Home Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1961—62 PAGES nGiraBB ■gHHtaSE Ik U)WKKINHlfllwir." President John E»JSennedy and Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson. Both have expressed sorrow and regret at the passing of the incomparable Mr. Sam. He died today in Bonham, Tex. trimmed from original budget re- There are several reasons for the dilemma now facing city commissioners and administrators, according to Assistant City Manager Robert A; Stlerer. REASONS FOR DILEMMA 1. Higher basic operating costs. 2. Forecasts of a possible drop fn the city’s total assessed valuation. 3. Increasing payroll and fringe benefit demands for city employes. Admlnstrators explain that operating cotta rise somewhat each year as material coats go up, but the largest Increase comes from a need (or more services. A9 a city such as Pontiac grows, and new subdivisions spring up, there is a corresponding increase in the need for sewage and water services, drainage, snow removal and other related services. ‘Disaster Alert’ Calls ’Em CD Workers on the Job Young Deer Play It Cagey j!Temperature Dip Will Turn Rain to Snow Tonight BONHAM, Tex. i£i~>S&m Rayburn, who served longer as House speaker than any man, died today in the home town he loved. Cancer and its complications caused his death. He would have been 80 on Jan. 6. ^ The White House was notified immediately. So was Hep. John W. McCormack of Massachusetts, the Democratic leader of the House. McCormack was the man Rayburn chose to Serve temporarily as speaker when Mr. Sam had to leave Congress before lt closed because of what he called lumbago. But even then, his docror believes, he knew he had cancer. The physician, Dr. Joe A. Risser. and members of the speaker’s family and! * * * staff stood by the bedside' in Risser Hospital as Ray-i TA/da'tm T ocf bum faded away. “It was! V Lj\JOI a very easy death lor a very! Prior) W* great man,” Dr. Risser toldj» iJlwIU* reporters. KenTiedv Asked about (he immediate eause~6f36ath."RJire! ssM limply—........... - that: "He just quit breathing." WASHINGTON (UPD-President j Then, in more formal language, Kennedy laid today the death of ! he put It thi« why; * Speaker Sam Rayburn ha« coat the ! ■■■ u. . United State! “a devoted lervant At |:SS thii mandat Mr, 8am ^ ,h citizens of this country an ! «*•*«■ W* "• ** ****>■ unflinching friend." Many city employes who have finished a course in civil defense rescue training got their first shot at practical experience Wednesday. .. ‘disaster" took place at East Boulevard and Fentherstone Road at .8:45 a.m. r It was a surprise civil exercise a^Up'hy otty tratora under the direction of David S. Teel, administrative assistant. • Not everything went smoothly. In fact, there were several small "disasters” within the big A huge bonfire blazed away for more than an hour while firemen tried vainly to pump water from the nearby Pontiac Creek. A AUGHT PROBLEM Teel. ft was the first big exercise for Pontiac’s auxiliary police uhit. Some 19 auxillary pollcemen left jobs to assist with traffic control. The whole thing by a patrol car calling in a disaster alert. Immediately, firemen, dty department heads, police and sheriffs deputies were ordered -to the area. All over Mi dty, -early lM employes dropped «i»tever ‘ the fire several thousand feet to the creek. However, water was low and they couldn't get enough pressure to, PUDIP uphlUJa the fl Then the Oakland County Sheriff Department’s emergency respite ambulance arrived with Sgt. Donald Kratt At the wheel______ A Midwest ambulance arrived moments later. Then the Pontiac Police Department’s mobile trailed by a civil defense rescue 1 "The heart continued to beat for j sorrow over the Texan’s death ol I four minutes after the cessation of cancer erased all political anifnosl-Mnw, than half an inch in show- ‘‘“P^atton. He showed no evi- ties as Republicans and Democrats I M, ! *denc* o£ *“■ Un“ ln ** alike eulogized the veteran legfo Few Spike Horn* Token ers fe" * Po"‘‘“ d ' »* seemed to be as ore in sleep. ” lative leader. ” _ - | area early this rooming. by Hunters During 1 stj Day of Season By DON VOGEL Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Press WEST BRANCH — There shouMlftorries- ’be plenty of bucks left for hunter waiting until the weekend before heading toward deer country. i^y, The U, S. Weather Bureau said temperatures will turn colder late this afternoon with' rain becoming mixed briefly with snow by ning and then changing to snow Temperatures are expected to plunge to a freezing SB tonight and rise to a high of M Friday. Tomorrow will bo portly cloudy but Saturday win find skies clearing arid temperatures a Utile wanner. Unfortunately for those nlmrods who passed up the opener the nut- The parks and recreation andj^ ol lar** b“ck» ■ ■ ■ \ public works departments fur-!fach, seaj»on «J«ady he haiqg-j Morning winds easterly at nished two rescue teams each.|,n« from meat P0*68 miles per hour wiii shift to south to ^ | Recalling his own service were doing and went to the area, teams were made up of em- Very few spike horns were jwe8t to northwest tonight. IXNIT M POUNDS (Rayburn in the House, the Presi- Police arrived first aruf blocked!ptoyes in -the water and cemetery! taken during Wednesday's open- ! * * * . I Rayburn had lo*t nearly SOjdent praised him as "a strong de- off the area to traffic. Then fire-! departments. Ing. Most of the bucks tagged | Foriy-four was the lowest lem- pounds in the months that cancer|femjter of constitutional reaponst- from Station No. 1 arrived ! The entire exercise was com-( carried good racks and were g'X perature in downtown Ponttoc prc- had ravaged M^tody HiS J^flblJitlea ot ,h* Congress" Dr. Risser added that death was an apparent remit of diminished Full Fay of Pkturos, Stories on Pagt33 function of the respiratory renter of the brain, which controls the respiration of the Individual.“ ft A ft Rayburn fold been unconscious for about 26 hours before bis death. The doctor and family had spent two near-sleeple«e nights at the hospital. LOST SO POUND* The nation's three living os- lone come from oM frieodo sad neighbors la Us home Kennedy,* in a statement Issued for the White House, said Rayburn had "an instinctive understanding of the American system and was a loyal counselor and friend of presidents of both parties on the great matters which affected our national interest and security." - I There: was a, "slight eommunl-j^ big stack of fuel-soaked debris; pitted by about 10:30. The city! to 4 years old. The shortage of jredlng * a .With a corresponding increase cations problem’’ lor a"Short time. vvns already blazing. 1 will plun similar tests'from timej young bucks from one and a half A‘ in property value, the city usually;someone had the morgue mixedj j.-jrpnipn couldn't use hydrants, to time, hoping that each one will to two and a half years is put-breaks even. But this is a year of up with the emergency medicalwe,.f 0ff nniits. Administra-jwork a little smoother than Utej sling conservation men. great upheaval downtown, administrators and city assessors point1 out, "( f;- , ! Uiban renewal ban left many bare spots on the assessment (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) aid area. i tors figure that in a real disaster, | last, ft * (water lines might well be raptured. ] The administrators expected a: * * * tew mlxups. The firemen worked fast. Inj "We’re almost glad they hap- |less than 13 minutes from the first ( peued. The whole purpose was alarm, they had a hose run from| 13 Italian Fliers Slain in Congo "I can't quite figure it," said! Louis Ruch, conservation game specialist. "Most of these young .--------------- bucks would have been half-grown u News deer last season with the mild win-! ter and plenty of food available. Since than, more should be turning up.’’ In Today's Press Comics Unarmed Men Shot by Insurgents; U Thant Orders Officials to Act Ean Greenhoe, 7097 Banks St., Union Lake, was one of two successful Oakland County hunters to connect Jhe first day. He downed a four-pointer weighing 112 pounds In the Rifle River area northeast j j LEOPOLDVILLE. The Co n g o(of here. (API—The United Nations today 'NEEDED 3 SHOTS’ •announced that ^insurgent Pongo- ..,mlMed Mor* finally con-i fcd"PTiraSi ^ 8a‘d veteran hunter/ idered 13 Italian u.N. airmen ail f the Kivu Province town of Hindu. , ______® M , . .. A U.N. spokesman said the un-i■ % Instructed U. N. offlclals ou the ^ scene to see that Mrate rcsponsl- ,aUtd ** 0t Me "reerivo the paidshmsat they "•*r • ®®5*. , , , _ r., .. JjlumT" Larry Shelmach. John D. Disch and John J. Disch, all of Oarkston. U Thant made the slatemetM .in lotted several does. Ed Farro a message of sympathy sent to an(] Bob Mathescm. both of East j Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Long Lake Road. Bloomfield Hills. Segni here and to the Italian gOV-;MW no deer while hunting tbe _ ; emment in Rome. - Boyer property near Rose City, ation service building during an exerciae yes- | u.n. BEADY TO Iff! | Harlow H. Curtiss, format1 Gen- terday. Vohantoer "victim" Courville had been given flnt aid on the roof before the stretcher-pulley rescue operation began • *'I A large, simple granite marker 1* inscribed “Rayburn"' stands at . 40-41 (the family plot. Smaller stones . 44 are at the heads of the graves of | eight other Rayburns who preced- 85 ed the speaker ln death. __ ** President Kennedy Is expected j wa, grfat Iom to tiw Con- to-JO. (Continued on Page 2, Cbl. 3) !gWM and to lhe country.” He | called the Texas Democrat "a patriot respected and admired by Former Vice President Rich ard M. Nixon, Iasi year’s Repub-| Hcaa candidate lor the presi-j demy, said Rayburn was "due I of tho moot effective polllteol i leaders the natloa has produced 1 In Ibis century.” ! Secretary of. State Dean Rusk •said of Rayburn: "A great leader 'has passed from the scene ■ • -! and America Is poorer for hto loss. (As a result of his leadership, untold millions throughout the globe | will lead lives of greater opportunity.” ft ♦' ft Supreme Court Justice Tom C-Clark, an rid Texas friend, said: "He was a true patriot—teaching up that though one may bt a partisan in priitica, he mint, as ha dW, place devotion to country first.” trie ads paid I tribute: wAo • M pretty good. Aa I l this Texas QUICK RETURN — The first deer reported .as .an entry in The Press Big Deer Derby was Russell Piucci’s 8-pointer which he shot yesterday at 19 a;m. In Ogemaw County near St. Helen. He was bunting alone and brought It down with his first shot. The deer unofficially weighed close to 200 pounds. Piucd , Kennedy’s statement was messaged to the White House by radiotelephone from the President’s jet [while he was an route to Seattle, (Wash. * * * !■ 1 i ■ .The President had been notified t: __. ^ ...... oeer unomciauy wcigi*7u ow iv — — i u« (before bis depariure. two; TH& POKTIA6 ie.: 1991 fei jCen/rai Business ffe» oTSfa ditlfTl (District Plan U5C Ul J,auium Reds Halt U.S. Convoy on Autobahn 7^"?' ’ , ' s . • ■ / , | The long awaits Central Busi- BERLIN fUPI) - Soviet border truck* with an Infantry company iwaa clean* to enter West Ger-I^f District Plan will be unveiled pHUhds today delated a D.8. temp W MO mm rap into a “minor awny," t}»|Spi»kesm«w said, “SuchMBT ff *■* P*«J-k«tert»f m the convoy traveling from West Ber- delay" at the Soviet highway !minor delays often take place.iwawroB 11b to lTest Germany along the checkpoint opposite Hrtmotedt, [There probably was a hassle about! . .,. autobahn in an apparent hassle on the Kaxt-Weri German border.ilhe convoy'* travel documents. L MjfiPJWJWi wit present the plan over travel documents; but finally It* mills from the divided city. Sometime* there is a dispute about H ou“*ne form to city commltmon* permitted it to continue. * Amer- M# no !• «M&I cmaJ MMi jg| Aa“J The Pav In Birmingham (to Be Unveiled BeforeBoard Detroit. Redskins Would i School Bond Proposal, Extra Mill Tax on Ballot Mart Is Bound Over on Robbery Charge i spokesman said. He said the Army attached U M-Btassm-*.: St. A 32-year-old Pontiac man who * allegedly stole *140 in an armed robbery Oct. 13 was bound over to Circuit Court yesterday by Mu- % nicipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan....... 1; gjji# ^ •'# I ’* • Leroy B. Perkins, 4M Elm St., to bring held In tho Oakland Comity Jail, la lieu of *1,000 • bond. PeiMns will be arraigned , at 1:30 p.m. Monday in Circuit . ? Court. H Police say Perkins took $146 wristwatch at knifepoint * Property Tax Hike Possible lor '62 rated that within a year America j may redWve the first practical , benefits from the billions of dollars ! CAMS^GANAVMAL (DPI) — (switchboards in space and wamj ----------------..........■ Three g lea m i n g new satellites himself of missile, attacks with the; a n i, rn whizzing around earth today indi-.help of “spy-in-the-sky’' satellites.! 1*1 Ifmlnll IIGTS The most Immediate'practical ,, , . pay-rtf probably will come from j Via jn in | Anna——-. , J , , a 300-pound atom powered satcl J101IJL JllvUI ly U ;; -™- invested *" «>“* exP,orai life named TraniR iB. wMctr me TMm* ■ _______•—HNuoyTSSr'Air Force put Into (Continued From Page One) “ ^moonlets. buried into orbit: J X ** imr within » two-hour noriod \Vertne« ”“olt «*•*"»*«? named TKAAt mediately on its own. He added Sri,‘.i W|*.,hM M,i*y“ iror ,’rfwTl *' n a v i g a t e by artificial “radio ... any nc.c<‘Mary alreadV |M stars," communicate through ‘I Canaveral. ★ * * being flown to reinforce the 200- Chpt. William T. G’Bryant of the!1™® Malayan U.N. giirrisoh in | Bureau rt Naval Weapons said K'tiuu. |that,- if Transit 4B does its Job Well,: ;U will become a part of mankind’s! The U,N, already had threat-first operational space network jened military action if the rebel-next year—a four-satellite system Hotts soldiers—part of a disorder-i to provide an all-weather method ly command of more than 2,000 for global navigation. | claiming allegiance to leftist Vice HOLLY TOWNSHIP - A local „ J ■*’ * , j Pre"ller Antoine, Gktenga-failed deer hunter suffered a fatal heart Piously, ^e Navy had planned to give up the Italians, attack near Mdlersburg in Presque t0 orbH four brand'new« aatellites] * * * --4sle-^otmty-<^}v vesterdgv es-helwrtgMng. Abmt lQQ .POU.ndj gach, Thn murdcr nf thn it»]ianB wii« and companions were climbing into!a* *be operational gystem. j announced after word that Can- j The 300 pound Ti'AAC, ml- K'olese Gen. Victor Lundula had ____ w> | though basically an experiment, j returned to Kindu for another at- of 4418 Grange Hall Koad! He ! also may have n note of prnctl- j tempt to secure the Italjlans' re- Amel caHty about It. Tbe satellite will lease and to quell what was de- ..........i length of about too scribed as an open mutiny | feet within a couple rt weeks to {against the authority or the cen-| ! try out a new method for keeping tral government. Diplomats Area Resident Dies i blind. Dead Is Clyde M. Johnson, 06. 1 Wet with U.S. Army Headquarters .change' to the super Wghway. ' '* ^atodMor iTa>>Tt-^/*» and Woottffirtdj..,, . . , " “ - 7:30 "’^Village elementary schools, MEXICO CITY M .»i /m mu. i»««: oiuuicn tuuwcB, . .. . | -j^jg would mean an actual tax Routine adjustment of to prln- [increase of 12-60 for each 11.000 clpnls’ salaries Is also on the of Mate equalized property valua-agenda of the meeting. tion, they (Cbntinued From Page One) rolls. It may lower the total tax base and certainly won't Increase It, say a . JWve^ye*rr*''fr6fn now, thto urban]I renewal area will be a better tax {producer than it has been in many; j years. This will ease the situation |y then, but 1962 is now. ! school. ASKING PAV HIKE $chwart!| American Legion Post In Holly nnd the Holly Oddfel- Shield and longevity (U new item) totals out to well over $200,000. That’s nearly $100,000 mare than It Is estimated the 1962 budget can shoulder, even at n lS.M-mll] tax rate. If pay hikes are forgotten this year, Pontiac will be four per cent behind other cities next fait, necessitating a bigger outlay in 1963. * m p Operating expenses hava already been cut to a bare minimum and it is feared that already some de partments may be cut too thin. « Administrators also warn that If the city’s total assessed valuation drops, this may hecesriteto Increase In assessed The changes are requested to! T ■ * * , . adjust tentative salaries set at;, In effect then, the school system budget- approval time in spring to;]8 sefhlng only a 2.6 nullage hike, by each principal, based on actual but' becau8e * state law it is the number of students cared for ??18^ * ’*ate11?n the ^ ‘he enrollment 'full amount of mlllage needed for h * joperations. If #PPrpved, sevhn of the prin- * * * , * „ cipais wdU make Hialii^*lnriewni| Th*. bond proposal lose. The changes in each case,^a tex increase’ according t61 are less than $100, except in one; care where there is $161 decrease. Young Bucks Hide Slender, 32-year-old Robert E. Mr. Sam Succumbs Funeral service will be 2 p.m Saturday at the Dryer Funeral ffome, Holly, with burial in Lake- tide Cemetery. . •" . ____ . HH ★ + #' .. Fischell of Johns flopkins tlnlver- '9urrtvtng Uertdei" Big wife ■ Rg-jslty’* nppliwi pliy*lty-'tal»rafWT“r" becca are two sons, Elmer of Fen- who invented TRAAC, said that if JO ^QflCCi III 3I66D son and Earl of Flint; a stepson, his idea works It could reduce the] “ Robert Zankl of Fenton; a step-|w eight of power systems for daughter, Mrs. Clair Munnf of Da- planned communications satellites vison; a brother, Frank of Holly; {by 100 limies. [Leopoldville said Gizenga himself; value of residential f was responsible for foe mutiny ! some experts fear the valuation Qn HUIlfinO UDGIier may drop as much as $5-mi!lion. v" V(A*IK»I They also point out that only 11 _ ■ [per cent of Pontiac’s total tax bur-1 (Continued From Page One) deiv- is eamed by residential known-awheiy iwrrter -Fmi Bear 'sessmenfs. This is considerably)of Grayling are at Boyer’ !less than the residential tax burden ; n „ bubwt of any other Michigan dty of com- Ci0DFREY ABSEXT (Continued From Page One) generally to attend the i [parable size. Pupils Demonstrate at French Embassy ! An 1,800-pound Discoverer sate!-jllto also rode Into orbit Wednesday;,u w' i Vandenberg Air Force Base,{ASKED FOR NEWS to shuffle ™^Bitter WjndS/ Arthur Godfrey who normally i takes time off from radio and tel-[evision to hunt this location did not arrive for the opener. school officials, since increasing {property valuations will provide the necessary funds to meet the new financial obligations. •* ♦ Hr The district’s more than 30,000 j registered voters can decide the; millage request but only property owners are permitted to vote on the bond issue. Voting precincts will be open Monday-from-l aTm-:-4o~8~-P’rm-* Absentee ballots can be obtained until 2 p.m. Saturday in Room 202 at' the Baldwin Elementary School. Famous Brand DRUGS at SIMMS Famous Discounts T0MITE—FRIBAY—SATURDAY Sale ;, . find herp ore just a few of the hundreds of DISCOUNTS found in our drug dept. We reserve the right to limit oil quantities. Bromo Seltzer 42s Brvlcreem T^r 59° Usterine "rar2' 59° Polierio 66* Super Anahist 123 | ao. MHolTabs For PAIN 69c Pkg. 30 44* Second Storm j Calif. It carried experiments for; The first telephone call from the j Uff Southwest lAmerica's top-secret Midas and hospital after Rayburn died went *8 81 uv/wm vv vui Bitter winds blew across miles' v-covered countryside —dfeflFarees for hunters. The kill vns very light at Mldaforest tub south ot Houghton Lakh. Among those members still looking for a buck are H. D. (Bud) • I hospital after Rayburn died i Samos—a pair of satellite pro-j from Dr. Risser to Kennedy' j grams designed to warn of missile j physician in Washington JEU^Jan’-f--launchings and do reconnaissance ;et TravgJL————------- MOSCOW (AP) -About 2,0001 Photo work in space^___________—t-TfilTwas by long standing pre-, . ,ponnrt Rlrirm ®reign students altacke^„Ui£{-------------------- Arrangement. The President h«d J**}*1^ MeXico and TVixa* mi - _ £rench.Bstea8sy1od^r6^^^ (u eL . 0 c L i iasked thfl hf *** ln touch|,h * h«v« The new storm also NWholi*’ Arthur Novotnny, Dale vindows and throwing banners In- Hunting Shuts 2 Schools with Rayburns condition and told *l’re9 • • . . K W. Bolllot and Owen Cancroft of o the front hallway. They were 'immediately when the speakcrj^' Colorado. Oklahoma and Kan-j*^ Jmph Blr- ilamonrirating agatost the impri*. AN " - Inland;was gone, L m,„.h >. th,-ee feet of snow;m,n*ham- Leo A. Baumgarter, imment rt Mohammed Ben Bella Lakes High School at Indian River. * • * As mtmh a ,hl Drayton Plains Homer Right Ox- ,ind other Algerian nationalist|an*’ Knotp.-n Colorado plains, clos-by his doctor. He hnd lost weight, *nR ’ ^ Highway 160 west ofi previously and had been feeling Springfield and U.S. 40 between had .for weeks. Kit Carson and Cheyenne Wells. I •Risser had warned him of the New snow thickened the icy j possibility of a tumor early in coverlet in extreme northeast) I July, New Mexico and parts of the i ★ i, {Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles, rns in pain then al- and spread eastward into Kansas, ailed it a backache, i Skies cleared early today In the he continued to preside over [Texas and New Mexico areas.] the House. iSnow continued In Oklahoma.| Twice, Risser said, he nearly I sHiere It blocked roads west_of| blacked out on the rostrum and j Boise CIJy in_Jl^ had to he helped away to rest,' mort county. 5 Supei DISCOUNTS for Tonite-Fri.-Sat. mmSSBBSSM Vj"xl500" Rol^f CELLOPHANE TAPE Mod«l 1107 TEXAS Special Regular $19.95 Factory Value Diesel locomotive, 2 cars, caboose and 10 pieces of track, plus transformer. Complete outfit by Lionel. $1 holds Smoking TRAIN SET -f C88 $29 Value, No. 1627S .. 19 •*788 NAVY DIESEL Set <10(8 . I / $39.95 Value Na. 1633.40 $1 HOLDS ANY SET IN LAYAWAY Extra Motorized Cars For Your l.ionvl Train Sets Gauge Motorized Cars Lionel Choie* of 3 Cars Regular tl2.9$ Value at PhBtetsx s NATIONAL WEATHER — Some snow is expected tonight from Michigan eastward through New York and New England as well as In South Dakota and Southern Utah. The Southern New England /Coast, New Jersey and Eastern Pennsylvania will have rain. -It will remain initd from Texas northeastwan^to the Allaptic.,Cooler weather js expected In to*' Plains states. • EIRE SIGHTING CAR-wit p-op«n»d. Ml Mnchn ton*. , • EXECUTIVE SEDAN—outomobit# with inxki. lighttd with r»d tloih —, • TRACK TAMPER CAR-s»lt prop»ll«l ty wor tic control cor that actual- CilUIAiCBi TOY DEPT, —fad Floor ooooooooooooooooooooo CRAYOLA CRAYONS SI Valua Box 64s Plastic Coated DURATONE PLATING CARDS 92 DOUBLE DECK SI N. Saginaw —Mata floor Bay All You TOBACCO NEEDS at DISCOUNT Tonight', Fri. nnd Sot. Nationally Advertised Brands CIGARETTES REGULARS 2” 231 Sale of CIGARS 6c KING KDWARDS BOX «♦ 029 50’s JL 6c BANKER'S CHOICE box ot 029 50‘t dm New R0NS0N 'Typhoon' LIGHTER r SCIVTOi i>Liter Rolaids ANTACID TABS 89c Pack 75 59* Dondril ANTICOUGH TABS Reg. 1.25 83* S.T. 37 Antiseptic 92* Fasteeth DENTURE POWDER 67c S.ie 44* . Mentholatum t13 Sterno 29c Tampax TAMPONS 169 Pkg. 40 96c Cold Capsules £je 39c Creolin--160z. s::: 79c Polident DENTURE CLEANSER Reg. 69c 46! PRESCRIPTION DEPT. DISCOUNTS IMO INSULIN Llltys' Insuli All types Ml AMPHOJEL TABS Regular $1.13 pack of *TQc 6Q'tablets, IW SEBULEX Shampoo $1:95 value. 4-ounces ISO tor dandruff control, I U-80 INSULIN ' Lilly*’ Insulin 199 All types. A & D OINTMENT $4.00 value. Whites. 499 Full pound. fm PH ISOHEX for Skin $260 value. t6-oz. 9 99 of skin cleanser. I BABY DRUG NEEDS at DISCOUNT, Meads EMFUHL Baby Formula 2t Regular 27e eon — liquid formula fdr baby . no mixing or stirring — ready to use. Limit 12 JJSSib J&J LIQUIPRIN Reg, 79c liquid aspire C4c tor children. «« POLYVISOL DROPS 13.59 Meads child* 429 vitamin*. 50 cc's. ' dm DEXTRI-MALTOSY $2.40 Meads formula *9 99 In 2 Vi pound can. I VIDAYLIN SYRUP $3.98 value, Abbotts Af| vitamins. 16-Or. :' ''dm •• N. Saginaw —Mate Flo or ■TJUOAPJD,' CilUlMtffli i» 05383638 rr-' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1961 THREE Gibson Refrigerator, UAW Reach Agreement GREENVILLE M - Gibson Refrigerator Co. the city's largest; employer, and United Auto Workers Union local 137 reached agreement -Wednesday on terms of a new lue, green, beige, red, lilac Imported from England! 45-Pc. Famous STAFFORDSHIRE EARTHENWARE v.. $|788 special... ■ m Sparkling white dlnnerware set with 8 each: dinner plates, B & B plates, cups, saucers, soups. I each: creamer, sugar w/lid, vegetable bowl, platter. Save! MORE CHINA, HOUSEWARES VALUES! Set ef 6 Sherbet Glasses, Reg. 5.98 . . . Set of 4 TV Tray TaMei. Reg. 7.99---------- Electric Cen Opener*. Ref- 9-98 ......... 25" Deluxe Lawn Sweeper, Reg. 29.95 30" Deluxe Lawn Sweeper, Reg. 14.95 Walfa'f . > . Lower Level Warmth without woight! "Celocloud" INSULATED UNDERWEAR If parfect 2.99 and 3.99 MEN'S SPORTor DRESS SHIRTS YOUR CHOICE AT ONE LOW PRICE! COMPLETE 2-Pc. SUIT This lightweight suit has a smooth nylon ahell filled with super-warm 'Celocloud" interlining. Full cut for freedom of movemant, action btek, Expertly tailored white dress shirts and long sleeve sport shirts in many styles ond color combinations....Very slight imperfections will not impair the looks or the wear. Dress shirts 14V2-17, sport shirts S,M,L. Terrific Value! A wonderful gift at a tiny price! 4-PC. DRESSER SETS $099 All staal, deluxe Lattara 22 UNDERWOOD PORTABLE This beautiful set would normally be much higher priced except for a timely special purchase! Set includes nylon bristle brush, mirror, comb and a generous sized hairpin box, Boxad, ready to give. Shop and$J compare! ■ features: tabulators, varl- CA8E *ble spacing, touch control, 2-eolor ribbon and Other*. With slimline carry case and other accessories. Stationery . . , Street Floor EASY-CARE TABLECLOTHS 52 by 52" 52 by 70" 60 by 16" 60 by 106" da* 1.99 Reg. 4.99 Reg. 7.99 Rog. 1.99 *2” *3« $5« $(j« , 59e Napkins, 49c. Soil, stain resistant. Linen* . . . Fourth Floor Minted pillowcases 1.00' Border printk on fine white cotton Florels; Domeiiici . . . Fourth Floor TV SPECIALS—5th Floor 21" Console with Taxturad $10fi Cabinet, Was 159.95 . . . ILO 21" Consolo with Blond $1*77 Cabinet, Was 199.95 Iff 19" Deluxp Portable, $100 Was 168.00 100 21" TV-Storoo, AM-FM Rodio $977 Combination, Wat 359.95 . . . LI f 23" TV-Storoo, AM-FM Rodio $070 Combination, Wag 419.95 . .. 010 MEN'S PAJAMAS » ’2.99 Coat or middy style broadcloth. A,6,C, Men's Wear . . . Street Floor BOXED STATIONERY w.h.'. 2 •«>" $i low prlco Mm L*rgo assortment of pratty boxed stationery. Stationery . . . Street Floor FOAM BACKED RUGS 24" round, contour $1 QQ or 21 by 36" (lie ■ • ^ ^ Other sizes at special prices. 1.99 lid cover 99c Llnem . . . Fourth Floor BLEND^BLANKETS » 2"’10 75?o rayon, 25 2 modacrylic 'Washable, warm. Blankets . . . Fourth Floor '' FAMOUS BRAND T-SHIRT* if porfpet ^ F#r $1 1.25 and 1.50 4m I Slight Irr’s. Fine cotton, nylon reinforced. Mon'* Wear... Street Fleer PLASTIC COATED CARDS Excoptional 1 n , $1 voluo 4m D*cks 1 Wipe clean, Bridge or pinochle docks. Stationery ... Street Floor SUPER SIZE RUG RUNNER 27 by 72" runnor or Q1^ 36 by 54" scatter m a # m Tfrflfjc value 1 Foam backed, 7 colors. Lining . .. Fourth Floor ENGLISH WOOL BLANKETS Wait.'. $1 C QQ low prlco ...... 1 gj # W, W Bar striped and solid colors. 72 by 90". Blankets . . . Fourth Floor QUILTED BEDSPREADS M 10.44 Twin or double4sizes. Floral spray pattern. s Drapery Dept. . < . Fourth Floor MEN'S LEATHER WALLETS Terrific Aft Values! AgVV Many leather* In black, brown or mahogany. Men'* Wear . . . Street Fleer CHRISTMAS CARDS R.n..M> of • 2 *“" $1 spociol purchaso 1 15 to 21 card* per box. Soma are Hallmark. Oraetlag Cord* ».. Street Fleer LINEN DISH TOWELS Very 2 F#r $1 spociol mJ 1 Special purchase savings Stripe* on white. 1 Linen* . . . Fourth Floor FOAM MATTRESS TOPPERS Twin sic# $A90 I'"*11 *,,e $f A99 Reg. 10.99 Q Rag! 12.99 ||| Almost 1" thick loom rubber. Wonderful comfort. Domestic * . .. Fourth Floor DECORATOR PILLOWS Specially $3 IQ priced ........ *4mJ , - Slub weave antique satin, tipper covers.' Drapery Dept. • .. Fourth Fleer I STUDIO SLIPCOVERS ' Exceptional AQ low prlco ...... WrTWW 2 or 3-CUlhlon studlo or dav.no Many color*. Drapery Depf.... Fourth Fleer 10-PAIR SHOE BAGS w.a.'. $7 J.Q low. prlco . . . dmgw w . TeliW oniy »,, ef -deaet spaw.6 cotom. *; i ' 1’ \ ttotloe* ,,, Street Fleer ' t V I V' ★ Special Purchases! ★ Reductions From Stock! ★ Clearance Items! ★ Charge Yours! SHOP TONIGHT, FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS till 9 O’CLOCK! Daytime and cocktail styles . DRESS SALE • Slack, navy, psttels, bright color*. • Sica* 10-20,12 Vi-24 Vk. 5-15. Or*** 0*pi.... Third Floor Lovely dyed-to-match separates by a FAMOUS MAKER! SPORTSWEAR CLEARANCE ‘1 Re*. 4.9S Reg. 5.98-6.50 Reg. 12.**-14.9* R«*. 10.98 Mom** Blouio* Swoaton, Skirt* Skirt* $290 $090 $g90 $090 K) Reg. 17.98 Skirt* 10. Reg. 12.98 Skirt* . Lovely dyed-to-match separates from one of the most famous makers of quality sportswear. In gold and green, sizes 10 to 18. Priced to clear, so be early! Sport* troar . . . Third Floor MORE SPORTSWEAR CLEARANCE MATERNITY CLEARANCE Slim Corduroy Skirt*, Ref. 6.98 . Blouse* to Match, Reg. 3.99 Slim Corduroy Skirt*, Reg. 10.98 . Blouses to Match, Reg. 6.98...... Slim Wool Skirts, Reg. 7.99 ... . . Blouses to Match, Reg. 3.99 Wool Skirts, Reg. 7.98 to 9.98 . Blue Jeans, Reg. 3.89 .......... .4.90 . .2.90 5.90 .. 3.90 . .4.90 *. 1.90 . .4.90 .1.90 Maternity Dresses, Wore 14.98 Maternity Blouses, Reg. 4.99 to 5.99 Maternity Slocks, Rag. 3.98 ........... Maternity Shorts, . Reg. 3.98 ........ Maternity Briefs, Were 1.00 ........ Maternity Pull Slips, Were 3.98 .4.90 . .2.90 . .2.90 .1.90 50c . 1.90 RAINCOAT CLEARANCE Print and Solid Raincoats, Were 17.98 to 24.98 $8 Third Floor Juniors', Misses' and Women's Coats! Famous Moke COAT SALE f Reg. 49.98 to 59.98 190 *39' e Block alpaca, worumbos, imported tweeds, chinchillas, laminated fok # Many fashion silhouettes # Basic end higl e Black, beige and colors e Sixes 6-1$, 5*15, 16»/a-22'/i Co of rathion* . . . Third Floor Four colors in, lace trimmed NYLON TRICOT SLIPS Very Special $ 2s Frilly lace trims the bodice and hemline of these lovely, easy-care nylon tricot slips. Choose white, blue, pink or champagne in sizes'32 to 38. Very nice gifts! Lingerie . . . Second Floor Contour or soft cup . . . FAMOUS MAKE BRAS Reg. 2.99 *1.99 Your choice of regular soft cup or extra flattering Contour cup styles. By one of the most famous foundation makers. Sizes 32 to 38. Save Vt on each!''-'. Foundations . . . Second Floor CLEARANCE of FALI* HANDBAGS Children's snug winter THERMOLITE" BOOTS Final dearanct of a group of fall handbags in novelty weaves, tapestries, grained leathers. Casual and dressy bags. Some ere 14 $299 $349 Warm Thermolite boots for children in red, brown or white. Save nQw for the snow and cold ahead! Children'* Shoot . . . Second Floor Girls' washeble PILE LINED CAR COATS to. if?8 Smart car coats with snug fur-liko pile linings and pile trimmed collars that convert to hoods. Choose green, blue or red In sizes 7 to 14 Save’almost $2 .00! GIRLS' LINED CORDUROY SLACKS *1.88 Girls' Wear . . . Second Floor Flannel lined slim slacks in solid colors or plaids. Sizes T-M, 3-6x. SpflCIOl Boys' or girls' worm Washable SNOW SUITS Reg. 10.9$ 188 *9* Smart ' little snow suit* with print jackets and. solid color slack typ# snow pants. Detachable hood for girls, matching cap for boys. Quilt linod. Choose blue, green or gold, sizes 3 to 6x. Boys' woshabla ^PILE LINED JACKETS a**. iys Handsome rugged jackets with a tachable hood and lined with pile for extra warmth. Large zipper, knit trim. Save on his In green or gray. Sizes 6 to 16. Boys' LINED Proportioned JEANS *2.59 Roys' Wear . . . Second Floor Flannel lined blue leant of tturdy Reg 2.98 denim. Size* 6-16. Huskies 2.99. Slim, Reg. Boys' and girls' FUNNEL LII^ED SLACK V SHIRT SETS Rag. 2.29 Flannel lined corduroy tlaek* with long •leave flannel shirts that match the lining. Sanforized, wash W wear. Navy, charcoal or brown In tlzot 3 to 6. Children * Wear . . . Second Floor MISSES' WOOL SWEATERS & $4.90 Shetland type cardigan*, long sleeve allpon*. Sportswear . . . Third Floor , WOMEN'S COTTON DRESSES is ‘2.00 Pretty print dresses. 10.2b, 12 Vi -18 '/i. Daytime Dresses , third Floor WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR Famous Brand Flannal Pajama*, Reg. 4.00 2.90 Famous Brand Pajamas, Reg. 5.99 3.90 Irr. Wolff Gown*, if parfect 9.00 3.88 Lingerie . . . Second Floor HANKY SPECIALS Mon'* White Cot'ns, Linens, Reg. 59c 3/$l Women's Sheer Swiss, Cottons, Reg. 59c 3/$1 Women'* Initial Cocktail Types, Reg. $2 $1 Hankies ■ ■ . Street Fiber SPECIALS FOR GIRLS Girls', Suhteen*' Skirts, Reg. 5,98-6.98 4.88 7-14 Orion Acrylic Cardigans, Reg. 2.29 1.88 4-14 Flannelette Pajamas, Lace Trim 1.99 Girls' Wear , . . Second Floor 100% WOOL SUITS ft*12 Lined (eckett; illm, full iklft*. Size* 9*18. Sportswear . . , Third Floor Woman's WHITE UNIFORMS Warn Ware 12.98 $*f 8.98 V| and 14.98 § Dacron polyester end cotton. Famous make. Daytime, Drosses . . . Third Floor NYLON TRICOT BRIEFS & 2*"1 Hollywood style nylon tricot briefs. 5-8 Lingerie . . . Second Floor - DRESS SHEER HOSE •% r , $1 Sp.ti.l £ | Full fashioned, dark or self seem 8' j Hosiery . . . Stroot Floor ,, BOYS' VALUES Long Sleeve Sport Shirts, Reg. 2.29 .1.90 Middy or Coat Pejamas, Reg. 2.29 .1.90 Proportioned Corduroy Slacks, Reg. 3.98 3.59 Soys' Wear . . ■ Second Floor FAMOUS MAKE CAR COATS ft* 19.90 Floeco, twetd corduroy. Sharps lined. 10-18. gportaweerr ... Third Floor FAMOUS MAKE GIRDLES i"W $394 $>|94 much better *C m All garment* V# ■ Girdles end penty girdles, Ben-Lon or power net. Feendatioa* . . , Second Floor NYLON HALF-SUPS 5* $2.90 Lace trimmed, white nylon tricot. $, M. L. Lingerie . . . Second Floor FAMOUS BRAND HOSE * *•». 1.M 3r' *2 Seamless dress sheers, plain or mesh. 9-11.. Hosiery . . . Street Floor FAMOUS BRAND SLEEPERS !* ‘1.90 National brand, gripper or middy. Sizes 1-8. Sleepers . . . Second Floor LINED RAINCOATS t* '8.90 - Reversible or Chesterfield style*. Si*** 8 to 18. v Sportswear . . . Third Floor FAMOUS BRAND BRAS If aerfet *» $3 2.00,230 4m 9 Cotton broadcloth with firm uplift. S2A-38C. s Foundations , . . Second Floor COTTON QUILT ROBES $5.90 Famous brand with Peter Pan collar. 10-18. Robe* . . . Second Floor COSTUME JEWELRY 4 Per $1 Special JT | Group of closeout styles, many typti feweiry . . . Street Floor 1 / HEAVY ILANKET SLEEPERS * & $2.90 Full zipper, non-slip* feet M, L. XL. 3 color*. Infants' Wear . . ■ Second Floor MISSES' COTTON BLOUSES sift* *2.99 Print* or solids, tong or roll »l**va*. 30-38. tlonse* . . .Third Floor MISSES' NYLON DUSTERS ft* $8a90 Famous makei' nylon qullt*d|dlMl«fl. 10-18. Robot . . . Second Floor ■ —SHEER HEAD SCARVES * 2"1 Oblongs and squares in prints, pstrelt. Dross Accessories . . . Street Floor SAMPLE JEWELRY VOFF Salesmen's samples In many lovely stylos. , feweiry . . . Street Floor WOMEN'S WOOL GLOVES Special $1#(X) .firm gauge wool gloyet in many colors. S, M, L. Gloves . . . Street flee* ;v ■A1/-’ THE PONTIAC PRE§B •Have We Forgotten Him Pilgrim Built wiMp «**? * v ^ ftP £ Government Competes With Private Lenders Current news releases seem to point out that our Government is hard up is far worse, yet often escapes censure? : '' 'TV*.—i. — One brave soul took the bull by the horns and called a spade a spade. The late John B. Kelly, millionaire “Long years of early American self-respect and work built but the traits you see today can destroy It in half the time.” lion, deficit and the fact that the “New Frontier” can’t even consider needed tax reform next year. s|f ★ ★ ★ Yet, then aft situations that make most of us wonder at times Just who’s kidding whom. Take for example the Community Facilities Administration. This outfit, one of the lesser known agencies 1 of our Government is under Dr. Robert Weaver’s Housing Administration. They are in the loan business and are empowered to lend up to $650 million for public improvements to communities which can’t.borrow from private sources at reasonable rates of interest. ★ ★ ~ ★ This all sounds fine, but What actually hftppens doesn’t make much sense. ★ ★ ★ An example Is Charleston, W. Va., where they needed a new sewer system, and they called for bids cm $4 million worth of bonds to finance it. A number of lenders bid on the bonds, and the lowest bid was 3.948 per cent Interest. Along with the Charleston city officials ths Community Facilities Administration d o c i d o d this wasn’t reasonable;-8olNttirnlhcy -decided to loan Charleston the $4 million for Its sewers at an interest rate of 3.375—-about six-tenths of a cent, less. ★ ★ • ★ \ Naturally, the decision for Charles* ton was easy. They threw out all the bids of private lenders, and grabbed the Federal money. This Is all well ajipd good. We are happy to see Charleston get a break. But what about the rest of us? The money that the Federal Government borrows now costs more than 4 per cent, which means that the Community Facilities Administration is carrying this bond issue at a loss. Plus, of course, all the high housekeeping costs. ★ ★ ★ So, as things stand, Charleston’s new sewer system will be paid for In part by millions of Americans who will never pull the plug of a bathtub In Charleston. father of Princess Ghace of Monaco, used a legal document—his #111-—to give the legal lights an overdue friendly poke in the ribs. ★ ★ ★ He wrote the thing himself, and set ih# tone in the preface whleh went: ‘.‘Kids will be called kids -and hot issue and iWh* will— will not be cluttered up with parties* of the first part, per stlrpeis, perpetuities ... and a lot of other terms I am sure are only used to fonfuse.” ' . ★ ★ ★ * Copies of this will are in heavy demand and are selling at $7 plus postage. They should hang In every law office and law school in the land. Guarding His Monopoly David Lawrence Says: The Man About.Togn Neutrals Must Butter U.S. Up It Tops Them All High Schoolers in D.C. Object to New Drama The American theater is sensibly acclaimed as one of the last refuges of realism In art. But the heavy spate of plays dealing with sex and its abnormalities suggests that some of our playwrights may have their realistic lens out of focus. ★ r ★ ★ The other night in Washington, D.C. at a signal from an evidently startled high school principal, 146 students marched out In the middle of a new play about sex. The protest of their shuffling feet even interrupted the drama. ★ ★ ★ Perhaps the writers, too, fc h o u 1 d perk up their ears. They have a right to press their quest for truth wherever they wish, but "realism” does not demand that they always find It In a dirt heap. If the theater doesn’t soon set a cleaner trend, the adult theater goers may also start marching out In protest. And It Is Right Here in Our Own Pontiac Section Road to ruin: A highway whore all the traffic lights turn green when they ace a fool coming. This family marathon, as concerns great-grandchildren, accumulates further Interest every day. But It now appears to have surely reached its zenith. First, an Indiana woman broke Into the national headlines with W gfeSt^rand-chlldren. Then a Saginaw woman, with many Pontiac relatives, reported 70. And now the neighbors of a P o n 11 a c suburban Oakland County village couple write me that they have 123 greatgrandchildren. Celebrating their 68th wedding anniversary last Buhday, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Schihl of Rochester have eight living children, 51 grandchildren, 123 great-grandchildren and two great-great grandchildren. Four of their family of 12 children are deceased. Mr. and Mrs. Schihl, who are 88 and 84 respectively, moved here from Canada a few years ago; both are In good health, and a kinder or more gentle pair you’ll never find. Their children live close by or In neighboring towns. Asserting that spring is Just around the corner before winter starts, Mrs. John C. Finlayson of 48738 Pontiac Trail mails me some baby iris blooms which she picked in her garden this week. If you're not reading the feature, “Tour New Social Security," appearing on the comics page every second day, you may be denying yourself a substantial addition to your bank account. Sure that he' saw the first deer to be shot In this open season Is Jack Walterhouse, who works In a gas station on the Dixie Highway . In Drayton Plains. He phones that a car with a deer on a fender stopped for gas at 6:30 Wednesday morning, and the driver told him to fill ’er up In a hurry, as he was trying to be the first Detroiter to return with a deer. The season then was only 30 minutes old. Commenting op recent items about blue lays in this column. ' Mrs. Jay K. Andrews of Waterford phones: “They're the wisest things on wings. They outsmart humans, and ere too wise to be tamed.’1 "One of the finest features I ever saw in a newspaper,” is the comment of Johnson Kuhlman of Birmingham, in phoning about the full page color map of the world in our Issue of Tuesday. “It surely proves what a divided world we now have with us,” he concludes. ' The family cat of Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Meldrum of Pontiac Lake has an extra toe on each foot—but the extras have no nails. WASHINGTON - What do aU these foreign dignitaries—Prime Minister Nehru, among others— really mean? Of what value Is the artificial “friendship” with Marshal Tito of Yugosla- via, and what do the lengthy con fereftces here h e a d s of state a back of it all? that the “nonaligned” haven’t become stooges of the West just because they accept needed funds. BEES TO HONEY The “neutralists,” as they sometimes have been called, know full well that it is the United States which dishes out the big money and that the Soviets are long on promises but short on fulfillment, while the conditions exacted by Khrushchev are far more onerous than the requests for “cooperation” made by this country. There was a time when the recipients cried out Indignantly against any “strings” being attached to financial aid, but they had to drop that Hne of talk when they came to realise that Moscow itself insisted on some very substantial conditions. ‘Big Improvement in Business Page’ Your “Market, Business and Finance” column has recently become more informative to those readers who are interested to the business world. I feel that The Pontiac Press will increase its circulation because of this. A large number # people that are now taking outside papers grh doing-so because of the New York Stock Exchange. I feel that if The Pontiac Press completes its coverage of the "Big Board” It would eliminate a large part of its Detroit competition. Ed McLean 165 Elizabeth Lake Ave. ‘Use Old Courthouse for Civic Meeting^* What to do with the old courthouse seems to be the question of the day. It might provide a much needed place to hold meetings for the many civic organizations. Its central location provides easy access to those without cars. Florence A. Henderson Birmingham Dr. William Brady Says: mln&of’~many people In this , country as they wonder whether the visits of high officials from abroad and the platitudinous professions of lofty purpose do any good, and whether the United States Is being “played lor a slicker” by the So-called “neutrals” or “nonaligned” countries. But the truth Is that It Is a game with high stakes. While mistakes have been made, the United States, under the leadership of Presidents Elsenhower and Kennedy, has actually proceeded with self-restraint, caution and common sense In handling most of the many delicate Involved. Boston Story Sad Advertisers Won Out Take, for Instance, the problem of India. President Kennedy knows qp well as anybody else*In the West that India's delegation to the United'Nations Jim been aiding the maneuvers of the Soviet Unkm, and that Krishna Menon, the minister of defense In Nehru’scabinet, plays close to the Moscow regime —If, indeed, he isn’t a Communist himself, as has been widely reported. + ★ * ■ American public opinion lately, moreover, has gotten a bit fed up with Marshal Tito, who also has been going along with the Soviet Union in the United Nations though accepting all the American money and military planes he can get. Several members of Congress have become aroused over this. -The furor helps to Impress the Yugoslav dictator—as It docs Nehru—with tho tact that, while “I was a constant reader of yours when your column was in the Boston papers. In fact I clipped and saved many of your pieces. I have often wondered whatever became of 01' Doc Brady. So I was delighted, though a little incredulous. when I picked up the St. Paul Dispatch and, lo and behold ... but then wondered if this could be the same | . . .’’ (J.W.R.) What happened | in Boston is a story. We had DR. BRADY been going along happily for several years, judging by the volume of mail from Boston readers, when One dreadful day there was a full page announcement of a wonderful new remedy guaranteed to grow hair on a bald head. The editorial page faced the announcement, and In my column, smack dab In tho mlddlo of wart disappear*.” J. W, R. closes his letter with a repetition of his gratitude for the health lessons he learned from my column before I was banned In Boston and promises that If I come to Boston he will arrange tor me to see a movie just released, titled “The Young Doctors.” I appreciate the kindness of this offer, but I’ll come to Boston only if I should run out of interesting places to visit. * * * Signed I ...........Brady, tt ■______ addressed envelope li eent to 1 Mac Preen. Puttee. Michigan. The Almanac By United Press International 320th day of the year with 45 more • to follow in 1961. Today is Oklahoma Statehood Day. The moot) is approaching its full phase. n ★ ★ On this day in history: In 1864, Gen. William Sherman started his celebrated "March to the Sea” during the American Civil War. In 1014, the 12 Federal Reserve banks were opened formally in accordance with the Glaao-Owen bill passed la 10U to “. . . establish a more effective supervision of banking in the United States.” In 1950, the first reinforcements for British and American troops reached Berlin, together with the first small arms shipment for West Berlin police. In 1960, former President Dwight Eisenhower ordered all federal agencies to cut their foreign spending to a minimum in a move to halt the drain on U.S. gold reserves caused by a shift In the . U.S. balance of payments. Believes Holidays AU Mixed-Up Why isn’t ThariksitH’Ing Day on the day it Is supposed to be? It la the lastHiursday in themonth which would be Nov; 30, not the 23rd. Why don’t they leave our dates as they have been for years? We might as well change Christmas and a few other holidays if we can’t get them straight. Why? Why? ‘Why Did The Press Change Its Stand?* .Several weeks ago a Press editorial described the need for fallout shelters and recommended that everyone take action. An address for detailed information was included. Without stating that you had changed your mind the editorial of Nev." 11 was a complete reversal of your previous stand. Why? Mr*. F. B. Felix Drayton Pjalns (Editor’s Note: The answer is very simple. Publisher Fitzgerald doesn’t propose to build a shelter. already constructed. Therein lies the everlasting glory of a democracy and a free country.) Portraits BY JOHN C. METCALFE When the sun Is softly shinipg ... On a weeping willow tree . . . I am overcome with longing . Back at home with you to be ... Oh, my empty heart Is dreaming . . . Dreaming every now and then ,. . That my hand .your hand is holding . . And that we are young again . . . When the scattered stars are gleaming . . . In the fields of blue on high . . . I can almost hear your whisper . . . Echo In the quiet sky . When the lonely clouds are walking ... On the highways overhead ... To your distant moonlit garden ... All my restless thoughts are led . . . And I hope that you’ll be waiting ... When I hurry to your door , . . And that from that moment onward . . . You’ll be mine forevermore. (Copyright, 1081) Case Records of a Psychologist: Older Child Usually Introverted pie and be voted by the Congress. So what has happened lately Is that some recipient* of foreign aid who have been cuddling up to the Communists have been getting the criticism they deserve, and have become so worried about it that they have begun to see that something must be done to allay sus-^ picion in this country. It’s the United States, therefore, that’s now getting some of the “buttering up,” though these same recipients of aid from America do not fall to send their emissaries to Moscow soon thereafter, presumably to reassure the Communists The Country Parson sh John Kelly Had His Say About lawyers’ Terms Officialese^ the tangled, stuffy language At government, gets plenty of well-deserved barbs. But did you ever ponder far a moment the language of the lawyers, which usually A?' ' . Verbal Orchids to* Thomas J. Smith of 3095 Pontiac Lake Road;,95th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Arnew Stockfield of Keego Harbor; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Hannah Predmore of Bloomfield HiUs; 82nd birthday. Roscoe Burnaby ' of Birmingham; 83rd birthday. a-sirit Between that day and the next, I got opt of Boston, and stayed out for 15 or 20 years. Then I had another go at it, and lasted for three or four years. I never learned the cause of my second demise in Boston, * A ★ I met sudden death in half a dozen communities when I said It was absurd to imagine chewing gum aids digestion. I chew gum because I enjoy it—even though I know It has no particular effect on digestion. for warts. He has never known an Instance where U has failed to remove the wart. This reminds me of the two-team practitioner In Pena Yan away back when Topsy was a colt. He constantly assured the 5,000 residents in the village and the 2,000 Yates County farmers that he had never lost a case of pneumonia. Well, maybe he had relinquished some patients to other doctors when death was imminent, and now and then a patient succumbed to heart failure, but by golly no patient of hia died of pneumonia! And many Penn Yan or Yates County residents believed him — that’s why he was a two-team practitioner. J. W. R.’a remedy is simple enough: “Every night before retiring pel the wait (net “ / “I don’t know who’s worse /ett, the fellow who makes op his mind with no tacts, or one who has all thy facta and can’t make up |ts mind.” L i a week or two toe wart Me Into small piece* off, leaving the, skin By DB. GEORGE W, CRANE CASE K-452: Jeffrey and Tommie, aged 5 and 3, are brothers. “Dr. Crane, they are so entirely different in their personalities, ’ their mother Informed me, “Jeffy Is more quiet a n d shy, while Tommie is a friend to everybody. “Jeffy is more careful.| Tommie is reckless and takes chances. "Jeffy al» is DR. CRANE very possessive and may save his candy for later, while Tbnunie gobbles his down and then tries to wheedle Jeffy Into sharing with him. “Surely'these differences must be inherited, don’t you think? For the boys have the very aame home environment.” HEREDITY VS. ENVIRONMENT No, these boys have entirely different home environments! For the older child came on the family state with no competitors present. Thus, he learned to monopolise things. And when his parents weren’t playing with him. he amused himself with Ms toy*. This Is sUeut play. And hia "silent” playmates didn't talk back. They didn’t scratch and fight With him, even if he angrily threwi them on the floor. ' it it it Moreover, they didn’t cry lustily for Mamma to come and take their part. For Inanimate toys like hiding blocks or a teddy bear or a tricycle, stay puL They’have no will of their owi). -lefty thus held full and un “Some warta crumble and disappear quickly. You may have to work a little longer oa others. . erv kingdom, at least Mil be was about t years old. ( Then cut Insurrectionist entered V in the form of Ms younger brother. who could crawl or toddle around and appropriate Jetty’s toys. When JeffYasserted his ownership, the tatreMer became a clever Applied Psychologist, for Tommie pquld then shed crocodile tears and scream loudly. Mamma would soon appear, and wearily exclaim to the older son: “Jetty, you aft a BIG hoy, ao let your little brother-have that ' toy.”' - ■ i. Under maternal duress, Jeffy would do so, but It went against hia Inner wishes. So he aeon learned to guard and hang eu to his own property even more Jealously thereafter. But Tommie soon finds that he can get away with almost anything short of murder, just by screaming and shedding tears. , ★ ★ ★ Since things come easily to Mm, by this ruse, he doesn’t value them as highly. The Prodigal Son was thus a “Tommie” or younger son. And this set-up usually holds true of two siblings of the same sex who are rather close together in age. The older la the introvert. EXTROVERT VS. INTROVERT The second child comes upon the fanilly stage with a Utile "king” already on the throne. And this “king” is stronger and bigger. must talk (er ay) his w * y along. And he begins to manipulate people before be la 8 months old. ~ He thus becomes adept In maneuvering human beings for hia attention Is focussed on them, alnqe they are the hutjor items In his environment. it it - it The extroverttve younger child thus learns to talk.gUbly. Everybody is hjs friend. He may entetc shies" Work or politics in later life. But the oldest child is an Introvert. He hat learned to think to himself and deal with non-talking objects (toys) almost exclusively for Ms first few years. So he may become the engineer, For a fuller test of "introverts vs. Extroverts,” send for my "VoV catlonal Guidance Booklet,” which contains this material. Enclose a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents. You parents will then see that your children have a very different home environment although they deep under the same roof and have the same father and mother. , v, M jR> Always. writs to Dr. Osons W. Crass to CMS of Ths Puttee Press. Pontlsc. gmu, asUw • big 4 east ...................- snvstopw and to r. 'X >C PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER Id, 1961 Will Ask CD Radios for Pontiac School . A request to provide civil defense radios far all 34 Pontiac public ■choOls is on the’agenda for 'today’s board of education meeting. Cost for 23 of the battery-operat- BOOTS MJO ' Ski'll cut u perfect figure 8 in white ICS SKATES FEDERATE-DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS 48 SOUTH THEY’RE APPRECIATED the young people of Pontiac, two high school seniors were honored yesterday at a National Youth Appreciation Week Luncheon in Detroit, to which surrounding communities In a five-county area sent 46 young delegates; .At left is Ed Bradley, 17, of 108 Spokane Drive, a senior at Pontiac Centi-al High. Hanked by Pontiac Optimist Club President Wayne Gabert and Pontiac Mayor Philip Rowston is Suzanne Polmear, 17, of 1175 Bamford St., Waterford Township, a senior at St. Frederick's. Gabert is reading nomination of the two delegates. The week is sponsored nationwide by the Optimists. Stab Wound Fatal to Detroit Cabbie DETROIT (ff — (fob driver George L. Hauck, 60, was stabbed fatally Wednesday night as he apparently tried to fight off a robber. Hanck’s body was found on the porch at an east side home where he had run from his cab to seek help. Police said he was stabbed in the chest and apparently bled to death. Officers said they found only $8.47 in Hauck’s pockets. They said the slayer apparently took a cigar box with more money in it from the front seat of the cab. Break Up Numbers Ring DETROIT W — Police said they broke ■^"a~,ntimbeHi fttig "doing' a $5,000 daily business with the arrest of .17 persons Wednesday night. Forty officers raided six homes and a carpet cleaning shop. They said they confiscated 11 autos, $4,400 in cash, 20,000 bet slips and six pistols. - ■>1 FLASH . SEE CAMERA MART Ad TODAY—Page 20 Fite Fighters Forced to Fight Fog to Fight Fire LAWRENCE, Mass. (AP)-Fo-llce say the fog and visibility were worse than ever Wednesday night. * #v It was so bad, they reported today, a fire truck had to be led down the street by a fireman toting a hand lamp. ♦ ★ ★ The brightly lit fire truck, in turn, served as a beacon for several stranded motorists groping their way home. , Should Have Broken Wait,- Goldwater Says WORCESTER. Mass. (AP)-Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., says the United States should have pushed over the Berlin dividing waU “when .it was only one brick high—and then backed off to see what would happen.’’ "it,' ★ A 1 Military men have told him jnothing would have happened, Goldwater said. W: . ♦ ★ ' “Now it’s too late,” he said in a lecture at Hedy Cross College ! Wednesday night. 16fh Gang Slaying Reported in Chicago CHICAGO (UPt) - A plumber With a long record as a burglar Was fatally shotgunned in front of his home early today, the 16th gangland-style assassination in Chicago in a year and eighth in the area lh a weak. The; body of John Hennigan, 43, as found sprawled half out of his 1956-model yellow and black car, parked across the street from his home. He had been shot twipe with a 12-gauge shotgun. “In any. emergency," he said, ‘people can work most intelligently and face disaster best, if they know what is occurring. A battery-operated i*adio in each school would meet this need. " One Out of Nine Births I in London Illegitimate LONDON - One out ofj eVerjLJiine babies born in London in 1960 was Utegidmate, (HplNKHi? ty medical officer reported today. Dr. J. A. Scott said in his annual report there were 57,368 births, 6,530 of them to unmarried women. He said 1,426 of the unwed mothers were non-British, including 813 from Ireland, 134 from European countries, 385 from the West Indies and 94 from other foreign countries. You still can't beat it...ei>en ore price/ For speed, comfort, convenience and coat, you still can’t beat Grand Trunk anmniuBg Bai vlca to Deliuitl Even with our recent increase in fares, you still save bi( money over the cost of A riving and parking your car (remember: auto costa are going up, too!) Most important, GTW gives you priceless freedom from road and weather problems, a chance to ride relaxed. Tired of the strain? Try the train! Harry A. Sanders, Vies President and General Manager. GRAND TRUNK U1HRDS HOME OUTFITTING COMPANY 48 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET Swainson Reappoints 2 to Corrections Posts LANSING tf) — Reappointment i „ WUMeMXMMee^^ — Clarence J. Farley of Grand Rapids to the State Corrections bun-mission was announced by Gov. Swainson Wednesday. Both appointments are for terms expiring Oct. 1, 1967, and require Senate confirmation. Rice is publisher of the Houghton Daily Mining Gazette, and Farley, real estate broker. Both have served on the commission since CtOSEOUT.1 cow must produce 6,000 pounds or more milk annually just to pay for feed and overhead. ftejCagfcof Chiist«J^is e'^*«»»atFeaeKll’s Ready to bravo slush or snow . . women's worm CHARM IT For flmt fall slush, winter lee and show — to wear now or put under a Christmas tree — warm-cuffed leather boots, warmly lined! Crop# •ala. Gray or black; sizes 5-10, N-M-W. Fine valued Just say 7. 'CHARGE IT' at Ftdsral's Open Tonight — Monday — Thursday until 9:00 P.M. Just in Time for the Holidays! A real chance to buy FURNITURE at BIG SAYINGS One of a kind, mismatched, soiled, but mostly all Brand New Merchandise and in original cartons - SHOP early for best +SQFA and CHAIR Values! 'NYLON SOFA astd CHAIR expertly constructed, all foam cushions —only 2 left in turquoise and brown — $5.00 down, $1.50 per week........ ...........$99.50 KROEHLER SOFA and CHAIR beautifully covered in all nylon materiel with foam cushions with famous Krbehler construction— regular $229.95 now only—-$10.00 down, $2.50 weakly . $139.95 SLIM ARM SOFA and CHAIR, Danish modem stripe beige and brown fabric) foam cushion, 1 only— $7.00 down, $2.50 weekly . ..................$119.95 PLASTIC SUPPORTED SOFA, Walnut arms, zipper cushions, covered In turquoise, 1 only—-only $5.00 down, $1.50 per week ... .$69.95 FOAM RACK SOFA end CHAIR, foam reversible cushions, all nylon cover, 10-yeor construction guarantee, in brown or beige-now only $15.00 down, $3.00 weekly ,.. ......$159.95 +SECTIONAL VALUES/ . R^tta-MODBRN'SICTIONAC'iM^ expertly con- structed, Oil colors available— only $10,00 down, $3.00 weekly...............$119.95 4- PIECE NATIONALLY ADVERTISED SECTIONAL, foam cushions, beautifully covered Irt nylon beige or brown— $l?.00 down, $3.50 weekly ...................$179.95 KROEHLER 3-PIECE SECTIONAL, all nylon, exquisite fabric, Krothler construction, 10-yeor guarantee, foam cushions—• $15.00 down, $3.50 weekly .................. $169.95 5- PIECE NYLON end FOAM SECTIONAL, can be rearranged 20 different ways, turquoise only, 1 left— $15.00 down, $3.50 weekly ................ $179.95 if UVlNQ ROOM TABLES and TABU ENSEMBLE, 2 step ond 1 coffee toble available in mahogany, walnut or bfand, all three only .... ...... r..%. *...$12.86 USE THE 1: • ... # WARD-WAY CREDIT PLAN - • No Intirsst y •No Firtanc* Company \J • Moko All Poymonts of FUSTIC TOP STEP TABLES or COCKTAIL, bum-proof, oil finishes —only ......................................$7.95 28" CERAMIC TABLE UMP, washable shade, 5 colors—only $2.29 POLE UMP beautifully styled with brass and white.$4.99 it BEDROOM VALUES I 4-PIECE IEDROOM, Dresser, Mirror, Chest and Bed, in cartons— $3.00 down, $1.00 Weekly . ...............$59.95 WALNUT MODERN REDROOM, double dresser, mirror, chest and bookcase bed—$5.00 down, $1.75 weekly ....$89.95 SOLID MAPLE 4-PIECE IEDROOM, double dresser case bed—$5.00 flown, $2.00 weekly ,... chest arfd book* $99.95 SOLID WALNUT or GRAY BASSETT 4-piece suite, dust-proof and center drawer guides—$10.00 down, $3.00 weekly.$119.95 it BEDDING V ALUESt TWIN « EUIA SIZE INNERSTKING MATTRESS of MX STUMS, your choice while they lost:.... TTTTTrrrTT-v.-.—• .$16.95 HOLLYWOOD BED ENSEMBLE, plastic headboard, innerspring mattress, box spring and legs—no down payment, $1.00 weekly $39.95 BUTTON PREE QUILT TOP MATTRESS or BOX SPRING, oil sizes, nationally advertised, your choice........$29.95 it DINETTE VALUES ! 5-PIECE CHROME or BRONZETONB DINETTE, plastic top table and four washable choirs—$1.00 down, $1.00 weekly.$19.95 7-PIECE 36x48x60 DINETTE, plastic top ond six beoutiful washable chairs—$3.00 down, $1,50 weekly...........W9.95 'M mmmm 5 ;wEFW ?$r-v, *t**f&*it*~------’ \THK FONT!AC PHKSSj THLKSUA Y* NUVKMBEK W, IflflT J, ipfr tranger Has Trouble With That New York Lingo School Health Men thoo^e Chairman •—VTWb-MlTiOCT-- .figured 7hat out but toy me in thej NEW YCHPtK , ’*-! Other translations are i t quite In thin town can run into trouble! trying to onlw breakfast ' ; ..... . & „ ™.. , ., _ _ • FYtond of mine (ram the South " '«■* tourlrt we*t couldn't get a doughnut.c#n ^u** tlftt hotcake* they kept , handing him »mething|menu are And there is (used, they say lunch when they] New Yorkers go to mean dinner. while the -rest of u* go to work. And, oh yes, around here they Maybe they just don't work as til a Waitress Mini/ not .Slato,'aihatij here, I don't1 know, in the Southwest, J You never hear of them other day and some clerk was em kids go to grammar or ele* trying to be helpful, After I had‘mentary schools instead of tried otit overall pants and Jesnsjg&bolfc. <« him. he Anally convinced me when they go to a grocery, they MP11 w" M*Mka«J home a hag of fobd when I pretty w#u, but they do body in Northern CalildMiMI with jelly in the'ISddl^when' thejnothinR 9u,t* WlSttficult here a* W* * lot wtth **“ W tlip,city when they go sSE? bring. They hand you »me- franoisco, which they pronounce!w‘ Chesterfield at the, ****** las they say in Tennessee and Ken- ■ (^JMEdtemdoed'to fxTwIBBlI L , he tonnd out that in this spot the!*1*" ‘bey mean milkshake, word tor doughnut Is cruller. GET MIXED VP A- | But'you can' get-mixed tip' Arriving tram San rranctsco, lithe names of meals. In the Mid* mod* "Ike mistake of asking for a j west, Southwest, West and South tiling- aHcT iffiy "bring fi^te " .Apparently the toachers!iteg gay they are ^™* W«CW| .. 5. around here don’t drill their kids jyorki and thole the tttve In bor- ?fayfae ‘J* Wble hero ) the Verb'take. oughs other than Manhattan say r And when they wait to get into they gm going to town. " DETROIT m •— Dr. C.'Adde town, Ocwego. N.Y., school phy-tcian, was elected ch Wednesday at the school aeefion of the American, Health Association. Dr. Brown was honored Monday night With a distinguished service award of the American School Health Association for Mitotan# ing service in school health c national and local level.' Dr,- Brown-is. known for a a place, these iolks say they am ■ ..... - onali W90i dm mffen. The dudexjwe say supper for the last meal Wafting on lirteT while everyhody]CWWHIN® A problem t of green before I cor-j of the day, but around here it is rected that to butterbom. They'dinner. And so they won’t get Bto^- ‘ fay,8 ^ HAaavmnnn in Contract 'hers! up, mv thev are i 7 M^'arid eventuatty got « coucto-- „-|nSptymwn^ 111 V.OniraCI . ites sav tnev are Mgybe thc trouble tore to the1, iAR-Work«m^S --------- schools. The kids around here, the Kwangtung Provincial Blnkiti^wkte survey on heartagm the jdon’t get grades. No, sir. Whatwho marry are now entitled to|school-age child competed some itheygetaremarks.... ■■■■. jtvrowaetahmicym^ ago. ■ y ew#-. | clause was written' into a new[ of the country waits in! Clothing can causeyou trouble/ And although that bring and two - year working agreement itoo. | wanted a pair of Levis the I take thing floors them, the East- signed Wednesday- Pair Comes put sSifit' -After Poh^i^^ LOUISVILLE/ Kv. (AP)--When ^—. insburg .couple I1T.500 for about 90 acres of their land/ they went to court. It chat them 1500. A federal district court jury Wednesday awarded Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Jarboe fMSXto tor the land, heeded by the federal government , for use in construction m the Bough River reservoir flood control project. Disaster Office Moved WASHmGTON»*-*75ieNatural Disaster Office, previously tn Bat-the Creek, Mich., has been moved here. The office handles federal disaster aid. 3-in-T Transogram popular peg table nw 'CHARGE IT' Sturdy desk, blackboard, peg board combination. Extra strong aluminum legs. SALE! Girls' 1.99 cotton corduroy slacks I47 Sharp-looking ityim in unlinad corduroy. Solid fashion colors and at-tractive prints. 7-1A SALE! Gitli1 1.99 cotton flannel pajpntas t47 SALE! 11.99 padded SALE! 14.99 folding toy chut with book rack teMo and chair iat Tailored In solids an dainty .lace waists. Sites 4 Girl*' T.*0-1.99 fancy stylos ( ‘ prints with i, boxer to 14. Padded all around. Washable beige vinyl cover, Safety hinges; book rock, 37x17*1*”. 12.99 Herdweed toy chest OPEN SUNDAYS NOON TO 6 Mon. 94*0 White formica top,^g mxmn o8 '"o* *88 covered p add ad- IvflyV . seat choirs. ■ fepBr;1 *»!'' ,' 1I.W - ’: v ’ S»fd in Numry fwnUun.0»pt‘ thru Sat. 9:45 to 9 h ' ) ;v m T-gE. roSTIAC PEKSS. THL'HS])AY, XOYKMBKR i(i, i»ffi V - •.xiyg'. NegrthU.S. Official sides. Rowan and four compan-ten,. ifajiS XK gro combe. KANSAS cnr, Mo. -Tex« to 1 travel they wilt be tnadequate un- year. Rods to Build Refinery MOSCOW UP — fam. the So-j /let news agency, reported ioday|{ that Soviet technicians ac ’ ' begin confttructio" of an finery for Ethiopia at the Red Sea port of Asaab. The news agency said the refinery would; have a capacity of 500,000 Indonesia for maneuver* near the], iborder of Dutch-held West New Guinea. [the first state to insure health care for the aged through a • . , 'private insurance coraMBW. - - * ■ — j-----------*" # *".... bombers, received from, A contract between the State , the Soviet Union under an armsjWeJtare Department and Blue deal, have just concluded an op-lCro(ls of Texas was signed at a leratjonal exercise in North Sir fame Welfare Board meeting -j matra. > Wednesday. As a result, more '• * * * than 220.000 persons on the old Two bomber and fighter wings: age assistance rolls will become a already ate patrolling off West'eligible Jan. 1, 1962. for hospital Guinea, which Indonesia care. 3 DAYS ONtf Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Don't Miss it! .federal r Reg. 10.99! Great sayings on boys' warmly Orion® lined, wool suburban coats SALE 6 88 'CHARGE IT* Your fdvorite boy can weather any storm in these gbod-laoking wool melton coats. Lined with Orion* acrylic, large stand up storm collars, sleeve tabs, hacking flap pockets, shell buttons. All new patterns. Olive, grey, charcoal. Sizes 6 to 16. •Reg. T.M. DuPont Corp. ■ f irm tollor j •w fall poMmi i* lining / tnto/ I ««*»•« Orion* lining j Sleeve tab* J Hocking flqp gockot. EXTRA SPECIAL 14.98-17.98 famous mdke snowsuits for boys or girls' at big, big savings Girl*' ityloc In vinyl, Orion* acrylic pilo, importod tapestry fabrici. Some aro fully pilo lined. -2-4. Boyi' tty lot in Galoy & lord tarpoon pilo linod plaids and quilt linod vinyl. Slim 2 to 4, 3 to 6x. Hurry for big savings. f.lo, S for 1.21 Beys' ond girl.' sweeten 2.42 88 'CHARGE IF •Reg. T.M. DuPont Corp. 2.99 handbags-new shapes, latest colors SALE n55 W 'CHARGE Drooty, tailored, catual styles In plastic celt, marshmallow plat* tk. Mack, brown, otter, tan. Save on easy-core Dacron, Trulon panels 99' Hang dry, no ironing. Dacron* polyester white marquisette. 45,' 34, A 72, SI" lengths, lacy* look Trulon, 42xli". Buy today. •Reg. TJH. DuPont Corp. 16.99 tot*', girl*' caatr and coat rets 14“ FREE ALTERATIONS Coots: Wide selection top styles, finest fabrics. Sixes B to 14. Setsi Zibelinet, plaids, others. AH warmly Interlined. 4-6x. Reg. 2.99! Girls' new holiday dresses s«W 1 Pretty cottons with dainty lace, appliques, rlc roc trims. Deep hems. Solids,1 pastels, lovely prints. Sixes 3 to 6*, 7 to 14. Save 1.22! Men's 1st quality coat sweaters SALE, [77 Interlockedlttfch. 50%im-ported virgin wool, 50% nylon, Full cut, double elbow, taped shoulder. Navy, oxford. Sizes 38-46. SALE! Elegant untrimmed elastic, high fashion coats ‘Complete stock of rich wool £ AST fabric coats plus raccoon col- ' H aa zo lored heather mist tweed. Fashion colors. Misses' and women's sixes lq H FREE ALTERATIONS SALE! Washable 23x38" nursery rugs Colorful designs ofgito eg sp| cartoon personalities. ~ M£m7r Heavyweight, colorfast. . m Ideal Christmas gifts! 08F SALE! 8.99 misses' quilt lined cat coats Cotton poplins, cords, rayon gdbt, cotton sheen*. Blk., Wue, rod, boige, antelope. 10-1S. Sold in Sportvoom Dopt. T44 SALE! MW 1.99 cotton knit tea topi |S° SALE! Rtg. 12/1.09 G-E ftathbulbt, now just Smart tuck-in or p cho stylos in plaids, ., lids, stripes. New fashion colors. Sixes S-M-L #5,M-2 or AO-1, limit —3 dot. per customer. Buy new for holiday 89 SALE! Reg# 1.00 warm headwear far winter C SALE! 1.79 leather palmed driving gloves Vi off on colorful plaid head warmort. Spun' rayon, brushod royon.j Save now at FoderaFA QQ< OO For yourself, for gifts. 70% rpyon / 30f« acrylic fiber knh, Btk« red, beige. S.M.I. 89 FEDERAL DEPARTMENT STORES Downtown and Drayton Plains THE PONTIAC THESS; THURSDAY, NOVfffoH&R 48, mi - Duluth Police Issue . Ticket to Ricksha UD publicity0^ { DULUTH, Minn. (AP)--The Po* for a Chineae t U«e Department handed out lt« since there t first parking ticket to a ricksha'plates, the offi . today. ‘the sponsors i The oriental' version of a taxi'Optimist Club. sict To Limit Enrollment ikii~ Emmet County coroner LeRoy Srojm said Nelson died Of stttti||-tion and burns,' Sheriff’s tofe be-' lieved a gas stove exploded while Nelson’s wife Lillian was visiting a neighbor nearby. ALPENA at—The Alpena Set Board said Wednesday - Its h school was beyond its erirollm capacity and voted not to Jade any pupils from nonannexed • tricts. Hope to Hqva a Dozen Units at Universities Within a Decade - ; KANSAS CITY (AP)—A plan to The /irra was low among nine establish space sclence laborato- bidders for the job-which is part ries at universities in the United of / $9.65-mil)ion revenue bond 5tate| was disclosed today by an program to boost the city's water official of the National .Aeronautics production factHtW., :' / ..*' *——■“t** Wl*« N. h1. Iwty of the theoretical division of NASA, $1 Million 'Go-Ahead' said; "The program has not been completely worked out but the gen-' TORONTO 1AP1 — The Ontario, eral ideas are known " / Athletle Commissioner assured Pe- Hess told the American issocia- manTr tion tit Land Rrant Coh^e** and challenger Tom McNeeleyJ Coaeges ifsCK tor .Fuiler State .Universities: / L pStg cool $1 mUlkm_a#Ji SEARS >EBUCK AND CO. “I, fully expect. they more jirmwiHiimr r nf ■' l fffffTT.. nfafdW' a dosenijtpaaa.aelentte laborato'"ishould McNeeley .beat champion' opewatthg at unlver* Floyd Patterson, sltle* within a dmwde.** The assurance indicated the j He mentioned me University of I commission's unreserved approval California at Ijtd Angeles (UCLA), I of the proposed Dec. 4 fight. Such ihe University/ of California at | approval was Fuller’s condition Berkeley and/the University of] for posting the guarantee. ____________ Iowa as Hess said/in a prepared address | In a normal year the United j that NASA/wants to utilize unlver*!States output of edible vegetable ! without weakening oils adds up to 7.5 billion pounds, the universities by recruiting these j About 2.5 billion pounds are ex* people /into government service, {ported. Shop Until 9 TONIGHT, FRIDAY, SATURDAY And MON. Silvertone Console on Swkel3ase-i 23-Inch TV Console ' (overall diagonal) Jubilee Priced! 199 88 NO MONEY DOWN On Sears Easy Payment Plait Radio with FM, AM at One Low Price! Squared screen makes your viewing easy Front speaker sends sound right to 34“ NO,MONEY DOWN Modern cab-- BIG SCREEN that shows picture details clearly, safety glass that softens glare and removes for easy cleaning, decorator styled cabinet that fits in beautifully with your other furniture. Sale ends Saturday! „ NOW! 15 or 27-month TV Service Con* tract (Instead of Former 12 or 24-month Contract) at No Increase in Cost! Inquire Today! SHOP ’TIL 9 TONITE House colors; Petal pink Mint green Horizon blue Clay beige Federal gold Regular $9.98, 80x90-tnch blankets for double size beds....................... • 8.99 *Chen(tr«nd Re*. T.M Domestic Dept.. Mein Floor m Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SlIOl’ AT RKAllK AND SAVE SEARS 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 699 Chan Charge It • Acrilan* acrylic machine-washes and dries. • Need no special handling because they’re mothproof, mildewproof and non-allergenie. • Choice of 5 washfasi Harmony House colors. Just when cold weather's starting, Sears offers you tlii* opportunity to save on medium-weight blankets that /are perfect for Fall and Winter use. Kasy-care, they shrink less than 2%. Hurry, choose from these Harmony Coklspol Frostless Refrigerators ,ti& 469s8 \ NO MONEY DOWN 15.6 cu. 9. combination is frostless throughout! Adjust shelf arrangement in seconds . . . over 1001 ways lo arrange shelves. Includes 159-lb. freezer, twin crispers. Save; ''Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” nil A n j ...........SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE jj IVt IA) REPEAT SALE! Save on Zig-Zag Sewing Machine in Modern Cpnsole r iiiwcsi You can embroider, monogram, tew on button*, zippers. Plus regular sewing in forward or reverse. Fast round bobbin action. Sears! Sewing Machine Dept., Main Floor 154 Nbrtfi Saginaw NO MONEY DOWN On Senr* .Easy Payment Plan * Phone FE 5-417lw Your Choice—30-Inch Gas or Electric Range With 12-lb. Turkey 1 TQ88 NO MONEY DOWN JL | JJF each tin Sears Easy F,,inpnl P1*n Set automatic dock to contreu either oven or outlet, dec. range/does the rest. Super pre-heat oven is a roomy 24” wide, has Visi*Bake window. Wide storage drawer for all utensils. Appliance Dept., Main Basement Deluxe 30-inch gas range . . 179.88 REDUCED! Visi-Matic Washer Sale 1298a NO MONEY DOWN Regular $159.95 Outstanding features: central controls, electric timer, Visi-Matic Wringer with 3” rolls, lint filter, 10-lb. capacity, Roto-Swirl Agitator with deep soil s scrubber. Cfiipdle Chord Organs 129 Sears Low Price Famous Silvertone NO MONEY DOWN On Sears Easy Payment Plan Listen! Come try it out at Sears. Get a wide variety of rich sounds with 18 chord buttons, 37 full size organ keys. Silken walnut grained hardboard console. Easy to follow music book. All Electronic Silvertone Organ............. 399.88 Radio and TV Dept., Main Floor AUTOMATIC Washer with Suds-Saver 21988 NO MONEY DOWN Regular $279.95 Now you can give your clothes careful laundry attention with push button simplicity. 8 cycles, 2 speeds, 4 automatic wash and rinse temperatures, infinite water level. Slender Design TV Set^J Give You Sharp Picture NO MONEY DOWN Includes Sturdy Stand 119 On Sears Easy Carry it home today, watch your favorite shows tonight! Weighs a mere 41-pounds, yet gives you a 19-inch overall diagonal screen with a full 172-square inches of viewing area. Sec it —buyik! t V , THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, NO VEHBER 1 EUm VEN Sears Toy Sale! SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO 2-Great Allstates Safety Tractioii Snow Tires7 or Regular Treads Drink-Wet 20-inch Doll with Wardrobe tiSmfftT 5“ TIs* ftstml jaalii fills ill. with bonnet Additional cotton drew and raosoit Include* bottle, rattle, hot water bottle* 2 sponges and soap. Ufa 63%-Inch ] Steam engine pull* tender, hopper car, ***”l rice savings bank car, gondola, flat car, ca- "| QDO boose. Includes remote control uncoup* I gw ling, transformer and track. ------ 'Toytown, Perry St. Basement Charge It 26-In. Doll Crib With Mattress Reg. 7.98 6U CtuMTg* It A delight for lit*]* mother*! Soft wax birch finished hard* wood with pl*y beads, tri m. ' ™ wBmu Remco Little Red Spinning Wheels Sears Price 497 Chari* It Spin and loop, poll and ont comes the braid. Little drla will love them! rvjy. ■ ?\ !&.$* ■* S' WSm r w :f§ Wind Him Up and Mr. Machine Walks dear Plastic 6*7 Ho walk*... hi* month opens.. boll sounds. 18-in. toll. Easy t< take apart, assemble. Mattel’s Exciting stGnni hH Commando Robots ~ Act on Command— Sear* Price 1387 Charaa It ' One man army firoa on microphone commands. 19. in. plastic body with battery- “Count-Down” . .Rocket Centers Sears Price 5*7 Charge It Battery-operated missile set Flat car transports rocket to launching pad. SEARS “Satfotadion guaranteed or your money hack” 1-More Night to Save! Shop ’til 9 Tonite, Fri., SATURDAY and Mon.! Aluminum Storm-Screen Windows Priced Low! Hurry, Get Ready for Winter! Up to 60 United Inches (95 Charge It 2 track, overlap style. Rust-resistant window* cut heat loss up to 20%. Welded comers. 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Door opens aad closes smoothly with neat, oven folds- 30x80*ln. door inbeige. Save today! Other aiam. Building Material*. Petty St, Basement 154 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171 Booster Cables J98 Chart* It Easy Matting for Mailed earn. For 6 or 12-volt. m jMm iSRl!* Attractive Clamp-on Door Mirror 414” head 1,T ■■■ Non-paie daet for anfor night driving, radoee* daylight glar. too. Chromed. Snug-fitting Clear Plastic Seat Covers 18 Regularly at 921.95 Protect* upholatery W In.talled Nfl MONEY DOWN REDUCED $49.99! Craftsman Economy 9-In. Radial Arm Saws YGSr 14999 No Money Down Color-Coded Control* i Pietol grip feed*, awtvela, till* rnwtfo- Mantlet ion trigpntawitch for aopOait cutting; continnotu doty button. See It demonstrated Friday aad Saturday eve-ning*. - New 10-In. Aeern-Arm S*rw .... 9249 . ^Satisfaction guaranteed m jm money bid** Long-wearing see-through protection for your car upholstery. Heavy plastie cleans easily with a damp cloth. Will not crack, split or discolor. -Have ihe«iriSitiIJhd%bue you shop. Sava to* day! Aute Accessories, Petty St Basement SEARS 154 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171 ■ J' mm**’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THtJRSPAY.iNOyiMfflR Iim ink , itmrr~ Aid Refugees 50 Near-Blind Escapees From Red Chino Given Chance to See Again HONG KONG (AP)-Anttficiin . eye surgeons following up a proj-j ect of the. late Dr. Torn Dooley have given 50 near-blind refugees from Communist China a good .chance -of" recovering thHF slgSt; Thfe favorable outlook was reported today by one of the team, Dr. Charles Iliff of Johns Hopkins University. He said that although the success of the operations may not be finally determined for months, most of the patients will be able to have "good vision."- -TEACHING SURGEONS Dr. niff, Dr. John Harry King of j Georgetown University and Dr. John McLean of Cornell University were sent to Hong Kong by Medico, a private American medical aid group supported by public contributions. They have been demonstrating the latest techniques 'of corneal transplanting tp local eye surgeons trying to treat thousands of blind refugees from Red China. Dr. Dooley, medical herb bf Laos, formulated the project be-lore Ids death from cancer. Dr. lUff praised the American people for the "genuine concern" they have shown for the blind refugees in this British colony off the China coast, - He said that since the team's arrival here two Weeks ago more than 50 "fresh” corneas have been sent from Buffalo, N.Y,; Seattle, Wash., and Denver, Colo., by jet planes. . - They Have Solution to Woriffg V6c§» Sayg Manufacturer :. Wants 'Wigs' to Make Political Comeback in Style winrasi TOBhg-ihaTPres* Gi^s Naf|v«y^srloat^ ident IQmnpdy. JauMb srnew fash- _ “ % considering By HAL BOYLE (pees, else known NEW YORK (API-Max Miller'"toppers.’ has a simple goal. “I want President Kennedy to wear a toshion wigfe'be said, f"-"That would start the bait rolling. the same way it did with _ Geor ge IV -trf O iO England and Lou-F , is XIII of F "The c ‘V^Wraofficers would i\ ^ m follow suit, then the lobbyists. j "Soon millions ^d :..bloodedJ Miller feels sure that in another 3 to 10 years these figures will be trebled or quadrupled. It is his opinion—well, anyway, his hope—that the fashion wig again will become a status symbol among many women. 'George Washington - wore fashion wig.” he said. "So did Ben Franklin and Thomas Jefferson. Would you call them sissies? "Actually this Is the second era i foe trade as of American history when the wig/their hair "from die contemptuous has been a status symbol,. regard of their bewigged betters.” STATUS SYMBOL According to Miller,' people have ■In Colonial America wigs were ***" wearin* ^8* tw 10A» **»•* symbols of status—but as worn by or so- He says both Hannibal and husbands not Wives. You could Kero wore them for purposes of gauge a' colonist’s station in lifeIdisguise, and that (he first Queen possess a dozen. The shopkeeper! her wardrobe, would have, two—one for every!. „ * day, one for Sundays. The black- A modem woman’s wig today smith probably owned but one, costs from 520ft to 5700, ft man’s while the indentured servants and (topper from 1165 to 5250. They last field hands had nothing to hide'from two to three years, and be sent out to be cleaned dressed for 54.50. Feminine wigs contain from 250,000 to 300,000 hairs, male toupees about 140,000. FROM SICILY The world hair buying center is Palermo, Sicily, and the greatest •eoume--ot- supply—iftthe--‘ltalian woman peasant. The price ranges all the way frorp 550 a pound for straight black hair to 5400 a pound for pure white or red hair, the colors in scant supply. whether Soviet thremler, Khrush-i chev might be■ a more Interested prospect, and would be glad to furnish toe premier with, a'fj-ee hairpiece as a starter. “A idee crewcut toupee might help him get rid of his Inferiority complex and give him more self-confidence,’’ said Miller. “Any* •way, it's'worth a try.” i far, Miller’s letters to the Eboh. Assures Investors - LAGOS, Nigeria ip—, _ I surance to overseas investors that their capital in Nigeria is safe from nafionalization was given hi the Parliament Wednesday by Finance Minister FeStus Okotie- Jacksonville, fiirr -si Th* U.S. destroyer Jone^Jngram j had a hot problem to handle When it touched the Seychelles Islands nekr Madagascar on a good will tour. 1 ' 1 1 *»v^ Hundreds of barefoot natives came aboard as guests — and tha Stoll decks, werescorchtog hot from the sun. The Navy solved the problem by havlngthe visitors dash from one shaded spot to another. BOYLE American m would be wearing beautiful high-fashion wigs. Their wives would fall back in love with them. The wholesome loving atmosphere in all those homes would put an end to juvenile delinquency, alcoholism and the television habit.” Miller, at 43 the owner of. a flourishing mop of hair that makes him his own wofrst customer, is the dynamic head, of one of the oldest and largest wig firms j to the world. OVER S MflXiON The hairpiece business is now about a $50-mllIion-a-year industry in this country, and getting bigger ail the time. The bald truth of the matter,’ according to Miller, is that some three million American women now wear fashion wigs and some) 400,000 to 600,000 men protect their! scalps from sunburn, rain, snow ang ill-natured laughter with ton- This Year, Good Taste Calls for Calvert Reserve You know it at once. Here it a decanter of extraordinary beauty. Outstanding! So it the whiskey inside-good-tasting Calvert* the right whiskey for today's taste. When it's Calvert, whiskey is delicious. So give Calvert Reserve, the gift they'll remember with pleasure. daring (Kit holiday mimm. MKiSt OFMtvtrr, Wuiwiulky ,«mtMwoof • ajwu nmti • m* smw «tn»» imiii Penney’S Our nalionally-famous blankets are hefty! •Warm! Ideal for tha cold nights ahead. Rayon with aerylie or nylon, all bound in nylon. New plaids, fashion solid colon, Ireversible designs. So nice to give—so nice to use. Select several today- 72” by 90” BEAUTIFUL MUMS OR ROSES DRESS UP COZY BLANKETS! Three and a half pounds of lavish warmth! These bloom beautifully any season, keep their fresh look through machine washing «t medium set. Soft, fluffy rayon warmed with acrylic , .bound in sturdy nylon! „ ^ windwat *795 lavender or pink § each KEEP WARM THESE COLD WINTER NIGHTS With an ACRYLIC BLANKET Stay toasty warm, with a lightweight acrylic blanket from PenneyV Beautiful solid colon. Nylon twill binding. Machine wash, mediu|n set. Pink, peacock, sand, lemon, cherry, mint green, pale bine, lilac. . ikIPYwl WhyW* PENNEY’S—DOWNTOWN Op«n Every Monday and Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.Mf All Other Weekdays 9:30 A.M* to 5:30 P.M. PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE Open Ivory Weekday—Monday Through Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. FRESH DRESSED NOT* --^FROZEN Pork Sausage Fresh 4% AOC Ground Mm lbs. 07 Slab Bacon Spougar Sweet V ORANGES Fresh Dressed ROCK HENS FRYERS DOZEN Fresh Dressed California wicks ^ r.h.<> 29; 17 cfiffDN WORTH 7t ewtmmSmnanSe.iUgswswmeramliy Store MOYAL GELATIN DESSERT '' to%MwtP«MiMtsiM jaMwitis OHkkmt IMMMHAWiMMriWlltk* «Ow m tfcNfM.'raMW mBI OPEN 7DAfs1 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. STEAKS TAKE THIS COUPON JO YOUR GROCER ^ TODAY! A tHlS PdiffTIAC iPRESS, THURSDAY NOVEMBER 10. 1»6I ONE THIRTEEN Vio jFiidge Gels Extra With Popular Turkey Shot of Nutrition Let us give thanks for bountiful food supplies. There Is no question of wtoflaer we eat. Our question becomes, “Which of the many •WHS?” ’ ST Beet pbric and poultry will tie given store emphasis this week reports the Marketing Agent, Mrs. Josephine Lawyer. Although wholesale beef prices ate about as they .ItAvd twre.HPang ftnm ACTUtoMfc- ing steaks, standing rib, blade chuck and ground beef at special prices. . Ham, Boston butt (the lean shoulder roast), steaks (cut from the Boeton‘butt), and are pork cuts receiving special emphasis. Turkeys are birds to check! Turkey prices vary according to die with the large lire about ten cents per pound than toe small size. Rflchlgan% apple harvest is complete, From now until next harvest, storage costa will be added. This same marketing principle will also be true for potatoes and sweet potatoes in storage. Vegetables can be colorful and quick-and-easy you choose tom toe town food cabinet. Frozen corn, peas, broe-“ and esiiUftnwer aw* sjpeetstlv 1 marked in some stOTreThis ww un are frozen strawberries and Ides. Pumpkin, cranberry sauce, fruit cocktail and peas are canned items to check. NEW YORK (UPIMButocd.for time in holiday meal-planning? Make this speedy version of fudge for dpssert or snacktime. In a medium saucepan, combine W4 cups of sugar with,% teaspoon of salt, 3 tablespoons each of peanut butter and butter or margarine and 7 tablespoons of milk. Bring slowly to a rolling boil, spiring constantly. Cook 1 minute without stirring. Remove from heat. Let stand <^L"toiHn-kr-eup ef quick rolled oats and hi teaspoon of vanilla. Beat until thickened. Pour onto greased plate and chill until set, Cut Into squares. Follow Rules tor PertecT Wattles ITHACA, N.Y. (UPI)—For golden brown waffles at breakfast, lunch or dinner, Marion MfccNab, a home economist at the New York State Extension Service at Cornell University, suggests the following ttm,'' melted 1st or shorten-tog.. Close cover. Host toe bento it and atom it to cool. Booklet mi Venison ^“OfferedkHJeaders- —Season waffle iron property. / —Heat to proper temperature. —Always leave iron open while cooling. • —Never wash Iron with ws- Worm Gingerbread Gets Fruit Cocktail Topping Spicy, squares of gingerbread, with, a gay fruit topping, nudes A. perfect family dessert on coot toll days. Drain syrup from canned fruit cocktail, reserving 1 cup synip. Combine syrup with 1 tablespoon lemon Juice, 14 cup brown sugar, 2 tablespoons each cornstarch and butter and 14 teaspoon grated lemon rind, w ' ★ A Bring t» boil and cook, stirring until thickened. Add cocktail'H :• and heat lightly. Serve warm over Venison i$ a highly prized game meat and makes an appetizing' dish it it ia property prepared. The Michigan State University Cooperative Extension 'Service pamphlet “Venison/* offers serving suggestions ranging from "deerburgers" to venison roasts ■ ■ The booklet also includes instructions for bleeding and dressing out^the deer and cutting and preserving the carcass. You can Obtain ¥ copy of “Venial" (Extension Bulletin E 253) tutor Oakland-County ..Cooperative Extension Service office, 1260 West Boulevard, Pontiac. able to to Hryeare ago. Today's turkey has M per cent more meal than the type grandmother could buy. The current model has short logs sad snore white meat And fcbrds of all stseo are leader and jvtoy. Turkey marketing methods have ctotofed too. Almost all turkeys now come ready-to-cook. Most are frozen. A strengthened overwrap for frozen turkeys was recently, developed. This means less chance for a tear to toe wrap, less chance of drying and loss of moisture. I Atom l to 4 days for thawing a frozen turkey In the refrigerator. For example, turkeys to the 4 to 10 pound range require 1 to 2 days to thaw; those in the 20 to 24 pound range, 3 to 4 days. If you buy a frozen-stuffed turkey follow the directions on- the bird, for it goes into the oven while frown. are gt their seasonal low at holiday time. However, many shoppers will select Michigan’s pro- T’opwfiHr Both broccoli and Brussels Sproutf are in good Supply and reasonably priced report the-produce buyers to this area. New,! cabbage supplies are arriving 'bum Arizona and these, added to the cabbage in storage, mean very thrifty prices for food shoppers. Notice that some Florida oranges are lower in price due. to‘the adjustment to the . greater volume of fight. Tnere is also good volume of gnipefrult from Florida and Celery and lettuce supplies have been small compered to the usual customer needs. Yew Gay Pumpkins Are 'Cheesey' i Thanksgiving and other hsrveit time dinners call for extra special touches stlch as “Little Cheese Pumpkins" atop a gelatine mince meat pie — the perfect finale a festive dinner. These decorative-ly delictous miniatures are easy to make from a mixture of crushed inch-square, cheew crackers, cream cheew, sour cream, paprika and salt. Stems are easy to make by cutting strips from green gum drops; or, use parsley or watercress and serve pumpkins as party snacks. Make it this easy way: i “Little Cheese Pumpkins j i 614-oz. package cheese crackers ! 1 8-oz. package cream cheew, at room temperature i 14 cup sour cream j T teaspoon paprika 14 teaspoon suit 3 or 4 green gum drops Roll crackers Into very tine crumbs between two sheets of waxed paper. Blend cream cheew, sour cream, paprika and salt together. Add all but about a quarter cup of crumbs to the cheese mixture, mixing well (till* wW make a stiff dough). Maid cheese-crumb mixture into IHtie pumpkin shapes atom! diteneter. Then OT crumim. rihm aiwmw ....... ■ides Of halls wHh side ef fork. Roll lightly in crumbs again. Top each pumpkin with a tiny stem cut Item green gum drops. Refrlgerareuntil needed. Use as garnish for holiday pies. Yield: About 24 pumpkins. Toasted Oafs Crust Has Nutty Flavor NEIII YORK (UPI) - Rolled cats gal party treatment to « crunchy, cinnamon spiced P * * crust. #. ..•■■, -m-m Toast J flip of uncooked, quick cr (rid nuhtomd rolled oats to a .Wdegrae oven 10 minutes. Mix withlteup of flmly-packed brown sugar blended with* tSUapoon of otooMcmy stir to V3 cup to melted Put onto buttons and sides of 9* * plate. CMl. then fill with FRESH Ground Beef 2... 79* BEEF LIVER Frtih Under % LUNCH MEATS ASS.ted39 PORK STEAKS HICKORY Hot Dogs 4, Jig RING BOLOGNA °Ade39;„ PORK ftwh 25 US /U Choice f Irib j LINK FRANKS RED HOTS 39V LARGE BOLOGNA Chunk Only 29 #em SISTERS SUPER MKT on purchase of 4 Regular or 2 Family-Size Royal Gelatin tbe pS^ xqvbmbbb la, iw FJtRtEEjS Yogurt /Con Used Like Sour Cream Gdigaerole With Biscaik W&&&.VU&. ,VW - - + *• 5v.4.-* j ' BroceoUEgg Caweroie 2 tablespoons fwtter or margarine 2 tablespoons plu* IV* cop* tiffed afetohad , JV4 cupt (about) milk / ^ 2 teaspoons baking powder iteaipoonaalt - -- ___, ?, tablespoons shortening 1 can (4V4 ounces) deviled bam X package (10 ounces) frozen chopped l^occoM’ (cotdted and „ -..■-*■"' '01% diced sharp cheese 4 hard-cooked 'eggs (diced) Make a white satire of "the butter, 2 tablespoons floor and 1 cup milk. 4 ~ ,» —\—-/— Grandpa and Vegetables Weren't So Chummy NEW YORK (UPD—Anuarlcans are eating more vegetables today than th#r grandparents did SO ye:ara:'ago, ■ '■y # A- W >\/ J" The V, S- Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Serv- 1 cup yocourt * ' 1 pkg. Danish dessert • currant raspberry (juices drained from thawed berries > 1 pkg. flraaen raspberries Drain defrosted raspberries, laving liquid. Add enough cold water to make 2 cups. Add to Danish' desaert and: cook according to directions. When thickened add rasp- CHEESELESS — It's cheesecake all right, except for one (Meg — no cheese. This tempting desaert is a cheeseless cheesecake, made with yogourt, and iuot even an expert epuld tell that the recipe mils for no cheese at all unless he looked over the cook's shoulder while she was preparing it. Cheeseless chUiBcaker an wr»rlt of one od the pany varied ways calorie-conscious homemakers art using yogourt to turn out rieh-testtog, yet diet-wiaa dishes, Is one of special recipe* offered by Dr. Stephan Gaymont. who Introduced yogourt commerclafly to the U.S. ’ I Stearti vents art neoessarj’ in [the top crust of a frtfi pie; cut lih» wilts . in attractive fancy- SUGAR Package •'One of th# reason* for Ha popularity 1s simply that ao many -AmadcgnL hsve discovered that yogourt, the twin cd~aour -eraam in looks, taste and use, has only one-sixth the tat calories that sour mam has. In addition, yogourt has the wonderful ability to aj appetites — thus making It to keep oft unwanted pounds," points out Dr. Gaymont. A versatile and refreshing dairy food, yogourt can be need In n variety of ways — as a Mas an we> an a delicious ad- 3 cups yogourt % cup commeal..... V4 cup shortening 3 cups flour 3 eggs I teaspoon soda . 1 cup sugar % teaspoon salt Crtam sugar and shortening. Add beateh eggs. Mix soda in yogourt and add to creamed mixture. Add commeal and salt. Sift flour ahd add to mixture and beat wail. Bake in greased loaf pan ' 350 degree oven for 50 to 60 min- Get Artistic With Marzipan Yogourt la truly an International favorite as proven by iti popularity at the United Nation* when the cafeteria sella dozens of container* dally. The U.N. members from the Balkan countries'stir It with a spoon and drink It ertdla Frenchmen usually ant It an a dessert, sprinkling their vogewt delegates, HR. sugar. American including Adlal Stevenson, usually eat yogourt as a snack in midafternoon for added energy. Kraut Casserole 11 lb. pkg. wieners 1 onion, minced or grated V4 cup tomato paste 3 tablespoons brown sugai Combine sauerkraut, yogurt, onion, tomato paste and brown sugar. Mix well. Spoon Into a two quart baking dish. Top with wieners. Bake In a 350 degree oven for 30 minutes or until bubbly. Scupa yogourt 1 envelope unflavored gelatin *4 cup cold water Vi cup sugar 1 tablespoon lemon juice l tablespoon vanilla extract (4 cup non tot dry milk powder Vi cup cold water 1 cup graham cracker crumbs Soften geisha In >4 cap cold water In top of double boiler. Stir to sugar and yogourt. Cook Vi cup yogurt 3 eggs slightly beaten Vi cup milk V4 cup sugar % teaspoon cinnamon I teaspoon baking soda M teaspoon vanilla It teaspoon salt , Combine sugar, spice, MQt and baking soda. Add yogourt, milk, eggs and flavoring. Mix thoroughly. Pour Into a buttered baking dish or six custard cups. Cat in pan of warm water. Bake at 31 degrees for SO to 60 minutes, or until an inserted silver knife comes out dean. Remove from heat immediately. Pureed fruits such as peaches, apricots, applesauce or peara may be served as a topping If you wish. Prepared Huts Will KeepWollOllled NEW YORK (UPI) - The Brazil Nut Association suggest* ' that homemakers shell, than grind, aUea or chop ahead of time any mitmeats they need tor holiday Last spring, hundreds of thou* sands of soft pink flowers bloomed In California. And the end result of this floral display waa intended tor you, Mrtt Homemaker, " creamy-colored almonds. A native of the Orient, almonds were first brought to America fay Franciscan friars. Today, America’s harvest is expected to he ths second longest on record and to liatad as "ptontifuT by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Almonds, Ilka the "Arabian Nights” talas, can be traced back to antiquity. The Old Testament speaks of "spice* and myrrh, nuts and almond*." They were the main Ingredient In many Far East foods tor centuries and a good example to the well-known confection, Marzipan- Treat your family or guest* to this delight of sultans After about 24 hours the mar-pan to rtady to mold. Color with mold * amafl shapes of fruits or etablee, using angelica lor stems. You may also dip small piece* In a coating or use marzipan to etuff Maxwell House COFFEE SUfcS GIANT MaxWE^ Jm Duncan l#M»? CMS MIXES ChotJblata—WWta—Ynllow ATLAS SUPER SPECIAL hue reaches the consistency of unbeaten egg white. Combine Vi ■Ilia and no* tot dry milk powder. Boot aatll stiff. Fold to gelatta-yegNrt mixture. Sprinkle Vi cup graham cracker crumbs on the bottom of an ungreased spring form pan. Four in mixture. Chill until firm, about 3 hours. Remove sides of spring pan before serving and sprinkle- an ad- Onoe ready, nuts can be pro-measured and stored in an airtight container In freezer or refrigerator until needed. Hero’s a guide tor buying and shelling the trioorne-ehaped nuts; One pound in the shell makes Vi pound, ahalled. One pound of shelled makes 3 cups who**. On# cup of shelled makes lVi cups of coarsely ground or sliced nuts, or 1 cup of finely chopped. Shelling Brazil nuta to easy If you freeze them several hours or overnight. Freezing makes shells brittle enough tor easy cracking. If you haven’t time tor this method, boll the nuts In water tor 3 minutes, than draft). Add cold water, let stand 1 minutes, then drain and crack shell*. Monosodium Glutamato Points Up Turkey Flavor This Thanksgiving, let your turkey be flte best bird you ever served; the secret to in the seasoning. When you season your turkey with salt and pepper, add MSG in this fashion: Use 2/3 teaspoon MSG per pound of turkey, sprinkling one half the amount inside the cavities and over the Divide the remainder between the stuffing and gravy. MSG does Wonders tor turkey by bringing out all tha subtlety of flavor and moisture as the Mid roasts. And MSG points up, the to; dividual flavors to gravy and stuffing, combines all into a harmonious whole, mm 7ft NORTH SAGINAW STRUT Sliced BACON 3ib*1" Bazley’s Own — PRE-COOKED smoked nn HAMS 39 ROUND—SIRLOIN—SWISS Steaks YEARLING 29 Lamb of 7 RIB CUT,—Sliced Free PORK LOIN 12 TO 14 LB. AVERAGE HEN TURKEYS SKINLESS FRANKS SHou$f rj* m 1 fcOFF^j Libby’s PUMPKIN LARG mm 2/-c resNi $ioo J’JJMPKlN I mu Mr.Clean Giant 28-Oz. Bottle USDA GRADE ‘A’ JENNIE’O TOM Maxwell House INSTANT COFFEE 6*Oz. Jar JB- OUVES No. Icebox Jar * 39* VIASIC SWEET PICKLES 29* TURKEYS 16 to 22 Pound Average / 29m EASY MONDAY Miracle Rinse ’iS,4i CHEER USDA GRADE “A’ FANCY JENNIE’O HEN TURKEYS 8 to 16 Lb. Avg. B. a 49< 11) Pound Cello Pkg. “W FRESH —LEAN ^ nu7'rw GROUND QQc Skin,ess BEEF Vvib Hot Dogs Vwrl BEEF FRUITS—VEGETABLES DEUaOUS WHITE or PINK GRAPEFRUIT CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE 4“ PAOC1 12“89( each • CUCUMBERS • GREEN PEPPERS e RADISHES .GREEK ONIONS YOUR CHOICE. .NMEISCOM.BREEN SUNT CUT .GREEN GIMT PEAS GREEN BEANS MIX ’EM or MATCH -EM_ 5 303 SI Cons I JELL-0 4 s 99 10 Deliciout Flavors TT PHILADELPHI/ CREAM CHEES Large 8-Oz. Borden's BISCUITS PLAIN or BUTTERMILK CAVERN MUSHROOMS ,*1" races aid STEMS 4jk.J[ Can ii Golden Mgid OLEO DOLE FRUIT COCKTAIL No. 303 Can .00 for FRESH FROZEN FOODS Birdseye Fresh 4 FROZEN SQUASH | | 12 Ounce Pkgs. ■ ■ CHOCOLATE CHIPS ■AKERS 10c 6-Ot, Pk*. I# OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRY SAUCE WHOLE or m JELLY tall Can MORTON’S NATURIPE FRESH FROZEN Fresh Frozen Large Family Size . PIES Strawberries Apple, Cherry, Peach, Coconut Custard or \J n y 3 • your nnc CHOICE AJf Eat Wed., Ihvr.., 9 A M. t. 9 rM. tAJB-rtWMA. .fiSSr«. OUT CORNCR BALDWIN AVI. and WALTON ftLVD. [AC PKESS.' THlXEkPAY. NOVEMBER < < >1 u*«^\ vfifr*** ^$11 if Low Prices PlUS 2 Just in time to fill your saver books fot Free Christmas Gifts* Ice Cream SECOND HALF GALLON hill shank half Smoked Hams CENTER SLICES REMOVED!__ W*pTt emsh »o»TOHJWTT 1QC ««59c PorkRo«*jJ® Fork Sausage ' HORMU. ALL MEAT ' ' <\ *‘ JOZ Skinless Wieners |k viiiTw»-cci«HW clOmuci». Luncheon meat i< Lbs. Compfettf. Shortening BeltsWIle ROAJTiN# Chickens Cranberry Sauce Canned HamS&*3— _l/.ltJ .i M.mmmm RaalU*. I)ra*lea __ Pie Pumpkin . .« 10* Whipping Cream sw 49* j / Goldan Homcite.d pie Crust ■« • 2 S3 25* Margarine . .5 & Mince Meat . . --* 49* Pumpkin Pie 3 w *1 50 Extra vESi Stamp* Bread 100 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE OP 6-CUP CARAPE PILLED WITH SPOTLIGHT Instant Coffee *W«IT GOLDIN PUIRTO RICAN Candy yams 13 “ 29' CRISP CALIFORNIA ^ Pascal Celery 2 100 Extra *12. Stamps with tmIi couroN an* mwcmam or *4X CAR AN SFOTUSMT [ Instant CoNm ISRjStfartfunett- r tt, nwtm Iht right to limit quaMite,. Prtea mi mip fredr. Ja»— “** *"* MM 4J*Nm WITH COUPON ON THE RIGHT Nov. 16th, 17th ond 18th Get in on This Special Bonus. Fill Your Books Foster by Doing All Your Shopping with Kroger. You'll Get Low, Low Prices Plus Top Value Stomps. WITH THIS COUPON Double VAtUI Stamps Nev. 16th, 171k and 18th PRISH. CRISP RROGRR Zip Crackers 14J, eitc «*" re®: 25° B __--------------- Kroger Tea Bags A4-CT. | PKG. 4 SAVC Ac—KROGER White Fresh FROZEN SNIDER FARMS - _ ■ — Cooked Squash .. ~ 10* -pan ^50 Extra vlru. Stamps SAVE He KieWa Reynolds Wrap tsi 59® Phlledelphla \*i 29® § MT**uBr' “** (Avi UR TO He—Cut Cem. h«. *4** 1***-4«dss> _ _ Birds Eye niETAiui we 17® Golden Whip . 39 f- mzH GIFT STAMPS With Purchase and Coupons Run IWs Pugs BUY NOW Fill Your Books For CHRISTMAS! w 11 ( inpU'ufonatoum Banv* Stamp Coupon Rfl Extra GOLD BEU Iflf Stomp* With Purcha* xisnmu 7-o, OQ :ocoNUT rSi Z9 » if c|| ?5gJ limit 1 Coupon-fuptaM Sun., Nuv.1t, 1961 U| I Poopin'* Fondf*n Boimm Stomp Coupon M Rfl Extra GOLD BELL C||| if If StomM With Pure ha *• Rfl Extra GOLD BELL assngSjMii ws CQ I Cuupun-li«plr»« Sun., N»v. 19,'t 96t 35L fwiltWMIWWWWUMUWWHIHIHMWWWWUll^j Extra GOLD BELL Stomp* With Purcha** | of Any Frosh PORK ROAST limit 1 Cuupun—luplmu Sun., Mom It, 1t*1 H f FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS |ttMIM*|U0N«r I |1HIIAM*Am.| mSOiilnUOOA. »aHai Nona to Doalort or MMn th* Right to Limit Quontitioi *tv. ; SEVEXTEEX THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. XOVTSMBBR16/ Buy the Size You Want! ALL ONE PRICE! Hens or Toms -vetnrcHOicEir NONE to DEALERS or MINORS SORRY, LIMIT 1 PER FAMILY Ocean Spray CRANBERRY SAUCE STOKELY’S PS PUMPKIN I ^ B11 LARGE No. 21/2 CAN New CropliOpGON BABY walnIis i-u,-*Oe Bag 'IPTP . I FRESH ' GRAPES : ' FRESH CRANBERRIES SUNMAID—S*«d!f RAISINS PEOPLED SUPER MARKEYS FOOD MARKETS Pride of the Flock Hi 3 PINCONNING MILO FRESH PORK STEAK SLICED BtffUVHL 39; PETERS__■___ PORK SAUSAGE O 1-Lb. $100 ■i I * Hamilton—Farm Fresh EGGS >1 CHEESE 49; TATO CHIPS Lb. 19* Lar9» 0 I ★ ’trijy HOLIDAY FRUIT CAKE FULL 3-Lb. SIZE QUICK FIX FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS TOP FROST—Frozen ’S—Frozen SHRIMP 10-Oz , l'/2-Lb. X Bag IBpiPBPP EIGHTEEN ' * \- ^yms ^ "" V' THK PONTIAC PRBS& THURSDAY, XOVEMBEB 16,\961 Plan^Tish Dishes to Varyk ComOflCotHiSXeep fo By JANET ODELL little tuna cake* for dinner. Serve diem with peat and boiled onion*. , Pancake Sea-Prise 2 canr tuna ' Svar aince lummw ended we havabaen talking about and giving you redpet for “economical” pork; 2 eggs , "hearty” beef; "abundant” chkk* % cup cracker crumbs «n; "in-aeason” lamb. This month Chopped did wd’vp taBked turiwy often. Sait ' ■' We 'think it’* JS£^SSTim, If teas to earn V,; ail Is used, save corn ell lor Take fish, for instance. And] frying. Beat eggs slightly. Break seafood? Aren't they an excellent up tuna and add to eggs with source of variety in your meal cracker crumbs, dill and salt. Stop* tatt or 5 Out pMtlM JSTiwlSS. wap™. If tn»H "ch ^wvtw-l appeal to you and use them dur-tog toe whole holiday season. One et the eld rsUabls firms put . tomatoes in their dam chowder and those who don’t. Well just pais along this recipe' tor .a quick' dam chowder macje with tomhto vegetable soup mix and canned minced clams. A hearty (oup. it can serve as_ wwse-imjTThTnsrfflglit. Manhattan dam Chowder U cup diced bacon Hipup chopped onion % cup chopped celery 1 cup diced raw potatoes Ocups boiling water 2 envelopes. Tomato Vegetable Soup Mix and " Dash .of pepper 1 1012 ounce can minced dams 1 until crisp. Drain on absorbent paper. Add onion and celery to bacon fat and saute 5 minutes. Stir1’, in. 'potatoes ...I irnrner 10 minutes. mix, thyme. and pepper. ’ Re-cover and simmer an additional 10 minutes. Stir to clams and bacon snd 3 quart saucepan, ijy bacon1 re-heat. Makes 6-8 servings. broil Halibut steak make a fine main >urse. To vary its taste : with an herb-flavored topping. A choice of four different Jberbs is given to recipe. Halibut Steak* With Herb-Crumbs .2 lbs. halibut alaaktr-frestr wsjeome p« \ buttrr or margarine! Use either kind to prepare fat, j CUp dry bread crumbs 11 ...; ’a teaspoon thyme, rosemary! i basil, or oregano teaspoon garlic Mil, optional , Thaw halibut on refrigerator' |shelf, if necessary. Sprinkle steaks, with salt and pepper and broil: 3 to S minutes on each side. . Make herb-crumb mixture by melting butter or margarine over low heat In a small frying pan and adding dry bread crumbs; loss gently with fork until butter or margarine Is absorbed. Add preferred herb and garlic salt, If desired. j When halibut is rooking on aec-| Cook Beef Loaf WithBeans Vegetables are “built” right Into "Tucson Skillet" to make it an easy-to-do entree that needs only gitod, dessert and beverage added tor an entire meal. Seasoned and{ browned ground beef leave* and; ......| ...............v„ _______ catsup top blue lake green beansside arK) fish begins (0 flake, and corn In a skillet whilf this when tested with a fork, remove! meal-in-one aimtoers away. 'Blue from the broiler and top each| lakes — pole beans grown to wafer- gteak with herb-crumb mlxttin rich Washington and Oregon especially tor canning -‘■are Ideal, accompaniments for meat dishes. Tucson Skillet 1 pound ground beef 14 cup bread crumbs 1 tablespoon instant minced onion 14 teaspoon crushed marjoram 1 teaspoon salt ’ * ,,li,liiSpo9n.l»5l*e|,.........._ 1 egg ■ 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 (14b.) can cut blue lake green beans 1 (l lb.) can whole kernel corn 14 cup catsup Combine beef, crumbs, onion, seasonings and egg. Shape meat mixture into 12 small loaves, brown to butter in skillet . Remove meat and a)l but 1 tablespoon drippings. Drain green beans and corn, place In skillet. Ton jyjLltuJaeatj loaves ami-catStip. Simmer 10 to, minutes Makes 6 servings. Slide under broiler again briefly | to brown crumbs. Makes 6 servings. WWW Wo have no Intention of getting into the argument between those Instant Rice Makes _______, This nutritious dessert tor • school child’s lunch comes from the kitchens of ,the Gas Appliance Manufacturers Association; Combine 114 cups milk; 1 cup uncooked, Instant rice, 3 tablespoons sugar, hi teaspoon salt, 14 teaspoon cin-namon and ‘4 cup currants in a •aucepan. Bring to a full rolling boil, stirring constantly. Turn off the heat, cover the jMin.And let-Hie pUddihg StaPd’for 15 minutes. Stir and .serve warm with a garnish of I ventila te* cream Serves 4. Make Up Exciting Relishes With Jam, Fruit, and Nuts You may serve chilled vintage Concord Grope'Jellies, Jams andr preserves Just as they are with] your Thanksgiving poultry, beef or game, Fresh from a bountiful autumn harvest they bring a unique deep flavor and a sparkling color accent to your holiday table. j You may use home made or the; fine commercial Concord grape jellies, Jams, preserves now on; the market. Just remember to, chill them well before serving. But if you’d like to get into the act yourself, and hear your praises sung far and wide, use these delicious beauties a* a base for exciting new poultry and meat relishes. Here are three piquant ones destined to bring glitter and delight to your Thanksgiving feast. Each is quick, easy and economical to make. Quick Concord Relish 110-ounce Jsr Grapelade or Grape Jam 1 tablespoon ground whole orange 1 tablespoon drained crushed pineapple ] tablespoon lemon juice Mix well, season and chill in refrigerator for a few hours, serve. 'Because of the raw fruit content (ASvsrtlssment > | thla relish It should bb kept under refrigeration, and. used within a few days.) Feasting ‘‘Purple’’ 1 20-ounce Jar Grapelade or Grape Jam 1 cup orange marmalade cup seeded raisins ?. tablespoons lemon juice <4 cup chopped walnuts or pecAns Cook all except walnuts together over medium heat to desired thickness. Remove from heat, add wal-j nuts. Cool., store In refrigerator to season and chill. Sene. WWW Cherry-Concord Jubilee 1 20-ounce jar Concord Grape Jam, Grapelade or Fruit, of the Vine 1 cup canned pie cherries, well-drained 2 tablespoons ground whole orange 1 tablespoon lemon juice >, cup coarsely chopped walnutsl Mix all except walnuts into sauce pan. Cook over medium flame to desired thickness. Remove from heat. Add chopped walnuts. Cool, cover, store in refrigerator tor a few hourr before] use to season and chill, ifu o For Self-Feeders Kmt jtmt twMIer «*o play "pick mp sticks’* With mat gusto. Gerber Mest Sticks anks a perfect Sager food. Made from selected, lean Armour Fork and Beef plus nonfat dry milk solids. This gives toby tots of bodybuilding ffV . protein apd' otbsr ^SS®5-* ■ important nutrimlts. A tow fat con- serve right from the container or heat __ slightly. >.>. Oerber Msnt Stick* (jlGX*OQX* MEAT STICKS* longer Season store their appetites with their suituiter etothtog.’-Reports from. .Florida and' California indicate that a large harvest of fresh com is on Its way, to market. ‘ The fall crop is expected to be 41 per cent more than 1960 and 2t per cent/above average. Do you know bow to save steak if it doddttoly bunds info flames? The torriuda tor salvaging hubby’s dinner is first, don't panic; second, reach tor the baking soda; land thinL-Jm-fo*-wd»-*ightr-; re4W*^¥f^tose^the fire. Soda, in case you don’t know It is one of the chief, ingredients of most commercial fire extinguishers. And tor good reason. The high heat from flames almost instantly turns the millions of tiny soda particles into carbon diaxicte gas which smothers toe flames by cutting off their oxygen supply. The ie,W» acre h.rvrot la toe , Be sure, when tofetog MW . sunshine state, which began in * stand back andI away from t - _.. ... .•__„„ ~ fire so that your hand doesnt get 0 the EvergtaAes am on Oct, L m hot‘area directly C It t „,tl| ti,____w.. above the fire.- And It’e a good H idea for the sake of easy dumping, package to clean andjwfiSlCT-toe.. giving, (alitorate s production (o ^ sur? reWferatomirac' ifp a couple of tag lectures to groups of dtisons, 1 safety experts lecturing in schools, and boy scout leaders Remember, the fatflrajn the sldllet or broiler Is one of the . most common causes of fire in the.,,, home. It ,caught and treated promptly, it's easily controlled. If not, there's more than toe steak, at stake . perhaps even your. It’s advisable, then, during National Fire Prevention Week, Octc-8th to 14th Jo do two things. Check your Supply of baking soda. If there’s Just enough left in the Coachella valley. Hot sub-tropical sunshine In Florida and California makes it Ibte io grow tali and winter corn fe the first place, but becomes the enemy of the-crop the moment the corn is picked. ! Successful shipping to far-off places depends' on the ability of growers HT pick their crop and | get It to a cooler before the sugar jin the kernels turns to starch. tinguish a Are, to keep a couple of pounds of It in a canister or old salt box within easy reach of the range. Be sure, too, that the, container is clearly marked FIRE in big bold letters so that in time of' crisis, there's no chance of confusion. - pounds the next time’ you go to ~ 60 well thought of Is s this particular phase 1 (Advertisement) Secondly, acquaint Dad and the youngsters with the soda fat-flra fighting technique in case they l^famlliar wttbit. Yi^te may 1 ‘ time wheri you’re out and ] they’re' handling the dinner de-for [tall or they may be frying thorn-fire selves a snack. (AdTsrttsensntf ' PANCAKE SKA-PRISES - Ttma takes on new importance when it is mixed with eggs and crumbs and shaped Into little cakes. The new tuna canned in corn oil is delicately flavored. Drain off the oil and use it for browning the patties. Serve with your favorite sauce. Holiday Seasoning I When it comes to preparing holi-day turkey, the seasoning makes ■ | the bird. Mbnosodium glutamate •• brings out all the subtlety of fla-i I vor and Juiciness as the hird | i roasts. Uje % teaspoon MSG per ! [pound of turkey, sprinkling half, -the amount over the skin and in the cavities. Sprinkle the cavi-1 .ties with salt and pepper, too. Divide the remaining MSG be-. : tween the stuffing and gravy. ONLY PURE tm/OA M/ES THE TRUEST, RICHEST FLAVOR Real Flavor Misting From Choap, Artificial lubstltutei! Co®d cook* know ike d-lirioui difference botnett’l Par* Vnnitle give* to esltss, frnWin** - *l*»Sf» SWty <**««. TU* Is boesOM Burnett’* I* Mil* frost the finest, pnr# wailf* betne with no artificial tr taftstlss lagrsdiMt* *44*4. Nothing e*n tsit* th* place of Burnett's far w« usnif/s ' flavoring! Pure almond, lemon, orange, brandy end flavoring* alto anlltble. Burnetts OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY thru Thun. 9 A.M.to10:30 -Fri. and Sat. 9 to 11 P.M. U.S. No. 1 Michigan ?!!> All Purpose ^POTATOES’ 50 L 59s i Top O* the Crop iHriitali MICHIGAN TOLL BUSHEL In Your Contiiiwr U.S. No. 1 Golden Ripe BANANM TASTY TENDER STEAKS • SIRLOIN • SWISS • ROUND • RIB Peters Pure Grade PORK SAUSAGE 1291 Fresh Ground Hourly GROUND OQ BEEF WiF COMPLETE SELECTION of FRESH KILLED U.S. NO. 1 TOP QUALITY TURKEYS—NOT FROZEN UMim QUANTITY ORDER YOURS NOW! Pot Roast.. . 49; Boneless Rolled Rib Roast. . . OVi Boneless Rolled Rump Roast17Vi Hamilton Extra Large EGGS 49 4 doz. Hickory Smoked ^ Picnics * Campbell's Tomato Soup 3 c 29* ?;hi saltines Largo Walnut. This Years Crop V lb. cello A €%C Scotties FACIAL TISSUE c 1 ^ FRESH RADISHES cwlle fCL C Pk>‘ V JONATHAN APPLES 4 15c - VINE RIFE IgA TOMATOES W 15; !jflPlSSs i*6 .grape-t Ml/FRUIT® 2fiMKs29e nineteen THE PCftFHAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1901 TriestoRecqw i In 1948, the Red .Chinese had 470 million people and 271 million acres of arable land. Today they have an estimated TOO million people and only 261 million acres of BY JOHN STROHM MACAO (NEA) — there have been charges that Red China's government wanted to starve off millions of her people so that there would be fewer mouths to feed. But.this year Peiping already has spent $900 million ol its shrunken treasury to buy about 5.7 million tons of foreign wheat, flour and other grains. This food, primarily from Australia and Canada, will' provide 25 million persons with 2,600 calories a day for'a year. Without! this food, 10 to 20 million Chinese tejfh* , iMffl*' ■*?*: Deep as China’s trouble was early this year, it promises to be Worse this winter because of another bad crop m '61, and a sus- They'U need half a billion dollars in cash or qredit to pay fOr this grain—-plus another $125 million that remains unpaid for this year’s purchases. / SEEK EASIER CREDIT ^ , Red Chinese have heen in Canada dhd Australia trying to get easier credit terms. Also, gold and silver -bullion is being sold in London to finance these purchases. It probably came from old coin hoards confiscated from pi))rderieii-.Ji>ndk>nd«. awil Mqtririat-ed businessmen in the early days of the revolution. ' MISMANAGEMENT. Bureaucrats Wasted manpower on such silly practices as “plowing 10 feet deep’’ to outshine another com- flue. Far East- The Red riders already are, taking steps to meet the crisis. ^,... "“FTHfT'ilKy’je negotiating with Australia and Canada for another Sly to eight million tons of wheat tor delivery starting InJanuary. That will keep 30 million persons alive for a yean*-# million thing about the agricultural commune except the name. (They might have gotten rid of Oat If Khrushchev had not ridiculed Mae’* masterpiece in a scathing speech at Warsaw in which he gave four raisons why the. communes were sure to fail. I (The Chinese press responded with -a stinging four-point editorial Citing the same reasons why the communes would sinceed. Khrush-J ehev’s round.) 'I MOTHER’S STORY—“They told me I had to go to the fields the day after I had my baby if I wanted m^rpgylgr.iflod ygfffMM ” Thrift ‘wnrker gave birth to her bhlld. A week later she fled the mainland. . . The Great Step Backward—the Chinese double talk explanation —goes like this: After forcing the peasants intoj communes (2,000 to 10,000 persons) on the grounds that they would have more efficient utilisation of | manpower, the authority has been given back to the production team (usually 10 or 20 families)—for the| same reasons. ★ private garden plots, abolished under the commune system, because “the commune can make wiser Use of land and labor resources,” are now given’ back to the peasants with the explanation they “will produce food.” RETURN PIGR Pigs, which the communes tried! to raise in large collective herds, because there would be “better | management, less disease, mope, RrpdueJlon,” jjreqncg., returned to ’private ~ I That’s because the J’peasftauudflJ 4 take better care o? them, will have jless disease problems, and will MdeiM*' occupations, which were discouraged on the grounds they smacked of “capitalism ” Me now encouraged because it to good t* have ’‘little freedoms within the large collective.” But what whnt sour—'why is food so short?. Why was the Great Step I Backward necessary? There were several reasons: WEATHER. Disastrous droughts in various sections cut yields three years in a tow. ' "'Vv dr One qualified observer thinks floods destroyed 60 per cent of the amateurishly engineered irrigation structures. (Three years ago, I saw millions of Chinese “volunteers” wt work on these jerry-built dams, carrying baskets of dirt or shoulder poles.) LACK OF INCENTIVE. The peasants’ land, their pigs, their private garden plots were taken froth them. Although the communes promised to pay peasants wages based on performance, none i of the commune workers I talked with had received anything except jtheir food and cloth rations for the past three years of labor. The Communist edict “He who does' not work does not eat!" keeps the sullen peasants at work In the rice fields. I talked with a mother holding a tiny , 3-week-old baby, who oald: “They told me I had to go to the fields the day after I had my baby if I wanted my regular j breaking crop yields to 1961 was consensus, as j measure M. The application of 110 pounds of J^NiBslI view .w a top -American *** .. .. ‘The Chine*! rulers show sign* China, according to the b*M vstl-iy^y arc not going to be as stupid mates, had only 15 pounds of Lp,^ themselves out of this chemical fertiliser pet acre.. mess, ■ as they were' getting.. too : For 2,not years the Chinese it." , ■ ^ 'V'1, • have used manure to replenish / —r?“ ' . » their field*. Rut Communist'j (Next: Will Peiping Start a, hureaswfaey fsrbade'peasants to jWyrfj1; raise private Mgs_.mil chickens. j Result: M per eoot less manure. /, .. ni______ tt» ormmp Bjok-rt i. . 1 emt-d”by thT’c.reat E^a^Jonflniw^ ward. Is this enough to maintain Uay that eight advanced T28 flght-the Communists in power, or is er-bomber trainers and tour Ctf there the possibility of an over- transports have been assigned to throw? South Viet Nam under tor U.S, Practically no chanee of unseat- | Air Force program to boUd up ing the Communists to the toe* the aerial strength of this Comoro-sm»oh)a future is the informedinist-menaced nation. - mfiSi about the tractors they going to get from Soviet and Chinese factories that the peasants stopped raising draft anlmals-4>ut they ended up pulling the plows themselves. INDUSTRAIJZATION DRIVE. The headlong attempt to become! a 20th Century industrial power OVittlight led to a tremendous diversion of manpower and. materials that dislocated agriculture. For example: • “We lost some of our rice uT the fields, because’ at harvest time our commune cadres hail a campaign on to build 1,000 small steel fttrnaees and we went four days without sleep to do the job.” This backward steel campaign _ • .led to great losses of materials FORGET HUNGER — Refugee arKj |abor, fouled up tranxporte-children stand in the productive tion amj netted nothing, grain Held their father now cul- | FERTILIZER SHORTAGE. One J tivates in Hong Kong. jbig reason for America’s recordie ooooeooooeeeeoooi wurriac wASti NEWSPAPERS WANTED /HIGHEST PRICES PAID WE PICK IJJP CHURCHES and SCHOOLS FE 2-0209 Announcing a brand-new “Mother-Baby” Guarantee on Heinz Baby Foods! MOTHER*.• you must prefer Heinz exclusive new safety-seal screw-on caps BABY.. * must jficiu the better-tasting Heinz Baby Foods under these caps ...or your money back! Over 1$0 Better-Tatting • Strained and Junior tmeh-tempting fabrics! many Orion* pile lined! misses’ and junior pernes? j. j ll* V* Hh-y I ovory night — ’til 9:30 N Cv M7 WINTER IY00 What a collection of coats! Every popular new silhouette Including button fronts, flares, cowl collars novelty sleeves and many, many more! Spectacular Paris accented fabrics including polished blacks, nobby tweeds, plashes, Novelties! Spme with warm Orion* acrylic'pile livings, others warmly interlined! Winter cdlots. Misses Izes 8-18. Juni^ petit^s 5-11. USE Dim CONVENIENT LAYAWAY FLAN... NO EXTRA CHARGE ' V IN PONTIAC 200 NORTH SAGINAW STREET BOTH STORES OPEtf SUNDAY 124 P.M. PLENTY of/FREE PARKING IN CLARKSTON-WATERFORD 0460 DIXIE HIGHWAY ■f-r I S|| | pi | §gj| p| mu ||| • V: 1'HE PONTIAC PRESS.' THURSDAY, NOVEMBKH la, l»»l ‘HANG’ OFFIOIAliS—Opponents of a Senate^ bill to establish a national recreation area In the Sleeping Bear Dunea region demonstrated their displeasure by hanging effigies of Interior Seqertary UdaU and Michigan Senators Hart and McNamara at Traverse Qty where a Senate subcommittee held a meeting Monday. Hart and McNamara are cosponsors of the bill and Udall recommended the proposed area be expanded. Plan N-Blast on Quake Belt Judge Charged \With Misuse oi Funds Retires FtTNT "W" — Genesee bounty AEC Aims at Improving wu,,am E Doran- Methods of Detecting Foreign Explosions CARSON CITY. Nev. W* - The Atomic Energy Commission may explode a five-kiloton nuclear bomb underground on a Northern Nevada earthquake belt next year, Gov. Grant Sawyer of Nevada •aid Wednesday. Sawyer said an AEC delegation from the Southern Nevada test ndte -toid -him the purfidse' of the test in a program called "vela Uniterm’.* Is to improve methods 'who last September was charged by the state auditor general's office with misusing court funds, Wednesday said he had submitted a letter of resignation to Gov. Swainson, effective Jan. 15, 1962. . In his letter of resignation, Doran, 60, said ‘‘Having served for over 20 years in th« Juvenile division (of Probate Court) and having reached retirement age 1 am now desirous of spending the remaining years of my lifetime free from egae»ritr R'i‘«t<*w* *1l,r f ■The etate-auditor1 genmirk of-]' rrf detecting and identifying atomic If ice said last September that explosions by other nations tor use audit of Genesee County Juvenile in an international control system. I Court records showed Doran had Hie proposed test site is . in;used court funds lo cash $540 in The chronic earthquake region, about five miles west of U.8. SO in the northern Sand Springs personal checks, some of which had been returned because of Insufficient funds, and had also taken $1,619.17 from the court cash register, leaving his personal range, Is required by technical !*®V8' ■ . „ ... „ criteria, the AFX! officials told s 0,fl(T full reimbursement was made last May 9. A State Supreme Court study of the case was ordered. Sawyer. The seismic test would be touched oft deep Underground in rock strata. The AEC said the test would not be conducted unless there Is full assurance of public safety. Further exploration and site pro-! paration will take about 28 weeks, I the AEC said, and is expected to I VIENNA. Austria (AP) — The cost $500,000. | Soviet Union today appointed Al- ———..........**• iexander 1. Alexandrov to replace Diplomat Appointed to Replace Molotov TAIPEI, Formosa Uf>—National-. 1st China and the Uniied Slates1 Agency. Wednesday exchanged notes in-. This was■ ai creasing to $33.15 million an agree-location hat Molotov ment for purchase of US. farm «*rn to Vlen"“;. Hp ^s.f°^ 1 'IAEA representative until his de- •*** ’ .......... -Inundation by Soviet Premier I Khrushchev at the Moscow Communist party congress. He re-turtl^ci to Moscow Sunday The Soviets told the agency | I Alexandrov would head the Soviet mission for the time being. He lhad been Molotov’s deputy since 'July 1960. FLASH . . . SEE CAMERA MART Ad TODAY—Page 20 t me GUIDE FOR FALL! CONN'S BOYS'-MEN'S WEAR SALE JACKET — COAT SALE Boys'. . $3.95 to $10.95 Mon's .. $7.95 to $19.95 Deep Pile Lined at Low, Low Prices “V SWEATER SPECIALS Coot Styles $4.95-$9.95 Hi-Vs $5.95 and Up Argyll Sweaters. . $6.95 SUIT aid TOPCOAT SALE Smartest New Styling Buy Now and Save TOPCOATS Tweeds, Plaids, Wools $24.95 to $39.95 Reunion. Longa. Shorn SUITS WonteSi, Vests, Plannels, Geba SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! . . $24.95 end Up Worsteds ... $29.95 and Up Dbl. Breasteds $34.95 and Up WE RENT TUXEDOS—REASONABLY Security Charge Accounts Honored CLOTHES 71 N. Saginaw CAMERA MART 3 TURKEYS GIVBI AWAY FREE .v 8mm MOVIE PROJECTORS KEYSTONE Brand Hew 30% OFF (2) Dejwr Amb.swdor —P810—Was ‘159" NOW ■99" 500 Watt 8mm Projector with Deluxe Case ... • *6995 ———— S—T* 1 35mm SLIDE PROJECTOR was NOW Stock, BELL & HOWELL CAMERAS WAS NOW IN STOCK Airequipt 77 $1 1 9.95-$79.87 (10) . . $169.95 $118.67 (4) Airequipt 33 ... . $ 59.95-$41.90 ( 3) Model 245 Auto. Load . . $109.95 $ 88.50 (5) Sawyers 500 R . . . . . $ 99.95- $71.88 ( 5) Model 475 Wireless Remote . . . . . only $299.95 (2) Realist 990 Auto . $ 89.50 — $54.50 ( 3) Argus 545 . $ 59.97 — $47.89 ( 3) | SHOP NOW-SAVE-LAYAWAY-5 HOUR SALE MANSFIELD ELECTRIC-EYE CAMERA KIT 3 TURRIT ELECTRIC EYE CAMERA yVas $119.45 8mm PROJECTOR • SPLICER $0095 REEL and CAN • FILM NOW W Only 3 Kit* is Stock! SLIDE PROJECTOR TRAYS I1IW(III1W I SAWYER AIREQUIPT EASY EDIT tt.25 $139 I WW‘ W Va,u' 1 TRAYS 99° MANSFIELD-(18 in Stock) ACTION EDITOR 40$ Capacity With Fa* 334.95 Splicer and Cement NOW $14.95 HURRYI SUPPLY /!$ LlMlTEDI ZOOM ELECTRIC EYE CAMERAS 3 LENS TURRET ELECTRIC-EYE CAMERAS YASHICA U-MATIC Auto.Zoom Reflex fl .8 (Only 5 In Stock) 1137.90 Value *99“ BILL & HOWELL V49.95 Val,„ Power Zoom 414PD •184“ (5 in Stock) RONDO-3 LENS Turret llectrie-Eye fl .8 $89.95 Value *69” Shop at the CAMERA MART and SAVE! Charge It! 90 Days Same as Cash! NEW BELL & HOWELL REFLEX 8mm ZOOM CAMERA Exrmhm at CAMERA MART SEKONIC ELECTRIC EYE Fl .9—Complete With Case (Just 5 in Stock) S *69" i DeJUR ELECTRA I Fully Automatic I i • (3 In Stock) M245* L ’ 2 Lens Turret (Only 1) $109.95 $0088 Valuo 09 3 Lent Turret (Only 1 In Stock) %22*89" 3 Turret Magazine *49“ FILM SPECIALS 35mm ELECTRIC EYE CAMERAS Ansco 3 Pock 83* 620-127 , ASHICA L.YNX SAMOCA EE 1 000 Sec. Fl .8 1 I «»/»«<• 300 Sec. F2.8 ‘Wf.W I „l<, „ith Cote SQ085 Fully auto. 79 RADIANT SCREENS $2en 40x40 SCREENMASTER Lenticular- $3 • Np Mon ay Dow CHARGE IT!' SHFVd Lay-Away AH Yiar A Small Deposit WiU Hold Any Article Until Wanted! ■stmszz. '****4. W FNS>» ‘SPOOKS ipiTf ° m Tim OFFERr 25 NORTH SAGINAW STREET THE jPONTAAC PKKSS. iritH>SUA^ > XOVfe>imH hi. i\\ivVt^u>\4 T \Ijat&Husband& $5 Million for Primary Highways ROBERT JS, PERK1N8 WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP ^sjpni^'Robert N, Perkins, U.S. ... !, formerly of White Like Tqwnship, died Monday in Porte* nteuth Naval Hospital, Norfolk, VE. after a two-month illness. Mia body i« at the Pursley Funeral Home. Pontiac. id^aMtSfi Wourit$ Lays OuiJ962T(^dW^fk ■ LONDON r. Ki(?rl*nd Is presently associated with Mayo CSinic. Minnesota, and the graduate school ot the University ot Minnesota as professor of dermatology. Birmingham Country Club by Dr. Mark B. Coventry, professor of orthopedic surgery at the University ot Minnesota and Mayo Clinic. All of the 47 miles of primary roads to be improved next pear are included in the throe-year, fU-mlltem construction program toe commission will undergo to tie in the county roads to the State Highway Department's freeway construction in Oakland County. One such project will be to widen Southfield Road to five lanes from one-quarter mile north of Northwestern Highway to 13 Mile Road. This $986,000 — the largest, so far as coats, in toe 1962 program — Other officers chosen arc: Two vlee president*: Clifford C. Huntoon of MM Pontiac Lake Road. Waterford Township, and Andrew D. gtlmer of 1*47 Woodland, West Bloomfield Township; secretary, James Templeton of 91 Spokane, Pontine Township; William R, Diltiselth of 11*4 Crooks Road. Avon Town- died Wednesday. “Noting thpt some form of aepe; slfects most children at puberty, he said,'that, aside from controlling acne itself, medical aid can (then help keep down psychological ejects such as an inferiority ptex. TAKE IT SERIOUSLY "‘‘Many young boys will t« case of actie so seriously that tgey'U refuse to go to danoia participate in other social actibi-ties," he said. “At the same time they neglect going to a doctor for help." “While treatment of acne can- keep It under control, prevent . ■earring, keep down the Incidence of Mnohhenda i 2-Acne is the result, he said, of internal glandular changes at a tain age which In turn results in .. more oily - skin, leading to black heads, pimples, and, If not treated, tgr scars or deep lumps. rTreatment depends on the Indl-vjdual doctor, he said. However t*re are ways In which the pa-tfent can help. He can wash, his !|ce frequently to remove oil and agio shampoo the head. iKay be prescribed *An acne lotion may be bribed by the doctor, according tft the case. Whether or not there (g; a diet advisable, Dr. Kierland Mid, depends on a patient's ex-pirience and the doctor's decision. *t» certain types,” - -athe doctor may also decide ipse hot paoho, antlblottco or * * * ' s and drainage." » addresses were also . n the afternoon at the Nunes' Rome Auditorium, was delivered h(r Dr. John Stirling Meyer, chief Hoffman’s Will Process and Cut Up Your Deer foi HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS Thatcher said Modess <%tlfeaficdevi 45 12 s installation wtl be at 6:30 p.m., Dec. 6 at the Edgewood Country Club. Elected to the board of directors tor a two-year term were: Lester R. Stanley of 2290 Rosewood, Waterford Township; Dr. Harold L. Blenenfeld of 173 Oneida Road. Pontiac, and James F. Davis of 2369 Walnut, Pontiac Township. regular SUPER VEE-FORM SACINAW STRUT i FrU»r IlM »* •< NORTH I . Thurrfaj N EISNERS LOOK! SI OO Lavish Fur-Adorned TRIM Down COATS Faihten applaud* tor aitoundinp roving*. Junior tlui, ml*ro*‘ Repeat of Sellout! Actual $59 NOTHING DOWN SAMPLE COATS or '500 a Month No Monty Down Ficluiiva ttyl« t Sopor luotrooa Um Um Digsifisd ENQ0ASS Credit Ptisl Daa-Lan Car Coat* $19 Racoon Trim Coat. $39 Genuine Cashmere $59 Open Monday and JFriday Evenings Until 9 o'Clock ^ y ^ y tHE PONTIAC PRESS,’’fl h ( / 1 ,t*.'7 r;i7X' 116,1981 I . jj _ A, v,,,,.||||||g|| ok Clearly States Women’s Dilemmas, Should ' %-A W n. mm little quirk In the to. sfinriMdMmd by 2to 2m Gat Marilyn Monroe, and 99 out of «^B|r' IkVf ^ * After a chilling aearion art tat bo* called ‘ilia Trouble Womfin ft Men” however, I admit be lured Into veadtof Jt is apt to take his wife's place on the psp-Ottattfst's couch nagged fey Us t v::: ' Che w«tny certain, reading NDas Roe's appraisal of her particular problem should help every woman to new respect for herself. m«IIm that her patte- The book, written by top reporter and recently retired AP Wom-ais'a EcBfor Dorothy Roe. states so dearly the multiple dilemmas of swan RhiUp Wylie, if he vend it, nrigbl fit e few of Ue qpider words, hi fact, any man who could roost, because men are afraid they < wUl lose this ruling role, anc ful that men will be toppled from " of themwjjves. man/’ observes the an* ’ valid; to be all thlaga to all Once she realizes that thia i» Impossible—and that the male sex li perveraely averse to female perfection anyway — She should be emotionally and physically relieved of the national female, burden: a oruhint-toad guilt.. VWijr 1S> women f«ll they must be ail things to all men? Because traditionally men have fried the UF Campaign Officials Release List oi Donors Although the drive ended Friday, officials of the Pontiac Area United Fund today retpassd lists of more contributors of pOO or more, Including donations from the ployes of the right major r factoring plants In file city. ... They are: >r Employ... .. »14*,01t.»» (Mdwm Motor* Truck * «»S.......................,*SM Baldwin MMiav BaiowHA jKWMr smpipjMB asac’jKKi'rff::. .Hw luahlne UtnnlnvAAa . 'll gs^acser... Mlchif.n Bell Telephone Co. 4.SMM -jras/fe-.... Otboljc^SMlol SorvlcM vsusr^ZZ2 Mr. Mto.il rwiwy BMW nvs|Mvw« PM^^Swr.i noipitii Stf^2»pf*Mer«y Ho.pit.1 iiatowii*'! «3to, 4.SO0.W 4,171.M S.HS.W John Hubert, M.D. lie * Jr RjMiS&iiii7 j. C. manor .1......... Cttttie$l9$8i a iuppiy *mp. —tt Tr»n*port .,. P Employ... .. . limw; t|ui»i»«M,,'MM4, Krojpr Company fmpioyw* ... Harry Rim, M O. .................. Wortter Clinical ButMUlf . Mobil Oil Employees -------------- Pontiac UtUr Shop ffnrl*j7** iYii tjlii‘iihii." 'i -•**- tatlmai Cash Rcalscor ■we ,w -lOowntown I . •.. ■ tfmw Ot Ssip. tt*. Miltab uf. I-------- (e Employees . muss owrt Bank (Dnytto) ............ Bolce Builder* Supply BOIP-Mitchell TypawrUar .... ?£££ ttyMpDurnltur.- Butt^Stora^p... M^a^fmTyltaployefi . ,..t Milk DM Mn Uion nuip Fed«rul s» Tom a jiwin . • ..... ..AtBB mmmm- m.o. .. • • Pontiao community finone ana Community loan ... • Ralph Wlssnt. M,D, .. • • • Stria Santoadtklnr Co.. tn Family Barrios Employees . gjBtmm FLASH ... SEE CAMERA MART Ad TODAY—Pans 20 Transamsrloan Frslght .. Trucking Employsaa . scouts Employ... ... YMCA Employ*.^ .......... ■1 Scouts Employ irSSJl Otlbart Hague, M.D. . Edward Eldar. Jr., M.D. fe Ja’-l w CIT Corp iuultable Life 100.00 58 100.00 100.00 dr a coouni •lntlna Co. .. ,_____ „jp. Mlf. .. N, F. (lehrlnacr. M.D. John Kemp, M.D........... Dean Brothers ........... Raymond Oafllardl, M.D Donaldson Lumbar Co. moo Hubbard ............. Mapla List Dairy Co........ i Sanford ............ Harris ............... —I Rsalty ............ (Drayton Plains) . Realty Employee* 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 Winter Winds Spark Summer Sandal Sale MOSCOW Ift—Now thnt ley Mm Soviet Union some shops have ‘ begun selling summer sandals, the youth newspaper to keep 1 and use evettywtleln her o DIEM'S PONTIAC'S POPULAR SHOI STORI 87 North Saginaw Stioot Owm Monday and Friday Until 9 P. M. fiee ParidBf Ib Is? tomtom tsMag M L1 "She iikes it that wsy.' From birth, American females apologize to, work for, and butter up whatever merr-they—esa Jay their wiles on. And men resent these attentions, even as they permit them, because they’re convinced they are bring fattened for the kill. Everybody feels a guilty, efittle resentful. It's a curious wcrM.made up of" vexed men and perplexed wom- courteous, but lltle up to what , children have been told by thrir After they’ve road this book, the ’It’s vital,” arid Col. John Ford, ‘that Santa Claus be exemplary. "We insist that he be not only ‘Santa must avotd.gariic and onions. He must be as Jolly as pos-te, without disturbing the peace. We insist tmlBs imap.^----------- # ,♦ fi fids was a pretty shabby way (exemplary indeed!) to speak to me. But Tm not Santo C»us. And neither, really, are the 2,000 men Colonel Ford is giving order* to. ;/ He Is national field eeewtoky of ihe Volunteers of Anawtoa and Like two years ago. A Santo-It kideed to the shins by a kid shoito . ing, "That's for not bringing nis What you promised tost year.” ... it* Colonel FOrd emphasizes he li laying down rules only to save hU If I were Santo Gaus, I’d think < Juries! Barnetts Hurrv! Last 3 DayM I Barnett’s Phenomenal ARCHIE IARNITT ANNIVERSARY SALE T hafsAll - Just 3 Days to Get In on These Big Sayingsl Don't Miss the Boat! Get Yours NowlShop Friday, Saturday o Monday Right Up 'til AM. ATTENTION, Give Him a NEW SUIT or COAT FOR CHRISTMAS If hn has bought hit clothit hero during the past 5 year* ... We Have His Measurements! YOUXAN ^HARGE IT OR USB OUR UY-AWAY PUN Look! Warm, Quilted-Lined CORDUROY JACKETS Specially Priced at blsck. They’re smart and serviceable, keep you warm at toait In tha coldest weather. Famous Jockey $3.95 Thermal Knit Underwear Sine* 34 to 48 Extra Special! SI 98 Snow - - Haiti or Shine - - Plan to Get Down Tomorrow! Bring the Whole Family to Help You Choose From This Tremendous Selection of. Fall and Winters Smartest Fine Wool SUITS 1—AM Year-RoumhWeights^ Come early for this onn! Here are brand new suits from America's - outstanding rooJto.r%"—pric«d sb low you'll hardly believe your iyesl A wide selection of new styles and colors. ‘43 75 Wool Sharkskin Suits Fine Tweed Topcoats You'll never have a better opportunity to save extra dollars on fine quality clothing! Suits of top quality, Sharkskins and imported worsteds. Coats are luxury Saxonies and imported tweeds! All reduced with handsome savings! Be sure to see them tomorrow or Saturday. $ 48 75 Lookl Famom Botany All WOOL PULL-OVER Sweaters Extra Special! BITTER GRADE Warm, Quilted Lined VINYL JAOKETS 3 Smort. Colors ANNIVERSARY PRICE •151 Fine Custom Tailored Suits Imported Fabric Topcoats Fabrics from the finest mills, crafted by the finest makers! Beautiful tailored models that were made to sell for much more . . . in a huge selection . . . deliberately under-priced for this event! Another Great Value! Join the Smart Buyers — Get In Early! LOOK I 170 USD FINISH ALL WOOL SHARKSKIN TWO-PANT SUITS All year 'round weights. Choice colors, all sixes— regulars, longs, shorts and stouts. We Repeatl Let Nothing Keep You Away! Don’t Be Sorry You Misted Chit on These GRAND SAVINGS! It’s Worth the Drive From Anywhere! Open Friday and Monday Nights 'til 9 PJA*\ 150 NORTH SAGINAW THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER lg, 1961 T\^EKT¥>THIPIE' 5.99 Value DAMASK TABLECLOTH SETS * 60x90 dinner table (Is* am mWk Jhem * Fine quality Damask N^M U i table cloth with 8 matching Ip |W w I • Perfect quality washable cotton • Assorted colors • Twin and full size e 24x36 MEN'S WORK ARCTICS iBuckh KOREAN BOY'S and MEN'S ZIPPER $og9 BOMS *3W MEN'S 6" WORK SHOES THERMO BOOR Admiral Clock Radio SNOW BOOTS Decorator DRAW DRAPES $199 FOAM BACK THROW RUGS IlfiPIfi™ ALUMINUM BaseMNt Window STORM SASH / $^22 # Install* easily e Fin# meets alu* PYrax 9” / FIE HATE a A famous _ make at the HI IIQ low Yankee mlnum screen included a Keeps out drafts in winter e Cools In summer 2 Ft. Wooden STEPLADDER Porcelain Enamel Oval Roaster mor* gravy • nr»- UKUMB DUST MOPS wood handle • Cot* ton yarn head * Portal colon Juno 8 Day WALL CLOCK $088 e 36' diameter e Brqps finish spokes • 6" dial whh raised -numeral* * A beautiful decorator wall piece. Portable HAND MIXER hand mixer • Super power Oyee Torque motor . e 3 speed switch e Automatic beater adjuster PERRY at MONTCALM STORE ONLY SNOW TIRES SUBURBANITE AND Town & County TYPE NU-TREADS 14” SIZES 7.60-15,8.20-13 SIZES 12.97 NO TRADE NECESSARY • FED. TAX INCLUDED 100% PERFECT CASINGS • Grade "A" cold rubber • Burned long wearing tread In famous Goodyear "Suburbanite'' • Mu» tread or Flreitone • "Town and Country" FULL ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEED f ^W&m *‘ ‘IrWW1 #ac/io Messages Illustrate the Tragedy ofBerlin friends — spring sharply allvej when the cool jazz cuts out and a massage leaps the Iron Curtain! {here. ' ’’fctother, you should not cry;” it j said. ! It was the final farewell of a! birthday party that could have! happened perhaps only In Berlin.! I A recording of a song.;titled.' 'I’ll Com Back" is followed j iy the reasKuranees that a West | Berlin man sdll lovci continue to love his fiancee wjwi—Tha-»h In East Berlin. All this is “ aired on a populsr disc Jockey program* Sons and daughters in West BeK -i Un send birthday greetings 4o ! mothers in Eastern Germany. Two West Berlin boyssendtheir a love with a record request to two g East Berlin girls they have not j, seen since the Communists sealed u the city’s East-West border Aug, \ Germany are"' broadcast' from Went Berlin radio stations which Soviet Premier Nikita i, Khrushchev has saM he wants st< lenced. Urn stark simplicity of a Helga airing a message to her parents in the East, an Alfred repeating bis love for Gertat and a Klara and Willie sending birthday greetings to their 76-year-old Mother strikes too dose to the heart strings of "I love the moon, the sun and|too many persons the Communists the stars,” the singer croons. ,dian identified only by his first name broadcast a re-affirmation Of love and fidelity for a girt living in the East, even though they, separated by several thousand miles — and the drab, gray Berlin Wall. r „ ... The broadcasts carrying the messages are transmitted by the “radio In the American sector” and “Radio Free Berlin,'’ two Berlin stations Khrushchev wants throttled on grounds they broadcast “propaganda” and Mata West German his absent fiafcc* and the record of “Their SongT he asked to be broadcast seem too intimate to be anything but truth. Recently a woman journeyed 15 miles from East Germany to celebrate her goth birthday in Berlin, pi SEPARATED BY CANAL | Her son and daughter-in-law who | li ve “in West Berlin aliw completed plans to attend. They bought the bid lady a pot of Alpine if was held on the Berlin Best-West border -* sou and daughter-' in-law! able' 'eddy." ta^lta-at - tt* . mother across the broad stretch of a border canal. - • * When die candles had burned to nothing, tite couple lift their violets and wreath on the canal** western bank and waved farewell, , They went home and drafted the message later transmitted by "Rai AP muhi Si stock GOES VP — Flatcar of * Reading Railroad freight brain stands upright after .the 10-car three-engine train hit an open ewitch and derailed in Edison, N.J. Pour train, men wire hurt In the crash. 33 Drivers Lose State Licenses County Residents Either: \ Have Permits Revoked or Suspended Census Bureau Releases t/.S. Divorce Figures WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Census Bureau reported Wednesday that 3.1 per cent of American men and 2.8 per cent of women are divorced persons who hav< not remarried. No figures were available or licensee of 33. Oakland: divorced persons who had remar torists were hither sub- ried. ^ of divorced men anil women of any state — 6.1 per j cent and #.# per cent, respectively. California was third in divorced men (3.7 per’cent) and second in divorced women (S.1 per cent. South Carolina had the lowest Ratio of divorcees among its women. 1 per cent. It 1.3 per cent ratio for divorced men was topped only by North Dakota's 1.2 per cent. NOW A THp YANKH TOY ah GIFT CENTER In DRSYTOH RUINS | NOW AT 4108-12 WALTON BLVP. JUST EAST OF SASHABAW Ordered to prove financial responsibility following one or more convictions of\ drunken driving ^Donald bam: Raymond St.. Rayai Oak: bow rrau DtnwHi st., rsrmlntton. Unsatisfactory driving records resulted In the loss of licenses for the following: .jrstji ¥■&.:? fsv't/4 toiT iH Stalwart at., Troy: Robert L. “trdasll n in B. Kenwood 8t, Royal ak; Thoma* O. JMIanlck. ifOOO W. Nine “---, SwU)tTeld: Thomas 8.-------- Sr'oirtOTd'RtMdTpTeaiiant KidceT William *er, 1143 Monrovia at.. Waterford^ “— XANSTNG Oft—The number of cars was up but weight tax reve-down in the vehicle 11-"RoVai Oaic; and frank x. wyaooki, cense plate year that ended Oct. M34l iootten St., rarmtofton. |31 sectary of Stale James M. Ordered to show financial respon- Hare reported today. Auto Registrations Increase in State registrations moved up from 3,705,222 a year ago to 3,756,940 at the end of last month, Hare said. In the same period, license tab H, -A,,.. Berkiay: income dropped from $67,174,000 Donald ' f. CJoutlar, Wf" Inman I to $66,857,000. Frrndalc: and John. w. Xllyton, 1683 _ .. . woodward H»i»hu li»d., farndaia. | The decline reflects the incl sibility due to unsatisfied' financial judgment were: Lint* HMidoraon, 8* Branch St. fos- Bt., Waterford Townamp: Joaaph M. ------- 117) Franklin A**.. Berkley: - —outier, MSB toman st., John W. KUyaon. 1683 pita Bird., farndaia. Ordered off the roads for viola-ling impact of the compact car tton of license restrictions or tor j the auto sales market, Hare said, unsatisfactory driving records 'r were: 'MountainTuna in Big City Robert W. Ooora, 81141 Sprlnabrook i | ztTvt q|»*KS|ft%i»B,”8*801 oak: and Wlien his role in a recent', Gun-iiTtU oaan whit*, it Sheridan Av»-'Rtnoke episode (Saturday*, 10-1 ! 11 o m. (2) called tor a song, John! Failure to appear for renexam-i D^hner came up with an authentic ination caused the following drivers We8" vtL|nla mountain tune to lose their licenses: taU(fht t0 him as a small boy by his father, who had learned it from his father. The song’s title has the years. Ava* P S. mat wen., ft Itllt Pond Rida, Avery A. She pin map a. e*»™, w* Pontiac: Dannie Lot _ - ™— tUc: Charles P. Jonei. load, Farmington: and 36TS6 York flt. Royal Losing his license because ol lysical reasons was Willis B. aiding. 384 Predmore Road, Oak-nd Township. One out of every five people working in Canada depends on export trade tor his livelihood. SHELLS ond Equipment 20 GAUGE SLUGS, 7* SUPER X 30-40 Krat $098 Reg. $4 75 X REMINGTON 32 WINCHESTER Special $098 Reg. $1.85 *Z WINCHESTER 8m/m MAUSER Reg. $475 *298 WINCHESTER 25-15 $069 Reg. $1.70 ■£.___ PETERS 250 Savage $079 Reg. $4.00 X FAY-BARKER HARDWARE 79 Spilth Saginaw Street We Giro If olden /to d ftompd s FLASH . . . SEE CAMERA MART Ad TODAY—Page 20 410 GAUGE SLUGS 5* PIN ON CHROME PLATED COAT COMPASS THERMO SOCKS 95* p* PI ML'A : 2 i&a r^riAvP(BarttAe PRESS, lW*” rTTO^T lonn#ayfSend Trring' Envoy Baclr to Moscow ?* TTBS^''t§®£iit (AP) — Hans Knoll, ambassador to Moscow rep sjBfr* established that Kroll was limo-M cent-fat:- any connection With press! | ____ m from Moscow saying the Russians had made new pro- ^j, Uprman Tllfflfll posals for solving the Berlin cri-jvll l/vllllQII lIllvUl ehJfhete had’been some reports) • ■«-»• "-^ataj_»smen] ~' MOSCOW:UP— The- 9mM Up-about the Soviet proposal. | ton wanted FtnJand today it con- Vessel Rescues Child Believed rimanded by Chancellor Konrad _ . _ . .* Adenauer lor making unauthor- Rat Traps Housewife .picked -female child .with} for®! the' foliation Space'IPrtter* blonde hair and brown eyes from a!Association. "*"7“ Ismail white raft about 13b mUesj „ . northeast of Miami, . Vrrr>hi Cf..».>:.^Ml-^-qPhe--Teport sffld fHe Hliiwii-wuirryvi ;suffering from shock and exposure.!Agency (FAA) i ,.,0,. kt j - jtering'the SST program, nor with MIAMI ha MB tent merrhrmmiiieiTap- : William Lttttowood. vfcrnprestrfaay summoned all state agency Iftngty the Americans Mfi-aboml-Tiw-fanrilyTiOT lenrinna demanded jfeh. Thee en mute toHourion, fo*, m charge of equipment re--directors and chairmen of state i.UtfiffiilK" _________ „...-~-lhe~*'i»«rtervn»«^ that could not wait-tor | *«• , search tor American Airlines. | boards and ^mmiwions to a meet- ; a summer vote. ’ 1 The message said the vessel hadimade the charge in * speech tw ing Nov. 27 on civil rights,, The sources i it has been!recent tests indicate. CONGO TROUBLE SPOTS—Underlined are today’s trouble spots in the Congo. At Hindu. Kivu provincial town north of YMKEES HEW SURE secessionist Katanga province, more than 2%0 Congo government troops were reported by the U.N. command to have revolted against central government authority Wednesday. At Albertville, in Northern Katanga, the U.N. said, nearly 100 Congolese. soldiers entered the city Tuesday where they arrested Europeans _ and Afrieeh") ei*°c|ad w * »oh tried to exttnrt money from passers-by. Slate First Hearing Park Pledges ■ hnwm-^yjy, LANSING (dt-The first public hearing on the controversial issue j of legislative reapportionment was scheduled for Nov. 28 by a constitutional convention committee | today after a partisan wrangle i over where hearings should be! South Korean Leader Says U.S. Economic Aid Won't Be Thrown Away i WASHINGTON Gen. Chung-heW- Hee Park, South Korea’s revolu- A proposal calling for bear- I tionary leader, pledged today that Ings in Detroit, Film and other there will be no further waste of area, was defeated in an 1M !Uf .. . . .. ... ;under his military regime, vote which followed mainly along , it ir 1t Party j In a speech prepared for a Na- The committee, headed by Mich- tional Press Club luncheon he de-igan State University President! dared that as a fssult-otdhe May Joim-A7 4tennriir derided that'8H !1«"l1faiMn) c8up he led “We stand public hearings would be held in i stronger, more firmly on your side Lansing or East Lansing. Site |than ever before.” of the Nov. 28 night meeting will} „„ M(d Preg,dent Kennedy | be decided later. and Secretary of State Dean * * * i Rusk had expressed "new eon- Republicans opposed conducting | fldence’’ In South Korea. I hearings Ground the state on } Park gaid that Koreans do notj grounds that M would become a|,fke mUitary governments any I traveling side show, involving too!mflre (han AmericansMo(and that] much t\vnp• * i he was not here to vindicate any | -T———— ; military government, including his Tshombe Rejects ««• ' j “We shall prolong It no longer than Is absolutely necessary,” he said. ww sropt inm st. [ttMONTCAUll YOU CAN’T MISS JON THESE GRAND OPENING BUYS AT BOTH STORES [Of SOOTHJ SAGINAW OPEN DAILY TILL 10 P.M. SUN. 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. U.N. Report on Lumumba's Death ELISABETHVILLE, Katanga tf)j Trujillo Brothers ■ —President Moise Tshombe of Ka- [___---------------k.....-4-- tanga today described as "cran- Ppfiirn Vayc UonQrt pletely false” the report by the ■'villiIlf iwpvii j U.N. commission which invest!-1 ......._ _ .. 1 gated the death of former Congo CIUDAD TRUJILLO Dominican Premier Patrice Lumumba. Republic « - A report that two brothers of the late Generalissimo; Lumumba wa. killed - with |Rafael Trujillo have returned after! two of hi. followers — In Ka- L brief exlje hag ent|ed a period of! tanga lari January or February. !relative calm in this troubled! The Katanga government claimed Caribbean natioit. Villager, killed (hem after they A announcement by the escaped Jrom custody. I Vmce of Dominica Radio said that The U.N. report alleged that|Gens. Hector Trujillo and Jose Lumumba yyas murdered, possibly j Arizmendi Trujillo—who owns the in the presence jif Tshombe, and;8tatlon—arrived by special planej the actual' killing Involved two Wednesday. Belgians. . } \ government spokesman pro-j Tshombe denied all the points i fessed to have no knowledge of in the commission report. | their return. President Joaquin * if a -Balaguer announced Oct. 25 that! said “whv didn’t the com- hnd deParted ,n self-imposed I He said wny aiant me com ♦« nnnnstHnn de- mission come to Katanga and do their investigations , instead of staying in Geneva all the time? They couldn’t have got the truth that way. We could have told them just how he died.” exile, bowing to opposition de-| mands thpt the Trujillo family j clear out pending a reorganization of the government. Il Hor.hrlm D.al.i hr shoes U.S. Sends Note to Reds Urging N-Test Ban Talks Mlraals Mil. Sh.pplni Center S. Telefreph nt S«n»n Ink* *<• Open Dully IS A. M. te t f, M. RASH ... SEE CAMERA MART Ad TODAY—Pay 20 UNITED NATIONS (UPII — The United States left it to Rus-Isia today to accept a new, 20-nation negotiating committee to work out a disarmament agree-j ment by nuxt June. ........ Seizing Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin?* challenge to join in new talks, in an effort to draft a disarmament! treaty to a spfeoial session of the General assembly by June1 1982, j U,S Ambassador Adlal E. Steven-} ion sent the Russian Wednesday night a resolution calling for} resumed negotiations. The disarmament debate of the assembly’s main political com-: mlttee was in recess until Friday-morning. NOTIOE OF PUBLIC HEARINfi Th« tontine City Commission has achedulsd pubiic hearing for Tuesday, November 21,190, *t 8 p.m. EST.fn the Commission Chamber, City Hall, on Intention t« Construct the following improvement: Worm fleece lined. Hood and muff packet. Draw Urine hood. Assorted colon. Sizes 4 to IS. WATER MAW In Ml, Clomens Street from Bay Street to 21i|7 ft. east of the weet property Une of Lot^AP NO. 104. For further information see legal notice. Interested property-'owners are urged to, appear.' .... By 4fder of the City Commission Dated November 15, 1061. OLGA BERKELEY. City Clerk h smu. BOtsn HOLDS M UYAWH Double thickness, triple crotch. Heavy weight soft spun cotton. White only. Sizes 2-4-6. NOW 2 BIG STORES PERRY RD. at MONTCALM — 51 S. SAGINAW $T jMi ,.1l A 4- isei on a dainty white linen embroi- ♦fH •A table in various tones of oak,lea! brown was by Mrs. €. R. Gatley. Ousters of grapes duty to toe side of toe copper container filled with tawny gold chrysanthemums. Gourds and leaves were at the base. yf/1 ‘.t**" Miniature china pheasants in brilliant coloring added to the fall setting placed on- the net-table roverihf made by Mrs. E, Warren Gatley of Lahser Mrs. Gatley had appllqued a horn of plenty IHiied with V*;-' ■ By MARY ANGLEMIER “Holiday Table Settings” for various occasions tutd seasons throughout the- year were on display Wednesday after-noon at fhe ,tJb.i-Fd annual hol-____Majrtca sponsored by the Pontiac Branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden' Association. *• The festive affair was held in the auditoriumof the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland Building. AT TUB TEA TABLE Pouring at the tea table were National Extension Chairman Mrs. William McCallum of Birmingham, Mrs; \Walter K. Wiilman, Mrs. Dora Dawson, Miss Gfttrgia Hoyt, Mr*. Frederick L. Ward and Mrs. Edward M. Buckley. A . ,#>•. ."A A sm iljflg^opmfn^snowman WltlTguindrm eyes and a mouth of I i c orr 1 c e stood staunchly on holly leaves and berries at the Children’s Christmas (able designed . by Mr#. Robert’M- Glenn and Mrs. John H. Patterson. Popcorn bail# held red tapers. The cloth of Christmas ded was edged with white ball fringe. Pictures of Santa Claus were on (he paper plates and cups. Pouring at the holiday tea sponsored by the Pontiac Branch of Woman's Na- „ tional Farm and Garden Association is Mrs. William McCallum of Birming- ^ ham, national extension chairman. Mrs. i 1 man, (at left); Mrs. J. Standish Sibley, social cochairman; and Mrs. William B. Hartman, prestdenr oflhe association, are choosing Christmas cookies, ‘ Parker P. Rockwell, general cochair-' and candy. Women's Section You Need a Friend, Says Abby Have a Heart-to-Heart Talk! By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Please don’t tell me to go to a doctor because we owe every doctor in town and - I'm n« “Hd-ding. What’s wrong with me? When someone asks me a question I start to tell toe truth, but end up telling I lie about little things, like Where I buy my clothes and who cuts mV hair. I am 15 and don’t get WCTU Unit Has Luncheon and Program Frances Willard Unit of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union met tor a luncheon Wednesday at the Church of the Brethren's parsonage. Devotions from toe Book of Jude and prayer were offered by Rev. Mrs. Lola P. Marlon. Mrs. Dorothy Hardenburg of the First Baptist Church presented a flannelgraph lesson. •'Thoughts on Being Broken lor God.” The meeting was closed with ' ■ fh(* byffln, “Blest Be the Ties That Bind" and prayer by Mrs. LeRoy Shafer. Tuesday afternoon 34 friends from Durand, Mrs. Shafer’s hometown, surprised'her with a chicken dinner and devo-, tional meeting, Jfrs... Grace Hatt offered scriptural readings, and Mrs. Fred Pape and Mrs. Ernest Prowant presented musical selections. Two readings were given by Mrs. LeRoy Brown. Mrs. George Johnson closed the affair with prayer. Soroptimist Club Plans Party, an allowance, so when the kids ask me to go with them, I never say, “1 can’t’’ —I say, "I don’t want to.” _____ i hn«» n qiliek—lemBwr ~Knif -'tott'TaritS wrong people oil and am sorry toe next minute. Sometimes I think I’m going ccary- Is there any hope lor me? UNHAPPY DEAR UNHAPPY: You need a friend. Most people lie because they lack the courage to tell toe truth. If there is a teacher, clergyman, or mature adult witli whom you can talk frankly, do so. Your problem is not as hopeless as you think it is. flood luck. WWW DEAR ABBY: My husband and I were engaged four years before we were married. He was away In service most of thif time. He wrote me beautiful love letters. I have kept all of them and they run Into the hundreds. Now he has asked me please to destroy them because he doesn't ever want anyone else to read them. I doubt if any-one could get to them in our home. Do you think there is any harm in keeping them? SENTIMENTAL DEAR SENTIMENTAL: It all depends on what’s in the letters. If they are Inflammable — you'd be wise to burn them. -------- A At .At..........—-— DEAR AB^Y: Perhaps I am too' tender-hearted. I belong to an OVER SIXTY club. I am 62 and have been widowed 3., years. Another widow and I go to their Saturday night dances. The minute I walk In, A than who is over 70 immediately meets me at the door and I am stuck with him the entire evening. He seems to like me but he' never asks me out. Other men appear Interested in me but they don’t have a chance because this man mo- Bazaar Mrs. Howard Decker, president, Soroptlmlst Club of Pontiac, attended the presidents' council Wednesday evening at the Women’s City Club, Detroit. Mrs. Ricjiard Paschke and Mrs. Frances Coons were also present. it it a , Plans were completed at the November dinner meeting in the Hotel Waldron for the annual “Kard Kapers” and bazaar Nov, 29 to the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Qaklattd. Mrs. Paschke is general chairman and Mrs, Kenneth Wright, cochaimuin. ■ Presiding at tye bazaar booth will l» Mrs. Karl SchuitiZ, Mrs. Paul R. Slayton and Marguerite Parrish. Mrs. Arnold Hibernian is ticket chairman; Mrs. Leon A. Glynn and Mrs. Bud Holmagle, door prizes; Talmee Suroln, favors and cards; Mrs. Roy Maxwell and Mrs. Coons, card tables; Mrs. Harmon Lawyer, Mrs. Ersa Arnold and Mrs. Madeleine Doeren, refreshments. The group wbl assist the Soroptimist Club of Lima. Peru, in sponsoring a young Peruvian woman to this country for a major heart operation. Local recipients of dona* lions are the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra and the USO and Nike base for draperies. White lilacs, lilies of the valley, blue violets and tiny white roses formed toe holders for ‘ " the white cantow cej$firlBg4ha spring tobte'Md'with a grape-colored cloth. Ivy was entwined at the base of the holders. Arrangements were by Mrs. E. S. Nelson, Mrs, E. P. Barrett and Mrs. B. J. Annett.. ... A New Year’s Eve table was the handiwork of Mrs. R. J. Isgrigg. The heads of red carnations formed toe hour circle centered on the buffet supper table laid with a white pointe de Venice cloth, an Import from France. Crystal candelabra held taU wbite tapers. A gilded coffee urn was set for serving with white china edged with gold. Flatware was... gold, ■ Brain candelabra holding mahogany candles with a turkey placed in the. midst of low chrysanthemums formed toe end arrangement of a Thanksgiving table by Mrs. Charles Wood. Service plates were decorated with \ pheasants. The cloth was a suit sand color. AH A Ar' Red felt place mAts .edged--wtto Flw were in place for the first course of the Christmas table by Mrs. Arthur JR. Young,. A china sleigh Riled ' with small wrapped packages Was to* Ceftt*1* i"! ■Hotm-HAS"''" -■SpfSYofholly trimmed the white reindeer at the table ■ end! FOR THANKSGIVING A huge turkey tureen placed in the center of a Thanksgiving table was on &. cloth of sunny yellow. Chrysanthemum# and nuts were mingled at the base of toe’ turkey With ' xah icaves. Brim ''"tobddhtbtff" were at each end of the table. China bore pictures of turkeys. 'fUkt, ‘i «v A table In tariatan was the work of Mrs. C; R, Gatley and Mrs. Young. The round table ' leimlh cloth of early springgreen was overlaid with a shorter covering of sky blue tarlatan. The crystal compote centering the cloth held violet statice and coral geranium blossoms. The crystal plates and goblets were a itelicate lavender. A Paul Revere bowl holding sprigs of holly with bright red ; berries centered the Christmas table by Virginia Ward. White china' plates bordered with green and gold were placed nopolizes me. How can I get rid of him without hurting his feelings? ----- _____----TENDERHEARTED DEAR TENDER-HEARTED: Here is a case where age can learn from youth. Enlist the help of a friend. She can subtly let other interested parties know that you are hot attached .to tote "over 70” gent by %oice, and would appreciate being “rescued” occasionally., ♦ AA Everybody "has a problem. What's yours? For a personal reply, write to Abby in care of The Pontiac Press. Enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. For Abby's booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding,” send 50 cents to Abby, The Pontiac Press. PTA Group Sponsors Blood Bank The, Pontiac Council of Parent-Teacher Associations will sponsor a Red Cross blood bank at Crofoot School Friday. Some 156 donors are schedr uled for the open bank, and “walk-in” donations will be appreciated, according to...Mr#.- ._ Earl 01tesvig, the group's pub-liclty chairman. "Since the PTA blood bank was started, there have been many requests for blood, and much is needed to keep up the good work.” she added. Hours are 2 to 5 and 6 to 8 p.m. Mrs. Theodore Figa, general rhairman, is being assisted by the council's health chairmen who are Josephine Seeley, Mrs. William Simpson and Mrs. Purvis Hunt. Mrs. Simpson will be chairman of the day; Mrs. Thomas B a r 11 e, appointment chairman; and Mrs. Conrad Burlison and Mi's. Howard McConnell, hospitality chairmen. AAA In charge of registrations are Mrs. Ervin Christie, Mrs. William While, M«. Russell Brown. Mrs, William Anderson. Mrs. R H. Goraltne. Mrs. Leslie Hotchkiss, Mrs. Thomas Fowler and Mrs. Cam-eroh Clark. Nurses donating their time are Mrs. Simpsoh, Mrs. Richard Chappell, Mrs. Leamon Furguson, Mrs. John Kay, Mrs. Thomas Gillette and Miss Seeley. Mrs. Raymond Pardee, Mrs. . Victor Wallace and Mrs. Lawrence Nichols will take care of laboratory sheets, A it A Canteen chairmen will be Mrs. Russell Bell, Mrs. Thomas Henson, Mrs. Fred Gobles. Mrs. Charles Miller, Mrs. Gordon Tallon, Mrs. Earl Oltesvlg and Mrs. Denver Rome. Mrs. Robert J. Alton of West Iroquois Road, (left) Mrs. Leamon S. Hunt of Dublin Road, Bloomfield Hills and Mrs. John H. Patterson of Illinois Avenue Personal News The Max E. Traxlers of Elizabeth Lake Road, honored their son Pvt. Robert Traxler at a family dinner-party oh Sunday, He has completed basic training at Ft. Knox, Ky., and is en route to Aberdeen, Md. ___________— Attending the dinner were the Donald Trailers and daughter Kathy of Midland, the Jack Traxlers with sons Ricky and Randy of Union Lake, the Charles Longs with daughters Jeanne, Shirly and Joanne of Walled Lake, Janet Schmlttling, Farmington and Carol Traxler. ■fr ★ ★ The birth of a son John Frederic, Nov. 2 in Pontiac General Hospital, is announced by the Theodore F. Cohns-seys (Nancy Aldrich) of Rochester, formerly of Pontiac. The Lee A. Kremers of Dwight Avenue and the Fred Cohasseys of Exmoor Drive, Waterford Township, are the baby’s grandparents. dt ★ ★ Returned by plane from Newton, Iowa are Mr. and Mrs. Harry 8, Pearce of Garland Avenue, Sylvan Lake. The couple spent 10 days visiting Mrs. Pearce’s two sisters and two brothers. *★ A it Area members of the Detroit Women’s Writer’s Club attended a poetry workshop and luncheon Tuesday at the Women’s City Club, Detroit. ★ A A The Larry A. Bowens (Sharon Halvorson» of Drayton Plains announce the birth of a son, Mark Scott, Oct. 27 in Pontiac General Hospital. i Grandparents are the Gerhard J. Halvorsons of Elizabeth Lake Road and the Arthur M. Bowens of Drayton Plains. A ft it Mr. and Mrs, Charles J. Craighead of Calgary Street have returned from a brief trip to Alllston, Ont., where they attended a wedding. it. a it Staff Sgt, and Mrs. David T, Galloway (Nancy Dusen-bury) announce the birth of a son, James David, Nov. 3 In William Beaumont Army Hospital, El Paso, Tex. The baby’s grandparents toe the Lyle B. Dusenburys of Ellwood Avenue and the Logan Galloways of Ferndale. * it A, . Ur. and Mrs. James E. Dearlng (Mary Ellen McKlb-ben) of Kent. Ohio, are announcing the birth of a son, Hugh Elliott, Nov. 8, in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Grandparents of the infant are the 8. W. McKlbbens of Beach Strept and Harold H. Dearlng of Oxford. laugh with the snowman at the Childrens Christmas table, one of many shown at the holiday tea Wednesday. Hundreds of visitors browsed among gay and colorful table settings displayed in the auditorium of First Federal Savings and Loan Association of‘Oakland Building. nuts made out of felt < fail of the doth just above the border. Jaunty squirrels, berries and leaves also were along toe border of fell.____ A white cutwork doth over Christmas red covered toe holi-. day table by Mrs. J. Alfred Hubbard. Tree twigs gilded gold formed the tree center-piece. Ornaments were egg shells covered with: velvet ribbon, sequins and tiny beads in shades of blue, green, red. gold, pink, coral turquoisb and lavender. was one made from old stove pipe rings tied to-'' gether with green bows and tiny pine cone elves. UNUSUAL WREATH A wreath causing much comment was the one jot dried hydrangea blossoms inter-speraed with clusters of grapes, peaches, lemons and plums. ' Gilded paper doilies formed toe edging. Silk bows with streamers in shadeB of gold completed the wreath. Mrs. W. R. Thompson displayed a Japanese arrangement backed by a Japanese ' aerwen, The emtie- retoWlthUrif ~ iim from Hawaii on a usabsta , antique base was placed on a black lacquered prayer stool. it' A A Mrs. C. T. Ekelund displayed an arrangement of roses made from com husks on twigs of/ • evergreen. Bright blue arjd green Christmas tree oprta-ments were placed among the greens. Mrs. Ekel und placed her.-offering ah' A'Efife, green and gold “runner \yoven by her. . ■ a ■ y- • a An. unusual- table* tree was one by Mrs. E., M. Buckley. \ Old strands of beads, ear rings, pins, and other costume jewelry long discarded covered the tree. Tiny flowers mingled with the gems, all forming a gay ..and - colorful trimming. The base was a gold mesh basket. THE TEA TABLE ' Glycerin . tea leaves from ’ India and bronze chrysanthemums filled copper bowls in . toe end arrangement for the tea table laid with a gold cloth. The tall tapers were green. A A A ---------------- Mrs,. John--HrPatterson and Mrs. Parker P. Rockwell were cochairmen of the annual display. Mrs. Robert J. Alton was in charge of ticket sales. Serving as social cochairmen wer^ Mrs. J. Standish Sibley and Mrs. Lucius E. Howlett. Proceeds will be used for the Grace Fitzgerald Scholarship Huff and Brady Exchange Vows Mr. and Mrs. J. Leamon Huff of Bamford Drive announce toe marriage of their daughter Carol Ann to Hartley W. Brady, son of the Heartiey Bradys of Leota Drive, Union Lake. AAA Rev. Elmer Snyder of the Trinity Methodist Church of Keego Harbor, performed the Nov. 4 ceremony at the home of the bride’s parents. June Everard attended the bride and Chester Hensley was best man. The newlyweds are living in Pontiac. Dance Friday The Merry Mixers will dance to records Friday evening from 8:30 to 11:30 pan. at the Waterford Community Center Building. Guests may be invited. 5 Pages Today in Women's Section Admiring the framed Christmas tree at the holiday lea Wednesday ace (from left) Mrs. Lucius E. Howlett of James K Boulevard and Mrs. Glenn H. GHf- s ' /m of Ogemaw Road. Ttie green JMt tree covered with important incidents in work of Mrs. John Birmingham. „ - T^t’OOTiac^'HEsp. TatTPPAf, ^OVBllBM ia,; JW» ^ ^.'\--k-~.~ ■ #m>i ’■"■^ 7 - rj&\'.*. *"• versity ! This is a double-duty exercise, good s for the thighs and the waist. Simply Measurements Are Factor roll from side to side, going as far in each direction as possible. Exercise Depends on You By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN The following excerpt is typical of the things many women ask. “I have a beauty problem wish ^u wuid write about in . your column. I am thin and certainly cannot afford to lose any weight. yet my thighs are muchl „ . . .. . .. P too large. I would appreciate itlextend.in* out from the shoulders' the floor to brace yourself. Make land the knees straight. Roll from| side to side, going as far in eachj large circle* with the right leg. After a while, turn opto the right side and make circle* with the left leg. Keep the knee atlff while yon circle and make the circle complete. Lie on the floor with your direction as possible. This is good waist exercise^ too._____ If you would like to have my exercises for slimming the hips, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaf-j let No. 3 to Josephine Lowman inj care of The Pontiac Press. ' Nurses Will Hear Talk orTResearch Registered nurses from Michigan will meet Friday at *1:30 p.m. in the auditorium of Saginaw County Hospital to hear Virginia H. Walker. R.N.„ speak on "Research Minded-ness—An Attitude of AH.” Sponsors of the program are the East Central Michigan League for Nursing and the Educational Administrators, - Consultanto and-T'eaehers section of the Michigan State Nurses Association. Miss Walker ,.H_director-of services. Indiana Uni-Medical Center and a*-professor, Indiana Unischool of nursing. Indianapolis. She is a graduate of the Rush Infirmary School of Nursing. Meridian, Miss., and holds a B.S. degree from the University of Tennessee and a master’s degree in nursing administration from the University pf Chicago. A former associate executive secretary with the American Nurses Association, New York, N.Y., the speaker’s nursing experience includes work in pub--He health and occupational health nursing. She was also a research assistant at Tulane University In New Orleans. Cutting Calorics? On a reducing diet? Don't eat heartily bpforCHfftiring. If you must have a midnight snack, try a cup of hot sktm milk. exeSesTnd aKeTm^.f tTej is any .sport which is especially Ip good for this." Thigh problem* are du« two factor*; muscle slump the accumulation of fatty deposit*. Horseback riding is excellent for tightening the thigh muscles, and the following exercise* are corrective to this condition. Lie on the floor on your back. Arms extended straight out from IS the shoulders and palms face the K floor. Legs straight. Lift both tegs II ».a.lewJecLaff..theiia.or -.liftUwfiyjp.. to a position which would form right angle to the body. Hold atW this angle and separate the legs' Swing them (toward -one another, 1 crossing the right leg over the ^ j Swing them* apart again, and thisiw time cross the left leg over the ni right, separate and continue. Keep H the knees stiff. i|§f Stand tall. Contract the hip | muscles. Hold while you count to eight slowly. Relax and. con-j tinue. Ue on the floor on your left side, placing your right hand on j Alumnae Unit Instructed in Giit Making Afternoon and evening Christmas project sessions were on the agenda Tuesday for area members of the North Woodward Alumnae Association of Kappa KappaGammir Sorority. Mrs. Gordon Boling of West-wood Court served luncheon to member* attending the early meeting. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. N. Weir Burkman, Mrs. Fred Keller and Mrs. Milton Mallender. Mrs. Frederick Eilber of Bloomfield Hills Instructed the group in leather craft, gifts for teen-agers at the Pontiac State Hospital. The evening session was at the Birmingham home of Mr*. Lyman Fishburn. Hostesses for dessert and coffee were Mrs, Bruce Randall and Mrs. Frank Reid of Birmingham and Mrs. D. R. Hubbert, Detroit. Mrs. John Bull conducted a Christmas workshop, teaching members to make gifts and decorations for the children's yule party at State Hospital. Gala Party Time DRESSES 25.98 It’s Special Occasion Time . . . the time when all party goers look for that very special “something”... the look of luxury ... the duo-purpose holiday dress. We know what you want and we have it! Sketched is our brocade with bunny fur in sheath with cover-up jacket . . - and our sheer wool all over embroidery sheath. White and pastels. Sizes 6 to 15. Dress Salon-Second Floor Over the River and Through the Woods To Grandmother's House We Go! Arthur's Holiday Cherubs hove such pretty things to put on! CHRISTMAS Hints and Treasures SHOE TOTE BAGS Colorful carrying cose for bowlers or bad weather. CELEBRITY KITS For the traveler or office cad^jf, Anchor Hocking Decorative Bottles $1 to 1.50 With BdBfcle Both ftil to $2.50 itierle noRmfln 12 W. Huron FE 2-4010 Pretty Dress Up DRESSES 5.98 “ 8.98 Thankaglvbig Day at grandma * ... and a new ap*cl«I occasion drew to make hor leak lovely and dainty. Our pretty ee e picture dress** are washable . . . beautiful ... and Wearable. Lace or bow trim*, pinafore effect. Lovely print* or aollds. Mae* I to te and 7 to 14. , Yeung Folk*' «*F — f*w#» t*»0» ALL VALUE SEEKERS to a most exciting SALE SMASHING SAVINGS AWAIT YOU DURING THIS COAT SALE-Outstanding values in dressy and casual warm winter coats. Slim coats, flared coats, see the whole gamut of superior coat fashions on sale now! *39 *49 *59 MAGNIFICENTLY FURRED COATS in exquisite fabrics, handsomely detailed. Dramatic values in luxurious fur trims. Collared and or cuffed in mink, beaver, or fox! $ 89 *109 *129 Sizes for Juniors, Misses, Petite* and Half Sizes 5 to 15, 6 to 18, 14 V* to 26Vs Coat Salon-Second Floor 1 •rtd* CHOOSE FROM 4 LIBERAL CRIDIT FLANSv CONVIHIINT TERMS AVAILABLE. THE "FOfcTIACPKfiSS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1U196I TWlfff&fairT $ay Often:' 'I Didn't Understand' become besL sellersr because they ere actually cheaper to use than paper. Terrydoth, of-course, is machine washable and needs no ironing. - , A department store buyer in Reno ; reports (hat terrycloth tablecloths and napkins have Sir SHARON KAY RITCHIE Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Don’t be in too much al a hurry to start rolling. " -This is one ot the first things professional bowlers tell .you. Get [set properly before you start. LThatTs the r-ftiisoti tavstresaingi the* importance of the stance, - By ilie Kmily Post Institute Q: I have recently taken a position as a stenographer with a fairly larget^Ompany. I do not work for any one particular man but take dictation from several of them. One man from whom I have to fake, dictation quite frequently, has a habit of dictating with a cigar stuck in the corner of his mouth, making it very difficult for me to understand what he Is saying. Is there any way 1 can tactfully bring this to his attention without running the risk of losing my job? A: Say to him- as often as necessary, "Pm sorry, Mr. Jones, but I didn't understand that word.” He may after a while realize that it is because of his cigar that you can’t understand him. and eliminate it. * Motique BLOUSE Enhanced by Personal . MONOGRAM in Poro'Silk or Dacron-Cotton Orders received by Nov, 25 assured Christmas delivery In bowling, it's how you Stand and the position of the arms before you begin the approach, A good stance is natural and comfortable Usually one stands with the knpes bent slightly, feet close together with one foot a little ahead of the other. Tali bowl-era often will bend slightly at the waist. Shorter bBwlers are inclined I to stand more erect. 700 W. HURON stance The Pontioak Chapter of .the National * Secretaries Association, Wternational, will be host to the Michigan Division Lead- For Your Wedding QUALITY and Quantity *39 [95 up Budget Turns Available C. R. HASKILL STUDIO 1 Mi. Clmmi Si. VB 4-SMS .MAKE CHRISTMAS GIFTS OF Colorful Cotton Hug YaHi 35' Pot Holders — Place Mats, Toys Skein THE OXFORD SHOP 43 N. Saginaw Street Opposite Neisner's The weight of the ball should/ Hj rest on the nonbowling hand while In the stance« position, should be close to sides. Elbows ^ Don’t mistake stance for tr/nce Take time to get set a x\A pre- t -. pared, but don’t stand < /verlong facing the ,plns before k into action. * / swinging b** ★ k */ (Miss Ritchie, a former Miss the feet close together with 1 America, is Dlrecton'-uf Women's— Activities for Ameritan Machine & onejoot a mTdheaV of the Foundry Co.) / other. To Host Training Clinic ership Training Workshop, Saturday, at Michigan State University Oakland. Dr. Lowell Eklund, director '6f continuing education, will' •tconie the assembly. iiiftn Sharia wllLhe.,the»» speaker, using topic/"Walk Worthy of "Y( I Luncheon speaker for the afl-I ernoon Session will be Dr. Ken-j noth Roose, director, division of I business administration and member of President Eisenhower's Council of Economic Advisors. He .will speak on ‘‘The .Role of Secretary in J Management Decisions." Q: M.v daughter Is 1o be married soon entf she has asked my nephew, to be nn usher at her wedding. She also asked his fiancee to be one o? her bridesmaids. Her parents are complete strangers to us and I do not feel that It is necessary to invite them to the wedding. My daughter feels differently and thinks that it would be discourteous, not to ask them WiU you please tell us what is proper in this situation? A: Very definitely they should be asked to the church Rnd. unless the wedding small that the guests are limited to the Immediate families and fewest intimate/ friends, they should also asked to the reception. J[he California Fashion Showings yiirrently are a showcase for the casual Elegance of American couture. Lee ' Hermans two-tone shaker stitch sweat-, er set off with a spring bouquet of raffia is worn (at left) above a white Dupioni lace sheath. Another outfit (at right) features the same designer's brushed mohair sweater with sleeves slashed in the oriental manner, lavishly bound in white satin and encrusted with Crystal drops and pearls. sessions of ent clinics will be open all fields of communicating officer training education, unman and public relations and civil? welfare. ___□labuwm.te Mrs. Kay j£. Rector of the Pontioak Chapter.- Margaret M. Melnemey, certified professional secretary and secretary of the Michigan Division Chapter, will serve as program coordinator. Q: When friends come lyi for a visit and we are washing television, is it not the/polite thing to turn the set on? This has been a source At great argument-in our - house for a long time and we/would ] -yoe-to1 sHtfe-irTper aricT 'Unit Discusses Wives Invite Husbands jTeen-Age Crime u0 q0 Along on Hay Hide Take Time Off ONLY 3 DAYS LEFT TO BUY sterling Silver $2" AT ONLY for any of these pieces AN UNHEARD-OF/VALUE! Mad• by lamout Oneida Communily Silversmith* Beautifully crafted to highest quality standards, this famous-name sterling is a dream-come-ttue at thig low price! Choose traditional Melbourne or mod. ern Engagement, and set’ a handsome table every day. This is a special purchase ... quantities are limited. Come in today! THESE PIECES ONLY $2.99 Luncheon Knife Luncheon fork Siled Fork Cream Soup Spoon Butter Spreader Coffee Spoon Iced Drink Spoon Oyster or Cocktail Fork Butter Knife Sugar Spoon SAVE ON PLACE SETTINGS TOO! 4- Piece Place Settings....$12.00t 5- Piece Place Settings.... I.VOOf 6- Piece Place Settings.... 18.00t Make np your own place setting* with any combination of piece* ... you pay only 12.99 for each piece. $1.00 will hold your set until Christmas, then pay only 10% a month on the balance if you wish. JtWllIHS Order Wow and'Away for Ghrltlmat NEW ' YORK- (UPI) — The National Recreation Association reports that American workers take a total of 50 million vacation weeks during the summer and another 32 million during the rest of the A: Ordinarily jyou the set off arrived, unles/, of course, they urge you to leave it on. If unexpected vMltors arrive while latching a program of special/Interest to you, you might ask your guests if they minded/your seeing the Apish of /hat particular program. Mrs. Goodloe Rogers of Ottawa Drive was hostess to 28 members! . . . ■ _ , , ..j j n > • ~ liWl, i bf the* July - August Group"of the’ MO-tteVOub-members.^ Ywir^^iftfw^up * Invited husbands to a Dec. recent meeting in the 300 Bowl. Ior afternoon Assisting her were Mrs. 10 hayride and dinner at Roches-1 The speaker emphasized that parlor E C Huthwaite Mrs Charles !ter s Hayride Lodge .from 7 to ll'ents’ feelings about art influence urn | Haynor and Mrs. RayTaylor. P-m- j a child’s response to creative art. Ruth Williams, junior and senior j The club’s pin. designed by a high school art supervisor In Ox-| jewelry store In Oxford, lias been ford, spoke on "Creative Art fori accepted as the official pin of the Thanksgiving devotions were given by Mrs. Louis B. West, chairman. A discussion on the role of the church in pro' enting | Juvenile delinquency and teen- . age crime followed the report on BeVGlly MeWIS life Honored of social education and action. "Churches for New Times” v r the correct procedure of . Second Marriage," send 10 reviewed the closing chapters ofi is In coin to cover cost of the book "In Him Was Light.” | Bride-elect Beverly Meiers \ h/ndling, and a self-addressed, j * * * * - honored at a miscellaneous shoi stamped envelope to The Mrs. Robert Oliver of West J Tuesday evening in the Liberty , _____„ ... Emily Post Institute. care of I Iroquois Road will be hostess for Street home of Mrs. Andy Taylor. appointed Mrs. Vern Russe* i the December meeting. i .-l___________ (librarian at th? Thursday meet- As a gift from the store, the first pin was presented to Mrs. Robert Green of Lake Oripn, national pin committee chairman, by Mrs. Kenneth Aeheson. The local club presepled Mrs. M ten ___Chapman of Pontiac with asipast miscellaneous shower president's plh- Mrs. Alfred Willockx. dub presi- sove now: long wool winter coots usually $49.98 Look at the savings you ^et now—on the wonderful textured wool coats you want with warm wool N interlinings for all the warmth you'll need this winter. Button fronts in ne(v full and slim silhouettes. Expertly tailored, black, cdlors. Misses! TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER shop to 9 p. m. mondpy, Thursday, friday, Saturday Guest* were Mrs. Frank Du- bloki, Mrs, William Donahue, ; (,|ujj j,ag )w0 npw members Mrs. Lloyd Anderson, Shirley j Mrs [>a|)ag Hilton of Oxford, Mrs. Quigley, Florence Clements, Lo- jp;UgPnP Bego. Birmingham, and retta Lauringer, Mrs. Robe r I ,three candidate members. Woodlngton, Mrs. Lloyd I Mrs. Leo Marfeau and J a Milligan. 1 Be Plants Featured !p- at Garden Meeting Also present were Jovita vldes. Rosemary Guibord. Mrs. j Dan Harry, Mrs. Daniel Wagner, Choice and unusual house plants Mrs. Donald Barbe, Mrs. Harry j were featured at the DM. Garden- ^ Dearborn, Susan Thompsori,Jdr%rl^ Aclah Shelly *lilmiMI Ampro« [grams are fakes—they are fun to watch but the public should not be fooled by them.” familiarity with the subject of mount by ESP, and also asked for definitions, we got affirmative replies from 71 per cent of the boys, compared with 50 per cent of the girts. "It's n sixth sense." explained David Williams, 18, of Delaware, Ohio. “Being aware of something, perceiving something but not knowing why.” Roger Simon, 18, of Haddon-firld, NX, defined ESP as “the ability of one person to perceive the thoughts of another without physical communication." FAIRLY TAME Compared to the sort of dramatic Illustrations of ESP that are found in novels and on television, the experiences described by you Thanksgiving Ndte Accents Luncheon Mri; C. J. Appel of Avery Road was hostess to The Ex-tensionlsts Tuesday. Luncheon was served in a Thanksgiving theme. Plans for sending Christmas gifts to the Lapeer State Home were completed during the business meeting. The program "Using Consumer Credit Wisely" was presented by Mrs. Wayne Cook,, project leader.* Invited guests were Mrs.' Edgar Zimmer, Mrs, Barney Me-Kovltz and Mrs. John Tainsh, Royal Oak. ' Mrs. Raymond DeGraff was cohostess. ms Have You Tried This? Diced Apples In Cake Keep It Moist for Days • By JANET ODELL 1 cup butter er margarine —“Conm-on'-a'Tny-padand Vli wear my meek after, fipe shirt and leotards by Mr. Mori - Sportswear.** The cotton lace filigree shirt is elegant over stretch fabric leotard made like Demons,. Nordquist-Muree Vows Announced Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert H. Ash of Seebaldt Street, Drayton Plains,, announce the marriage of their daughter, Faye Muree, to Ronald L. Nordquist, son of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Nordquist of Rochester, The couple was married Nov. 3, at the United Presbyterian Church, Drayton Plains by the Rev. Walter Teeuwissen, BARGAIN \ Quick dean up of regular merchandise. ' Included are many epacial purchases all j going ragardltte of original cost or sacrifice! More apple recipes keep coming our way which is fine. There seems to be no end to the apple-supply. Todays rfec-ipe is far a cake that wlfl keep for ieverai' weeks >| welt, hidden. Mrs. Wallace Bailey of Rochester is our cook. Reading, cooking and traveling are her chief interests outside her family. If her plana materialized, she should be on a trip at this writing. By Mrs, Wallace Bailey 2 cups sugar < 1 cup cold coffee 3 cups sifted flour 2 teaspoons dmamon 1 teaspoon nutmeg . 2 teaspoons bffiflnifsodar % teaspoon salt 3 cups diced apples 1 cup nutmeats Beat together eugar, butter coffee. Sift flour with ether dry Ingredients. Stir Into first and nuts. Bain to M* greased pan at 350 degrees for 1 hour. U. S. Dining Habits Are Often Appalling BY RUTH MTtLETT Newspaper Enterprise Assn, News story with a London date line: "English girls should make 4991 SIZES 2-10 LOW. LOW PRICES SAVE 5§%-60% EVEN 70% OUR FAMOUS FEATURE DRESSES $ _• t. B.ilt. HI....1_U«ll Cl.as Basic for the holidays . .. sweetly curving, carefree VARIETTE BRA wrn Gtoe thanks tor VarieSto . . . « that doos such a superb fob of shaping yoe 'neath holiday sheaths and (ree-fonn fashiond Deftly cut for clearly defined separation . . . •plnd Witched to mold and hold you beauti-tolly... Spondex elastic yarn Insert for breotb-toa ease. And the carefree cotton broadcloth's • toy to wash) Have several today-tor your-MW er for gifts. White. Sizes 32A-42C CHARGE m ISO lYtnr FASHION NfCDS ITS OWN FOUNDATION Let Federal's expertly trained corsetieres fk yaw correctly tor comfort and figure flattery. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Open Sun. noon to 6 DOWNTOWN AND DtAYTQN PLAIN* NYLON HOSE 3-1 22 NORTH SAGINAW ST. thorough Investigation of Americans before they marry one/!-say* the father of a GI bride. 'They might be shocked at American table manners." / « ★ tit The father of the GI bride just quoted is chairman of the Transatlantic Brides and Parents Assn., with a membership of 15,000. Instead of being Insulted by the Briton's charge that the table manners to even the better type of American homes are often “appalling” by British standards, maybe W ought to take his erittdsm to heart. It’s certainly true that toe uninterrupted family dinner hour doesn’t even exist to many homes today. ■ Instead of a leisurely dinner to a dining room, with lively conversation and no outside interruptions, all too Often the dinner hour is turned into a quick-snack time in toe kitchen or at the TV table. It is even unusual in many homes for toe whole family to eat at the same time. Junior has to eat early because of football practice. Sis gets a telephone call not only allowed to leave the table to go to the phone but also to talk tor 30 or 40 minutes. Dad : hurries through his megl because there’s something on TV he doesn’t want to miss. Mom has to hurry through hers in order to get to a PTA meeting. And If there are dinner guests and the meal Is to be * leisurely occasion tho children are fed ahead of time and scut to their rooms, Instead of having dinner Printed Pattern 4991: Children’s Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 outfit takes 1% yards 35-inch plaid fabric; % yard plain. Send 50 cents in coins for this pattern—add 10 cents tor each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Antuf Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York U, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. So, perhaps, today’s young people have been short-changed in the matter of gracious dining. Perhaps, in many homes their table manners have been neglected. If so, maybe what we need is the return of the old-fashioned dinner hour. More thoughts on young folks are in Ruth Millett's new Booklet, “Tips on Teen-Agers.” Mail 25 cents to Ruth MiUett Reader Service, care of The Pontiac Press. READY-TO-WEAR CLOTHING CAN FIT PERFECTLY! Many men fed tout toe only way to have debiting fit properly to to have It eustorn-taflorad. Kuppenheimer customers have learned differently, for thto matter of fit to us basic to sB Kuppenheimer clothing as Style. At Kuppenhetowr, toe fit of each todhridttal suit starts with baying the world’s finest fab-rics-for the material must hold its shape to hold its fit Many other elements, of course, contribute to good fit-toe pitch of toe Aalto dert... the cut of toe collar... the set of toe sleeve, the basting and stitching... even toe pocket lines. Then wt take over and fit your suit to yea. When you walk out in your newKuppenheimcr, you can be store not only are you wearing one of America’s finest suits, but that it fits you perfectly. Suits from 895.M THE KUPPENHEIMER LOOK IBTNR.— r- ' - ■W "The Man's Store of Pontiac” 106 North Saginaw Street Open Mon. and FH. Nights 'til 9 tAC PKBSS, THt&SDAY; ^OVEMBER 16, 1961 THIRTV-pyK Shoe Repair Special f Asserts i [filter allthe fats, passing some action in the stress of operations,! iinto the general circulation.. bone, .'fractures, starvation and' r . Z. j., . . other influences." He said an ex-J *2jcess amount of-fats in certain tn-j acaaiMia a ******* wan*1 *P; [dlviduals, who have a constant! Pinafljr come* from a smaU ;eWvatkm of y«*| choi^teroi and ***"*> * 'fat component* of blood. i th* hn««k Hut h*a»*1 . 9 I Regular $2.50 Value CAUTION ~ MEH WORKING High 1st levet» Jai tiw hhna 1 ® «W this hormone is released pr. Zarefonetts explained have been linked with hardening . under stressful states and produces hoped that "continued rescan1 if HRS Krtertw and iaJan to Ian outpouring of fatsfrorn hodyjtW* end other mechanisms, < heart attack*, strokes, and oth- \depotn Mt} iTS^)Wd^m._:fc ™-v" - • j •* p”®1 oouy iwiwiw !»(#,» win if»a S. S. KRESGE S heart I However, he said, there is . a, great difference between the! {amount of fat taken in through food! land the amount of fat actually I present in the blood. STILL SYNTHESIZES "You can take fats away from a heart patient, but his body will} stiff synthesize fats,” he said. j Turn to America’s Lightest and Smoothest Tasting Whiskey Cooderham & TTorf* *gH| Etlablithed 189$ J * Dr. Zarafonetis said research had i | shown that an excess of fat bl the! blood could be due to two causes: ! 1 — An excess of fat produced! i by the body under stress. ~~ ......j | 2 — Inability of the liver to N*«r Saor, woHsnm Comar Tele**^, ♦ Where you want to ♦ When you want to--- ♦ Regardless of weather ♦ AH winter long oirMwL firestone LOW THRIFTY MICE on Cigarettes Regular $R21 Size Ja S' *931 Fjltors m GUARANTEED AGAINST Road Hazards In all SO States and Canada 900 Calorie Diet 8 Or Daily Supply ■aMSL 146 WIST HURON STREET WHITEWALLS ONLY TWO DOLLARS MORE A PAIR PACKAGE nof LIQUOR STORE f DRUG STORE 195 DIXIE HWY. Huron Street T3g»TV-TWO ■. .. - ., -■ Antidiscrimination W Hit at *wpL- .-Jfc.... —ti-V‘1 the highway user-tor citizens—will pay i A proposal to nullify the rule con-stiutionally was explained Wednesday to the constitutional convention's committee on rights, tttmt* and Sections by delegate WeMoe 0. Yeager, RDetroit. After introducing the proposal, he 'said, *.... ____„ “The CIO News stated that my intention is to open *the floodgates of bigotry* and another group said that I want to keep Negroes and others out Of decent housing. I refute both of these charges as untrue,’* ■ GETS SUPPORT Yeager’s proposal was supported at toe'crowded hearing by spokesmen for about ^ spectators. One woman, who claimed to have petitions bearing 10,000 signatures h»r|f)iw Voagpr'g .proposal, distl'ih-uted signature cards to members of the committee, The cards read, in part Yeager said the proposal “puts STOP-SHOP-SAVE WONDERFRY ELECTRIC SKILLET Yeager said he did not support the statements on the cards. The committee on finance and taxation, meanwhile, heard State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie -urge ~ret entl on-and strengthening of a constitutional provision which earmarks highway-user tax revenue tor road construction and repair, Urging that the dolegatos strengthen the pay-as-you-d rive provision by spelling out “highway purposes” in dear language, Mackie said: today.** Mackie said user taxation In highway finance has met approval of most tax authorities “because it THagMOSTATI PIILLY AUTOMATIC! Translators Are Told to Stand Sy; Public Reading Expected Soon SPECIAL HOLIDAY PURCHASE 4U KOIW NAPKINS W RFC. II MATCHED ■ LUGGAGE SET FREE! 9UIK>CHEK\ RADIO AHD TV TUBE TESTING AVAIUIU AT MOST CIMNINOHAM'S MW OTOMS unt toutimianb monri immersible £ JERUSALEM (UPD—The three Israeli judges who tried Adolf Eichmann on charges of slaughtering six million Jews appeared today to have reached a verdict. Teams of English, lYench and German translators have been asked to stand by. The Judgment, reportedly about 300 pages long, is expected to be atendled in Hebrn^ beginning next week. It waa believed the court had finished writing It oat, or had only minor additions to make, its this week to d The Israeli press has predicted the verdict will be read in open court Dec. 4, but a court official said Wednesday no date has been set. Other sources pointed out Dec. 4 is the beginnig of the Jewish festival of Hanukkah and believed it more likely the verdict will be delivered after the holiday ends Dec. 11. Seeks Norway's Help BERGEN, Norway (AP)-West Germany will ask Norway for technical assistance in building a series of underground defense installations, Bonn Defense Miniate* Franz Josef Strauss said Wednesday. SAVE • ESTIMATES (No Charge-No Obligation} • TURKEY ON FUEL BILLS Free With ivory Job— (No Exceptions) . Call Immediately FES-8405 ipAYMINlS *Tll 'Si 24-Hour Service GE or SYLVANIA f CAR WINTERIZING SPECIALS MER0URY Asli-Frtsu • — 8* Limit MERCURY Psns. ftsljff^iL^l— w* Epsom Site If* PRESTONE Ds-lotr 5* Alfa Seltwr *1“ Enisimi of 21 38* PRESTORE Oss LIm Pri—r of 1M PUESTOHE Wsshsr Sslvssl *TW Prell Shiepao «g 73* 8* Hoibum JTXzl 7d< Battery Booster OeMo 8* l0 J Micrin Giant Plastic Swrspsr BRIMMS PLASTI-LINER T* J & J Arrestin ST *f w N* I 0J Liqiiprin 63‘ Long Handle Ssrapsr Sssw Brith-Sorapnr RMULAR 91.00 VALDM 69* IPAHA TOOTHPASTE with lit son m HOLIDAY GREETING CARDS •V AMERICAN GREMINGO MILADY'S LUXURY SCUFF SLIPPERS* ASSORTED COLORS mrf SIZES RMP15 BludiUdsOAf CUNNINGHAM'S PRESCRIPTIONS "lust What The Dr. Ordered" PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1961 TIIIRTV-TJ nrnu^WtttTMy GetAlongNow? HE Knew What Was Man's Work House membeip felt just that way about Mr. Sam. He had been speaker- ae4^r-most-«l them couldn't believe the House could Junction without him. tie first was elected boss of the House in 1940 and last January was picked for the job lor the 10th time. Little Texas City Loved Its principle Product/ Sam Rayburn "Birth control is an Individual matter,” averred Mr; Sam. "And so is marriage.” TrWwi tit A ' • As one of the country's most-publicized unattached males, Ray* was Interested In. His favorite advice to new , members Was: “Be reasonable. Be fair.” \ He believed that in legislation, as In everything else, a “little W Bd came of Hoosevelt'j ■ President Truman went to the White House, i had served In the VJ years when he busker for the first time e of id. That was on 940. Then the majority was chosen to fill out of Speaker William Bankhead of Alabama; who had Top Job Came Close, but Others Won Out Charm, Subtlety Were His, but He I Could Be Rough In his Job, gam Rayburn; was never at a lots for methods. It the situationrequired tact, subtlety or cti'anm, he had It ready. Hef always tried to lead rather than to' push, for eon-gressmen can be a balky herd. But when tougher tactics were WASHINGTON (AP) - Sam Rayburn came close twice to a On Jan. 3011951, Rayburn passed the record set more than a century earlier by Henry Clay for service1 as presiding officer of the House. Clay held that\ office for eight had seen 8,000 members come and go.. The House Speakership represented the pinnacle of his aspirations- Asked once why he never chose to run for the Senate, he replied: "I'd rather be speaker than 10 senators. I never had the slightest ambition to be a senator or governor. I love the House." ldential nomination, but at the last minute President Franklin D, Roosevelt asked him as a personal favor to make a seconding speech for Henry A. Wallace. Then in 1944 Sen, Harry S. Truman boosted Rayburn In several speeches but Roosevelt chose Truman himself as a running mate. When he opened\the session of the House on June 12, 1961, Rayburn had l^n speaker twice as long as any other man in history —16 years and 273 days. His Pat* Forecast Mood During the Harry S. Truman administration, the law of succession to the presidency was changed 'to put the speaker of the House next in line to the,vice president. Previously /the secretary of state had been in that position. representative* kept prat plans,, and. sentiment flow nearly two hours. Prestdei F. Kennedy Joined In the’ by letter. He wrote that i 1 Flag Already .Lower*! WASHINGTON (UPI)'- They couldn’t lower the capital's Rag for Speaker Sam Rayburn. It was already at half staff for Rep. Louis C. Rabaut, D-Mich., who died Sjm- He Tended the Store When They Were Out Kircmr-KOO — In one of the lighter moments of his long tenure as Rpsaker/of the House, Sam Rayburn flashes «n lR*y twitch as a young visitor gets playful last December. The youngster is 8-month-old Marty Grove, eon of neuffltopcrttian Larry GroveJ '"’u'T j , ,,.t hi 14Ay s! isui “I- just got to thinking about a farmer I knew back In Bonham,’’ he told a friend riding with hln^ "He was due to get married Saturday' afternoon. AH Saturday morning he was Out chopping cotton. He finally went in, had a long lunch, took a hath, and lay down —to'fest; One1 of his groomsmen got-fldgety finally and took him. lo task. ‘If you don’t hurry up, you’n going to fie late to the wedding, he said. But this fellow couldn't be Marital Bliss and Rayburn Didn't Mix Mr*Sam was married for months in hip youth, but the marriage didn’t take. In later years he seemed to have forgotten it, As had most everybody else—including society writers who always called him a bachelor. On one recent birthday i porter hard pressed for a story asked Rayburn It bachelorhood , was part 3 his prescription for a long happy Ute. Rayburn, who had seen enough birthdays, to have lost some of bis enthusiasm for them, scowled and replied that this question wait about as silly as a controversy then ear-rent about the merits of birth control. And that, he said, was about the slltteat controversy ha that he could handle but occasional proposals of marriage. He also was visited in Ms office regularly by Miss America candidates and winners, and queens of cotton, com, tobacco and just about everything else, most of whom got kiss on the cheek. Not too long ago In Us hospital Holton, Us administrative slstaat, who was |»st outside the by three sharp-looking i "John, Where are you?” growled Rayburn as the group surrounded his bed. “Right here, Mr. Speaker, behind all the girls," Holton answered. "WeU, it’s like I always told you, John,” Rayburn said. “With women you either have got It or you haven't. I’ve got it,” By United Press International Sam Rayburn’s scalp served as a barometer of the mood he was in. Normally it displayed a cool, clam gleam, slightly fanned mid somewhat freckly. When he was mad, the flush climbed up the back of his neck and encompassed bis head. Nobody in his right mind took up any business with Rayburn when this storm showing. ■. BONHAM, Texr MAP) — The principal product of Ronham was "Mr. Sam. And Sam Rayburn has died of cancer. A pall hangs over Bonham, and the people who knew him; loved him and honored him in his lifetime, that takes in just about everybody In Bonham-except the babies who have been bom In the small yellow-brick hospital where the life of the speaker of the House ebbed away. This is a busy little city of without anything to distinguish it from ether little Western or Midwestern cities other than the fact that it was the home town of Ray-bum. Where Bon h a m is known around the nation, that is what it is known for, The most impressive buildings re the First Baptist Church-and rautifrt;‘^w7OT Library. The library ip tucked into a 4-acre park on a small rise at the west edge of town, houses the papers and mementos Rayburn has gathered in half .a Century of public service. Friends and admirers paid for it. The cost a half million dollars. . TYPICAL COUNTY BEAT Bonham is a typical county seat town, built around the courthouse The homes are mostly frame, mostly white, mostly of tum-of-the-century vintage, give or take a few years. But there is a Colony of modem, ranch-type homes that echo the Sam WASHINGTON (UPD - Speaker Sam Rayburn probably wouldn't [_ hsysLfared-muth fiu' ali nieTeari that were shed over his illness. As he had told the House of Representatives short ly home for the last t fully, happy Hie . WASHINGTON (UPI) — He planned his future in a before going !cottan field when he was a young boy. Then he went le. lie d had ajou^ and lived It. ' ___ , „ t Not long ago he said: "My life has been satisfactory wouldn't have minded some rem- to rae entirely. I’ve attained everything I ever hoped I iniscing about his long public i would.” career. lu fact be no doubt would have reached for the scotch and self. (No matter what you have heard, In recent years Mr. Sam rarely touched bourbon). Take the time not long ago when President Kerinedy'A Jady. doctor pd Rayburn, at age 79, how a man should put on his pants. Ray-bum was having back trouble — ho thought then 1 it was nothing much but lumbago — and after Dr, Janet Travel! gave him a sfosi In the obvious place he teetered I first on one foot and then on the' Other while getting back into his! britches. Most people know him as "Mr. Sam.” His party officially proclaimed him "Mr. Democrat.” Some who loved him called him "Mr. fverythlng.” But Sam Rayburn probably was addressed most as "Mr. Speaker.” He certainly was called that far more times than any man ever to preside over the House of Representatives. Rayburn was speaker of the House more than twice Dr. Travel 1 gave it as her reproving professional view that thfs one reason so many men ' • back aches. She said they ought to sit down to pull on their pants, and avpid all that strain on the muscles. These Were the Milestones as long as any other man. He served in the House longer than any member ever did, and broke any number of other longevity records. / t 1 what fat generally agreed to be the & V** In,w“»ko««l highest sense of that terth. He Highlights in the career of House t00 was an individual* - a man Speaker Sam Rayburn: |whq knew what he wanted to do Born Jan. 6, 1882 in Roane or have done, and went about It Cbunty, Tenn. in his own way. Educated East Texas Normal Rayburn, according to reports he declined to deny, let Dr. Travel! know he appreciated her help, but that gulling on pants was man’s jp— llml MillwgiH || Wf Hull late In life tor him to learn a newt ray to do it. iCollege, graduate with a teacher’s ! certificate. ! First office came when elected to the Texas Legislature in 1906 at the age of 24. StaaDchDemocr^t, He Was Fair With All modern mode of the two banks and the imposing . First Baptist Church. A standpipe — .-a huge silvery water tank jn. jHx spindly tegs looks down on the town. "R ham” -is painted big and black on the tank — and scarwled with Seniors ’60,” which last year’ high school graduates left behind. By The Associated Press Sam Rayburn, speaker of the House more than twice as long any predecessor, was the beloved "Mr. Sam” to legions of Democrats—and to Republicans, tod. Though such a fiercely loya partisan party man. that he was called ”Mr. Democrat,” the, rug; ged Texan won a reputation for being fair in his rulings and forgetting politics when he handled the gavel. OppofemenT"" Congress repeatedly praised him tor Ms fairness. Rayburn attributed his longevity In polltloal life and bts rise to an exalted position to knowing how to get along wtflt people. “My advice to any new member who wants to stay here a long fime,” he would say, "is to keep In mind that he has two constituencies: the people who sent him and the colleagues with he must serve. here; and if you want to be in position Which enables you to help and please the people W your -district, you must also please your colleagues in the House\” Ry that, he expli Rayburn was next In line to the presidency during Truman’s first 'hen tpere was records may be measurable, but "immeasurable Is your devotion to cause and country.” While he worked well with his Republican colleagues, Rayburn was a Democrat to the core. “The longer f.jfoipj’e in Congress and the nffidns of the Republican* I he said n( a party dinner, proude no vice He might have been president instead of Truman had he not withdrawn his name from consideration hlaxparty’s nominee tor vice president at the 1944 Democratic ''1 wm prouder and National Convention. His name!I « Democrat, hat) been prominently mentioned, The convention chose Truman as President Franklin D. Roosevelt' running mate. plied Christianity’’ went a lfoig WERE TOGETHER Way. - V-j -Truman and Speaker Rayburn RECORD WAS PROOF \ were together In the letter’s hide- UK any proof of the efficacy efi*way nook in Capitoi on the legislature 1911 at It. Elected to Congress in 1912. Named speaker of the House In 1940. ,*■ Permanent chairman of the Democratic National Conventions of 1948, 1952 and 1956. June 12,1961, he had served as House speaker twice « any other man. Returned to ‘Texas in August complaining of back .pains. His trouble diagnosed it) Dallas cam*r on Oct. 5, Transferred to hometown of Bonham Oet. 31 to that | die. ' ! Died Nov. 16. Sam Rayburn seared the time-worn tactics of other pro feMtonah In fete Held. He didn’t bqek. His smile came only when Ms sense of burner or good nature were sroused. He Maned pretty girls, but seldom n baby.' Without a lot of fuss — except when he felt it swat needed — he attained power second only to that of the President. There have been many times when even the Chief Executive had to settle for what Mr. Sam thought was right. s Rayburn’s formula tor staying in Congress wps needed, Ms record supplied it. He went to Congress March 4, 1913, at the beginning of Woodrow Wilson’s administration and1 served without interruption during the terms of eight Presidents. He was lit the House longer than any contemporary and tor more than a quarter of the Houge’s entire history. During career be calculated be Like any person of power, he had vigorous and outspoken opponents. But even in these ranks there was respect in. the professional sense and, on the personal plane, affection. An old friend and mentor, former Vice President John Nance darner, sure said of him: “8am stays bitched.” The remark sms both appropriate to Rayburn’s ruinsl' background and true of Ms unswerving honesty and loyalty. There was a political fence between Rep. Joseph W. Martin, R-Mass., end Sam Rayburn, but they straddled it like good neighbors. In recent years when colleagues paid lavish tribute to the gpewter on his burthday, Martin, the my than to interrupt Rayburn’s tenting as speaker, led the way. HORN TO GREATNESS On the last occasion, this past Jan. 6, Martin said Mr. Sam was born to greatness — "One of the great figures in American history.” As usual, tom Rayburn put up s glum front and restated bis basic philosophy: That any ntsn can go places If he decides what lie wants ( *'■■■. At rh.Uf.t SEE HERE, MR. PRESIDENT — Sam Rayburn was an outspoken man, even with the President. Here he holds an Impromptu discussion with President Kennedy. Neither knew at the time that it would be one of the last. Rayburn and Kennedy, both staunch Democrats*, have had lltUe. tlme to work together. Rayburn chose his career before he was 10, working In that Texas cotton patch. He called il then just the way it happened •**: to college; to the state legislature; and up to the speakership; to Congress, and speaker of foe U.S. House of Representatives, He was elected to the House by the 4th District of Texas to 1912, when he was 30. He reached his ultimate goal on Sept. 16, IMP, on the death of Speaker William B. BaittBeSt''-"*- -*——. {. HI* col leagues re-elected him as speaker 19 limes — every lime, that Is. that Ms party held control of the bouse. Mr. Sam had to be tough, because he had a tough job. But he couldn’t hold back the tears on April 16. 1955, when top figures to the party threw a glOO-n-plate dinner for him and bestowed upon him the title of "Mr. Democrat” ABLE TO FIX THINGS | .here was something Mr. Sam didn't like, he usually was able to do something about It, one way the other. If a presU THE BmTIAC-PItESS. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 1ft 1W1 Hands,Over $1,500 '• ,'*■**£> FUSRV.-.—J SEE CAMERA MART Ad , TOPAY-*-Page 20 (Ooposi(• Pontiac Airport) OR 3-1254 ; ■ EACH WANTED RIGHT OF WAY—A National Air Lines planT (above) sits bn its nose after collision with a Northeast Air Lines plane at ja runway Intersection at Logan International Airport ~~' ** | | ’* MW "" tail of the Northeast plane (below) was sheared off in the collision. One oil the planes had just landed, the other was preparing to take off when they col* Udcd. Tweive j^osengers were injured, none seriously. STEREOSPEGfALS 4-SPEAWER / W STEREO mm With AtftomotiejCncinf*r* .Extra speakon In lid. ^ R/g. tS9.9S : NORELCO . SPEED SHAVER ) FLOATING HEAD SHAVER A *16" aft Boston Wednesday night The $2jjp00 Wrist Watch Slips Down the Drain jAS,_ANGELES ~(AP)~Dw»J« tile drain went Maureen M. Gray’s $2,000 diamond-studded wrist watch. She notified police Wednesday that she had placed the watch on the ;water tank in her bathroom. In reaching for-and pressing— tiie 'Hushing lever, she accidental* ly brushed the watch into the bond. ROYAL TYPEWRITER With Cat* and fully guaranteed. Reg. $59.95 STEREO With Extension Speaker Reg. $64.95 country dub or ooimtrygide... wear - SEBAGO-IVIOC . t with pride j NOW USE YOUR CREDIT STEREO Wake To Music With G.E. CLOCK RADIO Reg. $21.95 With 2 Separate Extension Speakers " Reg. $69.95 Con-Con Asked to Reword Parts on Handicapped A Wayne strike is meaningless as company decision not to resume operations terminated employment of all em* ployes represented by union on Oct. 3, prior to your order of Oct. 6 TRANSISTOR RADIO .fly Mays' With Case, Earphones and batteries. EAST LANSING UB State University professor wants the constitutional convention to eliminate a section of the present constitution which defines some of the inhabitants of charitable institutions as deaf, dumb, feeble* minded and Insane. Totten said the company cannot accept a decision of the union members to return to wotfc under a contract which has long since expired. Say* Will Go fo Court in Attempt to Force Intertown to Operate LANSING (AP) - The attorney general’s office says It will go to court in Wayne County to try to force Intertown Suburban Bus Lines, Inc., to resume service. The bus firm serves some 30,000 commuters in 30 Downriver Detroit and Western Wayne County communities. STANDISH (AP)—A Flint man was held In the Arenac County Jail today following the deer rifle wounding of his wife. He recommended that in place of the deaf and dumb clause the new section read: “For the care, treatment, education and rehabilitation of those inhabitants who are physically, mentally and socially handicapped." ★ Sr ★ He also proposed a change in the wording of the constitution to include a pledge of state support for programs and services—as well as Institutions—for the handicapped. 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Sturdily Made to Stand a lot of Hard Uso tool JOE PALOOKA BOP BAG EVANS TRICYCLES 16 Inch $977 20 Inch *}097 For Fun and Exercise , Tom Thumb TYPEWRITER ALL METAL IRONING ROARD Sturdy Built, tv Last Ihe Littlo lady a Long Time. SLACKS CONSUMERS A CENTER . /pft GBBBB BUDDY L All Metal TRUCK Oivo That Littlo Follow Many Hours of Ploasuro, $357 | i At; vCwi Mission Board1 I Makes Mans tor < ChurchMerger j CLEVELAND W~The board id | .-., bave prought In a private transaction at some point in his-tory. But even guesses and rumors seldom have gone above $1million to $1% million. It never has been denied that when the late Andrew Mellon—whose .'pictures now are’ in the National Gallery—paid the Russian government $21 million for seven pictures in 1932, Raphael's Aba Madonna was rated at a little more than |l.i million. HOWARD JOHNSON'S SPECIAL • TURKEY DINNER Approve Alpena project WASHINGTON (UP1). - -T h « Community Federal Housing Ad ministration today approved a. workable slum and blight clear-unce>programproposed by Alpena, I Mich, wiimnuigmiianE The record for a single painting |at auction was $770,000 for Ru-I bens’ "The Adoration of the Magi,’’ at a London sale in 1989. Tb#record for a collection at auction was $2,186,000 for seven French moderns in London in 1938. U.S. to Send Men, B26s to HelpSoitth Viet Nath Only Howard Johnson's fives you this delicious oung Tom Turkey Dinner with all the trimmings for just talked with members of the Taylor mission received san impression of something less than optimism about prospects for pulling Viet Nam out of the fire. There was a , feeling in some pentagon quarters that the mission of tiie U.S. Military Advisory Group in Viet, faam should he changed, that fewer members of the group should stay in Saigon and more get put (in the country to work alongside the troops and local officials at the lowest possible level. WASHINGTON (AP)—The Ken-loads of supplies 1 nedy administration is reported pines to. airfields to have decided to go ahead with The supplies were some of Gen. Maxwell D, Taylor’s helicopters capabl recommendations for strengthen- troops and morn ing South Viet Nam against a low-level strafing, growing Communist onsaught. * * "We’re beginning to get off the There also hav ground," a high official told a to that the Air For inductee cranberry sauce, dressing, fluffy moshed potatoes, carrots and peas, hot roll, butter, beverage and Vbur choice of pumpkin pie or one of pur famous ice creams Of sherbets. Where? At New President Macapagal Victorious In Hard-Fought Battle With Garcia MANILA (AP)—Diosdao Maca- Secrecy still obscures details Of pagai clinched the presidency of what Taylor recommended to Fnes* the Philippines today. The SI- ident Kennedy after returning two year-old vice president defeated weeks ago from a fact-finding mis* President -Carlos P. Garcia in a sion to Southeast Asia. Taylor is hard-fought campaign. Kennedy’s' personal «tjHfory W*» i,: it. _ - .situ,_i A.A.....''I .i’"" OEBANPR***''^1" < . .£ Some members of the Tajdor mission are known to have folt Vietnamese power wasn’t be* Ing used to Jfo fullest advantage, even though it included only about a dozen single engine' propeller-driven fighter planes and a handful of elderly transport aircraft, f ★ * To bolster this small tome, it was understood a few World ( War II vintage B26 bombers were being assigned to the Vietnamese. 4jp ■ ★ w Pentagon officials who have HIGHWAt AT Drayton Plains This ckrfidous special dinner fir 'ofTeretf 'TffiiSliSh'" Sunday, November 19 ONLY, so come tonight to HOWARD JOHNSON'S namese communications and command and control apparatus primitive, suggested Americans might have to step in and more directly Control these - functions rather titan standing to one side ae advisers. Macapagal is pledged to wipe, out graft. With perhape 83 tier cent of the returns in, the unofficial count1 gave Macapagal 3,188,133 votes’ add Garda 2,529,756. ESTIMATE HEAVY VOTE ( Estimates of the total vote ] ranged from 6.5 to ? million. | In the vice presidential race, ■ Macapagal’s running mate, Emmanuel Pelhez, led with 2,017,086 votes. His closest rival, independent Sergio Osmena Jr., son of the late President Osmena, had 1,819,086. Gil J. Puyat, Garda’s mining mate, had 1,479,532, , Garde, i TAKING PICTURES Reports from South Viet Nam indicated a number of actions already may have begun. 4r Sr ★. U.S. Air Force Jets have been carrying ottt aerial photographic reconnaissance. The Air Force has been reported shuttling plane- _______ 65, the NadoiuiUsta standard bearer, was fUent as his Liberal rival issued a statement saying the campaign is over, that the task of building the nation wiH now begin. Macapagal’s supporters had been calling him a winner since Wednesday night. * * a Sen. Ferdinand E. Marcos, president of Macapagal’* Liberal party, said today: "There is no longer any c» doubt as to the out* come Of tits presidential election." SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT JUMittau.. 1970.00 Bathrooms. 9650.00 Attics.... $850.00 REMODEL IN TIMI FOR THE HOLIDAYS AT BIO SAVINGS! nn ESTIMATES PLANNING SERVICE Call FE 4-1594 JVO OBLIGATION FOB BUSINESS CORNER of JOSEPHINE Namesake Grandchild Makes Disney Happy HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Movie maker Walt Disney haa a new grandchild—the first named for him—and he says he would have traded all his awards to insure such a namesake, i Walter Ellas Disney Miller was ; borU Tuesday night to Mrs. Ron Miller. The Millers have four other cml-Idren. She is the former Diane 'Disney. , LOCATED AT FLASH . . SEE CAMERA MART Ad TODAY—Pogo 20 Complete WALL TILE TAKE YOVR PlCKl All Flartic Wall Til. ELECTRIC uoht rarmus^ (Large Selection) DISCOUNT PRICES FREE! GENUINE FORMICA Plastic Fortified 49<« CeHieg Tile '“SZT7* S'. «. 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If the party doesn’t register, its of-ficers must by Nov. 30. LEADING LADIES—Only these 22 Pasadena City College coeds remain jn the competition for Queenofthe CaUfamiadty’sannual Tournament of Roses. Several jddginga have eliminated all ap ntuiii others of the original 2,200 coeds who sought the crown. The eventual winner, wtth-a court of slx princesses, will reign over the New Year’s Day floral parade and Rose Bowl football game. Says Family Must Protect Itself Fallout Is Individual Care Swainson Urges Aid Plan Tied to Social Security DETROIT (AP)—It is up to the Individual to provide fallout protection for his family in the event of a nuclear disaster, an administration official said Wednesday. “With certain obvious exceptions it is the view of the federal government that people should provide faHout protection for their families,” said John E. Cosgrove. Cosgrove, assistant director of the Office of Emergency Planning, addressed a session of a White House regional confer* !lud*d Wednesday himself to prevent a neighbor from getting into his shelter, Cosgrove said “the federal government does not favor shooting ' i neighbor. Experience In and disasters has shown that people are very cooperative." Lake Grain Shipments Highest in 16 Years night. NOT IN FAVOR He added that the government’s position did not rule out community) neighborhood or state action in providing fallout protection. Asked if a person should arm CLEVELAND UD-The Lake Car, riers’ Association says October grain shipments over the Great, Latasrwere - the 'Klgfiesf Tbr that month since 1945. Shipments totaled 1,931,566 net tons, but only,lJ.8 per cent of that tonnage moved in United States ships, said Oliver T. Burnham, association vice president and secretary. DETROIT tat — Gov. Swainson Wednesday called on Michigan’ elderly citizens to put pressure on Congress next year to medical care plan tied to the Social Security system. “The best way to meet the problems of medical care (or foe aged la through systematic contributions of employe and employer while the employe Is port of the labor force," the governor, told n rally of senior cltisens. President Kennedy endorsed the concept of Soda! Security financing of medical care this year hut Congress did; net pass the legation to put it into effect. Enactment of the bill would strengthen voluntary health insurance plans by removing the higher cost of insuring the aged, Swain-said. Filter to Protect Sailors From FaRouf Motorial as Deadline Draws Near are subject to ft fine of up to 110,000 tor each day of violation of the registration requirements. If the two deadlines Are ignored there is a third; party members must file by Dec.- 20. If they Both deadlines are apt to be ignored by Communist party lead-who have fought the issue in courts since passage of the Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950, which prescribed the registrations. The Communists have vowed to go to Jail rather than comply. In the face of the defiance. Justice Department officials have begun mapping plans to prosecute, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy indicated in Dallas Wednesday the steps his department woujA tako if the deadlines are ignored. Also, individuals may draw OTTAWA tlt-Canadian sailors serving in 22 of the Navy’s most modern warships will be protected against radioactive fallout material or chemical or bacteriological agents,' it was, ^disclosed Wednee-day. 1 The defense research chemical laboratories at nearby Shirley Bay has perfected a filter apparatus to screen cut radioactive particles at the ship’s air intakes, officials said. The machine can be manufac- Artisticany designed pipes sonfejin the America* 10M ■ *r%>mA fw»n stum*, were smokediColtonbus .tended. .. t. d©n*t, tfw*y face the same fine.—tinea tor. abom. J2J00., Two are required for each modern destroy- DR. HENRY A, MILLER Optometrist > 7 North Saginaw Street 4>hon*^FF^d842 “Better things, in Sight” Contact Lenses Opftfr Ffi. ■ Evenirtqs-^£loseri~Wed. Afternoons If the Communist leaders fail to register “as they have indicated," Kennedy told a meeting of the Associated Press Managing Editors convention, they will then be subject to a $10,000 fine and a five-year imprisonment. We also move in that area." Both the party and its leaders Reds'Won't Comply' With Subversion Act NEW YORK W — The Worker, Communist newspaper, says that neither the party nor its leaders will comply with a law, effective Monday, requiring them to regls-i an arm of the Soriet Unjgjx, U.8. Atty. Gen. "Robert Kennedy •aid in St. Louis Tuesday that ”.we will prosecute” unless the leaders oomply. The issue was brought to a head when the Supreme Court, after 10 years of litigation, sustained section 13 of the Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950. LOW PRICES-EASIER TERMS-R/6SEtECEm SALE! 23” INCH 1962 DRYER NO FREE TRIPS l« HAWAII - by GIBSON NOTHING TO BUY ... JUST COME IN AND REGISTER ONLY GOOD HOUSEKEEPING Of PONTIAC JI M18 SAME AS CASH - • ; 51 West Hfcftm Street ’ FE 4*1555 or low weekly or monthly payment. .. . . Ofrq Fruited MOw* f »»gO ME. m w i ROBERT HALL OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL 9:30 Our nationally famous Orion’ Pile Lined ALL WEATHER QUALITY ZIPCOATS 21 95 comp. value 29.95 ALTERATIONS FREE Quality coats at an inexpensive price... that's why more men are shopping and buying at Robert Hall! Water-repellent! 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PLENTY of FREE PARKING teste _ Ilk* 881 _ $h____i PONTIAC PR] * *■ What a team. What balance .,. what finesse. They’re fast on their feet...good on rebounds arid never beaten in a, fast break. They are the writers for The Pontiac Press. They combine their talents to put your paper together every day. They travel fast, work hard and write well to bring you All the news of Your World. For enjoyment, stimulation and help you can’t beat The Pontiac Press. Read it cover to cover every day. You’ll like it! THE PONTIAC PRESS V THlRTY-NIffEl THR PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SOVEMBKR 16, yfr>, 1‘1'? 7^/ season, opened Wednesday and be- * * * fore the first day ended at least Jaarsma reported" to the Kent *hrtt hunter* died of heart attacks Co unty Sheriffs' department and another in, a traffic accident: ~stmwonp-1wd-Mone-hehind a ft-There were So reports of gun- foot high fence at Ws farm to shot victims. H day and carry off an eight-point. v, s. sayior. •jprr- a] ,* />®tehbor dtacover-ed the tTsIs In Jerome TqnSMp war P|acp whero the 'hunter had L . . ... -..dressed out his kill. Jaarsma is Sanfori; In Midland Comity. ntlerintf ™ tln?1 tmvL.aJ,tnr Frank Flewelling, 71, of Rogers) formation leading to the arrest City, collapsed tmd died while of the trespasser, hunting with his wife near Rogers > The deer was one of a number City. ■ ' of animals Jaarsmu keeps ih a Georgs E. Weaver, 55, of Flint small *oo. Besides the buck was found dead near a buck ire ‘here are 18 other deer, all doea had shot near Escanaba In the and Illegal to kill during the Upper* Peninsula. Weaver appar- season, antelope, llamas and wild ently llapsed white trying to haul j fow'L. . • - * the carcass out. JZi Kf'&nV ^',9*osk,y Man-Will-Head struck by a car as he crossed u.s,jIonia County Schools 10 In the village of Branch. Bor-| ■ der» was on a deer hunting trip IONIA (Jh Bruce T. Blanchard In Lake County. lof Petoskey takes office Jan. 1 as But U.S. officials said this did agreed to meet In Paris at about, the time of the NATO ministerial meeting there Dec. 13-15. f Officials said a major purpose of~tl«r'Big- Four me^ng/vrould be to further work out a common Western position for possible Berlin negotiations with Russia, Con-Con Looks at Proposal to Enlarge An earlier step in/this process will be West Gentian Chancellor Konrad Adenauer*^ visit to Washington next week/ The State Department also has announced that Walter Dowling, U.S. Ambassador to Bonn, and Gen. Lucius B. Clay, President Kennedy’s personal emissary in Berlin, have been recalled for consultations'this weekend and win be here during Adenauer’s visit. / ★ w: fr While past foreign ministers’ meetings have been held in an atmosphere of imminent East-West negotiation, this time the attitude in Washington and other Western Capitols was extremely wary. AdYertited Stainless Steel Service lor 8 Any member of a committee may demand a roll call on committee decisions, with the votes to be available for public inspection. dispose of civil cases Involving $2,000 or less. Another new Court of Domestic Relations would handle all cases dealing with divorce, juvenile delinquent! and dependents, easing the case load of other existing courts. Each county would be directed to provide for at least one judge to be elected for a four-year .term, ■ T7^.......... LANSING (ft — A plait for an 11-member state Supreme Court and substitution of cqunjy court judges for justices of the peace is up for consideration at the 'constitutional convention. A third proposal would enable any three members of a committee to submit a minority report to the legislature when the committee di-vides on an issue, Frank G. Millard) R-Flint,, for-mer Michigan attorney general, said he submitted the proposal in behalf of Probate Judge Frank L. McAvinchey of Genesee County, its author.; 5 The new judicial system would Delegate Lee Walker, D-Madison Heights, came up with three proposals designed to make sure that deliberations of the legislature, are open to public scrutiny. It' would prohibit any standing committee from holding a closed meeting Margaret and Son 'FiY , After Birth 13 Days Ago LONDON (UPI) — Princess Mari garct and her 13-dsy-old son are “fit and well,” according to Clarence House sources. The princess and the boy are expected to leave Clarence House, where the birth took place, and return to her Kensington Palace home within two weeks, the sources said. All but the chief justice, elected by his fellow judges, would be divided into two five-member afo pellate courts. The court would sit as one body only to hear ques-lions involving the state or federal constitutions, "the welfare of thq state” or cases to which the two, appellate divisions could not agree. OTHER PROPOSALS The convention’s judiciary committee currently is considering oth- ROBERT HALL OF A NEW DEPARTMENT program director of the Michigan -NOW-OPiH— ALL NEW—BEAUTIFUL AIRWAY LOUNGE DANCING NIGHTLY , mS Highland ltd. S74-MS4 diate appellate court to relieve the Supreme Court’s work burden. The Mlllard-McAvInchey plan would do away with Justices of the peace and create at least one judgeship In every county to A Detroit liative, Baker was in the mental health field in Pennsylvania before coming to Flint last year. The Heart association, an agency oL Michigan United Fund, has headquarters in Detroit. Cftnstaasll^W& MEN AND BOYS A new department with a new idea — men's quality shoes at one price, $6.99, none higher! Choose from a huge selection of the most wonted | styles in complete size ranges. Westerfieid shoes are made of fine quality leathers by the largest manufacturer of shoes in the U.S.A. Yes, once again Robert Hall proves that for cash you gat high quality at inexpensive prices! AUTO STORES The "Flightweight” TANK MODEL —equipped with a Chain Quwrd—a Carrier— a Safety Reflector— Chromed Trim Rods— a “Giant" Hoodlighl-Stroomlleed TANK-I $42.88! Buck tan glove leather beet, Perfect for hunters, fishermen, farmers, truckmen. 3 eyelet bluchet in black. Classic styling perfect for any occasion. Italian-influenced side tie shoe In black with stitched moccasin-toe. A big VALUE I It'* a bike they'll love to own... deluxe In equipment... deluxe in conitruction... deluxe in detign... deluxe in appeeronce. See tMi One I J2 HOLDS T«* pife 'New/... Excitingly Different I "Super” TANK MODEL ( Sanbwssj*^ none higher! Cantilever 'TklHMA*" American built—In the new, oil'modem cantilever styling. w and rear reflector. m BOYS or OlltlS r 24 In.—20 In. Site Reg $39.95 Chip resistant enameled BKE HEADQUARTERS IN CLARKSTON--WATERFORD 6440 DIXIE HIGHWAY IN PONTIAC 200 NORTH SAGINAW STREET BOTH STORES OPEN SUNDAY 12-6 P. M. PLENTY of FREE PARKING MC\A/f “lower Cost Credit” at J & R—Carrying Charges REDUCED 20% NEW ! instant Crsdit — No Down Payment —Take Up to 2 YEARS to Pa J & R AUTO STORES ■Siii9HE313 i- m 1 World Famous American Mad* 1 [ nROLLFAST”... now 1962 Modohl I MEET ‘HIE CHIEFS — Here is Pontiac Central's probable starting offensive lineup for Friday night's crosstown football struggle with Pontiac Northern at Wlaner Stadium. Linemen include (from lift): end Milford Hfijte, tackle Jerry Madden, guard Wayne Lee, center Tom Eichhom, guard Gary Wesley, tackle Dick Richard*, end Ellck Shorter. Backs are (hum left): halfback Roy Couser, fullback Elbert Hall, quarterback Bob Pomeroy, halfback Charley Humphrey. Kickoff time is 8 o’clock. MEET THE HUSKIES - Hem is Pontiac Northern’s probable starting offensive Uneup for Friday night’s intracity football battle with Pontiac Central at Wiener Stadium. Linemen are (from left): End Lou Norberg,, tackle Dave Gruber, guard Steve Lang, center George Plummer, guard Art Solomon, tackle Don Glowaz, end Dennis Huffte. Backs include (from left): halfback Dave Shields, fullback Chris Payne, halfback Don tyeyer. Quarterback Rick fisher waits for the snap from center. ", Chiefs, Huskies Anxiously Await 2nd Grid Clash Friday Night Heavier, More Seasoned Line Big PCH Asset Bqckfield Speed Rated About Even for Friday Beetle at Wisner By BOX CORNWELL Pontiac Central's greatest advantage over Pontiac Northern in Friday night’s 2nd annual intracity football duet at Wisner Stadium* will be, in theory, where it counts the most — up front. -Although the Huskies are perhaps a bit laster, PCli boasts an ~ -edge in iwtt teetgW ence In the forward wall, the place where football games are usually won or tost. Paul Dellerba, Central’s head coach, is hoping that the Chiefs’ superior weight and experience will eventually wear down the Huskies’ front line forces and produce a PCH victory. ♦ k k The Chiefs had little trouble be^tjpg their crosstown rivals in last' year's inaugural Wisner as they cruised to a 54-14 triumph. D(ra itimum of praise this season, which Is a fairly common characteristic of most forwards;-but- (he fact remains that the Chiefs have several very capable performers in thp territory where the going is the1'toughest. The Chiefs have veteran strength at end positions in 200-pound senior Ellck Shorter and IM-pbund Junior Milford Htllie. Shorter and Hillle have been particularly effective In a defensive capacity. • Dick Richards, a 200-pound junior who is built low to the ground, has been the mainstay of the tackle corps while Wayne Lee, a 180-f»und junior, spearheads the guard post. * * * Lee. a standout player all season long for PCH despite missing two games due to injuries, is regarded as a good college prospect by Dellerba. He’s the top blocking lineman on offense and a solid defensive linebacker. His pass in* i creep) ion at Saginaw three weeks ago .set up a Central TO. Tlte giant of the PCH 1 line is center Tom Eichhom, a 225-pound senior who virtually is immovable in the middle of the line when hie puts His mind to the task at hand. Dcllerlm also has’’ received steady" performances from senior guard Gary Wesley, a 170-pounder, and IM-pcund senior tackle Jerry Madden, who likewise mlMtod a couple or games because of injuries. Ed,’McGee and Julian Spires canmr through in the dutch for Dellerba at guard and tackle, spedttvoly, when Lee and Madden were hurt. z, k * « Shatter, Hillie, Eichhom, and Richards all boast at least one year of previous experience. This is the 3rd year of varsity com-petition for Shorter. Northern may have a slight edge in backficld speed, but is negligible in view of the loss of Bill Young who became ill after two games. The speed of Roy Couser, Jesse Hodge, Charley Humphrey and Elbert Hall make the two baekfields compare favorably. Bowling establishments of Oakland County have a chance to add a . nice big trophy to their showcases as result of the 5th annual Pontiac Press Bowlerama. One of the trophies to be awarded, will be the "House tVOPhy.” It- will frft S|rpllar tQ_a. Spnnsrw^-q»w>phy Bowlerama 'House Trophy to Best Five-Mart Group mflltave the opportunity to name any five Individuals entered In the Bowlerama as "their representative team.” The actual scores of these film bowlers will be totaled and the highest total among the representative groups will earn a trophy for the establishment. a The actual scores of the five bowlers in their first qualified qualifying round only, will be counted. The bowler can bowl on either week or whenever he choosela. He does not have Id bowl as a unit with the other members of the choSen group. * ★ ★ ★ / The establishments must indicate to Bowlerama officials prior to the opening qualifying round, by marking the .entry blank that the bowler will be one of his five representatives. T Actually, the bowler doesn’t even have to make the finals. It Is his actual score that counts whether he qualifies or not. Besides the house trophy, each member of /the five-man gronp wtH recetve an additional 5-doliar gift tertifi-eate at the establishment aside from any money or trophies he may win as a qualifier, / ! Interest has been keen in the Actual’a Invitational part of the) Bowlerama. Last year 47 of the best bowlers In the tournament were Invited to this feature7 part of the tourney with Paul George emerging the champion and Bill Bull as runnerup. / dr dr w This year a record number of entries are expected in the Bowlerama and this should Increase the number of Actual Invitational bowlers. Invitation Is made on the basis of average and of actual score In the handicap part of the tourney. The high qualifiers at .each house, the champion and runnerup In the Bowlerama automatically are Invited in the Actual’s field. A $100 has been added td the Actual’s part of the tourney with the winner earning $50 and a trophy, the runnerup $25 and trophy, and the next two places $15 and $10. There is no additional entry for the Actuals tourney. Those Invited need only pay their line fees. The Actual’s bowlers, will compete for their title Immediately following the finals of the Bowlerama, December 17th at "300 Bowl.” Bowlers are reminded that the first DEADLINE for ^ qualifying December 3rd at either Wonderland orf Lake-wood to Wednesday night, November $9th. By trying to qualify the first date, bowlers will have the Hall Beats Sawc 2-0, in Close-Checking Game opportunity to try again the following weekend, December 10th at either Colliers In Oxford or Huron Bowl. Ho bowler, however, can try to qualify twice In the same day or In tha samb estahitoftmont _—.L-j.— Entries In the Bowlerama have been going at a greater pace than last year when 680 participated. Paul Horie at Wonderland Lanes on Richardson and Union Lake Roads, across from the Commerce drive-in, reported that he had 80 bowlers entered the first two days he had the entry blanks this week. Last jrear, with 680 entries, all prize positions received more money than was guaranteed. The winner, Ken Leece won $535 instead of the $500 guaranteed. All other positions were ata/lncreased. With the possibility of 800 entries and more this year, the Winner's share could reach $600 and more. One thing Is certain, every bowler who qualifies Is assured of at least $10 and one of every seven entries is certain to share the purse. rest tm MASON ESOOBDS JfiPMlINlL | 5 Flint NorUi«-rn j if Waterford 0 Bov City H dy 33 13 fcrxley 90 flaelOBW 7 7 Rocnm*r 7 S0 Keturto* PRESS BOX CHICAGO IB - The Detroit Red Wings played a tight-checking game and goalie Terry Sawchuk only 21 shots %fired at him. compared to 28 for Glenn Hall of the Chicago Black Hawks. But Sawchuk had two go past him— both while the Wings were man short — and Hall stopped them all. So the Black Hawks took a 24) National Hockey League victory last night. In Die only other NHL game of the night, the Toronto Maple Leafs slipped back Into second place With a 3-2 victory over Hall's shutout was his second of the season, putting him into a tie tor the loop leadership with Saw- Bill Hay scored both Chicago goals, his first two of the sear The victory was the fourth of year for the defending Stanley Cup ijj champions and moved' the Hawks ? into fourth place tie with the , Hay's first goal came midway [ The powerful Canadiens forged | In the first period. Hay took the a 2-1 lead early in the third period .' puck item Leo Lablne is feet In bu{ Eddie Shack tied H Hay took a pass from Bronco Horvath in the final period, with Detroit a man short again, and! rammed a 20-footer into the De-! trolt cage from a difficult angle to the'left. The Toronto Maple Leafs, in and out of the No. 2 spot all season, are in again. The Leafs Jammed in two goals within a space of 17 seconds of the last period last night and beat Montreal, 3-2, It moved them past idle New York into the runner-up spot. ★ * * The Victory served to further close a race already as tight as Cape Canaveral security. Montreal now leads Toronto by one point, and New York Is the same distance bade In third. Montreal, seriously challenged for the No. l spot that It has held so often It's almost habit, wl|l try to ||)iek up a little ground against last place Boston In the only league actlvjty tonight. The Pontiac Northern players, have selected quarterback Rick Fisher the moat valuable player of 1961 and named defensive ace Mike Marcum as captain tor *62. At Southfield, Rick Brewer was picked most valuable lineman and captain-elect for 1962. Soph Larry Crawford won back honors. ♦ Sr # , Former Michigan State pitcher Red Zllts was signed by the White Sox yesterday. Juan Pli-taro also Inked a contract. Milt Pappas of the Orioles suffered minor Injuries In nn auto accident yesterday. k k k Harness racing's richest event— the. $145,377 Messenger Stakes — will be held at Westbury, N.Y. tomorrow night. Five of the nine pacers entered were sired by Adi- Northern Michigan has dropped out of the top ten but continues to get votes In the AP small college football poll. ♦ k ' k ' Two past water contestants in the Olympics became the parents of their Jit child this week. They are 1960 diving gold-medal wi Gary Tobian aqd swimmer. His wife is former swimmer Marley Schriver. 11 Centreville Athletes Flunk Drinking Jest' CENTREVILLE (UPI) - School [authorities confirmed toddy that 11 Centreville High School boyfc have been suspended from all athletic competition for one year because of a drinking tocident. School superintendent Norman Whisler said the drinking occurred on the school bus the football team was riding in after its upset win over Marcellus last weekend. The victory gave Centreville portion of a three-way first place tie in the St. Joseph Valley Confer- Baytown, mo. st respect for Central, especially the defense of the Chiefs. Tony Pizza was high in praise of PCH after scouting last week’s South-Western game. W ★ * It could change from a high-scoring affair in i960 to a battle of defenses this, time since stopping the enethy has been the top forte of both dubs. The Huskies have appeared relaxed in drifts Kud in high spirits. They have put In a lot of work on plays and held a long scrimmage session. A light session (sided workouts today. The squad is in top shape for the occasion. Gotog- toto the game with a 6-2 record. Northern has already got even tor one bad beating of last year and he’s aiiktops to make up r the other,, Southfield walloped the Red and White 52-13 last fall but was a 14-6 loser this, fall. Central breezed 54-14. Northern coaches feel It will be closer this time but are malting no predictions. It might be to Northern’s advantage to get behind early. The He played to all but one game during the season, getting 159 hits in 560 times at bat for a .269 average. Slugging at a .630 dip, he had 16 doubles, 4 triples and •cored 132 runs. won the 1960 M.V.P. i 39 homers and 112' runs batted to. Mantle, hampered with injuries durtog late season, hit 54 homers and batted .313. He drove to 132 runs. The Mick had six first place votes, seven seconds, two tor third and five ter fourth. " *s ,v ★ Gentile, a sophomore, : got five votes tor first place- HID 46 home runs decorated a .302 batting average. He was only one behind Maris to RBI with 111. , Cash wm named on every ballot along with Mute and Mantle- He received one lint place vote for his league leading .981 batting ; average. 41 homers and 132 RBI’s. Arroyo, who And a 15-5 record and a 2.18 earned 'tm 'overage, got the other first place vote, Maris hit his 61st homer to the ,st game td a 162-game schedule after he had fallen one short of Ruth’s 1927 marie to the 'farmer 154-game distance. routed for tout of its victories, broke a tie In the last half for another and romped after a slow start. The Huskies held strong Walled Lake scoreless for three quarters and then almost pulled out a win. They alto came close to nipping Berkley to the closing-stages after a see-saw struggle. Their two defeats have been by a combined tour points. :. . ,1«» «.' Sr. si eBiianv iff ar US Humphrey ISO Jr. Shield* .f« Sr. SB Cornier .. US Sr Faya* ...1SS Sr. SB H»» . ..IMSr Hot Wtt Beginning LAFAYETTE, La. (AP)>- Th» weather man treated spirits todaj as the IMMW0 ‘Cajun Classic got tourney Mian following nearly a week of heavy rains. a* m ^'«S* TOE EONTIAC PRESS. TtttJliSDAY NOVEMBER 16, 1961 AssigK From Nephew Leander By MAJOR AMOS B. ROOTLE (and the effects of downdraft* on a Father of the Belly Series football in flight and I've worked Egad, friends, . I have a treat for lout my own system- Betcha it’ll you this week. work.’’ Eariy in, September, my nephew To be- sure, Lcander’s system is Leander offered his services to the a crude one, but the lad came up px>p|e Football Forecasting Fo- with some interesting predictions, nan. “■ NOTICE FOR THI CONVENIENCE OF OUR CUSTOMERS WHO HAVE BEEN UNABLE to Take advantage of our TIRE SALE DURING OUR REGULAR HOURS WtWILLBE ORIN FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P. M. We guarantee you a tremendous savings on Firq* stone tires . . , whitewalls, black walls,nylon, | rayon, Town & Country winter tires, tubed type or tubeless. We have your size on sale at tremen* dous discount. Best of all, We’ll take your old tires in trade regardless of condition and you can take | up to a year to pay with easy payday terms. Everyone who purchases $19.95 or more on our | convenient budget terms will receive a valuable gift. STORES 146 West Huron Stroot More Keglers Share in Prizes at hrkewgod Proprietor Bill Kuklinski akewood Lane* I* being kept busy these days keeping up a supply of prizes for his bowlers who have been “burning up” the alleys at 5121 West'Huron,' ft' ft * He has certain awards set aside J for various high scores and the keglers have been taking advantage of the generosity.. Bill Bull, an Instructor there, recently took home a watch for topping 265 by two pins in a 681 series. Bob Willis, who sponsors his own team in the Baldwin Rubber loop, also won a timepiece for hitting 273. ft * ♦ Ivy League kegler Bob Brown carped a pen and pencil set for topping 240 in a 685. He did it twic* with 245-247. World's Match Game Tourney Start: CHICAGO (AP) — A field of 128 j entry list representing 25 states men and 64 women will warm upland Canada and Mexico, tonight in a “Parade of (foam- ft ft , ft pions ” for (he fifth,anual World's, The meet, for the first time, will Invitational Match Game Bowling be held on 16 alleys built In the Championship. jnorth unit of the main exhibition The 10-day fourney, with a die- floor at McCormick Place, Chi-tribution of $45,240 In prize money, jeago’ starts Friday morning with the! ter 0 And in the true Hoopla tradition he jlljhaa confined himseli to the more lljdifficult selections. Go on with die predictions: Georgia Tech 24, Alabama 10 _ Princeton 10, Yale 14 ----* Arkansas 0, So. Methodist 8 Oklahoma 88, Army is Auburn 84, Georgia 21 Baylor 88, Air Fame 14 Kansas $8, California 16 Colorado 47, Nebraska 16 Columbia 20, Pennsylvania 6 Dartmouth 17, Cornell 7 North Carolina 22, Duke 20 Penn State 87, Holy Cross 8 Wisconsin 8, Illinois 8 Indiana 18, West Virginia • Iowa 31, Michigan 21 Missouri 32, Kansas State u La. State 28, Mississippi St. 0 Maryland If, Wake Forest 10 M|ch. State 15, Northwestern 14 Purdue 22, Minnesota is Mississippi 21, Tennessee 14 So. Carolina 27, NX. State 15 Syracuse 16, Notre Dame 10 Oregon It, Ohio State 0 So. California 14, Pittsburgh 8 Texas A. and M. 18, Rice 8 •^TWxaa't8,'1fo».'',c*irlorT'.. UCLA 23, Washington 8 Bowling Loop Loses Omaha Officials Don't Think Nbw NBL Will Disband as a Rosult KART SCWAf'P'N'Eft 8cM AffSfc y’ YORK squares foot laboiv That’s the average Amount of fabric in * a suit When the fabric is the finest and the tailoring is the perfection of seventy-four years of experience, then every inch of the suit says “Hart Sehaffner & Marx” as definitely as the label sewn inside. Our HS&M suits begin at 79s® 4 THE STYIE CORfg« Qt PONTIAC ■ Open Friday Night Until 9 ’ W« Pay Your Port ing SAGINAW at LAWRENCE BIRMINGHAM-272 W. Maple DALLAS Tex. (AP) - Commissioner Dick Charles and Curtis Sanford of the Na-j tlonal Bowling League said Wednesday they did not think their organization would fold because of the withdrawal of Omaha. | Owner Bill Russell of Omaha j turned his franchise back to the league Monday. Charles said the league ting everyone In , free for the next two MEN'S PARKAS ig. 12.00.... $ 9.95 «. 19.00.....$10.95 • PANTS• LADIES1 .. | 9.96 .. itt.es WHIM. AUONMINT Mew Cats —69.9S MUPPURS INSTAUIO eA foW q has emergedjta recent games as a- top lor all-Blg Tan honors. "He has turned tuts a first* “merged Jn, of-j candidate ott of the ne-pound Char* I senior wtoOtt,,,:e«ft’ reason why same ‘seers are plcUng Michigan to upset powerful lows Hall has gone both. ways to all [-“Michigan’s games, Including the Minnesota and Duke games he Wfut suffering from a stomach illness. anybody deserves to tie honored, It’s Hall," said Joe O’Donnell, Om man he replaced. Top Trade-In Allowance Uw Your Cor at a, Down Payment PONTIAC RETAIL "Nobody had a tougher Job than Lea. He started out at left guard, had to switch to right guard in the middle of the year after Joe O’Donnell got hurt, and at the same thine was moved from mid* die guard to linebacker on do* 65 MT. CLEMENS ST. PE 3-7954 “For a player to make all those i changes and still play as well as 'Lee Is quite an accomplishment." alt was a first-stringer from SERVICE AUTOSTORES SPECIALS the beginning but tad Ms Job rtjp fata, j(tai'-.hsr Dell and six ethers tram /the. ‘He’s done a better job than I Hast LANSING » - Two frustrated football teams will try to take out their.its.,on each other when Michigan State and Northwestern meet here Saturday. The Spartans slid down to ninth in the national ratings after losing two away games to Minnesota and Purdue. MSU now has a. 3-2 con-leeimce eiacord. t! J*j Northwestern ie&3 to t|to Big Ten but feels it should be higher. The Wildcats complain they fumbled away die touchdowns In a 10*3 loss to Minnesota and held Ohio State until the MeMew~nitfr htes before losing 1ts V™ -TV • Amazingly -soft to the skin 1 -—napped far added warmth 1 ‘ “1 ***** «* Rag. IM* Mth • Extra strong roinforetd SfONdl ► 100% combed top quality $2*8 Each TOPS and BOTTOMS— .SHIRTS—Long or abort sloovoa . ,/ Small, Med., Urge X-Largo DRAWERS—Elastic Walat—Ankle Length 1-PIECE THERMAL KfilT UNION $011$ |0AH Long slseves—ankle length-size* 36 ft 46 _ ........3 Extra sizes 48 to 52-$6.98 SWEATERS $29» 100%' Worsted Wool Coat Sweater Oxford Grey, 'Navy, ' Postmanblue, Brawn Sixes 38 to 46 $5.95 Sixes 48 to 54 $6.95 Sweten-WMte, Mon, Muck MEN'S UNION SUITS $195 Sft se Wto ^**5.49 jofs ssaRPLtS"„“1sr CHICAGO . not. New Me*, r 3. Lerecheld. Utah 1 4 Owl*, Ssrroeuee . а. Santa, ocla .«......... б. Harris. Louisiana St... against the Minnesota Vikings at Minneapolis. Then the Lions lure home for throe of their last ‘ games of the iehson, .. the win at Green Bay. Detroit has ‘ victories at Baltimore/ Los s and St. Louis and garnered ft tie at San Francisco when Tommy Davis booted a field goal with lour aecondstoplay^ Whether Hotming «dll miss the tst of the Packer games fills year is a question mark. But if the Army gives him permission play on Weekends r™ “ Wilson figures John Gordy should get the Gordy was called into active duty last week and missed Sunday’s game at St. Louis, "If they let one do it, they’d have to let fiie others play, too,’’ Wilson said in reference to reports Homung might receive weekend passes fo play with the Pack- Wilson figures Detroit can't make a mistake the rest of the way if the Liomi are to overtake Packers. And the Lions have a tough row to hoe. They have one road game at Chicago Dec. 3 and close out the season as hosts to the defending champion Philadelphia Eagles. New 1^ Cage loot) -HasGrowing Pains A full schedule is on tap for the Pontiac Tabie Tennis Association League play tonight at Pontiac Central High School with a feature match scheduled between former women'* state champion Carol ffran and Hereto Newhouser, former Detroit Tiger pitcher. Now Mrs. Wolverton, Carol is physical education instructor i John D. Pierce Junior High School. NOwhouSer is a devotee of table tenttis. ' * 63 schedule land plan, for W j$|j COUTSB Still Open CHICAGO (AP) ||i The American Basketball League, only three weeks old. alreaify has growing pains. Expansion is a main Mem at a league meeting in Chicago Saturday and Sunday. Also ’ """The league has been overwhelmed with franchise applications," says- commissioner Abe, Saperstein. who owns the Chicago Majors entry as well as the Independent Harlem Globetrotters. "Among' cities' seeking - membership are Portland, Houston, Dal-' Fort Worth, Denver, Indianapolis, Rochester, N.Y., and the agenda is the 1962-*Milwaukee." a| The et-ooitd' ipiraleawi' Fit to Ski" program at Pontiac YMCA will be held Thursday 'evening November 2M at 7:30 p.m. With men and women still invited > participate, ..*£ Besides the physical conditioning (program which Is five weeks, wifi be two lessons with aid! Vent and procedures and two is on the ski slopes at Alpinej Valley. Interested parties shbuldj call PE 54116. Georges RA DIVIDEND FOR YOU j Christmas Saving ] Club Members 10% Discount Tonight’s schedule: Seaman vs. Detroit Ice; .Capitol vs., Crocker Candy; Frostop Drive Inn vs. Nu-trilite; A- W. Root Beer vs. Pepsi Cola; Dorris Realty vs Midwest Ambulance; Fox Cleaners vs. Ail-Aluminum. ' Now It's Rico Coach Who's Being 'Hanged' fng 'Hoi (AP) - J HOUSTON (AP) — Jess Neely. Rice football coach, was hanged to effigy Wednesday night on the Rice campus. A dummy hanging from the limb of a. tree labeled: "Jess Neely. November coach, Arkansas 10, Rice 0." Rice, picked among the. Southwest Conference favorites to pre- hm lwrl a ril*. appointing season. The Owls have la 4-3 record. Although Neely is in his 22nd season at Ride, this was the first time he has been hanged in effigy. Cordovan “TRACTIQNMASIER” SNOW TIRES All Brand MW. .. NdRn-tnad$l * ^Wom first are ^dangerous tor Driving I Be Safer... Change ovi [H»* 4.00/f S lifer ■ Biographies Springing Up About film King Gable By BOB THOMAS Writer HOLLYWOOD- Clark Gable, who died a year ago today, already la the subject of tour printed biographies. The authors are hit widow, ex-secretary and -two professional biographers- , A Personal Por- Hall, 53.95 bean the by- l ine of Kathleen Gable, last Ot the atar’s live wives.. It is indeed personal, perhaps too touch The tone is set on ■ the'-first page: "I needed all of Clark’s courage and strength that night | left his hospital room for the time. They had told gope. But, of course,! I Tried to hold onto hint. Heartstricken. t Wouldn't let go. For two hours 1 held him to tiny arms. She had been Cardie Lombard’s couch and attractive green chintZ|to hide his lack of formal educa- secretary, and It is id the ''Lorn* ban) marriage to Gable thaf she Is most illuminating: . CLARK’S BEDROOM i guy trying to curtains. The finish of the wood- Jhto-work did not suit Carole so she had!**w’B> had ray-ft .removed and antiqued Until ttj'' • jJ ■T! ■■ J ^ . !*. had just the right pathia. L US L.« a. .j&tSli&ttra" JsrrssrJS)' .beige and brown, with quittedjaround the desk and a dictionary i belge wallpaper, a large green I stand Installed. Clark' never tried “Finally, I did what ray hua-i band would have expected mc. to, * --toeed~'Up''WTfT lPa • was' l touched.his cold face with’ hand, in a last farewell, and f walked out of the room.’’ | Future Looks Favorable tor King's TV, Series as-told-to author of the excellent: memoir of Ethel Waters, Already| serialhsed, the Gable book is to be published to January, , j54.95) by Joan Garceau with Inez! NEW YORK By EARL WILSON . Alan King will probably be the next co- i for. some Cocke. Miss Garceau Samuels takes a more external and perhaps more objective view of Gable, Much of the book is necessarily twice-told tales. But there -are also some disclosures that may. surprise.readers. Among them: That Gable was close man with a buck; that he em-1 median to get rich with his own TV series. CBS is hot for was estranged from his father fori readers- Others will find it re-jptoyed by Gable for 21 years, and “the Alan King Show,” produced by Bob Banner, and written warding for a view-of Gable’s final {her book proves that a man can by Coleman Jacoby and Arnle Rosen, and Is years. ibeji hero to his own secretary. jhegotlatlng hoping to start It In February, or ■ Inextfall. ’ r& ! King, who’s being given a testimontial by the Friars Monday) has sent plane tickets to Eddie Davis, his ex-boss at the old Leon to Eddie's, who now lives rfpar Miami, “Eddie fed me pretty good In the days when I was hungry,” says King, who now has a Rolls-Royce and the. old Hammerstein estate at Great Neck, anomownY Ms At Save Plumbing! TOO DWT MID CASH! f Credit Term* —- Take 3 Year* to Pay 3-PIECE BATH OUTFIT White or Calais—-S Ft. Tab, Wash Basin, Class*, "A" Grade Chrome Fittings Rap. $134.50 ..ir *■ FREE STANDING TOILET LSSSffiftSM s89 *5 18“ AUTOMATIC GAS WATER HEATERS - Full Fusil Guarantee. Rel I ■ V Warruntr. GUM-lleed to OmT — T« #rT Warranty. Glatn-linrd si 64 Electric (Detroit Ediion) IS Tear Warranty . ttS $49.95 $9495 $69.55 $79.99 BATHTUBS S-FT. STEEL SIR** aara* sSto BAfllTCB ........99 CRATE MARRED •io« LAUNDRY TRAYS *2195 Complete With Stand and Faucet CASH and CARRY 3-Piece. Cist Iron, Colored BATH SETS Cnsuylutu with tlttlas* Rag. >219.95 129* llsll Double Compartment KITCHEN SINKS Stainless Steal . .$29.9$ A (MADE MQN STra'SS" .«?« Sm« MAM .......ijn mREOVLARS SOIL PIPE 4- S.H. son, FIFE SRM 5- Ft. Leatlbs .. —.......... « . JT S.H. SOIL FIFE lata • Ft. Lenfthu .............. » BRASS SUMP PUMP Rag. $49.95 ■ $32.95 SHOWER CABINET Icunatac^ whit, rn»m- ;*82* riag-m Tya» ELECTRIC HEATER $37« Range Hood l, Drip Fan ly to tnatull $299$ FIRST QUALITY TOILET SEAT lower than most *2.79 PLASTIC PIPE ---ISOFanttienttlil'' ijrHSHRrHp-flfrR tomgMaSI STEEL PIPE Whflesalu Prices — ft* Lu r8a::8« « 'It? sn.»» O.D. Butt, #n-n. I ' Colt ■ -M COPPER FITTINGS , 10* H - T.U 16* ” Ell 19* H" Tuc . 29* a* STEEL FITTINGS ... .12* if Ell . 17* Hal. Tee . 29* VENTILATING FANS CHROMK PLATID PRI-WIRID CEILING TYPE ....$15.95 WALL TYPE $10.95 INSTALL IT YOURSELF—WE RENT YOU TOOLS SflfoPLUMBING %MJw SUPPLY CO. 172 S. Saginaw fe 4-1516 fe 5-2100 many years; that he hated the Adventure"- acU line, "GaWe’sj back end person's got him"; that he was obsessed with cleanliness.! “Clark Gable’’ (Pyramid, 50 cents) is a workmanlike job by newspaperman George" Carpozl Jr. of the major events of the actor’s life. WILSON These. and the multitude of other accounts ot Gable’s life make him seem strangely distant on this anniversary of his death. I there, but where is NOW! -PLEASURE OF HIS COMPANY " "LAWLESS BREED" EAGLE I Starts FRIDAY ROCK . KIRK HUDSON * DOUGLAS DOROTHY MALON - PIUS mmx< HUM MCOUMWWf Sum esrmMA«htiaWif m coton >r o< tux* Alan likes to spoof the telephone company. At, a dinner honoring Secret Service Chief James,The facts Rowley, lie said he got even with the phone company for I toe man? trying to mail him 10c in stamps Instead of returning his dime. The fact remains that Gable ■ ~ !®nd is bard to capture to words. When an operator said, “Please 80-DAY WEATHER FORECAST—These maps, based on those supplied, by the U.S. Weather Bureau, show that this area to the Great Lakes will'have hear normal temperatures but more precipitation than is normal for the next 30 days. deposit 10c,” he replied, “It’s, His set-jaw look and his crackling f!voice were known by everyone. I r* _ T~.1t ZlSl -OX., operator, I juat inserted ;bu| few claimed to understate 06uWuy 1 Oil nil • there! enigmas Therein lay much of his greatness. 98 County Men Ito Be Inducted Miss Lee Venora’s one of the eye-poppers in the Alfred Drake show, “Kean"; abe has something unusual for an opera-type: a 24-inch waist. The Everly Brothers, bound for the Marines, remembered that music publisher Don Kirsh-ner's weakness Is peanuts ^ —so they sent him a 90-lb. bag . . . What does a male movie star do on vacation? I Tony Perkins goes bowling .. Largest Draft Call in 8 . ——i— ..“ ^earsfoTaLiSOIn City Then there was this doctor whose prescriptions were so} -. - - illegible that a patient used one for two years as a railroad aria 1,304 From Mate pass, got into theaters and ball parka* with It, and finally gave it to his daughter who played it on the piano and won a hi Its largest draft" call in eight 'scholarship to the State Conservatory of Music. (Via Kent year8> the State ^Selective Service Hamilton, Caribou Lake, Mich.) sy*tera tod,ay„1.°^er<,l1'3M M‘chi" V * . gan men, Including 98 EARL’S PEARLS: This lAthe only country where it takes|to^ne’xtt0month.r more brains to fill out an Income tax return than It took to Another 2,000 registrants from make the Income. , i throughout the state will be or- TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: There’s a wonderful new babyidered to take pretoduction physical food on the market. It’s top heavy for a kid to pick up and!exam|nations. throw. Local Board No. *8 (Pontiac) WISH I’D SAID THAT: Walter Slezak. the father of three, ban a December quota of SO men teen-agers, agrees that whoever named It "spending money") while Local Board NO. to (North certainly was right. j Oakland County) will call 85 The East Ottomans, says Mike Connolly, aren't taking anyj n,®"‘ chances—they even tore down a statue of Horace Greeley. The, quotas tor this area are noi That's earl, brother. significantly higher than previous (Copyright, 1961) |months' totals, according to otfi- ior Raising Cost t- of Canada Goods TORONTO HI — Toils on the St, Lawrence Seaway Were denounced as a factor increasing the prices of goods in Canada and abroad, reducing (Canadian imports and cutting business in Great Lakes ports, E. Kollo Mainguy, general manager of the Orest Lakes Waterways Development Association, said Wednesday there Is an erroneous school of thought that most df the seaway business Is In United Stales or foreign ships. ’ In foot, he said, the toUs are a major burden on Canada, | A former. vice admiral in the Royal Canadian Navy, Mainguy said that while Canada tries to stimulate the tourist trade seaway tolls boost the cost at traveling the waterway for small pleasure craft by $3j) for the boat and $7,50 for each passenger. Society tp Send Bibles Overseas to Balance Reds NEW YORK (AP)-The American Bible Society has been asked to set aside $400,000 to buy and distribute Bibles to overseas areas where communistic, atheistic literature Is being passed out. of Jesus Christ. Millions may choose Christianity if we can! reach them with copies of manu-l •ripts in their own languages, v The society represents 55 de-| nominations of the Protestant Church. > i The society's council, close of its annual meeting Wednesday, urged the expenditure. adding; ’’All over the World people are choosing either athe, ism, materialism, or th<; Gospel dais at the two local boards. Hie 6.1 draftees from these two boards will report for Induction Dec. 1. Hero Plays Bartender Dan Sheridan, who appears Regularly as Jake,.the baHenHev, in ABC-TV's “Lawman" series Cl), 18 a. much-decorated Australian hero ot World War II. Sheridan won the American Military Cross, the! Anzac Military Medal, the U.S.I Silver Star and the French Croixj de Guerre for gallantry during, campaigns in North Africa, Syria! and New Guinea. Recognising the difficulty of moving the tolls from tne lower NOW OPEN ALL NEW—BEAUTIFUL AIRWAY lOUNGf DANCING NIGHTLY 1 483ft Highland Rd. (M-S9) t74-«*4 • Chicken • Fish • Pizza OR 3-0940 .« Cany Qut, Curb Service BEEFBURGER drive-in 5196 Dixie Hwy. nowiPIM ith inmuiBle - irfc tyNNY AT 7:00 AND 10:00 iflttVE --'BftlOlO WWJIA MAN Cinemascope MetroCotof -------PLUS-------- PAUL RUTH ANKA1MAN LOOK IN AMY WINDOW at 8:30 Only portion of the seaway, he saw no reason why they could not be dropped at once .from the Welland | Canal locks. Quotas for South Oakland County Include eight men from Lo Board No. 66,13 from Local Board ; No. 321 and 12 from Local Board No. 323. Ceylon Premier Raps K COLOMBO, Ceylon IB - Mrs. Slrimavo Bandaranaika, Ceylon’s premier who pleaded at the Belgrade Nonaligned Nations Confer-for an end to atom testa behalf of the mothers of the world, has written to Soviet Premier Khrushchev deploring his decision to resume nuclear explosions. The tost ■ time 1,800 draftees were called to a stogie month from Michigan was In Mny 1058 near the end of the Korean Conflict. Except for those who volunteered for the draft, all Inductees who report next month will be at least 22 years of age. ‘ All the Inductions will take place by Dec. 15, prior to the holiday season, according to Selective Service officials in Lansing, NO! ™,Kgt YET!! CUSTOM INSTALLATIONS FREE ESTIMATES—CALL FE 4-5216 NEW TILE KPHNENT Set Over 45 OiffvrM* Colon DiljtltrtS on Our 4J‘ Will ot Torrlftt Savins*! PLASTIC WALL TILE NOW All 0THIRS ^3^ 6<-3< 4<-2< COLORS INCLUDING 03 AY PINK. BflOf mi viniti 50% OFF SPECIAL THIS WEEK Armittoaf's q«. w WE LOAN YOU TOOLS onn'«n*'fi»-inttHny to-fi»-^ongolyhigher'on“lialaii»r~- - -______________WjPWWPI1 ,___J.,______ early this afternoon as the trading Jgy CHRYSLER DROPS J Moderate Growth but so are awStoat t^UhfiS pace fell off to the week's slowest, “J Chrysler fell 1% to 49 on an Without Anv Boom is anticipating one of the Key stocks fook losses of, frac jf“L2^nS2«P*& block of 8.000 share* and' W •OUT Aliy OOOfn bittere*t battles in years over a tions to a point or more,along w a was sold heavily as fit loss v revision of its tariff pUicies. i , , , _ , _ , , broad front. The market tre#Pww‘ , . , 'stretched to more than 3 points DETROIT (AP)—Five ol the na-j The Organization for Economic Komney Isabels roPtl rairlaiir Mao j settling down from Hj record} 0 ^ ^ ,d, {{ ^ before some support was met and •' "> ton industrial executive* pro-Cooperation and Devclopme eyes carefully 'the. moves in Eif* rope to forge a' stronger trading bloc, if that means losing Its tra ditional market*. European members are: A us- 4) trio, Belgium, Denmark. France, West Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxemburg, the, Netherlands, Norway. Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Tur- , key and the United Kingdom. V^SSvla't^ 'be' on band.—— ^ highs reached in a •‘firoionged J autumn rally. JiM |I Chrysler was « or tower sales and acted sharply. Moist autos, steels, PROCESS SEEN NORMAL chemicals, coppers, electrical Analysts saw the process as a'equipments ana oils were tower. Cxrrcfts, cello pxk . l.to ba„.v : . MMlWal ............. HR Celery, 3 to S So*. 3.35 WBTVW :i* Bonds Slightly Lower NEW YORK IB - Bond prices dipped at the opening of trading today. Activity was limited. ..'''•.•■■'-to Hr-.’ '' 7 Over the counter dealers in U.8. government securities quoted long and intermediate Issues off 2/32 to 4/32 with one or two long bonds down slightly more: Among corporates traded on the New York Stock Exchange UtHittt* held mixed. There were Dew moves amount-ing to a point. An Kings County Electric 6S, up 2 at 125. ■ to ' to" to Fractional gathers included Frisco Railroad 5s at 66%, Caterpillar Tractor . 4%s at 102H and Philadelphia.«lectric 4%s at 100%. Off fractions were Southern Railway. J?s at 101%, Sears, Roebuck 4% s at 104% and Illinois Beil 3s at83.....■ ■■ , . - trimmed slightly, dieted today that 1962, in wfoct meeting i than a point. w® he a year ot moderate growth!Atlantic the decline FeW dropped .NR. ________|PP r™... . General Motors lost a fraction, j without a boom. American Motors gained a frac- 7,16 torecaste came at the 4Tth Iton. | meeting of the National Industrial Prices moved irregularly on the American Stock Exchange in moderate trading. Sceman Brothers rose about 2 points while gains of around a point were posted for Gatineau Power, Jeanette Glass and Mead Johnson. Gulf American fell about a point. Other included Microwave Associ- ates, Great American Industries, Creole Petroleum and Desilu. American Stock Exch, nswru altar decimal points UI eighths n pw .... n mi l.rirt .. 415 Ml Conference Board in Detroit. The consensus of the five experts was expressed In n speech prepared for delivery by H. Glen* Bixby, president of Ex-CeUo-O Oorp. of Detroit, said Stir "The outlook for most segments of the machinery industry is favorable,” Bixby said, “but too ■PI .. ... many factors remain in doubt to iw sine Tf*. aS'31 predict any sharp increase in ma-ijj-5 govo^ I“ff“,. .-!- .??!chinery sales.*' Oen Dcvtl ... .... _______ Imp Cmm .... I Pacific Pst Imp Oil ....... 43.5 Mur* Wm d 12 3 fMN Radlihcs, white. Banach, acorn. Squsch, Buttercup SquMm. Butternut Squash, peliclous Squash, Huahard . Turnips, doc. behs............... Turnips, topped, bn........... 1.75 greens Cabbage, bti....... ......... St.IS , Ceiorv cabbage ............... 1.50 L ColTard. bu ................. 1.6*T Endive, bu.................. 1.36 Endive, bleached . Poultry and Eggs Hie New York Stock Exchange "#» a....to " .....oil Siragusa, chairman and 4M;* - TMhnico 'JdAfpresident of Admiral Corp., said —----------------------1 "while tile business pickup for the television appliance industry now is keeping pace with the rest of the economy, it will pick up in NEW YORK I II FLAP&L 1.12 Is.) nigh Low Last Chi'. I DETROIT. MOV. . 14 (AP) — 1 pels per pound *t Detroit ter 1 quality live poultry: ' Heavy type hens 14-17; heavy type roasters ever 5 lbs. 20-22; broilers and fryers 3-4 lb*. Whites 10-17; Barred "• Duokllngs 124; Turkeys; • - jWfi 1 s aw: JSt 1 6674 89* <074+ V 1674 ?3. Sr Gillette 2 74 Olen Aid ToclLjt )i-#ri toms 14.-ii a 32. CHICAGO PRODUCE CHICAGO. Nov. 10 (AP) — Ml Hi TBRsesiL,-. .»itRLf».MWM 22.00- 27.4n5 0Ul| SM fnmbs 1.00 iiwor; Saughtdr owes, stsady: moot OholM and prime wooled slaughter lamb* ltA0*lfAw- jood and cboleo wooled ^ lamlw 16.00-1 jToo^ i^Toi!?.oo: , _0 , cattle 180. sioughter ^ Clowes U& vu%7 Hi Sr.? 20 39 I____■ __ .35* 16 U74 -- - ■ Camnb Soup 2 4 if? 120 120 —2., Cdn Pac 1.50 40 2574 2474 25Ve+ 74 1? m Sa ?»r?4 late, n later Tree 1 lemnoie 120 Mlotox.1 *” •aim — , a;..' .4, cenco In ,40g J* 0*75 0774 ffJ4—1J Jen iertde^ J»b i| 7^ buna Air 1 I 2574 Jtal PneuT 1.20a e slaughter g I5.oo-10.00; oannoro and outtors 12.1 t5v?aiers 26. Not enough to main m|Mp 28. Not enough to make m«S» 180. Market ' unchanged but i enough- env one grade or welgnt to uo^dUoOotlon*. Compared loot we** W row* and (rllt* Me low*r; tows *60 mostly SO* lo**r. ralrlv ‘actlv*. butOhars un-a. steady ®“ iMa Caia %M M*fWr.*mo4iijr ,»teajy JSj.% Kffl fg “gag? Con El Ind l Con N Gas 2.30 Consum Pw 2 so Container .00g Coot Can 1.00 ^ Cont Ine 2.20 . Coat Mot .40 Cont M IAMI I 5274 5274- 74 5874 5874— 74 ,» ,» 774 774— 74 19 3774 3774 3774— 74 9 4074 3074 40 ..... 247 - <774 2874 2874- <4 22 3774 8374 8674+ 74 12 8774 3774 3774-% 11 M74 1574 1574 ”... 3 153 152 153 +174 7 14 1374 1374 — 7 70* 7574 7574— * 13 4774 4374 4674- * 42 S3 - <474 <474 + 74 1 174 2* 274....... 12 35* 34* 3474- * 2 47* 47* 4774—* 14 66* 0374 3374— 74 Revlon 1.10 Rex Drug ,50b Reyn Met .30 32 3974 SO’ 8074 1 1474- ' 49 38* 38 loo 1.™ 29 35* M< m :.jr 14 14* 14 id ou 1.30 3 4074 4074 4074..... Fulton ^ lb 4 »* im 3774— 74 Royal Out 1.45d 30 8* 32 8 —'* • 1174 U* U*+ * Royal McB Safeway St 1.40 33 8(74 SO* 3374- St Jos Lead t < 34 33* 3374- 8a, sanTTi 5 1974 19 W4 StROK Pap 1.40b 0 3874 3774 37*—lVa SanD *—— •“ “* ■*'' —T ■ u 8^1 18 18 u. 49* mMr 111 8earsRo< Sarvol Shell Ol taoU Tr It 171 13% 18* 11* + 12 2774 27* 27*— •Iffr 1 1374 IS* 13*.... 1 71* 417* 41*.... b AO 1 1 2174 j f !!J4- *■ g T- 24 599'a 595 595 - 14 52% 52% S2%-19 50 3-7 ITECktBrlT*. 15p 4 Sf% -J"1",11* i Edia 2.60b 7 mt Co 1.B0 18 „ r Gmr 1.20 10 *8% Lv 2 SI) 3 58% Kto 09V4 1.12f 11.1 23% 23% b 29 37% 37% 37%- R 32 49% 48% J4%- know; Community. alUiuuKh, some like Turkey and Greece are] a bit distant from that ocean. Its Official aim is to expand world trade and spur economic growth. Looking over the shoulders of the delegates at the conference is the Soviet Union, The Reds are conceded to he planning a stepped-up assault on world trade markets themselves. They've already ih-flieted considerable pain on Amer-oti companies. WANT EXPANSION Tie United States is especially interested just now to see world trade expand—specifics! ly its own exports. Its imptots have climbed sharply and so has the deficit in its balance ot payments, if con* ttnued, the trend could put presire on the. value of the dollar. The deficit* arises because the dollars we spend abroad on ports, foreign aldr military commitments, investment, travel exceeds the dollars we get back for our exports, earnings on investments. The deficit almost disappeared early in 1961 but jumped by SO per cent durlt^g the summer and now runs around |3 billion a year. In 1999 it waa $3.7 billion and in 1960 it was $3.9 billion. Some of the dollars that foreigners get are used to buy gold from Treasury. And a year ago the outflow of gold reached a volume |Sees '62 as Compact Year DETROIT (API—American Mo-tors President George Romney labeled the new Ford Fairlane a compact car today and predicted but will continue through our lifetime and the lifetirqg of our chll-•dre»«"----.- _____| Bernard A. Monaghan, president of Vulcan Materials Co., said in his prepared speech that "the overall construction industry in 1962 should operate at even higher levels than in 1961.” Little Trend SHown by Grain Futures CHICAGO m — Grain futures prices showed little trend today in dull early dealings on the board of trade. The few small gains were limited to wheat and corn during the first seevral minutes and redacted only a scattered demand although a trade advice said Turkey had put through a purchase of almost 5 million bushels of hard wheat for fhipment this month and next. unpopular in some world financial markets. The United States bolstered compacts would account for 2 million sales this year and 3.5 million next year. *m Romney repeated Ms definition Car Sales Hit 21.800 Per Day Previous High for First Part of November Was 19,996 Daily in 1960 DETROIT (JW—Sales of new domestic care were at a record level of 21.800 daily during the first IP days of November, Ward’s Automotive Reports said today. The previous high for the period of 19,996 daily was set last year. The statistical service predieted total sales tor the month of MS,000 domestic car* which would surpass, the all-time November record of 0.10,300 set In 1000. The Industry sold 0.15,231 the dollar’s- value, fay trimming Warto. said. Of these General the deficit through cuts in over- Motors defiers'ItidifoWtod-fot; Grain Pricos spending and pushing of American exports. Now the threat is once again sighted. Not even the dollar could hold its exchange value if the imbalance continued Indefinitely, Adding to the problem is the rapid growth of Western Europe’s, economy and export trade and the move of Britain toward joining in a trade bloc with nations Continent. That could freeze American exporters out of an important market. WANTS MORE POWER The U.S. administration talks of meeting this threat by bargaining for trade concessions. And to be able to bargain it proposes to ask Congress for power to cut tariffs further here. , ‘ Opponents of further tariff cut dkg are numerous. And so are those, both in management and labor, who think tariffs already per cent against 51.4 per cent of all October sales; Ford 2fc l per cent against 28.1; Chrysler 10 per cent against 11.5; American Motors 6 per cent against 7.3 and Studebaker-Packard 1.4 per cont against 1.7. Several individual companies reported record er near record sale* by their dealers during the early November period. Michigan Factory Goes to Tennessee overall length ot SO* inches (15 feet g inches) or toss. The Fair-lane, which went on sale today, - ~ Is 181.(1 Inches tong. Ford Insist* .It It Mno. eompnet.** Romney has predicted compacts would account for 50 per cent of ■s sold by the end of thig year. He admitted today they would fall short but maintained this was because volume production of the new Ford, and of ftto Chevy n (193 inches) was delayed, by strikes this tall. * *• * v In what he called his year-end forecast Romney said he agreed "basically with the general prediction that about seven minion domestic and foreign care will be sold in this country next year. With adequate suppliers in dealers’ hands, the compact total should reach a 50 per cent rate of sale early in 1962." News in Brief A thief broke open the front door of his apartment between 3 and 6 ...j. yesterday and took two sav*J liigs banks containing ~SRL.lt. «•* , reported to Pontiac police yesterday evening by Hugh Gibbs of 38 Carter St. ______ meats and groceries. home delivery. Have up to ^ .a every II. Free Information EM 3-3236 'til 9 p.m. —Adt. Rummage gale: Frl„ Nov. $7, 9:00 am.. I.O.OF. Hall. 14H N. Main (Liveniois), Clawson. —*Adv. Rumman gate—K.C. Rail, Hat., a73» to 19 Nov. 11, g-l pm. t QUINCY (A) — Joe Wiebel, presi- Pythian dent of General Processing Co.,J® 10 ** noo,n- ~~Adv. said Wednesday the firm plans toj Rumman and Bake Hale. Nov. n Logan .70 ma £ L 2.30 23 27 “* ltd Ko¥« .«» ' 16 37*4 3774 3774—' SRI Oil Cat 2 38 32* 32* 52*— if;Sid oil BK 1.40b 15 50* 40* 4*74 ■ - * “ wSwm- Jh id Pkg 24 20* 1074 20*+ —1 Otar 1.20 1 3374 33* 33*. Stauft Ch 1.20b 0 30* SO* 80*- Sterl Drug 1.00 21 97 03 97 ffsIHM JP 1.30 80 34% 34 34 ___Pack 134 11* 10* 10* law 1.40 4 27* 27* 27* It CO 1.60a IB 42* 42 42 - •T- Wiebel said "labor trouble was aj Rummage Sate—Halurday. Nes ®ntr'bu‘ln». fr^r^thangrndt -1%. > 3*74+ „ > (874--.* > 38*+ * feMjf S 7i% 71% 11%^. 44% jiJS* 79 46% 4 43% 4 iig^ Lehigh CRN SOe 32 10 lap sri * ' 3 “ Lcn V*1 LOFOlaoa ^........ 9 24* 24* 2474— * 43 33* 23* 3374+ * *» Vt 8M 71*- * HrXiM.'ar tmr I: s.it Mar . 3.12* Jly . 3.1674 Bob . 1.10* DM . fm f c&o 120 XS.FL Tr .M| Thlokol |7f a i41 gfci 1 if* 1974 W74 2 34* M* 83%+ » 4 if* U* 11%- 7 7 42* tmS 42*- 7 4fN .300 to is* 15* IstJ— * ITI Cont OOg 1 M* U* 5l%— 7 W 14 ®|Ssr* a » ati i 't%x» »'S* It* m - * —... Pt!T. „ „ BL .40 4 13* 13 u . 3 40* 40 40. *7* -•« * .¥L. —r rtS?.-hi+- • *» <»,»•/. ^ ig*_. % ■ 0p*“??|R«tlil Koyoteno Growth B>2 E ^^-achuatote Invea. n< MhugrtU^Inret . ___l«lon tooetrahie* . i WelUngton itentty ... ( Wellington rood .... •Nomina?Quote tlone - :th UB Tru*t .. i<-42 ISIS '.3ft 16.22 « jjf ”:S fobrl IIIf ‘•lillr IWt'IIP *1 <&a rEHTt is Igfll rsj:! jjjgjpii Ir r eh SSSSST.iT n£ I KXTItA liipUi lif 88 NEW YORK (UP» - Implies | tions of the breakthrough to new ‘highs in the averages are very 1 m for a broad extension of the it rally, says Joseph E. 1 Granville. According to the E. F. Hutton A > Co. analyst, there is no abatement [of technical bullishness at this , juncture with alt the key measure-; ment* supporting the MUy thesis. Note the excellent quality ieader-ship, Granville says. "This also underscores the probability that the | D-J industrial average may have Chrysler Reports Two Promotions Appointments^ "of Russell M. Cornier of Royal Oak as chief engineer for body-inwhite and Heipian W. Smith of {foutbfleld as chief engineer for body-compo-nents-and-trlm in Chrysler Oorp’* Engineering Divieiqn an announced by Alan:’: G. Loofbourrow, Chrysler Corporation viet president and director at aaglntwlafl. SE£&i|S J S| J47.| *4* J l.-illl if 2 61* J 'HnSliV Mr ll i i tE 2‘r—Dti’orcdor **ld — * dlvt4tb'<. t-P»v«bl» to dock .during 1060.1 Mtlumted C»»l. IWM* ISdKjtoS ot teteWWl* dot# y LiqoMoUng dlv+ % » Stoji* k m 'Ll i L, ^ , MW-MNRS NOON AV jeaaKF..:.::--..-.-. K tauM. as—Host BONDM asressuasSja'ifi" umed by mch com- H Public oumiw . In ttodr wspiEthil wm 1 ttsto* CMp4nr will bi raspsM ' tor the deslpi sf varleate a .....;ts Design and developitient of various hardware and mechaithnrm, in- . 730.61—4 so icontained hi tbs body of an auto-ito®+6tojinobtie .irSntiUi'a new job. (MM Uncbj i * : * ■•. #. tito+aH] Cooper lives at HOT Amherst. ; n&18'Royal Oak and Smith at , 24000 Two Lincoln-Mercury salesmen in the Pontiac area have earned membership fat the ”100 Club," William U. Huber, Detroit district sales maanger for Lincoln-Mercury Division, announced today. They are Fred A. Foster and Alfred Dittrich of Lloyd Motors, Inc., in Pontiac. M. E. ___________■ Berkley Loan CD. fat Berkley,* has been elected chairman of the executive committee at the Michigan Consumer Firnmee Association. Jk....-A----TS-.— The Oakland County Chapter of the National Association of Accountants wilt meet at Devon Gables Thursday evening. Howard little difficulty in coming up to 750 and perhaps beyond on this rally." Jerome Peck of Jerome Peck Associates, Inc., says although most of the activity over the past two weeks should be credit to professionals, there are soi that the. public Is coming back into the market. ■ .ft . w * Thus far, he says, the emphasis has been on growth stocks and depressed ''name" issues, but If the . j, , Upward trend Is maintained, there ^ - Is reason to believe that specula- ^’v Sft. il l live enthusiasm will again bring Jl Y " wUl *uc,t w4th some of the poorer stocks, to the 'fine, Shildi, A Co. note* that retailing stocks have recently been acting well and adds that the experts are now predicting that department stores sales this Christmas will be the beat on record. The Business Economic Digest •nys the business pace is showing w signs of quickening sad indications am that tbs dosing weeks of the yiiigr will find many lines ot activity posting new all-time high ...m A McKinnon thinks the malar trend of the market remains upward with prospects that the higher level of activity will con- _ tinue through the remaining weeks!' of the year. ' , While it is togicki to assume that some more profit-taking ami late tax-kwH selling will interrupt the market's advance temporarily, the course of least resistance appears higher over the bear term, according to Purcell A Co. the topic, "Value Analysis in Accounting Management." His subject will cover the responsibility of the accountant in value analysis, and how be can further the philosophy of this concept In hh company. Treasury Position wsamNoTOw -Uon of (ht TroMorv cor mpoauus* d—- * —— - tear raw mi WWiK * mi —■ mi mmmm _ j—_ *toO«.844.te|,4i|.M Jlt.OH.4ro4l*.M m .6 5.rn.M^.8&ci .......... v.££8., far {NPggg I " , yog 'i / . THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1861 Focus on Health jDocfor Finds Healthy Oldsters Stay Alert * , By The Awwelated Pcea* , Intelligence, a new technique avoid scars from bums, a healthy executives figure In the i sharp drop in perform- vested ance. BURNS WITHOUT SCARS for severe hums, a Belgian plastic surgeon uses a bold new technique which he reports avoids INTELLIGENCE ENDURES scars and deformities. - When older people stay healthy Under anesthesia, Dr. Jean Lor-tutd vigorous, there does not ap-thior of Brussels “sandpapers” Vgr to be any Mine to their the burned areas Immediately Intelligence with the advancing with a high-speed abrasive drill yean; says Dr. Robert W Kleem- to remove the .dead.. tissue. Cier, Washington lajiyersity psy-chotogist. | 5j| He gave inteliigetw tests at in-~tervmls-«v«r -Jul2-y?ar ,. period to causes; * two—Northwestern. Uni* versity faculty members plan to pat tiny measuring instruments and a radio inside a, player’s helmet, to radio bank data on what happens during impact, and what happens to the brain activity of a man in an actual game. The experiment is being devised by Dr. Stephen Reid, team physician James Aagaard, assistant professor pf electrical engineer-month after the scraping, the ***• skin has been restored, and, in HEALTHY EXECUTIVES nearly all cases it eliminates any popularly, the business execu-l scarring, says Medical World jfive lg thought of as a "harrifed News., land hurried man driven inexor- toB/KC to a I0-yeantu9y^of W ihafrrexecutivies. / ) W ; "7I The executives had less than .jdf the death rate expected among the general white male population of comparable age. A mala cause of U deaths among the businessmen was heart attacks, but even their heart attack rate did not seem excessive. A high standard of living and good j medical care apparently help executives live longer than the average man ■ '} DRIFT MARLQ By Dr. I; M. Levitt, Tom Cooke gfid PM Bv«— Bv Lou Fine ■persons aged 65 to % He'~TogndTELL-TALE. JIELMET____ Hibly toward an early death.” no evidence for the idea there Head and_jteck -injuries afel """’’T* W A.............—hCwmii-DfAnACAfl I 3Uf is a normal and steady intellec-Jcausing-anThcreasing percentage) But this concept Is not support- IIUllI nUUUjVvl tuff tual decline with the yeans; Btitlof the deaths occurring among ed by findings by Robert. H. i* iw who were soon to die. football players. jThomer, M.P.H., and E. L. Seeking basic information on | Crumpacker, M.D., of Washing- regardless of age, the tests re-1 Personnel News of Service Army First Lt- Ralph F. Fear, whose wife, Gail, and parents Mr, and Mrs. Dalbert W. Fear, live at 2344 Locktin Lane, Union Lake, recently completed the Medical Field .Service School’s orientation course at Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft, Sam Houston, Tex. » The lieutenant is a 1954 graduate of Walled Lake High School and received his D.D.S. degree in 1861 from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He la a member of Chi PM and Delta Sigma Delta fraternities. , TTTT—“’’tlSr4' . . A * dr Two local men are being .assigned to permanent duty bases for practical training following their completion of' United States Air Force basic military training at Lackland Air Force Base, Tex. They are Airman 3.C. Melvin numbers -and Airman 3.C. James G. Johnson. ningsdort resides at 319 E. Com- parents and wife, Barbara, live at merce Road, Milford, is being signed to Forbes Air Force Base, Kan., for training as a/food services specialist. He recently Completed basic military/ training at Lackland Air Force Base, Tex. 385 Gateway,' recently achieved recognition as a top Army marksman by qualifying for the expert marksmanship badge at Fort Eus-tts, Va. Specialist Patton, a student at LONDON (AP) —The. British government has decided to exempt the Irish from legislation to restrict immigration into the Suited Kingdom, parliamentary quarters reported today, The proposed law for the time to history would exclude Commonwealth citizens from entering the country freely. Opponents of the tow were aroused by the reported exemption of the Irish. They charged that what would be left of the law would amount to a color bar, '•.MONAHAN Airman Monahan was graduated rom -Waterford Township High Ichcwl prior to entering the serv* Army Pvt. Albert J. Hay, son of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Hay, 675 Amberwood St., has graduated from the 101st Airborne Division Jump School at Ft. Campbell, Ky, Pvt. Hay attended Pontiac Northern High School prior to his entering service last April. , CHAMBERS Airman Chambers Is the Mrs. Sarah L. Chambers of 22M Chambers St. He will be trained to be a fire protection specialist at Wesjtover Air Force Base, Maks. . Airman Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur C. Johnson of 45 E. Newport St., will undergh training as an air operations specialist at Columbus Air Force Base, Miss. Both airmen attended high school to Pontiac. Airman 2.C. Harold G. Campbell II, sbn of Mr. and Mrs. Harold G. Campbell, 2295 Euadna St., has . graduated from the missile facili-l ties specialist course at Sheppard * Air Force Base, Tex. t Airman 3.C. Robert M. Monahan, whose guardian Flossie Fill-/ Joseph F. Savino, son of Mr, and Mrs. Albert Savino, 1444 Holland Stf.Bimtinghanirto^b«a^l>romQt-ed to specialist four In Germany I vitiire ~BF~1r‘ ~ar -member - -ot—tbfe. 663rd Ordnance company. Spec. 4 Savino, is a 1959 graduate of Birmingham High School and was employed before entering the Army in 1959. A. BY WILLIAM E. I-aROCK routine District Manager Q. 1 have a maid who works, only two days a week. Must 1. report her wages for Social Se-. curity since she does not work, full time? you pay her *60 or _____ in cash wages to any three-month period ending March SI, dune SO, Sept. *0, or Dec. St, you should deduct Social Security taxes from her wages and pay an equal amount yourself. It Is the employer’s responsibility to make this return to the Internal Revenue Service. The return Is due before the end of month following the end of the calendar quarter. Tax reti forma and Information available from the Internal e Service. Questions addressed to: Soria Security, Federal Building, Pon- | tiac, Mich., will be answered by ! mail or to this column. Names j will not be published. 'Tight Little Isle' j Facing Genuine j Whisky Drought j GLASGOW, Scotland (API—A| severe whisky shortage—and this one far real-wag reported today) from the “tight tittle Island" ot Barra. . Cum are piled up on the Hebrides Island’s pier, impounded because Calum MacLeod, owner of the only saloon, refuses to pay a pier charge of rf3 pence—3H cents—a case Imposed by the Inverness County Council. dr dr dr “The cases reached here marked ‘carriage paid’,” said M*e!4wd -i see no reason why I ffiyutM fork over a pier charge." Xtoftm was the scene of Sir Compton MacKenzie’s novel “Whisky Galore,” a tale .of a war- • time shortage of drink from which the movie “Tight Little Island" was made. The thirsty Barrens how are rmiitng the barman “Tight Little FARMINGTON — A $2.1-million that ft has been estimated Wid an. extension there wIB be no.need for am bylaters in theFarmtogton School APPrev*J of the mlllag* District. Si V*st weald pievide a contt Sipt . ^d V. Harrison said Jj * THE POSTTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER lft 1961 FORTY-SEVEN BofrdMayPick Architect Firm Farmington Twp. Hopes ,♦0 Name Designer for New Hall Tomorrow FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP-Se-lection of an architectural firm to design a new township hall here may be made tomorrow night, according to Township Supervisor Curtis H.,Hall. Hall said that the township board might posslMy make a decision after interviewing representatives at three firms at 7 p.m. in the township hall. Prospective candidates for the Job, narrowed down from a field of 11, are Strickfaden and 8trick-laden, Associates, and Charles Hannan, both of Farmington; and Crane, Ktehler and Kellogg, Tentative plans indicate that an adequate building to house the township offices could be built for less than $100,000, said the supervisor. ALREADY HAVE MONEY “■It clin be constructed without any increase in taxes. This township already has the money, f years," he explained. The site for proposed building has been purchased for 118,000 on the southwest comer of Orchard Lake and 11 Mile roads. Funds tl purchase the site also have been set aside during the with possible lower rates as vak uatiort increases in the school district, according to Harrison. TO BUILD NEW SCHOOL Funds from the sale of the bond issue would be used to finance the construction of a junior high school and a 20-room elementary facility or -addition..Remaining funds would be used to purchase future school sites. .The Junior high school, which would have a capacity enrollment of (60 students, would he built on a 25-acre site east «f Middle Belt and between 10 and 11 Mile Roads. The property already Is owned by the school system. A decision has not been made is to where the proposed elementary school Will be constructed or whether the new classrooms will f be added to an existing school. About $600,000 would be used for this project. Future site purchases would be used for another junior high school * two elementary schools, Har-added. Groups Study Problem Ardas Avondale SchodslookTowartffutnre" The Avondale Schools Citizens’ Study Committee currently is conducting a thorough survey of the school system to determine its current and future needs. The central committee has been divided up into five subcommittees which are studying specific prob- lem t A chalmih. ia-f rpta^ -representative from each i committee serve on the cm committee at Its monthly m lags. The areas- being studied are fiances, school plants, educational programs, community needs and public relations. Subcommittees meet as often as needed. and Mrs. Genevieve Thompson isftiac Township. Secretary is Mrs-the-representative I Helen Wright and representative. Officers on the school plant sub- Mrs. Bonnie Krug, committee are Thomas rJtejfoMM * * ♦ 1254 Ashover Road, Bloomfield] Douglas Ferguson, 223 Hurst Township, chairman; Mrs. Marion St.. Troy, is ehairman of the com-Hackett, secretary; and Auburn rmipfty needs subcommittee with Davis Jr., representative. j Mrs. Joyce Davis as secretary and Frank Malhottamt. «5x J.mc- |Tom galloway as representative, town Road, Jtantlac Township. Is chairman of the public reS-~ tlons subcommittee. The group's secretary Is Mrs. Kathryn Wit- ' Mulholland pointed out that n jt-lpespifr are needed to work with ‘ leach of tfie groups7TRSieInterest-' -n joining are asked to contact -Edward Crouse. representative the chairman of the subcommittee at their particular concern. I When the committee has com-The educational program sub- pleted its studies, it will submit committee is headed by John R. recommendations for action to the Wee, 2237 Old Salem Road, Pon- board of education. The central commitiec’s first j problem is to decide which of the] older schools are In need of immediate repairs. About 80 citizens are no citizens’ committee, 15 of which serve as officers of the subcommittees -and on the central body, mi Lake David Stipeak of Un-l.ake was junior usher. COMMITTEE MEMBERS Chairman of the finance subcommittee is Jerry Kabel, 1286 Winch-combe Road, Bloomfield Township; secretary, McAllister Stock; Enrollment projections show and a new elementary school will be heeded by the fall of 1963, he “OH NO, NOT THAT! "-"When I’m lookin' for a woman, she buys me a dog,” groans Wormy, played by Jim Schank, in Brandon High School’s production of "Bemadine." His mother, played by Carmen Miller, likes the idea and so does Vemon, played by Barry Young, who is 'obviously pleased about Wormy’s new pooch. Performances .of Mary Chase's comedy will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday. And to assure completion of the buildings on schedule, it will be necessary to have the funds early next year since it takes 18 months to two years from the time the bonds are sold until the schools are ready for occupancy. ‘Bernadine’ on Friday, Saturday Brandon High Play Set It is almost exactly two years since the last bond proposal and millage request were placed be- “I ™ .?0nfy, ,a fore voters in the school district, akto.Jn.Jthe,.8cbool.auditnriiim.-~ million Director is Lee Moore, dramatics a period of years," he explained, i™* ♦„* coach. ?era,n< last several years. No date has been set for start of construction. The township’s present quarters are tot an old building at 23715 Grand River Alto, in Farmington city. ; Hall said the building, constructed about 1872, has served as the township hail since 1944. bond issue and a two mill tax hike were approved by voters by margin of 12 votes. Only property owners will be| mitted to vote on the bonding proposal but all voters will be allowed to decide the. proposed millage question. WSU Governors Hear Protest Against Speaker ORTONVILLE — "Bemadine, the first of two all-school plays to be staged at Brandon High School this year, will be presented at 8 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday Written by Mary Chase, author of “Harvey,” the play concerns a group of self-styled dead end DETROIT US — The Wayne State Univerlity Board of Governors took official action Wednesday on a protest against the appearance on campus of Herbert Aptheker, historian and editor of the magazine ‘Political Affairs.” A group, headed by Ann Byer-leln, 88, appeared before the board to protest Aptheker’s appearance today. He was to speak on "The Negro In the American Civil War" and was Invited to do so by the Waype Socialists Club. Miss Byerlein told the board, "We don't want tax dollars spent for Communist subversion. gping to the legislature." Leonard Woodcock, board chairman, told the woman he did not share her "worries about the public.” Education Unit to Be Dedicated Special Service Slated Sunday at Gihgeltville Baptist Church GINGELLVILLE - The new education unit of the Gingellville Baptist Church will be dedicated special service at 3 p. m. Sunday. * * Featured speaker will be Dr. H. . Savage, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Pontiac. kids. Beaumont, played by Arien Pettit, leads them Into the Imaginary world of “Sneaky Falls, Idajjp." When the_________| urea or discouraged, Beaumont reminds them that things ferent in Sneaky Falls, where the word ‘rib’ is never spoken and' mothers and sons aren't even in families. The main attraction of Sneaky Falls, however, is Bemadine, the Ideal Female. ONLY UNHAPPY MEMBER The only unhappy member of the crowd is Wormy who'can't succeed at being cither the wheel or conquering male that he wants to be. His mother needles him constantly and he can't get any men Miller, Cindy Bennls, Kathy Burton, Linda Jencks, Cynthia Kolos, Karen Grappan, Carol Kelley, Jackie Williams, Dianne ptv. j Grovesteen ^_Ii^yJHteUi—-Other players are Linda Metzger, Mary Atkins, Kathie Borst, Kathleen Hutchings, Marilyn Denton, Kathy Bryant, Gwen Hamilton, Judy Broecker, Nan Duman, Nancy Mills, Barbara Romeo and Ann Weeks. Boys in the play are Arien Pettit, Fred Beardsley, Harold Webb, Tom Parker, Jim Sherman, Jim Schank, Ken Perry, Gary Woller-man, jinny Young, Ken Weeks, Jim Tneolet and Roger Board. Tickets are available at the door. The members of the east Include Mary Ann Kennaday, Car- Orion Twp. Tops United Fund Aid FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP -Our Lady of Refuge Church In Orchard Lake was for-setting gat; unlay morning for the marriage] An evening reception was held of Carol M. Stipeak and Lawerence at the American legion Hall in Gamgiola. Officiating-at the cere-[Farmington for 400 guests. Follow-mony was Rev. Michael O'Hara.] mg a honeymoon in the S m o k e y Mountains the couple will liye in Farmington. $2,200 Gift From Firm Puts Community Over $6,000 Goal ORION TOWNSHIP - A $2,200 ■gift from Artco, Inc., put Orion Township over Its $8,000 -United Fund goal by 8.5 per cent, Joseph Taylor, Orion campaign chairman, announced today. 'Artco’s contribution represented over a third of our total goal," said TAylor, "We are very grateful to Walter Schreibez, president of the corporation for his firm’s generous gift. I am pleased to report that Carol Stipeak* Married in Orchard Lake Church The bride 1* tin- daughter Mr, and Mrs. Carl Ntiprak of | 29900 14-MJIc Road. The, bridegroom la the »on of the late Mr. and Mrs. Inula Garagkila of Went Bloomfield Township. ' For her wedding the bride chose a gown of Chantilly lace, accented with sequins, pearls and crystal trim. Her fingertip veil was attached to a headpiece, adorned with crystal drops. Mrs. Ralph Schlusler of Bancroft attended her sister as matron of honor. Serving as bridesmaids were Serita Noble of Farmington, Carolyn Grabner of Detroit and Judy Riffenburg of- Royal Oak. Martha Stipeak of Union Lake was the Junior bridesmaid and Dower girl was Maureen Thomas of Romeo. Assisting aa best man was Cole-roan DeConiek df Orchard i-ake. The 100 guests were awaited by Ralph. .42 of their $2,400 goal had been raised putting the women over the top in their residential solicitation. Area chairmen assisting Mrs. Dacey were Mrs. Ward Sly, Mrs. Dan Abbey, Mrs. William Andrews and Mrs. Dale Ballard. Industrial, commercial and professionals calls totaling $3,497 made Jby Walter S h o u p, Peter Hammelef,« Arthur Welt*- Struck, Killed by Auto j0“i* T«yior MIO (AP)—John Quinn, 57, of 0,l0u Rte. 1, Mio, was killed Wednesday Icontributed . $393.50. Junior High Orion ,ha* .raised-96;588 enabling ^(^ni^jr^tenger^of Madison LAWERENCE GARAGIOLA us to make our goal for the first I Heights and Donald Stipeak of, time in several years,” the drive ~ chairman added. I Mrs. Alfted Dacey, Women’s r campaign chairman, reported $2,- Rochester Plans Big Yule Parade PTA to Hoar Export in School Social Studios CLARKSTON — Problems of school social studies wilt be discussed by an expert in the field at an 8 p.m. meeting of the Ander-laonville School Parent-Teacher As-[soctution today. Santa Claus Will Stop] Miles Platt; a consultant-for the • • . .. • JljOakland County Board of Educa- tO J oin in ro$tlVitlOS!|i0n aocial studies department, will On DOC. V j speak to the group. A coffee hour I will follow his presentation. night when he was struck by a] car while crossing M33 on 1 near this Oscoda County seat. students raised $214.78. Special music will be provided by Rev. John Toroni, violinist; Mrs. Bruce Reh, organist; ant! Mrs. Lester Mack and Jay Me-Caughna, soloists, The welcome will be given by the church pastor, Rev. Sidney Hawthorne. UTICA — Tentative plans for a proposed $1,185,600 Disco Junior High School, to house some 900 students, have been approved by the Utica Board of Education. I Record Per-Acre Yield Seen for State. Potatoes DIANA LYNN HAWLEY JMT. and Mrs, Osmer J. Haw- ley of 339 Afwater St., Lake Orion, announce the engagemenf of their daughter Diana Lyon to Seaman William R. Raymond, US. Navy. The prospective bridegroom is the soiij of Mr. and Mrs. Oeve Raymond Jr. of 573 .E. Flint Si., Lake Orion. A Jan, 6 wedding is planned. LANSING Iff - Michigan’s fall potato crop Is headed for a record peracre yield, the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service says. The indicated yield of 18,500 pounds per acre is 10 per cent above the record set in ^958, the service report- ed. the state production is expected to hit 758.5 million pounds — 6 per cent above the Oct. 1 prediction, and 16 per cent above Average. The l'/j-story church school was built by the mem-i except for ' the basement eh was contracted. It Is of same frame and shingle construction as the main part of The first floor contains the Sunday School auditorium, classrooms, a nurgery and a baptistry. The basement is divided Into more classrooms now through the' use of curtains. Later folding dividers will be added. There are two rooms on the second floor. The addition was started in January and is valued at $35,000. The | church is at 3920 Baldwin Road. 7 Tentative Plans Okayed tor Disco Junior High room in conjunction with library1 facilities. The general plans follow those of the Sterling Junior High School, school officials said. According to Neal Smith, board architect, the 96,000 - square - foot building will cost about $12 per square foot. Fees for site development and built-in equipment wUI additional $157,000, he said. Elementary School vn Van Dyke, Just north of 23-Mlle Road. The school’s gymnasium will he built below the level of the rest Of , school, allowing for a higher ceiling. A cateteria partition will make lectures and combined classes possible without disturbing those at lunch. Room with library A room would be built with the library which could be used as conference roams or as a c|ass- The possibility ot initialling air conditioning for ase In summer school adult education sessions also fo under consideration by the board. Lake Orion Bands to Present Concert LAKE ORION - The music de partment of Lake Orion Community High School will present its Second annual band concert at 8 p.m. TUeaday at the school. Featured will be the Varsity Band playing a wide selection of classical and popular music. The Junior Vanity and-the Lake ROCHESTER — Santa Claus has scheduled a whistle stop here Dec. 9 for the Rochester Area Chamber, of Commerce's 11th annual Christ-ins parade. Clowns, floats, marching bands and high stepping strutters will I featured in this year's tribute the holiday season. Ten groups so far have asked to Join In the festivities, tq Ing downtown merchants, the Rotary, Ktwanls and I Jons clubs. Three marching bands High, Rochester High and Rochester Junior High schools. Hie colorful hour-long parade Orion Dixieland bands also wU||wuj |0rm H| the North Hill Plaza! play- Music director Is Peter Rfshopplng Ccnter and prooeed south' Kohnen. Physician Hits Funds for the'new school, third! ■ • j' r < i i , in the board's current building pro- /ilu JLIlUvCCf 10 gram, were approved in a $3.96- r« • » r* millido bond election last Dec. 5 OOCJGi OGCUfjfy i Main Street. Swinging weat on I Third.Street, the column will continue on to the American Legion Hall on University Street will disband. Schools Supt. Fred M. Atkinson said that completion of the school is due by September 1963. Subpoena Wife of Union Official Mrs. McMaster Called Into Case Involving Her Teamster Husband DETROIT (ff—Mr*: Elaine M. McMaster appeared before a U.8. District Court grand jury Wednesday in a case involving her husband, Holland B. McMaster. secretary treasurer of Teamsters Union Local 299. *. McMaster appeared after TMltfiiM ln/ton Thnmnn H DETROIT (ff - The King-nderson bill, which would finance health care for senior citizens through Social Security, is foot-in-tbe-door' approach that would lead to a full blown nationalization of the medical pi says a prominent Michigan physician. Dr. Don W. McLean, president of the Wayne County Medical Society, was only one of several physicians, politician!! and public officials who debated the issue of health care for senior dozens here Wednesday. McLean's remarks were ms to a panel discussing bet I for senior rltlaen* at final •Iona ot a two-day White regional oonforanee. The health care plan also was a major Issue in a rally Wednesday early 7.QQ0 auto plant retirees latlonal drive fongross About half of the floats an marching units needed have bee volunteered, C. of C. officials! said today. Additional entries Invited,, they added. Find Charles 0. Hohn Dead in His Home 63-year-old West Bloomfield Township man, Charles O. Hohn, Was, found dead -in the bedroom of his home at 3105 Wellingtoi Drive yesterday morning. He had been shot through the bend with n 88-eallber revolver. Oakland County Officers sold In his hand. the gnn « Two notes written i Charles G. Hohn were found o dresser. The dead man had l> undent since the death ot wife last August, according to who discovered the body Avon to Submit Estimate $1,500 for CD Budget AVON TOWNSHIP - The to- ur its 1962-631 to the state qualify for] federal funds mate was made inde-any action foe Roch-may take on] despite the possibility j may Advertisemeit FOR BID The Board of Educa> tion of the Rochester Community Schools, Rochester, Michigan, receive, sealed olds for the purchase of the house located at 328 Woodward Avenue, Rochester, Michigan. Bids will be received the Office of the Assistant Superintendent of Schools, of the Board of Education Business Office, until 2:00 p. m., on Monday, November 27, 1961. Appointments to see the house may be made by calling OUve -8193. The house is to be moved or razed from the property within 30 clays, and the resultant hole is to be filled with satisfactory fill. All proposals submitted shall remain firm for a period of thirty days after the fficial opening of bids, and must be filed bid forms to be obtained from the Board of Education Business Office, Washington ond Tienken Roads BtfliO of EDUCATION Commnnity Schools Bochesttr, Michigu Maury ill Beatty, Secretary ■ SE 5 Berias Death Death Notkes Story Is Told BOR8VOLD, NOV. H, 1*61. o„ *.*-*«: < •■■ taLWlfiB -Khrushchev How Potic* Chief Ml* Gun, Then Is Shot fig fis«W .Arty- nPNnMl I. Mr*. Cor* w LONDON (APHBrttiih news. ...!r today reported, that Lav- police chief liquidated in the f . er straggle alter Stalin’s death, was shot down at a Kremlin .meet* . ing after pulling a glut on Nikita Khrushchev. Khrushchev himself, according ' to tfiie reports, described -Be- -ria’s death to a private meeting , of Communist leaders at* last month's Communist party congress in Moscow. Three British newspapers — the Daily Express, Daily Mail and Dally Telegraph—carried the I account of the killing of Beria, two of them in dispatches from Warsaw, THIS IS THE STORY All gave this account: At showdown meeting in the Kremlin in 1953 soon after Stalin died, Beria pulled a gun. Khrushchev : grappled with him. Marshal Klrll . S, Moskalenko, now deputy de- • fense minister and chief of the Soviet rocket forces, killed Beria with a burst of submachine j fire. • None o! the newspapers gave the source of their information, but all noted that after Beria’s death Marshal Moskalenko rose to hisSi favor In the Kremlin hierarchy. The' full story of Beria’s death has never been told officially. Cuban Army Alerted for New Invasion MIAMI, Fla. (UPI) — Cuba has taken oh the appearance an armed camp In expectation of tan “imperialist Invasion,” travelers from, Havana reported today. Travelers arriving here said Castro has ordered general mobilisation of Its army and civilian reserves “in preparation for Invasion” of Cuba, (Source# In Washington said Castro’s soldiers and mlllHa have been on an alert for the past, several weeks.) The Castro government has -been warning of an invasion t the past four weeks, and t alert coincides with n renewal of anti-Castro violence In Havana. There have been reports of dead and wounded In the violence during the past two nights. Warns Unions AgainsfRetreat Reuther Says Crisis Should Not End Drives on Welfare, Wages WASHINGTON (UPI) — United Auto Workers President Walter P. Reuther said today labor unions should not forego wage gains or abandon their drive for new welfare legislation because of the international crisis. Reuthen said the nation *h< not allow Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev’s "terror tactic” —testing of a 50-mcgaton bomb— to Induce a sense of defeatism. He made the statements as president of the AFL-CIO Industrial Union Department (IUD) in a message prepared for the opening s sion Of the IUD’s biennial convention......- ■ ... The UAW chief set the stage for the two-day meeting by declaring that the AFL-CIO has failed to ..solve its internal disputes and v “united in name only." AFL-CIO President Ucor| Mean) was expected to take strong issue with R e u t h i charges when he appears before the 100 delegates from 10 un' on Friday. The IUD Includes practically all! of the old CIO unions in the mass-production industries. It has been viewed with suspicion by the AFL-CIO building trades department that formed the heart of the old AFL. Conflict between the two groups has continued despite efforts to find a solution since the AFL and CIO merged six years ago. Odell's Still Winning Those Cliff-Hangers BARBOURVILLK, Ky. 200 211 Auburn Av* FE g-3466 Voorh^es-Siple FUNERAL HOME ■ Established Over 3 ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a^frteiuH^^ adviser, ^phqnc^ FE K M734. Confidential. SnAHD AFTER THIS DATE NOV 14. 1161, I Will not be-jUS for any debts oontrac other than^^mysell^ BOX REPLIES At IS a.Si. Today them were repllea at The Pram office in this followliig S, 24. so. 04, SS, ft, 71, St, IT, BS, M, 93. 94, M, 96, M. KM), 117, lit, 117. LOST: BROWN EIPPERED WAL-let, no Identtflcetlon. containing about 6260 cash. In ARP parking lot on Perry St. Handsome reward. Phone 338-6636 ______ FOUND - WHAkf BLACK AND tfist-srtk. wsm 1,’s THFj ] Ust y,X,"?. Help Wi 4 H — 3POkTf^C PRESS, THtmSDAYv ....ipS LOST: TIOIR AND wim iW> (Ora .oak, Between Perry an" I Paddock" Beward.PE 8-770S.-. UMte: SIAMESE «*#' PROM dll - LISTINGS ON FARMS ANDAOBK- Si SSSBmmmM WmSmBm i • ®r |f, , BLOOD DONQRS WANTED m and ffl. r w». B *:»* ' W*C «*trott Blood B, Cass. FE 4-9847 scutes im Gener»l 1 i PART TIMS .'JK * *i once - 3 (non 1 t. 6100 guarantee a i?Uhll Mr. Oreen, ( .. ' OAK. ■ a 63 to II and up -pit hanr. ,. tonally advortl*,d Watklne 4 . route. Exporiannw unneoes- , A|HHliitoi>t»~Fsiridiltod 37 I LARGE ROOM^WARM, CLEAN. smalt knehon and bath on Cm« Uako.^Clean^attractlve. .Avatlat Are You Ambitious ? National organisation needs mar riod man 23-40 with high schoo eduoatlou. 6117 weakly guarsn teed whli* training. Phone Of . P'A R jr.LV BARBER PART ttME ' Jfil brook* Barber Shop. 3U31 W. 1 Mlto at OrdiardLek* Rd. Fhrm lngton, Mich. , ■ n ' ! BOY WANTED, MUST HAVj CAh at commission. F . -uelify Work from our temtko. otmo. Apply ifflce 306. 10 W. Huron i. L» 16 BOOKKEEPING. ALL TAXES EM 34414_______ FE 646 16-A Credit Advisors BUDGET YOUR DEBTS .CONSOLIDATE BILLS—NO LOANS For Yoqr Best Bet to Oot Out of Debt. See Financial Advisers, Inc. '3(4 6, SAGINAW__PE 3-7063 Ambulance Service OENERAL AMBULANCE Plastering Service Drenmaking & Tailoring 17 DRESSMAEINO, TAILORING. At-teretlons, Mrs. Bodril. PE 44663. ANY TYPie OP ALTERATIONS IN Refused Auto Insur. ? DO YOU NEED FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY WISH ITie Insurance Meneh — " 161 Wt Huron Felleut Shelters BE PREPARED , om-BulIt Fallout Shot A-l PLASTERINO AND REPA1R8 --- 4 Lea. FE 3-7033. NO FREE ESTlCT Auto Parts Fallout Shelters Built to C.D. specifications. Underground. basement r—• *•““ Popcorn Products Whelesale-Retall ■BinSSi Full tltna until Chrletmec. must hav* retail experience. Salary plug commission. Lynn Jewelers. 1 8. Saginaw. ______________ . COMPLETE LAWN WORK. OAR- den plowing, finished « top SOU. FE 34603. Auto Repair REBUILT MOTORS Fencing Earnings 6140 plus psr week. You must be 36-89 years of eg*, neat and hav* a oar. Call FE 8-0438 for appointment. ----------oy~ EVELYN EDWARDS "VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE” 2462 Auburn A— - “ ■ paw SEWER CLEANERS FE 6-7421 24 hr. service FE 6-6674 SEPTIC SYSTEM] TRENCHllWl, trucking, loading. MA 4-3816, Siding Contractors Wanted ^i,rrr 'able & produce. Good deal to right man. Call 363-4083 day* of RECEIVING CLERK Painting & Decorating 23 Beats—Accessories Hair Stylists 1ST CLASS PAINTING AND PA-»r hanging- Thompron,^FK^4-8M4. Experienced In structural steel. Able to read blue prints and handle phone sales. Excellent starting salary Midwest Employment. 406 Pontlao State Bank Bldg. FE 6-8227. _______________ i PAINTING AND DECORAT-- — years exp. Reas. Free er-i. Phone UL W----- 1962 EVINRUDE MOTORS beauty box i - Periling F>c» wPtoK yP 31-3323 Stamps for Collectors „v..BIPMUIMin»5BND for counter. Personality and nets essential. Douglas Clean-034 8. Woodward, Blrmlag- CURB OIRL 11 bR OVER 6806 Dixie Hwy.. Waterlord. OR 3-0640, DISHWASHER. PART TIME. AP- SALES $400 A-l PAINTINO AND DECORAT-Ing. Free oitlmatee, 083-3477. INTERIOR' AND EXTERIOR pajntlnjh 'expertly _ |M| Tn t k ' i email. FE 6-613*. Clean, Used and' Reduced 1961 Motors, Boats, and Complete Motor Service and Boat Repair I YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER Harrington Boat Works 10 8. Telegraph Rd. FB 3-3033 . STAMPS ON APPROVAL t>lAubura> Height* Hearing Aids LYNN'S TELEVISION. EVKNINO-‘- 6t tobor IOR AND exterior. ... RiMor«&14--------- aTady interior decorator. Fsperlng, Fk 6-0343. FOR SALE USED MATERIALS, FTpERHANOINO] PA1NT1NO. Soon, windows. Galvanised and black pipe, new., 4” **“*— " all kinds, Heating Service MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE BOOKKEEPER Through 25 Irtth'bankkTdaVs'or female. Top lalary. Midwest Employment, 406 Instrudlens-Scheeis 10 6 ENGINE AIRLINER, NON-STOP-, Lo* Angeles, San Francisco, San fitog*. 170.66. Hawaii. 136 e---- New Tqrk. 31*. Miamj. *64. 1 Service Ine. OR 3-1264. LiAVINO FOR B E. MO~ 17-18TH. . , --- _ .T* —iS-JgJOj. g 13 lF. Bpruc® K10 .14 LI Ft. 113 .13 U. Ft. ALL PURNACBS CLEANED AND serviced. C. L. Nelson. “ * "" " BRYAN F. FREi™. 361 N. Paddock 8t. FE 8-6973 DOMESTIC HEATINO COMPANY 671 Orohard Lake Ave. FE 3-3630 Day or Night Service Joseph Gauthier, OR 3-6033 Service Call $4.50 Towing Service I WRECKER 3 HARNBCK HEATINO ___ 8>1>» >nd Service Ph. 682-0380 MURPHY HEATINO hKRV’lbB.. CIVIL SERVICE JOBS 1 Need a high eehool diploma tor * »{uiy *eoura* /ul -SIT AND LIVE oh *3^8*74,°atte°r”l p.m. _ GIRL F.XPFRIKNCED ON GRILL, must be neat. No nights or F“" homo illy prepares you ’ Michigan High SItBREd by the ??%i.0,N.',icni'! Wanted Childrew ta Beard 28 CHILD CARE IN LICENSED HOME. AIRPORT LUMBER AND SUPPLY 6071 Highland Rd. •PLY B FOR CHILDREN. U- Wantad Household Geodi 29 Pontlao, ""Suiip" tile’" With rioilfes All sleos, uan toe ----- ' •mips, Grease traps, 1" diameter tn* su OBRIEN HEATINO 371 Voorhels Rd. “■ o¥ToTtKz5F-_. 3101 Orchard Lk. Rd. Ph. 033-3101 lamidry Serwce JIM * LYNN 'SERVICE (Drayton Plains and vicinity) 3009 Dixie, Pontiac OR 3-6660 LIl'B AAA SEhviOE . , “ 306 II l, Rochester OL 6- crook s ; 8ft & L DO YOUR LAUNDRY FOR . Finished laundry serv. Bnt-n’s, 1480 Baldwin. FE 3-037*. Tree Trimming Service ton, DC. Write for free booklet. National School of Home Study, Dept. PP. Box 6314, Detroit 34, HAIRDRESSER, OVER 1 YEAR FINISH HIGH SCHOOL. clamifift, High School diploma Awarded, study at-home ln^^jpare n FOR FURNITURE AND AF- livW1; Building Modernization Work Wonted Male 11 BUILDING MAINTENANCE WANT, ed, steady or oart time. Home* i winterised, have ick and tools. Call I. FE 6-0643,___________ WILT BUY ODD LOIR housefull of furniture, tools. .... M. H. Sallow. Auctioneer, FE 4-6600 or Holly 32 Wanted to Bent A-l ADDITIONS, FALL-OUT 8HSL-*--- ’louse Raising, Oarages, Con. Woik, Nothing Down. ORAVES CONTRACTINO ____itimatos OR 4-16H ATTICS' ANtP R E C RR A TION additions. Fre* 1X6 PINE ROOF BOARDS 80 Un. ft. 1X3 FURRING STRIPS 3o Un. ft. 3X4 KUn Dry Fir ... 60 Un. ft. 3x4-8 Economy Stud* ... .. 38o #a. Rook Wool ......... *6o a baa 4x8x'/. Hardboard ..... 61,88 Oxigy* Fir Plywood .... *3.76 PONTIAC LUMBER CO. Yard Friooa. Delivery Servloo ACE TREE SERVICE •TUMP REMOVAL Tree removal, trimming. Got o *68-3*10 or EXPERT TREE TRIMMING AND removal. Reasonable, FE 6-1Q0*. 1 Oakland Avo. FK t-0013 General Tree Service 2Aat*“,;ii!0Wrr oMr **•n TRIMMING ORTfEMOVAL. VfhT RENTAL SERVICE Tenant* walling. Val-U-Way, 34 Oakland Avenue, FE 4-3r' plumber's Share Living Quarters 33 INTERIOR DECORATiSb"MINOR repair ^nd^y all washing. Rtason- LEAF'RAKiSo! LIOHT H ------- and hand digging. FE 6-3741. . LIOHT i?AUOWOj^LEAF RAKlild. One drjTwino] detwu|»o. and exploded views. FE 4-7161. -- -.."trr,- - OR MSI. AH terms. 1 Quinn's C( TD hast .......... 03o un, ft, — 9 It. it. saiU .. I0R off . Waterford Lumber 3378 AirpffijhLBd Toyi-Retail BusirtduOppertunities BARNES * HARGRAVE Plywood A heat, beautiful 4-FAMILY IMBEDROOM Rrlok Ant. Full bimt., 3 baths per unit, built-ins. Parkins, ealke, lawn. *43.000 on your loi C, J. Dunlap, BuUdor rE 0-116 hauling caEL "with famIlY AN IMMEDIATE BALE FOR YOUR .. Land Contract ‘ Se* us before you.deal. Warren jfegf 77w- m | CabinetMaking ■JU THICKNESSES AND SPECIES Got ourj^rloes peforo ^ou^buy Plywood Distributor ' ESJt Consumers Discount Center 176 N. SAGINAW ST.^PONTIAC SCAhLETT 8 Bf^COI ' ■- HOBBY SHOP Wo fuarantso < I Used TV MARRIED" .. and'mechanics, ^ . mAitRiib“TtoO'mw.wor*. I wp. In momnu MARRIED M s "Wants workof any kind: FE 8-413*. JAN 33. hEEDS WORK DBS-noratbll. Ft 3-4107. YOUNG MAN It. FARM OR *W Wm* Wanted Femala U CASH Of OR FHA EQUITIES If you are leaving stato or at «S8frd® **u ",w ,mn R. I. WICEERSHAM 7110 W. Maple MAyfalir 4-4360 BUILDER Carpet Cleaners______ " • . TUSON ' .' ’ ton.'Mtoh. FfffWg-3363 Cote Laowlrtts , REBUILT, USEP TVs " Guaranteed OBKL tv service 3830 RUwMtltJbako Rd. FB 4 Trucks to Rent NEEDS 1 OR MORS Vacant Loto. city of Fonttfto — Any area. FaM Action by buyer. CALL. STB 6-3870, U to* ? - ill, imujaro i U-WASK-IT Wiegand MuSic Center Industrial Tractor Co. fnr • 'oackh . CASH ml equities, Land OeMMOto ! OUT*. VaL-U-WAY. 340 Schinldt, FE 3d—iWIP fWlWfl,A*PKEP»fhihO;rS4-Miur''twvte*, in won guarswood by fadlqro trained^ men. - - ■ T.^eBCoiTiTOicm. 111 N. SAQOlAW FK ■w Call Personnel Mgr, OA 8-3336 " ..Wlljrpi ■ 6^' IdHMPiMi' :lHil ii i inonwr.^-..,1- ^ viu. i Loralopt.iwpMyil,: MM j FOR YC ", OR S oeHRral "houseWork ilb child oaro, FE 4-24M - IRONINO toOT-Ur AND'filBtiP CASH_. ,361 oiiaakdi»miwm^'' fe «-w ACME QUALmr PAINTS Dtp. Complete . sqtoottou ta awe / 3 N. Saginaw ,T(fippt wow* ro« a«Sik*t’omoe work experleno* and family eta- CASH ON AN lift OR Of SALE. Tm j-tm* and liar us iron oof your real ESTATE PROBLEMS. CLARE REAL ESTATE. 3101 W. HURON. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1961 FORTY-NINE y#iiijiSii»-.* r^yg- t 4-9102. mfS th, 4 HOOKS AMO BATH ALL PRI- ' HB4BBB*r furatsfied, private entrance and bath, adult*. 8M after 6:30. 16 Pincgrove. • . »■ ^ | « ROOMS. AMO BATH, PRIVATE entrance. Child welcome. 3-1626. alter 2. MY 2-2721. 4 R^OMB-WEST BIDE. CLOSE TO *■—~“"it tattr »11 .Went*- sSre- TSfMmr „__- ______E ROOMS kitohenette, 10 minutes from — woe. Attroowv* WMhlrrates^QR 3-T7W._____________________ CORNER UNION LAKE AND TJ8f end bath, MA 4-1282, wool, CUE AN, 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE K a employed girli, PR 8-0000. FOR COLORED' 3 ROOMS, FBI- ONE OF THE NICEST 3-ROOM fumlehed apartments la available to e eelect couple, t" —“• k eluding utilities. 6r PONTIAC. 1 ROOMS. ALL PRI-rate, 1 Child welcome. OR 3-2317. JVBBT SIDE, 3 ROOMS AND B ApaHmentt-Unfurniahed 31 1- AND 3-BEDROOM. PAR T L Y furn. Lake-front apt a. OR 3-9106* Of OR 3-7229.__ TOSp»r' X)M UPPER, OAS HEAT! 4-3003, 100 Chandler. ________________ 'J,.'.'... rIvatI front end beck entrenee, garage, washer end dryer, steam heal I ROOMS, UTILITIES FURN ODE, a, 3. AND 4-ROOM -"-‘ and Donelaon ScheoU. thop; 1 and bug, service. COB ** 3 ROOMS AND BATH. ROCMBolIgDERN. ROOMS, UTILItM FURN, -dote to achoola. 4700 Highland 5 ROOMS. 470. PLU Utllltlee. FE 4-0481. NEWLY FURNISHED 1355 front home. 0 milee frpr tiac. Available Sent, to Ju a-aiii or pi M04tT pletely furnished 3-bedrm.’ Available forTtt months t— -15,- 10(2. -3014 Ceesthaven, Elisabeth Lake, Pontiac. Gan for appointment. ELIZABETH LAKEFRONT Till June 1st. Beautifully furnished In Early American, a bedrooms. 0100 monthly plus utilities. References required! Mrs. El-wood, Realtor. 082-2410. il&DlRN a furnished, near Walled Lake. MA 6-7«». ft OR3-8136. iffiys. rated, 3-0663. SMALL HOUSE FURNISHED. FE 1 1501, IOOL YEAR. 2 LARGE BED- — -------iietely furnished lake- Automatto gas beat, or. f' HlMk Drive, ROOMS, ‘MA 4-2060, Rent Houtdt, Mwfd»ri»j«lM>di 40 (1) 3 BEDROOM RANCH WITH besement and tiled floor, kitchen has bullt-lns, fas heat. Immediate poeseeelon. Near Oakland and Montcalm. MA0-1M2. . BEDROOMS BATH, OAS HEAT, aluminum storms, newly decorated, 100. 4212 Hatchery Rd., Drayton Plains. OR 3-0183. BEDROOMS. COMMERCE . VI-clotty! call- after Ti. wr »-ww. 2.BEDROOM, RAMONA TERRACE, 168 month, call FE 4-1660. Jr (MOurnMe, elec, hot wetor. Pull baso't. ril 4-0647. BEDROOMS. OARAOE ON OP- 338-0787. 2-0003.______ AUTOMATIC OIL Immediate yosses- 1 before 13. BEDROOM. LAROE KITCHEN. Tfle bath, living ~ --- ITfeg. ' BEDROOlt. OAS FURNACE. i Mo. City of Rochei __ BUNGALOW NEWLY decorated, electric atove. carpeting ml neat, fuU basement, garage, (70 month. 011 Lucille Dr.. Willed Lakt, Mich, MI 4-5669. , bkdroom. oil heat baby welcome Mil a month. No pet*. FE 2-0488 mmmm ranch 114 baths, tile basement, via# heat, carpeted, «U»*D —. 'iBBDBOOM. Ml ■ condition,1 on; Roeburmrftadd ences. Pontiac PrOsa I xBases- jb mmvmiw -utoo am 4—“ payed road _ ___ 4 tadrodm* and don, All lane > rowii, i®Hj|tipu( purd wjth wS». *' mm ' bONELSON PARK SUBDIVISION with lake privileges, Ir room newly decorated with carpeting, drapes, stove and •rotrlgorutor. References required and shown by appointment. Call PE 2-6034 DRAYTON WOODS, 3-BEDROl separate dining room, full hi Mint. immediate poeee.slon PACT REALTY. OR 4-0436 Executive Ranch Home ■ I I v 1 n l KfiS: bedroom homo, oM hMt.^ofpE mil refrigerator iroom, modern. TcSii trpoting, atove. and refrigerator, Judah Lata $00 month, PE 2-6046. and ref 1 bedrot h, full hi ergs kitchen, irfetor. living Itnotta, smell___ nent with shower lutomatic oil furnace. garage, [arden apot and tree*. baby wel-iome. near Lincoln Jr. aohopl, ivallable Dec. 1st. 77 LeOmnde. 180 per month, PE 2-8216. MODERN 2-BEDROOM. OAS HEAT 2316 Indlanwood Rd„ Lake Or-. Call LI 3-6222 ______ nIce 8-room and Eath fulj, -1407. bouae.”KTego"*Harbor, MI PLEASANT a-BEDROOM HOUSE, gas heat, near St. Michaels, |7*. FOPTION TO BUY. - basement, ga- o Realty. Call bedroom ,frame, —----------WJ — Vacant, Immediate possession. “VoWSiO „ SMALL HOUSE. iValw. HOME OF YOUR OWN. Huron. FE 6-3638._____ IN QUIET HOME. OARAOE. OEN-“imau. After 6 p.m. weekdays cent Bat. 120 8. Johnson, FE 1663, ... AT THE LiUOt Furnished 2-htdroola year around cottage on Maoedav Lake lm? * CRAWFORD AGENCY imH i u tear old 1-Attached t-M# Pull baaement. Soreanad turn. ft ft. lot. £ic. ooodttlon. 2042 DoTobOHor. in 4-3606. Original e hoorm. ra BY OWNER, NICE 3 BEDROOM briek, fttU basement, fenced yard, low down payment. FE a-llM. BY OWNER — 2 BEDROOM, GAB' BY OWNER - LOVELY FARM ' lie overlooking stream on 44 e. Paneled living room, — and1*tiShttwm' %£CSk& atb-car garage, beautifully BY OWNER. 2 BEDROOM HOME Cash to mortgage. 481 I off laldwln Road._________ BY OWNER. 2-BBDROOM RANCH i bullt-lns, fUH --------* ully lanelaeapei corner lot. 1 tary and sonl.. _ down payment-,; COLORED 3-JBEDRQQM HOMES' $io d8wn •everal good location* left FE 8-2782 afternoons ,1 2-4677 or U 2-7327 attar 7 p.m. WE8TOWNREALTY F "YOU'RE REALLY INTERlblT-ed In food location, roads, Fireplace 1nrltiri|ng a.. 1 Bldg. < Ilelby. Imiuediate Possession On this modern-to-the-mlnute old foshionod bungalow. Has ( large rooms plus utility largo enough for third bedroom. Stone front porch. 2-car^ garage. Nicely^ lo-. dose to excellent beach on Cass Lake. Only $8,050 with terms to suit qualified buyer. JACK LOVELAND IN OXFORD. 7-room, I ment, enclosed porch, Vw-garage, handy to schools wtu stores, very conservatively priced. H. P HOLMES, INC. FE 6-2963 Eves. MA 6-9709 BEDROOM HOME BASE NICE 3 Only 1 year's taxes a. Nice 3-bedroom utility. All newly rge comer lot. Va-shov- —“J— ” ‘Drayton area = r.“r« decorated. Ll. -------- - - cant. Can be shown anytime. H. R. Hagstrom, Realtor, 4«00 Highland Road, (M60), FE 4-0361. I Mi FE 4.7002, OWNER SACRIFICE. 3-BBDRQOM. bricky front, »_ years, gas neat. 0 per 1-6340. Water softener, gas In-Low down payment, or 4 per cent mortgage mo. 611.818. 814 Argyie, CARNIVAL By DldkTuraer MODEL HOME •evory&mgf^aniscaBmf. maintenance freo. Close to church and shopping center, add has lake privilege* on l^of the^.best^ ftshr etf In a Wooded area f^r'e those interested in hunting. This can /he. bought on tonne cheaper than rent. See Otis home at once. Dtoreh ^ButMers. PE. MM2 hfc „.,,:SEE Ni'.W ~ Econ-O-Tri - JAYNO. 'HEIGHTS ; Executive transferred. Will tie-riflee for immediate' sale, 10 per full basement, carpeting, mapet.. _ room with fireplace, dining room large kitchen with bnawme, forced, ' air- gas Beat. ■ corner lot, beach, MB Boat privileges, aaeaclatfou ■■ restrictions. 3136 Rosaline Lane, Dreyton. Plains. Owner phone OR . Neat' Northern High Sharp 2 bedroom, bungalow on nice lot —’ alum, siding - perm a-Mime front - payments only $88 per montir. After small down pay- Colored Bargain ~ Prtca reduced to 18.750 on title sharp 4 bedroom horn# —^ on "Briefly, these are your duties. You take dictation, answer the phone, do some filing and stay 8ingle!" 49 SaleHoum BUD Charm Galore Oay. attractive 2 bedre level in delightful Ot Subdivision, with attar estCS? .?r‘*,uL*: Country Livin’ *7 Acres, remodels^ 3 “Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 40 Mt. Clemons st. FE‘S-1201 After 6 p.m. FE 4-877,1 NICHOLIE CLAKK8TON BRICK RU NO A LOW id "uliiify1 payment moves you in. Balance at about 285 a mo. Including taxes and Insurance NICHOLIE - HARCiER 63tk W HURON FE 5-8183 RED BARN __Paes Brtok.irO—-------- The House of Ease J Bedrooms — Face Brick Oas Heat - Free Carpeting Attached.Oarage ......... The Oxford Squire 3 Bedroom Tri-Level Face Brick — 0*a Heat Select Oak Floors The Expandable l Bedrooms »JMU “*—* Oas Heat — Bircn vanui Large Walk-In Closata THORS, 494 IN HERRINOTON HILLS Lovely 3-bedroom brick, huge living —m with drapes, modern kitchen r*i?loridS WEST IROQUOI8 ROAD: CHOICE West side, white aluminum tiding. 4-bedroom home. Carpeting and drapes in living room and dining I room, family room, kitchen with breakfast nook, baaement^ oil 216.600. Shown by appomtmont. 'EXCLUSIVE LAKE ANOELUS: New brick bi-lev cl consisting of living room, dining room, ultra modern, tarm-atyle kitchen. 3 bed. rooms and den. 214 battle, carpeted throughout, fireplace and matly extras. Lake level hae family room with fireplace, nice TRIPP „ caped. Owner leavlm orida. Will take late mode or nouaetraller for 23.00 equity Balence FHA. R. I. W1CKEKSHAM IPS W. Maple MAyfqlf 44B FAMILY HOME: Price JOHN K. IRWINi Owner Transferred MUST SELL THIS LOVELY 3 BEDROOM log lake-front honw with apaelous rooms throughout. Includee flrplace, full d 1 n 1 n g < room, 114 baths, full basement, j ; 2-car garage, 14 acre. land. Full j price 218.600 “Easy terms- Call ■ J. A. Taylor, Realtor, OR 4-0306 -araace kampsen wooued lot, near school and shopping area. 2-oar plaetered. tiled, heated garage or multipurpose room. 2 spacious, bedrooms, bath, lgrge dining and living room. - - —' - carpeted and drapes Ottawa Hills draperies. j-lke-n( flbrary.P*Enilclent* ihly Pu....... kitchen with upboarda m it room reoroatlon bath - two half baths. Largo two car garage. Nlooly 1— ____________________B 8-12*2. "Wallpaper Steamer Floor senders, polishers, har 6 ROOMS. NEWLY DECORATED, owner Prospect and ganford. PE milted?* 13. imr'jt SEil&M ol*3®*1?BAf5”J?*#" t7l*r*AM pUf.'W4«p rea. CNR 3-1321, I am. to YOUNG-BUILT HOMESf h No C“ Down No Mortgage Cost: All you now) I* a JoL. |- now, excellent location, spacious 3-hedroom home, walk-In closet*, gleaming oak tloora, ■ heat, nmlly kitchen, 242.72 month — I Mt. RUSSELL VOUNG BANDY MAN gPVCIAL. *2. 2- room modern 1-floor hi dining room, basement, nimace. 3- ear garage, extra lot. needs decorating and Hiding. A real buy. TRADE OR SELL. 6-room modern .......m ...............a ng 8-7666 Re«. PR 4-M12 CLARK REAL ESTATE '‘iiuLlfer UBTIHO iSKVc^ * 3 BEDROOM HOMES Facebrick Front Paym’ts Less Than Rent $10 Moves You In! No Mortgage Costs Oak hf&t-cftrpfted living room DON’T WAIT-BUY NOW I No Down Payment 714 CORWIN (1 block north of Montcalm) (block east of Oakland) GINGELLVILLE Beautifully landscaped 1-acre lo with email barn and 3-car garagt 2-bedroom, lV4-story atumlnui floors, separate dining room Spick and span, New FA furnac and water neater. JAMBS B. ZURHLKE Custom Bqllder__ OR 3-071 MULTiPLE LISTING SERVICE’ IRWIN LAKE FRONT WeBster AKE ORION 10 beautiful acres w ir thru property up leorgoof" -*■" *** RML r-i ^ ree*. Attractive ri ,ng room, 20x36. C A WEBSTER, REALTOR^ -DXORAH BUILDlNO~Cp7~ ?B00 d* oration Only ltcomb. Reel- PINE LAKE ESTATES _____ “••**3 - TRI — QUAD LBV-RANOH Hp^BS.^Pvi. SrATiNO CO. COLONIALS ELS $8995 WRIGHT 345 OAKLAND AVE FE 64K4I BATEMAN i MULTIPLE listing service i DOCTOR’S HOME 6» grille* in Doneleon Park, prte* reduced $3,000. A ahow* Will build on your lot No Mortgoge Coal. TO MODKL: Kllaabfth l to Union . Lake Rond. Frariaworth Right to OF*N . I . HAYDEN. Rea ^BATHS' "0" DOWN ioi beauUfuUv ___ l arge ground level family . S2*. W6JSS ft? SACRIFICE PRICE 3 bedroom West suburban bi Just, a^rtono's^ttirm^froi ___walk Jdiae..for- screens Only tU.500* *monU»lyB YrnSe”* price redtteod ONLY 3 LEFT I 5rickfronI.,, Pub basement Glass | sliding patio doors. ^Estra^lajge | and urion. rnce rcaucen so 116,000. New custom 3 bedroom brick Witth|g*l*g*^*h4 taw- range and oven with mnor extra#. 21.608 down with 3* year mortgage, CALL NOW. FKKHY ' AWlJftMADlSoNhiiARKA ’ Shown by appt only FE 6*3763 — FB 9-2763 ! from T to 6 30 p.m. 5 ACRES a 12 Mile* west of Pontiac, Oh Ormond Road. Modern ranch home. 'built in I860. Aluminum aiding and garage. Plenty of or space to roain. You can't set a heller buy than this at Sparkl_uaQ^rT: ^Ransdr “Bungalow i lot — 120J«, of I month DON’T WAIT, slx***room i R EA LTO R Id'VrriLmm. jFK 4 °-s^ia FE 8-7161 :hi B**wr.*To [ UNION LAKE‘BRICK g- home A aeleot { You'll love Ihia well planned 2 . rrb view I PRICED, yr. old light brick with heauttfuii i— ^wS^ndhwALg*1 r kitchen.^ 3 bedrms., ««- i room has a tlrepiaci terfovd '•fcSHSYLVAN LAKE Humphries FE 2-9236 i Telegraph Open Pi * FlS^InteroOTn merit! r1" — BAM . i bath City water, i streets, 2-car ga-latlon room. AM- , I boot privileges 100 up. Open Sat-, 1 Rk **a-*(B»lnt WARWICK k SON s,. Val-U-Way NEWINGHAM !ranch at 623.660 including I HOWARD T, ICEA1 ^OrcU^d^Laka Rd. Mod^ ’ol5®'!* IJ 13-7.30 daily a«oept Thttr$d*y‘_ j ROCHESTER - UTICA Large 4-bedroom brick, 2 bativ. . baaement. 2-car garage, . jAWilj drive; -flAfOO 9000 dOWn BUSINESS PROPERTY! HIITER Harold F.. Weaver rraltor 8 * AU«UR "• 3 BUILD ANNETT Brick Terrace, West Side 6 lf«. rms, and bath, full rnaiit,^ oil beat. ^Cloar ^ to tlon, or low qn. pymt. 3 Spacious Bedrooms If you ar« tired of am. bet.—I this brick and frame Capr Coa ayton irlvtlei a>.: - $45triKnvx; Colored i I' f. (Diek) VAf.ULT 'ealtttr LK 4-3531 j _ 346 OAKLAND AVENUE HOYT | IMMEDIATE POSSBSiWON l fireplaces. CLARKSTON AREA -Nice ranch . -Jt bedroom* Urge W V^&lTAlS.rd*SJJ H.' wrra us - wo buy. **n L H. BROWN* Realtor M-SUO AREA 2-bedroom reneb type bun.--- with tile beth. ges beat and situ aled on nicely landscaped lot. Vacant and quick possession. Templeton West Suburban Part of an eoUto. must bo cold. Nearly new 2-bedroom, largo living room, extra nice kitchen. approximately 1 acts of land. Only 60,160 With 18 par K. L. Temp' r°h*rd ,960 With 19 per cent down Templeton, Realtor lard Lako Rd. . 682-000“ RENT BEATERS! 3 Bedrooms Carpeted Living Room and Hall Large Walk-in Closets Formica .Cabinet! Family-Sized Kitchen ALSO Full Basement Models Oak Floors , Vanity in Bath 3 Bedrooms 965 Carlisle OPEN DAILY It TO 8. BPorornB tapo. co. 16.286, l Small Farm, Close In Lovely 2 bedim, bungalow with 8 acres, oak paneled family rm. with fireplace, full divided basement, oil heat. Lge. garage ami utility bldg. 28x20. heated 20x36 office or work shop with plumbing. 232.808, WE WILL TRADE ANNETT INC. Realtors » E. Huron St. Open Evening* Mid Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 LAST CHANCE ONLY 3 LEFT 3-BEDBOOM vssKtfsr "O" DOWN *7stoWg UJ&SV.£* A Pocket Pull of Money When You Son Your Surplus ' Homs Through Wont AS* , Dial re 3-sin now i ,j( Hagstrom DRAYTON PLAINS 3 bedroom ^tr! level. DA butlie.^fli of eolon end* tile. Midland S lust elf Sashabaw. only 4l3.e»i Call for appointment. Homes-Farms INCOME HOME NEAR M-16 -This Is * real aaerifiee sale, Ordered told by oourt - i bed-rooms 2 bathe ^ new furnace 6 BEDROOM HOMS WITH 3 pete(l”hring room with fireplace ! READY FOR 8PR1NO BUY loff ’ VoorheU Rd!*ftl' MHOl*1***’ I „ INGLEWOOD, 847" NEAR OAKLAND W ioT^n.Vo:^tn. u A utility room, oil h«*t. Aluminum I fttoimfl. Lort* f«nc«d y«rd Ttk* ! tot. i*t* outo. or hat. 1V»_ baths, plao-1 —E "mw*. aluml-sene, I eat" Leaped lot. V reasonable a? rw^ia.&c tit you. » wJr lK ModH ■ w*ad . -rtJrrtwr $9,500 JBSiSbE MMU-irfoi Onir ilt.OW I Ttsas. Sole Houtei - 4-Bedroom Ranch '*.g.iLv"v sacrifice. *1,0*0. 0T3423*.______ VACANT 3-BEDROOM LAl front, flreplafc, screened pot .*750 down. J-bedroom , garage,, near Ortonvllle, »3»0 Will trkde equities for land c Northern Property 51-A l Oakland / Resort Property IDEAL DEER HUNTINO ■ - ' - a----lei “Make mo the happiest boy in the world. Go Dutch!” LUMBER Complete builders hardware — Prime main highway to one of the beat locations. Opportunity and room to develop any phase of building buelnes* here. Owner angtoui to retire. MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION JOHN A. LANDMR8BBR. BROKER 1873 TELEGRAPH HP. FE 4-1083 LIQUOR BAR Class C with howling alley In good drinking Thumb Area. This place needs a hew owner." Real estate Included for only 820,000 down. Alco, another Class C doing 88,000 per month, will take good farm in trade. Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681___________ Liduor Store Well located package liquor store. High volume business. Very reasonable lease. 810,006 down. Brewer Real Estate JOSEPH r.f RErtZ, BALES MOR. FE 4-5181_______Eves. FE 8*0823 HOBBY SHOP t delightful hustoess^youT and supplies. Excellent profits. Easy rent.^Just 03.- TRA1?E* PARTRIDGE ASSOCIATES. REALTORS W Huron. FE 4-3581 Businesses thruout Mich. RUO, WALL WASHINO. BU8INE88 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN \_ BORROW UP TO $588 OFFICES XN Pontlao —.Drayton Maine -* Utica Walled Ilk., Birmingham. Plymouth Need $25 to $500? See.. ? Seaboard. Phone FE 3-7617 1185 N. Perry St. parking no problem Seaboard Finance Co. Ei' upngnt trett&T, W' .■ f/M-Kiras g'*ce, various ”e*Sy”ci console boards and JrwH. % bedroom 3 beVrooin set, doubio dresser, hlgb-bCd, lOMlHjW I^U^wr,QS.-|gft sat oi now qBMrw. cajL FB 5-0407, Capitol Sewing Center for appointment. .............. 8 PIECE BEDROOM s'hT brand new, dohhl* dresser, b case bed, eWrt of Irawer*. * decorator lamps. M* - 4».» wekiy B u n k beds, eopMuet* 137 50, 10 ctylci to cbootc, from. . 6-year cribs, *13.0* UP. .J-Pl*®* chrome dinette, 034 *8. OxliJoam backed- rugs. *14.08. Also tweedo and flora! pattsm. Hug P»«*. : 88 *8. *1*8 add 013.00. PwaMt c tt otwsic Laid Ay*. FE .mmi. O-MBCB OTNCAh .^liyi^A; U«»; tog room set, |8t; Kroehler couch, *30; Red love scat, *15; Sleep ch’atr, *ifi AntiquV iulvcl table, 413: atrlMd *«» H4 Chrome set, U*. ftiaUty ■« 808) Orchard 1» a k ®» Kc ert-0874. We Mil ............. liwvrthfrW Cfunffi USED__..........4 ^T^umhtoce On all refrlgbratore, Auto. ,wa#-rangeB* wrfngcr OTShers; %rtQQl Horry to aS »!*• Consumers Power Co. rjfirj"T lid**--" E| S nsss*-:#.";. ft* ra., rnm mmmf Burmeister „ • dumberxc-mpany fAwrpWp 70S* osotoy Imka Bd. ^ JlUjfi-^S;tBnSsmti Co. FlS *41W8. a.g- ACUBIC-FOOT G.BjJlEFRIOBRA-0-YBAR 17 CUBIC FOOT UFRIOHT FRBEZ- -> Talen — ««lV 17 INCH RCA VICTOR. 035. ALSO 17 mim Motorola. 436. Miono FE . 130 36 840 05 98 Set* to oboqsi ...... WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE Walton TV FE 3-3357 Open 0-0 "r 1. Walton, corner of Joslyn 30 INCH O.E. RANGE. I Auto, timer. Clock light, 3 year* old. *100 FOR YOUR QUICK CASH LOAN of $28 to $800, borrow the modern. convenient way on your SIGNATURE auto or furniture with easlr-to-meet payments.^ ■ FES-8121 Ask for Les, Oene or John for a fast, one-trip loan. Home & Auto Loan Co. 7 N. Perry Street__, CENTtfRY FINAlicE_ COMPANY Lake Orion TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO 30" KENMORb o 30" ELECTRIC RANGES, *38-845, can deliver, portable heater, 18. 8-string banjo. *10. Tables, *8.(6 Tow citato. (3.50. 036 Whlttemore, FE 6-3084. APARTMENT-SIZE OAS STOVE AUTOMATIC ZIO-ZAO DIAL CON- ---Makes fancy deslghs, button i, blind bemt, monogram-by using the dial. In lov »^NH^AW«K»^OI»OAN» ’ HORBis'll'tiStc;* 'mmm oagaeSL^SHLi ... Wittl lanon*. il,l||*iP^lr ^MORRIS MUSIC * wwrf- „ _ Mtlquccbalrc,.oh#rry"coror. fJJ-Old pin* hutch. *mali »l*e *80. ' Antlaus hlgff clislr *l». A st*|»n Co.. .*•1 W. Walton. FE CIRCLE FLUORESCENT UOHTS, newest Hjht» •.y*-...— *?« <« Michigan ’ FmorSt csiar juluntc. kitchen*. *13.05 fTsctory am*rr^d. MiSadiH*...pi hi suite. T pieoe; »'• oontoj* YV; NORoi ELECTRIC^RANOjli. WITH FAIRBANKS MORRIS WAT pump and Mnk, f years very reasonable, Elgin O-7003, fiSSfiM^Hoi^iNd. # a i ■ !>**.*, firing. Open f daysTFB 5-4713. Montcalm Supply, 158 W. Moatoalm. ■■ ■,:■■■ ■■ • £1D ACCORDIONS. OOTTAR8, DRUMS. BONOoi ORQAN8. MANY C^ER.INJiYRWWTS FMmdJa suit Youi PurM. LAYAWAY PLAN - BZ TEWI8 EDWARD'S 10 >■ jf*Vff4W INSTRUMENT REPAIR - ^ 8^33 is E, SAGINAW ■. ■■■ FE- EjB ^^WWACT080NIC..»in^S, walnut, excellent conditions $488, BEAUTliPUi GUWAR ™-^r3-s8,- ml Rif^Sg^ED~zip-zAO erntm machine, will allpw_ eomeone to assume payments. Revel Accep- ment. Curt's' Appilanei HatWerr M. -Oi^a-llttl. ^ SPECIAL * X 13 RUOS. *34.08. Me-Leod Carpet. Woodward at Square Lk" Just balow Ted's. FE 3-770L STANDING TOILETS *It.(( IlSTnllfeifi 3 pc. bath seta with trim "B" 88* *8 ^•^U^O,1saL^*j 173 B. Sastoaw, - . FE 8-2100 dt5^D'’,l®b:'l",WA^R''46M!BNER, cheap Ilk* OR 4-1703._ HIGH CHAIR, BbY'S TOIDY ~ ■ QlW'«. OlOMlM. 4. f. 1, FB 8-30*1. HAVE YOUR FARTY' ATj#ALrS Hall, Walton and Ferry. FE 347*3 or MY 3-30*1. - 1 Hof" WAnirVATPER, 30-OAL. i 'loSMMi— — *—* SIEGLER - OIL HOME HEATERS Fays lor Itself b the niel it save* I CY BACK OUARANTEE MY 3-3311 ®Ci3i TRADE OAS RANOE TJ^tb OIL BEATER $30 ' about anything You want FOR THE HOME CAN HE FOUND AT L h 8 SALES, > A little out of the way but a lot USED Visit our trade,slept, for' real bargains. We buy. sell or trade. Come out and loo* around, 3 aores of free parking. Phone FE 8-024i. OPEN MON.-SAT. * TO • FRI. 0 TO I „ 24 MONTHS TO PAY 4 miles B. of Pontlao or 1 mile B of Auburn Heights on Auburn. MB* UL 2-3300.___________, with freexer i •top, *78. USED 30 gal. gas water USED phllco refrigerate RECONDITIONED Frlgli l?008 *130.(8 $14^.08 forge Auto Waeher .. four choice ~ 15.00 down, as 81.25 weekly. Guarai»««. Free delivery. QOODYEAR SERVICE STORE IQ 8. Csss FE 6-0133 JSED AUTOMATIC WASHER. guarantt ’ I. FB 4-88 WHOLESALE MEATS AND OROCBRIBS I Baby foods. 24 Jars 0*o. Short * " , 30c; Frotsn vegs-| --15c lb. Consumers approved, i 844.60, while they last. Terriflo Michigan Fit chatd~Laks orescent, 3*3 Or- LA BELLE SlitHc PROJECTOR. Warm Moxnlng Incinerator, ma-plc sofa bed and chair, OL 1-1028. OIL SPACE HEATERS. NEW AND used. SchteK'B. MY 3-3711. POOL TABLE 4X8 FOOT ALL RfFRIOERATOR, CHAIN 400 ft. ____ .jths, M shaper, grinding ... ... __ 'elding cable, lathe, burning outfit, — i! WjSsrp® i b°.R.5?aw.t*%V«6M HAMMOND SPINET GROAN with Hammond speaker, contain- • tog 8 speakers. Plus wet reverberation. 01,084. OR3-7M1, »ftar SHEET MUSIC SBLLINO COL- lectlon of spsclal scores written for a studio orchestra. Have over 400 separate arrangements, some medley*. *1 per scort or lSOO for the collection. All written more than 30 years »g0. Call FE 8-0785. SOH^IER LEW BETTE^LY8MUSIC CO. Ice entrance cable, 001 __Thompson. 7005 M80 1 ____ SMALL OIL STOVE WITH AT-’ *ied tank. Call after 3:30. FE SPECIALS I 4x0' HARDBOARD . > -4x8' PEOBOARD .... •>., « 4x0' FUR ........*3.1 i 3x7' CHIPBOARD .__*11 PONTIAC PJJfWOOB'COr UNIVERSAL ACCORDION, bass. FE 4-8126. UPRIOHT PIANO, *75 VIOLIN, EXCELLENT CgNPITION VIOLIN. OOOD CONDITION. 845 FE 2-2283. ADDING MACHINES New. Used. Rebullt--"Term*" Quality—Price—Sarvto* . "Here today—here to *tay.” Pontiac Cash Rem$tPLlSl,l,r8QUiUMi,,'r,|p tatoes. Marvin Middleton Sr., II 1 — ALUS CBALMKRS MODEL O Tractor with rotary mower . and ^m^w blade attachment. ^jto 1 — 1060'Model 010 Case Tractor wide front. Used Case-o-matle and ■Mi,mounted plow, 400 hrt. Save $3,000 on this deal. 1 — John Deere Model it Flail typc cnoppcr. Special this week of Med eqrn pickers. _One and two row. Ill* and up. Coulter’s Sales 1830 N, Lapeer Rd. Lapeer. Mlchlgt Phone MO 4-3131 SSHpir^M.....................TBK, —&nfj -—UiBtcwii- ildrog lUlky. MW or aftflfl KING BROS. FE 4-0734 FE 4 PONTIAC ROAD AT OPPY8 ’DETROITER “MODERN LIVING q SALE” ; Low Down Payment Easy Terms (^YBARs't© ' FAT J MOBILE HOME L1WNO .. Attn FtNEBTI COME OUT WPl> U AMAZED at our low , LOW FfUCWB, OVER JO SgSH&nUBAl AB 10 FEB CENT DOWN. ^ FOft YOUR BEST 1* ■ v ra . 5EE US TODAY! 4 Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales, Inc. , Drayton^ Plains SUNDAY 10*- 8 eluding rime. 333-1134_________ Tires mounted on wheels, c: end up. * Over a lOOO to eelec from: Royal Auto Parte, Mt. Clemens, __________ tool! Mo*Ft SUck tires, alC name ‘brands. Oft new oem Olb.OO plus tea and eiehenge. State Tire 8alcsfc 803 Saginaw, PE 4-4887 I AUTO SERVICE USED TIRES. rboclar-miA-snow, tow at 88.08. MotorMBart, ffl-m 87 bier1—*"• Auto Sorvico ' 1880 B MW. WITH SIDE CAR.’' Hi, 873-0830 WANTED: AJB TRANSMISSION " ■■ %PhoiF~'0i4«idtfc~::T wilL traIib ,'oli jitrNBBAU Dally 0:30-0 Cteeed Bun, ■ MeiTbR'' "kttifcMVW ' TUNE UP AND IPin GASOW c~ SPORT* CENTER-( SB*r haV KaTiT JOHNSON MOtORB , •“a&ftmjs.0" PINTES'S - MU 4- WILLYS. 4-WHEEL DRIVE, te.^ro^w^^nlew, camper box, 1080 JEEP (WRECKER. ReRPECT condition. 7,400 mlln. Reinforced ^~|a»Min7l^P^.J5wfy® MS Oakland A«» »■ 10 QMC PANEL ■87 PORD 0 SEDAN DELIVER’. Very good condition, 0488. Phone OR 3-0180. |4-t6n panelT „„ UL 8-07M.;; •; list CHEVROLET tv TON. PICK-... WT. f Eiijgbeth OAKLAND^ AT CABS Auto Imurance ”"l04 ANDERSON. Auto Insurqnce $37 FOR 6 MONTHS Complete Coverage On The Avera^ Car For Paymonta Call FE 4-3535 Prank A. Anderson. Agency 1044 J08LYN Eves. Phone FB 8-8030 or FE 2-4353 AUfO INSURANCE FOR ANYONE Rogardlees of provlouo record or eanooUatlpn. For hard to place insurance — UNDERAGE — BAD RECORD — FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY. CALL FE 8-7157, Don Nicholie S3V> W, Huron St. (Huron Bulldlnr “— ’ :oreign Cors NO CASE DOWN L11I87 Ford VI with (tick, 4-door, ^ r^ Moidrivi. fuu price, uh! r: Lueky Auto Sales, 113 8. SagL “ PE (HdPlf, I. Payments REPOSSESSION ION .Pord-eBek. si | Inder, full price | M W a month. .estd*X Mctora 338-71B1 _______312 W, Montcalm Uso tsundJcrbird. AUTOMATIC raEVRO- A^..^ai£lAMW^U^D Wait’ll h%' gets home! I’ve warned him about ./ hitching tides! . ;JT*.............. 1088 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP, |0 down and payments of only 087 a month; JuMn bntnr*. Lin-m a-8,r /$7 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP, with Dynaltow transmission, radio and heater, beautiful gold and beigel ■ $745 This is a sample of Our Low Prices' ot) Used Cirs! BILL SPENCE _SAMBLER 32 f. MAIN BTRCIT CLARKBTON MA 0-6881 BUICK SPECIAL, a DOOR, aflow drive, black,.one owner, OfCK'roadmastter. har i, Bmf^ttfiu Black finish, I 1886 BUfCKHOADl top, Bel'-"— 1 dip and solutely__..... -Motors Br.~TBvd7 at Auburn. FE an ‘62 LARK.. 2 DOOR, HEATER, DEFROSTER TAX AND LICENSE DELIVERED . $1800 Bee Todsy Mazurek Motor Sales B. BLVD^ATJAQINAW •ii BblCK RMDMAStER hard! , premium tires, all it be geep to be ep-Owner will seorlfloe, «jwtr— A ROAMIN' iiOLIDA¥ buck full of pleasure oen be yours In this superb 1800 Bulck Elect 4-door hardtop, radio end dynaflow. power eteerlng, brakes, electric windows, wall tires and a spare iirJP*HPH never touched the ground, Pull $2495 Remember, *we encourage you to check our cars with mechanic you know and trust. FISCHER ’ BUICK 515 S. Woodward, B’ham MI 4-6222 CADILLAC ‘80 SPECIAL v and Used Cars 106 1888 CHEVROLET WAGONS Brook wood MVUMpr, standard shift, only 81.208; Brookwood 0. cylinder, roworgllde. 01,308. Brookwood VI engine, Powergilde, 81,408. NORTH dnBVROUOT <»., 1000 8. WOODWARD «■;, EM- iriWOHAM. BP 4-27287 ?*rSCHUCK ©ORD M-24 ’ at Buokhorn Lake Lake Orton MY 2-3611 'u.ra«kwmK Oils full Price Surplus Motors W8—^ Wbw aodUmd Caw f 166 jeep ’’to. «'•wheel drive,' m*. 5r^tUT '1tBM . SAFETY-TESTED t|SED ' Suburban:Qlds. will: B«y W LINCfANrpRSElERE. 2 door, hardtop, full potmr with" full leather interior. W00. BOB BORST, INC. LINCOLN - MERCURY '''Cf»4ET Hunter B|vd., Birmingham _______ICO-tMO HENRY ' i! ' CHhSSM' QWLV',''!£*• type M or 8000 Wlkom ftd. ‘Oo'Ebrcury. a dooR, v4. 'Af-tomatto trana. Radio and healer Beautiful tbonr Mask with matching red and Mack Interior. If you coo this one, you’ll buy 1 owner. Full prise 01,700 -BOBBORST.TNC LINCOLN MERCURY COMET ■ME Hunter BlV4LaHBEMH|E|j^m hantliMbl saEsrvsr I CHEVY, 2 DOOR. STANDARD. good condition, FE >8840. i5 ckEVROLE*r vi ton' WraHi excellent condition. OR 2tol87. U68 CHIVROLBT IMP ALA 3-DOOR hardtop. V* engine, ------------ power steering, bral ftnd «“* •***%* rno NOR! HAMC"mi"«-2735.' chev^olW r?>**rSoo (WARD AVE., BIRMINQ- 1887 CHEVROLET 4-OOOR - SE-dan. V-8 engine, Powergilde, * red nice car. $695 HOUGHTEN'S Your Friendly Olds and Rambler Dealer ROCHESTER OL 1-876! ‘64 CHEVROLET OIL RAY 3 in A«1 cond. No mom t BUPYRIOIt AOTO. *** OAKLAND CHEVROLET BISCAYNB ooor. 6-cyllnder. Standard sbui Radio, Mater, white finish. Only 81,406. NORTH CHEVROLET CO., 1000 a, WOODWARD AVE., BIR-MINORAM. mi 4-2728. Ltoyd( II, price : Of (MB. «tuvurs. Lfncoln-MercUry-232 B. BagUiaw. FE 2-8131. 1069 RENAULT DAUPHJNE, VOLkSWAGENS! wmmoEp^ ORDER YOUR 1082 VW NOW1 WARD-McELROY*_ INC. 08 y., Bntwi 1 OR A0400 owon «Mi Car*. 57 BUICK 2-DOOR „ l-own*r, griur and white, ra-' dlo, heater, auft). whitewall. Bit* —.Taboo actual miles. One of jnBaha, O&lapd^wrwot* 1188 BUICK HARDTOP, RADIO, mwWiffS iMmg DOWN. Assume pay- __of' 017.00 par mo. Call Credit M«nr-, Mr. PWrM at MI GEE! WHAT A NICE CAR! nig JButek LaBabre 4-door asdao. Tfh:a^i&rAi« $1595 Remember, wt encourage you to cbeick our.carp with t mechanic, you know and trust. ' /, FISCHER BUICK SlS St Woodward, B ham ML 4-6222 ’60 Cadillac DeVille SEDAN, with only 13,000 miles and a beautiful rose finish, with full power I $3695 JEROME "Bright Spot", Orchard Lake at caes iit_ ’WftitSo ' ■60 CADILLAC 3-DOOR HARDTOP. 876. UL 8-6888 after 4:30. ’17 CADH-LAC, BEAUTIFUL. PRL UMU CA^lLac. ’<8 CdUt»E.rbRI8-tot blue body with white top. ra- 1960 CORVAIR "700” Coupe This blaek beauty tertor leave* not predated. This seen in order to Owner leaving l Call UL 8-3041 a and weekends. ___^__ wHrncwAL, TIRgg. ABSOLUTELY NO UOHWft DOWN. Assume pay-manta, at 110.71 per mo, Call Credit Mgr . Mr. Parka at Ml *•7000. Harold Turner, Ford. 1061 fORb. GOOD MOTOR, OOOD tires, cheap. 8307 Recn wrSsffWffiBBnf .m**MM___________ Motoring Is Such a Pleasure Particularly when _ you are driving a real nice ear Ilka this all gold I860 Bulck LeSabro 2-door hardtop, radio, heater, dynaflow, power steering, whitewall tires, hill ** $2295 Remember, we encourage you to check our cars with a mechanic you know and trust. ' I BUICK 515 S. Woodward, B’ham MI 4-6222 , radio, neater, whitewalls. ■87 CHivtoLiT. NEW MOTOR, nice, and clean. ‘80 Chevrolet am tomatto, (286. Oakland oar a, Ice, 128 Oakland. FE m» CHEVROLET 2-DOOlS SEDAN, ■ 8-cyllnder, Powergilde, radio, heater, WhltCWMlS. Only 61,188. Easy terms, NORTH CHEVROLET CO., iOOO j. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-2738. CORVETTE, 1884, WITH ’88 CHIVY *1,788,"Easy" itTni. nortiS CHEVROLET CO,, 10M 8. WOOD. WARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-87J6, 1957 Cadillac Hack, don't mu* this one. oi.HI 1957 Plymouth Vagan, 4-door, bleak and white, cutoMatto: VI, 0740, 1957 Dodg0 Wagon. 2-door, VI. 4 new tires. $740 SOME DEMOS LEFT R&R MOTORS 734 Oskland Are . PE 4-1028 Imperial - Chrysler Plymouth Valiant WEAL oblo. REPOSSESSION 1868 Mercury 4-door, full price 4207 and payments of (17 a month. No payments HU next Lbkerid*' Motors 3JK-7t*i “• Mantcalm ’ IBS* MERCURY"' O-DobR HARD- 1080 OLDS 4-DOOR HARDTOP Power stesrlng, power brakes, Hydramatto. $1795 HOUGHTEN'S Your Friendly Olds ’and Rambler Dealer ROCHESTER QL1-4781 1188 4 DOOR OLDS II, LOW MILB-age. ( new Urea, good eondtilon. T owner, (300, MA O-iMOT^ 10 CONTINENTAL. 4 DOOR, hardtop, full power, all (he extra*. This ear 1* ebony bieck with matohlng Interior trim. Very low mileage, priced to sell. LINCOLN MERCURY COMET **- Hunter Blvd,. Birmingham Ml 8-4838___________________ im CataiimjUiM 188* Pontfee itatten w_.„. ., 10*0 Corvalr >Dr. sedan ... i 1881 Bulck Station wagon .. M Bulck m iMpf u., IMOPontlno BonnevUl* *-Dr i|M Old* ■■to" 3-Or. oodnn .. 1080 Penttao 4-Dr, hnrditop .. 1000 Pontisc Catalina e-Dr. . 10(1 Ford Oalaxlo 4-Dr. .... ““ Buiok 4-Dr. sedan BiUCk 2-Dr, sedan ... .. __ Chew Bel Air .Hardtop 010*8 .... Olds 3-Djr. hardtop 7. •«“ 1*80 Chevy 2-Dr. sedan . ‘Rmntvlue 4-Dr, bMWW ___,»ontlac 4-Dr. MlwilP' .. - ™ 1088 Bulck 4-Dr. sedan . i 448 1*8* Pont!** Bonneville 3-Or, 81088 $10 Chovy impel* Cenv” ' 1888 Bulck dmVt ...... 1 Bulck Invlct* Ccnv’t ... (34*6 *88 Chevy lb-ton pickup ... t« 1*4 OMC Stoke trmek .. *3*1 SHELTON .-BGNqFfAe^»uicir= ROCHESTER OL 1-B133 Across from now car salsi cJnm;t!>p?..8as.,,»f»n11 Q-M34. 1087 FlVm6UTH 8 DOOR, RADIO, HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANS-MISSION ABBOLUTLBY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 010.70 ppr mo. Call credit Mgr.. Mr. >*rb» at Ml 4-7600, Harold Turner. Ford 188 rittibVTR *Tation TfAO-an, radio and boater, powr- cury-Com«$, 332 0. 0»f!ntw, FK wm 196! CATALINA CONVERTIBLE COUPE. Wbll* with black toft. All vlayl rad to-tertor. A ' real sharpi*! Rydra-matte, power xtoaftog end hfnkes. . radio, boater and' whitewall Sr**. -Hurry on fbts one I Only It.*** , WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward BIRMIWOHAM ' . M84,|W0 itlf''iWifTifAc HABDT#. 'RAtoNi SVsW MONEY C mom* of ne t* per tom _ Credit Mgr.. Mr. Vtrta a* 1 4-7880, Harold Turner, Paw' 1*80 PONTIAC 111 "'"lKl™r;r1 and wild black finish I Power steering and pwr. brakam , walls'HAURf PONTIAC BACH. matic'tran uoturmr t $197 Full Price NO CASH DOWS Ml ‘‘mi, *-door, Mu* aadwhtte. sr trad*. 8345 full priO* 4n&u- REPOSSESSION' dfiv# you hom« on duty from ■UK.7PC : A Fine Motor-Gar 1954 Ford Customline sedan. V-* engine, aut Umr-------, radio, boat* JEROME - FERGUSON Rochester Ford Dealer OL 1-4711 Southfield Motors 100 E. Blvd, at Auburn PE M07i •»7' piSltD V01 CUSTOM.“stick Qood aond. 0470. PE MSW. $197 Full Price ■86 PORD STICK, A BLACK BEAUTY! ESTATE LIQUIDATORS. 180 S. Saginaw Bt„ PE 3-7031. T-ilRD. HARDTOP, FLAME -d with all whit* Into rise. /-*-etlc trans. Radio, Mater, a beauty. Com* out and-today. BOB BORST, INC. LINCOLN MERCURY COMET "Mt Marvel Motors mo9rmM tift4 CSttjf WmMWn.if. AM. ■ntmftMuniih nas, _.. 08 FORD *ANCH wAOOli] PHONt M2-0727, ’61 FORD WAGON I Door Country Sedan with Hair, Auto. Transmieeion. wring tad Whitewalls I ^39T VI. automatic t BOB BORST, INC LINCOLN MERCURY COMET » Hunter Blvd., Blrmlngtaar Ml 1-4838 '67 FORD CONVERTIBLE Remember, we^rtneourage you to chedrour cars with a^-rnecHanic you know and "rust. FISCHER BUICK 515 S. Woodward, B’har Ml 4-6222 ’59 Plymouth Wagon With Radio, Heater, Tu-Ton* Fli tab, ahd Wtowailel -$995 *60 PLYMOUTH STATION WAOOM AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TifUW. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY MVll.toM^l brake* and power steering, „ jtorcury-Cowt, 232 8. Beglnew, ’59 Oldsmobile "98” CONVERTIBLE with low mileage, ful^^ec aniji^nUt green flniehl $1995 JEROME "Bright Spot" Orolmto Uk* at Cue - —« ^owNiit',1.i'Oc rr dLrifl ■■w>) 2-door habi> op. Gold finish With power iteerlng, power brakes, white-rails. Excellent condition. $895 HOUGHTEN'S Your Friendly Olds and Rambler Dealer ROCHESTER Van Camp Chevrolet, Inc. MILFORD • MD *‘MB0 ■u p6rd 1C , ___ exclu«nt c mitimMli*immm' . bob BORST. INC NCOI.N . MERCURY . COMET MO Hunter SlvdLJtmtoeltoW . ■SOTW SFmWMWSVl tiixm s=^ HOUGHTEN'S Your Friendly Olds and Rambler Dealer ROCHESTER QLI-Sttl HASKINS WINTERIZED Used Cars —This Week’s Special — sell Today l test m ..il KESSLER'S Inside Used Car Lot All Inside — All Sharp to N Washington Oxford OA S-1400 ----- - 165g PONTIAC. t-OOOR, HYDRA matlc. Power brakes. Good tires. Low mUeago. Very alean. 01,180. MA fim after ( p.m._________ ’61 PONTIAC WAGON Pull power. 381 W. Iroquois TO PONflAC 4-bdoSf.' ” rUwE'K II Nimoflu ...... ■80 PONTIAC 4-Door Auto *(4 OLDS 4-Door Super. .,,77. ill “Ii FORD Panel Truck . ii: Eddie Nicholas Motors li( OAKLAND AVI. PI 4-4000 . Rjwtaa tnd paymente of 017 A . No payment till p*«t Lakeside Motor* 1000 RAMBLER 4-DOOR SEDAN Automatic transmieeion, radio, boater. Like new, $895 HOUGHTEN'S Your Friendly Olds and Rambler Dealer ROCHESTER 1960 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD. Fully equine* In- lafcrSi ug^ a low mUMge. l-owner ear $4195 SEDAN DeVILLE. A let-btoek beeu-ty that U immaculate tbreugh-out GM alr-eondlthralng, full power and in the aecessorie*. 1%I THUNDERB1RD CONVERTIBLE. BUCklkbl beige -‘"h ■utoblt interior. Puli pap--. *¥ the acoetearite and the l-a-way Wheel. Only (7M miles. ’$3495 1959 LINCOLN HARDTOP 4-door, full power aod all the accessor)**, Whits to color. truly a beauty throughout' $1995 0. 0M W. > tilMBc - top, Hydramatlc, and braka*. rai 33,000 miles. 01,01 wnsMSi. . luT taimAO 3 do6r. EAthd. heater good tires end engine. om». nr um. . •toPON'T lA C'''BONNIV11.I.E, ■“"» coup*, full power, hydra- .... fi^oNTtAiOif msA1 'i-vm hardtop. Hydramatlo. power eteer-‘ng and braka*. Radio, neater, -walls, Solid whit* finish. Only WHO^r. fo' yog PBOB HART We Bend Over backward* to Pul me ( Door Stick ■to PONTIAC VI. (MM. •57 PORD PAIRtANB t dour Hsrd- CHEVY 3 Dear Stick (407, *(» tanBYY' 3 Door 0307. ■17 RAMBLER Clean MM ■88 DeBOTO Drive This one! 0238. tteady to got 0328. 'H PONTIAC Starchier *167 ‘03 PONTIAC Good Condition! *180. PORD 0 Passenger Wagon, (204. *63 PLYMOUTH WAGON IMS. BOB HART ■ISTA. Brant* to solar, full power Including windows aid Away seat. A law mlleag* beauty to show-condition. $2895 1960 STAR CHIEF SEDAN Pull power and all the factory accouaric* Including OM alr-conditloning. A sharp cacll $2295 ■ 2959 CHEVROLET ------ MMr with btoa totorior. automatic trans- SX-L ran&toi $1495 I960 CHEVROLET $1595 1957 FORD * tire*. You can really pick tills one over: Paint, chrome and .interior to ebsolutely spotless! $895 WILSON PONTIAC - CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward i nm. d White | Financing ^ -No Problem 1 HASKINS snJr ^ §!se No Down Payment I I Just Make Payments Almost 150 Cara to Choose From Here Are Examples of Our Tremendous Inventory - ‘88 CHEVROLET WAGON, (4 .... .far sxniSRg ■88 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE . . 8(87' «SJAIIb8mr SUS':$1.84 Weekly ■M, BUICK 4-DOOR HARDTOP . ■88 Pontiac. Ha runt .......... *M FORD WAGON, 'Sttok ... .. limramop M RAMBLER .7(100*., .... . 8 ft ' (t.e* Weekly King Auto Sales !v - 2 Big Locations -v' + HURON i FE 8-4088 ' FE 8-04ttf i f-CyL .......... .. ■ Auto Sales - .JiaH«iiNiii« •W RAMBLER WAGON. NI01.g2*i. Superior i In onkiand Are. HOUGHTEN & SON N. Main. Rochester OL Um REPOSSESSION Low Priced Trade-Ins 1$59 Chevrolet 4-Door, 6, stick, sharp ..$1295 lf58 Cadillac 4-Door Hardtop, beautiful , . . .$2195 1999 Rambler Station Wagon, nice ........$ 995 1$57 Plymouth, real nice car..........$ 595 lf57 Pontiac 4-Door Hardtop, clean , ....$ 695 l$56 Olds, full power, real sharp.....$ 695 1$56 Ford Pickup, V8, custom cab 595 1^56 Chevrolet, 6-cylinder, Powerglide .$ 595 1^56 Rambler Hardtop, V8 engine ........$ 595 | 1961 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE VISTA |rtill power, only 6,000 miles, new-car warranty. Owner’s personal private car. Save $LQOO on this, ffsS Olds 4-Door Sedan ........$ 595 1955 Plymouth 4-Door Sedan...$ 495 1»5,Ford 2-Door Sedan $495 18^5 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan ...*$ 395 1953 Buick 4-Door Sedan .......$ 195 1»3 Packard Sedan ..... .....$ 295 l&iO Packard Sedan .........$295 IrUSS JOHNSON . l\ ■ M-24 At the Stoplight lidxke Orion MY 2-2371 1 BEATTIE'S La-i used cars •fe/AT STOPLIGHT IN WATERFORD) '6D FordGalaxi© ......$1495 t-DOOR wltb 8-cyl. angina, stick ehlft. radio, heater and washer. I '60 Falcon 2-Door ..... .$1395 DELUXE «1U> heater, radio, washers and white walla I '57 Ford ...............$745 '§6 Mercury .........................$595 WliUi V-» angina, automatic tranamlulon, radio and heater! '57 Pontiac..........................$895 4-0OOR HARDTOP with automatlo tranimlMloo. radio and haaterl TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS - !56 Ford Wagon ........$195 inw V-8 angina and h ':57 Hillman 4-Door .... .$395 * beauty that foil will b§ proud to UMf Park* root eaayl Ota fconomy carl ?57 Chevrolet Wagon .. .$695 «d>oor with v-s angina and automatlo BEATTIE • WATERFORD FORD DEALER •(AT Till- STOPLIGHT IN WATERFORD) OR 3-1291 • ; Extra Clean Are These $harp Birmingham Trade-Ins '37 Chevrolet ...............TYr? ... .$75 Down , Sal Air 4-Ooor with 8-cyllndsr' angina, sutomstte tran.mle.lon. . radio, heater and whitewall tire.. Interior and aatarlor Ilka ’ new. No ruat and only 427 n month. ’55 Ford .. ............... ..............$00 Down , Convertible Top in good condition, no ruat, radio and heater. * Rune Ilka an afmoft new ear. Payment, of in n month. ’58 Ford ......................................$1195 , Country Squire g-Passenger Wagon with nutomatlo tranamlaalon | and fuljy equipped. Birmingham eecond ear. 1000 mile warranty 'Sp Ford ........ .^........^....„ ^......$00 Dowti Chevrolet*..............................$795 and up XegUndar "amPg-cy Under. WAII*are *n Vic "ucnlPondluon, "ranging ..from 1057 to 1888. ‘S8t Studebaker ................................$495 *««-Ooor Hardtop with radio, heater, atralght nick and g-ey)tnder • venglne. Oet 23 mile, par gallon on the highway ’59 Metropolitan ..........i....................$795 ntCoovertIWe and it get* 35 mile, par gallon. Haa radio and bdiaater. Tit* aarvlca record on tht. ear la available. Car like new. ’58 Volkswagen inconvertible. TUI. i ein eery good abap r mileage go-mo-blle BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER fit S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM ^J«Lfc39 '... 1961 COMET ......................a............$1895 - 2-Door with automatic tram ml.eton, radio, heater, nd whitewall ' tlra*. Lilt* new./ 1961 MERCURY .......................V.........$2396 '•.poor Hardtop with radio, heater, automatlo tranamlaalon, whitewall tires, power brake, and power atearlng. On* owner. 1960 CHRYSLER ...............................$2195, a-Door with automatic traiumuiian, radio, Mater. whitewall tires, power brake* and power atearth*. Had and white and right. I960 fORD ... ’.....7... I .. . ... .1. . .... . .$M9£. yairima. "aniy v.iWf-wwn-bia—w-mamr.- .tick, 'radio, heater and whit* trail tires. Solid black. 1960 COMET ...........................$1495 2-Door with radio, heater and. whitewall lira*. This car is Ilka 1959 MERCURY ............. ww ........... .$1595 2-Door Hardtop with radio, heater, automatic tranamlaalon. whitewall tlraa. power brakaa, power steering4 One owner. Sharp I 1959 FORD ........................... ....,$1095 4-Door with S-cyllnder engine, stick, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Ultra plea. .....— 1958 CHRYSLER .............................. $1095 Saratoga 4-Door with radio, boater, automatic tranamlulon, whitewall tires, power brakes and power steering. Ona owner •k*rpi 1958 LINCOLN .............................. .$1595 2-Poor Hardtop with automatlo tranamlaalon, radio, neater, whltewaUtirea and pawor brakes, steering, windows. 1958 PONTIAC ................................ $1095 jjpoor Hardtop with ^automatlo tranamlulon, radio nod banter. 1958 PLYMOUTH ............................... $695 Belvedere 2-Door Hardtop with radio, heater, autemafle trans-mission, whitewall tires, power brakaa and powar steering. Mice. 1957 OLDSMOBILE ............................. $995 ••*4" 4-Door with automatic tranamlaalon. radio, heater, whitewall tlraa and full power. Heal nice one-owner. 1957 DE S0T077 .7.7.7,............ .77 ..."!...$ 895 4-Door wltb automatic tranamlaalon, radio, heater, whitewall Urea, powar brakaa and powar steering. One owner. 1956 CHEVROLET ............................. $595 2-Door with O^yllnder engine, automatic tranamlaalon, radio, heater and whitewPll tlras. Extra nice. 1956 CHRYSLER ............................... $495 4eDoor jrtth automatic tranabiltalon, radio, haater and wpltewnll 1955 FORD .........7.........................$ 495 Station Wagon with automatlo tranamlaalon, radio, boater and whitewall Ursa. Really aq economy oar. -USED CAR PLAZA- ENGLISH FdiD - USED CARS LINCOLN — MERCURt - COMET 232 S. SAGINAW FE 2-9131 THE \ H TIME!! to Try a.Like New Used Car From Our Wide Variety . . . Save Now I '59 PONTIAC BonnevlU* Vista wlte radio and h4ater, aqulppad with full powar '58 PONTIAC •tar Chief Moor hardtop with radio. Mater, automatlo trana- '61 PONTIAC g-Paeienger Wagon with radio, and ht* Hydramntlo transmit. $1995 mlaalon, power brakes and pow- "$1195 *r a tearing. Extra me* and "$2795 '59 BUICK '59 OLDS '61 PONTIAC 2-door hardtop with, radio, heater, real smooth automatlo transmission, power brake* and power steering. ■ $1895 "I*" Moor hardtop with radio, heater and Hydramatle. it baa "$2195 Tampaat. The par of the Year and It oaa be youre for tee low, low, price of $1995 '60 PONTIAC '59 CHEVY '60 PONTIAC7 Dateline 4-door with radio, beat-•r. automatlo transmission, power brake* and power steer- Impala Sport Coupe wlte radio. Mater and nutomatlo tranamla-«ion. A real nice automobile, Catalina 4-door Vlata wlte radio/ heater, HydramiUo tranamn* ■ sion. power brakaa and poper steering. / $2495 $1795 £ csi Csl eo | FACTORY BRANCH ' BO NTJ AC- | GOODWILL USED CARS { Corner Cass and Pi^ — ALSO - 65 Mt. Clemens /St. FE 3-7954 JUST ARRIVED 1961 FACTORY OFFICIALS CARS ALL ARE TITLED IN GENERAL MOTORS NAME ’61 CHEVROLET Impala Sport Coupe V-» angina, Powerglide transmission, powar steering, radio, heater and real sharp solid Imperial Ivory finish with blue interior. FAIRLY PRICED $2195 ’61 CHEVROLET 4-Door lnipala Sedan .bewail tires. Solid imperial iry finish with red Interior. PAIRL? priced $2195 ’61 CHEVROLET Sport Sedan Mil power with AIR CONDI-TONINO. Solid onya black fin-ill with red Interior. Whitewall ires. Eijijoy the open road In FAIRLY. PRICED $2799 ’61 RAMBLER American 4-Door FAIRLY PRICED $1499 ’61 CHEVROLET Greenbrier Wagon g-peasenger unit equipped with beater, J-a p a e d transmission FAIRLY PRICED $2095 ’61 CORVA1R/ 4-Door 569 Model other 'delux* equipment. Solid royal blue finish. FIVE TO -CHOOSE FROM. V „ FAIRLY PRICED $1695 ’61 CHEVROLET’ Nomad Wagon -g engine. Solid fnwn beige nish with matching Interior. FAIRLY PRICED" $2695 ’61 CHEVROLET Impala Sport Sedan Economical l-oyllnder engine, Powerglide transmission, heat-er. whitewall tires and power steering. Beautiful fawn beige FAIRLY PRICED $2195 THIS COLUMN LISTS EXAMPLES OF OUR FINE SELECTION OF OTHER ‘CHEVY-LAND’’ VALUES IggO PONTIAC ....... CATALINA 4-DOOR SEDAN with Hydramntlo, radio, hooter, whitewall Ural, decor group and eolid bronu finish. .............. $1785 tg«0 CHEVROLET tMPALA 4-DOOR HARDTOP with 8-cyllmler “*■“*- 1180 CHEVROLET NOMAD WAOQN With »ina. automatic tram.—,- ..afehCTuM Iful beige and elerra gold .... $2065 SSa^i finish. METROPOLITAN . HARDTOP ytth radio. I ... $ 497 lggg CHEVROLET .......... BISCAYNE 2-DOOR, 8-cyllnder engine,. Powerglide, beater, directional signals and washers. Real aharp highland green finish. ................ $1295 1080 CHEVROLET .......... IMPALA 4-DOOR SEDAN. Powerglide, power stearins, radio, heater, aoltd sierra gold fUbeh and wnlttwaU tlraa. .................. $1899 I CHEVROLET . $1399 IggO CHEVROLET .......... SYNE 8-DOOR haa Power* heater, whitewall tlraa. tut solid highland grain ..................$1495 OTHER BARGAINS 1956 Through 1959 ’61 PONTIAC < Safari Wagon A terrific O-pasaenger with pow-er steering, brakes, seat and renr window. Also haa Hydra-matlo, radio, heater and white-wail tlraa. FAIRLY PRICED $2895 '61 CHEVROLET Impala Sport Sedan Automatic transmission, powar ^[.lnkl,'fla,sbr&"'whttjto-»Su». Verymnlce°nth?oughout|te ’58 Plymouth .,.$895 BELVEDERE 2-DR. HARDTOP with MdMk haater. automaU* transmission nod whitewalls l ’60 Ford $1897 COUNTRY BEDAM, - W2WKW wife v5 engl '60 MGA ...........$1875 ROADSTER. This beauty .has a 4-s^ised ^transmission and la *59 Chevrolet ....$1265 i automatic tranamn* '57 Buick .......$879 SPECIAL 2-DOOR'/HARDTOP w 11 n automatlo traosmiiitlon ’57 Buick .......$ 899. SPECIAL 4-DOOR SEDAN With automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls and large deluxe wheel covers. '57 Chevrolet ... .$ 895 ”210” 4-DOOR SEDAN With automatlo traumTation, radio, heater, 8-cyl. engine and white- ’56 Pontiac ......$795 SAFARI WAOON, 2-DR. HARD- ’56 Buick .......$ 595 SPECIAL 2-DOOR HARDTOP with radio, heater, power eteer-brakes and whll*>- ’56 Chevrolet ... .$ 895 2-DOQR fAOaif^ t with < I Snorr x tel* fc mm. - Transpohation Specials-'53 Chrysler NEW YORKER 4-DOOR SEDAN $150 '54 Poniiac 4-DOOR SEDAN $99 '57 Ford RANCH WAGON $295 '53 Buick 4-DOOR SEDAN $66 OLIVER BUICK 210 Orchard Lake FE 2.1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, yojg^MSE 46» im -EIFTY.TH1M* s Television Programs-- Yoa Can Survive Atomic AttftdWVo. 9 Tff iin THURSDAY EVENING «:M (2) Mavis (cant,) ; (OWyattEwp^ ! (7) Johnny Ginger (cant,) * \(»iP#eyh '1 (56) Searchlight 6:28 (4) Weather 8:30 (2) News (4) News (7) News 11 - (9) Supercar . (56) Age of Overkill 8:48 (2) Sports . (4) Sports 8; 18 (2) News - \ ■ • (7) News, Weather, Sports 7:18 (2) Divorce -Court : (4) Michigan Outdoors (7) Tallahassee 7000 : (9) Huckleberry Hound (56) French through Television 7:30 (2) Divorce Court (cont.) (4) Outlaws a) Ozzie and Harriet (9) Movie-• “Three Bad Sisters."(1956) A free-lance pilot becomes involved with three neurotic sisters. John Broomfield, Marla English. (56) Modem State 8:08 (3) Peter Gum (4) Outlaws (cont.) (7) Donna Reed (9) Movie (cont.) 8:18 (56) Images of Art 8:88 (2) Bob Cummings (4) Dr. Kildare (7) Real McCoys (9) Movie (cottt.) 9:08 (2 Investigators (4) Dr. Kildare (oont.) (7) My Three Sons (9) Playdate 9:08 (2) Investigators (cont.) (4) Hazel - ; (7) Margie (9) Playdate (cont.) 10: (M (2) Theater of Michigan (4) (Color) Sing Along With Mitch (7) Untouchables (6) Wrestling Answer U fntbu (4) (Color) Classroom 0:30 (2) Meditations 8:88 (2) On the Farm Front 8:18 (2) College of file Air (4) (Color) Continental Classroom (2) B’wana Don <4) Today (7) Funews (7) Johnny Ginger (2) Captain Kangaroo (56) Spanish Jot Teachers 8:88 (7) Jack LaLanne (56) Heritage 8:88 (2) Morning Show, '-The Magic Hat." (4) Ed Allen (7) Movie: “A Girt With Ideas." (56) Your Health (4) Gateway to Glamour (56) Children’s Hour 8:00 8:48 (4) Debbie Drake 8:85 (9) Billboard 10:00 (2) Calendar (4) Say When (9) National School Show (56M)ur Scientific World (7) News SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hearing Tests Free Parking at Bear of “Open Evas, bf Appointment" 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 pontiao, Mien USED BIKES Choose From Over 20 Bikes *$1 Only As b OVER 39 BIKES Guaranteed and Overhauled $1295 Up 16 - 20 - 24 - 26-Inch MANY WITH NEW PAINT SCARLETT'S BieYttt and HOBBY SHOP 20 K. Lawrence II 1-7I4» PANIC In (Nit LOT at REAR CONDON'S RADIO end TV Color—-Black and White THY OUR BOOSTERS! TRY OUR YA6I ANTENNAS por Channel t and 12 TO IMPROVE YOtNt RECEPTION POR THE UONS FOOTRAU^ — Money-Back Guarantee — free Technical Mvieal crack 881 MU on combi* EETOBE TOD HJTI 7 TE88S EXPEMnCt M COtOl TV Authorised Service RCA—ZENITH —-MAGNAVOX-*- Qiw> » t» t Mon., Fti. , 730 WEST BVROM ST. , . 'Mt 4-9794» ' - RCA-ZENITH DEALER MB 19:88 (2) Project 2 (4) Sing Along (coat.) (7) Untouchables (cont.) (9) Wrestling (confl) .11:88 (2) News ' (4) News m News (9 News n:i2 (7) News, Sports 11:18 (2) Weather (9) Weather 11:38 (2) Sport* (4) Sports (9) Telescope UAW 11:38 (2) Movie—“Hie Fleet’g In.’ (1942) A self-styled lady-killer makes a bet that he can kiss a beautiful entertainer. Doro- . thy Lamour, William Holden. (4) News (7) News, Weather U:M (4) (Color) JackPaar (7) Riverboat (9) Movie m, “Sofia.” (1048) A business man attempts to get two atomic scientists of Russia. Gene Raymond. FRIDAY MORNING TV Features By United Press International SPECIAL FOR WOMEN, 3 p.m. (4). “The Glamour Trap.” A dramatization and discussion about the belief that youth and beauty are prerequisites for happiness. Glenda Farrell, Meg Mundy and Marian Seldes co-star. FRONTIER CUtCUS, 7:30 p.m (2). “Journey from Hannibal’ stars Thelma Ritter as Bertha Beecher,' a crusty stable who Joins the circus for a business -I REAL McOOYB, 8:30 p.m. (7). How to Win Friends.” An effort to turn Luke (Rlchdrd Crenna) into a self-confident civic leader almost backfires. DR. KILDARE, 8:30 p. ’Holiday Weekend.” The, story of a hospital’s effort* tp.cope with MMSy hlgKway casualties. Guest star, Dick Sargent. MY THREE SONS, 9 p.m. (7). ’A Lesson In Any Language.” Mike (Tim Owyfidine) tries to learn Spanish while sleeping and the recorded lesson Is absorbed by Steve (Fred MacMurray.) AT THE SOURCE, 10 p.m. (2) Hugh Gaitskell, leader of the op. position British ’Labor party, will be interviewed at his home in sub* urban London by Eric Sevareld, Alexander Kendrick and Stuart No-vlns. He i* expected to comment on Britain’s role in the <»ld war and the Common Market, among other topics, SING ALONG WITH MITCH, 10 n.m. (4). Musical salutes to va> rious cities are featured. Songs by Diana Trask, Leslie Uggams, Jill Corey. (Color). UNTOUCHABLES, 10 p.m. (7). "Loophole."The underworld compete* for the services of a clever lawyer who i« expert in finding legal loopholes. Robert Stack stars Eliot Ness. 18:88 (2) I Love Lucy (1) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Jackie Cooper (8) Che> Helene 156) V.IJP. Mill (9) Nanny School Time 11:88 (2) Video Village aHw (Odor) Price Is Right (7) Texan (9) Romper Room (56) Spanish Lessen 21:18 (56) German Lesson H:88 (2) December Bride ■ (4) Concentration ______ -.(56) Images of Art • ■Community fi’fi jta&f' ost Sensible FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:08 (2) Love of till .14) truth or Consequences (7) Camouflage (9) Hone Pair (96) Superintendent Reports 12:30 (2) Search for tomorrow (4) (color) It Could Be You (?) Make a Face (9) Susie (56) Spanish Lesson ' 12:45 (2) Guiding light (56) German Lesson 12:65 (4) News :88 (2) Star Peformance, (4) Groucho Marx (7) Day in Court / (9) Movie: “Dark Victory” (56) Showcase :2S (7) Nevyi.... :S0 (2) As the World Turns (4)Califomians (7) Lite Of Riley (56) World History :5S (4) Faye. Elizabeth : oo (2) Amo* ’n’ Andy ----(4) (color) Jan Murray . (7) Number Please :30 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys (56) French Lesson :00 (2) Millionaire (if Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day (9) Movie; “Grand Central Murder.” , 10 (9) Movie: “The Affairs of _ Martha” ................... 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) From These Roots (7) Who Do You Trust? 3:55 (2) News 1:80 (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room for Dadd}’ (7) American Bandstand 1:18 (2) Secret Storm 1:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Adventure Time 1:80 (7) American Newsstand 1:68 (4) News >:00 (2) Movie: “Woman on the Beach.” (4) George Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles and Pinocchio (56) What’s New 1:80 (56) United Nations Review i:46 (9) Rocky and His Friends (56) News Magazine 5:65 (4) Kukla and OUie By PROF. WILLARD F. LIBBY The cheapest, most sensible shelter is the community or neighborhood type accommodating 50 to 190 persons or more. You and neighbors can build one for about 6100 per family member. This could well be five to 10 times less than building an equally effective individual family shelter, the larger the community shelter, the cheaper it is. Few peopt A- 5ays We Must Test NEW YORK (AP)-A scientist whose experiments helped lead to the development of the atomic Two Men Stage $200,000 Jewel Theft in N.Y. HEMPSTEAD. N.Y. (AP)-Two well-dressed men, one carrying an attache case and the other abriefcase, coolly staged a $200,000 Jewelty store robbery W< Ten days ago one of the men bought a Jeweled cross at the store, H. L.-Gross & Co. This time he strolled hi with a companion and said he came to ex-change the cross. The other man informed Joseph Inger, the manager; ' Treasury agent. This store has been depositing phony money, and ~’m here to check on ItJI As Singer sfrung open the safe door, both men produced guns. The attache case and briefcase were filled with watches, rings and loose diamonds. Vote to Join Turkish Govt. ANKARA, Turkey Iff) - The executive board of Turkey’s new Jus-ice party, political heirs of the executed Prime Minister As nan Menderes, voted Wednesday Join a coalition headed by former President Tsiriet ) sent, I HMI I in nuclear threat hat become a part of your Ute. Thie le the ninth inatallment.) came though the blast and fall-It in perfect shape. — And few Americans realize that the Soviets are far, far ahead of in building shelters, especially of'the type tor 100 persons or was actually tested In Nevada a tow years, virtually under an A-bomb, with two dozen men The shelter "rocked like a ship,” they said, but they and the shelter Expert student* of Rustria's civil defense vouch for fills, despite »Madame Khrashciiev's statement that the Soviet Union Atomic Energy Commission scientists and technicians stayed Inside it while an A-bomb, about equal power to the one that fell at Hiroshima was set oft atop a tower about cme mile away. Tq the contrary, the Soviet program even provides tor compulsory training in defense and survival to make nuclear war less costly in human lives. ACTUAL TEST MADE The group shelter tested in Nevada — the only shelter ever subjected In this country at least 1 bomb test — was quonset hut type ot structure, multlplate corrugated steel arch set on a concrete slab, and placed In the ground. Its top came about level With the edge of the hole; It was covered with several teat ot dirt. This community shelter equipped with bunks (one bed saebJwopersoim), dining find reatlon room, toilets, an antenna and periscope, air intake and ^ter, air exhaust vent, water supply and fopd stocks, a Building it involves selecting and buying a site, meeting son-lng requirements, getting approval; of the Civil Defense Office, per-' hape a bank loan, and engaging 'reliable, contractor. “ j Designs tor immunity shelters are available from your local of* Built for tho ARC at a cost of *2,500, It was designed to withstand blast pressure of 85 pounds per square inch, and to reduce the intensity of fallout radiation about 10,000-fold from area above tho bomb said today this country would soon have to resume atmospheric nuclear testing for Its protection. Dr. John F. Dunning, dean of Columbia University’s School of Engineering and Applied Science, urged such a move in a speech to Columbia' University Club luncheon. Saying that Soviet knowledge of U.S. retaliatory might would be of utmost importance in preventing a Soviet attack, Dunning described as “foolish” any suggestion that this country had solved the problems of a retaliatory arsenal. H Viper IS F>mlnln« Trl.nts win IT Negative rots Reporter Given Surprise Party on 85th Birthday AURORA, IU. (AP)—There ho hurried departure of woi after deadline on the Aurora Beacon-News Tuesday. Everybody hung around until Jeanette Smith, the newspaper's reporter who covers the nearby of Batavia, finished her work. BIRTHDAY PARTY Then all Joined in ’happy birthday” arou Smith’s desk. R was Mrs. Smith’s 85th birthday, and It was a surprise party. Cake and coffee and presentation of gift* followed. Mrs. Smith, a widow, has covered Batavia for the Beacon-News tor 57 years. Her beat includes dally visits to the police and fire school board meetings and i emergencies that arise. --Today's Radio Programs-- It (lows through Oermsny to tho Baltic Bos .. Bos oroaturo 11 Light brown wiiorri — French rive M Heritable lai » Kxotomstlono 4 i nr II u nr C ir fir w (T ST U IT IT W ET 54 W I Produced 4 Illuitrloua | Indolent g Covered with lesd T Boa eagle St Hoop-nuking IS The Mekong M Nebraska city Man on Mountaintop Hits Peak of Quality By Fred DANZIG loo highly Masoned with eye- NEW YORK (UPI) — “Man on ro,Un*> «|hMy-co«led acting lathe Mountaintop” is a boy-next- zredleots, which made It oil too door story that owes nothing to werataod and naeympa-old Andy Hardy movies or new taetlc for the TV screen, situation comedies. * Both Perry Como and Stew ™ Robert Alan Arthur drama Allen saluted TV’s torn mask forgave CBS-TV’s “Steel Hour” some mats -r "Dr. Kildare” and "Ben provocative and meaningful nKFQasey” —*'lrito some mtrical skits melti* Wednesday night as It ex-Wednesday night. Allan's effort, ntosd the responsibilities and re-mied “Dr. Ben Dedicated,” kid* lationshipe (Tognorrow: JMg dtp-Afkmjfe". 14 days to a month. All 100 of . ' * them could get inside the ifcelterl FoT WYs ^ f within five minutes by filing ini0*" Survlw Atomic Attack, send quickly. It can brcompletely but- your name and addresa and 50, or sealed for three hours cents to: . —as It might be in a firestorm— for a week when the outride air is used. TRICE TAG $5,000 Built*prlvate|y, this shelte might ixist about 65,000 now If undertaken by a neighborhood group. The estimate of $5,000 includes equipping it with radiation meters and other essential equqiment. Beyond that, the neighbors would have to contribuate food, blankets and other supplies. This type of shelter could also be used in ordinary times as . a clubhouse, recreation hall or meeting place tor social functions. R certainly need not be considered an emergency building in ease of attack. Atomic Survival m '"The Pontiac Press ■ OJJCJP' Box 1260, General Poet DBBce New York, N.Y. Pontiae'i 0a!| MtsdzMl MSSSk TV SALES and SERVICE Op«n Mon. thru frl. 'til V*.M C & V TV, Inc.* Get Our Price on GAS HEAT Chaadlur Itatfaf Go. OR 3-4492 OR 3-5632 • RENTAL • SOFT WATER « S-h LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. CDCCI HOMI rnu: AprgAisAi DEMONSTRATIONS uS-r-PICK* UP—DELIVERY CANISTER VACUUM | New in Cartons This it a fa maul brand and price drastically reduced. v ■ Complete With ?|Ay5 rirndteew IV 1961 MODEL VACUUM CLEANERS tell A attachments 2-Yepr $lQOO Warranty IO 8 W6SI for all makes and models $3.95 Gxclt. • MSACK UAIHMM • CtiICK ISOTOi 1 FREE PICKUP-DELIVERY-APPRAISALS VACUUM CENTER-FE 4-4240 We have one of the largest selections of 7V« and STEREOS in Oakland County terms; OPEN EVERY EVENING TIL 9 Except Sehirriev . ............... ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 W. Hurgn 81 4*2526 JUST EAST 08 TIL-HURON SHOPPING C6NTIR night, wee a eeratreetaM la the lag m a hn»*lmr”ln a coBee wouW ^ mm eHectlveiy handled fog a» a bus boy ta a coffee by ^ ^ exceptionally gift. J ■ ed second bananas in bis troup. Into his life, vie the girl-next- _ ____ 2 door route, came a compassionate t/Wno" •p®°* girt from Ibwa, Gerta Blake, por- attag room procedure tea bar- trayed by Salome Jena. ber shop. M wros uwt) wjbk o •tes'wta WPON. N*w«. ones CUM, B. Statoa cut. Hopwood WCAB. Hews, Sport. WPON. N«w. OtMII. CKLW, N.ws, bytd 5^, n.wu.» tT am. r< tWMHtek MNW. BP owes. ileiL " Robertson, ire blending an atti- For the recon), Bob Newhart’s ^°tlonal ^ slant on medical-type TV dramas, ; mental agility, succeeded in «*- me M0 wa8 the best tabilshlng a solid core of credl-^"1Ione "■* ** ' ™ ; billty around hie conduct. ^ ?...... '... .... ~ ' SSEI MB 1(T RCA . . . . . . . . . . $14.95 XZW RCA . srtjs 12Vi" Olympic ..... .... $19.95 20" GE $29,95 21" Emerson ...... , $39.95 21" Muntz . $49.95 24" Admiral $69.95 21" Spartan, bland ...... .$59.95 21" RCA $59.95 20" SHvartona $39.95 30-Dor Exchaaga PtMlaqa WE MAKE TRADE! WALTON TV J1S E. Walton Blvd., cor. Jdslyn FE 2-2257 * OPEN 9 «• 9 Miss Jena tended to let Robertson’* crisp delivery affect her earn at tintea, bet deaptie tMa .Tom Donovan'a direction helped tie the yarn'together with timely day night in a foolish ‘Checkmate* episode called "K1U the Sound.” He portrayed a paranoid ali-nigbt disk Jockey wife believed one of IN DEBT! IkM let ss live yes a censtrsetfva peymeat prafram Art wiH canaaMnta yoor Mils. All ye* reed b the desire t» *e» set ef debt. • ONI PLACE TO PAY • SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS • PROTiaiON OP YOUR CREDIT NMET SOME, lie. 18 W. Hareii St. « 4A801 m an. . ■ .ijJ ■* m - Will Help FoodBcmk Voters rusH... CAMERA MART Ad TODAY^—.Poge20 of Junior High School JENISON te)—Voters of Georgetown School District have given firm support to a 1185,000 bond isaue to finance a proposed new junior high school with no increase pledged an "initial'* contribution of $5 million in-cash and agricultural produ^itoJhei^^ja4«8:!fed food bank started immediately. mentioned as a likely date for Red China’s first nuclear exploiion, although other estimates say it will take up'to two more years. OKTKXASr 4BJENGB..._______________ Two years ago Red dhina's foreign minister, Marshal Chen Yi, told a pews conference that Peiping intended'to have die atomic bajnb. Since then there has been official silence While Peiping’s propaganda machines firmly denounced nuclear efforts of the West and supported proposals lar a nuclear five zone in the Par future.” Peiping said nothing. In its ideopogical struggle with Moscow over interpretation of Marxist• Leninist doctrine,- Red China ' has consistently -taken a tough line toward the West against the softer line proclaimed by Mos- 3-DAYS ONLY! Diplomatic reports baaed on in-formation from behind the Bamboo and Iron curtains cite strong hyDeations-that Peiping is making Undetermined effort to become a nuclear force. , The current signs are .that the Peiping regime it going about Hundreds of Specials Hiroughout the Store! OPEN’tiL9P.M Some political observers believe that the reednt explosion of a 50-megaton plus bomb by the Soviet Union was designed as much to impress Red China as to intimidate the West. A ranking Asian leader told this correspondent recently that Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev had told htm Russia was not aiding Red China’s nuclear weapons effort but that he (Khrushchev) thought Peiping “would have the bomb before long.” Republican Club Out lor VIP for '62 Speaker Planners of the 1962 Oakland County Lincoln Republican Club dinner are shooting for a top name 'or speaker. Former Prescient Dwight D. Ei-j :,iho\V',r has sent his regrets that previous engagement would pre-! bit him from attending the top; GOP fund-raising dinner of the 'ear. It usually is held in Febru- A club spokesman said other Inquiries will be sent to New York’s tiov. Nel SMI Rockefeller, Arizona S-n. Barry Goldwater and Jan vs Mitchell, former secretary of labor in the Elsenhower administration and unsuceeHN-- ful aspirant for governor of New Jersey. Wnht about former Vice President Ribhard M. Nixon? AP Pholofut "A GREAT GUY” — Lucille Ball and comic Gary Morton New York’s Harwyn Club. Lucille said, “I have found myself a great guy.” > Koella, that time, rector of the 'hteh, said. (Nixon has decided he’ll wy for governor of California.) Tonite, Fri., SATURDAY and Mon. Save Over *14! Men’s wool zip-coats in muted patterns Charge It • All in the newest short lengths ... smartly styled • Many with new split raglan shoulders; hacking flap pockets • All at eye-opening price ductions • First comers get cream of selection. Money-smart? Yes. But fashion-wise, too. For year's latest blues, tans, grays, browns accent muted patterns . . . diagonals, checks, plaids. Choose styles with split raglan shoulders (dressy set-in front, casual raglan back) and slanted hacking flap pockets. In regular, short, long sizes. NO MONEY DOWN When You Charge Your Topcoats on Sears Charge Account w Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back*' Men’s Dram Clothing, Main Floor SEARS 154 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171 1-More Night to Save! Shop Until 9 P.M.! Open Tonite, Fri., SATURDAY and Mon. Orion* pile-lined (I Wool and Wool Blends men’s coats JRegularly-16.98 to 17.98 Charge It What a selection at this low price! Handsome styles, all with deep, luxurious warmth of Orion* aery Re pile linings. Huge assortment includes brown, tan and gray colors, back or side vents, solid colors and patterns. Size range from 36 to 46. *DuPont Reg. TM. regular 2.99 long sleeved Pilgrim sport shirts ~ciror« te be the femity’s ♦"voHtel CoverwHn Nytw fHese. Choice of colors. Buoyant spring and foam construction. TITE PONTIAC PBESS, THURSDAY, COMFORTUU SPRING-FILLED PUTFORM ROCKERS 3 mai ##»twn DilUXEKIHGSIZE FREE 14-PC. LUNCHEON SET wi th every $25 purchase or more NO MONEY DOWN—$1.00 Weekly Large high back style/ padded arms. Comfortable spring construction. Washable plastic andttweetLjcover. $1 holds *M ChrUtmos, ■_____ ^ t_ >. *1.00 HOLDS TIL CHRISTMAS St JO HOLDS TIL CHRISTMAS HIGH-RACK SWIVEL ROCKER IH BEAUTIFUL HYLOH FRKZE Deep solid comfort pro- £ vlded by the restful high A foam back and ravers-Ible foam seat cushion, rocks. NO NONET DOWN DELUXE CLOSED ARM ADJUSTABLE RECUHER CHAIR Ad|u»ts to any position. Spring Jl construction with foam cush- 10 WO RTH OF STEREO MOONS Plus 45 RPM Spindle! HIRE'S HOW YOU SAVE; Warner Bros. 1 Stereo Albums. *. .till Webcor ,;.;s, Stereo.........0*1 45 RPM $ |n SPINDLE........ \ e iSP You Pay Only.... $84#! With Dual-Channel Amplifier Plus Detachable Wing Speaker.... Famous Webcor Holiday features 4-speed record changer with automatic shut-off after last record plays, Dual-channel amplifier and pre-tom plifier . , , Separate channel 1 and channel 2 volume controls . . . Detachable wing speaker with 8* connecting cord . 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J&mi $00 LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS JLWI ,£v 1 $1.00 Weekly • SIX ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER U, 1961 FREE 14-PC. LUNCHEON SET with every $25 purchase or more DELUXE ROOM GROUPS at Pre-Holiday SAVINGS Double-purpose, double service .. . One room does work of two* 7-Pc. 100% Nylon Sofa Bed Group Gracious living ro^m by day, extra bedroom for 2 at night Smart, deluxe Sola Bed and matching loupga REGULAR $199,95 chair M durable, ALL-NYLON fabric* plus _ loam wadded, reversible cushion*, arms and O gfl backs. In addition you gat 3 walnut or mo* A B v'U vll hogany occasional tables, 2 modern table ^ lamps to complete this deluxe group. Concealed bedding box. NO MONEY D0WN-2YEARST0PAY! WRC, 108 Ne SAti MONEY DOWN I m I iitlrs ,\ at ion ti 11Y . i dvert ised I n n erspri iifi \l nttresx ami It ox Sprinu You get double dresser with large beveled, decorator mirror . . . matching chest of drawers and bookcase bed . . . all beautifully designed in Starfire grey or charcoal mahogany. 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Automatic Contrast Restoration gives full picture depth and dimansion. *m of Admiral Carp. NOW ONLY. 158 NO MONEY DOWN NEW ADMIRAL (i--- CLOCK RADIO li LIMITED QUANITIES While They Last PORTABLE TV SPECIAL! ADMIRAL "EW,9K QUALITY COMPACT THINMAN SUPER-POWERED COOL "AIR-SPACE" CHASSIS 17,000 volt* of pictura power with exclusive Automatic "Picture Guard”* Circuit and Compactron tube provides brightness and plus-performance reliability never before possible. ADMIRAL PIONEERED WIDE-Angla 155~sq.-in. PICTURE 110* aluminized picture tube with tinted optic filter provide* wider viewing angle with le*t reflection*. Exclusive Automatic Contra*! Restoration insure* full range af light and dark tone* for full picture depth and dimension. Model P-7III. INCLUDING ROLL ABOUT TV STAND NO MONEY DOWN • FREE DELIVERY • FREE HOOK-UP • FREE 1-YEAR SERVICE THE POSTIAC EIGHT 50-PIECE SET OF STAINLESS STEEL Flatware Service for 8 Pre-Holiday Special Buy now and »avel. . . Beauty that lastsl — now miracle metal never needs polishing. Elegant new ’‘Simplicity" pattern. Ytitir \ AUTHORIZED \ JEWELER ^ for Nationally famous WATCHES Almost i 'Smart m expansi tootle fc dependc '{very' wat<,h fs doubly fluaron |ecd —^by vi and the manufacturers. Choose ftoiti SCOOP at WKC! ON EASY CREDIT! -e-MHOVA...AJiSM., • GRUEN • BENRUS • HAMILTON ond otherf ONLY I ti MWtniV Lady's ELGIN 19 Jewels 1. Single Mr attt AY eiem* cat* uirnt and Indent i. t. Touch r«g(/1it«f arJjuiU M jfimr individual feel. S. Calibrated tuts m paper MO can ten hsadingt letter* 4. Top esvtr remom for fliitf, ribbon (hangs md cleaning. A I. Centering device toch* Im carnage for safer carry /<£ I. Two Color rlbboe and stencil control. Man's ELGIN— Self-Wind 27J LIGHTER WEIGHT — WITHOUT A HINT OS FLIMSINESS or "caiir’ WHILE YOU iv rvnr ANTIOUE WMHUT TOE WITH STURDT FOUSHLO Mitt Lies MO HACK! fmtluil! IMtnf lady's BULOVAt '■. 23 Jewels ... lelyi U JEWEL WATCH aOMdhvAMt-WwM'i Ittlnllinj Typiwrlliri r------Man'sftUlQVA— Self-Wind 23J f 7 sr«*wim» l71*° AMI 45-PIECE Service for 8 MELMAC DINNERWARE by Brookpark FAMOUS WATCHES AT 4-Piece Yersa-Type COMBINATION [Si Horn i LARGEST SELECTION C GREATEST WATCH VAL BENRUS / k SFACIOUS RACK •AO anntre aiM ■ - /t—» rOli BOOK) JUVO MAGAZINES! m. 7 bnmmjl ^JtPayrasDls^ WW lady’* 2 DIAMOND 17 JIWEIS Mon's HAMILTON Waterproof Watch T.Ofr Weekly St.SOWHKIT Indy's LONGINES 17 Jewels \7 JIWH / watmmoof. r 'Mimm WOODF* Man's LONGINES ^ 17 jewels It.fswmkiy *QK{ ;» ioowhkiy arid Mon. LICA'S FINEST BENRUS NINE roirr io#n. At If Imv Saginaw Give a fine modern up-to dale watch. Don't let them be . dat4d*-watch Styles do change. Come ln~iee our large selection of America's finest watches. Names1 that you knoyv for style,quality,, value and performance. Use your " credit1 and. pay 'later on the easiest' terms iri tewrr..™^ or Lady's EtiEL TCHES Choice voblo — b«t tru«t ityte wotchet with colei et the fan-te. Accurate end 29RESERVES VOUR CHOICE 'TIL CHRISTMAS OWEST PRICES EVER ■ Man • 17 JIWIl WATERPROOF Lady's HAMILTON ; 17 Jewels 1.00 Weekly SlMWIIMV FAMOUS WATCHES OUR GIFT TO YOU . .. With Any $25 purchase or mere ' 14-Pc. Luncheon Set ! You get 4 lovely Hostess plates, 4 matching cups, matching creamer, matching sugar ; boat with caver, electric tea er ceffae pot with . cover and card.'' Elgin Sunburst Cord -Less Electronic Clock $ | Q95 Runs for full year on I 1 flashlight battery B TA WEBCOR “COMPACT” HI-FI TAPE RECORDER Oaas everywhere, records every** where. 4” Permenent Magnet wide-range speaker, 2 speeds, 3M and 7W Ip* with dual track recording. Plays 3”, 3” and 7” reals. Microphone, case and inftrwctlaitt included. $1.00 Weekly 8-TRANSISTOR RADIO AMERICAN MADE ... _ Big 3-Inch big- volume speaker, 8 transistors, earphone, leather carrying case and batteries. 50c Weekly POLAROID 10-SECOND Electric Eye CAMERA $A00 0Q . A Week No Money Down Fully awtomsrtfc electric eye sett your exposure SO oisure yaw perfect pictures ovary time.- A great gift. Now ... last than $100. DORMEYER Portable Mixer The new “Continental" Dor- jMh {% mayer. Big beaters for every \BBqq mixing task. Stores in a drawer, hangs on the wall. No money down. 50c a week impact, yet paw table radio. Brings In “ stetieni In thie area 3-Pc. Molded Luggage Set 50c a week jftwi&f 1 f TEN"- THE PQNTJAfe FBBSS, ’THPBSDAY, KQVEM8EB !<■ »««» K-” ' *' ’ - ,uiK!^-,v Lti-stW • t..; -r n / ,/ ^f->J'v;;WJ^ ff Hf vfiP£Dfl\ NO MONEY FRIGIDAIREBAB 13S 2-DOOR AUTOMATIC DEFROST Refrigerator-Freezer m glffl ■ W- i WKC’s BIG VALUE PRICE... PRICED FOR A SIU-OUTt Hug* zaro-zona Iraazar with its ownf soparota door! Big automatic dofroot ro-frigaratort Twin Glide-Out Hydrators star* noarly V* bushol! Stor-ago door holds *V*ry-thing from buttor to K-gsl. milk bottlos. rr IT" 5 iig— 1 ■' 1 WKMiiyiiJii.• w 11 mi I • If fl jWl ill MM mg-^LEs |i mm ■ ikj , j I BaKE* «• U§ppg IIJ wfprj i . , f| i_ ^^kAi-iSSai^ JIBj ar \f | §j» NEW FAMILY SIZE FRIGIDAIRE II CUBIC FT. REHHOEMIBR WKC’s BIG VALUE PRICE $ NO MONKY DOWN , m ■vcrylMna is big abe«it l» excagt »He r*M H*» (Mad WM leaery taotarM. •MM*.Mur'dw* Heat leader •toia* ovar 9*lb*. of froih •teaks, chap*, «M cut*. S-oiialf aterege. deer evea held* li*»>0>>liiaihA*»ds».Waw «a»> ’i's'j. KC. 108 X.SAOIXAW.. .FE 8-711 Roomy Extohtion Top Resists Heat, Stains, Acids and Marring 30"x40"x48" DINETTE l-tene leomhH chrome finish* box wot d V Ytone, wtpe-cJean-vinyl. ELEVEN 6 TERRIFIC CABINET RHYS New Fashioned JCs (cjjjjj) // / s* 36" stove high. Sliding gloss doors, stoinproof plastic top, appliance outlet. APPLIANCES! 34" 4-DOOR WAIL CABINET ~ Baked on White Enamel Coffee Maker Stolnlees Stool NOMONIY DOWN TlfE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER It?, 1061 Deluxe Base CABINET With SWING*OUT IRONING BOARD *2995 NO MONEY DOWN Use this cabinetover the . , stove, .sink, in ihd bathroom, Sv Aop t office or workroom. Easy to ^ III hang on any woll Double Door, All Stool UTILITY CABINETS OR WARDROBES Your Choice NO MONEY DOWN 50c A WEEK Massive Double Door Cabinets. 30" wide, 14" deep, 44" high. Heavy gauge steel-gleaming baksd-on white enamel finish. $19.88 MASTER VALET WARDROBE WWU'.ir Dmip 1 Extra wide—Holds more garments Safety lock—Keeps doors closed tight Roomy hat shelf— Easy to reach Lots of room in bane for shoe storage $19.88 6-IN-l GLASS DOOR PANTRY KITCHEN CABINET Automatic^l-SIke Toaster star Selector NO MONiY DOWN Color Selector *10.95 Steam or Dry hen With Vortabfo'*foamir'^**,''1#. *, _ *1.00 HOLDS TIL CHRISTMAS NOTHING GLEAMS OR CLEANS LIKE STAINLESS STEEL Stainless Steel Ulest'BeneC cheerfully replaced. j^pM Complete 10 PU»C0 Set RE* Enjoy the easy care and rich beauty of K/f©'- "West Bend's Continental solid stainless fe $ if 1 ^ steel cookware with tri-ply skillet for even f heating. Copper color accents under rich, OMRl brown, heat resistant cover knobs. mm, e 1 QT. SAUCE PAN WITH COVER PPP • 2 QT. SAUCE PAN WITH COVER |j v || e 9 QT. SAUCE PAN WITH COVER | # ID’/*" SKILLET WITH COVER *f^Tr 9^ QT; DUTCH-OVEN WITH COVIA **! 1 QUART COVERED AUCE PAN 3 QUART COVERED iAUCE PAN 2 QUART COVERED j SAUCE PAN HANOI ur nipM 5% QUART COVERED DUTCH OVEN SKILLIT iab tvttj COVERED < V* t* coma color ACCINTS Add a sparkling • touch IASY CUANINO Stainless washes bright warn ssal covins Hold moisture in MITAl HAMS GUARDS Keep handles cool Gentlemen Please ruth me __________________sett of Continental Stalnleu Steel Cookware. NAME ADDRESS STATE QCoth PChoroo □ C.O.P. OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY; MONDAY NITES TIL 9 FREE-PARKING BEHIND STORE 504 A WEEK THE PONTIAC PRESS, THU*tSDAYtNOVEMBEB, 16, 1961 FIFTEEN SERTA QUILT-TOP HERTA RUILTED-TOP rnvMti SMflteg 9 Matting! SERTA SMOOTH-TOP No Lumps, No Irapi, No lotions! ALL DELUXE FEATURES: 0 Healthful, comfortable FOAM-TOP construction! • Button-froo stooping comfort! o Extra firm support! • Sag-proof bordor construction! oSpocial low prico! Both mattross and box spring! FE3J114 (— mm ■ mum » mm mm m.tm m«rol mm ^ar-wr^JSOHHl K HOLLYWOOD OUTFIT! *39“ Not*! style Innonprlng and yo«n of servko. IM spring on Mg l*gi. Waohablo plastic uphoi-starad haadboard. ADJUSTABLE HOLLYWOOD FRAMES s4.88 MpM SIALY HOLLYWOOD OUTFIT! *68" Diamond - shaped, but» ton-tuflod haadboard In washable plastic. Innor-•prlag mattross with H|ast-right" firmness. Bax spring an lags. T. c * DURABLE MAPLE BUNK BEDS IN 3 CHOICES! NO MONEY DOWN '£«arp lUsttreWt- Greatest Bedding Bargains I fij^hyfe^s * ■■ yam^aoBrarSaagA . Converts to 2 Separata Bads! . ; 8-Pc. Bookcase Style Outfit MMbdmWIM (AA f An Meal Outfit for the I i • ChlMfOn*# Booml , _ 1*^1 k Can la Used a. 2 Separate Beds! Nothing Else to Opyl.{ Converts to 2 Separate Beds! - 8-Pc. “WagonWheel” Outfit M titan WIM tfififi pwlar wagtHt wheel design rvos as riephta* dasher or i sap- ' ■■ ■■ ate beds* Select hardwoods tn ofir W!M spin finish. With 9 comfortable MltllfillEV BBMM ■ttresses, 3 Springs, ladddV and ■•■■"IW"" Tull M Inches WWe! J outstanding eelae at ltd* tarctth " taw prlcel Ruggedly built of hard-woods in rich maple finish. With 9 csmfortabis mattresses, 9 rosftknt stool springs* ladder and gaafd:... A. real detune outfit! Smart styling, superb comfort, sturdy construction phtS convenient baokcnco hoadboardc. Maple finish. 1 comfortable mattresses, 2 springs. guardrail. %-Assam • |£Pr-.T. T n*.' VfiiSlw dfa ' JR WKC, lOtt >. A MA %W...FE 3-7114 w r r ' rr THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER SIXTEEN iMt) Dommmk Atony other uses, too. Use this now hair dryer for drying your nails, hosiery, pets, or other lidjt drying fo*k>. Even use it to defrost^frozen meats and vegetables. WITH TRAPS WITH TRADE NO MONEY DOWN IT’S PORTABLE ... DRT YOUR HAIR WHILE TOO WORK TAKE IT WHEREVER YOB 001 Whisper-quiet, efficient home hair dryer „ lets you talk on the phone or watch TV while yet# hair dries beautifully ... up to 50% foster and more professionally. Move around while; your hair driest Wear this new hair dryer like a shoulder bag. It dries your hair while you wash the dishes, fix dinner, or do housework. Three-position dial-type air temperature regulator (hot, cool, off) lets you select the most comfortable heat settingt Ther-mal control prevents motor overheating. •» MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASHER • FULLY AUTOMATIC • WATER SAVER • LINT FILTER TUB • SAFETY ilD SWITCH • FAMOUS MAYTAG AGITATOR ACTION • RUST-PROOF CABINET • INCLUDES Normal Installation, Delivery, Warranty OUR $ LOW FRIGE w HR MONEY DOWN - *2“ Weekly MAYTAG NEW HAL0-0F-HEAT DRYER • NEW SPEED-DRIES ATYPICAL LOAD IN LESS THAN ft HOUR • SUPER SIZE LINT TRAP • FULL OPENING DOOR • FULLY AUTOMATIC ... JUST SET ONE CONTROL • INCLUDES FULL FACTORY WARRANTY. BIG 10-POUND WRINGER WASHER OUR S LOW FRIGE e Heavy-Duty Mac 21 Vj Gal. Capacity • Safety balloon Rollers e Positive Sedi- wkc, ion iv. T • # •