lower Lend Fabrics . . . Fourth floor Set of 8. . Holiday Several Prints in GLASSWARE MATTE JERSEY Rag. $100 2J25 | Reg. $4 199 §m Imported Italian glasses, high- Many very smart print patterns ball or old fashioned, boxed 8 in lovely, versatile motto |er- to thrt set. 4k 7 Gtosswan ... Lower Laval Fabrics . . Fourth floor Drip-Dry Broadcloth * PIm Cotton PRINT FABRICS PRINT FABRICS C Rag. 9 $1 59c O Ut' 1 **oo 2 «*$t Fine drlpdry broadcloth fab- Machine . washable, winkle-, • rics in many attractive prints reslifont fine cotton fabrics In ,j and combinations. many patterns, colors, Fabrics... fourth finer' fobriel. , Fourth Floor , §m THE PONTIAC PRESS ' 48 Weft Huron Street' ',} [ ■ Pontiac, Michigan MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1962 " « 1\ -- | ■ESS**-- Mjvu, / • jjg£ Pin TMMMWil A Uinui Jo*mm. •• *V a w,, ■ °t^g. tt Seems to Me Something’s Behind Russia’s Apparent Change in Attitude * What’s going on in Russia? s Are tho Reds worried? Concurrently with the PtmIv dent’s Mikoyan conference, a new „ feeling is, arising, ^ohn f. .Ken- —nedy has now referred in public,’ on three occasions, to a “turning point ih world administration.” ^ -$■—■. ■-: - When I was in New York last week, several close students o( world affairs, including a few from Central . and South America, expressed the that Khrushchxv Isn’t as sure of himself as he was earlier1 in the-year.... ; ★ ★ The head Rad isn’t nearly as belligerent and bellicose as he Some believe that he Is disturbed over the Chinese advances in India And that he can envision an Asiatic fores of tremsndons power and scope. No one in his light, mind will ever discount 600 ■.niton Chinese. If they were all equipped with as little as 12-ghuge shotguns they’d constitute an awe-inspiring force. ...T“..-------------.......... Then, if these overwhelming hordes - , * .A„- were equipped with the latest arma- AllCl III LOnClUSlOn •... ments from some “outside and disin* jottings from the well-thumbed -forested party,” the handwriting on n^ytej^jog 0j your peripatetic' reporter : the wall would be visible all the way A. pdderal Aviation official says in . the populace, is a little more uneasy. It’s asking more pointed questions, arid Khrushchev’s glib and patent answers become Jiess satisfying. There are heartening signs in the sky. Certainly the man with the big mouth and the big stick isn’t as belligerent. When President Kennedy called that' Cuban; bluff, it marked an unrnle-takable Shift.' Can better days lie ahead? ' it might be so. , V|; ;■ ★ ■; '7* ] ; When President Kennedy djs-closed the enormous concentration of troops, airplanes, ships and fighting personnel in connection with the Cuban blockade, Nikita mast have pondered a bit In bleak silence, Here was startling pnd sensational action of the most, impressive kind. JFK was practically speaking the Russian tongue. 77 ★ : ★ ★ 7 / The current Washington talks are significant, but they won’t be conclusive until Mikoyan returns to the /Kremlin and the world hears the 'official verdict. Vdieo of the People: Read Same as Original’ Don’t sign papers when buying-a car before making sure all carbons atellke tbe original. If they are not and you're told information will be typed in later, don’t alp. fills is hmf the price, trade-in and payments are Changed. Mrs. Deloris Rowe 27ft S. Edith St.' Edited! David Lawrence Says: Forced Unionization Is ‘Tyr^Nny* to Mars. ■—~ «★ Some people are wondering why the Russians have allowed Mao fire-tuny to make thy prog-ress he has -to date. Apparently the Reds can tie his hands over- 1970 wrii fiy rrom toaat jfe:iroiirifr an hour and a half at 80,000 feet in the “Supersonic Transport.” Soo-o-o-o, when someone asks: “Who was that girl I saw you with last night?” you’ll hive to say: “Br, ah,'the one W New York or Los Angelos?” ..•••• night by entting off the oil eupply ...... Bewhre of real estate “bar- —«• *m> on® ®fe® stands ready to gftlns„ ^ places. The public. has been milked, bilked and fleeced astoundlngly, and the end is not yet. Heed your Better Business Bureau warning: "Before you invest, Investigate.” ....... Harper’s says the oldest adult skull, ever found runs 700,000 years back and the brain capacity is closer to man than the apes. ■ ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON - The Russians have a way of calling their government .a “democracy.” Thdy interpret die word as meaning a system in which their government imposes anything it considers good ,, for the people even if this i n vades individual -rights. The Secretary of Labor, W. Willard Wlrtz, admittedly .fleets President I Kennedy’s Views, LAWRENCE now says publicly that compulsory unionization is “democracy.” / He says that if two-thirds of the employes of a plant who are members of the union vote to* compel the other third to join — under penalty of losing their jobs if they don’t — this “satisfies every principle of democracy with' which I from labor unions at the polls and the benefits derived from, big campaign contributions collected by the union officers.. ~ Why does « tabor raton want the minority Included: After all, the law provide* that wage rates cannot be discriminatory and must be the same for anion and non-union employes. TBs answer is that the labor unions want more dues money. More and more tbp labor union becomes, on its own, a system of government which decides also bow much pension money snaU be set aside from each worker’s pay, irrespective of Whether or not the sups subtracted fit his particular financial problems. The usual argument made in favor of compulsory unionization is that the worker is benefited by the unlonta negotiations. But many n worker will dispute that claim, especially when a union demand for wages is so "high that the economic disturbance created compels the employer to lay off workers whom* be might otherwise retata. ‘List of Divorces Is Disheartening’ ' The most upsetting piece of -news found in the- paper, was the long list of names announcing that couples no longer wished to be married to their present mates. Fifty-two different couples said: “We don’t love each other any* It’s not hard to fell hi love. Tbe tough and wonderful part make It stick. The longer our divorce list goto, the weaker we Florida Resident -EwjqycdJBand — The J. L. Hudson Thanksgiving Parade was tops. What a thrill It was when the Pontiac Central band came along. Pontiac has always had a good band and residents should be prpu0. Mrs. J. D. Teeter Pompano Beach, Fla. ‘Good Care Given ; at City Hospital’ After being a patient at Pontiac General Hospital I certainly recommend it to anyone needing medical care. Normajeaa Waters Inquires About Proper Lighting Are apartment buildings supposed to have both front and back outside limits? At night everything is in complete blackness and I must grope, my way op stops. Friends who come unexpectedly can’t even find the doorbell. because of darkness. - Just Wondering Tontiac People Should Read Bible* In Pontiac it would be hotter for you to mad your Bible. It says to bridle your tongue. ■ i 1 fl^ymniMi iBire 200 W. Rutgers SL, ' Firemen, Hospital Receive Praise Thanks to the firemen wbolnok me to Pontiac General Hospital. Their kidness fe appreciated. At general you receive the best et care. . Mrs. Leslie C. Blbby 56 Euclid Pomaits fin this gap. Without oil, Mao would,,be a pretty sick Chinese laddie. SomeXthink Russia has delayed so she ran keep a finger \ la India and in Chj[na simultaneously. Playing both aides against tns middle is ons of Khrushchev’s , favorite devices* ★ ★ '• ★ Our nllier&re selling to Red China. Nikita knows tHiis. And he Isn’t very happy about the fact or the Overriding Implication. Japan Is even extending credit to Ned China — sort of an International credit club deal. ★ ★ ★ Russia has hinted she may not press for a Berlin settlement, Furthermore, Russian diplomats art acting in a friendly way. This is counter to the past, and Khrushchev himself has lost a largo part of his offensive Arrogance, That lofty grandeur and sublimity are becoming restrained. . And that’s a record. , In fact, (t arouses suspicion. ★ ★ ★ No one In the U.S. will accept any Russian diplomat at face .value,. but their new attitude is heartening. - A current military book in Russia says rather openly that she lags behind us in over-all fire power. The Soviets realize they’re running second- and their 'chances of lessening 'the wap ate slim. I ★ ★ ■ ★ Now for the $64 question. Is this for real? Do tha Russians mean tt, c I can’t prove It, but I’ll bet a sugar cookie “Muff’ Ford knows morp technical football and strategy than any 18;year-©ld lass ip the Country. She’s the daughter . of W. C. Ford, President of the Lions. For runnerup I’ll grow shamelessly; g immodest and noml-* nate my Own grand-daughter, Ann.. k....... I Uke this quotation from the Now York News: “Apparently no one ,in France likes Charles de Gaulle except the people.” .........TV is blowing the whistle shortly on-“It’s a Man’s World,” “Fair Exchange” and, “Splnts and Sinners,” and the Lorttta Young - Show bows out in March. Also “The Price Is Right” • Is tottering ...... ‘... Overheard: “It costs a lot of money to keep opr churches open, but It would cost a lot more to let* them close.” ★ ★ ★ Califorina claims she’s bigger than New York State. Specifically, the West Coast giant says she passed NY Nov. 24. Population: California —" 17,246,000; New York — 17,094,000. Listen for New York’s raucous and It another dodge to lull us into a - strident roar of protest * *. . . ... r false sense of security? Our UglfT- " The American Medical Association erected and we says shoveling the winter snow is very^ He made his statement in an attempt to influence the LoPkhCed Aircraft Corp. to bow to labor's demand for compulsory unionization. HANDS-OFF LAW But the Supreme Court of the United States pointed out specifically feat the law enacted by Congress does not prohibit the making of individual contracts by the employer with individual employes. ★ * Or Likewise, both the Wagner Act and the Taft-Hartley Act haa forbidden diacrimination “In regard to hire or tenure of employment in any labor organization.”, ,y>, Existing law really tells employers to keep their hands off the question of membership in unions. The employer has no basic obligation today to require an employe, by contract or otherwise, to join a union or lose his job. ' • w-vW' —Hk--;------- ■ .. Yet, because the law permits an employer to violate this principle when he accepts a collective-bar-gaining contract embodying compulsory unionization, the practice of labor unions in bludgeoning employers by strikes or threats of strikes to accept the mandate of a majority of the employes has caused a surrender by many employers. Thus, the principle involved-interference with the rights of the individual worker — has been brazenly disregarded. LOCKHEED HOLDOUT If there were some kind of award given annually in recognition of the courage of an employer who stood up for the right of his own employes to decide for themselves as individuals whether they want to join a union, such a badge of mefit ought this year to go tp the Lockheed Company Executives. ■ . In’vthe present dispute all wage issues have been settled by collective bargaining with n Dick West Says: v \ ", Composer’s Story Reads Just Like Movie Script WASHINGTON tUPD — Santa If all goes according to script. Claus I never had any doubts Bazelon’s symphony will be na-about. It’s guys like Irwin Baze- tionally acclaimed and he will go Ion that I have trouble believing in. Yes, Virginia, there is an Irwin Bazelon. There must be, because I have just been^i talking wlthj Jhhn. But what] happened to himl could only hap-fi^ 'pen 'in. -theMM^s movies. Let /set the seen iHT for you. There was this! struggling yotujg NEST composer, see, who has written this symphony. Like AIT straggling young composers, he Steeps getting the bhish-off. x to musical glory. If riot, the horses will still be running at Saratoga. By JOHN®. METCALFE When I came tb see my grandchild ... As at night she lay.in bed ... She began in promptly tollnto... Of amon8ter’sfiery head ... And with heavy breath she told me.. . On a motion picture screen ... At a giant highway drive-in ., . Such a creature she had seen ^7, And she said, that mean old monster ... Which had risen from the sea ... Was a figure most fantastic . . ^For a little girjito see ... Aiid ms story she related . .. Of tifet greenish gruesome sight. .X Evert* to my mental visiony. . Brought a horrifying fright ... But she said Qm: tody reason . . . Why that filmrae did despise... Was because that ghoulish monster , “All the time afraids my * ayes.” __________ The Almanac By United Press International Today is Monday, Dec. S, the, 337th day of 1062 with 28 to follow: The moon is approaching Ks first quarter. The morning stars are Venus and Maps. / The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. / On this day/in history: ~Tn lBBXfilbteis entered Oil Union aiFuie 21st state. In tin, Oberlin College, the flrst truly coeducational college in the itfited States, opened Its doors. ' feu 1920, the .Ford Motor Co. raised' daily; wages from 88 to |7 despite collapse of the stock market. W1M5, the Nation learned that microfilm of secret U.S. documents had been found in a hollow pumpkin on the farm of Whittaker Chambers. A thought for the day—the Brit-, ish statesman, Sir Winston Churchill, said: “There is no finer investment for any community than putting milk into babies.” Reviewing Other Editorial 'Pages are discounting tbe Sweet talk til wa see what’a behind It. It may mran nothing. But there’s no halm in hoping. . Sjfcferjr • ★ y,1' •, • Some close students believe things aren’t going too well “at hofrie” for beneficial if you’re in shape and* very Jiazardou^ if you •rent... - •1 ..... Insider’s Newsletter says 18.2% of the 8.7 million college students are married. It’s 24% at MSU . . . . . . ... Cfept. of Cheeks.and Jeers: the C’s--these early October dAys; the J’jhr the pesky fiovlets. Thefr collective^ that parole board if it freds those farms have failed to produce-as murderers. NiPKmhldl^tfullyV®^ Also, ' . —Habold A.. Fitzgerald : The employer haa merely declined to agree to an election that could bring compulsory unionization. If the nonunion men wish voluntarily to join the union they can always do so. ‘ / [‘h' '4 h The Defense Department can. exert pressure and threaten ,t to withdraw defense contracts unless the compahy conforms to the poI- '( itical objectives of an administration Which .counts on the votes * l H . r’l hobby U handicapping horse races. So ene day be goes to the track and parleys a few backs fete mer# than a grand. (This Is the place where I used to go out for popcorn.) Then he takes the dough and has some of his music recorded. Then he borrows hisUncfe’a can— I forgot to mention that his uncle is . a federal judge — and goes around to see an important conductor. He plays the recording for the. conductor, who is so impressed he accepts the composer’s symphony for his own orchestra. Not only that; he invites the composer to be a guest conductor at his premiere performance. REMEMBER THE PLOT? Veteran moviegoers will recognize that plot as coming right off a Hollywood back lot. And that is why I have trouble belaying In Irwin Bazelon. / His symphony, “Testimonial to a Big City,” will be given its premiere performance by the National Symphony Orchestra titis week with Bazelon himself ra the podium. Furthermore, the events leading qp to this climactic moment were more or\ less as ontiteed In the scenario above. H this taxes your credulity, you and fare not alone. Bazelon said he has trouble believing it,, too.- . r ♦ • W U/' He Is not exactly nervous about getting hill big chance, but he plans to conduct without a baton. He is afraid It mlfrht slip out out his hand apd impale a piccolo player. , Kilroy jh Dead X The pMcago Tribune Wherever Americans went during World War II, KUroy had al rrady been there. He beat the infantry to Normandy. HA’ scaled the Owen Stanley mountains of New Guinea. He used Strife's-private washroom at Potsdam. And after the war, when the flrst team' of scientists went in to examine the britleshlp New York after the test explosion at Bikini, they found the familiar chalk&i message, "Kil-roy was herai” ' Well never know for sure . whether James J. Ktiroy 'of Halifax, Mass., who died last weekend at the age of II, was the originator of tee expression. But he won recognition as sock in a-contest In 1947 and hit'story Is 1 h He was an feshector at a Bethlehem Steel company shipyard in Quinity, Mass., and in order to identity material that he had inspected be marked it “KUroy was here.” Equipment thus labeled wound up fe all corners of the world and started the fad which provfed embarrassing to the few service men named Kilroy. One, a Sgt. Eugene Kilroy, had a tale ri woe. Whenever he was challenged by an MP and gave his name, tee MP would sneer, “0,- i.wise gay, eh?” ♦ : ★ 4 ' When he produced ah I.' D. card to verity his name, the MP would denuuid to aee his dog tags, and finally ... c . MP—So your name is Kilroy! KilTOPrfimt's what I’ve h e e n telling y0<& MWi printed in Pe pewipfier •• '•*11 »• •“ newt dl»p*tnh»«. V AwaiM uMiM.jn Oeklend. .Oeneete, Wylng-' .................. t1?*Wh|re*ljp Mti THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1982 iH New Stamp belting in Christmas Rush WASHINGTON (AFMto new. Christmas stamp can’t be printed die lie* fast enough to satisfy mand, jthe Post Office; Dejiart* meat reported today. away 016 b**1" selling special stamp ever issued-,’* said James F, KeHeher, information aide , to Postmaster GChi J. Edward Day. ’, Kelleher said advance demand tor the stamp! was so great that Day ordered a record first printing of 500 million. The previous high for a-ifecial isSue was 300 'milUott lor the Mercury astronaut GlemrJr.’k space flight.v “W New York, N. Y. (Special) :A world-famous Institute has dis-covered a new subsUnC^ Which has the astonishing ability t*. both ointment or st»jopooitoty form called Preparation H*. In addition to actually shrinking piles- Preparation H lubricates and makes bowel movements less painful. It helps to burning and pain. Then this /substance speed-up healing of. thf fnJufed tilsues; all. pravent infoctlon (a principal ^useoftemorrhoide). » '1 while it quickly reduces painful awaiting; a doc- proved thia of 10 to 20 Tho secret i» heqling substance (Only Preparation H contains this magic new substance which quickly helps heal injured cells back to normal and stimulates regrowth of healthy tissue again- Just ask for Prepa Atfyrf H Ointment or Preparations Suppositories (easier to use away from'home). Available at. all drug counters. ; / ■ RAZLEY JLr CASH MARKET Jl ye NORTH SAGINAW STRICT SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY ONLY! ‘S?* PorkCho|»,.,.59,u Pork Chops.... 49* Pork Chop*.. ,. 29V“ •Pork Loii Roost..... SIP ■*- master generaL counsel ort :toe subjects and designs of hew is- Kelleher says the decision, to issue the stamp was made by Day onfy after extensive inquiries in- 'unanijnbusly Approved by toe CittopHs’' Stamp Advisory Committee; a 12-mem-Jjprto gi her group setUprlo give'toe post- Believe State Man Fell From Freight “Oddly enough,” sajikKelleher, ‘there was mope furor over the desigirof toe rtuiip than over toe. question (^whether the Christmas' stamp itself should be issued/’-Designed by James Crawford, g Ppst Office Department artist, toe four-cent stamp bears traditional Christmas symbols—slender candles and an evergreen wreath ith redjjow.; KeHeher Said- the department has received no letters from religious group? protesting the stamp. Protesting letters are generally of three types. “One group dislikes toe design, GIEA BEND, Arttr outran-sient was killed yesterday, when he apparently fell froth affreight train about 34 miles epSt of Gila Bend in southwest Arizona, Sheriff’s Sgt. T h e a r 1 Tibbet said the body wag identified from papers as that7 of Lyle Wayne Greggs, 38, of Muskegon, Mich. Tibbets said the. man’s body had rmmwm% IwT from BdaBuffff Pacific- tracks/ The viotim is “believed to have a Sister,“Mrs. Howard Knopp living in Muskegon, Tibbets said. ' Allegan County Fugitive Waives Extradition ALLEGAN B - Billy Clayton, ■, who was recaptured in his home' town, Broyard. N.C.. after walking away arom the Allegan County jail Sept. 14, waived extradition Saturday and will be returned here by county sheriff's of-ficers.-Clayton month jai driving away in arraigned before Circuit C Judge RaymondSmito Dec i but maybe they’ll like next year’s fleet toe holiday atmosphere dur, • Chlls&ras stamp design-end tooSe ing a particular time of the year, imp design end toeiie-who -like this one will write in tiwii totoll u? they don’t like that M,” said KeHeher. A second group felt the stamp was -an affront to the concept of the- separation of church and state. The third group, said KeHeher, “somehow felt toe stamp would carry out separation of the church and state even further.” • TO MEET DEMAND “AH We were trying to do was lng^pSBtlculartime, rather than something to mark a religious ’• jfajjn||j| said. to come up with a stamp in re-* died Saturday of cancer. sponse to a demand expressed to toe department in hundreds of letters every year for .toe last 20 years or more—something to. re- Ex-Detroit Is Dies of DETROIT (JV-Service for Daniel L, Wejls, a staff member ot Campbell-Ewald Co. and former Detroit newspaper man, wUl be held tomorrow at.l p.m. Wells, 55, He had been a newspaperman for 25 years, and had Worked for the Detroit Times andDetroit Free Press. No™oi||M1j:ngland Wm--Walter Elates, $!,' hid to up his Santo Chius job at a department store because he was ‘too kind” to children. SifiWS This gay arrangement ot roses and carnations is just one of many floral gifts you can wire to friends. Store fioofg Kind -Sa/ Bates gave his little visitor! two gifts tor the price ot one. I just did it because I did not__ want ahy of the children to go -away disappointed,” he Sato1- “i • let my Christmas spirit giet the best of me.” ' ■ . . A store spokesman said, “Mr. Bates has a very nice personality, but we have to be firm about • Word1! — Just Soy "Charge It" ONTGOMERY Retired Lawyer Dies In Wa.sKirigfon,D.X. HOT SPRINGS, V*. Ballard Moore, 75, ret ington, D.C., lawyer, died at his home here Saturday. A native of Grand Rapids, Mich., Moore began practicing law with a Washington firm in 1924. He later moved to Chicago and eventually became president of a firm there. He retired here in 1953. MOBILE TELEPHONE SERVICE NOW AVAILABLE IN THE PONTIAC AREA Now you can enjoy the convenience of modem telephone service in your car or truck! A Mobile Telephone leta you talk from your Vehicle to any telephone anywhere at any time. Contractors, salesman, repairmen, truckers, y doctors and many others find a telephone at their Anger tips saves valuable time. They can oontact their offices, customers, suppliers and edm quickly and easily. And these people in tain' can reach them without daisy. Find out more about Mobflo Telephone flarvioe today. Call collect to our Detroit office at 883-9900, eattensta 314, and oak for a free ) MICHIGAN 8.KLL T! Lff PH ON K COMPANY • ADD INSTANT BUYING DOWER TO YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT SHODDING BUDGET * • SAVE 10% ON ANY SINGLE ITEM fill mna D.p*"r#Zr^hInJ,,r “*** III THE STORE SWSSEv ' • ACT FAST! OFFER GOOD 3 DAYS ONLY-MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY • SORRY- NO MAIL, NO RHONE, NO.COD’S, NO LAYAWAY, NO CONTRACT ORDERS CUP THI COUPONS ANDMURRYIN! STORE 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 PM. HOURS Monday thru Saturday PONTIAC MALL PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rood X •tlflrFlOFTlXC' ftltESS . M^3STX3Lfi.Yj^ ’jat 'l9fl2 Jeers Route to Moscow Talks MOSCOW (AP)—President Tito compared by the taunts 4 and brief.but ceremonious stay in the visit other cities- before sitting probably f Yugoslavia, a Communist with gibes of the Pektogradio, ' .• - Hungarian ranitai > • rinum «*<»> K>»miin leaders for nmhiams trong neutralist overtones, head- The Tito party, Including his d today for Moscow talks with wife Jovanka, left Budapest by oviet Premier Khrushchev ao special trgin at midnight after a of the Italian Communist party, the largest in Western |!i^ope. Togliatti, ‘ who generally bides With the KTemlln, called China’s war with India “unreasonable and absurd.” Togliatti’ also -Recused Red e service in opposing Cuba, the im-. perialists have given one bonds l after another to the Tito group: ■ The group has recently concluded i agreements with the United )States, Britain and France f through which it obtained substantial loans.” *' REJECT MEDIATION 1 Tha Chinese also violently re~ 1 jeered anv mediation by Yugo- - slavia in the Chinese-Indian Borff • er conflict, The People’s Dally ac-Icused Yugoslav Foreign Minister ) Koca Popovic of maneuvering in s Cairo "to sabotage efforts made ■ by the Chinese government and1 t other Asian and African, coun- • tries for a peaceful settlement/’ - That China’s border war has shaken international communism 1 i was indicated again Sunday in a I i speech by Palmira Togliatti, chief.! a difficult period .with food shortages ha one problem. The United States agreed last week to help by providing 1^ million tons of (relations and its meaning for world Corrimunist affairs. As Tito’s expedition got unddr, way, the Peking radio blasted the "Tito, group.” and "its notorious supra-bloc policy” as “traitors of the proletariat and running dogs of U.S, imperialism;11 wheat,,.,, TITO’S ROLL Chinese commentaries attacked Tito’s roll as a neutralist. In East-West battles and grew par- China and its European alfy, Albania, of conducting a. harmful “smeap campaign” against world communism. '1 ' ; -^informed sources; ^ Idoscpw say: that Khrushchev admitted to his' Communist 'party leaders in a Ngv. 23 speech- that the Soviet Union had been on the defensive during the Cuban crisis. ticularly incensed over what Pe^ king called Yugoslavia’s espousal Tito and Khrushchev last met in'New York in 1C6Q at meetings of the U.N. General Assembly, The Yugoslav leader last visited the Soviet Onion in 1956, to an upward climb in relations between the two countries since the sharp break during the Stalin era. of a neutralist Cuba. The Chinese were strong supporters of Prime Minister Fidel Castro to the recent crisis and made no effort to conceal their anger at Mos- EDUCATOR DIES-Dr. John G. Bowman, former chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh, died yesterday at his home in Bedford, Pa., at 85 years- of age. Calumet was the name given by the French in Canada to the peace pipe of toe American Indians. / ‘Vi Aside from foreign policy, Tito Daily said "for its meritorious TITO TQ RUSSIA—President Tito of Yugo-k at a-Belgrade railway station as thqy leave slavia (right) and his wife Jovanka are bid .for a private visit to the Soviet;'Union, goodby by Vice President Edward Kardelj * . Pays for Bogus Bills ’ TOKYO (AP) - Counterfeit 1,000-yen notes that have turned up1* in the last year are worth more than the real thing right now. In. an effort to.’trace .toe , _________^ _____counterfeit drigins,, police offer from 162 NASW chapters in 50 10,000 yen reward for each bogus states and Puerto Rico. The deto 1,000-note turned to — with no gate assembly is the highest pol- strings attached but a bit of qua* icy body of the association. tloning involved. - Marriage Counselor to Attend Assembly A Birmingham marriage and family counselor, John Vander-lind, will represent 120 social workers in this area at the 1002 Delegate Assembly of the National Association of Social Workers to Cleveland, Ohio, Dec; 10-13. Vanderliad, who resides at , • FRESH • LEAN 6Ue$SWH0 ifeoteio niram? COTTAGE CHEESE LARGE EGGS JELLIES FACIAL TISSUE 400 Count Pkg. Flavors Grade 1 SKINLESS Wouldn’t your little girl or boy love to get a real letter fronf’Santa Claus? Choose one from.our seiectiorf, FREE at Pontiac State Bank, address' it to your child, then mail it in the special mail* box in anyPontiac State Bank office and we’ll have it sent > to your youngster .. . by mail , .. direct from Santa’* hometown (Santa Clans* Ind.)! , ..V’i Auburn Height* l|a|n Office: Saginaw at Lawrence Drayton Plain* Baldwin at Ya|o M-59 Place Miracle Mile M«mb«r F.O.t.C. ’V & M§ V FOOD MARKETS Peter's.«■ Pure 1 'Fred FORK 1 PORK SAUSAGE 1 LIVER , 9QC I: Oft' I K 1 FOOD TOWN f SUPER MARKETS ■ till mW*bwalr |TCCC MliiMntidllH«CWr,f; IN ItMwIa At*. 1 IDS CJelay Uki M.l •1 C.WmWI. 1 { UAtan t»K» Of.o»WD>Yt | CI»I*J SUNDAYS ■ DECEMBER^, ip62 Looks as Though Bossa Noyd Moy 8e Here to Stay means MfteV flair*' in Portuguese, the language of Brazil* was invented by a group of yourfg Brasilians who yrereexperimenting with new rhythms and harmonies. It caught the fancy of the elder Brazilians and soon-enjoyed national, popiarity: of Bossa Nova’* because he made it popular., Gilberto was present when em American JasZ. Unlike the often cacophonic music of the' twist, the sound of bossa nova appeals to the ear as well as the feet. Slides in the space- of your present range. Fabulous features include Automatic Clock, Viaual-Hite Porcelain Oven and ' Broiler, Eye-Level • Controls, Exclusive Hide-A-Way Cook- • v. big Top, 4 Measure HeatInfinite Top Units, Smart Lusterloy Cooking Top. ' No Reniodeiiiig Necessary OUR CHRISTMAS SPECIAL Normally thrRangtHaa Bold for $298.00, Plus the Base | at $79.95 quite popular until the end of Bossa nova has no royalty, yet. Benny Goodman -was hailed in his time as the .king 'of-* swing, fihris 'Presley becametiie prince of rock V roU and Chubby Checker was the high priest of the twist cult. However, Joao Gilberto, a Brazilian composer and singer, is regarded as the “Father until Sidney Frey, oymer of a record company, heard It in Brazil and decided to revive EASY PAYMENTS' UODAYS p^or cash .Surprise her for Christmas-?-We will deliver Dee. 24th if WE'RE OPm EVERY NIGHT Til 9 FE 4-1555 NSW YORK an overnight sensation.» “I think we have a real dance this time and not. a dance craze,’’ she said. Over at rival Fred Astaire’s dance studioes, instructors are teaching the bossa nova as a cross between thb" samba and .the mambo. \ “The dance is still In the beginning stage,? a spokesman- far Astaire said!,, “Every-' one is making up their own steps by die hundreds. We will know in a month which stans yill be accepted.” General Motors executive Sem-on E. Knudsen will be the main speaks Dec. 12 when 700 Michigan United Fund volunteers gather in East Lansing for the Campaign Achievement Celebration of the Michigan UnitedFund. Knudsen to general manager of the Chevrolet Division and vice president of General Motors Carp. He also to a member of the executive board of the Michigan United Fond. Knudsen former general manager of the Pontiac Motor Dvision, resides at 31500 Bingham Road, Bingham Farms. The volunteers will represent every community in Michigan In the annual evenL-recognlrlng efforts of community leaders in the fund-raising campaign. The session will be held at the Kellogg Center of Michigan State University. ' Plan Highest Station TOKYO (AP)—Japan plans to strengthen its typhoon warning system by building the highest weather radar station in the work)—atop 12,389-foot Mt. Fuji. ^gooohoijTekeepin OF PONTIAC 51 W. Huron St. OUIKFRITTB Omm qfMichlganfs OrtgbudDUommlm Largo SeJectton Tip* Recorder* APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS "lf% Only Money! But What If It It Yours?" 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PEARL CHOKER UU1E, ME A pearl collection beyond irpaginatlanl Stunhlng necklaces, brooches, bracelets, earrings—all wlthv a lifetime of wearing, plgasure.Regardloss of the pearl size In the piece you choose, you can be sure the value Is greater than Ward's, low price! .a jpearlbearing oyster. Well set pearl in g tie-tac, ring or pendant for a nominal charge.' ^today’s showing features Wards •xquisite LeGant pearls a p anesenu beauty will he oohaed make your selection, and hearing oyster. KL i @ 23* necklace, convert* to choker and bracelets • (*) Solitaire earrings with 14K white gold back*..» © 18Vi" graduated necklace, 14K white gold clasp ©MatUhlngclusterpInwith 12 pearl*, safety do»p.. (D 5-pearl cluster earrings with darling diver..vs.. © Pearl pendant, 14K white or yellow gold chain © 20-pearl bracelet with 14K yellow gold link*... T" • -4 ■ ram 'p^TOtT pgjipi •nte,partieT*hSmI*^,2 etTh°A*V} '' **** ae>> borrow tor %"*•*****• ***** ufadere tending. Jnet phono -- oe—or drop 4n«t the neenet W ^ftociattfl office. /v\ Lo^ns $25 to $5oo jKj*: ASSOCIATES i he knows Ishehopes I the GIFT I 's from ft RICMAHOsP ^sttBrnoH BOXED CARDS $2fi0 Valu* in*l*ckt *13" L_ ff* WS* r,c«ai*ps KORSBBn, ONTGOMERY THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MlcklGAX MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, jm LANSING (UPI) -— The 1962 Michigan legislature will stavjJn recess until after Christmas and thteJioli-days may prevent an adjournment altogether, of the session, Republican leaders said over the weekend. The lawmakers, prompted by fears 'oyer the Senate reapportionment case, have been in recess since July ----r-----------------—.26. They planned to come back Dec. 27 for a sine die O/tr'fiAc adjournment but the holi- Set; Protest irWfrielox DETROIT (UFI) - The .Vlgk lance Tax Committee has reached into the pages of history in its fight against the Detroit city income tax. ' SANTA’S HOLIDAY HOUSE —This year • Santa will greet eager children thipyghout the holiday.seggon in his “Christmas Big1' hut in. Oxford’s village park. Alethe Poll, a ninth-grade ajtudent at Oxford High School, stands in fhmt of the hut which she designed .and painted for the-local chamber of commerce. Her design was selected from many submitted to the chamber -by high school students. 12 From County to Exhibit Livestock Skow Opens More than 350 4-H’ers from 35 Michigan counties including 12 from Oakland County, are expected to participate iq this year’s Detroit Junior Livestock 8-b o if, which opened today at the Michigan State Fairgrounds, ,petrolt» stats l«o k forward to the show, now in its 33lrd year, and ^ u t months of hard work into preparing their animals for exhibition and competition. Lambs, fcojetad ateers wth be Many 4-H’sm throughout the A were to be iubmttted today: .Live evaluation of carcass entries is set far 7 tonight. All other livestock is scheduled to arrive tomorrow morning. f * * . Judging of the lambs, hogs and t e e r s w i 11 begin Wednesday morning. In the afternoon beef, ‘ “ and hog carcass evaluation Utica Teamster Still Tries for Spot on Union's Ballot will be conducted at Detroit Packing Co* plants. The four-day show will come to a close at 12:30 p.m. Thursday, with the sale of hogs, lambs and steers. Sale of the grand and reserve grand champions wilt be followed by the selling of other DETROIT (UPI) — Teamster Melvin Angel of Utica still hopes to get a spot on the ballot of Teamsters Union 299 in the Dec. 6-3 elections. Angel said Saturday he would appeal the rejection of his candidacy as president of the local a g a i n s t Teamsters President James Hoffa. Angel’s candidacy was rejected by local Yiop President Frank E. Fitzsimmons Nov. 4 at a meeting of tbeN^cal’s executive board. The board said Angel’s nomlna-/ tion lacked a qualified second. Angel, n, of 47511 Jeffry S charged that he had been illegally disqualified'and f 11 e d a protest with the executive board. The board met for (bur hours Saturday and rejected the protest. Angel said he planned to carry his appeal tb the Michigan Joint Teamster Council of the international president. “The trouble is,” he lamented, 'that no. matter where I go, Mr. Hoffa Is president.”< , The executive board is made up of Fitzsimmens, Haifa, Secretary-Treasurer Holland Me-Master, Recording Secretary David Johnson and George Sbelp and Sam Calhoun, who are Group to Dance in "Nutcracker' Flint Civic Ballet Sets Show in Farmington FARMINGTON - The Flint Civic Ballet wll stage a free performance of the “Nutcracker Suita” here Sunday under the sponsorship of the Children’s Ballet Theater of Oakland County. Tsehalkovsk reeled by Jeanne Hinote, will be presented at I p.m. in the auditorium of Farmington Junior HigiwSchool, 33000 Thomas ’The Flint ballet company’s Douglas NUes and Eva Marie Sags are cast ip the leading roles. The performance is being presented as part of the. county’s Children's Ballet Theajler Decent* her seminar meeth The, twwly formed children’s ballet gjjaup,‘which still tags fog students 10 to 18 years old, was organised to provide a local outlet-for talented children In classic and/ contemporary ballet. 25 m Approximately one-third of the high placing steers from each class will be sold individually. Exhibitors are allowed to compete in only one class of 1 i v e-stock. Entrants must have kept complete records on their project animals. The Detroit Junior Livestock Society is sponsoring the show jointly with the 4-H Club department of Michigan State University. The seeiety will present over $2,000 in prises as well as showmanship trophies and a four-year scholarship to MSU to the competing youngsters. Angel said Hoffa told him the board’s decision was unanimous. T still consider myself a candidate,” Adgel said. “I am trying, to bring democratic practices to the local but it’s a hard thing.” If Angel does ifet run, Hoffa and his slate, will be opposed by. only two local candidates for the control of Local 299. They were Ira D. Cooke Jf., a Dearborn driver, and Charles (Chuck) O’Brien. A husi-ness agent who has been regarded as a member of the Hoffa camp In the past. Mystery Fire, Levels Three Vacant Barns SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP -A fire of undetermined origin destroyed three vacant bams early yesterday morning at Cuthbert and Crosby Lake roads. Springfield Township Fire Chief Charles Hillman Mid one of the old frame structure! already was leveled by flames when his department arrived about 2 a.mt Firemen were unable to savp the other buildings, but they kept flames from spreading' to other parts of the unused farm. There U no home on the property. Hillman said he believes the farm property is owned by a Ford Motor Co. executive. There whs no estimate of damage available. The committee, composed of i a y o r s of suburban Detroit communities, S a t u r d proved a “tea party” la the met-!. 16 to spark ropolitan area Dec. the final phases of the petition drive against the .tax, Berkley Mayor George D. Kuhn, committee chairman, said the tw£ hour “tea party” will take place at city and township halls and ottr-er appropriate spots on the 189th anniversary of the famed Boston Tea Party. days,could play havoc with this idea. House Speaker Don,R, Pears, R-Buchanan, said, “I think'it may b^ilffki^to-getwjorHiestrftlre " two chambers back in Lansing between Christmas and New Year’s Day. What if we aren’t able to adjourn officially?” the recess bas..delayed the effective date of 102 bills passed, which can’t become. law until 90 days after official adjournment of the legislature. Among (he most controversial of the bills was the Sunday closing for retail stores. Other GOP leaders argued, however, that the adjournment date is just a technicality' and that the present legislature would die au-tomaJtically Dee.- 31 if the lawmakers'fail to reconvene. - He said persons who have not yet signed petitions, calling for a statutory law preventing cities or other local governments from enacting income taxes without voter approval, were invited. The hour of the tea parties was from noon to 2 p.m. At the same time, he Mid, theFCouhl sign po- Kuhn said his committee has Ob* lined more than 120,000. Signatures and needs about 100,000 more before the call for a statutory law can be presented to the legislature. We have about 50,000 petitions presently in the field and we urge that they be completed*, notarized and returned to the committee soon as possible,” he said. To Head Area Drive to 'Sell' Michigan Gets School ioon OK WALLEp LAflff - TBa Walled Lake School District had received approval from The State Department of Public Instruction to borrow |150,000 against anticipated state aid. TROY -Mayor Robert J. Hu-sr has been named Oakland County chairman of a campaign to promote Michigan. Huber, 40, of 1373 Key West St., Is one of three chairmen appointed from the trlcounty metropolitan area to head the promotion In connection with the 1903 observance of Michigan Week. Jarvis C. Webk oFOetroiF was named chairman for Wayne County and Milton Maltz of Mount Clemens was selected to head the Macomb County drive. The 10th annual Michigan Week j wilftc held May 19-25:, Some raised thequestionwheth-er lawsuits could be started on the constitutionality of the 162 hills becoming law — particularly on the Sunday closing.measure. Sen. Frank D, Beadle, R-St. eraifT safdp’TRSi'ir probably be a lawsuit anyway.” Beadle pointed out that majority Republicans in both chambers want the recess to continue because the U.S. Supreme Court hps still token no action on the suit of state AFL-CIO President August Scholle for redistrteting of too senate. The Michigan high court ordered the reapportionment but and other GOP senators won a temporary stay. They have asked a full hearing in the federal high court. LONGTIME GOODFELLOWS - * These three Pontiac Township firemen will sell The Pontiac Press along with other firemen and members of Metropolitan Club, Spirit No. 60, beginning at 1 p.m. Saturday. Charter members of toe fire department, they have-been participating in Christmas qharity activities for .18 years. Pictured are (from left)' Fire Chief Carl Schingeck, Assistant Chief James Breckenridge and Charles Thompson. Absent is the-fourth charter member, Thompson’! toother Leonard. To Discuss Attempt : 4 on Avondale The move now in progress to recall four officers, of the Avondale School Board will be toe main topic of discussion at a public meeting tomorrow. president; Raymond N. Baker, secretary; and Mrs, Genevieve Porter, treasurer. "TttA'Defenderl,” a citizen’s group opposing too recall, will sponsor toe meeting, to be con-ducted at 8 p.m. in the Commu-nity Building, 21tt Atlfcurn Ave. Speakers will discuss the current Avondale situation as well as trace the history of toe present board and the school system. YhaASDIA has charged that toe four forced former School Superintendent LeRoYR. Watt to resign and that they are insufficiency Republican legislators set (he late adjournment date in an effort to block any attempt by Gov. John B. Swajnson to call them back into special session for the purpose of reapportionment. The recess could be ended by a I. . - .. . call from » special committee ofduced t0 #>« Present board, mem- Curriculum, accreditation, renovation and building programs and recall procedures Will also be aired. Those attending will be intro- four leaders of' the GOP majorities in the two houses. Howevef, three of them, including Pearsl will not be hack next year, Pears made an unsuccessful bid for Congress in the Republican prh State Official Leaves fpr Nigerian Assignment GRAND RAPIDS WV-State Agriculture Commission chairman toe past nine years, Arthur J, Hannah of Grand Rapids left yesterday. for Washington on the, first* leg of a new overseas assignment. He has been named livestock adviser for the ministry of agriculture in Nigeria. hers. TO ANSWER QUESTIONS A question and answer period will be conducted after completion of toe speeches. The “Defenders” are opposed to the activities of another citizen’s group, the Avondale School District Improvement Association, which is currently attempting to recall the four board officers. The four are Floyd L. Cobb Jr., president; David W. Hficket^vice ton February presentation of for their 'Born Yesterday.” play are (frqrn left) Vince , Alice Henry,' casting committee member; and John Wltoertip, qhairmah of the casting committee. - \ SOUTHFIELD - An almost completed report on the reappraisal of land values in .Sbuto-field, submitted Saturday to the City Council and Its assessing department by a Cleveland firm, showed an increase of $15.5 mil- Fire DestroysToys at Hudson's Store SOUTHFIELD -A fire in the toy department of the J- L. Hudson Co.’s Northland store was brought quickly under control yesterday afternoon after destroying 2Q-by 20-foof section of the department. The blaze also burned through a wall leading to a stock room, ruining all the toys on bpth sides.of the wall. - f Southfield firemen said they believe the,fjre started from faulty wiring to which Christmas, lights were attached. They were assisted by two fire fighting units from Detroit. „ “* * No estimate of damage was immediately available. The blaze was discovered shortly after p.m- by a maintenance map in the building. Clarkston Jaycee* Pick 3 Junior Min Judge! CLARKSTON - The Clarkston Area Junior Chamber pf Commerce has selected three judges for Saturday’s Junior Miss Pag-' eant at Clarkston High School.! Judging the 16 contestants Will be Mrs. Virginia Loveland, womens’ division secretary, Pontiac Are! United Fund; John.D. Ka-megp, public-relations director, Michigan Bdll Telephone Co.; and attorney William P. Whitfield. dedicated to their school board duties. The board has said in rebuttal (hat toe ASDIA had « “deal” with WStt. Each group has charged the other with misrepresentation and distortion of facts. Southfield Reappraisal Land Valuation Increased $15.5 Million in Review ted to the council, Its members have no voice in assessing lend values. According to state law the city assessor determines *11 land assessment. The mayor has been at odds for the past year with City Assessor Gerald C. Easlick and tried to fire him as “incompetent.” Representatives of Clemin-shaw Co. presented their findings at a special meeting in the city hall. The firm Was hired about a year ago by the council on toe recommendation of Mayor S. James Clarkson, who attested that assessment figures on land value! at that time were below par for taxation purposes. The council vetoed the attempted ouster action, however, and Easlick is still on the job. The study covPred the entire city Including vacant lots as well as improved property,. While the study was submit- JUDITH ANN FRENCH Mr. and /Mrs. Edwin L. French of 2735 Christian Hills Drive, ^von Township,- announce toe engagement of their daughter Judith Ann to Woodward S. Smith, son of Dr. and Mrs. Woodwprd C.'Smith ______ _____________^ of Mount Pleasant. The couple^ report any violation! to plan a summer . | Check Turkey, Buyers Urged State Says ShoppAn Cheated on Weight LANSING UR - The State Agriculture Department has Issued an early warning to housewives thitiking already of buying their Christmas turkeys. Some of the shoppers probably were cheated by below-advertised Weights on their Thanksgiving turkeys, said the department's foods and standards division. < The purchaser of poultry, or any other commodity sou by weight Is entitled to 10 ouaoes to a pound. There Is no allowance for shrinkage, packaging, or wrapping materials, toe department advised. Michigan law also requires toe advertising of true net weight on the package,- plus toe name and address of the packer. The poultry also should cirry a designatiqnshowing.whetoeirjt Is Grade A*, B or C, This means i government bupector has passed the bird a|id certified It tor grade. ijewives-were urged Ip Check eight of thev bird on scales, qut other specifications and culture department. , #* ' ^IBflMHWTIAtrPftiCSS. K&ffDAf! OECtMjafc «, iMt Expert Lab Repprt on Body Remnants UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (gfr) pay for toe Middle E^t force. —A Soviet-U.^ clash la in prod- Latin^marican delegates have *.wtwup . ptupml to sible for sharing the coft of the wmiB<* theaeoonii reeolution. Hie UXfbrcMhithe Congo and the NBAmrtmtwS the cost of A ’question was how many ^ jgjj countries thatdo Saturday, peace-keeping costs would Vote to A rabbi make themselves legally respon- 22, of Ion sible to pay. Fifty have never other bib paid for (1m Congo operation, and A cheni 26 have neVer paid for the huddle shot 22-cs But One source said both resolutions were in danger of failing unless the. sponsors nailed down the Latin-American vote by sup-, porting the. Latin American Am World Court’s July 20 advisory opinion dwt costa of the pnce-meping forces constitute "expenses of the organhation’’ KROGER LOWERS FOOD-COSTS THROUGH VOLUME BUYING! which theUJN. diartwMys^Sijl be borne by the members ss ap-portioned” by the General Assera- aored by the United States and ■ight other countries, calls for a 15-member working group to glvo the assembly suggestions by nest April 1 on methods ofr financing similar costly U.N. peace-keeping operations in tbs future. Brig. J. H. Price of Canada was to introduce both resolutions this afteruugi hi lUF awmbly’ritt-" nation, budgetary oommittee. Soviet delegates said privately the Soviet Union would vote against accepting tbs court opinion and would nevw pay any part of the Congo or Middle East expanse no matter bow the as- FRESH KWICK KRISP I2nd Triallaces Young Slayer -Summon Prospective Jurors In Texas ’ 6 — John fEAUMONt, Tax. Mack Barring, U. Odasaa,--Tae.T—aeb( giaaid his 17-year-old sweetheart goodby, then shot her to death, starts h)S second murder trial to- Imm... prospective Jurors has been monad for the change of * Barring’s chief defease i weald file motions to dtomtss the trial because a toy at Ear-mit, Tex., rated last February that Herring was insane at the time bs kilted E|fobett Jean JXet Atiy. Dag SuIUvan dented that Baring Is being placed in doubte jeopardy and said ho would base bis case on premeditated murder. The prosecution has subpoenaed 17 witnesses, 16 of whom/testlfted at the Kermit trial. 'TJn defense has not yet tatoSa selection was 'several days. At the Kermh trial' in Febru- , Barring testified he tha .pretty schoolgirl in March dt 1161 at bar own request Haring said he and the girl chatted happily en route to a stockpond riser Notrees, Tex. where she On toe day of his arrest ho talked freely about the killing. “Oa the way out there we talked agent her friends. She how happy »be was going to be* as happy. WO talked abort all sorts of things. She kept saying what tt was going to be like In heaven," Herring Md officers. The sight-man, four-woman July at Kermit ruled that Boring was insane at the time of toe tootgun killing hut did not rule an hte sanity at the time of the trial The Texas Supreme Court overrated the verdict on grounds that Herring’s sanity at the time of the trial should have been determined. Nab Skunk Frsraloading at Cages in Philly Zoo PHILADELPHIA (AP)-A free-loading skunk has been sneaking at night Into the camel, kangaroo at Phihdol- and penguin cages pMa Zoo. Zoo officials caught him Saturday night. Thqyll continue to feed him, but the skunk will have to go on display and let folks look $t him during too day, Just like M e skunks. (ha zoo’s other five s j English Civil Service to Insure Tax Collector! “nCONPOSt ■ ial. wn, m. - ■ i rnmmmmmmmmmmmmm r1 ■ ■ WltH THIS COUPON-KWICK KRISP Thfck Sliced BACON CtRM* MML N< fWlf H, lnr«te rialaa, Ualaa Lila. M ilA^H mm 9AM *THte roifnAt? PRESS, ?MONDAT, DECEMBER 8, 1962 f wmmmm \ Choose Mersman tables for Christmas giving! Beautifully styled, masterfully ^ finished in rich, warm tones to coinpl^att any and every decor’. Inexpensive prices that in no way refleei ,>i * the• exceptional value offered! ^ i7»?25Sj3tjS Sr^ lO^ SQ95. .4095 MOSEYIN’ ON EAST — Don Leef a pro- says wftitendrta-tavite fesional guide from Council, Idaho, is, shown visit Idaho. He has covered about 10 miles a leading his western caravan through Perry, day; since beginning his journey last April. -Kan on his way to. the Whifc House. Lee ... 2m x 29V,, Hi. 15 end 23 MM, Christmas cards have had a ro> man tic history from the first known woodcut holiday greeting, printed in 1460 to the photographic cards of today.. I come from Alexandria and bring many good years to. give gen-erouslyi” . “I will give them for almost no money and have only God's'love | for my rewards INTRODUCED IN 1843 , The very first Christmas card was introduced in 1843 by Sir Haroy-Cole,- director of the-Vic-toria and Albert Museum in London. ^There are designs to satisfy anyone's taste -*• floral motifs, Santa Cfeus, Currier and Ives scenes, and the most personal kind of all, with photographs of the family. -Jhe-earllest “holiday froef-tag” on record, is e New Year’s card, printed about 1481 in the Rhine Valley of Germany. Itshowed the Christ Child standing jn the bow of an ancient galley manned by angels. ■ * Sr . The inscription read, "Here CAB said diet as far back as 1887, Convair advised airltaes using this model that the rear loading doors had au inadequate locking dtevlce. It recommended installation of a special “kit” to correctAa deficiency. . . The recommendation was not made mandatory by the old Civil Aeronautics Administration, predecessor of the present Federal Aviation Agency. family celebrating the conviviality of die season around a festive board. The panel was frowned upon by the Puritans. -But, side panels showed the charitable acts of feeding and clothing the poor. Stop Table 191% x 29, Ht. 18 and 20V 29.98 This helped salve the Puritans’ fpfLBp-..*.y I objections, and by I860 sending ^ | a Christmas cards was an estab- i v '1 ,lshed custom in England. ’HHFBIWm CROSSED ATLANTIC «u 3^' j |* * Christmas cards crossed the At-■ j lantic in 1875 when Louis Prang, a penniless* German immigrant " iniv :’if who inter became known as the npBMMP 1 "Father of the American Christ-lV V f 1 Card,’’issued the first line of ^ ^ ^ ' ®Mrin5 We enrly 1900s the J^fi* | sentiment of the card became ilKm ■dominant and the illustration In-BLAw,. cidental, until after World War . I, when color reproduction im- ... .— Nowadays, Christmas cards Holiday Elegance is reflected have evolved intoa well-estsb-ih this gentiy shaped sheath. The lished custom. For what better crepe muffle matelasse made way to keep friends inforfiled of With rayon has the appearance the latest family* news than jp a silk ribbon-knit. Worn with through -photographic cards or glittering jewelry, it will be in messages written on holiday perfdcttaste. (greetings. Merman Thb/es "the costume jewelry of the home’ Comer Lamp Table 29K x 2914, Hi 15 29.95 The Allegheny Convair from which Miss De Moriere fell was owned at the time by another air- V .line which, because it was about to sell the plane, did not order the special UL V Allegheny bought this particular Convair' but did not know about the door modification and never installed it. topped with boautiful protective matching hero is ttuly a fabulous group... in rich, mellow tone of Royal Walnut finish^ .. note the gracefully tapered legs ... the artful cures... the trlmness.of the square and rectangular tables.... the accent of the brass ferrules... and... We. have over fi styles from which to make your choice!^, Jf We'd like you to see them now XySw The Ranger spacecraft is 814 feet high. (UmVmiMl') New Many Wear fOR ONLY Special offer! CRUMP ELECTRIC Open Monday, Friday, Saturday Evenings to 9 p.m? Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday Evanings to 9 p.m. ?,'*' Auburn HalfhH, Mich. UNBELIEVABLE b„r TRUE as THE PONTIAC ftRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 3,1962 By ROBERT J. SEELING UP( Aviation Editor WASHINGTON—The captain of the airliner that crashed at New York’s Idlewild Airport Friday night wrote article two weeks age bitterly criticizing t.e runway! on which he and! 24. others, met] their deaths. WARMER THAN USUA^ — These maps released by the ii-St- WaattMT Bureau indjcata a continued above normal tem-perature trend and normal precipitation in the Pontiac area for the next 30 days. lesson Driven Home •CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa' (UPI) — Edward J. Marek took his daughter Suzanne, 16, for a driving lession yesterday—and wished he hadn’t. She was making a left turn when the car Jumped a curb, rolled across a lawn, smashed through two fences, ran over a patio, slammed into a house, plunged intothe kitchen, shearing a gas line, forcing the M. E. Rowley family to flee until firemen could:, clear the house of gas. Miss Marek was charged with driving without a license; her father with permitting an unauthorized person, to drive. Airliner's Pilot Criticized SERUNG The pilot, Capt. Edward-fiecbtokj of Eastern lines, was killed! trying'to land his DC7B in a heavy tog on Idlewild Runway 4. The artlcledywill appear in the January 1ssue^-«f .iUirlflt, trade magazine! for which Bech-told wrote a monthly column called “Pilot Talk. NEW YORK (UPI)—A desper-ate atte mp t to regain attitude came seronds too late to prevent the Eastern Air Linek DC7B crash In the copy delivered to the editors only two weeks ago, Bechtold charged that the Operattonal safety margins on Runway 4 were “uncomfortably close,” particularly with rain, low ceilings and wet surfaces. The veteran . safety expert of the Air Line Pilots Association, was taking issue in the article with plans to put a new Instrument Landing System (1LS) on Runway SIR: s Bechtold said the poor weather aid belonged on Ruaway 13, 31R, to supplement ln*trament landings from* the southeast normally made on Runway 4. TOO MANY MISSES The article said there were too many missed approaches occurring on Runways 4 and 13 under certain wind mid' weather conditions, mainly because pilots have [/I Safe! . YOUR CHOICE S g 98 KB SQUARE YARD A special group of higher priced carpets in both wools and nylons. AII heavyweight merchandise with some in the luxury category. 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( NOTHING TO HUY^-NOTHING TO WRITER » FREE HOME SERVICE TOR CARPET AND CUSTOM DRAPERIES OPE/V DAILY ’TIL 9—'EXCEPT TUESDAY *TtL 6 lecfewfltlv-Evcms i fine FLOOR COVERINGS Dixlf Highway, Drayton Plains . OR 4-0433 !fJ! «■-.J • ; ." .“.:.-...1 !..1..“..V ii *“ to circle sharply before lining up their an roach, i . ,- '' “From’toe pilot viewpoint, an XLS on toe southeast (fppraaefc) to Runway 13 is almost lory,” Bechtold wrotfe. “No i “There is no selfish tooth'd to- panded to get it.” crystal ball is ueeded for this." volved hero. Our margins are “Thousands of operating heura woefol^y thin... we need go ILS by eeperfoncect jet pilots should oir Runway 13 at Idlewild and not be ignored." he continued. |maximuto effort al]fluM. be- aXf Investigators Offer 'Ifs' in Death of 25 fried to Regain Allitucfe-bul Too Lale he was Overshooting runway ♦, his last-second try to climb away from |ba ground might have succeeded. But he was already too lew, investigators which killed 25 pmsons. The four-engined piston plane, carrying 51 persons from Charlotte, N.C., crashed and burned Friday night while groping to ward a runway through treacherous fog. A preliminary report by C i v i 1 Aeronautics Board (CAB) investl* iators yesterday- offered these If the pilot had been Able to see a few moments earlier that for another 1 a n d i n g,” Slattery said. H the plane had landed a minute earlier, the thick, shifting fog might have thinned enough to reveal the runway in time. It hit to the left of* the runway nearly ^iqile past toe ^pproach Edward Slattery, CA^-public in-' formation officer, saW toe crash Wagner both died br ibe flaming wreckage, lire airport’s radar monitoring system, a runway homing beam atid a weather bureau visibility instrument, were not functioning at toe time, the CAB said. The lack of these devices not provide sufficient cause for routing toe plane to another air- ¥*TmigIOave ^spSKcTW ippirottfly Whs l "weatoerseeD difference between life and death: ‘ said.. A radio navigational system was “The pilot probably caught sight used by Bechtold. There is some evidence, particularly from survivor accounts, that Bechtold tried to execute missedapiffoachwhe^ parently catpc in too high from the ‘southeast. ‘"7. r Government, invertigatars hwje «eM that - three, ground aide* need to help,planes to bad-Weather landings were Inoperative M the time of toe accident —including a device to measure runway YniblUty and a radar set which monitors the accuracy of instrument landings. of tho ground or A Jight or didn't...... catch sight of toe runway and dfi ,*»N*EM* JLS ipibperating it was time to go around normally. But Bechtold’s Cfiti- Runway 13 than Runway •< under most prevailing wind conditions. EjSfia toe basic method commercial, planes use whenTan Jing in poor'weather. It projects two beams toward an airliner — o n e indicating whether toe descent is at the right glide angle and toe other whether toe plane is lined up with flie runway. , A ~proper fLS approach appears: on toe instrument panel in the! form of a perfectly-centered cross. • » order to hgve $1 of earnings left for his family, a farmer must sell about 55 worth of products from his farm. ‘. . uAtj the Oektond County Board —- • be MS (t the JBpwp' m»i- ■■ ver*Tt7 Drive jT i petitions for the proposed tlon of the City of Rochester ■■ »i«u fi Wm& meeting to eeMed 1 October 17. IBM, • r to the general public. • BOUNDARIES COUM1TTKS, THOMAS C. TIUEV. mBmmm ■ john utaamns. • RALPH a. MOOR* JOHN K. NOKL Ir^d^rownjh^n^B^rd Chairmen *91 Xent Road prtenvuie. 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Voters here, with neighboring D e t r o i t much interested, will decide -today whether to continue with fluoridation of Windsor’s' drinking water. < ' A refesendum on the issue will be a part of Windsor’s municipal election. 'Windsor began fluoridating its water last September at orders of the-dty-commission. People generally did not know, of it until a Wfeek later. An opposition group, the greater Windsor Safe Water Association, succeeded in putting the matter on the ballot. , ^ Last Tuesday tlte city coupdlin Detroit approved fluoridation. It is not likety to start until 1964, however. ; Supervisor Succumbs PLAIN WELL (JR—Allegan County Supervisor Ernest Aungst, 75, died, of an apparent heart .attack at his home ovCr the weekend. Wig Market Goestn- Black , MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-The black market was turned blonde, brunette, red, and a variety of other shades. The latest ltem. on .the list is human" hair at #150 per pound. Police estimated thefts, from wig shops over the weekend at more than 200 wigs and 20 pounds of hair arid attributed them ^ professional thleyeS. A heavy demand for wigs in South Florida has cheated the lucrative black market, said detective George Watson. C ’$21/0001 in Furs; Jewett Misting in Los Angeles LMANGE^ stole furs and .jewelry valued at $21,00(1. from the Holmby Hills home of Davis Factor, board chairman of Max Factor & Co., over the weekend. Factor told police he discovered tiie theft Sunday when he and his wife returned from Palm Springs. British Actress Hurt inr Hollywood Crash HOLLYWOOD. (AP) — British actressShfrleyAnn Field.24, was 1 nursing a bruised’leg today—because of a three-oar auto accident in front of her hotel. ' "--jtu.. ’★ The actress was’ returning to her hotel in nearby Beverly Hills from a dinner date with British director J. Lee Thompson when the accident occurred Saturday night. A If ■ * A Jr.' '• Thompson, 48, Miss Field’s fre- quent escort, was cited fry Beverly Hills police for driving without a license. Dtttiidato Post Offler GRAND RAPIDS (I) - Grand Rapids dedicated its mv $7-mfl-post office Saturday. Frederick C. Belen of Lansing, assist ant postmaster general, made the dedication speech; JUST A JOKE —. Despite the No. 13 atop the trolley, it didn’t encounter any hazards. It actuidty Was stopped to pick up passengers and the brick-bearing worker poked his head out of the manhole to help the photographer. Watchman Halts. Mission Marines Put to R6u NASHVILLE, Tenn. (ft — A night watchman armed with a shotgun routed a 200-man patrol of Marine reservists simulating a battle mission. Accompanied by th& chatter of machine guns, members of NaahviBe s Srd Rifle Company. U.S. Marine Corns Reserve, wate teswfahg attack methods at the state fairgrounds. But they; dove for foxholes when a shotgun blast rent tfte early Sunday morning afrff Capt. James B. Harris said that police; National Guard and all business firms in tile area had been informed of the mode attack, but “that man hadn’t been briefed.’’ The watchman retreated after the explanation. Ktkbnett! \ fcrOAristmcf GIVE A NORELCO GIFT OF SHAVING COMFORT! ..A__Prtfd toftt (jwwjf purse!_ World-famous Norolco Rotary Blades stroke off whiskers...no pinch, no pull, no irritation r\ INI ULTIMATI IN LOXIIRV—NORIICO 30/SC 7170 L Finest shaving bwtru-k ment ever made. Twin heads swivel to reach every curve of the face. Seif-sharpening rotary blades. Motor adjusts speed automatically to beard, T10/220 vehs (AC/DC). Adapts to world-wide use. Deluxe travel, case. KOMI BARBERKIT-another greet gift te go with your Norake 30. Ohret complete haircuts at homel WORLD'S LAROEST-SILLINO SHAVER-NEW norelco 20/sc mo 'FUP-TOP' SFEEDSHAVER* Now at a newlowpHee. Handsome new desfen. 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BONN (UPIJ r-.Weat Geraufey may b« nearing the end of its “Adenauer era,” Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, who will be 87 in January, is facing demands from his own Christian Democratic Parjy 'that he name his successor, alia ii is un-likely that he will remain ir office for much more t* j|Hi|| jrearo! chancellorship this first and only chancellpr since thejfirat postwar West German government was formed in lftt, Aden* Us: new foreign minister, Gpr-hard Schroeder, has somtf vefy concrete Ideas of his own. Asked recently about German foreign policy, Adenauer prompt ly retorted .“whose policy do you mean? I.flne or Mr. Schroeder’s?” Thi3 remark had more than humorous significance. Not long ago Adenauer would never hSd' ad: mitted that one of hte ministers might have other ideas about policy. In fact it would have been extremely ||jr“.............. Adelph Hitler’s Third Reich, which lasted hist over It years. During these years Adenauer hire given Germany new political stability and helped make it, one of die world's richest nations. Above all, Adenauer has- earned recognition of the federal repgl lie as a leading, member free world community of * -'J.! 'Adenauer’s achievements, his drive for Western unity and his tough opposition to communism, led President Kennedy recently to (him “a great defender of POPULARITY SUPS The ehanceUar’s popularity two Tears ago was incredible despite his age. But then it began (0 sup. , Many Germans would have liked Adenauer to assume the position of president. The chancel-lor first said he would run for the job but then changed his mind because be would no longer be ible to steer German policy to a time Of cold war tenskm. The gsoersl elections b September bit year matted minister. OMMIAN jiHOW Adenauer has never hidden ttip fact that his is a one-man hy * ship. When he receive^,*! from President Kermady not long ago an aide astpdKmm if a copy should be sept-'o the foreign min-:iter. y/ '* * ’ #• >*bh no, this is a private letter to me,’’ Adenauer said, folding it up and putting it to his in-inside Jacket pocket. - . T The general publie is only too ready to acknowledge the chancellor’s achievements. People who vote Socialist are quick to agree that they have Adenauer to thank to Germany’• position to- pBKi * •* *’; ■ ■ i “But. the man is 86," most everyone sa^s with an expressive shf%., 7'" ^ ;r-—-r.J": Some members of Aden-auer’s party feel that he should continue as chancellor as long as 10 is able. They are rapidly aHha called the “beginning of the and." Adenauer and hls Christian ItaoNcralle Party (CDU) bit .... 1. their. abeolote majority hi Parliament and the chancellor was forced —'at a price — to ae-cept the middle-of-the-road Free DeaMcrata (FDP) into a coali- The political partnership tween the two parties began bad-ly and gradually worsened. Adenauer hiij/relf bad to agree to retire by the fall of no to make ymy to a younger man. The FDP repeatedly makes it dear it will Md bn to this promise. —jrf——yp- • w— Although “Der Alb” (the old pan) b atm full of vigor and political fire, -hie retirement pledge is giving Germany what Germans can a "Regierung auf Zeit,” or a “marking time gov- - Adenauer remains remarkably healthy to a pan of his age. His dose aides say he does need Us customary aftor-lunch nap, how-over. Thera have also been unconfirmed reports b the German and foreign press that Adenauer has pi occasional lapse due to as-hmritm if he is forced to miss ttfe siesta. AMaanar’a wit la ass ever. He know* frit w arid Adenauer reply). 1, “Don’t be silly, we can’t have two chancellors.’’ Pferrdmenges, who died earlier this year, refused to co.nment 1Adenauer’s reaction. The “Des Spiegel'.’ news magazine affair contributed to buj was not the sole reason ‘ split between FDR. were never -happy together toltjfltdarfy Poland airi Czectototova* their one-year codition for mjhand,toy to establUdi diplomatic relations Vlth these nations. Some of the baaic differences affect isicdtife parties Adenauer*! CW'wfo fee FDP several between therJWn pi Germany’s foreign and domestic poli^ieST The FDP always showed its dls-iKe of Adenauer’s policy toward the East bloc nations. It felt the government should make better use of Its existing contacts with , par- Domestic economy policy differences also existed. The'FDP, as a- middle-of-the-road par*; .'•instantly .demanded that the government denationalize the industrial holdings it still has. The FDP also strongly opposes any backdown towards trades union wage increase demands. Fireworks Explode, CyclisflsKilled Naples, Italy it&)~ Police reported be city’s first fireworks victim of the Yuletide season, Sunday. They said Antonio MsffetoriC, 16, was cruising along on bis motorcycle with a big toad of fireworks — illegal in Naples— when he missed a curve and crashed' into a car. He died in the explosion of his cargo. s The two car occupants were huit A new electronic device ind measures raindrops. Rewqrd Offered to Crey^Spoffing Missing Nina TP LOS ANGELES ill -* The Wynn bll Co. of suburban Azusa said Sunday it will pay a $1,000 reward to tbe crew of a Navy plane which spotted the missing NinaH sailing ship, Friday. The ship, a reproduction pf one of Christopher Columbus’ fleet, had been missing to two weeks on its voyage from Spain to the Bahamas, duplicating Columbus’ Voyage of discovery to1492. Carl E. Wynn, president of .the oil firm, offered tb*4W Auto FumesLKiH 2 in Italy; 3 Survive MAZZIN, Italy (APV-Five persons dtit to a drive.parked their fcir to chat and left thw motor running. Ekhaust femes overcame them all Saturday night, By thetime passers-by to this north Itall 1 town Investigated, Bruno Lorenz; 22, and his brother Mario, r were dead. ; The others, two men and a wo-man, were hospitalized in serious Brusirt"1prouto Is a ' of cabbage. Just what ACenauer ' himself thinks about his age is unknown. There is no one who would dare ik him outright. 7 W 0 1 His closest friend, banker Robert Pferdmenges, once told Ad* the jdke about one of the chancellor’s 23 grandchildren asking him, “Grandad, can I be m j,m up’ Mrs. Nixon Defied Pain to Campaign BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) —Patricia Nixon campaigned to her husband, Richard M. Nixon, while suffering from three cracked ribs, an Informed source He said Mrs. Nixon kept jjory secret, although she b intense pab todays, “because » didn’t want pity.’’ * # • * Mrs. Nixon received the Injury b early October when she slipped on a bathroom floor to a Si Francisco hotel. Since Nixon tost to Gov. Edmund G. Brown b tbe Nov. ( election, she has been b virtual seclusion at their home. She and thair daughters, Trida and Julie, joined the former vice president b Bermuda to Thanksgiving but returned soon afterward. Nixon is vacationing to the Florida lap*. ON SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THi 10THWTHS MONTH EARN FROM THi 1ST AT S COMPbuNDED AND PAID QUARTERLY ... OR YOU CAN PURCHASE - Advanced Payment . ft. Shares Certificates MIA Currmt Rata Tf / Mil / W . IF HMD TO MRIWRmL ...... AVAILABLE IN UNIH OF $80 PER SHARK I Established in lM~Never misted paying a dividend. | Over 72 yean qf sound mmnagem«nt~your assurance * of security. Attett now over 74 million dollars. 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Dei; Mb BirM 1 , | om PM FAMILY—ADUUS ONLY Irix ftto-ee- Wlieaties Cheorios V Your Choice f 3^ 79* ASP Applo Soucte....... cS# 12* kNMTomalwM.......... M 12* Iona Swoot Ptas ..,.. 12* Whole Kernel Corn mand can 12* ASP Poofs |N HANOV F1ASTIC*COATOD THEOW*AWAY CARTON 38c j Special'. Save 1 Oc —'. Jan^) Parker...... Cherry* Pie HBfr 4# v. ' Sava lie in 2 Laavae Potato Bread f XL 39* tw ew»T atianhc § PAcmc tir cfenpewv, me, Homogerazed Mi 7 MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY Peeemhar 3rd, 4th air fife ■ , ctnB AAP Weer Mnrheta b ReilimMddgce ■ jkam’0111 iBs^M’ilillv,‘0NI'ir THE PONTIAC EREfeS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1962 B~7 Those International -Pen Pals Start Writing Again ■■■>. By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - The tlm seemed ripe for Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to' Write 'am other secret letter to President Keimedy. Worriedly licking the ballpoint of one of those pens tint Click Nixon passed oiit in Moscow, he began: VA*.., '..wK’-.W- Dear Mr. President, my wife ■Nina know* Eng-lllsh, and since [sleeping so good I lately, she has [been reading me |some of tnole r .American [bedtime stories [like “Fail-Safe’ ’and “Seven Days • RUTH in May." Now r am sleeping worre then ever. .Several things botherme that I do net wish the comrades to 1 know about. For one thing, where Is that pbooe thatTls sup; • posed touwiptect; me direct to yea at tte White HnniaY—— I must have mislaid mine. Second, Just where is this fail-safe line that we ought to be watching? Aid by the way, how do we koql up tint touch-button phone tothe wir roMn Where your gen-erais can tell mo how to shoot Amtfcaa planes before itogMoOcow? . , Please pe assured mpt I wQl not publicize your reply. JFK REPLIES The President responded as follows: Dear Mr. Chairman, let me say first that I am relatively certain that Mrs. Khrushchev is as conversant with English as myl In fact, they are meant Only to Wlla TonlriA la aurldft TtnTinn l . 'llj m xttetvtea- wife Jackie is with French, Italiab and Spanish. I do not, therefore, question her translation, but I would like to make, eryswl clear that the hooks alluded to are not authoritative. be a story, and fit order to avoid euestionsr Russian, t hope this answers your any misunderstanding of the word “story”, Jackie tells me that this translates “hlatoire” in French, “racconto” in Italian and “cuen-to” to Spanish. Unfortunately* she does not know Apparently it did not, for byre-turn courier JFK redved « staling rejoinder. Waving;aside the formalities, it began- How dare yon tell me a story? Ho# can I believe 'anything you promise about calling Off a Cuban attack if you tell me. stories? Lies! Lies! A pack of Res! And to think I took t|te missiles away from that taadman Castro for at least most of them, ba, ha!). > . Dr. Wayne G. Brgnjfetadt^ioysf • ~ Clean Mouthy Teeth Keeps Breath am surq Stalin took our end of the phone with him when he did us the favor to leave this earth! Should we reinstall it? DISTURBED JFK -Disturbed by the tone of the letter, President Kennedy summoned governmental press secretaries aud=6^tfii«rW^l3fer » with-hold* all news that could prompt any more newsmen to write novels about Soviet-American relatione. Then he cabled Khrush- Q— Except for seeing my dentist twice a year and brushing my teeth dally, what can I do to eliminate halitosis? '•#. ;'"v A — Bad breath may be caused by decaying tissue) mucus or food particles lit the mouth, nose, nasal sinuses or lungs. Constipation has been overrated as a cause df halitosis. Eating onions, drinking Alcoholic beverages and smoking may aggravate the con-; dition. In some per? sons the cause Is] ha-rd to find.1 Sometimes allBRANDSTADT that is necessary is to take a few deep breaths to clear out the stale air in the deeper air sacs in the lungs. BRUSHING NOT ENOUGH Brushing your teeth dailyft not enough. You should brush after ( every meal if possible. Despite the advertisements far various toothpastes, brushing alone will not remove all the food particles from between your teeth. These are- the most likely source of the trouble. Some dentists recommend lining what amounts to a rubber toothpick such as may be found attached to the handle.-, of some of the better toothbrushes. M , it ; Others advise dental floss, but unless your dentist has instructed you in how to use it without injuring your gums, you had better not use it. The gums are easily braised and whenever you bruise them there will be some dead tissue at the site of thetoJorjL. This in itself can be a cause of halitosis. ■ GUM MAY HELP Chewing gum after meals may help to clean your teeth when you are unable to brush, them. The pm does not have to contain chlorophyll. WWW’ If your tongue-is coated, grasp the tip of it with a dean handkerchief and brush, the back of it with a toothbrush. Mouthwashes often do not remove the cause, k—; Q — I am, a housewife. Ten months ago I mixed some cleanser in my shampoo by mistake. The cleanser contains benzinlT Since that time I have lost almost half of my„hair. Could the cleanser have caused it? What should I do? \ [ • ■. , W',. ,-w A — Although , the causes of thinning hair in women are not known for sura some skin specialists believe that the regular use of shampoos that contain modern Man's Escape Almost Fatal DALLAH (UPI)—Police brought in Cecil Everett Davis yesterday to jail htoijon a charge of assault with intent to miffddv ' w w w The two arresting officers were writing out their .reports on Davis’ part to a knife fight that seriously injured another man, W W :• W„ Davis, 28, noticing that 'no one was paying too close attention to him, turned and stepped out a window. Hie window was on the third floor. Davis was in serious condition at a hospital early today. Cash receipts from farm marketings are expected to be up to 1963, although gains will be erased by higher production costs. MONTGOMERY WARD HEARING AID DEFT. fiiFt Idea FOR YOUR HARD OF HEARING LOVED ONES SPECIAL CHRISTMAS IfMMMOTK 1DQS0 MARINS AIB.. HMT tSS!USrim....179m * No Money Down PONTIAC MALL TUORAHHJ^ADAriUZAIITH Tataphow 612-4940 draperies, slipcovers, reupholstery not* 682-4940 PONTIAC MALL. Santa Missing Threefingers SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI)— Santa Claus lost three fingers Saturday as he waved to a group of admirers from the steps of a helicopter at Sacramento Municipal Airport. The incideat occurred as Santa, in this case Donald Novotny, 87, of Carmichael, was tearing local airport facilities by dvic groups. Novotny stepped from the craft when it landed and answered the cheers of waiting " youngsters with a hearty wave—before the rotor blades had stopped. The Whirling blades struck his hand, severing three fingers. He was reported in good condition at Mercy Hospital. " MacMillan to Tell Whether He'll Retire LONDON (UPI) - The Daily Mail said today Prime Minister Harold Macmillan will decide soon whether to retire and may stop down within the next three The ■ Mali si “wiD privately make known bis intention after Christmas. "His stature among Tory members of parliament is near its lowest ebb,*’ the newspaper said, referring to his party’s podr showing to 14 by-elitdions tills year. During the past million years, at least four ice advances have occurred. Council Nears Long Recess at the Vatican VATICAN^3T¥~(UPf)-------The Ecumenical* Council, with its job hardly begun, moved today into its ftoal week of work before a nine-month recess. ★ ★ • ★» A long and important draft dealing with the nature of the Catholic Church, its functions and its aims was before the council When it convened to St. Peter’sBasilica. The draft, entitled “De Ec-clesia” (about the church), Is Only the (th of 71 scheduled subjects to come before the council since it began its discussions exactly six weeks ago. Even one of thorn was put aside for later debate. When the council begins its second session next Sept. 8, it is al-most certain to have the "De Redraft 8ti|l before it, with another 66 subjects waiting, to be discussed. Some of these, however, may never be taken up. ★ • ★ The" “De Ecclesia” draft was first 'discussed Saturday. A cil communique then said that because of its Importance and its lengthy discussion on it . almost cerjtalnly could not be completed to the five working days remaining to the council’s first session. The session will end Saturday with a p u b 1 i c cerpmony in St. Peter’s at which Pope John XXin, his health permitting,' will preside. 'Admits Killing' Her Daughti Ski Instructor's Wil Near Death in Wes This could not be a factor to yonr case unless the shampoo yen use regularly contains detergent. A single exposure to a cleaning fluid even if it contained deter-gent could not be the cause. * . ★ ★ ■■ Thinning of the bait to women is more diffuse than that seen to men, so no bald Spot will form unless the patchy loss.of hair known as alopecia areata develops. (-* Ibis is an entirely different disease.' there will always ba enough hair on your head so that, with proper hair styling, the thinning will not be noticeable. , ‘ h , You should shampoo with css-tile or tindUre of green soap and use a drier rather than rubbing briskly with a towel. * , '★ * to setting your hair, avoid using the brush-type rollers that have become so popular, because they may cause hairs to break off and also they may injure the scalp., ,, You Know, It May Wdfk KINGS LYNN, England (UPI)-A package delivered to the railway station here yesterday had “this side up” stamped on five of its six sides. . i ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.(UPI)-A 37- year . old woman who admitted to police she killed her daughter late yesterday was reported to critical condition and near death today with multiple stab wounds that apparently were self-inflicted. Mrs. Eras Geba, wife of ski instructor Bruno Geba, under-went surgery, last night at Bataan Memorial Hospital, where she was rashe'd with stab wonndi in her neck, stomach and wrists. PttUca Sgt. Mika Ltwis sal d Mrs. Geba admitted slaying her daughter Mona, who celebrated her third birthday yesterday. But Lewis said Mrs. Geba was unable to!give any reason for it. * * * Officers said the girl was nearly decapitated with a military - type saber. FINDS BODY Geba, recently appointed ski instructor at La Madera ski area east of'here, returned home shortly after 6 p.m. for a birthday celebration for his daughter, police said. He found his daughter’s body to the blood • splattered basement of their home and his wife In'the bathroom, bleeding profusely from what Investigation officers said were self - Inflicted stab wonnds. Geba, a former ski instructor for the shah of Iran and an expert on diet and physical conditioning, said he had no idea of ‘had hdppihed or what had caused it. * The Gebas came to Albuquerque less than,a year ago. LONDON CHRISTMAS *-*. Decorative Hundreds of colored lights sparkled ad they lights on overhead Christmas trees suspended were turned on just moments before this-in midair far 1% miles cast • bright glow to photograph was taken. I Oxford* Street shopping thoroughfare. ; ' ' •> ' . "1 ' ■■-V.. detergents may aggravate the condition. qhey as follows : •it ' •a) I have noted what you say about a direct telephone line between us. Now let me make a judgment about that .★ t w As long as your poppet to Cuba refuses to permit the inspection that you yourself premised, I would say that we hive very Ity-fle to say to each other, by telephone or otherwise. A “story” is not the same as a ‘lie”, and Jackie assures me that her translation was perfectly lucid on that point. *■ * - ★ She says that “liar” translates “menteur”, “buglardo” and ..............to the languages me your new record called “The First Family.” Some'unsavory jokesters insinuated that it is opjy. an imitation, but they can’t fool Nikita. I would know your voice anywhere,.and also Jackie’s wispy lisp. - ■,» .. Like faflter like son is smart businessnum, and I congratulate you on figuring how to sell a million records wijhout using your own name. Ha ha.: , ■ - i** "w I have one small favor to request. Inasmuch as I sent America the “Swan Lake” ballet, could you send me a rubber swan for my bath? It is nice to have things in common, even if not e private telephone line. Expectantly yours, Nikita. ~ P.S. What is a panic button? Waitress Sat Straight on a Crooked 'Pafronf MIAMI (UPI) - “Hey, mister, you dropped your change, the waitress shouted when she saw several dollar bills flutter by a mail in Duke Mansene’s irestau-rant Saturddy night. Another Employe stopped tiie waitress before she pursued the matter further and pointed out that the bin dropper had just held up the cashier. ' I do not mean anything personal by that word, but I, would just say this: When are we going to get on-the-spot inspection of those missile sites? j KREMLIN CAJOLERY Khrushchev, painfully recalling the last time that Kennedy backed into a corner over Cuba, t h o u gh t it wise to switch to cajolffry." . , -k + “Yonr excellency,” he wrote with a flourish, “that hilarious fellow Mikoyan has — how you •ay—split my sides by sending HOT WATER HEATERS SO gsl. |ii, MW, approved tar mm on Edison and Cam . Unas, $89.50 valua, $39.95. Martad In transit. Also alactric \and hottiad (aa heatara at torrifia valuaa. ———-— - Michigan Fluorescent- Light Cjo. 193 ORCHARD LAKE AVI. Frightening Asthma Attacks Did In Minutes As New Formula Unblocks Long Passages Fast New Medical Formula Rattens Free Breathiox Without Vaccines, Shota Or Narcotics. Calm* Anxiety. No Prescription Noedod. Now York, N.Y, (Special) —A taam - of adentiata haa announced IW formula that a to pa frifhtaning aathma attaoka in minutes and nn-blockaluna paaaaqmfolL '' ‘s provo SUa Coramia rss* ar'‘ orhabit- anxietT and relievee the worat SoaaofMtttna-tho attaining gaaptag, the wbaaa- i fanr ocaidboawHB. ninaa. painful abota [drugaTUaftmak ueedaa dirooSod, it tiny tablet* oallad BRONITIN*. JUNK CARS AN D TRUCKS WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID- WePickUp g PONTIAC SCKAP ■ OUR NEWS QUIZ - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL irself 10 points for each correct In the Lockheed Aircraft Corp.-i dispute concerns the Union's lection to determine whether...., ’ can make work-rule changes it Join the union l are eligible for pension the right to change work s federal court has General ruled that the state is..... 2 The nation's rules la their decided. a-alrllnea 3 The Arkansas official pronunciation of a-ar-KAN-sas b-AR-kan-saw o-AR-kan-eas 4 December 2nd marked the . the atomic sn. a-20th b-16th o-l2th 8 For the, first time In history, one p controls the,French National Asseti) result of recent elections, a-Free Democrats b-Communlats c-Unlon for s New Republic anniversary of PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning.. * l-allevlate 2- detriment 3- insurgent 4- corrobofate 6-sirifo a-to make more certain b-to lighten or lessen o-rebet d-conteflt or quarrel e-lpjury or disadvantage PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with ths clues. 1- Mlguel Ydlgoras Fuentes 2- Glenn Seaborg 3- Paul-Henrl Spaak 4- Georges Pompidou 5- Davld Bell a-Belglan Foreign Minister b-He was sdeed to form n new Frmoh Cabinet. o-new bead of AID d-Guatemala's Preeldefit e-Chairman, Atomic Energy Commission The Pontiac Press DewalMr 8,1962 Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. a .....Penn State vs. Oregon State b .....Nina II did not arrive oneohed- HOW DP YOUR (Sooto belt Side of Outs Sspstqtoly) Rl to 100 points - TOP SCI 81 to fO point* - bwtlknt. 71 to fO points- Good. 61 to 70 polnta ^ Fair. 40 or Undsr???- If mm! Thh Quls iipwtof tim Iduootfoml Ptoflwm which Thl» N« (umldiMto School* In thlf AmflS a*'!« aid to PcvtagN Good ClHx^ahlp. Save This Practice Examination! L.. • STUDENTS Valuable Rerarenee Materiel For Exams. ANSWERS ON REVERSE PAOE 'Plane Downed birfeidents' VIENTIANE, Laos m - Pro. mier Prince JSouvanna Phouma hat blamed a dissident group of Iris own aeutealist ioroea fw the shooting down of a .U.S. supply plane. Taro American crewmen died I and the ihtrd was slightly Injured in the incident last Tuesday. Informed Laotian sources said the dissidents were members of the radical leftist “youth association,” which is practically7 In-distinguishable from the pro* TBOE PQNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 8. Souvanna had first blamed the ■ Pathet Lao for downing the plane, which was carrying supplies at his request to the neutralistforces the Plaine des Jarres. But his spokesman confirmed yesterday that ;the dissidents poured bullets into the plane as prepared to land. 2 Divers to Try;Slctfeff inT, OOO-FootPlun AVALON, 'Santa Catalina Island OaUf. (AB>«Two frogmen are scheduled to make a record .dive to 1,jf above the ocean floor, where the pressure is 30 times that on the surface, duck out of the bell and swim arouiid for five minutes— in view of a television camera lowered from the ship. 4. Re-enter the bell for the as- BowJing Ball Gets Strike but In the Wrong Lane TORRINGTON, Conn. (UPI) -Randall Schmidt, 18, was driving through the downtown area yesterday when his car was struck PRAGUE.Gzechostovakia W) — byalft-poundbowllng ball. (UH) — Soviet Com-iist party Secretary Frol Kozlov publicly criticized Communist China, today for its “adventuristic position” in the Sino-Indian border conflict: Without mentioning the Chinese by name, Kozlov, a member of the party’s ruling presidium, told the 10th congress of tiie powerful Italian Communist party in a rare open attach:' t “Hiose who are certain of their historic future have no need to play with fire and endanger all the achievements of civilization. ...__jh , ★ ■ ★ Attacking the Chinese party line thgt war with the West js inevitable, Kozlov said this is “an adventuristic position which lias nothing to do with Marxism. , '★ •*- % Delegates to the session of the Western world’s biggest Communist party broke into stormy applause. But Chinese representatives remained silent. Police said a nearby bowling alley reported all its balls accounted for and they theorized the run- No Bid for 'Moneybag' NANCY, FrancMB — The auctioneer disposing oKthings left by Widow Andree Stoll couldn’t get a bid tor an old briefcase offered at 40 cents.'It seemed heavy as lie was lugging it away; inside he President io Speak on U. 1 Economy NEW YORK (UPI) - President Kennedy will address the Economic Club of New York Dec. 14 with the national economy as a major topic. About 2,000 business executives and their guests are expected to hear the President’s speech and qnestion him from the floor. President of the chib is Kenneth] C. Royail, who served in the Truman administration as secretary of war'' and secretary of the army. Pag With $508 Missing From Pontiac Bakery A thief who had apparently been hiding in toe Tasty. Bakery, 80 N. Saginaw, stole a paper bag containing $508 Saturday night, Pontiac Police reported. Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths STEPHEN BATCHELOR Stephen Batchelor, 94, of 7270 Hatchhry Road, Waterford Town-strip, died today at Pontiac Osteo-sthic Hospital, following a brief Iness. His bqdy is at the Sparka-Griffin Funeral Home. mrs. Elmer r. parkins Service for Mrs. Elmer R. (Lucy t MffeTTT’wkirar'Tfr,^ St.’will be Wednesday iat 1:30 p.m. at toe Voorhees - Siple Chapel. Burial will follow in OakHi 11 Saturday after a lengthy illness. “ FOUND DEAD - Hie dismembered body Of Mrs.- Keruna Jain, 17, wife of an Indian medical intern was found in the refrigerator of her New York apartment. Police we holding her husband, Dr. Ranrish Jain, who they say has admitted dismembering the body. Injury's Fatal to Lapeer Man Death Due to Hitting Head on Rock In Fight tend the Csechoslovak Commu- away may have dropped from a found a hoard of francs amount- building before closing time and niat party congress. The Congress passing car. . .. ing to $1,040. It Reverts to the escaped'through a basement wim opens tomorrow. )car | state since there are no heirs.' \|dow which was found open. / ' The bakery owner, Ted Henning, 42, of 8180 Alien Road, told police an employe had hidden the bag with toe money inside a laundry bag stored in «ck -room. Police said theycould detect no signs of a break-in. Officers conjectured tout till thief must have hidden in the LAPEER — A 33-year-old local man died today from an injury sustained when he fell and hit his head on a rock while fighting yesterday. Orie Marr, 622 N. Monroe St. died in Hurley Hospital, Flint, early tills morning, after befog transferred there from Lapeer General Hospital tost night.. / Marr was involved to n fight yesterday afternoon witi/MI-c|ael Trejanowski, 3588 Merwin Road, Elba Township; according to Lapeer County Sheriff Kenneth A. Parted Parks said Hxyanowski walked over to a wood pile new his home on Merwfo/ftoad to see if toe two men and a woman had permlssiim to takyEhe wood toey were gath- More and More Oakland County People Are Sayu “Dave Gee IsOurt Warmest Friend* Thera is no substitute for quality .. . Quality of tha product, Quality in service. With this as a yardstick Dave Geo has been winning and holding warm friends for over 37 years, during which time tho Goo Coal and Oil Company has been distributing better quality fuel in Pontiac and Oakland County. Whether you have a five room or a five herb-room home • • • NOW it the time to . SWITCH TO GEE find Complete Heatingv Satisfaction! /• Our ’fleet of now, modern GMC trucks (meter oquippod for accuracy and radjo dispatched for hotter service) distribute cleaner burning New Mobilheat Furnace Oil in Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Clarkstoh, Orion, Oxford, Rochester, Auburp7 Heights, Bloomfield Hills, Keego Harbor, Wailed Lake and tho surrounding area. May wo add your namo to our ovof growing list Of OAtiSflOd customers? Dial FE 5-8181. larr allegedly drove up to a truck, said he had pern ' take the wood, and if ter a heated discussion struck Trojanowskl. According to thp, police report, Trojanowskl said he hit Marr and knocked him down and Marr’s head struck a rock. Marr did not regain consciousness. Investigation of the incident is not completed. DampensIdea of N-Force Tie French Minister Shuns 'Integrated Europe' PARIS UR — French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Mur-ville; whose government wants to make France an fodOpendeht nuclear phwer, poured cold water)&■ day on the idea of an integpdted European nuclew force. ★ it ■ wt| Couve de Murvilkyi legislators from the owe of toe Western EuTOpei (WEU), convened to dil ropean defenses and toe possibility of such an integrated nuclew force under7command of the North Atlantic/Tr eat’y Organization (NATO). VIX would not be easy to find / substitute for toe purely national (nuclear arms) systems which today are the only o n e s which exist,” he said. “National imperatives, needs of collective defense and financial, economic and technical possibilities are factors to take into consideration and if possible to reconcile. ★ * .4, .“One must also understand the wreljipf^ which is implied in the possession of an apparatus as terrifying as a nuclear arm and, in consequence, toe difficulties to agreeing to share it; “One must also consider Anally toe necessity, If toe time comes, of a rapid decision — difficult to realize through a debate among several goveru- Mrs. Elizabeth member Guild, Cemetery. , Mrs. Perkins, a retiree, of Wilson Foundry wxl Machine Shop, died yesterday atber home following a long illness. ert of Pontiac, Leon of Union Lake and Dannie.of Auburn u _ grandchildren. He was a past master of L fo. 319, F&AM; and a member of Inion Council No. II, Royal Arch Masons, of Ypsilanti; Union Chapter NO. 85 RAM; KntohtoTempW . _ , ,. Nortoville; and too Southlyba Methodist MRS. GEORGE HOMIAK The Rosary will be recited for Mrs. George'(Elizabeth) Homiak, 67, of 2200 N. Telegraph Road, 8 p.m. today at the V<' ‘ Funeral Home. Servlet will be a.m. in St. Michael’a/Catholic Church, with burial foldt. Olivet Detroit., /member t graduate of i of Nursing, Jude Apostolate James Catho- ___e, and an hon- of- St. Michael’s died Saturday fol-prolonged illness. She was a former Oakland County Merical Care Facility employe. 4 LEWIS BUSH GLARKSTON—Service for Lewis Bush, M, of 8940 Qrtonville Road, will be t pjn. tomorrow Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Hom< Burial Will be Wednesday in North Star Cemetery, North Star. A former custodian to the Fern-dale School System, Mr. Bush died Saturday after a lengthy illness. Surviving are a grandson, Robert Cranick, With whom he made bis home; seven grandchildren, 22 great-grandchildren and si great-great-grandchildren. 'Showdown March' Planned by Yemen DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Yemen’s deposed inuepsays.he has started a “showdown march” recapture his throne, but the rebel regime has challenged him “to show his face to any part” of the Red Sea country. d * * C1 a i m i n g a slaughter of 458 Egyptian soldiers in the preceding 48 hours, Mohammed Al-badr announced yesterday that four of his royalist tribal armies were mwch-ing on toe republican capital of San’a and other key cities. In a communique broadcast by the government radio of Saudi Arabia, which supports the monarchists, Al-badr accused toe United Arab Republic air force of “mercilessly raiding and devastating” pro-royaliSt^towns and Villages “as if'toey were Israel.” Rhode Island.il 48 miles long, *37 miles wide, and has 400 miles of coastline; / The WEU assembly Is made lip of members of parliament from France, West Germany, Britain, Italy, Belgium, toe Netherlands and Luxembourg. The union covers political, economic and cultural'relations, plus the political aspects of defense. Tha United States, which la opposed to such national nuclear arms development programs as France is undertaking, has suggested that a European force integrated with NATO be formed as an alternative. Overdue Craft Lands in Ohio YPSILANTI a — A Dearborn pilot and his single-engine-plane, reported overdue at McKennan Airport in Ypsilanti Township, were located in Ohio last night, ending a search by state police and Federal Aviation Agency authorities. * Police said Robert Naylor, 57, called his wife last night to let her know he was safe. Naylor been due to arrive at the airport yesterday morning. Important Message To You" Who Heat With Coaf We carry a complete tina or all regular grades of coal, including . . i:i: GEE POCAHONTAS "LITTLE JOE" The all purpose STOKER COAL BM1 PART 1:1-b; 2-c; l-b| 4-sj B-o. PART III 14ft 2-e; 3-cj 4-aj B-d. PART III: t-dj 2-i| 3-a; 4*bj 5-c. SYMBOL QUIZl a-10| Mj o-9| d-4; e-1jf-2j g-8, h-7; |-8j j-I. Mac’s oldest and largest Looelly owned d optrelsd New Mobilheat Distributor! Now, more than ever you will appreciate-the Many premiums you gqt with HOLDEN RED STAMPS Given at no extra charge by Gael Personal SupervisionT7T” Every funeral servlet Is personally supervlssd by one of the, owners of ths Done!-son-Johns Funsral Horins.' We cherish thlg, obligation < to the families ws serve, PIOBNAL Tmktnq , 4-4811 HURON ST. U..,.™, t ‘ !l. 1 v/ LESTER P.DOERGE& AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Lester P. Doerges, 57, of 2594 Crooks Road, will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Sparks-Griffto Funeral Home, Pontiac,, Burial will be in White‘Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Owner and operator of Del-Ray Cleaners, Mr. Doerges died.at his home Saturday. He was a former member of tbs Auburn Heights Lions Club. Surviving are his wife Hilda; daughter, Mrs. E. J. Reid of Melbourne, Fla.; « son, Janies W. of Eatf Gallia, Fie.; a brother, three sisters and two grandchildren. DR. F. A. LAMOREAUX SOUTH LYON-—Service for Dr. FYederick A. Lamoreaux, 82, of 182 W. Lake St will be 1:36 pjn. Wednesday at the Phillips Funsral Home. Burial will follow in South Lyon Cemetery. Dr. Lamoreaux died Sunday at his home after a lengthy illness. He had p r a c t i c e d medicine in South Lyon for 50 years. Surviving are two sons, Charles and Frederick, both of South Lyon; and a grandson. FRED LyCKETT AUBURN HEIGHTS - Service for former resident Fred Luckett, 61, of Oscoda, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Moore Chapel of Sparks - Griffin Funeral here. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. A former employe of American Forge and Socket Co., Pontiac, Mr. Luckett died Saturday In Vet-jrital, Saginaw, after a long Illness. He was owner of a restaurant in Oacoda. Surviving are his wife Ruth; a daughter, Mirs. Virginia Hunt of Grand Blanc; a son, Ray of Afr bum Heights; five sisters, and nine grandchildren, f - MERRELL J. RENWICK SOUTH LYON-Service for Merrell J. Renwick, 59, of 224 W. Lake St., Will bp 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Phillips Funeral H o m e. Burial will follow in thp South Lyon Cemetery. Mr. Renwick died at hie borne MRS. WALTER ZIELESCH ROMEO — Service for Mrs. Walter (Ma) Zielesch, 68, of 169 W. Gates St. will be 2 p. m- tomorrow at St. John Lutheran Church. Burial will he In Cadillac Gardens East, Fraser. Mrs. Zielesch died Saturday at tor Community Hospital. She will , be at Roth’s Home for Funerali until noon tomorrow. Surviving besides her husband are a sister, Miss Linda Bertsch of Romeo, and a brother. ' irvjVfog besides Ms wife Flor-j are a son, Meridlth of Ash-I, Ohio; two daughters, Nhns.. Robert Relghard of Plymouth and Sharon JC. fate of NorthvUle; and seVengrandchlldren. RANSOM T. VW7 CLARKSTON Service for Ransom T. VUet, 74, of 82 Orion Road, will be 2 p. m. tomorrow at Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home. Burial will be in Lakevlew^ Cemetery. ‘ / A deputy on the Oakland County dog warden's staff, Vliet died Saturday at his home after an, illness of four months. Ho was a mpmber of Ceder Lodge No. 60, FAAM. - . Surviving are hkwife Marie; two sons, Emerson C. of Clarks-ton and Leslie V. of California; throe daughters, Mrs. Robert Morse of piarkston, Mrs. Jiriui W. Graham of ^Pontiac and Mrs. Ellsworth H. Chase of LivoMat 18 grandchildren and MVen greatgrandchildren. ’ More Students on Full-Time Basis pt EAST LANSING IMf — Michigan State University has a larger enrollment than toe University of Michigan in terms of foil-time students, but if part-time students are iluded, U. of M. is the larger. Ibh Is one of toe findings of the University of Cincinnati’s 43rd annual college enrollment stovey, released today. Hie survey shows MSU has a full-time enrollment of 23,595, placing it ninth on the list of toe nation’s largest universities. U. of ‘l, with a foil-time enrollment of 1,691, is Util. With part-time enrollment in- . eluded, U. of M. Is ranked 19th with 39,152 and MSU is 12th with 29AM. Wayne State University, with part-time students included, Is 21st-ranked with 29,832. Hie nation’s largest university, terms of full-time enrollment, the University of California with 58,519. Pair Injured in 2-Car Crash UNION LAKE—Service for onetime Cleveland Indian pitcher and tbftner resident of Union’ Lake, Irwin Gough, 75, of Lake Whrto, Fla., will be 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, at the Sparka-Grif-“ Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will follow In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Gough died Friday after a,-'lef illness. His body will be at the funeral home after 2 p.m. tomorrow. He Is former manager of t h e Edgewood Country Club In Commerce, and apiemborofthe Walled Lake Post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Surviving are his wite Ghristine; a brother and a sister. . Two persons wen hospitalized following • two-car, head-on collision early Sunday on Auburn Road in Avon Township, dr W ■ dr Listed In fotr condition at St. Jo-eph Hospital today was one of too Rivero, David O, Devine, 26, of 2978 Gerald St, Rochester. A passenger In toe other ear, Verm May Sandusky, 87, e< 144 Strathmore St.; Pontiac, mi reported to be In satistaetaty po®-dition at tho hospital. Joe B; Ranson, 24, of 2448 Auburn Road, told sheriff’s deputies his car 'was stopped when struck by the oncoming dar. He wna treated at the hospital for minor injuries and released. Miss Sandusky suffered fractures of an. arm and leg. Devine ImfiotaUnjurlee. v E. Detroit Club Wins MSUO Chess Tourney The East Detroit Chess Club with 12 points won the first-place trophy Sunday at Michigan State University Oakland's first Invitational Chess Tournament. The session is scheduled to become an annual event: •'' J ", , Second place Went to toe PSD- . tiac Chess Chib, with 8te points. The Royal Oak .Chess Club also scored points bat was beaten by Pontiac in over-ell be if d play 8 to 8. Fourth was toe MSUO Chess Club, sponsor of the tourney, which scored 8 polntc. m • ~X;• ' r;,. ■ ry■ ./-■■■•—■— . THB poyfoac press, Monday, December 8,1902 ifl aiiii By PHIL NEWSOM UN ftewigu News Analyst Notes from tee foreign news ca* bles: . Declining optimism: President Kennedy warned Americans not to become oyeHy optimistic, over tee Soviet agreement to remove its missiles from Cuba. And other Western statesmen advised the Pollyannas not to work their hopes too high over a posslble change of heart by tee Kremlin after Cuba. - CubanCoup Changes Russ1 Little QUEEN MOTHER - Queen Mother Elizabeth of England, robed as a chancellor of London University, conferred honorary degrees at a Foundation Day ceremony at the university’s Senate House last week. tp sink in. Indications reaching Western capfc tais from M o scow in the wake of Nikita Khrushchev’s Cuban backdown show no inclination so far on the part of tee Soviets to nuke any note* NEWSOM worthy concessions. '• Hi Geneva, too, the Brash to date have remained as unyielding as^ever on disarmament and a nuclear test ban. Hie only noteworthy development at present is the absence of any real pressure for a Berlin settlement, and even on this one Moscow gently needled fhe West again last week to notes to Washington, London and Paris. Khrushchev still may be mat tog 9 his mind on the next phase of.thb eoM war and how it is to be prirsued. .But the optimists Who havfc predicted a new era of good will to Soviet diplomacy are beginning to be less optimistic. There are big crises to'the world such as those between India and China that get~all tee atten-tion, And teen teere are smaller ones generally ignored by the but important to those con cerned. _ » • inch is the contention be-i^WThritellipv^ofr pines ever North Borneo. This is .a complicated ^affair. Norte Borneo once belonged to the Sultan of Siilu, whose heirs ceded It to the British North Borneo Company, which after World War II ceded it to the British government. The British now plaii to have it incorporated into the nascent Federation of Malaysia. But not too long ago, the Philippines lodged a claim for the territory based on tee right of succession through the Sultan of Sulu. The result has been some bad feeling betweenMilayi and tee ■ As. a .consequence, Malaya’s Prime Minister Tengku Abdul Rahman is expected to'Skip the forthcoming ministerial meeting of^^8*ociiUion.xl^fiute§a8t _ Asia (ASA), the cultural and eco-nomic organization of the Philippines, Malaya and Thailand.« ft#y>'4;* * m ' Tentatively, this is scheduled to be held at the Philippine mountain resort city of Baguio to January. [But the strained relations between Manila , and Kuala Lumpur could torpedo this meeting and even damage the fabric of ASA Itself. FRENCH GOVERNMENT The word from Paris is that Erente/Prltaier Georges Pom-’s new government to be announced Dec. 6 Li unlikely to show any .startling changes. Key puts such as those , of foreign minister, interior and finance will be filled by tee Minister of Education, and Alain Peyrefitte probably will return to tee Information Job after three months as minister tor Algerian refugees. GUERRILLA WARRIORS A couple of months ago, heavy weather forced ,a strange rubber-boat flotilla into a remote corner of. Hong Kong. . • v Aboard were tf young Chinese men to top physical condition, expertly trained in guerrilla warfare and carrying a tall complement of portable fore a rebellious parliament toppled the government and forced President de Gaulle to go to the people for an overwhelming electoral victory: Minister of Information Christian Fouchet is likely to be named Their original destination had beta the coast of Red China, But for the unexpected storm, these Nationalist Chinese agents would have wreaked their havoc on the Communists and the world would have been none the wiser. UrH,Wane Missing in Congo; 4 Aboard STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)-A Swedish-manned U.N. transport . plane with four mendboard inn reported missing today to tin Congo. ■ ■ The Swedish defense staff said * tee two-engined C47 Dakota tnadft its last radio report at 4:31 p m. # Sunday, saying Ifwas flying at : 12,000 feet and bad tod tor about one hour . - . 5 , „ The plane was believed to be en route from Leopoldville to Al-bertville. ' The defwuNtv staff spokesman said there are several 'small aMps to tee totdn MuiQg the route hut some of them have . j noradiolinks. Farmland is being converted to other uses at the rate of about two million acres-per year... Soviet Delinquents Bring Chaos Keep 'Em Off the Farm MOSCOW (A — Life down on * the. collective farm Just hasn’t been the same since Soviet courts started Snipping Juvenile delinquents out of the big cities to work with the peasants. Exasperated Ukrainian Kd-khozniks (collective farmers) are tolling authorities to quit sending problems — they have enough ef their own. The conntry folks’ case against the government’! program for ‘ “re-educating” young idlers who won’t work was presented in tee Kiev “ravda ef tee “This is re-educating idlers?” the newspaper demanded in an article exposing the hljinks of the Sovtet dead-end kids among their country cousins. OK AT FIRST... It cited the Maks troy state farm near Donetsk. Valentin Donskoy, chairman of tee state farm, said he and his farmers got a shipment of idlers last year and, at first, everything "went all right, but soon things began getting “The wont of » te tee drunkenness,” he told in in- fer three or four days. They don’t ge. eat to work until they drink up everything-” Donskoy and his assistants decided to quit selling vodka to the state farm store That same evening, all the “special settlers” were drunk as usual. “It turned but the special set-tiers had hung one on with cheap eau de cologne.” ha explained. “The storekeeper couldn’t keep UR with the demand. He fulfilled his plan for the. safe of eau de cologne for tee next 10 years.” The article said the spirit of the INI law calling tor the exile of fallen and other undesirables was not being observed. ruefully said: “Our village people are saytogt ‘If tee city folks dea’t know hew to bring Pedaling Garment Chief Forced Into Hit Car NEW YORK (UPI) - David Du-binsky, 70, president of the international Ladies Garment Workers Union, will have to get around In his chauffeur • driven car for awhile. Dublnsky, who is fond of bicycling in Central Park, left his two-wheeler outside a Manhattan restaurant yesterday, rfnd alien he came out it was gone. The labor leader said he forgot to lock it., them up, then what ant we supposed to do7’ ” A district official told this talc of woe: “This was a nice, quiet village district. But Urn cities started cleaning out toeirjeum and dumping all the hoodlums onus. BOWL OF CHERRIES “This Is no life for idlers' but a bowl of cherries. All summer they live here on ready-made fodder — cucumbers, tomatoes, radishes, potatoes, carrots,, peas, peppers, cantaloupe, watermelon, apples ... (all scarce items in thd cities). “This is no place for them., They get their bread too easily here. “Not far from here, there are some stone quarries. It would be a good idea to send them there. Let them work — and if anybody doesn’t show up for work he won’t got a fig on payday. “That would be a real re-education.” The official said that of the 220 exiles shipped to his district a year ago, only about 100 remain. Most of the others, he said, “are being re-educated in prisons.” “Thirty-torse were sentenced for illegally leaving their settlements, 32 for hooliganism, the rest for tliievry and other crimes. A few are fugitives,’’ he added. Get a New Viewpoint about — CONTACT LENSES Miracles in plastic that can mean a new concept in a naturaI, becoming appearance. It is possibleTthat you may enjoy* a new freedom from glasses. A becoming, natural appearance ond the other advantages that minutely-sized contact (ensis can give. If you think you would like to wear contact lenses, your inquiries are invited. K. STEINMAN, O.D. 109 N. SAGINAW ST. Dully »t!0 A.M. »• 3:30 P.M. Friday tilO AM. Is l»»0 F.M. FE 2-2895 ED PAYMENTS AVAILABLE FRIGIDAIRE PRE-CHRISTMAS S/UE OF STURDY DEPENDABLE APPUANCES Your Best Deal Is a Frigidaire at Wayne Gaberts , - Your Dependable Servicing Dealer for 33 Years NO DOWN PAYMENT-2 YEARS TO PAY-90 DAYS SAME AS CASH NEW 1963 FRIGIDAIRE WASHER WITH 12-LB. TUB-2 SPEEDS-2 CYCLES FOR ALL FABRIC WASHINGI * FABULOUS FRIGIDAIRE FUUR RANGE LOOKS BUILT-IN BVT ISN’T! World's most boaoft-fui electric range wtifc glldu-up flllgroo. glass ovon door of -sryoiovuL Very Specially Priced for Christmas Selling. 90 DATS SAME AS CASH! LOWEST INTEREST RATES IN TOWN! Dofc 6th, HJ 9 Pit 121 NL SAGINAW ST. ■ / .. •_.v/ POsrfiAC press, Monday, December b, im Soviet Premier Ridicules Abstract Art day idjiht would be returned to the artists. And an exhibition of abstract art, due to open here Thursday, was canceled at the last minute without explanation. they were “daubed by the talHestabished. conditioiyTmaklng pos-and formalistic art of ; the hour-of a donkey/’’ ^ dWe an unprecedented burgeon- geois world.** ' Armed WIth fhis colorful raiti- N of arti*«c ,](Omishchevtte Urttote cism,too Conununist party news- the editorial hailed the toatgoodartshould“gto — A’' bomb blew this hole in the Berlin whll yesterday, shattering 200 windows in the area. The explosion occured at the burner of Harzerstrasse and Boucher-strasse along the wall between the American section aqd East Berlin, scene of many dramatic escapes. The sign to the background reads “Attention! You are leaving Vest Berlin.4’ Reds Quickly Brkk Up Opening Bomb Rips Hole in Berlin Wall BERLIN,(UP!) - A large homemade.bpmb blasted a 4-by-2-foot hole in fte Communist antirefugee wall yesterday and shattered some 200 windows in nearby fled to West Berlin during the night in full uniform, but unarmed. Police did not reveal the location of his escape. Communist and West Berlin police nished emergency squads to toe scene from both sides of the wall. But ho ether incident occurred and Communist repairmen quickly bricked up .the hole. The East German Defense MUyor Willy Brandt and West Berlin “nitres” for toe expie- Nenkoetoi District border of the Amerleaa sector ef the divided city. West Berlin police reported that a Communist border guard Invite Detroit Inventor to African Celebration DETROIT' (It—Detroit Inventor Joseph N. Blair has been Invited by Tanganyika President Julius Nyerare to attend toe African Republic’s independence celebration this month. rP «-B1 a l r, 08, who recently developed a system to buOd a five-room house in a day using two men, was invited to help Tanganyika provide low-coet housing for its citt- “youhg p old who.! West Berlin welfare officials lid today five Communist „ pioneers’’ 12 to 14 years whiffled to West Berlin Friday night “for toe fun of It” probably would be sent home this week. The boys live in nearby Potsdam and cut through three rows of barbed wire to reach West Ber- U.SjoOrbh Second TV Satellite porivntv kind OP INSURANCE FI 4-3535 104* Arm. DOUBLE B Top Valun C9 ■ STAMPS W 5 With Etch OSw ■ PurchtM Of rVmimnnmir , fl SQUIBB INSULIN ■ U40—NPH—PZ1— Ragular A OOi> WITH THIS ■ of oo* COUPON S Furtney Drugs! ■ 974 JOSLYN j SAM'S SHOE REPAIR MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER fFfr. Pontiac Slab Bank) WHlU YOU WAIT OR SHOP SERVICE PbOite 333-9289 Hourtl Mon.-Thura. 9 It I ’* , tMh Sat. 9-7 WASHINGTON (AP)-A Relay satellite will be launched next week from Cppe j pave the way fra n change of Ityt jU gram with Europe. ♦ it Relay , will follow in too footsteps of Telstar, used last summer for toe initial swap of television shows across the Atlantic. time, there’s a chance the exchange may be three-sided with the possible inclusion of South America. \ ♦ • w. X The planned launching was mentioned Sunday on a televised interview — “Ybiith Wants to Know”—by Newton N. Mlnow, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, and confirmed hy a spokesman for National Aeronautics and Space Administration. HIGHER ORBBIT rNASAOfffcttfrwM Delta misstie will be used and that Relay will travel in a somewhat higher orbit than Telstar. Leonard Jaffe, NASA project officer for Relay, said it is one of a number of communications satellites that will be tested in mt “Will live there.’’ WWW Although Telstar is still functioning, it became balky last week about taking orders from earth and refused to turn its communications receiver oli and off. Telstar was built by the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. Relay was developed by the government, with the Radio Corp. of America serving as the prime contractor. EXTRA GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS ... Fiwh Ground Beef J Ww md PoNkoaa of 1 Uo. or Mara 7 - ^ J Blue Ribbon Farms Beef Chuck Cuts Elna Regular or Drip Grind naversl to second excision pro- An Iowa State University study indicates that rural entrants fall far behind their urban counterparts on college entrance examinations but, once in college,, their grades do not differ greatly from those of urban students. Wf Scientifically and PROFESSIONALLY CLEAN AND Q*V REMOVE SPOTS ~~ VOORHEIS “1-HOUR" CLEANERS Walton st Siihahaw.Ill SUM* Swiss Steaks 2-89 . Tasty Ripe Elber^h Freestones ^PEACHES 5 99 i with Bacon ^ # T ; Campbell's Vegetable, Vegetarian, or Bean with Bacon Good Taste - Florida New Zipper-Skin Tangerines Eesy to Peel — Easy to Eat! 176 Size Doz. With f.g, Jjm&xJSmk. v Regular or Instant Puddings toJEU-O Waldorf Toilet Tissue — White or Colon With Coupon 19* 6 49“ 2 59* Grapefruit"SMS*Bift 3V Frozen Beef, Chicken or Turkey Banquet Dialled h«;SOc ipy Seeltest Cottage Cheese 39* SAVE 14* Large 30-ox. Ctn. < VALUABLE WRIQLEY COUPON Mel-O-Crust Sliced ' Hygrada——With Beans ‘Southern Seas White Meet CHILI TIMA FLAKIS . -- ~ & is* - mzxmiTmm trim offocthrwffcrovyh Teradey, Oeceeiber 4. We reserve fbe rfftoff fe limit fieetMis. , VALUABLE WRIOLlY COUPON JtSS, VALUABLE WRIOLKY COUPON «BSt, VALUABLE WHIOL1Y COUPON VALUABLE WRIOLEY COUPO^jM Ifo VALUABLE WRIQLEY COUPON^ JSov^eWHh ThlaCoupon 1 J Soya up to 26< With Thl* Coupon J JY Sovo lie WithThla Coupon FA EXTRA GOLD DU BILL STAMPS | With Thia Coupon ond PurchoM of 3-lb*, or Mora Fresh Ground Beef , ixplra. tahirday, Dacambar • Vienna Bread 19* 16-os. Loaf Sova 2£e With Thl* Coupon Taaty Mpa llbaito Freestone Peachee “ ®c2.99* eaapa* eaad Thru latw dm. a. Sov# I0e With Thli Coupon ’.ichka LmiH Hkkury Smakad Sliced Bacon V tffer.- Cw*M aNd Thru Oat., Dm. a. nut ona Cauuan far Cuitam. OaodTaata laltinei Cauuan oaao Thru Sat., Baa-1. HHlUWffl mmmms Anortadf lavor* Jello Puddings ester Cauuan Ooad Thru fat., Dm. f. LNnh DM Cauuan Far cu.tamai _ Wklto ar Color. Waldorf Tissue : 2JSIS9* i Cauuan eaad Thru Sah, dm. a. GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS SjAf : -^#fir^l * ^ *' *^r , ' tTHE PQNtlAC PltiSS, MONDAY. DECEMBER fr, 1962 ,, 6 ^~ ^X/^::"?^^-*v'-. ■**%-V THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. - land Contracts rnnfSL HNti ___■ PINCHE Man’*, '=se=M!^-'®-~ - eioauar. uucen on oonsisn. Bmall furniture. 4340 Dhtto Upetatra, Drayton Pinto*. 1: trtBunlnfa end bwthlng, frw pic* atttfsawrsas JPP1ES. t WEEKS OLD. AKC REGISTERED. MY 1-3810. REQ- A PUPPIES, URCHIR8TM/.„ 5:15 p.m. weekdays nnd ton. SM-r" wif pjn.. nil dny Snt. —™- PUPS. SM Ali. pjyoi —until Chrletmns. Cllppl L OR 3-Sdll. • ■ ggs _ H.1PP1NO — PUPPIES— nenrlce. UL mil. OjRMAM SHEPARD &a RAUlO AND APPLIANCE 4*T LWLT8S liLiffriucTSi your P." jpFA. ^ ^n,., .ikg ntw. chrtn. i Wo8—WlStit iEinarcb eleIBBuc Ranob. • iinish. m3, ol {to^r|rnn0TO.,wj_ffl igI formica Heal ' Chrtolrons Sto, OR ... • ^^STJSVt. e rooms op .MAGNAVOX TV m wa > • ^Tiinh tm nsianu puppiEi aid. will hold Until Chris' 3-0308. ' . "kittens. DACHsttUliD PE 3-MIS._____________ pERRIBR-POX TERRIER selection (or Chrlst-irrlcs. Vernon Hutch. . „»dl«- *- 'J------ T-2T10. L ORC3-501Q. » Hndley' Rd, Orlonvllle. Ho BALANCE DU* or SM.SS ON' Por lurfiief informntlon. I .uta. r.i< Zik Hrwlne i r“ r handled at Q wi or CPU be hpndli oothly CoS credit ma ywme Centers Mr oi V MWT- town prtodsr. SM.M. a i PROMJtAP MAHQQ-; FE 2-8181 ; SSS; i ■imagft'ft oths-c . 7:30 P.M. WED ]&S%?»n%<69".r TAucnuN sales' & SL . I M OLD MARE SHETLAND- w:n die s»d hri&. MMtll, t 5u» WELCH OELDINft.* as tout brawn with Plaxen p oh if tiews.w months , cr < run _____i itoP bar. Ml P. Cash Lc $6ooto$: Voss Buckn m*WM T OIL FURNACE. &M! It's that easy to get your pd in the paper. Try it today ...for extra ■vgEjqaa Christmas money < * .sell toys, appliances, sports ““^*r equipment, cars. Remember Off. Slate top. CtO. FM 4# WGWNiU S MM M^jp^ ! ICE* SKjKrs’sLElb^TOSi • ACS5M^1CT. CRUI« OUT BOAT p l>*11*--’*. _ "|tod»y« S OR on, id with duct Veoa JElAicTRIC OUITAR AWb USED ORGANS KB %*vS jioTHarj dDursiniiwiu«an*Hwi---------- Ed. W M oST»1-Hurc sa|Btdnyi.jrlwvPIOl?. |*T£_1 Ortonem NA T-JHS. Tour__4ann . EBwfcsws: Wanted Cae^ftWli W ■ Averills > ' m usrieoMM' . M&M MOTOR SALES Ellsworth AUTOSALK Ocan Use p. m. About 125 musicians will participate. Climaxing this, annual parade of concerts is the Community Christmas Concert, Dec. It, 3p. m. at PCHS. In addition to combined vo- Four festival-styled programs are'planned throughout the month by the music department pf Pontiac public schools. / A holiday concert is set for Wednesday at Pontiac Cental Hi#! School’s gymna- On Dec. 11, a second band concert will include seasonal as well as standard pieces in the Pontiac Northern High School auditorium, 7:30 p. m. Participating bands and their conductors are Pontiac Lincoln Junior High School, Earl Somerville; and Madison Junior High School, Roger Welton. The All-City Instrumental String Orchestra and All-City DEAR SISTER: Leave him alone. He’s normal. He’ll discover “girls” soon enough — or some “jane” will discover Feathery Holiday Widow Told I think it’s Willy Jut a wife to by to What’s on your mind? For a personal reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, The Pontiac Press. tain close friends, neighbors and members of her church guild at an informal Christmas get-together Thursday evahing Dec, 13. Mrs. Bran-nack is president of Guild Six of All Sainta Episcopal Church. Some 36 guests will gather around the organ for Richard Morse will conduct Feathers win float through the air at holiday parties this year. Ostrich, coque and marabou feathers in form of boas, capes and stole*, are all inspired by that “Marien-bad” film. School band. Eastern, Jefferson and Washington Junior High School bands will also-play, directed by their respective conductors, Robert Wolters, Fred Smith and .Gerald Irish. to Beware of Scandal two Pontiac high schools, the Pontiac Women’s Chorus, directed by George Scott, and the MacDowell Male Chorus, directed by A. Michael Dempsey, wiU participate. The All-City Advanced Youth Orchestra will accompany the 850-voice chorus and the audience in Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus. Former For Abby’s booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding,” send 50 cents to Abhy, the Pontiac Press. By The Emily Post Institote Q: I have a friend who is a. widow in the late 40s. She owns her own house in a fine residential area in this com- 25th Anniversary Show munityand ir highly vespect- partment’s choirs and glee clubs are issued a special invitation to again join in this final selection. AU of the concerts are open to the pubUc free of charge. At the band and. orchestra programs, a free-will offering will be taken for the In-teriochen Music Fund. Garden Club to Ring‘Silver Bells Jazz Group to Perform at MSUO in .charge of Mrs. Alvin H. Knorr. Examples of work done by the children at Pontiac State Hospital will be shown by Mrs.' J. Reed Alexander, Carmen Adams, Mrs. Edward S a m m u t, Mrs. F. F. Maish and’Mrs. C. A. Ross comprise the Invitational dec-orations committee. Mrs. Claude WeUes Jr. will do the staged Some people still believe Commemorating its 25th an-that just because they foolish- niversary, i h e Birmingham ]y got. themselves tatooed Branch of the Woman’s Na- whan they were out on a spree tional Farm and Garden Aa- one night thqr have to live sociation has entitled this with the tattoos forever. year’s Christmas show “Sll- I know a follow who applied ver Bells.” for the State Police and had Mrs. Chester Wisniewski, to hive two propellers re- chairman, and h6r committee moved from a very embar- have chosen titles of p a s t rawing part of- his anatomy years’ schedules for this sea- before he could pasrthephyti- son’s show, to be staged caL Wednesday pnd Thursday in ANM.D. Birmingham Gommu- ♦ A ,nity House. « DEAR ABBY: My daughter Indoor and outdoor wreaths had a child out of wedlock and hanging arrangements, when shs was 18. under the caption “And Once She merited shortly after- A g a i n Christmas," will inwards and her husband adopt- elude shadow-box composted the boy. At lithe boy joined tlons. Mrs. William McCalium the Air Fofrce.Be was never fo in charge of this class and told that ha was Illegitimate. * special group, “This Is Foc Everybody knows but him. the Birds.” I told my daughter to write Angels or a Madonna will the chaplain and have him tell highlight a class called “The the boy. He la a man now and Angels Sing,” title of the 1058 should be told. My daughter show. Mrs. Henry J. Gilmar- refused, and even forbade me tin is ^airman to write to my Own grandson “ifc shinlag Hours of tor fear I might slip and teU Christmas" featuring compo-him. . ■ altions of pewter, brass, sll* She has robbed hint of ver. glass or china has been his greatest Joy .. -to write assigned to Mrs. Donald Ir- to his Granny.'Wn have al* ^ . j 1 A class “Merry, Marry say the bey should be twd. I Christmas’’ challenges all think my daughter is afraid her son will find out she was no angel. What ia your opinion? ' ■ , ■ • « Mrs. Harry 0. Hoyt Jr. is hospitality chairman, with Mrs. Leon E. Jackman appointing hostesses. * ★ f.. Area senior citizens are invited to attend the show and tea on Thursday afternoon. Tito event is open to the public from 3 to 9 p.m. Wednesday and from 11 a.m. until 9 p.m., Thursday. Alpha Chi Opega Alumnae, North Woodward Suburban Chapter, will prepare Christmas gifts for children at the Plymouth State Home and Training School in NqrthvUle durtog tiie Dec. 11 meeting in theBIoomfield Village home of Mrs. FTed A Henny of Bradway Boulevard to begin at 8 jf.m. Members have'been asked to bring mittens, hats and scarves and the chapter is buying a aled for the youngsters! Mrs. William I. Denman Jr. is chairman of the refresb- Crockett, Mrs. Joseph Kinney Mid Mrs. Robert J. Stuart will Plan Bazaar for Charity The Woman's Auxiliary to the Oakland County Medical Society will bold its annual ' Christmas bazaar-Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Ralph Margulls. '' ' Chairman forth* affair Is Mira. Harold Aube, who wiU be assisted by Mrs. William Wangner, Mrs. Arnold Brown, and Mrs. John Flick. Proceeds from the‘ haASr will be donated to the Michigan Diabetes Association. a Christmas cgfd, with Mrs. George W. Tischer handling entries. Compositions with child appeal entitled “Christmas All Through the House” will be accepted by Mrs. Francis P. McGuire. ^ Mrs. William B. Graben-dlke’s class “Merrily, Merrily Ring the Bells” wiU honor the Tickets for the performance are free to MSUO students and to holders of too-ture-eoftcert season tickets. Other orders will be taken by phone or mail through the ticket office, MSUO fit Roch- DEAR GRANN Y: It appears to me that you’ve never forgiven your daughter and would ||ke to punish her through her sonf. My adviqe is to stay out of your daughter's personal relation* with fries will be approved by Mrs. Robert E. Fowler and Mrs. Horace T. BretteUe. Mrs. S^J. Skaistls Is chairman of the junior class “Nltfit Before Christmas” showing tree ornaments created and Selecting place mats made by children at Pontiac State Hospital far their 25th annual Christmsu j Show Wednesday and Thursday at the Birmingham Community House, are members of the Birmingham Bronchi Woman's National Farm and Garden Association (from left) Mrs. lames A. Hunter, horticulture chairman and Mrs. Chester Wisniewski, show chairman, both of Birmingham. Mrs. J. Reed Alexander of Bloomfield Hills is chairman of the group's horticultural therapy pro? gram at the hospital * Favorite Carol . NEW YORK - The late Eleanor Roosevelt, in her last published c o 1 u m n revealed that her favorite Christmas Carol was “SUent Right” J w THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. DECEMBER 3,1962 Polly's Pointers ^ ’;| ?•.... • Use a Boorcf DEAR POLLY—When Lhave pur families oVer for dinner, Lftnd that my small dining table will not accommodate the necessary things for table' setting'phis the meat and vegetables, to say nothing of a centerpiece. ' So, the last time I had a group, ! bought'a large colorful tablecloth and draped It over my opened ironing board and used it as a buffet serving table. . The ironing board will hold most of the food and then an attractive table setting is not spoiled. MRsTlt. M. C., DEXR POLLY-lf you do riot have a place to store table place mats so they are flat and smooth, buy g dip board (the hind fpund in offira supply itore*),"It makes a dandy boWSLuClipoa foe mats and then hang the board in a closet or cupboard. ' 'sv-- -&.W* , PjjEAR POLLY — Old you know that there Is exactly enough material used on the back of a chair to reupholster the arms? A favorite chair of ours became frayed on the arms (the first place to show wear). My husband get foe idea of using the like new material on foe back (which we replaced with material of almost foe same color) — m astasrs isdfaaia «jUt*p*yt A. Several thing* mu* be c Anyone, child Or adult, who. has a admire should be examisad.by a physIdsB. If SO specific causa for the seizure can be uncovered, moat doctors assume th*t the patient has “epilepsy." A Bald-more specialist recommend* that the single-seizure child be given appropriate medication for » period of four years. Medication is then tapered off over a period of opt or two yaary. This treatment 4s utilized to prevent possible recurrence and to help overcome the fear of a second seizure. In mapy cases, treatment beyond suck a period is not necessary. The diagnosis of epilepsy I* not considered in a young child who haa a abort, seizure with high temperature. Single febrile seizures of this sort usually do not Moor after four or live yean of Wo knve JUt owe seller-—te provide druge sf tbe blgbsst PERRY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS m last llvd. .#♦ Perry y 111-7152; 1211 Baldwin at CalSmbla iy-7057 Oo-Si-Do at Dance "Club, sponsored by the Pon-r tiac Department of Parks and Recreation, held a dance Saturday -at foe Hawthorne School. .. ■ , ■ Guests included Mr. and Mrs. Lou Steib, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Domas, *Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Zachar, Kelly Mc-Clanahan, Carolyn Huffman, Mr. and Mrs. Merwin Kintz Snd Mr. and Mrs. Edward Chandler. 5Hi—p- The annual New Year’s dance will be held at the Waterford Community Center. Tickets and information may be obtained from Mrs. Robert Newffl. Myc Kenneth R. Wright, Elizabeth ? Road (center) watches as Rev?and , Everett Dell look over a guest bopfU The occasion was a reception in their honor Sunday afternoon at Pontiac Unity Center. Rev. Dell is the new minister of the church on North Genesee Avenue. New Minister Honored Sunday at Women of Unity Reception W o tp e n of* Unity honored their new minister and his wife, Rev: and Mrs: Everett Dell, at a reception .Sunday afternoon in toe church on North Genesee Avenue. . 'Joing the Dells in the receiv- To Host Meeting ing line were Alice Kimball, chairman, of the board, Gordon Gray and LeRoy Trafton. Mrs. George Bodell, Mrs. S. J. Filkins, Mrs. R. Elliott Thorpe and Mrs. Ernest Vi-veros took turns presiding at' the tea table. Mrs. Kenneth Wright was general chairman for the aft- . ernoon. Working with her were Mrs. Gordon Moats, Mrs. Thorpe and Mrs. Mary Wagner. Other conjmittee members were Talmee Surola, Mrs. -Harry Kreher, Mrs. Ray STAPP'S.. . shop tonight for . , . II Foamtread* Slippers Gift Slippers that bring laughter, happiness, comfort and Christmas. Bays' or Girls' Low Cut Corduroy In Red, Blue, Black, Yellow, Pink, White. Size* 8 Infants' Corduroy Front tip for quick Hn. Color figured detign on solid blue, pink, yellow or white lined , hi-top. Size* 4 to 8. 2" Cowboy or Cowgirl Werm • corduroy with e bolstered pistol design on the side. Red or black boot style. Sizes 3” *3 i Big Boys' or Young Men rLOw-CUt, oxford styled in colorful plain or striped corduroy. R#d, black. Sins, smell. 3 to JAPP'S (Opan Frl. te t , Mon. to S:JO) g>. JUNIOR SHOES , IM W. Huron St I>l«*r.ph It* (Oprn Frl. to S t Set; to l;MI in Rochester JUNIOR SHOES 411 IT. Main St. Rochaatrr (Optn Fit. to St Raab and the Elmer .R. Hut-, sons.' Guests were present! r o m Algonac, Detroit, Birmingham and Royal Oak. Perked^VVqshes In France, instead of the familiar wash tub and a bar of soap, housewives have traditionally boiled clothing in large cylindrical pots which operate on the same principle as the coffee percolator. FREE GIFT BOXE8 5.98 to 12.98 JEWELRY f rom $1 Special Selling WALLETS ... prom $1 SWEATERS HANDBAGS ... to 9.98 JIB* hr ll.lt Orion*. wooia. fur blonai, s!fp«o«i ond Cardigan* :5.99 BOUTIQUES Excellent Ideas for Small Gift Exchange, from $1 QOQETTE §H KLNr-SAGINAW ST. FREE PACKING DOWNTOWN LAYAWAY GIFT SELECTIONS Charge Accounts Invited press: mostday, December a, m Adviser to Talk to Council of Girls Group Elma J. Stuckman of the national field staff for Camp Fire Girls, Inc., will be in Pontiac today thro u g h Wednesday, it was announced by local "council President Richard Jarvis. . ★ ■ ★ - ★ ' Mis s Stuckman advises qpuhcdis ip Illinois, IPdltiilik, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and West Virginia While in Pontiac, ,14 Mrs Stuckman wiU^confer with the Pontiac council board-of di* rectors,- committee chairmen and staff orr the councd’a operation and its plans Mr serving groups in die coming year. . * * ' . /; . The local council of the Camp Fire. Girls, Inc., ia a member * agency of the Pop-, tiac Area. United Fund. die Alabama Extension Serving suggested. Place new f t ockln g s in a refrigerator tray and coyer with co 1 d water. Freeze until solid, then thaw to room temperature- You Can’t Recover Time away. But, for a dressmaker, it could lie professionally stimulating and enlightening.” Miss Theboni had completed her music studies in the incredible space of three* years when she to whether; they are using time or “I’d never have been able to it just passing it. ■■ do It without concentrated use of % For ittrtince. U« ».H» h«r . ates between friendship and mere ,1ZE ... wd-sociability But if it'nadnt, if Id found t a ‘passtwv ttmf ’ ' dWn’‘ have ® vo,ce °r coaldn’ [n>t passing thus learn a foreign language .or hai j_ She said: -“To spend an evening no gift for acting, at least I wouli As with people who really don't, in- not have had to think that the res on- terest me, Just to pass the time, is son for my failure was because ive my idea of a real waste, There’s had Wasted time which I shout jys nothing wrong With it but for me have spent in effort.” If! * it makes no sense, tor a novelist She continued: “Time is the elt me »t might very well furnish him ment in which we exist, as wate ;oi- with material and come under the is the element in which a swirame Inc headbig-or research. swims or air is the element i ize. “For me, browsing through nyhjph birds fly. Whatever *0 U to department stores and shops. ..... MATERNITIES • UNIFORMS MU AC Li MtlE IHOPHNO CfcNTft • n d>sw lyiwtiOes. nmn wins - SPECIAL Mon. Tues., Wed. Only! PERMANENTS • Haircut • Cream Rinse • cream Shampoo $050 • Hair Styling ^ , mQ »„ HEALOIL BEAUTY SHOP 71 ft N. Saginaw- accomplish them in the unknown apiount of time given us. " 1 JACOBSEN'S ... if FESTIVAL of -CANDLES Let the glow from a Christmas Candle reflect the warmth and hospitality of your home. \\ •!♦*»* rat ^ ’ IT r* s X Ifc? 4 - gfc ' , ({ * M . r Half the' fun of giving is in the'choosing and .Jacobsen's, offer the LARGEST CANDLE CHOICE OF ALL! Rich in traditional beauty lor Chrlstmast a. 8-Lite allm~top*r candelabra, can stand, or hang. Durable metal, e. Golden Tree Holder adorned wtth vplvet Christmas ribbon. Six holds holly or mistletoe! Comes red cups lillod with scented wax. in white or green with red candles. b. Long burning red or green Gibwing Glass Pillqr of wax, has flexible metallic lantern stripping^ An eldgant centerpiece or stand. !:ioM c. Pine scented colorful wax ,fills r a glass cocktail pitcher. Sparkling ^50 f. Choice of five colors in tear drop glob* of candle wax, completely incased in net. 7". size „ 5" Size . . .. »1 with holiday glitter . d. Snowball Candle, frosted In white. Burns with a red glow. 1 5" Size ... $P g. The TwiW... Isa glowing candle ’ covered In glitter. Your choice of white, fed or peacock. 12" size ££ 8" Size....$2........ r h. Christmas Goblet of Bayberry —scented wax. Fills the room with 4n5Q the smell of Christmas. 7" high ... /. CAPRI CANDLES CHEER Jolly 01' Saint Nick perches on a Mound of holly wfth berries. the red caprl - j/ holder Is filled wifh wax " $495 that burn| for hours. § FLOWERS 'TWO STORES TO SERVE,YOU Pontiac FE 3-7165 Lake Orion MY'2-2681 Dwars by Wjr* Throughout th» Wofl«l‘ » -N. SaglnaArSn and Mm E. Curtis Matthews, Bloomfield— ft ills, were photographed aboard lAmerican President Lines SS President Wilson just before the ship’s recent departure from Son Francisco for the Orient, they ate *en route to Honolulu on the luxury liner. The President Wilsonjcalls at Honolulu, Yokohama, Hong Kong* Manila, Hong Kong (second call), Kobe and Yokohama .(second'call) before returning, to Spn Francisco via Hawaii.- Spain's Children Incredibly Cledn Spain has the most Incredibly clean, well dressed* children you could meet, No doubt— a tribute to the deep love t Spaniards have for children. . As Pritchett^ays of the Span*, ish woman, f.. .“She has marriage and eight children in her eyes” ,. which makes for a large, laundry bill in any country”7 ■ —----•--------------------%--- Husband Platonic Wife Causes Drinking By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE N-4M; Terry T., aged 42, was a leading insurance sales manager. “But, Dr. Crane.” bis lovely wife protested tear-ifiilly, “Terry is now going downhill rapidly. “For he la almost drinking himself to death. “And it has been going on for ley-, eral years. He refuses to admit he is*' whipped by John Barleycorn. “He will DR. CRANE not even consent to seeking the aid of Alcoholic* Anonymous. WARNED TWICE “But he has been warned twice by his firm and now he has beefi told that if he ever comes to the office even once more in an tor toxicated condition, he will-be discharged permanently. „ • “Yet Terry used to be such a wonderful husband and father. So what can I possibly do to help him? Last night he told me it is either whisky or suicide.” . In .modern psychiatry we-regard alcoholism as somewhat like the fire escape from a burning building. Liquor addicts thus resort to whisky as an escape mechanism by which they try to flee from an inner torment (emotional burning) due to humiliation, shame, fear or prolonged quilt. By use of certain drugs we medics can make the addict so nauseated whenever CADILLAC HEARING AID . COMPANY at PONTIAC Announces for ChrUtmas Solo Only! ||h«w'175 how *255 3imC* NOW m l« 1 MEDALLION KYI-GLASS AID • 1 CONTININTAL STYLI r~~ EYE-GLASS AID 9339 • 1 BEHINDEARAID Small kef Powerful • 1 BEHIND-EAR-AID Full JtaaffO Sound rag. prieo «M NOW All Aids New and Fully Guaranteed 17 West Lawrence St. fi .1-2733 -All Permane he touches whisky that he ’can’t stand his liquor. MUST ODELL ‘FIRES’ But unless we first put out the inner emotional “fires"-from which he is trying to flee, he jnay then.resort to some other escape device, such as the drug habit or insanity or even suicide; as Terry threatens to do. “Yes, DF. Cragi,’’ Terry’s wife admitted,” “but what emdd Ttrry be affaid ef? “He, has always been a big, strong man and very successful In sales work. So why should he wish to flee into alcoholism?” Wives, your sins of omission in the bedroom often drive men into chronic drunkenness. And that’s exactly what was wrong with Terry, For he began to grow platonlsf several years earlier, although his wife neither realized this fact nor noticed it, for moat' wives are relatively frigid, anyway, as measured by the usual masculine standard. In his terror lest his wife realize his failure, and also to gain a little relief from his constant dread that he would become totally Impotent, Tferry resorted to the bottle. COMFilTK WITH CUT AND SIT NONE HIGHER Shimpoo and S*t $1.95 Expert licensed operators to give* you an easy-to manage hqircut, long lasting permanent and becoming hairstyle. No appointment necessary, permanent complete In two houre. iZ, \ HOLLYWOOD beauty Shoe Q|nm mWr|i it I A. M. .. f> . ,1 ' ■> '-'? 'v ' j 78 N. Saginaw pvar .leeley MkK 333-9660 % WORRY CHIEF CAUSE Indeed, most' men when . they pass the age of 40 grow more or less platonic, chiet-ly because Hi worry Itself. For'“worry” Ts a cerebral or brain action, whereas sexual passion Is emotional. ’ You cannot “cerebrate” and likewise “emote” very long before one or the other of those* processes dwindles. So as soon as a man begins to worry about weakening ardor, it wanes far more. Most impotence to men is- PURELY psychological. And a lot of testosterone shots produce their effects mainly because of the BELIEF of the patidnt in the doctor, rather than because of the hormone effect. WHY THEY 8TART Since platonic husbands subconsciously-decide that if they get hall drunk, their wives will . fret about their liquor habit and torget to notice their waning erotic ardor, Millions of fearful husbands start guzzling whlsky. . And you wive* can prevent ’ such alcoholism by reviving their sexual ability, so send for the booklet “How to Prevent Platonic Hushanda,” enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents. inOjMMnphlBl*. (Copyright, 19*2) Alw»y« writ* (0 Dr. 0«or|* W. CrtAt ,.I CEE# ol Th* PonllBn Pr«n, PontlBc, Mlchliitn. anolotlni * long 4 cent s • “-“.-*^ --ivBlop* knS |»J printing MMUjy •tgmpad, iglt-gddmMd anniop* nm| M,c centi ta oovgr typing and printing omijjv whan you .land tor hla nByohoiogiuM V Foil Will Cut Ironing Time Placing a 8ho#t of aluminum foil between the ironing board pad and cover will speed your work and give the job a crisp touch. ' . - tint voyfisc iwtMs;Mmtei¥. fttctMsieit i Cdlls on Women to Fight Against t, 'j fm , U m t ' ‘ . ■- . . *2 N. SAGINAW By GAY PAULEY ^ UPI Women’s Editor TOKYO ~ n* hands that rock the cradle should join into a potent force to prevent nuclear war, lays Japan’s only woman cabinet minister. Min Tsuruyo Hondo, minister of state, member of parliament and chairman of Japan’s Atomic Energy Commission, sent this message to the “women of the World” during an interview. . “You ask What I think la women’s role in working for peace . . I would say, lei, us unite and stand up against their development and use tor -any-warpuipOse42»^r^tr^ “Women are thschildbear-oro,” said toe tiny, 81-year-old member of toe cabinet. “Ilmr are instinctively against destructive fored. “Here the wdrld is at a stage when man Is about to reach toe moon, Venus, perhaps otb^ er planets. Let us direct W~ scientific research toward the happiness of manklndrNot hls destruction. . "Yes, I’m optimistic about toe chancel for peace... The Cuban settlement is most encouraging.^ i HEADS SCIENCE AGENCY Miss Hondo was trained Os a "home economist, but part of her job as well as directing - ABC, to Jo toendf up the science and technology Sjgency. . She candidly admitted, as we spoke through an interpreter, that when she was appointed to the cabinet more than four months ago “they made "p ease out of me.” There was strong criticism in the Japanese press against the appointment by Prime Minister Ha--yato ikeda. Japan, she sajd, is concentrating on research for peace-: ful use of atomic power — especially in the medical, thermal, and fgrieulihiratfMfrdi: However, toe government is developing one of the world’s advanced .rockets, and plans for a nuclear ship are in-toe “There is no Question but what nuclear research should go on,” she. said. But she stressed its peaceful'aipects. “Here in Japan, we"have" much fear of what a nuclear arms race can mean . . . Ja- NEW LOCATION (Carl Wilien Is happy ta serve yaw at 914 w. { WILSON'S , Sfco* Repair XictfuC % 5V Pnotographor, 518 W. Huron' Street Near General Hospital FE 4*3669 CAREER GIRL ‘Oj—toiBwwnagpjW. Permanents Tinting and Bleaching MURRAY SISTERS Beauty Studio Spinster Dinner Honors Pontiac Bride-Elect Camille Maclnnis .of Dallas, Tex., honored Katherine Alice Hayes of I- Jesse Guilford, National Amateur golf champion in 1921, died Saturday flight at the age of 68. Guilford was the first amateur ever' to win the Massachusetts Open, capturing the title In 1919. He also was a three-time winner of the Massachusetts Amateur champonship. , There’s Still lime To Moko Yo*r Own STORM WINDOWS AT YOUR LOCAL DEALER Held in Death Local bird lovers who found the 1 ,W,M "1 M birds in Ishikawa Prefecture appealed for help. The Japanese air force and the All-Nippon Airways are flying the birds to Tokyo. Then they’ll ride a train to Lake Hamawa, in southwestern Japan, a winter haven for swallows. Mrs. Romney Looking . Lansing Home LANSING (UPI)-The start of the new year may find Gov.-elect and Mrs- George Romney living in Lansing. * ★ # Richard L Milliman, the Re-puljlican politician’s press aide, said last night, “Mrs. Romney has looked it some houses in the Lans-ing area. I’m quite sure they'!’ find some sort of accommpdaUon here.f<'» Milliman said the Romneys had as* decided whether they weald Odea a house or an apartment. Originally, Milliman said, Romney thought the coupte might take an apartment in Kellogg Center, the Michigan State University operated h o t e 1 in East Landing. Problems developed,ho waver, and thfe plan was discarded, Mil- CAPE TOWN, South Africa (UPI) -- A total of 650 natives have been1 charged with the murder of two white children during the Paarl riots last month, it was announced today. Five natives also were killed during the riots. No whites have been eharged in their deaths, The original government report of the riots said 100 Africans marched On the Paarl police . station, the action which .started the fighting. Later it said tfiefigure^ T ” Four hundred Africans met here yesterday to pass a resolution against violence, but reserving the right of defense if attacked. Armed policy surrounded the crowd, which jeered the officers, but there were no incidents. Bomb Sot Off In Spain SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain (AP)-A small bomb exploded Sunday night In an alley between two buildings housing the provincial military goverrupent and the local branch of the Finahce Ministry, No one was hurt, put a number of windows were broken. Paper Strike Talks Set in Cleveland CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) Meetings were schedyled today between Cleveland’s two strikebound daily newspapers and two pi an effort to reach a settlement on new contracts. Federal mediator Gilbert J. Sel-din was to meet with negotiators for the jnoraing Plain Dealer, the aftefndon Press.and News and the Cleveland Newspaper Guild in the, morning. A meeting with repre-sentatives of the newspapers and Teamsters Union Local 473 was scheduled for afternoon. Neither paper has published since last Thursday night, when the Teamsters local, which represents 466 delivery truck drivers, began picketing. The drivers’ old contract expired Nov. 15. ONE-STOP home improvement SERVICE!... [.-Np-ivtitf to worry dbaift fro bothersome. materials, built-lni, et even financing . ; . not when Poole's offers ONI-STOP-SKRVICI that lets you sit back and relax in easy comfort while we finish, your bathroom, f kitchen, "rec, room" or addition. FOB FREE ESTIMATES os AMT HOME IMPROVEMENT I Call the BILL DING NUMBER FE 4-1594 EtUmtotl Financing! Planning! Contracting! ON ANY HOME MODERNIZATION NEED HTCHMS—ADDITIONS—POBCHIS*—PATIOS. ATTICS—BATHROOMS—SIC. ROOMS OPEN MONDAY. FRIDAY I A. M.~'H1 5:30 P.M 'i$ SAtCBOAT i.« Am. 'si am' I ONE-STOP SHOPPING CENTER PAY MORE? WHAT FOR? SAVE ALL-WAYS at WKC! _ lumber & _ Sg- HARP.WARg - ^| WKC’S OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 9—FREE PARKING Utt&i THE PQfljflSlAC PRESS, MONDAY. PEflEMBER 3, 1962 / THE PONTIAC PRESS ■■mam PliP; ''M® ^SjpES^yE^T vjSPi 1 >>...* V ‘ - , THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER & 1063 ■ W,'[rifk. %r JwPT TfaB PONTIAC PRESS, ^MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1968 Biwimntwiiiiwwii : m 34 YRS. IN THE BICYCLE BUSINESS ! DISHMASTER4 Holds in Famous SCHWINN OPEN FRIDAY NITES 'till PARK FREE in Our Let at the Rear SCARLETT'S BICYCLE 1 HOBBY CROP 20 E. Lawrence St. POSTIM FE 3- HOD’S of PONTIAC Open *til 9 p. 770 Orchard Lake Rd. JhalWsass* PONTIAC HEAMUARIERS 3 ROOM Up to 260 Sq: Ft. Deluxe Hand Carved FULL CUCKOO CLOCKS GUI TODAY! ' / You Always Save at— / CASS/ i FOR CONTRACTORS AND HOMECRAFTSMEN K H.Po ROUTER POOLE HARDWARE CO. 151 OAKLAND AVE. -FI4-1394 1 N. Saginaw St. H 4-1889 1 IV Perfect Gift j Back It Goes to Its Regular $14.95 Price After Jan. 1 st Boys' SCHOOL JACKETS it’s a M GAS DRYER FEATURE FOR FEATURE 1M» ... you'll agroothw'.moro J*j*[ In a Hamilton. For com- plotoly automatic washdays ask to son the now matching Hamilton Auto-mqtic Washsr. own § (fryer for onfy S.C. ROGERS T.I.phon. 333-7812 HARDWARE Handy Home for a Telephone! AS ADVERTISED IN HOUSE & GARDEN REDMOND’S Jewelern-Optometrist * 81 North Saginaw St. FE 241612 • FI 5-8174 mmmmmmmjnuKmmmmmwmHmmMmmwwwnn p^^^^^oiyaoaaiMiiaaMOOOOManiO^ CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY SALES um SERVICE GIVE A Tip Quality HOFFMAN TURKEY OR HAM for Christmas \ Yooll Long Be Remem be re< far Giving a Delicious HOFFMAN THAT! a practical gift * *. THE WHOLE FAMILY WILL ENJOYI ★ TOPQUALITY ★ LOWEST PRICES HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS mu. Piny Sts JKt4tU0 Follow World Events WMi This Qualify GLOBE! Ing world affairs them b no finer gift. Solid cherry bass U’P' m* t& ■ 41 gWjfpi ■ swivel globs. $9Q50 OPEN EVERY EVENING r Uth LOOK AGAIN! ffb Stainless! PATTERN , SOLID STAINLI Lovsly New Ssrvb»for4 •16®® *m MIRACLE MILE Shopping Center HARDWARE ~nd' E 8-9618 i.»wwwwiwnwsrst«w«stam«mHW(aiWMiK MMMMMHHMH—MMMMM——M MM— The Practical Christmas Sift 1 | hew SAVE s25 CHAIM SAWS WORLD'S FINEST to 9 P.M. IRMSTO SUIT —0P1 No Need to Shop Around — See Them All at LEE’S LAWN ft GARDEN CENTER ROYAL Safari PORTABLE MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM| RCA RADIO STEREO SPECIAL! “WHERE” you buy it PONTIAC TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 11'South Ibis Machine H*adquarter$ FE 4-4022 TOTAL SOUND the whole fomty. *189 FRAYE 589 Orchard Lk. Ave. FI4-9S26 ■BMUpist—UMMMiMBiMMMMMMWMMMMI TRADE FAIR'S CHRISTMAS DISCOUNT EUREKA “Princess” VACUUM CLEANER With All Attachments til Tnub Fair's LOW, LOW Disooraf PRICE TRUE FAIR DISCOUNT CENTER 1108 West Huron St. Uj«i Util - Sunday IftiU Come In and See 5-MODEL RACE CAR SETS DEMONSTRATED ' • We Sendee .Our Sett - ‘ -/-r^ r* J • No Sanding Sack to the Factory f II HOLDS AMY UY-AWAf /" PARK FREE lb CHir Lot at the Rear SCARLETT’S BICYCLE ft HOBBY SHOP 120 I. law"*"* St, PONTIAC . " "T-^ ;TV T Fl^TK* WnWOTOWOKI .'Tht flora With fht Rtd Door-Open Friday 111 9 GENTRY Colonial House *1S. Main, Olaritston Plenty of Frtt Parkin* - FE 8-2362 euVa^i THE POXfaAC PRESS,-MONDAY. DECEMBER 8. m«2 awnuouniH ■MMMMMMcnoncanraMj EVERY NIGHT mee Peralta obHaliar other icorei; .. iml Hunter; and. Richard Ryam 6«6r-AI Ur-■ —-Ci add Mika Curtll Willed—Ted Croaedell; R>ui*°rIwordi:C' half and Bobb^ c M _______6*3—Dale Ryan; 093-A. Smith: •»—Curtli Neal; jut—Pete atari <3*-Ron Seabolt; Hfl-Waalay ck, Lawrence Maki, AM ItWWrd Var-ti Mi-Orant it. Amour and Bob dor-eg; (11—Ed woolley; UO—Ctoll Pop-(IP—Paul Roohon; AM—Joa Sawyer, la Nlcholaa ud Bud Janl*: *17—Bill ___na and John Miller: 101-Tonyl WrSKtt VaMerhcek. O’Brien (ltd Richard i)au*6 Interception* Ay 3 Dotrou Del—W»tl 39—16 3—31 6—49 1 1 It—14 0 14—if rUnltM (llarrln I from UhRU (Herrls ■ (Welker klok) temx ("(Walker Howb Falls, So Do Wings AROUND TO SCORE — Bill Harris, Toronto Maple Leaf center, skates'in at the extreme right of the net after firing the puck into the net in the first period of the game against the Red Wings' last night. Goalie Terry Sawchuck tried to block the disc but in vain. The WIngs lost, 3-1; Keept Lightweight Crown Ortiz Flattens' Opponent TOKYO (AP) — Carlos Ortiz, i fisherman, tipped the scales at looking every inch a champion, 163. knocked out game but ineffectual ®rt*z> 26,, who weighed 134% . , „ _ - . _ „ . pounds, gave the youthful Kosaka Japanese challenger Teruoboxing leMson. It wax Kosaka in the fifth round Mon*L^c;puej,^y Rican born New York-day night to retain his world light- |er’fo 38th victory against four de- Final Stages Today RALEIGH*1 N.C. (AP) - The trial, of two St. Louis men charged with briberv in the bas- ............ ttafoali game - fixing scandal, h 80-yard p^ss Trom ^r SOHT moved into tte final siages today with arguments to the jury. weight boxing title. ★ ★' The crew cut Ortiz, boxing like master, hit Kosaka . with two sharp lefts to the head and followed with a murderous right jab to the c.hin which sent the 22-year-old Japanese to the canvas, dazed and bewildered. Kosaka tried to get up, then fell b a c k gesture of pain and disgust. : The knockout came after 2 minutes 32 seconds of the fifth round. FIRST DEFENSE It was the 26-year-old champion’s first bout slnoe he wrested the crown from Joe Brown in Los Angeles in April. ' Ortiz, a Puerto Rican, who lives in New York, weighed in at 184% pafoids. Kosaka, 22, son of a poor | feats and his 16th knockout. Sports Calendar Pontiac Central at^PlUierald Prop Owlmmlnf Pontiac NorUiom at Pontine Central Prep Baiketball , Lanalnp Bekton at Flint Northern Midland at Mt. Plea cant Lanelna Eaitern at Pailnaw Hl|b Berkley at Pordion Holly at Ponton . . PitenraM at Haiel Park Marnaon at Oranbrook ■; Lancer at BeaoMr Van Dyka at L'Ani* Creui* Kettering at Oxford Elk ton-Pigeon at North Hr anew EinmanueVChrlBlIan at WUktnor* Lak* Orion Vine oT Linden - Callat* Baekethall ' Pliftfge v*. SyraotM* at Ntw York Hawks in Id as Leafs Drop Detroit 3-1 Coach Sid Ab«l Cries foul7 After Gordie Sprawls on Ice DETROIT un - When Gordie Howe falls to the ice on his too*, something is unusually wrong. The graceful Red Wing super, star just doesn’t topple that easily. Howe went down last night and the Wings cried foul It cost them a game and they dropped from first place In 1he National League. With Howe sprawled across the Detroit blueline Geqrge Armstrong gathered in the puck and firHd the winning goal with less than 2% minutes, toft in the Toronto Maple Leaf’s 3-1 victory. “He hooked me first, then he gave me a little spin and a little jab with his stick,” said Howe, applying an Ice pack to a nasty welt on his tog. “That's the only way I’d go down; It’s just a little Illegal.” , Mild-mannered Sid Abel .Issued his first blast of the season at the officiating — referee Frank Udvarl his target. ; _ He calls penalties late in ttfe game against us, but nothing against them,” fumed the Detroit coach. “Armstrong sticks his slicKYiut and spears Gordie. Then he takes the puck away and scores and Udvarl does nothing. 'That was our best game Jn a long whito. Toronto wouldn’t win one much easier,” » HEROICS The Wings dominated th* game, outshootlng the Leafs 37, to 32. But Johnny Bower’s heroics in goal saved the Leafs. The loss knocked the Wingk opt of first, the position they held .. shared since their opening game in October. The Chicago Black Hawks, by beating -New York 5-1, pulled ahead by twb i points. >' dp1 ■(. | Howe was the only Whig whin could beat the amazing 38-year- * old Bower. A rising 50-footor just under the crossbar In the second period spoiled Bower’s 'Shutout bid. Howe’s goal matched one by Toronto’s BUly .Hurrls in the first period end created a M tie, that lasted iptit he fall. THE PONTTAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 8. 1962 Oxford Tuesday strong chanee to cop the 111. County championship. Oxford, however, will floor § veteran quintet highlighted ' by uel Christian plays at Whitemore Lake, OrtonvUjeopena at Linden brook in other top contests on a light midweek schedule. Kettering's trip to Oxford Is expected to be a happy one for ing the South Central crown to Jorws, Sain Impress Ja. Opening Setback to Blue Devils By JERE CRAIG „ The (mketbaU court at Pontiac Central High School has a . tion in recent years for exhibiting top flight prep cagers and Saturday night’s season’s opener L~ tween the local Chiefs tting Pmwa Pntnte barm Oat reputation. Unfortunately, however, the bad guys bid an abundance of good players and Grasse Points cor* rated Us second impressive vie* tory in two nights, 62-43. ben «MS Friday an a team ef- weaMh pregram. Four of the , five starters reached double figures and the fifth one hit for eight petals and played a feed defensive game. Gary Spade shot nine field goals into the hoop and added two fouls for SI points to pace die winners. Robert Hadley socred 10 points as did W, 215-pound Marc Looesk and (M center Jim Seder. Mel DeWalt came off the Central bench to give coach Art Van Rysin the offensive punch his club lacked at the start of the contest and combined with Gerald Henry and Ray Sain to rally die Chiefs. DeWalt hit 14 points, Henry had 13 arid Sain dropped in six of his eight points in the first half. EARLY LEAD the vis- The Holly-Fenton rivslaLjp such that die game invariably is rated a tossup regardless of the records. It is even more so this time because the conte: comes so early in the season. TOP SCORER Emmanuel Christian will be trying to climb above the mark against the Lakers. Ralph ceach Hugh Davtaas^ Milford unleashed a balanced •coring attack against South Lyon to even its record at 1-1. Three Redskins hit in doubles. Tom Shiftier was high with 1$, Tim Barnes added 14 mal Gary Powers hit 13, Joe Parrish chipped in with I. Jim Sprinkles was high scorer for South Lyon with 10. Scoring load for scoring 36 points in two games. Madison, rated an outside chance to pick up the marines in the Oakland A, may experience some trouble at ieexpe-rieuced Craabrook. Although WHERE NOW? — Mprc Lonesk of Grosse Points searches for his next move after grabbing pass from teammate iq second quarter action Saturday night against Pontiac Central. PCH defender A1 Galbraith (8?) prevented Lonesk from scoring a bucket this time. Center Jim Seder (61) anticipates a pass from Lonesk in game won by the Blue Devils. , NFL Game Statistics Titans, ¥ Home Tonight Grosse Potato's pressing, quick defeats bothered the Chiefs in the early going and permitted the talented visitors to Jump into a 13-3 lead. The Blue Davila' team play dissolved Into Individual efforts too often in the second quarter but they had enough abnity to hold a BO-31halftime margin. EMI (Mb by MeKfadey Joaee rad DeWalt narrowed the margin to five petnts at the start of the secoad half, but that was the eleeest the home team ceeld DEVILISH - Vic Dhooge of Grosse Pointe’s Blue Devils throws up an arm barricade on Pontiac Central forward Gerald Henry Saturday night at the local gymnasium. The visitors’ Marc Lonesk (33) la bedeviling Henry at the left, while Bob Hadley (4l) is in the background. Such defensive antics were common by the Blue Devils as they won, 82-45. Staubach Sinks Army, 3414 Navy Preparing in off is the third session and the •cere had only jumped to entering the final stanza. But tba superior manpower of the Blue Devils then showed its might with a Bfolnt burst that built to a 80-38 bulge with less than three minutes remaining to play. Chief tormentors in the stretch run ware Spade, a 3-11 backliner with quick hands and feet and legs that sprang him o v e r the hoop, and Vic Dbooge (pronounced Doo-|te).« PULL AWAY Spade connected for eight straight points at the outset of quarter number four to put the game out of reach; and Dhooge kept the score comfortable for coach Chuck Holksy by hitting six of his eight points in the late going. Van Hyde could find solace in the manner the home dub hung in the game after appearing completely outclassed In the early momenta. Forced to shoot from the outside, the Chiefs mads a contest of ft unto had By JIM HACKLEMAN Associated Press Sports Writer PHILADELPHIA (AP) - With the glory oif its latest smashing football victory over Army still flaming brightly, Navy already la pointing for a fifth successive triumph against the Cadets. Only hours after Saturday’s Sill rout in the 63rd service classic, the exultant Brigade of Midshipman had raised new battle chants: ‘Drive for five" and "Let’s go, five Ini a row.” And Wayne Hardin, an Iconoclast who obviously doesn’t adhere to the ancient coaching philosophy of playing diem one at a time, readily volunteered that he ' ‘ ing a year ahead. START NOW ‘We have to start now preparing for No. 3," says the imaginative young strategist from Smack-over, Ark., who is the first Navy coach ever to send out four straight winners against Army. Clearly the Middies have the momentum in the historic series '—and looking Into the future, they have excellent prospects of ex- completely blunted their tome- live with his defensive rebound-ing while Sain showed good moves under the offensive backboard. Harold Pickett gave indications of developing into a good playmaker, i needed commodity. tending their streak. Of the 42not the outward personification of ranking players on did Navy team that completely dominated action Saturday, 30 will be back next Chief among those returnees is the boy whose exploits keyed the Navy triumph and mesmerised the vaunted Cadet defense-Roger Staubach. Navy’s entire squad starred with its exhibition of alert, touch football. But it was the 'name ’Staubach” that’ -constantly hummed through huge Philadelphia Stadium Saturday arid has been the key word ifi poet-game conversation* since. Very few have taken charge in this renowned classic the way Staubach did in view of the atadi-crowd of 100,600 and* the nationwide television audience. The strapping sophomore quarterback, with the physical talents and mental agility to become one of the great ones, plagued the frustrated Cadets an afternoon with his pinpoint passing, clutch runs and audacious field generalship. Strangely enough, Staubach was a poised and siriooth performer. He often ran with the skittering awkwardness of a new colt. His passes sometimes looked like the desperation heaves of a sand- lotter. -----— GOT RESULTS But as someone remarked, “AH he got was results.” The 26-year-old Ohioan closed out a brilliant first varsity season with 10 pass completions in 12 attempts for 204 yards and two touchdowns, and scored two touchdowns himself. And even these Impressive figures do not tell the whole Staubach story. Time and again he was apparently trapped only- to turn potential large losses into a vital gains with Itis dazzling pataes and weaving runs. Time and again it was Stabbach whose artful dodging kept Navy drives i raining y*rd*8* Pmim Intercepted by Fumbles lout irvsrr*............ feS to'iwi'wt Wtt-ro**MlS>neUCkM Pltt-F* mlchnels *7 Pltt-FO Michaels 13 Mtt-ro Michael* It Attendance I8.5M. DALLAS. Tex. (AP)-StatUttM at tba kllaa-Ceeveland National Football game: COWBOYS BROWNS University of Michigan and Detroit, opening night basketball winners Saturday, move against suffer competition on their respective home courts tonight. U. of D., an easy victor against Assumption, tangles with Purdue, one of the top contending Mams in the Big Ten this year. The Titans, captained by Harrison Munson of Pontiac and George McDaniels of Holly, are a sophomore-laden team with M John Schramm of Chicago heading the list Schramm scored 17 points Saturday with junior fotterman Dick Dzik getting 19. Twelve of the IS players used by coach Bob Caliban scored. Billy Moran, Albie Pearson, Lee Thomas and Leon Wagner played 100 games for the Loa Angeles Angels last season. MtBh-Pb Oirlitaphereon XI Mfcm~THptett I pm* Iran (CbrUtophmon kick) klckT * p“* ,rom Brofirst play and Carl BrettschnSkter, recovered on the 21. Using the option more than usual, Plum canied for a 7-yard first down to that five. His end zone paaSvbounced off Watkins' fingers and Ken Webb ran tflWorts. Cutting ht-slds left guard, Morrell then dove By The Associated Press \ sen dpeaer triumph enter Osh-That winter madness college koeh, Wis. basketball — really descended on Bowling Green, a highly ranked Michigan as 14 senior colleges!Iclub test season, has four starters r&ssss. “SZsSmfii GAME SAVER — Dick ‘Night Train’ Lane goes high into the air to bat down a pass intended for Jimmy Orr (28) in the end zone in the final seconds of play yesterday at Tiger Stadium. Orr war all alone until Lane made the leaping save to preserve a 21-14 Lions’ victory over the Baltimore Colts. State College Quints Start Heavy Schedule went into action Saturday night. Michigan slammed Ball State of Indiana 68-50, Kansas State beat Michigan State 66-50, Del-trolt trimmed Assumption of Ontario 7042 and Northwestern defeated Western Michigan 83-74. But the team rapidly stamping Itself aa the school to watch in Michigan basketball was Northern Michigan, which trimmed superior of Wisconsin 100-60. Northern plays Michigan Tech tonight, its third game in four daya. Michigan Tech defeated Oshkosh State of Wisconsin 0247, Alma downed Eastern Michigan ?448. Wooster of Ohio nipped Air bkm 73-71, Ferris Institute clouted Aquinas 70-47, Valparaiso oflndi-ana outscorad Hope 85-72, Adrian crushed Slippery Dock of Pennsylvania 0147, Manchester downed Kalamazoo 73-70, Bowling Green roared past Hillsdale 102-83, Grand Rapids JC defeated Northwestern Michigan 92-73 Muskegon Community College nipped Henry Ford JC 7148 and Illinois Tech beat Detroit Tech 74-46. , Northern Michigan, scoring its secoad straight basketball tery in-two days, wee led Gary Sfic with II points. ‘ S-t and 44 tfos, Northern igan raced away With ■" u The vletery ever | ffctil back and it showed. Bowling Green substituted freely but completely outclassed Hillsdale. Nate Thurmond scored 31 points for the winners. Charles works ted Hillsdale with 20 points. Purdue Quint in Detroit for Big Battle Michigan Plays. Host to .Strong Creighton ■ Rebounders... Munson, starting at forward, netted four points to the epe* Purdue, minus Terry Dischlng-er, has a tell ball team with three centers at 6-9,3-7 and 8-7. PURDUE SOPHS The Boilermakers claim regular Mel Garland as one of the heat guards in the Big Ten. Garland, who stands 3-1, averaged 16 points a sophomore last year. Use other guiurd spot has two sophs battling for the poeltion, Ron Hughes and Bob Purkhiser. t lace a ragged travels to Notre Dame foet-day nlglht. The Wolverines had to come from behind7 to defeat Ban state Saturday night led by a 21 point effort bySophomore Bob Buntin of / Detroit/ Creighton, an NCAA U team last year, posted a 20-5 r ordlfor the season including «' over Notre Dame twice, F Marquett, UCLA and Rica. One of the outstanding sophomores in the country last year fas Creighton’s Paul SUaa Who Was second in the nation in rabriund' to Jerry Lucas of Ohio State. Creighton was 3rd in the country in rebounds. THE PQjgfrfAC PRESS. MOXlUY, DECEMBER 3, 1962 ABL Standings Tom Krzemeinski, Michigan State footbaH «nd - from Beaver Fills, Pa., played prep foptball with Joe *Namath,y sophomore quarterback stpr at Alabama.. W.OOO Mil* GuMttJtm 3 STAR MUFFLEB Imtoll.d and TAILPIPE free 20% OFF REGULAR PRICES Soot Belts $7.95 Ea. CAM FRICTION INSTALLED Wmmmm" RIGHT NOW JET AGE MUFFLERS "Ride Lev-ler" Shock Absorbers vTh*yWhhpsr* FREE INSTALLATION IN MINUTES O America's largest Muffler Specialists # Priced to fit every posketbeek e Backed by the' experience el making ever 180,000,000 mufflers tAeyVe TTiere ir no" iniiiilition ehiiifr Mrfrfflir or war pip« when purchased at the urna time a* muffler. AT THIS LOCATION OMIT BRODIF.’S MUFFLER SERVICE 1ST W.y«. St. FI 4-4900 & o jR*' SmlSc/tM U AUTO CHOOSE FROM 6 BEAUTIFUL COLORS ONE DAY SERVICE.,.RAIN OR SHINE...IN BY 9, OUT BY E EVERT CM CAREFULLY MASKED REVERT CAR RANDI MACHINE SANDED ^STEM RDITTEN GUARANTEE itm&’i&wJScAeM OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY. 7:30 AM. U BP.M. 147 S. Saginaw ..FItaal 4-99UI Maple Tankers Splash Big Seaholm Takes 6thRO Relays jn Birmingham Team Gets 102 Points in Taking AU doubters as. to the swim-ming power of , Birmingham Sea-holm should oe cleared of thblr doubts today. The Maples, figured to walk off with Michigan’s prep swim title, outclassed 16 other teams including top contenders- GroSSe Pointe and Ann Arbor in the 6th annual Royal Oak Relays held Saturday atJjkimball High School. Seaholm'scored 102 points in winning.severi of the' eight relay events and in the process set six records. Runnerup Ann Arbor, seen a% the closest competitor for state honors,'had 62 points, but failed to win any of the events. ' Grosse Pointe, winner of the 200 backstroke relay, was in third plgce with 50 points, followed by Royal Oak Kimball with 38. ★ ★ ★ The versatile Maples used 16 different swimmers on the winning events headed by Bob Wolf, Dave Zimmer, (Tom Coupe, Topi Fritz, Don Spencer, Dennis Rozema, Jack Hoyt Randy Matthews, Rick Lotero and Jeff Wallace all part of winning teams twice. A capacity crowd watched the relays. The dual 'season .gets heavier this week with Kimball playing host to Fitzgerald tonight, Don-dero visiting Hazel Park, tomorrow and Seaholm playing, host to PCH-BNhLJwkers h Splash; Tuesday PontfaM? Central-end-^-Pontiac Northqrh wanned up for their in-tet:-city swimming Tuesday night at the PCH .pool by partiepating i to in the tot annual Vehicle City Re- / < ev-o "BVimi...... .■ ansCnnefPdOTTn Tlint Sat- urday night. Flint Northern won the team championship by nosing out Flint iCmfraij 77 to 64. followed by Lansing Everett^ltfn^TontfilcXen-tral 56, Pontiac Northern 45- and Flint Southwestern. 35. Lone victory for a city schoot was in the Diving event won by Alex Hiller and Cliff Mann of Northern. The Hinkle swimmers finished 3rd in the Crescendo Relays with a team of Don Biley,’ Gary Barrie, Bob Basinger and Don Chambers. Their time was■ -fcffJ.- ‘ -PNH-took" third In the iiee Individual medley relay with Carl Cascadden, Rick Johnson, and Skip Irvin. in Tuesday’s meet, which figures -to be very dose, Pontiac Central’s strength lies |n the freestyle events with Bob Lorenz. . A good race should develop in the backstroke between Mik Jenkins of PCH and captain John BHkey of PNH. Northern is expected to take the diving event. StartingAime is 7:30 p.m. PCH was second in the event behind Fint Northern. The Chiefs team was made up of KaUfmAn, Phillips, Johnson and Lorenz posting a time of 5:06.5, PCH was 2nd'in .the medley relay with Jenkins, Blaylock, Lorenz and Phillips in 1:54.9. and 2nd in the freestyle, relay with .Vanhall, Hubbard, McNamara and Kaufman in 1:45.8. Steele, Cheney Score' in Harcourt - Divisions M JOLLA, Caiif. (APWJhaun-cey Steele. Jr. of Cambridge, Mass., and Dorothy Cheney of SgritaMonica,. Calif., won the men’s and- women’s division of the National Senior Harcourt Ten,-nis Championships Sunday, Steele defeated ’top-seeded Bill Lurie 6f Hawthorne, Calif., 7-5, 1-6, 8-6. Mrl Cheney beat Mary Prentiss of San Bernardino, Calif., 6-0 ; fBRBpar ■ m m IS | i^mtiM mm mrnm FREE BODY & FENDER REPAIR ESTIMATES I WITH EARL SCHEIB S EXCLUSIVE ESTOMETER! MIDDIES IN CONTROL - Navy quarterback Roger Stau-bach (12) is hemmed in by a trio of Army defenders but he still gets off a successful pass good for a touchdown to end Neil Henderson in the annual battle between the service teams iturday in Philadelphia. Army players are Bill Hawkins (77) 111 Chescavage (83)., Navy won 34-14. MAC-O-LAC PAINT 1400 Beautiful Color* Blended to Your individual Ctieket 7 *iii W». - ’fl” , »*,49C«I. “ 0«i- GENUINE FORMICA GENUINE ORIENTAL MOSAIC TILE 1 at (Duality 69° ASPHALT t, M p . TILE i|C 1 LINOLEUM $095 RUQS, 9x12 g|oaoh PONTIAC'S LAROEST TILE CENTER DO-IT-YOURSELF Genuine CERAMIC WALI/TILE W 900 4 raid Irdi - U V W. fumlih All T««l» CURE VINYL TILE l ,r*r . 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Guardian Maintenance CHIVROLIT • PONTIAC » OL.DSMOBIUI« BUICK • CADILLAC -BMp TRUCK FIRESTONE Thi« 83V6 RPM Collaotora' Album, specially MMm lor Fireatone, ia tho mid* hlih quality II tboaa which normally tail for |3.m anal t98. It dentures the 12 moat popular riatmaa carol*. performed by Riel Steven*, Brian Sullivan and tha Fueaton# Symphony orchaatra and ehetea. Don’t apt FE 2-9251 A 12-inch Custom LP High Fidelity Recording Featuring Favorite Christmas Carols from the "Voice of Firestone" OPEN WEEK NIGHTS 'TIL 9 P.M. Monday thru Friday T#B EQffmC MONDAY, DECBMBlR 3. ifol AAU Calhfo&Probe DETROIT (AP) — The AAUiof a coalition plan with U.S. Track wound up its75thlmnual conven-land Field Federation and other tlon with a call for a congressional I track agencies, investigation of tha NCAA and At tha Mum time, tha AAU devoting w atand firm on its version I elded Sunday to leave the door Canadian Delate TOBOGGAN $E88 Jf. .up. - jw I jT“a“wom V , ----Wa Ivy, Sell. Trait Ici Skates—. LAYAWAY NOWV SKATES SKIS 3*1 BOOTS TOBOGGANS finest TOTS DISCOUNT PRICES- Ice Skates Sharpened ; , BARNES i HARfiRAVE Hardware 742 W. HURON ST. nix nu open fhr further negotiations with the NCAA-supported federation; AAU president Louis j. Fisher of High Point, N.0., said. “It Js the duty of tho U.S. Congress to tho NCAA and Its pup- pet federations from top to bottom;** Fisher also offered Congress the AAU’s full cooperation in making investigation of his group. A truce meeting called by Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy last month in New York saw a coalition plan offered to settle the Stt years of bickering between the rival groups over track-powerr However, tha AAU executive committee approved a coalition plan last Thursday which the Federation charged repudiated the original agreement made in New York. 2f ■ The question of whether the AAU for the proposed coalition will be the recognised ruling body for American participation in 1964 international track affairs ap peared to he the basic .issue. The AAU has bean recognized for many years by the International mhateur Athletic Federation, which governs world track and field. Hie track federation wants this recognition to go to the coalition after the 1964 Olympic CHICAGO (AfWlh# battle of the pocketbook between The' rival gins today when theNational Football League holds its anhual player drift. jnJBLminde wWrthsLdST ^ Rams gettingJii »l Pink and limb* " ably grabbing quarterback Terry inker, the Heismari Award win- COMEBACK — Green Bay Packer halfback Paul Hornung goes nine yards through a gaping hole in the Los Angeles line yesterday in his “comeback" after siting out -six games with a knee injury, he scored the Packers* first touchdown as Green Bay routed the Hams, 41-10. Helping him on this play is Jim fiingo (51). Aft Honors at Stake Dallas Texans' Back' Into Title Tilt By The Associated Press It wasn't exactlytoe way would have liked to be crowned Western Divislbn champions BIG TAX SAVINGS! Enjoy the Best for Less It's smart to serve the best arid too Outstanding In quality! 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WHY PAY MORE? $483 CANADIAN WHISKY* A BLEND• 6 YE^RS 010*80 PROOF* IMPORTED IN ORIGINAL CASKS BY McMASTER IMPORT. CO., OEtdOIT , scotch Whisky• a blend * 80 PROOF • imported in original casks by mcmaster import fa, detromt the American Football League, the Dallas Texans are ready for a title battle today with either the Houston Oilers or Boston Patriots. The Texans backed into the title Sunday. They were beaten 23-14 by the Buffalo Bills but It didn’t matter as second-place Denver lost its third in a row, 34-17 to the Oilers in the mud and rain at Houston. Houston’s victory kept one-half game ahead of the Patriots in the battle tor the Eastern UUe following Boston’s Friday night victory over New York. The deposed Western Division tlists, the San Diego Chargers, threw off a six-game losing streak and extended Oakland’s to 16 games with a 31-21 victory in the other scheduled game. The Raiders have, not won since November, 1661, including Ullnws this star, scored twice and picked up 108 yards rushing for the Chargers (44). Rookie quarterback John Hadl passed for the other two TDs. Dick Dorsey and quarterback Cottott Davidson lead a. fourth ^quarter surge by the Raiders, combining on 65 and 90-yard touchdown, plays as Oakland outgained the Chargers in the air, 296-150. Battle of Pocketbook Begins Today With NFL rounds in the Nit, drift will go slowly. Before selecting a player, the interested teams will try to contact him In order to fhaki sure it has a chance of signing him. The NFL will select 280 pUfflW ................ Angeles ner from Oregon State. The American Football League held its drift Saturday and did not select Baker until Siji Diego picked him in the 12th round, an indication that Baker is headed for the NFL and AFL teams did not care to waste a high draft choice on him. ■ SIGNED PACT For the same reason, Junious Buchanan, the 274-pound tackle from Grambling/is not expected to be a top choice to the NFL draft. Buchanan was Dallas’ first choice in the AFL drag and was immediately signed to a contract Because a player is drafted by one league doesn’t mean he will not be drafted In the other league. Hie top players, will be drafted by both leagues and that’s when buttle •»»? mmtntr SNOW till! 4.70x15 mfc $7.05 7.50X14 . $8.95 IECULAR THIS ' 4.70x15, w.k J4.8B 7.50x14 Iff $•»* >1 Bif Dlwaaa — Inkui. „.kii Cuba UNITE* T«E SERVICE OPEN DAXLT 'Id « MH |Mlh RECORD RUSH Dellas fell victim to the Bills’ ijuvenated quarterback Jack Kenfp and the record - breaking rushing of fullback Cookie 'Gil-Christ. Kemp, back in action after an early-season hand injury while with San Diego, threw a pair of 1-yard TD passes and completed 21 passes for 230 yards. Gilchrist, the AFL’s leading rusher, picked up 63 yards to set a season record of 053, five more than Billy Cannon’s record-making total to 1901. It also helped Buffalo (6-6-1) break Dallas’ season rushing record of 2,170. Tho Bills now have ,163 with another game to play. Dallas (6-3) moved to within 16-14 tote, to the game as Len:Daw-son connected tor two touchdown !S but Gilchrist’s 2-yard TD burst finished the Texans. He also added a 3V-yard field goal. The Oilers (9-3) making their patented late-season rush that has carried them to two divisional league crowns, have won five straight. Again, it was old pro quarterback George Blanda who rose to the occasion, throwing for three touchdowns and kicking tiro field goals despite the atrocious conditions- Two of the scoring passes went to Cannon, but Houston had eight intercepted to help set a game record of 13 thefts. BLANDA STARS Gene Mingo upped his leagueleading scoring total to 133 with field goal and two conversions r the Broncos -(7-6). Denver turned a fumble recovery and interception into a pair of scores and a brief 14-10 lead in the second period before Blanda hit Cannon and Charlie Hennigan with touchdown passes. OPEN ’til 9P.M. 'F'iro$tono FOR EXPERT CAR SERVICE WORK K I Repack front wheel bearings Balance front wheel* • Restore braking capacity... • Stop uneven tire wear... Any Amerfem Med# Cor Smooth rm Gerry MacDougal, like Gilchrist a former Canadian League Earl Baumgardner Wins HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP)-Earl Baumgardner of Dallas won the Florida Professional T e n r1 nplonshlp Sunday when' finals, opponent, Armando Vieira, also of Dallas, fell and Injured a ■ leg to the third Set. BOWL A FRAME AT TIMBERLANES I Pontiac Recreation , IS North Perry Street ' u It leit Lawrence • OPEN I0WLING e ft IRUinWICK LANES • PlOttSIIONAL M Uwry, |>.. M.A. Member h OPIN DAILY* jO A.M.afe 13 Midnight inlay Noon to Mllwj v^mEPpifgPEIw rTREADS jfl&Ki THE PONTIAC IBEM mONDAY, DEi Just How Far Can Administration Go With Censorship? UMof* Note - This U the tint of fi, series of three analyses on government t»-formation polidet.) tlon got sharp news media criticism for its .handling of information diving the Dctober-Nov< By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — The shades are down, and have been for quite a While, on Information the government is willing to make public,Jtt-HMr time they’re not til foe way down. They go down sharply in times of overseas cri- 1 Cuban affair. It began easing up those particular restrictions when the heat died DBM HUB JFK Then latelart week pep. John E. Moss Of Californian a of Kennedy’s own Demogatfc par- . They, did ini . both world wars, ta the Hawaii............_ W^.whenthe MABIDW American U2 plane was Shot down over the Soviet Union in 1900, at the time of the disastrous Cuban invasion of 1961, and mow recently ini the Cuban tension of 19621 The Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations have all been Involved—when there was crisis and when there wasn’t any. ALGIERS (A -About 200heav-ily-armed troops of the Algerian National Army surrounded gov* ernment headquarters today. During the nlgiht troops blocked the principal roads into Algiers, ' ‘ VA Sending tards Earlier Pension R o c i p i e ntf Warned to Act Soon search operation hi the city. Official sources declined to explain the action. But it was believed connected with the arrest yesterday of a police divisional commissioner, Omar Harreg. -He was accused Of being a member of the underground Svctml Revolution party, which has severely criticised the government of Premier Ahmed Ben Bella. Mow than 71,800 Michigan veterans and dependents of deceased veterans should start receiving their annual income questionnaire cards this week — a mi Iter than list year. However, Robert M. FitzGerald, manager of the Veterans Administration Regional Office in Detroit, today warned recipients not to lajT the cards aside Rut because they have until Jan. M to return them without penalty. Pension payments will be suspended If the fUled-eut card forms aw 'wot returned to the VAbyBsb.1* This happened last year to some 7,166 beneficiaries in Michigan and to mow than 900,000 in United States. X WON’T WORK This year, as always, FitzGerald said, some veterans Just won’t return the cards since they know their lncome is, or will be, above statutory limitations , for pensioners. This won’t work any mow than being tardy, he pointed out. If, after suspension, no questionnaire reply is submitted, the pensioner will be requited to pay back all ’payments received hi 1962. Four different types of punch cards are going out this year. One card is. for veterans and widows receiving payments under the old pension law. Two Cards aw required under the now pension law, one for veterans and the other for widows and children. These require statements on both income and net worth. A fourth card is being mailed to dependent parents receiving The Detroit manager explained the earlier mailing as a continuing stop in VA’s efforts to reduce the problems of processing the annual questionnaiw. President Kennedy’s adnfolistrs-Jy and chairman of the House sub- committee on information, hit at the President and his advisers for pf the news. He cited examples of news restrictions not connected with'Cuba or crises at all: Restrictions oq covering underground nuclear tests in Nevada, secrecy about all military space activities,* recent blackout on in- formation about Russian satellite efforts although the Russians know all about their own satellites. “To a xemarkable degree/’ Moss said, ’’the White House itself is mtaining direct control over the handling of government informa-tion. - .Important Jews - making events, ranging from a backstage greeting (by Ifonnedy) to mem bers of Russia’s.Bolshoi Ballet to ArWy Rings Government in Algeria LISBON, Portugal (A — Premier Antonio de Oliveira Salazar ordered a sweeping cabinet shake-up today Including the dismissal of Minister for Overseas Territories Adriano Moreira. The party has issued tracts calling for immediate add full land redistribution, nationalization of aU major enterprises and a vast sqcial benefit program. The party’s line follows Closely that of the Algerian Communist party, which Ben Bella’s government outlawed last week. Moreira’s replacement by Navy Cmdr. Peixoto Oorwlra, a former governor of Portuguese Guinea, was believed due te a dispute with Salazar over colonial policy. A reliable source said Moreira had been urging moee autonomy foC Portugal’s restive possessions while Salazar wanted to keep foe power in Lisbon. Prof. Galavo Teles was named education minister, replacing Prof. Manuel Lopes de Almeda. The change was believed due to criticism of Lopes de Almeda’s handling of recent student strikes. The other changes — in seven cabinet posts and six subcabinet Jobs — wew considered normal, routine replacements. Last night, Mohammed Khi-der, secretary general of foe Political Bureau, Algeria’s policymaking body, spoke over foe state radio - television n e t w 0 r k and called for a purge of persons blocking operation of the govem- He said special people’s military courts will be set up to try Khider said foe political bureau is unhappy about the slowness with which former , guerilla unite are being absorbed into the national army and said security still is not assured throughout the country. India Requests More U. S. Aid WASHINGTON (UPI) - In Ambassador B.4C. Nphru said yesterday India has asked for a “long and complicated list” of addition' al U.S. military aid to fight a long struggle with Red China. He declined to disclose the nature of the aid India wants. Nehru, in a television interview, said it would cost India billions of dollars to expand its army and that it would bear foe'“major burden” He said U.S. Assistant Secretary of State W. Averell Harriman was given a list of immediate and long-range needs presented by Indian officiate. '■ r; * Nehru indicated- it included re-quests for arms and military equipment, as well as for production equipment Shake-Up On LONDON (AP) - Lord Beveridge is benefiting from the welfare state he lathered. Sunday was Hte 26fo' anniversary of the Beveridge report, the study drawn up in wartime Bri, tain which led to the founding of the free National Health Service in 1948. Leaning'heavily on a stick, foe 83-year-old economist told reporters: “I’ve had arthritis in my right leg and arm since I was 80. I see doctors everywhere and don’t pay a farthing.” • Stevens Van Lines,. Inc., began oing business today from its newly acquired office and storage warehouse at 3965 Elizabeth Lake Road, Waterford Township. The new building is of fire-resisting masonry construction and the property includes a three-quarter acre fenced parking lot tor trucks. The firm moved to its new location from 119 Gladstone Place. Didn't Favor Missile Trade -Stevenson'’ UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) —U.S. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson last night denied as “inaccurate and untrue” a published report Out he was in favor of trading U.S. missile bases in Turkey, Italy and Britain for Soviet missile sites in Cuba. The charge was made in an article in foe Saturday Evening Post written for foe magazine’s Washington editors Stewart Al-sop and Charles Bartlett. A spokesman for Stevenson said ’foe story... rests on the allegation that Ambassador Stevenson 'wanted to trade the Turkish, Italian and British bases for the Cuban bases.’ The record will show that this is unfounded. “The. story further charges that Ambassador Stevenson dissented from foe consensus of foe President’s (National Security Council) executive committee and preferred ’political negotiation’ to foe policy of foe quarantine," foe spokesman said. “This is also untrue.” Soccer Player* Kicked Into Clink by Blue Law SHEFFIELD, England (UPI) -The soccer match had gone only 33 minutes yesterday when alltfj players were arrested. . They were charged with breaking a local law banning athletics Sunday. . The motor me produced i 1 Redlands, Calif., facility. 4 to eauasd by light r ' of till motor. y ^ ReapsjBenefit of Health Plan foe bomb teste in foe Pacific are under firm presidential control. WHAT TO DOT. fp|' ’ “This is not all bad, nor is R all to the gpod. When we realize what sort of news management is going on in Washington today, we’d better start considering what —if anything—we’re going to do about Almost exactly a month before, Moss, on Nov. 1, banged the Defense Department for qn order requiring all ite officiate to report Van Lines in Business at New Warehouse promptly to the Pentagon’s public restrictions—or lack of reason- relations office ifoe substance‘of idl interviews with newsmen. * Arthur Sylvester, assistant secretary of defense in charge of public affairs, had put out foe order Oct. 27. Moss* didn’t budge him. When foe National Editorial As-sociatipn on(Nov. 17passed*resolution protesting Pentagon news policies, Sylvester to days later replied there had been a “great deal of twaddle” about Jite order. But foe whole reason for news NEEDS TWIN CARRIAGE — Edith Dowling’s mother would like a twin carriage because her B-month-old daughter, with 49-pound casta on both legs, is fob heavy to carry. Edith was born with a dislocated hip. She is steadied by her 4)4-vear-old sister Denise, in their Boston home.______* - lies between war and twaddle, between necessity and nonsense. It takes these main forms? Withholding news which truly might endanger national security. No one quarrels, in such a case, when it’s real. Sometimes It isn’t. UNRELENTING NEED Because it is arbitrary to call some information secret when it isn’t necessary, there is an unrelenting need for public vigilance; This is the root of the endless dispute with government. Then there is the Sylvester system of compelling officials to report on their conversations newsmen. This may help keep top Pentagon officiate informed on Whitrthetr sobordinates are saying. But it cannot- help bqt discourage, those subordinates from talking to newsmen altogether. Having to report on what was said rpeans extra work and could cause them difficulty if the boss-map; thinks they talked too much. Withholding information is also ne of the neatest ways* to hover Ailstakes. Kennedy said hte administration would not conceal ite mistakes. He hlmself frankly topk foe blame for the Cuban invasion fiasco. (Yet, by his doing so, the public was deprived of knowing who INCOMPETENTS’ REFUGE The House Government Opera- tions Committee, parent group of Moss’ subcommittee, said in I960 secrecy ls “the first refuge of incompetents.” . Tito very fonss in which we live complicate and torture foe problem of withholding news. It te’ufo derstandable in wartime. It to not at all understandable to peacetime. But we are in a period that is neither .war nor peace. In short, this to a moment In , history when the government can release more news than it could during war but less than it could in peace. Presidents Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy have all had to order some restraints in this cold war period but ever since Truman began it foe government has been criticized for pulling the shades down too far for the national good. Federal officiate, including they President end rice president, but not members of Congrats, are subject to Impeachment proceedings by the House of Represen- Professional Dry Cleaning PLAIN SKIRTS SWEATERS 49 Voorheis “1-Hour” Cleaners Walton at Sashabaw — 131 Baldwin December 3rd thru 4 P.M. to 9 P.M.—M0N.-TUES. and THURS. 4 Pit. to 6:30 P.M.—WED. and FRI. All DAY SATURDAY Children must be accompanied by parents Come...Get Your PTJWTY OF REFRESHMENTS, TOO! It's Christmas •efl..00*" mmmmmmsmm, at Lloyd's f < mm Everyone t Lloyd’s giving... SANTA trade values to help you SAVE! Be sure to bring the KIDDIES USED CARS on display at all timet NO PAYMENTS TIL 63! .I0YD MOTORS Lincpln • Mercury • Comet a. Meteor a English Ford 232 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET, PONTIAC —FE 2-9131 . tj / ■ 1 VEAL SALE! Big V•*■33', 2^49* ? ‘^79* Food Club Pancake Flour For Pancakes, Waffles Nut Brown Syrup Etna Pure Grape Jolly or Preserves White or Colors Scotties :. 1 Maxwell Homm . Instunt Coffee—** Starfire This Coupon Good Only at Big Valu thro Saturday, Doe. 8. Gaylord Pure Creamery FASHION Mel-O-Crust Vienna Bread - l1 Brown 'll' Serve Rolls Cinnamon Rolls Bond Mel-O-Crust White or Colors Pioneer White or Pink Sugar Pkg. of 12- PkfrofB SALE! Pillsbury • Chopped Spinach • Leaf Spinach e Chopped Orocceli Saltines Golden Ripe Bananas Pull O' Juice Florida Oranges 2 Full O' Vitamins Florida Grapefruit 5 Mich. U S. No. 1 Delicious Apples 3 Calif. Crisp Pascal Celery Fresh Green Onions .. . i Crisp Fresh Radishes Tide Salvo Detergent Tablets Ivory Snow Ivory Soap Zest Seep Soaky Liquid Cashmere Bouquet Spic S Span Dash for Automatics Zest Soap Mr. Clean Draft Premium Dux v Ivory Flakes1 Sunshine Biscuit 27* Applesauce Cookies 79c Niblets Corn ■. S 25* Green Giant Peas White Cloud White or Ass't. 2 Pak Toilet Tissue Crisco Shortening Nabisco Sugar Wafers 15-or. Tasty Ripe Elberta 2 *5 35* 2P43* ’^GO* 3KS49* Snider's Catsup 14-Ox. Bottle Limit 2 25 ■a EXTRA GOLD >0 BELL STAMPS This Coupon end Purcho*# * of 2-lb. Chy ' I c EXTRA GOLD i IP BELL STAMPS This Coupon and Pti rehaw Mb. Pkfl. Hoiol Leo” . Sugar Wafari C A EXTRA G°LD Jy BELL STAMPS With This Cotton and Purehos# ; EXTRA OOLD » BELL STAMPS Coupon endPurChais 50 EM& h This Coupon end Purehais On* 3-Lb. Jor Dubuquo EXTRA GOLD RILL ST/MPS VlthTWs Coupon and Purehos# of two )-lb. Ctns. Fleischman's Margarine SufwiMtwi&efo VP:: THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 8. 186! People Recognise Character By Neal Adams ff's Now Smart to Have Good Grades By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed.JD. ' Professor of Education, University of Southern California Gone are the days when the “A” student was ridiculed by hi* "all-around” classmates aftd pktured as • skinny egg-i " he a d wearing] -thorn * riihmed glasses. Good grades! have come to be ► associated with good character - and auccesr-ittj school, in athlet-l ic* aid on the! Job. DR. NASON A supervisor hiring many college students for rammer work has found that those who make good grades are fnore dependable and do more satisfactory work than phor students. Good students gain recognition in other fields, too, due to, the fact that good grades ire usually associated with patterns of conduct out of school as well as In school. tost summer, a high school June graduate received a $30 check, a refund on his automobile insurance, pnder the terms of his ~ iy, because of his good grades. Insurance company’s records show that students making better grades MvefewwlCdt^flr;”’ — Low grades are not necessarily associated with careless driving and Inattention to duty on the job. SERIOUS ATTITUDE Some children making low grades are working up to their ca- pacity hi school, and take a serious attitude toward their responsibilities in other activities. However, I have had occasion to wort with many boys and girls who came to me with a pattern of low grades, defiance of authority at school and at home,, and along with these, a record of numerws traffic violations. JACOBY ON BRIDGE These students felt helpless In a society where grades determine college entrance, affect the kind of job available and even the cost of automobitoTniurance. They covered up their insecurity with rebellious behavior and unwillingness to conform to the rules of home, school and society. Once ..their study skills Improve and their grades become satisfactory nonconformity disappears. Their attitude at home as well as at school changes. Their traffic violations become virtually noqex-istent. - r ; USE GRADES GAUGE!, (You may obtain a copy of Dr. Nason’s “Help Yotir Chlld Succeed In School” by sending $1 to ’Help Your Child,” Box 1277, General Post Office, New York.) By OSWALD JACOBY This week’s series the great importance of planning the whole play of the hand right off the bat. The first thought should occur before playing from dummy on the openingtead. Thus, South’s thoughts should be, .‘‘If trumps break nicely all I can lose are two trumps and a dub, but East, doubled. Prob-, ably, he. holds four trumps. In that case I can’t make my contract but I don’t want to go down more than one trick. How can ~ protect myself and still make the hand if East has doubled without four trumps?” He solves his problem by leading a low trump. East wins the trick and his best play is to lead a trump ri#it back because if he plays a third dub South Grades, therefore; are * gauge. Falling grades are danger signals. It should not be necessary to wait until there Is defiance of authority to spot a potential dropout or delinquent. \ f The problem can be recognized and solved more easily in the ear- ly grades than at the hid) school level. There is no need to wait un boy gets behind the wheel of aft automobile and vehtg his frustration by breaking traffic rules and endangering lives. ' ^ To Study Powtr Source PISA, Italy (AP>~A group of Italian, technicians went to Mexico. this weekend to study possibilities of using natural underground steam resources for industrial purposes. Their techniques are used in the Lardarello region of central Italy to produce electric power. Czechs Reset Congress i By Carl Grubert VIENNA, Austria (AP) - After long deliberation, Czechoslovakia announced its postponed 12th Communist party congress will open Tuesday. It had been scheduled tor October, but was put off after • visit to Prague by Soviet ideologist L. F. Ilyichev. DRIFT MARLO By Dr. t M. Levitt, Tom Cooke and Phil Evans will ruff In dummy. Now South takes his ace of trumps and plays diamonds. East Will set him one trick, but that is nothing to what Then, South foBows to that first dub; ruffs the next dub and does some more thinking to iee how ho can draw trumps without risking a cataclysm. AMTS WKMI4I ♦f V4 i«« saw AS 4KQJS fQSTS WJ5 Alois ♦*» ♦XQlOfS! AAJI7S •; t THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. DECEMBER i, 1962 mss Believes Prayer, Not Surgery, Wilt Save Child From Cancer ' GLASGOW, Scotland (I) - A Scottish mother is putting her faith in prayer rather than gery to save her 15>-month-old daughter from on her right eye. “I behoved S»yeTcan do wonderful things,” said Mrs. Mary McKeown, 35, a Roman CjtiSelfo., “Despite what the doctors have said, I no longer think I am going to lose Margaret.” ' * ft British doctors told Mrs. McKeown and her husband, Matthew, that the baby will die unless the tumor is removed.* Margaret al> ready has lost the sight of her left eye, and an operation would blind her. The McKeowns took the baby to New York City last month after Mrs. Joseph Gales Ramsay of Reno, Nev., wife of a retired ' financier, offered to pay for sitr- gery. But doctors in New York .gave, no hope that an operation could save bothMkrgaret’s life and the sight of her remaining eye. Miracle Mile Drive-In 2103 S. Telegraph-FE 2-1000 OPEN 6:45 P.M. IT'S A WOWI TENNESSEE WILLIAM? GREAT FIRST COMEDY! -and— “I have wavered in discussions with my husband,” said Mrs. McKeown. “He has tried to persuade me to let the doctors operate. “But now he has accepted my decision because I have- complete faith that.Margaret will be cored 'without surgery. “I am waiting and praying.” Special prayers were said yesterday for the baby and her parents at the Catholic church in U3-dingston, Just outside Glasgow. /fter the service the parish priest visited the family and advised them to go ahead with the operation. Bat Mrs. McKeown A professional man in Nottingham, who asked to remain anonymous, said he was prepared to offer one of his eyes to Margaret. " - # \ ★’ But medical authorities said the technique of replacing a whole eye has not been mastered. FBI Reveals Capturing One of Top 10 Giminals WASHINGTON (*T—’The FBIl They said both would be held at announced the'Capture of one ojf its 10 most-wanted criminals in^a Hollywood, Calif., apartment early today. The FBI identified the man as John Kinchloe De Jarnette, 41, native of Kentucky. They Sakl he Was placed on the most wanted list only last Friday in connection with three bank robberies totaling 1100,000. De Jarnette, slim, square-jawed and bushy-haired, had boasted he would not be taken alive and FBI agents found three tally loaded pistols in the apartment. They also found a briefcase filled with $5 and $100 bills and were in the process of counting it. Also arrested at the apartment was Miss Doris Lee Nelson, 28, wanted on a Kentucky warrant charging ber with fleeing the state to avoid prosecution for obtaining narcotics by fraud. ★ The FBI said Miss Nelson and De Jarnette registered at the apartment as Mr. and Mr*. John Nebon on Saturday. the Notorious (andladY EBB Jules Verb's "Five W&&KS MOW! EAGLE; Jerry Uwl« “Sad Sack” and Jsny Lewi* “Delicate DsHnquenP Starts Tuesday 7Q*8tart/fnff new experience from MARK ROBSON who eleeMffedyoo with"Peyton Piece,” "Champion, ""From The Temce,,l STEPHEN BOYD DOLORES HART r“MIIIAOLR WORKER”, 7:00-“JESSICA”, 8)82 Only .10144 NOW thU a mighty motion picture miIUXIa experience...touch it Ifll...senseIt...feel It... WOTKer you can’t forget It! STARRING ANNE BANCROFT/INTWOOUCINQ FXTTV OUK< the Los Angeles County Jail pending arraignment today. The bank robberies De Jarnette Is charged with occurred over a 42-day period this fall. He is charged Ip* federal warrants with robbing the Seventh and Hill Branch of the Liberty National Bank & Trust Co. of Louie-viUe, Ky., of almost $24,000 on Sept. 10; the Highland Branched the same bank of more than 436,-000 on Oct. 10; and the Madison Road branch Of the Providence Bank in Cincinnati, Ohio, of more than $38,000 on Oct. 22. He also was sought for violation of parole from* a federal penlten- BERLIN REPLACEMENT - Maj. Gen. James H. Polk (right) stands with Maj. Gen. Albert Watson II, whom lie will repbce In about a month is U.S. commandant in Berlin, a post Watson has held since May, 1961. For Cheaper Sidewalk* HAWTHORNE, N.J. (UPD bw. liquid derived from thylene and urethanes ca tpixed with sand to make sidewalks or patios as hard as cement at much less cost, Delka Research Corp. saya*. 'A Rude Affront* Robinson Notes Heart Attack By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Televisioa Writer HOLLYWOOD — “It was a rude affront,”: says Edward G. Robinson of the heart attack he suffered in an African Him location: <1 -,... It’s one of those Uttie stumbling blocks that, you encounter along the way. The only thing to do is-to kick it aside TfiTTkeep-on going.” The actor to back in hb Beverly Hills home, surrounded by the great French-1 impression i*t| paintings be love* — “They’re like old friends.” He makes little of the attack that felled him in Tanganyika June 18. ★ • e....-it T had a Uttie pain after dinner and it persisted for two or three let you .up, you have to learn to walk again.” . . v-2 . He had acted in a third of hi* scenes before the attack and finished with five weeks of work in England—“They moved Africa to ShepRarton studios.” That} he came home.’ His activities now? -’The same** before,” he satt, "I feel great. There are rlnw things I’m supposed to Watch, but otherwise my life hasn’t changed, Have nrigar?" who was flown down fromXcffiap "TfSeclined,. but he lit one,,with... what would have happened if I satisfaction. “I askeiHM London, hours,” he said. "Not much would havebeenniade of it, except that people In the Company started getting worried and sent for a doe-tor.They Started with grams and all that,.and there was much e^ditement. illy it wasn’t much,” Rob-insoiyhdded. “Of course, anything that has to do with the ticker to important, but this was just a Uttie warning—an insufficiency, they called it.” "■"“Aftepwacd.1. asked the doctor THOMAS had jiist gdne to sleep after I was sick. He said I probably would have gotten up the next morning feeling okay and would have gone right back to work with no iU effects.” * BEDRIDDEN 4 WEEKS Robinson was bedded for three weeks in Africa and one in London. “that’s what makes you sick—lying on your back,” complained. “By the time they 2000. doctor if I would hdve to give up smoking,” he said. “He told me, ’Well, since you’ve been smoking' aU your life, I see no reason why you shouldn’t continue.” I fold him, 'You’re my doctor.* ” The U. 8, -wiU need to increase food production by two and one-half times the present rate to meet the nation’s needs in the year U. S. Eying Neutrals' Ban Ideas GENEVA (UPI) - The United States said today it is interested in neutral proposab for resolving the nuclear test ban deadlock but warned the Soviet Union would have to fchange Its position before they could bad to a treaty. U,S. Ambassador Arthur H. Dean told the 17-nation disarmament conference his government is giving “careful consideration” to proposals made last week by Sweden and Indta for ending the test ban deadlock. ★ • e ’ ★ Dean said the most interesting points in the two proposab made by the neutrals last week were those concerned with international on-site inspection of suspected underground blasts. 'We believe that any agreement mast contain provisions for detecting and tospecting these concommltant with the obligation to cease testing,” he mid. Dean warned Ike Soviet Union would have to change Its position regarding Inspection before the neutral resolutions boro fruit. The American delegate reiterated his country’s opposition to an uncontrolled moratorium on testing, because of the wny the Russians broke the bst moratorl-in 1961. 'OPPOSE ARRAGEMENT “We oppose such an arrangement and will not enter Into such an arrangement again,” he said-“We have had a sad, experience With an uninspected obligation or pledge to cease tests. Now, quite rankly, the shoe b on the other footi 'Now b the time for tho other side to come forward and try an mm hy controlled Agreement banning all tests, as we tried the nninipected arrangement.” Dean sold Sweden’s suggestion that an international scientific commission be aet Up to police a test ban and serve as the nucleus of the proposed international disarmament organization “offers some interesting comments.’1 Much of the food you buy is federally graded. Grades and standards developed by the Agricultural Marketing Service describe qualities of foods just as phunds, dozens and quarts de- YOU ALWAYS SAVE This Week’s , Bonus Buy gf NEW ERA ranis cur With $5.00 or-Moru Purchase Groceries—Meats—Produce Chicken of the Sea Tl IKI A special label | Chunk Style, Flat Can 2(59' Dream Whip TOPPING torse AT* 4-oz. box nr# Bakers Angel Flake COCONUT VA-oz. 35* 5c Off Label SPRY 3£77' Alpo Horse Meat DOG FOOD uy2-oz. OOc Can Jtiw IGA TOMATO JUICE MICH. BEET SUGAR IGA Fresh Frozen ORANGE JUICE U.S. No. 1 Michigan POTATOES SALS DATES MON. DEC. 3rd thru SAT. DEC. 8 IGA FROZEN WAFFLES m SARA LEE COFFEE CAKE WsrtssrvetlM rifhttollmit |c quantWei—nont sold to Mm or minors 69* THE PONY!AC PI&SSS. MONDAY.l^ECEMBRR 8,/i062 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Thursday. y_,,. Produce Apple*. Northern St C»bb»ge, flcuriy, fen. Cabbage, ted, bu.......... Cabbage, aprouta. bn. ... Cabbage, atandard variety. I NEW YORK (AP) —Aluminum issues declined following news of price cuts for the meter Arid a lower trend prevailed in the stock market generally today. Trading was fairly active early this after* noon. ..i3 Losses of. key.stock? ran mostly from fractions to about a point. Motors, steels, rails, oils, chem-icals, nonferrous metals, utilities, . 1# tobaccos, electrical equipments. Carrot*, cello-pak, 3 dl. . Leeks, da. feefea............ Onions, dry, 0Mb, bag Farelejr, «uriz^4a. boh*. Parsley, root, da. baba. ... Potatoes, I Squaah., Buttercup, Saunafe, buwifnut, fe Squash, KubDiurd. bn. .V., Tomatoaa. 144b. fe“ Tumlps, da. > Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POOliTBT DETROIT. Dec. 3 (AP)—Prle*l U per pound at Detroit for No 1 qua DETROIT, DOO. 3 (AP)—Egg prtsea paid par doaan to Datrolt tar llret receivers (tnoludlng U.8. t: Whltoa—Orada A jumbar43-40; extra large *1-44; torn 3v 14-41; medium 30-33; ainaU 10-37: .. brown*—Orada A torn .IMW — 30-311 small 34-35,' Orada B ■" awn/—*r Ifl-UL mostly U. Lower StockTrend 1, electronics, and rubbers were among the major sections which joined in the downswing. Efrokers saw it as profit taking on the five-week advance, now that the market has entered December, a month noted for cross Steels worked lower despite growing optimism regarding steel industry prospecta.U.S. Steel and Republic Steer were off about a point/ The' aluminum price /juts by leading producers accompanies some .fairly sharp decllites ln Switching, and reinvestment by big funds. The news background continued quite encouraging; Treasury Bonds Drift Lower NEW YORK UR - U. S. Treasury bond prices drifted lower at the start of trading today. Corporate bonds were mixed. . An over-the-counter dealer in governments said prices were off all atongtheliMV-^ mediate and short term bonds generally off about 2-32s, Bills The dealer said the sag seemed 1 be attributed to temporary withdrawal of the federal reserve from the market. Dealings were, described as sifow.7™"" Alcoa and Kaiser Aluminum fell more than a point apiece. Reynolds Metals was down a full lint. Aluminum Ltd. eased. Ford and Chrysler dropped about a point apiece. General Motors and American Motors Were fractional losers while Studebaker traded about unchanged. American Stock Exch. , igure* after decimal polnte are eigbtbi NEW TORN < API—American Stock Ex- n.%w ... 33 bu N Am,.... 00 .shu nee.... 4% jcaUer Indue.. 0% Creole Pet ... 35% Mohawk_Alri . 4% Ply Titer .... 10 Muek P Ring . 13 . Oen bevel.... , 1% HJPet Md .. 11% terriragrit The New York Stock Exchange Acquittal Plea Denied Hoffa ^Aflwnay Begins Case in Teamster's Defense NASHVQJLE,. Tenn. (UPI) Federal Judge William Miller today 'overruled a iriotioh for a ‘-•verdict the |l-million conspiracy trial ?of Teamsters Union President By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK — A new status symbol ter the homeowner, That's what the makers of snow throwers hope their gadget will become, T h e y also hope snowstorms will hit the northern half of the country.i well before winter makes Us of-; ficial debut come DAWSON James Hoffa. Miller today stated no reasons but last week said he thought the government had cited “numerous Instances” where Hoffa received payments front s nationwide automobile transport firm in violation of the Taft-Hartley labor law. Hoffa is accused of sharing in 1 million-dollar payoff to protect Commercial Carriers, Inc., from labor troubles. The payoff was allegedly made through Test Inc., a truck leasing business in which the wives of Hoffa and the late Owen Brgjnan,, Teamsters vice president, owndd, all the stock. ★ Defense attorney Z. T. Osborn Jr. today accused the government of “shopping/around” for a court which lt/thought might be favoraMe for a conviction and said noneof the acts alleged the briictment occurred , in the middle Tennessee district. also overruled another , motion by the defense that tee government state wblcb~ payments they sought to get a now —» experience tells them they ring up 70 per cent of annual before Christmas. And because they plan factoring schedules well that, they have become among the iriost avid readers of long-range weather fore^mts. Miller’s overruling of the acquittal motion came as the defense began its case. The trial moved into its seventh week day. The defense has given no indication as to how much time it expects to take in presenting Its Stocks of Local Interest decimal point* nr* eighth pm...............*... 13.1 ___, Corn, .35.0 i Arkansai Louisiana On Co...30 int. Chem. Co. bid ..11.1 1 _______Pood Storee ........ .114 1 Davldaon Broa.................4.0 Ped. Mogul-Bower Bearing! 37.4 ; Harvey Aluminum .............10.4 I Hoovtr Bell & Bearing ......30.1 1 Leonard Refining .............0.3 IcSSwStl Standard 33.0 1 oledo Edison Co. ......... 34.0 i OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS The following quotation! do not nee airily represent actual trenr—— — Intended as ■ guide to 1 0 trading range of the ae They're ReallySelling Power S^ow Shoml lit time the snow shovel lack any social standing at BETTER EVERY YEAR The winter of 195940 saw 40,000 snow, removers sold for around |7 million. The following winter sales went to 75,000 units'for better than 113, jmilllon in 196142 to for $26 minion. Iri tee season just getting under way the 25 or so major makers of the gadgets hope sales will hit 250,000 at nearly $44 million — with help from the weatherman, and maybe the stock market. ★ Sr it * The, manufacturers admit the market for snow throwers isn’t as great as for power mowers since grass grows rapidly in a large part of the nation where snow hr either very little of a problem or none at all. And an open winter can ruin the sales talking points in other large sections. In fact, the Industry after getting under way in 1953 nearly went under during the light snow- S| Call On Key U. S. Officials for Stockpile Information ses were George Caste, anotfh-dal of tee General Services Administration's Defense Materials Service, and Kent B. Crowther, an official of tee General Accounting Office's Civil Accounting and Auditing Division. • The subcommittee, headed by I--------- . Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Ma., bail recommendations that f u tu r,® been holding hearings off-and-on stockpile goals and requirements the year on the , various be changed. government stockpiles of critical Among the scheduled witaes- end strategic materials. Thei pan- ------el hopes to complete hearings next week and begin preparirig its report for the next Congress. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Senate stockpile investigators called in key government officials today to would like to see the *et total cort and yalue climates iovemmeal’, werstod • - stockpiles. Counsel Richmond C. Coburn of the Senate Stockpiling subcommittee said the hearing today may provide information for possible Bjtotronlci Capital ........ Electronics International . Prlto Oo. .. .. . .......... McLouth Steel Co.........34.3 Michigan Seamless Tube Co...It Pioneer Finance .......... 0.4 Santo Pe Drilling .........13.0 Tnnaoont. Qae Pm* Un* ...30.7 Vernor'i Olnger Ala ....... 1.4 Wlnkilmen'i ............... 1.7 Wolytrint Shot .............34 Wyandotte Chemical .........47 MUTUAL rUNDO BID Al . 7.31 ,1U - Affiliated Pund Putnam Growth ... Television Electronic Wellington Equity . Feed Grains Keep on Stronger Trend A familiar and popular gift item — United States Savings Bonds—will be available in attractive new “package” this Christmas, according to Alfred C. Girard, volunteer chairman of Oakland County Savings Boricb Committee. Dm package consists ef a handsome, free gift envelope availabfe at local banks to purchasers of Savings Bonds to be ased as gifts. The envelope Is faced in Viue with a drawing of the American eagle holding a red, white and blue streamer. “Coining at this time of year,” Girard noted, “the new gift fold-is at attractive bonus, to •^•[Christmas givers. Throughout the year, however, these folders will be available for all types of gift occasions, and will be kept to stock by the banks for tills purpose.” CHICAGO UPI - Feed grain futures continued their stronger' 1 today in fairly active early transactions on the board of tradrwith December corn starting off almost a cent higher. “ • corn, it was the fifth consecutive day and for oats it ran to seven without a setback. Oth-grains and soybeans turned slightly firmer for a while after opening about steady. Brokers said the support included a moderate commercial demand, but that there appeared also to be improved buying by speculators who showed a preference for the long side of the market. ^ Grain Prices OPENING GRAIN CHICAGO, Dee. 3 (AP)—Open today: Wheat .a*p .,7,..,.,1.1* •o. ......3.05% Oate lar ......3.00% Deo ..71 lar ......3.01% Mar . ' “ o ........1.30% May . »p .........M3% jui .. Corn Rye fee .. .....1.03% Die tor ......1.10% Mar' •t .......US% May Savings Bonds Gift-Wrapped fall winters from 1955 throtigh 1059 pressing snow info small blocks and many manufacturers dropped mr easy storage. out ....' /• CAN’T DO MUCH IN dm? Even where they can cprint on a good idea of snow man years, the ^home snow plow/salesmen know they can’t do touch in cities of 200,000 or overJFor one thing, people titore haven’t much of anywhere tar throw snow' and let it accumulate as do the homeowners in the wider open Suburbs. nukers are wrestling with m- Today there were replies at The Press office to the following boxes: 1, 4, 19, 17, 18, 56, 77, 79, 83, 118. FOR FAST. ACTION Pontiac Press Want Ads Dial FE 2 8181 lty for error* nth*, canoel th* char*** portion of tbs that tlon of transient Want Ade l* • a.m, th* day of publication aftor the ftret insertion. be aura to get your "RILL NUMBER." No adjustment* will be given without It. Closing time for kdvertlie-ment* containing type (Ian larger ^ JJJ^LooUl# previous to publication. CAM! WANT AD RATES acoompanlee order) see 1-Dgy 5-Oays ” 5-Day# S’ »2 OO 12.4(1 13-84 5 in in tin 10 0.10 10.80 18.80 An addMontTfaarg* of 80 o«nU wui bo raatto for um or PoniiM Rr6ii BOi numwrg. The Pontiac Prcsi to Mtmoriam LOVING MEMORY O We still have you m out Sally mlesed by yo garet and wm Danli and dad. . s Vour Bills ” F^tV^wk. Cim Aaj tistntetit Service 714 Huron, _ 'JjEt >-W»t -- Chrletma* wrapTweyLFerry ■ US Indlanwbod Rd. Lika Orion An equal opportunity employer TOOL ROOM'GRINDER Fmrel PIrscters OODHAltDT PUNE , Keego Harbor. Fh. m Di: E. Pursley funeral home Invalid Cat Service FE 4-—■ Donelsbn-joffis coats FUNERAL HOME DRAViair FLAWS "" ^frrw.Huron, Voorhees-Sipl© FUNERAL HOME Cemetery Late CEMETERY LOTS. OAKLAND hui* by owner, leaving »t*u. Sacrifice Drlce. LI 3^738; Y OIRL OR WOMAN NEEDINg . , frlondly adviser, phone FE wer jB^^o&dB»ntil3! ■ DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES. 131 Menominee. FE 5-7gQ». - WB'lL” * FAY OFF-i YOUlj^WSStd. Add a room. Heatlng-aldln- "■"* ■' have goo * terms, lo 3-03M. ON ANh A d equity in home. Long w monthly payments. FE FTER THIS DATE, DEC. [ Win not be responsible debta contracted by any s myself. Henry E. Van SO Benson, Pontlao, Mtohl- i tall, gray around mouth. U> cinay. vicinity ot %*rhrtlL Huronjsnd_ Telegraph. LOST: GREEN LAKE AND ( mere* Rd. area. Black and ) Male fomeranian, puppy, light brown, no collar. Name “Trouble." 5 months old. Vlolnlty of Drayton Plain*. OR 3-4385. LOST: NOVEMBER 27. WHITE KIT• tan. Mack ears, WU and markings. _r___) foxw b6a, please oondQl Orchard ______J# > \ * _ _ LOST:, COLLiE wira_ CbLLUO name of Ck£!*. I vlolnlty of Lag* after 7:30. AFTER 6 P.M. ’ \ Must have * men ■ BB . . In evening. Barnlnga of 345 per week. Must be neat appearing and good worker. Start Immediately. Also opening for full time men. For ”ATTRACTIVE POSITION charaote?*etea^*wo*rSt—^ •)» . oil*. Call FE 6-51 IS for appolnt- BABYgnTER AND LIGHT HOUSE. Blood Donors Needed FE 4-8847 15 Rh positive. 17 Rh negative 8 to 4 Mon.. Tu«*.. Wed.. Thurs. Detroit Blood Service 16 South Cats,________ OLIVER MOTORS SALES 2 Opens . Mechanics Weekly Ouaranleo BUI Borland —Apply In Person Only— 16 Orchard L okiLl 'mIn wantkS. apply at BfgBoyDrlva-In. Telegraph and jewelrV salesman ''permanent, Must be ■ experldnced. 1 *• 8“ "Machine REP AIRMAN Hlgh^uamj^ecragtag^ eapeOence an3°vacaUon. _ M, CMFG. CO. f LOVXN^ MEMORY^OF re not forgotten loved oi Nor will as Mini ■ We wlU aFSEraj*— OET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLAN ,dm can afford MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS TN DEBT Arrange to P*y with on* smnll wet weekly payment. m> BUDGET SERVICE^ tlAff TxFERIENcSD- IN~ frAut ■ end knowledge n and^ oapable for later pro tlfrS department| Interviews glv.en dally at. 148 Welt HUron. see Mr. Zelaeko. OVER 18. MORNING WORK IN Drui^ Si PART 'TIME PUBLIC OPINION INTERVIEWING Silt parltlm* evening0*!? MrvMWlng In Oikland County. Paymtnle start gl 51,80 per hour plus 5 cent* car mUMgo, Exp*- . ABOVE-AVERAGE SET UP MAN «r a ___.*1*0**, gwvUedgc Warner ti Swasey A-C ■vmhmm* .p ft, I rarr helpful, paid I lRipi»yBiiEt AftBcln ^ 9 LEGAL Experience on Internal, external. ana surfno* trlndert ^raaulrad. Paid holiday*, tnsurance ana vacation. “ M. c mfgTco. WHAT’S YOUR LINE?, rouNq i soboot I MAN, MUST BE HIOH • * to learn nvletlm _____________kayo oxaoutlv* abUl- ty for future. SUS Highlann. Avon Chyistmas Time Customers want , products see on TV and In UHllIM CAR.BILLER ..............SOT Must have dealerehlp experience and knowledge of DOokxOapIM. Position open Immediately for For Information 0*11 tall r’S medical .-r,.£r .-Baja;?®™”'"1 ,:± . RBLl help a JABLE WOMAN, UVZrTS. with houseworx and oWdron. babysitter and uoht house- work, stay night*. Sat. and Sttn. Off, FE 5-7508, iABfiffim IN MY HOME. DAYS. Siamoroiis position In Pant, house, must have ~Ught »##re; tarlal experience, fntngulng po** tlon for young gal"gr-34. CLERK TYPIST ............... 8251 Like to work wito ohWrwf Opportunity i awaits you. No experience necessanb u {yplng BABYSITTER OR HOUSBKEEV-Uve ln^Orlente^ okay, ahlld 52251 WANTED, AP- 8ECRETARIES ........ Many available. position younx gals, shorthand I typing 60. iUCPBRIENCED WAITRESS WANTV ' Rd.. Rochsstor, after 4 p.m. ■ MI 44400. CflULL COOK, 8:50 A M. TO 5 P.M. S days a week. Apply at Baumans Restaurant. 808 g. Bird.. Bast. HOUSEKEEPER. STAY, REFBR------ ....r- —'-'Tf, g days and SECRETARY/ Mult have eg*] experience, prefer ghortbhnd but Will accept dicta, phone experience. 5335 to start. Midwest Employment - 40S Pontlao State Bank Building woman,. *i-su, i accounting. Prefi. . ———_______ accounting. Knowledge of offlo* machines Important. Supervisory level, and In laslcfnatlng flild. it reaulre * A ..'..'.......,1480 9 administration. “I accountlnR. ,LEfl ........ ground preferred but ------------- datory. Age 21-38. PRESTON WALKER SMITH , EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL COUN8EUNO SKRylCT .' . 850 E. Mapla . Birmingham Tell Everybody About it with a PontiacPress Want Ad Dial FE 2-8181 Employmint Information 9-A tartrmtow iowa 1* t; able construction workers. Box 854, Baltimore 3, Md. aoeordiani. 8u 118jfi1* •BJOWW. ... further Information. Instructioifs-Schoels 10 —-■ MEN - ‘ LEARN TO OPERATE Heavy Equipment TaBBwSi® Allied Institute, Ft 44IW « writ* Pontiac Frees Bos 104. Work Wmtoi Mate *1 - DRAOLINES ...... BULLDOZERS ORADER8 CARPENTER WORK. NEW AMD " remodelbut. OR 2-2902. back hobs • CLAM SHELLS. SCRAPERS CARPENTRY. BRICK AND Mgl, CONCRETE. eWflT lOWW^ ^ FE 5-5422. f -■■ ' .'"" " popjyBOVEis,.-^-'1'’ --Tirirtned men ere earning 6151 per weak and up. Thousands of additional man are needed right now to operate, the heavy equipment used In building roads, bridges, dams, airfields. Irrigation systems. MARKlkD VgllRAN wrra PAM-llv nseds wait. PE 6-8002. ■ PLAOTERINO. ALL KINDS. E. Merer*. OR 3-1346. PA1NTINO OR. ANT ODD JOES, full or part time. Ft 4-1715. SHOVEL BACK HOE CLAM AND drag IJn^operalcr, fuU «, P«I Complete training glvet you actual . experience on heavy equipment at our resident training centers, with Work Wontsd Fsmole IS pleFton. For complete Information 5 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING .. bail 112-S42-158* or send name, address, ago. telephone number and working hour* to: and house diaaPlu"TK 3-1IS1. ‘.MLMrWAWI” • ASSOCIATED Heavy Equipment School; 18.880 W. McNlchola * Detroit 35 Michigan DAY WORK B* THE HOUR. OBN-eral homework. 5154171. IRONINGS WANTED. CALL AFTER ' 5 p,m. FE 2-7182. - RADIO ” LaLy WOULP^UKE HOU8KWORK WHITE LADY ^WANTS DAY WbtK. Operators Building SorvIcs Suppnsi IS NEEDED! A-i MASONRY AED.OINtRAL mE,w.«.tt,iiYOTr- Wo sro now interviewing ’ young ■Tsrtjig^” ' ernment-llcensed radio operator po-sltlone. Big demand te .XM^gOMt Homo Improvement loans St wtf bank rata* and oonvwleot terms. Pontlao Stata Bank. FE4455>. _ steamships, pipeline companies, polio* and amergsney services. 8to. EXCAVATIONS - SrLLDOSUNO Septic Systems EM W5W Writ# for free details and intar. view. Send your name, as*, education, address, and pbone number to: USED BUttBltia MATERIALS, used 2x4’», 28c anchTMxll 5**5 and 14 foot. fl.20 each, gM„*nd oil furnaces and boUsro toilet*. RADIO OPERATOR TRAINING Central Technical Institute Box 17, 0/0 Th* Pontlao Pro** Srg^£gdroT3 ion" D'Hondt Wwoklng. 20 Auburn. Fhhnf 120-tm ti U 11 S •? TRY W A M T A D S F£ 2' 8 i T ^ , j|y BrywAIA, Tafino, 4gm| ESP|$$ ujumo# MAdtelrti ’ HIOB *• 1SPk» ““ ■ “ I LEAN EPFIC-ENCY APARTMENT, I ■*=ae.1-j«KfTm wk. Including 9 lr-iM>. BOOM TERRACE. 65 WHITFIELD. :,S>Myfeg "L^'ibedroom ' gnrag*. I1W leu*. aaers ^gfif if **»*!«»» If TI2ZY By ,Kat» Osann . Sato Hnm HIITER MINK ABBA, 3-bsdroora >ai__ wall-to-wall carpet, alum, storms sasxsi* • 291 W. Yale at Stanley Rent — Option $86.50 mo< -------- fewmA^ull^wnmn*. ®*°^v U« M1W. 1 ' V : I w y W..1.T* »..i Wmtmtm 1 VMT BOB. I bedrooms, plsstsred wells, carpst, large kitchen^. base- 3-bedroom. both. -I Pm* Want. X Mill, OB 32999. !. Dnumaldna & Tatlorlna 17 finer 3-bedroom. furnished ; ■ " _QrMgB^yg»gm.—-.............■■ ■ alAratjono oP wrim. I ?^** ~[gB^mD' ,H66i." i hbolriT A^ WO have many prospects for good clean temes sn IM you^tevtag «ood .wslinl l — —. not 1st us do tbs Job for you. bur, roots of experience boro taught uq moor things shout renting. Wo toroS. ell our prospects csrefuur ss to their credits, clean-llness end responstbUltr- PlOdgO phons hk your lings.------- Dorothy Snyder Lavender W01 Highland Rood gr--———' FULL BASEMENTS rltoirtaiH IMjwMri M • a ROOMS. STO ator. utiUtle MomT privi •qulrMe m . N PRlVl- t HOME AWAV PROM BOMB M prlvste home, a sleeping' —““ -nrwtrMiii min.' xmum.—' P CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM. GLOBE S-l DECORATING - JS88&Mi Jl LADT WTBRIOi ^IPIBP MfptTrB^^OTr DECORATC [. IN CHAMBER- PAINTINO AMO DECORATINO Boms Improvement Maas st Ml rates snd ocavsnlent ter Poetise gbto Bank. FB 44M1. WALLPAPER. REMOVING, PAPER-lng. Expert deoorstlng. OB 3-7894. Tgtovhtoa4tadio Strtta 24 WEED TV OB RADIO TDBBSf Fpl? TU^Te^iSg ■ ROOMS AND BATH. UPPER. HOT ralcrteat. PB 94271. ■MRI AMD. BA fm TOUT loor. 0*00% modern, tea host, lid. 1739 Bseohcrott. Bee go Her- Rooms With Boorfl . .MEALS 7 DAT* A WEEK. TV . snd living room privileges,- shift worker. U Matthews «. ■ Ait itXCEPTIOHALCLBAN HOME Mari efiosgrnJmf^Tn, lf, lKI. . ,f .. sInoOb-AND DppBLE ROOM I i«irt s»in«rTiv»«iiy <7-« - 1-2701 ' IlMhl LI 1-4077 sfter 7 pjn. WESTOTTN BBALTT NEW FHA APPROVED 3 and 4 Bedrooms Fact Brick Homes $150 DOWN OAS HEAT - PAVED STREETS LARGE ROLLING LOTS OH M-M SpSSFgP Job Orion behind Albsn'e Country Cousin. MODEL OPEN DAILT U TO I SQUARE FEET OF LIVING ^-hodroomi^*lmths. Jg* tog srss. ESS0I „^^Jp|ijMg|Kw._____ out/(town payment. Trade consld- li&.TU.T»^.ga: safe sandy beach Tea. this, 4-bedroom Cape Cod brisk on Wstuu Lake has many, many Phis features to addtttwi to Ho beautiful beach. Everything - *— By oould deeirs fi g « noma. Priced way down k sale at $30,000 on terms SOME IN TRADE. Call t.Twarden realty fa-TIt?_____Wt W. Huron Bloomfield Highlands Sato Houigg 49 $9,500 ss. wnmgK?;as Ruly McNA> ART meveb 2 Big Bedrooms A minor chants would make this a lovely (•bedroom homo. Brick and frame ranch home on beautiful 00x300 fit — privileges on Loon Lake. Cut stone fireplace Witt beatalator unit, full dining mom. ceramic tile bath. LABOI THROUGHOUT. LOTS —itwny ana --wltt hum A TREAT TO OP 8TORAOR CanaUto Cass Lake 49.S largo . bedrooms and i floored ^mttlo jtor^expanxton.^ / lined, largo recreation room Wl sun imr' ACREAGE CLOSE IN Model open, m #7 Bennett. Smith Wideman 412 WEST HURON ST. OPEN EVES., FE 4-4526 BATEMAN . New* Models • . Your Choice of TRI LEVEL ON TOUR LOT RANCHER $10,600 OPEN DAJLyT^O 7:30 TRADING Is Our Business le fireplace. 2 lived to and betojr sold by Me tags Co. A Mg mat for somsc at I1S.980 wltli t2,000 down. CA POR APP-T NOW W. Bloomfield yiMdroom brick ranch to Pont] School district. Beautiful eopdttl 7 years old. ltk bathi, patio a carport. Pfigt time offeredJi ATTRACTIVE 3-BEDROOM CAR- m, %£raugmutf>*lhiU hardwood floors, lib-ear garage. Low down -payment «r jaaaa with option HAGSTROM REAL ESTATE BM W. Huron , OR 4-0338 Evenings oau MM4M — OB 342» with an city aaentbnt, oD _______ and screens. llh-csr garage, only GILES REALTY CO, i PB MRS 231 BSIdwln AVI MULTIPLE LI8TIWO SERVICE om brick, raaeh. f_____■» Modern brick math home with ANCE with modest down AS modern. oarDoMLaL rietorswlndow and 4 ft. over; buys thla modern roomy. ; ■araas Frito iSdacaoed hang, attached double garage.Witt ranch bungalow. Has sal Canoed ; - paved drive. Carpeted living room kitchen. 3 bedrooms, am re Shu waiting for. I quickly still JM vaa ri.m uuwn plus oosts. Only $65 per Month ANCE with modest down papnent buys this modern roomy, well-kept toflnfMi MmsItaMMi-WmM to Rtert ■■ Host elesn 1 rooms and : rsssGta.Tassj«»“ keep yon cool In gammer, w in wintor. short distance to dt town stores, ehnrobss and bus eoansotlsns. (M par month, includes ' heat and water. K. " HempsteadjRealtor, 103 E. iwbEr wmEjC' bj»JW apartmanU. teal, hot water. 1 and refrlgorator. furnished. l-_ Sj^^JisrASjSsfe INd, REALTORS. FE 4-4232 or PBMKB. RgBt Hseidi, Fwntislwl 34 !»‘ vntaTgims! 6llT-ggT». “ JSiSmwim i8- UAiff mmhW waWWS.' exo. todg,.^ HoriM, Pi CASH 48 HOURS “Tsam-* WRIGHT ■■ .HSUftt'i I i ..rr.Tj., cthave $100,000 AUGiTsT JOHNSON rp jot : •oar attached garage, full baas-meat, ceramic tils batb. Don McDonald Laketront Bungalow COMPLETELY FURNISHED Lovely d-room _ modern. Interli trga picture t r. 3 baths, ll id dining l. and a a.teten. Carr-*-bedrooms. BHl and plastered WATER AND dealrable bomei aie.soo rou price. Humphries FE 2-9236 \ SI N. Teiegraph Bead UNoAMwarBalTPEVliM . HAYDEN basement with targe dow Ml. Wa floor, i__ ary room, oil boat, targe 3-car ga- SMIsJO l^mW™ wait of Ponlae on tarn taka. $27,000, terms. Brewer Real Estate JOBEPH P. REISZ SALES MOR. PE 4-0181______Eves. P» 0-0033 rSumL ______________- ml. 2 bedrooms, recreation a and antra bedroom in baso-it QU furnace, garage. tl,f“ m pin* mortgage OMt, 1400 DOWN Ohio mertgaxe coet. i now on this wall Copt ran horns on 2 wooded tots. IMr-csr garage finished and heated. Xx-, eellent kitchen, gae furnace, newly decorated. Priritages on W',T-— — Lake. —.- 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL $9,995 $1,000 DOWN MGLrmBB* «r tot. Finished family itod~ Interior, ltk-car CAT! ON YOUR LOT J. C. HAYDEN Realtor j^.^VteSS.. 107(1 Highland Ed. (M-dg) 1 KM 3-8404_________Open ’til $500 Pull price 9-room house to Royal Oak to sSl. ( Booms. 34s prospect; sonablo down pymt. Inquire dl,(M oi b.TM CASH, S-ROOM. 3-h-tnn tiie bath, waOto-watl car-end. PE M977. Colered. CLARKSTON 3-BEDROOM RANCH HOME EEC. LOCATION — RECENTLY REDECORA^ro —< 1U BATHS — PAST POB8K88ION — NO DOWN PAYMENT REQUIRED — CLOt-INO COST8 ONLY OP APPROX-IMATELT l3M. mratt.Tm«tote in sdvsncTtlOl Sundew Ur.. Oommercs. Sim only. ’•ssas.'gsisfttfw®®: ‘""1 ROOM ITRNUHED CABIN. *0742. • $62.00 A MONTH phis taxes. 2 bedrooms, basement, oratoX taM watccms, PB 90411. hnuidfktd ^4KE. LBEPROOM. garage. Near Pontiac Engtosarfag. MM will mors you in. Call W. W. Rosa Homes at OR 24821 tor do- I BEDROOM it A H 0 H. OAK AUBURN—CROOKS ROAD AREA . Sharp S-bsdroom alum, ranch, tet-to, spacious lot. Psvsd street. Ter- rific value (10.9M might trade. Cell H C. Newlnghem, Realtor. UL 92311. UL 24379. ItMt Hmsm—UHtanMitfl 40 14« uro^flin^u? RROKHR^-^gg 'BMP'1 COMMUNI1Y NATIONAL BANK iriihi *aiD> 2-BEDROOM MODERN HOUUB. Df oountry. OU Mat. newly dsoorsted. Jobs O. Myles. RMr. EM3-gl33. 9BEDROOM HOME. INQUIRE 7$i Doris at Paatteratons Rd. to.llM CASH Buys this 8-room 7-batt home. Ex-MUnt location at Elisabeth take. Condemned, but has wonderful poa- 2 BEDROOM BRICE TERRACE. IN-"aulre IM g. Edith PB 4-4371.. Elwcod**Realt'y ' 663-2410 ELBOW ROOMf . S*'gtXdsW^VepIIs4j Fsnosd Mortgage oost will move you to. Call W. W. Rosa Homes, at OR 34021 for details. * 2 BEDROOMS, ON AUBURN BUS ltaoJinquln 22 Auburn Rd. S-ko6U_house. (40. tm WSbb Rd. OR 3-2249. . , 1 ROOM AND BATH, DRAYTON Plains, 39M Hatfield, OR 34146. *-BfctiROOM. Mi BA*H8. AT UP-oourt' p#r POR COLORED—2-FAlHLY One to live to and rent upper. 0"l5, PAUL JONES REALTY PB 4-9990 4"'KSSU'ISX: MODERN TERRACE. !5^%.rfcrirWpS& HANDYMAN SPECIAL. 9 BeD-ro^^m, ^ rsprir. (4,9M. r %d6Ui AN& bAJb, FBiti Hsrttsra Hitt. PE 44724. 4 ROOMS AND" BATH/ CORNER BLY $3(0. COLORED UTILn^ROOM™^10RECBh WRIGHT 193 Oakland Art._PK 1-2441 . FLOOR — RECENTLY INTER- $190 Moves You In, FHA GTs O'NEIL OPEN NIGHTLY < FIVE TO EIGHT AS TOMORROW HERE MODEL HOME that to obsolete a few short is a years from not plana which ton living rocm. kite Uy room. Just I rangomsnt wble your parttcular turlsUc kitchen ten. or fan sleet the t l best sull femuy. r s&%s.%“.rtZd,a! rLs^i^stir m ril.900. with exosllent flnsno-Eg. gtrslght out M-39 (W. Huron) - to Twin Lakes VII-lpgs and follow our signs. SHARP 7-ROOM PERM A STONE FAMILY HOME. 1 glory featuring king slic ted-|---”-----( kitchen, full on pha trims. A DANDY POR A RETIREE Clean, Mat. well , located. One bedroom, attached, ga- m fortsbS H^g!lCrii mw% mU 3-Bedroom Brick With ear part. .All targe with 18 ft/_ master tedroo — lVk baawi Wcndcrtol ot^tl—■ SSI S,1*WS‘win°“.«rlfl«‘^ $11200 Only M.1M down plus *“■ MN'TWA^L "** ,Mr Auburn Heights Real nloo 3-bedroom; a0 Wtlk blc closets, large Uvtog room kitotea. mcoly cattwtet « storms and sersena end bly 101 ft. tor Oiter movtag to Csllf. DrlMd td $11,MB, fttn $1,100 u7-phu co«U. Excellent atoa off Squirrel Rotd- Real Rancher Priced so you oennot afford to rilscteflESi^gawte snd^blg^ 149' lot nlcoly landscaped w t * •* fenced roar yard Extra nice, tremendous value atfWyni.a approx, $1,100 down and only t?9 per month Including taxes and Insurance. Close to school. Bring your eteok book. Ask' About Our Trade-In-Plan Brick and brown frame, loir long ranch Wlte overhang- Lovely setting. 113x140 ft. lot: Largo nytog room, flroplacs. 3 large bedrooms, osramlo mol supper room With petto doors, dandjy touslisn. UUUg attached garage, a year* old Eg-esllSnt fixtures and woodwork throughout. Owner transferred. $19.-9M. PHA terms. HAROLD £. PRANKS. REALTOR IM Union Lite Hibd EM $-3309 IRWIN Drayton Plains 4 btdwomg with walk-ta otaroto It Juol Quo of ite-oiilotsndtag foa-turns to this lovely boms for a large family. Has oak flooH,. ftul basement, with gas beat. The 30-foot Uvtog room teg niee flreplr and bourn u on large shady with paved strati. DollHouse Sm tot wlto ntaa*tama to lbs cation of .this lovely 2-bed TO bungalow with targe carpeted ! tag room. Ideal for retired eou._ Or yoosg couple. Bargain priced fs mtMo dmm. South End* 3-bedroom homo with carpeted living room and — ------- Rd fill Hww , /4» GAYLORD aubuHn hexohts, uioo.Stedwsm. fuu bafement.- recreation room. sparse redecorate. Low down. PS?® .J bus arS hot water heater, alum, ftonnf -LawTcnce Mi Ga^d; Bro^Mwff'Ptea -MYtStt Birmingham {STaiJ™l wrilSr tovely.. oak ItaWI. ntaa basement for rooroatlou w8K. gas beat. Panesd yard. Oarage, patad drive. BUM- WlA tariM- Plke. Neat ■ room, basement, j Igkfuroaee, pg*M gtrosta. < Pontiac Realty *7 Baldwin ' ________HA ..QIOBOE R. ntWIN. Mi W, WAlton “mm KENT BRICR' BI-LEVEL Hero *U toe Imna for too the average. Some of tHr - St taso^sMs: Sram scaped with Merton Sttmwod. property. Cyoloos fenced. Lake. JSljDrG? tody *1».7»! - Terms. Cau Tames A. Taylor, Agency 7733 HIGHLAND ROAD ■ OR 4-0304 ,/■. . STOUTS Best Buys Today LAKH FRONT RANCH—Cut# and cosv, features 17X19 Uvtog room forced atrIkMSiWRttil RMlfll< Luxuriously carpeted throughout. Only S14M9 With Mat of terms. ILL SCHOOLS—Within t blocks Of Ifig f-ysar-old 2 ksdrocBl ranob homo, gpaotouo Uvtog and dining arm. op to date kitchen, tile bath, painted baeement. oil teat, laandry bays, storms sod screens, only liiJM with io% down, plus cools. Immediate possession. HERRWOTOl^HILLg —^gharp^L celling to UVlng room and dtotog. area. tUa bath, basement with roc. roan, gas teat, water softener. Well landscaped, Stater garage. - pawd drlvs. Anchor fsnetof. Only $13,790 With easy PHA terms. 1 LOTS—Included with tos aala. of toll auto . StedMOM suburban MU, Oak' ttoers. oU forced • air Warren Stout, Realtor 77 N. Saginaw Btroal PB 92199 POR A QUICK SALR. CALL USI ANNETT Telegraph Road IN ft. frontage by Mg ft. deep. plus^TO ft. altef^ytoad West Side Brick 2-bsdrm. terrace. Good stsed rooms. Uvtog rm.. dtotog rm.. WSj^SbKiciS teal tor no ran UhM. Sunday W i. 'rutL PRic® m.' n.. new gas furnace. 'MIDDLETON REALTY_CO- TO SETTLE ESTATE — Mwdroom . »—tr wlto full bath. Located on * r cm acre of toad near Dray-Plains Reduced to (MM. CaU LARGE RANCHER loading to Casa Late, f . -30x24 Uvtog room with 2 baths, double garage, i. water and sewage, (l,-I. CaU 402-1602. Stllweli- z CLARK IM OR LES2 DOWN. Sroom modern temo, Northern Htab District. Newly decorated, oakftoors. Exchange -OR Trade Yote equity tor What you really want — Naw or exlat-tog nomeo — any alas — any dlrecUoa. Yoa need no money — lot no solve your total Estate problems. “Today** Top Trades 3}4 -Acres * fireplace, sunporoh and attached z—“-rib suburban at 9U.9M. — -utfllty i — osxia Lake Angelus Golf View Estates. ■psaKi, wlUS.-ISU'TC KAMPSEN RIVER FRONT gMd lake. TWO *P full bath a no ft. on tha ■ LEADING TO 99.990. COLORED — Largo i rm. modern temo on jiavqjl street. Full hue- m 190 DOWN — totsrior just Uki Two bedroom bungalow with PUlI^bato. now oabtost oink. U) *- , , Pulf bath. Plenty of garden space. Oarago. frlted at only 19.990 ted real easy tqrma lorightpeo- jt living fm. Bnolosed porch on IMS elds. Oood sandy bsacn. only In,(M and terms That are easy. INCOME SPECIAL - Near McConnell Sohool. Here to MS Of tM test. 6 urn rooms for you wltt fireplace. TWO nloe 3-rm. apt* with |U good furniture to rout, plus.,a 4-rm. bungalow homo to nijt. Two large Iota, Qaragai for I cars/ Aluminum aiding. Now • gas fur-nacs. Perfect condition to and out. mautlfuUy landscaped Mill plenty Of trqogi flowers, oto. Prlohd at only (H.1M, This one has 93M ter month toooms plug IMP ml apartment. WU1 consider trade. JSt with US -- Wo Buy. ten and mm BROWN, Realtor 1.1. SPECIAL. EERO NOWN. Mod-om whits trams bungalow sit-.—i-n go | rite lota, some toads tractive t__________________ ______ Largs Uvtog room with flroplac Basement, oil boat, Endow breeaoway and attaoted Soar g_ rage. Lake privileges. Now at gu.(N with gl.MO down, WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — Quick'' pcasaiitca to tots I bedroom terns. Pleasant kitchen. FuU basement wlto oil teat. Oarage. Excellent no Down, mv.dw Comfortabts . 3 I dtoatts. oU funi Ctaoa to ssbori. CLARK REAL iioi wThubon _ •— Evenings oaU PE 9-3698 or OR Mtfltiw ltetlng Service rqntate, fbsdrm. furnished k g ft. ltvtag room- wlto stone_______ place. Fun bath, Ians acrssnsd porch. Part basement. 2-car ga-rags. Extra btta roar..(17.H9. ,30 Dlxls Hwy. al Telegraph PH 2-0123—Open Bvec. ______Pres Parking 10 Acres—Oose In Beautifully restored farm boms on Baldwin Rd. Ultra Emm kitchen, ( tedrms., 2 baths, obrpsted throughout. Serocncd patio. Basement, oil teat. 2 bams, garage wltt sleeping (m. $32,5oo. terms. Rochester Almost now brick ranob. ( bedrma.. 2 tile baths, living rm. wltt circular bay window ond white brick flroplaeo. dtotog rm.. family rm.. utlUW MUXER ARRO- FEM466 (ALT NEW SBsdTOom trt-lovsl 4,** . ,. wltt take prtvflHngl -l(M, owner transferred, q possession. ( extra large ro----- nr baths, terowted yflters. gM teat. Black ton atroot. 79x190 ft. oorhvr tot. 11.7(1 down. INDIAN VILLAGE. A .charming % DOWN tor^tyua ne - iriua I late pri upstairs. P throughout - nearly new carpeting. sharp modem kitchen, base- ,W2Sf: picture windows. Psncod'yjro. garage and hrssasway. Only (490 down plug Utg. costs. William Miller Realtor FE2r0263 lake oakland brim bi-lev-EL: Living room with flroplaoo, S97Atfe«5ffB« family room with flroplaos. hath £s lot of storage on lake novol, i attached garage. Largs lot. a by appoiplmnt. LOrtBbcim?ltoT’ Square Late. Very spacious five bedroom homo In sx-esilent oondltlon. Largs Jiving room with IlNMiNi dtotog ‘L, kltohsn ONLY 1 MM8 1 ^ prioo'$9?4S0. ELIZABETH LAKH FRONT - Wltt good sandy ksacb. plus spacious i-bsdroom homo, wall-to-wall oar-peting In Uvtog room, ltk baths, oak lloon. plastered walls, loads Of otoooto. full basement, garage. — Pavod drlvs. iaUtog for MI.M0. Terms. ' ACRB' -* Wltt 7-room sokmlal homo, oarpettog *-lUntog room, bau, .,. plot level land with braat. Hi lent looattm. Best of Chrysler ~~ssswiy.M.IM. Terms. OPEN 9-9 imATJM "T.TT»LE LMTDVO SERVICE I CASS-BLIZABBTH ROAD PHONE682-Z211 NORTHERN HIGH AREA,. , f bedroom rtmch, 12x90 ft. living tWAtiW. Terms or wsdta BASS & WHITCOMB 2-7119 REALTORS UL 2-2930 BPI^CIALIZINO In TRAPES" °Brfok 2etory. Colonlsl homo, only O yn.. rid. This lovely, boras of-tars l lsrgs bedrooms, 4-riocp cs-ramie tils batt up. iteBrTwMI room wlto flroplacs, wring ftein, family iw, kitchen end breakfast room. % bath and sorssnad porch, full tUad basement. PA gas teat, IVt-car briok garage, gush stores as awnings, sprinkler system, large attic fan. beautiful carpeting and much moro. MUlTBE shown by ANOINTMENT.. NORTH •IDE: 2 bedroom ranch boms to good condition. Living room, large klwbm, utility,1 bstb, oil heat, nloo hit. psr°mo«taW,Mo "'rigSt to*01"1' *** - ; - “WE NEED LMTINOS” John K. I Irwin Val-U-Way WE TRADE ON AbhT pOMEn $45 PE^ MONTH ■rid 93M down, tor this small »• tedroom homa. Larga Uvtng room. GI»—$50 DOWN ■ room homo utar Auburn Hs^--.. Reoently rodssoralsd. Call today. M. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR , FE 4*3531 24S OAKLAND JgVE. OPEN M For that personal - • WEST SIDE groom bungalow, full J .'w JjifiirEii gjPl era: (7%wdVwfi. DORRIS WELL PLANNfD RAMfl&kbf' RANCHER;, (14,TM ... A living room Mg enough for masalyo furniture. small tnoagfa for bomey air. Largs pleturo window, a wonderful family kitchen, I bright ehterful bedrooms, gas teat, IH-ear attaoted garage, sMldrou qaa watt to a nelghbqrboqd HUM- fUhtag.PAkwSir p"m.d"n.5bd“l! sidewalk*1 P*T*d ctrMt* 0llNW» ' S6 12-ACRE EyrATEJSrrR^BBANp nt. S fire- ru; rWSL- Sices. large tee bed Ins Id*.' * I 1 ACRES, like new euatom In —b good floor pi with flieplaoe. I i With it, (amt illy n r. »!*.- 3 ACRES with 7-room^feni^ lrome. Clark*ton school*. near Dixie Hwy. 111.000. $2,000 down. 4 ACRES close to Waterford. Lam Mt of farm buildings fireplace MM3S It ACRES 4-bedroom ho a, small SorSorT7river. lit.soo. Sub. COtiHSlTE BBT or farm BOILDufOB In oxo. condition on oomer. 10 aorta ofland. M ^CTfkyooNh Of^ Ctarkston toad frontage. I • bedroom to lam I d other with Opportunity orchard with oyer lttt , lit petr troee. modem homo with t bedroom* C. PANGUS. Realtor ORTONTILLB 411 Mm St. WA 7-M Site Bmlam Property 57 120-FOOT ON CROOKS ROAD. NEAR ffiffist I “BUSIEST TAVERN FOR MflLHC" you take, a Took. Grossing «■ will TRADE. State Wide—Lake Orion 1171 W. MR OA t-ltts • FACTOTbaI MICHIGAN ’Business Sales 1 okM? »£ W vcuwfHI mot* /t*warBen REALTY towu ■ I kAfeMWliwmFitov- 4-90*4 It gauge,. Jka new. (Ood 5w trailer, portable Singer lowing tmnm loua idea in t eftre 3 p.m. offer1, L&nd Contracts drfitol. ,,.......... ___ M8?^r*month Including ?per cent Interest. Data of sale February, lttt. balanea owing on contract. $21,950. Excellent purobaaer, ooou- ron — dental aurgeon. Property question. 171 acre*, Ctarkston area. 10-room bout. " m gags against property. 4 -per tost lnterwt. ean be 119,101 Will beadle. Cell after 7 p, i»irned. 2 5-91M 20% Discount On land eentrad eeld In 1M0 lor M.UO Baianot owed (at 7 pr cent tntereat) $3,377 - dlaooUl 0*75. Total coat *3,700. • everel other contracts With dll count of IS to It per cent. C. PANGUS, Realtor WwrtBd jmtrtt»4HH»» 0A CASH FOR LARD CONTRACTS. *. J. Van VitMT 4MS Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1355. CASH mortsasei araUable. EfoOot"—“ or equity, h you^'caf Ted i-irn •JM t Ian• or PE 4-3990. Land Contracts , see ueo before you deal.' Waryen 77 N.^iagtna- “ IMMEDIATE ACTIOJ on any nodjaad oontraeta. new ~tr laalonbd. - •vwnrWBB upon aatla- MB tttTW (kehard I-*-- Mtnay to Lmr 41 Get $25 to $500 OR TOUR Signature I AUTO or FURNITURE Up to 24 mouth* to repay PHOONE FE 2-920* OAKLAND* ' Loan Company 209 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. BAX^ 401 Pontiac state Bank BuUdlng FE 4-1538-9 $25 to $500 on Vour SIGNATURE Auto or Other Security FAST, CONVENIENT M Months to Repay Home & Auto Loan Co. 7 N. Perry St. FE Mill TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS l» TO 090S VDTO* OL 1-97*1 Htli PL MU* '•FRIENDLY SERVICi’1 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WRRRR YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 tjrtM Flint —» 1 it -S Birmmibtw LOANS %inSt^T San ^o. “ ‘ -7BENCE ““ * * WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500 We Will bejdad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. tot Fonttao Stete Bank Bld(. FE 4-1574 ------ -------_ MMrtf*yU*nw MORTOAOB ON Ol.-HRPm with lAMbot frontaa*. No Sp-praleal fee. B. D. Chkrle*. Bqult-ebie Farm Loan Borvitt, 1717, S. Telegraph, FE 4-ttM, of M-to o«ar North Brsnw.lHi< oood home, not emn|Mt*ly ntodei TUa farm I* eet up tor dairy, t Sflh Household Qttil ; ^ DAVENPORT AND l«h Qtriihi ^JnA^rtS&r," SnSSnm « tSS'u * PRICE — REJECTS, 8EAUTI-ful living nn. and bedrm. sultoe, 370. 01.50 Week. Barfeln Hou.e, 103 N. Caee. FE 9-0*41. . Mi Orchard Uit All. • PdBCS tlVlNO HOOM (BRAND 920 A MONTH, BUYS 3 ROOMS OF furuHur*. 'j&jsa I table tan 9 pc. bedroom set •ftf 9 yaulty lamp*, kitchen dinette • deck and chair, wllta tonaraprms [ spring to match Wyman Ihiraltur* Ob. I s 19 RUOS, FOAM BACK. 314 39. Tweedi 393.06. Oval braided 333.33. Axmtnittrs 349.13. 13xlt nylon 42 Orchard Lake Ate. ■ragtewi OPEN MON.-SAT. 3 TO I 94 MONTHS TO PAY ‘PCT1 Automatic SiNgkr Dial Control oablnet model. JuaL set the dial for buttonhole*. Mind heme and all the other work. 364.30 full price or paymentt of 05.15 per month. Waite’s FE 4-9111. • AMANA 9W01IC FOOT UPRIGHT froeser. 4 ytars old. to----1 condition. FB 6-5330. BUFFRT. CHAIRS AND ' dreueri. 11 fatso. 44 liSbhodM ’SET. BLEACHlb OAK. ■nring and mtltma, chest, drawer, 9 I holly wood b cut headbutt for refuwd , 1 d frames wits . N* retdonebi S. Arery *t. abeth Lake Ketetae. PE 3-«3l'. BEAUTIFUL SINGER Stwtaf Meohln* In wood consol* zig-z*g equipped for tanoy auM practical atrataht sewing. 6.90 L month imet 110.00. Tel. WYMAN’S BARGAIN STORE lm Rebuilt Maytag ........... Rebuilt refrigerator ,., 2-pc. Living room eutto 9-po. Sofa bod lUtt* . Btdl, springs, mattress Oat rang*! ............... W. Pike - E-Z Urma FK 4-1122 B 4-U) Cash Loans $600 to $2500 an hemee any Mace^Oeklaad Voss & Buckner A Mortgage Problem? Wt make mortssS* loan* to meet strtoUon *oaru?#1 C3«h* "end * eon- j CASH Loans to $2600. ture. 9MS months to repay. OrouB all your dom Witb only oat email monthly payment. ■ ■ Family Acceptance Cbrp. iw«p« BEAUTIFUL BLOND I ble and 4 chair*. FB t^ iw F CLEARANCE) IUNK BEDS (WROUGHT I complete with springe and treuet. 339.95. Aleo maple or trundle and trtpla bunk beds, son's Furntturo, 49 Orchard Laks COMPLETl) DINlNO ROOM SET, dAyenpow'and1 r"-1— — emi able. yH *m. CLOTHES DRYER HOTPOINT - RATED NO- I Deluxe model — new in oratka Free InalMlSWn m Edison Line* KELLY’S APPLIANCES 9917 Digit Hwy. Drayton FT —Christmas Special!- weekly^ F,B 3 7323. Elect CARNIVAL By Dick Tomer “Jimmy? Oh, his driving rights have been suspended for 30 days, for reckless use of the family’s gasoline credit card!” i, . Machine t4.M moi.~, ___________ I Capitol Sewing Center* for Zhl Sole Miscsllansou* 67 large ' cMb _Akp (brand now) tll.M up. Fosntm'r Furniture. 49 Orchard Lax* AtS. ELECTRIC LIORT FIXTURES. ALL ^■K ■— -eslgna. pull downs. W, Bedroom ll.Iti Irroguwn, ssmples. jehard LskeX-it. 08 WEBdOR bbltTABLB STEREO. 1S^Sr _____ I; Singer Zig-Zag oonsole model. 339,50. Electrolux vacuum. 914.95. Over 75 mod- Z£ tsnA0^.^ HO TYKO TRAIN SET. MM ht- TOT WATER BASEBOARD. 9L50 per ft.; bl| isvllfl on hot water heating lupptMl. O. A. Thompson. 7M9 M-59. CARVED LEATHER tlkAF'J A SPECIAL DAY, LOTS i choose from for Christ-I browse. ” ‘ ... Oakhtll, 1 of US-10. -Open 8 Hi-Fi, TV l Redies Channel muter nnlennu. rotator* Reg. 041.10 value now tll.M. 1 or'- JOHNSON’S RADIO and TV 40 E. Walton near Baldwin FB 5-45*9 Authorised Admiral Dealor MAHOGANY CONSOLE 21 INCH TV. RCA. 9“ ‘ NEW PORTABLES 1175 PER WEEK OOOPYBAR SERVICE STORE 30 S. esse Av*. FS 50191 USED TELEVISIONS, FULLY LAVATORIES COMPLETE 924,3* value 914.98, auib bathtub*, toilet*. ehower etall*. Irregulars, terrific vsluee. Michigan Fluor-— 7"> Orohard Lake—I. Pontlao ly 'ill 9.' Sal* 67 9 SPACE HEATERS. 9lt GALLON plMe, all equipment. , AND CHlW—--------- ___|_____ Chlfferobe. Boy* Ice skotee else 19, 9. 1 Girls ji. |S| MEDICINE CABINETS. LARGE 20’ mirror, Slightly marred 93,95 Large selection of oablnots wltt or without •Hhta or s[ldlp« doors dfirbuj — clothes, els* 9 'and 'll. 3-2939._______________ _ -INCH RADIAL SAW. LIKE NEW. 6,000 btU'oiL PURNAC* WITH some duet work and all oontrols Including thermostat and 99t gal. nil tank. Good working condition, A-l* BLlBCTRlC DRYER - BJ.95 Reconditioned Ironrite lroqer *69.95 Maytag wnngtr wainer ....919.95 Frlgldalre apt. refrigerator ... .939.95 CRUMP ELECTRIC CO. ••▼••troucnii thi able In oolor. lmt only. ’ QutlUy v AUTOMATIC zter iso SEWlWo Mnohlne In lovely blond oabuiot. Make* button hole*, blind h«mi, designs, etc. Pay off aocount In I months, at 95 per month or *4* cash balance, universal Co. FE uHTAinj Automatic wots tm -1- * supplloi KTsm^ol ________I.....I hsstor. Hardware, elect. euppUes, crook SQSjdM Md fitting} Low* Brolnora Faint, Super Komtana “d “lSEi'Sm' SUPPLY M6 Lapeer Rd. FE 4- CABINET MAKING _ KITCHEN CABINETS free Estimate* Day or Evening FORMICA TOPS PONTIAC WOOD PRODUCTS FORMICA aa natural A TOPS . I ■udWsMr. G'iSH AND CARRY . Formica Headquarters * New Loeatlon 317 orchardIaki rd. Cabln^l^)^smk|^Hood3 PONTIAC R1|CII»K SPECIALTIES O-OAUOE. 9—7-CAR F RE IO H ----- • 2W irantformer. I m " ' unoouplers Coat 33*0. al essi RAMO Alb Rl $37.50: new portable typewrltera 343.98! adding machines, shop parte oablnete, mimeograph machine*. offeet _pr*u. coat, raeka. fokbes. 413 Frank St., Blrmlng-ham. MI 7-9444 or 4500 Dt£f Hwy., Drayton Plains. OR J-ttt7. W* also buy. inameMtal iron porch and Railing corners, and JSgta t dividers. AYI8 CASH -. Sacrifice. OR 3-279*. rugs, eeat oovers, Blowing horns. 30o up. Styr£ tag full. Msny $4.3*: Im foam bslli eiaes v balta. 95* up. btllooni, *7) 9enso chain saw. tl*t. Coveralls, work ptnls. shirt*, shop coats. 21 h.p. ass engine, {to. Faint. nuitoN.'!*«*• fattauryi novelties. 100.400 Item*. Now-Used* Surplus. THE WHOOPEE. BOWL. AmI Dixie Hwy.. Clsrkslon, MA 5-0122. RUMMAOB SALE. WASHER. DRY-*- stove, furniture. 4Mwsn. dlehe* clothing. MW Mlddlebelt, Mar SUfa^Pfli SPACE HEATER t stawIem steel sihks. wit rim. MMfa. Delta gUgi* lay* fauoat*. I19.M with epray. O. , [HE SALV—__ RED SHIELD STORE 113 WEST LAWRENCE SotlTj^^FSwfimi. ^Zppllal TAKE ON PAYMENTS M.M PER —ith on Singer Sawing Machine, nodsrn caolitat. Full balance 328.16 Capitol Sowing Cenlr- to RENT A rfkW' aiNaZu^e i OASCONVERSION UNir*. used HirKacb for Aali. IX- oellent condition. FE 4-MI37. . WAkKlIOUSB CLASSIFIED AD ON WTTawIl -r Christmas Trass BEAUTIFUL SHEARED SCOTCH MM, Slat natural *Mtebi.r~~~ Call MA I-15*1 or MA 5-3*27. Christmas gifts 67-8 SMITH-CORONA now condition. ^5?I* after tape writer/ Portable, w 3*5.00. Pbon _ 3 b.m. i POUND BOWLINO BALL, (10, shotgun, 90 gauge bolt adtlon. cut down for young boy, - 910, Grime* Mw, 910, hoy* Imported akl sweat- —T—. FREE—BEAUTIFUt Scdtch Pln* Christmas lYeo vlth purchase of |1* or moro. __ SKATES—SLEDS—TOBOOOANS -TOS»SS85glBiS^ ecr&out bo:i^;u XJtVoiiT, 6X1* FOOT. Camaras • Servics POLAROID ELECTRIC B7TE L ACCORDIONS. LOW PRICES. LOAN- ACCORDION FOR BAll. UL 3-9244 BABY GRAND ELibTRlC PLAYER, 9500 3351M4 *r-- * tion, *175 SM-iiM" MORRIS1 MUSIC CO. I S.^Telegrajih PE 9-0667 _______GUITAR. 1 YEAR. REA- sonable. FB 2-9054, Ask for John. HAMMOND SPINET OMAN WITH DRIVEWAY GRAVEL, Tor 96. dellrersd. Also f sayl. FB 4^559.__________- • Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel ABC.WOOD. FIREPLACE AND FUR-i r. OR 34875. FB 4-2199. ■ — ILL KINDS OF WOOD, SLAB. flrtplM*. kindling and as orddrtd. also trM removal. Al's Lsndscsp-Ing FE 4-4M8 or OR 3-0169. FIIUEWOOD. OAK. HICKORY. AND fruit wood, ll* to *19 a «md. FB 54)214. . • - - i FREE FIREPLACE wboD AND — 't. It. bunt brush and Paper C fireplace Wood for sale. Fots—HuitHinPofs 79 2—WIRED, 4 TOY TERRISdS. * GALLON COMPLETE A4UARI-um set up. S17.W. Includes 1 fret tropical fish. Hunt's Pet Shop. FE cMppIngs^and DACHSHUND PUPS, ( __J Stud dote, FE 5253*. SrITTANY PUPPIES. B WEEKS. good pedlti-Md' MA 5-154*. boxer puppies. * wiBiia oLD, h paper. 195. MY M3M or MY COLLIE PUPS, ARC REGISTERED, 7 weeks. rtas MT 3-9W0, DACHSHUND PUPPIZB. AKC REO-• Istered.Redmfaes’. -OL 149*5, —— POODLE CLIPF1NO AM) BAfrf ia I^ Alio poddl** for aal*. t 3-4373, OR 3-9218. cTdle ii ffltrbta . |MK of Q*y wHEt' . ii HUNGARIAN VIZSLAS FOk SALE. POODLE PUPPIES;* WEEKS OLD. D^U« ffifl . 2459 Auburn, UL 2-2200. DLJC CUPPINb - PUPPIES o stud service. UL 3-1311. PARAKEETS /ODARUrniED TO talk. um. Walker’* Bird House. 90S let. St., Rochester. OL 1-W79. Will hold *Ul Chrtotm—. AuctioR irttjjr* L 7:3* ll-O-Way Cot Lake Rd. > less organ* are pi bOMtlful condition., and all sr* priced to sell, sk* your Christmas selection not Term* to cult your budget LEW BKTTERLY MUSIC CO. ■,r=** ..Op® Fri. 'HI a~ "pester Hvoitock Aoroes from B'him Theater SOHMER PIANOS THE MUSICIANS OONSOLE COMPLETE LINE LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. . ■ (1 M*W B’han?n eater'* * IF YOU WANT TO .glUJL YOUR piano. esU Mf. Dusonoorry at Grinnell's Pontiac Downtown Store 17 I. Saginaw St. "hone FE 5-7IW I FLAT CORNET. 3124 take 179. OR 2-9142 days. Farm Product msrssr, Dvsuumiiy designed et - Very flne workmanship. — No down payment UP to 3* immUtsTo pay Flifif payment In February GALJLAGHER’S CHRISTMAS OREBNS. PLANT; flowers, poultry, fresh eggs, baki goods, hoMy. vsgetablss. apple older, eto. OAKLAND COUNT MARKET. 235* Ponllec Lake Rat U||Mg|wM||U|||Hrom 7:00 a.* FARMALL MODEL A TRACTOR IN A*1 SHAPE PRICED AT tm - .^kdTgbrSI'm E 4-0734 PONTIAC JANSSEN PIANOS All styles and finishes now svtlloh Prioed from 94N. Make your Christmas seleotlon dow Spsolal budget term*. No money down. Up to 4* months to pay. jWfesif,, finish, perfect condition ineld* WIEGAND’ MUSIC 4*1 IHsaboth Lake Rood FE -2-9424 USED ORGANS \ W* hav# all slsee of used ormn* » from 6».*0 tolls**.**. f MORRIS MUSIC L ll Typo* Auotton y I year old girl. Romeo. ______IS 0 MONTHS OPDYKB McCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS PRICED AS LOW AS $149.95 CREDIT TERMS — WE TAKE TRADES.. USED CHAIN SAWS PRICED AT (75. KING BROS. ‘V 4-0734 FL . .. PONTIAC ROAD AT OPDYKB NEW IDEA. ONE-ROW CORN PICK-er, rebuilt. Davis Maohlniry Cr Ortonvllle. NA 7-3292. Your Jol Door, Now Ides. Oebl snd HAT Truv#rTrullur» TRAVEL TRAILER ^ SPECIALS Completely itlf eontelned YOUR AtRSTREAM DEALER WARNER TRAILER SALES , at w. Huron 7 I875.li k 4* DREAM HOME TRAILER. *7 model } GLEmm' Pssd AutmTrddk Parts fflKL 1956 FORD VI MOTOR. IS53.5S5U; 4’ Bulck Dyntflow trans . 1994 Chmrn: HH Powerjllde. 1951-9 Fowqr-1 6 55193 or HUM Better Used Truck* GMC -,#/ Factory Branch . ... ““ifui0*8 ai*. I HiA j HJH CBN’ InsUllod., Complot* *lne ofllparts and bottle toe/ C 4 9743 3173 W. Huron 8Top IN AND SEE The *‘A11-Newrn[963 FANS, FRANKUNS, CREES. REAL ^OOD BUYS dOOPl55* USED TRAILERS—STOP IN TONIGHTi * —Open f dm A WHIM _ Holly Travel Coa MA MI7> WonftdCore-Trotfci 10F "ALWAYS BUYIH $$JUNK CARS - FR|_ -------- Averill's OH3-I.’ $25 MORE HOLD ITj . ■efor* you 9*11 that ehorp, lai model oar of youra set air offs tod, W* wUl pay you top doller. See AL BAUEfl Matthcilvs-Hargrcavcs *51 Oakland alCaaa E 54191 , , FE 4-49 CANCELED?^ “REaPBaSD*™-” YOUNG DRIVER FOlf7w^^ATroS?1%Ii|ft/7rvr7A Pontiac Sports Car, Inc.' 467 Auburn FE 5-1511. v VOLKSWAGENS W Volkswagen, convertlbl* .. Wit* 1311 Vnlkswsgsn, sun roof ,... S9436-1151 Volkswagen, sedan . SIMS - WARD3lcELROY, Inbti NEW 4455 W. Huron HW. r# l-WH; | Renautr "Authorised Dealer" OLIVER BUICK and JEEP C0fn,r ^ftai..... 1332 VW SUNROOF. 199-1411 before 138 B black BUICK 3 bOOR HAkbiw. ih —• —■“* “-‘-‘i, ehsrp took-stllW.-No money down, WO finance! UNIVERSAL AUTO SALES. 13* I-Bsyhisw^St. AjL heatar, excellent eondltlon. full prioa $137. Assume payment* V . fisc, 'window'iiia'v OM oxNuflva lOBti* * lift, if! 441392. I-l?;t .... 1000 S, WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-1738. dr fnpnr mmsx ■ fawnettf tranemUslon. power atec tag gad brakes, radio, beater, w whitewall tS5, A good lookli black and white sport# gar to Wiu not • be here long, aa oi sly ISM. WBm tern -j fit your budget. ■ payments until wxt -year. Bn. BMPl CHRYSLER P L Y-MOUTH, 012 S. WOODWARD, Ml 7-3314. Hard to Find In^euch auperb condition aa this Easy to Own I'rt dealing foolt. A Joy to Behold I ! H Bulck..La,, gabre ,,.4-doot. ha Sparkling burgundy, with i _____i rose interior, Radio. Beat Rynaflow. Powtr steering. Pot brakes. E-z Eye glass. White* tired. The spare has yet to ton the ground This magnificent eu.. mobno 1* In’ Mint condition. Full J $2795 1307 PLYMOUTH,, RADIO AND MWiffr’Iagim '(portlBK .fuii mSKSjsg SALES. 115 S. I Cirt 1l> Nsw art Usrt Cars /1002 TEMPEST lbmanb convert. >MSfiRi. 4-barrel carburetor, tipOad transmission.-radio, heater, white wufirfwtdoow. er. 148 dow*(M9«J|» per1 peak.* Birmingham Rainbler ««8 8. Woodward “SaESo, TIRES. d Turner, Fonl. 0. NEW TIREST __Ford panel, pr . Mt. Clemens Motors, MOTORS. ______ 1087 PONTIAC STJ door nardobl ... iRSihone FE l-iXtaliNa 4-D 1017 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR HARD- 7mm RM^marvs a^na^auto^ ISrkston Motors li» asar-jrg nents of 03.21 por wk. ____• mostly Ai.^._ managor Mr. Cook at: KING AUTO SALES 3375 W. Huron St. v’i .. ■ .FR-MMO - 1962 Chevy Monts 2-Door i with radio, hotter, Bad Sour the floor, whitewalls. $1895 John McAutiffe Ford 0 AVE . B1RMINOHAM I V ' ''Kids'" Have You Seen Santa? Gifts for the kids • Refreshments for. all "Over 100 WONDERFUL BUYS LLOYD'S < Llncoln-Moreury-Comet Metoor-Engllah Paid S3 S. Sammaw FE 2-9131 luipned with turn, power atoar- ____.... -ltd taligato wtn- o, heater, and whitewall exceUenl performing ear laritptaaOor a MU year, i only MM. Easy terms toflt your budget, lip payments antli wwt y»ar~ BIR-MINOHAM CHRYBLER PLYMOUTH. 013 S. WOODWARD. MI FISCHER BUICBC 784 Woodward, B’ham MI 4-6222 ACROSS FROM ORIENPIELD’S 1380 FORD VI 800 FAIRLANfc. ‘ door, equipped with auto: tranemb elon. power steering, brakes, radii heater. Oood whliawaUa, axe. cot dltlon, 01.080. Original owner. Ml doootttar.Kio. 1488 FORD FAIRLANE. AUTOMAT- ‘ doqr.good oor" ■m. OR 3-8314. k ah; __i Pull price 0430. MarvelMoiors HASKINS Sharp Trades MS PONTIAC 4-door eodM wtU I960 T-Bird Hardtop, Clean ! $2095 John McAutiffe Ford 010 Oakland Are. FE 5-4101 #oa6. Low-coin baiUc loan era, eu^ronlc eye^ quolae with nmtchlng trirTT 41.538. CR18SMAN CHEVROLET. ROCH-ESTER. OL 2-8731 1380 FORD WAOON. A NICE CLEAN MOW, V-4. radio, boater, auto. “STOSSKS ■OLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aeeumo paymonto of MAS par mo. la, Mb at *^ irold Turner, FortK 180 S. Saginaw, FE Birmingham* Rambler 7*741. mission. * rnSuo. in 1 V-l. ftw4rtl 4-bbdfe Id*. CiU OL 14917. Iini cifEVRo doev aodan. 4 LEY RUCaVRe > oyutdor, FoworgUdo, nfett PATTERBON OTEV- larMaH 1880 |. WOODWARD jjor SSCaS^tTsS’ A^T’ Mnawr'fM.'Tawf rsranomlMlon, tyidjo, Paata wook'a epaoial, 4808. VBirminghdm Rambler HUY TTOUR OAR IN A DIF-ferent war. For Intofoiting details own Mr. Mount. Boo-sun Motors. 133-1471 'Before 1 p.m. ifiRHolT a Vi w»r tranemlsslon. one owi new i Fuli prios |4W. Marvel Motors m __________tt price 3137. Assume paymenta of is.ll par PMK with no money i.Saginaw, W8M408. * 1961 Falcon ! Fiitura 2-DoQr , with radio, beater, whitewall Stautlfulilua finlehi $1595 John McAuliffft Ford M0 Oakland Ave. . A FE 5-4101 HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds "Your Croeeraads to MA urn “ 1880 FORD 8TARUNER 2 DOOR Sardtop. V-4 4Attn*. automsllc. adlo. heater, whitewall liras, solid fiUK Extra nice. Onl* J1.84V - . FEROU- JEROME tor Ford I IMP FORD 3-DOOR. RADIO, HBAT- WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Asiume payments of 38.78 _por mo. Call Credit Mgr.. Mr. Farkt. at Ml 4-7800, Harold Turner, Ford. glno. Cruls O-Matlc. ri whitewall illroa, large era. extra warp. Only ll.8tt. Eaay ---- TSctIML FEROUSON. Ford Paalar. OL MI711. Suburban W- MOTORS USED CARS ■top — Shim hero before you buy WE KEEP TlfE BEST, WHOLESALE'the REST MS f. Woodward Av4. MI 4-4485 1340 FORD t DdOR ItANCK WAOON. Trane. A1 owner, low mileage, si end ear In A1 condition Inal and out. Jluat sell for 11,138, a bargain. >M tfflt 1384 bbDOA 3-DOOR $79 Mi Mt. Clamtn; Street Haw owl U»wl (af» 40! I'Now art IM Cart 106 1988 FALCON 2.DOOR SEDAN. DE luxe trim, .radio, heator,- whits walla. Clean Oood condition. 8788 OR 3-6718 after 8 n.m. l , I960 CoSeT 2-door. Stick, red. New Ml of whlto* Wftllf. k - $1095 SEE THE "DEPENDABLES" KESSLERS : - DODGE . 341 N. Lapeer ltd. Onford r Next to world't largest gravel pit) t OA 8-1400 or OA 8-1883 I860 FALCON RANCHKRO. A REA1 beauty throughout!- The ntekut thaY drlvos llxe 'a carl ,8885. Haupt Pontiac Open 'Monday, Tuesday and . Thursday nattl 8 p m. One,Mile North of US 18 on Mil ■ cinrkston » »- MA l-MQ 1880 FORD VI FAIRLANE "800" 2 door eodnn equipped with auto 1 matte transmission, power itoerlni end brakes, radio, heator, and gooc whitewall tires. Very ettraattVO mC talllc green with harmonising to' terlor trim. An axoMlont oar lr every way that Is guaranteed for I full year and priced at our glass. Eaay terms arranged to fll your budget. No payments TU next Iter. BIRMINGHAM CHRTSLEF PLYMOUTH. 813 g. WOODWARD MI 7-3214. ' 1959 MERCURY. 3 • PASSENGER . wagon, beautiful Birmingham trade-| In. Automatic transmission, radio. ; beater, power steering, power , brakes, one owher car. Special, [ 1149 dawn and M.M per week. ; Birmingham Rambler 8MB. Woodward MI 44900 1388 LINCOLN PREMIER 4-DOOR sedan with 4 way power, ante matte tran*muitoa, radio, *H whtteweJU and other extra*. Ntci sequoia green body with wblto top ana 3 tone gfeon Interior trim. Thu !• a goad running, high quMlto car at a low print of only 8488. Eaay terms arranged to fit your budgnt No. payments imtll next v year. ' BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER vPLfMDPlL 912 S. WOODWARD, MIYQtM.. 1969 MERCURY MONTEREY 4 door tadaa, with radio, hoator, mero-O-matla tranemlealon, power steering and brakoe. 3188 down, assume payments of 1^2.39. LLOYD'S Llnooln-MercuryOxnst Metoor-Engllsh Ford ■ 333 8. Sajflntw at. FE 4-9121 A-l Ujted gars at down-to-earth prices. Your old ear dawn, bank rates, 18 montM to pay. Call JUpitor 8-6010 STARK HICKEY, FORD CkWBQD On 14 Milt Road east of crooks Across from the Clawson Ihop-. nine Center. Factory- Officials' 1962 Cadillac seden. A Vary low —mMongo, wlito beauty -wUh blaols -and wblto Interior nndjwwor ga-lora, at flto low price of 83,993. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC ' 1350. N. ! Woodward •; Birmingham MI 4-1930 - Special - 1959"RONTIAC ■ter Chief 4-door that has radio an. hoator, hydramatlo tranamla-ston. power brakes and power ■leering This one alto haa air conditioning and u a real aloe buy, net with haste $1695 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE y 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 1883 JEEP STATION WAOON 4-wtwal drive, newer take off winch. New rebuilt motor. IM B. Mary-Hand,' Royal Oak. 8414484. radio, hoator. good condlllon. FE . 1888 1-DOOR JEEP STATION WAO-on. 4 wheal drive, 4 evUnder en- —v-yiAc" gine. 3 speed tranemUslon. Heater, 2-tone point. Only 8488. Easy tormi. JEROME • FEROUSON. Rochester Ford Dealer. OL 14711. Kias Have You Seen * Santa? Gifts for the Kids ’ - Refreshments for All , Over 100 WONDERFUL BUYS LLOYD'S Ltnceln-Marourr-Comot Metoor-Engllsh Fold 232 sTinginaw FE 2-9131 "Kids" • Have You Seen Santa? Gifts for the Kids Refreshments for all Over 100 WONDERFUL BUYS LLOYD'S • Llnceln-Mercury-Comet Meteor-Engllsn Ford 231 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131 I9BS OLDS^34PEED FLOOR SHIFT, j mor hordtop. Rydramatle, power steering and brakes. 7,000 actual mltoi. only H,IM, Easy tormi. FAITEMUN^BVROLET CO 1,-808 S. WOQDWARp AVE: BIR- 1 MINOHAM. MI 4-373*. 1988 LINCOLN CAPRI 4-DOOE hardtop, power, like now. NO MONEY DOWN, lust assume payments of M.M por week. Fuff prion/MM. ' UNIVERSAL AUTO exchange (K block y of1 Oakland) IMS LINCOLN PREMIER. 4 DOOR hardtop, full POWOT, 11.188. EM 8-0881. 1987 OLDS SUPER "M”. 4-DOOR, Power itooring. Power brakes, pay- 11 monte .'of 88.13 per week. Full . “^'UNIVERSAL AUTO EXCHANGE Ml Montcalm ('A Mock E. of Oaklond) w8b plyTJoUWPOm. running _ condlllon. Ml 8-7858. ‘ ll 1959i«Ford Custom “300” 4-door with V8 engine. Pordomette trnnamlsatoit whttownlla, ’ radio, hontor and washer*. MM. BEATTIE ■Your FORD DEALER’ Since 1830” >N DIXIE HWY. IN WATERTORD AT TBit STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 BUY YOUR CAR IN A DIF-’fortng way, FOr intoravtlng -details nan Mr. Mount, Soa-aun Motors. 133-1471 bsfors 1 ywmZ Yhis Week Only Full Year Warranty! 1962 BUICK Kids are no money d Arrange all f---_____________ AUTO. UUJM 150 S. Saginaw S "E 0-4071. 1956 Ford F-“500” Platform Like New A 1003 MOreuix Monterey 4-door sedan. A real enprp ant ’with auto- laan beauty at opIy M.' WILSON ipONTIAC-CADILLAC . J350 N. . Woodward Birmingham MI 4-1930 1382 CATALINA 3-DOOR HARDTOP. .. . - MY t-MOt,-:? ■ .. MOt POHmCMIATAtfNA 4-DOOR • 1981 FOinTAC TEMPEST 4-DOOR sedan, with radio heater, standard transmission. 0178 down And as sum- payments of $43.40 per mo. LLOYD'S Untoitt-Morouiy-Cnmot Meteor-Bnglleh Ford 332 S. SagmtW St. , feTiiii OR CA1„_.... iTfemCT ‘ BUSINESS .P'TS'-',," BOOMING! oar,all new lBOJ's ere really roll-Ing and up bringing us many of tho ntout 4rado4ns-we'vo eoen on . year. ^TUje^ edrantago today M our SUPERIOR RAMBLER" 550 OAKLAND AVE. i Nsw jj^ TIswI Cant 1340 PONTIAC CATALINA 3-DOOR hardtop, power ateerlng and, brakes. 1 owner, tinted fleas, 33,000 miles. MAMnXLD AUTQ SALES. 1074 Baldwin-1984 PONTIAC CONVERTII power steering, power brakes, b Mfu) rad and wbite. New nylon. Just assume pnymenia of 03.11 per wk,: Pull price 0397. NO MONEY DOWN, • UNIVERSAL AUTO EXCHANGE 1 313 tfontoalm (ft Mook E. of Onltlnnd) DON’T BOY ANY NEW OR USED CAR until you, got our donll Completely recondltlonod udod care at : low prloee. ’ HOMER HICHT , MOTORS. INC. Chevrolet' PWtMlpt«RUl«ll-j, 1 N>w «nd Uswl Cars . IM RAMBLER American Woor, 31,Tf» delivered. ROSE RAMBLER SUPERMARKET . EM MISS ^^ — 'MI MIM „ Birmingham trade-in. OUR down end 89.95 par #eek. • J V Birmingham , < /Rambler .. / 000 S. woodward TATE STORAOB AUTHORtZl LIQUIDATION SALE FUl PRICE. Low Weekly Payments Juki M.M ~ Estate Storagc Co., p^jUj^^Eaet Roulevara at _Auburn' 043 Oakland PONTIAC. SAVE JKQNEY WITH - sank loan when or used ear. Call heater and washers. 1493. ^ .- BEATTIE It s Here ■84 !53 Plymouth, 'M Ford .... jgjiBBfo *94 Chn«)«rI....,. 5 trucks T> BiriiTtagham Rambler ___FORD DEALER I on Diaqi~mnr. ni watIrtord AT TER STOPLIGHT QR 3-1291 (57 PONTIAC. 4-DOOR ClftBPTAN hardtop,, full power, l -lei BONNEVILLE. PONTIAC CATALINA, 4 DOOR, lemma transmission, p o w o r *aa,,moB-pr)- 1341 CATALINA 3-DOOR, BYDRA-^lo, CkOOdaM condition. 01,780. OR 3-0310, _____________ f6RD inks. 2-DOOR. VI, STl runt. New tlrca. 4300, 424 923 9lf7 t'ORD CONVitftTIfiLB, __ SHIFT. RADIO, HEATER, AUTO. TRANSMUSIONj W7"™........... TIRES. ABOOLtrrELY BY DOWN. Aeiur a 034.78 par itio. C Mr, Parka, at if Tumor. Ford. Power stearnSr9 a and looks.uko n oxohanso for IM. ....____ . price, write Pontiac Prow Box ox T' PRICED TO SELL INI CHEVROLET Impale. Moor hardtop all white, bis VI and fuUy equipped. Beeullful. Only jt,- M0 PLTMQUTR Bavoy. a cylinder, J-door. auto., power brakes, hitter, reedy to to. $038. , 1381. PLYMOUTH iaroj,^. 3-door, lioo noDOE Mow, VO, stick, radio, TORO Country sedan steering, radio, , Ml 1084 CHEVROLET. Bel l MBS SEE US BEFORE SAYING YES TO A DEAL ; R 6c R Motors lAmerlal ' Chrysler Plymouth 730 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-1831 — on# of which you mllHtUkoi 1962 Buick Invicta Station Wagon $3195 Loaded. Like now. what mor* thorn i any! 1961 Oldstnobile Super 88 Station Wagon All tho goodies Including a rack on tho topi $2395 1?59 Buick Invicta Station Wagon M-M-M-Boyl Thin Is a dandyl $1495 1962 Buick Special Ste’tion Wagon One of those economical little e-oyllndore WM. everybody lovoe ae much. Automatlo tranemlealon and powtr atoorlnx. $2495 Remember, we encourage you to check our cars with a mechanic you know and trust, FISCHER ■ BUIGK 784. S. Woodward; B’ham , MI 4-6222 ACROBNjjFROM^OnpiBNFI|tLD,l 1961 PONTIAC Bonneville Oonvarilblo with Rydramatle Irene-mlselon. radio boater, power steering. power brakes, power wlnr*— 3-speed wlpere., dock, roar apeaket. deluxe whael ct whitewalls, MatjMlIa, remote traf mirror. White Interior 1961 BUICK Electra “225” Convertible with turbine drlVI trenemlulon. wonder liar radio healer, power steering, power brakes, power windows. 3-Way now- «$ aya steal premium fib with li Mtin wlm g whitewalls. Bur white top and b OLIVER MCK *A REAL GENUINE BARGAIN!, And ham, it Jal IM! iulok La Habra 4-door hordtop. Roby blue. With flawlees matching Interior. Steering, power brakes and knee-deep to • tin lBdiMlj!i whitewall tlree. Hound good? OKI Here's tho beet part — full prise oni- $2064 lemember, we encot ou to check our cars with mechanic you know and rust. FISCHER -BUICK stearin*. Turquoise and white wit n matching Interior at Only 81.49! WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC ■ 1350 N. Woodward Birmingham MI 4-193Q- 1942 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX. LIKE u%Z,ppft coupe, E 3-gjff8. 1943s TRBU 1934s You plo( R--WdUftoonoo It. You onU or have your dialer Call FE 4-0964. It's eiikT COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK 1443 fiMFEST ^DOOR COUPE. $2499 3RAND NEW” 1962 CHEVY Impala Convertible Yes, this car is brand hew. Equipped with Powerglidh trans., padded dash, wnite-walls. wheel covers, 2 speed electric wipers with washers, white with red interior. 100% new car guarantee. 12,000 miles or 12 months. Add $89 for V*8’i. Only 9 ofthese beauties left' so hurry, -Patterson Chevrolet i, Co.' 1000 S. V^oodward Av«&; Birmingham J^I 4-2735 "Kids" : Have You Seen Santa? Gifts, for the Kids Refreshments for all™ Over 10C WONDERFUL BUYS LLOYD'S Ltncdln-Marcury-Cpmet Motoor-Engllsh Ford' SIS. Saginaw FE 2-913* "ONI YEAR WaHOanTY” on all fan "ON OUR BIO LOT" BOB BORST , Lincoln-Mercurv • BIRMINGHAM II Milo Rd on US 10 Spartan Dodge Now Open BUY YOUR NEW OLDSMOBILE ' VMM L. HOUGHTENs& 838 N. Main a Rochester OL 1*741 RUSS JOHNSON ONE-OWNE^TRADES 1143 BONNRVILLE CONVERTIBLE Power steering, power brakes This Is n demonstrator and- carries a new eat warranty . DWCOUHT 91.000. 1993 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX Turquois with white Interior, automatic transmission, power steering and brakes. Thie ls, n beauty. 1947 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE Automatic tranamlaslon. radt heater. It's a brand qtw oaf at the only one left. DISCOUNT ISM. 1N2 RAMBLER CLAWiFc WAOON Brand----1 *“* I IR^LASsfc W tewi The Inst on* lo tl far you, DISCOUNT 3848. 1943 RAMBLER CONVERTIBLE Another brand now oar and reed to go. Better hurry I DISCOUNT 9300. 1M3 CHEVY IMPALA HARDTOP 2-dpor codon. All power. Only 8,81 «riuni mlloo. Con't bo told frot B'W] ..... 83.495. 19ft CHEVROLET CORVA1R IM 9 trantmlj'slon, 81 mo paymnntt of | lloyd;s Llnooln-Mercury-Comet Meteor-English Kid 232 8. Saginaw St. “» 3-8131 I960 RAMBLER AMERICAN 3-DOOR beautiful all white finish, Immaculate condition inside and out, standard shift, (-cylinder engine, absolutely NO MONBT DOWN. Just assume payments of M.lt per week-Rull price8897. UNIVERSAL ~ AUTO EXCHANGE Ml Moutoalm (Mi block E. of Oakland) Bill Spence Rambler-Jeep "Your Authartoed Peateri' ^_ WE SERVICE WE HONOR ALL WARRANTIES Jeeps and Ramblers Regardless , of where BOUGHT!! Bill Spence Rambler— Jeep MA 5-See-M *' " m,OLARKSTON Birmingham _ ™Bambler::'":_ ----— ..gM-Si-<|iaudn»id*— MI 4Q8M 1W8 'IXMOV-fR" AMHRldAfTfBh--an all Wblto flnleh, automatic frant-mission, Radio, Heater and an rust I Runs Ilka a new earl Liquidation Frio# 3587 No Money CM" ue^UNIwfiwf^ AUTO.' SALES 188 A, Saginaw St. FR 1861 AMERICAN, 3-DOOB ‘'STICK.'' Just Ilka new. Special, SM down. 87.88 her weak. , Birmingham Rambler SM S. Woodward ■ wijBBKte*w*k»whi— 1937 DeSOTO. 4-DOOR RARDTQP, with 88 down, and assume payments of 814 por monthl Stop la and look this beauty overt LLOYD'S Ltncoln-Mercury-Comet Metoor-Engllah Ford ! 233 8. Saginaw St, FEl-3tn _____ VOLKSWAGEN MICROBUn aND 1383 Tempest LoMaua. M3-M». , 1*960 Falcon BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD AT TRB STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 , beat altar- OR 3-4M7. 1960 Studebaker Lark Convertible. aoUd white with white top. Sharp! 8888. Van Camp-Chevrolet Inc. "Kids" Have You Secn Santa? Gifts for the Kids Refreshments for all Over 1ft) WONDERFUL JUYS Ltncoln-Mercury-Comet Meteor-Engllsn Ford 232 a. Saginaw - FE 2-9131 ^ 1M1 RAMBLER AMERICAN . 3-door sedan, A one owner car wll very low .mileage. All rad flnli .nuveryshm^. 1940 PONTIAC 2-DOOR SEDAN A bronee l uuty. automatic Iran million, new whitewall tlree. li.jm. 1940 FORD WAOON (1.338. 1959 RAMBLER WAOON very ihMrp automrijUe. 1189 PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN tlree. RUM poril^ MM CHEVY 4-DOOR SEDAN Full power, automatlo trapem alon. AUaat to 1886 CADILLAC 4-.DOOR DeVILLH IPs a hardtop wlUi ail brand now tine and full Mw*r. You really mual aon 111 ^ Select Uied Cara. .158Rambler wagon ... *87 Foutlao hardtop ......... 887 Dodge hardtop ..........i 887 Rambler. Warnin''..VA.H -------------.Wagon ......'.J sedan .........J IMS Pontiao •888 Pontiar 1884 Chivy special) 8 80 Russ Johnson ' PontipcrRambler - M-24 at the Stoplight • Lake Orion , MY:3-p266 WL mu or oAumriOT— BUY NOW AND SAVE! «oaa ■AuiftRvtT.f.f! IMA DODOB 4-Door Hardtop. Power steering, power brake*. Hydramatlo, ra-jun. hoator, whUewalla. ^ White Convertible with automatlo transmission, V4 engbio, radio end hooter. White finish with black top. Tho prtoe alone will (rtm^ It'a aB^jjSulf 1*M DODGE PIONEER. . 3-Door Hardtop wtl| standard transmission, a-cyllndor engine, radio, hoator, wbltoWall Ores. Beautiful blue flnleh and matching trim. This one you mutt M*‘ ■ aim aril It. . 8481 1888 PdNTIAC ■tor Chief 4-Door Hardtop with power steering, power brakes. beauties to shape* from. On* blue end on* gold ftoteh. Your shoiso for SHf* 1988 BONNEVILLE t-Door Hardtop. Power atoer-Ing. power brakes, HydramaUc. radio, heater, whitewall tires. Beautiful rad finish. Lst’a gt first class. ^ 1*88 PLYMOUTH Custom 4-Door Suburban t-Pas-aongtr Wagon. Power steering and brakes, automata, radio, heater, whitewalls. 3S*N actual miles. A nice family wagon. 1840 TRIUMPH Convertible. The color Is right —RBDI Lot's go sporty 1 11481 1883 RAMBLER Amorloan Deluxe Wagon la equipped with "B" (tick, radio, hoator, whitewall Ursa. A most 188* PONTIAO Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop. Fewer eteerlng, power brakes. Hy-MnilirNMkiJMMr, whitewalls. Beautiful blue flnleh with matohlng trim. Lei's go first 1888 CHEVROLET 14-Ton Pickup This truck la randy to go to won for you. Take it bnmn for only IMS 1841 BONNEVILLE Coitvoiinbfo with power Mooting, powe r _bf_Mt*h Iftvgirn — TWigr 1 whitewall tires. 1887 CHEVROLET 4-Door station Wagon. Radio, hontor, .whitewall Hrae. Beautiful roes finish. YOU onn’t boot a Chevy wagon^for economy. INI PONTIAC . 4-Door Hardtop. Rydramatle, radio, boat**, whitewall tires. RMMttful 'Mid biaok finish with rad trim. Frloed to Mil at only 4-Door Sedan l^fl^Re^W family earephta^aoonomi 1841 PLYMOUTH Sport auburban Wagon, glno, automatic {ran d trim to match. 1IM BUICK Convertible with power 'Steering, power brakes, Qynaflow, radio, heater, whitewall ting. Etre la a real beauty with beautiful j^tijge f1-’-'- *----T-" 1943 FALCON Future with bucket seats and fwiftllMM -------- — dlo. heater, MM PONTIAC 4-Door Baden. Hydramntie, radio, hontor, whitewall (tew. Yes. It's that gold , color with matohlng trim, chroma on door* and Mg wheel covers. matohlng bueket s heater. 4-speed steering, brakes, wmdowe and seat. Extra toW' miles. Tailor made lent covers. A now oar tisde-ln and strictly a beauty. MSB CHEVROLET 4-Door Sedan. V-B, automatta. radio, heater and whttawalla. Not a scratch Inside or OUt. Oat full yonr warranty. 8M8 •LYMOUTH ■ Heater, d...^. I shift. All White 4-Door Rnrdtou with atoorug, power brnkaa, flow, radio, boater and - wells •— Extra niOO an w IMS BONNEVILLE rerllble with power atoorli ir brakoe. Hydramatlo. motor: whttownlli, e-z < silver leather trim. 1M1 STAR CHIEF . 4-Door Hardtop. Bower steering. finish with blue Him. Btriotly whitewall tlree. Thin wan a 15,000 automobile whoa now., Rydramatlo, radio, I_____ whitewall tires. !(’■ that popular color, Nd and whtto, wlUi trim —--i- B«trn low miles end Electra "335*? wliSnSower ataar-ing, power brakes. Dynaflow. ramo. mater, whftowall Uree. Beautiful ivory mil ah. Yes, folks, it's the^hlx, big Buick I MSI BUICK ■nsolal a-Fateeiuar Btetlon Wa«ou. Standard tran#mlselon. vadTo. hoator. whitewall tin*. Gold finish with matohlng in-Mrinr. rift* at only ■_ • JIM PONTIAO •Ho. hantorf^whlSvraSfi. it'S'tmt KgUtrim*°^ wlUl ‘ i JM3 PONTIAO V 6,oft* a .fa. ^"TrnwM SHELTON . i PONTIAC i— BUICK ROCHESTER ' OL l -8133, . . Open Mon., Thpbi, Thiirn,, 8:30 to 9 \ ', -Wjed., Friia,'Sat., 8:30-6 *h-■' ■; *1 • - ....•' : THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER & 1962 --Today's Television Programs-- I furnished by stations listed in this column arc subject to change without notice VJ-TV Ckanntl 7—WXYZ-TV Chennai A-C*LW-TV Cjrtnnal **"JWTU» TONIGHT l:H(2) Newa i (4) M Squad / (7) Action Theater (Cont.) (9) Popeye (Cont.) ...- (56) American Economy 6:21 (2) Editorial, Sport* 6:28 (2) Weather_____ (4) Weather liM (2) Highway Patrol (4) News (7) Npwg -----iOl Haiobopa---- ------(W) History 4:44 (4) News (7) Newst Weather, Sports 7:14(2) Phil Silvers - ■. (4) (Conor) George Pierrot (7) Yancy Derringer (•) You Asked For It (56) This New House, 7:34 (2) Leonard Bernstein (4) Pierrot (Coot.) (7) Cheyenne (9) Movie: “My tkm.” (1946V Shortly • her husband’s <' ....dow encounters Army engineer. Stanwyck, (84) Way of 8:11 (2) Bernstein (Cont.) (4) Rebirth of • City (7) “ “ wi- *bara Compari- 8:98 C ITle Ball Saints and Sinners (7/ Rifleman (A) Movie (Cont) AU)basketball: Purdue vs. ( U. of D. I (9) Local election 1:44 (2) Danny Thomas (4) Saints (Cont) / (?) 8tooey Burke • (f) Jubilee • (84) Guest Traveler 4:14 (2) Andy Griffith . (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Stoney Burke (Coot.) (41 Festival 14:44 (2) Loretta Young (4) (Color)^ Brlnkley’l .Journal .(7) Ben Casey (9) Festival (ContJ 11:14 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Stump the Stars (7) Ben Casey (Cent) (9) Festival (Cont.J. -11:44 (2) News .. :(4) News (7) News (9) News 11:14 (7) News, Sports 11:18 (2) Editorial Sjports •(♦rwiioaf^ (9) uKl 11:29 (2) /4) g (7) Weather (9/Telescope UAW 11:28 (2) Movie: “Hie I [eyr (1942) Political finds himself suspected of murder. Brian Donlevy, Veronica Lake, Alan Ladd, William Bendix. (7).Movie:' “Forbidden Is-land.’! (1969) Skin 'diver is commissioned to find priceless emerald; Jon Hall , Nan ] Adams. 11:81 (4) (Color) Tonight (9) Movie: "There’iAlways a Price Tag,” (French; 1958) Down-and-out young man gets Job as chauffeur for a financier whose Ufa ha saved. Michele Morgan, Daniel Gelln, Peter Van Eyck, TUESDAY MORNING 4:99 (4) Continental Classroom Atomic Age Physics 4:15 (2) Meditations 4:29 (2) On the Farm Front 4:26 (2) News 1:81 (2) College of the Air (4) (Color) Continental Classroom American Go* (7) Funews 7:14 (2) B’Wana Don (4) Today ____(7) Sagebrush Shorty MINCRAL KINGDOM r r r r ■ r- 7 8 9 W R" IT i IT nr i IT IT hr a ar i 21 i sr ■ r~~ w w\ W ar w W r* sr IF ■ W IT r sr i w w H JT t ■ nr L l w 47 ■ 62 5T 1 r— 49 ST Bfi sr _ sr 56 IT sr r ar IT BT sr ur B” ! 5T —2 IT Map llBplili 10 Concern* 11 SMI print 14 Hawaiian WrMth - 10 Toner, ItCtoe* it Oontalaoro laanow rohioli <• Alloy, miner*)* IT Hatwork II Trlmmlnc, 40 Heavy mini 41 Moral wrm blifhot 11 Onto colli 65 Charles I,*mb M Matched place* II tfai# 7:11 (7)-Mh»t Conger. 4:44 (8) Captain Knigaroo (56) French lor Teachers 1:84(7) Jack LaLanne /(84) Film Feature 8:45 (56) Danish Lesson 4:88 (9) Warm-Up 4:84 (2) December Bride * 5 (4) Living (7) Movie: “Ariaonji.” Part 2. (9) Cher Helene (86) Safety- ___-r- 9:16 (9) Nursery School Time 4:84 (2) Millionaire (t) Misterogers (84) English V 9:45 (9) Friendly Giant 9:86 (2) TV Editorial 19:11 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Romper Room (56) Our Scientific World 19:18 (7) News 14:26 (4) News 14:88 (2) I Love Lucy |4) (Color) Play JYour Hnwrh - (7) Girl Talk (S6)FrenchLesson 14:81 (84) German Lesson 11:14 (2). McCoys (4) (Color) Prioe Is Right (7) Jane Wyman (9) Adventure Time 11:48 (88) Spanish Lesson 11:38 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration •(7) Yours for a Song (56) Music and the Renais- U Thant Chides 'Frigid' West Sovinti Hava CKarigad, Says U N. Chltf BALTIMORE » - The secretary general of the United Nations says western leaders have not responded to a change in the! political climate of the Soviet) UflkMk , „ .. ‘ , * * ★. “Western leaders saw the world as a battlefieId between) two antagonistic systems, mltf-j tantly expressing the principles1 good arid evil,” Secretary Gehe» eral U Thant said yesterday.. (A*v,rll„m*nt) Woman Neatly Itches To Death "1 ntarly iteMuMM f«t«i itch, tbfilm. mi i —. ... Dueam j i&K1 slK .S*P' GIFT OF TIME — A total of 439 years was represented 1>y five Hooversville, Pa., brothers at a party for Charles Barron (center) on his 95th birthday. From left are David, 92; Albert, 85; Charles; Homer, 78; and Edward, 89. The men represent a total of.-150 direct descendants. TV Features TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2)%Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (56) Reading for Teachers 12:28 (2) News 12:18 (2) Search for Tomorrow .. (4) fruth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:41 (9) Morgan’s Merry Go-Round (86)* Spanish Lesson 12:4L(2) GuMtagJUght (I) News 12:88 (4) News (9) Playback .1:88 (S) Star Performance (4) Best of Groucho (7) Gale Storm (9) Movie: Story.” 1:11 (56) French Lesson i:30 (8) At the World Turns, (4) People Are Fumy v (7) One Step Beyond (56) Woijd History 1:11 (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:18 (2) Password (4) (Color) Merv Griffin (7) Day in Court (56) Mathematics for You 2:28 (7) News 2:SI (2) Divorce Court (7) Seven Keys . (56) Careers 2:85 (4) News 3:91 (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day 3:81 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Young Doctor Malone (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Scarlett Hill 3:81 (2) News 4:11 (2) Secret Storm (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:39 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (7) Discovery ’62 * (4) Popeye and Pals 4:48 ( 84) French Lesson 4:68 (4) Newt (7) American Newsstand I 8:14 (2)Movie: “Chain of . Events.” (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Action Theajer (86) What’s New? 5:86 (66) Film Feature 8:46 (86) News Magazine 8:81 (4) Carol Duvall By United Press International LEONARD BERNSTEIN, 7:30 p.m. (2). A rerun of “The Creative Performer,” with Igor Stravinsky, Glenn Gould ana Eileen Farrell. THE LUCY SHOW, 8:30 p.m. (2). Lucy fears Viv will sue her because of falling over one of Jerry’s toys. DANNY THOMAS, 9:00 p.m. (2). Kathy’s relative in Ireland are enthralled by Danny until they find out he’s a Lebanese and npt an Irishman. ANDY GRIFFITH, 9:30 pm. (2). Andy appears to be paying -jar lot of attention ixrPeggjr M*f Mlllan, and Opie becomes jeal-ius. BEN CASEY, 10:00 p.m. (2). An eccentric veteran nurse upsets “We may or may not agree with his (Khrushchev’s) phllo* ophy or with his aims,” That# said, “btu we have very good reason to believe mat he does t want war.” ' Thant said there is seme MOSCOW (OPD - Western dlplo- spection, or to talk Kennedy out evidence that the west was, at „iats anticipated today that the of demanding it. toait in part, beginning to tree- return of First Deputy Premier There have been no indications 0g„|ze the Soviet change In Anastas Mikoyan frbm Havana of any new Soviet moves on Ber- attitude, but suid ranch more and Washington would trigger a|Un. | neeijs to be dene. !°P*fLmMr»i!W^ S0VietP0,iCy! d u./ rai...........It! d- U [ said he was very encoiir- in the cold war. , Baby's Doing All Right; laged when ^went Kennedy hospital routine by isolating patl-A Like 1 y ents and feeding them her Home- made plum pudding. DAVID BRINKLEY’S JOURNAL, 10:80 p.m. (4). Subjects: comparistof of East German and West German television; a modern sculptor; and fan magazine popularity of President Kennedy’s family. (Color).' Educator to Give Report on Recent Far East Trip ANN ARBOR (^-University of Michigan President Dr. Harlan Hatcher, slated^ to return Thursday from a seven-week trip to the Far East, Will report Friday on his tour at a meeting sponsored by the Student Government Cou^il in HIU Auditorium. It will be open to tbe public. Hatcher visited Japan, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Formosa. Thailand and India. Look for Review of Soviet Policy Thant, in his first speech since being elected permanent see- | retary general of the U.N. Friday, spoke to 1,516 persoas at Johns Hopkins University. ! Thant said Soviet policy has) _: become much more flexible since; .Stalin’s death, but .the western {nations, at least in part, have refused to recognize this cha Mikoyan dame; back yesterday from talks with Premier Fidel Castro during a 24-day visit to Cuba and discussions with President Kennedy and United Nations Secretary General Thant in the United States. He made no airport corn-meats. It was believed he went itraight to Premier Nikita Khrushchev to report oa the results of his trip. Western observers said Miko-yan’s report on American reae-to the Cuban crisis could influence not only the Kremlin’s Caribbean policy but also its actions on Berlin, Laos, disarmament and a host of other international problems. ’find out how my baby is doing.” The sympathetic jailer opened the door; He said Carpenter wan Still runping when last seen. Khrushchev is believed to have been shaken by, Kennedy’s firm stand on Cuba. SONOTONE House of Hearing 29 E. CORNELL GLASS REPAIR MANUFACTURER* W SPECIAL STORM SAM Mr ODD (US WINDOWS PE 140*1 — EM 3-2306 — OR MAM C. WEEDON CO. 1092 W. HURON 2 BHn. WaN *» T*t#graah COLOR TV SERVICE AND SALI8 Motorola - Sylvanlo Dealtr OREL RADIO nnd TV l» UHtWMUi L»k* B*. 3344*4 Jailer Do«„'t Feel W.lliKKjS itS $£ BONHAM, Tex. (UPI) - Quin- ment in Laos in return for an ley Moore Carpenter, 25, of Gar- end to the civil war. land, Tex., told the jailer at the * * Fannin County Jail lastiiight that He said he also was encouraged; he urgently needed to call his wife | by the West’s realization that It - • . . .. - cannot create pro-Western gov*. ernments in nil parts of Asia and; Africa, but must be content with; the creation of Independent, non-aligned nations. TV Better, but Nol Enough Says FCC Head Minp WASHINGTON (UPI) - Feder-.ls "imperative In a democracy... al Communications Commission that there be some adequate op- Newton M. Minow feels television portunity for all political parties If Mikoyan confirmed a stiffen- ha8 s h 0 w n -gome signs of im-lto have their voice heard.” j provement” but it still has a long ! * * *- , j pray to go. The FCC, Minow said, was| Minow said he thought the main Uware that “m a n y, many sta-reason television had not im- tlons” exceed the maximum time; proved more since last year, when 'prime viewing period programs. | he called it a "vast wasteland,”jThe commission has “preached,' was because “too many broad- we’ve pleaded.’’ with the industry i casters underestimate the audi- j to police itself in such matters, ence. jhe said. He said in a television inter- ing of U. S. policy, it could have a major effect on a whole range of Soviet policies, observers said. Kennedy and other U. S. officials are understood to have told Mikoyan that Washington insists on International inspection of ouba to verify n Soviet pledge to prevent n new arms build-up. Castro has steadily opposed any such inspection. Mikoyan apparently fettled to talk Castro into accepting the in- Jack Benny's Interested In a Movie Papa Role Inntalled Voltage Regulator But if it fails to do so. Minow | ild, “the government very reluctantly’’ might have to steprin to) enforce the code. Princo Philip Hunting | Door in Northorn Italy I , . | ,llMt „ |_________11 TURIN, Italy 1$ - Prince Phil- more higher levels to be reached)ip, Duke of Edinburgh, arrived In! h. television, particularly f o r Turin today for five days of hunt-, young people . .” ing north Italian pheasant, deer I * * * {and wild hare. ---- —. - ... .He «aM there still is hw much) . ^ * . * * NEW YORK - Jack Benny hankers to take another fling at thel,^ and violence on television.! He flew in from Rome, where] movies and play the part of an older man whose wife — of about jgmajj children, he said, are given !he arrived earlier today from Aus-shakes him up considerably by telling him she#’s exposure to the idea tralja! He had attended the com-) view that “I believe (hey think that people are not terribly bright, when In fact a constant rise In the level of education and information in the country .. has produced a far more Intelligent audience ...” “I would think the viewer’s taste is h igh e r than the broadcaster .There could be ihany -Today's Radio Programs- the same age going to have a baby. So Jack was down front the other night when Paul Ford played that part so wonderfully in thd new smash comedy hit, "Never Too Late,” opposite Maureen O’Sullivan with Orson Bean as his son-in-law. WMW a tiM-WJR. «l»l WVM. NAVA yarns. New* WJBK.’ Robert E. U* WCAR. Tom KoUln* WPuN, N*w*. Sport* Wan, New* «:*#-WJH, BlilUMM WWJ. Builneu N*w» WXVZ. Alas Dr*I*r CKLW, Bud pivSM , WJBK, Robert B M* *:!*—WWJ. A*y* RUMMfe tiM WPOW. Raw*. ChrUty Wjn, T**l*bt Al A MiM-WJR. Tour R**g**« ' WWJ. Teu usd dm law f Hr). NAVA, Must* far Ml le ss-ww.r. World Ntvs WXVZ, 14# Also tiiSA—wjh. Navi WWJ. Nava CKLW. Jos dentil* WCAR Neva, fport* wpon. Neve. Chrtetjr Hil*—WJB. a. Reynold* WWJ. OriM Mwel* . CELW, B Sitton WCAR U N. Wles 14K-WJN, Marts Well CKLW. Neve, Deeld WJBK, Neve, Aren whpi, Bos. NeVf, eport* A:00—WJR. NAVA, Murrey WWJ. Nev*. Merten* WXVZ, P*ul Hnrvny. Wolf CKLW, Neve. David wjjsk, Nava. Mm WCAR, Nev*. MArtyn WfQN. Nava, oloen , Wnn,,Master MeLaod '• tl;N-Wjn. Muete . WWJ. Dsvn Uunte WCAR. Vie Archer AiSO-WJR. Jack Herrti CKLW. Mari Morgan WKTZ, Fred Wolf tubsoat MORNINO As**—WJR. vole* Al AfftA. lti**—WJK, Karl Hsu ! WWJ. HAWK Merten* , m btfCTU* . WJRK. N***. Reid WPON. Nava. Tin* WHPI. NAVI, Murto MtIA—OKLW. Kennedy CsUlBg MU.*:.-AW,T J** * 111**-WJK. N*Vl, Health WWJ, N*vi, Linker WXVZ, winter W88 iW* WCAR, RtVIi Mertyn WPON. Neva, fine Wam. Neve, Hurt* Niwa.’wI OKLW. £**a Uttlil 1 WJUK, New*. ■ j iwaKww M ■ tgSV.itv.",oV»1dWol, WjmL New*. Arerj 6:44k—WJIL NffWi. If. Qu«*t lit**—wjn. Tim* (nr tfatt* , WXVZ. Winter. Neve ■ CKLW,. Jo* VAA TUnSOAV APTKKNOON i?khl-wjr Neve, fara WWJ. Neve, Linker , Wire. Navi, winter CKLW. Navi, Orent HrkA' ■ VFON. NOYIi TIM * *WSi nlo "TBWw ■ WJBK, N*** A-.ry viM AHendAr 0/ wpon, Nava, onen ' nvfiurx. New*. |K»»r» * WHPI, NtWi. MUili W*V8 Winter New. tifO-WJU. Ueve. Rheve WWJ, Neve, MeUhbor wxm Winter Rev* CKLW, New*. Jo* VAA WJWt Neve, geld WPON, Newe. Tine WRPI, New*. Mu«* l!t*_wjn. New*. ’Ohowi WWJ. Neve. Hultmen WXVZ. Winter -New* CKLW. Neve, Jo# Ven mSMMn WHH, Neva. Muale •lie—OKLW, Oblftbavk Sl**-Wjn. NAVA ObAVOtA WWJ. NAVA, Uultm** will. e*b*iuiin, naw* # Ie# wnn, naw*. mum* •ifes's-was, wjwL Iavw. Lee . * wc/in. n#**. ftMrtdAR . WPON. Neve. Tin* wnn. N*v«, Moot* IlM-WJg. M*llto HAli CKLW. Bud U*vle* |t«Ar.Wjn, Ntv*. MUAlo Hull WWJ, N*v*. Bumper Club | zap*: By EARL WILSON UNLIMITED SOFT WATER constant exposure — that the solution to a problem is)monwealth games there, n kick in the belly or a slap in the face." Minow declined to endorse proposals to amepd a section of the FCG code to require radio and television stations- to offer ’ 1 equal time only to'candldates of ffie two major parties in political campaign*. He said that section of the code ’has got to be changed," but H Jack’s Interested in buying H for pictures and starring In H-sn Is Bing Creaky. Producers Elliott Martin and’Danny Hollywood, nnd Playwright Snmnor Arthur Long, whose nickname Is “All Sumner Long,” evidently have n small goldmine. The script’s so hilarious that All Sumner Long worked all summer WILSON long writing in some dull spots so the audience would get some brief relief from laughing. Paul Ford thinks Jack would be good in such a picture. “I get btliy Hmha and he gets Benny laugh8.’’ Ford says. — THE MIDNIGHT EARL . Did Dorothy Colllas beat out everybody for the lead In "She Loves Me”? . t . Curvy Dellas Rennie, now understudying Yvonne Constant in . “No Strings,” turned'blonde and says it’s more fUn. Peter Townsend, who almost married Princess Margaret, was watching the Roseiand Twisters.. . Seven Art, Films is steaming. It spent 52-mltlkm on the soon-due Pat Boone film, “Main Attraction” — and another company Just put him into a low-budget quickie ... Connie Francis wrote a tune titled “Caroline," in honor of yoidmowwho ... . Singer Kitty Kailen has an offer to lead all-girls'orchestra. EARL’S PEARLS: Officials who write the astromical budget; our space program say wryly that we “must become accustomed to the cost of high living.” Lea Carpenter TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A local guy says he’s already picked u,e u's* a Christmas gift for the bratty kid next door — an electric train! Task forcem and ten miles of straight- track. American Air Force units In GIs leave Thailand Aboard 2 Transports BANGKOK. Thailand <81 ~ Two 035 jet transports left Central Thailand today with 154 U.S. com-1 bat trpops bound for Hawaii. The withdrawal of American infantrymen from this Southeast) Asian country is nearing comple-1 tion. ® Two more C136 flights — Ibis afternoon and tomorrow will the pullout from Korat, HOST FREE $3, PER MONTH Wc Sarvlc* AH Makes LINDSAY SOFT WATKR CO. . SKI RENTAL AVOID WAITING AT THE SLOPES— Your whole family can rnjoy skiini, and family ski rented *t your Pontiac Sears w. ski boot!, poles aim skis with safety release binding*!. ,.. and the rental 'fee can he applied 10 any purchase of 425 or more of oki clothing or equipment i •. uee your Sear* charge, / KINTAL HI 1 I renin*..........,.4S ........ I’D SAID THAT: The Pennsylvania Dutch philosophy was noted op a blacksmith mop new Allentown: "The hours is, until the work isn’t." Catholic Digest. . - * Well; there’s one thing to be said for a diet — It certainly im-ves the appetite. That's earl, hrether. ^ ■ (Cepyrlght, 14U) j Thailand are not affected by the pullout. • . The American armed units werq rushed into Thailand last May to deter a Communist threat feared frqpi neighboring Laos. ) i sst THE PONTIAC PRESS,' MONDA^, fa* am! 1Contributors Here is the last list In k series ^ ewttdbtttors of $100 or more 3$ the successful 1982 Pontiac Atea United Fund Drive: a£ki*o B«at ,r>l*piion» ce. £ a Michigan B«H. Telephone «mp)o Fhotlac Stilt* Hoapltal tmploye tontlac/ Oenaraf Jlo.pltal employes .3,599 ' KltaC*'! IM. fa. | Outdoor I Pontiac CoUntfy Club Oatnun'a Men's ’wear ............ JSft'fi 'D. Pierce Jr. High School.,. Kroger's employe* .-i.;...,......... Kroger’i (Perry i entployee.......... . Pontlae dty water Supply- ... • *m»h»y**. HHHHMMR 271 County Sheriff Dept, employes . 274.County Proteoiltnif Attorney’s Office employer. Pontiac country Club ........... White Owl Bxpreaa 'employee,. Kruchko Plumbing 4............. Calico . Corners .: . .....,. .., Housthold Finance .............. Oeneral American Transportation, Wrlgley’e (Saginaw) employes . Boutell Drtvaaway employea . r.. Bulck Warehouse employes .... Progressive Machine Process - mployea . chlgen Ch * Tool dl __1___„____ ,_____ i. Treasury Dept, employes ■. Marre, M.D, m............ . woon Napley Ny* Dairy employe* ............. County Audltors-Aeoounttng _ employea ..................... Philip F. Mayotte west Detroit Olese, Inc.,....... West Detroit. Ola** employee .. Ctrl sendberg school ........... Lloyd Motor* employee ...f... D: S. Truck employee ......... Pontiac Lake School- ........... Thomas Cooley School 137 Pontiac Laundry .............i,v,v F. T. Standard Farta ........... *«] Fontlao State Bank Building, me. J;2 Ogg.ciean*** In*. .P........8•.' Charles FattlOh (............ }*} Dr. Carl Blrkelo ....... ......... Dr. L, Oelstein .................. ™ Marehbanks, Inc.................. 134; Arthur's,,Inc. ......... Sraltest-MIlk Division . Mrs. Ida aark :.......... John McAuliffe Ford PauT KOTn, Inc. ______JOT K-Mart employes ............ Mobil Oil employe* ,„....... Wrigjey's (Drayton Plaint) County 1 employee .................. laaac Crory Jr. High School' 1 1301 Canasta, a card game of ‘“ rummy family, surpassed construct bridge as this country’ , in most popular card gable for . !!i brief time. -Junior Editors Quiz on- BRANP NIW, 1962 AUTOMATIC 110-ZAC ___________ PORTABLE . WHITE Sewing Machine v^l^«s 1171 * »47” Ik • Blind SUtehee j , J i®i|j!»11 mniii igg.. whiti's pinist quality Fully (BirarantMd Free Homo Domonitrotion Within 25 Milo MM - New 7-Foot Vacuum Cleaner Hate Braided Cloth, All Rubber (Mo Untie or Vinyl) FULLY GUARANTEED Attachments Included $1.25 Week Tm Hone Demomtiation 01 4*1101 Within 2* Mlfi Radius CUK-TS APPLIANCES HIW LOCATION mi HATCHIRY ROAD OR 4.1101 W*»t* >W0 to Airport SS, North If Sllthsry . . v QUESTION: Was thf^reallyaKingArth^^ Knights of the-^ound Table? ★ ★ ★ ' ANSWER: When, In tha early 400s, thlltoman soldiers left Birtain after a long occupation, there was a great deal of cotv-fuslon. The Celtic people called Britons had come ta depend On the Romans for protection. Now they found themselves attacked by tribes from Europe such as the Jutes, Angeles and Saxons. It is thought that at this time a strong Chieftain arose to nelp the Britons battle their enemies. Legends about him sprang up, especially In Brittany in FTance, where the people were also of Celtic descent. In these, the chieftain became a legendary king who established his claim by drawing the magic sword Escaliber from a reck and who gathered such famous Knights as Sir Lancelot and Sir Galahad to form the Knight of the Round Table, sending them forth to protect the weak and the helpless against evildoers. These legends were collected by Sir Thomas Malory and brought back to England, where they were published in 1485. Called ‘‘Lemorte Darthur” (the death of Arthur) this is one of the most thrilling books ever written. This book provided material for others, such as Tennyson’s famous “Idylls of tha King.” ' I....r~T ' ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: We don’t use armor or swords three feet long these days, and yet the bravery And chivalry of the oM knights cart still be an inspiration to us. You can ba a Sir Lancelot or Galahad too, jfist as long as yon battle your best for what you know" is right and good. OPENING SPECIALS AT OUR JMCW LOCATION Tfe Boor (hop PONTIAC’S LARGEST, NEWEST, MOST MODERN FLOOR 00VERIN0 STORE "OPPOSITE THE MALL" 2 BLOCKS WEST OF TELE0MPN ROAD 2205 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD, FE 4-6216 Plastic Wall Tile 2f„r FRONT DOOR PARKING I It I MW lew prlcs—j Is either Ml betas or oh TUB AREA You GmU ALL FOR • 40 eg. ft, TVe • t Bale 11 • fOtt.Osp el Spreader • 10 ft. Strip# AT OUR NEW LOCATION FULL BATH AREA You Got* AU FOR • Tlag.ft.Tlla • f Olsanar jl if It. Ogp. i • f Ipraadar • |B^tM)w * 10 ft. lass , ................ SIP CERAMIC 9Q( THE Perfect Quality ARMSTRONG —— ^ INLAID TILE MSQ Guaranteed by Armstrong 6 SOLID VINYLIIIO RUBBER TILE 4 SSI 9x9 IOeA. Pm Vinyl Ills I COLORS RUBBER BASE —(4lwlAfnigep No Scrubbing Perfect Quality fM;. WE BOUGHT ^ A TRUCKLOAD H A HELP 11V YOURSELF JWgtflt, 4" HI0H W 1 OBEN EVERY NITE ’lU CHRISTMAS TONIGHT, TUESDAY,^EDNESDA Y ONLY Your Choice 20 Toy Specials Baby Dolls Cry, nOr Drink and Wet 00„ UBS Detective Sets 00( Are Exciting ' 00< Each Just s«y. “CJHLAHGETF’st Sesro Toy Ttnem, Parry Jl Baeeawnl 20-in. Wooden aa. Dull Cradles OO. Friction-Motor MetalRnenn Clris’ Alnminam nn. *-pc, toy metsi nn_ sturdy steel OAlt Assorted HasUo -aa. Cooking Set OoL Sweeper Set* OOl Toy Truck* OO -. Toy Truck* 881 4-pc, Toy Metal Cheot-Checker- OOe Adorable Plash qq Cnte, Cuddly Domino Sets OO.m Dog Assortment OoL Stuffed Doll* tmi' “ ^ ^ Cute, Cuddly aa. Binoculars Are Stuffed Dolls 881- Exciting Font Complete 13-Piece Spin Casting Kits Clft-Prieed 5 OS7 aim ini assorted colors. Soft and vrsrm dm *• for sold weather driving S41-L atsss. I The Weather i 11.8. Weather Bureau Forecast Mostly cloudy Tuesday (Detail*.Page 2) THE PONTIAC VOL/120 NO. 256 .★ ★ ★ T'ONTUC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1962—32-PAGES 2 Area Teens Die in Crash QirDockrSpaceWorkers JFK to Get T-H WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy gets reports today from two Taft-Hartley law emergency Boards he named itf stopping strikes by East Coast dock em- Mr. Shnoo loved more than anything. workers. Shnellingham Shnoo Buys In another development related a Most Fantabulous Zoo By LUCaECE BEALE CHAPTER ONE Once upon a time there was a man named^hnellirig-ham Shnoo who loved animals more than anything in the world. AVhen he was a small boy he eoHected tropieat and turtles »and hamsters. As he grew older his collection grew to include rac-*--:—~— coons and monkeys andj snakes. By the time he was a young i major labor, controversy chiefs of the five operating unions the nation’s railroads gathered here for a huddle to determine their next legal step in fighting worker layoffs threatened by the carriers. Of the three disputes a renewed strike by the 60,000 dock workers appears to be the most imminent. The workers ended an earlier strike after the administration On Oct. 6 obtained an 80-day injunction under the Taft-Hartley emer-' liotte:--------------——-------- man he was collecting tigers and K jj \ zebras and even giraffes! Finally, Mr. Shnoo bought a 5 .10 ml ” zoo. It was an *old' run-down-place owned-by a man named Crookshank. g| IPjjj This man did not love animals. He kept them in cages so small | they hardly had room to lurnj around. He gave them very little food and he did not heat their j houses and he never spoke kindly to them. Crookshank was glad to sell the zoo because he loved money as' much as Mr. Shnoo loved ani-l The emergency board studying this case is expected to report to the White. House that there still is a tight deadlock between the AFL-CIO International Longshoremen's Association, and shipowning and stevedore firms. STRIKE THREAT The-next-step-wilJ-be-a-vote on, the employers’ last settlement offer, rejected by the uni worker turndown of the offer, which officials-say they expect, will mean a real threat of a pier strike on Atlantic and Gulf coasts 'n Dec. 23 when the 80-day -lion runs out. simply to recite a negotiating deadlock. It is strictly a formality that, under the law, will enable the government to go ahead with application for an 80-day court in->n-barring a further strike— The time lag will enable government mediators and the special" board headed by Prof. Arthur M\Jtoss, director of tfie University of California Institute of Industrial Relations, to try new peace moves. The chief issue in dispute between Lockheed and the machin-is the union’s demand for a union shop arrangement, requiring employes to be’ union mem- bers, provided the workers^ approve the idea by a two-thirds margin. Lockheed has declined to permit such a. poll or be bound by its outcome. h' An earlier White House board had recommended the union shop subject to two-thirds approval by emuployes.____ The rail dispute has been a continuing one all year. The carriers are trying to abolish up to 65,000 jobs they claim are now obsolete. Still another White House board recommended more gradual reduction, originally confined to locomotive firemen. The unions have been resisting any layoffs. Red Armies Smaller, Haven't Gone Third Injured on Lincoln Rd. All Were Too Young to Have License for Driving Car PAUL H. DROEGE JOHN C. KRAUSS No Appointees Yet—Romney Next Governor Plans Careful Assessment LANSING (UPI} - Gov.-Elect George" Romney said today his j plans for setting up his new administration are developing rap-1 idly, but he has made no definite! Two Birmingham teen* agers were kilted and a young friend was critically injured when their\speed-ing con vertible "Crashed into a tree in ,Bloomfield Township Saturday night. \.*-* Dead when they were putted from the twisted wreckage of the car were John C. Krauss, 19, of Road, and Paul H. Droege, 14, of 1590 Fairfax Oakland Highway Toll in ’62 Drive. -8R- ion, Dean Gebo, Last Year '14, of 1474 Pierce St.' Birmingham, Ta Data 87 NEW. DELHI, India UP)—Prime Minister Nehru told jyj gucb designations will . be Parliament today the Chinese Communists may have -based on competence, character thinned out the advance units of their invasion armies, and capacity,” he said, but they have not withdrawn them. In elabo*ating* Romney said, The Chinese repbrted their troops had pulled back »|n tbe process of taking a look in at least one sector in partial fulfillment of Peking*? riitiio'ssibie appointees) l expert I Y*ea r,i milp« pvtpnHv frnm or more in the 25-m le an hour “1 contemplate acting on that , *ne mlles _exl®nda /rom Lne appointment during December I ^akeK( Chem“ng R°?d. between ^ne . * *i i, I Brighton and Howell in Living- ,ne a i *“ »ld "• s- 18 jSCS wl^le Joh"-l‘ p,r"“ wenl point,” he said. I of Lansing. The boys met at the Krauss Romney expressed concern during the hour - long news conferences over the fact “budget I processes , are not as far ad- I vanced now as they were a year ago. “The principal reason,'' he said, “is that this was an elec- 1 tion year.” Because of the delay in draft-> ing a budget, the governor - elect j said, “Obviously there is noj adc-1 quate time for submission of n budget that could be called wiili out reservation a Romney budget, j News Flash WASHINGTON M — The Russians have begun taking their IL28 bombers out of Cuba, the Defense Department announced today. out for dinner.. The mishap 1 curred only a few blocks from the home. John’s father told police he had ntf idea the boys would take the car. ’'“I didn’t even know he c 0 u 1 d drive,'’ the stunned father told police, j The dead hoys’ bodies arrat the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co.. Birmingham. “It must reflect to a considerable extent going programs. But j we do expect to do the host Job* we con in the time available and' expect to have some impact on; Hie charMer 61 tmrttmigrr* Marshals on Scene S. Dakota Town Riled Up Romney also said because of the 1 , 1 ABERDEEN, S I) iff)—Federal Marshals meet here tonight to aid formula and ma|) strategy for their invasion of Mound City, a village wfiere planned steps in the state capital; zoa|olis t0VVn folk and farmers threaten “another Mississippi” to budget, even If all other appropri-1 ^ from turning over government records they have locked in aliens were ontlnuedI at the same | barricaded bui|ding. level, would be up $18 million over 1 ^ it -k the $512-million appropriated for, .p|u> (.ounty Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service |fiscal 1903. , [office was moved this year from Mound City, the county seat [ with a population of less than 200, to Herreid, population 633, eight . . ■ \ ' miles north. Haif-of the record were moved to the new A8GS bullding in Herreid, but Mound City area folks foiled attempts to tpke the rest. , ,, % They locked the ASCS office and sandbagged the front. They threatened to fight If anyone corned for the records. Texans Get 81 Degrees NEW YORK (UPI) — The highest temperature reported by the Weather Bureau In the United States yesterday was 81 at Brownsville, Tex. The lowest temperature reported this morning was .14 at Omak, Wash. years Mound City has been wary of any thought of moving the county seai. Mound City fears that if the ASCS records go to Herreid, the courthouse may be the next to go, .. CRITICAL SITUATION “IT they call the U.S. marshals out, someone might get his head blown off,” one Mound City businessman said. A farmer said , Mound City will neve! give up its fight to keep the ASCS office. ★ ★ ★ ‘ The government is trying tp scare us,” he said. “We've beer | through too much to get scared.” - Many people in Mound City have a financial Interested In the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) 7»r 4.. m MONDAY. DECRMBRR fl r«WI rrea Still Churning Off East Coast By The Associated Press '!5|5k severe storm that for the last “ ^ k has chined in every direc- 0Ps Eject to Return to Ruined Isle tion off the South Atlantic Coast centered 280 miles east of Charleston, S. C., today, packing gale winds of up to 65 miles an| Four rieSf Tls center: It has cut awayiarge chunks of beachfront in North Carolina, where seas were reported as high as 14 feet off Frying Pan Shoals early today. The seven-day-old storm has floundered and churned in every direction. The-center has remained in a circle with a j radius of less than 250 miles. No one has been injured. . U.N. SUPPORTERS - Among the spon-LONDON iff) — After 13 months No one has been injured. A [ sors 0f the new Rochester Area Chapter of of modern life, the refugees from ferry ran aground in North Caro- the' American Association for the United Na-Tristan da Cunha have elected to una Saturday, but the only ones tions are (from left) Mrs. Walter P. Reuther, -return to their volcano-ravaged is- aboard, the crew of three, got off prof. Charles 0. Huckter of Michigan State land, it was announced today. The safely. " *“ ~ I v ------,—______ vote was 148 to 5. . By this secret ballot the islanders decided to return in late 1963 to their isolated homeland in the ,.$outh Atlantic and turn their backs on traffic problems, televi-„,jaion, big movie houses and other -►refinements of civilization. The '‘vote was organized by Britain’ "“Colonial office among islanders over21. The 260 islanders were brought here when the volcano . on their island — an island with -----a total coastline of only 21 miles erupted, threatening their ’ lives and homes. University Oakland, Mrs. Lawrence S. Shepard ahcf Mrs. Wood M. Geist. Mrs. Shepard and Mrs. Geist are temporary cochairmen of the group, which held an open hojise and signed up 52 members at MSUO yesterday. Thestormwasa''ione^’cutoff 52 Residents Sign Charter from the general circulation of the _________ ^ . atmosphere. The Weather-Bureau said that while cutoff low pressure systems are not hew, one so strong as this was unusual for the area, since it has remained so long in such a relatively small area.’ And there were no outside currents of sufficient strength immediate sight to cause the storm to move away. •winds of from 25 to 45 m.p.h. extended outward 300 miles from the storm center. The forecast was for the storm to remain nearly stationary today, with little change in size or Intensity. Pictures from the Tiros satellite have helped keep track of the storm. Gale warnings were displayed from Myrtle Beach, S. C., to the Virginia Capes. -Small craft ings were in effect "'from Myrtle ‘ to Cape Canaveral, Fla. and from the Virginia capes to The weather will be suitable feape May, N.Jr— J H| Seas were rough, and tides ohe to three feet above normal Continued from north Florida to Vir- Form Rochester Unit for A total of 52 Rochester area resi-dents yesterday signed up as charter members of a new chapter of the American Association for the United Nations (AAUN) at .an open house held by an organizing •I Since arriving hare, most of the ^islanders have been living at government-provided quarters at an old, but far from uncomfortable Royal Air Force camp near South-. ampton. ‘DECISION MADE’ A colonial office spokesman said that now that the decision to return had been made, die bulk of the islanders will be in Tristan da ‘Cunha by the end of next year. for resettlement toward the close of, next year, which is the summer period in Tristan. - Twelve chosen representatives were sent to inspect (the island a few months ago and to dtacover if it was fit for repbpuiation. The y ; decided it was. A large amount - of restoration must be done to get homes and their fishing industry -•ready. Many of them have complained about the weather here, saying ^Britain is damp and cold. Others ^pave been frightened by the traf-—-He. While some have liked TV — which they never saw before coming here — many said they would be just as happy without it. Tristan da Cqnha was discovered in 1506 by the Portuguese Adm. Trislas da Cunha, and annexed by Britain in 1816. The people are said to be descendants of shipwrecked sailors, settlers of NORTHEAST SOCKED IN F.lsewhere on the weather front, rain and storms pounded areas in the Pacific Northwest. ‘ Heavy fog blanketed many New York State and Canadian sections along Lakes Erie and Ontario, halting movement of ships and planes and making driving hazardous. Air travel was halted Buffalo and Niagara Falls. On the pleasant side of the weather pattern, unseasonably mild weather continued in wide areas in the eastern half of the WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Kennedy returned to the White House today for a rundown from W. Averell Harriman on the results of his two-week trip to India and Pakistan. Temperatures climbed to record highs for the date Sunday ii many cities, with the mercury British origin and women from the reaching into the 60s in many sec-island of St. Helena. I tions. Harriman, assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern Affairs, was believed prepared to give the president a rather encouraging report on his mission. . Harriman has expressed hope that a long border dispute between India and Pakistan might be on the verge of being settled and also was said to feel India has made judicious use of U.S. military aid in its border conflict with Red China. The President arrived 4>y helicopter at 9:30 a.m. (Pontiac’time] from the first family’s northern Virginia retreat near Middieburg, Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Partly cloudy and mild today and tonight. High today 58. Low tonight 36. Tuesday mostly cloudy with chance of a little drizzle; high 54. Winds light and variable today, becoming southerly at five to 15 miles per hour Weithvr: Cloudy NATIONAL WEATHER - It will be generally fair in the, eastern third of the nation tonight. -Light rain is forecast for upper bakes, the northern Plains, the. Mississippi Valley *.:ai)d on the Pacific Coast from central California north. Some * Snow "and snow flurries are expected in the Rockies. It will "be cooler hi the northeast, the northern Rockies and the north-?. HWtmS'h'' .'- 'V committee. SOme 80 persons attended the meeting at Michigan State University Oakland to hear a talk by guest speaker Mrs. Philip Gentile, a United Nations observer for the Adult Education Association, which is supported by the Ford Foundation, Mrs. Wood M. Geist, 63360 De-qulndre Road, Washington -Township, said the turnout was “very heartening” and termed the meeting successful. Mrs. Geist and' Mrs. Lawrence S. Shepard, 229 Rochdale St., Avon .Township, are temporary cochair- men of thtjgpoup. An organizational meeting to establish thq chapter’s structure and elect officers is scheduled for Jan. 22 at MSUO. Purpose of the group is to build an educational program to support the United Nations. Chairman of yesterday's p r o ■ gram, Mrs. Walter P. Reuther, JFKtaHear Results on India Harriman to Discuss 2-Week Trip MARIETTA, Oa. (AP) - Two special freight cars of classified Atomic Energy Commission materials in charge of five couriers derailed along with 22 other cars and three locomotives today. Two of the * couriers were slightly injured iq the derailment of a Louisville and Nash-,vllle Railroad freight at Kenne-saw, Ga., about six miles north of Marietta. An AEC spokesman at the Albuquerque. N.M-, Atomic Weapons Research Center, emphasized that the derailed materials constituted hazard to health or safety. Va., Kennedy asked the executive committee of the National Security Council to join him and Harriman for their 10 a.m. conference. Harriman returned to Washing; ton Saturday from a two-fold mission on the president’s orders One aim was to try to determine the extent of India’s military requirements in coping with the Red Chinese invasion. The other was to assure Pakistan that American aid to India would not be used in the 15-year India-Pakistan quarrel over Kashmir. Harriman was reported to have brought back with him from New Delhi a long list of requests for additional U.S. aid. The president attended the Army-Navy football game in Philadelphia Saturday, then went to ilen Ora to spend the remainder of the weekend with his family He and Mrs. Kennedy attended Mass at the Middieburg Community Center yesterday. Armed Bandit Holds Up Market, Flees With $3 An armed bandit fled with |3 Saturday afternoon after handing note demanding alt the money ... the cash register to Ludger La-Barge, owner of Ludger's Market, 2548 Elizabeth Lake Road. LaBarge told police the robber held a gunf in his right hand while thrusting the note at him with his* left. He was described as in his late teens, smaU in stature and having blond hair., Freight Cars With Atomic Cargo Derail said the new chapter was being formed because ‘‘each one of us is interested in doing what he can to bring peace in our time.” Mrs. ‘Gentile urged participa-Jon in the new chapter as a ton in the rmsensof people rfr-bi ‘working build a stronger and safer world.” To be known as the Rochester Area Chapter of the AAUN, the group will draw its members from the Pontiac, .Utica and Romeo areas, as well as from Rochester. GUESTS PRESENT Guests at the meeting included Robert W. Peden, president of the state division of the AAUN; Dr. Robert Frehse, vice president of the Detroit chapter and director of the Detroit Round Table of Christians and Jews ; and Mrs. Warren Cooksey, president of the Detroit chapter. Also present war Harold Chalk, president of the Oakland CpuUty chapter, whose membership is concentrated in the Birmingham and Bloomfield Township areas. Others active in the formation of the Rochester area group are several MSUO faculty members, including Sheldon Appleton, assistant professor of political science; Charles O. Jtuckcr, professor of history; and Gerald Straka, assistant pfofessor of history. • Rochester School Supt. Donald C. Baldwin, Dr. Edward .J Geist of Rochester and Addison Township Supervisor Frank Webber also are among the organization’s sponsors. Nehru Says Rods Not Withdrawn (Continued From Page One) be used only to resist Chinese aj gression. ' ’ The New China News Agency reported a withdrawal of Communist Chinese troops in the Walong area at the extreme east-JemjEadjsf. line. Walong, 15 miles west of the Burma border, fell to the Chinese in an offensive that subsequently carried them 80 miles down the Lbhit River valley toward the plains of Assam. High Indian military sources were quoted as saying Chinese troops still held positions in the Luhit Valley. - A dispatch from a Chinese correspondent in Walong said scores of peasants gave the withdrawing Chinese newly harvested sweet potatoes and bananas and “called down blessings on them," ” Hie Chinese broadcast said nothing about withdrawals elsewhere, but authoritative Indian sources at Tezpur said the Chinese seem to have withdrawn 20 miles on the northeastern front; apparently the Bombdila area. The area is some 300 miles west of Walong and is the scene of the greatest Chinese penetration toward the fertile populous Assam plains. There was no word from either side on the situation in Ladakh, key area in the five-year old border contest. In rejecting important sections of Peking’s peace terms, Nehru has said China’s provisions would leave it in possession of 2,000 square miles of Ladakh. The area, bleak and uninhabited, is important to China for the strategic road it has built linking its Singiang Province with captive Tibet. Birmingham Area News ,, Elementary Curriculum to Include Languages BIRMINGHAM — Foreign language instruction in the Birmingham School District, already offered to junior and senior high Mr. Shnoo Buys a Zoo (Continued From Page One) and before long people began to come from far and wide "to pay to see his animals, for word spread that they were the finest and happiest animals in the land. QUEEN COMING Now it happened that the Queen of the land was very fond of animals. She let it be known that in order to encourage kindness to animals she intended to visit all the zoos before Christmas and to make an award of 1,000 gold pieces to the one she found the most deserving. When Mr. Shnoo heard this he was very excited. He felt that no finer zoo than his existed and he was sure he would win the L000 gold pieces. He very much needed the gold because his last payment to Crookshank was due on Christmas eve and he had spent so much money building up the that he really did not have the gold to pay. ^Now he felt thpt his troubles would soon be over; the zoo would be all his; Crookshank would be gone, and he could do even finer things for his animals. Mr. Shnoo looked and gasped. “Goodness! Why didn’t you give it to me sooner?” “Forgot,” said Crookshqnk. “Impossible!" cried Mr. Shnoo. He stared in awe at the envelope. There, scrawled in red letters, were the words: “To Mr. Shnoo at the Zoo from Mr. S. Claus at Santa Land.” Tomorrow: Mr. Shnoo’s Decision. Copyright 1962 He rushed about the zoo spreading the good news. He promised Molly, the hippopotamus, he would buy her a husband; he told Herbert and Louise, the giraffes, he would build them a grape arbor; and to Blue Lady, the parakeet, he premised a bottomless bowl of honey. As he left the bird house he ran ipto Crookshank who handed him a letter. “Came yesterday," said Crook-shank. “I got it from the post-i man.” -TT" £r Frank J. Howlett, 61, o?_______ Hillside St., Birmingham, secretary-treasurer of the Detroit real estate firm, Howlett-Barretf-Wat-son, Inc., died unexpectedly of a heart attack Saturday. Scout Executive Gets Jackson Post Mr. Howlett was a 33rd degree mason, past'master of the Corinthian Lodge No, 241, F&AM; past commander of Knights Templar Detroit Commandery No, 1; -meipber of the Old Guard; Shriner; and a member of the Red Cross of Constantine. Van R. Braidwood, an executive of the Pontiac District of Boy Scouts of America since 1954, has been named to a similar post in Jackson. No successor has been named. He will be given special assignments in his new post. The Pontiac District contains about a quarter of the Clinton Valley District of Scouts. Members of the Pontiac Boy Scouts honored Braidwood at farewell dinner arranged for him last week. Probe Blaze; Death Linked to Suffocation Hie Pontiac fire marshal’s office today was probing an early morning house fire in which a 60-year-old Pontiac man died apparently of suffocation. The fire was reported at midnight in a 1%-story frame home at 480 Franklin Road. Firemen found the body of James Brown, owner of the home, two rooms away from a bathroom in which the fire had apparently started. Brown was pronounced dead on arrived at Pontiac General Hospital, after failing to respond to inhalator threatment. The fire gutted the bathroom, but firemen kept it from spreading to the rest of the house. Damage was estimated at $1,250. introduced in the elementary school curriculum next fall. In a report to the Board of Education, Mrs. Louise Couture, coordinator of the elementary and secondary foreign language program, said a total of 3,925 junior and senior high students, now are taking languages. Russian is being offered for the first stime this year. However, French is the most popular language in the district; which presently has 1,876 students enrolled in that course. place among 30 fn and speaking, later read and write the language. An “in-service workshop,” third to be held this year, will t a k e The languages are taught by the audio-lingual method, explained Mrs. Couture. Students b e g i n by listening Realty Official Dies Suddenly Heart Attack Fatal to Frank J. Howlett He was also a member of the Detroit Athletic Club; a past president and director of the Automobile Club of Michigan; and on the board of directors of the Standard Federal .Savings and Loan Association. Service wiH be 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at the William R. Hamilton Company Chapel, Detroit under auspices of the Detroit Commandary No. 1. Burial will follow in Roseland Park Cemetery, Royal Oak. Surviving besides his wife Doris _re a daughter, Mrs. Marilyn Barnes; his mother, Mrst Fred Howlett; a sister, Mrs. H. M. Barrett; and a brother, Dr. Howard T. Hewlett. The family has requested memorial contributions be sent to the Michigan Heart Fund. Draft Call Includes 30 From County Michigan’s draft call for January will affect 30 registrants in Oakland County and a total of 276 in the state, Michigan Selective Service Director Col. Arthur A Holmes said today Holmes said the 12 months of 1962 saw 60,032 Michigan men registered by local boards. All men are Required to be registered on their 18th birthday. The January draft call will include only registrants of at least 22 years of age, except for volunteers who are accepted between the ages of 17 and 26. - teach languages in the district. Hugh W.'McIntyre Service'for Hugh W. McIntyre, 40, of 15548 Kirkshire, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the First Pres-byterjan Church of Birmingham. Burtal will be in Acacia Park Ofemetery. Mr. McIntyre died unexpectedly yesterday at William Beaumont .Hospital, Royal Oak. His body is at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. He was a member of the American Society of Metals and president of the Men’s Club at the First Presbyterian Church and a member of Pi Kappa Phi fraternity of Purdue University. Surviving besides his wifiTPau-line are his daughter Gloria and son Richard H., both at home; his mother Mrs. Thomas McIntyre and a brother. PAUL H. DROEGE Service for Paul H. Droege, 14, of 1590 Fairway Drive, was to be held at 3 p.m. today at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. with cremation to follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. He died Saturday 'night in an auto accident in Bloomfield Township. Surviving besides his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paid F. Droege, are is ter Susan* at home; and parents, Mr.1 and Mrs. Russell Hughes of Vero Beach, Fla. Walter Kadell Service for Walter Kadell, 65, of 1264 Lenhill Court, will be 11 a.m. < tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. - Kadell died unexpectedly— Saturday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac; He was a member of Charles Edward Post, American Legion; the Senior Men’s Club of Birmingham; and the McDowell Chords of Pontiac. He was a retired sales,representative. Surviving besides his wife Lorraine are a daughter Mrs. Edward Wright Of Indianapolis, Tnd., Walter R. of Nankin Township; and seven grandchildren. JOHN C. KRAUSS Service for John C. Krauss, 15, of 1800 W." Lincoln Road, will be p.m. tomorrow at Christ Church CtanbroOk. Cremation will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. He died Saturday night in an auto accident in Boolmfield Township; His body is at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Surviving besides his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Krauss, are a brother; and grandparents, Mrs; Marion Wilde of Yuclapa, Calif, and Hazen Purdy of Dade City, Fla. Town Riled in S. Dakota (Continued From Page One) outcome of the battle. They are Shareholders in the neW build- ing that houses the local post office and the former ASCS office. Closing the ASCS office has affected business in Mound City. Albin Herman, said reopening town’s only cafe, said reopening Of the office would provide a lot of business. SANDBAGGED - Residents of Mound City, S.D., a small fanning community, have sandbagged the front of the Agricultural Stabilizatipn and Conservation Service office to prevent federal officials from moving re- . uw, p »««,» hhwh«i»i<»-cords to a new ASCS office set up In another / render of the record, He spid the: community. 1 government will 4use whatevei The ASCS program is hurting too. With half the records in each town, ASCS officials have been handicapped. The agency administers soil bank loans and handles other Agriculture Department functions. Travis Lewin of Sioux Falls, assistant U.S. district attorney, met with more than 200 Mound City farmers and their wives Saturday night. He said mar-shals will be sent unless the , records are surrendered. Lewin told the group, gathered in the grade school gymnasium, “if we can’t voluntarily get the records we will have to send marshals in. “If someone attempts to stop the marshals — and you knew what happened-in Mississippi^ the marshal will be required to takp steps to protect themselves.” * He advised the Mound City people, “if you want to fight, fight it legally." The Justice Department’s posh, . tion, he said, is unconditional sur- for^e is necessary and lawful. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1962 Cites'Evidence- Leaders Talk Under ; SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (UPI) I —Author Eugene Burdick claimed yesterday “there was abundant evidence” the n a 110 n’s leaders have been paralyzing their emotions with tranquilizers while debating the vital Issue of war peace, - . “The higher you go in the pyramid of power,” he said, “the surer the indication of finding unbalanced people at the top.” Burdick, co-author of “Fail Safe” and “The Ugly American,” charged that there is “an abnormally high” consumption of tranquilizers in Washington and “no can say that these drugs help in achieving wisdom in the vital decisions made there.”. The best-selling author addressed the final session of a three-day symposium on the prospects for democracy, sponsored by the Center for the Study of Democratte Institutions. Burdick did hot elaborate on this use of tranquilizers but5 protested the growing cpmplexity that a ingly necessitates their use. ing instead a return to a principle of simplicity in which “Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Khrushchev would simply say, ‘Let’s turn off the arms'race.” .'i' “Those men now in power in our government are already collapse under the tremendous Weight of scientific YnoWl Because of similarities between the United States and Pakistan, a study, is. being' made of their na-tlve plants which could be useful •ledge «rtl TeacherFinds!! Lesson a Loss SPRINGFIELD, N.H. (AP)-Penacook High School’s hunting safety instructor was recovering today from a shoulder wound sif-fered in a hunting accident.. the I sports Saturday----- right shoulder by a ing companion. About $385 million, or more ms" twice as much, money is paid annually for operas, concert and opera tickets and re-;s in America than for events. lidf they v__ Rhoden, 20, o Calif, v • & .wi* ■ They would ^ke to know how the' suspect managed to squeeze through a 6-inch by 11-inch air ■vent to escape from Jail. , - Boys' and Gids' 2-6X ——SNOW SUITS 3-6X Flannel Lined Boys' and Giris',3-6X Many Styles in ' Men's Cotton Knit mi *10 SLACK SETS 2 ,or$3 LINtu SLACKS Reg. $1 00 1.44 1 “TOSTUME JEWELRY^ ■S ' 3 For % Values ■ ft**, 2.99 $2 Warm 2-pc. hooded snow suits . with quilt lined jackets^‘Washable^ Flannel lined boxer slack with flannel shirt that "matches lining. 3-6X. Flannel lined corduroy or heavy cotton boxer slacks. Sizes 3-6X. Necklaces and matching earrings in novelty and tailored styles. , 3-button placket front, taped heck, embroidered pocket motif. S, M, L Children’s Wear, Second Floor ; Children's Wear, Second Floor Children’s Wiar, Second Floor Jewelry , .. Street Floor • Men’s Wear. . • Street Floor Man's Cardigan Special Purchase .Wool blends or 100% Orion ? acrylics. Piped trim, first quality. S.M.L Men’s Wear . . Second Floor Men's 100% Cotton ATHLETIC SOCKS Reg. 69c 2 p0'' *1 100% fine combed cotton with nylon reinforced heel and toer.' 10% to 13.' .Men’s Wear Street Floor Men's Boxed Tac and NECKTIE SETS Reg. 1.00 4^5 Necktie and tie tac set in smart new patterns. Boxed, ready to wrap and give. Men’s Wear - - . Street Floor TONIGHT TILL 9 AND TUESDAY ONLY Sony, No Mail or Phone Orders, No Deliveries. Use Your Waito's Charge Account. Shop Tomorrow 0:45 A.M. till 9 P.M. Boys' Long Sleeve Famous Brand SPORT SHIRTS GIRDLES Reg. $100 1.50 1 Reg. 2.98 $100 to 5.00 1 Wash and wear Sanforized cotton shirts In stripes, plaids, prints. Sizes 6^1 8. Girdle or ponfy style in white. Sizes SML. Save to over holfl Boys’ Wear..’. Second Floor Foundations .. . Second FloCr Boys' Hooded Women's Sizes 5-8 WARM JACKETS BRIEFS Reg. $11 11.99 9 5*“2 fo$1 Detachable hood jackets with . Cotton, nylon or acetate briefs extra heavy zipper. Quilt lined In sizes 5 to 8. White ond 6-18. : colors. Boys’ Wear ■,, Second Floor Lingerie . .’. Second Floor Boys* Kentfield Wpmen's Lounging KNIT BRIEFS PAJAMAS s 2 ^ *1 & 2 $7 Sturdy cotton knit briefs in sizes 6 to 20. White. Quilted Jacket with embroidered trim, matching solid color pants. 12-18. Boytf Wear... Second Floor Lingerie... Second Floor Girls' 7-14 Hooded French Purses and CAR COATS WOMEN'S WALLETS Reg. $Q 10.99 O fs 2 $1 Pile lined hood,- treated to repel 52-windaw, stretch-tab closing sott and rain. Washable Sizes wallets, also french purses. 7-14. Several colors. Chris' Wear. - • Second Floor Handbags ... Street Floor Girls' Flannel Lined Women's Leather Palm SUCKS DRIVING GLOVES «•» $100 '•*6 | 1. Special $1 Purchase | Corduroy or -heavy cotton Wool ond rayon blend knit plaids. Flannel lined for extra backs, horsehlde palm. Black, warmth. 7-14. brown, beige. Girls'Wear... Second Floor Gloves... Street Floor Girls' Pleated Run-Resist PUID SKIRTS MILUY HOSE *•0- $0 3.99 £ «.g. $100 1.35 | Wash and wear pleated all Seamless nylons that almost around plaid skirts In sizes 7 to never run. Country Beige, sizes 11. 8% toll Girls’ Wear... Second Floor Hosiery... Street Floor Gids* 4-14 Warm Men's 100% Cotton pajamas , HANDKERCHIEFS R*g- $0 2.29 Special *1 f $1 Purchase f Tor 1 Warm flannelette pajamas In 100% fine cotton handkerchiefs dainty pastel prints. Sizes 4 to ■ 14. ■ v ' with wide hem. White. Girls’ Wear... Second Floor Olds'2-14 Millay Women's Chanel Style 8 COTTON BRIEFS ORLON SWEATERS 1 2»«,$1 Reg.^7 $4 4.99 ■§ Colton knit briefs In while and some,colors. Sizes 2 to 14. Orion acrylic chanel type toss-on sweaters In blue or green. Sizes SML. drii* Wear.,. Second Floor * ■ ;•" .{• ; V' - , Accessories. . . Street Floor Famous Brand BRAS *•» $100 2.50 Regular contour or slightly padded styles in sizes 32 to 40.-A-B-C White. Foundationt... Second Floor Two Styles In Misses' All-Weather COATS Reg. 9.90 *8 Reversible balmacaan or hooded. reversible styles. Treated poplin. 8-18. Coat Fashions .. . Third Floor Jupior .Sizes in WOOL SLACKS Reg. 7.99 $5 Glen plaids, stripes and novelty' prints'in green, blue, red. 7*15. Spontteear . .. Third Floor Misses Sizos in CORDUROY SLACKS Reg. 2.98 2 •" *3 Zip closing pinwole corduroy slacks in black, turquoise or green. Sizes 10-18. Sportswear... Third Floor Roll Sleeve Cotton MISSES' BLOUSES Reg. $0 3.98 Colorful checks and plaids. Choosd Bermudo or convertible collars. 32-38. Blouses . .. Third Floor KITCHEN TOWELS 4 - *1 Reg. 59c Fine linen kitchen towels in attractive colored stripes. Several colors. Linen... Fourth Floor SMART WALKING CASUALS with oinso/. Imported Full Fashioned 100% WOOL SHETLAND SWEATERS Reg. 5.99 % 5 e Brown » Beige e White e Black Soft cushioned out-solo, magic shank and snug arch fit ffe:| \l comfortablo walk- ing. Black or stone. mm U-sstt. m Fine 100% wool Imported full fosb-ioned Shetland cardigans with ribbon-faced button holes. A nice Inexpensive gift at a savings tomorrow onlyl Sizes 34 to 40. Sportswear ■ ■. Third Floor Zip-Front, Nylon Shell INSULATED UNDERWEAR Special Purchase 9.99 Value H5 COMPLETE SUIT Here's the way to beat the eoldl These suits are warmly filled with acrylic and misc, fibers and really hold out the cold. Triple illlched seal and crotch, knit culls, fully washable. Sizes S,M,l,XL Men's Wear ... Street Wear Sanded, Ready to Stain, Paint or Varnish) BIG, READY TO FINISH ' , * it, 9-DRAWER CHESTS $t8 Here's o lot of snug storage space In a good looking chest that Is sanded, ready a varnish, paint or stain. 41" long, IS" deep, 34" high. Housewares... Lower Flo^r Nylon Tricot or Cotton Blends GIFT SLIPS and PETTISLIPS 2.99 to 5.99 Values *2 Several stylos in lovely lace tnmi slips In taiy-cam nylon or co1 blonds. Somo ore a vary famous br with tiny Importations. Choose w black or pastels in sixos 32 to 42. Lingerie ... Second Floor Very Nice Assortment of Types and Colors! Wool and Woi>l Blend FABRICS tyagular TOMORROW ONLY 2.99 yd.......... *2 3.99 yd..........,*3 4.99 yd.'......... *4 5.99 yd............$5 6.99 yd ........ *6 7.99 yd.......... *7 Fabrics... Fourth Floor > Boxes Notes and STATIONERY 1.00 Values 1 3-J1 Fins quality, paper In many small prints, designs and colors. With envelopes. High-Low Design SCATTER RUGS Reg. 2.99 6 3.99 Reg. 4.99 •2 *4 High-low loop pile design scottet rugs in several sizes and colors. Stationery. ■. Street Floor Linens... Fourth Floor Zippered Vinyl SHOE TOtE BAGS Reg. 99c T »■ *1 Shoe tote bags In several colors and printed patterns. Full zipper 1Notions i. ■- Street Floor Hoover "Constellation" VAC. SWEEPER Formerly 49.95 *38 Famous Hoover tank style sweeper complete with tools, l-yr. warranty. Sweepers ■ . • Fifth Floor 8" Copper Bottom FRY PAN Reg. 3.99 $3 Deluxe 8" copper bottom fry pan with stainless steel Inside. Housewares . . . Lower Level Large, Clear, "Footed" CAKE PLATE R.S. $9 4.00 W Raised stem crystal-clear cake plate really sho\ys off cakes, deserts. Ciflware Set of 8 . . . Holiday GLASSWARE too Reg. 2.25 Imported Italian glasses, highball or old fashioned, boxed 8 to the set. Glassware ... Lower-Level Drip-Dry Broadcloth PRINT FABRICS Reg, 59e 3*1 Fine drip-dry broadcloth fabrics In, many and combinations. , Fabrics ,.. Fourth Floor Fluffy, Imported GOOSEDOWN-GOOSEFEATHER BED PILLOWS 10% down, 90% feathers 2for $8 50% down, 50% feathers 5* 2fo,$ll 100% Soft Goosedown 2 $14 Domestics... Fourth Floor Print and Solid Color DRAPERIES Reg. 3.39 to 3.99... ..J2m Reg. 4.39 to 4.99.., ......*3- Reg. 5.39 to 6.99.. ,J4. Draperies... Fourth Floor Lpvely, Versatile MATTE JERSEY Reg. 1.99 Solid Colors Lovely ancf versatile matte Jersey makes exceptional < blouses. Fabrics... Fourth Floor Several Prints in MATTE JERSEY Reg. 2.99 $2 Many very smart print patterns In lovely, versatile matte |er- J/. Fabrics. . Fourth Floor Fine Cotton PRINT FABRICS Reg. 1.00 2 «.*! Machine washable, wrinkle-resistant fine cotton fabrics In many patterns, colors. ' Fabrics... Fourth Floor V TTTPT PONTTAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER i , UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) —A Soviet-U.S. clash is in prospect over a resolution to make all U,N. members legally responsible for Sharing the cost of the U.N. forces in the Congo and the Middle East. The resolution, sponsored by the United States and nine other countries, proposes acceptance of the World Court's July 20 advisory opinion that costs of the peace-keeping forces constitute '‘expensed of the organization” which the U.N. charter says “shall be borne by the members as apportioned” by the General Assem-bly. SEEK SUGGESTIONS A companion proposal, spon-, sored by the United States and eight other countries, calls for a 15-member working group to give the assembly suggestions by next April 1 on methods of financing similar costly UJf. peace-keeping operations in the future. Brig. J. H. Price of Canada was to introduce both resolutions this afternoon in the assembly’s 110-nation budgetary committee. Soviet delegates said privately the Soviet Union would vote against accepting the court opinion and would never pay any part ’ of the Congo or Middle East expenses no matter how the’ assembly voted. Arab delegates said they could not Vote to accept the court opinion because they refuse to help pay for the Middle East force. Latin-American delegates have been, drawing up a proposal to amend the second resolution. The Latin Americans want the cost of peace-keeping operations assessed , separately' from the yearly U.N. ‘ and they wantjthe per-1 manent members of the Security CMinciKthe Uidted States, the Soviet Union, Britain, France and Nationalist China—to pay a larger share of such costs than they do of the regular budget Th» United States pays 30 per cent of the annual U.N. budget l Clash on U.N^Fun^s 2nd Trial Faces Young Slayer Summon Prospective Jurors in Texas BEAUMONT, Tex. IUPD — John| Mack Herring, 19, a former Odessa, Tex., schoolboy who kissed his 17-year-old sweetheart goodby, then shot her to death, nfarfa his iiecond murder trial today. ■' A special 200-man venire of prospective Jurors has been summoned for die change of venue trial. Herring’s chief defense counsel, John Barnett, Indicated he would file motions to dismiss the trial because a Jury at Hermit, Tex., ruled last February that Herring was insane at the time he killed Elizabeth Jean Diet. Atty. Dan Sullivan denied that Herring is being placed In double jeopardy and said he would base his case on premeditated murder. The prosecution has subpoenaed 17 witnesses, 16 —of whom testified at the Hermit trial. The defense has not yet called its witnesses. Jury selection was expected take several days. , ★ h ★ At the Hermit trial in February, Herring testified he killed the pretty schoolgirl in March of 1961 at her own request. Herring said he and the girl chatted happily en route to a stockpond near Notrees, Tex. where she died. On the day of his arrest he talked freely about the killing. “On the way out there we talked about her friends. She was cheerful and chatted about how happy she was going to be dead. She wasn’t sad. She was happy. We talked about all sorts of things. She kept saying what it was going to be like in heaven,” Herring told officers. The eight-man, four-woman jury at Hermit ruled that Herring was insane at the time of the shotgun killing but did not rule on his sanity at the time of the trial. The Texas Supreme Court overruled the verdict on grounds that Herring’s sanity at the time of the trial should have been determined. Nab Skunk Freeloading at Cages in Philly Zoo PHILADELPHIA (AP)-A free-loading skunk has been sneaking at night into the camel, kangaroo and penguin cages at Philadelphia Zoo. Zoo officials caught him Saturday night. They’ll continue to feed him, but the skunk will have to go on display and let folks look at him during the day, just like the sod’s other five skunks. English Civil Service to Inlure Tax Collectors LONDON (UH) - The Civil Sendee Clerical Association said today, it is taking out a special insurance policy for members, especially tax collectors and wel- Tbey will be Insured against attacks by angry citizens. tM$Z&''“ but has paid nearly half of the cost of the U.N. Coqgo force. This extra contribution has been on a voluntary basis. > Sponsors of the two resolutions were reported confident that-at least the one accepting the court U.N. budget ^opinion would get the two-thirds vote needed for filial adoption in the assembly, "But one source said both resolutions were in danger of failing unless the sponsors nailed down the Latin-American vote by supporting the Latin 'American amendment. I.HH ... ■ was how countries that do notify any peace-keeping costs would vote to make themselves legally responsible to pay. Fifty have never paid for the Congo operation, anch 26 have never paid for the Middle East operation. Expect lab Report on My Remnants IONIA (ffi—A laboratory report Ionia County Sneriff Peter Yarn / from Lansing was awaited today the case of a decomposed body found near the outskirts of Ionia Saturday. ; . A rabbit hunter, Dale Shattuck, 22, of Ionia, found the skull and Other bones while hunting. ■ A change purse and a singleshot 22-caliber rifle lay near the body. vleck said he believed the b o d y . was that of .Norton Bloomer, 51, an Ionia taki driver missing since Dec. 10,; The/largest piece Of fused silica ever/made (62 x 11 inches) will. be/used as a telescope mirror at Naval Observatory at Flag-f, Ariz. “I, I TO? I KROGER LOWERS FOOD COSTS THROUGH VOLUME BUYING! FRESH SPARE RIBS v SMALLER COUNTRY ClUB AlPMeat Wieners . 2,VS 98* HV,GRADE'S Ball Park Wieners. . ... 59‘ GORDON'S ROLl PORK SAUSAGE . . . *39* KWICK KRISP THICK SLICED ■BACON 2 891 lean-meaty Serve if Save bacon. LEAN-SLICED Country Chib bacon . WITH COUPON BELOW ,49‘ 65‘ EXTRA FANCY SLICED Swift's Premium bacon „. 65‘ GROUND FRIeSH SEVERAL TIMES DAILY Ground Beef 31» LESSER . QUANTITIES 4. SOLD AT — « REGULAR RETAIL Link Pork Sausage. . . .. 65‘ SWIFT'S. PREMIUM- * Skinless Pork Sausage,’," 39‘ BULK PORK Country Style Sausage ... 65‘ SAVE 3b OVER REGULAR PRICE—KROGER OMVC OVT VTth Htwwinn r — __ — mam FLOUR 25 159J REFRESHING NEW DRINK! 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TOP VALUE STAMPS i \WITH TRAVEL CASE WOMEN'S WITH THIS COUPON AND SS.00 PURCHASE OR MORE EXCEPT BEER, WINE OR CIGARETTES 0.«pN l“ldU.' »?«•« sunbeam *ragg | ■ SHAVER #* ! Dn. H, I Ml. M4ZMQ WITH "MICRO-tWIiy" SHAVING HEAD SENSATIONAL! SAVE 50' JUBILEE SHEER SEAMLESS 50 EXTRASTAMPS WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OP " KROGER DELUXE PECAN | | CARAMEL ROLLS' -*• fouDon velld (I Kr«i«r In III* rnnilxo ™ Mall. N. Prrry St., MlrniU MII«,_nrayUn d thru •mm »-4 ■ 50 EXTRA VALUE STAMPS | ® , MM«U run PAIIBAAI AKJI! UllBFUAil AH * mn So good, Kroger personally guarantoos these nylons for 30 days against runs for arty reason, A' 2 =‘l4® % m WITH THIS COUPON ANO PURCHASE Of m 5 ■ FAMILY JSIZe PEPSOOEN1 ■ k a FLUORIDE TOOTHPASTE I i g mW. t& { £$2 ■ Jh Z MMnd, Union Lnks, Ulls» nnd Otfor* Own mm 1 ...............i ft. S 1 WITH THISCQUPQN-KWICK KRISP am f I TILL C lie Adi RAF AM ■ ' WITH THIS CQUPON-KWICK KRISP Thick Sliced BACON % R9C riolM. Union litko, Utlon and Oxford Ihro Turx., DM. 4. UdS. Limit (BO ranson. L THE POyrTIAC^BREggr-^royBAY, DECKMHKRj4 19«2 8 i ^ k> * * ** '-'«/ )?; '#i| ' It ' .ess: aiii|ipin( £ $ v** % v^Or ^4^,1 *V /? 'M They're Rpally Selling Power Snow Shovel lit? MARKETS. The following are top prices covering "sales of locally grown , prodm^fcy growers and sold by theih in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau, of Markets, as of Thursday. —------Produce Apples. Northern Spy ........ Apple eldfer, 4-gal......... .Pears, Bose, bu. ............ VEGETABLES Beets, topped ............ Cabbage, curly, bu........... Cabbage, red. bu............ Cabbage*, standard variety, bu Potatoes, 2S-lb. Losses General Mart Picture Early Trading Moves Lower NEW, YORK MP> — The stock market” moved generally lower in — active trading early today as prof-its, were taken on many recent big gainers.. A minority of issues still plugged ahead, scoring fraction- "Treasury Position WASHINGTON tAPi—The cash pop ion ot the Treasury compared wli orresponding date a year ago: ir 49,890,107,729.19 • 305.679.065.264.64 . 15,978.083.542.30 Deposits fiscal year July 1............ Withdrawals fiscal yea al gains. The general picture was one of losses ranging from fractions to about a point among key ptocks. "T’hcTKkertap ’laggetHn-cariy trading, but as the session continued, the tape began to catch up with transactions. ★ * ★ “ Despite growing optimism about steel industry prospects, steel share? moved backward < ance, reacting from their show of strength last week. Rails were unchanged to a bit lowes, also in a technical correction. Big T h r e e Motors were all down. * ★ ★ • U.S. Steel dropped about a point. Chrysler was down more than a point. .Texas PacificCoal & Oil-fell about2. Du Pont bucked the trend with a rise exceeding a point. Fractional gainers included Westing- house Electric, American Tobacco, Merck, and Liggett & Myers. Ford declined more than a point General Motors and American ’ Mftfmm di-nppgH frn^jnpK | Prices were mixed on the Amer-an stock exchange. Kirby Petroleum, rose mpre than a point. Among fractjonal gainers were Aerojet-Genferal, Loral Electronics, SJntex, and Kawecki Chemical. Losers included Creole Petroleum, Polarad Electronics, Tri-Continental Warrants, and Univer-salControls. , Fltfui AmericcnrStock Exch. decimal points are eighths Stocks: NEW YORK (AP) Cal El Pw .... 22 ______ Cohu Elec ... liy* Lakey Creole Pet ... 35% Mead Ply Tiger .... 16 Mohai Indus' _____etl“ 13% Technico Hall Lamp . ,c Pet Ltd The New York Stock Exchange Hoffa Defense By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - A new status symbol for the homeowner. That’s what the maker? of snow throwers hope their gadget will become. They also hope snowstormswill hit northern half, the country) NASHVILLE, Tenn. people there haven’t much of any- to Talk to Teachers Dr. William J. Emerson, Oak-j inland County superintendent of schools, will be the main speaker Oat a dinner meeting of board of i (education members and educators | !" from the Traverse City area, in Traverse CUy tonight. Emerson will discuss Public ! Act 190, a new legislative pro- 1 experience tells them they ring up 70 per cent of annual sales before Christmas. And because they plan manufacturing schedules well ahead of that, they have bechme among the most avid readers of long-range weather forecasts. The power grass mower became a status symbol in the late 1040s and sales grew impressively during the 1950s. Makers of the homeowner’s winterized mechanical-helper would like to see the two become a year-around business. In time the snow sbdvel would lack any social standing at all. BETTER EVERY YEAR The winter of 1959-80 saw 40,000 this problem, touting snow catchers or peeking methods of . compressing snow, into small blocks for easy storage. Already they’ve come up- with later models to handle almost any depth and type of snow, and with chutes to discharge snow in any desired direction. Still another variant is an attachment for suburban riding tractors, and also snowplow blades for-tractors and riding mowers. The prime market the manufacturers ace aiming at is the Wt million rfamilies in the Midwest an! Northeast who live outside the congested city areas. SEE$ SUBURBS GROW ■One producer, Jacobsen Manu- $13 million in 1961-62 to 150,000 for $26 million.^H In the season just getting under way the 25 or so major makers of the gadgets hope sales will hit 250,000 at nearly $44 million — with help from the weatherman, and maybe the stock market. The manufacturers admit the market for snow throwers isn' great aS for power mowers since grass grows rapidly in large part of the nation where snow is cither very little of problem or none at all. And an open winter can ruin the sale; talking points in other large sec tions;---- I In fact, the industry after getting under way in 1953 nearly went under during the light s^B fall winters from 1955 through 1959 where to throw snow and let it accumulate as do the homeowners in the wider open suburbs. Some makers are wrestling with Hammond Organ Buys Everett Piano CHICAGO (AP) - Hammond factoring Company ot Racine, Wis., that has dug into the statistics as well as the weather forecasts,’ says only 5 per cent; now have snow throwers. But it estimates that if the trend to the suburbs keeps up, the number of families should reach 11 million by 1970. It hopes salesmen by then will have placed a mechanical snow remover in at least three million homes. * ★ h Salesmen don’t stress the status symbol as much as the convenience'and the wear and tear on the hearts of those over 40. But if the idea catches on In enough neighborhoods, the power ’ shovel may join the power mower in the affluent society. CatlOn Key U. S. Officials lor Stockpile Information WASHINGTON (UPI) •*- Senate stockpile investigators called key government officials today to get total cost and value estimates on the government’s oversized stockpiles. Counsel Richmond C. Coburn of the Senate Stockpiling subcommittee said the hearing today may provide information for possible recommendations that future stockpile goals and requirements be changed. Among the scheduled witnesses were George Casto, an offi- Savings Bonds Gift-Wrapped A-familiar and popular gift item — United States Savings Bends—will be available in an attractive new “package’ Christmas, according to Alfred C. Girard,-volunteer ehairman of Oakland County Savings Bonds Committee. The package consists of a handsome, free gift envelope available at local banks to purchasers of Savings Bonds to be used as gifts. The envelope is faced in blue with a drawing of the American agle holding a red, white and blue streamer. “Coming at this time of year," riirard noted, “the new gift folder is at attractive bonus to Christmas givers. Throughout tho year, however^ these, folders will be available for ali types of gift occasions, and will be kept stock by the banks for this purpose.’’ vision which enables counties to . combine for the purpose of im- | Organ Co. announced yesterday u j proving education services to has agreed to purchase the Ev-handicapped children. Icrett Piano Co. of South Haven _ , . 'from the Merldan. Corp. of New! The annual dinner meeting is iy0rk City being sponsored by the G r a ndj The amount of lhe tash lr| !Traverse County Board of Educa- ,adjon was n()t annount.cd. ;tion. Board of education member. News in Brief Theft of $250 worth of tools from r his garage was reported by Phillip Daugenais, 3218 Edgemeer Road . ...... ,.........A spokesman for Hammond said commerce Township to the sher- neighboring.^,, Everett's 400 employes will be iff s department yesterday. retained and the present manage- [ment under President Edward J. Friendly G o n e r a I Baptist jAmrein will continue to operate Church, Bazaar - Rummage I the company as a wholly owned Bake sale. bee. 4, 9 a.m. to [subsidiary at its present location.'p.m. 128 W, Pike. —ad It S % + H f H S * $ h * Successful*!nvesting ■* ! "S' h * ‘ “ * % * H S The Oakland County Amateur Radio Society will celebrate its 25th anniversary with a dinner tomorrow night at the First Federal lj,nd*rJ#^d 1 Savings and Loan Association of irie Wt Oakland, 781W. Huron St. * The planned potluck dinner is expected to draw many charter members of the club; ^7 < - * 1 Chairmen of the event is mrs. Leon R. Groggof4461 ParnellSt„ Waterford Township. Net irhports of all types Of fish tnto Britain In 1959 were 199,000 1 valued at 53 million pounds (more than H48.mUUo||.) .. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 54. For twenty years I have kept my nose to the grindstone in order to retire at 55 and enjoy life. Wc have investments that bring us In about $1,200 a year. If wc sold certain property wc would have another $80,000 to invest. Wc need a yearly income of $7,200. Would this be possible to attain by buying stocks?’’ S. J. A) You have set yourself an at-traclive objective, and I hope you achieve it. IFm afraid, how-„ p, that you cannot do so through * a the purchase of common stocks in today's market. What you are asking for Is a return of 7W per cent on stocks — which Is very much higher than IS Jlthe 4V4 to 5V4 per cent’ that you ’*2lean get with safety. }j}-,j You’re obviously a shrewd busi-10 4 nessman. Why not look for h real Estate investment — possibly a rbil sale and lease back arrangement ''mi —which might bring you the de-slired return? Or an annuity might do it. In any event, my best wishes for ydur retirement. Q) “Would you comment on the stock of Borden Co., which I am considering buying?" E.M. a stock 1 like but am rarely asked about. Borden is the second largest dairy company, with a foothold in other phases of the food industry and also in chemicals and plastics. Earnings have risen in each year but one since 1952, and dividends have been increased 5 times in the same period. Borden Is a good! stock selling to yield 3Vi per cent.] If you will allow me, however, I’m going to make a suggestion to you. If you want a good food stock, you might first consider National Dairy. TTic latter is the largest company in Its business and is Just as strong — though perhaps not sd diversified — as Borden. Earnings growth has been similar, dividend growth ha?* been greater. The sharps yield 4 per cent and sell at a lower price-earnings ration than Borden. • Mr. Spear cannot answer ail mail personally but will answer all questions possible in his column. (Copyright 1982) cial of the General Services Administration’s Defense Materials ..Service, and Kent H. Crowther, an official of is General Accounting Office’s, Civil Accounting and Auditing Division. The subcommittee, headed by Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., has been holding hearings off-and-oa through the year on the various government stockpiles of-oritical and strategic materials. The panel hopes to complete hearings next week and begin preparing its report for the next Congress. ★ * * Director Edward McDermott of the Office of Emergency Planning is expected to testify at,a later hearing on requirements and programming of future stockpile programs. The Sy m ing ton “group launched Us inquiry at the request of President Kennedy, who on Jan. 31 announced at a news conference that many stockpiled items were far in excess of current or estimated needs. The subcommittee last week 0 0 k e d into contracts involving three of these items nickel, tungsten and titanlum. Coburn described tungsten as the “most overstockpiled” item in the government reserves. Symington estimated that the government, at current market prices, stands to lose almost $500 million dHT its current tungsten stockpile. New Jobs May Reach to 50,000 EAST LANSING (UPI)—The man-power development program in the state may result in as many as 50,000 persons leaving the unemployed ranks but it will not solve all the state's problems. Charles C. KilUngsworth, hair man of the State Manpow-r Development Commission, said Saturday that the $3 million ^available for the program In Michigan could provide training for 50,000. “But that represents less than II the 128,000 unemployed perns in Michigan,” he said. “This training program is a lusty infant that's doing a good job. When it grows up it will do better job but no single program can end unemployment,” he said. ★ * * Older jjersons and youths who have dropped out of school with-lompleting their education will continue to pose problems in the unemployed ranks, Killings-worth said. However, he addctl that Michigan continues to be the national leader in the manpower development program. He said already 670 persons have been enrolled in job training classes and that 50 more courts . are under consideration. KilUngsworth addressed representatives of Michigan’s 19 local manpower development program committees. Max M. Horton, director of . the Michigan Employment Security Commission, also addressed the group.r He emphasized the problem uneducated youths (ace when they' seek work. Mgny ot the chronical-unemployed in the nation art from, the ranks of the 20 million persons who never finishc! ele-inentary school. la life