Th§ Wcathr ithtmnt M fMt t> THE PONTIAC PRESS^ Edition VOL. 119 NO. 310 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1902-30 PAGES AMQCIAT ron«D MUM Michigan's Ideal Junior Cftstro Predicts More Revolutions HAVANA (/PV—Cheered by a vist throng of Cubans and a tnessage fixnn the Kremlin, Fidel Castro brushed off Cuba’s ImpauUng expulsion from the Inter-American system Sunday night and predi^ed his kind of revolution would sweep Latin America "like a march of giants." A throng of Cubans jamming Jose Marti Plaza roared approval as the bearded prime minister assailed President Kennedy as hypocritical and Impudent for banning imports from Cuba. U.S. officials in Washington said the ban, chiefly affecting tobacM, will deprive Castro's ^gime of $39 million a year. Castro shouted his defiance of le Organisation of American States for its 14-1 vote at Punta del Eate, Uruguay, last week to oust Cuba from the hemisphere family of nations until it breaks iU ties with the Communist Moc. WINNING moH SCfiOdL MISS - Rochester Junior Mias Siiarei IsMihart. 17, tleft) and Genesee County Junior Cheryl Coscla, 17. flank Mary Ellen Pike. 17. of Traverse »ty who Sat-t Miss title, in a contest headed by the Pontiac Area Jaycees. The state’s ideal high schooi.senior will compete with others from all 50 states at the. America’s Sorts' 17-74 in Nobile. Ala. City Teen Wins -Junior Miss Title j Tiwverae City girl was the winner among the iat ctnnpeting for the Michigan’s Junior Miss titleyf^aturday at Pontiac Northern High School. is Traverse City’s Junior Miss, Mary Ellen Pike, ♦17, named by three Judges the ideal high school Steelworkers Study Demands for Contract PITTSBURGH » — OediaB o« ’ to one of the earliest starts ever, top officials 01 the UnilN iteel-workers Union begin conferences today to formulate demands strategy lor contract talks Big Steel. The roatracl for nome SSS Tax Probe Seen to Aim at Wall St WASHINGTON W»-A prominent Wall Street figure closely associated with the New York Stock Exchange is expected to be the first target of a federal driye against alleged tax evaders in the securities field. Informed sources said Sunday the case involves allegation^ of criminal tax fraud and would produce a sensation in financial and busiiiess circles. If the goverament adheres to Hs tentative timetable. It was learned, evidence will be presented to a federal grand Jdl-y in New York CKy later this week. A final decision was being delayed pending a special meetli^ of federal proseentors later t^ day. Informants said at least a dozen tax fraud cases, including this one. were being developed against senior of the state. The PonMao area eontribnted to Mary's court In the form of IT-year-old Avondale Seidor High Ichool neidor Hharel lomdiart. second ninaer-np. Share! h Roehealer's Junior Mias and llveo at MS Cherrylaad, Anhnm The trio was completed by first runner^ip, Cheryl Coacia, 17, of Flint, who came to Pontiac as Genesee County’s Junior Miss. ’The state Junior -Miss will co pete in the America’s Junior Miss (More Photos Page 22) finals, March 17-24, in Mobile, Ala. Junior Miss eftndidates from all SO states are expected to be rep- JUDGES listed Judges for the state contest, sponsored' by the Pontiac Area .^raes, were Mary Morgan, fashion and beauty editor of CKLW radio and television; Ray Storm, Pontiac District commercial man-of the Michigan Bell Tcle-phoM Company; William A.’ (C^timied on Page 2, Col. 1) They said the intensive work the securities area was similar lo past Income tax crackdowns which have involved physicians, headwaiters, morticians, lawyers, small businessmen and even tugboat captains. ^ Some of the iavestigatlens have been under way lor aa long'M three years. A large proportion Involved Wall Street option, but several center In other cities. A number of the piling cases resulted frwn recent investigations of the American Stodc Exchange and its mepibers by the Securities and Exchange Commission. WOULD BE SENSATION Some sources said that if the case of the New York Stodc Exchange figure reaches the courts, it might well be the most sensational one to involve a Wall -Streeter since Richard Whitney, the former president of-tbe ‘,‘Big Board,” was sent to Sing Sing Off grand larceny in 1938. It was understood that the justice Department and the Internal Revenue Sowice have developad allegations that the individual involved undertltated his Income and Inflated claimed deduentiona lor contrlbutfons to charities and There is talk in steel circles that negotiatioM may get under way soon after the union conference ends, perhaps on an informal basis. March 1 has been mentioned as a possible target date for agreement on a contract. Secretary of Labor Arthur Goldberg predicted* on a recorded television program in Washington Sunday it appears a better than 50-50 chance a contract will be s a strike. Snow to Accompany Pontiac area resktents can ton up their overcoats ’cause the Winds will blow colder with steadily falling temperatures and a few snow flurries later this afternoon and tonight, the weatherman says. ★ ★ Tonight the mercury will dipp to a low -CUba charged today thift Organisation of American Slates the U LaHa Amerteaa aathms which voted agalaat Qiba. Castro’s 2 - h o u r, dS-mlnute speech came on the eve of a debate in the U.N. poUtical committee on a Communist-sponsored resolution charging the United States is planning aL_ against Cuba and meddling in her affairs. PLEDGES SUFTOET As the crowd gathered (or Castro’s speech, Soviet Khrushchev messaged a relterh-tion of Russian support for the Cuban revdlutian. “The people of the Soviet Union are always with you, dear Cuban brothers,” Khrushchev said, growing militant movement aoiidaiity In ail parts of the globe wiD help the-Cuban people frna-4nt» the evS plans ai the .ILS.. imperialisU and their hirelings.” To Moke Film in Prague MUNICH. Germany (API — A West German film team plans to make a movie in Communist Czechoslovakia in the spring about the Nazi terror to Prague during World War II. The movie wUI be baaed on a novel by Israeli author M. Y. Ven-Gavrlel. expelled Fidel Castro’ ment from hemispheric affairs as "illegal.” I ★ ♦ Cuban Ambassador Mario Gar-cia-Inchaustegui, in the General Assembly's main political committee. renewed the perennial aggression chances agajlflgl-fb* FWel Castro's Garrta rkarged the tam” la a drive ftr beudspbeile But. the Qiban said, the UJ. Cuba’s has grown. WWW "When a country supplies li dth arms and tarts, uses its bases and the bases of its pup this force is overtluown by our forces in 72 hours, when the U.S. government cads an 0-legal foreign ministers meeting, when our people choose to defend thrir inalienable rights of choosing their own destiny, then all the U.S. warlike potential shrinks,’’ he said. “Cuba thus grows; on GEORGE W. ROMNEY “Nab Rightists as Francs Awaits De Gaulle’s Talk Will Be Made From Detroit AMC Chief Back in Motor City: Claims on TV He's Undecided By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. George W. Romney has picked 0:30 a.m. .Saturday at a downtown hotel for his long - awaited annouhee* ment whether he will seek the Republican nomination for governor. Members ol the American M®. tors COrp. public relations staff were today making the arrang*. ments for the press conference as Romney, president of the corpora, tlon, flew back to Detroit from Washington, D.C., where he appeared yesterday on natkaiwidi Background on Romney Page 29 television and had breakfast witli' Michigan Republican congress* men today. Although laalsllag oa thu "Meet the Press*' TV program that he BtUl hasa't de«Msd In another development. Dcni-ocratic National Chairman JohR Bally said at a Detroit preM conference that his party would whed its big guna into Michigan it Romney decided to take on Gov. John Portly Reporter Tests Fallout Fare Survival of the Fattest? By DKK SAUNDERS Die day d redconing rti For me the big bomb! I gtota c« nbibit 1 Ig Ml a r week survival r W The fat man of The Pontiac Prbss reporting staff has been "canned.” Until Monday, Feb. 19, I will cat scientifically prepared I an effort b PARIS UPI—Security officers announced today the arrest of seven Secret Anhy Organization members caught with plans to overthrow the government. The develop-nuRt came as the nation awaited President Charles de Gaulle’s speech tonight on Algeria, which may touch off more violence. Author|Ucs said the arrest of the men, identified as membwk of the secret army’s operational headquarters, was the most severe blow to date against the terrorist underground in France. The secret army is sworn to prevent Algerian independence. A bomb believed laid by the secret army damaged a TV tower in the northern city of Lille. This is a tactic by the secret army to black out Important speeches by De Gaulle. Transmission at Lille was not inter-ruptedf however. and imashed windows at the regional administrative headquarters at Gernoble, In the Alps. Thero were scattered outbreaks ol violence in Algeria. These questions deaf with civil defenm. We’ve «U been told about sheiters and how to stock them, But all the books have qne thing in common — the word "nor-ml.” like, the “normsl” water con- sumption for au aduH Is two qna^ per day or the "uorroal" eonanmpttou of coftee Is three eupe dolly. But I am a 217-pound guinea pig. Is that normal? * * 0 Do you know how much water you drink each day? Do you count the cups of cof- Do you Just take It for granted you could live on emergency rations tor a prolonged period, or do you know you could? it * * These are a few of the questions I’m giving my rotund little body a chance to answer for Itself. it it it Some things, like water, coffee, lid- rienrsttas-J won’t rut down oq because I’d like to know dose to “normal” I am. But food will be very limited. ‘(XMMPACT’ BUDGET rU be like a limousine operating on a compact’s budget. * A A My staples will consist of two foods recently developed in cooperation with the U.S. Office of CivU Defense Mobilization by General Mills, Inc., and Quaker Oats Co. Both are the products ot several years of research aimed at developliig a fow-emt food high In protein nnd vitamin onntcnt for speclflc nae in tamlly or com- He is expected to mnTte some report on progress toward ending the seven-year rebellion In Algeria. French authorities said the members of the secret army were five officers and two lawyers. None is well-known. They were arrested while meeting In apartment - building in downtown Paris Saturday nighl. LAST MEAL — Pontiac Press reporter Dick Saunders sat his food-loving 44-4tM5-inch fr^e .down to its final (for awhile) meal last.night. His "last nonnal meal” consisted of shriihp in ■our cream sauce, milk, potatoes, leg of labb, green beans and chocolate erte. AH this has Dwy were supplied by city civil defense offidals who ordered it for use the city hall shelter area. Both foods can be mixed with milk or water, eaten as a porridge or eaten dry. The General Mills product, Multi-purpoae Food (MPF) can be mixed with many types of food and comes cotoplete with suggested recipes, tfossibly bracing me for the teat, tminiind). Smita pou,«l «i the pUi« Ung in the foreground have more vltaiqin and j mineral conteirt than the other meal, at a frac- '‘nonnal'’ meal. This mtxning tion of the cost. (Continued on Page 2, Q)l 6) bid for the governorship. T Md them my name and we got acquainted,” Rommey said. "I hadn't met them before. Then I outlined my basis convictions. I outlined some of the things 1 felt are necesaary to-grt Michigan rolling again.” One of the ponts he stressed In the meeting, nnd also an the The blown of the secret army came decplte elaborate seonri^ measurac la both France and Algeria against violent reaction lo De Ganlle's radio and TV Bailey hinieA he himself would take a hand in the contest if other Important eiections in Oslifornia, Connecticut and elsewhere did not take all his efforts. Romney, 94, ot BIoomtMd Hills, emerged from the two-hour brert-today into a swarm of He said his reception tlclpallau In both pnrllea. He said a new Image In needed tor hin Republican party, wbleb bd said, for a long H ' ' " taUy I ivlth b The Democratic party^ he said, has been associated too' stronidy with labor forces. Following this morning’s meeting in the dining room of House Minority Leadtec Charles Halleck ai Indiana, piep. Victor A. Cox of Sault Ste. Ma^e said if he were a betting man he’d "bet a dollar or two Romney will run.” ★ A*' A Brodmfield, who introduced Romney around the room, wasn't so sure. "I believe there are still some serious questions in his mind whether he wants to get involved,” Broomfield said. Misring from the seuion were Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) in Indonesia Students Attack U.S. Legation in Protest of Dutch Plane Refueling JAKARTA, Indonesia Uf - A student mob stoned the U.S. embassy and ripped down the American flag today, injuring one em-“he action brougli lerican protest. A A A The students, believed to be pro-Communist, were protesting because a Dutch plane carrying troops to disputed West New Guinea was allowed to refuel on U.S. soil. The nM»b action came before reports reached here that the UnUed Statoo had withdrawn permission lor Dnich charter pUnes cariylng troop* to use U.S. airfields at Anchorage, Alaska; Honolulu and Wake Island. At the Hague,. a commiaiique said Premier Jan eje Quay of the Netherlands had exigessed his (Continued on Page 2, Coi. \) Press Enthusiastic Downed by Reds Two U.S. pilots die in Loot as plane shot down by hostile forces ^ PAGE tS. Visits Japan Bob Kennedy reassures Ikeda on trade policy — PAGE S. No Good r * Radio ttagnmm . 16505376 *rwo THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, im To Consider Proposal ^ for $1-Million Building The teelbUlty of leuii« county Uad Beer the new courthouee for coMlnictlon of n |l*mllUM office building will be ooiinldered row by fbe OeUend County Board **A*Defr^iyndicate of fo\ir memberi headed by realtoi- Loiiki Savage has expreaacd wiUlagneaa The real problem would be to get tenanti for the flrat floor, be explained. The community National Bank of Pontiac would be the logical chief tenant, Savage adde^, but admitted ' that the bank hu not yet been contacted. ‘Wa will wait for a dedalan fay The prepaeed toer-etory I lag, wUh «a,aao aqaarp f College Aid, Pension Bills ■lid provldp oinop* lor real to altomeya wlahing to locate la the court house vlctalty. Many lawyers have expreued deiirc to relocate at the county aervice center on Telegraph Board. But earlier effort! by a group of attorneys to finance such a pr^ect by themselves failed before any proposal was sent to the board of supervisors. Preliminary architectural draw-tags have been prepared for the fletroit syndicate by Ptmtiac ddtect Harry Denyes. Ihe plana provide for Ready for Senate Action WASHINGTON (AP) - Two of Presldtint Kennedy’s I legislative proposals—the college education aid measure ■ employe penskXHvelfare regulation bill—come up for Senate a' Capt. David-L. Murphy, 30, copilot, Bloomfield, Neb. Capt. Thomai D. Carter, 27. navigator, Helena, Ark. Sgt. Bernard P. Terrien, 32. anglneer, Gillette, Wls. Lt. D. J. Hughes, 28, a passenger, Fort Walton Beach, Fla. Capt. Robert H. Sanford, 34, a paasci^r, Greensboro, N.C. “ ■ Preston PWsley, age un-W, service address APO 126, en route on emergency leave to Alcoa, Tenn. ON ROimNR FUOHT The Air Force said the plane was on a routine flight. The C47, military version of the DC3, left its home base. Hurlburt Field in Florida, last Friday. It left McGuire Air Forca Base, N.J., Sunday, slopped at Philadelphia and flew to Greenaboro. The Federal Aviation Flight Service station at Knoxville ,Tenn.. ■aid the plane was cn route to Knoxville. At Greensboro, the plane _ briefly, stopping but one of the two engines. Wttnessds said the pilot took off down the e.OOO-kDpt runway and was some 100 feet off the ground when an engine stalled. V The plane cartwheeled, Its ri^t wing scratched the runway, and the C47 burst Into flames. is acheduled to send Ml Ck^tol Hill n message on education. He ia axpectad to follow later in the week with one on defenoe and civil defense. NOTHING NEW EXPEOTED Informed aourcea said the education mtsaaga will detail grams Kennedy already has mentioned In his State (tf the Union and budget meaaages. Ha is not The Weather Puli tJ. 8. Weather Bureau Beport PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Few snow flurries are expected tonight with a low of IS. Tuesday mostly cloudy and colder with few snow flurries. High tomorrow 26. Steady ar falling temperatures today. Wind ndrthwesterly 20 to 30 k NATWNAL weather - Rain is expected tonight alon|^>the WkMb. and South Atlantic coast and in the Pacific Northwest while MOW thnries met forecast for the Great Lakes ai«e and the Norfii OaHriri Rodtfet. It.wlll be coldEer east of the Rockiea. \ '' r/-....... There ia likely to be a wide Continued U S. Aid Promised to Adoula Prom Oar News WIreat WASHINGTON - Congolese Premier CyrUlc AdbuJa arrived here today $or talks with President Kennedy and immediately received a of continued U.8. aaslat- "We shall endeavor to continue the assistance we have provided to you In the past," Undersecretary of State Gaorga W. BaU told Adoula at airport welcoming ceremonies. Adoula was to lunch with Kennedy at the White House at 1 p.m. (Pontiac Time) and follow this up with a conference at O) p.m. "We regard the development of an independent and peaceful Congo of greateat tanportonoe ta the whole free woi4d,” Ball aald. He pledged continued U.S. support for United Nations endeavors to achieve this. tions subcommittee opens haai> inga Tuesday on Kennedy’ organisation plan to set up an urban affairs department. The special Senate subcommittee conducting hearings on tary speech censorship poilctas ia uncertain about its plans for the week. These depend on negotiations with Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara over his r»-(uaal to make known who censored specific speeches. W. Bottom Files for Re-Election to City Commission District 4 incumbent Winford E. Bottom today filed a nominating petition tor re-election to the City Commlision in the March 5^ primary and April 16 general elections, said aty (Hark Olga Berkeley. This leavaa anly two laoom-Mat oommissionera who haven't as yet with Ike clerk. Bot- tom, b I d d I a g for hit form. If tho fifth laoontbent to flio. Two perMBM not ourrenlly on the oommlsalon also ha Vo Bottom, 36. o) l74 Euclid Ave., has been secretary-treasurer of Thomas Die A Stamping Oo, in Pontiac for the last 10 years. Bom in Missouri, Bottom has been a Pontiac resident since chihlhood, went to Pontke schools and graduated from the U.S. Ni val Ordinance School and Oenehtl Motors Institute. He is married had has two chil^ dren. He was^ assemblyman at World War II and returned to join the sales and purchasing de- Bottom la a member of AH Satata Bpiaoopal <3iurch, a Mason of the former Pontiac Police Ra-■ervt Aaaociaition. Stone Embassy in Indonesia (Continued From Itaga Oat) deep disappointment and adf that he could not understand the U.S. decision. The Indonesian news agency PIA said FYuwign Minister Subandrlo ekprasaed regret about the attack on tha embassy althopgh he added he could "well understand the anger and Irritation of the Indonesian people caused by the permission granted to Dutch troofMjarrylng planes to land on American soil." The agency said several pet»oij|s leadlag the demonMration. teraoo, executive secretafy of — Psaoa Onpa. will b# the gueet spetkar at a Fab. 15 ptibitc pto-P«m at the Oommunt^ Houae. The I p.m. maatlng has bean |l ranged by the Birmingham Chapter of the American Association -* University Women. )f the Blr- Special invitations have be sent to the adminlstratlan, and inttrseted students of I mlngham, Bloomfield and ivuikb wood schools, as well as to Oran brodk where Patterson taught po litlcal science from 1943 to 1945 Pallanan served 'la the U.S. rotary la PreHdeat Bteeabow-er's oahtael. Hla admlnfotratlve post In the Paaoa Oorpa cams after the tlao-tlon of Prosktont Ksnnady. ADOULA WITH ZORIN - Congo Premier Cyrille Adoula shakes hands with Valerian Zorin, Soviet deputy foreign minlater and head of the Soviet U. N. delegation in Adoula’a suite at the Hotel Pierre in New York after their ar PUMWss conference Sunday. Adoula files to Washington today for talka with President Kannody amid reporU the U.S. will step up econoRilc aid to the Congo. Pattenon la an aaalstant profea-sfooal laeturor In public ndn tmtkn at Gcorfe WaHdngton Uni-vainlty and ndptant of tha Arthur B. Flaming Award in 1980 aa one of the outstanding young men in In the afternoon. Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., chairmait 'Of the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on Africa, is host at .a foa in Adoula's honor, in the evening Aaat. Secretary for African Affairs G. Mannan WUllama entertains the Adoulas at hla realdance. will visit Tuoaday moni-ing with Eugant Black, prsaUant of the World Bank, before rstun-Ing to New York. . Adoula conferrtd with Valerian Zorin, tha Soviet Unloa’s delegate Sunday in New York. A man tor Adoula said lai Zorin had requattad meeting with the premier whan ha returns to the city. had dinner mmday Mgfil with Adloi E. Stevenson, U.S. am-baaaador to the United Nattana, at Stavenaon't hotel sulta. I hi reply t to a large extoat. U It had not been for the help you have glv«i Adoula expressed hope that U.S. oaoiatonca would conUnuo. Ha said peace In -the Congo "la a task for us. a task for all men of good Adoula Is assured of a friendly reception on his unofficial visit. Hia succass in prevailing over Et tremiita of the left and right m tha Congo has surpassed the highest U.S. hopes. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Hw chairman of a House highway li>-vaatigotlng committee charged today, that "pcinictous" land buying prices uncovered In Maasachu-aetu may be port of a nationwide pattern. Rep. Jehn A. Blatnik. D-Minn. made the statement in openlni hearings on right-of-way purchoae Massachusetts. He said sub-Investigatora Atronout Glenn VIsitt President in Capitol lent throughout the national $41 billion highway program. Re asM 67 blUlon would be spent la aoqnlrlBg land for tbq WASHINGTON If) John H. Gleniv Jr. visited President Kennedy at tha White House today. The Marine lieutenant colonal called on the President shortly after Kennedy returned from a weekend at Glen Ora, near Middle-burg, Va. There had been no advance announcement that Glenn would the President prior to Ms return to Cape Canaveral, Fla. 'It teemed unthinkable that there would be expenditures of such tremendous sums of mofiey without proper and effective controls,’’ Blatnik said. If the prinetpic of juit com-pematkm le somehow subverted into an Inatrument tor unjust enrichment, then the public inter Romney Verdict Saturday (Continued From Page One) Congressmen John B. Bennett of Ontonagon and Clan £. Hoffman, dean of the delegation from Alle-Both are lU. GRIFFIN qinZXES Doing some qf the questioning of Romney was Congrossman Rob-bert P. Griffin, R-Traveraa City, another passible contender for the same nomination. Broomfield has been om of hia bjg boostara although Romney comes fror Broomfield’s county of Oakland. If Romney says ’’yea" Saturday and Griffin decllnea any contest, Broomfield said "Certainly, I would back George Romney—in that event.” "If George RonuMy roes he’s golag to be a dtffleuM man to beat,’ tratad by dishonest nun, James (Scotty) Reston of the New York Times hurriedly asked; "Well, if that la true, then how can you do anything exeapt say on the 10th that you are toti« to run tor governor of Mlchlganf" that’s what I’m going to say." Romney repliad: "Basically, Business People Set Up Unit to Boost Romney He aald Romney was "very well scelved" by the delegation. Broomfield added ^hat he was per-oonally impressed with Romney's depGi and knowledge of state prob- Broomfield stated Romney said he was very disturbed with the unemployment situation In Michigan and extremely critical of the power of apeda! Interest groups in the state. and unofficial dean of tha state’s Republican delegation In man’s abaence. Ford said thinks Romney will run. Former Michigan GOP national commlttoemaa David W. Kendall alao attended tha maettag, one of sfveral Romney has had with He’s to meet tonight in Lanatng with membors at the Michigan Senate. bto dark-hane Md far Ike prsa- On the televlskn program, how-ovar, bt answered a newsman’s quesikm whether ha had tuM hlmsalf eat by sayte never nded myself In. He repeated bto fi was putting Michigan back on aund economic feet: Romney nearly gave it away Sunday to the nationwide TV audience that he will run for ^veroor of Michigan. i^er M tied told how he dis- agreed ^wlth premise* that t politics was infil- ★ ir it DETROIT (UPI) — A group of Detroit businessmen and women today set up a "Volunteen for Romney" organisation to aid tha American Motors Corp. president in his expected bid for Michigan United ganlzatlon was made up of a of prograaalve J all aagmenti In- IV graduate of Pontiac Central Igh School was the oktoet car dealer in yean of aervice in Pontiac and tha third oldest Fort dealer in the atate. la 1911 Milward received hto first franchise, which wu located where the Riker Building to today. hto 16 yean. After a venture with a wlrelass _______________Job with the V Motor Qi., one df early n factoring companlei here. He started as a dnftaman and lattr became purchasing agent. He stayed with the firm for five yean before he entered business with Ford. 8 PM. Deadline Looms to Register for City Primary Unleaa you have ngistered at^ the Pontiac aty Oerit’s dftlce by' 8 tonight, you won't be able to vote In tbe March 5 city primary election. The clerk's office, which usually dosM 5 p.m. will remain opfn late to accept voter registntkms. Today is the deadline. Pootlac reWklents who recently who have moved to Poatiao or who have not voted or ragtotond In the last tour years, must leg-later to be eligible to vole. Tbe primary will be held to select aty Commlaaion candidates for the April 16 general election in district! where more than two for candidacy. With a week left to file nominating petitions, as yet there is no district wheit more than two have filed. TTie clerk’s office is on the main floor at aty Hail, 35 S. Parke St. Fronch, Tito in Tiff BELGRADE, Yugoslavia -France has demanded the recall Yugoalavia’a ambassador to Paris and announced the French “ThtlT***"" *■» wrr- grade in a dispute over Yugoslav recognition of the Algerian nationalist rebel regime.. *Castro Bigger Pill Than Tito*-Rusk WASHINGTON (UPI) • tary of State Doan Rqdk todfY eallad Qiba a gravar thraSl^tlton Ytvoaiavta and predicted that 'Tito asked Ruak dfaoctly agalnat whom Tito might bo expected to um 378 planM suppled to Yngoalavia by ^ Country ttoce USB. V J. Itade wUh Ike Rad bbo tkat Q*a to a part of Ike urasM Yage- Rusk defended continued trade with Yugoalavta » toeluifing satea of VS. jet ptanes and other mlB-tary hardware — in the face of Pretident Kennedy’s deqtokni to shut off afanost all trade with (Tuba. Rep. Gl P. Lipscomb, R-Ohlif., tko-Yagadevtons tkamoelvea aoning behind them might bd^ta neighbota. ITito countiy. Rusk of Yugoslavia from Kremlin rule UH. help in buildlag this % •STAY OUT OP IT R^. Delbert Latt, R-Oiio, asked tbe secretary; "Is there any doubt in your mra, in event' of any showdown between tfae East 'an4 the Vt)est, as to whldi side Yugoslavia would be an?* thooa elroomatanoes tbe Yngo-■lava wuoM make a stiwng effort to stay ant af R," RaA re- Aa far aa Berlin to concerned, Ruak said Yugoalavla's polidea appear to be very cloae to those of Rude said the eastern and «uth-latern European countries — because of World War II — feared ‘a revived Germany." As a re-ult. be aaU. the Idea of permanently splitting Germany ap-oealcd to them. Rep. A. Pad Httehee, D-N.&, i^lnmui of - - - The secretary strongly defended U.S. aid to Tito’s government. He ■aid efforta to woo Yugoslavia away from the Soviets had paid dividenda to the West. Rusk said U.8. aid under the Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy admlnlptratlona has "firmly estal^ * llabed" tbe Independence of Yug»-ilavla and made 'nto "the outstanding example, at successful da-fiance by a (Tommunist country of, Soviet finperlallam." ■/ Adai^uET Bock ^ Desk Bonn, Germany (ft — Oiancel-ktr Konrad Adenauer, returned to office today after being confined at home for the past two the grippe. 86- /- TH^ PONTIAC PllESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY g, 1902 THREE Bob teennedy Vigitg Japanese Chief Reassures Ikeda on Trade Policy Bjr CONRAD FINE TOKYO (AK) - Robert T. Kennedy enured Japanen Prime Mln-later Hayato Ikeda today that future U.S. aconomk policy under hla brother’! direction will not neglect Japaa Economic ieanea that have aome grumbling In Japan came up In the flrat official call of the UJ. attorney general’s six-day visit to Japan. Doer BLADDER IRRITATION uriDBtlenbetta nlcht. SMaBdarllT. add luflar from Haad-sraatad. Ia‘tMh "frlutMll CYIbVbx ■au^br fcrlMi faat, ralaalac atMfartlw curkiat InlUUM ••rmj In atnw, tM OTsrn^M nwnSaTnwi stitw laat. SMhCent a pound surcharge on the cotton content of textiles the United ‘ Kennedy’s talk with Ikeda. ' ' ~ eda that the trend in'U.8. pdicy Is deflnit^ toward lowering tariffs, Osborn said. Kennedy also told Ikeda that President Kennedy's intention to seek closer ties with the European Famiiut GUARANTEED DIAMOND RmOS a» Ssrii«s Up te OH Gimpare the quality and price On Genuine Diamonds at Simms before you buy. PaV cash, pay leu qr use FREE LAYAWAY at no extra cost. DUMONO sns 13333 Reg. 1200—new DUUNONO sm Reg. HOP—new Lewest tikm ea 14k GOLD WIOOINC RANDS REEKS FAVORABLE TRADE er the United States it seeking favorable trade treatment of Japan as well as Itself In the EEC. dr A A Kennedy, an expert and tlrdeas campaigner, whirled about ’Tokyo Sloeple, the presitet of thR,acad-all morning on behalf of his brother's New Praatler program. David Osborn. U.8. Embassy secretary, said the OBIB WARM aREEnNO Everywhere Kennedy went he was greeted by crowds of eager ; people. At the Jiutice Ministry office girls dressed In blue frockp. jumped up and down and squealed. Kennedy stopped and 'Mok hands with one of the girls. Kennedy opened his airport arrival statement Sunday night with brief greetings in Japanese but stayed away from the language during bis rounds today. ★ A # Mrs. Kennedy visited a Catholic Eq^iah language school and had Weather Bureau Has Sympathy hr Ground Hog DETROIT lAP) - The forecasters In the United Slates Weather Bureau’s Detroit offica ianied this special bulletin Sunday: AAA “We as weathermen sympathise with our fellow prophet, the ground hog. On Feb. 2, Ground Hog Day, he came out of his hole, looked around, saw his shadow and crawled baiic Into his hole for six weeks more of winter. 4 ¥ * "Now, Just two days later, the temperature at Detroit climbed to a springlike 90.’’ However, the bureau said, cold weather wAi due today. 5 Die in Illinois Crash NASHVILLE. III. (AP) - Five . ersons died and seven o were injured Sunday night when a small foreign car and another auto collided on US. Highway 460 eight miles east of here. In quick succession. Kennedy Convent of the Sscred Heart New York Oty. She alao vialted a crippled ebUdren’a homa. Mow CoEiforf W—riig FALSE TEETH ■seswamsswat wsftoomooass kWM plaM dwqpmfan. PAArawW. sB impmTsd powasr, ssmidSM op tn dust Uiw M SMirs oon^ Fine Fidelity in This 10-TRANSISTOR FM-AM Portable RADIO Includes BATTERIES ond EARPHONES Compart to f69^ la DStM^rM luaaaos ■OoMm ' ST-------- - •yea WaloilM r UieraiMor'' sad dlodM. Perm* bsr bbi«u._. •pn^ M « nMbUsM bstWr-IM. Wsa laPMt plMUc esM sod «ItU dtlcut fr*sii»net*i (OaS« srailaM* st titrs cMl > AU eboM Mir lre« Isjawsy plso- APPLIANCE BUYERS! OlllE FRnTER SAYS PLEASE I • • • NEVER UNDERESTIMATE MY DISCOUNT PRICE!! W# soy this with pride ond it's nothing more rhon o friendly informal reminder to chock our prices il your ore plonning to buy o.new opplionce, television or Hi-^i soon. So tnony folks tell us, "I didn't think you could sell it for that price." Yes, mony people ore, surprised ond pleased when they get Fretter's price. OtlllFRimR Whydon'iyou? ^ JR H Ml ... FLOOR MODEL SALEH g . original discounters n . ‘ S SPECIAL OFFER S .THIS WEEK ONLY S Complete and approved ■ home outdoor Antenna Kit n with the purchase of ony * TV set, excopt portables. ■ Instollotion optional — i $10.00 . ItISJI MI-FM ty«M«st Radia ... mi.M tS4nek NrtaM* Raw ia Crataa..........SIIRM tawraan M-lnak TV......B14I.N Waatkighausa 21-lnck TV Raoata............... BUMS Syhmaia ttaraa...... I lt.N ttaraa Raaard, 4 TrMk, Taga Raaardaf, Rnarieaa llada • • CLOSE-OUT AT BELOW COST All Traasistor, AM-FM and Cleek RadiM ia Strok. Aa EnapliMal Maroy-Saring Oppwfanity! ONLY WESTIN6H0USE 6IVES YOU ALL THESE DELUXE FEATURES ATA.SPECIAL PRICE New Westinghouse Multi-Cycle LAUNUROHAT* AUTOMATIC VYARHCR clunar. Prove it to yourself! The Laun4fomat’s exclusive Multi-Speed Tumble Action washes clothes cleaner because it gives you More Wash-. ing Power. Coma in and let us show you the Westinghouse Laundromat’s many deluxe features. You can be sure ... if it’s Westinghouse. o/lcr imafl iloim payment Matching Westinghouse Electric Clothes Dryer'./(.r.,wt77 BUOCIT TtPMS ■ 30 Days Eithonge ■ CfNIROUS TRADE ■ FAST 24-HOUR ■ NO MONEY DOWN ■ Courieroi, After un TO 16 I If Nat Fully Sotiifisd I ALLOWANCE DELIVERY J ON ANT PURCHASE J yfit Sole Servite MONTHS TO PAY ■ fiSfTSrioad Discount Makot tha Rig DHfaranca Freva It ta Yeariar ■* tanrica Oomat^FirsI Hagardlats of Prica- FRETTER APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROAD Open Doily TO A.M. *til 9 P.M. - FE 3-7051 - Sundoy TO A.M. ^til 7 ?M, >RliiRiUBiUiUuuuBaBaa"PHiUUUuuiu •txv .r Sparkle aurm clocks You rhraly aaa budfot-pricad clocks with •ucK rich styling. Tha amartly stylad caaas coma in popular aandalwood with fraCafuUy tumad fold color sida panels. SENERAlf^tlECTlie SPARKLE Put sptrklf > In any room - reoaqom uvm ROOM on D£n... No winding.. .No rninding... Just saf It... forgst Itl Hs¥» spsrkit In your horns todsyl Mskss a parfact gift, tool 91 N. Sogiaow -aoas Main Floor Chock This List for Ypor Namel LUCKY PRIZE WINNERS Here Are the Fortunoie Folks Who Won Priies in Our 'Comporison Doyi' Contest: MH.e.aeL0Oa-tliamiill,Ps(inae...... .......-MOVII BMaTOOTaTLOn-niiarsiiavIsw.Draylta..........-aLagMOLOOK agoaai e. WILLIS - ins Mallwr, Um** LaSs .- KITCWN CLMK Tmoas I>unct-4M W. Nsrss, Nntlse..........-ILtCTaiC DOILL uai roaotwaa -1 ii i. whsss, NnHsc..... Ham stMuia - ism w. s. aive.. Trsy....... rsAw H. Aoaais- in oraee, sroroitw.... ■BS. r.«. aiWOLD - 111 NsImr, roatiae... J. r. Dearo-U l. rrliMatan,fwrtlas......... a ------DOLL Nan j. (iLita-M oarnr, eaaiiaa..............-Burmin Adv Dapi -2nd floor. TONITE and TUESDAY SPECIAL SALE HOUSE RUGS at DISCOUNTS Washable Non-Skid Sale of TUFTED RUGS Small Sita Ruga RQc AAadium Siia Ruga 4 Q Ona Prica at..... 99 Spackil group of. . I r3x5 Foot Ruga Sava at only . . . 1" Largo Sixa Ruga Your cheka ot. . .. Woshobla lultad rugs in hi-Jo's, plush pilat, loops, cottons, viKOSai and others ... solid colors ond twead' w'*h loom rubbar or rubbariiad bocks. Sova hare Of Simms. Sale of CARPET RUGS 100 24x48 Inch <40 .Carpat Ruga.....I 24x72 Inch .4 Carpat Runnar..... A 24x108 Inch «07 Carpat Runnar....V Stitch bound ramnoiirs in tweads and solid colors, non-slld lotax or loom rubber bocks, long wearing loops. Mpny^ses —hollwoys, dOorwoys, kitchens, etc. Big voriaiy of colon. Only $1 Holds This CAMERA In SIMMS FREE LAYAWAY-TONITE & TUESDAY Only ELECTRIC-EYE Makat Sattinga Automatically KODAK Movio^amera Refpdar $M.50 Seller With New Fast fl.6LENS 8mm roll lood Comoro wiflj ,11.6 lens ond automatic electric eye with built-in type A filter that lets you shoot indoor and outdoor movies on the some roll of film, single Wind rapid crook will expose 10 feet of film in one winding. $1 hold>. SIMMS IS 4 A OPEN TONITE 10^ -TUESDAY HOURS 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.- for tbo Pail 21 Yoon SIMMS Om tbo BittMt MSCOWm... aiitf Sl» At H! Sinca„|^934 you could count on Simma for boat voluai in town and YOU STILL CAN . . . juat compora our vduat and DISCOUNTS with joH othars and you!il aaa hew much more you aova haral SIMMS AUTO DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS ‘CHAMPIOir Spark Plugs Rofutar fl.OS Volwo-loch spark plwgi for most con. limit 8 plugs par parson. Tha Easy Woy to Claar Snow and Ic* Melt^Off Spray De-Icer FRII 3«c ICI-SCRAKR 14-ounca spray con of Da-icar to WM door windthialds pf snow ond ica ... mokas for batfar, softr driving. Limit 2 cons. Regular $1.95 value. Begutar SS.f S Velwe ^All-iteal carriers will fit rr . has suction cups to hold /fham sacuraly to cor top. SIMMS HOUSEWARE DEPT. DISCOUNTS HASSOCKS With BRASS Handles R*9ulor $7.95 Volu* Planter Bowls llJISolor M: GLASSWARES C : l-Pc. Snack Sat j 117 .......... $«||«r ■ ..MStll ifM .»•-«(., I n iMliti talt. tar#,. .. anS plaatt. # Af ihown—let hot 4 cup* and 4 ra-Chaic* at aiiatiad 0 cauad plolat to hold cupl and food. * limit 2 |#t( par porton. ••••••aooaoooeaaaoaa#te##eeeeaooo####o#aao •FIRE-KING’Ovon-Proof ’BAKING WARES With Serving Rocks Rogular«$1.00 SaMors ^£LLmACln I ' »■ .FOUR " "T'' ‘ ■- ■ ^ , ... ■ 1 V. PoNtiAc Mess, Monday, February a, i962 3 DoiMe Double VUHE Stomps >»FREE F00D.RI. Daily Double Coupons No.1&^ lowers food cost - but never cuts ttualif >-ronry-Twmmmirroy 'j. Bet Extra . Toft Value Stampi during DAILY DOUBLE DAYS Bet gifts faster! 8-LB. BAG FLORIDA ] Grapefruit II iS-LBrBAG ifeSW White Potatoes ^ YOUR CHOICE i-Ai CAiMPBELL’S Vegetable Soup 7IO-I/1-OZ. smo® c«» I Raisin Bread 18« l-LB. LOAF SAVE 9« SUNBEAM MIXMA8TER. Choioa ot IS ipMda tat ovary typ* of ndzing. Autonatie baatar ajactcv. Two bowla and radpa book....IS booka. GENERAL ELECTRIC PORTABLE MIXER. Tluao apaadi, puah-button baatar ralaaaa. Raniovabla cordaat. Drink miaar at-tachmant ind. .S S/5 booka. DORMEYER "MIX-WELL'* MIXER. Stiia up battara, grinda maat, too. Tan apaada. With t bowia and ladpa book......11 booka. choose from fmm brood oame mixers Uce ewso...!dl free far t-LB. CAN. FREE DOUBLE \ NO.l to HmR qiiantiHea* Rrkea end Jtami effective Hiru TueaTf Feb^6,1962 ct Kroger in Pentiec, Drey- We reMrve Hie right to «9lv%uiY« inns t «ma# rw® Wp • «rw* «■ f%rH|p«r owu u wniewBrp oreeuj’' ten Pleins, Mireclo Mile Sh^pinf Center, Union Leke Villege end Oxford. Ne^ add to dMlei^. T~1 ■V " ' :'- X / *. THE PpNTlAC PllKSS, MONDAY, FKBHUARV 3. 1062 FIVE Tq Head Torch Drive DETROIT un - Wendell V: An-pencil Jr. of Qroeie Point hu been named to head the Detroit area’i 1962 Torch Drive. Andemn is president of Bundy IVihtni Go. and vice president ot the United foundation. The drive will held Oct. 16 thnN«h Nov. 8. Tir«5tone BRAKE AND FRONT END SERVICE t. Af*im( nonMl re Tir*6tont NEW TREADS •rriKI m SMNO TMt lOOKS N ON YOMIWN TIRES Complete $et of Tubelese Whitewalls ANY SIZE ' 4 For 149 49 rtM tax omS 4 TraSa-bi Tba* U.S. Inspector Satellite to Be Our Eye in Space Says More Businessmen Should Go Fly Kites ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. II) ■ No mundane hobbies for Howard ^ff, asaistant vice president of By ELTON C. FAV AP Military Attain Writer WASHINGTON (AP)-The U.i the development of a satellite inspector that would investigate plcious apace objects. The Job ot designing, making and testing a satellite inspector Is under way. A contract was issued Imoat a year ago. Last «eA, in a memage to Cbn- gress on apace activities, President apace. currying a multimegaUm bomb. The rapid advance in apace technalogy by the Soviet Union, as well as the United Statep, can make t^ problem of the antliStelllte program urgent. The present pTob-of developtng a Zeus or other anttmiaaile aj^em to cope with intercontinental balliatlc mlMilea may be surpassed by the need to do something about n threat from Kennedy said the Defense Department and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration cloaely coordinating efforts" in the program. tr . NASA’s Rar In his measage on space Kennedy said a satellite Inspection program would pgovide the United States "in the near future......... the means to inveatigale suspicious space objecu. He did not define the reference to the near future. • cruise in the vicinity of lui unidentl-ned and auspicious satellite and •nd back reports. Even though the Ranger rocket find towBid tha moon last tmuith misled Its mark by thousands ot miles, the Ranger's space vehicle demonstrated to some extent the ability to change direction space. This is vital for a satellite inspector vriilcle. TO BENDEZVOim moon rocket has the same mission as inspector satellite; To rendei-..js with n satellite. The Ranger also has a TV-tranamiaalon system that the Inspector could use to relay, robot-fashion, a report on what it vlded by electronic probing and relayed back by radio. mi|^ be needed to report on whether the suspected satellite was on a reconnaissance mission or carried a weapon that could bf/flred at earth targets. Improvement would be needed in what the military calls reaction time. The hours, days or weeks .of delay to get a space vehicle {launched could be lll-afforded If U wia suspected that a satellite Editor Estimates TJ Billion Babies Have Been Born WASHINGTON (UPI) - TKe Population Bulletin says that 77 billion babies are estimated to havf been born on earth during human history, aasuming that man first appeared about 000,000 years ago. About 12 billion probably lived before the beginning of the new atone age in 6000 B.C The present population of the world is roughly 3 billion. An article in the Bulletin by editor Robert C. Cook said that ‘ man has been around for a ralUl< years, about 96 billion would have beef) born. 32 WUion of them r’“ to 6.000 B.C. Some scientists now think human history spans 2 million years, he noted. Just say "Charge it" ... buy on easy terms wlwr* your doNor bilys MAES 146 N. wm FE 2-9251 Balloons Carrying Gifts From Formosa to Chino , TAIPEI, Formosa U) - One .hundred thousand ijnga inscribed with the Chinese characters for freedom — tiu yu - are being {delivered to the people of Communist China ai Chinese new year gifts. I They are being sent in ballocn->borne parcels from the nationalist-■ , The Chinese OUR BUILDING IS COMING DOWN! WE MUST CLEAR OUT! Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelj^. He flifs a Mtc. # * ♦ Aft told* a civic club here that he thinks more business and professional people ihould take up kite flying as a hobby. $5,000 Life Insurance for Only V •n otUr ol up to It.OM .iDupundlnt Afti LIU IniurUBM ProUctloD tor OBly le tar tha tIrM month) ThU U a •paolal and law raUt. M dap olt«r avallablt to pariaiM la food hahitb up la Oft M in. It U mada ta aoly M. Introduaa aur ntw, law coat DoubU--------------- —' Protactlon PoIleT that Isanrat. pour ■■■■»■"* TtAE OFF HSaa AND Mda tOBAT! ■■■■»• TIMS Urs INSIIBANCS CO. Dapt. HO BAN ANTONIO I, TEXAS Wama to IFrlal).................................... ......................... (Advartlaaaaat) Tormenting Rectal Itch Stopped In Minutes New York, N. Y. (Special) -One of tha moat common amle-tions is a condition known as "itching piUs”. It is moat embarrassing for the rictim Science Finds Nawr Hcnlinf Subitaniw That Promptly Stopd Itching and Pahk ol Pilaa ment” was repertad and verified by a doctor’s obaorvations. This improvement was maintained in caiea wbara a doctor’s oWrrations were continued over n period of months t Among thesa sufferera wars a wida variety of hemorrhoid conditions, soma of 10 to 20 yaars’ duration. The secret is this new hanling substance (.Bio-Dyne*) - discovery of n world-fnmotfs reeenrch institution. This substance is how obtainable in eint- during the day and especially • - at ________________ «’• good news. For the first time, science agfrarating No matter what you’ve without reeults - here’s stance with the astonTshing ability to promptly atop tha burning itch and palp. It acto-snrinke hemorrhoids — ally .......... ----------- — without surgery. Msdlcal science has prorad thie substMce produces a remarkably affective rate of healing. Ite germ--s£o' ing properties-) it miection. haipprw- (conrenient to carry if away from home) or Preparation H Ointment with apecial applicator. Available at all drug counters. PLASTIC WALL TILE 1. SI 55« »3« ■ iOPcs.«”x«” lifouulltv9x*xVi 13‘, RUQS $3*5 Rubber Base 98‘ Inlaid tile Genuine MICA 29‘ Plastic COVE^fG ic^Qc CEILING TILE 6K2‘ INLAID TILE \0\ VINYL WALL COVERING 25‘J; BUY-LO “ 102-104 S, Saginaw (Next Door to May's) Free Forking in Rcor _ Opw Mondoy ond Pridoy *HI 9 P.AA. V ■ H" Vinyl SOLID VINYL 5‘ ASPHALT TILE SPATTER ' 4%o NEW STORE HOURS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE (XMi Monday, Thursday, Friday and SATURDAY It b«att... 06 it sw««pi... as it cUant! HOOVER CONVERTIBLE WITH LIOHT oml ATTACHMENTS R«g. 89.95 Swetpar plus 13.95 Teel Sat <84 Complata-You Seva 19.90 • Two-spaad motor automatically ■hiftt for correct cleaning power a Modem styling; throwaway bog 0 Switch on handle a Famous HOOVER quality 0 Limited quantity NO MONEY DOWN, EASY TERMS! Hooftr Clrantn ... tiflhTloor Triple Chrome TENSION TOWa POLES Holds towels for the whole family In only 1**et floor spate. e Sparkling lifetime CHROME fi • Holds firmly in place by tenti e Fits all Ceiling! e Attemblef in 2 minutes withoo) toeli. e No Mar piaolk giideo prufeef ceiling and floor, e Naces towelo at your finger tips, e An attractive, functional bathroom accoosory. A, 4 seven-inch towel rings B. 3 seven-inch towel rings, 2 cross poles $09S $ps Ifineni... Fourth Floor 9:45,1.9 9:455:30 Famous RICH ''CASCADE" DRAPERIES OF TEXTURED FIBERGUS GUARANTEED NO IRON EVER! So Many Custom Sizas you Six D«corotor Colon: Sa..Th.C..»ofCg.tomJd001/^.^ Ambotsodor Slim-Line 17" PORTABLE TV * Shop ' and Compare *129 e Built-in disappearing antenna e Contoured tinted gloss filter plate e 110 degree oluminiied picture tube e All handwired cKotiit, beige with gold trim e Overtited front mounted speaker for censele / quality sound I e 15" high, 22H" wide, 11W deep THE PONTIAC PRESS «WeM Huron stmt , Ponttac MONDAY. FEBRUARY 5, 1962 ■AROLO A. rmOBRALD Pr«(ld
clear testing. Actually, there was not jniich to be gained from the very beginning. o ★ ★ ★ At no time had the Kutwianii indicated that they would go along with a policing policy If a ban were agreed upon. So for all practical purposes, any agreement would have been worthless. ★ ★ ★ Last year when the U.S.S.R. broke the moratorium on testing it became quite evident that any future unsupervised nuclear ban would be broken at their whim. ★ '★ ★ Since this was the situation the West had no choice but to hold firm for an inspection system of some s6rt. Russia flatly refused any discussions on a ban with inspections a part of the deal. ★ ★ ★ Apparently, the Reds’ two main objections were that they feel further scientific advances are possible and also they are suspicious of the West generally. Some of this came to light when Semyon K. Tsarapkin, the Red negotiator pointed out that any type of inspection would be used by the West for intelligence purposes. ★ ★ ★ Of ctAihie, this argument is not valid, but as long as they continue to hide behind it any negotiations will be pretty much blocked. ★ ★ ★ Just how true their claim of fear is cannot be evaluated. But their ap- parent skepticism of the Western World’s Intentions will make It extremely difficult to ever agree on a nuclear test ban. withstanding some reports to the contrisry. j Just as a V>ur through the big Capitol building is educational, so is a conducted tour through the Con-Con site. Constitution Hall. There is a gallery for the public and guides for the tours. ★ ★ ★ Debate on hundreds of proposals is beginning now op the convention floor. The results will form the new Constitution. While Diere, It’s a good time to corner your delegate and express your views on what you’d like In the Constitution. You elected him. The Man About Town Best Contributors . . Are Our Readers, as the Items Conclusively Show Voice of the People: ^ ‘Don*t BUme Teen-Agers for Racing on Highways* in regards to the letter about a drag strip, we had a drag stHp • started at the MSS speedway until a bunch ol busy bodies put a stop to It. So now the teen-agers have no drag atrip and alao Uw guya that build hot rodt hava no track to run them on. All 1 can aay ia when hot roddlng takea place'on the highway we all know who to blame fhr It and It la not the teen-agera. Not a Taen-Jisar ♦Give TairDoUara ‘No SUdlns on Ice to Schoob Attended’ at IVoy SdiooV Do all Oakland County Schools have the ruling “No Elding on ■ . Ice,’’ or la Troy an exception? ♦ w w This seheelyard to as flat as ground caa be and has'bruntlhil aUdiag kw oovertag a large por-ttoa Just right tor a numlag start. P r e h a h I y rv««jr grown AnMutema has doae this In Ms In reply to “Freedom’s" letter, we pay a ichool tax for the pur-poae of building and operattne a school for our children's education Yes, we still have our freedom to lend our'children to a private or parochial school, but we should alao have the' right to give our tax money to the school that to educating our dtUdrea as. that Is the only purpose of the tax in dw first place. A Taxpayer ^Socialisin Indicated in JFK's Proposals’ Kennedy’s State of the Union Message advlsea this nation that he wlahes authority to raise or lower taxes, compWe control ol Import tariffs, and authority to accelerate federal public . works programs. He wills Just a Little Reminder David Lawrence Claims: JFK Coiifident We Can Compete in Trade President Kennedy Is convinced that we are perfectly able to compete : against the wide world in spite of our : high labor rates. ★ ★ ★ ) The White House Executive aaserta that our productive amt manufacturing methods are superior to the majority of the ' world so that our workers can actually turn Out more goods per man per hour. He says that we actually produce coal cheaper than Japan even though the Japanese labor rate is not much • more than one-eighth of ours. ★ Also, he asserts that we are nearer , the source of supply in the matter of f&w materials and again we can bring About an economy to offset the high . labor wage here. The President also : believes that the average American bidustry will turn out bitter quality, guarantee prompt delivery A,nd then will service everything we handle more efficaciously than our competitors. it ★ ★ He declares that we are pre- • pared to face the selling of the i whole world in a truly competitive sense and that we should make a bold bid to face the European ; common market squarely at the earli^t possible moment. State Residents Urged ;lo Visit Con-Con : FVw those who have a free weekday, ‘A Taluable education for Michigan Citizens iz only 70 miles from Pontiac. Michigan history is being made every day at the Unsing Civic ; Center where 144 Constitutional •: Convention delegates are grinding •' out what they hope will be the * ; State's new and fourth Constitu-:» Don. '-V ★ ★ ★ i They are doing it for all of ds, not- Dlet:.Where If there Isn’t a wlU there’s a weigh. ’That this Is the coldest winter since 1926 is the assertion of William Williams of 71 South Shirley St. He also states that when a boy he lived at Big Rapids, where In February, 1895, it never got pbove aero for the entire month, nor did thb sun ever shine through the clouds. Thanks are extended to Ester Brown of 25 East Tennyson Ave., for a piece of currency Issued by "The Bank of Eternal Life,’’ also for her kind words: "Your column gives everybody an uplift.” Fear of icy roads causes a big drop in traffic. On a ten-mile stretch of the Dixie Highway northwest of Pontiac between eight and nine o’clock on a recent morning there was an average of less than one car per mile In each direction. Recently returned from a trip to Mexico City, Gene Pruder of Birmingham suggests Jhat we adopt Its system for cutting down the speeders by having big bumps In the pavement about every quarter mile. Hearing a commotion in their back yard the other morning. Mr. and Mrs. Bliss Honsker of Bloomfield Hills, found that a young deer was trying to battle its way out of a snow drift. It quite willingly accepted some assistance, and then galloped away. ‘ The membofs of the suicide club are again out in full force," writes Bernard Ballar of Pontiac Lake, referring to those who drive cars on the ice on our lakes. Former Pontiac resident. Jack Clapp, j writing from his home on the bank of the Mississippi Rivei' near New Orleans, says that an average of over 50 ocean going freight vessels pass his door every day. The salvation of television, according to Mrs. George Ftoer of Keego Harbor, la found in the re-runs of the good old material. She writes that they have no worthwhile new stuff, simply because there isn’t any! A Pontiac physician tells me that the actual hqart beata will soon be tranamltted by telephone, for long distance eonsnltatlon. It to presumed that they will be called “phonetlcelectrocardlo-grams.’’ Put your bird feed high above ground, where It cannot be reached by cats who climb a tree, or from, any other source, is the advice given In a-letter from Mrs. Clyde Newton of Lake Orion. The cats not only eat the feed, but will kill the birds. This also places It above the reach of marauding dogs. Bobby Feathering His ’69 Nest WASHINGTON — It's strange what a difference just a few months make. The country was being told, for instance, in January 1961, that Robert F. Kennedy was being appointed attorney general, not Just because he was the President’s brother but because he was skilled In matters of I a w and the art of Investigation. It was denied that any favoritism lor a relative or nepotism was in- lAwRENCE volved. But today the 36-year-old attorney general has become a ”good-will ” ambassador for the President of the United Stales, who just happens to be his brother. There oertalaly to no need lor the attorney general to lake a tSHtoy Journey aroand the worM JaM to gH Inlormattoa on Imw better to ran the Uepartmeat of Justice. He will teaia little abroad that will enable Mm to that Just to make his mark as attorney general is not enough and that, tf he is to train himself to be a presidential, eandidate later on, he mutt learn something about the world and engage In wider fields of publicity than the Department of Justice offers. * MIGHT VK BETTER ^ In fact, there are enthusiasts who claim Bobby Kennedy would be more decisive than his brother and perhaps an even better administrator—though, of course, this, too, is perhaps a premature bit of speculation. Bobby Kennedy wss reported to have received a few weeks ago an Informal bid to visit the Soviet Union. The report was subseqnr«tly denied In Moscow. Maybe the Kremlin had second thoughts after going bark to the files and rereading the interview published on Oct. 21, 1955, In “U.S. News A World Report,” just after Bobby Kennedy returned from a visit to the Soviet Union. He said then; “I’ve had enough of it. . . . We are dealing with a government to whom God and the family or the Individual means nothing, and whose practice it has been in the past to make promises and treaties to serve their purpose and to break them when It has been to their advantage. “It can only be suicidal lor us ... on the basis of smiles to strengthen Russia and weaken ourselves. ...” (Copyright INI) --------------Mnount and time of unemploymlflM cmbi-pensatlon. to pay tor the medical care to the aged, and to train unemployed masses for Jobs (would this be in communal, federal schools?). He wishes to fUminate giving private industry a tax allowance for equipment depredation and repiacement oosu. He wishes to subsidize any private industry hurt by increased imparts. He wanU to,subaidize our state school systems and to increase our financial support to th^ U.N. .Several of his personal advisors are known to favor socialism. His recent proposals would nuxit certainly Indicate tha^he is Indeed a Mrs. Nancy X. CMtty ' Yet, thia Joy-flattening rule has been Installed. Why? The lawn cannot be damaged. Children bundled In winter clotMng' stand small chance of being Injured. Neither could they drown. Moiv ere deprived of a great big chunk of wintertime fun be<-ause someone has apparently forgotten that ha qr she was once a child, la Favor ol CMMhood Pteasares Thanks for Artide on^avid Augustine’ Hurray for your won^irttl lN " tide on our own David Augustine! It was B great tri^te to a fine person, but an equal amount of that praise should go to his father, *Need Artificial Rink for Hockey Players’ It took a number of years tor Pontiac to provide a lighted baseball park. Will it take the same . number for the diy to provide on udequato artifleial rink for Junior hockey enthusiasUI I watched a Jalalor hockey Smiles Verbal Orchids t(y- s. E. Mlnard of 88 Norton Ave.; 86th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Loren D. Colwell of 319 Perry Av«.; golden wedding. Mrs. Hortense Palmer ol Bloomfield Hills; 81st birthday. 9 Mrs. Mercedes Francis of Waterford: 82nd birthday. Austin Mortimore of Drayton Plains; 81st blrtljday. Mrs. Ira Beadle of North Branch, formerly of Pontiac; 87th birthday. ^ , The fact that Robert Kennedy-referred to familiarly as a rule in Washington as "Bobby"—will in a sense represent his brother and will be given the equivalent of a royal welcome everywhere may be a satisfying errand or vacation for him, but it wUI be obvious that it is his relationship to the President and not. his status as a mere Cabinet officer which warrants attention. A ♦ ★ His Itinerary iqpludes Tokyo, Hung Kong, Jakarta in Indonesia, Bangkok in 'Thailand, Rome, Berlin, Bonn, the Hague. Paris and possibly London. Wherever he meets with the top men in foreign govemmenU, he will be looked upon as a spokesman for the President of the United Stales. ir it it The prime ministers in turn will hope that what they say to him will be transmitted to the White House. It’s a strange way to conduct the diplomacy of the United States, which supposedly relies on the secretary of state and the American ambassadors abroad to carry on a system of communication on foreign policy. AN ALERT YOUNG MAN 1( he were not the President’s' brother, the attorney general’s trip wouldn’t attract much attention abroad. He made a similar trip to Asia in 1955 accompanying Justice Douglas of the Supreme Court. His comments then show Ms acuteness of observation. Par he to. Indeed, an alert-minded young man about whom WashlngtonlaiM are often found quipping nowaday! that he hopeo to oucoeed JFK in ISM, and then ' T^ Kennedy will come along as the third of the ‘idynasty’’ In 1S77. This is admittedly a long time ahead to speculate, but Bobby Kennedy, lUceable, ambitious and a good poiitlcian, certainly realizes The Country Parson Dr. Harold Hyman Agrees: Demise of Personal Touch From Doctor Lamentable *Masonic Honors Weren’t Mentioned’ It was with great Intemt that I read your article relative to Ralph T. Keeling. However, it was a disappointment that several oL the Masonic Honors that this gentleman has earned were not mentioned. Mr. Kedling has been a Past Thrice lUustrious Master of f\>ntiac Council No. 3 since 1920 and a life member thereof. J. M. Walter TIM Conneil No. I Lake Orton Touth Is Making Our Nation Strong’ dur nation depends upon the kind of people who live In it. Youth is playing a big part in making us good, strong and dependable. Here’s a letter I felt I must share with my readers: “Your article on the value of house calls topk me back to my childhood with a feeling of nostalgia. My father was a pioneer doctor who came to Pittsburgh, Kan., In 1885 when Pittsburgh was just a wide place in the road. “At that ttmr, .the doctor was you can do the name thing In a ditferent way. For example, many occhestral conductors suffered this complaint until someone suggested that they dispense with batons and lead their musicians by merely waving arms. duX “"d something | Apparently, gripping the baton in **P*i*( ou*’ utiwl. a certain way produced shotilder Mra. Mai strain. 389 West Huron St. We read The Pontiac I entrrat the city to do something constructive about this. Father of Future Hockey Playero Jbn Berg Joalyn Lkter From Annett Chared by Reader T h r e> cheers for Bruce J. Annett. It> one of the best letters I have reaA In a long time. I cut it out and s^it it to The Detroit Newt. We airsick and tlrad of having our taxra raised all the time and new taitM added. \Mra. 8. Kerr Union Lake ‘You’d Better Check Property Boundses’ pervlsor’s plot, you’d better d and see II you still have as much \ property as you bbught or If the road to- now running mkhray through your living room. Mrs. T. W. Owrek Union Lake He practiced poychtolry tong before we knew the meaning of the word. He was good at curing many patient* with kindly advice and ongnr pUto. ’ Now, progress and cirpim-stance have changed this and the practice of medicine reminds me of a large factory where the patient is on an assembly line. . “He has not much more than a speaking acquaintance with the (foctor, who many times'does not • recognize him or remember what his trouble is until he looks over the case history that’s handed to him by a nurse. ★ * a "I do not know how'to change this but one thing I do know and that is that the patient and his family suffer.” To which I can only add a fervent “Amen." • * * *. Q — Would you discuss bursitis of the shoulder? Four men who work with me and I have been having a battle of it. and we don’t seem to get any relief. In moving our ihoulden. It feels like we have broken eggs 'inside. I have not been able to raise my arm ail thf way up sine July. My doctor toolc X-rays but he said there were no calcium deposits. Isn’t there something we can do. to get comfortable? A— For immediate relief, you might ask your doctor’* permto-aion to have the Jofatto washed Case Records of a Psychologist: Be Grateful to Dental Surgeons Week, so I have lany leading dental IQ can tell a about a Bum by simply watcMog what makes Hra laugh." there must be calcium present. And It may be possible to prevent reaccumuiatlons by Injecting a preparation that acts like ACTH. Btit of greater importance is prevention. * ★ ★ Since five of you in the shop have the same complaint! inflammation of this particular bursa must be the result of something you do oit the job. . ‘ y' Why don’t you analyte what Btralno you put ou your shoulders when you do whatever It to you do? Then toy to fl^nro out how By DR. dEORGi; W. CRANE CASE ^425: This is Children’s Dental Health Week, so I have been asked by many leading dental surgeons and college professors to focus on this famous event. Dentists are vitally concerngj with trying to PREVENT tpolhg decay. That’s why they I have cooperated! with the schoolsl to pneourage chit- dr, crANE dren to drink milk and eat raw vegetables. Aad la rdbent yean, the dea-ttoto hhve been the eMef spon-sora of fluoridation of clly water, for this seems to cut down about SS per ceut of decayed teeth ia ehildren nmred on such water. “But isn’t fluorine a terrible poison,” some folks have demanded, almost hysterically. In fact. Salt Lake City, Utah, vetoed the fluoridation of its city water by k 3 to 1 majority last fall, aw* . But the early pioneers In vaccinations against small pox were likewtae assailed by Ignorant ele-ments'in much the same.way the fluoridation advocates are attacked. Lo(d( at the simple facts, namely. that we add only ONE part of fluorine per 1,000,000 parts of wa- ter. Vet in Deaf Smith, f'ounty Texas, where tMs idea oHghiat-rd, the nati\’es have been drinking from • to 8 parts fluorine per parts water ever stare the white men settled there. And those Texahs have no ill effects from drinking 6 timeV the fluorine content that we use in CU- cago and some 4,000 other fluorU dation cities. Almost all of our drugs, and medicines could be called “poison” If you used big doses. 'Thus chlorine gas was a deadly poison in time of war, hut we have long used chlorine in city water to kill germs. We medics use morphine to reduce your pain after surgery, injecting about one-sixth of one grain. But If you took a few whole grains, you’d die, oo morphine to alM a deadly “potoon” If used In 80 to Iodine, though we have added snull amounto to table ■alt since 1M4. ’Therefore, don’t join the Ihqught-less mobs who scream against fluoridation on the inane ground that fluorine (in big doses) Is a deadly "poison.” I only wish our Chicago water had been fluoridated when our 5 Crane children were toddlers, /or (hey’d have much better teeth now. * ' ★ * * The American Medical Association has joined the American Dental Assoeiatidn in advocating the Fluoridation of drinking water, Just because that tiny trace of fluorine reduces cavities. In Balllmore, Maryland, after 1 years on fluoridated water, the S-year-olds entering- first graile had 75 pe^ e«nt less decayed teeth than other f-year-olds In cities tocUng flueitdaled water. And wlU you parents also dteck your youngsters right-now for that dangerous 6-ye^ molar. .Start counting from the midline in front, above and below. The 6th tooth from the front f| of ' them) are permanent teeth, not baby teeth as most ppients erroneously surmise. They are not replaced by a second let, so be sure your child doem’t let those 6-year molars decay. * * * Remember the magic dental Number M -4he «lh tooth from the mldUne which erupts at about the cMId'o Slh year. There will be 4 of these and thejr are one and only teeth, not. baby teeth that are replaced by aee-onda. Salute your dental surgeons who are often more jealous of your child’s having gtxid teeth than many thooghtlesw parents. So cooperate fully with your dental surgeons in this vital ^Idren's Dental. Health Week. iUoay* writ* to Dr. 0«m* W. Cran* In car* ot ItW PaoUaa %«■*, BooUao. MteMtan. mekwkis a 4 e*nl (tam^. iclt-addnaiod ■mtopo tod to cent* to eov*r tjrplai tod printing co*U idien y*u *«id tor hk p*yeiMlotlc»l chart* and paoipiilct*. (Copyright, INt) ran t* ontltled u* lor ropubU-Mwt printed in ----„ well at an *P ••rw* diapawhe* Til* Pimuae Prat* w dellrerad bv carrier for M conu a «**k: vh*re alBtltd In Oikitnd,' Oennee. blrlnz- I^V cSSStS^^tTtMy a 'roar ■ ttorwhere la WfllillMn and aU other pUe*4 In tho United 8Ut«« SM.M a I -I V THB PONTIAC PKESS> MONDAV. FP:BRUAKV 5, 1902 SKVKN Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths Mn. Mull R. FWttr (EUn), «. o( 1» WcnoMh Driw, die Saturday at 8L Joaapb Mtroy Hoapltal afttr aa Ulnaa U two day*. Survtvliig beaUtea her huabwid, ara thraa aout Marti R. Jr., Robart R. Royal Oak, Ivaa P. ot Eaat Lai» tag; oaa daughter Mn. Robul McDonough et Grand Raptdi. t brothan, WUUam L Roy o< Eaat Lanalng aad Jolai L. Roy of Haaldsbu graadchlldren. 8 a-rvlce will be 1:30 p.m. Wednaaday at Donelaan-Mina Funeral Home. Burial wiU follow at White Cbapel Memorial Oemetary. MM. CATnOUIfE K. aBORQE Mn. Oatfaarina E. Gaoaga. 3SM6 LuImt Rond, 8ou|^ifleld, ^onaudy ot PoaUne, died Satuc day Mt. Carmal Ho^ttal, Da-troit She waa M. Floyd and Clara of Pentiac, Clem et OU aty. Pa., and Ckaitayl Gaotga ot Fbeano, Oallf., and five daughtan, Mn. Laura Sovey of Clawaaa, Mn. Ida Wood of LI-v6nla, Mn. Haael Smith of Grartd < Blanc, Mn. Fraacea Stdn ot 8hj> Petanburg, Fla., and M Schnabel of.Detrall. Sevantean grandchildnn, dS great- grandchildren i Service will ba‘1 p.m Tuea^ > Grand River - Ava. nw Lahaar Road. Burial wlU ba at Ottawa CMnetery, Drayton Plalna. FRimiLDf L. RCNDUCK Franklin L. Hedrick, B, of Detroit, fonncrly of the Oaaa Del Rey Apartmenta here, died yea-teiday morning at the Arnold Home, Detroit. bar con Surviving la a daughter Mn. Fred Baldock of PHtaburgh, Pa. Sendee edll be 1 pm. at McFarland Funeral Home, 5«n MBS. SAMUEL W. MORROON OXFORD - Sendee for Mn. Samuel W. (Fannia F.) n, of 0B Pleaaant St., will be burial at White Chapel Oematery. MM WnXIAM E. NEAL Mn. WUIiam H. (Della) Neal, of 6038 Northrup St., Waterford. died Sunday at Pontiac General Hoapltal foUowing « twc<^ 111-neaa. She waa 7L Mn. Neal waa a member of the Church of Chriat of Dugger, bid. Surviving are a Clyde Lehman, with whom dull ved, one brother aad one %ter. Om granddaughter and a graU- Mra. Neal'i body will be u the SharpcGoyette Funeral Home in Clarkaton until 5 p.m. today at which time ahe wiU.be taken to the Nepkiik’a Funeral Service in Dugger, bid., where ahe wUl be until aervioe at 3 p.m. day at the Church of Chrtat there. WILLIAM r. OaSMAN Funeral aervice waa held 8 day from the Sparfca-Griffin Fu-neari Home tor former Pentiac realdent, WUIiam F. Oaaman, 75, 5^^ TOILIT TANK^ALL TBcATIIARPWdSHIOStL Survivora include a non, 'WUIiam the OrtonvUle Chapter, O.E.8. H. of SeatUe, Waah.; two 6 tern, Mn. Q. J. Appel of Pontiac In the GrtonvUle Baptiat Church. and Mn. L. Schlefler of Drayton Plabia. Alao aurvtving la a ntater, Mn. Ivan Beckwith of Seattle, MMEAMYA.nBI Mn. Harry A. (Thebna Marie) Tibbetta, SO, of 5660 Rowley St. Drayton Platna, died early thii morning at St. Jooeph Mercy Hoe-pltal. ^ luffered a prokniged ill- Survtvfaig beeidea Mra. Detlaff la another daughter, Mn. AveilU LyUe of Saginaw; three Eaten, Mra. Mattie Dahlman, Mira. Mae FrankUn and Mn. QraCe Taylor, all of Rocheater; 10 grandhUdren an 31 great-grandchlldreii. Mra. Tielta waa a member of the Flnrt Aaaembly of GOd Church. Survivora include her huaband, her parenu, Mr. and Mra. John Lowery of Lexliigtan, Ky., five A aervice wUl be held at 3 p.m. took hla blanketa to. a laundromat. WhUe there, he aaid he noticed that a waaher poatod to run 30 mbiutM ran dqly 17, and, a Aryer auppoaed to run 10 mln-ned off after aeven or Arrangemanta ara by the Voor-heea^ple Funeral Home. ^ ’ JOSRni MeOJRLAND % ATnCA TOWNSHIP - Service r Joaeph McCUOmd. SaOO ■ “ “ ‘ Tlbel:30p.ra. Imlay City Road, wtU at tha Baird FUneral peer. Burial wUl be In Peck Ometeiy. A carpenter, Mr. McCleUand died of a heart attack Saturday In Lapeer GOuaty General ELRRT O. SADLER ORTONVILLE -.Service for'El-ery G. Sadler, 13, formerly of Oti tonville, ^U be 1 p.m. Wedneoday C. F. Sherman Funeral Home here. Burial wUl be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. Sadler died thia morn at Saginaw Oateopathic Hoapltal foUowlng a heart attack. He had been an employe of the Pontiac Motor Dlvtaiao and waa a member ^ Ehgiea. He lived In Vi bealdea hla wife . are two aona. Jay of Rocheater and Enieat of Orton-vtlle; a daughter, Mn. Margaret Mynhler of Ariaonn and one grandchild. Two Dirly Blankets May Bring New Law Bataan Negotiator Dies ^«*id war ii, died Sunday. WUIlama had been vice preaident AKROM, Ohio Betty Crocker's Bisquick 39' Vermonf Maid Syrup 49' • Chicken •Turkey t Beef 5^99* VALUABU WmOUY COUPON ■Bl VALUABU I i| r lAvi wm B HJIb ItM. W, comi m CDupon tMd tl lAVI WITH THIS COUPON 5*59* Cdwdwi trae ttirv iDtoreay, M. it. GEXFIfSIER GIFTS U.S. No. 1 Michi^ All-Purpose Potatoes 25 ‘49< Plain or Buttermilk Dixie Biscuits R WITH GOL_D REI_l_ GIFT ST/XIVIRS ,'h ‘ lllli r , /' riAC iUtKSil. MONUAV. FEIfttl^ARV Dixie Highway Mishaps Injure Two Pedestrians An Al-ye«rold Watoionl Town-■hip boy wu m o( two p«dM> IrlMi iRlou^y tajurad yetlerttay on the Dixie Uigbw«^ ■ * A # PontlM 86tte poUot nid Timothy 8. lyMi, lOB ol Mr. aad Mm. John B. 1>hii of «M nr-her Rood. Nn Into the poth of a ctf drlveii by Mil. Thiteee autth. 41, FBnt, on Dixie Hl^iway near —- - _ The TyMB boy, wbe eoHciiwd ■ fnicterrd pelvio, le nipottod le fair roildllion at Ponthw h Mefcyv Hoepital today le Jamei F. Johneon. 40, « Meryi-vlUe truck driver who wm etruck hy e cur while diiecthif tnlDc at the eoene of an aoddeot. la mute Lake Townahip, Robert J. LaMi.ln. 40^ HUlcreit HiahlmMl Townahip, waa hurt when hia car went off Pontiac Lake Road and etruck a tree near Bnendel Road at 10:30 p. m. Saturday. '♦ ★ e Laah toid Sheriff e deputiei lighti from an onoomtaig car blinded him temporarily and cauaed him to kwe control of the car. He la in aatiafactory condition at Pontiac general Hoepital. A car that had ______________ waa being pullad out by a wrecker en Dixie Highway nai)h of TWe-graph Road about 10:30 p. ■tale police, waa hokttnc flam In hie handa to direct traffle around the dMMe. 00; u nafian St. etrark ~ thea ma Me the r tewed# pekoe eald, I bei« heli^at the Mre. Ruth VenDevelder, 33, le In aatiafactory oanditlon at St. wu inlored In a thraaaar oeUielon on Dixie Highway at Oraafe Hall Road In Grovaland Townahip. 010.T iNdinr Mra. VanDevelder wae a pne-aenger In a oar driven by her hue-band WUliaai. 8. 40SSO 14 Mile Rt|ui. Walled lake. Moves to liquidate Michigan Surety Co. Way Pay Strike Idles 3 Million London Workers LONDON m ^ About three million engineering worfcere went on a one-^ atrike for tnore pay today, ckMlng plbnta making everythbig from pine to jet planee. It wae one of the worat ebutdowna to bit the nation alnce World War U. But tMe apnwHag elty waa ■pared the ordeal of aaeOMr glaU traffle Jam when tnuwpert weikere ealled ett a eabway and arglag ef their leadere. Iheir M-btur walkout a week age pnralyeed Leaden. But more trouble, loomed qn the labor front he unione girded for a campaign agabiet thf govem-ment'e wage freeze, deeigned to improve Brttain'e competitive po-eitton in foreign mariteU. In 30 dtlee union leadere called mate meetinge to aeaeae rank-end-flle BUpport for more deftpnt ac-neKlay walkmitB Find Policeman Beaten to Death 4th Wisconson Offiewr to Be Slain on Duty in Post SevBn AAonths BURUNGTON, Wli. m-A 39-yearold poUoe eargeant wae found beaten to death in hie aquad car •t the edge of a water-filled quarry * ' y. He waa the fourth Wle-In police ofOeer to be dain on duty during the paat eeven .Centner Bemaid Gvenaon eaid that Sgt. Anthony Eilem had been bruUlly bealeh with his own heavy flaihli^t. that hit neck had been Hie service revolver wae mtaelag. The bleedstalaed ogaad guardlag Bw edge e( Ibe gaarry made le eraah t Me bardaa Me the deep water. Officers fh>m a number of Ra-ctne County communities had been senrehlng four hours for EUera after the sergeant failed to re-to a radio call at 3 a.m.> They found hia car at the quarry site, on the outakirte of the dty of Radne about 20 milee from Burlington, at 6 a.m. * * 0 * mirr’a tom uniform Jacket waa touad amid eigne of a struggle baalde state Hl^way H near the Burfington dty lirnhe, only a block from the Eilere family home. Hf Annoyed the Judge TAIPEI. Formosa lies Yang Yung-hsu, 25. compfained that U kept touting her around, proposing Ma Sees Union BackinAFL-CIO t LmtE ROCK, Aik <11-t-Teamsters Union Presidont Jamet R. Hoffa prSdlds that the Teameters will rejoin the AFL-CIO soon and that the parent union’s president. George i^eany, will not poet much lo^r. * * ♦ Hoffa said Sunday that the Teamsters would he back In tha, AFLdO “the latter part of thb ear' or the ^ly pul of next w." ‘He said Meany, who wa mental In exprlHng the Teamsters from tbs AFVCIO, “will be gone It like all men bbo tall to carry New York Oty replaced PMIa- JUNK CARS AND TKUCKS WANTED -HIGHEST PRiaS PAID- W e Pick I 'p FE 2-0200 • SPECIAL • THIS WEEK ONLY 6-30' Cuftord Filltd DONUTS o» Site f. M. 29 N. 3tfi«ew. Dmmmwa IQ IB State Insurance I today to Hqnldata the al-. insolvent Michigan Surety onee one of the state’s largest /and moat reapeded casualty com- Colburn asked Ingham Coaoty Circuit Court to appoint a recHvar to diaaolvt the 47-year-old company, which operatad at one time in 8 stalaa and did a 8 miOioa annual burinaaa fai surety and ball bonds. Tbe rsmailsitnasr saM the 1 “By the mltkfle of February, there will be no usable cash to keep the company in operation,” Cpibum aaid. The firm’s latest financial statement allows a 3100,000 cash balance but all but about 8.000 is held In trust and cannot bt used for expenses, he said. A 8.000 payroll for 17 employes here U due Feb. IS. I Tommy Thompson Tommy Thompson, gen-•rol monoger soys, "Everybody Knows about that better deal at Shelton's on new Pontiecs and Buicks. But keep in. mind those beautiful new cor trode-ins cin the used cor lot just :r(^ the street. Ail ore conditioned, guaranteed gnd ready for your inspection. Before you buy, pirase see our selection. Remember, only 8 miles for that better deal." SHELTON Pontioc-Buick ROCHESTER 22iMaieSf, OL 1-8133 oll-purpose shelving RUGGED 5-SHELF STORAGE UNITS 488 SlIWI shoe cleorance! A Wide Selection of LEATHERS ond SUEDES HIGH ond MEDIUM HEELS in This Collection Boy's Flannel Lined Light Weight Spring Jacket • Heevy-goufe Steel • Boked enamel finish • AdiealeUe shelvet Ideal for goroge, bose-•ment, business — these hon^ units will solve ony of tOl storage problems. Eoch shelf holds up to 300-lbs. Ladies . . . now is the time to buy those lovely Fashion Stride shoes you've been wanting to get. A real buy at this low Montgomery Word clearance price. Sizes 5-10; AA-B, >Jot oil sizes in every style. Wemfs Cewpfel* Hat^wan OaportaMi save now on crew sox MEN’S SOFT ORLON®-NYLON BLEND Long wearing cotton work sox, with nylon reinforced heel and toe. Wash-dry fast. White only. 5 Wards Coapl*to Ike* Department stripe bond towels 5?. 2'-59* Reg. 59c WASHCLOTH 2 for 29c P i m, M N m m ^tr SPECIAL PURCHASE |44 Wards Boys' jocket, zip front. All cotton shell lines with cotton flonnel for these chilly spring days. Knit wristlets,, col I or, waistband. Washable, too. Cute houndstooth check on4-deep jxekets". A real playtime fovorite with ony little boy. S 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONPAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1962 Grandparents Reveal Big Marriage Secret WILSON -t- By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Cute blonde little Yvette Mlmleux of Hollywood rarely played a slick trick on us so-called journalists when she kept denying she was married—now it turns out her husband has grandparents in Brooklyn. And Abraham Goldsteins, of Brooklyn, are like all grandparents—they're proud of the grandchildren. So while Yvette, who has Greta Garbo’s passion for privacy, was keeping her marriage a secret, the grandparents were telling close friends what a beautiful smart girl their grandson, Evan Borland Enger, had married out in California. They mentioned it to somebody who mentioned It to, Blabbermouth here. _______ I phoned Mr. Goldstein, a retired insurance underwriter— and he admitted that Yvette is their granddaughter (by marriage i and he addpd: "And she's a beautiful, lovely girl." He and his wife Sylvia spent some time with Yvette and their grandsbh — "who’s In a type of show business” — apd YYette, the cl^armer, was ecstatic about Grandmother Oold-etela's delicious cakes. Well, they’re. ecstaUe about her, apd I'm ecstaUc about Upping away mote o|_the Mlmleux Mystery, so hurrayl Pretty Paula Stewart says husband I Jack Cartei;^“deservea somf kind of med-|kl” — he bought his mother-in-law a mink coat . . . Rita Hayworth’s cosy again with Gary MerrUl, who’s been phoning from Chicago......Hollywood wags say that Sinatra’s new theme I song’ll be ”lt’s so nice to have a Prowse ^ around the house . . .” BBardot’s mama will manage Brigitte’s new perfume company. (It’s hoped BB’li oome here In Aognst-to launch it . . . Dlahann Carroll _________was guest of honor at a Detroit Charity PAULA party—and won the door prise. THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: ’Taffy Tuttle says she’s not worried about the raise In postal rates—she’s already sent out her ’62 Christmas cards. WISH I’D SAID THAT: A ’’born executive” is a fellow whose father owns the factory. EARL’S PEARLS: Definition of a supermarket: A convenient spot that enables a woman to go broke in one store. (Copyright, 1962) MONTGOMERY WARD LOOK 4- >)- WHAT AN OFFER I BIG n\ir PORTRAIT Semi-Life Size Bust Vignette UNCONUTIONAILY 6UAIUNTEED tolls For $095 99 c PLUS SO( MANOLINO, WRAPPINO A INSURAN( LOOK-"SPECIAL” You Will Also Receive Your Child's Portrait On A ' DESK CALENDAR Absolutely FREE! Ag« 5 W«ekB to 12 Yomra UMin iPer Child ■ 2 Per Family Family Groups Taken , ^ SERVICE AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 1 TO 7 ONLY! Op«n 9:30 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. PONTIAC MAU SNOPFINB CENTER 409 North Telegraph Rood GOOD EATING-and a GREAT BUY! 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AH iwIms in this rkets TutMhT* Feh Ath la eH Eastera MleUfM Uf 6 89< 3 ™ 1*00 SWANSDOWN Cake Mixes lwaon flake, banana, ORANOBCOtONUT, YELLOW, DIVIl’S POOD, PUDOKOCONUT 3 |«00 49< YOUR CHOICE AOP if^nd 4^^ 99< Fnrit Cocktail or Bartlett Pears 4 99* C 16-OZ. .regular or scented . iestoil it. •'( 3.\ ' J. ■S' - ] THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY Jj, 1962 \ EtEVEN .'M*. ‘.w; WNTGOMRYWARD grand . ^ ooenin 3 temperature gas dryer er 3 cycle 12-LB. AUTOMATIC WASHER chcice * Flow-through drytr * Built-in filtor * Shut-off timer Low in price, yet< high in drying efficiency. Flow-through drying method mokes every garment come out bright ond fluffy — clothes ^are dried just right! Efficient Kreen traps lint, colors stay bright and clear. Offers an ideal heat for any fabric! GIANT-SIZE DELUXE WASHER • Built-in filter keeps woter free of oil lint • Sofe, thorough multi-speed rotating ogitotion 0 Doulirtg, stoin-resistont durocron finish 3 cycles give any fabric from tough denims to tender wash 'n' wear customized laundering care. It's so oosy — just dial the cycle you need, the Signature does the rest. 4-cycle 3-temp ELECTRIC • 3 heot selections o Built-in lint trap • 10-lb. copocity 4 cycles give all fabrics tender drying care. Ideal drying temperatures for all items laundered. Smooth side drum provides sofe, gentle action. Regent Coronet STEREOPHONIC - HIGH FIDELITY Compoct Deluxe HIGH FIDELITY TAPE RECORDER Webcor Regent II HIGH FIDELITY TAPE RECORDER 229” Now you con own ond/record your own Stereo and standard Monaural tapes. Wonderfuliysimple operqte. Three ^eds, two 5^' ^, speakers, 16-watf dual channelMONEY DOWN amplifiers, many more features. ■ '/ ; ^ ■' . ' . Webcor's triumph in minioturizqtion. Features . include record safety lock; 0095 duol trock recording; 2 speeds; ZVa ips • /y for voice, radio, TV; ond microphone^ .. _ with built-on stand. >95^ Features include 3-speed pushbutton record and playback; dual- m track* recording; full-fidelity re- I cording head.T professional type i 0 editing key, digital tope counter, See It at Wafds! / M TWKX.VE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRU^Y 5^ 1062“. To tht ONE MAN in TEN Mtmft UffMt T« i«nlM 117 Awm MM IMM I«Mm 82 WEST HURON ST. — PONTIAC WMkAiTt: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sat. aarf San. 9-S PhMM FI 4.A22S ■NO AFFOINTMINT NICISSARY| Health Service Plans Research Lab in Ghana WASHINGTON .(UPI) Sum«>«l G«n. Luther L. IVrry announced today that the U.S. labile Health Service plana to eatabliifa a medical reaearch laboratory In Ghana. Ghana. The project, first of its kind In Africa, will be undertaken In collaboration with Ghana’s National Institute of Health and Medical Research. Cancer, malaria, tuberculosis, leprosy and other diseases will be studl^. Work So They Cah Play HARLAN. Ky » - People of nearby Loyall are workihK hard so they can play. The community, which has never had a park, building (Fie with v and cash donatkmB. tadTtrtiMnitiiO fSitiSUISIailay Mi phn aCLL-Am M-Mb MMnHn TiShi w aacS aMMU KMtp ^*yi|rA*ss rdk Ji« It *#•. Imp pMtai «• KLL- ass, arwtltiirtTil. V. a«t msIo RECO Troubled Earth Intact After Hindu *Doomsday\ By HCNBY B. BBADBHKR Niw DELHI, Indlsi (AP) -Serpent Rahu had his fun but tht world-^^beaet as If may be earthly troublee-was still intact today. "Dodmsday weekend" passed without the horrible calamities predicted by Hindu soothsayers that' sent millions of frightened and Nepalese believers to prayer meetings. The evil Rahu swallowed the sun as predicted today. But things jame back to normal after an eclipse lasting about three minutes. rRKDHTKU (!AI.AMrriKS Hindu astrologers had predicted great calamities when six planets—Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and Earth—moved conjunction with estch other the aon-aod the moon over weekend. It 1iippoiaL,.only every century or two. ★ ♦ ★ For astronomers it was an intriguing scientific 'phenomenon. But for millions who believe in inauence of the stars it was frightening. Some feared the worst may still come. Keith Robertson, Britain’s l,00ti-member Afthei 'Society, spent a cold aiM ra ‘ night with aeores oi his followers stop a mountaiti praying. BIG FLIP* He came down to warn: "I believe that very soon the world will ‘big flip' when the poles will change places with the equator. And mind you When the ‘big flip' comes., 75 per cent of the world’’ population will be killed." The path of the eclipse lay over le South Pacific, and Guinea was plunged into daik-ness. ♦ A It was so dark I could not see numbers of my camera. Jim Huxley, editor of the New Guinea Times. Dogs &trked, roosters crowed and native papuana on the island hid in their huts until the shone again. REPORT surerxs Teams of foreign scientists gathered at Lae, coast of' New Guinea, and a Japanese team reported complete success in observing the eclipse. Rahu was right on time as he reports of the catastrophes aatrologera had predicted. Swaml Yugiraj, one of 250 Hindu holy men conducting prayer meetings in New Delhi, mourned: "What a terrible time the serpent Rahu has chosen to devour' our protesting sun god." ATTEND SAORlfICEB In Ahmedabad, capital of QbJer-at State, about 900,000 Hindus attended propitiatory fire sacrtflcM conducted by 1.200 Brahmin rlests. Indian airlines operated one flight to Bombay without a jdiigle Mtaaenger. Other planes in the irea flew almost empty. Katmandu, capital of Nepal, .ooked ,Uke a ghoat town except around the Hindu, temples. All shops were closed and streets deserted. Fearful of . earthquakes that would bring their homes tumbling down on them, thousands of Nepalese took shelter in tents. slither^ I Proposing Arts Goldberg Offers Plan for Six-Way Council to PromotR Cultur# WAS1.IINGTON (UPI* - Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg today proposed a six-point program to dwiop the adrts in this country BO that it cannot be said Americana "know how to work but not how to Ilvo.” Goldberg said en envisinnad a s|x-way partnership to build "an art-conauming and art-conadous public.’" He railed lor a Joint effort oa the pert of the pehlte. patiSWi end benelartois, ^vale eral government. Goldberg, in prepared testimony before a select house ed'icatlnn Bubi-ommittee, . speeifleally en-(torsed the proposed creat^ of p federal a)rts council. \ ' BTATVB OF CUL'niRB He said the council would be of 'infinite value in informing us of the status at which we have rived in our cultural life and of courses we m»y pursue to enricli in thia life." The aeerelary aeld a sMy ef the eHs ahaald precede aay fed- grants matched by the reetpl-eats. Goldberg said this method of aid would bring many levels of government. private institutions and Individuals into the picture. Hiu. he added, would make it more likely that th? artists themselves will retain control over their work. Preu Manager Dies NEW YORK (AF)-Max Rock-man. 73. retired subscription manager of the sNew Yoilr Herald Tribune, died Saturday. Roctahan, who retired three weeks ago, had been with the HqraM THbene 43 years arid had senmd as ctreula-tton manager and promotion manager before becoming subscription manager.. ■‘ik Is There A Baby In Your Home? IF THERE is YOU NEED GEE DEPENDABLE FUEL OIL SERVICE! The colder the weather the more you'll appreciate Gee’s de|»ndoble automatic delivery of better quality fuel oil as your home remains worm and comfortable which promotes o greater degree of health for every fhember of your family. For over 37 years more and more Pontiac and Oakland County residents hove switched to Gee and COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION. _________________ S SURE-BE SAFE-CAU. GEE TODAY-DIAL FE S-8181 NO MATTER WHtRE YOU LIVE •.. Gas's fisst of nsw, modsrn CMC trucks, mstsr squippsd for occurocy and radio diipofchsd to givs you' bettor ssrvico diitributs bsttsr quality foal oil in Ponfioc, Drayton Plains, Waterford, Clorkiton, Orion, Auburn Haights, Bloomfisid Hillli, Kssgo Horbor and th# surrounding orso. SAFETY, WARMTHJ COMFORT AND HEATING ECONOMY IS AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE-DIAL FE 5-8181. SEl lleit .^^^STOR MIRACLE MILE 5 Winter fiptciflfci Ladies’ Reversible Jersey All Weather Coats Solid laminated Jersey reverses to print poplin. Regular $19.95 Children's Snow Suits Sizes 2 to 4, 3 to 6x Reg. to $14,98 Ladies' Famous Brand Shoes All colors^, all sizes, all heal heights, not every style in every size. Reg. to $10.99 $^00 Use A Lion Charge T :,/ :> ' . ' • . y. - :■! I ■ , THE PONTIAC PHESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 5, im r THIRTEEN It's Politics, Politics on Stockpile'Issue Horit Buchholz a Dad H(Xi.ywp05 (AP) 7- Mm. Bvn nmnooMonr — PoiMa hM iMQMd Mivtoof t^t h* hepm rmrad tta lov^ hMd in «MMa.lnMwm»u »--— towly hMd in itoekiito. tUtatkii am^ Uiiililntloii h«n3liig of tlw mri” In Wailiinglaa. 'pabiK proom. num nther am* At his iMt Ksna^ _ wfoS __________________ Muait SymiaKton. to esnduflt a probo of Aa stockp'*' ' M.4 'pOlnK proiiain, map jprther '—toe uao aaahat RapuWi- ns«a aa Aa taoa al Hi a yaanc powar, SymiBKlao was pamalally m charga at tba atopli^llng pro- The WaAlngton Evening Star In tta news story on JPK’s press Demands Rocky Prove Charges Wagn«r Aiki Gotrarnor to teck Up Ckiimt on Milk-Doting luuo MEW YORK ll»-Mayor Robert F. WiAwr bu catted upon Gov. Nelson A. Rockefettar to pnwa that vinagar had been Injected In some New York Qty milk to turn # ♦ • fas quotad as aay-tag ki Etanira Satunky night that ha thought some It sour in about 10 minutes." IT aanM net ba aMretary. Rabart L. MaoMaaaa. I bad ^bl»~«i laaaa Is Aa emergsd as perhaps the state’s urged resumption of milk-dating. A Maw Toek Oty srilaaam hwed by the Rspabtteaa asn-trsM state legWatara la IMO. Groups opposing milk-dating, including moat farmers, claimed that transportation and handling practicas had become so efficient that Ating seas unnecessary to Rockefeller recommended repeal of the prohibition against i Atbig in his recent roessaa Presents Liiiraiy to Miami Synagogue tor who has dedicated much of his me to making books available to to Beth David Cbngregation. Harry amons, tt, started collecting contributions for the library In Simons gave the library keys Sunday.to Philip Sdiiff. president of the congregation, and in turn rsoehfad a laminated scroll of the bosid's raeoluthm nsming the H- * it it Simofis began a drive in 1921 for free school books tor SMnan-doah children and Ae project went through two years later. He has been a member of BeA David .tor more than 90 yean. Still Feels Fine After Passing 100th Birthday CXXLUMBIA. Ky. (AP)-W. J. IfBill) Banka turned 100 years old Sunday and he’s feeling fine, thank ydti. "I eat giwd, I sleep good, I feel good and some of the women even sty I hwk good.’’ Banks observed. He walks a mile to town once or twice a week. He says he haa smoked a carton of cigarettes a week ‘‘ever rtnoe they were a nickel a padc.” Plan Walking Cxcovator MOSCOW (AP)-Et«ineen Ae Ukraine designing j^ant conUnue at chslrmsn of As Joint I. Byrd to an arch-conserva-on naany oooa ‘ and omiANt to I ptokAa Uha tuna. Furthar, Byrd llftod no ato gla ftngsr to help sisct Kmuwdy to At preshtoney. Byrd, who first came to Senate at the birth of Ae new deal in 1933. hu at least one unique 8p dartHoptod to OOP regularly suppUgs Byrd’s commit- sefly, Ae iSBetor paektobly Bate al KemwdFa obaige The aristocratic Virginian to a laatar of understatanwnt. Bo. to Kennody. Dte Prealdeat should therefore be able td apprsciato tha wry humor in the letter he haa I damned the ' doak of that auiroui ^ ________ stochpUlng program, ao Byrd moakly asked him to "remove the oecracy label’’ from-the stockpiling German aetorhuiband wtth a B pound. IBounce boy Sunday at Chdara of Lebanon Hoapltal. Tha diHd. named Christopher, is the I sahstmaew "J wsPM he very lad Indeed to reeaptare this heps, that wd aalgM Aarsleri aat If yoi were korr before ino.. EUim BUTO WASH i« w. n«iM a*nM Vran nmMM I next year and a halt 4 I prMcntly to be one up on .. -------------#,budget. Mm to the battle of the. But JFK is also a .toaster at tnsuranoe _poUoy (tomad to age M). 'You nay earn to hi ftoal No ono win aan on you. You handio the anUra tran»-aotlon fay nail with OU> AMKRIOAM, tba oanpany onB Wgmnt INSURANCE Tmr out Ato ad and an^ OU Amarlean inanraaoa Oa.. dlOO Oak. Dept, unn, Kansaa City M. MO. No olSgsItool goes farther te make friends - r?' , 'V I’OLUTKKy THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, t^RUARY 5, l062 At Brooklyn Maswim Mr. and Mrs. Tommie V. Jackson of Clarkston announce'the engagement of their daughter Ruth Ellen, Woman Heads Primitive Arts Mr G4V PAinunr Image of ■ Yet, «t SO. the trim bhmde rank* u one of the youngeri cureton In the country. hMOMef than atUactkoas la tha world. AnMrica, tha Middle Ehat, In. dia, AMoa, gouthaaateni Aala, ■ a than the Chl- primltlve art* and new world nUhState Band CUnic, held aniMilly at the college will bring to the campus high school musicians from the eastern section of the state for instruction, rehearsal and performance under outstanding directors and clinicians. For Fomily Fun (NEA) — Small, appliance-style hydronic (hot water heating) boilers enable homeowners to remodel basements into useful, attractive family (Jou/1/ WeMttg ■1^^ PkA#A#innnki, Is ^la^IuronStrllt Mear General Hotpital FE 4-3669 Photograph! lost q lifotimo Have them taken with T.L.C. by EVENING APPOINTMENTS Tims PsyineiH Phiai Avsilabls wHh Weekly er Mentlily Peymeiitt HoBMWBBif' Folides • nre • UdriRty • Aete • Bwilwy H. R. MCNOLIE INSURANCE AGENfY CaU FET-7858 49 Mt. Clemens Street, Pontiac H. K. NkhoHe. PMiidsr H. D. NkkoUe. Owner Pre-Season CLEANING SPEQAL! AU Hou$ehold Item* • Dmperie* • SHpeovere • Blankets • BedspretdH 15% Off FOXdry CLEAN ........ Joined memlwro of the Style . Steppers square dance club Saturday evening at, Willis School to celebrate the group’s 10th anniversary. Guest callers were Norman Seay of Farmington, Randell May ot Rochester, Bsuce Allen of Lake Orion and Charles Shafer of Pontiac. Edwin Farr is club caller. * ♦ ♦ Highlighting the everting was acceptance of the gavel by Carl Selser, new club president, frqm Robert Schender, Fopr 'hundred g tended, a -aeebpt* R'aliaivAmerican Qub following the Saturday morning r*up-ttals of Nancy Patricia Clifton to Frank A. Lozzi in St Bene- dict Chuqsh. Rev. Richard • Pehnenherr yerfwvuted the - - carried gold-sprayed an- Win at Bridge ; find ., || Boiu 4 and MRS. CUR'ns a. CRAWFORD Pontiac-Bonneville Duplicate Bridge Club met Saturday evening at the Hotel Waldron with five tables in play. ■ * * ♦ Winners for the event were Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Small, place; Dr. and Mrs. Carl Bolton, Mrs. Charles Patrick JU Guy, Mr. and Mrs. Claric Teller and Mr, and Mrs. James Sweeney, second, third, fourth and fifth, respec-Uvely. Thomas A. CUfton Drive. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Anthony Lossl of Detroit and'the Mlo Mr. LossL Designed along prlnoeoa lines, the bride’s gown of Mrs. Donald T. Ciatlce. of Lossl, of Btraalagham. tured a Watteau back above a chapel sweep train. The Empire bodice waiT styled with lavaller neckUne and kaig. dig Hilo tha past the thing, you have read about come Walking an ancient . in the nilna of a city buOt before the Christian uAttB , through time Instead of space." Port of Mrs. Roamthsl’s job as curetor.wll| be to continue the ^the-sDot research ihp has been doing since 1961. 6 ♦ * Mrs. Roeenthal was In Paris She carried gold-aprayed staphyllums and Ivy and wore a bouffant veil ef champagne illusion caught by a cluster of gold room and paarla. Moss green peau^aatln tor Rodger CUtUm, Grand Rapids. Ihoipu CUfton, Detroit, and Anthony Lossl Jr., brothers of the bridal couple, and iparvin Capesao, DstroM. vacation from Skidmore COI-^ when an expedition first J“*»d her. The Ecole de where rfit WM sponsoring an tx-PjdlHoi^Inlo the Middle East. a northsm aU lodge, the new a gold from thrir beadpiacea of ftow-era : Your friends are right. Your daughter’s dolls should not have been put away until she herself Initiated it. Older glria do not actually "play” with dollt, they Just like to keep them around for ornamental — and sentimental DEAR AMY: My problem concerns my mother-in-law by a previouji marriage, my first husband being deceaaedk She has become "Chief »-ting Bull” In tny bduee. She pops in on me before noo»- wlth no notice-and she siU here until 8 or 9 o’clock at night It aeema she always comes when I have eomethlng else planned. Not wanting to attend her. I quietly cancel my plans and attempt to enter-Uln her. She doesn't have many friends, and goes practically nowhere, so she Is not very good company. How can I get her to let me know in advance when she’s coming? Her vislU are becoming imnv frequent. SITTING BULL’S VICTIM DEAR VICTIM: Take "Sitting Bull’’ by the horns and ask her to let you know when 0 you can plan she Is oomb your time. When you "quieuy cancel your pinna, you give her the mistaken impression thkt she can visit any old time because you, too. Just sit around doing nothing. * ★ ♦ CONFIDENnAL TO MOLLY: Yes. money talks. But it doesn’t always talk cents! * A A How Is the world treating William Christie and Mrs. Vinton Ball are in charge af Ubie and door priiaa reapactively. Serving on the reberiimeiit committee wM be Mrs. RuUbl CsntoiMiiy, Mrs. Vidal Gon-zalea and Mrs. Cowley. On March 4, films of the New Orleans' MardI Gres will be shown at tha UJ. Vster- of the bridegroom. Announce Betrothal Janrt Lotdae, to Darsrtn D. aon of the Robert C. Review Handbook During Workshop Members of Epallon Chapter. Alpha DelU Kappa Sorority, re-vlewed the ADK handbook at That trip, primarily fbr ex-Ploratlon and excavation In MAM In Israel’s Osrmel Bfountalns, resulted In diseav-epr of bones of a Neanderthal Man. The bones were "75.680 to 100.600 years old," she said. 'It was a fairiy importanf find." fhibaequent expeditions have taken her into the BlbHcal ruliis In Egypt, Turicey and rile was a t.„ dent at the University of Ari-sona field school lor training archaeologists: and most recently Into Southern Mexico’s Guerrero Mountains, nioed Jimgie country. A NEW YORR OIRf, Mrs. Rosenthal grew up in noral Park, N.Y., where her parents. Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Fuller, still live. Aftor her studies at the University of Arizona, she Joined the Brooklyn Museum on a training In 1967, she was montH, head curator of the Creek acknowledged recent A small donatkai tor National Commander Mrs. Raymond Jofyoe’s travrihig expaaaea to the official dedlcatlan of tha In the home of Mrs. Genevieve Van’t Roer on Dbde Highway. Mn. Nelson VanAtta was co- The 1902 budget, presented by Mn. Gordon Rice, finance JMy, can of The Pontiac For Abby’o booklet. "How Tb Have A Lovely Wedding," tend 50 oents to Abby, The Pontiac Prerident, Mn. John Lan-don, announced tha otate dinner at Ann Ari»r. Hostess lor the March meeting will be Mrs. R. M. Osmp-bell of Drayton plalna. make at least a couple of expeditions a year —the next one to begin In March on a Ford Foundation grant. A A A It will take her and a group of "three or tour" back to the Guerreros, where earlier explorations have revealed ruins estimated as old as ^000 B.C. and as young as 1600 A.D. AH of her expedifions have she said, suits her fine. "Ilila,” said the blue^yed blonde, '’is a wonderful way to keep a suntan.” SayLavery-Todd Vows at St. Dunstan Chapel St. Dunstan’s Chapel, Christ Church Cranbrook. was the setting for the vows of Penelope Todd to .Robert F. Lavery, Friday evening. Rev. Robert P. Patterson, associate rector, performed th^ double ring candlelight ceremony. The Ashby G. Todds and the Lome F. Laverys, all of Birmingham, are parents of the newlyweds. the prayer book held by the her Sabrina neddine and i Empire waistline extended Into a floor-length skirt of impressed pleats. Her bouffant veil of iUiiskm feU from a soft Dior rose of silk organza. Maid of hoqor Nancy Roberson, Birmingham, apiwared in ta and carried a cascade of miniature yellow carnations, Ivy and ye^How sweetheart roaes. .iWlNB WEAR BLUR Mazy and Laura Oryson, twin daughters of Dr. and 5lrt. Peter Giy*«, Ann Arbor, wore blue silk organza and held Golden Age Club to Meet Friday ’ The Golden Age Clttb of Wa-terfmri will meet Friday evening at the Watertord Community center- Refreshments will be served and cards played following the 7:30 for everyone over 60. Sorority Sets Meeting Alpha Sigma Nu Sorority has slated its next meeting Feb. 26 at Physlciana Laboratory, Pontiac SUte Bank Buildiiig. Among those attending will be new members M«. William Christie and Mrs. Maynard J. Peters. Lillian Mortz is the newly inetalled president of the group tor 1962. Asidsting Miss Mortz are Mrs. William G. Looney as vice president; Mrs. Frmk M. Jagwilch, secretary; Mrs. Leonard C. McKinley, treasurer; and Mrs. Daniel J. Hack- A Whimgical Thought * Run Teen Catering Service? Vrtght, Garden City, served as best man. Ushering were Edmond C Peters, Royid Oak and Earla J. Mo-Garvab, Ann Arbor. After the church deception. the newlyweds left for a rid honeymoon at Aspoi, Crio> Hie bride is a graduate of Stephens College, Columbia, Mo., and her husband will com^e work on hia master’s degree at Unive^ty of Michigan. Rose beige cymbidium orchids a«»nted beige lace for Mrs. Todd and a sheath Aass of gold brocade tor the bridegroom’s mother. By BUm MILLBTT Ncwspai^ BataiBriaa AssodaUen A nntrlttonlri wim the Agrleuliure Dapartment has adriaad parents to let their taan-agars eat whatever they want for breakfast. If they want spaghetti, give It to ’em, she says. If they want a hot dog or hamburger with their orange Juice Id the morning — then let ’em have tho hot dog or the hamburger. That may be fine from a nutritionist’s point of view — but the mother of a large family may not take to the Idea so kindly. ★ ★ ★ OettlBg ene breakfast menu ready for a ftually Is ehete eneoidi for aseat mattaan — wUhaut having to oatar Ja ^ wblma at taon-agers. Besides, teen-agers get catered to . enough already. To keep them frcrni having to thare any more than necessary In the give and take of family living many teen-agers have their own telephones, their Own ears, their own room for entertaining, their own record playmrs and television sets. .So why should parento bo asked to eater to them oven further hy en-eouraglng them in silly food whims? WHY CATBB TO WHIMS? It bacon and eggs and toast and orange Juice Is the menu the rest of the family wants for breakfast — surely a teen-ager can sit down at the table and eat the same thing as his parents and his younger brothers and sisters. it it it \ The nutritionist’s Idea Is that If yOu don’t let teen-agers eat the kind of breakfasts thty want they may not eat any breakfast at alL But what’a wrong with parents saying "lat what Is put before you” the way parents used to do. Instead of saying meekly ”If you want hot dogs for breakfast Just say so. Or maybe today you would like spaghetti or e nice, big hamburger”? There's more food for thought. In Ruth Mlllett’s new booklet, "Ups’ on Teen-Agers.” Mail 25 cents to Ruth MiUett Reader Service, In care of T^e Pontiac Press. P. O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station. New York 19. N. Y. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY S, 1962 FIFTE^IN Admit That We Can't Like'Everybody Dm Mn. Uwrmoet , My S-y«a^a boy ihouio “Go l«w*y“* <0 oayoiw who rii«i kio tfuintthtt woo^ySISng__ Ht dUUked her and once tried to ■ho oun* hi hvm church. ho yeUa “Go away” to •varybody arho oonw to the door. I katw triad to Bsaha a ■anw jgr I o< ap^m H and MM to” bdi It doaai't woriL immm Otot Know what? I think ok a $tcnt pUvm kt ^ IghMl ivdMiM od yoor iSoi boy. I thbik you, loo, w«iitod that grandmothar aWay. aweh to all right with me. Tlw quMttaii to: “Why ton’t H all right wMh your a a a Nobody la obllgad to tov« r«la* tlvat that wa aia raanlrad to «b> tertain. So what about looUag ■tralght at tha probability ithat ot hto _ •o and did not data to mnmT If you wn laak at It atralgM, m aaa Ml Ma hiMi ' itoaeiartoay. Woo wa atol hotok IdM . . They had reawited each other and tha world that had tarood them to atay ttgathar. They lad Head thUto dog to wyaoaa the ‘ tfllty they bad beat atrald tofaol do aot havo to teU people to go lor me any more. It I don't them hare, I will teU them mymU. It you don't want them hare, pat go o0 in tha yard and play until they leave." And U be them by action. WDLLBi A ULmr It Wfll bo, I axpact, aomething of a raliet to him to toam that you are eapahto at handUi« your lent IMr to the d a bettor la toee tha toot toar Then wo don't a appeal to a child 'Idike for ua. It'a a are to a poattiot ‘T know what to havo to aay It for me." only then that Mvlopaapla ~ You don't Have You Tried Thfi? Giant-Size Chocolate Bar Makes Dessert for Nine toy lANn OIMMX Cniahad graham craokar caned to rooiMat a Ndpe tor put bar and n inatoingJaiS^. Happii;;:jM m double boiler. MaT C lUghUy. _ . UP VtoiP IM BPr iPWW- ite ledpea which aha aaya toi^ag m men liho eap«tolly. Jiwt tor- »«»Htag to dtreottoaaj get to eoBM ctoectoa when you _ pnekag^ ^ vaal^ ■erVe or. cat It. - tote matoU aad oeatol abo Mra. HIU to active In church Put a la^ of -52^cookie cnimba to a “^*’**^- _ tocfe(2 pan. Pour over I toy aua. nnnm ™ crumba on top. CWU night, or'at icaat 1 to 11 cut In aquarea to They Affect Health Keep Teeth iu Shape LOWRBY STARLET ORGAN i A coNiptola Miaybaard atiM wito I parcutiion...Mton|>VMnMltoa ... axchNiM Lwrfur IHdUv.lMMb tabs... a variety M ‘ voices... riali arehito.---- ' aHacto...lovalyiplMUIylto|... and of all, MiyafiMM pity a Why wait another diyT emw Ik or phone us for a free trW toiwt Unit to Hear Dog Trainer or and inatructor at Leader Dogs tor the EUnd, Inc., Ro-clwator, wUl addraaa Twin Blolheca’ Gkib Thuraday evening In tha Oommonlty Sarv- if Mra. Cbailaa h Gordon Pankey. Mothers' Unit Names Oiiicers for the Year Otticera tor the DeMolay Motbera' Oub ot tha Ponttoe Chapter wekw etocted Thuraday tvanlng following a fandly co-oparatlve dinner In the Ma-aonlc Temple, Eaat Lawrence Street. Mri. WUUam C. Pfahlert caD... WnUAM WRIGHT JMk frop $8156 Ckdrfnmi $39.56^ 270 Orchard Lakt • FE 4-0558 mamhio thraupNMjti Ing and praaided at the elec-tloa Past President Mrs. rrancto Mapley, Imtalled Mrs. Oaear W. Norgimi ap preal-diuiti Mra. Clyde A. Mottor vMb prealdent: Mrs. WmlgJt EASY lUMR TERMS ar 90 DAYS CASH Fnrklo, treasurer and Mrs. Ray Itowaid, (haplaln. Mrs. e conui\lttee. member, Mm. Gall r, and a guest, Mrs. TVederlck HoM, were wal- Fllm Is Viewed ' by Church Guild the United Church of Christ" was vtowed by membera of the Bethel United Church ot Ototot Women's Guild Thuraday evening In the churdi partoio, Dtocuaaton fol-lowtd. Refreahments In the Valentine motif were aerved hy Mra. Robed Strauee and Mrs. Henry R Helmkamp. The group wOl aponeor a bakateaa bakad gooda aato on rub. 38 and a mtoahmary meeting, with luncheon at noon, to planned fUr Match IS. Complete Plans for Fashion Show Tentative plana were completed for a spring faahion show by the Phi Kappa Tau Chapter o< PI Omlcron Na-tional Sorority Thursday evening in a local flower shop. Mra. Oliver Dunatan explained the fundamentals of flower arrangement and showed basic equipment for the beginner. Slides were shown of arrangements for various occasions throughout the year. _________ The Unfled Stolea harvetos about mUUon to thrat poundalTDOtoto tone of paamita each ymr, of smelt annually in Wlaaooaln. la crop worth about fSOO mllUon. YOU WANT TO SAVE 30% to 40% ON FINE, CUSTOM RE-UPHOLSTERING Serving Oakland County Over 30 Years rnmmtkimmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm »25 to»500 CASH IN ONE DAY OR . LESS YOUR J CHOICE I OF I PAYMENT ! PLAN ! — PAmm to,fdMhea - ■ W^HoHBteryMiKlUmdyJmfYmiinrnYHiAfHim J STATE FINANCE COMPANY • mmm» ’n«>n ! PROFESSIONAL t CLEANING L We Stitch and Sew [We Clean and Spot ; We Press and Inspect The PROFESSIONAL WAY. at FATHER AND SON **Where Quality Counts** Clean Uily WE PICK-UP ' s'shiilt 10 Iba. AND $119 $2®o liibeN eatra eheofe ler' DELIVER CALL 1 ■•aHNIwIly lavnd. •fed . . . Codtond FE 2-6424 OPEN 7 A.M.-6P.M. Fgtlier & Son GUMERS 941 Joslyn Comer of Mansfield wNh or without preaeription in a wide ' choicto ef frame stylet and colprs. Choofg the fromp ilyle to lult your Individual loito and puraonolity from hundreds. In our studio. Lenjes are available in neytrol, gray, green or brown. ^ BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE ilYriiein T09 N. SAOINAW ST. E. STEINMAN, 0:t>. Dally 9:30 AM. le 5:30 P.M. Friday 9:30 AM. ta 1:30 P.M. FE 2-2895 SIXTEKN T^E PONTIAC PRESS, MPyPAV. VeBRUARV 5. 1962 ^ TWO COLORS Performance Proved for 7 Years in U.S. Hemes ^HPSEERC^wc^ow nm vista color vi Watch All These COLOR SHOWS At Our Stores And This BeaiiliMGift AbsoluMy 1 DIsncyhinsf figurine ^ci Fiv* of fho world's bost-known, bost-iovod Woh Disnoy cartoon choroclors .,. in an aHractivo flift packd«ol Boaulifully'Sculpturod, full-color figwrinattbowbola ^ family will lavnoyoort just for coming Ip to too a domonstration of RCA Victor Color TV. SUPPLY LIMITiDI (ChildrM must bo occomponi^ by on adult.) MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5 I Continental Classroom . . . NBC 6:00 -7:00 A.M. Sqy When ’ ...NBC 10:00-10:30 A.M. Play Your Hunch...... ...NBC 10:30-11:00 A.M. The Price Is Right ...NBC 11:00-11:30 A.M. Concentration ... NBC 11:30-12:00 N Your First Impression.. ... NBC 12:00-12:^0 P.M. Truth or Consequences .. NBC 12:30- ] :00 P.M. The Jan Murray Show.. ...NBC 2:00- 2:30 P.M. Young Dqctor Malone . ...NBC 3:00- 3:30 P.M. Five Daughters' ...NBC 3:30- 4:00 P.M. Here’s Hollywood .... ...NBC 4:30- 6:00 P.M. George Pierott NBC 6:00- 6:00 P.M. National Velvet* ...NBC 8:00 -J:30P.M. Bell System Science Series NBC 8:30- 9:00 P.M. Hallmark Hall of Fame. ..'. NBC 9:30-11:00 P.M. The Jack Pear Show.., ....NBC 11:15- 1:00 A.M. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10 Pip the PipeYjy - ... NBC 9:80-10:00 A.M. The ShariXev^Show. ... NBC 10:00-10:30 A.M. King Leonardo and His Short Subjectf ... ... NBC 10:30-11:00 A.M. Pro Basketball *..... ... NBC 2:30- 5:00 P.M. All Star Golf ...NBC 5:00- 6:00 P.M. Tales of Wells Fargo.. ,...NBC 7:30- 8:30 P.M. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7 Continental Classroom — NBC 6:00* T:0OA.M. Say When ................NBC 10:00-10:30 A.M. Play Your Hunch............NBC 10:30- 11:00 A.M. The Price Is Right.........NBC 11:00- 11:30 A.M. Concentration ...........NBC 11:30-12rt10N Your First Impression......NBC 12:00 -12:30 P.M. Truth pr Consequences .. NBC 12:30- 1:00 P.M. The Jan Murray Show........NBC 2:00- 2:30 P.M. Young Doctor Malone .... NBC 3:00 - 3:30 P.M. Five Daughters ..........NBC 3:30- 4:00 P.M. Here’s Hollywood^.........NBC 4:30 - 6:00 P.M. George Pierott. .........NBC 6:00 - 6:00 P.M. Wagon Train ..............NBC 7:30- 8:3QP.M. Joey pishop Show ........NBC 8:30- 8:00 P.M. Kraft Music Hall..........NBC 8:00-10:00 P.M. Bob Newhart Show..........NBC 10:00 -10:30 P.M. Brinkley’s Journal........NBC 10:30 -11:00 P.M. The Jack Pair Show........NBC 11:18 • 1:00 A.M. I Saturday Night at th^ Movies ....... *esl«r Dsy-snt tins oaly .HBC , 9:00- to finish MANY COLOR SHOWS EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK COLOR SO BRIGHT ... SO TRUE .. . YOU NAVE TO SEE IT TO BELIEVE IT! OQilP INTO OUR STORES .... SEE 3 (MEAT COLOR TV BAYS THIS WEEK On the New RCA VICTOR New Vista Color TV CONDON'S TV 730 WEST HURON STREET FE 4-9736 FRAYER'S 589 ORCHARD UKE AVE. FE 4-0526 . WAYNE GABERT ‘"Your Doumtotou RCA Victor TV Dealer'* 121 N. Saginaw St. FE 5-6189 R|M|P ; * ELECTRIC COMPANY nampiDta Ju%t East of fel-Uuron Shopping Center New Center Electronics, Inc. Mirada Mila Shoppino Cantor-Baiaar Araa Mpen Datfy lOA.M. to 9 PM. FE 8-9607 STEFANSKI SSSS Sate$ and Sert'ice 1157 Wast Huron Sf. FI 2^967 ' Sweet’s Rslio aniLAppliance i 422 WEST HURipN ST. / / FE 4-1133 ’XhOAAAS-ECONOMY / FURNITURE COMPANY / 4945 dixie HWY. 36> S. SAGINAW ST. / DRAYTON PUINS * PONTIAC OR 4-0321 FE 3-7901 1 / THE PONTIAC PRESiS I^ONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SEVENTEEN , s Farmers Busy Do Oakland County larmen take It eaay. Juat lit^ around playing checkan, vialting or attending Saturday night aquare ■* "ng the long winter MjMfa in a a|Mt-elHM* \ •*Vhat a laugh,” aaya dalrynnn Miner of Brandon TOwnaMp. ‘'^mera Work at leaat ten ttmea hanfer in Ow winter than TWo queationa went aaked. “What do you do in the winter timet” and "la fanning a bual-neaa or a way of life?" When the Brat queatlon wip aaked, alx of ia a buaineap-and ho worka hard at it. The daily, monthly, yearly rau- Take dairy farmer 6ai% Miller, mour Lake Road b^na at 4:30 a.m. After milking and feeding hla cattle, Milirr I>a> breakfaat a,n>. It'a back to the barn a.m. and the )ot> of cleaning gera and ahovelliig cow manure. A newly Inatalled automatic gutter dihwar hni ||hMened|t^ cbcfn ^4whai. ^ After lunch, and between feed- AREA iiS NEWS ire. f Story and Ptiotos by Roba Hointzolman ing. milking and cleaning prolecti which are again neceaaary night. Miller repalra machini fencet and out-eheda and chedu IIABVBNT O? TREU ’TKen'IKfreTi'Tra^^ Rob- ert Long, who la reaping a harveet n! Biple trees which he and his dnd planted on his 300-acre farm! in 1935. Summer months are filled with I cultivation, pninim; and ftnallyl harvesting thousands of apples, but In the winter the apnles have to be graded and rarefully packed to be hauled to market. sheep in bams and corrals. Water must not be allowed to freeze, and above ail—solid wooden fences must be kept in (uil repair. If one of the sheep decides to climb a fence, the whole herd foUows suit. Of the 100 fuU-time farmers left In Oakland County, very few ape the oM-fkahioned diversllled type, accoeding to Walter Cook, Oakland and Conservation Service er. “A fanner almost has to clallze to survive nowadays.' DIFFRRKNT VIEW However. Kennedy McQueer of 1700 Williams Lake Road. White iLake Township, has a ' " "My farm to not a money-nuk- ing prolect in the business sense of the word.” he said. “I topd to feed both'my tinlmals and my family—and thi| to me to a ' way of life." After worfclag for almost M years at the Poatlac PIsher Body plaal, and keeptag the farm np In his spare time. ,Me-f)aeer finally gave In Is the In- ills 25 "milkers” yield about 13 gallons daily. T^ere are chickens, tor fresh eggs, rabbits for delictous meat and his own beef rattle for excellent steaks. In the summer, there Is* big proudetion from / a vegetable garden, dnd these, plus fresh fVult. jam the-his McQueer ----------- The endless Job of keeping the Ownty Agricultur^^bllliatloh, ^^an. spreading fertilizer for the spring planting and pitching tons of hay, along with all the other chores, mount up to a good liTiixir day for eveiy tyi^ For all—the Job of winter farming amounts to endless chores. For ^any—it 1s strictly burinees, but for a few it is definitely a '’way of life. " Thrrie days every week, IW \On a beautiful centensial farm o^Buao Road, southwest of Mil- ____ Pkstm jord. Porter Bennett and his son tnRN’g POE THE BIBDS — Chickens, that to! White Lake Dgvld^tend 400 healthy sheep. p’s all-round farmer Kenneth MoQoeer takes a , Mt from hto choraa to look aeroai hto UO-acre snow covered farm. V Siis farming to strictly a "way et life” for McQueer who quit the Nftetory long ago to tend garden — Just for livbig. ■ there la a ’haiid-lw«m -----r nys t----------- beam with a faded inacription the barn phpvlng the structure was built in 1842. Tons of enidipim and eons have to be hauled by tlw Bennetts to the miNHRY HEIFER - Although Qark Miller of Brandon Township keeps hto 50 milking cows stanchioned In neat rows, young heifers are left free to roam in un area adjoining the main barn on Seymour Lake Road. Shown above is one of the young regtotcred llolstelns leaning over Ha trough, for sweet-smcillag alfalfa as Miller keeps a wary eye on Her activities. ~Ai?Riar^Tnoi!SANl«l o;- 'rr.l — 3o:i Lon" of commerce ToWnshlp is one of the lar;;cst n )i'> TvOwers in the county. His huge Storage barn holds more than 13.0C3 I■ll8hel.; which all have io be caitefully washed, gnided and packed before lieing Iwiuled to ..uirkel. Long to shown with a couple of handsful of tne Lh'IicioUo varlcly and they really arb! WOOL FOB HEAT. MEAT TO BAT — Itat'a what Iktle Iambs are made for, aocoftiing to tieir owner, David Bennett of Milford Townahip. QPwever, sheep raising to more than that fai the sinter. It’s a constant round of repairing heavy they all. says Bemwtt. He and hto father raise 400 of the woolly animals on a acenic farm near Orion Twp. Vote to Decide Zoning Spocial Election Today to Determine Fate of 3 Pdrceli of Land Orion township - Property owners here will vote in a special election today to determine what zoning classification will apply to three parcels of land on Mian-wood Road, near the Artco, Inc. Petittoned by about some 9M eMglbto voters, the referendam wiil either back or reject a Sept. Xrguments for the board’s re-zoning have been that the township needs new industry, the site to attractive to such plants and th| area to not heavily populated. Against the board's move were the site would lower resldeiittal property values , there and would increase noiae,,traffic and smoke in the air. If new indiMtiy were to move there, argued those In favor of the rezoning, the township’s tax base would be improved. SbUing booths at the Ol-ion TOhmship HaU, 571 S. Broadway Str, and at the Cangellville Fire lia, 3350 Gregory Road, wlU be open until 8 p-m. Frank'McKenzie Vowg Told Wed in Evening Rite ROVAL OAK TOWNSHIP -Three governmept-appolnted employes of the Federal Urban Renewal Program here resigned Saturday. Aiatotant Housing Director Wiliam Vamado, 46, ended hto 14-year term with the project. Mrs. Bessie Walton, 42. bookkeeper and accountant, and Carl Bauhman, 45, rehabUitaHon officer, also resigned. AU are Detroit residents. . The three resIgiiatloM were to beoamei effective I p.m. today. This leaves the newly appointed director pf the urban renewal program, James P. Estes, with only , half a staff if and when he shows up to take over his duties tomorrow. LAKE ORION - White gladioU and palms graced the altar of the Lake Orion Methodist Church for the wedding Saturday evening of Marilyn L. McKenzie and Darrel E.' Frank. Rev. Albert Johns performed the candlelight ceremony. Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Gordon J. McKenzie, dt 526 Baadey Drive. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Frank of Mishawaka, Ind. chose a floor-length gown of whtta hoaqaet tatfeto frataring loag, tapered Heevee and a ooal- t ended la a coart A demicap of pearls and sequins held her fingertip veil of French illusion, and she carried a cascade arrangement of white roses and ivy centered with an orchid cor- Eates, who to from Memphis. Tenn., has not been seen or heard from hto appointment Jani 24, according to a member of the township board. Estes woB appotoM to head E. FRANK Attending her atotcr as matnm ta honor was Mrs. James Brown ofOxftxd. Bridesmaids were Judy SriMwe of Detroit and Mrs. James Holden of Gibraltar. MaiHyn Brown of Oxfordi aiero at the bride, was flewer William Frank served his son as best man, and the /guesU were by Charles Krenek of Cbloma and Monte Czuhai of Grand Rapidi. A buffet supper fas held in the church house immediately following tile rites. The ycfpg couple win live^Jn Kalamazoo. Tu^ay Muticaie Sots Men's Night Program ROCHESTER Members of the Rocheater Tuesday Muaicale wiU present a "Men’s Night” program of American muaic tomorrow evening featuring hidian, southern, western,, and niodern selections. Directing the 8 p.. m. performance will be Mrs. John Walters of 480 Nawaka St., Troy. The program will be at the home of Mr. and Mra. Henry AxfoM, 4090 N. Rochester Road. 3 Employes Resign Urban Renewal Body *40 Questions* at Davigburg Town Studies Problems DAVISBt developement survey will be made by the Davtoburg Junior Chamber of Commerce tomorrow to learn what ‘reaidenU think can be done to improve tho village. A form with some 40 questions will be distributed to persons living in the area of the unincorporated village to find out the weak points In the community, according to Robert Schoenhals, chairman of the development The ansafis will enable the daycees to pinpoint the nrenn of vncniicy created by the resigna-tloa of Raymond O. Hntcher. Hatcher reoicned under Are In December, /At Saturday’s regular meeting of township board there was a heated discussion between members and township residents over the proposed construction of Jow rent housing in the east portion of the township. WOULD REDUCE VALUE About 50 citizens at the meeting demanded that the proposed low-rent homes be constructed on the west side of Wyoming rather than on the east side because they 2nd Meeting Slated by New 4-H Club GOODISON — A new 4-H Qub being formed here will hold its second meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. at the Baldwin School. Called the Paint Creek Valley •H dub, the group to led by Mrs. Rex Smitherman. She said membmhip to still open and leaders aMo are needed. Project arena are knitting, sdw-big and cooking for girls, wood-woridng for boys a>td horses and ponies for both boya and giris. would reduce the value of their A meeting 3 p.m. next Sunday In the Townahip Hall will be held to schedule a public hearing on the proposed building site. The east side of the township to residential and the only section that was void of wartime housing projecu, now razed under the Urban Renewal Program to make way tor new construction. Car Crash Fatal to Area Woman Lapeer Home Attendant Dies, 3 Co-Workers Hurt in M21 Accident IMLAY CITY —, An attendant at the Lapeer State Home and Training School was fatally injured early today and three other state home employes are In critl-condition following an auto accident on, M21, about 10 miles west of here. Dead Is Mrs. Nellie Cheney, M, of S178 N. Van Dyke Road, Imlay Township. Mrs. Mildred Bogart. U, of MO River Ave„ Imlay Oty, Is In Lapeer County OenenI Hospital with severe cuts and bruises nnd frnctured right hip and right nrm. Also at 'the hospital is Mrs. Glayds Kerr. 62. of 260 First St.. Imlay Oty. who suffered cuts and a broken left leg. . • Taken to Hurley Hospital, Flint, was Mrs. Roselda Larson, 32. of 365 First St., Imlay aty with severe head injuriea and a broken right ankle. Lapeer County gherlfPs depu-tiea said the women’a oar. driven by Mrs. Bogart, hit aa 8-ineh deep pothole oa Mil, skidded aeross the northbound traffte lane and hit a free. The mishap ocoured about 19:W a-m. Deputies said Mrs. Cheney was apparently thrown from the car. They said the potinle in the concrete was cauM by the sudden warrfi weather Thawing the ground ani warned fhat the holes have appeared on many other roads, mai^ driving btuardoan. a better comniualty. About 12 members of the local Jaycee or^nizatlon will conduct the aurvery between 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. Wiile not directly related, tomorrow night’s survey to expected to augment another program undertaken by the recently organized Area Civic Improvement Aasocia-ation, headed by Mra. Clyde Nel- aey. The Improvement Asaoclation to an outgrowth of Mrs, Netoeyto lone campaign that started late last ^ar to promote the village and new bualneas. Both have AN INTEIKaiANaB The major concern of the as- aociatlon now is to have change conatructed at DaVtoburg Rioad and the new 1-75. Ramps at this location would provide a direct route south for motorists in Springfield and Rose townahip, according to Mrs. Nel- ley. The association, with Mrs. Mari-lynn Hauser as treasurer and Earl Fnrner as secretary, already liab received the cooperation of the Townahip Park Oom-mtosion in planning for a beauti-Acatkm program of the area. The aaaociatjaa also has the backing of merchants. Werner Hoy, ehalrmaa of the ters has photographed all th4 stores in the village. These pto lures will be adnt to s reconstnic-tkxi architect in Akron, Ohio, whs will prepare a scale moddi of aa Early American town. rai^ plan lor beantHytag the area akmgtode roads with ptoMs and Dewera. Park Commtoiloner Robert Pe- The plans would be useful to the propMed complete remodeling of the stores in Devisburg, an idea first put forth by Mrs. Netoey when she began her revitalization campaign last November. 'Adelines' Io Harmonize in 'Carnival of Music' UTICA — 'hie Utlca-Rochester chapter of the "Sweet Adelines’ will stage its first full-scale muai-cal production, "Carnival of Mu-■tc." Saturday in the auditorium of Utica,Hi8h School. Songs by several area groups will highlight the 8 p.m. program "Sweet Afcllnes’ ing the show's nucleus. Abo to be teetnied men's ehoras at el BerbertoMp Qnertol Singing In AmerMa. Three visiting quartets, each one champion, will sing several lections. They are the "Yankee Mtoses." the "SWeet Sioux* nnd the "PlorTune Tellers,” a male comedy quartet. Other special attractions will elude a performance by ' snettes," a Pontiac precision drill team, and a novelty dance routine by Mary J. Tom and Donna Levick. dhughters of two "Sweet Adelines” members. I man: Mrs. ChariM Nolteit, Harry Tom, publicity. Chairmen from the Utica area are Mra. Arthur Horier, musical selections, and Mra. Robert Dega, tickets sales Ind posters, assisted by Mra. Lucille Shlrokus and Mra. Burdlne Claahll, who are in charge of budget and finance. Tickets for the program may be purchased from any member of the sponsoring group, or by core tactlng Mrs. Dega at 45630 Qis-ter Road, Utica. Hcketo also will be available at the door. Named Carnival Queen PETOSKEY UB-Judy GCrrie; 17, a blue-eyed, brown-haired, aki enthusiast from Boyne City, ruled ai queen at the 1962 Michigan Wlntei Sports ChrnlvaJI held here during the weekend. CXIFFEH BREAK - Taking a moment out in making final arrangentents for thei( first musical production to be staged Saturday evening at Utica High School are four members of the Utlcadlocheater chapter qf the "Sweet Ade- lines.” They are (from left) Mr*. Charles NM-fert of Rodwster and Mrs. Arthur Horier, Mrs. Leonard Langmeyer and Mrs. Robert p«t», Ml M Utica. Their group will form the nudeqa for the show to be stag^ at 8 p. m. i EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 6, im Lait Timms Tonight ^‘HONEYMOON MACNWr «*ETHUNDH OF DllUlir I Ministers Group Upset TUES. EAGLE IfREttOC MARCH; BEMGAZZARA DICK CLARK JARALM EDDE ALBERT \School Play, Dancing Hit muiEnaEii >fiiiaiiEii! PANAvisioircoum ■k*w» □ Strand -REGUUR PRICES-- Sodal dancinc, profanity In Eng* anoe of the play “Ute ther” in Pontiac achoola came under lire from a gi 43 fundamentaliat and Uve miniatera, who atate repreaent 13,000 church in the Pontiac area. In .a mimeographed letter to the Pontiac Board of Eduo thd\ miniatera aay atudenta refuse to participate In objectkitahle achool actlvltiaa fer “ridldU^” hy teachcra. Pantiao Soheote gapt Dana J fhltmer, who waa oat on ••Mttae laapeetlea of aehoa IWo mondag, aald ho had bei naod of the raeelpt of II letter hy Ma oMoa. On aaU I The letter atated, in part; “We aak a clearcut atatement of policy from the Board of Edu-catkm and the office of the au-perintendent of achoola relative to theae mattera, and we further aak 2103 S. TELEOtAPH RD. FE 2-1000 h .^1 ,Vo Extra Chmrga ELECTRIC JN-CAR HEATERS Ksr£*lssmU»m FIRST SHOWING that aatiafactaiy policy be Impie' mented at the adminiatratlve and teaching level to prevent ftarther repetition of theee diatreaaing ' HONED BY OROVP The letter waa aigned by the (jieator Pootlae Evangelical Min-latere Fallowahlp and Ita Social Action Oonunlttee headed by the Rev. Lyal H. Howlaoh of the lint Free Methodlat Church of Pontiuc. whiflh li to aeoept written ex-enaoa hem parania of atedento who eaanot pnittelpato in eer- Station Warned Over Readings KPPK in Los Angtlos GBts Bombing Threats on Birch Broadcasts heeaeae of roN- (loas boOef. However the minlaten ripped what they allege to be the actual application of this policy. "While It ia true." the letter statea, "that our letters of exculo are accepted in the schools, it la also true that our young people have been ridiculed before their classmates for these beliefs.' ★ ★ • A -Several church' memben and other parents in December had received clarification .^1 existing school policy on reqitlred readings in English classes, when they protested the use of Pearl Buck's novel "The Good Earth” and Walter L. Edmonds' "Drums Along the Mohawk" as using profane language. Roof of Church Falls in Italy, Non* Injured ROOCAFLUVIONE, Italy tit -The snow-burdened roof collapsed a roar Sunday night into a church in this east oentral It *' of children had baan lat out aar^. Thirty-one Inches of snow had fallen In recent daye in the rocky GRAND OPENING OF OUR GREAT NEW TILE CENTER LOS ANGELES tl» - Radio tion KPFK, which plans to broadcast readings from the blue book of the John Birch Society, says it was wanted, by an anonymous callefr 'If you Commies broadcast the blue book, we're gonna bomb you out of ' ‘ AM the wife at aelor Hebert Ryan said aoniobody eahed their home Soaday a a d warned “aomethlag might happen" to Ryan if he participated In the reedIngB. Ryan Is In Europe. His reading already ta recorded on Upe. Mrs. Ryan hired two guards to watch her home. AAA KPFK, a listenersupported FM station which carries no commercials, said it will begin a week-kxig series of programs about the Birch Society tonight. Hie blue book, a primer of the BOclety,‘wllI be read by Hollywood personalities and sections will be discussed after each reading. The station said the book will treated objectively. A a A The homes of two San Fernando Valley ministers, one a Lutheran and one a Unitarian, were bombed Thursday night while they participated in a panel dlscusalon of right-wing movements at a Jewish synagogue in the Westwood section of Los Angeles. The bombs did not cause serious damage and no one was Injured. The bombers have not been apprehended. In renewing the attack on "profanity or blasphemy In our speech," the ministers' group protests "the use of reading materials In EIngllsh classes in the Pontiac school system which are redundant with this type of language." ‘GRAVE CONCERN* r Aside from their claim that teachers are ridiculing students who an Mcused from this type of reading, the mtnlstifrs chaige that "It la still a matter'~dl'tnve concern that this type of.language Is used in class cUscuulon and done with our young people in at- The gnap also says the ex-aasd etudeata an penalised by “behig leeeed le da eoasMeeable oilier than the eriginal aastga-meat called for." The letter also atated that the nlnlsten "an disturbed by persistent reports of derogatory re-nuurks being made 1^ certain teachen in this area concerning the validity of the Chriatiui Fal£ and the vem^ of the Bible." A A * The play, "Ufe With Father, perfonned last year at Pontiac Northern High ^hool was condemned by the ministers as tnvesty on baptism and noted for its usage pf profane language. The letter continues: "Attendance was compulsoo*, we are told, by English teachers, if the student wished credit for his semester's work. It is a sad commentary on the teaching pro-feulOn when this sort of standard is upheld before the student body —and made compulsory at that! If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Vatican Prefect Dies VA-nCAN CITY MB - Gaetano Cardinal Cicognani, 80, prefect of L the Vatican congregation of rites, I died at his. home today of a li^art I attack. He was a brother of Amleto I Cardinal Cicognani, Vatican jectc-I tary of state. School Districts Down LANSING UB—Michigan now has 1,888 school districts, the State Department of Public Instruction reports. Reducbg the number, the department said, were seven re-'cent annexations md three consoU- 1962 Codilloc 1962 Oldsmebile DYNAMIC 88 J. WMcIi Do Tm ‘5,125 T’i.ltt CAOILUC You Bet Quality Serviee too at ■ ■ • I SagiiiQw OPEN MONDAY-TUESDAY and THURSDAY TILL B P.IL ■ ^ I BAZLEY MARKETS "To Serve You Better" Quality Meats at LOW, LOW PRICES LOOK! SAVE! YOUR ONOICE! LOOK! SAVE! JUNEDALE BRAND SMOKED PICNICS ' TENDER SLICED BEEF LIVER uan Kim nw • ROUND • SIRLOIN PORK CHOPS VALUABLE CCUPON OoDd Fab. 6th and Tth EirtHIft Btarer to a 2-LB. LIMIT wNh Maat Purchasa aiLO CORE SLICED BACCN FRESH - LEAN GRCUND BEEF LEAN - BEEF SHCRT RIBS Bead at lAtli Otortt a new Prlnoeaa phone—the smalleat, moat convenient u eould wanti YouHl INie the way the Pirlnoeaa phone It plaoea, making a bedalde location eapedally handy. D abo like two other exciting featurea of this modm T-the built-in ni^t light that i^owa aoftbr In the daik i^ the dial that llghu up adien you lift the rebeiver to make it eaay to call at night* Order a Prlnoeaa ]dione aoDa and chooae from five lovely decorator colora. Juat call your telephone buaineas emoe—or ask the maiuip the telephone firdek. M/CHIQ/lih bell TELEPHONE COMPANY , \ 4 Tho Pr/nemas pk night light bulH nips * day pttmr with dint tnd in, costs only pan-a ana-tinm ehaiga. THE PONTIAC |>RE$S MONDAY. FEBRUARY 5, 1962" NINETEEN PRESS BOX Chuck Ferrlei tt Houghton was diiqualifMI Sunday In the ipecial slalom ^event of the Emile Ailala Bkl miMt In Megreve, t'ranoe. Winner wu Ernst Falch of Austria. * * * ■ Hayes lease jpl fsadao wea kis nrd straight ladoor vtetory slaae IM eihsa hairsathatt-yard hardleata M la the Baataa \ Gary Visconti of Troy finished \secoad In the Junior divi^ of the National Figure Skating champion-ahhw at Boston. T ★ * * Kd Fergasea. M V. of of ochpol after Ole first swBesti ■a had seholastle proMeias. A * * * Klver Rouge, the No. 1 Class B tgam In Michigan, lost Hs first game df the seam Saturday night, Sft«, to Toledo Macomber. It ended a 39-game winning stroak lor Haage. - Wings Shake Off Injury Jinx, 6-0 Bassen Shines After Injury Stops Sawchuk Other Lineup Changes Help Defeat Bruins; Montreal Loses DETROIT te — The Injury Jinx that threatened to drive the Detroit Red Wlnga out ot'Stanley CUp playolt contention took a licking ‘ ksl night. So did the Boston Bruins. ALL Vn» on THE BALL - Arnold Palmer ra.*rf.m and HiecUtors Intently follow the baU as it atopa of the HOO.000 Palm Springs Goll Oaaslc. Palmer a foot short of the cup on the 4tb green at Ber- roiaaed hla birdie here, but blrdied the next five muda Dunes yesterday during the (Inal round holes and went on to win the rldi event.__________________ Hopes Dim for World Ski Meet East German TravefBan Termed Cause FIS Council Dacision Sot Tuesday Deadline for Issuing Visas ^ERN. Switzerland (AP) -Hopes that the World Alpine Ski Chmpianships would surmount the political......... ^ ★ ★ ★ e Barbara Pureley Makes Successful Comeback New Skating Hope? BOSTON (AP) Roies I^raley, making a came-back at the tender age of 30. pn^bly wUI be the favorite to win Ihe ‘women’i title in the World Flguiy Skating Champiamiilps in Prague nnd month. e aU but today in the face of a eoMlnned Inflexible travel ban by the NATO alllet agUnat East Germany-* a * The executive council ol MemaUanal Ski Federatkm (FB) gave the Western powers 37 hours to lift their current travel ben and grant Consmunist East Germany’s Hellers entry permits and visas to tte champtonshlps, ach^uled to l^n this Saturday In IVance. . * * * If this Is not done by noon Tuet-oouncil decided af meeting Sunday, amptenHilpa will be eeled and the event reduced to a the 196lj Olympic bronze medal winmn- retired to marry and have a W>y. She will have to I meet The Netherlanda’ Eurofean Champion \8jouke Dykitra, who woo the ai^er medal In the Olyn>- week, Feb. 10-M. A it From Berlin, where the wall dividing the Western and Communist sectors of the dty, helped initiate the entire aequence of re-■trictiona. waa no poaaibility whatever the East Germans would g«t their permits by noon At the same time, FIS who had already cabled Prealdeiit Kennedy on Saturday aeddng Intervention, dlipatched Hmllar notea to French President Chaiies de Gaulle and Prime Miniater Harold MacMillan of Great Britain. ♦ ♦ ★ Hiere was no Immediate comment from Paris. Lon^ or Washington, and none appeared to be forthcoming. it it it Even the French foreign ministry announced days ago that it would take no action In behalf of the East German competitors. As for the men, Col. Gerard said he‘d be happy 11 Monty Hoyt and Scott Allen fMah In the fint seven. Hoyt, a slender 17-yearold school ttudenNfrom Denver, senior title In easy Wort he eny Mr Saturday. Alien, only .12. of "But I’m Volng to I lind wort start prac- Butler, They’re 1-2 on the U.S. men’a team but they’re not yet in the Hayes Alan Jenkins, David JenkiM and Dick Button, Gerard painted out. ’Tommy Utx of Hershey, Pa. won the junior title Sunday. Yvonne LHUefleld of Lm Angelca and Peter Betts of Van Nuys, Calif., captured the dance, .frown. Dorothyann Nelson of Chicago and Fetter Kollen of Uke Pladd. N.Y., won the senior pairs cham-pioanhipt. AU wiU make the trip to Pra^. Parsley today! "I’m buuik both figures and free niIMT ON AU. CARM Mrs. Pursley, of Arcadia. Calif, won the natiohal title before t capacity crowd of 4.000 at thi Boaton College rliik. She was rated first on the fards of aU five judges. ■ \ * it * In second place was 36-year-old Lorraine Hanlon of Bdston, followed by IficUe Fisher of Minneapolis. Both Miaa Haitkm and Mias FIHter wiU be on the I lor the world champioiiahipa. The United States has had a virtual monopoly on the w«imen*i world title for the pasi seven years. Carol Helas won it five ttanea and ’Tenley Albright twice. * * "Of course Barbara can beat D^Btra," snapped hei mh. "Dyfcstra is a good but there is more " Pontiac Bowler Monroe Moore sd a pretty profitable trip east irer the weekend — 319,160 worth. He won 3160 lor being 2Sth in the Philadelphia Open pro tourney and then earned 315,000 on the "Make ’Iliat Spare" television program Saturday night A tirae prob- ot another 31.000 on the Hww. ne wlMli«a braugM Me ean-Ino to 6*l,no tor the poet six e iMWMy aiM TV Harry Smith nipped Detroiter Bob Crawford 2« to 343 In a great "No doubt about tt," aald Col. Gerard Crooks, executive aecre-taiy at the tl.S. Figure Skatfng n. "She’D be one of the favoritea. Ot courae, n besides Miss Dykstra, she still has to beat a good field. She’ll have to be careful of Regina Hell-zer and Karen Fromer of Alwiria and Wendy Griner of Canada. ’This was the first national champioiwhip since the tragic air crash that wiped out the entire United Stotes team of 19 akatets Uutt Feb. IS en route to the world Forge, Rangers Need 2nd Game in AL Tourney standard Forge forced the ett/a American League hockey pUyoCfs to the doublfr«limiiiation limit ahd Bqys Club' reached the Nafiona] loop aemlflnals in wi^end tournament action at Northside Park. After handing the Pontfac Central Raldeni an 8-1 thrashing Irt the Saturday morning semis. Forge proceeded to whip the Mountain View Rangers, 6-2, in the after- Eagleg, 810 l«cad8 Change Local Ladies Take Ists at State, Stylists Drop Pontiac women stole the show at the Michigan SUte Elks tournament whUe outtiders were continuing to dominate the Elks’ Ladies’ Invitational and Michigan Eagles’ meet here over the weekend. Randy West Hair StyUst of Pontiac dropped to 3rd place otter leading the Michigan Women’s State tourney for three weeks. Mabel Owens and Gertie White rolled 1.SM to Take the doubtoa lead and hit the Ugh actual aerie* thus far of m at Big Bap-Ids. Shirley Puckett grabbed the top bM la Slagles with «• and Carol AraoM laHed the high actual stogies series of 6H. Only two leaderi held their pori-tion hn« at Lodge 810. The Opals of Port Huron stayed 1st among the teams at 3,989. Northwestern of Detroit hit 2.946 to drop Bonded Insulation of Pontiac to 6th. Lois Bulaon, Kalamazoo, retained the lead in all events handicap at 1,864. Two new doubles combinations took over in doubles with Viola Gluck and Fay Barnhart of Fern-dale high at 1,267. Bea Friainger, Ann Arbor, went ahead In singlet on 6S0. Dorothy Vanderbeck ot R^ Oak took the all events ao-tutual lead At 1,674. Two new men rank 1st among the Eagles. B. Heer of Oeana fired 7N to singles nnd the Bitot pnlr of Hnny Atoion senior uM Jnnior l,m to doubieo to go . to front nt Airway Lanas Eagtef No. 1 of Battle OeHc continued Jo top all teams wltti 3,061 and O. Weidal«£ast Detroit, beld-lst in aU evento^th 2,010. Two teams bettered Randy West’s 2,890 with SaUne Hotel of Saline taking the lead at 2,928. EtofSTSAMa OmIi, Port Huron . Plat* Craft, Xulnnu »u, eon Huron ............... >t« Craft, Xulnmnioo ........S.SP northveitcrn, Detroit .........{.SO Dnltr Chntn, Ms lUpidi ........ ~ nnd B Brake, Knlnmnioo ......MB Olaek-P. BKnhurtTlVnSoIo ....}.to _ HIU-D. Vnnderbeek. RoynJ »k ..IJJ' t. Bonn-B. Bunlltc^ Oorr, tod. .. t.» ----’■ BDIOUtS 0oa mnnnr, jufcn Arbor ......... Pranoot RanMn, Kniamuoo ........ MS -----noenrd, Knlomoioo .:.......TO I Ouenther, Pontiac ... Batota, Detroit .... ■AOtBS TEAMS Xaclaa Mo. I, Battle Creak .. PalUafl Boer, Flint ....... Oak Oardene. Haael Park Auditini. Adrian ..... Carej'i Oulf, Orand Rapid* . _____jnon 8r.-H M. Ratta-C. Brli«e, -™-~ --sz r Lucaa-O. Weldal, Detroit ^ ■ - -}-»« A. Dtrand-B. Holeman, Waterford l.Tn EAOLBS SINOUS , Moore $15,160 Winner in East Bowling Event The triumph kept Ihe Wlqgs a point behind New York icnunble for fourth place — the last playoff petition — in the National Hockey League. ’The aud-denly hot Rangers nipped leagueleading Montreal 2-1. SAWCHUK HURT isen quiclcly put on his pads after Terry Sawchuk waa injured in pre^me warmup. Sawchuk. who’d yielded 19 goals in'liis last two games, was struck on the left shoulder by teammate Alex Del-vecchio’s pratice shot. The regular goalie jiDned Vic Stasluk, Leo Labine aRd-Howie Glover on the sidelines. * * * The wave of injuriei knocked the Wings reeUng out of fourth plaoe. They'd lost three Straight and hadn’t won in five games. Then Baaaen, entering the game cold, came up wl( finish at PhiUy for Ihe 35,000 1st prize. Crawford needed to with three strikes to win. He got the 1st two but (ailed in the final 33.000. it it it hqd eliminated Don Don Garter in a duU ato US-194, cnwfoid defeated PhiUy vet Joe Ostroald by 173-16L Ostro-akl took 31.000 and 3nl on total pinfall. Carter earned 3900. Meme Imi blocks ot 1.MS and lAd* Friday to nsovo ap tram tSnd to 17th hto toll boek agato Monroe was bothered by a neck in hia last games and at ni^ but tt didn’t hinder his iwaie to decide fiie crown. Rick Foeter taUied four goals to feattBe Forge’a rout of PCH, then ■owed three more to pace the victory over the Rangers. Teammate Jim Conklin added two goala. Guy Gauthier’s goal after 2:39 of overtime brought Boys Qub a 2-1 verdict over Forge in the NL. Mlk Cady’s flrst-perted goal wa matched by Forge’s Merrill Mudd in the 2nd period, setting the stage for Gauthier. The Union Lake Optimists meet BOya Club Tueaday night at 6:30 on Northside Ice with the wtoner lacing the Rangera for the NL title. He puDed away from Ron Gau-srn alter an even start to ean his 6th 31.000 check on the dww >d 314,000 by converting the Jackpot spare. An extra 31,000 is provided for conversion of all regular spares before the jackpot but that shot was postponed in order to have time for the jackpot roll. The final, which is the 5-7, will be tried before this week’s show when the presentation of hia 315,-000 wUl be made. PuckChampionsliip Near for Wolverines By United F It’s Pike’s Peak or bust for the niversity of Michigan hockey team ... and it looks like the Wolverines may make it. Heading for the Rockiea and a fourgame atretch at Denver and Colorado CoUege, the hlgh-cUmb-ing Wolverinea lead Die Weateni CoUeglate Hockey with a 9-1 mark and a sweep out West could virtuaUy clinch the UUe. Michigan completed a two-gpine sweep against Michigan State Saturday night, 5-1, with Wayne Kartuach, A1 Hinnegair, Ron Cof-istine, Larry Babcock and Jerry Kolb getting the goals. MSU dropped to third plac* to the WCHA with a L3*l mark, re- { placed to the runnerup spot kyi Michigan Tech. He was at hia best in the third period whni Boaton strove to spoil his shutout. It was only his second to portlaDB of four ..NHL aeasaos. The Wings beuared back from their S-I trpuRctog tatarday at Montreal with ptoaty of oemlag paarii ot Iheir own. Coach Sid Abel juggled his drat line for the game and It paid off with three goala. He promoted Claude LaForge to first left wing, moved Delveodilo to center and kept Gordie Howe at right wing, [Each scored once and all but La-I Forge bad two assists. ROOKIE 8COREH Rookie Chuck Holmea scored as Detroit whipped to a LO lead in the first two periods. Norm Uliman scored twice in the final PETOSKEY IBi-Jeanne O^len-chuk, a 30-year^d Det^ art teacher, whipped an toji^ hip and aU the competition/to win f Senior Women’s dWlalon ol I North American Omdoor Speed-Champio^ip during the Mrs. Omelemfhuk, who hurt hip In a apID lost week, won. NotioiKii Ciiuiaar Championship at t. Paul.yMinn., a week ago. Pistons Move Closer to Clinching Berth Howe’a three points put him three behind New York’s Andy Bathgate in the scoring race. goala by Dave Batou aai JaBtor L««Ulo. DieUe Moore scored their first torn to IS games. The Chicago Black Hawks edged the ’Toponto Maple Leals 2-1 on ' period tallies by Chico Maki and Pierre PUote. Frank Idahov-oUch scored for Toronto. WWW Delvecohio miaaed aoottag on te fifth penalty shot this season in the NHL and Detrott'a third. iamble, protecting Brutoa' goal,'stopped Delvecdilo’a shot with hia left pad. to"*”** » 1* It « in 114 SONDAT-S fESVLTS .... Tork 1. MtotNAl 1 Cbleuw I. Torooto 1 Oolirtet S. Boiten 0 Munaon Scores Key Overtime Points Villanova Stunned by U-D By The Associated Preoo The Hindu stargazers may have had Michigan’s coUege basketball teams in miiid when they predicted the start of doomaday over the weekend. The astrologen said the . doomsday period began Saturday and every Michigan basketbaD team diat played an out-of-atate team on that day tost — with the ex-mpHon of one. Uel- verstty of Detroit, teem I behliid' in an 4 to pn But there were ho other last mtoute charges to glory as Purdue stamped Michigan Stote 86-74, MarahaU of West inigtoto beat Westinn Mlchi^ 8^78, Concordto Teachers of River Fmest. HL, downed Albion 77-59, Findlay of Ohio beat Lawrence Tech M-76, Western IDionois chilled Eastern Michigan 91-50, Dllnoia State beat Central Michl^ 63-53, ahd Malone of' Canton, Ohio, stopped Spring Arbor JC 88-73. In aU-Michlgan games. Olivet beat Kalamazoo 60-57, Hope pummelled Adrian 7549, Ftoriz edged Northttn Michigan 77-73, North-wood eDpped Northwestern Micb-igaa 8999 and 800 Tech dottoted Gotehto JC 85-7L - Dnvs pdtaadMvi was tbs jor reason tor Detroit’s victory. The lanky Titan ace scored 29 points but it was his basket with 18 seconds left in regulation time that tied the score at ’^-aU and forced the extra session. With Detroit ahead again after the WUdeats had taken a four-point lead in the early mnnento of the overtime, DeBuaicbere dindied the victory with a layup and a free throw with 50 seconds left. Pontiac’s Harrison Man-son netted 17 points lor U-D, five In the ovfWtlniM ' , TIk loss was the fourth in 19 gamm for ViUanova. Detroit now la 129. _______ MIOHIOAN OOlXaOB BOOaBBOABD a ptBamebi^ (Rlrar Pm«t. XU Morthwood *1, Mirthwratern kBehlim < Soo Twh U. Ootjblc JC 71 Mlehtean St BA’TO ONE DOWN—Hank Baaaen (D. Detroit Red Wing goalie, shows some fancy footwork as be makes a save on Boston's Murray diver (16>. in the 3rd period of Sunday's NHL game at De- sen replaced the Injured Terry Sawchuk out the Bruins as the W^s skated to Nb. 3 Is Detroit defenaeman Mar- Detroit Teacher Skate Champion The sriMMiteaeher racked ap M pstato here wtth three flrrio, a 004Mod aad a thifd to Itolsh woD ahead of Dev Oortoa, aa U-year-oU Utoverrity ot terday. Dk'k Hunt, a 26-year-old police-BDB from LaCana^, Calif., won Senior Men’s title with 16 polnti. He won the thrswquarter and turo-mlle races. WWW Arnold Uhrleaa of Elmhunt, N.Y., the 1961 champion, tlsd with Tom Auguatitus of Detroit and Terry McDermott of EaaexvUto, Mich., for second place. E* M. LARIS (4n> ro rr TP ro rrip \X H* 8W } « en 4 4-11 14 Mtttter * * ‘ — ErVs; f u I ssa {S j lUleleimPSi Orehard Lake St to’e toWWiro hope^ Tieeday ST Eeglitt9'|fc*^-::::.:::::;:;a 1 J.‘fcg ■‘I.'-'.' " 'i- TWENTY The PONTIAC press, monpay, February g, 1902 BRAKE and FRONT END SPECIAL * ChKk, idjuil, t(it kMkti * RtpKk (ron< wkttl kfirtnct * CkKk. - "What’s wrong with Arnold Palmer's golf garnet" . seem ONE WEEK ONLY! SPECIAL Palmer, playing Ake the Palmer t Nation^ Open and Masters une la IWI, put on a daxzUng Mie hunt to win the $50,000 Palm Springs Classic Sunday. * * * He climaxed the 54ound, OOJiole larathon with a 3-under par 01 lor a tcMii aearr id JOS. If Mow* I under par for the long haul at the par 73 Bermuda Dunes Country Club and lour other coui ' fat the tournament. Palmer started the round three strokes behind the leader. Gene Wisconsin Has Surprise Quint Buckffyei Hava Badgera Qi New Challenger in Big 10 Race Uttlsr. But he ran off a string of live successive birdies starting on the fifth hole, caught Uttler on the eighth and went two oher'* Gene on the ninth. ____..as Palmer's second fat the three 150.000 Desert Oas-sks and his first vidoty since the British Open lapt July. Palmer leads the gypsies to the $35,000 Phoenix, Arte., Open. Then he wUlAiacatton until tfaft Bstan Rfl which hs won last was former U.S. 0^ '^^pion Dick Mayer. He got to keep the entire $50,000 KnfMM he earned with a hole^mone xlay. *niere arere no more ao Mayer didn't have to split By Hm Aassetatod Press For three years Ohio State stood os the symbol of basketball superiority In the Big Ten. Chances are the Buckeyes, unanimously the No. 1 team In the nation, will win their third straight conference vtmplonahip. Now out of nowhere comes a nlucVy Wisconsin team which haa j finished In the first division once In the last U years and has 12 Big Ten victories to show the last four seasons. Wisconsin’s 54) record la second only to Ohio State's 60 mark In the Western they eaa be proud of Ikemoelveo evon If they IBU to wfai another game all seassa. Trailing by 11 points levei^ times In the first half, Wisconsin rallied on a balanced attack to finally siMue Minnesota ^turday, biJB. Ohio State, unperturtied by Wlsconain’B gritty showing, woltxed post Northwestern, 97-61. Illinals defeated Indiana, 96-95, and Pur- *T EARL SCHMB'S youf ur is lunnei baked. 3 YEAR WRITTEN GUAR«NlfE honored in over 100 cities One il.iy service —in by 9 out by 5 Complete Bpholsterjs service Free body and tender estimates WORLD'S LARGEST AUTO PAINTER Ba Sura It's Eorl Schsib 64. Wfanonrin was the only I |to win away from home. The home court was of little help to Iowa which fell before Cnighton. 6947. * ide Imn the MlcUgan-Wls> In game tonight, Iowa will be at Ohio Stete and Minneaote at Illinois. Saturday finds the Big Ten with s complete five game schedule. Illinois will be at Iowa, Indiana at Purdue, Midiigan State at Wlaconoin, Minnesota at Ohio regionally televised mati- ~ ' dv.'.'.- .ssv^URY COUet t ^ ^ NEW aTANDsokffJeil k V.«KCLIf*Y METEOR P"" U^XUWOUa MKiJOUKY MON7|iREYr: Best-loM^huy^. 1 tXM .. ir. itM . I*-*!! lAi-Ih .! n-7»aa«7-_ w,„„ „.ww OOW-TVOTTI-*# Sn^ Ml tWaT-TR-IS-M 7t-TMr-7MS-JSJ g S“aSK sa.04' . _________ i/b UM.M 7MS-70.7a.7l-M IU4.U TaeS-TS-TS-Ta-M to S1M.W SS-TMa-Ta-TO-M 7«.7a-7S-7SAS-*M w-TO-Taao-se-M PuS€^ WE0.FE8v7tli ^ LADIES'NKhTMl.00* /ra* Qiftt for Laditg, ht-Gms FsiMm 9Imw-7AS FM. Shirpl PISTONS V8 ROYALS ...... Hair FaiMossatHsWinw CONTESTS—PRIZES I *UONEr RgSDIVD 9IAT9, fIJB • fl.OO '* saiaMciaNaNM.i>« ■ ■I OOBMI4CCWTI0 Mnm » CONVfNTION ARENA Tm Omm» or ieesoa ___rvotloao Seer vABsmr I SEE flit NEW. Widk Track PontiM HAUPT SALES AND SIRVICt MA 5-1566 BBCISTBATION 1 BEGINS m. 12 LAWRENCE T- DISCOUNTS TINS INOW TIMS 6.70*15 ?¥* $T.W 7.50*14 ■??“ $«.9f MCLNLAg TlklS 6.70*15 S-T** 54.88 7.50*14 ^ $9.8f riw T*>—SivkkBf* *To”SSRr;i>^ UUnt T« SKVKl ooM Mw. nwt., m. -w t t* S-MS AnENTION YOUNG AAEN - Your iuturs la in electroniu ... the foiteat growing indwitnir In the world lodoyl Plan for that future by toklng the fmeC troining ovoilable. Enroll now for our next "Electronic Engh" nsering Training"' progrom. of TsehMlsn 1962MERCURW sizzlers In 3 sizes! Now at your Mercury dpaler'U! 1. CoMpaet Mfirewy COMET. Want; a compMt that's lively, frisky, nimble? Comet scoots up hills, scampers through tn^c. For extra power—the Mercury Comet 170 “6." For extra economy-the Motrury Comet "6.” For extra resale value, too. Comet leads all the compacts! 2. New ttaiNbnMM MMoiry METEOR. One of today’s top performors. Choice of three engines: gas-stretching Meteor “6,” 221V-8, and hot new260V-6. Meteor has big-car features at compact prices—in fact, more than half of aU compact models are priced above the Meteor 2-door sedan. LtNOOLN.MSCURV DIVISION MOTOR COMRANV •■WFg-g--1 SEE THE BEST-LOOKING BUYS-NOW IN EACH SIZE-AT MERCURY QUALITY HEADQUARTERS LLOYD MOTORS 7,r LiNCOLN—MERCURY—COMET 232 SOUTN SAGINAW STREET _ .L FE 2-MSI , ■ :/ ■ . THE POXTIAC PRESS. MONI^AY. FEBRUARY 5, 1962 TWENTY-ONE Mulloy Ntt Champion tort UUDBIDALB. Fli. (AP)—Guidnar Mulloy, ifi. Duvb Qip playw, tlM Austin Smith tennis title tat s gnieiln« 14, 44^ M, 64, 6-1 niatdi Sunday. Also Hov* Uno# Selection of New Treods fer All, Feyeign and Compact Cars all SERVia OUAftAMTob MOTOR AAART SAFnY CENTER ' FI 3-7145 121 1. Monfcalm St. 3-7846 I Bmtoa CollM* M. Hfl/ Cr«M Tt Tl; M. BoMrntnr* N DMquMM w. M. rrwwu mr « Dwtaouth M, CerMU W P«M n. SrowB IT Ml IS. Cunatta TSck N Tsia Mb rrlnealaa II aasrtlBM Sarrard M. cakuaMa T| SaanlaiawB A'M!%aribaif Tl WauachuaaUa nrithoda Iilai DaUvara ST. Iluteara II ColfaU H. BoekSlU W , SOOTS Aukurn Waka I_____ ______________ Uaqi^ ttala' N. Munrajr SMIa It MlamL ru. 11 nartda SmOan n *r Malalai BRKAKH IT AGAIN — John Uelset, German-bom U. S. Marine, clears the bar at 16 feet % Inches in the pole vault event of the B. A. A. track meet at Boston Garden Saturday night It was the 2nd time In two days that he broke the 16-loot barrier, having Jumped 1614 In the Millrose Games gt New York Friday. ■r '• Uelses Soars'16y4 Feel; May Join Rocket Men “ « SALE ONE WEEK ONLY III ENDS SUNDAY 4 P. M. U ^MUFFLERS F L E R ANY CAR Maks or Modtf mSTAUEO FREE IN 1S MINUm FOSEION CASS - NOT INClUDiD Cuaranleetl JnyWriling *8“ s GOLD CREST I IHOtslMrdLaksM.(llf.Tslsgrspli) Nntlso Flt-Mlt I ALL 4 WHEELS RELINED GUAtANTEED IN WRITING NOUR SERVICE rsm-nTH—eiitv. su OTNtn s.t. esM tIt.N “HE GREW HAIR” Wama rsaUien. CUyi*arg, Penna. (near AltoMia), shews he rsfrmv hair by Uie Lesley Hosm Treatawnt Method. Hair Coasvltaat Here Yomorrow; Leara If Year Hair Loss Caa Be Stopped aad Baldness Prevented Mr. F. I. Brodle, representing the Lesley Hair and Scalp Consultants, will give hair and acalp consultation to hair worried men and women at the Waldron Hotel In Pontiac, Michigan. Tuasday only, PMruary 0, IMS, from 1:00 PJ4. to RHIO PJd. The Ledey Oonsultanta point out that remaikable resulU have bjr parsonal eiaminatlon followed by indlridual treatments that anyone can easily carry out In the privacy of his or her own home. Regular checkups In your dty by a Lesley Consultant assure success toi the minimum period of time. WHO CAN Hie most conunon causes of hair hMs are: improper scalp hygiene, neglect and mlitreat-ment, which eventuaUy lead to baldness and can vary weU be the oauae of your present-trouble. #t% ot our clients are men, 40% are women, and S% are yotmgsters. When -you first notice^ your hair thinning, brouMit on ally by dandruff, Itddng,, n«ie, i^eas or folllclm clog^ with 'aebum or aeborrhoa, taka poBltlte aetkm at once. See a Hatr snd Scab) Consultant. EXAmINB TOV ntEB You Incur abaOhit^ no charge or obligation ter o^^ to for ooDsultatlon. We will ftoU you frtnkly end alnoerely tMbm M.i»i/»u .. owTied schools Of Its kb*) Mtd CalaraOa ChUtaa It, Atm» MaU ■ taau Clara SI. Pa«in«. CiU. Ml • Pw^ImS si IdahB Mala M ^ . D. Saola Barhara to gl. MOi VAvnuuunuifrrniJi//////7/y/// TUBELESS WHITEWALLS They provide much greeter security then private empfoyment and excellent opportunity for require little or no spAlelized Oducatlon or expariarKa. But to get one of these jobs, you roust peu a test. The competition Is keen and In some cases only one out of five emment. For FREE Information on Cov-arnmant jobs, IrKludIng list of positions gnd saleries, fill out coupon end mall at once— TODAY. You will also get full details on. how you can qualify yourself to pfss thyse tests. Don't delay—Act NOW! LINCOLN SttVICI, Pekin, lllirwi^ I am very much Interested. Please send me absolutely FREE (11 A list of U.S. Covemihent positions end uleries: (21 Information on how to qualify for a. U.S. Government |ob. Name............................................Age............ AddreM...................................................... Clfy............................... .State.................... 5 BLACK TUBELESS NYLON 4-PLY a.ts«is . C.SMIS etsiis . SUPER DISCOUNT PRICES! BRAKE Front End Alltnmint SPECIAL OwfMiOhhlab. I to exahn, T..-1I JW $5.95 ^ Mx^t Cxrt I 88f I ■ 77 WEST HURON ST. ■ WI HONOR ALL MAJOR CRIDIT CAROS! ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ it Pays to Take Care of Your Car witli Guardian Maintenance FEATURED **$TEER $T0P” MNnR DRMN6 Your General Motors Dealer offers complete "STEER and STOP" services for safer, surer driving. His factory-trained service specialists check and correct your entire brake system . . . accurately align the front end. Factory-approved replacement parts are available if required. Modern, up-to-date equipment is used to assure a quality job. Protect yourself, your family and your investment with quick, complete Guardian Maintenance "STEER and STOP;’ services tofjay! • INCLUDES BRAKE ADJUSTMLNTand related brake larvicei, as required, to assure you of safer, sjnoother stops. eFRpNT-END ALIGNMENT for increased safety, easier handling and longer tire wear. PLUS: eCOMPinE QUALITY LUBRICATION with > winter oil chock for efficient cold-weather performance. BEST KIND OF CARE FOR THE BEST KIND OF CARS AND TRUCK8I Guardian Maintenance a CHIVROUITp PONTIAC •OLD8MOBILE*BUICK • CADILLAC vOMC TRUCK TWKNTY-TWO THE PONtlAC TRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1962 Stresses Study of Solar Flares ■WASHINGTON (UPI) - A ilnfle ■olar flare apenda aa much energy aa milliona of hydrogen bomba. Understanding of the mechanlam of aolar flprea. Dr. Herbert Fricd-aaM today, might make poe-aiMe the controlied reieaae of H-bomb energy lor peaoetlnie power, rrtedmaa, Mperiatoadmt of THAT HHOW BIZ KEKUNQ — At a dressing Cheryi Coacia, Birmihgham Junior Miss Cheryi room table, four flnnllsta talk nervously about Belhards and "Rochester Junior Mias Sharel Dieir upcoming talent show exhibitions. From Isanharl, who lives at 295 Chrrryland, Auburn left to light are: Genesee County Junior Miss Heights. Girl at right is unidentified. ’ 'Apart from the importance of understanding the sun's terrestrial influences," Friedman said, solar flare is one of the most fascinating puzzles in pi as physics." M riMtoi ky %t NokI* ARTISTH TOl'CH — Pretty as her ptciures. Romulus Junior, Mias. VliSoria PeMy, pats last lock lirlo place before expinininp; an exhibit of her oil paintings on s age ol Pontiac Northc r.i -High School Saturday. Victoria wa.< one of 13 contestants in Michigan's Junior Miss finals. Weekend Accidents Fatal to 42 in Ohio COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) least 42 persons were victims of accMemal death* in Ohio ovai weekend. Traffic accidents counted tor 30 of the total, one of the highest ever recorded in the state for a non-holiday, 54-hour weekend. TAKING TO THE WINGS — Backstage before formal dress competition, two finalisU lift their arms wing-like a1 the sides ol their spreading dresses. Al left 4s Detroit s Junior Miss, Janet Lyszak: at right is Pontiac's Jugior .MJfiS, Christine of 2144 Garland Ave., Sylvan Lake. Plasma physics is the branch of BCicni-'C most directly concerned wlih efforts to harness H-bomb reactions for production of virtu-aUy inexhaustible electrical power. H^ar flares are by no means uncommon. They occur frequently during periods M maxl- Offlcials believed the unusual balmy, spring-like weather, with temperatures in th# 50s and 60s contributed to the highway slaugh- Bullat Kills T«en-Ager, 14, Playing Russian Roulette COMMERCE, Ga. UB — A game of Russian roulette proved fatal to Robert Harold Hayes, 14. Deputy Sheriff . C. H. Spence quoted another youth as saying Hayes left one bullet in a revdver Saturday, twirled the cylinder, put the muzzle to his hekd and pulled Hayes later. From Pontiac School Board BEADY THAT SMILE -> Dinilnutive MarcM Merrill diubs on a final speck of lipstick before sportswear competition. The Bloomfield Hills Junior Miss later acted the part of a carnival barker in the talent contest and also' did. a spriqus dramatic sketch on tHb death of a cat. Expect Community College OK By RALPH P. HUMMEL The Pontiac Board of Educatlonl is expected to back the county plan for a community college but hold out for popular election of Oakland County Brand of Education members imd popular control of munity college purse strings. A policy resolution on the Pontiac board's stand' is slated tor approval at the Wednesday board meeting. rfinance and administration out of |the hands of the people. In finance, the county plan would llet the voters of the county vote once on okaying a mlliage hike in property tax and a 2 per cent transfer-oLproperty tax. If these levies are okayed, the county community college system would be permanently guaranteed $3 million a year, without seeking renewed voter approval. la admlaMrathm, the CMUly plan would pUoe the oammanity deflhe the posHloa ef the Boerd of Edacattoa with regard to (I) the eatabliahmeat of a Bity ooHege ts tho school dlatriot, der which a eoanty system of conunonlty eoHegeo -directed by the Oonaty Board of Education coiild be eatabHslied.” "This policy statement," the prepared Pontiac agenda item stales, •will attempt to summarize the thinking ol the Board of Eduoatiotl has evolved from the study and discussion ol the past three INDICATIONS GIVEN Indications most recently were that thinking by the local board was going along the lines of commending the county board for its plans to set up an Oakland community college system based on > county-wide property and property-transfer tax levies. TWO SHOE-INS — Heavy boots are contrasted with ballet flippers as Lake Orion Junior Miss Sandra Huerth talks with Genesee County Junior Miss Cheryl Cbscta (right). Sandra did a comic monologue and dance: Cheryl danced classical ballet and later placed as first runner-j:ip. 'Chow Mein Special' a Tangy Mouthful board wooM close a key link In n chain of approval forged by county educators. The county plan already has the support ol the Oakland County Asoodntton of School Superintendents. However, at the same time, the Pontiac School administrators and board officials have continuously - questioned provisions in the county plan which they say would keep Midland Leader, 55, Heart Attack Victim By FRED DANZIG NEW YORK (UPI) - Less than cne hour after Stan Freberg diahad out hia '‘Chow Mein .Special" Sunday ni^L I was ready for another serving. • An inventive chef whose redpes fm- tffffgy eotire have been sampled only in the commercial pantries of broadcastiiw and record albums in recent yekri. Freberg was at long last given the run of the TV kjtch-en He came up with a full-cburse X^TV ipecial that had tin-Boioes needed to give tlie coAxlal euWne a frerii, teative flkvor Chun King Chow. Mein Hour" "Stan Freberg Presents Chinese New Year's Eve," picked on the soft underbelly' of our culture: TV. What was so remarkable about is show was his success in spf ing bright satirical gravies ovfr drio(i4)Ut video viltles. The “Siftg Along" spoof was a mirth-filled nilnesifone. The "Open End" tqka-off which dealt •with TV (jornmep-dais, conduted in a serlo-sentlmen-tal. awe-filled nranner. dozed with artislrj^ and bite. The dpedal, called either * Benjamin Franklft fastened curved pieces ol wood to chaic legs Pontiac board members have voiced a desire to have a nity college-controlling body more directly elected by and responsible to the people. Oouaty Board af Bdacatton, wMeh la elected by a dalagate Both of these county provisions will he up lor discussion in the legislature's Senate Education Committee which was recently given a bill creating the county community college system^ apoo-aored by Sena. Farrel E. Roberts ROaMaM County, and George C. Steeh, D-Macomb. 13 in Mission Flown From Tense S. Kasai ^layal Aitrophyiiciit iipkt Sun to Control of H'Bomb't Enorgy divlalaa af the VS. Naval ^^aea^eh Labaratory, dhearasd Voice af Amerira. a by the a flare rdrasea energy eqotva-leot to nUlHons of H-bombs, Its emlsotons represent only n small ripple In the steady flow of energy from the mn. IK addition to pravldlhg clues to the controlled release of hydrogdn energy for power, study of flares may explain thow the sun affects earthly wearther, Friedman said. RADIO BLACKOUTS Visible changes in solar activity, such as flares, are accompanied by inviaible ultraviolet and X-radiations whirh cause radio blackouts and northern and southern lighU on earth. But, said Friedman, "it remalna mystery" whether the earth' weather la influenced by "theae n V t B i b 1 e solar ultraviolet or X rayi." Spaceborne teleacopes and detectors "may soon provide Important clues to the understanding of these Prince Is Stricken With Cold on Tour JAKARTA, Indonesia (F — Japa-tse Crown Prince Akihito has sen stricken with recurrence of severe cold during a vlalt to Bal the Japaneae Embaasy said today. The 28-yeaiMdd heir to the Japaneae throne is expected to art short his tour of Indonesia, cancel his visit to the Philippines, and fly block to Tokyo when he recovers sufficiently to travel. Akihito, who is traveling with his wife, Crown Princesa Mlchiko, cau^t cold in Pakistan when he set out on his tour. He seemed to e c o V e r but ■ Indonesia's wet steamy monsoon weather apparently brought a recurrence. H08PITAL DEDICATED — Comedian Danny Thomas happily greets an unidentified fan after unveUlng the atatue nl SL Jude at dedicatioa oeremonlaa tor the new |5«iillion hoH^tal at Memphia, Tbnn., Sunday. Twenty-five years ago, Thomaa prayed toSLJud?, the patron of bopeleas. cauaea, a*ktag ■aoeesa. and promised a shrine in return. The hospital will specialize in research to chll- .dren's diaeaaea. Regearcher^a Test Findg Bad Speiing's Universal I ailCAGO (B - A report flf spelling test for 1.137 Upper grade pupils in Midwest schools has disclosed scores ol different spellings of relatively simple words — all, The report by the OdcaBS education and paychoiogical ptifalWt-Ing firm concluded: "IN'. Parker la continuing his study," The teat was made of 0th. 7th and 8th grade pupils by Dr. Don-H. Parker, senior author of ipelling laboratories for Science Research Aaaociates. Parker observed that when pupils are caafronted with the need to write a word they da not know bow to spell they often will laveat or create a speUIng -aad hope It gels by. He said the studento compiled 160 different speiUngs of the word Theae included such strange words as "unelegir,” "unl-'unnavercal,” "umiver-and "Inapri- ..S' „sk* Orion. * IN. Chwrolft. Bartel N# .IMTmaMi sill ba aoM at SsSIIC sib-Uon for esah to hlfhaat Mdar. Csr mtr The youngsters found 50 diftor-bnt ways to spell "calendar.” They tried "cal ader," "colender," ’damder,”."galender," "canalda," ind "canlder." The word "require” was apelled 50 different ways, including "rcquei choir," "recryer," "requeer," "re-quir," and "reaquor." me" waa 61 dU- Lit “Ic'aTlaSSf wlU Sa sold at BaMb SI to hl^iaatblddtr. Osr ■ Oo iSkrssry I. INS. St Jt:N ropuc BALB Oa Vabrmiy liilNl. st l.:N s-n. at TSs'^m.^'a^teT XTtoswijiM* sill ba aold at public aucUon for esah r Btey N Inapacted PUBUC BALE Oo rtbrsan It, ISdS. st lt:N aai. at M3 Asbani Bt., ^ttec, MMl., a t.l3 Roablar Bpprt Badan. Bartel Ho. nlN. -‘II ba aoM at pubUa sscUos Isr esah btebaat blddor. Csr suf ba Inapacted OSmniAL MOTOM accxptaucz corf Fab. . and t. IN. KRESGE’S LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (AP) — Thirteen American missionary women and children have been evacuated from the Presbyterian mission at Bibanga in South Kasai, scene of new military tensions caused by insubordinate Coh-)ps, consular officials today. plane, their own private plane was seized by (he South Kasai troops on suspicion that they were transporting messages and personnel loyal to the Lulua tribe — traditional enemies of the Balubas. The missionaries were flown ont last week aRer a U.N. rescue planq was seised and Its crew held tor three hours by Baluba tribal gendarmes loysl to their native chief, Albert Ks-lonll, now under arrest by the l^eopoldvUle central government. of three of the women remained at the miaaion. The y.N. said a letter insisting 1 U.N. freedowm of movement in the troubled area had been sent to the Kasai provincial authorities and bad been favorably received, but it was not clear how much effective c o n t r o 1 the provincial government would have over South Kasai, which once claimed to be an autonomous state. Without their plane, the missionaries were cut off, the diplomatic report said. River ferries w^re flooded out by high waters and roads were blocked by troopa who refused to permit traffic in cither direction. ‘Walk to Luluabourg — Just like we do," sneered one of the aoldierB when the missionaries asked how they could pick up their food plies without their plane. It sbOT« sddMM. MIDLAND (fi - Ray Fry, 55, Midland city manager and prominent boy acout and civic leader, died of a heart attack Sunday. Fry look office as city manager here March 17. 1952, Bom on a Newaygo County farm, Fry went to work (or the Jackson County highway department upon graduation fmii high aobool and In 1M5 became Jack-ton city engineer. Survivors include the widow;, a daughter,. Lindai* and a son, Victor, of Jpekson. if® Fune ral arrangements wepe - I in ,11 ic reports said ______________J troopa ael^ the U.N. plane and crew at Bibanga Jan. 26, warning them th|| Balubas considered the U.N. hostile lorce. sy In The American e Leopoldville sent . fleer to Luluabonrg ami the Kasai area guaday to iaveatigato the tdtualion. / Hie American mission families vere flown out of Bibanga last week in their own mission plane as e/ precautionary measure In ca^ a U.M.-South Kasai conflict si^d break out. t Americans are working under th^ American ' Presbyterian 6into'‘ Misalon.' ★ ★ ' r«b. . sod A INt 6n l*sbrusrr 19, INI. at 10:30 s.m. t 6. Mt. CtemWM at.J^tts«^Mich.. s Mt Pontiac Btitlon Wagon. Bartel Ho. On Pobruary U. lM9-.at.IO: 01 Ht. Clamant Bt., ^ntiae. INI Pontiac 4-Door CaUUna, --------- - U1P411M. will ba told at pubUc suction ----ttb to hlshatt bidder. Car may 6a :ted a. abora a<—— Na!*ST^14Nn. sill N lO^ ai pu^ asctlon lor cash to Mshait Uddar. Csr may N intpteted at aSe»a »M14M0, «1U N acid st puMte t' tor eaab io btebort Mddar. --------- inipteted at sSsn M FACTORY CLOSE-OUT 5-Pc. DINEHE SET A Regular $49.95 Value This Sale Only $2095 Dilivaiy |l Extra DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORE ONLY Limited Supphf OpanjAAon., Thun., Fri., Sot. ?:3p to 9:00 P.M.-Tua*., Wad. 9:30 to 5:30 P.M. YOU CAN "CHARGE IT" AT KRESGE’S ■X: THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 6, 1902 TWENTY.THREE Only Harm Themgclveg Students Who 'Have to' Cheat Heed Help ■V LBRUf J. NAMN, M. D. Pwilmit M Ualv«n«7 tt Mkeni CWUm Student chMttnc hu tnrmaed aa ichoob ha itudy kwd. # Pranura on Itudants and. In-directly, | on parents i teachsn, is order of the day. To thoae i ' who ara alrnMty (allfulng, (eeliiws almost to tl breaking peln aenae of valuas. The ___________ cheating, uo- de. nabon happy students, disappointed par- rea. ■"t"-. This is too bad. ' Most sutdenU who think they have to cheat don’t have to at An adult friend, now a-thaclv told me. "If i had Worfcet as hard studying as I did cheat Ing, 1 wouldn't have had to cheat' WEIf THE MVDEirr Preaching to the cheater is no Bswsr. He wouldn’t cheat If he felt there were aiqr other way. But If paimU and teachers cooperate they can keep young people frotn feeling that th^ need to cheat OiUdren often cheat because they haven't leaned some important facts or have misunderstood facts that they have learned. If parents and teachers are alert, they may be able to help the student correct the problem Itefore the situation becomes too serious. Moat ehIMrea are net lasy. They wU| wash hard an a pro-Je«( when they know what to do. Here's a program fbr them: * 0 * Get the student started trying to improve his academic work, then encourage him by. showing him better techniques and skills lor readiiE, writing, and listening. Good study techniques are set-dom learned through trial and error. Most students need help. A good source for this type of help will be found in my book, “You CAN Get Better Grades." tWEATBIIg ARE CHEATED Each student should be encogW jed to work for his own around development. Help him to see that getting a good grade through cheating, even if the pro-temporarily successful, limit on his ultimate at- kaows them. Hds Is net Um. U.S. Radar Warning System Gave False Reports at First WASHfNG'TON (UPI) - False warnings friun America's giant missile detection radar In Greenland wen numerous over a period of flvs nontiis. it ^ today. '* A Hie Defense Department said in an annual rep^ to the ' House that "the ma)arlty of false reports which first plagu^ it wen eliminated by Febniary 1961." The radar, kaswa as BMEWS 'ler BalHstfe RHasHe Eariy Wara-lag Bystena, beoame operational One of the eariy false warnings became public knowledge at the time because three visiting nessmen wen present in Colorado Springs, Colo., when the Virarning was llairiied to Air Defense Head- But the Air Fbrce said this difficulty had been 'MtiHinated after one month of operation. The state-nent said the technicians had 'refined adjustments in a built-in device which now causes the computer to ignon the return from the moon.'* DIDN'T ELABORATE The Defense Department nport dhl not spe^y the nature of the further .......... FEARED ATTArK ' Before the falsity of the signal could be established, the businessmen spent 30 tense minutes under an impression that a massive mis-, sile attack might have launched against the United Sutes. Ob Nov. n, IMS, the Air Forco U.S. Pilots, C« Downed in Laos Yonks, 4 Othors Die as Plane Is Hit by Enemy Fire on Miuion VIETIANE, Laos (API - An American-piloted transport plane was shot down by hostile fwces Sunday while flying over Plaine des Janes .on an air to government forces in the area, it was teamed today. A A A The American pilot and copilot and four Lao unkuMlers were 1 in the crash in the hill country east of the Plaine des Janes. •nie C46 was operated hy Air American, a civilian firm set op by the American government to provide the Laotian army with air tranRXirt NORMAL MMION Air American said it was on a n dropping rice and refugees It was not Immediately known whether it has been shot down by prince Souvanna Phouma's neutralist troops, pro-COmmunlst Pa-thet Lao «r antiaircraft artillery manned by North Vietnamese soldiers. Several other American-manned planes have been shot down or crashed in Laos civU war since Traffic Chief Can't Park Car in New York City NEW YORK (AP) - Traffic Commissioner Henry A. Barnes, brought here to help untangle New York's traffic and parting problems, has found a parking space tor his own cai^in Baltimore, ^ Barnes, who supervised traffic in the Maryland city until test month, said Sunday, "I have been thinking about bringing it (the par), but what would I do vdth It after I yt The commissioner, who earns I27.S00 a year, said he can’t afford the rates charged by New York gty garages, CBC ExBCUtivB Diet OTTAWA (AP) - Donald Man-son, 75, general manager of Canadian Broadcasting OcBpam-tion In 1951-S2 and a pioneer of the Canadian radio industry, died Saturday. Manabn. who was ^ in Wirt, Scotland, came to Can ada in 1907 to work with the Mar t-oni Company in establishing commercial radio cwnmunicat^ Wtween Canada and Ireland. He served as A (Smadian government inspector of radio In Worid War I and later became chief Inspector. Each parent should atrive to In-Ull Integrity, loyalty and good Teachers should maintain a situation in the ctamroom, particularly durtiM teats, in which It is difficult tor a student to cheat. It la ptedi« too much tempUtion In way of a aindert tor ths lier to leave the room or When cheating la easy, the honest student Is placed at a disadvantage. Many adults have told me that they dropped out of school after making their way through cheating and without really teaming. They found they could not go on to advanced courses. They found out too late that they really had Mfticlent abOity to pass by fair means. They now know that THEY are the ones who have been DRIFT MARLO By LauHu Tarnar TVVEyTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. MO*NDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1962 Markets, MAliKEIS The following ere to oovcrlng aalet ot locally grown produce. Iqr groweri and lold by them In wholcaale package lota. Quotatlona are fumtahed by the Detroit Bureau ol Marketi, at of Friday. D«trott Produce Big Three Motors Off Upside Leadership Weakens Buturnat . Poultry and Eggs . t (API—PrIoM Ilvt poull WblUi lUAUty .— ---ji At Dttrolt byTlIin-At. Ml«crt Hacludlni U.O.i WhIUA—OrAdt A Jambe W-M: fitri tarit lArt* mrdlam MW- allitr» NEW YORK (AP)-The atock marto for a while carried Ita current rally into the fifth atraight began to falter, allowing a mined pattern oarly thla afternoon. Trading waa active. Galna aiid loaaea of fnctiona. to about a point prevAUed amoos moat key atocka. Inveatment buying waa atlll attracted to aoine ol the major oUa Ralla maintained a fairly ateady tone. Steela were narrowly tion of galna in output and menta although new ordera have been leveling off. The Street waa fairly optlmlatk-in view of the aharp rally of laat week but it waa plain that proflta iifiing taken on aome shortterm galna.’ MOTOKH OFF Big Three motors were off. An assortment of Issues which have severe losses weeks rebounded sharply as they met renewed demand, but there was no solid leadership toward the upside. A standout performer was Johnson & Johnson, up about S points on a report of favorable government action regarding its new oral contraceptive hormone. The stock advanced 4Vk Friday. Brunswick rebounded more than point from recent loaaea. ^y-nolda Tobaccos recouped a coiiplc of points. Prices advanced on the American Stock Exchange in moderate trading. Syntax, which manufactures the hormone fbr Johnson B point following a m-polnt Jump IW.T''n'Mor* '10(4; AbmS AtAAdy. WblU Isrs* IsirAt Friday. Gains of a . ter were made also by Creole Petroleum, Heli - Coil and Anken Chemical. Liberty Fabrics was more than 2. Rayette was off about a point and Massey • Ferguson eased. Scurry-Rainbow Oil, firth Sterling and Pacific Petroleum Managers Pick 'Man of Year' Oakland Life Insurance Agents Are Cited for Their Service Corporate and U. 8. Government onda showed an irregularly higher trend- Oakland County's' Managers As-xdatiop has named its "Men ot the Year"—men among Pontiac's life insurance men, recognized by their companies lor service to their and to their community In Bond Prices Open Mixed WEW YORK (It - Bond prioea opened the week mixed to a shade higher today. Over the counter dealers in U. S. government securities quoted liw lermeAatn and long Issues up 2/32 In slow dealings. SH per cent, I year certificate and 4 per cent, 4H year note to be well received. Hie two hew Issun h alight premiums , in when tnultng. ^ porate tradlDg eu the New York Subscription books opened for the Treasury's Sll-7-btllion exchange designed to replace four notes maturing this month and on April 1. Veteran dealers' expect There were comparatively lew price movements among corporates. Very few, even among usually volatile convertible section amounted to a full point or >. An exception were com products 4Hs, up 1 at 102 at one time. The New York Stock Exchaip ol' nImM itsok 'MBOAoUiMTs ‘um*aoST (Ma) Blfh Law LaM Oaa!| CmCAOO. JAA. II (AP> —(OaDAl — LWo poaltir: WbAltiMo bBjriM Drlooo ■ unebADt^; opt«Al M WblW HecC Inr-on a^lysiaitUl aoab tryori UH; Suek- UvMtock ^ aceioiv uvwerocK nBTRorr, r«b t iabi — (Ubda) — Cottlo atSO. Bulk OArlT oupplir ilAUfbUr ttrrri ond hellori; olAndArd And good giodta nrodomlnotlni. oniAlL loeroAMd tbowirik ol food and choir* tlotn And bi-ilcra^eoata In^odero^ Duw modcrouljr oetlvo; tood And ebolco •Irrro atoAdT to lb cenU lowtr oMeo hMtrra »-M ernu lover: utllUy oowa Mrnino woak to moatlr 50 centa lower. Canntra ond euttora obout ateody, ( hood miiod hlih choice and prime Around iy>5 lb ateora n 50: acolterliif cboleo aieeri 35.W-J0.05, mlied loodr " Ohd low eholce J4.75-35 75: ateera 2I75-M75: aeTerol lc_... _____ heilara M5d2S: mlied lotda blob food Aliil low choice hellera J3 5AJ4 50; uflllty rowa 1410.15. lew up to 15.50: OAluura Howe too. Borraws, allU Abd lowi mo5l number I 300-110 lb. IT.OA.17.70: ^ mi'a"ed*'j 'an'd**'I uij4?lb. and ] 340.370 lb 10 14 M: number 3 IT*-3(10 lb 15 35-15 75 I 3 And 3 30IMOO lb. oowa 14 15.35: 3 and 3 lO^ lb. aowo Ir. prime lee 30-30: ■ A^tad t.M Boduo S.10 Biduti .101 __.J ITrod .40 jauuS’,- ____________________ ADefPw 1.00 I 47H 47H 47He JtUie Chal l.lSt 14 tlH II tl - Alum u3 .00 n VH 17'" AlOOA 1.M 10 0044 “* §ss Brk Sb 1.40 IS llti - ___ _____ Bd Per lb 7 40 4m 4IVk Orond Un Mb Can S 47 4BH 40(4 4St4- Va Oran C SU lAO Am Cyan 110 40 4474 44H 44V- 44 CM ABP I IOa AmCyw 1.00 40 44% 44% 44%- V. Ot Ho By 3 Am a rPw ’.S *0 5o% »% HjOreytiound 1.10 — .... ^ ,,, ,g 10 + % 14 404< 4m 40V«-H I 1 07»a fWa 17% + % 4 03% 41% 03V- % It I7'w 17% 17% e % .00 1S4110 im 110 n M% 8 Slit % oj J8 rs -- 7 10% 10% 30%+ Va Heyden Npt I 0 M% M% 10% .. Holt Elect 5 00% 004i OOba-%'Mofnoetk IJOa 10 M M N - % Hookor Cb l 1 TI Tl 71 - ' a Hotpl Cp Am ? jr* r* ■ I sr “ “ 100 ib. < vtifhu K-rlLo^i-oJ: “iJi 00 abem loabo IT-lO. ody~ to ^fr__ Amph Boro AnOfondo t. Armco All 3 ArmourbCo Armat Ck I Aahl Oil 131 Alnhlaor 1 » AU Bonn 1. Atlaa Cp e, 100-310 ll». lVt0-17.1S: Vb e lOO-te Ibe 17.00-10.00: top 10.16: No 1. 3. 1 130-300 Ibe. ITOO-lfso CatUe 10.000, cAleea 100. Local reeelpta •malloat tor any Monday alncc May. IMl ind 13 aorket aupply amoUeai for any Monday aineo June. lOoi: tradlnc rather alow: slouehter. itoori ond half era atrona to to hlsber: cows alow, ateody; •teody to 00 blaher: eoolera ond a' and IMdora ateody: load lote blah and prlmo lllO-uto Ib. alouahter 37 00-^00; *— —— *• d"iioeke‘; I prima hellera ^W: -hoica a> U.00-31.: Stocks of Local Interest Plfuyaa attar deelmal points ara alfbtba David) n Pood 8 Federal Mogul-Bower Beorlna> Harvey Aluminum Hoover Ball A Bearing ^eonard Beflnlng Ml' standard Toledo Sdlton Co. e'fnuJSled*o mate trading range oi me AMT Corp.................. Aunt Jane's Pood ......... Detrotter Mobile Hornet . Diamond Crytul ........ .. ' Klectronict fntomoUonal Wlnklemant Wolverloe Bhoo............. Wyandot to Chemical ........ MVTtiiaTcNDS 1 Atmioted Fund . Chemical Fund .. Xeyatone Income U , .. Beyatone Growth K-l . MataAohuaef Orovtb . Trust «SRr.‘e-“a_ OenPub Dl L30 O TolABI ,7S ----- . - - ------,-- “ ,S li i ss: S&j? • OUlalU 1.10 ... ..... ‘ “• • “ By SAM DAWSON AP BuMbbss News Asslyst NEW YORK (AP)—Guessing whai the stock market Will do Is whole-timc Joh lor thousands and s part-time Job for millions. * * * . And if you ttel that all the pro-fsaslonal guessing Just now on the course of tho market is loaided with more than the ueual quota of 1961. Oioeen for their outstanding performances were Gld R. Dixon— mansgement, and Robert B. Becker—agent, for the Life of Virginia Insurance Co.; Francis J. Stacey, Lincoln National Life; Howard Bratt, State Farm Insurance Co. Bill Arce,^ Shile Farm Insurance 'jCo.; Alex Clark, New York Life Insurance Co.; R. J. Cortes, Nation Life Accident Co.; Tage Guldbrandsm, Metropolitan Insurance Co.; RichBrd/'MineTveiaer, Equitable Life Assurance Society; ' " ~ Davis, National Life A Accident Co. Selections also included M. J. Slocum, National Life A Accident Co.; William Bonning, Prudential Co.; John Leonard, Met- The experu are all predicting like mad—and aometimes it takes an-pert to interpret their predtetionB. ★ w ★ Out in Phoenix. Arix.,.,s vice presidam of the Valley qistlonal Bank, Herbert A. Leggett, puU tongue in cheek and looks at tbs ropolitan Insurance Co.; G. L. Andrews. National Life A Accident C».; Robert Msynes, Metropolitan Insurance Co.; Joe J. DeMag-gio, Life Insurance Company of Virginia; Buzz Bommarito. Joha Hancock Insurance Co.; and J. E. MaslngUl, National Ole A Accident “0. The group, as guests of the datlon. received their “Man of the Year" trophies, respectively, at a recent dinner accompanied by their wives In Northwood Inn, 2303 Woodward Ave., Berkley. 8 ^ 8^: % St ^Ito Air Issuance of Liquor License to Country Club —H— Halllbtirlon 2 40 0 U% 51% U%+ % Rbmm Pap 1.30 ' 1 34% M% N%- % „----V4 3 31% 31'> 3I%+ % S 44 *'■ “ I U% 15% 15% “ .1 SJS JKi salawsr SI ISO M I4% 54% 54% f5ii ^ f5Ti+ % Sc(Ht>ap 50 34 —" AL BB 1W 3 30% 30% ----------3? Shall OU l it 37 40% M% ShaU Tran .TM XI 10% U% slncIlTr ■?* 30 40* 8% SlnaarMf t.tt 4 110% lta% OmllhAO .Ita J »% 33 15 55% 54% 54%- ^ 1% 1% i%-; BIsalowS .IOa Uo«mk Ud Bor^ 1.40 Bon worn 2 Brissa Ml Brut My 1.30s ‘’~miwlck ,10 -.;kaya PL 100 Buey Xrit Uudd Cb .100 BuUmTI Bulova M t IT .. ^ 15% 11% 35% —B*— IT 15% 15% 15%v , 13 35% 15% »%+ %t|_ f*gTJ‘S5;‘St:%£rab‘’? 8?i%?KjJi%:{tis{2ir.r% 1 41% 41% 41%+ % nu Hick 1.55 10 43 41+4 41%+ % lal Pack .40f 1 31% 13% 13% ,|nt Paper l.Wb Tc 50V, 14V, 54%- H IplTclATal 1 15 54 51+4 53%- % ITECktBrk +• 44% 44% 44V,- % 7% T% 7%+ % 'Sqsotiv 3a _ „ , „„ SouCaJCdla 55. 45 10% 30% alM 13 «Vi • • ♦ Vfc gyy 0 u Carrtor Cp 1.55 2 5% . JO • .00 0 --------- 01 10% 05 — ..... S5 41% 45% » *T% *7^ *T%+ % 3a 41% 41-/1 41% , Ml 41V, 45% 4t%— 05 4 M.t Cert-taeef* .75 b _____________ _ - 57% 55 . Ctev El Ul 1 1 54 10% 5I%+. . CocaCola 1.40 4 04% M% 04%- % Cole Palm IJtS 35 00% 50% IM+ % C^ttu Rad IS Ifw 50% 10%- " - • P a Ir It 15% 11% 15%... ___ 1.40b 00 40% 40% 40*4+ % Colum Oaa 1.10 15 17% 07% IT%+ % Col Ptet 7M 0 01% JSV, ll%+ % Coml Crad IM IS 50% 0 U%+ % coml Bolv .lOb 2 UV, 03 » -r % Com* Kd ................ Cob XdU Mtnam i telorlaloi WcUInflo 1J:U : ifij Amoricon Stock Exch. (Plfuroo alter dacimali arc In alghtl ».l Xa^ Indaa J k as kul w iis- ^ " as ift Si uSkAMy*'!**' *4 109% 109% M9' 14 i7(, 1)1, 17' „ _ J.50I., 1» 136% 115 155 [SckhAlrc 1.00 M 51% 50% ^ is i» 3as:'i , ■1-v.a K:i ra as 74M7i 5 55% » ' a* 3 ir> ii> 10 ^ 451 38% 81 f im Isa JHu— ** 10 10% 10% M%- % 11 114'4 114% 114% + % 3 40% 44% 4"" - -J; liJ The issuance of a Class C liquor cense In Waterford Township will be discussed at tonight.’s meeting of the Township Board. Izist Msich the beard Issued s Class C H4H5Mr to the Poatiso r+Hintry Club irMch prevloHsly cense, permitting Ihpior nine months Of the year. HoTvever, the stale tailed to aJ- Hie club now has an applicBtlon on file for the license to be used at a different location and in the meantime retains its resort license. Board memberi are oqiected to decide tonight either to allow thla alternate reipieat by the dub cr to Issue the available licedse to ax other applicant. Some Grain Futures Drop Way Down CHICAGO UR — Several grain futures contracts declined major fractions today in slow early transactions on the Board of Trade. Brokers said demand was very light all around and that the offerings by speculators may have been more short-selling than liqui- To the Stock Market Predictions M<^an Little market and the economy in tenni he says a lot ot the eiqierU use. •ALWAYS fUJCrUATI*' "Stock market acting up but krill ahrsys fluctuate, brokers con-If It doesn't there won't be In the monthly economic lettOi* he writes for the bank, he gets down to fundamentate; •What about peopiet Fiankly. s outlook isn’t good. Howevw. stsUstidans figure dlfterenUy. More people mean more Imp- The Arizona banker also takes a look at the economy in general; ‘Major trend podtlv^ up. dope-sters aaaert. Qf couree, the minor may ruin you, but that Is thatr fault." UsUcs. •MORE EVBBYTBINO’ “Baby crop to exceed expeda- ________________ In a deadly •erlous velB by one Wall Street expert. Arthur Wlesenberger. He pitHB hts thrusts at the popular notion that a bull market Is a tiros of pneperity and profits for JFK Postpones Message on U.S. Stellite Policy WASHINGTON (AP) — President Kennedy postponed his mes-to Congress today on the ellite policy. He rescheduled h for Wednesday. ♦ > A The While House gave no explanation for the delay. In the message Kennedy is In his SUte of the Union message Kennedy said be would "soon send to the Congress a measure to govern the financing and operation of an Inlernationsl communications ssteUite system in a manner consistent with tbC public interest and our foreign policy." tion of several flrma In ilrvelop-Ing a worldwide communications system. * * The Pmideht was prepared to register his opposition to domination of the proposed system by B company. TO CLABIFY STAND Kennedy's special messaga on communications satellites was expected to clarify the government's position on ommershlp and participation in the txopoaad system. Woman Critical Following Crash 3 Othors Treated for Minor Injuries After Royal Oak Collision ROYAL OAK - A 23-ycaiM)ld Berkley woman is listed in criMcsl condition this morning at William Beaumont Hospital from injuries received when the car in jvhich she was riding was struck by another on 13-Mile and Rochester roads sarly this morning. FTOadiM NlcboUs of S4N Os-ford St. has seven head lajariee. Kennedy had prop9aed last year that the United States bunch such a system and make its fsciUtles available to the worid. He also suggested that private enterprise own the ILS. share sad tiiat other eoHiP tries be invited to invest in the system. * ♦ A Sen. Robert S. Kerr, chairman of the Senate Space Oimmittec, introduced a bill last month propos-ii« establishment of a SSOO mlUion-corporstlon to push development of gioM space cammunications. SEPARATE IDEAS Kerr, an Oklahoma Democrat, said the corporation would own the U.S. part of the system with 5,000 shares for sale at $100,000 each. Aides to Kerr said the proposal kras his own rather than an administration measure. A A A The Federal Communications commission, has under consideration s plan to let a nonp develop and operate the gystem for international telephone calls and eventually for international television, Wlesenberger potnU out that at M Old of the year the Dow onet Industrial avurage was cloat to Its hlatorlc high "167 polnta and 20 per cent Mgher than •I ths.+SM ed the presidential electtoa J«t 14 hectic months before.” AAA That puU 1961 squarely on the generally accepted list ol bull market years. NOT SO WELL But maybe you had other stocks than those carried in the popular averages. Worse, you may have held some stocks among ths 130 on the New York Slock Ex- ___„e that Wlesenberger notes declined 40 per cent or more from their UI041 Mghs. Some dedtned that In a bull market everything must go up. A. A A The major triMd, to be mire, as up. But If you put your money on the leas fortunate among the favorites, you know what is meant by "the minor trends ipay 14 23% 13% 03+k-Vj I7*^« MVS 4 u i7Vs im WV4+ ^ _ J 8? S i^SMj3o;^ I; U 43S O Va LwWn* 8^1 ^ ^ vj ITntt AfJ Un Mb 19 17H i4lnnU«i Co .Vttt e 0 Ooi I 0«« Cp 1. Prrtghi 3 nvniiim j ns Rorr m 30 M% 30% M%- tk Groin Prices CHICAGO OSAIH CHICAGO. Fob 5 (AP - 61*11); itr....... 07% kmeol - 00% Mor........ 09+4 Mor 71% Jnl] Driver of the car, Charles E. Greenert, 26, of 149 Ottowa St. Troy, and passengers Robert L. Meher, 26, of 208 Oak St., Roch-ester, and Maurice R. Roberts, 32. ol 39 E. Mapledale St., Hazel Park, all koere treated for minor injuries and released from the hospital. Driver of the car Ahlch struck Gresnert’s auto was Leslie A. Le-Fstvn, 20, of 924 N. Rembrandt St.. R^ Oak. He was not Injured. HR AT UGHT According to Royal Oak police, Greenert) who was going north on Rochester Road, arrived at the 13-Mile Road light at the same time :as LeFaivre, who was travelini cast on 13-Mile Road. LeFaivre tatid police he sleweki ‘To. \ —V— Vonad Cp .40 3 15%_______ n.ri.. 4. , 4|w 4m I 11 5t% 55% 59%+ % —w— ^ruriBPte lit 3 ^ Woni Um 1.50b 0 04+4 54% 54%-^% W)l Bbneorp 1 14 37>'4 57% 57%— % 1& Lard (C I Jnlz ... I a? : :!F Treasuiir Position eiTs 4iar on the lelt aide. Both drivers were to make state-nents at the Royal Oak prosecutor’s office today. According, to police, the impact threw ihe woman up «ito the lawn of the Mary Lyon Junior High School about 12:45 a.m. 15 55% 1... . 55 37% 37% 37%+ % Baianiw . 0 8% 8 8 ij °Vi8ai* Tl DU C Staf l.lta 4 55% 55% M% ... ....... ffitS -hi »% 0 $1% 53% S3%+ % Northrop 10 104 103% 103%-l%,H«+t AUlIn .to 1 10% 30% M%- %;Norwloh Ph te 8 S'* r* s%:»& SIS "‘vif’ ' i: 0 iikt 11% 11% !: 1 11% 11% Sl%+ % —p— I J'ono Cp 1 40 School children of some (Xlito KilSLr^ib J dties foltow special ^outo maps their koay to and from thair-homes na »-to avoid traffic ' ,, ParSo* »« 55J^ ^ MahodT ♦ ^ •v'pS%*u .. ’J 3** 8;^ g+ •} 8^0 8!t Sr D*^ ", 5% oT., -. M 44% 45% G%4 l% PhU W 130 « HJ* H'* 2’' .. 13 14% M% 54%t % Phil a Hdt tb * 73% 71 — % " 43 41 G pbUlp Mer 1.40 0 103% 101% 101% +1% 0 50% 55%‘ 55%+ % PhlU Pet 1.70 14 50% 15% *" 3 17% 17% r% PUn+T Bo* 73 , II 0^55% SO 398% 157% 107%- H PttPlatoO 3 Hb iS 8%^r- News in Brief Elglity dollars In cash (rono vending rpachines and another $75 f whiskey were taken Saturday night in a break-in at the ‘99 Oub’ on & Telegraph,/Water-tor* Township Entry was gaindl by breaking the plate glass in the front door. Two mo containing about $80 were stolen by ttileves who broke Into Pontiac Lake Laundry, 83U High-Road, it was r^x^ed Oakland County Sheriffs-deputies yesterday morning. "Crossing the Rubicon" means to teke an irrevocable step. The.---. phrase stems from Jan. 19, tfumth^o B. C., krtien Julius OiMar crossed p" t$e Rubicon River and staoted tho 5] Mnith "IfO Tf.5 15L5 — jUth TtS S5.3 ord albums krith s total value of $260 koere stolen from hls.apari-at 177 Fisher St.. Robert Williams told Pontiac police yesterday. Wild < J81 Or________________, _ Tues., F'eb. 8,6 pm. to • pm.—. Lodge Calendar ogUlar Meeting of Veterans of Local Rebels on Strike Date Allii - Chalmers Unit Opposes Others by Extending Deadline MILWAUKEE » - United Auto Workers Local 248 at the home plant of the AUl*Chalmers Mfg. Co. broke ranks kdth locals at other plants around the country today. by extending a strike deadline to March 15. ■ AAA A Feb. 20 deadline had been set earlier by the council of eight UAW locals at A-C plonU. The council Is now negotiating with the company for a new omtract to replace one that expired Nov. 1 but has been extended by mutual consent of the union and the big heavy industrial and farm machinery company. Local Ml Pikwideat Charies M. Mmlts told a meetiog of aboat S,NS kkofken IsoIgM that he had beea la coastaat dhagieemeat kkllli the eight-plaat oOMeil, and to bargain. Schultz said the UAW council orii^nally sought a Feb. 4 deadline but was persuaded by Local 248 negotiators to extend it. AAA .Other Allis-Chalmers plants at La Oosse, Wis.; La Porte and Terre Haute, Ind.; Gadsden, Ala. Springfield, 111., Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Pittsburgh. to do, par- bar that had been apaculativa favorites. A A A Some of the amt canialUes of 1961, moreover, .kreren’t listed on Price oi Gold Drops Sharply on Paris Market PARIS (D - The price of gold dropped sharply on the Paris exchange today, apparently In-.dicating confidence in an early settlement on the Algerian conflict. AAA The gold Napoleon, a .coin that is generally bought by Flvnch-men lor hoarding arhen they’re look better, dropped a full franc (20 cents) in to^’s trading. It fell from Sunday’s 41.60 frances ($8.32) to 40.60 ($8.12). Business Notes Appointment of • Emmett B Lekiia, 836 Colonial Ct. Binning ham, as director of fleet aectior of General Motors sales secUor has beta announced by H. E. Craarford, director of sales asc- Chelsea Finn Exhibit Will Touf in Russia CHELSEA (GPI) - Hie Gelman Instrument Co. of Chelsea will take part In a medical exhibition to be held in the Soviet Union, it was annouheed today. AAA The company said the United States l^nnatlon Agency selected it to take part in the exhibition called “Medicine, U.S.A.," months starting in March. A A A ^ Hi^ firm said its pr;|duct8 on display krill be primarily air sampling equipment used to determine quantity of toxic gases and dusts in outside Sir and in factories. “ Lekris, kriio has spent the past 15 years In the ssles department of the Chevrolet Motor Diviskm ol GM, succeeds George V. Kieffer. kriio has been appointed regional director of fleet activities krith headquarters in San Francisco. -AAA Lekris attended North Carolina State doUege, where he majored in industrial management prior to Joining the Chevrolet diviston as parts representative In 1946. He IS held several s^es and sefvice positions in the division's Louisville and Atlanta regions, and for the past five yean has bsen ss-sistant manager of th« division's commercial and ■ track department. h -J. Tlgue. 6^5 Hills Drive, Bloomfield Township, has been ap pointed manager of the training department of Ford Motor Oo.’s Automotive Assembly Division. D. ,J. Bracken, divi-general man-, announces. . B. Shultz Jr. nymouth, su of salary ninistration on company’s in-trial relations will succeed iHgue as indus-[trial relations Imanager at the TTGUR Wixom assembly plant. Joining Fbrd in 1936 as a production'kvorker at the Rouge Plant, Hgue graduated from Wayne State Unlveixtt)) in 1948 krith a bache- , tor’s degree In Journalism. > islta haidinuA stSe —________ '1. Rtdgekray, Oom- risen in the last decade. It is sec- 0#h NASA Contracts WASIW4GTON »-flle National Aeronautics and Space Administration today announced the award to Chrysler (3orp. of nearly $3.75 million In contracts for engineer-^ ing services at the Marshall Space Flight Center at HuntsvUle, Ala. The proportion of American school students studying Latin bulTWo contracts ore includ^’, one fbr $3,0n,000 and the Gther for ^HE POXTIAC PRESS,. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 5, T062 TVVEyi*Y-FIVK Both GOP and the Deina Political Parties Full of Disunity By JJma MAMUm ■ MTASHDrarON ^ Atnerlean political partlM'-aM like po^ ular fronU that let IbcUom gaint up under one tent and one ' ' and. In pubUc, glou over dltletenoaa. Thli doean'l aolve the problem \ of how to achieve unity on the la- the public can know what to expe^ when they pm-«l«hn a party pfogram-bot them (n bualneaa. Preaident Dwight O. Elaenhower had hia handa full with hia own divided Republlcana When he i to offlco. f>realdent Xi«utedy -having the aame trouble with hia pemoerata. • Kennedy ignored the deaertion from hia ranka when the Houae Rulea Committee—where Democrat outnumber Republicana 10 to 5-yoted to kill hli idea for a new department of urban affaira and houaing. UEMM JOIN OOP It waa wrecked becauae tour Southern Democrata Joined the five Republtcana to vote againat tt. Kennedy ignored what the Demo- ....tered the Republicana and prompUy propoaed eetabliab-of the . urban «H****”“i h hia Reorganization Act Llltewiae laat week the Republi-oana, whoie only real unity la to trying to beat the Democrata. blithely aMpped over their own dlviaiooa to criticize the.odpoal-Hon " at the dinnera which I hold are uaually long on generalitiea and abort on Tha Paopla of Ookiand County ____ , Who Never Finiehed HIGH SCHOOL ere invited te write ter FREE bbeUet. TeUt hew yev con earn peer American Scheel Olpteme. __________AT HOMIJN sparejime aawte«,aMUteM Ima M rwr rau H-tef* HM> ichMl iMU«r Ntw 7-Foot VocHum CItonor Hoto iroidwl Cloth, All Riibhar (ae ploatie or vfafll FULLY GUARANTEED Attochmonft IncluiUd $1JU Wotk fiM Hmm DfHOutntioi 01 4-1101 Within 25 Mil* Radius CCtiTS APPLIANCES rather ruefully it aeoned, that In the past 30 years the Republleans have held the presidency years and control of Congress only four. SJULOS TACnCB "Why, with so much that Is logical and sound dops the electorate chooae to buy the inferior product of the opposltlonF'’ he aakied. Hie main answer lay in liiMdty "ai^ tactica’* bp the New Yorte’s Gov. NelaOn Rockefeller accused Ken^y fakery in blaming' the Repiiblleana for killing the department of ban affairs instead Of pointing a finger at the Democrats who brake ranks to block him In the House Rules Committee. * * Rockefeller said it was e. subterfuge to bypOas the states and "gain direct ^ittcai control over the nation’s big cities." Democrats answered Rockefeller on this in a hurry, laying that when h; was Pratedent Eteenhowef s chair-of an advisory committee on governmental orgaiiizatlon. Rockefeller had recommended creat- best Illustrated dlvition among When be started to speak at a fund raising dinner in Dee Moines -over a dosed TV bircuit—some Republicans at a dinner in Waah-ingten booed hlnu They later applauded when he attacked Ken- Last week out loud about who is "giving the leadership dlrecthm ” to the Republicans. It’s not Rockefeller, who some Republicans think la too ' It’s not Sen. Barry Gotdwater of Aiteona. Some Republicans think be’a too reactionary. It’s hardly former Vice President Richard d- Nixon, who has taken himself out of the 19M presidential race, and is busy run-niigf for the governorship of Cal-iiornla. At this point it wtwio seem, after the fund-raising dinners. if the Republicans haw a leader it must be Eisenhower. EARN MORE ON SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY the lOTH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT COMPOUNDED AND PAH QUARTERLY ... OR YOU CAN P RCHASE Advanced Papent Shares Certificates Cumm Rata IF HELD TO maturity AVAILARLE IN UNITS OF $80 PER SHARE Eitahlished in 1890-Never missed paying a dividend. Over 72 years of sound mdHagement-’jrour assurance of security. Assets now over 74 million dollars. CAPITOL SAVINGS f LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 W«o^ Huron 4-0561 Downtown Detroit OHieos Wothington BM. itdg. 27213 SovtMlold Comer State Street WO 2-1078 Five Are Killed in State Traffic Baby Dies of Smoke; Builder Is Crushed by Heovy Steel Casing By Hm AsMeteted PrtMO rive persons were killed In traffic mishaps on Michigan's highways during a weekend of balmy qdng-like weather. In addition, a 2-month-old child Jed from smoke inhalation and a construction worker was crusi to death. The Associated Press count weekend fataUties began Friday at 6 p-m. and ended Sunday at mid-nl^t. TBAmC: RusseU Eagling. 53. Alpena, killed Sunday when his car apparently struck a snow bank and rolled over about six miles W’esi of Alpena. ♦ ♦ A Peter Martlnak, fO, Flint, died Satiaiday of injuries suffered in h^d-on collision in Flint. Vfinis Morley, tt. Port Hures, killed Sunday when her cai Death Notices iorwl OulMod M Vloli Akm; ^r taUwr el Mri. Pkul MltMl, rutf-feeieVi-oSnj ast®Si.VrSas,Sf* tetwd TuTedeV w O^rlM Ttewgy etflelet^. lo- FuBeygl PlrsctBrs COATS ^ rtmsnAi, uom Piurrow pLAiwe on s-rnt -------------------- -"L ■ D. E. Pursley Donelson-Iohns HUNTOON . rOHCaAL ROUK aiuTT ALB FROM IMS Are. . >1 l-MSS "trfsr. _____ISM it. Wi 2{;:X,’!i.r?rr‘._______________ •ad m* ntphrv. Fuotnl lerrlc* *M held tt I P.n. et Um WIUlAS SultiTtn * Sm Fimerel Rem. TM W. U-MIk Reed. Reyid Oek. vlUi Rev. Tbemea W- Rtrt-men etti^UBt- IntermeSI Ui Mt. Morrl). tfowAi, m:»: "iWi. btftffiiffcA. 344 PrsakUa h«ed: m T1: be-leved ettc ef Mui Keeef. re-netel sendee vtt te Md Tec*-' *r.,r»e, d. et w s.b. ai the Furikv riwerel Heme' ellh Pr. A. BdadAMina etrtsutUd. in-termnt U> Oes 11111 Cenetenr. Mrs level vUI Ua In state at the Pursley Funerai Hoeie. VlbaiiiaoN; fra. 4. itei. PAWkls P, M Pkasant St.. Otford; ast If; dear mother of Mrs ChrieUSe M ^ttlilf and Mrt. ArerlU Lytle, dear ilstet of Msttk Debl-mea. Mrs. Oraee Tavlor and Mae Prsnklln: else lurflnd by 10 irendehlldren aed M ireat-frand-chlldrea. Punersl servleo will be tipld Thurodftjr, Ptb. I. at 1 p.m. at tha PlumarUU IhiparHl the OrteortUe BapUsI Church for B lerviee at 3 p.m. Orler ef ■aetero Ster will eeoduci----- side servlat at 3;N pm. OrtoavUk Ceaeury. son will Ik la staU at tl^ msrfslt Funeral Hame, Osferd. ___________________J^^arV Neal vas Uken from the ST- OeyMte Ihneral Home. Clai to the Revurk Paeaiar thmssfjled., for aervlee *~ Chweh of Cbrkt, Duet wST £!rts:t Si sum bt tha Hewklrk Voorhees-Siple PUNRRAL HOMS , PR — Seubllsted Orrr 33 Yet ^ifesiNry Luti Menomlasr. PS b-T3et______ EfitB New caLEmnator dAh~ ON AND Arm THU DATB, Pshruarr 3. Ili3. 1 vlll not be responsible for any debla eaai- STEADY WORK No layoffs, bl|b tamlnis. as rs-■erleaee necessary, espenso paid Iratobii. Ntal eptwaraaet, car es-saaual. CaU' piT S4«3| for ap-potnlmeal. T & C FOOD CO , IXC. TrUcRIRs tmaedlala apenln«t ter analllled arer-4he-road espertanced •eal-driven Must be vUlInt to IraveT TOP EARNINGS 1?^ TECHNICIAN sSnler^aaaUm^ mo*sl M. C. MEG. CO. m IhSibhVbod Bd Ube^Ortoe lOtRSWAOEif R R1 R t HcNTA. Uve AppIkaUans nav kolas |M aaalHv predur Raar OR i!sm. bel< «ss“Assa.ff-4".r«“.K Dept MCR-Slb-331. Preepert, lU WANTED Men to 1 . AROUND OmL FOR OOSR- .'■AVON CALUNO" pnuaw Uw ddatbeO ahbese ae TV e for above avereee eereliitel -- ' REGISTERED . CHIEF MEDICAL RECORD LIBRARIAN lamadlala apenin(. Mt bed. fully epproved leaeral voluntary bee-bKiU. WeU staffed Dep t vlth esn-tral dietailas cqulpmsiil. Mdeses ■ Kfe'eTI --- benettk^aeiaf^^^n. CbRSETTIERE We have a full-time apenlet for e eorectUsrs. Immediate dkeauni . prIeUera, other benefita. Apply mb Vioar Empkyment OAlce. Wsitee. COUNTER HELP , Per part Ume verb. Apply eoe-teaeloe etaad Mtraele MUe Drive-la bet. I tad I pm. Ask far Mr Relth.____________ ilPERlENctO ORDA and ---- ikrb, ------- sS^r ______ iHdy. Ufht_______ be arren«id 3 In family. Call 33H341. after A_______________ LADIES ■riEQEPNBKfe iMiBi - ___ .-^jrtaasad veNreea, or cell between 3 aed S p m. PE M3M._______________ WANT;feo :~|P*ERLT WANTED: MUl _____________ ____ hOHMilOYM. M«»i hAY« WRITE WdICut FOR BART SIT-^1 aed Utht hoBaekeepiai. Uee la phu waaee OR 4-13M. wanted EXPEsiimcED beau. ty eperatore. Pkaeaat vorktaii —‘ fuu u - — — vert Roe^ Moadays. TOC iSr^'aiA N"af-’l3)'"WR :sSa.^ r&S'ibSSf d'js,ifti.rpTif:.;ai?irmJ3 ‘-ir^Mrt-itSr^r-aVSn.*^ 8Sf Blood Donors Needed EE 4-9947 3 am. ta 4 p.m. Yues., Wee., nu^A^Oetroll Blood Servke. it iiini“t)iriF5liAN wfrii cLr. eera S3 to S3 and up per nour. Jteod"rodte Itepei" " — w A N T dear mother of SI s , > •, esn SlovSz', Draytee sfaterefWiCTT beWt: bekred daughkr of Mr. and Mre. Join Lowery: deer ek-ler tt Jaeper, Paul. J. W.. Robert end Bcberin Lowery, Mrs. Della Hamm and Mre. Beeak Black. Fu-aeral arrr--- —•“— WE wna TO THARE OUR MART i2T&.r“iS!sr*bia?e.2rs cspreeckea o< cympalhy durtat aur rteml bereavement in the dtelh ef our belored vUr „mallwr. Spaelal Uiankc tc Wm. P. ^rk. The temi ARE DEBTS WORRYING YOU? OvI aul of debt on e plea | can affardr —Employer —Utretchee NOTICE I to Chsmberklp, Will the parte who picked op or tbup up imfe brown ead whiu Rtt-Tarrler dog pleaee bring him back or turn him leocc ce he and get bli d" <-iisin ima .nA hemeci. HIc BDNA-S BBAOTT SALON ------------ •« II Tl PI 4 IMT buteet enalyds booklet. CREDIT COUNCELLORS - -M Mate Bank Ride. PB S-S4M —No charge lor bud...-,— Write or p£m for free beekleL MICHIGAN------------- LOBE WtlORT BAPBLT AND enonomlcaUy with newly releaced Des-A-Olat WbkM. N eenu nl PAY OFF YOUR BILLS WITBOirr ALOAHI X^L0\TaT$10 WEEK A PART TIMB ZOB Needed et once--t maw for ere- ssi..*e“ifiV,‘"orR?.'^r3..*si: . I p m. to g p.m. A3IBRICA-S LAROEUT likE -LOW prtaed Union Label Ruclnecc frtnUng, Adrcrtlclng SpecialUec fi-cfey‘2rS-iiA?’3ai: MunONS full or pert time. SarTfeuT^rpe.™ PRCE SAUC8 BIT Includaa 3N page caUlog ihovlng hundreds of pru^ Items used dslly by busT eatslof. PollUcal Printing. NA-nONAL PRMS. Dept. 3. North AOOOUnANT FOR ESTIMATtild mslal park and eoM aceeenllng. Sand compute Oork, pay. aduea- Wlieensln.____________________ !AN njtCE 3 MEN OR WOMEN PonUae area to cupply ciu----- with netleneUy adrenlsed Mtl to 8t. Ctoir OMoty. Emma Cbra Wangler, 36, West Branch, killed Friday when her auto struck a parked truck near ft Branch. Ire. Bertha Blasbill, 74, Detroit, idlled Saturday when struck by a car as she was crossing a street. MISCELLANEOUS Steven Graver, 22 months, tran of Lt. and Mrs. C3iaries Graver of Kincheloe Air Force Base, died Saturday of what doctors said was smoke inhalation suffered Friday when the trailer fa which he whs sleeping caught fire. ' Charles BeU. 24, Evart, crushed to death Saturday when a 1,900-pound steel casing being unloaded from a truck fell on hhn. Bel), a construction worker, was working at the site of gas well near Armada in Macomb County. Reports Brifoiti OK'd Use of Uie for N-Test LONDON (UPI) — The Sunday Observer said Sunday Britain has agreed to the use of Christmas Island 1.^ mile south of Hawaii, as a site for posrible American nuclear tests to the atmosphere. (A U.S. State Department spokesman, question^ about the Observer report, repeated a previous announcement that "m ____Ids were reached55 in U.S.- BritlSh discussions on the subject.) CITY ADJUSTMENT SERVICE FE S-928I 733 W Huron Pealtee. Mich oppoerrs main po« office FLOOR LNSPECTOR Por imall blr-crult ouillty prt cUIOD park. Muat hava t Paid hollda IP TOO ...JURANA_________ ...llalan ----^------- l/ovv Rate#-;:r£Z Terms 1 OR TOO OLOr 1 rlaf^fl-H ' Insurance Agency ----—yrOHS 131 W. Huron _ ” *•”» WN^OtN^ OOD DOW ' kILERS 1 Dublar igton BoALL.ODT MIl-kra. Hauat Halting. Oaragta. Oaa. ..... DawB. a contractIno OR 4-UU «r*k Wnrk,Nn PAUL URaVu Prat EaUmataa............ B MODBRNtzXfISN Cf^ Hddm ALUMnnfM STEP ^ EXTBH- CARPENTER WORE^OP A ), liuurtDca aod « jab Inaurtd. OR 3-7117 ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? XINSOUDATS TOUR NLLS AHD L»pniaivE Ton ONI PLACR TO PAT BUDGET SERVICE ------ ■ y, 4.gtei S SIJO i Tell Everybody About it with a Pontiac Press Want Ad That’s because; of the greater selection of everything frpm automobiles to employment offered every day. lust Dial FE 2-8181 married man Intaraatliig pntltlnn far machan-leally Incllnvd, high Khenl grad-uak. abk ta drive, tneoma ap-partaally. Pram IN ta lli* par week. Onnd clean nutilda verb I Por paraonal Inkrvltv call PE mil. , MECHANICS WANTED - ONE for fortlgn cart — oaa lor Cadll-Ucs. Plenty of jaba. Mutt have Need $120 - $150 Weekly Jal?e’\rbRkT"-»br«;r InUraakd In ateady Ineome at a high level. Mutt be married, 33 to 4S. and have a datira k atrva cuatomert lalUiluUy. High acbool tduoaUon and ear requlrad. gilt sjsTif.*?. arrange far perianal totarvlew, ROifYx mLirman por NArtOM-ally knewn lead oonearn. aalHng vbolaiale to reataurank._botela, and hoapikla. Ago tt k 3F- High achaol graduak- llarriad. Bkrt-. log Ulnre IlM per week. Write agparianead aod willing . Cbnnca for ticaUanl plat profit aharingplar rown Realtor. 60a Ellii hetb LUt Raak for Mr. iJir“kktATi sAI^Bt-^ fSj fCV%lafe ?ar‘?5 and uied home lafee. We need tbrta full Ume aaleeman. All Uta floor time you want. LIbaral eommlaaloo ptaa wblob vlU guar-aoka you a real good living. CaU Mr. kampien pereonally. KAMPSEN realtor-builder H71 W. Huron St._PE «-SMl sinoLb middleaobd' handt- mnan aXIMrlaBMd With ObMIl iGWa asr'iArtss.^s-’* aflOtoUim-------- i»rg*a'Taris't.?";t'^ .70 W*era‘*“‘*^"*‘i'*&PMS3 SALESMAN ARE CREATED. NOT '--' My men wilt varify Uiat raining program, paid for , raauy payi offi Por an -““1 of a, fine bualneaa Cgrpgt Clggwgrt Kaotuc^ Lunyi, aig and aloker. BLATLOCK COAL * SUPPLT CO. gl Orchard Lake Ava. PE 3-7131 U-WASH-IT 4 E. PUCE AT MARIVA hart, PenUae PI Ctitgto Tidttehy EXPERTLT DONE. WILL IN-atall, t^ and ftnlib. Readv for P»w aatimatea. MY l-MIB fWctricEl Cwrtractgrt NEiowici auiLoiNa sbrtice Wallpaper Steamer Floor aondera. poUibara, b a . . aaadara, furnaca vacuum akaii-era. Oakland PuM O PaM, Ol - Bard lJo Avt. PE Mitt. ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR ...or sBcnrrARUL bbkyics Stampg far CcNECtccs PEEB NICARADOA LIST teulrral Stomp Shop a 4aaT_____Auburn Hal ‘‘ airp6rt lumber M7I Highland Rd, OR 4-IWt 3jt4 - > BCONOMT VrUDS aa 3St iill vhtto pint baerdi iTa lln.lt. ■4 No. 3 m 1011 A. SM Bn. ft. Ik TO caalna... «o lie. R. 3k TD baaa ....Ma lln. ft. Itb - 3 tt. It. uah ... «« afl Waterford Lumber MMAIr,aiMr‘°*”^<3EHMI compleTeTtock Building Materials -PRiefD lUORT- SURPLUS LUMBER AND MATERUL SALBa CO. I34« HIsBand Rd (MMIOR 3-M< TALBOTT LUMBER lMI*^lLAND“AT8f **8^*t43M PLYWbOD DISTRIBUTOR , „™.rr I»n Ml tt 1-0433 I aeUmdiaa. PE Mttt MICKEY STRAKA iv service Tra* TriHMHifii Sgrvkt ACE TREE SERTICB grUliP REMOTAL Tree removal, trimming. Oat • bid. M3-M10 or PE PtiM. i SfcgjF $fvlcg Magnetic Inspection Mnnaglo mathod lAIr Porea aterovtd) Blanchard Grinding Now booklag raeeptkna ________ qaato-danaa partka. Play any lypa muale. tnil aupply Hammond argon. OA S34a7. Jerry Van ACCORDION OROAN, P11 OOODTBAR SERTICB N S. Caat ^T“ General Tree Service BAUUNO AHD RUBBl^ RAHB your price. Any' Uma. PE MSM. HAm3N5~TND RtfBBilB; is load, anytima. PE 441304. UOHf AND REATT TRUCEUiO RubMah. fill dirt, grading and {ravel and front and loading. PB -eSS3.___________________ _ ______________________ Trucks to Rent '^^•^JSSff-TR'A'feSS&a'^- Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co, 7» a. WOODWARD PE 444SI PB 4-1443 Open ttolly lealudlag Buedny TROMAa UPBOtRTERlWO iSft NORnt PERRY ST. FE 5 B888 lAELEW CUSTOM ' ypiSilTBi-h^SIN Cooky Lake Raul. SM OPPICUL ROOTER SERTICB Park - Barvlea; all makaa BAENB8 a RARORAVE Banding,. PE ll ARL COOPER P FLOOR SANDINO. -----------Jrta eat. OA i-Mtl FLOOR SANDINO AND flNISH-‘— “ — agperienee. work .........! 44037._________ SNVbkR FLOOR LATINO, 1 A-1 .RAFERHANOINO Work Inaured and guaranteed — Painting if dealred. ggSM43 WeM ClggMrt Htetw OFFICIAL PASSPORT. IDENTIFI-eattoe—wallet photoa. Low prieae Feat — whlfa you watt tarvlea. Eraagc'a—Downtown Fonttae. WiSla*^ wtndawi. Raaa. 8^ taatlou guarunlaad. FE 3-1(31. Walpgpar Atma QuaUty Falnk Iny. I Hundrada of paltarnk In itoek i 3 N. Saginaw St. FE S-ttM I EXFBItrS CAMERA SHOP 17 W. Hurdh FE VOflt MARK DAVIS CAlfititA MART S3 N. Saginaw FE 4-g4g7 _ ^ Wgfgp . I HAVE EOUIFMENT TO TBAW ! out fraaea wultr llnat. PB 4-IS31 gy. rwiTin --------------------- >.//>/ jcrniii ”ir - A D S FE 2 8 1 8 1 li;: - TWKNTY-SIX THE JPONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 5, 1062 InplMMal An»ihi > \ EVELYN EDWARDS Phone l‘E 4-0584 SECRETARY Pr«fMr tom* vorklac (iparlMMt. DowMowa Meauan. TypUw aa« •botttiaBd. lUdwait CaiplarairaL 4M PooUm Kata Baak ■><(. PC i-ntr______________ ImpUyiit lnfcriMrtlM 9-k ACTtlAt JOBi IB D.B . EVROPC. Many high pay. WrH« B«Dt inf. OtfMr. “ a«t J-». Ptm plajr. a crMItV* atUTHlfi uodi laadarthlp. PC i-TWl. ___________ ihwf tWf 0—Hf> tim*. Per (rat bookirt vrlta to NaUmI Icheel ol Homo Blady, Dopt PP. Boi (lit. UolroU 14. Mlchliaa. WORUNO MOTHER TO LIVE and oharo tapouiei. PC (-TI EM_JJH3 ____________________ 5CNTLEMAN WANTR t6 BHARB hu hom» with eoupit.----* coin Motor, n MUSIC CENTER Serving Pontiac Area , 31 Years . SPECIALIST ■MUSIGART Drama-Dance Home pf the new (Ivnamic teachinj; system FE 4-4700 268 N. SAGINAW WbbM Rtal Estot* 7IM W. Mapit MAylair (-(lIC CAfffi — 48 HOURS LAND contracts - HOMES • Enurncs 'WKIGMT sn Oaklaad- Avd . »PE M4< Work WBHtMl Mato Toart old, loo) Lsisr.^ “iSLiS:. •SSS,“W«si; — »«ii. ly't'wK* WAlI>Tp*R IttMoVED. REA------- ratat. PE Wit. balofO. Week WaaM Fawato 12 BOOEESnnUk. IMBOUW ZCL balancf^XxpoTlMiet f yaaTi: I proa, oalary ((0. PE (-1117 OENERAL ClEANiyg. ^EX>i8i OIHl« WANTS BABYSITTINQ OR lypini. Call OR )-117t ___’ LADY WISHES "day WORE O* LIST WITH US A. lOMN.SON & SONS REALTORS TE 4-2533 )7(t s tei.eoraph___ ApartHNBts. a repair. WORK OUARAN7 CLETTRIC MOTOR SERVXct RE-oftlrloc tnd rewinding. 911 B. Pike Phunt FE 4-3H1_________________ laaklwapiRg t Taxss DraswwaMwg t Taitoriai 17 DRESSMAKINO. TAILORINO AL-Ic retlSiie. Mre Bodcll. PE 4^0(1. HEMMINO AND~^?iWKAl15Ni; reaeonable. PE MSU. ACCURATE W. R. BOLIN Tai and Aecountins Bar CORNER PIKE and lUL PE 4-11(1 ll no pna-IN TOIIr HOME . ______ OR l-llM. lono~p6rm'tvPed INCOME TAX, BOOKKEEPINO. Notary (]•(» avrrail. PE' 4^1(7(: 5>J1 SccomJRiw*^ • fA3tES~DONE BY~E8TABLIBHEb LONG FORM ITEIdlZEO IN YOUR I. (». Phone PE 4-(7B(. Very cheerful tor ulwt/i 0 Nurittng Home, NAUonM 7-4W. VACANCY FOR_______________ e puUeat Reue. g74-l*4a. Mavtof aad trackiat CAREFUL MOVING. rerae. PL i-SM0. (M-ltK. A-1 MOVINO SERVICE. REASON* able ratee, PE H4M ' PE l-KM. Paiatiaf t Itocaratlaf 23 IBT CLitn PAINTINO AND ^A> INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR, free eet., work fuar. 10 per cent dU, lor each (il-OMO.______ tinXIUOR AND EXTERIOR palnllns. Wall waehlns- Free er“- PAfSlTiib~ANb“DECOBATINir HoNia Improrcment laaaa at 1 . -------------------------- Poptiac return. U^e fJBoa* Pah-■wvc Mla^i ^.JS ' epanaea pud. n>. n Waala4 Ckiyraa til'laai^ 21 CI^ O^B m UOBMSBD keme. Wl SJSM or OR 14U7. .... CARE pre-ecbeol child. CALL SBLU all. more CASH furniture and*apllancce. Bdr-' I Houec. Pi MSM__________________, 44s(( '«r Holi>: ME 74m.' ALL CASH Of or pha equities — Icarlns etalc or ne money nulckly i---------- mediate depoelt. Rl. WICKERSHAM . Maple MAylUr » CASH Hare b Elwood Baalt'y. IM-1410. HELP BUIpER NEEiA I OR MORE Vaoant LoU, OHr ef Pontlaa . .Any area. Peat AcUop by Ruyai CALL. PE (-Ills. 11 to t B B S, RUlLDlltO CO. _________li Salmer St., SPOTLESS, ready TO MOVE _ Drayton. 4 rooma. OR l-UIO.. • nocM: •ttitUr MrttMliWB DORRIS ’ O U ARE CONBIE ELLINO OR TRADINO, call lor r proltealonal opialon. Do not ll obligated. Over » ya»a In l-BEDROOM. E bath, ilnsla p week. Pte l-ISTl. ______ ____> BATH, PRIV/ entrance, 111 N. Telegraph. ROOMS, NEATLY. PURNISHBO for retired or working lady. Prl- ------W Pleae- Iflnktre.' ref-PB 4-4014. ROOM PURNISHED APART- --- —bachelor Orchard Lake Robina M^Ua VUIage, IM Elli-abeUi Lk. Rd. ROOMS. PRIVATE bath AND anlrance. newly decorated. 1 Mocki from the PaU Office. II ___________Florence,________ .. ROOMS. ALL UTILrni clean.^nlcely ^fdylrti' Tr. like NEW, ____ ________ OlngellvlUe. PE (-1(17,___________________________ LARGE_________- and anlrance. lot B. --- rooms. (13.M week, PREPEh buehtlor. tvcryiblng furoiihtd. PERRY FB 3 CLEAN ROOMS. P R I V i ^ bAth, utlllMeo. gtrAge. but i4»«. qulAt, refined tduU» FE 2»3W. 3 ROOMfl AND BATH. ADULTS ill per week. Inqu*— -• Are. PE 51M1 1 rooms, completely pur- --‘Tate bath PE O-MK. td,. brlya adnlt. P 1 AND BATH, DECORATED. BY * EM.b.m. BewaSW •«(! VW I ROOMS AND BATH. CLEAN Call MI 4-148S. ____________ 1 AND 4 ROOMS. NEWLY DEC-oratad. newly furnlehrd. Un‘-" .new managemgnt. Apply Apt. 70 Clerk St. _______________ PRIVATE BATH AND PE (-061( or PE 4-4l(( ilROOM BASEMENT APARTMEOT ------ * Llbartj. “■ "• ADULTS ONLY 1 reomi and bath, utllltlce paid. *" 147 W. Howard, PE or PE 1-0401. , ED-1 ROOMS _____M No'rtmi St. MA frJ41(. LOVELY Al'AKTMENT Close to downtown, utlllttec nlebed. Clean, modero. Fur ' I Rbaiir AND BATH, ADULTS •U^^No drlnkart. M Monroe, ps 1ST pibOR. 1 E^(. BiTk. uUUUaa. cloaa In. WB >-74ar b) 1-ROOM CNhiRNIBSRD APAkt* __,.DU, (t( and m. H B IdIth. ROOMS AND a!lTdlENET1%. 4l»an, MS N. S«llnaw gtraai. eedroom kRi» terbAciF- Tiled bath!* Pull bemt. Oas heat. Fenced yard. Oaratt. PE i-4l((. i.T----.rrr.T;.,--ct.-.t.- 1 LAROB ROOMS NEWLY orated, close In, prlmte eniranca and Bath, After 4 p m. PE mil. 1 «OOMS and bath. REPRIO-------------*-ee fum. PE S-0444. i^^VoiTB^biwfr .th, lower Heat______________ IDEAL APARTMENT FOR NEW- ,----,. ^ --a.---- utllltlei .MONTCALM-BALDWiN AREA -\ Raw ^badroom, 444 month. Car-\ paled. Available eooo. PE MS7I. \la to (. B B S. Builders._ ORTHiRN HIOH AREA - NICE lodte Park. FE O-OMt._______ NEAR PONTUO MALL rooma and bath upperLaII uI Modern 5 Room JIT j :RACE. NEXT TO ST. J hospital. PE t-lkll. COURT AlFARTMENn uhTIL................. Are ton looking tor eloan-- tlva Spartment whara the peopit ara ttiandlyT caol In su--- tima. warm In winter time. 1 roonft and bath apai rent (or |(1 per month. ^SaWNWi " " 4-aM4 or PE 4-7(71 ldulu"pTele*rrrt.^‘'Ml' t-UllL (•BEDROOM. PULL BASEMEN^. ern. »i W. Cornell. 444 - „ 1-7M8._______________ BEDROOM. RAMONA TERRACE (((, CUI >E 4-lM(. 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX -VILL decorate $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 344 East Rlvd. N. at Valenein 1 BEDROOMB, Bhirtey, PE 4 OAS HEAT. N. 1 MROE. ROOMS AND BATH, eir month. Mu«t have relarencee. etemen Realty, ask lor Tom Bateman. PE 4‘“ias'i.rti Waterford. OR V(l(7. Sacrifice Down room hriak wBb ». , uUUty room, Sl> M In Lake Oakland Halghia faaeh prlvllaiaa. beat dub. muaS mara. (SI par mo, OR i-aati CHEROKEE HILLS UnS-‘a'lr'^ri. . (ilyc. Eietaalva raUMnUal m "^-od. No ear traffic. CaU ^Miaa^ I (lafil” REALTOR Newinghani UL 2-3310 -----■■ 84H Convert Your Home INTO A "Home of Your Choice" Home Rank Exchange THERE ARB No Realtor Discounts .Bass 6t Whitcomb Trl-laeal or ranah ctartar ^ak. bulk on (oar 3^ Maay pbaa la MODELWEH DAaV iM Econ-O-Tri 3-Be8r6om TrifLinrei- $8,995 — $995 DOWN WILL BUILD ON VOUE Wt OR OURS TO MODEL; Cllaabath lake R to UUon Lake Rd. Rawth Paruwerth. Right la medal. d Sun. s la S p.m. Near MSUO ea hrlc A Real Bargain ___ly 1 hadrom located oa estate 100. lacludee plaitered walls, o floore, fireplace. 1 ceramic « haUm. taU dIaHm room, ItaR kai ment. with extra large racri lion area Only IW milea lr< Rocheiter. Pull price only (1 I. A. TAYLOR. Realtor CAL betate and insurance Tin RIOHLAND BO. iMSSl__ tlLV F4 SDN !•( OR *^3H TRIPP pletely rodecorated. Rrcraatloo kHchan. AlUebtd two- wnt. PI l-flU. Sylvan Village LOVELY EOME^^jllDl Ctdr^t, Itbkalha, waoderta tatovlelaa roam. RIah aarpatins and drapartaa laciudad. Ralaad hearth firaplaca. Platura window ..................... cod nooft, saa heat. A4-RIGHT ICALL POt DETAILS I Lakefront . . lAi Bargain tiuulex d i».* Kgf, Oaod haaah, haauUlul Ifl. M-R •im .-w^ 'oif tanSea, wUar'iiaS po^tiiw I*'piiSm'*'mw'""***‘* LfST WITH Humphries “"'“flfr.' KENT .. watar froaUga aarpatins In llvina a room, tall haiamani, g Oarafi. Tlile la a nlea It. 010,(St with ILiat dawn. home, taU buement. oU k^ Oa-raga. Now (T.OOS wHli (l.HO down BRICE SUBURBAN - Immi pueoiilon to this l-badroom saranar with llnlahtd roc root- „ Dodldoa. Lac prleUcgct -It OISAW. Tcrmr CLARKSTON - New h< deraralcd ^bedroom I bolhi. (Pfl. carpeted Ui oU boat, itbdar garag sHU. SI4.ISS. Tarma. tT^lUUMa Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor kiyd Kent •Win" - Oua Ev PaikiBg LABE PRONT: A bcButlM aaUIng with laU of traas makaa ihU brick ranch home very dulrahlc. i bedroohit 1 balte, modem kflehen. Bll llvlaa room with fireplace, ful kMMMSt Vtm MMM to Atttofhfd pUit^rtd garof* rAlt PONTli MPfTAL lAC OEPVIUL s-aE.xraii'TTsa be naad as a larsa family hama New roof, gat tamaer aliuilaam atarme and aaraans. Radaceraled Inaidt and oat. Raedy la mo» In^rt^ at (lO.ISS wRta 11.100 JOHNK. IRWIN "BUD' PULL BASEMEIIT. (-RBOROOM Good »aml-bunsalaw la flaa neigh borhood. tg blaab ta sand beach to Union LaU. 1 Udrm and full Plenty of Room To Putter 1 Me - Ova <11 roan 01.100 down. OdOtoraM. Trata a «;(BS*u‘S££uT«Si (-1(10. EM (-7UI. aam auBag axlarlor perM awn-h$*. Pear gaeaga. aadi,Rl1otd at (S.MS.IS, don't watt, eatt u aow* $5,500 Cash Sevan (71 r« distance GLES e; walking pv. .. ......... t. ant bed- downetalre. ( bedrooms and ■ - part basamant, gu ‘ Sell or trade. Allracuvr 1-hadroom ranch homa. large (am-lly kllrban, carpeted living room and hall. Oaa heat. Raaeonably “Bud” Nicliolic, Realtor 4S Ml. aamana SL FE 5-1201 After 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 RtiLfiPiB uiflNd iUmti EUZABEtH LABE ESTATES. P bedroom brick eetontal. 1 yra. comer M, Swar sansa. iOn "We Trade —We Build” ARRO GILES REALTY CO. PE (din in RaMwIa Awa Opdn ( a.m, to I p m. MULTIPLE UhriNO SERVICE NORTH SURURBAN -home, larie ' Uvlng baeement. garase. fe X IOC with fruit irete payment. DORRIS COMM BBCE TOWNSHIP. POX Lake, a badrooms, Uvinx r----- . 14x14'. Ursa kitchen, utility lot lOOxllO*, down. — - Eves.. MA 4-1333. COLORED ^-BEDROOM HOMES $10 d8wn - 635 FRANKLIN ROAD ral good locatlona left . JB (-(TN or PE P1TI3 U (d077 or U 1-7337 after -WESTOWN REALTY 7 pi GAYLORD LAKE FRONT VACANT. 7 a very 'niaa hodie with ex Idn. whitb sandy beach, bum In 1(40. Hardwood flwi.. tra large bedrooms. We hava key so call today, n —-------- to look and ludfo i Total price (il.TtO. C A (d(Sl outdoor barboeue. Only 110- can be arradfed. ACRBAOB. We farm with fou.-------- ----- We have a 10-acrc piece with good four-bedroom home, Thera Is other acreage for sale. call MY (-(UI and get turth Lawrence W. Gaylord no E. Pike St. ta SdCOl Broadway and Flint MV .---- NICHOLIE WHY PAT RENT? “- “— Newly decorated. Va- MILLER ^•xTin. iVk ceramic tile bat living room, ^ oil be lot, carport. (400 t William Miller ;iealtor FE 2-0263 small tamlly, • |aa tarma. Watkins Lake Privileges Neat bungalow foi ie> living room, ni onclosacT front ppr< jgood lot. Only (l.tM Close to St. Fred’s - ooms, a hadrooma down bath, (nd floor; 4 badroomi full hath. bath In basa- '‘k.rs55c“'T£{r%D”A’?? BDTTElt HURRTI SMITH WIDEMAH Farm Home. $65 Month 3 bedroom home on 4k aero lof — tall haaement — 1 ear ga- mSy •a'’*won”e*^ul** buy for^*%0M Colored $50 Mouth ^y 3 ^room Unj^w — tall sarufa — anclastd front and ^k ----- ---------- /riglrt BEAUTIFUL - Larse shady with 3-hedroom home, full ba ment. knotty pIna rec. loom. _ stone fireplaces, (-car attached larasa. Only 014,100, ttrma. IMMEDIATE POflSESBION - CDiy l-badroom ima, car—"— “- decorated home, cametlng la Uv-banU kitchen, nicely avcorawp, geraf t, wall lann-scapad. sWad yard. Battav Eur- RTEBT SUBURBAN ranch, earpctlnt- In Uvlng___ oil heat, laraga, lovely larga shady loi. Only oi.SN. 'farms. TED McCULLOUOH. REALTOR OPE./V%"“^““^*^;?d1^1I-3 PHONE 682-2211 KAMPSEN REALTOR - BUILDER Let’s Trade Houses Four Levels Overlooking Watkins Lake Nrlookins Watkins Laka-Mr bedrooms aid dan, 1.0' X 13' kitchen, formica iblnM. F'"’“------------- ... built-in _ q' family ro ground level, basame attaehad (-car garagi 31.700 down p room with rooms. ((’ llvhss rooi tlreplaea, tUod bath, I with table apnea, good dry Ustment with aiall dower Large Family Special \ 4-Bedroom Brick Two hatha. exeapUcoal lot lor the kiddies to romp and play. Only (l.SOo down. Immediate pofsetaton. c'a.r,; 111 OAKLAND , I PE Webster LAKE CUilON — OXFORD 3 3 bedroom and bath home overlooking LaU-'Orlon. Nleo klteb-en. dlDStte apace, ftcneh doors to cnelocod pordi. niaaaant Uvlng. room with attruBve Btoplaee. Oaod looauoa. |I,I0| with SLIOt A w HUOE: 10 X ISO lot enhanced by wooded surroundhii make a baauUful setting for this extra larf# ranch home outtarjgcr than ajwntaal^'A'^ft x^ jjl ifil^ tvmf nataral nre of the a WOtT* STATELY ENGLISH TUDOR: Design Inside and out gives this bomiT a atyle gf sir and ersae. Located on PonUao't southwast alda In a vary good neigbboi- hood of all--------- -------- 7 spacious tursl fireplace m most In famUy bsstmeiM^plus^ 011.800 PHa!** ' Val-U-Way Wo TT|do Oh Any Earns l*'bcdroomir“’taD Salh, off’fl furasecs. fair coadltloa. Ten Attractive Bungilow Ic4 wHR a >. I iota. 1 Colored Income mci*ooYcurtj^fornorSota lSr52l»d7»i*i%SS55rViili R. I. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 (43 OARLARP AYE, 0 tO 0 BATEMAN You Trade ^ We’ll Trade ling Is'Ou Trading Is'^Our Business Dwight Street -------1 brick wl SS&i •tormi Md Mrtm. 't«rp«Unti KS.i&%n.r- LETS TRADE What’s New? ' —..... IxS vi-,- . mediate potatailoa. You may iwn payment. LET'S TRADE Orion Area Got M-M U parry Aeraa. RsM •lea (-hadraom, ranciMr. Pnn lsUa*1&ISl’'R. 'm! c£a*(i ta IKI!tla?“*TOr^ ankSwSJ?*Bv* «iSiMdr2.vws:rN5 Only 11( 740 - 1000 down and Lake Privileges and as euta as Ihty comef nr• MULTIPLE LISTINO REEYICE O'NEIL MULTIPLE LUTING SERVICE 1 BEDROOM BRICK and cedar sKakat home. X,ar(e caaomy, Bear two tavaly a. ((.Its down etaMn. coaU w.l.*i.%l^ the proud awntr of uila lovely Ehcdrvwm or opUon-cl 44h bedroom or family jiTUr-ptuT 14 ta bath aff im. (ta^r go- C?Sg lot. Only (1400 down | G.I.'s No Money Down ta-ACRE Cvay (-voom bun- (alow, itiullaan a_____ _______ era School area. ( bedrooms natural firaplaca, part base- I. Large car «c. Idl a n PERRY PARK, l-room ranch, (-bedroom, aldmlni ----It and scraent. aw cyclonad fenced yard, plus tamUy room. To« need only your DIsebarge tc he the ownaPof thU ranch ‘ S5of!«uSrS.ta‘a, Insuranet. KEBOO. S-badroom family home. Amroxlmataly 100 feet from Caaa Lake. 1-car ■araga newly redaeoratad. iaUert THU pay all coats. ROOM TO sTRSfrCH; On thi clous M lit X 120 local--" North tido el town. AUrac-( bedroom bungalow with --------‘ gaa heat, dream 13 with natural formlea eountara a stalnltas (S.OSO. kitchen Ota i EVE APPBAUNO HOME; |I0,SI0 and 0100 wUl bandit. (4 x (4 on fonndatlah, plus larti sir—-' ta front porch Nice enc Uvins room with fireplace. 'enton Area Ranch — 3-badreom on -l acre axeaUant eondtttao. Nataral f mant, aoclotad brataaway. xa- 5«‘4u'r?!S?^.w*^“^)Si Holly Apartment 7-tamUy an main atrasi In the vUlaga, all apU..aarurnlshad'with private bathe and entrancaa, jmw-ly painted and In exetU^ oei-moo. Ineama over (nl — month. A sound tavestmsn Rolfe H. Smith. Realtor (44 S. TELEGRAPH RO. J-”** ...... Pleasant "Lake Front Bacrtfloa to settle estate. 3 had- ---- .----- Vw treat aaS im 'll. R?^A^TROHr RAY O’NEIL. Realtor St R.^'^Iesraph Open^t^yu^ ANNETT Pontiac Mall Area IdesI for workers In this new shopptas area. Brick terraet, 3 rms. dn.. t and bath ap. Phil baaamant. oil heat, low , matatanenot coat. U,(00, loi^ West Side Handyman ____ dyman Hera tt li. could oa ( family _ I.,.., ... I_. J haaement, (at heat. ( c I'^itaii rase. Vacant. (I.30S, ( hatha, family kitchen, lovely fireplace In livtag rm., ( ear att. garaga wUh breeieway, are Just tome at the extras. (IS,-MS. tsrms. Kirk in Hills 3f church fi Iga. lot 1 a, rimoh, lueiHace, lam-miS, radiant Hr. hast. —,—ng and drapaa. Overataa S par sarata. $17,(9; tarma. WILL ANNETT INC. Realtors IS E. Huron St. Open Evenings and Sunday L4 FE 8-0466 Furnished Home . bix spacious 3-room modem bungalow with larga enclosed porch. Uls baUi. oarpeted living r“‘ '•'-tag room, an oak f---- - i-idom'-t-- -" ■ Brflvyer Rieal Estate . THB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1962 TWENTY-SEVEN Attcntl6n, Lot Owneri Dorothy Snyder Lavender HIITER mMB nninfon___ — NOTHING DOWJf noBTnBRH nio* bunuct. ------"Kft*'W*S STOUTS BesT'Euys Today rsim 1&3tUI --------Hviifl MM, tat- ln( i»act kItoiMB wlttpUiilir of caakoikN ym—r kBMm«^ Wttb f«c. BTM. «U a«M. wnrr non -------------------- k«p( Madrooa brick BB4 fraat ruMh bom*, ^tUr*4 voU*. UM DOWN - «e ooiU, bakummit. MTcod air b*al. ■** vaUr baaur, t«a*id baa jaii. on*-«ar faraf*- ma* to laa-madtoUlT. cmr FAiuf - Ucatod limit* U a«f* pare j ---- bMlroom* ‘m?'d **r b iVSEonr S; bar ba".;iK-.'^ 2 bat. aelr tn* daaa a ' dl*. •LOOKTOBLO rmr - u**ii'i-bareom beta raaa trttb at-t*cb*d ><*r (*r*i*. U i N •oB^Mceb ^ ^crl^U^ lapd; •flffnauh* IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 Ml lOdLTN OOR. MANHnSLO FBII gymtlllOy AWP dPIlDdT avBlBf*. a lai|* ua*l “"wsssur REAGAN k*Bi ni (11*1 apml llTloi tplact plu*h rr'iGd"at ni.'iid.'* \\arren Stout. Realtor platwrtd wall*. bIc* kttcEa dlnlBf *pa**. BBlIt-la eir*o rsBc*. Pall ba**m*nt. ga* I l-«*r pla*t*r*d garat* P a MamlBiw aldlBg witb bria I 2 Acres Lara* )-k*drbam with lull I mcnl. Aatom^ h*al Oai Patt af totp toad t* aontd t m*rctol'aod front on W; Wi Bird. Pull prtc* I1I.M0. Perry Park . Neat and cl*i____ with carpeted llrlag baaameni. Ptotahad ~ ' l^ear garage. I hNa ahad* Uaaa. Tw a rsgfi Homos-F^arms EDROOM - Pull tl _____ent. au hat aadStoelni tor. large M. Clarkaton leho klndargarta torw high, wan dlaUBce. tll.7tg. gl.Md ion. I aae* at ttb per ant. CUSTOM BUILT S-ROOH RANCH, attached S-eu gang* M tb Mr* lot. fruit trom, large Muialad aad lUBORBAR DUPLBR good ratan. IM.BBa. t BXCELUBNT PISRINO BWIM-mlna, boat dak* « mtouiai . 41? rtKcT Lake Buni M*k* ihl. modara aecsod bom*, to aador dU lb* l£i Bear Ih* airport ' •lr**t froar -l-room m< Brewer Real Estate «CPB p. RRISR SALM MOR E Mill Beg ^ ILUAlik LAXC PRONT. TEAR around l-b*drpom. flreplac*, ll*.< .....\ k-MM LAKBPRONT LIQUOR Bar to pop-alu OaklSBd A. locall^ dwa-«ra^yk.Ju* antra ranlal baaom*. *7TCnrss.*jisa..- STANDARD OIL I atoll modon aarrio* atal for ***** Tralnton. 'ftoaaalal aletaoe* oftarad to guallttod por-*M. Oood naigbboilMad bulua* S^row WUaa had OrOard Lb* CMI Ml SAIII daia or Mr. Ag- u.fim ! (•« manlh‘‘'Aran*bfa PR a^l. II to I. S. B. s. tra. iiooM MbnkRN STATIONS FOR LEASE OU, OOMPANY. gawilB**, sorou bow ib m ar.!i'pi5rif.*R^s}?ii*k_ SSSiTAiSSHuT'^^ for mtrehADdUo oolr; MoW* •blUlf. dotlre !• bt your own «iS*af«5i;!i..-AS't?h“ AN IMMBDUTC SALE POR TOUR Land Contracts H*rr«i *PTi: Midi’ stout Raalla TT N. I 1SHERMAN 'S PARADISE. Large tok*. » mlu. Pallac Nd »r;d5*iiinu*jrB“i!. month. Dal* Brtaa Carp. PE *-*m OR HIM_________ ARaOLUTRLT bodrwm-------- farm homo, *■— M nitoR n A n K Mrwm . appoalliif larg* glhaaod and orebaa, good bon* «.M0 SQUARE FEET FLOOR SuUdibg^Blto^LlWdoii BY OWNER; hSTORY llLOO. Idi CLARK S ACRES. TRADE CHt SELL. maat aad oil fanac*. Scar g^ njr*, gna boaM, oraargl. $17,- TRADE. Win aooopt ponr *»-_- full prlc*. ON CANAL LEADINO TO WIL- ear llWOO^ornS! ” *'^RS REAL^i^ra ^^St&l^if"hlSTINO M«^CE 4 BEDROOMS iitoad to*'‘MM?!2N**l»*MiSfiS“ r**-naUon room In baMmant. torg* lot, 10 R. MMBaat t* ataadtog btqr, luTwa i ^ 1 ACRE AND A I ROOM BRICE, phu a 10 1 40 out baUdtog. TUa pr» CRAWFORTI AGENCY 81: way Jr aa HOYT ‘■Par that I . INCOME 107 SANDERSON 4 apartment*. 3 rnom* nto bBtha. Oaa heat; MU comt ptr moBOl. CIom to down* town Ud«. Low dowo poy- IW S. iMasiM^ ^ulSplw libtino servmrb NIC* rf>B0d*l*d larm h and other hulldlnga. Itb acraa. tk wooded a so- on Mantohlm. Idtal for a dMtor or harbor abop or aam- BRJcS?**BuSSraS 41M^a. W. I ■tonr wimi fu]] bbMBCBit M cbr btaa^loppad. OBlj S from downtown. Idal tor ^ tor eltolo, and nnmaroa* other tma of buSh^. A-1 eon- TOMIS * SON, RStoLTCm Hit Dial* Hwr. OR *0114 ROCHESTER _._*u oornar — A-I 10«-^ ttalS BLOCE BUSINESS BUIUV td*Bl lor mow MI omaU bnatoaM. On baar EEl LnS* tU., B***C. *^1^ ^ Eatoto. MN EUi. Lk. Rd.. PR 4JOOO or FB MSW. . COUPLE OP OOOD BUFim iorrie* atatlon* araUBblo to proper partta*. W* an mon tatar- S.U“| r alderli < YOU interStEd in a Place to work and llrel W* bar* a gaaolln* atatlon with _Uring ouartera. Ideal — Small tore*, OR I-IIW. FOR BALE jnna'i Orill r ■■ _______ the citi of PUnt. Mleh . near too rlllage of CUo, Mich. Shop epn-•laU of II machine*, lupoctlon eaulpV loada of imall tooling. (Ox 34 cement block bldg. Start of a new home 11x11 that U, all, ABILITY 0 fOt eaa for lour Laud Oon- uSl“"toVt ‘hoVo.Wa^ kimanl* toe aaobfa rat M ARRO - Caia-1_ ACTION STv'SW IMMEDIATE ACTION 6a MI good iaad eatraeU. New or aoMonod. Tour eaah apa *at-lalectori loapacUm of pnv^I aad Utl*. AW for Em Tompto^ ggidia. Ml* Orchard IX Rd. LAND CONTRACTS BOUOIT ANY- !SK.“Sir«i.iS« gebardJAS*. EMpin bWlI MMWy te Um 41 (UoM^ M^ Landatil ^ $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE PAST. CONYENIENT 14 moolh* to rapar Home & Auto Loan Co. 7 N. Pam.St.* PE 1-1111 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN _ BORROW UP TO $500 SrPICES IN raiton _fl*tn* — Utle* Walled Lk„ Blrmtosbam. Wimouth Get $25 to $500 ok TOUR Signature "'pfiokmi® OAKLAND L<^ -^'-“f?ETl5r9‘ WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 state'**pi'NANC]^ So. MS pen^y. ^ya bms. Need $25 to $500? See Seaboard Phone FE 3-7617. 1185 N. Perry St. PARSINO NO PROBUM Seaboard Finance Co. IX W9 yimr bUSWI / .*. ^•‘^^‘d^L-LOANS SiJSi,Sh.S!^5i.^r TEAGUE FINANCE C6. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO mortfMr«> providinf you lot 4ii do toy typo of bopio improvomMt. call iPusa, Mr. Roa* or Mr. Boaderoff. CARNIVAL By Dirk Turner ns? pUaU bMor eif^oMto Vuaa'^iuSS' 08 5i5^.OTskffifw BoaibM. Wrtii polnl iff*'’** Intduooal pearl drop tlan. B*M. tom ftoor langto *alrt wtib lAi- BALLERINA LEkOTW ^kBoblNa dreia. >tu 11. 4U l«Mtb il*«r*c. ChantUll l*e* *v*r mUb - MS. •iu 11 iNnk MdTiaHol^ Motlik. Call r(4-l*7». ftouiM' wiSi BOY 66ats. sfijc~lwi: dlMIU^^-------------------- 1 BARGAIN GROUP; ODD BEDS. Braaun. cb*eu. ■petogp. mir--- radim. dinotio* and fiwtog ctalnei, ehtap U eloM. guaron- Ml. Warm monlng eoal hontori. lit Duolhorm otT boatero. fll Bunk bed*. M* caMnet *tok. W S L?&n,“SftS. iS: Evoritolng la noM funllur* at ALS?NEV^X*Im roomo, bodrami. dlnettco. ragi aad maMrouoo Paetorr loeoadt. abMt to price *y0Y-BELL-TRADE largalD Haa* IN N. Cau at Lo; i«J?. o»“ ea til . . ...- Ml < trie etore* tIO up . ... act N4. Wathar* IK up. 7Wi rug 114, Bottled gu etoe# $ Enee-bol* duk 111 I plee* b< ram act Ml. Odd badi. eba* ‘‘™B*SV-“Vl!:L^i* TRADE PEARSON'S PDRNrTOR*_ 41 Orehard Lake At*. PE 4-W UPRlOirr PREBSERS. VW (41 4(t Unde Ylato St.______ ROOIU OP FURNITURE. Nksk-Ijr aaw. l-b*droom aultoA ttrtof fss^«*-.fiV!rvndai orFE t-MW. JS^AeJ (xii Rudfe ;—...... kareiTSarpet I Dtola HWI. ^ . or * ____p»v». riai— PQR THE HOME CAN $6BeD AT L k S SaCM. A mu* out to* wai bat -laa* to par. Punitan and anon of all ktiida NEW -USED. TlaU Mr trad* dapt. tor real bargain. We buy, aell or trade, Co«o s.“?k/2?^>4^r‘' OPEN OTN VtT l_ TO I ALUMINUM 8IDINO SAVE two TO (400_ AT LOW WINTER BATES drJS liffioV.*^ mu-n..ng •nd ba*d enamel alum atorm ^ — appliances — Eaai Bptonn. nbum .. JW.M ■ ■ ,K*d*r7ir.”»lt uTi ilk eoniol* to axcellant —-on. Sewa oa buttona. blind u.„di. monognm* do** do*- Ri‘“ioiSf?r"(hl'o8’'e.S8!'pttn" Walte'e. PE VKll. , , ‘SSg,‘?5.A,V"i-,iip cu. ft. daaplraaaa^a^L ato* frig. Martog wdiber, lata modal, SoElefa, mV H711. K13 FOAM BACK RUOS. BRAND —- I14.N. $13.01 ^ M4.M. •m*r rug*. gMWrixll ns $9*1. I7.W and MIN. 04 DOUBLE 1 Berry Garage Door. Factory Seconds Y AvBtlBbl* Bt'ilieBbI* dlaeouBS sns ool* strtat, BirmtoghatoN PE Idsn Ml MIM TALBOTT LUMBER Iwf^A&NP Avi. **ltf*falSI III east iTwrbnTb “Don't spoil it for him by telling him shout it. i only seen It twice before " I. BRANfa m#. H’i: m. n (4417 irarTHEBrii plB, Mand aaa wnNuni inw. Uf je aMpima; aln uuodi* had* SXAUTIPUL StIriNO NfieoiS ^togar Aatomaite Sig Sag Saw-tog MacblB*. N* atIMtoanU n*bS*d to aak* daaonUr* pa^ tarn*, butla bola* at*., Jaat W. *!»• **W^r-W!L”.?eJ‘ ,%Z raSntNB'^OTratoiiriSM- ngokqftWIHB - j^Gd'^y**II E*' W*Nm. PE ELECTRIC DRYBit gib. iffiflSi. ---- Ml. Soto la good -- —-------- __________jkkATb*. pump. MS PE MiM MIDB-A-BED. EXCELLEMT CON-diUM, g7(. PE (jlK aft. U a m. MM —- II (CVCLE. LIQUIDATING entire stock “JbSn «tory Ukiiwib. ...... kw -- i l'*Lb*“to* «t.b!^«i cIlSTVibsk?"^ B*jlaaw_______PE (-mi CRINO ORANQ P I A N 6. «’• WML PtPR. M U. tk“ COPPER B^ lie. Tollato lUH. O. A. Tbompaon. TSW Mil WeaL M monthly wiLi TiKB Abkh ALMOST NEW Stogar Big Sag aquippad. CaMaat mMal aawing maaala*. awka* button boia. da- BTFLAfFW. I SMALL WORLITSEB ONAND MN ESTET ONOAN HAMMOND CHORD OROAM MM tall RUOB ....... . M.H AfVRALT TILE. KA. ........ (* PLAimO TILE, BA........... Ic "RUTIXy TlLSi. IM S. SAOINAW Ptoto." ugAif ftAfti aaw M to M par mo. r. xjsste^; eg. Ihai'r* alaotrlc. coo- tie alg-aag I. aUgbUl uai lEEOLE AU-•ewlng ma-[. Makaa but- evbrythino must OOI BEDROOM iarmnno co. 47M Olato Dnitoa Matod OR 14714 9E2JL...... UMBD OAK (4417 after I __ LARGE CRIB AND MATTRIM. Moving — .Sacrifice Norg* alaetrie *lo*i. Umar, cloe Bandlx elaetrte dnar Kanmo au$o wftftbtr. Blreh dto«U* m .sin Blaotrte Btaa, 14' < IBEBED EIJKTROLUI Utad alaetrie rw-,. --- E'fSySrVVaSr*'" " Crump Electric, Inc. t Auburn Rd_____FE 4-3171 VACUUM CLEANER — A BRAND ----—*• —>• type wito all at- WYMAN'S Oao maro .... J* „*r. Elec. Rofrlg. M< Oimr Wrtogor waibor to " Eloctric rt— eabtoot. OR H4ll. ____ NEW, NEW, NEW! "Pint TJtoO to Mlohlgan" AU NaUanally Bdrenlicd brand*. --- ---- earing* up to 4t par TRADE-IN TELEViaion "SERMin CHECW - ‘^DTEifik ^ 10 S. CBia lATHTUM. CHIPPED iw.(S AND JSI Owtort Leg IT Holpoim atootrk dryar, paper baadtag bard and alralgbl *a*. odd M of itormi stMTacnona, Oratlmaa ir' UHlag arbor power nf ^t7L GALLAGHERS alaS* guaranto* and daUeary. GRlNhTELL’S Just Arrived! "•\tgyrws: ss*Uor MORRTS music lAo^i.:- Tr'V?l-J?a‘.a, ________PEMM7_________ aUY NOW AND SAVE oW ^L —' i«..«.in*BM. CtaoM* fro* I. LIbargI toad* ErA^gs^ ‘ary^toiNAw OROANO OROAN ATTACMMiBNT. I (Ml I caHi I ICE SKATES Bareaa k Hnrgrarai. 7U W. HBrg BA-hfROOM nXTURES. OtL AN6 Sudar. ‘Rardwarir 4*et. aa^u. a?r'#iSL“W"«;l2 BIG -SALE ■" 4 I ( V O ROVED MAHOGANY -e M“ Vh" 4 X I MASONITE . 11 M- BUNDLE CEDAR CL6sI -TIER M PONTIAC PLYWOOD O0> 14H Baldwin Ar*. PE IN IRCLB PLuoREBCEN'I L10H7 newaat Ughta lor kltdim (11 m stop Co., STEPS. It Bplaob b can. Po cement steps. REAI ... --- ..IojI Wa!toiy'Pi!'l-^ sewino center M(-7IM DEMINO DEEP WELL PUMF and tank. *^1?**“* FREE Bl'iNOtNO i J, Copper IP length - 7k bath eat with tt .. Copper. N’ coll N gal. beater. gl*«i II SAVE PLUMBINQ 171 g SAOINAW ..d Ut.: ■"pTCko $faea ItpElp^kaaf » ...... PE (-4711. M« W. Moatoblm. FIX UP 4x1 H" aUndard toatentt* . fl.H ffl 4: SSsrr.. . a Syi'iS^::|S la* I PI. apaelal .MS Looa* Reek wool, bag .I .N 4M Y.O. toososany Hywood M M Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY *W';Vr’to"fp.to”iA}" Sunday 10 V|n^to ( p.r i6r WAim HEATER M OALtDN f ■ tomti^M ^---- rAniLSfa ITBBL do Wtrta _________, SSb.**" Piano Sale matebtog braiUi off lororal ■ Clark cor- Prieoo --------- _____and dfltrory. of Ihooo --------—' OO^OBbl )to'doinr%ymoM dIb- towoot ftoaaeo ataarguanUMi lew BETTERLY mubio 00. ampUfItr, I mini. i pian6 Ran t^y-hora to a : Cash Regi vniovB. lyfw^ibwrB^ du liesU^S photooepy*mtebtnea ' anf dlctol- ranca Potlaa, — ......... lEW NATfONAL C—. -----------. tera from IIM m. Now NaU^I oddlog ma^not tram MS a. Tb* onie*a‘%***Sskl*nd uSgMaeomb Wtory'-rWT'eSS r*»a."*?;. iSED ADDINO MACHINES. Ml N “ipLLEY RUSINKSS M^NM 0 W. Huron__________PE/4-II07 71 BULMAN HARDWARE Men’s Hocke’ Brand now tof only a few < aharpraed. C good lather. 110.00. PE I" Skates wkjra TR.?“Slii KELLY HARDWARE New and Used Guns Comploto nno of ^Ung oqulpmonl. Myori P»«nP», .... Saii4-6ravsi=Rrt fi CRUfenCD STONE. SAND. ORAV-ol. Earl Howard. EM l-OMl. IftM^Cw^ jf -A-A BLAB WOOD DELITBRED ffiiriikn»"8; g2i*^r«if Alberta t-umb*r MUla place and 'slab wood. Lew *^ppiSf^.' fk moo. BOinR PUPPIES. 10 MONTHS T ) PUPS, ail 1 wiU'm COeXER PUPPIES I10.'i baag, Drayton Platna t UeNART'S ‘TAtTwAodil ' jr-ia.. lit pupplat, POOOLUfQUALrfY i^LVlBR K.K<). leaving aUtaj (M up. PE_I-*IM. PARAKEETS Ot^ARANTyP^ 'ID lo7 let* SL. Raeherifr. OL 1-M7? Puppies - kABsirs' AHYpir Shop, M WUUami. PE 444M. SiaAL - VALENTINE PRICES Hatehary. MM Artun*UL‘. thoAouohbrbd male COLUB g montlu old. ParmanantOoU _and dahouia Mta ^ t-WOS^ WAMTBO — OOOD HbMi POR S B & B lUCnOH SAU EYBR\ mOAY EVERY SATURDAY ---lY SUNDAY ___ Umtack 7;M p m. l^US .cow TIM W."li« ____Orchard U. Rd. Oornar R nut Lk. aad ordmid Lk. Q| T daya a wak. RulnY. BOOS. aPI atablaa. flowari and M FOR TORN DEERE ^D NEW ife.ry'^tlS'J'o'AL.e'at;.- tfi 7-im. Alae knmalit* obnm awi MctULLCXH CEAi:---- KING BROS. PE 047M FB 4-llU TkiimAC ROAD AT OFOTr" Kllgbeth Lk. kd. im* balane* 07 rnaolha at a MY I-14M. A message Intarait _ to* flrtl »9T9 into ft eom^U» turaia PtK*?.".ran."%!*b?ll r.nS?'toT.“Vid.'*ISi-‘*M,i^ slalloiant buy tot, lavaaUgala .toV day I Ovar N ^*r*m har plan* to saltet from. Ala. *any taeat-last used mobU* boa** bt ra-duoad prieaa. Stop out aoonl Ym witl b* glad ym M. Bol) Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales, Inc. “•‘tSSArfeAYSA Ulls iLCM.tt^^ o*atsaiffisi!d. turatluro. earpotlng. otorm* an EXPERT MOafaj'^ME '»«**»» Parkhurst Trailer S41ea -PINEST IN MOBILE Peaturtog Now Moow- BHOHTB MOBILE HOMBa.. Oood aaod bom# typo tnUora U PER diNT DOVfN, Oom Way-tl trallora. Wolvortoo track oaup-ora Cars wlrad Md bltaha ta-sltllad. Cem|tt*to Um ol parto - TRAVEL TRAIL) ■ — Winter Rates — F. E. Howland, Rentals Ml Dixie Highway OR l-i4M JACOBSON TRAILER SALES Oom buyi an diottoy modolx. Sorvico and part*. Wtotor prieaa a rraUls. (HI William* LM*. Drayton Ftolaa. ORI-IMl. TNTEB FRIM OH BSOOROS-lUwod aaod bteyolM, _ KOLAS boat. ITBI ON DISPLAV •62s ON DISPLAV Century Owens Skee Craft ir BBBRINO VOLVO r FISRERMAll OUTBOARu Evinrude Motors Maxurek Marine Sales Sagtoaw at «. Bled FE 4-MSY BAR'a'AIN'~'fWi Wttli;'61*LT “abSlil ^iSS3^«5S^ upboUlary. motor well. ea*e feifE'*VB.:T5a Min. roSm^ itiD liliKni GASOW paclly. MM. torbT;s,a{.*;*.*^^s.ss CHECK OUR DEALS BEFORE YOU BUYI to 71 b p. iDoareaptor agtoa to IN h w Ray MW-Saea-aad ■*( -"tND™SSjtRINB 1-----*---- PINTER'S Marine Sales 1371 N Opdyb* Rd. FE 4-OOM FORTA-CAMFBR TRAOm —*“ima TThdeSs KESSLER’S MARINA ( N. Waaiaston. OA HIM OgfarS lIVnrtad Cara-TrEcks 141 $25 MORE WIR. M Male Highway. — Averill's “TOP DOLLAR PAtiY” FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS GLENN'S : 'M-'Si 6*RS.“ Ellsworth AUTO SALES OXFORD Trailer Sales r widei — 10' wide*. All tongth and Ell*. Frieas ad terms I salt au toman. . . TaUowston* tnyalar*. S Eaa. U ir. B*.smart . . go TaUowatoni. Used Ualta. AO sU*. r4’-lF wid*. Uaad ea be parohaitd m rsntal For A Really Good Buy See'' Us Today! Oxford Trailer Sales MU* 8. of Lak* Orton a Mb TELKFHOWE MY 14711 FOR BENT, new M'. SET UF TO Co5l%"^N"?.?i^'l... fob*us"to*pice%f'and*^l your trailer. Any II' to M WE HAVE lUTEIia WAmNOt CALL US 'TODAY I Holly Marine & Coach 11310 Mouy Rd. BANK RATES Tirs»-AEt»>TrMk I4S W. Harm_____Fe S-llll ewED~T^. m-li E. Matcalai. STANDARD BRAND HEW TIRES. '^-14 to on Oosral Safriy Tlra. an to to ol Mfa.'o Uot pria. Black ar whltawaOa. ED WILLIAMS CRANKSHAFT ORINDINO W "Top Dollar" POR SHARP - LATE MODELS M (St M MOTOR SALES * ^ DIXIE HIOEW^ ” WE NEED IGOCARS • “TOP DOLLAR’’ SRINO TITLB See Bill or Nick AT Suburban-Ol(ds Used Cars Ml S. WOODWARD B'HAM. MI 4-448S Uiad Aat»-TnKk P«H motor. IIM ChoT. motor and pow-trilldo. UM Bulck dynaf^ SP>-clal and Sapor. C. E. La, FB New Md Used Tni^ies Lookin(j - for Special Units Extra Nice and in A-1 Condition! Priceid to Sell! ■N OlfC SUBURBAN CarrpAII 'H FORD RANCHBW . U FORD F-IM Trator wMk — also —, New 1961 Ford P-WO Walk-in Vanettel Save Ovpr $800 John McAuliffe FORD SALES t:4H Truck Department I ^ l^lJJf OA^gNlTAV^ ^ ' ' ‘ ' :v ■■ ■■ ' ■ V, TWENTY-KIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1062 mw Tr«cb 103 I La« I Petier-Trucks GMC • Factory Branch m Ntw «n0 OmO Can 1M ■n CHETY tit I-Doon wrm vi rndne. noor ililll. aU »M-- I»ug«. EM Mtl>,_______■ im CHETROLET aiaCAYNi! 4-door. Vi •oflao, PoworjUdrjj-oio. booior. Daij jNt. EArraat-SON CHEVROLEt m ION ■. WOODWARD AYE. *I|UaHO< HAM Ml l-mt._______________ U CHEYT BEL AIR, Y-l. ntCE .:•! .‘.-iraorar ALL TYPES LOW RATn-rULL COYER Aq rfNANaA^BRP MM _ S 4-DOOR chevy Vi POWER- ■ltdo ooion OR l UM_______ list CHEVROLET IMP ALA 4-door hordlop. Vi onilno. outo-motlc. powrr •toorini. brokci, wmdewo and Sorajr ooaU. Solid WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM Ml 4->TN IMS CHEVY PAREWOOD STA- ilJM. EE A^SiS. IMS CHEVROI.ET HARDTOP RADIO. HEATER AND AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. AoiUBO Kymrntt of iMTI pot mo. Call rdll M|r, Mr., Arki at Ml 4-7MI0. Harold Tumor. Ford |rid*. ins CRARE MOTORS. liso CHEVROLET IMPALA MXMR hardtop. Vi toilno. Ppoorilidr Powrr (totrlDi and brakoo, Poo or ooat. Powtr wTndooto. Sunt»_ t^?^S^"p"i’?r^N*‘?aEV*=58: ■M CHEVROLET BEL AIR ' door orlUi i Cyl Standard thlfl and extra eharpi Vsth rampT^^vrofet, tnc. MILFORD___________MU i-lWi tlroe. power brakee and powi iMrrInr fUU prtco tSN. LLOY MOTORS. Lincoln Moreurr Comet-Metoor. I» ^ aaslnaw FE l-il31. INI BUICE special 4- ft"' INi CHEVROLET 4-d6QR BB5Aii Vi eniloe with Poworslldo. ri dlo and heator. oharp blaek fir teb. Full price. iLm. 'LLOYI MOTORS. Uncdlb-kl^urY-Con ot-MeUor-BniUeh F o r d. US I ___Sailnaw. FE S-illl. •M CHSiVY-DELRAY. SDOOR. i -........ heaUr. Shitewalle. ____ after t:iS. 1M7 CHEVROLET 110 S-d6QR. i celinder. itondard ehift. Extra MINOHAI>. Ill 4»>735. TRY USl CHEVROLET IMi>A14 4-DOOR ... ---Powerillde. ^ a d t o. heater. .•“ITat?!?^*- TM a. ■Woodward" ”” B'ham “ -M BUICE mCIAL ■ si5ia“oi.."«t.t^!5n.i!"uo''"a*t **** BIRMINGHAM Clirvbler - Plymouth ill S. Woodward_______Ml 7-1111 INS BUICE CONVER'nBLE. LE-Sabre. Radio and beater, power brakoa and .Power aloortni. t REAL SHARFTEI Full price il. •U LLOYD MOTORS. Ltneoln-Mercury - Comet - Motoor-1^ liih Ford. U1 S. Sastnaw FE PUBLIC NOTICE INS Cherrolel. Y| ooflno with stick shin. «-dr. No cash down easy terms. Lucky Auto Sa _^ljij S. Sajlnaw. FE 4-1114. « CHEVY IMPALA 4 DOOR hardtop. 1 owner, clean, low inlle-a|c il.4M FE 4-illl________ condlUon AbsoluCoIy no bom down. Assume payments at il7.H por mo. SUBURBAH-OLDS USED CARS. Mi S Woodward. Blrmlni-ham. Ml 4-44M BUICE .... paymiunti (rf 11.^: re -o?^i» %sgS5u$^ — NO CASH DOWN Elni BOB HART MOTORS S4i Orchar^Uke^ Toorbolel term? 'fATTXRsSn* CHEVROLET CO ION S WOODWARD aye . BIRMINGHAM. *-jg» ansportatto ______I FE 4-OW 1M7 BUICE OONVg er brakee a—. luU price iWt. LLOYD k ORB. Uncoil ----- TRUE BEAUTY 1959 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLB. BLACE PEARL Fun'power and all the accessor- $2895 WILSON PON I'l.U - CADILLAC * , 13-iO \. Woodward BIRMINOHAM M,| ftWlll ; INS CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4- ' ^r sedan i cylinder. aUndard ehin. radio, beater, whiuwalle. Ratio block Pnlih. C AVE . BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-T7M. PUBLIC NOTICE iUlae Coupe DeYlUe, eyery-I eo It. 1-owner, hi — Ne money down. it eterythinil You must i Irlte to appreciate. P'“” Sl.Hi. SUBURBAN _ i CARS. Mi 8 W Blrmtnsham. Ml 444M. Have Cars — Will Sell — Reasonable — •M CHEVY A-l Oooditton JIN •MPONTUC Hardtop JIM >M FORD Herdhte 'M MERCURY 4-door . ^ })•• •M CBEYROLCT Vi stick . jlN •17 FORD Vi Club Coupe . iJ7» Superior Auto i^les IN oa£lahi ‘FE 4 GLENN'S •'SHARP CARS' •SI PONTIAC Coneertlble tlM •41 FONTIAC Wofon Wt *41 BUICE Wafon Special .. illM •M PLITMOUtH AutomaUe •M OUM Btatkm Wafoo •M PONTUO Yeotura IPS CBBTTY impala 4-door ... IlW >M BUICE S-Doar Hardtop . ill •WOMETTROLET SOoor •!•' IK •tS MERCURY *4)cat Power illM >« FORD FaMon 4^oor iltN •WOLDS d-Doer Hardtop •N CHRYSUftl H-iop. Power |1M4 'N POHTUO 4-Door H-top •M POHTIAC 4-Door Power •N FONTIAC Ooneort. PoNer ilTN •H CHETY ' ' *”“ •N BUICE I •M FORD S- •NCAIWY. FW^- •« YOLEHWA^ WkSoV . . * W •M CHEYT Blt^ Glenn’d Uoior Sales sn w. ™ betUr. whitewelle -Inleb C........ _____ PATTERI ROLET CO. INi 8 “■ AYE, birminoha: idHAM. Ml 4-1711 Mmv ^ UMd Cets 106 •N FALCON, iUM. APTBR I. OR MOTORS. FE idWi._________ rwar^sfi.' . Easy terr tvroLbt C radio with rrar erat speaker. Window waebere. back up llihls. Tires like new. Clean and priced to sell. EM 1-1M7.__________ IWt CHEVY. EXCELLENT CONDI-tlon throuibout OB MMI. •»4 CHEVROLET 1-DOOR ’ lick I Cyl Redlo. beaUr and eery sherpi New car trade-lbl • Fun Price ilN Surplus Motors ' 171 »: Saghinw________FE i-401i iiN”0AE- Power etaorinf. Power. new tires, white with I— __ one owner. Ql.MO. OL 1-M45 - BUY WUR NEW^ , OtDSMOBiLE HOUGHTEN &"SON OM N. Main, Rocbeitei OL l-tTOI 1065 6LDSMOBILE 1 bo6R RA-010^ HEATER AND HYDRA-MAflC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN................... I10.M per Mr Parke at Turner, Ford. ,_____ 1N7 Ot.DBMOBILE. CLUB COuEe. RADIO HEATER. HY DRAMATIC AND POWER STEERINO ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN Aieumr pnymenU of tM.7l per mo Call redll Mgr, Mr. Parks aUMl 4-7500. HeraW Xnenar. Peed N. JIsenHe paymenly of r mdl ^ trsdll Ifgr., » at MI E750I. Harold —• Special — 1958 PLYMOUTH STATION WAOON. Hero Is good oar tor a largt 4— has radio and he^„i $1295 PONTIAC RETAIL storf: '* FM M 1050 MORRIS MINOR SEDAN. IOH MERCURY PARELANE. 4-door hardtop. This I-owner beeu-ty has rverytbingl Including the low price ot amy 01.105 Your old ear down or 0145 SUBURBAN-OLDS USED CARS. 5H S. Woodward. Birmingham, MI............ mileagr ering am nemleilar 745 can dim, 'I'his Week’s Special $1095 1958 PLYMOUTH* 4door TO aulomaUe Fowei steering. Very good eoodItloD. A bargain at $795 Many new and used ceri to chooee from. R&R MOTORS Imperlsl. Chrysler, Plymouth NMr«riUM sxir^ffia.TOi.'s; “*■ 1957 IM.M per month. 1956 HERCURT. Oammuler 4doar. t mluUn! r?Ro ai^heatet. whitewall Urea. FaymenU « 'ili.H Hum «i0 0^ Cm TIAO CONVEBnaUT a nidir ear la Wtoi. FE B Roeefalre Court. lOOrOiMP 0 and healer. IMN IhU BOW anstoe. Fay-msme m HN per maalh. Above cars with very low cast) down or old trade. 6-MONTH WRITTEN GUARANTEE BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 666 S. \\’uodwaai..VbB^--f " ^11.6-3900 - 1 1N7 RAMRlfR STATION WA^ $99.00 DOWN Or Your Old Car Will Buy'a New 1962 Pontiac Tempest Sdoor wHh htaUr and washari ---------------- 1962 Rambler American 3-door with hcaur and wasberi Demonstrators 1962 RAMBLER ••m" sodoa. AU whtu. fully oguippedr Low mllNfe $500 DISCOUNT 1962 RAMBLER ‘**$600 DISCOUNT 1962 GRAND PRIX Boontlful an rod Balah, fully aguljpN, aUmhram wheeU. Uw ““*$700 DISCOUNT Used Car UN CMEVT B'TTOOD WAO. I Ni UN FONTIAC. HYDRA. {UN 7IN CADILLAC H-TOF,_JJ3N INI -niUNDERBIRD M TOP HIM INI FONTIAC 4-DOON IIMi ' Your Choice $145 1M3 BUICK jebAN IHfl TONTIAC HARDTOP IM4‘rHEVRY?LS“?{D*N UrCHl*Y%ST¥.?ftSF _ Jaguar l i i-- Automobile Import Co. sit B. f——■ NEW CAR TRADES with I TEAR WARRAHtT ’62 OLt)S N Convertible, inn be ynurs for yaar old car down. '62 -PONTIAC CaUllnn 44loor Hnr^ kM Fowir nod real alee, S3.HI. ’61 OLDS N 44lodr noUtoy. HtU Fewer and an randy. H.7N. ’61 CORVAIR Moton Sport CMso, nuiomnUc trnaamSM..|Msr ’60, BUICK 1-da»r Hardtop has fuU power tad U nlee. ik.UI ’60 CADILLAC ’60 OLDS 160 PONTIAC IS^^iLMi.- • ’59 CHEVY S4loor Bel Air with PowersUde. II.- ’59 FORD T-BIrd with full Power nod •59 CADII.LAC *n BitUUL. fall Power and t3,1|i. ’59 OLDS OeUbrity SNnn with fuU Power. il.Mi ’58 CHEVY BEL AIR Itoor Mnidlop wNb full Power. MN ’58 BUICK Atoor UmlUd and R bne Ml Fow-or. il.MI. ’58 FORD Stoar wHh VI anftne. NN. '58 OLDS N Holldey Coupe, full price il.IN ’.58 LINCOLN ronllneaUI witb Air Conditioning. I3.IN - '57 PONTIAC i-pnesenger eutlon wegen. ITIfc ’57. FORD i-pateenser elguoo wNoa. I7N •56 OLDS N l-4eer. real nice, Ifti RUSS -! JEROME Ito, Otoli •' "fiv MIN * I'K 8-W88 1961 FORD country Sedan. Power sUerlnt. and brakee. nuWmntk, rtdU, henUr, wklUwnlU. Low siUNfe. *‘*^CHtJCK FORD M34 at buckhom Lake Orion_______MY I-Hll UH FORD RETRACTABLE. - n Lincoln, i rer, no ru U53 Chevi.... ..... Rd 'M-Ni ON y Mi3 '59 FORI) i-DOOR with Rndlo. Heater, and WMt $995 57 ANOLIA J-DOOB. RADIO AND heater, " ' “ ---- ~ finish. 113 « BIRMINGHAM rambler Hi B. Woodward Blrmlnsbam Ml 6-3900^ “Excellent peymenU of 13.81, per JtoX to pay off balance due of iMT^AJ-SoLUTELT MO CASH DOWH. EUy^Auto^SaUe. Hi S. Saginaw N8 THUMDEHBlKp 3 - P 0_pj« John McAuliffe. Ford no OAELAHD AVE. FE 5-4101 '^?.;“et^.ri'5^.*w‘=JMr.; --- - beet offer. Ml 1-21111. OLIVER BUICK ONE FULL YEAR WARRANTY ON ALl. CARS ■a BUICE Fpeclal VI 13317 •SI BUICE 3-door hardtop i3IN •SI Special VI enfihe |]fH THUNDIggI^.^TI NEED TRANSPORTATION? No Cash Needed! WE ABBAHOB ALL nMAKCmOl •M FORD SnCE •^•M FLT. OOHYERT 8 . MOLDSH-TOF^ ' 811.88 lie. *** -M CHET. BEL AI« V8 wcH.vT.sns;;;;- CHEVT HEL AIR .,«TICE^ M mercury hardtot^ , SPOT DELIVERY CREDIT CHBCEED BY PHOMEI Liquidation Lot FE 8^4071-2 ilTN 'N PONTIAC caUllna 3-door |lHi •H DODOE surra waton . . IUM •M CHETROLBT BlKtync HIM 'M BUICE LeSabre 4-door I14M ■M BUICE InvlcU power •H MEECURT 3-door led, •M PONTIAC CdUUna bordtop iUN •Ml PLYMOUTH 4-door WAgon •H OLDS 3-door tNOn •17 BUICE Bpeclal hardtop I 1 •13 CRETTROLET AMlOor 311 I 1 •H OLDg Super 4-door | I OLIVER BtflGK Only 8 Miles to Rochester for That BETTER DEAL'- Right Time . . . Right Cars—Right‘Prices—Right Newt 1959 BUICK ...$1895 Elcctrn 4-Door Hardtop.. Power eteerlng, power tranemlulon. radio, beater and whitewalle. Oo ^akee^^ Dynaflow i961 VOLKSWAGEN 3-door aedao with radio, hrater.. waahere, turn i wUh while leather trim. Still like new ...$1595 ilgnali Bed paint 1959 PONTIAC ...$1795 Cntellna convertible. Power eteerlng, power brakee, radio, hMter, whitewall tiree. Solid black with red trim. Really an eye cateber. 1 r 1958 PONTIAC ...$1095 Chieftain 3-Door Bedan with radio, healer, Hydramatlc traoemteilon and power brakte. Turquolee ftnieh. 1959 PONTIAC ..... ...$1695 Catalina 4-Door Hardtop. Power eteerlng. Power brakee, Hydra-matle traaemltelon and eaey eye glaee. BoRd white. 1959 CHEVY ...$1795 Impala 4-Door Hardtop. Powtr eteerlng and 1 tranemleetoa. radio, heater and whitewalle. actual mllee. irakee, Powergllde 18,0M guaranteed 1959 FORD .G.. . .'.. ...$1695' only 33.0N eetueJ mllee. Locally owned and a new oar trade-in. ‘1959 CHEVY . . ...$1395 ' Bel Air 4-Door Bodan. 4wntrbeauty. I960 Buick ............................$2295 top. Loca^ owned nnd a new ear trade-in. 1955 PONTIAC ....................... . .$495 3-door eedan with Hydramatlc. radio, hratrr and wbltrwelU Only 3I.0M actual mllee, Hae that popular red and Ivdry flnleh. A owner. Better hurrv! * 1961 PONTIAC We bed 8 of then INI CateUnnt to ehoon from but have only one left. They are Oakland County care and hare been fully reconditioned mnhnnl-cnlly. They have been lubricated and -*' ■1795 1959 CHEVROLET ......................$1295 Bel Air 4-door eedan. 8 cylinder, Powergllde, rndto, healer, white-wall Tiree. Beautiful copper flnleh. 1959 BUICK ...........................$1595 4-Donr aadnn with Oyanflaw, radio, heMer and xrhltewall tlrei. A trut blue beauty. Locally owned and iharp. 1959 FORD ..,..,.....$1195 3-Door Bodnn with V-4 tnglne. Pord-O-ltoUe trnnemlnlw, rndlo. henter. whltewan Dree, nue and Ivory flnleh. Real eharp. 1954 PONTIAC.....$145 1958 BUICK .....■......$1295 BpecMI 4-der hardtop. Power eteerlng and brakee. radio, heater. Dynaflow. whltewane. A pink and leory beauty. Wowl 1958 BUICK ....................$1195 EOoor Sadaa with Dynaflow traacmlMlw. radio, bMtei and whitewall tlrei. RnuUful foM and Ivory flaleb. Om ow^r. 1959 BUICK ......................$1595 4-Door Hardtop with Dynaflow traaemlulaa, radio, beater and whttewnll, Uree. iharp all iht way. 1959 PONTIAC .........$1695 4-doer hardtop wdtb power eteerlng, | 1957 CHEVY .....$995 1959 PONTIAC......................$1995 Bonaevlbe 8-Door Hardtop with power xteartiig, power brakee. Hy-dramaUe iruimltilooe rtdio. taMttr " Icfttber trim tnd Uk« ttcw. NEW CAR PRICES START HERE: TEMPEST $2186. PONTIAC $2725. BUICK SPECIAL $2304. LESABRE $3091. PONTIAC 223 MAIN ST. SHELTON ' ROCHESTER" BUICK OLive 1-8133 Used G^r Lot Aci;oss From New Car Sales - Closed W^. - Fn. - Sqt. at 6 P. M. 1 ■ 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1962 TWENTY-^INE -Today's Television Progroiris- - Ptttt iir Ixmar P«y at AMC, Con»C6n, (Church • «-wwM? okMUMi MONDAT BVENDfO «iW (2) Movto (ooBt.) (4) Wystt Ian> (7) AqnuuuiU (coa^) <9S) Kcyootei •i|S (DWMtber (7) Mahklia UN (2) Newt (4) Newt ^ (7) Newt ^rCtnnonbi (S6) Fmich nueush Televi-Aon •tN (2) Spoilt (4) Sporto •t« (2) Newt (4) Newt (7) Newt, Weather SporU im (2) Svergladet (4) (Color) Oeorit PNmt (7) Expedition!. (•) You ANed for It (96) PortrtlU In Print 7;N (2) Danger Man (4) George Pierrot (cont.) (7) tbeyenne (9) Movie: “The Sailor Taket a Wlfo” (1946). When tailor meeta girl and marrlea rlage ian't ao eaay. Robert Walker, June AUyton, Hume Citnyn. (96) Way of Life UN O) Pete and Gladya (4) (Colo#) Natfonat Velwtt (7) Cheyenne (cont.) (9) Movie (oont.) (96) Four Ftmlliea •;M (2) Window on Main Street (4) (Color) Science S e r 1 e Algebra (Cblor) UN (2) Medltatlona 6iN (2) On the Farm Fnmt UN (2) College of the Air w (4) (footinental Claaaiaoav-Govemmant. (Color) 7iN (2) B’Wana Don (4) Today (7) Funewa 7iN (7) Johnny Ginger UN (2) Captain Kangaroo (96) FNiich for Teachtrt |:N (7) Jack LaLamw •;N (2) Movie: “QuaUty Street’ (4) Ed Allen (7) Movie: "Blonda From Braoklyh’’ UN (4) (Sateway to Glamour (96) Safety UM (4) Debbie Drake lUN (4) Say When (56) Our SdentUic World tUNHlNewt lUM (9) Billboard lUN (2) I Love Lucy (4) Play Your Hunch., (Color) (7) Ufo of Riley (9) Chez Helene (96) Engllah V ItiN (9) Nuraery School lime lliN (2) Video VUlage (4) Price la Right. (Color) (7) Texan (7) Rifleman „ (9) Movie (coot.) 9:N (2) Danny Tbomaa (1) Science (cont.) (7) Surlelde 6 (9) Don Meaeet^e Jubilee (N) Gueat Traveller •:N (2) Andy Griffith (4) (Color) Hall of Far (Special) (7) Wfalde 6 (cont.) (9) Feetlval lt:N (2) Henneaey (4) Hall of FauM (coot.) (7) Den Caaey (9) Feetlval (oont.) lUN (2) I’ve Got a Secret ) Hall of Fame (oont.) (7) Ben Caaey (oont. (9) Featlval (oont.) 11:N (2) Newa TV Features By VnMed Priaa iBtemaUaaal BOntMCK SraCfAL, 6:N p.m. (4). A one-hour film explaining, via draraatlzatkra, cartoona and expcrlmenta, the meaaurement of Dr. Frank Baxter, heat. (Cfolor) DANNV TMOMAS, 9 p.m. (2). Daimy voluntcera to help. Charlef Helper (Sid Melton) radecorate a room tor a nuaery. ANDY OUFFITH, 9:30 p.m. (2). Barney Fife (Don KnotU) poaei tUef In order to pry information from priaoner and unwittingljr per- (9) (N) . 11: U (96) German 1 UiN a) C (4) C (7) Youra tor a Song (96) Hlatory With Heit Hakl TUESDAY ArnOMOON U:N (if) Love of life (4) Your Flrat Impttaiioo (Color) (7) Camouflage (9) Mary Morgan (N) What'a New? „. J (9) Newt-' M:N (2) Sea^ for Tomorrow 14) Truth or Conaequenoca (7) Make a Faw (9) Suale ItiN (96)Spanlah Leaaon ll:M (2) Guiding light 19iH (4) Newt (96) Oman Lttng . 1:N (2) Star Ptrfonnanoe (4) Groucho (7) Day In Court (9) Movie: "The Slatera'' lilt (96) French Leaaon 1:W (7) Newa UN (2) Aa the World Tuma (4) “People Are Funny" (7) How to Marry a Million-aire (M) World Hlatory 1:H (4) Faye Elizabeth l:N (2) Paaawocd (4) Jan Murray. (Color) • Romney Energetic in All of His Activities 11:19 (7) Newa. Spoita 11: li (2) Weather (4) Weather (9) Weather ll:N (2) Sporta (4) Sporta (9) TeleaoHiie DAW U:96 (2) Movie: "The Mad Mlaa Manton" (1938). A debutante known tor eacapadea notifiea police ah BartNura Stanwyck, Henry Fonda, Hattie McDaniel. (7) Weather ll:N (4) ((folor) Jack Paar (7) Five FIngere (9) Movie: "Three Coro-ladea" (1936). Story of Gorman youth at be^nnlng of Weimar Republic. Robert Taylor, Matgarat SuUavan. tuoday mobnino II Continental Oajaroom-- HAU, OP PAIMB, 9:» p.m. (4). ‘Artenic and Old Lace." When two old ladiaa. Abby (Dorothy Stick-ney) and Martha Brewater (Mildred Natwlck) are dlaoovered to lacing homemade elderberry wine with araenfo, nephew Mortimer Brewater (Tony Randall) triea to prevent maaa piurder. AntIN of Mortimer and hia broHiera. Jonathan (Botla Karioff) and Teddy (Toni Boaley) add to confualon. This 90-mlnute adaptation of Jo- duced and directed by G e o r-g Sdtaefor. (Color) HENNESEY, 10 p.m. (2). Mam (Abby Dalton) gets Chick (Jackie (fooper) to take her to dance a then diacovert the has made Lea Brown and his ( chesira. BEN CASEY, 10 p.m. (7). I Walton (Jack Klugman) suffers aertous nervoua disorder as he la about to make medical history with brain operation. SACK PAAB, 11:30 p.m. (4). Guests: Bob Newfaart, Jackie M:^ son and Dr. Margart (Color) (96) FVe l:tt (4) Newa t:N (2) Houae Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys (96) French Lesson UN (2) MRlionalta (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day (9) News •:!• (9) Movie: "Jacqueline" UN (2) Verdict la Yours (4) Our Five Daughters (7) Who"DO You Trtiat? I:H (2) News 4iN (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room tor Daddy (7) American Bandstand (M) Four FamUles 4:16 (2) Secret Storm 4:N (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Razile Da^ (M) Japan: Changing Tima 4iN (7) American Newsstand UH (4) News UN (2) Movie: "Man About Town’’ _____ (1).George Pierrot. (Color) ■ -(7) John^ Ginger 19) Jingles (96) What’s New? 6:N (7) Cimarnxi City (96) BrHish Calendar UN (9) Rocky nnd His Friends (96) News Magazine 6;tt (4) Kukla and Ollie (BMor't Note — Oeorpa Jtomney, boas of American Moton, ii wUaly axpaetad to awfe tha JUpuWean gubor-notorial nomination in aarpera think that JUmnay may haea an cyt on the Whita Mourn. PoUtko oftan no groater challengt — and Jtomney can’t reeiet chaU Imgee.) By A. P. MAHAN ■ DETROIT (ft — Between 9 and i a. m. on subimer days, Ctoorge WUcken Romney freqnmtly steps a golf course that adj^ his nOO.OOO suburban home, tees up three' golf balls and whacks them down the fairway. - ■ * # A Then, as -rapidly u he — — follows them up — Keeping all Hwn balla In play aeparately for alx holei. ------------ 'A compact 18,’’ the father of American compact cars calls his bobtaUed. speed-up version of golf. TMs wdrter, RomMy attacks ~ ' It af pahMo af- Romney’s work pace resembles his three-balls-at-tliiie golf. (In tha winterUihe, he subetltutea a quick outdoor run as morning exerm.) He drives the 18 miles to Alner lean Motors headquarters In an AMC compact. Generally, within few minutes of 9 a. m.. he is Urtaleeved in his paneled office. A recent day was typical. •YOU READYf Romney showed up at 8:90 m„ ahead of his secretary. To get a meeting of his high-level policy board started, he walked down the hal|, poking his bead into the doorways of vice presidents and asking, "you raadyT" Tho asoMlag over, ho was aff to downtown Detroit -- N mln-nteo* drive ewey — le henuner eet with hh laber experts and offlelah al the Ueltad Auto Workers Unloe a stadia eipla-aallsn o( oxaetly hew AMCa eew He’s busy as usual as chairman and president of American Motors, whose Ramblers are pushing for third place in aufo industry and whdae Kelvinator Division » (wuschold apUances. enUBCH WOBKER He works hard at his position In the Church of Jesus Christ of Lat-y Saints (Mormon) — a pqst, equlvalant to that of a bishop. Ha is an elected delegate, o of three vice presidenta and leading figure In Mlchigan’i current oonstlhitlonal convention. It it it And he’s seriously considering a bid tor the Republican nomination tor governor of Michigan. Even before definite word on that from Romney, there was apt tloB that , the governorship i _ a springboard tor a try at the WhMe Houm. ' State Tax Exemption for Ford Draws Fire DETROIT (I) — A propoaol by Gov. Swainaon to exempt food and drugs from the state sales tax has drawn the criticism of the Michigan State Chamber of Commerce. The orgaalsatlsn sold Sotar- the Migiaal salsa tax of S per most to 4 pe^ oeaU H nld ’’No other tax has had so much voter awroval," * * * The chamber also laid, in a statement of policy, that it was opposed to state tax law aid for the help of metropolitan areu because "the further earmarking of state funds for local government is unsound fiscql pdlcy." It also ur^ the correction oi Ask Romney about that, and he mlies, "Ah, pohaw, you couldn" lean me.” NoQiing more perhaps the state capitol at Lansing. be says, has entered his mind. Whatever the grounds tor thfs position, lack of assurance isn' likely to be one of them: 'NEED CONFIDENCE' "You've got to have confidence, and eno«Bd> It.” Romney once said, "to bet every last dollar on yourself." Romney has fiiat sort of conft-ence. He atoo has faith — in (tod, in hlmaeU, and whatever caUN be Is promoting with the fervor of an evangelist. ‘ ns wife, Lensee, aaya it took Mx months of marriage tor her to reallae that It wasn’t aager, oMy enihastosm, that faeled Us advMaey of varioes theoriea and employment compensation laws. U.S.-CanacIa Traffic Increased During '61 DETROIT IB Bord at 10 points between States and Canada where bridge or tuiinel faciUtea exist increaaed by 2.6 per cent to a record 18936,107 cronings in 1961. The United StatesGanada Bridge and Tunnel Opontor’a Association said there were 488,032 more crossings last year than in 1960. At 54, Romney Is a handaomif man, 5 foot llVk tall, with dark hair greying at the fringes. He weighs 179 pounds, tos grey eyes and grins broadly and often. It It It Romney hu promised a decision by Saturday on the gubernatorial ra^, unless feUow delegates at the constitutional convention ask him to delay until they have redrafted Michigan’s 1908 basic law. ■ - To(day's Radio Programs - - wn (WZ) CKLW m) wwj (MO wxra wcab (iisn wfon (imz> wmu am) MOMOAT *T«jnirO WXTZ. OoboaiUa 11:11—WJa. B. tUreoMl WCAK S.H. Week Ulsa-wjR, uuiio WWJ. Down Muoio WCAB. A Ooepot nmoAT MOBNiNa •;W.-WJR. Muito HoU WJBK. Howo, Arory WWJ. HiWo. True flory WPOH, Howo, OHon Show eiM-WJIt, H»Wi WWJ. H«VI 'Krw. wtnur CKLW. Bud IMTIMI P4e-WJII. Howo. Murriy WWJ. Howo, Mortano , WXTZ. Howl Rorrty. WoM ' CKLW, Hovi, Dorld WPOH. Howo. UWU Show •:ie-WJI», Jaeb Harrto CKLW. Hory Moriia l§.00..,.WJR Korl Horo WJBK, Howo. Hold LitA-WkTK MeHooky, Howo tWA-WJII, HOWO, Bheweoaa WWJ. HtWO, MoiWfU aoAt, Mwo Dark WliK. Howo, Lea WPOH. Hbwi, Don MeLaod fiOa-OKLW. BhirtbraU wc^ Sfortiiu'i au** TVXTiL Id MovfMn »:ie-WJ«. VolM M Atrlo. WWJ Howl, apbwto Oponor tojBK. Howl, WPOH Howo. Jerry Otoon l:ee-WJB. HOWO. Z|toweaM WWJ, Howo. MoxwaU WzYa, WInUr CKLW, Darioi WJBK, Howo, Hobart Lta WOAK, N0W4, BIMnAan WXTB, Wolf* Mtwf lIiM-WJR. Howo. Hoolth WKYZ, UoHooloy ^h; Haw.; Sm McLooZ WCAll, A. Cooper ChoT^ y*ZohMtIon StlO-wn, Hoquoot eiie-wjR. MuMe Hon CKLW, Bra opwwr WJBK:. ifowo, Arory wp^ aperta WWJ, Howo Lynkor WCaI, howo Martya WPOH. Howo, OIM fhow |liao-WJR. rtmo for MuaM SiBI—WJH, Muila Han OKLW. Hod Doricj Jiaa-WJH, Hawa, Oterb WWJ, HOWO, Bumptr ClPb WXTZ, Winter WJBK, Howo. Laa siia-wwi, »to» wootou TOBtDAT AmSHOOH WCAH, Howo. Shorldoa WPOH, Howo. Dan MeLaod Pi«a-WJ», foqnlry CUW. K. Ksowtao .P:l»--WJII. iBOomo Tax WJBK. Howo, Arory WCAB, HOWO , , 1 WPt^o liVi* IjOvU Biusw Il:ta-WJH. Howo. porm WWJ, Howo, Lyokif WXTK Howo, MaNoaVy ■tea-WJH. Muala MU WWJ. Bapkoali. Bumpor CKLW Bud Darlri piM-WJK. SeOB. Club WWJ, mtonoenra Utoe-WA. Cttaoort • ••iRsr&bSSJ"*** ■ t;»0-WXYZ. How., Wolf CKI.W. KOWO , WJBK. Howo, Arory a.-to-wjR. HOWO, a OMoot WJBK Howa. Hold WCAR. nowo. Purif WPOH, HowSa Jtrry OIoob’ lt;l|-WJR, Tima far Muala WWJ, Bmpbooii, tyokor i:aP-WJH, HWKMuSk HAl WJZK. Howo. Loo •Ste-fW-itS!*. WCAH. . . . . . hi 19M, a presMenttol year, sad he’s been tabbed aa a promf ‘ prespeet by sneb OOP eblel Richard M. Nheoa and former tha people to rely on the gev-lentol pwessass elaasal to . RsaaWt People reach to- 8290,000. He Uvea in a SIN.OOO-claaa home, tor which he drew the floor plans. Romney also helped with the landecapliig and Ukca to putter about in a sweater, toetera, money he had earned lathing and flooring houses his la- He does his best to noicomodate them, even at home on Sunday afternoona which normally he devotes to his family and romping with hia grandchildren. * * * He’ll even moke room for them at church, talking about politics and other mattera before and after the various services. Romney’s Sundays start n early as his work This was tatonded tor emptoyes (The profit-eharing plan was the flnt of its kind in the Industry. Praised by UAW chief Walter Reuthcr, the contract was received by some of Ronuiey’s tallow Industrialist!.) ♦ •-At At 12:30 p. m. he arrived at al] luncheen meatliig of AMCa sone managers fioa aoroee the country. He ordered a bowl of soup, then went up to the pubUo addrees microphone and baiRn Me nIn pitch, after asking his aadlenM to go right on eating thi' riba. (ha I Bobby donas as aaytog bo ol-wnys Ogsred be’d mako seven ^ u holes, aa ho neb-er worried about a blooper herd Ho to praaktont of too Detroit itoka (dioceao) of too Ultor-Doy Salato aad aooally meola with hta coanclllero from 7tN to iiN a. ns. totaday. At 9 be al-lands a BMottag af too prtoal-hood. Al lUN toem’a m ItaMday I p. n. ai t Romney more Sunday meetings than these. Reoently he and his councillors continued their early morning meeting In his car over 20 ihSea of snow-covered roads m he couM at the (mieslon) vlth a reporter to srhom he explained the precepts of a Mormon en route, he hurried back to hU FUntlao ward to witness the Meislng of hia yoqngaat, and grandchild. toa next shot. •Tm j»4 fuggeatnig." Romney iaW, "that I only make sevt mistake! In a round of golf. Aa matter of fact, I play golf for two reasons: exerdse and humility." GIVES INTERVIEW After tha speech, be returned to AMC headquartera, picking up two visiting New York newspaper^ men whom he gave an Interview en route. Back at AMC, Romney gave hto office a quick chock, then drove 7D miles from Detroit to Lansing. He arrived at the stale eapifal In time lor a 4:N merttag af a constItaUoiial ooaveotton eea-mittoe ef whlofc he to ehalrman Two hosra later, he euggoetod toat *Ve go BO a grasp aad earns right bsek" from a oofo-toria across the street. He finished before the others and had tended to buslnen at hto convention office by the time the other committeemen were ready to resume their meeting. Thla laat-ed until 6 p. m., when the a tuttonal convention convened. ♦ ♦ ♦ An AMC aide and a Citizens for Michigan representative got in brief wofda with Romney aa he walked down the haU to and from Us committee sessiona. The general Romney hM two daughters, both married to Moempn converts; 20^ear-old ^eon npw a Mo^ missionary In England as was father before him, and a lAyeor-nn. MHt. Ha met hia wife, ___tonssr Lmore Latount, at Mgh school. She was ones a Mat-r»Goldwyn-Mayer apprentice ac- Ing the race lor governor. The friend added: "I hope to God you don’t do It. You’re too RDod a day. "We aoon began to argue," Romney recalls. “We were friendly but Intense, and aoon the clerics were Usteolng and taking rides. It got 00 I'd go over some days and heckle him up ao audience. I felt ' should repay his favor." WORKED IDR SOLON Hto miarioi completed, Romney returned to the United States and got a Job In the Washington office ol Sen. DtvM I. Walsh, a Maaia-chuaetta Democrat. He was put to work digaoting tariff leglriaUpn and became familiar with the field. He toea moved to Atambinm (VMnpaay M Aamrira, got a W a ntMta raise aad get married. Hto ftaal Job with Aleeo was WasMugton repreaentoave. la • RENTAL • SOFT WATER 13 UNMAY SOFT WATER CO. U K. n |.Mai tbe prerideni of American Motors was formed In 1964 by the merger of Hudson Motor Cbr Cb. and Nash-Kelvlnator, and Romney became pierident of the company In 1966, a year whan H tort nearly 7 million. B|^ 1991, thanks to Romney's sales asmult ____.___________ of hto oompeti- tcra, AMC wu In the black by fH Should ha win the (X)P gubenia- youiw Gov. John B. Swainsca, who took over after G. Mennen Williams’ 12-year administration. Williams la a Demoerrt. A long-time friend told Romney recently he Jell Jw.«>aA~4Jmt took-Inr tor another fight" in Woman Neariy Itidies To Death "lasMriybsMwriasto 7y,ymn.Tk*»lf»md0 MSMMwArirsMkNMei i ■__ Pertuc I Osly l»t(*oo/*d TV SALES and SERVICE C&V TV, Inc. tS« OoklonH A.« M 4 IM", RCA COLOR TV Solik and Srr«H. Sweet's Radio TV til 10:45. At U:19 Ronuey Wt eo» vertiM hall tor too trip home. Hto driver bod tbe right front seat rt tbe Rambler (aa asset Issues are more important than candidates,” he aays. "A simple Illustration: 'There is n who can provide eound leadership on the basis of unsound principles. Principles ar* more important than men.” ■CERTAIN ELEMENTS’ Last Ms^r he told a gathering that while he dlaagree^ with some of the Democrats, "I’m certainly syinpathy with certain (strongly ednaovative) in the Republican party on a atewide basis.” And some time ago he told more than 20,000 employes at a meeting in a MUwaukee baseball park, "If I worked in a’plant, I wpuM Join a unkm and be active In It.” One of Romney’s favorite Tbe AMC president figures his putside activitiec have cut to about half a week the time be devotes to his company, so, he adds, ‘I have reduced my compensation of our be says. He suggests that union ing on an Industry-wide basis be barred. H« would also require. In effect the break-up of any company engaged In any one baric Industry (autos, tor Instance) and doing more than 35 per cent of tiie total buriness (as General Motors and Ford). ♦ ♦ / Another problem that preoccupies him is "the leap-fiug^g over local and state governments to Washington and the resultant ‘swollen federal'power. “Most states, W of them, are I make a mockery out of osa, giveo hto time aad to addb Itoa he to a ttther — one who douteo M per eort of hto hi-eomo to too otoneh. He doesn’t smoke, drink, oi ■wear, and his physical pact Is such that a clCM aswjctoto oo ______ Tve had to mention It occasion when he had me worn might add, I’m younger than he Is." ♦ ♦ ♦ Until political activify began bUbif into Romney’s time, he took 'Satiu^s off. He doesn’t any ntore. But the Romneys give their mi, a maid, off from Saturday noon until Monday. Mrs. Romney then prepares the family inMlB — for as many u a dozen opie. Romney was bam to OOhaa-hua. Merteb, July 6, 1N7. FIva lator Paneha Villa’s rev-I foreod hto family art( (The fact of his Msxican birth raised some speculation ai to hto ellglbiUty for the prsridency. If the office to "a natural-bom cltl-Courta generally have held, however, that chQdreh bora at lea or abroad of U. S. citizens are ’natural-born" for the purposes of passports and other privileges.) WENT TO ENGLAND As a young man of 20 Romney went to England for two years as Mormon missionary, paying His base salary is 8190,000 a boosted his earnings as high Sb Tbe VFW Commendi JFK for Embargo on Cuba WASHINGTON (AP) -Veterans of Foreign Wars anlmously commended” President Kennedy tor placing a virtually complete embargo on trade with (Jiba, Robert E. Hansen, National VFW commander saa" Sunday, ♦ ♦ ' A statement by Hansen saW, This action by the President received a resounding ovation from the more than 600 atate and attending_____ confer- Army Chemist Dead Washington (A?) - Brig; Gen. Edward Montgomery, 73, a reUreri Army CSiemical Corps officer,'died Saturday. Montgomery served tor a time during World War II as ehlet of chemicaj wa^. fare for the European (beater. After his retirement In 19N he worked for the-American'CyanaMtid Co. ' New YOHc City Riitil 1953. He w born In .Omaha- COIVSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS Become Debt Free tFie Sensible Way. Arrange for a Schedule of Payments to Fit Your income. • NO LIMIT TO AMOUNT • Requirements: Your Sincere Desire to Get Out of Debt. Phone FE 8-0456 OR SEI Mieiiisai Credit Coinellors 702 Pontiac Stote Bonk Bldf. -NieMsrm AaseetotlM of CrartI CaaosoUon |aka M. Naasoii, Din SPECML PRICE With This Ad on FURNACE CLEANING •750 MICHIGAN HEATING CO. li Nmbvfy it. Ftl4«ai SUPER DISCOUNTS COLOR TV, BLACK and WHITE TV RADIOS, STEREOS ' Before You Buy ... Check Our Lew, Lew Prices ... 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DIAl WITH MKNMAM'S LAMEST COMPANY 1011 W HlirON Addltfeao) OMicet rkieuakgar MieWao* InfeHed by FE 4-0951 AMHonel OMicet rkieuyk^r MieWao* 11 Vs liefks West of Talegteph) Nemher PcatlaC Ctewher ol Commouo -jr ■I •A- THtiiTY Much of the nil of the Domini-|roo(a tor ye«r», and green fencel ApproxiHiately U per cent of can Republic it n fertile that iUr|poeta nmetlmes turn themaelvei the cacao produced In the wo cane will grow fnwn the aamellnto tree*. |comn from aourreg In Brasil. ^ Bilk-law. on WoMr Job I ’^^Ihl^SDoysIn, ‘ Miami Beach EnteFY^r Name in the film 'll fiu4 Electrical Promotion A FabuhNis Expense FaM Trip for Two! Dwtoils in Wwdnwfday'e Pontloc Prwee General contractor JohnSadler of 905 Hldcory Ridge Road. I Miltord, la low bidder id H4.S37 on water taciUtiea far the Half Moon Picnic Area at Pinckney, urcording to the State Building iDivlsIon. - --------------- ''Sj After Uncolp was shot in tlie Ford Theater, public Indignation prevented John T. Ford from reopening the theater. He sold It to the government which rebuilt It for War Department offices and rtorage. In 1891 the floors collapsed, killing 22 people and Injuring 68. ^ I- iMIMEOaRAra^ SERVICE I Bulletins, Letters, etc. FAST SERVICE! ; GtrUtiaa Lileratve Sain Harry A. Sanders of 780 E. Square Lake Road, Bloomfield Township, has been elected president ol the Detroit Terminal Railroad. He also Is vice president and general manager ol the Grand Trunk Western Railroad. Blue Ribbon MARGARINE 1-lh. Carton.. With Coupon V ?*t»ttitl|WtWttM»>ti;V>Vftt»WttM»WtWWtMWWg? I rtonii-KXXiTowNicNtttcajroM , fflr BLUE RIBBON [l| MARGARINE ill 1-lb;11C Umit ill On. I I . DAY» Woman's Orel* Stitchod Tats' 29c Voluo TripIo Crotch TRAINING PANTS Fresh 6R0UND BEEF I Argyle. HOSE Peter’s SLI^D BOLOGNA Sol* Doyf t ' MON., FEB. 9 thru \ fWEO., FEB. 7,19621 Half Pound Boys' 1.98 Voluo WINTER CAPS All wool molt on Knit . Attortod colon, lyt' iltot. Ski tlylo. Boys’Long Sleeve tr.. SPORT ' - SHIRTS Mon'f 'T' SHIRTS Iw. Hwy webt. Na..iraUhaMli. StMf t-M-L. 22x44 TERRY BATH Peter’s—O.K. SLICED BACON PETER’S SKINLESS ^LINK SAUSAGE FACE ^ Ok - ajoa CLOTHS Atisrtod poitol ■ WF K TOWELS Vine Ripe TOMATOES LB. Temple ORANGES Aluminum BROILER Highly polishod. H*ot« quickly. 100 Size Aluminur^ BAKE and ROAST PAN Cloant easily. ___J3-Plece Windsor SAUCEPANS Aluminum. I Highly PEOPLE’S H FOOD TOWN FOOD MARKETS 263 AUBURN | 465 E. PIKE Sf. | 700 AUBURN ST. ftM«Ssti*«>H ■ SflN lA.M.Mitr.M. I OfIN 7 bAYt A WIIK j SUPER MARKETS h Tfc# Woath§r yoL. m NO. 810 THE PONTIAC PR ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5. I9e2—80 PAGES umnD cpr: ’pmry V flllLU ^ Romney Hits Both' Parties Castro Predicts More Revolutions GEORGi W. ROMNEY De Gaulle's Report Is Tensely Awaited ' PARIS M^Brlstllng with security forces, Prance and Algeria waited tensely for President Charles de Gaulle’s report tonight over radio and televlsiOD on his progress toward ending the seven-year rebellion in the North African territory. Thousands of riot police, 32 tanks, 100 squad cars and light armored vehicles waited on the aleit on the outskirts of Paris. Troops took strategic positions in key '^Algerian cities* to counter the thrtet of an uprising by PUSDOKS SVFTOaT As the crowd gathered lor tro’s i| “ ■ Tax Probe Turns toWaliStfeeier troiRinw# Figurw as 1st Tor^ of U.S. Drive Against Evadors WASHINGTON in-A prom WaU Street figure doaely aamd-ated with the New York mode Ex-change la expected to be the firat targat of a federal drive agabiat allegsd tax evadera in the aecari- I involves allegatioiiB ot criminal tax frand and would produce a aenaatiaa in financial and aaated te a IMerai grand Jury hi New Yacfc CNy later thta week. De GatiUe is a leader who keeps hia own connael. But there growing apeculatioii that he would expreaa guarded optfanlam about acta for an Algerian settlement He is also expected to denounce the rightist Secret Army and make another rallying call (or support by declariiw Ids Fifth Republic, which grew out of the Algerian crisis, hasbroughtthe country Informants said at least a dosen tax fraud cases, including this brokars, underwriters, stock manipulators, "boiler room operators' and Wall Street lawyers. They said the intensive work in the securities area was to past Income tax crackdowns which have involved physicians, hendwatters, morticians, lawyers, " --------1 even tug- Same of the li A number of the pending cafes resulted from recent Investigations of % Aitoorican Sforic Exchange and its members by the Securitim and Exchange Commie- WbtliD Bk SENtAnQN Si^e sources said that if the ctsse of the New York Stock Ex- t weB the most sen- _______one to Involve a WaU Stneter finoe Ricbard Whitney, the former president of the "Big Board," was eeht to Sing Sing for grand lareeny in 1938. tice Department and the Internal Revenue Service have developed allegations that the Indbridna], in- and kiflated dmrned deducatlona for contributlona to cho philanthropies. Adanaiwr Bock afOodc BQNN, Germany Wl ^ CSumeel-k>r KoranW Adenaue^, rehiroed to hi! office today after being oon-fioed at home f^ tte J»A *«« weeks wtth the gripfib. The 86-yimr-oM government chief looked fit. J the underground Secret Army Orgtnsetion of Buro- DBBllS tp keep Al- DeGaidle fi rifled te begin : at 3 p.m. (Pontiac time). tlations betweca De Gaulle and Algerian rebels toward a One ol the Sectdl Army*a favorite teetlea la te sabStage radte aad TV....................... To counter this lactic a heavy giiard was posted at the base of the Eiflei Tower, which has an Im-pc^nl TV relay installation atop it.^Guards were doubled arotmd radio and television tmtaUalions in Algeria. An estimated 100 European die-hards were arrested in the Alger* ian caidtal in an effort to staU x>ff some of the pxpected trouble. Lesders of the Algerian rebel government were meeting in Tunis to reports (rf Its emissaries who have been holding sesret — skms wUh the French on h a Are aid steps toward independence after ^1 years of French rule. Steelworkers Study Demands hr Contract PITTSBURGH Wl > Getting off to one of the earliest starts ever, top otftolaU of the United Steelworkers confere today to formulate' deroanda and strategy for contract talks with Big Steel. ' basic steslwutkefs expires duM There is talk in sted circles Itei get under way saoo after |he^ unton esnferenoe ends, perhaps 6n an informal baste-March 1 hat been menttoned an a passible Unglt date f(te agree) on a contrari. U0Oretary ti Labor Arthur Goldberg predicted on a reewded tale-virion program in Washington Sunday Mt-appeani a h^er than SQ-SO ' ■■■ be. signed HAVANA (JlLjOheered by a vast throng of Cubana and bolitgNdAfy a message from the Kremlin. Fidel Castro brushed off Cuba’s impending expulsion from the Inter-American system Sunday night and predicted his kind of revolution would sweep Latin America ‘‘like a march of gtanta.” A throng of Cubana Jamming Joae Marti Plasa roared appnival as the bedred prime minister assailed President Kennedy as hypocritical and Impudent for banning Imports from Cuba: U.8. Officials In Washington said the ben, chiefly affecting toMtcco, will deprive ls week. wflUng to finance construction im-ipediatdy If the board agretf to “ property tor a per^- » of the'inoome from rots "for about SO yean." TO OWN BULDINO Ibe county would retain the property and on termination of the lease would own the building, he sakL The tomdlcaU) would expect to realise a profit on its Invest-mant within the length of the lease. Aeeeidtog to fiavage, the firet Winter Blows Milder in Most Parts of Nation By ne Asaactoted Preas Strong northerly winds blew cald air and snow from the Rodc-les into the north central region t^y but fairly mild midwinter weather prevailed in most other parts of the nation. The Icy ah- from Canada ended a wednnd of aprlng-like weather id the Midwest where In some aad a mtolmam of 1S.IM ■qaan feat af effiee apeee weald a eanmKted to advaaee peeea admitted that the bank has Hot yet been contacted. "We will wait tor a dedslon by e board of supervisors before _______________«oa from a temporary traUer at the cneter," suted- The syndicate hu agreed the architect that their building would be styled to compliment the existing marble courthouse. College Aid, Pension Bills Ready lor Senate Aclkm WASHINGTON (AP) — Two of Kennedy’s tlons with Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara over his re- itudie speecha over the country. ★ ★ ★ The House also plans to pass Plane Crashes, Inquiry Starts C47 Burnt, Killing 7 AF OfficBrt at Graeniboro; Soarch for Clues Cold wave waminga were posted There Is likely to be a wide ditforenoe between the Houae and Senate college measures, however. The final verskn wlU have to be worked out in conference. The Houee last Theaday pasted a tl-54)Ullon roaasute limited to funds tor construction of classrooms, laboratortas and libraries. DEBATE BROADER BHX The Senate started < Friday aa a much broader $2.V7f,000,000 biU, with voting acheduled to atart today. Amend-mento are Ukdly to delay a final vote until Tueaday. The bill contains not-only |1A million In construction loan Amds, but alao 1924 million tor itudents ■cholarshlpa and 250 million for granta to help build public community Junior coUeges. ★ ★ ★ The penslon-weltore b to put teeth Into enforcement of the 1958 law aimed at preventlan _____j In administration plans which now contain almost |80 of assets. Presidmt Kemwdy tends Congress today a message on communications sateUltes. Tuesday he la achedulad to sand to Oapitol Hill a meiaage oo edocatton. He la expected to follow later in the Kansu and Iowa and eastward into the upper Mlailaslppl VaUey apd Wlsconeiii. Cold Wave coodl-ttam, the Weather Bureau aaid, win axtend acroat Mlsaonrl, nu-itols, Indiana and weatem Ken-tacky today and tonight. Temperaturaa dropped a UtUe below sob In feetioas of Montana, MtoesoU dnd North Dakoto. Up to tour inehce of snow hit aroaa in northern Mlnneaota Sinriay. Winds up to 65 m.p.h. ■wept the Grand Fbikt, NJ).. dvll i Informed aouroes said the edu--xtlon measage will detail programs Kennedy already has tloned in Ms Stote of tlto Union He it not ways and streets In Upper MlcM- the Gulf coast and aloog the Atlantic seaboard from PMh ” ’ poaals. He reportedly wlU i the importance of education to the GREENSBORO, N. C. (AP) Cn trbnsport plane crashed and bunted Sunday, klUlng eeven Air Fofce men. An Air Force board of Inquiry today bcglm the task of examining the charred remains of the plane at the Greonaboco-High Print Airport In search of clues ) the cause of the crash. The board was flown here from .ope Air Fttrce Baie near Fayetteville, N.C, only houri after the plane amathed Into the turf 100 feet from the airport. There were no survivors. Pope AFB Identified the dead Capt. R. J. Rice, 27, thd pUot, Fort Walton Beach, Fla. Capt. David L. Murphy, 30, copilot. Bloomfield, Neb. Oapt. Thomas D. Carter, 37, naviipitor, Helena, Ark. Sgt. Bernard P. Terrien, nglnaer, Gillette, iWs. Lt. D. J. Huidtos, 28, a passenger, Fort Walton Beach, Fla. Capt. Robert H. Sanford, 34, ■ssenger, Greensboro, N.C. Sgt. Preston Presley, age i available, service address APO 126, w route on emergency leave to Alcoa. Tenn. ON BomiNB mom The Air Force eald foe plane was on a routine fUght. The C47, military version of the DCS, left Its hcxne base, HUriburt Field in norkla, last Fridsy. It left McGuire Air Force Base, N.J.. Sunday, stopped at PMIa-and flew to Greenaboro. The Federal Aviation Flight Service station at Knoxville, Tem., Idane was en route to KnoxvUle. At Greensboro, the plane . briefly, stopping but one of the The House Governmoit Opei* togs Tuenlay on Kannsdy’s re-’ ■« to set up an The special Senate subcommit-tae conductng hearings on military speech cenwwsMp poUcles Is Its plans for the k off down thi and waa some off the ground when stalled. The plane cartwheelec the C47 burst 1 week. These depend on negotla- The Weather ruuv.B. PONTIAG AND VICINITY — Few snow flurries aro ex-peeted tmsight with • lew ef IS. Tuesday moaUy elendy nud eeldsr wtth few anew florrlea. High tomorrow M. Stendy or temperstnres tedny. Wind northwesterly M to 88 At I •*.: WtoS TAMdty W to Ou n*M TOMdAX **••»»»•“• MSXL’fSS&ViViTm. AP SliilitM BAISONAL WBATBEB - Ruin is expected Mu^Au and'South Atlantic oOost aud to the Padfie Northwest wnfle snmr ftaiitoa awtorecMt tor the Great Lakes ar« and—** I. It win be coHer ia« of ths ^ The Day in Birmingham Ex-Cranbiook Teacher to Be Speaker Feb. 15 BIRMINGHAM * . tenon, axeeiitlve swsratafy of MwIMfal scitoMe flea IM to 1M5. Peace Oorpe, wU bo the ■HHf palto speaker M a Fab. U pttblle pro- The 8 pjn. maottag has beau a^ BBsad ^ tbs Birmingham Chap-BT of ths Amateaa Aaaddation of Uidvesrily Won Special liivttotkM have >aau ■ant to the * ‘ ‘ ‘ of the __________ , and IQ_ weed schooto, as well a to Cran- ADOULA WITH ZORIN ^ Congo Premier Cyrillc Adoula ahaka hands with Valerian Zorin, Soviet deputy foreign minister and head of the Soviet U. N. delegation In Adoula’s suite at the Hotel Pierre to New York after tbetr 8 PM. Deadline Looms to Register tor City Primary Unless you have reglatared at w Pontiac CUy Cleik's efllee by 8 toright, you won’t be able to vrie to the Match I dty prttoaty conferaoee Sunday. Adoula files to Waohtogtan today tor talks with Proaldant Kennedy «mld reports the U.S. will step up economic aid to the Congo, Hie deik’a office, which otowt-ly doate 5 pju. late to accept w Today Is the dtadUns. JFK Hosts Adoula at Luncheon Today Station Warned WASHINGTON (AP)-Prerident Kennedy welcomes Premier Cy-Adoula of the Congo to Washington today with a luncheon the WMte Hotue. Adoularis ahsured of a friendly reception on his unofficial visit. MS to prevailing over extremists of the left and right to the Criqp> has surpassed the highest U.S. hopes. MORE AID mePEOTEP It is not likely the 38-year^ moderate Congoleae leader will be promlaed any new U.8. ud i Visiting here. However, Informants said, plans are afoot to extend further economic aaalstancc to his country through the United Natlona. ★ A A Underaecretaty of State Geoege Bail and G. Mennen Williams, the assistant secretary far African affairs, planned to be at Washington National Airport for the arrival tram New York of Adoula, the afternoon. Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations aubcommlttee on Africa, la host in Adoula’s btonor. In the evening Williams entertains f at hla residence. A A i Adoula will vlait Tuesday morning with Eugene Black, president of the World Bank, before returning to New Yoik. Adoula conferred with Valerian Zorin, the Soviet Union’s delegste Sunday to New York. A man for Adoula said later that Zorin had requasti meeting with the premier whn N to the city. KPFK in Los Ang«l«t G«h Bombing Threcrti on Birch Broadcasts LOS ANGELES (B — Radio sto-tkn KPFK, which plans to brood- of the John Birch Society, says It was warnsd by with Adlal E. Stevenson, U.8r ambassador to tbe United Natkau, at Stevenson’a hotel suite. ' LUNCHEON PLANNED A two-hour stag luncheon at the WMte House and a one-hour con-vitb Kennedy follow. Romney Hits GOP, Dems (Continued From Page One) Fat Man'of Press Faces Survival Diet (Cbntlnued From Ppge One) They were supidfod by dty dvil defense ofOdsls who ordered it fw le to the city hall shelter area. Both food! can be mixed with ..lilk or water, eaten aa a porridge or eaten dry. The General Mills product. Multi-purpose Food MPF) (can be mixed with many types of gested redpes. Poasl^ bracing me fOr the teat, ly wile made aome tasty "IffF nigM I sat down to my last "normar maaL This morning I had my first survival breakfast cup milk, H dto MPF and 1 brtiv on the powdered milk and protein mundilei. The leet of the rod hot pepas Is determined to eurvtvc. Stone Embassy, in Indonesia (Continued From Pege (toe) said Premier Jan de Quay ri the Netherlands had expressed hte deep disappointment and added Uiat he could not understand the U.S. decisioa. A A A The Indonesian news pgency PU said Foreign Minister Sut^pdrlo exprossed regret about the attack on the embassy although he added he could "well understand the anger and IrrlUtion of tbe Indonerian granted to Dutch troopKwnytag planes to land on Amarican aril." aa a eaodMato for delegate to I announce I aa a Republican who recognizes that the Republican image needs improving,’’ he said. Oroge W. Romney nearly gave it away Sunday to ^nationwide TV audience that he will run for gov-mor of Michigan. After he had told how he iMb-grert with a ne premiic that politics was infiltrated by dishonest men, James (Scotty) R^on of the New York Times huirtedly asked; AAA "Well, if that is true, then how can you do anything except say on the 10th that you are going to run for governor of MicMganT" AAA Romney replied: "BasicaUy, bat’s what I'm goipg to say.’’ W. Bottom Files for Re-Election to City Commission District 4 incumbent Winford E. Bottom today filed a nominating petition for reflection to tbe City Commissioo In the March 5 pri-maty and April 16 general elections, said aty Clerk Oigo Berkeley. lUs leavea only two taenm- Ma Sees Union ^kinAFL-CIO LITTLE ROCK, Ark IB — Team-■ters Union President Jamea R. dicta that the Tcanuteri . a the AFUOO soon am) that the pdrent union’s presideirt, George Meany, will not hold bis post much longer. AAA Hoffa said Sunday that Teamatera would be back In the AFL<30 "the latter part of this year or ihe early pint of next year." He said Meany. who w mental to expeDlng the Teatosters from tbe AFL-dO, "will be gone Just like ill naan who fall to cany filed as yet with the clerk. Bottom, blddlag for Ms aeeani term. Is the fitOi taeombent ts filed. Bottom, 36. of 174 Euclid Ave. tas been secretary-treasurer of Thomas Die fl Stamping Oo, to Pontiac tor the tait 10 yeari. AAA Born to MiaKWri. Bottom has been a Pontiac resident since cMkOiood. went to Pontiac schooto and graduated from the U.& Naval Oidtoanoe School and Genoral He to married bad has two children. He wee onf aasemldyinan at Pontiac Motor Divlston before World War n and returaad to Bottom to a member of AO Ssinty Epismyl Cburdi, a Maaon Aha have net vvtet pr mfoissad la toe tori tnr yeare. BMri rar totar ta ha sHgtola te veto. The primary will bt held to ae-toct City Ctani tor the A»rU 18 general elactioa at tha Dolcroaa Sdiool of 1 to dtotricta where mors than two ^ file for candidacy. With a wetk left to fils nominating pstltlanl, oa yet thors to no dirirkt whsia The clerk's oMoe to on the mala floor at CUy Hall, 35 S. Parka to. "If J blue book, we’re gonna bomb you Aad toe wife af aetsr Esheri idyeafied torir aad waned It happen" te ityaa H he parMripatai to the — Rjraa Is to. Enrapa. Hie rsodhR atavofty to reeeried on tape. Mrs. Ryan hired two guards to watch her home. A 1 KPFK, a Ustnisrfupportad FM latton which aarrioa m oom-meretoto. said it win begin a week-lav aettoe of pngrama about tha ~treh Society tonight. The bioe book, a primer of tha .jdety, wUl be raed by Hollywood peraonalittoa ond aectlons wOl be ---- ------------ —“— Ths The bomas of two San Fernando Valley ministers, one a Lutheran Thunday night while Uiey perilo-ipoted to a panel diacuaalon of right-wing movements at p Jewtoh synagogoe to the Westwood section of Los Angeles. The bombe did The bombers have not besa apprehended. 2 Swiss Win Race Up the Matterhorn SERMATT, Switzertand (B -Braving gain, two young Swiss mountaineers have conquered the Icy north face of the Matterhorn In the first-ever winter ascent of "the tall Idller.” They woo the race Sunday to the summit of the 14,328-foot Alpine peak against five Auftrian and German climbers who were swallowed up by clouda and still wei today. The five were on the Swtoe-ltaaan border Jaat U aad a totaeW Hie two Swiss - HIM von All-men, 37, and Paul Ettor, 33-reached tbe top after a tworiay climb. Even though the Matteriwrn’s north face has been climbtd approximately 3 timae to the summer,* the "Ice-glassy” almori the treacherous peak and there are no real halting places or Vatican Prtfflct DIm VATICAN cm (B — (tordtosL Cteognanl, 10, prefect of Vatlean congrtgatkm of rites, died at hla hbme to^ of a haart attack. HewaaabrotherofAmleto Cardinal aoognani, Vatfoan saers-tary of state. R^fs are known to carry 13 hu- era that infect Uveelodc and poultry. odutotatthttve post to the Psaoe Oorpa itm aflsr the atoc-ttoB of Pioaltari iGamsdy. AAA Pattanoa to on aastotant pralaa- puhiie admli rafhM ri.Orirts Warittagton UM-wnir aid lasMsof of the Arthur B. Ftomhv Award ta IMD es oAe ^ torii to I af age to vats. At pnsori. ihe to one ef tbe aecndltad tMKfMn of the Unloa Iheriogleal Sontoary. New York, et the door the MgM of the pcp Ex-CHy Resident, Frank MilwanF, Dies rix. Ariz.'lo Frairii 8. Milward. , end tor 35 yeors TIS Prea was told by a eloae friend of Mr. Milward that the 79 - year - rid. tormar rerident had Just retonad from a Suaday ofier-lide toUowtog church and he apparently Buffered a heart at tack at Ms apartment The sMttoM dean of vetd dsai- Funeral arrangemento are to- The graduate of Pontiac Cantral Ogb School was the olderi car rs of aorvioe to Fob-___________lilrd olderi Ford dealer to the state. In 19U Milward received Ms first franchise, wh^ was located where the Riker E *“ tag to today. tt waa brilevril that MHv Alter a venture with a wftrieas MUward took a Job with the Welch Motor Co., one of toe eorty factoring componiea here. „ started aa a , later became purchasing agent. He stayed wtth the firm for five years bribre he entered ' ' Ford. He ta a gradoMe at ite Ity of Chicovi, hflUM 1 lA degraae. A dbiner raMptton OMT to be hrid at II ClBltt Osri. tateririttoiiBlly ae-eaoa ortosi rirtueae, a eoMOrt of 1:15 p.m. wtt bo the psvsiatofiio af t _ .. _ - p pAaop aad organ on Apefl l. Tha lari concert of toe ssaawi w^ be an organ rcdtal May U by Aloe Wyton, organtol and duk’-er at tot Chthednl of 8(. John the Divine, New York. Service for ChortoasV, Ztoimer-mon. 18. of USn Londerdab be 1 p.m. tomoTow at the Bril Chapel of the WDliam H. lltan Cb. Burial wfil bo ta Mr. Zimmerman died at home nd oasrated tl I TW Or, D iger of Ihe bildt department for the VVederick B. Stevens Go. AAA Surviving art Ms wUe Msrie: a .augbter, Mn. WendeD Smito of FranUto; a^oon. Donald C. of Domril Ballard of Lake Jadoon. Tex.; a stepaon, Lawrence E. Brown of Lanring: and thro# The family rsqueats tost any .........I be sent to toe Foundatksi, Dt- tirit. Oeeno W. Erito Servlet tor Goorge W. Ratoh, 93, of 164 Westehericr Way, will be U a.m. Wednesday at the Bril Chapel of the WlUiam R. Hamfl-ton (ft. Burial will be Lamb, bfr. Reish died at Ms home Sat-iday. He owned the general store In Lamb tor many years and was postmaster there from 1900-18. He waa toter affiliated wHh the A A P^ He was the ridest member of the BIrmlagham Senior Men’s dub. Mio. J. K. Bain, Mre. H. M. Daw-aoi and Mrs. D. J. Hagenah, ril of Birmtoghom; a son, Gordon ot ‘ a sleter, eight grand-and one great-grand- THo in Tiff BELGRADE, Yugoolavia IB — Flranee bos dentanded tha recall of Yugoslavla’a ambaseador to Paris and announoed the French ___________will not return to Belgrade ta a dispute over Yugoslav rscognltlon of the Algerian natton- Rusk (Quizzed Over Cuban Exports WASHINGTON (Ufl) tovestigaton called on Soentaryforeign economic policy that the of State Dean Rqpk today to ex- up to holt the flow of riratoidc goods to Cbba from toe free world. The riwdal House Export Oon- __________ public hearing about hte |138-mllUon worth of _____Amerieaa slityped behind the Iron curtain te ttie last 30 monttis 'under goven-nent ex| The I wMb a report by Sou. Jaeab B. Xavtts. E-N.Y. rettereaotiuiopoBeylie [ Witt tte Sovtat b^ I said to a report to thaito Qtoo. widely differing allied trade policies must be coordinated to "iriwff Communist axpectations of sme- 'We cannot watt until the ground baa be« washed out from tmder us by such competMon u may be selMaatiuetive or by tbe di^tve strategy ot ths Soviet toadershlp," Javlta said. In OB opentag statement at the Houae hearings. Chairman A. Paul Kltdita. D-N.Y., arid he was dto-turbed."about the lack ri any to-tematfonal cmtrols over the export of strategic commodities ' He said "vast quontittoa ef daot Eenefly has atdOiad a baa aa ataaori all VM. trade with Obha to deprive the Cbriro re-gtoM af abori 8N Srilltaa ao- oaalir Tbe embargo will slop any re- than $19 million worth of supplies to Cuba. The NATO countries to-duded West Germany, G^t Brit* however, were' Cuba’s .lorgeri trading part- tram Cuba. Only smile be allowed to go to But, gbeordtog to ttie latest eon- UB. AOtoa have otnttoued to ( with the pro-Soviet Csaflo covem- Japan exported 9B,OT,009 worth ri machinery, oriton gooda, fish products aad other materials to Cuba while Chnadat ridnad goods valusd than yu mlllldn. A A A ) BOlti that wHto the burtog tbe first few months of 1961, 13 NATO QDUiitriiir. Japan ' to Qmimuntot natlona, trade with Cuba baa not berii robject fa auch TT THE PONTIAC PRESa MONDAY. FEBRUARY 10«2 WCVEIi m "y Claims Causes Mainly Psychological Hpirdresser Has a Few Tips for Balding Men H« ^noysd th« Judg« TAIPKI, ronaoM (AF)-U Uu-U. M. «M JiriM tint dayt tor BxinnrujB amnxB NEW Yomc-I und to tavff « Lately rvt bem loo broke oad boiy to vMt hto ntan oo IVe NjuB let my btor fO •imiiid «n-droMed, wblcb to pret^ ibock- . Anyway, dito batodreMtor 1 • *iBMd to have to a Undly Benda-nwboto......................... except tor one qntok. Ha was bom In Ebrope, bead in Brooklyn, Uvea In the oonntry, nuu a toioD on Beat 48th ftraat. and cans hteiSf nth Avenue.” That’s hair bix. AtoeH to a' apeetaltat, nst m^rXabanltea^ B eflbe eeveshiB aver To a man, bto balr to hto youth, cfo and Id, an In one I status, T*J phdnp: Ote aC th^ig^ tean ol bN Ufa la ivcragi I. with HAKES UfATTHM WOMB The most Ironic part a( the picture,” says Albert mOy. ”to Sierte f^elaxes • Hules Hental of Fairgipunds Seektns to generate Tiue and to encourafe nuudnunn year-araund use of the SUte Fhlr-grounda, the Mlehto|ii Mate Fair The new rule abandons tL _ vious regulation which limhed « industrial corpora Uons tor dle-plays o( educational nature. It wiB take edset on Fish. Ul The Stale Eslr Commtosioi. .. duced the rentals tor the three major buUdings; The Ooliaeum, from 1900 to $300 daUyi the Agriculture building from $300 to $300; and the Dairy Cattle building from $300 to 8300. To AAolco Film in Prog us (AP> - . MUNICH. West German make a movie in CsechoslovaUa in the , ______ the Nail terror in Pni^ durli« World War a Ihe asovle wttl be based on a novel by IsraeU M. Y. Ven^tovriel. School Diltrids Down LANSINa 1A08 school diatricts, State Department of PttbUe ~ ports. Reduciof the number, the were seven re- grawlng mnrae begins to emiTy. And it has been my exderlMice that the very wemdag can make Mb hair ton out toster.” “However, of this I am sure. ^ of the eauam are paycho- Mgaro only going to make ★ A *■ One of the poeitivo results of wnrying to that whan a man sees a tow. hatos tollii« - he refuses to brush the remaining hair tor toar it, too, wiU come pathetically. “A aermal taUiw sal of hair to he mate new tkaa tor a-Mid * * ar In more than |0 yaars of oh-. dalUl brtleves that the euro tor to him with this problem, he first examlnsa their heatto with don to start the hair grawthg eash a sealpi 1 dwrt begin and thus the arteries kilo the head.” ”A maa Is aarvens a MMp HkeTbaSr. he eaa of caaas of simple tolling hair can be cured by relaxation and r* h * "Of courat If a head is long bald, there likely la not a live root in the scalp,” he adds. eaa be daae bat. Oed btaas em. I wtah them task.” The kindly colffurer has stM en might like to copy. When a lady customer to 1 e a v I n g thh country, he photographs her in the salon, so she has a parma-Dsnt record to show strange, non-El«ltoh speakh* Vxactly how her hair should be the pictures home and use them as bhwprinU tor doing up their own locks. Thus saving nuuiey at Albert’s photographic ea- ”So you kMC a customer.” he shrugs. 'What to that comparsd to gaining a thousand thankst” ClAOftkiolSgceumb. ijSSI; S liTVSS .S WASHINGTON (AP) - Eric *" C*y, Mkk. New Yorii CRy rivtaead Phila- began his service with the g«>wn-moot In ia» ^th the rederal I ta« » »» Bureau of Investigation, joinod the U.8. Poreign Service after World War U and was an attache In JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS ' WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID- W« Pick Up FE 2-0200 ■ rONIIAC KSAP| • SPICIAL • THIS WEEK ONLY 6-30- Cuttard PilUd DONUTS of . IS^lMW^ (.purpose shelving RUGGED 5-SKILF STORAGE UNITS 4 88 e Hawvy-tswiga ttad • Mkad awaasal Hnhl •e AdlitMtkhIa shalvga Tommy Thompson Tommy Thompson, general manager says, "Every--body knows about that better deal at Shelton's on new Poritiacs'ond Buicks. But keep in mind those beautiful new car trade-ins on the used cal’ lot just ocross the street. All are reconditioned, guaranteed and ready for your inspection. Before you buy, please see our selection. Remember, only 8 miles for thot better deal." SHELTON PontiocvBukk rochestIr 223 Mein St. OL'1-l133 Ideol for goroge, bose-ment, butineu — these hondy units will solve any of lOI storage problems. Each shdtf holds up to 300-lbs. sove now on crew sox MEN'S SOFT ORLON«-NYU)N SUNb Lora-webring blend of Orion® Acrylic arid stretch Nylon, wash — dry fast. ‘ White, colore. -rw I lavra vmiwsw 5-*2 shoe cboroiice! A Wide Selection of LEATHERS ond SUEDES HIGH ond MEDIUM HEELS in This Colloction Ladies . . . now Is the time to buy those lovely Foshion Stride shoes you've been wonting to get. A real buy at this low Montgomery Word clioronce price. Sixes 5-10: AA-B. Not all sizes in every style. Words Complals fhaa Pspaihaaal stripe hand towels Reg. 59< it hr 59^ R«9. 59c WASHCtOTH .. .. . 2 for 29e Treasure Chest brand*. Yorn dyed colors thqt lost. I^igh-ly obsorbent. Drop terry tor-'*'1 ders. Act foit if you o n t these sensational values I Words Ceaptols Item Osparlwsal Boy's Flonnel Lined Light Weight Spring Jacket Boys' jacket, zip front. All cotton shell lines with cotton flannel for these chilly spring doys. Knit wristlets, collar, wotot-bond. Washable, too. Cute houndstooth check and deep pockets. A real playtime favorite with ony little boy. Word! Ceaiatota CblMrae’s Dagaikasat 3.49 RUSTPROOF ALUMINUM LUNCH-KIT, VACUUM BOTTLE 99 Lightweight, yet ready for years of service! Pint-size years oi _________ _________ bottle has leak-proof, screw-down stopper, plastic grip. Words Csmatete fgastteg Oasds Peyarfaisal ONE-COAT gloss enamel |44 Gollon r4.66 One coot provides o high-gloss olkyd finish, ideal for ,woodwork or woils in kitchen and both. Crease, woter-resistont. Siliconized, re-toins color and shebn after repeated washings. Odorless. ( Semi-gloes enamel, ft. 1.44 gel- am HEAVY DUTY BULK OIL IN YOUR (CONTAINER leguler 28c Exceilerit premium 'quality oil cleans os it lubricates, keeps dirt in harmless suspension, protects hot spots. Come In today and see this excellent value at Montgomery Word. Hurry while It lasts. cerdinol stretch WASHABLE SEAT COVERS Reguler 5.98 Royon-cotton blend — looks pi MM like upholstery. Fits seat like ■#■1' stretch sock,- instdls seconeb. 5 IwBhfRA IR4 Jv. AV OPEN every night till 9 p./v^. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, fIbBRUARY S, 1962 Grandparents Reve^ ^ Big Marriage. Secret By'BARivWlUON NEW YORK w Cute blonde Uttle Yvette Mlmleux of Hollywood rarely pltyed » elicit trick on ua ao-o*lled Joumallate when the kept denying the wu nfarrled—now It turne out her huBbnnd hte grandparente in Brooklyn. Ant^ttie Abraham poldstetna. of Brooklyn, are like all grandparent*—they’re proud of the grandchildren. So while Yvette. w|io hae Greta Oar-bo’i paealoii for privaey, waa keeping her marriage a aeeret, the grandparenU were telling Clone friehia what a baaatlhil amart girl their grandaon, Evan Harland Bnger, had married ont In CaUfonla. They mentioned It to aomebody who mentioned It to Blabbermouth here. I phoned Mr. Ool^teln, a retired Inaurance underwriter— and he admitted that Yvette la their granddaughter (by marriage ),^nd he added: "And ahe'a a beautiful, lovely girl." He and hla wife Sylvia apent some time with Yvette and their grandson — "who's In a type of show business" — and Yvette, the charmer, waa ecstatic about Grandmother Oold-steln’a delicious cakes. Well, they're ecstatic about her, and I’m ecstatic about ripping away more of the Mlmleux Mystery, so hurrayl Pretty Paula Stewart says husband i Jpck Carter "deserves some kind of med-lal’’ — he bought his mother-in-law a Imlnk coat . . . Rita Hayworth’s cosy I again adth Gary Merrill, who’s been ||phonlo| from Chicago. . . . Hollywood I say that Sinatra’s new theme I aongH be "It’s so nice to have a Prowse I around the house . . ." BBardot% mama I will manage Brigitte’s new perfume com-I pany. (It’s hoped BB’ll come here in I August to launch It. . . Diahann Carroll I was guest of honor at a Detroit Charity PAULA party—and won the door prise. THE MIDNIGHT EARL... TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Taffy Tuttle says She’S not worried about the raise In postal rates—riie’s already sent out her ’62 Christmas cards. WISH I’D SAID THAT: A "born executive’’ Is a fellow whose father owtu the factory. EARL’S PEARLS: Definition of a supermarket; A convenient spot that enables a woman to go bj^e In one store. (Copyright, 1N2) MOimOII/IERYWARD LOOK >> WHAT AM ormi BIG II'x 14' PORTRAIT Semi-Life Size Bust Vignette UM2INDITI0IMUY 6UillUIITEED $995 99 ♦ Lua UO< HANOLINn, WRAPWINn a INSURANCB L00K-"SPECIAL” You Will Also fieceivo Your child’s Portrait ; On A DESK CALENDAR Absolutely FREEI Age 5 W««kt to 12 Ynars UMITi f Per Child - 2 Per Eemily Femlly Groups Taken SERVICE AVAILAILE FEiRUARY, 1 TO 7 ONLY! Open 9:30 A. M. to 9HM P. M. PONTIAC |NAU mOPPMR C«Tb' " 409. Tolagraph Rood • I CWiAflNG-anil a GREAT BUY! FORK LOIN ROASTS CLOSED SUNDAY AS USUAL p Allgood Brand ARPV nNI QUALITY Sliced BACON 39* T-U. PRO. tUPIMIOHr QUAUTV Fon^y Siktd Bocon mo. 49c Thkk-SBc«l Bocon 97c ''SUPER-RIGH’r QUALITY —NONE FINER FULL 7-RIB" PORTION 29 LI WHOLE OR u RIR HALF ” LB. 45< Sliced Beef Liwer 35c "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY Ground MON. AND TUES. ONLY a/ 1-LB. FK( GRAND WITH FORK DINNERS Mott's Apple Sauce 3 35.02. OAC OUR PINIST QUALITY AGP Apple Sauce c»'12c STOKELY CANNED Vegetable Sale GREEK PEAS, CUT GREEN BEANS, SHEUIE BEANS, KERNEl CORN, CREAM STYLE CORN Tow Choka 5“89* SAVE 16c—JANE PARKER Apricot Pie 39 SAVE «e-JANS PARKER Cracked Wheat Bread io& 17c ANGEL SOFT Facial Tissues *2o5iS' 3 49*- formondaYaiMl Tuesday "SUPER RIGHT" Center Cut Pork Chops = * 69* RED RIPE, VINE-RIPENED Tomatoes . . . M9* CRISP, SOLID, 30 SIZE HEADS Lettuce .... 3 ■ 25‘ RISDON'S VITA Skim Milk a 29< SUNNYBROOK GRADE A" Large Eggs 2 °° 89* ASP BRAND-SEaiONS Grapefruit ... 6 »»89< UDY BITTY BRAND , Priiae Juice .. 3 1*®® DINTY MOORE Beef Stew.... 49< lIBBYS TASTY, DELICIOUS Tomnto Juice 4 ^ 94< ABP BRAND—LIOHT, CHUNK STYLE Tuna Rsh ... 4«^99< MAKES LIGHT, UNDER BH Blsquick ■ i 0. MAKES LIGHT, UNDER BISCUITS BITTY CROGKER 40-OZ. PKO. - ■ 39« ^p^^uper J^orkets AN pricM la tfcii wgmewatearauv.iNe. _ gN affecfiv* Ihra TwMiay, Fab. SfB la aN Eastenk .. SWANSDOWN Cake Mixes IIAIKNI HAKE, BANANA, ORANaeCOCONOT, YMOW, ORVIl’S POOO, niOOMOCONIfT 31*00 YOUR CHOICE Mr? Brand Fruit Cocktail OP Bartlett Pears 5»99c RIOULAR OR SCENTED. lESTOIL a 59c vV's: ... ■ •• ■ .1 ■■ i'v'' , . \ '’'a.'u j/ ■.•■■■■-iv'.- •■■■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUAR\^ 5, 1062 r. ItyJPpU^cs, Politics ^ on Stockpile^ Issue Ainir MpdfM; “It vtoiw tlMt he hopes tnve«lg«tOM, H#rabiiig rimVtiuT e wm ,EK Hont Buchhbiz a Dad . MUrNMMUIIV j •WAOPNCTON ~ PDUUdi hu ijMrad its lovely Iwkd in oonneo-l tkm with w ihwM dpteie rtwfe*—^ At hie iHt pm Kennedy dramatically t hlT^ - - - . __________________ _ Muart Syuringtea, to cendiiet e Inbe of the etecfcpUe which, he pWng progfim* _ _ munition for uee ayUnet oene la the congreebonal election teid, oootelnjk 11:4 blBlon more itir wy I ^ nie e e en the fera el It: e yeeeg ever, el letting the Inveetlgalon Inveetigete the Inveetigaton, ' Until ehortly before the ISIeen-hoerer' edmlaltttmtt(m ‘ come to poteer. Symington wM pereonelly In charge of the etockplling pro> gram, luf heed of the National Reeourcee planning Board. The -------- ‘ gen In ttr * * The Wuhlngton Evening Star in ha newa atory on JFK’a preaa Demands Rocky Prove Charges Wagner Asks Governor to Bock ,Up Claims on Milk-pqting Issue . NEW YOBK le-Mayor Bobert T. Wagner has called upon Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller to prove that vinegar had boen Injected in |mne New York City milk to turn tag In Elmira Saturday night that he thought eomd milk “had been Injected with vinegar, wMch turns It sour in about 10 minutea.” secretary, Rebert L. MacMaaaa. Wagner, who won a third aeasive term as mayor and bmerged u perhaps the state’e most powerful Damocnt, had . brged resumption of milk-datinf. A New Yerk City erdlaaatw yegatatag nllk-datlag was aat-tewed by Ibe RepabScaa-oea- Groups opposing milk-dating. Including moat farmera, claimed that transportation ^ handling practicae had beoamb ao efficient that dating was unnecessary to protect temlUes from sour milk. Rockefeller recommended repeal of the prohibition against mllk-datlng In Ms recent message to the lagislatara. Presents library to Miami Synagogue - MIAMI, Tia. Ill — A former Shenandoah, Iowa, theater opera-ior who has dedicated much of his Uta to malting books available chfldren, has presented a library to Beth David Congregation. Harry Simons, 03, started collecting contributions for the library in IMS. Simons gave the library keys Sunday to Philip Schiff, president of the congregation, and In turn received a laminated scroll of the hbard's reeolution naming the library for Mm. Simons began a drive Jn 1921 tar free school books tor Shensn-Boah children and the project went through two years latar. He has been a member et Beth David Mr more than 30 yaars. Still Feels Fine JMttei Passing 100th Birthday COLUMBIA. Ky. (AP)-W. J. Sunday and he’4 feeling fine, thank you. . “I eat good, I sleep good, I feel ]my I look good,” Banks observed. He walks a mile to town once or twice a week. He says he^ gmokad « carton of uJsacattsa a jveek “ever since thgy...]wlk«^ a Mckel a pack]” Man Walking Excavator : J^DSOOW (AP)-Engineers the Ukraine designing plant of No- tor a 2Q-stoiy power exca-that :lralks. The Tgss news f said the rotary excavator t mounted oh le^ instead of •r tracks, eliminatig 500 (AdTirUMlittat) : Stops Coastipatiofl dDeto'AgiiigMon'' met. •sews ear. Use . MB tauMw RiMRi^ m-m 1 sssoMMs st.yaasiirntaiv , af yoar ootee WMl alw apt, Isat ihe : ssnsrey^ss V awssdiaflakrai^lUiojMn^ I” Um urfi w paras. Of sH Issdins Wss- leoiwBwM^r^i stteakseih e lower oeloi leaww^bsa: peaewl istoeefs ndar Truman and Then four years ago Ota ordered the program drastically dut back, after hia defense moblUzer, Gordon Gkray. said it was silly to hoard nuclear age. Noncthefeaa It looked Ilka JTK ad struck a rich poliUcal The stockpiling, he chided, was “a potential aource of exceaalva and uncoqactonable pnfiti'’ wMch j^mtagteo will Inv^ata “without delay." The good, gray Virginian miliBy ,atatad out that after all, his Joint committee on nooeeiential gavern-nant axpendlturee has been issuing monthly reports on this vary Harry F. Ryid, the watohdag of the Treaeaiy eiaoe IFK was ta ImeepsalB, qafetly aaUeuaoad diattoction. So deep-rooted Is OOP respect for Ms fiscal souqSnaas that when RepubllcsM twice captured control of Congreee, they invited the Democratic eenator to conllnue as chairman of the Joint Committee. The aristocratic Virginian Is. a Kapnsdy and Symington were not jnueed. Byrd is an arctaconaerva-tive who on many occasion has given aid and comtort to Republican fiscal p^et like balanced turet.' Further. Byrd lilted no single finger to help elect Kennedy to the presidency. Byrd, who first came Senate at the birth of the r ' haa at least one Kennedy. The President therefore be able to appreciate the wry humor In the letter he has received from Byrd. JFK had damned the “cloak of semoy" that surrounded the stockpiling program, so Byrd meritiy asked him to "remove the secrecy label” from the etockpUlng ki. .J— teok Bate el Keaaedjr** charge that we have eteekplled several btiueadellara weethtoeawch ot stralegta amleriata by sddtag ta aabsUace: “I VuaM ba very glad Indeed ta veeaplare tMa amoaat for the Treasury, ta tife hope test wa migM theref have ta taoreaaa the dsM HfMXYWOOD (AP) - tfn. Horst Buchholz prasented her lan actophustamd wtth a S-, „1. Kkmnce boy Sunday at Cedars of Lebanon floopital. The child,* named Christopher, Is the couple's first. Since Kennedy' has asked tor a 35 bilUm debt Umit increase ta the next year and a halt, Byrd ■eema pruWitly to be one' up on him in the battle of the budget. But JFK ia alao a master at If yol were hori befere 1910... Opes I A.M. to e P.M. DtUy Seeder S:ie to S IVHN AUTO WASH Thatcher, ■ foNorton and Warnat INSURANCE let us tan you hear yon —*y for a ■“““ policy Tou ma} Uu policy tha r«t of ymu^SSs to help ease **" •——— * You handle the entire trsae* action by mail with OU3 AMERICAN, the company which bHpad ptaoeer taaar-anoa for eanlor Tear out thla ad and autfi It today with your naaM, address and year of Mrth to Old American Insurance Oo.. Marathon gasolines flow, and away you go, even at 30° below ‘itr V - riSi'Vr 1 THE PONTIAC PipiS.* MONDAV! FEBRUARY 5, 1962 |I mmm m ' ■' Udmif That We Can't Like Everybxly i. MUnSL LAWI N«w jllwpHw jj Dttf Mi«. UwiMBOt: My S-yearold boy ■bouta "Go away" to anyoae who ilnga dooifMlL Hio haWt bagiD wh« Ma Cfwiftnoth* wai vlaMw m. Ha dtallkad bar and oboo Mad ta tr he yella "Go away” (to everybody who cohm* to the doer. " have Mad to make a gama for ilm of opening It and aaying ‘Oome In’' but It doean't work. AaOTvcr: Yoa dUa't Hba Hwt year Know what? 1 think that you ‘ a werat plmaure to that ‘ of your I think you, too, wantei graadniother away. Which la all 'ght with BM. Vm queatton la; "Why lan't It aU right with you?” * * Nobody la obliged to low nto. vea that we art raqutrad to «• atralght at the your child ot hla grandmother that you felt and did not dare to exyreaaV U yoa will leak at if atraIgM. You can aay to him, "lUly, you do not have to tall people to go away for me aay more. If I don't want them hare, t wll tall i myaelf. If you don’t want i here, juat go off la the yard and play until they leave." And If he them by actkm. riLLMBkMUB It wlU be. I eapi 0^ a relief to him to loam thto you are capable of handUng your They Affect Health F 1“ LOWRBY STARLET ORGAN compfeto Miwkeaid omw «Hk iftwiiea... nahmi rewrWndoa Anyone can play HI ^ ...McluiiNLM»tfyQiMo...tMeh ' tobt...a vartoly oMaotninwBtgl Micet... rich oicheaM anoMibto e«ecto...lotolyiplaimiflto|... and belt of an, anyoM IM ptojr It Why wait another day? Cama la ar phone in for a fria Mai la yaw PRICED FROM $595 to $3095 -NEW- \LESTER-KIMBALL and CABLE PIANOS *695" ItootUto ■ lltae toUtaun ' your ohIMron \ ;modern woodmen uaed their dog ton tUlty tr • dfecenrteey. Yen een i ■n't < Ten taeir, I’lpnee knew a man anf win wheeadeg anagyei aad too. It toilferirto toa doga0^totha ire haftir totMe the toot toat en dnat He eeetola peegto who »to aoe ne •» and aeeapt toe Then we don't convey a hiddin appeal to a child to expreia aur dlaUkc tor ua. It’a only than that we are ta a paettton to aay: know what to aay to people who ling the doorbell. You don’t have to lay It for me." Heve You Tried Hrfi? Giant-Size Chocolate Ban Makes Dessert for Nine toy JAim ODELL % teatooon vanilla i of Farminitan ueot a roctee tor ___________ito. Happ^, we wore abla to help her out tow gave iw one of her favors In douhio boiler. Molt. (M got to count oaloitot whoa y •erve or eat tt. * ft * Mro. HiU iB active ta church I dfeMdtoaa M i vatoltorieM Put a layer of crachar or yak, too twapHal vltftor and cnimba to a buttarad QVKB PASTY toy lire. Eam 1 large atm Hcupmilh 1 packaged mix’ ^ crumlw on top. Qilir PVoiw night, or at toaat t to 4 hgm. CM ta ifuaree to mm. Keep Teeth in Shape toy JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Lovely teeth are a tremendone aaaeU They have such a great cf-that ftti to know that ^pyonhea it tfaa moat ueual eanm ot tooth kee after tlw age of to. ftotimetoly, it Cere of your teeth also la Im* portaot hooauao of your health. the whole lyitem and lolka who hevn mleetob teeth are not likely eat a well4)alanced diet. te toM*lH at hla toeto by the age ef aa. Imagine ttto, to e I baa pycnhaa lha gutoa be> oa puffy, bUdabHr^ bUed wreatollalaaaaftoMh. Generally apaabing, pyorrtwe I canaed or ptaowlad bp ato^ coi tecih tend to nwwe it Because ef tUa. narmal eentoct to toet and toed may pack betweoi Matooduaton, or tooorrect aUgm f the tooth, caowa abnonnal lewban ohewtag and atoo the teeth more difficult to fsn aonstoatly Hire. I Heritage Club Hears Lecture An illustrated lecture on the ’Totyus of Itorty lighttog” by Mrs. WIBlem Kemp hlgh- Unit to Hear Dog Trainer Commercial ftohermea tal(e froml The United States hurveats about _M mlUion to three million pounds 100,000 tons of ptonuta pech year, of smelt amnwUy to Wlaccnitn. la crop worth aboM SSOO mittton. Gwrge B. Iliudeiunn. train, ar and toetructor at Leader Dstoi tor tta BUad, lae., Ito-eiwstar, will addreee Twin Mothm’ Chib natwaday eve. ah* to the Cunmantty 8erv-toaa BaUdh« en PranUto Bold. if toraatod to the methods used wfll he lira. George Van Horn, Mothers' Unit Names Officers for the Year Officers for the DeMolay lletkere’ Oub of the PPntlac OwpK _ a family c«^ dinner In the Ma> Temple, Beat Lawrence caQ... WIUUM WRIGHT lire. Wllltom C. Ptohtort 270 Orchard Laku • FE 4-0558 Mrs. Franoto Maptoy, tiwtaUod Mri. Oeear W. Norgren pa ihusI-4mu Ifes. Clyde A. Mottor !«,» Ralph lASY BUOMT THMS or M DAYS CASH ___ and Mrs. Ray Hopwid, chaplain. Mis. Mcyltor waa appototed to the Now member, Mrs. Gall tlW^, and a guaM, Mrt. rmrnUk Moha, ware wel- Film Is viewed-by Church Guild A tout ontlttod "Tangible Evidence on the United Church el Christ" waa viewed by meadMra ol the Bethel United Qaavh of Chrlat* Wemen't Guild Ttoireday evuntog in the H. __ fSLT fab. to end a mtotoonaiy meeting, with luacHoon at noon, to planned tor March U. Complete Plans for Fashion Show lantotlve plane were completed tor e iprtng taahlon show by the Phi Keppe Tau ~ ' Omicron Na- a local flower shop, lire. CNlver Dunstan explained the fundamentals of flower airengCinent and ■bowed batoc equipment for the beginner, toidee were ihown of erTangemanta tor throughout Guests ol the group wore Mrs. William Haiber and Mrs. Jack O’Hagan. For the March meeting, Mrs. Edward Hansz of Mo-Ointodi Drive will open her home lor a gourmet dinner. Mrs. FVuikUn Read will give THUm eiBIVAN SlUBBBT THBIRR $S.8S IndudiiiE Tox SUNDAY MAYMK, Nk 11 “imieii wflini" M A44411D Serving Oakland County Over 30 Years • •• YOU WANT TO SAVE 30% to ON FINE, CUSTOM ItE-UPHOl^TERINi Quelity m«t«rUI( and expert work-marwhlp lhrmi#wut! *25 to*500 CASH IN ONE DAY OR LESS YOUR CHOICE OF PAYMENT PUN - Phene to Aepmme* ir*H New Eaarythmf Rtadyfar Yom Fhen You Arriit STATE FINANCE COMPANY a PwUtoc State Mnh Wdf. « 4-1571 We Stitch and Sew We Clean and Spot We Press and Inspect. The PROFESSIONAL WAY... at FATHER AND SON **Where Quality Count*'* claan tnly loW WE ' PICK-UP AND SSMiM $]19 SMttllfuHv lauRd-•rad ... Cask md $200 DELIVER CALL PlihMto m4 I^Nwory FE 2-6424 Cany. ^ , OPfN 7 A.M.-6P.M. Father s Son CLEWERS Ml JoDlyn Coraiir of Mantfitid < The attraetive girl has lovely teeth, and she keeps them that way with proper care and regular brushing: She also avoids nervous habits, such as pressing tongue against teeth. Yet, irt tnie. The yearly coal of a $2,000 Junior life insurance policy is only $8.40, if your child is under 5 years o( age. Premiums are slightly higher at older ages. Investigate now the many benefits of Modern Woodmen Junior insurance for children. Polio benefits ate included at no extra cost. At Mo extra Coot .1 siieu ■*«« i|hw information cau or write ^ FORFOR^ M. I.' PANIELS, District Mmogar : 563 Wfst Huron iStriot FE 3-7111 , FLAIR COLD^WAVE 1715 Exquisitely Styled for Valentitu^s Day MON. •TUBS. #WED. BUDGET COLD WAVE OfCLUDINO HAIXCVT 159s BEAUTY SALON raoNBt Ft t-Utt Open Mon. and Fri. Evenings 'til 9 PA1. *Aak Aheet Olpi ' lauaty Imss*' , APFOMTMBIT HOY AlWAYS NKESIADY with or without proscription In o wido ■ choico of from# stylgs and colors. Choose the frome style to-suit your individual taste and personality from hundreds in our studio. Lenses are avail-ai^le in neutral, gray, green or brown. - BUDGET TERMS AVAIUBLE 109 N. SAGlhAW ST. E. STEINAAAN, O.D. Dtoly9>)0AJN.to5i30PJL ' Fri«toy9>30AJM.tal!30P.M. FE 2-2895 ■'V. SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, im lULlIRl C*Ntiiitmal ClattraMR ... NIC l:M •ItMA.M. tayWIiM .................NIC Hay Y»«r Nanch...........NIC TIm Iriea It light......NIC fl:Nf 1t:lCA.M. Caacaatratioa ..........NIC 11:11 • 12:M N Yaar Firtt laipratiioa..NIC 12:M -12:31 PM. Truth or Cantaquaactt ..NIC 12:N> Tha Jaa Marray Shaw.....NIC 2:N* 2:11 P.M. YauagDoctorMalona ....NIC S:M* 1:311.11. Fiva Oaughtart^..........NIC 1:M- 4:MF.M. Nara*t Nallywaal .......NIC 4:M* l:NF.M. laarga Plaratt...........NIC 1:01 • l:N P.M. Natiaaal Valvtf^.........NIC l:N *J:3I P.M. Call Syttaai Saiaaea Sarias NIC' 1:31 • 9:00 P.M. Nallaiarh Nal at Faaia.... NIC 0:10 - 11:N P.M. Tha Jaak Paar Shaw......NIC 11:19 • 1:00 A.M. PipthaWiMpit-............NIC 0:30-10:00 AJI. Tha Shari Lawit Shaw.... NIC 10:00 • 10:30 A.M. Kiag Laaaarla aaO Hit Shart Subjaatt......NIC 10:10 • 11:00 A.M. Pra latkatball*........ NIC 2:30 - 1:01 P.M. All Star Can............NIC 9:00 • l:N P.M. Talat at Wallt Farga..... NIC 1:30 • 1:30 P.M. Saturday Night at tha Meviat...............NIC 9:00 • ta Nnith biantM Olataraam.... NIC 9:00 • 1:00 A.M. Say Whaa \............... •. NIC 10:00 -10:30 A.^. PiayYeurN:^oh............NIC 10:30-11:NA.M. Tha Priaa la Might.......NIC 11:00 •11:30 A.M. CanaantratiaiiV..........NIC 11:30 • 12:00 N Yaur First laipf^ulon....NIC 12:00 •12:30 P.M. Truth arCansa^aaeat*.. NIC 12:30- 1:00 P.M. Tha Jaa Murray thaw......NIC 2:00 • 2:30 P.M. YauBgOaatarMahfaa'*....NIC 3:00 • 3:30 P.M. Fiva Daughtars'^......NIC 3:30 • 4:00 P.M. Nara't Nallywaad^........NIC 4:10 • 1:00 P.M. Qaarga Piaratt..;........NIC 1:00 • 0:00 PJI. WagaaTraia^..............NIC 1:3|. 1:30 P.M. Jaay lithap Shaw'*’......NIC 1:30 - 0:00 P.M. KraftMusiaNan............NIC 0:01-10:00 PJI. lab Nawhart Shaw.........NIC 1I:I0-10MP.M. Irinklay*t Jaumal.....NIC 11:30 •11:00 P.M. Tha Jaak Nar Shaw........NIC 11:19- 1:00 A.M. SATURDAY/FEBRUARY10 MANY COLOR SHOWS EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK COLOR SO BRIGHT ... SO TRUE. . .YOU HAVE tO SEE IT TO BELIEVE IT! COME INTO OUR STORES ... SEE 3 GREAT COLOR TV DAYS THIS WEEK CONDON'S TV 730 WEST HURON STIIET FE 4-9^6 PRAYER'S 519 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. : FE 4-0526 WAYNE GABERT “Your Downtown RCA Yictor TV Doalrr" 121 N. Soginqw St. FE 5-6189 ■■■■ ELECTRIC COMPANY JuMt Kant of TetAlurou S^kopping Cimter New Center Electronics, Inc. AAifocIa Mila Shopping Cairiar-^Baiaar Arao OptnDmlyl(lAM.t»^PM.\ FE 8-9607 . STEFANSKlitM / Sal*»^amd Service _j' 1157 Wwst Moron St: FE 2-6967 ' ' ^> Sweef s Radio and Appliance 432 WEST HMRON ST. FE 4-1133 ^ j THOAAAS-ECONOAAY V FURNITURE COMPANY 4945 DIXIE HWY. 347 S. UOINAW ST. DRAYTON PUINS * PONTIAC . OR 4-0321 FE 3-7901 / E ~|i0NDAY. FKBRUAAY *.1^ THE POIS^TIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGii •EEN T Winter Keeps Farmers Busy Do CMdand County tannen take it ea«y. juat alt^ around |daylii| checkaik, viaitlnc or attending Saturday night a q u a r t t a laugh." Bays i aarfc Millar af BraMMi Toumihip. "rarmera woili at leaat ten ttanes harder in the winter than aumraei •Huid that*! the goMimned truth.' This hwne spaa aeattnaent was aebaed and rr-aehoed by several made Ihraugh ^e aawdly. \ Two questlans were aakid. **What do you do In the winter-timet" and "la farming a biut-or a way of life?" When the question was ashed, rfx of Take dairy farmer darit Miller, for Instance, srlth hio huge air-conditioned S90,0n bam and held 10 registered Holstein cows. la a buehiesa-and he wocfcs hard at it. ‘Hie dally, monthly, yearly routine on his 900-acre farm on Seymour Lake Road begins at 4:90 a.nt. After milkiiig and faediiig his lUler has breakfaM at ■ a.m. It’s back to the bam, at • a.m. and the Job of cleaning nian-gers and shoveling cow manure. A newly inetalied automatic gut-tw cleaner has lightened this cbora After lunch, and'between teeih Story and Pliotos by R§ba Haintxelman ing, milking and cleaning pro}^ "Checkers—visiUqg — dancing," lya MUIer. "Whai's that?" cultivaUon, harvesting thousands but in the winter the apples .have to he graded and carefully packed to be hauled to laarket k. must not be allowed to treeae, and e all-iaoUd wooden leneaa must be hapt fei full repair. If om of the she^ decides to dimb a fence, the whole herd follows ault. Of the 300 full-time farmers left I Oakland County, very few are the old-faahlaoed diversified type, according to Walter Cook, OaUand Oounty Agricultural Stabilization and Conoarvation Service mhnagr 'A farmer almost has to spe-Ef to survive nowadays.’ in 1935. Summer months are filled witA However, Kennedy McQueer of 10 Williams Lake Road, White Lake Townkhlp, has a different w. ’My hum is not » money-mak- ing project in the business sense of the word.” he said. "I grow food to feed both my animals and my- famity-and that to me la a way of life." years at tbs Psaliae Plsbar Bady piaat, aad kesplag the farm ap la his spare thne, Me-tfaeer flaagy gave la to the hi- Hia 31 "mllkera’’ yieM about 03 gallons daily. There are rhicfcena, for freah egga, rabbits for delicious meat and hli bwn beef cattle for excellent steaks. In the summer, there is big prouddion from a vegetable garden, and thaae, pluB fresh fruit. Jam the big McQtiieer treemr. The endlem Job of keeping the cows clean; spreading (ertiliser for the Bpring Ranting and pitch-ing tons of hay, along with all the other chorea, mount up to a good 16-hour day ter every type of farmer. For all—the Job of winter farming amounti to endless chores. For many—it Is strictly business, but few It is defteltely a “way of life. ” bnahols sf perteel IBoHhsm gpy, PaMsteas. Jaaathan aad Mda-tosh appita are taken to aurket atored to the Mg ben eiM have to he kept at a adegrae tern- . OtHUrg FOR -niK BIRm - Chickens, that Is! White Lake Township’s all-round farmer Kenneth McQueer talap a moment out from his chores to look acroaa his JSOwere snow covered farm. This farming ia strictly a "way of life" for McQueer who quit the laclory kteg aigo to lend eoars, chichena. ratahfts, ducka and a huge garden — Juat tor living. On a beautiful centennial (arm on Buno Road, aouthteeat of MU-terd. Porter Bennett and his son .David tend 400 healthy sheep. Porter says there is a hand-hewn benm with a faded inacription in the bom proving the atnic^ was built in 1843. Torn of ensilage and com have to be hauled by the BennettB to (he MUNORV MI3FER - Although .darit Miller on Seymour Lake Road. Shown above la on bt Brandon Township keeps his'50 milking cows the young registered Holstelns leaning ov« fetancbloMd In neat rows, ytwng heifers are left trough for sweot-amelling alfalfa as Miller k fnr to roam in an Brea adjoining the main bam a wary eye on her actlvitiea. to improve the village. A form with some 40 queatktna will be distributed to persons living in the area ot the unincorporated village tio find out the weak points in the community, ac> ' ng to Robert Schoenhals, chairman of the development Township ia one of the largeet apple growers in the county. Rls huge storage ham bolds more than 10,000 bushels which all have to be carefully washed, graded and packed before being hauled to .iiarket. Long is shown with a couple of handsful of the Delicious variety — aad they really are! 3 Employes Resign Urban Renewal Body WOOL Pt« HEAT, MEAT TO BAT — That’S what little tomba are made for„ according to their owner, David Beanett of Milford ’IhwnsMp. I|owever, sheep raising is more than that hi the arinter. It’s a constant round of repairing heavy they aU. says Bi 400 of the woolly goes — so go He and Us fatherjaise a scenic farm near Orion Twp. Vote to Decide Zoning Special Election Today to Determine Fate of 3 Parcels of Land pRION ’TOWNSHIP - Property owners here will vote in a special election today to determlM; what zM^g clasailicatkm will apUy to three parcels of land on Indian-wdod Road, near the Artco, Inc., LAKE ORION — White gladioli and palms graced the altar of the Lake Orion Methodist Church for the wedding Saturday evening of Marilyn L. McKenzie a^ Daitel E. Frank. Rev, Albert|^ns performed the candieUghi ceremony. Parents of the brideVe Mr. and Mrs. Gordon J. McKenzie, of S26 Bagley Drive. The bridegroom is na of Mr. and Mrs. William Frank of Mishawaka, Ind. ^eUtioned by about some tSB e^ble voters, the referewdom will either back or reject a Sept- Argument! tor the board’s re-zoning have been that the township needs industry, the site is attractive to such plants and the area is not heavily populated. It the board’s move '------ nts that new industry at i would lower residential -riy ~~ ww— ase ixBse, traffic ai^ smoke le air. new industry were to move , argued tboae in favbr of (be ing, the township’s tax baae I be improved. ing booths at the Orion ihtp HaU, sn S. Broadway ind at the GingellviUe Fire 3350 GrcBory Road, wUl.be until 8 p.m. Frank-McKenzie Vows Told Wed/m Evening Rife ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP -Three govcnunent-appolnted employes of the Federal Urban Renewal Program here resigned Saturday. Aasistant Housing Directoe Wit-ttam Vamado, 48, ended his 14-year term sdth the project. Mrs. Bessie Biralton, 43, bookkeeper and accountant, and Carl Bauhman, 45, rehaUlitatkm officer, also resigned; AO are Detroit reaidento. The three rerignaUMw were to beceme effective • p.m. today. This leaves the newly appointed director of the urban renewal program, James F. Estea, with only " a staff if and when he shows to take over Us duties OM a iloor-lengtb gawa •( die bouquet toffeto foaturtog ig, tapered sleeves and a seal- t ended to a eoart A demicap of pearls and sequins held her fingertip veU of French illusion, and she carried a cascade arrangement of wUte roses and Ivy centered with an orchid cor- Estes, who is from Memphis. Tenn., has not been seen or heard from his appointment Jan. 24, according to a member of the town- Attending her aisfer as matron of 'hmior was Mrs. Jamts Brown of Oxford. Bridesmaids were Judy Schewe of Detndt and Mrs. Janies Holden of Gibraltar. Marllya Biwwa of Oxford,' Tuesday* Musicole,Sets Men's Night Program gw. William Frank served his u best man, and the guests were Mated by Charles Krenek of Cotoma ai^d Monte Czuhai U Grand Rapids. A buffet supper was held in the churdi bouse imriiedlately fUkiw-ing the rites. The young couUe will Uve in Kalamazoo. ROCHESTER — Members of the Rochester Tuesday Musicale will present a “Men’s Night" program of American music tomorrow evening featuring Indian, /southern, western, am) modern Sections. Directing thb 8 p. m. peiform-ance wUl be Mrs. John tWaRers of 480 NawMck si., Troy. The program wUl be at the home of Mr. aad Mrs. Henry Axford, ‘ N. RotiieMer Ro^. About 13 members of the local Jayoee organfawtlon will conduct (he surveiy between 6:30 and 8:X p.m. While not directly related, to-lorrow aight’B survey is expected to augment another program undertaken by the recently organised Area Chde Improvement Asiocta-ation, headed by Idrs. Clyde Nel- would reduce the value of their A meeting 3 p.m. next Sunday the 'Township Hall will be held to schedule a puUic hearing on the proponed jHiikUng site. The east We of the township is residential and the only section that was void of wartime houstag prefects, now rased under the Urban Retwwal Program to make way for new construction. Car Crash Fatal to Area Woman _ program to fill the vacBBcy created by the rerigaa-ttaa of Raymoad O, HatciMr. At Saturday’s regular meeting of the township board there was a ben and Township residents the proposed construction of rent housing in the east portion of the township. WOULD REDUCE VALUE About SO cltbenB at the meeting donanded that the proposed low-rent homes be constnicted on the west side M Wyoming rather than the easlj) ridq, because they 2nd Meeting Slated by New 4-H Club GOODISON - A nw 4-H Oub tielng formed here ' ' second meeting tomohnw at 7:30 p.m. at the Baldwin School. Called the Paint Crd^ Valley 441 Onb. the gimp ia led ly Mrs. Rex l^thermsn. She said membetsiiip £i stiD open and ' era also are needed. ' Ing and cooking for girts, working for Ixys and horses and ponies for both boys and giris. The Improvement Association is an outgrowth of Mrs. Nelaey’s lone promote the village and bring to hew .buaineas. Both have sucraeded to some extent. Lapeer Home Attendant Dies, 3 Co-Worker* Hurt in M21 Accident JMLAY CITY - An attendant at the Lapeer State Home and ’Training School was fatally Injured early today' and three other state home employes are in criti-oooditlon ((^lowing an auto accident on M21, abeut 10 miles wssT of here. Dead Is Mrs. Nellie Cheney, 88, ef ms N. Vaa Dyke Road, Imlay Township. Mrs. Mildred Bogart, as, of SM River Ave„ Imlay Oty, Is to Lapeer Coua* right hip aad right arm. Also at the IxMpltal is Mrs. Glayds Ketr, 62, of 380 First St., Imlay City, who suffered cuts and a broken left leg. 363 First St., Imlay City with severe head injuries and a bnten right ankle. Lapeer County ghertirs deputies said She women’s car, dilvm by Mrs. Bogart, kit an 8-tooli deep pothole on M21, skiddei Deputies said Mrs. Cheney was appaivntly tbrowp ftpm the car. ~ said the pothole in the — lead-They Crete was oai||^ by Ote sudden warm weather thasrlv the pound and warned that the holes huve appeared on many other rdads, making driving hsaardons. *40 Questions* at Pavigl^rg Town Studies Problems By JIM IDNti DAVISBURG — A community developcment survey will be.made by the Davisburg junior Chamber of Cbmlneroe tomorrow to learn Spvtogfield TV>wmhlp Park Com- AN INTERCHANOE The major concern of the as- sociation now is to have change constructed at Davisburg Road and the new 1-75. Ramps at this location would llrovide a direct route smth foi motorists iii Springfield and Rose township'; acemnding,^ to Mrs. Nel- Hw associaticai, with Mrs. Mari-lynn Hatiaer as treasurer and Earl Farncr as secretary, already has red the cooperation of the ters I baa photographed all th« M in the village. Theae plo> I will be sent lo a reconatruo architect to Akron, Ohio, whs prepare a scale model of u Early / The plans would be useful Is the L • ■ " ■ big of ti the stores in Davisburg, aa put forth by Mrs. Nelacy she began her revitaUzatk» Park Commissioner Robert Pe-| campaign last November. 'Adelines' to Harmonize in 'Carnival of Music' UTICA - The Utlca-Rochester chapter of the. “Sweet Adelines’ ! ita firat fulUealb mual cal production, “Carnival of Mu-ale,’’ Saturday in the audllorium of Utica High School. Songs by several area groups will highlipit the 8 p.m. program with the “Sweet Adelines’’ form ing the show’s nucleus. Also to be featured la toe meu’s efeatus of the aaolefy for Chairmen (Tom the Utica area are Mrs. Arthur Horier. musical aaleetianB, and Mrs. Robert Doga, tickets aalea and posters, auristed by Mrs. Lucille Shimkua and Mrs. agewient af Barbershop Quartet Three viilting quarteU, each one champion, will sing several ae-lectiona. They are the "Yankee 'For-Tune ’TMlera,” a male comedy quartet. Other special attractions will In-[ude a okformanoe by the Pontiac pred-team, and u novelty dance routine by Mary J. Tom and Donna Levick, daughters of two "Sweet Adelines" members. >i maui Mrs. Churleo Nallert. of budget and finance. Ticketa (or the program may be purchased from any member of ponsoring group, or by contacting Mrs. Dega at 45630 Cbu-ter Road, Utica. Tickets also will be available at the door. Nameci Carnival QuMn PETOSKEY ID-Judy Gertie. IT, thuaiaat from Boyne City, ruled as queen of the 1962 Michigan Winter Sports Carnival held here during eOFTBE BBEAK — Taking a moment out in making final arrangements (or their first musical production to be staged Saturday eye-ntng rifUtica High Schod are four members of the Utfoa-Rochester chapter of the "Sweet Ade- ‘ lines.” ’They are (from left) Mrs. Charlea Nof-tert of Rochester and Mrs. Arthur Horier. tin. Leonard Langroeyer and Mrs. Robert Dega,' all of Utica. Their group wUl form the nucleus Uw show to be staped at 8 p. m. THE P(^tlAC PRESS. MOfNDAY. FEBRUARY 6, 1962 ^---------- He Didn*t Knock Rock Either Katzman Making Mon0y on Twist Films GRAND OPENING OF OUR GREAT NEW TILE CENTER By VKRNON SCOTT UPl Hollywood OorreopoiidwH HOLLYWOOD - Producer Som Katunan recognlsei a revolting development when he aeei He proved thit when «ie turned out H quickie movie titled ‘Twiet Around the Clock" for a moady $280,000. The picture standa bring in more than $S million. But wouki Katznum atop there with a nlce.tidy protitT ' Not Sam. ^ He li In the proeeao of lllmlag a aeqael. **Doa’t Kwtck the TwM." Katemaa la the laat maa hi the worid who would hMOk the twtat. It la making Urn a muiEiisn ./-nianEin PANAVISnir COLOR But underneath it all Sam la fickle. He once waa a ata rock 'n' roll man. And in the future be fully expecta to awltch his affection to whatever crazy erase may pop up. ORIOINAL T1TLE8 Not too many years ago he produced "Rock Around the Clrok" at a coat of less than $300,000 and It earned $5 million. He followed 'I think th^-twist aequel .will double Twist Around the Clock* becauae the twist is still growing. as wan as kids are doing the twist aU over the country. ★ * * Even J do the twlal. Tvo lost five pounds at it ao far." Sain drummed a tattoo on office desk with an ivdiy topped slack walking stick. ‘The twist >B emy to learn. Yea take a fighter# etaaee, pretend yon’vo got a tnrkleh towel 2103 S. TELEORAPH RO. FE 2-1000 Ophe 6:30 - Storti 7 F.M. yti Kxint Chargu ILICTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS -AND- NOONANilA^Ail-^ only nii I LikS the first twist pioture, the second will star Chubby Checker. It also will Include sonw new dance routines. HAS NEW DANCES "We're introducing four new liances," Katzman said proudly, "the ‘fly,* ‘Bristol stomp^' ‘mashed potatoes' and ‘new continental And I'm looking for one of them to become the neiy craza." gam Bold ho sras not above 'Ply Aroaad Iho Oloek.” The I potatoes fliag and perhaps ‘‘Stomp Aroaad the Cloek." Katzman rarely spends more than a whek filming hla movies, has produced some 300 One of his early ones atarrod John Wayne who earned $180 for the epic which Sam brought in at Citrus Growers Want Name of Cranes Changed LAKELAND, Fla. SAT.-$UN. admitted on Oot. 14. INI as an emergeney ease, beeame npsef May U, IW. and hrske aaotiier patteaf's radls. Rennell said that when an attendant came to quiet the youth the patient tore the attendant's sleeve and tried to bite him. He said that after the scuffle a dla-colorathm was noticed around the patient's eye. Rennell said the attendant denied hitting the youth intentionally, dr d *■ He said also that the youth was treated for lice at one time but I wa^fourid when he was examined ptton being taken to his homp^or a visit. And, he said, a small caHus on the youth's loo* was treated. "H la my feeling," Rennell -said, ‘.‘that in considering the patient's limitations and the limiUUons of our own program, we are dolni all that can be done for this boy.' Insurance Officer Dies i LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Dewey F. Grueiftragen. 63, financial vice president and treasurer of Bankers' Life of Nebraska, died Sunday. Gruenhagen, who was born in St. Paul, Minn., had been active in the investment banking business for 30 years before joining Bankers' Life in 1954. 2 BAZLEY MARKETS 'To Serve You Better" Quality Meats at LOW, LOW PRICES LOOK! SAVE! YOUR CHOICE! LOCK! SAVE! JUNEDALE BRAND SMOKED nONICS TENDER SLICED BEEF LIVER 2S § FRESH - LEAN GROUND BEEF LB. SHORT RIBS MZLEV BEHER TRIM GRADE 1 RUIN OR GARLIC RING BOLOGNA 39^. Loon, Moa^ CHUCK ROAST 39< LB. PORK CHOPS VALUABLE COUPON Good Ftb. 6th and Tth EntHlaBBaarcrtoa2^B.UMIT with Meat Purchata SLICED BACON 19< LB, OMd at a«tli Stares If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 1962 Codilloc Which D* ‘5,025 1962 Oldamobil* DYNAAAIC 88 CADILUC Yw Pnbn ■LOIS OLDSMOBILK ( You Get Quality Service too at.. OPEN MONDAY-TUESDAY and THURSDAY TILL 0 P.M. For teal coavenlenee, wouldn’t wondaeful Just to reach out and pick up the new Prinoesa phone—the smalleat* moat convenient atep*aaver you could wanti You’ll like the way the ^rinceaa phone fits thnamallest plaoea^ making a bedside looathm eapetdally haiuly. You’D also like two other exciting fcatniea of this modem tdephone—the built-in night light that gjowa softly in the dark ... and the dial that lights up when you lift the receiver to make it easy to eall at ni|^t. Order a Prineeas phone soon and choose from five lovely deeorator odora. Just call your tdefdione huaincaa office—or aak thoman on the telc|dione truek. > . 1 ft font IfjOM bufft \MICHIQM BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY r/ia Prh>c*$t phon», wHh dl»l Md n/ght fjgM bu/lt In, edits only pon-a ono-tlms etiMigs. , JfflU IBM W . ■ '' • A .. ' TttE PONTIAC PKBgS, MONDAY, FEBRUAKY 5, im To the Stock Market tomtag mim tt loMObr wntm I bf poMn gad mU bjr hi nekaia > tanWMd fay tha i Bvwa «l Mwhait. m oI IMday. Dotrott Product •a UM riMuw, m I at HH. ftwtdard OU (Naw Jaraay) I jS ua a fracthm. Ttaaoo addad about J* a point. TXL OO sportad 3% to 27 i Sf kitok".:.{to oa a big opener of 3UM teW'V.'.V.'.'.V.’.'.V.V.V. Ito ★ t » ................... k'aMrTto itocovamiBont action rag }. B22?* .........V " rS"*» oral contracapthfa iSjTte atoek waa up 4% Poultry ond Jofanaon t Johnaon pointo on a report-af favonhla iM r>v«mmant action rogardtaig Ma o,-»:S£sni IHK/naas UtWIDCK •*SB!**_* l!2f and fSf ntot aito Urn uaoST E#s- i PI i 3t I lia^- * & ______ 3®"*bs?'jS VMlm toliM •aaaek M a*k« • "ttMO to Ml taMto •« M]P M* enai Bamh«r I Md 1 Iw-Ma a. M.^niai Stocks of Local Infonst ngutm alMr palaM •r^htto AUtod aopcriiutrktU .....l|.t If- Aeroquip CerD............g.{ M. Stock Mart Continues Rally NEW YORK (g - The Stock early today, eonttanimg too rally loiLlYad- ★ k k no Btocka which have taken i« iooHa in laoMt waaki atoppad back sharply to respeaaa to rsnawed demand. ' k k k mmmUk rasa IH •» «K aa apsali« btoek aC IMM lie Servloe Oae^ 4 Gaa aA^jAaMag loasia were geurry-Rala-OH, Edo Ooip. "A." Tampa Eiaolrle aad Loral Pactmneia. advanoo of tha nows. pott loww. Rails w«a steady on » unchanged to high to around a point were made by Chemical/ (baola Managers Pick Man of Year' Oakland Lift Inwranct Agtnfs Art CHtd for TMr Strvict Pinconning Will Get WASHINGTON It ^ Aatnmaut Mm H. Glenn Jr. Vieitad Praaideiit Kennedy at the White House today. The.Marine lieutanant.eoionai called on the President shortly Copper Tubing Plant BAY CITY (UPI) - A fl-nilillan copper tube mill plato will be eonetnicted on a thatoa aMe in The Storltag Copper Oorp- aUd it wlU Start tit project later thia month. ProducUon will b^ in bog, Va. d at Gian Ora, near MIddla- or agent, tor the Lifs to Insurance Co.; fVands J. Staoay, *‘ Ola Natto^ Lite; Howard L State ram Inaumaee Ga.; Arcs, State Earn Insuranoe Go.: Alasc Clark. New York Lite Inemwee Go.; R. J. Cortae, Nation Lite 4 Aoetdant Co.; T«e rrstodant prior to his return to Cape Canaveral, fla. Ha Is copper tubing tor nee by air- tentatively scheduled tor an ea aad refrigeration drcUag orbit fbb. U from | The-New York Stock ^change and H. O. Davie, National Lite 4 Actodant Co. Saiectioiia also inclnded M. J. Slocttm, Nattonal Life 4 Accident Co.; William Bomring, Pnidentlal teauranoe Go.; John Leonard. Met-i\Cb.; G. L. An- _________ite 4 Acddsnl Go.; Robert Mayneo, MotropoU-tan bwhraace Co.; Joe J. DeMag-— --------------- - ^ ip/ 1«|| otiaumi ISIS J»«?>«smjs ^ ^ - toto l.«s as Am iToee im n mi Am OptM Sk f sr Am amm S t CM Am SM JS » IM Am TMOTM MS a US %.i.. 155 'Z’SL ir tsf.’s,^ ifS riii S«ar:::: smTesa ijsr i « nii « - j iSf llif! ^ms^rn. uiiSt55ii; mte 1 IM CM «r sni- < m ^ 1^ ssS+l a .ssf M 8k 8« a»i-v 8 ^ \ 2 a \ ...is _________ i8 # p S STAHSai 3 SI !m «' mu. Su. SuZV to to toK j ch imarsc SSi^*tto.j 57 ^ -cote i.to„^ « _______________ U ISK Oslo Fair M UK CM l.tob u 41 OoluiT OU I Col Pitt m Ctml Crtd I.to 4 Hii Cm 1 7 " Cm R Ou tto .1 Ctowm Pw tto It I*::* 8Srp/gfiSSS!.-;::::.:::;;;;;», -.s TruuetBUMiiMau Pip# L- Sl.l 14.S Id road ..........BM •.!€ 8u.»ur3il»K Dttrt S t MK MM Dlm^ jS * ^ .1 MM ^ Dwe aim • ^ Mi? tifSliS t Atr L • 87 8 *xSmSii . Amoricon Stock Exch. i\ JPI sr%i%uto SI ssra.®?** SI SS’itf Si 3 i 8 1 m SMP^ Si* SaSbMNs lSl —T— ■I om IJS -- mm I JMb * J........ NEW YORK (API-I wbat tha stock markst win do Is and a paitmma Job ter mUlhaia. k k 'k And if yoa teal that aU tho natenal geaatopg pM now to to tho toorkto It loadod MTO Ihoa tho Hiual qaoto to 0 and to thote oommaaity in k k k k k Out ki Ftoinix. Ails., a vica « psuatdmt to tho Valhy Natkmal Bank. Htetart A. Loggott. puta tai«ui In dwik and looko at thotl Hancock Inourancc Co.; and J. E. ifaalagffll. Natkmal Lite 4 Aoddent Go. k k k The group, aa gueato to_____________ datkin, received their “Man to the Year'* trophies, raapectively, at a ra^ dtamer accompanied by ■ wfvea in Nerthwood Inn, 3908 Woodward Ave„ BeiMey. To Air Issuance of Uquor License to Country Club The temanoe to a Oaaa C Uquor I Uoeneg to Waterterd Towmidp wfll ' of the TowneMp Board. Lato March toe haai________ a Cteaa C ■aema te the PSultee Oiuntiy Gtab wMeh prcvteutly had haau um^ « naart S- ■mar aino aMuthe to «ke yaaa, ■awavar. tha atate tegad ta al-law Mb gasnaa dua te tee teat teat a as4ato h wttete MO teat to tea alHte Tha dub now has ai _________ on Ilia for tho Uomaa to bo UBsd at a diftormt knatian and fai the meantime rataina Its rsasrt ttoaMa. decide tonight either to allow thh by the dub or to Ailing AAolotov Rgfums to Moscow Aportmgnt MOSCOW (B — Fonpar Foreign Uaktmr V. M. Moiotov ratumed to his Moaoow apartment today after apendiiig more than a week In a local iMupital with the flu. A ho^ltal attendant aaU he Is now iS Aw * Mjr I MUD sw iJir ii MarnmiCt UartlB M Mur D M. Mebm Air M#rr a MOM S iiw-" !SS2;.rji" 18% SSTta s SI 111 mE mom .7S mm SB?.’?. 1. StoiS 8 K » j A A g,’k asKS,. !*c^ aw. tJi ' s: eu'i;. S ^ s«i- tsas i^T i bI:' sssr£i.8 Ip 85 857^ as to Us futuR. Prenger Khnab- bar to a ao-called antipaity group last October. .gubsequenUy, Molo. lov ratumed to Uoooow from VL Qroin Pricos GHIOAOO GRAIN onqAoa p»b I eater, and Monrioa R. Roberta, 32, of M E. Mapledate St., Haiel Park, treated for minor injuries toe hoaplUl. Driver to too car wMch struck Greamit's auto was Lsalie A. Le-Falyre, 30, to S34 N. K SI., R^ Oak. He waa not in-Jund. ■RATLIGiR to Royal Oa Rochester Road, arrived at the 18-Mile Road Hght at the **“ as LoFaivre, who kai ert's ear w toe Ml tUe. Both driven were to make i manta at the Royal Oak proas-cutor's offloe today. k k k According to poUoe, the impact threw the woman up onto tha lawn to toe Muy Lyon Junior High Seboto about 13:45 a.m. News in Brief naebimo and another $75 worth of whiakay ware taken Saturday night in a btaak-in at toe '» Ptto' on 8. Ttoegraph, Water-lord Township. Entry was gained by breaking the plate glaaa In tha ftont door. «v4eini»ig about $10 Ware stolen fay thievaa who broke into the Poattee LUw Laundry, 1311 Hlgb-land Road, it was reported to Ooktend Cbmdy Sheriirs doputieo yaoterday morning. A phaiagraph, radto and It rae-ord hlbuins wlto a total value to 1330 wars* stolen from his apartment at 177 Flahtr St., Hobart Williams told Pontiae polica yaa- ’^V burg. Veraan A. Ridgeway, Oom-ma^. AU Worid War I Vet- doaa to ita hlatoric high “IS? points and 30 par cent Ugber than at tha ava to toe presMautial eteetkn Just 14 hectic months bare.’’ k k k That puts un aquarely on the generally accepted list of huU But maybe you had other atocln than tboas cairiad In tot popuhte averagas. Wane, you may have held aoma alocka amoi« tha 130 Uated on toe Naw York Stodt EX- 8en. Robart S. Kerr, chairman of the Senate Space Committee, Introduced a bllMato month propoo- big eotabUahnMiit to a 1300 mUttoii- Kerr, an Oklahoma DemocraV Uw oounter «6 persons who fsU M toe corpontlon would own too uim in a buU toaiitat ewythteg U.S. part to tot syatom wMh 5,000 tearea for sate at $100,000 aach. Aides to Kerr said the proposal k ,k k The Federal Goninwiricattam adon a plan to tot a nonprofit firm develop and operate the system and eventually for Internatlooal k k k _ 'Thla has invoivM a bto dlsputa MILWAUKEE « - IWtad Auto Woricen Local 30 at the home plant of tha AUtoGhalmers Mlg-Go. broke nnka with locals at oth-ar planta around the country today by extending a atrika deadline to March 15. k k k A Feb. 30 deadline had bca set earlier by the council to eight UAW locals at A-C planto. The oouncU la now netotlatlng with tot company for a new oontiato te replace one that wpirad ' been extended by to toe union and the big k k k Local 30 ropreaenta about two-thirds o4toe firm’s lOJW) worker*. S,Mt weskarc teolghf ttath^ wUh the eight-ptato cmnMU, and toto aa lM« ■■ aegtotatowa are to pragrcss, tha Lecto ha heads Scfaultz said the UAW coundl .riginaUy sought a Feb. 4 dead-Una hut wu peimiadad by Local 30 negotiators to extend It k k k Other AUteGbalmers plants art at U Gnwrc, WIs.; U Porte and Thrre Haute, Ind.; Gaibdeii. Ala.; SprfiM^, BL, Cedar RapIdB, Iowa, and PHtehurgh. Chelsea Finn Exhibit Will lour in Russia CHELSEA (UPI) — The Gelman Inrtniment Oo. of Chelsea wtU ta*e part in a medical exhlUtlaa to be held In toe Soviet Union, It was announced today. ,.k k k The company said the United ^tea Information Agency selected it to taka part in toe ex- _ _ U.S.A.,‘’ •ebst^ to tour Russia for four months starting In March, k k k TTw firm said Its products oo diq^ wlU ha primarily air ■ ■ uasd tolleter- The proportion of American high riaen in the last demule. It la seo-ond only to Spanish. k k baaher alao tahw look at tot aeonesny In gansnl: Tha daagsrs to gustolag what maiket la going to do, par dodtned 40 per cent of more from mch at 70 por cant in price, among the 40 that ware eft SO per cent or more wore a number thto Imd hao^ op««tatlvu fa- mofwvaf, axciiangd hu in a hul muat go up. k k k The major trand, to ho mro, was up. But U you put your msn-ay on toe leas fortunate among too Uvorites. you know wbat Is by “tos minor trends may Price oi Gold Drops Sharply on Paris Market 9MU8 (ft - The pries otjM ______ to an aarly sattlemont on tha Algerian cen- Hm gold Napolaon, a ooto U la gnsinally boagM by Fpsm man for hoarding when thayVa worried and sold vdisn thtaga look bettor, dropped a Aid franc <30 cento) In today's trading. It Business Notes Appointment to Emmott B. Lekts, n ODkxdal a Birmingham, aa director to fleet aactian of General Motors sales section has been arniounccd by H. E. Crawford, director to aatet sec-loo. k k k Lewis, who has spent the part to the Chevrolet Motor Diviaian of GM, succoeda George V. Klafler. director of fleet aetlvttlaa wUh k k k LewU attended North CaroUna State OoUage, where he majored in induatrial management prior to Joining the Chevrolet division as a parts representative In IMS. Ha has held several sales aad service positions in the divislob's Looto-ville and Atlanta reg^, and for the past five year* has been a^ of the dlvhdon's JoMito J. Tigue. 3215 HiUs Drive; poMed manager of tha trabdag department of Ford Motor Go.'a ............-ibly Dhdaloii. D. Joining Ford la 1 notion worker at tha Rouge Plant, Tigue graduated from Wayne State Unhwdty in IMS with a bachelor's degree in Jounialism. G«ts NASA Contracts WASHINGTON (to-Tha Natfonal trqtton today anasunead tha awaato ‘ Cforyslar Gorp. to nsaity SS.15 lag servieaa at tiw Marshall IM Flight Csntor at HostavUla, Ato. ‘TWO oontracta are toehtoad. am fo/ S3.3BLM0 and tha other Igr 1638.003.. .